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1972-10-24 - Orange Coast Pilot
' ) anhunt ·Pressed • • ., •• Ill County \_Drama , " L. -. ran-81en ~ ~ .. • DAft..Y·~d..O"f'~'..w .. RiCMW"11: ...... -~ . ' . . CHEEK'$CARRJE> BY,BU(LET,•Of ~ICE,R;NASH .TELLS, STORY 'Gunman Sprin-.:Trap ~; R"?r.11 lnter~ion ln,lrvine ' . lh\H, Y Pli.OT' fttff ,,.... Ol'PIC .. NASH.S'40V>'.S 'IRING STANCE usl1»BY ASSAILANT • j 1 • :.. • In Irvine, IM MMI Lyl"' In t ... •Rood Sudclo.ily C•-Up Shooting ' ' Policeman In Irvine .... By ARTHUR R. VINSEL Of 1'le D1l1Y '"llot Si.fl A massive, ovel"Jlight manhunt con- tinued today for a gunman who lured an Irvine policeman into an ambush on a lonely coontry road, shot him. then fled into a foggy comfieJd and escaped. Patroiman Stephen T. Nash,. 23, was hit in the face by a bullet fragment in the dramatic 11:10 p.m. confrontation as the slug shattered his squad car's windshield. He gwmed the engine at the last sec- ood in a desperate attempt to nm down his would-be killer when the apparently injured man lying on the pavement leaped up Into a crouch and took aim. · Stunned by the Wound, he swerved ·and spun the car around so he could take cover behind its door, while the gwunan darted into the field on Jeffrey Road, 200 yards south of Barranca Road. Officer Nash said lhe man sprinted for a windbreak of eucalyptus trees aod a creekbed as he himself crawled into the field c:ornbat-.sttle. Fearing tie· would be ca light in a sec- ondary ambush-according to his descri!>' tion of bow be was lured into a trap - the wounded officer waited for rein- forcements instead o[ going after the gunman. Fellow officers in squad cars an'ived within five minutes to initiate a manhunt .,ttiat eventually involved an anny of of· 1 ' ficers from other police agencies. Patrolman· Nash briefed supervisors on what happened at a commend post set up 1 under direction of Patrol Sgt. Larry Bersch near the ambush scene. • · }le was later treated at Costa Mesa Memorial Hospital for a superficial gunshot woond on tbe left cheek tnd released. Investigating officers were cautious about saying it was definitely a rigged trap this morning, but circumstances left most with little doubt. Officer Nash said he was parked beside Jeffrey Road writing a routine report by flashlight when a car carrying two very cleancut )'(XIDI men pulled up. The gunman himself was described as having long black heir,· a full, bushy beard and wearing a leather jacket over a T..ttlrt tnd blue derum Joans. "A biker-type," one officer remarked today, hin\ing outlaw motorcycle gang tactics. Ollker Nash said the two men told hitn they were en route to · telephone police aboUt someone In the roadway who a~ pear<d to be injured or perhapo Ill . He sped to the ..,.ne, wbero hla headllghta lllumlnltod the ouppoood vlc- liJn, 1Ylni face down, his cbeek against the uphalt pavement tnd both bands hidden beneath his chest. Sudde'nly, Offker Nash aald1 the man jumped Into a crouch clutching a loni- . (See Al!BUSU, PIC• II . ' -' ' . Basehall~s · .. Loss Jqckie. Robinson Succumbs at 53 .. 1 .... -. STAMFCJRI), Conn. (AP) -iacltle llAll>lnson, .who broke major league 58.seball's racial barrier with tile old Brooklyn Dodgers in 1947 and went on to stardom and a plaoe In the Hall of Fame, died today of what hi. doctor described as heart dl!eaie. Hall-blinded by diabei.s, tbe 63-year--Old Robinson suffered an early morn- ing attack at Ills PoSh home in this suburb of New York City and died at 7:10 a.m. at a hospital. (See story, Page 16) ' He had been honored only 10 days earlier during the 1972 World Serles at Cincinnati when a sellout crowd at Riverfroot Stadium applauded the 25th anniversary of his debut in Brooklyn. Robinson's hair was white, hiS eyes almost gone and his heart scarr!i!d by a 1968 attack. This curbed Robinson's successful business career during the put few years. He could hardly see to walk when attending the fwieral in April of former Dodger teammate Gil Hodges. . Stlll, death came as a shock to the baseball world. Weaving Erratically Danish Ship Hijacked B.y Cook Being Souglit ABERDEEN, Scotland (AP) -The Dani!h trawler Nor~p. hijacked Sun· day by 'her sea cook, was sighted today 150 miles off the Scottish coast, the defense mhllstry said. The J22..ton trawler, last seen weaving errailcally into a North Sea storm with tJ>e.coolc at the helm, was spotl<d off the Firth of Forth by a British European Airways helicopter. A ministry spokesman said the Royal Navy Fisheries Protection vessel Ashton and the Dutch Navy submarine Tonijn were racing to intercept the Nordkap. The sighting came as Denmark's Marillin• Reacue Service was pttparing to lawidi tielicoplera to join the bun! for the Nordlcap, manned only by the runaway cook, Jorgen Christiapsen, 28. ' Air Crew FindS Third Cobra . ! SAN FRANCJscp (AP) -A deadly five-foot king cobra llaa been found by Trans Wor)d AirUnes !night 'c:mnnen al San Francllco InternaUooal Airport, an airlines spokesman llJI. 1be ll\8ke, dilcovef'ed late Mon- day nigh!, -the thlrd co!ll'a lound at San Francllco tnd Loi AngelOI International oirpQrta 1lnce a lhipmeol ol flowers fro!'I 1liat1and anived over the weekend, TWA spokesman Jerry Cooley aal<I. 1'lfl fint cobra was found S.tur- <181' nlgbl aftet TWA flight 'IH ~ rived in Lot Angelu. • There were fears Christiansen was doomed as he sailed into the stonn with little navigational or engineering ex: perience. His angry skipper, Borge Jacobsen, stranded in Aberdeen with two other crewmen, fumed that the Nordkap with Christiansen at the helm was a danger to shfppibg. ft was sun not known why Chri!tlansen seized the Nordkap as It lay docked in Aberdeen harbor.· Friends in his home port of Ejsberg said be had always wanted to skJpper his own '1-iP· They said defective eye!lght prevented him from qualifying u a captain. Some mentioned en alcohol problem aod Scot- tish police said Sunday they believed the pirate cook was "Under ~ influence of drink." But Jacobleo denied Ulil. Cbrilt1ansen, who wu vainly pursued by Jacobsen. and police in another trawler Sunday night, yelled as he hi· jacked the trawler that he was heading for Denmark , 400 mUes to the east. TOPLESS SHOW FIGHTS FOR LIFE CllARLO'M'E, N.C. (AP) -Fifty lopleao daDCOl'I performed here to raise money for a la'ffllllt against a cily ordinance baMing such dancing. The ordinance goes Into effect Nov. I. They performed alngly aod In groupo Monday Dlghl at one of the H top!.., \)igblclubo In towo. A llaJldinC-<oom-only crowd ol IOO pald P apiece. A second ouch 'l'bplcsa Review I.I planned next Monday. an. Turns Self In to MPs In .Clemente By JOHN VALTERZA ot .... 0.lly ...... ll•ff San Clemente Police arrested a drlfter with bloodstailu on bis clothes early to- day on suspicion of murder after the transient approached MPs at the Chris· tlanltos Gate and assertedly said, •• just killed a guy." Ninety minutes later, officers being directed by the suspect found the victim of the shooting. The body of a Long Beach Navy man was found beside the San Diego Freeway a few feet inside the southerly city limits of Carlsbad. At that point, local officers turned Jerry William Manning, 11, over to Carls-- bad detectives. The case began at 3:45 a.m. when Manning approacbed the MPs. The Military police then called local officers. San Clemente Police Lt. Robert Muon said Manning led officers to a late-model auto parked at the Basilone Road off. ramp of the Freeway. Bl~ns were found on the front 1e4t's .passenger side. On the floorboard the officers found a spent .32-callber cartridge. Maaon said the oen pbue wi.ct about an hour as the "cooperative" IUSped assertedly led officers southward in the quest for the body. The search ended east. of the freeway near the Poinsettia Avenue overpass in Carlsbad. The identity of the victim remained a mystery early today. He (Ued from a single wound to the head. Spokesmen for the Carlsbad police department would say nothing about the crime, insisting that all available person- . (See DRIFTER, Paie Z) «:oalt We.,.er Hazy IWlsblne Is on the agoncla tlrougb W>dndday, acconling to the weatherladf, with highs" along the coast In the . lo" '/Os, rising to IO inland. Lows lonl&ht 53. · INSIDE 'J'PDA\' The o~moipherc ta rtttrai7kd jovialitu for rtportna obea:td th t McGovern campaign of:r.. plau. WrttM-1 ate llttlt' chance of hi& winning, buc Che falf9wed condidale malnfalni hope. Sec 1torv on Page Q, LM,IWf I ._ . CNIMll'llt Doti Ctfttltt 11 o..... 11 DM•_.. V 9MINI ,... • IMlrtlfa: I I ,.11 ,..... •It '*' lllt ll .... II ........ ,. AM LllllMn 1t • I " 2 DAILY PILOT s Thieu By lbto A1socl•ttd Pre11 Presldont Nguyen Van Thieu said t.Orugbt in Saigon the Communist side bas requested a cease-fire and that one could come "in the near future" -but (Inly if North Vietnam withdraws all its troops. Once that is dope, 'Ibieu said in a lwo- hour broadcast, his government would be ready to discuss a political settlement wJth the Comn>unlal-lf..-'il NationaJ Libera· lion Front, kl;\own as. the Viet Cong. No outsJde party couJd make decisions determining South Vietnam's future , he saiC:. 'lb.ieu declared no one has a right to jmpose a peace settJemenl on South Viet· nam and restated his opposition to a APCD Chief Says North Vi.ets Request Cease-fir •• -. tripartite coalition government as sought by the Commwiist side. He declared that no fonnaJ agreements were reached ln his live days of talks witb President Nixon's national security adviser, Henry A. Kissinger. lie said tbe talks were exploratory and "nolhtng wu signed.'' ln what was essentially a reiteration of his government's long-standing position on an Indochina settlement, Thieu said the cease-fire would ·have to oover C.am· bodia and Lao& as well as South Viet· nam , and be guaranteed by international supervision. "A cease-fire may take place in the near future because lhe Communists have requested it," he continued. "The Communilll agreed to, and even be& for a cease-fire because tbey are militarily loeing." He said be asked the United States tu "•sk the C.Ommunlat.t what ~Y want" and said South Vletnal!l would ....,.,e ·111 own final declsloas on ils futwe. Meanwhile, the White House aald tod•Y "some progreu has been inade at achieving a negotiated setUement of the VletMm conflict," but relUted to give any support for the assessmenl Press secrotary Ronald L. Ziegler reported tbe progress following an boul' long meeilng in Wasbington between Pretident Nixon, Secretary of State Willi3JD P. Rogen and Kissinger , who returned Monday night. Ziegler turned back repeal<ld attempll by newsmen to draw out elaboration on his atattment. He spedlically rtl ... d tu camnwit on tbe speeeb ioday by Tiu.u cbarging North Vietnamese proposala for a .settlement are 111-dJJguised attemplS to undermhle his government. Jn an ucbanae with newsmen, Ziegler at firlt appeared to aar the "some prog· ress" referred only to negotiations with North Vietnam. but later sald he was also including discussions with Thieu. Reporters asked why the White House refused to discuas uped.S of the negot.fa. lions when 1bieu and North Vietnamese l>remler Than Van Dong had made statementa concemillg tbe state of - efforts. "We have an agreement with N~ Vietnam oot tu cn.ou.. negottatlooa, Zlegle:r ,responded, •1and we are going to stand bY. that agreement." , • He said be would not commeol on "oey other statement," the 11m~response. he gave when asked il D6ngT wmrlt'/rs with Westen\ ne.W9men }»'tached the .J»- talklng agreement. , Thieu'f speech coincided 'Wth a state- ment in Parll by Prlnce Souvanna Pbouma, Piemler of Laos -bis nation with C.mbOdla and the two Vletnams constitute lndoch!na. • ' He teid, ''l think we are on the tve °'' cea•·fire, 11 but added : ''TNs la not., cert.4Jnty. ~' The LaoUan leader shied away IMt'rl. prevlou. slltement iq wblcb be saldi _...fire W<>uld come wltbln Ille ntil'. seven days. • ' 1 The stock ri\arw, sensitive aboUt Y~ nam war peace rumor•t moved lowef .. day alter Tl!lcu's ·~· , · '111• Dow Jones lfidllil"ial lier.,. c1.,.1y watched baro"14.ter cm"<llte Xork Stoek Exchange. ~ '.611 :;,K l 9'$.97 around noon. • ·,t The market <all!Od Friday pnd on speculation sometliing...-. cease-fire -was •bout.to~ ii nam in light of ltlpt'by KIQiapr. Ft"OMPqel AMBUSH ••• . Ryckoff Urging Fitchen ,Ouster barreled, small' calibet nwl~ . typical combat style and c1ra-:111a 1 • at hla i..d. , /c Lunging sld•l'•Y.• a!moet loo late.!!"7' tried to run ov~ the man as be fired.: lie was nm,~· t~ get oll a~· blast due to ·t'M delay \ii .Celling the weapoo out of Its bracket '"1fbif'; crouched below Ille da•N.xulrd delenalvel\>. Environmentalist Newport B e a c h Councilman Paul Ryckoff today joined Huntington Beach Councilman Jack Green's call for replace ment of the man in charge of Orange County's Air Pollu- tion Control District (APCD ). Ryckoff, in a statement prepared for delivery at today 's city council meeting, said William Fitchen was wrong to ap- prove expansion of the So u t h e r n California Edison Company steam plant in l;luntington Beach and should not be allowed to continue in office. Cowity supervisors w i 11 conduct a public hearing Wednesday to determine if the APCD should remain under Fit- Prosecutor Hits Will-Wife Left Ow1i Nude Pliotos LONDON (UPI) -A prosecutor at the Old Bailey criminal court called it a curious case as he listed its ingredients -a wealthy businessman, a pretty model, a disputed will, a 'Mexican duke , and a disappearing lawyer. Prosecutor John Buzzard told tho jury Monday that under the terms of the will , businessman Clive Raphael left his wife 1• only U cents plus four nude pOOtographs of berself. Buu.ard gave the details es he outlined his case against Eric Alba-Teran, described as a Mexican duke who works as a banker in London, and a 22--year-old teacher named Shelagh Macintosh. Both pleaded innocent to charges of lorging Raphael's will. Alba-Teran also deoied obtaloing Raphael 's RoUs-1\oy<:e by tne6llS of a forged letter. Buizard said a third conspirator, lawyer Roland Shulman. bas left England and is believed llvJng in South America. Shulman, Alba·Teran and Miss Macin- tosh produced the will. Mitten on the back of an envelope, a few days after Raphael died in the cras:i of his private plane in France. Aside from the curious bequest of 12 cents and the four photos to bis wife, model Penny Brahms, the will left most of Raphael's fortune to Shulman. Alba· Teran and Miss Macintosh signed the will aswllnes3es. The prosecutor claimed Miss Macin- tosh admitted the will was forged . He said the trio searched Raphael's apart- ment after his death and found an en- velope bearing his slgnautre. Miss Macin- tosh, he said, typed the forged will above this genuine signature and she and Alba· Teran signed as witnesses. Alba-Teran contended the will iJ gen- uine and that he wjtnessed it while Raphael was alive, Buzzard said . OU.NM COAST ST DAILY PILOT Tt.e ~ CM$t OAILY PILOT, wllfll •ktl It amblMlt tfle ....... ,,..... i. publ1*d try ... OnrlCJlt Cl•••• ,..,,.,."" ~. s,,.. r.tN tdlllont er1 PllblWlld. Mnty ""'°""' Frlay, for Olotle MtM, N....,.,, le•Ch. HuritlnoNn INCt1/l'eun111n v11i.-,, ~· 11..U.. INll'le/SNdlnkk ll'ld $fn Clfl'Totnl1/ IM Jllltl Clllltlr-. A t1119l1 f'llloMI 9Cl"1tr. k Jll,lblh.lltd 5-hll'dtVS llW SWIC!ty,. t,.. prllldj»I Mlltltlrw crt•nt r1 11 no wot hy $trwtl, COlll ~. C..lllOrni., •MM. Rob1rt N. Weff ~r.,1c1..-.r •11111 .. ulllltllff J1cli R. Cur'•Y Vice ttmld.-it '"4 OeMf•I M.tf1111W Thom•• K•••JI E4llCW' lliolftet A. Murphin• MtMflng e:1Htw Ch1r&.t H. Leos Rlcher4 P. Nill Altlllt1111 MIMO!ne Edlfon .._ CMtt M ... 1 D "'':!!1 S!Ntt .......,..., "-dll ml N ~""9ff ut\IM llKfil: t22 l'er•ll AVl!llM Hrw!tlrlgfOfl l411d'!! "'" l wclt '°" .......... left ~t as Ncll'ttl RI Cl"'~ I.Ml Tll1pt 1 (714) 64J-4JJI Cl_,,.. MMll .... '4J..1171 Pf'IM c...l A,,_ 5"1111 tf ...._ IMU 4tJ.o4Ut ,,.,. ..... ~ CWMy c.M-.tllft 14 .. 1111 ~t, trn. °'"'* Ctltf ltlltllllfl'"' c:orn,.ny. ... -tJtrltt, lll111!rtllons. •fl ... 111 tNttlt ., ffwrllM!Mrlll '*''" .... , ... ,~ ••ll!Ovt lfll(llf ,.,. '""*' tf ~itfll ....net, ~ dN ~ ... "'" 11 C•ll Mtw. C...lltoffll• ~1'11 JJ\I' tMTltr · ,aAI """'9'1fVr .,.. ""'" u.rr nwwttt1rr1 f.1(11t.,., ... flM, .. U.'5 n.nltll'f. '. chen's control or be reorganized as part of the Health Department. Fitchen had said he granted the permit, conditionally, aft.er weighing the need for energy against the potential im· pact on the environment. "llis job is to monitor and police sta· tionary pollution sources, not judge power needs, Ryckoff said. Fitchen's approval of the expansion came after he fought against an e.arlier Edison propasal !or expansion that would have produced even more smog. The new proposal "is for a complex of small units instead of two large units previously applied for," Ryckoff said. "The power output and-the emission of pollutants would be somewhat less than in the previous-application for expansion. However, ~mission of oxides of nitrogen \viii be increased by some 20 tons: per day for the plant expansion," Ryckoff said. "I would like to add my enthusiastic support to Mr. Green's suggestion" that Fitchen be replaced by "a qualified engineer," Ryckoff said. Green has twice called for Fitchen's removal. "Mr. Fltchen's recent action may well have a profound effect on our .at- mosphere, unless the Huntington Beach city coimcll or other authorities manage to block the plant expansion, 11 he said. Fitchen said bis approval of the pennit for the new plant is oontincent upon proof it can meet reduced emission levels claimed by the company. "He (Fitchen) bas no scientific evidence . . . the added pollutants will not affect our atmosphere significantly," Ryckoff said. "It seems qulte obvious that Mr. Fitchen '"' not fulfilling his responsibility in a position for which he was not trained and that a qualified director ls needed for the APCD." Besides bis pollution control position, Fitchen holds county titles of agricultural commission and the sealer of weights and measures. From Pqel DRIFTER ... nel on tbe small force were at the murder scene. .. LocaJ officers said it appeared that the victim had been shot and propped up on the pa.ssenger side of his car for some time before bis body was dumped on the roadside. Manning allegedly told local police the victim "wouJdn't Jeave me alone" during an appannt southbound drive from Long Beach. After the shooting, Manning allegedly drove the car for s time, dumped the re- mains on the roadside, then headed north again. He drove the car until It ran out of fuel at the offramp south of the city limits, police said. Manning then walked toward San Clemente, finally reaching the base gate. ~Lost $150,000' • R,.ea.dy to Boll By tbe time be freed l~. the, assallsnt' tool .. ' was ar ~ay. ,. . His frantic r.aioibroadco,11 ol "Cilde 999 -ofliC..-~-!oetp -11rooJb1 poUte helicopters . fri>m .bOlb Costa Mesa anll Newport'lll>acli; but growing ground fog lp the area bJ4 tl!elr qqany. 011!cen from fiolh 'clttes, plus Oral!l!t' · -Ey Sherill's deputies. the Ca!ilorlli~ ; , .' 'llY r,,t<OI aqd Irvine Rancb ~i 'C ,t . # '** to tbe qianlttnit. • • , · IO·illfl1culty.1n ,:overine tltl da4:. • iot!~aed 'fannland, \larden GrtlYC policemen Bill Compton aDcl Larry Dl'l!s 'with tbO!r sceut.tracldng cJois 'l!ttmdl;r and Rlclt joined lite blUIL '4 , · WestminSter officers Grant Va!MI' I.¥ ·Tim MJller with their bunt clop Aul ~. Elcb . alao "'-"tdlecL . were ~ ., lnlnlcally; Officer Varner hlJmell 118~. . ...,_ --wodndechlmoat. fdeiiUcallY.-In tho Doct' There's no reason to get teed off anymore about" those long walks between the greens at the Costa Me sa Golf and Country Club. SQ<ty·five new elec· ---.~--:--""' • Md , ... ~ ~ . by..bullet frlcnleDI• tric "T,Birds" now stand-by to-bauf.golleri-in-com---d1lrlntl~jpll1.'.llallleJul~ irltb' ~ · fort. The municipal golf course lies behind Fair-berserk bandit poUce fbla!IY killed. . . view State Hospital. · One patrolman with -a bullhorn -repeatedly broadcast warnings and pleas High Court Will Hear Pregnant Nurse's Case From wt.. Servlcel WASHINGTON -:' Susan Struck, the Air Force captain facing dilcharae &om the service for having a baby, was granted a bearing today by the U.S. Supreme Co~. in ber appeal, the 28-year .. ld nurse claimed Air Force regulations un· constitutionally 'aingle out pregnant women for punishment and intrude "into a person's fundamental rl(bt to decide whether to bear a cblld." Boy, 17, Accused In Sexual Plot With House1.vives MEMPHIS, Tenn. (UPI) -A 17-year- old boy bas been accU!ed ol putting obscene notes and voodoo dolls fn the mailboxes of suburban housewives in an attempt to coerce them into sex, police said. Officers said Monday the youth was ar· rested Saturday by a detective who hid in the car of a woman who agreed to act as bait for a police trap. , The court will bear the case early next year. An order last May by Justice William O. ~glas barred the Air Force from discharging Miss Strock until the court decided whether to hear her suit. "" The career officer became pregnant while serving at camranh Bay, Vietnam, early in 1970. Her baby, a girl, was born Dec. 3, 1970, and was given for adoption. At the time, Air Force regulations re- quired discharge in case of pregnancy unless the pregnancy was terminated. Since then, the regulations have been modified to permit a waiver. Capt. St.ruck's request for one was denied in June 1971. Thte appeal said that as a Roman Catholic she was prevented by her religion from securing an abortl<m. Since an abortion or rniscarrlage would have permitted her to remain in the Air Force, the dppeal contended the regula- tions also violated the constitutional right of Catholics of the "free exercise" of their religion. Capt. Struck, a native of Louisville, Ky., is stationed at Minot Air Force Base lo North Dakols. Meanwhile, the court declined to review the: controversial question of whether marijuana may be legally classified as a narcotic drug. Sailboat Manned 1 By Ted Kennedy In No Trouble WOODSHOLE, Mass. (AP) -A sailboat manned by Sen. Edward M. Kennedy (!).Mass.) was located today lo a harbor near here by Co~ Guard apd Secret Service personnel who spent much of Monday night and early today searching for the M-foot vessel. A Coast Guard spokesman 1a!d Ken- nedy and his party were saf~. A Kennedy spokesman said the saillag party bad neV<r been'in any danger and the senator was unaware anyone was searching for him. The Coast Guard apokesmin said the search was begun Moodaf evening wben someone who accompanied Kennedy in a second boat on the salllng trip around Martha's Vineyard bicarii~ .separated from Kennedy 's boat, the cmtqb, and asked for aoslstanc:e in locat!Jis It. • Even while the starch wu in progress, Kennedy doeked the boat and routinely telephoned members of his Washington>\ staff t.o check on senate matters. the Kennedy spoke1D11an said. Kennedy flew to Hyannis Port Monday to go on the overnight sailing trip, something he often does. A spokesman in Kennedy's office in Washington said the senator was sailing to his home al Hyannis Port and would return to Washington today. _ for lbe _ ambush sµspect to surrender to avoid being killed too , whicll would have been probable given the cood.itions. . The searclt area -(rom which ~ evidenUy escaped -was bolmded b7 Barranca Road, Vale:ncla Avenue, CUlve,. Drive and Sand canyon Avenue. I Irvine City Manager William WoUett. who is titular-poll<e dllef, turned Up a! the seacb command post 1D a comi. munlcatlons van operated by Colla ~ Search and Reacue Team LL Bill Savage, Colla Mesa poUCe captains F.d Glaigow and.Bob Green ,..,.=. too, with almost all -' " at the scene thJJ mom.Ina as the of ihe area nearod an end. .. Lawmen from tbe five other poll<e departmenta and sheriff's penoonel ....., being released aft6r 'dayligbl'·wban It ap- peared tb4 bunt llOuld i,, fruitless, . The •IU\htPted m"*' la tbe flrlt .,.. jor crime ol violence in Irvine •Ince Ila. Ill-man police department """"1\e!l ,!rwll ranke.OI Colls 'Mesa o~ went 'li\tq, operaUcm seven wfieks ago. , : Due to p!aDned but Ullbullt boullng,.U... cilY wlib Ollly 30,llOO ·of !ta even~. 430,llOO populillon ...my g<nerates """"' than a doien police log entria per d!ll, The abe of its U square mllel.· however, keeps the officers on veriq. sbllts 'busy jttst patrolling to curt> crlmCI. and provide citizen protection. SF Boy Losf in Wave_, PACIFICA (AP) -A South San Fit. cisco boy was mlsslag and presumOcl drowned after a big wave caught a group of boys in the. sure at Rockaway Beach here, police said. Police identified tie boy as Ronald Richard, 13. i , The youth had a stocking pulled over his bead and canied an unloaded .32 caliber platol, officers said. Capt. Robert Cochran of the Homicide BllN!au sa\d at least. three women receiv· ed obscene and threaiening notes in their mall boxes and two of the women found dolls positioned in an obscene manner. Let Us Put You on The Map:: The youth, not Identified under juvenile Jaws, was charged with attempted rape:, carrying a pistol and <!\ICJrderly conducl ' I ' ' Female Doctor Claims UC Near the entrance, inside our store, is a 9i1nt new map. We are in the process of identifying all of the bomts we have carpeted since 1965 on this map with colorad pins. (A differant color for each yHr.) Resists Social Changes BERKELEY (AP) -A woman doctor, who as.uils shapely nudes In a medical textbook as "Circa 1941 Pollce Gazette pornography," saya that, es a woman, •he bas probably be<n underpaid from .,50,llOO to $200,llOO during her 31).year career u a rtsearcher and teacher. · And although UC Berkeley ii reputed to be frlendly to social change, the doctor added, "Change with respect to women ls abollt as rtmote ·at the Unlvenlty ol C.l1£oml1 u at Harvard. "All you have U> do la look at tbe !lat of tenur«t profenon:" at UC Berkeley lo see there are not enouah women among tbem, aald Dr. E>tell' llomey. Dr. l)amey, ~I-ol ph)'llology and blopity1tcs at Gt!orgttown University, spoke here Monday n1gh_t on .. "SU Hormones and Human Ability." At a naw1 conference beforehand, the doctor renewed her crlUclsm· of IJ. • lustrotlons In "The Anatomical Basts of Medical Practice." She >0mewhat gleeluUy announcod that the book hu be<n l'tcalled by WllllamS and Willtlns publ!abers to correct a number of JclenUfic errors. "It llOllOda Ilk< I'm bappy," she said. "lf they are losing money, 1 am." Speclflcally, Dr. Ramey criticized the use of beauUful, nude, nonm\1$CUlar women to chow ~butlon of muscles. ''You can't aee anything except mnooth 1kin and large btta1t1," lhe &&id. She Aid the !ntroducllon ol thCI book w11 tndicative of ·the tel atUtude of medical oci>ools and medical tutbook authors. She quoted It as ••Yln(, 0 Don 't bother .to ask us for the modell' phone rwmben. Our wives burned our Utile blaclt bOokJ at tho last barbecue." • Close scrutiny will detect some interesting fads: firstly, we have carpete~ homes on virtu· eRy avery street in the arH. Secondly, the pins ere in bunches, indicating WORD-OF-MOUTH advertising. Thirdly, the numbt< of homes we hove carpeted is staggering. II you desire h on• sty, etperiance, •nd recommendeticns from n • i 9 h b o r s we h1v1 >rorked for, ,then Alden's is THE PLACE I • ' ALDEN'S CARPETS e DRAPES 1663 Plantla Ave. COSTA M~SA • 646-4831 HOURS: Mon. Thru Thurs., 9 to 5:30 -FRI ,, 9 to 9 -SAT., 9'30 to 5 -, . I • ' ' ' ,. ' ' '' I ' £ ti ' J) ' fT ttu Ii• ·~ - s OAILV Pn.OT LAGUNA BEACH DENTISTS SUGGEST AVOIDING REFINED FOODS, Pl\YING IN ADVANCE Happy Mouth Over Off ice Entrance Carries an Economic .Mellage to Incoming Patients "I HAVE NO REAL COMMUNICATION WITH OTHER DENTISTS AROUND HERE. l'VE BEEN THERE" Oline Ven Wleren Aui1ts Dr. Jim Rolfe In Atmotphere Th1t O.p1rts From Tradition School Board Backs Irvine Bond Proposal Pulling Teeth With a S111ile Water Quality Board to Meet Campaigners for the Irvine Unified School District's $50 million bond election li,ov. 7 have issued a list of endorsements that includes all five members of the city c;puocil, the Irvine city m'anager and six pl.Anning commissioners. By JACK CHAPPELL Of tfl9 o.nr P'llol Sii" Jim Rolfe grinned from behind his great black bushy beard. "As a general rule, they go out smiling." The 5iign on the door they go ou( reads "James G. Rolfe, DDS," in that con- ventional raised white l e t t e r i n g archtypical of all dentists' offices everywhere. . Inside, nothing is conventional. Dr. Rolfe and partner Dr. Aman Vogel prac- tice dentistry amid colorful patient- painted murals, tapestries and piped-in ,Jn all, the list compiled by bond cllairman Art Anthony and co-workers . has 70 citizen ,sndorsements for School ljoasure K. All school board members are on the Wt. ·The names of Mayor and Mrs. William Fischbach, Councilmen John Burton and Henry Quigley and their wives and C.oun- cilmen E. Ray Quigley and Gabrielle Pryor are on bond support material. • rock that would set Muzak right ba_ck on .its subliminal perception. The Laguna Beach waiting room seems "built around 8 . huge round waterbed and incense hangs heavy in the air. The council as a body took no official action supporting the measure. but Anthony contacted each member in- dividually. The $50 million bond measure, which would carry wij,h it an additional etimated $18 million ini interest over 2.; 1 years, would go to build at least eight ' schools which are needed in the next five )'tars, Anthony bas said. Also offering support for the bond are Itvtne city manager William Woollett and his wife Diane. The only planning commissioner not on the list is Ellen Freund, who is on vaca- tion, and was not in town when Anthony was gathering his names. Commissioners and their wives en- dorsing the measure are Wayne and Margaret Clark, Frank and Helen Hurd, Richard and Diane Kent, Robert and Nina West, Wes and J udy Marx and Harry Shuptrine. Many of the other names on the list reflect Irvine citizens active In city com- mittees, in the University High Parent- Faculty and Fr I ends Organization. homeowners groups and past school district sisues. "It's relaxed. It's just like home rather than the sterile white walls and white uniforms," Dr. Vogel said. Dr. Rolfe, 33, and Dr. Vogel, 28, are serious dentists, make no m istake about that. It's just that they have combined theit: Jiv es and their profession, working what they live and living their work. "I'm a vegetarian and I recommend that. A healthful diet is most important. Burglars Find School F akery LOS ANGELES (AP) -ll the burglars who broke into the International School of Bartending wert: expecting a high time, they were disappointed. The place was full of liquor bottles - containing colored water -and money - "play" money used in training. The disgruntled burglars smashed about 60 bottles and scattered the money over the floor before leaving, in· vestigators reported Monday. Officers said the burglars did escape with about $2,000 worth of office and school supplies. Trabuco Creek Scenic Project Wins Backing I>"' !A project almost eight miles long wjtich would convert the Trabuco Creek c&annel into a sCenlc corridor, a pitrk Witti a man-made lake, and a 5.3-mile ~Id preserve is propased in an Orange cAunty F)ood Qintrol District report. :-rtie scenic corridor would begin at the ui>stream end of the concrete-protected c~annel in San Juan Capistrano and ex- tfnd 4,0C!O feet upstream from the San ~ego Freeway. ·At that point a dam is proposed which ~d aid in flood control but could be civeloped into a recreation lake. ~he ~ park, regional or community, ~d extend along the creekbed another tt<> miles northward. • I Enrollment Holds In Adult School pespite Fee Hike : The recent increase in registration fetS t6 the San Clemente Adult Schoo l Program caused no signUicant effect on 111rollment at the popular night-school I pfOgram. i: Aides for the Capistrano Unified School District said that in aplte of the lncrease. i fees to $S per class, 850 persons recently ftgistered to take the classes of· ftred at San Clemente High School. 1 The enrollment is a n Increase or 40 i\udents over last year's starting total o( ttudents. The fee s apply to students taking most ~asses for no credll (high school student!! r fDd citizenship and English pupils pay no f.pM). • ~ • Since the shift, 1t1id Adult School Prln· a,,_1 Al ValenUne, tKe district has had a $600 lncrellst In revenue. ' • Flood C.ontrol Chief Engineer George Osborne recently outlined the proposed recreation area to the Board of Supervison.. The lower scenic corridor would be tree-lined but detailed plans have not been developed pending determination ol the validity of the damsite. The upstream wild inserve in and along the cliff-lined canyon bottom of dense riparian habitat would extend to O'Neill Park. Above the park, a low dam and debris basin is planned. PresenUy geological studies of the main darn!lte are being carried out con· sistlng of borings and analysis of prop- ertie.S of soils encowitered. The site of the proposed dam and park is now used for sand and gravel ex- traction on a leasehold within lands ex- cluded frum the surrounding Mission Vie- jo agricultural preserve. Because land use along the corridor, park and preserve is beyond the nonnal function of the flood control district, it has been suggested by Osborne that a planning grant might be applied for as the next step. Starkers, He Gulps and Ru.ns OXFORD, England (UPI) -The barman at the Dewdrop pub had already served the young man a pint of beer before other patrons reallied something was wrong. "He's starkers," one shouted as the young marl, Wearing nothing but a pair or black leather· boots, gulped his ~r and ron from the pub. . Twelve (rlend1 had each bet the youth $12 he wotdd not e11ter the pub Mked and order a drink . movie equipment. "It is a rarity for people in dentistry to stress healthful diet in the total body sense. They just say, 'brush your teeth after every meal and don't eat sweets,' " Dr. Rolfe said. Both dentists agreed lhat the biggest part of their job was making people aware of their teeth and bow factors such as diet affect them. They suggest avoiding use of refined and processed foods , as well as shunning canned and frozen foods. Neither Rolfe nor Vogel think much ,of the."produCtiorf une dentistry'~ practiced by some of their fellows. "We spend about twice as much time with each patient as most dentists do," Dr. Vogel said. "It evens out though, because we don't need a four-bedroom oceanfront house or a Cadillac," he said. The culture bolh doctors are shunning may have its own thoughts about them too. they admit. Dr. Rolfe's telephone book yellow page ('ntry pointedly states, ''noo-Member American Dental Assn." . "I have no real communication with other dentists around here. They have nothing to oUer me. I've been there." "I'm sure they h;lve an opinion, but they don't approach me,'' Rolfe said. "Most of my patients· have a life style si mllar to my own," Rolfe said. . "I definitely think there is a segment of the population that is being reached by thi s practice that wouldn't otherwise," Vogel .added. A part of that segment has been responsible for a Cash First policy at the dentists' offices, "like a grocery store," Rolfe said. "It was getting to a point where people Boy Dies in Fall From ·Moving Car A four·year.old Anaheim boy was'killed late Monday night when he fell from 11 car and v;as struck by another vehicle on the San Diego Freeway near SeaJ Beach Boulevard. William Draper, son of Mrs. Pamela Draper of 9121 Cerritos Ave., died of head injuries when run over by a car driven by Margie Ann Steele, 51, of Westminster. The lxiy managed to open the door of the passenger side of the small sports car driven by his mother, the California Highway Patrol reported. A spokesman said today the mother was so distraught that they could not detenni11e exactly how the small child managed to open the car door. ..... .i'w'llil owed us great sums. We would send them a bill arxl they would have left town or the address would be no good," Rolfe said. "It'• unrortunate that it has to be on an economic basis. I wish It could be rendered on a non-economic basis. It would be much more fair. It should be a birthright," Dr. Vogel said. Rolfe has been practicing for four years · while·· Vogel Is ln his ftrSt year. Both are in offices at 2.55 Thalia Street, and lxith men were graduated from University of the Pacific. .. Rolfe sal~ he ii the way he is because be just didn't flt in the "dentist" mold. •'This was the only direction that was open to me," he said. "When I got out of schools, tt seemed like what I wa.s faced with was a Jot of hypocrisy within my profession." Both doctors feel this "departure from the traditional" is a forerunner of a trend. '"I11e overall principle is optimum health care. We use the latest and most up-to<iate techniques," Rolfe said. The departure comes at what they feel is the "depersonalization" of dt'Dtistry. .. Tbe patient Js made to feel like a piece of merch.andl.se. They extract a lit- tle cash from them as . they go out the door," Dr. Vogel sald. In O em?nte Staff members and consultants to the San Diego Area Water Quality Control Board will meet in San ·Clemente early next month to explain details of a major antipollution master plan affecting parts ol the South Orange Coast. The San Clemente meeting is one of two called by the agency in San Diego in advance of f0rn';a1 ~arings in December when the public will be able to volce coocemes ovei'-water quality in the board's jurisdiction. That local session wiU take place Nov. &·at 7:SO p.m. in San Clemente COlUlcil chambers. Representatives of local waste treat- ment agencies and others concerned with water quality Issues have been invited to the informal information session. The formal hearings on the specific regional planning needs and the report preparation will be held in San Diego Dec. 11. The agency regulates water quallty in all of San Diego County and area1 of Southern and coastal Orange Coimty stretching up to Newport Harbor. LINCOLN-CONTINENTAL ••• Mark IV • • • Continental Coupe 1973's ARE NOW HEREl, I --LEASE-- SPECIALIST IN FULL MAINTENANCE LEASING! SEE ONE ... TRY ONE ... BUY ONE ... TODAY! Rome Of The New Car •• , "Golde• r ........ • ' ~ 1\11H1ll!>'t 2121 HARBOR ILVD~ COITA MESA • &401830 Dome 01 The New ear • , , "G•ldete ,._,. .. • • • 4 DAil V PllOT '.'• Nixon, Monsoons Slow Viet Bomhillg ' •• ' I I I ! I Silly, Soggy Season Sets In SAIGON (AP) -President Nixon has reduced 1be bombing of North Vietnam. mainly around ltanoi and Haiphong, dur- ing the critical peace negotiations that have been under way, it was learned to-- duy. The gesture coincides with the onset ol the northeast monsoons over lhe North, v.·hich always reduce American air ac- tivity Urere and divert lhe thrust of the bon1blng campaign to the Ho Chi Minh trail through Laos, where the dry season ""' be1un. 11IE U.S. Command refused to cooJJnn or deny the reported restr\cti0tl$, but the 7th Fleet disclosed without elaboration that three of its four carriers have mov· ed from !he Tunldn Gull off th< coast of North Vietnam into the SOUth China Sea of! the coast of South Vietnam. Other sources outside the U.S. com- \ Mim IN 11lE MOltNING: Th.is is the t time of year when in the early hours, the t · foggy, foggy dew creeps in along this ' ; j ! . i ' i I ' • • best of all possible coasts and casts many folks into a mood best described as the Terri bl es. Everything in the world, they declare, has abruptly turned dull gray. Summer's sun has vanished on a permanent basis. Nothing is left but Dullsville. Do not despair, gentle reader. Why, even the U.S. Weather Service may rescue you. When I fought my way into the office through the mists of the mom· ing today, the weather report defied the outside elements. IT WAS INDICATED that Santa Ana breezes are on the way. These desert air currents are scheduled to blow all the fog to Hawaii, clear your breathing tubes and lift temperatures into the high 80s. Why, even now, as you are reading these pearls, it is possible that you are basking in an Indian summer. But otherwise, you might complain, things are still pretty dull outside. Well, that might be. Oh, you might get a smile out or Mrs. Shelba Marsh or Costa Mesa, who, despite tile gnashing or teeth over at City Hall, is putting together a Children's Zoo at her place on West Bay Avenue. SO FAR. Mrs. Marsh's household pets Include one coyote called Henry, a chim- panzee named Chubber Rex. t-wo rac- coons. seven kittens, and a pair of guinea pigs. Mrs. Marsh aiso says she has a lion and a bobcat on the way to join the other animals. One might suggest Costa Mesa has a zoo, whether they want it or not. Another little news item has indicated that Laguna Beach will not get a piece of the action at the Colosseum in Rome, Italy, despite the best efforts of Art Colony resident Tom Merrick. Merrick dispatched real estate woman Fausta Vitali to Rome to buy the old place but she failed. Laguna will -just have to be satisfied with Irvine Bowl. MEANWHILE, BACK on the £ast Coast. Balboa Island's chronic pad- dleboard expert Larry Capune sloshed along in the Atlantic, propelling his 18- foot board some 2,400 miles from Boston to Miami Beach, thus setting a world's record for getting dishpan hands in salt water. Another world's record fell in Corona del Mar yesterday when two Corona del Mar sophomores. Dan Paulson and Mark Gadarian. played pingi)Ollg for 72 straight hours or thereabouts. ALL GOVERNMENT agencies are going to thank the lads for having done this at the Gadariat) household, thus causing the elder off the place, ooted boatyard owner Arsene • ' B 1 a c k i e ' ' Gadarian, to lose a lot of sleep. Blackie's attention has thus been diverted from the verbal slings and arrows he tosses at government He has somethlng new to gripe about. The youth movement also prevails elsewhere as a couple of young Costa Mesans named Jeff Overstreet and Charlie straub have started pouring a 3,000.pound candle in the shape of an American Flag. They intend to give it to President Nixon for Christmas. MEANWHILE, two goals got trapped on the roof of Woody's Wharf down in Central Newport while at the same time at Art's Landing. Johnny Carson's teevee straight man Ed McMahon fell into the drink while trying to film an epic called, "It's a Wet, Wacky World" which it turn- ed out to be. But 311 this aside, you're probably right. There doesn't seem to be much happening these days . \1,1 Tt lfflltlll Soldier Sought Using loud speakers and a Japanese flag, a Japanese rescue team searches for a \\•ounded World War II straggler on the mountains of Lubang Island Monday. The team completed a 1-2-square mile search without finding the soldier, believed to be Japanese 2nd Lt. Hiroo Onoda, 50. ·whistle Stop!) Shrill Blast Halts Agnew Heckl.er PROVO, Utah (AP) -Vice President Spiro T. Agnew startled a campus au- dience by literally blowing the whistle on a lone dissenter, then got something of a surprise himself while flying on to Utah for campaign appearances today. Agnew was criticizing the defense.-pro'.- posals of Democratic pre s i d en t i a J nominee George McGovern in a speech Monday night at the ColJege of Southern Idaho in Twin Falls. The crowd filling the gymnasium in· eluded one young man who interrupted the speech with periodic heckling. Ignoring the first interruptions. Agnew asserted that McGovern "isn'l suggesting ·a minor reduction in strength," but in- stead "he's talking about cutting our na· tional defense establishment to the bone." The heckler applauded. Then Agnew whipped out a sta~ss steel whistle, blew a shrill peal on it and shouted, "Wrong" The audience cheered. ·As Agnew-flew on to Provo late Mon- day ni&'Jt, a bolt of lightning struck his plane but the pilot, Capt. Bill Reese, said DAILY PILOT DELIVERY SERVICE Oellvtry of the Dally Pllot Is guaranteed Mon1111y.Fr1<111v1 11 you ltO nol ,,,.,.. vovr P'!Por by j;JO p.m., ctll Ind vaur .;opy w!U Ill' broughl ~ l'Ou. f"tll• tre !llltn un1U 1:30 p.m. S11Tutd11y .,,., Sundeyt ti .,.,.,. Ill) ""' rtctl"' your CODY t>Y 9 11.m. &a!urd1y. or I 11.m. Sundlly. aill •nd • COPY Wiii bt brouollt '~ vau. C•lll 11•• 181'.tn untU 1n 1.m. Telephones MOit Or1no-Coun"' Are11t ., ..•• M2-411l ~cr!llW11St Hunllngior. 811111;11 •rod Wntmln1ttr ............ 540-1220 litn C~manlt. C1111l1tr11no &tacll, Son J11111> C11pi11r1no, Dina Po!nt, SOu!l't Ltguna, L•!lllNI Hf9uel .••• tn""1G there was no noticeable damage. The chartered 72.7 carrying the vice president, staff members, Secret Service agents and newsmen was flying through a storm about 'J:1 miles southwest of Salt Lake City when the bolt struck, causing a loud thump. Toda)", Agnew planned a midmo~g speech at the 'Marriott Center at Brigham Young University to help local Republican candidates trailing in the polls. The building at the Mormon school is named for J. Willard Marriott, a Mormon and prominent supporter or President Nixon . After the speech, Agnew was to fly to Salt Lake City for a private mttting with the First Presidency, the ruling body of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter·Day Saints (Mormons). In his Twin Falls speech. Agnew con· demned what he called "an incredible reversal of the traditional American respect for courage and selnessness" by people who praise draft dodgers and deserters. He said that no war is popular "hut in past wars there has been no immediate escape from conscience because opinion leaders have not drummed a cacophony of excuses into the national perception." In the Vietnam war, he said, the respect for the military has been eroded "by a constant cry against the morality of the national leadership because of it's refusal under four presidents to take the easy way out of the war in Vietnam." 'A ttacker' Fron1 Peru RENO, Nev. (AP) -A rpan police say was killed after he opened· fire on tw() patrolmen was identified today as Fernando Torres-Garcia, 24, of Lima, Peru. Torres-Garcia was shot by police in a downtown bus depot Monday about one hour after a man matching his description shot and killed a clerk in an all-night market during a robJ>ery. Cooler Air Circulates Clouds, Storms Scatte red From Rockies to Ea.st Sun, /lloott, Tfde• TU•SOA'"f' 5tcflNf low .• .... fi,1 ,,,f!'I, .t.1 , Coastal Weather HllY 1un1hlnt IOll•f· Ltgllt verl•bl• wll'I01 n11111 tncl mOrnJno holtr• bfcom· lf!O wtUirrlr t «i " knoi. 111 afler-. lodtY find WMMsd•Y· HIQ-h 10!!.ly, 10. Co.11•1 i.mPtr111vr11 r•"Pll trom )1 to 13. lnlalld ltmpe••Nrt• ''""' trom S. IO •4, Wiit<' ltmll'lltl!~~· .... Temperatures tnand coollnned the report, but dedlned 10 go Into details ol the re6trictloo or aay wbethu it was part of some kind of a tacit agreement betweM the Uruted States and North Vietnam. u.s. llglllel'bombens have been averaging lus than 200 strikes against North Vietnam ln the past few days. 1be U.S. Command roported aboul I2jl strikes Monday. ,__ A SPOKESMAN !or the command noled that th< northeast monSOOD1 ue now under way and added that "weather is a PoSSlble factor" ln the reductlon in the strikes from the previous average of 300 O"r mQf'e per day. But even the bombers Dying were stayllig away from the Hanol·Hafphoog industrial complex, or what one Air Foree ~r called "tbe vitals of North Vietnam." The U.S. Command also reported lhat New York Crowds Gree.t President WASffiNGTON (AP) -Pres1debt Nlx- on has drawn the biggest crowds of his campaign as ~ led ~ caravan through New York City suburbs and met cheers peppered with occasional heckling. A few dozen anti-Nixon protesters disrupted his appearance at the night.. time rally capping his ~paign swing Monday, but police quickly hustled them away. Nixon paused to watch and reswn· ed his speech with praise for the officers. ST~~ _POµCE ~iinated that 4251090 spectators lined streets of a dozen normally Reptiblican commuities in Westchester County as Nixon and wife Pat waved from a limot?!ine in a 50-mile Veterans Day motorcade. Another 15,000.. plus were on hand for the rally at the Nai&ti County coliseum in Uniondale. Newsmen who covered both. events said the crowds exceeded the number who flanked the streets on Nixon's last such tour -in Atlanta 11 days ago. Along the parade route, the pro-Nixon ~fl and sign!!_ were counte~ -by a sprinkling of chants and placards sup- porting his Democratic rival, George McGovern. BANDS, BAILOONS, cheerleaders, in- flated pink elephants, and an audience waving thousands of flags distributed in advance greeted the President at the col- iseum. In introducing Nixon, Gov. Nelson A. Rockefeller said the crowd represented "America at its best." Once Nixon began to speak, however, catcalls and derisive chants echoed from one section of the upper balconies, then another. Police quietly led away a hand- ful of hecklers. UPI TtltPllOtf FRIENDLY ADVICE? Nixon,. Supporter GOP-Watergate ln<;ident . Reopened by Nixon Order NEW YORK (AP) -President Nixon h!is ordered a reopening of a White House investigation into the June 17 Watergate in<:ident, CBS News said Mon- day night. The report came from Washington reporter Daniel Schorr on the CBS News 4 Turk Leftists Surrender; 81 H oswges Fr eed ANKARA (AP) -More than 60 weary Turkish airline passengers were flown to Istanbul today after the four hijackers of their jetliner surrendered to Bulgarian authorities in Sofia. The hljacked Boeing 707 remained~ Sofia temporarily, and Turkish Airlines sent a DC9 to bring the passengers back. Bulgaria granted asylum to the four young Turkish leftists who command- eered the 707 jet Sunday and held most of its passengers and crew hostage for 38 hours at the Sofia airport. The Turkish government made no ob- jection to the grant of asylum, but the Bulgarians were expected to bring charges against the hijackers as they did against four others from Turkey earlier this year. The plane was hijacked over Turkey on a domestic flight with 71 passengers and 10 crew members aboard. The pilot and a passenger were slightly wounded in the hijacldng and were let off along with nine other passengers when the plane landed in Sofia. The hijackers also allowed food and gas heaters to be brought ahoard. The hijackers thrcatene<I to blow up the plane and all aboard if lhe Turkish government did not free 13 leftist prls. oners anl make certain reforms. 'l'he Turkish government rejected the demands . The hijackers repartedly told of(lclals Jn Sofia that their goal was to "tear down the Turkish regime and set up a MafJ'ist LenJril1t sysU!m." Their dell\llnds included eliminatl<'ln of "antidemocratic" articles In the Turk· lsb constitution, lifting of a ba.n on strikes In areas under martini law, bet· t.er conditions for peasants. freer condi· tlons In tJnlversilies and broadc11st of thetr derru:inds on tl\C Turkish radio. Eleven Turkish provinces have been under martini law since April 1971 fol· lowing a wave of lerrorism, and more tho.n 2,000 t>ersons have been placed on lrlal .\n mllilary coorls. • I with Walter Cronkite. Schorr said the inquiry was resumed "after President Nbcon was cautioned by acting FBI Director Patrick Gray that the agency had established more serious direct links to the White House than the President might know about." e Oil Cleanup KA YENTA, Ariz. (AP) -Environmen- tal Protection Agency officials at Lake Powell say the situation with an oil spill ( IN SHORT ... ) looks the best it has since the more than 38.000 gallons of oil ran into the San Juan River Oct. 9. An agency spokesman said Monday crews were in control and all the oil would be out or tbe water of the Jake in the Glen Canyon National Recreation Area within "two or three weeks." The spokes man said the cleanup was being slowed because only one truck and one dredge can be used at a time in the remole comer of the lake where the oil- sodden debris is captive. e B1ttk to Work NEW YORK (AP) -REA Express employes returned to work today under a federal court order after a four-Oay na- tionwide strike that curtailed all but emergency REA shipments. U.S. District Court Judge Edward Weinfeld issued· a lo.day, back-to-work order at the company's request Monday night after the striking union rejected REA's latest contract offer. Weinfeld's order was quoted as saying he acted out of "concern for the financial conmtion of the company nnd the effect the strike has on the welfare of the employes and the shipping public.,. e Dr11g Arre st WASHINGTON (UPI\ -Aaron E. Henry, Mlsslssippi NAACP slate presi: dent and state Democratic . party chairman, was arrested here last week on a charge of possessing dangerous drugs. His attorney said they wer~ prcscripUon drugs and the charge will be droppeil. Henry, 50, of Clarksdale, Miss .• was ar- re~tcd early last Wednesday by two vice SCJUad detectives who found a "plastic vial containing numerous plfls" in his posseS!Jk>n, police records i;howed Mon· day. However., bis attorney, Ro11ald Goldfarb, said he ·would p r o. d u c e legttlmitte doctors' prescriptions in court. "We have been given every indication that when the pre.~ripUons a re presented the charge will be dropped." C<1ldfarb said. 8$2 bOmben made no raids In North Vietnam durltur !he it hOun eodlng at noon Tu6day. llut the IOUl'Cff wl» con· llrmed th< res1r1etloM placed oo llgbteJ'. bomberi in the llanol-Halpbong recioo said the abS<nce of tho B52s fl'Olll the northern aides should not be "°l)lidered too slgJ,liticant. For one thlng, tbeir strikes generally have been 'oooeeotrpted in the soulh<m 3ector ol the counlry. However, the ellib~Jet Stralofortresaes Dew more than 100 strikes in South Viet.. l)am, Laos and Cambodia, sources said. About a third ol the raids were "°"' centrated in the Saigoo area, wbert fightlng erupled north of tlie eapilal. ffiGHWAY t.t was cl~ 21 miles north of Saigon, and South Vietnamese rorces backed by bombers were trying to drive North Vietnamese troops from three hamlets in the area. Military sources reported that Viet Cong guerrillas and politlcaJ cadre are stockpiling flags aod loudspeakers f()r a major pl"Qp&ganda effort in the event ot ,. cease-fire. A document captured Oct. 9 in Blnh Dinh Province ordered Viet Cong cadre to "prepare for a critical period of transition and make your presence highly visible." It was signed by the Viet Cong province chief. The document ordered the Communist forces to form special propaganda teams of three to five people in each ham.let to raise Viet Cong flags, pai:dt them on walls and houses and obliterate south Vietnamese flags with whitewash. McGovern Says Nixon Delayed Viet1ia1n Peace By HELEN 11IOMAS NEW YORK (UP f) - George McG-Ovem said today that President Nix· on could have achieved a Vietnam set· ~Iement_ ~n 1969_ on "exactly the same terms" aS iioW#"being ·negottatea,--'bUt~. delayed peace out of fear of right-wing criticism. McGovern predicted that a settlement now, with the election two weeks off, would "destroy Mr. Nixon" at the polls because "1--ean't imagine anybody voting for him after what he has done -over the last four years." THE DEMOCRATIC presidential can- didate, interviewed on the CBS '1Morning ( CAMPA.IGN '72 J !'!ews," said a pre-election settlement would show that Nixon delayed peace in Indochina "purely to avoid criticism from the right wing war hawks" at a cost of 20,000 American lives, "countless tens of thousands" of lives of innocent Asians, and $60 billion in U.S. war funds. -McGovern said he finds "oo indication" that the North Viepwnese "have chang- ed tbeir negot iating.positions one iota" since Nixon took office. Therefore, McGovern said, the President could have achieved an agreement on "exactly the same terms" that are being discussed now by adviser Henry Kissinger and the North Vietnamese. HIS INTERVIEWER said t b a t previously the Communists had refused to permit President Nguyen Van Thieu of South Vietnam to participate in e coali· lion government, but now reportedly have agreed t() his participation. But McGovern dismissed this as "a very minor point," saying the Com- munists all along were willing to accept "elements of the Thieu regime" -if not Thieu himself. McGovern said that Nixon was "afraid" to debate him on television because "he would have to explain to me and the American people what be has gained in , killing another 2 0 1 O O O Americans." He charged that Nixon intensified tM bombing ln Indochina, ordered the in- vasion of Cambodia, and mined North Vietnamese harbors mote to pacffy "his right wing critics" than for any military sig nificance. "THOSE THINGS are fraud ulent," he said. "They haven't changed anything. Thep.te simply killed more people." McGovern, hammering away at alleg:a· tions or poli tical sabotage and spying by GOP campaign officials. also charged to- day that the President "has taken sanctuary in the White House" for fear that "he may be asked to account for the incredible activities that bave been car~ ried on in his name ." Wick s r '{lb I 'Remember. Voting me ou(. will up the unempfcrtment figures: " ·--.· I " " ... ,, ·- ·- .. . " • • DAILY PILOT 5 Dynamite Stolen; Trio llel<l Redlandt Maa Diet • 50 Cars Involved Protesters Grab U.S. Fl_ag In .Freeway Crash SACRAMENTO (AP) -group or about t5 pe!'IMs, Wbat started oul u • flag whlcb ouinwnb<r<d the UN rabillll carttDOOY to hoaor the t the United Nations ended in 1 tw~ 1Uppor1en 8 cettmony · woman tug of war over lhe some said they were .John Colley d ls c ardr.d his prepar~ apeecb fo ccmment on the anH-UW denwnstratlon and heckling. In the name of Ws country who tatern1pt1 meet!ias where people wish to meet and e11:- press their Oplnlona:, they're simply fooling" themselves," Colley shouted above catcnll3 (rom the audleQl:!t. members. UN flag. Birch Society members and ANYO~ ho r ,, h A! the blue and white UN others identified themselves " 1".o;.. w ee.., t at CORONA (AP) ~Floyd P. ed, crushing several cars and banner wu hoisted up a dDwo-as supporters of John G. he'a oonLrlbuting to democracy Myen, 44, of Redlanda has pourina: fuel across the pave-town flagpole, he Ck I er 1 Schmitz, the American Party1-;jjiiijiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii9iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~ bee Id .tlla.. 1. Shouted that it WU 8 "trtason l 1 SAN JOSE (AP1 -Three vouths were in cwit_odv today In the theft of 240 1tlob o/ dynamite. "enouRb, to blow up a couple of good i I 1 e bulldlllg1." Santa Clara WI' • iff'1 investigators said. . , 'I1le trtn Wiii !lt"oaed Mon.- Complete Selection n en\.11~ U the man ment. True-. driver Ray CAllfOlllllA flag." presidential candidate. killed In • sen.. of 'Pileups on Scheldel<et said he bad slowed M "Ou~ oot now," they A John Blrcil Society float the fog-bound R l v e r 1 l d e down, but couldn't stop fast chanted, urging the United leU over from a Monday ( BRIEFS .,) Freeway. About 25 persons enough. States to quit the INematlonal morning Veterans o a y were injured. organlr.ation. ... parade was pulled to a spot BALOW.IN The highway patrol said E w THE QIANT came from 8 .., near the Dagpost. A mess.a~ PIANOS and ORGAN~ -day by Dan Rohrig, catttaktr and e<>-owner of the Santa Clara Quicksilver Co. u they drove away from the• South San JO.. mine, a llhtrlll'• spokesman said'. about r;o vehicles were In· scape arrant on the float urged the United 'f'Olved Monday mOrning in States to leave the UN. three chain colllsJons when fog "Were it not for the ract reduced visibility to • few • t p Olice Seek that this mob assembled to .n- reet. A patrol spokesman said s b • G • u terrupt this meeting rerninds debris 00 t.be rreeway tn-u JeC*"' .,Ve p one so much or the rise c.r dk:altd tbere had been several ~ " Murderer Hitler we could laugh lhem other unrepart.ed accidents. o!f," said Nathan iel COlley, a ff.or th• Vole• DI laldwhil , , • lllld ,... ... .._ Ille dltt·-· , "HOMl OI JHf IAUIW/N MUSIC" LAr I OnlJ AlllhoNed Ba.ldwin De.ler In On.pi Co1111t7 WOODWORTH , . . Pl.I.MO AMO OllGAM SALfS • Gtca~-"-S __ _. :Ibe collisions ocaured-tn A leading Sacramento c Iv I 1 .._.. a-. the 11me place where. 711 MENLO PARK (AP) -A Thomas Nolan. They were I<> RIVERSIDE (AP) -rights atl<>mey who was tbe 515 NOlllll MAIN, WITA ANA • 547s5151 CAMPO (AP) -Seven trip-vehicles crashed into one former coo\'lct and t be be arraigned today j n ·search ls continuing for the ~s~pe~ak~e~r~a~t ~th~e~fl~ag~ra~is~ln~g~. ~.:::::::::::::::::::: HAMS :i ~i: ::1: ~ t= :i~. !~'~ali~ yeara daughter of a St a ri Jo rd Redwood ctt1'Municipal Court killer of a North Carolin.a Ii rampage at tbe camp Marino University prole110r, 10t1ght on federal and San Bernardino poycbolOfllsl found bound, gag. honorten.sl Cllllldamp here, cautbolinllties~x-.WITNESSF3 said Myen by mte-and f·e de r a J County w~antl ch a r gin g ~~ ioh~~ ~ ve age, au r car blew up when it was ram-· authOrUie:t ln a two-week them with murder a n d here authortUes said. said / med by,two olher vehicles. Six abu Iha uni wf 1 Oigb 'd ' The reacue Monday night """'°"" ...,. bolpltalhed Wilh ma nl t extended from a u t I<> avo1 p-The fully clothed body of ., • , So Goecl It Will from the c 1 m p ' 1 ad-broken bones and internal in-California to Texas, tiave sur-ecution. Benjlimln S. Gantt, 55, a ministration buildlnJ was jurleo. rendered bere to warrants 'llleyweretobetransported psynsboch~~isNt c from Haunt You 'Til It's G-" llUlde by more than IS she!' Highway patrol spok-n chor!lng them .In a bloody to San Bernardino by We<f. Cree '"""'" · ., wa' ilrs deputies and a bellcopler 11ld Myers died In the first ol prison escape during which an ne!day for a reamdgnment on ~~Y by1~! = room Su!> e Roady to Seno wlltl Hooey '• Spice Gian dispatched to lhe oceoe, of· the pileupt1, when about 40 unarmed guard was a1ato. tbe ..... _ h · 1 e ._ For loatl.. No l'ro--ficlals said. cars crashed into e8ch other. Both pleaded .lmoeent in the ....-..6es, au t or t i es 'Ibe autopsy indicated the .... r- e-sc!Jaaltz l'clfc Sheriff'• deputies aald !of on eacapMllling, and friends aald reported. probable C811Sjl of ~ealh was • 1 .. ......., a. ..... and wi ... LOS '"G-~· AP ) the ~-~ ..... __ they worried about the · • aspbyxlatlon. officers said. e ~ witlo Saodwldooa To Go n..i-. .c.l.d:AJ ( ~y; waa w pa~. 80 pair s PRISON guard Jesus GantJ' feet and ankles were John Schmitz, American Party· vehicles -. calJlbt ln low llllety. ed led hind • Al Typos of Catlring ! presldenUal. candidate, says vtsiblllty when .they were Andrea Holman, 18. and Sanchez, 14, was kill and his bound, his bands t be J70t I. c.. ...,._.,, c.... def M• -67J:"tooo the United States is misMndl-travello&' rapidly. Benton Doug!a, Burt, 30, sur--~rt George J. Filf.gerald,, his back with sheet strips and '•lad! w""" s c-... ,_._ ing the Indochina war and In the tecond accident, a re1l4ered Monday to FBI was wouOOed during the am--:. a pleceot electrtt-cord-and-his 1122: L ~. A.1•1111 'JJ.-J.ftl misdirecting ita ant l d r u g1 'iig;;;aa~lnllllpo~~rr~ll)lc~ti!o!ijv~.ertufn.~~-·~g~en;;tl~lnii!the~ office><o~f~at~torn~e~yl~bu~sl>e!c~~a~pe;:.~-----m~ou'.'.:lh:.w'."'a~s:,:ta"!ped~,_l'JIO~li~·ce~11'."id'.:.·~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ~ eHorta. . -It ii! da~ a~ ~A'.'°"U:'::: ~.': PRIME R·l SUBDIVISION LAND--°'tlllf• County conitr=•n 4.6 Acres said, 11We're furnishing the -··· for staying In that ,... Establllhod High Quotlty Huntington Beach Aroo ,.__ -· BushirCl/Hamlllon $tr-to the North Vietnamese white -1• we tt<lld our troops to R Ill> Cf ... lo llMC~ -sa-is -Shops ~ ... i=.:~th':ffurnlshe<t SEALED BID SALE WE calllALLY INVITE YOU lOTHE the sinews of war to both sides · $130,000 Minimum . . . can't be taken-very· ~~Bulli!On liifo.'Iticl. So"tl~rr'"' $10-aerionsly in either pPce or war." Ph.Olp~. llol!-rt Newport Booch C:ity tfall 3300 N.~rt Blvd. :::_<7141 · 673s2110, oxt. 205 Miss .Davis To Support GI .on Trial SAN FRANCISCO (AP) - Black acilvist Angela Davia says she will tour the eotintry dnunming up support for Pvt. Billy llejln Smith, a black GI now being eourt-martlaled On charges of murdering two Anny officers in Vietnam with a fragmentation grenade. Miss Davis told a DeWI cm- ,......,. here Monday the cue against Smith "b obviOUJly a frameup'' and said his cue was developed "to terrori7.e Gls" who oppose the war. She aald she would tour campuses and communities acroa the country, encourag- ing demonstratiolls and raising money for Smith's defense, but declined to provide further de. tails or discuss other matters. Smith, from the Watts area ol Los An(eleo, baa peladed II> nocent to charges of murder-ing two officers at Bien Hoa Air Base near Saigon. His court·martlal at Ft. Ord is the first to be held In the Uniltd States on "fragging" charges. COSTA MES--A·- GRAtJ D OPENING Y2 OFF -ON All • • • ca·rpets and furniture cleaned WALL 11 ,o · ·• ·WALL CARPET CLEANING * NEW CARPET SHOWROOM * CUSTOM INSTALLATIONS & REPAIRS * FINE UPHOLSTERY CLEANING * COMMERCIAL & INSURANCE WORK I 714 I 645°3708 • King's Carpet Co • 225 W. Wlloon St. Costa Mota, Coll!. 92626 4th Semi-Annual DOG SHOW Saturday·· October 28 . di See beautiful dogs, ddoraole ogs, grand dogs, elega'nt dogs, cute dogs and smart dogs! Judging starts at 10 an;i •• Enter your dog now (purebreds only) ·at Russo•s·wonderful World of Pets! . -"""-....... l .. ""'""" ., • ...,_ , ~ r.......,.n....,. FASHION Now the111'1 a.Keyttone Savings and Lo8n 111adv to serve a whole new Bl8a-the Allport. Center. · This Is our olflclal Grand-Opening time- now right thiough till November 24th. So . Ile li11M to come by and join us for the celebration. Free gifts for Mother Nature. Keystone has a deep Interest In ecology. That's why everyone who comes by our new branch at Airport Center can tBke home a unique Ire• g11t, A young seedling nee ready for planting 'wherever you choose · ... plus a free booklet with corn· plete planting instructions. Please pay us a visit. We have enough trees for everybody (Including a supply at our Weslmln•!et and Anaheim oWces). At the same time well be continuing our tree planting program In Orange County. When you come 1it we11 atrange to have a 2·vear'>!d tree planted In your name, at- our exp911se, by the Division of Forestry, Every single tree helps Orange County. Well give you a mep showing Where your tree Is being planted plus our special c:ertlllc:ete oHhanks .. • -o-·•o1 and Loan ort Center. something for the . whole family. Keystone has planned a big housewarrn· 1ng. We've put together a number ·of surprises for you. There'll be displays, literature and items to make the ttme y~ spend at Keystone really worthwhile. A few words to savers. Keystone gives you the highest Interest possible on every dollar you deposit at Airport Center. The only question ts how much Interest do you want and for how long . Open a regular passbook accmmt and get 5°10 compounded dail\/ from the day your funds are deposited to the date Withdrawn, Deposit 11000 or more at Kevstone and receive 5•/4% on 1·2 year deposits. Put In at least SSOOO for 2 years or more and your yield Is 6'1o compounded dally. All funds Insured to $20,000. Casa Keystone. If you like authentic Spanish decor.yon11 like the way our tnterlor decorator has handled. our new Airport Center branch. It's an ertlstlc delight. Most items we111 carelully selected in Mexico and coonll- nated. for your pleasure and comfort. New convenience at the airport • Drive right In oll MacArthur Boulevtml. We'1111>etween campus and Jamboree on the north side. There's plenty ol parklD& and an easy dr!V&!n facility. Of course you can. cleposit or wltlidrtnr !IV mall and IN• pay the postage. We ollar manv free services youll like: safe de- posit bo xe s, notary service, traveler's checks, use of our· spacious community room. And many other services exclu, slvely for you. We're open· for business now. see uo Monday through Thunday .trom 9:00 a.rn. to 4:00 p.rn. and Fridays 10:00 a.m. to 6:00 p.m. Manager Jbn Clark and hls stall wlll be waiting to show you around. cOme and get your free tree. KEYSTONE SAVINGS • lonal4 1'. CUpori, Qlalll!IA!l o! Ille llolr4, DokillN Ollcot WHtt II ' ~ 14011 -.:11 ll'fll. mxt IO Ha1'1111y ID!l. l'bODtl mMI, ~ .... ·-.. ............................ siiiuAiRitf.. .... .-,~-!'!!-1!-.... ,;,;..1 •e" I 0111o1o MS N. Euc1J4. Oppooll• ~loNIWO!I'" l'bot!I 77W..a...Alljal lllelK1 GO! MaCAlllW? llML l'bODtl D$OH7 • r • I . . -• ' . •'" ' • DAD.Y PROT EDITORIAL PAGE NO· on Proposition 21 ' Proposition · 21, the Studenl School Asslgnmenl In· initiative on the Nov. 7 ballot ls a bad one from bolh le· gal and moral standpoinls. Although proponents. seek to play on emotional op- position to busing of school children to achieve ethni<: balance, the measure's real purpose is to 1nake any and all desegregallon impossible. Dr. ·Ralph W. J-lornbeck, widely respected former superintendent of the Pasadena Unified School District, now a business executive, describes Prop. 21 in these words: "It would be destructive lo the efforls of many local school districts to implement reasonable' and sensible plans of integration, plans which could go a long w~y towards e!minating. the inequalities now prevalent ln California education." Dr. Hornbeck's experience in Pasadena convinced him that integrated edu cation was a n.ecessary r~ute to high quality education. Of that experience he said: "We proved that significant academic results can be achieved as reflected in our achievement test scores fol· lowing the second year of complete de~gregation. Last year, after our first year of desegregation, we managed to stem the decline in average achievement test scores which bad been going on for seven years. In May, 1972, our tests recorded the first consist.ant increase in those scores in the last eight years." cd rears and prejudices which , as Dr. Hornbeck bas said, distort their entire view of society. From such beginnings come Ute raci<;t turmoil1 rooted in ignorance, th at bas so torn the nation in recen't years. Proposilion 21, by' repeating the Bagley Act aimed at relieving racial imbalance -not necessarily by bus· ing -would Ue lhe hands of school boards and perpet· uate the dual public school system which, because if its inequalities, was ruled unconstitutional by both the U.S. and Californ ia Supreme Courts. It would not only bar transportation for desegrega· lion (only 2 to 3 percent of all school busing is for de. segregation), it would prohi.bit school pairing, develop- ment of educational parks and complexes, redrawing of sc hool zone boundaries, and even walking for the purpose of integrating. , . The existing Bagley Act provides a \Vay of avoiding court.ordered busing by encouraging local di stricts to develop their own plans for using other methods to cope with segregation. The policy of lhe Legislature, as em bodied ln the Bagley Act pasSed in 1971 and signed by Governor Reagan, is that racial and ethnic imbalances in pupil en· rollment shall be prevented and eliminated. It reAuires local districts to take note of racial imbalance and to develop plans to alleviate it. • The state Legislative Counsel's opinion, based on the U.S. Supreme Court's ruling on a statute similar to Prop. 21, is that the measure is unconstitutional. )) Without reasonable integration in the schools, the nation can never achieve real communication among all ·or its people. lntegration•spares both majority and. minortty children the damage that nows fro~ rac1al is<r lation. In such isolation, children grow up with unfound· The DAILY PILOT recommends and urges a NO vote on Prop 21. 