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1972-10-27 - Orange Coast Pilot
Reds Step IJp South Attacjls . Infernal Maehines Foree Evaeuation Of Mesa Buildings ------~ DAILY PILOT * * * 1oc * * * • • • FRIDAY AFTERNOON, OCTOBER· 27, 1972 VO&.. 41, 1110. at.,4 SKT~S. 41 PA:HS ' , Wait a Minate1 l ,. -' '.J:\Yelve women, being trained in the" Nav>:'s fire fighting school at the Treasure Island Naval Base in 1 S'an Francisco, participated in a firefighting demonstration this week.'Wbat held up tbti.proceedings? Milady's. coif!~e. of course. Alleged Mutde'r Scheme Target Takes Stand A Huntington Beach man who iden- tlfietl. paraplegic Raymond Graves in testimony as the architect or a plan to murder him will go back on the witness 5tand Monday to complete testimony as key prosecution witness in the Orange County Superior Oour\ trial. Richard Garvas, 29, of 18110 Gull Llwe, tosttfled late Thursday shortly belore J\idge Walter Smith called a three-day Roess that Graves told his hired gunman last Jan. 19: "shoot him". G~as Mid the. command came itnriiedlately ii ft er Joseph D'Arobra ~. of c:m:ess. )\jld clubl>ed btm 'lo tho floof of tlraves' Jiving room at W32 Martha Ann Orlvt, Los Alamitos, with sucb lorco tlw!t he broke the baton he UJ- ed for the beating. · Garv as said D' Am bra returned from Twin B~s, 2, Die AUBURN (AP) -Two-ye&Mld !win boy. died Thurlday In a fire wblch fiared In their bedroom Jn -rby Fomt Hills, officials reported. '!be victims were Trevor and Tracy Qlubb, IOllS of Roy ~nd Patricia Chubb. I ' \. '•, the bedroom with a weapon, shoved a bullet into the chamber and shot the man he believed to be unconscious, in the back. "Then he went back to Grave~ in the bedroom and said 'Qkay, 1 shot hlm. He's dead now'," Garvas te!tlfled. He told prosecutor Robert Chatterton that he clearly heard Graves say to D'Ambra "that's good, now Ue h1a hands and feet." At that Point. Garvas said, he got up, ran from the house and JOUght refuge In a llOlld>bor'• home. The ndglibor, aum· tnoOed sbetifr's officer~ to her houM: and comforted the badly wound.lid rman until their anival. Graves, wbo Ihtened to the testimony, from his wheelcbalr, Is orr trial for at- tempted 'mUrder. He ls repreoented by the public defender. The prooecutloo Is also eipected to "" D' Ambra, who ii currently aervlng a •tale prlson.ieml of up to 15.J!OOi;a art.r pleedlng Jlllilty to reduced chargoa, u a wltne111. II Is alleged by the prooect1tlon that Graves owtd Garvis $2,500 and became irritated by the Huntington Btacb man's repeated demands for peymtnt. n I• 'Bombs' Evacuate Apartment A pair of black, bomb-like boxes -one ticking ominously -forced evacuation of two Costa Mesa apartment buildings Thursday night, after beilig planted at the front dOQr and in the car of their in- tended target. Demolition experts from El Toro Marine Corps Air Station removed them gingerly &nd opened the one with the timing device from a distance, using special military apparatus designed for the p1.r,,.,.. They turned out to be relatively harmless but apparently created their builder's desired effect: fear. Officer Chuck Hamilton found the items, listed as destroct.ive devices in his report after Lee A. Breighton, 18, of 1323 Baker St, took a grim telephone call about 9:30 p.m.. Police said. "There is a present at the front door for your mother," the male stranger said. "If she doesn't like that one, there Is another ooe in her car," be added, abruptly hanging up. Miss Breigbton lives with her mother, Mrs. Gloria E. Williamson. Discovering the deviooi, 0 f f i c e r Hamilton notified headquarters and the watch commander, Sgt. Max Wilson, called El Toro MCAS authorities. Chief Warrant Officer Roger Larvie and Staff Sgt. Earl Drennen, of the ex- plosives demolition team were dispat- ched to handle lbe devices, one of which was ticking. They opened It, discovering an alarm clock wired to three highway emergency Dares and packed in shredded pages from a newspaper. The aecond suspected bomb removed from Mrs. Wllllmlon's Jocked car con- tained identical flares and newspaper packing, but had oo clock, police said. CAN SUPERMAN SA VE HIS CITY? Getting the depreSIOC! city o f MetroPolir; (nl:) ·ouror"ltlo-rtd-may-be too much of a job -even for Superman. The man who In tile past coold only ba •lopped by green lcryptonlte now has a prnbltm with greenbacks. Soe story, Peg• 24. Alleged Tar·get Of Murder Sehe111e Gives Testi1nony e • I r No North Sorties Wetsuited Laird Announces Pacifists Halt in Bombing LONDON (AP) -US. De£ense Secretary Melvin R. Laird announced to- day that · American warplanes have halted all bombing operations of North Vietnam above the 20th parallel. Laird spoke with newsmen after a meeting of the North Atlantic Alliance's nuclear plaMing group. He refused to say whether the United States still is flying reconnaissance missions north of the 20th parallel but appeared to take one step further an announcement in Washingt~ on Thurs- day by presidential advisE!r Henry A. Kissinger. Kissinger told a news conference the United States informed North Vietnam that "we would stop military activities north or the 20th parallel." Laird eonfinned that these activities have stopped. "We are flying no sorties north of the 20th parallel," Laird said. Although American mines lo Haiphong harbor are incl uded in the U.S. military activities north of the 20th parallel, Laird refused to say when these mines mifiht be deactivated or how long the process would take. He also declined to discuss the su~ stance of the latest Vietnam peace moves which he described as "serious, sensitive and significant." Laird is returning to Washington later in the day. * * * * * * Enemy Increases Attacks On South Populated Areas SAIGON (UPI) -In apparent an- ticipation of a cease-fire, Communist troops stepped-up their attacks on populated areas throughout South Viet- nam today, capturing two villages and threatening two major towns within 45 miles of Saigon, military sources said . Though sporadic and widespread, Com- munist forces carried ou'.: l.24 attaeb in the 24 hours ending at 3 a.m. (PDT) to- day, the most since the Tet offensive of 11168. Th i U.S. command said two Americans were killed and four wounded during the stepped-up £1ghtlng around South Viel· nam. Viet Cong aod North Vietnamese sold- iers captured two hamlets on French-built Hlghway I northwest of the capital early today and tbollllb under coonterattack by government reinlOiCemiiiCS, lhe' at- tack<rs held tbelr p0<ltlons. The villages are 20 miles and 30 miles northwest of Saigon, and sit at the edge of tht-ttaditional CommwUlt ln£Uttatloo route from Cambodian b o r e r sanctuaries. Southeast of Saigon, Communist lrOOps 11urrounded Oat Do and Xuyen Moc district (county) capitals Md fought their way through the lin • or militia defenders to within 1,000 yards of the centers. of both towns. oat Do, 45 miles southeast of the capital, was captured once for 10 days by the 'Communists last April during their spring offensive. Both It and Xuyen Moc. 55 miles southeast of Saigon, are in Phooc Tuy Province, a resort area when there is no fighting . Phuoc Tuy was "pacified" by (See FlGtm:NG, P1ge !) H y priotist' s Job ls Never Done SOtml SHIELDS, England (UPI) - Nlibl crutniyJ>iiM£11"2wtn RE4tl.-Jll<I £1nt3bed hi• act and wu headlni home when he was callf!d back to "wake up" seaman Len Morgan. He had llypnotized Morgan during the IC aMtlils-.-allorwouldn1t~come out .-of It. A few hours later, Morgan, 32, slipped Into a trance again. Shipmates took him to a boopltal and Heath wu called In to wake hlm up again. Arrested By JCHN ZAIJ..ER Of 11te o.llY Pli.t Slltff Fifteen ~·etsuit-clad pacifists were ar- rested Thursday after plunging lnto the ocean in an effort to stop the 16,900-tm assault ship SS Duluth from leaving Seal Beach Naval Weapons Station. Police and harbor authorities, using five boats, were required to remove demonstrators from the path of the Duluth, an amphibious vessel bound for an undisclosed port. Four Orange Countlans, a 64-year~ld man and a 15-year-old girl were among those jailed in the third "human blockade" try this year for a group representing the American Friends Service Committee, a Quaker-affiliated organization. Those arrested from Orange ColOlty were Claudia Jo Goodwin, 20, of 1405 Crestview Ave., Seal Beach; Jotn Frederick Mangels Ill, 20, of 18032 Butler St., Irvine; and Michael Traub, 19, of 317 Goldenrod Ave., and 11mothy C. Whisman. 21, of 700 Heliotrope Ave., both IS.. QUAXEllS, Page !) Orange Wea.tiler The weatherlady sees a possi- bility of sprinkles through Satur- day, becoming slightly wanner this weekend with hlghs ·of 68 al the beaches rising to 7$ lnland. Lowa tonight 50-57. INSIDE TODA1( PauL Laurt'nce Dunbar, son o/ slaves wM become the pottfc 1poke.m14n of tht black Amcri· con, i.s bti~a h01&0rtd b11 UC Ir- vin Ertnsion with th1 four day centnmiol celebntdon.. Actor and scholar R01coe lee Brow• will read his works. See toda~'• W.ukcnd<r. ' ' i I I J I I I I s McGovern CafilptNo Feeling of Doom llromPagel QUAKERS ... of Cor<>nl de! Mar Others arrested Include Patti Sykea, 43, Santa Mllnica ; Sherri Siegel, 2 t , Topanga : Steve Huston, ZZ, Altadeoa: By JOHN HALL LOS ANGELES (UPI\ -George MC'Govern is ~crepting Ike news ol a possible pre-election selllt!nH!Ot of lhe \'ictnam war without the slight.est hint or desp:1ir ror llis presidential caodldacy. Unquestlonnbly, the dlplomatlc reports rro1n Hanoi and Washlngton announcing a tentative ni11e-poln1 setlll'1nent have !11 thrown the cand!datt! off strid~, (2! stolen the thunder fro1n his c1nnpnlgn and (3) to an extent, suhJectcd hiln to hcklc currents c the nc~otlatlons. But there i3 no sign ln the McGovern camp of the impending doom that some forecast should President Nixon end I.he \\at before the November elect.ion. To the contrary. fhert' is an a1~ niosphere almosl vf relief lhat North ..-::: ":~ * 'At Tf,p of Pen' Vietnam'• dlsclosure ol the nJ.ne..polnt settlement awaitinG stanature by Wehlna:ton and Hanoi is at Jut nulhing Nil:on's-Vletnam pc'.icy out lnto lhe open. Nlton -not ?t!cGovern -la the ca~ didate on the spot, accord.Jng to this I ' The only otbe>. ailematlve -and !be one wbtcb UW: Wbil~ House aeems to be punulng -Is "' go back lo the bargaJntna; tal•le and attempt to draft a new 1tgrcernent mon to Thieu's liking. White llocse adviser Henry Klsslng~'s s1t.1tments Wedne,,day lr\dlcatod thlt ( ) thls process of tedraftfag would extend NEWS AN 'LvSIS beyond the Nov. 7 eleelion. "" •' Publlcly, McGovern is acetptlng al '------------• race value Ole Administr~tioo's con- tht."Or)', He must now fish or cut bait. 1'hc President laces the choice of con· tinuing to supµort and defend lhe South Vietnamese regime of Nguyen Van Thieu, or rn:lking h1a own deal with the North Vietnamese to withdraw rernalning troops in 60 days In exchange for the release of U.S. prisoners. tenUon lhat peace is close at hand. The candidate said he would welcome a set- tlement. even if it comes on the eve of election. lie urged Nixon not to pe.nnit Thieu to veto another peace setUement. 'lbat ls the official McGovern line and It is not likely to cllange for several day5. ·1bo .. who have bad lour years to eod the war deserve anolbtt few days, 1-' aald one aide 111 a parody or Nl&on'• ttat. mmt ln 19" that those who haYI hid four years to aettte the war do not de1erve another cbanoe. But the unspokan expectation in !be • McGovern camp ....:i. J&rgely confirmed by Kiuinger's news confereoce Tbursdny - is that Nixon wiU be unable to bring himseU to sign the agreement whlch Kissinger negotiated, so wedded ls the President to the Thieu regime. IMtead, the Admlnistratton will at· tempt to Pill olC the ·U1atter unlit after lhe election by seeking to reopen the ~ego Us lions. North Vietnam's nd.io broadcast an- nouncing the nine-point s e t t 1 e m e n t Tuesday Signing Pushed by Reds So11th Chjrto s •• PARIS tAP) - A North Vietnamese spokesman insisted today that the peace agreement reached with the United States should be signed Tuesday. He added that Jtanoi negotiators v.·ould be willing to meet 11cnry A. Kissinger though "there are no remaining ques· tions that need another meeting. ''But if after the signing of the agree- ment on Oct. 31, Dr. Kissinger wants to meet with Le Due Tho and Xuan Thuy to discuss problems of common interest, we are ready. ··rbe peace is at the tip of a pen:• Le said, insisting that the United States car· ry out the agreen1ent to sign Tuesday. POW Process Centers Set In 3 Sites SAN DIEGO I AP ) -American prisoners of war released after ac) end to .. the figh.tiilg in Vietnam will be nown to one of three processing sites in Guam, !he Philippines and Oki.nan, it was reported today. l"t·~ ,. In a e<>pyTight story, Ille S&n Diego Union said the Defense Department's top official for POW affairs, Dr. "°ger Shields, outlined a procedure under which released POWs w\U remain In the centers until judged physically able to return to the United States. ' "It could be a week, 10 days or longer. depending on his health conditions and the doctors' recommendation," the paper quoted a military officia l. A processing center has been chosen for each POW, the report said. On ar· rival he will receive a new uniform, any ribbons and medals he earned and in· formation about his famil y. The center will have d o c t o r s , chaplains, legal experts. psychlatMsts and a friend in the same military branch, the Union said. The friend will escort the POW by air to the United States, to Travi.!I and Norton Air Force bAses in Calitomia and rrom there to military hospitals, the newspaper said. "We plan lo take them to the service hospital of his own particular branch of service fhat is nearest to his home," a Pentagon spokesman was quoted as saying. •·Air Force patients wou)d go to I he nearest Air Force bospitaJ and so forth." If the hospital is in a dlfierent city, the military will fly the POW 's family there, the Union quoted the .spokesman as saying. OIAH61 COAn ST DAILY PILOT ,."9 ·0r.,.,.. CM.11 DAlt.Y PILOT, wl!JI w11k11 iJ ~ 1 ... ff...,....p, ... ., \, pUOllAM!I bV 1~f °'""'"" CO.ti PUlllWllnQI C-... ~ r•!t .Oltlora llrl Plib(1''-d, ~,.., ......- Fricl•y, 111r Cini• Mt\t, N.wpwt Beld'I, th•nl1"91on e~Kll/FOU11t1ln V•llr,, L•lflln• a-11. •rvlne/~add!•Nck ...i Jin ci.m.n1111 :5111 J¥HI C1111nr...... A 11...,.,, ,...,,°'""'' Hllilll'I II Pll(lll1l\4ltl "°'ll'"Cll'f' """ 1-•vi.. r1111 ptlntl!MI Pllbll1~"10 1111nt i. •I iso we11 81r ~lrffl, C0tt1 ......... C.llfofnl.I, ,,.,._ Roh11t N. W11d Pr11k11nt 111!d Pull!\.,,., J1clc R. Curl1y ~ Le. told a news conference that "it was the president of the United Slates who proposed the date of Oct. 31 for the signature." It was not precisely clear whether he was malting the signing or the agreement a condition for another negotiating session. In \Vashington, presidential press secretary Ronald L. Ziegler refused to comment on the North Vietnamese of· ficial's statements. Le said Kissinger referred Thursday to an "honest misunderstanding" about the date. Le said: "\Ve don't believe there is a misllll- derstanding. It was written black on white in a message from the Presldenl on Oct. 20.'' ''The U.S. side claims there are still some things to settle. We consider this as a pretext to delay the signing of the ac· cord on which the two parties reached agreement," Le said. He scoffed at what he said was 1Gss- inger's need lo compare lexts of the ac- cord lo clarify questions of linguistics. ''This question has already been settled definitely," Le said. He iaid that at a secret meetinf on Oct. II that lliiisbed at ! a.m. Oct. I , npert translators of both sides compared the text of the agreement. In another meeting on the afternoon of -Oct. 12, experts of the two sides again worked on the text in Vietnamese and F.ngUsh. he added. Le said that on Oct. 17 Kissinger and Xuan Thuy, chief of the Nort h Viet- namese peace delegalion, "went over the text chapter by chapter. article by article, sentence by sentence, word by word. There is no question of linguistics pending." f'romPageJ FIGHTING ... Australian forces before they pulled out last year. - 1n ~ air war, the U.S. command said a U.S. Alr Force F4 Phan&om was shot down today by antiaircraft fire over North Vietnam. · The two Cl"f:wmen parad11it.ed Into the Gulf of Tonkln and were picked up by helicopter 11 miles northeast of the Demilitarized 1.one. U.S. fighter-bombers attacked North Vietnam "more than 10 times Thursday. High-fiying B52 bombers joined the airstrikes with nine waves, all or them over the lower Panhandle, the U.S. com· mand reported. The U.S. Navy announced today the guided missile destroyer USS c.ochrane was damaged by a shore battery Wednesday night while making a firing strike again,t an ammunition dump near Vlnh in North Vietnam. * * * Sclimitz Says Vietnam Allies Stab.bed in Back GRAND RAPIDS, Mich. (AP) -The American Party's candidate for the prc~idency has called !he Impending peace ln Vietnam a "Bl.Ab in the bRck IW our altie.'fl." CAlllRAMN ... , l Pattern Of Cantral I Ar-901 controll.d by ~et Cong ond/or North V'tetnomeM Fore":• UPI,...._ FIGHTING CONTINUES <AS PEACl!>PLANS"MAPl'EO-#. Map Shows Areas Held by South Vietnam, Communistt l' alley Police · .... ' ' ' Porno Case May EridWith Ruling of ffiegal Search I A possession" or pornographic materials case against Joseph Reitano may have collapsed with a ruling Thursday that Fountain Valley police violated his rights v.·ben they searthed his borne at 18283 htt. Baldy Circle. ' An Orange County SupeMori Court ap- pellate panel of three judges reversed a Santa Ana inunicipal court decision which bad denk!d a motion to suppress the evidence filed by lawyers for Reitano, 59. tt was successfully argued that police Improperly assured the leaseholder of the Reitano home that they had aulhority lo search the premises and conriscate the 7,400 books and magazines and 17,000 brochures found on the premises. Charges subsequently filed against Rt!tano and bis son, Lucien, 25, both fonnerly or' C.Osta Mesa, included the allegation that the materials seized were pornographic. It was unsuccessfully argued by ,tne p1"09eCUtlon that ~ owner of the F~ tain Valley home. OOn Robert80b, 3t38t Pasa Don Jose, San Juan CapiStrlino, had the power to allow Fountain Valley police ·to sea rch the premises leased to Reitano. Reitano is currently awaiting Lhe oul· 1790 Letter Bought NEW YORK fUPll - A Philadelphia bookshop has paid $14.000 at auction for a five-page letter writlen by George Washlnaton on Dec. 26, 1790 to James Duane, a member ot COngress. come of a series of appeals on earlier conviclioos. lie was sentenced to 18 months in federal prison in 1971 after pleading guilty to sending obscene materials through the mails. Judge Avery Crary added a $1,IXX> fine to the punishment and sentenced Lucien Reitano to two years probation. Prosecution of Reitano on civil allega· tions that he permitted the display of obscene materials at peep shows operated In Santa Ana has also been delayed through appellate action. Grass Hidde1i l1t Patrol Car ' A lid oC marijuana (about 8 warns) was seized and placed In the Leguna Beach police evidence locker after being' found in a D'\Ollt. unlikely place -under the seat ol a police pat:~-car. Officer Paul Rose found the pat an.:i a roach {partially burned tnarljuana cigarette) as he cheked out the vehicle prior to taking it out on patrol shortly after midnig ht. "That's why we always conduct" search or the vehic les before the or~ flcers take them out," Police Lt. Frank Dillon said this morning. Police had no e:ii:plnnatlon tor the presence of the pot. polnte<Uy referred lo an a1greement witb Ki&alnger IO seu\e before the end of this moatlt. To some dlplomatle obserVers. thll amounted to an ultimatum by llanol f'f' the Nixon administration to either afan the aaretmc.nt by Wednesday or face the collapse or the negotlatlons. If that shoot~ happen, McGovern would have 8 ruu week to tuimmer bon1e the n1essage that he has bl.>en trying to put across to the people sinct he became a caodidate -that the: only way to end the war ls lo elect him president. He ba1 promised lo wlthdra"' all American troops within 90 daya of his in- auguration and end mlllt&ry aid t.o South Vietnam regardleu of its conM:quences to the Thieu regime. * * * Peace Plan Proposed By Thieu ... SAIGON (UPI) -President Nguyen Van Thieu said today there will be no peace in South Vietnam until he signs a treaty himself. He countered the Hanoi-Washington nine-point peace plan with a pro~al for or any combination of two or more ooun- to decide the makeup of a new Saigon government. Thieu told pro-government legislators who marched to his downtown Independence Palace to show support for the president that he favors 11; South Viet· namese rererenUum so the people could "voice their O\Vn wish." The president said the United Nations or any combination or two or mor coun- tries could supervise the referendum. He propsed that a government be formed between his administration and the Viet Cong according to the percen- tage each side received in the refer~n dum. Thieu has hinted at such a referendum for severa.1 week!.but his proposaJ today was the first time be spelled out lilii idea. The president has always insisted that only Internationally supervised elecUons could replace his government. but today's proposal of a referendum would not directly e'.~ct anyone. lt would in- stead allow the choosing of government officials by both sides. "For once, nobody could say that be controlled 99.9 percent or the people, and nobody could claim two-thirds either," Thieu said.. , It was an obvious reference to the three-slded oo8litioo JrOposed by Hanoi and Washington to take over the reins of government. Both the Viet Cong and North Vietnam have opposed any United Nations "in- terference" in South Vietnam In the past. "We have not agreed on anything yet and yet the Communists boasted that there will be a cease-fire and are prepar- ing for it." Thieu said in a speech to pro- government legislators at the presiden- tial palace. "We are not afraid of a cease-rue and the peace. I am sure It will come, but it will only come when 1 personally sign the treaty for a cease-fire and peace," Thleu ~aid. "Without my slgnature It means it has not been agreed lo by the people. "The Communists can use 10 hands and JO legs to sign treaties, but without my signature, it means there has been oo agreement by the people," Thieu said. "It will be inval14 in .South Vietnam. I am not an obstacle to peace. I reflect the \\'ill of the Vietnamese people." Thieu told the lawmakers. "I don't know what U.S. presidential adviser Henry Kissinger and the North Viet· namese have said to each other. I only know the stand of South Vietnam." Thieu's speech followed by one day word from Kissin~er in Washington that "peace 11 at hand' in Vietnam and final agreement could come In one more meeting with the North Vietnamese . Radio Hanoi earlier Thursday broadcast lerms of the agreement. Equip1ueut Arrives KA YENTA, Artz . (AP) -More equip- ment was to arrive al the site of a ma5$ive oil slick today near the north end of Lake Powell in southern Utah where crews have been working for more than two week3. The workers have been t~ylng to scoop up tont of debris and thousands of gallons of oil caught between a aeries of Jog and styrofoAm barriers on the San Juan River near the St."eRlc lake. Bob Leverlna, :i.l, Pasadena: Fnuildln, Zlhn, 64, Claremool: Phil Dermott, 34, Santa Monica: Chlirles Swift, 54, Santa. Monica; Nancy Perez, Loi Angeles; AM MacKlru)ey, of Santa Monica, and· Shalom Michelin, 21, Pa80dena. A Navy sPokesman said after the Jn .. cldent that the Duluth had experienced no delay despite the fact that some pro- testors were able to swim within o few yards of her hull as she exited Anahetm Bay. The 15 pacifists were arrested on a variety of charges including unlawful. aaembly, failure to dlaperse, bringing' unaulhorized vessels lnto a harbor, and1 trespassing. ln addilloo. the juvenile girl was charged with resisUng arrest. · By midnight Thursday, the 14 adu.llli: had been released on bail ranging from $250 to $500. The girl was released into custody of her father . The nine men, five women, and one girl demonstrators began their so-called blockade about 3 p.m. as the Duluth was . preparing for departure. Three small aluminum craft, each with . four passengers, pulled into the nar- rowest part of the Anaheim Bay channel.• As the Duluth r.eared them, they dove in · the water and swam toward the giant , vessel. Al the !:ar.:e time, the three remaining . protesters climbed under a barbed wire fence on the public beach immediate)}"' north of the harbor and began moving down the beach toward the same narrow part ol the channel. • Harbor authorities and officials, ap- parently with advance warning on th& protest. imn1ediately swung into action as \\~tsuit-clad Seal Beach lifeguards dove from boats to forcibly remove pro-· testors from the path of the vessel. . Meanwhile, uniformed security police chased the other three protestors down lhe shore, and later waded fully-unifonn· ed into the surf, waving their billy clubs• above thelr beads, in an effort to ap- prehend them. · Sailors lineJ the starboard side of tbe Duluth, watching the whole operation.· When the last. protestor was picked up. they gave a loud cheer. · A spokesman for the pacUists said the purpose of the demonstration was to ~ mote public awareness that weapons J.re shipped from Seal Beach to Vietnam. Fonda, Antiwar Activists Plan County Speeclies Oscar-winning actress Jane Fonda and two other antiwar activists will make two appearances at local college campuses on Nov. 5. She will appear first at UC Irvine's Science Lecture Halt at 1:30 p.m. during a program sponsored by Vietnam Veterans Against the War (VVAW). Also slated to speak during the program that lasts until 5 p.m. are former Chicago Seven defendant Tom Hayden and VVAW leader Scott Cami!. Admission is $2 to the antiwar gaUter- ing at which the film! "The Winter Soldier Investigation" and "Vlllage by Village" will be shown. Miss Fonda will then move to Orange Coast College where she will address students at 8 p.m. in the auditorium. Hayden is also slated to appear at OCC along with actor Donald Sutherland. Tickets for the OCC event are $1 and are available at the student activities building. Her appearance was arranged by the Associated student Body at OCC. Peron Given OK To Make Return BUENOC AffiES (AP) -Juan D. Peron's way has been cleared for the former dictator to relurn to Argentina from exile in Spain next month. The government said Thursday night it authorized the Italian airline Alltafia to fly Peron here Nov. 17. Peron has said repeatedly he plans to return to Argentina prior to national elections scheduled for March, but has never set a date. Peron, 77, was ousted by a coup in 1955 and has lived in Spain since 1960. Opera Singer Dead NEW YORK (AP) -Thelma Votipka, 74, Metropolitan Opera soprano who sang more than 70.roles In htt career between 1935 and 1963, died Thursday. Sbe specialized in small roles and among her be!it·known were the witch In "Hansel and Gretel" nod Morlha in "Faust." Vk:t ,.,_.,..,, MICI a..n.•11 """"9fl" Thor.1•1 K11•ll Editor Tho111•1 A. M1H11hln• M.l""lnt lldllOI'" Rep. John D. Schmlti of Tustin uld Thunday the announcement Uutt peace could be near was "a sellout and sur- render." De Wanted to Go Ho111e and Did 0.1rl11 H. L1ot ~ith•r4 1, N•tl Al\ill1n1 MMt!il"" EdlNn """• Cni1 Mea;a: la wt:~:.~r Strwl ...,._., ~! ~ H '-1t¥1N l.....-•tKll~ m ~-I A- Htlntlnf'-1 BM01 17'1S hKtt Miiin•• "" ,c....._..1 as Norffl •• ea"''"' 111..i Ttl•••••• (714J 641~121 O..Ul14 .A4lh11r' ... '4Z.1ttt ,.,_ ,_ .. A'"I koilft of ~ tMcti 4•1o44Zt ,,... '"'"" .,..,,,,... CWllfy c.~ ..... ,llt ~ '"" °'"' c .. ., ~ ...... ·--~-:::r·~-"W .:~·="= ,...y .. • .... UCfllf •llMvl .... , ... ....... " '*""'··· ..... ~ CMM ~t ... Hid 11 C.11 Miii. "lltiml• k4M(lltllft fir tlf'tlW U,., """"'"'"'' 1¥' ll'llR ti.JS "*""'"' IWlllWY *9flMl*'t .,.., -ltllr. ''President Kissinger's revelations con· linue our sellout 1n Southeast Asia ," Schmitt said. "Any such revelation one week before the election is toUored more towArd the election than toward pcl\Ce, 1r thnt'11 peace at all, It's peace of the grave," he sakt S<.'tunlti aaid he refemd to pttsidtn- tlal adVl.str Henry KliS!nger as "Piiiil-- dent Kiss1nger" because "Henry KJN- lngtr Is tbe de facto (In fact) l'rHldent of tbe Ui1ted States." Schmitz bl"O\llht bl11 1010.key campa.Jp to .Mlchla.on 'l.bllnda1 and ptedleutd he will do well Jn the 1tate Nov. 7. Schmitt aald he should do well Jn Mlch.ignn because It hn1 a Itron& nn- tlbusln,J platfonn, IJ agalnlt C1tabll1hlM strong(!!" gun am1rol laws and opposes .. Hbl'raltzed abortion IAWJ. Man Com1nits Cri1ne to Force His McALES'l'EI\, Oltla. (Ill'!) -The warden of the state pi-ulon and the district attorney: in ~~h tu~ down a reque!rt ""lnim et-«Jn George J. Bambtraer. 46. He want.td to rtturn to hls "home" In prllon. Bamberger, who has been out of prtson only 55 days In 12 ye1rs carried the clothina be needed~ Cor th• tdp boct to prison recently Into the 'districi at· torney's office and conre.ssea to a number of UtlM>lved crlmt1. lie held out hi1 hands tJ be handcuffed . But prosecut« fl'r&nk llagtdorn uld hamber~tr had done noth\nf wrong. "lie asked us how he couJd be sent back for four years," Hagedorn said Thursday.Jo.. "We lold him there was no rea1tOn to senCTlilm l>acl. "Tiien, he asked iC we would put him back If he did comriilt a crime "We said yes, but asked not to do anything for that reason becawe he miaht get hurt. Something might go wrong. "But he was happy 01 a lark, and told us he'd ht seeing u1 later," Sunday night, Bamberger broke tnto a tavern, called the )>()lice And tnl<l lllem tt burglary was going on. He walk~ Way Back Into Oklalioma Priso1i ouL,lde and '!'Aited k>r authorities with his handt In lhe air. · Jlal!lbcratt lu0>cd.down oilers ol a Jury trial or mental tests, asking Instead that he be sentenced Immediately. Thursday he lfOl hlJ Wi8h. When he went before District Judae llllYlDOnd W._ (1raham, Bar:nbet&er saki he wanted to return to prl90n 110 he could com,~l1!te an art course he ,tarted biirore he wns rt.leased severnl week1 ago. lfe 111\d he won second prize with hJJ first prison sketch. Whtn AMlstnnt District Attorney Mike Barkley recommended the four•year sentence, Bamberger told the judge. "1 wouki-1inctrely apprectae tt ti yoo W®tcf sentence mt to tttat," "It ii with dlJtaste that I'm rcqulred 10 adhert t.o your wlahu," Graham aald . "It's a tlmple act or burglary. I'm dliSAitl1fied with U1e prospects.. tltave, however, no choice but to protect IOciety from thl1 type of behovlor." "Thant you," D1mber11er aid. "J'd like to return to prison. The world hu ch:ingf'd an awful lot." ,, or ID and In chi not w up he fi the .. ol J • a p d F 'V SA "1' terya adve BoO I I • Will Bob Battin Rise From His Own Ashes? By JACK BROBACK Of .._ DtlW "91 .... WHAT WOULD YOU think of Bobby Battin 83 cotmty ""'lronmental clllel or county assessor? That question tn reference to First Dlllrlcl SUpervllor Battin· of SUta Ana has· been bandied about County Seat nunor !actotloo for .._al - now. The inference la that II Biitttn la not r&>eJoded· to hls poot as supervllor Nov. 7 be mq be appointed to a top position in county governmenl "Incredlble," say those who have watched his Inept performance as a supervisor and·as cbalrman of the board In 1971. BUT IS IT THAT Incredible? The lot<ea·beltlnd BaltlD have not been noted for their subltty bat then Ii llO douill about their poliUcal acumen and overwbelmlrj& deslre for power. · Who are these people and how would they go about placing their man in a powerful post? There is the well known duo of Dr. Louis Cella and Fred Harber. They are admittedly Battin'& brain trust. Most subatantlal fUnds con- tributed to his campaign have come from those two and organizatlona they control. BOW COULD THEY get enough votes on the Board of Supervisors to place Battin In a top job? The same way they got him electeil to the board after a record or having nm for two·otber,elect1ve offices -state Senator and Assemblyman -and railed miserably. What Is that way? MoneyJ It ls well known that the Cella·Harber organ!z· aUon cootributed heavily to the eltctloo of Fourth Dlatrid ·superv1oor Ralph Clark and in critical instances bis vote on the county board bas gone their way. ~ THE DRIVE lmmedlately alter orgllllzation of the 1971 board to fire County AdmlnlstraUve Officer Rotiert Thomas. Battin was chairman and newly .. lected Fffth Dlstrid Supervisor Ronald W. Caspers and Clark joined in the attempt. II ""uld take three votes to put Blutn In the post of onvtronmental agency chief or county assessor. Assuming Clark's vote Is assured and further assomtng that Battin coold not vote for himself, (There is some doubt on this Issue, the law is unclear) where would they get the other two votes? CASPERS IS UNPREDICTABLE but In most sllowdown votes he has lined up with Battin and Clark. As chairman, be seelil! to think that to retain power he must go along witb "the club." Bow aboot Ralph Diedrich of Fullerton who Is likely tO replace !our-term Incumbent William Phillips? He got 10,000 more votes than Pblllips in the pimary. . Diedrich ha! empbatloally denied any connection with Harber me! Cella but his denials have been so emphatic It IOUDda like be who proteltetb to much. He is known to have lunched with Harber on at least two oCcaalonl and, al- though it bu not been proved, the In Group la believed to llO oupJIOrll!>g )lhn financially. ' OKAY. THEY HAVE CLARK and maybe Caspers. Diedrich la the only logical third vote . It certainly wm't come from attorney William Wenke who · will take over Batlln's job if all political signs are valid. And It mOO certainly won 't come from Second Di.!trlct SUpervlsor David Baker. Baker, once a member of a soltd f to 1 majority on ~board when Battin firat took office In 19611, baa found blmseH on the short end of 1 to 4 votes ID the past year. • BE IS CllARCl'ERIZEI) by those who view county 1ovenunat eriucaily as "Our ooly dependable supervisor." ' Phillips, In a tough fight for b1a polltteal future, was ooce a strong aDy o( Baker but in recent months be has wavered, seemingly trying t.o pick the most popular stance on controversial questions. • ASSUMING THE ELEcrION of Diedrich and Werrlce, the first week tn ·' January should be interesting. Can a man who bu been constanUy cr!Uclzed by public and press allte, a deCeated candidate repudJated by the voters, be appointed to a 1op county administrative position? At this point the only roadblock to such a move would seem to be a .strong protest from the citizens o( the county who would stand up and protest, "We · don't want a machine controlling our government." 'Hot Potato' Prop. 2·0, Fall Fashiom-Sunday Top feature story in Sunday's DAILY PILOT for many Orange Coast area readers may \Yell be the pros and cons of the "hot potato" proposition on coastline preservation . Staff Writer Terry Coville analyze> Prop. 20. Here are some of the other offerings being prepared for Sunday readers : SUBSTITUTE FATHERS? -Parole officers have to lY friends, confidants, marriage counselors -even employment bureaus -for sotne of the felons who have been placed In their can alter releaae from prison. Staff Writer Can- Pa:t Boone Plugs Antipornography 'Vaccine' Plan SAN DIEGO (AP) -SIOJ!er Pat Boone says he feels "like the Jonas Salk or the entertainment industry" for his support or Prop. 18, the so-called obscenity fn. itlatlve. '"'I've discovered there it an 1:11r tlpornography v 11 cc I n e 1 ' ' Boone, chalnnan of the "Yes, on Prop. 18 Com-- mlttee," told a new9 conference Thun- daJ . He said the measure r e m o v e a pornography "like lhe smog device on a car. like the vaccine again9t polio." 11le measure gives ii lon1 and explicit definition of obscene books, movies and shows, eliminates the provisk>n that permits works with redeemtna IOclal lm· po1ance and allows communlties to 9't their own standards of obsceltlty. Opponents, Including much of the entertainment l_Mu3try, contend the mea1111te lruiliigC. on !rtedom of speech and would Impose largO<Cale cenllOl'lhlp. ''I'm ... saddened that '° many en- ter;alnero have been decelved by paid ad"ferttslna; lodust.rtr11 and law llrms," Boc>oe said. I I • •. dace Pearson describes the parole of• fleer'• Ille and job In the Sunday Special. FRASIER, AGAIN -Loot closely at the cover o( TV WEEK and you'll get a fleeting glimpse of the late Frasier, the lionhearted lioni He's ln me or the photos In the montage by Richard Tbomal or '"Ibe Walton.a" ahot at Uon CJountry Safari. llALLOwEEN ACTION -RouriduJ> story tells Miere the city-~ ac- tion will be for Halloween c ~~. but al!o offers words of caution for parents from polke and firemen . CHINA'S DISNEYLAND -Red China bu a Walt Disney.atyle amusement part where the admission Is only three cents. The political message comes at no adl- ditlooal charge u part of the exhlbila and dllplays on the wide. COP IN CLASS ...: The "Cop oo Cam- pus" program tn Newport Beach haa moved indoon. PoUce find there ls more rapport when the officer conducts cl111e1 at the l!Cbool lnllead of juat •being available on campus. Sta.ff Wrller Joanne Reynolds slla In oo the program at eo .... de!. Mar tpgh School. THE CANDY MAN -Joe Benry'1 job Is to test; taste, count and weigh candies. l\'1 no job for amateurs. Story acbeduled for YOU Section. FALL FMH!ONS -Famly Weekly Women'• Edit.or noutyn Abrevay1 offers advice on bow to organ!u an fn.voeue wardrobe for fall with clltbel you already own. tt'a thll week'• co\ltr story. PEA.CE PHOOEY; THEY'U TA.KE TV- SACRAMSNTO (UPI) -1'elel>- llatloo ICXTV ,.ported that &a womtri and t1'0 ,_ ealled to ·r:omplaln-when "LOve of Lii ... and port of ''Wllere tho Heart Is" were knocked off the air !t[ pmldenUal adv!Mr H<nry A. JOuirraoer 1 br1t11nc Tllll'lday oa Vletnlm peace negoU1tlorrl. it • . . I' 'J'flke Your C'hoif!e ' Artist Norman Rockwell, whose personal preference is beside the point, stands between his paintings of the two presidential candidates and their wives. Rockwell was ·commissioned by the Ladies Home Journal to do the paintings. lrVine ;eianners. Weigh B~ds -f or Oil Drillfug . . ~ pl8llZl!ng ·. <»"1:"1issloners will consiiler any spec~c proposal to allow ··oil COYnpanies to test drlll for black gold in the Irvine Industrial Comple:r. Last week, Standard Oil Corporation spokesmen recounted to commissioners the financial advani.ges to cities which allow drilling for oil. 'l1le firm sought provision in the latest rewrite of the :zoning laws affecting the Irvine· Industrial Complex to allow test drilling. I Planning Commission Chairman Wayne Clark said the commission however, sug· gested the companies prepare a specific proposal for the way ~ test sites migbt flt into the Industrial park. Should oil be discovered underneath frvtne.,• a decision to allow full scale drill· mg m1gbt well binge on revenues which would •CCNe to th<> city, Clark said. "Thia might be • way to pay for open space acquisition." Altliou&b the frvliie.COmpiny owns the mineral rights to~lts. properiJi in the new ' city, a spokesman for the firm's subsidiary, Irvine Industrial Complex, was WJaware of ny agreement with oil companies, Clark noted. "I ~uspect ·this kind . of request is pretty much ,OOttne," Clark said, indicating.be d!d not feel there •were any immediae ·plans to begin oil exploration in Irvine. : c:oinmissioilets• who said they thought lhis 4,l'ea must :be: Pretty ml!cb wo~ out in terms of. oil supplies, however, were told that neW tecbnlqi.res of fmdini oil have in other areas found new sour=. Other commission concerns centered on the nolse and ugUness attendant to oil drilltng. Any approval lor test drilling, they said, would depelfd Oil ·oil firm" meeting yet to be dra""1 city standards. City planning staff -will consider guidelines and would evaluate any specific proposal brought to the city, Clark said. ? • ' r ' . ' . ··-.... DAILY PILO~ ,1 6,614 Votes Needed? Irvine District " ••• Bond Gets Push If, as Orange County 1Registrar of Voters Dave Hitcbcoc.k estimates, there l! an lkl percent· turnout or voters at the Nov. 7 election, at least l,81f pel'IClll wW have to vote approval qi the Irvine Unified School Dimict'1 l50 million bond election for it '.o p...sa, Art Anthony, bond camJ?Blgn manager. told Irvine School Dlstrld trust ... that while he ls opUmistlc, getting that many votes will be "tougt •. " There are about 12,fOO registered voters in the dlstrict and if ther registrar's predictions hold true, at least 9,920 of . them T"liU go to the polls in less than two weeks. The bond issue, School Measure K. on the ballot, tak:es a two-thirds yes vote to p811, br in this case, 6,6lf votes, Anthony said. • · • To try to reach these 61000-plus voters. about 70 campaigners· will address specially printed envelopes to them Saturday from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. at University High SchooJ. The cars, printed and stamped at a cost or $445, wiU be addressed to 6,600 voters by the volunteers in the high school multi-purpose room. The cars refer to Nov. 7 as "Decision Day." School trustees have earmarked the funds to build at :~ast eight schools, which they say are needed in five year. AntbOny Wednesday made reference to the recent defeat, despite a S2 percent yes vote, of a bond measure in the Hun- tington Beach Union lligb School District. "There's a great difficulty in passing r bond election in this coimty," Anthony said, in one of his rare negative statements. j'l know Inrine is different " h" added, quoting an off.said phra~. "But I just hope it's dUferent enough." Volunteer speaken's ch al rm an Barbara 3iersma is continuing to organize before city groups. City Coon. cilmen Henry Quigley and Gabrielle Pryor have appeared for the bonds, as have all school board members. A telephone campaign also be waged in the last few days before the election. Trustee Sharon Sircello suggested that campaigners try a "personalized" ap- proach with UC Irvine's 1,115 student voters·. Developing a non-family oriented brochur for School Measure K is one way to reach the students who normally might ignore school bond issues, she said. Anthony, a Turtle Rock resident whose children are in college, said that Turtle Rock and Univenity Park area resldtnt.s have been in the past the biggest sup- porters of iJonds. ''The other areas," he said, referring to the central and northern aect k>ns, "have not been so good." School su(>IX:lrters have not been wor· rled about these areas in the past, but "the numbers game is cbangin&," he said. South of tne San Diego Freeway (Tur· tie Rock and University Park) there are 6,500 registered voters. North of the San Diego Freeway, then: are 5,764 registered voters and "you cao see where the homes are being built ," Anthor1;y cautioned. Most of the develop- ment is going on i .. tbe north. Nixon Plans Two Trips To Clemente Rumors continue to mount along the South C'.oast this week about one - possibly two -visits locally by President Nixon in ad vance of the national elec· tions Nov. 7. Local sources as well as campaign of· ficials ln the Los Angeles area expect the President to arrive in San Clemente Nov. 3 or 4 to spend the last weekend of the ca mpaign at La Casa Pacifica. Other campaingn spokesmen havP speculateJ that the President might show up as early as Monday to attend the last major re-election event for him in Orange County-a $25-a·plate dinoer at the El Adobe in San Juan Capistrano. The White House thu s far has said nothing about the Presidents plans for next week. Southern California sources. however, believe that Nixon will cast his own ballot at his traditional home polling place at Concordia Elementary School. The plans call for the President to leave the polling place and immediately board a helicopter for the jaun t to the Spirit of '76 and the flight back tu Washington. STATION WAGONS • e Montego MX Villager ' •~Marquis Colony Park e Monterey Station Wagon ' ---·tEASE--- Specialist In Full Maintenance Leasing ! SEE ONE ••• TRY ONE • • • BUY ONE • • • TODAY! llomt Of The Ntw car • • • "fie ..... Te~ Rome or '!be New ear ••• -~--"G_,...•Wea r .. dl" l:m1 IWlllOll ILVO.. COITA MESA • ~ ll30 '• , 4 DAILY PILOT with 1 Tom urphine Coast Climate: [t's 'Variable' ORANGE COAST, WILD COAST: This s the time of year when the \\·eatherman n our region goes absolutely out of his \oggin. lJe keeps trying to predict the !''eat her. He can't. Anybody who has resided along this best of all possible coasts with any length ,r tenure knows that here in the shag end ~f October, you can't tell what's really going to happen outdoors. You take the recent rains, for example. rhc last \Veather report I'd seen was tal king about how we had some fog and the Santa Ana \Vinds were going to come along and blow it all away and we'd have a wonderfu1 lndian Summer. 'That night the fog stayed with us. It felt like midnight underneath the Oak.land 1Bay Bridge. So I tuned into the teevee weather guy to see how he w'ould explain all this away. It was easy for him. QUESTIONED ACCUSINGLY by his rellow news broadcaster, the teevee weather guy retorted, "You remember I said last night the Santa Ana winds were on their way here. I didn't say they'd get here ... " Ah, such clever dancing with words. This is called lhe old Weatherman Slithers Off the Hook trick. He said It. but then he tells you that wasn't \\'hat it meant. Well . rinally the Santa Ana winds did briefly grace our region and then came the rains. SHORTLY THEREAFTER, the v.·eather report people start telling you that along our Orange Coast, """may get "a few sprinkles or light showers ... '' Now I ask you as a thinking person, what in bloody bilgewater does THAT mean? A few sprinkles, I suwose, sug. gests that you might hit a dewdrop or two with your windshield.. Light showers, on the other band, could be excused as anything from a steady soaking from the sky or just a lew buckeUuls of the stuff. So any way it goes, the old weatherman has a way of coming back afterward and saying, "See? 1 told you'° .. ANCYMIER ONE of I.he weathermen's favorite phrases in this region is "Variable cloudiness today .... " Now isn't that nice? This can be anything from complete cloud cover to one or two patches of nuffy stuff floating around in the clear blue ozone. Elther way, you can bet the weather man was safe when he hung that "variable" bit on you. Here's another one the weather· watchers' favorite lines: "Fair except for patches of fog or low clouds night and morning along the coast ... " NOW THAT REALLY tells you a lot, doe!ll't it? If you're out there creeping aloog in the old family bus in a thick glop of fog, it doesn 't make much difference to you that there might be a patch of blue 15 miles upcoast. You're in it, bud- dy, and that's all that counts. And how about that line, "fog or low clouds?" I sure wish the weatherman would tell me when a low cloud gets low enough to be<:ome fog. When It hits the ground? Who knows ? Anyway, this is the lime of year when worried school folks often call the newspaper and inquire about what the weather is going to do to their big homecoming parade. n!E ANSWER isn't easy. It would be if the good old weetherman wOtlld just say "the skies are golng t.o tum black aa sin and it will rain Hke the very devU." But don't hold your breath for him to get on the hook like that. • F~dl!. -27, 1972 Shakeup in Cairo President Anwar Sadat (R) has accepted resignation or Gen. MC>- hammed Ahmet Sadek (L), reportedly. a critic of Russia's military assistance to Egypt. Sadek held posts of vice premier, war minister and commander-in-chief of armed forces. NY Police Battle Crowd To Enroll Black Pupils NEW YORK (UPI) -Police, after calling for reinforcements, cleared a path through a crowd of jeering, scuf· fling white parents today and escorted 31 black students into class at embattled John Wilson Jr. Junior High School in Brooklyn. The students, led by the Rev. Wilbert Miller, a black, left a bus at about 10:30 a.m. and were escorted by police and school chancellor Harvey Scribner through th,e main entrance of the school. The crowd or about 400 white parents shouted "go bome" and racial epithets as the chidren walked past lines of helmeted police. Some of the white parents sang a mock version of the civil rights hymn "We Shall Overcome." 1'1ost of the children wbo normally at- tend the school stayed home today at the urging of their parents. Some 10 minutes before the black children from the T'tlden Housing Project in the Brownsville section left the bus, a h .. Jf dozer1 eggs were burled from the crowd into a group of their parents, slan· ding at the barricades. Three persons were arrested, two white men and a white youth. Wilson Junior High is 70 percent white and 30 percent black. · Earlier, a shouting group of parents scuffled briefiy with the police when they temporarily broke through the police lines. Helmeted police fought with flst·swfng· ing men and clawing women as they attempted to clear a path in front of the school for tbe obviously higbtened children from Brownsville. Nixon Announces First Corn S~le to Chinese WASHINGTON (AP) -President Nix- on announced today the first sale of livestock feed grains -300,000 tons of com -to the People's Republic of China. In mid-September, there was an an· nouncement of a 400,000-ton wheat sale to China but there had hem no earlier deal· ings in com Nixon, in a campaign radio broadcast on the !armer and his problems, said the new relaUonsblp with Peking "is another si tuation in which our farmers are both contributing to peace and profiting from peace." N1xm said ''the grain sales which we have made to the People'• Republlc ol China ooly 11C1111cll the surface ol an Im- mense trade potenUal between our two C0W1tries." The President reported a contract for the sale of the com had been signed "within the last few days." U.N. Flag Lowered MODESTO (AP ) -A man accusing the Modesto-Stanislaus public library staff of "supporting the international Communi!t conspiracy" hauled down a United Nations flag outside the building and refused to surrender it, police aald, until offlcers intervened. Orehel D. Krier, 41. Salida, told authorltles Wednesday he saw the nag Dying at tbe library when he passed by and "couldn't sland by while the county supparted an organization that gives aid and comfort to the enemy." The sale thus amounts to about 12 million bushels - a relatively small amount inasmuch as annual U.S. corn production exceeds five billion bushels. The Agriculture Department, mean- time, said it learned of the sale through export impect.ion reports. The sale wu a private commercial traMactlon by the Louis O..yfUJ C«p., N.Y. olllclala said. Spokesmen said they did not know If the 300,000 tons of com was part of a larger sale ol U.S. feed grain to Ollna. No government credit or export subsidies are involved, o[ficials said. Nixon, in le remarks, also de.fended a controversial grain sale to the Soviet Union. DAILY PILOT DELIVERY SERVICE DtHvtry of the Dally Pflot Is vuarantffd MON11y.Frld1y1 H yOU 00 not MW ,.o11r PIPlr by $:lll p.m., a.II •nd your copy wUI °" b""'llhl 10 you. r1111 •r• t•ktn unTll l:lll p.m. a.tlll'Ny IMI """"YI rt yOU do not ,.._111'11 your ~ by f 1.m. S.tlll'dlly. or • 1.m. il.lnOlly, e./I Ind I OJV'I witl bt brol.llfll .. yOU. Galli IN IM.11'1 until 10 1.m. Snow Falls • Ill Montana ) Stock1ne1i Get Warni1ig in Nortliern Rockies Temperatura "" ...... Ht.. ,Ot<>CM,. rt0lon «CUl'!WltllCI mott of tilt '''"· IM HllJOflll Wfftlllr &Mvlct Mid. T"' .-..C. Mid cenOUllM ~ Moln to ·tmorow tw hl~v wtltl 111r1111t1 (.IOVCh Ind •llohllY ••rmtr ttn'IOll'ltvrh llf"MlcNd. TIMlf"ldNs ft1"1 "' La """'" Wtl n. II tl'IOVft:I rt-=h 7l bv il'tvnt1v. Alti.nv, dr All9nt1, rn lwton. cir lvtt.io. ctr C~rMlfOfl, "' Cl\4orlofff, f'll c-... c1r1c1-tt, "' Clit¥tffflll.1dr "'"""~ oet • ar-Mollollulv, ..., -""'"' IC1nMt (tfy, cir LI• Y'8ff. ith l.1"'9 ... ,... .. _ ... ... -.... <iii ... '""· "" ....... .... .. . .... .. .. n n " .. " .. " . " a .. . .. ~ .. " " . ... n ~ " " ... " n .. .. .. .. " .. .. " • • • ... Sale! 20o/o off on all women's heels. l•ilorff or sport 1tyl•1. ptain or trimm.d with d•1igner-loolc ec:cents. Choos• from leethers, suedes, 1hiny patent vinyls, a11d more. Classic end f•shion colors. Sale! Our entire stock of disposable diaper f'le.shlped disposables with 1peclal Inner tining that screens moisture away from baby. Waterproof backing eliminates rubber pants. 5elf·stlck tapes hold securely. Newborn, bag of 30, reg. 1 .29 now 1.09 Daytime, bag of 30, reg. 1.49 now 1.29 Overnight. bag of 12. reg. 79¢ now S!IC . • • Save 20% on all our shower curtains and matching window curtains. Get super savings on printed and embossed \linyl shower curtains. Matching window curtains come In ~two sizes. Wide selection of bright colora to match your bath decor. • • JCPenney . The values are here every clay. Shop Sundtly noon to 5 P .M. 1t the followrn11 1tore1: FASHION ISLAND, Newport' 811ch, (714) 644-2313 HUNTINGTON CENTER. Huntington Beach, (714) 892-ml HARSOR CENTeR, Costa Mes•, (714j 646-5021 • r I , • ' l 2 coun 125, Pres Mc who disa • w Ala w Wa to HDO c tha the w cu NI tin ~ • CD s wi SU u .. ,,....... PAUL SHERWIN ESCORTS bAUGHTER TO CAR Secretary of St1te Convicted in Bribery Trlal 2 Fund Committees Fail to File Reports .. ' • DAILY ".LOT $ B!glawav Bid Top N.J. Adviser Guilty. in Bribe Princess Sees .Star LEEDS, Eoglard (AP I -Princess r.t-ace or Monaco went to a ball and met her onetime scree u lover. Cary Gran!. MacGregor Admits Special Fund-'Not for Espwnage' ... FllEEllOLI>, N.J. (UPI) -penonal and pollUcal friend of New)lmey Secretary of State Gov. William T. Cahill, who Pauf J . Sherwin, lop advlaer to campaigned largely on the promise that he wou.Jd clean • governor who swept into of. out corruption in the state's flee on an antieorrupUon plat-political circles. form. wu convicted. Tbunday o1 C<llllPirlni' IJld olferfoa lo ALL THREE SAID they .-Jve -. brlbe. would appeal. SUperlor Court "I'm dellflbted lo see you again," the princess. fomter actress G r a c e l<A!lly, !old !he 6&-year .. ld Grant 11unday n I g h t when they met at a Varie- ty CIUb of Great Britain ball. DGrlng her , Hollywood day~ the P'""""' and Grant starred in the lum "To catch a Thief ... WASIUNGTON tAP) -The aome addilional funds oon· chalrman of Presideut Nixon's trlbuttd ln 1971. He said the campaign committee has fun d was used for acknowledged for aie first "pre:Uminary planning for the tltnl! the existence or a special primary elections." campaign fund . But he denied the money was ever used to finance political espionage against Democratic presldtm· lial hopefuls. A COMMITl'EE spokesman said later the money was not left over from IMS but waa contributed In 1971 and early Urla year for possible prlmary use. Wlllllm c. Lolllbran, 1 Judge Francis X. Crally set Ropubllcan !ullcl r!Wtr, a1Jo ,.ntenclng for Nov. 10. Each 11181 convicted ot. the 11me faces a maximum sentence of charge by the jury of five •Ix years In jail and a $3,000 '---------' womtn and MVtn' men. and fine. Clark MacGregor said in a televi.lllon interview Thursday that the money was bot.h a "carryover" from the 1968 presidential campaign and The General Accounting Of. flee has reported the Nb.on campatgn bad on hand a fund ~ J . Mamo', owner of a Sherwin, flanked by his wife, 'coostructlon mm, was found tln'ee sons and t h r e e guilty of coo.spiring and Of. daughters, sat motJonless as lering to pve a bribe. 1 the JW'Y foreman read the 'No Mess' Polaroid Marketed verdict. But his wife, Elva, TRE ·TRREE WERE clllrc· burst Into tears. Their oldest MJAMf BEACH, Fla. (AP) only lhree things -focus, ed with trying to pt state daughter, Mrs. Jean Mooney, -After four 'years and $250 push the shutter button and TraDJportatJob CommissJoDe.r put her arm around her million, the Polaroid Corp. has wait John C. Kohl to give Mamo's mother, and wept herself. introduced a oew seJf-Oevelop--One sec 0 n d after the coostructJon company special When the family left the ing color camera it says w!U photographer pushes the shut- developing picture unit within an invisible, stlff protective plastic structure. The unit represents 17 layen of com- pounds, some only 1 o - thousands of an inch thick. of at least $350,000, whose receipU a n d dlabunements were unaccountfld for. The Wulllnplo Poot baa nported the fund contained as much as 1700,000 whicb .... uaed "' flnaoce the Wat.rgate bruk- ln and f0< a widespread effort lo dilrupt tho campal(!llll ol Democratic --tial oon- Lenders Wt spring end sum· mer. MacGregor WU Interviewed by Elizabeth Drew on National Public Affairs Center for Television. MACGREGOR. cbainnan of the Coounlttee fer the Re- election of the Prealdent since July 1, when fonner Atty. Gen. John N. Mitchell resign- ed, alllO for the first time listed five persons who Wfft authorized to make payments from the fund. =:=tra: lna rJ:·: =f°d!~ 8aeJ~ ! "c!~: oi:;;elive:i~ of a _ter. the camera ejects a a $10,000 cootrlbutton to the the car. paperback book and weighing --:::;;iiiliiiiiiiiiiiiiii~liiiliiiliiiliiiiiiiiiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiijii;;=--- Republlcan party. He shook hands with some only 24 ounces, the SX-70 will w ASHINGTON (AP) _ Two campaign financial reports Witnesses testlned th a t reporters but told them he retail for $UKI and be available committees which have fun. night at 8 Wasb.tngton bot.el Sherwin attetnpted. to fn.. would have no comment. naUonally shortly after the EXCITING ART neled larg. e amounts.of money He will be ·-mpanled by his nuence Kohl . However, the first of next year, Polaroid I t Pre d t NI I -"" company which submitted the "I CAN'T BELIEVE it." said Thursday night. It will go 0 0 11 en xon 5 re-e ec--wife Comella low bid !or the oon~~ 'ept ·d M Sh · "ho Id on sale 1·n Flon·da Nov. 10. tlon campaign have failed to ' ' u-_., • S8J rs. erwm, w cou file registration statements in e Korea Bid It. th1s happen?" The camera, brainchild o( t 1o1 r f fed 1 Sbenrin took a leave of Cahill said he would not Polaroid founder Or. Edwin apparen v a ion o era SEOUL (UPI) -Tb e a•·-·· ~m his job ,.hen •-t · vi f t•· L d · t h Costa Mesa Art L1-eue Now Thru Sat. 5oatll (oast ?Jau law. government of President Park ~R.it:: 1n1 nc commen m ew o 1n;: ap-an , re q u 1 re s e Examination of hundreds or Chungbee proposed~ new con-_w_a•_in_dl_ct_ed_. _H_e_w_a•_a _cl_••_e_pe_a_L ________ P_ho_lo_gr_a_p_he_r _es_se_n_ti_al_ly_to_do __________________________ _ ( BRIEFS _) slitulion today which gives thel-------------------------'-'"-'"-"-"'-"-'''~_.,_~--·-----------------------presklent more powen, e:r· pouring lnlo the General Ac· counting Office also shows a $25,000 loan to Democratic Presidential candidate George McGovern from a secretary who refused to say •how a secretary could afford such a loan. e Bomf> Su1pert TEL AVIV (AP) -A 22- year-okl American tourist luis been arrested for Investigation in connection with the murder- by·maJI bombs addressed to President Nixon. Secretary of tends his term from four to six years and weakens the powers of parliament. In Tokyo. I Sooth Korean oppoaltion leader, Kim Da~ jung, said Park was at- tempting to install himself as a dictator "forever." September's Beef Prices Took Slide State William P. Rogers and WASHINGTON (AP) Defense, Secretary Melvin R. Laird, the state radio reported Consumers pajd less for beef oda last month because of a slkte I y. The broadcast Identified the in catUe prices and the first .suspect as Dennis Feinstein dip in middleman markups and utd he came to Israel as since last J u n e , the a visitor several weeks ago. Agriculture Department said I today. • ..... s-rrlt The September ... tan pri.,. AHcUORAGE, A 1 a • k a of bed, a key lllclicator In the (UPJ) -Diveni were called cost of living, was sllgbtly less into the search for HOIJJe Ma-than $1.13 per poond on an all- jority Leader Hale Boggs to--cut basis, inclUding ham· day to probe an area where an burger as well as steak. oil slick was sighted in That was a1most three cents Alaskan waters. Jess than in August and 4.4 The slick, first sighted cents cheaper than the record Wednesday near Cordova in high in July. In August, Prince Wllliam Sound, was within the scheduled flight however, the price spread -the markup -from cattlemen pattern carrying Boggs and to consumers was a record three otben when their plane -44.S cents per pound. disappeared Oct. 16. wt month, according lo a e WaU-Aid "market basket" nport on WASHINGTON (UPfl -U.S. !arm-produced food, the Alabama Gov. George C. mlddleman share for beef was Wallace wlll come back to the 43.3 cents per pound, a decline Washington area this weekend of 3.3 percent In a month. to ra1se funds for Holy Cro!S i""========,I Hoopita! at Silver Spring, Md., where he was treated for gun shot wounds received in May at a Maryland campaign rally. Hospital officials s a i d Thursday that Wallace had ae- cepted an invitation to attend the eighth annual fund-raising ball for the hospital Satunlay Prosperity Next Goal Says Nixon WASIUNGTON (AP ) - President Nixon, his quiet campaign f o r re-election bolstered by new Vietnam peace hopes. aays "if you give me the chance in the nut four years," he will work for pro. perity and 0 tulJ employment without war and without ~ flatlon." Nixon, usJng a propeller· driven aircraft not usually (cAMP AIGN '12) 11s.toelated "' I t h presidents these days, made 1 Dying trip Thur1day night to lluntlnaton, W. Va .. and Ashland, Ky., to stump for his own candidacy and for beleaguered RepUbllca1tJ seeking 1tat1 of· fices. C..wd1 etftmaled by polk:o 'ncL nlVo'IPDen to total mon than 20,000 lunled oot 1long the way. Pew ckrtslve crle1 Wl!J'I heard and virtually llJ curbside p1Kard9 r a v o r e d Nixon's cause. At an airport rally in Hun- tln3tM, where polJce said 1,000 ,..,. on !land, llJxoo 1'1llt hit Impromptu campelcn SPl9Ch ........ ..11e1 he termed hit conlldence that the United States w(lf acblova "peace with honor and not peace with KNOW YOUR CANDIDATE VOTE FOR GORDON GOOSE The-voting age bas qain been Jowenid. to ctve othen: the rl2hl to vote. Clfl.s &nd boys atttindlna ..,,,. tchool In the Newport·M~ aru can wtn ft trtp--«io Sacramento vla Alr California. Ballots 11vaUe.blc tn Wflltcl.ltt Plna ahoJ)I 8 l 11th A: llvtne Ave-. nue. DcpOlit oN only Sn the ball()t box at Jett•• Pett.Ing Zoo, Apl)elrin& OcL 31 lllN Nov. 5. SlrOP ••• WESTCLIFF PWA 17th & Irvine Annue The State Pay Control amendment is designed to dG exactly what it says. Control state pay. State salaries will be set by the r~;::::::::::lt=:::=~established boards: The State e. Personnel Baard, University of California Regents andStateUniftr· sity and College Tulstees. Does that mean a generous boald can nm away with thetaxpaym'nm:J? Absolut.ely not Proposition 15 limits the inaeaat3 (ordecreases)payboardscan recommend. State salaries, by law, will be kept equal t.o the average paid tr the same jobs in private industry. In other words, a Jab technician working for the state will get the aver- age salary paid t.o lab technicians in the private sectot No more.. No less. As a safeguard, your elected~ sentatives in the State Legislature have the right to turn OOwn raises which might unbalance the hulget. The final vote belcmgs to,__ Does Propositbll5 mean higher taxes? No. The state has collected eoough of' your money to cover easily any and all salary adjustmem affected by Proposi· tion 15. (0n]une 30, 1972, the budget sur- plus was already $565.7 millm.) Keep state pay in Ii• without a tax i Vote Yes on IS. .surrender ln V'8tnam." IL--------'-------------------------------------------------------- ' v I ' I • - DAD,Y PILOT EDITORIAL PAGE Laguna's Good Fortune Laguna &>ch has turned up among .lhe h'!"dlul or lucky winners of 1972 federal grants !or 11& Mam Beach park. The two new allocations bring total funding al· most lo lbe hall million. dollar mark. Only five of 37 applicants for this year's Land and Water Conservation grants in a five-county area ~ere approved. This seems alm ost too good to be true, since the Art Colony already had reeeived a 1971 granl of ,$255,000 for the first phase Gf.14e pad: projeet. l'~ new , grants, one IO( park development, lhe othbr for furttyor land 'acquisition, amount to an ;ddltlon¥ $28,7,660. · Mµth credit must go to th~ deF!i rs. of ~ beach park, architect Fred Briggs and a~. arcJilteets L,ang & Wood , as well as to Ille city . all members wbo judiciously tracked the applications througlVthe govern· mental 1abyrlnth. ,. Undoubtedly the purvtyors. of moqey al~· were Im·· pressed by the audacity of a small Lown, willing to shell out almost $8 million to buy up its valuable beachlront (or the admirable purpose of crea.ting a beaut~~l park. that will serve generations of reSJ.dents and visitors. Now Is Best Time to Buy • On the subject of federal funding, Laguna Green· belt's indefatigable Jim Dilley has come up with some food for thought. · If the Aliso Water .Management Agency is serious about moving toward eventual tertiary trea~ent '!f sewage effluent -that is , total water reclamation -it \Vill need adequate land to accommodate a lake and stream filter system. These could also double as recrea· tional facilitie s. ment facility. Thia might not be so far.fetched, for, as Dilley notes, land prices are almost sure to take an upswing once lhe huge system is In operation and later. acquisition of land !or lhe more advanced treatment process might become I financially impossible. .,. .. ~ach of Us Ca~ B~ George ·~r much 0r the year,•mos\ Orang&.coast reSidents bask•ln the glow of afiluence in·a bou.Qtiful .~. But.as man'y t hurcbes ·have learhed, when tlie, time;.,.mes to conlflblzte a llltle hard c:i,Sh fQr the' ~.of.~wt'(ell?w mzan, .the attitude cha.nge,s;to that of Af l>~lachla r .we re suddenly poverty· str1clten. , • That, of course, js,.human natqre. '!Le~. George Do It" is a slogan issuing from Uie ~ubco'nscious. But there are human. needs, which must be met. And the United Way Is the best way - a sin.Ille contribu· tion to cover a multiplicity of good causes. For. instance, these gilts will provide: -$250: an average homebound patient with Visit· ing Nurse service for a year, including phjisical therapy and home health aid service . -$150: Five sessions with a trained psychiatrist at the Child Guidance <;linic for an emotiorially·disturbed child. -$75: Food and temporary shelter for five home· less families through the Salvation Army for one day. -$58: One day of care and training for 10 people at one of Southern Orange County's centers for the re- tarded. -$20: A family counseling session with the Family Service Associatton. Emergencies of every kind are met by the helping hands of 54 agencies. The current campaign goal is $1,315,000 for operating funds. The several thousand-acres in the proposed Green- belt would serve this dual purpose admirably, Dilley sug· gests, and AWMA would be well ,~~vised to include such a land purchase in the "package 1t presents for 80 per· cent government funding of the regional sewage treat· If each of us gives his·share, \ve'll each be a George, or a Georgia, doing the job himself or herself. s ~l'VE HEA~~ OF C~YIN6 DOLLS) 8UT NOT Of 5Pl111N6 l'UPPf.TS."' Kennedy, Not McGovern, Likely .Leader Demos Are Thinking Ahead George! What Are You Up To Nowadays? We Badly Need \VASH.INGTON -The post-McGovern reconstruction of the Democratic party is being anticipated by some leaders even before they know for sure how the elec· tion will turn out. A McGovern victory, of course, would make such anticipations academic. But the size and extent of a McGovern defeat would have a strong bearing orl what will happen in the futtire. The fa!rly obvious conclusion is tl)at Sen. Edward ~1 . Kennedy. however badly McGovern is beaten, will move in as the popula~.~ad~ er of the party and steadily advance tOward lhe pmidential nomination of 1976. IT IS NOT QUITE that simple. Some other general conclusions are being reached which are subject to ex- amination. One of them is that John Con-. nally of Texas, serving as secretary of state, will turn Republican and take the 1976 Republican nomination away from SJJirO T. Agnew. Who says that Connally will either be appointed secretary of state or turn Republican? He 13 a Democrat. leading the DemocraLsi'for Nixon and his future may lie in the .Demoa'aUc party more strongly than in the Republican party. the South, labor, ethnic groups, youth, liberated women, even the traditional liberals will have lost their moorings . Anyone who brings them back together will have to command respect pver a broader spectrum than ?(qGovenj'• and it is ~t even certain· 'flWl ~etl(ledy's scope 1s that great. Ke'rmedy1s greatest wea~i is i# the South, a fact which is not unrelated to his growingly wann relationship with Rep. -Wilbur C. Mills, chaimian of the tax-writing House Ways and Means-COm· mittee. Mills Is not much known to the ge'.neral public, but he stands solid ip the South as a signer of the contumacious Southern Manifesto on Racial Segrega. tion, ·~nd sound in Wall Street on taxes. MILLS' ABORTIVE bid for the presidency (probably aimed morp at the vice-presidency) did not improve his political slature. But at least Senator McGdvern promised to nominate Mills for secretary of the treasury, and if that never happens, the A':rkar.&.s Democrat has a chance to become speaker of the House of Representatives ,assnning the Democrats still have / control next January. l.! recapture the old coalition ~lcGovern had lost. . THIS ts ALL IDGHL Y tenuous. Con- nally, remainng an ambitious Democrat, could make the way harder, for Kennedy. A reeonstructed South which had voted for Nixon and Wallace might not make ( __ A_R_T_H_OP_P_E_J Democratic leaders very hospitable to a LOS ANGELES -I was in Los Kennedy under any conditions. Angeles on business and whom should I The conclusion can safely be drawn run into but my old friend, George. that it ~ill not be ~ for Kennedy or NoW\George is ()ne of the nicest guys ~~one else to reunite a party .so badl.Y -..•you•dl~ver want to meet and it was a d1v1de.:1 as the Democrats will be if pleasure to see him again Good ()ld McGovern is swamped on Nov. 7. Ge<Jrge. · .Aoother conclusion can be hazard~ So we shake bands and I say, wtth reasonable safety. McGovern will "George! You're a sight for sore eyes. not fold ~ tent and steal away into the And what are you up to these days?11 d<irk of night. He has given signs already .. To tell you the truth" he says, "I'm that he ia thinking past his possible runiring for Presi- defeat and as a United States Senaklr dent." will try to ra:lly the forces or opposition "No kidding!'' says to Nixon and carry the . torch into the I. "That's a great 'campaigns of 1976. In . any case, idea. But you ought' McGovern would have kl keep right on kl tell people." campaigning if he wants to ptay in the "I've been trying," limelight He would be up for reelection he says. "But I just to the Senate in 1974. can't seem to get the UNLIKE SENATOR Hubert H. Hwn· phrey in 1968, McGovern would still ha ve bis pulpit ln the Senate which Humphrey was forced to relinquish for two years. The importance of this is that McGovern will h3ve continuing access to the in- formation media based in WashingWn. message across." "The first thing you should do," says I, "is pass out a lot of buttons and· bumper stickers to spread the old name around." "I've been doing that for more than a year," he says. 'ls tbat right?" says I. "Well, maybe people We keeping them for souvenirs. What about a slogan? You'll need a slogan." Metric Just to indicate bow badly this country needs the metric system, and how baffling our whole present system of weights and measures is, today's word- quiz deals wholly with this mischievous subject : l. If you asked for a "hogshead" of li· quid, how much would you get? 2. If you ordered a "cord" of fuel wood, bow much would it weigh? 3. How many sheets of paper make a "quire"? r. 4. ~ow long is a "chain" in surveying and engineering? ~. "Full fathom fi ve thy father lies." says Shak~re - bow deep is Dad? 6. U a horse stands 18 "hands" high, how large is It? 7. lf a tailor made up an "ell" of cloth for you, how much would you have? 8. How many "scruples" make a "dram"? 9. Can you distinguish "one ounce" avoirdupois from "one ounce" troy, and ho.,. much is a "fluid ounce"? 10. Whe1. Peter Piper picked his peck of pickled peppers, how many quarts did be pick, and what part of a bushel? ANSWERS' 1. A large cask, containing from 63 to System ~YDNEY J, HARRI~ 150 gallons, depending on whether it held wine or some other liquid. 2. A "cord" is a unit of volume, not of weight, equal to 128 cubic feet. usually 8 feet Jong, 4 feet wide. and 4 feet high. " A "quirt'(' is 24 sbeetS or paper. 4. A "chain" is 100' links of equal length, having a total length either of 86 feet (as in a surveyor's' chain, or the distance between the wickets in cricket) or 100 feet, as in an engineer's chain. 5. THY FATHER lies 30 feet deep -a fathoifi is six feet. 6. A "hand" is four inches. 7. An ell of cloth varies in different counfries ; about 45 inches. a. A scruple is equal to 20 grains or 1-3 of a dram . 9. An O\ll'ICe is 437.2 grains or 1116 pound avoirdupois ; il is 480 grains, or 1/12 pound troy; a fluid OW'lte is 1.8047 cubic inches, or 1/16 of a pint 10. A peck is a dry measure of eight quar"·, equal to 537.6 cubic inches, and is the fourth part of a bushel. (I have a re<tm more of such absurd examples of our illogical and outmoded measuring s;stem, but first you have to find out how many quires are in a ream.) Experience shows that if McGovern loses as badly as the polls now indicate, the Democratic party will be completely, sha ttered and wilt have to start to rebuild from the bottom up. UTERALLY FROM lbe bottom up - This is mentioned here...to• s~w how carefully Kennedy is keepfng~hi.8 oPtlons open and getting himseli ln a position to cuJUvate North and South, East and West. ·With a foot in the McGovern organization, and a foot in the South, Kennedy could · step forward into his natural terrain, the urban areas, to McGovern's record in politics indicates he will try to assert his nominal leadership of the party, and, in anY case, bang on for dear life to whatever statisre being a defeated presidential nominee gives him. ThAt woa't make the job of reuniting the Democrats any easier. "Come home, America!" he calls out. "Did you lose your dog?'~ says 1, look· ing around. "NO," BE SAYS. "That's my slogan: Fuel Prices Headed Up The No-Growth Movement Growth is a six·letter word thatJs tak· in0 on the connotation of a four-letter word in some localities. Cities and.itates that once courted new residents and new industries have come to the conclllSioo that growth brings more problems thin progress in its wake. As a result, pro-- posals to retard or halt growth are gaining an increasingly sympathetic hearing. California. the country's fastest-grow· ing state since World War ll, is in the forefront of the think-small movement. At an Aug. 7 news conference. California Attorney General Evelle J. Younger S<tid the state was prepared to sue local governments to prevent people from OlANGI COAST I ' EDITORIAL · I. RESEARCH 'being· allowed to move into ·areas where thty would contribute to air pollution, overload sewage . facilities, or otherwise degrade the environment. "A city is ,like an apartment house," Younger said. "If it ls filled, there should be no effort to bring bl any more people. The a>ncept that 'there's room for one more' 1ust doem~ apply." A SIMILAR VIEW was expressed by John Tooker, cauromla'a director of plarming and research, on Sept. 18. Testi· fylng before Ille State Assembly Commit- limit population to 3.4 million. Possibly influenced by that action, the Los Angeles County Board of Supervisors voted in late September to freeze building-permit· awards on 1.8 milµon acres of county land, including !JOO.~ acres that are mostfy held by private builders and speculators. Heoceforth, the board will grant permits only if plans call for no more than one unit per acre in the Qffected . &N!as. The surprise move immediately held up 1,600 building permits, representing $43 million in ton· strO:ctlon, that were pending when the tieelsion was made. Growth no doubt will continue in Los Angeles and ela<where, but tile day1 of unchecked development appear nwn- bered, DAILY PILOT tee on · bivli1iml111ta1 Quality, Tooker sai~~Mlceo may have to •"' "be •in~j¥~-~orzzll!,to; '· r ud, ·~!.'k~ ·•.; [lofll -· po~'4'0wttz,I . ' • • LoCil ·1,Q.ftl'lll!IOllU that ~~y .,. . • T'"'""" Kt<t>ll, fdilOI"" prt)'<e.del'tltlpmonls to e~ 9'<'lr. IU. ·, • ~ · • • ~''would·.l>O '"""·~" lli.addf>d, , • All\<ifil'; lfiz~t st JIOw llttlol~;en e 11ze,:\\!Ctlvo ' •• Come Home, America." "It ought to sew up the tourist vote," says I. "Maybe what you need's an issue. Say! Aren 't you against the war in Viet· nam? Now, there's a good one. People are pretty sick of the war." "I'm for withdrawing all our troops, planes and used tanks in 90 days," he says. "Wow!" says I. "A fearless un- compromising stand like that will really arouse t~· country. One way or another. Wait till yOu tell the people that!" "I did," says he. "But nobody seems to care much." "Well," says I, "Vietnam's pretty far away. Wl1at you need is somethlng closer to home. I've got it! Corruption. You know, mink a>ats and deep freezers. Scandals always rack the nation." "I think 'this administration," he says, ."is the most a>rrupt in American hlstor;." "IF I WERE ·YOU, I wouldn't say that." soys I. "All bell will break 1 ..... " "I already said It," be says. "Oh," says 1. "Let's see. I .know, •hat Minneapolis Tribune Two terms invariably appear in the growing number of reports about energy resources. One is shortage. The other is price increase. They are ':"elated, of course, but in ways that sometimes escape public notice. That relationship becomes especially important when ex- Perts are forecast ing a doubling in U.S. energy requirements by 1985, an inability to meet those needs domestically and uncertainties over cost and delivery of foreign resources. Bitt Americans , because of tradition and the vagueness of proposed solutions, tend to defer worrying·about t,he matter. They have been condiUOned to abundant, cheap energy and the proficiency of U.S. technology in energy and simUar utility systems. When Americanr set the thennostat, fiip the light switch. turn the faucet or pick up the telephone, it works: in most other countries it works 30e!letimes. The idea of expensive or ir· regular energy s.upplles (or both) is beyond the experience of most of us. 1f you said you wpre for closing Utx MOREOVER, SUCH alternatives ~ loopholes for the: fat cal.s? Everybody's those recently proJ>O.."ed by the ad- sore about that." i mJnistration'a Office of Emergency "I dld," he,J?.•· ~-a'!' not lhe kind lhat In· "Hmmmm. says t. "AnY'\l{llY. there'ti ,citi1en.1 to Individual actiOn. We are loll 6f-·Jb\DP. ~g ~e. l(ou · Id !<> rtde mass transit end railroads Could Come" flt ;ro, ... cutting • gprt 1 ~~Often, make our houses belter ln- ll>enlllng, d•"11Di up pollution, llnli ••lated and mayb< use BOiar energy. The Welfare' reilrmi' an<I .iimlfar radical sug~llons are sound -If the means are ~t!diln.t ofj(iQY CtW:iiblllfg social .strtfc--· availllble and not 'too expensive. - ture:• ~ · •" · ' Which is why the price-supply nla- supplied by oiJ imports, prices in the United States wilt be tied still more closely to the rising cost of foreign oil. ANOTHER UPWARD push in prices could come from reducing the oil-deple- tion allowance on Jomestic production if that often-cited loophole is closed in a tax-reform law. Forbes magazine describes the depletion provision as a subsidy that holds down the retail price of a gallon or gasoline from the $1 it might otherwise be. The prospect of sharply increasing energy costs will , we hope, become leverage for overdue political-economic action:• Recommendatloris for co~ing energy, deve~oplng other energy &OUrees and providing more efficient energy.us- ing systems such as mass tranait are being he<\f~ from both business and government. A good means Of en- couraging consumer and voter ac- ceptance of those recommendatlot1' is to create publlc awareness of the cost of Calling lo carry them out. That is wb,1 we are e~aaed by signs that the energy ahoftage, and the effect It can have on Prices,\i3 becoming a po1JUcal Issue. • r---By George --~ Dear George: Bditorlol l'o9• Edilor wben !h. COii of nrovldlng a~itltl"'I 1---1-___ _. '-'""-r~--t~~-1o,~'...., .... tii...~-..:--I ,...... _ The odltoriol ,... ot lhe a.Uy · 'lhe Los Aog;,les City Council , and -- "l did " he says. "An~ doo't say tlonablp of energy IOUrCeS Is so im· radi<Af..J,__ · _.:. _ Jn Jlll,ll.Ye•ra, !pternatlonal oil "Don't worry" aays t alter a rew companlM earned high profits In the pr~ It wot!Td .soom that more aod more a,dvke columns nre running In the newspapers of the: naUon. Could you tell me it lblt I! because America iJ in worse shape mentally and :motionaUy I.ban at any time 1n history ? Or i~ it . betauee t.lie average citizen feels alienated from his surroundings? Ot ia it because or a general sense of futility? - Pilot teeU to Inf~ and •limu Almoet everyone en)oys a circus late l"taderS bt 1ll'ftltnttna thl; PlaMing Commlulon, ln a July' 16 report -M .. 1.t? un. •• wait tor Rinillni ncwspeild'• oplnton. anti com· to Mayor Sam Yorty, recommended a 1"6'--'• ••<v mentary on ioptn or lntl'l'ftt and 4.J-mllliQO cetllng on the number of peo.. Brothen and Barnum &; Bailey •lgnlficancr, bf provldin1t a ton1m pie who'could live ln the city by 1990. when we can •ttend our local city tot"'IM ...,..___._...,~, -An>Ulld 2.8 million -lo...now mlc1' council meetln••? opl~ t.nCl tJy ~U11Jt the It"· L.A dt llmJ•• but t ~ divtrte .. -irtwPOln" o(. lnCormed qb-w uw . Y WI' presen ion~ -P.E.W. -and ·-·· .. ··-Ing regul1tlons woold pumlt • cl lh• day. tl>!onlkll population or 10 million. nu.. w..U later, the pl¥olng com-Frlday, October 27, 1972 mlssfoo wont beyond tbe report by edop- Ung 1 20-y .. r remnlnJ plan desfaned to • i 1'1111 ........ ,.,._,. ..... ,.,. w,... ..., .......-iy ........ tM ,...,, ••• ltftC Jtw "' ,_,.. .. ......, .... Dallr l"llM. minutes of sU~nce. "YOu'Jl think of ductlon of foreign crude oll (IO!d mostly sometlllng." In non-II.$. markels) nnd sublldhed their r•flnlng and marketing opuallons. Tile SO IT'S COMFORTING to know lbat source of tboae profits Is rapidly flood old GeorieM13 out there somewhere -aecltruog as producing counffies dema1.1d lbinking up daring proposals which, -and get -ownership of tbelr oil wells rtghl or wrong, &timulate vigorous public , and a hlghc.r share of production profits. debate and tllus keep tbe vital )Uleles Fuel prl"" In tile United States teem of our d,emocracy1 nowlQI:. sure to be drlvtn upward u a result. Al leaat Ibey Would 11 anybody was And, because or the expected lncrtm In listening. the percentage ot, the AmeriC&tJ market \ W.E. Dear W.E.: Nah1 The rwson the newspapers are so lull of advice columnists ls because we work sq cheap. (S<nd your problemt to George and see what happens. But d.op't say you Wertn't warned.) •• Q !el Jn le .. on ol cu re lo ti q hi w la bl h si y A p QUEENIE B Phil lnterlandi 10-'Z-7 ••wen, if you must koow, my well-diversified portfolio Cell on my foot." · L. M. Boyd Ideal Burlesque Figure: 3 7-25-35 It's likely your granddad can tell you the world's lead- ing expert on that theatrical entertainment known as bur- lesque was a fellow named Harold Minsky. Stated be: "The Ideal feminine figure on display In skimpy c<lOlume should tapemeasure 37-2:>35." NOT ENOUGH just to report !bat sharks are canni- balistic even before they're born. Take the comµm AUantic shark, for in- stance. The elder In a batch of un- born fry mosci frequently devours its brothers and s1sten: even before any of them see the light of day. A CUNNING cus1ooler Inquires il any university teaches a course in the science of pogonotomy. Tricky query. Know of oooe such. "nte Mellon Insti- tute ooce conducted a lengthy study on the subject, know tllal Pogonotomy is the manly art of shaving, should mention. QUERY -Q. "What states have lotteries now!"' A. New Hampshire, New York, New Jersey, Connecti- cut, Penmylvaoia and Massachusetts. Michigan is getting ready to ·start one. And November voters will decide on lotteries, also, in Maryland, Washington State and Colorado. ticular profession are the sons ol men wb01 likewise APPROXIMATELY 85 percent~the 1De1J • one par- so employ«!. 'lllls line ol w0rk Is by the fact that it has far more father-and-son performer! -than any other. Can you name the occupation! Most citizens so queried say medicine. Why I doo't l<J>ow. It's farming. DINING our -How frequently should a fellow take his ladyfriend out for a restaurant dinner? Our Love and War man has an oplnioo. oo.· this, too. At least once a month. Once a week, II possible. Subject art.es becau.e a femlnine client, whose husband bates cares, wants to know how she might get the old boy to escort b.,. oo tbe town occasionally. Nothing to it. She can keep a bumed leg of Iamb in the freezer to haul out for dinner whenever that bistro mood strikes her. AVERAGE Canadlsn husband is 21.& years old before he married. That's 2~ years older than the average states- sk1e bridegroom. HOW MANY pairs of shoes do yoo. acquire every year, young lady? Average girl, it's now said, gets five pairs. Average boy, four. Average mother, three. Average father, two. THAT the poor multiply f...ter than the rich is oommon knowledge. Less widely known is the fact that citizens ol below-average intelligence do not produce anywhere oe&r· ly as many youngsters as peopte ol above-average intelll· gence. Scholars say they cannot explain the why of this, but merely regard It as one more natural phenomenon. INTELLECT -"Whereas a man reaches bis lntelleo- tual peak: between 20 and 30, a woman reaches it in middle age," says that renowned specialbt on the difierences ~ tween male and female, 'lbeo Lang. "More signiflcantly," says he, "a woman's intellectual performance is at its lowest dwing the years she is marrying and having cbil· dren." Interesting. However, Mr. Lang's observation ap- pears to cootrsdict that widely reported eontentloo that men are at their conversational best in their mJd-40s, women · In their late 20s. Address mail to L. M. Boyd, P. 0 . Box 1875, New- port Beach, Calif. 92660. New Shipment New Variety Of . Koi tnJtt-. DIAMOND 101 • , • Flnt.....,,..._u.,... . .,... ce .. i....i--..t-t.rhe ..... IMry. FANCY KOi ALL SIZES POND FILTERS ly_%1NSUI •I -·-----~-............. ~~}.... ..... $275: ..... --·p JUST AlltVID Pacific G01dfish Farm NIW L.OCATtON 14~00 GDLDE!IWEST, WESTMINSTER OPIM MILT IM -893 7105 'Ol'IM SIHIDAT 12.. n4 • t ............. ,,.....,. j i , -_!• . SAVEi _.II Y OR SCRABBLE CHOI(( OF TWO FAMOUS GAMES Mona poly ••. best seller real estate trading game, 2·8 playe~. 8-80. SmOle .•. a mind tickling crGssword game · for ages 8 to 80. 296 ••• l(G. 4.4:f·l ·'' STEAM/ORT ••• USU T~P WATER tro(IS steam or dry, has all '1abric settings, 1abric guide. Choice of Westinghouse or Ham- itton Beach. Contour handle. HSOZ/854 SAVEi 12-GAUGE m I.DAii , HIGH BAS( GAME SHELLS 22% OFF Precision Remington-Mohawk ammunition bo x of 25 •• , rabbi~ duck, pheasant load~ Stock up on shells for the hunting season ••• now. BOX 29 Be 1 contestant at White Front's Halloweoo party! Every Wtiitt fl'Oiit"1tOF8iill hOld its own contest! Prizes of toys fOt boy or girl 'Winning in these costume categories. •MOST ILAIOIATE •YOUNGESTENTRANT •MOSTOIHllNAL IN COSTUME •MOST PllGHTENlllt• EACH CONTESTANT • FUllllllST GETS A CANDY TREAT I Friday. Del-27, 1'172 DAILY PILOT f SHOP SATUllDAY FOR THE BOU ONEii' During our Bold Ones sale you can save up to 49%! You'll find reductions on best sellers ... plus a timely special on Hallowe'en candy! ONE DAY ONLY! SAT., OCT. 28 ••• WE'RE OPEN 'Tll 9 P.M. PRICES GOOD WHIU QUANTITIES LAST! SOM( MAT I( UMITEDI BIG LISTERINE ANTISEPTIC NEW SIZE! INTRODUCTORY PR!((_ Special! Famous Listerine in new king size ••• 64 ol. (Hair gal.) For moutfl wash, mi.nor cuts, in~ctbites, infectious dandruff. 2 ~~ SAi.Ei PlAmC RASHUGm SAVE 40'1 ! COLOR CHOICE Handy for car, garage, home or shop. Operate on twci ''O" cell batteries. 29c WESTBIN JEANS AND POLOS FOR INFANTS AHD TODDLERS s1 Infants long sleeve crew neck Polos S-M-l. • • flare jeans 12·18-24 mos. Toddlers long sleeve turtlenecks 2-4, flare jeans 2-4. No iron. ,~~~~:~. IA. (Nit d '-•1 I•••••' T•rre1u:t stortsJ PRINTBI THIRY BATH MATS su• RESISTANT FOAM BACKS Colorful tub mats in original prints tor bath and pawder room. Machine washable and dryable C1>tton terrie<:. OUR RIG. $1 aac . Ima', WOMEN'S CASUAL Sim GAY2·TOll("PATCHWOIK"VAMP 222 Comfortable casual, the smooth man· made u~ pers wipe clean fast. Sizes to 10, brown. ''',·."••• (#el .t t.q l••c• •1111rerr•11c1111r11 J .SAVEi HALLOWEEN CANDY TREATS c PACKAGE OUR LOW DISCOUNT PllCI WIDE CHOICE, INDIYIDUALL Y WRAPPED Favorite candies to please the ghosts and goblins at a pleasing low price. Packages of mini bars: Long boy, peanut butter, Mil k Oudds, Slo·Poke, Butternut, Milk Shikes, plus bubble gum, Ju iu Fruits, Fruit Chews. ~OOD WHIU SU,,UIS·LAST ••• HUlltfliTOlt"oun. DAIL~ ANltSAT. 10-AM TO' PM. $11N. 1t TO 7 • Tlllll'I A'""" FIONT NIAi YOU l•SM • • COSTA MESA 3088 .IRISTOL ST. S.n Diogo Preow1y 11 lrhlel • ·1 • \I ,.;;,,.,,.. CMAlG( tT ••• WF CHDlt CAID ~ llllltMlll ~··-·-~-· . , .,.. •Mlll~CIMMCMI --~ ,_M -....... - -• _.,, 1u • ctlftltlwt tttllt """ I -- Key Witness Hunted FALL: TRUCK LOAD EVENT Has Corona Figure Leh Country? CALIFORNIA FAIRFIELD ( AP I Authorities say they are in- vestigating repor~ that a key witness in the Juan Corona mas!! murder trial has left the country for Auslralia. The missing witness. an iUnerant laborer nu m e d lsmuel Kenneth Walton, 32, is !\l!!ilfU! by 11J1 llt'O!W:ilion. Wllllfn ltlol ......... llltfpy a!teF tl!t dlacov@'l' of mi~ sn~Sul~ COODI)' In 1rl that deliplant, I far , laboq I tr89iiir. had lrled to hire ltlm to htlil garii@ge. visa by the Au s tralian Consulate Geoeral in San Jo"'rancisco. The Coast Guard confirmed that Sheri(f Whiteacre's office had inquired about getting Walton off the boat, but had been told once the boat was in internat10W!~lll1 lhtft was nothing .. 1{ Guard oould do . Sheflll Whi~ later con· lirfTll!I lhis ond added be had caueci the Otlanalf ca11n. who ~ed lhe 1)88!1 er and crew lilt anll aakt l')' showed no ooe with W~toj1'1 name aboard. ""However, we sUli r t<I talk to Walton , and tj contact authorities i , Vft{t" couver, B.C., where th ~l~ scheduled to call Friday or Saturday and see whether he's actually on the ship and If he wiU ti. wiliin( .Ill f'llqrfl @lid "81if)'. t:xlf1111llo• -Nil qtend to #itneaaq " lll<l WMteacre1 "°'1 ~ e un- derstand the CXllY way we <1!Uid fofliO bJm Ip COl11il liac\ 1¥0UIAI, ~ \lirougb the O,jiart· tneot of llfWtice.'1 EDDIN PLANTS PACK $2.67 per Flit, Mix or Match '4-)etter' Teaeher Triumphs SUfTl!lR COVNl'Y Sheriff Jloy Whi~t ,put QUt a builetln last w~k seeking Walton es a witness against Corona, who is charged with SAN FRANCISCO (AP) _ murder ill the deaths of 25 The reinstatement of a Los farm laborers found in shallow Angeles Valley Co 11 e g e graves near Yuba City in ~1ay teacher accused of using an and June of 1971. obscene poem and picture in Thursday night a man who her English class has been .af-rcfUsed to identify himself firmed by the California telephoned t h e Associated Housing Leasing By Aide Probed MANY VARIETIES AVAILABLE SUCH AS: *VIOLAS *PANSIES * MARGUERITES * SNAPDRAGONS * CINERARIAS * LOBEUA * DELPHINIUM * ICELAND POPPY *STOCKS *PRIMROSES ARBVCIW! & SON WESTCLD'P MORTVARY ll7 E. I'm Si., Coale Mesa ..... • BALTZ-8ERGERON FtJNEIUL ROME Corona del Mar l'1Mt5I Costa M-llHm • BELL BROADWAY MOllTVARY 110 Broadway, Costa l\tesa LI 1-3@3 • McCQR.1\IWlt LAGVNA BEACH MORTVARY nos ~-CuYtl Rd. -15 • PACD"IC VIF:W MEMORIAL PARK Cemetery l\fonuary tl!apel l50lt Plclfk \.'iew Drive Newpor1 BHdl. Callfonilil -• PED FAMILY COLONIAL l"IJNBllAL DOME 7111. 98ha Aft. Wtstmlnter ltWl1S • SMITRS' MORTVARY 6t1 l\tala St. Bupreme Court . Press and other media in San SACRAti.tENTO (AP )-Gov. The board cf trust6's of the Francisco and said he had Ronald Reagan says he is junior college ordered the seen Walton board the P & 0 "looking into'' the case of a "-'ual of ~-n Me••• t liner Oriana in San Francisco ~nu ~ a '""'&er n state housing officiaJ buying 50 1989 for claas use of a poem Thursday with a ticket for housing units and leasing them she wrote entitled, "Jehovah's Sydney, Australia. to a public housing agency for <2\lld," and 31\ advertising rental to the poor. brochure titled. "You· Can THE CALLER, who said he The official, Wardell A. Con· Become a Se:rual Superman." was a longshoreman, added nerly, is deputy director of the that he handled Walton's bag-California Department 0 f THE BOA.RD CONTENDED gage and saw his passport. ll I d c · in a Supe.rtor Court trtal that issued in Walton's name about ous ng an ° m m u n 1 l Y Miss Melzger's conduct was three weeks ago and bearing a ( ) "immoral" and constituted JN SHOR "evident unfitness for ser· .