'LEJ'S ·Jl:IST-SAY-WE~f--SOTH 60T PULL." Astrology: A 'Skeptical' Believer' ~YDNEY J.HARRI~ ", The enormous revival (or Dear Gloomy ·G us Joy must have reigned uncontained • ·throughout the Missouri Synod over Ol' Mizzou's humlliatioo of Notre ·~. Dame last Saturday. -H.J.B.· 'nltt tMNn rlfl.cts .......... ........ .., -""' .,.. of "" _,..,.,, s.... .,_ ,,. ,....... "' ...,,,, Ow. ~ Jllilol. recrudescence, if you will) of interest in astrology the last few years has promp- ted many readers to write to me uklhg why I have not commented on the subject and whether l am a skeptic: or a true believer. 1 .., ,, The """" ( have not -la "1ale4 Jo lhe l~e or the peraon, and thal that I have nothing of value to·contrltute , "e'ach oCus is the result of a coqfluence Of to the discussion, for I am a ''BktJit;lcaI iacton:-from the . genetic to the eoS- believer," hanging loose on botb sides of mologtcal, that we have scarcely begun the questioo. .._ to comprehend. I AM A BEUEVER in lhat, along with At tbe same time, 1 find it vulgar and Hamlet, I am convinced that tliere are repellllaf. that so many quacks and o~ more thinp in beav-portuntats have taken advantage of this en and earth than uncharted realpt, and, instead of ap- are dreamt of in proaching it with scientific delicacy or Horatio's (or any· spiritual reverence, have perverted it fo cme's) pbilOiSOphy. gain or notoriety or chea nsa- 1 am at the same tionallsm. t 1 me a skeptic, bocauae I am equally convinced that air- trology, as under· stood and practiced today, is as far lrom. the essential truth of the matter as ancient astrology was tram , Renaissance astronomy. o r medieval alchemy was from modern cbemistry. SOME It YEARS ago, J .B.S. Haldane, the distinguished British scientist re- marked that "My sw:picion is thai the \llllVerse ii not ooly queerer than we sup- PQSe, but queerer than we can suppose." AJ I grow older, and learn more, 1 in. tnasingly agree with this remark: such matters as precognition and ESP - laughed out of scientific court a gen~ra. lion ago -now seem not only plausible but probable. I AM SURE THAT, in some still· ob8cure way, the life of the electron is IF ASTROLOGY, in its ult' ate form, should turn out to have any erit, surely it is not for the vain and pet purpose of advising us of the most propitious day to bet on the horses, or waining us of that CQQjunction of planets when we should beware of meellng a dark stranger. It is thli ignorant and melodramatic pan· dering to our hopes:, fears, and general credulity that · formerly put astrology in such bad odor. IF A SCIENCE, it should oot pretend to know more than it does, an atUtude which is fatal to the scientific enterprise: if a "spiritual" discipline (whatever that may mean ), it should not traffic in such mundane matters as investments aod carnal encounters. As commonly prac· ticed today, astrology offers the worst of both worlds -bogus science and shallow philosophy -and we can thank our lucky stars if it is not taken too seriously before it becomes worthy ot seriousness. 'The Authentic Person' Sydney J. HarrlJ doe> not wrilt to fill ( J .Mee, as any reader of his column in the DAILY PILOT Is well aware . ll Is ob-THE BOO~ trlous that each column is written to er-' _ ~ prtS.1 a considered. thought. :Now. Jn "The Authentic Person, Deal·, modem man, and 'coping' seems to me a ing with Dilemma," (Argus c.ozn.. . more realistic and realizable goal Ulan munications. paperback, ft.95} Mr. Har-'sOtvin&'·" til.tells us in' the "'J)~ace that what he is Included ln the 140-some pages is a atteinpUDg to do he is "to stimulate m tion explaining a number of key terms ljiought about the w we think." And ., used In the text and a subotantlal tbls ft does as Harris examines paradox. selected bibliography, both Of con· polarity and per80l1alilm In hlJ C<lll· siderable help and Interest to the rtadcr. slderc:noo of::. life and dilemmas of 1IAJUUS DOES NOT hesitate to JGlb 1111)' • cMUeoce stock B111Wen tbal have beeo IL\RRl8 DRAWS on a vast pet90llal part of tradlllon, bul nol to 1ubs\lluts store of hlltorlcal, phll090plilc;il and other stock answen. po)'dlologl<al insighl in preparing tbls The boot II, as llalT!I lilmself uys, ltlmulallog and provocative IWll'k. In the "M exerolle In lbinklng about lblnklr)&." ptefaco lo "The AutbenUc Pt~", Har-A -Olllllll oaly in slu. One to be ..ad, ril wrlttt Iba! In his view "paradox, re-read, tonSidertd. It Is quilt deflnllaly- polarily and penooalilm '"' lbe keys to tbought-prowltlng. ooptng with many of the dllem1t111 or Marianne R. Ba ... .... B11 George • • o.ar George: · ~Y h111bancl drinks from dawn lo dark, won't hbld a sttady job, runs otoond with a buacb of bllma or hlnp •!OUl>d a saloon. lllllk .. pelNI 11 th! waltrelSet, atagger1 home at au hours. Sing• at three o'clock In lbe morning a u d generally malt., a fool of lilmaelf, I Whal 11 WRONG with a man Uke thi s? • FURIOUS Dear Furlour: A1thoo1b l am • bit hesltant to ofter a definite dlagoosi1 on the ba>l1 of lbe tket<hy Information you have !uml1hed to me. l would venttlr! thia reply : He'• drunk. GOP Sees Nation as -Tax. Weary- CongreSS Gives ~ix!lll _Need·ed _ls~ue WASHINGTON -Presi dent Nixon now has his issue with the Democraticall}'o controlled 92ad Congress to exploit in tht closing two weeks of the presidentia l campaign. He can and no doubt will blame Congress for forcing a tax increase next year ~Y overriding his vetoes ,on big spending ana refus- ing to accept a $250 billion spenclJng cell· Ing. ' .l'r~, lj)•,!!!1 has a good chance r of SU!llafJ\l!!l, . ~ " idea ovv Uii:-~t two weeks that a cease-fire in 'Viftlam Js immiaent. - TOGETHER THESE circumstances have given:..,~·Presidimi all the rub: munition he' toeld posll:bly desire in the final drive to win-a landslide victory and carry in a RepublicaJH:Ontrolled Congress. All the advantages are on his side. A big lead in the public opinion polls. Sustafiled hope of a breakthrough to peace. An outstanding reason for turn- ing out the Democratic Congress, as weU as defeating the Democratic presidential nominee. ,--- 0rcHARD WILSO~ If Ntxon cannot convert these unusuaU'y favorable conditions. into a ·whopping victory,jt won't be for lack of means. Few incumbent presidents have had .JUCb a well orchestrated score for victory. , YET THE COMMONLY accepted outlook is that while Ni.Jon may win big 111 the presidential election·, he will not sweep in a Republican Coogtess. The time Is perhap!J lo%-short to gel across .th€ full impad,'of 1conii;eS1ioaal refusal to put the braJtes·oo spending. But N~on has al !,east shilled \be. blime {or th<:!l!Oge defil'lts hie adminjStratloo · bas rua:..Up to the Derhocratie Congre!s: -r Republicans supporled the $24.6 bil1ion bill to clean up the nation's waterways which Nixon vetoed as in· flationary and probably requiring a tax increase. This will dissipate some of the force of his arguments against a spendthrift Congress. BUT HE CAN MAKE the issue just the same that a tax weary nation can fmd no relief with Democrats who Won't accept any presidentiaJ limit on spending. This same Congress could not stomach Nixon's demand for arbitrary power to cut appropriaUons to fit under a $250 billion spending Ceiling. There are ample reasons to think that Nixon did not ex· pect Congress to agree to this U& precedented presidential authority. But he reasoned rightly that its refusal to do so would dramatize the issue, and shift him from the defensive to the attack ln lbe closing days of \be campaign when he thinks •oters finally make up their mlnds. , Gf:)'t)l'iG.Qff .$ de!WiVit cau~ by Deini>Cfa'\lc--t . ·pressure on t ti ~ Watergate affair, political espionage and big business fav<iritisJll, is important to ' Nixon. He likes tc>· campaign on the at'. (ack, 'and feels so wicomfortable on the defensive that,be give5 short shrift to an issue the Democrats consider one of their best. On the primary issue of Vietnam, it is now difficult to see how Nixon can lose the momentum created by the com· plicated maneuvers which have been going forward for three months on the conditions of peace. '111E WOK.ST THAT could bappen would be a 'final bloW·up which would give Nixon the opportunity to explain in detail the closely held secrets of the KiSsinger missions to Paris and Saigon which have inspired speculaLion that a preliminary agreement is imminent . He would be able to present a convincing case, which no one would be able con- vincingly to refute, on how he went the last mile' to achieve a settlement Nor would it be out Of character for Nlxon to spring some dramatic surprise, pos.!ibly involv~ President Thieu of South Viet- nam, to reinfo~ Lhe generosity and good fattb qf ~ . .1tttempt to get a cease- fire or-~t1ement. ' ;;;,. .t: ' · 111E~ll.frY, or appearance of a possibility. ll'h\f in fact carry througb to the eve of the eleciion, in which case many ,Y!)lers would be unwilling to sus- pend what looked like a good !bing. All these circumstances give Nixon the bes1 conditions he could hope for. Moreover. there has been no sharp m. crease in unemployment which has previously dogged Nixon in prefildential elections. Most analysts agree on an op- timistic economic outlook. So, if Nixon doesn't win big, be will· have no one to blame but bim..self. Fulbright Receives a Hard Spanking WASlflNGroN -If Sen. J. William Fulbright, chairman of the prestigious Foreign Relations Committee, does go through with those hints he has been dropping about retiring, it will be readily understandable. For the testy, contentious 67·year"ld Arkansan, serving hjs fifth tenn, the past session was ooe long series of frustra· lions and rebuffs -culminating with a blistering verbal spanking administered by members of lhe House Foreign Af· fairs C:Ommittee venting long·held feel· ings of resentment and annoyance. That the harsh cuffing took place in the privacy o( a House-Senate conference committ~e and was not publicized did not blunt its sting. FULBRIGHT WAS told ofr in unspar· ing terms. He was left with no doubt that as far as lhe bipar- tisan leaders ol the H o u s e committee were conCerned, they were thoroughly fed up with bbn and his endless machinating lo gain a domineer+ lng voice in the f()r· mulation and run· nlng of foreign pol~ icy. 1;hat's the Inside re:asoq for tbe col· lapse Of the conference negotiations, and Gongrets's failure to pass a foreign military aid budget authoriiatJoo bill. To avert a complete halt of such aid, lncludin' more than !800 million In so-called • aeeurity supporting assistance" for Jordan, Israel, South Vietnam and a few other U.S. allies, a stop.gap resolution was rushed through at the last minute to maintaln a flow of funds at the eiilling budget level ·· • THIS MAKESlllF'I' wlll last unlil Feb. 28 of next year, by which tlme presumobl)'' some kind of an un· derstanding will be worked out ln the new Congress. ... Ind ignant House committee ~ c:on~der th!J patchwork expCdlenl highly , un.utlsfactory and ph1.ce the blame tquattly oa l'ulbrlghl and biJ oommitle< -and that's wllil they Irately told him in the closed-door blow-up. 'J'he explosive meeting was the eleventh the conferees of the House and Senate foreign affairs committees had held over a period of some three months in an effort to iron out differences on foreign military aid. • The stymying issue was not tbe amount of money in the two authorizing bills - $2.03 billion in the House measure; $1.72 billion by the Senate. WWLE THIS difference was not resolved, what the protracted private deliberations snagged on were several Senate amendments considerably in· creasing its jurisdicti~ and control over treaty making. Nominally, these provisions were sponaortd by Sen. Clifford Case, R.·N.J .. ultra-dove and close ally of F.ulbrlght, who led the fight for them in the con- ference. • As originally passed by the Senate, this Increased authority was confined solely to the Senate -with the House ten com· pletely out In the cold. Jn the very flrsl meetings, the House conferees made short shrill of thal. House Foreign Affairs Chainnan Thomas Morgan, D.·Pa., flatly iald the Senate amendment waa unacceptable - and that was that. "WHAT THIS amounts to,v said Morgan, a practicing pbyslc1an in private life, "is that a small bloc of the Senate, not more than ore.third of its members would be dictatina the foreign policy of ~ United States. 1bat's the real , stgnWcance of lhls amendment. n.1, ls no simple scheme. Its nature and scope is very fat-reaching. "We are not goiq to stand for it, and you might Just as well forget It. As far as the House conferees are concerned.., we are not golng to consider It any further. Th8t's all there Is to it." At the Ufth conference meeting, Fulbrig ht finally backed down -to the extent of offering to include tbe House in ' ' wielding the increased foreign policy detenninlng aulhor.lty~ But that belated maneuver got nowhere. BY THAT TIME the House conferees had an authoritative legal opinion brand· ing the Senate amendment as of highly questionable constitutionality. The analysis painted out ~bat the Coostitution vests foreign policy and treaty making in the hands of the Chief Executive, and Congress is barred from intruding in that sphere which, it was held, the Senate amendment was designed to do. The scorching blow-up occurred at the eleventh meetiog when lhe Fulbright-led Senate conferees retused to jwik ~ "un- constitutional" amendment. This time, Rep. Clemenl Zablockl, D.· Wis., second--ranking Ito use com- mitteeman, t.eroed in on Fulbright -to the unmistakable delight of the other House conferees -Reps. Wayne Hays, D.-0., Dante Fascell. D.-Fla., WllliiyD Mailliard, R.-callf .. Peter Frelinghuysen, R.-N.J. "WE ARE GETTING sick and u .. d coming to these niietings and getting nowhere," said Zablocki. ~'Neither reason nor anything else ~ to mate any Im· pact on you people. ,You dogmatically stand pat as if all right and intelligence Is on your side, and you refuse to com- promise or give any gnnmd. "Our patience i! exhausted and we are nol gotna to sland !or any more of this UJ\Yleldlng stubbornness and h I g h · handedneu. We are bu!)' and have a lot of things oo our bands aod don't intend to lool around any longtr. Your lnsfsteace oo this amend-t ii not on 1 y UM?a90llable but probably lllegal. W,e are agalnlt lt and we're not going to give an Inch. Either it ls dropped or we are through." "l fully concur in that," quietly remarked Rep. MaillJard, rank i·n g Repcblican on the House padel. F\JUIRJGllT LISTENED to \ho tongue lashing in silence. Then as the mcetina was about to close, he spoke up, "We will.assume full .-..poa1lbility !or sponaor1ng a oonllnuing resolutllon tto temporarily conUnue foreign military aid at the present btJda:et level)." That set off a concluding withering bJast from Hou.se Chairman Morgan: "What do you mean ybu will assume . that responsibility? How do you get that way? Don't you know that con- stitutionally it is the House's prerogative to assume that responsibility. Under the Constitution, all appropriating legislation originates in the House and not the Senate. If there is going to be a con· .Jinuing resolution, it will originate in the House and not in the Senate." A TENSE SILENCE ensued -broken by a parting shot by Morgan : "You want to keep in mind, Senator. that there are two branches of CongreM -the House and the Senate. You do a lot of talking about the executive branch of the government trying to whittle away the power of Congress. It seems to me you are guilty of the very same thing - of infringing on the authority and prerogatives of the House. You're w~ting your time. You can't get away with It." If Fulbright, up for reelection in 1974, does go through With his hints of retiring, be w;oo't be missed by most of his col· leagues. OIANOI COAST ' DAILY PILOl Robtrt N. Wted, Publi.ahcr Thoma.I Kc:111uil, Editor Albc:tt W. Botti EdilOTial Pcigt Editor The editorial pe.Jtc of the Dall)' Pilot wccka 10 Inform •nd atlmu· hate! readcn by p~tntlng tbl!I newapapc1 .. 1 oplnlol\ll And corn-montary t>n loPIO nt lnler~t and •la:nlfi~nce, by provldJng a forum tor the exprtulon of our readers' r.:1plnlot11, and by prHenting the dlvt1ne vlowpolntt of ln(ol"!TI~ ob- l ef'WD and 1pukC1rn<'n "" topiCI ot lhi! day, Tuesday, Oc!Dber-24, 11172 . I ' ' • , '-'-Small Talk'' • ' • n'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 . W~rning, The Surgeon General Has Determined THat Cigarette Smoking Is Dangerous to Your Health. • ... .. • KING: 21 mg."laf,14 mg. nicotine. BO~ 20 mg."taf, 13 mg. nicotine. av. per cigarttta. FTC RlpoltAUG.'72. ' ' . • • ' ' ' ' -. ' ·--: -· . . . , . . :- •, • ' • .. • 1 I ' I ' ' ' ' ' I I i I I l ' l ~- r I I f OAlLV PILOT QUEENIE 8 Phil lnterland" ""The guy next door' image 11·waated on me. The guy next door to mo 11 a creep." L. ltf. BOJd Milk Does Better In Black Cartons It was none other than that apert Gov. Roriald Reagan Who sal d: "W'fien you-lJirt\frn-ttre--mosrtmerrbtondts,-, -~----~~~= they seem to glow." No blonde aboold dlacount II'< oblerva- tion as mere flattery. Governor Reaaail sarely meant IL He was the fellow, you may fecall, wbo'a couple.fll decades ago was named by ~r.n Califarnla-DeWIPIPtf' women ••the -,...,_man !n Ho~. ANY ClllLO that biuo'b. before· the qe ol • It oald lo be a rl1'UJ . . . B{WNIEIT_ol tht ... ti .11 the IQulr- rel -. • . IP YOO dip thal. llalHnto . -l!Mll64-pan!ftn-be!onr youcdrlve-11 Into a plam wall, the pluler won't _ crumble, remember that . . • ODDS • ".° ,i THAT the baby will be a boy nm 21 · '6J In '1 ... A VEl\AGE American moves · 14 U-In hit Ule. Average Brtlllher, eight times. Aver•ae J1peoe1 five ti.mu. MILK-MllJr. ougbt lo be maruted In blacl: cmitalnen. That's what the sci...,. boy1 In HolW>d contend. DaylJCht drains about 90 per<enl ol the vitamin C In milk In ooe hour, they say. In their -!y Invented bla<k carlonl, only about 10 pen:ont ol the -C Ii loot In an hour, they claim. ONE MORE malrJmollW llCbolar :cJtJma bit lllellme studies indica te 71 pwc:ent of all married people oootem- plat. divor<e at some point In lllelt Uvea. No doubt. Pretty dangerous, such cont.tmpl.ltkn OUr Love and War man frowns upon il You lmow ·whal l{llllc Grabam Aid: "Any old boy who daydrttma about dl..,..·11 DOI mucb amart· er than the one-armed feDow who feed.a the bear1." ' QUERIES-Q. "Only dol that doean't bark la Ille Bu- enji, right?' A. Eskimo do1 doean'I bark, either. Howia and yelps, though. Q. "AMONG Orthodox Jews, can an uncle marry bis niece?" A. No, but an aunt can m arry her nephew . THAT thing called chronic anxiety is said to be com- mon among editors. More so than among any other group of professionals. Such be the quoted claims of Dr. Ray. mond Cattell of the University of lllinois. Anxiety, says he, is "a disorganizing factor." h-1ight keep this in mind. If the front page looks peculiar oc:Cuionally, make allow- ances. i 11\JN!lllJNE -Prosumab!y the normaJJy s\mny weather eZJ>lalnl why ICbool kids 1n the Deep Sooth !oat Ital class· room .itme eooh year lban younptora ellewhlre 1n the oountry. THAT the widows far outnumber the widowers has betn Wtdti)' ttported. But were you awarei•'alJo, there are tbret Umea aa many spinsters as bacbtkn over age 651 Addrt11 mail to L. M. Boud, P. 0 . Bok 1875, New· port B1®h, Calif. 9~860. meclical wel9ht relludio.n . 'The sefe and practical method for the entire femily to loose weig)tt ..• under the strict 1upervi1ion of Medical Doctors Call for inform1tlon Monday thru Friday "9 1.m. to S p.m, CLOSED I P.M. • 2 P.M. LINDORA MEDICAL CLINIC Nowport ·-~ . 404 W"IMIMttr.o...645·3740 L-. .... 42WJ4t W. C... t•t..J4JI , ....... ,, .. 2,14 ,..,... 0-. 71t·710J lA ..... 6f4·112t ""'•" .... '41·1740 ............. , .. tos, Weed'-' HHh J47•S'47 Ptlllertoll 170.tl OI Ot...-,IJl.JJtl .. ~:.·, • ' ' GRANADA HIU.t I llOOO Challwonh SI. I WOODLAND HILLS 21500 Vlctoly Blvd . , AIVEASIDE 3j20 Tylar S!. SANTA ANA 3900 Soulh Brislol $1. . ' ' • F Your choice 2 for$4 Sweet dreams 1l11pµear specials. loft 1(0"4 cotton flannelette. Mlchlnewashable. Prettyftonlt pMtl In assorted colofs. Misses' sizes 34 to '40. 0. Full length gown. Available in extra sizes 42 to :48. 2.22 each E. Pajamas. F. Dress length gown. Your choice 2.99pr. ·SI~ special Oeep·j).1e acrylic shaggles with son 91>11. Assorted colOrs. Women's slzesS to 10, wholesllos. TORRANCE Sepulveda, and HJwthoine LAKEWOOD Ca rson St. •nd P•ramount 81wd. · BUENA PARK Beach and Or1nge1horpe OR&HGE Garden~ Grove Bl~. ind Manche11er ' Open ... kday. 1:30 to·t:JO S.ndty. 10 lo 7. • I \ , ' . \ ,.· I, ' , ' . ~· .-" :· .. I ·-~ • • • ' • I. I I "lrs ca lied REIAXIN'. lrs so1T10thing cats know how to do better thon anybody else.• .Jovial on Surface Aboard McGovern Campaign ·PI~e · • By HELEN THOMAS stronghold, insists that bls canvasS looks much better £or WASIDNGTON (UP-1) -"In Uie Democrats than th e one minute, the next presidenl pollsters say. of the United States will be airborne" are the words heard Obviously running on a over the intercom from the shoestring ,compared to lhe pilot of Dakota Queen 11. high-powered, w e 11 -o i I e d There are smiles 00 the Republican e f f o r t , the faces of the i-eporterS, 'and McGovern ship sail!: on amaz.. ingly smoothly from a some cynical grins, as Sen. newsman's standpoint. George S. McGovern's 7'rl chartered jet takes off on THE FRicnON Is minimal another hedge-hopping cam-with the reporters, although palgn tour. there are sqme cracks by TV "God Bless This ¥ess " cameramen a b o u t the reads one slgti on Oie-ci6iir-=-•amateur1~~ Involved' in the - door. show . Another touch is a poster But the camaraderit: and the showing a carjcature of Presi-obvious awareness of tt.e need to "take care of the press'.' ~ have made points wjth reporters. "Manketeic:, Sup· er•tar, You're not a s fl re at as r1ou think flOU are.'' Some correspondents call the candidate's plane and the back up "wo" plane their home away from home. Tbe Dakota Queen i s ~ decorated with hotel keys dent Nixon and a caption: never turned in by reporters "Would you buy a used car . in a hurry. There also are Irom this man?" pumpkins symbolic of the THE CANDIDATE himself October season. is accessible, and although CJb.. SOMETIMES THERE· ts a musly fatigued, manages to singlloog on the buses during keep pushing oo. He looks long hauls. 1be McGovem amazingly well and is one of motorcades do not enjoy the the best dressed presidential same protection as t h e candidates in history. President's caravans and The pros and pundits aboard someUlnes they are death de- the plane have written him . lying, zooming through the off. streets, 20 cars long with only "The only story here is if he one police car leading the abdicates," said one veteran pack. · reporter. On long nights, reporters McGovern's aides are aware compose dillies summing up of the sarcastic assessments the campaign and poking fun of their boss' chances and· try at McGovern and hls staff. not to show gloom. One was a spoof of Frank The candidate him.sell has a Mankewicz, the political direc- "never-say4ie" zeal and is tor, which started o u t : convinced he can put it au "Mankewiez, S u p e r s t a r , together on election day. You're not as great as you think you are." "I HA VE SEEN the faces in There have been faux pas on the crowd and read the the platfonn. message in their hearts," McGovern referred to McGovern says in stop after Perwylvania Gov. M 11 t o n stop. "The polls have been Shapp as "Melvin Shapp." wrong all year. If I had listen- ed to the polls, I wouldn't be SEN. EDMUND MU!kle, who here. The only poll that counts once souaht the nomination, is on Nov. 7." gave McGovern's cause a lift The youths r u n n I n g Saturday when he urged the McGovern's campaign, driving Poles in Pennsylvania. to vote in a motorcade, lining up the for his candidate. telephones, handing Out the "I've been defeated two buttons, have not lost hope. times and dammit I don't One young man in Bergen want to be defeated again," he County, N. J ., a Republican grinned. g()(Ml morni~ .deJ breatifast the drive-thru "non-stop" breakfast for the srly blrdson- the-go. Now being served at all Del Taco locations-a complete, deluxe continental breakfast •• coffee, orange juice and a piping hot Danish .• all on a nruHpil. tlly •• just 69cand IT ONLY TAKES A MINUTE! · NOW SERVING 7·11 AM NEWPORT BEACH lriatol ''•I~) .t c...,. ' SANTA ANA TUSTIN •tt1 St. -4 H...,_. fwy. ~ tell Hiii .._. ..... AM hy • ...... --c-- • - I• Pick from our new "Ear-Port" PIERCED EARRINGS 77f; More than 2000 pairs of earrings to choose from, au on this convenient 5-fool walk-around "ear·port" disP,lay. And every pair prettier th an the next. • GRANADA HILLS 18000 Chatswokh SI. WOOl>LAND HtU.S 21500 Viclory Blvd. RIY!RSIDE 3520 Tyler St. SANTA ANA 3900 South Britlol SI. T.......,, -24, 1972 DAIL V PILOT 9 • PANT SUITS WITH PIZAZZ With that high-fashion flair yoJ,1 love, and done in an easy·wear, easy·care double--'knit acrylic, that looks and feels for allthe world Hke finest pure wool. a. Peplum jacket style in red·and-blue or grey·and· black. Jr. sizes 5 to 13. 23.99 b. Tunic jacket style in red, navy or black. Jr. petite sizes3 to 11. 21.99 the . . I TORRANCE Sepulveda 1nd Hawthorne LAKEWOOD Carson SI. and Pa11moun1 Blvd. IUENA PARK Beach and 011ngethorpe ORANGE Garden Grove Blvd. and Mancheoler °'"" ... kdlya 1·:111to1:111 hnillp 1 D to 7. I • •• .. .• ' Jf DAILY PILOT ,.....,,, Octobtf 24, 1'112 TONIGHT'S Opera 'Or,ontea' Glows at Irvine ~ By TOM BA.:i.Ev Uahan opera house more lban ---------- ,., b Jt --· TV IDGHLIGHTS NBC D 8:00 -"Bonama." Ben and a young woman about to give birth are taken hostage by would·be !!ilagecoach robbers who use them as de- coys. Lorne Greene. KCET llJ 8:00 -UN Day Concert. A live concert ~ celebrating the 27th anniversary of the United Na· tions by the New Jersey Symphoney Orchestra and ' mezzo-soprano Marilyn Horne. ~ ABC 0 8:30 -"Short Walk to Daylight." James • Brolin of ""farocs Welby" heads the cut of this TV drama about eight terrified couples trapped in a Ne\v York subway tunnel when an earthquake devastates the city. CBS 0 9:30 -''Of Thee I Sing.'' Carroll O'Con- nor plays a presidential candidate running on a platform of love in this remake of George Gersh· ii'! win's vintage musical com edy. I .... 11:w-.; '• :n>r 01 ~ 0.111 P11e1 s11tt 300 years ago. "11 Ootf~",,!l.,,,S:," c"11 t.>el.A Th l h kAA Clotl'• WOl'tl tlld C II• "'b • r ere nHa nve ~n "'any It lktd all the lngrtdien~s ow...1r1 c11~ °' J-.. ,,.,... a damp handkerchief in the d 'd "' 11~1ptr.etor Jolln 11.11. Qlltunw audience when Antonio Cesti deman ed by the av1 opera •= ~ tlxbv. ~ _. llQ!ltl/IQ goer of the 17th century --'&'di '°' cAIT unveilt'Ci his ·'Orontea_" in_!n thwarted love ( niore than Orontt. Sw P•tthtll -Crwit• Blll'"lin l l~•k• m\'11\•1~·· ~-. ..,, ........... ~ CINIOIU 01~ ••• \'a..-.. ci..m. Redgrave ·Jackson \l.1111. Q11r1•11 ufS1 .,,,., a\1'11\'l.ftU llH.<\t lW'l!llClllOS" •U!U\ IMO\• ,,._ Sliowtl1H: 7:00 p.111. -ollD- onceJ, n:ithos, a love-sick ''"'I"° K•r111..., o·er1 ... r· AlldOnl Jom Obtrl•I queen of Egypt, an artist who Ari•'" 1t vo '•"'lrn• is really an equally lovesick 9:.!!:10 CIMl~l'k~'!~to? . f Ph . . d ~if&l>d•u J"' 'lt't•v pnnce o oen1c1a an a Cl•ncln1• Oltttl!•o) oVtc• w_,..v l ' I ho 's eally 4trll<'IOfint• s.,....n Croh1 mys ertc.us ma e w ' r 1(.1,..,.,.1.,. R11tMnbtl'o. l•rtlt•• Wllki a former lady of the court. ----------- )'ou would need a computer to unravel the Gordian plot 1hat Cesti injected into his "Orontea" but the Italian of J&t9 didn't give a fig about that. He wanted all the above listed ingredients plus tuneful melodies in copious quantities and he must have left the premiere of "Orontea" in hap- py mood indeed. NO HAPPIER. we might add, than the audience Satur· day night in UC Irvine's con- cert hall. They very obviously thoroughly enjoyed the UCLA Workshop's revival of an opera that was believed lost to us. in terms of the full score, until its vuy happy discovery just 20 years ago. There were damp handkerchiers in abundance at UCI but we must quickly add that it wasn't Cesti 's pathos a la 1649 that got to the lfielders. Much of what must TV DAILY LOG c .. ,;,:::.:,::;: .... oo ' ·~ i<?'l RuSS211s Film.--....., 1avage me11iah Tuesday Evening CJCTOml 2A ,,0011aoemm-rno -9,...,.. '11tt frtnchrMll,. 11)"1- GWlll'MWWnl ID"'"-, Ill-"" USMC (1JI C..r11ul111d11 ·9111 Dll6Clll Ei••••• m-......, 111r..,...,.,. lll)ll--111--l:JO (I} Mlp1t't Htr91l "-' (tO) ~·· .. ~ -(com) '62 -.ltrTJ lewtl. ()) CIS NeM Willer Qoflllftt 181 ....... S.mln DN m .... •-m ••1111·• 1s&eM l!ll--·-m AltrHMf I "Tools 11111 Ttch· nlc11.1et of AslrvnoflTJ" Plrt I m ...... CaTW ... lit""""'" Eri)~a.• ED D1t tz I'll '9Ullt ...... , l:Ol II l]J D ID -·-.. -CIJ Ttd • C11 4 ITS? i1J"""1o-·NR ...... CJ Wllsl'I MJ IJMJ Qllt&wllq m '""'•" ... ill) ..... ?2 EE LI hn)I Sh .. fl!) Tiie FtMdl CW ililD'--'*'"M .. 13 MtN: (C) .,._ tlilt ti,_,.,. Isl•"'" mi Tuh411 Aft m-- Wednesday DAYTIME MOVIES t:ll ID ... •stiit Is ........... (CClffl) '-42-8t11n AlltrM. LOl'tttl louJll. f'.JD O"T-. '"' W 1-1 , '16-lf9111 Ounnt, MfMti D1Ni11L 10:00 (I} ...... ""' O*) '14 1•)11•1 Holldly, WIHltlfl trtm™. a-,... <""> '53-to· Sit R..,., "" "'1\d&H. ll:J08 i)) --Tho '"""' .. 11 publie flllltl\ .rflCUil wtli\t COii· iuetlq an lmntlptlon lnfl) vit- 1t1rul ilMIM luds Mc'-'tfttt Into the WOffi al poHtlcs •lid lntripL UllMI ~ Mfff Frtllfl, lou friz. nfl, CllJI Htlson-111d )'f Stmrt ..... & TUES MOVIE OF WEEK * 7 people l•ce de•lh in a wrecked subway tunnel. James Brolin 0 ClJ11J Ell AIC T--(C) (IO) "SMrt Walt: .. DIJllPt'" (slll) '7Z-Jamu Brvllfl, Dolt,Mltcft. 111, 1amn Mcflchln, ~ Unooln. .,.. Bllftdy •• Wt.en I ~u&tlq MrthQlltkl IMb tl!t city, *'Jtd tlffffild auplU 1rt tnpped In • "" Yoit city subW*J' tunnel ind llespeflt91y by to find I Wty out. As they trMf'M ttll "•rious tunnels thly find tti. compllt1ly blocktd by dlbril, i nd fln1lly me.st 1111kt thtk .. ,. lllldlr lh• ri'N, wen tllouCb tht tube Is cracktd ind fi\IH with w1t1r. m---., LI MIWidM N II .-... .. D a m Tiit "" O..t "A Subo stitvte Womb" A WOC111n. 11nablt to t l!TY I dlild fllW tltllll blclillU af 1 h111t lllllltflt. hu tile embryo 1n«sp&1ntM to htf Jiattr. Pltlb- 1""' .... u thl listtf btcom• ,_.-• Ult btbJ lh9 ii e1r· fyin&. stlllnlt ~ts., SW. Ur· U11 lfli C1u1 Betz fUlll m ....,1...,. lfBUIY .. •"'7 ...... 11!1"' -fmlDn•• t:25 Cl P'slllcsl An11t•e1t••lll t:4S tE ~ tt.rtitutrl' '"'"aom•1e '"""' ·~-· Up in Prlion" (R) am .... fl C1J (J) Ell M.,.. "'""· M.D. CJ 1ert1 kltft' f'ruHb Thtlllw m """""' •• 11JJ flrfq UM fD """''• .... Tiil "Mtw k · !ors for ttie Cl••*'~ (R) Ollldl ... ... Cl:)f~ ..... ... Ill_ ..... ... -·-" .. -("") '!1-«lcilrf Tmts, Stt'"' tlr111. 1:11 e -n.. ._ IN SbptlW' (6r1) '43 a....,. Sln4m. l:JO 'a 1-l .... Wlli ...,.., .. (Wn) •• , -Jlml!IJ' (llllOft. a ..... It...., ....... (drl) 'li-Alldl9 lih1,,hJ, G11J Cmb,. l:tO I)) (C) -....... -(CO!fl) '14 -lOflf C11rtls. - Iii -ot l1cftl" l"•l .,._ loll• "'""*'· "A MASTERPIECE!" _.., -4'AUI. 0. ZMllrlERMA.11 ..... -· UBI' P.ll:lllRI !!!. IHDW CQ.-~·-~ ~~------~ Alllml.llU MMMlll •'11•'11 .,;,_~-,,., .. .... ~, ....... ' .wnllUI T•l:pl: Ml.1551 far llllor!Nlkln ENOS TONIGHT "TREASURE ISLAND" ALSO "KING ELEPHANT" STARTS WED. ACADEMY WINNER JOE DALLESANDRO AND SYLVIA MILES IN "HEAT" RATEDX WlOAYS~•lt J.&1,tlll.&MOll, -......11 WEEKDAYS 6:4S Hiw•ll•no-1 H1w•U-t :4! H1w1ll•n1--J I 11 H1w11!-4:4J & ':4J CHARLTON HESTON : • '1,11,·1/11 D11o~v.1~111 "'114( HAWAIIANS" Evory man hos a dream9 tho1 must be realized ... MElTlOCOlOll ·MGMO Indy Warhol Pr111nts -- WEEKDAYS 6 -8. 10 SAT. SUN. MON. 2 4 6 8& 10 THE ONLY ORANGE COUNTY SHOWING STARTS WEDNESDAY OCTOBER2S DIANA ROSS §BILLIE HOLIDAY DY s~~s BLUES ST ARTS WED., OCTOBER 25 I .. ' have produced moans of anguish among those first au- diences produced tears of laughter last weekend but not, rl1ht ~m.s lo be in lhe mld- dle of aU of them -ln no way detracts from that glorious Cestl score. Jet it be immediately stated, to IT rs CllARMING in its tbe detriment of this delightful simplicity, never less t h a n opera. · tuneCulaoddelightfully A splendid cast very ob-melodic in Its entirety and viously and cleverly played up proVidlng, with its rich c:taah of . ..,.. ' fll!llllWMlll \;~~ a number or situations tSee OPERA, Page 211 lhat have not survived the ctn..l=~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~ turies any better than the Vic- torian melodrama h a s ·sur-- vived the passage of just 70 years. But the mirth generated by those situations -and Tom Oberjat as the repeatedly bewildered Alidoro who turns out to be a prince in his own INDS TONIGHT "The Other" !PG) AUD•n HE,IURN "Wait Until Dark" STA a TS WIDHE~DA Y ,fTll SILLEltS "Where Does It Hurt?" IR) ind i'Prudence and The Pill" $do -~11.t.Cll ·· ...... - .. tn.ftooo lU• h lo -01. l ·•UO ENDS TONIGHT "BULLITI" ~· -ALSO --_ "BONNIE AND CL YOE" STARTS WIDNESDAY Woody All ... ·"PLAY IT AGAIN SAM" AUO l,GI "THE LAST OF THE RED HOT LOVERS" --CtNlDDMl 21 ... ·--..._-~ .l:::::J.;'C!'~ ---;. STADIUM · I ' .. --~ ..... -.. ---- ---·~ STADIUM ·J ' .>:>•~··----. -.. STADIUM 4 ' '-~~ .... -.1~ ... "'LAY IT AOAIM, 5AM"' l11cl111lvt E"l•INlll N•• H• lt•ttrv• S..ts Wl-r .. J Ac .... "" A~nll '"11'1D0llllt OH THI aOOll'" Ml"""tr..-n "THI OOMATHIElt" Ill • ~INT •LANKM fltl ''Tlt•AIUlt• ISL.AHO'' CO) • ''XIHG ELE,HAHT" IOI Liu MIM111 ""O•AltET" C,.01 • ''SWEET C:HAltlTY" "'TMli NEW CIEfllTUlllON 5" !It) •lltl °""1•' c. Sult ,1111 •ll'LAY MISTY ,Olt ME" !ltJ M•linee Mond•y All -... ~ It•• ,.,M, "NICNOL.A'.i AND ALeXANOltA" lllCll•nl N•n11 "C:llOMWILL" "?LAC:ULA" .-""°"' H1nwl aay MHIHlll ''l'ltOOS" ••Ill '" C•lltl -(POI '"" Ill c:•r1 (l"Ol C>Mdller TIIM DrK\UI "ILACULA" lt•W Mlll<IM "'l'A:OGS" httl Ill C.iffl (l'G) WEDNESDAY NIGHT* IS TACO NIGHT GET SIX FOR $1.SO! Make Wedneldly nfghl your night to e•t out At Del Taco, Wednesday night la T•co Nlghl You get •ix tatty Del Tacos for just $1 .501 Thi• Wednndly, drive thru for a family 1ize mell JOU won't forget At Pflc" you'H find hlrd to bell • FrOm 4 p.m. , NEWPORT BEACH Bristol {P11isadesl 1t C1mpus SANTA ANA 4th St. and Newport Fwy. TUSTIN Red Hiii near Santa Ana Fwy. ... and other Orange County locations "BAD COMPANY" IS GOOD COMPANY. GO SEE IT ..BAD COMPANY" ltl .. 11*"'1 Mftctlvl'll, lllft ........... ,..., ·-" "TNI 0000 OUYS AHD TH• •AO GUYI" • • • ' • ' ' ·' . ~ Jackson Says Probe Delayed WASlllNGTON (UPI) - Sen. Henry M. Jocklon, (0. Wull.), UYI U.S. 1ttorneY1 In E1orlda took 11ven months to act .on~ Campaign lelttr J1ckooo ol ll· Uclt oelNll In. Jacqoo look isa!le Monday wJlb· U.S. >.ttoroey John L. ~ who. uJd In Jacklon- vrue )'rldly In tunllDi the let· tor over to the FBI tbal he had not known eorller that It had been sent lhroo&b U.S. mail. IN A TELEGRAM to Briggs, Jackson uJd the let· ter had been tw'ned over to two assistant U.S. Jttorneys In Tampa March 13 along with a postmarked envelop showing it had been mailed. PUBLIC MEETING ~he Irvine Rench W tier District invites you to a p~blic meeting on the Rattlesnake Land Outfall to, be held on November 21, 1'172 al 7:30 p.m. a'f tho Roncho S.n Joaquin Intermediate School '4861 Michelson, Irvine, Calif. ' T"1r proposed ,,roject is to convey reclaimed w • t er from the District11 existil'.19 rklamation plint lo the Rattl..noke Reservoir in the fool· ~J!lf, a distance of 91/i miles. This project is part of. a master plan for the po.,ible total reclama. tion of wa~te water .. The reclaimed water is in- tended to be used for irrigation purposes. The _ •hrnativ• to water reclamation and reuse for irrigation purposes is lo convey the waler to the ocoen for dispose!. A detailed environmental impact report is avail· able al the following locations for your review if you dosi;;e: UCI Library, IRWD Administra· tiye Oijico; Irvine City HaO, and Rancho San J~uln Intermediate School. The purpose of the discussion is to give interest- ed ancl concerned cititens an opportunity to con- sider the econ~ic, environmental, and social aspects Qf atternative waste water 2lans. Tht phony let ter targeting both Jacbon and Sen. Hubert H. Hwnpllrey got ltttle publicl· ty during the campai&n of the two Jl'esidenUal candldates in the Florida primary b u t recently becarM publicized. Briggs spoke out after sy~ dJcated columnist J a c k Andenon wrote that Jackson'• request for an lnveatlgatloo of the lotter had gol]t. unheeded and had not even been acknowledged. THE L E TT E R detailing spurious charges a g a i n s t Jackson and Hwnphrey was circulated on a phony cam- polgn letterhead of Sen. Ed· mwxl S. Muskie, another Democratic presidential con- tender in tbe primary. The letterbead, purportedly of Muskie's campaign head- quarters, listed an address that did oot exist. Many letters are believed to have been circuJated in the Tampa area last March ln an evident attempt to discredit Muskie. Apathy Cited TORONTO (AP) -''Tbe problem in our. time is not rampant atlie.lsm, nor is it a willful desire to do wrong," the Rev. Wllllam Huras of Ad- vent Lutheran Church said in a sermon. "It is tndifferel')(e - a lack of the w.,111 to . live meaningfully .'' KIDS LOVE UNCLE LEN I WOULD _LIKE TO HAVE YOUR FUNERAL HOME TAKE CARE Of MY FUNERAL. BUT I DON'T WANT TO PAY ANYTHING NOW AND I DON'T WANT TO MAKE ANY F~l'IER.AL. ARRANGEMENTS. WijAT _SHdULD I DO 1 • by EUGENE 0 . BERGERON .... -" w111.,. tMt .,.H ,..... M 11 wrtth19, n. hm below wlll ..,... tile purpose. c~ 1t •...., 1t""'.,.., ,_.... .ttKt1 ., ... , ,. ... At ...... .t _, .... I llllNct. tlHrt tile hlf'l-.ll'rt•••• hMNll HOM9 H 110ttfted, It is ., ....... tW "'9t coaito&t: w-x;;w;;; r1to.. wllewll .. •••'Wtht _...•I •••I••• for..,,...,.... ....... ----~-----" YM .... • 4 I lhtC .... fwN1 ....... ,..... wrf'9 • ul. vn...... pwlble, ........... _.. ...... 811~ .... B.it::-Bergeron Funeral Home COSTA Ml!SA 2 LOCATIONS CORONA dol MAR 646-2424 673°9450 " ( • ' I I ,• IWl. Y PILOT 11 Give Away Cesar? Reagan 'Makes Offer' to Pennsylvanin SACRAMENTO (AP} -thia nation and the oppres!ive "This is a 1 a c r i ri ce Gov . Ronald Reagan says be forcH that keep them down. Ca!Uornla is prepared to make would like to give farm labor in the Interest of human com· leader Cesar Ot.avez to "MY SUGGESTION," Rea-passion ," Reagan wrote. Pennsylvania to help organize gan replied when citing "Your own citizens will once farm workers in that state. Shapp's concern for the poor, again enjoy the taste of LOSE WEIGHT THIS WEIK OdNMx cen hllJ ,_. lllmrM thl ttlll allll p1111111 ,.u wanl to bl, Odrlnla II • tiny labltt 11111 ....., ..-...M. c.. tMs llO tl1npou1 ;,., No •tlntflc. No qlldlt torch&. Gtt rill of _.. flt Ind IYt lonp'. 0.flfta hu bMI 11Hd MCtldvl)' lit tlloOM•1 ti Mr tllt country lor 14 rwt. (Wrlnlli: 1"111• COSls $3.25 Ind thl twp~ llZe $5.25. 'f'ou must k111 ulfJ' flt ot Y'OU' lrlllMY win bl rlfwided bf 11*1'drvultt. Mo qutatlonf uktd. Acdft "° _. atltlltea. Sotd wih tl'llt prlM bJ'I THRIFTY ""'" "'' Ol'>C t•Ul<t ! '> 1 Ol~I' 1be tongue..J.n.dleek offer is "is that you persuade t.he iceberg l ett u ce r rom In the latest letter, dated agriculture industry of your California, and CaUfomlans 'MlUNKlay, ex.changed between state to invite Chavez to come will feel the urge to purchase1---------- Republlcan Reagan and and organize the farm the product s o( UPIT ....... Mrs. Valeria Kushner, wife of an American POW and herself a campaigner for Sen. George McGovern for president, met with his strategists d u r i n g a stop in AUanta. Democratic Gov. Milt.on J. workers or Pennsylvania . Pennsylvania." Sbapp of Pennaylvania. .------''------'-------I .....,_ Now ••.• Plastic Cream Invention For Artificial Teeth ll1fflciol THiii llntr Fmt S.bmllllem that bu reYolutioniud denture .eum,. rr STARTED last summer when Sbapp issued a dlrective to all state departmenta to ceaae purdwlng Cslilomla and Arizona iceberg lettuce becauoe ol the boycott of those products by Olavez' Uoitro Farm Worken Union. Reagan fired off a letter to ~cr'!:m~~~t~.! Shapp deacribing the boycott oe'fefbekn-(orm1anduticmem· as a jurlsdlcti nal dis t braoe that 1w1p1 Ao/4 u-. t• t*4 It k:i. JOU bite harder, ditt bet· t.tr. eat more naturally. F1XOOEN1 laata for hour&. Retlats inoiltutt. Dentura that fit are eaential to health. See your dent.isl ~1u.tarly. Get tlllJ·l!>l.llC FIXOll8NT Denture Adheaavc Cn:am. 0 pu e 111MJJ111•f li1SNU •f .)'ONr Mf11t•. It'• II between <J:iavez' union and wiQue dilcovery called P1xooc~ Teamsters and criticizingl-~-----------------1 1 Pennsylvania for Ji av in g poorer w o r k i n g conditions than California for faim workers. CUvtttl-U • What do doctors recommend for patients in pain? Shapp's reply Oct. 4 reaf- firmed bis support of the boiycott and concern for "the pllght o1 the .,.... people 1n Doctors all over the rountry dispense over 50,000,000 of these tablets to their patients each year. Grant WitMrau;n Due to Spea-ker There are many medicatiol\9 a phy1ician or denli1t can pre- acribe for pain. Some are nar· cotk, many are available orily on preacription. Bul there ill one pain reliever, available without prescription, doctora -ai1peJ11e again and again ... Anacin. Each year, doctors give over 50,000,000 Anacin tablet. to tora recommend most than any other leading tablet. Headache and dental pain ia relieved incredibly fast; minor pains of arthritis are depend- ably eased for houra; even the aches arid pii:M orco1auna fl.ii respond to Anacin. So the ten- aion and depresieion that can be caused by 1uch pa.in will be re- lieved too. ..And milHona take Anacin without stomach upeeL " . -their-petiente in-pain, Ir doctors PHOENIX, Ariz. (AP) -FOR THE TIME being," think enough about Anacin to The DeMuod Foundation has he added, "our foundation will dispense all these tablet.a, what announced It is withdrawi ng continue to furnlsh t b e better recommenda.tion ~n you $6,000 in scholarships from the aak when you are 1n pain? \Vhen you're in pain, why don't you follow the practice of ao many doctors and take the tablet a doctor might give you in ru. own office. 'lake Anacin•. University of Arizona because scholarships to the other two You see, Anacin contain• Angela Davis is scheduled to Arizona unJverslties, unless more of the pain reliever doc· speakontheTucsoncampus. Ibey, too, fall Into the trapl-------------------11 "When we beard that ... the Iha! the lludenl leackrs_ and . likes of Angela Davis will •!> faculty at the Uoi•""!!Y of T S t d ' N Q • _pear_oo the UA Cal!lPllS for. _Arizona have fallen_ln_to, --ry a ur ax s -e!A'S UlZ speech. . . .and Is to be paid He said the 16,000--d-lie -· - We Dare You •Minlm11111 $100 P9f11Gnll 11.ecount Hop in your car and come as you are! The Imperial folks are waiting for y~ ln1)erial en ·· CoataM-- Harbor Blvd. et Fair Drtve (7 14) 979-1000 $2,000 out of student funds for used. where "students will appearing, we were aro'used to given every opportwllty to action " said Fred H. Knowles hear about the Virtues of the a spokesman 10<' the roonda'. 'good old traditional American tion: ·~w~a~y~o~I ~Ill~•·~' ~";;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;d;;;;;;;;~~;~;~~;;;~~~~;;;;~~~~~ HE WARNED thai smanerli scholarships giveo annually to Ari7.ona State University and Northern Arizona University could be wittxlrawn also if Miss Davis appeared there. "We have searched for a better way to express our ex- treme indignation, but have found none we can exert, other thatt to withdraw o u r scholarships to students on that one campus starting In the fall of 1913," be aald. • Now In Its 21st Grea·t Year FREE _ COOKING SCHOOL Mesa Theater 1884 Newport Blvd., Costa Mesa Every Thursday, Oct. 26 thru Nov. 16-9:30.11:30 A.M. HELPFUL HOLIDAY HINTS MORE THAN $1,000 IN ' Fl.EE PRIZES e SURPRISES e GIFTS Channglow and Caloric Gas Barbecues and other prizes given each week Second printing of one of the most popular cook books ever sold in the Orange Coast area ••• 247 of the best recipes selected from the cook- ing school's first 19 years for just $1. Prepared last year lo mark the 20th anniversary of tbe school, the book was a sellout. Here's your second chance. • Sold only at the Cooking School Co • Sponsored by Souttiem Calif. Gas Co. , , • • • ' • J DAILY PILOT ae.t• Netlees Political Notes WE ~ATUltE Supervisorial Rivals Slate Swindle Suspect Gets ]ail Term SAW DOl- Debate on I ss ues in Coun.ty SANTA ANA -One or four Rosal failed to show up !or men Indicted by the Orange aentenclng on the date set by County Grand Jury followlng Judge Stein.,., but was ar- lnvOstlpUon of an al!lO flnan· rested In Detroit and noturned By 0. C. HUSTINGS Of tlle Dfllly ...... ,, ... Rivals . for the two county supervisorlal seats on the ballot Nov. 7 will debate the issues Friday before the Orange County Forum of Town Hall of California. First District candidates Robert W. Battin and William F. Wenke, pluS Third District candidates Ralph Diedrich and William J . Phillips a r e scheduled to square oft during the noon luncheon meeting in Magnolia Room C of lbe Disneyland Hotel in Anaheim. ARBUCKLE & SON Reservations can be made WESTCLJFF MORTUARY by calling Town Hall at f%7 ~ 11th Sc., Costa l\tesa 547-3047. "'"'~ * ·* * e . TH E SCHMJTZ..for·Presl- BAL 'J'Z..BERGERON dent folks have opened a new FUNERAL HOl\lE o(~ at 1882~ Newport Blvd., Corona del !\tar 67S.t4SCI Costa Mesa. .The p h o n e Cosla l\1esa Mi-UU numbers are 645-3955 and 645- • 3956. BEll BROADWAY Dick Dorsett heads the MORTUARY Schmitz campaign in the 118 Broadway, Cotta Mesa Harbor Arl!:a. Fin an c e LI 1-3433 chairmen for the Io c a I e organization are former Costa McCORMICK LAGUNA Mesa mayor John Smith and BEACH A!ORTUARY ~11 estate saleswoman Joyce 11os Laguna canyon Rd. ~H-9tl5 -* -*-* e STATE SENATOR George PACIF1C VIEW l\foscone (D-San Francisco) MEMORIAL PARK wilLwlng inl<Lllrange_Cowlty Cemecery Morcuary Friday for the second time Ch1pel this month. 3SOI Pacific View Drive Moscone, who some say Newport Beach, California would like Ron Reagan's job, MU'l'M is schedWed to speak at noon e -at Cal State Fullerton. Beoch Blvd. It starts ~t 6 :30 p.m. Donations or n.50 per person will be asked. Shella and Richard Brinegar and Su s ie Boll iger, coordinators for the event, say prizes will be awarded for cos· tumes and games. * * * ANOTHER McGOVERN party Is planned Sunday at the home of Mr. and Mrs. A. Leonard Robbins , 9761 Rangeview, Cowan Heights. It st.arts at l p.m., according to Mrs. Richard Alexander of Lemon Heights, chairman of the event. She s a y s · all Democrats, independents and undecided voters are invited. Again, donations of $2.50 per person will be asked. The party will include dinner , dancing, en- tertainment; a plant sale, a flea market and discussion of the issues. * * * THE PTA at Heinz Kaiser Middle School in Costa Mesa has scheduled a discussion on PropoelUon 14, the so-called Wat.son tax relief amendment, during its Oct. 30 meeting. The meeting 1s open to the public. Speaker s will be Assemblyman Robert Badham (R-Newport Beach) and Dr. John NicoU, superintendent of th-eNewport=Mesa-unrn ea School District. A quesHon and 'Arthritis' PEEK F AMIL y ,Friday night, the senate ma· COl.ONl..\L FUNJ!;RAL jority leader will move on to s • s t ROME Orange for a Hallowee_n dance eIDJD 8l' e 1-:::::t===~~~IW~-~i\v . . _ aJ'l(I bu He~. sponso~ed bf. -. . · · .-Wiimiliittrm:mr---~ -=aiiCacos .!Oi'-=acGdV.em~lt~tJCm'] • starts ' at 6. p.m. in the physicians will d i s c u s s SMITH"' MORTUARY Casserole Banquet Hall, 300 S. art~ritis in a day-long sym· 6%7 Main St. Flower .st. posium Nov. 4. 8 ti ~ 8 h Donations of $2.5<1 per Sponsored by the Orange un ~ eac person to ~efit . t he County Medical Association, McGovern campaign will be nine roundtable discussions LOCAL EDITORIALS The DAILY PILOT Quite Often Fights City Hall so~t. ., will be repreated four times · * * * during the day. beginning at GHOSTS, goblins and 8:3tl a.m. and ending at 4:30 McGovern well-wishers will p.m. at the Grand Hotel. gather in Huntington Beach The event will only be open Saturday night f or a to doctors, interM a n d Halloween costume party aim-residents. For m o r e in· ed at beefing up McGovern formation, c o n t a c t the campaign coffers. Arthritis Foundation, 2315 E. The benefit will be at the 17th st., Santa Ana, 92701, 547- home ol. Jean Turner, 18423 5591. answer-period wW follow their cing" swindle that cost the to Orange County last week. talks. Newport ~atlonal Bank more . ~udge Steiner. added four The meeting gets under way ORANGE COUNTY. than 115,000 bu. been sen.. years l"Obl!tlon to the 00 .. at 7:30 p.m. in the school tenced to one year in county year Jail tenn and ordered auditorium. jail. RoasJ to make good bis share COAST SlfER MARKET * * * Superior Court Judge H. or the 115,000 when be returns AT LEAST F1VE candidates Walter steJner's senteocing of to work. ' for major political offices E l Ronald Rossi, 34, La Mirada, It was alleged apt the nopresenting the South Orange Xp OTefS cl...00 a file that was opened lour men that they bilked the Coast will be debating In a In April 1971 with the filing of ban1t of $7$,000 by selling i:on· HOMf D!LIYl11' CALI.'. ' 673°3510 candidate's forum Wednesday charges against Rossi, Robert tracts fOf' the aale of IJOrH?•· night in Capistrano Beach. Seek y outlis William Dunlap, 37, of 1'1tl911 lstenl cars through an ••to 3341 E.CO~T HWY. Tbe event, sponsored by the Westport Drive, HWltingtoo agency that no longer was In ORONA DEL MA Capimrano Bay Area League Beach, assistant bankr~o~pera~llon.~;;;-~~;;~~~~==~=~~~~ of Women Voters, will start et ORANGE -Forestry Ex· manager John St u a r t 8 p.m. in school district head· plorer Poat 237 • the oldest past Hamilton, 35, and Frtnt Pcr- quarters auditorium in Serra in the naUon, seeks high ry, 36, of Los Angeles. School. school students at least 15 R.OMi and Dlinlap were later Among the c a n d i d s t e s yean old as new memben. ..:~A., by · In Jud schedllled •-at'-nd will be Spo con.,11,;i.eu a JUry ge w (.C nsored by the Ora,nge steiner's courtroom. Dunlap Incumbent candidate ror the Rotary Club, activities of the drew. a six·month jail term 7lst Assembly District Robert past will emphasize fire pro-and three years probation. Badham and his Democratic tection end fire prevention. Hamilton was cle8.red of all foe James ~rpe ; Republican • They will include studies and charges of conspiracy, grand Andrew H 1 n sh a w and field trips on wildlife manage-theft !d forgery, Perry is Democr.at John Black, who ment, forest engineering and sun subject of a lUl· seek el~Uon "? ~e 39UJ redwood forest management. tionw e bunt by lawmen. Congresst1onal D1str1ct ; plus Meetings are held 00 the se--c:_,----,---====--==--;1 ~bert Lowe, Democrate seek· cond and fourth Tuesdays ·of mg the . slot _In . lhe 4.2n,d each month at 180 S. Water St. Congressional District. Low~ s For more inf Orm.at" tact opponent, State Sen. Claire 100~ ~n Burgener, is not yet certain u Je!f Kron g a a rd , 1~761 be can attend tbe event. =eport Road, T u s t 1 n , STARS Sydney Omarr Is OM ot the WQrld'a great utrolo- gers.-ma column I! one of the DAD..Y Pll.OT'S ereat features. Nttw! Free! .....,.. ..... cw... ... 2 .!!.~· 5135 (,,.,..... ......... .,,. . IMAI f,,f,U • •tt. lllOW Sift ., fe 5f'lt 0-W. Lolt ••••••• ·" .. . • 0-... ytNI ••••••• n .. 0.C.W.. ......... SOio ~, ........ It 01 '""1111 .. "'-"" ....... llwwbW• •••••••••··'' .. · •Wi..fri '&ttr SIU ' 5'111 WMf ......... ·•• •• • AHT mu c:0,.. O....._ •·" •• .. •· .t! "1 • 1'111 ALTIU noMI at.Mt •••• ,. ...... 10 6 ~IAIT PATMIMfl NOi• ft MIST WQOt.fNS &At. ... ! _,.,~&Hf'I ••• ·aa'•AtLY .. 9 ·AHO OOtlll! ~ll1 11#11, 1N ..,.AMt,_,...., ...._ alS411 IUSJ MACAinMUI an. •.MNJI ....... UM.ti AMi& ~ ,_ ....... ~-o._.: c-o.., .... ._., ''" ..._ M<wr,,."""' "s... oi... , _ _,,. CUT~ "fall.a Lifetime Personal CheeJling! I .. ' ... nQ_minimum:hatani::e'.n!qnlred;:no:11ro1fll!01111i111=--~ service charges, ever. The Bank of Newport offers the specialized Services you expect to find at a friendly neighborhood bank. If you're unable to come in to the bank to open your account ... we make house calls! Our new account delivery service will cQme see yoo and make all the arrangemeOts for your new checking or sa\f'.ings account. The Bank of Newport is a distinctive full-service bank, with o.;tstand- ing trust and escrow departments, and complete low-rate loan programs. The Bank of N.ewport JS owned, directed and staffed by Harbor Area people ... we take the time to serve you better. DOVER AT SIXTEENTH STREET • NEWPORT BEACH,,CALlfORNIA • ~5-5333 . , iiiiiiiiiiiii 2300 HARBOR BLVD. <HARBOR CENTER) COSTA MESA Phone 545-1440 A DAILY 9:30·6 P.M. ' . ( MON. • THUR. • FRI. TILL 9 P.M. PRE CHRISTMAS ·MO NEY SAVING EVENT GIRL 'S GOWNS and PAJA MAS . LIMITED QUANTITY GIRL'S ASSORTED FLARES i 2 $ VALUES TO $7. GIRL'S 1 COATS ~ and s llMITEO QUANTITY PRICE 88 PRICE e I ANKAMERICARD e MASTER CHARGE . , • ' ' •, BOY'S • SHIRTS and $ ,49 T-SHIRTS VALUES TO $6. BOY'S JEANS $ 99 and FLARES VALUES _TO $7. GIRL'S •• .. DR~~~.~s~ ~P~CE. INFANTS , ·BY TRIM FIT $ 49 • STRETCH •• =· SUITS. • • I IF PERFECJ, $4 TO $6 • • • • .. 1 ' • Ch0ice: . " .. ... .... • (ft l _,! Practical Look Need/eel ' Your Bag • ' No matter what look you decide on for•tall and winter ensembles, there will be no problem in selecting the right handbag for the outfit. Manufacturers who comprise_ the National Handbag Association have prepared an ariay of exciting and fashion· able new bags to complement. They come in all _kinds of •. cm and materials. . }z --Accessonz1ng ·the-c0emu:-<li'e5s iS '1mj!Ol'Wlt, and the association offers a choice of (above) a framed patent leather with silver and gold square trim (on the model}i a peau de soie clutch and chained shoulder type (at left) a velvet shoul- der bag 1upper right), or an enlarged gold locket trimmed Witll lace-like carvings with a twisted gilt chain. Tote bags are favorites with the sports look (at right). On the model is an oversized shoulder bag in vinyl.· Leather trims a canvas tole (lower left); double ring tortoise handles top a chino bag (upper right), and the leather tote Qower 'right) can double for a carrying case. " --• ' ' ... ! Ad;olfo Un·r.avels Fa-sh ion Yar·n . ' ' ' , By MARIAN CHRISTY • New"81 dmcriptlve pllrue In fashion is ~lng able to ez:clalm with unalterable ,&lncerity' "Darling, it's pnctical!" Hat deslgnir Adolfo, whose boutique collecticn baa elqan"" literally wailing · tn line to snap his wearable-packable-. anwrinkable knit., says that yesterday's luat for extravagance bas given wa,y to · tilitarianlsm. But Adolfo, who designs for such wide- Oung best-dressed types as Mrs. Ronald lleaian and Barbra Streisarid, says .there's an Inherent danger in so-called 'pcacticil" clothes: '• "WbJ," he lill)'S incredulously, :•praC- rtlcal ·11 somewhat synonymous with 'tlasstc.~ Classic can be boring. Women •lntcht end up In facsimiles of uni!anns. BeUeve me, that's horribly depresa:ing." .f Afolfo ~a sens:itlve fashion creator -'ls doing bis beot ID be sure the practical doesn't become synonymoos with dull. "A designer must t!ke liberties and in- d\tlg~ in iantaales," be says. " When the sweater mania hit the American fashion market, Adolfo hap- pened to be In Pam, absorbing the raml!lcstlona of the trend. lNSPD\ATION Ono day he -into the Rue ~ section of Tbe Louvre and came -a llpeClacular show of Russian )>aDet costumes by Bakst. ''The nest lb1ng I knew I wu traealating the print. ~ patterns from the costumes onto knit dtesaes," says Adolfo. ' Tbe result of the Instant lnsplreUon Is a teries of. slim-but-easy street.Jength f. maxi knill with a look that surpasses cardigan, slip-on sweater dress that now •Melling !asbloo. "A dresa bas ID more than jus:t a long sweater," he says. . , Adolfo is telling his clients everywbue !bat all 1 woman abookl \\'ell< under knit. {s a body llDCldng -period. Ho-er, J'OllWL with "Jelkt'' bod1el which are 11'11 of the llllllMqulJHlie ""'1tn>I, ot>- vlclllly camot !Ill thll bill. They need support. ' 111n that cue,'' •YI Adolfo who levels with his moneyed cllenll, "I tell them ihoy muot ..ar wur a bra and my llr- dlo." The glnlJe Adolfo rtlen to la ponty . ~ whlclt he ~ from · Engllsb- made elaltlclzod !•bric. The tenaton of the girdle 11 veey prol!OUl1ced and hold& . flabby thighs and cierrieres In tliht pos1. lloo. ~ Tlll~G8 FIRST .,_ women who hl'9 IOod ~ but 91" over mo ti pee<! """"'hlnc ...,. ti.In a body llDckq." ., • says Adollo. M an experiment, he designed a girdle geared to wear under knits and 0 bad a few made up. WbeoeTer rotund. ladies came in foc knit try-oos, Adotto would band them the ginye'.and aay that's What went on first, p1-. SollO Adi>Ho'I ·modet., ill 'twiggy typeo, started a!klng for the girdla He knew be bad s~met,hlng. "Only the very young want tops and bot· toma. that bounce," says Adolfo wbb.llkes firmness. Womoo may loee their" shape but Adotto's knit. do not. 'Jlley're "'P!clally constructed not to cling, sag or lose their shape ilfter coontiess wearings. "There's nothing worse than seeing a woman's dresa cling to btr den-lero alter she's been sitting," he says. Cheap 1aits will do it every tJme," •llYS Ado1fo whose price tap are in the $2l5-f400 ranee. with no, reti.stance from women who ap- preciate quality. Other considerations come wit.h the price. AdoHo doeso't make knits with pencll- stratibl st.lrtl. There's &ive -a lfttle A· line or a lot 41 .dlrndl And hemlines are a!wayr mid-knee ur llllgbUy below. "1Wbeu a woman sita the skirt o-eeps up. 11'1 not a pretty algllt. There t. the ques- tion ot propriety •1' LAllGR!llZE He always. -.ea women ID buy toll• in· ooe size laJ'&er than ,regular cl"\hell .. "Every elegante baa a wetsht ftuctuatlon of five pounds. Knits cling. It's eu~ ID fool the mirror than yourself. An estra size is a ~derful dlaguiser." Adolfo ..,,.led the clothes that Barbra Streisand wean in the Arthur !Awtftlee rriovie ''The 'Way We Were".,Batbn, wbo .:..,.Uy 'dlctales ID dea'8llOl'S what she wuta ·-not'vtcevena -.wu aurprislngll -minded wllb Adolf~ "She told me ID MDd bor thlnp ·1 thouglll -be -1ate."·..,. Adolfo who qiilckly turned Girt a wardrobe ol loifll -1ncllldlll( a pot-' terned cardlpn lllll with the jacllel.cul!· ed and coilllJd • lllnr fol. ,.,_ 1181\ ts 1n """raabloo co11ect1on anc1 ts me "' bis bell sellen. When Mn. Reagan wanta to obop the Adolfo llne1 ~ ..U. New York ID tell. him ao. Aaouo, wht 1111 M, "adofu" Mn. Relpn, Is .. poclallJI _..u .... Nol ol!lY -he -.......... and ~ptia -ht.maqp bor lteml trom the un. /or tr)'o«I, l I Adolfo's knits include the crochet ed look. Lek, the tenk in maxi length with , bodice cut-out. , Right, the not-so- cleuic full-length with zigzag design. • ' ·--.. • • llEA ANDERSON, Editor T"""1, OdMw ... lt11 ._ U Smear Campa ign Helpful DEAR ANN LANDERS ' A> a gynecologist and a member of the Na- tional Commission on VD, I want to thank you for the good you have done through your column. Your recent advice on bow to spot VD was excellent. U it is possible, wUl you please n!tum to the subject and empbaaize a few points which are not well known, even by msny pb,yslclan5' In females, gonorrhea may be present , without symptoms. It is a fact that the majority of females who have it barbo< · the inlecticn !or long periods of time. Pa- tients [requenUY. -come to me because their boyfriends have told them they ac- qulttd !be disease from them. Up:in examination the women appear per!e<tly OK, but I take a smear and the • • • "-'~>Mlll1ts. aidicatFtltey 40 IMeed -~c - gcoorrbea. All women who lead active • • 1ez lives should have lab smears. Il ii · quidt, simple, palnlesa and Inupenslve. Although our hedonistic society has ~ the· old lashlooed birth .,.,_ frol ·deVlce the boys used ID buy furtively ' in ~. it is still tbe best way to prewnt' VD as well as pregnancy. Jt might also be a factor in preventing """""" of the cervix. Gcmorrbea Is the most common cause !or aterlllfy In botb msle and !emalo. II also ...., couse arthritis, akin enip!Dm, ..-ate trouble, kidney dlae-, heart -and eY1!11 death. --EDWIN DE COS'rA, MD, CHICAGO ' ' DEAR OIL DE COSTA: ftuk yoa for prwldlaf _, _ --mlpl be w .... v1q lalormatloa. I appreclote yeor -DEAR ANN LANDERS' Do yoo still give advice or do )'IJU just tell people what they want ID bear! I read with -the letter -the CIOlmtry lady (pardon. woman) who wu lrrillted · by city people who ,..,. loll and blew their car borna until tome00e came oat and gave them directicm. I wu ewn more astonflbed when you agreed wllb lier that they were boors and c'ioda. Whal ever became of the milk of human klndnm? I have lived in the country over 20 years on a little-traveled road. When a stranger stops to ask dlrectloos I am happy to help him. II Is such a amaU lhinl to do, why would._,. resent· It! Please, Am, don't encourage such lack ol ooocera tbal we resent doing a amaU kindness. Does the Bible not say that In enoountertnc strangers mme have en- tertained angels unaware! -COUNTRY HICK AND GLAD OF IT DEAR GLAD: "Stran1en" arn't wUt llley ....... be, phd tbe !llCI tbat - wilt wader • Co a farmer'• property may wtD r.ncou&er somdb.lilr btl'*- ''aa&eb." Read on: DEAR ANN LANDERS' One thine t. !or sure. You rnlgl>I be from Iowa, but )1)11 are I dty girl through and lbn>u8't- your reply lo lhe farm womain who ......,ted It when city people !Imo .., ID thtfr props~ and booked tbe ...... for oomeone to come out and 11 .. them rood dinlcllonl ,... a dead glireaway. I'm a fann penon and I know that l!IOlt fanner> keep doga oo their place for protection. The doga ire not alwa,. •lslble. but they are oo lhe look>out !or stnngen. If the !arm family -~ ba_. ID be It -· )'IJUr oo-qlled "good llllM<n" -....it In ---OOUNTRY rout DEAR rout: -,_, °"""'1 o..aa. w &lie 11111r1t e•m11I Y ... leuer """' tltCle .... ,.. I I RBI .... au.. ,nc1i•ce"9'tCl•mk • Cln drop be a friend Jn -of strea? -u ,... keep )'IJUr htad ~ can llley be of help! Ann i'..mdori -booklet, "Slraf.abt Dope a6 Oruca' .. 1tpo11118 the !act from the flclloo . Gel II today. For Ucb booklel ordered -a dollar bll~ plua a Iona, ~f.....,,.._, alilnped ..,..iope, (l! .... 11 postace) to Ann 1-n. llOI 1311, Qilcap, IL I06S4. • ! ,. J4 DAllV PILOT Norway Flavor Definition of lutellsk: ~ fish which hal!I ~soaked In btlne. Appeal.! mainJy to Scandinavians for whom it il a Christmaa or holiday treat. ConverJent source: t h e fourth annual lutefisk "mkl- dag" to be sponsored by Trygve Lle Lodge, Sons cf Norway Sunday, Oct. 29, in the Amerlcan Legion H a 11 , Newport Beach. More then 700 guests art ex- pected for the 2 to 6 p.m. fesUval, which this year will raise funds for a Harbor Area charity. Lodge members wearing natlve costumes , or "bunads," will serve lutefisk, meatballs, lefse, flat bread, limpa bread and homemade Norwegian cookies, and musi- cal ent.ertalnment will round out the festivities . Tickets are $3.50 for adults and $1 for children and may be obtained at the door. Preparing meatballs are Mrs. Astrid Bergford (left) and Mn. Karen Vennund. New Dilemma for Men What happens when a man is confronted with a bright new world of pink •hirts. ~ pie pool.I. dlecktnd IUill and wild U..? He's either confused and sticU to the basic black. white and brown or wean eome dal'> ing oolor combinations and wooden bow he really loob. Is the president of his com- pany frowning upon h I s plumage? Relax. all you fellows who are in • color dither. Gerrie Pinckney can teach you which suits to wear and which to leave in the store, what ooklr shlrll to lluy and just how b!gh to fly. Six men showed up for her first class on color and IJne, including an attorney, CPA, oalelmeo. two productlllft con- trol managers and an Autooetica e:s:ecutive. FIGIJRE TYPE 'Ibey received the same in- structions u women get for -.at!ng their '118nlrobts. 'lbe1 --drepod with dil- ferenl oolond mal<rials to see wblcb ahadea wen best for them. measured for thek figure type and given in- otructlolll on just what to ooy to build a wockable wardrobe. It SOllDded like a "hen party ... uyou u.ted to get a dozen while ahirtl and that was It," one man. commenled. "floe• that llh!rt go with that tie and puit.sT" another asktd. "I can't throw away all my clotbel," ,Iamentld another. COLOR COORDINATION Gerrie Pinckney h e I p s her student, Bill Rowley (seated) ' find !Ii• colors he should wear, while George Pinckney, anoth· er pupil, offers his opinion. ••What bappena when plum color goes out of atyle? I wear my 1Ult1 for years," said one aftu being adviJed thil WU HIS oolcr. "Wbet'1 going to happen if you walk into a boUd ol directors meeting wearing a J>'uro suit 10 yurs from now'?" Gerrie llelde<I ell the ci-- tk>na and commenia Ute an expert and oller"1 tho follow· tng Ups for men: WRINKLE MATEl\lAL reweave them . They'rt for the man who travels a lot. CLEANING TIP "Send your jacket to the cleaners once to every two times YoU send y o u r trouaers. It When she told the men ti takes two to five yean to ltllft uP'ofget 111 preconcet~ a Wll'drobe ov~ to Ill the cor- ldou obout color w11en tdlop. rect coiors and stylu for ead> ping. Teke color 1Watcbel. lndivldual, one of the atudentl Wrinkle rull material before moaned, "Go aee Y o u r buylntl _a good~ wl!! bonl<er!" no1 llllY wr!nlded. 'Ibey •II agreed the Calta 1111 you have 1 paundt don't Mesa sea ms l re 1I•1 tn· El~tr or Blair a:trvotions were valuable Jn ;::.. anll you're llhort a'"1d boootllll their seH«inlldence. tweedi and heavy ptatds. "We """ II!, ..,...inc the ,,_ ~~--a tllllt put · -colon, llld Don could see wttich ones were right." . "When you wear the correct colon you feel better," noted Goorge PlncJcn<y. "You !tam to oblerve people closer." "SI.nee I have studied color8, I'm llways giving lectures at work," 11)d Don Edward.I. BUI Rowley, a 0CPA, OOm- mented, "Jt ... beJPo' yoo do a better job of drw!ng ... Ted SWenlon noted, "It h<IPt us to proJed OW'Mlv'8 to people ... deal with aod show warmth." Boolde1 helpln( a man d,... hlmse~ wtll, wl1)' elN should a JN.JI take a class In color and line? "It'• a cood conversation pWJcet'' the attorney replied. • • Your Horoscope • Scorpio: Don't ·Allow • . Pride to Get 1n OCTOBER 25 WEDNESDAY . By SYDNEY OMARR AllIES (March ll·April 19): ary measures. LEO (July U.Aug. 22): Friend may resort to lteavy- hsnded methods. We i I h various factors, l 11 c I u ding moUve. ()no close to you may want to atop you from making mistake. Stop and listell-ed evaluate. Applies especially where opposite sti: is ~ cerned. New Ideas are tested. Some ne1gbbon, relatives may •Po p ea r ultra COMervatlve. However, thoee cloae to you do want you to succeed. Pioneer- ing efforts will succeed. But you can' change p e op I e VIRGO CAug. 23-Sept. 211): overnight Rome, security -these mat. ten are accented. G i ft TAURUS (April :ZO.May 20): purohue coold be more ap. One who teaches will seelt proprlate than i m a gin e d . your opinion. t:ooperate but Make conciliatory gesture 'to don't waste time. Means make family member. Taant1, Ubra plain that your efforts are J)ersons are involved. You get worth something more than opportunity to improve J>OSi· compliments. Trust bunch. tion. Look .beyond the immediate. . LIBRA (Sept 23-0ot. l2)" Perceive potential. Don't go too faf afield. Stick GEMINI (May 21.JlUle 20); to fami!!ar ground. One you Stop trying to skip es.senllats. took for granted hs• Ideas including meals. Energies can whi,cb would surprise you. Do be debilitated. Plainly, It is some addiUonaT readilfg. Gain necessary now for you to take Indicated through · Vf r i t t e n better care of y o u r s e I f . word. Check with Plscel. Journey may have to be SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): postponed. Pace activities. Relative may have idea which · . coold save you money. Don't CANC~ER (June 21.July 22). _perajt fltlde to stand In way ~me ttVISlons tn~-.re In-of progres... Heed voice of ex-dic~ted. Pressure is exerted perience. capr1corn is in pic-be~ scenes. Be thorough. ture. Joint effort succeeds. Don t delegate duties. Ap-Take Inventory parent minor matter could be · blown up out of . proportion. SAGITTARWS (Nov. 22· Know it and take precautloo-Dec. 21 ); Finish what you Way start. Doo't !nlUate new proJ· ed. Instead, round out present actlv)ly . Pennit mate, partner to take initiative. You gain most now by waiting, listening and learning. Bide your time. CAPRICORN (Dec. 2f.Jan. II): Cooperate with Soorplo. Lend wdgbb ol experience, prestlge. Yoor .Uorts will be repaid. Know It and act ac- cordingly. Fresh approach now pays divklench. Break through to new boriions. Live up to polentla1. AQUAllIIJS (Jan. !G-Feb. 18); Avoid acling on impulse, Extra planning now itlds in achieving ultimate objective. One close to you requlrts apec!al attent~ Some. plans may hsve to bi. <:banged. Go with the Ude. Be anllytlcal. PISCES (Feb. l .. March 20): DilfereoUate betwt!