--------~ T. • • vice." The court ordered Miss ff t D Metzger reinstated, an order 0 0 g S that the trustees appealed to the high court. Are Tops IN THE COURT hearing, MW ~fetzger said she used the brochure and p o e 111 liberally sprinkled with four· letter sexual words in teaching a course dealing w i t h oeosonhip, pornography and obscenity. LOS ANGELES (AP\ - Next lo recess hot dogs run high on the list or favorites ror students in the city school system. The school board voted Thursday night to approve the purchase of 48,020 IW?1ds of . franks from three packing firms for a total purclwe price of $'l7, 198 . The franks are expected to last only about a month in school cafeterias. of· ficials said. Development. He has con· firmed buying the units from May through November 1968, and leasing them to the Sacramento Housing Authori· ty, which in tum rents them to low-income people. But he denies any wrongdoing. The authority's low-income rental project officially began Aug. I, 1960. • l\'l0l'011 BMked LOS ANGELES (UPI) - Mayor Sam Yorty, who cam- paigned unsuccessfully for the D e m o c r a t i c presidential nomination, has c n d o r s e d President Nixon. Yorty said Sen. George McGovern's program "consists only of chameleonic inconsistencies and w i J d diatribes calculated to capture votes by rash promises and sheer demagoguery. e Talk• ,Jtloved SAN FRANCISCO '(APl -A strike by 300 Merchant Marine deck officers entered its third day today as f e d e rally mediated negotiations were moved from Washington to New York with no repo rts of progress. * CALEDULAS AND MANY MORE SATURDAY & SUNDAY ONLY! GARDEN CENTER NEWPORT BEACH e FASHION ISLAND STORE ONLY JC Penney Norman Walker, spokesman for the Federal Mediation and Conciliation Service, s a i dl-----------------------------~!;;',,';,~ta~;~f ~~ '';!)";~ Challenge the News Quiz Union and the employer Pacific Maritime Association 1fec:;,it;,.s:Y:::;pi~g;;:; ••• on Satur_day's Family Page Thufiday at Washington. ONLY AT WARDS HUNTINGTON CENTER 7777 EDINGER-HUNTINGTON BEACH Haml .... alMcb ... .,. Justice Looi! M. Burt<e. wrltin& the court's unanimous doclllon. noted that Miss Metiaer explained she U!ed the poem "to show her students, that words which, on their surface appear vulgar or coarse, can be used to produce different impressions on the reader." OUR 100TH ANNIVERSARY YEAR brushed hla•ket plaid shlrtJacket 12.00 Whot hos • wide-spaced pl•id with • soft brushed surface, zipper front, pockets 1 Our super shirtjackot by Now Y orl M1r:kintosh. It 's a w1rmin9 sight over everything. s.t,1-L. Mail and phone or•• invited. ' . -·--fi~~ -son ttIJnce Ilew@&le81lv ANAHEIM NEW,O•T MUNTINGTON I EACH 4 f'it-&efhl 47 f"••fll•n hl•ft41 7177 Edlt1,tt A•tnu• f714) IJl-tl2f 1714) '44·1212 171-41 •2·lJ11 OIAN8E, MALl. OF ORANQE CER.R.ITOS 1111 H. l••tlt1 llr••t 1714) HI· I) 11 100 Lo1 C•tt1!01 M•ll ! 21 JI 160.04 1 I SHOfl 10 A.M. h t 1IO P.M. MONDAYTHlOU•H FllD"Y, SATURD"Y 10 A.M. t• 6 P.M. SUNDAY, tJ NOON t• I P.M. FANTASTIC PRICES! BEAUTIFUL DIAMONDS! ·HURRY! HURRY! !tin OUR 100TH ANNIVERSAR ONE DAY SALE 9:30 A.M. TO 4:30 P.M. SATURDAY, OCT. 28tll STONE5-GEMS DIAMONDS MEN'S-LADIES' CHILDREN'S RINGS OFF MANUFACTURER'S REPRESENTATIVE SALE ON ENTIRE RING AND DIAMOND COLLECTION OF ' INVENTORY . SATURDAY, OCT. 28 9:30 A.M. TO 4:30 P.M. ONLY AT WARDS , HUNTINGTON CENTER 7777 EDINGER, HUNTINGTON BEACH • I I, D • Pelitieal Notes • McGove1n to Give Talk in County By O.C. HUSTINGS Of ~ Dlll'f Pl ... llalf 0 e m o cratic presidential candidate George McGovern will he breakfasting In Orange Counly Saturday. He'll speak lo hla supporters al about I a.m.-In the Embuay Room ol \ h e Disneyland Hotel. 'l1>e 15-per- plate breakfut llarta at 7:!0 a.m. and Ls open to the public. OcHiosta ore Rep. lllchanl T. lianna ([).Fullerton) and Rlchanl O'Neill, cbalnnao of the Orange County Democratic Ce n t r a I Com- mittee. * * * Orange by Chicanos I or McGovern has been canceled. But an evening of chamber music Is planned by McGovern backers for Sunday i n Newport Beach. It s\artl al f p.m. in the Versailles Apart- ment Clubbouae, IOI ()agney Lane. That's near Ho a g Memorial Hospital. Donations of $10 per -will be aought. Sludeota can get In for IS ii they have m cards with them. * * * A CRO SS·C OUNTR Y Women for NlxOQ. bw: tour is scheduled lo chug Io Io Anaheim Saturday. A rally ta planned for 3: 30 p.m. In the parking lot In front of the Dtaoeyland Hotel. * * * ACADEMY AWARD winner John Wayne will be on hand Saturday night during the GOP'a "Mante carlo Night" at PROP. 11: Trustees Of the Newport Beach's Balboa Bay Huntington Beach C It y CIUb. (elementary) Schoot,.~ct Gambling paraphernalia will are tmanlmous In ·~Ir op. be set up tn the Bay Club's poslllon lo the a o -c a 11 e d Wabon Ameodment -of-main dining room and Orange ficiaUy, anyway. Coonty GOP canclldales will Some trustees said they be Ja~~inl!-might vote In favqr of the pro. Sure enough, says Dave perly tu limitation measure Vercoe, 'Obo la organizing the as lndlviduala, hut said aa Republican fund raiser. achool_t_beca ther_ must op- "We're using M c G o v e r n JIO.'e 1 use 1~ passage money. Each guest " 11 1 _ would hurt school finances. """'ive 15,000 In phony money * * * when . they walk In the d00<. lllEANWllILll, the 11- 0Ur mooey will be redeemable member Huntington Beach at an auction held at the con-Paru and Recreation Com- cluskm of the evening." mUsion has lined up solidly Tickets at $11.50 per person atnst ~ I"-14 O> will be available at the door. =~1= ':1ucb ~f u:/; · aays Jim Howard, pttlident of recreation program depends the apoll30ring A n a h e l m on schools and schools would Young Reoubllcam. For lhet, be hurt by paaaage of the GOP revefers will get a mid-measure. night goormel b,..kfast and an elgbt-plece band. * * * WIN SOME, LOSE SOME: The Halloween dance an · buf- fet planned for tonight in Bids Delay 4th Floor Of Jail Joh SANTA ANA -Completion of the fourth Door of the Orange County jall has been delayed pending r<Oblddlng on Ille project which has an estimated co.rt of II.II million. Joseph Smisek, 0 r a n g e County -of building s ervices , told county supervisors that all 11 bids ,,,eoed Sept. 11 should be re- jected. New bids will be open- ed Nov. 7. Low bidder in the initial bid- ~ was D!eM and Zlm- mennan Inc. of Glendale at $1.9 million. Tbe highest bid waa 111bmltl<d by Near-Ce! Corp. of Santa Ana at 12.Z million. Tbe completion of the fourth floor will provide space for 600 additional lnmat<s, Smisek said. The Cil'qe County Crimloal Justice Oouncll has urged county supervisors to expand the jall. The council also ht1s sug- gested that, since only three of seven prisoners are eventually eentenced to county jail terms, that e pre-trial release pro. gram be oonsidered as an alternaUve to f u t u r e ex- }>8!1.11oo. * * * IN TUSTIN, truateea ol the Tustin Union Htgh School District alao are opposing Prop. 14. They said the three new unified school systema - Irvine, Tu.tin and Saddleback Valley -being carved out of their district stand to lose more than $6 mllllon In li>cal tm-73 if the Watson initiative passes Nov. 7. * * * BACK IN Huntington Beach, student government leaders at Golden West College a1ao are opposing Prop. 14. * * * AND Fountain Valley School District trustees have vowed to help defeat Prop. 14. They esUmate the financial loss to their di.strict a\ $370,458 during the firat year of the propooed property tax restriction. * * * MEMBERS of the Orange Coast College faculty and staff have doaal<d 11,150 to tbe educational a mpalgn agalnst Prop. If. '!be donation was accepted by Californians Ag a I n 1 t Higher Tu.es, the group COO<dlnatlng the state cam- paign effort. The money will be used to help pun:ha.se television spot. featuring Gov. Ronald Reagan and former Gov. Edmund G. Brown apeaktng In opposition to Prop. 14. 1be Coast Community College District Board or Trustees last week stated in a resolution that, if passed, Prop. 14 "gravely riaka the destruction of community col- lege educatiional opportunity !0< thousands of aludenta here and throughout California." • WESTERN STATE UNIVERSITY COLLEGE OF LAW OF ORANGE COUNTY PIOVlllOHALLT ACCJllDITID IY THI COMMmM Of Ml IXAMINUS Of 1111 STA.Tl lAl Of CAUPOINIA. Now o1<(9fJtft19 men .11nd women for 1dml11lon to th• Spring 1913.SemHter. • IF YOU HAVI! 60 9CQptabl• tmlta, • IN 2 YEARS of pert·llrne law •Mfr (l d&tM>S ptf WMk 3 to "' Mura per d•P), you can fftn your 8.S.L d.gttoe, end • JN 2 ADDITIONAL Y!AIS of ,,_rt-time l.w ttudy )"Kl un ''"' 'f'O'.>' J.D. dtD'"' n b«onw ELIGIBLE TO TAKE THE CALIFORNIA I.AR.EXAMINATION wmn Ol PHONI POI. tHPOIM•TION Ol CATALOOUI 800 South Brookhu111 ANhelm 92804 171 41 63$.3453 ' APPLY NOW FOR FEBRUARY 5th DAY, EVENING OR WEEKEND CLASSES INDIHYI l lllMI l'OI NDIU.UT ...... mionn lO.lNI _,. ... .......... ' The Treasury is he·re tq_ ?ave you. · Prove it yourself. 20%off on men's jackets. 4 days only, Friday through Monday. 12.70 was15.88save3.18 A. Reversible ski jacket Quilted water-repellent nylon with polyester fiberfill. Hood concealed under collar. Knit cuffs. Machine-washable. Acorn, blue or green. Men's sizes S-M-L-XL. 17 • 99 was 22.49 save 4.50 B. Bombardier-style jacket - Nylon cir~ with "wet look.'' Lining, collars, cuffs and trim of polyester pile. Navy, brown or cranberry. Men's alzes S·M·L·XL. 31.99 was39.99 save$8 C. Rugged split cowhide jacket Genuine sueded cowhide with contrast top stitching. Brown or tan. Men's sizes 38 to 46. 15. 98was19.97 save 3.99 D. Mid-wale corduroy coat All cotton corduroy with arcyllc pile lining. Brown, ten, ollve. Men's sizes S-M·L·XL. QllANAOA Miu. 18000 Chall worth St. I WOOllUHD 111U1 21600 Victory Bl•d. AIVEllllOl 3520 Tyler St. IANTAW 3900 Soulh Brl1101 St . JI ,, I ,, .. . .. ---- Friday, Oclobtr 2'7, 1972 DAIL V PILOT 9 \ TORllAHCt: Sepul..Oa and H•wlhorne LAIC~ °""°" ILal>d P111mounl BIYd. IUt:NA 'AlllC Bolch and Orangethorpe OllANQI Garden Grovt1 BIYd.1nd M1nctw111ar • .. I Tht .......... 11 11'.....,,Mor"' Tht corti.Plfallve ••I• prlcn 1rs1tt1 ••• ln1roduetoty tPtCi•I ofl ... a lor !he ~new Trtttury 1iorn and prlc•,... d\M:llont tor lht 4 t st1bllsl'lte1 Trtttuty .ttore1 . • .. • ' . .. -. • -• ' ·-• . • ' .. • -.. .. .-.. ' r ~ .. •• ... . • ; . , I • ; : •• • • • • • ' ' ' l i I • • • -. • • ! . J • l I ' • . ' • • . • . . . . . " • • . ' • • • • •' . :: I I • • • • • • • DAILY PILOI Frld.ly, October 27, im Weekeiad Cafeaadar Buoys Race Ends Angelman Series Bahia Corin11\ian Yacht ,.--------- Club's Around tbc Buoys Race this weekend \\'ill \\1lnd up the 1972 Angelman Series fo.r yachts racing u n de r the Paclric Handicap Racing Fle•et measurement rule. 11ie Angelman Series - which includts offshore races as well as "round the peli(s" competiticin -has deve1oned into one o( the rnost oopular fixture s for the PHRF oeootP.. Newport Harbor Yacht C'luh has the only other vachtinit action in the H11rbor Area this weekend with it's annual Saint Cicero Series for Lehman-12 skipoers. But local yachtsmen \Yill ft!so be involved in other out- of-the-area competition. Peter Wilson of Ne\voort Harbor Yacht Cll\b head.'i uo . the USC sailing team whieh will be compel.ing for its third victory in the Dou,'tl~s Cup, in- lercollegiate match racing series at Long Beach today and Saturday. Also at Long-Beach will be the Ocean RacinJi! Fleet cham- pionship regatta Satu.rclay ::ind Sunday featuring the f•Jp yachts in most of I he Southland offshore s a i 1 in g series -includin~ NllYC's Ahmanson alld Balboa Yacht Club's 66 Series. other highlights on lhe Southern California Yachting Association calendar: Los An~eles-Lone: Bet1ch HUNTINGTON HARBOl "R YACHT CLUB -Dana P<iint rnvitational. Saturdll\'. CABRILLO BEACH 't' \ClfT CLUB -FaJ! Series l\n. 2. Sundav . Santa .\lonica Bay S()lfTH c 0 :\ s T roR- L\'THIA.i\ '"1\CllT CLL'B - BOATING , Del Rey to Isthmus race /Fletcher Memorial Trophy), PHRF Saturday. KING HARBOR YACHT CLUB -F'alJ Series No. 3, Saturday and Sunday. San Diego MISSION BAY YACHT CLUB -Snipe Invitational, Saturday and Sunday . SAN DIEGO NAVAL SAIL- ING CLUB -Navy CUp Regatta, Saturday and. Sun· day. CORONADO YACHT CLUB Jessop Series, outside classes, Sunday. SAN DIEGO YACHT CLUB -Waterman Series, OR. Sun- day; Elton Ballas Series. A-10RF, Sunday; Woodward Series. Cal-20. Sunday. North and fnland AN4CAPAYACHTCLUB- Ormarid Beach Race, Satur- da\'. S.\N LUJS YACHT CLUB - f all Series. Geary-18, Sunday. SANTA BARBARA YACHT CLUB -First race of !!}73 l\"i!son Series. Saturday. Peruvian Champion Enters Havasu Race George Rodriguez of Limn. Peru, who grew up racing bicycles -but longing to drive race boats -has entered the Outboard World Championship Nov. ~26 at Lake Havasu City, Ariz. Higl1 Point Race Sailed Rodriguez is the first Peru- via n ever to epter the race. He won his country's Unlimited Outboard Championship in 1971 at Titicaca Lake, 400 miles southeast' QI Lima. His victory came in a 15-foot Carlson with a 140-hp Mercury It.at Rodriguez had flown more than 3,000 miles from Los Angeles. then trucked to the race site. Because of the unusually high cost of outboards in Lima, Rodriguez concentrated Sail Le Vie, co-skiopered by on bicycle racing until he was Don Ou.Boise and Dale Wold of in his 30s. He bas been driving Voyagers Yacht CJub was the boats regularly 11ince 1968. wiMer Sunday in the Small Rodriguez said be was anx- Yacht Racing Fleet division of ious to challenge other drivers South Shore Sailing Club's from around the g 1 ob e . High Point Series. "Although my boat is not as Rwmer-up was Glenn Reed's powerful as many, 1 plan to Aloha Ir from SSSC. Olher win -not just finish," he wiMers: said. "It would be a great PHRF-A -(1 I Sequoya. honor for my country." Jim Moore. SSSC: ( 2 )J;::=========::;I Lumaran. Bill Rohrs, flYC : f3l Lunalilo, Hugo Carver, sssc. • Coastal Weather V•rl•bie cloudl!'lffl lod•y. Llghl YI•· l1ble wl..a. nlthl ll'!d mor-1\1119 houri Dl«lmillO _,.rty ' to 15 ltnoh In 1ff~ todly Ind S.tunUI¥. Hlgn tod1y 7L C0.1191 l91nper•turu r119 from D IO 1'11. lnl•lld i.n,p.r1turn r•f10I '""" .u to 7.S. w1m 1emper1111 .. "'· Sun, l'lloon, Tide• l'IUDAY S.Cond hl;ti . l :Cl.I P·"'· $ .• Slcond r-f :llJ p.m. '4.1 Firs! l\IQlll Fl"! low StconCI hlOh ........ U."TUIU>AY IUHO.f,Y ,,~ '·"'· 11 1:1$ .. ,,., ~.2 1:1l p.191. 5.1 10:1• p.m. a.1 l'"!r1I 11'911 ••..•••• $:)1) •·"'· •.2 First low 10:3"1 1.J'I. 2..f llcond Mell •:Of p.m. •.7 SKOlld low l1 :20 p.m. 0.1 Sun lllton 7,DI 1.m. 1111 ':05 p.m. Moot! lllton II :05 ~.m. ltfl 12:4' p.m . KNOW YOUR CANDIDATE· VOTE l'Ol CLINT ' CHIMP ~ voUna: t.lt hli• ag:aln boon )owered tO '1vt" othen !he rlgh~ to vote. Olrb and boys a1.ttodin& any ac.hool tn the Newport.;;M.._ area can win ~ trip to Sacram~nto vlll Air CaltfotnJa. .Ballot.I avAilable In Wiistcllff Plua •hoPI at 17th t" J.rvlne .Ave--nue. Oepoelt one pn1y ln the be.llot box at Jett'• Pe:tUna Zoo,. appcartns Oct. 31 t"bru Nov. 5. SHOP ••• WESTCLIFF PLAZA 11th lo Irvine Avenue .. The Treasury is nere to save you money underfoot. Prove it yourself~ 4 DAY~ ONLY, FRIDAY THROUGH MONDAY. Armstrong Place 'n Press " Excelon· floor tiles Square-foot tiles 25~~Ch Carton of 45 .11 .25 regular low price 13.05. Peel off the paper backing and press your new floor in place. 3 patterns: Palatial. San Roque. Bradford Brick. Tile your 9' x 12' room for just $27. ©f(°Qi~~®~fQ~ or 111• our Tlm9 f11~ Pl111 "Early Bird Specials" Armstrong Excelon ' floor tiles Carton of 45 7.65 h1vlarlowPnceS!.ll 17~ Square-foot tiles 4 patterns: T1destone . Orittstone. Shattered Stone. San Pedro. each Driftstone 59.88 Eureka upright vacuum with Dial·A·Nap' INCLUDES CUSTOM ATTACHMENT SEI Adjust 4-posilion control for any rug or carpet. Special cleaning brush shakes. beats. sweeps, and combs. Complete with accessory kit . (Model #20108) '· ... , .. . , .. . .. . . . . 17.88 Hoover Handivac .. lightweight was 19.95 For quick pickups on rugs. floors. Easy to store or hang up. (Model #29101 24.88 Eu~eka rug shampooer and floor polisher was29.95 (Model 1118AI 19.88 Hoover cannister vacuum Rugged steel co nstruction. but liglitwelght and compact. Filtered air exhaust. non· marking roller wheels, throwaway dust bags, storag~ space for accessories. (Model #2017) limit: 1-Per cuslomer WOODLAND HILLS 21500 Victory Blvd. LAkleyfOOD Caraon St. and Paramount Blvd. OllAllADA HILLS •ellOO Ch•ttwonh s1, I TOllllANCE S.pulYOda Md Howt•orne lllYlllllDE 3520 Tyler SI. IUENA PARK Beoch 1N1 arangethor.,. TIMM ~.alue• 11tll1 ,, ••• ..,,, •lotts. The comp1r111ve 1alt price• l11te<1 11e inlro<luctory speclal ol!ers ior tht 4 now Trttaury storet and Drlce rt• dueilona lor !ht 4 t•labllahtd Tt111wry atortt. SANTA ANA 3900 South Brlstol St, ORANG! Garden Grove Blvd . and Manch1111r C)poft-kdOJOt::io lo t :IO Sundors 10 to T. ' • ' '. ' \ c to Ci coo ap """ ifil boa to Ille nol the Ille org ... on mil " insl Doc Seeks New ·Records Carl :Kiekb~fer, 1!1arine. propulsioO pioneer, inven- tor aad engme builder, u; dwarfed beside a 36-foot Cigarette offshore racer his firm Kiekhaefer Aero- maril!ll Motors, has fitted witb pair of engines and stern· ·drives. A near identical hull Aeromarine ID equipped witb two of the new 6oo'borsepower, 4sB cubic inch engines was driven to a new U.S. off- shore speed record of 82.449 miles per h<>ur witb Bob Magoon of Miami Beach at the controls in a lW<rway run over a nautical ~e off Marina del Rey. • Welcome Aboard By ALMON LOCKABEY The Coast Guard cla ims to be "becoming increasingly concerned over the alarming (boat) accident rate," but b apparently relenting on its earlier stand that operator li- censing is the answer. In a recent news release from the 11th District public information office, Cmdr. Richard RounseveUe. chief of. the boating safety branch, was quoted as saying that the key to boating sa£ety is educatioo. CMDR. ROUNSEVELLE said the lack of knowledge by boating enthusiasts of the lllate and federal boat safely laws ls a primary ~use of boating accidents and that "of> viously the way to reduce these accident.s is to educate the boating public." 'Ibe commuder reminded boat owners that the U.S. Coa..t Guard Auxiliary and the U.S. Power Squadrons of. fer excellent courses in boat.Ing sa.lety, seamansblp navi. galioa and small boat handling. ' '!'De 1-Beach offlcUs opinions on tile .aubjed are In -t with boating orpnisaUoos whlolHl8ve been ~ of years that !,be -to stop iiccldaia afloat IS to educale the 1>9"1 O~, . BUT·Wlll!IN THE Fedora! Booting Act ol 1911 went m the boo k s national Coast Guard officers were making noises like operator licensing was pending and would be the answer to everything. Boating organizations from coast to coast jumped on the propooal and reminded the Coast Guard that Ito own lll'ganhaUon f0< years had insisted that operat.r licensing was oot the answer to preventing aecldents. Galleon Sails Recreat,ed in, San Diego SAN DIEGO (AP ) -A glµitening-new Spanish galleon plies the approiches to San Diego Harbor, looking for ail the pie-shaped world like a ship that crosud the Pacific in 1565. No conquistador is aboard this one. But, says Lynn Merkle, who built it, "a lot of strangers come up and aak ror a ride." The job took 17 years, starting in 1955 when Merkle got the idea that the huge ship-long cargo holds would provide room for his growing family. He has sailed it now on flve weekends, reaching 2Q miles out to sea . "We're still working on the insldes," says Robert Sproule, a young sailor who ha s helped the Merkles in their hobby. "It still needs the chart room finished end small thlngJ." With his wife Beulah, Metkle spent two years in research. mainly in libraries. They built a two-foot model for ballast tesl~t Work began in the Merk.Jes' backyard on the final 50-foot ship, scaled down from the 105--foot model which once car- ried goods from the orient to Mexico. The volunteers included the Merk.Jes' 12-year-old son Dan- ny, now 27, who built most of the rigging, and their daughter Sandra, a year older, wtnse main job was to Ugbten thousands of bolts imbedded lout inches apart in the hull of maple and plywood stripping, cover«! with asphalt and then flberglasaed. A -ln·llW, Donald Csskly, wnrked with Mrs. Merkle oo the four ll8l!I which covered 1,200 square feet. There is eight tons of steeJ ballast in the ship, which Js called the Santana. It g...,.. 20.S tom. To supplement tbe sails, a 2$-horsepower diesel engine was installed. The Merkles, wbo pay f/5 In monthly rent for a slip in the harbor, are continuing their work on weekend•. They take about a dozen relatives and friends on their ~rt outings. Nest summer, their tlrtt long crube 1s planned to Cstallna Island, a trip 111- volving 200 m 11 e 1 • What do doctors recommend forpatients in pain? Doctors all over the oouhtry dispeme over 50,000,000 of these tablets lo their patients each year. There are many timication1 a physician or dentist can pre- iteribe for pein. Some am nar- cottc many are av•ll11ihle only on pttecription. But there la one pain nllever, available without preiteription, doctor1 diapen.e ogtlin and atain ... Ana~in. Ellch year, ducloni a1ve over fi0 ,000,000 Anacin tableta to their patient.I In J)lllft. If docton think enouah abou\ Anacin to rli1pcn11 alt theae to.bleta, what better recommendation ct1n you '81k when )'OU are in pain? You 1ee, Anacin C'Ontaln• more ol the pain l"l!llever doc- tor1 reoommeocl lDOlt thu. llJQ' other IMdln1 tablet. Hud•chfl aod dental pt.In II relieved ineredibly tu&; minor TM1ina or arthrllil ore depm4- abty ellHd for houni: even tht ach<!a and pains of ooldt and thl n!tlpond ts> Anacin. Sq the ten· j f<fl'i ahd tt.J)J'llldon"thit-can bi ca\ltfld. by 1uch ~ wUl be rt• 1.1.v.d too. And mlllkmo -Antdn without etom.M::h upML When you'n ln path, wb,y don't you follow U.. ""oil"' of 10 many docton and take the tablet a doctor rnl1ht 1iv. YoU ln hill own. ollloa. 18b AnldA•. • • • • -·· Friday, Ocl.Obtr 27, 1972 DAILY PU.OT J J .~The Treasury is here to save you on sportsmen's guns and gear. Prove it yourself. Men'• Insulated suit 100% nylon shell with Dupont Dacron• 88 polyester Insulation. Knit collar and cuffs. Blue. Slz .. S,M,L,XL 7.99 • 59.99 79.99 24.99 Springfield 67 pump shotgun, 12 or 20 gauge 5 fast shots. Shoots all 2¥.t and a· magnum shells. Machined steel receiver. Mossberg SOOAV vent rib pump shotgun, 12 gauge 30" full choke vent rib barrel or 28" modified choke vent rib barrel. ' 12 gil. No. 6 duck·load shotgun shells 2.99 boxof25 Oute,. shotgun cleaning kit 2.99 Roslli single barrel shotgun, 12 gauge 28"' full choke. Top lever~break open design combined with exposed hemmer for safety. 2¥< • chamber. Gun CllH Black loather grained vl,,Yl. Lint fr<1e·gun clolh lining. ,,..,.,,_40", «•, 48•, 52" length1. · ... 2.97 ~#:::;....' GRANADA Hll.LJ 18000 ChaltwOrth 81. I WOOOl.ANDfflUI 21500 Vlcioty 81-.d., RIV-35IO '!YIM St. ' IAHfAAllA 3I006oulllBrlltOl81. '1'.9RRANCE S.jJUIYldl llld Hlwtllome LAKIWOOO 01 ... n SL Incl P1"""°"nt BIY<t llUENA PAllK Boldl llld °""'Oolho'1'1 OllANQ! GardonGIO\<t-. llld-llir • , I I ' I ' l • I I j l ' • . \ l I ) J DAILY PILOT ,4ccused Will Get Diagnosis SANTA ANA -A lcrmer Orange C.ounty probation of- ficer accused on atTeSt of the murder of an 3-month-0ld baby left in his care has been ordered 10 undergo a diagnostic study after pleading guilty to lesser c~ges. Superior Court J u d g e William }.lu1Tay sent David Ross Parker. 28, of Anaheim 10 the Chino Guidance Center for 90 days. He will use the resulting report when he sentences Parker to what could be a state prison term or up to 15 years. 'YOU Section' There's something for YOU in the "YOU Section" of the DAILY PILOT every Sunday. Check its personal appeal for you and yours. ORANGE COUNTY Parker pleaded guilty to amended allegations of in- voluntary manslaughter. He was charged with murder July 31 after little Jeffrey Alan Fitzgibbon died in Orange County. Medical Center. The child's mother told police she found her baby bat- tered and unconscious when she returned home from a date. Doctors Vi'ho vainly tried to revive the dying child said It was covered from head to foot with bruises and four bones had been broken in its back. now36.99 Widolvs Sue Fii·m In Crash • SANT A ANA -Two women The women claim that many of tbe parts in the aircrart which carried William C. Hap. nah, Dallas Moon. and pilot Ernest H. Marriette to their deaths were defective. Named as ro-plaintifrs are Mrs. Moon's two sons. David, 13 and Darren, 12, and Mrs. Hannah's son, Mark. 4, Alumni Aid SANTA ANA -Bob Boyd , head basketball coach at use. ¥:ill be guest of honor at the Inland Orange County Trojan Anunni Club Sunday. It will be 'held at the home of Bob Citron 1128 Sharon Road. Proceeds will go to USC Basketball Boosters. For reservaUons, contact Jerry L. Amo, 1571 Amberwood Drive, Santa Ana 92706. The public is invited. · Presiding ~udge Sumner Re-elected 4 SANTA ANA -Superior Court J lldge Bruce Sumner or Laguna Beach W/IO -~ pttSidlog judge late '1'llurlciaY by his 18 colleag\111!1 oo lbe Orange County bench. He was assured of a second tenn with a 20-to-9 victory over the only contender for the office, Judge Raymond Vin- cent. "I can thlnit or no greater hooor than to be elected by your peers to a position or leadership," Judge Sumner commented after the annual judges' meeting. '"This is especially true when y o u r peers are members of what is con- sidered to be one of the best trial courts in the United States," the presiding judge added. , Judge Sumner will remain at the helm in 1m at a time when be also serves as chainnan of California's Constitutional Revision Com- mission and chairman of the Alooolllllon ol Pres Id Ing Judges ol the Callforolo 5"perlor CourU. 1'be f o r m e r ReuJ6ucan assemblyman was -·tile · reci- pient In 1971 ol the Franltlln 9. West award, ' Yule Cards Ava,lable TUSTIN -Orden are now being taken for Christmas cards by the Orange County .unit of the American Cancer Society. Each card costs 25 cents and is imprinted with the sender's nam~. Any amount over that is a tax~uctible con- tribution to the society. Cards will be delivered about two weeks after they are ordered at the unit office, 18356 Irvine Blvd .• Tustin. The Treasury is here to save you plenty on top name entertainment. Prove it yourself. 4 days only, Friday through Monday. Save$3on GE automatic stereo portable phonograph Carry like luggage. Automatic jam-proof changer. Solkf.. state amplifier. Stereo cartridge with long-wearing diamond stylus. Automatic shut-off. Matched 5~ speaket's. Rugged polystyrene case. Blac~ (Model #\1936) Soundesign AM/FM digital clock radio now17.88 reg. 19.97 save 2.09 Uoyd's portable cassette recorder Single rotary control operates all: play, rewind, stop and fast forward. Remote control mike. Automatic recording le\.<el oontrol. (Model#V609) Wake to music clock radio with solid state circuitry, built-in antennas for AM and FM broadcasts. Walnut grain cabinet. (Model #3452) \ Generation gap? We never heard oflt. J J-~ ~~ lllllCll sttlllHT ----· JllSJ~ll. .. a ,ltOOF l£NTUCKY SlJAIGilT BOUJ801tWHISKEY DISTILLED' AND 90TTUt1 IY THE JAMES 8. BEAM orsTllLING co .• CLERMONT. BE"M. KEftTUCK'I ·=---- now 99.88 reg. 129.95 save 30.07 Soundeslgn AM/FM stereo radio, &-track tape and record player 10" 4-speed BSA changer with automatic shut-off. Jacks'°' auxUiaty input, tape output, headphones. speakers. Dust cover, 45 rpm adapter. (Model ~ .•on,,.""""°"" Reg. 12.97 now 9.97 now 24.88 reg. 29.97 11ve 5.09 GE Multl-band AM/FM portable radio Opera1eson.fOur "M'' site battefietor AC houae current. BuUt-ln automatic frequency control for drift- free FM reception. 3N speal(er. Vernier tuning. Earphone iatk. Two antennas for AM and FM. (Model#~<9Zl} ·( t ' ' GRANADA HILLS 11!QOO Cnallwonh St. I TORRANCE Seput~a and Hawthorne WOODLAND HILLS 21500 Viclory Blvd. LAKEWOOD Oatt0n St. and P6ramount Blvd, RIVEAllDf 3~20 Tyler SI. . BUENA P'ARK Beacn and o .. ngelhOlpe SANTA ANA 3900 Soulh Bristol St. ORANGE Garden-Grove Blvd. and Manchester ThlM ••'"''at all I'""'"' "°'"-Th• comp1r1tl\I& ••l"e pile:•• lltlacl at• Introductory apeclal olltr1 tor tt.I 4 "'w Tr11sury tlOfetanO pric:e,... ctucUont ror tht 4 111atill1hecl Trt11Ury •~toreL the Open wetkdt)'t 1:30to1:30Sund1y110to1. • r· a J ' ----·~ ---- Karen Thomp1on edminiden e battery of te1h when e child • come1 for help in learning (below, le~). At right she check1 heerihg of e problem learner. Low· Grades? Find Help Fast STORIES BY JO OLSON Of .. O.lff 1"1111 lhft Learning w pay attention is necessary for learning perception. 'Ibis in turn leads When Johnny can't read, follow diree-to learning motor perceptual·motor tiins or sit still in the classroom, chances skills, then to sensory-motor integration. are he's not jl.l!t stupid or belligerent. organiµtioo, integration and He'.-probably one of the~~~ ~l~ementi lan&uas.e c_!eyelopment, who bas a "learning diSa~lli y" and mathematical development and higher needs ' extra help instead ol "alra ·lwad I es. .• dlsicpllne. ~ , . · ·~By the time you re~ fourth grade What afe \he first signs· t~'·J.< ~\have to read to ~ ... sald Dr. ___ 1_ • • Elnora Schmadel, exeaitlve dirtctor of not lennuug enougb~to keep up with his ~ The• Learning center. "lf you can't learn ~mates?·. · to read you can't learn to do math, for .. Withdralfal or deterioration in his example." · • academics and ~havior," acoording to She noted that there are are lot of J,osepb F. Timassy, assistant director of childttn who -don't read and described The Leaming Center, Santa An8. otle,juntor college freshman who learned n'.STING BEGINS , by U.tenhfg and still was surviving in ·Psychological tests, a pbysic81 ex-college. aminalion and an evalu&tim a r e CAU.!1£8 LISTED prescribed for childreR who are unable to What are some of the causes of learn- get along with their , parents and ing gaps? classmates, he said. Illness, physical disabilities, unsettled Why is careful attention to a tiilld's home atmosphere, frequent change in development necessary? schools, bad teacher~ student ccm· A child wbo misses the first steps in . munication and cultural differences· are a the pyramid of education will not, be able few. 10 catch up without Help. becatl!le eat$ Parents do not realize, the length of new procass ii ~ent 1 u po. rt time it takes for a c.hild to get over being kllowledge of an earlier one, Timassy ex.-sick, Dr. Schmadel said. She cited Dr. plained. ... Sidney Adler's findings m:the 60s that the A brochure printed, by 'lbe Leaming "Asian Ou really was encephalitis and center describes the pyramid this way: what ·appeared to be a short siege could cost the ~hild a whole year's school work." '·So-called mild illnesses are not always mild," Dr-. Schmadel stresses. "ll takes a long time to get over them and oo one koo'fli what ~ .child. miases al crucial points." r- A student • may Jfliss a wOOle year's worth of learn.iilg if his teacher "turns him oll," said Jean Davis, business manager for tbe center. "He will tune out until he gets a teacher who turns him on ." MINORITY STUDENTS Cultural barriers often are experienced by minority children who attend schools where all le!SODS are taught in English. Time magazine of Aug. 7, 1m cites studies by J. L. Dillard, a linguist at the University of Puerto Rico, and William A. Stewart, president of the Education Study Center in Washington, from which they concluded: "Gbet~ children often have learning diliiculties that are basically language problems." Dillard amplifies his statement in his new book "Black English," which is an examination of the peculiar brand of English spoken by ghetto blacks. It sounds like an illiterate English but really js a parallel version of English. The Black: English s y n t ax, Dillard found, is arranged according to a syntax resembling lhat of West African lang- u.:iges. He says that "Black English does not require a distinction between praent and past tenses, for example, but it does require a differentiation between coo- linuous and momentary action." SAMPLE OFFERED Time offers a sampling of a ghetto reader: the. Black English Sentence, "Ollie big sister, she riame La Verne " translates to "Ollie's big sister is named La Verne." The article states that Dillard and Stewart "argue that (black) children should fi rst be taught to read Black English, so what they see on the printed page would correspond to the way they talk." Once a child with a learning difficulty has been spotted in the classroom, what should the next step be? According to Karen Thompson '~ plan of action, it is the administration of a bat· tery of different tests than those the child already has been givf'.n. The Newport Beach psychologist often will recommend psychiatric help for family members along with extra belp for the child , and will use as many other resou rces as she deems necessary. CHECK·UP NEEDED A complete physical also is recom- mended by Mrs. 'Mxlmpson so unnoticed MOD film Fights Pollutio·n Everyone is concerned about pollution "Marijuana still is being re.searched . lbese days and they righUy should be. Why lake Chances?" Industrial wastes, food a d d i t i v e s A new series of slides with narration pestieides, houaehold chemicals, radi.a; .i.. answers every question an expectant tlon, pharmaceuticals, ballu~ioog~ and mother could possibly have about the narcot'ics all wreak havoc wttb mans en-birth f he bab and . f vfronment. o r y rts care a - "They also are suspect in the damaging terwards. of another very important environment: ·"Straight Talk About Pregnancy and the mother's womb which, shelters an un-Prenatal Care," produced in cooperation born babe. with the Agriculture Home Extension Tbe Moreb of Dimes has produced a Service, is excellent for use in clinics and new filmstrip dealing with t~ hazards of areas where low-income mothers camot pollution to the fetua , '8cluding venereal . disease, drugs, diet pills, marijuana, o~am re~ar prenatal check-ups. . rubella and cigarette smoking. ~ ~ers1on •!so has been prepared 1n "Tomorrow Happens Today" is of i~ S~, making it perhaps the only terest to parents, 11tudeots, teacher., presentation of its kind In the United prospective mothers and fathers and Stat~. • anyone concemed with chUdreh. Evdn a more sophlstlcated audience "Start thinking about clllldren before C<J\lld1leam from the slides, thoogh, f,.. they ere conceived 11 Is it.a primary QUCSUOl'll are auwered that any woman message. ' mighl·be-reluciant to ask her-· )t graphlcaUy 1hoWI chUdren born to Tilts leiies, which uses Ultlike dolls sypbilis-and·gonorrhea-lnlected molhen, depictlJll seven! natloruilltiea, la <x· point• out that free clin.ie1 are good cellent for teenage girls woo may soun:es for counseling and treatment of become pregnant and deliver a baby with ventreal diaeaSe and urges tnfected no prenatal counseling or medical penoos to lnlorm partners before, tteXUA1 checkups. relaUOlll. It d&C....a dlJller llpals, toxemia, It stressn the impor10JICt of proper tilt -·• >, weight pin, l)'lllpl<mt nutrition for teenage girls who may of prqnancy, rtducln( tilt rislll of beCOme motben before they are fully prematurity, ebild spacing, old wives' grown themselves. "The ~ time to talet, exer<tse, smoklag, dr1nklng, "'baby otart feeding a baby la 1tverll 'year1 'blues." tteXUAl relatloosbtpo, lal>of and before It la born " tilt narratloo l'YO. delivery. "Sound .cary'l' It ls." A teleher'1 gulde, nutrition c b a r t, 1.liOUl arug• ll ,.r."• "Talirll c~INI 1•1111plllell and a catalogue olJ<laled a baby's me 1111 t. Two-thlnll of the maler1alJ are avaU~ble with the ..n... babiel born to addicted mOtliera go 'Bolh may be borrowed from the Marcll tllrolllb ~wal. No one knows for Of Dim.,, Ill Dyor Rd., Slnll AM. m. IUl'e tho Mure ol a baby who ls born :rm. Slaff 1>1•mbm will oho" them oo addicted. request. l problems can be corrected~ How early can a problem be spotted? "When kids are 2 and 3 marginal pro- blems can be noticed," Mrs. 'Ibompson said. Some are not caught until a child goes to school because parents excuse their children. "Some slkle through first grade. The next big discovery of underchievqa is made in the third grade. "A parent can check a child by how he relates to hit peers. Does he scream or have tantrums? "Early treatment is important because children -don't have their ha bits developed fully and their egos are a little less involved. They can't tum you off as eruiily." A crusader·· for special education and special help for children with difficulties is Mrs. Amador Ramos of Costa Mesa, whose 8DD was found to have problems fu first grade. COLOR BLIND "His teacher told me he would never learn, thal he was color blind and bad impaired bearing," she said. Tests by the family doctor showed that he was .. on the borderline of being retarded." Mrs. Ramos asked that be be put into his school's Point I program and protested when she was told be wu too (See FIND DELP, Paa:e JC) -· . I • • BEA ANDERSON, Editor , ... u Nursing Healthy Ambition DEAR' ANN LANDERS: My 20-year- old boyfriend, after two years of college, h88 decided to be a nurse. 1tfy parents are shocked. My Dad's comment was, "The kid must be gay." I tried to assure Dad that Gordon is a perfectly normal, healthy, virile guy and bis major interest is taking care of sick people. Dad can'L understand why Gordon doesn't go to medical school and become a doctor. But Gordon doesn't want to be a doctor. He prefers the rel a· tionship that exists between patient and nurse. I am considering a career in nursing now that Gordon has talked so much about the satisfactions or caring for the aiclt. It would be simple to switch since I've bad two years of college chemistry, zoology, biologicai science. But wouldn't it be considered odd if two nurses got married? -SERVICE ORIENTED DEAR S.O.: Today nothing ls con-, sklered odd. Tell your father that many 1 normal males bave found a rewarding career ln the mming profetskln. But I do feel that they ought to call male nurses something eke. DEAR ANN LANDERS: Your answer to "Berkeley Bill'' regarding four-letter Words was good &it you &bould have hit him harder. Granled, words are only souods, but by the same token, treaties and Ucenses are only scraps ol paper. lt'S what those sounds and scraps of paper MEAN that matters. Moat decent people are made uncomfortable by dirty words. Refraining Crom making people uncomfortable is simply good manners. No one bas the right to embarrass others. In Texas a person can get •- rested for using foul language in public. I am 17 years ol.d and proud to say that my father would alap me across the room if he W>_ard me use a flllhy. word. Some kids my age think I am weird when I tell them to watch their mouths when I'm around, but in my opinion there's a lot more wrong with kids who can't ei- press themselves without talking dirty I than with me. If I'm a square, OK. bot 1 I'm proud to be a TeJ:BS Baptist. -·1 TYLER TEEN DEAR TY: I'm a far cry from 17, and I'm• Texu•Bllptllt, but I 811ft· Shake 1 lauds with a sqaare from Iowa wbo liked ; yoar letter. 1 j I ' J DEAR ANN LANDERS: This question [ want to ask is a highly personal one and [ am reluctant to ask anyone we know. It places not only me , but my family in a very unflattering llght. Can yoµ help? In the last month two relatives passed 1 away. Both times We received huge box· es of clothing'fnlm the famlllct. First, lei , me tell you that we are not poverty stricken, although I guess one might say we are probably the least affluent members of the family. Many of the garments were 20 years old and In need of dr)'ocleani!W. Sboes ' were included, heels run down, holes in I the soles and broken races. There were ' several dozen pain of faded llOCb, torn pajamas and Wlderwear and lhirts with frayed collars, with missing buttON. Our first incllnatton WU to tttum the bo1es but my huoband and 1 dec:tded that no insult was intended. Those people are just ignorant. We 1ent the few wearable suits to the dry-cleaners and then to Goodwttt IndW!lrlea. The mt ol Ille clothes we will WJe as polishing rlgl. Now the qucttk>o : Should "e acknowledge rec:eipt or the boxee? U IO, 1 what should we aay? -NOT THAT l POOR IN W. VA. DEAR VIRGINIA: Acbowled&e 111t hoxtt. Sly: "'l'twtk yo1." Pa11d. ! OONFIDENTIAL TO: HELP NEEDED WITH OLD MAC DONALD : 11 he the one wt!h the fann! If he ii, I hope bo bp ;. p)ll crop Dell -· -frap )'OUf delc:rtptlon he doesn't have anytblna eloe pq lor-hlm. ~ ..... bodllebilt-! """"' -. Doe ... -· Aol 1st1r' •••• UUlllll ~ art _,,, ......... ,.. .. -.... .. _ .. ,,. ............ . _ ...... -..... ....... ................. _. ...... IO U. DAILY l'llA1i'. ' • •• . . . • • DAllY PILOT l'rldar, <ktober 27. 11111 New Door Open for Handicapped Child By ALWSON DEERR bl .. Of,jf¥ ,.,.., ,,.,. "A hflJ>P.Y place to grow a.nd learn.' This Is what tencber-dlre\.'" tor C!alre Nugent hopr..s the John Tracy Chnic center for the deaf.blind ehlld wlll be. The center, located i n Fullerton, opened its doors in mid-October .. ~1ith a tw(}.fold purpose. Ftnt aod foremost is to work wlth training deaf- blind children and I h e i r parenL~ Sttond 11 to provide a labor:itory for <levelopment of u corrt:spondence course for the deaf-blind child potternt.>d aflt:r the <:lin1c's 1.'\Jrrtnt course for the deaf The center is beglnning y,·1th only three students, ag1:<l three and four, but hopes to expand. The youngsters v.•iil attend from 9 a.m. to l p .111. daily. Their mothers w\11 HI· tend once each week plus a group meeuna wetkly. STIMULATION lier teachlng mtthods are based -0n "total stlmu!aUon, •1 Miss Nut:ent explained. "Firsl we make sure ~ &re fitted with boarlng alcb all<! glasses to take advantage of any sighl or hearing they do have. "We work at developing tht tactile sense, also, because ft is throligh th~ :sense they will gain most or their knowledge,. PAT BANAS SAYS IT BEST WITH FLOWERS From Page 13 W• will bombard them with · and ll10TO wily 11111· arm. for pareots complemenled by ..._,, input. ,,.. .. cblldnon fortably. ·11 ... ao•I. 8'11· penonal SU(fflealloos tallorod Jlllll! be rteeplJYa to all klndt fteclini oiid davtlopmeiil of Jo each cblld. of stimuli and this bu lo be 1<1f-coocept llld -ol pray Slep ooe ii an inlonnallon devtlopecl." follow lttm about Iha child, hi• Wltb ~ multiply flan. l"or · .........__I bo Ute in • habits bll lan!Jly which II dlcapped. sllf.'ldded, you must ~·;;;."'U:,. .,. 00 fil1ed '1o and nillled IO !lie use a combined approach. trl · . focllltl tbt Trac cllolc a month atler Iha~ "My feeling Is lo send In any ·"" ts, Y 11 be&Un-woy the dilld Is able to .,..le developed a !XII' . , rectlve and give It baok." rt°lpondenc:e ~ al • no PERSONALIZ£D , • The deaf·lillnd have a prob-ebarge IO the lam • Al-at From this, aud monthly Jem, relating with -le aud lhe'deaf and -heertnc nporll IOl!t by parenta, lhO exp"'8illg tbomlelv',. • she child JI will be a DMldel lor lhe atalf ca11 offer SU(ffl..UOO. and said. So she beg!M with ll'Oll dealobllnd cowae be In I exi>laln, any problemJ that gestures like pullJng Mom researched. arise. over to the retiigeral.or and The onei<Mwo yea, courte · Each lesson includes 1 sec- then refines. comu lo tJ 1eaoos and ia tion on bthavlour problems, DEVEWPMENT aimed at the two-tc>ll•e YUr· di>clpline, toilet training, tan- Gross motor development, old group. trums and sleeping and eating getting the blind child to move Jt often general guidelines problems. other sections deal with development and growth making uao of tho way bo peylically. emotionally and plays by blmJe!I and pllylng 1DClaU~; Up readlag, lille!llng, special 1ames with Iha cblld ,.... traWqc and IOlliua1e ar< uplaloecl. and opeecll -lion. A r<adinl list, IO bo baueht In lllmple, d!roCt langulte , or bom>Wecl. accomp&lllet parents a ... Cl ... ln!Ormatlon, """' 1-. ltom what hearing problem. l!lu Nuaent l&ld tho ,_ are and ... Of Jiearing aids to ~ In FUilerton will be uaed bow Iha .. ilre family can be u a laboratory to cloYO!oJ> part.' ol Iha tducallonal proo-tools for parmtl.'of the deal- .... blind child, as well a1 other Pmnts •r< advised "learn-procr• .. In Oranae •nd Loo Ing J110terlals are au around Ancelet COW1lle1. you. U11 lhem." No oottly or "lbe rewards are b¢lt lnto elaborate materials are re-my Job." abe 'added. 11Wben a quired for tbt coune. lnslead, child does oomelblng yqu've JlOl"lltl are ac!vlsed to coU6CI been worltlng for him to do, It pictures and lnexpenslve Joys. gives you a (OOd !eellnl IO READING usr · share 11 with him and bis Sbarlng l'1e cblld"a day, family."" Secret Service Gets Special Bouquet By JO OLSON Of 1111' Diiiy Plltt Sid The Secret Service agenta who guard the Western WhJte House are typical of thelr bre<d -they"re Ught·llpped and tough. They're also a sentimental bunch, prone to get in the doghouse with their wives once In a while and willing to pitch in and he1p others when not protecting the president. No one knows this better than Pat Banas, a Costa Mesa free1ance florist who has &r· ranged. flowers tor their wives' birthdays, sent Oowers so they could make amends and put them to work stemming roses during a last·minute emergen-- cy. She even helped promote one Secret Serviceman's r omance and got lhe job of ar· ranging all the flowers for his early October wedding. Mrs. Banas, a volunteer who used her unpaid experience as a steppingstone into a career .rter bet husband died several yean ago, also has worked on floral arrangemen'3 f o r various We.stem White House functions as well. BOMB CHECK "Every flower arrangement hu lo be cbeclted for bomb! before they go to the White House," she said,~explalning. that "the Nixona onct received an nplodlng corsage." Most _,,tly, ll!ree ar· ra.ngements were ordered by the Nllons for a party when they returned from t b e was m occasion sbe didn't use a Dower." Mrs. Banas has· given her talents to her church, st. John the Baptist Catholic Church. and bas assWecl with wed- dings In var:IOU!I churches in a volunteer capaclly. She Is experimenting with a ptrJCeS8 that will enable her lo dry Portioos of a bride's flowers then make them into a permanent plaque u a gtft for the couple's new home. "I can't say enough for volunteering," the 1 iv e I y mother of four repeated In descrtbl'1& her life and her at· tempt lo piece tblngs together alte< her hllllband"a sudden death. Sb& cbaln Parents Without Partners" hot line for wldowl and widowers and .. a fringe benefit la delllgnlng bouquet& for the wedding of two people she alllBted thn>ugll.tbll iwo-gram. Why do flowers appeal to Pat Banal? "Sending Oowel'I ii a truly beautiful way to 1 a y tamethlng beautUuJ," 1 he said. "Flowen are a symbOI of God's creation. "On my day off I RP ool· lecllog. I go lo weed obow1 'and flower shows. It fills a void in my life. "All ~ my volunteer •-ort hu fit oo beauUf\Jlly IDlo my life." Moll of al~ tbouab. Pat Banu Ukeo people, Wblcb .Is M secret to the touab men wlio guard the Pnlldint. Republican conventton inl~-------------------~-----~--- Mlami Beach. and Mra. Banu helped design these. Two featured sugar bash and protea, and one included the marguerlte daisy, which is supposed to be Pat NiJ:oo's favorite nower, along with white gladioli and bells of Ireland, Mrs. Banas said. For the Secret Serviceman's wedding she used yellow and white roses. and she said the men's favorite for every oc- caskln is red roses. For a touch of humor Mrs. Banas arranged red and white _la spar ,ors Hundreds of items to ignite your ~lents. All are grist for the mills of your mind. • • Find Help-Immediately carnations. blue bachelor but-I !"==="""---=====---==----=----~"'\ tons and tiny American Oags I• for the wife of an agent when she became an American citizen . 'Ibe Secret Servicemen were enll!ted ,on one occasM>n when Mrs. Banas was behind in preparing'flowers for a wed- ding next door to the western White House. 7th Annual Fal Rose Show Sat. I. Sun., Oct. 27-28 "A Mill of Roses" 1t Huntin9ton Center's enclosed mell. We promi1e more then e ro1e gerden of b1autiful errengements end 1p1cim1ns fillin9 the mell with fregr•nce end color. Sponsored by O.C. Rose Society •t B11ch & Edinger off San Diego Fwy., H .B. youog. Ile finally was ad- mitted. and was in it two or three years, "developing slowly." Led by Mn:. Ramos, a group of parents fonned the Harbor Council f o r Neurologically Handicapped ChildN!n a n d raised funds to train teachers for their children and others like them . Mrs. Ramos' son , who let- tered ici track and played foot- ball in high school and now has earned his dipl o ma. s ho w e d improvement all through his school career and t-JONG -KONG CUPOll TAIU>U ,. ••• NI"' IN ~ COUMn ...,.,.......,c-t.. ... was able to finish his last three years in regular classes. The Costa Mesan credits her soo's doctors and teach-- ers with his success and says she and her huband helped by cooperating with his leach· ers. Also, she tried lo undustand and give him all the love she could. "The main part was prayer," she said. "Some parents won't accept problems with their children. They're the ones who need help. "It takes a lot or time and patience. So many times I was told that's what l got for adop. ting a child ." The association, she added, has grown into the California Association for Neurologically llandicapped Children and has nikhoven, district psychologist. A suspect child is fully tested by a psychologist then a special teacher works with tbe child and a achoo! nune worb wiib the family. The children in the program are tested yearly, and an active parent group is maintained. "Within the last five years a great deal more education has gotten across to parent!: and teachers," Joseph Timassy concurred. But the key to success is taking action the minute a learning problem is spotted. "These kinds of problems don't tend to flJ. themselves," Dr. Schmadel said. "People "l have a very close, friend- ly relationship with them," she said. "They're a nice bunch cf people. They're h ardwor k ing snd very dedicated. They're unsung heroes." ClllLilBOOD MEMORIES F1owers have always been a part of Pat BaMs' life, from the Ume she was a small child In Mlchlgan watching her mother arranging bouquets. "My mother ls extremely talented," she said. "There only change be<all!e there iJ a J;:::========::;J need to change." KNOW YOUR 2 .?!~. $135 XA'lA5 SAU quite a few ch a pl er 50---------- The old·world art of creative knotting, revived by Pier 1. A whole new-line lo tie on, without tying up a lot of money! Rustic jutetone, bright rayon ratta il, th ick woven cotton .. Linen and seine twines. Beads to b.1ngle, grainy wooden spheres to strings , • , rings ... shiny buckles to polish off a belt. Two simple knots make a myriad of variations. Imagination's the limit! Even & little libraty to start you thinking. .29.;. 52. 95 .....,.,......, . ......,._ IMS WI bf_ MOW 0-W. lfill ········" .. a...... • .., ....... •1 " SUI< -· ••••••••. t• At ~k"' ........... fJ .. . Sift 'W-1 ............ If c..e.-........... 92 6.1 $Wrto ............. 10 • un., .. -o.c-.......... ~-.. ,....,awn •. •WI m ANT 1111 • IMT trl'U: co•1u • .. n AUllATIOMI • SAfT •ATMCNn .... -"""' . ~ 7'00 "HIST WOOlfHS j Al>fO DOI.Ill& lHITS J m 8E DAILT 9-9 SAT. 9-6 SUH. 10-S ler ................. !'MM 133-0211 llSS"a MAC.AlflfUI ILV. •• tum.., -... ,., .. """ ""-' r ...... -~ . a.-r .. a.-C...ft•J ..,.,_, "" ........... ,ldlftf I .... J""' 0 .... , __ ,1 fl C7', P. ITALIAN DELI e BAKERY ol.ucci .,/Jeli RESTAURANT 8'11 Adams ol Moanollo, Huntington Beach. OM Ill i... '-..... ' Dsll OJltfltllolltlll C•...,.... Sflll 111 0tr9-•-21 y..-rs hlly 1M; M. 10.t; S.. 1M1 ClelM w ... : 961-44'6 Ml If MIM!tn '"""' "'"""""' ·~· M--l"-•111 \lllltW ,UM1ii1"' -,.. 1 ... 11.Jf PIE lfO LIMIT ..... 1111 6'" 6Wli H-llliWI 11•1'-' Ml .. ., -SAUSAGE .. , .. ,. ttAt~ ... i1:W::e5i ... 1111 IORTADELLA s1.09" throughout the state . School districts now are ac· ti ve in proxiding special help for children who need it The special education pro- grams in the Laguna Beach and Newport-Mesa sc h o o I districts a re typical of the new approach to l ea rni ng disabil ities. NEW SERIES Offerings in the Newport- Mesa Unified School 'Di.strict begin with a series of classes ror hard of hearing children as young as 18 months old and continue to classes for the lrainable mentally retarded, which enroll students untU they are 21. In between are 25 special day classes for the educa· tionally handicapped child, defined as one who has at least average ability in leam- lng but is underachieving and requires special tutoring sltua· !Jona. There are five learning disability groups and self-con- tained units In the Laguna Beach SchooJ District, ac· cording to Patricia Nun- For A Career ... NOT JUST A JOB BE A "WOMAN IN WHITE" NIW CLASSES STARTING Now•mb1r 5 -J•nu•ry 8 lif•tlt111 Plocem•nt Assistonce llJt.', °' Mffl,uJ ~r1t1tf.nd co11 /IMS r«ri"' du.~ J.6, 4 -.rn7 fl"oinillf lA J mo11..U. ~---623 W. J 7th, SANT A ANA 541-4461 __ ......,._ YnlllAN'I tfN!ftTI AYAllAllf I ( I IF you really want to lose weight •.. but you enjoy good food and a lot of it c:> ... you'll love Weight Watche'"!! Thi" Wt:iRht Watchers progr;in1 offtr$ you •n endltst 11.iroety of dellcious foods, 1nclud1ng me1t, fi sh, fowl, ~l•ds, lru11s, vegetables, r'Qt11oes, pistil: and wonder· fut de,serts! And It rt:ally worlu. Over '4 mill/on hippy people have lost welghl w11h Weigh1 Witchers. So why wai1l Come le11m how to sJJm down wfe}y, wnslbly, cnJovabfy. C~SSES Ow OPEN Co • Meu Center H •t Wll1e11 M , 71)0 PM TUES. f 1J M I 71JO PM F.ORJNF ANO FREE B . HURE CALL: 83S.SSOS WOOiT~WAlOIRS. CANDIDATE VOTE FOi DARRELL AARDVARK The votlna qe hu again been lowtred to atve others the rtght to vote. Gtrlt &nd bo)ll attendillJI: an,y ecbool ln the Newport:..Mesa area Cfln wtn a tHp .to S11.cramento via Air C&Utomta. Ballot.I avallable In We1tcllft Pl,aia shops at 17th A lrvtne Ave- n~. t>epodt OM onl.y ln the btllot box at Jett'• Petting 1.oo, llppearlng Oct. 31 thru Nov. S. SHOP ••• WESTCLIFF PLAZA 17th & I rv1n• Av1nu. ~Wotd!M ...,.._.....,.. ......... w .. ,111w .... -·~·""'··~-k.""Y, ''-~~~~~~~-'' I HANG YOUR HERB PLANTER. Clay fired pots resting in wood stained holders nektle the tiny herb seeds. Nutrasoil pellets and complete inslructions included. Choose (rof'(l basil, caraway, chives, parsley, sage, marjor.im. 150 Macrame cord ...... 6t • 1J.<4t KAI08 rrr Metal skewers in .1 rack. 5t.1in· less. Gleaming. With fine gr.iined h.1ndles. Prepare ·1hose sizzling goodies for thHe h.indsome skewers. 229 REPLACE THAT OLD DOORMAT. Wei-fLAnER YOUR FLOORS. Numda~ prayer come good folk with a manila doonnat. rUgs in rich Orien1al colors. lnteretting It's 100°1~ abau, fine hemp that will stand designs, ~n /n India. 50% wool, SO% up to scrapes. Strong rtctanglM: '2.67 f COiion, 2 x 3', 2' JC •• s4 99 18"' )( 30", 20"' l( 36". . . . . • . . . . . •. '6' . . ----• ················· .-.-PIER 1 IMPQ.RTS 2710 HARBOR BLVD. COSTA MESA ICOINll Kl.ltOI .--~DlMSJ SHOP MONDAY THRU SATURDAY 10-9 SUNQAY 10 ·6 540.7337 • l . -~· -. -· Horoscope Cancer Minds Money SATURDAY OCTOBER 28 By SYDNEY OMARR 1 Aries ls impulsive, ram- bunctlou!. When naUves or this zodlacal sign ran 1n love. it can be sudden and it Is an the way. For Aries, love ls of paramount importance. Without It, there Is a void Iha< la dUllcult, U not impos!lble, to nu. Arie• is pbyllcally drown lo Lej>, ha• ambivalen< .. LOWEST PRICES OF THE SEASON DAILY PILOT JI LAST 4 DAYS: FRIDAY, SAT., SUNDAY, MONDAY SHOP FRI. TO 9:30, SAT. TO 6, SUN. NOON TO 5 Mltn,gs about Aquarius, takes ·-===================----===================---===================-short trips with G e m i n I , mates investment plans with Scorpio, borrows and Jenda in connection with Taurus and phllooopbi,.s witb Sagittarill!. ARIES (March 21-April II): Creative urges dominate. A~ cent now ls on affairs of heart; chlldml, per900al d r iv e s . Your desire i.! to break from restrictions. However, being too free might bring unuaual Pl'QJ>lems. R e s p o n d ao-cori!\Dg y. . TAURUS (April IO-May 20): Obtain hint from A r I e 1 message. Realize that some i. restraints a c t u a 11 y are ._ beneficial. Family responsibility l'Ollld be a bless- tng. No one is going to hand you aomethlng of value on sllver platter. Improve home atmosphere. GEMINI (May 21-June 20): Include family membtr in special trip, recreational ac- tivity. Ta1ll'lll and Llbrt could play imPortanr roles. Stress versatility. Realize there in alternatives. Voll can reach goal through use of newer ~ ctdures. CANCER (June 21-July 22 ): Emphasta is on m o n e y , valuables, personal pouessions. Fine for u- aminllll! quality product!. Be a comparison shopper. T h e more selective you are, the better deal you can con-. summate. Act accordingly. LEO (July 23-Aug. 12): Cy· cle high and your personal magnetism soars. You get what )'O\I want bul be sure you 'tnow what you really desir<. Dnmatize need for action ntber than rhetoric . Caprlcwa i.s Involved. VIRGO (Aug. 13-Sept. 22): You get i,nfonnation which enables you to close transac- tion. Fun and games may temporarily be finfsbed. Now you get down to facts which can spell out r e a 1 ad- vancement, personal progress. stop making exeu.ses for delay. Throw away security blanket. IJBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 22): Accent is on desires, ability to make romance bear fruit. Aho, this is a time to show af- . i.ctlon to loved one through gift. Check special a~ nlvenaries. Don't be afraid to be senUmental. Dine out -be with congenial people. !KJOBPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): lntultive intellect can aid in achieving purpose. Means by following hunch now you are most likely to succeed. Home environment needs attention. Promise made to Aquarlan lllould be fulfilled. SAGITTARllJ!I> (Nov. 22- Dec. 21): Emphasis is 00 travel, faraw.ay p I a c e s , pbllosopby and desire for personal growth. Another ln- dlvidnal born under your sign figures promlnenUy. Be versatile. 'l1lere is more than one way of ,ceompUsblng goal. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. It): What waa held in abeyance is given green light. Aqua.riu1 and Leo are in. volved. Investment procedures are spotUghted. Mate, portnu want& to know more about how money 11 being dispersed. AQUARIUS (Jan. ZO.Feb. IS): Sense or timing become• more lrnDOrtJnl than usual . Public wlll l'efPOlld lo your er- rorts. ButJou should '""'rush. Be sure details. especially where legal questions are fu. volved. Patience is your ally. PISCES (Feb. It.Morch IO): Moderate -la dellnlble. Family member who want& to rush 11 mlatoken. S t u d y Aqaartut message. Keep ap- point m c n t 1 aimed at benelltln; health. F e II o w worker la •ltliln& bluea over nothing. IF TODAY IS YOUR Bll\TIIDAY .YO!' ore lntenae, lndlvidnallatlC. Yoo .,. ifiJe to setU• Ip groove which will m0o you happier and more ~lve. tnDecember , ~re Js a change in home en· vlronmeni, pooalble change of raklence. You are U1Ually in- volved, In one way or another, FASHION SAVINGS COITON/POL VESTER DRESSES sport dresses 49-reg. 26.00-60.00 10.99-29.99 LONG EVENING DRESSES, 8-16 \bridal and formal 97 -reg. 44.00-60.00 33.99 JUNIOR AND JR. PETITE DRESSES young signature 94-reg. 30.00-40.00 14.99-19,99 WOOL MAXI COAT S4" LONG . junior coats 24-reg. 58.00 47.99 LEATHER SHIRT JACKET, 28", 5-13 ir. coa ts and suits 24 -reg. 60.00 49.99 EASY CARE SHIFTS, S-Xl daytime dresses 61-reg. 13.00-14.00 8.99 SPECIAL SIZE DRESSES, 14Y>-22Y, women's dresses 57 -reg. 22.00-32.00 15.99-21.,9 MATERNITY TOPS AND PANTS maternity 105 -reg. 10.00-14.00 5.99 ~nd 7.99 DYED SHEARl:l1'ilG LAMB SUEDE COATS vibrant fall colors, warm and ribbed. S99 NATURAL MINK STROLLER COATS bordered and collared wilh dyed fox S555 NATURAL MINK WRAP-AROUND CAPES long, flowing. elegant cover-ups SJ3J FULL LENGTH DYED FRENCH RABBIT COATS Paris-inspired, spotted, belted, slightly shaped $119 fur Sillort -4 7-<hMge your iiK now, we'll bill you io Feb. iUI' products I.libeled to~ couoll"y "l(.Qfigio ol impOOed fu''· m.ii~ co. does ooi c.i..y furs ol .llOim.llls -1'1e.lltened with l!xtillC1ion WOOL FLANNEL FASHION PANTS signature sportswear 55-reg. 16.00-18.00 10.99 POLYEST£R SKIRTS, PANTS, VESTS skirts. coordinates 101-reg. Sf7-S40 11.99·27.99 KNIT TOPS, SIZES 8-16 belier blOU'f!S 39-reg. 13 .00-16.00 8.,9 BLOUSES, PANT TOPS belier blOUSfS 39-reg. 15.00-16.00 9.99-11.99 EMBROIDERED ACRYLIC CARDIGANS knit sportswear 72-reg. 18.00 11. 99 CUFFED PANTS, S-M • blvd. sportswear 16-reg. IJ.00 9.99 PALAZZO HALTER SETS blvd. sportswe<1r 16-reg. 20.00 ll.99 PRINT TUNIC PANT TOPS better blouses J9-reg. 18.00 11.99 YOUTHCRAFT QIANA• BRAS bras, girdles 44-reg. 5:00-5.50 2.99 OPAQUE PANTYHOSE, FASHION COLORS hosiery 7 -reg. 1.95 1.69, J/S5, 6/$9 CASHMERE COATS, 6-16 women's coats 27-reg. 74.00 57.99 WOMEN'S LEATHER GLOVES women's gloves 3-reg.,9.00-14.00 6.99·7:99 . BLOUSES AND PANT TOPS l/5, S/S blouses 31-reg. 8.00-13.00 5.99-7.99 WOMEN'S HANDBAGS handbags 26-reg. 11.00-16.00 7 .99-9.99 SIMULATED PEARL CHAIN ROPES fashion jewelry 22-reg. 3.00 1.99 ° FASHION RINGS fashion jewelry 22-reg. 5.00 2.99 MID HEEL SPORT PUMPS forecast shoes 12S-reg. 23.00 15.,9 IT AUAN LEATHER BOOTS forecast casual shoes 129-reg. 35.00 25.9' GIRLS TWO-PIECE PlA Y SETS infants' apparel 36-reg. 7.50 4.99 BOYS' AND GIRLS' KNIT TOPS toddlers 126-reg. 3.00 :Z.29 PRETEEN conON CORDUROY JEANS preteen apparel 90-r"!!. 9.00 5.99 LAYERED LOOK LONG DRESSES 7-H girls' wear 77-reg. 10.00 7.99 LONG QUILT ROBES 8-14 childrens' lingerie 79-reg. 10.00 .6.99 MILK BATH QT. SIZE toiletries 136-reg. 2.29 t.6, TRAVELITE MIRROR toiletries 136-reg. 16.99 6.99 TRUE YOU ELURA• MODACRYLIC GYPSY WIG fashion wigs 748-reg. 35.00 ~4.9' MEN 'S & BOYS' WEAR NO-IRON PRINT SPORT SHIRTS L.S. ~n·s sportswear 84-reg. 9.00 5.99 ASST. LEATHER WALLETS men's accessories BO -reg. b.00-9.00 3.99 MEN 'S LEATHER BELTS, 30-40 men 's accessories 80-reg. 6.00-10.00 3.99 ORLON!' ACRYLIC CREW SOCKS men's hosiery 127 -reg. 1.25 99c MOC-TOE OXFORDS men's shoes 60-reg. 26.00 21.99 ASST. WOOL SUITS men's clothing 21-reg. 85.00 29.00 FAMOUS MAKER S.S. DRESS SHIRTS men's furnishings 6-reg. 5.50-7.50 3.99 NYLON SKI PARKA men's casual slacks I lb-reg . 25.00 17.99 YOUNG MEN'S FLARE JEANS pace shop 130-reg. 14.00 5.99 FAMOUS MAKER KNIT FLARE PANTS mach ten shop 83-reg. 12.00 4. 99 FAMOUS MAKER BOYS' JACKETS boys' Clothing 14-reg. 17 .00-20.00 12.99-14<99 BOYS' COITON BRIEFS AND T-S HIRT' boys' furnishings 23-reg. 3/2.70 3/2.39 TASCO WIDE ANGLE BINOCULARS. 7xJ5 cameras 37 -exc. el cajon reg. 42.99 39.99 MINOLTA AUTOPAK 600x CAMERA cameras 37-exc. el caion reg. 39.99 34 .99 MINOLTA SRT101 SLR 35 mm CAMERA cameras 37 -exc. el cajon reg. $202 S 189 FOR THE HOME PlASTIC TRASH CANS bulk housewares 33-reg. 4.99 J.99 DURACREST SHOPPING CARTS bulk housewares 33-reg. 10.00 8.49 PROCTOR IRONING BOARD bulk housewares 33-reg. 12.95 9.99 WILSHIRE WARDROBE CABINET housewares furniture 87 -reg. 50.00 J9. 99 HOOVER UPRIGHT WITH TOOLS vacuums 73-reg. 67.99 57.99 LARGE WEST BEND TEFLON e SKILLET small appliances 74-reg. 29.99 17.99 . BRASS TABLE LAMPS . WITH SHADE~ lamps & fixtures 63-reg. 65 .00 44.99 SWIVEL ROCKERS upholstered furniture 141 -reg. S2b7 S 199 QUEEN SOFA SLEEPER sleep shop 14S -:reg. S399 S279 5 PC. RAITAN DINING SET patio furniture 146-reg. 249.95 $189 5 PC MEDITERRANEAN BEDROOM bedroom furniture 143-reg. ~75S $599 conON PILE AND VELVETEEN PILLOWS art needlework 40-reg.5.00 :1.99 PRO HOCKEY GAME BY MARX toys 42-reg. 18.00 4.97 ITALIAN DINNERWARE FOR 8 china/dinnerware 46-reg. 90.00 69.99 Sil VER PLATED 4 PC. COFFEE SET silverware 48-reg. 3S.OO 27.99 P1NG-PONG TABLE sporting goods 50-reg. 44.99 34.99 ITALIAN HAND CUT TUMBLERS glassware 126-reg. 9.00 4.99 WALL-TO-WALL NYLON BATHROOM CARPET linens, towels 30-reg. 20.00 11.99 NO-IRON PERCALE BURLINGTON TWIN SHEETS bedding 34-reg. 6.50 2. 79 SURETY KING SIZE GOOSE DOWN PILLOWS bedding 34-reg. 24.00 20.99 FAKE FUR AREA RUGS JO"x48"-8'x10' fl00< coverir1gs 137-reg. $20-$140 14.88·108.88 MAYTAG 3-SPEED GAS DRYER dryers 714-except el caion-reg. 239.95 199.811 30" EYE LEVEL GAS RANGE r~hges 737-excepi el cajon-reg. 549.95 SAVINGS FOR YOU BEAN BAG CHAIRS Lurtains. draperies 113-reg. 2?.00 14.99 WIDE ANTIQUE SATIN DRAPb Lurtains, draperies 113-reg. 27 .00-40.00 19.19 HOUSE AND GARDEN COOK BOOK books 68-reg. 7.50 WEBSTER'S ENCYCLO.PEDIA DICTIONARY books 68-reg. 39.50 QUART DANIEL HOOPER BOURBON J.99 9.99 4.99 liquor 107, exc. buena pk ., el caion-reg. 6.19 IUMBO CASHEWS SALTED OR UNSALTED ca ndies 78-reg. 2.18 lb. 1.&9 -; !RISH FARMHOUSE JAMS , 12 OZ . IAR gourmet 108, exc. el cajon -reg. 69c 591; :: x; ~· ,i; ~-~ · ENTERTAINMENT, APPLIANCES ~ -~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-·::<: FAMOUS 18" DIAGONAL COLOR TV ~: televisions 722-reg. 419.95 129.95 ~ MEL VILLE CLARK SPINET PIANO pianos 720-except el cajon -reg. $699 S5CJ9 ZEN ITH ~5" DIAGONAL CHROMACOLOR TV televi s ion~ 722-reg. 609.95 SONY 8" DIAGONAL BLACK/WHITE TV televisions 722-reg. 129.95 ELECTROPHONIC 8 TRACK STEREO 569.95 94.95 stereos 728-reg. 299.95 199.95 TONECREST PORTABLE CASSETT E RECORDER rddios 729-rcg. 26.95 19.89 PHILCO 15', 2-DR. REFRIGERATOR refrigerators 72 1-excepJ el caion-reg. 309.95 $279 BUDGET STORE VALUES MISSES' ACRYLIC IACKET -SWEATERS SPortswear 800-exc. wilshire-reg. 9.99 MISSES' PANTSUITS , MANY, 8-16 dresses 810-exc. wil., el cajon-reg. 9.99 MISSES' KNIT TOPS , 40-44 SIZE \vomen's 816-exc. wil., el cajon -reg. 4.99 MISSES' PANTCOATS, SIZE 8-16 coats 828-exc. wil., el caion-reg. 29.99 IUNIOR POL YESTER/COITON SHIRTS. 5-IJ 1r. scene 601-exc. wil., el caion-reg. 4.99 DORETTE PANTY HOSE, A, B SIZES hosiery 807-exc. wil., el caion-reg. 99c MISSES' NYLON SLEEPWEAR, S-M-L sleepwear 821 -exc. \vilshire val. 3.99·5.99 HANDSOME SWAGGER HANDBAGS handbags 827 _,,xc. wil., el ca jon-reg. 5.99 DOREITE GIRDLES, PANTY GIRDLES girdles 819-exc. wilshire-reg. 7.00 WOMEN'S BOAT SHOES, 5-IOM shoes 812-exc. Wilshire-reg. 3.99 TOT BOYS', GIRLS' PANTS, 2-4 children's 808-exc. wilshire-reg. 2.69 BOYS' WARM OUTERWEAR, 8-16 boys' 822-exc. wil .. el cajon-reg. 12.99 MEN'S NO-IRON DRESS SHIRTS men's 806-exc. wil.. el cajon-reg. 4.99 MEN'S SHORT SL SPORT SHIRTS ~.99 7.99 J -· .. ~ .,, - -: -.-23.99 .. J.99 l :: I: J/2.35 H ·i: !:. .. 2.99 -. -,. 4 -, .. ; .,, .. I:: 5.99 J.49 ,_.,, .. ,. -. -. ·: r . .. 10.9' i:: .. 1: J.'19 ·i:: .. sportswear 805 -exc. wil., el cajon were J. 99 2/5.00 MEN'S All WEATHER COATS men's 814-exc. wil., el cajon reg. 18.00 MEN'S STRETCM I 00% POL VESTER PANTS . 14.9' ::. .. .. men's 817 -exc. wil., el cajon -val. 9.99 7.9' .. CALVERT NYLON BATH 'RUGS, reg. 3.49-5.49 :; linens 831-exc. wil., el ca jon 2.79-4.4' 1 ~: 4x6' BATHROOM CARPETING, reg. 8. 99 811 -exc . wil., mont., c.lrl s., oxn., el cajon PILLOW PROTECTORS . STANDARD SIZE domestics 803 -exc. wil., el cajon-reg. 1.29 QUILTED FLORAL SPREADS, TWIN, FULL bedding 825-exc. wil., el cajon-reg. 19.99 7.4, : ; . SHOP-..MONDAY JO FRIDAY 10:00 TO 9:30 • SUNDAYS NOON TO 5 sa.turday hours 10 to 6 • ~y co south coast plaza, san diego freeway at bristol, costa ~ 546-9321 • • I I, ,, DAILY PlljlT • ' 1 . o~dS ChOsen ; b~ Zontians ' . . .. . . moaltl;lhe Zoltla Cl~b . rrahman slle was named Qlr~ Ntwport,lllrbor select. ohe , of<he;quartet and last year coed from each of the recel4ed lhe"'Masonic Lodge's Newport-Mesa high schools to Girl-of-the-year award. be Girl-of-the-month for her She has been a volunteer school. tutor for lhe handica~ and l'he students are selected on is current pl'elidM.t of tbe ' tt\e basis of their leadership, sehlor planning board. ~ ,Wtizenship, service to their NEWPORT BARBOR :-S~hools and scholarship. After attending 0 range .... Selected faculty nlembers Coast College for a year, Miss 'I~ the girls' assistant prin-Janice Lee Ryan plans to "'•ctpe.l from each IChool assist a lranS!er to the University of l.oota Club member in making Southern California and major •1\fle choice. The girls and lbei?' in secondary education or deo- '"motbers are honored during a ta! hygiene. .. Zonta luncheon during their She is a student councl1 award month. representative, flag twirler, .,. At the end of the year, the member of the executive ~'IX!norees from each acbool council and Tars and Stars ·ieJect one girl to be named and was !elected s e n i o r '-1.onta Girl-ol~he-yur and the homecomlng princess. recipient of a $50 savings "She has been a majorette CdM HIGH Terry Watt NH HIGH Janice Ryan ESTANCIA Debbio Brouwer IME R·l SUIDIYISION LAND 4.6 ACl9 !ottbllahod Hlfh OINlll'( Hunll""°" 1 lloKh /11.J luahtrd/H...,jlton StNoll Cl ... •to Beach -Sthoola .:.. Sho,., I SEALED BID 'SALE $130,000 Mlnl- Bulldors Info. Ind. Solla R.,...,. -$10 Phlllp F. Bottoncourt, ~ Boach City Hioll 3300 N-port Blvd. -!1141 6JMl,~O; ..r. 2ai CUSTOM DRAPdll$ ' ' WOVIN WOODS 25%. OF.I; CALL GENE TODAY . ' CM HIGH =.r::eH 673..'.8015 bond. for her school, is active in her church and has vollUlteered as CORONA DEL MAR H M,_ Terry Watt, daugb .I a ... ~per at-o 8 g of GAA for four years, was of the May Co. teen board . ..._ ter 'Memor"ial ll6spital , /-rr;;;;;~C~ho~rl~L~•;c~koy~~;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~ rnembeo of the catifornia.11 -· SChola!llC Federation. of Dr. and Mrs. Jean H. Watt Presbyterian. Miss Ryan is elected sophomore treasurer COSTA MF..SA of Newport Beach, hopes to the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. and secretary• junior class Representing the student attend Stanford U~veni~ and • George R)'an of Newport vice .Pre!ljdent and student body on the p r i n e i p 8 l • s have f ca~r m sc,ience, Beach. OOdy """'etary and served as possibly as.a hufse. / . . ,----· . cabinet, Miss Cheri Lackey IM.iss Lackey has been a member of the National Forensic League for tour years, holds the Degree qt Ex· ~Jenee and is working tgward the Degree of Distinc- tlpn . She was named outstan- dlng individual speaker for the O:q,ly Coast Qffers " She is ~udent body presi-ESTANCIA a Junior v~rs1ty cheerleader plans to obtain a bachelors dent AFS president Girl's Miss Debbie Brouwer . during her Junior year. degree in business ad-Stat~ representative' and daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Ken-Miss Brouwer is a member ministration then attend law 8\IDe!Dbet"of the Senior Hooor neth Brouwer of Costa Mesa, of Ca I i f_o t n i a Scholarship school. • 63 Guaran~eed1Cer.tificates Sg:iety CalifOrnia 4 Scholastic plans to attencJ Bio lad· or Federation, Campus Life Club, She is the daughter of Mr. ~era lion af!f GKA. '. ' ~ another ;independent 1.co ege · ~ati~nBl ~orensic League and and Mrs. Donald Lack'Y of • ·Miss 'Watt •tias been a drill: and mijol' in · s pee eh was named junior princess for Costa Mesa and is Girls' team member Girls' League pathology. homecoming. League president, front page officer for tw~ yean and a She was chosen Girls' State She is active in her church editor of the newspaper, mem- Girl Scout for 11 years. As a alternate, bas been a member youth group and is a member her of the year book staff and 1171-72 year. Miss Lackey also i~ a member of AFS, serves as EDC chairman and is a member ol the Sailing Club. • Saturday ;$~rvice ·The Insiders Club ,;;1, ~:All Dolled Readying e a r \ y dona- .~ tions of dolls to be ::·:made like new by the . , Danny Davey Doll Club, Assistance League of .• , Laguna Beach are the '" ?.1Jnes. F.L. Yohe and .... .: A. w. Brehob Oeft to right). Area schools and 1.: organizations have be-i. gun collecting d o 11 s which will !ind homes , ~with Navajo and Hopi " .Indian girls this Christ- ,., mas. .. ' .. ... '" •· •( ..,, "' '• •• •• 't'o avoid disappointment, prospective brides are reminded to ·have their wedding stories with black and white ,!!lossy photo- graphs to Ille DAILY PILOT Women's D .. partment one week before the wedding. Pictures reeelveil alter that time will not be used . For engagement .announcements It ts imperaUve that the story, also accompanied by a black and white .glossy picture, be sub- mitted six weeks·or more before the wedding date. II deadllDe Is not met, only a story will be used. To belp fill requirements on both wed· din~ and engagement stories, forms ate· available In all of tbe DAILY PILOT offices. Further quesUona will be answered by Women's Section staff members at 6424321. ~' =~ ~.~.~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~'! COSTA MESA GRAND OPENING Y2 Off ON ALL • • • 'Carpeb and furniture ·cleaned WALL II . :ro .. filli · · WAtl·~ CARPET CLEANING * lllW CAAPIT SHOWltOOM * CUSTOlll INSTALLATIONS a RE.PAIRS * .... UPHCIUTlltY CLEANING * ~RCIAL a INSURANCE WORK (714) 645-3708 .. 's Cirpet Co. m "· •••' "· , I • ~ 1 r ·· · ' I EXCITING AJl,T·: Costa Mesa Art League Nol.IJ Th,ru Sat. &oath Coast 'ttua • .~U~~~ I 1be lnsidorl ctub: A new way tQ belt Inflation. Its rpembershlPi card pennits you to buy nearly every- thing you 'need f~orn the finest closed-door show· rooms at substantial say.. ings -appliances, furni- ture, stereo equipment, sporting goods, draperies and much, much more.. . You can even buy cars at the "fleet'' price and mobile homes and motor- cycles at substantJal sav· inss. The lnsiders Club ; .. Effective Annual Earnings 5.00%-5.13% Passbook. No Mlrumum. 5.75%-5.92% One Year Certfficate $1,000 Minimum. 6.00%-6.18% Two to Ave Y..-Certfficates $5,fOC> Mlrllmum • Up to 90 days loss of interest on'amounts withdrawn befor,e maturity on all certfficata accounts. also ptovldes big dis· counts on tickets to sport· ing and entertainment events ••• plus a whole list of fi'ee services: safe deposit boXes, money or- ders, travelers checks, and notary services. · Membership require· mentfor....,-$2,500 minimum' l:leJaQce. Coast lx>mlworsflOW receNe ... ,sooi.1e. membOrships en- tlt!lhinl\em to"" outside ~~ferr'al Se'!Jces. ASk about Jo nln11.at any Coast offiCe. ' " This is RCA Country. IN YOUR PENNEY RECORD DEPARTMENT ''"'' L ADltS LOV [ OUTLAWS WA\"1.UN Jl·:~NINC.S ~ ... ·' .,,.,~ .I I ·j " ,_1 ,• ...... ., .• -.... "'N llWfllontCI: 9ChA. Hlli_, U.Meelll•llNlll ...,.,.._ WIL.lftltll It~ Pl,WJ 3933 Wllsh~ IMf,. LA.. -.Zlll!I LA. CIVICcunnti: 2nd .t. BromdWay' • ~1102 HUNTINGTON RACMs 91 HUntlNlOfl cam.• {7141 897-1047 SANTA MOfll'JCAI 718 Wlllhlra INd. •3D074G .......... 10th .. PM:lf\c • aSJ.4341 --Eullllnd S"°PPfnl Qr.• 3SWZ01 PAHOM.MA cnn ChB• & v1n Nurs Bl\ld. • en.11n T-18751VemlrliBIYd.•34!MM514 ._.....,,., 3n:I & Locult • 437·74&1 UST LOI AMQD..ar etn & Soto • 266-4610 PWIOND Mii: 321 Diamond liar 81\td. • (71'4) 595-7525 Doll)' --•AM ta4 Pll All-~CMc -· -satunlQo IAlltolN Opening Soon: Offices In San Gabrfel, Tustin&LaMllllda. Albums 3• ft.DA ' w:TOfl Tapes 4• " ROii MISSINDYDU JMJ\E.Ell Two .record eat 411 ~ · We kn~~~~;fh1g.for. 1 • , '' Shop Sunday noon to~ P'.M. at the following stores: ROii FASHION ISLAND, Newport Beech (714) 6#-2313. HUNTINGTON CENTER, Huntington Beech (7141 892-7771. ( ... I . I • . . It's a Mad, Mad Ga111e VPI T ....... NEW YORK GIANTS' PETE ATHAS t45) .. ARGUES WITH REF OVER FUMBLE PLAY ... L-akers Clash With Warriors; Kings Triumph INGLEWOOD -The beefed-up Golden State Warriors, sporting one of the finest forwards ever to play the game, invade the Forum tonight for a National Basket· ball Association Clash with the derending world champion Los Angeles Lakers. Rick Barry is the only man ever lo lead both the NBA and the rival American Basketball Association in scor- ing and the lean tiger of the Warriors comes to town with a hot streak going. He tuts connected on all 24 free throws attempts this young season. Tbe Lakers. 6-2, are working on a five- game wirwing streak -far off their own • 33-game skein set a year ago en route to a 69-13 record. But the Lakers have looked almost as potent in recent games while the War- riors have looked sluggish in compiling a 3-2 mark. Thursday night the Warriors dropped a 94-93 decision to Chicago as Bob Love hit five shots in a row in the fourth period. V' INGLE\VOOO -Rookie John Kozak scored his first National Hockey League goal early in the fmsl period and veteran Ralph Bacltstrom's fourth of the season iced the Los Angeles Kings' J..I victory over AUanta Thursday night. Los Angeles' third victory in a row, the longest team winning streak in two seasons, made the Kings 4-6-0 and moved them into a tie for third place in the NHL West. V' ESSEN, Gennany -Americans Arthur Ashe, Cliff Richey and Bob Lutz registered victories Thursday in the West German pro tel'lnis tournament and ad- vanced to the quarterfinals. Ashe, of Richmond, Va .• beat Newport Beach's Roy Emerson 6-2, 6-3. Richey, of San Angelo, Tex .. defeated Cliff Dz:y9dale of South Africa 7-5, 6-3, while Lutt, of Los Angeles, eliminated Charles Pasarell of Puerto Rica 6-3. &-4. Australia's John Newcombe and West Germany's Wilhelm Bungert also ad· vanced lo the quarterfinals. Newcombe · ousted Colin Dibley of Australia 6-3, fH, and Bungert upset 1'1ark Cox of England 7-6. 6-4. ' NEW YORK -Members of the Oakland A's ari.d Cincinnati Reds will share a record $1,882,178.45 from the World Series, baseball com~ioner Bowie Kuhn's office announced Thurs- day. A spokesmsn also announced gross revenue from the seven-game Series of $3.954,542.99, the commissioner's share of $593,181.15, shares of $554,,73$.79 apiece for the American and NBtlmal League and cuts of $554,'m!llS lol' eacll or the pa.rtlcipating'clubs. · ii ' The play0n1' sllatt t.tal w.., !l{ured oo four gamefl\ the othqrs oa seveo games. ... AND IOWA STATE GRID COACH HOLDS BACK KEITH KERFIELD. Four Chicago Players Allen Tops Balloting For Ba seball All-star s NEW YORK (AP) -Baseball's world championship belongs to Oakland but Chicago dominates the 1972 Associated Press All-Star team selected by writers and broadcasters across the country. Tbe champion A 's failed to land any of tbe 10 Jirst team berths in the nationwide balloting but four players from Oicago - three from the National League Cubs and one from the American League White Sox -made the squad Slugging Dick Allen, the Sox' first baseman headed the balloting with 407 vote.s, tops for any player this season. last winter. batted .308 with YI home runs and US runs batted In. The three Cubs chosen were outfielder Billy Williams, whose :n homers matched Allen, lhlro baseman Ron Sanlo 111<1 shortstqp poo K""81nger. J.®hit plateau for his career, batted .312 for the Pirates. Two Cincinnati players, catcher Johnay Bench and second baseman Joe Morgan, made the team. Bench bounced bade from a poor season in 1971 and hit fO homers while driving in 125 runs for the Reds . A1organ, acquired from Houston ln a winter trade, scored 122 runs for the Reds , tops in the NL, and stole 58 bases while batting .292. 1be two pitchers named were left· hander Steve carlton of the Philadelphia Phillies and righthander Gaylord Perry of the Cleveland Indians. Both had remarkable seasons with losing teams. Carlton led the majors with 'El victories and had a 1.97 earned run average, pitching for the last-place Phillies. Perry was 2 ... 16 with a 1•.92 ERA for Wttl·plaee Cleveland. ..... --.. 1.. • ..... • ... ~ • Frid'1, Octobfr 27, 1972 DAILY PILOt IT Ex-Cal Recruit Clainl'' Papers Were Falsifie<J BERKELEY (AP) -A lormer Unlveralty ol Callfomla foolhall recruit h., mealed a terie.·af violatlont wblch led to Ibo NCAA decilkn lo leY)I two ad- dltlonal yws probation against Ibo Cal football P""'9M. I,oonle Cflltendon, who left lhe school without havin& played a minute ot vani· ty loothall, report<dly tolG the NCAA lhe details ol bow be W8J brought lo C.I under false pnllol""8 and fraudulent(y enrolled in a junior college. His testlmooy to the NCAA last year was made public 1bunday !or the first time. "1 don't want to blame the school in any way," Crittenden said. ..What hap- pened was the responsibility of a couple of guys who are oot there now. There was just a whole lot of illegal things going on" I was lucky enough to get away from there before It got past the point of ever getting straightened out." The NCAA COOncil .. port said that two Cal asslstanls had lraudulenUy ..... uec1 athletes in junior college ;without the~r knowledge ·where they received credit without attending cl:iss. As a result ol Ibo penalUes announced Wednesday for a list of 21 alleged in- fractions, CaJ's football team is on pro- bation until Feb. 1, 1975. Asked about Crittenden'! cbafges-, -Dave Maggard , Cal's director of inter-collegiate atblitics said, 11l'd rather not comment on names and penonallties ... But Maggard, while terming the NCAA probation "an extremely s'e v ere penalty," said lbal the Cal violations lhat brought it on were .. inexcusable." He said tho tcbool bad not decided wbetber to appeal lhe puni-.nt. Crittenden, oow one of the nation's leading receivers at University of Texas· El Paso, was recruited out of Hutchinson (Kan.) Junior C.Ollege after the J970 season. "Whal happened -are you ready for this -was that I committed myself to enroll at CaJ in December (1970) and an assistant coach entered me.in the winter qwirter at Laney JC •(in Oakland)," Crit· tenden said in the interview. "By the time I arrived in the Bay Area in March, I already had two months of work credited to me," be continued. "I had never been told they entered. me and they didn 't tell me right away once t got there." Crittenden said when he enrolled for the. spring quarter at Cal, an assistant coach told him he would have to drop out btcause there was a problem with bis ap. Team McLaren Seeks Revenge In Grand Prix RIVERSIDE (AP} -Team lt.fcLaren seeks revenge in Sunday's Tunes Grand Prix even though time has run out for the British based outfit to win the Cana- dian-American CUp title agatn. Penske's Porsche Panzers have already won the overall crown "''hich levels the 200-mile Grand Prix to a finale when the McLarens with Denis HuJme and Peter Revson hope to salvage a final victory. George Folbner of Arcadia, clinched the driving title two weeks ago at Laguna Seca in Monterey when he won by pass- ing his teammate Mark Donohue. In mid-summer Donohue, winner of lhe Indianapolis 500, crashed and Follmer was summoned to take over the Porsche for the Can-Am events. He won five times and Porsche replaced Team McLaren which had been the overall win- ner since 1968. A total purse of $96,870, including ac- cessory awards, will be divided in the Grand Prix for the sports car drivers with $15,000 and an automobile going to the winner. Second place will be worth 110,000 to the runner-up In the r~d of 33 with starting positions decided today. Additionally, there will be a Trans-Am 2.5 sedan race with Bobby Allison of stock car lame lalting pert. Allison will race a Dat3UD 510 in a 50 lap race covering 127.5 miles Saturday. He'll be a teammate of John Morton who has won five of the 10 races in this aeries. In ~ Can-Am. Follmer promi.set an all-out race, saying, "We won't need to have a tactical race. There lJ no r!ason for It." At Laguna Seca, it appeared that Donohue slowed down and let Follmer- t•ke lhe cbeclier<d nag 111<1 the title. Donohue had missed too many races to be In cooi.ntlon !or the UOe. pllcatlon, and· be wooldn't be •llilble for 1Prinl practke. Ile rewi:ned -to Newport News, Va., and found tho iradea from Laney waiting for him. "I wu amazed because I never even aaw Laney," Crlttenden aaid. "l mean where ls It? As I recall J was given credit Jn Eni!llsb, Spoecb and ,...elblng elte." He ""' 181d Iha! the grade point averafe wu U, eiractly what ii requir<d to transler from a junior college to a university. For 'ltbletes who have not graduated from a junior college, the NCAA requires a predicted 1.8 grade average for college work. ,, .. That'a where I fell short/' he aaid.., ... , hadn'I llnbhed at Hutchloton and ba!llJ, predicted 1.6 In high acbool." .' When he returned to Cal IOI' Ibo, $11 quarter Jn lll'll, Crltlendon aald be 'got 111Splcious when moments before a I'll"" in LitUe Rock acaJnat Arkan.au be '8' told he wasn't eligible lo play. .-( He said a sportswriter who had COile to see Crittendeo pJ.,. lllleOed lo ~ l!tory and Jnlrl>ducid him to friends-In tbe NCAA olflce at Kansas City. '". Crittenden left Cal, and while im NCAA investlgaled Ibo vlolatiooa, be Wd be worked at an auto parts warei..e. finished at Hutchinaoo and pre:pared:!or transfer to lfl'EP ~ Cliarges NC AA Olympic Group ~: ,> Shortchanged U .~. KANSAS CITY (AP) -The National Collegl>i. Alhletic Association h a s withdrawn from tbt United States Olym- pic Ccmmitteo, cbarg)Dg that tbe. USOC ha! "&bortcbanged America." Complete .-ganlzation ol lhe USOC waa demanded by the NCAA in its an· nouncement, made 111ur9day by Charles Neinas, cbalnnan of the NCAA Jntema· tional Relations Committee, and Samuel E. Barnes, NCAA secretary-treasurer. The NCAA's lknember Council l'hade the decision at Its fall meeting in Kno.1- ville, Tenn. "The NCAA strongly supporu con- tinuat,ion of the Olympic Games.'' Barnes said In a statement. Reorganization bas been sought for almost 10 year1, he said, and the council has "told our delegates to Ullllinue to.strive for reorganiution from within." "Not thia time. We have had enough." The NCAA is recommending ~bat its 700 member schools not help raise money for the USOC, and not appoint people to USOC committees. "'Ml.ls action should not be construed as recommending the United S t a t e s withdraw from the Olympic Games themselves," Nein as said, adding that the lnlemationaJ Relation& Committee hopes for improvement in the Games. Since CMgress gave USOC its charter and !uncled ii, the NCAA hopes Coogress will take a good look at It. Describing the USOC as selfserving, \Valter Byers, NCAA executiv'e director. said "I don't think it can be reorganized internally. It 's a classic case of in· breeding. The only external force with enough clout to bring It about is . . . CongreBll." "The troubles in Alunicb at the '72 games are only the latest example of the continuous, countless bunglings of the USOC," Barnes said. He was in Munich during the Games. "We feel we can do more for the studcnt·ath!etes within the United States Collegiate Sports Council and the World University G9lne.s than tlnugh the USOC," Barnes said. He also said the NCAA would reco~ mend to its more than 700 members that each college coach and athlete make the decision to "dettnn1ne within their own conscieDCe the extent to wh1cb they feel they can support the USOC as it i! organized at lhe present ti.me.'' The U.S. COlleg1ate Sp<>rts Council, which holds this country's franchise in the World Olympic Games, ls composed of the NCAA , National Af,soclation, and the American AuoclaUOO for Health, RAMS' GEDDES OUT WITH BROKEN LEG LOS ANGELES (AP) -Starting linebacker Ken Geddes, reactivated less than a· week ago, was deactivated Thurs· day by the Lo.1 Angeles Rams with a broken left leg. The HooW, =-pound G<ddeJ, a second-year pro from Nebruta, had been out 1lncc t b e preseaJOO with a broken right ann. He w.a• reactivated lut Saturday and played two quarters of the Rams' 15-12 victory over the Cincinnati Bengals. He came out In the third quarter with whal Ile said was a sprained ankle. X·ray111tunday dlacloced that Geddes' left fibula was broken and he was placed on the move list. A team apokesman said Geddes could be ready to pfay again in four to sl.1 weeks. Physical Education ~.Recreation. Barnes pointed out that Sen. John V. Tunney (0..CSlif.), already has received Senate approval for a natimal com- mission to investigate the USOC. The President \\'ould appoint se ven public members to the commissioo. Palmer Tied With 4 Others For Vegas Lead LAS VEGAS (AP) -Arnold Palmer had a twinkle in his eye as he sat and 'fa.Vored the six-under-par 65 he'd posted in the fim round of the $135,000 Sahara Invitational golf tournament. That gave the struggling old champion a share ol first place Thursday with four others and gave him -a good shot -for the second lime in as many weeks -of ending a 1$.month Victory famine . "Maybe this time,.. the 43--yeaN>ld figure, already a legend. said with 11 smik!, "maybe this time 1 can make It sl'and up. "After all," be grinned, "now I have a little more e:s:perience. That prusure gets to us rookies. We start choking down the stretch." It was an obvious reference to his col- lapse in the last two rounds of the 1ut ~'eek's Kaiser International. He'd led by two strokes after two rounds, but hiJ put~ ting touch deserted him and he finished weU back in the p.ict. Palmer's 65, forged over the 8,000-yard Saham-Nevada Countcy Cub course, put him in a first-round lie with vetenn Doug Sanders, rookie standout Larmy WadJdn.s, Larry Ziegler and Canadian George Knudson, the streaking winner ~ the Kaiser last week. Palrntr, Wadkins and Knudson pllljed Sahara-Nevada and the other t'A'O were at the slightly longer Las Vegas Country Club course, also a par 71 . · They'll switch couraes today with p,e last two~ at the Sahara-Nevada.• Jack Nicklaus, the man who h.. dominated the game this season with .ilx- victories and a record $214,000 ! in winnings, was just one stroke back lnd tied at 68 with Vietnam war hero Bod Allin . At 67 in the closely bunched field "Jl"e 43-year-old Art Wall , the 1959 Masten champion, Diclt l.oti and rooltle ~ \Vat.son. -: Lee Trevino, the British Open ~~ holder 111<1 lhe defeOO!ng champlOD. In this one, couJd do not better than ..: 70 and was far back in the f.eld. Pal.nl!t. facing a victory shutout in a caletidar year fOf' the first time in hiJ storied career, dtdn't have a bogey and misired only ooe green In his llOlid ~!fort . He blrdled three of the four par t'A·O with short putts and one reacblng the green with two hie lfis made a pair al 10.loot blnlle put .. hit a nine iron ll)r<e r~ from !he cup lhe other. 'But lbat WU just the first Palmer aald. "I'm gs>lng to tee if t just keep It going. "I've got to try to hold oo And kee going for tour mmd.I for • ci.twe." The powerful Nlcldaus hit iil1 wtlh ...up elflctency but had a llttle ble wttll tho ])1!11u. Ho milled el times from IS reet W leu. The amoon\ for eaCll lndlvldual playtr is not Jet kaown. but U has been estimat tha\,e'acts Olk.Jand ~yer wilt receive 121,d and fa9Ch• Clnclnnatt player will·ftt fis,ooo., V' Williams, who led National League bat· ters wfth a .333 average and had In rbi polled 364 votes, second on1.t to Allen's total. SNllO balled .!02 wllh 17 homers !or the Qib,s, and K..,Jn1er finished wtlh a .m average. Joining Williama in the outfield were Houston'• ICD&IUonaJ young Ce 1 a r Cedeno and veteran Plttsburah atar Roberto Clemente. Cedeno bolled .:1211 wllh 21 homeri and 81 rbl for t h e Astros, wblle Clem<nte, who ,...,hed lhe USC-Oregon Tilt T~ps Pacif ic-8 Slat LOS ANGELES -After g1vmg shortstop Maury Wills his release, the Los Angeles Dodgen have continued their youth movement dropping relief pitcher Ron Perranoold ancf ·purdlaalng the contracts ol fOl>r playen from their fann teams. The Dodgers bought lhe contracts ol ou!Ueld<r Von Josl\ua lrom Albuqu<rgue, where he led lhe P•clfic Coast Leaglie In ~a t t l n g with a .337 average, and pitchers Dennis James and Oreg Shanahan from El Puo and Rick Ni tz of Bakersfteld. • ' Braves Tr ade Carty ATtANTA -Rloo Oirry, tho 1'70 ma- jor laague baiting cbampioll when be hit .368, today "'IS lisded by tho AOanla Braves to !be Ttxu Rangon for pitcher Jim Panther. \ By Ille A-lated Pm1 Oreaon owns bock·to-bocl< vicUJrlel over lhe tlnlveraity of S o u t h e r n C.lllornia bu! COO<h John McKay of tilt Mtlmally top.ranltecl Trojans holds no arud«e a~ hla alma maier. "Ore1on beat aome people . . • they haven't beat Ibis 1 .. m. Moot ol lheae guys weren't here," aays McKay of hit 7. o Trojans who-mt! E.,..., On., Saw.. do.y seeking tbelr lllth PacUJe4 eo... ference victory. M••n"blle, UCLA. ~L overall and at :i. O Ille only other leam wllh a perlect - ference re<ord, bolts W Waablngton Stai., 2-1 Jn lhe league. The Coogan .., lhtlr looe leaauo ..... t• C.llfornla, wlll be pniteNc! ll Ibo game DIOMI anything to WS\1 In the final llandl!lP. The ll<art uted • llla1er who m1y live been lntllllble al lhe time. In other PIC .. , • .,. •• Slanlord (W) bolts 0nl0" Slat• (1.f) and Wt rt l:' alto Wafter "°"*"live deleala II lord and Soulhem Ctll, ...... t'allllt• (I.fl In S.altlt. M'any of tho Soulbern Oii ,._. "'° :DAILY l"ILOT ""9te bY Rk ... ,. Klltl!IW EDISON'S BILL FORO {71 ANO MATES ME ET CdM TONIGHT AT ORANGE COAST. Edison 8-point Favorite Over Tough Sea Kings Edison Higb's Express, unbeaten and apparently headed for a showdown with Santa Ana Valley a week hence, takes on 1971 champion Corona del Mar tonight in a key In1ne League test at Orange Coast College. 1be Chargers of Edison are eight-point favorites to keep Corona del Mar out of the victory colwnn in four circuit starts. It gets under way at 8. Coach Vince Asaro's Edison crew maintained its unbeaten skein with a 7-6 ib:ici.iioo over Estancia last week and enter tonighl's game healthy with the ex· ception of receiver Bob Granath. Granath is bobbled by a toe injury and Mark Weatherbee Md Ed Weinberger are expected to share the major responsibility in the pass receiving department. But Edison's forte is the blast over tackle With fullback Joe Demetrakos clearing the way for tailback Fred Hernandez. Hernandez has burned the opposition for 4l'Q yards and a 4.6 average. 1-le's scored twice and is a sure handed ball carrier, rarely fumbling. Mustangs Bid for Upset Against Eagles Tonight Estancia High's Eagles attempt to stay in the running for the Irvine League foot- ball championship tonight with an en- counts-against rlva1 Costa Mesa High at Newport Harbor High. It'• an 8 o'clock kickoff for the two schools 4n the sevenlh annual test. Estan- cia leads \n the series wi th three win!, two losses aOO a tie. Coach Phil Brown's 5--1 Eagles are two- touchdown favorites to dispose or the wtnless Mustangs of Costa Mesa behind tbe pa!H1ln combinotioo ol quarterbock Mike Mqner and tailback Dan Prin- cec<to. ground attack with pitchouts to Prin- ceotto the major point or concern for- Costa Mesa. Princeotto has rolled to a 5.9 average with 715 yards in 120 carries and he's scored six touchdowns. Magner Is highly effective, too, with a 4. l average and two touchdowns. Estancia was a prohibitive favorite to defeat Mesa the past two years -and succeeded by 18-16 and 14-7 margins. Quarterback Craig Way bas made Edison's attack click, however, with his fine short passing game. Way's allowed only three interceptions in 80 attempts and completed 46 of 80 fer 545 yards and three touchdowns. His comp I et ion perctntage is 57 .5. Edison's defense has also been a strong point for the Chargers. A.00 that's where coach Dave Holland's Sea Kings figure to place lheir hopes on an upset. Bob Jones at linebacker and Pat Lynch at defensive end are big items for the Sea Kings, along with a secondary con- sisting of John Grower, Jon Terry, Pat Walt and Bob Pfeiler. The offense revolves around the nm- ning and passing of quarterback Joe Tosti. who likes to sprint oot from the Sea Kings' I-formation. Ii"-~ EdilM o.t..e " "~ "' 190 Dematrak.01 ' " l:lllolt "' 17$ Ped! ' CG BllNIDW •• ·~ ·-MG c J. JohnMln '" •• ..... ' •G C•mpbell "' ISO Wlnctiell ' " fl. J~ "' "' "'' " " We11t!vblie "' 17$ C.mllbl!I " 08 w • ., "' '" •• ...,,_ co " H&rn•ndez m 1$5 Wtlnbe......-Cl " Demetrakos "' 150 J. Mor•di> • •• W&lnl»'9ft" •u 150 M. Morldo • CtM OlfenH CtlM Dlftflll " AndrlWS '" "" lYn(h • " Twvm1n "' 175 Jone1 ' •G St1w1rt "' "' Freil! ' c G1rn '" 'ZJll Polle • CG G1rr1tt "' 175 Sl•l""'-lr " LT ClemtncP '" llO Nelton MCI " IC"'11er ·~ 110 ¥<1-l•r " oo To!rl '" .. W1U ·~ " Behren1 "' m '~ co " """' ·~ 1'5 G.-Cl " Pit/~ '" 11$ Pfflltr • But the Eagles are entering the game jn poor physical corxlition and coach Jobn Sweazy'& Mustangs are spoiling for an """"· Sweazy is banking on quarterback Steve Sharp and tbe runnJng ol back! Dem1la Delany and Wayne Verlng. l1lat lr1o carried 30 times against Magnolia and figure to carry tbe bulk ol Mesa '• ground attack. Huntington Beach 's Goal -Playing Rol e of Spoiler Mesa's pa!Slng attack has been hurt whb tbe oppasition stealing a dozen ln- lereeptlons. E.Utcla, meanwhile, has a winning combination In Magner and Princeotto, and are looking for help from converted tailback Roy Butlellng at fullbeck. 