<ll des!r< and necessity, U lm1>11tlent, you hamper chanceii for sue· ceu. Build slowly. Strive to fulfill p a s t comm1tn1ents. Leave no loose ends. You get chance to create a more secure· position. IF TODAY IS YOUR BIRTHDAY you tend to be in- trospeclive. Very few persons know the real you. rn December, sociaJ lire will be accelerated. d>~""'..!0~~~~~~ For Coast Couples 'l'o avoid dlsappolntmenl, prospective brides are reminded to have their weddinf? stories with black and white j!lossy photo- g~~s to the DAILY PILOT ivomen's De- p ent one week before the wedding. Pictures received alter that time will not be used. For engagement announcements it is imperative that the story, also accompanied by a black and white glossy picture. be sub- mitted six weeks or more before the wedding date. If deadline is not rnet, only a story will be used. To help fill requirements. on both wed· ding and engagement stories, forms are available in all of the tJAlL \' PILOT offices. Further questions will 'be answered by Women's Section staff members at 642-4321. BLEDSOE-McCONVILLE Davls Bledsoe; ushers were John De8ver, Glen Wells, Kristy McConville became the bride of Stephen Allen Brian Carmen and Antonio Bledsoe during ceremonies FerTando, and ring bearers conducted by the Rev. Dr. Ray were Christian and Timothy , C. Gery in Quist Church by McConville. ::; the &:a, Newport Beach. The bride is a graduate of i.; Their parents are Mr. and . Mrs. Lawrence McConville of ... Corona de! Mar High School ~ Balboa Island end Mr. and and earned a bachelor of arts lf '>1 Mrs. Sherman Bledsoe of degree from Northern Arii.ona t-' Phoentt. University. · Serving as maid or honor Her husband is a graduate was Miss Karen McConvi\le, of Santa Ana High School and while bridesmaids were the attended Orapge Coast College Mmes. Mark Collins, Robert and California State Universl- Burris. John Loughborough ty, Long Beach before en-; < and Miss Linda Ne J s on . tering the Navy. Pressently he ' Christine Arnold was the is the head guide for the Hatch ~ flower girl. River Expeditions on the Attending as best man was Colorado River. MRS. BLEDSOE Family's Roots Not Square LILLY-PALMER Gail Harriet Palmer of Hun- tington Beach and James A. Lilly of Newport Beach ex- changed vows before the Rev. Dr. Phillip G. Murray In the Community Church Congrega. tional Corona del Mar. By ERMA BOMBECK I've always been rather con- fused about grandparents. If it is true that bei.ug near children keeps you young, bow come I look like Gabby Hayes and my parents (who are not around the kids all !he time) look like the eternal springs of youth? AT WIT'S END house rule of "no pets" by buying a Jive bunny at Easter. It's a love that takes the consequences for breaking the homemade noodles in a shoebox when you are at col- lege. It's a birthday present no matter where you are or how Jong it has been since you have written. It's a love that has tlme to listen to you when you talk. It's a love that kisses you unashamedly no matter how old you are ... It's a love that transcends long hair, bare sandals. or whatever you choose to look like. lt's a gentle, no-hysteria, comfortable love that as.sures you that no matter what shape the world ii in. • .someone always survives. Attendants were Mlss Helen Carter, Miss Gail Palmer. Wuls R. Benny and Jeffry Lilly. The newlyweds will reside in Newport Beach. It's a love that binds three generatlona: together and says, . "I too once looked like Gabbyl---------- Hay., and then I beoame • IF yo_u really grandparent.'' Dr. Margaret Mead in a book to be published next month C'mackberry Winter: in-bed·by-10 house rule whea .---------------------I they baby-sit. want to lose weight ••• My Earlier Years") doesn't particularly have the answer to th1s particular phenomenon , but lhe doeJ aay some things about grandparenll I like and ·-with. . She says, uWhat our society lacks today ls the mutually beneflclal closeness between grandchildren and grandparenta. Grandparents give you \ aense of how tilings were, boW things are. They know the world iln't going to end because you don't use two . wash cloths or somelhlng. ''They've lived t b r o u .g h change. Children need three It 's a wonderful love that crles inside when you are being reprimanded, a n d laughs when you are happy. It's an eternal love that doesn't seem to be nurtured by attention or the promise of any returns. . . .only your being there . It 's a love that accepts you ror just what yoo are to day ... not v.·hat you are be- ing molded to be tomorrow . It's a loyal love that sits in the rain and watches you sit on the bench. It's a love thal sends you generatlot1a to grow up with ----------I and we've done studies that ·· show older people who are close to their grandchildren ~.--are very different than people who are not." I've suapected thls for years. Grandparents hive a special, unique kind of love. It'• a love that rol3 teeth frorit forbidden candy before meats. WHAT CAUSES WRINKLES ON THE FACE? but you enjoy good food and a lot of it ~ ... you'll~ Weight Watchers! ~ The Weight Wal thers • program offers you an endlen E~ to sun and wind.hardMI the layw of outer lk.in variety of delicious foods, and, wfth the years, bkidt1 .kin b-eothing. This cauth the including meat, fish, fowl, MW laytr undtl'Natfl to aag and age fmw. Wrinld• ~alads, fruits, vegclabln, en an~ of dtad ._. ~ mn betenlO'lllld potatoes, ~st• and wonder· lt'1 a love lhat canctla the witt. cs~ ..w c:nan1 prodycL ~ abo.t rul desserts! And It really ..... '.Lc.l?i..........._ P~ at lufbn(. works. Over -4 mllllon hippy ".,_. ....., .. oe ' Echnntt. "0en1e dreped u1 ~.!,the~':; wi!b dillarent oolon and we-::;;==::;;===:;;;;;~l-=~~~~~;;::::~I II oa. . l '1f you'n w111na for a IUllr========I ~ The classic cardigan ~ -11 ...._ people have lost wtlght ... monogramed :.!.',h W1•flghCt W1t1cJ>eBhow. So for ~ .. , Wt I ome eim NF#POR.T • II 1'4'HK>M llLAHO • f!IEWl'OlllT t.lNTElt. • "'"'* to slim down s.fely, ~slbfy, your llllle ones MONDAY . l'JtltMY, tt11M;at . IUHO...Y.12:1N100 . OTHaJt o.t.YS 10;00-J :» fltjoyably. to allllO bad< In lly!e, It ..... FRANCTC::O will. ,,,. falric and ...-Exclusive !C" "'Hu~.0.-.mm men 1na1c1e!heDAILYPIIPl'll ' '\.ORR .J' fall don: men obould hlva tnotber grut newopapor - nice belklolbeo. tho Christian 8 c le n c e .. _..,... tvfrf time Moaltor. In-depth lutur01 }'Oii buy a lh1rl. ·IUJt or llacks. and commenllrles I r o m "Kn111· ara the lllte&t UUna Christian Scl•nce Monitor out but there Isn't one ~ews Service are pub!llhed aeamslml wtio Ulca to sew ' extlUllve!y lit Or&11&• CcMmty them. o.. flOOd ~ and b1 the DAJLY PlWI'. you've hid It. You Clan~,.__ ________ _,, I aioMaH'I ...... ......... lfU I. C..lf Hwr • -...... ,,_ f.tf11rl1tt IM!ll•llllv•I ••r•I••· .. 1!111 1114 1111• ltdl•• whe ~rt. \'Ht th4itf9 tlf~llf Wtlt•Mt. 1111111111 Mii.,. .,., .. FINE STATIONEtlY CN1111MAI CAlff erttr e C"-1'1 e ~ • INlai11TIN• Ull .. UL •lllTI 1111 t'l'll •IWAf · tft·Mtt UllUlll. IW•fMnd'IT IAllllt l -""11'"'. CLASSES .................. , ....... I Al('f PILOT NOW OPEN •ltU.t,..,·, •I••• 1,, •lt• •-1Jtl•"'• Fashion J1land Newport Be•ch Newport Btatfi WUllftffJ, 7100 , .... (Opening November) ' ,.,. N..,.,, To"n & Country THE HELPFUL GUIDE F,OR INFORMATION Or•nge AND FR££ BROCHURE .1111) 55l!·ll95 CALL : BlS·SSOS "JJuntlngton Harbour WEJGHT®WAT©fRS. (7141 ha.1'61 Wtlfht ... "(Mn ...... ,..i ........... ~ ... "llil•liirmmiiiiiio-r# !---------------------' "llHlth\WfMMn~NNl,..,~OINl--N.'• ·. . . I - • I • TUMBLEWEEDS MUTI AND JEFF MUTT, FIGHT)'t)UR OPPOSlilON.' BE 'FE.ARL.ESS···LIKE MY l'RIENO. AOOl..Pll GL.UTZ! FIGMENTS NANCY J4E HATEP·-·HE RIDICUL.EO "THE I -HIGH ANO MIGHTY • 1-\E SPIT VENOM AT me MIL.ITARY- -HE WAS TOUGH I 1------1.. WHERE'S YOU PIDN'T GIVE ME ONE MY 1.0.U. NOTE'? WHERE'S THE POLLAR YOU eo~ROWEJ:? LAST" MONTH'? r--.,.- , I DAILY CROSSWORD ••• by R. A POWER I ACROS S carbonate 51 Loud sound 52 Ye1terd1y'1 Puztle Solved: 1 Shuls no1s1lv 6 Drolled 10 Wild 1ppl1 14 E. lndl1n ga!IWIY 15 "···· Bick Islands: Pert of A11sl<1 54 Stom1ch of a ruminant Little Sh1b1" 58 16 Indeed: ln1h animal ·--and pieces 17 Dispatch bOll 18 Unmoved 19 20 Nimbus "listen 10 ·····I" 59 Musical 1nst1um1nt 61 In hermony 6Z Molding 63 Parasitic eggs 13 Shov• uo 21 Neithei's companion :J Animal 42 Tongue disc"Jlore'tion 43 Nor1nwe1t S&milic 22 Certain soldiers 14 Footless 26 Famed moun11in 'fl S1ey11d a1011nd 64 Aegean CORSI of A~•a Minor 65 High hills 66 foot rest 67 Top ol a docs: language h•ll DOWN Informal 44 Brings 31 Greek l11Her 32 More unfriendly 33 Golfing groups 25 Pul off until about JS Pu1s1dent•al nickname symbol ~ An emohon 3 Diva's solo 4 Rubs in ce111in way later 27 Veruce beach 28 Image 5 Investigator 30 38 PUil or\ 39 Turns to !) Civlhan 29 Giants Of Expos Rationed o"' liquid Conservation 34 Put into AO Posaessive Co1p9: Abbf. words word 7 The -.: 35 Emanation A1 Number Chicago 36 F1m~y •2 Proolre•der':I area members: m•1k o43 Cook'• •ccessorv o4'4 Pro's partner 45 l essen 47 Anti.,d10ul 1odium 8 love in Abbf • Pisa 9 Turn• over 10 l arge wasteland 11 Hold lorth vocally 12 Parts 37 Anglo• Saxon slav• 39 Large houses 40 Teleohona compariv employee 46 Bill's partner 47 European >t>O• 48 Few: Prefix 49 Stop 50 EQUestrian'1 garb 53 Short communic1· h'.,..-1~1 -+'--1~'-+'--l..,,~6.-l~~'-+'~"Tiifn",.-+1-1 ~-"'-+"-1 • r~ 1$ ~-- "' , II " " ' " " ' I ... " " " 36 ,, " ' l9 .. - '" r. " • .. ( " - ~ ! I • ,. -l l~ ... -- b:.-1--11--+-·.:~:4-_.._..·--~m"r-1--.+-.+-+-~ YOU DO WHAT GL.UTZ DID! PEANUTS JUDGE PARKER uu PERKINS ' ... c--~ by Tom K. Ryan HE PROij'LY "llNOWS by Al Smith +IE WAS SHOT TO DEATH IN GERMANY! by Dale Hale DOOLEY'S WORLD SALLY BANANAS ~~~·o<fl .fJJ.~! GORDO 1 , • I MOON MULLINS ·. ' . lHEN Wl\Y OID YOU L.JE TO THE LlElITT>ilAMT? YOU TOLD HlM ™AT YOUR HUS--eAND W/>S HERE by Harold Le Doux W.A.IT ! &lOP HERE! IU WALK THE RE.ST ;:!~~ .OF THEW•~! AT THI! KOTEL WITH ~U '?HAT Hl6HT! by John Miles ' TliHday, October 24, iqn DlllV PILOT J 5 1 t ,,.,-------Nii~ SUNE ~NG #IMS'tFt.F tAI 7'1£/tr ••• WHAr-00 YoV SUPPOSfi NE".s WA11:NtNO ~ IO·z.4 "ff,~ by Roger Bradfield l I by Gus Arriola ,.,,>1-R I· L-·~~·~ by Roger Bollen WHAT DO 40U MEAN, 'SO WHln"'? I '---,,--:J 1 i • h H !I • ,. I "But why should they '<\'ant world peace -they'd ell be out of work." DENNIS THE MENACE , ' .,. ~ ,... "9-_., •• • • , J 8 DAILY PILOT Ex-D9dgers Ace Rohin·son Dies of Heart Attack I ! " • OAKLAND FANS TURN OUT TO HONOR WORLD SERIES CHAMPIONS. Martin Predicted It 150,000 Fans ' Former UCLA Standout Became First Black Player in Major Leagues f, STAMFORD, Conn. <AP) -Jackie RobinJOn, who broke mojor league baseball's color banier Jn 1947 and went on to stardom and a place in the Hall of Fame, died today, apparently or a heart ~ttack. The 53-year-old Robinson, who had suf- fered a mild heart attack in l968, was stricken early thiJ morning at his 14- room home in this New York City com· muter community. Police, summoned by his wife. used oz· ygen in an. attempt to revive him and then rushed hlm to Stamford Hosp\tal. He was dead on arrival. Robinson had been scheduled to appear ln Washington today as one of several maln speakers at a symposium op drug abuse. Sponsors of the event said Robinson had called Monday night to report that he wlfs hemorrhaging from the eyes and . that his doctors said he should not travel. Robinson's baseball career was filled with controversy and it did not st.op when he retired in 1957 to take an executive post with a restaurant chain. He later became caught up in Political disputes with m<re militant sections of the black comm.Wlity who as.sailed his Republican party alfiliatloos. But Robinson was f i r s t ol all an athlete and. that is how he wrote his way into history. Amid scorn and criticism Crom some following the announcement that he would be the first black in the major leagues, Robinson did his talking on the playing field. He joined the Brooklyn Dodgers in 19-17 after spending a year with Montreal and leading the Jnternational League in hit- ting. He made his first appearance. in the JACKIE ROBINSON I need a man who can fly~ the flag for his race, who can tum the other cheek. lt I get a firebrand who blows his top and comes up swinging after a collision at second base, it cou ld set the cause back: ai years." Robinson was the mao. He endured verbal abuse and a loosely organized at- tempt ,to keep him out of the game. attention 11 a track and foot.ball 1ta?". Ht spent three yun in the Army, ri• Ing to the rank ol llautenan~ and Ilten began coechlng bueball at Samuel Houston College, a Texa1 Nesro dlooJ, while playing shortmp wllh the Kattaa> City Monarchs of the old Negro American League. From there he got hla lint tryoUI With a major league club, the Boston Red So!. Booton didn't Invite him to Join lite club, but Brooltlyn did end be moved to Mon- treal. After watching Robinaon In action dur-• ing the 1946 apring training, Clay Hopper, • a Mississippian who would manage Robinson the first year. asked Rickey. • ; ''Mr. Rickey, do you think he i! human?'' Robinson aot a $3,500 bonus and a $800 monthly salary to play .with Montreal. In his 10 years with the Brooklyn Dodgers, Robinson eamCd a top JMUal _: salary of $42,000 and !hared slz World Series purses. He made his mark as a base-stealing second baseman with the Dodgers and later shifted to third at the end of hi! career. With RobiMon breaking the color bar- rier, Larry Doby became ·the lint black to join the American Leque the nest year. Today, some of he game's greatest starts -Willie Mays, Henry Aaron, Bob Gibson, to name but a few -are black. Tiie melw fM.gw 111.-.11 cerMr recotd1 -' J&dr.19 RoDlnt0n: Yu.r G A• R M » a 1tr rt11 •.A. !Nl'-Blln 151 5'0 115 vs 31 5 If .. ,,.,,. 194-6iln 1•7 J14 10& 1111 31 I 12 IS .2'l 19'9-8~n 15' 59l ln 20I lit It l• 1t~ .14 JP»-flkn ''' 511 " 110 " ' '' ti ,m 19$1-81111 15l W 106 TIS l3 1 It 11 .D ltS'J-6k11 14' 510 1°' IP 17 J lt 71 ,XII l9S3-B•n 1l6 ,.., '°' Ut :u 7 12 tJ Im 1~8kn ,,, * t2 no 12 • 15 "' ,lll ltSS-alltl IOS 117 ii 81 6 2 I » .2» 1ff6.-8k,, 117 w " " 1J 2 )0 4 .27J .\ W ] _ Il . National league as Brooklyn's first e . . . .e-n f ba_somaa.-ill..a-game..,.gainit tbe llo•ton com t) fle-Braves. Heplayi!il most of lils<m>F at Robinson was born in Cairo, Ga., in 1919 and moved to California. with bis family a yc.a.t Jater. The young Robinson began making his mark as an athlete at Pasadena Junior College, becoming the first man to win letters in baseball, basketball, football and track. He then \Vent on to the University of California at Los Angeles, where he received natiopal TO!l b 1::112 oll17 t4J lSll 27) J4 l:U 7l4 .l11 AL Manager of Year · CHICAGO (AP) -Towards the end of the regular Ameri can League season. • Bil!Y Martin or the Detroit Tigers told ·Chuck Tann~ of the Chicago While Sox : "It's got to be either you or me for A-1anager o{ the Year." That was disclosed today by Tanner, who was named Mondly the AL Manager o{ the Year in an Associated Press poll of sports writers and broadcasters. The White Sox fini shed 51h games behind the Oakland A's. newly crowned world cham- pions, in the AL West race. "If you wtn. rll send you a con· gratulatory wire. and if I win, you can send me one ." is the way Martin was quoted by Tanner. It turned out Tanner received 213 votes to capture the coveted honor. while Eddie Kasko of th·e Boston Red Sox: collected 140. and Martin was third with 66. The poll, completed prior to the open· Ing of the major league playofi1, ranked Dick Williams ol the Oakland A's fifth with 24 votes, behind Ralph Houk of the New York Yankee&, fourth with 38. Tanner. in only his second full major league seuoo. made a season-long run at the Oakland A's mainly with a ~man show -Dick Allen, Wilbur Wood and Carlos May. His most artistic achievement was his handling of the enigmatic Allen, who previously felt rejected with t h e Philadelphia Phils, the St. L o u i s CardinalJ and Los Angeles Dodgers. Allen wound up leading the AL in homers with 37 and rbl with 113, batting .303 and sparking the White Sox into pen- nant contentlon after they finlahed 22 1-) games behind. Oakland in Tanner's first full Sox seuon of 1971. Tbe charismatic Tanner. once a journeyman big league outfielder, ac- cepted the Manager of The Year honor v.·ith complete surprise. "Is that right'?" he kept repeating v.·hcn informed or hia selection. "What dO Gl'id Ratings "-_ ... , P'l't. ., .. m --,...._ '· us.c:: {40 7.. "' 11 ... _ 1111•, ~· ,,. 1, Al-me fJ), M IOl lJ. Ai.611mL J.1 17J J NeOrnk• 121. ,., n• 1J. "°'"' a.mt, .. 1 1a 4. (ltlfo 51. !!)~ H .. , 14. 'f........ •2 116 S. MIOllOl11 111, "4 ,,. 1&. ..... Ill,._ •I .. 6. UlvllleM 51., ... 511 16. A.ttlMil JI., .. I '6 1, Colo!>ldo. 6.1 ~ 17, l"lwlM It., 41 24 1. Olli.lel'IOIN, .. 1 l.11 It. 11191 Arit-'•· "·2 10 t. UC.LA, '-1 :Mt SAM.I, •I 10 10. Tne1, "'1 m Wttl v1r111111e, f.2 10 Oth•r:r. ,.,1~1t11 "'°'"· 1111111 11p11e11e11c111v, Air l'••ce, De•tlnOIJlll, il'1Drid1, G-gle, toul,YUI•. Mlnour!, Horii! Ce•ollM. No•lll Cerolln1 $Hte, Oo<l•ll,_ Stele. P11.,,..,., S1en•o•d, Tel'•' 1~<"· Wtallll'l(l!Oll Stitt. CHUCK TANNER you say? I'm very grateful and it's a big thrill to me. I have to credit the whole White Sox organization, from the scouts to the playera who did the job. Tanner joined the While Sox late in 1970, a season in which the club finished witb a horrible 56-106 record and a major league low attbldance or 495,355. In 1971, Tanner perked the Sox to a 79- 83 finish and a turnstile count of 833,891. Then, last season, the Pale Hose became a red hot home attraction, playing before 1,186,018 as they won as of 78 games in White Sox Park. •·Next year, we'll have a better season," Tanner-said Monday. In reply to questions about a White Sox weakness through the middle. Tanner said: "We will try lo improve next season, but even with the second base combination we had and our centerfield situation, we still were tbe setOnd best AL team last season." Tanner, wbo concedes he bold! a light rtln on Dick: Allen, was asked it the slug· gtng star will attend spring training, which he miPed entirely last season because of a cootract dispute. "No, Dick doesn't bave to go to spring training,'' replied Tanner. "I don't want him to. Tr he does, I'll kick him oot. 1 just want him to play first base the way he did this year. ffe's l~e greatest." Series Champs OAKLAND (AP) -Women fainted but did not fall. Tbe press or the crowd kept them upright until they·revived as 150.000 ecstatic OakJanders lined the streets to welcome home the triumphant A ·s with their World Series championship. . !t. was a warm day, and for JOtcmg and near-hysteria t h a l ac- companied the l~block parade from Lake Merrit to the civic center, Mon- day's crowd was...prderly except wben it surged into the street to touch the pass- ing heroes. "The crowd is so dense the parade jusl can't get through."' radioed police of- ficers. "We tried to budge them, but they just won't move." But the jams lasted only moments. and the parade made its way through storms of rising balloons and falling paper serpentine and confetti. In the procession were more than 100 antique autos, assorted marching bands and ranks of baton twirlers and cheerleaders: working the 11).deep crowd to ever dizzier heights of relebration, Polk:e Chief Charles Gain estimated the crowd at 150,000. Cbeers went up for everybody on the team, from bat boy Hoo Pieraldi to owner Charles o. Finley. "This ls a happy day for Oakland." understated mayor John Reading as he handed over a plaque to Finley inscribed "To the Swinging Owner of the A's." J\1anager Dick \VUliams got o n c dedicated to "The Genjus Manager of the A's." Each player got an engraved pewter plate1 Jhe bat boy got a trophy. and the mascot mu1e, 01.arJey 0, was decked with balloons and presented with a bag of victory oats. Balloons also decorated the motorcycles of the goodnatured palice of- ficers who handled the record crowd, swollen because of the Veterans Day holiday and called "The best crowd Oakland has ever seen," by Deputy Police Chief George T. Hart. At the speakers stand, where the players and their families were ln· traduced to the hoarse throng, a special ovat~ went up for outfielder Reggie Jackaon, who appeared on crutches because ol en lnjtlly suflered In the flnal American League playoff game that sent the A's to their final triumph ovCr Cin- cinnat~ Greetlngi trom Gov. Ronald Reagan. who was out of the state, were read by his executive secretary Edwin Meese III. \rho was booed every time he mentioned the governor's name. second base. Robinson was a sensation in his first year, earning rookie of the year honors. Two years later, his .342 batting average earned him the league's most valuable player award. Branch Rickey, the man who brought Robinson into the major league, told the rook le: "I need more than a great ball player . JACKIE ROBINSON IN 1947 Winning Is All That Counts--Gihron CHICAGO IAP J -"I don'I care wl» aays bow lucky we were or how cloee it wu," Ald Abe Glbron Monday nlibt aller his rejUvenaltd Ollcago ll<Arl cdpd lite -Vlklnp lS-10, "Wt woa and that'• an that c::ounl•." The Bears dldll't ciinCh lhelr ......i llltlliht victory until a Mlnll<IOCa touch- d<nm PISI from Fran Tarkenton to John Boa&l•Y had ltee!I called back baceuse of an l11<1lglhle roc<lvtt down/ltkl end Fred Co• mis9ed a 27-yard ll•kl goo! attempt orllh ..... -retUtlnlnc. MlllD-cooch Bud Grant, et18'Y blll calm, .. 1c1 ''11'1 tao bad tbc big plq had to be mode by lhe olllcl1ls. Tlttt• wun't a !tac for aome time •lier Ille play had lioeft ""11Ummaled. I "All the officials." said Crant when uked wl» Ibo lnellglble rec<IVft' wea II wu guanl &I Whlto who appannUy ~ too rar wltlle Tarkenton waa ecrainbllns -. be opottod Beoaley. "We aln.:edf had our ettra pomt teem on the field," aakl Tarkenton. Tlten u an efterlhougllt be edded "Bui l'm sure tbe offJctals, ln their Jude.ment, were rlght. Beuley w111 the prtmary recclvtr. He decided to shake off the guy who was holdlng him and went down the middle. IL'• JuM unfortunate that M)'body has to loee the way we klst." The IO!I dropped the Vikings , pre· s.,on favorlttt,1 tnto la1t place In the c.otral Divl&lon Of the Natlonal Football Ccl\ference while tbc S..ra climbed with· In t % Jlllll .. of GT$! Bay and Detroit I J who are Lled for the dlvilion lead. The Vlktrtp bad lhe boll for cmly nine plays In the first half but one of th<m w11s a ff.yard touchdown pus (tom far- kenlt:rt to John Ollllam on a lhlrd down eltuatton In Minn-.'1 lint -of play. CltJcago tb«t dornlnaltd the nr.1 hair. running off 41 ple)'I while taking a 10-7 left<! on a 21-yard tield goaJ by M.ac Perciv•l and a fOUJ'l.yard touchdo\vn pass from Bobby Douglass to Jim Harrison who carried the ball 31 times and gained 103 yanh rualtlng. Dick Bulkus launched the touchdo\vn drive bv rtQOVering an Qecar Reed fum- ble rul<t~ l•ter called •fake field goal and A fake punt wflfeh helped lt\e Bears ln,. men.11ety. The fake field goal c&ll came on the i.udtdowu drlvo with the hokltr Doog· lass rolling out for $ix yards and a first down. kff9 •• 0..rtfft Cllk• a--• IO • S -IJ Mmr-te Viki..... 1 0 3 • -10 MIM -Ollllem, 44 O.u ff'Ol'll T•rkmtotl (CC. kltkl (Ill. -f'G. P•r<IYel 21 (ft! -ll•rTltO<!, • P<flt trem DD\191•11 !Ptrcl. YI! ti(~) Mi.tin. -"c;, Co• 21 Cftl. -1'0, l't rrfyel 10 ~1111'1d•nt• -ss.101 l'lr1t 1111-\ •h11119' -v••ch Ye rll1 pooUl"11 lfeturn y•rf1 P IUlt . .... tl•llUltl rumbla -""' Peritlll .. -''''" V1•111tf " 1t·U "' " 11.,.s.1 ... » ··~ '"" " "'"' ~ " ••• ,.,, s •I •• . Sports Sensation Stardom Came Easy For Jackie Robinson NEW YORK (AP) -Jackie Roosevelt Robinson, baseball's black trailblazer, shattered the major league color barrier wilh ability that carried him to the Hall or Fame. A C111legiate athletic sensation at UCLA, the outspoken Robinson was brought to the Brooklyn Dodgen in 1947 by the late Branch Rickey to start an oft· turbulent, always-exclllng career. Robinson, who retired in 1956 after a spectacular decade as a Dodger, died · Tuesday morning of an apparent heart attack alter diabetes had left him parlially blind. He wu 53 years old. A nalive or the south Georgia town of catro, Robinson WIS a 5-foot·ll, 225- pound athletic dynamo who hit .311 for bis 10 National League sta90DS as Brooklyn won six pennants aod-in bis final year Just then, Rickey 's tum-the-other• cheek advice grabbed him. Eddie Stanky. a Mobile, Ala., rn!Mnt " who played second base for Brooklyn. shouted at Chapman, "Why don't you piCk on somebody who can fight back." Robinson credited Stanky for much help during that rough first sea90n, 'lben neJ:t summer, Jackie took Eddie's job at second base. Stanky and Kentucky-bom1 shortstop Pee Wee Reese helped make it easier on Robinson's own ballclub. World Series Composite Box Score • -the 1956 World Seri~. CINCtNHATI (Al') -Tl>e ~fl• botJCM•. Robinson was bom Jan. 31, 1919, the 01 ,,.. 11n World s...1.1: Yowtgest of five children. His father u.n1NG IUMMA•Y OAKLAND A'S deserted the struggling family a year ·~ r • a ,. 11r ...i ll'lt . later and his mother pulled up stakes, ~~;-•is " ~ : ! : : ~ ~ ~ moving her offspring to Pasadena. Ato<J •' 1• o 1 o o o • .oct Young Jaclde was an immediate sports ~:':1"P•1' 1: ~ ! : o : : ::: sensation. Even on the s o u t he r n H ... ,, ltH•" J o i o • o ·* • tarldo lb 16 l 1 I O I .2ff California sandlots, he was so superior Me...dTltk ,, is :i , .o 0 0 .u.,, that other kids would buy him Tena-ct t ·lb ,, .s • i ' ' _,.,. Ore"'1b 11 o • 2 o 1 m sandwiches and drinks just so they could M•roue1 ~ 1 o l o o , :.00 be on Robinson's team. 1tubl,t1t 2b 3 o 1 o o o .m tfottrm111 ,. J o o o o t .000 "You might say," Robinson chuckled a F111Hr1 • 1 o o o o o -* few years ago, "that I turned pro at a ~~~: • 1 : ~ : ! ~ :: very early age." 0oom P.Pr 4 1 o o o o o .ooo S I P d . MlllCMf ~ I 0 I 0 It I I.GOO Pepper treet n asa ena was a mtx· M • .., .... 1 Pkt 10 1 3 o o 0 1 .:ioo ture of blacks, Mexicans and Japanese M1muton " o o o o o o o .ooo r 01111e.., P'I< S 0 1 11 O O I .200 and youngsters grew up swiping ruit Lodler P o o o o o o 0 .aoo ~ from groof vbees and .throafflwing dlrt bombs at "°";!',,,: ,,: ,: ..: : : : 1: :: 1 autos t pass111g uent. CINCINMATI ltlOS ~ n-"·--'s skill ··-1-• him to athletic e111 r 11 • •fir "" .n.uuu~ ..._, t:U ltOH tr ti 3 6 0 0 1 I fame at Pasadena Junior College and ,.,...," 2b 24 ' ~ ' o o 1 then as a football-basketball-track hero To1eii '' 2• , 1 ' o o ' hn<:fl c JJ44101! al UCLA at the end of World War 11. ,.,,., 11t u , 10 , o o 2 Jackie was an All-American nmntr, =~,.: rt ~: : ~ : : ~ l averaging 12 yards a -""' one year for Melt.,. rf.111'1 • ' • 1 t o t r bal -·, p ·r· Foster CINI o o o o o o o the Bruin oot I team. He set a ac1 1c con<'#(n ,,._ JJ 2 , o 1 o 2 Coast Conference broad jump record and °"'*' u-flfl 1 11 o o o o o ,J.1o1.,,. 300 0000 led the league In basketball scoring. &orboll ,. o o o • o • o But, baseball was to be his ultimate UllLMll<lf'r p"· • o 1 1 o o o C1rn>llP 00 00000 gnme. J1v1w "" 1 o o o o o o Robinson had been paid a $3,500 bonus ~;:.";:!1e:,, .• ~ ~ : : : : : : by the Dodgers and his Montreal con-Ha11 " ' o o o o o o BilllnghemP 5000 00D tract \Vas $600 a month. By his career's Gu11~11 " 2 o o o o o • end . Jackie was makins $42.500. McG101M1r1 • 1 o o o o o o I Toll!• 2'0214'1 '11!1 His major league debut at Ebbets Fie d ,11cw1NG stiMMART ~. .114 .UJ t ,., .2tl ). ·"' . ·"' .1$1 • ..... .... . .. ... ' ..... .... ' ·"' ·"' ·"' ... .... , ·"' .... ·"' .... ,,M In Brooklyn Wlll against the Boston o.e.ICUND ,.,. Uraves and lbelr outstanding Ho1t1men 1.0 • ; uT~ 1h1 ; ~ ~ !' .~ ~ righthander. Johnny Sain. Jackie went ~'""'•" 1.0 i u._ 11 i J 1 • 2.• 1: BJut 0.1 ' ~~ I ' ' I S 4.CO f) hitless. Hunter M , " n s 1 ' 10 2.11 ~ "All I saw was curve balls," he said. :Hi!.' ; •:~ ~ ~ ! ~ 1: ,!;:: .. ''Curves ol all dlfierent shapes.. siltl and Lock« 1 \'I 1 o 1 o • o.oo II speed&. I wondered whether I'd 8000 be ~'" ~ !,"' ,.! J 2~ J ~ :_: .;,}' back at Montreal." •--"'""" 1. •'"· cltan CIMCUHIA.fl •I OS No ce.1 1 "' " , w .. • _ .~ Robinaon \lied his ICOl'Chlnc spttd to Noiefl .. , > IN 7 4 • 2 2 ,_,, ~ beat out a bUnt agafn!t Boat.on'• Bob = t~ : ;_ ! ~ ~ ! : ~:: ; ElUott.' Nr:xt day, at New York'a Polo °"m•lov ,., ' 1 1 • 2 s 1 1.J1 ,.?. lei hand Hell ' '""' 1 • 1 1 1 oa Grounds, be hit a homer oil t· er 111w"""9m. 1.0 ) ,,.,. • 1 o • n o.• ~ Dave Koslo of the Olanta. ~'::1911111 ; ~ ~ ~ ~ : ; 1~::: Rickey had warned J1ckle that he Totelt 1 •1v. " 1• 11 11 » "'' ·~ woo\d have to wear an "armor of ........elf' .. ll. •1111r1orwtt1, Heu. ICO.e •Y IMIUNtl humlllty" as b3sebaU'1 roolde black. The 0o-1enc11 1.i 112 002-1• ed I I l 'l.d Clnc111,..tl 110 UI .,,_,I l request pat ence was aeven: Y e E-lfl'ldl. M0rt•11, ,..,,L " ... ,.. cw:""'°"· , .. on the first trlp to Philadelphia. tte111 t. H11111t•'. Tit*•. ~''"'"" Aloil, •• ,,... Man.•er •·-~-Nnan't Phillies Me~•'· c1m .. 11tr1', OP-c:1nc11111e11 t. ~"'° •· • uuu .... uti,.. 1,()tli-(IMlr111etl ft, O<llllletMI 4.f. 19-ROM, Mor• ... shoulcd rAclal slurs at him. Jackie '· 1e1~ 1. 11..-0 t Otl't11rme, ~ • .-.'°". 11 ' almost cracked, _..,... droppln~ his bat -M_,.. z. c_...i.n. J11Yi.t. Orlm11c, Cem1111tiit. ..,,.,.,. 2, AIOI.I, Hondrldt, ,,...,., M.11191111. t,.-cor.:_. ,/ and 11alkin1 toward the Ph ladelphia clo!I "" .... ,. .... fflll'-CP( Mc.Glalfltlfl , ... rt. w .. ~. ((~fl!IYI, WP -•hi*, "'"'""' ~ dugoul. • .... H1,111t1r, . ' • • ! . t, • ' \ I, ' • ' ' '• ... ' I I T11tsd111 October 24, 1'172 DAILY PILDT 11 ••ma.craor-• w SWING SllOOTlllT lll1'01MEWlllD When drivi"' tee slX>ls lnlo a stronc headwind, th• tend..,. r;y Is 111 hit the ball harder than usual. This is a IMdency that )OU should resist. I I I By changing the nonnal rhythm of your swina. you run the risk o.f hitting an off-line shot. The headwind magnifies ahydlrectional errors yourni#ht make. A shot that should slice only 10 yards may bend brice !hit •mount because al tho wind's ect:Jon. I I . r strongly suggest --hitting in the wind, you co~ trite on striking tho ball 11 squarely as possible. This Is a PoOitlve lllou&ht thatwtU replace th• natural ura:e to over·swin1- And it's !ht best ny to beat the wind. a. o MAn. ....... ..., _ ~l\ ~ Lene Irons From Tht ffouch, Pitchinr '"''" Woods., UpttlH ft Downhill l its-these and othtr shots ara dtUlltd lot )'OU lft Arnold Palmar's booklat, "Troubla Shots."' for ,air copy, IMftd 204 and a &t1mpad, self·addAIM«I .. ,~to ArMlid Pal"*, .. C9ft; of thi& ntW•P1ptr. Acosta·· W estern's Mr. Versatility &b Acosta may be the most 10Ught-after high school foo~ ball player in Orange County wften the season ends. 55 percent completions in- cluding a touchdown per game average and 175 to 180 yards per tilt. UC Irvine Kickers In Tourney UC lrvtne will Journey to Da vb for the All.callfomla aoccer tournament t h I a weekend after defeating UC Riverside Saturday, 4-2, on the Anteaten field. UC! took .. early lesd Ind held It tbroogboot 11 coach Bill A!hcrolt emptied the Anteate" bench In the lltCOlld half be,_,re Rlvenide finally acored. Mich ()Jlfy, playing at center f<n1ard, netted the ball alter a perfect pass fn>m Achllles Palomino in the f1rlt mlm.ite of play far the victors. Palomino later left the game with an injured right leg alter scoring a goal with an assist from Agusto Alarcon. Walter Fuentes S<Ored the third UCI goal. '!be ftnal score came on a pass from !All! Larsen to Jer- ry Kaiwi% from 18 yards out. Riverside scored its two goals in the final 10 minutes with UCI reserves in the game. Ashcroft praised the W<>rk or Fred Albertson In the goal and Bob Guthrie at a halfback position in addition to tho!le scoring and mai.lng assists. Sunset Duo Rated 1-2 But right now he is con-cehtraling on bringing the Western High Pioneers into the Sunset League cham- pionship snd Thursday night will face another hurdle on the rocg road to success in the NiwporfllmiOi'lligh Siilon. His aerials haven't been concentrated on any 6ne part.k:ular receiver. Rather there are five playen who Mater Dei lost, Edison woo, have divided the action pretty but the top four in Or~ge evenly. Cowlty's official listing of prep They lnclude Gary Caskey football teams as selected by n -spnt tM.-nan-Porterat -,u..-oi\ItY-PlWT remalils split end and wide receiver, the same. "He's the best football player to ever play al Western High," coach Jim Everett says by way of praising his 6- 0. I9(t.pound quarterback. "He's the best offensive player I have ever coached. He's durable, an outstanding quarterback, a fine leader and an eicellent student," the coach continues in passing out the accolades. For starters, Acosta ls the ideal prospect ior a college wishbone signal-caller. He liQ.s to n.in the option play wtll and is an e1cellent passer. In leading the Pioneers to a perfect $-0 record this season. be . has averaged 225 yards total offense per game. In rushing statisti cs, he has averaged about seven yards per carry. His passing statistics show Mark Alvey at flanker, tight Western and Westminster end Andy Schiller and top continue to run one-two follow· reserve Jeff Cornell . ing easy Sunset League vie· Everett continues his praise torles and Mater Dei is thlrd of the young signal-Caller who despite losing a 7-6 deci!ion ~. led Western to the AAAA finals the CIF AAAA's No. 1 ranked before losing a year ago in ad· eleven, St. Paul. ditio~ to his currer.t sea.son Edi.son squealted by No. g heroics. Estancia, 7-8, to maintain Its "He is a Vt:r"J dur~ole player position while Estancia fell and has taken som real shot! one notch to seventh. ~ year without D; stx county teams remain W1'- Jured. Of course, there • beaten and untied after five always that possibility but we weeks wtth La Habra snd don't even think lbout It;" Pacifica moving up to fifth Acosta has rec e1 v ~ d and mtb. numerous letters from ma)Or Unheralded s a n ta Ana uniVersities ~ the coun-Valley, pkted up points after try already this seuon and gaining its fifth straight win. will undoubtedly get mott All Of the ranted teams ap- before . it e.nds. . He's an pear to be solld favorites this acadenuc ma10r with an efe week with Mater Dei having on a college education and will perhaps the toughest task be abletochoosethe.cboolbe against Bishop Amat (HJ in desires to attend. Angelus League bostiUilies at Mt. San Antonio College Fri- day night. .., -<'* Fishing ls Bot Crown Prince Hassan of Jordan landed this 190· pound marlin on a shark fishing trip on the boat Del Mar out ol Davey's Locker recently. Skipper Monarchs Move Up, Edison 9th Mater Dei Hlgb'1 Monarchs, flfth in last week's CIF AAM P"!P football poll, moved up to fourth despite a '"' k>ss to the No. t St. Paul Swordsmen in Angelus League play. Other Orange Coast area elevens in the Top 10 are Westminster (third) a n d Edison (ninth), We.!tmioster shelled Marina , 3U, while Edi.son was slipping by Emncia, 7-3. Estancia also picked up votes in the AAAA ratings. The top attraction this wee.k: involving ranked learns is the ~1ater Del-Bishop Amat strug- gle at Mt San Antonio Friday night. Amat was accorded a No. 6 pQslUon after getting by St . Anthony, ZZ.16. Santa Marla (S-0) ~ ranked fi rst in AAA circles while Temple City i.!I fint in the AA classtficaUon. The latter is working on a 35-game streak. "' ·~ ,. "' .. n !: ll Doyle , Tabs 25 Winners I~. Doyle or Huntington Beach won the. nrth week of the DAIL y Pllm Pigskin Pickeroo Contest, but a week of upsets gave the conte.!tants a difficult time. Doyle picked 25 winners to outdistance Elmer Tanogosbt (Newport Beach), May Zirbel (Huntington Beach ), Cbrb Schneider (Fountain Valley) and Dave Sigler (Huntington Beach). Each picked 23 win- ners and had to be separated by the contest'!! tie breaker Coast Rangers Begin Soccer Season Sunday ORANGE COUNTY TOP 10 Clyde Gillam is shown with the prince. Below, Gary It was lhe second week a member of the Zirbel household was a winner in the contest. Dirk Zirbel was first last week. The contest is co- SJlOIUIOfed by the DAILY PILOT and the WestcJUf Plaza, University Park , Bayside C e n t e r , Eastbluff Village and Harbor View Center shopping centers. Opening of the h om e schedule by the Coast Rangers soccer teams takes place Sun- day afternoon when t h e Rwers entertain Tecolotlan iii' a PacUic Soccer League zri$tch at Costa M e s a ' s TeWlnkle Park. ·A reserve game starts at 12:30 with the featur e tilt at 2;30. "l'he Rangers play a IG-game home !ichedule that runs tbrough March 25 with the reserves facing two additional opPonents. 1be home schedule: COAST a.t.1101•1 HOMI KNIDUL• OCI. :rt -Ca.11t R11'91A w, l ecolotllro. NOY. $ -CM•I R ..... I VI. Futl.,·ton. NOY. lt -COi•! ll:l l'lgtrl YJ.. T ..... 1)11 Cltv. J1ft. 14 -Co.111 1l1ng1t1 va. l.ont Buth. J1n. :zt -Co.st R1ngw1 ,,., Otk1 10. Fiii. II -COlll RIJIVlfl VI. °"'"" "'· ,,..,(h ' -(Oii! 11.,,..... vs. D1111/bla. M•rch 11 Spirl1. COii! Mln:fl 11 -C••I Rll!Ql1"1 VI. P'-nhc. Mlrcl'I 15 -C•1t R.ngien ,._, Cout •~ lt.1Mrvn p I • r pretlm/111ry ,,,.,_ •t U:llt 1t •II g...,,.. •11~ MM'dl 11 (1'1'1otnixl. Thi • _...... hlw two cnt.er C11tn , DK. " Yf, llhl1r ...0 April I vs. Jl'f(Otl. AH home prMJ •I T.Wlnld1 P1111 lft COii• Miii bfg!Mlng If !•30. ~~~~1000~' ORDER YOURS \ TODAY! Penonalind • Stylilh • Efficient Order For Youreoll or 1 Frltn<t Mey b• ustd an envtlop11 11 retum 1ddrts1 J..hel1. ,.\110 vtry hendy 11 identific•tion .. b1l1 for rn1rkin9 p1non1I ltem1 such •• l>ooli:i, tecord•, phot°'1 •tt . Labels stick on. 91111 end may bt us•d for m•rkin9 hom• c•nn•d foc.d it1m1. All label1 at• printM :. ~ "With stylish Vogu• typ• on fine quality whit .. · f. 9ummtd ptp•r • •1-----,11~:;:;:--=;::;:::;;:;.·-11· .• -.-, ---"J 1 I Plltt l"rlft•lllt L•MI C>I•., 1".0. •• 1.MI • w11 M-. C1ilf, JMM l I I I I l ,. I . I L..: __ ~tL~T PRl~!!~.!i~. _ _,f • Poa. Team Points Barrett of Costa Mesa displays six yellowtail caught 1. Western (5-0) 55 on a recent trip out of Davey's. 2. Westminster (5--0) 53 -------------------- 3. Mater Del (f.1 ) 50 4. Edison (~t) 46 5. La Habra ( S-0) 35 6. Pacifica ($-0) 30 7. Estancia (f.t) 25 8. Anaheim (f.1 ) t8 9. Brea (S-0 ) t2 10. El Modena (3-2) 9 Others: Orange l:J.M I, San- ta Ana Valley (S-0), Servite (f. I), Valencia (:J.l-11. Goliath Tops Costa Mesa Mat Card Goliath snd Black Gordman return after a t~montb absence while Samoa's Prince Maiava debuts on this eve- nina's wresUing card at the Fafrgrounds 1n Costa Mesa, with action getting under .way at 8. Goliath challenges Mexico's Ruben Juarez for the Orange County championship trophy in the main event while his partner In crime, Gordman, battles Japan'• Kinji Shibuya Cardinals Score Early But La Fonda Wins Pair Calendar Wtc!lleM•v !Oct. 2J) The Fount ·n Va I I e a1.1te1n.,. JO 2 a , 1 w111r POio -HIHlllflOton 1nc:11 11 at Y H1rrh , ;m l D O O Wnt,.,lnlleo-. Wnt.m 1t N~ Cardinals semil'ITY\ baseball cr..mci1on, n 2 o o o H••toor. T111t1n ,, Mluloll VhlO, t"Y Flef:':.'Jb l i ~ : un1v.,1ltv 1t Setlor•. v 1fencla •I team dropped a pair of g..5 t'i'-. c 1 1 t 1 Lt0""1 BeKll. Mertr11 11 s.,.,. A111 Johl'\IOl'I, C. 1 0 0 0 111 11 ):ISJ. , decisions to host La Fonda HUCIJOn, o ! o o 1 Soc«r -GoldMI wnt 11 1<11111rtat1 euu.,. o o o o I> -1 Stars Sunday in action on the "1f:11r. 14,l•I• ~ , ... · Til9rMrt' <Oct. i.1 Footb1lf -NIWPMI H•rbor ti Santa Ana College baseball FV c 1rd!n111 OJO on 1>-J l 2 W••'"" (' '·"'·'· field LI Fondl St1n 020 UO 1-t I Crou tovnhY -C-.. lkl Mir •I • ~ 0..11'11 EdllOll, E1t..-.clfl -' C•l1 '°'"'· _,, Sunday afternoon the 1• r 11 rt11 ~;-' Kl<'tlot 11 W••l•rn , .i.ru S:lleJ.lr. 2tl 4 1 1 ! Wfttrnln1tf1" 11 """t1ngl1111 tlldl. Cardinals return home to ao.M11. 11:> l 1 o . M11a11111 v11ro 11 ••n c1-i., ~~f,~ll ~ 0 f e M19noll1 11 FO!Mtll!I! VtJl9y. Slnta AM Fountain Valley High School H.,r •· ~ 4 l 1 o 11 Mlrlr11 ';~'I~. m ~i!i~·M '''! 01 ( "' fdO for a doubleheader w l th 1-""'· 11.111 ' o I Fooi11t -_. ,,.,., .,. -IC n11v. cl 1 o 11 Orlftfl c-t c.1"91. o.rwo Hltll 11 Garden Grove beginning et 11. Milt., cf o o o o Br11, v111Mt1 at LIOlll'I .. ad!. Ml.., Mllre ~-mp1'on •-d three '•""'.-,... ' ', g •, •, 0.1 ... 11.,.,. """' 11 Mt. u.c. cm1 ""wr. 1llll 1 • 11 0 1 MHI w 1!1t1ncl• 11 N._t H••-· ·~·· J I doubl.. ~r the Cardinals in F rt o w.11"'1"''"' 11 """"tt"".,. effdl. IU I. 5 1 M1•f111 Vi S:lnll Alll ,, w .. 1mln1i.r, Sunday's second game while 111 " • M1u1on v 1110 w s1n ,,._,, 1111 •• Ron Salazar had one hit in th e Fv c1re11~111 :JlO cm ~s 10 ! 11. un1v1r111y "' Sonor1 •I L• H•llr• L.t Fatld1 illl't Olt 151 11-t I 17::1111. opener And two in the second--"'-"'="""'-~'-~-'-------------·" contest. Mike Selwood belted a triple in the flrtl iMing 0£ the nightcap with the bases loaded to give the Cardinals en early lead bOt nve runs for the Stars In the fUth erased the lead. in the roughhouse semlmaln. !~•nr, ., Goliath and Gordman return X:Kl:l~'.b11 to Costa Mesa following very ;;.="="'='='"=·="======:::;I IUCCtlSful tours of Japan and Texa1 during these put two monlhs. Meanwhlle, Maiava, rated by experla as being one of the greatest Wl"t.Sller1 to ever come out of Samoa, makes his nm Orange County ap- pearance ever when h e squares off against Japan'• Massa Saito. Where To Go Looking for somewW.:re to go, somethJng to do ? N'o one gives you better tips tban the WEEKENDER. 11'1 [lQbllsl> ed evtry Friday in the DAI· LY PILOT. GRAND PRIX 5113~ MO. DAVI IOU PONTIAC ---· .... ··--LIA.II llde'T -PACTOIY AvntollZD·DULll MlllAl1, ti.» 11 Si• e .... t ....... 1, ,.,,._ ,.. DOUJf 141 ... , I Pilot Pigskin PICKEROO Co-Sponsored this week by UNIVERSITY PARK Shopping Cente1· Culvtr & Michelson, Irvin• DAILY PILOT BE A PROPHET FOR PROFIT Top Weekly Prize in Merchandise Certificates For Weekly Second Place Winner Each for Third, Fourth and Fifth Place Winners Plus BONUS PRIZE A pcilr •f tic•ets ho the ., .... of tU '"'' f USC w. Netff Dti-1 te w• __.., .., .... ,. Ca•,,_,. at ... DAILY P'ILOT. B• a pi91kin prophet for profit. Play the Pilot Pi91kin PICKEROO game for w•akly pri111. Top winner etch week receive1 $25 gift certificate from th• 1pon1orin9 shopping center. Second pl•ct winner gat1 $10 cer- t ificate end third, fourth •nd fikh place winners each get $5 certificate. Each· certificate is 1p•nd1bl1, just like money, et •ny itor• in tha 1pon1oring 1hoppin9 canter. Sponsor,hip rotates with 1 different canter sponsor· ing each week'i contest. P•rticipating canters •ra: Westcliff Plaza, 17th tnd Irvine, Newport Beech; Harbor View Center, San Joaquin HiU1 Raid and MacArthur Boulevar~. Newport Beach; E11tbluff Village Centar, E.stbluff Orivt, Newport B•ech; Bay· side Center, Btyiide Criva end Jamboree Road, Naw. port Baich: and University P1rk Shopping Canter, Culvet and Michelson, Irvine. Watch for this player's form 11ch weak in tha DAILY Pl_:..~T Sports ~~cti~n. Cir~la th• team you think will win 1n aech pa1r1n9 1n tht l11t of 30 g•mes end sand in tht pl.yar'1 form entry blank or• reasonable facsimile. Than watch tht DAILY PILOT sports pa9t1 for ttck week's ll1t of five winner•. RULES --l • lllM!lif lfll• """" ti"* ...... tr I ,.._.... flal111ll• If n ,. ....., Ill• t*'llftl. "llM__... lec1lmlll" 11 fttlllM 11 'II "e'lfl<I C1•t1Clh ... llntrlft; _, M 11111ftnn Ill •Ill •1111 •lllPI 19 l1C:llfl1t1 llllltbot. TIMM -"Id! __., ~ Wiii .. CllM911111W, t. SW It ,., l'ILOT l"IOlll(IN l"tCtel•OO Ct*lUT, l"'1f _,rt_,., ,. .0 .... u ... Cit!• ~. CA. """ J. °"" .. tntry "' ,..._ _.. WMli:. 4. 11Mt11t ""ftt M ,...l'IMrtl:lll Ml l1i.t ttlaft Tfllor .. 1y tr -H ti H ll¥1t• Ill 19 1'11t OAIL Y PILOT •Ilk• .-, ' ""'· ni.l'Mly. J, Plffk ......... Mft'dllllh -OAILY l"ILOT ...... \l' .. , ... !Mir~ 11111e r1111111n; "" ...... " llllW, .. Tll lll:•A•lll: 11.AHK MUST •I l'llLID IN Diii: INTll:Y II YOIG. •••••••••••••••••••• • EN'l'Rlt' BLANK • • Cltclt .... ,... ..... ., ................... • 111 ....... h MCl9lil -..... • Rams ·vs Oakland • San Francisco vs Atlanta • Minnesota vs Green Bery • • Kansas City vs San Die90 • Miami vs Baltimore • WashinC)ton State vs UCLA • use vs Orel)on • • Cal vs WcnhlnC)ton • Tulane vs Geol'C)la Tech • TCU vs Notre Dame • Oklahoma State vs Nebraska • Illinois vs Purdue • Pittsbul'l)h vs Syracuse • • Penn State vs W. Vi1'9inia • Air Force vs Arizona State • Indiana vs Northwestem • Fullerton vs Oran9e Coast • • Riverside vs Saddleback • Golden West vs Cypress • Ma9nolia vs Fountain Valley • Newport vs Western • Edison vs Corona del Mar • • Dana Hiiis vs Brea • Valencia vs LaC)una • Mater Dei vs Bishop Amat • Unlvenlty vs Sanora • Costa Mesa vs Estancia • • W estmlnster vs HuntillCjton • Santa Ana vs Marina • Mission Vi•lo vs San Clemente • • Tll UIMClll: -Mr ..... -··-·..-__, .... ...,. ............ • •.-• ·-• • Clly • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • . .... '" . ··················~· • • DAILY PILOT s T.....,, Octob<r !4, 1172 Antitrust Suit 2 Banks Call Off Plans for Merger SAN PRANCISCO (APl - Wells Fargo Bank and Fir11t Westcn1 Barut and-Trust Co . have called off a proJXlsed merger that lhe Ju s tic e Department wai seeking to block In an antitrust suit . OfflctMI of Wells Fargo and World Airways, major owner of First Western . jQintlV an- nouneed terminalion o( the merger plan first put forward April S, 1!171. mE CO>f P'l'ROLLER or the currency had approved lhe merger, provided tha t Wells F'arRo divest il<;e\f of t'irst Westem's 41 Nort!'l••rn California branches. Rut lhe Justice Deoartment went 11> court last Jan. t7 to block the mer1?er on antitrust ~rounds. FINAWCE Welts Fari,?O. haedquartered in San F'f-ancisco. has asset.s f'f $8.5.'J billion and 291 hranches in California. First \Vcst'!rn, with assets of $1.2fi billion. has 95 branches and is head· quartered in Los Aneeles. Wells ForJ!o said in an al!reement si~ned Oct. 14, 1971, it wou1t1 oay S95 million- for First Western . ·which is 99.5 percent ov.•nE!d bv World America Invf'slors Corp.. a v.·hollv owned subsidiary of World AiJ"Y.•ays, Jnc . ._ FIRST WESTERN h :id assets or $1 billion two yea rs aj!'o when merger talks he!lan. Ed~·ard J. Oalv. board chairman and chief e1,.cutivP. ofricer or World, aNt Richii.rrl P. Cooley, president 11.nd rhief e?:ecutive offiC>er of \YP11s 1-----'""'o _aud, _Co_ saldJ11. a join st:ilf""'""t lhl'lt effm1.s lo neuntiall! a S1>tllf'l'l""t of lhe af!tit.,,c;t sui r hArl f:iilerl . "Under t h e s e circum· stances. f a c e d with the ~Jternative.s of vears nf litisza. lion or a se111 ....... nt N>11rine no reasonable rcliltifl'1Shiri to the transactonas orit?inally pr~ posed. ~·e have. with re'!'.ret. C'(lncludM that t hi> intcri>o:'.~ of the parlies. !heir emoloves. sha!'f>h<ilders and ci•stnmf'rS \\1ould best be servl'd by the termination of the merger agreement" 'l'lfE GOVF'R~'MVl\'T alle~· et1 in it~ suit filed in S<>n Fran- cisco fe(feraf criurt thnt the TT'f.:"l?er \11oulrl rli...,inate a"111al .<ir>rl no t,. n I i a 1 corn,.,..tlHnn betwf'f'fl the banks. and that c11.storn,.r services would be reri11cer1. In ;i lo'"' s!.:ifP.rtlf'l'lt at that fi...,~ lf\t' h!>l'l)I:<: rli<:<>O!"i>ed \hat the mcr~er would be anti· ~ ~f/ CJiop off lo .. .,,~• ditt•M• a. hl0 coll• ,.._.~ tiy 1111-ttioriM -· ~ pt.yMI or c•Rdret1 •.• "'9 TOLL CONTROL SlOPS :A.llS hi 011t1W. .._ wlttiollt • lffoc:tiltt loc•I c.•lk. I~ -IHt tM TOLL CONTROL ..... hi ,..,...... , _ c. ... , •• 1 ., •• , •11hl91tt ........ c.. , .... 11 •ort l1111rolt.fl••· tlLIPHONIC 19Ul,M(Nl COIP. S...._7toJ Don't Miss These Free Lectures Jnvedlmenl Sened Oct. 25th "Maximum Return on a Minimum lnvesU:nent'' Lecturer -Fred Becker 11Advantage of Small ln\lestor" Nov. 1st Rea l Estate Syndication for. the Lecturers -Phil McNamee and "Cap" Blackburn Nov. 8th ~~I Conse~ation Through !zing Taxes" Exchanging Lectun!r -Bruce Howey HTallorlng Your '73 lnve.rtmenl" Lecturer -Randy McCardl• TICKETS AVAIL.AlllE AT THE DOOR EACH SESSION MEETS 7:30 ·9:30 P.M. GOLDEN WEST COLLEGE S.rlM CCHpontortd By Oro"'° CN1I e Gol ..... Wot! DAil Y PILOT Coll• Huntlng1on Beac,h • Fount1ln V1l11y Bo1rd of RNltort . - r OVER THE COUNTER <.:OMPLETE NEW YORK STOCK UST " • • • • ,. •• ; • • ~\ • • . , • • • " • • • • ~ " " ~ • • ~ ~ • • • ~ n • ~ " " •• t l • I , • • • : I I I -~~ ·~Cease-fire Report .. . _ Sends Stocks Up NEW YORK (AP) -Another rl!ly rooted la re- : ., port& of progress toward a c....nre la lndochln& •. ' ·" booatod ll<>ct muket prloes Mooday. ' • Deoplte some bUJ!Deoses belnt closed In obeerf. ance of the Vetenns DaJ bolld.oy, ltock tndlng was relatively active, chiefly beca~ of a Ourry ol ~uy!ng early In the sesslon. "Tb• market will respond to reports of prog-ress toward p e ace u long u there seems lo be smoke where there ii fire," obeerved Bradbury K. Thurlow, v Ic e pnstdent for research at Laidlaw " Co. ( ' • . . ,. . . ... ,1 .· - . ............ .. -.. Oa-. 1'72 s. IWLV PllOT LOS ANGELES Unlollamerk:a, boldhlc oom- pany for Union Bank ol Loo Angeles, baa -.• SI -t lncrtue ·and Dtl 11>-come for tbe third quamr ml • ti ptr.ent 1llln for lht --tbe dl(led Stpt. 30. Third quarter f1iurn ttJtu. ed showed Vnionamerica'• net Income al '7.15 mUIJon "" 70 ...,It a ....,., up fr<>m 115.115 mll1lon "" rJ -• lhare • ,..,. .... I! DAILY PILOT l'IJllUC NOl'ICll ' .. ,,. ... •• ... .... , .. '·" 1.• '·" t .U ... 1a.u '·" ... ••• '·" .... '·" .,, ..... •• ... .... ... -· T~,-24,l'ln "' ... ... ... ... ... ... .. ... ,, ... .. .. .. .. ,, .. .. ... .. .. ... .. ·" •• •• •• ... .. •• .. ... ... ... •• ... ... ... "' ... .. A .. .. .. ... .. .... .... .... ·"' .. ... ... ·" ... ... ... ... .. ·" ·" JS ,. ·" ,. .n ·" ·" .. ... JS l'llt+A , .. -+-A I'll+ .ti ,,.. + .. ,,.. ... , ...... I'll+ AS I'll+ "'5 ,.,. + .4 l'llt + M 1'11t +A '"' + .Al l'llt ••• 1'11.+A '"' ~ .JI '" + ... ,.,. +.a 1'11.+.a "' " ..... ,.,. ..... 1-.. +A '" + ... ,._,+A ... .... ... .. . - • • ... ... ,,, ... ... ... ... ... ... •• ... ... ... ... ... "'+ • .... ,.. .. .... .. . .. ... .. ... ·" • • ·" ... ·" .., .. -.... .. .It ... ·" ·"· .. ... ... .. ... ... ... ... ... . .. •• ... .. .. .. ... l ...,,. .... •• .... •.a .... .... ••• ••• 1.01 .. ... '·" ..,. ... •• I.II •• •• .d .d ·" •• -... ... . .. . .. ... .... ... ... '·" . ... .... .. ... ... ... •• •• ... ... . ... .... '"" ... ... •• .10 •• • 11• ·" ... .• .., .a .. .. .. ... ... .. ... ... .. .. ... .n ·" ... .. ... .. .u ... •• •• ... .. .. .Id .» .• . .. ... .. ... .. • ... •• ·" ... .. .u ... ... .. ... •• .. ... . .. . .. • • ..... .. • ••• .. .. ''°' "'""· "' .... ... •• •• .. N&.W ...... .. ... .. ... .. .. -. v ...... .,.,Tr. ·" .. .. .. . .. -. ,,, ,., .... ..... ... -:::." M.111 ... .. ... .. •• .. .. '#-... ... ... ... ... •• ... ... ... •• • .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. ... .. .. ... . .. •• ... ... .. ... ... ... .. .. ..,,... ........ p.,.... ·" .Ill ... ... ... ••l .. .. ~I! •• . .. K &. W ......_ YtcdM -.., 1 Ml .olfj .. ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... .. .. .. .. .. ... .. .. .. ... .. .. ... ... .. ... LIPI OF PARTY -joanne Wolcott projects her "new image" to the astonish- ment ot Wllliam Spencer (right) and Don llbqades in this scene from the Co<ta Mesa Civic Playhouse romedy "Me and Thee." 'Me and Thee' Mesa Comedy Takes New Glimpse of Generation Gap ht Barry Cooking Froe tiCketa for the 1m edJ. lloa of a ~ IC!lool tbal bas bef!t "packing tbtm In'' at I.be "" ol 7llO _.. pe!" aesslon for more than IO years ll"8 still available tn the Om!ge Coa!l, areo loday. But poep<ctlye "studenla" bod belier tither pict lhem up Jn a burTy Or ftgure on being among the lirst in Uoe at lhe Mesa Tbeala", 1184 Newport BM!., Costa Mesa, when this year's first -(<ta under way '111uradoy. 'Ille -ts 8'>inc into ila 21st -year u an off-campus ,.....,1aUoa of the Coast Community College District (Orange Cout · and Golden West colleges) and olber sponoon, lncludlng Alpha Beta Markell, Southern Calilomla Gu Co., Davia~Brown appliances, the Mesa and Lido lheaten·and Galoric Corp. Preoented in """ ..,..;o., - eacl! one dillerent -the cook· ing 9Cboo1 is held annually on consecutive Thursday ~ ings at the o.ta Mesa tbeatttr. 'Ibis year's aes,,ions are sc:beduled for 9:30 to 11 :30 a.m. Oct. M and Nov. J, 9 and 18. FREE TICKETS are available al Alpha Beta marl<ela in Hlllllington Bead!, Fountain Valley, Irvine, Santa Ana, Tustin and Costa Mesa and at the theater. A J>OP11ar feature ol lut year's 10th anniversary edition of the achoo! -the com- pilation of a coolr:boolr: con- taining 217 =lpes !nlm the come during her self -pro-first 19 years of the soboo1 - ·-______ ~ -claimed~'wild··spell"--wbidt-J!!l!.ved to be a_lOUout. The en- Session she punctuates with a shapeles5 ceremonial robe of an Afrk'an drummer and headdress of garish lassies and Jeopenl skin. Slightly drunk.and on a "crying jag." she bu bilartoos, changelul moods. McCartney Dissents . . pp. Son performed some In- nocent college prank, spent a ni1J!! Jn jail as a result and !:l:. roommate bis parents . 'Ibe parents are up ~ about ll, and at lhe same t1Jillj pick on one _.,.r's lboffCOmings to ease their -ID lbe end, of cnune, the ~ -bow dull, mid-di~ and normal they are. I help of a friend and trtst, roUfld into one calalyst, they shake vet far en0ug11 out of practical. careful pattern of llle to meet Soo ball way. Ali4 by lbal time, Son bas ~-~! a little and m ~ as impo!SibJe to JN THE END, It Is UDIWldable not to reallze the '*"""' not the aon, needed ~ychlalrlat's help. But · the good pert : the cast. m Spencer 8! the calm.. .-ssurtng psychlalrlat· frtm4 la smooth and con- vindal' in hla role. Wtilfe calmly convincing lhe ........ (Joaone Wolcott and bon ~Idea), their "psych!c ..... an rusty" and ~ "oomethlng to ...... )'OU up. bft,11 he js hap.. 1>111 rtminllctnt of Walter M&W.11 many "Plaza Suite" acenM wben he bu a bit of wpnt pmuadlng to do. OO'EITABOIJIT .M tbe doctor's advice slow- ly sinks into their beads, the parents begin bickering, as well as reveal the.it true characters in more depth. A BOUNCY, sometimes too- hurried Rhodes pounces on bis wile for taking a plant from the woods, nurturing it in their bOme and lurnlng It Into a "bousebroken shell of Ila former self." Miss WokoU bitingly n!plles, defending her molber· Jy role in a bruised, righleow manner: "{It isl ~ and thriving, and an are you." When she dutifully goes ID stand by ·the SOD on tria1 for his prank. the husband Is determined ID indulge hlmseU and soon brings home Lela (Lori Furtner). ZESTY, NATIJRE.loving Lela is full of youthful prattle, to his delight. ll is great fun to watch her scatterbrained, out- o f -control vibrations transform into gentility and placidity upon drinking Rhoades' broody. HIS VEXATION at lhls unexpected cllange ls IUf. ficlently put•across to the au- dience. This vua.Uon la even underlined when Rhoades manages an ad-libbed "damn" when be accidentally over- turns the footstool with Lela'• cloak. However, his vigor at times comes across too strong. Miss WolcoU'a best momenfa Arehie King 'F'amily' Keeps Top Slot !IPJlf YORK: (AP) -CBS' "~Jn lbe Family" topped the ~ Television ratings for lhl ~k ending Ocl. u. ac- ~ w rating figures inlido pobllc here Monday. "< ih Ibo oecond. COOK<UUve ......-"P"llhlly" hu headed' Iii, lllellen Oat of lel!Wlon'• ~lopnlod ....... and the Ume the Sunken have Iba pock llnce the llart of ~fall seaaon on 1iim NBC Aho,.. -"Tho ' Slll.r-writel" lla.Lvwooo cuPn -~ Lockinbill will llar In eiid irrtto the screenplay for 111.\t Deipbl ~,. for ABC. TV. Sunday Night M y s t er y Movie," "Walt Disney" and ••The Mooday Night Movie'' - came in second, third and fourth, respectively, followed by ABC's "Marcus Welby" in the week ending Ocl. l5. The We<k's U otller wlnnm, bl order of their rankln(, were: ••Sanford and Son" (liJIC): "Bridget L o v e 1 BerIDetf (CB.'1); "Adam-12" (NBC): "Ha...U P'lve-O" CCBSJ' "Flip W!lann" (NBC): "Olnoon'" (CBS): . "TUeeday MOYie"' U>e Week" (ABC): "Frlday'Nighl Movie" (CBS): "Mary Tyler Moore" (CBS): "Gunsmoke" (CBS): "Maude'' (CBS): "Ironside" (NBC): "SUnday Night Mo v 1 e " (ABC ); "ffm'1 t...,y" (CBS) and "T'hurlday Ni&bt Movie." CCBSI." 3 Beatks Want IT IS EASV lo tell lhal the T-0-Pay Fttm Wire Setvlcet llOCl Mark Miller is the staid one.-in .the.f.amil>'-PatlenUy __ tolerant ot hiJ parenls' various moods. Miller Is ccmsistent throughout his role . H i s charocter, a cnol-headed but compassionate youth. is very 'l'lne·a-Boatles-are trying to get Poal MeCartney, the fourth Beatie, to agree ~ lbe payment of a $381,• .. tu: claim against Apple Coi:pt the company formed by lhe;;lJOP well Portrayed. Several time.! during the play, lhe neighborhood mei.r maid (Evelyn Bertolet) enla"I with wide strides to barrau Rhoades about partdng bis black Buick in front of the church """"' the street. Her strident voice and aggressive mannerisms give the tough exterior needed to penetrate the familys' crazy moods. "Me and Thee," the first productlon ol the comedy on the West Coast, continues for 1,.. more weekends, Fridays group. •l A company spoke9"'al) said Job.a LeQDOll.1 George H.nllon and 1'Jngo Starr are .. lhost anxious" to pay the mopey, but McCartney "has not yet given hl3 aiment d~lo repeated requests • • •11 McCartney broke with tl>e other three ;,, 1969, and l1!,er"e and Saturoays, al the Com-( munlty Center auditorium on the Orange County Falr8l'>unds. • • PEOPLE .. ) From Pqe 10 OPERA •.. humor, an obvious example to those great Italians who were to buUd on this splendid foun- dation. A splendid cast that will take this fine "Orontea" to four other University o f CaHfonJa campuses between now and late November work- ed hard and diligently on this happy n!viYaf under the direc> tlon of John Hall, -aJao provided lbe English transl•· t1on for the work. OUr own Judy Edgerly of UC! wu ibere ID carry the local flag with a splendid depiction of Sllandra, the lady of the court who becomes em- broiled in cSne of Alldoro'1 many altuations but b recon- ciled in the · pantomlmic final acene I<> the cnnslant Corlndo. Mbs Edgerly WU In fine voice Saturday nlgbt and an excellent choice for one of the Jtey role• ln "Orontea." JAN POPPER held a ...-. baton in hls dli<ctlon of the UCLA Chamber On:hcatra, Gall Bixby gave u1 flrtt class costume desJ«n 1nd Archie Sharp get.I .• epeclal word of praise from th!s critic for ooe o( the moJI ellectlve and chamtitJi Jobi ol toenic deslp that we have letD <11 an opera llaiO Jn many a nar. All name1 ll'fl confined to the cut Utt Jn noopltlon of a 1plendid teem ellort. But • ipec:lal tribute. 1f we ml)', for Joyce Sweeney, 1'ho had the often unenviable task o f pGrtraylng Glaclnla. I h e former lady of Ornnte:a'• court who has to pose 1s a male (l1mero) for ,much of the opera. Sile hod the 00.l voice on 1tage Saturday nlgllt and It WU !'OIRtlable that ... COUid nol hear more of le have been numerous disagreements among members of the group lince then. * World chess champion Bob- by Flacber has accepted an in- vitation to play in Brazll U. eluding a posatble simultaneous match against 20 of the country's best players, 11<COrding ID lhe president of Sao Paulo's 0-Foundation. Tbe federation head, <>rlan- do Paes, laid that Jnterna. UonaJ Grandmaster J o a e ~-asked Fllcher I<> come ID Brazil. Tbe dale and the purao had not been .. iued. * Dr. Armaad Hammet, an American magnate who lived In Ruula and knew Lenin, presented a '' mUllon Go~• !!Ortralt to Lenlnsr•d 1 mnntta1e Museum. Ham.mer, 74 .. )'C!!•r·old chairman o( Occldontal Pelrolun C..,., JMdt U>e presentation at • ........, I D411.Y I'll.OT IJ • ""'i'& - • ' • I r . I I I I 'l I • • I I I I • I 1 · I Everyone Has Someth ing That Someone Else Wants DAILY Pl,LOT CLASSIFIED ADS ·The Biggest Marketplace on the Orange Coast -,Dl~I 642-5678 for Fast Results • You Can Sell It, find It, Trade It With a Want Ad • _..... I~! _..... I~ I _..... ~ I • ~eral CAMEO HIGHLANDS Top. condition. 3 BR. & family rm. home. Xlnt loc., some ocean view. Property vacant for quick occupancy. .. . . .. .. .. .. $62.900. CAMEO SHORES Just listed -4 BR. & family rm. home; spa- cious dining & brkfst. areas. Property in top cond. Panoramic ocean view. Beaut htd. &: filt'd.. pool. .. " "" " ... " ..... " .. $125,000. ' Convenient parking-easy to be a "DROP-IN" at Bay & Beach Realty 675-3000 BAY & BEACW HF ALTY ' ""'(; •~•~'"'°•OF&''·' • Gtntr•I General Exclusive Corona del Mar Considered one of the best areas on the ocean side of the Coast Hwy. This older family home is si tuated on 2 residential lots. Xlnt appreciation situation. 0 ff ere d at $79,500 _--CORBIN =-MlRTIN REALTORS 644-7662 G9neral General * * * * * * TAYLOR CO LIDO ISLE -$74,900 Summer/winter fun home. Plenty of activi- ty on this friendly Island. Bright & cheerful 3 bedrooms & 2 baths. Top condition. Spa- cious south patio. Quick possession . ''Our --211h-"11r'' WESLEY N. TAYLOR CO., Reallon 2111 Son Joaquin Hlll1 Rood NEWPORT CENTER, N:B. ~10 Gen1rat General oflnJa J6/e PRESTIGE WATERFRONT HOMES SHOWN BY APPOINTMENT 57 Lindi lslo Orlve o. ... ei • Gentrll ~\'\j~~-S#titi, ~-~ REALTORS 2829 l!AST' COo\ST HIGHWAY CORONA DEL MAR. CALIF. 644·7270 WATER, WATER •••••• •••••• EVERYWHERl!- POOL, PIER and SLIP too. New carpets and drapes, 2 Bedrooms, 2~ baths, WET BAii, marble fireplate. Overlook THE WATER from your patio and enjoy . . . . . . '85,000. LIDO ISLE •••••• •••••• LUXURY , . • in this beautiful 2 story 4-bedroom. S bath home With many extras and builtin kit- chen. On extra wide lot. so you can store your boat or trailer . . . . . . . . . . . . $79,500. AUSTIN-SMITH, GORMAN & Auoclotes 644-7270 0-r•I Gontrtl O....tl .4.~tou: LINDA'S LINDA' Both are Uruque! 'Linda the owner and Linda the floor -plan. If-you know The Bluffs you may not mow Linda the owner L but you'll : surely know Linda the noor plan: • bedri>Oms, all on one floor, plus an added T.V. room · and an enclosed patk>, a bedroom-office com- plete witll !oJt !!!ld t!lose high beam ceilings that set off the dramatic Spanish barrel-type fileplace. You should see Linda the fioor plan and meet Linda the 01"ller. It's great and she's a kick! Both are Unique! PHONI UN19UI HOMES. CORONA Dll MAR. 675·6000 Ul!lill()Ui: li()Ml:S REAL ESTATE NORTH MESA ' SPECIAL ••• . $31,000 VA NPRAISEP lmmoeulato s -2 bath with .......... loYely ~ lamlly ..... (1800 ... ft.), !n>plcol landocapllv. All tbla for Oliy $261 per rnoeth· with no moqey dOwn .. -. Coll -• • I f '" -· ' *BA YFR•ONT-LJDO PENINSULA I-. S BR. 2 __ .,' ten"ace on . the b a y • • BeautiM ....,.,._ pool :t. ¢a1" garage. sec:vtlty. Boa( \ allpo. $84,!100. BY OWNER. 673-6000 or *5570, · Balboa ~iontnsul• . I DUPLEX. 3 BR. Qp. 2 dn. $5.5,000. Next to beacb. AGENT 675-0144 College Porte S2000 Dwn. Assume pymnt'a. Custom 4 BR.,~~ ba. home on Lagoon. Mstr, B. has sitting area & frplc. Waterfront fami- ly rm. w/conservation pit around the frpl.; lovely garden, lge. slip . . . . . . . . •189,500. Gen1ral General 3 BR. 2 BA. dble pr. Close BAYFRONT -NEW LISTING -BAYFRONT 1 ,;;;~~---l ~~~~~I to ,,, ... 1s -att •· For Complo .. lnlormotlan 1 • Corona del Mar BAHAMA On All Homos & Lott, Ploaoo Coll: . ' BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR 341 Boyside Dr., S..ite 1, N.B. 675-4161 Via Lido Soud, with nice beach, 3 Bdrm. low- er plus 2 bdrm. upper plus guest room . Just BEAUTY . MACNAB IRVINE completely remodeled. New cai'pet. Mission Exciling new listing in h-fESA We root Immaculate condition! Owner will VERDE -3 bedroom, 21h NEARLY NEW include furnishings in the downstairs plus bath luxury home located Charming 4 BR. 21h bath "Uest room in the sale price! $197,500. Owner on a quiet cul-d~sac street. home. AttractiveJY. 1and-Gen1r1I Gen1r1I 0 d A pool-size yard with a large 1.:;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;; will consider trade or COD ominium. covered patio & sprlnkl£"rs 9C8.ped. Convenient to South I• front & back. First person Coast Plaza. $42, 700. See it CORONA DEL MAR SPYGLASS PLAN 74 . S-'USBU.!lY .RjALTY with 151,500 can own. u,;, & yoo·u like "' Ch"''" ~QnaCtW:S ~ ~.; 3600 plus..11q !Lin_thls 5 lldrnl. -6J3.6f00 home. ~IJ1L6f6~(sF£j - o! Coast Highway. 4 ba, plos hon"' nn home 315 MARINE AVE., BALBOA ISLAND BAYFRONT DUPLEX Ju& ~ ~~~ oc~an :. ~~ .. :·~~..!~· ;e~:u~~ c;.., I General Newport ~1!~!t ':!C:O::~,t~~~ HOME WIT.H 20 TREES IN COM? Right!! ~s. Qwm. ing 3 bedroom. 2 bath with lots' of used brick, wood and warmth, on a tree lined street in c_d.M's finest area .• Beautllull,y -reniodeled in 1912. Key_lo...private .beach. ~ Only $79,900 and you own the land. C'all NOW 673-8550. Plus Family Room in record player. No·wax lfl 1t plex. Downstairs completely ~--THB J!RAL~ ~=a1be~eili~~ =~bt~s ~~!:'. ;:t: MESA VERDE Close Fairview =is:d!r 0;:e~:;1~~ •·c:J~'I .. 'itRS, ..... " Gener1f Ger1eni~.~~,,.i AU built-in kitchen sized k>t & breath-taking Your Eyes 646-llll prop, in trade. Flexible fi. -N "'Tii ""' · HE WORK The ""t boy in view or ocean & coaatllne. ORIGINAL &nd pi""'"' a bright and -cing. Tom Q "' en * DUPLEX * T Mlle _ ' ' ..• CS-Corona de! Mar YOl· can ce lebrate the holi· When construction was bet· cheerful 4 bedroom 2 bath (anytime) ~. (K23) t..a. IS DONEi ~~· At $'12,SOO day, in your ne1v home. Call ter. the equipment more home with a formal dining South of H,..,way • • ME HARBOR now $145,000 including land. stunt;", the ow~er added in· room. Thia home has a very Call Bill O'slrike [lnililmfe:;*~ ·] Exceltent Location Youcan justenjoythisb<'aut-~ FrSMEN __ .. sulatiOn, an mtercom, an usabletamilyroom.Alsoa at545-8922eves. -~· 2&'Den&2Br~ ttuUy-'d@COrated'1 BR-Costa -'iii'RA · · --81 ed ·fi•11 aiarm--systemk a covered· rancast!C swin1mlng pool. 11W-~Mt{t::IDD--S71;500- Mesa home w~lh a iarn.ily One-ln-a-ml.lllon rare find. 4 r I patio and bloc wall !enee. You muat see this home '-'toe.Mama... MORGAN REALTY room o"'.erlooki~g the nice bedroom, 2 bath. huge faml. Interior also shows original before you make 8 dedskm. REAL CLASS · yard wlth . fnnt ~· . a ly room with beamed cell-quality _ if you like it sharp-Bring all offers. Only . 673-4642 675-6C59 covered patio and a b~1lt·1n logs, fireplace. D 0 u bl e lIBALTY _ er the owner will cooperate $38,500. Call now. 842-2535. 3 & a Family rocun with wet ANXIOUS J!__ag_!!one bar~ue. Ch1l<tn;n _@age + bonus of another to upgrade befol'e you move · bar, 2%. tiled baths, w/w SHARP POOL . ean ~alk to ~ls:-A big ~itta -dool)le---guage--Univ. Park Center, Irvine in. Walle to everything, ~·-R~~ carpets & drtt~___!___Tri-ltyel O\AIN-'Sf--1 shoppmg cPnter JS close by. shop with 22D power&: kJts ~all ~tbne, 833-0820--11ire'i iJil -FaiYiiJY, $.1f,'!ll0. _._...,.,_~ -wtth ~%,COO sq. ft. of H'OME ~ ~ $34.950. Ca.ll 646-Tin. ef extras. AU for 0-1.. Office hours 8 AM to 6 PM Call ss+-2313. FEl!A!l-BRS beach com!ort. Atrium en. Want tbetr' beautlful 4 uv <HN I.Ml, llFM trance for ample filtered This beautiful\y decked & bedroom home in Big Can-~-THB REAL~ ~~':".¢0;.i ~ terms GOVERNMENT ~ THB REAL~ sunshine Truly lega t CUSTOM POOL W l T H yon aold. Lovely '-plan, 9~'TIUCS9_, Call 54tl-ll5l Opeo Eyes, REPOSSESSION-LAJ:~~~. ~.f :"1.ILY ~ICS"OPEl:A:N ~'l'SRSTil 9~. QUICK OCCUPANCY ~ ~'i:!1 onif~: .di: ~~.~i In ~.i:.;;,: Cal~fe ~.Jzis~ 0 '" 11 0 n' Bia. ~ -OFiN 'ii ,.._ -WA ED""! .~ ""' . OWNER MAY payment. Call 962·885l. living. It's a perfect com· ,SMALL DOWN E~nel 5.~ el!DgiObleWtoN~.. si,,750 . . .•. ~ LEASE.OPTION 11 =to+ !hi:,~ OCEEALEGNAFRNCOENT ·~•,,v "" ~ l..ergEI famii3.Will Ioye this 4 .I Spacious Huntington Beech !';i ~ home that goes with it. .Auumes GI Joan on this this beautiful 3 bedroom, bedroom hOine wi 2 tUu EASTSI -. Home in the Magnolia, 11~1--Lovely carpets, paneling WITH A VIEW plush little gem with three LARGE & LOVELY Costa Ml!M home. Great be.tbs wi/e-jjaver builtin C STA MESA Hamilton Area.. Close to and only 5 years young. huge bedrooms all new cond1tion with ~w shag dreMi ldt'Chen. Keep cool. 0 &~. Space lor Boat er Take over VA k>a.I) with Perched h1ib above b!i , plumbing and w8te:r heater, LARGE - 3 BR. den, llv. carpets, new ~nt &:: large with air cooditiontt. Large 5 neat houses en a huge lot. Trailer Storage. 3 Bedroon1, --·-$6,250 down payment. Hurry Corona Beach, with stept and bla; detached double car rm/frpl &. kitch. 3"% car lot. Unbelievable prlCe of covered ~tio. with shaded Each home with aeparate 2 Baths, Fireplace. Ofte~ BROKERS INC. on thls one! · right down onto the be9cb. ' garage. Payments ·of $221 gar. A<fded attractit'ln, in-enly $22,00), But hurry, all garden. ~ quiet Joca-garage, yard & laundry for $34,950. Call 64&0555. 1'hree OoorA with elevator. per mcnth includes all. come from new,. priv. 1 BR otters must be submitted by tion. Patio. AD corrven\eDCea room. Choose your homt: ~ J'i5a.. CO&~TS master betlr! "ml suite tfith apt. Beaotl!ully lndscpd, Oct 25. Call us lo< foll b)i1 lid< 51(>-l"r.ll r.. 3 bedroo lhtte 2 --=r:"I'" ""3J'I 0 ~ r i G "' ,.ith r.eai:,7 we,,cmt n~!7711 8~'L!o~~~~ ~ROP. ~~ c0pen ews.> near . . ~ ~~ .... o. ,.~r.~~fur~n oc s11 ~i~t~~~ §." ~1~~~ Open 'till 9 PM Want ad results . . 642-5678 / 2955 Harbor, eo.t& Mesa ~·~llSl Open Ewl. •UJMO!UT °'!Ht cOLww co. ~~ bui:oo": ~d :!i:1ei! (Open Evenings) ~-l!~g; n:~t:r· ij i General 1 General EVEIYTHING sold? We can help you withl ";:=;;:=;;:=;;:=;;:=;;:=;;::.::=~1 -.~ -- WILL MOVE FAST oor Goarantoed Home Salo,. ~:=:~:;:::;;:::±~I THE ROOM A FAMILY Owner .,,. prloe 11 to aell! 6i'J.~ 646-05SS 58&-0222 WELCOME TO BY OWNER AT THE TOP WOULD WANT See thb new listing """'Y· j~ ~ MARLBORO IN BE,\UT CA MEO La eu ... ta. El borado Model ----Corner lot. 3 bodroom•. ' Ii~ 'hlil COUNTRY SHORES. 3 BR, 3 BA. FAN· featuring 3 bedrooms. ~ Ineluding 3 Bctnns, 2 baths, CAR ~;r :~!~% ~~s J , . and bring ~ horse to this ~~m~~·D1:°°sJ9.~Y ~ ro:im ~tire~, and near ahopping, sparkling ENTHUSIASTS -$1350 down. ,..L-'f-, neat 2 bedroom ra.nch·style 675-8403 ""'1i'11Wtirlllililijl -= ft. . tairll .ready clean, seclusicn-like, with BOAT OR TRAILER ·!"., • . home on large lot. Per1ect * DUPLEX.. • to sq, I ~.!ps '-·-.... -. trees &: fenced yard, Make LOVERS *' COATS ltT Of tttf. cot.wru co. .__ the t .. -a •• who t 180DEGREE VIEW-CclM rco~me~a"dasd·l-tl•o·n-al this)'Olll'lucky.day.Call lorWEHAVETHEHOMEFOR & smstolA . ...w ..... ......,, wans BY OWNER pus roo ' more information r;-t · to th. V t M 1 La d animals & wide 0 Pe n 420 MARGUERITE Prlnci B tit II d t d 3 BR 2" ba home -· and baths -or ' ,., -· E : ... 9416 YOU . 'U> ume ... ~ . WALLACE acan • n ·-·· Located l"" a few ' -eau UY ecora e ., r 4 • • B&M!doncurrent base price -•-,-6 \tel._.. one year old 3 bedroom REALTORS Locate-din fast growlng In· blocks from Newport Beach. pals only, 644-8494. Frml. dining plus COZ)' den w/frpl. Co1;1rl-qJ new units. owner Thfre is a reaaon home on quiet street in 546 4141_ dustrial 'I)'act. rwc new Ne}V on the market. can us GIVE ME LAND! yard entrance. 3 car gar. $87,500. Hamett transferred and will sell for 18 ·years, same location Newport. 5 Garages, 2 multiple 1?tJildh:igs _in ~d quick. That is R-2 land in~ Davies $45,500. Pleue .Phone carports. Ottered at $58,500. (Open Evenin91J leased. Thill par"CeJ is 130 x Call 54&"6880 (Open eves.) del Mir, South of Highway, 54&-~. PETE BARRITT 250' Fronting on &lsan Aho ..... -houae ON THE BAY REALTOR Ontu Street in Santa Ana. Asking for n1y IMOOO ...,_ 11 t. I d t d 1 bdrm 1 bath own --J»'ke is $1 .35 per ...,.,.. 0 · ..; k;., ---.., Attrac tve y ecora e • ., • Corona del Mor 642-5'00 ~"' foot . ~er wiU consider believing. s.ro.Nl,I. , your.awn apt. in most desirable area. Shel-'II tered pool. Steps to finest stores. $65,000. Edie Olson RICH IN DETAIL 1..i t10t'th ot O>oit """ . . HOMEABILITY AXER Large 2 bedroom I< pool. SOLVED BEAUTIFUL NEW CUSTOM A graclowl, chffrfu1 quality Ideal I.or the couple wtx> Spe.ciouslBedroom Home ln * 3 BDRM near ocean.·· OPEN1-5DAILY.1215SOMERSETLANE. oonstt'Uct<d home In pres-lllrns to ••II-in. Largio HWltingtonBeach.2 Bath.'l, ,Fi·i',";.,AC arr·con<l, 3 BSl~XW POOL Costa Mess , f this Uge Harbor View Hilla. Me-coVered ~tlo wlth ample Family Room. Plenty of OPE L OPM Choice loc. affords great privacy or ticuloUs planning ta evident privacy in rear yard. F'ull Room to store a Boat. Close BDRM, aasume $230 Pm.N 2-S'T'ORY BARGAIN! S2tXl EASTSIDE 2800 sq. ·ft. 3 BR., 3 bath. Must aee. Mary througtiout. FOUP large bed· price only $(2,500. Call to Schools and Shopping. Of-Mission Viejo .•••.• $38,900 ''SP.LASH'' blJys FHA' INCLUDES t Lou Marion rooms. separate famiJy 962-8851. !ered for $34,950. cau • 4 BDRM near ocean • • • WASHER, ·DRYER, RE· ~ice , 1 quiet ~· ~ B!L! room with tirepl~. '2 very ~. $54,900 I..ookina fur an Immaculate FRIGERATOR! Common 311')1 Y nn., P • ..... .,. LIDO-NEAR CLUB & TENNIS secluded patiQs ottering the 9t . ~ l733 w~r:J>r., N.B. family garden home with SWIMMING POOL! Act ~~1e;1~~ror0~r:r :_~l~Ji~.,&Jl;a~~:s s:·:e::i.' tia~~~ ~':J~~~ I ··~ l :. SPACE ~~~~~tt'.SA last. Call 64&<Xl03. ca'Ne..Y°'i)~MG BR. with sundeck. Summer or family home . leaaebOld ... you own the :Xl.j!.;..