1lle M, 11$-pound Butleling is Estan- cia'• fourth player Rt fullbaclt due to in- jurlea to Scott Gayner, Joo Hartley and DelW(,Y Snyder. The !alter returns to mld- dlquard with BuUellng at fullback. Magner likes to direct ht. males in a c..... lrMwl ~ C..1• ,,_... Dtflnl l.f' McC'Mmkll I.. l'IO 11 ,._i LE: l.T o..11 17t 1,, f'.,,.I, LT l.0 ~-17t 110 °"i. MO c; ,..,,._ 1n 1"' McOwlNl'I llT ltG ltroldt llP Its ~In .. ! 11r ~ lf7 11' O._, LS al YMMIN 1• IN I~ L.1 " .. --Jal '" 0.IMJ "' fla 0MT IN 111 ........... Dt ffl """"" '" Its DIMM DI ... ,..,.... ,. ,. ........ .,. ------.,,-.... . .. •T =--on .. "' c '" ··-... .,....._.. , .. .. ..,,.... 1" .. -'" ,. ,.,.,...,... 1• ,.. """""'-,. ,, ,...,. 1• f ltt•llo.9-1" ,.,.... flt l(llft ' , I:··-1: =. ,.if .... 11 ~= LI LT ':f •• ... "' '" '" .. " It's tuneup time for Bill Boswell's Westminster High juggernaut footba ll team tonight when the Lions tangle with an inexperienced Huntington Beach Oilers squad in Sunset ~ague action. KJckoff is at 8 on the Olien field . The Llons Will be playing tonight's game with one eye on a lhowdown con- f rontation with Western High'a Pioneers a week from Saturday with advance work foc that cne already started. The Lions, to a man, were on hand la.rt night for Westem'a game with Newport Harbor to gtt a -•I glimpse of the t~rated Orangt! County team • Undoubledly, tbe Pioneers will return the favor this evening. Both tea.ma are undeleated and highly regarded In the CIF (IM!COOd and third }. But 1etpng back "> tonlghf1 tussle with the ();kin. Coad! R'o1 l!rummetl knows full well the Job 'fa<Jni his Jluntlngtoo .S..ch aquad. It II a monwneotal ll!k and one next to the lmpoalblo with \\lettmlnoter a """9erVRilve 14-f)Dlnt flMle. llie u~ )1111 wel<ome the return of rtmllk'i llild Tii!y l\CCOlll&Ddo •hll• the Oil"1 will be 1!1tbou\ the oervlcel of Kyle Vu Amerotws; perhall' for tbi balance ol the .-....._ Ac:comAndo missed the last two Lions ! , games but is listed in the starting lineup tonight. He will have an opportunity to prep for the biggie with Western in tonigh t's ga me. An already thin Huntington Beach team can ill afford the loss of a back of Van Ammrort's caliber. Perhaps the key to success for the Oilers will be the throwing arm of sophomore quarterback Greg NltikoWBki. Willie the OUers haven't thrown much this year, Nitzko~ki proved he is capable of paas1ng with accuracy in the aeason opener when he completed four-- for-four. • W estern'·s Late Rally Down·s Newport, 14•10 By HOWARD L. UANDY OI .. Dllff" ,. ... t•H West.rn HfCb School won the ball game "> keep 114 uildeleated record lnt!ICt but Newport Harbor woo the accolades and came within ID eyelash of pWllllg the mllja< upoet" lbe prep -Tbunday night before fallilw to lbe power(UI Piooeen, lf..10, on the m.L!t..oaked win- nert1 flekl Coach Don . Lent's Newport Sailors outplayed lbe Ploneen In ev.,y depart- m..I exe<pt lbe 11COrel>oald and at the ball-time lntmnlosion put a damper on "°'""'""IOI actlvtti<s for tbe boots by leading, 111-0. The Salkn played ball control throqboul tbe first half, b a v I n g ~ for 11: 16 ol the 24 minutes ~ cludlrc 1 time coosuming drive on lbe fll'lt series that toot 9:31 to complete. The TllB did everything but nm tbe Piooeent out of the stadium In that first half, then came back to almost pull vic- tory out of the grasp of the CIF's No. i rated team late in the game. The Tars took over on their own 19 yard stripe with 3:32 left and the Plone<n leading, 14-10. Steve Buklcb, the quarterback who calmly directed Newport on repeated gains throoghout the nigh~ went to the air after the Tara were set back on a penalty maklng ti third and 11 at their own 11. Buklch hit Mike Phipps !or 20 yards, Mike Folsom for 11, Dana Kemper for 19 and Folaom again for 26 to move the ball • • -.... T-·-.... ..... TOl•l1 ''*"" OAM• tTATISTKI W11ttnl PASSINO HH " • ' .. Off '" .. .. .,,,, ~" '" • ' w ' • • ' '" "' u "' 3/34.0 ,,. "' 0 -10 1 -14 .... ... " " '" u '·' •• ' n 1J 1.1 625.5).l 15 &5 • s., V lU 2A <1,QI N....-t Nlrtw ,. pre "" " pct. 1, ' 1 ,,, . .ot w ..... ••01:..ur { to the Western 13 with 46 seconds re-. malnlng. His next attempt wa1 intercepted at lbe eJaht, however, by Mart Alvey and the Ploneen chOl::i to nm out the clock wllb 38 aeconda rtmalnlng. Newport drove II yards !or 114 first score 1!11h ail of the yardage to the We.stem II coming on a time coosumlng, IS.play ground game. Undaunted by a penalty that moved ii to tbe 17, Buldcb stepped back and threw a strike to Folsom fu-the end zone for a touchdown. Bob Uoven converted and lt wBS 7-0 with 3:29 len In the first q<laJter. The stublan Newport defense beld the Pionerra twice, then the offense aiatn ate up lbe clock with a drive that fook 7:54 and ended with I 21).yani field pol by Unvert wbt:n the nuWD1 1ame bo&· ged down at the four. Thia made It IH with 40 -ten In the ball. . Bob A'°'la, the Plonoen AJl.CIF quarterback candldale, dlrect<d Weatem to !ta flrat""""' with l :OS left In lbe third period. He threw a atrtte to Dan Pmu for the touchdown and Rock Weeb .lick- ed the =-Ion. The final Western aoore came on a five-yard plunge to cap a 74-yard cb1ve with Mite Bodkin golnc over with 7:2.1 lei! In tbe game. Kev Crestview Tilt Diahlos, San Clemente In Must Win Situation San CJemenle and MWkm Viejo, a pair of teams on the rebound, I.angle toolght at 8 o'clock tn a Crestview League football game at San ciemente. Both scOOols will be looking to regroup after demoralizing defeats l~t week and both will be seeking to keep league title hopes alive. Mission Viejo, a team that was ripped by Villa Park 26-7, bas a 2-1 record and is tied for the league lead with rour teams:. San Clemente, an upset 8-7 loser to KateJla is tied with four teams at 1-2 in league play and is 3-2 overall. Based on past performances, the gam@ stacks up as a defensive battle. San Clemente has allowed only s i x touchdowns in five games this season. Mlssk>n Viejo has he.Id opponents to a 13.4 scoring average overall and has held league opponents to an average of just over 10 points a game. Miasloo Viejo has relied heavily oo stunts defensively this season i n recording one shutout and holding two other opponents to one touchdown each. 'Ibe Diablos have gotten e:icellent defensive wort from linebackers Rlck Qirtls end Bob Bates, linemen Don Reeves and Bill Henry and back Kevin Eaton. San Clemente defensive standouts have included end Lonnie Hutti, llnebacken . \ Tim Vleisldes, Lance Swigert and Jerry1 Hawtlns end backs Jerry Key and CharUe Dargan. Offensively, the two teams have con- trastlog strengths. Mission Viejo featur6B a aolid ruMing game with 155-pound Dave Caldwell the workOOne. He's picked up nearly 400 yards rushing tlm season 1and averages four yards per carry. San Clemente, meanwhile, relies on the passing of 205-pound quarterback Bill Kenney as its major offensive weapon • Kenney bas pissed for 492 yards this season and ha3: a .506 completion petten- tage . lo C ......... otfeltM .... C..,._,. .,...... LE Kn 17S llO C•mMWltt Lil! LT FlllPOH ltS UO Ol-sburn LT LG Dout1ll 160 16S Mu1111!Y MG C H.nm.n 1'5 ltS JI-llT AG Hutti tu 1'5 Hutti Ill! RT J-.n lts UO V,_.i.ldll OLI RE Pl1'111n 175 J.10 twit.rt LI Qll """"" 19.5 115 H.wleh11 OLI F8 c-.... le 171 OW.Ml Cl RI fllau9h 1ol0 171 K.-, Cfl Hfl Ktli.y 1'5 l:U flbfler S MY -LE IMuer LT EkfllbrrrC. LG Goll« C MtlClnnn AG Tomet11 RT Hlinrr RE E11tw1 ..,_ Ill C•ldMll RI llllM\'ft FL. ~rry ---MY -180 lfS Moffitt "' "' ..... Ito 200 Alu 11.5 2GQ Eldleblfrl• 1rs 1u 11....,11 205 110 Wlllt. 110 170 C11rll1 1N 16S "'"" l50 lCI fl•Nt lU lCI HotM uo lJD hton " " •• "' •e " " •• •• •• .. • A-tany North froubl F U ID bas J racin T '" wltll went est In • •• . Frtd;u, October 27, 1972 DAILY PJLDT J9 Start Your Engines! Gardea Leads Ma1,er Dei Attack • WITH DEKE HOULGATE Monarchs • Ill Loop Crucial The cblll d lhe nll'J!t air was cut by the warmth d the fire in the pfl. Bapplness waa all lrOWld. II wa, an excllfng and il>- trlgulng Idea lo 1""'I of the gueela at the dude ranch jual outalde Welll, Nev. Some of them, Mldwest.emen, had never IC!Ol the desert, a ranch or even mountains before. On< of tbe guesto al Tony Fox's WJUlll4l pony under lhe Western stan wu the fastest man in tbe world, Gary Gabellcb, the lalost In a loog line of speed berooa who earned the term living legend on the blinding white 11ltpan It BonMvllle, utah. Gabellch bobbled around oo crulcheo, hil companion bandllng his plate In the food line that inched pasl lhe barbecue pll "Hell, w11ot am I using tb ... f'"'!" Gobellch uked of no- body in particular, looking down al his cnrtclleo. And wllh tbal he threw one of h1J crutchea into the fire. It was later pulled out, the bottom ,half burned away and Ibo top ball chamd. "By the flrat of the year, Babellcb oak!, "l plan lo throw away the other one too." The crutch burning waa 1 lypjcally brash and unpredletoble action for the wild young man Who dared to go 622.40.1 mph ln ,a rocket car and who b determined to recover 100 percent frotn a racing accident that severed a b a.n d, mangled a leg and crushed a foot. Fortunately fer Gabellch, the band waa rmored, the foot and leg rebuilt by a brilliant sur1eoo. So here he wu, six mouths after his near fatal accident, tosslng a crutch into the barebecue piL Normally wiry and mmcular, Gabellch js a shadow of his lonner atbletlc sell. He ha> lool 38 pounds, and be ha> lo exer- cise bclh anna and lega every day lo restore their vllaliiy, loot durlng a Jong term In the hospital. Araother Craek at Land S~ed Reeord AJnady lie tallll of rolng bock lo Bonneville !0< llllOtber cracli al rahing the Lud Speed -. Be bows be'll bave .. hurry. Craig Br<edlove b already balldlng bl1 Ntbt car. Ari As· fH1 a&)'I he has a CIJ' ready to 10. Tbe Raltlau elalm they barre • ar too. The oely apparont holdup 11 Uni developmenL ..,,.,. Im~ a tire capable of nDllllof llfely 11 711 mpil yet. Bat theN b talk of atbg lofld wlleell, meaning no lln!s woeld be aeed<cL Gabellcla 1peadl 11 Uttle tlme la a wt.eelcbaJr u lte can stand, ud Ile IDttl out of hll llome la Lo11 Be.acl u ofteD and for u IOllg u Ile cu take It Tiie trip to 8oDDevWe a couple of weelll ago,... loogh pbyalcally, bat olmoally qlfle a look:. Two tblnp ttud It) bl• path loday -lhe need i... time lo 1eattll for a 1pon10r to pr11y for buDdln& lllJ aen record car and cith to pay medical upea1e1. He'll blve to look for • spon10r by bfmHlf, bat a banclt of h1I friend• llave organlltd a benefit party for him to assist wftb tbe other matter. G117 Gabellcb Night wW be beld Wedntlday, Nov. l, at the Los Aqeles Convent.Son. Center dminl lite Soatltera California Internat&oall Auto SHw. If yoa want to meet W1 remarbble say, It'll only cott $S t.o ret into tlte party. If you are ID or near he Los Angeles area, we hope you wm. There It stm anotber crutcb to 10. M-11 Traeka In Flnanelal Troubles Mlcbigan, Texas, Atlanta, Sears Point and now Ontario. Many of the great and near great auto racing lracb oo .the North American continent are having monumental financial troubles. Failure of Donnybrooke lo live up lo especlatiom pr of Tex· u and Michlgan to be made available through bankruptcy court has Jeopardized both the Cootinelllal and Trans-American road racing series. Gooe from the USAC venue b ~· Dead Is Ille air· porl coorae at Sebring. Loot lo tbe sport In a jumble of poUUcal and legal tangl~ is Swnmlt PoinL Dallas bas slipped to the minors. Operating cl08e to tbe vest are Riverside, Seattle, At- lanta, Phoenl:s:, Bryar and Mid-America. This was supppoed lo be tile Sport of the ros. Whal happened? Traeks Etnbat'l'Pseel 1J11 /tlangement In almost every case poor manacement bu been combined wltb unrealllUc gW IO embarrass the trackl that opened or went bl& tlnte la an efrort to ca1ll. In oa the grut swge of inter- est In moter racing. llterest ls IUll great and growing, but tllj: am.attar way auto raclng Is organbed and promoted preveatl It from achlev· in< anyUdag near tbe potenlla1 lffll for ft by vlllonarlel like Davkl Lockton, Lea RJcbter, Larry LoPatln, Jim Kutt and Haak Loudenbacb. 1'tll'fle )'elfl qo tbese men all beaded giant orpahatlonJ in the sport. Only Richter survives u preslde.nt of Rlvullde Intematlonol Rocewoy. D.t.JLY ,ILOT Slaff ...... UNIVERSITY .HIGH RECEIVER TIM IGOE. University Squares Off Against Rugged Sonora University High's football team will complete a four week series of games with the Orange League's upper echelon teams when it tangles with Sonora tonight. Game time ls 7:30 at the La Habra H1gb School rleld at La Habra. Coach Jerry Redrnan's Tro- jans are sill seeking their firs! win of the season as they square off agalmt the defen- ding league champion Raiders. In three previous gam"' agalmt league title contenders Brea, Valencia and Sad- dleback the Trojans have been outscored by an aver,!lge of 28 point! per game. And in Sonora, Redman doesn't see too big a drop in the caliber of competition. jans set school records for passes attempted, passes com- pleted and yards gained pass- ing for the second time this season in last week's loss to Valencia. The Trojans picked up 265 yards lhtougb tbe air as quarterbacks Mike O'Loughlin and Gary Wilson combined to complete 19 passes in 37 at- tempts. End> Tim Igoe, Ray Hale and baUbocJi Murry Graham have been the main University receivers. Sonora and University have met only once before, with .Sonora taking a 28-0 victory last season. tI j""~"'o"'"" '" , .. '" ~~A ·~ 'l' " "I 11 ... r•:i..i:: ·~ Q ~LOUii n , .. " -, .. Hll r•Mm ·~ Sii W•llrl8 ... lj lt~wnlty DllMM "' '~ , .. :r ~ "' ,. ~i ~~do •n '" b\ ~\rno ·~ ·~ 01!1 Hie '" 011 ·~ '" OB G ... 11 ... WALNUT -Anolber major coa!rootatloo In Angelus 1-foolbell IClloo b on tap lonllbl .. ,,...., 1 Del IlJi)l'a Mooarcba batUe Bl3hop Amit'• Lancer• at ML San Antonio COIJeC•. '!be klckuff Is tcbeduled for I and ceacb Bob Woods' Monorcha bave been lnslllled four-point favorllos lo tum back the BWlop Amat lhreat. Dana Hills Lopsided Underdog Dana Hilla High School's .fledgling football t.lm will go for its first win of the season toelghl at Bt<a Illgh School at 8 o'clock. But the Dolphins likely will be bt over their beads against unbeaten Brea, Ule seventh rated 2-A team in the CIF, and the Wildcats are substantial favorites. Brea Is 5-0 and, along with Valencia, the favurite to win the Orange League cham· pionship. Dolphins' quarterback Bill Springman has thrown a touchdown pass ln every game he's played tbls year, but Dana Hills may find It Impossible to run agaimt Brea's strong defensive unit. Offensively the Wiidcats: like to nm, with Steve Seeba (320 yards) and Keith Redman (269 yards) carrying the ball. They also have a top quarterback ln Corey Leyton. Dana Hills coach Tcny Leon calls end Dan Carpenter "fan- tastic, and what makes him morf: effective is that they have other receivers they can go to. You can't concentrate on stopping Carpenter. "But they don't pass much because their running game does so well. They aren't rea1 fancy and don't do a lot of things, but they don't have to." Brea coach Doug Keebler is returning the Wildcats to the grid prominence they enjoyed In the late '50s and early '60s. From 1959 to 1963 Brea won four CIF championships. "I think the winning attitude ill in all people and youngsters-," Kechter says. Dalla HU .. OfftnMI '" 11 t~ "' . ~· ltt £ = .... "' ~~ FOiier '" fl:OdrioueE "' 'I Sodn41m111 >M Fii Mal'90fl "' k l !l,lc;k '" FL Uenholm "' 0.M Hllll DllfenM tf ~ '" lU kl C:t~ "' . ·-'" Rf C•uldv "" L. sr..n:er "' "' """•l~• ... l "' 08 E119"llalm '" DO foll~los "' pa UttO<I '" Early tilts 1m1ntb muagement of Ontario Motor Speedway flaaUy made lb loq-awalted public admlaalon thal $! mllllon a year tn lnterelt charges oa tlte mUldpal revenue bonds told to finance buDdlng the place was toe large a financial burden. As of Dec. 15 speed"•)' managemeDt wW be in default of tta lease. City offtclll• wtJo control tbe operators through a non.profit eorporatloa. expect a new agreement to be worked out with the boadbolden so that nctai can continue. But it lln't Dec. 15 yet, and that remains to be lffll, Texas Speedtea11 Shut Doten "They've been doing well this year, even though they've lost to some good football teams," Redman says . .. They've got some good hit- ters up front , especially in the offensive line and they're just as physical as they were last year. "They don't have the skilled athletes that they had last year at quarterback, end and runrllng backs and that has hurt them ." Laguna, Tigers Clash In Orange Loop Tilt ?.fichlgan International Speedway and Atlanta Intemat.ional Raceway continue to operate under ru1es of bankruptcy, but a Texas judge shut down T ex a s International Speedway alto- gether. · One of the unfortunate side effects of poor management and promotion, whether you are a fan or a competitor, is the loss of one of the sport's largest commercial supporters, L&M Cigar· ettes. U.M bas dropped the Cootlnental series, possibly to take oo the US,\C champk>n.!h.lp trail or maybe IODlething else Jn sports. Redman considers t h e Raiders to be basically a run- nlng team, which features halfback Dan Jones. Jones, a 140-pound junior rushed for 186 yards last week as the Raiders ripped Dana Hills. University's offense ha s moved almost exclusively by the pass this season. The Tro- Vikes, Saints Collide Santa Ana Tabbed to Win Su1iset Tiff With faint playoff hopes still lingering, surging Santa Ann lllgh School battles Marina in a sunset League football game at Westminster High School tonight (8 o'clock). Santa Ana Is an elahl1>olnt favorite to dispose of the Vlk· lngs. Both teams are W. Santa Ana, alter louet to Mater Del, We.at.em a n d W_,lnsler """1Dll a win over Corol'll de1 Mar, came on lo la1ock off Pf"Vloualy Un- beaten Anahtlm, 14-7, laal week and cooch Tam Btildwln attrlbut" II lo the bealtb of quarterback Mike Molina. "He bad a llhoulder Injury that really threw bil tlmlnc off." Bald in explains. ""nle In- jury I• heeled now •nd I thlnll yoo'~ going to "' him l'llllly start to throw wcill." Thf.re has never been any doubt of ,ft1olinB'a 1bUlty to run out of the wllhbone -. ·--- formation and Baldwin hope.11 the big junior can caJTY the Saints into the CIF playoffs as a """"" place team. "Remember, Westminster 11111 baa to play Watem and Anaheim and Anol>eiln has ID play Western and Loera," he says. .. straoaer things have "'-1ad." For Marllll'a !AM Wheeler, It may be a repel! of last week'• game. '!be Vlklng.S ..... burled ,... by WOIUlllnsla'. "Santi Ana iJD't nearly I S bl&_ u Westmlmtt1\ b u t they're alrfully q u i c k , ' ' Wheller faYI. ' ' T h e y ' r e primarily a runntg ltam and we have lo coolaln their out.Ide game. u Marina radlcollr·al-Ill offensive p.me plan f o r Wtslmlnster, throwing Z I tlmff, 1lmost u many passet .. tile ueln -1n lb 1our prevloul games. "tr he has adequate pro- tection Grtg Foster can throw with anyone," Wheeler says, "but as to whether or not we'll pass as much against Santa Ana, 1 can't l'f!ally say." But Bal<holn Is looking for an aerial -from tbe Vllc- lnga. 111 th.lilt they'll ttwow on us and FOiier Is a lnmendooa paaer."' be llyl. "Maybe II'• just that they got behind and bod lo poa, but I lblnl< they are a much bettc !elm wbeo they're throwing. ti Like a fighter who has been decked the first two rounds, Lagwia Beach High School's football team will try to pick itself up off the canvas t.onight, hosting Valencia at 8 o'clock. The Artists raced through their pre-league s c h e d u I e unbeaten, but have fallen to Brea and Saddleback In con- secutive league games. But things won't get any easier against Valencia, co- favorite with Brea for the Orange Laague UUe. Laguna coach Hal Akins goes one step further. "l think they're the strongest team in the league," he says." Actually, the Artists have not given them.!M!lves much of a chance in their last two gamea, fumbling seven times against Stea and giving up three touchdowns on fumbles lo Saddltbect. "thope we can cure t0me of thll lt:uff, It's ao ftuatrating," 11,)'1 Atinl. "We lolt tour ex- chanlee 1nm the cenw 1o the quarWl>tct and that't juot rldlculoul. '"11wre'1 no way Sadd1eback -:ie !IOlnll better lhtn us." Valencia eo&eh Dav I Plndney lmb lo a-. 0'lbat Slddleback game wu • Pro Results no Indication of Laguna's true strength," he says. "The teams I like to compare them with are Brea and E I Dorado." Laguna lost to Brea, 2trl5, and beat El Do<ado, 34-32. Both teams were unbeaten wben Lagwia played them. Tonight's cOnte!t promises to be a ground-oriented. one. Valencia puses only when neces.ury and Laguna bl even mott hesitant lo put the boll up. "Dave Marriner ls really abarp," llYI Pinckney of Laguna'• ace acatback. "I'd heard roporls •bout h I • ability. but It wasn't until I saw films that I believed them." Marriner ha> rolled up 504 yards ln 69 carrlea and play• every game with at least one defensive man keying on him. Valencia hi• two IOl1d ruMel'll In Diet SletiD'!" and llarT)' Loomis and • slandout •nd In Richard Hernande~ And Volencla quartertacl< Paul LoBorde baa thrown aeven touchdown puses, all of tbom IOIDll lo llemandei. • It'• a must win altuatlon for Mate Del .. the -·ten Mooarchs trail St. Paul (UJ and Bilhop Amat (l<I) In thb second wecli of Angelus play. the runni:lg of Jim Gardea and Ule puslog ol Steve MartJn-- dalt, 1 pair of juniors, for the bullc of their yardage. come up lo expoctollon In Iha aerial game. So it'• the running <if junior ba<b C!1tb Grllfln, Dave Amador and Terry Garrigan that figure to present Mater Dei with most or lts: defenaive problems, The key lo the Monorehs' attack: is in the offensive line. Gardea ts the Orange c:oast area's leading scorer with 50 poinl.J Oil eight touchdowns and a two-point conversion. On lhe left side are tight end Jeff Clark, tackle Mille Pegan and guard John Roth. He's carried 94 tlmes for 558 y4,fds and a 5.9 average. M~llr o.l otff- l li! ~larl I t~ -~n On the rlgbl aide are guard Tim Grzecka and tackle Bob Alvarez. C I a r k aometimes moves to the right side when Mater Del finds the weakness at that point in the opponent's deftme. And Martindale's paasing bas been excellent. His low fastball ha.! been on target 28 or 54.. attemptl for 401 yards and one touchdown. -re~ ltl!: Mumlol'd oa """rttnc1111 L.H G••OH ~~ w;~.. u ~,.,.Del C»'- And while the heavy work is being dor>e up front, the Monarchs will be counting on Amat. meanwhile, likes to utilize a ball-control type of. rense built around t h e wishbone fonnatioo. E StvN 'ij T B<1ec1 ll T Jri;Je4 ti~ l!ffa Rov ltortl Quarterback Mike Garcia Is a sleady performer but hasn't .... ,.~ ............. s Muml<lo'd BOB HEUSSER PRESENTS SUNSET FORD'S FOOTBALL FORECAST .._. ...... , ..... Sal•.., .., ,.... sJW. ..,...,... fot ..,. ., .. , '°' ,,..,, tMr. doeY't .,,._ to be 'fWf ..n. Ho..-. tt..ro dkl•'t eppow to be toe .-• tfMblo lent weetdd ellMr, N tM roof Uter .. ly c...ile!! Co.kl YH beUe¥e C.lorodo, 0...,.. & Mllloeri? Not to --"" Nny & ffo..W.1 Ti-to toko dowo tM "Go" Flsli&.f" U,11 & 9lw tfle crystof NII • few oma ,..,., TMro h 11 bl9 thnalllOtJ to•M lo ,.,. dh· toftco 011d tflo Co119G" ef W•htt101t Stcft 90 oftor Ha.tty fcrrONd UCLA. TM ColMJOB ore 901"9 to "' ... this tho 9a1M of the .... 0111 tM Wfft Coast, 11111lns tho Mltdorrotecf Saturday, Oct 28-Major Coll1r11 Al•b•m• 31 At110n• H Southern Ml11l111ippl 0 El P1so 1 Ariton• St.It. 27 Air Force 20 Arkanu1 31 Norlh Te•11 I Auburn 2~ florlde Stile 20 l!l•ylot 20 Bowllnt Gl'Ml'I 33 8rigt.•m Youn1 21 Buck Mii 14 Teu1 A•M 17 Mlr:shall 1 Colorado Slate I O.vidwn 20 Citlldel 2S Clemson Jl Co\11111 ll Wake Forest 12 Colorado lO Ml1$0Ut1 1 Dlrtmouth 21 H•rY•rd 11 Dlyt:on 2l Delaw1,. 23 Orak• 31 V.M.I, I T~mple 17 New Me".lfca St.Ill• I """ ,, E•st Clrolln.1 35 Geof°ll• 17 Georsia Tecl'I 21 HovstOfl 29 lndlanl 20 IOWI SIN 27 Kent Stllte 20 N•vy 20 furmen 6 Kentuck1 1 Tulane 11 Mlululppl Stl• 20 North-\•m 14 Kan ... 1 1 Horthetri UlllMltt lS Louisvilf9 40 Clnclnrleti U Maryland 21 Memphis St.t. 24 Mi•ml, Fle. 21 Ml1ml {Ol'llo) 27 Michlpn 35 Mlchl1"an Stlt. 29 MJ11l1slppl 22 Nebrask1 o&.!J vtrslnl• 13 Tul:UI 22 Army 1 Toledo 14 Mlnnno'lll 1 tow• I Vanderbilt 10 Ok!•l'lotl'-. Stile 1 No. C•rol!n• St.Ito 21 South C1roUn• 10 Not,. Dllm• 24 Ohio Stllte 31 T.C.U. 1 Wiscon1rn 7 Okla horn• 45 Pecftlc Jl K1nM1 st.I• 0 Idaho 1J Pennsytvanre 25 Penn Stabl 11 Pltlsburth 22 Pun:lue 17 ll:Utpt"I 21 San Olell' Siii• 26 San Jose Stele 27 Southern Cel 4Z S.1.4.U. :n Pt1noeton 2l West Vlr1Jnl1 14 s1racu1e 21 II Inola 10 Columbl• 17 Fre1no Shit• 14 Lona 8•1ch 21 o .. .-on I T1•11 Tech lO SW Loulsl•n• 17 Stanford ~ Tet11'1HSM 41 At11niloo I °"911Qn Stlote I H1w1U 1 Te.us 25 Rice 14 U.C.l.A n Utal'I 2l W1shln1ton Sl•I• 10 Naw MPlco 21 Utah Stato 20 VIH•nov• 20 V.P.I. 22 W1shl111'1on 2S W•st T•ut 15 W)oomll'll t Holy Crosa 11 WJIU1m .. Ma.., 1 C•Ufornl1 14 Wlchll• t Western Mlchl11n 21 X•Yler 21 Y1lt1 2l Ohio u n You nplOWl'I U Cornell 17 c....,. ce.,,,,.,, t.n .,.., . .....,. " -.., wfttl th 9*h & pldi UCLA. TIMlt IJt lltM *w-do-......_ tM SMMn Md~•'-'.,..., wlll tote ,-. .. n•kiff•"'t ht" ........... day of coW ..,...,, A.ad WON ttief llttle fr--. ~-lios .... wlttl Coland• - -WHll i..c..11t IW1t91 ~I JISI aN ILUllEL A.ad po._ H ... """"' lee• wlll cootlltM Ifs wl1t111S., w..,.. fT•ac"" Wopesbtlry by 24 pohm. THt'• tt for .... .,... '-tboll ,, .... ...,, ...... urda & letMrs co•I .. : or i.o... ,-, ttop l1t at s.. .... ford. W• •lwcrrl kaw ts.e to talk up a footboll 9C"M· Other G1m1s-Soulh and Southwest 1'ppe!ach!1n 24 Arltans•1 Tech 20 Austin Puy 24 etuefleld 211 C.r1on-Ne....m1n 27 Ch•tl<lr>OoCI U £1st Teus 24 Ee1tern Ke,.,tuc!ly 20 Ell11beth City 19 Elon 2i r tonnee 17 H•ml>den-S)'dney 23 H1rdln1 22 Howe rd 42 HOW•rd P9Yf'll 21 Jacksonville 17 Ke ntucky SUie 20 lamt• 21 Llv!n,.ton 17 loul1l1n1 Tech J5 McN9'h41 JO Newber!'J' 20 P,.lbytetl•l'I 22 "'"" .. ~-. SOUtl'lem Stat. 15 ~.TIM. U Teit11A&..I 21 Tens L.&11.M,.n to Trinltf 3J Wetl liberty 2l'i Wul V•. Sht. l7 Western Kentucky 14 [est T•nMlllff D St•t1 Cotl•P Art. 11 Atk,·MOntlc-llo U West Ve. we1_.ft 1 lenolr-Rhyrlll U T1nne1'" Ttctl 20 SW Te•ts 20 Mun1y 17 ra.,.ttevlll• 14 Woffon:I 17 Hendenon U Emory &. Henry 14 Mlulssippl Coll111 20 l11moton D Sim HouatOfl 1 W•stem C.rotlne a Pin• etufr 14 Arklr'IMS St.lit It O.lla 7 SE loulllant I i~ford ~ c...... u Wett•m M•r)'l•nd nu OU•cl'lltll cent.. 11 T1rleWn I MeMurry 11 E. Cenl,.I Oklthom• 7 Conc:ord 7 Glenville lS Morehe•d 1 Oth1r Games-Far West Abllt111to Chrlttlan 30 C•I Lutheran 24 Ctl Poly IS.LO,) 32 C.rt1nl W•shlnrton 20 Chico Stat• n co10,.do Coll•P 21 Colorado Mlnu 17 COlo..00 Wutem 27 0."11 21 Fullerton 16 Humboldt 26 lot An .. ,.. 14 Norttiem Co1M9de 17 Occident•• 14 PKlf;c L.uthe,.it 17 Pupl Sound 24 Redl1nd1 14 '""'raid• 22 S.11 FerntrldO 26 Southern Of910" 21 Wtber 2' Whitworth .SI Lilll••n NIW Mulco 1 LaV•rne 11 Neved<I (RenoJ f Eattern W•1hf111ton 7 S•n franclaco St•te 12 W•1hlnrton, Mo. lf ft. LeW\1 U Westmln1t1• 1 H•ywltd 15 Ca! Poly (f'omon•) 7 SacrJmento 10 U.S.1.U. 1l W•shbum I Pomon1 12 1e11ti.o Co11e1• 6 Pot11•nd ' c·-... monl J W1'11lll11 14 Nortit.rn Artzo111 , 1 WHlern oN11111n11011 14 NeY3da (Lit Yeps) II Ore1on Ttcl'I I SUNDAY, OCTOIEI 2t lM ..... , •.•.• 24 OeloW ...... 21 Ml!tlMlll ••twa•n IHd<ln "' lh• Al'C ..... Hl'C Wetltrl'I Dllll•lt-11'1 Ml , .. l•r·ftkl'IMI • """"""' ""'' lflll l\IH '°"'1111 " 1 ,,..view "' 1•rs 511per lftl •• NewYorlhtt •..... 11 N-l1t9laftd •••••• 14 ~llOlllO o. • """' .. twe WHk1 .,,,. Wfltl'I J•l1 t1111111to11 Pitt, 41·1S ••• ft.1l"lhtr ,,..,.II ffr """' •n1t•n41 11111 .,.. 11 In SflM 511dlvm. Cl11Cl11•atl •••••• 27 H.-t.tt ••..•• 11 51UI ltldlflt Al'C Cttllr•I D,.,lllln ...... l,.._'t ........ -""'1'1119 11 MIM -1ra ........ 11 .. rll" " l1o1111of 0 1"" •Miiier llefHI, w...,..... ...... 11 Now YMti: G...,_., •••• 10 OlHtl 91-Clllt"""' c.fN-Nctl •* lll!Mntllp "' N-J-4.. 11: .... ll'll '"°"' Wdi ,.l"" .... tef N-y.,..,, IN ""*' Y<lllkff S!Ml-M win l'I' IMCl'll9-. Ms.-1 •.•••• 24 ................. 10 c"'"' C'HUll,. C111f1f9 """"'' "' •11? 111Klll 11e11 • Def9lllllM' e.a.m_.. ... ~ ... ••'1 -.r111 •• , Ml•ml 11•'1'1 \lflhttt,.._ •lib tel ... De\11111111 • •• c.ltl CH tMI f'fthb.,P . . . • . . JJ lofhi. . . . . . . 1 7 ......... I """ 4 • • • 11 .. ..,., 4 IN 1 ..... ""'"" ""'' •fllll ....... 1111 Alie Ctllfrll DfvlllM .... ...,. tame ,....,.. 111 klff•lf 11•1 "'"" ,....intllL C9tk .......... 10 St. 1-h ..••• , 16 l .. n • ,._,,.,._..ntnf1....,.f1r.<1<11 .. ...., 09Wt!MI ti ..... CMctt-IMtflef' lfl~ litl911N • • • l•rffllf' 1..-11 fW C.N .. •lrtltd'I' '""time ltMA, ·-City ...••• 26 S.11 D ... o ••.••. 20 ••c WllMflt DIVlllen r1v•l1 "'"""" ,. ..... ..-Cl Wllh 01•111111. A.11111"" "'"'"' .. ""' Chi.II' ewrt9ffft•• II Mt fl(fW Ill MIC-"' lhh -· ... , .............. 10 c;;,......., ...... lf "_, .... Mii( Ctfllr•I IM'l'lllH Mltle • , • fine ,......... l'IC•tr q .. r1..tt.dl •t•ln1f Kr•mMlltf ..,.....,._... 'flll.lfll q .. n.tMdl, ......... llper1Mcl mltfll Ml .. , "'' llotrt, Naw Ort... ...... 21 ... 1 .... 1r.•"' •••.•• zo 1'"'91M ..,_ Nl'C cetlt""'"'"" , , . l•lllh """ "°'"'"'"'hi 1dv1a ,,,.. •1111 • IMre •~119r!111KM eu•rterllKa ..... 1'1111911 ..., \IMl'I lelt .......... Cflllh. ............ 21 Seit "'-cllC• •••••• 11 .,._. llldt•ep ~,,.l'Ndf lltvt S~ .... , M In Nr lrl\I ... •IMt II~ l'"•k-. MW 4 •lllf I. lt•MI tlVlllll lllw ....,. Afllnl• llfl M In ..... ff "*"' Cf'IWt C.._.._, •••••• 27 h9"f .... , . Zl Tlllt ..-c:tw1.i ....... ...-t .......,... •II -It, lllft 11 1111• ,-.lllt Wt"re Ml _. Whl ftytti" t11wW .. • • , C ....... 111 W J .... J •••• .._.. w.ertllll tllolh lff Yllllntl• ••• TIM .. lllli19!ICI If -<fY'f•I ... II tt ltr l9lfl..,.. ..,._ h. Cwttln!J Ml Ille llollt , •• ,.,._.,, ... M"¥ M .. ,_ .... ,,.., """""' ,.,..,...,, ~ t• . , . ,, rtoflt, M ............ 1 ""' fff tt1 tft,.._ If Alf. MONDAY, OCTOUI JI, 1'12 ............ u ~ ...... 1J ...... '"""" • 'f IJIClln fW ...., .................. ttnt ..... tnf IMr'I ..... -.. M.-.., ... ,,....... ""'*"" .. ~ Take Valley fiew Turi Off flll ~ • . • ;. • . ·-. " , .. ·.· ;- I ,. -· • " " .. ·I J 1 • • ' . " 1• • ' .. DAILY P[LOT What's Doing Outdoors JIM NIEMIEC Duck hunters Y.'ere rewarded with lx:ttcr than avuage waterfo\\11 thi~ past week as new nights of ducks moved into I.be Southland. . Huntin.g w::is rated very good at private clubs aroond the Salton Sea as most timlts consisted ol sprig and wigeon. The public shooting area of Wist.er on the south eOO of the sea pro- duced fair hunting for scatter gunners. Clubs in Orange and Riverside counties were faced with fog early in the morning, but this change in weather seemed to ~ . prove hunting. Hunting was good in the \Vasco area as new bird! from Northern California have moved Into ponds around the Kem Wildlife Refuge. There is a good population of sprig, teal, spoon· Jes and mallards in tJie central valley. ,. This weekend should produ ce fair to good shooting for duck m hunters as ('{)Id weather in the Pacific Northwest is starting to · · force ducks and geese southward. No Season on Ca11vasbulu This weekend marks the open.Ing of the honker buaU.a.g sea· son in the Southland zone. Even though there art not too many Canadians In Southern Califonda currently it won't be too long before large V's are spotted in. Southland skies. Hunters are to be reminded that this year there is no sea- 5<10 on canvasbacks. The birds are easily identtned by their . large bodies, long sloping beads, white undersides and the fact : lbat they come ln low kl decoys wUhmst circling as de most puddle ducks. Most Cans are found on deep, large takes, but when bunting pressute gets heavier they wlll start sho\\'fag up on all types of open water. fl1tall Population Down, Scattered The 1972 quail season opens Saturday but the prospects for ·a good opener are low. The rain we had last week scattered the ·~mall coveys of birds and hunters will have to work extremely :~ard to bag a limit. ;: Some of the better areas along the western slopes ol tbe :~gh Sierra show a slight increase in quail, but for the remaind· •)tr of Southern California the valley quail population is down : 1rom previous years. : : • There is very little public bunting area open this season : j>rimarily due to the high fire danger which still exists. .. ::: Marlin fishing Slows ::: J\.larlln fishing bas slowed down considerably this p:,tst week , )rimarlly due tu bad weather and the tact of boats out In seareh · :or splkebllb.. _ One marlin was ctte'Ckedi~""it-~e Balboa Angling CIUb earl· \er tbis week by Dr. Don Pinder of Newport Beacb. Dr. Pinder was fishing aboard the sportfisber Makalra near Long Point when a IZZ.pound marlin hit bis phsycbobead jig. There are still lots of marlin in local waters, but it 's a bit • or miss proposition as to whether the ·billlisb \\'ill bile on any ;given da y. .· ': Angler Loses 17•h·ho11r Battle ::~ Doug Wright of Costa Mesa lost a tough fight with a broad· ; '?ill this week near Santa Barbara Island. Wrigllt boo~ed the :~v.1ordfish. whose weight was estimated at close to 400 pounds ::0n 50 pound tackle. , ' :: After I7 ih hours or bat lling the giant, the fish came unbotton-'.;tcl. \Vright had fought the fish haU of one day and all through '.(lie following night. Keeping the boat Dreadnaught in the right 'jlostion all night was skipper Mike Blower. ;: Bonito Fi1hh1g Tops ha Oceall : : Bonko aeUon for harbor area anglers pick~ up this past ;week as boats running out of botil Art's Landing and Davey's j.ocker retamed to the docks with above avuage .catches of the ;lard fighting game fisb. : : In addition to boneheads, anglers are also picking up bass, :bottom fish, small barracuda and an occasional yellowtail. ~peaking of yellowtail , action still remains very good at the ,:Oronado Islands as small loads of fishermen are getting into .. ,ame pretty good fishing for yellows. Bay anglers are still picking up nfce stringers of bay and ~tted bays while anglers fishing from shore report an up. awing in spotfln croaker and halibut fishing. • Fishing Consistent off Baj11 : Marlin. sailfish, dolphin .and roosterfish are rewarding ang- :!ers fishing in Mexjcan waters with plenty of action. :· Chuck Walters, just up from Rancho Buena Vista, reports :lhat fishing is great with Jots of billfish being taken daily. Wal· :t.ers expects fishing to improve even more as the Sea of Cor- : tez continues to cool to ideal fishing conditions. ;: There is also some excellent dove and duck shooting to be :found on Baja California and \Valters invites his guest to join ·~ oo the fantastic hunting after a day's fishing off the resort. :r'or reservations al the popular Baja resort phone 64H838 in =Newport Beach. ;-•' Tro11t Tops l11lo11cl Flslal11g • Water temperatures at most lakes in Southern Callfomia ;a.ave now dropped down to the point where trout hive become ~ active. Helped by the Department of Fish and Game plant· ·bigs, Mgters are taking home nice stringers of bows. Vail Lake and San Vincente ~servolr are the hot spots for .Jrout curreatly and both are aJ90 ldcldng out so me nice catches . et bass aad crappie to experienced anll'.lers. · • · Lake Hen~baw 11' considered slow as are both Cuyamaca ;ind Hemet. The only thing anglers seem to bt doing wortb- :Whlle at Big Bear is moving the rafting ducks around for duck :lunters. PRESIDENT'S CUP WINNERS -Maxine Strickland. • (center} was the president's cup winner at Rancho San Joaquin Golf Course this week. Ray Haberreiter· Oell) won the treasurer's flight and Phyllis Stafford copped the vice president's flight. .. Rancho Title t,o Strickland; Area Prep Durst Nabs Mesa Crown Running Surmnaries ~fa.xine Strick I and suc- cessfuUy defended her president's cup crown at Rancho San Joaquin Golf C.ourse this week by defeating Marion Keeler in the cham· p1onship finals. Mrs. Strickland is a t"'" time champion in the event follo\ving her victory. In the vice president's fli ght, Phyllis Stafford defeated Lila Simdorn for the title. It was Zola Bartholomew as the win· ner in the Secretary's flight with a win over Beverly Cornwell . Ray Haberreiter won the treasurer's flight by defeating Vi Saxton in the final match. fn the A flight net com· defeati ng Betsy Caves, 2·up petition, Pat Banta and Vida and Helen Holabird winning V•nlfY P If I CNI• Mft• lt, E'*hdl 41 ivero paced second follow-over Sue Foley, 2-up. 1. "iolll<l•v ccM1. 1o:in, 2. Go11111c11. ed by Bobb1'e Co• and Marg I th ' n· h fCM), 3. Woltml•r (E), ... Pr5"sl \CMl. " n e .secretary s 1g t, il s. sm1111 tCMJ, a. Aotlna (EJ, 1. u.1er DuBois. Fourth place went to was Elaine Tully over Ma rge i~r,>io~·F~~;r'('C'.M\~"'1 ' '· ~nl$on Ga bby Bailey and Marg Evan! Rossen. 6 and 5 and Bionda Jtm1or v11n1tr C.11511 AW\.I 1$, E•t•tw:lil M with three teams tied for fifth Yount defeating Fran Riste, 6 L Sterrett tCM), 10:36·, 2. M1!i tCM1 . 3, Grelr>er ICMI, 4. Litke {CM), S. G<n· place. and 5. 1y 1CM), 6. G&ll•11ller CCMJ, 1. LeMr> Included \Vere Helen [b. Lee Ginder gained the ~c .. ~~1!~1111Li{c~1~1• '· Stoapiro cei,i 0· betson and Martha Jmbr ecbt, 'New JV tl!COO'O treasurer's flight finals with a Ann Holstein and J ane Martin 1 u · fl cost• ~·;n;,5":~.uic•• zm and Edna McHugh a n d -P winner over a PP Y 1. Hvoole (CM\, 11:21, 2. zun19a IE). J. El R Coltrin. Metcalf (£), 4. Aamsev {EJ, $. Harrl1 eanore ose. fCMJ, '· wr1011t (CMJ, 1. ems 1cM1. e. In the B flight -. ~. 1•11·0n, Sally Bruce WOil her match 111e> enoc111111 tCMl 111111 Rhr;in ce1. 10 ,.,..,..,l'l"~ Sllllllrig IEJ. . Beverly Hope and Marjorie in the director's flight from vanity sc-_ Hodge took low gr-· honors Frankie Blair, 5 and 4 and w•'ll wes1m11111er JS, HWlll"''°" &taeh Js """' 1. Angel fH9), f :$1, t. McNllr (HBJ, 3. with a 90. oppose Afillie Johnson, winner Peiers /WMJ, •· C«nk:tr (WM), 5• over Doris Hand""huch t Quiggle IWM), 6. s1acv IWMJ, 1. Oki Barbara Buskirk and Kay o><.. ' ·up, 1wM1, 1. R1,1flll !WMJ, 9. wnsori (HBI. Nebb won low · net with Joe for the title. io. s1>1r1ev 1w.v.i. Dun nd Lu Scboffli J1111lor Va,,;lll' Costa Mesa n a . cy n se-Seacliff w11lml~tr IJ, Mt111llllff011 81-.:11 4' cond. Third place went to · 1. Prince 1WMI 1o:l6. 2. R. Pou Frankie Durst will reign as Barbara De Fran~ and Lm· k Patli Schottmiller is the new <wMJ, 3• Menclor• cwMI. •· Meall • ham '-" !HBl, .S. AMersori (WMJ, 6, Cordray womens club c pion at Mathewson. champion of the women 's club IWMI, 7. J. Pou fWMJ, •· Gra....itn Costa Mesa Golf Course for at Huntington Seac\iff C.Ounlry cwM i, 9· Howie IWMl, 10. Abbev IHB>. Patsy Gallant and Lll Smith v1rs11v the next year following he r f urth . J Club. Ml1sio. vi.1• 11 s..i Cletnefltt 4t cooquest of the coveted title won ° with oy Ashley 1· lll•l G•11a1v1, Mccarthy, M HO'ftr and Lou Hughes in fifth place. Kay Moser finished second Cangiano, Coot<, IC. H-.. tMVJ, 1o:st' this week with a s+OOle total in the championship fli ght 1. Hurlblit <Kl. a. BOWeto CMVl ,-of 257. Zanotti !SC), 10. KeUh ISC). ' ' El Nig11el with Hazel Kerr copping low Jltltllor v1n11., Runnerup in the cham· President's cup competitwn net honors. M1u1"' vi.10 11, san c1ctnentt •r P''onsh'p fij hi v· H kl 1• OleJ Bt!Ol>O. C. Bau, CC>01'1<!Y CMV) 1 g was l os ns at El Niguel Country Club in In the first flight. June Fil· 11,u, '-Jonn,..,... <sci. s. R. Bass tMvi with 262. Barbara Leonard LagWla Niguel moves to the tin won low gross honors with 6. cu111al>d CMVI, 1. Je<1nora1s1<.1 (Mv), "'on the \o\v net div1S· ,·on o! '1St 1'."111a IMVJ, 9. Guu l$C), io. weisr. final rou nd of play this week. Rose Erickson in the runnerup the cha mpionshi p flight with a Betty p;-has been named position. Net honors went to vars1i., 220 .,..., M.lrllll 16. S1nl1 Alie 1f . as medalist or the event with a Liz Brandenburg with June 1. Marly" 9:52 (M), 2. Slum~ IM). 3. In the first flight it was Claflin and Helen Hodges in Rffd (Ml,'· C.mptoetr CMJ, s. ConMUv Ba b M h . net score of 71 instead of the tSAJ, '· Tanman 1MJ, 1. M.IVWl\Ort r ara orton t e winner I f 8 the runnerup spot. <SAi, 1. Sco11 !SA), 9. Moraga tSAl 10 with a 286 total. A tie resulted ow gross score 0 9 by Eaan \SAL ' · f r Esther Nugent as previously Second flight gross went to J 1 v or 1rst place in low net reported. June Doyle ~ith L en 0 r M1r1n~r. u:~'L.. 44 between Joyce Caplis and Wahrenbrock secood. Norma l . Ario <Ml 11:02, 1. Hlll (Ml, J. cldr• 0 ••• Sk'lli h I h In semifinal round action, tM>. •· Moot< CMJ, s. Miiier tMJ, " '"""°"mary I on, eac wt Pard ped the I t Myer1 {SA), 7. Allen (M), I. Trautwel~ 221. An IS·hole playoff will be Edith Carpenter defeated cop ow ne <MJ, '· Plcth'"' CSA/. 10. Alv«• CSA>. staged to determine the win· Mildred White, 4 and 3, while award . N•wiwwt Na~"'lf. w., .. ,.. 15 er Jackie Watson took the In a field and shots tourna· 1· a • ._ <NH). t:otS, •2. 1<.oriet cw), n · of f(a dy t•;. k p · Sebo 3. Heldb<'lpk INHjr ~. MurreJ IWl, s In the second flight it was measure y Bra , 2 and ment 1U1o wee , atlJ tt· Saor1 INHJ, d. :.,1 0:1s fNHJ o·Har~ fl.ofarion Voss the low gross t in the president's fli ght. miller was the winner with ~~71~s8'<~-1 J, '· A•oa 'tw·i. 10. s. Hazel Kerr second and Cuba •New course •KOrd • winner with 296. Jean Dalpee Vice president's f Ii g ht J11n1er V•rtrtv WI.ii• the lo t · •· · the results found Agnes Goui·n Curl and Audrey Etchison Ne~ Har11Gr 11, w,.,,,,. • w ne VICwr In 1. S•makl' (NH) 10:411, 2. Clartt second flight w1·1h Vo•da tying for third . Li z Bran· CNH J, J. RObln!lllfl <NH J, 4• ICellh tNHl ' " den burg was next. 5l;,,tf11"°'1tN HJ, '· Wike cw1. 1. Sketch Adams the runner-up 'vith NH J'. 10: ~:~~ \~~\'. 9. A1111r.ws scores of 233 and 234. Football June Chaflin won the second v • ..,1fY Norine Grady copped the flight followed by Flo Covell, 1. :~f.:: \"\":'~~. 't·l:wc~~ ,lMDl ltfea'• Golf Quru·terfinals Set At Santa A11a CC ' ... Second round matches have been completed In U>e Sonia Ana country Club hit?'·luw tournament with e 1 g h t partnerships moving to this week's quarterfloab. In actioll over the wtl!kend. Lou Clem and Don Dicus delealtd Diclt McCoy and 0. Z. Robertson, 6 aod 5 w h i I e Bill H.utcheD!J and M a x Mct:lain topped Jack Wilder aod Ken Lewis, 5 -and 4. These two teams will meet in quarterfinal action. Ned Kborey and Duane Pedlar defeated Bi!J Dennis and GeJTy Knudson, 8 and 6 while Ed Hayes and Lloyd Stocker topped Bill Koch and Orma Crank, l·up on the 19th hole. • • In the lower bracket, Fred Werder and Jay Hewitt took a 9-6 decision from Les Boyle and Ron Price while Pat Hart and Ed EtheU ··topped Ed Goold and Larry Ridgeway. 3 and 2. They meet in another quarterfinal round match. Charles Hester and Vince Hogan took tne measure of Merle Boyle and Rupe Hen- dricks, 4 and 2. Jim Duggan and Milo Tedstrom stopped Don Smith and Ed Sylvester, 4-up on the 18th. Quarterfinal matches will be completed this weekeod with the semis nett wee.k and the champion.ship roatch .Nov. 11 at 10 o'clock. Mesa Verd~ In a better ball of ·parj.:ner's tournament at Mesa Verde Country Club over' t b e weekend, Del Hamre ind Ken Ho11p posted a ne t 65 to gain toP,; honors. ,lb ' a better two balls of foursome competition on Sun- day. Ken and Virginia Houp teamed with Barbara and Bill Malick to post a 128 5(.'()l"e and win first place. A tie resulted for second at 132 with Arnie and Erma BeRdet teaming with Bud and June ~1cConneU on one squad. Banks and ~ary Wannamaker played with Jerry and Dorothy Sauveagu on the other team. ,...,,...,coast Two tournaments take over the limelight at Irvine Coast Country Club this week under new head pro Richard Martinez. The Lawson Foote seniors event was played on Wed- nesday and the ghosts and goblins event is set Friday. Big Canyon QuaJifylilg contbtues for the men 's club championship at Big canyon Country Club in Newport Beach. The tournament wiU be played on two weekends, Nov. 4-S and 11-12 with the winner determined on a match play basis. 19th Bole The 72nd annual Southern California PGA open golf tournament will be held at Ontario National Golf Club Nov. 1&-19 with a purse of hole event will be played on Thursday and Friday .. • qualifying round. The field will be cut for the second end third rounds. Entry lee for the SoCal open is $50 for pros and $40 for amateurs. With addition of the Southern catifornia o p_ !. n . golfers will have a three- tournament fall tour 11ext month in Southern California. The IW,000 Long Beach Quej!n Mary open will be played N'ov. 1-5 followed by the Ge.rdena Valley Open and the SoCal Open. GWCGals Triumph;c Clinic Set · Golden West College's g;r.Js basketball team won its se- cond game in three starts Wednesday defeating Orange Coast, 41·33. Sue Lehman paced a J..J scorers with 2'l points in the game while Laurie Anderson took high point honors for Orange Coast with 18. Golden West jumped to a 13· 9 first quarter leod, led D<lt at halftime and outsccftd Orange Coast in both the thirf and fourth quarters. Other scorers for Golden West included Linda La~ (8), Judi Metzler (51, Marilyn Bernardini (41 and Kathy Howard (2). Scoritjg -~or Orange Coast were Mi~lle Poirier (5). Pat Shine''(2\j JoAnne Zubillage (4) ana· Janice Sutherland (4). . ~ NBA Coach of the Yea Sharman and the irftire cbampio~ip Lakers will take· part in the fif nu al Lakers-Sears 'C I ~t Sa . ' turday morning at · :. Fonun. ' The public will be admiited free of charge to the clinic: which begins at 10:30 a'.m. Youngsters, 16 and under, will receive a coupon redeemtible for two seats to a future Lakers game. The clinic will begin with a showing of the full-color '972: Lakers highlight film. Following the film , Sharman and the players will take part in a 30-minute inmi..ctional period, demonstrating t h e various aspects of basketball. This will include demonstra· tions or the b a s i c fun- damentals of basketball. basic defense and offensiv e maneuvers. The right price on the right .. 1E1EV\EiruLV PORSCHE AUDI '73 modvl J, 5.lle1, Lea.,119, Serv•~ Piru •"ti SerY•tt opari S;i1u•dav $10,000. Finl round action in the 54-MaJwatW• 111w11. • e-i., HHll •Phonl: 655-541~ GRAND PRIX $113~!R MO. Alt ctnd., 11'1"'' wlncltwf, fllf Wfll., YlnYI lo•• AM•llM '""'• rllll' wlll1., WJW, Motl! .,. bvdlft 111ti. 24 mo. •Ptn e11c:1 ... ," .,. ev1rafll llrivln9 Piiis T & t.. Onl•r MW t1r tal'tlUI Cltll'llfY, •I INCt..UOING S/SGMO Ml, WlltltANfY :: Lakes Cacbuma. San Antonio, Nactmlento and Isabella are ~ted, a& belt, fair for bass as cold wea&ber has hl)mpered fJsh· 4g acttvlUe1. ~ Irvine Lake h•a closed for the season and wtn n1tt re-open -craUI Januftt)'. The opening of Anaheim Lake bu been delayed :Ont11 t9' Orange County Water District can rtnd enough water :'° supply tbe lake. CurrentJy Irvine Lake Is leasing out duck ;!>finds for the ttmalnder of the waterfowl sea80n. third flight low gros~ award Shirley CUmmaro and Stu ~; .. J,1116':'~ • 1~6T;'r. t~oll!J· ti.\1.~ with a 312 with Ruth Schilling s d' Dudley. Lenor Wahrenbock ~t= 1J..'toi. '· Tru11'tf:: <Ai 10: DAVE ROSS PONTIAC first in low net with 226 follow· tan mgs won the third flight with J•llltr V•rsttr 2410 tt.fbor ltvd. ot Folr Dr., Cetta Mua ed by Fally B k 'lh 227 Pauline McMahon and Olah 1 ,•isnw .t.l'llolt 1!1 Mai.• °"1 M ll"SI DlllCT -F•CTOlY •uTHOllZID D""LEl n roo S WI , l ic ev1t11 \'I· lO:n , 2. CemDlren (Al .. "' .. -B ~ I'! SUNSET LIA;ut ., ... Morgan next. Ror. ~~R~)(M40l~vl='kl~)(Af Mdft.·l"rl. l:JCI M J:.10 . Sif, & Ewnltog1 • ., Appf. 1§ .._.alll/011 w'""~ 4 o 11 19 In a T and F. tournament ~°'1wenJ<1fl. 9· Armeiir1rlt (Al, 10'. TONY MOROCC0546 1017 W1sJl'nlnsi.r 3 D !9 31 v !~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Big Canyon Country Club ~~~m l J ff ff this week, Hazel Kerr was the ,_111, v •• ~~::-5-JM .. llOll• u 1- _,. FlMhing ls awing Its end In tbe Eastern lfigh Sierras. 'Actton la almost non-exlstant as angling pressure bas really fallen otr and n·tghttlme temptraeures have been falling below _the freezing mark regularly. women•s-club stage·d'l:lne-of Us "t.lll'r• ~ I -2 ' ~ firs t Oight~wl.nnet. ~ith ~1fl iJ· eimlrlr, IMJ "Ur.:' ]. W1thtrl~· biggest tournaments of the ~=t"terbef . \ ~ 4, a followed by Kay Moser (39 ). . v~=-tllll~' '~. ).~~fMCf:-Y}:· year this week with members "' ""'°" ••lldl 0 3 211 .. Patti Scbottmiller (39~~) and (M), 10. ll•iir~~-._. , " 11nd guests playing in a w"""'~~':,J<':':,.,,,, 1• Polly Browning (40). ~-1a111 ~n•v ,;1"Z.,9111 •• partner's better ball affair. W•11miM~i7rH~:'1nii~ ee1(l'I Winnie Lindsey and Mary c,1.;,~'T2~1r;t ~~~~· • '~O:tt!:.f.~':,' . J th A fli ht Merine Yf. S1nt1 AN 111 Wtttml"'~ V $ 81tcl'loff f'PVJ 0 J kiili.1FV), •• ' . .. • • . •• :. Area Prep Grid Results n e g competition, Loar• VI. AMl!tll'll •t L• P•lm11 an Dersommen tied for first M,·,·~, 1 !M\, · 1, ~'r,t,~tn:' c~) '· &Ji two teams tied for first place ANGl!t.us 1.1t.fu• in the second flight with 391h v · o. wr.1111 ~~iv with Lols Grosenbaugh and s1. "'•11! 2L o,.'ll •1! followed by .Jackie Fitzgerald M11rmo IM!, t. Ac•t• !FV>, t. 1C1111r Jean Mallory getting the top f!~llfreAmat I ' 13 1~ (41!h) and Wanda Knage (42). cc~M~1i'°2.v1\li.1'cc~~tr,·1J. ,!,-~ ~~~':" tcalclll. ,. 0 1 1_21 award after mat Ching ~"An~y g , ,: .J Lenor Wahrenbroek won the ji,~J: ~~\, ~~1H"~·11~11~~~ COit• M••• 0 0 0 0-0 scorecards. Ada Hallett nnd Plu1 x o 2 11 2l third night with 36~~ with . ca1c1wen fj,ll~ J.r."~r., 1e1. N1wi;oor1 i't1rtior' i. 1 JJ ~ De•-Helperln en> Thun.dev•1 sc°" ••> c 111111tr11C11on e.1t11 o o o o o ... .., w run-st Paul u. Ph• x 10 Vlgrlnia Stevens 1381Ai ), Petle • ,., _. M•r 24 ,.. _ _. T0.1 81111(:11 (1), 14a,,1rt ne-up with both ... ; lonltlll'I Oemtl I. Lfnci.rpl'h IE I 10:$1 !. 8r11CkJ Cl!. M11lrov llJ~ W11u Ill, Thl•lot t>I. "' SQWUJS M1!ifl' DI .,, 8l1l'IOCI Amit at Mt Cro(t (40) and Nora Morales :COM\, J, Vll'IQeP li~tlMI, •· Garlow Y'VWf jnu a f 'M. SAC ' ' (CdMi'..h!ii 9S!!!!!JV Ill • '· Lendrv1EI. •A '!JW,-•..,.rton c •> -j'\• 1 I j;;;~;"';;;;'' ~;;;;,;;"'°;;;"';;;0;;;";;;;;· ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~"":;;i;'"~";';;'·;;•~';;'-;;;;;;;;;;,;;;;;j 1 _~1~40~\\;;) ;;';;'•;;xt;;in;;U;n•;·iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~~ii· ,~"-~'';i1<.i11 MJ?r.~· lintr "°Mr. ICdM • •· i JMllCll 1 3 t:1J ~::rr:11T9f;; ~C~Af:'~~~~~ ........ ,; ,.,.; "'"""'....... Paramount Sports ~ .JJoqn's ~ikts" ~ ~ ~. . SALIS AND SlllVICf • ' 'til 8:00 p.m. ... ..,., W1 t d1r, ,.....,, MMr t-..t.111 ... w .1..._ WI CAlll FOi llCYCW 1712 '!'.ft!':..._ e c....1M I .... ,,.., .... TA Ml~ 645-4721 , I G11er'!lking :Jenni6 • Ul •IAlUllq ALL TOP llANDI TIEJOIN 'l'INNIS SHOES TM Matt Ctf'ltftr1aMt MH1 Canv•• $14.fS LMther $20.fS tfOUllll l MON, a ,llll. f TO I TUii .. weo;,. TNUll.L a SAT. 'Tllo I SU1tDAY' lt It 1 333 E. 17th ST., Costa Mesa lBeb.ihd The lntematlona.I Houte of Pancttkl•&I PHONIMZ-61fi • IJCPUT ITtttNOINO • PllOM!'f U•AtR S . · fWll T.Y. WITM IYIWY IXPLOua BUYTODATI AN 'XPLOIER' 24 -Ol&Y s9995 "~explorer sa11ta a11a 1130 S. HARBOR BLVD. (7141 839-8040 I ,. I COtrn-SrAtlr~REff~ OCT.20·21 SHOW HOURS , WEEK DAYS, 5·11 l'M SATURDAYS, 12 NOON TO 11 •"I SUNDAYS, t2 NOON TO 7 PM A.OUll S $~.00 • CHllO•!N UND El 12, $1 .00 • IJNDE• 'rtll y j Your • ....,. Wert• 1 · ·Lookll;tg at Social Security: ' Is It fpr 'or Against P~or?' ,, By SYLVIA PORTEii Do the -al~tlme blah Soclal Security tues dllo1mlnate qalnst the poor? Is the "earn.l.ng.s teat" a bla- tant dlacrtmlnatlon In faV<ll' of . ii,. rich! Wbal'• the poeltlon .oflhe -tq wile! And 11 11 llJle that the federal' go...,.. ~ uaeo our Social Securtty ·-. !or .....soda! .siourlty pupoeea! ., Not 11nco the SocW Securtty syJtem was cruted 1n the • mkl-19.10I, more tban a generation ago, bu Ibero been IUcblntome debale ·-ill !' pl'QYI- -. dm!o- Utm and goall.'And ... ~ ably -for SoclalSecui- ity ~ ..... ~, . .,.. ldl,. ii ow to a vllally ~ peMlan ba ae In ·Ille U.S. and Social Securtty ' II.tel 00 both tmploye ~ employer will hll a IJndmait 11.7 perctnl '"1. -wai• bale nm year. WHAT, THEN, are IOme of the answen? Q. Does lhe system clb<rtmlnate against the poor! A. Thete IJ llmpty DD d0. -tbol the 8oclal Securtly Ill Ii • ~e tu -and the blgber the nte goes, the more obvloua this f a c l becomeo. In ll'IS, the tu will ri.. "' 5.15 pen:ent on up tD 110,lllO of wages, or to a maxhnum. of. 1831.10 a year -paid both tiy employe aud by employ<r (!IS ·against 5.2 percent on up tD $9,GOO of wages or a maximum of $181, in 19'12). Quite a jump ... If you ...,.. 110,!00, you'U pay 1831.80 and u you ..,. $1,800,000, you'll also pay 1131.111. IP YOU ARE struggling on a pey of $f,OOO, you'll pay a 5.15 percent tu In '7S and If 'l ltVINE 'CAT' FACTORY -OwnerHobil! 'Alter '. right) and b!lilder Uoyd !\<>,. Qeft) display artist's .• NJlit,~g of new facility. Mary Soderberg, ''Miss •J Bobj.e Cat' ll?unges oil catamanl\ ·as Bart 'Brown Of ;. Coldwell Banker and Co. loou on. ..,, . Coast Catamaran Set ·For Move to Irvine A $1.4 million factory to employ 300 persons in lhe 1manufacture of lightweight .sailing catamarans b under construction on a l»cre site in lhe new city of Irvine. ·-Coast Catamaran Co r p, -of the Hobie. Cat will begin produc:tlon of bolts In- 'Skytrain' . -Air Travel . Planned . • eluding the new 12.-foot Mo~ Cat In February. An 87,000 square foot plant b contempllted on haH of the site at 2026 McGaw Avenue 1n the Irvine Industrial Comples. The fU'Dl also employs -125 penonl! In Its present plant at S3012 Calle Perfecto, San Juan Capistrano. H.U of the Irvine site will be reserved ror future ex· pansion, a spokesman for the l!rm said. Salf:ill and M c A d a m Coiis-tloo eo.. of com Mesa are ,the bullden, an~ .Martln',JOl\(!S~ Bart ~ of Coldwell tBa ' er and Co pany arrang for site quisitlon. Coast Catalnaran, launched In a Dena P,ollj.t Quonset Hut · ln 1968 by 'surfboRrd en- tre~\µ' Hobie Alter and an associate, ·recorded net sales of 14.41 million In 1!171 and a net lncooie Of $m,2S5. - • • ' yoo ..,.. a. lat $4tl0,000, yoo'll allO pay a, US pereent tax (but '"111 U1' to f!O,lllO). Hu~ Af Boclal Security .. . -AdmlnlltraUoo 1pokeameo. u ,._.,,,,_., a eounterbalance, Social ..... ~~.-..., Securlly caab benefita aro a ""'AA"'V"'! ="'s"t""tN.,...,MV,,-,.,:::,T"T;.L.,-' lsr higher proportion of the l'ONP ? •• earnings ol Jow income Americana than of hlgber In--------- ....,. taxpafen, A very low lnoome .....tor, for Instance, la -ellgtble foe a retire-ment benefit amoonllng to more than 90 pereent of bis earnings. And, they add, they comlder the tax "in the nature of a premium rather than a tax." . TO me this does not make tlli! regressive tax any less -Ive -and tbe tax will come under ln<reaslng. attack. Q, DOES THE "earnings test" favor the rich? A. It favors all those elderly Americans wbo have nesteg111 on which they collect interest and dividends -for under the law, there 1J DO limit 00 wba> they can oollect while still get· ting evf!tY penny of their SocW Security benefits. In contrut, even under the Jiberalized provision which became law last week, you cannot earn more than $2,100 In }'OIB' retirement (up to age '12) without starting to lose be:Qefitl .at a rate of $1 in ben«Its lost !i>r every IS earn. ed over $2,100. So, of. course, in tbi.s sense the test favors the rich. And this ts sO even though Social Securtty IJJOl<eamen lnsJst tlu!i the original CO""'l't of tbe law was •to ·proteet 1 the" wotier agairm loss of earned income due to old age, ctiseblllty, etc. The &)'Item didn't even con- sider· unearned. income. Abo, spokemten aay, any other at· Utude would penalize the "prudent saver." Q. WHAT'S THE poeiUoo ' Tiny Sea .Squirt Helpf1il? MlAA!l.(AP) -Scientists at the University of Miami say the key tD a potential medical bonzanza may be locked within the cells of ehe lowly sea squirt, a tiny marine crealure found In Florida's tropical waters. , 'nr: M'lcllael Siegel and a team if microgioloblats have discovered a mixture o f pulverized squirts injected into mice is effective both in sup- pressing the rejeclim of •kin grafts and slowing of growth of cancer c;ells. ~. Sigel warns, be faces a long, tedious and perhaps impassable r o a d before it can be -determined whether the sea squirt help save human lives. e Zoo Babies AMSTERDAM (AP) -Five cubs born to a cheetah named Angela In the Dutch Safari Part De Beeb Bergen are the first in the world to survive birth. in captivity, the park management claimed. of the working wife? e "'-•-B A. I've been fighting this one "'...,.... ar for 80 long that I'm almost ready tD concede defeat (but not quite). Aa a working wUe, you are eligible for {ull retirement beneflts_bas<d'oo your torrner earl)l.nga and t a x con- trlbutlona; you are e11Utled to full dlaablllty insurance pro- tection during your y~er ye.,. (unlike the ~ wife); at your death, your survivors become eligible for monthly benefits based on your ~. You .get whichever ls the higher ben(lit -your own based on your earnings or what's payabJe on your husband 's earnings. And if you· get the benefit from Canada and Alaska en based on your husband's pay, route to South America, where what happens lo all ~~ spend the winter. es you paid on your ~~ • Porpoiae Drl1'fl during your own working . Y""'! What happens, indeed! PALOS VERDES (AP! - Q . D 0 E S T H E GOVERNMENT UJO the tu .. for other things! A. No. Every penny of your contributlona goes lntD four separ•te ftmds, apart from each other and apart from the u.s. Treuury, and the ooly purposes for which money can be, paid out of these funds are: Social Security • Medicare benefits and costs of ad- ministering t b e programs. Funds not needed for current operatloos are Invested In U.S. government ·securities, earn eDOrinOUJ amouDts in Interest and thereby enhance the pro- gram. J I • Tuna fJ.Sbermen are being en-- . couraged to Use new methods and equipment in a move by the federal government to curb drowning deaths of porpoi.seJ snared in tuna nets. Secretary of Commerce Peter G. Peterson announced the federal action h e re , saying, "When one porpoise dies In a tuna net, that is one death too many." The porpoise, a mammal, !Cbools and travels wllh yellowfin t u n a . Flshennen bunt lhe surface schools of J:l'Opoises, circle them with nets and catch the tuna ~ demeath. e WUdHfe Bill CdM Student Cltberlne A. Egli, dau&hla' ol Mr. and Mn, Norman J, ll:Jll of C..ta M.,., bu -...,.... Intl> !!le boDon fa. ~ atud1-m II Snrthnlore Coli•1• ill -.Peon. t A 1J9dU1fe of C4rol!a .i.t Mu HlCb ldlool, olte II -Jotlng In Pl)'dloloo . DAILY PILDT ff You Goiia Have Beari Bicycl.e Salesmari Sells Everything for Trampl.ant ' ' • ' ' • • Marett Clwnpoaulo., a 5-year~ld Plrta blcycte 18.letman, flew to New York pn bls way to c~t a new heart ln C.lllomla. televilion lhow to coneentnte on bookini rtquests. Nubvillt, IJ carried In moro lh111 1 .. dtles. He will be Oll<!'•te<: on ln the Stanford Unlvaralty Medic!al Center at Palo Alto. Champ.Jllaaln sold everything he owned and borrowed l1l011eY to get the 136.000 ~eeded for the trlp and l~operallon. Ml.u Howard has been COiiar qi the shew for five of Us le\'ert yean. Bo(b are regulars oo the Grand Ole Opry and have recorded several songa togelber. A spokesman for Anderson aatd be would get a new woman star for the show next year. The show, produced in Gov. Roaatd ReaJ:a 11ld 'he has given small cash contributions to political cam .. paigns this year but "I have never been a big contributor." : He did not volunteer how much he had given or to whom. [ __ PE_o_Pi_E __ ] Polio Epmemic Strikes Champousaln turned , to the United States because hospital.I in Paris told bim they had DD heart dooen. Frank Maat"twlcz, George McGovern's national political director, missed a campaign appearance in Muskegoo, Mich. when the car be was riding In was stopped for speeding. Connecticut Students 1 "I was just napping ·m the back seat," Mankiev.icz said later in Detroit. "Tbe next thing I knew, police ngbts were flashing." -. GREENWlCH, Conn. (AP) -A polio epidemic was declared by federal of. ficials at Daycroft School where a number of students had not been im· munlzed agalnet the disease · because or addition, he said, five students, suspected of having the highly infectious disease ,.·ere sent to homes out ol state before the polio cases were reported. rellglous reasons. B. COBBY CRISLER, president or the "We have to declare a polio epidemic school , said 'ftwrsday an inoculation~ The car waa stopped on Interstate 96. Driver Ellen Wessel, 21, a New York campaign worktl" assigned to Muskegon, was ticketed for going 94 miles per hour in a 70 zone. with our preliminary infonnatlon," said gram was being carried out to vaccinate Dr. Dewayne Andrews, of. the U.S. Health tb'.>se among the 130-member student Service's Center for Disease Cootrol in body who have not been immunized. Atlanta, Ga. Crisler said that the private boarding '* Andrews said polio bas been confirmed school is not affiliated with any church, in three youngsters, and bas been but that it "serves young people who are Country music .sina:er Ju Boward is 1leavtng Bm ~· syndicat~d . clitlloallY d!.,,._.i In eJ&bt othen. In . 'Christian Scientists.'_' ----- IJo·n ·sweillund LET US COAST ... G.ENE,RAL TIRE SAFETY -" · CHECKi ~= ~. 646•5033 540-5710 .!'::oo'.:: .. . . ' FRONT END ALIGNMENT MULll'llllll ..... ~IOCI, '111•• ..i-1111 •I'd tit• -r. Wt cet• net U•ter, c•.,,...., ,..Ill, - Mt '9 ywr Ctr tMllllfadlH"lll"''I •PklflCll...... ..... utety d!Kll tllCI MIPt J'"t ........... ONLY $850 YOUR CAR , _ _, ~lain C.r1 (Cttl wllll Air Cond. atrdfor torsion btr1 COS! utrt.) FOR WINTER DRIVING RADIAL TIRES ... For Import 03rs SI EEL RADIALS ... For U.S. 03rs General SPRINT-JET General caJibrated' DUM.-Sl•a. RAD1M. •Awiwcl • E"""PMI' TrHCI 0,.... 2 .~90 tor -·-.. . .F.!r~~ taD TO m t OUT CW t• IMl'Ofll: CUI VWSPECIAL General DURA-JET~ $ WHITEWALL +!'LY NYLON CORD BOOY ONLY ... LOW PRICES ON SIZES TO AT 9 Otfr OF 104MPQRT CARS BAI IERY SA•E ........ oll IM ._,.,,., low !tflt;• or ""' o.lc• · TIRE SPECIAL BLACKWALL SPECIALS 111X11-1'7hlS.-071xll TllNlen. fllf fl.7Mt.Jt Dl5CONTINUID DISIGNS l"HILI THn LASTI ••11•'1 i. •••ell. lxcll111,. -..... ..,. ....... no. fME llATTmn' TUT fllllll ___ .,..,..Mtllry_ diliOl'lf ........ hel Mif1 TIRE CHAINS ~3~uo 111111"""421111--771111 ILACIWALU - TUULISS TlllS WHILI (IUANTtTID U.ITI WHITEWALL BARGAINS PASSENGER CARS SIZES: S20xl3 to 900xl5 -L7bl5 CAMPERS & TRUCKS SIZES: 700xlS 17Sx16-S 750x17 10.16-S 700x16 800x16-S 9SOx16-S 700.17· 12·16-S 610.IJ~700.1J-771•11 llifllt ai.m.. l'n 11.7MJ:.M CO,JttPLE:'f,E, BRAKE RELINE . . " 95 NOT JUST ··- IRAKE \ELINE lut we do au ttiis. 1. lllliolNIWlltfty...,llllot• ........... 1. lzt•I• tlte ctl•ll ..... .....,., ...... ___ ...,.~ .... .,. .. ~~::.. ........ --~ /, 4 ..... 1 ................. 1. II 1.T .. _._.4.,....._ 6. ...... :::. ~, I liioiei:'"-4r-~ ,, "'"1. A41!zfl •-••1111r ••• , .. ....._ ....... '\ .......... ,_ ..... , .. ' ' I 2% DAILY PILOf s Forest Service Plant-a-Tree Bid Receives \V1\SlllNGTON (AP\ - A U.S. fores! Service report will N'COOUllend soon t b a t the fl'deral ager.Cy expand its pro- grdll1 lhrooi:h ~·hich con- sumers can plant B 1ree by ac- repting a commercial product . The program hss drawn the ire of mcn1ber8 of Congress, private citizens and U.S. com- panies bt.><:ause it has been us- ed by a Japanese company - llatsun automobiles -to pro- mote a foreign-produced pro- duct. BUT PATRICK J. Sheehan, who i:; ir, charge of the Forest Service program, says he and (It.her stall members have recommended the campaign be kept and made available to others. But be says some changes should be made in the ground rules to reduce undue, commercialism -particularly any suggestion that the Forest Servtce endorses Ute product. The recommeodal.ion will be made in a report next week to John R. McGuire. chief of the Forest Serv i ce in tbe Agricult ure Departtnent. a spokesman said. It w a s ,prepared after a review of :bow the advertising plant.a- UNITED STATES NAT I 0 NA I. BANK SOU TH COAST PLAZA BRANCH NOW OPIN SATURDAYS 9 to 1 P.M. MON.·THUl5. 10·5 P.M. fllDAYS 104 P.M. 17\4 J 140.SZI I. loclMed 111: So. c..t rt .. o, CMt• Mno D. DEAN HEISER rHEDS IMTERIORS . ~ (A:I~ Ji Houri: Dally 14 S.rlH CCHpOnt0rod By . 0r..,.. c-t Goldin Wt1t DAILY PILOT e Coil• Hllfttl""'"' klch • "-toin Volloy Board "' RultoN ' I OVER THE COUNTER COMPLETE NEW YORK STOCK UST ' • ti h lb • wi un fo • •• ""' • I . No • ··-Thursday's Oosing · Pri~mplete New York Stock Exchange List :~ire Report · d to Stocks .• • -' . .. 1'72 oAJlV mar n =---= KIDS LOVE UNCLE LEN SATURDAYS IN THE DAILY PILOT , , DAILY PR.OT ,. .. o .. t ·on ~t;iln ' ' . . . l. • • I MmR0P9J.IB,•lU. (Al'),-l"O'l a more 1>la booa te -~be doot. We wai!>'Up ~&.:Recrutbt . hal ceodl ~ ilJt,,_ .._;.:, 1ra1nt)1* ._. ~to-li.wtlb lhem!" r .. *"":ot'~,...k IDd su~ billn1 b.eeP abl•·to museum, the lhlnl a full·blown to Sprinsfleld (the at ate sold 13(),000 worth or lu 110 cept the flnt !30,000 until the bumper with v1COUOl\UI who Weti.rlleld aan 1Jie ~~lo.· \Jnll&• .. ~ ~and lho pt .QI!, the cround J'D Amazing World o! SUpcrman. caplt&I) with all our papers oommoo stock, all It could un· "'1lire llllM'1!'U oold. made allghl detours 10 see "who would benefit' the.Jnqo~ .,J>n!due\iOn 'ii SUP e,rm In Mettopol!I. . "lt •·ould take a Jot of .. pecUng approval that day." ti! the papers eame through. By OctDber, only -rourlh SUpennan's hometown. the real estate ,•-!~ '. rnemor!blila."' • ' 'l'lie man~ Jn ''""E" · t l t 1 rted .. They learned that approval "In the early part or June, o1 the stock !1sue bad been The unflnlJbed exhibition w-~. . ,,.....,. , • • 1 h.""" money JUS 0 ge 8 a • might take lour months. sold. Thi exhlblUoo ball still ball 0 _ _, foe 000 .. _.and canatr\ICllon pep,pl~. \'Iii>. •·JAM ;...,,1, lhK•t!dllqr or oould ~ ~ ~ ~'"1-r"'. . Westerfield said. "This was our first real big we got our ok," be said. HWe hadn't opened. Westerfield ~ ~ bankers -~e hive reeejvt¥f l" ~ ~etl think1tht.-~Oi1Ual '"~,.lb· •~-.!."'~~~. 1 • ~. O 'o~ lie wasted no time. ,.!back," Westerlleld said. typed upadyourt prooll~~· Wnde decided to hlre a broker. 2,000 goople dropped In. very little aupport'li~ 1lj'"1.•: '.Ii 11-YOllQ cohCeptliin. . gl'Q; ~11o11 " 'f '••we bad 'l1 meetings in were re o se IWI..,.. 8 ''W6 got pe.nlc~ as a 0>m-••. Now we ar~ oW. Of) this ;• 1'.ll'Ve.4.(lev~ -..eeo ~hlng "°rth. three weeks," he said. "We IT TOOK ONLY five weeks everybody bad lost interest." THE PEOIPLE of muntty with the tbougbtol all damn llmh.11 ' • -... like' It," tie sayi. j 1Ilhfuk five The fictional Metropolis is were so innocent we jumped for approval, but meanwhile, Westerfi!!ld had another pro-Metropolis, meanwhile, began these thousaDds of people Nations Periodicals is year11 from now people will be the place where Superman, up and got three pre-in-Westerfield said, • • Pe op I e blem. to wonder where they were coming ln," Westerfield said. renegotiating a contract with looking back wishing they disguised as Clark Kenl, a corporaters, sold stock -all began to get the idea that The state securities laws going to put all the tourists. "If we had 25,000 people on Metropoll.s Ret'l'tation under couJd have gotten in on the mild-mannered reporter (or this time not knowing that it something was wrong.'' forbade use of any of the pro-During the summer, the opening day, what would we which it gets $00,000 for the ground Ooor." the Daily Planet, "fights a --------=------=----=---------'---'----"---------'--.O....-'------------"---'-'------"'--------- ,... never-ending battle for truth, justice and the American way." For 30 years, residents of the real-life Metropolis, a city of 6,900 ln Soolhern Illinois where the economy is depress- ed, have been talking about using Supennan to promote their hometown. "I. SOME TH{NGS are looking up in Metropolis.. ,. , h ' A new interstate highway coming in from the Kentucky side of the Ohio River will route Chicago traffic b y Metropolis' front door. And the state is constructing a reprOduction of an l8th cen- tury C.Onlinental rort to get the cars to stop. But the city still has pro- blems. Bob Westerfield, a balding 44-year-ol.d f o r me r ~ resslonal football player \\'ilh a wile, six chih:~ren and a dry cleaning business, revived the Superman idea last January. "We needed to do something to establish our community," be say1. "I recommended to the Chamber of Commerce we ·establish ourselves with a Superman of Metropolis Award for visiting dignitaries, people of subst&nlial personal achievement and people who have shown a great deal of in- terest in our community.'' The chamber approved and National Perodlcats Publica- tiom, the comic book finn that bolds the copyright on Superman, agreed. THE FIRST award was ~ given to Gov. Richard B. Ogilvie after President Nixon and Vice Presklent Spiro T . .. ~ Agnew declined. Sen. George .. ., McGovern accepted a subse-:._ ..,. quent award. The first award put Metropolis , riding a wave of nostalgia, into the national spotlight. ( 'tbe promotion included an official Superman homecom- ing. A giant painting of Superman was hung on the water tower; merchants posted life-size Superman cut· outs; kids got the day off from school, and lhe week I y newspaper changed its name from the Metropolis News to the Metropolis Planet. National Periodicals had been thinking of building a l.®-8.cre Superman L a n d since the 1950s. What waa a more likely location than Supennan's hometown? M e t ropolitan Recreation lnc., with Westerfield as presi- dent, was established to take over. TllE PLAN WAS to build in three phases. The first would be an es:hibitioo hall, the se- Berrigans' Trial Hit; 'Corruption' WASHINGTON (UPI) - Two veteran reporters wllo covered the alleged plot of the Rev. Philip Berrigan and others to kidnap Dr. Henry A. Kissinger have concluded the attempt to prosecute lhe an- tiwar priest was a corruption of the American system of justice. "The. FBI and the Ber- rigans," a book by Los Angeles Times writers Jack Nelson and Ronald J. Ostrow, was published Thursday. ln it, the newsmen con· tended the N i x o n ad· ministration carried out the proeecution In an effort to prove FBI Director J. Edgar Hoover had his facts right. 1 ·: ... ~ • I '' A THOUSAND NOODNIKS • . . 90·LB. ROLL ROOFIHG 3 77 lr'.'r. ROLL !J~1 Weatherproofing by the roll. Covers a hundred square leet. No more raindrops tailing on your head. lx12 PINE SHELVIMG 15~·"· 1 handed my wil• 1om• board1 It told her I wa1 pining for her. (For that. I de1e"ed the hit.) WHITE ROOnNG ROCK ' ,;.'./ict'ii:>...JC~. ~. ~ :~ 9 ~~- 1 remember seeing thl1 stulf on therft fancy houses in Pho.nix. Numb.r one grade (mu1t mean th• liP. W><Y IS HE. 1'1.l'M"\ ~ c;. "!'\\€. SH IN4t..E. S ""1 1'\IE'. ti.!St'Dt? JOHRS·MAHSVILLE ASPHALT SRIMGLES • I • ~ ~1. '-'~ 100 SQ. rr. Choice ot colort. heavy mineral coat, and l saved the beat tor last •.. a FIFTEEN year gumantee (you heard right). Ii you are looking for something a little easier to put up, '"below. 235-LB. SEAL·O·MATIC SHINGLES ·' • •• • rmERGLASS HANDLED ROOFIHG HAMMER 2'' Lightweight but still 1tfong due to the Jiberglaaa. Flt1 th• bill for that" big roofing job (yech}. 100 SQ. rr. These are the acme thing a• above except they have an added •tripping on them that automatically acl1 as a lap cement. Pretty nilty eh? See you at the store. '/4' SHOP PLYWOOD 2~·~e· SHEET a.B1JSHEL _,_,LAD DD LEAFUGS 47:.0FS They· still measure by bushels bub? TheSi&'ll hold six of them. 11 a bush•l bigg.~ than a breadbox? 19c I:A. 1 "x4"x6' CEDAR FENCE BOARDS Six toot cedar l by 4's to brighten up that backyard. You say you live in an apartment? Too bad. "" ' , r rldi!y, Octobtr 27. 1Q72 DAJl V PILOT ' .f . _Browne, Actor, to Read Dunbar, Poet ;-..__ By CANDACE PEARSON Of ... Dlfl)' fliltt 11111 "I suspect that what I love most In literature is. poetry. No, not suspect. That '.s true. ' . -"Poe(ry is not a form -il's a spirit. "And," the sensitive actor with the f¥110w v11ice continued, "it m a y therefore follow that what I love most is reading poetry. " .. RoScoe Lee Browne, actor-schoJar- athlete-~acher, will have an evening to do what he loves most Nov. 2 at UC !'" rvme. .Browne _ will lead off a five-day con- fejence beht& sponsored by the UCI Ex- tension entitled "'nle Centei1ary Celebra- lioo·of the Life and Work of Paul Laur-ence Dunbar." Dunbar, the son of slaves, was born in Dayton, Ohio in 1872 and died ooly M years later. Forced to support himself by working' in an elevator, Dun b a r nonetheless found time to write four PAUL LAURENCE DUNBAR' " . • novels, several vo1wnes of poetry and short stories. He was described by the period's literary leader, William Dean Howells, as " ... the only man of pure African blood and of American CivllizaUOn to feel the Negro life aestheticaUy and express It lyrically.'' . Browne, who won the Los Angeles Drama Critics Award in 197-0 for best ac- tor for his perfomuu;ice in "Dream on Monkey Mountain," will present a varied seJection or Dtmbar's peoms. Dunbar wrote two styles of poetry. One, formal, in the manner or English poets ; the se<ond' often witty, in billck d.Jalect. Dunbar was afraid people would ap- preciate only his work wilh d.Jalect, but be was very young, says Browne. "I don't prefer one (style) to the olher -in either instance, the IOng is true," says the man who taugbt:literature before ·he walked on. stage as a ·professional ac- tor. "You tmd poems by almost all poets where you're aware the song has not been freed at all. The technique has overwhelmed the perfonnance," Browne says. Dialect.-admiUedly,Jw.emotional eon- notaUons for many persons, of any race. "The sound of dialect for such a long time has been used to denegrate an en- tire people," Browne comments. Its use has subsequently been avoided for rear or continuing that denegralion. "But people listening (to the readings) ,..rn realize it isn't an .Amos and Andy .show," the performer ~~· "It's a poet at work." HONORARY DEGREE • Browne graduated from Lin co I n University in Pennsylvania, did graduate study in comparative literature at Columbia University and in ethics, poetry and Italian at the University or Florence. He taught at Lincoln Uniyersi- ' ty and has an bonor~Doclor of J,luman ' i.etJen degree. ·,' ; """"UY he bas -ared on ~vision ~•""'.ill in the Famjly;" "Sanfdiltl and J!jin," and "Bonanza." • motion picture .' treditS include "'l'!le Co die d i a n s , • ' "Topaz," "1be Llberation·or L.B. Jones" and "The Cowboys." But his stately bearing ls perhaps most in line with bis own production or Black poetry and music, "A .Hand is on the Gat.e" and with Shakespearean roles. His graceful body is in part the product of intensive athletic training. The man who says in mock seriousness that he is 88 years old was a member of ten American Track and Field Teams competing In Europe, the West Ind.Jes and Soutb Amerka, Wu American 1.000- yard champion Jn 1950 and '51 and bolder or many national and iot.ematlonal track titles and records. Born in New Jersey, Browne didn 't start out to .become an actor but was always interested Jn theatre. He was teaching literature when he left the academic life for, .. the import business. When the company he was with was about to merge •with another, he decided to choose another calling. CASTING NEWS Having decided rather arbitrarily on acting,' be studied a · New York trade paper. An ad under "c8sting news" reported tryouts for .Toe Papp's New York City Shakespeare Festival the next day at 6 p.m. "And so by 6:30 p.m. the following day, I was a professional actor," Browne says, his somber .face breaking into a wide grin. His first professional role was the "Soothsayer" in the first act of "Julius Caesar" and the role he wants most to do now in t)lis country is a more famous Shakespearian cbaracter, Othello. Browne has portrayed the passionate Moor for the BBC, the English te levision service. "I am not an expert on stage," he said modestly as he leaned back in a chair in the fat.'Ulty lounge at UCI. "But I'm more at home.there." Films , and television are technicallf more ·difficult for an actor, he comments, because action must be understated and because they are as· much or more the director's (and Mt fllm editor's) medium as the actor's. On stage, the gctor lives the lire or the character and builds that life to "extra- on!inary peaking moments. "If that life bu been true, which is different from real," Browne interrupt- ed him?lf, "Anyone can be_real -it's only true tt ·yoo brimimate the script. 0 When 'J'OU' get to the1 large moment, it will naturally' come oot of that Ute," he concluded; his voice "and guestures ad- ding expression to his .story. A Hollywood Hillsreoldent, he keeps an apartment in New York City. He recently returrted rrom Munich where he repeated (Ste BROWN, Page 301 lrvine Series a Sell-out "My all absorbing detire ·is ... to be able tO. ititerpret my own peo- ple through !Ong and StOTl/." Paul Laurence· Dunbar Ticket requests for the UC Irvine Ex· tension's Centenary Celebration of black poet Paul ~ Dunbar' Nov. 2-6 are no'!Qnger.beirlg ~ed. The scholarly ~ being offered as free lectures or as a two-unit credit course bas been moved from 'tbe concert hall to the sclence'lectlµ"e hall because of the \)Umber of admission requests. The event is now technically "sold ou~." although ft is free lo the public. Adv&nce 'requests have been numbered. Jfsohie people with advance tickets don't shoW at.each session, non-ticket holders ~ be admitted. People interested in Laking the two-unit course for credit slitu)d call the UCI Eitension office, 83H41•' °""tW born 1872 in Dayton,.Ohio, was the • flrsl black author to achieve ~I appreciation. He died,in 1906. · T¥ celebration cX his b~ 1hu at- ~.eminent literary lcliQlara from al! o•er the oountry. .. The coordinator is Myron Slmon, UCI associate professor or English. Dr. Simon wrote "Ethnic Writers in America," an antlf(>Iogy'whlch includes a· section on Dunbar. The schedule of events is as follows : -Thursday, Nov. 2: Readings by actor Roscoe Lee Browne. -Friday, Nov. 3: 7:30 p.m. -The Relevance of Dunbar with Arna Bon- temps, English professor, Fisk Unlversi· ty ; 8:30 p.m. -The Poetry of D.mbar with Dr. Darwin 'l\lmer, English pro- feM<>r, University of Iowa, -Saturday, Nov. 4, morning session: 10 a.m. -Ounbar:'s Dialect Poetry and the Folk Traditloo with Dr. DicksOn Bruce, UCI assistant professor, com- parative culture; 11 a.m. -Paul Lauren- ce Dunbar In HI.story with Dr. Gossie Hudson, chainnan or N!tory dlvLsion at Lincoln Univenity. -Saturday afternoon session: 2 p.m. - Aesthetics of Dunbar's Tales with Ad- dison Gayle, assistant ~fes&>r of English, llerna1d M. BaruCh CoUege; 3 p.m. -niclal Fire in Poetry of Dunbar with Dr. James Emmanuel, pro1essor of English, New York City College; 4 p.m: -Masking of the Novelist with Dr. Ken- ny Williams, English p r ore s s o r , Northeastern Illinois State College. --5aturday Evening session: 7:30 p.m. -Portrait Against Background with Dr. J. Saunders Reddlng, professor American Studies at Cornell University; 8:30 p.m. -A Film Biography written and directed by UCI film lecturer Carlton Moss. -Sunday, Nov. 5; l p.m. -Motives and Methods of Dunbar. a question and answer period with a panel discussion by aU lecturers., moderated by UCI English professoc Jay Martin; 3 p.m. -Dunbar and the Poetics of Popular Culture with UCI associate professor of English ~ Lentrlcchia; 4 p.m .. -Dunbar, James Weldon Johnson and the Writing of Dialect Poetry with Dr. Simon. For students attending for credit, a session will be held Nov. 6 to as.sign papers. The public ls invited to view first edi- tion worts by Dunbar and books: written by conference participants on tt>e first fioor of the UCJ camiw library. ACTOR ANO SCHOLAR ROSCOE LEE BROWNE TO REA!> DUNBAR'S WORKS -- FLAMINGO GU ITAR IST LAU RINDO ALM EIDA . . . . Afternoon Music Fills Irvine Bowl lnteniationally reno'Mled mUSlfJQRS Laurindo Almeida and Bud ShaokJ guitarist and saxophonist, will team: ~ for a performance at the Irvine BoWt~in Laguna Beach on Sunday, Oct. 29, at 1 ~~ p.m. :· The perfonnance mark.! the drst of • series of concerts designed to featw'.'9 established artists in the jazz, folk, b~ and modem dance areas of the pedoJ1n::i ing arts in Laguna Beach. · · -~lany or the promising groups and lo- dividual artists who live in the OnnfP Coonty area also will have an ·o,; portunity to perronn in one of the most attractive open air facilities in the CQUi! ty. "The high standard of the as yet: unknown artists is going to surprise the people in the music industry," said M-.rc Friedberf-..who is promoting the IrVine Bowl concerts. "People need something to do-<h winter afternoons. These Sunday cio- certs will bring music lnto the fresh am and out or dark, nightclub atmospberei:' said Friedan. Chuck F1orcs and Buddy Clark will-~ company Laurindo Almeida and llid Shank. ·:A One of the world's several truly "'1t concert guitarists, Almeida Is ever hiille compared to Segovia, whom he lainfl and respectJ. (n the past year _ ibi .Philli~r111oni~ Series· Begins 'War of Worlds' Brazilian has played dowls of coo~ pcrfonnlng the works of the mas~ On Air Sunday Yet recently he toured much of the Mild ' as fea\ured soloist with the Moclenr Jq< Orson Welles' or\glnAI ''War..m lhf' Quartet. -.:·. Worlds" radio broaClcnst will kie't-off Accordlng to Friedan, Almeida brotacit ' Mehta Conducts First of 7 County· Concerts· three nights of a J:lalJoween celebration BQ,sa Nova to the U.S. long before 11-'tif on KNAC ri;1dio at 9 p.m. Sunda.y. called that; he has scored many ~ . Bleck Sabbath w 111 hcadl.1nic; four ""'"\ often composing, then playing his~~ hours or spook ~ws beguuu.ng at 1'Wsic; and bis famed recordlngs ~ 1be Los Angeles Philharmonic On:hestra, Zubln Mihta conducting, will introduce lhe Orange county Phllharlnonlc SOqiety's 1 9 7 2 -7 3 sublcrlptlon series of seven concerts, sunday, Oct. 29. Openlilg the society's f9th season, the concert will be played in UC Irvin• Crawford hall at a,30 p.m. Mehta wUi O!l<ll the program wilb Mozart'• S)'111phonY No. M in C, K . 338. Followilll lntetm1salon Mahler'• Sympbooy No. 5 in C sharp minor will be bean! in tbree parll: -Part I - Funeral March, Part II -Scbeno, Part Ill -Adagletto and •Finale. ZUbln Mehta !8, has been the Music Dlro<tor of the Loo A n'g el e 1 Pf1Uh1rmonk?> OrcheJt.rt sloce 1881) He' 11 c.,,.iltid with buifdlng the on:hettra to ils pruent ital..... where both Mehta Ind the Orcbeotra • re synonymous With musical excellence in international mu.sic c:lrcles. htehta opened the wlnt.er concert season of the Los Angele s Philharmonic at the Dorothy Chandler Paylllon of the Music Center Tbunday night a(!er spending a full oumme" he coodllCled at the Prague Fettlvaf, the Pablo Casali Festival In Puerto Rico, the Robin Baod Dell FuUval in PhUadelpbJa, coocertt in Car1ca1 and Montreal, a l~Y Vl<Otlan In jlraail and then to Ttl Aviv wllh the Janel Phllharmonlc, lot wblch he ii 11111tlc advllU and to lhe Festival at Vence, France. ID la~ Auamt he directed the ' Loo Angeles Phllbannonlc In Hollywood Bowl hr the ~ ~ and open! throe -111' SeJllOl\>ber ~ Ibo 1-1 PhUl)lrmoolc In a ~lb -Tour and • North Amlrlcln Tour earlier thts month. On the South American Tour they received raves and played to packed houses every night. At the farewell performance in ·Rio de Janeiro Mehta took 12 bows. Three nights earlier, In Buenos Aires, he wu called back 20 times and the orchestra played tbree encores. .Vter. CUlductlng the Loi Angeles Phllbannonic thl'Qugh Nov. 12 Mcbta and the ()n:htatra ,will leave Nov. !$• oo • l'IO week tour of Japan . Ile wll\ then mum to Southern C.llfomla when. ho ,.u1 condiict bla usual eo o~ .. ooocerll wltb the Los Angeltal Phllbirmool<- -UekMa for, all 7 ""'°"I'll are t ~ f'"' ..,.......,be:n and '81 Jor Pllltbannanf< DJ0!11be!S, oo aai. al the . Pllllllonmtlt olllce, 201 w. Coast • • . , l~ighway, .Newport Beach. Single tiCkets (if available) are $5 and students $2. Phone 646-6411. 8 p.m. Monday night. Then V111Cent everything from Bach to a beautiful IOli Price will narrate a witchcraft program · it at 8 p.m. Tuesday nlaht. ISee CONCERT, Pate it> .f Following is the complete schedu!~ of concerts for the season : -Nov. lf the Royal Philhannonic Orchestra. Lawrence · Foster conducting. Teiko ~19f'hashi, violinist, UCI ; Jan. 77, Los Angeles Philhannooic, Zubin Mehta conducting. Occ: Feb. 10, Los Angeles P.hilharrilonic. Lorin Mav,el con- ~ctlng, Vladimir Ashkenazy, planlsl, · qcr: Mhrch 21. Los Ange I cs Phllhannonlc, t..awreriet Fosttr, con-, dUcling, UC!; April I, The Da1laa S)'!TlphonY. Anshel BruaUow, con- dllCling It Whltfemore and Lowe, diic> ' pianists; end May 11, U>s Aogeles PhOhannooJc. ZUbln ~eb con· ducting . I • ;· \\ l.l :hl .~Ul.K 1-'l·:.\'ll HI·' ' • • Newport Harbor Ari Museum presents the largest and most ambitious oxhibilion in Its 10 yeor history Thursday when il opens with a major ntro- spectlve o! the A mer I can realist painter Reginald Minh. The exhlbltlon openllig .l!so m,erk~ !h• end . o! dJreclor · Thornas Garver's career , wilb the mu,seum. See story op Page 30. · I ll What lo Do Page 211, 23 • UCl..A Celebration Page 28 ; Concert series Page 28 ; Out 'N' About PAge 27 , : •• Donna Fa:go Page '¥1· • TV Movie Pago 21 Uve Thealer , P•i• 29 · TV Log -Page 29 • • lnU.rmllslon Paa• 30; - Page aO-·~· -. Clilldren's Play • . : • • 1, H DAILY PILOT Frid&J, Octobtr 27, 1912 'WJult to Do, Where to Go • Free Concert 'Fonlgh' t Go den West -OOT~ll . coNcERT -Goldin Wul Collect Sin• Band, directed by Dlvkl AnthoA)', 1'il1 oanduc\ a tree coo.cert at 8 p.m. In the 1111 QillUllWlllY 'l'llttttr. ocr.11-11 CIW'T FMR -111e Ith AnoUl1 -wlll be conducted at Denwar Q-aft Studio, 238 E. 18th st., COsta Mesa, from 11 a .m. to '4 p.in. each day. 100 arUsts wlU show items of jew- elry. pottery, mlie!ra1ne, weaving, stitchery, tle-dye and many others. OCT. 31 JfALLOWEEN CA.RNlVAL -Westminster will conduct its l llh Annual Halloween gathering at Sigler and t-.'1cFadden Parks from 6 to 9 p.m. There will be costume contests by age groups and jack~lantem contests lpumpkins must be brought already carved). A "Spook House" wiU be held at Bolsa Park from 7:30 p.m. to 9 p.m. NOV. I Street, QJota Mesa, be11nnin& al 7:30 p.m. AppearinJ Oct. 28, Selah with Debbie Kerner. Admission free. OCT. zg. Z9 ART SHOIV -El Cajon'! 7th Annual .tjreade will be held at Gillespie Field front 9 a.m. to $ p.m. daily and will In- clude displays ol new general aviation aircraft, 25 experJ... mental aircraft, 50 antique aircraft, a Coe.st Guard reSCtJe helicopter, and various displays of aviation-related equip. n\ent. '!lie Air Show will be I-3:30 p.m. each day, and will feature aerobatics. stunt flying, including a car to plane transfer. spo rts parachuting and demonstrations. Adinis· sion is $1.50 for adults and 50 cents for children under 12. OC"l'OBER 31 FOLK OANClNG -UCI folk dancers meet every Sunday from 7-10 p.m .. in Crawford Hall. Dances of Greece, Yugo- slavia. Israels and the world taught, in addition to regular teaching of beginners, intermediate and advanced dancers. priC'e. lN CONCERT -"The Moody Blues" at the Forum in Ingle-NOV. t . 5 wood Forum at 8 p.m. Tickets $4.25 to $7.25 available at all ITS 1'1AGIC _ 18th Annual presentation at Wilshire Ebell 11cketron outlets. Theater, Los Angeles at 8 p.m. Tickets $3.50 and $5.SO. An ocr. !I all-star magic revue featuring great illusionists and sleight- BONFIRE -Family sing song and bonflJ'e gaUtering at New-of-hand artists. pirt lluile>, Pac~lc Cll89I Hwy of£ Jamboree Road, New-NOV. z -Beach, Evening car load rates, $1.50. 644-0510. COMMUNITY CONCERT _,__ Harbor Ar.ea C.Ommunity Coo- -OCT. zg cert Association presents young violinist Regis llPasq~~r at • NOV. 3-5 ANTJQUE SHOW -Anlfqile a1>oW and sale, Quality lfot<I, Anaheim. l~ours: noon to 9 p.m. Admi.s.sion, $1. 547·1355. NOV. 5 MUSICAL MEDITATION -Newport Unity Churdl presenta Mu.slcal Meditation Festival at 10 a.m. Nov. 5, 15th and Irvine Streets, Newport Beach. Organ, piano and (U.ltar music. NOV.$ CHILDREN'S CONCERT -Golden West Symphony will pre- sent an introduction to orchestra, conducted by David An· thony, in the Campus Theater at 2 and 4 p.m. AU adults must be accompanied by a child. Adnlission, 50 cents. NOV. 5 VIETNAM -Antiwar activist Jane Fonda will appear at 8 ... p.m. Sunday in tbe CX:C auditorium. Sponsored by the aSSOCi· ated students, the lecture admlssoin will be $1. Tickets, at $l, are available at the OCC box: office. NOV.7·11 DRAMA -"Ondine" by Jean Giraudoux with new trans- lation by Director Robert Cohen, aswciate professor of drama, staged by UC Irvine School of Fine Arts. Fine Arts Village Theatre, 8 p.m. Tuesday..Saturday, Nov. 7-11. Tickets at $2 available at Fine Arts Box Office, 833-6617. NOV. 9 • 1% It's Magic Lady magician, Diana, \vill be one o! many profes- sional magicians appearing in the 18th an n u a I show on stage at \Vilshire Ebell Theater, Los An· geles, for seven performances. Nov. 1·5. All seats reserved. For information. call (213) 851 ·3313. Violi1iist in Recital ~ CONCERT -Every Saturday at the Calvary 8: 15 p.m. in the auditorium at Orange Coast Co ege. n:i80C· iji&pet tent at the comer of Fairview Road and Sunflower =~ia~ti~•n::...:.m::;e::;m::;be::...:.rshi:.:'::ps::...:.req~u_ired-::::lo::r-•..,dmi;;;;'ttance.;:;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;::;;;;;;;;-- DEATH VALLEY ENCAMPMENT -Furnace Creek and Stovepipe Wells Village in the Mojave Desert. A mwt for wintertime desert lovers. Special activities include dancing, nature talks, guided tours, fiddlers contest and burro races. Opening the 1972·73 season of the Harbor Area Com· munity Concert Association at 8: IS p.m., Thursday, Nov. 2 in OCC Auditorium, is young violinist, Regis Pasquier. P ittsbu rgh, New Orlcnns, <ind Otta\\'a 1 National Arts Cen~ ter1 . :Haunted Hotase :"Baronial Hall " will be on exhibit ~t the Miniature : Fair In Sheraton Beach Inn, 21112 Pacific Coast : Hwy., I~untington Beach, from 11 a.m. to 9 p.m . : Saturday and Sunday. Admission is 50 cents and :thousands of miniature items will be on display ; and for sale. . i VCLA Theater Arts • Celebrates 25th Year 'nM!' UCLA Theater Arts "Dracula" will be presented HUNTER'S • BOOKS #8 FASHION SQUARE SANTA ANA (714) 543.9343 * Hard backs • Paper back1 Greeting Cards OPEN EVENINGS MON. & FRI . * Department is 25 years old. May 3-12 in a story-theater Aho h1 1ewrty Hlfh It's celebrating with a i·ear· style by faculty member Lat-• Shenw01 Oab • LA. Jolla F od e 9'tio.til1 e Sa. ffC11Khco loog anniversary season plan-ry erguson, a a long awajted stage vergion of the The \Vest's O!dl'St & Finest Bookstore DEC. 10 HANDEL'S "M'mlAH1' -University Chorus and Orcbes.- tra to present Handel's oratorio, "Messiah," under direction d. Maurice Allard, associate professor of fine arts. Crawford Hall, 8 p.m. Sunday, Dec. IO. Admission $1. NOV. 11 DAMSH GYM TEAM -Orange Coast College's Peterson Gymnasium at 8 p.m. Variety of modern rythmical gym- nastics for boys and girls in vaulting. tumbling, skJ pping rope. acrobatic floor exercises, $2 general admission, $1 for students. Tickets at door. NOV. 10 • 11 PILGRIM FESTIVAL -Claremont Pageant traces the plight of th!: pilgrims ·-their revolt and celebration of Thanksgiving on Plymouth Rock. No admission charge. Both days showing at 2 p.m. NOV. IS PHILHARMONIC CONCERT -Concert by Royal Philhar- monic Orchestra of London with Lawrence Foster conduct- ing, sponsored by Orange County Philharmonic Society. Crawford Hall, 8:30 p.m. Wednesday, Nov. 15. For ticket in- formalion call Orange County Philharmonic Society, &KHi4 11. NOV. JS PHILHARMONIC CONCERT -Concert by Royal Philhar- (See WHAT TO 00, Page 28) He ls one of five sons of a celebrated father. Pierre Pas- quier. of .the internationally acclaimed Pasquier Trio. AJ. 12. he won the first prize for violin at the Pa r is Con.servatoire, and at 13, the first prize for chamber music from the same iratitution. The new world first heard this artist at age 14 when he toured Alaska and Western Canada. Jn 1966-&7, he returned to this hemisphere for a Unietd States debut tour of reeitals and orchestral appearances, and each fall since then he has come back for sold-out tours in recitnl, and with orchestra, including those of Clevealnd, GUEST ARTIST Regis Pa5quler e PRE-CHRISTMAS e PRE-CHRISTMAS e PRE-CHRISTMAS e PRE-CHRISTMAS e PRE -CHRISTMAS e MUST MAKE ROOM FOR LARGE PRE-CHRISTMAS SHIPMENT WAITING IN THE HARBOR • .,, "' h :i: !!! ~ "' • ned to fill the Ralph Freud prii;e winning novel "Ten Days Servin~ Callfornia Since 1851 Playhouse and the other The-~Th~at~Shoo~~k~Th~e~IV~or~ld~·;· ~~~~~~~~~~~=~~~=~~~=~~ aters In the MacGowan HallJ~ ,. complex with the enthusiasts of the performing arts. Our Orange Juice is so fresh, so l!ood, ~o low priced! You can s.rve it 1.,_ringly for your Hallownn Parties. It s so good with Oonuh for the FreudBegtru;,ingla·~~-sea.;1~ i~ th: . kids Vodka for the grown ups! Perk up your Halloween Parties with our .J'""'"""" fresh squHied Orange Juice! It's cheaper than the "other kind." premiere collaboration by Bil- ly Barnes and Bob Rodgers. NEWPORTS HEADQUARTERS ptaytng 0c1. :z&.Z9. Entitled ~ FOR ALL THE HALLOWEEN "Desi Friends," the new show GOODIES, GHORDS, INDIAN feature! a musical view of the W S 25 years since the nrst theater CORN, STRAW FLO ER •.. graduates went forth to try YOU NAME IT ! their luck in sOOw business. Following the musical will be the Pulitzer Prize winning drama "No Place To Be Somebody." Playing Nov. 16- 19 and Nov. 29-Dtt. 2, Charles Gordone's play draroatlz.es the rage. humor and wit of one lroubled Black American. J'rom the contemporary to the classic, "The Country Wife," William Wycherley's fut pel'ed story of how Mr. Horner cleverly beoomes the molt popular bachelor In town la bext oostage, running Feb. 1-10. ConUnuing the departmental tndttJon or presenting premj«e dramas, a new play by Harold and E d I t h Lieberman will be staged Mardi 1-10. '"!llrone o f straw" presentl 3 chilling 1'91'>' set in Naz.I Poland. A ,.W lld,apllllon Of tbe 1ll~lme t,.vorfte horror 1'1Wrf I ALI.GLASS AQUAalUMS 10 91L ,,,fl "911. 