-ljli! .ORIENTED? buee bed?oom.s, 2 '""""""" Near Newport Rghta. 3 BR. 2 $76,500. Eugene Vreeland land. $82,500. • ~INC. t · • Try this beau 11tu11 y be:th.~. clo9e to freeways and Ba., & scp. playroom, 2 C. F. Colesworthy BRQ~ . sue.1101At:T °' , .. ,.CO\wtu. co. decorated home 1or $35.500. sl:iopf:q. Call 1rplcs., kitchen bltns. •Net BAYSHOREs-GREAT BUY , " •·-·DE OCEAN VIEW-l Bedrooms and 2 Baths BBQ. Dbl rar. O>nter lot . Owner must llquldate -leaving area. 4 & Company -·---and a hoge · $34.500. Lge . .BR., dlo. rm., den, brkfst. rm. Well 640·0020 '-8iif,~M $35,950 !2'7x24) FamUy .;::: h:::' Rooltws 54>-0t<i5 MOVE IN NOW!! TRIPLEX located nr. prlv: beach. Ma ke otter. Mary · Ntw llttlna on quiet 1tree Beautiful Ilka new l~ ~ar Many new ltem1 R t Open Eves 5 room, vacant, immedLate J..:t BR units in like new Harvey $25 900 lined sh·~et near achools old 2 Al.Ory, 3 bedroom home plut1 a lovely landscaped HOME SITE posseu\o11. Newly de<.'Ot'8.tet1 oond, Upper W:Ut bu lovely • and churd1et. 5"~" UIUJTl· with panoramic oceu at y(U"d and patio. 646-nn. thruout. Large fenced cor-view of hill!! & llgtrbi. -Good SPECTACULAR SPYGLASS SWIM POOL abl• loan or "f 10% down coutllne view. 10% down ~ ~ Ex""il•nt Newport Hoights ner lot. NI Ptioe only income. -·vA loon • ,_ .l. lo """''nt • THE •EAL Location. Quiet S t r e e t . ll.9,950. o~ ~000 down will over ~ can be aaumed Thia: 5 BR. home bas 3 baths lge, fam . nn. A lovely 3 bWIOOtn, i b&ui to new an. mo o,.""1 • terms wtth quick pollltBlkm ~ B Build )'Qur Dream 1-lome. h nd r.n 8851 -!l5tJ ;;,/ hom•, all -trlc --h but., ment lt"~l'red. . il&IC i··~. Call•••~••. a le. -.....u . · · et . .,..,. , · & Wet bar & 3 carJarage, <;nj·oy your OW• ~ -OPE TL "' ~--C <+> •• •• ton bollt-In kitchen. light~ '""E.17.RIRl Ill N • ALL ·•·UI• gorgeou1 ocean cw! $122,000. LaVera _, Dellahtf\tl patio, ow , · • ~ ~ Bums = ~ ~ C.I.. rl!i I RtoltOt'I 16-7711 A::.._~MfJ.':/' I~ I ~; IRVINE COVE -VIEW lush low !Mlntenance nrd • ... 2043 WestcUH Oriv• 3 bedroom 2% bath condo-• • • , t · •· , Mt•r H••P•rt P••t ornte Tbls'1mpiac. 3 BR. 3 Ba. & den home OVet'-and a. bcauUtul lwhn pool! rm;;: Open 'till 9 PM mlntum With private yard LDVELY LRG 2 aty loob finest prtv. surfing beach In the ~ Bli<. iMt>-t"r.11. TOP mcu lt'fl: MONEY MAKER dooble car g..-.ge. View OI ................. COO.Will co. bOme, 211 ba\ ll"ple, Q alll ..... I Is h by Ii ' TE grol!nbelt & pool. Only kit h d hi h u y W.~uuu ·S own many . ne 1.ffro EST A EJ-111 l•bdrm. u.nU11 on 2 lots. $25,500. Immediately avail· a.r ... Styl1 Homt gas c ti .... turu. $195,000. Kathryn Raulston Pl'l'ICttcally 00 ~Pl coone Xlnt renml area. l·Blk to ~ble. Earth JO\Ter'• kind el Uvtn'! WHY WAIT? U:uge ya.rd. SP r l n k:.l~;I 2005 thltb!:r; Cost.a Meta and cc llvlnc tn th t 1 bay II ocean. Pn>pery:y GINNY MORRISON Wrum frplc,, kids rm1., Now'r yoor chanee to set $4.1,000, Owner1.i~!8 u ~,,., ..... ~ home show• wcU. Call for a.pp L *** ·R••"TO.... farm kltch.. $30,900. Oaw1 thla 3 Blt, 1\t ba., in con. Or., C.M, 540--MU. Sele or Ltan/Optlon "" _ _,, to -.. •160 ooo + • ........... ._.. tr1endlv! vtnltnt Costa Mesa 1oo.; CO ~ MeA Verde near thr · $44,IXXI 11.lD ..,... • ' • *W!)* ~ M-. Rf:AL ESTATE ml(ntr moved out of state; I.JOME & IN. ME -B/acioaett6 3 ~. 1% prkt, 10%-down wtl dolt. Ce.II: G-3663 61$.8886 eves. • •Vmle Or. East. TREASURES neerui llOme cleaning, but Ing new duplele ba !l11C-/ sold ~ carpet * . • OMm Mesa you Cftn get a ~ ~t DcaulJful 3 bdrm ~rid patio, beavy lhake'. **•** 5Sl..WO 1831 \VeatcllU, NB. 645-mO • MORGAN REAL TY. unit + l bdrm rento. )J!ift. RI' q: yard, PotMldkln 10 n Evefllngt) QUIET Eruitstdc Stre6t. Ltko 673-6642 675-6459 ' Xlnt location, 151 Bay Nov. 5. $43.500. 2838 T&bqo R.talll:a ~ '"""'" D'~ E"'I.' •• Hi 950 new, co:cy J.-Br., 2 ba home. . St., C.M.. ~. Pl., C.M. 546--2759. Open Evts SU.-.<'5$ • • 1~c." v.--~ · " ... _,, Dbl IJtono frplc. Bltns. 4 UNITS, ?i,twport Height• I 'J;'be-fUtest draw In~ elt. fUC l'ltl.lltl an JUlt a phone Se.II thf old 1tutt. Qu.)' the l-28R • 1-JBR. ept, 151 E. Ch?enhae. 135.000. A It. Gd. incomc .• Walk flit tOOpg. • •• l Deity l>Uot Clllii9l.0«1 C1J1 &!!l • ~ n!1'f ftuH, ' Whlle Elephknt Dlme.A--Llne Bay, Cotta MHR. ~).¢Tl. 64&-1.4S6. 613-87'2: 491H'.l8711 _;Ad~ • .!-~!!!:.--~-I · • HERITAGE . . REALTORS TARBELL 0 WALl(lfi & lll --Coldwell,Bnar ~ 550 NEWPOllT CENTER DR., N.B. 1334700 • I j q I· l • " · 1 I IBIT 1111! c L A s s I ,. I E D 6 4 2 • 5 6 7 8 . SAYE t:ASHI • >t BDRM., 2 bR. on t:ormr lot. '25.000. Sl,500 dowti Authorlrod llrokor * 54U570 * *VACANT* J\fUS'l' SEU.! 3 BR. Big yard. Trailer access. New paint &: CT11ta:-m.ooo. Low dn. SCOTT REALTY , 536-7533, 24 hn. I BY ~'nE!r, 3 BR home, on l~ lol 232 Costa Mesa St. Nr St Joachim's School. m.900. F'br appt, 83!Hl.64. BY owner 3 br, 2 ha, frplc, 2 car gar. S26.~. • 54f>.5567 • MARK SPlTz GREW UP WITH . A POOL . , and 80 can your chll- aien~ ·See ·UilS--super 4 bed- room with family room and covered patio Sol Vista for only $44,750. BE A WINNER Elega:it 4 bedroom 2 bath wilh family room, COVl!:red and enclosed patio, lush car· pets and drapes, new sparkl- in&: J>OQI. Near everything. Only S46,500. ' WIDE OPEN SPACES Lots of glass walls, cathedral cpjlings. sunny kitchen, screened-in lanai, 3 bdrm, '%"battt:-1\ll'"this·and· a -comer lot tor nnly $36,900. CALL 545--0458 The DAILY PILOT ORANGE COAST'S leading $25,900 3 bedrooms, I* baths, all uew electric kitchen. Yoo won't bellevt> it! Hu double oven-ranae j: loads of cup- boarda, uJ!iraded carpe1s & drapc-1, covered patio, pe.rlc- lhe be.ck yard, room for boat pte. \Vith Sl.500 do..,·n payment, S22:l coven a.I.I. l' 111.w.e Re.11 ht 1te 531·5111 ( =1 531-5111 And anYone can assume the $164 total monthly payment or get-new GI LOAN-. Conveniently located t o trwyz, -major s h o ppin g centers & schools. We will take a smaller home in TRADE. o-..,,_ of the four «tumbled wotdr be. low to for11t lovr si111p'4i word~ t-.-H _E,.R_"Ti"'".-tl ! A -.....,.., pfa1ri1o ..,,,, ;:='~' ~'''='~i~ ~,::';:'it..~ ... nanoe company to moke a car C 0 P T E K I poymonl, I have to - o -. • I I' I' I r 0 ~:::: ~ .. 7!....::: • • -• • • you d...io, f1om .i-.,, No. 3 below. • ' 11 t I CONDOMINIUMS Lofty living awaits )'OU! Act swiltly lo select your own Newport Beach condominium. Visit the temporary offices of the Newport Crest Information Center, conveniently located at 2400 West Coast Highwey Suite B, Newport Geach. Open Daily 10 a.m. to sunset. 1714/ 645-6141 ' T"""1, Oct*' 24, 1972 DAILY "1.DT 3 Xbc.52. 2 BR, 2 BA. Udl hv· ine room. 2 door , ~trir .. prb. dilp., plumbed .for wuher, carpeted thruou1. AwnlftJ! ~arport, porch 4 full lldJ't1nl. Dtllwred A tet up 1n park of your c:holct $1,909. Full "'""· s.wms LAGUNA HILLS MOBILE HOMES U889 San Dieao Fwy , , Laguna HUis. C714) ~110. S.D. or S.A. Fwy to El Toro exit. left on Ave. Carlotta to 1NJe1 lot. l<hcS5 KIT w/cab&na.. 2BR. nl~ oond. Adlt1, Hunt Bch $42>0. 1162-<1119 2 Br., den, 2 ha, nr beh. Drift\\'OOd beach club. $1900 llrm.53H321. ----- j[j] AcNage for' ule 150 , .... ,.'--I ~ STOP PAYING RENT!!! Take Advantage of Our "NO CLOSING COSTS'' SPECIAL EXPIRES OCT. 31st a Minimum S1lfiO Moves You In. a No Closing Costs. • Immediate Possession. IN ADDITION, you get 2 & 3 bedrooms, 114 & 2 baths, built·-in range, oven, hood. dish· washer, disposal, individual laundry area, en· closed private garage, private entrances, choice of carpet color, cable TV, swimmin2 pool, gas S.B-Q & park-like recreational area. All tbi! for as little as $207 per month, in· eludes everything, on our .. least expensive unit. PRICED FROM $11,950 TO $23,450 Santa Ana Fwy. to Culver, right about '4 mile to Walnut (Isl road on left), left I mile to HWalnut Square"; or San Diego Fwy. to Culver , left about 3 miles to Walnut, right to "Walnut Square:· or call 714/832-9670. ---------------Income P!'f!rty 166 11 UNITS Deluxe l year new l~ne bedroom 10-two bedroom, located Jn tree l i n e d residential area, garden areas & patios, D/W air condltiontna, shq carpeting St:G0,000 (IRO'l8), Cill 'f days ln0133-{1Q!O lnvestment Dlvi1kln ~l BtWneN: Center Drive IrviDe, Ca.Ill. I 1n St•rt Your Investment Pr09r•ml Attrae, 'A acre Nw Iota \\·/city \\'a.ter. witbl.n 1 milt ol mu.IU-mllllon Mopp'1 center, aoU coune • freeway . $500 Down, sso· per mo. Full prf~ "995. Sellen need tax break, wUI trade for local Income piapetb. McNASH REAL TY '42-140D Ro•I Eltote W•-114 DAIL Y PILOT Monoy to LNn 1st TD • .r.:-r · 6o/4 % INTER 1·:s·1 ~nd Tn r'"' l.ci\v,.!U 1·ii1"s (\rHll~l' C<• "WE BUY TD'S" Sattter Mtg. Co. 642-2171 54~11 "°rvln~ l131'hr)r att 11 vr~ ~E~:[) Ct\Sfl~ $1.00:l. Or ur ltl $3.000, $10,000 and n1orr. ~· Avoo Thrift fnr a R~<il Es1.ntc Loan. Uf)l)n approv:•I llilf' fhc rnQnf'y hU\\'('Vf'r y• tu like. Also ask abour our un~'<'u1·M iwrsonal loans. AVCO THRIIT. 620 Nt•11·port Ctr. D1· .. Suite 101. Ne\l'pnrr Beach, Ph. 833--34.w. ' 365 tou••s Unf\lrn. 30.5 Apto. Furn. ...,,_.~ ... l~I ....,_, ..... I~ ! --·--ll!l 1 .............. l~I ~ ... -....::l~i!i!,,,.I 3641 Apt. Untum. :i4S Apt. Untum. 365 Apt. Unfurn. W Apt. Unfum. ~ Room• 400 ' Rr .. dl•n. 2 Ba. 1-'IA ht 1111\RC. $.'t':A.l/mo 1 2 l·l~lintrope-67:...,....{ijl 0 t 'n. 2fl8'! 1TF. C'Olt<>~('. z b-;:-~. ~11 lrplc. paUo, \\Ir, 1t<'rrl1•n1"r "'1!'11,."('. & 1·1-161::.. 5 0 4 r('n1leaf. ; , M-,s.a t Nt~EDS f";11n1~v' :.' Hr '·'n1'CI Jril F:nl ! i:ur !\ids '"'hi . $13."1 ALA Rentals e 645-3900 e HARD to Bear~ 3 Br J•)tl'I C~I. f·'uc<I yrd. c!l<'l gur. $165 ALA Rentals • 645-3900 3 BR. 2 BA. rle111 crpt, paint In/out. fncd yrd, 1~v patio w/brick BBQ. nr schls \V. side 1st & last. rels. $220. 546-9342. RENT UNTIL YOURS rl• r fl let151• option p!K ou rent 0111i[ th~ 11rne yoi 'l't a!lortl tn bu~· \\•,. hflv• .... ,,•1•ttl 11.'l.!(ngs IX'Jn!'.{ i;olr' 1111s \\'tiY Ctill 6~7m d~il ~IJll\1C1~111 l • H•I (0..Y>lU C• $11:1: llt'W J br, nr bc;h, l)hnS gar, nitt'. $210-2 + Den. P<'n!nsuln Pi>int. Chile!. pet ok. s:vxi. 2 I.Ir, 2 ba. dbl frplc, bltns, pvt over A"ar. NU-VIEW RENTALS 673-4030 or 494-3248 General General ,c~o!!'':!•_Mffa~!!.-----l~N.::.•.;;w.tpo.::.n~Be;;..::.•::;ch~---2 ROOMS. own entrallee, STD. -.;;;;;;;;;;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiii;;;;,;;;i;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiim ' -& $60. monlhly, rtliablc Caso dcl Ora · ... .,.SliBllU "'I VIEW APARTMENTS men, m now,,.. st. eo.u. ~ 1io AS BIG AS Mesa, 646-tl36 Al.L l'TILJTlf'S PAil> El CORDOVA .APTS. 2 &!room. 1 bath .... $190 A HOUSE ROOMS S15 wk. up w/klt. Campa~ lw!or(• yn" L'('M' From $145 '·-·--2 "-u $205 ~ I •• ~.. s-~ k A -& 2 8-.J """"'vvm, U1L 1 ••••• ...... .... an 11 f'W, ~ •IVl.U l)()U..'M! ~·......, w UP ptJ, •1•v "\1,tom dHl§rrk'd, fea1t•rl"" 1 9'1rooms 3 Bedroo1n, 2 bath ••••• $25.'i securfly, a 11a r1m en t 1 Newport Blvd.. CM. ~ ~p11clou11 kiteheu w11h \ Oish"•asher • Shag Carpeting • Walk-ln Clos-Beautiful new aptA. w/pvt dt"slstned willil a Maste1"'1 :>tS-9753. dh'«'t Uithtln~ ets. Forced . .i\lr Heat • Extra Large Rooms • JMltio6, gara1:0. J>OOI. spa. touch, (litclW1iV(I club with• '=n.::R=pvt"'-too-m-e~c~1,-,..,-. -"'-I • Scporute rli11'r. :~1·l·a Bea utiful Game Room • Heated Pool -· BBQ's-Lu!ih garden setting. Adultll, unlCJl.K' Atiull.bar, fountaim shopg' plaza o>tittt Mesa. • Home-like .~1or~e Bnclosed Garages. Quiet surroundings and no pets. 151 E. ::l'lt, C.M. arl(I formal gl:ll"dens. All Aft 5 & wkndio 646-.2042. e Privn1e 111_tllos 646-8666. par\ of the South Coast'!! ' eloseto shopping.(Nrflarbor&HamiltonSt) p' kL nd finest apartment com PRIVATE room Own mt e Closed i:arase \1• stnraR• ar • Ike $urrou Ing '"""lto, . w1~·•, pho-... v'1rw. •~ Adult Living . No Pets. ..., .r ........ , '""' ~ • ~t;u·hle pulln1an 2077 Charle St., Costa Mes• f?UlET DELUXE t bodroom/studkl!I fronl S195. we'd:. 645-3143. • K!ng·sz Bdr1u~ 2 &: 3 BR APTS. 2 Bedroorn from $2!)5. .._ •-• Pool • Ai'trbc -/' gur-Pvt. Pa1Joa * Hid. Pool11 OeJuxe 3 bedroom l.ARGE room. pvt Ul:ll oi: cntr. HAC IE NDA HARBOR Nr Shop'g * Adults Only Models o""n \I A./..l. to 6 P.1't in M<'sa. Venk'. £mplyd roondl"d 11'hh p h lanrl From $154 M • I A r-man Call 545--2822 ""•10•· DELUXE 1 & 2 BEDJilOOMS art1n que pts. VERSAILLES • N;;,. Bdnn .. k;tc; "';v ''" Arfult Jlving 11.1 il."-br!!t Furnished & Unfurnished Im Santa Ana Ave., C.M. on the BLUFFS tiona l. Pvt aclll home, nr l..'trge 1 un $180. i\f~r, Apt. l13 1)46.5542 at NEWPORT ti.II. £u11t C.M. 548-4271. 2 BDR.\1. $200. l~eated .. Pool -· Garages -Shag Carpeting * * $180 * * Fmm Newport BIYd .• turn at Nie(' rooni, O\Vll ba. & mfr. No Pets Dishwasher -All Utilities Paid. 3 Br .. Jl,2 Ba .. newly painted. tlospltal Road (1 block kitchen priv. Good loc, East 365 \V. \Vilson 642-1911 Adults Only · No Pets Bltn.", crpt/d?'J)fl, encl patio, above Pacific Coast Hwy, at C.M, $98/mo. 548·5998. WEE KL Y-MONTHL y 241 Avocado St., Costa Mesa ~1204 Nr schls &: shop'g. ChildrcD Lido Isle} to entrance. PRIVATE entrance & bath.. 642-«70 Bike to bch. sngls or rain· 1" MONEY to loan on real il ics. $135. 2 Br. Gar. Klds/ Condominiums Unfum. 320 Executive Suite• VILLA MA. RSEILLES ok. No pets. 880 Center St., 900 cagney Lane, Nl"wport $80/nio. Near Brookhurst & CM. Call aft 3 pm. wkdays. Be a C h , Ca . 9 2 6 6 0 . Adam.'I H B 963-2067 2080 Newport Blvd. SPACIOUS 1 & 2 BEDROOM APT. AlldayWknds.642-8MO. Telephone: (714) 64.5-0000. GENTLEMAN .. ma.s ter Coste Mesa Furnished & Unfurnished NEWLY DEOORATED Spectacular Bay View bedroom, retrtg, TV. Beach t11late. Reasonable rale8. nr pets H t ' a. ~ will buy your T.D. cR~•~"-'~-A~-~H7o~u_s7• _ _:_9_7U4---'-"30 _ un •ngton ..,.."" • 641 .. 2611 Adult Living 2 Br w/gar frxn yrd Pvt beach, dock. 1 unrum & Pac. Coast H\vy, 536-8518. * BROKER 642-7491 * 4 Br, 1 ~• ba. Convenient to 1 BR condo nr Beach & """"''' • ,1-p•i'ng ~ Atlanta, frplc. refrig, dbl STUDIOS & 1 BR'S Dishwasher color coordinated appliances • '"/patio. Wtr pd. Call btwn 2 br, 2 furn or unfum bach· Del Pvt tr &: ha • FREE Linens Pl h .a;,.~ 1 &: 5. 636--0.20. elors. All with crpts drps . wee. . en · • FREE Ut"i'ti..., us shag carpet· mirrored warwvbe doors.. 2224-A Placentia Ave. $145 bltll.1 stove refr' · d' '. Maid serv1ce. No smokers. Mortgages, Ca1i ~i>. "' " · ..,.,.,, gar w/elect door opener. Trust Deeds 260 1-cc==-~""ci--=,----,-,-,--$170 962 -·5 " •0 indirect lighting in kitchen -breakfast bar • 548-C Bernard $115 ' ' '"· " 675--03JD: 54&-7197 • Full Kitchen poss.ls. 673·2162. 415 3 BR CONOO.Oouble 'garage, . -·-. s:--.idn. 1st 1'0, $'."ii. Pl'r 1110. new erpt<i/drps. $ 2 2 5. I BR, wtfu.rn. Relrig. {I., bltns. Including !l•~,, du<' 3 yrs. l -""~'-"~t._54<>-__ m_-1_.____ Crpts, drps. patkl. $155/mo. Cowrs $10,000 L 8 ~ 11 n :1 z BR. unfurn. $16S. No Les Luymt>s, Bkr, 540-1151. Beach ocenn ViC'\V lot.~ rhildren. no pets. 388 \V. Laguna Niguel bnnrf pairl off. 10 ,.~ discounr. Bay St. 645-1317. l --"---=~---- • treated Pool ~uge pr~vate fenced patio • plush la,ndsca~ * SHADY ELMS. POOL * \\'AU< Guest Hom• • Lnundry Facilities mg • brick Bar-be--Ques • large heated pools • Adults Poolside $140 up 1\' Blocks to the beach orl:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;I & ·&lanai Air conditioning. • Children next block run ~~ block to the bay. 2 • TV ma.id setv avail Free Fumitvre Plan BR apt, \V/front uard. e Phone Service 3101 So. Bristol St., Santa Ana 557-8200 2'1nd St CM <" "'. 199 ' COLDWELL, BANKER & CO. 177 E . ., 6 ....-3U..;i Avail Nov. 15. $ .50. Call * $27.50 WEEK & UP MANAGING AGENT 2 BR, cp1', drps. bltM. Incl1""61'°5-_::l"'4'=-".~~~=- * Private Room * for Ambulatory Lady or Man Good. nutritious Food. liil7liii41ii4'il'.l .• -ljjjL';<jji. iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiif _D_a_n_•_P_o_int_____ 3 BR. 2~ BA in Sea Terrace, I' ocean view, cptl/drps. 2 BR., family r111., 2 frplcs. Lease $400 mo. inc. Assn e Studio & l BR Apts garage. Mesa Verde area. 2 Br., 21h Ba., frplc, Dbl gar, • TV & Maid Service Avail $160/mo. 549-1058. pool, sauna, Club hse, Nice. cheerful atmosphere. * Call 548-475.1 * Houses Furnished 300 Balboa Peninsula 3 BR, 21,~ bath. All new in. terior. \Vinter rental. 305 Montero. 1-8'1!}-5991. Corona del Mar Nr..1V J Bedroom. 2 Batti · Quiet street -Walk to beach -$3.50 a month. Bkr. 675-W5 Costa Me111 e H0i11EY! l Br. Nr. stores. Sm! yard. Util incl. $125. ALA Rentals e 645-3900 •. Chp~l~:._~&1vipc:t1·~tf,,oon l _A,,_p_ts_._F_u_r_n_. ___ .....;3c.c60 Apt. Unfum. 365 1 & 2 BR. Garden Apts. Pool. Wshr/Dryer. New paint and ... "'"" .,_, Oshwshr. Utpl pd. $160 up. carpels. M~ts $ 2 9 5. Magnificrnt ocean view! dues. 213: 322-5585. Eve. $250 Month. S46-3~3 213: 322·2202. 237G Nl'\vport Blvd .. CM Lagun• a.,.ch Corona del Mar 324 E. 20th St., 845-4761. 64:1-2346 (JI' 645-4UO. Huntinqton Beach Newport Beach 548-9755 or 645-3967 3 BR, 2 BA, shag crpt, drps, SEACLll~F Manor Apts. 2 Rentals to Share 430 $100 month & up. ROOM & bath w/priv e~ 2 BR. 2 Ba., upstairs, down-carport nr OCC Upstairs Br. $164, Pool, Crpts, drps, 1 Bedroom. new crui>ets 2 Bedrooms . All C'lecll'ic Best local. Call f\lrs. Segner 962-29..16 or Mrs. McLey 96244TI NEWPORT HO~IDAY PLAZA trancl!'. Near beach, bus & stairs. Attract. apt. Swedish $1G9/mo 552-mi · bJtns, garb. displ. 1525 APT. to shr., male25-J5, Prl DELUXE Spacious 1 BR shop North end. S 8 5. trplc. 6444610 days; ' · Placentia Ave. Ask about rm .& . ba. pool:. other RIVIERA CONDOS Jurn apt. $135. Heated Pool. 49-1-707'9 673-4607 aft. 6 p.m. Dana Point our di~I. 548-2682. ~~ t le s • $95. Ews 365 Monte Vista • 3 bed-Ample parking. Adults, no LIVE in hnrury from $45 wk * GREAT VIEW.· 2 BR. * NE\V luxury (upstairs) 1 SPACIOUS 2 Br, 2 Ba, 1 blk PROFESS. b . rooms. 21~ baths, $295 per pets. or $160 mo. Singles er Frplc., bltns, sundecks, pool. BR 2 BA. Fab. view' o! to bay, 1 blk to ocean. si. .. -. homC: wl'~nesspoo'/"', ~ month: 358 Santa Isabel • 1965 Pomona Ave., C.M. suites. heated pool, maid $210 up. 644-6344, 67>3535. ocean&: harbor entr, i..'OOlpl Yearly. snl/mo. Bk r . d~';i:;.,ble N'pt Beach Joe 3 bedrooms, 21h baths, $318 * SHADY ELMS • POOL * service, laundromat. Vlllage bltn kit, yr~ rate, $225., 675--49ll. $llS. "-'! 6'5-';,"". · JX'r month Cinclud<!s ""'ash· e Adults Poolside $140 up Inn, ~9436. Costa Mew 33881 Pequ1to Dr .. 68&.-4105. 2 BDRM., l i,) Ba .. lrplc., '-..(lJ J.A]IJ.e. AlOne on k>t. sngls .or lnn1· er. dryC'r & refrigerator): e Chiidr.en next blo<'k. OVERLOOKING ocean & liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii OCEAN vi S iou 2 2 Br. Muse to share. Hies. S14.5. Fncd. Kid.~/pels. 339 Monre Vista . 4 bed· Free Furniture Plan village. J min. from stores, ~· pac s patio, Jge. back yard. 1 blk Year round. $185 mo. Rent·A-Hous.e 979""8430 rooms. 21 !? baths $325 per lTi E. 22nd St., CM 642•3645 $225 monthly incl. utiJ. & TV HARBOR GREENS br .• 2 ha., din. lU'ell, bltns, to ocean. $WI. yrly. 4915 \'our share $95 6T.HI028 mooth. \1TLLAGE REAL cable. 494-8541. new cpts & drps. Balcony. Rivtt. 675-3:906 after 6 pm. ' · 3 BR. "1ax, 3 children. No ESTATE. S3l-5800. 2 BR. UTIL PD $175 1 ~="-=-"'""-----$1ro. 837·3927: 837-5178. NEW .shag, paint, stove. 1 Office Rental 440 pets. 18421 Beach mvd. -:C=7"'~°'='"-'-' ___ Attrac. furn. Htd pool. Adlts. 1:-N;,;•.,;WPO;,;;,;;c.""-'BeeO.:.:;;;dl;;;..___ E 8 ult blk -"-h ""' pd Y I Close to shpg. · S.n Juan Capistrano Fumished & ast I w ""'· · ...,...... • r Y· nESK space available $50 No pets. !inf.ant ok) We have Winter Rentals Unfurnished . · Bach. tl.50. 2 Br. $250 mo. Will provide turnl Fe3n:J. 2 ~~d::~1Qi<. 2 BR. 1 BA, re.frig., ('.pts 642·9520 \Viii Take Students WEIL designed 2 . .BR... 2 ·Ba. 673--0T.ll · at S5 mo. ~ service $250/mo. 842-4827 & drps. \\'tr pd. $180, mo. * $25 PER WEEK * Also oceanfronts avail. From $130 to $215 mo 2 car gar. Avail Jmmed .. $1&;-1-Bdrm. $19:>-2-.-Bdrm,..._~ 81\'d. 9~9163. 2l°H3l-7282. & Up. Pool & niaid service. 4 BR • BA S325/350 !'!'!'17423Mo. Yrly 1 ease · big modern Y'ly. Dave Huntin· ~n •--~-•••-...., • 3 Br CONDO. crpts, drps. · r. • ·' .... • • B hel ......-494-0615 fi75..1972 ,;•u ~" ~i pool, waaherfdryer. R/O, Duplexes Furn. 345 Kitchens ava·t. Motel Tahiti 3 BR. 2 BA ............ $285 ac ors • 1 Bdrms · · · .. DESK space available $50 • /ll::AR This! 1 Br. E/side. r{'frig, $200. M8-l405. Be h corner Harbor & Vir.toria. 1BR.,1 BA ............ $17S 2 Bcfrml e 3 Bdrms ttuntlngton Beach NEW dlx :uplex, % blk mo. Will "provide furniture :L~· 'R~~is$l:.64S..3900 $175-2 Br. Frplc;, bltns. 2 Ba. Newport ac * $25 PER WEEK * 2 BR l~e~3663'' $250 11h or 2 Full B•ths * MOVE IN TODAY * ~an. 4 r. upper, yrly at $5 mo. Answering service condo. 19742 Coventry. WATCH the :run set ovt!'r the & Up. Pool & maid service. $13' A MO. lse. $425. per mo. 540-3442. available. 222 Forest Ave, Laguna 8e•ch 833-1100 days, 546.9754 eves. ocean, from your baJt'Ony. 4 Kitchm!I avail. Motel Tahiti, Master size bedrooms ,~·/ Spac, 2 & 3 BR in 4-plex. EASTBLUFF DLX 2 BR. 21h Laguna Beach, 4M-9466 3 BR. crpts, drps, blUns, dbl , Br .. .2 Ba, nicely furn. corner Harbor & Victoria. high beam ceilings, large Several avail AIL EX· BA, frpl.e, shag. drps, pool, ~B"A-"""""E"W=•OF=F'°'l"C"E'°'S"'I $125 Util pd, !rg bach, full g•-•o. ~one:c o:A•.""""' o• Suitable !or 3 or 4 teachers P"l""l'NNING 1 BR G·-.. living room w/gas or TR.AS. Pool. ~ bldg. Kids dbl gar, patkl. 644-MOS. y VI k;t_ pvt ••too· . .......,, _. ,,.,.. ~ • * .::11 u • 1:1..1uen ~.. hurn' I Fro $139 •-~lu•e "'" ""ndltio-• ,~ 832-1530. or students. Thrn J une. $300 \\vuu 1ng fireplace. we rome. 1'01:.:i;l. • ~ L><= " • , ..... ......., '"""' $140 -Util pd. Sml but nice mo. (2l3) 431_2406. • Apt. 2 BR. 2 BA unf. Pool. Convellient laundry area Mgr. 17371 Keelson "B". I Apt1., Redecorated, Lido Area .1 Br_ Walk to beach & 10\\'n Irvin• ~ -"'"'-'""'-'"-'='--'~="I Rec area. 710 W. l 8th St, *Balboa Penin. 3 BR, 2 BA off kitchen. Enclosed pa· blk W. of Beach Blvd. off Furn. or Unfum. 370 Realonomics, BlO". 615-6700 UIO. UUJ pd, 1 br seprrot·/;;;;;;;;;;:;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:; OuplexesUnfum. 350 cC::M~-=~~~~~--over ~-On bay tio!. 2 s1vimming pools. Slater.968-:751Dor8474200. _ OJ!FLC..E~UORE , l1'4!:e w/pool. Dec-orator furn . 2 Ba . $325 BACHELOR, 1 & 2 Br. apts. sauna, recreation facili· E>..'TRA LRG 2 BR, 2 BA, Balboa Penrn1ula 525 sq tt Util Paid. ~ .;;: , 6~1EW REN1!_1J48 i :~:·2 Ba :.~~~.::::$34.5 Corona det Mar t~/ ~·~td.&pool. ~~::~1=~!1350/mo. ties. Security guard. No crpts, drps, bltins, J?'l. DELUX 2 BR fum park'g. 2002 Newport, cor. or \VE HAVE OTHERS ROOMY 3 Bedroom. 2 bath, 853 Ce11 St ·645-8965 up.1----------pets. $165. Nr beach 233J F1orida. furn • 1,i bik: ' ~t!,n-of Bay St. 646-12S2. FURNISHED Laguna charm ground floor. $350 pr. month n er · • BACHELOR apt. \Vinter or Mod I Ope 1 I 53fr.3976 or 828-1727. .... .... ~. 675-4630. ocean y. BEAUT office to .share. house for salaried responsi-plus spackius 1 bedroom VERY ni ce 1 BR. dplx. )'('arly lease. Open Sat & e s n 0 ti 1 pm WALK TO BEACH "ff>" .., Across from BBC. NB, Resp 'l111l1 "I1i·ilil, ble older man. $160. No u-•-•-.,.;... pn'va•-en-Quiet. Sep. by garages. Sun. 4831 Rlver St, NB. or 2700 p~--Wa CM ~--~ 1y u~~·• '~' ,....uur,, ... u, "' A Utti 30 N ca!I wkdays 213: 330·4.588. •••• -· y; New l & 2 BR, cpt/u•...-Corona ct.I Malt ,,..... ·>'on · ~,VTV'~ . L"'1.dtso. "94-Sllsle 70· utran,.~:e .. · ~t~pr '",""•'";-nrusBo.th. -"~'s-_1021~".""-~~·-~o~po~t•. 3 4 BR. w· 1 1 nr H11rbor Blvd & dswshr. 316 16th. 53&-1<£> or · Business ~entel 445 BLUFFS IFUL.LY FURNISHED) Very p opu lar ··Bonita'·, m odel home co nd . Completely redecor. Avail. now! 600 mo. or i<'ss? ;/to/.. 5rst t'f!.&1f' (:,'}. reall.t' 2~14 Vista del Oro Newport Beach 644·1133 ANYTlME ---··1 \.1·11ll11 r ' 0SINCE 1946" 1st Western Bank Bldg. University Park, Irvine Days 552-7000 Nights 3 BR. 2 baths •..•.••.•. S32fl 4 BR. 2 balhs . , ....... $350 3 BR., bonu& nn ••. , . , . S400 erecthi11 REALTY Univ. Park CentC'r, Jn •ine Ca ll Anytin1e, 83.)-0820 Office hours 8 AM to 6 PM .... '" u:::: :::: or 1n er or year Y 847-3951. SO. of Hv.')'. Spac. 2 BR.1-;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;.j call Bailey 50 Altf.. Furn. Bach. & I Br. Ex· lease. Open Sat &: Sun. 4831 Adams L 1 Blk 1• River s1.. NB &I-. call 14 BLOCK TO OCEAN apts. &: poo • to MISSION VIEJO 00\VNSTAIRSduplex,lovely teptionally nice!· 2110 kd 213 330-45M S'rn37 2 Br apt 'Crpts, drps, new lx>ach; al_so. 3 BR. unf. 3 BR, 2 BA, frplc, drps, Newport Blvd., C.M. w ays ; . "HNI 0 decor. $165/mo. ll5 13th St. house avail. Agen t, 644-4848. SPECIALTY CENTER ~hag, bltns, encl<;d gar, $350. F'URN. 3 BR. 2 ha., steps to 8-16-4955 or 536-9959. Costa Mese Retaii/Comn1. space avaiL 60.~ &>gonia 213·6.19-2201. BACHEWR Apts. $115 &. up. lx>ach. Ocean Vu, Agent, l!!!!!!!!!!!!!'!!!!!l'!'!!!!!!'!!!!!!!!!' I j~~~~~'ii]t~Bii 1~:;;;;;;;;;;:;:;;;:;;;:;;;;.I Contact No children or pets. 2135 675--4630. l·l BR w/refrig $13(), 1·3 BR GRUBB &: EU...IS CO. Co$ta Mesa Elden Ave., See .Mgr. Apt 6. NEW 2 BR. 2 BA, $285. 1st & · DELUXE 2 ba. irplc S185. Both have 557.7900 1 BR. un!urn $135/mo. No C.M. last. 1h Block to beath. 2007 APARTMENTS crpts, drps, bltns, dshwftr. * * * * * *·1 ~~~"!!'!"~~!!""~1 childrn. no pets.~ \V, Bay e TROPICAL POOL e Court St. apt B 6'iS--0258 Air Cond ... Frplc's • 3 ~·Im· cNc:•::...<P<:.:":::·.;c846-5l27"'-="·---. 1900 SQ. FT, BLDG. C~2 St. 645-1.'17. 1 Br. Furn SH> Gas & Wtr WATERFRONT 1rg 2 BR ming Pools • Hetllth Spa . BEACHBLUFF Apts. lA COSTA APTS 19th st CM H foot _-"'-'--"==:.__,~~---' Pd. lt, E. 18th 5-18·1168. ..,.,,. winte9. 'S300. yearly: Tennis Courts • Game 8.lld 2 & 3 BR. Pool, patio • lraffic.'i.2 car·-t.~ga~. Sep. Huntington Beach '#UJV o wht 8231 Elr 842-4893 .,. ... -;;;:;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;: 1 BR Trlr, $ll0. 2 Br, trlr ,544-:.:,:,::;201;=:~~-~~-~ Billiard Room. · · 18• · l & 2 n-..1 2 Br hse. Ideal for R.E .• • $13). Util incl. No ~· or 4 BR. 2 BA Be h A .1 I BR, ~ $160 SPACIOUS 3 br $189 Avail ~room photo stud· . adv. agency. IMMED OCCUPANCY children 646-1809 64 -· · on ac · vai · r "''" e Built -e Sh · .,,,,. "'""" • · · • · oow thnJ June, 1 9 7 3. 1 BR. & Den From $H15 now. All xtras. KI d s -w ag carpets architect, etc. .,.,.,.......,. or New 2 & 3 Br apti: FURN. 2 Br. apt in good . 645-0245 or 547-97»Bob. • MEDITERRANEAN welcome. 968-7510, 847-4260. • Drapes • Walk In closets 646·1246. Dbl garage, dshwshr area Water & gas pd $150 2 BR o r ~ .. t •Swimming Pool 1·co='M"ME'°"""'cr"AL~-~-,-~ .. ,-_I · · · 1 BR furn. apt. No children up ex ....., .. n own. e Bar·"·""'es um on ....... Cor 1-luntin~on/Arlams. HB. 5'12-3379 or 838-0019. 2405 , VILLAGE Crpls, drps, stove. $145 mo. • En•lo~,-"1 Garag Coast Hwy. suitable for 5., "IS8 nor pets. 1,2 E. 16th St. ,.~., .3507 .. ., bo . ~ II _,, 2 LARGE Br apt l cli'ld k NB G46-46G4 2400 bo BJ ~ All Util'tie p "d utJque s."'l' or ga .ry. 1 r • · 1 0 • -~~~~·----~ Har r vd., C.?ot I S 31 $Z75 mo. l<'ase. 494-7518, Lido lsfe pert Y u~J:O NEW dlx duplex, 1..V blk (TI4) 551.ao20 3~ r:sic. newly 1pa1=· Good Real Estate. PRIVATE HOUSE ocean. 3 Br. lower, lse. thru RENTA!. OWICE '.-.14.!;. 142-""''i'••opoo' . M d I'-ffi I ~' H. UNIYERSTTY PARK AREA B yf IMMAC 2BR, $170. Bltins, June 15 $300 -••~•••z OPEN 10 AM to G PM ;,o.i,-""' 'U.O aturr a u ..,,, no pets 350' o ce store. ......,. 1· Lido Isle a ront · ...... .nv-...... · Walking distance to traffic. 2340 Newport Blvd. 2 bdrm .. 2 baths plus den or d I 3 garage. Adults. No pets. 160 WINTER. 2 Br 3 BR. beach Laguna Beach ho . t 2544 ... """' Beautilul upf)l'r up ex, 21st St S48-2127 11 PPln( cen er. C.M. 64&-, ~. ~~·=~~ Epanc~~ rm,, ,,:', Br, 2 Ba. -1...t-g sundeck .• --.~N-i~ee---1~.~,-B-R-,.,-.-;-1.-rs. ABB~ ~~A~?J256 ~i~ u .. p~~r~ ~ Br,.,,."""p·gl • VIEW • 354 Avoc64•2do 970ISt., C.M. Industrial Rental 450 .... v •= Leatt-. $650. fi45...8917. e<><. & · · . OCEANFRONT • feoatures. Adults prefct'N!d. ,~~~~~~~~~i 1 ..,,., up. Mature lldulls, San Clement. Adults, no pets. 2984 Royal Lease. $.!10 per month. Call child ok. 642·1265. "-'"'--"';..;.;="----Palm Dr. $"152/mo. 645-3515 2 BR, 2 BA. Lease. Malure o•.rv...,., or......,....""'°". Ap¥tmenl$forRitnt · 11 UTILS Pd., Bachelor, Quiet. 1 BR. apt, incl. linens, walk _o~r~---'~=···'--'---to beach. Pool. Security. LA MANCHA 1600 to 3300 Sq. Ft. JUST COMPLETED ,,..,.,....,=o "A" """° ~ ~~ 557 ..,..,.... Adults, no pets. ElevatorJ"'"""""""""""""""""' 1 Adult only, no pets, $120. to heh., 262 Victoria, S.C. BRANO new 2 Br apts, $350 UP. Brand New OeltlXe Units IN SANTA ANA Bach $1 25: Stud io bayiront, 1 _L_ag=.u_n_•_BH< __ .,____ S48-8251. 548-14(l'i. By Owner. 493-3835. crpts, drps, bltns, encloseri 31755 Coast I-fwy, S. Laguna Rent now tor your con· New tilt-up bldg w/sharp, $15.i; Dl'earn Cotfage lncd Sl50 v;ctor\a Sch., 1..,, studio.A _;:;..;__F;:;..c_ ____ 360_ 1 Br. eoclo.'led patio Aot. Unturn. 365 garageor t::•o !,_,~1 6CaJ. I 968-04D7 49}2835 struction allowance ol 1 crptd, paneled offices & · i Br, sngla!fam ok. '6 pts. um. Carport, pets OK. ~.... md1> free rent. l BR, 1 BR sto ra g e me z z an\ n e Rent-A-House 979.1430 ocean view, full kit. IL-S140. 673-5L.'\.f B.-lboa ltlanct 2 BR apt. Carpets & d ........ , Lagun. Nlret & den 2 BR's & 3 BR's. overhead loading doors, ll~ S22S. 2 br. bltns, crpttdrps, Ba l10a Island Sl50 / ti.I 01,_ · ''0 N NIGUEL From Sl50. Dshwshr, encl 220-3 phase_pwr. S95 B11.1~i ut\I pd. S1"5 Bay oc..-can vit'I'. gar. ---------2 BR. util paid, $170 mo~ no · w u · '-""r pen;on LAGU A gar, swim'g Pool. BBQ's HUNSAKER DEV. CO. front Ba.!. Uril pd. $.125, 3 br. 2 M, 2 !rplcs, gar NEARLY new 3 BR. 2 BA. pe!s. 2Zl7 Maple St. 3~f' 2 baty ~Can tffi No pets. Stove & relrlg, Apartments Pets acceptable · 546-5460 R•nt·A·House 979-8430 yard, dL't'k, patio. camp! fum All c\e<·t kltch.. * 548-8913 * Oia:!nr. 6~~r:1°· s:m.5a:.s. 1 Br., 1 Ba.: $185 e 2 Br., l 642-2007 TI8 Srott PL , C.M. ~--~--~-- U 30S NU-VIEW RENTALS frplc, patio. BBQ. Lease __ _;;___;:,::...:=-"'---Spac. 2 & 3 Br apt. $140 up Ba· $225. e 2 Br. 2 Ba.· LARGE I b t $115 Fu 340 sq. ft ofc., work/storage 1 Houses nfurn. 673-4030 or 494-3248 I h r u June · Huntington S.adl Balboa Peninsula Pool, cpt/drp, bltns, kids ok ;ZJS ' ' ...,'>£: La n:;· ap · ·1 1 rn. space .• C.M. UUls pd. ~fo. to ' l 638-8'170/5.19-ml. 1996 Maple No J 642-3813 •WJ. u ·• gar., qu e · nr n10 557-M?G· 673--0824 General e OCEANFRONT To'" 11 . • '· • Incld Gas. TV cable k \\ltr mktl. Mature adlts. 1922·B · ' · · LOVELY 4 BR ocean view 2 Br. U111 pd. Prking L QUINTA HER house, tantai;tic vie\\'. 3 BR, 2206 College No. 5 •• 642-7035 Fully <rptd J: drpd. Rec \Vallace. ~518. Storage 455 near to,vn & 'schools tncci balronit>s. UXl/mo. 200'h a MOSA * * BEAUTIFUL l & 2 BR. yd. Siloo mo. 494-7754• • Sapphire. ~~ Spanish Country Estate Liv· I11m rm., 3 frplcs, 4 Ba. Contemporary Carden Apts. facll. Htd Pool. BBQ ares. l BR furn Jl JO. 2 BR unfurn BLOC. for rent, approx. J6' EXTRA-SPECIAL, 2 br, up-Ing &c Spacious Apts. Ter-2400 sq. ti. $750/mo. Yrly. Patios. frplc.. pool. $155-29041 Aloma Ave. ~40i?t~ia;:ui1s only. 325 x JR' 1vith cen1ent floor. $J0 Lagun• Nigu.I ~1·. Patio. Tbru June. $250 raced pool: !runken gu1 ~673~"°'=7~·------$180. Call 516-51-63 499--2277 or 495-5274 · · per n1onth. 275 F'Jo\.\•er St.. SPAC. « BR, f?0.000 home, _mo=--'~'15-8989~, =~·-----~:· Unbelievable Living: -l ~Ciioiiron;;;;•;;;;d;;oijl iiMiiaiiriiiiiim ATTRACT, New 1 BR. 1 BA. Mes• V•rde Newport Beech "C_-'~'-~~~~-~-- Belboa Penlnsule Apt. Adults, no re ts. STORAGE Building fur rent Nr. beach. Rent $450 mo. "'-""'-'-"'-;....;....c___ 1 BR. FURN. $17S $135/mo. 1970 \Va I a ce. DELUXE 2 &r 3 Br .• 2 Ba., L1·ve $30 mo. m Flower St. Costa Resp. pany. e 831--0588. ANNUAL °' Wloter "'nta!. 2 BR. FURN. $210 ra..~! 51s--081)4. encl ga,, $160 up. "'•ta! Meaa. 646-9138 YRLY Lease. New 2 BR, 2 BAYFRON'T'·lmmac. 3 Br., 2 BR. STUDIO $195 ..,, l &: 2 BR w/fum. aVll.11. Ofc., 3095 Mace Ave., R.,,ntalt Wanted 460 • Th ha 0 Golf Co -..:: 2 Ba F'rpl . ?riv beach. ALL UTIL!TlES H -• I $130 54&-~"'"=°""'-----~~ ' e8e Are Just A 1''ew Of .... ~,1 675-2000 ursc. _..... Ca.rage. 6 15 • 0 7 4 6 or PAID eat= poo . &: up. -· ' Our MAN'" RENTALS . . . mo . ......_. . ,,..,., ... 2599 Adults No Jl'tl ON TEN ACRES Adults. 853 Center St. 2 Br Mesa Verde Villa, b. EASTBLUFF 3 BR . hOme Of : * C"""-'"-=o:o·c_~--~-645-8965. crpt/drps. No singles. $195 g Condo. Needed Immediately $1'15 • BEACH PAD: Partly _M..;•;;.•;.;•'-'V..;•,;,r.;.d.;.•_____ em Wk le Up On Ocean. 4 blka s San D Apts, turn.../u.Mlm. Lee4e SPACIOUS T ~-2 b 21..:"'°;::::-..:oo:H022=..:::::=·-~---I by respon11ible part, furn or 1 turn. UtiJ. pd Long hair Ok. Lovely Bach·l Br-Rooms ( ' Of ieltO Ftwy Fireplaces / prlv. patto.. own,,_,, r. unrum. (older 8 e ct i o l'I ; * NEW lrg 3 br, 2 bu, ham n1' .• "'laid Service · Pool ... UtU pd ~: 1~1~~~ ~:'.)Holt Poola Tennt:s Contnt'J Bkfsl. ~111.vasZ]~~s.~l~· gar, ~N::;•::;w"po:;,;:;n..;_Bee:;.:;.;:,<:.;h;____ pref'd). 644--6943. : SlJ:, BfltNC KJd1 /Pe1 . 2 frplc, Rhag crpts. drps, _ _;•::CaU='-"615-:;;·..:":c"°=•~-1114• 847-Mfl 900 Sea La.he, CdM 644-26U 1 & 2 BR, Adults, no pets, PARK , NEWPORT RESPONSIBLE Pmfes11ional er. Bungalow. Gar. vacant. ~tlos. fncd S.125 m 0 · 2 fut, 1% RA. _patio. balcony. ~~~'.W:~"i.!r~'.'.'.".' 1 ,!;Mi"'"""'i~ur~nr~Coa~''-' ~ll~wy~l I ~B~A~YLJM~E~A~DO~W~S~Al'l'~SS~. APARTMENTS frOffi $140 ""'Oman need:t Studio or 1 · * 645-6"177. 5'13-lo\44. :tl5 F:. no.y, SXiO rno. on yr\y Slti • SIG5 3.1!7 w. Bay St. CM MG--0073 RR npt. in Corona dcl Mar: $150 . HAUNTED lioust'. 2 REN1' h!'e. unfurn. 6 Br., 3 IS(I. fnq. ut Apt c #i73-l!iZl f'>Ac•-1or •• l BR. pat'-. on the boy NR•,",,·'.!...m.~c,'.· ... A '!°!:.d. rinker, ha I rpt ~,, le-•• or "-A'\.-7771 °" "" ...,. CHEERY 2 br, upstalra ar,t. SPAC. b"'hl apt. nr ..... his & · '" ,,,, Vl"t""O't:r'I · + rk-11 +older ho•nl'. 1-'ncd · w c · '' r ...,..., ~.:~="'-'"-~-~~~ trplc's, priv. xara~11 • 'n ptd & drpd Qu ..... Oakwood Is $1 million In l "'=='"""'-"""'"-"=c.,-~.1 yrd for kids/pct. depo.t;ll . Avail 29. Oct. $1175 'lF.AJU.Y-3 Roon1il hy fhe Dfvtded bath .\ lota of Fu Y c, U e~ ~hofping. No pr.tit. $130 ino. Luxury llpatt.me111 llvin~ ov· re creation. Swimming RETIRFD couple w/smaJI : * 010. 5.'"17-92X9. Bay. $170/mo lncludlng util. 1 tl Rec hall 1 & crnr w pvt cntr. 11e 0 lfli pd. Call 97S-0134. erlooklnit !he wl\l~r. F.n)o~ dog want 1 Bt. apt. nr SI= . YEAR'Y at •·a<h'. 2 lMMAC. lge 3 BR. 2 BA. fam6 ."73-"-5800=·'---.,-,----pooe J ~9blrs AAuM ~th!! g1:1r, w&hr, dryt'r. $Zl5 nto. DUPLEX • 2 BR. unlum. $750,000 health liJlfl. I !!\Vim· pools. Hea (I h CI U bS. CalhOllc church and ahop. ~ • •• 1 1 l)W h 1 -: · · · · · "1r pd. Yrly OOsis. AftG pm cara<e. n..1 .. t. No ,._ or Saunas. Tenn ts courts. pi-cnlf. 549-1724 Br. Jo"urn, GAl". Singlctt Ok. rm. rp c, • a alil'. crp ~. Corona del Mar Sec for ynuMN!U! 1T.l01 &. wknd!I, fi73.-03!0. -"to-I~,-,_ .. ,, _.....,... ming pools. 7 lighted ten· •'fj "-=o,.-~- * $275. mo, Avl\11 1o .26 . ,;:,;;.;.;;.c;;..;;.;"-'=---Keel.!lon Ln. Cl blk \V. of ""' ·-~~ •"0""•1.w. nl.1 oouru. pha miles of Billiards. Indoor golf driv· 4BR:---1-s1y hsc. nr Adams 01' I •~rs 2 bedroo015 each. Bltlns. car-5 d v 11 v rd hi II Sl60 .·PRIVATE 2 BT. Jlome. ..........,,. OCEAN V\ew. 2 Blka to big Bench, 1 blk N. of SlAter). pct• & drape#, ChOlet: loca-* 2 BR Apt. Crpts, drps, bicycle trllla, putting, shut· ing range. an o eyba!l. MCM e e sc • l ch d. I nr. everything. Yant 1or Coronn, 2 Br. $220 util. pd. ~~--"-"==2-..:78411=---ti<ln. Lease $200 pr month. carport, upsta.ln. $135/mo. n~boud. croquet. Junior l's Whirlpool Baths. And lots Cl\11 213: fi33-1850. child/pet. Newport Be•ch Yearly. Adults, no pell. 2 BR. upsWr'I. crp~. drpt. Call 673-8550 RLTR. Older pref'd. 67W1'5. from $174.50 monthly: al.t0 t more. A resident tennis Misc. Rent•I• 465 I * ,,~ V" 4 BR 2.,1..;cw;-:.:::,.1:.:624=·~-----,. bltln1, no petl;. J child. $15o. 3 BR & •-n dupl,,,,, 2 .. ha, 3 BR. 2 BA-PATIO. and 2-bedroom plant and pro and ectlvltles director 1 ft!IO _ BY the SEAi 3 Br. B...ur ,..., -1ew • n 1 BR. film pr~ apt. _846-'="7337=.o&J:ct,;•~· ~-~~ ue "YI d M · • Wanted· 2 car prage for F~ Gar K'•-"'cl-e Ba. Twttble. fam area. ........ _ ... -u sun-h no ;;..., U •--~ ~ 1 adults, oo peta, $325. teue. $110 lJfesa el ar. 645-1208. 2-story town h011&e1. F.lec· who plans free Sunday 1110...,,,e, Ne..,..,.-... _h or ·~· • .,.,.. .. '"•·•· '"''"'"cu ...,,, ,.,,.._, '"'.,..,• &1tl6 l)l..-....;n nvle . I 6l7lrl IA CdM e 2B -$ll'.) trlck1t~nt,prtvatepatlo8 b h db b . ..,. .. ,,....,,I.>\: ' LANDLORDS I POOi. eustom. s s 9 s. pet". $185. Ptua u 111. Roams $22.50 ..,..eek, apLtt $93 ~· u N ~· ~~1ssi · Crpt n ~flf. • be.I 1 ti dr rune es an er ecues. C'.osta Mesa. $45-3130 ; rntt RENTAL SERVTCE ~ . c83:::.:,1-l,:Sl"4"-7--~-~~ ~mo. 536-7006. 2 ;: ~pt :'~i: Nov lit, ~k Nr.'li:e'r ~t~r. ~: ~es~S::te:.:ll·par: Starting es low aS $140.5'8-c~375'-:l."'°'=--===-- BEACON RENTALS UDO TSLE 3 Br .• 1'i Ba. 2 Bl!ocs to Big Corona. Bach.1 ~.-,~B~R-. N-.-.-r~SM-.p-1pl-ng-. lo beach, 11odults, $20.5. 1 Br. wilh Rl.raJt!'. Wtr "' lng with elevfltOtl. Oplk>nAl S !ngres. one end !WO· nME FOR • * ~111 * m1-ln1. L.eue $37!1/mo. $150 0111. pd, Yea,BI· 1 Nt'~'IY decorall"t:i. 41.15/Mo. 833-l-t7l or 5464411. itttrdener furn. $UO mo. maid aervlct. Jusl north 01 bedrooms, furnished end LANDLORDS! 67J...tOd3 or 2i,: ~2808 c:~~ ;;:· &t5-l . Realonomtcs Corp. 675-'100 • Corolido 2 Br . I ~ Ba. Adll11 only, 00 petll, 548..roM, Fuhk1n Island Pl Jambot'ff unfurnlstied. Sorry no We Sl>edaltze rn Newpon ;;~~~J:~t:::~ Lagu,na Beec ::1nl ore~m;~· sno. 2c:~·. ~~i:i.~~ =: ~~l~~a~W~l"~,':;11 ~~~~r~111~r ,~e~~ ~odels "4l•c:h •Corona Ml Mar • 'fctfu.1t!';:.~f11:'°J.~ 1 BR w/OC('nn ""· 1175 2 BEDROOMS, 1 bath. Just 1.cSc:"c.t•:c"c.' "-0"-.K'-SllO=c.·-'6'"~'-"=·-i tor ~ntAI tnformauon I: 1..apna. OUr Rental Ser-la ..... !WHn36 mo. 9 mo. Jae. Adlt•. Ph: redecorated. $210/'lno. 2 Bit 1 • vke Is rnre to You! -""UICK CASH Monro• • . P•lm Spring• 714: !Zs-2435 Re"' ••• -• • • r:~ BA-YEARLY. 3 Bit, frpl., Sleps "' ,. J n._ •i-. •"ut•-only, --outor, V"O>r•••v. Townhoul!C tyJle'. \.11(1.1, pgHo. to -n $""" ii Bft •~vi. • Nu-\ltewl s!Pooi. iit';,1 torQ~ltelon. ... ;; 2 DR. 2 n.. l Bl.KS from $160/n\ll 615-1~~~-Anil:\~· "nEA'i.TY 6.12-:""Wio. I NU-VIEW RENTALS FOR ACTION. • • IJl93ClwrchSt .. 543-9633-8.t1 I.TVnr "'1.~•·~~ boach. u o M•"""'1"'· E-SIDET BR. $1!0 Don' ~ •·-ht' S'J3...l}J) 49C4248 '°u. . ...,,., 1.,, v.rn:oL 673....0931 675-4873 I 11-•V• up u~ a p. I "' CALL 642·5678 Dally Pilot Want Ad• h•w Optn ""''· &7&-017 : or Bit.,,,,;.,,, .. rn •. Pool. "LI"" it ln clwllled, Ship Want ~ rwuJIJ ••. &0-5618 be.rplM galore. -·~-~~·~•~fl_4.~----Sril Idl e lttml . , . 642-!i67M Adult~, ro pr11. 611·9MO f(I Shore: Re!IUll~! 64HAl78 . • • ,- Oakwood Garden Apartment• Newport Beach !rvlno Ind 1611'1 $45-0550• 6'2-8170 QUICK CASH THROUGH A DAILY PILOT _WANT AD 642-5678 .. • -··-.. l~ I ...... _ Jal 1--~ I I~~~ 1,L;..; ... "--1-Nol...;.,;,leoe..;.;. __ ~ , ...... Ureo ..U I S50 Contractor f WW not bt mpoMtble for FOUND~ rrilh S!l!f'r on JACK Taulane • Repair a~ debtl ol~r than my Rochester SL, c . M . ttmOd:: .. _addtt. » yn. e:rp. own u ol 10.24·12. Clyde C. 645-tl.26. Lic'd. :v Wa,y Co. 547--0036. = :e:.om.tawn Lani!, MaJe JIUPP)', no oollar. Bllldr Addltlom * RemotltUna: ---------J~ PerMN1t * HINDU SPIRITIJAIJST * Let this ~ change YoUr whole ouUOOk on lUe for 1ht betb< -....... on JJJe. Uc. Re&dlnga dal!y. 10 A.M.-10 Plot. 492-9136. 492-i103t Sl2 No El Cam ino Rea.I, San Clemente. Social Clubs . 53! FIND YOURSELF' JN SOMEONE El.SE. DISCOVER DISCOVERY 7141835-6885 213/387--3393 loot•-Jal Found (frM adsl FOUND brown Ir. white female Spaniel type dog. Viclnlty South Coast Plaza, 0:>sta Mesa, ln park1Jl& )oL HHJ5'15. J"ND: 1~ Vic. Paclfic Cst. Hwy 1-Npt Blvd. Youna: fml cat: Blk, grey A LL Orange tiger striped. l.Jkel to rkle in can. 540-6569 an 4 pm. FOUND: 2 puppil!'S, ma1e blk Lab Retritvtt A am fem. blk A: brown .dog. Mesa Verde area. 5f0-6631 or 54&-9521. FOUND: Male dog, very lhaaY. white w. Br w n marldng:s, collar. Vic. Java Rd. 557"'8795. FNO. -Blk &: white hall Krowt1 puppy. Terrier mix, Vic: Corner ol 17th & Jrvine, 646-~. FOUND: Vic. Villa Sweden, CdM, lite P'llY natty cat wearing whlte 11ea collar. 494-1346. SCHWINN boy'a SHngray bike found tn Irvine Terrace area. cai1 1)75..n49. F'ND on 1.1).22, Caineye & Falr. approx 5 mo. old gray cat w/wtlte collar. 545-0>48 • FND: Blk oranp I. white cat Fml. Vic Iowa St., C.M. -· * * * • white, Jooa Mlr, vtc ralt ~rwidc Ir Son, Uc'd Dr A: Fordham, CM 5el-23Sl m-eotl * 5f9-217tl Lost ill 0.rdenlng ___ ,.._ ___ _ * * Trader's Paradise li'nes times dollars * PATCH PLASTERING TRD Bermuda Dunn cc All typea. Free estimates Elt•tet Vu loC. Pilm Des· I ~~...,.;Call=..;54CH825=.='-- crt A Lake Elalnore CC PltJmbln9 Hr\J"hfi • Vu lot for nr on • I ;..:.:;;;;.;:;;,;,c... ____ _ r.onao or mob. hm. 613-2128 Dralns uncJoue<I .. $7.50 JIA VE two Sclquoia Crest Sewtr 11.ne to 100' -$15 lots, $7800 Md $6*10 clelll'-* 5&-2502 * want Harbor Area R·l or COLE PLUMBING R-2. Can add cuh. i4 hr. lt'Mce. 645-.1161 WANT late Cid or Connll' In put for Newport 30 $UX. 1loop! Sleeps 71 All Raclna:/CnU!lnl Gear Inc. JOHJil 5.'l.i-97'76; MS-03'8 PRJME ind. bltJa, AAA Na!. Tenant, 20 )'I' Jae. $3(),000 N.N.N. Inc. 1'nlde 1121.000 eqty I« Ip aptt., or com· • Bia. !KH46&. Bkr. 615-1215 PLUMBING REPAIR I CANYON lake tot, aolf cne Ylew...L nr. lalre, UDd. utiL $10,IW tree A cku, Trade forlnc:<lmt-0< I! Brir.5'1-. $200,000 """ In S!00,000 bda Portland. Ore. MA ~a'tk>nal Tenant, on N.NN. I) yr lie. Want prime ahoPI cn1r ct '' ma. 541.&669. * * TRADE S acre:s corner of No job too amaU tieelion. Road °" 3 aktes, * 60-3128 * N<ar Vlctontll•, tor°"""' Sawing/ Al .. rallons l>Jwlty "'n Al .. ratlon~ COMMERCIAL blda, aood Neat, accurat~. Z )'W"! 01>· Income, L.A. 18Ull0 ,qty, Tllo """"'"" tor era._. Co. -----~--property. Owntr/Aatnl. CERAMIC tUe new A 642-5851 remodel . Frte ffi., Smalt l.Jke to tn.df:T Our Trader'• ~Jobl=c;•:;:•:::lcom=;.;•·..;'36-2<26=='-· _ Paradlle column I.I for )W! Tutorl-!l llnt8 ... • * ... 5 da.ya CREDENTtALl:."'D teJchrr • for 5 bW<I. P"-•t lbttrffl to h e I p * * i:hlldl'tn w/TOOdlna Pl'Obo. Aft -........ 141).lll94 M'r., Grupe. - ' JlIIJ I.__' "_ • ...,_ •• __ ,.J _._,,,IJ I ' I • OAU.Y PllOT ff J[lll :;.I _ ... ,_·-..::JlIIl~tJ 1 TOP QUALITY EXPERIENCl!D I SHIPPING Ii: receiving clerk. Varied dutiea tor grov.rlng 0nu1ge C o u n t Y. firm. Master Blue..,mt, 234 Fisher. Costa Me• a , 540-9313. SECRE."l'ARY lo< ...,,...,,,.1 Days, Utime. Personnel Dept. Hoag Hogp, N.B. -------.,, , I SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS Rent Wash9rt/Oryert $2. Wk, f'ull rntlnt. * &19-1212 • N E A R I .. V new P0rt1tblt dilhwuhcr. Paid $U9. WUI !!ell for' SllS. cub. Call 832-1162 alt 5;l>. .. I DAILV l'ILOT r-,, OcuW 24, 1'172 ~~~~~~~,~,~~~~~~=~~~,~~~~,~~~I ~~~ \ ..... .., J~ I •a •• ]~ \ -· 1 I ~ I -· ._ J[EJ [ ,_u. J~ I _.... J§J [ _..,.... 1§1 [ _,_,... J§J j;;;; __ ,.. .. ~~~l 1 ,Auto1=;..;...w_ .... 1 .. ..i ___ ,.."-' Autoo, '"""'"*' 9)0 Autoa, ~_, '70 r-;utoo.=::....;;u_•.._ ___ "°-r n>n u ,.. .. Clllcaao •hoe Sltlh·T'" ouvPY. Show ,,..... ru WE "AY TOP MAZDA VOUCSWAGEl\I COIVAll '" Oov• ~ Cyct•1, &r,1s1 • Scooters 110 G.,ogeS.le 1--------Furftttun 1 -112 Ml-i""-t Q.UB C 11 A J R , turqoot.e vl.nyt $35, Dol\f' vln.YI Couch, ~ cbalr o1tom•n S75. Barttl chair vtnyl CUlbloN $2>. 1..,. Olncl"' Set $5t!. Early Am. Cof1ft Tbl. $30. Kl .. s... Bed llO. Exoc. Mahoo&"Y D" k 60" JC M" m &12-4627. SWIVEL ROCKER. BLACK NAUGlW:IYDE. ALMOST NEW. Pak! Ill(), Sell $5t!. &&2-1734 e"ttS I: wknds ANTIQUE OAK SECRE- T ARY. Armolre, Hoosier, oak t•ble, chain, Jl.1Lsc. -· MAHCK;ANY French card table $50. Maho&any stereo cabinet $110. !ITH113 SIMMONS HlDE·A·BED (Doublel $70. • 919-6173 • •**Sofa It matching love seat, never ulli'd. Both $150.. Private. 968-7910. MOVING. Will seU house full of furn. All nlUSI go. 407-C Harding, Balboa. li13-Q41 8-24" Early American Maple Bar Stools. S15 ea. Good cond., F.V. 842-2034. • Jewelry 815 ua1 ....... SD, m 841·1'0li ... ~,, Oll<ck • ll'hile -B-1-CY-C~U-CASH after 6pm. * 8.12·UXl'7 1lll 6. • l9TO Bw:, f pau. Pv:fect ~ USED BICYCLES •* AKC RED ... -c:ond. 41,000 mU... SUn nxll. All types 642-1212 J.llNIATURE DOXIES . . expe_l'lldvt tlm. $2,100. C&ll Mlac:.U•-• • Call 96lHIJ51 * REPAIRS ... UMd "" " INdll, )>II 1 owner .,..,...,,., 494-0\n. '65 Mania. X1nt cond . thruool Mech 1 0 U D d • $.'WI/bit ofr. 551-llll ,' 5S7~ttn ... ~ E:LEGANT Platinum A dia· W•nt.d l20 LABRA00R PUPS cl1I ua. b hre «tUmftit-. 1970 vw POP TOP CAMPER mond bnlOCh, ...._.ogula• ---------6 Wl<J, AKC. a. .. yollow & r .... pick-up • dtl1"""' !hit GROTH CHEVROLET NJy equip, E>cc'el c:ond. COIVE llE ftped, 8\.a carat•, appl'O:( ** WANTED ** blck, tst snot 645--4782 aft !I. k 37,<0J rol. Best o«er or 1---------.1 :r. ~~~56-~: Fri~ndly, klvlna: home for * IRISH Setteni, 6 wks old. wee . AU lot Sales Manqs possible trade, 96Ul411. CORVl.TTE 'T2. Red, Auto, adorable SllkY Terrier f"° AKC reg. 1 male, 1 feml. COM BIKE' SHOP tm1 8el.cb Blvd. BENZ '69 Camper • Movlne, must a1r, P.W .. TUt whl. Belt.«· Misc•llaneous 111 male puppy. An lhOll. Hse-,__,,-=~·==---~= 3032 E. Cout Hwy. Huntl.astcm 8-.cb sell. $11m R.eblt eng., _,fer=. "'113Hl23"-'=·-----I bkn •· C -.i -"""'"",.,...,..,.=.,...... 673--1281, !O).Tl84 nu -LOOKING FOR =,,,·,,.-.,=""~-,-,..,.--1~':!'?.. r~ .. :"'Ex: °""'now"" Chrislmrul .... _ IQ NISl '60 300 SL RDSTR ,_ .. _ .. _._ ... __, __ ~--I COUGAR EX'TRA HOLIDAY CHJNA cabinet ur hutctt, an-tra cute. 644-627$ ~ WE PAY TOP 001.lAR AM/J'M Racflo, RetJ Colll!Ct· 1969 vw SUndlal Camper. ---------1 CASH?? tique or new. ~are e. Horses 8S6 JOHN 'S RACING CYCLES FOR TOP USF.D CARS or's Item, •6160 lrnma.cu-SacrUlce sugs, 1968 0:>ue8J'. Full power. We will take on ron!lgnme:ntReuona ·~~~bl~•':.· !64'!4~468'1"!':.'--,-/'7:7,;;-;,:;-;;-;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;~ • BVLTACO * U YoW" car la atra clean, late. $AVE Call 96t-6SW $2195 or ~~ off*er*. unique, weU-made I-U!IU!Ual WANTED l..oYeseat me sofa "ARABIAN PUREBRED" '73.5 are here. ~t in· see us ant. ' VOLVO ** - Hem! for our Christmas hide-&·bed GRA y S1alllon age 6 •rides ventory o f motorcycle8, BAUER BUIOC NEWPORT Boutique slore. (No used ~7 $975. Palomino ~ Arab, parts & acceaaorlea avail. 292$ Harbor Blvd. DATSUN itemsl eg. clothing, pillows, buggy, show honse & rides Uaed cyclef.I, street & di.rt. Costa Mesa 979-2500 SAVINGS lintns, place mats, aprons, Muslcel Instruments 122 wtplenty of rlbbold. $1250. Expert service dept. lCheck 1000 w. Coast Hwy DODGE 1966 Dodge Clw(tt. N<w Tittl, Bn.kea Shocks. Ex- cellent Cohdltion, MM180. pot holders, Christmas dee-Reg. Quartet mares, Dapple our warranties). 9 to 6 dal-Autos, Imported 970 Nwpt Bch 66.&lOO orationB. candles, palnUngs. PIANO, xlnt cond t '>O:I\. Gib-gray, ready to race $675. ly, closed Sun & Mon. 2255 1 ____ .._ ____ 1--'-='-==-..:.::="--I As Nev•r Befo,. OD All R@mainl111: "12 elc. C11.U tor an appt. Tom -Palomino Ma,...~•--• ..___ Harbor Blvd. CC or n er ROMEO 90f'I 12 string elee. guitar, ·~ •wu ALFA or Beth Carney, 675-7860 hard II.hell ell.lie. $200 or best been bred $2"lS. Palomino Ha rbor & Wllt.0n), Costa btwn 10 am-6 pm, or aft 7 otter. Bell 360 4 track tape Gelding. 'Pop deck blood, Mesa. 646-4655 or 646-2428. 1--------- pm, 645--3109. recorder wfecho, taPe copy Worth $1500, Sacrifice $875. YAMAHA 360 MX, '70 Nu top ALPHA '72 Spider, new, * AUCTION * macnine, microphone •1"'71'=4-o-13~1-~"'5=1.-o-----It bottom end. Koni &hocks, mwi:t ~II. Pvt. party. Beat stand make oiler. 675-1808 NEW store to serve your Ceriani sprngs-frnt end. Im-otr. 6§-8208, 54&-f:e18. Fino Furn;tlltt •ft. fao. English • W""•n riding ina<· IQO. 64+-0518. AUSTIN HEALEY & App\lancet ACCORDION ( D a V inci) needs: Horse World, Town Auc..1K>ns Friday, 7:30 p.m. f Xl .1 nd V 1 & Country Square, 18.182 Motor Homes BMW W indy's Auction Barn ~.IZ'sioon o:° bSt ~h-~ BeachBlvd.,H.B.963-3990. s.1./R•nt 940 --------- VOLVOS FORD '66 Ford Ranc:hero , AT, - "••., l•..:, !Wllo, Healfl'. v.r. Rtmtt lUWI\-wt• Good. Good TireL S89$ e VAt Uft '66 El Camino, Radio, . IU'-tV Heater, Auto Trans.. Air . Conti., V-S. $995; 64.H644. '71 MERCEDES 2.SOC-1918"Hubo,, e.M. MS-!B?l 1969 roRD °'"'""Sedan, 6 Loe.ded Si.Iver Auto-Trana l\utos, .U-990 pass. wagon. Air, P/S, ~Newport, 0 1 646-8686 963-4887. PONY p~~e ~~::,~· Sloo.1 -M-o_to_r~H-ome--R-e_nt_o_l_s Visll our new home! G.r.ge Sale 812 Beh'nd Tony's Bldg M11.t'I Ask tor Liz. Av11.llable for dally, weekly & l :Oll~i~c;e~F~u:•:•:rru.::•e:r _ _!!~[~~~~~~~~~~[ I--=------FRIGIDAIRE BoL freezer Equip. 124 or monthly buJs. 21', 23', Garage ESTATE Sa I e. $125. 5 pc nearly nu Br. set. ~ and 25' self contaJned Mo. Estate of .G. Williams, 13392 orig. avocado finish, $250. 2 LIKE new Gestetner No. 366 1 lilets INI ] • ~ tor Homes, all e.qulpt with SotteU Dr., Garden Grove. orange & yellow club chrs, machine. Askin& $fiOO or ...,...Fq'pll'lllll 1' generator, roof air. and ROY CARVER, Ille, AMIFM Rlidkl, Powe; • P/B, Arr. Clean family Steoring, Pow" Wh.tows. iUICK ~~615. 644-21~6; $7295 1------- NEWPORT BUICK ELECTRA '64 FOl'<I Van, good lbopo. •-,....__ I -ded ,._,...... Good buy! MS-6328 aft 6; DATSUN ~.!~!;, .~ 64&-<838 days, ""' r.r Furn., refrig., Range, bed $.15 ea. Blue & lavpnclt'r sofa best offer. Western Business . many other extras. All divan, desk & ch al r. $90. Lrg Walnut cocktail tbl &'Nice, Inc. 563 W.19th St., Coaches are 1972 modelli. 23t E. 17th St. 1000 w. Coast Hwy leased. Desperate to sell 1,:.Rlc::;::lwd:::.;::,_· ~~~~~- vtA"brating re<:dll~, _,_!_~-· $80. Console_ 'I'Vb'~I· All C.M. 642--0'212. Bo.ti, Pow•r 906 We have thP all steel Am~ Costa Mesa ~ von, nu out at.,.,. \....,..~, Xlnt cond. ~f1sc. t 1.11, amps * CRO\'~ CLASSICAL --------- Nwpt lk:h &:S-&400 673-6949. 6 pm-9 pm. l~RD Tudor Touring ''3 MERCEDES 190 D ·~ht~ ~ ... ~~ Call 645-'151S bedding, linens. Lots or ml etc. ,557-0442. GUITAR * LI~ NE\\' &lao. Please call 8.19-9560. & yrdage, oak buffet, extends SWIVEL ROCKER. Almost new with case and ractory b1u1t. deep hull, non-Motor Home Rentals to make tbl Elephant col,. BLACK NAUGHAllYDE. books n!t 54&-9571 ainkable 10 ft. boat. 5 ..hp ltttion, some antiques. sm.l. ALMOST NEW. ----·----' motor w/approx 35 hrs use, suieboord, Round Oak tbl, Paid sso. Sen $50. EXEC swvt ehr S15: 23 Sec ~ gal gas can, paddle & SALES & LEASING Otina glass. Garage full 542-1734 eves & ,vknd~ chr S8 -18 desks files stls de.signed for oars. AU for full .service facility Air Cond, AM/FM Radio, Jm-P.B. RAH. tact air. Under '64 Ford Country Squtre good maculate cond, (JUA649). 30M. $425 under book. appearance, Radlat.s, Air $995 646-1252, -= Conditioning. l350. 833-3288. NEWPORT ""' Buick Skylal'lt. Xlnt '67 LTD, 2 tlr, lull ....... tools, trunks, cedar chest, 867 W. 19th CM 642-~ only $250 Not even the cost Da M ~~~ .. ~-1'\!, •• '~"; * NEW MAGS * MODEL 200 MASTER AD-of 112otoc •loo.. Call 538--0534 miar otor Homes SALES-SERVlCE--LEASING Ov•rs••s O.liv•ry CREVIER MOTORS 208 W. 1st St., Santa Ana DATSUN cont1. to mu.,. •• .,.,..,, .u-, 1ant1att. X1n1 cont1. ISSO. call 5'57-lli~751'l. ,;,60-0434;;;;..;='-'·"--~----t 1000 W. Cout Hwy '8'J BuiCk 225 Electra P.S., 'TI LTD ctySq, 10 pass. wag. blk North of Garden Grove 4 U.S. Maga, 4 Lug1 , Lugs, J?RESSER_ $358 new, used 3 aft :> pm. tro.vy-tum West 00 Banner 10 Caps. $10. 544-7613. 1\sk for times. askina _SDI. 979-6173. ="'"" .. °'1m~SEA="RA=Y"'',..' -531 ·6800 --'-N~w"pt-'--"Bch=,o'~=-=--I P.B. Air $200. '66-8859 after fuU pwr., air ... ~c;_,~ Jo miles Sorrell Dr., then left. Sale Bob. VICTOR Atrl'OMA'MC 455 Olds, Pack-e-jet, 20'. aJ1 starts 9 am-?? Oct. 23, 24. COUCH, 2 chairs, ottoman CALCULATOR $165 Series Equipped for Water ALL offers considered. 1970 835-3171 MG •pm. bo1ow ""'"· _, -------1·55 BuJcl<, good ....... '"'· INTERNATIONAL '70 MGB-GT. Top shape. ll5Q.' Call 494--19l> 25, 26. Wanda lluffmnn $100. 7 pc, dinetle set $50. e 548-1000 • Skiing' & fishing tandem self -contained T'ravele~e. DATSUN F..ltate Sales. Coffee table m. ki.ngsize Plinos/n-•ns 126 trailer Call after 12.00 Excel. cond. Ford econohne 1---------$2425. 645-a2'l: 2400 W. --=~~~~,,,---1 '61 Travelall, 4 whl driw. PATIO SALE Starts Tuf'~ bed $50. Exec. Mll.hogany "'W-(n4" 830--6482 MU"sr chassia, 2 air cond .. slee'pll "''" 1orn. • w• in d""' ITS. 642-4621. ORGAN HOBBY 1;;';,. 1 · 6, lge bofhrm. 0n1y 16.100. eoaat 111way, SUJte l ·Np• CADILLAC "'bit .... 11ww 1d. Bch. $500/oUer. 297 C a n 1' o n kinds ·of goodies. odds & Atm.JMN Haze, long fur Low down. Call owner ends. Ski boots sbJt 7%. 50c coat. Condition excellent. WANTED: Expert Bo at anytime, 494--0141. WEWPORT DATSUN ...... ,_._ ..... _ Acrt1,. L.8. MGB ,~......,.....,. ~~J~A~VEU="'T.M,.--1 w~ahiies~·sitt-SB. -83!A909.----Don 'tbuYifiyorganuntilyou Builder to convert ~ng R.m A-Motor Hom• mens slacka, w-32, 34, *'PRIVATE tennis club noo can pla,y! Non-players wel-vessel to pleuure cruiser. 1 for your Vac.tion 1---~"""""· ...,.-, ·--Cpe--De....Yllle portable camping tollet, membership fee: & only $10 come to attend free work Contact Jules L a n g' * 139-4301 * wonder horse, new bo r inf tiO" 673-1166. '69 MGB GT. R.adJal tint, Full power Air Omd. Vtn;yl new clutch, AM/FM fildio. Raof, ou&J. Com1ort1 Seats, Excel oond. $1,850. ~l())t BeautifuJ Ftrem1st Ftn.lth, eves. 6-W&J ... ts. ~ tape '70 Javelin. Still ~ m-.jor warran. Loaded wfxtnu. Pia, A/C. 83"1'-2959. Elisabeth Stewart tennis per mo. ~. s ps. or onna ~ t ---------SCOTSMAN 1966, sleeps 6, dress & bathing suit. Size It's a bretnt, sell your items Contact: Tom Dieterich Bo.tt1, 51111 909 Icebox & lots or extras. $500. Now Open In 16. X-mas decoration, f!tc . with eue, use Dally Pilot 642-1851 842-5757. etc. 1853 Port Abbey, N.B. Classified. M2-5678. Co•st Music Servic• 25' CAL-25 fiberglass sloop, --.,~0-, .. ~ .. -m-,-f~0,-,.-.. -.-NEWPORT BEACH PORSCHE cru1't! control JEEP $176. • ••••••••••••••••••• Nowpot1 Blvd. •I H"bo' riggod !tr crumng w/club '1' WINNEBAGO. 2T'. Costa Mesa jib, 6 h.p. 0/8, stove & Slee., 6. 640-0482 1000 'ti(. Coast Hwy. 645-6400 '71 PORSCHE '911T tiet" month 36 mo. O.E.L. tax '68 Jeep 4 1 wheel drive, &ldoma.tic tnuwnissioll, air condition- ing, radio, whitewalls, very 1 clean and low mileaie. (J<EX3l6) $1895 dlr. CaU ....-. 5 Spd, Radio, Factory Alloy 1---..,.-,-.,.-..,.-,-,---1 sink, $5500. Call strat I ---------;·"ft.' PIANOS. ORGANS E "nright, Michaud-Iseli., ~ Hammond, Wurlltzer:' m&n)I ST"a--0915 Trailers. 'Travel 945 \\/heels. · $627S NEWPORT l>ATSUN I mmodl1to Dell very LEASING others.·Pre-sea.son specials. ltn Ventur• 24 ·70 wtnnaba,go, 17'. sleeps 6. A CONVDllENT SHOP,ilfC SEWING CUIOC RHt THE GAi. ON TM£ GO. model close-outs. Piano It Loaded w/xtras. Genoa, Draw-Tile hitch, !JWBY con- Organ rentals. Money sav· head, Elect syst. $3900. trol. Only $1,985. Must sell. 1ng bargains are here right 968-1396. 962-4198. ~~~~~~--now at: CORONADO 25. Racing win-'TI 18' Golden Nugget WE HAVE THE NEWEST OF DATSUNS IN INVENTORY FOR YOUR SELECTION l!XXI W. Coast Hwy. Nwpt Bch 645-6400 All MODELS AND MAKES '73'1 SoUtbern Cdfamia MDCURY '70 Mtrclll'Y Monterey 2 Dr HT, v.i, Aul Trani, power atee rina , Radio, Heater, whlttt walla, wheel ~. A wry nice car Cnsct'O) f1995 dlr. Call 1971 Porsche 911-T. Immac. For an M In Women's Workf c.11 Mory Beth '42-5671, ext m Wallichs Music City ner. Fully equip. Aft 7 Tandem, self cont'd, Xln't South Coast Plaza ~2830 wkdas, or' anytime wknds cond. $3400. 64.4-1.&11. 646-lm *PIANOS*°ROANS* RACING Sabot, 2 ..n., ~ Auto Service, Pam 949 cont!. 1 st National Bank Leasinl Be a DesigMI' lnstallt Crochet ,:.~;:_~. ~·~pm~ ·*NEW MAGS* TOYOTA Kawai-Steinway-Baldwin etc Flying Dutchman aJ' 4 U.S. Mags, 4 Lua1. 'Lugs, SAYINGS 3)01 MichelBon Drive -· Be a designer -cbooM: from 5 ~Ines for it~ front princ9S drea or tunic phn p9.ntl. Sew one version now, another next tta.:>n. Send! Printed P11.ttern 9198: NEW .HaU' Slzea 10~ 121,i, 14lW, 16~, 181;1, 201,i. JQ:W M1m!1 Sizes 8, 10, 12, 14, 16, u. l!IEVD'TY·'1VE cmTS tor each peltern ~ add Z ttnbl fOr each pattern for Air Mau and Special Hanc:n-in<· _,..,,. tltird-dua dfllvtry "Wfll tlke thrft' weokll or "'°"· Send to Martian Marttn, the OArLY Pll.Of, M1 Pattern Dept., 232 We•t lJtb St., New Ytd, N.Y. lOflll. Print JfUIE. ADnu::81J with m-, SS and 8'l'l'LB -· SEE MORE.,, Qulclc Fubionl and chooae one· ttun he trom our Caiallltl . .All OnlY lOc. INS'l'AN1' SEWING BOOK ... toct.y, Mar tomofTow , 11. JNS'l'ANT FASHION BOOK • lfundreda o I Wdtlonlict>.$1. Player Pianol & Rolla w/traller. $1,llOJ. Excel ~r· $70. 544·7613. Aak tor (Comu 01 MacArthurt 7078 Rentals .......... We Bu.y.&ll cond. 63Hl08. ~~-~~~~~~~ As Nev•r a.fore n~ CaW~-<1367 Dally 10-6 Sun lJ-5 211' MOTOR Saller, Sips 4, FTEW'S PIANOS lull galley l hood. priv ll 14 ] On All Remaining '1' YOUR. ONLY eo.ta M,.. !T141 64>3250 prty. Sll95ll otttt 118-:ill17. _.,.., JOYOJAS rACl'ORY THOMAS Malibu, ..,, of HOBIE 14 AUTHORIZED Spinnet l1tle •11.aUe Color-$865 firm. Cindy 8l1-1010 days l glow ttOlld wafltut cab. -General 950 t\.·.~ 110:• CADILLAC Porl"" C<btf. $T!l5. 968-5945 Boata, Sllp1/Dock1 910 ..-i:K-------lll(.llA wno DEALER Uaed Orgona Nffded ' GOLD CAD. Coupo "' TOYOTA Wr"' Hlectton of Ottfll-Hlghest $$ Paid in Cash BOAT allp avail. 12'x38' 407 Ville. Loaded. $2300. '69 IL ,70 DATSUN 240Z lacl in 0ranp Count)'. Call Collect 213: 874-6762 E~ Edge(~':") terM.. 8!'J~·e!!: blue Datsun. $1050. 673-4191. I Spd "-•Jo A" Conti M 1966 Harbor. C.M. 646-9303 SaJes--1..eu!na. =====~~=~ m . ..w N•-.w.;ig Trucks 962 ' r.au ' 11" ' ags CABLE-NELSON PLAYER 525-1153 "-· --------I $3695 '67 TOYOTA"'""'-Dolun •• N ben PIANO Collector Item. Mint BOAT SI.Ip for rent. Avail. '73 Chevrolet NEWPORT Xlnt cond, radio, heatu, a cont!. 646-3fg! -afte< < pm. ;mmod. untU July 1. Up to Pl k & y owner. !l6lHl967 Cadillac Sewing M4ichlnea 828 =-"=··~613-3259~~·-,,.--= c ups ans DATSUN VOLKSWAGEN 2600 ~R 81., SINGER mod. 003-E touch n SSaill.l! boa~p&CI! avail. 20-26' L'!:: ~:~ llXKI W. Coast Hwy COSTA MESA ew all acce• tlq'd b . Nwpt Bch 645-MOO '69 VW BUS $1S-50-9100 Open S.unda¥ 11 • 9• an ca · e 673.t'i006 e HOWARD Ch•vrol•t 1972 Datsun 1200 &edan. 7" FOR Sale or trade, '$ Cad $250. alt S. 830-8821~. --1 Newport h•ch R.adi IXXI lO Put wagon. Excellent Sedan de VUJe Uke nu. TV, RMfio, HIFi, Boats, Speed• Ski 911 MacArthur k J P.m horee Blvd _548-<l7Sll __ 0·~:,,~··,..6,..'l0='~~·1~_._1_1850_·, N~:,ORTlliMPORTS Will take best ''65/'67 big Storeo 136 ,. ,, "'' "--· 200 """· 1 833--0555 HONDA ou tcr oqu11y • 1o bo!aneo. ·~ 1---------3100 W. Coast Hwy .. Newport e 545-9055 e .MUSTANG '72 Powder blue MWltMg. Hardtop. Airlcond-U>aded wtxtras. S36-t7f:i9 aft 4 pm . OLDSMOBILE '70 Olds Cutlas:I SUpreme Fall power, air, vinyl top Mag wheel coven, Michelin tirn, low mileage $2,850. Pr. pty. 646-6722. '68 Cutlau SUpreme. Full,y kleded. Prkt'd below Blue -· 11.200. Excol cont!. -!Ct Ol6I: Cutlus, Excel rond. ~ PWI', $11!;0: .. OLDS 442, 4 apd tt-an5, R/11. $1000. * Call 642-2486 • PINTO ·n WALNUT Con!Ole stereo, year new. 455 ~ Oldsmoblle '70 Ford Van. Xln't oond, Beach ~ :--=~""~-=--,- S250 or best of!er. &iick':8-jet engine. Equ~ped 30,000 mi's. Gd tire s. 'TI Honda car. 'Ei6 ~ ~ t Brown ~1.971 Cadillac Coupe de 'Tl Pinto Runabout, stick, 5.16-1993 'ntishing ~water mg. am/lm stereo tape. Xln"I GREAT! $900. nnboUI. engine•' H 1· _ ..;...13Xlnt cond. $4900. CaJl disc brks, radio, clean oon- 1 iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiim/ Fu Y equt•~ t a n d o m ha $2000 ... ·~ • I * ~ "'"° * '"" . u rs v•;r-. dlllon. 6~1190. I ~ t::raller. This outfit ls like. 2Js.pe. · ~. x v•~ Milter. ~ma.gs. PoMt· '68 EL DORADO, &Ily '"" [J new. Original cost $9UI. 1955FORDF~2tondump., ___ J_A_G_U_AR ___ h'action-~:u,!!rque equip., must aee to~ J • Sacrifice $5(0). Phone 1 Muter . .,,,_. vw-.-w. preciate. !S4&-51SS. ff9t le You .. 830-6482 $700. 1fJ64 Ford F-250 '-' ton, '70 JAGUAR XKE coupe '68 VW Bug, AMIFM, 8 M-U~S'l'=-'-.;,~11-14-' -Sk-1 -... -,-& all metal box for fittings, w/wire wheels, kpeed. tr a e k ste reo, new CHEVROLET 3 LIMS, 1 Times, $2.00 Trailer. CB '"Radio 0-104-M $850. Ca11 eves, 962-0492 Regency red. Xlnt colld. tlttalpaint, really clean --------·123 O..annel 531-2164, 548-8995 1961 FORD Picku.p V-8, 8' $3899. C&ll 543-G355. $1050. 6*-3559 19"lO Cbn. Conooun Estate, C1JJ'E blk .l wht decla'ftdl'l>46'°'·""H995G"l-cc-·-.,.,Sk~l -,,..-.,...,l,,-O"""° -~~;,·"~~/l;cumC-34ll1"1to;;'.=ra=ck~.=RWll~ 1 '10w/··~~GUARw~ XKEls ... ~ *s-'flJCaJVWI ~ coafndtt 5~ ISi~ .. ~,_!111;,0IPwrFM. fln tf"') kitty. 5mo old, male. Needs a.spar Boe!: HP. --: w''" '""' • ~· <•J. vh•-••'luo :.:iv; ....,.... WlL&Clll, --/..,.t-f'Qc:& C.Nall6 a good home. 67H236 an John80n motor & big whW DIESE L POWERED Regency red. Xlnt cond. or 642-<1632 Stereo radio. tilt tteer. •bl "'f ~pm. ~~.$119& or best offer. %. Ton Chevy. 827·2248 $3899. Call 543--0355. '70 vw camper pop top with Factoey Air, luaaee •&di;, Mo .. ,,.....,,_. _,.,..,. eai MIN eoi1•-1r-S'"-Autos W•nted '61 • Jaguar 19TI, ted, Vl2 eng. tent. $2100. new tires • brakes. Panel-m ... a_..u:a -..... '5 -. • . ""U"C•111an ,..,p """'""''RY Co do 1971 2 + 2 ,.alio ..-· c:ond a •-~ ~ * Ing A·~-~ 551 ••M ly along ln ril!Dle-desl&n mix female spayed aood >.i;.n • u rona . f , , Uw • ~ ,.. • -.... .......... --~. capes. • pet 'ror any age. 8.39-'583'2. Nr new. 21'. trier, landau REWAR.D trans. IM3-38f1 '63 V\V VARIANT. ~72 Chevy· Wben bteeze1 blow, be y 0 U N G bla top. stereo, boat levelers '68 XKE 4.2; wire rims, new * .$451), * carefree Jn ma1ching, 3-col-ck male $98$0. Contact TI.f.675-0202. Mich X tires. Low ml. $2400 645-4488 alt 6 pm lntpala .,. capos o1 knitting wonted. ~aho~pho~nf~·~·~'"']good~~d~lt~poa~l·1~~~~~~~~~ I or best otter. 64&-2690. Ealy cn>chot. Pal"'rn 7018, ~Ion, MS-1285 AM l PM. WILL PAY OVER '1' ·BUG, · llg!tt blu, Xinl A;lo Trans, Fac!Dry Alt- chlld1s "·" and 8-12; teen'a, FEM Collie, apa,yed, lows I ~-·-JI•] '~lprrad'ltil~" ~·m1"""1 cond. '~..... Cood, Power Steering, ~ . di .. ___ K Dy Bl B .S-Ll~ •• ............... • ... ~9981 * Radlo, tilt wheel, ,.~ •• m!Mel' ~16 incltjdod. leen&&en & I Is, doot "'' e lie ook $1!19> 496-9561 -ov• PLYMOUTH '72 Plymouth Gran Sport, ~ Dt, Hard.lop, Auto Trans, Fa.ctory Air O>nd, Power Steering, Pow- er Brake.a, AM/FM Sti Radio, Vinyl Roof, on SAOO miles, (302FYA) S dlr. SJ8..6536. '69 Valiant 4 Dr "Auto Trana.. S995 • '66 valia,t Wagon A~to Tl"ans, Ra610, Heater, $495. 845-«144. 1910 Plymouth Road Runntl-. Exo.llent condition. Make oflu. PONTIAC SEVENTY•TIVE CENTS llke sm1 childnln. 640-0365. 1 -;;;;;;;;;;;~~~ owner, • • '60 VW BUS $2795 dlr. 83M536. '°' •ach patt•m • add 25 ADORABLE puppl<1 muotl• For l•te model, clean, KARMANN GHIA ~ ~ '72 Vega ~: .:rt~:H.r: re .. £.._~~'*· darl-C~mpen, SaJ./R~ low mil.... ctom. ... '68• Karmann Ghia eonv. lo '64 VW SUNROOF BUG. Autom11.ttc 'l'n.blm1-kln. '67 ~ GTO, 4 lfit, ing; otherwlae thlnklul ..... , ... ., .,.,....~, Slide tn Camper Sl.eepcl'. flea, Imports, trvckt or mlleap. Ext A int. Xlnt aean. Good condition. $3'15. Factory Air CondlUonlna, ~!traction, maga, 400 q,,i. delivery wtU take three Pup~ mix~ breed. INSULATED. c•mpert. oond. $1050. firm, 6*6003. MS-3911 white. aide walla, Custom ::tfer~!' s-roo:. ~~ weeks or more. Sf:nd to 642"°17' $295. Call and bk for BU)'tt M .. '"'DA '70 vw, tac lllr. A¥1FM. eaulnterl;?!; ,L~> $2395 dlr. '68 Pontiac LeMans, 2 H• Allee Brooks, the DAILY sn-1734: 531-2304 DAYE ROSS ,... Ex 1 cont1 n-.. __ ~. PILOT 1fl5 N-~·-·· ce . ·-o• ~1 ·71 -· r-~-Xlnt nd hanllop, full f)wt". Excel ' ' ~.., F E I I offer 54~ e """"""'' co · cond. $1,XO. 548--0250 before t>ept .. Box 163. Old CbWlea I -11~1 ·10, lriordbed c~ntltgti~~e MAZDA '68 vw· " Air cond .. Auto trana., PS, 6 1 Slat/on, Ne" Yotk. N.Y. .,, _ w " g. • • · PO"NJIAC LEASE SPl!CIAL · ew tlrea, ttr.kett & PB, 1tenJO. Vinyl roof. Only ___.P'"~· ----~-JOOU. Print N'llm6. Mdreu. _ . amltm 11tereo. XJnt tires. N ,72 RXJ 1hoclcs. Neat llttlt;: car lo'r 12,00J mt. l owncf. $3495. '70 Pontiac Lemans Safari Zip, PatteN NmnlMlr. $21'.m. ~. ext m. eW $825 or best offer. 54fr1S77. Ole., 54S-5561: Home Wgn RJH, PIS. P/B, ~t!t.O 1-n~~ ~ C•h " 151 Uw'/•~~'•p El\l!.'..._~.H-oom .. ",!!! 2480 H1rbor Blvd. $57.56 19'10 VW. 23,000 mllea. Cftfl. 494-$J03. AIC, lug nck Xlnt td. di lo Ul.... •IVW"" •IUeOl ""''I Costa Meg 546-IOl7 Sl,250. 1970 (l)evy El c,rn1no, runs S2.T75 aft 6 pin TI4: M&-9413. reel ns, """"' PERSIAN le llimaJ~an kit-xtras. Sett otter. ,.._2014· 536-4394 exctllem;. Rebtiilt eng le. 'Tl Safart Wagon 6 pus. .::f:."t :.i:::s. 8::: lena. mln)t colon. $50 t\ up. Cycles, 8Jk•1, WE tMut all make• of clean ~~· +ru:r:S-~ ~ '65 Bµg. Xlnt cond. Clean. tn.nl., 307 cu. ln. Pwr. Str. Beaut Cll'.lbd. 16,800 mile, &Jc terns. n.oo. * ~70 * Scootera 925 uted sports mn. paid for ......... Jietr: l:ifakes, tirH, eti; ssz. Auto._ $1750. or bfft offer. RadJo, $3.295. 114: 586-08JB. lltotut c-ftd --Doga 850 or not. Pleue -In for ply. Tri.., -. 8'/Ssl2JT. . ,,,__ f'trll-. '89 Grand Pl'lx. SJ mootel. Uam by picturul Pat· '69 Honda 4&'.1 A·l, '67 hi "PJll"llKI. • •• vw Bua, rood cond.. Rehlt '98 ~ com. Red wfblt Air cond., FM atereo, lllUI)' ....... $Lli0. ... WAN'!'!:!>· Fri•ntlly G-... good, '67 Honda 50 72 ROTARY'$ -· $1111). 1nCmv"' .... 2 ..... • ..... 12,«IO. m=. l -·--Gift-lovtn1 bom• ·.,. dorllnc A·l. 'Mw olrl. 33>-A "Dem"' Sale'•.· ' . 1tt""vw . ~~ ""* ....... Sl'l?!O. RAMIUI : -more thM JOO attll -fmWt St~ Terrier pupt, Woodland, CM 66-3544. U ;;; · o.>.7"'".1- $1.00. HCIWM!brd<en. All • h 0 t •• "72 ffarlav Davkhon, = '10 ~·-" sn-• m H• ~-·~.. -_, lt TO CHOOSI! Cloan( "-~ ·-·---"' • . ~-'66 "• "BLER • ' ..,....., ""'• • -Must 1ell lmmtd. 8J0.8333, ~Y custom. . ____ ,_-_ .. _~ __ 1 AM~ •tt'f't'O, s 8 o o . ""'"" "Menct" r,·~if1y R•• llMk• .,. SILKY T•me' pupo, AKC • • 3100 w. Coast HW)I., "BIGGl!ST SAVINGS" TIME FOR ~ alt g,lltl pm . $200. 145-tm BoM:., u PrfN At;llt.M'. champ lines, 1 mtle, 3 ·n Suzuki 50ec, street blke, Nt'WPOT1 8"ch "Sf!rvlce la tn, dlUer nc.i" . · '63 Corvette F11.st b ack , VALIANT f lOc-"'malet. T•rm~ (11') Like now. 1'0 mU... '115. '42·MOS HUNTINGTON BEACH QUICK CASH tt1m!O,Jmm•c.$1tll01"bottl-----..._""'l""I Qollt -• I' II pattema. _551-_ 6'M'ITT °' &IH93S.""'=--= (MPORTS WA!<l'ZD MAZDA THROUGH " otter. 1146-10<!. '89 VAJJAN'I' 4 °'· .tuto !OC. \VF:IMARANER pupa, ~c. ':J:lVARNA "T2, 125 cc. 0 .. '811 MttlOlu Cpe. Mag -· ,... ••. $185. • '86 Valjant .,..,... Qo!~ -I -lop lhow ijUaflty. Stud condltionl 12 > 0. ~·1 = 11331 Beach lllvd. DAIL y PILOT "'bll •••·· a 1<0 .,...,_ 155(). w.,.,. Auto 1'tna, Rt!'lo, ~. 111!1'Vtce. Call &M-2102. &G-?S.11. 842 6666 ~ M.1tr. Mr. fry Aft & pm. llG.Wl40, J{eatf'l", m. ~ qtllt• tM" ,....,..,. Ll\lhtt -MALTESE AKC Sun Can,on 'Tl Hord-,~,~.,.~ .. -.~11~1'tl~Xl~nt BIU. MAXEY TOYOTA llnw llOTI'1(!!hlng you w1.l'll to WANT AD '62 Chevy Imp&.la, q xlnt '6.S ValJapt, .f dt, 6 Cyl, ab1o, l~ br1u1tif\JI patll'fM. ~. pa.kt Jt'JO. SAc tor m. to a condition. See al 119%; E. 18111 Btach BlVd. sell? Clautoed ad.I do It 64Z·S678 clean, nu ttrea.. Red wired PS R'ff nr tftt: --~-------rood home . S*-1780. 2ard St .. C.M. H Btadl. P\. "7..&'iSe we!I -call NOW MH673. lntf!r. $400. Sf5-5321 Ru.~ xtnt' $515. ~ . ' '• ' ' .,. I ••I I .. -.-l ' --~ .... ~~-=--~--------- j • I '! I 'I • ... Teday's Flaal istrano N.Y. Stooks •• . :. Y'bL 65, NO. 298,,-4. SECTIONS, 50 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA TUESDAY, OCTOBeR 24, 1972 TEN~ ...... ~~~~~-"-~~~~'--~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~--~~--~~~~~~~·~~~~~~~~~ • • • • rv1ne o iceman • Freeway Murder --Drifter Admits Killing in Clemente By JORN V ALTERZA °' ... o.ltr 1"1111 , ... San Clemente Police arr<Sted a druter pl!)l bloodatalns on hill clothes early to- day on suspicion of murder after the tramienl aiioroacl>ed MPs at the Chrls- tianitos Gate and usertedly said, " just tilled. guy." itlnety minutes later, officers being ~ by the sU!peCI found the victim of 111< ·obootlng. The body or a ·Long ~ N~vy man waa round beside the SU DletO Ffteway a few feet Inside the ' eoutherly city limits or Carlsbad. At that point, local officers turned Jerry William Manning, f1, over to Carls- bad detectives. The case began at 3:45 a.m. when Manning approached the MPs. The Military pollco then called klcal officers. San Clemente Pollce Lt. Robert Mason said Manning led officers to a late.model auto parked at the Basilone Road off. ramp of the· Freeway. Bloodstains were found on the front seat's passenger aide. .=_llasehall!J s · 1'oss . ---------·--- Jackie Robinson Succumbs at 53 STAMFORD, Conn. (AP) -Jackie Robinaon, who broke major league baseball's raclal barrier with the old Brooklyn Dodger1 in 1947 and went on to stardom and 1 place in the Hall of Fame, died today of what his doctor • deocribed aa bear! dtsease. -• -Half-blinded by diabetes, the 53-year-old Robinson suffered an early morn- ing attack at hill posh bome Jn this suburb of New York City and died at 7:10 a.m. at a bospllll.18ee story, ~page !&) He had -honored ooly 10 days earller during the im World Series at cinc1nnau when a oellout crowd at Riverfront stadium applauded the 25th anniversary of hill debut Jn llNoklyn. Robinsoo.'s hair wu white, bis eyes almost gOoe and hi.s heart scarred by a 1168 altaek. TblJ curllid Robinaon's successful buslnesa career during the past few yem. · .II<!. could hlrdly ... to W111k when attending the l_.i Jn April or former . J>odpr' lao1U1w1e GH Hodaea. ~ . • SUD, doolla eame u a -..icto u.i baseball -Id. ,. •. Hinshaw Receives Strong Support From President Andrew J. Hinshaw hh received a 1tl'QClg endorsement £rom President Ric¥rd Nlxoo In hill campaign !or elec- Uoa. to Congms from Orange County's 3* Dlslrlcl. Ii. 1"Uer from the President n!Ce!Yed Mmdl,)' reed' ~.11.Dear Andy. As YoU near the end or wbat I tnew must have been an arduous and rliallei1glng campaign I want to take tllll·opportunlly to wish yoo the best on Nov1 ?. ·~needs your dedicated Jeadttsrup Jn the nerl Congress. With YOW' belp we can make unprecedented p ....... toward tile great goalJ or our new American majority -peace at home and abroad for generations to t'ODie, a new prosperity wltbout war and wllbolll lnOatioo and the opportunity !or every American to see the American dream come true ln hi.s own life. ~"I look forward to working wttl) you in apkin,g the next four years among the ' . best in America's bistroy. Sincerely, (signed) Richard Nixon.'' The Orange COunty assessor who defeated incumbent Rep. John Schmitz ID the Ji.me primary said today, "I am very pleased with President Nlxoo's en- dorsement and his desire to wort with me in Washington for the next four years. "I, too, am eager for the start of m~ legislative career u Orange County s man on capitol hitl . I believe that by close attention to the job, bard work, team play and the cooperation of the Nixon adminlstration that I will make a worthwhile t'ODtributlQo." Hlnshaw said hill goel ts to be "Orange County's best congressman in history. The President's support and assistance will give me a good start toward that goal" Hinshaw's opponent lD the Nov. 7 elec- tion is Democrat John Black, a Newport B&ch attorney. lj.igh Court Will Hear P.regnant Nurse~s Case • ' From WU. Servlco W ASJuNGTON -Susan Struck, the Air ·Force captain !acing discharge from tbe · service !or having a baby, was Sll"ted a bearing today by the U.S. iluPr-me Court. In lier appeal, tbe 28-year-old nurse Claialed Air Force regulatlona '"" conalilllUonally single out pregnant ~ for punishment and intrude tllnto ~ -·a fundamental right to decide wbetlier to bear a c:hlld." ni..court will 00.r the ct>e early next YN• to order laal May by Jll3tlce William Q. f>o\lglaa barred the A1r Force from dloe!wglng Mlsl struck nntll the court decided wbetber to bear her suit. The career ol!lcer became prelllJllat wltlle iervlag at Clmrllilh Bay, Vietnam, Ntly In tl'IO. Her baby, a girl, wu bom ~. s.~170, and was given for adoption. At Ille jlme, Air Force ttgUlalionl re- q\Jlred dl8cbarge Jn caae ol pregnancy • • unless the pregnancy was terminated. Since then, the regulatiOM have been modified to permit a waiver. Capt. Struck'11 .request for one was denied in June 1971. Thte appeal said that as a Roman Catholic she was prevented by her re.llglon from securing an abortion. Since an abortion or mlscaritage W'OUld have penitttted her to remain In lbe Air Force, the c1.ppeal contended the regul&- ttona allo violated the constitutional right ol Catbollca or the "lrM esen:lae" or their religion. capt. Struck, a naUve of t.oullvllle, Ky., la 1tatloned at Mlnot A1r Force Bue In North 0.kota. Infant ' Girl Found -SOU'l1! SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -An Infant air! only a low boun old wu found eba~ tn a truh can at a drive-In movie !beater and police are aearchtng today !or the mother. • I I I On the floorboard the officers found a spent .32-<!aliber cartridge. Mason said the next phase lasted about an hour as the "coope~tive" 11USpect assertedly led officers southward in the quest for the body. • The search ended east of the freeway near the Poinsettia Avenue overpass in Carlsbad. The identity of the victim remained a mystery early today. He died from a single wound to the bead. Spokesmen !or the Carlsbad police department would say nothing aboot the crime, insisting that all available person- nel on .. the small. force were at the murder scene .. Local officers said it appeared that the Victim hadl>een---sliat""lbd-propped'llp""on---___ DAILY rn.ot.,.... .tL~~ the passenger •ide o! hill car for aome CHEEK SCARRED BY BULLET OFFICER NASH TELLS STORY time before his body wu dumped on the ' roadside. Gunmen Springs Trap at Rural Intersection in lrvi.,. Manning allegedly told local police the victim "wouldn't leave me alone" during an apparent ~ drive from Loog Beach. · Aller the shooting, Manning allegedly drove the car for a time,• dumped the re- mains on the roadside, then beaded north again. ~ He drove the car unW it ran out of fuel at the offramp south of the city limits, police said. Manning then walked toward San Clemente, finally reaclting'lhe baae pie. Thieu Announces Hanoi Officials Ask Cease-fire By tbe Auoclated Pres11 President Nguyen Van Thieu said tonight in Saigon the Communist side has requested a cease-fire and that one could come "in the near future" -but only if North Vietnam 'withdraws all Its troops. Once that i!I done, Thieu said in a two- bour broadcast, his government would be ready to discuss a political 11ettlement with the Cornmunist·led Nattonal Libera- tion Front, known as the Viet Cong. No outside party could make decisions determining South Vietnam's future, he saiG. Thieu declared no one. has a right to impose a peace settlement on South Viet- nam and restated his opposition to a tripartite coalition government as sought by the Communist side. He declared that no fonnaJ agreements were reacbed in his five days of talks with President Nb:on'11 national security adviser, Henry A. Kissinger. He said the talks were exploratory and "nothing wa11 signed." In what was essentially a reiteration of his government's Jong-standing position on an Indochina settlement, Thieu said the cease-fire would have to cover Cam- bodia and Laos as well as South Viet- nhln, and be guaranteed by international supervision. "A cease-fire may take place in the near future because the Commtmists have requested It," he continued. "The Communists agreed to, and e~n beg for a cease-fire because they are militarily losing.'' He said be asked the United Slat .. to 1 "ask the Communists wbat they want" and said Soutb~Vleblam would reserve its own final decistons on its future. Meanwhile, the White House said today (See TlllEU, Page %) Air Crew Finds Third Cobra SAN FRANCISCO (AP\ -A deadly nve-foot king cobra hall been found by Trana World Airllne11 freigbl d'e'fl'mtn at San Francilco lnternaUonal Atrport, an airlines spokesman II.YI· 'nle snake, discovered late Mon- day night, was the third cobra lound at Sin Francilce and Loi Angeles tntemaUonal elrportl 1lnce a lhlpmeot of llowen from Thailand 1rrlved over the weekend, TWA apokwnan Jerry Colley "Id. The fll'St cobra was round Satur- day night after TWA ma ht. m ar- rived In Loll Angeles. r OFFICER NASH SHOWS FIRING STANCE USED BY ASSAILANT In Irvine, the Man Lying In the Ro•d Suddenly Carne Up Shooting • Clemente Lawman's Trial On Manslaughter to Begin ' . After months of delays,· the trial of a San Clemente police patrolman charged wllh misdemeanor manslaughter in a traffic death is set to begin in South • County Municipal .court Wednesday morning. 1be case, stemming from a ratal traf- (lc crash during a Memorial Day weekend pursuit, has been the subject of aeveral delays. It had been set to begin early lsst month, but the prosecution won a lul m·1nute postponement in an apparent ef- fort to find photogr.1phl or , the crash 1etne. Patrolman Gary Adams i8 the defen- dant la lbe ..... ... The young patrolman wu char'ed In the deeth or Jellr<lJ Brill, 16, Long Beach, who ., .. ratalJy lnJOl-ed Jn a higb' l!]iood, mr'end colllalon at the start of !be holiday -nd late last May. ~ collision t o o k place I! Adams ulOrl;dly wu In porault of a car being driven In emUc fashion •Joni South El Callllno Real. Neither the r<d Jlghta. nor slrtli of the patrol car wu operating when the uNt •lammed Into tho rear or a pickup tnlCk laden w1lh camping 1ear. Brltl wu riding in the bed Of the picil.W and suf- fered fatal !lead and internal hurts when he was hurled to the pa~ent on izn. pact. Several companions were hurt but recovered. Adams ha! been serving as a desk of- fi cer since the formal charges were filed. He has entered a plea of innocent. Dana Hills School Plans Rummage Sale Membert of !be Dana Hilla High Scbool Pnrent, Teacher, Student. Aaaocil!Jon have launched a quest for rumll}age lo be aold ill a fund.raising event No•. 4, I and 6 nn tbe Elka Club patio In san Clemente. All ilems HI !or Bait at tho t•ent are W<!lcome by members, and .C!l"'Plete Ill' lormatinn and arra111emen1x lor plckinl up the donation• can be mode by ca11Jn1 416-11161 or 49:H261, Th6 aale wlll be the fil'll hmd ralser ever htld~bf the gniup which· recently ocaanlzed to 1erve .Pie new high sciJo?I. • f Prone Man Leaps Up, Fires Shot By ARTHUR R. VINSEL or .. ~~-... A massive, overnight m.ubunt c:oo- tinued today for a gunffian who-hired in Irvine policeman into an ambulb oo a lonely country road, shot him, tba a.L. ioto a foggy cornfield and escaped. · Patrolman Stephen T. Na!h, 23, was hit in the face by a bullet fragment In the dramatic 11:10 p_m. confrontation as the slug shattered his squad car's windshield. He gunned the engine at the last aec- ond. in a desperate attempt to nm down his would-be killer when the apparently injured man lying on the pavement leaped up into a crouch and took aiµl • Stunned by \lle wound, be swerved and spun the oar around . ao he could take cover behind Its door, while the gunnian -dartlil1ill0llie fieldl>ll-;Je!lrey-Jload;1!0- yards south or Barranca Road. Officer Nasb aald the man sprinted !or a windbreai or eucalyptus trees and • creekbed as be himself crawled into the field combat-style. Fearing be would be caught in a sec-- ondary ambush-occording to his descrip- tion of how be wu lurid into a trap - the wounded officer waited for reln-- forcements instead of going after the gunman. Fellow officers in squad cars arrived within five minutes to initiate a manl:u,1nt that eventually involved an army of of,. ficera from other police agencies Patrolman Nash brieled au~ m ~ what bapperi at a c:oounand post aet up under dlrectlon of Palrol Bet. Larry Bersch near the ambush scene. He was later treated at O>ata Meu Memorial HospJW for a superllcJal gunshot wound , on the left cbeet and released. Investigating officers were caatioul about aaying It wail definitely a rlued trap this mornlng, but circumlltancea left. most wtth little doubt. Officer Nash saJd he was parked beside Jeffrey Rood writing a routine r<port by flashlight when a car carrying two very cleancut young men jJUlled up. The gunman himself was described as baving Jong black hair, a lull, bulby beard and wearing a leather jacket over a T-shirt and blue denim jeana. "A biker-type," one officer · remarted today, hinting ooUaw motorcyde - tactics. Officer Nallh aald the two men told him they were en route to telopbom police about aomeooe in the roadway who ap- peared to be ln)!nd nr perbopl ill. He aped to the acene, where hil beadllgbts w.-1ec1 the IUPP*d .io. tlm, lying lace clown, bis cbeet aplnst the asplJalt pavement Ind bolh iludo hkiden beoeatMtls chest. Suddenly, ooicer Nub llld, the man jumped Into a crouch clutching a Jooa- bamled, amall caliber revolver in typical combat style and drawing a bead at hl11 bead. Lunging sideways almost too late -be Uied to run over the mao as he fired . He wu never able to 1et off a shotgun blast due· ID the delay In gelllng the weapon oot or Its bracket while croucl>ed below tile dashboard defenalveq. By the Ume be !reed I~ the 1a1llaat was too far away. lllJ frantic radio broadcaat of t Code 999 -ollicec needa belp -brou&J!t polloa (See AMBUSH, Pqe 11 ' •...•.. ~ Hazy sunshine ts en Iha agucla through Wedneaday accotdlng to the weatllertady, w(th blghi aJonc the cout In tile low 10s, rlllntl to 80 Inland. Low• tonlght Sl INSmE TODAY Th< ot"'°'plicrt ta <tllnlfntd jovialit¥ for ~ aboiml th• McGOllCm compafqo\ air- plane. Writtrt aee litilt clwlncc of hi.! toi•Mla, b•t Ille fatlgu<d candidate molntai., hopt. SH •torv on PoQt 9. L.M. ..... • ,_.,,. " = .J = .. ~ ': CMiit. 1S --.. ~· 11 ~ 11 ...,.. \Mo1J '*"" ....._ • • ... ..,_... .. ,. .,.,..._, .. 'T......._ 1' ••"'11 ... iilll 1•1l ~ ,. ,...... ,." ..... . ,. ... ..,.. ,, ............ .. ....... 'M ............. . AM......,_ 14 I -- ie DAIL 't PILO 1 SC l'rontP•geJ THIEU • • • ... "some --bao been made II lithieving a nqoUated actllemeot of the Vietnam c:oolllct," but refused 1o alve any IU1JPOf\ for Ibo HI "ll<lll !'ms _,.,. Rooald L. Z\egltr reported lhe progress following an hour- long meeting in Wmhington between Pres\dent Nixon, Secretary or State William P. Rogers and Kissinger, who returned Monday nliht. Ziegler turned back repeated attempts by newsmen to draw out elabo ration on his statement. He specifically refused to eomment on the speech coday by Thieu tharging North Vietnamese proposals for a setUemcnt att: ill-disguised attempts to undennine his government. Jn an exchange with newsmen. Ziegler at first appeared to say the "some prog- rl'ss" referred only to negotiations with North Vietnam. but later said be was :.ilso including discussions Y!'ilh Thieu. Reporters asked why !he While House refused to discuss aspects of the negotia- tions when Thieu and North Vietnamese Premier Than Van Dong had made statements concerning the state of peace efforts. "We have an agreement with North \'ietnam not to discu9!!1 negotiations ," Ziegler responded, "and we are going to stand by that agreement." He sa id he would not comment on "any other statement," the same response be gave \\'hen asked if Dong's interviews \l:ith \Vestern newsmen breached the no- talking agreement. Tl1ieu 's speech colDclded wth a sta1e- men l in Paris by Prince Souvanna Phouma, premier of Laos -bis nation \1ith Cambodia and the two Vietnams constitute Indochina. lie said, "I think we are on the eve of a c£'ase-fire," but added : "Tbis is not a certainly." The Laotian leader shied away from a prevlous statement in which he said a cease-fire would come within the next seven days. The stock market, sensitive about Viet- nam war peace rumors, moved lower t.&- day after Thieu's speech. 1be Dow Jones industrial average. a closely. watched barometer on the Nev.· York Stock Exchange, was off 5.34 to 941>.97 around noon. 'lbe market rallied Friday aDd Mo nday on speculation something -primarily a cease-fire -was about to happen in Viet· nam in light of trips by Kissinger. Top Clemente Citizen Sought An expanded form at will be launched late this year in the annual selection of nominees for the Citizen of the Year ac- colade by the San Clemente Chamber of Commerce. Service clubs and other community groups will be welcomed to nominate a candidate for the title. The winner of the honor is announced at the chamber's an- nual installation banquet. Besides broadening the nominating function , the chamber also will replace a three-man selection. committee made up only of directors with a committee made up of former winners. That group will be composed o( Dr. Robert Bea.'dey, Max Berg, Don Hansen, Stan Herring, Walter Llebig, Clifford Murray and Paul Presley. ' - Groups wttb a nominee in mind can check through chamber offices for nomination guidelines. Husband Brings Body Into U.S. SAN OTEGO (UPI) -FrMk Medina loaded the body of his wife, who drowned while swimming ln Mexico, In a camper rig and drove it across the border to the United States rather than get involved in legal complications In Mexlco. Medina, or Los Angeles reported the death of his wile Bettle, ft, to police on the U.S. side of the San Ysidro border cro55ing Monday. A deputy coroner examined the body and said there were "no signs of violence." OtAN61 COAn IC DAILY PILOT ' TM Or"'fll Cfftt DAIL 't ~IL.01', wllll wf'lldl h <Omblrwtl UM N-·~rn1, N Ml~,_, .... ~ c ... , 1"111111111"'9 ~. ~ Nhi edltlMt. .,.. _.llMll, MM111y ttlfwoll P:rWl'f, .... C-1• M ... , ,.......,.. ...... H1t1r1llnf*I '"""''P:*""lll" Y•li.y, L10YM •..a. INIMISMdltlNd: ..W·lafl ci.-w $a" J~" CNltlr-. A tlllOlt r .. lor\11 t.il*lrol'I k Mllalltcl S.,,,,.._•'f• tn11 ,...,..,.._ TM pr1"c1MI M ll1l'IW-, Pltnl 11 •t »II W•il Sl'f llrMI, CMla MHt, Call!Or"ll, fK2'. lt•b•tf N. WtM Prtallttfll aM ~lllllltllw J1ck l. Curlty \'kt l"rftW.I ..... Otr\tl'1I ,..,.,....... lho111•1 l(,,.,u l!dllor 'niern•• A. MvrJhi11• ""'"""" •llhor Chtrle& H. L••• lt!ch1rtl P. Nill A1t1lll111I Mallltlflll ldi'°" S. Cl._... OMc. )OS H•rtti II C•111l1e A•tl. tll7J: --C-1• ""-41; no w..t .. ., ''"" M....,i a..ctl1 ml N_,.,. ...,_.. ""''*"""" ~= ltl11 lwdrl ......,.,,. ....,_. IMO: m l"•Mt A.,._ Ttl•••: s CTI4) '4Jo4lt1 0-5""4 •• -........ '414'71 S.. a....te Al D•jlC11£41Ull , ........ 4'2-442t ~. 1rn. ONllft Olti! l"Wlllfllfll CM!p9ft'f, "' ...... ........ lllwtrll ..... .......... , ,...".. ,,, ~-""""" '°"""'· .,. ~.., w11t111vt ...-rel ,.,.. ""'"""' .. dltYtWlf ....... . ~·ti••., ...... at~ ..... c.lll<trfll•, ........... w ~,...., ..... -""'' .. -11 1.1,IJ .......,.., ~, .... , ... lfltlleiw .... "*''"""· • .-24. 1972 • J Lawyers Grill Witne·ss .'Taj Mahal' Btlk Trial Ent.ers 4th Week Br TOM llAllLEY Ii .. DlllJ Hiit SI•" Four dmnee l1wym today began their gr!lllng of key prooecuUon witness Citizens Map Homestead Robert Machan u Ibo Orange Cowity Supqlor Coon "Tai Mahal" trial of _ Laglina lUlla financier Joseph Dulaney and four co-defendants went Into Its fourth woek. Machan, controller of the S t • Bernardin< Hosp\\al tn San Bernardino three years ago when the Roman C&thoUc ln!tllutlon WU allegedly bilked of '500,000, wu Indicted with the Dulaney group on chars,. of grand theft, froud and conspiracy. changed bis mind •nd backod \he purchase of 150,000 abares of Audia Mobile Homes stock offered by tJ\I! ... Dulaney fll'OUp IJld brendod by the p~ ecution as WOr1hl8S!. ~·~ Machan has admitted in earlitf'~ testimony that he received payments j)t, at least $32,000 at. about the lime that hospital authorities purchased the "'8 ttock. -i Machan lllld he got a S\5,000 cboc:k f"1Jit. ... _ HENRY KISSINGER ARRIVES HOME FROM SAIGON Nixon Advlwr S.y.i 'Some Progres.i' Mlct. In T•lk1 Annex Fight But I.be veteran accountant, SO, became a prosecution witneu last week in a deal which cleared him of any complicity in the alleged fraud for his testimony. Rayes •boW • week after tbe ~ purclme ..., approved. He has ~ that be later received St7,000 from ruverside broker Weddell Warren AustiQt 38, another co-01.tfcndant in the trial. Weaving Erradcally A klrmidable bloc of opponents to the annexation of 300 pri!:le acres along San Juan creek to the city of San Juan Capistrano will do battle Wednesday afternoon at hearings scheduled by the Local Agency Formation Commission. Machan conf1rrned today aa cross ex-. amination opened that he at finl advised the three nuns who comprised the St, Bernardine's board of directors that they should tum down the offer that would supposedly lncrease interest revenue on their $500,000 reserve fund from five to 10~. Machan confirmed today that be Je!(' \he ho!pital tn January of 1970 shor1J1: after the hospital's conlrolllng mot~r house decided to take Je1al action to recover a loan that was now In default. Danish Ship Hijacked Virtually every citlzen's group In San Juan Capistrano Beach and Dana Point has voiced official opposition to the Pryor Homestead annexation which Machan earlier testified. for the pros- ecution that the Offer came from co- delendants James Shipley, 38, of 16951 Lowell Circle and Daniel Hayes, . 40, of 8211 Snowbird Circle, both of Huntington Beach, who met the hospital controller in Newport Beach, It has been -pointed· out by Ibo pnl9-· ecution that llulaDey, :18, ol :1831 Vilj cascadlta left Laguna Hiiia for Wes\- 0.nnany wlih his family tlNo monthii By Cook Being Sought -would tiring San Juan's boundaries near· ly to the sea. The opponents include the capistrano Beach Community Association, chamber of conunerce and water and sanitation di.strict in that county community. before. , The prosecution has also stated that complaints about the l n vestments bllllness administered by Dulaney from the Taj Mahal complex In Laguna H\Us were being filed by many lnvestors in World Financial Trends. ABERDEEN, Scotland (AP) -The Danish trawler Nordkap. hijacked Sun- day by her sea cook . "'as sighted today 150 miles off ~ Srotlish coast, the defense ministry said. The 121-ton trawler, last seen weaving erratically Into ::i North Sea storm with the cook at the helm. was spotted off the Firth of Forth by a British European Airways helicopter. A ministry spokesman said the Royal Navy Fisheries Protection vessel Ashton an d the Dutch Navy submarine Tonijn wrre racing to intercept the Nordkap. The sightins came as Denmark's ~laritime Rescue Service was preparing to launch helicopters to join the hunt for Aberdeen harbor. Frlenda In bls borne port of Ejsberg eaJd be bad always v.·anted to skipper his own ship. They said defective ey<s\gbl proveited him from qualifying U" a captain. Some mentlooed an alcohol problem and Sa>t-. tish police said Sundly they believed Ibo pirate cook was ''under the influence 4'f drink." But Jacobsen denied this. Money Deficits By Republicans, In Dana Point, the Citizens for Action, the sanitation district and others also op- ~ the merger. Oppooents argue that the land contains valuable commerclal and building sites and would rob the two county com- munities of crucial tu base if in- corporation were to take place in future years. They claim as well that the annei:ation would nearly split the two commmlities and make future merger into one new city nearly impossible. Machan also earlier testified that he SF Boy Lost in Wave PACIFICA (AP) -A South San Fran- cisco boy was missing and presumed drowned after a big wave caught a group of boys in tht surf at Rockaway Beach here, police said. Police ldentilled the boy as Rooald Richard, 13. The """°"" phase ol the. current tr!Jf will bring Mrs, Marlene Dulaney, 32, to the courtroom lo face, with her hu.1band and Shipley,, alleK&tiona stemming from _. \he alleged defrauding of those lnveetora. l The World Financial Trendl operatloo • is now In bankruptcy. Olflce bull~~ controlled by the group tn Leguna "l and Seal Beach have now been dispo9e:I ~ of by bankruptcy officials. the .Nordkap, manned only by the D T ld runaway cook, Jergen Christiansen, 28. emocrats 01 San Juan Officials claim that severaJ landownen !eek the annexation and such a move would help align city boundaries with those of the county waterworks district serving Sari Juarb - The acreage follows Doheny Park Road and the Santa -Fe traclts on the caplstrano Beach side ud Del Obispo Road in Dana Point's territory. Students Find Viejo Poll Favors Nixon Hands-DoWn. There were fears Chr.istiansen ...was _ _ _ _ _ - doomed as he sailed into the" storm with WASIUNGTON (AP) -The Finance littl~ navigational or engineering es:.' Committee lo Re-elect the President bas penence. million ince A ril His angry skipper, Borge Jacobsen, spent more than $22.5 8 . P If the presidential election were hel~ been surrised by some results or the stranded in Aberdeen with two other and is sllghUy in the red going mto tht .,____ p J today in Mission Viejo, Richard Nixon reactions to its work so far. crewmen, fumed that the Nordkap with final two weeks of the presidential cam· r....,... .. e would win hands down, according to Tbe majority of area voters questioned C~~ at the helm was a danger to palgn, reports filed today show. AMBUSH preliminary findings of an area poll by are going "quite stnmgly for Prtskleot shippmg. 'Ibe campaign of the Democratic • , • Mis.slon Viejo High School students. Nixon," as ei:pected, Oladwick saki. Jt was still not known why Christiansen presidenUal c a n d id a t e George Ten students, headed by senior Kent But it came as a greater surpriae, be seiud the Nordltap as it loy docked tn McGovern , also Is nmninl In it.. rod but he\kopters from both Costa Mesa and Oiadwick, have been canvassing voters said, that lameduck Orange County by a much heftier margin of about SU5 Newpor1 Beach, but growing ground fog in the Saddleback Valley community ud ~ John Sclltnitz, th• Berkeley Woman Doctor Assails Bias to Females BERKELEY (AP) - A woman doctor, who assails .shapely nudes In a medical textbook as "Circa 1941 Police Gazette pornography, v says that, as a woman, she has probably been underpaid from $150,000 to $200,000 during her 30-year career as a researcher and teacher. And although UC Berkeley Is reputed to be friendly to social change, the doctor added. "Change with respect to women is about as remote at the University of California as at Harvard. milllm. in the area hid their quarry. as of early Monday had gone to more American Party candidate. seems to be 1be campaign halanca are reflected in Officers (rom both dties, plus Orange than 400 homes. receiving little or no support. repom lo \he General Accounting Office, County Sberlfl's deputies, the California They plan 1o poll at least 800 persons In fact, he's ninnlng a poor third to required under a federal .elec:tions law Highway Patrol and Irvine-Ranch secari--before they coril.pile the final results as Sen. George McGovern, the Democratlc that wtnl lnlo effect April 7. ty deputies reponded to \he manhunt. part of a PoUtics "12 unit in \he~ Party candidate. AlthouiJ> due -y, covertns \he Due to dllllculty tn covering \he dark. humanities class. McGovern Is holding a llln>ng secood period Sep. 1 through Oct. 18, tlOtDe fog-sbroudod fannland, Garden Grove The hmnanlties program of 45 students place and Chadwick doesn't upect tbat reporll apparently wero ~ by the policemen Bill Compton and Larey Davis Is divided Into tltNe sections -clv\ca, to change much. Veterans Day Holiday and oot ell In! In. with their scent-tracking dogs Thunder English seminar and sociology -and The stud-have been received "'11 However, the flagship committee for S."1.d Rick joined tbe bunt. each student must take two sections at by everyone they've questioned, he said, President Nixon -the Finance Com-WestminSter officers Grant Varner and one time. another note of surprise in his voice. mittee to Reelect the President -·and Tim Miller with their bunt dogs Axel and But in this month before the Nov. 7 "Everybody seems to want to help and McGovern For President, Inc. were Eich were also dispatched. general election, the entire class is con· they're quite pleased with us being out received on time although onJy balaocet Jronically, Officer Varner himself was centrating on national and local political doing this/' Chadwick said. ''The few and mt contributors were available early wounded almost identically_ in the neck issues from cUHerent angles. people that refused to talk were busy." toiay for McGovern. and face area -by bullet fragments The Chadwick Poll, somewhat like the Oiadwk:k was pleasantly surprlafld Nixon's finance committee reported during a gun batUe last year with a professional Gallup and Harris polls, is a with bow well-informed the voters were. contributiom, loans and trans.fen from berserk bandit police finally killed. sampling. Students are going to one in 10 "We would ask aboul the Watergate nwnerous satellite oommilteel of $2.(1.0 One patrolman wilh 8 bullhorn houses. Five," he said, referring to a group ol million since April 7. repeatedly broadcast warnings and pitas The poll ts only one project in tbe ™ charged with bug1lng Demo<ntlc nie NJ.son people raised more than SlO for the ambush suspect to surrender to class. Other students are taking sides on headquarten and allegedly u 's I n f million in the pre-April 7 period but, avoid being killed too, wtllch would have the 22 California ballot propositions. Republican money to do so. "Everybody "All you have to do lJ look at the list of tenured profes,,ors" at UC Berkeley to see there are mt enough women among them, said Dr. Estelle Ramey. saying they would abide by the letter of been probable given the cmditkm. Debates have already been heard on seemed to know about it." the law, have declined to discloee where Tbe search area -from which be proposition 18, the obscenity initiative, Some DemocraUc Party memben plan· lbey got It or bow they spent ll evidenUy escaped -was bounded by and on proposition 22, the farm labor in-to cross party lines to vote for President· Dr. Ramey, profesaor of physiology and biophysics at Georgetown University, spoke here Monday night on "Sex Hormones and Human Ability." At a news conference be(Ol'ehand. the doctor renewed her criticism of iJ. 1ustrations in "The Anatomical Basis of Medical Practice." She somewhat gleefully announced that the book has been recalled by Wllliams and Wilkins: publishers to coITeCt a number of scientific erron. "It sounds like I'm happy," she said. "If they are losing money, I am.'' Specifically. Dr. Ramey criticized the use of beautiful, nude, nonmuscular women to show distribution of muscles. "You can't see anything except smooth skin and large breast!," she sald. She said the iDtrOOuction of the book was indicative of the sex attitude of medical schools and medical textbook authors. <.c She quoted it as saying, "Don't bothe"f to ask" ua for the models' phone numbers. Our wives burned our little black books at the last barbecue." Science Students /11. San Cle1nente To Visit Catalina Firty·four San Clemente High School science clu b student.J will take a lhree- day trip to Catalina Island as their nnt scientific field study erperience of the school year. The evtnt, scheduled for thil weekend, will Include 1 blend of study and n>Cl'tll· tion on the Island. Dlvlng and klen- tilleatloo of marJno oraanlmll will talce up much of the trip Ume. Stud.lea of the tstlnd'a natural history allo art 1ebeduled as well aa hiking, nrlmmlng aDd loUrlng the USC Marine labaratory on \he lltbmUI. Nlne ldult upervllol'I will atlend 1loog with Ibo 1111dtnll. ~tUtkln for the ·trlp wfll be provldod 00 v....ia (lf the Dal)• Wharf sportlilblng Oeet. Once on the · bland. the science studeoU, all members cf the 1rhool'1 lcierice club, will camp at apedal campgrounds. I Tbe Nixon report li.!ts ei:pendltures Barranca Road, Valencia Avenue, Culver itiative. Mxoni Chadwick said. since April 7 of '21.5 million. The com-Drive and Sand Canyon Avenue. 'Ibree students have been chosen to 1be main reason given for voting for mlttee said it bad $514,985 to caah on Irvine City Manager William Wollett, play the role of presidential candidates Nixon by the people polled, he said, "b hand as of Oct. 15; it wu owed ID even who is titular police chief, turned up at and convince the class to vote for them McGovern hirruself." SI million aS of that date, and bad debts the seacb command past in a com-in a class elecUon to be held a few days To check any change.s from the results of $1.6 million. munications van operated by Costa Mesa before the real thing. he'll compile next week, <lladwick sa1d In the period Sept. 1 to Oct. 11, the Search and Rescue Team Lt. Bill Savage. A series of candlates or candidate( he plans to take a smaller poll a te.. report of the committee aald, It collected Costa Mesa police captains FA representatives, ranging in political spec-days before the election. about $9 million and spent some $9.5 Glasgow and Bob Green were assigned trum from American Independent Party Tbe students in the class aren't old million. too, with almost all personnel remaining to Socialist Party -will speak to the enough to vote in the real election, ~ This compare5 with sa.t mllll<n that at the scene this mom.Ing as the search class prior to the election. they're involved and concerned desPltl' the McGovern committee reports n.islng of the area neared an end. C21adwick'1 voter analysis group has the age barrier. -and $9.05 million It repor!a lpelld\ng lnj!iiiiiiiiiiiiiiii;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;t the Sept. t-Oct. 16 per10d. · I McGovern's top committee reports baving raised SI3.4 mlllion ; says it is short $107,204 cash on band: Is owed $125,027, and bas debts of 13,85 m\11\oo, It was not immediately clear whether the over-all McGovern figures refer .to contributions and expenditures going back to April 7 or to the fLrSt of the year. They are listed mlder a column titled "calendar year to date." TOPLESS SHOW FIGHTS FOR LIFE CHARLOTl'E, N.C. (AP) -Fifty topless dancers perfonned here to ralae money for a lawsuit q:ainst a city ordinance banning such dancing. The ontlnance goea Into effect Nov. 1. They performed singly and tn groupo Monday night at one of the If topless nightclubs in town. A standing-room-only crowd of 800 paid $S apiece. A second such Topless Review ls planned next Monday. Tuberculin Tests Offered to Students Nlnlh and 121l>gnde atudenll a\ San aemente ud Dana llilll ltJab schools will be offered free lubercuJJn lkln telll In 1 P"'1!'8!1l S]lOl1I01'ed by Ibo Oranae Coun- ty Health btpartment Oct. St. School Nuno Dorothy Otfaney llld the tktn teats are a-definitive means of lrao- lnlJ tuberculosis and tre belna u.ed as a replctment to cbclt J•r&)'1. Parenti wlll be asked to sign watven for their chUdr<n, 1Dowln1 \he atudent lo undcrao \he painless lesl I Let Us Put You on The Map Near the entrance, inside our store, is • giant new Map. W1 •r• in the pro c: es s of idontifying all of the bomes we have carpeted 1ince 1965 on thi1 map with colored pins. (A different color for Heh year.) Close scrvtiny will detect 1ome intore1ting loch: flntly, wo have carpeted homes on virtu- 1Hy every 1lrHt In the Ir••-Socondly, Ille pin1 ere in bunches. indicating WORD-OF-MOUTH advertising. Thirdly, the numbtr of home1 we have e<orpeted i1 staggering. If you cl.sire hon• sty, experlonc•, and rec:orrm1ndatiom from n e i 9 h b o r s we hive -ked f.,;, theft Alden's i1 THE PLACE! ALDEN'S CARPETS. e DRAPES llMCI ttlf IN COSTA MISA 1663 Placentia Ave~ COSTA MESA ' 646-4838 HOURS: Mon. Thru Thur1., 9 hi 5:30-FRI .. 9 to 9-SAT. 9:90 to S •• • • • <: ' ,, " ' . -. r ' . •, . , ;-- ., • . ' . J8 DAILY PILOT SC Antitrust S11it 2 Banks Call Off Plans for Merge1· SAN FRANCISCO (AP) - Wells F'arso Bank and First Wes!em Bllllk and Trust Co. have called off a proposed merger that the J u s t i c e Department was seeking to block ln an antitrust 5Ult. Offlcers or Wells Fargo and World Airways, major owner of First Western, jointly an· nounced termination of the merger plan first put forward April 5, 19?1. THE CQMPTROLLI!R of the currency had approved the merger, provided thAt \V~lls Fargo divest it.sell of to'lrst Westem's 41 North e rn CaJifornia branches. But the Justice Deoartment went to court last Jan. 17 to block the merger on antitrust i;i:rounds. FINANCE Wells Fargo, haedquartered in San Francisco. has assets rof $8.53 billion and 291 branches in California. First Western, with assets of $1.25 billk>n, has 95 branches and is head- quartered in Los AnJi!eles. Wells Fargo said In an agreement signed Oct. 14, 1971, it would pay $95 mUlion- ror First Western. h is 99.5 per nt o orld America stors Corp., a wholly eel subsidiary of World Airways, lnc. FffiST WESTERN h a d assets of $1 billion two years ago when merger talks hegan . Edward J. Daly, board chairman and chief executive offlcer or World, aiid Richard P. Cooley, president and chief e:tecutive officer or Wells FarJlo and Co., sajd in a joint statement that efforts to ne110t!ate a settlement or tHe antitrust suit had failed. Expansion Plan Aired "Under t h e s e circum- stances, f a c e d with the iilternatives of years of litiea- lion or a settlPP'ent hParine: no reasonable relat\n11shl., to the lransactonas orirlinally pro- posed, we have, with re11ret. concluded that I~ il'lf"r,.q(q of the parties. their emoloves. sharPhtilders and customers would best be served by the termination or the merger agreement." THE GOVERNMENT 111leg· ed in its suit f.iled in S:ol'I f-"ran- cisco federal court that the merger woolfi elif'linate aC'tual 111.nd p o t e n t i a I comnPtition between the banks, And that customP.r services would be re<luced. In ' i(iinf ~fojon'IAnt at that time. thn h .. .,1f'" ,.i;,..,., .. .......,i ttiat the merger would be anU. " '!'I., Cllop off lotit ~ ... ~ ObttH1c:• & toll c:olls .._o.t by Vita~tflorlffd ••· I ployon °' c:llildrn , . , "' ... TOLL CONTlOL ST0'5 CALLS to ootsldo -• wlttlollt ' .thctlot locol colls. h•xpottilM -IMt tk TOLL CONTIOL Pf ollffltllt. P'kM C.. puts lo p.-t 1 ... Dotfow. TIUPHONIC 1$iUIPMINT COU. 54•·7fOJ Don't Miss These Free Lectures Oct. 25th '1Maximum Return on a Minimum Investment" Lectur<r -Fred Becker Nov, 1st "Advantage of Real Esta(e Syndication for the Small Investor" Lecturers -Phil McNamee and "Cap" Blackbum Nov. 8th "Capital Conservation Through Minimizing Taxes" Exchanging Lecturer -Bruce Ilowey "Taliorlng Your '7S Investment" LAlcturer -Randy Mccardle • TICKETS AVAILABLE AT THE DOOR EACH SESSION MEETS 7:30 -9:30 P.M. GOLDEN WEST COLLEGE Sorin Co-opan10red By. Orange Cont • Golden Wnt DAILY PILOT Coll°"' Huntington 8.1ch • Fountain Valley Board of Rnltora OVER THE COUNTER tOMPLETE NEW YORK STOCK UST '----· •·A..nu.nt01111&1..._. SWUIG SMOOTMlY nm> THE WlM D When driving tee shots into a strong headwind, the tenden- cy is to hit lhe baU harder than usual. This is a tendency that 10ll should resi1t. By changing the nonnal rhythm of your swing, you run the risk of hitting an off.line shot. The headwind magnifies any directional errors you might make. A shot that should slice only l 0 yards may bend tw ice that amount becal.tSe of th• wind's actk>n.. I strongly suggest that when hitting In the wind, you concen- trate on striking the ball as squarely as possible. This is a positive thoueht that will rep I.ace the natural urge to over-swing. And it's the best way to beat the wind. •• w.n.._,.._ L~ rrvns rrom Th• ROUt!h. Pitching rrom Woods. Ul)hill Mf 00-l'ull U.s-tMi• and other ihots ar• d•taill9d for yOll \n Anda Pai!O*r"' tloolll•t. "Tro11bl• Shots." Fot J'l'Uf '°PY· Hf!d 20i 1"'4 a s11m~. sell-.ddrusld •nv.&opetoArldd PaltMI', • cw. ot thl$ ~...-~papef. _t\c osta We stern's ~11·. Versatility Bob Act1sta may be the most sought-after high school fool· ball player in Orange County '!\.'hen the season ends. But right now he is ~ centrating on bringing the Western High Pioneers into the Sunset League cham- pionship and Thursday night will face another hurdle on lhe rocky road to success fu the Newport Harbor High Sailors. "He's the best foo tbal1 playe r to ever play al Western High," coach Jim Everett says by way of praising his 6- 0, 190-pound quarterback. ''He's the best offensive player I have ever coached. He's durable. an outstanding quarterback. a fine leader and an exceUent student.'' the coach continues in passing out the accolades. For starters. Aeosta is the ideal prospect for a college wishbone signal-caller. He Iii.es to run the option play well and is an excellent passer. In leading the Pioneers to a perfect ~ rerord this season, he has averaged 225 yards total offense per game. In rushing statistics. he has averaged about seven yards per carry. His passing statistics show SS percent completions in- cluding a touchdown per game average and 175 to 180 yards per tilt. His aerials haven't been concentrated on any one particular receiver. Rather there are five players who have divided the action pretty ~ven1y. They include Gary Caskey at spUt end, Dan Porter at split end and wide receiver, Mart Alvey at flanker, tight end Andy Schiller and top reserve Jeff Cornell. Everett cootinues his praise of the yO\Jllg signal-caller who Jed \Vestem to the AAAA finals before losing a year ago in ad- dition to his current season heroics. "He is a very durable player and has taken some real shots this year without being in-- jured. Of course, there's always that possibility but we don't even think about it." Acosta has received numerous letters from major univenltles around the coun-- try already this: season and will undoubtedly get more before it ends. He's an academic major with an eye on a college education and will be able to choose the school he desires to attend. · Coast Rangers Begin Soccer Season S11nday Opening of the home achedule by the Coast Rangers soccer team! takes place Sun· day afternoon when t h e Rangers entertain Tecolotlan in a Pacific Socter League match at Costa Mes a 's TeWlnkJe Park. A reserve game starts at J2:SO with the feature tilt at 2,30_ The Rangers play a 10-game home schedule that runs through 11-farch 25 with the reserves facing two additional opponents. The home schedule: COAST' JtANOEJt!J HOME SCtU!OU\.E Oct. "' -Coe1t llu>Ot•• VI. "TKololl•n. NO¥, 5 -C.C>llt Rlfllil'l!fl VI, 1'11llt'l"ron. NtN. It -(.1>1$1 Jt1ng1rt YI. T...,pl1 City. J111. U -CC>ltl Rl~J ¥1. Lorio e11e1 .. J111. 11 -Coest lillll!IH"I vs. o.tt1 711. Ftb. 11 -C.Olll ltll'lglfl Y•, Olym. oic. Mirth ' -Coet! lt1"9t'fl YI. 01""4111. MlrCll 11 -C.1>11! R1nver1 "'· S1>9rt1. M1rch It -CO.II Jt1n;trl VI. .. r.o.11!•. ~·~ 2$ -(oest Rl"O'f"I VI. (0911 ft~ ltQl!rvtl PI I y prtllmlN<Y ''"'" II 12:)1) ,, 111 0-1 '""'* M.ucfl 11 (P'l"oOtfll•). Tri. ·~ 11.o,,.. two ~ 11oa1 .. , O.C. 1• Vl. T1t1l1r Mid Aoo"ll I n . Javto"l. .. 11 "°"" lllmft 11 Te'Nl"kl1 P1tk I" Coe.11 ~ io.;il1111!"9 11 2:30. ! . 1000 ~ ORDER ·! t YOURS TODAY! "eautlful Stick-on LABELS Personalized • Stylish • Efficient Ord ... For Youl'Wlf or • Fr\and· Mey b• uted on •nvelope1 es return eddrMs N.INl1. Also very h•ndy •• identificetion lebels for mM-kin9 p•r1on1I iteml such ., ltooks, records, photos, etc. Lebel• 1tlck on g l••• end m•! be us.d for merk in g hom• cenned focd 1tem1. AJI libels ere print1d with 1tyli1h Vogu• typ• an fin e quelity whit .. 9urnm ed peper. ...----------------=·1 l Piii Ill "'i. '"""'en. t llf "'•" wlftl 11.U "f I t P lllf """''"• \.Hltl CM• .. 11'.0 .... 1W41 I t c. ........ g111. nm I I I I I l I , I I I L --~~LOT PRINT_!~;...;;;G __ J UC Irvine Kickers In Tottrney UC lrv1ne will journey to Davls for the All-callfornia SCIC'Ctt lournament t h I s \l.'tt.kend after deleatlng UC Riverside Saturday, 4-2, on the Anleaters field. UC! took an early lead end held it throughout u coach B> u Ashcroft emptied the Anteaters bench in the second ha.U ~fore Riverside finally scored. !\{ich Duffy, playilc at center forward. nelled the ball aft~ a perfect pass from Achilles PaJomino in the fll'St minu1e of play for the victors. PaJom.ino later left the game with an injured right leg after scoring a goal with an assist from Aguslo Alarcon. Walter F'ue.ntes scored the third Uct goal. The final score came ~n a pass from Leif Larsen to Jer· ry Kaiwix from 16 yards out. Riverside scored its two goals in the final 10 minutes \.l'ith UCI reserves in the game. Ashcroft praised the \\'Ork of Fred Albertson in the goal and Bob Guthrie at a halfback position in addition to those scoring and making assists; Sunset Duo Rated 1-2 ltlater Dei lost, Edison won. but the top four in Orange C.Ounty's official listing of prep footb3.ll teams as. selected bY the DAILY PILOT remains the same. Western and Westminste?' continue to run one--two follow· ing easy Sun.set League vic- tories and Mater Dei is third, despite losing a 7-6 decision to the CIF AAAA's No. 1 ranked eleven. St. Paul. Edison squeaked by No. 6 Estancia, 7-6, to maintain its position \l.'hile Estancia fell one notch to seventh. Six county teams remain un- beaten and untied after five weeks wilh La Habra and Pacifica moving up to fifth and sixth. Unheralded S a n t a Ana Valley, picked up points after gaining its fifth straight Win. I All Of the ranked teams ap- pear to be solid favorites this week with Mater Dei having perhaps the toughest task Fisfainn Is Bot against Bishop Amat (4-11 in ""lJI Angelus League OOstitlities at Crown Prince Hassan of Jordan landed this I90- 1ft. San Antonio C.Ollege Fri-pound marlin on a shark fi shing trip on the boat day night. Del Mar out of Davey's Locker recently. Skipper ORANGE COUNTY TOP 10 Clyde Gillam is s hown with the prince. Below, Gary Poi. Team Points Barrett of Costa Mesa displays six yellowtail caught L Western (5--0 ) 55 on a recent trip out of Davey's. 2. Westminster (5--0) 53 -------'------'----------- 3. Mater Dei (4-1 ) 50 4. Edison (4-0-1 1 46 5. La Habra 15-0l 35 6. Pacifica (5-0) 30 7. Estancia (4-1 ) 25 8. Anaheim (4-1 ) 18 9. Brea (s.-0 ) 12 10. El Modena (J..2 \ 9 Others: Orange (3-1·1 ), San- ta Ana Valley (5--0), Servile (4- 1/, Valencia (J..1-1). Goliath Top s Costa Mesa Mat Card Cardinals Score Early • But La Fonda Wins Pair The Fountain Val I e y 11.~e1tv. Jb 2, •, ,' 01 H•rr11, lti Cardinals semipro baseball ~l:i:'.°"?fi u 2 l' f a! dr ..........., W~lt•o., << '> O team OW'>" a pair of 9·5 !.tlwooc, c 1 10 ! ! JohnMltl. c ! decisions to host La Fonda H.,.,_,, ri g l '' l11U<1r, p Stars Sunday in action on the A1to11r, ~11:!H ~ San ta Ana College baseball Fv cardln1lt !JO ou_ ':l I ' field . La FonGI St1r1 10 1 ... l-1 5KonC G1m1 This Sunday afternoon the 51,1,1., 211 111.1 r, ~,~ C di Boo.well. II) 3 I 0 a ar nals return home to 1.111 10-0 : f f ? Fotmtain Valley High School ~:" .. T::°~' ,', '! l' 'l ~n1:von·,1· for a doubleheader w i t h ,i:~fni,V, ci'b 10 ! , ! Garden Grove beginning et 11. ~~t, g' ! !, i Mike Champion had three P1ln1.r. P doublet for the Cardinals in J~iffr/'•1 .)i 1 ,i Sunday's second ga me while • " • Ron Salazar had one hit in the Fv c1re11n1i. :JOO ooo 2-i 10 1 Monarchs Move Up, Edison 9th Mater Dtl HIC)l'1 Monarchs, fillfi"lit. Jut week'• ClF A.AM prep r.l.JbalJ Poll. moved up to rourth d .. p,,. a 7-ll Jou to the No. 1 St. Paul Swordsmen ln AngeJu.s Leacue play. Other Orange Cout area elevens in the Top 10 are Westminster (\hlnl) and Edison (nlntb). W'51mins1e sbelled Marina, S.-8. while &fiJon was slipping by Estancia, 7-ll. Estancia alao picked up V<lles In the AMA ratings. The top attraction thi.11 week involving ranked teams is the Mater Oei-Bisbop Amat strug. gle at ML San Antonio Friday night. Amat was accorded a No. 6 posilioo after getting by St. Anlbooy, 22-16. Santa Maria (~I Is ranked first in AAA clrcles while Temple Cily Is first in the AA classification. The latter is: working on a 35-game streak. ..... ,.,~·~~1ufiU1 ........ · ·· .hlllts 1. W.Sllr~l 1'5 3. Wnlm rw {S-0) lri •. ~tff ((..lJ Ill s. Sent• ~ ($-4\ " ~: J~=-...,,_~, 4-1) li :: ~= .. ,~1. ~i lO. SH Gor-wo !% 31 Others: San reo.,, Alllltfltlr1, An.helm. C-ton. ~AM V1lt.v. H-, s.nt' , C.11""'1, Santa hl'tlollr.. E= 1, Muir. '· s."'' Mlrm(s-4) 177 1. eurro1111hs Hll "' J. ClarflnOnl l-0 124 4. t.1 H1br1 I ) !If s. Pecllk1 \S-Ol 101 6. Wnl Cov rwiif"ll t2 7. Los Al'°" ( 2) 76 1. Ctbl'lr o ()-) 51 •. Rollll'ICI Hills \'-11 43 10. Anleloce VII IV (5-0l ts on-.: Uplafld, hcelllor, ,._, JUciMttl, El ModtNo, ArrtlVO, 11: ....... y tB.,.... P•rkl, N~ P'1rk, Trov. 1. Trrno11 Cltv ~, ,,, l. SL 81t"Nrd IS..01 15tl 3. W1llM/l 1r,.1 "' '· Neff ($-(! 111 5. Munitr!: J-4) •• 6. North 1ttwr11dt (S-0) '1 7. flrN ls.4) 1M I. ARO!Jrl f'"-U 2' t , c111rt.r 01lr. 14·11 t~ 10. Nortftykrw ('41 17 nt~•11 lll:ov1I Ollk-P1lo V1rGe. V1l.ncl1. Sin lllf'll4lrdJno, lt\ldl'(lff, Avlllflon«C•mto:o, l• C1"ac11. • I. LA fl~hl IS-0) 2. C1rpenllrl1 IS· 0) 3. DHert (5.(ll Do yle Tabs 25 Winners H. Doyle of Huntington Beach won the fifth . week of the DAILY PILOT Pigskin Pickeroo Contest, but a week of upsets gave the contestants a difficult time. Doyle picked 25 winnen to outdistance Elmer Tanogoshl (Newport Beach), May Zirbel (Hlllllington Beach), Chris Schnetder (Fountain Valley) and Dave Sigler (Huntington Beach). Each picked 23 win- ners and had to be separated by the contest's tie breaker It was the second week a member of the Z i r be I household was a winner in the contest Dirk Zirbel was first last week. The contest is co- sponsored by \he DAILY PILOT and the Westclill Plaza, University Park , Bayside C e n t e r • Eastblurf \'illage and Harbor View Center shopping centers. Calendar W .. llllll•Y (Ocf. UI W1!ef POio -Hvflfl1111ton 111eh II Wnlmlmlet, Wnlern 11 N-OOl'I Hlrbor, T1,11;t1n •I Mlulon Vl1lo. U~IY«lltv 11 Scnor1, VlllMll 11 LlllVfll 9-.ch, Mlrl111 11 S..nt1 A111 1!1 II 3:15). Soc.taor -~" Wnl 11 Fllll1rton Cl:)CI), T"""°Y !Ocl. tO FOOIWll -N--' H1rb0r 11 w""'"' 11 11.lfl.J. ClllH country -Coron• del Mir 11 EdllOn. e111ncl1 II '°''' MQI, N~I Hlf'bor II W1111rn, Wutmll'lllW 11 Hlll'lllnvton etKl'I. Minion V11Jo 11 s." c1-._, M19noll1 11 .. OUfltal" 'v11t1Y, S111l1 Al'll 11 Mlrll\I (111 11 3:15). "'*Y {OCt. f71 Footbllt -'°""" ott1 Mir "' ec11-11 0rtf'gt COMI Collltll, 0..... HUii 11 erH, V1l1MI• 11 LIV\lfll eMC;h, Mal ... 0.. YI e1t11o11 """' 11 Ml. !AC, Cotti MIN v1 ElllMI• 11 H..vport Htfbor, Wf'llmln1i.r 11 H1111n11111on 1-.ch, M1rl1>1 VI S1nl1 Anl 11 Wct1llTllllll .... MIHIOll Vl1(0 VS S111 Cl1m.r11t (11t 11 l l. Unlv1r1llv "* $onOl"I 11 1..1 H1br1 (7:)0), Goliath and Black Gordman return alter a two-month absence while Samoa's Prince Maiava debuts on this eve- nlng "s wrestling card at the Fairgrounds In Costa Mesa, wlth action getting under way LI l'ond1 St•l'f ClQ U2 •-9 I opener and two in the second ,-~---------------------\1 at 8. Golia th cbaJlenges Mexico's Ruben Juarez for the Orange County championship trophy in the main event while his partner in crime:, Gordman, battles Japan's Kinji Shibuya contest. Mike Selwood belted a triple In the first inning of the nightcap with the bases load to give the Cardinals en early lead but five runs for the Star! in the fifth erased the lead. in the roughhouse: semlmain. !il•ur. 11 ••!, '! '!l Goliath and Gordman return 1»1w111. 1b Mct(l"lfy, rl to Costa Mesa following very .:;";:":;'":;"";;·;;"::::====""""'~I ,1,,,1 011M sucxessful tours of Japan and ,. Texas during these past two month..'I. ~1eanwhile, Maia\18, rated by experts as being one of the greatest wrtstlers to ever come out of Samoa, mnkes hla !ir!lt Orange Coun t y •P. pearance ever when h e squAre11 off agalnst Japan'• J\fassa Saito. Wh ere To Go Looking for somcwMl"fl to go, something to do? No one gives you better tip! than the WEEKENDER. It's p1blish- ed every Friday in the DAl· LY PILOT. GRAND PRIX ~13t~ 11111s.,f"f8rdlco.8 littll • day. Things Gnl looking up In Long Beach. With ouraml- ing, smokelOGS je1s and cheery. low lares, happi- ness and San Francisco are Just around the comor. Ukewise. Sacramen10 and San Diego. Coll ua or your 1tniling travel egort. PSA g\"191 JOU • Uft. . -... -. ... OAILY PILOT J7 Pilot Pigskin PICKEROO Co-Sponsored this w .. k by UNIVERSITY PARK S)iopping Center Cul ver a MlchellOl"I, Irvine And The DAILY PILOT BE A PROPHET FOR PRORT ' Top Weekly Pri1e in Merchandise Certificates For Weekly Second Place Winner Each for Third, Fou"h and Fifth Place Winners Plus BONUS PRIZE A pelr ef tickets to tti. •• .._ of tfle ,......, t USC w. Notf9 htwe) .. Miii wwl'1 whlM,, C:.ltl'tfty ef ... DAILY PILOT. Be • pigskin prophet for profj t. Pl1y the Pilot Pigskin PICKEROO g•m• for weekly prize1. Top winner ••ch week receiYes $25 gift certificete from tho 1ponsorin9 shopping center. Second place win ner 9et1 $10 cer- tificete •nd third, fourth •nd fi~h pl•ce winners e•ch get $5 certific1te. E•ch certificete is spendeble, just Jike money, et eny store in the 1ponsorin9 shopping C enter. Sponsorship rotates with • different center sponsor- ing eoJch week's contest. P•rticipeting cenf•l'"I ere: Westcliff Pla11, 17th •nd Irvi n•, Newport Beech; Harbor View Center, San Jo•quin Hills Roed and M•cArlhur Boule¥ard, .Newport Beech; Eastbluff Village Center, Eastbluff Drive, Newport Be•ch; Ba y· side Center, Beyside Drive e nd Jembor•• Roed, New. port Beech; •nd University Perk Shopping Center, Culver end Michelson, Irvine. W•tch for this pleyer's form ••ch weelc in the DAILY Pl:.OT Sports Section. Circle the te•m you thinlc will win in each peirin9 in tha list of 30 91mes end 1end in the pleyer's form entry blank or • reesoneble facsimile. Th en wetch the DA ILY PILOT sports pe9as for each week's list of five winners. RULES t. SIMI It "' PILOT 1"1$SKIM PICICl•OO COHTISf, S""9 ~rt-t. ... o. •1• ua. c.1.1 ,....., CA. """ a. Otlly -ll'ltry "' --""" .... ~. f:ftlrin !!Wit .. '""""1ttif Mt t.lfll' """ TllllrM1y ., "'"' IN ••U"tf" 11111 ti tlll DAI\. T P l\.OT ..,kl ~ ' •. Ill.. Tl'lv...Uy. S. l"lrtlclNllflt l!WrCM11h I/Id OAl\.Y 11'1\.0T ""'PloVMI 1.-!ht!~ lm~ •1.111 flll'llW.. "" 1111 ... " lfftltr. I, TIE IJllAKI'• aUHK MUST ll ,ILLl!'D IH OJI liiHTll:'I' IS V'OIO. •••••••••••••••••••• • ENTRl"BLANK • • Cltcte .._'" tMM1 win ... tt.h _....., t.-s • • 1 ....................... ....,, • • Rams vs Oakland • • San Francisco vs Atlanta • • • • Minnesota vs Green Bay • • Kansas City vs San Dle90 • • Miami vs Baltimore • • WasltlnC)fon State vs UCLA • • • • USC vs Or99on • • Cal vs WashlnCJfOn • • Tulane vs G!1or9la Tech • • TCU vs Noh'• Dame • • Oklahoma State vs Nebraska • • Illinois vs Purdue • • • • Pittsb11rqh vs Syracuse • • Penn State vs W. Vlrqlnla • • Air Force vs Arl1ona State • • Indiana vs Northwestern • • Fulle.,on vs Ol'ClllCJ• Coast • • • • Riverside vs Saddlebac:k • • Golden West vs Cypress • • Magnolia vs Fountain Valley • • Newpo" vs Western • • Edison YS c-na del Mar • • Dana Hills vs Brea • • • • Valencia vs LacJuna • • Mater Del vs Bishop Amat • • University vs Sonora • • Costa Mesa vs Estancia • • Westminster vs HuntlnC)ton • • • • Santa Ana vs Marina • • Mission Viejo vs San Clemente • " • • Ttl .lll:IAKlll: -li'Y ..... M ftlt "'ti """""' ff .. Intl W9f"H • • ""'"·"-'""'• ......... • a H• .. • • • ·-• • • a City Zip • • • • Pll,iM Sn • •••••••••••••••••••• . . " ' . •• .. • •• -' .... ·' ·' ·' .. •• . . ,. " ' •• .· " " .. ·' . .. .• ., ·' ·: .. .; • ... ;. .. • , . ' - ·" ·: • .. ':- ' , ' . .~~ .. - : : lo ,, . , r' , ,f• t ... ' . ··-•' -... • .<,, . -: • ,_ -~ ·, . . .· .. -.. I , .. . . • .. • •I ., .. . I ... " .. .. • •!-. - ., . :• .. .. " " .. • • " . . • .. ·: ' . . ·' ,. ••• • -.V .... 'i . . '• T""""' OcUW 24, 1972 Tuesday's Oosing Prices Complete Nelv York Stock Exchange List Market Recovers From Early Loss NEW YORK (AP) -The stock market shook oU llffp early losses that set In Tuesday alter Soath Vietnam Pruldent Nguyen Van Tbleu'• state- ment that a cease-fire In lndochtna bad not been worked oul , Trading, which slowed In the wake ot Thieu's announcement, picked up again as buyers returned to the market tale In the session. Robert Johmon, analyst for Paine, Webber, !actson & Curtis, said there •rpeared to be "a great deal of latent optimism abou what should be hap- pening In the market since the economy ls going great guns." -. ' I I SC DAILY PILOT Jf • ' '-· ~ 24. 1'172 OAllY PILOT PIJllUC NOTICB PUBLIC NOTICE I PUlllJC NOTICE 1---,===:-:::::::::=::---·1------------1 'k'i1riiWI aU111t•• PKTJT~ l'KldU IJtc'J"MM.tt IVfillitl'lf HAMI ITllnflllllT Bwt Burry ...... STATIMllNT llAMI rTAT.-lfT "-......... ...,_ ..... ..,.._ C k O s • lMhlll .................... MIMA --·· .. : ~ ... .,_ .,. COMl"ACT COf'l"D ffRVICL .. 00 lng esswn 'ACIMAT'C fYSTIMl. IJllll I" L8ttft THI! ......... wo.l:t:P. "61 u JeOe W.llwlt II .. CM'9 ~ ,_, &t., Cetf• MtM. CMIMrnl• ~ om., ~ a..dl. ~ T..,, hllW ,...._, 2M W..W II .. Rodcff9 0.-kl ,..,.,..,,, UIS LOllfYlno ""'6. Col.ti Mali, (4llhDfi111 nut SI .. ~ c.lltornl• tint. M..tM L N.c8floll, m T-tt.. Thia ~ it .... ~ ll't M Tlllt ..._ 11 ..... (O'ldVctllll DY •II C..lt "'-'• C.llfoml• ~. lllCll'lldwl • • 1.-1,,...... AM ww•, t>'lll La .>oltt ~ Hunt· Ttn"V ........, ,,..... T 0 ke A "lab l ltOdDIN ti, Ftrr.ri "*'-' lktdl Cldfornl• """ TMt "'""*'' fllitid wllll tttl CtullfT lC ts Val e ci!:ot .. ~~C=-ty~"'oc':r,~ T~~MM lt llllllt cWldudtd by ·~liu.."l::f'.~~~.occ:T~ WILLIAM I. ST JOHN, COUNTY C:lA.ltK. I* Ni. W.,.. CLERK. by ~ .. ~ °"""""'' Free tickets tof the 1972 edl· tion of a cooking school that has been "packing them in" at the rate of 100 persons per session for more than 20 years are still available in the Orange coast area today. But prospective "students" had beUer eilber pick them up in a hurry or figure on being among the fint in line at the Me.sa Theater, 1884 Newport Blvd., Costa Mesa, when this year's fl.J'Sl session gets under way Thursday. The school is going into its 21st year as an off-campus presentation or the Coast Community College District (Orange Coast and Golden West colleges ) and other sponsors, including Alpha Beta Markets. Southern Cati[ornia Gas Co~. Davis ·Brown appliances, the Mesa and Lido theaters and Calor:ic c.orp. llw h¥«1W J. ,,,...,.,., °""""· ,._ Mlorklll I . Mc:I ....... ... .... 1... -OIM'I Del'"' "°' Tllll M•twnll'lt ftltd wltll ~ County ~ ..., _ _.. ., ' l'utlll.n.cl Or•• CO.II Otlll' ftllet. Ci..t; .. Or•• CounfT Oii: ()c:lobtr !, om.w :t. 10. ,,, 2A. 1m ws.n tire printing was ~ld at $1 ~r ?:r ,,, 14 i1 and N~;; ~lt11::1~1~._,y f.l~: =TY . PUBLIC NOTICE copy before the fou rlh session PUBUC NO'nCE 11·iosu t o.n PiJ ot the 1971 school. 0:~1o~t.'U 1~1 "1'$f.:t "'Z.C~~:A:~lt..'::.r" A second printing or the "'cr1T1ous 1us1N1s1 PUBlJC NOTICE The 1o11owi111 ...,._, 11 c1o1'* w.111 ... book will be available thls TM 1o11!t:·,!'~·:'!:!e lllnl-••:VILLA.OE IUNf'LOWElt, dS JOtll 111 .. year and be sold at the same ill; SUPllt lOlt COURT o• TNS-N~ ltltll. c:aut ,, per copy. The boOk will be L~~·~i .• PN~= ~.::"~:.ti.:! ·~:~·c:t.f#l:~~N:: Ji::'.Zn:;',;..!n-C~ 1~,, McUrM available only at t~ Methesa tt~ R. Aut. 324 Luaot!W. St~ MfW!Mf1 Nmc• 0., "~~':"~~·OP AM•No•o ..Ji~~ 1' •• ~ W '11 'lbeater and only dunng e-:11, C•l110i"11I• n...o l'ITITIC* l'Olt PROUT• o• WILL '--ft• M. llOlfTI .....,.l.1 .... school Thl1 bu51Mu Is tltillll ~ttd b'f •11 AND LllTI•RI TbTAMINTUY T1'11t Ill*-' ftled With tM County ~M .. th.a I . ()00 In :r • ll'ldlvlduilt Ell• .. of ISTEUA MA!: SCANl.Off, Clft<OI' °"'"'°' County,.,: Oct. 6. ltn. ore n l , guts, 1n-Teel R. Aere '*...... •w at-ty J. Mldlloll. D1puty CMlfY eluding • ca 10 r i c or Tiil• "''-' nltd Wlttl "" twntv NOTICE IS HER!IY GIVEN tMt ,..,._ C)erk of Ol"Mll>t COIJl!ty Oii OCT. ,,, 1t1t.. ,JQtiN PAUL ~IS hM flltd Mrtlfl M ...... C11annglow gas barbecue WILLIAM E. ST JOHN, COUNTY CLEltJC., ~ .,.iltlofl for ,.,,.... of WU\.... Pvlllklltd °'""" com Otlty ~\lot, valued at $80 to $100 for each 9' 9evffly J. MMlclolc, CHputy. .. ..... 'lWc~~.~-::,-:."'p.~'::,1 to Odoll9r 111. 17• u. '1• 1m im-n session will be presented to Pllbllsllld or""" C011t O.Hy Piiot, 11W11 IN rinw ~ l'ilCI o1 hffrtnir the PUBLIC N011CE , t OclOClef 17, Mo ll ltld No>Hmllet' 1, WIM 1\1.1 ...., 111 for ,9C'fObtr ,1, ltJ1. '11-----=~~---- those attending the school. 1m 2m-n t:oo •.m. 111 .,.. ~of 09'llrtmtnt ••••••••u..!.~•'"T •• "'' No. S DI Wld oourt, .t 700 Cl>1lc Ctn!« ....,.. PUBLIC NOTICE °""" w .. 1. 111 .,.. ory of s.n•• AM. ITAT• OP CALll'OlNIA POtt ENTIRE MENUS will be c.11tom1.. · TH•.c.ou:VA-1~ouwo1 _ ................. on stage during the "KTITIDUS IUSINEH Olltd Odobtt' ll. im NOTICI 01' M•.UINO Olf PITITIC* Y'"t".°"'~ . NAME STATEMENT WILLIAM E. St JC>t-IN, "OI: PltOUTll Of' WILL AND POil seSSIO~ by the two l~tructo;s. ..~M following ptf'IOll 11 doing llullMSI JOHN p'..~"'~r.. Ll!TI,aRS TllTAM•NT.t.a'f. Sharmg the cooking duues . GALILEE DESIGNS 1.m 22lld SI "17"" ~·""· i.1.i. of DELLA TUIACH, ::r;e t ill. be G ~--k c 1farn1 nuo ~ Slllt• Alie, C .. lfllnllt n71:1: NOTICE IS Hll:EIY 01\ll!N (lflS age w e!T)' ua en, Pff'#port Btaeh. .. • Att.nllY 1111 p,...p.,. TITLI! INSURANCE AND TRUST Southern California Gas Co. a!• ~"':;_· 1~:~· ~ 221111 st .• ~ Plltlllll'lecl 0r.._ co.it o.ny P11ot. PANY 1111 n1ec1 11en111 • JWHllOll J: consumer i D [ 0 r 1:Jl 3 t i (l D Thl~c t!Wr~ rs• belllll condvcttd by illl Oc!Ober IT, 1•, 14. 1m 2806-12 :,.OOI;:..~~~ :i.::::-;;t:_,. t ti nd Sandr 1ne11~1du4!1. PUBIJC NOTI,_ to W111c11 1s "'* '°" t11rtw w1.,.. represen a ve, a a J. N"le B\ll'n1 '-&:1 1111 !Mt h time illld p1.ce ., """'"' K~• gourmet cooking in-Thols 111t•mffll ftlC<d wtlh , .... County I • :. MIM ..... ""' "" for OClablt" SI ~:"D'""' Clerlt of Or1ngo County on Oct. IS, lW2. I ,.._ I ttlt oourtniom J structor for Orange ' Coast WILLIAM E ST JOHN COUNTY CLllll.K •""••toa COURT 0" TM• 1m M t :OO 1.m .. II "' · ' ' ' ,.... 0.P9rtmlftl No. 3 of Mid court, It Evening College. By klr«IW J. MtddOl(, Otpuly. • -·· STAT• OP CALIFOl:lllA l'Olt Civic CM\l•r Drt.,. Welt, Ill ti-City or --TMI COUNTY Dll OltAtlG• Mrs. Gerken, listed in Who's Publl$1'1td Orilfllll' c°''"'•"'-n' P1ii;. No. A1·7~ •-•T•O" s.~:,......,.ck~'°:t11t1i • Who of American Women Oc!Obtr 17, 2~. 31 I/Id ' NOTIC.• o" Ml!AR ... 01' •• WILLIAM • St JOHJrt ' 1'72 '1m·72 "OI: PROIATI 9F .WILL AHD "°" CIM'ly c\«k ' Who 's Who in the West LnTliltS .TITAMl!tf'TAllY. •A•N•t. KHA• LIFE OF PARTY -Joanne Wolcott projects her "~ew ~mage" to the astonish· 1nent of \Villiam Spencer (right) and Don Rhoades lil this scene from the Costa !\lesa Civic Playhouse comedy "Me a nd Thee." Presented in four sessions - each one different -the cook· ing school is held annually on consecutive Thursday morn- ings at the Costa Mesa theater. This year's sessions are scheduled for 9:30 to 11:30 a.m. Oct. 26 and Nov. 2, 9 and International Biography and PUBLIC NOTICE o!:':!:ci.°'. CHESTER L e.vtowELL. JONMION a 1eeMN .. ot 2000 W [ Ach-t NOTICE IS HERE8Y GIVEN that (aw= l.ltN .. ST J. KNAG, .lit.I omen o 1evemen , ETHEL FltANklE .,.1 n1H llereln • uu MtcArftJllll" aiw. ·--been on the gas comnany's FICTITIOUS IUSIN!'SS i:·" tor Probli. of Wiit ilnd for ... o. ... 1Tl6 JJ(I.;) t'~ NAMI STATEM .. lllT °" "'""" l4ildl, CMll. tw:ll staff since 1952. Ttit foUowh"' ,...._ 11 dallW lllnlMl• ...,.nee °' l.lt!IB T•11omeni.., 10 ,.... T .. : cn,1 ,,...,.. II ' peilllaMr, ....... tnel lo wtlldl 11 ~ l!'f Al'toi'MYS ..... ......._ 16. " . BYRON K E HT CHAMAEllL.AIN Nrf'-P9rtlcvllri. ilfld TM! ~ tl!M .nit P\llllltMd Or-. COMI OlllY Piiat, • 'Me and Thee' FREE TICKETS are available at Atpba Beta markets in Huntington Beach, Fountain Valley, Irvine, Santa Ana, Tustin and Costa Mesa and at the theater. MRS. KROGH graduated GENERAL INSURANCE co .. ms Wnt pl.Kt ol Miring llw wm:-hilS btlft ... Ocl<ll:IM' 17, IL 2A, 1m ... n coest HIOt1w•w Newport a..c11, C•. for' Qetol»r 31, 1'72. •I t .00 •.m., 111 m.el-"-----'----===--- from Whittier College with a ~ron Ktn; ctwunbwtiln. ..., =~6:;" ,:' c9:f:~= ~:;.l w°'-~~ PUBLIC N011CE BA degree in home economics ,,._.. sir .. 1, cmi1 Mesi, c.. 11w~i:J' ~·1~,,;•ntomi.. Mesa Comedy Takes New Glimpse of Generation Gap A popular feature of last year's 20th armiversary edition of the school -the com- pilation of a cookbook C{)O- tai.ning 247 recipes from the first 19 years of the "'SChool - proved to be a sellout. The en- in 1963. She W!LS a SEniOr home 1,,:~~neu LI r..11111 collduc1td by In WILLIAM e. SI JOHN, lllOT:.11 .. ~~~~~ICHI economist for the gas C{)m-11Yron Kent ctiam11er11111 c-"" ci.n. ~1c llOlke 11 Mrlb'r •-tMt pany for five years and. is ci~' .,:'~':;' c::c'"' ~"'s.:r ~~ ~11~l:!:" J....~~~ =~:_s':'.:V =-:-:;:.,. ':;!'~ teaching two gourmet cooking by B.-..rty J. MaddoX. o.pu1y Caunf'tl LM A"""""' cam.nM Mnl 11110U1 """ 11a1N Md sly" o1 l'A91tlC ~ E . . Clerk T•fl 111,I m..in ALLEY il1 106 !Stltl• lwbll. c"I ~ classes at ............. v-e n 1 n g · ,.. ... , AllwMT .... , P•"""*' Newriorl SM(tl COUlltv o1 Or•,.., ,_.. College Publl"*' °''""" (OISI O.llv Pl"!t PubUNMd Ori11191 Cots! O.lly Piiot, of c111foml.. did .. ftll tllltl di'( .. . ch k' Octobll" 3, 10 17. 2A. Ttn 'lW·n OcfObw 17, 11, u. Im 27'1·'12 Octobll'. lf72. by "'""""I C'(IMMf, dllio!YI Reports on ea wee s ,.... wld --""""'IP tnd ftrTnlnlf9 thillr cooking ~session will .be PUBLIC NOTICE PUBIJC NOTICE ,..s!~r~fi::srt:r-,....~ wlM bl~ featured in the [ollowmg F'ffrTF'"'"'",,_.1 .... ~.-lllCTITtOUt I Ult Ness ducttd by .Mtrvle_ltlltoell.. P w111_ ,..., BY JAN EDWARDS Of."" D•llY Pllor Sift! - It seems ha rd to believe "Me and Thee" has not been performed be fore on the West Coast and is supposed to take place in U1e present. But despite its silly and da ted plot, the cast at the Costa J\tesa Civic Playhouse puts together a fun evening. The plot nearly falls into that often-traveled generation ENTERTAINMEHT come during her self-pro- claimed "wild spell" wh.ich she punctuutes with a shapeless ceremonial robe or an Afrlran · drummer and headdress of garish ta~les and leopard skin. Slightly drunk and on a "crylng jag." she has hilarious, changeful moods. Wednesd ' food ti f 1"-1 IUU• •U:> ,..._.. Ind dlaci\il1'91 IH ll•tlllllfn Wiii clltlfl. di ay s sec on 0 NAM!' STAT .. MRNT NAM• STATliMIENT .,.. firm Mid rtcll .... •11 monl• PIY~ the DAILY PILCYI'. TIM follV'flllnp pertOM •r• dolfl9 Thi loU°""'no pw1011t u• doing lo"°""'"'· McCartney Dissents 3 Beatles Want b\lllnHS 11$: llu1I.-n : ......... fl.tf.ttllr..l'IOl!t't 11 ~ gi-ltll~:: HAMILTON.JONES COMPANY, 111344 · THl!-WAt:RUS.-'21'--ft--A ••. , ~91*1-WlllftOitDi ~; -'" Scotch PIM sir .... F-1•111 V•llty, LllQUl'lt Bffcll. !Ills city on lot Ill)' obll{llftonl lritUrrtdi...'!' C•lltornlt f2W • Sllrll'lft II. ltcrt'M, W ••mont Ave .. Shlrtty l!Mft Ill hll" -Mmt flt In - J-It_,. Kublll., 10092 Ct11Htl l.lllUM 9-fl, MIN Qf 1111 flnn '" Ori.,., Hunting~ Bffdl, C•llfoml• Gtry O'G•r•, l:UI Olff Drlll'I, lQUNI DATED AT ca.. Noffl, Clllfenllil, tNa O•vld Allen P~Jonott, 1'3-U koldl anc:ll. 20tt1 II-IV of OCtottw, 1972. Pint Slrffl, Founl•ln Vlllty, c.ntomla Thi• tlullneu 11 biting C'Ofldlldtd by • MarM 8'.lllodt .... Tnli bull-II being «lftilUCl«I by • v-11 pW!ntnhlp. Publlshtd Orlftlllf co.ti O.ltw Pi-. oentr•I p.9rtnllnlllp. Slwven II. Royw Ocioblr u. lml ~ J-A. Kubik Gtry 0'0.r• - Tiils 1lllfinlflt ftled wtltl !tie C-"t Thlt •1•*""'1 fllfld wlttl 1111 COlllll'f PUBUC NOTICE c1er1<. of Oranotc c-f'tl Oii: 0c1. '-1tn. o.r11 o1 0r.,.. c-tv on: Oct. " 1m, -----------:--81 8..vwly J. ~ ... OepllfT C-ty By .._,., J, MMIODJ:, ~IV Cwntv1· -Cl«k. C~. NOTICll OI' TaUITll'S SAL& • ... F*'1 T ...... n...m rr IS EASY to lei\ thal the Publlshecl Or•no-COllll b.s11y Piiot, '"11t!ilthMI 0rlfl9I CO.st O.lly Piiot. °" NO\IWl!tlll' .. mi. II 10=-~ son lttark Miller is the staid T p Off Tax 1"' _____ ,_ .. _._._,._ .. _,_._. _ .. _n ___ .,,_ • .,,_1"'._-__ ._._._,,_ .. _· ·-·-· _.,,, ___ ,,,. __ "_1~~:~.::.K)N~ =~c;.~t! one in the [amily. Patiently 0 ay PUBUC NOTICE PUBUC NOTICE "'*' 1t111 ,..,wani '° o...i °' 'frvt1 hi ls' , dolled Auglllt T, mo, ,_,... AUllUlt II, tolerant of s paren vanous 1--~;;;:;;;-;;;;;;-;:;;;;,;;;;;---l -------------11970, ii1 lM1. No. t0n. 111 boot m1.,.... moods. Miller is consistent FICTITIOUS •USIN .. SI PUau<: lltOTICI I(), ot Oflldll .. _.... lfl ~ oMm .. lhrou"'""'•t h. j H · NAMIE ITAT .. Ml!NT Notkll I _...,. ti-!Ml"" MIWPOl'f tne ~fT It_.., of Or•• C"""'Y• ~ 15 ro e. l s From ~-Se-..t--marking the openino of an ex· Thi following PlfWI! Is dolno bull-9Mdl P~ftll ~ °" 1lllnNY St•fl o1 ca11tom11. character a coo) headed but nu1<; n'lt....:OI M-e '" E I N~ 2.. 1m, wttt llcfd WILL S&LL AT PUBLIC AUCTION 1'0 ' -----ex-Beatles are tryi'ng hibit of his vast private art HOPCO ACOUSTICS. 1711S k Sk'f1)lortt .:::1c~ lo ~ En .... ronm.nttl HJGHEST BIDDER l"Olt CASH {ontllll compassionate youth, is very 1111_. llect' n. c1rc1e, 1rv1111. c1111. '2701 i'"PKI RtOOrtt wflkll IWIYI.., ttltod 111 1, HIM ot wit 1n 1twtu1 "*"" .,t 1111 well portrayed. ' to get Paal McCartney, the co JO Robert C••I Hook«. 16.Jl4 Mt. NI-COlll\lllCflOll wlltl """toltowlng Pf"O[tdlll UN'-d ,,.,..., 1t ..... North fl'tM := Several ti.mes dun'ng the fourth Beatle, to ogree to the An aide to Hammer said the ,""•, "",11111111 v, •..,u..,, c.ur. '2111 1. uw ,.....m11 ~kiltton Ho. 1m 9f to rtM °"'"" COIJl!fT CwrltlOutt-1·-• , . . . h s bu1 neu 1 no conc1uc1tc1 lr't •n Stlwn/Hunllnoton fat , '°' unit Mfllor tt 700 Ovit ClrlMr Dttw . gap. Son performed some ~ nocent college prank, spent a night in jail as a result <fnd has a roommate his parents dislike. The parents are up tight about it, and at the same time pick on one another's shortcomings to ease their tension . As the doctor's advice slow· ly sinks into their heads , the parents begin bickering, as well as reveal their tl'lle characters in more depth. play, the neighborhood pter payment of a $388,000 tax decision to exh1b1t his C{)I-1001 .. 1dua1. cltlwi• r.itl'Mllftt llorM 1oui1tc1 •t ~ 'fl· 1111 s1.1. 111 ttit c•tw ot s.nt• Mli, maid (Evelyn Bertolet) enters claim against Apple Corps, the lection in Russia was made Tll11 ~~i ~= ... W!lll ~ COuflty P'r:1:!• P~N.t1c1ttori No. 1m ot ;:.!:";!'·:.:: ~'·~': w"" .. 111:::::: = ·th 'd tr'des to harrass pany lormed by the pop last month when Hammer c•"'k of 0!'111111 COUflf\' Oii: 0c1oe.r 6. All~W•lltw corpor111on for "" c-. .......i of Tn.11t 1n ~ prop11r1y '5!\llltlt ht WI WI e s I com to M--w to work out ltn. WILLIAM E. ST JOHN, COUMTY 111vCHOll ot ' Ul'lll condomlnh;m •I ,I ... iald pi;.mtT ilrwJ Sl•l• 6'Krlbed 11: Rhoades about parking his group. came v........ CLERK, 11y r.1 ... r1w J. M.OOO.., Otputy, nwtl!H•t comer of wfthl""°" Sti'Mt Lot 11111 of TrKI Ho. int.•• per-.. black Bui.ck ·1n front ot the A comn•ny spokesman said what Is billed as a muliibillion-""'" lhcl Oc••11 Fl'Ollt W•lk In ctfltr•I t-rei:'Mltd 111 6oak so, pao11 n 10 "' 1"" ~ ll d deaf ·th th Publlt.hed Or•not COii! DellW Piiot, l•lbOll clu&l.,.. of Miit-'~ 1Mf11, In fht chureh across the street. Her John Lennon, George Harrison do ar tra e wt e 0c1ot1tr 10, 11, :u, 11, 1m 2n~n 3. T~''""" •nd F1r111 ""'-0 ct T~ ~c· ot ,.... C01J11tw R_.w of Mid ... A BOUNCY, sometimes too- hui-ried Rhodes pounces on bis wife for taking a plant from the woods, nurturing it in their home arxl turning it into a "housebroken shell of its former self." strident voice and aggressive and Ringo 8'arT are ' "most Soviet Union. PUBUC NOTICE ~!'~ICdc!w=.rv.~ ''!,.!CM ~~~-lllCI other tolTtll'IOfl '·• mannerisms give the t.ough anxious" to pay the money, * nortMMi.rtY c:omtr DI ~ •1Gnattori, 11 '"W• of 1tit rNI prGMff'I' In the end. of course, the parents realize bow dull, mid· dle<lass and normal they are. With the help of a friend and psychiatrist, rolled into one helpful catalyst., they shake themselves far enough out ot their practical , careful pattern of life to meet Soo half way. And by that time, Son has squared up a little and no longer seems as impossible lo wxlerstand. JN THE END, it i s unavoidable not to realize the parents, not the son, needed the psychiatrist's help. But now to the good part: the cast. William Spencer as the calm, reassuring psychiatrl!t- frlend is grnooth and con- vlnctng in his role. While calmly convincing the pom>ts, (Joanne Wolcott and Don Rhoades), their "psychic gears are rusty" a n d prescribes "something t o shake you up a bit," he i8 hap- pily reminiscent of Walter Matthau's many "Plaza Suite" scenes when he has a bit af urgent persuading to do. Miss Wolcott bitingly replies, defending her mother- ly role in a bruised, righteous manner: "(it is) well and thriving, and so are you." When she dutifully goes to stand by the son on trial [or his prank, the husband is determined to indulge himself and soon brings home Lela (Lori Furtner). ZESTY , NATIJllE-loving Lela is full of youthful prattle, to his delighl It is great fun to watch her scatterbrained, out- o f -cont r o I v i brations transtorm into gentility and placidity upon drinking Rhoades' brandy. IDS VEXATION at this unexpected change is suf- ficiently put across to the au- dience . This vexation is even underlined when Rhoades manages an ad·libbed "damn" when he accidentally over- turns the footstool with Le.la's cloak. However, his vigor at times comes across too strong. Miss Wolcott's best moments Ar~hie King 'Family' Keeps Top Slot NEW· YORK (AP) -CBS' "All In the Family" topped the Natklnal Television ratings.for the week ending Oct. 15, 8C- m'ding to rotlnfl figu"'9 made public here Monday. Jl's the leOODCl oonaecutlve week "Family" bu headed the Nlelaen lilt ol tolevtsion's 2tJ ~ted -and the third l1me tho Bunl<era have Jod lhe poet cdnce the start of the ...., fall ......, on to]cvillon. 'Ibree NBC lhon -"The Star-writer HOLLYWOOD (UPI) - IAmence Lud<!nl>lll W!U atar lo and Miio lhe .,,_.., for • ·~ Deqid BwW" /Or .\Be. TV. 'I Sunday Nigbt M y s t e r y Movit." "Walt Dlsnty" wKt "The Mondlly Night Movle1' - came In second. third and rourth, respecttvety, ro!lowed by ABC's "Marcus Welby " In the week ending Oct. 15. The week's 15 other wtoner1, ln orde; of their rankinJ, were: "Sanford and Son" (NBC) : "Bridget. L o v e 11 Berni<!:" (CBS); 11Adam·l2" (NBC); ''Hawaii Flve-0" (CBS)' "Flip Wilton" (NBC): "Cannon" (CBS); ''Tuesday Movie ol the Week" (ABC J; "Friday Nitlllt Movie" (CBS I; "Mary Tyler Moore" (CBS ): "Gtm1moke" (CBS); "Maude" (CBS); "lr<ll•ide'' (NBC !; "Sunday Night M o v le ' ' (ABC); "Here'a Lucy'' CC.BS! alid ""Tbunda1 Nf&hl M<nle," (CBSJ." ed FICTITtoVS 8USINRSI 8ouli'v•rd tftlf J•mborM ROid. ' 6'1g'lbed. •bow Is Pllfl'Ol"ltd 10 bt-1 Jll1t exterior need to penetrate but McCartney "bas not yet Jazz trumpeter Miles Davis NAMI STAT!'MSNT ... T1ll AMI Ml'p of' Trtd·1?'fl --,..