11.so 26 91). , .... •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• • LAROE JUICY •Newport's Fl"Ht Flow.rs •~ U.S. •1 • • VALIN"" • GORGIOUS • IDAHO • • ORANGES • ••HH POTTID • POTATOES : • • Chrysanthemums • I 0 ... $I oo • $1 '9 • s Lb,;.,~•llo 29C • • • ._... • Prr Pot • _., • • l.lmlt 10 Litt. • Limit 2 • Li~lt 2 • • With Thia Coupon • With This Coupon • With Th11 Coupon • •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• • ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• • • OUR FAMOUS • HALl.OWE!.N • ALWAY• A FAVORITO fR!SH SQUEEZ~D UMPKINS • • ICEBERG • ORANGE • p • • LETTUCE • JUICE • • • • • LARGE SIZE • • • • : 2 Hood• 25C : 39c 9 .. ,. I• Vt O•lloM o"'' • • l.lmlt 4 HNCl1 • Limit 1!J O•llo" • Limit 2 • With Thia Cfltpon • With This Coupon • With Thia Coupon • •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• COUPONS EXrlRE NOV. 1, 1972 In th•ir never endin9 1Nrch to ' 91_..·thelr customers the finest these restaurents •«"• Ntwp«t. rroducel Pettoniit 'thein1 you'll never regret it! Amenos. Belb~a lslend• lei Posedo. 2 locetions, S1nt1 An1, Costa Mesa; Andlomos. Tustin; R111Py ·,~, Newport; Ylcl'ot Hu90 Inn, Laguna Beech and over 300 others. How ebout your cellin9 us 1 "Orange Countv'i Moit Popular Product and Flower HoU8t" ---~~-. ~~~~ NEWPORT PRODUCE Opell 7 Days a W11k 8 a.m. to 8 p.m. H1' Newport ....... d oo 11t1 r .. 1a .. 1a ·-•n-a11s 67J.1711 "Hitt "36 Ytar1 oj Produce IONDED ,FRUIT SHIPPER ''W'Mre Quol{(tl Lt thl Know How" FOR ,, YEARS Ordlr of tht Howe" • • '.CO·RSO Road Tested in Oct. Bicycling Mag.azine . SPECIALISSIMO ' FROM ONE OF ITAL Y'S FINEST & LARGEST BICYCLE MANUFACTURERSI A TRUE EUROPEAN LIGHTWEIGHT 10 SPEED + TAX • IN THI CARTON .,, "' h :i: !!! ~ "' • WHILE THEY LAST!! I· .. SOLD NATIONALLY AT 129.95 •• ·I COME BUY & SAVE $$ "' Handmade Frame Of Quality Seamless Steel With F i n i s h e d Lugs • Simplex ~ Derallleur. Ratio: 42·52 Chainwheel, 14·30 Freewheel • Universal Or Balilla Alloy • Center Pull Brakes With Hooded Levers • Pirelli Gum Rubber 'Tires • 27"x1 1/4" Chrome Steel Rims With Large Flange Hubs And Quick Release • Handlebar And ~ Stem Of High Quality Alloy • Italian Racing Seat • 23" Men's Frame In Choice n Of Red, Yellow, White • Weight: 27 Lbs. • ~ RA CASH ~ • .,, "' m n :i: !!! IMPORT DISTRIBUTORS • ~ 1635 Superior St., Costa Mesa ~ (Today, 2 pm to 6-Sat. & Sun., I 0 am to 6 pm) I • • ·~ '". Dream Machine Restaurant Lives Up to It's Name More oflen Uutn not, ft &eeDll. dining out 15 taken a:i 11 serious busltiess -an occasion given to solemnity rather than levlty. There are times , of course, calling for formal ceremony and behavior, but they shouldn't be allowed to set the pace for most restaurant outings. Perhaps we're sometimes led into over-seriousness by such factors as a haughty waiter, Intimidating ambience, or grim-faced patrons at the suITOundlng tables. Happily you'll find none of these kill- joy elements in a rollicking new restauran\ that's just opened on Bristol St. in Costa ~1esa -the Dream Machine. AS A l\1ATTER of fact. those of solemn and sober mien are distinctly warned to stay away Crom this place -Wlless, double as entertainers -singing, playing guitar. piano and even the vioHn -~d you have son1ething like a three-ring circus to accompany your meal. Dinner entree5 lead off. for eKample , with the giant beef rib and golden bird feast, SS.95 per person. Or you can try tbe golden bird alone (a rresh. plump California fryer, prepared a different "'ay each night), $4.95. Ne:it in line come the dream burger (chopped bee! steak stuffed with mushrooms and onions, and topped 'fl'llh cheese), $4 .95; top sirloin steak (14 oz.), $5.95; sauteed chicken live"'. $4.95 ; giant beef ribs {barbecue s"•eet and sour), $5.50. FOR BRUNCH or dinner there's an im- posing range ol full-meal omelettes and burgers. The latter, priced from $1.75 to ntunber or people partaking. Two of the three members In our party opted for lhe Dream Machine "planked feast", $5.95 per person. Varied from time lo time, on the night of our visit of- fered food o! lop-notch quality as well as quantity sufficient ror several more peo- pl e To one side of a huge "'ooden plank "'as st:icked a massive mound of barbecue ribs and a whole. quartered chicken. The mid-section provided a vegetable selec- tion of fresh com-on-the cob, cherry tomatoes and two varieties of squash. The other end of the plank contained a huge stack of fresh fruit -cantaloupe. grapes, orange, pear, apple and strawberries. Beneath everylhing was a savory and Uuffy bed of rice pilaff. Tl1E TIURD order went for the mushroom omelette, which contained fresh rnushrooms sauteed in butter 8lld sherry wine, and topped by melted Swiss cheese. Fresh fruit accompaniment in- cluded orange, pear, apple and can· ';~ { &. ta loupe. The on1elette loo -like most dishes at Be a ch · s floating Reuben E. L ee rr1da~, Octobtr 27, 1972 DAIL V PILOT zt' l Out 'N About NORMAN STANLEY the Dream J\tachine -was served on a restuarant -Far West Services. lnc. - large aud attractive wooden"plank. are the people lo thank. The entrees also included a nice basket In a fine gesture t.-vnunendable for its of fresh bread. community-minded service, they're tt>ss- d i..A ing a gigantic Halloween party, open free perchance. they're looking for the right $2.75, include Bristol, mushroom, ortega, J\1any indivi ual dishes and uvuse of charge, to all South Cuast moppets. tonic 10 rid them of their straight-laced chill, shrimp and health burgers. specialties on the menu call for your The proceedings will get under "'ay on ways. Omelettes, priced from $1.95 to $2.25. waiter to explain the content, amount da 3 For, it anytlling, the overall tone and include cheese fine herbs and cheese, and price. Don't be hesitant to ask -the boat at 4 p:m., Tues y, Oct. I. tenor of the Dream M a c h ine mushroom. ran~hero, shrimp. fresh fruit, you'll rec.eive a friendly anq complete ac· THERE'S no precise cut-off time. but automatically sets the stage for fun and chicken liver, chile and vegetarian. count. " parents are adivsed everything will be a good time by all. There's a wide variety of salads and A good beer and \\'inc list includes wrnpped up early enough to let the A breezy. informal and jovial aura fruit and cheese dishes, each a complete draught Schlitz and Heinekens, and a children still make their trick-or-treat pervades from top to bottom -; that is, meal in itself and concocted for any choice selection of aperitif, dessert, rounds. upstairs as well as down, smce the number of people to share. white, red and rose' wines. Kids "'ill enter the Reuben E. Lee by restaurant is quartered in a distinctive Tabbed from $2.SO to $10, these include Located at 2831 Bristol St., just off way of one o! the ramps turned into a two-story structure. shrimp, health, chef's and creation Newport Ave., Costa Mesa, the Dream darkened twmel for the occasion. Scary On both levels there's a colorfu1 array salads, and the fruit bowl supreme. Machine is open daily. II a.m. to 11 p.m.. but harmless monsters will wander at o! antiques and fWlky old objects from An innovative beverage list offers Monday through Friday. and from 4 to II "'ill through the crowd. Sing and laugh with the Wil- shire Boulevard Buffalo Hun- ters when they perform at 4 p.m. Tuesday, Oct. 31 aboard the Reuben E. Lee. Far West Services, Inc. is staging 1 free Halloween children's costume party aboard the Reuben E. Lee. There will be witcheio brew, scary monsters and cos- tume prizes. Also, big-t ime jau will be on tap at the Dry Dock, 2601 W. Coast Hwy., Newport Beach when Cal Tjader per· forms at 3 and 9 p.m. Sunday and nightly at 9 p.m. through Wednesday. bygone days that merit hours of close English breakfast, jasmine, herb, Dar-p.m. Saturday and Sunday. Jn addition to a bubbling cauldron or scrutiny. Everything from tum-of-the-jeeling, Ceylon, Early Grey and Lapsang \vitches'-brew (actually a tasty, soft-drink century bottles to one of the earliest Souchang teas. Exotic coffees run from OCTOBER'S annual fun and ga1nes concoction), there'll be lots of candy, made slot machines. . . mocha mist to titan, cafe Giacoma, cafc lime known as Halloween rolls around balloons and other goodies for every Other appropriate touches in this vein Gauguin. Russian, expresso Romano and again next Tuesday night. And if you participant. include Tiffany lamp reproductions (as cafe royale. have yoWlgsters around the house you Numerous games will be played, with well as some bone fide old crystal probably don't have to be reminded. dandy prizes tor th e winners. and a mn- lighting fixtures). and walls filled with BY WAY of dessert there's a stag-But you might not be aware o! an jor prize will be .ewarded for the best large photo blow-ups of people and places gering selection of ice cream dishes. unusual party that's being staged for the costume. Any outfit is fair-game, the as the cameraman caught them genera-These reach a final point with the "orgy kids this year. One guaranteed to be a more imaginative the better. tions ago. creation", a concoction of what must thumping holiday delight for mom and There'll also be music, songs and To this splashy atmosphere add an cf-surely include everything in the freezer, dad too. entertainment galore provided by the fervescetlt group of waiters "'ho also priced at $3 to flO. depending on the The good folks who operate Newport Wilshire Boulevard Buffalo HWlters. ~49::::6-:=57=73:::::=============== iiWiiiiiiiT•H•E•B•l•A•CiiiKiiiiKiiiNiiiliiiGiiiHiiiTiiiiiii1f====::======Rea=I ==ii-LAGUNA'S NEWEST AND Mo~T-Ex-c1r-1N~ ~ MEXICAN /AMERICAN RESTAURANT FRESH LOCAL LOISTER Complete Dinner $5.95 BRANDIE BRANDON DUO, Tues.-Set. STEVE TOMSIK, Sun.-Mon. a1ul fro1n 4 to 1 P·•·• Me•.•fri. d•ri"I ROYAL "HIGHNESS" HOUR fcnlllo11 Shew by M.,t.ra. 1Z:15, T111tndey OpM Seven Days 32802 COAST HWJ'. {.t C"'Wll V1l•J Plril,1'1'1Y) LAGUNA NIGUEL CAL T JABER NIGHTLY 9:00 P.M. Sun., Od. 29-Wecl., Nov. 1 AND 3:00 P.M. JAM SESSION SUNDAY, OCTOBER 29th 2601 W. Coast Hwy. Newport Beach 548-1166 MEADOWLARK COUNTRY CLUB Lark Room DINNER SPECIALS Choico of Soup or S1l•d 81k•d Potato or Rico Pll•f e G•rlic lr<t•d lov•r•9• e D•ts•rl WEDNESDAY -Top s;.io;n Sleek -············· $2.ts THUlSDA Y -Pdm• R;b ···-···········-·-···--·-$3AO FRIDAY -Bui Stro9enoff ····················-·-... $2.ts SATURDAY -Tournedo1 of Beef -···-···-·-····· $3.25 SUNDAY -2 Lobs!•• TeHs ·······-·-···········-····· $5.10 ()rang~ Co11nt11'• Top Entertain•"""' JOE LIGGENS The orJelnal HoneyDrlPfilf' with WILLY JACKSON 117tJ •Lt.HAM AYINUI CAt w.,....t HUNTINeTON 11.ACH fll41 144-11.. f21JI lfl·lfM Cantonese Food Serving Lunch and Dinner 7 Days. Week RESTAURANT ~ COCKTAILS eat here or INTIMATE DINING COCKTAILS • DANCING SEAFOOD BAR ENTERTAINMENT Open Doily 10 A.M. to 2 A.M. Lunch 11 :30 to 3 Back By Popular Demand JERRY LAMBUTH 330 EAST l 7TH STREET COSTA MESA 642·2304 Sat.-rday OctolJer %8 f ", Prizes For Best Costume ~ .~;N,!~~~Eir~~ ~~~~~ 1, 1" ' I I t•k• home ENTERTAINMENT. ' STAG CHINESE CASINO 111 21st Pl., Newport Beach ORiole 3-9560 Ope Yffr Are11td Dolly 1Z·1 Z -Fri. Giid SGt. 'tll l •·"'· l"•mout Ju S1werbr1tltl 1'1'1111 P1!1'9 Ou"'pllllff. THE BERLINER RESTAURANT 11StZ llACH iLYD. HUNTINGTON IU.CH A COMPLETE CONTINENTAL DELI SECTION Ol"IN Jl:O• LUNCH MMI, tlll'lll Ill. -111• lo !:JO OINNIR flROM I P.M. !"KCtlll MMNy DANCING TO VARIOUS GIRMAN OANOS Frldly Ind hflJ ... IY OPIN SUNDAYS THIRD AND LAST llti WEEKEND OF OKTOBERFEST SAT., OCT. 28 0.....:e to T~ HAPPf WAHDElllElllS l'"'m E"'"'PI LOEWINllAU OICTOlllFUT IEllll OirK1 From Munlcl! OUR MENU Sl11k1 • G1rm111 Styr. S111t1rW1len W...,.r k l111ltul .... _ 8HI Slrot11riotl .... ""'~ 1ot1l1Pvt Stu• "'' LIH!dln WI S1n1 Kiflt 5111 51.,...klln lnlno>ISfl'IM'I LUM~ TOP DECK Here's the . Exciting New Experience FEATURING Cooper& Tanner Uve "1Usk Nial'IUy for D1nein1 & £nt1rttinment 696 S. Coast Hwy. Laguna Beach 497-2300 ANDY SELLS Wed. th·ru Sun. MOJO COMPANY Mon. & Tue1. Night• SUNDAY SANGRIA BRUNCH fe•turiflCJ Menudo e M••i,111 Om1l•H11 e Hu1•01 R11ntkero1 •"d otk1r M1••c111 F1.orilo1. We'll stake you to a bonus breakfast. Sambo's for steaks? You bet! Samba's has steak din· ne'i-5 for all appetites ... all budgets ... at all !Imes. And there·s no gambling on quahty either. AU our steaks are made from hefty, choice cuts, tender and juicy-the way you hke 'em. And nght now. we've made them even more tempting. We'll give you 2 breakfasts for the price of l -just for enjoying one cf these great steaks. The New York Steak Dinner-with french fries and $Blad, just $2.95. The Top Sirloin Steak Dinner-with all the trim· m1ngs, only $2.55. The Deluxe N. Y. Steak Sandwich-with golden fr1ts and garnish. $2.25. To win your bonus breakfast. simply mention this ad when you order any Olle of these steaks. Your waitress will give you a coupon good tor 2 breakfasts tor the price of l. That's 2 Sambo Specials for just 95r -you can"! beat th is deal anywhere. Treat yourself to a steak tOday. Get a 2-for·l bonus breakfast for yourself lnd a guest tomorrow. How can you Jose? Al an Samba's Restaurants 1nSouthem California (lrom Thousand Oaks to San Diego), Offer aood U1rouah Octobt• 31, 1972. .. ' OAILY PILOT NOW SERV1N6 24 HOURS DAILY CAPTAIN'S TABLE COFFEE SHOP Pi.-m.2770 c_Airporter CJnn aio•er 11700 MAC ARTHUR BLVD. ~IJ4 (I i91D0011-Wlot tlr'fJOrtt NEWl"OJll =· .. for th< best VIAL CUTLIT SWISS G•r11h h.d with toM•to, •¥o<•do, 1wi11 cheo10, ltll<t lordtltilt , AMONG 20 SILICT DINNll INTllU VINA HARMER DUO E11torttlnl119 Food -Cocktail• -bt-eot -Doncl"'il Now Appearing CHAPTER Ill DON-JESSE-DAVE Tuuclay thru Suncl•y 1:45 • 1 :lO OPEN DAILY lrHkfa1t -Lunch -Dll'IMr -Sund•y lrvnch EARL 1' IUFFET DINNU--$3.25 to $4.25 Salad BfU' -Choice ot 7 hottl'ntrct.'s Sundays-4 to 7:30 p.m.-Mon--.{rlday-S.-7:~0 p.m. 31106 COAST HWY .. SOUTH LA'GUNA -4H-Z663 Ample Partdo9 For Weekencle1· Ad ,·ertisin« " Phone 642-4321 PIZZA HOME DELIVERIES HAVE CHANGED A LOT SINCE THE OLD DAYS Now Me 'n Ed's mobile CNens speed delicious ptpinii-hot pim1 to your door in minutes. for prompt service phone 646-7136 (Newport Beach/Costa MeH-17th1ndTuslin) /. / or 847-1214 (HunUngtan Beach-Bea<h and H;el). .h Get the Pizza with Pizzaz .~: @) t.:\Mn 0..l~ ~~ · "' f ... ,,wn-~ --~~-- APPEARING LIVE At Hungry Tiger Restaurants Whole Maine Lobster Dinner $695 Whok ltNml'd 10 ptitfeetlon • Dr•wn buUe1 • Sowp or S•IM lndlorid~ ~I ol O'f•n ITHh bfMd • Biked poteto or Rice Pllaff • V•a.b+e AVAii.AiU 7 DAYS A WllK -hungiy tiger RESTAURANT AND SEAFOOD OYSTl!!lt BAii: CALL FO" RESERVATIONS lflJHGltt 1'0Elt ltf l TAIJltANTI HOt.LYWOOD: IOIO "olly.,ood 91\111 (II L,1 8•111 l21ll '462· 1323 111lltMAN Oii.ili: 13•?SYenlu•o 81•<1 1[111 OI Woodm•nl (n3) 78f-ll 7~~WflTCHfSTUI. il~l So ~pvl•llJ8 81\rd JN111t L.A. !nl A,.po,,i 11\J) 171-l:IOO PALOS YlltOlS: 27300 ...... mo·~" Ill•<! ( ... ! Penln•ull Center~ (2 1JI J7l-M11 I ANTA ANA; 16.41 W Sunl1owe• ("'"''' hem So Co11.i F>11r1I (1141 979-11 &1 NIEWPORT llACH: 3~S E Co11! H•O""'t (No or J•mlHl•••l !11•~ 673-6~• FR££' Far West Services, Inc. invites you to bring the kids to our HALLOWEEN COSTUME PARTY aboard the REUBEN E. LEE Tuesday , Oct. 31, 4 p.m. PRIZES• GAMES• SPOOKS• BALLOONS Drink some witches brew from the Bubbling Cauldron See the Scary Monsters up clos e! Sing and laugh with music & songs by the Wilshire Blvd. Buffalo Hunters Wear your best costume and win a upeL prize __ _ -*THE REUBEN E. LEE 151 E. Coast Highway, Newport Beach WHAT TO DO ... (l'nm Pap Zl I maolo On:hetlra ol London wllh LAwffilCe Foster conduct· q, ...,.,.....i by Orqe Cowlty Phllharmoolc Society. Qoawford Ball, 1:111 p.m. Wednelday, No,v. II. For Ucket lnlormatloo call OrlJlle COunty Phllha noOolc Socltly (n4) 114Utll. NOV. 17·11 DRAMA WORKSHOP -Exploralory worlus otaged hy fine arll graduate students Wlder direcUon of Peter Church, lec-- turer in nne art& Village Studio Theatre, 8 p.m. Friday and Saturday, Nov. 17 and 11. AdlnllSlon 50 ceni.. NOV. 17-11 ORCHESTRA CONCERT -Concert by Unlvendty Orch- estra under dlrecUon cf Peter Odegard, associate professor of music. Fine Arts Village Theatre, 8 p.m. Friday and Sat· urday, Nov. 17 and 18. Admission $1. NOV. 15 CHAMBER CONCERT -Qincert by Prague Chamber Qr.. chestra sponsored by School or P'ine Art8 C.Ommlttee for Arts. Crawford Hall, 8 p.m. Nov. 25. Tickets at S2 available at Fine Arts Box Of(ice, University of CalilornJa, Irvine Cali- fornia 92.664. For ·lnformaUon call Fine Arts Box Office (714) 833-Ml7. OCT. ZI ORGAN MUSIC -St. Androw Rober\ L. Huestla will P"" sent a varied program of organ music ranging from "Te Deum Laudamus" to contemporary service music at 4 p.m. Sunday Oct. 29 at St. Andrew's Presbyterian Olurch, 15th Street ~nd St. Andrew's Road, Newport Beach. Admission free: NOV. 30 • DEC. Z SURVIVAL THEATRE -Nonverbal theater exploring human communications, presented under direction or Ashley Carr, assistant professor or fine arts. Village Concert Hall, 8 p.m. Nov. 30 ·Dec. 2. Admission $1. THROUGH NOV. Z5 SOVL MIJSICAL -"Dao'! Botber Me, I cani =:.= II Bwitlngton H•rlford 'lbealre, Hollywood. Pe 'l'lre>clay• lhtoogb Satunl>)'I It l :IMI p.m .. Sundays II 7:30 p.m. fdellntts oo Salurday >nd Sunday al 2:30 p.m. IJm!ted four wed< engogemtnt. For OOet lnlormatton, e&ll (JJJ) -1. TUROU<lB NOVEMllER OBSERVATORY COURSES -GrUilth Park Obtervatory la offering five -In -· aa.... In navlgellon, .. ttonomy, stellar evulutlon, meteorltel and coamology are scheduled on consecullvo weetnlghta. To 1lgn up for 1111y o/ the courses or ror further lnformaUon, call (213) ~1192. , TIIROUGH DECEMllER APPLE HARVEST -Oak Glen'• Annual Fall Frolic In Riverside County. A vl!ltor's &hopping center (cider, apple pies, cheese, old-lashJoned candles, homemade pastrtea). Two zoos, two lroo~flahlng ponds, miniature gold mllle, nature walks and picnic ground!. Located north on .Beau- mont Avenue, from Beaumont, or north on Oak Glen Road from Yucaipa. ' THROUGH OCTQBER L.A. zoo -Featuring anlmals of the world, the Loa .. An~ Zoo is open every day from 10 a.m. to 6 p.m., Grlffitb Park. Take Los Feliz turnoff the Golden State Freeway. TIIROUGH OCTQBER MOTORCYCLE RACING -Every Sunday at Escape Coun- try. Take San Diego Freeway to El Toro Road. foUow the signs. 13 miles east. Races start at 9 a.m. Cash prizes and trophies. THROUGH OCTQBER BEE TREE - A Hve bee lree highlights lhe exb;blt at the Valley Plaza Nature Center, 6011 Laurel Grove, North Holly· wood. Minerals, Indian artifacts and live reptiles are fea· tured in ihe new nature museum open from 9 a:m. to 5 p.m. daily, ei:cept Sunday. TUROU!JB OCTQBER ~-o;e..._l TRAVEL TOWN -Traru:portalion vehicles of all types and vintage are on display at 4730 Crystal Springs Dr., Los An· OLD geles. The unique town offe,rs trolley tours around the park MEXICALI and allows children I<> play on lhe relics. Open 7 days a wed<. lroH..i Hlllkt Si.Ill •:wt _,,_:....., __ _ _ ....... _____ ...._ --· lllM ......... CAFE 11,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~===1 ' ~-I '. -~ Great Mexican Food 0pe•11 •.•·to4•.M. LUNCH e DINNER AFTER HOURS 7 Days A Wllff SHIP AHOY ,., M·-..... -r.: =.:"'o&., ... ~ IAt TIM N..,..-t Pier} IJ~~~~~~~~~~N...,.,...... 675-171t NOW OPEN Lafayette French Restanrant The Finest In French Cuisine Opeo 7 Nl9iti.--S to 11 p.m. Plowty Of Pandnq Your Hoit: Edmond-Your Chef: Pi erre 12532 GARDEN GROVE ILVD. GARDEN GROVI 537-5011 TEMPLE GARDENS QffNG:s:BRestaurant Rl<;KSHA COCKTAIL ~~~~.~~E Featuring Exotic Luncheon & Dinner Daily IUfffT LUNCH 11 :30.l :JO MeNey .. ,. Mdoy 1100 ADAMS C.t Herltotl COSTA MlSA 540..1937 5411-ltZJ Tropical Drinks r-,---Chln=e Cui':in7 l11~-====~==========:=::==::: I /~-....... " .. .,., .. M O CLOS .. -OA, I ,1,,, FLING I BAllBOD SUMMER I ENTERTAINMENT • 7 NIGHTS A WEEK ?DR•CE LUNCHEON SPECIALS DANCING ~~ I x._ ~ SecifoM Selo4 I * HAP HALL DUO l G~~:.·~~:stLI . I •t\ -( J lrc111uty • Fried C:lllcbw I W!lfl ca. ... Wltlls • ,,.. ( LAIRY LAI I mf --:-111 :~=wk• 1t-I ~::· ~::~ysu:i~., and ~ l:lY l I Open Da ily From 6 A.M. to 2 A.M. I I Rear·Mesa Theater S:u-=i:f:. CCKt• M..,a PHONE •••• 645-5550 141 L , ... SI., ................ ... L .. ~ -15:\ EAST 17Tll .... COSTA MESA I _________ ,.,., RESTAURANT LUNCH e DINNER COCKTAILS SEA fOOl}-STEAKS-PRIME RIB INTERNATIONAL ENTREES FROM $2.15 BANQUET FACILITIES ENJOY A MEAL WITH CLAUDE AND JILL Prime Rib e L•nch $2.25 -Dinner $3.95 Paul ..,yao Cut $5. 95 LIVE ENTERTAINMENT DANCING NIGHTLY Lunch-Mon. thru Fri. 11 a.m. to 2:30 p.m. Oinner--Mon. thru Sat. S to 10 p.m. Co111.pllment1rv Beked Al1dr:1 for 111 8trthd1y• I. A11~lv1r•••i11 2645 Harbor llvd., c .. ta Mesa 545-9471 CULLY IS BACK AT THE PIANO BAR Tuesday and Wednesday NADIA'S WAZURI Thursday, Friday and Saturday Nites DAILY LUNCH SPECIALS CORNER OF PARK AND MARINE IALIOA ISLAND 673-4530 Releiced and C1su1l Intimacy HOUSE O~ SEAFOOD NOW OPEN FOR LUNCH 11 :30 to 2:30 Tu ... thn Fn. Nightly Oinner-Coc:kteils ~ to 11 p.m. Sunday 2 to 9 :30 prn-C101ed Monday' 1814 N. Coast Hwy. I El Camino Rea II SAN CLEMENTE 492-6571 THE BULL AND BUSH YOUR FRI ENDLY BRmSH PUB Proudly PreiicnL~ ORANGE EMPIRE JAZJ: IAND Traditional Dixieland Jau from Callfornln'~ Finf'Sl Jazz 1-fuslclans EVERY FRIDAY-t to 12 P.M. From the City of Belfast THE IEGGARMEN ' . ' \\'e are plea~ed. to have this [abuloua group or entertaincl"l! performing !n t helr own Inimitable style ... EVERY SUNDAY-7 to 11 P.M. 877 W. 19tti ST,, COSTA MESA 646-HJO THE NU·TWO Paul O'lrlen & Walt Dolan Weil.tlnS.. SUNDAY BUNCH 10 A..M. te J ~.M. _ U.,N9Un PACl4'1D 317 PAC:IPIC COAST HWY. HUNtlN610N llACH COCKTAILS ENTERTAIN!lgN1' 536-2555 OPEN 7 DAYS NOW AmARING FIN lteH•• Ctclllne Coek&alb W... hyt111 1)0 A.M. t1 1J:)G ' VIC GARCIA M. _, S.t. 11 :30 A.M. te 11)0 2325 E. €0AST HIGHWAY 673-B267 RQtrvatlon1 ,....,., 4._11 MIDNIGHT ''SUPER.MEX'' 9093 E. ADAMS , HUNTINGTON BEACH 962°7911 Open Dilly -5 p.m. to 2 o.m. CLOSED MONDAY • I • • • --• ll•PP!I Girl The ,;Happiest Girl In lhe w h o le U.S.A . .'' Doona Fargo will be singing lhat and all her other popular s o n g 1 when she appears at Knott's Berry Farm Sunday, Oct. 29, at 5, 6:30 and 8 p.m. Winning Art On Exhibit The winners of the 11th an· nual Torana Ari League paint· ing end graphics exhibit bav• been selected by j u r o r , Richard Challis of the C!allls Gallery, Laguna Beach >nd are on exhibit throogh Septem. her at Bullock's Santa Ana. First prize was awarded to Mn. Thomas F. Hom for her acrylic painting entiUed "Cap- tain's tbalr," Second, Mrt. Lote TltisUewalte for o1Beacb Crowd" and third, Mr a • Clarence Reed for ' ' T b e Garden." CHAMf'AONa llllUNCM aUflf'ST SUN .. OCT. If, M1• • J l".M. &TUfrS'llR[ llSTAUUNT no WIST COAST MUNCWAY N9WPO•T IEACM ~ "Fin!'st li.Iexlcan Food in Orang!.! Co." Ch1rbroll1r-food to ~o Opt111 7 D1y1 Coc.H1ll1 Ent•rl•l11m111t M1 w. '"' ''· • ..WU. , ......... ~1 •• ,.....~.A ~ .. ,,. Grwl r. ftMEftA. ttaTAUUNT Contlntntal Cuisine Coclctall1 Semnu L•ri.ncheon mid Dinner Mondau through Saturdalf. Closed Sundays We are locat•d neict to the May Co. in South Cotst Plau. ·----11»-l...ldl!!! C•st•r M... 540.JMO 11fc~~.x.~ ~~1\ Pe/, cy ~ ' j ~~Rae~ Succukn1 &./from Capl/JUi Cook~ broikr. Del~ia f rom U...S.Um Seos. Magtii{1«11iHarbor Jliew. Cook...., ... _ ... _ .... SUNDAY BRUNCH 2:5001 O~A O"IVE DANA l'OINT HMIO" Uf..1111 Off 'MlfttCflMtHJthtrt\1 -TilftJlt utuMN•MllMO..- ' ' ' T KHJ Gran CBS McKe and I slgoe esca 1:111 B (}) 0 lJl e m Ill IHJ m• m 9 • Gll Ill l:!O CIJ D CIJ Ill m • IHJ 11!1 Cl I Ill Ill 7:008 ~ (I) fJ 8)1 Bl II]) m m Ill 9 m Ill 7:!01) D 0 ... It.JO 10:55 11:00 11115 ll:JO t2'IO ( ll:IO ( 1:00 1:10 ( Friday, October 'l7, im DAILY PILOT .. . , TV DAILY LOG TV HIGHLIGHTS KHJ CJ 7:30 p.m. "Operation Petticoat" stars Cary Grant, Tony Curtis and Joan O'Brien. CBS fJ 9:00 p.m. -CBS Friday Night Movie, "The McKenzie Break" stars Brian Keith Helmut Griem and Ian Hendry. Capt. Jack Connor (Keith) Is as- signed by British Intelligence to circumvent a POW escape in Scotiand during WW II. Friday Evening Saturday Morning OCTOBlW 27 OCTOBER 21 "°IJDUIDl!HD-1,000-- CD llli -0 iii ID•-g-... ''lllt "'d So<' U CDOO U.- CI) let s.art m INtller Im fJ WIW .., West (Jj) Tiit Dedric C-Pllf mni. ~111tst1... 1:•1Jllatr'• T,..... 111-"" "'"' o m"' - Lesson Learned Prime Minister Mark Hendrlckaon aamonlah- es attendant Scott Ml· chael of Costa Mesa In a scene from Chapman College's original mus!· cal adaptation of "Rum· plestlltsltin." Perform· ances will take place in the Memorial Hall audi· torium at 4:30 p.m. Nov. 2, 8 p.m., Nov. 3 and at 2:30 and 8 p.m. Nov. 4-5. Admission, $1 adults, 75 cent. chll· dren. 633-8821. Group rates. Homosexual Drama Establishes a First HOLLYWOOD (AP) The film cenlers on the lhe bomo&uual lmpllcatlon William Link, a short, beanled !alber's e!lorls lo hide his and got lnvo(ved In the pro- writer·producer, said, ' • t f bomosexua1lly from his son duction." anybody bad told me a year and the son's discovery of it. \=:::::::=-:;=.;;:=:;::=~= ago I'd he'cloing a movie like Levlr11on said, "No one Is a 'p''i""'cg" ·WI~ 'c""g' ~ this for television I wou1do't villain. The man bas to live his have believed ii." Ille Ute way be has Jo. But il BOOKSHOPS His partner, R i c h a r d he doe.a. be burls his son. If he Levinson , ta 11 a nd dosen't, he hurts henhlmsellbe' • ~~ (7141 "3f.1700 moustachioed, said, • ' W e Each bu moments w 5 SOUTH co•1r 'lA.l.t. °""" thought there would be no not nice. They all have 1~c.~,M= .. =M==· :":"~' :""::":"='=-=~ market for this in television lallibUltles. I and to our surprise, there was . Levinson and Link talked to Everyone accuses television of homosexuals and psychiatrists being bland, bul this iJ an and showed the "'1'1pl to them aduJt theme." "I think homosexuals were The movie is ''That Certain more concerned with images Summer," a bittersweet view than with good dram a.'' r Levinson said. "One homosex· of a ew days ln the life of a ual said the kid should have man, his former wife, his son aeeepted bis father because it and bis homosexuaJ Jover. It will be seen as an ABC wou1d have helped their lm· age." Wednesday Movie of the . Link said, "You can't lake a MDlllE fW1N06 FOR ~ENTS AND YOUNO PEOPlE Lit(e Theater l1Jl Altic HHitt• e ca.,. Pltftlt m "' "'"' ,,_..., u mrn -'"' 11!1-· I.Mio ®I • ....... Week, Wednesday, Nov. I. poll on drama. This was the "It's not a piece about way we saw it." homosexuality in our view," ·~0ne of the comments we ------------~~~~ • 'Tbrch.' Goes Out Saturday 9 ,..,.,."' ltRI m MINI: "''""' ludlheatl" (ID LI S.pda ~ (tch) '5'-Klrwln Mtthnl, Jullt '81""....,. Ad1ms ... ,._.. W..,..... (m) '57 5:30 (I) Hops'1 HerMI -«11th LlrttA, Jllll Divis. UM""' IC> l"'I .,_." MJ OIM1* -~ Levin.son said. "It's about a got was that we offered no father and his son. We tried solution," Levinson s al d . very carefuJly not to make a "How can we offer a solution? piece of propaganda out of It." 'lbe population can't even Levinson and Link were the agree on what homosexuality -~ lflTllOO R l)edlrl1NqtJ1ftl~ ,.,.. ... ,,.,,,t ..... .... -· ("") ·-ltlty ...... l:GO. Cl) .... -(J)CU-BID,.._ llli---..... __ mM<J •-U CD(l)Dt .... ·-··-·--lllJCM: ... T ... 1-GlllJ--fltAllll••llJ I l:J08{1),._- ll:)_ CU.._ D llG"''"-""''"la 11!1--D CD CIJ MC I •:i:: -Iii).... __ ..... -m"'.,"' -. . II) LAio -ltGl9(1)1'1 -a.. 1:ao fJ CD U ~ 8111111-""""' ...... "' _...., ............ ", .................. . (I) Tnill • (wtt) '4~ S11lllwia. ., (J)a.... o-' 1ci..,,. T.,,,.. <1"tJ . D .... My UM1 '63-Bofis Klnotf, .Id Nkholsoft. m 1 LM "" m """' (CJ .,....,.. <"'> •2 e 1 Drt•• 1t Jul• --M•rl St1'l'tllt, MOii UnsbUfJ'. llJJ ..... .,, lllJ T>t -""'"" EE 11r1111 @l lillattr h1111s' NtlPbtrhooll ED UntJ Artl IE tWi 11 Sii Can flt El Mer 11H1 Can M M'*9f t:30 II Scttlly·DM 1111-. ....-h<llk" o a m"' ._ Ell) blltr Dttbf {J)TijHM: Wllllllw 19 lilt Std OJ Sptt4 Jlactr O (II TN lndr Kick 7:30 II Cirtusl »MltY's Cl1t1A" (I) C.rt:IH Canli¥al 0 ..,,,_ ,,_ 1111>-..... a Mtirit: (C) t?tlr) ·a u.. " .. s.. Hui .. stnetr'" (dr1) '53-J1ma C.1· 10:00 Ill m Sult' mzo 11ey, Bartllra ...it. fJ t]) (j) lbritdllil l.I)T1 Tll tlle Trvtll 9.-.t... ..._ "The Totthbtaren" Closing its engagen-.ent with rmat perfonnances tonight and Saturday 1S this George Kelly comedy !ilt _South C o a s t Repertory, 1827 N e w p o r t ). Blvd., Costa Mesa . Curtain at a p.m.; reservations 546-1363. • •• Ice skating everyday. (J)"" ,._ 1~.lOfJ (J),.. ..... - OCARY GRANT, TONY U llli m"-" , • .,"~.~::. .. *CURTIS ••• "OPERATION CJMovie:~Mnula'""' (WU)'5Z 2701 H•rbor ll'<'d .at Adami PETIICOAT" -Wild 8111 Elliott. Phfl Colin. Coit• Mesa. C1lif. 92626 0 Miii .. I """' (Cl (2><) ..... !! ~ .~:.::; (d-' '41-Tel ( 7141 979-8880 .. '*' htticMt" (com) '5.!-tifJ -. ,.., ll~~~~~~~~~~fil Crint. Tony Curtis. Jottt .D'BrU. Edward C. Robinson, Jotu1 QaffielL ®Jllo,... -h •JtM = =-P.1'111" ll ; .:,.; lllJ llo llodrJo cjli....I m, .. .._,,.,_., m_.....,_...., __ ... mw .. """.... ll>GlfJ(l)Dt -m Untl•ll WorW D SI m Mii~ tilt WtlW Ill • m""........, ..,. '1)AddUll Fa•lly (l)Mlbill tlollt Shlw 1:00 11 (j) s.o"' an11 cw o CJJ m ,,.., ru•• O ®1 lrJ "'Jo< N4 Sol ID M-ll> U m (l) ID '"" •-flll (JI> "'"' CD Hopa'• Htree• e ~ u.n 8) f'tny Mut1 ft rih WIK 11 Pl'I FootblK fl) Ktrmlllfl Ctn!• 11:31 a lll D Ttlklll1 wtt• .• Clall fEl (111 Wtshltlft11 Wtlll It 1tNw (I} ""°": "leM tf CiMlfTM" U1 Enttsta A1111u Prnut1 (wa) 'S2-M1l1. Powtss. ai) LI l1t1Vidable 0 (J) ~ Ullmllt m Morit: 12111> •.1uM clrt" 1d11) m.,...... w..w . '42-Rol\.lld Rt111n, Ann Shtrld1n. m ·flltllt: "loll '.lki" (doc) 51- UI a (jj m"" .... -m IHl"" """" .._ o mrn mn. -,,.. Aft FtJ '1he Modflther" emoon m Meiv Crtffil 11.'001J (() Ardlle't TV f11111h:s tfj) Tlll J1st It ... (R) 0 ... ,,., EE> Cit)1Mlciltfl 0 .... w -SOCKO SEXY ROBERT u m m 'l: - FORSTER AS BANYON O _, (C) """" ""' T• After Ghost Story NBC 1111" (•> 'M-llitii Gaynor. l:GO IJ (J) CIS Fridoy Mlc't _, (CJ iii Jul .. ! (nr) 4111 Mcl111dt lltlr" (d11) m TM Ghat 1M1 Mii. Muir ·1~rlt11 Keith, Helmut G11em, 1111 ~CA£: Collttt cndit count t{endrt, Patrick O'COnn1U. fEI Mtltlf ltrtn' NII~ 0 @) @n ;bllt StlfY "Alttr·Eao" III) Trnthlrt u mCil m•-m 9"'"'""" CD l'llf T1leh111 1Z:3011 Cl) flt MMrt llld ttll Cnbr fE U1 Vtm11 hr1 IKttlar Ila 11!1 (jJJ ·--(R) 0-: ..,,. ........ $f1/' ti) LI C..111111 (dr1) '65-.ltln Marais. 1111"' -· u CD m'"""'•........., l!i)I................ ®I -' IC)..,_""" lllo !'.JD 0 (SJ Cl) G) TM OIW Couple ltMr" (WU) '54-Audlt Mu~"1. fJIDMIWI mEt .. llllJ' ltlwl !~IE YJV11111 Htftfpm m Sdl•• StMt 10:00 m s.w.s Mtrm 8 S.1 Appeallnc Mystery Ill-* BANYON NOW 911o Ila'"" 0 00> m ._, t:GO B CIJ cu-·• Ii••-om-•-.,_ u mrn m""-"'""' u mrn m ....,. ,_ fJ hria llr111f Pmfllb 1ttrllltt tD SHt Trtl11 111..-..... m-!Hl Eltdltl 7Z Ill Cl11 1t1 '8 Twdt m Sov11 m C&M411111 Mvt•turs 11) L.i. """" l 'IO 0 _, <I> ......... (..,) llil "'"'" '° m ..,.,.,..~ -.. g)l11Pt11 tf tM Sd tlllMbtM lflltl' Ne~ 10:30 U T•lk llCk m ttu .. 11 ••••• • P1ttko1t Ju11ct1o11 Oji MIWl1: "I Ctlfm" QI Spt1kln1 frtttr 2:00 II Dustf• 1,...._ Q!I Mowl1: (C) "DlllMllM" 0 Acrlcllllllfl USA 10:551 Polltluf .......... "' (t) ltl111llc. ,_ 11<00 DDGlllHJI-®l 'MW . (J)®)N.., m-go,....,_ (!IJ..,._ w ... .-., oi11o. m ... Strttt Cl stltrlodi: HMtt 1\lltn 6' TY ..._, If Min II Truth If C1•~11111C1t ttJD 8 .. tt l.8nil'I Cit Mtw11: (C) "ttonlW. Dr. Hltdt-811.-., Cldl"' (ltof') '" -a.m" 51 .. 11. m MdlM'• ""' l!B llrMI Ttlll Anldltla tB , ••• , 11:15 • ci .... l4 1:00. TIMI Sida II .... ea Hmlft 11,IOIJ (J)CIS Lola_, (CJ.... D ....... Ill - llllldtn" (wt1) T1llJ Sml1s. 8 II• Adill a a m~"' CtrM1 ro r. w f'lkkr. <Cl • _, (CJ -7F' o-(<) -Citr" (ftl) (com) '&5-M3~llo M1stnlllnftl. '52-ll.iolph S0::1tt. f)ffi(l)GDDkl ,_ '"' Ill_,.._,,.,,..., 1U111m1n II $11bllltult Jiost. ...,. (h«) '63 -W ........ III Nlafltal111 '111t MpltfY vi U. • M•: ......, T"*" ,(•) '41 Y!W1 Dfoo(' Cl1udt fl1IM ltm. • 'TIMI ..,..,.. ID Tt Tell IM Trltll QI Ntl .,... 12'°" •• ...., ......... " -·---()ol'l '40-l•tllt 11nb. 1r• 11scv 12:I0 9M"": ........ ol --"T--(com) '52.-Mlt1 BIOl'k. S:311 r..t ..... Ol Ct11n\IJ M1111k h Cilll9lt 1 .. ro ao-_...., ''". _, "'" ·-... al>"' ··-(4B) '57 -JIJM MoutJo•. ·- Cl) -TIM - ~, • I • ALFRED ltilCllCOCK'S "FRENZY" 7:00 .. 10:40 .... "PLAY MISTY FOR ME" $lion .. f p,M. c .... s .......... 2 , ••. JOE DAUESANORO AND SYl VIA Mn.ES IN "NEAT" IATEDX .. ...... . ..-, ... 11.. ...... . 1, "Sammer and Smbke" writers and producers of the is." •••••••••••••••••••••••••••• "4 a 111 -11J -- Now on stage at the La· guna Moulton Playhouse is this drama by Tennessee WWiams, playing Tuesdays through Saturdays WlW Nov. 11 with an 8:30 p.m. curtain at 606 Laguna Canyon Road, Laguna Beach. Reservations 494-0743. Center auditorium, west gate TV movie "My Sweet Charlie" Levinson said Hal Holbrook , of the Orange C o u n t Y and are the creators o{ the father, and Martin Sheen Fairgrounds. Reservations "Columbo " "Mannix" and did not have any fears about 834-5300 between 8 a.m. and 5 "McCloud'." Currently, they playing the parts of bomosex· p.m. are writing the script for a ua\s. Link said, "I asked one --o·-,.._""""'"_ ..... ~- ''The Sklo of Our Teeth" theatrical ·movie, ' ' T11 e actor if he would take the \~==========' Hindenburg," based on a book part. He !laid he would be ter- Thomton Wilder's satirical about the flight of the Gennan rifled at the thought of comedy opens tonight as a dirigible which .ended in dis--playing a homosexual. I ask- project of the Westminster aster. ed. him i( he would play Hitler. Youth Theater, PI a Vin g The idea for "'lbat Certain He said sure." 111.Jght Up the Sky" Moss Hart's comedy about ihowbiz continues tonight and Saturday for the Irvine Com- munity at the Humanities Hall P layhouse on the UC Irvine campus with an 8:30 curtain. Reservations 646-3178. Fridays and Saturdays for two Summer" originated when "The onJy problem for the weekends at 8:30 p.m. in the the partners met a divorced actors was tech ni cal , ' ' .,.1 Westminster Civic Center man who told them that his Levinson said. "Hal said ap. ur.&M" ... ...,, ... auditorium, 8200 Westminster son was coming for a visit. proaching the role was very F-OR'F'"'uN...-1 pa'o'""Fl"'I Ave . Reservations ~7537. When they realized that the difficult. Playing it was not. It 11 BARGAINS GALORE! """'O TaJes of Terror" father was a homosexual li v-was the same with the script. 'fl\ltS..WS~Mett$ ing with another man they Thtiiking about it was very t.MdirJl5'.llllllYAllOof Opening tonight and playing knew he was facing a dilemma difficult But the writing went 1.t..M.1114•.l•t for two weekends, Fridays anU that wou1d make for exctting swiftly. Oddly enough, once we AI O.Ol'!Q• /1 1' '2' ... "" "The Legend of S I e e p y Rollow" Saturdays at 8 p.m., are drama . ""'"'"' "Markhelm" and "Mask of, _____________ g_ot_•_tart_ed __ w_e_r_o_rg_o_t_a_bou __ ', • This children's production enters its second weeken<l with performances at 7:30 tonight and 2 p.m. Saturday and Sunday at the Fountain Valley Community Theater, 18280 Mt. Baldy Circle, Foun- tain Valley. Reservations 962- 5198. the Red Death" by Golden West College alumni in the Actor's Playbox on the GWC campus, 15744 Golden West St., Huntington Beach. Tickets at the door. "Mrs. McTb.lng" Saddlebakc College opens it! seaso n with three performances of the Mary Chase comedy Nov; 2-4 at 8 p.m. in the College Theater, Building R on the Mission Vie- jo campus. Tickets at the "Me and Thee" A new comedy at the Costa Mesa Civic Playhouse con- tinuing tonight and Saturday at 8:30 p.m. in the Community door. ---CINEDOMI 201,:. .... ~~--.. --t'INEDDME 21 _ ... ·-.-"'? ·.r·"""."".'1:'-:'fU ----~· S /AD/UM · 2 ,>;' ·~~ I f ... UTTElll'll•S Alfl l'lfll!., fPOI Gtllli. Htwn & Edwa,,_ Allltrt llllO "PLAY IT AOAIH, SAM"' 1!11ck11\Vt il'l ... "*'t How Ht !t-l"ftd S..b WIMtr ol i Acdtmy AWtl'ft .,l'IDDl.1!11 ON THI 11001'" M•rlOll •r'"" •• "THE GODl'ATHEI" (Ill • "PDIHT •LAHIC" Ill ttlflltn THI CAT., fJIJ • "THE 5ECllETAIYM fllJ "'THE NEW CENTUlllOHI" fll) ~ o-;c c. SC.tt "'PlAY MISTY l'Ollt Ma,. Ill Cl1tritl •ronMft ..,.HIE VAL.ACHI PAPElll" !Ill • "X Y & Zlili" -··11 ... Jt; ,_ .., ... "Wttlllt• DO•t IT • HUlltr' ---T-•--.n "'OIT TO ICMOW YOUll ...... ,, .. 1111 l!DWARnS 11 (1\~\l\l f \:l li.. • ~···<,,.· • .,, ' . . .... . ,. ' .. ' p1'c4dill y ~llt11t(' ~ate.,, @)~o_@@)@@ t.111k•1111ric1r4 e 111•1f1r ch•rt• 7 f11hi111 1111114, 11twp•rf c111t1r 644·1070 "All IJC"'AORDlllARI& Y' JOY'Al&ADAnAnOll 01 JOHii ICllOW&D' 81HWAllJ llOVl&I liOUllD JO S11MU&A11 AllD MOVll" -'-'! G'flflfl .. ,..... "' ........... "I UICI 1Hll ll&M var MUCH._ 8RIWAllT, HIAR1WAllMlllG, IMGROlllllGl"--.....-... -. •• -_,,,rw,_,_ AIOlll' YOUJW lfte MAK• _ ... '"4,N_f ... hllr...... ~ •~ c.....,._ lflDl mwr "JOHN KNOWUI' ion cu••IC uar-w•• 'fUIClfU UCOMU A C&AIM ...,,._ , MOflM MW"' .:::.=.. ....... , • ..,.. •• ,.,...., ..~ I n_,._,_,. -................ _, .. .....,. ... DI.).~ ·OflO l\M04l'D ~ • LN'Fll' l'ft..cr "-" A~ffillCE .... ._ h 1111*-.llW.,. "lAOT Sl••s TMf llUIS"' Ill .. ,_.,.i .. "lOYllS 4•0 OTMll ST••••tts" (HJ ,, ....... wi ....... emc ... ·,.1.....,c.1, "lllClllT & IOGGS" !PG) t C1l1r l" 'I'•• Cl..t •J:•I .. "AOIOI IA•ATA" O!ll'( Or1ng1 COunl\I 0.1 _,,, "11PAllATll l'liACli" (POI "l'lltllMDS" fltl )J~ " mv11 lie wlltl p1r..t --_ ... ·--'-,.;!";t'·;;• M;;.>_.J .,. ,..... :;i Hf'Sf( , ......... ~ftl.Heht ·-""'-"' "ASYlUM" l'Gl •<1111' "Tiil IUTCMll" (Pl)•< ..... If tlfllOl .. "Plf( .. H YCHI MA'fl 1101111ltl TO lOI• •T TOUIMI.._ "'lSTl•M .. <'•I • "'1MI Q1Cllll" (''' --.... --M> ; ..... ''t:'C::lttl•--.,...,,.,.rr&U" DO ... MtlOT,.....f'I ... .......... .. .. ' :JO DAILY PILOT Gurver's Last Show Much Ta"lent in Theaters Marsh on Exhibit The sidewalks of New York from the Bo'lo-cry to the Union Square are being celebrated by the Newport Harbor Art l\1useum as It presents its Reginal A1arsh e.th.ibit, open- ing Thursday. Nov. 2. The A1arsh exhibit, ,.,hich wlll be a1 the museun1, 221 I Balboa Blvd., Newport Beach. through Dec. 10, ls lhe largest and most a1nbitious exhibition In the n1useum 's 10-yeAr hi5tory. It also 1narks the end of 1bomas JI. Garver's four· year career as director of the museum. Garver haS accepted the post of curator of ex- hibitions for San Francisco's Al.H . De Young l\1emoria l l\luseum and California Palace of the Legion of Honor. A black-tie preview will open the major retrospective of the American realist painter on Wednesday even- ing. Mrs. Reginal Marsh, "'ho has donated works from her private cclleclion for the showing "'ill attend t h e preview. More than 85 paintings, large-scale watercolors and Chinese ink drawings have been brought together from 25 different sources: But I er lnstitue, Youngstown. Ohio; Columns Gallery of Fine Art. Columbus. Ohio: f\1etropolitan f\1useum of Art, Museum of l\1odcm Art and the Smithso- nian lmtitution. Born in Paris in 1893 to Hrtl:st parents, Reginal Marsh spcnl his IUe in New York City. He died there in 19f>.I af1er documenting New York 's burlesque houses. beaches and bums with deep compass.Jon. ··He had a mordant sense of caricature wh ich he combined with flamboyant and precise draftsmanship. a legacy of the old masters "'hose ·works be st udied on his frequent trips lo Europe," according to Phyll is Lutjean s. museum spokesman. "His city was a place where people came to entertain and to be en- tertained and to be with friends ." His favorite haunts were the Bowery. 14th Street. Coney Island. the El. Marsb main· tained a studio on 14th Street. overlooking Union Square for 20 years. The artist used high- powered binoculars to spot his subjects amid cut-rate stores, street hawkers and clothing outlets. During the summers Marsh travelled to nearby Coney Island. '". .. Where a million near-naked lxlcties would be sten as one, "Marsh said," Crowds of people in all dlrec· tions, in all positions. without clothing, moving like the great compoeitlons ol ~elo and llubens." "' lie was a drartaman, using large watercolors and dr8w· ings in Chinese ink with a lint of color. His technique, show· ing the masses of figures clustered together. conveys !he essence of New York .,.,.here land i..s n1easured not by !he acre but by the square foot. Commenting in t he ii· lustraled catalogue which ac- companies I h e exhibition. Garver points out t h a t Marsh's figures are crowded and pushed up against each other but " ... his people just go -riding on lhe subway or the elevated, silent and discon- nected from one another ... packed together but isolated from one another by a distance stronger th a n physical proximity." The exhibition travels to Des ~1oines Art Center in Iowa, Fort Worth Art C e n t e r Museum, Fort Worth, Tex. and the Art Galleries, University of Texas, Austin, Tex. Museum hours are Tuesday through Sunday from noon to 4 p.m. and Friday nights Crom 6 to 9 p.m . Admission is 50 cents for adults, 25 l'i!nts for students and children. Guided tours at 2 and 4 p.m. CONCERT ... BROWNE. • • (From Page ZS) (From Page is• 11 Under There exlsll 1n Ol'&Jlle County a v111t reservoir of perlormtnc tolent -not all of which ls confined to regularly 11<heduled prodocUons of the area's v • r Io u 1 C9mmun~ tiea er groups. Many of amateur thesplallll who regale us Wltb tbe.lr com1c timing or move us wlth the.Ir dramatic interpretations two or three times a )'tar a<:tually have only scratched the aurfaoe ot their abilities . Consider, if you had the pleasure of witnessing it, the recent one-night variety show presented at the Huntington Beach Playhouse. It was an ecumenical event attracting talent from many or the other community theaters ln the area -and much of this talent shone with a high, professional gloss. Among the highlights : •-The hilarious im- personation of Phyllis Diller by Ann Lapp, who has been doing the cackle and fright wig bit for years . Although Ann is a good-looking, w e 11 • p r !>- portioned girl, she ls com- ,__WM .. His ........ -Hll•O.n ~ C•..dy "WHERE DOES IT HURT?" album of Broadway favorites. He has "\\o'OO 10 Grammy Awards. The first program will also feature Steve Wood and Beth of the group "Honk". This group has established itself as one of the best conteniporary sounds and recwtly signed a recording contract. his acclaimed role in ;;Monkey Moun- tain." Bro\me. and fellow character actor Anthony Zerbe, have been performing an evening of poetry, "Behind the Broken \Vords," on college campuses end \\•ill do a benefit showing sometime in Novem- ber for the defense fund of Pvt. Billy Dean Smith. accused of killing t"·o Army Reginald Marsh · was done in Chinese ink technique. ~-.. KM /Dnld Nfw "PRUDENCE AND THE PILL" Also performing on Sunday will be James. Patrick and James. They live in Corona del l\lar and have scored triumphs on college campuses and TV. One of lhe most gifted and under-ap- preciated blues artists , Jimmy Withers- poon, will top the bill on Nov. , 12. John Wasserman. critic for The San Francisco Chronicle had this to say: "I will simply uy that I wod.J.u rather hear Spoon sing the blues than any man alive." Accompanying Jimmv Witherspoon will be Robin Ford, discovered ree:e:ntly by Spoon in Palo Alto and who with Witherspoon mesmerized the Audience at the recent Monterey ,Jazz Festival. Another great success story emanating from the Fifteenth Monterey Jazz Festival Is 17-year-Qld Patrice Rushen who plays piano with a sophislicalion that had both jazz pla~rs and audience overwhelmed. The third group on the second billing is Gabriel Gladstar. Two guitars and flute combined with some of the best original songwriting has already allowed this group to become well known in hometown Laguna Beach. All seal! reserved at $2·3-4·5 and are available at the box office, New Direc- tions, Laguna A-tusic, Les Gamins. lnfonnation available at 644--7477. officers in Vietnam . His social concern doesn1t stop there. He's been lending campaign support to the Democratic presidential candidacy of Sen. George McGovern. He has campa\gned in the past for the late President John Kennedy, for Sen. Eugene McCarthy and for A d I a i Stevenson. PIM'M'IOUflt P1ctur11 llf'9Mntl .,llLA.,-IT AC3AIN. """ .. ~T~" .t.1> ..... _.. .... D~.- But communication via drama is still his focal pojnt. Bringing body, mind and being together as one family in a performanct is a ronstant challenge. Ill,..--TIMES---.. "Too often in many of us, they are dis· "SAM" -•:45 & 10:05 tant -retat1iv,~es~·-"_h~•:_:'"=gg=es~t~s,:_:•_w___:ry __ ~!;;;"';°"';::•;'; .. ;::;';'';';o;";';'~ smile on his ~ace. Music Center Opera Associ;ation presents the Sixth Annual Visit of the NEW YORK CITY OPERA Los Angeles DrilmA Critics Circl~ llw.ud Winner 11 Superb Operas 21 Superb Performances Nov.15-Dec. 3 Opening Night! Don Giovanni Mo1.1rt Wed., HO¥. 15, 8:30 pm ((llrHibJ Fri,. HO'f. 24. 8:00 pm 11t11lli11) The Makropoulos Affair Jalllet• (IR EliC1U;b) Thurs., Nov. l&, 8:00 pm Lucia di lammermoor OolllRtll !In IUll1n) Fri .. Nov. 17, 8:001111 Sun .. Kov. 19, 8:00 pm la T raviata ven11 (In llllllli) Sat., Nov. 18, 8:00 pm Wed., Nov. 29, 8:00 pm la Boheme l'ucdnl c1111ta!i1t1) Su n., Nov. 19, 2:00 pm Sun., Dec. 3, 2:00 pm Unncn e1i~1 11R Frt11t'l Moll, Nov. 20, 8:00 pm Sat., Nov. 25. 8:00 pm Sat .. Dec. 2, 2:00 pm Maria Sluarda OOl!llllti (In ll1i11n) Tues., Nov. 21. 8:00 pm Thurs., Hov. 30, 8;{)() pm Der Rosenkavalier StrlllH (In ~r1111nJ Wtd., Hiw. 22. 8:00 Piii Fri .. Dec. l, 8:00 pm Susanniilh f1oYd (In (1111it~l Sun., NO't. 26, 2:00 pm Rigoletto Y•nll{ln lt1lla11) Sun., Nov. 26, 8:00 pm 2ND AT CINIMA WEST #2 HAROLDand , .... a. MAUDE !!ill RUTH GORDON Bl.OCORT ':::::."" Sat.. Dec. 2. 8;00 pm Les Contes d'Hoffmann ett.nbiH:~ (tn Fnnt~) Tuts., Nov. 28, 8:00 pm Son., Otc. J, 8:00 pm TICKETS Now I ., ... c""" "' "~"' .. ...,., o SD. Ctllf. Music Co .• 637 So. Hiii: W•lllch& and Uberty Ac.nclM. mdlet. IM)I not IM uch•n1..S or ""'*"..._, f"or lnfotTltttlon: (21S) 626-721 1. , II lUllYI • OIAMGI COUNTY tNGAOlMUT DIANA Ht.BE HO DAY .. BAD COMB\NY" ( Tld;tt prlce1 for 111 perform111e1i: Orchlstn. Founden Cifci1, $11.00/ L,.., us'"""'· "'· 1.!151 M SJC CT''""' Bii'°"'• ""' ~!15/Bll<Oll)', lf.R, 3.15 U '" L" far speci1I Gr011p Rates, Clll 84~1428 0 P'AYJ LiQN 2n4 llG flATUH HAROLD and ""' I -MAI.OE [(ill RUTH GORDON BLOCORT '='° I ALSO "M*A*S*H" Co•t. Seit. & s .... ""' 2 Everyman hoSadirorn that must be rtrolized ... • lotlt 111 Col°' -11) COMllNATION WOODY ALLIN "PLAY IT AGAIN SAM" ALSO Pw "THE LAST OF THE RED HOT LOVERS" e .... s ... ,,.,.. 2 '·"'· MGM Preearfs Al&l ll'JSm.i~ "5l'W>IGE ~ SIO'flnQ ~TIJTlll · SCOTT NffCN"f cn:I H8.fN M1RREN ScteenoloV "tJf ~ l.OGlE. bed if' It-.., klol( I.?{ H.S.El:E A11ociCHe ~ ~ BE""'· Plo(t..ced cdJ Dh'ected bf KEN li'USSEU. IR 1_.!!!U!CllD • .2.I ME1ROCOJ>l -o STAITS fllOAY OCT. 27fli tXClUSIYllYI "****" _,,., .. ,.,.. o.i1, ...... T!te only Orange County Engagement /HllDOVll . HEN THE LEGENDS DIE Yt•' Ceo IHI r ... ll•ck 111111, .. , .. , Him,.' Try I•· ''"'' hh• .. , w•tch owt. Bltl; ROllllR'I' C.'08Bf-CUI.I' '"l l"H!lll(l!XA~ llOW THRU TUtsDAY ' ' plettJy COOYlocinJ .as I doffy Oilier doul>I•. ' -P'ted West's rich, full singing voice that gave hla au- dience a look at another tip of Intermission -hl..l__ver~ut ta~l~•n~L;...'::--::=:----:--: It's not that easy to se. a ·•Anything You Can Oo. I Cil) ballad like "Dulcinea" to a Do .Bctlct". And U1cy did, ipo •• lubrtcated audience, but Fred -Six·year-old Debbie Fresh.· did so with ease. cute: as 8 button and carvltla -The incomparable Marty out a movie career with .i PJlr!· Fuchs, already well known as in "1'he New Centuriorts", ~ a skilled stage comic. rolk who 's helping to btinJ; sioger and songwriter. 'I'hls dancing back into popul1t1 • time, Marty pulled out an -Three Hwttington ~ outlandish oomlc rout i n c stalwarts retivlng those "gOod reminiscent of Prof~r Irwin old golden rule days" "s lhey Corey and com P 1 et e I Y learn a!I about the birds, th~ dliunanUed the midnight au-bees and the fishes. Wildl y dlene:e. runny antics from Pa u I -Pat Warner, blessed with Sullivan, Nancy Wills and Ron a set or the most melodic Lambert. vocal cords in lbe county, giv. It all started out , emcee Ji1n ing ou1 with "The Sound of Smilh explains, as a fund-rais· Mu!;ic" from the show of the ing idea for the On Corps , same name In which she star-ladles· auxiliary or th e red, and "Wouldn't It Be playhouse, and mushroomed Loverly" from "My Fair into a magnet for COOJlty Lady", in whJch she should. talent. Smith, who turned -The comedy team of down 10 more i)Cls the day or. Fillan and Faulstick (or is it the show for lack of time, also the other 1,1•ay around?), Ron gave directors from other and Carol breaking up the local groups a chance to sound house with a surprise routine. off about their current reversing roles to tbe tune of theatrical projects. . DY SINGS THE BLUES PAR/IA.OJNT RCTlJRl:S CQpt:Q; t.Tl('li'.j ord BE.Ql<V GOROv' p-e,,ent [).ANA hCSS 1r<J "llOf SINGS Tl-£ llUES" also stor11rq E-llLV OI f-Vv'ILUA~ oo-slooing RICHARD Pf'.?Yor.? . [)reeled bv SIQ'>Jry f tU?IE Pn:x:lu:ed t>,. JAY \\'fSTON & JAJJi:;~ S \";f-1:-~ E~rve Producer B:CQ!..Y G07CN · Scre<5f'J..JY t'"/ TERENCE tv1c:Ct~ & CHRIS CLARK .} SUZAN!...;[ deF'ASSF. MJSic score b,> MICHS.. U.GRA11.1D · F11<ned inPANA·/!SICN• In COLOR · A Pl>PM!0~NT FCllJ, E ~i fRl 1~~-....0!ll"Wl'~•<Jllt•·"'~!' ''"-.J u IXCLUSIYE ENGAGEMENT • ••• • • •••••••••••••••••• * COAST HWY. AT MACARTHUR BLVD. * NEWPORT BEACH • 644·0760 A(SQ SHOWING AT ·~r.f'BUENA PARK DRIVE · IN 1.fftCOLN· AYL -7 8LOC!IS WIEST OF 9U.CH 9LVD. (Adjolnlnt 1M LINCOLN Dl'tlYIE·IN) CHllDRfN UNOf.I \2 fUfJ tl U,HONI 714/121~070 I :, DI TU ·~AC 1 , Mo 5'. .. ldt 9"' GI t4-~--- -; Ap ·.ma ,, Far "tm 15 p,, 17 Nu ,. 1! B• 19 Cit '" .2() De .2t 1/1 :tj . . " .. ~ "' 3J 36 .. .. 41 DICK TRACY TUMBLEWEEDS MUTT AND JEFF NANCY .. M!'f AUNT ·FRITZ! WANTS A SAL.MON FRESH FIS H HOW ABOl.!T THIS 7oNr:? I DAIL y CROSSWORD ••• by R. A. POWER I Yettltfd•v'• Puule Solved: ~ACROSS city 1 , Mon• -··· 45 Not e•cited S:~ Identical " Group of 9' · Game ships 14-:0·· •• ebout: " Ran 11 • ', Approli· c1n1in gait • matetv 53 Be In store ,, Farm '"' 7-impl~ment .. Sudden 15 PelvlC bone 1p11m or " Nuclear pain compleK 55 Recording ,, Be borne medium 19 City of 56 "Bnu Ft1nc1 --·· .. 2q Dead 57 Gem 22 1/10 yen, 58 Area' al1t1r in Japan " Go ln 23 St1110 60 Famed S.A. : owoet'• . soccer plllytt . concern " """ 24~ Kil'ld Of hit DOWN : In baseball 1 Banking 2' Str1tch1d tr1nsaction '"" 2 Preposition " Cetti. 3 Combu11ion -...... product 32 Not here • Dynamo 3J Chile con port • -• Trme of 3J lottM ye1r 36 UMmp{oy9d • In ,••i•tence I CJOr'I 7 A 11 ··-· -• F1m1le 31 -•torv 1n!m1I 37 vr, • Libr1rien'1 31 c .~. feq\'flt neighbor •• Support for 39 Mak•• dirty I ltllUI .. c;h1g ore 11 Certain " Amerloln•' pain1ing1 n1ighbor1 ,, Govern '3 Drink• 10 13 US Govt. .. N~h1rn olflclll• 21 Unaccom• 39 Mean• of p1ni9d trlfllPQrt .. 22 f"iah tion 24 Britlth 40 Shed hair counselor•· 42 Bid to It-law· 1t1ef1d Abbr • 43 Snarl ' 45 Wiiiand 25 Plly 1 -: rnutlctl Clnad" .. n lr\1trument watlrWIY 28 Pronoun 48 Enclosure 27 T1ke tt e1sy 47 Author - 28 Group ol Witter atodcl 48 Noted 29 Mary Ann certooni1t ---·: U )'o1n1 of Georp Eliot tand 30 Lease 1gain 50 NOJ ... Of' 31 Fertlle medium-done germs 51 Hl!Rlic 33 "The -poem Mutiny" 52 Piece of 38 Full of 1ud1 furniture 37 R1dlu1 64 Kind of time• two IOUnd 1 'l I 4 11 12 II ' I by Chester Gould by Tom K. Ryan ' t.f(.HCNI suim.e by Al Smith by Emie Bushmiller . NO-· ~ PDN'T J.:IKE .rr- PEANUTS """" -" .n ovou · HAVE ONE WIT H A NICER EXPRESSION 'i • JUDGE PARKER IT SEEMS I NEVER COME IN HERE IWf WIVJ YOU'RE EITMER PACKING OR UNPACKIN6 THAT~! VM'f DID YOU LEAVC THE POUCf STATION? MISS PEACH • j:!l.l.Y .$C.HOOL- W0MfN'~ \..I~ ~flN• 1\llS Artlll~OOll PERKINS \ .--..I'~ ' • DOOLEY'S WORl.D SALLY B4NANAS : 'bitru.....<>fr I' ~Htl-Taoll .... """"/'141& ~..,w ...... <Put-"'<·~ GORDO MOON MUWNS ANIMAL CRACKERS Friday, Ott.obef' 27, iq72 DAILY PILOf $! by RoeJef Bracffl•ld ,,._ow T0--0 By Charles lanottl by Gus Aniola by Roqer Bollen Tll! &AIM 811tD l#ET'S ~~ Blfii O! JUIC<J ~li?M, IJA ICIJO\O ! ... " by M.U I f 1 H 'While otbt.r primitive peopln med fttb IDd fnJt u • medJam of e:r.diaqe1 -my, lt lmlt1 Ave beea w11l1rtal havinc moaey tba& could spoil If yoa dkla't spend tt Wt.'' DENNIS THE MENACE .. I I I • I ' 1 DAILY PILOT 1'172 S.r. *Rl2 I 0CJG.104311 FINAL DAYS Of '72 CLOSE-OUT BRAND NEW '72 CHRYSLER NEW YORKER ~ OR. Hor'. t:o1scouN1] $ BRAND NEW '72 PLYMOUTH Surburban STATION WAGON Seri1I ~ PH46·M2D-211620 pow•r 1t11rin9, pow1r br1k11, b11cli:•t 1•1h, vir1yl roof. I 5SJCXVI $1895 '64 OLDSMOBILE V-1, autom1lic, r1dio, h•1f1r. IOZWOl71 $395 • New York1r 4 Or. H.T., VI, 1uto., r1dio, h11t1r, pow1r 1t11rin9-b..1k11 • 111h • wil\dow1 t ilt wh1tl, vinyl top, air cond., crui1 entrl., 1tc. IOIOASJ) $2095 '71 V.W. CAMPER Pap top, tint, r1dia •nd he1t1r, !129CllJ $2395 ' \'11";". • EQUr · -PPEo WITH · V _AM-FM •t•-. ·. 8, Automat· Int , r•dio IC, d , ,__•r disc bre~ PG'Ner .steer. ~&,, ,_,_.er 6 "'• -1' po'Ner win.. . ¥1nyf side Y seat, Yfny1 mouldings. roof, . '67 FORD GALAXIE · ·soo 4 Dr:SIM:I. VI, 1uto., r1dio, h1•f1r, pow1r 1t11rin9, pow1r br1k11, WSW, eir eor>dilioni119 IULP7121 $595 '72 CHRlSLER NIW YOIUI lrou9h1m -4 Dr. H.T. VI, •ufo., AM ·FM r1dio, h••t•r, pow•r d1eri119·br•kes • window1 • 1•1t, 1ir c:onditio11ing, vinyl roof. ISOOELTI $4995 • "'-S""' CATALINA 2 Or. H.T. VI , •ulom•lic:, r•dio, h••f•r, pow•r sf••ri1t9, power br•k.e1, WSW, •ir conditianii19, vinyl top. IXNHll-4) • $1095 ··ss CHEY. CAPRICE VI, •ulom1lic:, r•dio, he•ter, 1ir c:onditioni~, vinyl tap. !66-476· JI0759/l $595 • ' ' . • '\' • • ---"-· • ATLAS IS YOUll: Rl!Cltl!ATIONAL V•HICL• Hl!ADOUAltTl!ltS f'Olt JALl!S, SA\llHCJS, Slll:VIClll SEE US NOW/ I "', ' WE' TAlcf ORDi'NARY . CARS IN TRADE f. I ' , • • ·~ • • ... 2000 cc engine, Auto. trans., flipper windows, radio, heater, $ vinyl· interior. Like new. (883- DNW) IMMEDIATE DELIVERY CLEARANCE PRICED '72 l TD FORMAL . , COMPLETE PACKAGE . $ . IMMEDIATE DELIVERY • • • LEARAltCE PRICED '7_2::GRAN· TORINO FACTORY A1R COND. V·8, auto .• p •. steeFing, vinyl interior, radio, heater, white-- wall tires .. like new.t(014-S.D) IMMEDIATE DELIVERY CL.ARANCE PRICED, '72:COUNTRY SEDAN 10 PASSENGER· WAGON· FACTORY AIR COND. V-8, outo. trans., power steer- ing, luggage rock, ~uol facing reor seats. (968-E'BE) like new, rodio, white wal~ IMMEDIATE DELIVERY lllW URIE'R ~01:·~2 • willl ePERRIS VALLEY SHELL CAMPE~ r.flr ....._..._ hLeu l•t•ri•r. ' ' . I. -. It~ 4 speed trans. 411 Rear end 3910 GVW 60 Amp bonery 35 Amp oil. l800 CC EOQ. Vinyl Seot 600 x 14 6 pr. tires. Reor leaf Springs Ind, Fr. Susp. #SGTAMGl 7871 .. COMPLETE PACKAGE $299 Total s5995 . Down MO. $ $~2.:401s totOI cosh prite .Jn-. ' ctuding tax & license. Deferred payment price $3176:60 includ- ing tox & license & all tarrying charges far 48 months on ap- provol of credit. ANNUAL PER- CENTAGE RATE 12.78 % Friday, October 27, 1972 DAILY PILOT 3 CLEARANCE PRICED '72MUSTANG FACTORY AIR COND. V-8, auto. trans .. power steer-$. ing, radio, healer. (36S.OZGJ Like New. IMMEDIATE DELIVERY CLEARANCE PRICED '72 GALAIXE 500 FACTORY AIR CONO. $ V-8, outo. trans., power steer-, iog, radio, heater, (158-DKW) like New IMMEDIATE DlllVERY E· 100, 250 C.1.0. Eng;ne 3 $ speed trons .. 105" wheel bose. Ideal for the surfer or the motor cyde buff. Order Yours Today. ORDER YOURS TODAY '65 Y·•-n~M~~~~~••-$588 . ''69v~.:~~-~~~~: . .-$1188 '69 v~.~~:~~:-.-.$1488 No. 930-nF. mering, rodio, heat«. license No. YRN 380 «.lie~ Na, YPU-044 . . . I 68 .~~~~~~~~.~:~~. . . . ·· ... · . . PLYM FURY Ill $988 I · NAllTOP . l 6 8 V·I . outo. trans .. fCJClorrciir condi1ioitinf.,.wtt stHrii1g, radio, hforer. licenw No .• YOV719 ' . . '68 V-O~~~~~~~~.~~.r.~~.~ ... $988 ' · 1!ffririg. rodia. hlotw. UcenH Mo. WfX24S ·--.I . '69 PICKUP $1388 CMIY.(•t ... W , V·I, llMAo. IMaNr. LQnse No."60stb· • ·i70 FORD .$1488 · CUSTOMM . V-1. ovto. w.~ .. •ir <1!'9ditioAi't1. powtf lfffring. rod ... Motef. tictnte 7611NX ' • j I :t DAILY PILOT Everyone H111 Somethin9 That Someone Else Wants DAILY PILOT CLASSIFIED ADS You C•n Sell It, Find It, Trade It With a Want Ad ·The BiggestMarketplace on the Orange Coast -Dial 642-5678 for Fast Results -..... l~l -.... I~ I _.... @l _.... I~ I --~~~ -·· I~ I _.... I~ I _.... I~ I _.... I~ 0..-11 General Gon..-ol 0. .... 01 Gonorol Gonor•I · liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii9J--:*~*:--~*~*-:----*:--*~1~~:;-~-"-~----s.-.-~-.~-General Gonor1I A UNIVUI: '10\U: HI THERE! * TAYLOR CO. * ~-~ BIG CANYON COUNTRY CLUll Beautiful near·new 4 bedroom residence in this exclusive area surrounded by elite B. C. Country Club. Sunken conversation area in living rm. Lge. dining rm., fam. rm. with frplc. & many extra features. View of area & goll course. Priced right at ....... $119,000 21 HERMITAGE LN. OPEN SAT/SUN. l-5 :3Q LIDO ISLE -FOR CHRISTMAS! REALTORS 2829 EAST' ccwrr HIGHWAY CORONADILMAR,CAUF. 644·7270 "START SMART" •••• Seem Fonmda To a. Mixed • PRfFERRED LIDO LOCATION With Pleasure ' · T:i'J t!. '!:::" ... ~ 836 VIA' LIDO NORD OPEN SAT/SUN. 1·5 ~~.~~, ·~ .. ~ : •• ~ PIER AND SLIP l<ttchen, and serve at a ~::"u:~~.,:1u.~.'·:; 3 & DEN & GARDEN ROOM you II e11J()y the ultimate in living. Ju" minu1e1 from $295 OOO achools, shopping and the beach. 847...QllO. ' ~REAL DAVIDSON REALTY 646-7767 673-9060 Caught you again reading a Unique Homes ad! Don't be em barrassed; thousands do it every night. It's a relief. an expression, it's fu n ! Frankly. we enjoy writing these ads - and talking \vith you. And as long as we're talking , Unique would like to invite ye>u lo ha ve your next real estate affair with us. \Vhether bu ying or selling, the people, the service and the results \viii delight you. Look at all the others on this page, then think of Brins the children! 4¥.o Bedrooms, 3 baths. A drive-In space for boat & vehicles. 40' Lot. Loads of closets & storage. Anxious owner offers flexible finance. Quick poss ... $79,500. 106 VIA DIJON OPEN SAT/SUN l-S:30 •••• WITH THIS CONDOI IN BACK BAY AREA -3 Bedroom, 21h bath, builtin kitchen, stone fireplace. F AMI- L¥ ROOM, community pool & REC. ROOMS including billiards. Fee land close to every· ·~~~s 5801 w. Coast Hwy •• N.B. 3116 N1wporl Blvd., N.B. ciass1tied Acts . . . 642-5618 ! ""'""'""""'"" ... .,...,.. ... ..,..,...,...,...,..,,,,..,..~ll us ........ Aren't we UNIQUE? ON TOPOf THE REAL ESTATE MARKET WITH THE NICEST PEOPLE SELLING THE NEATEST HOMES CORONA DEL MAR, 67S«IOO • MESA VERDE. 546-S990 • NEWPORT IEACH. Ms-e&OO • CALL U1 General Gener•I * OPEN DAILY 1-S * 3816 KEY BAY. CORONA DEL MAR LARGE POOL -YOUR OWN LAND 4 Bed roon1 s. fan1 ily roo1n , 3 Car garage. Fast move-in. $89,950 * ADOBE CLASSIC BY CLIFF MAY * 4 Bdrm . 4.000 sq. ft. home. Pool, paddock, citrus, acreage. TRUE LUXURY. $225,000. •• b ) ~!~~~~1:B~r o.n.ral 0.-11 I I Open .J.lou.H6 " SunJa'I 1-Sp.m. CORONA DEL MAR 221 Orchid Ave. $66,500. 3726 Ocean Blvd. $135,000. SPYGLASS HILL 3801 Ocean Birch · $122,000. HARBOR VIEW HOMES 1972 Port Seabourne $89,500. LINDA ISLE #54 Linda Isle Drive $289,500. WESTCLIFF 1215 Somerset Lane fNew) $96,500. BALBOA PENINSULA 1140 West Bay Ave . $169,000. CHARM GALORE-OPEN SUNDAY 14 221 ORCHID -CdM. See this cozy cottage with 2 BR. & sep. guest qtrs. All in lmmac., move-in cond. Pro!. Decorated. $66,500. Triona Berg:ln EXCLUSIVE -$98,500 1215 SOMERSET LANE -OPEN SUN. 1-5. New custom designed for exec. buyer. Vault- ed ceiling. 3 BR's., each w/bath, cpts. & drapes. Lots of extras. Mary Lou Marion SPYGLASS SPECTACULAR See the forever view from this 5 BR., fami· ly home. Best schools, churches, shops. Walk to Corona d.el Mar Beach. Fee land •122,000. Lavera Burns GREAT LIVING BY THE SEA Spacious, ocean view home in beautiful Sborecliffs. 5 Bdrms., den, family rm., work- shop. Lo v e I y patio. Must sell! $110,000. Mary Harvey LIDO ISLE -BEST BUY OWNER MUST SEU. this immaculate 3 BR., 3 bath. fam. rm . home on 2 lge. lots. Pool· size patio. Steps to private beaches & club. $129,llOO. Kathryn Raulston VIA WAIIERS -LIDO ISLE We are proud to offer th is well built & maintained 4 BR., den home with channi line kitch . & lovely South paUo. S85,000. Eugene Vreeland OVERLOOKING FINEST BEACH This 3 BR. 3 bath & conv. den home ii de- lllned to take full advantage of one ol the most beaut. views In the area. $195,000. Edi e Olson OCfANSIDE -3 ARCH BAY Ocean view from dreamy home -3 bed~ rooms & family rm. -wood, brick, Mexican We. Short walk to beach entrance. •135,000. fee. Carol Tatum lllO DEGRE& VIEW-CORONA DEL MAR Beautifully decorated 3 BR., 2~ be. home. Formal dining plus cozy den w/frplc. Court- J:lrd entrance -3 Car earaie. ,87,500. llalTletl Davie> --Coldlou 1llsJ , .... ,.. ~ SN NIWl'OllT CINTlll Dlt., II.I. ' , LIDO ISLE -$14,900 Sum mer/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. 510 LIDO SOUD OPEN SAT/SUN. 1-S:30 MESA VERDE -$37.SOO We invite you to see this truly delightful 3 bdrm. home in a quiet neighborhood. Family rm., lanai & 2 baths. Palos Verdes stone fire-- place, lge. rooms., built-ins in kitchen. Nice-- ly landscaped. Immed. poss. Lease/option. 1645 SAMAR PL. OPEN SUN. 1-S:30 CORONA DEL MAR "OWN-YOUR-OWN" On the water! Fantastic view & pride of own· ership bldg. Private marina, pool, jacuzzi & security guard. Adult occupied. 2 Bedrooms, 2 baths. Call for brochure ........... $89,950. LINDA ISLE -$245,000 Luxurious custom built 4 bdrm. home. Fam . rm., lge. game rm., formal DR. & 4¥.1 baths. Wired for Hi-Fi th.ruout, electronic oven, cus- tom cptng. & drapes. Pier/slip for 65' boat. 50 LINDA ISLE OPEN SAT/SUN. 1-S:30 NEWPORT HEIGHTS -VIEW -$94.000 One of a kind! Fil !or a King (and Queen too). Gorgeous view of lights, bay & ocean. 3 Bedrooms, formal dining & 3 baths. Huge deck for entertaining. Anxious owner. LINDA ISLE A yachtsman paradise. You owe it to yourself to enjoy the luxury of this prestige area. A lovely 5 BR. home w/lamily·nn., formal din- ing rm. and 4~ baths. Wet bar, barbeque & 3 fireplaces. Pier & slip ........... $16~1000. 16 LINDA ISLE OPEN SAT/SUN 1-S :30 BIG CANYON -$142,000 Many added features in this magnificent coJlr dommium in this beautiful country club area. Overlooks golf course. 4 BR., den & formal dining rm. Owner purchased other. LINDA ISLE LOT -$69,500 A real Choice Taylor Co. Exclusive. Build your own luxury home on this island of finer homes & yachting. The last available Jot. BROKERS & SALESMEN We have an opening in 9ur Residential Divi· sion for an experienced man or woman pos~ sessing enthusiasm and integrity. If you are interested in a beautifuI office in the finest location, working with congenJal associates, • we are interested in meeting you. Office Open Saturdoy & Sunday "Our 271h Yt1r" WESLEY N. TAYLOR CO., Ro11ton thing . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $34,llOO HAPPINESS IS ••.• • • • • THIS 4 BEDROOM All wrapped up in this 2-STORY 4 bedroom, 3 bath borne. HUGE rumpus room that will take your pool table. 2 brick fireplaces, built- in kitchen, large yard & room to store your boat. VA NO DOWN ............ $39,950. AUSTIN • SMITH, GORMAN & Assoclotos 644-7270 General General oflnJa .J/J£ PRESTIGE WATERFRONT HOMES SHOWN BY APPOINTMENT 3 L1nd• Isle Dri'fe -Open Sunday Beauliful new 5 BR., 4~ Ba. bOme. Water- front living rm. & formal dining. Handsome oak paneled tam. rm., frplc, wet bar. Large master suite has frplc. & cozy lounge area. View of Bay & the mountains. . ... $179,500. S3 Lindi .... prtri Elegant 5 bdrm., 41h batbS; on Iato6n. New carpets, drapes & wallpaper. Lov~y .garden & large slip . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $212,000 57 Lindo Isle Drive custom 4 BR,1 3~ ba. home on Lagoon. Mstr. BR. bas sltung area & frplc. Waterfront family rm w/conversaUon pit around the trplc.; lovely garden, lge. slip ..... $189,500. IOI Lindo Isle Drive Lovely 5 BR., 4 ba. home with downstairs waterfront mstr. suite & lge. game on. or study. Mexican tile floors, beam ceilings, quality construction, slip . . . . . . . . . . $155,00fl For Comptet• lnform•tion On All Homoo & Loh, PIH .. Call : BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR 341 '"1!'9 pr., Suite I, N.8 . 675-6161 Gonerol SMITTY PAN? BETTER THAN ~th~,:',, 3 ;:ro;:; ! A MODEL HOME Slllitty p&tl for I.be new bot EXCLUSIVE'' New listibg General General :-::c ~~ ~ e~ in "Mesa Va. North," 1 -;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;I carpets, new drapes, new year new, ~ bedrooms • .,. llbutters, new kitchen and single slory with uperadina: bathroom fixtures and new & exlraii plore, even has oower pipes. The lovely air conditioning. You'll have pool is new u is the Gu to see to believe! Call WI B.B.Q. all surrounded by to inspect today. $42.950. hulh new plantln& and bang· 2111 Son Joaquin Hlll1 Road "Ovorlookl"fl Big Conyon Country Club" NEWPORT CENTER, N.B. 644-4"0 In& buketa. The cozy ~ CQ&ATS breakfast moll, l&r1e utility room. ""'"' bulltln oto,... WAt• •cE areas im the aarage , - automatic door o p e n e r , REAi. TORS - 1prinklen in the back and 5t6 41t1--~ new """"'· walk tn 1,..__0 Ennl"'") closets and publde loca· Vt""" .... QUALITY BUILT ,:n,~.-..!'.!~":'.:i~'"' 1""""'!!!!!!!!!!!! ...... 11!11!!!!!! .... Coll 61>-122S SPYGLASS PLAN 74 ... Corona de! Mar cottage on R-2 lot, So. of 1 • .,-~fll!c. ii 3llOO ptu. ,., tt. tn this 5 Coast Hwy. Spacious 2 BR. charmer w/lnner, II~ h bdrm • ba I>lua bonu. nn secluded patio plus a small bachelor unit off x::;~ ~~~Jn.; ·~;:J.; ~~ the dbl. garage. . ................... $61,500. ~~..;_,·.;,.: & bullttn record p10yer. No- LOCATION7. 'LOCATI06o1Mf'• 1u&$101A1tY O• '"' COi.WiLL co. ::tiiu~~b~ 1~~~~: ltf'! * DUPLEXES * f:'·""'d lot I< breath-Iak· ... you bet! This is your opportunity to own 3'NEW LISTING$ C:stii°'ne~Youotcan ':!:rat~ a 3 Bdrm., 2 bath borne on -the Peninsula for 2 BR up, 2 BR down; t.he hOlldaya in your new only $62,500. Surrounding properties are in oceanalr w/ocean view in hom~. Call now $1-6.000 ln- th .an 000 b ck t beaut. oond. N..,ly decor. cludinti land. cion.:n:: ... "':~ .... 175-3000!~~~~8:: 8 red h1·11 a "DROP·IN" at Bl,,y 6 Beach Realtl' -2 bath ··-•t n; s ea. wu. ' Carpeted, draped, newly -·-----------------1 :~_B_AY ~. _BL .. ~C 1.1 _ ' .' ".' I Gonerol 0111•al Exclusive Corona del Mar Conaldered one of the beat areu on the ocean Ii.de of the Coast Hwy. Tbb older family home b 1ltuatetl on 2 ruldentlal lots. Xlnt apprecla!Jon situation. 0 ff er e d at f79,800 CORBIN-MARTIN WLTOIS pe.inted lnskie &: out: ocean view. $89,000. £ ve s . 642-2253. ON BAY AVE.: 2 BR., 2 Ba. ea. untt. F)plcs., etec. blb'll. BU< to ho>. 1'19,!IOO. Eyes. 61H085. CALL: 673-3663 associated ('11•1~fR~ l,l{fl.1ir ~'• .1.·"' e"1t. •• 111~~1 REALTY Univ. Parle Centn. t.rvlne CAll All)'tln'IO, 833--0tlO OUlce llourt 8 AM to & PM THI ULTl~ATE HOME! 1be com.D&et. privacy -.net broathtalil..,; .... .,. ol th" be.clcyard with ht roualve uoptcal ... IOrfall w1lt atone make ""' ,,... !l!lo 1oY<lf * OCIANl'RONT * M.,. V-homo. 5 1arR« * BARGAIN * bedroom' !amtlJI A di~ t.-duplex tn OOIIlllllrClll room•. $-<or .. ,...., • ~ 1 ,,. potloo. TnII¥ dtlltnnl • zone neu-. )In UKI. Priced-rtRhL X1ot cofid. I price only Coll 5'H880 -(Open Evtt.) -~ • )'0\11' lttmitl THI IRWIN CO. Rt1ltors '44-6111 •. HERITAGE REALTORS llO Newport Centfl' Dr. ll!!!!!!I..,!l!!l,....,,......, .... ..,.l!l!!.,..,..,.,__,llll~l·~~!!'!,~N~"P"'~~Be~ae~h1 ~ ....... ...,.,.. .... .,....,, I " • ' r .. General General ARE YOU A TURTLE? Majestic borne located in the most developed section of Turtlerock. Spacious four bedrooms surround an airy atrium full oI ferns. Trees and landscaping are mature and manicured. Sba_g carpets thru-out, a large formal dining room pnd a fireplace are included. Stroll 200' to the olympic size swimmirtg pool and tennis courts. This one is a winner. ENTERTAINMENT CENTER This large home on three Peninsula Point lots is yours if yo u need seven bedrooms, six baths. Upstairs party room and sundeck four car garage, beautiful tiled courtyard and many other features. Lo- cated oioe block to bay or beach. Was $135,000 -Now at $128,000. DOWN TO THE SEA IN A DUPLEX Beautiful oceanfront duplex right on tho sand. A deligbtful quieter stretch of beach. Large sun deck a neat dwelling for beach living. ON A CLEAR DAY YOU CAN SEE FOREVER Tl)!s lovely home is the personlficaUon o! elegance ~omplimented by the most fintastic view. Watch not only the interesting activity In the bay, but also ... 180" panorama of the Pacifica. Large living room, fireplace, 3 bedroom, 3 bath, with brick patio and brick in the kitchen. A perfect lot for a pool Offered at $100,000. UNrTS -NEWPORT 6 beautiful deluxe apartments with one over the garage with a peek· •·'loo view of the ocean and ~e SUll deck. Only I short block 19 tae bay . .$175,000 with ~ ownet will consider trades ~ su!i, mil all offers. Great tax ~shel,ter. · BEST NEIGHBORHOOD ! Well appointed 3 bedroom home, 2 bath In the very best neighbor· hood. Nicely arranged around a private pool for outside living. A corner lot. SOUTH COAST OF FRANCE 7 Panoramic view -on a clear day you can see Mexico. Closely located to downtown LAGUNA. Beautiful home with 2 adjoining lots -this is a jewel -call now. GREEN GREEN MESA VERDE On the golf course. Large deluxe home with 4 bedrooms, family room, 4iiiin~ room, and kitchen 'with breakfast area. Plus beautiful covered patio, atrium with water fall and many other features. EASY FINANCING ! No. College Park! Beautiful 3 bedroom, family. room. I '!4 bath, one owner, adult occupied, College Park home. Onl,y '33,500. NEWPORT -CONDO! A condominium -Relu & enjoy $250,000 recreational center in- cluding pool, putting green, adult lounges1 bobby rooms, and teen center. All this plus large 4 bed'., famlly room, 21h bath home with fireplace, nice enclosed patio, newly installed continuous clean Tap- pan oven, Kitchen-Aid dishwasher, only $32,800. 10% down terms available, and IMMEDIATE POSSESSION RXER • UPPER· UNITS 3 units -good location -wonderful potential. Only '43.000. SHOPPING CENTER 7 Low management Costa Mesa Shopping Center. Less than 6 x Gross, capitalization ra~ over 10%; $250,000. OPEN HOUSE DIRECTORY 4 bed., 181162 Racine Dr., Irvine. $51 ,500. Sat. & Sun. 1·5 4 bed., 1783 Panay Circle, Country Club Dr .• C.M. $115,000 . 645-4040 Sat. & Sun. 1-5 4 bed., Condo., 334 Tours Lane. C.M. $82,600. 645-404-0 Sat. & Sun. 1·5 8 bed., 1101 Essex Lane, Newport Beach, $61 ,000. 645-4040. Sat. 1·5 3 bed., 1311 Kings Rd., Newport Bch. $100,000. 645-4040. Sat. & Sun. 1·5 7 bed., 1511 Mira Mar, Newport Bch., $128,000. 645-4040. Sat. & ~n. 1-5 · 2 + Den, 392 Lookout Dr., Laguna Bch. $110,000. 645-4040. Sun. 1·5 "REALTORS" SERVING GREATER NEWPORT HARBOR AREA MEMBER MULTIPLE LISTIN SERVICE • ' ' • I f t ------- Friday, Oclobtr 27; 1~72 DAILY PILOT :JS NOW OVER 1 i0 SOUTHLAND OFFICES ... J 2 IN ORANGE COUNTY! 5 • • • • REAL ESTATE LICINSE SCHOOL ONLY $60.qq •(fOI A COUISI THAT SIW MANY rL.AC:ll .U .... H .U·S111.tol" * SPECIALLY DESIGNED I WEEK COURSE * PRE·EXAMINAT (ON TESTING ' * DELUXE AIR CONDITIONIO FACILITIES * PERSONAL COUNSELING FREE PARKING & FREE Pj.ACEMENT SERVICE e 'FREE REFRESHMENTS, e COME AS YOU ARE e PART-TIMERS WELCOME e BRING A FRIEND • • • • • • • • • • II • • . ~~~~~~---'~~~-'---~~~~~~ ... I _•_1a_1_boa_;;,.,~ _,I _I· Costa .Mesa •I • • • • • • • • • • • • Limited Seating • Call For ·Reservatioils • >' • NEAT AND SHARP I • STARTER • Orange • 962-8847 I • • • DUPLEX WITH A VIEW 1 ACRE EASTSIDE BUILD 14 UNITS : TUESDAY, OCT. 31st, 7100 P.M. SHARP : Young family'• delighl-area's great schools, s h o p p I n g , beactiea just around the cor- ner. 3 Bd.rmt, patio, nice yard. Assumable VA loan $219/mo. PITI. CALL &15-mt (#701. AIR CONDITIONED EXECUTIVE HOME Large 3 bdnn &: family room home on estale-aize comer lot features IW!h landscaping, eleclric garage door opener, 12' x 24' covered patio &:: much more. $39.500. CALL 642.-Jm (#lOOJ Two older houses on 1 acre, Eastside cOsta Mesa. Not many of theae left. Excellent location for rental umu. sub- mit your oiler now. Thia won't last. $!15,900. CALL 60-lTll <•!ii). ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• COLLEGE PARK • 3 BRS., DEN & POOL POOL HOME $11,950 In Mesa Verde, sharp 2 bedroom condominium i n beautitul area near park and schoola, Modem, convenk!nt ~tchen with all the bti'ut·lnl. Aaaumable IBA loan. CAJ.J.. 546-9521 (#64). INVESTORS SUPER DUPLEXll Beautirully maintained duplex on a huae lot. Built-ins, large covered patios, &: much more for only $34.909. Rare ind~, but we have it! CALL TODAY 979-1050 <•84} • Fountain · Valley • OPPORTUNITY FOR INCOME A duplex that shows a pro- fit, at the beach. Easily rented due to choice loca- tion. near beeches. market, library, and bakery. Jt could use a little tender ,loving catt, but It will reward some fortunate buyer proportion- ately. Ready to go at $54,950. CALL 675-4630 C•44) BAY VIEW FOR LEASE FDR LEASE FOR THE BEGINNIN~ DEVELOPER Choice area of C.ollege Parle :!UOOng the Iner hcifne:s. ,!;lparkl.- ing pool a: lush landscaping. VACANT. Immediate poues- slon. 95% financing available. Only' $32,500. CALL 642-lm (•102) 3 MINUTES TO BE,ACH Charming 4 bedroom home with huge 'ba.ck;yard & extra large bedrooms. Exterior .freshly palntt'd. Attractive landscaping. Se'.ler very a.n· ldous. Only $27,950. CALL 54&9521 (#83) 250D SQ. FT. OF LUXURY LIVINGll R es t a u r a n t /delicatessen operatil;>n cnly 1 yr new net· • ting SOOOCI monthly. Can be j •· Mission Viejo • I AEGEAN HILLS 3 BDRMS. FAM. RM. ImmacuJate, air: conditn'd, beautiful mountain viE'w, large fenced yard, Walk to elem. school. Beamed ce i Ii n1 a, aunken bath. Near shopping. Large Bdnns. $38,900. CALL 645-7221 (#71 ). I • Santo Ana • I WESTSIDE BEAUTY 2 bcrl1oom, 2 l>ath furnished luxury apartment. Bay view, wet bar, third~Ooor sun·porch ' • aCl'O!IS from Newport Harbor ' Yach! Cl\)b. $400.00 Yearly; \Vi.,ter, $300.00 P.1onthly CAU. 6Ta4630 (•951 • Corona del Mar • Older house on two large k>ts (total 90' x 150'), ~ R·2, is close to 17th Street Shopping Center. Rouse is Substantial and usable and will provide a residence for years if desired, but tnie pot~tial 1! ii!. land. Property clear, asking $35,000. CALL 61>4630 {#96) LIVE. THE GOOD LIFE In 'carefree condominium liv· ing in Costa Mesa and New· port Beach. 2 &: 3 Bdrm mod· els w/pool. 95% financing available. $21,950 and up. CAlL 642-1771 ( #97) ' 5 BEDROOM & DEN Spacious home in excellent area near park A close to all schools, kinderprten through college. Decorated with attrac- Uve textured wallpaper and good carpet. CALL :i46-9521 (#98) One of 1~ ve~·s fi~~ ex- ecutive homes. LUllh landscap- ing &: a -VIEW to boot! Only one of it! kind! 4 1Pft;clous BRI &: ever 10 many extras! Only $53,950. Hurry. CALL. 979--1050 (W:58). . GI BUYERS ATTN! $30,950 Cute· 3 BR fu. North Costa l\fesa, Shady patio, prot landacape, etc., etc. Take ad· vantqe' of your GI benefits. Won't tut long ao call now. (}pen eves. CALL 979--1950 (IJ73). taken over with minimum cas:h. Great Jor young couple. Pt>tential g r e a t _ CALL 645-7221. (#76) • Huntington Beach • 3 BDRM-AIR COND. Pride Of owneri4dp hofne 11.·ith all the wanted features. ear. peted & draped throughout, log-lighter nr:eptace, air con- dilioner. Patk>, lush landscap- ing, sprinklers front &: rear. Close to all schools & churches. 95'A, financing. Only $31 ,500. I I CALL 642-lnt (#1011 _ • Nawpart • _ CANNERY VILLAGE, j • Tustin • I INCOMEINVESTMENT •-~----~.11 YOU CAN SEE FOR MILES Benttlirull.v landscaped home i;•1rrnundi~ Large patio and pool; •I bedrooms, 3 baths with !orm~I dinin:r, room. 1so• otC<i"" \"I' . !if't'nhH.'C', \\'et bar, P"""'''r' 1 tir . n•·t'('SS to pri· \'a!.• .,,;1·•; ·;nu r l'ltne ii, it's herr. ~; i • ,,.,;:in· hon1e makes gni<'io Js ii ving 1:1. reality. $12:"!,VW. LALL 675-4630 (a 94) EASTSIDE TRIPLEX MANICURED LOOK Three stores on "'-1> 30' x 93· Lots, with an additional 30' x ~· paved lot ror parking or more "construction. Building has been remod~led and looks llk.c n_c.w lrts!de and .out. Al&0-- appcars partlally stressed for second story. Find your niche in Utls growing art colony for $125,000. CALL GTa-4630 (#92) COUNTRY FEELING! BUY OF THE WEEKI ONLY $41,500 MESA VERDEii SI, SI, SENORITA $31,950 t.arge 2 Bdrm duplex wtth at- tached bachelor unit · o n klng-si?.ed 62x165 lot. Double detached garage. Owner bu M:lueed price for quick sale. Call now for appt. CALL 642-lm. <•61). This borne has IL Perfection In 1!ncfscaplng. Also 36' covered pat10,-4-1arge: bedtooms with private master suite, &: con- venient service area tor laWl- dry. $30,000 VA. CALL 546-~ (W:85) LARGE MESA VERDE 4 bedroom home. A short walk to libracy,...clubhouse. &_pools: Attractively decorated with Spanish tHe entry, beautlfuJ carpets and drapes. Spacious master bedroom. CA I.. L 546-9521 (#99) ' BUY OF TI-IE l\10NTH! Large 4 BR beauty with custom cirapeS & prof. landscape! Huge cov. patio \\'/built·ln brick BBQ! Prime location only 2 blocks to shops. Hurry! CALL. 979-1000 (#74). • Uere's a Spanish style house v.ith a {tile) roof, a graceful -stairway. What a aetting tor you! 4 Bdrms, 21,~ Ba, 3 car gar, de:LighUul patios. Near beaches. CALL 64.>7221 ( •69). Charming 3 BR 2 BA custom home _ in_ prime area. stf0i1 thru the patio garden. Then make ofier! \V\dow owner wants fast sale. Truly a bargain at only $29,950. CALL 979-1050 <•72). V.A. REPO $950 Down Excellent family home · 3 BR. den, 2 BA, all electric kitchen, fireplace & shake roof. Li:e. rear yard, e.ncloi· ed by b1ock wall, inany fruit trees. Only 3 minute walk to Thon1as Paine School .l La Quinta Jfigh. ''Happy to hw YoU"· Call today! 545-8C'l4 SOtml CX>ASf REALTORS SAN FRANCISCO BOUND! Comfy, cozy 4 bedroom home v.ith crackling fireplace, all built-ins A: lots of goodU \\'alking distance to stores A: schools. Exce:llent neighborhood. Priced for lmmediate sale for $33,000. Submit all terms. Act now on this one! Call 545-8424. OOtml OOAST REALTORS • .., ttiil lla9dy 41rectory whli ,.. .... w .... - t'IMI to M....-.iti..,. Alf ti. ... ...._ llltMI Wow .,. descrlM4 I• ............. .., MIM lhl11 et. ...,_ r. totky'1 DAILY PILOT WANT ADS. ,__ .... , .. .,.. ...... ..,. .................... .. list sHll h1for-riow I• "" c•t.1119 .... ,,..._,, S... •rd"J. s...,. HOUSES FOR SALE (3 Bedroom) 221 Orchid, Corona del Mar 644-2430 $66,500 • (Sun 1·5) (3 Bedroom and Family Room Or Den) 19201 Edgehill Dr., Irvine 833-2901 $95,000 (Fri/Sat/Sun) 1!030 Galaxy Dr. (Dover Shores) NB 64!!-155-0 $110,200 (Daily) 489 E. 20th St., Costa Mesa 642-8235 $41.95-0 (Sat 1-5) 1215 Somerset Ln. (Westclilf) NB 644-2430 $98,500 (Sun 1·5) (4 llodroom a nd Fomlly Room Dr 0.n) 3816 Key Bay, Corona de! Mar 673-8080 (Daily 1-5) **1653 Bayside Dr.·(Yachtsman's Cove) Corona de! Mar 675-1935 (Dally) *4521 Brighton Rd. (Cameo Shores) CdM 642-8235 (Sat & Sun 1·5) IS llodroomsl 3801 Ocean Birch (Spyglass Hill) NB 644-2430 $122,000 (Sun 1-5) (5 Bedroom i nd Fomil y Room Or Den) **:1!46 Linda Isle (Linda Isle) NB 642-8235 (Sat & Sun 1·5) **#64 Linda Isle Dr. (Linda Isle) NB 644-2430 $289,500 (Sun 1-5) LOTS FOR SALE **!653 Bayside Dr. (Yacbuman'• Con) CdM. 6'/S.1135 (Daily) . • • __ .... G.nonl General /Jag.cre6l Beautiful familr. home In exclusive Bo.ycrest. 4 Bdrms.. family room with lots of shelves &: storage. 3 Baths, formal dining room, nfce- ly landscaped yard with kid's play area. Light & cheerful gourmet kitchen, service porch & a covered patio. Just listed! $79,500 CAMEO HIGHLANDS Delightful home among many trees, with a tip-toe ocean view. 4 Bedrooms, large kit· chen with breakfast/dinin~ area. Lots of privacy. A super value at $69,500 BACK BAY VIEW Traditionally styled 2-sl<iry home with.POOL, 4 bedrodms, large family room with stand- up wet bar, & 11Get Away" paneled den, shakes, wood siding,· leaded· glass -the works! $72,500 HARBOR --- General General General •••••••••••••••••THE BLUFFS THE B·LUFFS FRONT ROW BAY VIEW EARLY AREA Famous "E" plan. 3 bedrooms, family room, 2'h baths, -rarge brick llreplace. Over 2200 sq. It. Spper patio & balcony overlooking largest greenbelt. Immacu· late. See it, it's beautiful. Tennis courts & full recreational facilities. PopUiar TRINA plan. split- level 3 BR:., 2~~ ha.; all elec. kitch. $60,000 GAYNOR REALTY tflst ~~f1.Ju/(' 551-4122 673-1235 0 ~ ••••••••••••••••• 2414 V~ta dol Oro Gone<al ; General Newport Beach 644-113.1 ANYTIME 4 BEDROOM GOVERNMENT REPOSSESSION THE MOTHER Three Uttle Words SAVER In Mesa Yarde Tbi.!I beautifully decorated 3 Charm, warmth and comfort bedroom home ha.a a lar&e describe this 3 bedroom finished "bonus room" tor home on a quiet street In th~ children to play In. In-Mesa Verde. Fe:aturea love- cludifii Dad with his pool ly carpet.Ing. draper:ie.1, table, Modem wcll«gan-covered patio, park like ized kitchen, Large back-yard wtth many trftll yard and the children can sprinkler system, detaci;d walk to IChool. Close to garage With room for major shopptnr. This Costa camper, boat or trailer In Mesa home ts perfect. At drivewa)'. Price S.11,900. a truly realistic price of Please phone 5$6-2313 for -....... General CHEA PIE 3 bedroom home on larire lot. Polenlial oon1merclal zoning on Brookhurst Ave. Try 5'1< down. Full price only $22,500 Newport at Folrvlew 646-All l•nytlmo) In An Hour! Could tell you all about this wonderful buy! \\'flit til you see the maMlve llvlnir; room with ll" great fireplace! This 3 bedroom home haa a marvelous patio, Located on larxe comer Jot. W aJk to Meadow Lark Country Oub and golf coune. Price at $32.500. 847-6:>10. • THBRll:AL ESTA,"I &RS CffN Tl. tPM COMPANY RWTORS Everyone ii e:ligible to bl(y- this beautiful 4 bedroom, O:ieta 1'.fesa home. Great coodltion with new shag carpets, new paint & large lot. Unbelievable price of on1y $25,150. But hurry, all oUen must be submlt(ed by Oct. 30. CaU us for full ....... Call 546-5880 (Open eves.) $.15.ooo. cau ..... 646-1111. additional lnlonnat1on. INCOME [•·~~) (~IUM , ~:5,~~':=~~-.•.· HERITAGE 2'41 E. Coost Hwy., Corona dal Mar "S.lllng RMI Estala In N_,i Harbor Sina 1944" 673·4400 i..::::::::::::::::::i ~==:::=======::::==:~ Room~buildmore.Prlced NEW ON THE \----------1 to ,.u NOW• Only 132.500. REALTORS A BEAUTIFUL . WELCOME TO 646-3921 EYH: 646-1543 Gonor11 Gener•I H E ,,. I., MARKET '""'"' 1• a "'a"'" l ~~~?~~~l iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiilllG OM B ..... ExcltJnaly ~, .. home. MARLBORO 18,..... same location 1'=3000· TO OCEAN FORECLOSURE Mloot.. !rom ""' Beach, COUNTRY Lachenmyerl VA I I Is FreewayandShopplnR . Over 2800 equare eet n th Quiet v.·ell m 8 1 n t 8 1 n e d and bring your hone to thl1 Here ls the beach bOJne that beaullful 4 b@droom, La Nelihborhood. 4 Bedroom, 2 neat 2 bedroom 1'1Ulch•1tyle ~t~vr_'!:!.. d~~. COLI.EGE PARK ~b,!'°"'~'mil· .J,~ orrigbttJ!' S.IJ\L Custom Flreplact>. home on large lot Pmect ...._ ...... ...., u-= • !'CB ,.._, Private Patlo A Room for a for the family who v.-antl formal d Int n I room, No down. 3 bedroom, 2 bath folks who lo entertain. Pool. Hunt~on Beach. animals &: w1de ope n ht!amt'd-eelllng family mom,. home with big yard A a Many channlng leatutts, Only sp..850. Ca.JI 646-«155. spacn. Located just a few extra larKe master brdmotn BOMB SHELTER. I n c I u d I n i rich lhaR blocks from Newport Beach. ::e-n!l!J ~m°:':a~~ "1 Ill =~UI = ~ New on'the mutceL CaU UI COLWELL proleaionaJly dea>Blod 4 flJ ,.,.U br1ck wot bar. Price $42,!00. ~..._ (Open ...,.) landscaped. This 11 truly an OPEN HOUSE SUNOA y For lnJormatlon c a 11 out 1 tan d l n r value for noon 'Ut dulk 2332 Cornell ,.--------~ Pi?OPEA1"11S, INC. ltl.ll lOllS -. -. HERITAGE Realtor $36,1SO.Euytmn1: Dr. ~~-~") -"""...,,,..,.,..~WIP.lco. 1'5llli... co:n "":;-' L~asQPflN~J A RARE AND .r·-~~~-·l •.-'.'l~ ~ =t~ Fairview SMALL DOWN •,.::.;i~m: w::hlh~ REALTORS 0pon E-intt '4Ull11 -m -.. !hit ""m""" n ... ptace. ~"'" Dalglil I • "2.-4454 • plush Utu. pm wttb Unit praa;e + hmu. ol ariotbet Just ~ , .,.,.... lfDltl C-rlllMI 1'lp -...... .u -.... -doublt -on• lot !fllh 1111111......a. ln- plumbbw ancl -"'""" "'°" wllh I'» ,,.... A loto '"""· 1.oco1..i -., QUIET Eullicle Stn!el. Lllm J 1!••···---~ and bl& <lo'"""4 dOoble eU 111 mru. AU tor only -and In 1 pl Ealt -. '°" 3-Br., 2 bl home. *I• 00WN .,.._ PQ-ol $Z11 $32.!00 n!A or VA -.0 lllde ~ -m!ta1 Dbl llooe ~ BllnL • por .-., -.a. a..U.blt. 'll''l"t lut. ...... Prlc:td It ..i1 al Cl"Hfiblt. 135.(0J, A rt . To Vet. lmm.e. 2 Br .. w/w ~ Clll £wt. •.cm. t•."ttn.. . --CPtrlwdWI. fQlk. 11141 o'W. J&e. >do Boll. -11&'11' DUPLEX •..••• 111,ll!O -· OnlJ Sll,500. -MM1I1 " . · HrRITAGF 1-11111 • Wllll ..,.. m &. °"}""= •• an. .. -llrlft Bay. C--NMJ7. (!i·~~'. • . fG.lfll I,,... • "' .. 'i ' I It I 11 t l f If~·, _,_..,. General LARGE FAMILY WANTED! $28,750 Large famll)' will love thil 4 bedroom home v.ith 2 full beths, wtJe-saver bul1ttn dream kitchen. Keep cool with &Jr condJtloner. IAl'p cove:red pa.tio with lhaded garden. County quk!t k>cil Uon. Patkl. All convenie:nces near by1 Bric, SfO..lnl TARBELL 2955 Harbor, Costa Me:sa. $25,900 SWIM POOL A kwely 3 bedroom. 2 bl.di home, all electric pu.lh bubo ton built-in kitchen. llaht a- cOOerfuJ! ~lightful patio, hMglng baskets w I t h fio....-en, k>ads of decking, lush low maintenance yard and a beautiM swim pool! Brk, 5t0--l'T.ll. .TARBELL 2$.; Harbor, Coeta Mesa DO YOU WANT CHARM AND . WARMTH? Shorecllffl: CdM'1-Hnest kt- "8tion. EnChanttna 3 be(IJ room, 2 bath home, loa~ wllh ..... bri<:k. ""°"ic~ the linfft ol ev~ Lovely --"""" -"· Key to private beach. Pride of owncrahlp. Only $'19,SOO. Call 6'1:1-3f;;O. DOLL HOUSE WITH A FUTURE c.2 zonlnc • Pre\~ a1 picture lnadde. pltntv ot s-tldng outllde:. 1 block to 17lh St, C.M. $.t3.,~ Incl. tum. ( l I OolJLY l'ILOT f11dcr. -27, 1972 _.... l~I _.... I~ I --@l I _..... I~ I ~--I~ I ------I~ I ---.1~ f ~-:--l ~ OoNral : ...... del Mor F_.aln Valley Huntlntton _,, Huntl119ton a...h Newport llNctl Newpol'f Buch N•wpotf 8Hch Conclomltllum1 F~:::-;;;.--;:::-11;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;.1;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; I;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; 1---------..... 1. HI It's AU For MARK SPITZ AN EXOTIC ~c ~i!!"..;SJ.Y!;!: Pre-Grand Opening Sale! ~ =...!.8,;co -""N.;..oo='-SP-EC1-AL1-srs-"' ..... _1 Yq1r TakinC) GREW UP WITH INTlRIOR Bia Id~~!. ~wt;:.~;: ~1. Mod<lm, hr. ITl,500. HAVE ON~ TO S£LL• WE owner wantl out of th1t fan-n~~1 Com~ A POOL th~ .... , .. -.... -..... cAJl owrw.r ~ far CAN 00 JTl WANNA BUY tuuc rn, CAM ·o SH R S . , ... iu ..... ... • '*11CaUY J ..._ delfnina oven, oen.mlc tft4t &.PP t. Prlnclpala only. VA,"''nrA :.'°'" 2vv, ,•,,.._A ( • bedroo ' balh ,_ __, ., ... ,. .... cbll F'ea~t ~ e.,.. oo intimate~ New no-WU GbOn, telf.. , ' ON~ WE'VE ,..~I borne u he hlll been SPECTACU' •R drl!n. See lhll super 4 bt<I· ort colorful deecr ldt·•·n -. .. •-,,..._ .. _ ,,., IVOE:'•u ,., ~ tr an 1 t e r r e d . Nlctl,y _... 1'00l"ll w\th tamll,y roorn and thls lift MW 5 bedroom, 2 cno:: .,..._,,...,,., .....u ~ -..,._._,, Du.Pkx. t BR I: BEDROOMS. IN ALL ha.nd1e1.ptd with maturt OCEANFRONT covend plUo Soi Villla for bath, llf'it farnlly room. purchalt!d with no money 2 BR. ~. nev new oood. AREAS. SUBM.rr On'EllS. lrftl &tld plant.a. Ooee to Paetened 10 cat I on on ~ $U 150 formal dlnlng room. $Pf:dal down. 4 BRt. faml.bt nn., 3 Gttat Uve-lD A-Rental ll'lcl. larwtn ret.l'7, lric. ......_ ~11,y1and 11\_op,ln1 . Bri&bton Rd, withe finest 0 llE ,AW. INNER lhaJ carpe~. Most un111u.al ~°!~~Carpet RWtori, tum., ............ Cl>t. drpl;, Duplonirun~ llOfne hu detadled ~ ol Ocet.o VD:.--WS . st~ to wallpaJ)('r. Triple ceramic -~ eti:. $10,b• Prfv. pt;y. •~ ••• anct boat_ gate. All tmna ortvat.e beach b•low . Elqant 4 bedroom 2 bath sink. And "° many eJCtru. VICTORIAN CASTLE f4.H19l, .... 162 ~-~~ ~ mm ~:~~~t~ ~~h -~!, =· 1=:~ ~·~~1. Must aee. 4110tha mile to beach. Ofl.U¥ WATERFRONT nWd't Cluarta'I • &1ii bath& • -.i"' ~ .-, le: very irtuny! Chandelkra, 5 BR, ~ BA + 2 Bl\ Qt. ~ ~ --• ;~ tonnal OY&I DR·I•. F!t-pctl and dnl~•. new ~· •· rieh carpets, drapea froo1 Ni ba,cb • tmnlt court. D,._ -?Ao beeutUul ~ &,_rr&.....,. Ing pool Neu •'<'l'th""" lbe "RltJ"! Romln<U us CONDOMINIUMS 13 Ba""' Bay, m.Qll ~ frT.n. o clf sn!i,!. ~ ~ro~EN SPACES ~,.:'..': ~:=·~.:::: •-'='""i..':. ~:f.:" C ..1-.1 ••-(Lll}. Lots of CWS walls, cathedral call us f'IJYI 962-SSU. Red $41 ttS * 6Tt-&56S * NEW DUPLEXES BUILDER SEU.ING NOW. $45,'50 $-ltlth of Adami on flunting- ton Strett, H.B. .orona ...., -celllngs, ,.,,,,. ''"'~•. MOVE IN NOW!! c.,,..i Roalton. ' cuSTO"HoldE:w·flENTAL. Just north ot Coalt ltwy • .creened-ln lanal, J bdrn1, 5 1'00m, vacant, Immediate REPOSSESSIONS •ac: .. Mt Lojty living awaits you! Frp!c, Nu cJ)t. paint. Ocean, ""1'!!!!!!!!!"'!1!!!.,.!!!!ll[!~I l..w'J(e 2 bedrooni & pool. Realty Company 2 bath. All thh1 and a corner po!ISc:11lon. Nev.·ly decol'atl!d For tnfonnatlon and IOC&tion cVi:::1.::' Act swiftly 2 'blks. $59,SOO. 99&-1616. ~ l'6 1 t_deal !or the couple who 642.,n35 67S-32IO lot tor only S36 900 lhruout. Large fenced cor· 01 t•---FHA • VA ~-,. lo selec t your own lncom• Property 536.llU Wees 10 entenain. LarEe ' · nl"1' lot. Full price only -""'"' Newpon Beach condominium. N ..._ covered patio with ample CALL ~ $19,950. OnJy Ul'Ol down wW oonr.et -Vtsit the temporary offices of the ewport He,.,,a Macnab-Irvine privacy in ..... yard, Full RALEIGH mm ••. han<ll .. Call 962-8851. KASABIAN Newpon Crest lnfomielion Center, NEAR NIW. IN C.M. 2<400 West Coest Highway •-·• d'· mt + + -...... RetJtf Com~-_ ;t;.;,~" $42,SOO. Cell 4 BEDROOM ~ RHI E•tat• 962-6644 ccn,enlenlly loc ated.. 3 BR. 2 ba.. 2 U,lc. + $29,950 1 OWNER MOVING Sulla B. Newpon Beach. ~rm.'$<1 • .00. ~ CORONA DEL MAR tilt Ch k I t thl 1100 \Vants action. lluge 4 bed-Open Dally 10 a.m. to suosel. Call tor A-'t UNITS ec n o · 11 roomy Open House Sun 1-4 room, 2'-ltory with ever;•· .,.. ' ' I sq. tt. 4 bedroom, 2 bath 18107 F1rtstone 'llljllll .. IBii!liil $49 LIDO REALTY Outitandlna: location. EX· lamUy room borne with a Cho\ce1;t model ol Tiburon thina. ,!lro. Bkr, 842-l4l8. 1714} 646-6141 3377 Via Udo, N.B. 673-7300 cellent jXltentlal tor this --private oUice. Rooin for condos·'Monte.rey. 3 BR, 2~t BROKERS INC. OWNER ANXIOUS unusual triplex. $82,500. LD1s r campers, bo a t 11, or Ba., lam. rm., luxurious Sharp 4 bedroom, 2 bath. BY OWNER -Miller. ~. (LI!). BROKERS lNC. whatnoer. ;\ perfect ~e carpeting Ir draJ>C'. A/C. liOi ...... iiiOiiiOiiiOiiiOiiiOiii; $28,500. Jmmedlate pos.sn· 3 Bdr., 2 Baths. Beautiful 1._..,..,_iiiOOiiiiiil&i""I for a large, active fa.mUy on wet bar. 5% down. 1;4 MILE TO ~"°""'i'·'-"-"""''-' -"842-=141=8.__ kitchen, laJ"I" master Macnab-Irvine t• lovely Raleigh Street in l•rwin realty Inc. l';.vt-~ bedroom w / pr!, bath / 20'x30' Co1ta ...... Call 67J.85Sll. 96S-44ll5 CATHOLIC · ~ dressing area, U,lc. Owner 642-8235 675-3210 1 0 1 -;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:I motivated. Tenaa A v a • '"'~~~~~'!'!'!!!~I BONUS R OM ~· I aa "~1. =.~."':["~.,:..·=; SCHOOL I• JUST LISTED 138.500. 67>-1658 or 64&-8684. I INCOME UNITS I sitting on top of this lovely DflAft_-= room. Wlth h a n d 1 o me 3 BR & den or 4 BR and 2 Do )'OU want a 4 bdrm.. & a Son Cl----\' 3 Bdrm, 2 bath home. Other ~um.I fireplace oU the deluxe bath. plus fantastic family bonus rm., or do you need ..,,..,.,. 2 'J°B9R'd~l;re$38~000 l f features lntlnde st~ built-in kitchen, dighwashet. rm. GI no dn. Price $29,500. ~ bdrms. with ~ baths Duplex & bach unit $41,500 1 living rm. heavy shake roof. SEE THE SUNSET Patio. No wax linoleum, Pymts $249. Incl. all. Big plus c ........ ted tamUy rm.! On • STREET -~ 'd LOVE LIVE 3 house1 &. dupleic $67,500 2 flre.pl~s. block wail ... in 1000 While SaUa. 3 gorgeous shag carpeting yard with covered patio. All 'Th.ls klvin.gl.y maintained you to CALL 642-lm f.e.nce & nice cul-de-sac kJ. BR .. lamlly nn. home; lge .. ~ut. Beautiful Pat lo elec kit. Reall,y super aharp. home on extra s.lzed lot can -·---~==~: ~. __ ~I'--Few atepa to golf oounie, cation. Priced only $35, 750. lot. $69,500. awaiting )'Our o u t d o or a,, be ready for qIDck occupan· ~ ~ perfect for retired couple or Ontu Gall 546-5880 <Open eves.) OPEN SAT/SUN. 1·5 =s! Brk, $32 ,500 a; cy. Near pwil:11, wllh com· ~"';':.. == young family. .., ~ r 1YIHI[t 1000 WHITE SA:L~ 4 BR~¥i~~~~ WM 5ll·5111 ( =1 531·5111 a.~~~E 1i. Laeun::.: l·L"'i"'do"-l-"•;.;l•;.__ _____ 11 ~J;!t,;f:? vu -m1111Tf21 I I ~ode! home,...f011' P1""' Lad $21,500 Sunday. 11652 Can'Oll, Cul· UPPER Three Arch Bay, So. OPEN.SUN. 1.5 Mark H. Dunn Rltr., 492-9931 TRIPLEX-CUSTOM • Llndatrac1. y a1r con ·· verdale 11Vine 1 --·--New Hom e 219 VIA NICE 'f ounCJ Couple's DOH Y. f"UKlCl.JK covered Jie..tlo. gara~e door Enjoy the warm glow trom • · Fi:;'hir;g touches be 1 n g BUILDER'S REPO BUILT I RUJ.'J'?IR opener. 5o/o down. U1e brick fireplace. 3 made. Open beam ceiling, 4 Bedrooms · Family room Sell u ts! Cracked slab-Best Beautiful owner unit • 3 ' Delight larwln realty Inc. bedroom condo. New ly tile deck, 2 Sty. with good 2 Fireplaces. $89,500 otter! 3 Br .• 2 Ba., via Santo bedrooms, 2 full ha.Iha with Boy, .YOU should see this cute :!..":,..~~ 968-1405 painted, new d r a Pe B ' ocean view. 3 BR, 21.i: ba.s. ~ low11a J& Tomas. San Oemente, prln. l1{aw t>!~te; u~ll~ ~i 3 bedroon1 hon1e in Eostside ,._m·.112.1 Q\\·ner anxlou.1. 3 bedroom. washer, dryer, retrlgerator,, Family nn w-wet bar &: -·-only. 546-8801. bedroom. l bath .. -•i. Built· Co •1 r s·~soo carpets. Vacant . Im· - -wu G sla "<'SI\ or :..1 , • den. 2 bath hon-.e. Elegant maculate. Call !168-4rt56. Util. rm. Private com. 3416 Via Lido 675-4562 r-J C I ins + dillhwasher. FA ~at1 reat s111rt<'I' or n \von· fireplael!' lends added charm munity, beach&: tennis crtl. 1 ~~~~------n u•n •P strano v.;/w carpets, fi enc.lOSeO derfully <."On1lor1ablc retire· * DUPLEX * to graciou.s living room. ••• "SINCE 1946" By owner $69,fJOO. Eves. ,.M_•_ .. _v_a_rd_•_____ ........ ; & laundry room. ml'nt hon1c. BiJ;:" spacious South of H'-'--Grune roon1 with pool table, lst Western Banlc mdg. 499-2972 1 SAN Juan Hilla Country Club $69,950. front yard iuld close 10 ...,.-ay wet bar. Intercom system. Unlver<y Parle, Irvine Mesa . Verde ' condomlnlwn. By owner. P•te Barrett RHlty shopping. \Von"t last Jong. Exc1ll1nt Location Near all schOOls It .shopping. EMERALD BAY S29,00J. 2'J032.."(.'..' P aseo 646-7171 2 & D n & 2 B 2561 D•y1 552-7000 Nighh First time advertlaed! !! 8 1 d 4"' .. ~ 642--053 · • r. Bric, $25,000. 842-• FINEST LOT Se 1 u r a f!ro. "'7"J'Uo3, -.,-=~=::..---! $71 .... LISTEN TO THE m ~tom 4 bedroom, 3 49'-8239 * INVESTORS * Le THE RE.A.Lij MORGANffAL TY Yurtti.,rton &each WAVES CRASH VIEW • $50,000 bath, 2-lltory, just oft golf • Fint user depreciation -6 ES' :llTERs FIXER·UPPER TED HUBERT '°"""· Pl""' cupeting, Santa Ana new, 2 BR. 2 bath untl>; In cJN 'Ti g~ 673-6642 67$..6459 PARK THE BOAT from th\11 3 bedroom Oricnlal SPECIAL •nd Associat•a beautilully deoorated It Ieu !---------Laguna Beach. Spacious & 1::::=======~ JsnoRECUFTS, Lovely 3 right beside this lmmaeutate · ~~~D ~~~ 8 e;~.e; Bring your paint brush a nd 3471 Vla Lido, NB ~ _5 ~. ~ ~ $695 Move in beautiful, with ottan &: Land BR 2 bu. Fam rm, Din---2 sto...., 3 bedroom, 2•£ bath • rug shampoo. With a little 675-8500 S 0 U T H C 0 A S T 'vhite water vlew5. Teniflc Pri nl ,, • ......,.,.,&! .,,,,._.;;:.;; • ., ""12 drapes, paint at landscaplna:. tender laving care this New Condos. portunj~ n ° Y <>'llT"V• '"'"''""'· beauty. Walk to beach and Better than buying a new spacious 4 lxlrm. home on Income Units REALTORS. 3 BR, 1~ BA., shag crptlng 0~0ROAN REAL TY Prime C· 1 DUPLEX -Excel \oc & oond. park. Full price on.ly $39,950. home. Has a bold_ gate, too, --qu.iet . street. can--be-:your 1_ Bdrm &-den-house "pl ug thruout (ex:Ct'pt kitchen I 67• ,,.. 67, ,.,9 2 BR. 1 ba ea. COMPARE. NEW LA QUESTA for only $33,900. pnde and JOY Live '" a Miss-ion V .. Jo o ----·t Pri patios -• ~ Four .a~ii ph_1s on Slater Owner 675-ts:M SAN MIGUEL CALL THE REAL . duplex or 1 bdrm ea over 3 ===.o..:.=----rapes uu·uuw . . """""'.,.......RS'. o-nd -Ave. in Fountaln Valley just '•-~-park-like atmosphere near car garage ocean. views. Sharp 2 Bdrm. $2',900 2 car garaae11. From $249 ... ,"~'v ..,.... ,.., .. Ea.at of the City Hall. Easy Cost• ,,... Corner lot, poutble boat ac· ESTATE FAIR golf course. tennis, swim· Room to ex.Pam. Submit of· per mo. Incl. main. or 111e duplex. fully rented. $48,$0, to '"" San ~ 4 •~ 3 bath 3 5•.1: 2551 ming pools, shopping end fel"5 • $79,500. Neart,y new 2 bdrm home optkln, 2 parka, 2 pool.!. $10,IXX> dowo, 714 '7e loan. F::ay_ -~"'the full J,~ * f HA REPQ * ceu, ~111' 1 ' ~ -schools. $42,950. 494-7551 features plush w/w cai,>el. Cell John SNvenlOfl Good ntWTI. Quick ap. is' $221.500. For further in· • • • garage, arp, c ean OWNER must move ' i • h•11 H McCormack R E dish.washer Ir: brick ftrt>-979-1633 preciation. 151 E. 8-y St., formation on this parcel and upgraded thruout. Only decorator'1 de 11 t e . 4 r· ' · . ' ' ' · place in lge living rm. Eazy C.M. 642-f837. others call ~100>. 4 BDRM., 2 ba. on $43,900 ... llURR'i! bedrooms, 2 baths, large I SPECTACULAR 3 br, 2 ba. maintenance dlchondra lawn OWNER SACRIFICING INVFSI'MENT DIVISION corner Jot. $25,lm. CALL M5--0lS8 l&rn.l.ly room with love.ly Custom feature'!!, bl t n front &: rear. Club facUities .$1,5tXI down cryata1 chandelier and most bookcues, deck&, cuatt:lln avail. incl pool, tennis 6: .......... ~ Larger near new dupJex, 11' (~J ro::~~~,L •• ~gi·~0~~~~ ~1~~~~ 'K~~~~~·w Mobua-.. 6:~:.~~~2:::~::~ ""XER No yard work here. 4 Br., 3 of decldna. Patio, luah low I --• ~-· ~O"'NL""'Y"'. ====~-4 Br, 2 ba La Pu, air cood. For S•te 125 dc:Jwnto#n Long Be a eh, n &. Condo w/pool. Near maint~oe landscapfna A m"'9V • ..,_-vpancy -OCEAN VIEW on lrlJ corner lot. Crp(~ !---------lnoome $565/mo. $.15.W>. $17 750 fwy. Only $24,500. 5% down SAVE TIME a beautiful swim pool with GAzEBo lhruout lkaut Ind-A Contem,...LatlllNI Hllll Bkr. 213, 59&-4493- PO,OL ~t.~me~ =~ low lkfore ~u!i~~y home in ~~ ~~d, Br k: °::f se~~n: 70E ~~~ 3 BR, dnken, 2 1~ths. Slafte 1 •Hnj :f1~~:~~c~tioc!~ Only 8 !f"ces lelt!Le~dult 1 'F"'o"'u"RP=L"'EX""'""152=,tm=.-,F"'"'A CJS Real Eltate the Hun~on Beach area, dential Home, Turtleroclc try, su en v. rm., P · Dr. SJ0.2670. Owner. park, a...,acent to iwre ~t. new dahwsbrs. n> 2~RYFHA~GAININC!.! UDsrollES S1&-ll68 or SST~ ever use our revoluUonary vt.ual CUSTOM POOL HOME ~.n.~lnet .1 M..,.4 u8icen3t :f~edga~~I~'. ~hnn k~~h~~: SHARP 3 Br & faro rm home W0,orld.1 1233011 MouJRltondee°'""'~tle ~~~.owner• 7 11 · Open Fri, Sat & Sun programmtna: that ahowa at ON 1/2: ACRE ESTATE --Y vew. r, A prize winner at S55.IXX>. wlpool &: view of Sad.-•• 0 &• .. J"· • l,'-~-7''-';"7=--,= \\ASHER, DRYER, RE· 1l19 Gleneagle a glance the homes for sale 4 bedrooms family room Ba. 3 car garage, lge mas· ?.Ussion Realty 494--0731 dleback Valley. $ 3 9 , 500. Laguna J{illll. 7141836-3900. Lots for Sale 170 FRJGERATOR! ~nunon 4 Bdrm., pool-size lot. indicating lhe of home & Spaclowl: 'living rooni ter suite, family rm, dining Principals" only, &»8761. SHOWPLACE. dual wide SWB!MlNG POOL. Act 0 v e r kx>klng prospective lot, price, p:iol homes, Jo.. overlooks the pool &: huge rm. lived ln only 5 months. PORTAF1NA N•wport Beech Ponderola, nr clubhouse, on fast. Call 645-0303. marina, See Catalina Ialand cation & compares these grounds . A utomatic 19201 Edgehill Dr. 8.iJ...2001. LAGUNA comer, adult 5 Star Park, tree of charge. with the recent sale&. Call sprinklers &: water BOftener. Legune Beech nr ocean. Move rlsbt ln! lerwln rMlty lftc, !!62-8847 or stqp by In quiet ntra1 area. Only Custom building sites Ir: ON THE POINT $6195 Caah down/uaume I Olli.\ I I Ol \O\ MUST Sell! 15.000 sq. ft. RA. AAumable G.L Loan 6%. 2221 Canyoon Dr., C.M. Make Offer! 5«8-47!5. Mountain, O...rt, Rosort 174 968-44ffi Ontu $41,900. White W•t•r View homes. Left on Nye1 Place BALBOA PENIN pymtf. Owner. 616--256. * < BEDRM, pool '"" tol, ~"'2l CALL THE REAL New, custom built, °"" to .. trance. , MOBILE hm. f°' lalf '10 cweriooking pro11pecttve .,, ESTATE FAIR 2.0Cll ft. of luxury living w/ Laguna Beach 494-9:m Located leas than a block off model ~. Great cond. LOT In famous Lake Havasu, marina I ocean v i e w . 536-2551 wood, &:lass Ir: beams. Dbl. L•gune Niguel the oceanfront I a block See at %t59 Newport Blvd., be.me of the "'Orld tamooa ,, t ... . ) ..,. OCEAN VIEW-~of~~tallna Isl. Owner sa~.Aslumenpr e:'tb;. ~h.•wl.&-~~Vin; NEW CONDO on F..ut 9, from Newport Bay. Larie 4 Space ·6• O:l6ta Me a a. London Br1dae-Located $35 950 I I lty I 9608 HamUton Ave., HB VA loan now on property at rm11. 4re patio area. One view goU course 3 Br 2 ~1·.,!1~~ ~2529• cloae to ail echoola Ir: city, ' arw " r•• nc. OPEN 9 AM lo 9 PM 5%% and your monthly In· of the ffn~t pieces ot view 6 5-0033 ., with flrePi,:~. family room l'.>x57 Broadmoor, 2 BR. 2 m.-:i or will trade ltM Costa Beautiful like new l~i year 968-4405 (24 Houn) stan:nenta are le.BS than prdperty In the area. See Ba., ownerl ' 75 · Ir: abaded patio. Somt> view BA.Ad 1 Screened1 ~ k 0 P"t1to0, 5FStarV .· Mesa or Newporl Beach tn. old 2 '1Qry1 3 bedroom home HAVE )'DUI' own home for 5950 rent. Generous s ized today at $69,500. 1.L;;,l;;:d;;:o_l;;:•;.;a;_ _____ 1 of ocean & bay from upper 71• _ . come prop. &M-46fl. wlUt .panDramic ocean & Chrlatmax! By owner, E-bedroom•. custom ahutten, * 499-2800 * 1 1 M Price $65 ..-- coaatl:me view. 10% ~ aide pool ~. Oonv. Maves you in, no qu.aUtying. btlUt·ln dream kitchen, full • * CHOICE * Cal.~ ~USf ,000. Mx90 Wellft'ntt, like new. 2 MT, Cabin, comp. tum., in ~nm with quick poueaxm located, 4 BR. tplc, bltn Seller pa.ya all coeta. 3 bed· dinfne RJOm, profesaiOnally b ~ Nord Corner lOt Open Ewe:. Br., den. wet bu, a.tr cond. the plnei, overlook.a your U desired. be.r, crpts, drps, kit ap-room, 2 baths, T yean new. landscaped grounds e= ~ ~ 5 B<tnna., 3~ baths ~ua din A.cro&I at from b c b own beaut. meadow. Loe. on pliances, newly dee thnlout. Electric bullt-ln range &: thencl~ rromtlo the8 ... ~Lla:h000 .. to.co.wr-c nn. plua Jsi;e. sund . 5S-t8T6 or 0 &12-ra23. · 1 7 __ tp1~2t •'::!'11. 011'6•950FE~ $30,CWX>. 642--2093 oven, w/w carpe.lll\ drapeii, ~pa • ..... $27, · .,. .. :::;::.=CIU. $85,000 20x44. 1972 Star all el@Ctric. ......, e·-· "'""" Realton &fS..mt LOVELY LRG 2 sty 4BR, fireplace. Priced oe.iow mar-LIDO REAL TY Set-up In Meadows, Irvine.. T:~~ 5S7-3lS9, ~7414 _,3 w .. tcllff Ori·--·· 21> ba, lrplc, bltln ket at $21,000. Payments OWNER trans!etTed. G.I. ALWRIN.G 3377 Vla Udo, N'pL Beach $12.00J. By owner, (7141 Ask for Bruce Halllrw ~ • .., less than rent Walk lo ma· terms • low-low down oon· * 673-7300 * S!S-3969 Open 'till 9 PM gaa kitch dsh/wah. Furn. jor lhOpplng center. vtla! s bedrooms. Jaree 4 Bdrm. plus family room ....... GAIN. Udo Park 2 POPPETT F I a t 11 nr. VACANT Hup yard. S pr in kl er• tamUy room wtth insp~ home in x.m1, move-In oon-ULTRA MODERN CAI" Idlewild. Mobil home on Immediate Occupancy S43Dr,oooC.M~~.~ Denver I' joyl1rep!a:Ut~r•, cprlh~·. •, ladtlon Spad~.s llvinglookroom Expoolclllnf<, 5tloBR.f 4 Ba.ll vd1""1n Realty Com~ =· ~ Sail°t:.t ~ ~ tt. view lot $1.175o • 3 bdnna 6: t fAm1I ., .• .nirM'l'U· • ' e s to ~ over ing \)Ill • orm. v., . Harbor VMw Hiii 673-.1817 '"" ... · aepara e l' * VACANT * 9""4471 ( :=. J 146-11 OJ dlshWBllhu. Well planned lush, green cai1Yon & mag· & family rms. Wet bar; I · Broker 5:11-3169 1Wr7414 ~ ~Y OO$l~ =··~MUST SEU.' 4 BR 2 BA ~~'3&~1 ~unds! netically blue Pacific. Call parqUet fioon. lmmecllete Occupancy SEE This Altract. =near Re•I Estate 7%G~~·MO!lRJSON Trailer ace~•· eii yerd: M. ORE COLORFUL DESERn1) FARM.fflLE Earl Waterbury. 1511,w.,c. GEM ~~"~\'l'k"~; =·.'l:;~l3r't , etc. Exchange 112 New paint It crpt'g. $25,150. HOUSE ln center of H.B. ~I 1610 w. Coast l-lwy., NB custom home. Mu.st lcll! Stort Your •'*•• -REALTOR$-Low dn. SCUM' REALTY. than a rainbow t. thll lowly ha.I l small BRa. I goodie ...,,,,,.0e,"('Z.._ REALTORS W-4623 Owner bought another! 15 .;....,. lsa:iMe9a 5.16-7533 24 hn. home. lndlVklual lnte'lior room, huge. living room-a· REAL sr."~e BEAtrr. Lido Home. Floor day e1crow . Don'• "'911•• jral Investment Program! •.~*Verde Dr; £aat.. HOl\tE le INCOME -Spark!. de~ with Spanllh touch tra.h.lgb ceilings i:real~ im· E 'AT plan outstanding. South Chichester ~ CLUJ. GIMflll ~ At1J'ac. 'Ai acre vtew \ota •.**'*/ ~ ~~ ing new duplex $48,950. which blends lttelf to aae of open !':pace. $2$,500. 1190 Glenncyre St . patio. Superb kilchen, 3BR, 'iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~.;;;;;;j w/city water, within 1 mile --. BcautUul 3 bdrm ownen gracklul entertalnlng. 3 Red Carpet, 96HSU. 494.9473 MS-0.11£ 3 bas. Bkr. 67H494. • of multl·mlllk>n lhoPP'a: !Open Evt'ninp) XJ~t °j~at~ }~~~ ~ ~Mma~~~ng ~~'. LA CUESTA, 3 BR, fa.mlly Don't gtve up the sblpl CHARMING 3 BR, 3 BA 642-8235 675-3210 AcrMge for Hie 150 center, goU COUl'9e & POOL PLUS St CM ·---·-Like Cl t •• h rm., h'plc., 2 ba., .ma. "Uat" It In cl• .. lfl"', Ship End of Isle. 168,SOO. • r..,eway. $500 Down, $50 per , ·• · · ~·· new. ose 0 ....,ac • thruoul. OWNER 968-7450. to Sllore Reaulta! &12-6678. * O\VNER. 675-2518 * POOL Bu1lne11 Property 154 mo. Full price $4995. Seller• EnJOy the: 5wnmer in YQUr_ MESA Verde, on golf eoune. Call 968--44.00. need tax break, will trade own hU2e pool, plus Beaut. 4 61'. 3 ba, lam nn., • On Peach Tree Ln. see this TWO ~ T 0 TA L : for local Income property. * • Bedt'OOft>, lonn. din rm .. 1'g. llv rm. • S@l\41~-9't.trs· channJn& ( aR. 21> Ba. with 104'"'°9 CHOICE LOCA· McNASH REAL TY * Hardwooit Floan wftrplc, bltnl, lrg. p11.tio. lge family Mn I-dining rm TION. Hun!lngton Beach, '42-8400 • Low ~talntenance $53,CW Owner, S&-1501. beam celllnga & slcyllghts: ZOFESSNEDIONALBUSINESS.OR oml'R().CES '* IUJCll_ ~Of'l$ T' p / iflt f' 8 /fl ' C' <[ 2100 *I"· ft. of rrac.loua Uv· RMI E1tet• Wen'9d ll4 * Pleue call 546-Zlll Local a Mlaclon vwJO artt.l"I"!"'!~~'!'!'~~~~ I ne UZI • W ne U .,n nUC«. e Ing wilt! 8 iparklina: pool. $17.500. ea. TERMS write; • • ..... ~ ~ 125 ID S311M Foe 1n1o call McCALL MAGAZINE O A••••• 152 500 KANPAK. 1993 Klhel Rd. * Cj)uick Cash THE JtKAL Broker -.1T39. KITCHEN ~ t':'C:':mb~~. ::: /!........ CALL . ~ ." ''f•lflf Klhtl Maul, llawllll. Will buy your property. All ' ..._ BY ~. , _, .. 4 br, hdwd Hana:bta pola, •elf-cleaning low to form IOUI' lil'llple words. 'fo.:~ 1 ~-:;=~-~~~·~""=:::·:! nn ,_ ~llh lnc*:Pll oven. pot-IK'l'Ubber dlah· I I 1 · ,.... Cemetery cnsh within 72 hrt. Call I• XI i ~.;,. . Low I 3 0'.. wuher. Thick cnnl<I• Ille l ,.o El x, 0 ul Tl .. --Lot1/Crypt1 156 Ba~tyle Home r..&<!n_"""" ' · counteni. Heavy walnut ca b-Niar Ne:,~:,•:,v,, Off!<• Earth Sova'a kind of !Mn'? ,_._., ln1:t1 with bla; C«Milc PACIFIC View ?.femortn.I -1rp1,., .... rmo., BY.......,. 3 br, 2 ba. ~ 2 """"· Rock bubble patio Walk to Beach Park. 2-Cemetery 1 o • •. farm IUtch. P>.900. D&wa car pr. p&,900. dtcklng oU al••• p&l.l·lhru. ' s Gr&\PCI c and D, Lot 3.<r.I. I * M456T * Cushioned Doon, o~e n I F 0 L D 0 I 1· ty. 3 DR., l~ ba. Carp., 8'.yvlew Terrace PI o t . I I II I <' d~s flop! bit•• Tenn~ ~· -· -•L ESTATE D•n• Point weave ahade1 AND t't • --·-. . 1 .,.. ' ·• · ' ......,....,~. TREASURES Just the kltch•n! Call us for f ~YW~i> SW·:1L TY c--rclal 1111 WOlldl!l, NB. M5-rnO OCEAN VU:W HOME dtacrtp<Jon of "malnlng I . Pr-rty 151 I '"YFIONT F°' Sale By Owner. 2 Bdrm., 2,000 09uan feet llkr. * 548• 1290 * ....;..;.;;:;.;,;.;.:.. __ _ .. 1\!o Bath. '31,000. 19M1'0 116U6ll. I C A P I ff I '• roR Sale « ,..,. • unit of· UDO PDftl'fSULA llt ~pm. ~F"ro"""m"""R"'f<i..,.."T"'li-,..,R"'ool....,-. -3h:~l~t. ~~n A1i nee bldir .• ~ leued. ~ ~-3 !!!-.:.!"_ -.. F-aln van., To Baarned Celll1191 I I I 1· Clover operallont "My wife. for on\v -In lhe heart •vall. Nov. !Sib. 1,000 09, n. h.~·Bel'utitUi~OWN!R letVU., every Every tnch of tbll plu.\h 4 hadplastk:•vf'Qtlry,1--htr or llnrbor lft&hland11 . ~~ ~t.Do~ndJ~;~~ iiod. _,~Slrurity. room 11 Wlred for ltereo bedroom la Spln1ab. On oor-I D U R T , M la.Ult card a.'' Another exdut1M? t tom OCCUPMt.a. OWnt..'1' 8JO. 7651. llNt ai wait TV Antenna. s ~ ner Jot, 1 .. 1oey with thOU· n -Jo-'2"'f l\irtpard 1\#lll Eat ate 0:iurt'21)' to bkn. OWNl!iR. 61$.6610 bedJoon,. lam le111lly 11ndt ol doUan of UWtd· I I' I I I I 0 °""'""' "'° '"'""' ....... 60-2222. room with fn 1 p 1 r 1 n 1 tn,:. SbUJI • dean u an)' by fUlln11 Jn the mlalttO wordr Harbor Vu HOITICI 2 BR + FOR &lie or leue \;. 4 unltt, £'!""P Pwll -ba&utt!W bGUt·la motlel. • ,.. -lop,,....,. No. I""'""" Den. r ... Ready to move LOOO "I· n. each. 18!5-71 moo Own. ~·· Jdtchen, ~ d 11bwa1 ti• r , CALL THI RIAL j Pll~ ~(.~. u:mu IN I' I~ __ 11 ~ II l' L tn. Owner. ~. betwn 1 ~A~ Do~ I BR. I BA. dlJle ... a-....,...,. -bor. -ES-TAT l-l'AIR -ii!lf ~ <• • ,;;:-. !:: .• !: . & 5 dally. am Pott ........ 8'0-19111. CoUl'f"Y to v~1~~-ti= 5;,~~~~l·~L~::i:.:.: ··~~~UTOI I I • I I I ~~'.·w,:,.~~ v~~'-'7:.''= • -• l!OQy Pilot -vcui ~z.?..'IW. 11i>tc. 11 b1k '° """'• 1C111• $CRAM·i.ETs ANSWERS IN CLASSIFICAnON 700 Pool, CUii-8Y <>wnor !!!"f"-""' Ad.t1trtt a DallY Pilot Ad. .......,. 13L!IOO. !M-715f. 144.950. 644-<l21S. .,....... MHl'ft. • . • I • WANT TO BUY l or 2 unita Oii 8aJb lalaod from I """"'· CIUl m.0427 QUICK CASH THROUGH A DAILY PILOT WANT AD 642-5678 .. -li I -·-I ~ ( -·-I~ I -·-I~ I --··-lltJ I .,_ .. ._ Jl!J luslneu HouM1 """""" l....;;Oppo=.;.;"""=ltv..__..:•:: General alltouMo Unfllm. CfW.lcla m lnlvm• Unf\im. Apt'I. Furn. >II Apto. fum. IJl!Uate t«Al. MEDICAL GROUP DCl'ANDING INTO TEXAS NEWPORT Wl'ttl fXCELL'llNT = mJ:~i~E~~ RMERA COND,OS -AT END or IST 365 MoOtc Vll14 . 3 be<!· \'EAR J:o"Ort EACH $1«XJ rootnl, 2\6 baeh., $295 per ~VESTED. month! 358 Santa Isabel -cau for appointment for 3 ,bedrooa11, 2" baltwi, $318 ~= :::~~t: :~~ These Are Just A Few or ;; ~~ ~~=:,:;~';· OK. Our MANY ~ALS. , . "SINCE UWG,'' Monte Vista • 4 bed· Mr. Vietor ITI4l 533--0302 SSS GOBBUN'S $1~ 1't W~tem Ba.n)t Bldr. =~: ~E $3~ 8eflutv Coll,., l n' por es. UnJvenlty Park Irvine Butcher SboJ,. Nets $20,000 r. Ill' atore*s. artly ·Da ys 552·7000' Nlght1 1.,::EST=A:~TE=·.o.S3°'l"°·5'00'7.--- Pipe & Tobat.'CO Slore • New 1140 S•n Juen Capi1tr1no • SPOOKY! 2 Br. Stove, fenced .~ !or kida. 3 BR 2 •·i•· ~~ 2 BR, 1 BA. ,.~. cpl! Need Mtg. Buslncs:c1 ;•" * 4 BR~ 2 ~;~ ·:: .': ,': ,' ,': $.1ii) &: drpl. Wtr pd. us'ifiO, mo. HOLLAND Bus. S1le1 $165. TRJCK or Treat! 3 Br. 3 BR .. bonus rm. ·••••· s.fXl tm-91S3, 213-431-7282. lrvlno Newport llNch Coolo Mno LIVE LIKE A KING At Budget Prices! FURNISH£!)... UNFURNISHED *POOLS *ENCLOSED GARAGES * CONV ENIENT. TO ALL BI"..ACllES FROM $135 f\AONTH ADULTS PLEASE VILLA POMONA PHONE 642-2015 (1700 Pom0na Ave.J l'\16 Orange, C.M. 645-4170 Encl f,':ar. * ok. Vaco.nt . Ouplexe1 Urtfum. 350 BiR ~ RESTAURANT, $175 · OLDER 2 Br. Houae! i red h·111 Coront1 ct.e M.r NEW a.pl'! tor adults only. Beach area. Llceltled for Front porch. .Kids/pet . Balconies. fireplaces, beam• ¥Slertalmlent. Includes cor.-* ROOMY 3 Bedroom, 2 bath, ed ce1llilp, wood paneling, PllnUon 4 stock. AJk for $225 • BALBOA laland! 2 Br. REALTY emmd floor. $350 pr, month CRflle~. drapes. Recrea- Van. Broker, Mfi...88ll. Frplc. Bltns. Avail Yrly. Univ. Park Center, Irvine plu.s spaclowl 1 bedroom Hon building with pool. DISTRIBtrrOR, • wholesale LANDLORDSI Call Anytime, 833-0820 upctaira wtth private en-Furn & unfurn. Bachelor & blcyde &cce!!Sftries. Good FRO: RENTAL SERVICE Office hours 8 AM to 6 PM trarioe. $225 pr month. Both 1 bdrm1. trom $135. 140 W. opportunity. $3500. /\ft 5. BEACON RENTALS units next to park&: tennis, Wilson <Just West of OOS-2832. * 645-0111 * PRIVATE HOUSE call Balley 6':ra550 Aot. Newport Blvd.). M-y to Loan 240 UNIVERSITY PARK AREA 2 BR 1 Balh Sw<dlsh lrplc * $27 50 WEEK & UP -----~------Balboa Peninsula 2 bdnn., 2 ba":,f_"_ den or ' · ' ' uQI -etec bit-Ins, d s h w h r , e Studio & l BR Apts ••---y to loan 240 library. Enc.lo yard and ··----•--'---Clo" e TV • M ... ._._ · A ·1 M9Mk BAYVIEW 2 br, fannal din, ....... --.. patio. All lat.._. .,.....,..,. "" "•.J"'•· "" atu ,,,._-rv1ce va1 r 1 tush ha inted I ....,,..g.~ 00'" garage w/e!.ec o Pen er. • Phone Servlce-1-ftd Pool 1 I TD L rp c. P s g, pa n features. Adults prefert"ed. vtew deck. µso incld'g util . e Children &: Pet section S oa ns :C~'$~ ~ly~ ~lk to ~ J:_;f,88~lh, Call 1 year lease. Eves 675-5«).1. 2.17S Newport Blvd., CM Cott• Mesa 548-9755 011" 645-3967 , 6'14 % INTEREST 4 BR, 2 Baths, tenced """'· 1100 mooth & up. .,_d TD L Coron• tM1 Milr recreation privllris-. NEW 2 br, 2 ba, mature HOLIDAY PLAZA 'JI oans CUTE cottage. 2 br, new cpt, Gardener ' $:'.50 I mo. adlts only. No ch1do, or DELUXE Spacious 1 BR frplc, pa.do, wtr, gardener, ~126.1 aft 6 pm or wlmdl pets. tl90 mo. 12-8 pm, furn apt. $135. 1-leatcd Pool. garage. 644-1615. 5 0 4 TURTLE Rock, 2 sty, 4BR, ,,:64!H>3'70:::.;=:.--~~--Ample parking. Adults, ro Femleat 38A,. Cfl.lb, ~· $425, Huntington Bffch pe111. S•ttler Mtg. Co. Costa Meu swlm/tenni.s, A Jan 1. .;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;~; 1~1005~~P'.£omo~""'"~A;v•~·'::· ~C;!_.M~·= 642-2171 545-0611 1~113>-=~""~"~· :--.,.---IMMED OCCUPANCY 2 B•. ~ rms. Co""'" loc. • I MAN'S DOMAIN · Spac. L•guna Beacfl • Brick planter & snack bar. ScJ'Ving Harbor area 21 yrs. Bachelor. All util incl. $84. I·-''--._...;._____ New 2 & 3 Br apts t. .. 1 ch\ I * :Pi10NEY to loan oa real ALA Retttels e 64S-3900 $150, Util pd, Victoria Bch, Ohl garage, dshwshr Pvt. "l"::oony. t n Lowest rates Orans::-e Co. "WE BUY TD'S" l Br. util tncl. 1*1 I. lut tm. Student preferred . Rertttnee1. Q..-25«1. We have Wlrrter Rmtal.s WW Take Students AllCt ocot.nlronts: avail. 3 .lldrml., 2 baths, lrplc Unl'llrn., yearly •••• $275 4 BR.• 211A • • • • . . . • $323/350 S BR. 2 BA ........... $285 1 BR. l BA ............ $17' 2 BR. 1 Ba. .Ptnin •..• $250 CALL: 113-3663 associated B;(OKERS-Afl\l TO~S l 02S W Balboa 67J-166) * Balboa Penln. 3 BR, 2 BA aver g~. On bay .w/beach. Util pa.id. $350/mo. 213: S>-7233 - BAO:IELOR apt. Wlnter or >'orly 1;;..,, Op<n Sat 6 Sun. 4831 River St, NB. or call wkdays 213: 330-t588. 3 or 4 BR. Winter or yearly lease. Open Sat Ir Sun. 483I ~~r st.. NB or eall wkdays 2L1: 330-4588. FURN. 3 Bil, 2 ba., steps lo beach. Ocean Vu, Agent, 67H630. 1. :B1l furn. apt. No chlldren nor pets. 2405% E. 16th St. NB-. WINTER. 2 &. 3 BR. beach rentals Red. to $250 & lea&. ABBEY REALTY 642-3850 BEA.OIFR.ONT 1 br., patio, Washer, dryer, $150, utila incl. 646-1234, Ren. 1 Br. furn.pool-I blk ta ocean-single adlt. n45. yrly. 615-6900. 646-2696 em. estate. Reasonable rates, or lrg studio, ocean vw. Cor Huntin~on/Adarns, HB. ~·t <;:;:1r1 ~~~~ ~~: will buy your T.O. e GOOD GRIEF! 3 Br nr $200, 3 blks bch, 2 br. bltns ~'!'!!~"'!"5•36-1!!!!!111!!!!!!!!!!!!! I 351 Victoria, Apt 4 4 BR, 2 BA. on beach! * BROKER 642-7491. * beach. All util incl Slf.iO. pvt patlo. $350/mo. Avail. thru June, ALA Rentals e 645-3900 $235, Util pd. 1 + den Lido Isle $135/mo dbc mob home, ·'73. &t5-0'M5 er 547-9726 Mortgages, SHARP MESA V E R DE w/frplc So. 1FtEf:· Nice! oompl turn. Htd pool. i ..:Bo=b·'-------- '_.;cT.:.'":c'°''-°'=od=''----2"60"' PACESE'ITER • 3 BR, 11;4 NU-VIEW R NTALS Lido Isle Bayfront ~~ ~'. ~9 ~~t .S.n Clemente ,. BA, fireplace, £Old shq 673-4000 er 494-3248 Beautiful upper duplex, 3 81.~', Se , ~fob Est ~-1st TD, $55. Per mo. t .. --• 11 B 2 Ba ' --·-->eek .,,~:",;....! aQl !I , 1 BR. apt., incl. linena, wall< loci di 9% d 3 Cl'JI , C01na~ Pa O, OCEANVIEW 3 Br .. 2 Ba, r, . ...._'° l!jWJU • ~ u rli UC' yrs. 1 e par ate doi yard, dbl garage. References. Lease. $650. 645-8917. tQ bch., 262 Victoria, S.C. Covers $10.000 L 11. gun a Pt>Measlon Nov. 7, 2838 Lease $325. 495-4486 or * SHADY ELMS • POOL * ·By Owner. 493-3835. Beach ocean view lot. S2alO T-•-Pl r.. "~ ·~1331 • Adults Pool.slde SI40 up 1 7~~-c:-'-~~--.,. bond paid off. lO'J" discount. ~& " .......... -· -'-~~;;·~~~~~-· ~ ~ e Children next block. Apt. Unfum. 365 fT141 493-U54. · $165 MO, 1 BR. Cott&ie. Ap;wtments fotRent I =1 Free Furniture Plan l'iliiiiiiiiliiliiiiiiiiiil INEAR So. Cst Plaza. Beaut. Carpets & Drapes _ • &.Ibo• Peninsut• 1• 3 Br., tam rm.. t~ ha. Place Re<y 494-9729 iiiiiiiiiiiimliil /1TI E. 22nd St., CM 642-3645 1.;;.o;.;;=..;..;===-- Crpt1, drps, bltns, 1;prinkln, 1..1.~ y rde A 1 F 360 2 BR. UTIL PO $175 e1 pc.EAN~0NT Town· I/ 11! l fenced, $295 mo. 1st. last, 1.~_;._•~•--•-------P s. urn. Attrnc. furn. !·ltd pool. AdHs. hOlist', fantastic view, 3 BR. dep. &-ref!!. 598 Sturgeon NEW lrg 3 br, 2 ba, tam rm., Balboa Island No pets. linfunt okl fam rm., 3 frpJ/cs, 4 Ba. lmiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiilliii I Or .• 546-7325. trplc, shag cr'J)ll!, drps, 6't!·9520 2400 sq. fl, $750 mo. Yrly. HoUMI Furnished 300 RENT w/option to buy. 3 patios, fncd $325 mo. NEARLY new 3 BR, 2 BA, * $25 PER WEEK * &73-6087. Br., 2 Ba. Hillcrest Home. 645-61Tl, 543-1444. campl furn 4J.i ele<:t kitch., & Up. Pool & maid service. DLX 3 Br, 2 Ba. $275 yrty. Fdblam. size ~tch, ~ Mnrs .. 1-'-=-=~===---frplc, patio. BBQ. Lease Kitchens avail. Motel Tahiti, Nr. bch & shop'g. New General RENT UNTIL YOURS gar, <fMN mo. ~ ur-Newport Beach th r u June . D/W dcpfrrnt. fr P I . ~· To see • phone 638-84?0/539-8831. corner Harbor &: Victoria. 615-228l. -· .. Bkr. NEARLY new apL 1 Lrg. * ~~ ~:R. r~r sn;PS TO BEACH. 2 Br., 4 BR. 2 BA, I r PI t!. master bedroom. Utlllties Apt. ·no w untS h s · yearly. M1ts, na pet!!. $200. redecorated $325 mo. Nr. paid. SUndcck & wash room. Rec area. • t t, &'B--1990· 6T~7li03 Don't tbl"OW .11.way yoUr rent San Diego Freeway. 1 car garage space. Yearly. CP.1. ' ' money. \Vhy don't you leue M&-1698 or 54&:-7045 Realty Con1pat' 673-9659 BACHELOR, 1 & 2 Br. apt&.•1;CiiioronmmaiiidiieiiiliiiMaiiiiiiiiriiimiiiii with Bn option to buy and *** EASTSinE. *** * BAYFRON * BALBOSDl/mo. ,_, _ _. ~ 1 B Encl. carports, htd pool. evenhavesomeofyourrent 3br 2ba,trplc cpts df1>C HOME FOR LEASE A~...... · r Adlts/no pets. $120 &: up. apply towards purchue. We bltifts. Fncd fd. $ ~ 9 5 '. On beautiful H A RB o R apt $160 per mo. Util incld. 85.1 Center St. &15-8965. have several 11 s t i n g s 644-6034 ISLAND. Channing 6 BR CTI41 675-583'1 or (213) l B -•J available thi.a "'8.Y· ca111.,:~=;._~~-~--1 home. ~ pier a. 11111>. 278-44ll. VERY nice R. .. _. 6'7:r7225. 4 Br, 1~ ba. Convenient to Sanely btach for t be 3 BR, 2 BA, frplc. $2515/mo. Quiet.. Sep. by garages. "' : IChoola • abopptng. S2'l5-chlldr@n. Jane Frazee, Would rent unfurn. Adltl OYCI' 30· No pets. *f.kt4fiJI '~~m~~ ~ 64 .. 2~ '~>. ii\a;: 2,;:; F~wpo,~~~1~~.~~~~0 --· -~ • --·& 2 s-4 Br 2 -.-... 67>3210 eluded. $325/mo. Yearly IU"IDIAIY 0' n.t <°'-Wll~ (0. ....... ~~ ..... J. • 1.,,~~~~~~~~!!!!· BACHELOR A .. $115 & 3 BR, 2~ bath. All new in- tqrlor. Winter rental. 305 Montero. 1-819-5991. Coron• del Mllr 2 Br. 2 Ba.. Well furn. home. Qulet & ocean doec. BOYD REAL TY 6'75-S!m Huntington Beach CLEAN cottftge Incl ut11. lo.laid SC'rvice. Single man. $l00. 536-7870; SJIH.114. L•guna 8 e•ch $124 Util pd. bach tU' bch & town, full cooking. $150 Utll pd. nicely furn l br, Narth encl. $XK) Utll pd, pvt l br cottage \v/heatrd pool NU-VI EW RENTALS 6734030 01' 494-3248 Lido Isle ON nn: BEACH. Lovely 3 BR 2 BA. Completely furn. $350 mo. Avail. 2 or 3 mos. ~7017. ha. Owner 557-n09: 1323 1= RARE BLUFFS lease. Agent, 642-$235. P . up. S•-•-•• SI N of n-•-No children or pets. 2135 wneuew. ., • Dru1.o::r. CJIARMING 2 Br upper, e JliEEDS LOVE! 2 Br, fncd E-MODEL LEASE trplc, util. $200. 3>5% Coral. ~l~en Ave., See Mgr. Apt 6, yrd. Encl gar, Kids. $130. Lz"&. 2 story 3 BR, lam rm, (213) 45HJ.04. 17'='' =·===-.,...,,,....~"'"° ALA Rentllls. 663900 2% ba, trplc, ON BLUFF Ael'--P-l•sula Ad~~tVE5 2. Br. 1~ewly< w/full Upper Bay vtew. In s; -""' =--~· p&clOl.ll. u..its o • EASJ'SIDE Lovely! 3 Br. Fncd for kids/pets. $185. ALA Rentals • 645-3'GO original area on quiet cul· ANNUAL or Winter Rental. storqe, Close to .stores Ii: de-sac. White crpt'a thru-BA.YFRONT-Immae. 3 Br., 1 ~OCC~~· ~11M=·~'°~·~S36-S~~Il-4_._~ out. drps, appli's., bitn pr 2 Ba Frpl. Priv beach. CUTE 1 BR. newly painted. storage. Deck, patio. Close Garage. 6 7 5 _ o 7 4 6 or Beam ceilings. M u c h 3 Br. comer house • Mesa to pooL $600/monthly Incl privacy! Convenient loca- Vetde. Newly redec. New assoc. dues. Call Mrs. Stein-6T.t-2599. Hon. $139.50. 536-Sll4. painUcrpt. $350 'mo. Oct. 27 er 6#-0739 or &t4-0620 eS25 Wk .l Up On Ocean. e TROPICAL POOL e thrU 29 call S&-2781. AfW" . Lovely Ba.ch-I Bt-Room.s that n4!34&-8'l80 $97.50, Utll pd, Balboa Bach. Maid Service • Pool • Util pd 1 Br. F\&rn $145. Gas & Wtr ~~~~--·--= 1 blk bch. clean, full kil e Call 6'l5-81409 Pd. 145 E . 18th 548-U68. 3 BR, 2 BA. new crpt. paint $175 new 1 br bl.tns crpt/ * *Nice 1 &. 2 BR Trailers.. Wout, fncd yrd. COY patio drPs. carport. ' ' 2 BR, l 'Ai BA. patio, balcony, SSS I: up. Matu.re adults, wfbrick BBQ, nr scbh W-SZXI. 3 br, 2 ba, trplc, bltm. 315 E. Bay, $250 mo. on yrly h'ld -• .,.,_ side 1st I:. last, refs. $22). g~. Smal!.fan! 1'. patio lse. lrx:E· at Apt C 673-1521 c 1 ....... ,,_.uo.>. 546-9.142. NU-VIEW RENTALS or ~7771. 2 BR, utU paid, $:170 mo. no Bike to bcb, sngls or fam· 673-4l:m or 494-3248 YEARLY-3 Rooms by the pet&. ~~St* illea. $135. 2 Br. Gar. Kids/ BLUFFS -View 4 BR. 2" Ba.Y. $:110/mo incl\lding util, pet•. Ba. Twnhse fain area. 673-5806. Ront-A-Hou11 979-8430 Pool. c.,..;,,., s 3 9 5. OCEA.NFRONT 2 Br. S2'l5 3 Bedrooms, 2 baths. Very 644-Q275. util incl. Ti1 JUiy. sharp. Large fenced yard. -=-=--=~-* C&ll 673--472'. * $235 /mo including LIDO ISLE 3 Br., 1" Ba. 3 BR. convert den, 2 be., -~--Call D Blt-iml. Lea&e $.'rm/mo. 1rp1 -• "M wlnte• glU'Ul.!I.,,.~-. ave. 67 ... ,...,.. ..... _.,..., ._ c, .,........... ..,.,., . 540-115L Agt, .>-tYO.> er ..w: _,..."""° Annual avail. 646-821L NEWLY landscapal--4 BR, 2 4 BR. 3 Ba. U_a:hl k bright BA tam rm erpta & drp!I exec. home. $450 Mo. Coron• del Mar ~ lat &: I~ $100 cieantni \VJNTON Realty 675-3331. deposit. 642-T'152. WALK to beach; 1 BR, oonv. ** 3 Br., 2 Ba., fncd yd. den, 11', ba., bltns, patio. No Family only. $2!IO mo. pets. $275 Yrly MS-1290. Agent, 837-1271. Newport Shores OCEAN View. 2 Blks to big Corona, 2 Br. $2Sll utll. pd. Yearly. Adults. no pets. 645-1624. 2 Blks to Big Corona. Bach. Huntl-ton Beach 3 BR. 2 BA.. Swedish frpl $1SO util pd. Yearly. I .. , -•• ort •---. Adult, no peta. ~lGf. __________ , _ .. o., ye y..,...., e FRESH & Clean! J Br. By agent 675-4630 BACHELOR prqe apt. Ute Stove, refrig. Crpta, drps". cooking.. Ocean Wew. $120. Nr bch. $125. Condomtnlullhs n'IO. incl util. 675-3982. ALA R9nt11l1 e 64S-3900 Furn. 315 $30 week; I Br furn duplex 1----'--------near ocean 311 Heliotrope e LIVEABLE? 2 Br. rncd General By appt. only &M-4340 yrd, enc.I gar. Ktda/pets.1..;,.;_ _______ C 1 u--- Sl.56. PALM Sprinp. SJS dQf. incl 1_0_•-•---------ALA Rent•ls • 64S-3900 maid .w!l'v. Jndlan Wells C.OUntry Club. 55)-86318, Alone on lot, 1ng~ ar tam-Condominium• 1 Br. $140. Adults only. S/Pool. Jd<!al tor BachPJors. 1993 Church St., 5'18-9633. I BR. Furnished gal'll£e apt. No pets. 27S Broadway, C.M. $140/mo. Huntington Beecn LoQUINTA HERMOSA Spanish CountJ)I Dtate Liv. Ing I SpadouB Apta. Ter- raced pool; sunken ga.1 BBQ. U11beHewble Ltvlng • Only 1 BR. FURN. $175 2 BR. FURN. $210 2 BR. STUDIO $195 AIJ.. lITILITIES PAID Adults No ~ta !<I blltl S. 01 San Diego Frwy on Beach, t blk W. on Holt to 16211 Parkside Lane.) C114l M7-544I $145 • $165 Bachelor & 1 BR, patloe:, ...y "a!!~ r ~ ON TEN ACRES Apts. tum./unlum. Leu< Fireplaces I prtv. patioa. Pool.t Tenn.ls Conmt1 Bkh1. 900 Sea Lane, c.dM 644-26U MacArthur nr Coast Hwyl ---------2 bedroams each. Bltins, car-- pets & drapes, chaice loca· Hon. Lease $200 pr month. Call 6T.l-8550 RLTR. 3 BR & den duplex, 21Ai be, adults, no pets. 1325. Leue. Inq. 617 Iris, apt A, CdM. A,vail. Nov. ht. 644-7558 2 BR. 2 Ba., upstairs, down· )talrs. Attract. apt Swedish b'plc. 644-4610 days; 673-4607 aft. 6.p.m. 2 BR. Stove, ?efrig., frplc, nu cleclJr. wrw erpt'g. View. Adults, no pets. $2«1. 10 to 4, 3Z2 Heliotrope, Apt B, CdM. CHARMING 2 Br duplex. Newly dee. $185 mo. Call alter 5, 675-5Sl,D, it no answer, call 675--3000. 2 BR apt avail Nov lat, walk lo ~ch. adults. p::a. 833-I411 or 5*4431. COit• Mesa DELUXE APARTMENTS Air Cobd • Frplc'• • 3 SWhn· ming Pools • Health Spa • Tmmta Courts -Game and BUllani Room. 1 BR. From $1SO 1 BR. &. Den From $185 MEDITERRANEAN VILLAGE 2-IOO Harbor Blvd., C.M. CTI4) 557-803) RENTAl. OFFICE OPEN 10 AM to 6 PM e NEWPORT e e APARTlt)ENTS e t4SO Newport Blvd., CM Cl-ULDREN OK $95 Bach utl l pd. $145 Ba,y front Bal. Util pd. Rent-A-Hou11 979-8430 2 STORY, llv., din, 2 br, QUEEN· SZ. 1% ba. Step:ii to bch. regtaurnnts, .11hopt. $395 lensc. 673--0072. Illes. $145. Fro:t K!c:!J!~ts. Unfum. 320 RentoA-Hou11 979-1430 ::;--~----- Caso de Oro AU. UTJ1JTIES PAID Compere before )IOU rent Custom designed, featuring: 1 BR. Jo'urnlshed $138 l BR, l BA Unf. $133 lrplc'a, prlv. garagts • AU.. lITILITlES PAID Divided bath & lots cf Call 646-1038 Hou1e1 Unfurn. General LANDLORDS! 2 BR. Rent Nov. Jst, Ontown1_C_o_•_••_Me_ .. _____ _ Hun~on Beach, $1SO per 3 BR 2 Ba crvts drnpe11 mo + $35. Cleaning lee. bttlni, chlldfen ok': am! pei Call 536--3491 aft 2 pm. ok. $115 mo. 546-3710. VJ1LA PACIFIC -'/10th." 1nl. to beach. 4 BRI, ex· Huntington h •ch clu1dve private roaidcnoe. I!"'"',...,,.....,..-....,..,...~.,.... $2fi/mo. Bkr. 962-55ll. 2 BR ,Condo. Adult llvlnc, 3 BR.. 2 BA. blt-inl. J-lunttJWton Ba,y, twimmtnc We Sptclolbe II! Newp0r1 Fenced. Cldldron OK. pool, ....,.,don, Ir p 1 c , JJeaeb • Coron• cte1 Mar • SZO/mo. M)1827 ·;,;;:;~.f/:rfl:rlire. 1ase le Laguna. Out Rtntt.I Ser-* 3 Br OONOO, crpta. drpl, 2 Br Condo Brookhunt 6 vtce ts FR~F 1n Youl Try pool, wuber/ctr)'er, RIO, Adama, Oilldtpe(t ok. $IXl No-View! rfirlf, r.n>. 548-10. mo. Di-4230. NU-VIEW RE NTALS 3 BR. crp!!, drpo, bltlnl, dbl 1:':8:i:R,:-"un°"<~urn~.°"R<lrll=,......, "'"'·"bl"'blo.-~ 01 ... 3'a ~J.Sli. S:JS. 544-9506 or Crptt. drps. patio. $IM/mo. NEW 3 BR Lab Am>wl>ead 1 c:::,=::;:.~,.....--~ i... """""'' Bla', 5«>-U51. home. Rent or I e a a e . 3 BR. l.«e Fam rm. Cpts, ~ Occ Cl 4 BR 1% Bath Frplc dt1lt. bTtlnl. Brand new Utl.11lLU. • ea.n • ~"J:· ~Imo. m..m.. . $215 ptr mr>. MT.U Alt-0 i~-OBa~~~ TIME FOR DAILY PILOT CLASSIFIED ADS CALL 642-5678 ' • ) LEA:SE new 4 BR. 2 BA, =;..,-d•· ~· 9UICK CASH 2 BR -· wry """'" THROUGH A ~J ... ~""' S2!0 DAILY PILOT i"'oo.,,..2:":=er"". "">;gm±c, b"'11n-,.1.""'2"'"ea-.1 CLASSIFIED ADS =03~~-~: 642-5678 " • Sp.aclout kltchell with in· direct llghtin& • Separate dln'1 area e Home-like storage e Private pall<>1 • Closed g&.raae w/11oragr • to.tarble pullman e KinK·ll Bdrrnt e Poof • Barbtques • aur-rounded with t-'u.sh land· =·"t..i at I I ..... LARGE l BR $1!0. 2 BDRM. SDI. No Pets 365 w. \V\han 642-1B71 WE EKLY-MONTHLY Ex-tin Suites 2* Nowpo<t Blvd. Ciiio Mooa 642-Mll STUDIOS & 1 llR'S e FREE Unens e FREE UtlllHe1 • t'llll Klt<heo e 1-leated Pool e Laundry hcWtlea • TV a maid *"' aw.JI • PbOo. .smt'I' Nl!t!d a "P•d'"T PCact' an ltJI clo!\eta. Rec hall, pool &: pool t•blc11, 19.UM batM. 1 BR, spac\ous, FA heat, See for your3t!lf! 17301 new dlshwuber. refrla,, Keel!!Oft Ln. (1 blk W. ol shag crpt. $1~. 72'0 Beach, 1 blk N. of stater). Shalimar. 642--0844 or ~~™' ~·~4822~~,,_~,_..,,~ ~fEN, small ~ hotel. DELUXE 2 Br., lli BL Room• $22.50 "'"'Mk, a»ll "95 SU.Sio on ~nd atreet. P" mo. ....,106&. · ~ts. drpa, pool, bllno, * 2 8R. Ntlll' Sbopplna: * · patioc. $155. 1 child ok. Newly decof'lterd. $115/Mo. peta. 541--11St R<alonomk:s O!rp. 6J5.i11IO NEWLY DECORATED 2 BR, """"In. °""" drpa, 2 Br w/pr .. -ru~.l bltlnl. .., pell. 1 child St!iG. f'ncd yl'd wrdo~ 84&-M aft 4• , ~A ~cf ntsa lve ..• slis BACllELOR ApL C-to patio l•,,•ch A .-.... 1Lll/mo. lN~ :"~An W..: Gu A water ·Dd. ln...-r. Re,tp. -adult. only. No L•tuN chlld'ren or Pola. ~ -· • 6 4 2 5 6 7 8 D A I L y p I L 0 T c L A s s I F I E D 6 4 2 - 5 6 7 8 OAllY PILOT ft PUBLIC Ncmcz " DAILY PILOT f-.-V,1'172 • \ . lllT 11111 " c L A 5 5 I F .-1 D, 6 4 2 • 5 . 6 • 7 • 8 IAYB L WOT JO CWll YOUR CWll om ·na FAST! FAST! ACTION! CAll DAlY PILOT Cl.ASS- lflm DQIT. D I A L D I R E c T -- 6 4 2 -5 6 7 8 i ( ,. ............... l~I .,._.,,,_ I~ I .... '" --. J~[ ,. " Os ..... ' . """""' 0 ...... 1 IL CORDOVA Affl. --~l'nm.,JltS 1 &2 1adr..,• -S'IAY llOMl-ON1--+ Dishwasher • Shag CarpellaC • W.it,la Clo. eta, Fotted Air Heat • Extra Large Rooma • Beautiful Game Room • Heated Pool • BBQ'• Enclosj!d Ganges. Quiet surround!~ ed close to shopping. (Nr Harbor & Hamllton St) Ailult Living· No Pots. WUDNDS. WOULDN'T Y9'1! It'• all here fo r you to Ol\IOY SaturdaYs and Sundays aod all week long, too. 2077 .Cher .. St.. Coota Mola 642"'470 fl!i0,000 heallh 1paf 7 swlmmlJlg pooll, 7 Ugbt- ed tennis courta, b cycle lralls, putting green, ahuflleboard, croquet. Spacioua lunlor l'• lrom $174.50 monthly, plus 1 or !-bedroom plans and Z.slory toWlt houses wllh 2 or 8 tie4' rooms. All with electric .tltebe=, rlvate bal-cony or patio, <>arpetlng, clra es. Sublel- ijACl.ENDA lWllOll From $1st. DELUXE 1 & 2 'BEDROOMS Fumlshed & Unfurnl1hod Heated Pool -Garages -Shag Carpeting Dishwasher -All UtlllUes Paid. raneao parklng, elevalors, o maid """ Adultt Only· No l'ols 241 A-St., COiia Mola 646-1204 \'Ice. Gourmet food market dry cleaner, beauty salon on grounds. See beatitlfWly flu-.' nlshed models today, 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. Other tlmea by appointment. Just uortb of Fuhlon • Island at Jamboree aod Sao Joaquin HlllJ Road. .VILLA MARSE.ILi-ES Sl'ACIO.,,S I & 2 BEDROOM APT. Fumlshed & Unfvmlthod Adult Living DJahwasher color coordlnated appliances • Plush shag carpet • mirrored wardrobe doors.. lndired Ughtlng In kltchen • breakfast bar • huge privet.. fenced patio • plush landstap. Ing • brick llal'-!Je.Ques • large heated pools & lanai. Air conditioning. PARK NEWPQRT APARTMENTS . Oii the bay fol aphona 1714) 644-1900 for Nfttol lnfonMtloll. Apt. -J6S Apt. Unlllm. jiS 3101 S.. Brl1hll St., Sonia Ana 557.ftOll i COLDWELL, BANKER & CO. ' MANAGING AGENT -----------·------. Apt. Unfum. J6S Apt. Unf-i--------Cost• ~ 1 I: :I Br Garden Aptll, $135 up. Pvt. patioe, carp?tl, furn. avail. 531-!508, -it it BEAUTIFUL 1 & 2 BR. Contemporary Garden ~ Patb, frpl~. pool. $!BO. Call 546"5l63 ATJ'RACT, Nl!W 1 BR. l BA. Apt. Adults, no re t & • $135/mo. 1970 W a I a c e . 548-0!l)l. 1 I: 2 BR w/furn. avail. Heated pool. $130 I: up. Adulta:. . 853 • Center St. -·· 2 BR. 2 BA. dbl ......... mi.. bltlna, d1 h w1 h r, ~/mo. Avail. l 0 I 2 5. 6'5-al3. SUN·NY 2 B·R, b I t D&/ref/gar. Sundeck. Walk beach. Adult& No ..... $190. i:.. 61>-42lS. 1 &; 2 BR. "Adults, no peta. BAY MEADOWS APTS. 387 W. Bay St., C.M. 64&-0073 E·SIDE 2 BR. $150 Bltna, w/w, refrlg, Pool. Adults, no pets. 642-9531 $150. 1 Bt'., utlls. Frplc., beams. patio, adlts. no pets. 2652 Oratme. Aft 5. 54&-1674. 2 BR. cpts, drps, bltns. Incl 546-8370 ....... M ... Verde -.. NEW NEW NEW $160/mo. 549--1058. Lall!"! N!r!!? 1 .. 2 BR. GarOen Apia. POOL VII I I PAlll I °"""hr. Utpl ~ up. llUll ut.11 r ] LAGUNA NIGUEL 33!..E.2 ':. ~ ..... ...... ~™ l ~lfllEX =·"'~ Upotaln. Famlllo1 Wolamol ApatliiNnh 1 Br., 1 Ba.: Sl.85 • 2 Br •• 1 Ba: $2'A e 2 Br., 2 Ba.; $235 SPAC. bachl apt.,,. ocbla & (2 BR., 2 FULL BA.) I lie) Kbopping. No pets. $130 mo. ONLY 2 LEFT! .._.,_Ml Util pd. Call 919.-013<. En-will be ••!'"',.,.--,.----' Incld Gu, TV Cable I: Wtr Fully ..... ~ drpd. Rec facll. Htd Poot BBQ are&. D~ _ 2 BR, unrum. pleasure. Decorating will be Cleslification 100.124 Garago. Quiet. No dop or ; ~ oablnet ·-I I~ 291)11 AJoma Ave. m-rm « ~ MolOV-motm:yclea. 548-272), • Lode W/lg ator ............. ~ SPACIOUS Townhse, 2 m-. 2 e Bm ce~l.ndry & Patlol · ba, vaulted ceiling, gar, e DIW-Dispolal • Drapes CIH1fflci1tion 125--149 pools. $210. 540-4179. a Deep 2 co1or shag cpt& DELUXE 2 I: 3 Br., 2 Ba., encl pr, $160 up. Rental 1 BR, crpt/drps, garage, $130 per mo. 3'16 E. 16th St. 54&-l.SU. l BR. 2 BA.·PATIO $170. Mesa del Mar, ~1208 The DAILY PILOT ORANGE COAST'S leading Marketplace • Special 90Wldproofing e Nr. SM Diego Frwy. Hartormw. GAS Heat, Gu Cooking and WATER -All PakL Lower Apt $IBO .Afontb to Month 622 Hamilton, CM _.,..., -I~ I ~~:::·c:·Uni=-:..· ~-111ace ___ A .. _ ... I ._,Clollili::--;::-1..,-:-:i;on-.,.I 50-~ 114 Newport Ba- l~ WHERE RatW CONGENIALITY • . PREVAILS a...mcet1on 200.260 Ocean view, 24 hour boule See Mel'-Mr. ii Mrs. Hoban S.:IG'2 I I~ security, a p artment• llJ!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!••!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!IL.:."~·~u~,~-~~~-~J-.... _ .............. . -1ICI touch, exclU1ive club with lfe81i.BJIU 21 ci...mc.t;.. Joo..i;;s ~~~"""."'t 2 Bedroom, 1 bath •••• $190 I Jlpb' ; ,_....; J( I) ~it o; P~er ~ n ?:::~ 2 8'dn:iom, 2 bath ••••• $205 • _ munlty 3 Bedroom, 2 bath ••••• $255 t bedroOm.Jstudlol trorn $'\$ &!autitul tlJ!W aJ?U. w/pvt ClaMfficetio11 360.-370 2 Bedroom trom $295. • ~ ..,..., pool, -, ,~ Deluxe 3 bedroom "° ~ .. E.~:Wt:.t -~ -vi'RsAiwsP.?.L =Ike SUrniundl C1a11m c•Hon 400-465 on the llLUFl'S QUIET DEWXE "' I 11 .... 1 al NEWPORT 2 I: 3 BR API'S. II ••Mitt From Newport Blvd.1-at Pvt. Patios * Htd. Pooh: • · HOtPltal Road ( blotk Nr Shop'& * Adults Only Clilulfic•tion 50C).510 above Pacltlc Coe.at Hwy. al Martinique Apts. . ~~ .. ;;,..,~· 1m Santa Ana Ave.i..~.M. ( Pa n.s 11•1 Be a e b, Ca . 9 28fr Mgr. Apt. U3 ..,.55<2 • . · Tel<!phone' !TI41 64!Hll!O. jr1{ 3 Br., IY, ba. tt Clonlfic•Hon 525-Uii 2 Br .. 2\0 BL, trplc, Dbl pr, ~. newly decor. encl ,. ![SJ pool, nuna, Oub hie, patio, blbls, crpt, drpll, a..e _. r....e Wshr/Dryer. New paint Qd ~ to everything. $110 ean>etii. Adult• $ 2 9.S • mo. 880 Center SL, CM. Call 0.11ifit::•fion SS0 .655 ~2346,or 66-41l0. alt 3 pm wkdys, all day OCEANFRONT nr. p\er. ........ 642.8340. I If 1¥ I 1'!e· 'BR. 2 BL .. , ....... * SHADY ELMS . POOL * illlneUoe Modern. clean, x1nt cobd. e Adults Poolslde $140 up · . Chlldrtn Welcome. S32S. • • Oilldren next.bk>ck Clilttiflc•tion 57S..510 Irwin Co. Rltn. 6"-6111 Free Fumlf\lr• Pl.In I 1~ SPACIOUS 2 Br. 2 Ba.-1 171 E. 22nd St., CM 642-3645 ..... _,..... . to bay, 1 blk to ocean. 2 BR apt. C&rpets & drps, I Yearly. $230/mo. Bk r. $150, w/utll. Older person Cles1Jfic1tion 60()..699 675--49ll. ~&f Stove t: refr'le.1 Jfil) NEW=~"',,,.'-.-. -pal~n-1,-,tove--.-1• I · •:4'9)1riMl f 1 blt ttJ heh. Ulll pd. Yrly. Spa~ 2 • 3 a, apt. $140 up t Bach, $150. 2 81» ~ Pool,_cpVdrp, bllN, kl<holc Clo11lflcation 700.710 1 ,;:,~~=~----1995 Maple No. 1 .•• 60-3813 EXCU.I BALBOA BA y ZIOS Coile1e ,No. S •· 642-7035 1 •, n••• If ~I CLUB ·Lwc. Bayfront 1 Bil. Oi1rta ....... . . ApL $4M 1ub-le11e. e NEW luxury (upstain), 1 Cl111lfic1tion 100-lllt :=UTIFUL 3 Br 2 a'... BR. 2 BA. Fab. view of 1 ~ \i block to ocean. iJnM;n. ~":tt ~ ~e.iiif. ,_ _,.._.. )~ :::~ O't>ll, drp1. Cuqe. 33881 ~Ito Dr. 68MJUI, ~ .. f' 1 ,EA5=~"==~~--l NEW 2 Br., ovtrlQoU-ooea.n -11J 1ution 1~51 ;)ioLUFF DLX 2 BR, 2'J; • marina Shor cup drf>I I ~ BA, frplc, """'· -. pool, bttne incl~ pr Igoe-bilcony' .._._, l ~JP dbl car. petio. ~. n!!O 0r ltp wlih ont )T 111e: ._..,. lta•lt 1'.-YEARLY. 3 BR. frpl., ••,Pit -WS. Cl Ill t' 900. "° ocoan. $300. 4 BR. $Ul. OCEAN view. Spadow: 2 est ~ ion 91 2 ABBEY RtALTY 60-38$0. br., 2 bL, din. att11, bJtnJ. [ l~ QUIET 2 Br •llUlldedt. -COii l dl'1>1. 8aJCOJ01. ~ .... er,.t. -pool, pr, lliflto, IJ90. 83T-3921: 13'!-$113. . -.. "' ,..... 11811 64HOOI EHi Bluff Claulll .. llnn 91 5.94• 2 BDRM ci-to booch, I §] ,..,1y, $215. c._.. , WELL -2 BR. 2 Ba. -.... I L"!I * 115-11>14 * I 2 Car I"'· AvoQ. lmmed. -2 811, $llO ,.my, ' U» Mo, Yrl)' I e a 1 e , , One block mim beech. &U-1423. C&e1siflc<1t1oft 950.990 * ITHSl5 * , I • • :: L ., • 2 ' ·~ l I· ! f I.~. • f . L " !" , • " ! . -. F ....... -V, 1'172 OAILV I'll.OT :JJ m~~. ~ .... t1o11~j~~,, -J~ ,___[ ;;-~l~~.1'i I[~ ----~;;;·lal;;;1 1---1 ~ ---...1~----'-;;Lol ;;;J-'"";;-1;;[1}];1~' ;;;' z-.'i ~? ~l[ill;;~l~iFll ~? ;;;;l[ll);.•1 :i-... 1-P•lntlog I . ~ Ip ~ I " n 'll,lllib.. R-• .... offlc. Ren••I ... "°""" 11-.... , I.SO c-. c-..i. P•perk•"llnt . r:;·~lp;'W~Oll;;;:lod~, ;;:M~l~F~n;;.01 ;llO;;';;•;W;ont..i.:;;;M;;•;;;F;";;;';"°;;;;;W;;;•"'::::;;-;;;;;M;;;;;;;;;;;;;'~ _ Fum. Qt' Un!Um. 370 ---,,.,----,, FOR rent In __ te -DANA POINT 0 Utll ... ft, ol PART Cdllo. ""1Alle doc· CUSTOM ~ ~ Cu11on).'l!itter. Ar'i,'!J:. ~P --~ ... · O.llver Tele..1.-DlroctOl'IH -ll•lboa l".ftin.ul• • lUrftlabetl ._ wltll ., _,. ~ «<. In VJc E-Sldll, C..ta -W... pr!Yoo, w......., P"•-p I II ~ .. -~ I wltl'M>ut ldtchen privllapa pltaunt De!.,._ a:mm·~ (Newport Blvd.l, Cali ~ decQ.. Don. 60-t514 • n "I h0Ud~1 happier fot your Men or Women 18 or over with cars, staUon l•Bllollrn. c.:'w> -*1nc Ja<ty pre!flftd . ...,p1 .. 1 °""" view • !>IH?S21d"'ve,.._oc PATIOS:PLA.,T. ERS No job too,,..,''° ""AIL ontlretamUy! '"••U)'oett-wagons, or Ugbt trucks. Pleasant outdoor • II blk "'"'1/liaf. Mllllon V,.Jo, !l&-29U. -· -.. ""-& -· All C-..te ...rl. Brick. lJ~.~~°:(f0~.,".!; ~ ·~~~~ worl<. Your available dayllght hours. CallL l\pn<. ~ • 2 ROOMS. own • ..,._, $10. 1100Ye natural .....,., lql. A roUND' vi.. Villa Swede•. .iumP1tone wk. 1194-m!. und.,bld. ..uooo. ca1.icc .... t;,all..N""'-MD-100 liceDJa plates required-~ply .for job deJ- C.01t• Mui . .__. iplel&J 111ito al...otr:I ,"'11;a.e OIM lite gra)C Ouff)o~t - -I I ~ Ir ' In 8 ~ I -I 31) p " 1-;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;:it;;;;;;::;;.t ~n:'."'irs f10Wt"f' St. Costa ,, eat u re 1 or a bolne. wetitnir whlte nea collar. PATIOS. Milkl, dr'l~Slw, ll'~lN~ tftllEXtet. Neat. BABYSlTI'ER. ReUable, re-er pt on -. am g. :.JU, :.JU or : ·"'-· 1• Me • M&-9136 (714> 7564362. ~1348. ·' b&'fak, remo;ve &. retlaee ~~ murteoua: aer-tined, 1 o v I n g A ._r. at the location nearest you, dally beginoinl • • ~-·.J.r "" ••t nESK anoice •VIJlaJU $50 tY'>.UND , • Ped! --• Dog '~acrete. $4S=!ifi8 for eet., ,_"fv · ,·Re ' on req. Uc'd, fectlonate. a or 5 da,y1 wk. \Ved., Nov. 1st at -* * *NEW** ..Ll Y ~ .or'A~a.w'.:;!,.; ·~ •v • _, •·~ • SIDEW~A.l'IOi I' • • ·.,,, '•l>b. slnoo 1955. ''30-5:30. lla yr old .Ut, 10 ..,..-a 'IV ,. ~y mtli. WW provide fUmlturt plain brwn collar, vie. & DRIVEWAYS . ·~ · yr. okl boy. Lite MkPI. SlO 1980 No. Gta1Hll Avt. -Or1ngt \: -t·t COSTA AP"" =· Blvd., CM · :~~':. ~·= ::riew.,..~ Santa Ana l.Je'~/Sonded · 64.7-~ .:11 .ff~fntlnt Sptcial day ID •tut. 362 El:tber, 6441 Caballero -Butn• P arle: Lil ltl. Huntlnaton BN.ch. IU-4S21 ta. . Child Care · ·1 ,.r· 1,,}JJR Mod APT $69.50 C.M. 64tH'l618. '32.I W. First St. -Santa Ana LARGE room, pvt ba.·& cntr. :tND: Grey Penian cat ·' 'PaJnt &. LaQQr BABYSrrrER lor 2 girls 81 Fair Drive, -Costa Mesa .. l lo 2 Bedroom e' Bull•"" • Shag carpets e •Drapes • Wltl.lk in cloaeu: • Swh'nmifl&" Pool ·~·· • Enck>led Ganae . AO Utilities Paid in ~ Verde,. Emplyd Bu1ine11 fletttl1 445 w/purple Rhineltone collar COSI:A MF..S,4;FRESCHOOL. BenaGn PQiting . Free EsL &&,es 8 &: 1', boy 15 ·from 5 C F · und man. C.all 545-2821 vtc. Victoria Si., C.M. 18th 1: M~rovla,. ~ * "2-199!1 * to 9 pm s days wk my (Orange o. a1rgro s -* Nice~·· k.ltch priv op-900 SO. FT, BLDG. C-2 645-6723. HOURS 6:30· am-6:f ~ , N Wuti home. Poaible JI ve .f n . Enter .from Nwpt. Blvd.) lion.al. PVt' adl.t home, nr 19th St, CM. HeJWY ·foot nm. trie11dly A Ired a I e Muaic ~?:l'·~ .. _.Rftl' .... 0 ng 5.51-3954 · aJI. F.ast C.M. 548-42'11. tramc. 12 car prlc'g Jot Sep. wearing Dea collar vie. Ratu'. Llc'd.~~ *1_.WA_!_~PAP~R °? BABYSITTER. Lakeview Stt1rtlng Tuesd•y tht 31st. Nice room, own ba. & entr. 2 Br hse. ldeal for R.E., Bushard St., in H .B. 838-5237. . ••. , •• Wben ¥1.N call Mac Sehl. l)igt., llntgn. Bch. •t 1:30, 10:30 l 1 P .M. , ••• kitchen priv. ~!~East photo studio, adv. agency, 962-2290, CHILD Catt • My Mme. 54&-l#I IW6-l7ll 11:30 am to S::ll pm. l405' Wiilow Ln., Westm.ins .. r c.M. $98/mo, ~. architect, etc. 6f6.696l or FEMALE puppy, black & )Jcenaed. Hot meal.I. Good PAINTING, Carpentry 847-7215. Mature adull1, m pets Walldnc diltante to • shopping "-· '354' A-St., C.M, '642°97111 Deluze. Pvt. entr. I: be.. 646-124& ........... y• , __ ' grey w/white m~. ~~ ... 91'!-.~~.!.! I nr ~.-18,._:n· ~~. arelloab. e;:ABY'°'"SJ"T;:;l;;;'E'"R,.~-; ...... == .. = .. 1 Equal Oppor. Emplov.11r Maid service. No smokers. "TI!E FA .... uR ' ,_ V~. Edwards I: Talbert. ™..,..,,, .. un • 1Wa1•... ~ ••· ~ er 5 days wk, 8 to 5:30, own ,-G~~ ~~ t er t:: ~~mo.~~ :;.~ ~·Muroy Park, _cont~ac:tOf' • . f~G A PAPERING, ~ ~~~~ area.11H!'•".'lp"ilw!' ... n"-'1..i"'!','!M'!"!lo~F~7~1'!'o!'H~.~l~p'lwll.~.~,~ ... 'l.'"Mil'"l~F~71iliol bedroom, ::'1f• TV. Beach small retail •lhops. Antique Huntinicfnn Beach. Call I: JAq< Taulane -Repair i9 yn. In Harbor atta. Lie BABYSITTER : Lt CLERK. TYPIST FIBERGLASS • P""· 0---( wy. ~ OtlO ahop, ~y shop• wanted. iderJtily• 847 9753 tea\od., addlt. ~ )'!'I. exp. I: bonded, Ref'I fum, }lo~ 2 ....,, ch\I.._ Fo ro. . ··--'• t--•• n-....o-o1 ..... ~ ~ 425 30th St., M •. n__. Beach. ' . · LJ 'd My W•• Co <•7 """"' .,..., .....,,, • "1"· w.-.:n. r vo::neral Office wvi.·"· Exper. •••.uuualor ·~. PVT"'°~roo~m~.~,,,..'--~eo.ta~~-M-e_sa_ 1 6'f3..9E06. ,.,.. ... ...., • ., ~YAN Cat • declaw· c ·. ._ '"" ~. u-u-~. M~ thru Wed. 8 hr day. Typlna, fjllna, Reception piece work. Helmet manut LA "'•"CHA home, S65 mo. FOR LeeBe (J) 1500 SJ It 1 'ftl. Wallatt> St., C . M . Adj!~~~~:: .. ~~~ .~:~r:rr™G · PAP:i'e~ livine area. 544-9138. duties, etc., Real Estate or AJ:ply 1777 Placentia. CM. I "Ll'U" C.U 546-9346 a"'--•• "• Zone. Cor Hunt· 5-iS-4500; 646-4015. .....,,...,."'""" ·,. Banklng Construction background de-Dra»G New DelUxe Unit.II ,.,...,. ...-. wh' 6'B;-604.l * 5t~2170 l:Jc. lnsui:ec' G~,,n~~ TELLER slrable. Inunediate open~. I ~= ,J:,,~r or~ ~Nf'ba.~~Pri~en.= ~~.I: &Jams, HB ~ca1~~.Mar1~ Drafting , Harris tl'U-.55S Commercial bankingexpe:r. Call?i.trs.LloydlorAppotnt· ~'s rree rent. 1J!R.1 BR $19Q ,mo. tnc. o,til. 6'1'~~ .. :11, ofll-/s~-. $95. Hi· Elden C..M. 54H607. Photography CENTrNELA BANK ment. 833-8722. FINANCIAL PLANNING DIRECTOR ~-2 • B -· · _, '"" w... PLANs-Hou.ses, Rem 0 d 8 ' Newport Beach Area CLERK . Young intelligent, • ·U\ln JU.ta & 3 R's. . ., 415 trattlc. ·2340' Newport Blvd. FOUND: Yrlg Blk & tan Room Additions. $50 up. IS yoUr child posing a prolr Call Mrs. f'erguson e"" ...... tlc clerk to work I· '?:~ s!_,~··~pat\JJOOI.~~~ Guest HOll'I• C.M. 646-%>44, 548-8113. = ~Pm~bermfn. 5.57~. J;ves, 557-695. • : lem? I specialize in action 646--1121 w/a:;;putcr d at 8 PJ't>. Ne'vport Beach financlal in- stitution h a s Immediate opening far director oI rsta.te & bwl.lneas plana. Peta·acewst.able 1nciu1trl•t Renf•f 450 . ·' . . Gardening . r ~photos of children. 536--2887. Equal Qppor. Employ.er cemng. XIi,t co. w/llberal "2·2Xl7 Scott Pl., C.M. * Prl.,.~ R-. . * ~,.8,f;8b,Ho:':n· a:n:1ae: ~ Ha .all Garden trlat.ler, Patdt, Repair •BEA:UTICIAN WINµT fringe benefits. Raub,. Bern WESTBAY 211. 1 & 2 6R, '" _., JUST COMPlETED • ~-~-w an .... " APPEARANCE FOR & Froo~ W Rocbeator, from $170. Foreso/ Ira for Complete garden aerv · * PATCH PLASTERING BUSY SHOP 548-0019 l=OCoso=ta="M'=esa."""~~--=-, r>-1.ust have Ja\v degree & heavy exper. In tax A estate analysis service. Previous In s uran ce & a.u background prerd. D-Wshn:. Gal, wtr . Ambulatory Lact,y or Man 1600.to S300 Sq, Ft. FOUND: Fem. dog'Paft·Lllb, Ki~ 1 an i • 6 4 6-4676, All types. ~,,!"timates B I M __ _; tu . . COCKTAIL waltress Expel. Atllts. no pets. ll4 E. Good, nutritious Food. IN SANTA" ANA recent IUl'gt'!l:;y, back Jeg.' 64 . ... Call '1'fl.N:)(l25 oa anvt"AC ring Full A part time' Local St., 548--0137. Nice, cheerlul atmosphere. New tilt-up bldg w/sharp, Vic Ml.selon Vl,jjo,.&TI-238:t. BOB'S :CARDENING • · Plumbing Ca?inet c\Slemblen Exper. refs. Apply after 5 Pm. H · Beach * Call 5484753 * crptd, paneled · otticet & AMBER eyed · long haired & ~DSCAPING • mm. 4 yn. C a b I n e t DON TJxt Beachcomber unt1ngton • tor ( g'e m e % z a n I n e cat, O>nma • del M a' r . Jrvtne Industrial ~ .. Drains unclOgged -$7 .50 ' Assemblers Trns, min. 6 390'1 E. Coast Hi way Salary wU1 be in acoonlance ' ituNTINGl'ON Ga rd e'l1 9 O'WThead-k>amnlr doots, ll().. fi73.-552!J. Complexes. Sewer tine1to1l08' -$15 mo .. expe1-. Elcper. Bonders, c.orona del Mar \\•/exper. I: quali!icaHons. • Apts. Hell at Bolla Chka. t would like to care tor m.3 phase PA'f\+ FND. Blk kitten w/fiea col· 5m-42!E after 5pm. * ~%!02 •-'(!'"~~. Toochup, ex Per· COMPANION to Grandmolh· Submit l'HWTte w/u.lary 84&-1323. Cl>mpare • ~ eklerl.y people or 1cbildren HONSAKER DEV. CO. 1ar vtc. Pomona School, AME;RtCAN gardener. ~ • COLE PUIMBING ~n Yacht!: er, my home, SPl'inldale & ~;!i ::d :"~:~ what lQl're m.la\ng. •Fr. w/bandlcapa in my own 546-5460 C.M. 548-<M37. .of "G~ Cutters" do~ ·2-hr. service. · · 645-1161 1931 Deere, S.A. ~er are&. 5 hrs per day Daily Pilot, P.O. Box 1560, I S130-$260. home. Good cooking. Happy .. A,, tt --~1., Wh _,, Salvkl half a JOh? For estiratlte . AIR .,."-......._l Mon.Thurs 10 M.1"·3 PM oc· ,..._ta M.,. Calif 911;26 0-=. Apt-priv. pa'~. & clean hotne. Have older ,)Off.I ag. u~c., WVl• orage FND: t iuwe · call Custom Gardener, J~. i PLUMBING ·REP J'tlT""O\IU casional ~a hn., days ~ ' · .,....uAL uu children to be!.p w/CJUe. apace, C.M. uttt. pd. Mo. to Capistrano Bch. M~. 645-2658. . No job too small BOAT BUILDERS only prepare hot lunch lile Equal Oppor. Empk>ye.r ;~~ =cg= S:,.~ l~ Please call 897-m4. mo. !i57~'r6; G7:HE24. 644-81~ ~--ily * LANDSCAPING * * &t2~312a. * &per. bonder & finish car-hou5ekeeplng, 536-5tl4,, 8-5; GENERAL Ole. Educational ~ $151>. ~· Vacation Rent•ll , 425 $torage 455 EXPENSIVE cat. ..,_... New lawns, s Pr Ink I er 1, Sewing/Alttr•tl?nl . pent~ needed ror high 84&.513t a~ ~ .1: weekends. corp. seeks intelligent, ~ ===~=~~---[ .!!::!!!:::.S:::::::;::=._.::.= breed. Newland & El Ar· d~. cleanup. State lie'~ ' , . q:uabty. aallboat ,man u f . Ask for Vll'gtwa. dMd w/gd typing sJdllg, :: Lido Isle Rentals to Share 430 FENCED •ttirase area,"-A. royo, Fntn Vy. 847-5122. 536-1225. • Dress~,--~,terations 'YeslsruAI Corp)._~ Placen-OOUNTER personnel for dry Congenial o(c. Nr. Cal State W tl'hdna' a tr o 11 e d FND. Mesa del Mar area. Desi&'"' .. to 11"' you lie. ve., ....,..a Mesa. de Call for Long Bch. Send resume & • 2 J •·-I I mal -·• Pri a;:x1.:.1"'i pa . G-•/Black Kitten we .. ..i ..... EXPERT Japanese. Call Jo* 646-6446 642-8961. a..!""t. be"t'wn"""'s •' 9-.~ a.m., :1 Bft,party • .,. .. ,yryease, APT.toshr., !!~, Suilableforbtz,trailers, • ._ <MU'6 "(¥•aTdener Complete . 1--.======,--.... ~ aal r e qu lre m ents to: , aduJts, 107 Via Florence rm & ba, pool. other heavy equipm~nt, etc. C.M. collar. 541>-8791. Gardening ';SerVice. NB, CM CUSTOMS ,QESIGNS BOOKKEEPER 548-4243. Kuster's Quality Classified Ad No. 5.16, Dally l•i1 open Sat/Sun 10 am to 4 f_a c i I i t I ea . ~ Eves area. 64.1-21Sl. area 546-1894. , 1 Mod to Hi fashion alterations Burroughs L400 Exper. Clc.'llners, 15M Newport Bl., Pilot, P.O. Box 1560, eo.ta _. pm.· 979-6956. STORAGE Buildlng for rent Lost 555 AL'S Land!4Caping. Tree t(f also 548-9768: 8 am4:30 pm Gall Lorraine C.M. Me:sti, Oltt·~· ·-·~- r!·' Newport Beac. h PROF'ESS. QI' business man; $30 mo.~ Flower St, Col!ta ALL Black, tern cat rpovaJ. Yard rernodeling. · Alteratlori5-6C2-5845 p WESTCJ,I AgelFF j;;iiii;i;..................... GENERAL OFFICE sharp home with pool, In Mesa. 64&"9136 'n'ash hauling, lot cleanup. 'Neat accurate. 20 years exp. crsonne ncy Day &: Nite Work in small Coala Mesa :. desirable ~· , Beach loc. Rent•h Wa~• 460 w/yeUow eyes & flea col· ,,,_ . .J-•·•-.,.,.. llfi6 ' • 2043 Westcllff Dr., NB • "'-tar, vie Parl< & Garno~ =-'P<•~~, .. ••r . tile 645:2770 DISHWASHERS om,. doing """'• of tv"Y· l . $l7S. Call 1!!02. Balboa Isle. 9 yr old owner GARDENING SERVICE thing. Must type accurately 1 · 'l\Je 2 Br. house to share. WANT to 'ftflt Gera.ge In heartbroken. Call Fran, Reasonable _ Reliable CERAMIC tlie new & Bookkeeper & BUSBOYS &: opera.ta 10 key adding !)'.·. .' Year round $185 ~· Newport Beach. Coata Mesa 6'1S-3683 or 540-0995. * 64&-6852 * , remodel. Fi:ee .est .. Small We need one Automotive mach by touc:h. Gd salary&: . 1 Your lllare. $95. 6'D-9028 or Corona del Mar 111'ea. for LOST, female Irish setter, EX p ER r J apanese-jobs weloomi:. ~2426. Bookkeeper with QMV ex· benefilll. Mature, stable wo.- b• BACHEll)R will share apt 1tortng boat on yrly basis. named Una, li~ yn. Male gardener knowhow upkeep ·~nee. Send resume to Apply In Person man. cau (TI4l ~ i rg · ln Cmta Mea Days ~ eVea & Irish Setter wfwhite mark· plant ~!St trim 'cleanup' LllJ Box 501, c/o Daily Pilot, 3-S P-•m• Mon. thru F ri. GIRL FRIDAY: Growing • -..,.. 64:7-2858 w~. 673-}'l52.. • Inga. 2.)'l'll...Jiame-8lian. V.ic 96&--Mss. ' ' · -[-l . m.___west ~-Street, Costa manufacturing co. has a ·1', , FEMALE 23 or over to share •. MATURE , elili>1~ woman N.B. 548-558'J PROFESSIONAL Japanese • . ~n9nt· . -Mesa, ca111. 92626. /) place for vmiatile person tn ~~ 3 Br ~ others. :'!:pi:'°mom~~'!i.= ~GA= Puli, ~ Gardenern,.., ~~able. ~ ' I I . :f~ one .<\utomotive Loco~ :;:P~al~~;· :':t!s me: $ 0 area. eve. Fli-Sat Will exchange wn ' approx. · est. Call ~· · Job Want •, M I 700 Bookkee.,.... with achlne -""' skills. Lite sh. To S5GO. '" from 14 GIRL "' 1 child want.I to . . ' Deaf I: Blind. Vtc Temple ... ..,..,...,.. G d ea a .t .--m ,., ......... i· serv!Cei!l 'tor .couple or pay Hills L.B .f94..6853 JAPl\.l,.,..,r.. a r en e r · E'Xperlence. Send resume to 1555 W. Adams Call Jan Page, St(Mll55, j. Oakwood Is $1 mltllon in ~~~~Br. apt or :~m:~ desires 1.0sr' T~p Poodl·e, white ~~~:~ai:'f.°~310:. SCRAM. ~LETS :~t501~; °S"~i,"°&s~ C~a MllM ~= m.~· 279 0 !" recreation. Swimming G•r•ges for Rent 435. mwie··1or ittrtl' wfopdori to w/dark tipped ears. female, *EXP.~~·· Mesa, Calif. 92626· GmL FRIDAY. Exec. aeek· [ -·f)()Gt-8 . Healt~ clu-Os, SJllGI$ g~ ·for. rent ~~ .. ~-~~ ::;~~-~~ rnonarea.~798: 11:· .~":ANSWERS· ::~·ofli' automotive 0r~~01Y gN~~~ ! ~":at~~= w~ Saunas._. ~nnlJ .,ca~rts. $1Q/s:ao. 177 , .. ~ ... ~ St; inti. Wt~ tMecorii . tan • MALE Golden Relrievet, ~I S.rvlces •1 .., t1.... ,,.., ""' Bookkeeper. Send resume ne~spa~ carrien1 St. ,~e-in~ ikill• & lite bkk:pae ex· •' Bl1Hards-. lndoor·gOlfOflv. Coat& ME'la, ~ n.. ~. 5 )'is. old. t-ieedl Jn,cl~· Tuxedo -r......,..,..,.... ra ... c -10 Box 501. C/O Daily Pilot, qwrell Utt:·l.IJe 0 .a ll 1011 per._6#-0635. l ingrange.SandVGlleyball. Office'R.m.1 -...-. , • ._...., RESPONSIBll!: Pro!euional Uon. Vic Ca.Ur., Homes, HAN.PYMAN. All kinds or Tundra-CU1' OUT 330 West Bay Street C.osta Wagon or Van, rn:ntact 1\ti·. GRANDMOTHER needed lo B~ d 1 1 ~ Irvine. ~ARO. 5il4-6354. ··-.... , small jobs a Clever openjtiOn:' "My wife Ptfesa Calli 9'.626. ' Harry Seeley, 330 \\'est Bay Whi"r>obl •111S:' An OS :.;.,_, "• , r: Kt> woman ne«t<la: Studio or 1 ........ had plastic surgery J CUT • · SI Costa Mesa Babysit daily in my home . • t more.· ' resldenl -tennis ~...,..,\'iapaill '"~··,a .. _, .. ~ uo apt. In Corona del Mar. HVY rtmmed I I as 5 e 5 • sl)ftjalty, "5&9374: 54&9723. l'N'fliit ..:.__;_.. BUSBOY/MAN ·• ' 7 ...... to 4· 30 Olildren 6 .l 7 I " mo e ,w·w•w...-~N~ k hon-drink blloca. 18, black cas~.,. Vic OUT her =:i= ciuv.1:1. . DENTAL front ofc, prior ex· ·ON • • • I;. pro and acttvlties dlre9tor al $s mo. Aniwertttg service ~~· M4-8494. er, Sarita Ana; ~rt st. Hauling WINDOWS, carpets, upho.I, • & DISHWASHER per pret'd. Appt. making, ~~:ee~~~ M~ ::: , who plans free Sunday atatlablt. zt2 Fbrest :Ave,. STltlAL ed Oct. 5th, R.e1Jpd, f!46..;9276. YARD & Garage Cleanup. draperies, 1'>use cleaning. ~tu.st -be· clean & neat. Over fl.ling, posting, typing, etc. O\vn transp. Call after 5 or '· • brupches and barbecues. ,..,.µ,gUna Beach. tlt.!9'56 · INDU tpaoo·want : REWARD Free t 7 dll)'ll Call l)eluxe Cleaning Ser v. 18 .. /\pply irt person, Surf & u baclcup to ofc. mgr. !'' ,starllr:in as low es $140. 'e' A·Y~IEW ~P.Ffl"E_S !t::e~':: ~~"':':,tv:, Gordon Setter; -Thurs. v1·c. anytlm!~ ~ · , · 53&-T132 -· ~Jn'. 5930 w. Cout Hwy., dSa1ary"~~2~.! ~11>·6~2"8I ~L=· HELP -.-. d I ' ~ ~ 6 I ·-~· N · ~ Be h .,.,, ,...,.., ' .JO:x ... ER Sklpn..r. Eng. Elec. . llfll· .,..,. ....., a.i • I Singles, one an WO· "I!>t! '"•Air-CbiidiHOned or mo. eue. ~. ewpo., ac .,.,..,...._.,~ G~.;GHaullng& d. clTree/s~Estb .. ~~b. ~· M .~L An~re. BUSBOY, ecper. pref'd. Ap.. DONUT Shop till nlte ahllt. CASl-IIER, \\'RAPPER. r: bedrooms, furnished and "RedeOOmted. LldO,· ~Are. RETIRED couple w/small GREAT oa-St .,,_k.;... ..,.,_ ar Y eanup, .,..,.) 3 · 1 .. 1t. lfl ...,_.... .a.11 .... w-· W ~ ·-, Start Nov. 6th. Apply 3400 675-6T . ,..,.. . '..,............. liJ; 557.ffi04. ' .( .. ..., • . ·t'Y2106 \V r;:;::::.::.-,._,,T NB~.. oman age~-No exper unfurnished._, (ilorry no Ria]bnonnc.. Bkr. · 00 dog want 1 Br. apl. nr male. ·vie · ~·. ;&:· . . . . . uv=a.uuvn, . . nee. Apply in pehODo Mt. Via Udo, Newport. I.. c~lldren Dr p_&t~. 'MOd'els • JOfFICE..srORE ·; Catholic church and lbop-Catalina.; 10/25. 497.:.1969.: S ' ADER & dump truck Jab Wanted;. Fema:te 702 Donut, 133 E. 17th st., C.M. HOSTESSexper. helpful but d II 10 lo 7 525 ft Util peJd C'J ri P"" cntr. ~1724 work. Concrere. ..phatt, BUYER --~ oot ....,.... o..r 21. Apply f~ open a y . pazZ'g. 2os2 .N~ • .cOr: 2 BR unfurnished boull!. 1i?e~:.n;f~. 0=. ~: sa"wing, breaking, 84G-7UO~ GOOD TYPIST ·~~"i~ ...... Di.: 1 n per• on, Love• a Oakwood of Bay St. 646-1152. Lease. Needed by Nov.·3. ly desperate • .f91-2098. Hauling & cl~anup by exp Will do yovr typi"9 at NPWpQrt Beach financial m. Suite A. Ol. 546-:Dn. Restaurant, Brookhunt I: ~ 'ATI'RACTIVE 3 room ofcl C.M. area. 724-0963 aft 6 college student, lge Irk. 5.14-'her home Wiii rlckvp stilution has immediate "-t I I 1· nt Adami, R.B. 1,1 • Garden Apartments ~ .. i... w/w _, m· pvt < BR, 1 ll"' Jue. nr Adams or 1846 or 534-n64 ' ' H 8 ~ '"' f f sionaJ ..,.n a Ill I • HOUSEKEEPER wanted, J ..... ..,, ~.... v y••n · 1 ' and dellvtt loca ~ ., ~ ..... ,,~ .. or a pro es y ' Sat only. 548-7074 Newport Beach ba, E-&ide CM. -mo. Mesa Verde scJll, l child. I 111¥' 1 ~....... garage c eanups. F V W 1 711 _ w ... .,,,. expertence. ou day per wk, S2 per hr. lrvlne and 16th 963--2111 °" 963-3268 eves. Call 213: 633-1850. lmtrvction ~ trea, dirt. tvy. • ''· •• • ~per pg. will purchase otfice in.tp-DRILl.. operator, exp'd I: References. Own tr an 1 . '45-0650• 642..a170 PROFES&ONAL Saite ready Misc. Rentals 465 , ·· 7 . Drlvewys, s;radlng. 847-2666. or will wer 5 k by hour plies, auto fleeUi I: oUk:e trainee&; to opera.le N~l 831~ Niguel. Call eves. to &O· HeD at Bolaa Chica. H I 1 :· 1 call 147.309 , ' equipment. mach for printed t BA-Y Ave. Eve'""t"1"'~ new! """" e w ted 2 car .,.,.... .... tort OU.SK ean ng . boards. 0$,yl & nltes avail. 4 •;# '"'16 H.B. $275/mo, 84&---an • ---Schools & , ·MATURE man . de 1 1 res \Ve will consider an1y a~ Apply 1'Tt95 SkyPark Cir, I Carp, Stove, retrig. 1 BR. TIME FOR storage, Ne\VPOf"I Bch er iristrvctiOns· 575 JAPANE.sE lady desfreil r-~passage on cnuse to Car· plicants w/a ptOven reoord Unit K. lrvtnll! 1-$160 .mo. Yearly, ind. park· Costa Mesa. 66-3130 I h bu 1 e work . Ne e ds ribcan Wand. Gourmet cook of the highest integrity I: ..::;;::,,::;;.,;:;:;:;.=,_=.-- ' tttg A "ill.. QUICK CASH $3751, ' • transportatlon. and all uound dutie1. ho""ty & who •8'11y gain a DRIVER0 HELPER 1 1:·.:BAY View. Close to all.' PARKlNG spaces avail. 156 ~.nd.,,llJ'9 An.Jy1f1 • 5§0.1332 • Desire mnl Wary & confidence & admiration ot To drive co. president to LA t1 Room w/% ba.. $60 MG. yrly THROUGH A W. 19th St., ·C.M. ,$11)~. Ba\cf; OOU&q'.'(e ·at.Ut..Nov. Dedicated Cleaning passage or? Call 646-3632. management & vendors. & \lo-Ork in plant d!lririg day. HOUSEKEEPER, Uve-ln, 2 adults, Corona del Mar, chantcter ref'L 6'J3.«m. INSURANCE: Pitt.me, ex- pc ., CdM llUI. qency. Gd salary. Send resume P. 0. Box 8, Corona del Polar, Ca ~·Newport .Beach Riiy 675-1642 WANT AD mo. 64J.91f)1. , ·13th Evl ·Analieim. ~hyllis *WE 00 EVERYTillNG * NEED help at home? \Ve Must have been U~'d 20 yrs. 1, Uke to trade? Our Ttader'11 ~~~~~~~~~~ r ~artiSOn, ~E:.tter. Ca 11 (tels. ~ e:st. 646-2839 have Aides, N li rs es, Send resume & s a In r y jCaUf. Uc. Req d). Must f Parad5 ,, __ ""'5 dootwn,n 1•5 ~ ;!?U! CALL 642-5678 ;I '~ ' G~ lfo~i,n.11-D. :~3916. HOUSE OF CLEAN Housekeepers, Companions, hCtlstory1 • .,.,tnadconflde~ to1: llv~n Newport area. With INSURANCE gfrl, exp'd, I 1 ou-="• ays or ,.....cl\.1:1. .. 1-lomemakers, up j 0 h n, ass!' no. ouo, c o QV-.:1·ume can eWT1 more For bu.y Doctor's ofc, I 'j;i;ii;ii;;i;iii;iiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiOOiiOiiiiiiiiii Pwsoruils • PiANO'•Te«cller .. uh i q u e Floors, windows, crpt, 1valls, 547..fi681. ' DaJ!y PUat, P.O. Box 1560, than $7<XX> per yr. Call Mr. Newport Beach. 64&-3903 4 t * * * 1r .* * $~~i!4fd B ~ e ~ ~ ~ 6 yr~~~ ~=!~ ' Help Wanttd, M l F 710 ~~rO~Po;a~;:~ :::tw~: at (2l3J 537 -tGOO ~ 92625. ! ; Personals . 530 churob·pl~)'.ing 531-1337 By Day. Own Transportation ACCOUNTING bookkeeping DRUGSTORE sales glrl. 1 iiiiiiiiiiiiiii * 83&-0648 * Secretary. why drive to L.A CAR Wash e m p I o ~ e e • Must be experienced In !rt I 1-, " 0 Trader's Paradise lines times dollars * HINDU SPIRITtJALIST * ~, I~ , or LB? Challenging, in-wanted I/time. App Y to druptore work. Good pay, Let this ad change your S.W:._......... . Landscaping · terestlng, position. female. manager, Foo~tatn Valley benefits & hours. Apply in whole outlook on life tor the . , ~Costa Mesa, CPA oUice Car Wash, 10035 Dils Ave., per Ion , Bushard '• better~ advice 'oFf°.SEASON SPECIAL! 'Commensurate pay on r .v. Pharmacy, 244 Forest , all. Patio covers &: 1prinklers. education I: ixp. 548-8874 CAR Wash e m p Io ye e s Laguna Beach. ~~ lif.:M~~· ~~1,;t9i:i: Accounting • Comp! lndscpg avail. Sjl!jl· for appoint ' wanted I/time'. Apply to ELECTRONIC . Exp'd M/F · • & dlcba.ck Valley Landscs.pt:a: , . , manager, I.JOO C8r Wuh, uaemblers & inspector flt 4!l'Hm4, 312 No El Camino JJ:Jt'OME '.TAX~oper~t 837-3856. Advertl11n~ SK,.tary 418 E. 17th St., Corita Mesa. Teleflle Computer Product! Real. San Clemente. ~m~~. ~76.serv, COMPLET& landscaping ·ft .G~t oppor., 1or. ambitious. CARPENTERS 17795 Sky Park Circle EASY DIVORCE wtallatloo State ""'""''' h<ghly oklUOd •"''-Bn>lns. f1nl!h ..,,,..,.,.. w/boat Irvine 501.Q;t;O Ftte • f'ee Po.itlonl Sec~ /figure Ap to S&X> Gen'! Office lo $525 Acrounting Cleric: $500 PBX RecepUoni.t lo S400 Pt l Receptl'J'ypl1t $2.50 hr ~·y, Ille ah to $500 488 E. J71h (at Irvine) C&L 642-1471 'lod'm dl·-• taw• are Babyslttl-· Camm IndU51rial, Apt . lnltiatlve A -ah .required. bolldlng exp. prerd. Lona ELECTRON t C Tech-...... .... ~ !"'-!670 range proaran1. continUOOI Auembler for arn&Jl Jilifit. ~ Qmple. S~by-lltep, con-¥OTHER. ~·ror ·z.s yr Top 6 2XJ1 So JANl'l'ORIAL put / tJme lldcntial instruction, make _ a:rd Painting & ' ' Advertising Displa.f Sales, employment. ~·ages Mln 2 yn. exper. · · ~ Local $2.Z br . .Mils. it poasible for you to handle ~::_ 'f'"~ ), k: Paptrhangi"9 Some ap. ~· ~RD BOAT \VORKS ELDRitcERLhey,YSan~•Ana.ple .... ~ .. -e 979..l923 e your own •divorce without a "t"' ...... w-~ '!'-----------------..,..~I lawyer. $24.95. 544-2482. 645-6547. PROF. Paintln&, ailOI rools. -645--5i:i0, 9 am-5 pm , 1300 Log1rn Ave. home w/pl'ivate family. JUNIOR Sllesm~: 10-15. .t TRADE S acres cornev of DAY Nursery, bablet to 3 accoUa. Cell. I ntcrfexter. U.TE'iiATION 11eam11reas, Costa ri.,eaa Wm l Marie Ba I e 1, F.am U).$40 pe-~ ret· I ;,~~~~~ 128· ;:..d~Se~t:.~ seetkln. Qoftd on 3 sides, ~ onma~ e t~1 ~: yn. $18 per wk.,646--5788 or Lie/tu. Free ett. G&m~. Eicpd. F~~.!" f~!; CdM CHARGE NURSE 842-<JT6.1, ting new cuatomers krl' the ;. N.N.1'J. inc. Trade S125.<m Near Vlctomlle, fol' Orange rtbean Island. Gourmet cook 645-4302. EX1'ER. Complete 2 cce.t.s, 1 ~1381 .....,., V'tV""OoNY evt!I. RN • 3-U Stilf1 , Full 1Jm6. EXPO. s a 1e1 man tor DAILY PILOT. ThJ1 Is not a 1~~ 1!9'Y for lge. apla, ar co.m· ·>County Pl'Qpe\'ty, and all IU'Otlfld duties. om..t> c~.-r:ny hQme, birth stQry $26!), 2 story .~. APPLIANCE_ T,JOCHNICl,AN Slru1.lna-, Nov. 13. fumlt~ 1tore. Salllr)' I newspe.~ rcutt and. cDs ', l'ylel'C\al, Bkr. 547-S4G9. 544-4294 Desire sml salary & thru 6. Bolaa ~ Brookhun:t Neat W'l'lrlt; Rey, 894-SOSS. Dcp In f'ril'daJre a,ppl'&. Huntlngton Bl•ch Comm. steady position, not Incl~ collectios: or CANYON lnke lot, aoU cne qt>MMERCIAL bldgi good pa.uage or ?? Call 636-3632, area. Call 839-993L HOUSE ~Una. lot/ext Work fl"om radk> di~po.tdl Conv•ltscent Hoepit1I good ruture. Re:fa mfd. CaU =~· ~..: 1 ~ lflew, nr. lake. und. utll. l.hcome, L.A. 181.000 eqty. PROBLEM Preanancy. Con.-accoua. C"Wng,, ~ Free =~ft.. t!.~~. "&~ 18811 f1ortda St .• 11 .B. 64&-7512. haun after .thool and 8 on Ir $10,000 tree & cle&r. Trade Exchange tor Orange Co. tldent. 1 y mp at he t l c Carpenter eit, n4/!36-68S7. '. • . • • lMlt Webfter, Sel'Yice Dept. CHECKEft.Atrro PARTS EXP'D ~tat t fu1j i 1 t Saturday. We have~ .. for lncon;!~,J>roperty or?? ~perty . .,~5851/Agent pregnancy couneeUng .... A-AP Indus/ omm'l/Resid PAINTING -!Jtones~~cle&J\ Mar.,~ SALES CIXRKS A PARTS clelfrH v.urk in , 3 for Fountain Valley I: Soulb I ~ Srk. 547 'V'IQJ. ...,._. don I: =ns . • All tfpq Work. ltenKld<.'l, ~~~· Ucl!'nltd 4',R:rJSJ' Pute-tip exper MEN. WME SALQ F;XP. days~, CPA, adv .. ry~~~m~tieU:: ~ _ $75M. cqty on 950 acres nr. $200,000 eqty in $500,000 CARE. · _,1 IO ,, ,~... .... Ir lnsw.~. ~40. , , ·Ad ~n<a' 1~· at o.c' 111 E. 19tb ST. C.M. PR. I•• y c.1 pa Bal 54001))(1 int ~ Portland, Ore. ~AAA *EUROPEAN PSYOUC * w tn.l n, un ... ,, .. ame, rift' A ~ tall'~ · · JIChool by 3 PM to "'"~' •,%. F.nta.ilc ..;....: National Tenant. 00 N.N.N. -panel. etc 962-Ulll. . . . a~ ~ ·1 art • (2l3l C!RISTMAS Money 0 Starl F /C BOOKKEEPER ~~~ ""r.- 1411 hU14, valleys. f'or·tnc, prop ~ '!! 1.ae1;v11-: ~.:=Pl Appta. avail:~ Oct...t,N'1'1. C•rpet S.:,..ice . 1 ~ ;:"Y ..... ·aiU:· :~~f!ru ~1 1 !!!;oo, =~ming~ Ofu~U~ F~A ~ l~-...,nr ace:' ~rn:rt PT • r l t 1 • or J Jncr. 547-6469. en,. \!. . . cn-O 5J3.-C1S6 , ro'Fl clean Ai heat pNntUW. uper. A '°' Fry Chok. tt· ptesl nat'l Orm. No ~ v ~ .,...."~ 6SS.. ;1: ~A~~~~~ ·~~~~.; liiUPL£s PAR11ES I Olli JOHN'SCUpttA:Upholattt)t lnttlfior', 1"&.~'.rits Ctll~'~pe•. cW a~aJood ~mie:~= Salar)'open.. (213)m.l L=~-= S:,:,! ·ird~Myor~com1or =~-~·bt'dtraner. PhllUp.m. ' ~&a.n;C 1 ~~ Dlak.~':.::m: to · beitch 8 !J~ ~.oJ!!-~ ' ~~~ia Balbol 'Rt.1 Clab .._.., '""°""· Eqty $24,060. aat. Call 531rUl4 _...,., ,\ all c:olor INT ~ EXT .....,.., po,.i! <1 DaJJt Pilot p 0 1lox Clll/RCI a-tan Ullmt lldhottl•~ Sales Rep lllK 6eloo. - • 1 '41-1816 8\'eL 847·13 ~GING Slf1l)M call Jim briibteners> 1:1'1ii minute = ~t wood! .WO. .eo.tL Me.i.. c;,., '92626. Ja.nllol1al/tome r•-p_•_I_ '·' ~;'trfs!!:·:= IO~ uv&ln Nann~ or ~ 1-'lto acrtt, OcW1 vu, Rec llAVE~pOOlhome p.m. 5.1t-o3l22 ,ble1.eh lqdwhlte PRar .Pl1ntft' boneltworit Abt6moti,ve ,. Exp.. H. 8c:b. KHm.Gtnft.atl.ftdlft'~ $700 =58R,~·= 1• nd.-4 ml. ffOt\1oefftl,1 ml. '" IAtle lot w1tfi !ruit tl"H!I ~ ~~~ reu. ·Uc/I,.,' 1nt1m. ~ A;c CflESSIV,f,, •mbitiou• M&-!727. r:i c Bkltpr/&ee'y $100 PO 2TC. E ro. • 1fJom I'll take In M""" Bay In RancbO MJtaae, W•n< ALCOJIOUCS °""""""" -~~ dlJ Rfh. si..:ma -cu ._....,n for ooe CLEANING -w -Sec'y Saota A• 1660 L v:n IXPIR, IJc<&.T!Uforoom'Jonti,. ~a~~'-"!<-PhooePO~~Tll:',._.~~.~te .~ ,. . ...;<ftiiCJl7.0-•-SEN90t<P~G* •f the -Ford per_wl!.O!c.lnNp10oft!or1 p;tfuieC..'IOfc Ul>hr AN...,..W... ~ ' tc..S3U321lf646-1896 -· -v· ~-··~~: .. -__, ---coucll SID CIWr IS. •15 ,.,.: , ~ DNJmhlpo ·lit Ora•&< '!"!'!' ,_,.,. '°' Cl......, s..:r.-to $'lll0 • Nsa• " I UNi'rll Cott• M,,.., 11'& Like to tnd<T OUr Treder'• SOC!el •Cl-as .,.. II ...... counts, OOI 60-Uas ,.,.. Eols l)\llnty. l'l<lpeal... ~ All llo. 431. eoq, Pflol. -v .. """'"""' a.n.nJ $1J!~""'1 VA toan, __ balaoco '47.J>O· .l'U'ldJM ":"'.:! 11 ""l/OUI l'IND YOUMEU" method. ~ ftl1"0ll. WALLPAPIR HU plan, I~. So• ~ 8:..~ O.ta -NIWl'ORT ~ . I , toe.; " -....... Witt ·-~ • 5..... aa:o Good ...t.F,= C.lt -~ e-~, . ~ ............ ""' •1111 -·CM-Tie; ·'~~:Broker !.17 lor 5 bucl<s. IN so ~ EI& v-....:S.:-• Rflll Put • little .. ~. tn Y<!'ll' TA~ ROllNS "..,,.., ~ "":. ~ m 0.Z:~r IL tl/n:~'"f!?"'~· ' · * I"' " DtSCOVIRT -ete. u.iu a l)o\iy PUo1 .. _., CW! ~ •IDFD 11mor Ulvd.. , . ..,.!Foo ·• ..._ 40 -wk. -• _...,. -._ · • * * "' ..,. *I DISCOVIR_. JIOU• -.... us. . .ion ~U-boubi..lor l'ORD "*~-·.a. ·-w -~~ I ·--·---Cl•••••••••iiiilil fJ4/llS .. JJl<5 !J(!!0!1! C11.i'.m.d *': • IG -.· .. _ ~ MMa Mf.(114. \\''-nt w1 !Wllltll •• -1. ecz..-+ ~ • ·- .. l j I ,. . . . . 4 ] , . • I I ,. i ····-_ ... o-~ ~ ·~ '. . . . '. - ' ' • - I I •• ~ •• " ,_ I \ \ . . . . . . DAILY PILOT l[llJ ..__I -·d-1 • ·__,I~ .iliii[ -· I iiiiiiiiiiL ~ ..... I a ' J ~ ( "" 10 "9 Ill ( "" -...... llH Help Wontoll, M I ff 710 Helf Wontod, M & F 710 Help WAlllM, M I ff no Appllonceo Ml Fumltvrw Ill o.,.,. lf,lo 112 Mleal'-t 111 2 LlllOI, 2 Tllftu, '2,0t Cots 1ft IDJ[ '---_ ..... _,...._...Jl[ll) [ "'"'' .. · etc ~._.In.-.... ir PrKllcol Hu""' S:E ~~II"',:::.: Roni Wuhon/Dryera a.uB CHAIR L I\"-l-ll'AMll.Y CWWlE SALE, LOOKING ffOR CUTE blk 6 "'11 dodl..t PERSCANS O!ld uo--•·~· ,,_ &Pl-2319 Newport I Akles · '"' · 11 Wk. FllJl ma!nc vtoyl 1311. Booe ..,,,. Cloocb, 0.-Hl&l>lendo 52i6il-ldt11. 5 mo. old male. NMdtt ,......__ BIYd., C.M. S4U1$. All o... ... n.. Pvt duty .,.. =..-~!1th g:~ * 611-121:1 * mat-chair ; ._,, -S..WVcl Rd. Odl4. EXTRA HOLIDAY a -home. m..-alt 1 hY-CFA I'll, - !WN'l'DIANCE Men ro. floor " ._, duty .....,. No M • 115-l!an'el -w,,i -lW. Near ,_ CASHn pm .,..,,. .-. 1311 ud up. mot.I, In uchanac tor apL wait Jor pay. Reta nee.us. esa. NEAR Ly new portable CUJhkiaa $2$. E&riy Am. quN.Q ma~ a: cprp '50 Wt will take on oonlJcnmut ADORABLE puppl8. must * ~ 11 2.t1B Newport Blvd., c .M. lntttviewo, ,.g;w.11on 9-S SHOP FOREMAN ~:::"'ius.Paltl .J:' :: 0t&c N. 1311. E>tlO, Mo· 111"'1tfit ~ -., Wllquo, ...U·made 6 1m..,W -*' -te -dazt. Dope 154 548-9155. daijy, except 8:un-J.nrouUe for company, building llllH ~'1862 alt S·l) bop,ny Delk flO" X SC" m. x1nt cX)Gd $15. Nq. bidiN: ltem1 for out Cluistmu lQs they art! 5'5--3$01. * Manqer • NUNn JUailtry, 3 5 1 Office dWpl&)'S fot' boustna:. • · &d-4d?. bod $1\. Ma.pie Padmd BeU Boutique atorw. (NQ u.d ntEE * * WANTED: Friendl.1 l.al'Rf' 0J'2' Ctity car w1ilh. Hospital Rd., N.B. C3ll indmlry. Jlave work l n a OVER D wuben. dryen. JUST ln time tor the toolblll attreo rtt PlYr ndlo. Items~. ck>tblne pWow1 ** &o aood bomf, lovtnr homt' tor darllq F.1\fl 11,...1 T'l!q. Mu5t h!IVf' anytime, 642·9955 01' lcnow)edae of wood\\'Oridng, refrigerators trom $39.95. IUIOlll Luse black need.I ftpai, tz.' Dlnab7 llnenl, mabl: aprona'. =k ~""-000mfPP1'· female Si~ Tt1Tier P'tPl- uu'i•h;,nff';,1 aptltu~ & 540-9954. ;ruphlct, des.lgrtlng, lid· 56-0'niO.. naupbyde recliMr, wry w/motor $75. rlbttglaa pot rs, Chrlttmb dee-way ~· 89').i llouacbroke:n. All I hot 1 . !!Uf)(-1'\'l!i!)J')' t\blllty, Xlnt PROJECT ENGINEER ministration. Plftent k>ca· t'RlGIDAillE trostleas ~ good conditlon. S150 new, bo.tt tank $35. ELec. blt·in orations, candlet, J)l.lnllnp. SHE needa a fr1end now. Must ~ lrnmtd. SJ>.m3. lutun• w/ KruWln:.:: co. 6 day Nt•w llnl" of otf shOrc di'il'el Hon, o,pistrano Be a ch. frl&, xlnt cond. $135. tiled 2 )'tUI. $50. ~ oven wtroti&eerte A range etc. CaU for an appt, Tom Grey 5 mo. old ldttun, Jlkt1 SllJ<Y Ten:tei' pupa:, AKC \1'k duru!!: tralnln~. 5 days p()\ver lx>ats req's projc<'f IAcatinl soon near Orange * ~ * aft. :>:30 wkdyt, anytJme top.Make otter! Men•a aDd or Beth CarMy, 675-'1860 dop, ~ champ lines, 1 male 3 thL•r••nfcc1·. St art !Ull en.cineer ,.,,/expcr in Irie Co-Airport. Send reswne to CHEST Freezer SlTS wlmdl. w om 4! n •a ~by btwn 10 am.$ pm, or aft 7 WANTED: Jovlnc home for 1 fema.IN. Tt-.rms. (Tl•) Sl~lS. ltrpt:ndlnif on flbt'rgl.5 power bollt syist('JUJI Claulfled ad No. 506, Dally Copptttone retrk.~ EJ • LOVELY 9, divan • •ttacbed items, ldttben lteml. toys. pm, 663109. yr old male 1trtped cat. ;533-~~--~-.,--.,---.,--:#1~~-lof2~ Mr. See, engineering. Good dra. .. \'ing ~· ~it~ tsa>, a.ta dryer s:io 557..f19o ec end table bu 2 draW'lln, brt1~«ac. See It to M ltcaUaneout * 64H209 * WIRE bl: Wrler JXJpplda. capablllty necess. eu.. · ' • · with G~ llul top ae~ ftt Wanted l20 BROWN COO<·A-POO AKC, champ 1 Jr ed. Mm~GiRdr!s/ap~ = M .d Con~~c.t . 1 ~~ b'\Jn o Per at o r -~~~~ Silver with Ute blue fabric. 8.AYSHORES Multi-Family Excellent wtth Qlildren Adorable. Real beauHtt. e<p. for 1 v.'Oman, ~· Ila" c'n, anb, ""v' ~h"t o t le. Exp'd • working delv'd 839-76». 546-5218. CU.tom made. Excl!Ueni Garage Sale>, Sat. 10 to 5. Pr. ** WANTED ** e 64S-57S9 e .!l<::.T:...st:=T:.:·-~=----1 "'"' u o urn a ac s \V/l't's n: 541J.48U bel. 10 6 ' • corrlltion. O:>lt Stoen AsJdne of club chair$. DarlJ.na baby Friendiy lovfna home tor FULL bred boxer trft -** AKC RED ** Size Shop. 646-9~ C~t:t~~~. ~ s. ~ton·SaL s:'iJ Late ' ~ Ir m. onb $90. 60-«l89. ~by fumituft'. Mr. adorable SilkY. Terrier le-lhots. 3~ yrs. old. ?.iaie. Gd MINIATURE OOXIES MATH MAJORS (71" 540-7010 TECHNICIAN K"""""' . -~ WOVEN ""'nible klnr con .. la~s..= ~puppy. AU o!tote. Ibo-w/chlldren....,.., 615-000. *Call 96H001 * Equ•I o,..r. Emp~yn ., I TRAINEES •• GE --bo"· -pread, olive &Oki & Halr ..,..,. Etlilor -.. . 830-8333 LABRADOR PUPS R I E S •--· ' "~" •wm Ivory 135. wooden hkhalr Lr& antique Oelr de'1<. Mini Wk! AKC Cb yellow • e• ..... a... treezer, $100. G.E. gu m .. upright piano u.eo .. bike. Recordplayerca.blnet. WANT to bl.a)' f'rench Prov I _.., 11~1 6 ' • 66.4m af1 '\E\\'PORT BEAOI Finanl'la l ln~tltution has lm- n1edia !e-o pen In a: for mana g<>ment trainee. FREE Work Includes a.urmbly of dryer, $7S. !Q-8281 walnut Contemp. tbl. 131). Boy's wet autt. Ski ~.!.u'°..!~. to m.iphO!ata-1;;;.~;---~~~"~IAKCblck,,.~ ~!ala~~~· electro-mechanical devices. 673-70i4 equlpment. Misc houehold .. .,,......., ...... , P8¥ approx $50 · m.u• ..... ~ ~ Good manual dexterity &: Fumlture 110 · Items, Tcya. Etc. 2602 c.ir-sn.m · $50 •up. S!J-18615 or~ a: License Training ballic electronic~ req'd. Will Gar ... Sale 112 cle Dr., N.S:. CHINA cablnet or hutch an-Pets Gen.rel ISO wknda. 543-2758. L imlted Time Only teach mech. skills. MOVING sale. Wing chain Ml II ' ' · KEESHOND Pu A KC Famous Ucenae course now Sat. lntervws. Av.II. ~!!'!1., It: so;:; t 1~~ 9 ~ ~A~~ lamps, -1 .. 1_ see aneous Ill ~ble.~~ r a:•· GRAND OPENING reg., all shota. !F wb. xtra MrNT~1lThl OUALIFICATIONS * College Degree available thru Tarbell Con\· Gulton lndustrle11 lam·~·.:,· an•~·•-•-~--•' 04 ........ ,. .,..IG AUCTION WANTED , --·-t _,_ ~-cute S1Z. 644-C'M pany. Applicants fully re-1644 Whittler Ave., C.P..1. .... .. .,... wU;Aci· ..--wheell, golf set. mem: l!M """'".,_ -~ ' • 5 lmbursed upon qualillcation. 642-2400 set, relf'i&, accesaories. 321 new, Xmas deoon.Hons. FRIDAY 7:30 P.M. hlde·&·bed. WANTED. Loving borne fl:X' Now .,.. experienced .,,., Equal Oppor. Employer Lindo, Balboa Peoln. Sa~ portablo camping tolle~ OCTOBER 27 644-4B8T FANTASTIC SAL£1,I, yr old lemalo Slli<Y -· _....le, o...,n1 .. -av&ilab!e. TECHNICIAN 1~ b 10-f new, facial sauna, Relax-M I Papen incl. $30. 114&-m. .--r r-"'6., wan= Y · lciser, Sunbffm Mix Muter. New CoJot TV"1, new Spanl&h UI cal lnttl'Umentl 122 lRISll 6 ~ Jd * :\lath ?itajor * 11: Yl'5. \Vork Exper. · Onl) tho!*! with the Ii e q1uillflcntlons need apply. Complete training program. estab. co. ror lnspecUon on FORMAL dinina; set, vanity, TV bednn set&, commodes, * Setters, w...., o • Future ma.nqement oppor-Pulse transformers & delay bedB, dreuers, queen We bau!:"' ~~~ cocktail tables, dilvana, love-MUST Sellt Ludwig dnun 3 DAYS ONLY! AKC l'el· 1 male. 1 ftml. tunlttes. Call Mr. Sloan at line•. (Exper only) 540-9261. matt. & box springs, odd old ~cane & Jan, wal: seats, vtlvet ch&in, tamps, llE!l, Blue •pe.rlcle, chrm J .;846-;;3994:!:!::~·~....,...,,,..,...,,..,,.. Suhn1l1 t'l:~t1111r ...,·fsalary fl!>. q1111't'1111·nt in ronfldence to: C!a~s iht~I 11d no. 532 r:lo 0Aily l'ilnt. P.O. Box 15al, (0<;;•:1 '1,..~a. Ca. 9~. 832-T5440A. RBELL TRAINEE lbl•., bed"""acls. china, fi• lnm, ,..,.role, dish.,, picture•, chem, dlnett.,, """!" " 2 'l'lnnor Tome. Frldoy, Oct. 27th AKC ....,,.red lrlM Sel'" dishes, etc. 968-1230. frames, golf cart, mens refrlg's, washers, dryers, Xln t COPd. $3!§0 or bm:t ofr. S•tvrclay, Oct. Uth pupplH, 9 weekl. $7"5.. · 8 FT. aofa, chest of drawen, shoes. size SB (new} clockll, ~ level stove le Iota of Call Tlm 49)..'DM. 5Q.-1775 annolre, red velvet twin Polaroid camera, much MISC. l.3J Bus Contello acconHon Sunday, Oct. 29th CHIHUAHUA pup, female1 8 ,.....,, blond wip, pecan more. 1853 Port Abbey WINDY'S ACTION Wt.e new* . .!!;"!,!,,""'*· ' w .. 1a. $25. UMultabl• ,... REAL ESI'ATE ~ coffee tbl., hot pink lamps, Place, Newport Be a ch, ~ NEVER BEFORE -amall children. 646-4225. Wl\Y !X>t sell in the "boom-etc. 675-6060. 644-filll. 644-4687, 10 A.M. 'ttll 4:JJ COME BROWSE AROUND GIBSON 12 1tr1ng -'tar. ANYTHING LIKE TH1S1 OLD EzwUab Sheep Doc. 15 1'.IJ" .I O·ipor. Employier REALTORS ASSEMBLERS ln,dgi' cities in the> tr.S.-m "... AKC ' --Huntlnlton Beach/Fountain Female ESTATE CLOSE OtIT! p. . 3l7S~ Newport Blvd AcousUc w/bla bo:x. Xlnt le SALE . R\OI, ~. ~ Valley. Call Phil McNl.rTlff, No Exper. Necessary Color TV, gate leg table &: 6 SUPER PATIO SALE Behlnd Tony's Bldg. Milt'Ls. cond. $250. 642--3469 on 144 fish tanks. Buy one chlldren, $150. 6'73-9512. ... -.· VILLAGE REAL ~ATE, chrL Compl twin bedrm set. SAT. Ir: SUN. Oct 28 & 29 Costa Mesa * 646-8686 • at our reguJAr low price and SCHNAUZER pups. hiebrtm, 962--4471. VOLT antique desk, sev.'inJz; mach. 9:00 A.M. ~CE. never-uiea":-2 Office F!mf1Ytt/ -for le reeelve an additional lhDtl. Stud aervk.'e. croom- REAL ESTATE _ Two ex. Instant Personnel misc items. 644-4493. ru:i:i~r~Vf ~! tone Copper enamel 39.. Equip. 124 one! Ing, tmna. (n4) 52H39I. perienced alesmen needed. Temporary Service NEED to sell fast! White Lota of etc! Plenty for "Fire Hood" w/artistic gas LIKE new Gestetner No. 366 . . l..arger cornmlssion split. 3848 Campus Or., Suite 106 naugh hldabed, $40, 4 everyone. MANY BAR-Jog. Also bum! wood. Xtra machine Asking $600 or Also • New unported line of Hor111 15' bonUI plan. Call Ginny, NP~!i ~i!~. Emp~?<ll ~~ ~a, S:~~ m: GAINS! N11~ .. JUNK! SorTy, ~~ ~.piki::· = ~ .. ottef1• We563stern1,, Busl.9thl.,..St. dry food . le SALE. NEW store to serve )"OU!' 557-4130. I"'""""""'"""""""""'"" 642-4504 no pre-se ... ,.. watch 14K gold Longlnes. 2 CM.'~ ''" ' MANY TANKS English &: Wm.em rldlna: R.E. Trainee. Brkr &: LO~T. newly uphols., MOVING-Bargains, a Ingle gold band.!l. $60. 673-4690. EXEC swvl chr llS • 23 Sec ON SALE ~Jlorse World, Town developer will train & Trainee Assembly $200, 4 bighback whlle bed, walnut stereo, 3 piece SEARS door Exampl l5 Gallon, all lass & Counlrf Square, 18582 sponsor for lie. can between A .... "ta. To .., hr. """"'' dln c•-~. M• ea, 9ecilonal $35 •• maple che«t ...... boxganl&'e openers, chr $8 • 18 des.ks file• It.ls /hood" G ~ sg Beach Blvd •• HB. 963-3990. We are now accepting a·pplicatlons for - .;x... .. ..,,. IWIU" .,.... & double headboard SSS. 11uu "! es. Orig, cost $175 867 W. 19th CM ~3408 w , uarant=u yrs. 10am·3pm. 545-1124. P.P.S, NO FEES Sctten door, l<lx.16 $20. Mbc --gamH d'·he ••·Will .elltorl!OSorboth MODEL 200 •••~ ·~ ............... $12 . ., * GENTLE MARE.';ountl 6#-5f19 . •"3 •• ' .. s, for m. Includes servk'e RESSER ~1 .L.ll. ~ w/adultl or chlldreA. $lDO. RECEPTIONIST/typ!Bt, 60 Pacific silver. 316 Broadway, C.M. contract. Will Jet 25 blue D $3S8 new, used 3 Many tanks & tilters to be 84'7-1480. w.p.m. Must be attractive. Personnel Services 8' Quilted sofa and love seat. 642-0040. chlp stamp .books go for times, aaldna: $200. 979-6173. GIVEN AWAY! . · · l-'-",.c;;U;:'.'IC:~K~-C~A-S~H-C.~I . a1-ea. 545-9425. lJ" No. Tow'' blue and green Doral. MOVING SALE • Table• M = call -•-VICTOR A'_MA_C D> In I-FREE n-•• .1 .. ~1 .... ~ Contemporary modern, chain -fa., mlrr r ~.,,,,ea. ~1u. u1v .11 me ..... u•·•w .. ,.. R.l:."STAURAJ\'T app!icanls Union Bank Square ~s recovering. S50, retrtgtraf; ($2S), new 0GE * FIREWOOD * CALCULATOR $165 THROUGH A ;.~,:;fp~or ,.';!';,: Orang•, Cali!. 5<'7-4861. range top ($'5), 2 stereos. D>mpatt quallcy, quantity, & • • 548-1050 • THE TROPIC ZONE DAILY PILOT Experienced Broiler & Prep c!eaocul aware_.. only. 547-6446 ANTIQUE OAK SECRE-tan, hldeabetl, cheola many price. 2 loc to ...,,. you, P11-/0rt1n1 126 2064 S, Mein, S.nto Ano Jack N The Box, 385 E. 17th Ask for Rachel May TARY, Armolre, Hoosier, Items. 49'3-4056. Frl0 P.M.. Sand Canyon & S.A. Frwy; C1ll '79-Flsh WANT AD SC Coeta M.... w•tTRESS EXPER oak table, chalrs, Misc. Sal A.M. -Rd at 1rvlne m vd. ORGAN HOBBY 642 5678 Full Time RN-LYN M; be over 2J.. No Ph:>~ 830-6499. ESTATE SALE: Sat A Sun = ~s!: A_ oran&'e· , Need a "Pad"t ~an ad! -----·-----1 Betwn Rl'~eT~ea~ptl~ & 5 pm ~~~ • t~lt ~~si ec~: ~sir~ft' ~T~ ~~~M= st:! ~ !o1e ~ ~: PERSIAN RUG SALE ~~t =-~:n.~1:1;: •••••••••••••••••••• D~s registration g.5 daily, e..xcept H .. ')'., Newport Bch. cabinet $110. pliance1 to elec. ruora A SAVE 30% come to attend free work lss.12 ~tacArthur SWl. Lescoul.le Nurses 97!Hi173 hair dryers. Must llell all. OCT 27 thnl NOV 4 shops. For ln1ormation (Acros!ii fron\ O.C. Al.rportl ~stry, 351 Hospital Rd.. WD~tkre&S. Exper. Days 4 ffl.IS of furniture for sale1 2015 C.On:unockft Rd. N.B. CAU. KERMAN'S Cont t· f; Di t rich Newport Beach N.S. Call anytime, 642--9955 IC Churches Rest stereo, larnPl'!. paintings & Nr. Irvine 6 21st. 543--tarl IN CORONA DEL MAR ac · om e e Equal Oppor. Employt:r or 541>-9954. 2698 Newport Blvd., Cf\,f many misc. items. Like new BALBOA Penlnsula Point 10:30 to 5:30 * 6Ta-7340 642--2151 1 .. .,;,~~~~~""'""I SALESWOMAN WAITRESSES • Food & Ir: reuonable. 492-0085. Garage Sale: F\Jrnl.ture, ap-OUTDOOR Cbristmaa lights Coast Music Service MOTHERS for 11ne Oilldml's store. Cocktall exper, only. Ski'• MAPLE Dining Room Set. pliancet, dishes, linens, &. suitable for comm'! ue, 250 Newport Blvd. at Harbor Net'd money for Oiristmas't The1 Red Balloon, Ud. Blue Beet, 673-9904. J..ra:. tbl, 4 Captains chrL bicycles. Sat lG-5, Sun 11..S. ft. Red &: 11ft11., 15 watt Colt& Meu. , lt'!ii \va.Hing tor yoo at ME).1666 Huntington Beach, Meclll buffet, bar cabinet. 1550 E. Ocean Front, Uahta Ir timer, $50. Whi~ PIANOS -ORGANS TEMPO. Onna• & N<wport Beach. WANTED Good cond. 640--0364. Balboa. J'i.oncb Prov. law ,..~ $25. llammontl, WUrlltm ...., • Clerical SALES Girl 21.-30, exper. gift CRUSHED velvet 110fa $175, GbbqARAmovlGE Sale: StaWeu SM S002. olhen. ~aeuon sPecam. • Keyr,unch wrapping f/tlme. Newport BUR m.at.clrlng lOVt!Seat S 11 O. • e camera, treemr, S'l'.UPENT desk. SIS. Swag model cloa&Guta. Piano &: l'or M lld In W.man't Workt Coll Mory Both 642..5671, ut 320 e Typ tt Center, 644-4737, Ca I I QLAR ALARM Spanish lamps $35 ea. baby furn, t Y Pew r It er, lamp, $10. Typewriter, $15. Oryan r@Dtals. Money UV· a Steno Martha. 642-2396. water akia, desk. etc. 7am-Port TV. $25. on 1eascape, Ing ha-'· h ~-•t """ 7pm Sat only, 2583 WWo, $50. Serving cart. $15. Mile. •&cu.i•S are ere .,.., Holl~ Princess e A"ambly SEAMSTRESS, E•p'd. to SALESMEN TABLES, llOlld dirk walnut. CM 847-= now ato And '.\lony Others a •• 1. t 0 res Im a k er CocktaU (30xti0x16) $ 4 0 w II' h .. • c· lrvinP 540-'"50 w/Alteratlona & Oressmak· Comer (30x48x22) $40. 2 fi * YARD Sale: Sat & Sun. GARAGE Sale, Tlwn., Fri., a IC S MUSIC ity Ano.heln\ 533-2322 fng. Mut:t haVf! own tranap. FULL OR PART TIME style chnr ~ea. 6"--0750 310 9th St., H.B. Hand Sat. Furn .. dishes. Misc. South Coast Plaza 540-2830 r\l:VER A F'EE AT TEMPO Corona del Mar. 675-1735. THIS AREA HOTPOINT refrig, separate thrown tea pots & hangln& !.8:5ach.Rlver Ave., Newport *PIANOS*ORG•us* Ten\po Ten\porary Help ~ freezer comp. $75, OU paint· pots. Color TV, vacuum, i><: r-.#01 .... Out ~ LCO G 8 Sec'YI. Many· $500-$800 497 .. 1776 i--, Flowers, Beaut play pe,n &. much motel TASCO Astronomical .......... '6 For BUSineu NE\;"COMER WE MIN : • F/C Bookk:ee-• ... u. rr"~:. ........ I;/\ L'A~"""" 536--0194 Tel--.., .,...__ I en se. Best quality. prlcel. serv. To ~!~~Pt~~1Xtfr:s new • Girl Fri ~ ~ WANl'ED: Gals! Part timt co~~ n:c:;;:·t. 9 COLONIAL aota. chair, oval, Ped""Cond~Oui Malit. KawaJ.Stetnway.BaJdwtn, etc resident fam ilies bring1n& 100% Fee Paid By Company S2 per hr. Trainlng &: pcs like new $6!5. C'ur'wd rugs, dnpes. oddJ &: ends, 64+-4299 aft 6. Player Plano! &: RollJ itifts & ei\'i..: Info. Good pay Ut Relnder's Agency materla.la f Urn I S he d , :1 coat $600 aell $275 All Frt. &: Sat. 9162 Brabham TO BE MOVED • 12x18 Rentall , . , •.•• , , We Buy-Sell Pltin1c. ~-tusl have happy 4500 Campus Dr. lingerie. 675-7900, 675-7877. ~ Sun or aft '6 6f5-63'is Dr. Huntington Be a ch • bldg., 2 nns, wood const. Daily 10-6 SUn 12.5 l'inll<!, cnr. typln& ability, 546-2llB Newport Beach WHO WANTS TO WORK! ay ' &Cl'Ol5 from Talbert School. $895. Dlvd. 10 mi, or trade FIELD'S PIANOS 547--30'J5. ...,..._..~ DRIVE A CAB! MAPLE atueo, end tables It GARAGE Sale • Reflig be.r for! 546-Qt56 Costa Mesa (714) 6'5--3250 :\(lTF. CLERK '>'1ith banking f'XP. Good t)'p- it;\, 1\cc:urate 8< Neat. P.iust like worl<inc \\·lth ligurM. Ple1U1Mt ""·or1dng condiUom & e..-.:cellenl ben1t!:lla. Call J'l,[r. Newland for appointment 83&-3489 Bank of America !iOO Newport Center Dr., NB An Equal Opportunity Em· pkiyer NURSES AIDES Exp pref. Day shift. Beverly IV!anor Con\'al Hosp 24452 Via Estra.da, Lag J-liils. SECRETARY CHOOSE your hours, w'Oric: lampa. Make offtt. refrlg Baby l t ., day, 5 days~~~· per for )'OUl"lelf. be your own 642-8759 ~. clothes, etx':ks~ 9 Fr Down Sectional aofa, * PLAYER PIANOS * $37.50. Call:~ =J!en~ic':'~~v:i: •:.~s:!!er&.~tc=:i~ ~1573m;.=,?1'~ ~~uept=n~b~; ~=:~~~:::::J: SEC RITY ERSON ret1red. Age 21 to 70, sup-Prl """' ~. 54&-8lGf Chandler upright ••.•.••• $875 U P plement you.r Income. Drive vate. :ioo-7910. GAR iale Sat & Sun. Dinette HELP a needy family. Any and 3 otherl, all 6 planos Jmmedla~ openings for 1/ a cab 6 hn or more a day. KJNGSIZE bftl, velvet mta .et, refrla", IOfa, ch.rs, baby repairable tumitune. Will restored. David T. Qu.Jftt!, time or p/time exper. aec:w--Apply ln penon, Yellow Cab & lovHeat. perfect con· 1t~ms, golf cluba, clothing, pick up. Please ca I I 2940 D Grace La. C.M.. lty penons, Xln't benefits C.o., 186 E. 16th St., Costa dltionl 548-6347. misc. 384 Costa Mesa St, 963-4062. ~ • ~08 6 pay. Mesa. 4 Pc. Se~nal w/Chlnese C.M. AUTUMN Haze, long 1ur Used Organs Needed Apply Penonnel omce WOMEN tables $7$. Comer Maple SAT. only 8-4. Hatchoover coat. Condition excellent. Highest $$ Paid ln Ca.sh BUFFUMS PROMOTION deol< 135, 64!).-0402 alt So30. I ah le , couc h, c rl b . 113S-3909. can Collect 21.'lo 874-Gl62 I .. I I I t full oouch/loveseat, gas drier. mm a e emp oymen • DBL bed, mattress, aprtnp, Botti RATI'AN Famil'-' rm., turn. CABLE-NELSON P,.YER or part time doing pleuant -=. Dbl headboard & e gardens. 29:li2 Via J ~ Ir: excltlne telephone work. 'hme, $25. 673-4646 San Sebastian, 831 -2733 Couch, b8ml chair, 4 bar PIANO Collector ttem. Mint SERVICE Station uleam.an Guaranteed salary + Bonus GARAGE-Rummage Sa I c -stools, $150. 6#-8274. cond. MS-3497 ·after 4 pm. and lubeman, run and part &: commJalon. Work trom ORIENT AL F\Jrnl.ture. Bar, Co 11 e c t or ' s I t e m r DINE'M'E Rt. good con-FISCHER Baby G r a n d time a\'a. Top pay and our olllce: or your home. ~n It: carved chain, Furniture • Books . Cloth ing dltlon $35. 1513 Orange, Pia.no. Excel. cond. $950 or No, 1 Fashion hland, NB frinae benefits. t:XP. prefer-Call 897·7481 or apply at Westminster, 213-431·2660. -Bric-brae. 31st St. & Villa C.M. 642--5866. Bert otter. ~3869. red apply at Sheil 17th and 15091 Beach Blvd., West-BR Set, \\'hlte dbl bed, side Way, NB Oct 23-29, 9-5PM HOSPITAL bed w/sl.de rails Sewing Machines 128 Irvine, N.B. minater. An equal Opportun-tables, dresser, hd.board, ANTIQUES china rock tndudtng bedside tray. $135.1---''"'-;.;...;.;;.;.;.c;.;_...;.;;.:. NUR'\ES 1\.ldes. exp. pref. SERVICE Station Saleaman-tty Employer. mtrmr. Misc furn. 644-l.57'6. perslan n{g, dres~r. ~: SST-7568. SINGER mod. 603-E touch n Park Udo Conval Center, Mechanic, e.xper. on I y , WOMEN. Orlw·In ROUND oak table, 2 leave, clothes. 703 No. Ba,ytront, MENS suits & slaekz, sz 42, !le\\', all act."Ms, antiq'd cab. 466 Flagship Rd., i'tB. F/time, Uc. Prefd. Neat Fost.er'•F'reeze extend to oval $45. Captain's Balboa I.stand. Sat &: Sun tailored by Sy Devore, pert:. $250. aft S. 830-8821. 642-8tll4~----~--In appear&nce. Apply AM, 899 w. 19th St., C.M. chair SS. ~1459. PAno Sale. Art Objects, cond. 644-lEDJ. Spor11ng Goods l30 NURSES Aides. 11·'7 ahifl 2590 Newport. m., C.M. ~~ JttAN -drive truck It: GdREEN French ~lncial frames. misc. Sat·Sun. lCMi * 2 Chevy be.kt tll!ats, new MEN'S -'"- Full It p/Ume. Mesa Vttde SERVICE Station Attendant wu•" in yard. Apply In avenport w/i..rwtwood pm. 308 Larltspur, CdM. blk upbol. $50. Gas lawn siua, expert~ntal Conv. Hosp., 661 Center St., Fllll I put tlrne. Expd. person, ABC LUMB~R. 140 trtm. $12S. S.25ll 673-565=2.'--=-~---mower, $15. 557-2869. racing, w/blndlngs. Maey C~I. j.1'$·:i..:O .. -----Salary + Comm. Apply DJl E. 17th St., Com Mna. LIVING room SlOO., b 1 u e ••T Oct '8th 9 t1l 64 ......_ to choose from. 548--G.164. --Harbor mvd C M <>n • • , a.m. • R'!lbnenbl at Gloria 6'0" PRO~~ Su~-~ OVER'l.'EJGlIT men &. •• • • coucb, 2 chairs, ottoman, everything Is f'Onl!!. mt.91 Marshall foronly$50. • •-nL• ,,....,. ... w o n1 e n \V a n t e d t o SHEF.T ~ -man, 5 -yrr. ~ _good cond. ~3299 Big Bend .Lane. Hunt. Bch. =-"54ll-"'-'7"405""-, _;A"'nytlme""""'"-' __ 1 a.Ir brush, good condition J_ .1ft . putlctpe.te In a revolu-min exptt. Small plant. D11 •du 111 I~ BEAt.rr. 4 post.er, pineappk! F1VE Family Gara.gl! Sale, AQUARIUMS, 2 • z gal ~· ~cfl · ff)F' v., ""'-• .... .!.~h red""wcttoconcept lnln loiSoiii.. ;;Rl;;tciiheyiii'iiSaniiiiii'"iiA:O ....... ~mmiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii.::· ;;; bedrrn wet, anttq. white Sn!. ,f: Sun, 94, 274 Knox SM\\ tank, complete. $40: • a o, '• ~ I u n, sweep g beveled. Xln't cond. 646-9206 Pince, Cos ta Ml!'Ka. Evei. 557·1788 Stereo 136 f'or your most lmportant the country. S.COm• •llm • SYSTEMS =====:0:==:;;;;;...,i=~==:=:;:=:==.=:;~~====ol~~==:-".""=:::'.'""__;= holltlay occuloM, we .... earn money at the same Antique• IOO 1973 ZENml A RCA TVs on ffst this slimming princess time. •..:"='"-' ~---ANALYST ·•ale al Oran•• County'• dram -b deco , PARKING Altendant1, top ROBBIE'S ANTIQUES largegt dealer. Cub 90 at no trim aat the ~ine ra~ ~· Apply ln penon The NEWPORT BEACH Finan-Dealing in American An. Cha.I'll! or terma to 38 him. Send! ltungry Ttgei Rfttaun.nt, ciol lt111:1tutlon ha• Im· tlque1 only. High quA llly, months. 3 yr picture tube, l Pr1nted Pattern 92!'.M: NEW Pacltlc Cit. Hwy., N.B. Ask medlale open.Inga for SR. low prlce11 M Yi yr partt & lle!'V1ce mr-Half Siz.et: l<>'A 12\ii 1414 f~ Daphne. ANALYST, Must have min. 541 Ceiter St., C.M. -(Take *Y" -DoilyAdMlyClt#d. Jf. ranty. All avail. modelJ In 16'1t 18~. She 14~ (~st 37) Piiimt OUlce-C 1911 n 1 ns . of 5 YI"· heavy exper. w/l.rg 19th to Park, loc11rled on cor· To~i;':::::S!;!"fo..~, •lock. ABC Color TV, 90'J1 takes 2% yarda 5t-lneh Plu.th small bllnk, Newport. computer sy1tena A ability nt r Of Park 4 Center.) 1 NOdworda ~lng tol'll'Tlbti't Atlanta, Huntington Set.ch. fabric. Approx. 2 hrs nitcly. Exptr. to Malyz:e user n-642-5313. of)'ClW'Zodioc blrthalgl\. 968-3329 thru 31 Oct. MJVENT\'·lt1VE CmTS couple only. F'lrM! detail qulrtment•. t.n addition, ool-COLLECI'OR must 1ell lO ·~ l!Could llSfdl!ll"" MAGNAVOX 23" color TV for "acb pattern -add Z woc1t. Top pt,y. ca I I lege education a: tamlliarlty 1.11tJquc G6man Ir An\f'r· 2~ nro '25hot9 wslnut cabinet w/1wtvti cents for each pattern lor Jl!f927-Gll5. w /GROUP INSURANCE knn -,.·8.11 c~k,;, $70.-$1$5., ah 3lilllcomo! 6l*~ base. $1'15/oUer, 673-5806 A.Ir MaU and Special Hand!.· A/or PER.SON· "93 1079 •Ge ~"rllUCh '4tww aft9AM. tna· otherwile third-class PARTnMEte'llertr.inee, NELIPAYR.OLL ap. . . f5hop 3!i0r 65~ ~-'-'~~~~~--ldel!wry will takci ~ male or female. Evet1 A. Sat . pllc&Uons matt dffln.blt. WANTED. ~ c h In" 7~ r,='' ~I:.. 4 Channel 8 track/reel -reoe:l v.<eekl or more. Send to t~ =·Call Mr. Polltlon lnvolvn documtn· =· Re11on1ble . :tt. =~ =~~~ "°'··"~ :sr.~·ha.rdly11!1d:!. MarMul Martin, the DAILY .. -~·-1-i"''=;;;:c,·-----= J•~ ... _ _, ,, PILOT. 442, Pattern Dept., PBX Answertna ~. ........ • ..........,....Hon A (!>.. APPfi~• I01 1Wt .1..... 10Y-NC. PKll.CO Model 2500 TV. 2!2 West 18th St.. New ~:·:.::·yard~ ~~~~=l;,;"";;;:;lte!rla<:.:;::::.._"_.,.--= jf~..., it~ ft$., ~'~,_,~,~ ~~~,utnapen. i:"M'E,N'lnn~ ~ Me-. art&. 5G-JJ64, ..., •• ems. Good ~-', * rn: ,.,.._ MW..... 74¢J'll •• CNtllCOIH ZIP, 8IZ!l tU1t1 STYLI!: ~~ ··~ uw.. ........ ~ ~ °""" PBX ()pr opor. Lita tn>1nc Top b<Mll" a unique wmi< l7H1ll !"" ... .._ s;"" ,,..._ l<ll>IBE&. nq"d. Pte.OOde 1~. envitomntnl For con-LATE MODEL AV1'01d.AT1C I~~ .a..,~ ,.~, • " JfS FS&Eaah_M_~.~~~I;~ lftl,. ~' CM-.JOST. aldtratton plMlt INbndt WASHER $45.. fa.Id ..,;:;.,_ ,.,.. te; YDll · • 11 u ,...._. "'"' PLAm<3 Xlnt oot1 tor tn. NIUme, lncludlnr n.Wy re-• Hl-M4I . 2:>=-!O!rrhoft\11 :t:--. =.u:-su~ ~. ~ d!vMfull w/crxperienee In ([111nment1 1n conftdence to FROSl'FR.EEE ~..t"atre, il1t ~l:::. 12111. 3 Linet, 2 Tlmet, $2.00 I Only 50c. lamlnlt!QI" ~~ CJ...ttled ad 110, !53f. c/o eroa::. fl'eatl' ·~ 9fi1$ 2JM 5.J°""'* .,,.,,.._ INS'I'AN't SEWING OOOK :-~ M~ ur, = ::. 1ciJ?i. Box lSIA, nnn. J!! &tier 4 p.in. ~1: gj~ r,z:...._......... • UNWED M011fER. Cat teWll. today, wear tomorrow. •·-•-u-:..ll':': • •-An r-"' n-, Em~ WES'nNGllOUSl!J relrla 26-.. _ ,.u• ,.. -~ ~ ~-~ I _,... • •r --y...-,...,.. ,,,..,_ &71-ev-·-~ -.~•.....,•-~•odMb e INSTANT FASHION dUltrlll lJ" atl.D4ards. W/botlom Nzier Jlb n.w 2i UotMt et 0ay • ~ P!K8 klU~ns. 5t1Hm9 DOOK _ Hundreds 0 f OP1Y lor --l'Ut a ~l'Je "kltit" In )IOUr llOO.S<&-:UneJee'r4pm ' .. _ ,,......_ ,,_ ~" UlVABLE Tmo old~--•, _fuhlont.cla.$1. JMllf ...... Good P1¥ A Ltvi.