~ Pl.n. COii• MilM. Clll,.,,,.., the familys' crazy moods. given his consent despite was in satisfactory condition Thi fclktwlng .,..._ 11 doing tiusi-JAK CMStrlldtort ~ fOf' • "ui:; . 119 Ull'ldtnlQntd Trwtw dltc:l•lrr-""" "Me and Thee," the first ed ,, ta! .th ... cOl'darNnh1m ba1lld -1hlrty n.11mry tor_, 1._rldr'o9l of tM.tlfelt repeat requests . . . at a New York hospi Wl . GOLDEN WEST CONSTltUCTION B•lboll &ou~1nl ... ,,.,.., of '.'!:J .,.., •l'ld otner COnllftOll dlllvMlllllr." .-.Auction of the comedy on M~-~ney broke with the t b k I and lher 1-CLEAN..,.P, m E. 1m. Cott• IMl.I. s1r11t, '°""'*t1' of u.s. •ut~ ........ .,., "-"' hlrll11. ........ \..-..,.:U l WO ro en egs 0 UI"' Calllomfil 92627, lftd _,.,..... of Wnhlne!Oll Stnltt 1(1 ""' WI• Wiii be IMlll, 11111 Wlltlotlt the West Coast, C{)ntinues for other three in 1J69, and there juries sustained when his Gery E. G••Y· ,,,, SNthorl, NtwPOrt clfttrtl ~ l~un z-1. .,, co-it or wtrrllllty, exiw-w lmlll51d. two more weekends, Fridays sports car ran into a traffic f:."~:i'!• ~1·conc111ct«1 ~ •n o!J.ihe ~1&:!.. ~ 1: ~=.,J!:' '°" =!: .... '1:!"·,...,P01..:e·;:::~n1: .,,r.; and Saturdays, at the Com· ( ) island on the West Side 11'1d1...iou.1. loc•toM 90Ultllr1W of fll.ord ROid .... ,.,..., d,..i. 1vm o1 1111 """' waw.s w MW · Cen dit · · nha Gery £. Gl'•W of MacArtlM' ~ ltld nortlMrty o..d of Trwt, lo-Wiii UO.nut. wtlh "'" muruty ter au onum on PEOPLE Highway m Ma ttan. T111t "•'-"' fllld w1111 ~ c-iy of E••'-"i. 0r1" 111 ...,_ view ..,., thllfeo11, .. prOOlldld 111 Mid ,.-.. l h e 0 range C o unt Y D~vls told a reporter .be ~,:iLr.z:rl!~"'J8':.'N.~T~ ~ l"lnl'llt AoP1le11t1on No. "3f °'! ~~~~ :;:-.::.:.:: Fairgrounds. ----------"~ decided to go [or a drive CLERK, by a.wrtw J. M-... °""""'' Entman-Koll Qlmplfty tor ""' ~ of ,.... Tn.llltt """ of "°" 1n111a ctMtt.I From Page JO OPERA ... humor, an obvious example to those great Italians who were to build on this splendid foun- dation. . A splendid cast that will take thls fine "Orontea" to tour other University or CalifonJa campuses between now and late November work- ed hard and diligently on this happy revival under the dirro- tlon of John Hall. who also provided the English transla· lion for the work. OUr own Judy Edgerly of UCI was there to C8JT)' the local nag with a splendid depiction of Silandra, the lady ol the court who becomes em- broiled in ooe of Alidoro's many situations but Ls recon- ciled in the pantomimic final scene to the constant Corindo. Miss Edgerly was ln fine voice Saturday nlght and an excellent <:Mice for one of the key roles ln "Orontea." JAN POPPER held a sure baton ln his direction of I.he UCLA Chamber Orchestra, Gail Dtxby gave us firtt class costume design and Archie Sharp get,, a special word of praise lrom this critic for one of the molt effective .ind charming Jobi or scenic design that we have aeen oo. an opera stage in 11WtJ a year. AU names are confined to the cast list In recognJUOn of a splendid team eltort. But a apecial tribute. 1f we may, fOT" Jayce Sweeney, who had tho often unenvlable task o f portr1y1ng Glaclnbl, t h e Jormtr Jady of Orontea'• court who hat to pose aa 1 male (lsmero) for much of the opera. SM had the hell voice on atagc Saturday night ind It wu rqreltJlble \hat we coold JJOt hear mort of It. - have been numerous disagreements among members or the group since then. * World chess champion Bob- by Fischer has accepted an in- vitation to play In Brazil, ln- c l u di n g a possiole simultaneous match against 20 of the country's best players, according to the JireSlden t of Sao Paulo's <l>ess Foundation. '!be federatioo bead, Orlan- do Paes, said that lnterna· tional Grandmaster J o s e Quinteros esked Fischer to come to Brazil. '!be date and lhe purse had not been seW.ed. * bec.uae he £eft restless and .._.,.l •lfUCllOll r of ~riling etrl9I •NI 11'11 DY Mid Dtld DI Trv1I Pt.lbllslwtd Or•""9 CGISI D111W l"llof. rtdlullop1M1I of -flrtnllll '"'*'1111 n. bentfld .,..;... Mid 0... Of that be doesn't know how the t>ctoblr J. 10. 11, 24, Im 1651-JJ 111 1111 ., .. llOUndld b'f c.nrr11 A~. Trvn "'"1ofor9 MY IMCUfld Mid °'".,...... •dent ed VI• Udo ilfld Mewport ley. 10 11'11 VlldlrtioMd • wrltlrM o.dwstlOll' 3CCl occurr . PUBLIC NOTICE Ctlpln of ""' •DOW: ref«ffltilcl Envl,_. of Olf rull tlld Dtmal'ld w sat. .,.. • His doctors say he will be in "*'1•1 lmptet 11-" will be Oii fllt In wrl"91'1 euNottc. " o.teutt 1nc1 E~on fl he •·-It I I A-t.~ tne Dlplrlmtnt DI' COlftmunlty ~ kll TM vndlrtlollld c.Vlld .. Id Notk11 t uu~p a severa w~. l'ICTITIOUS •USINl!IS '""" tor publlc lf!IPICflon. of D.t 1111 WMI EMdl lo "" to .. "I'm all right " Davis said NAME STATeMalllT Nolle• Is...,,..., turtlllr gl'lll'I ll'lilt wkt ~.!. 1 "" -:!' wl'llr• ""' '"'' ' • TM loUowlnQ ,..,_ 11 doing blnlneu ~ll'blk HMrJng w111 lit htld Oii ttlt 21'111 rec:..,._, II " "I'll just have to stop buying II' d•Y DI Novembef', lf72. 11 lM hollr of J::Jt pr'Olltl'fy ~!Id.Im th·-little cars " . J. c. INTERIORS, 21P AH• YI••• Or .. ~.M. 111 ~ Councll Cl'ltrnben of ,.... 0.11:,-· .. •• 11-·· ......,., · Nt'WPOl'I Be•ch, C•lltornl• ""°· NtwpOrt r!le.m CUY Kiii, 11 which lllTHll ..,_ * Jull1 A. Cel!tlolrll, m1 All• \1111• Dr •• ll!d pl.c. lllW •NI •II Pl1'-• lnllrattd ~T-... -~~ lklc.11, C:•llloml• nuo. m1w •W9ilr ilfld W hHrd ,,,.,.._. •• ""' nn • Prime Minister Edward Thi• tMll'lff• 11 btl"I c:ondvclld i.w '" J.ckl• HH!her, $ee:rwtMY '!.~~ ....... ~ • llldlvld1i11I. City of Ntwp0rt l'9cil ""''-' •••VN Heatia or Britain, a music Jvll• A. ct11blrtl Pl•nfllno commri11on ""' I er Who Plays the P'cano to Thi• 1!1llt'llftl f\1-.1 wltll 1119 County l"UOllll'oecl Ori1fl91 Cotti Delly Piiot, Publl&hld ~"""". ,,,.eout Dilly J:!.lof1 OV Cl"11 of Or•""9 C-"t Oii: Oclllbllf 2.. October ~. ltn ....n Octob« 16, -, .,_.71 relax attended a performance ltn, WILLIAM I!. ST JOHM, COUNTY f the' p . Orcheslr CLEl:K. b'f BrilrlW J. ~ Oepllfy. o ans a. ,. . .,.. PUBUC NOTICE PUBIJC NOTICE Cooductor Sir George Solti Pvbllil'led DrMIOI COii! D•llw Piiot, A -ADValtTISl!Mf.NT 1"011 llDI • leb ·~ .,_ 60lh "~hd Odobe<' 3, 10, u , 2'· Im ~n A·I. 111 ~~ of • 11-wtlon DI 1111 BOlrd of Dlndln of ...... ce rau;:u IU.::O Ul.l l • ay AN ~••Int Cal.Ill"' W11W OlllT'kl. ~ ..........., II. wn. dll"ldlnt "* after the perfonnance. Solli, a PUBUC NOTICE roo11ce. NOTICE 11 HE1tE1Y GrvEN 11111 1111 eo.n:t °' Dlf'lttron. of "'",. ,.,,,. Brito f I di to Moullt11r<1 CpullfT W•ltr OlllT'kl, wt~ rKt'I~ If 1111 offk9 or lt'I ~ n. ormer y was rec r FICTfTICKll 8USINISS Engir-, It. o. WOlllll•, ~11118 Engir-tlld ........... ., ~~ O[ the Covent Garden Opera. NAMa ITATllUl .. NT ltTMt, knit AN, C.lltomle tvfl1. 11111d bllb tor lvmllllll'lll •II ltbor. Heath J·o'··· Solti' and the Thi lollOW'lng ~ It doing IMJ-tt1111P011•tjol'h !Mfw111s Ind ilUd't _,... f.Clltti.. •• INIY ti. ,..,... ""' Ul1:U n · COflllnltltl'li lllerwlt!I Tr1bueo Olkl Trild No. f». W•llr S""""' liiic»I ••tfNlll& musicians in a glass of cham-. SAUCE METALS, P.O. lox H (21'MI (Prof«! No. WKALIF.at1 c...1rkt No. ~14'). • SNfottl'I ~). Hunflngloll aMCll, A4. Copill ol flll c.ntrld Docvmlrlb !MY 0t IMtll'llMll el W. tfflot pagne in honor of the occasion. cautornl• f'26.M. o1 1111 eonw1t1no E119ii-, toce11c1 et »t W•t 1'll1n:t '"'""· ""'' ""'° C.tlflnlll,, At 26, former campus * ervce K1mw. 11•1 s..1or111 1.1111. A w1 "' ~ p1em, .-clllc.11tm n °""" cent1iltt doc\llMfltt 1n1y • ..,..,... •Ll-1.-HUl'ltln;lan llld'I, Callforrlll t»M. •I 1111 t00We "*"llDMd off'IQ \IPOll P"'lf'M'f or tllM 1111' -' '""' IMV'IOltJ...~ radical David Harrll wUIJ.&3 '-llcbael Harrington author Thh ~ i. !Ming ~ by •11 "'""' AIM MOulll•lnt C-'Y w1iw Dtttrkt. T...,. vr111 0t no rWllf • -today's st"•~ts may look 11 ' llldlvl"""I rM\11'1'1 ol well docvt'Mllh INI r""1nt It 1111 ,..qvll'tlll, l.IUal or "'Mle Qther America " a 11Nc. IC.Inlet COplll of Ille S!Mldolt'll $plrCKICetloftt, 11\1 .. Md c:ofM of P'ullllt ~ upon him as historical figure. book that helped to k' the Thi• 1!1IWMlll "'" WUll ~ Cfllllt'( lrnd AIMC1111o!w rlf«red 10 II\ llllM pl-. Md •Ptelflc.lloftt 911111 -tlOtllkMll When l ( . turned to Spat CIM of Orll'IO" Qunty ., OCIOtltf' II. ~ PIWPICI ..... tl'6clln '""" 111'1 Mli.tltn lllwlOf ti !Mii' -..,.._ arrLS re federal anti-poverty crusade im wrm•m E. st Jotin. COuntV Cltl'll. M l!tdl bid t11tt1 bl midi 111 ~ "'"" """" Mt ~ In stanlord University to speak 11a· ' -....,~ J ~ Deputy. lnforlnlt\oll ror 81d!Mn, Ind w1111 M C'Olllidlf'ltlOll '° weft Pl'1'Vltloll of tM resigned as COC 1nnan of the vr '' ' ' .. ..-Cllllllrld dOCVMlfll'I. 1111 Pl'lnt and .-c:lfk.ltlonl, lf'llll ell .ecllNnd• Mttllll ,,..... to the class of 1976, the rormer Socialist Psrty. Democratic Pvbll•l'*I Dr•• COl•t o.ny •11o1. •y modt11c.11on1 or 1tttlf'Pl't"at1on1 of 1111 .. ., clocvll'Mltl. ......... Student ........ -!dent drew ""tllbllf 1T :u s1 •lld Mowinblr 1 A"4, l!tdl bid """ 11e IT\Me on m.e fOt'ln •1111 111 ..,. rNnMr ,,.,_ ,,.,,.,, r ..... • Sociali!t Federation. 'ifn · ' 21M-rl 111 1t1t contrld cloculnlnh. •nd •u r.. '""'""'1111d 0y • nrtttlld 0r tfthMn ooly 150 freshmen out of a dllck cw 11111 bond 10r "°' ._. "''11 t111 1101 .-c.,, • "" tl'l'lfllrnt ., the .... f ~. 01JO 1N111 •wablt N ,.,,,_ ....,. MoulllfllM COUllty W•lll' C*lrlct, Ol'MOf Ctrlll'llY, class O &UU\lt 1, . c1n10mi.. •l'ld \111111 bl tiled 111 • -led .,,..,.... w1111 tilt a,.1_ ., ~ "[ sunnnouo they've forgotten TEMPORARY ROAD 0111r1t1 at hit ottlc• locllld •t aot W•t Third ltrtrll1-Stllt• AN, c1111W11~• ""'' ,.,,...~ lllN>rl ll'lt llollr or ,,. PM ,,IT), ... _..,. .. lrn, II wllldl lime bldl wu me somewhat. t probably 0t OCMfltod In ll'IO!lc w ..-•IOUll by 11w E1191-of "" eotrd or ma•e -ae•-to the Stan-tarila ....,. Moullltlnt C0!,11'1ty W•t« Olllrkt, Or•fllll COVl\ty, C•llfot'lllt. t • •~• -CLOSURE ANNOUNCEMENT "" 1~ fMllt..,_. dl«k tr lllct '*"' WH bt l lvtll •• ' ..,.rt11Mi1 ford frtshmen as oomeone "'' .,. ._ wm .,.w •~ "" '""'"" .,. "'m"" "' '"'""' -we•• h·istonc' al _ --David llaJTls "" ti"* Mfllnttt• •t•ltd " "" ... "' 11 "*" to 111"" •lld 111 -" ..,_, MOC: or 1•11111'11 lo dD to WOl'lll\ tlfl 00) CS.YI DI lloflat ol IUCl'I •w.rd, 1'19 ~ f//f of the draft protest days four JamborH Road betwHn e ••• Co••• Hlghw•y llld llOl'ldAJ.* "U'11:~ ::t. .,..~e:~:.;"'::. ""~·In ,... ...,.. "' iMI or five yoars. ~." said Har-. •nd B•yai-'-Drive wilt •-c'--·• ovom'·ht Wed-lnglftflr •t"" iim."',.,,. op1111M ,,.1,~blt ""' bldclW !NY wtthd,... rls. a leading camnn• anUmar ..... P9 tv..u rv 1111 b111 tor • period of t11Jrty tJOJ .t.111 •• h cs.i. .,. 10r "" OC111111tt "*'-'· ,_ d I rtl I 9 ·-of lo I ,,... The lllCcmtf\11 bJdMt'. tlrrlu!lllMM.lll'Y Wllll ..... •IQlllorl of ffrlf activist in the 1980'•· Ml •Y, • • ng II p .m . u.CllUM • w• r m• n """"'*''· Wiii bt r9Qllll'tlll to "'""""' • ....,,. .... lnlllr'lill bOlll!ll In WI .,..,., H-....iA __. 20 months In con-lion profoct. Ml!l'I to tHty ,,., Pll'<:llll of ftll tal'1T'Kt Pl'ke. • • flttllfvl ~11....c1 llMI -.a rv. ~,. lfl 111 M*rllll ..... I to ... ~~(~)"" llMI COlllrKI pr1Qi, Whld'I .... prbon for ttl\mlng to enter the ,,, ll'OI'• MIY ...,..... 111 1ntonr11M011 '°'" e111c11n 111C1 G1nw11 Pnrtlllotll. found ol In orcMr to mlnimln tM Inconvenience to mo-,,..,, TM tuC"tat!\11 .._ ... .in r.. ~·• to PNCure • PNNll!i Army and wu a er 1111urence. l'lflkf'I tNwtnC• 11 "'°" ~••If MKt!blif 1n .,. 111tDnM11o11 .., the ~ ant t d r a.ft torl1t1 who normally UM the 1t,...t, w. h11ve 111ked llddtrl _, 0-.1 ......,. ..... M . H911Ui 11 l\tf"llW 01-111111 pvrMllftf to tM Sl1tvtee crf 9"I ..... ~. Re Wll married to our 1ubcontrador 1 Kennedy Plpollne, tnc.., to work or c.111w111a1 w *81 11w .,...... •ootlolblt, "" IMn:t of Dlratln • ...... ' J n. • IMO ~·t Alie "'-1111t1 ~ly Waflr Dlttrld, IWll ilt(lftlllr\M "" """'" ......... •i.Jl&er OID ~ei m -· """' th-....., the ni..a.t and ...--1-1 tho i-• by 6 a m r11• ef ...,. •"'" """"' 111111 r1tn tor r.e-1 ... , ... ,.. ""' """""" ....,._ 111 ""i the couolc eepanted after his .__.. .... ._.. .. p .. • ... • • 11c..11,., 1n w11klll 11111 wcwa-" 10.,.. ,.._., .... ,.. w:ll.-triltt., w.. Olf ...,.,,... parole. Thursday, or ~ ~to 1111Cvi. ""' CIOfltrlK'I wllldl wi11 • .... ,.... "filili-. * Th• main line to be tapped rvn1 under Jam- Dr. Armand Hammer, an bor .. , MCe11ltatlng temporary closu,.. of the American magnate who lived atrMt •nd dlv•r•lon of traffic to Bayside OrJve. In Russia and kMw Lenin,. •-by presented a $1 mll.Uoq Goya W• '"""' that the•• arrang1ment1, authoriad portr1lt to Le a Jn Ir 1d •1 city permit, wlll not prove too troubletom• to our HermJtage Mu&eUm. n•lgh~r1, whaM und9r1tandlng 11 V•r/ much •Po Hammer, 74 -year·old t tod ROD JENSEN chalnnan or Occldontal proc • ' Prefilct •••• , .......... Petroleum Corp., made thellL.•••••••••••~·~ ,~,,.,:.~1n<;::•~C~·;~:•-r:. prse:ntaUon at a ceremony I ~ Cllllf\11 Miider. TM ~•lllnl r.lfil t6 dtt9n'lllfled lfl " ttl ..... ; ICMIDULll O" PllllVA!llN• llATU 01" WMlll AlllO APPlll.NTIC:ll ICHIOUt.a KHllDULll Of' ... aVAILINO aATlf 0, WMIS TrlM or oc.a.,."'8 ... I I I I I \ ' ' ' I Lag1111a Beat!h Ted•Y'• ..... , EDITION ' ~L 65, NO. 298, 4 SECTIONS, 50 PAGES J ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA TUESDAY, OCTOBER 24, 1972 TEN CENTS -• • ·rv1ne o iceman DAILY l"ILOT ll•ff l'Mt9 Prone Man Leaps Up, Fires Shot By ARTHUR R. VINSEL Of ... Dllt't ...... ''"' ... A massive, overnight manhunt co~ tinued today for a gunman who lured an Irvine policeman into an ambush on a lonely country road, shot him, then Oed into a foggy cornfield and escaped. Pa'.trolfllan Stephen T. Nash, 23, was hit in the face by a bullet fnfgment in the dramatic 11:10 p.m. confrontation as the slug shattered his squad car's windshield. He gunned lbe engine at the last sec- ond in a desperate attempt to nm down his would-be killer when the apparently injured man lying on the pavement leaped up into a crouch.and took aim. SIUJmed by the wound, ho swerved and spun the car arow;td so h!! coulc;I tak;e cover behind its door, while the gunman daried-fnto-tbe-fleld-on-..JellreM!oad;-200 yards south of Barranca Road. LAGUNA BEACH FIREMEN WORK TO SAVE $145~ CRESCENT BAY HOME .AND EURNISHINGS DenH Smoke But Fire Was Confined to Living Room of Oceanfront Home; No One Was lniured Officer Nash said the man sprinted for a windbreak of eucalyptus trees and a creekbed as he himaeU crawled into the field combat-style. Fearing he would be caught in a sec- ondary ambush-according In h1I descrip- tion of bow be w" lured into a trap - the wounded officer waited for rein-.•: i/,i~haw Handed it'ong B,acking FTom Pte3iJ.ent J. Hinshaw bas rteel'fl!d a ~ endortement from President ~ Nb<IXI In his campaign for elec- lliij' In Congress from Orange County'• 11111. District. A leller· from the President received Monday read: "bear' Andy. As you near the end or wj.at I knew must have been an arduous and challenging campaign I want to take tifio opportunity In wish you the best on NOV. 7. _...America need,, your d e d i c a t e d iii'dersh;p In the nut Congress. With 1'l!ll help we can make unprecedentld proifeas toward the great goals of obr new American majority -peace at ._ and abroad for generatlom In ~ a new prosperity without war and ~ lnfiatton and the opportunity for Odty American In see the Amerkan drPm come true in his own life. ... J loot forward to working w:ith you in .king the next four years among the ¥i;I· In America's histroy. Sincerely, i ) Richard Nb<on." Orange County assessor ~ toe! Incumbent Rep. Jobn Schmltz in une primary said today, "I am very pldlied with President Nb<nn's en- clcJliMVtollt and his. desire In work with '.mt'• tii. ,• 'asbington for the next rour ~· ;·01, too, am eager tor the start of m'- Jtitjlattve career as Orange County s • rOD capitol hill. I believe that by ~netlentJ(lll to the job, bard work, tMm .. play and Ute cooperation of the ~admlnlstratlon that I wtll make a WQrtllwblle contribution." :1fllmbaw said h& ll0811• In be "Orange ~·s besl congressman In history •. 'l'lie President's support and assistance wl1 give me a good start Inward that pl!." lftnlhaw11 o~t in the Nov. 7 elec- tldn 11 'Democtat Jobn Black, a Newport Bt&ch attorney. ' I"> .lfir Crew Finds ' .Third Cobra ,_ :: SAN f!WICISCO (AP) -A " deldly live.foot king oobra bu been found by Trani World Alrll ... trellhl crewmen 11 San Francllco · lntematlollli Airport, an alrfloe1 • IJ>OUsmllnAya. •-'1be wk., dllco~ered lato Mon· day Jllaht. wu the thlrcl cobra round' at San Francilco am Los Angel .. Inlernatlonal elrports si!IC1! 1 ahlpment of flowon frnm Thailand arrived over lbe weekend, 'l'W A spoke11nan JelT)' Colley uld. '1be first cobra was found Satur· day· night alter TWA Olghl 754 ar- 1 '• r!Yed In Los ... .,.1 ... ' ' Fire Destroys Paintings . ' ' forcements ~ of go~ after the gunman. Fellow officers ln squad cars MTived within five-minutes to initiate a manhunt that evotlllMllj .~ an M!DJ of-<11· fioers troill 4flllr polite agenciel. • ' 11al?olqlan Nllll lll1eled ..,...ltorl on At Cres.cent Bay ·nouse wbal ... ...., ol I_.... pool let up under cliiocfim ol Plln>I Sgt. Larry Bersch ~the amhuh ocene. Fire did fll,000 damage and destroyed several original oil paintings in a $145,000 Crescent Bay oceanfront home Monday afternoon. Laguna Beach firemen believe the fire may have been started by a cigarette burning in a soCa. No one was Injured in the blaze. Fire was confined to the living room of the exclusive home, which was unoc- cupied at the time. It is owned by Richard Ragan of Burbank, Capt. For- rest John.son said. Hagan's son and a friend had been in He was later treated at c.osta Mesa . the structure painting and. fixing it up, _ Memorial Hospital for a superficial Johnson said. . gunshot wound on the left cheek and In addition to the paintings, as yet not released .. identified, the fire destroyed several Investigating officers were cautious large pieces of furniture and smoke about saying it was dtflnltely a rigged damage spread throughout the house. trap this morning, ·but citcumltaDces Jeff. Intense heat charred the structure most with little doubt. floor and burned through living room Officer Nash said he was parted beside c.irpeting. Ten Laguna Beach firemen Jeffrey ROed writing a routine report by responded to the call placed by Hagan's fiashlight when a car carrying two very son who had first attempted 00 quell the cleancut young men pulled up. blaze with a garden hose. The gunman him8elf was de9Cribed as baving long blaclt hair, a full, busby Laguna Council to Get Ocean Property Goah beard and wearing a leather jacket over a T-shirt and blue denim jeans. "A biker-type," one officer remarked today, blnttng outlaw motoreyde gang tactics. Officer Nash said the two men told him they were en route to telephone police about someone in the roadway who ap- peared to be ini'l'ed or perbal>' ill. He sped to the scene, whett his headlights Uluminatod the supposed vic- tim, lying face down, his cheek against the asphalt J>$Vement and both bands hidden beneath bis chest. Proposed goals for ocean front prop- erty betw een Laguna Avenue and Sleepy Hollow Lane will be studied and may be enacted during a special meeting of the Laguna Beach City Council at 7:30 p.m. Wednesday at City Hall chambers. The council will take a look at pro- posals of the c.oastal Liaison Committee which include suggestions for develop- ment of a "Ports of Call" area atop the bluffs of lbe properly. The }erritory covered by the report in- cludes now vacant land owned by Upland Industries, a subsldJar.y of 'Union Pacific. William Casteel, Former Manager Of Hotel, Dies Private funeral services will be held for William T. Casteel. I o n g t i m e manager of the former Hotel de la Costa on Laguna Beach 's Boardwalk, who died early loday ln TwentynJne Palms, follow· Ing a long Illness. He was 81. Mr. Cesteel, wbo hnd mai!e his home In the desert community since leaving . Laguna In 111611, 11 survived by his w-. Mary ; a son, Leonard of South Pasadena ; aro by lbrte grandcblldren end one great grandcblld. · 1 • A real .. tata bcoker he came In Laguna In 1948 and' was· \nanager of lbe beachfront properties of Consolidated Mortgage ComPtlny, which Included the Hotel de la Costa, for the nat 11 years, . making hQ home at lbe hotel which he and h1I wile operated. The old hotel aod adjacent structures were demolished following the city's purchase of the beacltlront Jor ill Main &a.ch Part development. s_. Family Mortuary in· Bannlnil IS In charge ol ~ arrancements. ' Upland has in the past proposed COl\9 struction of a condominium and later suggeste(l that a hotel complex could be constructed there. If goals are enacted by the . Ci.ty Coun- cil, city staff would be required to act within those policies. Jn formulating a specific plan for the area. ·A specific plan is comparable to r.on- ing, except that it is drawn up specifically for a particular piece of property. Upland in the past has said that the corporation "cou1d not live with" pnr posals in the Liaison Committee report. "lt IS my desire and-I believe thal of the rest of th'e cOuncll, not to be exces- slvety' hard-nosed, but to Produce abso- lutely the best development on that prop- erty as our prerogatives ·permit," said Cllarltoo Boyd, Laguna Beach mayor. '1Tbe tendency in tbe •past has been to ~See COAST, Page Z) Suddenly, O!lie<\r Nash said, the man jumped lnln a crnuch clutclilni a long- barreled, small caliber revolver in typical combat style and drawing a bead at his head. Lunging sideways almost too late -he tried to run over the man as be fired. He was never able to get off a shotgun blast due to the delay In getting lbe weapon out of Its bracket wbile crouched below lbe cluhhoard defensively. By the ttme be freed It, the assailant was too far away. His frantic radio broadcast of a C.ode 999 -officer needs help -brought police bellcopters frnm both Costa ' Mesa and Newport Beach, but growing ground log In lbe area hid lblir quarry. O!licen from both dttea, piu• Orange (See AMBUSH, Pqe I) Dasehall!'s Loss Jackie Robinson Succumbs at 53 STAMFORD, COOn. (AP) -Jackie Roblnlon, who broke major league bueball's racial barrier with lbe old llrooklyn Dodgers In IM7 and WfSll on In stardom and a place In the Hall ol Fame, died loday ol wbat h1I doclnr detcribed as heart di.9ease. • HaU·bllnded by diabetes, the Sl-year .. Jd, Robtnson lllffered an early mom- infl attack at his pooh bome in Ibis suburb ol New York City and died at 7:10 a.m. at a lfoopttal. (See story, Paae II) He had betii b<!rlor<d nnly 10 days earlier during the 1112 World Serieo at Cincinnati wben a oelloot crowd at Rlverfrnnl Stadhun applauded lbe alb annlvenary ol his debut in Brooklyn. Robinson'• hair was whlta, hll eyes almost gone and hit heart llCllred by a 1968 attack. This curbed Robinson's succeaful busineN car.er duritta the pa.at rew years. • ~· He could hardly ... In walk wben attendina the hlner&I In April ol lonner Dodger, teammato 011 Hodges. .. Stlll, death came u 1 llhock 14 lbe \>'IOblll wotld. ·us -cREEir-SC-AllREOllY--BUtl:ET;-OFFICElrNASFrTEttS-STORY-- Gunman Springs Trap at Rural Intersection in Irvine Jury Due Case Niguel Trial Nears Final Stage 1 By 'FiiEDEJµCK SCHOEMEllL .. ',:,., .. ~.,........ . LOS ANGEU:S -Evidence In the trial ol 1bJee Ohio men <l>araed with the multknlllicn Laguna lfiguel b a n k burglary 11 upected In be submitted to a federal 'jury late today following firial arguments· by defense and prosecution attomey1. ' Today's ~ings . were dominated by attempts from attorney Victor Sherman, representing Amil l):in.sio, to impeach the testimonies of two key pros-- eCl..ltion witnesses. However both Richard Gabriel and Earl Dawson reitf!r:ated their previous statements to the court. Gabriel last week testified that Dinslo told him of his role ln the $5 million burglary while the two men were in Los Angeles County JaU. Dawson f.reviously testified that defen- dant Char es Mulligan admitted In his part In tbO crime When the two men met in a Tustin bAr earJy in June. FbW •rguments from attome)'J were scheduled early this aftemoCll lollow<!d by instructions from U.S. District Court Judge William "M>tl" Byrne Jr. In jurors. The jury will then retire to chambers to weigh the evidence and testimony against lbe three suspects charged with C.. crime considered la be the largest bank burglary In law enforcement history. In a related action early this morning, Byrne denied a motion that charces be dismissed against defendant Philip S. Chrislnpher. Similar requests from a t t o r n e Y s representing Dinsio and Mulligan were denied Friday. Oemente Police Arrest Man-'I Just l\.illed Guy' · By JOHN VALTERZA Of .. n.lfY ,.lllf Stiff San Clemente PoUce arrested a drifter with bloodstains on his clot.hea early ~ day on suspicion of murder after the transient approached MPs at the Chrls-- tlanitos Gate and assertedly said, .. just killed a guy." Ninety minutes later, officers being directed by the lllllpecl found the victim of the sbootlnc. The · body ol a Long Beach Navy man was fouod beside the San Diego Freeway a few feet Inside the southerly city lll'nill or Carlsbad. At that point, local officeri turned Jerry William Manning, 27, over to Carls- bad detectives. 'l1le cue began at 3:45 a.m. when Manning ap~ the MPs . The Military poltce then called locaf officers. San Clemente Police Lt. Robert Mason uld Manning led offlcers In a late-model auto parked at the Basilone Road off. ramp of the Freeway. Bloodstains were found on the front 1e1t'1 pusengar tide. On lbe floorboanl lbe· officers lound a Laguna Cab Firm Loses Receipts Laguna Buch'• Courtesy Ceb com- pany was 0011fart..d of $ZSO llken Jrom 1 locked safe . and metal cablnot In the co~ omce eal1y Monday. Police Aid at the tlmo ol lbe lbeft, the driver bad been ealied 1rom the olfke at !?S Broadway la plU up I fare. Wben be -med be round that the louvertd win- dows bad been removed and tbe flcor ure wu open. Police said the Ale bad not been fore· ed. Recolptz or 1110 had been taken from I~ and llO taken from the mttal cabinet: • • \ \ spent .32-callber cartridge. Mason said the next phase lasted about an hour as the "cooperative" suspect assertedly led officers southward in the quest for the body. .. The search ehl!ed east of the freeway near the-Poinsettia A venue overpass in Carlsbad. The Jdentity of the victim remained a mystery early today. He died from a single _,.,.. to the bead . l!pokesmen f0< the Cerllbad police department' would say nothing about the crime, insisting that all available person. nel· on the small force were at the (Ste DJUn'ER, Ptge Z) ' Weather Hazy sunshine 11 on the agenda through Wednesday, a=rding 14 the weatherlady; wtth hlgbs aloeg the c;out In the low.~ rising to 80 Inland. Lowa lnnlght 53. INsmJ.: TODAY Tht atmo.IJ)httt ii, restrained jovlallty for re)>OT'ltt• aboord t h t JI~ c:cmptdgn alr-p-. Wfi..,.. oee llttf• ch<mce ot his llliftfthi{I, bul the fat~d candld41< mafntalna hoJ><. See ttor)/ Oft Poge 9. • ' • DAil\' PILOT UI FURNITURE REMOVED-Capt. Eugene D'lsabella, left, and fireman in smoke mask remove furnishings during Monday afternoon Laguna Beach blaze. It \\1as believed to have been started by a cigarette in a sofa. Damage included the loss of original oil paintings. Two Programs to Discuss Watson Tax Amendme11t The pros and cons of Proposition It the Watson tax amendment , will be aired in t""·o separate programs in Laguna Beach Thursday. An informatioo meeting requested by employes or the school district, but open to the public, will be held at 3:30 p.m. in the high school auditorium. A representative of the Realty Board, supporting the measure, and a spokesman for the sc hool district. :speak· ing in opposition,, each wi/J have 20 minfites to present arguments, wittl a 21). minute question and answer period following. "At 7:30 p.m. in city hall council chambers, the Laguna Coordinating Council will sponsor a Proposition 14 forum . Debating the issue will be rerresen- tatives of the Los Angeles office o Philip Watson, author in the proposition and of Californians Against Higher Taxes, along with Orange County Transit Dislrict manager Gordon • ' P e t e ' ' Fielding. Following the debate, questions will be invited from lhe public and fro m n!presentatives of such interested civic groups in the City Council. Laguna Beach • Laguna Beach Offers Second Guitar Series A second series of guitar lessons for both beglMers and advanced students will be sponsored by the Laguna Beach Recreation Department beginning Nov . 8. The classes, taught by Trish Clark, will meet on Wednesday nights with begin· ners scheduled et 7:30 p.m. a nd ad · vaoced students at 8:30 p.m. Registra- tion for the five-week se ries is S5. Classes will be held al the Recreation Depart- ment, 175 N. Coast Highway. OU.HG! COAST .. DAILY PILOT 'Tl'le °"'"99 CN1I OiltllY PILOT, wlftl ""'di h anllllt* tl'le H-PrMt. 1' publbMll tty ""°""""' c .. ,, l'Wlllhlftt Ctmperl'I'. ~ rwr. 9dlllonl •111 P\1111~""1, Moncll'I' ti'lf'ou?PI Frld1y, IOI' Col11 Mtll, ,.IWPOrt INcll, H ... t111111h:ln !lffdl.IFDVflfllll V1llty, LIOll'll INdl, lrvlM/S9ddllllllct 111d Sll'I C1-l1/ S111 J11111 C1plt1r1no. A slnvl• r19looo1I i.IHJol'I It pubi11Pled S.1111"11•'1'1 .,_ $wo;11.,., TM "1ne"'91 Pllbllthlno pltnl II 11 'XI Wftt 81'1' Simi, Cotl• M-, C1lllw11l1, '!6H. Rolt1rt N. W11d Pr•ld911t Ind Pllblliller J1c\-l . C11rl1y Vkt h_..,, Mid ~I Ml~ Tho"''' Ktt\'il ' EdflW Them•• A. M11Ppt.l111 ""'-''"' a111tor Ch1rf11 H. i,.,, ._icli•r• I . Nill AllldMll Mllllollfll l6110!"1 .__,,_ JJJ f.r11t A Y111111 M1l h11t A,4;,,,,I r.o. 1011 •••• tJ6SJ: ..... _ CMtll ¥-: D """"' 1•'1' Slnllt t.tcft: »11 ,...._. ...,...,.,... ...... l9dl~ 17'7$ ·~ ...,... .... .. Jiii Hof1ll I.I C~ 111•1 T" ...... C714J '4! ... ltt ~ ... ""'"" .... '42·1171 ................ p.,.,.,.,.....l , ... , ..... , .... ,4 •• ~t. 1m. ~ CO..! ~ ... °""""""' No '*"' 110!'l11, l""°'lf'tt!Ml. ........ INlfll" or ld\'WI~ lw* ""' .. ,.,..td w1ftw1Jt ..at• ,... ---., °""'""' ....... -""I..::::'" .. w • , .... -<•.....,.,..... lllfllllt Irr •ti""*' DM -'fll'l'J -!'Mii 11.1t. t!IOl'ltlll'll "'"...., tlnltMI.._ ltM rl'llll'ltll!r. I Unified School District, Laguna Beach Taxpayers Association, League o f Women Voters, Chamber of c.ommerce and Board of Realtors. Persons attending the meeting also will be able to oblalli copies of the League of Women Voters' analysis of all prop- ositions appearing on the Nov. 7 ballot. From Pagel COAST ... take of( and hope for the best," Mayor Boyd aaid, pointing oul that excesses have now amde prior planning e1Lremely important. "Our concern is centered around the necessity of a plan and one that Lis mutually put together. The wbOle purpose is to see that all of these 1 prob- lems are explored in the beginning. This hasn't happened in the past. "It is not our intent to cause bard.ship, just for the sake of doing so," Mayor Boyd said. Goals suggested by the committee have been recommended for council approval by the planning commission. Specifically recommended in the study is a coastal tourist corridor of shops, restaurants, hotels and entertainment spots. The committee suggest.! that e1isting densities unde r the strip--roned lands not be increased but stated that as permitted under present ronlng, hotel use of up to 200 roOms would be acceptable. "Permanent residential uses art not considered compatible with the goals of the General Plan," the report states. Train Kills 5, Crashes Again LIMA, Ohto (AP) -Four hours after a . Penn Central train crashed into a car near here, killing a woman and her four young daughters, it smashed Into a steel truck at a crossing at Monroeville, Ind. Rail officials said no one was Injured jn the second mishap. Engineer Arthur Lee •terron said Mon-- day be sounded his horn when he saw the car pull on to the tracks ahead of him near Lima, but told auUlOr\ties it didn't stop. The engi ne crashed into the car end carried it a half mile down the tr11ck1. In the wreckage workers found the bodle8 of Sylvia M. Garcia, 27, of Cridersville, Ohio. and four daughters, Christine, 7,., Ve ronica, 6, Angella. 3, and Rebecca, 1 months. TOPLESS SHOW FIGHTS FOR LIFE CHARLOTTE, N.C. (AP) -Fifty topl.., dancm pttformed hm lo n !H money for a lawsuit aa:alnsl a ctty ordinance batlnlng such dancina. The ordinance 1oet Into effect Nov. I. They pttformed tlnalY and 1n """"' Monday nlslbt at one of tho 14 topleu nl1btclubl tn town. A atandln1-rool1><llllJ crowd of 800 paid '3 apl.... A - 1uch Topi.,. Review II plannod nut Monday. ' Thieu Cites Cease-fire Con,ditions ,. By the A1!0dated Pftu President Nguyen Van Thieu Aid tonight in Saigon the C.Ommunist side has requested a cease--fire and that one could come "in the near future" -but only If North Vietnam wlthdraw1 all its troops. Once that is done, Thieu said In a two- hour broadcast, hiJ government would be ready to discus3 a political eetUement with tho Communllt·led Nallooal Ubera- tioo Froot, known as the Viet Con,. No outside party could make decisions determining South Vietnam's future, be saiC:. Thieu declared no one has a right to impose a peace settlement <n South Viet· oam and restated bis opposition to a tripartite coalition government as sought by the C:Ommunist aide. He declared that no fonnal agreements were reached lo bis flve days of talks with President Nixon's natkmal security adviser, Henry A. Kissinger. He said the talks were e1ploratory and "nothing was signed." In what wu eaenUally 1 reiteration of his government's long·standing positk>n oo an Indochina settlement, Thieu said the cease-fire would bave to cover Cam· bodia and Laos as well as South Viet- """'· and be guaranteed by International supervision. "A cease-fire may take place in the near future because the C.Ommunlsts nave requested it," be continued. "'Ibe Communists agreed to, and even beg for a cease-fire because they are milltarily losing." He said be ailed the United Stales to "as.It the Communists what they want" and said South Vietnam would reserve its own final decisions OD ttl fUture. Meanwhile, the White -said today "some progress baa been made at achieving a 11<11otjated 1ettlemml of the Vietnam coofilct," but ~ to aive _ any support for the ~l Pre9o ·-aecrelarj-Rooald L. Ziegler reported the progress following an boul" long meeting In W asblngtoo between President NiXon, Secretary of State William P. Rogers and Kissinger, who returned Monday nlgbt. Ziegler turned back r.peated attempts by newmien to draw out elaboration on hi& statement. He spedflcally ..ru.ed lo comment on the !p<eCb today by Thieu charging North VletDamese proposals !or a settlement are fil.di.sgulled attempts to undermine hl!I eovemment. Money Deficits By Republicans, Democrats Told WASHINGTON (AP) -The Flnanct Committee lo Re-elect the President bas . spent more than $22.5 million since April and Is lllgbUy In the red going Into the f~al two weeks of the presidential cam-- palgn, reports filed today allow. The campaign of the Democratic presidential can d l d 1 t e , George McGovern, also ii running In the ftd but by a much heftier margin of about $2.15 million. The campaign balances are ..rlected In reports lo the General Accounting Offlce, required under a federal electlona law that went into effect April 7. Althougli due Monday, covering the period Sep. 1 through Oct. II, oome reports apparenUy were delayed by the Veterans Day Holiday and not all are in. However, the Daglhip committee for PresJdent Nl1on -the Finance Com- mittee to Reelect the Prealdent -and McGovern For President, Inc. were recelved on time altbougb only balances and not contributors 1Vere available early today for McGovern. Nixon's finaoce committee reported contributloos, loans and tranafm from numerou.1 satellite committees of $20.0 mllllon since April 7, The Nllon people ralled mono than 110 mlllioo· In the pre-April 7 period but, sa!'lnl they woold abide by the letter of the law, have declined lo dlsclo!e where theJ got Jt or bow tbe:J spent It. The Nlzm repon lllls ezpendltun1 since April 7 or 12u m11U<11. The com- mittee llld It bad $514,11115 In cash on band u of Oct. 18; lt wu oftd an even II m11U<11 u of that dale, and bad debts or ILi million. In the perlnd Sept. I lo Oct. II, the report of the commlttee Aid, It oollected about $t million and spent some $9.5 million. This ·compares with sa.9 million that the McGovern committee reports raiJloC -and It.OS mlllioo It reports spending In the Sept. I-Oct. II ·period. McGovern'• top committee reports having raised $13.4 million ; says it Is short 1107,:IOf cash on band: II owed 1125,027, and has debts of IUS million. It wu not lmmedlately clear 1Vbether the ovtNll Mc:Goftrn fipr<I mer lo contribullom llld expenditures golna back lo April 7 or lo the llnt of the year. They m lltted under a column titted ''calendar year IO data.'' Crochet Class Set An advanco clw In crocl1et will be taupt by MiJtnoo Coltl!'C'°ft during the Laguna lleacli n.matfoii ~nt'1 lsll program In needlewortt.arls. '"'-one-hour ctau wll1 begin at t 1.m. Friday and run for four aucceulve Fridays in the Rec:rutlon Bulldlng, 171 N. Cout Hipwsy. Fee II IS. DAILY P'ILOT ,,.., ...... OFFICER NASH SHOWS FIRING STANCE USED BY ASSAILANT In lrvlne, tho Mon Lyl"tl In tho Road Suddenly Conio Up Shooting Frot11Pqel AMBUSH ... County Sherill's deputies, the California Highway P8trol and Irvine Ranch securi- ty deputies reponded lo the manbunL Due lo difficulty In covering the dark, IOl!"lhrouded larmland, Garden Grove policemen Bill Compton and Larry Davis with tbelr scent-.trackil)g d!>gs Thunder a.•~ Rick joined the ,bunt. Westminster officers Grant vametand Tim Mlller with their bun~ dogs Axel and Eich were also dllpatcbed. Ironically, Officer Varner himseU was wounded almost identically -in the neck and face area -by bullet fragments during a gwt battle last year with a berserk bandit police finally killed. One patrolman with a tiullborn repeatedly broadcast warnings and pleas for the ambush suspect to surrender to avoid being killed too, which would have been probable given the conditio~. The seard! area -from which be evidently escaped -was bounded by ' Barranca Road, Valencia Avenue, CUiver Drive and Sand ean,oo Avenue. Irvine City Manager William Wollett, who ls titular police chief, turued up at the seach command post in a com- munications van operated by Costa Mesa Search and Rescue Team Lt. Bill Savage. From Pagel DRIFfER •.. Service Center Gets Favorable Laguna Report By BARBARA KREIBICB Of 11111 Dlll'I' 1'1)11 Stiff The South Coast Reglonal Servict Center. which opened u .. door! April I at 670 S. Coa!I Highway, Lalll!ll!!. Beach, serves as "a gatekeeper for the com- munity, helping to prevent worse pr®o- lerns later on. · Dr. William Routt who came to Laguni. two years ago as head ol a C:Ommunity f..1ental Hea1th team serving the South Coast area. was reporting to the city council on activit y or the Center since It moved into larger quarters in the remodeled former home of the ill-fated Mystic Arts World. His team was assigned to survey the health needs of the commwlity following a City Council request to the county for installation of branch health and social welfare services In the area. The Regiooal Servict Center, be said, now houses representatives: of the cowr ty's welfal'f: and Ch.ltd Protection. Proba- tion, Public Health and Mental Health Departments, all or whom cooperate in · "coping with any problem that walks in the door." Routt introduced several spokesmen for the agencies workl.pg out .l the center, who described -the various services available. murder scene. Tony Muc.la, one of four memben of a Local officers said it appeared that the drug abuse team, told the council, "I victim bad been shot and propped up on think lhings were getting better, but one Accountan Grilled •• By Lawyers By TOM BARU!V .. _··i Four defense lawyers today belW their grilling of key prosecution wl~ Robert Meehan as the Orange eolAiif: Superior Court "Taj Mahal" trial Laguna Hilll financier Joseph Dullll.lf-· and . roor . co-defendant& went Into • lourtb week. Machan, cootroller of the S ._ Bernardine Hospital in San Bernardi9" three years ago when the Roman Catholic institutioo was allegedly bllblll or !500,000, was Indicted with tht' Dulaney group on charges ol grand the¢' fraud and conspiracy. · .• But the veteran accountant, 50, became . a prosecution witness last week ln a ~ which cleared blm ol any compllclty Ill· the alleged fraud !or bis testlmolly. _ Machan coofinned today aa cros1 ez.. arnination opened that he at flnt advlaed the three DUDI who comprtaed the SL .Bernardine's board or dlrectora that they BlloWd turn down the offer that woold suppooedly lncreue Interest revenue on their $500,000 resecve fund lnim five to IO percent. • Machan earlier leltlf1ed for the prtJ-: ecutloo that the offer came from c!o-• defendants Jamea Shipley, SI, of 111111 . !Awell Circle and Daniel Hayes,, 40, o( < 8211 Soowblrd 4lrcle, both or ~ Beach, wbo met the bospli,l controllerln • Newport Beach. . Machan also earlier test1fied that "f changed hi& mind and backed ~ purcba!e of 250,000 allare! of Azalta Mobile Homes stock offered bj tJir, Dulaney -and branded by the ~ ecutlooasworthleu. •• • Machan has admitted Jn earni ;. testimony that he .-ived paymeata "'. at least $32,000 at about the time thal tlie boopital authorltlt,s purcbaled the AJalla · llock. . . Mactian .iald he got a "MOO cbect ll!ini · Hayes about 1a week after the stock . ' ·purclwe was aePrDVed. He has leltlll..t· · that be later received "7,000 from Riverside broker Wendell Warren Aust.ln, . 38, another co-OJe..idant in the trtal. Machan ..:onfirmed today that he left the 00.pital In January of 1970 sbortly alter the hospital's cmtrolllng mother house decided lo take legal action lo • recover a loan that was now in default. It has been pointed out by the proio. · ecution that Dulaney, 38, of 2131 Via Catcadita left Laguna Hilla for Wea\. Germany with bis family two mootbs before. The prosecution has also atated thilf. complaints about the t n v e 1 t m en t'f"' business admlnisteret by Dulaney from tho Taj Mahal oompleJ: In Laguna Hilla were being flied by many lnvuton I!' World Financial Trends. The !eCOnd pbaee or the cum!llt Ir!&! will bring Mrs. Marlene Dulaney, 32, to the courtroorn to face, with her buaband. and Shipley, allegations ste!Nnlng from • the alleged defrauding of those tnvestore. The World Financial Trends operatkxt '1 is now in bankruptcy. Office bulldino cootrolled by the group In Lquna Hilla r- and Seal Beach have now been dis~ :· ol by bankruptcy officials. > . ' the passenger Bide of his car for some problem ts getUng people to come in." ume before bis body was dumped on the The drug abuse team, be said, bandies Raffle Operators roadside. individual and group counseling, making Manning allegedly t~d local police the referrals for severe problems, responds H Id p Ill victim "wouldn't leave me alone" during lo crisis calls and makes jail visits. e -rize egal an apparent southbound drive from Long Judge Warren Knight of the South Beach. County Municipal Court is CU1Tently ~UERTO ORDAZ, Venezuela (UPI) - After the shooting, Manning allegedly cooper-atlng with the team in a pilot Poftce in this river port city said they drove the car for a time, dumped the re-referral program which appears to be broke up a raffle operation ln which the mains on the roadside, lhen beaded north successiul , Mucia said. "He recommends pri7.e was the company of a prostitute. again. people who get arrested, to us, and wt Capt. Agapito Rivera Salazar, chief He drove the car until it ran out of fuel try to help thel'fl for three to six mooths," the local police, aald the rafOe Uctett- at the offramp south of the city limits, he e1plalned. "Then we go back to court were sold for the equivalent of fI.10 each police said. and report to Judge Knight and he uses in a local bar. Manning then walked toward San our recommendation in deciding the He said three per80ll8 were An'elteclJbr _Cl---iemen~~te~,~flnalliiii;y:r:ea:cbin;;;;;'~g:th:e:b:ase;;;;;~ga:t:e.;:::c:ase::.':'::::::;:::;:;;:;:;;:;:;;:;:;;:;:;;:;:;;:;:;;::co:m;::ecti:':on::w:i~::the::r:al:D:e:.::::::;; ···~l~ • Let .Us Put Youion TheMap ~ , Neer the entrance, inside our store, ls •. •giant new map. We ere in the process of identifying all of the bomos we hove carpeled 1inco 1965 on this map with colored pins. (A different color for each yoor.) Close scrutiny will detect some interesting loch: firstly, wo hove corJ>etod homos on virtu- ally every street in tfie area. Secondly, ..+,, pins ore in bunches, indicoti~g WORD-OF-MOUTH •dvorfaing. Thirdly, tho number of homos we h1va carpolod i1 sl199erin9. If you desire h o n • 1 t y, experi011ct, •ocl recommendations from n e i 9 h b o r ; we have -kod f.,.., then Aldon'• i1 THE PLACE I ALDEN'S CARPETS e DRAPES 1663 Placetltla Ave. COSTA MESA 646-4838 HOURS: Mon. Thr~ Thu"., t lo 5:30-FRI., 9 lo 9 -SAT., 9:30 to 5 - ' ' ' l •• I' ' ..( ' ( . , . . ~ t • _,. l f ...... ' "~ ]> 'r .• • '" • . •• •• • • l I I • ehaek EDITION N.Y. Steeks VOL 65, NO, 298, 4 S~CTIONS, 50 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY'., CALIFORNIA TUESDAY, OCTOBER H, 1972 TEN CENTS I Nixon Seen Hea.,ily Fa.,ored in Viejo lf the presidential el«:llon were held today In Mission Viejo, Richard NiJon would win hands down, accontlng to ·preliminary findings of an area poll by Mission Viejo High School students. 1'en students, headed by senior Kent Qadwick, have been canvwi.ng voters In the Sad<IJehack Valley community and aa of early Monday had gone to more tben 400 homes. . 'l'bey plan to poll at least !00 persoll5 . bfor" they compile the llnal results as ' • - port of a Politics "12 unit Jn theli human!Uea claS3. The hwnanitles program of 45 students ls divided Into three sections -civics, English seminar and aoclology -and each stud~nt must take two JeCtions-at one time. But in this month before the Nov. 7 general electk>o, the entire class is con- centrating on nation'!' aoo loci! polillcal Issues from different angles. The Oiadwlck Poll, somewhat like the professional GaJlup and Harris polls, L! a samplin(. students l'll'e going to one in 10 houses. 1be poll Is only one project in the class. Other students are taking sides on the 22 California ballot propositloDS. Deba):es have already been heard on proposition 18, 'the obscenity initiative, and on propositjon D, the' farm labor in· iUative. , 'fttree students have been chosen to play the role of presidential candidates • and oonvlnoe Ibo dasa to vote for them in a clus election to be held a few days before the real thlngr .A series of candlates or candidates' representatives, ranging in political spec- trum from American lndepe!ldent Party to Socialist Party -will 'Pt'k to the claaa prior to the election. Chadwick's voter analysis group bas been surrised by some results of the reactions to its wort so far. Tbe majority of area voters questioned • . rv1ne o iceman ' !I'hieu Cites Cease-fire • '1Mle~l'Na ··President NgUyen Van 1bleu said t4l!lilll.Jo ~ the ~mmunist side has lll!<luost<d. a ce.,..fire and that one could cqllie "In 'the near fu-" -but only II ··No!th VlebWn withdraws all Its troops. • ~· that ts done, Thleu said In a - boar ~ bla government woold be reW to dllca. • pcilltica1 aettlement with the Communist.Jed Natfonl] ~ lloe·FNni, known .. Ibo V'lll C:OO.· No oulside par\y coU1!I ,,,... dOcilll'"" delOrmlnlng South V'ietnam'11 lulur., lie ~ ,__"°one .. • debt io ~· ..... -•-Vie~ nam and r..tat.d bla oppooltlan to a triparjite coalltloa government as aoogbt bf •the C)nm1mitt side, , He dedarod that no formal aP'eements fttt JtOdled lo bla five daJ! of talks wlth -~·t national aecurlty adviser, Henry A. Kllslnger. He aald the talks were exploratory and "nothing was alJ!>ed." tlall • . f ' Jn what was essen y 1 reiteration o "111' government'• long·standlog position " an Indocblna aeWemen\, Thieu said p.e cease-fire would have to cover Cam- lloiila ·and Lloe S. well u South Viet· .,.;m,. and. be guaranteed by International o1ipervtaion. ~A ceW-llre may take place In the _, future because the Communists U'fe requested It," be contlaued. ""nle cihmunlsts a,reed to1 and even .beg for ~ beeau.se Ibey .... milllarlly ·ft'e said be asked the United Statea lo "ilk' the Communists what tbey want" Illa said Sooth Vietnam would ruerve lts ~-(See TIDEU, Pqe Z) ,, -Tustin District -•• Meeting Tonight 'Tbe regular meeting of Tustin Union ~ School District trustees Monday ~ canceled because of _lhe legal boll· cl@)' and will take place tonight at 7:30 at Tqllin Hlgb School. •tSil the agenda tS a discussion of the Y(.jaon Amendment, Propoallion 11 on ~ov. 7 ballot, which would restrict !hi ·use of property tu,. to fund scbools. Ol.trict Superinttndent Jack Schumaker II ~ trustees to voice oppoailion to ui,. amendment. Tustin Hlgb Scbool ls at l!lhl.aguna Road. .... ' i4ir Crew Finds 'Third Cobra ' SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -A ' cleadlY fiv.foot klntl <Obra bu • Jeen found by Trana World AlrU... freight e1nmen at San Franc*° International Alrpoit, an aJrllnes · "2kaman ,.,.. , ;,. Tbt anakl, dlacovered late Mon-Jay night, was the third cobra 'l\)Und at San Franclaco and Loo Angele1 lntematlanal •trporl& alnco 1 • shlpment of llowen from ' Tball•nd arriv.d over the .nekencl, TWA ltJOWmlD Jerry Coaley aald. • '!be flnt cobra WU found Satur- dly nlg!lt a~ TWA fli8hl 'Ill ..- rived In Loli AJlielea. ' ' N 't "°MAT ..... W aJcMN ~ Prone Man Leaps Up, Fires Shot By ARTHUR R. VINSEL Of Ille Daollr Pll.t ltlff A masaive, overnight manhunt con- tinued today for a gunman who lured an Irvine policeman into an ambush on a lonely coi1n1r7 road, sbot hlm, then fled into a foggy cornfield and escaped. Patrolrlan Stephen T. Nash, %3, was hit in the face by a bullet fragment in the ' dramatic 11:10 p.m. confrontation as the slug shattered his squad car's windshield. He gllnned. the ~engine at the last SEC· ond in a desperal:e attempt to nm down his w~-be l<iller 1')len the appartntly 1 injured ~ lJfpr 'on the. Jli!itemenl .-l"'!ged,UP:¥fo)a crouch~ took aim. • f ' -OKEEK SCAltRED •BY' BULLET, OFFICER NASH TELLS STORY Stunned 1>y the ';fOlllld, m swerved and spun the car · lrOUlld ao be could take cover behind Its door, while tbe.gwunan darted Into the field on Jeffrey Roed, 200 yards south of Barranca Road. . . .Gunm1n sj,ring1 :Y'r1p at' Rural. Intersection In Irvine Officer Na.sh said the man sprinted for a windbreak of eucalyptus trees and a creetbed as he himself crawled into the field combst-st)'le .. Hinshaw Receives Strong Support From Pre~ident Fearing be would be caught ln a sec- ondary ambush-according to bis descri~ tlon of how he was lured into a trap - the wounded officer waited for rein- forcements instead of going after the gunman. Fell<Jw officers in squad cars arrived within five minutes to Initiate a manhunt that eventually involved an army of of- ficers from other police agencies. Andrt!w J. Hinshaw has received a stroog endorsement . from Presid~t Richard Nlmn in bla ~SD for eloc- tlon I<> Corigt'elf lri>J!l Otange Connlj's' 39tb D!Strid. . A letter trom the President received Mcmday read: "De.ir Andy. As .you near the end~of what I knew must have ~ an ari:l:uous and challenglng cimpaign I want to take this opporlunio/ to wish yoo the . best on, Nov. 7. "America needs your dedicated leadership in the next C.Ongress. With your help we can make unpreced~ted Two Zone Issues Put on Irvine Council's Ag.enda ' Denials of the residenUal zonings for the Harker-Rinker property near El Toro Marine Corpo Air Statton . and poeslbty the Lanrin Company parcel in central Irvine will be conaldered tonight by the Irvine Clty Council. Both matters were addt!d to the agenda for t.onlght'a meeting at 7:30 o'clock in city hall, Gil campus Drive, on action of couocllmen last Tue=. · At that otudy on, Coundlman Henry Quigley ·Iodinated be would reverse his position when he moved · to den,v the r.oolnp then. Procedural · ob- jectloaa by Councilmen E. Ray Quigley Jr. and John Bui:ton led to aetting the n..s.tten over to tonight. The zoning quesUons, t m f o r t a n t -they would set p ann Ing pf!Cedents 1n the yet lo be .master plan- ned central ll"line area.a . of the city, ....,_ an already beavy agenda. Amaag other matt.n .to be talcen up tonight are: -ltetOlutlon of Ute planning com· mloaton'a ttqutrement that Sollthern Calttornla Edlaoo Company unciergnl<md hip voltage llnet serving two Industrial ...,plea parcela. The !lnn ls appealing the cornmlaslon'• trac~ map condition. -A Donald Bnn O>mpany -Graen- tree Homes -tnct map providing 7t new, alnlle-lamlly horn'" near Culver IS.. DENLW!, Pap II • • progress toward the great goals of our new American majority -peace at home and 1 abroad for generations to eome, a new prOsperity without war. and without Inflation ana the ·opportunity for every American to see the American dream ·come true in his own life. "I Joot forward to working with you in making the next four years among the best in America's hlstroy. Sincerely, (siioed) Richard Nixon." Tbe Orange County assessor who defeated incumbent Rep. John Schmitz In the June primary said today, "I am very pleased with President Nixon's en- dorsement and his · desire to work with . me in Washington for the next four years. "I, too, am eager for the start of ml: legislative career as Orange County s man on capitol bill. I believe that by close attention to the job, .hard work, team play and the cooperation of the Nixon administration that I will make a wort&wblle coDtribution." Hinshaw saJd his goal is to be "Orange County's best· -In history. The President's support and assistance Will give me a gOOd. start toward that goal." Hinsbaw's oppooent in the Nov. 7 elec- tion is Derpoaat John Black, a Newport Bet.ch attorney. Pcttrolman Nash brieled supervisors on ,. what happened at a command post set up under direction of Patrol Sgt. Larry Bersch near the ambush scene. He was later treated at Costa Mesa Memorial Hospital for a superficial gunshot wound on the left cheek and released. Investigating officers were cautious about saying it was definitely a rigged trap this morning, but circmmtances left most with little doubt. Officer Nash said be was parked beside Jelfrey Rood writing a routine report by flashlight when a car carrying two very cleaocut young men pulled up . The· gunman himseH was described as having long black hair, a full, busby beard and wearing a leather jacket over a T-shirt and blue denim jeans. "A ·biker-type," one officer remarked today, hinting outlaw motorcycle gang tactics. ~ Officer Naab said the two men told him they were en route to telephone police about a.omeone in the roadway who ap. peared to be Injured or perllal>' ill. He sped to the scene, where his beadllgbts Illuminated the suppoaed vlc- llm, tying r.ce down,. bla d!eek against the uphalt povement and both hands (See AMBUSH, Pase I) Basehall~s Loss Jackie Robinson Succumbs at 53 STAMFORD, Conn. (AP) -Jackie lloblnaon, wbo broke major league baseball's racial barrier with the old Brooklyn Dodgera ln 1947 and went on to stardom and a place In the Hall of Fame, died today of what hi1 doctor described u beart dlaease. Hall-blinded by diabetes, the S}year .. ld Robinson llU!fered an early morn- ing attack at bis poab borne In thlt suburb of New York City and died at 7:10 •a.m. at a boopltll. (Seti story, Page I&) He bad been honored only 10 daya earlier during 1lle 11112 World Serlel at ClnclnnaU when a sellbut crowd at Rlverftont Stadlu111 applluded the 11th aonlveraary of his debut In Brooklyn. Robinson'• hatr wu wh!te, hla 'eyea almost gOM and bis heart ICl1Ted by a Ilea attack. 'lbil curbed Roblnlon'a aucaoaful buslnesil career durlng the put few years. · ' ; . He could hardly aee to walk when atten41ng ·the funefal lo April of former Doelger teammate Gil Hndges. · · SWl, deiith came t s • lhoct to the bueball world. •• • are going "quite strongly for President Nixon," aa expected, Chadwick saKi. But it ceme as a greater surprise, he said, tliat lameduck Orange County Congressman John Schmitz. t h e American Party candidate, seems to be receiving Utile or no support. In fact, he's running a poor third to Sen. George McGovern,. the Democratic Party candidate. McGovern is holding a strong· second place and Chadwick doesn't expect that to change much . The students have been received well by everyo ne they've questioned, he $8.ld, another note of surprise In his voice . ''Everybody seems to want to help and they're quite pleased with us be.Ing out doing this," Chadwick a.aid. 0 The few people tha t refused to talk were busy." flladwick was pleasantly surprised with how well-infonned the voters, were. "We would ask about the ~ Watergate !See VIEJO POLL, Page Z) m .US OAll.T •ILO' Stiff ""- OFFICER NASH SHOWS FIRING STANCE USEO BY ASSAILANT In Irvine, the Man Lying In the Road Suddenly C1me Up Shooting I N e'Wport Official Fears Inaction on Plane Noise By L. PETER KRIEG Of Ille OlllY JOllet IUiff · Orange CbuHty Aviation Director Robert Bresnahan may be trying to lull county supervisors into complacency over the noise problem al the airport. Newport Beach Councilman Milan Dostal charged today. Dostal cited a report from Bresnahan to supervisors evaluating the noise pro- duced in an experimental take off by a Lockheed FIOll at the airport two weeks ago. In that report Bresnahan said, "The federal government has Issued contracts recenUy to fully tnveatlgate:ttle merits of a shon take of! and landing aircraft and its .ability to further redUce' the noise problem. "ff such a venture were successful. we couJd solve our noise problem at Orange County Airport within five to aeven yean," Bresoa1-o said. "There are so many unknowns that I get the feeling the airport tnanager may be making them (supervisors) com- placent ao they will not try to solve our noise problem at Orange Co u n t y Airport," ~"1 said. , Earller. Mayor Donald A. Mclnm• had referred to a letter sent to Bresnahan by • Eucalyptus !rees Taken· in Irvine • Eucalyptus ruatlers are roaminJ: one. time rangelands now comprU:lng the trvine lndustrtal C:Omplex, a landscaper complalhed Ii> Irvine police Monday. Wlllllm B. llelglty ol 0 a rr e I ' a LandacaplllJI In Yucaipa reported the $245 theft of 1even trees 1t 2222 Altoa St .. wll<l1 be went to perfonn plant[ng maintenance. / Offictr Harry Ehrllch aald'the eucalyp- U thlovea ... uy snipped wires • boldln1 Ute '"'"'' trunks In place, uprooted the onwnentol pl<mtlllJIJI and aboconded . Daniel W. Emory, head of the citizens group righting jet air traffic at the airport that was sharply critical of Bresnahan's report. F.mory pointed out that the LlOll take off was compared wilh a single Boeing 737 take off that occurred at 10:21 a.m. on the same day . The Boeing pr.x!uced a noise level 1.f 108 SENEL which, Emory said, "was definitely higher than the average noise level for a m. "Tbe actual average noise level is 103 SENEL," Emory said. The LIOU Trlstar was monitored by the county's equipment at just below 100 SENEL, according to Bresnahan. Emory also pointed out that tbe simulated take off by the LlOll was whh (See NOISE, Page !J r----- Orange Coast Wead1er Hazy aun-e Is on the agenda lhrougb Wednesday, according to the weatherlady, with hlgbs along the coast In Uie low 708, rLsing to 80 Inland. Lows tonl&ht 53. INSIDE TODAY Tht 0Cmo.tph1re iJ rtatroiftfd jovialit11 for reporter1 aboard t h e McGovern campaign air- plane. Wrlttrt tee little .thanot of his tDlnnlng, but th< fotlgued candidatt molntaiii& hope. ~' .at.oru on Page 9 ..... L.M, a.,c I ,,_ -· ~':::."' " -II °""' --. u ••lltritl ,... ' •llM't•llMMM lf.11 -"'" ~ ........... It ........ ,. ............,, 14 ' . • I 'J I DAIL y PILOT t5 ,......,, -24, nn Shai·ing the Concern Fo1· One of Their Own By GEORGE LEIDAL 01 tt11 Dailr f'ilet St•ft I SEE A CITY or 30,000 who believe they can lead a nation pockmarked by urban blight into lhe wilderness where many will share a new urban life. On Saturday, that relative handful who share a faith in the bright future that is Irvine 's will pause rrom pursuit o( a new urban happiness to share op- timlSm with one of their own. At 1 o'clock, an e\'ent which OC"Curred more than two years before Irvine was born is to be remembered-the Oct. 27, 1969, disap- pearance over Laos of an Air Force pilot. In Campus Park at UC Irvine -scene of antiwar ac- tivism in recent years -I see gatherillt a coalition of humans who care about the well being of anOther hum.an. THEY'LL COME, I hope, to wish Happy Birthday to a man, who may never hear lhe greetings of hundreds, per. haps thousands, this day. If Lt. James 'Vayne Herrick ls among the quick, news cl this ceremony in Irvine inay never reach him. Satur- day is Herrick's third birthda y since he was shot down 1..1:101.1. over Laos. HIS IOWA PARENTS who will visit Irvine Saturday and his sister, A.trs. Barbara Hedrick wbo Jives In the nascent city of dreams, have not heard from Jim since his name wa s entered on the cold, statistlcal lists of the Defense Department. The "missing in action" designation is slim hope indeed that be is .;11ive and perhaps in good health. Perhaps because I've come to know of Irvine's youthful optimism and learned ro share it. I've aban9oo00 cynical objectivity. For, I see a city of progress halting to lend support to a family who for three years have lived With gnawing uncertainty. ls Jim dead? Is be among the hundreds of pri.sooen of war believed to be still aJive but ignored in of- ficial POW listings? Can It be when this ugly, unglor;ous war is finished, he11 return to the city which has adopted him by council writ? Will he visit Irvine, a city whose most concerned residents have penned requests for Information about his fate to olfi~ials in Hanoi! I SEE A city born of intense political strife, ignoring for an hour or more politics of state, nation and world for the politics of the brotherhood of men. World opinion, Irvine opinion, the opink>n of mankind cannot but move those who would depr:lv~ relatives of MIAs certain knowledge of their fates. I see a city sile:need by choked lean. J see barefoot students witli long hair rilaking ·room .in their Campus Park for their fellow--clttzen.r.- 1 see closed shops, haircuts interrupted, taverns with locked doors, ham- mers la.id to rest on fresh cut timbers, tractors silenced in asparagus and cel- ery fields, saws .stilled in orange groves and eucaJyptus windrows, gasoline stations with locked pumps, laboratories abandoned for a moment in the span oC eons and libraries shushed inviolate. IN A CORNER of the t1-«1uare mile comer of the world that smiles on. 30,000, I see a band, perhaps a choir or an orchestra. I see a statesman mayor. And a councilman who urged this day be set aside. Tbey offer word.9. Words of encouragement. Words to comfort one whose plight th<y hope we share. I see Jaycees and members or the Junior Women's Club who prepared for a city's outpouring of humanitarian concern. When it is finished and people return to pursue their separate hopes, I see a living tree left behind -a symbol of the life all who came desperately hope remains within the body or Lt. James Wayne He.nick. somewhere in Southeast Asia. BUT MORE, the tree will symbolize a moment in Irvine's rush to grea~ ness when many stopped briefly to comfort one among us. None came to protest or advocate war, they'll say. They came to recog· nize war's cruelty to some wbo answered a caU to duty to country not all wbo attended must have shared. Boy, 17, Accused In Sexual Plot Witli Ho11se1vives MEMPHlS, Tenn. (UPI) - A I7·year- old boy has been accu.5ed of putting obscene notes and voodoo dolls in the mailboxes of suburban housewives in an attempt to coerce them into sex, police said . Officers said Mooday the youlh was ar- rested Saturday by a detective whG hid in the car of a woman who agreed to act as bait for a police trap. The youth had a stocking pulled over his head and carried an unloaded .32 caliber pistol, officers said. Capt. Robert Cochran of the llomicide Bureau said at least three women receiv- ed obscene and threatening notes in their mail bo1es and two of the women found dolls positioned in an obscene manner. The youf.ti, not identified under juvenile laws, was charged with attempted rape, carrying a pistol and disorderly conduct. OUN&I COAST ts DAILY PILOT l"-Or•"'P <:Mat DAIL V P ILO'I, wllfl -"kfl h ~ the N-Prl'U. 11 PUlbll~ II\' "" er.,.. CM• ,.,,._.""""' c""'*''· s.p.. " ......... are liVblk!Moj, MOnd•Y ttlreuof! Ffld.1y, fO!' Cos!a Mu.., N""'PQr1 6tech, Hwntt,,.... IMCll/1"°""1•1" V•ll.IY. t"'°"' htdl, l""lrlt/Stddltt>adt 111111 s~n C...,_tt/ SM .JUflll'I C.plstr-. 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WllflDolt ...... ... ....... .,, ................ . ....., ee... ............. , Ctiltl ~ Cti!IMM, MIKr""IM W ftn'litr SIM ....,,1 "' ~· U.11 ,....r,, Mllf .... ............ a.Al ·"*"""'· Frot1t Page l VIEJO POLL • • • Five," he said, referring to a group of men charged with bugging Democratic headquarters and allegedly u s i n g Republican money to do so. "Everybody seemed to know about It.'' Some Democratic Party members plan to cross party lines to vote for Presideat Nixon, Chadwick said. The main reason given for voting for Nixon by the people polled. he !Wd, "is McGovern himself." To check any changes from the results he'll compile next we-ek, Chadwick said he plans to take a smaller Poll a few days before the election. The students In the clau aren't otd enoogh to vote in the real election, but they're involved and concerned despite the age barrier. Writing Contest Set for Students Opens at Viejo The Mission Viejo High School English Department is currenUy sponsoring the firm annual prose writing contest. Compositions from all level students wUI be judged by Engll!h cta .... , then a student-facuJty commlttee and a final time by teachen and studentl or creative writing claues. Calegorles are e x p o s i t o r y , con- troversial and humorou1 essays (111 1,000 10 2,000 words): short stories (!00 lo t,IOO or 1,500 to 3,000 wordl); vignettes (300 to 600 wordJ) and critical reviews (1 ,000 to 2,000 word.I ). Winning compositk>ns will be publl'bed in the sprlng ln the student literary magailne. TOPLESS SHOW FIGHTS FOR LIFE CllARLO'l'l'E, N.C. (AP) -Flity toplesa d&nctrl performed hut to nlle money for a (awsult against a city ordinanco henning IUCb dandntJ. The ordJnanco pes Into e(fecl Nl1#. I. They perlonned •lnli7 Ind In 8J<llllll Monday nlcht at one of tho 11 ..,..._ n!gbtclubo ill town. A ataodlng·~ crowd of fOO paid SS apiece. A *Ol1d auch• Toplw Review ii planned next MondaJ. • Ul"IT ...... Life Goes On A Sou th Vietnamese child feeds his baby broth~r while taking refuge in a culvert be- neath tlighway 13 about 17 n1iles north of Saigon. Family took cover in ditch as South Vietnamese Rangers clashed \vith Viet Cong patrol. Fron• Pagel NOISE ... a "running start permitting It to achieve an exceptionally high deck angle of 20 degrees. "This deck angle corresponds to . that achievable with a very lightly loaded Boeing r.n flown by a pilot making an all out effort to minimize the ooise," Emory said. The Tristar was also lighter than it normally would be with passengers and cargo and ''was being flown by a test pilot with the aircraft equipped with in- strumentation beyond that normally pro- vided in an operational configw-ation," Emory saici. "The combination of a highly qualified test pilot and superior instrumentation makes it \irtually certain that the pilot technique was superior to wliat can be expected from a lypical airline pilot," Emory said, Bresnahan's report had been quite glowing about the Tr:lstar which Lock· heed Corporation bad made availabl e as part of an exhibition at South Coast Plaza in Costa Mesa. In his analysis Bresnahan said, "Although the operation of the Tristar from Orange County Airp<rt. would pose some operational problems with regard to weight turbulence, it is my opinion that the operation. of this aircraft on a scheduled basis would reduce our present noise impact area over 50 percent." Mcinnis pointed out that this wollld be true only if the number of flights were reduced. "The Tristat is twice as big as the ms bemg used by Air Calilornia and il there were fewer flights carrying more passengers the noise would be less," be said. "But ii there were the same number of fli$hts it is apparent there would be no noISe reduction," Mcinnis said. From Pagel THIEU ... own final decisions on Its future. Meanwhile, the White House said today "some progress has been made at achieving a negotiated setUement of the Vietnam conflict," but refused to give any support for the assessment Press secretary Ronald L. Ziegler reported the progress following an bour- long meeting 1n Washington between President Nixon, Secretary of State William P. Rogers and Kissinger, who returned Monday night Ziegler turned back repeated attempts by newsmen to draw out elaboration on his statement. He specifically refused to comment on the speech today by Thieu charging North Vietnamese proposal.a for a setUement are lll-disgulsed attemptl to underm.tne h1a government . ln an exchange wltb newsmen, Ziegler at first appeared lo stiy the "some prog- rc53" referred only to negoUaUons wiJ.b North Vietnam, but later said he was also including discwislons with 'nlleu. Reporters asked why the wttitc llouse refused to discuss aspects of the negotia· lions when Thieu and North Vietnamese Prtmlcr Than Van Dong had made 11tatem,nts concerning the state of peace efforts. "We have an agreement with North Vietnam not to diaru111 negotlatk>ns," ZiegJer respondll!d, "and we are going to stand by that agrtement. 11 Ho said he would not comment on "any other statemtnt," the 1;1me respon11 be gave when ul<ed u Dong'• lntorvlowl with Wtltem newamen breached tbe no- talkine: agreement. Thltu'a speech cotncidtd wtll I llate- mtot In P11rla by Prince Soov111111 Phou.ma, pre:mter of LaOI -hJ1 nation · wtth C.mbodllo and the two Vletnam.t constitute lndochlna . He uJd, "l think we Rrt on the eve of 1 ceue-fire," but added : "'"113 Is not a certainty." Law.yers Grill Witness.1 'Taj Mahal' Bilk Trial Enters 4th Week ' . . ' By 'llllll BARLEY ............. ,,.,, Four defense llowym loday began lhelr grilling of key protl<Clltlon witness Robert Machan as the Orange County Supel'ior Court "Taj Mahal" trial or Laguna Hills financier Joseph Dulaney and four C<Mlefendanla went into ui fourtb -k. Machan, eorttroller of the 8 t . Bernardine Hospital fn San Bernardino three years ago when the Roman C.lhollc lmtltutlon was allegedly bllked or IS00,000, was Indicted witb th< Dulaney group on charges of grand theft, fraud and conspiracy. But the veteran accountant, $0, became a prosecution witness last week in a deal which cleared him of any oompllcity in the alleged fraud for bis testimony, Machan confirmed today as cross ex- aminaUon opened that he at first advised the three nuns who comprised the St. Bernardine's board of directors that they should tum down the offer that would supposedly increase interest revenue on !heir $500,000 reserve fund from five to 10 percent. Machan earlier t..tUied for the P""" ecution that the Offer came from co- delendanta James Sbipley, 311, of 16951 Lowell Circle and Daniel Hayes, 40, of 8211 Snowbird Circle, both of Huntington Beach, who met the hospital controller in Newport Beach. Machan also earlier testified that he changed his mind and backed the purchase of 250,000 shares of Azalia Mobile Homea stock offered by the Dulaney group and branded by the proo· ecuUon a.s worthless. Machan baa admitted in earlier testimony that be recetved paymenta ol at least $32,IXX> at about the time thst Qie hospital authorities purchased the Azalla stock. Maclwuald ho IOI• ft5,llOO check from H•Yff about a WHJI: aJttlr the stock purehase wu approved. He bu tealtfled that he later received $17,000 from !Uvenlde broker Wendell Warren Allltln, 38, another co-cil.:!ea'ldant ln the trial. Machan ""1llrmed today that be left the hospital In January of 111711 shortly after the hosoltal'• cootrolllng mother house decided to take leglll action to recover a loan that was now in default. It bu been pointed out by th< pros- ecution tha1 Dulaney, 311, or 26l1 Via CUcadlta left Lquna Hills for West Germany with his famUy two months before. Gates Made 'Emeritus' In Absentia '!lie prosecutloo bu alao slated UU.t , eomplalnta about the I n v e 1 t m e ftJJ. bu5tneu admlrJstered by I>.tl111ey • Ibo Tai Mahal complex In I.ocuna HJll~; w.,.. being filed by many JnvOllon !J>• World Finartelal Trtnd!. "': The second phase or the current trial • will bring Mrs. Marlene Dulaney. 12. Jo , tbe ""1ltroom 10 face, with her busballd and Shlpley, alloptlODt stemming from tho aUeged defrauding of U-lnvmon .. The World Fln.ancilol Trends operaUill.. Is now In bankruptcy. Office buildinO • controlled by the group in Laauna Hll!s · and Seal Beach ha~~ now been disposed . of by banlrruptcy otuctals. •. •'. F ..... P-.eJ •, AMBUSH ... bidden beneath his chm. •' Suddenly, Officer Nub said, th< mao jumped into a crouch clutching a 10111• • barreled, small caliber revOl.ver 1n typical combat style and drawing a bead at his held. San Joaquin School District trustees Lunging sideways almost too late -be last year planned to hire an associate tried to run over lhe man as he fired. superintendent to take over Ralph Gates' He wa.3 never able to get oU I shotgun place as superintendent il the June blast due lo the clolloy In getting tl\e uniflcaUon election failed. weapon out of its br8cket while crouched • below the dashboaid defenslvol7. •• U wtlfication was successful, aa it was, By the time he freed it, the assailant the associate would retain operational was too far away. •• control, but not the higher title. 1 Hi! frantic radio broadcast ot a ~ But, district trustee Dennis Smith 999 m ,...;iD he! related Monday, there were "subtleties" -o ~ n~, _p -brought poll involved in that decision that "we dktn't helicopters from OOth Costa Mesa and envWoo 8 year ago.,. Newport Beach, but growing ground f'f • --. ........ 1 .. _. --.. i. ..... in the area Jttd their quarry. ,,. ,,-~~ -~ promo...:u associate Officers from both clues,. plus Ora e superintendent Richard Welte Io County Sherill's deputies, Ille . caJlfornia superintendent and doaignatid the VICI• tionlng Gatet • • s u p e r J n t e 0 de 0 t Highway Patrol and Irvine Ranch securt- Emeritus." Gate., 12, wu due to reUre ty deputies reponded to the manhunt • in June. f Dueb to deddiffi"!'1i1f-~•~-'i"""Grlng the Gclol'l, Smith said be realizes taking such an °~·• '°" M~, arden ,. ... nctkm while Gates 1s on vacation was not policemen Bill Compton M4 Larry Davis the beat time, but "it (the issue) was with ~ir scent-tracking dogs Thunder there in !root of us al that meeting." ""~ Rick. joined the hunl l Train 'Ki11s 5, Crashes Again Welte went into u:ecuUve aeulon with Westtninster officers Orant Varner and the board"wt1en·tt-mac1e"111e·deciaion-. -..Tim Miiier wltll ,~-_ Although Welte was admlnlsfulng the Eich """' alao clbpatcbed. LIMA, Ohio (AP) -FOUi' hours ofter a Penn Central train cra$ed into 1 car near here, killing a woman and her four young daughters, it smashe;d Into a s~ truck at a crossing at Monroeville, Ind. Rail officlab said no one was injured in the second mishap. Engineer Art.bur Lee Herron said Mo~ day ho aounded his born when be saw the car pull oolo th< tracks ahead of bhn near Lima, but told autbortt.le! it didn't stop. 1be engine crashed into the car and carried it a half mlle down the tracks. In the wreckage workers found the bodies of Sylvia M. Garcia, 27, of Cridersville, Ohio. and four daughters. Ouistine, 7, Veronica , 6, Angelia, 3, and Rebecca, 4 months. Frot11P .. el DENIALS ... Drive and Walnut Avenue. --Consideration of allocating city funds for completion or a public education com- mittee survey of city families. -Direction to city staff to prepare a recommendation on how the city should proceed with Phase II of th< bike trllilB subcommittee report which urges ex· tension of the city trail system. --COnsideraUon of the plmming com- mission's resolution asking pending zoo. ing and tract map matters requiring en- viromnental impact statements to be re.turned to the commlssion tor EIS review. district, Smilb contended ho waa "func:-Iroolcally, Officer Varner blmsell wu tlontog In a 111boefvlent 'poslUon lo the wounded almost identically -in the n.ct new 811,...........,.nta of th< UD!fled and face area -by bullel frWnenll dlatrlcta r,--·--· during a gun battle last year With a Tho .irunc.tlon election cruted th< berserk bandil police finally till~ Irvine and Saddlebadt Valley Unified One patrolman wtth a bullhom Districts from the San Joaquin, which repeatedly broadcW wamtnp and~ , wUI '""'go out of buaineas as of July I, for 'dthe~am~~edsuspeclt hiloch~ld ba \0 1973 avot uctog &J.U oo, w wou ve Giving Welte the tJUe "places bhn 00 1 l>een probable given the conditions. peer basis wtth the superlntendenta of Tho aearcb area -from which be the new dlstrlcta " Smltb said and evldaltly .,..ped -was boonded bf allows him to jo~ the county s.iperu,. Bammca ~Valencia Avenue, CUlftf tendenta woctatlon. Drive and Can)'OO Avenue. • , Although the promotion ltaoll canied Irvine Cley, Manager Wllllam WolletL., no raise, Welte did reoelve a IZ,000 raise wbo ii titular polico cblel, turned up at two months ago, boosting bis salary from the .seach command post ln a com-- $28,000 to $30,000, Smith said. mun1catlons van operated by c.osta Mesa The trustees are "making every ef. Search aod Rescue Team LL BW 5avagt. fort" to contact Gates to tell him what they dld, Smith added. Gatea I! on three- weeks vacaUon in the east. "I feel he'll Wlderstand," Smith of· fered . Although some district personnel feel ot~erwlse, Smith said that I h e "emeritus" status 1s oot a demotion, but rather makes Gates a "senior" partner. This was Gates' 27th year as superin- tendent. Raffle Operators Held-Prize lliegal PUERTO ORDAll; Venezuela (UPI) - Police In this river port city said they broke up a ratne operaUon io which the prize was the company of a prostitute. Capt. AgapUo Rivera Saluar, chief of the loco! police, said th< ram. tlckets were sold for the equivalent of $1.10 each in a local bar· He said three penons-were arrested in cormectlon with the raffle. * * * Mayor Assails Police Ambush Irvine Mayor William Fischbecb todly tenned as "tragic" the attempted murder of Irville Policeman stepben Nash In a remote agricultural section of the city early today. "This I! just tragic, appalling ml sictenlng," the mayor said. • "I hope the Individuals concerned on caught and the full meaS\lre of the Jaw,f.s brought to bear In this case." Sbocked by the attempt on th< life a( the Irvine officer, th< mayor indica~ the new city's police department ~ have th< full becking of the dey s polillcal le&dershlp. "I cannot believe there are aDKJD8~'tl!1 in Irvine penoos who would be ao OW with hatred as to attempt lo lrlll f'. policeman." the mayor coocluded. Let Us Put You on The Map · Near the entrince, inside our store, is • giant new map. We are in the process of identifying oll of the bomft we hava cerpehld since 1965 on this map with colored piM. (A different color for each yoor.) Close scn1tiny wih detect some interesting \ focn: fintly, wo have carpeted homos on virtu- ally ovory street in tho eree. Secondly, tha pins are in bunches, indicating WORD.OF-MOUTH •dvor!ising. Thirdly , th. numbor of hO!Ms W9 hove carpeted is 1to9goring, If you desire h on 0 a I y, Hperionce, and recommendotions from n e I 9 h b o r s wo hove -led for, then Aldan's ls THE PLACE I ALDEN'S CARPETS e DRAPES ' 1663 Placentla Ave. COSTA MESA 646-4838 HOURS: Mon. Thrv Thurs. f to ,.JO-F~I., 9 to 9-SAT., 9:30 to S '" . ' r ' ' ' ' • I I ' ' ' • ' ' ' . .. f " a In d p l I ' I ) ' I ' • Don1ington Beaeh Fountain Valley yoL. 65, NO. 298, 4 SECTIONS, 50 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA •. TUESDAY, OCTOBER 24, 1972 TEN CENTS Newport ~Official ... , - Urges · Ouster of Fitchen '·l!:nvironmentalist Newpor;t Be a ch Calincilman Paul Ryc:P>ff today joiiled Hunti~ton Beach Counctlmao Jack Gr'ten's call for replacement of the man ln charge of Orange Count)_''s Air Pollu- tliili Control llislrlct (APCD). 1tyckoff, in a sta~ment prepared for delivery a\ today's city council meeting, sWI William FitCben was wrong to &J>" Prtve expansion of the S o u t h e r n Ctifornia Edison Company .steam plant ~ I . ' • in Huntington Beach and should not be allowed to continue in office. County supervisors w i 11 conduct a public hearing Wednesday to determine il the APCD should remain under, Fit- chen's control or be reorganized as part of the Health Department. Fitchen bad said he granted the pennit, conditionally, alter :welghing the need for energy against the potential im- pact on the environment. . "His job is lo monitor and police sta- tionary pollution sources, not judge power neesb, Ryckoff said. Fitchen's approval of the expansion came after he fought against an earlier F.dison propasal for expansion that would have produced eVen more smog. The new proposal "Is for a complex of 'SIMI! units instead of two large units previously applied for," Ryckoff said. "The power output and the emission or • pollutants would be somew~t less than in the previous application for expansion. However, emission of oxides of nitrogen will be increased by some 20 tons per day for the plant expansion," Ryckoff said. "l would like to add my enthusiastic support to Mr. Green's suggestion" that Fitchen be replaced by "a qualified engineer," Ryckoff sakl. Green bas twice called for Fitcben's removal. rv1ne o iceman .. .. "' t . ' ' .~LY PILOT~ b' Jeft• Zaller • FOURTH GRADER TESSIE SCATES, 10, KNOWS A SABERJ'OOTH TIGER WJIEN SHE SEES ONE Wost Ora"ll" County Teachers Uslng Variety of Materials to Mako L .. ..,.,, Maan Mora .. ,BU;e, Movies · I ,- J.oin ~Three Rs' r.' · l~ Curriculum t Z· . ' By JORN ZALLER • Of • Dill.-,.. nan 'bice throwing and movie appreciation bV. lal<en their .places beside spelling . ,..i reading drills es common elemen- ,tary school pastimes. ft'. 'l'eacbers in every district in West Orarige County are giving their students gflOOS, films, and tape5 that were once <1rt1med only as rare or special treats. · 'The purpose Is to promol< flm and dtverslty as effective aides in teaching buic skills. Valley Police Seek Grant For 'Community Officer' By lllICllAEL· GOODRICH Of ,.. o.ltr , ... ''"' The Fountain Valley Police Depart· ment has applled for a $17,000 grant to funtl a project which will Involve the of- ficers more closely with the community. forcement situation we hope to create bet1er understanding for the police," OeNisi said. The ride-along program will take citizens to the scene or police action in a special police station wagon . Three nights a week, the community services officer will take interested citizens around the city to observe other policemen In enforcement situations. Prone Man Leaps Up, Fires Shot By ARTHUR R. VINSEL Of ... Diiiy ,l)tf ,..., A massive, overnight manhunt . con- tinued today for a gunman who lured an Irvine policeman into an ambush on a lonely country road, shot him, then fled into a foggy cornfield and escaped. PatrolJTlan Stephen T. Nash, 2.1, was hit in -the face by a bullet fragment in the dramatic 11:10 p.m. confrontation as the slug shattered his squad car's windshield. He gunned the engine at the last sec- ond in a desperate attempt to nm down bis would-be kilter when the apparenily Injured man lying on thi · pavemenl l••!'f'd~ up iiilo a crouch and took aim. stimned by the WOlllld, b' -and spun the car around eo he could lake cover behind its door, while the gunman darted Into the field on Jeffrey Road, 200 yards south of Barranca Road. Officer Nash said the man spMnted for a windbreak of eucalyptus trees and a creekbed as he himself crawled into the field combat--style. Fearing he would be caught in a sec- ondary ambush-according to his descrip- tion of how he was lured into a trap - the wounded ofiicer waited for ~ forcements instead of going after the guijn1an. Fellow officers in squad cars arrived within five minutes to initiate a manhunt that eventually involved an army of of- ficers from other police agencies. Patrolman Nash briefed supervisors on '""'t what happened at a comma'ld post set up under direction of Patrol Sgt. Larry Bersch near the ambush scene. He was treated at Costa Mesa Memorial Hospital for a superf1cial gunshot wound on the Jeft cheek and released. Investigating officers were cautious (See AMBUSH, Pa1e I) Edison Expansion Topic of Meeting "Mr. Fitchen's recent action may well have a profound effect on our at- mosphere, unless the Huntington Beach city council or other authorities manage to block the plant expansion,., he said. Fitcben said his approval of the permit for the new plant is contingent upon proof it can meet reduced emission levels claimed by the company. "He (Fitchen) has oo scientific evidence . . . the added pollutants will m not affect our atmosphere signi.Dcantly," Ryckoff said. "It seems quite obvious that Mr. Fitchen is not ruifilling his responsibility in a position for whk:h he was not trained and that a qualified director is needed for the APCD." Besides his pollution control position, Fitcben holds county Utles of agriculhn"al commission and the sealer of weights and measures. DAILY Pll.01" ......,.,..., ........, ........ CHEEK SCARRED BY BULLET, OFFICER NASH TELLS Si'oRY Gunman Springs Trap 1t Rural lnterHction in Irvine Thieu Reports N. Viet Request for Cease-fire By the AslOCfated Prt11 President NgQyen Van TbJeu said tonight in Saigon the Communist side has requested a cease-fire and that one could come "in the near future" -but only if North Vietnam withdraws all Its troops. Once that is done, Thieu said in a two- hour broadcast, his govemment would be ready to discuss a political settlement with the Commuriist-Jed National Libera· lion Front, known as the Viet Cong. No outside party could make decisions determining South Vietnam 's future, he saiC:. "some progress has been made at achieving a negotiated settlement of the Vietnam conOlct ," but refused t.o give any support for the assessment. Press secretary Ronald L. Ziegler reported lhe progress following an hour- long meeting in Washington between Presidenl Nixon, Secretary of · State William P. Rogers and Kissinger, who returned Monday night. Ziegler turned back repeated attempts by newsmen to draw out elaboratkm on his statement. He specifically refused to comment on the speech today by Thieu charging North Vietnamese proposals for it settlement are ill-disguised attempt.! to undermine his government. •-.,-.Research shows that most students If ft wins the grant from {he Com· munHy Services Project, a combined federaJ-!tate<ounty task .force in FoWl- tain Valley, the department will s.t~ a two-phase program deslgne(i to prevent crime and boost comrr1unlcaUon with residents by creating the position of com· munity services officer. "lns,tcad of reacting hinuelf, the of- ficer will explain to the people what is happening while they are together in the car." De.Nisi said. Members of the Huntington Beach HOME Council will hear details of Southern California Edi9on c.ompany ex- pansion plans when they meet &t a p.m., Wednesday In the city h a II ad- ministrative annex. Thieu declared no one has a right to Impose a peace settlement on South Viel· nam and restated his opposition to a tripartite coalition government as sought by the Communist side. In an exchange wllh newsmen, Ziegler at first appeared to say tbe "some prog- ress" referred only to negotiations wlfu North Vietnam, bat later said he was also Including dlacussiom wtth Thieu. -·'team best when eIJ)OSed to a varieiy or m6terials.'' says Bill Barnes, educational sirvices administrator for the Fountain V,.Uey School District. ~Relying on the state textbooks alone can become pretty dull to the typical &fade school child," be says. . , ~Take dice throwiog, for ei:ampte. The .. am:tent human tendency to cra.P shooting t' ~ been harnessed into an effective ii\lcational game. Two chlldren, each with a pair of dice. throw them t,ogether. But rather than ajjding the spots, each chUd must multi- ff pJt the two numbers that show up. The 1;, ~e who completes thls operation first Wins a point. .. ft.us a child may be unconscious that _., "-b1 reelly only doing basic math driU. •, !See GAMES, Page I) .. • Crime Prevention Seminar Scheduled 'A free, -.lgbt crime pnivtlllion 1e1T1fnar for bualneamen lll ICheduled for 7:30 p:m., Wed~ay In the Montgomery ,. Ward cafeteria. It Js sponsored by the Huntington Beach Chamber of Com· merce. The -lnar lnclud.. I short IJlm, 1'Paper Hangers ," presented by detecU•e ¥el a.mlngton ; a talk on "credit" by N. "Nej" Slm<r of Telecr..itt, In!:.: and Ups on !Xnf"to conduct youraelf ~r l!lft11, by pollce p<iblic rtlationa officer Gary Wright For reservat1on11, phono the Chamber at -1. · 1 The officer's two responsibilities would be to coordinate a community crime prevention program and a ride-along project to more ,claaely, invoJve Fowitain Valley citiun:s with· the worklbgs of the police department. "The traditional idea of the police is that they suppl'$ crime, 11 says Sgt. Bill DeNisl. "We want lo begin a program of crime preveoUon and community lterac- tion." Among the people the police hope to become more involved with are the youth of the city; · "The kids are on lbe verge of loving or hating us. If we can expoee them to law enforcement 8ll a. people-oriented pro- fession we can change their negative im- preuJona,1' Derflsl explained. Under the community crime prevention program, the ~!'hopes to divide the clly Into seven distrtcts, each with a representative who will meet once a mooth with the community services of. lictr. Al the montbl,y meeting> the represeJ>- laUvea aod the officer will diacuss how police can beci1rne Involved Jn the local areas. "If one section of tho oily II hllvlng burglary problems, wt can call In our es· pert In tbal area and he can, ttll them bow to discourage the burglar," DeNlst, aa!d. . . The community representatives will then go bock II> their nolghborboods and make contact with other residents. The community ..,..Ices Olncer will alao spend IO per<etit.cl blJ lkmt lalklni with 1mall -In neigbborhood homes. "By talkinf with people in a ...,.,,. , . ~ . . DeNlsi said the department had plan- ned to begi9othe program in 1974, but the grant from the Community Services Proj- ect would allow them to begin in Jaunary. The Community Services Project Is a federally-funded program administered by the county to promote innovative projectt in expanding cities. The project directors will review the police proposal in December before gran- ting final approval. Edison olllclals will explain their pro- pooal for expanding the Huntington Beach power plant to meet the elecll'lcal needs of the are.a. Commit!ff reports on Meadowlark Airport, city slgna and hlgb rbe rules wlU also be presented at the meting, The public ls welcome at all HOME Council meetings. Basehall!'s Loss Jackie Robinson Succumbs at 53 STAMFORD, Conn. !AP) -Jackie Roblnaon, who broke major teague boseball's racial barrier with the old Brooklyn Dodit!fl In 1114'1 and went on to stardom and a place in lhe Hall of Fame, died today of what h1I docCot described as heart disease. Half·bllnded by diabe1<1, the IS-year-old RobllllClll IUlfered an early mom- tng attllck at his poo1I home In this suburb of New York City and died at 7:10 a.m, al a hospital. (See' story. Pago 16) He 1lad been hooored only 10 days earlier during the 11?2 W'qrld Serlu at Cincinnati wben a seUout crowd at Riverfront Sladlum applauded the 25th annlversary of his debut In Brooklyn. • lloblneon'a hair was white, his eyu almool gone '1ld h1I heart lcatTOd by a 11118 attack. T!tls curbed lloblnoon's succesaful buslneM career durtJlll the past few yean. He could hardly see to walk '!Olten attending tho !Uneral In April of fonner Dodger teammal< Oil Hodges. StlD, death-<amo u a shock to the b.-U world. • He declared that no formal agreement. were reached 1n his five days of talk! with President Ni.Ion's national security adviser, Henry A. Klssinger .. He said the talks were exploratory and "nothing was aigned." In what was essentially a reiteration of bis government'• long-standing position on an Indochina setUement, Thieu said lhe cease-fire would have to cover Cam· bodia and ·Laos as well as South Viet· ru.m, and be guaranteed by internat.kmal supervision. "A cease-fire may take place In the near future because lbe CommWlists have requested It," he continued. "The CommWllsts agreed to, and even beg for a cease-fire because lhey are militarily losing.'' He said he asked the Unlted States to ••ast the Commulii.sts what \bey want" and said South Vletnom would reserve IU own final decisions oo Ill future. MeanwhUe, the Wbil< Houae said today Flu. Shots Scheduled For Senior Citizens A nu ahot cllnlc for Huntington BeaCll senior citizens will be held from 3 p.m. to I p.m. In the Lake Pili< Club """"'· Lake and 12th atreets. 'nlO clinic Is ~ponaortd by the Hun- tln&14n Beach SOroptomtst Club and the Recreation and Parks Dtpartment. For fur11t<r lnlormatioo phone 147-2541, or 116M341. ' RA!porters asked why the White Rouse refused to discuss upeets of lhe negotla~ tiona when Thleu,and North Vietnamese Premier Than Van, Dong had made statements concerning the state of peace elforts. . OJ'alltfe C:oast • Weatlter Hazy sunshine Is nn the agenda through Wedneoday, according to the weatherlady, with blghs along the coest In the low 'IOI, rl$g to 80 Inland. Lows toolgbt 5L INSmE TGDAY Th• alln<>lphfre is ,.llrolfted joviality far ,.J)O!'kr, aboan1 th t McOotJ<m campaign air· plane. Writer• 1ee Ut,le chance of his wfnnlng, but th< fatigued candidate malntalna llope. S•• story on PGf/e 9. ~i:.= • c........ at.J -., 0••••• 11 --. .........., ... .......... ,..., ,..._. .. ,, '"' .. .__.. 11 .._,_ M AMI lMilllr'I It • I ' "~AILY_•ccllccDT ____ • _____ r_ .. __ .... -'._._Oc<_ .. _211_._1_m_ I • • ~ - Groundbreaking Set Construction of Beach Library w Begin. .. Tbe first shovel lull or earth. marking the start ot c»n.struction on the $1.8 million Huntington Beach central library. will be turned over saturday morning. Civic leaders will hold the traditional groundbreatlnc ceremonies at 10:30 a.m., in the central park at Talben Avenue and Golden West Streel Architect Dion Neutra's t.hree-leveJ, glaswncased library wUI be open fOt" business about April 1974. 'lbere 1s a beaYJ cor>centration an esthetlc vliue throughout the library design. Neutra has plonned aome 13 pand.s inside the ltbrary, aa wtU aJ flow- ing ponds and founlains oulllde which wlll compliment the' lake. Pretty as the water may be, it also servies a funWonal use, according to John!on. 'lbe 90ft aound of Oowinl water is con- Exeansion Plata tldered a natural IOUnd barrier to hmh<r aouodJ such u oculfllng shoes or not-so mufned voices. A huge, concrtte splrli ramp will deicdrate the library cnltance from lhe lower JeveJ. It will he of gnater lmpartance U lbe city adds an additional wing to the: library in the ruture, as suggestAld by Neu tr a. THI$ IS ARTIST'S CONCEPTION OF NEW HUNTINGTON. BEACH CENTRAL LIBRARY Certmonie1 S1turd1y Will Mark Start of Construction on F1c1llty Overlooking Talbert Ub Total cost of the central library is 16 milliOn. when finance . charges and sit.e llreparation costs are added to lbe basic $28 million construction figure. 1be library Will sit on a knoll. overlooking Talbert Lake~ wilhin tbt city's !OT-acre central park which is also under COOJturdk>n. Beach Aides Ask Review_ High Court Will Hear Pregnant Nurse's Case From \\'ire Services WASHINGTON -Susan Struck, the Air F'orce captain £acing disc harge from thl' scrvic:e for having a baby. was From. Page l GAMES ... And at the same time, he has a much greater incentive to learn his multiplica- tion tables thorougbly. Educators see a.oother value to such devices, as welL "The more supplementary materials a teacher uses, the more Dex.Ible will be her program," says Don Pate, principal ol .Surke School~in.ffuntington Beach, "A teacher can work witJ1 half her clas.. from the basic text, while she asaigns others to tapes, games and films for whateve r lessons they need work on." "This allows her to work with different children oo different levels according to their needs," be says. The materials used vary greatly. Some are outright games, lite the math dice, but others are simply regular les900s placed on tape or on film strip. Children may wort with them individually or in small groups. But in all cases, the material.!I are can.flllly designed to be used by teachers as an Integral part of lbe teaclllng pro- gram. In some subjects, there are teachers v.·ho rely almost 100 percent on materials that were once considered only .. sup- plemental." 'Mlis happen! particularly in science and social sclence, where many teachers consider the state texts dull and outdated. Also , these two subjects lend themselves especially wen to presen- tation on film and through exhibits. Typical or lbe supplemental materia1 that can be used is a c.ollection of Indian artifacts, animal fossils, and stuffed animals that will be available this year in the Ocean View School District. "It's one thing to read about, for e:t· ample, a sabertooth. tiger," says Jill Henricks, manager of the district's cur- riculum materials center. "But it's another for children to be able actually to inspect the remains of one. "We hope that in allowing them to see the one we've got this year will bring a little more life to their textbooks." The Ocean View collection includes more than 200 elhibits and ls on loan from tbe Los Angeles museum of natural history. Scouts Open House Boy Scout Troop J94. of Huntington Beach will ha~ an open house !or boys 11-13, and their parents, from 7:30 to 9 p.m., Wednesday in the Lutheran Church of the Resurreclioo, 9812 Hamilton Ave. For inlormalion aOOut the troop or the open house, phone 962-6901, or 96&-4021. , OIANel COAST •a DAILY PILOT ,.... OfWlfl CINtt 0.-.ll."t' 1>11.0T wtil. wtiktl la ~ .._ H-'"'-. ll PlflllllsMlt ~ .. ~ CO.t ,,_llfllllg ~ .... nit tdh ..... •r• PllO!lthtcl. MOl'dl<f ftitOl.llh l'rWt'I'. '°" CO.II Mtw, N...._,. 8~. """""'"" hKll/l'-1•1n v.11..,, Ut-hech. l,.....,,./s.ddl•Mde end S•n ClftoMntt/ San Jvafl C.plttr-. A 1lN1lt rt0kwl•I lllllttM " publltMd ""'"'•¥• tlld hllCl•l"o fhll prlnc:llHll publ[1ftlnci Pl•nl It 11 330 Wu t \1-, &1""1, Cott• M.... c.i+1ornl•, t2n•. w.wrt N. w,,c1 h'Mlffnl 11'1111 PllO!lt!Mt Jt J: k. C11Mey Vlei PT-'""t 11'111 Otfleral MIM9tf' TM1r1tt K .. •il •••• n""'"'' A. M..,r,hl11• _ ..... a.Mi H. \a" ai.ti.1r4 P. H•ll ................ llan Tiny Ce.tilt w...~~ ... llw .................. otn. 11111 le1M lovl1¥tr4 MeW119 "'4re111 P.O. I•• 1t0, t1i41 Ofto<OHI<• Ufl!lt ~· m ,..,., A~ CM• "--1 Dli W•ml S-..._.,. htdl1 en N .... IWlnll 11'11 CllfMMt: aJ NOr1JI I C11'1\1nt ll:MI , ........ {114) '41o4JJ1 C1 1.,... Mes; t!tMt '42.,171 p,_ ,..,. or...t t...r '"'"""-Mt-12Jt ........ "" °"""' C-1 """""' ... ~ .... -1*'1e\, nMtnl .... ... ..,..... ""'*' .. .-W.1 ..... h .....,. ""' .. r•M•M wlMt 9'ICllt ..,. ....,.,. ., dllffllilt ......... ...... 0.-....... Hiii If CIMllo ,.,._, c.1t..,.1a. lllllllrliMIMI "' ,.,.,w n.u ~I W -q U.IS ,,_,....,, mllltsY .......,..., AM"""'~· granted a hearing today by the U.S. Supreme Court. In her appeal. the 23-year-old nurse claimed Air Force regulations un- constitutionally single out pregnant women for punishment and intrude "into a person's fundamental right to decide whether to bear a child." The court will het.r tne case ear1y oeit year. An order last May by Justice Wiiliam o. Douglas barred the Air Force from discharging Mlss struck until lbe court decided whether to bear her suit. The career officer became pregnant while serving at Camranh Bay, Vietnam, early in 1970. Her baby, a girl, waa born Dec. 3, 1970, and wu given for adoption. At the ti.me, Air Force regulations re- uired-d.ischar.ge-in-cue-oLpregnancy unless the pregnancy was terminated. Since then, lhe regulations have been modified to pennJt a waiver. Capt. Struck's request for one was denied in June 1971. Thte appeal said that as a Roman Catholic sbe was prevented by ber religion from securing ,an abortion. Since an abortion or mlscarriap woold have permitted her to remain In the Air Force, lbe •ppeal contended the regula- tioos also violated lbe constitulional right of Catholics of the "free exercise" of their religion. Capt. Struck, a native of l4ulsville, Ky., is stationed at Minot Air Force Base in North Dakota. Citizens' Goals, Objectives Unit Presents Report A Song-awaited report from the Hun- tington Beach Citizens Goals and Ob- jectives (GO) Committee will ·be presented at 5 o'clock tonight in the city hall administrative annex. The GO Committee was formed in May 1971 to study the needs and attitudes ar the community at large. Robert Sutake beads Ille GO steering committee. Most of the investigative work was done by 17 subcommittees in- specting such subjects as residential, commercial and industrial progress, shortline development, parks and recrea-- tion needs and nati.ral rtsources. Tonight's report will be a summary af the canclusions found by the 17 su~ committees. Most of the work was done lhrough surveys malled to residents. The report will be glveo al a combined study session of the city council and planning commission. Tonight's session is not a public hearing, but such hearings will be held in the future. Councilmen may incorporate some of the GO C.Om- mittee's conclusians in future city policy. Trustees Studv • Position on 14 A report on employment DnCtlces tn the Huntington Beach Union High School District wUI be presented to trustets when they meet at 7:30 o'clock tonight. The report will be pre~nted by Mn. Stella Sandoval, a cnmmlssloner with the state Falr Employment Practices Com- rnlsslon. Charges that the dlstrk:t wu not fair In Its hiring •nd promoUon pracUces were first leveled In September 19'11 by membert of the Mexic&D-A.mertcan Com· mlttee on EdUCBUan. Since then the d!Jtrlct, lbe Flir Employmellt CommlNlon and tho Mu· !can-Amerlcan Committee havt been ex· plorlng employment pradlceo. The truslffl wUI meet In the Hun- tington Beacb High School Auditorium. Feminists Arrested NEW YORK iAP) -Alty. F1orynco Kennedy 111d femlnllt Tl-Grace Attinlon were armted Monday when Ibey refUMd to move while. demonatntlo( In flutt ol ·President Nixon'• c a m pa I l ~ 11 .. 11. ~uartera. About IO wornen-'1 rllbtl ac- Uvla11, protqtlng the Pftoldent'I pool· tlon oo chlld care and abottto.i, appeared In cottumet tn front ot the Madl!on Avenue offices and thrtW candy killel to spectators, shooting "Kiss off Nixon." . . Air Crew Finds Third Cobra Dioll Neutn, taking over design ol the library when bis world famous father, Richard, died, haJ created a laclllty which features huge, glass windows all around it, flowing ponds of water inside and outside. and library stacks placed strldly In lbe center. Of Edison lmpac~ Report SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -A deadly five-foot king cabra has been found by Trans Worki Airlines freight crewmen at San Francisco International Airport, an airlines spokesman says. The make , discovered late Mon- day night, was the third cobra found at San Francisco and Los Angeles InternatioDal airports since a shipment of flowers from Thailand arTived over lhe weekend, TWA spokesman Jerry Cosley said. The first cobra was found Satur- day night after TWA Dight 754. ar- rived in l.o8 Angeles. Couple to Face Trial Over· Slot Machine, Gun ~rick and Kay Loar were ordered today to face trial Nov. 20 on charges stemming from the alleged discovery of a machine gun and a slot mecltlne in their Huntington Beach home. u.ar, 35, and bis wife, 32, of 4082 Hum· boldt Drive, were ordered by Orange County Superior Coor! Judge William Murray to return to his courtroom Nov. 10 for a bearing into a motion to dismiss lbe allegations. The same dates were odJeduled for co- defendent 1bomas Morgan, 53, of 3301 Devon Circle, HuntJngton Bead!. He is identified by the prosecution as the man who attempted to sell lbe Gmnlo-made machine gun to an undercover agent. The trio was arreSted. last Aug. 23 by pallce who said they found lbe slot machine and a pistol silencer during a search at the Loar home. Money Deficits By Republicans, Democrats Told WASHINGTON (AP) -Tbe Finance Committee to Re-elect the President bu spent more than $2U million since April and Is sll&bUy In the red going Into lbe filW two weeb ol the presidential CUD- """"· roporta filed today show. The campaign of the Democratic presidential c and I d a t e , George McGovern, a1so is running in the red but by a much heftier margin of about $2.85 million. City Librarian Walter Johnson says the centralization of the boolr--1;tacks is ane of the uoique features in Neutra's design. "He doesn't like cluttered shelves, the normal feature or a library," Johnson says. Tbe library is essentially two stories tall, with a basement for unloading and storing suppl ies. The top level of the library, entered from Talbert Avenue, will feature a large audio-visual ~lion, including microfilm projectors, microfische cards {three books can be reproduced on one .. ind.es:~ size card) records and other information retrieval systems. A studio, for possible use with Golden West College cable televlaioo, also will be on the upper level. 1be upper level al!o wm have balconies, called "reading platforms" by Neutra, and -several meeUng rooms. ~ A small book store, selllng-government documents and ltema of general interest, also-Will be on the upstairs level. The lower Jevel will house the children's library, a youth activities room and an lndoor patio overlooking the lake. A graphics room, where the pubUc can practice mu!U-media dlsplays, will also be available. It might also serve as an arts and crafts room . Vaccine Oinics For District Children Slated Children wro were not va<cloated agalMt measles end rubella in the recent program conducted in the Newport.Mesa aod ac.an View school d!Jtricts will have another opportunity in November. Clinlcs are scheduled for 1:30 p.m. Nov. 17 at St. John lbe Baptist school, 1021 Baker St. In Costa Mesa and at to a.m. Nov. 1 at Lake View Sch:>ol, 17451 Zeider Lane in HWltlngton Beach. These immunizations against rubella, the three-day meules, and llklay measles are free to all children between one and 12 years of age . Although children may have already been immunl2ed against either disease, the National Foundation.March of Dimes says it will not be harmful for them to receive this combined vaccine. Children who recei.ved immuniz.ation before 11165 wbould be ,...Immunized with this combined vac<lne, according to the Orange County Health Ileputment. Permission slips lor pre-school chidren will be avollabla at Ihm two clinics. For further tnronnatlon, call the Orange County March of Dimes at 979- 2270. Huntington Beach wants to revil(W the same environmental impa:ct report the Southern CAllfomja EdiSon COJnpany mu st submit to state authorities. "They don't have to give us a ilfferen t From P-.e J AMBUSH ... about saying It was definitely a rigged trap ~Is morning, but circumstances left most with little doubt. OHicer Nash said be was parked beskle Jeflr<y Road writing • mlllne report by Duhllghl wheD a car carrying two very clWJCUt )'OUlli IDOll pulled ·up. The gunman himself WU deoclibed U having loog lilact hair, • fllll, bushy beard and wearing a leather Jacket over a T.oJitrt and blue desllm jeans. ''A biter-type," one officer remarked today, hinllng outlaw mo•~'· gang tactics. ~ --:4 ... ? ........ Officer fl"1> soi.A.I!>< two men told hlm Ibey were eo route to' telephone pallce about someone in the roadway wbo ap- peared to be Injured or perhopr lli. He sped to the aceoe, where his beadllght.s Illuminated the supposed vic- thn, lylng face down, his -aglin.<t the asphalt pavomenl and both hands hidden belleath his chest. &lddenly, Officer Nash aid, lbe man jumped Into a crouch clutchlng a long- barTeled, small caliber revolver in typical combat style and drawtna: a bead at his bead. lAlnging sideways atmo.st too late -be tried to nm over the man n be fired. Be w-u never able to get off a shotgun blast due to lbe delay In geltJn&. the weapon out of its bracket while crouched below the dashboard delemlvely. By lbe thne be tr.ed I~ the asaallaDI was too far away. Kia lranlio radio broadcast of 1 Code 999 -officer needs help -brought pallce helicopters from both Costa Mesa and Newport Beach, bu1 ,....me groond fog In lbe area bid their quany. Offlcen from both cities, plus Orange County Sherll!'s deputles, the CalUornla Highway Patrol and Irvine Ranch securi- ty deputies n.pooded to the manhunt Due to difficulty in coverina· the dark, fo15-shrouded fannland, Garden Grove policemen Bill Compton and Larry Davis with their scent-tracking dogs Thunder 1. .. C:. Rlck joined the hunt. Westminster officers Grant Varner and Tim Miller with their hunt dogs Axel and Eich were also dispatched. Ironically, Officer Varner himsell was wounded almost identically -in lbe oect and lace area -by bullet fragmenll during a gi.m battle last year with a berserk bandit police finally killed. One patrolman with a bullhorn repeatedly bn>adca51 W1ll'lllngs and pleas for the 8mbosb suspect to surrender to avoid being killed too, wbJch would have been probable given lbe coodllions. lype of report, but we do w1111t lbe fUU impact repart before. building perm!~ are grante:d," city spokesman ~ Severns said this morning. ~ 1lle city has reJod<d What Ecbson ~ f1clfls called "a preliminary report'~ won't Issue pennlts for the C91D S250 lnillion expansion of its Huntiif Beach power plant. Edi.son officials will give a full on their expansion plans at 1 o' tonight' before the combined city cil and planning ·commission, in chaml>ers. - But Seven111 said the -lm't peeled ,lo tUe -Cll the permits 1111tU Nov ... "We bave guldellnes for the !'Udy, but Ibey -to be...-committee, next week," Severns plaloed "'11te requlmneots bave ~challged." • Edison_ ~ has wm .approval for its eipanslon from lbe 'Orlilge Coimt,y Air.. PollutJon Control_ IlJsb:lct. Now, EdlaoD olllclals ....i dty bulldlog permill, plus the okay of abollt' II more state and federal qenclos. Tonight's n.pari will Involve 1111 Ed1M ; explanatioll ol llily lbe DOW po-pnlC' ess (using jet engines) will be cleaDer than building mon steam'gmeralon, u. it tried t"!'~ yean 1go. ~. Special Stamp Folders Offered ,.,/, I Some 19'11 commemoraUve stamp folders are still available at the HUii'' tingloo Beach Poot Office, 6771 Warner Ave., according to officer4!>dlar(e Deu tWard. 'l1lls Is the first mlnJ.album dlalrlhuled nalloawide through lbe poa1al oyatem. It contains M commemoraUve ltlmp& wllJ;I a de9crlptlon of each stamp ln&lde lbe folder. The price la $2.110. Wml aays lbe stamp folders ore designed to encourage stamp collecting among young people. Included in the col- lectlon are two Christmas stamps lSSUl'd Nov. 10. 1971. Halloween Parties Set in W esbninster Three ol lbe We"11\lntler parks will be filled with goblins and ghosts and olber small Halloween monsters next Tuesday night. ... The recreation department's tradi- tional Halloween Carnival will start at I p.m. at Sigler llld McFadden parks. Ir spook hoooe at Bot.sa Chica Park will be filled with 111j'sterlous surprises from 7:30 p.m. to 9:30 p.m. The cmnpalgn balances are renected in reporl!I to the General Accounting Of!ice, required · under a federal election& law that went Into eHed April 7. Allbougb due Monday , covering the period Sep. 1 through Oct. 16, oome rcparta apparenliy were delayed by 1be Veterans Day Holiday and not 111 are In. Let Us Put You on The Map However. the Dagsblp commlttoo for ' ""'81deot Nixon -the Financa Com- mittee to R<elect lbe Pmldent -and McGovern For -~ lllO. were received on tllne althoaP only - and not contrlbuton were available early today for l\lcGovem. Nixon'• llnance committee roported contnbulloN, I08111 and tnnlf•ra from numen>t11 satellite ccmml-of 13).0 mllllon since April 7. The Nixon people raised more than SlO mJllion In the pre-April 7 period but, snying they would abide! by the letter of the law, have declined to di.aclose where Ibey got It or bow Ibey llP'llt it. Tbe Nwm npott lla1a expendllum since Aprll 7 of $211.5 million. The com- mittee aald It bad 1514,1115 in cash on hand u of Oct. 16; tt wu oWld an even ft million 'u of that date, and had debll ol $1.8 million. In the period Sept. I to Oct. 16, lbe report of the committee uld, It collected abollt ft mUllon and spent aome 19,5 mllllon. Thia compam with fU million that the McGovtm oommittee nporll ralaln& -and $11.otl mUU.0 11 reports opendlnc In the Sept. I-Oct. II pariod. Mc:Govem'a top committee reports baviJli nlaed $11.4 million ; ll)'I It 11 abort $1117,204 cash "" bqd; la owed $125,0l'I, and bu debta ol •• mlllion. It ..., Ml Immediately clear whelber the ov.....U McGovom lip'U nl•r to coatrlbuUOlll and uptndltu,... going hock to ~rll 7 or to the flrat ol the )'Ur. They are lilted under a column UUed "calendar year to dale.'' • Near the entrance, inside our, stOr., Is • 9i1nt new map. Wt 1r1 in the proc111 of identifying an of t'1e homas we heve carpeted since 1965 on this map with colored pins. (A dlff-rit color for each yHr.) Close scrutiny will d1tect soma lnieN11iing feel>: firttly, we have carpeted homos on virtu· 1Ay every rlreet in the area. Secondly, 1111 pins oro in bunches, indicating WORD-OF-MOUTH •dvertising. Thirdly, the number of homos we havo carpeted is staggering. II you dasiro hon o sty, .Hperionco, ~nd recomm1nd1tlons from n 1 I g h b o r s w1 hava workod for, then Alden's ls THE PLACE I ALDEN'S CARPETS e DRAPES 1663 Placentia Ave. COSTA MISA 646-4838 HOURS: Mon. Tl!ru Thurs., f to S:30-PRI., 9 lo 9-SAT., 9:30 lo S l ' 1 I. I ;~ I • On N pri Acco co rt .. to be heart "I H' St Fr An 51roo man clo tea Nix w te Po she II C8 to ad a Ca " . ten see the' an ' llo --"' . -" - -------_ _.,_ --~-. -i DAILY PILOT 3 Henry Corte§ to Leave Prison-Again On Nov. 7, Henry COrtei will be a free man 1g1ln. On that day, the convicted hetolo dealer will be released from the state prison at Tehachapi on parole. And as be wilts for that day he must be recalllnc the time nearly one ye1r 110 when prison officials m.l!takenly (reed him on parole for S3 d1)'1 before lm- prisohlnJ1~tm again. Acco to his attorney Peter Fetros, Cortez plans to settle in Orange County to be near his elderly father who has a heart condition and bis sister who works at the Hughes Aircraft plant in Newport Beach. "Cortez called me long dlatance a few days aao." Fetroa aald Monday. "He said he ~ getting escited to the polnt he can't sleep, thinking about getting out." Once before, the gates of a prison swung open -that lime at granite-wall- ed Folsom Prison near Sacramento - releasing Cortez after prison ofiicials misread a state appeals court ruling and thought it freed him . Then on Dec. 3, 1971 -33 days after he had been released -James W. Green- man, Cortez' parole officer, knocked on the door or Cortez' aunt'• home Jn the Sierra foothlliJ community of Lincoln. "When J told him he had to go back in. it wu like I walked up and him over the head with a 2--by.f," Greenman recalled later. The court had actually ruled that Cortez must be allowed lo appear before the same judge who originally senlenced - him to at least 30 years in prison to plead his case for a reduced sentence. Early this year. Cortez and Felros traveled to Riverside, and Superior Court DAILY .. ILOT St•ff l"tltltt "'I HAVE NO REAL COMMUNICATION WITH OTHER DENTISTS AROUND-HERE. l'VE BEEN THERE" Oline Vin Wieren Auista Dr. Jim Rolfe In Atmosphere Th1t Dep1rts From Tradition Hinslia-w H arided Strong Backing From President Andrew J . Hin.shaw has received a strong endorsement fl'OJil President Richard Nixon in his campaign for eJec- tion to Congress from Orange county's 39lb District A letter Crom the President received Monday read: "Dear Andy. M you near the end of whit I knew must have been an arduous an~ challenging campaign I want to take thiS opportunity to Wish you the best OD NoV. 7. "America needs your d e d i c a t e d leadership in the next Congress. With yoilr help we can make unprecedented progress toward the great goals of our new American majority -peace at home and . abroad for generations to come, a new prosperity without war and without inflation and the opportunity for 1 every American to see the America n dream come true in his own life. "I look forward to working with you ln making the next four years among the beat in America's bistroy. Sincerely, (signed) Richard Nixon." The Orange Coonty assessor who defeated incumbent Rep. John Sclnnltt ln the JW1e primary saJd today, "I am very I pleaaed with President Nixon's en- dorsement and his desire to work with me in Washington for the next four years. •Go Ont S111iling!) Laguna Dentists Nonconformists By JACK CH,\PPELL Of "" 0.11' .-.i.r s,... Jim Rolfe grinned from behind his great black bushy beard. "As a_ general rule, they go out smiling." The sign on the door they go out reads "James G. Rolfe, DOS," in that con- ventional raised white I e t t e r i n g archtypical of all dentists' offices everywhere. Inside, nothing is conventional. Dr. Rolfe and partner Dr. Aman Vogel prac- tice dentistry amid colorful patient· painted murals, tapestries and piped-in rock that would set Muzak right back on its subliminal perception. The Laguna Beach waiting room seems built around a huge round waterbed and incense hangs heavy in the air. "It's relaxed. It's just like home rather than the sterile white walls and white unlfonns," Or. Vogel said. Dr. Rolfe, 33, and Dr. Vogel. 28, are serious dentists, make no mistake about that. It's just that they have combined their lives and their profeulon, working what they live and living their work. "l 'm a vegetarian and I recommend that . A healthful diet is most important. movie equ.ipmerit. ''It is a rarily for people in dentistry to stress healthful diet in the total body sense. They just say, 'brush your teeth . after every meal and don't eat sweets,' " Dr. Rolle said. such as diet affect them. They suggest avoiding use of refined and processed foods, as well as shunning canned and froien foods. Neither Rolfe nor Vogel think much of the "production line dentistry" practiced by some of their fellows. "We spend about twice as much time with each patient as most dentists do," Dr. Vogel said. Judge John Neblett agreed after a hear. Ing lo drop Cortei' prior conviction of heroin J>OW!l.!ion -enabling the California Adult Authority to set the Nov. 7 release date. If Neblett had not agreed to do so, Cortez could have served another 21 years in prlaon unleu Gov. Reagan com- 1nuted the sentence, Fetros said. "Now he can finally just sit there click· ing off the days until his release," Fet.ros said. "He has told me he'll get a job In Orange County so he can be near his father who ha.s had several heart at· tacka." When COrtez' story became known, the mistaken release stirred a at.atewide con- troversy, but Fetros says be doel not thin!< the publicity illfluenced Judge Neblett'a decislon. 1'Tbe publicity helped me, though. because it prompted witnesses I never could have found to contact me and agree to testify at the bearin&" in Cortei behalf, Fetros said. It was the testimony of narcotics of- ficeas , he said, rather than newspaper stocios that mad<, l'leblttl g-to mab Cortu' parole poaible '° aoon. Duriog lhl JIG trial, lla!AI naraitlcs ageot Robert A. Bark lestilled that lie ~ieved Cortez was one ot the mQr suppliers of beroip in Riverdde County, but In hla February ltllJmoa7 Barlt llld he had come to belleve Cortez wu "neo-otiating for someone beyond hfm-se-lf'!• Asked if Cortez was just a heroin de:livery boy, Bark said, "I tbWt therlH a potentud that that's what took place." Slaying Suspect Held Drifter Quot,ed-'l Just Killed a Guy' By JOHN VALTERZA Ot 1M 0.llY .. 1111 Stiff San Clemente Police arrested a drifter with bloodstains on his clothes early to- day on suspicion or murder after the transient approached MPs at the Chri s- tianitos Gate and assertedly said, " just killed a guy," Ninety minutes later, orficers being directed by the suspect found the victim or the shooting. The ixidy of a Long Beach Navy man was found beside the San Diego Freeway a few .feet inside the southerly city limits of Carlsbad. At that point, local officers turned Jerry William Manning, 'ti, over to Carls- bad detectives. The case began at 3:45 a.m. when ~1anning approached the MPs. The Military po lice then called local officers. San Clemente Police Lt. Robert Maso n said Manning led officers to a late·model auto parked at the Basilone Road off· ramp of the Freeway. Bloodstains were found on the front Boy Dies in Fall From Moving Car A four·year-old Anaheim boy was killed late Monday night when he fell from a car and was struck by another vehicle on the San Diego Freeway near Seal Beach Boulevard. William Draper. son of Mrs. Pamela Draper of 9121 Cerritos Ave .• died of head injuries when run over by a car driven by Margie Ann Steele, 51, of Westminster . The boy managed to open the door or the passenge r side or the small sports car driven by bis mother, the California Highway Patrol reported. A spokesman said today the mother was so distraught that !hey could not determine exactly how the small child managed to open the car door. seat's passenger side. On the floorboard the officers found a spent .32-<:aliber cartridge. Mason said the next phase lasted about an hour as the "cooperative" suspect assertedly led officers southward in the quest for the body. The search enc:ed east of the freeway near the Poinsettia Avenue overpass in Carlsbad. The identity of the victim Temained a mystery early today. He died from a single wound to the head. Spokesmen for the Carlsbad police department would say nothing about the crime, inmsting that all available person- nel on the small force were at the murder scene. Local offlcers said it appeared that the victim had been shot and propped up on the passenger side of his car for some time before his body was dumped on the roadside. . Manning allegedly told local police the victim "wouldn 't leave me ak)De" during an apparent sou thbound drive from L-Ong Beach . • After the shooting. Manning allegedly drove the car for a time, dumped the re- main::; on the Toadside, then headed north agai n. tie drove the car until it ran out of fuel at the offramp south of the city llltliU, police said . Niguel Case Expecwd To Go to Jury Today By FREDERICK SCHOEMEHL ot tllll DlillYJUtf '"'" LOS ANGELES -Evidence in the trial of three Ohio men charged wilh the multi-million Laguna Niguel b a n k burglary is exi>ected to be submitted to a federal jury late today followtng fin al arguments by defense and prosecution attomeys. Today's prooeedings were dominated by attempts from attorney Victor Sherman, representing Amil Oln!io, to impeach the testimonies of two key pros- ecution witnesses. However both Richard Gabriel and Earl Dawson reiterated their previous statement.!I to the court. Gabriel Jut week teJtil.ied that DinsJo told him or his role in the $5 million burglary while the two men were fn Im Angeles County Jail. Dawson previously testified that defen- dant Charles Mulligan admitted. to his part in the crime when the two men met in a Tustin bar early in June. Final arguments from attorneys were scheduled early this afternoon followed by instructions from U.S. District Court Judge William "Matt" Byrne Jr. to jurors. The jury will then retlre to chamben to weigh the evidence and testimony against the three suspects charged with t:k! crime considered to be the largest bank burglary in law enforcement history. In a related action early this rooming, Byrne denied a motion that chargea be dismissed agairust .defendant Philip JI. Christopher, Similar requests !nng attorneys representing Dinsio aod Mulligan were denied Fliday. "I, too, am eager for the start of my legislative career as Orange County 's man on capitol hill. I believe that by close attention to the job, hard work, team play and the cooperation of the Nixon administration that I will make a worthwhile contribution." Both dentists agreed that the bigges t part of their job was making people aware of tbeir teeth and how factors LINCOLN-CONTINENTAL ... Mark IV Hinshaw said his goal is lo be "Orange County's best congressman in history. The Prtsldent's support and assistance will. give me a good start toward that a:oal" • Hinshaw's opponent in the Nov. 7 elec- tion is Democrat John Black, a Newport Ber$h attorney. ' UN Day Observed The Coastline Chapter of the United Nations Association and the Model of UC Irvine will mark UN Day this evening wit h a public lecture se: for 8 p.m. in room 178 of Humanities Hall. Chemistry professor F. Sherwood Rowland will discuss "IntemaUonal Nuclear Problems and Promises". Female Doctor Claims UC . Resists Social Changes Bl!:RKELEY (AP ) -A woman doctor, whf assails shapel y nodes In a medical tedbook as "Circa 1941 Police Gazette por1lography," says that, aa a woman , she"" has probably been underpaid from llf>!,000 to $200,000 during her :IQ.year career u a researcher and teacher. A'.nd although UC Berkeley is reputed to 6e friendly. to soc ial change, the doctor added, "Change with respect lo women is abcl.Jt &I remote at the University of CnQfornla as at IJarvard . "All you ha ve to do is look at the list of ienut'i!d professora" at UC Berkeley to see ther11 are not enough women among them. said Or. Estelle Ramey. Or, Romey, professor of phyglology, Rnd blophy1lc1 at Georgetown UrUvenlty, ~pate titre Monday night on "Se~ Jlormones and Human AbUit.y." At a n~ws confe.rence l>Qforehand, · tht: • doctor renewed her criticism of 11· Justrations in "The Anatomical Basis or Medical Practlet." She somewhat gleefully llllllOUoced that the book has been recalled by Williams and Wllkins publlshe.rs to correct a number of scientific erron. "It aounda like l'm happy,'' ahe said. "If they pre lo.!l ng money, Jam." SpecUically, Dr, Romey criticized the uSfl or beautiful, nud~. nonmuscular women to show distribution of mu.~tes. "You can't Se(l anything except smooth skin and large breasts," she said. She said th• Introduction of tho book was indicative of the sex atUtude of medical schools and medical textbook authon. She quoted lt as saying, "Don't bothtr to ask us: for the. models' phone numbers. Our wives burned our little black book! al the la st bl:irbecur," J ' I • • • Continental Coupe 1973's . ARE NOW HERE! --LEASE-- SPECIALIST IN FULL MAI NTENA NCE LEASING! SEE ONE ... TRY ONE ..• BUY ONE ... TODAY! Rome Of 'nle New Car ••• "Golde" ro11eh" . .. ·- r\11 ll( I lflY 2GI HARBOR BLVD~ COSTA MESA • 1540-158311 • Dome 01 nie Nft Ctr • , • "Gohlea ·l'etidl" t j I { 4 D.lllY PILOT Nixon, Monsoons Slow Viet Bombing~ ,. ·. Silly, Soggy Season Sets In l\11STS IN 11lE MORNING: This is the ·: time of year when in the early hours. the ~· foggy. foggy dew creeps in along this best of all possible coasts and easts many folks into a mood best described as the Terribles. Everything in the world. they declare. has abruptly turned dull gray. Summer 's sun has vanished on a permanent basis. Nothing is left but Dullsville. Do not despair, gentle reader. Why, even the U.S. Weather Service may rescue you . When I fought my way into the office through the mists of the mom· ing today. the •Neathcr report defied the outside elements. IT WAS INDICATED that Santa Ana breezes are on the way. These desert air currents are scheduled to blov.· all the fog to 11awaii. clear you r breathing tubes and lift temperatures into the high SOS. \\'hy, e\'en now, as you are reading these pearls. it is possible that you are ... basking in an Indian Summer. But otherwise, you might complain, things are still pretty dull outside. \rel!. that might be. Oh, you might get a smile out of Mrs. Shelba 111arsh of Costa Jl,fesa, v.·ho, despite the gnashing of teeth over at City ffa!I. is putting together a Children's Zoo at her place on \\'est Bay Avenue. SO FAR, ri1rs. l\t:irsh's household pets Include one coyote ca!led Henry, a chim- panzee named Chubber Rex, tv.·o rac- coons, seven kittens, and a pair or guinea pigs. Mrs. ~iarsh a'tso says she has a lion and a bobcat on the way to join the other animals. One might suggest Cost.a ~iesa has a zoo, whether they want it or not. Another little news item has indicated that Laguna Beach will not get a {liece of the action at the Colosseum in Rome, Italy, despite the best efforts of Art Colony resident Tom Merrick. Merrick dispatched real estate woman Fausta Vitali to Rome lo buy the old pla~ but she failed . Laguna will just have lo be satisfied with Irvine BowL ~1EANWlfiLE, BACK on the East Coost, Balboa Island's c!tronic pad· dleboard expert Larry Capune sloshed along in the Atlantic, propelling his 18- foot board some 2,400 miles from Boston to Miami Beach, thu s setting a world's record for getting dishpan hands in salt water. Another world's record fell in Corona del Mar yesterday when two Corona de\ Mar sophomores, Dan Paulson and Mark Gadarian. played ping-pong for 72 s!raight hours or thereabouts. ALL GOVERNMENT agencies are going to thank lbe lads foe having done this at the Gadarian household, thus causing the elder of the place, noted boatyard owner Arsene ' ' B I a c k i e ' ' Gadarian, to lose a lot of sleep. Blacltie's attention has thus been diverted from the verbal slings and arrows he tosses at government. lie has something new to gripe about. The youth movement also prevails elsewhere as a couple of young Costa Mesans named Jeff Overstreet and Charlie Straub have started pouring a 3,000-pound candle in the shape of an American Flag. They intend to give it to President Nixon for Christmas. IUEANWHILE, two goats got trapped. on the roof of Woody's Wharf down in Central Newport while at the same time at Art's Landing, Johnny Carson's teevee straight man Ed Mc~1ahon fell into the drink while trying to film an epic called. ,;Ifs a Wet. Wacky World" which it turn- ed out to be. But all this aside, you're probably right. There doesn't seem to be much happening these days. SAIGON (AP) -Presideot Nixon has reduced the bombing of North Vittnam. mainly aroun~ llanoi and flalphong, dur· Ing the critical peace negotialioru> that have been W\der way, it was learned 1<>- day. The gesture coincides with the onset of the northeast monsoons o\ler the North, which always reduce Am<.'rican air ac- tivitv there and divert the thrust of the born.bing campaign IG the. I-lo Chi Minh Soldier Satight trail thtt!Ugb Laos, where the dry season has begun. THE U.S. Command refused to eonfirm or deny the reported restrictions. but the 7th Flaet disclosed without elaboration that three of Jt.s four carriers have mov· ed from the Tonkir. Gull oU the coast of North Vietnam Into the South China Sea off the coast of South Vietnam. ()tfler sources outside the U.S. Com· Ul"ITti..Mtt Using loud speakers and a Japanese flag, a Japanese rescue team searches for a wounded World \Var II straggler on the mountains of Lubang Island Monday. The team completed a 12·square mile search without finding tbe soldier, believed to be Japanese 2nd Lt. Hiroo Onoda, 50. .;... ·whistle Stop~ Shrill Blast Halt s Agnew Heckl,er PROVO, Utah (AP) -Vice President Spiro T. Agnew startled a campus au· dience by literally blowing the whistle on a lone dissenter, then got something of a surprise himself while flying on to Utah for campaign appearances today. Agnew was criUcizing tile defense pro- posals of Democratic p r e s i d e n t i a 1 nominee -George A-1cGovern in a speech Monday night at the College of Southern Idaho in Twin Falls. The crowd filling the gymnasium In- cluded one young man who interrupted. the speech with periodic heckling. Ignoring the first interruptions, Agnew asserted that McGovern "isn't suggesting a minor reduction in strength," but in- stead "he's talking about cutting our na- tional defense establishment to the bone." The heckler applauded. Then Agnew whipped out a stainless steel whistle, blew a shrill peal on it and shouted, "Wrong" The audience cheered. As Agnew flew on to Provo late Mon- day night, a boll of llgbtning struck his plane but the pilot, Capt. Bill Reese, said DAILY PILOT DELIVERY SERVICE Otllvtry of tilt Dally Piiot Is guarantted Monday.f'rkl1y1 II yvv do not "'"' V0\11' 1>11per by J::JO p.m., call Ind l'Ollr o;0py will oe broU9ht to you. r1t11 1rt liken tlf>I U 1:30 o.m. sa1urd1'1' '"" Sundl'f: It 'l'flll oo nOI rtc:•lw 'l'OOf CO!l'I' 11'1' t 1.m. S.!unla'f, or I 1.m . Sundl'I', (Ill I"" a CO.,,. Wiii IM bn'.Mllllll Ip 'l'Du. Calli 1rt •1<11'11 u"tll 10 ''"" Telephones Motl Ora!IQ't COuntv A•M• •• " •• 642-tttl NO<!llWl!SI 1i!Hlll11910r, !HKfl and Wntm!"111r ., ..•.• , ....... 1m ._,. Clernenlt, Cap~trUIO 8tacfl, s,,. Jue" Cao111TlllO. o. .. a Point. SOlllll Lt1;1111'0. LfllUN Niguel , ••, ~ thert was no noticeable damage. 'l'he chartered rn carrying the vi~ presiden·t. staff members, Secret Service agents and newsmen was flying through a storm about 'l1 miles southwest of Salt lake City when the bolt struck, causing a loud thump. Today, Agnew planned a midmorning speech at the Marriott Center .at Brigham Young University to help local Republican candidates trailing in the poHs. The building at the Mormon school is named for J. Willard Marriott, a Mormon and prominent supporter of President Nixon. After the speech, Agnew was to ny to Salt Lake City for a private meeting with the First Presidency, the ruling body of the Church or Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints (Mormons). In his Twin Falls speech, Agnew con- demned what he called ''an incredible reversal of the traditional American respect for courage and selflessness" by people who praise draft dodgers and deserters. He said that no war is popular "but in past wars there has been no immediate escape from conscience because opinion leaders have not drummed a cacophony of excuses into the national perception." In the Vietnam war, he said, the respect for the military has been eroded "by a constant cry against the morality of the national leadership because of it's refusal under four presidents to take the easy way out or the war In Vietnam." 'Attacker' Fron1 Pem RENO, Nev. CAP) -A man police say was killed alter he opened fire on two patrolmen was identified today as Fernando Torres-Garcia, 24, of Uma, Peru. Torres-Garcia was shot by police in a downtown bus depot Monday about one hour after a man matching hi!I description shot and killed a derk in an aU-nlght market during a robbery. mand confirmed the report. but declined to So Into details ol the mtrldlon or say whether it wa.s1N1rt m some kind of a tacit a~ment between the United States and North Vietnam. U.S. flghUir-bombers have been ave.raging less 1han 200 strikes against North Vietnam in the past few days. The U.S. Command reported about 120 strikes Monday. ..._ A SPOKESMAN fer the ~mmand noted that the northe•st nmll"lMs are now under way and added that "weather is a poaible (act.or" in the reduction in the strikes from the prevlou.t average of 300 or more per day. Bul even the bombers Dying were staying away from the Hanoi-Haiphong industrial complex, or what one Alt Force commander called "the vitals of North Vietnam." The U.S. Command also reported that New York Crowds Greet President WAS!ilNGTON (AP) -President Nix- on has drawn the biggest crowds of his campaign as he led a caravan through New Yock City suburb! and met cheers peppered with occasional hecldlng. A few dozen anil·Nlxon protesters disrupted his appearance at the t!lgh~ time rally capping his campaign swing Monday, but police quickly busUed them away. Ni.Ion Paused lo waicb and resum· ed his speech with praise for the officers. STATE POLICE estimated that 425,000 spectators lined streets or a dozen normally Republican commuities in Westchester County as N11on and wife Pat waved from a limousine in a ~mile Veterans Day motorcade. Another 15,000. plus were on band for the rally at the Ntwau County coliseum in Uniondale. Newsmen who covered both events said the crowds exceeded the nwnber who flanked the streets on Nixon's last such tour -in Atlanta 11 days ago. B52 bombers made no niicb in North Vletnam durlna; the 24: houra ending at noon Tueaday. But the !IOW'ceS who con· finned the restrictions ploccd oo fight_er· bombers In the Hanol·llatphoog region said the absence or tbe 8$25 from the northern skies should not be considered too significant For one thing, their strikes generally have been coocentrated in the southern sector of the country. However, the eight-jet Stratofortresses new more than 100 strike1 In South Viet· nam. Laos and Cambodia. sources snid. About a third or the raids were con· cenlrated in the Saigon area, where Ughting erupted north of the capital mGHW AY 13 was closed 21 miles north of Saigoo, and South Vietnamese forces backed by bombers were trying to drive North Vietnamese troops from three hamlets in the area. Milllary sources reported that Viet Cong ~errillas and political cadre are stockpiling flags and loudspeakers for a major propaganda effort in the event of a cease-fl.J'e. A document captured Oct. 9 In Dinh Dinh Province ordered Viet Cong cadre to "prepare for a critlcal period of transition and make your presence highly visible." It was signed by the Viet Cong province chief. The document ordered the C.Ommunist forces to fonn special propaganda teams of three to five people in each hamlet to raise Viet Cong flags, paint them on walls and houses and obliterate South Vietnamese flags with whitewash.. McGover1i Says Nixon Delayed Viet1iam Peace By HELEN THOMAS NEW YORK (UPI) -Ge o rge McGovern said today that President Nix- on could have achieved a Vietnam set- tlement in 1969 on "exactly the same ·Along the parade route, ·the .P~Nixon cheers and signs were COWJtered by a sprinkling of chants and placards sup. porting his Democratic rival, George McGovern. ~aa-now-being-negot.iated, but .delayed peace out of fear of right-wing criticism. BANDS, BAILOONS, cheerleaders, irr nated pink elephants, and an audience waving thousands of flags distributed in advance greeted the President at the col· isewn. In .introducing Nixon, Gov. Nelson A. Rockefeller said the crowd represented "America at its. best." On~ Ni.J:on began to speak, however, catcalls and derisive chants echoed from one section of the upper balconies, then another. Police quietly led away ~hand· ful of beclc1ers. Ul"I T•i.tMtlt FRIENDLY ADVICE? Nixon, Supporter GOP Watergate lnciden,.t Reopened by Nixon Order NEW YORK (AP) -President Nixon has ordered a reopening of a White House investigation into the June 17 Watergate incident, CBS News said Mon· day night. The report came from Washington reporter Daniel Schorr on the CBS News 4 Turk Leftists Surrender; 81 Hostages Fre ed ANKARA (AP) -More than 60 weary Turkish airline passengers were flown lo Istanbul today after the four hijackers of their jetliner surrendered to Bulgarian authorities in Sofia. The hijacked Boeing 7fJT remained in Sofia temporarily, and Turkish Airlines sent a DC9 to bring the passengers back. with Walter Cronkite. Schorr said the inquiry was resumed "after President Nixon was cautioned by acting FBI Director Patrick Gray that the agency had established more serious direct links to the White House than the President might know about." e Oil Cleanup KAYENTA, Ariz. (AP) -Environmen- tal Protection Agency officials at Lake Powell say the situation with an oil spill ( IN SHORT ... ) looks the best it has since the more than 38,000 gallons of oil ran into the San Juan River Oct. 9. An agency spokesman said Monday crews were in control and all the oil would be out or the water -0! the lake in the Glen Canyon National Recreation Area within "two or three weeks." The spokesman said the cleanup was being slowed because only one truck and one dredge can be used at a time in the remote corner of the lake where the oil· sodden debris is captive. McGovern predicted that a settlement now, with the election two weeks off, would "destroy Mr. Nixon" at the polls because "I can't imagine anybody voting for him after what he has done over the last four years." THE DEMOCRATIC presidential can· didate, interviewed on the CBS "Morning ( CAMPAIGN '7Z J News." said a pre-election settlement would show that Nixon delayed peace in Indochina "purely to avoid criticism from the right wing war hawks" at a cost of 20,000 American lives, "countless tens of thousands" of lives of innocent. Asians, and $60 billion in U.S. war funds. McGovern said he finds "no Indication" that the North Vietnamese "have cbang· ed. their negotiating positions one iota .. since Nixon took olfiee. Therefore, McGovern said, the President could have achieved an agreement on "exactly the same tenrui" that are being di.scussed now by adviser Henry Kissinger and the North Vietnamese. HlS INTERVIEWER said l ha t previously the Communists had refused to permit President Nguyen Van Thieu of South Vietnam to participate in a coali~ lion government, but now reportedly have agreed to his participation. But McGovern dismissed th.is as "a very minor point," saying the Com- munists all along were willing to accept "elements of the Thieu. regime" -if not Thieu himself. McGovern said that Nixon was "afraid" to debate him on television because "he would have to explain to me and the American people what he has gained in killing another 2 0 , 0 O 0 Americans.'' He charged that Nixon intensified the bombing in Indochina, ordered the in- vasion of Olmbodia, and mined North Vietnamese harbors more to pacify "his right wing critics" than for any military significance. Cooler Air Circulates Bulgaria granted asylwn to the four young Turkish lellists wbo command- ..rec1 the 7f1I jet SUnday and held most of 1ts passengers and crew hostage for 38 hours at the SoCia airport. The Turkish government made no ob- jectkln to the grant of asylum, but the Bulgarians were expected to bring charges against the hijackers as they did against four others from Turkey e BaC'k to Work NEW YORK (AP) -REA Express employes returned to w-0rk today under a federal court order alter a four-day na- tionwide strike that curtailed ·all but emergency REA shipments. '"THOSE THINGS are fraudulent," he said. "They haven't chang.ed anything. They've simply killed more people." McGovern , hammering away at allega· tions of political sabotage and spying by GOP campaign officiaL!I, also charged to- day that the President "has taken sanctuary in the White llouse" for fear that "he may be asked lo account for the Clouds, Storms Scattered From Rock ies to East V .S. S11mmar11 TtmW•lur .. dr"""*' l"IO !he fOt 11 lar ~ti "or1111r" T11t1111rly !Od•V •• cool 1lr clrcultl..:I throuuhc!ut ln. fllt!Oll'• "'llhtcllon, o.r.e<ll ~10Vdl"'11 W\lh 11\0WO'f). ttwnotr1tor""' 1n0 drlnl• •••troclf'd lrom tl'lt MIU.ht.I"" Vlllt'I' tlld Id• IKtflt _,,"""' l!ll'H lo !hi AllMIU(C ~-. AnOttlotr 1lorm IYI""' 0....IOl)M lfl ""' ""'"""'"' _,, .... ot 11\e •ltlitwt bfl"ll I fftlaf\lrt OI rl!fl lftd IMW -· fN l'MW"tl'llrrl ll:«:kltt. Ind l'IOl'!Mt" UltPI. T._ ~t flld tt'11tl"1y olKld •t'HI "''Id c0tld!tto1u. T~llUtM tfllQ'ld I•-1' ~I OWlltPI, M!M., 10 ?fl ti l<ty Wtt.t, fl•. Calif o m la -· . Wcollcl lllOll . 