-.tD lhOlt baublet lot NEAft ..w Speed QQetri .,,,_ 400.. '°"""'°"" N,.&1 • n iniw - turlof, ITll-lm HMm. ~:tiil!l '1 tt'Aloed, 644-0Llll alt 8 pm· the P<nny Pincher. \V•nt ad ft!IU)ts .•. 64Ut78 Look-Allkes 7035 ir,A<lce 13 ... ~ You'll love your set and he'll love hill Easy-crochet! Do a double take! Crochet Hia and Her bmrts and k>na' scarws In vivid. easy ripple deslp in 3 colon. Use knit- ting worsted. Pattern 7035: n1Em'a, women's S, M, L Incl. SEVENTY·l'fVE t'.lllNn for eacl\.. pattern -add 2$ L"entl fof eacb pattem for Air Mall and Special Hand). ... , ·-third-due delivery will take three week~ or more. Send to Altct Brooks, the DAILY PILOT, 105, 'Neetllecr< Dflpt., Box 163, Old Cbellea • Stntlon, New York. N.Y. 10011, Print~~ A~ Zlp, "'"""' !<llm .... N E E D L ECRAFr "121 Crochel, lcnlt, etc. Free dlreetlona, !IOc. INtant Maen.me llM. Buie, fancy lmota, pet· ...... 11.00. (Mturt ~ lloM: -l..A!am by plcturt1! Pat· lttnt. $1.00. Ownplde IJttltQt Gift 89ok -mora than JOO aU1a 11.00. O>mplelO """"" Doolt 11.00, ii Jlff1 Rue Boob • 50c. 8oflt of ll Prtae AJ.,_... 50c. Qallt Hool" 1 -18 patterns. 50c. Mneam QlllH Book I -!Oc. QulllJ for 'hdlJ'• ttwl• .. '' benutlful Pll\tt'hl. &Oc. benellfo. Dtlco MtUNIAC> ·-"· Call O...tn.t •lectrtc dmr. $90. ___ J~~~~~~~~g;.U~·;-~ll:'l~~N<~~;~~~!~~~l __ Ji T•hby. Spayed, ehoi., boll For that Item under $10, tty -------------- I l 0 • s N c li 16 J * 0 • .. • • •• . ' ... . •• • Friday, ~ 27, 19n ! ............ JIB I 11·"'-lliJ I -·.. I~ I DAILY PILOT 41 ( -·-1§1 I _..... l§J I .. ~...... l§J l ~~i;;I 970 Jun .. , Imported 970 --HWHf 156 CyclH, Blltel, Antlquo1/Cl1uk1 95J 1.T,.ruc.-.. k•"-----""""2l~""='°'"'-W"'-"•'-nlod..;;.;. __ _ MGB PA y Qnr Hor,. • AJ. s-i.,. 925 IWIE. JJ38 Plmlooth ...oc1y BILL 111 vrv ~. C...o brolce. HINI llllut C.mlnl 50 oc 4 waaon. 0110 ol Ill< orlilnaliY """"I $235. wlth new t a ck . Speed, liaht.s. horn. etc., built lor the U.S. Border ..._ &lmo1t new 2 W. cboote Patrol. St1U bu duhboatd P'ONY and all tack. noo. from. $185 '-.ch. 232t La switch panel tor n..1.~-u:i REWARD llOlK~WAGEN ~--~~~~-1-~~~~~~-~ '69 MOB GT. Radial tiru, 1967 TRtA, W/W, lRS. New '6.1 VW. Sunroof. Great new dutch, AM/FM racilo. MJchelln X tirH, 45.!XXI ml. tranaport.e.tion. Pi-GC-9180. Lindi Pl.. Newport lleach. •lren. ndk>, etc. ~ .. HAS THE MOST POWERPUL NEW MINI PICK UP WIU PAY OVER Kelly Blue 8oall NEWPORT DATSUN Excel cotKI. Sl.850. ~102.4 Orig Owner. s1e. 646-8320. * 6'5--3715 • Ask tor t ll. 60-8495 -enaine' runs like • top. Wh'-lns II r&<lone, orfalnel eves. 1968 VW Y.'utphalia, crnpr .. '63 MOB. Robll •""· Good llOLKSWAGEfll Pop-lop, ""'· '"""· Im· Livestock tsl YAMAHA 360 MX. '70 Nu top tranirmiulon ls toUnd and A bottom end. Kont shockl, original wood need.a ~ TOYOTA For 1111 modol. cl...,, low mlloo .. -.. tics, Imports, trvckt or c•mpers. c:ond. thruout. Creal trans. mac. Sl!m. 536-mt e\~. ~er offer. 615--4600. '62 VW Bug, ilWU'OCll, aood 1965 v.w. Bug &00c7 coOO. ESCONDIDO Cetia'!l _ _1prn1•tmt end. ln1-doln&. A treasure fot at.Po LIVESTOCK AUCTION'S mac.~. 6"-0078. preclative ®llector w1tb NEW HALF-TON No Down P•yrmint and only Now Open lo '89 MGS-GT, xlnt cond. lo cond. $495. Call after 6 pm. $4:.0. 253 Knox Pl. C.M. ml'•· RAH, malce offer. Call 6"r.HS67. 548-2595 MID WINTER. PEUGFDT 10 1peed.1 PX and time to ftnlib the job rlg)lt. AU. BREEDS. PA Lea than 100 mile• No one else bu one ll~ lt, NEWPORT P.-ACH 6'13-a2. FOR Sale. 1969 VW Van. o,68=-oVW=~n""-.... ='--1<>---~ ... ~. UUJ;, &U , llUJIU, OPEL Good conc!. "·""'· 32.ooo m1. SM.rp! HO~~N ~rfect ~tk>n. Both for lino& others &ft known to ...... --....-have been junked. Fonner 0:i:nd ~n~ = S: 1970 Cl 2!51J Motocrou. First owoer drove It out from Oct. 29th, at 10:30 am. N. $475 tailn. Call after 5, O>mect1cut. Some ~ on approved credit FnrY No. 78, Eaoondldo, 496-6601'. parta ava.llabW. , Firm at ' Calif. Call Rick Berry, ** l969 YAMAHA 12Scc Sl,000. Call S'JS.-7448 after 6 e 76"69ll or 724-44.91 MX-Good cond. pm. 1 •-., 2illO H1rbor Blvd. 548-8250 Dune 8uggl11 956 Total pr ce Inc. tax , "' ~c. C t1 MIN J46.I017 $2Sl.2.60. only 48 mo 1. an-OS . Call and ............ DAYE IOSS • PONTIAC $69." ..... -.------ ! I(•.)(» J 'T2 Honda, 750, K-2. MEYERS Manx Man,y ac-nW % rate ts 15.01. De-WE PAY TOP DOU.AR ~ ~ Immaculate c:ood. Must aell. Ces90f'M!i, l'ftdi en r In e feJT@d pymt. price ol. FOR TOP tTSlm CARS l'-iiiiiiiiiiiiliiiliiiliiiiiiiii~; $1.150. 642-7683 work ~75. 96Ml69. $3356.64. Ser. #004759. U your car la extra clean, II SCHWINN tandem. Li k e e tee us tint a-·ts p -rew. Think Cllriabnta. Buy Trvc:k1 9'2 BAUER BUICK 1~-=;;·~-.;;.•.;.c• _____ now & ave 40% 1133-2505 BILL MAXEY ml Harbor Blvd. FAN TA SY 27' F/G eves. '73 CHEY Coota Meaa ll'J9.2500 -w!V"""'" dual ·n Yamaha 3111 End.,.,, "CAMPER YAN" Aiiio., Imported 970 axle trier. Tim Mere Looks rd,,;.,, ...,.i. 1575. TOYOTA crul,.. 160'•, Jo boors, 548-0'l59 day•: St 5 • 0 2 6 3 Co~po SUrler w l th O 8'"12' coclcpl~ • n c Io 1 • d .,... carpets, panel sldet, dual ' BE CH BL VD ALFA ROME w/nu canvu mp I: !Pde ,65 Hond ISO 11 'd for 111:ereo speakers and Ice box, 18881 A • 1-------- c u r ta i a 1. By Dino. street. t.!w ~ Good ltO\'ll!, hsb water l)'ltem Hunt. hath 147-8555 ALPHA "12 Sp\der, new, --11..-3331. Iha-1141-1622 • .:.;a V-8, dioc brakes. ndlo, DAVE'S YAN 1111111 ..n. Pvt. port;y, 1lelt r-• • heater, ROld lft'ei;J metallic otr 615-CM ~ 38' li62 SPORT Cruiser. '66 Honda Zill Scrambl.... with "Rain Dropo" belt That'• rtahl Thll '72 GMC AU. snN' HEALEY TWln ICfE!w, Fly brldp, 2-$700 CASH. trlm.1, l!q'U!pped wide oval customh:ea van camper 225 HP moton. Sleepa 6. * 646-7076 * Firestone .t: U.S. magii. A built for Mr Dave Ban7t--------S/S. Extras. Must 1ell by SEAR'S re&! buy for the weekender. with trailer bitch. electr1c '61 AUSTIN Healey 30»- Nov. 1. MAKE OFFER! MOTORCYCLE $50 Senal 101730. butane refri&erator, dual Near mint cood. 42,COO orig can "" .... at 28th St. * .._ * $4295 exhaust, tire rack. ....,ta! ml. l1nJ firm. 531H744 Marina. N .B. ~ phone wood int wtth carpet ~t9nSEARAY" r:~t~.~· Ex-BILL BARRY i,~~·~:puc= BMW 455 Olds, Pack-a-Jet. 20•. 200 673•5277 GMC .. PONTIAC-FIAT automatic, and special maa Villt our new home! Series, Equipped for Water Xln ~ $iB9 ' Cl.st St. at S.A. Frwy,) hatch on root That'1 right. Siding & fishing, tandem t ~1 aft 6Pm 2000 E. lst St., Santa Ana 'lbat'• the van that Dave 1000 W. Coo1t Hwy. 645°6400 WE HAVE THE NEWEST OF DATSUNS IN INVENTORY FOR YOUR SELECTION 1Bl\l OPEL KADET, ~ """'· RAH. Oeon. --PORSCHE '71 PORSCHE 911T 5 Spd, Radio, Factory A.Uoy Wheels. $6275 NEWPORT DATSUN 1000 W. Cout Hwy. NwptBch ~ '65 Ponche-, SC. dean. tint nznn1nc eond. Xtru. Forced to 1ttl. #400 01' belt. offfto. 6T.H41S. '1ll PORSCm: 914, App. Group. Olrome r i rq 1 , ndlahl. Jo mllea. Xlnt cond. $29ll5. 613-0907. 1971 Ponche 9U·T. Immac. cond. 919-3484 FIAT ·1111 -TVra. m --------1 Black. 1 owner. $5,000. LEAVJNG town. '69 Fiat 8S01 __ -==49+<1237===--- Cpe. 1100· or -o(fe" TOYOTA 551~ art 6:30. '69 Hond 90 trail & street wheels, with large escape & trailer. Call after !2000 ?»l-1000 ~vln:~~~li ;;_~4; 830-002. MUST ·~;;'.i~.S:•~ • ..:iL,:;':_c....:..,.~ubs. BILL BARRY ROY CARY!R,lnc. 'cl'~~~: HONDA SAYINGS 1972 SKlPJACK 24 '71 SUZUKI TC 90 radio. 11,000 mlle1. Front 234 E. 17th st. --..;*~6'1>4153~~·=---I Ai Never Before On ft.II Remaining '72 OPEN CRUISER XLNT. Cooo. $295. mounted Wam 4 to" eloc. GMC-PONTIAC·FIAT Ooota Meoa !146-4444 JAGUAR 225 OMC, tandem traller, or ba:t offer 548-1961 winch. 'l111s car ls like new. (1st st. at s.A. Fl'wy) -------- TOY OT AS cbemlcal head, Blml"I top. Go-Kart, B/S 3 !IP (917ELX)WILL TRADE lllOO E. Lst St., Santa Ana & •70 JAGUAR XKE coupe l.fAllU complete ~. compass, N ttl"es Does 40 ' 558-1000 w/wlze wheels, kpeed. ~ • VllFlike ,!!· =.' ~~ ei:. 56-iru * . CONNELL CHEVROLEI' Regency red. Xlnt cond. 2828 Harbor Blvd.. Autoo Wonted ... $3899. Call 543-«155. mOTA 16' Boston Whaler. 90 HP Motor Home1 Costa Mesa 546-13'.13 * JagLr :um, red, vu eng. Johnaon. Tral\E'I'. Good Sale/Rent MO _. Chovrolot WE ,AY lOP SALES-SERVlCE-LEASING 2+2ae~atlna.aJr--"' auto cond. 11675. 644--0210. •• CASH o.. ..... Dellvlry lralll. ~ -· ""' Harbor, C.M. 646-9303 ** 14' Glasspar. 30 !IP Pickups & Vans CREVIER MOTORS '66 Jquar, XKE .,.., -'.69 Toyo!• Coron• Evlnrude, trlr, t!rtral. Make N o w I 8'9 Stoclr: D w. 1st St., Santa Ana PirellJ rad1a1J, 53,t:m mi. 1 4 Door. 4 Speed, air, radio. otter. 642-1312. Low !'Tieu 135-3171 owner, $1995. GIM564. <YEJIZll), Boots, Ront/Chart'r 90I • HOWARD Chovrolot !:i ':" u"°:.: :;.!"' __ U_S_E_D_B_MW--,1-19'10 J.....,, 2+~ tow $11 H IN ORANGE CoUNTY Newport Booch GROTH CHMDLET mlleap, llr. Loodl!d, $<399. CONNEIL CHEVROLET LEASE: 4 days yrly $0!. MacArthur &: Jamboree Blvd '69 1600 ~ 6§,flll. 2828 Harbor Blvd., -:.·::.~~ ~" 5 to PURCHASE LEASE 1-.S 7t 2002 KARMANN GHIA n.rta Mesa 546-12l3 '70 Chov. ¥0 Ton ... ~ =. ~ C~~V~ ~~S '68 Karmann Ghia conv. Io ~na. ~ ... :"°""~ BMts, Soll CORONL'.00 25. Racing win- ner. Fully equip. Aft 1 wtu!U, or anytime wlmds 64&-1172 8 Meter Sloop, converted for crulalng. Xlnt 1 h a p e • Sacrllice at $1S,OOO . 60-5146. RACING Sabot. 2 sails, rood I ClOl'ldition, aood record, 1265. 846-1404 aft 6 pm. :Ill' llO'l'OR Saller, Slpo 4. &alley Ir head. prlv prty. $8950 offer '7'78-2017. 20' NEWPORT $2995. J{m7ENBURG MARINE Dana Point • 496-4020 HOBIE 14 $865 firm, Cindy 833-1010 days 14' HOBIE CAT W /Trailer • 675-5981 Dl.dfleld Racl~ Sabot, NUMBER 1160. • 673-2916 • **25' CORON ADO, In· bd/ouUxl. Anchor. stove, compass. sips a. 642-7628 Boots, Slips/Docko 910 FOR Rent-Dock: Power boat up to 25'. Water &: elec. W. Newport. 673-"'74. Boofl, Spood a Ski 911 RENTAL DISCOVERER '25' BALBOA '18' • AMERICA'S FINEST MOTOR HOMES SPECIAL YEAR END PRICES AND LOW OFF SEASON RATES ASK FOR J1M NIX • BOB LONGPRE PONTIAC NEW TIOGA Pickup. V.S, auto., radio, a.cts mlleap. Ext " inL Xlnt motor overhaul. New P.S., P.B., air con d . 141 _ _.:,unttllcton IO t.3311 ~ W. 1st ~8171ta Ana oond. $1050. nrm. &H-5003. transrn overhaul. New 1mog (35456lll.$2299 WE ..., all .,.... o1 cleon MAZDA :m.s.!•:. a~::: used -..... paid tor CITROEN CU'. Must Uk $ml/bot ""· CONNELL CHEVROLET 2828 Harbor Blvd., O>sta· Mesa 546-Ul3 or not .. P1eaM drive tn tor.I--------MAZDA 830-!J6.'iO aft 6. -...,,.._ Citroen Maserati LIASE SPECIAL '70 Toflll• Corollo '69 Ford SUper V-.n, E-300, A!Transm .. r/h. Xln't cond. camptne untt. i 11 s o • 615-<00I. NEWPORT IMPORTS New '72 RX3 0iupe. • opeec1. a1r. ndJo. AWARD WINNING $57.56 <"'4BRL>. LUXURY CAR $1399 l.Daded. ROTARY powered. CONNELL CHEVROLF:r Rood & Rallyo Moton 2828 H..-Blvd .. 36 mo. + T & l. For resp. Co&ta Mesa 540-U0.1 '60 Ford V-8, '1' Too P.U. wttb camper ahdl. V-3. .. 11111 w ~~ e automatic, new paint. tires. -• ...,._ wy,, Xlnt. 64>-2842. N'""'°" BeaclJ Orange County's Oldest Dir. 1609 Pomrna Ave. 642.'405 '6T Che\7. 2 Ton Truck, 12' --===-===-alum. body w/llft pte. Call IMPORTS WANTED Costa Mesa 714-548-3559 4~-6919. · Orana:e Counties DATSUN e '69 OIEV. II to"· 6 cyl. TOP I BUYER Good cooo. IJ650. Call SILL MAXEY TOYOTA '70 DATSUN 2AOZ 66-&09 aft 6. 18881 Beaeb Blvd. 4 Spd Radio Air Cond Mags '616 'ii Ton Ford P.U. w/1beD H. 8each. Pl. ur.-, ' $3695 ' camper: 8 Cyl Ilk lhllt, AUTOS BOUGHT NEWPORT $850. M&-0117. ' SUPER WEEKEND SPEC IAL DATSUN 1000 W. Coast Hwy N wpt Bch 66-6400 '67 Datsun 4 Whl. Drive 970 Patrol H. T. Extra good eon- --dltlon. AM/FM radio, stick lhift, lock hubs. (UPE165). . $1999 CONNELL CHEVROLET 2828 Harber Blvd., O:ieta Mesa S46-12l3 '7D DATSUN WAGON Air c.ond., 4 Spd. Like new condition. Very low rniK (9!16Bl'G). $1695 NEWPORT DATSUN 1000 W. Cout Hwy. Nwpt. Bch. M>'400 '72 DATSUN PICKUP pty. Tradea •cons. •n Corolla, xlnt cond, 29,700 actual ml., 1 OMll', new '72 ROTA RY'S Hra, IJ4'Xl.. 49 2 • o s 28 , "Demo Sale" '::"'roYOTA MARK 11 Extras $1950 . 10 TO CHOOSE or Sett ouor 493-1784 "BIGGEST SAVINGS" ~c....,::-,:::--::,..,.,,~~- .. s.nnce ~ th< dlfior· ..... TRIUMPH HUNTINGTON BEACH MAZDA Stt It • You'll Buy It r.i:r 1966 Harbor, C.M. 646-9303 BENZ Sell idle !toms now! Call 6G-5678 Now! $AVE NEWPORT DATSUN 1000 W. Coast HY.'Y Nwpt Sch 645-6400 499-4007 * 546-1526 • 65 vw WXl 'M VW Bug, auroor. Engine 'best oiv~ cond. . or '6.5, reblt in '71. Good rond. • 5.36--0451 * $>175. Pvt. 557-7827 '70 VW Bus AM/F1it, Reblt Vacancl~ COii money? Rent eng, Good condition. $1700. )"!'~ house, apt., 11tore • 645-1358 • bll:J&: •• etc. thru a Dally Pilot V.\\'. 1971 Supt>r Rull:. Sun CJ.auififtl Ad Sell idle items roof, stereo, El:cellrnt. now! Call 642--5618 Now! $1750. Offer. ~ Autot, Imported 970 Autos, Imported 970 PRICE A DOT DATSUN BEFORE YOU BUY! NEW DATSUN 1200 $ta1ulaN1 eq11ip-Jlt Jnclv4•1 llaatar, .. afr-1t.r, wliit9- w11\ tlra1, hmpM 1war41, IKkl119 9•1 ta11k. +•,..... all l'f"11Mlire tta111t. A 111•cli "'''' lnchtdl111 ,.,,, JO 1t1il•1 ,., ,.11.11. s.n.1 •129914 s59 TOTAL s5712 DOWN MO.• OR '2026 ~~1 PLUS TAI & UC. ......................................... ·········~ i * USEO CAR SPECIALS * ; • • ~ •••••...........•....................•.•...•..•.. ~ '61 DATSUN. 110 $ 1199 4-DOOI WAMM ...... ~. AM f'Wdla. WSW. l!COllCll'll'f plvt. llO«ll .. tn. ....,!!¥. 9'lt A.SM ........ · · · · • • · :·················································i i ASK ABOUT OUR 5 YEAR i ; INSURED WARRANTY PROGRAM l i ON NEW AND USED CARS i • • ,. ................................................ .. 71 MERCIOES 250C Loaded, Silver, Auto Trani, AM/FM Radio, Power Steering, Powtr Wlndows. At These Buys This Weekend! - 11 YAKAltA 175. 1«lO mlln, R&BLT Tnm1mlllloo 1 It ,_ point. lOnt oond. + Ford, S ...s. SlDO. to-8 i..lmet. l«JO. -oft~. - r • $7295 NEWPORT DATSUN tt:m \V. Coast 1-lwy Nwpt Belt ~ All IXPLOllU 20 o•Y $6995 •• , tlll• •• u ........ ,.., .... .., .... , ..... , ......... , ... . t•h ..... "4 •1 .......... ,, ... ....,.., ........ --..i.. ..... llt .. M.......,MCIM '89 MGC '" ...... -... ,,_ .... -................ UC. 11f.O\'$, · •1111: FALCO I VU 1111111. Collll., All Tiit o.n... Lie.. "R_..,, '18 OPEL ITATION WAOOM, Miity """-*· Lk, WT~ &91 '64 YW COIV. -..... , '"· ..... , Iii& '82 YW BUS ..... ·-· ··~ -,.. ........ 491 '64 CORY AIR M ........ "'· ....... 39& '88 CORTlll COUPE t~-..";:,;,'."" -...... 39& '~ FILCOI '""'· ........................... lie., ., •• '"· &96 '81 CHEVROLET • , .. •K•••. ·--· .... """· 891 1 BILL YATES AUTHOalDD VOLKSWAGEN SAW e lllYICI e PAITS LIASINe a UNTALS 491-4511 • 4tf.ll61 • 1)7-4100 ....... ..: i!!lt:: :-.:;-.....,. 4 • 'f' '68 CORTINA GT ............. _ . . $795 '72 YW SUPER BUG ............. $1995 • Sptell, Radio, Htllwr. (XL'l"o131) Oro11nge, rlKllO, ,..., spe1kel"ll, •fYle 1xtuou11, tKlgry warranty. (!IJ F8Y) '66 YW DELUXE BUS $1050 '67 CHEVY l/4 TON PICK-UP $1795 Priced To Sl11 This WHICtnd. ISBL 22•1 J~I Ilk• oew. (201218 ) '71 YW 411 WAGON ........... $2795 Unllltr i<"a.c:l'llry W1rrenty &. Al.Ito., AMllo, -Mkfl9tln X Redltila. Lie. !"'ICU '69 YW SQUAREBACK ...... -.... $1495 Mllelllc 8niwn. SHutlfull (XXH 7.&SJ 11 ii I' I \ ' I •• 11 '• il :t " • .. •• j; ' 1! I -RENOVATION SALE -·- I I 1972 DATSUN 1200 I 1972 DATSUN 240Z 1972 DATSUN PICKUP 1972 DATSUN WAGON ! 1 • I , -••• '"'r ' • ' ' '•• ''"' "•• •' I '• ' .. FACTORY AUTHORIZED CADILLAC • 990 Au"'" Used 990 Aul .. , UMCI f90 CADILLAC CADILLAC ; ,73 Cad'U •n Cpe. o.v. LOADED! I ac MJC!tEUN TIRES. LO Mt. Cpe De Ville ~700Cad 50~~ Lardaflf,:. Full power, Air Olnd., Vinyl Low M,I. Excel ~ .• J(tnu. =u~i'alF~~:r ~~: Prl pty $1500. m.m>~ 6-way ...... stereo !ape CAMARO ' cruise contl'Ol $176. per month ?i6 n10. O.E.L. lax lmmedl•t• Otllvery LEASING ALL MODELS AND MAKES '73's Southern CalWomia '68 CAMARO SS Ne\v engine, clutch, battery. Polyglass. Ca 11 Tom ~1. •n camaro, Z.1\ l10 !IP, • Spd, Low miles. nl!'W 1JrH, Excel cond. $MXI. ~"1882 1970 Camaro air, auto. PIS. v roof, Excel oond. l2'00· w.4108 or "1-!811. CHEVRO~ 1973 BUICK & OPEL PRICES ARE LOWER AT TERRY BUICK "LOW OVERHEAD DOES IT" SEE US BEFORE YOU BUY '67 Buick Limited Sedan 011• O'Wll., •11+ornobil•. full power, ftcfof'V tir. Abtoluttly immeculatt, IUOU<tl71 '67 Buick Special Hardtop ' Sport Coupe. Pow•r 1t•eri'"), pow~ '\r,1i,1, fee· tory •it cond., vinyl tap, m19 wtltt!1. l11I 1h1rp. (UC'P6991 "LOW OVERHEAD DOES IT" TERRY BUICK SIKe 1 tJJ -5 .. Ir WalHt, H-' ......... '71 Volvo '63 Cad, clean. fUl1 power. Good cond. $400. C a 11 536-6588 P1800 Coupe ,~....._ __ . ___ _ Immaculate condiUon, auto-Need a "Pad"! Place an adl ~""'"'l'"""""""l"""'~~""""""!""'"'"~""""'!!~I matic ~-. .AM I FM Autos Imported 970 Autos, Imported 970 Autos, Imported 970 stereo. radial tires, snowi -;;;;;;;;;;' ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;/ white exterior, red interior.II 648CAL. See It -You'll Buy It .,Ptu. lf.l.Vi& W YOLVO 1966 Harbor, C.M. 646-9303 1964 Volvo, Sell for parts All parl!I excellenrl 673-8117 or 642-8716 VOLVO 1971, 142$, Al\.f/FM, Excel cond, Gray w/rf!d int. Call 714/494-0078 * '61 VOLVO* auto, orig ownr 642-9586 SAVINGS As :Never Wore On All Remaining '72 VDLVOS .,Pw.ltwia W VOLVO 1966 It arbor, C.M. &16-9303 Autos, UMCI 990 AMC HORNET HATCHBACK ALL NEW FOR '73 fl/ff'~ • 1973 HORNET HATCHBACK 'nnted Windshield, Wheel 011c, Heavy Duty Cooling. (A35037El31691) $2499 IMMEDIATE DELIVERY WArdS.Lee I 11t1m1111nn 547-5126 l~ $<>. J.l•ln SL santa Ana WE'LL GO iib '· -·~ crnorlr @IF ~ WlJ!lf§!I TO PUT YOU IN A BETTER CAR I So you need a better car but just don't think you can swing it right now. You're our kind of people! We will go out of our way to put you in a better car ... not next week ... but RIGHT NOW! • All Cars Listed Here We Back Up -100°/o 30 Days or 1,000 Miies Whichever Comes First! MANY MORE TO CHOOSE FROM ' r 1970 YW 1969 vw 1969 YW i966 YW · IUS 1ua .. FASTIA.Ck S9UAllLlCir: ' Autolfl•tie tr111f. N•w f•1dory r•• 4 1p•.d, Eltre E1c1ll111t col'ldlt1011. Super 1oocl t;OMl'I· built 11t9fne. c:l1111. f tlo11, $1888 $888 $1388 $1588 ' GARDEN WEST CLKSWAGE ' I I • .. • .. •'. ' " I :: " " " .. ., " ,· •' :f ., ·i ·' :1 ii ' . '· • :t t: " :· ·: " " ., • " " ·' .. I• •' ll !I " ., :i " " ' ·: . I :1 ' ' ., j: .- ' . . Ii \, :1 I' •I :1 ., 1· •I :1 :1 " ,. • ' " " :: I• :! " I; ' ' 11 11 I' 1t .: 11 :1 I· '" I I I I I I • I .. :t ' .. ' " '· " ' ~i ' u • .. ,. ,, .. .. " ., " ' I ,, " " " '• .. " :· 'i J .f :! l, . :! I· ,. ,. :: :· " " : " •' " t: " Ii Ii " " . ( :t .. . .. ., " I· ' • " I .. :1 I• 11 ;f '1 ' !1 " .. " . " ' ' " " " '• " ti 1: :i l! 11 I' 1i •t " 11 ii 'f, • I ·. I I j • Auloo, UNO 9'0 Autoa, UMd 990 CHEVROLET CHEVROLET Na lD GOOD TRANSPORTATI ON '60 Corvalr Auto&, UMd '90 Auto&, UMd 99V Autos, U~ "' CHEVROLET CONTINENT AL CORVAIR rgg CAPRICE Wqon, all ex· tru. RllOd cood.. IUIOO. Da.Yll ~. """' ~U15 ('86) 4 Door, rood cond., new ltrell. MUlt It.LI S8'15. * 96H290 aft 6 PM t 'M Monza. Xlnt 'co n d . thruout. Mech. • o u n d . $350/bat otter; or trade. 557-ll81, !!67-J272. CORYEllE '70 CORVETTE '" lmp.111 Coupo v.a, auto.. aJr CMd.. v1ey1 root P.S., 110Wtf aeatll, radio, 1uperlor car. CWXG502). $1699 4 door. One of the clea.ne&t CORVAIR In town. J."WP269. 1------------------CHRYSLER CORYmE 350 V.S mag wheel~ rood huJtEer tires. A M I F M ramii, tape deck. Power mering, 4 speed. Im· maculate condition Lie No. OONNELL CHEVROLET ~ Harbor Blvd., Costa Mesa 546-Ull $466 '68 Qirysler D> 4 Dr. HT Beautllul G""" Finish, ao-1981 Qlrvalr. Can be wred for dune buggy. N~ work. 115. • 615-0098. --------1 OOOAZE .. mNGRAY Oonv. Red $41 95 See It · You'il Buy It tlque vtnyl roof, Auto wlblk lnl 321 V-8, 4 1pd, 2 H YW ...... am/Im, •rl& ownr, ARBOUR 1968 Chevy C&price wgn, Fae air, orig owner. $1350. * 673-1522 * '61 Novi Coupe 6 eyUnder, radio, P.S .. stick. Real -buy. CWYGOOIJ. $1199 OONNELL atEVROLET 1 2828 Harbor Blvd., Costa,M,... 546-12Q3 1970 MONTE Carlo, R/H, air, radials, low miles. $2950. or offer. 548-8985 '71 V091 H1tchbock Cbupe. Radio, automatic, sharp. (5:!0CXIJ). $1699 't'ONNELL CHEVROLET 1828 Harbor Blvd., Cotta Mesa 546-1203 '62 ~ Nova, 2 door, medt pert.. new motor, tlres, radiator, needs aeat Coven $150. 675-651:* alt 6. •n V090 GT lfatchback, 4 speed, radio. SU~ clean. C358EI'Wl. $2399 CONNELL CHEVROLET 2828 Harbor Blvd., Costa Mesa 546-1203 * '56 CHEVY * Excellent running cond. $150.~ '72 Impala 4 Dr. H.T. Vinyl roof, P.S., P.B., air, auto. 30 day un- conditional Guarantee. Nice. (146CCEl. $3499 CONNEU. CHEVROLET 2828 ~larbor Blvd., Cost.a Mesa 546-1203 '62 Chevy lmpe.la, eng xlnt clean, nu tires. Red wired inter. $400. 645-532'1. '73 lmpola 4 Or. saian. 800 miles. Like new. Full lact. warranty. HM air, P.S., P.B., auto. V8. Use reg. gas. (104504). Unusual value. $3999 ~w.lWJi4 -TOYOTA 1966 Harbor, C.1.f. 646-9303 170 lmp•I• Custom Coupe. V-8, air, auto., P.S., P.B., radk>. (110ASI). $1999 OONNEU. CHEVROLET 2828 Harbor Blvd., Costa Mesa 546-Ull 1970 Olev. Ooncoun Estate, 8 Pus. Sta. Wp. Pwr. St-,. & brakeo, AM-FM Stereo radio. tilt steer. wbL Factory Air. ltigga&e ... ck. oew tlret • brakn. Panel· Ing, Asking ims. 5574861. '70 Chev. 4 Door Sedan v.a, vinyl roof, air cond •• P.S .. P.B. automatic. (196ACSJ. $2199 CONNEI.J.. CHEVROLET 2828 Harbor Blvd., Q;i$a, Mesa 546-1200 '70 MALIBU l Door hardtop V-8, auto. lrans., factory air, power stee1ing and brakes, radio, htr, white wall tires. {3ll- AGF) $2195 dll'. 836-6535. '71 C•price Coupe Use reg. Gaa. V..S, auto., P.S., P.B., vinyl roof, elec. windows. Remaining fact. warranty. (129396). $3299 CONNELL CHEVRO~ 2828 Harbor Blvd., Cosla t..1esa. ~UJJ 19&t CHEVY Greenbrier Van for aale. Motor recently rebuilt, in good running con. dit!on. Body good, ®es need paint. Call 557-m; .. ... $700.00 or best otter. '71 Camero Coupe V..S, 1"8d1o, stick, superior car. New tirell. (313CQS), $2599 OJNNELJ.. CHE'VR.OLET CONNELL CHEVROLET 2828 llarbor Blvd., 2828 llarbol' Blvd., COsta hfesa 546-12'.)3 Costa Mesa 546-12}3 '65 MallOu, 2 dr., hdtp, V..S, IMMAC. '63 Chev .• 4 dr., 6 auto trans., RAH Runs very cyl., auto. R/H. Xln't tires ecocf. $550. g.t&-3956. & brks 41,IXMJ orig. mi's. ,67 C•m•ro CoUn. Inter pert. Runs beaut. 2nd r -Owner. $285. 536-8400. 6{~· stick, radio. '66283Chev. BeWht Alrt .A/4Cdr.:t!r., $1499 Xlnt.·:..-.-~~ OONNELL CT!l;\>ROLET . mt VEGA Wagoo, l.;IX!O 2828 Harixr Blvd., miles, P/S.·auto tranl, air, Costa Ml"IB. 54$.120.l AP!{/FM. 968-4760 Autos, 1............ 970 Autos, lmporied VOLVO -TO YOTA SALE! SALE!' 1SALE! CLEARANCEcON ALL l 9n•s SELECT FROM OYER 200 970 . ' ""' Trecle I•'• ... ... ...... NEW AND USED CARS IN STDCK ... •• No Den ,.,_ O.A.C. MONTHLY PAYMENTS AS LONG AS 48 MONTHS . Opon 7:30 To I P.M. Mon. Tues. Thru Thurs., 7:30 To 6 P.M. F1ct. Auth. Volvo & Toyota Svc. & P1rt1 · (7141 646-9303 or $40.9468· Autos, New 980Aut0... New Trana., Fact Air Cond, PS, PB, PW, Power bucket aeats. Radial Uret. Extra low mUe1, looks and drives like new, 1 owner. MUST SELL $1595. 645-f,644. Vacandes cost money! Rent )'OUI' houle, apt., store bldg., etc, thru a Daily Pilot Clauitied Ad. 642--5678. $1750. 833-1454. um.i Beach Blvd. '69 CQr:vel'8. Low-m 1 , Huntington Beach "l)&ytOna blue. '13 Vette 80-4435 rims le S.T. belt~-radiala. A good want ad 11 a aoo<l in- 54!;..3249.-vntment. Autos, Usld 990 4.utos, UMd WE HAYE THE FINEST SELECTION . OF PREYIOUSL Y OWNED CADILLACS IN · ORANGE COUNTY • I 0 EL DO RADO S • 20 COUPE DE VILLES • 13 SEDAN DE VILLES • 2 BROUGHAMS • 2 CONVERTIBLES PLU S MANY OTHER FINE AUTOMOBILES. '7Z CONTINENTAL SEDAN '70 CADILLA.C STEREO MULTIPLEX FACTORY A1R CON-Calais Hardtop Cpe. Factory air, full power, DITIONING. Vinyl top, leather interior, full AM-FM plus other extras, This car is excep-power, tit steering wheel, power door locks, tionally clean. (475BHF} cruise control, and all the extras. (666ESH). Only S3S55 '5111 '71 CONTINENTAL SEDAN '7Z MARK IV VINYL TOP, Leather Interior, full power, fac· With elec. sunroof. Vinyl top, leather Inter., tory air conditioning, tilt steering wheel, dual comfort seats, full power, fact. air, AM- AM/FM stereo multiplex. cruise control. Very FM stereo, power door locks and more. low mileage! (880EOJJ. Sale priced UliJ week-(404402) ena. S82ZZ $4999 '71 ELDORADO '71 COUPE DE VUJ,E Vinyl top, leather inter., full powe'r, factory 5 to choose from. Vinyl t.&t leather Interior, air, tilt wheel, AM-FM stereo radio, power full power, factory air, t wheel, A.M'..FM, door locks, outstanding care. C226CJS) power door locks, WSW, less than 19,000 miles. {211GBX). From $6ZZZ '5166 '7Z BUICK ELECl'RA ZZ5 '88 CADILLA.C Custom. Vinyl top, vinyl interior, fUU power, Convertible. Full power, factory air, leather factory air conditioning, tilt steering wheel, interior, tilt steering wheel, AM -FM stereo, Ml/FM stereo radio, white aide wall tires, power'door locks. (197946), etc. Very low mileage. Immaculate condition. 1641-DZZ). SZ2ZZ $4999 '7Z OLDSMOBD.E 98 . . '7Z MARK IV 4 door H.T. Vinyl top, tapestry interior, full \Vith elec. sunroof. Vinyl top. leather inter., power, factory air, tilt wheel, Tadio, heater, dual comfort seats, full power, facL air, AM- wsw. las than 9,000 miles. (588EAD) FM stereo, power door locks and more. 1404402) $4999 37999 '70 COUPE DE VU,I ,E ~71 TORO,NADO 7 to choose from. Vinyl top, leather interior, Dual comfort Scats, full po\.YCI', factory air, full power, factory air, tUt wheel, powtt door tilt steering wheel, stereo AM-FM multiplex. locks, Mof-F?tt stereo. (9)3BEJ). (050CXUJ 33999 $4111 Hours: 8:30 AM to; 9:00 PM Mon. thru Fri. 9:00 AM to 6:00 P M Sat. and Sun. • NABERS...__.. 2600 Harbor Blvd., Costa Mesa 540-9100 980 Autos, New 980 Autos, Now 980 Autos, N•w ORANGE COUNTY's NUMBER I VOLUME BIDCK-OPEL DEALER ORANGE COUNTY'S LARGEST SELECTION Of 1m BlJ'ICKS " ' ' ,, Isl I N 5 A L E 5 72 DEMONSTRATOR SALE '7Z IUICK WAllE CUSTOM 4 DR. v.-, •uMmlllt, r.cllt, llUtw, ~II-Inf ~. IKI. •Ir cord., W•W.I,, Yln'fl •• llnltd ,i. .... nit •1Mr"'9 wlletl. StrYI 21"2. '72 IUICK SKYLARK CUSTOM CPI. '72 IUICK LISADI CUSTOM 2 DI. CPI. o'7Z Ol'll. Sl'OIT COUPI • 53895 · 54195 I 52195 , ·--.-.. rrldaf, October 27, 1'72 • DAILY PILOT <(.1 ---........... Step Up To Luxury • • Excellent Selection Of Previously Owned Mark Ill's and Mark IV's 1970 MARK III EXQUISITE Ebony black finish, black landau, and burgundy leather interior. Full power, cruise control, climate control, air cond., individual power front seats, power door locks, tilt wheel. (644BIJ) $ SALE! Outstanding Group Of Choice Cars! 1971 Dodge FAMILY WAGON ly TltAVCO 2 tone paint, shag rug, &Jeeps 4., 127" whl. base, VS, auto., P.S., R&H, raised flberglau roof, elec. water system, dual battery Aystem, elec. refrigerator, gu range w/oven. porta potti, butane & water tank, like new. (511DYUl $4875 1971 Buick RIVIERA Like new. Attractive lime frost with dark green Landau roar A match. In- terior. Luxury equipped, Full power, fact. air, AJl.f·FM stereo, Ult wheel, chronte wheels. (OOBDBW) $4375 '69 Continental HAltDTO' COU'I Beautiful condition, Ll yellow finish, light gold landau w/matchlng inter- ior. Equipped w/Pwr. 1teering, brake11, windows, seats, radio, beater, ractol'y air. ( 641EYV) $2775 1972 Cadillac FLEETWOOD UOUGHAM • 14,000 miles, like new. Luxury equip- ped thru-out, Full power of coune with ind.lviduaily adjustable power front seats, factory air, AM-FM stereo, cruise control and much, much more. See & drive today. (971- DZK). $7275 • 1971 Continental COUPI. IA.LI PllCID Beautiful Polar white finish with black Landau roof A black leather Interior. Luxury equipped thru-out. F\dl power, auto. temp. air, AM-FM stereo, tllt wheel, power door Jocks. Drives like new. (809'110) $4575 '72 Marquis Brougham I ROUGH AM Like new, 14,000 miles. Lux. equipped thruout. Full Pwr., Ind. Adj. front seau, tilt str51:. wheel. auto. temp. air, AM-1'7.1 stereo rAdio. BeauUful Brazilian Bronze fin ish w/brn landau le saddle tone int. (499ElvJ Sale Priced ALWAYS A GR.EAT SELECTION· OF TOP QUALITY CARS •.. • "'Otano• CountV'• Famllfl of rm. C..- 2121 HARBOR BLVD~ COSTA •M • -- I • " l I I . .. DAllY PllOT frldq, 0c.-27, nn I • VIHTURA • VENTURA CUSTOM • FIREBIRD e ESPRIT • FORMULA • TRANS At.I • lE MAHS e LE MANS SPORT COUPE e LUXURY LE MANS e GRAND AM • CATALINA • BONNEVILLE • GRAND VILLE • GRAND PRIX e SAFARI e GRAND SAFARI e LE MANS SAFARI ~ 0 ~ . . I ·-' ' BRAND NEW 1973 LEMANS COLONNA.DI J Dl. H. T. Coup•. l11nip•r 1lrip1, pow•r 1te•ri119, turbohvdr•m•tic tr.a11u11i11ion, tl11t.o' 91111. 110170]210011 5) WIDE TRACK I • BRAND NEW 1973 CA.fAlCNA 4 DOOR HA.IDTOP VI, •utoll'letir;, power 1t••ri119, pow•' dit c b,•ke1, white ,...,/! tlre1, detui:• •heel COY•"· l?L39Jl JC I002251 1972 GRAND PRIX DEMONSTRATOR JUST 15 REMAINING '72 DEMOS 1972 BONNEVILLE 2 DOOR COUPE VI, •ulomtlic, pow•r 1t•eri119·br•ke1-willdow1, •ir c.onditionin9, AM · FM 1t•r•o rtdio, tflt wh••I, wheel cOYtf'I, tic. 12KSTT2At 10103 1 LEFT TO CLEAR Ab1olut.ly lo.d.d wifft full po••t, f•ctory ,;, c.onditioni119, AM-FM t•dio, vinyl top, 12N57Y2Cl175151 Dtmontlr•tor, All ARE DRASTICALLY REDUCED TO SELL! '64 GRAND PRIX va, •utomtfic;, r•dio, ht•l•r, pt;>wlr 1t•erinq. /OS8406l '70 PONTIAC WAGON -'641MPJLA1P er, 1ir c;onditioni119. IOUU9l91 '65 CHEV. EL CAMINO -'67 MUSTANG VI, •ulom•lic, M•CI wht•l1, r•· d io, h••l•r. 17F0101967161 '70 PONTIAC LE MANS That's just what you'll get at Dene Ross Pantiac. And everyone IS talking about it ..• The great selection, the quality of our used cars and especially about the low, low prices. Talk many be chlfap, but wait until you see the real action start when we offer you the deal you c:.an't afford to tum down! Stop by and let's •.. well, let's talk it over. Bonn,vitl• 9 pttt. Full pow•r, fec.tory ,;,, hrggeg• r•ck. I 26- 2'460Rl 30017l Pl1'4 Wtr S•1111tedi ltetall $)510 lliil ''' h•1 oY•t $2000 ill fh• !'flofor I lr•n1mi11ion. 4 1ptl>.I, r1dio, heattr. Mu1t •••· 19'45. OOIC I PJ 17 Sport H.T. c;oup. VI, P.S., tufo· m•lic, t ir, vinyl lop, AM-FM 1t•r•o, 119ll£VI PJ91 .. My S11111tM ..._.. $2175 '69 GRANO PRIX VI, tutom•lic, pow•t 1l•••i119, f•c;lory air, vinyl top. (17657. 9P1 219'491 P400 ~'I Svnn'911 Retllll 52700 '71 JEEP 4 WHEEL DRIVE Pic;liu p. V6, powtr tl••ring, •ir c:onditlo11in9. ('441Cll l P'41'4 Kelly'···--..... , $3155 $2699 '69 CHEV. CAMARO 6 c.ylfndtt, aulom•lic, pow1r .te1ri119, radio, ht1!ar ( YVN- 1021 P40l Kelly S.ttnte4 .... II $1910 '68 FIREBIRD Va, •ulom•lic:, pow•t 1l••,;n9, t ir conditioning, vinyl roof. IVIV1 9ll P<426 ke'ty '-t9Kt.d Retoll $1 t IS DAVE ROSS Autos, New 9IOAutos, New 980 WITH THIS AD WITH THIS AD '68 JAGUAR XKE Aulom•lic, •ir c;onditioning, wir• whttl1, low l'fliltl9•· (ZAVl52) P405 lt.etly Sut~ Rftfoll S.4100 '69 Alf A ROMEO GT 1750 c;pe. Orig' 17,000 rnil•t. 5 1pe•d. r•dio, .,.,,.,,,, tZ8V]21) P4 21 lloHy Sufl"ted R•toil SJ2to Autot for Sale '69 CATALINA WAGON 9 P'''· VI , oulom1tic, radio, h•1i•r, powt r 1!t 1rin9, •ir cond. l l,000 mil•1. !YOY077l P410 1e11., S111Jgnted Retoll s2100 '69 LE MANS COUPE VI, •ulornatic, pow•• tlearing, •ir conditioning, viny l lop. tXSE7461 P427 Kelly $1tte1ted Retell 52560 i\utMfor~ '68 MUSTANG Autom11tic, powtt 1tttdng, •ir conditioning, r•dio, h••*••· !XOA562l 41'4A itellr s.,...-..... u 51675 '69 VOLVO WAGON Automtlic, .,;, c;ond itioning, r1- dio, h••let, l 1,000 m i I • 1 • !YWR84JI P4 l I ~tr SGtJt .. tffl 1 ... 11 $2600 '69 FIREBIRD V8, tulOfll•tic, radio, h•at.,, powtr tt.•ring, •ir c:o11dition- in9. )9,000 milts. IXXJ6291 P'4 22 lolly~ ....... $2461 $1999 '69 PONTIAC GTO VI, •ulo'"•lic;, pow•t 1t"ri119, ,;, c:o11d itioning, vinyl top. l662FVYl 1160A Kelly $9ftnted Retail $2200 '70 PONTIAC GTO H.T. Cpt. Vt, •uto111ttic, pow- •T •*••flng, f•c;fol'V •Ir, vl11yl top, lo '"ll••91. 12'42l70Rl'46· 9121 P42l hlfr l•11•1Ml lee.II 52911 $2399 '69 FIAT 124S Coup•. Gold. R•dio, h••lt r, lu99•g• t•ck. 13,000 mil,,. I025FFNJ ll 24C lolly ~ 1 ... 11 52100 All Sale Prices Effective thru Mond1y, October 30th, 1972 2480 Harbor Blvd. at Fair Drive COST A MESA Ph. 546-8017 l V2 MILE SOUTH OF THE SAN DIEGO FREEWAY OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK 8:30 A.M. ta 10:00 P.M. SUN. 11 A.M. to 9 P.M. AutH forS* AU IOI for Sal. lo0~ YOU CAN NOW IUY ~ Autos, Used 990 Autos, Used 990 Autos, UMCI 990 Autos, Used 99t Autos, Used 990 Autos, Used 990 Autos, Used 990 Q ANY NEW '7J CHIYIO· <( LO IMPALA. CAPllCE. .. CHmUI, HOYA. YISA. % 01 LUV TRUCK FOi ... ONLY: l: ... OVER -~ $149 DEALERS INVOICE ~ COST. .. x IWI"' Tllll Atl ... Salo Prl .. AppllH Only To C1n l: I In Stock Ancl Does Not Include ... j I• F1ctory 23 Holdblck. -< CORVEnE l: 11---------t '66 Corvette ::t 327 cu. in. V-8. power Kteer- "' ing, i·adio. Nh.'t'. <TER642J. )> 0 $2199 CONNELL Clll~VllOLJ:::T 28~ I hu·hor Blvd .. CORta Mrsn 5'1!~1 :liJ:i CORVE'T'TE '72, Rctl. Auto, ~ nlr, P.\V., Tilt whl. Besl of- -t fer. ll'.0-11123. :i: COUGAR -<11--------::t 1969 Cougar. Full 1nwer. ell $21.95 or conaickr offer. • * 642-4268 * * >11 =~-~~~~-c ·71 Coup!' x.n 7, l\tint cond. Owner will •rn.nge finance. 13.1195. 49+-091 DODGE '70 Dodge Swinger Cpe. V-8, vinyl roof. air oond., P .S., auro, radio. 20.077 miles. Superior car. IM2AYV). $2499 CONNELL CHEVROLET 1828 liQJ'bot Blvd., Co.<:ta Mesa 546-1200 '71 Dodge Colt, Muat sell. lo mileage, $2075/oftM'. • 54&-9721 • FALCON '64 Falcon c:onver1 . 4 1pd. Sharp k>oking car in search ot loving mechan!c. St%'i. 5~. FORD ~ I ~1 535-1143 ~~~ ~ ! v ... CHMOLEJ Vom i! ftWor Trldtr ;;; i .Ill k * I I a Ina. k .. liwlel ..... l!i DODGE ·10 Ford van t,i: T. Aulrl. Y-3, '69 Cherge,. Cpe. \\'indowit. bnck sent I.>(! V·B. vtll)'I root. auto., P.S., ('Orttl. '493-.12'J9; 83()-.h).t. air. Superklr Cllt. G-Oud 1~0 ,~RD 1 R mil~. (tn'IE'TE). "'·It' .,_, • n \Vl•gQIL Urt!I, $2099 ""'"' ......... ~ .. 217 0. La Gri1lla, San Clemcn!c. CONNELL OlEVROLET 19'.1 F0t'd F'•irlant!., powr 2828 111\J'OOr Blvd,, 11cerl11g, pOWr brks, 11:ood Colt• Meta 546-J.203 cond. t495., 493-074.1. 1988 Dodge Charv,r, New l96i Ford Cortina, nu Uret. Tires, Brake11 Shot.*"· Ex· Excel mechanlc&I cond. l!::================~l ~te;!;1!!_!1•:!!"'!..Co~'1d2!11!,!lo~":..· !!!&i!!;2-:,1!91!11!!!:._. Clean. $495. 673-8117/64UT16 WITH THIS AD WITH THIS AD . ·' .... 1 .... ".1 #J .. · l FORD NEED GOOD TRANSPORTATION '61 Falcon 4 Dr, /\ truly clran car. 4;,7. GIP. $466 Sl't' It . You'll Buy /I ~w.le.wi& -TOYOTA 1!166 !!arbor, C.M. 646-9300 '69 Mustang CouSM Air, P.S., Rulo. rRdio. V-8. Good mlle.. Super aharp. IYWT863L $2199 CONNEl.L Cllt>:VTI.OL£T 2tl28 lhtrbor Blv1I .. CO!lla !\!('Sil 546-1203 FORD ~71 Ford LTD Wagon 10 Pass .• P.s .• auto .. air. lug- gage rack. Sharp. Priced to sell. (453CL\Yl $3399 CONNELL CHEVROLET ~28 l!arhor Blvd., Coi;\11 ~lcsa 546-1203 '64 Forti Van, g'OOC:I shape. Good buy! 54H326 aft 6; 646-48S8 days. ask tor Richard. JAVELIN MUSTANG PINTO ·70 Javelin. Still urxler n1ajor '67 MUSTANG, A/C, R.&H, '72 Pinto Runabout, stick, 1v11rran. Loaded w/xtras. P/S, dlsc brakes, new tires, disc brks. radio, cl~n con· P/s, A/C. 837-2959. approx 50,000 ml. $100. d!Uon. 673-7700. LINCOLN above low Blue Book. 11200. -==-=-"'=----I (213) 431-4119 ·55 cm1. AM/FM, "''· OLDSMOBILE leather lnlrrior. Sunmot.1 -------- Much reatora~lon do n e. '61 Torona.do, All pwr, load· Must sell. $950. 494-ii360: ed, $7000 new, besl offer '197-2507. over $1~. 6 '15 -7 9 0 0, MERCURY 677787'7. PONTIAC BONNEVILLE 2 cir '6.1 beautifully cared for mechanlcu.lly .t-otherwile. Nu Us., shacks, batt. & paint. Best offer over ~· 613-4690. ' '69 Vlata Cruiser Wgn. PS, •70 LE MANS Spl. C p c . INTERNATIONAL '70 Mercury ~ ·~--~c1<. XJnt ''""'"· 1 ow""'· tow i..!. ,;:"'oc'~o;·,.;~~o"' .. 9&3-;:;o.o::'-=· =~ price $2,005. Private 'DU'tY • --------l~terey 2 Dr 1"!1", VI. Aut '69 OLDS «2, convertible 4 ~96Ui'=';::U~G·..,...---=--=,-I '61 Travelall, 4 whl drtve. ns, JJOWi!:r s e e r n i • &pd trana R/H 11tn:I ' .-.: ......__ Radio, lleater, white walll, *' ;..-::\, 6'2-it86 .. '69 nmt sta WJPl. Bonnritlle. Rebll eng. RuM g d · wheel covers, A very nice 1,.;&1.1 Alt, all pwr. Xlllt cond. Ol1g $500/offer. ~ Can Yon c~r (716CTO I Sl895 dlr. Call PLYMOUTH O\vner. 979-8425. Acres, L.B. R".6-6535 '65 Pon!. PS, radkJ. JEEP 'TI Merelll'Y Col. Pk wag. 8 '7 2 Plymouth C<l. '°""· Orig """'""· pass. F'ull pwr. Auto locks. • 1t $.150. 87).3348 * '68 Jeep Ttlt whl., air. am/fm Oran Sport. 2 Or, Hardto~ '60 Grand Prix, SJ modtl. stereo. 24,000 ml'•· Fact. Auto Trana, Fac.tory A Air cond., FM 1terw, many Jfl66 T · AIRD, l'erfect <.~, 4 whet! drlve, automalic mainbllned. 546-2.m Cond, Power Steenng, Pow· t SZ350 67J..3331 RAii. air, tape,, oow trre' tnl.l\8mlqlon, air condition· · tr 8rakea1 AM/FM Stereo x res. · · ILJ.9/1. 962-<529. :121' Holly toa. radio, whlf•w•lls. """" MUSTANG Rldlo, V "l'I Roof. only RAMBLER Lllne., N.B .. Aft 6. clean And low miJeage. 5"00 miles, (3021YA) $339$1---------1 ''11 LTD Cly!'.Q. 10 pa.1. wq. CXEX316J $1895 dlr. Call '6.~ Convertltdc. Must •II dlr. 836-65,l5. '63 Rambler, auto trans. full 1iwr., air, rack, lo miles 836~. 1650 or make ofter. 5U-T.l63 1971 PLYMOUTH Cricket Good trat\llportaUon. $1.50 o below book. 644-!S616 '70 Toyo!• I.And Cn,ilser l'lftW aft 6 pm or wknd1. S£ .fspd, otc, many xtre.a. otter. 9'f9..8189 aft 5 pm. FORD '6C VAN, Body 8c tires, low mll~agtt. perf '61 MW!lang P'stbck, 390, 4 4,00'.> ml, <Below whit blu Don't sctvo up the &hip! tnilne In good condition. eond. 12400. 6 4 ~ · 14 8 2 apd, nu tlre1, 50.000 ml. book $HIOO. • 644-4694. "Lllt" It ln cfa.altled $111 $650. 5:17·7178. 64!H)28(1 Beat offer. 548--4477 Sen Idle 1tem1 ... 643-56'18 to Shont Rhultal 64iiri8. • • -• . ·: .; • • • . . " I ' . ALWAYS ·-A STEP AHEAD WHAT'S NEW?? FndaY, 0c.-27, 1972 DAILY PILOT 45 HERE NOW FOR IMMEDIATE DE LIVE .RY OLDSMOBILE'S . ALL NEW LOW PRICED COMPACT CAR I ' ~ FINAL CLEARANCE • REMAINING 1972, DEMONSTRATORS , MUST BE CLEA:RED OUT NOW ! ! ! ORANGE COUNTY'S ::=:~;~~~-~~"~~,~~~.~~~~~:. S 5 NUMBER 1 HONDA buc kel sHh. llb57H2ZI081>44 ) CAR DEALER 'We Have The Largest Selection SEDANS and COUPES 1972. HONDA CAR #AN6001051525 TRUCKS A-ND VANS · 1/2 TON AND 11.t TONS SERVICE --PARTS--· BODY SHOP Open Every Saturday 7:30 'TIL 5:30 GREAT '69 OLDSMOBILE CUTLASS YI, ntHMtk, redfo, """"· ,.._ s.i899 ""'"'9· air cffd., wllfyt ..,. A rMf My r.dcry. WI" fbwHtce. CZA•1161 '70 FORD MAVERICK hctery -.lpped. ''°' 11ke. s.i199 WUI l'fH••· fl16ANLI • ,. ( USED CAR '68 OLDSMOBILE DELTA 88 2 Do. H.T. YI, eel-.,-·-· $1399 ,.._... ,,..,. .. I IN' .... * cHlll., wllryt top. o .. ;: .... hmry. CWIL4791 flMKt, '69 FORD MUSTANG '-tttoc.L YI, ... .-k, ....._ ......... ,..., ............. Mpt,.ltew ......... I I 51499 ) )• SAVINGS TODAY!!! '70 MERCURY MONTEREY '68 CADILLAC SEDAN DE YIW ''· ••f'ollMlric. ........... ,..., 51899 "'" ,._ eM ,... lnwy. s.is99 ...... , ............... Air c .... ltl .. Jitt, Wiii ....... A Niii ftla cer. «W916JJI WIU fllMlllCe. (41SAZP J '69 PLYMOUTH STATION WAGON '68 OLDSMOBILE 98 VI, .. t1•atk, ,..._, ilitotft, ,..._ 51399 Pill,. .... 5999 1"""9f. Nice 4-llJ c•. aMI ett cM41rio•htt. WUI ffHKe, (JtJffHI IWIDl77) • ' I . { (. ' . I I ' ' ' ' • II II • • 2 DOOR HARDTOP Full Factory equipped . . . . $199 DOWN $71 A MONTH $2188 ~~~~E s "'" .... , .... ,, .. , '"" __ ,,.. ......... Iii: ..... & .. 1-"1 ... CN{Jn M - u Hlt Ill' )6 '"'· Otl1<r•d f1•1. ftic• f17SS !Ml ff• & lo<""'• ~ ,£KMIMlf 1,urtLU'!I. 1 ::: 0 '73 DODGE CttALLENGER ~ 2 DOOR HARDTOP Full Factory Equipped . Order Yours Now '72CHEVY. MALrBU 2 DR. H.T. .'69 CORTINA WAGON 4 Speed trans., radio and heater. (X8R819) · • $788 WE APPRECIATE YOUR BUSINESS ,. ~ v.a, auto. trans., radio, heater. (518BPT) '69 PLYM WAGON Fully equipped inc luding luggage rack and radio. ""~'$788 • I ' ' I . rw ....... ..., ... " rrldly, Octobtr 27, 1972 DAJLV PILOT 41 2·DOOR COUPE Whirewoll lir•s. rih wheel re clining seal. full factory equipt b621K2S30.5823 $199 DOWN $60 .A MONTH ~~RN:~s . ~ :m.333 FUll ,,,, ......... ,, ... ,.., .. ,. ........ 1"11 icl ......... - ' , \ ;1 PRICE ' ' .l dl_..,... ...... _ Utd I It< )6 ...._ °""*"'' ..... , .... ,,l,, ... 1 ..... I<....,• i'HJ.IJ. ,IKilllat;I ~·11 11 JI'\, 2 DOOR HARDTOP Fully Factory Equipped Order Yo•rs Now FOR 36 $199 DOWN $92 A MONTH ..... ~~r"~ ... $2as·s· FUll ~.~i:?.:?. ' PRICE price JJJJI m ... & .... ' (lllSI. ·:~\:'ll(fN· ....... '70.D.ODGE ·'. ~OtARA , v.a, auto. trans., •ir cond., poweriteering, pow· er brakes. (DL41 GOIJ.l,016) ' .-$1088 2-DOOR HARDTOP Automatic transmission, radio and heater . (151 DLF) $1088 ' ' '72 CHALLENGER BIG "6" Real clean. Full factory equipped. (196FFH) $1988 '68 PICKUP DODGE Nict. ·31peed trans., radio, heater. (09362K) • I ' • I 'I • l I .. ' •' • :..,, l ' • ' .. ~~~ .. ~ ·~·~, SIPT. 1hll~ 1t111· .. , ou~. ~,. · 1 ~·~¥tW 1$ •GPD Af 601:-J PIOM COAST TO. COAST I ·v .. ' er'1 door1t•p. H•r.'1 wlty. . ' For tit. fii-lt •J(I cl•Y• .,. 2,-000 111'1 .. yow 'Ford D••l•r jt•~r•~• to ·P•Y IOl'l.· fw. •nv M•[or rtp1in. · For tile 111ri 2~ mo11tft1, yo11r Ford De•ltr 9u1rtn• fet1 • 1·5 % •cll1couftt on Nptir•· COYtrM ul'ldtr" th1 ntw A·I W1rr111ty, You 9•+ A·I pt'Ot.ctiOfl wh•n yo11'r• 011t of towPI fool In '"'Y St•f• of t+I• Union yo11'1! fincl ptrlici· p•ti119 fo'ni',0.tl.,... wflo wlll pr'O~ptly tiid co11r+.· 011dy ho110' th., 24 "'ontlll pr0Yi1ion of yo11r A· I Wttttnfy. ' Come'••• ~ur 1eltctio11 of 'A·f'~n•nt...i u1td ct"6 f!Xltyl> Y(1'r1 A· I' W1;ran.., hetdqutrt.r1 In ttii1 .,4 .•• +ti. clltl111'1h~ where you lot¥ttV•Ut worrlo1 011 our ~oont.I!· •• -' . • • 1 • TEST DRl)t'E PINTO FdR '73 TODAY! . , GE"r·BACK T'O'THE BASICS· WITH A ·.· .. . . '· ' . '· . FINAL CLEARANCE '72 TRUCKS ·NEW 1973 FORD . ' DRASTIC DISCOUNTS ON EVERY '72 LEFT IN INVENTORY - e BRONCOS . e f.. lOO's GRAND PRIZE WINNER! .. COURIER MORE FOR YOUR DOlLAR ,., .. .:J,'heodore Robins Sr. looks on as son "Bob" Robins presents the key of a brand new P i n t o to Mrs. Doris McClary of Placentia. The car, which was loaded with groceries, was the gr a n d p r i z e given during the dealership'S r e c e n t 51st Anniversary Celebration. Fifty other valuable prizes· · Were awarded to lucky win- ners during the event. $209900 T·BIRD SALE 4 AVAILABLE-'61, '68. & '71 MODELS '68 CHEY. CAMARO H.T. Factory equipped, good miles, Weaken~ Special. IVVB398) 51050 '71 LTD 2. DR. HARDTOP ~:...:=:v ;.:~;:1o~:~:::; ·s259· ,. :coo,.ditioning, good miles. 1120- CMKJ' '66 ·MERCURY 10 PASSENGER Commufer. Wagon. Full power, air cond., roof rack, good mile1. ISJF5l61 • ·s750 .· 4 cyl. OHC eng., 1800 CC Disp.,· 4 speeci· al sync. trans, dual hyd. brakes, individuoi front coil spring suspension, I '400 lb. p.y !Qacl. · ·WAGON SALE 10 AVAILABLE-'62 to ~72 MODELS -··-~·~t•r· _ DAMOl.lo a•70 .LTD 2 9 --. &MIL hlll ........ ~ ~~ltJAell. 6 6 '70 Y.W. WESTPHALIA Camper with pop top. Good miles. New car trade-in. (453- BNV I ~ t249.6 . '64 INTL SCOUT 4 W.D. VB, roll b~r. Wagon. Hard to f;nd. 1210AOXI MAKE '1 0FFER '69 AUSTIN AMERICAN 2 o.. 4 :). .. d, good m;I••· s796 Green w i t h bleck interior. l672ADYI 4 TO CHOOSE FROM '69 & '70 GALAXIE & 'LTD's . llAM•LI• '6t LTD $1596 .................. ............. :::~ .......... .,4"-! ............. au:' .. 4JIJ , ~ .: l 9 • '69 SHELBY COBRA GT ·soo • speeJ,: ra:dio •rid'h•-.ter, pow- er steer~9' new ,,.int: ( 170- ASG J :',so • • ' I '69 TOYOTA CORONA ' . Sedan. Radi,o, haeter, eutom•· tic, i1 ir conditionin9. Good mile1. IYBU830J 51050 '66 PONTIAC WAGON ' C.taHna 4 D•. V8, •ad;o, heat-sa· 96 er, eutom•tic, power steering, •ool ••ck. ITEY7081 .>: 'im'i.iA"EltfCKt2 DOOR . .,.. ,,,,, :~ .W\.., ~ •. '69 FQR-D 'FAIRLANE V8 , ·•d;o, hHI••, aulo., P.S., s1296' air cond., 9ood miles. 1223- '66 CHEY. CHEYELLE·. Fact°'y .. ~.;~e·~·-v;ny1 ;ool, · $1396' 9oocl' miles. {269EIEI ' DIJI ., . I I it · cylinder, · autom1tic, radio, heater, new p•int. (SVY4761. Good miles. .~· ---... ---" _..,..,_, --a.Alllautl - PAln • IUftCI HOUIS , _.f l .. M-. , __ ,,., .......... 'I i 1 .. ·5796 • (j San Cle111enie Ca VOL 6$, NO. 301, o4 SECTIONS, '48 PAGES ' ORANGE COUNTY, C>,.LIFORNIA - Today's Final N.Y. Sto«!ks FRIDAY, OCTOBER 27, 1972 TEN CENTS Witne·ss:e.s Testify at Clemente Officer Trial By JACK CHAPPELL Of .. o.ltr ""' ...... Estimates of high police car speed and denials ol beer drinking wero made by witnesses T~y at lbe misdemeanor manslaughter t'.rlal of Gary Adam's, San CJem.ente patrolman, involved in a fatal tJ:alllc colliAlon. · . . A11oung pasaenger in the pick-t.1p truck Involved In the death crash with Adams' police car told the Laguna Niguel Munlc!pal court that none of the youths ar. Processing Plans Told ForPOWs SAN DIEGO (AP) -American priaoners oC war 'released after an end to the flghling In Vfelnam will be fiown to one ol. three processing sites In "Gaam, the Philippines and Okinawa, it was roported today. 'In • copyright story. the San Dttgo Unloo'llllid the llefenae lleputmeol'I qi OlliCw far POW ,UU,, Ill:. Jlogor Shields, ouWned a '.....dm. under wlllcb Nleuod !.'OWi Wllrloiiiiidn II\ the -untll~~~to ~-to tit& Uolted states. "It could be.-. 10 days .. -..... ljepend!ng on hla health coodlllGlll and the doctors' rocommendatlon, • the paper quoted a mUitary official. A processing cooler bas been chosen for each POW, the r<port said: Ou ar- rival be will receive a new uniform. any ribbons and medals be caroed and iJ>. fonnaUon about hll family. The center w1ll have d o c t o r s , chaplains, legal erpens, psychlatrlsts (See PRISONERS, Page Z) Border Officials Grab Marijuana The U.S. Border Patrol dlwlged 'nntrs- day that another large seizure of mari· juana was made at the San Onofre Checkpoint at midweek -a haul of 123 kilos with a street value of $27 ,000. It was the latest in a growing number of .marijuana busts at the alien check· poir1t a few miles south of the San CJemenle city limits. The latest ooe was the offshoot of a roullne immlgraUon check Wednesday olghL Wbeo pstrolmen opened the trun1t ol the car they said they noticed the llrong odor gtvm off by the Ulegal weed. • They arrested the driver of the car, Stephen Grant, 22, of· Capitola, along with his wife, Elizabeth, 20. 1be couple was turned over to U.S. CUstoma agents along with the %70 pounds of marijuana allegedly anuggled In from Mesico. Halloween Party Set in Clemente A Halloween psrty opeu to all boys and girls will be sponsored at the South Coast Ar.a Boys Club In San Clemente Tuesday nlgbt under llpollaOnbip of the SO.th Coast Jaycee1. Games. a spook bouae, refreshments and coolelts will be held at the club starl!ni al 7 p.m. EaCh child attending must wear a ®'" tume .and the donation Is 25 cents per famlly. 'l1te Jaycee sponsorship iS the flnt of the annual party at the popular club. McGOVERN DUE IN ANAHEIM Democntilc prosldential can- didate Geotae S. McOovern wlfi be in Orange County Saturday and will addross a brel.ltlast meeting at 8 1.m. at Disneyland Hotel In Anaheim. For dotalil, aee O. C. Hustinp' column today an Page. t. , .• j in the truck bad•drunlrbeer lust prior to the crash May :IS. "We were drinking 7·Up," Wllllam Schutz said. Tbe yooths admitted that the truck carried "a Uttle over" tliree case.a of beer, but denied that any beer waa being drunk. . The collialoo bet~ the police car and. the pick-up truck 'l'llllllted In the death ol ooe of the -"'· Jell Bdtt, IS, of Long Beach who bad been r1d1ng in the rear of the truck. The bo11, ·""1 been • I No North Sorties bound far !:an Onofre beach. Skidmarks left by the potlte vehicle in- dJcated a minimum speed o( rn miles per hour, testHJed George Platfoot, an Anabe.lm Police Department traffic in- vestigator. Platfoot, an expert in skidmark IJ1l]y>is, oald skids left by'the police car would be .~ual to those left by the~ebi cle traveliog 61 mlles per hour, but not Involved in an accident . Laird Announces Halt in Bombing LONDON (AP) -US. Defense Secrotary Melvin R. Laird announced to- day that American warplanes have baited ali bombing operatio!ll ol. North Vietoam above the 2001 parallel Laird apoke with newsmen after a meel\nl of 1"e North Atlantic AWabc<'1 that "we would 4" military activities north of the 20th parallel." Laird confirmed that these activities have stopped. "We are f)yjng no sorties ncrtb of the 20th parallel," Laird said. The officer said be was not qualified to testify on the amount of energy absorbed in the crash. Platfoot's testimony was attacked by Adama' attorney Gerald Williams, who pointed out that the skid tests were made nearly tl)ree weeks alter the crash and the road may have had a blgher resistan· ce to later skidding. Williams said with the curing or the thoroughfare which had bee."l slurried just a month prior to the crash, the skids cou.Jd be different. Platfoot had taken a like police car and skidded it on the foadway to produce data for his investigation. Platfoot agreed that the more recently slurried road would be more slippery. Platfoot also said that there was oo way of telling exactly what the resistance of the road was to skidding on that day. The young passenger of the truck told South Chino s •• ~~~.thetimt..i States 1101 ts~ --m'sd.• ....... u.. ~ but ~tbouglr ~ mines to llalpbong harbor ·are Included in the U .s. military tclivJU..north If; theJIOth parallel, Laird -tG . when -mines mlll!t be ~ or boW .lonJ the '~~· ~il//J'l/J, would taka. . -• ~-M!w~~ da1 lll;Olid ~"";;:t;;; ~ A. .. 'i'il."f;.. told ..... eonf-the Uolted",iitates Informed North VietDalD "" -,...,_. -~ ule sub-stance ol Ibo i.tesl . Vietnam peace moves which ~ allaibed u .. lerious, sensitive and 1lplficaat." "' Laird ts reb!l'Dlnl to IV asbingtoo later in the day. • · , • Man Commits .Burglary To Get Home-Prison McAl$STER, Okla. (UPI) -'Ille warden of the stale prlaoo and the dls\rlct attorney In Tul!a both tumed down a request from ex<an George J. Bamberger, 46. He wanted to return to bis "home" in prllon. Bamberger, who bu been out of prison only 55 days In 12 years carried the clothing be oeeded !<>< the trip baclt to prison roceotly Into the ~ct al- tomey's office and confessed to a number of unsolved. crimes. He held out his bands tl be handcuffed. But prosecutor Frank Hagedorn said Bamberier bad dooe nothlnr wrong. "He ubd us bow be could be aent back fOI' four yean," Hagedorn &aid Thursday. "We told him there was DO ...... to send h1m back. "Then, be asked ii we would put him back lf ne did commit a crime. "We said yes, but asked not to do anything for that reason 'because be might get lllrl. Something might go wrong. "Bui be wsa happy as a !art, and ti>ld UI he'd be aee\t!i'UI later." SUnday nigh!, Balnl!erger broke Into a tavern, calied the po!lce and' told them a burglary WU going 00. He walked outside and waited for authorities with hla bands in the air. Bamberger turned down offers of a jury trial or mental tests, asking instead that be be sentenced hnmediately. Thursday be got his wish. Wbeo be went beforo Distrtct Judge Raymond W. Graham , Bamberger said he wanted to return to prison 110 be could complete an art course be started before he was released several weeks ago. He sakl he won second prize with his first prison shetcb. When Assistant District Attorney Mll:e Barkley rocommended the four-year sentence, ~berger told the judge. "I would sincerely appreciae It U yoo would sentence me to that." "It ls with distaste that I'm required to adhere to your wishes," Graham said. "lt'1 a simple act of burglary. I'm dlssaat~ed With the proepeeta. I have, however, no choice but to protect society from this type ol. behavior." . "Thank you1" Bamberger said. "I'd lib to retum to prison. 1be world bu changed an awful lot." I Pattern Of Control J ....... -rro11ac1 by ~et Cong and/or North Vletnome• for<"'• UPI ......... FIGHTING CONTINUES AS PEACE Pl:ANS MAPPED Map Shows Areas Held by South Vietnam, Communists Enemy h1creases Attacks On South Popula~ed Areas SAIGON (UPl) -In appareot ao- ticipation of a cease-fire, Communist troops stepped-up their attacks on populated areas throughout South Viet- nam today, capturing two villages and threatening two major towns within ~5 miles or Saigon, military sources said. Though sporadic and widespread, Com- munist rorees carried ou. 124 attacks in the 24 hours ending at 3 a.m. (PDT) to- day, the most since the Tel offensive of 1968. Th ~ U.S. command said two Americans were killed nnd four wounded during the stepped-up £1ghting around South Viet· nam. Viet Cong and North Vletnames~ sold- iers captured two ·haml eta on French-built Highway l northwest of tbe capital early today and though under counterattack by government reinforcements, the at- tackers held their positiom. The villages are 20 miles and 30 miles northwest of Saigon, and sit at the edge or the traditional Communist infiltration route from Cambodian b o r d e r sanctuaries. Soggy Quakers Arrested Southeast of Sllgon, Communist troops surrounded Dat Do and Xuyen Moc district (county) capitals and fought their way through the lines of militia defenders to wlthltl 1,000 yards of the centers of both townl. 15 Plunge .Into Ocean Trying to Stop Warship BJ JC"" ZAU.ER Of .............. -Fifteen wetsuit.clad J*lfiltl were ar· ...ied Thun<lay after plWlllfnl Into the ocean lo an efJort to stop tl>e -11,900-ton assault lhlp SS Dulutl> from lea•in( Seal Beach Naval W poo1.stat!<Jn, Police and 'harbor autborlUe1, Uling five boats, were requ'lrtd to remove demonstratora from the path ol the Duluth, ao amphlbloua v-1 bound for an und1aclOled port. Four Orange Countlanl, a 111-yeaMid man and a 1$-yW'Old gJrf Weftt .... those jailed in the third .......... blockade" try thla year for a·• ropn!Wlllng tho American P'ilendi Service Commlltee, • Quakel'afflllated organization. '"--lrom Crance Qiunty • wero Claudia Jo Goodwin, 20, of 1105 CrMtvlcw Ave., Seal Beach; John Frederick M111geis Ill, 20, ol 181132 Butler SL , lrvlne: aod Mlchael Tr1iub, 19, of S17 Ooldenlod Ave.. and 'nmot)1y C • Whlamon, 11, of 700 llellotl'OllO Ave., both ol c.rooa de! Mar. Othen arrested Include PaUI Sykes, 43, Santa Monica: Sherri Siegel, 29 , ToPl!tlta: Steve Ruston, D, .itadeoa; Bob Levertna, 28, Pasadena: Franklin . Zahn, M, Oaremont; PhU Bentr.otl, 14, Santa Monica : C2Jarles Swtll, 14, Santa llloqj<o; Nancy Peru, L4o Ao!Jelm; Ann ~!(Dey. of Sant• Monlce , and Sbirfam MICbe!in, 21, Puadena. A Navy apokesmM said after lbe Ir> cldent that the Duluth bad esperienced no delay deoplt. the fact that aomo pro. terton were able to awtm wttbln a few \ yards of her hul1 as she exited Anaheim Bay. The IS P.Stifists were arrested on a varlcly of charges including unlawful as.w:mbly, failurt to disperse. bringing unaut.boriied •eseell Into a harbor, ianc1 trespMting. In oddiUon, tho juvenile girl we.s charged with res.l11ttng arrest. By midnight Thursday, the 14 adults had beon rtle~sed on baD 'ranging from '250 to $500. The glrl was released Into custody of her father. The nine men, nve women. and one llrl demonstnlors began their llM:afied bloc:Ude about 3 p.m. a1 the Duluth was preparing for depsrturo. ThN!e small aluminum craft, each with · four pwenger1, pulled into the nar· ,,....,1 part of the Anaheim Bay channel. (See QUAllERS, Paae I) I • Oat Do, 45 mllel aoutbeast of the capital, Wll! captured mce for 10 days by the Communists last April during their spring oUcnalve. Both it and Xuyen Moc, M miles 80UtheatL of Saigon, are In Phuoc Tuy Provlnce, a resort area when there la no fighting. Phuoc Tuy was "pscilled" by Auatrallan for«1 before they pulled out last year. 'In the air war, lhe U.S. command aald 8 U.S. Air Force F4 Phantom wu 1hot down today by antlaircralt nre over North Vietnam. The two crowmen psracbuted Into the Gulf of Tookln Ind were picked up by hellcopttr I l m.lles northeast of the Demliit>rl%ed Zooe. • U.S. ll(ibler'bomben attacked North Vietnam "more than 10 Umes Thurldly. lligh-Oying Bs.Z bomben joined the alrstrike.I with nine wavea, all of them over the lower Panhandle. the U.S. com· tnand reported. lhe court of Judge H. Warren KnJgbt that he had seen the patrol car just prior to lmpsct. The truck was heavily laden with firewood and camping gear he said, bot he denied the wood was packed above the sides of the vehicle. Two youths were sitting in the back, be said. He testified that the truck 1topped at a stop sign before entering onto EJ Camino Real. Residents Say Caspers Not Helping By JOHN VALTERZA OfflleDlllYPllet ..... Leaders of a large group of Capistrano Beach residents, battling to save 16 acres which they insist is a public park, plan a meeting Monday with County Supervisor David Baker, "because our o w n supervisor has ignored us ." Capistrano Beach land surveyor Frank Rainey and others plan to bring tbeir riles of documents and CO?TeSpOOdents to Baker's offices early Monday afternoon to meet with the District Two supervisor who Initially was responsible (or brillging the. park Issue before the board. Rainey and otfiers have claimed oflei that Ftllb District Supertilor Ralald C8spen bas refused to meet with them per900ally, and bave cJaJmed that Caspers' stall has been "of lltUe help!' The issue revolves around old maps and other documents ft1ed with the COWl· ty showing the 16 acres at the upcoast edge of the PaHsades as a public park. Plans currently are before supervisors to transform the acreage into a major condominium complex with t 11 e developer's offer of the construction of a small view park overlooking Dana Harbor. Rainey and hundreds of others, however, claim they have proof that the land was intended for public park use and awrt that transactions placing the property ln private bands decades ago were "irregular." Baker's staff today said that It was their initial study of the development Is- sue and a proposed abandonment of a county road on the coastal property th8t kept the issue from being routinely psssed by the board. "U we hadn't taken this off the consent calendar, this thing would have been routinely passed by the rest o[ the board," said a Baker aide, Dick Ruiz. Letters to their own supervisor have been sent repeatedly by the grouop. "We've tried many times to meet with Mr. C&spers." Rainey said this weet, "but we can't ever get the chance. "We only want bim to come down to look over the area and sil down with ta to bear what we've worked so hard to find out about the problem," he added. Corrospondence shows that Cupen' initial suggestion to the residents was to bring their case beloro the Capistrano 18ee PARK, Pap %) Orange 1t'eadler The weatberlady lel!f a poai- billly of sprlnkfes through S..tur- day, becOmlng •liihtly warmer thll weekend wi th hlgbs ol ea at the beochel riling to 75 !nland. Lows tonight ~7. INSIDE TODAY Paul l.curcmce Dunbar, ton of slaves who became the poedc ipokcrman 0/ tho bfa<:k Amm. con , Ir being honornl bu UC !Jo. vin Ezl<...,,. 1Dith the /crur do» crn"""lol «lebrotfo•. Actor oJtd athoktr RosCOC' Lee 8ro1DM !Dil l rtad hfl -""· S•e todol/'1 Weekender. ' • .. OAJLV PILOT SC Merger of Water Districts Urged by D~ector ' Dy BARBARA KHE:IBI Cll Voorbe.11. Trindle lltld Nelson tVTN ), in °' .. 06llY ,11tt '"" its critJcal examination or SCCWD prob-CharJ!na that dlreetori of tbe South lcms, said the merger could result 1n an 1..,1guna lani:11ry Olstrlct h1:1\'c refuM.od to iumual savina of $10,000, a fla\u'e that dtSC\JSS .:1 recoinnlt•ildcd 1ncrgcr with the tw been questioned by .sanltar)' Dnl South COC1st County \Valer l)tstrict, pres:ldent Clay MltcbeU. SCCWD director Robert l>111yt'r has Suire thf' study was completed in July, rct-on1mrndcd th.at the dlstri('I l:Jk{• steps .'1!\crnpts to JX•rsuade directors of the hi resolve the Issue ~an1tarv chstri~·t to di1'C'u" the 1ncrgl'r t-.1crgcr ur 1hc 11vo d1str1tt~. 1vh1ch lia\e bt-1·n unsuccessful, according to share officr spa<.'<' nnd i;l•Jlt•ral nu.u1agt•• 1)1l'}'l'r. n11·nt. wns the 111aior 1·rcon1n1l•nd:it1011 in Hcvicwulg lhc problcrn 111 the Oclobcr ;i sludy of 1..hstr1tl 01>eralions n1:1de f1>r n11'rting of l~ SCCWD boord, Dy,·yl'r 1ht• wUtl·r diiltrlCt board this ycrir . notL'<! that the fir:it auempl to invoJ v~ the The 1ndepe_nd_e_nt_cng11~_,,_ri_ng f1r~m_o_r __ ,._· n1_1ar __ :_v_boa_r_d_r_am_•_d_ur_1_ng_111<_co_u_r_s_e_• · Wait a Mi1111te! T\relve "'omen. being train ed in the Nav~·s fire fi ghting school at the 1'rea.::ure Island Naval Base in San F'rancisco. participated in a f1ref1~h ll ng rle111onstratio11 this 1veek. \Vhat held up the proceedings? !111/ody 's C'Otffure. ot course. Youths' Soccer Leag11e Planned An initial meeting for South Orange Coast boys over 10 yean old intertsted ln an organized soccer activity will be he.id Saturday at the South C.oast Area Boys Club in San Clemente. Tbe 1:30 p.m. session wiD ~ opm for parents as wtU because oli a g1'!lt need for adult participation and le:ade!'!ftip iJl'I the annual soccer league. Boys Club manager Mike Brady SB.id even boys "'ho never have played 3QCCer before are welcome. Included in the program wl\1 be Jn· struction in the fundamentals of the in· ternational sport. Complete information on the activity is available by calling 492--0376. Sierra Clobbers Meet on Coast Orange County's branch of the Sierra Club will hold its first meeting alon,g the South Orange Coast Thursday . offering a program which will include a presen. talion on mountaineering. Ben Lindenstei n. chairman of the club's basic mountaineering trainin~ course. will explain the !!port and demonstrate equipment at the meetlng - u·hich starts al 7:30 p.m. at ~farco Forster Junior lligh School '• auditorium. Llndenslein has trained 1,000 novice mountaineers. Other events at the meeting well in· elude discussion of Sierra Club activities such as camping trips and ecology and welcome, said prtsidenl Randy Bosch. OlblNGI COAST K DAILY PILOT "rl'le Or..,._ CN&t DAILY PILOf. wl"' Midi 1, comol-!flt N ...... p""'· 1, PVfll1"'-11 ty !he O•~ (0.11 Pvtlti1lll"1 Con'OP&"Y. ~ r1 .. 9dlllotlJ l •t PYIMl1ll..i, M.....i1y tllrovoft l'tld•Y, tor Co\!• Mtu, Nt .. POrl •t~ll, M111<!1 ... lon 1!11<1H:lll~-!1l11 Vlllty, l•Ovn• ... ,,,. tr .. 1ne1~1M1K-,.,. S•~ ci.mtMtl Sin J,,,.11 (l(lltltl-A l ll>Qlt Ff<.l•Ol'l•I edlllOn 11 Pll\lllll'>td •1h1td1y1 "Iii S""°lf\. The prlMIPtl PYll!!1lll119 pllnl I• •t llO W~JI 1•¥ ~lfHI, CMI• Mtll, (llltotnt.. tJt», Jl:oli1rt N. W1M Pr11111en1 11111 POll!OI..,.... J 11lr: JI:. Curl1., Vk1 ,.,_ldt1'11 11111 Gtntrtl M11119tt Tho"''' IC11vil li!llor illoMtl A. Mur,.hi111 Mtl\llflrlt e.i- Ch1rl11 H. l1ot Rl~ll••• P. Nill Aullltlll M.11\ff\"' llll1WI ,.. C11..-.. Offk1 JOS N1rtll El C1F111l111 Jl:t•I, ,2672 .,_ Offluo C..I• MIN: .QI Wtll .. , $1 .... 1 "........, flldl: un ,..,,,..., ... lt'f*111 H-~ 9Hefll IPVJ •H<ll ltlMYtrlll ~ IMdl! m ~ornt ,.,,,_ ,.,..,.._ 1714) 642..flfl Cl-"'"1 AMrtt .. 6424671 S.. C ........ A• Dt•••I-.. ! Yak•••• 4f1Mlt C......'9flt. ltll. Ot..... CMd l'VlllllMtll -r· ... ...... .... 111"''''\ofll· 1111111111'111 Mt., It' HY'frtl"'""'IS ...... """ ... ,~ wllf!WI "'9'111 ""' Ml.dM If *Yfllflf -*'• • ....... itltlll ,.. .... NW 11 c.ft Mttoe, c.tll~fai. ..._,l_.ltn lw CMT1lr UM _... • .,J W !Nii •>.II fl'IOnrfllYI Mfflt11y .. ,1 ... 111N Sf .. ll'IOl!tll~. From Pagel QUAKERS ... As the Duluth !"eared them, they dove in t~ watef' and swrun tawa.-d the &iant veslltl At t.he .:::u:·:? !lme. the three remaining protesters ctimbed under a barbed win: f{'.OC'e on the [JUb)lc beacn immediately nonh of the ha:rtJcr and began movtng down the be.acb lOWlll'd the same narrow ~tbecloumel. ~ authorities and officials. ap- pliler!lty with advance warning on the pro&esa , unmedialPJy swung into action as wctsun-c.lad Seal Beach Uteguardl dn\!e from boats to forcibly remove pro- lestors from the !)11th of the vessel. :0.{canivhile, un1rormed security police chased the other three protesters down the Jbore. and lntcr waded tully-unifnrm~ ed into the surf. waving their billy-clubl abnve their heads, in an effort to ap- prehf!nd them. Sa1lon lineO Lbe starboard side of the Duluth, watching tbe whole operation. When the last protettu w;l$ picked up t~y gave a loud cbett. A spokesman for t~ pACifists said the pllJ1)0Bt or the dtmcwatranon QI to J1ft>' mote plhtfc: awareness that weapon1 ce shipped from Seal Beach to ~ Capo's Planning 'Sta£ r to Get Reinforcements San Juan Capistrano's ~teged plan- ning :stair C1f one will AOOn receive some badly needed heir ln processing the flood of l:WJ.o;iness at city hall -"rented" ataff 1Jf a Tu~tln pla.Min g firm hired to pllch in on office dutiel as well as add to the! city general plan. Coul'lcilmen agreed to hire the firm of llaworth and Atldtnon at 11n ::rnrrual fee not to excted M0.000 to assist In both planning functJOM. The expense waa authorized after the council agreed that the one-man pla.nnlng staff could no longer hondle the flood of development buslneia that has come to th.: city In recent months . Staff of the con!ulting !Inn wlll begin working "In a matter nf n few days,'' City Manager Donald Weidner told ooun· cilmen. The office help will he the first function or the planning firm. After a contract review In eight months, councilmen will decide ii the general plan rcYifllen wlll be launched througb the same com)iny. GOP lncu 1nbent Sued by Rival SAN l>rEGO (AP ) -Democralle eon- ~ional candJdate Frank Caprk> has flied suit against Republican lncumbent Bob Wilson, accusing WllJOn of 1bua1ng hls coogrtulon.al malllng prtVilege. The suit, filed In U.S. Dlstrlc:l Court Thurllday, contends· two "Bob Wlbon 'Reports" newsletters, one before the June primary &ncl one lasl week, were malled •t public expense to promote the WllJOn campflign. Wiison said the JUlt was "clearly polillcal and part of the last-minute 1nonkey business of any elccllon ." !be otudy, whlll U was learned that !be mtJ'ltl' would be a major ......,. m<ndalloo. ,,,. li)vitatlolt to Pllllellllle ......... ~ed, 0...,.. 111t1: Willi llle llllltary board malntalnlng "they hod no r,rW- lems -any that exilted were ours. ' 1'he samt rc3ponse was made on com- plellon of t he study, although "almost JOO peromt of u1e changes which we n~de ns recommended by VTN applled to the operation of both dlslricl!," Dwyer continued. It was lhe feeling of the water board, he added. that while merger of the t"'O dlatrlctl would be Ill the beet llll-al lbe people -"' both, tbe people aLould be 1Iven a wlco Io lU matter, by me&nl or • public hiearina. Staff U\ley conciucted to gather in-- fonnallon for a mettlna with homeowner!! r~ulted in compllatlon of rour pages of reasons ror the merger and qnly a page 11galnist, Dwyer said, and a further in- vftatlon to discL ; the matter was sent to sanitary board president Clay Mitchell on Aug. 16. This time he agreed, and a Joint rneetlng was aet ror Sept. 27, but it later was called oll, by unanlmouis vote of lhe sanlLUy ~ whicb "allmlned the door in our facel," OW,.. repaned. In u In-irhJ> the DAILY PILOT today, Mitchell hlarllled the sanlLUy board's reasons for clecldltt11 aga!nlt 4.Jscussion of the merg~r proposal at this tfme. . "The study conducted for the water board claimed $10,000 a year could be saved by the merger, but In no way :showed how It could be &aved," said Mitchell . "It referred to fewer dlrectorc' fees. but thls actually would not be achieved. Righi now both boards bold monthly meetings lhal last tltroa to four Planners OK Guidelines Clemerite Approves Stiff Statemerits for Projects San Clemente planning commissioners \Vednesday formally settled on an elaborate 16-point set of stiff guidelines for environmental impact statements for major development. then approved four such statements for separate projects. But the one, key development en- meshed in the impact-statement con· lroversy remains in limbo -the ad- ditions to Presidential Heights and im- provement of A venida San Pablo to serve the new houses. Commissioners agreed that because the statement for !hat project was su~ milled only a few hours before the m('(>ting . they would postpone any action unti. a ne1v panel of city department heads could eveluate the statement. The new rules set up an elaborate list o! requirements for the slatements, in- cluding a summary of the Possible Im- pact on the evirooment from a project, an inventory of environmental features and the listing or "unavoidable effects" or the project. Other issues which the: statements must address include the relationship between a short-tenn disruption to the en- vironment and the longterm effects. The developer also must I i s t alternatives to the proposed project. Councilmen, however. have the optioo to take up specific matters at any time, and they also can hear appeals of plan· ning commission decisions on tbe statements. lt is certain that they will become directly involved in the statement af· feeling the San Pablo road extension. The council agreed. last week to postpone any action in the controversy untll the commission wrapped up the guldelllle process. Local residents along san Pablo have banded together as a homeowner's association and hired Laguna Beach lawyer William Wilcoxen in an attempt to block the construction of the road ex· tension to serve the massive housing development inland of the city golf course. City officials had settled on the San Pablo route last year after months of debate and marathon hearings. Since then, however, San Pablo residents have simmered about the road choice, despite the appearance on the city master plan, designated as a major collector allowing access to tbe back country. Residents insist that alternate routes are better. Other alternates, however, have drawn similar violent protests from other citizens. 'Supervised Referendum' Thieu Counters Proposal For Peace With Own Plan terference" ln Soulh Vietnam in the past. "'""" Obvlotllly It would nol ba -!Me to ,.,., thllomt>ch mwi-In • alrcie meellng of a combined board, "' K foold be necesaary to have two meetinga a mouth and that would wipe out the sup- J!oatd aavl114J." l/nder ot1te law , Mitchell ,.Id, sanitary board directors receive $40 a meeting and water board directors get $50. The financial aspect, however, Is not the prlnelpa! Issue, Mltehell said. "We are now ln the midst of setting up the Aliso Water Management District, which ls c:ompletely removed from the local water district, sj.nce it does not ~ die sewage. "Wt (the sanitary district) have participated In lhJJ uglonal plan from lhe beginning and our board is. oom- pletely informed on every aspect of it. ''This is no time even to think of a merger, because it is essenUal for our board to concentrate on the problems and plans involved in the steady growth lo the south of us. Our interceptor lines and treannent plant will have to be enlarged and we will be participating in the new 9CCRn ouUall. "Al some time in the future it would perhaps be logical to think of a merger, bul not during this period or growth. "We can't cut down on the activity of our board, which lncldentally has been able to make savings amounting to hun- dreds of thousands of dollars by being thorough in its studies. And there seems no reason to consider it if there is no noticeable saving to the taxpayer." Already the two districts share office space, tbe direction of a general manager and much equipment, Mitchell noted. Two directors, Nor man Anderson and Harold E. Edwards, served on both the , water board and the sanitary board. In his report to the water board, Dwyer said the merger question could be brought berore the Local AgenC'; Forma- tion C.Ommission (LAFC) by petition and from there referred to the Board of Supervisors for a public hearing. I I r I Besides the guidelines, the com· missioners also tightened up the review process for the statements ooce they are ftled . Boeh such statement will he submitted lo a panel of city deparlmenl heads who then will review tbe is.we! and tbeo ma.kt a remnnnendatiorl to the planning eommmm SAIGON (UPI) -President Nguyen Van Thieu said today there will be no peace in South Vietnam until he signs a treaty himself. He countered the Hanoi-Washington nine-point peace pla.n with a proposal for or any combination of two or more coun- to decide the makeup of a new Saigon government. "We have not agreed on anything yet and yet the Communists boasted that there will be a cease-fire and are prepar~ ing for it," Thieu said in a speech to pro- governmenl legislators at the presiden+ tial palace. Sclimitz Says Vietnam Allies Stab.bed in Back ( 1 U lbe commissir«J endorses the find. inp, the action is mmp&eted. PARK .... Thieu told pro-government legislators who marched to his downtown IDdependeoeo Palaee to show suPPQrt Co• the prw.ident that• favors :o. SouUi Viet~ -mettndttm tlO !be people could ...,_ their """ • h. .. The president ~ tbe United Nations gr IA7 combinatka of~ or mor-coun- Boy Pam 11111 Recrealion District. <>UW coulil """''!!! lhi ~(erendum. "We doll't ba~ too much faith .in that He" iropaed thif"' &:tgovemment be district." Rainey said. formed between lib a:ctministralion and TIM! district recently 3Bf'ed to oppose the Viet Cong aecordiDg to the percen- the proposed abancbnneot of the tage each side received in the referen· tolld\tay, boftver. The road i1 graded. dum. but riot paved, and leads to the edge of Thieu has hinted at such a referendum I.he blUfb and ~r view of the for several weets,but his proposal today coanline. was the first time he spelled out bis Idea. TM oppoaents to the condominiums The president has always insisted that planned bJ' the n.aa Bluffs Corporation only internationally· supervised elections based tn Newport Beecb, admit their oould replace his government, but laek of faith in the loeal parts dislric:l today's proposal or a referendum would however. ' not directly e~:ct anyone. It would in- The rancor stems from the district's stead allow the choosing or government earlier decision not to becane involved In officials by both sides. another battle to save allegedly pubUc "For once, .1obody could say that be lands for private development. controlled 99.9 per~ent of the_ peopl~, an~. Another nnall viewpoint in the same ~ ~d cl81Dl tw~thirds either, area -again ooce eannatted for public Thieu Sa.Jd. . ue -faeed thrtat of development last It wu an obvlOUS reference to the spriftg.. three-sided coalition proposed by Hanoi Rea.ideals first went to the district for and Washington to take over the reins of help government. "But the hoard decided that the land Both the Viel Cong and North.Vie~~ and the little gazebo on It were not that have opposed any Uruted Nations m. Important to public use as a park and the district's $20,000 annuaI budget 'could not handle the expense of maintaining the mall structure," said the board's lawyer, William Wilcoxen. Caspers' involvement in the issue essentially has amounted to work by his top akle, .Tom Fuentes. tuentes was not available today to oomment on the strong i n t e r e s t demonstrated by Baker. The Irony, however, perslsta:. A large group of Ca!pen' constltuenl5 1n the Fifth District have admJtted that they are looking to another supcrvlaor for help. Peron Given OK To Make Return BUENOS AffiEs CAP) -Juan D. Peron'• way has been cleared for the foz:mer dictator to ·return to Argentina from exile in Spain next month. The government said Thursday night it authorized the Italian airline AlitaUa to fly Peron here Nov. 17. Peron has said repeatedly he plans to return to Argentina prior to national elections scheduled for March, but has 11ever aet a date. Peron, 77, was ousted by a coup In 1955 and hos lived In Spain since 1900. "We are not afraid of a cease-fire and the peace. t am sure It will come, but it will only come when I personally sign the treaty for a cease-rire and peace," Thieu Aid. ~'~ithout my signature It means it ltas not bttn agreed to by the people. '"The Communists can U!le 10 hands Mil 10 le(!> Jo sign lrt!aUes, b\rt '!/thou! my signature, It means there h3s' tiijen no tgn<ment by the peo.!'le," Thit\U Sllld. "It w11r i>e litvalld In South vteinam. 1 am not an obstacle lo peace. J'Tened the will of the Vietnamese people." · Thieu told the lawmakers, "I don't know what U.S. presidential adviser Henry Kissinger and the North Viet- namese have said to each other. I only know the stand of South Vietnam.'' 'Mlieu's speech followed by one day word from Kissinger in Wa.sbirigton that "pe2ce is at hand" in Vietnam and rinal agreement could come in one more ~ with the North Vietnamese. Radio Hanoi earlier Thursday broadcast terms of the agreement. Cost for Ma,>or Of Clemente's . Journey $448 A trip to Philadelphia late last week by San Clemente Mayor Arthur Holmes - to watch President Nixon ens.ct his revenue-sharing program -cost $4411.•7. City Finance Director ~raid Teacbo\lt said the costs, borne by the council's travel and training budget, were the complete tab for the flight t o Pennsylvania where hlttldreds of persons watched the President sign the bill whlcb returns millions of dollars to states, counties and cities. San Clemente gets ll27.000. The trip was author'2ed by fellow coun· cilmen, with one dissenter, Councilman Thomas. O"Keefe. The maorlty theorized that Holmes' presence at the ceremonies (answering a White House invitation) would serve to promote the clti' and acNeve publicity. GRAND RAPIDS, Mieh. (AP) -The American Party's candidate for the presidency has called the impending peace in Vietnam a "stab in the back for our allies ." Rep. John D. SChmltz of Tuslin uld Tl!u...iay the announcemeot that peace oopld be near was "a sellout and sqr-. render;" I I "President Kissinger's revelaUons con- tinue our sellout in Southeast Asia," Schmitz .sa\d. "Any such revelation one -. week before the election is tailored more toward the election than toward peace. U that's peace at all, It's peace of tbe grave," he said. Schmitz said he .referred to presiden- tial adviser Henry Kilstnger as "Presi- dent Kissinger" because "Henry Kiss- inger is the· de facto (in fact) President of the Unted States." Schmitz brought his IOY"·key campaign to Michigan Thursday and predicted he will do well In the state Nov. 7. Schmitz said he should do well in Michigan because it has a stroog an. tibusin,; plaUonn, Is against establish~ stronger gun control laws and opposes liberallz.ed abortion laws. From Pagel PRISONERS. • • and a friend in the same military branch, the Union said. 'nle lriend will escort the POW by air to the United States, to Travis and Norton Air Force bases In California and rrom there to ml!ltary oo.pitai., the newspaper said. "We plan to take them to the service hospital of his own particular branch of service that is nearest to his home," a Pentagon spokesman was quoted as saying. "Air Force patients would go to the nearest Air Force hospital and IO forth." Uthe hospital is in a different city, the military will Oy the POW's family there, the Union quoted the apc>kemum a1 saying. San Juan Scouts Hold Open House Boy ';coot Troop 176 or San Juan c;apistrano will aponror an operrhou.se camping session Saturday at the Old ~1\sslon Schon! playground to acquaint boys interested in scouting with the • troop's actlvitlea. ·N. Viets Want Peace Soon 'Mle ses!lon will last from 9 a.m. to 2 p.m. and will lnclude the demonstration of campaign 1kllls. Prospective member1 can ask questions about varioU1 3COUtlng programs. Marcos Nava, a new akte to the pro- gram, said tbat Mexican-American yoolltl In Ille community '"' esPt<lally welcome to the Saturday event. Blacks Face Action HONOLULU (UPI) -Slz blacks aboard the fleet oiler Ha.ssayampa lace courts-martial resulting h'om a racial br,;wl wbile the ship was at SUbtc Bay ln tht Philippines. A spokmnan for the commander lo chle.f of the P1c:lflc: Fl!M!t said Thursday that the rive men, between the age1 of 19 and !l, were charged with asanult ln connection with the llassayam- pa dlsturbnn« Oct. IS. Will Meet Witli Kissinger But See No Problems Now PARIS (AP) -A North Vietnamese spokesman lnsisted today that the peace agreement reached with the United Slates should he 1lgned Tuesday. Ile added that Hanoi negoUators would he wllllng to meet llenrY A. Kbslnger though "titenl are no remalnlllg ques- tions that need another meellng. "But U after the 11$ the agre& ment on Oct. 31, Dr. u wants to meet with Le Due Tho and uan Thuy to discuss problema of commcn Interest, we are ready. "The peace Is at lbe tip or a pen/' 1..4! said. ln!lstlng Lha\ the United Stat~ car- ry out the agreement to 1lgn Tuesday. l...e told a new1 oontertnce that "It was the president of the United States who proposed !be date of Ott. 31 ror the · signature." It wtts not preclaely clear whether he was maklng the signing of the agreenitnt a condition for another negoUattng session. In Wulllngtoo. pmldenttal prm sec"'Iary llonBid L. 1.i<gl" rdUMd to oomment on the North Vietnamese of· ficlal'• '1,ltelNlltta. Le said KW.1n1er referred Thursday to an "honest mlsunderstaDclinl" aboUt the dnte. Le said: "We don't believe there ls a mlsUn· derstandlng. It wa1 written black on white in a m'uage from the President on OCt. 20. '' "The U.S. side claims there nre still some things to settle. We con1lder this Ill ci pretex t to delay the slgntns of the ac- cord on which the two parties reached agrctment," Le s11Jd. He scolftd at what he said wtls Kill- inger'• need to compare texts of the ac- cord to clarity quest1ona of HngulsUcs. "This qucsUoo has t1lrcady been settled dcllnitely," Le said. lie tald that 1t a secret meeting on OCL 11 thll Onllhed 11 2 a.m. Ott. 12, up<rt tran!lators of both sides compared the text of th(l a1reement. tn another meellna: on the attemooo of Oct. 12, expttt1 o( the two sides again worked on the text In Vietnamese and En1ll1b, he a~ded. Le said tltot on Oct. 17 Kissinger and Xuan Thuy, chief of the North Viet. namcse peace delegation, "went over the text chapter by chapter. article bT article, sentence by sentence, word by word, There is no question or lingul.stlet pending." • • Y ot1r Ofle9'• WertJJ tooking at Social Security: Is It for or Against ~~or? '•' ._ SVl.VL\ PORTER .. T ~, r ,•, Do tho .... all-time hlih 'Social Security .tuea dlacrlmlnote against tho pcxr! ''.JI Ille "earning• tesl" • bia- °t'ant dl!Crlmloatloo In favor ol the rich! Wllol'a tile posltloo '~1.lhe ~wile! Alld isJt .kl!• tllal the loderal ~u.n~ -OW" Social _, • ~lribuHonS for . DOl>Sodo1 -~lji purpose1? ':,ti<t since \he Social Sec:urill' ,~ was created In th& 11'!1<>19.lOI, mo<e. than ·a g<nenlloo ago, bas U-been llllCb·lnleme de~1aboot Ila pniv~ ....., dlree- tlool and goala. And u n..sentan<I-~ ~ llji Is ... ~ rap-. "°"7"" idlY n o w to a vitally trnporlanl pension b a I e In, 1U. U.S. and Social Securltr ' . taxes oo both employe and employer will hll a landlnark U.7 pe....,t on a tteord Wll• baoe oext year. . WHAT, THEN, are tome of the 1111Wen! Q. Does the syatem dlsorilµlnate against the poor! A. There Is simply .. d .. nYlna that tile Social SecurilJ tU Ii a regrealvt tat -and the blgller the rate g..,, the m:>re obvioul this f I C t becomet. In 1973, the tu will rise to 5.85 peri:ent oo up to ·no,IOO ol wages., or to a ma$wn ol. . 1631.10 a year -paid both by employe end by employer (u agalnat 5.J percent on up to '9,000 "' wages or a maximum or $118, In 1972). Qu!le a luj?P y00 • earo $10,IOO, you'll pay 1831.80 end · H you earn ~,1,aoo,000, you'll alao pay 1631.IO. IF YOU ARE otruggJlng on a pey of $4;000; you'll pay a 5.85 percent tu in "IS end H IRVINI 'CAT' FACTORY -Owner Hobie Alter ~·~right). and builder Uoyd Ross aett) display artist's ; ~ndei'ing of pew facility. Mary Soderberg, "Miss ·,..Hobie ,Cat' lqunges on ~atamaran as Bart Brown of 11<-,Coldwell~ and C\). lf10lii on: , ' ..... ~ .,c 1 .-. Coast Catamaran Set r,.. .. "For Move to ,Jrvine r,. {, 1 A $LI millioo factory to eluding tbe new 12-foot Mooo- Cat In February. ' employ 300 penons In the ._racture ol lightwelibl ,...1ung catamarans b under ~D On wl l>Acre site ' ift. the neW cify of lrvine. Coast Catamaran Co r p. ::J11P.ers of the Hobie Cal will 1'l!iln production of boats Jn. 'Skytrain' : ·Air Trav.el Planned . LOS ANGUS (AP) -Tbe chalnnan of a Britlah sup- Pllme~ airline bu • an-niiunced plans !or a budget- minded, no frills New York·~ London "stytraln" concept to tap a new market of air travtlen. · Freddie Laker, cbairmarl and general manager of Laker !.All:wa11 Ltd., "8YS be en-~ !inp!eintlitettlln or the skytrafn, or air bus, concept .-• dally baslJ .. IOOll u Gftlted. "Slatea and BrjUsh tory ageqct .. glvo theh:' val:t' • An 87 ,000 square loot. plant iJ contemplated on half of the site at Z02ll'McGaw Avenue lo the Irvine Industrial Complex. Tbe firm aloo employs 125 penons in its present plant at 33012 Callo Perfecto, San Jusn Capistrano. Half d. the Irvine site will be reserved for future n:· ~S:W.a spotemnan for the Saff~D and McAdam Conslrucllon Co. ol Costa Mma -the bullden, and Martin Jones and Bart Brown ol .Coldwelf Baoker and Coll>' piey.1 ,ntilged' !or Ille ao-, qulslPOIL" coast Catamaran, launched In a Dana 'Poil\I Qu<msel Hut In . 19118 IJy aurfbqml .... trepreneur Hobie Alter and an ~~t~1:i' .::1'! net iooome ' of $%T1 ,255. ilaket, rtR IM Angelia recenily to lab delivery ol loin, Belly E. lllQ, con- .• ..,. of. two DCIO serte& ·10 silmer loans ofl!cer at~ ol widel>odirf,~ for Ult In the ·•-~ca'• C..la Mesa office skYlrllnt oald there would be,: ·-..,-' ti>< ......Vallons advertising Ill Ir k 1 Ill campall!i! or nrlrumum atay ~ ':'/t ~reID!"'la w1Cler the plan. .liai)k . Ho aald puae_ngers ,WOuld/~ .,.:: Hiii walk UP to boarding, counten ......i her ' any t!mt from alx houri ~ IO I h 1 ' l • mlnutea prior to ~ · !th purcllall 1 tlclcet cllm~···~ r w aboord and lake a ,.o.t, 10 91 ~ ( =.:; which .;rid. bO ' •rr'ab8!di-' ' at • Pou.' each. :.~ ~: 1 ;~ ~:~'I':~ be"lleated oa ~ to oCllcel-r.nt lwo -<0mparlaoci to ; ,.... NO . · •bout Ill!, whlcb .,. -"" She ••• i ~ hli.bond reside luxurloualy!bf major •Ir ...,. , In Colfa Meia, ' rlera oo DCtia.l'lll lakl.. Tfle . : • • •. certll.fed muiinurb !C1P.ldt1 ' r !or o DC10 Is '80 po.-...,_ N. B~ hU Llbr aald be would ali-t • -•promoted to ,!outhlm. penonl wbo llWAJI '!iift , Californta llalea ~ for wanted lo travel but ban not BA ·<ncl<er Cl•Jll"J• 1 na- been able to Jiord to bir of· ' Uonal printing 8l'9 packalinl feting air -bet....i '"' !Inn, . and $11t each wey. Tbe Mile Ht joined 1!>e company ailel' _.,Y !are on achlduled servlnc on tbe 111 .. alllfo of ll'!tw'Tork·Loodon dillbta CUI' Conttoental Can Compuljl and renU.v Is about 1270 one way. Fedel'al Plperi>olnl Company. ' • ' ' )'OU """!*,lat '400,000. )'OU'U ailO ,pay ~ 5.35 pen:eat tu (bol anJy.,, 'to $10,800). Bu~ ,11y Social SOcurU)I . . Admlnlsttatloo spoWtnen, u • • a counterballltd. Soc I a I ~'S~ Socurlty cull benefit• are a MAVI setN lit( LITTL far )llaher pn>portlon ol the l'ONI> ? • earnings ~ ~w lncome~~~~~~~~Amertcans than of hlgher In- come tupayefs. A very low htcome worker, !or in1ftan<ie, Is -tllgtb!e !or a retire-ment benefit amounting to more thao IO percent ol his earnlnp. Alld, they add, they cooalder the tu "In the nature of a premium rather than a tax." To me thla does not make thla regressive tu any IW regross!ve -and the tu will Tiny Sea Squirt Helpf1il? come i-.. -ing atlaclt' MIAMi (AJ!) -ScienUst>· at Q. DOES THE "earninga the Uiit•ersity ol Miami say test" favor tile, rich? the U]' 'to a potential medl<;!ll A. It lavora all tlioae elderly boozaDza may he locked Americans wbo bave nesteggs within the cells of ehe lowly on wb!cb .they collect Interest sea iqulri a tiny marlnt and divMlends: -for under the, creature f~ in Florldi'• law, thenl Is no Umtt m wbat they can collecl while ·111111 get-, lr<Jplcal watera. , ting every penny ol their . DI\ MJcbad. Siegel •!Id a Social Seairlty benefila. team ii microglolobista have In contrast, even under the discovered a-mlxture--o-f Uberallzecl provision which pulverized sqUlrls Injected Into became law last week, )'00 . cannot earn more. than $2,100 nuce_ is effective ~th in ~ In yoor retirement (up to age P-'"i the rejection o1 •kin 72) without starting to looe grafts and slowing ol grow1h beaeflts at. a rate of $1 in of cancer cella. befte!1ta loot !or •.very $Z earn-H ... ever, Sigel . warns, be ed orer $%,100. I . 1· tedi --' So, of course, in thl! sense acea a ong, oua ana the test favors the ricb. And perhaps impassable r o a d ,thla Is eq evei;i . lhOoib· Socl!'1 before It can be determined Security opolresmeo Insist tbai whether the sea squirt can the origtnol concept ol the ~w help save human lives, wu to Jll'(llfct the worlier agalllll Joas· of earned Income e Zoo BafJles due to old age, disabllllji, etc. The l)'llem didn't even con- sider unearned lncorne. Al.90, spokesmen say, any other at- Utude would penalize the .. prudent saver." Q. . WBA T'S TiIE pooliloo of the workirc wile? A. I've been fighting llils one for 10 long that I'm aboost ready to concede defeat (but not quite). Al a won:tng wife, you are eligible for full retirement benellts based m your former ~-.and l•JC .,..,. trlbo-; yon are entitled to fuJJ iliability Insurance . pro- teotlon ' durlnC your yoonger years (unlib the llOl>'WOl'idng wlle): at your des.th, your survlvon become eligible !or monthly beneflls based on your earninp. You get whichever la the higher ~t -'your oWn hued OD your earningJ or what's payable on your hwlband'a eeminp. . Alld jl you got the benefit baled on your blsband's pay, wbat happens to all tbooe 1m· ••·you paid .. your eamlngs during your own worlq yeen? What happens, indeed! Q.-D 0 E S T H E GOVERNMENT use the tuea for other th1nga? A. NO: EVery JIOIUlY ol your oontrlbutloos goes Into lour sepirate fUnds, apart from el\d1 other and apart Jrun the u .s. 'l'reowry. end tile only purposes for which money can be paid out or these lunds are: Social Securilji -Medicare benefila end costs ol ad- mln!sterlng the pnigrams .. Funds not needed for cU.rrent openUons are Invested In U,S. government aecurlties, earn enormous amouota in interest and thereby enhance the pro- gram. ''* Walter GOOiltl Jr.; of Colona de! lilt, bu -named .. ualslant vice pnol- AMSTERDAM (AP) -Five cubs born to a cheetah narried Angela In the Dutcb Salart Pork De Beeb Bergen are the first In the world to survive blr1h In captlvtlji, the park management claimed. eF.,_ Bar AUSTIN, TeL (AP) -A state biologist Indicated that falcooen from Calilornta and Kansas are raiding Teu.s beacbes to get their birds. Bloloiilsl Dennis R u ss e II meoUooed problems ot e~ forcing a problblllon against caplurinC perogrine falcml at a meeting of the Tens Parl<s end Wildlife Com- m!ssion. Russell reeommended that the commisalon consider Wu-- ing a limited number of permits to !He Artie tundrlus falcons from Tens beaches - a stopover for the falcoDI from Canada and Alaska .. route to Sooth America, where they spend the winter. • Pe1 pefse Drfwo PALOS VERDES (AP) - Tuna flsbermen are bebll en- couraged to use new methods and equipment in a move by the federal government to curb drowning deaths ol porpolsea snared In tuoa nets. SeC:n!tary of C o m m e r c e Peter G. Peterson announced the federal action b e r e , saying, 0 Wben one po~iae dies ln a tuna net, that is' one death too many." 'lbe porpoise, a mammal. scboolJ end travels . with yellowfin tun a . Rlshermen bunt tile surface schools ol propotses, circle them with neta and catcb tbe tuna 111> dernealh. e Wildlife Bill -la lht -Joy· -deportment or J ..... ud Ecu of Costa Mtaa, bu - Blglao of CalUoi:oia. In-OC<..,ied Into the bonon t. aunnce bi'ol:enp rtm>: chpend«lt study -m 11 Ho WM provloualy, ,, """!« ~re Qo 11 .e I e In conaultanl wtlh lht !bin; , Swarthmore, Penn. lollo'i'tlw. • , )'tarl wllh thl A puate ol C0roria dol F.qa!tal>le Ulo ~ 11 u r,t ,n c •, 'Mar lllCl> Jdlool, fljf ll mo- Soc:lely ol thl United Stalel. Jorint tn poyd!OJba, DAILY PILOT II Yon Gotta Have Heart -l Bicycle Sa,lesman Sells Everything for Transplant • Marcel CbmpMull, a 39-year-old ~ bicycle salesman, flew to New y ork on his way to get a new heart In CalHornta. teltvlalon lhow to ooncenlrate on booking ~ward lw 'been -ol the abow 1 ... !Ive ol lls IOVerl years, Both are regU!ars oo the Graod Ole Opry and have recmltd ieveral aoogs together. Nuhville, Is carried In more thao 1+ dUes. * ) Gov. Rouald Reagaa 111~ be has given • He wlll be o""ate.: on In the Stanford UljivmUy Medical Ceiiter. at Palo Alto, Cham"""""" aold pe'}'thlnc be ~wned and borrowed money to get the 136,000 ~ed"Tor the trip and the operation. A 1pokmpan for AnderlOll 11ld he would get a new woman star ror the show nen year. The ahow, produced in small cash contributions to political cam· pe.1gna thiJ year but "l have never betJl a big oontrlbutor." . He did not volunteer how much be bad< given or to whom. ( PEOPLE ) champouuln turned to the United State1 because hospitals in Parla told him they bad .. !Jearl.donen. F'nulk M 11. t W·I c 1 1 George • •• . Polin Epidemic Strikes . Connecticut Students ,. ,, McGoveni'a national political director, missed a campaign appearance in Muskegon. Mich. when the car be was riding in WU 1tol'P'11 lor speeding. "I waa just napPing ln the back seat," Mantle"!"" 111ld later In Detroit. "Tbe n¢ thing I knew, police 1lghls were flashing." GREENWICH, Conn. (AP ) - A polio epidemic was declared by federal of. ficials at Daycroft School where a number of students he.d not been im- munized against the disease because of addition, he said, five students, suspected. of having the highly idfectioua diaeaae were sent to homes out of state before tbe polio cases were reported. religious reuons. B. COBBY CRISLER, P,..ldenl or the "We have to declare a polio epidemic school, saJd Thursday an looculation pro. The e11r wu stopped on Interstate 96. Driver 'Ellen Weuel, 11, a New York campaign w¢ter 8'dgned to Muskegon, was tJeteted for going 94 milea per hour with our preliminary Information," saJd gram was being carried out to vaccinate Dr. Dewayne .Andrews, of the U.S. Health those among the 130-member studeqt tri 8 70 IOpe. , •I , Servk'e's Center for Disease Coolrol in lx>dy who have not been fmmunlzed . ~-: Atlanta-, Ga. Crisler said that the private ~ ·* Andrewa said polio bu beeo conf'trmed school is not affiliated with any cburcb, in three youngsters, and ms been but that it "serves young people who ar~ Country muiolc'"Sl{Cer Jao Bowaml is leaving BUI -~• 1 y•ndl cat e d clinically diagnosed in eigl)I others. In • "Chrlatlan Sclentisls." ~~~~~~~~ ,_ . . . ' . . Don ·sweillund 585 West 19th St reet, Costa Mesa ~~ ~' 646 .. 5033 540-5~10 :=::.::.: FRONT END ALIGNMENT rn.i1mm1 fl«f9rmanc•. rwt. 1i..r1t11 11"11 tire _,. W• "" ONLY LET US reel Cllll'I', ~. ..... .. , .... '""' Is yMr Ulr Mll""'Khlnr't 5'9Clllcloll-... ...... .-!sty cMdl •1111 ldlllSt ,..,.,. ''-""· FOR WINTEI. DRIVING RADIAL TIRES ••• For Import Cars SI t;EL RADIALS ... For U.S. Cars General SPRINT-JET Gonerol Calibfatecr •2 ~Cord R9dl8I .,,.. Pim ,,...,,,.A.-COrd ... •AN~ale a hfoptlM T,_, 0.-. ~:e_-:.~ ........... _...__ . VWSPECIAL General DURA-JET• $ . WHITEWAI I +fl. Y NYlON CORD BOOY ONLY ..• LOW PRICES ON SIZES TO ITT 9 OiJT OF 1),fMPORT CARS TIRE SPECIAL 'BLACKWALL SPECIALS , '13~~~- llS.11 l21atf.-.771111 AACIWAW- TUllLDITllb WHILI 9UANTnllS u.nt WHITEWALL BARGAINS TIRE CHAINS PASSENGER CARS SIZES: 520x13 to to0x15 -L78x15 CAMPERS & TRUCKS SIZES: 700.15 175x16-5 750xl7 10.16-5 700• 6 IOOx16-S 950xl6-S Z00.17 12·16-S 110x1J~700.IJ--7Jl1ll llltllt ........ ,IT l1,7Ml.lt COMPLETE .BRAKE RELINE 95 NOT JUST A BRA1<E RELINE But we do al this. 1. -NIW ltMwy oloty h"'9 oo ·4-1 2. ·-.... .,.,, ................... wtlffhl J ............. -...... ._., """ --~~c.r. ........ & tCi t-~·~s;;;=-· ~ ··=--~-..... . '-' .. 7. ..... ............ , .. , ............ If, .. '' \ ......... ,.. •...... • If°" DAILY PILOT Forest Service Plant-a-T1·ee Bid Receives WASHINGTON IAPI -A ,-------.... U.S. Forest Scr"iti? report wtll rtt0mmend soon t h o 1 the federal ai;er.cy exp;uld its pro- gnm throu~h "hich con- sumers can plant a tree by ac- cepting a commerti.al product. The ptogram hns drawn 1J1e ire (If 1nembtrs of Congrt•ss. private citizens and U.S. 0011\· panies because it has lx't'n us- ed by l:l Japanese company - Datsun automobiles -to pro- mote a foreign-produced pro- duct. BUT PATRICK J. Sheehan. FINANCE v.·ho is ir. charge of the Forest '-----------" Service program, says he and other starf members have recomme nded the campaign be kept and made available 10 others. But he says some changes should be made in the ground rules to reduce undue commercialism -pa rticularl y any suggestion that the Forest Service endorses the product. The recommendation will be made in a report next week to .John R. McGuire, chief of the Forest S er v ice in the Agriculture Department. a spol:esman said . It wa s prepared after a review of bow the advertising plant-a- UNITED STATES NATIONAL BANK SOUTH COAST PLAZA BRANCH NOW onN SATURDAYS 9 to 1 P.M. ·MON .. THUU. 10.5 P.M. 'fllDATS 1M P.M. '1114) 54 .. 5211. LM:-.d hi: S..C... ...... C....M ... D. DEAN HEISER ,THEUS I MTERIORS. Ii II' [ $ f [ SALE! CLOSE OUTS , Nov. 1st "Advantage of Real E.!tate Syndication for the Small Investor" ., Lecturen -Phil McN&mee and "Cap~ Blacltbum . Nov. 8th Exchanging .'"Capital CoruervaUon Throu1b ."MlnlmlJlng Tues" • • Lecturer -Bruce HoweJ ,: 1Tailoring Your '73 Investmen t" IJecturer -Randy McCardle TICKETS AVAILABLE AT THE DOOR IACH SISSION MEETS 7:30 . 9:30 P.M. GOLDEN WEST COLLEGE s...1 .. c..,.on-od By er-c-t Golden Wnt DAIL~ PILOT • Colleve H .... lnglon Beoch • F°""laln Volley lloonl of RMI- - OVER THE COUNTER NASO Ll1tln91 for Thutocloy, Octobor 26, 1m COMPLETE NEW YORK STO<;K UST I I I I ' l ' F,ldiY, Otltbit 27, 1912 SC Friday's Closing PriceS-Complete New York Stock Exchange List ::Peace Indefinite, Stocks Fall Again NEW YORK (AP) -'Tho lack of •nY llnn new 'Jll'Og?eSS toward an Indochina settlement sent In· veston to the sldolines today, and stock prices gen· orally moved lower. ~ts said thal, while Investors continued to be optimistic about a setUement In Vietnam, they ·,apparently wanted to wait for more concrete devel· '. 'Optnflnts. :11nvestors seem to be S1ylng that It has to be seen to be believed," said Charles M. Lewi!, analyst •tor Treves & Co. "It bu to be firm, done, complete. .. c;>nce a peace ap-eement is signed, the atmosphere :.wW be clearer.' I.OS GATOS, Slra Corp on- nounetd It haa signed an agrttmenl with a Japanese trading finn tor a leaslhillty study ot Slra's solid waste dilpoul process for potential UR in Malmdo, Japan. Toyo Glken Co. Ltd. of Tokyo wm bqin the study and receive from Slra information and plans (or construction or a plant In J1pan capebl• or handling 300 Ions of solid waste dally. OAlLV PILOT J3 es...,.tc...,. FRESNO -Despite IUghet prkta caused by one or the shorte!I cropo oo record, the Calllomia Jlailln Advbory Board sayt dome.tUc raisin sales to comumen was up more than 10 pm11nt 1n Stpttmber compared to a year ago. The sales 1ncreaae may reflect consumers' dta:lre to "stock up" on. ralllnl 1n Ill· ticlpaUon of further price boosts. OAllV l'lLOt S-,.pernaan.-"Metrapol .• ~ ~at on ·-~~nab • • ·~LIS, ru. (AJ') -cond a more e I a.b o ra t e cooldn't be done. We went up Metropolis Re<rullon had ceecls from tile stock sale ex-traffic bid been° bumpe.-... do with th<m!" 9lpennan hasn't been ab(t to museum, the third a full-blown to Sprln&fleld (the st a le aold !30,000 worth of Ila $10 cept the !mt $!0,000 until the bumper with vacatlonon who W.sttrflel(l aaya the ~Pie. get , oft lhe ground l n AmWng world of superman. capital) wilb all our papt:rs romrnon stock, all ll could un· entlrt is1ue waa aoltl made alight. detoura to see uwho would benefit' the most, Metn1polh. , "It would take a tot ol expecting awroval that day." tll lhe papen came lhrou&fl. By October, only ..,..lourth SUpennan'1 hometown. deal uoe oi ·S.~·· name 11!'1 tee al btlP. *"' .. -~\On .o!'Suphm'an memora~. I I t They learned that approval "In the early -~ of June, of the stock luue had been The un11n•·•~ e·"bl"·· the real ..tale en, the The 'n>an who n l>e pas lll<>l~Y just I<> gel started," ~· aold. The exhlbltfoo ball sllll ~ ~ ~· construction people; ·the · SAM' SMITJl1 tht editor or cou1d be ttopped only~ gretin -Westerfield said. m~·~~~~:o:r 1f:~at big we got our ok ," he said. ·i we hadn't opened. Weaterfleld hall opened for one week and banker1 -we have receiv~ Uie,PtQe\,'tblQD tbt·r tW kryptonit~ now has a problem He Wasted no lime. setback.'' Westerfield said. typed up our prospectys. We declded to tilre a broker. 2,000 people dropped in. very Uttle support ftbmiibeJn, tll'''beyorid' coaeePlicll. wtth greenbacks, $ 2 5 O , O O O "We had 27 meetings in were ready to sell stoek: and "We got panicky as a com-• . .Now we are out on this "I've never aeen enythl.ng worth. three weeks " he said. "We IT TOOK Of'il..Y five weeks every)>ody bad lost interest." THE PEOPLE or munity with the thought or aJJ dnmn limb." like It," be says. "I think five The fictional Metropolis ls were 80 lnn~ent we jumped ror approval,· but meanwhile, Westerfield had another pr&-Metropolis, meanwhile, began these thousands of people Na tions Periodicals is years Crom now people will be !he place \Vhere Superman, up and got three pre·in· Westerfield said, •'Pe op I e blem. to wonder where they were coming in," Westerfield said. renegotiating a. contract wJth looking back wbhlng they " di~gulsed as Clark Kenl. a corporaters, sold stock -all began to get the idea that The slate securities laws going to put all the tourists. "If we had 25,000 people on Metropolis Recreation under COtJld have gotten. ln on the rn1ld-ma1mered report.er for this lhne not knowing that it something was wrong." forbade use of any or the pro-During the summer, the opening day, what would we which lt gets $50,000 for the ground floor." the Daily Planet, "lights a -=~=-=~=::::'.~::C.---'---"----''----------..:._ _ _;:__ ___ ..::_ ____ _:. __ -"'.:.:_-"-..:._.:~---------''--...:...-'-----=--------- never-ending battle ror truth, justice and the American "'ay.'' For 30 years. residents of the real·life !\1elropolls. a city of 6,900 in Southern Illinois ....,,,.. "'here the economy is depress- ed, ha\•e been talking about using Superman lo promote their hometown. ~O"!\fE THINGS are looking , lip in A1etropolis. A ne\v interstate hlgh"•ay ooming in from the Kentucky slde of the Ohio River will route Chicago traffic b y ~1etropolis' front door. And the state is constructing a reproduction of an 18th cen· tury Continental Cort to ge t the cars to stop. But the city still has pro- blems. Bob Westerfield, a balding 44-year-old r or me r pro- fessional football player with a wife, si:r children and a dry cleaning business, revived the Superman idea last January. "We needed to do something to establish our community," he says. "I recommended to the Chamber of Commerce we ·establish ourselves with a ~rman of Metropoli s Award for visiting dignitaries. people or substantial personal achievement and people who have shown a great deal of in· terest in our community." The chamber approved and National Pcrodicals Publics· ttons, the comic book finn that holds the copyright on Superman, agreed. THE FIRST award was given to Gov. Richard B. Ogilvie after President Nixon and Vice President Spiro T. Agnew declined. Se.n. George McGovern accepted a subse- quent award. The first award p u t Metropolis. riding a wave of oostalgia, into the national spotlight. The promotk>n included an official Supennan homecom- ing. A glant painting of Superman was hung on the water tower ; merchants posted life-size Superman cut· outs: klds got the day off rrom school, and the week I y newspaper changed its name from the Metropolis News to the Metropolis Planet. National Periodicals had been thinking of building a 1,()00.acre Superman Land since the 1950s. What was a more likely location than Supennan's hometown? · M e t ropolitan Recreation Inc., with Westerfield as presi· dent, was establishOO to take over. THE PLAN WAS to build in three phases. The first would be an exhibition hall, the se- Berriga1is' Trial Hit; 'Corruption' WASHlNGTON IUPf) - Two veteran reporters who covered the alleged plot of the Rev, Philip Berrigan and others to kidnap Or. Henry A. Kissinger have concluded the attempt to prosecute the an- tiWar priest wu a corruption of the American systerp of justice. "The FBI and the Ber· rigans," a book by Los Angeles Tunes writers Jack Nefson and Ronald J. Ostrow, was publiahed Thursday. In it, the newsmen con- tended the N I x o n ad- ministr1Uon carrk?d out the proeecutton tn 110 effort to prove FBI Director J . Edgar Hoover had his fact• right. Ad good 'tU th• lot crNpl in on littl• cofs l•tl (No•. I. 1971) a na t ional A TllOUSAND NOODNIKS • 90-LB. ROLL ROOFlHG 3 77 IFT.i ROLL !J~t Weatherproofing by the roll. Covers a hundred square lee!. No mote raindrops lolling on your head. lxl2 PIME SHELVING 15~.FT. l handed my wil• 1ome bocrrd1 • told her l was p1n1ng for her. (for that. I deae"ed the hit.) Wl<'f IS HE. P\l'r\'\r-IC, ~fO. ~HING.LES cN "'Tl\C tlJSl'DE? • HE°.''> AFl<AIO HIS uil'«(R- >.--4-.....i SC:t> \l,J\U... ~Ollt JOHHS.MAHSVILLE ASPHALT SHIHGLES " , . . ' . ' ' ~· ' ... '• '. ~ :. .. FIBERGLASS HANDLED ROOFlHG HAMMER 277 Li9'htweight but 1till 1trong due to the libergla11. Ftt1 the bill for that !J~ 100 SQ. rr. Choice of colors, heavy mineral coat, and I scr#ed the best for last .•. a FIFTEEN year guarantee (you heard right). If you a re looking tor something a little easier to put up, 1ee below. 100 SQ. rr. Th"• are th• •am• thln9 aa aboft e~cept they haY• an added stripping on them that automatically ad1 as a lap cement. Pretty nifty eh? See you at tbe store. ;;...~o+_..,.;b~ig~r~oo~lin~g:,:,i•~b~{y~ec;::h~) • ..,.~"'!".,...,..,,_,,,.J.~.;... ... .,.."'!7:..:ii::i age ~· . ao.u. BAG • 'I•" SHOP PLYWOOD 2~·'a· SHEET &qBEL "'-"LAWKAID LUl'UGS 47~.0FS They •till measure by bu1bels huh? These'U bold six of them. I. a bushel J:>igger than a breadbox? l"x4"x6' CEDAR FENCE BOARDS I I I I • J Laguna Beaeh EDITION Today's Final' N.Y. Stoeks VOL. 65, NO. 301, 5 SECTIONS, 56 PAGES ORANGE CQUNTY, CALIFORNIA FRIDAY, OCTOBER 27, 1972 TEN CENTS Impact Report Blocks Action on Development Late submission of an environmental impact statement bas temporarily block- ed Laguna Beach PlaMlng Commislon action on a proposed 42,000 square root specialty shep comple:a: in the 1100 block of South Coast Highway. Planners this week agreed to continue conskieratioo of the $1.5 mlllion project until Nov. 13, after learning the developer· had submitted the required im- pact statement only a few hours before Grass Hidden lrt Patrol Car A lid of marijuana (about 8 grams) was seized and pla<:i!d in the Laguna Beach police evidence locker after being found in a mMt unlikely place -under the seat of a police pat: .. car. Officer Paul Rose found the pot anJ a roach (partially burned marijuana cigarette) as he cheked out the vehicle "prior to i:.aldng it out on patrol sbort],y after midnight. "That's why we always conduct c1 search of the vehicles before the of· ficers take them out," Police U. Frank Dillon said this morning. Police had no explanation for the preseace of the pot. Hunting~n Man Robbed of $182 In Laguna Beach A bushy·headed gunman robbed a Hun- tington Beach man or $182 in cash Thurs- day as the man waited in his parked car along busy South .Coast Highway in Laguna Beach. William B. SorreUa, 60, told office.rs that as he sat in the car, a man opened the driver's door, thrust a blue steel automatic pistol into his side and demanded "give me all your money." Sore1Ja, a Huntington B e a c h busines.mian turned over nine $20 bills and two $1 bills to the man described as about 23 years of age, five feet 10 inches ta!: and weighing about 140 pounds, with dark busby hair or medium length. He was parked at 680 S. Coast Highway, close by former location of the Mystic Arts World . Sorella listed an address or 410 32nd St., Huntington Beach, police sald. He was not harmed in the encounter. After taking the money, the gunman grabbed the vehicle's keys from the ig- nition and fled on foot toward Cleo Street. Football Fathers Honored Toniglit Laguna Beach High School will honor tts football falhers at tonight's varsity game with Valencia. Fathers of team members will be ad~ milted free to the game and will sit in a special .se..:tion. They also will be Lreated to desserts donated by the PTA. The pre-game football feast in the high school cafeteria will feature hamburgers this week. Dinners pri~ at $1.50 for adults and $1 .25 for students are served frotn 6 p.m. to game time, with proceeds going into the senior all-night party fund. Twin Boys, 2, Die AUBURrt {AP) -Two-year-old twin boys dJed 1'1lursday In a fire which Oared in thelr bedroom In nearby Forest Hills, officials rtported. The victims were Trevor and Tracy Chubb, sons of Roy and Patricia Chubb. McGOVERN DUE lN ANAHEIM Democratic presldenUal can- didate George S. McGovem will be In Orange Counly Saturday •nd will addr.,. a brt•klast meeting at 8 1.m. at Dl!:neyland Hotcl In Anaheim. For details, see 0. C. llust11111s' column today on Page. t. their meeting opened. The proposal, however, at the..request of commiasion chalrman John M.cDowell was explained by Ronald Goldman of the Los Angeles architectural finn of Brent, Goldman, Robbins and Brown. The enclosed complex of shops, restaurants and a bank, Goldman said, would "become a focal point on Coast Highway and enhance that area." The project would face the highway No North Sorties between Oak and Brooks Streets on land pre\>iously owned by an automobile dealership. The developer, West Amer i ca Investments of Los Angeles, is seeking a conditional use pennit and two variances to allow construction of the pedestrian· oriented center. The conditional use pennit would allow construction of a park1Dg lot on the R-3 (high density residentia'I) Ufle portion of Laird Announces .... Halt in Bombing LONDON (AP) -US. Defense Secretary Melvin R. Laird announced to-- day that American warplanes have halted all bombing operations of North Vietnam above the 20th parallel. Laird .1poke with newsmen after a meeting or GM! North Atlantic Alliance's nuclear plaMing group. He refused to say whether the United States still is flying rect:>nnaissance missio111 north at the zoth 'paraJJel but appeared to take one step further an annOUDCCIJlent in Washington on 'fbur5. day 'tif <PreSldenUal ad~ Henry A. Klsslipr. Kissinger told a news coufereoce the United Stales lnlormed North Vietnam that "we would stop military activities north of the 20th parallel." Laird confirmed that these activities have stopped. "We are flying no sorties north of the 20th parallel," Laird said. Although American mines in Haiphong harbor are included in the U.S. military activities north o~ the 20th paraUel, Laird refused to say when these mines might be deactivated or how .Jong1lhe process woold take. • lie also declined to Clt!c>lss tbe ..,i,. stance of the lateft Vietnam peace moves which be desc:ribed as "serious, sensitive and signip.caot" Laird is returnln( lo Washin&ton later in lhe day. De Aids Stork Officer W e'lcomes Baby to World By ARTHUR R. VINSEL Of -. Del,., t'ti.t Slaff One Newport Beach pol.iceman got the c!assic old radio-dispatched assignment about noon Thursday th at makes fellow officers glad they were home for lunch when it went oul Alta Kihlsb·om Services Slated Graveside services will be held at 2 p.m. Saturday in Pacific View Memorial Park of Alta D. Kihlstrom, 319 Myrtle St., who died Wednesday in South Coast Community Hospital at the age of 80. Mrs. Kihlstrom, a naUve of Utah \Vho had lived in Laguna Beach for the past 32 years, Is survived by a sister, Eleanor Kihlstrom of Lynwood. and by three grandchildren and nine great grandchildren. Bishop Stanley C. Kimball of the Church of Jesus Christ of the Latter..<fay Saints will officiate at the burial service. McCormick Laguna Beach Mortuary is ln charge of arrangements. Memorial donatlons may be directed to the American Cancer Society. Patrolman Gene Senecal, 3.1 and the father of four children, helped deliver one and came through with flying colors. He was more nervous, perhaps, than the new mother. The dispatcher ordered him to the Lawrence A. Rudyzinski residence at Jl48 W. Balboa Blvd., at;Kiut 1:30 p.m .. on what is known In the police profession as a 902M childbirth. "Upon arrival, I found the front door locked, so I rang the doorbell, banged on C1e door and yelled through the mail slot," Officer Senecal said in his report. "Someone inside yelled : 'Come in through the win.:low,'," he continued . Racing around the building, he found an unlocked window, slid it open and scrambled through. "I found the victim lying on the sofa, talking on the telephone," his report con- tinued. "I immediately checked the victim and observed '-male child lying near her left thigh," Officer Senecal's report related. Grabbing a sheet from the hallway llnen closet, he did what they tell you to do in demonstration films shown every so Often during police training sessions. He said father Lawrence and an am· bulance arrived simultaneously to give aid and comfort ~ Winifred, 26, who was !See DELIVERY, Pago Z) the property. One· variance is asked to exceed the 3().foot heigt.t limit in the C-1 (commercial) zone by 6 feet. The other variance Is requested to permit devia- tions from setback regulations. Goldman argued that a full 36 feet of height would be needed to permit sloplng rooftops along the length of the complex. Such styling, he said1 would be "in keep- ing with the character of the ex.isting surrounding community.'' Sloped roofs would allow for enclosure of air .conditioning and related equi~ ment, be added. Goldman noted that parking would be provided for 138 cars and the project's effect on loca1 traffic circulation would be minimal. The developer plans to use side streets for entry and exit to parking areas instead or dumping traffic on S. Coast Highway. A total of 29,000 square feet would be e s • so.,th Chino Seci SOUTH --· .. , Pattern Of Control I Areo• conlfOllff by Vi.t Cong ond/or North v .. tnome .. Forces~- UPI........., . ' FIGHTING CONTINUES AS PEACE PLANS MAPPED Map Shows Area1 Held by South Vtetnam, Communi1t1 Enemy Increases Attacks On South Populated Areas SAIGON <UP I) -Jn apparent an· ticipation of a cease.fire, Communist troops stepped-up their attacks on populated areas throughout South Viet· nam today, capturing two villages and threatening two major towns within 45 miles of Saigon, military sources said. Though sporadic and widespread, Com· munist forces carried ou, 124 attacks in th..: 24 hours ending at 3 a.m. (PDT) to- day, the most since the Tet offensive of 1968. Th U.S. command said two Americans were kllled and four wounded during the stepped-up fighting around South Viet· nam. Viet Cong and North Vletnames-sold- iers captured two hamlets on French-built Highway I northwest of the capital early today and though under counterattack by government reinforcements, the at· tackers held their positions. The villages are 7.0 miles and 30 miles northwest of Saigon, and 1lt at the edge of the Lradiliooal Commwtist infiltration route from Cambodian b o r de r sanctuaries. Soggy Quakers A~rested Southeast of SaJgon, COmmwdst troops surrounded oat Do and Xuyen Moc: dilltrict (county) capitals and fought their way through the line• of mllllia defenders to within 1,000 yanls ol the centers of bolh towns. 15 Plun.ge Into Ocean Trying to Stop Warship By JCRN ZALLER ot ... D.itr '11tt ., ... Fifteen wellutt.-clad pacifists were ar· rested Thurtday after plunging Into I.he ocean In an effort lo atop tbe 18,900-ton tssault ahlp SS :>llluth from leaving Seal Beach Naval Weapons Station. Police and harbor authorJtles, uatna five boats. wer~ required to remove demonstrators f'rom the path of the Duluth, an amphibious vtad bound lor an undlJclaoed port. Four Orange Cotuttlans, a 14-yeON>ld man and • l~~d atrl were amooi ,_ jailed tn the third "human blockade" try thll ytar tor a group rtprOllellllng the American Frlettda Service Committee, a Quaker-afmlated organ!Utlon. Those arretteo from Ora1111e Cotutly were Claudia Jo Goodwin. 20, or 1405 0-estvlew Ave., Seal Beach; John Ffed('J'lck Mangels fl_I, 20, of 18032 Butler St., Jrvlne ; anJ Michael Traub, 19, of 317 C'.oldenrod Ave ., and Timothy C . Whisman, 21, of 700 Hclio(ropo.4vc., both of Corona del Mar. Others arrested includ,e Patti Stkes, 43, Santa M?ltlca; Sherri Sfegel, u , Tcpanga; Steve llttaton, ZS, AltadeoJ: Deb Levering, 28, Puaclena ; FranJtlin Zahn, 84, aaremont; Phil Bura:ott, M, Santa Monica; l:harlM Swlll, 14, Santa MoniCa; Nancy Peru, LOI Angeles; Ann MacKlnoty. of Santa Monlu, and Shalom Mlcbelln, 21. Pa .. dena. A Navy spokesm•r. said alter the In- cident that the Duluth had experienced no delay despite the laot that iOme pro- . testora were able to 1wlm wttbln.a rew yards of her 0011 as she exited Anaheim Bay. The IS pacUists were arrtSted on a varltty of cltarge.s including unlawful assembly. failure to disperse, bringing unauthorized vessels lnto a harbor, and trespassing. In addition. the juvenile girl wat charged wl1h resisting arrest. By midnight Thunday, the 14 adults had bttn rtl,ased on bftil ranging from SlSO to $500. The gir~ we.s rtl'ased lnto custody of her father. The nine men, five women. and one Kiri demonstrators began tlk"ir »<:ailed blockade about S p.m. as the Duluth was preparing ror departure. Three 1m1ll alumin\lm craft, each wllh rour pnaengers, P'dled lpto the n1r-. -port of the A .. betm Boy dltlnnd. , !Seo QUAl(,&118,. Pap ti • Oat Do, 45 miles aootheast of the capital, was captured once for 10 days by the Communlsll last April during their spring offensive, Both it and Xuym Moc, 65 miles !MlUlheast of saigon, are ln Pbuoc Tuy Province, a re10rt erea whtn there ii no fighting. Plntoc 'l'llj' WU "pJcilied" by Australian fortes belare lhey pulled out last year. ln the air war, lhe U.S. command said • U.S. Air For<o F4 Phantom wu 8bot down tOday by anUalrcrall l1i'e Olltl' North Vietnam. The two crewmen parttcltuled tnlo tile Gulf of Tonkin and were picked lip by helloopter 11 mUes northellt of tbe Demifltar!ted Zolle. U.S. llghleM>omlters lltacked North Vietnam ''more tbaa 10 tJme1 Thunday. tt11l>-D)'bt& &l bolnlten Joined the al""11tu with tllne waves, all ol them ove.r the lp•er l>Mnbandle, the U.S. ~ _Jlllltd ~· resented for specialty shOps, a,ooo 1quare fee· for restaurants and 5,000 square feet for the banking facility . Director of planning and development, Wayne Moody, said his staff will review the environmental impact statement and make a recommendation to the com· mission at the November meeting. Little opposition is expected to the project. Goldman said construction could begin as early as February. If that is true, lbl complex would open in fall, 1973. e Water Aide Says Talks Rejected By BARBARA KRElBICH Of JM o.I,., t'llt'I Slaff Charging that directors of tbe South Laguna 1ani.ary District have refll5ed to discuss a recommended merger with the - South Coast County Water District, SCCWD director Robert Dwyer has recommended that the district take steps to resolve the issue. Merger of the two districts. which share office space and general manage- menl , wa s 1he major recommendation in a study of di.strict operations made for Qte water district board this YW'- The independent engineering Orm of Voorheis, Trindle &nd Nelson (VTN ), in ils critical examination of SCCWD ~ lema, &&kl lbe merger oou.ld result in an annual aaving ol 110,000, a figure that ha! been qttestloned by sanitary board president Clay Mitchell. Since the study was completed in July, attempta to persuade directors of the sanitary district to discuss the merger have been unsuccessful, according to Dwyer. Reviewing the problem at the October meeting of the SCCWD board, Dwyer notec; that the first attempt to involve the sanitary board came during the course ,: the study, when it was learned that the merger woulci be a major recom- mendation. The invitation to participate was ~ jected, Dwyer said, with the sanitary board maintaining "they had no P,J'Ob.. lems -any that existed were ours. ' The same rr lponse was made on com~ plelion of the study, although "elmost 100 percent or lhe changell which we made as recommended by VTN applied to the operatioo of both districts," Dwyer continued. It was the feeling of the water board, he added, that while merger of the two district.I would be in the best interest or the people oerved by both, lite people sl.ould be given a voice in the matter, by means of a pUbllc bearing. Staff survey conducted to gather Jn.. formation for a meeting with bomeowoers resulted in compilation of four pages of reaaon.s !or the merxer and only a pap against, Dwyer said, and a further In- vitation to disc\ ; the matter wu aent to sanitary board president Clay Mitchell on Aug . 16. This time be agreed. and a joint meeting waa tel for Sept. 27, but It later !See MERGER, Pqe Zl Oraage Weatloer The weatherlady &eel a posst. blllty ol llJlinkles lhroogb Satur- day, l>econilni sllghUy wanner this weekend with blg)t> ol 68 at the bcachetl rising to 7$ Inland. Lowa IOlllght 5().67, INSmE TODAY Poul Laurf'Tl.Ce Dunbar, ma of slaves who became the poeifc 1pokttm4n of ~ black Amf'ri. ca11, fl bring "°"PTed b¥ UC Ir-vine &%1...ion with lb< four-<14v centemtl~I cel<btatidn. Actor ond achOLOr R01coe Let ~ wUI road hi. -"-· Su todof'1 Wttkcndtr. L.M...... 1 ....... •11 ,....... . --.... ._ . ·-. --.. .. ,..,,.., ,... . ·--,.._ ..... ,........ ' _....,. II AML ...... IJ ... _ . -..... --.. --.. ~c:.ity .. ,. •• a •• 11'41 --~ ...... . ... .......... -, ....... == .., ............... ,.,. --.. \ % DAILY PILOT LB . , Witne·sses Testify at , Clemente Officer Trial :· By JACK CUAPPELL Of .. ~ .......... E&llmata ol blah pollce car apeed Ind denials ol beer d"rl.nilng were made by witnesses Thursday at the mlsdcmt•anor mansl:iughter Lrlal ol Gary Adams. San Clemente patrolman, invol\led in a fatal traffic colUsion. A young pas~nger in the pick-up truck involved In the death crash with Adams' police car told the Laguna Niguel 1-luuicipal rourt that none of the youth.<! Initiatives Used Poorly -Carpenter State Sen. Dennis E. Carpenter (R· Newport Beach ) told UC Irvlpe faculty Thursday he would not support changes of Cnli!ornia's Initiative process even though he believes It i!I belng used unwisely. In a luncheon speech in the University Club on campus. the representative of the nati on's most heavily populated single district. listed seven specific ballot measures he does not feel should have been put to voters because they represent "massive legislation" at the polls Instead of withln the "crucible"of the Legislature. In the truck bad drunk beer juat pt1or to the crub <f II. "Wt wve drlnk1n& J~8.'' Wllllam Schull l&ld. Tbt )<>111111 lied ~t llt! truck carried "a UttJe ov•" Unt caei of hoer, but denied that lllY betr w11 bl-Ing drunk . The collision between the police car and the pick-up truck resulted In the death of one of the paa!tngers, Jeff Britt, 16. of Long Beach who had been riding in the rear of :~e truck. The boys bad been bound tor : .. Ooolro belch, slildmorb Ifft 111 1111 pollco \Olblclo 111- dlffted • minim.In tpeod ~ " mu.a per 'IMlr· 1..i111M QIDtta Aatlool, .. Anaheim Polk:e Deparlmeol trattlo In- vestigator. Pla~!oot , an expert in sk.ldmark analysis, said skids left by tbe police car would be • .:iual to those ll'ft by the Vt!hi· clc traveling 67 miles per hour, but not in"olved In an accident. by Phil lnltrlandJ Thi ~-Mid be WU ool qualillld to laltlly .. u.. lll'DllUlll of ......., ablorbld 111 Illa enab. PlaUool'• llttlmcl!J' was attacked IJy Adami; attorney Gerald Williams. who Pointed ou t that the skid tests were madti noarly three weeks after the crash and tht road may have bad a hla:her resistnn· ce to lftter skidding. Williams sa id with the curing of the thoroughJorc which had bt."'C!I slurried ju.st a month prior lo lbt crub, tbe Uldl could Ila dlf!trtnl. PloUool had taken 1 ltke pollco car aJ)d skJddcd it on the roadway to pMduce data for his inVesUg.atMln. Plal foot a·greed that the n1ore recently slurried road would J>e more slippery. Pla1foot also said that there \fat no way of telling exactly what the resi.stance of thti road y,•as to skidding on that day, The young passenger of the truck told Illa CGllrt ol Judp H. Warroo lllll&lll Iha ho bad ,... Ute pattol car JUll prior If Impact. The truck w8' bea\Olly laden wltli firewood and camping gear he said, hl\l he denied IM wood was packc.'d above the aid• of tbe vehicle. '" ; Two youths were sltllng In the back, ti: gaid. He testified that the truck stopped at a stop sign before entering onto Et Camino Real . : . Capo Park Group Unhappy ~ Meeting Set Witli Supervisor 'Who Ignored Us' By JOHN VALTERZA Of lfl• Olll'( "'"' "'" Leaders of a large group ol Capi strano Beacb residents. battling to uve 16 acres wblch they insist Is a pubUc park, plan a meeting Monda y with County Supervisor David Baker. "because our <J w 11 supervisor has ignored us." Capistrano Beach land surveyor !'"'rank Rainey and others plan I() bring th eir files of d()('urnents and correspondents to Baker's offices early Monday afternoon to meet with the District Two supervisor who trutially was responsible for bringing the park issue be!ore tht board. Rainey and others have claimed often that Filth District Supervisor Ronald Caspers has refused to met:t with them personally, and have claimed that Gaspers' staff has been "of llttle help." The Issue revolves around old maps and other documents filed with the coun- t)" showing the 16 acres at the upcout edge of the PB:lisades as a public park. Plans currently are before supervisors to transform the acreage into a major condominium complex with t h e developer's offer of the CQnstruction of a small view park overlooking Dana Harbor. Ral.ne'y and hundreds of othen, however, claim they have proo[ tbat the land w.as intended for public park use: and assert that transactions placing the property in private bands decades ago ~:ere "irregular." . . The dlatrlct recently agreed to oppose the proposed abandonment or the roadway, however. The road ts gradett, but not paved, and leads to the edge o, the bluffs and spectacular view of tbt t.'08Stllne . The opJ>Ollenta to the condominiums planned by the Dana Bluffs Corporation' based in Newport Beach, ndmit tbeif lack of faith in the local parks district,' however. The rancor sterns from the diltrict'i earlier decision not to become involved in another battle to aave 1llegedly public lands for private development. . Another small viewpoint In the sa~ area -again once earmarked for publi~ use. -faced threat of development last sprmg. Residents first went to the district Io~ Sen. Carpenter objected to the placing of propositions 14, 15, 18, 20, 21, and 22, specifically because these are "not yes or no issues," he said. ~ Supporting his contentio n that the meawres are too dilllcult for the average voter to understand, Sen. t:arpenter released latest results of a California Poll on the public's current un·. derstandlng of the proposit_ions. . . "I Worked Like a Horse All My life to Get Here and Retirt, and Now I'm Getting This Ridiculous Ura-to Paint." Chess Federation Cl1ief Mav ()kay Baker's 6taff today said that it was their initial study of the deVelopment ts· sue and a proposed abandonment of a county road on the coastal property that kept the issue from bein& routinely passed by the board. help. .. "But the board decided that the lan4 and the little gazebo on it wel'fl not tba.f important to public use as a park and the district's $20,000 annual budget Could not handle the expense of mainta~ the small structure,·· said the board's lawyer, William Wllcoxeo. lie said those late findings ind1cat~ the following percentages of people in California are "unaware and have n't read the ballot measures" . -Prop. 14. the Watson property tax 1~· itiative -82 percent are unaware It is on the ballot, Carpenter said. -Proposition 18, obscenity: 86 percent are unaware. -Proposition 20, coastline initiative : 77 per~nt unaware. -Proposition 21 , school busing : 8$ per· cent unawa~. -Proposition 22., farm labor: 8(l per- cent unaware. Carpenter also hit the trend ln misleading advertising on both sides of ballot meuuru and said be was prepared to vote for a at.ate law requiring the news medla to "make readUy available lo voters presentatloDI of both sides of Luues." • -..c ~ Fro111 Page 1 MERGER .•. v:as called oft. by unanimous vote of the sanitary boarO which "slammed the door in our faces," Dwyer reported. In an intervie·.v with the DAILY PILOT today. Atltchell clarified the sanitary board's reasons for decld.lng aaalnst discussion of the merger proposal at th.ls time. "'rhe 1tud.y conducted fur the. water boa.rd claimed $10,000 a year could be saved by the merger, but In no way showed how it could be saved," said Mitchell. "It referred to fewer directors• fees, but this actually would not be achieved. Right now both boards bold monthly meeting• that last three to four AppalOQsa StrJ:>,~ On Branch, fit, Bleeds to Death hours. Obviously it would not be possible to cover this much business in a single ~g of a combined board, so ii would tt.M~essary to have two meetings a ... th he · · mon and that V.'ould wipe out t sup. A ai1:·yeaMld Appaloosa horse bled to de ath In a Huntington Beach neld Thurs- day afternoon after be stepped on a large eucalyptus bi'anch and it flipped up Lo gore hlm ln the 41tomacb. The rider of the hone, Robert Vega of 15582 Wilson St.. Midway City, said he and three other friends were walking t.belr borsea in the fleJd on Ellis Avenue near Beach .Boulevard around noon when the accident occured. Vtga sold the horse Tobby, stepped on the· slJ·foot branch which hurtled Into the animal's 1tomach between his front legs and 1ev«ed an art try. He a.aid he quickly removed the horse's saddle and ran to call a veterinarian but could not get help before the animal bled to death IO minutes later. Ve11 said he had been showing the horse to a friend who was lnteresed ln buying him from the owner. Jeanne Oakey . Thfl beige Appaloosa and the othtr three horses were kept at the Williams Stable, 7021 Enu!:8t Ave.. liuntlngton lltllcll. OIAM•I COAST .. DAILY PILOT "ftW ~ C6'tl Dif,ILY l"ILOT. wllfl 'Nfll(tl h i:-omblPltd ttoe w..,. .. ,ieu, k Mlllhd bY !toe Or9ftOC! Co.1f Pub11llli"9 '°"'Piny. s..,.. n,. tllllkWll ere WbOtned, MeNllV tl'I ...... l'r1d1y, tot" Coi.11 MtJi, Ht'WllOrl IHdl, Hunllfl91icwl l eact!/,_lllft V•!lrf, uoi- 9-dl. ltvtM/s.ddl-.ck and ~"' Ci.tM<lte/ S•" J-C.pltlr-A. II~• t11QIOl'l1I '"'II'°" I• IU&lllMll a.tllf"!hy. eN1 Slll'td•l'fi· not prlnc!Nl Mllltllnt "6flnl It •I U> W..t ''' 11rw, c:oii.t IMM, cau..,.,,.., ,,.-. R• .. •rt H. W1M l'ralcl.,.. •fld Pvl!IWIW J11ti-l . Cvrl.., \'Jot ,.,......,, .... Otnw.l IM!llfll'. Thell'l11 l(.,.,ff l!dl!W lh•111-11 A. M11t~I~• ,......'"" ldltw CMrle1 H. L••• RJ11h1N I, Nill .W/tWtl M8Mtll'll l:•ltin L..-. ..... Offlt• 221 "9r••t A .. "11• M.tfn111 M4,.111 P.O. In U6, fJ611 --C...M-1•=-=htd!I Dll ............ .... &llkfl1 'JWt ~ It: JOt N«1I! !"\~••I Ttf1••••• ff141 '4MJll C' '"W .U;Mll•1 MW.ft ............ Al fwal Slit , .... , .... 4f4..fut a,t,: ...... ml, Or ..... CIN1t ........... . ~ .... ,..,. .............. ......... .... ltl ,,.,,. ftl ~-MNl:li -.. ·----~"'..,.,.. .... . --~ ..... ,, c.t. ,.,..... c:..,,.,,.,_ "" w orrlw a.a ,. Nl'f'!WL.., fN .u,,, """"'"' ""'""' *t!IMftllllll IUI ........... Posed savings." Under state law. ~1itchell said, sanitary board directors receive $40 a meeting and water board directors get $M. The financial aspect, however, Is not the principal issue, 1.1itchell said. "We are now in the m.Jdst of setting up the Ali.so Water Management District, which is completely removed from the local water district, since it does not han- dle sewage. "\Ve '(the sanitary district ) have parlicipaled ID lh1I regfonal plan from the begin!Jln( and our board I• com· pletely informed on every aspect of il "This is no time even to think of a merger, because it ii essential for our board to concentrate en the problems and plans 1nvolved in the steady growth to the south of us. Our interceptor lines and treatment plant will have to bt enlarged and we wlll be partlclpatlng in the new ocean outfall. "Al some lime in the future it would perhaps be logical to th.ink of a merger, but not during th.ls period of growth. "We can't cut down on tho act.lvlty ol our board. which incidentally has been able to make 11vtnc1 amounting to hun- dreds of lbou.wi<ll of doll~ by being thoroua;h In tu ltudlea. And there 1eema no rea son to considar It if there 11 no notictable 1avlna to the taxpayer." Already the two d!Jtrlcta ahare office space, the dil'(!Ctlon of a general manaaer and much equipment. Mitchell noted. · Two directors, Norman Andert0n and liarold E. F.dward!, served on both the WAter hoard and the sanitary board. tn hl1 report to the water board, Dwyer said the mera:er queltloo could be brought before the Local Agent · fl"orma · Unn Commluton (LAFC) by poUUon and from lh<re retemd to the Board of Supervi!Wrs for a public hearing. 1790 Letter Bought NEW YORK (UPI) -A Pht\1delpbia bookshop has p&id •14,000 at auction for a five-page letter written by Otorae W11shtnston on Dir. 28, 1790 to James Duane, • member ot Congress. CAN SUPERMAN SA YE HIS CITY? 0.ttlog the dlpreaed dty o t Melropol\1 (DI.) out ol Ille. red IMl' l>t too mucti of 1 Job -even for superman. The man wllo In lht J>011 oou\d only be •lo!>!>ed by -· tiryp<oolte -hu • problem with .,..nl>tctu. See otory, Paa• 2•. Escaped Hippo Back in Custody MEREDITH, N.H. (AP) - A 450-pound baby hippopotamus that John Smlth found on his porch at 3 a.m. has been recaptured and retureod to Animal Forest Park, a nearby tourist attraction. Workmen from the animal park caught up with the escaped hippo in a swamp near Scenic Road at Wein Beach on Thursday and returned it to captivity. Sm.Jth doubted that police would believe a call about a hippo on the porch, especially fnim a man named John Smith. "l gues1 I was about the first &UY to get chased across hl.s own deck at 3 o'clock in tbe morning In hls "underwear by a hippopotamus," Smith sald. • • Fischer Rc1natch AMSTERDAM (UPI ) -Max Euwe, president o! the World Chess Federatio n. said today he was willing to try to change federation rules to make way for a "revenge" match between U.S. world champion Bobby Fischer and Russian Boris Spassky. Euwe said that under present rul es Spassky is nol entitled to a second chance. Fischer is required to defend the title he took from Spassky last month against the winner of a candidates tournament n ... later than 1975. But, Euwe told newsmen after a meeting at the Dutch chess federation, "'lbe sJtuation of some years ago, when the loser was entitled to a revenge match could be restored or a rule could be adopted that the \oser can have a reved(e match if t~new titlist agrees," he said. ' Euwe said th! n.Yet: could be changed Sl'erra Quhhers •·• .'ftl!afhl?Yilid JtDt , • prolllcm. onlf by a ~lf}.n congress but Both l'tsc!Mr ~ iy are eager to play a "second ma the cediury." Euwe said. Meet on Coast He said ii was "strange" that the soviet Chess Federation appeared to be Oranae County's branch of the Sierra Club will hold its f!:-st meeting along the South Orange . Coaat Thursday, orfering a program which wUI include a presen- tation on mountalneerlng. Ben Lindensteln, chairman of the club's basic mountaineering training course, will explain the sport and demonstrate equipment at the meeting which starts al 7:30 p.m. at Marco Forster Junior High School's auditnrium. Llndenateln has trained 1,000 novice mountaineers. other events at the meeting will in- clude discussion of Si~ Club activities such as camping trips and ecology and v1elcome, said prealdenl Randy BoiCh. Youths' Soccer League Planned An Initial meeting for South Orange Coast boys over 10 years old interested in an oraanlzed soccer flctivtty wilt be heJd 8aturd1y at the South Cout Aru Boys Club In San Clement@. Tile 1:30 p.m. session will be opfn for parents as well becau.sc of a a:reot need (or adult parUclpatlon and leadership m the aMual toceet lea.sue. Boy1 Club manaaer Mike Brad y 11ld even boys who never have played soccer before are welcome. Included In the program will be in· !!~ruction Jn the fundamental s of the in- ternntlonol sport. Complete lnforrnatloo on the activity is available by calling 492--0378. lukewarm. "Possibly, MOSC<IW no longer puts faith in Spassky but I think that is wrong," Euwe said. · "S passky is a player who needs to get ·accustomed to his opponent," Euwe said . GOP Incumbent Sued by Rival SAN DIEGO (AP) -Democratic con· grtsalonal candidate Frank Caprio has filed suit against Republican incumbent Bob Wilson, accusing Wilson of abusing his CQngresslonal mailing privilege. The sult, filed ln U.S. District Court Thursday, contends two "'Bob Wilson Reports" newaletters, one before the June prLmary and one last week, were malled at public expense to promote the Wlllon campelgn. Wilson said the suit was "clearly pollttcal and paft of the last·mlnute monkey business of any eltctlon." Lagunan Ira Reed Last Rites Tuesday rJr. Albert 0. lfJerpe wlll otflclilte al !ervlc:es 'I'uenday in Pacific View Chapel for Ira L. Rted, 22$42 Allvlew Terrace, Lagun11 Beach, who died Monday in SUI Fr<incisco. He was 76. Mr. Reed is survived by his widow, Lorene; a son, Jack of Chicago; steP. daughter, Llnda York of Laguna Beach; and sister, Leela Reed ot Chicago. BuriaJ will be at PaclDc View ft1ctnorial Park. ''If we hadn 't taken this off the consent calendar, thls thing would have been roulinely passed by the rest ot the board." said 1 Baker aide, Dick Ruli. Letters to their own supervisor have been sent repeatedly by the grounp. "We've tried many times to meet with Mr. Cas~rs," Rainey said this week, ''but we can't ever get the chance. "We only want him to come down to look over the area and stt down with us tG hear what we've worked so hard to find out about the problem," he added . Cor respondence shows that Caspers' initial suggestion to the residents was to bring their case before the Capistrano Bay Parks and Recreation District. "\Vr don"t have too much faith in that district." Rainey said. Johnson Quits Civic Leag11e Post in Laguiia' Laguna Beach Civic League president Donna Demetriades announced Thursda y that city councilman Carl E. Johnson Jr. has subn1itted his resignation from the league. Johnson, a fonner president of the Civic League had served on the organiza- tion's board° of directors since 1985, dur· ing which time he worked for three ye11rs in behalf of the League to implement the city sign ordinance. In a letter lo the board he -stated, "\Vhile past membership on the board produced no cannlcls with respect to PIRMlng Commission or City Council membership, the nature of aome of the decisions that will be required of the City Council in the future Is such that It seems essential 't<> remove even the smallest possibility 6r appearance of con· flicting interests, no matter how slight.'' llis resignation was accepted with regret, Mrs. Demetriades said. Johnson, former Planning Commission cbainnan, was elected to the City Council 1n July 1 following the recall of Councilman Edward Lorr. 'Blues' to Play At Irvine Bowl Calpers' involvement in the lssui essentially has ·amounted to work by bls top aide, Tom Fuente!. Fuentes was not available today to comment on the strong l n t e r e a & demonstrated by Baker. • · The irony, however, persists. •. A large group ot Caspers' constituent; in tht Fifth Diltrid bave admitted that. they are looking to another supervilor for help. '. From Pagel QUAKERS .•• ' ' As the Duluth r.eared them, they dove In the water and swam toward the giant vessel. At the ::ar:.2 time, the \!J.ree remainini protesters climbed under a barbed wiri fence on Ille publlc beacn lmmediai.J; north of the harbor and began movtn& down the beach toward the same narro"' part.of·tbe channel. ~ Harbor authorities: and offlctaJs, aR- partntlY with advance warning on tli: protest. Immediately IWWlg Into actloa as wetsuit-clad Seal Beach llfegulll'(f& dove from boats to forcibly remove pm. testora from the P.:ttb ol the veaael. ' Meanwhile, wtilonned security po~ chased the other three proteaters down the 1hore, and later waded fuUY-unlt9~ ed into the surf, waving tbelr billy clubs above thelt head!, ln an effort to ap- prehend them, Sailors llneJ the 1tarboard aide ot tbe Duluth, wat.chlnc the whole oper1Uori. When the' last protester wat picked up they gave a loud cbeer, A sPokesman for the paclflltt said the JlUl'polle of the demonstration w11 to pro- mote public awareness that weapona W2 sh1pped fl()m Seal Beach to Vietnam. • From Pagel DELIVERY •.• hustled off to Hoag Memorial flolpital. The baby boy's arrival was a !irst·time event for both Officer Senecal and the five--foot, one-inch, 107 pound housewife. "Her complelion was quite white. It must have been a trying erperleoet fof her," Officer Senecal said today. "It was wibellevable," he remarked regarding her abtltly to keep cool durl!ta The Army Blues, a musical group a continual telephone conversation. specializing in contemporary music, wtll Officer Senecal said mother and son present a "free concert at S p.m. Saturday seemed to be dolna fine and hospital of· in thfl Irvine Bowl on Laguna Beach 's flcials have confinned hla evaluation. · Festival tlf Arts grounds. A policeman for 71iis ye an now, The Blues, touring the country to call Patrolman 8eoecal aid today he bu attention to the Army'• "new look," pbty raced 1ever1l ~nothera·to-be to hoapita11 their own version of the lMOvatlve music ir, his squad car with llahta flalhlna and or Burt B&chart.ch, The Carpenters, !llttn 1CrtamJna but he bed never before Blood. Sweat and tears and othtr current •elped out f•1vorlte~. He 1ay1 bh1 bedside Ollnner always Featured singer with the grou p ls Spec. man11ed to convince his back 1ta' Walter Skeet, who began 11natril pro-paaenge: to make sure they didn't drive resslonally at tS and b11 appeared on up to the emergency room doot with two mnny national television show8. back s~at passengers. De Wanted to Go Bo111e-and Did Man Commits Crirne to Force His McALES'l'Ell, Okla. (UPI) -The warden of tbt at.ate priJon ind the dlatrlct 1ttomey tn Tulsa both turned down a request from ex-eon Oeorae J. Bamberatr1 48. Ke wanttd to nturn to b11 1'bome' tn prllon. Bamberger. who hu beeo out of prt.oon ooly 16 dl)O• In 11 19an cantld the •tolhlnc he needed Tor lh• trll> back to prllon ncenlly Into lht dWlat •• lorbey'I o(fict and conf111ea. lo I mimblr ol unt0lvtd crtmea. H• bald out ht1 bands 1 > be handcuffed. But --P'rtnk lllgedorn Nld Bamberzer bad done nolhtill wrong. "He asked us how he could be 1ent back for four years," ltaeedom uld Thursday. "We told him there w11 no reason to send hJm blick. "Then, He 11ked If we would put him back ~ he did commit a crime "W• Nt4 )'ff, but uked not to do anything for 'that raa10n because be might Ret hurl. Son1ethlng might 10 wrong . "But he WIS h11ppy u a lark, and told us he'd be wing wi later." Sunday ttlght, Bamber&er broke Into a tavern, caUed tbt police ind told \htm a Way Back Into Oklahoma Prison burglary wai going on. lie walbd outalde and "'1alted for authorJUea with hi• hands In the air. Bambera-er turned down offers of a jury trla: or mental itsta, 11kln1 lnatead that h• he ltllteoced immedlallly, Thuroday he aoi his w!Jh. When he wtnt bt!<n Dlatr1ct Judie Raymond W. Graham. B1mber1er aald he wanted to return to prl90n IO he could complete an aM course ba started btforw he wa1 uleaaed aever•l weeka ago. He said ha won second prize with hi.a f\r1t prllOO 111letch. When Asslatanl Dl•lrlct Allorney Mllre Barkll)' recommend.Id tht four--year oentence, Bam1>er1or told the judgt. "l would alncmly •PJJHClae 1t 1f you would sentence mt to that." "lt la with dlatute that l'm requited to adhere to your wl8lte1," Graham said. ''It'• a tlmple 1ct of bur9lary. l'n1 disHattaflod with the proopecla. I hi.,,, bowevor, no cboloe bUI to protoct llOclety from thil type ol bohavi\lr," "Thank you,0 Bambe.raer 11ld. '"t'd like to reh.lm to prlton. The world hat C"hansed an awtu1 lot" Saddlebaek Today's Final N.V. Stocks VOL. 65, NO. 301, 4 SECTIONS, 48 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA FRIDAY, OCTOBER 27, 1972 TEN CENTS Planner-Irvine Flood Plan 'Meets Conditions' Irvine city planning commissioners were told Thursday night the new city "is in much better shape than are the developed areas of the northern part of the county." Gordon Jones, Irvine Company director of ebgineering planning, noted the San Diego Creek ·and ·Peters Canyon Wash study by the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers _shown to commissioners Thunday night was one of 10 such studies under way in tbe county. Canaival Cl.ws Jones er:nphaaized,tbat Irvine Company planning bad already considered the flood hazards within t~ new clly. "All exlsUns dev~JOpments, as con- structed, meet the conditions outlined in the report and fhe undeveloped areas are being engineered tQ avoid such flood hazards," Jones said. Tbe study shows the amounts of nooding the city would expect along the two watercourses in the event of an "historic'' standard project flood or an intermediate -once in a 100 years - storm. The report indicates the storms of January and February of 1969 produced runoff ~uivalent to about half the amounts expected to be generated in an intermediate leYel Oood. Jones detailed one flood proofing. con- cept the city might consider. The idea aYoids typical coocrete cbaMelization of the San Diego ·Creek in favor 0£ landscape burms on either side of a DAILY PILOT Slafl """' Installation. of.ndes Including a roller coaster at University Park Shopping Center suggests it's time for the second annual Irvine Council for Education and UC Irvine Interfaith Foundation Carnival. Ga Dl e booths for adults and t:hildren are featured taday through Sunday evenings until 9:50 p.m. in the com- munity effort which supports the Interfaith activities on campus. N. Viets Push Attacks, Most Silice in T et SAIGON (UPI) -In apparent an· ticipatlon of a cease-fire, Commwiist troops stepped-up their attacks on populated areas throughout South Viet· nam today, capturing two villages and threatening two major towns within 45 miles of Sajgoo, military !OUrces said. Though sporadic and widespread, Com- munist forces carried ou . 124 attacks in the 24 hours ending at 3 a.m. (POT) to- day, the most since the Tet offensive of 1968. Th · U.S. command said two Americans were killed and four woanded during the stepped-up fighting around South Viet- nam. No North Sorties Laird Announces Halt in Bombing LONDON (AP) -US. Defense Secretary Melvin R. Laird announced to- day that American warplanes have halted all bombing operlitions of North Vletoam above the 20th parallel. Laird Jpoke with newsmen after a meeting of kill North Atlantic Alliance's nuclear planning group. 20th parallel," Laird said. Although American mines in Haiphong harbor m included in the U.S. military activities north oi the 20th parallel, La.lrd refused to say when these mines mlght be deactivated or how long the process would take. He also declined to discuss the sub- stance of the latest Vietnam peace moves which he described as "serious, sensitive and significant." Laird is returning to Washington later in the day. surfaced creek bed , Planning Com- mission Chairman Wayne Clark said lo- day. ''It is an attractive plan. My only con- cern is how it might be financed," Clark said. Jones' remarks also pointed out that Caunty bonds for flood control passed foUowlng a 1938 flood, have large!)' been spent Ooodproofing north Orange County. "Inflation and increased construction prices ate up bond monies originally in· tended to fund the countyw:ide system," he said. Further, three attempts to pas,, more bonds have failed at the polls. Jones said, "Most people lnvo!Yed feel that a lack of a major flood threat due to the lack of rainfall in recent years in the now- populous nonb county area, has resulted in voter apathy toward Oood control b..:i.d issues." He noted the lrv!oe Campany is also cooperati ng with public agencies in the planning of a series of 13 chec k dams in lhe Irvine hills to con1rol siltation and runoff under storm conditions. Jones ~·rged "'understanding" of the in· formati on in the flood plain study "by resideots and pi..blic officials.·• He coneluded, however, that "largely because "'e have had the opportunity to plan. Irvine does n't face the prospects of major fl ood damage to existing and fut ure development as do other areas of Orange County." Interim Plan Due Irvine Seeks to Avoid 'Crisis' in Zoning By GEORGE LEIDAL 01 IM o.11r l'lllt st~ Irvine MayoP William Fischbach today said he has directed city staff to prepare a crash program leadiag to adoption of an interim general plan to meet the Jan . 1, 1973, state deadline. Councilmen will meet Nov. I to discuss the two-month planning effort the mayor says will avert any "crisis" related lo zoning in the new city. Until now, councilmen have believed Irvine would be exempt irom the state mandates regarding general plans. Early Wednesday morning however, City Attorney James Erickson related his view the recent coort decisions have put more pressure on the Oedgling city government to meet planning deadlines. In a nulshell, Erickson now believes that without a general plan by Jan. 1, Irvine will have no ~ning laws with which to regulate deYelopment. However, sinct-some courts have ruled building permn.s may not be issued in the absence of open space and conservation elements of general plans (which were to have been adopted last Aug. 31) the mayor points out there would be no "rampaiO development in Irvine . Building permits could not be issued, he said. While the mayor contends the situation is something less than a crisis, he nevertheless has taken two significant steps in prepara\ion for the Nov. 1 meeting which was to have had onJy one item on the agenda -interviews for a publi c sa fety director. The mayor's actions are : -A direction to the city attorney to draft special relief legislation for possible action by the Legislature to exempt Irvine from the general plan deadline schedule. -Direction to the city planning staff to prepare a quick ened procedure leading to adoption of a general plan by J an. t, 1973 instead or Jan. 1, 1974 as presently pro- grammed . While it Is true the city's position to regulate construction would suffer little from ignoring the deadlines, Mayor \See CRISIS, Page%) Soggy Quakers _Arrested 15 Plunge lrito Ocean Trying to Stop Warship By JUI!( tAWR OI' ... IMM 111 ... Si.II' Fifteen wetsuit-clad pacifists were ar- rested 'nl.ursday after plunging into the ocean in an effort to stop the 16,000..ton ~ult ship SS i>uluth from leaYing Seal Beach Naval Weapons Station. Police and harbor authorities, using five boats, wer -: required to remove demonstrators from the path of the Duluth, an amphibious vessel bound for Irvine Visitor's Car in Smashup A Burbank man driving through beautiful downtown Irvine escaped with facial cuts and fractured false teeth Thursday night, when his car sailed 60 feet off the dead end of rain-slicked Jam- boree Road into a constructiGll ditch. Douglas H. Kimlin, 41, declined hospital treatment after the 10:30 p.m. aceident where Jamboree Road ends at Main Street, saying be would see his own doctor and dentist. Officer Harry Ehrlich said Kimlin's car sustained major damage and mowed down a row of reflectors and street signs when it slid out of control after he saw what was ahead and applied the brakes. an undisclosed port. Four Orange Countlans, a 64-year-old man and a 1$.year-old girl were among those jailed in the third "human blockade" try this year for a group representing the American Friends Service Committee, a Quaker-affiliated organization. Those arrestea from Orange County were Claudia Jo Goodwin, 20, of 1405 Crestview Ave., Seal Beach: John Frederick Afangels Ill. 20, of 18032 Butler St., Irvine; anJ Michael Traub, 19, of 317 Goldenrod Ave., and Timothy C . Whisman, 21, of 700 Heliotrope Ave., both of Corona del Mar. Others arrested include Patti Sykes, 43, Santa M'lnica; Sherri Siegel, 2 9 , Topanga; Steve Huston, 22, Altadena ; Bob Levering, 28, Pasadena; Franklin Zahn, M, Oaremont; Phil Bemzott, 34, Santa Monica; Charle! Swift, 54. Santa Monica; Nancy Pere.t, Los Angele!; Ann MacKinney, of Santa Monica, and Shalom Michelin, 21, Pasadena. A Navy spokesmar: said after the in- cident that the Duluth had experienced no delay despite the fact that some pro- te.!tors were able to swim within a few yards of her hul1 as she exited Anaheim Bay. The 15 pacifists were arrested on a variety of charges including unlawful assembly, failure to disperse, bringing unauthorized Yes.sels Into a harbor, and trespassing. In addition. the juvenile girl was charged \\'ith re!isting arrest. By midni~ht Thursday, the 14 adults had been released on bail ranging from $250 to $500. The girl was released Into custody of her father. The nine men, fiYe women , and one girl demonstrators began their so-called blockade about 3 p.m. as the Duluth was preparing for departure. Three small aluminum crah, each with four passengers, pulled into the nar· rowest part of the Anaheim Bay channel. As the Duluth reared them, they dove in the water and swam towa;d the giant vessel. At the :.i. ! time, the three remaining protesters climbed under a barbed wire fence on the pubbc beach immediately north of the harbor and began moving down the beach toward the same narrow part of the channel. Harbor authorities and officials, ap- parently with adYance warning on the protest, immediately swung into action as wetsuit-clad Seal Beach lifeguards dove from boats to forcibly remove pro. testors from the path of the vessel. Meanwhile, uniformed security poUce chased the other three protester! down the shore, and later waded fully-uniform- ed into the surf, waving their billy clubs above their heads, in an effort to ap.- prehend them. Viet Cong and North Vietnames~ sold· ien captured two hamlets on French-built Highway 1 riorthwest of the capital early today and though under counterattack hy government reinforcements, the at~ tackers held their positions. The villages are a> miles and 30 miles northwest of Saigon, and sit at the edge af the traditional Communist inWtraUon route from Cambodiim b o ! d e r sanctuaries. He refused to say whether the United States still is Dying reconnaissance missions north of the 20th parallel but appeared to take one step further an announcement in Washington on Thurs- day by presidential adviser Henry A. Kissinger. Kluinger told a news conference the United States lnfonne<I North Vietnam that "we would stop military activities north of the 20th parallel." Offi~er Assists Stork Sailors lineu the starboard skie ot the Duluth, watching the whole operation. When the last protester was picked up thl:!y gave a loud cheer. A spokesman for the pacifists said the purpose of the demonstraUoo was to pro- mote public awareness lhat weapons :.._·e shipped from Seal Beach to Vietnam. Southeast of Salgoo, Communl•I U.Ops surrounded Dal Do and Xuyen Moc district (county) capitals and fought their way through the lines of militia defenders to within 1,000 yards of the centers of both towns. Dat Do, 45 miles southeast of the capital, was captu red once for 10 days by the Communists last April during their (Se< FIGHTING, Page l) Helpirig Hand Nipped by Seal If Newport Beach S e o I o r Lileguanl.ILogan Lockabty tries to lend a h<lplng hand again .today. there Ls one chance 011t of two It wiU be bandaged. He tried to Thursday at 44th Streel and \'fest Ocean f'ront and suffered Jaccratlon.s whto be got bitten for bis trouble. "Victim was 1tiempting to take a sick seal Into custody," wrote Humane Officer Joe Wiison in hls ierse incident report. "Seal retum- ed to water/' it continued ... Unable to capture at thiJ time." • Laird confirmed that these activities have stopped. "We are flylng no sorties north ar the Irvine District Meeting Slated For Residents All Irvine. resident! are encouraged to atttnd a opeclal Irvine Unified School • Dlstrici.1.mee~lng on or about Nov. J5 to help plan a way to be!! develop dbtricl programs. , Under.,...nt Seilote BiU One, sohool diJtrictt don't hsve to of.fer but " minimum ln E!?ilish, physical education, scienCe and math. Other programs are lelt to district dlsoreUon. The tcbool dl.strlct-cltlJens committee will 1l10 be deslplng a way to dclonnine the diltrJct'1 goaJ1, objectives and philosophy. Superintendent Stan C...y ,.I Nov. t5 as a tentative dai. for the lnlllal meeting. Jnvttation.& will be aenl aut to all cMe and homeowner• groups, bul Corty said all people woold be welcom•. Further dttalll on the meeting will be !1!leued ot 1 l11'r dai.. • New Mother More Calm Than, Newport Policeman By ARTIRJR R. VINSEL Of flM Dallr l"llol II.., One Newport Beach policeman got the c!assic old radio-dispatched assignment about noon Thursd2y that makes fellow officers glad they were bon1e (or lunch when it went out. Patrolman Gene Senecal, 33 and the father of four children. helped deliver one and came through with Oying colors. He was more nervous, perhaps, than lbe new mother. Tho dispatcher ordered him to the Ulwrence A. Rudyiin.'!kl residence at 1148 W. Balboa Blvd., about 1 :30 p.m., an what ls known In the police profession aa a 902M childbtrth. "Ujlon arrlval, I found the front door locked, 10 t rang the doorbell, banged on (•• door and yelled through tbe Dllil slot," Ofllcer Senecal said In blM'Oport. "Someone Inside yelled: ~Come. ln througb. ,lbe wlnjl)w,'," he conUnued. Racing oround the bulldlnf• h6 found an unlocked window, 1lld 1 open and ocrombled thrwah. "f found the vlcUm lylna on the IOfa, talking' on the telepbooe/' fi.11 report con- tinued. "I immediately cbeclced tbe vlclim Ind obleMled • male child Iytni near bet' left 1hl1h," Officer Sfneca1'1 "port 1$1'd. Grabbing a sheet from the hallway lintn clOlet, he did what they tell you to do In demonstration fllms shown every so often during poUce training seaslons. He said father Lawrence and nn am- bulance arrived simultaneously to give aid and comfort .o Winifred, 26. who was hustled off to Hoeg Memorial HoaplLal. The baby boy's arrival was a flrrl·Ume eYent for both Officer Senecal and the flye-foot. one-inch, 107 pound housewife. "Her complexion was quite white. It must have been a trying experlenct for her," Officer SenecaJ said today. "lt was unbeUevable.," he remarked regarding her ability to keep cool during a continual telephone conversation. OU1cer Senecal Nlt.i mother and son McGOVERN DUE IN A.NA.HEIM Democratic presidential can- lllllai. George S. Me<lov<m will be In Drong• County Saturday and Will lddrea 4 br..kfost motllna at I 1,m, 11 D1'neylancl Doiel In Anobtlm. For details. -<>-c. llliatlap' c:ollllM today on Poge. 1, • ' !eemed to be doinll flno and hospital of- ficials have oonflnned his evaluation. A policeman for 7V.. yeara now, Patrolman Senecal said today he ha!J raced several .nothtts-lo-be to hospital'! ii. his squad car with lights flashing and siren screaming but he had never before helped out. He says his bedside manner always managed to convince hi! back seat passenger to make surf: they dld1. 't dfiye up to lbe emergency room door with two back seat passengers. Policeman. Fired In Rock Hurlin g SAN DIEGO (AP) -A policeman fir<d for allegedly throwing a roc1< through 1 car's wlndsJ1ield has pleaded lnnoctnt to assault, but first wu ordered booked. Doyle H. Empsey was dismlaed after a rock-throwing me.lee outlkle a rock concert June ts. "1 couldn't find 1ny -loo ol tbe llw whkh "'YI po""'1 omcm wl10 (QIMllt crimel do nol hive to be bool<ed1" O.pu. 1y OleL Atty. Jom Howlt:ker, 1111c1 ~ Coast Weat•er The weatherlady sees a pos!I· biUty of sprinkles lhrough Satur- day, becoming slightly warmer thJs wttkend with highs or 68 at the beaches rising to 75 inland. Lows tonight 50-57. INSWE TODAY Paul Laurence Dunbar, ion of 1lovt1 who becamt the poetic spokeJmnn of the black A.mm. con, is being honortd bl' UC Ir· vine E:ctenafon 1Di&h &ht jour-dav ctntewnial celebration. Actor ond 1cholar Roscoe Lee Browne will rea.(1 hil works. Set todo11'1 \Veeklndcr. z OAIL Y PILOT IS Fridll.--27, 1'172 No Drinks, Auto Crash Jury Told llv J ACK CHAPPEU. 'OI 1M 0.lh' ~IOI S"ft ~~s!im:itcs of high police car speed and denials of beer tlra1king were made b)1 wiu-.esses Thursiliiy at the misdemeanor man.<daughtcr trial of Gllry Adams, San Clemente patrolman. iflvolved 1n l!I fatal traffic colllsion A young passenger in the pick·up truck involved in the death crash \\'ilh Adams· police car told !ht' L..1guna Niguel Pttunicipal court that none of the youth.<! in the truck had drtlllk beer just prior to the crash ~1ay 26. "\Ve were drinking 7·Up." V.'illiam Schutz said. The youths admiueo that the truck carrit'd "a little over" three cases or beer. but denied that any beer 1vas being drunk . Tiit' collision between the police car and the pick-up truck resulted in the dl!ath of one of the passengers, Jeff Britt. 16, of Long Beach 11•ho had been riding in the rear of ... .., truck. The boys had been bound for "ln Onofre beach. Skidmarks left by the police vehicle in- dicated a minimwn speed of 67 miles per hour, testified George Platfoot, an Anaheim Police Department tra[fic in· vestigator. Ptatfoot , an expert in skidmark analysis. said skids lefl by the police car \\•ould be -:tual to those left by the veh i- cle traveling 67 miles per hour, but not involved in an acrident. 'fhe officer said he was not qualified to testify on the amount of energy absorbed ~ in·the crash. Platfoot's testimony was attacked by Adams' atlomey Gerald \Villiams, v.·ho pointed out that the skid tests were made nearly three v.·eeks after the crash and the road rr.ay have had a higher resistan- ce to later skidding. Williams said \Vith the curing of the thoroughfare which had been slurried just .-i month prio r to the crash, the skids t ould be different. Platfoot had taken a like police car and skidded it 0.1 the roadway to pr'>duce data for his investigation. Platfoot agreed that the more recently slurried road would be more slippery. Platfoot also said that there was no way of telling exactly what the resistance ot lhe road was to skidding on that day. The young passenger of the truck told the court of Judge H. Wa rren Knight that he had seen the patrol car just prior to impact The truck w3' heavily laden wilh firewood and camping gear he said, but he denied the wood was packed above the sides of the vehicle. Tv.·o youths were silting in the back, he said . He testified that the truck stopped at a stop sign before entering Oflto El Camino Real. Exchange Group Marks Birthday The Exchange Club of Saddleback Valley will celebrate its fourth birthday with an address by C. P.1. Eischen, California Exchange Clubs president· elect al noon Thursday, Nov . 2, al the El Toro Jolly Ox. The Exchan ge Club is nO\Y a SO. member organiz.ation co n1 pr i s ing business and professionaJ n1en of the Saddleback area. Club projects include a recent Fire Prevention Week, Crime Prevention \Veek, and an up-coming Jong distance AAU·sanclion lrack competition n I Mission Viejo High School. Charter president was Robert L. Dameron, now chainnan of the club Frt.'tdom Shrine Committee. 1790 Letter Bought NEW YORK (UPI\ - A Phih1delphia bookshop has p;iid $14,000 at auction for a five.page letter writlcn by George \llashington on Dec. 26. 1790 to James Duane, a member of Congress. OU.Niii COAST " DAILY PILOT Tl'le 0.-..... CNll DAILY PIL01, Wllll ..,..,1(1\ 11 COfnlllNd ~ H.-PrQS, I\ l!llbllilled by ,,,. Or ....... CO.II Pwlllhl"' C°"ll*ly ....... rll• ..:1111ant .I<• pWll\i...;t, M~y thtOVOfl Frkley, tot cos'!) Mnf, ,.._POrt ~ac11, H"'"ll"° ..... 8ttc111"°"""ln Vtllt!y, l..101111• h~ l,....IMIS10cl kbeck eN1 S•n CJ11n4on~/ S.n Ju111 C.111lllr.l111t. A 111111111 rt<1lon•I ..:llllon Is publlihlllf ~IUtll.IY\ l rcl S11'1d1y\. r l'le prlncip.I Pllllllthl~ pl.flnt I• 411 lJO Wtil 8•Y Jlrtll, Coi le M-. Ctll!0<nl1, '161'. Roli•rf N, Wt•d J .1cli: It. C111l1y Vic. ..... lde!lt •nll G..-it1.11 M ....... lhOll'l fl kt•viJ Et11or Tliol'll11 A. Mu1phi11• M*"-Olltf lClllOr Chtrtt• M. Ltot licJ1erd P. N•ll ~•lslu1 M M.lllllnO fdllWl Offk" c..11 MB.I: »Cl Wts~::r S•rwt ~ ••Kl'!! JU) .... ....~ '-"""'-8M<t11 m f'wnt "-Huft!lna• '"''" ,,,,, 891(!1 ...._, IMI CIMN!!lt! m$ Notti! II ~II.NI ,. .. .,.... 11141 '42Am Cl.ulf\H ~ .. f.42·1111 S.. C .. ma•t• AA hpc:I••: , ........ 4f'2..442t C'""'9M, mt. OrttlOt C.•I NIHl'"8 ~,. .... -........ ltllllo"-'ltn&. ... *'-' --., -~---fllttlfl -y R ~llll«vl wltf19111 .._ .. , Mt" ~ .. """'""' -· ~ t~ ,,_, ... MW If Cetfl ~ C..hflnlla. ..._,llfillt! tw Urrllr JfM "'*'"'IYJ Irr -" Q.lt 1M11llllr1 MIHl-'Y *'tlM11tM 11.U MMWllt. 'lJsed (]11wisel1' Carpenter Backs Initiative Plan St.all' Sen. Dellll.ls E Clrpentt'r t J{. ~{'\\'port BeaC'h 1 told l"C.' Ir' u1e l;i\'U!ty 1'hursd~y he would not support rh.'.11\gcs of Cali{omia's u11t1ah\t proC'r&s t\'en though he ~ht\t'S 11 1~ bel.ng used unwisely. Jn a lunC'hron speech in the l'nil·ers1ty flub (\11 rarnpus, rhe rrpr~wnlali\·e of 1he nation 's most hfa\1ly populated single d1str1rt. hs1ro se\en specific tallot nu:•asures ht> does nol fttl should ha,•e been ;iut lo vote rs because they represent ''m3ssi\·e legislation" at tht polls instead of ~·ithin the "CruC'ible .. of the Legislature. Sen. Carpenter objected to tht pll!ltlng or proposition! It IS. 18. 20. ZI. ruld 21, specifically because these are .. no! yes or no issues .'' he said. He ~id those late findings indicated lht! following percentages of people in California are "unaware and haven't 1 ead the ballot measurt'S" -Prop. 14., the Wfltson property tu in· 1tiative -II percet1t are una"'·are tt is on I.he b..1.UOI, Carpenter said. -Proposillotl 18. obscenity 86 percent are unaware. -Propo&tion 2<1, roastline initialivt· 77 percent unaware. -Propo5ition 21. school busing: 85 per· C'en t unawart. -Proposition 22. farm labor : 8.1 pe.r· cent unaware. Carpenter also hit the trend in misleading advertising on both sides of ballot measures and said he was prepared to vote for a state law requiring the ne...,~ media to "make readilv a\'ailable to l'Oters presentations of both sides of issue.i;." _ Supportuig his ro111cnt1on lh.11 the measures are loo difficult for the average voter to understand. Se n Carpenter released h11est resul ts of a California Poll on the public·s current un· derstanding of the propositions. Grass Hidd e11 In Patrol C<1r Appaloosa Steps ·On Brancl1, Hit, Bleeds to Death A hd of marijuana I about 8 j!'rams 1 was seized and placed in the Laguna Beach police evidence locker after being found in a most unli kely place -under the seat or a police paL . _car. Officer Pa ul Rose found the pot anJ a roach (partially burned marijuana cigarette) as he checked out the vehicle prior to laking it out on patrol shorUy after midnight. "That's why we alv.·ays conduct " "' search or the vehicles before the of· ficers take them out ," Police Lt Frank Dillon said this morning. Police had no explanation for the pre:;ence of the pot. Nixon Announces He'll Veto Nine Different Items WASHINGTON (UPI ; -President NiJll!n said today he v.·ill veto nine mea3Ures because they \\'OUlC: exceed his budget by $2.75 billion over the next two fiscal years. He said he was taking the action despite advice that it would be "politicall y very damaging." "If I were to sign these measures into Jaw. I would, in effecl. be making prom· ises that could not be kept since the funds required to finance the promised services are not availablt and would nol be available without the higher taxes I have promised to resist," he said in a statement. He repeated his pledge to hold federal spending to $250 billion and claimed the nine measures if enacted into law, v.·ould breach the budget by $750 million in 1he , 1973 fiscal yea r and by nearly $2 billion in 1974. "Each of these measures by itself might seem justifLSb\e or even highly desirable," Nixon said, adding that the decisions had been very difficul~ ones for him. -The appropriations fo r the ~lealth, Education and Welfare Department. a rneasure which Nixon said included $535 inillion in overspending. He vetoed an ea rlie r version of the sat!" measure which contained a budget- busting $1.8 billion last August. -The public works and economic development Act of 1972, which Nixon said would unnecessarily add new federal programs which have been demonstrably ineffective in creatlnJ:t jobs and stimulat· 1ng economic development. -A measure authorizing federal funds lo su pport mineral research and training institutes in each or the 50 stales and Puerto Rico, legislation which Nixon said 1~ unneeded because of workable existing programs. Fonda, Anti,war Activists Plnn County Spt>eches Oscar-winning actress Jane Fonda and two other antiwar activists wlll makfl two nppearanees· at local college campuses on Nov. ~. She will appear first nt UC Irvine's Science Lectu re Hall at I :30 p.m. during 11 program sponaored by VletMm Veterans Against the War (VVAW l. Al!!O slated to speak during the proiram that lasts untU 5 p.m. are former Chicago !*v'n defendant Tom llayder. and VVAW leader Scott Cami!. Admlulon is $2 to tht antiwar gather· ing at which the fllrru. "The Winte r Soldier lnvesUgaUon" and "Vlllaie by Village" lflll be shown. t.-1iss Fonda will then move to Oranae Coast Colleae where 1he wUI addree1 11tudents at 8 p.m. In tht auditorium . Hayden is alao 1lated lO appear at OCC along with actor Donald Sutherland . Tickets for lhe OCC e.vent are $1 and are avail.ablt at lhe 1tude.nL ocllvltl'' butMlng. Htt appearance was 1nnn,:ed by lhe Mloclated Student Body at OCC. A SIX·year-old Appaloosa ho~ bled lo death in a Huntington Beach field Thurs· day .af!emoon afler ht stepped on a lafl!e eucalyptus branch acrd 11 n1pped up to gore him in the stomach. The rider of the ho~. Robert \'ega of 15582 Wilson St .. ~tidway City, said he and three other friends were walking their horses in the field on Ellis Avenue near Beach Boulevard around noon ~·ben the accident occured. Vega said the horse Tobby. stepped on the six·foot branch which hurtled into lhe animal's stomach between his front legs and severed an artery. He said he qWckly remo\'ed the horse's saddle and ran lo call a veterinarian but could not get help before the animal bled to death 10 minutes latei. Vega said be had been showing lhe horse to a friend v.·ho was interesed in buying him from the. ov.-ner. Jeanne Oakey. The beige Appaloosa and the other three horses \\'ere kept at the Williams Sta ble, icrll Ernest A1·e , Jluntington Beach Fro111 Page l CRISIS ... Fischba ch conceded thal recent court decisions are producing a "crisis for the development community that Irvine can- not ignore.'' In Los Angeles C.Ounly, ror example where judges have exacted a building freeze blanketing 700.000 acres for reason of the absence of an-open space plan, • new constructioa is at a standstill. The new city, additionally, has yet to approve any new zoning: for residential development since it was incorporated last December. Failing adoption or necessary plan elements, new development would be caught in a rourt actions or en- vironmentalists which-city inaction at ltris point would aid and abet, observers note. The mayor did note ltvine. has several re5aurces it might draw upon to com· plete an interim plan package. Among these are: -The Irvi ne Company general plan might supply some of the necessary re- <1uired elements. -C.ounty adopted genera! p I a n elements particularly those for areas of the city south of the San Diego Freeway. -The city's policy ;:ilan considerations which have been under way for several months and were due for Dec. t adoption by the council. -Partially completed eUoru. of city planning consultants on the open spece and parks policies. Further. the mayor noted that a ~cneral plan which relied heavily on the planned community zoning concept - "that's pretty much the way things are done in Irvine anyway" -woul d likely eliminate much rl'd tape. Since wnlng, by state law, must be consistent with a city's general plan by Jun. I, areas of planning concern within the city might be restricted to the plan- ned community zoning review proces~. That procedure retains large measures or quality control for city officials, but would spOOd conformance to the state law. Mayor Fischbach empha sized that the Spt.'t.'<led up planning process dld not represent abandonment of the council philosophy to require much citizen input in planning . lie suggested the intr.rim plan might be subjetl to later revision foUowlng ex· tensive public hearings. "By relying hea vily on the IJ'vine Com· pany gencraJ plan and county zoning ordlnancet I believe It b, f'asible 10 develo~ An interime:ity general plan by Jan. l, •the mayor said, adding that "lhe city staff l~ ln general accord." Triggering the city's action along wilh rCC!nt court decisions, was the re1li2a- Uon that State Sen, DtMis E. Clrpen· lfl.r's bill to give de1dUne relief to new cities had failed In the legislature, the mllyor noted. Despite the desire le. renew that relief atltmlpt, "we o.1nnot alt on our hands and do nothrrtg belween now &nd Ott. 31." he <.'Oflcluded. I lt'ait a Jtlitiute: Tncl\·e \Von1e11. bfling trai ned in the Navy's fire fighting school a t the 'l'i·ea~ure l.-,l11nd Na\•al Base Ju San Francisco, participated in a firefighting dcn1011stration this \\eek. \\lhat held up the proceedings? ~t ilady's coiffure. of course. Man Conimits Burglary To Get Home-Prison ~tcALESTER . Okla . /t;Pll -The "·arden of the state prison and the dist rict attorney in Tulsa both tumed do\\'ll a request from ex-con George J. Bamberger. 46. lie Yi'anted to return to his "home" 1n prISon Bamberger, v.·ho has been out of prison only 55 days ln 12 years carried the clothing he needed for tht trip back to prison recently into lhe district at· tomey's office and confessea to a number of unsolved crimes. He held out his hands 'J be handcuffed. But prosec utor Frank llagedom said Bamber .;er had done nothi1: wrong. "He asked us how he could be sent back for four years." Hagedorn said Thursday. "We told him there was no reason lo send him back. ··Then. he asked if we \\'Ould put him back if he did commit a crim~ ''Wt sai~ yes. but asked not to do anything, for thal reason because he might get hurt. Something might go \\'rong. • Otapman :(}£ f ers Education C.Ourses At Viejo, T ust ii1 Saddleback Vall ey area residents v.ho want to start or continue their college educations. can enroll in Chapman College's residence education program. Classes will be conducted a1 Tustin and :0.11ssion Vie10 high school campuses for the eight·1\·eek courses v.•hich carry a full semesters credit. Registration for the first ter1n \¥hich runs from Oct. 30 to Dec. 22 is being taken by phone at 997-2290 or Y:ill be taken al the l\\'O high schools from 3 to 7 p.m. Oct. 30 to Nov. 7. The classes meet for t\\'O and a half hou rs two nights a week, and the com· pleted class is fully accredited to apply 1oward undergraduate and graduate degrees. The fees for the classes include a $10 admission fee, a $3 registration fee and $40 luit1on per undergraduate Uflit. and $15 per graduate unit. For information on the course offerings for lhc (irst seS!.1011, call the college at 997·2290. Sales1nnn Co"ies Back From 'Dead' TACOMA , \Vash . tUP I I -Walter P \Vlld 111\ssed tiis own funera l. Memorial services were held for \Vild, 31, abou t ti month after his overturned boll! was found in Crescent Lake and an ex ten sive sea rch fai led to find hls body. Wedne!«l11 y, Wild turned up in Tacoma. lie said he spent the last four months in Hawa ii "lo learn to find myself." He s:ild his career as a salesman had hrf'n 100 rr.uch or a s1ra\n and he plan· ncd his disappc:irtincc He said he would allcn1pt to ba'o1ne an environmental se:lcntlsl. He al~ said hi s 'v1re, wht'I believed him lo be dead, accepted him hack "\villi the help of God. we're happy:· CAN SUP ERMA N SA VE fllS CITY? C:tttlng the depressed city o f Mctropoll11 (1\1. l out of lht. red may be too much of t1 jnb -rven ror Superman, "Bu t he was happy as a lark, and told us he 'd be seeing us later." Sunday night, Bamberger broke into a la\•ern, called the police and tcld them a bu rglary was going on. He walked outside and waited for authorities with his hands in the air. Bamberger turned down offers of a jury tria: or mental tests, asklng instead that he be se ntenced immediately. Tburaday he got his wish. When he went before District Judge Raymond W. Graham, Bamberger 11id he wanted to return tc prison ao be could complete an art course he started before he was released several weeks ago. Re said he won second prize with bis first prison sltete:h. \Vhen Assiitant District Attorney Mike Barkley recommended the four·year sentence. Bamberger told the judge. "l would sincerely appreciae it if you would SCJ'ltence me to that." .. It is with distaste that I'm required to adhere to your wishes," Graham . said. "It's a simple act of burglary. I'm di3sastisfied "°\th the prospects. I have, however, no choice but to protect society from this type of behavior." "Thank you," Bamberger said. "I'd like to return to prison. The world has change<! an awful lot." GOP lricumbent Sued by Rival SAN DIEGO CAP) -Democratit con- gressional candidate Frank Caprio bas filed suit against Republican incumbent Bob Wilson, accusing Wilson of abusing his congressional mailing privilege. The suit, filed in U.S. Dbtrict Court Thursday, contends two "Bob Wilson Reports" newsletters. one before the June primary and one last week, were mailed at publit expense to promote Lbe Wilson campaign. Wilson said the suit was "clearly polillcal And part or the last-minute 1nonkey business or any election." 'Bombs' evacuat.e • Apa.rtment A pair of black, bomb-1lke boxes -one Ucldng ominously -forced evae:uatlon ot two Costa Mesa apartment bt.llldlngs 1bursdey night, after being planted a\ lbe front door and tn the car ol lbelr In- tended target Demolition erperts from El To,,, Martne Corps Air Station removed them gingerly hlld opened the one with the timing device from a distance, using special military appal'llluJ desiped !or tbe pUlp(l5e. l They turned out to be r<latlvely harmless but apparenUy created their builder's desired effect: fear. Officer Chuck Hamilton fOl.Dtd the items, listed as destructive devices in bis report after Lee A. Breighton, 18, of 1323 Baker St., took a grim telephone call about 9:30 p.m., police said. "There is a present at the front door for your mother," the male stranger aaid •• HU she doesn't like that one, the.re l.s • another one in her car," he added. abruptly banging up. Miss Brelghton lives with her mother, Mrs. Gloria E. WJDi8Dl!OO. Discovering the devices, 0 f f I c e r Hamill<ltl notWed beadquartu& and the watch commander. Sgt. Mu~W~ called El Toro MCAS authorities. Chief Warrant Officer Ro(er and StaH Sgt Earl °"""1eo, ol lbe e<· plosives demolltion team were dl!plt· clled to handle the devices, one of wblch . was tick.Ing. They opened 14 discovering an alann clock wired to three highway emergency nares and pa.eked In shredded pages from a newspaper. Tbe seCond suspected bomb removed from Mrs. Willimson's locked car ~ tabted identical nares and newspaper pacldng, but had DO clock, police aald. Fiji Toll Increases SUV A, Fiji (UPI) -Dam.age from hurricane Bebe, which smashed its way through the South Pacific this week, wW' cost Fiji millions of dollars, Prime Minister Ratu Sir Kamlsese Mara said today. The death tell in the hurricane rose to 17 today with the dlscove:ry of the body of a 90-yeaN>ld woman in a native thatched hut in the sUll·flooded Rewa river valley. FrotnP11geJ FIGHTING. • • spring offensive. Both it and Xuyen Moc, 55 miles southeast of Saigon, are in Phuoc . Tuy Province , a resort area when there 11 no fighting. Phuoc Tuy was "pacified" by Au stralian forres before they pulled out last year. · . In the ~ir war, the U.S. command saMi a U.S. Air Force F4 Phantom was shot down today by anUa lrcraft fire over North Vietnam. The two c::rewmen parachuted into the Gulf of Tonkin and we~ picked up by helicopter 11 miles northeast of the Demilitarized Zone. U.S. fighter-bombers attacked North Vietnam "more than 10 times 'lbursday, High-flying B52 bombers joined the airstrikes with nine waves, all of them over lhe lower Panhandle, the U.S. com· mand reported. South China s.o ........ CMllJHf .., l Pattem Of Canlrol l ... ,..., coolnlli..l loy Viti Cont and/or Horth~ ,.... .. ,. The man who in the pnst could only be stopped by green kryplonlte now hns n problem with greenbacks. See story, rn"'~ 24. .,.,_ FIGHTING CONTINUES AS PEACE PLANI MAPPED Map Shows Are11 Held by South Vietnam, Communl1t1 -. ' I i ' UPIT ...... PAUL SHERWIN ESCORTS DAUGHTER TO CAR Secret1ry of Stat• Convicted in Bribery Trl1I 2 Fund Committees Fail ·to File Reports Hfglaway Bid Top N.J. Adviser Guilty, in B1·ibe FREEHOLD, N.J. (UPI\ -personal and Poll llcal lriend of New Jersey Secrelllry of State Gov. Willia m T. Cahlll, who Paul J. Sherwin, top adviser to campaigned largely on the promise that be wou ld clean & governor who swept into of-out corruption in the state's flee on an antico!Tl.l ption plat-political circles. fonn, was convicted Thursday of conspiring and offering to ALL TlmEE SAID they receive a bribe. would appeal. Superior Court Princes s Sees .Star LEEDS, England (APJ -Princess Grace or Mon!co went to a ball and mtt her ooetlme 1Cteen lover, Cary Ort.lit. ;,I'm deUghted to see you again," the princess, Conner flctress G r a c e Kelly. told the 68-year--0\d Grant Thursday n i g h t when they met at a V'.lrie- ty Club of Great Britain ball. ' During her Hollywocxl day!!, the princt!ss and Grant starred in the furn "To Catch a 'I'hjef." William C. Loughran, a J udge Francis X. Crahy set Republican fund raiser, also sentencing for Nov. JO. Each waa convicted of the same faces a maximum sentence of charge by the jury of five six years in jail and a $6,000 L----------' W<>men and seven men, and fllle. Michael J . :P.fanzo, owner of a Sherwin, flanked by his wife, construction nnn, was found three sons and t h r e e DAILY PILOT 5 MacGregor Admits Special , Fund-'Not for Espionage' \\'ASHINCTON (Al)! -The chairman of President Nixon's campaign co1nmittee has acknowledged for the firl!lt tlm~ the existence of a special campaign fund . Bul he denied the money ~'as ever used to rinance political espionai:c against Democratic presiden· tial hopefuls. Clark MacGregor said In a televislon· interview Thursday that the money was both a "carryover" from the 1968 presidential ca n1paign and torne addit"ional funds con- tributed in 1911. He said the fund was used for ''preliminary plonning for the primary eleetions. '' A COMMJTI'EE spokesn1an $8.id later the money was not left ovtr from 1968 btJl was contributed in 1971 and t"arl y this year for passlble primary use. The General Accounting Or- fice has reported the Nixon campaign had on hand a fund or ot least $350,000, whoie- recelpt!l a n d d.lsbursemenll were unaccounted for. The \Vashlngton Post has r~ !he fund contained 11s much a..s $700,000 Which \4-'aS u.sed to finance the Watergate break- ln and for a v.•Jdespread effort to disrupt the campaigns or Oemocratlc presidential OOfloo tenders last sprq and wm- mer. ~1acGregor w.as interviewed by Elizabeth Drew on National Public Affairs Center !or Television. guilty of conspiring aad of-daughters, nt motionless as h1ACGREGOR, chainnan of ferlng to give a bribe. the jury roreman read the the Committee ror the Re-- 'No Mess' Pola1·oid Marketed verdict. But his wl!e, Elva, election of the President since THE THREE WERE charg· burst into tears. Their oldest MIAMI BEACH, Fla. (AP) only three things -focus. developing picture unit within July t. when ronner Atty. ed with trying to get state daughter, Mrs. Jean Mooney, -After four years and $250 push the shutter button and an invisible. stiff protective Gen. John N. Mitchell reslgn- Transporta tion C.Ommissioner put her arm around her mllllon, the Polaroid Corp. has wait. plastic structure. The unit ed. also for the first time John C. Kohl to give Manzo's mother, and wept herself. introduced a new selC-develo~ One 5 cc 0 n d after the represents 17 layers of com· listed five personJ who were construction company special When the family left the ing color camera it says will photographer pushes the shut-pounds, some only 1 O. authorized to make payments consideration on a $600,000 courtroom, Sherwin helped his "change our lives." ter, the camera ejects a thousands of an inch thick. from the fund. highway contract in return for youngest daughter, Carol, into About the size of a 1---'--::;;liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiilil;;:::--a $10,000 contribution to the the ca r. paperback book and weighing! Republican party. He shook hands with some only 24 ounces, the SX-70 will WASHINGTON (AP) _Two campaign financial reports Witnesses testified that reporters but told them he retail for $180 and be available comn1ittees which have fun-night at a Washington hotel. Sherwin attempted to in-would have no comment. nationally shortly after the EXCITING ART led I ts f fluence Kohl. However, the first of next year, Polaroid ~c ~e am~~n ,0 money He will be accompanied by his ,.,.,mpany which submltted the "! CAN'T BELIEVE 1't," Id Tb rsd · ht It ·11 Costa Mesa Art League Now Thru Sat. i~to Pres1d~nt Nixon s r_e-elec-wife. Cornelia. .... !JS u ay n1g . w1 go lion campaign have railed to low bid for the contract kept said Mrs. Sherwin, "how could on sale in Florida Nov. JO. 5 ~ 11 file registration statements in • Korea Bid it. this happen?" The camera, brainchild or outb oast • "I apparent violation of federal SEOUL {UPI) _ T h e Sherwin toot a leave or Cahill said he would not Polaroid founder Dr. Edwin 86 law. government or President Park -~•;bs~enc;e~fro;m~h~ls~jo~b;:w~he~n~he~J""~m=m:en:t~in~v=ie:w~ol~th:e~a~p-~~L~nfn~d~.~r~e~q~u~i~re~s~t ~h~''.___~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-Examination of hundreds of Cbunghee proposed a new con-was indicted. He was a close peal. photographer essentially to do stitution today which gives the l--------------------------'-'-"-'-"_nk.l_,_M_•_".c"":_m_~_, _________________________ _ ( ) president more powers, ex-BRJ EFS lends his term from four to six years and ""'eakens the '---------' powers of parliament. pouring Into the General Ac- counting Office also shows a $25,000 Joan to Democratic Presidential candidate George McGovern froni a secretary Y•ho refused to say how a secretary could afford such a Joan. e Bot1ab Smrpect In Tokyo, a South Korean opposition leader, Kim Dae- jung, said Park was at· tempting to install himself as a dictator "forever." September's Beef P1ices Took Slide TEL AVIV (APJ -A 22- year~ld American tourist has been arrested for investigation in connection with the murder- by-mail bombs addressed to President Nixon. Secretary of State William P. RogeMi and Defense. Secrelary A-1elvin R. WASHINGTON (AP) Laird, the state radio reported Consumers paid less for beef today. last month because of a slide The broadcast identified the in cattle prices and. the first suspect as DeMis Feinstein dip in middJeman markups and said he came to Israel as since last J u n e , the a visitor several weeks ago. Agriculture Department said • B S h today. • OflfJS earc Tbe September retail pric. ANCHORAGE, A I ask a of beef, a key indicator in the (UPI) -Divers were called t r r · 1· htl I into the search for House Ma-cos 0 iving, was 5 tg Y ess than $1.13 per pound on an all- jority Le<1der liale Boggs to-cut basis, includln~ ham- day to probe an area where an burger as well as steak. oil slick was sighted in That was almost three cents Alaskan waters. Jess than in August and 4.4 The slick, first sighted cents cheaper than the record Wednesday near C.Ordova in h' h . Prince William Sound, was ig in July. In August, within the scheduled flight however. the price spread - pattern carrying Boggs and the markup -from cattlemen to consumers was a record three others when their plane 44_8 cents per [>OUnd. disappeared Oct. 16. Last month. according to a e Wallace Aid "market basket" report on WASHI NGTON (UPI) -U.S. farm-produced £ocxl, the Alabama Gov. George C. middleman share for beef was Wallace will come back to lhe 43.3 cents pe r pound, a decline Washington area this weekend or 3.3 percent in a month. to raise funds for Holy Cross ;==========.' Hospita: at Sliver Spring. Md., vo'here he was treated for gun shot wounds received in l\1ay at a Maryland campaign rally. Hospital officials s a i d Thursday that Wallace had ac- cepted nn invi tation to attend the eighth annual fund-raising ba ll for the hospital Saturday Prosperity Next Goal Says Nixori WASHJNGTON (AP! President Nixon, his quiet campaign f o r re-election bolstered by new Vietnam peace hopes, says "if you give me the chance in the next four years,·• he will work for pros- perity and "full employment without war and without in· nation." Nixon, using a propeller· driven aircraft not usually (cAMP AIGN' •12) associated w I th presidents these days, made a flying trip Thursday night to llunllngton, \\!. Va., nnd Ashland, Ky., to stump for his own candidacy and for be l eaguered Republicans seeking state of-nces. Crowds estimated hy police and newsrncn to total more than 20,000 turned out along the way. Few derisive cries were heard and virtually all curbside plac11rds c a v o r e d Nlxon'!I cause. At an airport rally in Hun- tlngton, where Police 11aid 3,000 were on hand, Nixon built his tmpro1nptu campaign speech around whaL he termt.