12:1:11.111. (,0 WIOMltOAY 1'1r11 low . , . •1'11,,.,, '·' llllrtt lllflt ... ll:lt ,,,.,, '·' SKO!ld ~ · . . 6tll P·''" o.t S-=ond hl111P1.. • . -- '"" iltlMt 1:1H Im. •et• •:11 p.,.,. "'-ll:hn 7:ftp,m, ''" t·.S 1.m. • Coastal Weather Iii'¥ Mmtllf,... lodly. Llll!lf •trllbtt wlnoh nlohl tl"ld morning l'loun bKom- 1"'11 '"'"""'" ' to 1, kl'IOft 1 ... lffll'llOOM t0d1y and Wldnttd!Jy, H~ toOl'I'• 70. Cottlll i.mp,r1turn ,.. .. Prorn J7 io 12. 1..i1fld tffl'IPfl'•I.,,... r•ntt trom ~ to "-W11W """"''"'" M. earlier this year. · The plane. was hijacked over Turkey on a dom estic night with 71 passengers and 10 crew members aboard. The pilot and a passenger were slightly wounded in the hijacking and were let off along with nine other passengers-when the plane landed in Sofia. The hijackers also allowed food and gas heaters to be brought aboord. The hijackers threatened to blow up Ille plane and all aboard If the Turkish government did not free 13 Jefllst prts- onen and make certain re.forms. The Turkish government rejected the demands. The hijackers reportedly told olllclols In Sofia lhat the.Ir goal was to "tear down the Turkish regime and set up a J\.tarxl&t Lanlnlrt system." Their demands included elimination of "•ntldemocratlc" articles in the Turk- ilih constitution, lifting of a ban on strikes In areas under r(IU'tial law. bet~ ter conditions for peasants. freer condi- tions In unlverslt~s and broadcast of their dtmands on the Turkish radio. Eleven Turkh1h provlncts have been under martial law since Aprll J!rll fol· lowing a wave of terrorism. and more than 2,000 persons have been placed on trial In military ·courts. U.S. District Court dudge Edward Weinfeld issued a IO-day, back-to-work order at the company 's request Monday night after the striking union rejetted REA's latest contract offer. Weinfeld's -0rdcr was quoted as saying he acted out of "concern for the financial condition of the company and the effect the strike has on the welfare of the employM and the shipping public." • DMtfJ A"'est WASHlNGTON (UPI) -Aaron E. Henry, M!sslsslppi NAACP state presi- dent and state Democratic party chairman, was .a,rrtJted here la,\t WC<!k on a charge of possessing dangerous drugs. Jib attorney said they were preScrlptlon drugs and the charge will be dropped. licnry, 50, of Clarksdale, Miss., was ar- rested early Ian Wednesday by twti vice squad detectives who found a "plastic v(al containing numerou!I pills'' ln his pogsesslon, poUce records Ahowcd Mon· day. However. his attorney, Ronald Goldfarb, said he would p r o d 11 c e legitimate doctors' prescriptions in eourt. ''We have been given every lndication that when the pre~rlpllons ll r e presented the chtlrge will be-dropped ," Gold(arb said. . Incredible activities that 11avo-been car· rled on in his name." 1Vic lu r "i'l~ 'Remember. Voting mo out. wil( up thB UllBmplqyment figures: \ ) l ) \ I' \ , ! ' I VO b w t ·• I i. " I I I ~ I I ' l ) -· . ··-' I ------------ --------- Orange Coast EDITION • Teday's Fl••' N.Y. Stoeks VOL. 65 , NO. 298, 4 SECTIONS, 50 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA TUESDAY, OCTOBER 24, 1972 N TEN CENTS ' Newport Official Urges Ouster of Fitch en . E:.gvlronmentalist Newport B e a c h Cowicllman Paul RytkoU today joined Huntington Beach Councilman Jack Green 's call for replacement ot the man in ebarge of Orange County's Air Pollu- tlort Control District (APCD). Ryckoff, in a statement prepared for deUvery at today's <:,ity council meetin8. stiid William Fttchen was wrong to a~ pnWe expansion of the So u t b e r n Caf'omia Edi.son Company steam plant • In Huntl!Jilon Beach and should not be allowed to continue In office. County supervisora w 111 conduct a public hearlntl Woo...day to determine if the APCD abould remain under Flt- chen's eot1trol or be reorganized as part of the Health Department. Fltchen bad said be granted the perml~ ·condJUonally, altRr weighing the need for energy aglllnst the potential im- pact on the environment "Hll job is to monitor and police sta- tionary pollution llOUr<ell, not judge power needs, Ryckoff said. Fitcben's approval of the etpans.ion c.ame after he f~ht against an earlier Edison proposal for expansion that would have produced even more smog. The new proposal "ls for a complex of small units instead of ·two large units previously applied for,"·Ryckoff said. "The power output and 1he emission of • poUutants would be somewhat less than in the prevlowi application for expansion. However, emiss1on of oxides of nitrogen will be increased by some 20 tons per day for the plant expansion," Ryckoff.aaid. "I would like to add my enthusiastic support to Mr. Green's suggestion" that Fitchen be replaced by "a qualified engineer," Ryckorf said. Green has twice called Jor Fltcben's removal. rv1ne o iceman Thieu Cites Cease-fire Con,diiions ~y q,;, A1soclated Press President Nguyen Van Thieu said tonight in Saigon the Communist side bas requested a cease-fire and that one could come "in the near future" -but only if NOrth Vietnam withdraws all its troops. Once that is done, 11lieu said id a t"tfo-. hour broadcast, bis government would be reiictY to dis<u!s' a pollUcal settlement with the Coriunwtist-led Nallollal Libera- lloQ Froa~ Joiown u tllt Vlei Cool. ~ outside party could.,,.. decTsloiis determining south 'Vlobtlm'• future, hi' _ 111'. ' Thieu declated no -Im a rfPI to Impose a peaee 1elllmient on SOUlb Vie~ lllllll and ,.,..led bis opposllioo to a lrlparUte coalltloa government as 80\lihl by tllt Communist side. He declattd that no formal agreements were reached in his five days of &alkJ with President Nino'• national security adviaer, Henry A. KlssiDget. He said the talks were exploratory and "nothing was signed ... In what was essentially a rei1eration of bis government's IOllfl·sllmding position oo an Indochina settlement, 'Ibieu said (See THIEU, l'lge II ~ewport Council Will Face Three Major Iss11es • · Ways to _get the city staff cracking on trailer park inspections, continued pro-. lest over police helicopters and plans for 11 non-profit corporation to finance park land acquisition are three of the major issues facing Newport Beach councllmen tonight. ·~'<lommuo.ity Development D I r e c t o r Richard V. Hogan ba1 delayed in- spections of all trailer parks in the city. 'ibey were ordered by councilmen two weeks ago, but Hogan says be doesn't \a:ve the manpower. He said he'll be asking for some money for temporary hetp at tonight's meeting. Councilmen will also get a report from Police Chief B. James Glavas ao. ways to eUt helicopter ooise. City Manager Robert L. Wynn will report oo his meeting wilh bond laywen that produced a de~ermination that it would be legal to f-ce acquisition and di!velopment of parks by U8:ing a non- Jrofil corporatld!. Residents filled to produce a ltec<!IWY lwo-tbltds marjorlly vote In a 19 million 'Jark bood election in June, althouih 60 i)ercent of those voting did approve the measuni. ~ COUncllmen consider that a mandate to 'j>rocood with altenulle nnanctng methods lot at least part of that amount. Councilmen tonight alao will cooslder: -A new environment.el bnpte't 1tudy of the Robert H. Grant lM-unll con- dominium project neor Hoa~ Memorlal Hoopital. They rejected tllt llrst one. -A propooal to lei B>lboa Co.., ' residents deal with their problem of no•· lous gases seeping from the ground In their area. -A police ~ to ~ulre hotels and motel1 to retain reglltraUoo rocorda for one year. -Consideration of an envtromnental 'impact statement on the propoled ·"""· iner<lal development of the 1'1'1-acte c.111.. Radio Company property near Orange County Airport. -Plot pl ... for the new police ll)atlon ~fanned nei<t to the new r ... llatlon on Jamboree Road. ' I • Basehall!'s Loss Jacki£ Robinson Succumbs at 53 STAMFORD, cOnn. (AP) -Jaellfe Robinson, who broke major league baseball's racial barrier with the old Brooklyn Dodgers in 1947 and went on to statdoql and a .place In the Hall of Fame, died today of what bis doctor described u bean disease. Prone Man Leaps Up , Fires Sl1ot By _AJtTIIUR R. VINSEL Of llM Oii"' Piiot sr.n A massive, overnight manhunt con- tinued today for a gunman who lured an Irvine policeman into an ambush on a lonely country road, shot him, then fied into a foggy cornfield and esca~. Half-blinded by· diabetes, the·53-year-old -Robinson suffered an early mom~ Ing attack at bis posh borne in this subui'b of New York City and died at 7:10 .. a.m. at a bospaat(See stofy, Page l&1r--------"-------==1--- He bad been honored only 10 days earlier during the 1972 World Series at Cinclrmatl when a sellout crowd •t Riverfront Stadium applauded the 25th anniversary of bis debut In Broollfyn. Robinson's hair was white, hls eyes almost gone and bis heart scarred by a 1let attack. Thia curbed Robtmon's successful bw:iness career during the pa.st few years. He could hardly see to walk when attending the f\Uleral in April of former Dod.g~ teammate GU Hodges. sun .. death came .. a lhoclt to the baseball world. '~H•}•~Jl ~~~~so~s' -DQstlil "Hits 8 resnahan Over Air Noise Report By L. PE'll:R JallgG Of .. o.llJr f'ltlf ..... Orange County Aviation Director Robert Bresnahan ~ be trying to lull COWlly supervlao<I Into complacency over the DOiH problem at the airport, Newport. Beach O>uncllman Milan Doolal charged today. Dostal cited a report from Bresnahan to sopervloon e¥a!uallng the noise pro- duced In an uperimenlal tate off by a Lockheed FIOll al the airport two weeks ago. In that report Bresnahan said, "The federal government has issUed contracts recently to fullY investigate the merit. of a short take off and landing aircraft and its ability to further reduce the noise problem. "lf such a venture were successful, we could solve our noise problem at Orange County Airport wtthin five to seven years," Bresnahan said. "There are ao many unknown,, that I get the feeling the aitport manager may be making them (supervbon) com- placent so they will not try to aolve our noise problem at Orange Co u n t y Airport," 0...tal laid. Earlier, Mayor Donald A. Mcinnis had referred to a letter sent to Bresnahan by Daniel w. Emory, bead of the citizens group fighting jet alt traffic al the atrport that wu sharply critical of Bresnaban's report. Emory pointed out that the LIOU take off was compared with a alngle Boeing m take off that occurred at 10:11 a.m. oo the same day. The Boelntl J>Nduc<cf a noise level J 108 SENEL whkb, Emory laid, "was delinltely higher than tbe average noise level for a 1'11. ''The actual average noise level is 103 SENEL," Emory said. The LlOll Tristar was.monitored by lbe county's equipment at just be.low 100 SENEL, according to Bresnahan. Emory also pointed out that the simulated take off by the LlOll was with a "running start permitting it to achieve an esceptionally high deck angle of 20 degrees. "11'.lis deck angle corresponds to that achievable with a very lightly loaded Boeing 737 flown by a pilot making an all out effort to minimize the noi!e,'' Emory said. 'Ibe Tristar was also lighter than it normally would be with passe~ers and cargo and "was being flown by a test pilot with tbe aircraft equipped with in- strumentation beyond that nonnally p~ vided in an operational configuration," Emory saici. "The combination of a highJY qualified test pilot and superior instrumentation makes it virtually certain that tbe pilot technique was superior to what can be expected from a typical airline pilot," Emory said. Bresnahan's report had been quite glowing about the Tristar which Lock- heed Corporation had made available as part of an exhibition at South Coast Plaza in Costa Mesa. In his l:nalysiJ Bresnahan said, "Although the operation of the Trlstar from Orange Coonty Airport would ·pose some ope.rallonaJ problems with regard to weight turbuJence, Jt is my opinion that the operaUon of tbls aircraft on a scheduled basla would reduce our present noise impact area over 50 percent." Airport to Lift • PatrolfT'lan Stephen T. Nash, 23, was hit in the face by a bullet fragment in the dramatic 11: 10 p.m. confrontation as the slug shattered his squad car's windshield. He gunned the engine at the last sec- ond. in a desperate attempt to run down ,!Iii would~ lWlu when the. apjlOfeitUy injured -lying .. lit& pavenienl leaped up t}lto a crouch and toot ai!Q. ~ Stwtned /'1 the wouod, b' awerved and spun the car arOund so he could ta,te CGver behind its door, while the gunmin darted Into the field on Jeffrey Road,.200 yards llOUtb of Barranca Road. Officer Nash said the man sprinted for a windbreak of eucalyptus trees and a creekbed as be himself crawled into the field combat--style. Fearing be would be caught in a sec- ondary amblJ!h-according to bis descrip- tion of how he was lured into a trap - the wounded officer waited for rein- forcements instead of going after the gunman. F.ellow officers in squad cars arrived within five minutes to initiate a manhunt that eventually involved an army of of· ficers from other police agencies. Patrolman Nash briefed supervisors on what happened at a command post set up (See AMBUSH, Page II Mr. Cu nningham Rites Cond11cted Private services were held Monday for Richard N. Cunningham, resident of the Harbor Area for 41 years and former owner Of a food market on Balioa Island woo died Friday at the age of 84. He lived on Marine Avenue and operated the store where the Balboa brand! of the Newport Beach post office now stands. For the past sii: years he has lived at 363 Magnolia St. in Costa Mesa. A native of Minnesota, Mr. Cun- ningham was a former mclnber of the Uons Club and a men1ber of the Harbor Senior Citizens Club. He is survived by his wife, Edith of the family home; two daughters, Virginia Miller of Newport Beach and Catherine Keesee of Santa Ana ; s e v e n grandchildren; and eleven gr ea l · grandchildren. L . .. 11111t -Ov~rburdened Jets Cati Land Until Election Day Heavyweight pollUciana are going to be llloftd to land at Otance County Altpon, Wei~ tbe alrplantl that carry them, anyway. Oranre County SUperv!aon today declclecf to allow ovtrwelibt pollllcal Jets to 11111 the eounty ll)nltlp between now and the Nov. 7 presidential ell!dlon. CUrrenUy, tllt jet limit al county airport fl 115,000 pounda. 'Ille polllkal jell will esceed tllal welallt. SUpenlaorl voled I to 2 to srant the overweight jet permit to the U.S. Secret Service. Supervlaor Rooald Copen of Newporl!Beach and William Phillips of Fullerton ~ed oo. · Robert Bl'Olllahan, a>Unty dlteclot of aviation, told board memben be bad received requests from the Secret Servia! on beball of Vice President Spiro Agnew, Democratic presktentJal can- didate George M c Go v e r 11 and JlemocnUc vice presidential candidate Sargent Shriver. B-ahan llld bo could oee hlmsell beiog caught in the middle belWffil two political partlei U the board did not act on the problem. • 0Althoulh be u8ured board "'F"ben the larger planes would not damage the airport'• runways, Bresnahan said he would like to see all overweicJ>I jell banned at •nY time. Ile said there ii a 3S percent safety factor ovet the lmpooed 115,000-pound weight limit. "We can aalely lltt planes <' weighing up to l:Jll,000 pounda without runway damage," Bresnahan said. Caspers urged that the board dinlct Bresnahan to not allow aQy planes over 115,000 pounda to land at lbe airport al 1ny time. SUpervtsor David L. Baker of Gatd•n Grove disagreed. "It is onJy for 1 two- week period. and we are •sauttcl that the ll<avlet jell wlll not damage the airport. I aee no hann in approvlntl the requttu temporarily," be •l'l"ed. Bater &DI the aupport of RDberl Ballin of Santa Ana and Ralph Clark of Anaheim. A precedent of aortl was 1tt two yea.rt •I• when Air Force One, the Presldenl'1 jet laoded al the airport . , "Mr. Fitchen's recent action may well have a profound effect on our at· mosphere, unless the Huntington Beach city council or other authorities manage to block the plant e:xpQnston," he said. Fitcben said his approval of the permit for the new plant is contingent upon proof it can 01eet reduced emission levels claimed by the company. "He (Fitchtn) has no scientific evidence ... the added pollutants will not affect our atmosphere signlllcantly," Ryckoff said. "It seems quite obvk>us that Mr. Fitchen is not fulfilling bis responsibility in a position for wbk:h he was not trained and that a qualified diredot" ls needed for the APCD." Besides his pollution control position, Fltcben holds county titles of agricultural commission and the sealer of welghta and measures. m us CHEEK SCARRED BY BULLET, OFFIC!ER NASH TELLS STORY Gunman Sprlhgs Trap 1t Rur1I lnterMction in Irvine Cl1 eering Neighbors View Ping-Pong Marathon End By WILLIAM SCHREIBER Of "'-O.lh' Pitel Slaff A blaring radio and clapping, shouting neighborhood kids took the place of brass bands and cheering throngs as two Newport Beach youths ~fonday wearily claimed a new world record in a Corona de! Mar garage. For Mark Gadarian and Dan Paulson, the thrill of victory was overshadowed by the thrill of putting down ping pong pad- dles for the first time in 72 hours. The Corona del Mar high sophomores played pin g pong continuously from S p.m. Friday to 5 p.m. Monday. eclipsing the unofficial world record of 60 hours by a half day. "I'm not really too tired, just a little sore in the shoulders," Gadarian said in the moments alter the marathon y.·as over. The match was he.Id in the garage and alley behind 610 Begonia Ave., the home of Arsene "Blackie" Gadarian, Mark 's father and noted pundit and Newport Beach boatyard operator, The elder Gadarian had few words of praJse for the record-shattering effort. "I· was uninspired to begin with and I'm still uninspired." he sald. "But at least now I know how long I can work him. "We have a very good relationship ," Gadarian added . "lie needs me lo feed him and 1 need him as a deduction." The last few minutes of the match were a test or nerves. Good volleys were spoiled by tired reflexes and more balls ~·ere missed or slammed off the table than the ones kept in play. w~ it wa$ nil ove r, Paulson's Thief Steals Dirt From Site in CdM A Corona del Mar landowner com· plaJned to Costa Mesa police Monday about a ditty thief and he llletally meant It. Investigators said A. Sandy Steiner, of 44(. Riviera Terrace, charged A aecond party with ateallfig his dirt at 1560 Superior Avt:., apparently lht: result of grading for development. Officer Hogan advised Steiner -who tailed to esllmate hb dlrl'1 worth -to take the malt.er to civil court. }' grandmother. Mrs. George Brousseau of Garden Grove, pushed through the crowd of children to get the new champions to sign two ping pong balls. "I feel Uke a baseball player or somethin g,'' said Paulson. "But these balls are a lot harder to sign." Then everyone wanted an autographed ba:J. The dozens or balls scattered around the garage and alley were gathered up. "Hey, wait a minute, these balls cost 50 cents apiece," Mark said. Well, they can help pay for them with the $100 gift each will receive from Dan'• grandfather, who stayed up with them much of the time as a witness. 'The n1oney will be awarded at a family ceremony Wednesday night. "What are you going to do with your ping pong paddles, Dan , break them up for souvenirs?" asked one admirer. "No, these were pretty good ones so we'll probably keep them for ourselves," Paulson said. Both Paulson and Gadarlan said they were confident when they started tha t they could set the record. The only thing that worried them was that they had • (See PING-PONG, Page ll Oran ge C:o allt Weatller Jiazy SW'l!lhine Is on the agenda through Wednesday, according lo the weatberlady, with highs along the coast in the &ow 70s, rising to 80 hliand. LoWI lonlgbt 13. INSIDE TODAY Th.t citmOlpMTt i.t re1trained jovialitv for reporters aboard £ h c McGowm campaign air· plane. Writ.en ree ll&Ut chance of his 10inning1 but tht fat igued candidate malnwilu hop<. Se€ storv o!' P09e 9. • DAIL¥ PILOl • Lawyers Grill Witness 'Taj ·Mahal' Bilk Trial Enters 4th Week By TOM BAllLEV Of t1i1t O.llY ,!It! Sitt! Jo'our defense la\\·yers today began thfllr erlllln& of kt·Y prosecution \'lltness Robert ~facbnn :is the Grunge County Superior Court "Ta j Mnhal " trlsl of 1.quna Hllll financier Jotepb Dulaoer and four co-defendanll went lo.to ill fourth \\.'CCk . ~lachan . controller of the SI . Bernardine llos pitnl in San Bernardino tnree year~ t1go wnen the Rornan \\leaving Erradeally Danish Ship Hijacked By Cook Being Sought ABERDEEN, Scotland r AP) -The Danish trawler Nordkap , hijacked Sun· dey by her sea cook , was sigh ted toda y 150 miles off the Scottish coast, the de£ense ministry said . The 122-ton trawler, last seen waaving erratically into a North Sea storm with the cook at the he!nl, \\'as spotted off th e Firth of Forth by a British European Airways helicopter. A ministry spokesman said the Royal Navy Fisheries Protection vessel Ashton and the Dutch Navy submiirine Tonijn were racing to intercept the Nordkap. The sightins: canie as Denmark's r.faritimc Rescue Service was preparing to launch helicopters to join the hunt for the Nordkap, manned only by the runaway cook, Jorgen Christiansen, 28. There were fears Christiansen was r!oomed as he sailed into the stonn with little navigational or engineerlng ex· perience. His angry sk1pper, Borge Jacobsen, stranded in Aberdeen with two other crewmen, fumed that the Nordkap with Christiansen at the helm was a danger to shipping. It was still not known why Christiansen seized the Nordkap~as it lay docked in Aberdeen harbor. Friends Jn h1s home port of Ejsberg said -he had always wanted to skipper h1s own ship. They said defective eyesight prevented him from qualifying as a captain. Some mentioned an alcohol problem and Scot- tish police said Sunday they believed the pirate cook was "under the tnnuence ~f drink." But Jacobsen denied UU.. Money Deficits By Republicans, Democrats Told WASHINGTON (APJ -The Finance ("ommlttee to R~lecl the President has spent more than $22.5 million slnce April and is slightly in the red going into the final two weeks of the presidential cam· paign, reports filed today show. The campaign of the Democratic presidential c a n d i d a l e , George ~lcGovem, also is running in the red but by a much heftier margin of about Ji.SS million. The campaign balances are renected in rtports to the General AccoWltlng Office, required Wlder a federal elections law that went into effect April 7. Although due Monday, covering the period Sep. 1 through Oct. 16, some reports apparently were delayed by the Veterans Day Holiday and not all are in. However, the flagship committee for President Niion -the Finance Com· mittee to Reelect the Prt!ldenl -and McGovern For President, Inc. were received on time although only balances and oot contributors were avaUable early" t6day for McGovern. Nixon's finance committee reported contributions, 108111 and tranAfers from numerous satellite committees of $20.0 million since ApriJ 7. The Nixon people raised more than SIO mllllon In the pre-April 7 period but. saying tbty would 11blde by the letter or the law, have declined to disclose whtre they got it or how they apeat It. OIAN•I COAST M DAILY PILOT Tll9 e>r.,.. C'M&t l>All 't PILOT, ~ eMCtl It _,..,... fllt Mtw.~ It ~ Irr tht ~ c..11 ,....Wrilnl c""""'. a.,.. ,., • .tl!MN itr• ,.,itlhfllll, MIMay fllf'OVQll F1*y, Mr et.fl M-, M-..wt ltKl'I. •••'1•• 8Ndll~•'" V.ilfY, L....,.... llNdl. INtriWhod~ ...,.. Sen C*"""1el ..... J..,... C.Plll,._ A ..i,..11 r .. ~l .iftlM II ~ lttul'1t•'f"l n kind•..,.._ r11, Pl''"''"' ''••H•tllrll "'"' i. ., ni w.r-i a.y llf.t, CO.II #MM, C111;o..,.11, '2't1'. • Roat.rt N, Wt•d PrftlN!lt 1119 P111111t11tr J1•~ R. C11rl•Y Vic. ~I ..... o.n....1 M~ Thtft•1 ke•Yll ..... 'Titlfltl•t A. Mur,fil,.• _ ...... L P•t.r KN .. ........... ltkfl Ctly 1::111"" .. ..,... ... 0..... JJJJ Htw,.n leul•••r4 Mam.,....,,..., r.o. ••• 1111t t2"1 --Qltl ,..., -'#Mt • .., ..,... ...... ~ ......... ..... ~· '"'' '""' -· _.....,..,, ......... 11 ~ .... T•r'1rs (714) Mt-4111 Cl•'"" Mll•rt bl '41-1671. - ..... °"""' C...t "*" ...... ... -........ 11!\ltlretllllt+ ...... ., ....,.,.,~. """" fll!t't'° ........... ......, ............ ....... """9N --· ___ ........ _ .~ ~.... .,. 4'1'rtw HM ...-itrll'rl .. """ ., ,, "'*""'"'• fllfllltty .......... l1M ......... Chri.stJansen, whO was vainly pursued bv Jacobsen and police in another 1ra~·ler Sunday night. yelled as he hi· Jacked the trawler that he was beading for DC>nmark. 400 miles to the east. From Page l AMBUSH ... under direction or Patrol Sgt. Larry Bersch near the ambush scene. He ~as t r ca t e d at Costa f\1esa i\tem-0ria\ Hospital for a superficial gunshot '"°·ound on the left cheek and released. Investigating officers were cautiou11 about saying it was definitely a rigged trap this morning, but circumstances left most with little doubt. Of(lcer Nash said he was parked beside Jeffrey Road writing a routine report by flashlight when a car carrying two very cleancut young men pulled up. The gunman himself was de!Crlbed as having Jong blaCk hair, a hill, bushy beard and wearing a leat~r jacket over a T-shirt and blue denim jeans. "A biker-type," one officer remarked today.,--lllnting outlaw motorcycle gang tactics. · Officer Nash saJd the two men told him they were en route to telephone police about someone In the roadway who ap-. peared.to be injured or perbapt ill. He !peel to lbe scene, where his headlights tlluminattd the BUJlPOltd v1c., tlm, lying face down, hit cheek again>I the asphalt pavement and both hands hidden beneath hlt chest. Suddenly, Officer Nub 181d, the man Jumped lnto a crouch clutching a tong· barreled, Bmall caliber rtvolver in typical combat style and drawing a bead at bis bead. Lunging 1ldewa)'I almo8t too late -he tried to run over the man as be fired. He .was never able lo get off a shotgun blast due to lhe delay in getting the \veapon out of its brackel while crouched below the daahboard defensively. By the time he freed it. the assailant was too far away. His frantic radio broadcast of a Code 999 -officer needs help -brought police helicopters from both Costa Mesa and Newport Beach, but growing ground fog in the: area hld their quarry. Officers from both cities, plus Orange County SheMfrs deputies, the California Highway Patrol and Irvine Ranch securi· ty deputies reponded to the manhunt. Due to difficulty in covering the dark, fo!i·shrouded farmland , Garden Grnve policemen Bill Compton and Larry Davis with ~ir scent-tracking dogs Thunder <.....r; RlCk joined the hunt. Westminster officers Grant Varner and Tim Miller with their hun: dogs Axel and Eich were also dispatched. Prosecutor Hits Will-Wife Left Own Nude Photos LONOON {UPI) -A prosecutc>r al the Old Bailey criminal C'OUrt called it a curious case as he llsted its ingredients -a wealthy businessman. a pretty model, a disputed will, a lt1exican duke and a disappearing lawyer. Prosecutor John Buzzard told the jury Mond11y that under the terms of thc"'Wlll , businessman Clive Raphael left his wife only 12 cents pluJ four nude photographs of herself. · Buu.ard gave the detail! as he outlined his case against Eric Alba·Teran, described as a Mexican duke who works as a banker In London, and a 22oyear-old teacher named Shelach Macintosh . Both pleaded Innocent to charges of forging Raphael's w\11, Alba·Teran also denied obtaining Raph11el's Rolls-Royce by mean1J of a forged lett er. Buzzard Pld a lhlrd consplratl'lr. lawyer Roland Shulman, has left England ind Is believed llvln& In South Amertc11 . Shulman, Alb"·Teran And Miss Macin- tosh produced the will, written on the back or an envelope, a few days after RaphRel died in I.ht cra~1 of his private plane in France. Atlide from the curlou1 bequen of u cents and the four photos to his wife, model Pmny Brahms, the will left mo1t of Raphael's fortune to Shulman. Alba· Teran and Miu Macint08h signed the will u wltne!lel. The prolt(.'Utor claimed Miss M11rln- tosh admitted the wlll was forged . He taid the trio searched Raphael'• a-p&rt· mcnt after hll . death and fOund an en- velope be1rl.ng hll 11JEnautre. M111 Maclrt· losh: he said, lyped the foratd will above thia genuine slgn11ture •nd 1he and Alb> Toran signed 11 w1tne11se1 . Alba·Teran conlcndcd the wUJ 1, gen-uine and that he wltnc!5ed lt whUe Raphael w~9 alive. Buzurd uld. ' Cathollc lntUtulloo wu lllepdly bUktd of ISOQ,000. ' Wftl Indicted with the Dulaney group on charges or grand theft, frAud and conspiracy. But the veteran accountant, 50, become a prosecution witness last week In a de11I ,\·hleh cleared him of any complicity in !he alleged fraud for his ll'SUmony . Machan confirmed today as cross ex- amination opened that be al first advlied the three nUl\I who comprised the St . Bernardine's board ot directors that they should turn down the offer that Y<ould supposedly increase interest revenue on their $500,000 reserve fund from five to 10 percent. Machan earlier testified for the pro&- ecutlon that the Offer came from co. defendants James Shipley, 38, of 18951 Lowell Circle and Daniel Hayes, 40, or 8211 Snowbird Clrcle, both of Huntington Be1ch, who met lbe hospital controller in Newport Beach. Machan also earlier testified lbat he changed his mind and backed the purchase or 25(1,00J shares or Az.alia Mobile Homes stock offered by the Dulaney group 8nd branded by the pros· ecuUon as worthless. Machan has admitted in earlier teaUmony that he received payrnent.s of at least $32.000 at about the time that the hospital authorities purchuecl the Azalia stock. Machan said he got a $15,000 check from Hayes about a week after the stock purchase was approved. He has testified that he later received $17"000 from Riverside broker Wendell Warren Austin, 38, another co-o.Je..1dant in the \rial. Machan 1..'0nfinned today that he left the hospital in January of 1970 shortly after the hospital's controlling mother house decided to take JegaJ action to recover a lo..n that was now in default. 11 has been pointed out by the pros. ecution that Dulaney, 38, of 2631 Via Cascadita left Laguna Hills for West Germany with his family two months before. The l:JtOSecution has also stated that complaints about the investments business admir.istered by Dulaney from the Taj Mahal romplex in Laguna Hills were being filed by tnany investors in World Financial Trends. The !lleCOnd phase of the cWTent tri11l will bring Mrs. Marlene Dulaney, 32, to the courtroom to face, with her husband and Shipley, aJlegatlons stemming lrom the alleged defrauding of those lnveston. 1'he World Financial Trends operation Is now in bankruptcy. Office bul.ldlngs controlled by the group in Laguna Hill! and Seal Beach have now been diaposed of by bankruptcy officials. Newport Council Slates Revenue Public Hearing Newport Beach councilmen said today they wiU conduct a publie hearing Dec. 4. on proposed ways to spend the $184,000 in federal revenue sharing funds the city is supposed to get each year for the next five ears. Prior to the hearing a council com· m1ttee wUI prepare "• set of alternate ways" to spend the money. Prospects for using the funds to cut taxes ate uncertain since the amount or money received under the program Is tied lo the city's tax rate. "I would like to see taxes go down with this added money, but if we have to rai.!e taxes next year becau.se of it, we're not gaining anything," observed councilman Milan Dostal . "If we use it to cut taxes we just may get less nex.t year," he said. The council's budget goals committee will prepare its suggestions and report to councilmen at their 11tudy session Nov. 13. Councilmen will r e v I e w the altemaUves bet~ then and the public hearing. The money can be used for purpolleS other than maintenance and opuatlon CO!ls. Couple to Face Trial Over Slot Machi_ne, Gun Frederick 10d Kay Loar were ordered lodlly to fllce trial Nov. 20 on charges stemming from the alleged discovery of a machine gun and a slot machine in their 1-luntinglon Beach home. l.onr, 35, and his wlte, 32, .of 4082 Hum· boldt Drive, were ordered by Orange County Superior Court Judge Wlll11m Murray to return to his courtroom Nov . 10 for a hearina into a motion to dlsmi u the allegations. The same dates were scheduled for co-. defendent Thomas Morgan, 53, of 3301 Devon Circle, Huntington Belch. He is lde.ntlned by the proeecutkln as the men who attempted to 11ell the German-made machine gun to an undercOvtr agent. The trio w11 amtt@d 11at AuJ. :as by Polle< who aold they lottnd th• olot 1nachine and a plstol silencer durlna 1 IW"Ch At the Loar bomt. Wife Held in Murder PASADENA (APl -A 27·Yt•Mld houlewlfe ~•s booked for lnvcetl~atlon of murdor In the aboollng d.,th of her bu•· bond. w"°" body WA! found In lhe couple'11 home, police aald. lnvtl\tlgaton s1ld Sarah Gr\zurd called them Monday to ref)Ori the dt1th of lier hulband Jolul, 2.\. a city water department employe. DAILY PILOT Sl•lf ....... MARK GADARIAN SIGNS PING PONG BALL FOR Al;>MIRER Marathon Player Paulson (left) Also Big With Neighborhood Kid1 High Court Will Hear Pregnant Nurse's Case l'rontPageJ PING-PONG. ~ already boon up all day for school when tbe mtlch bopn Yriday. "We bad ldlne low •Poll and a!Jnoll quit tbe second night ," Cadarian oald *'But we had bragged to all our friends so we stuck it out." \Vhen the boys hnd already passed the unofficial mark Monda}', someone wr:nt out and had T-thlrt1 mnde ror them with their naine• on the back and the initial• WRHIPP on the front in big red letters. "'That wa y evt!ryone will hnve to ask what it means -World Record Holder ln Ping Poo&." Gadadan said. Once the mat.eh was over, -oobody won becluse they stopped keeping score after l20 games -all the boys wanted to do was get away frorn the ping pong table. "We'll play again someday," Cadariaft said. "If someone breaks our record, we 'll break It all over again." 1be new records will be Uled with ttie Guiness book of record11 for posslble . .Plication in the next edilion of the "1aperback Usting of world markll. But there was to be no rest for the weary a£ter the match. Gadarian had to go to a mandatory play rehearsal at school Monday night and Paulson said he was going to stay up and watch the Vikings.Bears foothill game on television . ii Today, Mark made it to school but n.ti ataye<l ln bed. • .. • Butz Says He'll ·-= .. , .. ~ Cooperate With ~ Newcastle Probe ':~ • From Wire Services WASHINGTON -Susan Struck, the Air Force captain facing .discbaxge from the service tor having a baby, was granted a hearing today by the U.S. Supreme Court. u. s. Secretary or A«rlculture ~: claimed Air Force regulations un-Butz says he Ls willing to sebd ~ constitutionally single out pregnant . witnesses to testify on Newcastle ~ women for punishment and intrude ''into before the Assembly Agricultur~ .~ a person's fundamental right to decide mittee ch1ired by Assemblyman Johll , t whether to bear a child." Briggs (ft..FUllerton). ~ The court will bet.1 Ule case early next Butz: made the 111DOW1Cement MandaJ;: year. in . a suburb of Sa<;ramen~ on a cam- An order last May by JU!tice WllUam -pa1gn tour for President Naon. He said In her appeal, the 28-year..old nurse O. Douglas barred the Alr Force from he or a represena.tlve would hol'l9r a Fro Ht Page-o1-----... 1scllargtn1r1.11u-Struclnmtll-tlle-.ourt-6ecr.....,~-t1bo....,ause -oomt decided whether to tw:ar her suit. order concerning an appearance befom THIEU ... the cease-fire would have lo cover Cam· boclia and La<>! as well as South Viel· n<>m, and be guaranteed by international supervision. "A cease.fire may take place in the near future because the Communists have requested il ,'" he continued. "The Communists agreed to, and even beg for a cease-fire because they are militarily losing." He said he asked the United States to "ask the Communists what they want" and said South Vietnam would reserve its own final decl8Jons on its future. Meanwhile, the White House S11id today "some progress has been made at <ichieving a negotiated settlement or the Vietnam conflict," but refused to give any su pport for the assessment. Press secretary Ronald L. Ziegler reported the progress following an hour· Jong meeting in Washington betv.:een President Nixon. Secretary of Slate William P. Rogers and Kissinger, who returned r.-tonday night. Ziegler turned back repeated attempts by newsmen to draw out elaboration on his statement. He specifically refused to comment on the speech 1oday by Thieu charglng North Vietnamese proposals for a settlement are Ill-disguised attempts to undermine his government. fn an exchange with newsmen. Ziegler at first appeared to say the "some prog· ress" referred only to negotialions with North Vietnam, but later said he was also including discussions with Thieu. Reporters asked why the While House refused to discuss aspects of the negotla· lions when Thieu and North Vietnamese Premier Than Van Dong had made statements concerning the state of peace efforts. The career officer became pregnant Briggs' committee. \Vhlle serving at Camranh Bay, Vietnam, The committee wants lo question B11ti early In 1970. Her baby, a girl, wu born about the government's reimbursementf Dec. 3, 1970, and was given for adoption. to California poultry farmers who are At the time, Air Force regulations r~ ordered by the U. S. Department of qui~ discharge in case of pregnancy Agriculture to destroy their fiocb Ip. unless the pre&naney was terminated. order to bait the spread of the disease Since then, the regu.laUons have been which is fatal to birds but does not arf;i modified to permit a waiver. Capt. hum.Ms. Struek's request for one was denied in Briggs wa1 shoved aside Oct. 5 when June 1971. he tried lo serve a subpoena on Butz as Thte appeal said that as a Roman he left the l'Oltnun at the end of a catholic she was prevented by her Sacramento press conference. religion from eec:urlng an abortion. Slnce At the Fullerton Auern.blyman'1 tt- an abortion or millcarrl1ge would have quest, Superior C.ourt Judge WUliam M. permitted her to remain in the Air Gallagher ordered Bub to show e&\Ule Force, the .ippeaJ contended the rtgula· wby he shouldn't appear. tlons also violated the constttuUonal right Asked about the incident Bub: said or .cat~ll.cs or the "free ererclse" or Briggs' attempt to serve the subpoena their rehg1on. . . . was "a most unusual procedure." Ca~t. St:uck, a n~t1ve ?f Loutsv11le, "I think he could hav paid us the Ky .. 1S stationed at Mmot Air Force Base courtesy or asking for testimony like in North Dakota. anybody else, and we would have sent our best expert witnesses to appear Erle H. Frady Rites Thursday Funeral services will be held Thursday in Corona del Mar for long time resident Erle H. Frady Sr" who died Monday at the age of 77. Mr. Frady and his wife Lucille, moved to Corona de! Mar in 1948 following his retirement from the hardware business. Mr. Frc.dy was active in the Corona Highlands Property Owneni' AB90Clation. He leaves his wife, ot the family home at 505 Seaward Road ; a BOn, Erle H. Frady Jr. of Studio City: four grandchildren, and a great.grandchild . Services will be !teld Thursday at t p.m. at Pacific View Chapel . Burial will follow at Pacific View Memorial P1rk. before his commlltee." Butz said Mon· day. "We had no Idea that he was galng to do that," Butz saki. "If he had requested us through the u.sual channels of oom- municationB, we would have sent out ex:- J:ert witnesses to testify, and we &till will, as a matter of fact. Briggs has been critical of the government's repayment, which he said has not come up to the $4 per chicken the.~ the !armen say they need. SF Boy Lost in Wave PACIFICA iAP) -A South San Fran· cisco boy wa1 missing and presumed drowned after a big wave caugbt a group of boys in tht surf at Rockaway Beach here, police said. Police Identified the boy as <lonald Richard, 13. Let Us Put You on The Map Near the entrance, inside our store, is 1 giant new map. We ere 1n the pro c • s s of idantilying all of the bomos wo have carpeted since 1965 on this mep with colored pins. [A different color for aoch year.) Close scrutiny will detect aom• Interesting facts: firstly, we have carpeted homes on virtu- ally every street in the area. Secondly, the pins are in buncho1, indicating WORD-OF-MOUTH adverti5in9. Thirdly. the number of homes we hove corpetad is st•ggering. If you d1sir1 honesty, experience, 'and r1commend1tion1 from n 1 i 9 h b or 1 we h•v• worked for, then Aldan'• is THE PLACE I ALDEN'S CARPETS e DRAPES 1663 l'lacentla Ave. COSTA MESA 646-4838 HOURS: Mon. Thru Thurt., 9 to 5:30-PRI ., f lo 9-S~T .• '130 to S ) . ,. • . Ion req .. No we wt ad ... , • O~ange ~ast • EDITION - Teday'• Fl•al N.Y. Stoeka '1'.QL. 65, NO. 298, -4 SECTIONS, 50 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA TUESDAY, OCTOBER 14. 1972 c TEN CENTS Jlow Would YOU Spend Mesa's $1.8 Million? . . . 'lbe city of C.OSta Mesa has $1.1 million ot un!pent money in !he kitty and there is ftkely to be a dogfight over it. _'lbe funds come from the "una~ Jlll)prlatelf and llDCommilted resourteS<' of Uie council's previous budgets and from about !500,llOO the city e>pe<ts to receive under<tbe Federal Revenue Sbar- "'H!'"B'am. 1:£¥llcatlons or troubl~ ahead became " . • apparent Monday nlgbt when Costa Mesa citY. couocllmen could not agree on whether-to use the money for a tu cut, or I<>< city lmprovemenl projectl. 11l'm gOing for a tu cut and I'm going hard for It," annouoced C-Quncllman Alvin Pinkley during tbe council and staff study sessloo. "And so am I," chimed in fellow councilman Dom Raciti. The other side wa~ argued ·just as strongly by Councilman Robert M. Wilson , who said he believed the windfall account could help several ne<:ded proj- ect.! of fthe ground. Some of · these were spelled out in a priority list by City Manager Fed Sorsabal. They include night Ughting or the TeWinkle Park baseball diamond and six new tennis courts at TeWinkle Park, replilcement of obsolete equipment, con· • struction of a new downtown fire station, median beautification, s t r e' e t im- provements and many others. Also raised by Sorsabal W3S the possibility of diverting some of the money into a branc_~Ubrary serving the north side of Costa~ and into a com- munity center. The fire station, would replace an ex- .isling station on Rochester Street, which rv1ne o iceman • • Thieu Cites • Cease-fire t Con.ditions By the Associated Press President Nguyen Van Thieu said tonight in Saigon the c.ommunist side has requested a cease-fire and that one could come "in the near future" -but only if North Vielnam withdraws all its troops. Once that ls done, Thieu said in a tw.r hour broadcast, bis government would be ready to discuss a political setUement with the Comnu.m.Lst·led National Ll.bera- tioo Front, known as the Viet Cong. No outside party could make decisions determining South Vletnarq'• ~. be saiC:. l'hieu declarod no one has ·• right to tmpose a peace settlement on South Vie~ n$1 and restated his oppooitlon to a lf1partite ooalltion government as sought by tbe Communist side. He declared that no formal agreements were reached in bla five days of talks with President Nixon's national security adviser, Henry A. Kissinger. He said the talks were exploratory and "nothing was sianed.!' 1n what was essentially a reiteration of bbl government's long-standing position on an Indocbina setUement. Thieu said the cease-fire would have to cover Cam- bodia and Laos as well as South Viet- nam, and be guaranteed by international supervisioo. "A cease-fire may take place in the ne.ar future because the Communists have requested it," he continued. ''The Communists agreed to, and even beg for a cease-fire because they are militarily loe:lng ... He said he asked the United States to "ask the Communists what they want" (See TRIEU, Page Z) , 0. V l"TLCIT ..... W ,C ...... CHEIK SC:lRRED IY BULLET, OFFICER NASH TELLS STORY' • ' ' I ' Gunman Springs Trap at Rural lnteraection. in Irvine Six Injured in Costa Mesa Major Auto Accidents ... ·' Major auto acciden~i injured six persons in CoSta Mesa late Monday and early today, one ·ctatfl involvib.g a i:?ar that rolled ·over, tumbling 15 feet before stopping just outside a plate glass win· dow. Traffic Patroltnan Chano Camarillo noted two victims suffered identical in· juries in· separate ·aoodebtst reporting still another coincidence. Drivers in two predawn crashes three boors apart have the same last name and live in the same apartri\ent building but ar~ appar@tly Ul;ll'elatedl Ricbard A. Young, 19, or 3039 Coolidge Ave., and neighbor Daniel G. Baker, 19, of 3000 Coolidge_ Ave.l suffered injuries about 3 a.m. in the rollover accident on Newport Bouleviµd at 21st Street. Officer Cainarillo said Young's import car ran off northbound lanes and overturned, mowing down a city street sign and decorative planter box, then almost smashing into a motel's glass front. Young was listed in serious but fairly good condition today at Costa Mesa Memorial Hospital after ·surgery to repair a,. fractured left hip and multiple abrasions. His passenger, Baker, suffered multi- ple lacerations and was transferred to (See ACCIDENTS, Page Z) Prone Man Leaps Up, • Fires Sl1ot 8y ARTHUR R. VINSEL Of ltte Dallr Plkll Sl•ff A massive. overnight manhunt con- tinued today for a gunman who lured an Trvine policeman into an ambush on a lonely country road, shot him, then fled into a foggy cornfield and escaped. Patrolman Stephen T. Nash, 23, was hit in the face by a bullet fragment in the dramatic 11 :10 p.m. confrontation as the slug shattered his squad car's windshield. He gunned the engine at the last sec- ond in a desperate attempt to run doWJr bis would-be killer when the apparently mjared man 11ing on tho !>O"""""t l~aJl!td up into a CDllCb and toQl . .m.l: Stunned by tbe wound, b' swerved spun the car arow>d so he could cover behind its door, while tbe gunman darted into the field on Jeffrey Road, 200 yards south of Barranca Road. Officer Nash said the man sprinted for a windbreak of eucalyptus trees and a creekbed as he himself crawled into the field combat-style. Fearing he would be caught in a sec- ondary ambu!h-according to bis descrip- tion of how he was lured into a trap - the Y.'Ounded officer waited for rein- forcements instead of going after the gunman. Fellow officers in squad cars arrived within five minutes to initiate a manhunt that evcmtually involved an atl'!y or of- ficers from other police agencies. Patrolman Nash briefed supervisors on what happened at a command post set up under direction of Patrol Sgt. Larry Bersch near the ambush scene. He was treated at Costa Mesa • Memorial Hospftal for a superficial gunshot woµnd on the left cheek and released. Investigating officers were_ cautious about saying It was definitely a rigged trap this morning, but circumstances left most with little doubt. Officer Nash said be was parked beside Jeffrey Road writing a routine report by flashlight when a car carrying two very cleancut young men pulled up. The gunman himseU was described as having long black hair, a fuU , bushy beard and wearing a leather jacket over a T oiJbirt and blue denim jeans. "A biker.type," one officer remarked (See AMBUSH, Page 2) Candle Power Mesans Plan Gigantic Yule Gift CHARLIE STRAUB ·POURS WAX FOR GIA!IT PATRIOTIC CANDLE C1ndlestlck M1ker1 Start Profect at MeM's 1eWlnkl• Park . I The first layer of a 3,000 pound American Flag candle was poured in Costa Mesa Monday afternoon by an enthusiastic group of youths . They splashed 75 pounds of molten paraffin into a man-high plywood form at Te Wink1e Park, site <lf the candle building until early next week. By that lime Jetf Overstreet and Charlie Straub, the men bel}ind the proj- ect , hope to have the wedge-shaped can- dle out of the form and ready for mount- ing oo a 1,000-pound plywood base. 'Mie gigantic candle ls destined for the White House' as a Christmas Gift to the United Slatea. It will carry tbe In- scription, uPeace, Freedom, Unity and Equality for AU Mankind ." OVerstreet and Straub plan to haul It to Washington D.C. in a relrlgerated truck, stopplng at various points In the country, before they deliver it to the WhJte }louse. Fueled by an "ete:nal" gu name, It will be displayed somewhett tn the na· tion's capitol. Overstree.i maintains. "But where? That's going to be up to the Whi te House," he said. Pro\tldlng oll:pert advice for the pouring Is Rick Stock, 24 , a professlonal candle .. maker from Huntington Beach. Stock has never built a candle weighing more than 105 pounds but he believes the Flag proj- ect is possible. "I read about it in the newspaper and r thou ght it would be a very interesting project. I'd never heard of a 3,000 pound candle before and the idea really blew me out. It seems to be starting out very weJI." The candle makers hope to pour about six to 12 Inches ()f wax per day. They will have lo be careful 1lnce there are some problems involved. "When you pour a candle in layers you have to be sure that the next layer ts alwaya hot enough to meJt part of the layer below it. Otherwbe they won't sUc.k to each other," e•plalned Stock. 1be American Flag racla will be abooi two Inches thick and applied alter the basic candle has been broken out of tHe form. Stock said the colors would be 11 bright as ltl08e In a normal Flaa:. Straub and Ov,erstreet cla im to have • corp& of 25 volunteers to help with the.. candle. They wll be pouring wax into the form dally, from 10 a.m. until dark. · ) is infested by termites. Land for the sta- tion is already in the city's possess.ion which means that it could be built for air proximately $175,000. While the overall funds from surplus anci Revenue Sharing amount to $1.8 million, councllmen will actually have to setUe the future of only $1.64 million. About $161,000 will be taken from the m ' total to cover ~alary increases granted to all Costa Mesa municipal employ• earlier this year. Striking a compromise pose, Mayor Jack Hammett advised the council that it may well wish to lowel' the taxes and to go ahead with some of the im· provements. "Let's give them !f little o[ both.'' e DAILY PILOT IJaff ....... OFFICER NASH SHOWS FIRING STANCE USED BY ASSAILANT In Irvine, the Min Lying in the Road Suddenly Came Up Shooting Mesa Council to Shorten Builders' Impact Reports The environmental Impact procedure required of local builders is likely to be streamlined considerably as the result of brainstorming Monday night by the Costa Mesa City Council. Meeting in study session. councilmen decided that the 18 pages of ques- tionnaires, instructions and definitions should be boiled down "into a short version , and a shorter version." The shorter version would be required of developers building smaller sLruc- tures, such as patios and single-family homes. The other form would be required of anything larger than that. The current stack of papers consists of a »question fonn which must be answered by all builders. If anyone of the · answers is "yes," a fonnal en- vironmental impact statement is· re- quired . If all the answers are "no," the ap- plicant can apply ronnally for an en- vironmental impact s t a t c m c n t ex- emption. Planning Director William Dunn told councilmen II would be possible to reduce the paperwork but said that en- vironmental impact procedures of other agencies are even lenghtier. Environmental Impact statement.s are required of virtually any major projects throughout the state 1ince the state Supreme C.ourt ruled that any project which has "significant" lmpacl ~ the Mesa Woods Group Sets Meeting Tonight Mesa Woods rtsldent.s are Invited to attend a general membership meeting of the North Costa' Mtsa Homeownert ASloclaUon at 7:30 tonight in I.he Bear Street School. Paul Diehl, presldenl of l he homeowner1 group, said the meeting would focus on the latest planning RM. ionlng developments In the north Costa Meaa area. environment must be accompanied by a study. Just what that word means is con- fusing since no criteria have been developed by the according to Assistant City Attorney Robert Humphreys. Meanwhile, councilmen will act as ultimate judges on whk.h projects do and do not meet the environmental Impact standards. McGovern Rally Set SACRAMENTO (AP) -Sen.' G<orge McGovern will seek votes Thuraday evening at "An Old Fashioned Welner Roast" al the Cal E:1Po grounds, Democratic officials announced. Orange Weather Hazy sunshine is on the agenda through Wednesday, according to . the weatherlady, with highs along the coast in the low '709, rising to 80 Inland. Lowa tonight 53. ' INSIDE TODAY The aCmo1ph.e1'e I.I Test.,.altlf!d joviality. for -rtperlerl aboard ! h e McGovern campaign air- plane. Wrltt11 see littLt chonce of his 10lnnlng, but tlll tatlgU<d cand«:falt maintain.s hope. See SCOrtl on Page i . ,, ,, • ' .. ,. ... •. \ DAtl V l"!lOT Stiff l"fMfil FIREM!AN CHECKS CRUSHED VOLKSWAGEN AFTER CRASH ON NEWPORT BOULEVARD Two Were Injured In This 3 a.m. Crash Th1t Ended tn Front of Don Qul~ote Motel Mesa Cale11da1· I TONIGHT U.S. BICENTENNIAL COMMITTEE -First meeting. Residents are invited to help fonnulate plans lo celebrate the country's 200th birthday in 1976. Con- ference Room , Fifth Floor, City Hall , 7:30 p.m. "INVESTMENTS" -OCC Lecture Series presents \VU!iam L. O'Bryon in second of live-part series. Eastbluff Elementary School. Newp:irt Beach, 7:3().. 9:30 p.m. No tuition. SQUARE bANCING -Community ~ecreation Center. Fairgrounds, 8·10 p m. Tuesday!, $1.25 per lesson. WEDNESDAY. OCT. ZS OCC SPEAKER SERIES -Jim Thorpe, candidate for 71st St a t e Assembly district, Fre< Speocb Area, lt a.m. PREPARATION FOR PARENTHOOD · -OCC Lecture Serles, Lecturer: Mar· ~-' ior\e Pyle. R.N. Oct. 4-Nov. 8. Estancia r' ltS Forum, '1:36-9:30 p.m. .. Sailhoat1'1anned By Ted Kennedy In No Trouble WOODSHOLE, Mass . (AP) -A sailboat manned by Sen. Edward M. Kennedy (0.Mass.) was located today in a harbor near here by Cop.st Guard and Secret Service personnel who spent much of Monday night and early today searchlng for the 54-foot vessel. A Coast Guard spokesman said Ken· nedy and bis party were safe. A Kennedy spokesman said the sailing party had never been in any danger and the senator was unaware anyone was sea.rch.i.ng for him. The Coast Guard spokesman said the search was begun Monday evening when someone who accompanied Kennedy in a second boat on the sailing trip around Martha's Vineyard became separated from Kennedy'& boat, the Curragb, and asked for assistance in locating it. Even while the search was in progress. Kennedy docked the boat and routinely telephoned members of hls Washington staff to check on Senate matters, the Kennedy spokesman said. Kennedy fiew to Hya nn is Port Monday to go on the overnight sailing trip, something he often does. A spokesman In Kennedy's office in Washington said the senator was sailing to his home at Hyannis Port and would return to Washin1ton today. DAILY PILOT 'TMO..... ~f DAILY l"ILOT, "'4$ ftldl h CIMIMMil tlle "-'"'-· It ~ ... .,., lfW or-.. c-.t ..... lltllrlt C-w,o ..... ftflt .. 11-. .,. Jllllll11119d, Men!My Ill"'"" P:'*f, ,_. CMl'I M-, Ntw'*1 l..ell.. ~ a.-c11/F_..1n v,11...,., UOl!n• llclldl. 1rrlnet"S1<tc11Q,11; .,., sin cien-tv San J-C.plslT-A 111191• r1111oMI .. ttllft It ~lllllld s.ttllnl1~ llnd SundlJl. n.. ""1r>C.1pa1 P11t1lltlllnv ""' 11 •t Jll) w"'' .. , Slnef, c.,.1, MCM, C1llton1!a, rJt». Robert N. w.,J Pr"~ end ftvcil~ J•11k R. Curl•y Vici l"na1191f Wiii 0.-1 MlrlaOtr Thom•• K•••U adltDr Tliefll•• A. Mwrphi11 M ..... 1111 f:lfltar Chtrle• H. L111 klc.h 1rd "· Nell Alffllwrt MMlflllt U !Nn .._ __ lJO Weit ••v Str••• M•mttt Mlllr•1•: P.O. h1 1160, •2626 --~ t1Kt11 UA H..,.... 9-MWN ......,.. '-": m ,_, ... _ Mtllt1"'91911 lffdl: 11111 ~ llultY•nlll ffll C..,_..: JU ...,,,. at C.mlM "NI Tel9"-17141 64Jo4JJI a...MM ............ '4Z.U71 ~'· tm,. 0rt11tt c-1 "'*""'"" '°"'"""· ,,. ....... J..~· llhllll"llllM. ..,,.., ... -""'"" .,, 1........,, """"' _, M r~ wflMuf If*.., ,..,.. fl'llMIM«~-· '-Ill ci-11 ........, ,.M at c.i.11 ~ OllllDnll• lullKTIJrtlll'I 11¥ C-••ltr -..; IMllllll't'l lrt IMll U.lS mtfllfll\'1 Mlifll'T .... ,,., ... IJ.61 "'°"'""'· ' (;lash Over \VIII Businessman's Widow Left 12c, Nude Photos LONDON (UPll -A prosecutor at the Old Bailey criminal court C"alled it a C"urious case as he listed its ingredients -a wealthy businessman, a pretty model, a disputed will. a Mexican duke and a disappearing lawyer. Prosecutor John Buzzard told the jury A-1onday that under the terms of the will, businessman Clive Raph~el left his wife only 12 cents plus !our nude photographs of herself. "Buzzard gavelhe details as 'he outlined his case against Eric Alba-Teran, deseribed as a Mexican duke who workS as a banker in London. and a 22-year-old teacher named Shelagh Macintosh. Both pleaded innocent to charges of forging Raphael's will. Alba-Teran also denied obtaining Raphael's Rolls-Royce by means of a forged letter. Buzzard said a third COl'ISl)irator. lawyer Roland Shulman, has left England and is believed living in South America . Shulman, Alba-Teran and Mtss Macin- tosh produced the will, written on the back of an envelope, a few days after Raphael died in the cras.'.l of his private plane in France. Aside from the curicus bequest er 12 cents and the four photos to his wife, Butz Says He'll Cooperate With Newcastle Probe U. S. Secretary of Agriculture Earl Butz. says he is willing to send expert v.•itnesses to testify on Newcastle disease before the Assembly AgricultW'l! Com· mittee chaired by Assemblyman John V. Briggs CR-Fullerton). Butz made the announcement tttonday in a suburb of Sacramento on a cam· paign tour for President Nlxoa. He said he or a representative would honor a Sacramento County show~use court order concerning an appearance be.fore Briggs' committee. The committee wants to question Butz about the government's reimbursements to California poultry fanners who are ordered by the U. S. Department of Agricu1ture to destroy their flocks in order to halt the spread of the disease, which is fat al to birds but does not affect humans. Briggs was shoved aside Oct. 5 when he tried to serve a subpoena on Butz as he left the rostrum at the end of a Sc.cramento press conference. At the Fullerton Assemblyman's re- quest, Superior Court Judge William M. Gallagher ordered Butz to show cause why he shouldn't appear. n1odel Penny Brahms, the will left most cf Raphael's fortune lo Shulman. Alba· Teran and Miss Macintosh signed the \Vil! as witnesses. The prosecutor claimed Miss Macin- tosh admitted the will was forged . He said !he trio searched Raphael's spart· ment after his death and found an en-- velope bearing his signautre. A1is,, Macin· tosh. he said, typed the forged will above this genuine signature and she and Alba· Teran signed as witnesses. Alba-1,'~ran coqfended the will i.; gen- uine and that he witnessed it -while Haphael 1vas alive, Buzzard said. From Pagel AMBUSH ... today, hinting outlaw motorcycle gang tactics. Officer Nash said the two men told him they were en route to telephone police about someone in the roadway who ap- pearell to be injured or perhap! ill. He aped to the scene, where his headlights illuminated the supposed vtc. lim, lying face down, his .cheek against the asphalt pavement and both hands hidden beneath his chest. Suddenly, Officer Nash said, the man jumped into a crouch clutching a Jong· barreled. small caliber revolver in typical combat style and drawing a bead at his head. Lunging sideways almost too late -he tried to run over the man as he fired. He was never able to get off a shotgun blast due to the delay in getting the weapon out of its bracket while crouched below the dashboard defensively. By the ti'nJ_e be freed it, the assailant was too far away. Hi! franU.c radio broadcast of a Code 999 -officer needs help -brought police helicopters lrom both Costa Mesa and Newport Beach, but growing ground fog in the area bid their quarry. Officers from both cities, plus Orange Coonty Sheriff's·depulies, the Calilo- Highway Patrol and Irvine Ranch securi- ty deputies reponded to the manhunt. Due to difficulty in.covering 'tfte dark, fotj;·Sbrouded farmland, Garden Grove policemen Bill Compton and Larry Davis with their scent-tracking dogs 'nlunder i.:.<! Rick joined the hunt. Westminster officers Grant Varner and Tim Miller with their bun~ dogs Axel and Eich were also dispatched. Ironically, Officer Varner himself was wounded almost identically -in the neck and face area -by bullet fragments during a gun battle last year with a berserk bandit police finally killed. One patrolman with a bullhorn repeated1y broadcast warnings and pleas for the ambush suspect to surrender to avoid being killed too, which would have been probable given the condiUons. Politi~al County Airport Will Relax Ban tleavyv.'cighl politicians arc going to be allo\vcd to IanG at Orange County Airport. Well, the .airplanes that carry them, anyway. Orange County Supervisors today decided to allow oW!rweight pollllcal jets to U!e the county airstrip between now and the Nov. 7 presidential election . OJ.rrcntly, lht Jet limit at county airport is 95,000 poonds. The political jets will exceed that weight. Supervison voted 3 to 2 to grant the overweight jet permit to the U.S. Secret Service . Supervisor Ronald Caspers of Newport Beach and William Philllps or .FuJlerton vottd no. Robert Bresnahan. county dlrtetor of avl11llon, told board members he had received requerta from the Secret Service on behalf of Vice President Spiro AgJ1ew, Democratic preskJentlal CRn- dldate Ceorge M c 0 o v e r n and Democratic vice presidential candidate Sargent Shriver . Bresnahan uld he could" 11ee hil1lAe.lf ·being caught ln tht middle· betwotn two ' pollliC"al parties U the bonrd did nol act on the problem. Although he assured board members the larger planes would not damage the airport's runways. Bresnahan said he wouJd like to see all overweight jets banned at any time. He said there is a 35 perti!nt safety factor over the imposed 95,000-pound weight limit. "We can safely like planes weighing up lo 130,000 pounds without runway damage," Bresnahan said. C.spero urged thlt the board direct Bresnahan to not allow any planes over 9S.OOO pounds to land at the airport at any time. Supervisor David L. Baker or Garden Grove disaareed. "It ls only for a two-- week period find we are assured that the ht.lvler Jets wl.11 not demage the airport. r set no harm In approvtng the requests temporarHy," he argued . Bl!iker 1ot the support of Robert Battin of Sa.nta Ana ond Ralph Clark or Anl!heim. A prtcedenl of sorts was set two yr11rs ago when Air Force One. the President's jet landed tit the 11irport . 1'"91 Pflfle 1 ACCIDENTS. • • ... .. Oranae Coun1y Medical Center after being uamlned loeally. J1mtt V. Younc, !WI, of IOlll Ooolldp Ave., Wiim the )'Otllliet Younc llJo lives, tullmd lelHortous Injuries about mldri.taht wbm his car hit a parked vebJ. cle oo 12nd Su.t 300 feet west of Or. ange Avenue. Police said Young's car sustained ma· jor damage. but he did not require hospitalization. A spectacular triple-car collision on Harbor Boulevard at Gisler Avenue about 11 : lS Monday destroyed one car, heavily damaged a secood and flattened a left turn •llnal. InvesUgators said Arthur J. Liddle, 17, of 1645 Corsica Place, Costa Mesa, was southbound on Harbor Boulevard when he entered the intersection. The resulting collision involved cars driven by Joel J. Witte, 19, or La Mirada and Sherry D. O'Brien, 28, of 3189 Gibraltar Ave., Costa Mesa. Witte and his passenger in the destroyed car, Timothy L. De Smet, 19, of 5U5 W. Roosevelt Ave ., Sana Ana, went to Orange County Medical Center wl!h mu1tlpl"' laceratlon.s and abrasions while De Smet also had bead injuries. , I DAILY l"ILOT S•ff Pllll9 The third motorist, northbound on Harbor Boulevard when her car tangled \Vith Liddle's southbound car and Witte's vehicle, eastbound on Gisler Avenue, escaped injury. SHATTERED VAN AWAITS TOW TRUCK AFTER MONDAY CRASH l Thrff Hurt In Three--c·ar Collision at H1rbor and Gisler Mesa Planning Position Goes To McFarland Edward V. McFarland, an insurance business owner from Costa Mesa, is the City Council's choice to fill a Vacancy on the Costa Mesa Planing Commission. ~1cFarland, of 1692 Oahu Place, was selected Monday night from a field of 20 applicants. He will not be appointed until June 6, since no official action cou1d be taken during Monday's council study session. _, A former member of The~Mesa Goals and Objectives Co m m i t t e e • ~1cFarland will take tbe place of Olarles A. Beck on the commission. Beck resign- ed last month to move to San Diego. During Monday night's session, coun- cilmen also announced their intention of filling two vacancies on the Goals and Objectives Committee. Appointed to the commi~ will be Rk:hard Carstensen, 3023 Country Club Drive, an envirorunental mamt.ing con- sultant, and William C. Clapet, 32llll Min- nesota Ave., an architect. From Page 1 THIEU ... and said South Vietnam would reserve its own final decisions on Its future. Meanwhile, the White House said today "some progress has been made at achieving a negotiated settlement of the Vietnam conflict," but refused to give any support for the assessment. Press secretary Ronald L. Ziegler reported the progress following an hour- long meeting in Washington between President Nixon, Secretaty, or State William P. Rogers and Kissinger, who returned Monday nighl Ziegler turned back repeated attempts by newsmen to ~raw out elaboration on his statement. He specifically refused to comment on the speech today by Thieu charging North Vietnamese proposals for • settlement are ill-disguised attempts to tmdermine his government. In an exchange with newsmen, Ziegler at first appeared to say the "some prog· ress" referred. only to negotiations with North Vietnam, but later said he was a!S<l Inc luding discussions with Thieu. ~~~~~~-a ~~~-.~-j . '" I' Baseball" s Loss ~ ~ t Jackie Robi1ison Succumbs a.t 53 ,;~{ STAMFORD, Conn. (AP) -Jackie Robinson. who broke major league ~ e baseball's racial b1rrier with the old Brooklyn Dodgers in 1947 and went on to . r;:i l stardom and a place in the Hall of Fame, died today of what his doctor • ~ described u heart disease. 1.:i Half·blloded by diabetea, the 53-year-old Robinson suffered an early mom-\ log attack at hi• posh home lo this suburb cf Ne~ York City and dJed at 1:10 , a.m. at a hospital. (See story, Page 161 • He bad been honored only 10 days earlier during the 1972 World Serlel at P. Cincinnati when a sellout crowd at Riverfront Stadium applauded the 25th ..: , anniversary of hla debut in Brooklyn. """ Robinson's hair . was white, his eyes almOst gone and his heart scarred by a 1968 attack. 'l1lil curbed R6binson's successfuJ business career during ·t.ht past rew years. -__ He..coulclhard.ly ... aee.Jo ... w.alk..wben.attending_the.Juner.aLin...Aprllol 1or:mer Dodger teammate GU Hodges. Still, death came as a shock to the baseball v.'Orld. Prop. 14 Warning 1,000 at Coast College In Unemployment Peril?·:: About 1,000 employes of the Coast Community COilege District. have been warned they could lose their jobs if Air Crew Finds Tliird Cobra SAN FRANCISCO (AP) - A deadly f1ve>-foot king cobra has been 'found by Trans World Airllnes freight crewme:i at San Francisco International Airport, an airlines spokesman says. The snake, discovered late Mon- day night, was the third c.ob.ra found at San Francisco and Los Anjelea International airports since a shi pment of flowers from Thailand anived over the weekend, TWA spokesman Jerry Cosley said. 111.e first cobra was found Satur· day night arter TWA flight 754 ar· rived in Los Angeles. Proposition 14 passes this November. Dr. Nonnan E. Watson, chancellor or tht two-campus district, distributed the v.·aming by letter to contractual employes in Huntington Beach and Co.1ll. Mesa before the Veteran's Day weekend. "This letter will serve as official noUce 1 of possible ~non-reemployment for 1m74 as authorilred in Education Code Seclioa 13447," the letter re.ad. 1 "I believe it is important for all staff members to be aware, at tbls tbne, that if Prop. 14 passes in the general electim Nov. 7, there ls a strong poalblllty that se:vere reductioos will have to be made in staffmg the c.oast Community College DistrJct." The letter was not dlstriblted to tbt district's hourly employes. Watson claims the message wa1 not loo tended to alarm anyone but rather to in- form them about the effect of Prop, It. otherwise known as the Watlon Amend- ment. Prop. 14 would place a ceiling on prop- erty taxes and raise sales and corporate taxes. Let Us Put You on The Map · Near the entrance, inside our store, is a giant new map. We are in the process of identifying all of the homes we have carpeted since 1965 on this map ·with colored pins. (A different color for each year.) Close scrutiny will detect some interestin9 facts: firstly, we have carpeted homes on virtu- ally every street in tho area. Secondly, the pins are in bunches, indicating WORO.OF-MOUTH edvertising. Thirdly, the number of homes wo have carpeted is sta99erin9. If you desire h on • st y, e1perience, aftd recommendations from n e i 9 h \, o rs w• h•v• worked for , then Aldon's is THE PLACE I ALDEN'S CARPETS e DRAPES 1663 Placentla 1 Ave. COSTA MESA 646-4838 HOURS: Mon. Thru Thurs., 9 lo 5:30-FRI .. 9 lo 9-SAT., 9130 lo 5 I • .. • ' f " cen Am WO ol om b .. Uo lno