>d his confidence that the United States will schleve "peace with honor and rw,t pence with surrender In Vletna1n." KNOW YOUR CANDIDATE VOTE I FOR GORDON GOOSE / (I I > ' I \ ........... Thr \"Olin}[ ai;:r, has ai;taln be\'n lnwer<.'Ci to Ji(ive othcr1' th(' rhrht to vote. Glrla and OOy!I l\ttt>nding any school In the Nt'''"l)Ort·f.1eM area can ,,·in 11. trip to Sacr&m('nto vtn Air Otllfomla.. Ballol.t 11v11iln1>1t· In Westclltf Plau. shops 1'l 171h A Irvlno Av,.. nil!'.'. Ocnoslt one onl)' In the t~llot lk'!x at Jett'1 Pr.ttlng ZIJO, Alll.ICf'l'ing Oct, 31 thru Nov. !5. SHOP ••• WESTCLIFF PLAZA 171h & lrvlne Avenue It's decision season again J'.:::~:;;;;::::::i.~ ladies and gentlemen. The pro-r of California Regents and State Univer· sity and College Trustees. Does that mean a generous board can run away with the taxpayers' rnmiey? them) i.mreadable ballot ,__, Absolutely not ;;:::~~~== ;ag ~ shoulclStateWOlemrkplaiforfl!.._ propositions. · i not the politicians. We can't help you with the <:' ™=' ") Salaries of state other 21 propositions. But we employees are controlled can shed a little light on -~----...i by a handful of politicians. Proposition 15. The State PdyControl Not the entire legislature. Proposition 15 limits the increases (or decreases) pay boards can reconunend. State salaries, by law, will be kept equal to the average paid for the same jobs in private industry. Amendment (After reading this ad, Control a man's income you may still vote against us. But at and you control the man. (Look · least you11 know why.) at any boss-ridden eastern city In other words, a Jab technician working fur the state will get the aver· age salary paid to lab technicians in State employees should and see how bad it can get) work, not walk. Three times in the past three On May 22, 1972, state years these politi· Water Project employees shut cians took money off the water flowing into the legislature al lo- Southem California. It wasn't the cated to pay state first strike by state employees. rollege personnel. We'd like to make it nurses, highway the last patrolmen, forest fire Unlikemanywmkers fighters and other in private industry; Cali· ,. California employees and fomia State employees put th e money aside for their have no established way own pet projects. to work out employee-employer Proposi tion 15 will take problems. They either have to state pay control out of the hands strike or quit of politici ans and give it back Twenty-five percent have to you, the voters, through quit in the past yeai: Others your elected legislators. have staged costly work stop.. After all, it's your money. pages. Thernajority are looking for an intelligent alternative. ./ State pay should be controlled, not •nlpulated. The State Pay Control amendment is designed to do exactly what it says. Control state pay: Propositionl5 gives them one. A yes vote on 15 will keep state employees on the job while their elected representatives work out disputes with state boards. By law, decisions reached through these negotiations will be bind· ing on all state employees. State salaries will be set by the l~F-~.: established boards: The State Personnel Board, University Talking is much better than walking. the private sectoi: No more. No less. As a safeguard, your elected repre- sentatives in the State Legislature have the right to turn down raises which might unbalance the budget. The final vote belongs to~ Does PropositianlS mean higher taxes? No. The state has rollected enough of yo ur money to cover easily any and all salary adjustments affected by Proposi· tion 15. (On June 30, 1972, the budget sur· plus was already $565. 7 million.) Keep state pay in line without a tax increase. Vote Yes on 15. Cali:tM-forY•011J5 -Co-t.Olrl:lrl9ittlr: "W.EmtO--... I 11111• G.m Kanrtb E. lhrl!Ollo {.mlel V. Mcfhll1,MD. f:.':.~ .... ~11ma F. $IR'!I c.c...,.._..1 ~Hord Os: D. QUfud erum.11 (IJl.JQhll (;atliJI (RtCJ I!<)-~ .,,.Miki' ............... 0.. J'w...c C. '11.'olr, U. ~dfft '""'.l·""""" Jl:idwdA.~ HM.. "'.ita J· v.tM9 loft.Ji..,.. R. Mi19 Jl•c~ .ltcc~ Or; l\nmtdl Jl Stllilh c.n..w..o.DWW Hon.Y~tir11iti ... ~~ Mu. llcno« Gnif ildlwd 11. lillill .. "~""" t. I n. S wm 'htr w.."s!"'.'.~tt· ,.~C.llJlnir.~ .AntM .Broni.. ~.BiHG-br.J11ha~ KtWtt ,.....,, }l(lft. r:ri .II. Wriflf ~ ~ • Unnft 8. t.de ll"'-~L ~ RQbeft B. lfall:'ll C.M.IM•dt.mt tit M!JW:l Ml'lf!lfil AndloDof • Rn ,,_ - O.~D.-Dlurifl~· ""'., ... Mn. 11:11111 I. IJ1nuo11 MMli,_ ~·-r.?;"' ·-r;,~ Pllilli L. Cintt" S.t.J:=-i~ M. H. lbrttf )Kt ..... r.: .... U!:'~ =~t=.. Jeon.J,i!a..m e.~ Arnett L. Hlt1&lielil SiMer J\athlftl i.-. ta.M. ton. KlcNnl Nnlnt RtT. A. Cllqilt 11:"""'" ·-':re.: Ala:Nomu ~:.-~"'II:,.,,. I <tr ~II~ •.RobtrtF..H~ ~<iMW. rd R1blltMnKlll'bile1 ~ w;r-~~~ P.u~ lk' Hf'nllndf:l T.Ml!llU """'/-"·"" Oarlt:11 It. s.arn.no ~if·-'"'·~··""' l lrJ,.Leo JU,.h Hoa.Gilbtlt M~ 5''" utePtdtt HM. Sil"'~ s.ichn =l~W'i'b I ..... £-0.-~:,r~R. --~=i· .. Rt'4 ~ lo\'. Statrhlmmat ~-~=-:i.L" .... (1111, ' • elrit "'~"""'"'' u:: Ed•ln l,..Z =""" Mn. !.ff ..... -~-·"'-Re~ G.SilrmcJot Gtar&1H.~ I i • DAILY PILOT EDITORIAL PAGE A Responsible Decision Irvine City Councilmen this week refused a toning that would have allowed Harker-Rinker Development C'oinpany to build WO homes on a 70·acre parcel near ~ 1'oro A1arine Corps Air Station. Following much legal \\'fang~ing about "''.hether or not the action should pinpoint noise as the chief reason (or the denial . councilmen finally turned down the zon· ing by a. 3 to 2 vote. .... • •.,.. ,.r .' Councilmen John Burton and E. Hay Quigley Jr. favored listing noise as the ct~y·s chief concern. Httd their view prevailed, the city m.i~t w~ ~ave faced f~ ture legal difficulties. The council m•Jonty ~id ~e1r votes were based on the length)' record of ~estimony_on the Rjnker proposaJ,.n9t merely the jet n~e affecting the propeYly, , Among those other . conci:rns are la~ of publu: services to the property 1ncludrng water. sewers, roads and schools. The council acted responsibly. Each of Us Can Be Gcor!!e For much of the year, most Orange Coast resjdeots bask in the glow of affluence in a bountifu.1 area. But as many churches have learned, when the time comes to contribute a little hard cash for the good of .our fell?'v man. the attitude cha_nges to that of Appalachia -we re suddenly poverty stricken. That. of course, is human nature .. "Let George Do It" is a slogan issuing from the subconscious. But there are human needs which must be met. And the t'nited \Va v is the best \\'ay - a single contribu· lion to cover a inultiplicity of good causes. For instance, the ChUd Guidance Clinic for an emotionally-disturbed ~~ ' -$75: Food and temporary shelter for five home- less families through the Salvation Army for one day. 1 -$SR: One day of care and training for 10 people at one of Southern Orange County's centers for the re- tarded. -$20: A family ~ounzjing session with the Famil.Y 5ervlce Associat_ion' . EmergenciF of ever.y klnd are Jlllll by the helping hands of 54 lgencies. The current campaign goal is $1.315,000 Cot operating funds. If each or us gives his share, we'll each be a George. or a Georgia, 'doing the job himseU or herself. ' . . Irvine's Adopted MIA At 1 p.m. Saturday, the new city of Irvine will pause to honor Lt. James \Vayne Herrick Jr., an Air Force pilot who bas been listed missing in action in Southeast Asia since Oct. 27, 1969. In ceremonies in Campus Park at UC Irvine, city officials and citizens alike will join in a humanitarian, non-political demonstration of sympath y for the family or Lt. Herrick and hundreds of others like him. \Vith newfound hope that information will soon be available on all MIAs and that they and prisoners of \Vat might soon be returned, Saturday's recognition of Irvine's adopted MIA portends greater measures of optimism. • these gifts will provide: . ~ S250: an average hom~boun~ patien~ with Vtsit· ing Nurse service for a year, including physical therapy an d home health aid service. . . -$150: Five sessions with a trained psychiatrist at \Vhen Councilman E. Ray Quigley Jr. urged the new city to adopt Lt. Herrick, brother of CuJverdale resident :tltrs. Barbara Hedrick, it appeared it would be a long time before news of his fate \\'Ould be forlhcoming from Hanoi. Now, all may join l!fr. and Mrs. J . \Vayne Herrick of ·Panora, Iowa, at a time when the ouUook is brighter that they will know more of him. SB ~ ... >~~ ·rvE !jEA~~ OF (!\YING POLL5J ~UT NOT Of 5PITTIN6 f'UPP£T5.~ K e 11ue dy, Not MeGov erti, Likely Leader Demos Are Thinking Ahead \\'ASHl~GTO~ -The post-'.\lcGovem reronstruction of the Democratic party i.!J being anticipated by some leaders even before the)' know for sure how the elec· Uon 'A'ill turn out . ft. McGovern ''le Lory. of coone, would make such anticipations academic. But the size and extent of a McGovern defeat woul4 have a strong bearing on what will happe11 in \he future. The fair)y obvious conclusion is that Sen. Edw11rd ~I. Kennedy. however badly McGovern is beaten, will move in as the popular lead- er of the party and steadily advance toward the presidential nomination of 1976. IT lS NOT QUITE that simple. Some other general conclusions are being reached which a~ subject to ex- amination. One of them is that John Con- nally of Texas, serving as secretary of state. will turn Republican and take the 1976 Republican nomination away from Stiiro T. Agnew. Who says that Connally v.•HI either be appointed secretary of state or turn llepublican~ He i:5 a Democrat, leading the Democrat!! fo r Nixon and his future may lie in the Democratic party more strongly than in the Republican party. Experience shows that if McGovern loses as badly as the polls now indicate, the Democratic party will be completely shattered and will have to start to rebuild from the bottom up. LtrERAU.. Y FROM the bottom up - (rucHARD WILSO~ \ht South, labor, ethnic groo.pg, youth, liberated women. '''ell tbe traditional liberals will have lost their moorings. Anyone who brings them back together will have to command respect over a broader speetrum than McGovern's and it is not even certain I.bat Kennedy's scope ts that great. Kennedy's greatest weakness is in the South, a fact which is not unrelated to his growingly warm relationship with Rep. Wilbur C. Mills. chairman of the tax-writing House Ways and Means Com4 mittee. Mills is not much known to the general public, but he stand! solid in the South as a signer of the contumacious Southern Manife!lo on Racial Segrega- tion, and sound in Wall Street on taxes. a.11LLS• ABORTIVE bid for the presidency (probably aimed morr at the vice-pre!idency) did not improve his poliUcaJ stature. But at least Senator McGovern promised to nominate Mills for secretary of the treasury, and if that never happens, the Ark.ar.sas Democrat has a chance to become speaker of the Hoose of Representatives assuming the Democrats still have control next January. This is mentioned here to show how carefully Kennedy is keeping his options open anil getting himself in a position to cultivate North and South, East and West. With a foot in the McGovern organization, .and a foot in the South, Kennedy could step rorward into his natural terrain, the urban areas, to recapture the old coalition McGovern had lost. THIS IS ALL IDGBL Y tenuous. Con- nally, remainng an ambitious Democrat, coold make the way harder for Kennedy. A reconstructed ~utb which had voted for Nixon and Wallace might not make Democratic leaders very hospitable to a Kennedy under any conditions. The conclusion can safely be drawn that it will not be easy for Kennedy or anyone else to reunite a party so badly divided as the Democrats will be if ~1cGovern is swamped on Nov. 7. Another conclusion can he hazarded with reasonable safety. McGovern will not fold his tent qd !teal away into the dark Of night. He has given signs already that he is thinking past his possible defeat and as a Unlted States Senator will try to rally the forces of opposition to Nixon and ~BlT! the torch into the campaigns or 1976. In any case. McGovern would have to keep right on campaigning U he wants to stay in the limelight. He woufct'be up for reelection to the Senate in 1974. UNLIKE SENA'tOll Hubert H. Hum- phrey in 1968, McGovern would still have his pulpit in the Sen.ate which Humphrey was forced to relinquish for two years. The importance of this is that McGovern \Vil! h11ve continuing access to the in- formation media based in Washington. l\ifcGovern's rerord in politics indicates he will try to assert his nominal leadership of the party, and, in any case, hang on for dear life to whatever stature being a defeated presidential nominee gives him. Thl'lt won't make the job or reuniting the Democrats any easier. The No-Growth Movement Growth is a six·lettcr word thst is tak· in0 on the connotation of a four-letter word in some localities. Cities and states that once courted new residents and new industries have come to the conclusion that growth brings more problems than progreg., in ils wake. As a result, pro- posals to retard or halt growth ire gaining an increasingly sympathetic hearing. Califomln. the country's fastest-grow- ing stale since World WRr II, is in the forefront of the think-small movement. At an Aug. 7 ne~s conference, Califoruia Atlorney General Evel\e J. Younger S<tid the state wa.s prepared 10 sue local aovemments to prevent people from ~~ O•ANGI CO~T • " ,. .i• T "°""" 111..U, ~dilor ~ ' AlbmW./l<Jl<t EdiCorill Page £dftor EDITORIAL RESEARCH being allowed to move into areas \Vhere they would contribute to air pollution, overload sewage facilities, or otherwise degrade the environment "A city Is like an apartment house." Younger said. "If it b filled, tbere should be no effort lo brlng in any more people. The concept th1t 'there's room for one more' JUSl doem't opply." A SlMlLAR VIEW was expressed by John Tooker, Califomla's director (If plaMing and research, on Sept. 18. Testl· rytng bef ... the Stale Assembly Commit· tee m Environmental Quality, Tooker at.Id tbat eutntlal 1trvlcts may have to • "1»"'10ihe1d In "l""t areaa of'CW!omltfto ~ oil tmweleome poputalloo l(ll>wtb. LOcaJ g(\vtmments t~t f(IUttnefy ap- prdve dAiv6opments to expan<j lhelr l•• baset "would be astoundtd1" t,>e addod. at how little ema revenue they recdve when tho coot ol providing additional tuVlcel Is takM into account The Loo Anaetes City Council and Plannlng Commilslon, In a July 11 "l>Ort to Ma)'Or Sam Yorty recommended a U-mllliM celling on l!.; number or i>fO' pie who muld Uve In the city by 19911. Anlund U mtllioll people now rutde wllltin L.A. cl\)' llmlta. but pi-.t ion- tn1 regutalloN would permit a lheor<llc.I Pol>lllltkln of 10 million. 'Ill... -ki l11tt, the PlannlnJ oom- mtulan -• be,.00 lbe n?port by adop- lina a 20-year "tOllin& plan ctulgll<(I 10 limit population to 3.4 million . Possibly influenced by that action. the Los Angele!! County Board of Supervi~rs voted in late September to rreeie building-pennit awards on 1.8 million acres of county land, includlng 900,000 acres that are mostly held by private builders and speculators. Henceforth, lhe board will grant pennit& only if plans call for no more than one unit per acre in the affected areas. Tht surprise move immediately held up 1,600 building permits, representing $43 million in t.(•n- strucUon , that were pending when the <icclsion was made. Growth no doubt will ccmtinuc Jn Los Angeles and elsewhere, but the days or unchecked development appear num- bered. Dear , • .~Joomy ' Gus Almost everyone enjoys a circua -right? Why wait ror JUngllng Brothers and Barnum & Balley when we can att.cnd our local clly councll meeUng1? -P.E,W. nit ........ rt«fCtll ,....,., "'"" "" _._..,....... . ..... ,._ ... """"' ft ......, ... OMIT Plltl. George! What A re You Up To Nowadays? e adly Need Metric System (,__AR_T_H_oP_P_E_) LOS ANGELES -I was in Los Angeles on business and whom should I run into but my old friend, George. Now George is one of the nicest guys you'd ever want to meet and it was a pleasure to see him again. Good old George. So we shake hands and 1 say, "George! You're a sight for sore eyes. And what are you up to these days?" "To tell you the truth," he says, "I'm running for Presi· dent." "No kidding!" sar-i J. "That's a great idea. But you ought to tell people." "I've been trying,'' he says. "But 1 just can't seem to get the message across." "The fir.it thing you should do," says I, "is pass out a lot of buttons and bwnper stickers to spread the old name around." _"I've been doing that for more than a year," be says. 'ls that right?" says I. "Well, maybe people are keeping them 'ror souvenirs. What about a slogan? You'll need a slogan." Just to indJcate how badly this country needs the metric system, and how baffling our whole present system or weights and measures is. today's word- quiz deals wholly with this mischievous subject: t. If you asked for a "hogshead" or li- quid, how much would you get? 2. U you ordered a "cord" o( fuel ~·ood, how much would it weigh? 3. How many sheets of paper make a "quire"? 4. How long is a "chain" in surveying and engineering? 5. "Full fathom five thy ( a t h er lies." says Shakespeare - bow deep is Dad? 6. JJ a horse stands 18 "hMds" high, how large is it? 7. I{ a tailor made up an "ell" of cloth for you , how much would you llave? 8. }low many "scruples" make a "dram"? 9. Can you distinguish "one ounce" avoirdupois from "one ounce" troy, and ho\\ much is a "fluid ounce"? 10. Whet, Peter Piper picked his peck of pickled peppers, how many quarts did he pick, and what part of a bushel? ANSWER& I. A large cask, containing rrom 63 to ~YDNEY J.HARRI~ 150 gallons, depending on whether it held wine or some other tiquid. 2. A "cord" is a unit of volume, not or welgbt, equal to 128 cubic feet, usually 8 feet Jong, 4 feet wide, and f feet high. " A "quire" is 24 sheets of paper. 4. A "chain" is 100 links of equal length, having a total length either of 66 feet (as in a surveyor's chain, or the dlstance between the wickets in cticket) or 100 feet, as in an engineer's chain. 5. mY FATHER lies 30 feet deep -:t fathom is six feet. 6. A "hand" is four inches. 7. An ell of cloth varies in different countries; about 45 inches. 8. A scruple is equal to 20 grains or 1·3 of a dram. 9. An ounce is 437.2 grains or l/Jfi pound avoirdupois; it is 480 grains, or I/ 12 pound troy; a fluid owice is 1.IKM7 cubic inches, or 1/16 of a pint. 10. A peck is a dry measure of eight quar", equal to 537.6 cubic inches, and iJ the fourth part of a bushel. (I have a rewn more of such absurd examples of our illogical and outmoded measuring s)'stem, but first you have to find out how many quires are in a ream.) "Come home. America!" he calls out. "Did you lose your dog?" says I, look· in--; around. "NO," HE SAYS. "That's my slogan: Fuel Prices Headed Up Come Home, America." "[t ought to sew up the tourist vote," says I. "Maybe what you need's a? iss~e. Say! Aren't you against the war 10 V1et- nrun? Now, there's a good one. People .are pretty sick of the war." "l"m for withdrawing all our troops, planes and used tanks in 90 days," he says. "Wow!" says I. "A fearless un- compromising stand like that will really arouse the country. One way or another. Wait till you tell the people that!" "1 did," says he. "But nobody seems ro care much." "Well," says I, "Vietnam's pretty far away. What you need Is something closer to home. I've got it! Corruption. You know, mink coats and deep fr~rs. Scandals always rack the nation." "I think this administraUon," he says, "is the most corrupt in American hlstorj·." "IF I WERE YOU, l wouldn't say thal ,'' ssys I. "All hell will break loose." "I olready said 11," he says. Mlnneapolis TrlbWle Two terms invariably appear ln the growing number o( reports about energy resources. One is shortage. The other is price increase. They are "!'elated, of course, but in ways that sometimes escape public notice. That relationship becomes especially important when ex- perts are forecasting a doubling in U.S. energy requirements by 1985, an Inability to meet those needs domestically and uncertainties ove1 cost and delivery of foreign resources. But Americans, because of tradition and the vagueness of proposed solutions, tend to de(er worrying about the matter. They have oeen condltloped to abundant, cheap energy and the proficiency of U.S. technology in energy and similar utility 1Jystems. When American! set the thennostat, nip the light switch, turn the faucet or pick up the telephone, It works; In most other countries it works sometimes. The idea of expensive or ir- reguJar energy supplies (or both) t& beyond the experience of most of us. ''Oh," says 1. ,;Let's see. I know, what if you said you were for closing tax Jl.fOREOVER, SUCH alternatives as loopholes for th?, fot cats? Everybody's =tr~~~ly ~r b~m~ge:c~ sore about thal ... .._..., t the •'nd that · "I did" he says Pre,,_ ...... 'ICSS a.re no ,.., 10- "tlmnimm," ...Ya t "~way tbere'a spire citizens to tndlvidus.I action. We are lots bf oll>er tfltnp ~ '\ieOPte. 1(0<>, • told lo net. maaa traMlt and railroads c:oold come out fol cutlfng PWIJIOll _. orten, make our bou!es better In- spending cleaning up pollutidn, 1•artUng sulated and maytK.. use solar energy. The welfare 'refonnl and llm.Dar ridlcal a~eit\oN are sound -1f l~ means ere revislont of our crumbling aoctal stra~ available and not too e%}>eJWvc. 1 .. Which ts why the pclCMUPPlY rela· u!:. d'd .. he "And don •t say tionahlp of energy IOUl'Cel ii 90 tm-1 I · !18.ys. port.ant. In past "ears international oil 'radical '" ' ' the "Don't worry " II.YI t alter a rew companies earned high proflta In pro- ' "Y' ·u think or duction of foreign crude oll (aotd mootl,y minutes o!. silence. OU \n non·U.S. market.I) and subsldlzed tbc!1r somelbing. refining and markellng operaU.,,.. The SO IT'S COMFORTING lo l:now that 90UlCO of those profits Is rapidly good old George 11 out there JOmewhere declining es producing countries demand thinklna up darln& propouls which. -end get -ownership of the.tr .otl wells rlgh\ or wrong, stimulate vigorous public 11nd • hlgher share of product.Ion profits. debate and thua keep the vlUll Julcles Fuel prtcea In the United Stales ~ or our democracy nowtna. sure to be driven upward as a result. At leaJI. they would if anybody was And. because of t.he erpect.ed Increase In llslt!nlng. the percentage of the American market supplied by oil imports, prices in the United States will be tied still more closely to the rising cost or foreign oiL ANOTHER UPWARD push In prices c0uld come from reducing the oil-deple- tkln allowance on Jomestic production if that often-cited loophole is closed in 8 tar:-refonn law. Forbes mag a ii n e describes the depletion provision as a subsidy that holds down the retail price of a gallon of gasoline from the $1 it might otherwise be. The prospect of sharply increasing energy costs will, we ho~ become leverage for overdue political-economic action. Recommendations: ror conserving energy, developing other energy sources and providing more efficient tnergy-us- lng systems such as mass transit are being heard from both business and government. A good means of en- couraging consumer and voter ac- ceptance of those recommendation!! is to create public awareness of the cost of failing to carry them out. That Is why we are encouraged by signs that the energy shortage, and the effect. it can have on prices, ls becoming a poUlical JMUe. B11 Geor'fle --~ Oei\r George: It wouJd seem that more and more advice columns are running ln the newspapers of the nation. Could you tefl me if this Is ~ause America l!I In worse sh.ape mentally and : mouonally lban at any tltne in history? Or lo it because the average cltlr.en feels alienated trom his surroundings? OI' Is It becausa oC a general sense of futility? W.E. Dear W.E.: Nah. The reaton the newspeper1 ~re ao full of advlC8 columni.st.s I.I beclu.se we work to cheap. (Send your problema lo Goora• and aee what happens. But don't say you wtren't 'Warned.) • • Huntington Bea~h Fountain Valley --• Today's Final N.Y. Stoeks VOL. 65, NO. 301, 4 SECTIONS, 48 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA FRIDAY, OCTOBER 27, 1972 TEN CENTS 15 Seized • Ill Seal Beach 'Blockade' of Vessel By JtHN ZALLER 01 l'I* DtHY l"llltt ll•ff Fifteen wetsuit.elad pacifists were ar· rested Thursday arter plunging into the ocean ln an effort to stop the 16,~lon assault ship SS ;)uluth h'tlm leaving Seal Beach Naval Weapons Station. Police and harbor authorities, using five boats, wer~ required to remove demonstrators frorr. the path of the Dul_utb, an amphibiOWI vessel bound for . an undisclosed port. St., Irvine; aDJ Michael Traub, 19, Ot 317 Four Orange CountiaM, a 64-year-old Goldenrod Ave., and Timot.by C . man and JI 15-year-old girl were among Whisman, 21, of 700 Heliotrope Ave., both those jailed in the third "human of Corona del Mar. blockade" try this year for a group Others anested include Patti Sykes, 43, representing the American Friends Santi M?Dica; Sherri Siegel, % 9 , Service Committee, a Quaker.affiliated Topanga; Steve Huston, 2Z, Altadena ; organization. ·' Bob Levering, 281 Pasadena; Franklin Those arresteo from Orange County Zahn, 64, Claremont; Phil Berm;ott, 3f, were Claudia Jo Goodwin, 20, of 1405 Santa Monica; Charles Swift, 54, Santa Crestview Ave., Seal Beacb; John Monica; Nancy Perez, Uls Angeles; Ann Frederick Mangels Ill, 20, ol 18032 Butler MacKinney, of Santa Monica, and DAILY PILOT,,.._"" Jollfl UI .. GARY GREEN COMES UP WITH APPLE DURING BOBBING CONTEST AT PLAVIN SCHOOL Karen Price {center) and N1ncy Schantz: Encourage Schoolm1te at Dedication Rit11 Appaloosa Steps On Branch, Hit, Bleeds to Death A six-year-old Appaloosa horse bled to death in a Huntington Beach field Thurs- day afternoon after he stepped on a large eucalyptus branch and it Dipped up to gqre him in the stomach. .The rider of the horse, Robert Vega of 15S82 WilSOfl St., Midway City, said be and three other friends were walking th;eir horses in I.he field on Ellis Avenue ~Jr Beach Boulevard around noon when tqe accident occured. "Vega said the horse Tobby, stepped on the six·foot branch which hurtled into the aoimal 'a stomach between bis front legs and severed an artery, He said he quickly removed the horse's Sllddle and ran to call a veterinarian but could not get help before the animal bled to death 10 minutes late1. Vega said he had been showing the horse to a friend who was interesed in buying him from the. owner, JeaMe Oakey. 1,200 Attend Ceremnny For Facility in Valley Urbain H. Plavin School. a racility uni- que in the state for its mingling of physically handicapped and non-han- dicapped students was dedicated in Fountain VaUey Thursday night in a two-" hour ceremony atte~-::~ by 1,200 persons. Children who will never walk, run, or play baseball were the stars of the show, participalin( actively In the numerous skits and games that marked the ceremonies. There were. aome . tense moments for some or the handicapped children but the non-handicapped. always chipped In to smooth over the difficulty and the show went on without stopping. Plevin School, which serves han· dicapped children from the Newport- Mesa, Huntington Beach City, Ocean View. and Fountain Valley school districts, is the first in the state to in- tegrate handicapped children and non. handicapped ones, according to school (If· ficials. It .has a present enrollment of 63 physically handicapped students and 331 regular students. "I can't tell you how well the in- tegration bas worked out," says Prin- cipal Waldo Price. "If we have any prob- lem at all, It'• that the noo·bandicapped chllt'lren are. lavishing too much attention oo the .handjcapped ones. "W'e"re teying to tei1ch self-sufficiency, but there is so much help available that some of the impetus to learn is gone." Dr. Price said that lhe two groups not only work together in many classes, but even play togethet at recess. "You shoukl see the kickball," says Orr (See PLAVIN, Page I) Homeowner Action • ~ Shalom Michelin, 21, Pasadena. A Navy spokesmac said after the in- cident that the l)Jluth had experienced no delay despite the fact thLt some prcr testors were able to swim within a few yards of her hull as sbe exited Anaheim Bay. The 15 pacifists were fjrrested on a variety of charges including unlawful assembly, failure to disperse, bringing unauthorized vessels into a harbor, and trespassing. In addition, the juvenile girl • Ie Major Towns Near Saigon Threatened SAIGON (UPI) -In apparent an· ticipation of a cease.fire, Communist troops steppe<HJp their attacks on populated areas throu ghout South Viet· nam today, capturing two villages and threatening two major towns within 45 miles of Saigon, military sources said. Though sporadic and widespread, Com· munist forces carried ou. l2f attacks in th1.1 24 boors ending at 3 a.m. (PDT) to- -<ciay, the most since the Tet offensive of 1968. " Th · U.S. c:ommand said two Americans were killed and foqr wounded during the stepped-up fightlni around South Viet· nam. , Viet Cong and Notth Viethames~ sold· iers captured two had\k!ts on French-built Highway l northwesl of the capital early today and though under counterattack by government reinlorcements, the at· tackers held their positions. The villages are 20 miles and 30 miles northwest of Saigon, and sit at. the edge of the traditional Communist infiltration route from Cambodian b or de r sanctuaries. Southeast of Saigon, Communist troops surrounded Dat Do and Xuyen Moc district (rouoty) capitals and fought their way through the lines of militia defenders to within 1,000 yards or the centers of both towns. Dat Do, f5 miles southeast of lhe capital, was captured once for 10 days by the Commw:tlsts last April during their ·spring offensive. Both it and Xuyen Moc, 55 miles southeast of Saigon, are in Phuoc Tuy Province, a resort area when there is no fighting. Pbuoc Tuy was ''pacified" by Australian forces before they pulled out last year. In the air war, lhc U.S. command said a U.S. Air Force F4 Phantom was shot down today by antiaircraft fire over (See FIGHTING, Page %) McGOVERN DUE ·IN ANAHEIM Democratic presidential can· didate George S. McGovern will be in Orange County Saturday and will address a brea.k.fast meeting at 8 a.m. ·at Disneyland H()tel in Anaheim. For details. see 0 . C. Hustings' column today on Page. 9. The beige Appaloosa and the other ltfree horses were kept at the Williams Stable, 7021 Ernest Ave., Huntington Beach. Huntington Eyes High Rise Control Harbour Plans Delayed · Huntlqton Beach councilmen and planitlni commlsslonen will bold a Joint study tealon at 7 p.m. Mnnd.ay night to namlne the proposed city hig)l rise ord.lnance1 The. City officials also will be reviewing ~ p!Mned development ordinance. A moratorium on planned developmenti ex· plrtd Ocl. 20. The propot<d hl'1J rise ordinance could creatt special z.oru.ng for certain areas of tho city allowing \he construction of atrocturel abOv-e 40 feel. Tbe 1tudy ...,Ion will be beld In the dty ball ..... buildtnc. ll Is OIJ"n to the public. • Angry homeowners accured a 31).day delay of a propoeed 1211 mlllloo expansion of Huntlngtoo Harbour Thunday by con- vincing the Regional Water Quality eon- lrol Board to make further en- vlronmentaJ Impact aueuments. Citing algae, Dooling debris and focal matter n exlatlna probltms, the homeownen demanded U\al no new channel work be done unW tt was proven that rurther deterioration would not rtsult. Meeting in West:minltcr, the Santa Ana regional board agrttd to K<k fUrtber m. (onnaUori bot gave no assurance to the homeowners that the project would bt fln8llyblocUd. "You're bouoclng Ibo btll trm one aaeocy to another," complained MUton ( eeycbok when the board argued that 1 complete envtronmental impact analylll sboold be made by "''"' other aaency. "There is a law to prevent you from clolng this... .. The Huntln~ Harbour Corporation waa oeeking approval for ti project lh.t wlll ultlmateJy involve lhe dred&bfc of a 4,000 foqt channel In ID ~ tract of land JllSI IOllth ol Edinger Av ue, and OOMtruotlon of 110 boat moor!np. a a.a. acre lagoon and U> housing unlta, The dtJ plonntns ~t approved lho plan Jut May, before Ibo rtotnt SUprnme Court decllton demandlna en- vironmental Impact 1talementa on all ....iot dlveloprnenl.I. Katherine W a 111 n, a Huntlntlon llattour reatdent wbo Is aloo a -ap- pointment to the city planning com· mlsslon, tesUfied that "everyone is going ahead on the 11111111ptloo that oomeone clse II doing an mvlronmental Impact "P.Clrt· But -b8! tq actually d9 one,•• A staff lawyer for ·the water quality "'"1d at llnt lldvlsed the board thal tho bomoownert bad no legal balls for dtmandblt an en\11ronmental Impact. But later the fawyu wu allen~ aqd lfllllollt dllCusslm, the water qualCty cozn.. ---unanimously after two hciun ol testimony to delay the matter 11>Ul their Nov. IO meeting, when tbeY ~ !hey would COl1lid<r the en- WOnmcllaf !mPact _n.,.t of their ..it . . I - was charg~ with resisting arrest. By midnight Thursday, the 14 adults had been released on bail ranging from $250 to $500. The girl was released into custody of her father. The nine men, five women . and one girl demonstrators began their so-called blockade about 3 p.m. as the Duluth y.·as preparing for departure. Three small aluminum craft, each with four passengers. pulled into the nar· rowest part of the Anaheim Bay channel. As the Ou!urh reared 1hen1, Lhey dove in rhe 1l'ater and s1r:.im towa:d the giant vessel . At the ~ , time, the three remaining pmtesters climbed under a barbed Wire fence on lhe public beacu immediately oorth of the harbor and began moving down the beach toY.'ard the same narrow part or the channel·. Harbor authorities and officials, ap- parently y.•ith advance warning on the tSee QUAKERS, Page ZJ s South Chino s •• SOUTH TU ... MO.l NIMTIAJllf CA..-IAllfll IAT Pattern Of Control I A reo• controll.d by Vl•tCono and/or North V..tnomeM fo<cos :. UPI...._ FIGHTING CONTINUES AS PEACE PLANS MAPPED Map Shows Areas Held by South Vi1tn1m, Communists President to Veto Nine Bills-'Exceed Budget' WASHINGTON (UPI 1 -President Nixon said today he will veto nine measures because they woulL exceed his budget by $2. 75 billion over the next two fiscal years. ' He said he was taking the action despite advice that It would be "politically very damaging." "U 1 were to sign these measures into law, I W<luld, in effect, be maklng prom· ises lhat could not be kept since the funds required to finance the promised .services ere not avallablP and would not be available without the higher taxes J have promised kl resist," he said in a statement. He repeated his pledge to hold federal spending to S250 biJUon and claimed the nine measures if enacted into law, would breach the budget by $750 million in the 1973 fi!fCal year and by nearly S2 billion in 1974. "Each ot these measures by it.self might seem justifiable or even highly desirable ," Nixon said, adding that the decl!klna bad been vt1y dllficul' ones for him. -The approprlatlom for the llealth, Education and Welfare Department, a measure which Nixon said included $$35 million In overspending. He vetoed an earlier version of the same meuure which contained a budget· liusllog· fl.I blllton l••t August. ..:n;e J)llhlle -"' and e<Ol!Omlc devtlopment Act of im. which Nb:on Twin Boys, 2, Die AUllJR), (AP) -Two-ytlN>ld twin boyt died Tlluradly In a !Ire which nartd tn their bedroom In nottby Fomt llIU., olfldals ,.,.,nod. The vlctlmt "'" Tuvor Ille! Tracy Qiubb, ..., of lloy and Palr!dtl Olllbb. • ' •' said '•\IOU!d unnecessarily add new federal programs y.·hich have been demonstrably ine ffective in creating jobs and stimulat- ing economic development. -A measure authorizing federal funds to support mineral research and training institutes in each of the 50 states and Puerto Rico, legislation which Nixon said ill unneeded because of workable ulsting programs. Orange Coasc Weatller The wealhcrlady sees a possi· blli1y of sprinkles thn)Ugh Satur- day. becoming slightly warmer this weekend with highs of 68 al the beaches rising to 75 inland. Lows tonight 51)..57 . INSIDE TODAY Paut Lourt'Plct Dunbar, sma of slaves who become '11.t poet•c apoltetma11 of tht black Amari· con. is being hOftortd b~ UC Ir· vine Exten.sion with lM four-da~ centennial csltbration. Actor 011.d scholar Roscoe Ltt Browne will read lits work.I. Set toda~'s Weekender . -..... .,..... .... a .............. or-.. ee.tyo .. '' . ..._.. ........ '""II ,.._ 1' -.... ,_..._.DU T-• --.... =-··J Wtnf ..._ ... • ., DAILY PILOT " FndA1, Oc'*' 27, 1972 Policeman • • Gives Aid To Stork By ARTHl'R R. \'INSEL 01 Ille ~lly ,.1191 ll•tl one Ney. port Beach pohcl'rnan (jOt lhe l'~assic old radio-dispatched ass1gnmen1 about noon Thursd:.:v tha t makes fellow officers glad they y,;ere home for lunrh 1Yhen it v•ent out. Patrolman Gene &>necal. 33 and t~e fa1her of four children. helped dclivl'r one and came through y.•1lh flying colors. l~e y,·as more nCJ"\'OUS, perhaps. than lhe new mother. The dispatcher ordered him to the La~l'rencc t\. Rudy1.inski re!'idence at .. 1148 \\''. Balboa Blvd .. about l :30 p.m., on 1• hat is k.no .... ·n in the police profession as <i 9Ct2.\.I childbirth. "Upon arrival. l found the front door locked . so I rang the doorbell, banged on 1 '11:: door and yelled through the mall slol." Officer Senecal said in his report. ''Someone inside yelled : 'Come in through the y,·in.iovl.'." he continued. Racing around the building, he found an unlocked \\'indO\\'. slid it open and ~cran1bled through. t. ''I found the \'iCtim lying on Ille sofa. talking on the telephone," his report rorr tinued. "I 1mmediatel\' checked the victim and observed <. mali child lying near her left rh1gh," Officer Senecars report related. Grabbmg a sheet from the hallway linen clo.se!. he did \\·ha! they teU you to do in demoos1rat1on films sho\\'Il e\'ery so often during polic.e 1rauung sessions. He said father Lawrence and an am- bulance a.rri\'ed simultaneously lO give aid and romfort .o \rinifred. 26. \\'ho was hustled off to Hoag Memorial Hospital The baby boy·s arri\'a.I was a first-time e\'ent for both Officer Senecal and the fl\ e-fool one-inch. 107 pound housewife. .. Her romplexion \\'as qui te white. It must have been a trying experience for her." Officer Stnecal said today. ··Jt \\'as unbelievable," he remarked regarding her abilit~· to keep cool during a Cflntuiual 1elephone conversation. OffJCf r Sene-cal said mother and son seemed Lo be dotng fine and hospi ta! of· ficials ha\·e confirmed his e\•alualion. A polareman for 7"'1: years now, Patrolmcin Senecal said today he has netd se•;eral .nolhen·UH>e to hospitals u. his squad car wrth lights flashing and SU'ftl scrtaming Wt he had never before helped out. He says his bed!1de manner always managed lo convince his bad seat passenger lo make sure tho did.L.'t drive up to the emergency room door with two back seat passengers. l'ikiiag Priiacesses One of the!>e IO ~tarina ltigh School roeds \Vill be cro\vned 1972 hon1ecoming queen during haUtime of tonight's football gan1e \\'ith Santa Ana liigh. Girls are (standing. fron1 left) Laura lloffn1an, Deborab Dunn. Jeana Terry. Jannette i\-1ann and Sandy Jackson. Seated (!rom le(l) are Kathy Shanahan, Denine Blume, Carolyn Face, Rhonda Rivera and Vicki Fraley. Game is at 8 p.m. at \Vestminster tligh Stactium. N. Viets Want Peace Soon Will Meet Witli Kissinger But See No Problems Now PARIS (AP) -A North Vietnamese spokesman insisted today that the peace agnoement reached with the United States should be signed Tuesday. He added lbat Hanoi negoliators would be willing to meet Henry A. Kissinger though "there are no remaining ques· tions that need another meeting. ··sut if after the signing of the agree· ment on Oct. 31. Dr. Kissinger wants lo meet wilh Le Due Tbo and Xuan Thuy to discuss problems of common interest, we are ready. "The peace is at the tip of a pen," Le said, insisting that the United States car· ry out the agreement to sign Tuesday. Le told a news conference that "it \\'as the president of the United States who proposed the date of Oct. 31 for the signature." It 111'35 not precisely clear whether ht: was making the signing of the agreement a condition for another negotiating session . an ''honest misllllderstanding" about the date. Le said: ''We don't belie\'e there is a misun- derstanding. It \\·as "-'litten black on white in a message from the President on Oct. 20." ·'The U.S. side claims there arc still some things to settle. We consider this as a pretext to delay the signing of the ac- cord oo which lhe two parties reached agreement," Le said. fie scoffed at what he said was Kiss· inger's need to compare texts of lbe ae- cord to clarify quest.ions of linguistics. ''This question has already been settled definitely," Le said. He said that at a secret metting-OD Oct. 11 that finished at % a.m. Ocl. 12, ezpert translators of both sides coinpared the text of the agreement. In another meeting on the aftetitoon of Oct. 12, experts of the two sides again worked on the text in Vietnamese and English, he added. Le said that on Oct. 17 Kissinger and Xuan Thuy, chief of the North Viet- namese peace delegation, "went over the text chapter by chapter, article by article, sentence by sentence1 word by word. 'lbe.re is no question of linguistics pending." * * * * * * Thieu,Counters Proposal f'romP~l PLAVIN ..• .. __ ~ ~ ln _ \Vashington, presidential press .,... ~~tary Ronald L. Ziegler refused to ' ,mnunent on the North Vietnamese of· ~aljs statements. ~ Le said Kissinger referred Thursday to For Peace Wit ·~~~Ian .' " , :::.:. " side ~f ~ the .referen. Price. "ff a child has to remain in a wheelchair, he's allowed to slug the bafl, and then someone wiU help push him around the bases. "The spirit here is better than we ever hoped it could be." The aim of the school is to bring the handicapped "into the mainstream of life.'' •·So often the handicap1>ed are kept oH by. themselves in schools "-'here they can't associate "-'1th typical children:· says Plavin School psychologist Phil Hall. "By bringing them into contact with !he real world , \\'e hope they'll have a chance for normal emol ional develop- ment." Integration at Plavin is not complete. however. Separate classroom.. are built around a huge central open space. On one side are the handicapped children, on the other are the typical ones. For therapy, self-eufficiency lessons, and remedial "-'Ork \vhich Ille han- dicapped children often need. they re- main in their O\\·n classrooms. But for much of ba.~ic school \'Ork. plus music, lunch and recess, they mingle \\'l th the typical children. •• DAILY PILOT 'l'1tl ~ CNI! DA1L.V' l'IL.OT _..ih whldt 11 eomblntd 11\e N._Prns, Is DllblllMd by Ille or-. Co111 PW1bh1"' com~""· kl*' , ... M1119n1 ire putllklle!I, Mond9y ltlrovgll Frld1y, for Cotti M..... N--1 8eKh. H\11'111Nlotl !IN(ll/Founltl" V•!lty, L19un1 •HCti. l'VIMlhddlMltk •nd 5•" ci...,,...1e1 5M J~" Clpl1lr1no. 14. 1lnq11 '";on11 dlllon 1s p,1b!11hld S1•11rd&y1 1fld S11n<11y~. T~1 prlnc!INI P\lb111111119 plf"I 11 &I llO W••I 1.., ~lrnl, Got.I• Meu, C1ll!ornl1, mn. Reb1rt N. We1d l'r•ldet11 IM Putill..,tr J1cil R. C"1l1v V~ Prllldtnl Ind Gentufl M1n1otl' T1'tom11 k11•il Ectller 1l.em1• A. M11rrt1'ti~1 Mlllftln9 ldltlr ~" H. t..H IUch1r4 P. Nall Aulllenl M-.lnl IEdl~ T ,,,., C1vlll1 W.t 0rMM Cl\ln!y Editor H• ...... a..dl Offlc.e 17111 l111h lo11l1v1nt MtUlat A44r11n P.O. le• 790, 92,41 --UOIN hKfl• tta ""-1 ,.......,. Ctlll MtMt . W-1 Bl\' S11'"4 N""""' lft~! Ul:I N-port k!,11H1rd .. " C""'*'1•t "5 Norfl'I fl Ctml..o 11111 T .. t,.111 17141 •42·4321 CtMHlt4 A4wffhlltf ••2·5611 PrMI ~Of•• c...,-Cat!llftll!ltitt From Pagel FIGHTING ... North Vietnam. The two crewmen parachuted into the Gulf of Tonkin and were picked up by helico pter 11 miles northeast of the DemintaTized 1.one. U.S. fighter-bombers attacked North Vietnara "more than 10 times Thursday. High-Oying BS2 bombers joined the airstrikes wtth· nine v.•aves, all of them over the lower Panhandle, lbe U.S. com· mand reported. From Pagel QUAKERS ... protest. lmmediately swung into action as wetsuit-clad Seal Beach lifeguards dove from boats to forcibly remove pro- testers from the path of the vessel. Meanwhile, uniformed security police chased the other three protesters down ihe shore. and later waded fully-unifonn- ed into the surf, \\'aving thei r billy clubs above tbelr heads. in an effort to ap- prehend them. · Sailors lined the starboard side of the Duluth, watching the whole operation. When the last protester was picked up they gave a loud cheer. A spokesman for the pacifists said the purpose or the demonstration was to pro- mote public awareness that weapons ~ c shipped from Seal Beach to Vietnam. Fountau1 Valley Club Gearing Up For Bicycle Rally The Fountain Valley High School Key Club will sponsor a bike rally from B a.m. to S p.m. SalurdaJ ln the Baron campu11 parking lot. • The rall1. open to any Fountain Valley or Huntinaton Btaeh ywnpter in the filth , si.Ith, aeventh or eighth grades, wlll feature an obltlcle OOUl'M. SAIGON (U PI) -President Nguyen Van Thieu said today there will be no peace in South Vietnam until he signs a treaty himsel!. He countered the Hanoi-Washington nine-point peace plan with a proposal for or any combination of two or more coon· to decide tbe make\IP of a new saigon government. Thieu told pro-government legislators ''ho marched w· his downtown Independence Palace to show support for the president that he favors P South Viet· namese referenJum so the people could .. voice their o•\'n wish." The presiden~ said the United Nations or any combination of two or mor coun- tries coµld supervise the rtferendum. He · propsed that ~· goverronent be formed between his administration end the Viet Cong according to the percen· Burke Announces Talks P ostpo1ied Ou Vnificatio1i Top-level talks on school unification in West Orange County have been delayed until after the Nov. 7 elections. Assemblyman Robert Burke ('fl-Hun· tington Beach) had called for a roundtable discussion between represen· talives of lhe area's six school distrtcl3 for the end of this week. But the lawmaker said Thursday that only one school district could send representatives to the meeting. Burke said he is now shooting for a Nov . 15 meeting of representatives from the •1untln~ton Beach Union High School District and its five feeder elementary dis1ricts. Terry Moshcnko. the Democratic challenger for Burke's seat in the 70\h Assembly district. has charged that Rurke purpo11ely chose a date he knew 1vo11ld l.Jt unacceptable lo most achoo! thstricts in order to have the unlncaUon 111cetlng postponed until after the eltc· lion. ''lie played a little game so that his refu11a l to sponsor special unification legislation won't ap~ In the newspaper before the election, ' Mosbenko said. "Baldenlub,'' Bild Jlurke. Tfifeu bas hinted at eucli a relmndum for several weeks.but hi5 )iropoeal today was the first time be spelled out blJ Idea. The president ha! alwa)'> inllited that only lnternaUonally 1UP<rvlsed elections could replace his government, but today's proposal of a referendum would noL directly e'.::::t anyone. It would m.. stead allow the choosing of government officials by both sides. "For once, .1obody could say that he controlled 99.9 percent or the people. and nobody could claim two-thirds either," Thieu said. It was an obvious reference to the three-sided coalition proposed by Hanoi and Washington to take over the reins of eovernment. Both the Viet Cong and North Vietnam have opposed any United NatiOPS "~ terference" in South Vietnam in the past. "We have not agreed on anything yet and yet the Communists boasted that there will be a cease-fire and are prepar· ing for it," Thieu &aid in a speech to pro- govemment legislators at the presiden- tial palace. "We are not afraid of a cease-fire and the peace. I am sure it will come, bot it will only come when I persona1ly sign the treaty for a cease-fire and peace,'' Thieu said. "Without my signature it means it haa not been agreed to by the people. ''The Communists can use 10 hands and 10 legs to sigtl treaties, but without my signature, it means there has been no agreement by the people,'' 'l1lleu aaid. "tt will be invalid In South Vietnam. I am not an obstacle to peace. I reflect the will of the Vietnamese people." No North Sorties Laird Announces • ~alt in Bo~hing : LONDON (AP) -US. Defense Secretary Melvin R. Laird announced t<> day that American warplanes have balled all bombing operations of North Vietnam above the 20th parallel. Laird apoke with newsmen after a meeting of L.M! North Atlantic Alliance's nuclear plaMlng group. He refused lo say whether the United States still is Oying recoonalssanct missiom north of the 20th parallel but POW Process Centers Set In 3 Sites SAN DIEGO {AP) -American prisonen of war released alter an end to the fighting in Vietnam will be nown to one of ~ processing sites in Guam, the Philip~s and Okinawa, it was reported today. In a copyright story. the San Diego Union said the Defense Department's top official for POW all airs, Dr. Roger Shields, outlined a procedure under which released POWs will remain tn the centers until judged pbyslcally able lo "'tum lo the United States. "It eould be a week. 10 days or longer, depending on his health conditions and the doctors' recommendaUon, 11 the paper quoted a military official. A processJng center ha! been chosen !or each POW, the report said. On ar· rival he will receive a new uniform, any ribbons and medals he earned and I& formation about his family. The center will have doctors . chaplains, legal experts, psychiatrists and a friend In the same mllitary branch, !be Union said. The friend will escort the POW by air lo the United States, to Travis and Norton Air Force bases In C8lilornia and from ~ lo mllitary bospltals, the newspaper said. "We plan lo take them lo the service hospital of hi5 own particular branch of service that Is nearest to bia home," a Peqtagon spokesman wu quoted as ~· "Air Force patients would go to 9'" .• ~ Air Force hospital ·.ODCI so forth." • If the l>oepltal ii In a diffel"'11 city, the mililary will Dy the POW'• lmnlly there, the Union quoted the spokesman as saying. Woman Suillg For Removal Of Billboard A property owner has demanded that one of 28 controversial billboards flank· ing Paciflc Coast Highway ln Huntington Beach be immediately removed from her land. Mrs. Elbia Hall names Metromedia and the Foster end Kleiser advertising agency as defendanl3 in an Orange Coun- ty Superior Court action that also seeks '30,000 in damages. Mn. Hall claims that the defendants ignored a demand made last Jan. 28 for removal of the sign by Feb. 10. Her lawsuit precedes by just daY> the hearing before Judge James F. Judge of a writ filed by Metromedia, Foster and Kleiser, Ryan Inc. and the Outdoor Advertising Agency against the State of California. Both sides: are due in the courtroom Monday to debate allegations that the state violated a long standing agreement when it prepared to demoli!b all 28 bllfboams. It was alleged in lhe lawsuit that Hun- tington Beach officials, tbe losers In en eJtlier court bid to remove the sips, were ectlve In the dlscUSSIODI that led lo the state. decision. appeared to take on, step further an: announcement in Wuhlnlton on Thurs- day by presidential 8dvTser Henry A.· KJ.asioger. • Kls.!linger told a news confe~ the: United Stat" tnlonned North Vietnam\ that "we would stop milltary activities! north of tbe !Dtb parallel." • Laird confinned that these activities· have stopped. • "We are Oying no sorties north of t.he 20th parallel," La1rd Aki. ·• Although American mines in Haiphoag·: harbor are included in the U.S. mUitary: activities oorth o: the 20th parallel, Laird • refused to say when these mines might · be deactivated or how long the process ~ would take. : He ·abo declined to discuss the su~ stance of the latest Vietnam peace- moves wbJch he de.scribed as "serious; sensitive and significant." ·-Laird is returning to Washington later: in the day. . . • • . • Huntington Man ; Robbed of $182 : • • . In Laguna Beach : " . A bushy-headed gunman robbed a Hun· tington Beach man of $182 in cash Thurs; day as I.be man waited in his parked car. along busy SOUth Coast Highway In Laguna Beach. • WUllam B. SOrrella, 60, told off"""' that as he sat 1n the car, a man opened the driver's door, thrust a blue steel. automatic pistol into his side an4 demanded "give me all your money." : Sort.Ila, a Huntington 8 e a..c h businessman turned over nine $20 bllli and two $1 bllls to the man described as about Z3 years of age, live feet 10 inchei taJ: and weighing aboot 140 pounds, wltll dark bushy hair of medium length. He was parked at 680 S. Coasl Highway, close by former location of the Mystic Arts World. Sortlla listed an addles.! of 410 32nd st., llunlington Qeacb, police 9ald. He was not banned in the encounter. Alter taking the money, the gunman grabbed the vehicle's keys from the ig; nition and fied on foot toward Cleo street. GOP Incumbent 1 Sued by Rival SAN DIEGO (AP) -Democratic con- gressional candldate Frank Ceprlo ha! filed suit against Republican Incumbent Bob Wiison, accu.slng Wlllon of abusing hi5 congressional malllng privilege. The sui~ filed In U.S. District ~ Thursday, contends two "Bob Wilson Reports" newsletters, one before the June primary and one last week, were mailed at public expense to promote the Wilson campaign. WU.son said the suit was "clearly political and part of the last-minute monkey business of any election." H allowee1i F ests Slated for Parks Haunted houses and jack-o-lantem con· tests will highlight the Halloween a~ tivities planned for Tuesday night in three Westminster parks. Csrnivals with rood and game booths will be held from 6 p.m. to 19 p. m. at Sigler and McFadden Parks. Costume and jack-o-lantem contesls for elemen- tary school chl1dren will also be held at both parks. A haunted house will be open at Bolsa C.Uca Park from 7:30 tot p.m. The only charges for the activities will be minimum fees for the game and food booths to cover expenses. DAILV' l'IL.OT lltff _. ... Mt-1nt ~. 1f12, OrWlff CO.I Pllb!~ ~. Ml .,.,.. ...... !llvllni--. Mlllrltl .....,., If' H""1"""*''' 111(1111 ~· ... ~-•1111Wf tltt.116 ... Ribbons wUI be awarded to the top rinisher. in each grade level with troph'" going to the youngster with the top Ume and •ii! tohool wtll) th• most '!bmm. To • compete In tbe rally. eacb younasttl' must have • btcycle llcenMI from the FounLlln Valley or Runtlnaton Beach Pollce Departm11t1t. Pointlllg OU\ that the date chosen In Burke's Invitation to the meeting was Qct. 26 -lhe same day es the dedication of Plevin School In Fountain Valley - M~henko saJd; "I think he lntentlonally chose Oct. 2a because M knew it would present a C{)nnlct for any achool official plnnnlng to Attend that dedication." Since Plavin School terVtl t h e orthopedlcally handicapped throuahout WMt Orange Cbunty, the Fountain Valley School Dl•trlct had Invited all tocnt school official~. Edison Candidates ll'llNlon Of '°"'1'ltl'll ..... . ,..,,. a. .... .... at Celt• Mn., C.ltf!lnlltr. tllDW!lllllM IW urrlw SUI l'Ml'\lt'lfyl h' lftll( U.!J "*"""'' ll'tl!llWY .,..,.._ RM """""Y· A repretentat!ve lrom the Fountain Volley Police Oepartmeat will be prt1tnt lo tteeflse bikes. Burke said Moshcnko's c.h11rge ~r e "ridiculous." One of th ... live Edison High School homecoming princesses wlll be crowned queen tonlgtft during helfttme of Charger foolboll game against Corona del !tlar Sea K!nga. The 197~ homeooming court Includes (lrom left) Becky Reeb, Sherry Bergstrom, Stephanie McCrea, Pookle Tully and Sue Phillips. • Game l! ocheduled lor 8 p.m. at LeBard Field on Orange Coast C~llege campus In Costa !tlesa. Will Bob Battin Rise From His Own Ashes? By JACK BROBACK Of ... ~ Pllet ..... WDAT WOULD YOU think of Bobby Battin as county enviroomental chief or county UlleSIOt! ...iniat question 1n reference to First Ol$trict Supervisor Batlin of Santa Ana has been bandied about County Seat rumor factories for several weeb now. \ The interence Is that lf Battin is not re-elected to ·his poat .81 supervisor Nov. 7 he may'be appointed to a top posltkln in county government. "Incredible," say those who have watched his inept performance as a superviSOJ' and as chairman of the board in 1971. BUT IS IT THAT incredible! The forces behind Ballin have not beeQ noted for their sublet)' but there is no doubt about their political acumen and overwbelm.ing desire f9r ._'9'11'! .... ~ CK power. Who are these people and bow wou1d they go about plaeing their man in a powerful post? Thert is the well known duo of Dr. Louis Cella and Fred Harber. They are admittedly Battin's brain trust. Most substantial funds con- tributed to his campaign have come from those two and organizatiOM . the~ control. HOW COULD THEY get enough votes on the Board of Supervisors to plaee Battin in a top job! The same way they got him elected to the board after a ncord or having run for two other elective offices -state Senator and Assemblyman -and (ailed miserably. What is that way? 1.1oney ! It is well known that the Cella-Harber prganiz· atlon contributed heavily lo the election of Fourth District Supervisor Ralph Clark and in critical iJ•tances h1s vote on the county board has gone t~tr way. ' WITNESS THE DRIVE immediately after organization of the 1971 board to fire County Administrative Officer Robert Thomas. Battin was chairman and newly-elected Fifth District Supervisor Ronald W. Caspers and Clark joined In ll>e attempt. It would take three votes to put Battin in the post of environmental agency ehief or COWlty assessor. Assuming Clark's vote is assured and further assuming that Battin couJd not vote for him.self, (There is some doubt on this issue, the law is unclear) where would they get the other two votes? CASPERS IS UNPREDICTABLE but in most showdown votes he has lined up with Battin and Clark. A3 chairman, he seems to think that to retain power he must go along with "the club." How about Ralph Diedrich of Fullerton who is likely to replace four-term incumbent William Phillips? Re got 10,000 more votes than Phillips in the primary. Diedrich has emphatically denied any eonnection with Harber and C'.ella but his denials have been so emphatic it sounds like he who protesteth to much. He is known to have lunched with Harber on at least two occasions and, al- though it has not been proved, the In Group is believed to be supporting him financially. OKA V. THEY HA VE CLARK and maybe Caspers. Diedrich is the only logical third vote . It certainly won't come from attorney William Wenke who will take over Battin's job if all political signs are valid. And it most certainly won't come from Second District Supervisor David Baker. Baker, once a member of a solid 4 to 1 majority on the board wben Battin first took office in 1969, has round him.sell on the short end of 1 to 4 votes in the pa.st year. RE IS ~CTERIZKD by\those who view county government critically u "our-on11 dependable supenillor." Phillips, in a tough f_lght tor his political future, was once a strong ally of Baker but iD recent months he bas wavered, seemingly trying to pick the most popular stance on controversial questions. ~UMING THE ELF..cl'ION of Diedrieh and Wenke, the first week in January should be lnlerestlng. Can a man who has been constantly criticized by public and press alike, a defeated candidate repudiated by the voters, be appointed to a top county administrative position? At this: point the onJy roadblock to such a move would seem to be a strong protest from the clUzens of the county who wou1d stand up and protest. "We don't want a machine controlling our government." Fischer-Spassky Rematch Possible-Chess Official AMSTERDAM (UPI ) -Max Euwe, president of the World Chess Federation. said today he was willing to try to a "revenge" match between U.S. world champion Bobby Fischer and Russian Boris Spassky. Euwe said that under present rules Spassky Is not entitled to a second chance. Fischer is required to defend the title he took from Spassky last month against the winner of a eandldates tournament n... later than 1975. But, Euwe told newsmen alter a meeting at the Dutch ehess federation, change federation rules to make way for "The situation of some years ago, when the loser was entitled to a revenge match could be restored or a rule could be adopted that the loser can have a revenge mateh U the new titlist agrees," be sold. Euwe said the rules could be changed only by a special federation congress but that be did not consider this a problem. Both Fischer and Spassky are eager to play a "second match of the century," Euwe said. He said It was •·strange" that the soviet Chess Federation appeared to be Jukewann. 'Hot Potato' Prop. 20, Fall F ashions-Suooay Top feature story ln Sunday's DAILY PILOT for many Orange coast area readen may well be the proe and cons of !be "hol potato" propo1itlon on coastline prdonatlon. Staff Writer TeJ'l1' Covllfe allllytea Prop. 20. I Here are eorne of the otbtr offerinp bein/I preplred for SUnday ruden: SUBSl'ITIJTE FATl:IERS! -Parole olflc:era have to br frlerids, confidants, marriap counselors -even employment bureaus -for 101De of the fekml w~ have been placed In their <a1'1 alter releue from prim. Staff Writer Can- dace Pwtoo deattlbes the parole of· ll<er'1 llle and Job In the Sunday Special. : BRASIER, AGAIN -Look do11efy at the cover of TV WEEK and you'D get a fleeting gllmpso of the late Fmler, the lionhearted lion. He'1 In""' of the pholol In the montage by IU<hard Tbonw of "The Waltous" shot at Lion Country 5afarl. HALLOWEEN ACTION -Round~p slory tells whero the dl)'-oponaortd ae- tion will be for Halloween celebrants, but also offers words of caution for parents l'rom pollee and firemen . CHINA'S DISNEYLAND -Red China has a Walt O~ey-style amusement park where the admilsion ii only three cents. The polltJcal mmage comes at no 11:d· diUonaJ charge as part or the exhlblta and dlsplaye on the Inside. COP IN CLASS -The "Cop on Cam- pus" program in Newport Beach luls moved Indoors. Police find there is more nppon when the ofOcar conducts classes at the sc:hool Instead of just being ••allable on carnpua. Staff Writer Joanne Reynolds Illa In on the program at QJrona del Mar High School. TlfE CANDY MAN -Joe H""''' Job II to tell, wte, count and weigh <and!,.. II'• no Job fa< omateurs. Story lchOOufed for YOU Section. FALL-FASf!JONS -Famiy Weekly Women'• Editor rtoealyn Abreva,ya oifm a~vlce on how lo orpnlze an Jn.vOg\J• wardrobe ro, ran with cloOlct you all'ffdy own. It'• this week'• mver 1tory, Fridar. Octobtt 27, 1972 H DAIL V PILOT :J Peace Issue Steals Thunder McGovern Keeps His Chin UP.: • By JOUN HALL LOS ANGELES (UPll -George twtcGovem is acceptlni the news or a possible pre-election settlement of the Vietnam war wllhout the sUghtest hint of despair for llis presidential candidacy. Unquestionably, the diplomatic reports from IJJnol and Washington announcing a tentative nine-poin• settlement have (1) thrown lhe candidate off stride , (2) l!olen the tbunclor lrom hil campolgn and (S) lo •~ utent, subjected him lo Dekle current.I a. the negotiations. But """' ii no sign In the McGovern camp of the l.npendlng doom that some forecll8t -Id President Nixon end the war before the November election. To the contrary, there is an at· lllOllphere almost of relief that North Vietnam 'a diaclosure of the nine-point aettJ!mtnt awai""'° 1igD1ture by WllJblngU>n and llano! ii at last Oushlng Nixon's Vietnam pc!Jcy out Into the open. Nixon -not McGovern -II lhe Cllll- dldate on ll>e apol, according lo this theory. He must now !lab or eut bait. The President faees the eholee of eon· llnulng lo support and defend lhe South VletnameJe regime ol Nguyen Van Trueu, or m:lking hla own deal with the North V1e1nam& lo ~·hhdrat11i• remaJnin& troops In 60 days In eWianae for tba release of U.S. priloners. , The only other att:emattve -and Ult one v•hich lhe White HOUie seems to be ( NEWS ANALYSIS ) • Convi~1 Breaks Into Jail pursuing -is to go back lo tht! bargaining tai•le and attempt IO draft a new agr~ment more to Tbleu's liking . "'hite H0t.se adviser Henry Kissinger's Sl r.tements Wednesday indicated that this process of redrafting wouJd extend beyond the Nov. 7 election. Mnn Burgles; 'World Has Clianged an Awful Lot' Publil•ly, fl1cGovern is accepting al fa ce value the Administration's eoo- tention that peace is close at hand . The candida te said he '\'ould \li'elcome a sct· Uemenl, even if it comes on !he eve of election. McALESTER, Okla. (UPI ) -The warden of the state prison and the district attorney in Tulsa both turned down a request from ex-con George J. Bamberger, 46. He wanted to return to his "home" in prison. Bamberger, who has been out of prison only 55 days in 12 years carried the clothing he needed for tht: trip back to prison recently into the district at- torney's office and confessea to a Fonda, A1itiwar Activists Plnn County Speeclies Oscar·lvinning actress Jane Fonda and two other antiwar activist.s will make two appearances at local college campuses on Nov. S. She will appear first at UC Irvine's Science Lecture Hall at 1:30 p.m:during a program sponsored by Vietnam Veterans Against the War (VVAW). Also slated to speak during the program that lasts until 5 p.m. are former Chicago Seven defendant Tom Hayde1. and VV AW leader Scott Cami!. Admission is $2 to the antiwar gather~ ing at which the tilm:.. "The Winter Sold ier Investigation" and "Village by Village" will be shown. Miss Fonda will then move to Orange Coast College where she will address students at a p.m. in the auditorium. Hayden is also slated to appear at OCC along with actor Donald Sutherland. Tickets £or the OCC event are $1 and are available at the student activities building. Her appearance was arranged by the Associated Student Body at OCC. number of unsolved crimes. He held out hi~ hands :J be handcuffed. But prosecutor Frank Hagedorn said Samber .;er had done nothir.: wrong. "He asked us hOw he could be sent back for ·tour years," Hagedorn said Thursday. "We told him there was nc reason to se nd him back. "Then, he asked ii we would put him back If he did commit a crime "We saiC: ye.s, but asked not to do anything for that reason because he might get hurt. Something might go wrong. ';But he was happy as a lark. and told us he'd be seeing us later.'' Sunday night, Bamberger bro ke into a tavern , called the police -and to ld them a burglary was going on. He walked outside and waited for authoraies with his hand s in the air. Bamberger turned down ofters of a jury tria! or mental tests, asking instead that he be sentenced immediately. Thursday he. got his wish. When he went before District Judge Raymond W. Graham, Bamberger said he wanted to return to prison so he could complete an art course he started before he was released several weeks ago. He PEACE PHOOEY; THEY'LL TAKE TV SACRAMENTO (UPI ) -Televi sion station KXTV reported that 58 women and tv.·o men called to complain when "Love of Life" and part of "Where the Heart Is" were knocked off the air by presidential adviser Henry A. Kissinger's briefing Thursday on Vietnam peace negotiations. said be wcm second prize with his first prison sketch. When Assistant District Attorney ~iike Barkley recommended the four-year sentence, &mberger told the judge. "I would sincerely appreclae it if you would sentence me to that." "It is with distaste that I'm required to adhere to your wishes," Graham said . "It's a slmple act of burglary. I'm* dissastlsfied with the prospects. I have. however, no cholee but to protect society lrom this type of behavior." "Thank you," Bamberger said. "I'd like to return to prison. The "'·orld has changed an awful lot.'' Border Officials Grab Marijuana The U.S. Border Patrol diwlged ThW'S-" day that another large seizure of mari· juana was made at the San Onofre Checkpoint at midweek -a haul or 123 kilos with a street value of $27 ,000. It was the latest in a growing number of marijuana busts at the alien check~ poii.t a few miles south of the San Clemente city limits. The latest one was the offshoot of a routine immigrat..ion check Wednesday night. When patrolmen opened !he trunk of the car they said they noticed the strong odor given off by the illegal weed. They arrested the driver of the car, Stephen Grant, 22, of Capitola, along with his wife, Elizabeth, 20. The couple was turned over to U.S. Customs agents along with the 270 pounds of marijuana allegedly smuggled in from Mexico. He urged Nixon not to pe~ Thieu to \'elo another peace settlemell\. That is the official McGovern line and it is not likely to change for several days. ··Those who have had four years to end !he war deserve ano ther few days," said one akle in a parody of Nixon's state- ment in 1968 that those who have had four years to settle the war do not desen•e another chance. But the unspoken expectalion in the fl.icGovern camp -largely eonfirmed by Kissinger's news conference Thursday - is that Nixon will be unable lo bring himself to sign the agreement which Kissinger negotiated, so wedded is the President to the Thieu regime. Instead, the Administration \Vill at· tempt to put off the matter until after the election by seeking to reopen the negotiations. North Vietnam's radio broadcast an- nouncing the nine-point s e t t I e m e n l pointedly referred to an agreement with Kissinger to settle before the end o( this month. To some diplomatic observers. this amounted to an ultimatum by Hanoi for the Nixon administration to either sign the agreement by Wednesday or face the collapse of the negotiations. If that should happen, McGovern would ha ve a full week to hammer home the message !hat he has been tryini; to put across to the people since he became a candidate -that the only way to end the war i.! to elect him presidenl. He has promised to withdraw all American troops within 90 days of his in- auguration and end military aid lo South Vielnam regardless of its consequences to the Thieu regime. STATION WAGONS e Montego MX VIiiager ' e Marquis Colony Park e Monterey Station Wagon ----·LEASE---.. Specialist In Full Maintenance Lea•in9 ! SEE ONE • • • TRY ONE • • • BUY ONE • • • TODAY! Romt or 111e Now e.-. , , "Oel4e• T-•" Romo or '!be Now c.r • , • "fi•W,,. T•lldl" 4. DAILY PILOT Coast Cli111ate: [t's 'Variable' ORAXGE COAST, Wn.D COAST : This 1> the ume of year when the \\"eathennan n our region goes absolutely out of his 1oggin Ht> keeps trying lo predict tht.' "eathcr. fie ran'L An~·body \1·ho h.1s resid£'d along this !!(>st ol all possible coasts y,·ith any leng1h >f tenure knO\\'S that bere in the shag end >f October. you can't tell "·hat's really coing to happen outdoors. · \'ou take the recent rains. for example. rhe last weather report I'd seen was Wking about how \\'e had some fog and the S.:1nta Ana \\·inds were going to come 11long aod b!o1r 1t .:ill away and ~·e'd have a Y.'Oflderful Indian Summer. That ntght the fog stayed "'ith us. It r('lt tik<.> midnight underneath the Oakland Bay Bridge So I tuned into the !et>vee .,.. ealhe r guy 10 see ho\.\-' he l\·ooJd f':icpla in all this 3\\'3y. h w·as easy for him. QL"ESTIO~'ED ACCCSDiGLY by his reUow neu·s broadcaster. the teevee wealber guy retorted. "i'ou remember I said last night the Santa . .\na "''ind! were oo their way here . I didn't say they'd get here ... " Ah . such cle\·er dancing with words. Tllis is called the old \Veatherman Shtlx>rs Off !he Hook trick. He said it. but then he tells you that "-asn·t "''ha t it meant \\'ell. finally the Santa Ana v.·inds did brieny grace our region and then came the rains. SHORTLY THEREAFTER, the weather report people start telling you that along our Orange Coast, we may get "a few sprinkles or light sOOwen ... " Now 1 ask you u a thinking person, what in bloody bilgewater does THAT mean? A few sprink1es, I suppose, sug· gests that yoo might bit a dewdrop or t\\-o with your windshield. Light shov.·ers, on the other hand, could be excused as anything from a steady soaking from the sky or just a few buckeUuls of the stuff. So any way tt goes, the old \\'Catherman has a way of coming beck afterward and saying, "Sec1 I told you so .. ANOTHER ONE of the weatherman's fa vorite phrases In this region is "Variable cloudiness today ... " Now isn't that nice? This can be anything from complete cloud cover to one or two patches of fluff y stuff noating around in the clear blue ozone. Either way. you can bet the weather man ""'as safe when he hung that "variable'' bit on you. Here's another one the wcather- watchers' fa vorite lines: "Fair except ror patcbes of fog or low clouds night and morning along the coast .. .'' NOW THAT REALLY tells you a Jot, doesn't it? lf you're out there creeping along in the old family bus in a thic k glop of fog, it doesn't make much difference to you that there might be a palch of blue 15 miles upcoast. You're in it, bud· dy, and that's aU lhat counts. And how about tllat line, "fog or low clouds?" I sure v,oish the weatherman would tell me when a low cloud gets low enough to become fog. When it hits the ground? Who knows ? ·Anyway, Lhis is the time or year when worried school folks often call the newspaper and inquire ahout what !he v.·ea tber is going to do to thei r big homecoming parade. TIIE ANSWER isn't easy. It would be \[ the good old weatherman would just aay "the skies arc going to tum blaclc as 1in and it will rain like the very devil." But don'I hold your breath for him to get on the book like that . Frida)', Oc:tobtr 27. 1972 U~I Tt_.. Shake11p i•• Cairo President . .\n\\·ar Sadat (R) has accepted resignation of Gen. Mo- hammed Abmet Sadek (L), reportedly a critic of Russia's military assistance to Egypl Sadek held posts of vice premier, war minister and commander-in-chief of armed forces. NY Police Battle Crowd To Em·oll Black Pupils ~'E\V \'ORK t L'PI) -PoliCt', afler calling for reinforcements. cleared a path throogh a croVi·d of jeering, scuf· fling while parents today and e.corted 31 black students into class at embattled Jolm Wilson Jr. Junior High School in Brooklyn. The students, led by the Rev. WUbert ~filler, a black, left a bus at about 10:30 a.m. and were escorted by police and school chancellor Harvey Scribner through lbe ma.in entrance of the school. Tbe tro'A'd of about 400 "''hite parents shouted "go home" and racial epithets as the chidren walked past lines of helmeted police. Some of the v.·hlte parents sang a mock version of the civil rights hymn "We Shall Overcome." Most of the children who oormally at· tend the school Slayed home today at the urging of their parents. Some 10 minutes before the black children from the Tilden Housing Project in the Brownsville sectioc left the bus, a ~-If do= eggs were burled from the crowd inlD a group ol tbelr parents, stan- ding at the barricades. Three persons were arrested, two white men and a white youth. Wilsoo Junior High is 70 percent ""'hlte and 30 percent black. &trlier. a shouling group of parents scuffled briefly with the police when they temporarily broke through the police lines. Helmeted police fought with fist·swing- ing men and clawing women as they attempted to dear a patb in front of the school for the obviously frightened children from Brownsville. Nixon Announces First Corn Sak to Chi~se WASHINGTON (AP) -President Nix- on aMOunccd today the first sale of livestock feed grains -300,000 tons of com -to the People's Republic of China. In mid-5eptember, there was an an- nouncement or a 400,000-ton wheat sale to China but there had hem no earlier deal- ings in com. Nixon, in a campaign radio broadcast on the farmer and his problems, said the ne\V relatioMhip with Peking "is another situation in which our farmers are both contributing to peace and profiting from peace." N"txoo said "the grain sales which we have made to lbe People's Republic ol China only scratch tbe surlaoe of an lm· mense trade pctenUal between our ~wo countries." The President reported a contract for the sale of the com had been algned "within the last few days." U.N. Flag Lowered ~10DESTO (AP) -A man accusing the Modesto-Stanislaus public library stair of "supporting the international Communist conspiracy" hauled down a United Nations Oag outside the building and rc(used to surrender it, police said, until officers intervened. Orchel D. Krier, 4.5, Salida, told authorities Wednesday be saw lbe flBjj Dying al lbe Ubnry wben be passed by and "couldn't stand by while the county supported an organization that gives aid and comfort to the enemy." The sale thus amounts to about 12 1nillion bushels - a relatively small amount inasmuch as annual U.S. corn production exceeds five billion bushels. The Agriculture Department, mean- time , said it learned of the sale through export inspection reports. The sale wu a private commercial transaction by the Loois Dreyfus Corp., N.Y. officials said. Spokesmen said they did not know if the 300,000 tons of com was part of a larger sale of U.S. feed grain to China. No government credit or export subsidies are Invol ved. officials said. Niion, in his remarks, also defended a controversial grain sale to the Soviet Union . DAIL\' PILOT DELIVERY SERVICE Oellvery of the Dally Piiot Is guaranteed J,lond•v·FrlCl•Y• II '/'OU dO ftOf hi..,. 'l'OVI' pepe• bV S:JO p,m., ull •nd vovr copy Will till brllU!ltlt to VV\I. r 11111 •r• l•k~ 1111)11 l:JO p.m. Sallll'09y el'd S<lfld•y: It ¥0U ito l'IOI r.ctl.,.. ¥OUr COCl'V by f 11.m. Saturday, or t I .In, SllNll,, Cllll 1n0 1 COPY wilt bf brovghl to '1'1111. C1\li 1"' •0.111 Uflfll 10 I .FT\. Telephones Motl Ot'I""'• C»1.1n1Y Ar•1 ••..• ,. ..,...I Hor1t1-.1 HU1111!'1111tol'I IMdl 1nd wn1"""',., . , ............ ,..Im lln CttnMnr., C.Plttl'MO ll-.dl. S8n J\1111'1 C.p111r-, DIM "°'!'If• loultl LIO-. UQ\IN Hltwl , , ,, ...... Snow Falls • Ill Montana Stock1ne1i Get W ar1ii1ig iri N ortlier1i Rockies Temperature• 1·-a1oi1 ktllfl'U\tltd '"°'' of IM rein, fl'l9 N•tloMI Wttltwr ..,.,Q .. Id, Tiit ... 'II« Mid concllti-t#Mollld bellf'I IO 1.__ 1tv '4111/f'drt wlltl Y~tblt cloudl Ind llklflfly Wll"l'IWI' l~h.lrM OftClktH, T"'"'IWIY'I ttleft fri lM "'*lff Wit 10. 11 ~cl ~ n tl'll $1111rt1ev. _._ .. " " . " .. .. .. " " .. " " . .. . .. " " " .... .. .. " .. " .. ,, " " " .. . •• 11 .... .. " n ,. •s SI ~~ ~~ ' Sale! 20% off on all women's heels. T • iloted or sport styles. Pl•in or trimmed with desi9ner.look accents. Choose from le•thers, sisedes, shiny patent vinyls, and more. Cl•ssic •nd fashion colors. Sale! Our entire stock of disposable diaper Pre-shaped disposables with speclal Inner lining that screens moisture away from baby. Waterproof backing eliminates rubber pants. Self-stick tapes hold securely. Newborn, bag of 30, reg. 1.29now1.09 Daytime. bag of 30, reg. 1.49 now 1.29 Overnight, bag of 12. reg. 79¢ now 69e Save 20% on all our shower curtains and matching window curtains. Get super savings on printed and embossed vinyl shower curtains. Matching window curtains come in two sizes. Wide selectlon of bright colors to match your bath decor. JCPenney The values are here every day . Shop Sund1y ~oon to 5 P .M. 1t the following 1tor91: FASHION ISLAND , Nowport Beach, (714) 644-2313 HUNTINGTON CENTER, Huntington Beach, (714) 892-ml ~ HARBOR CENTER, Costa Ma..,, (714j 6-40-5021 • .. • ; . • • ' • • ,· . . •• ,.; . .. ' • I I PAUL SHERWIN ESCORTS DAUGHTER TO CAR Secret1ry of Stete Convicted in Bribery Trial Highway Bid Top N.J. Adviser Guilty. in Bribe FREEHOLD, N.J. (UPI) -personal and political friend of New Jersey Secretary of State Gov. William T. Cahill, who Paul J. Sherwin, top adviser to campaigned -largely on the promise that be would clean a governor who swept into of-out corruption in the state's flee on an antlcorruption plat-political circles. Conn, was convlcted Thursday of conspiring and offering to ALL THREE SAID they receive a bribe. would appeal. Superior Court Princess Sees .Star LEEDS, Englard (AP\ -Princess Grace of Monaco wtnt to a ball and met ·her onetime sc.~en lover, Cary Grant. "I'm de\Jghted to see you again," the princess, former actress G r a c e Kelly, told the 63-year-old Grant Thursday n i 1J h t when they met at a Varie- ty Club ol. Great Britain ball. During her Hollywood days, the princess and Grant starred in the !um "To Catch a.Thiel." William c. Loughran, a Judge Francis X. Craby set Republican fund raiser, alto sentencing for Nov. 10. Each was convicted of the same faces a maximum sentence of charge by the jury of [Ive six years in jail and a $6,000 L----------' women and seven men, and fine. -- f:'rld1y, Octobtt 27, 1972 DAIL V PILOT 5 MacGregor Admit,s Special Fund-'Not for Espionage' WASHINGTON (AP ) The some adcliUonal funds con· chairman of President Nl1on'5 trlbt.11.ed. In 1971. He said lhe campaign corrunlttee has acknowledged for :he first time the exi1itence or a special campaign fund . But he denied the money was ever used to (inance political espionage against Df:mocralic presiden- tial hopefuls. Clark MacGregor said in a television interview Thursday that the money ~·as both a "carryover" from the 1968 presidential campaign and fund was used for "pr!llmlnary planning for the primary electJons." A CO~tMITTEE spokesman said laLer the money was not left over from 1968 but y,·as contributed in 1971 and early this year for possible primary use . The General Accounting OI· fice has reported the Nixon campaign had on band a fund or al lcout t.350,000, whole receipts .. n d dl1buntment& were unaccounted for. 'lbe Washing""1 Post bu rep«tod the fund L'Ontaloed 11 much o $700,000 which was med to finance the Watergate break· in and for 1 wide.spread effort to disrupt the compolgns of Democratic presldtntlal con- tenders last spriJl8 and llllll· me.-. AtacGregor waa intertiewed by Elizabeth Drew on National Public Affairs Center for Television. Michael J . Mamo, owner of a Sherwin. flanked by his wife, construction firm, was found three sons and t h r e e guilty or conspiring and or. daughters, sat motionless as ~IACGREGOR, chairman or fering to give a bribe. the jury foreman read the the Committee for the Re- 'No Mess' Polaroid Marketed verdict. But his wile, Elva, election of the ?resident since THE THREE WERE charg-burst into tears. Their oldest MlAMl BEACH, Fla. (API only three things -focus, developi.JJg picture unit within July 1, when fonner Atty. td with trying to get state daughter, Mrs. Jean Mooney, -After foo.r years and $250 push the shutter button and an invisible, stiff protective Gen. John N. Mitchell resign- Transportation Commissioner put her arm around her million, the Polaroid Corp. has wait. plastic structure. The unit ed, also for the first time John C. Kohl to give Manm's mother, and wept herself. introduced a new self-develop-One sec 0 n d after the repr!sents 17 layers of CQm-listed five penon!I wbo were construction company special When the family left the Ing color camera it says will photographer pushes the shut· pounds. so me only 1 0 • authorized to make payments consideration on a $600,000 courtroom, Sherwin helped his "change our lives." ter, the cn'mera ejects a thousands of an inch thick. from the fund. highway contract in return for youngest daughter, Carol, into About the size of a I _:::.c~-~i!iliiiiiiiiiiil~iiiii~~------iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii .. ;;::--a $10,000 contribution to, the the car. paperback book and weighing I Republican party. He shook hands with some only 24 ounces, the SX-70 will WASl-flNGTON (AP) -Two canipaign financial reports Witnesses lestlried that reporters but told them he retail for $180 and be available ·ttee hi h •· f Sherwin attempted to In-wouJd have no comment. nationally shortly after the 2 Fund Committees Fail to File Reports EXCITING ART comnu s w c ullve un-night at a Washington hotel. led I t { fluence Kohl , However, the first of next year, Polaroid ~e ar~e amo;in 5 ,0 money I-le will be accompanied by his company which submitted the "I CAN'T BELIEVE it." said Thursday night. It will go Cost• Mes• Art Le119ue Now Thru S•t. ·~to President Nixon 5 ~e-elec-~·lfc. C.Ornelia. low bid for the contract kept said Mrs. Sherwin, "how could on sale in Florida Nov. 10. tton campaign have failed to Soatb ~ st .,. file registralion statements in • Korea Bid it. this happen?" The camera, brainchild of _A. UI apparent violation of federal SEOUL (UPI) _ The Sherwin look a leave of Cahill said he would not Polaroid fowlder Dr. Edwin -t..V. law. government of President Park -~a~bs~en~c1~e~fro~mrJh~l!~jo~b;::w~he~a~b~e_Jco;m;;:m:•n:t~i:n~'=ie:w~o:f_t:h•:_:•:P·~L~a~n~d~, ~r~e~q~u~i ~"~s ~tl~1 ·~--=~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-Examination of hundreds of Chunghce proposed a new con· was indicted. He was a close peal. photographer essentially to do stitution today which gives the l--------------------------'::.:••:_:'0::.:1":::"'::_' ::.:"::c":::":::"'c.-=-' ------------------------- ( ) president more powers, ex-BRJ EF S tends his tenn from four to six years and weakens the .._ _______ _, powers of parliament. pouring lnto the General Ac, counting Office also shows a $26,000 loan to Democratic Presidential candidate Ge<1rge McGovern from a secretary who refused to say how a secretary could afford such a loan. e Botnb S118peet . In Tokyo, a South Korean opposition leader, l(jm Dae- jung, said Park was at- tempting to install himself as a dictator "forever.'' September's Beef P1ices Took Slide TEL AVIV (AP \ -A 22.- year-old American tourist has been arrested for investigation in connection with the murder· by.mall bombs addressed to ?resident Nixon. Secretary of state William P. Rogers and Defense, Secretary l\1elvin R. 'VASHINGTON (AP) Laird, the state radio reported Consumers paid less £or beef today. last month because of a slide The broadcast identified the in cattle prices and the first suspect as Dennis Feinstein dip in middleman markups and said he came to Jsritel as since last J u n e , the a vi.JU,or several weeks ago. Agriculture Department said · h today. '\ e .U..gs Seare The September 'retail price ANcffORAGE, A I a s 'It a or beef, a key indicator in the (UPl) · -Divers were called cost of living, was slightly.lfilss into the uarclt for House Ma, than $1.13 per pound on an all- jority 1'eader Hale Boggs to--cut basis, including ham· day to probe an area where an burger as well as steak. oil slick was sighted in That was almost three cents Alaskan waters. less than in August and 4.4 The slick, first sighted cents cheaper than the record Wednesday near Cordova in hi h ul Prince Wllllam Sound, was ·g in J y. Io August. within the scheduled flight however. the price spread - pa ttern C&"""ina Boggs and the markup -from cattlemen • • / ~-e to consumers was a record three olhers when their plane 44 .8 cents per pound. disappeared Oct. 16. Last month. according to a e Wollaee Aid "market basket" Teport on WASHINGTON (UPI ) -U.S. farm·produced food. the Alabama Gov. George C. middleman share for beef was Wallace will come back to the 43.3 cents per pound, a decline Washington area this weekend ot 3.3 percent in a month. to raise funds for J{oly Cross ;==========;I HOl'lplt&: at SUver Spring, ~Jd., where he was treated for gun shot wounds received in ~1ay at a Maryland campaign rally. Hospital officials s a i d Thursday that Wallace bad ac- cepted an Invitation to attend the eighth annual fund,raising ball for the hospital Saturday Prosperity Next Goal Says Nixon, WASHINGTON (AP\ President Nixon, his quiet campaign f o r re-election bolstered by new Vletnam peace hopes, 1ay1 "if you give me the chance tn the next four years, 11 he will work for pros- perity and "full employment without war and without in- nAUon ." Nl:xon, using a propeller- driven aircraft not usunlly (cAM 1 P AIGN '7~ associated w I t h presidents theMI days, made a fiylng trip Thurlday night to lluntlngton, W. Va ., and Ashland, Ky., to stump for his own candldacy and for beleaguered R<publlcans seeking •late of· rices. Crowds utlmated by police and newsmen lo tot.ii more lhan 2G,OOO turned out aloni the way. Few derisive cries were heard and virtually all curbllde placarda f a v o r e d NIJ1:on's cause. KNOW YOUR CANDIDATE VOTE FOR GORDON GOOSE ( I \ I \ Thf'" voti ng age ha.!l 1tgaln been lmo.·crcd to give othc!TA the riaht to vote. Girl• and bo)'l'I attcndinl( aey school In th" Ncwport-Met111. aroa can win a t1·lp to Sacramento vl11. Air California.. 8allot1 avallAblc in Wrstclll'f Pl1ti.a shops 11.t 17th I: Irvine Ave· nur. Ot•po!!ll one onl,y In thu Milot box at Jett's Pctttlng Zoo. appearing Oct. 31 lh.ru Nov. 5, SHOP ••• WESTCLIFF PLAZA 17th & lrvlne Avenue It's decision season again ladies and gentlemen. The pro-J::~;;;:::::::::r_, ~i=~~~~~(~ ~g ~ Statt.,.aplovles them) unreadable ballot should wark for JIUt not the politicia-propositions. ·-l - th . Wi2e1 can'th~pjouBwitbthe ~i;;e:-) Salaries ofstate o er propos1tions. ut we empl0yees are c:ontrolled can shed a little light on --.i----...i by a handful of politicians. Proposition 15. The State Pay Control Not e entire legislature. Amendment (After reading this ad, Control a man's income you may still vote against us. But at and you control the man. (Look least you11 knowwby.) at any boss-ridden eastern city State •ployees should and see how bad it can get) wark, not walk. Three times in the past three On May 22, 1972, state years these politi - Water Project employees shut cians took money off the water flowing into the legislature allo- Southem California. It wasn't the cated to pay state first strike by state employees. college personnel. We'd like to make it nurses, highway the last patrolmen, forest fire Unlike manyworlrers fighters and other in private industry, Cali· California employees and fomia State empl0yees put the money aside for their have no established wzy own pet projects. to work out employee-empl0yer Proposition 15 will take problems. They either have to state pay control out of the bands strike or quit. of politicians and give it back Twenty-five percent have to you, the voters, through quit in the pas t year. Others your elected legislators. have staged costly work stop-After all, it's your money. pages. Themajority are looking for an intelligent alternative. State pay should be co11hollecl, not •nipulated. The State Pay Control amendment is designed to do exactly what it says. Control state pay. Proposition15 gives them one. A yes vote on 15 will keep state empl0yees on the job while their elected representatives work out disputes with state boards. By law, decisions reached through these negotiations will be bind- ing on all state employees. State salaries will be set by the ....t/<rl-"'tP-'ltri.._. establish~d boards: The State Personnel Board, University Talking is much better than walking. Or Wm' ,..,v ... 11 ofCalifomiaRegentsandStateUni1er· sity and College 'frustees. Does that mean a generous board cannmawaywith thetaxpayers'mcmey? Absolutely not Proposition 15 limits the increases (or deaeasesJ pay boards can recommend. State salaries, by law, will be kept equal to the average paid fir the same jobs in private industry. In other words, a lab technician working for the state will get the aver- age salary paid to Jab technicians in the private sector. No more. No less. As a safeguard, your elected repre- sentatives in the State Legislature have the right to turn down raises which might WJbalance the budget The final vote beloogs to~ Does PropositionlS mean higher taxes? No. The state bas collected enough of your money to CIJVet easily any and all salary acljustments affected by Proposi· tion 15. (On]une 30, 1972, the budget S\11'- p~us was already $565.7 million.) ............... LC-.81t11t ~to:~ ""' """' Kftll'dtl E. Hllllcm fE··~M.O.. l':"..,~T."" ='~ &.,..C::Ulno ... t Jtn.Jmir &~ ~""'"'""' ~~r.ie.w. Ml ,._C.W• Dani IJ. Buy n • A.Gr.::-..,,_.,.,~ Jltw. ~ • RtfH ~ kf'911Cdi D. s.-U.Cd.,.....~am:· c-u., n. o.ww . Hon. YVl'lflN 8111lbwallt Mn. ftOl'tOI flT licNrd II. ntll'll'i ~·=Ml .. tL5''-)'(trtMAC.llfrw..i.~ /i~H.&:--~r. - H«1. am Gttn1a R.,..J11lian K~Mf """"' -lb. R.Wl:r l"Z.'s!::..-· a.,_ K"" J,iont ft. ~.RobtnB,Haas c. lt.1,,\l1t;) ....... Vt. MIP;I MaMM A-·'"' DJnid Wtl'lp1111 ~e-l'L Rlllh I. H•nllllll """"""' b."l:t.~~ ... ·-iL .... ~ ...... PtllUlJ L W..11!!' n, M. H. llmtt JO~ a~· t-llflCJ Aftf'f Hon. tWfl.~ t':il~i;S"' AnM!l L. lltmfitkl $11t1r K•lhkfti IAdlt. Ul.M, I !1111. ~idlll'd Nt91N Al&.il £ AseYtdil ..... rmcm.A. )or; Hftllllin 1-nl '::.'r.: 1i1.-'fjn!llA t "' t"'··~ JI s tow a.• ... W!IUIOI Ck*r ll:c•. Rotiert !. H~ ll~nW. Judi ;:1111r:u -Mri.Johrl W. H~ l'>fl Calfry "~ ~riollif'll~u c r. ~tl'lllt Ml -'iM.Oll. Ci.det I. S...W 1.lmcf' ~ M,D. •• .,,o~w.Cdt it et'·~ M"-1Ao .Hinh ""'·~':\t'·=:!I-~~ ~t.ot "'-· Sll'l'lllfn SandltJ a..~ Hon. WUllAnl M. IMMil ·-. '"'"""' 0. Hotlllllll Mn.~"' M ~~~~~ RIT. Cll1'I''.8fto...,11Nr Hoa. rAw'ft ~.., J ~~l&.~" .....,,.,,..., ":J.l;.""' .. i:'il.::":-'"'"'"·~ ..... ~..._ .. °"" M g-,,. .... -RnolimG.: iloll. Gtcqt H. tnmc; At an airport rally in •run· tlngton, where police said 3,000 were on band. Nlion buJJt hla Impromptu campaign speech around what he termed hh1 confidence that the United Statu will achieve "peact with honor and not peace w1th su"enderlnV~mam." l _________ JI--~------------------------------------------------------~ • DAD ,Y PROT EDITORIAL P AGE A Good Idea-Stalled Recent uproars over the operation of. ~nin_lal eon· trol departments ln various Orange coast. c1t1es JS s~~r lng live municipalities toward construction of a Joint facility. Talks among city managers o~ Fountain Valley, Seal Beach, lluntington Beach,-\Vestminster and Costa Mesa are in _progress and m~y ,le,~d . to a new pou~d, pe.rha.ps1,.1 .-1n lie located near the Orange Courity Sanitation n1Str1ol · headquarters. . ln view of the complaints which have surfaced in three of these cities (Huntington Beach, Costa Mesa •. and . Seal Beach), this would appear to be an excellent idea. The shelter could be constructed and operated_ 011 a share basis,. leaving the partidpants free to provide, or arrange for, their own stray pickup services ... The obvious advantages are that the cities co~ld exercise control over operation of the pound and real_tze gjgnificant savings compare:! to individuaJ construction o( shelters. The current negotiations follow an encouraging pal· tern of municipal cooperation amo~g Orang_e Co~st area cities. Cooperative ventures are being practiced m other service areas, sucti as fire and police, and they could ex· lend to animal control as well. A Reasonable Action Fountain Valley City Councilmen moved wisely this \\'eek "'hen they decided to continue till late Novemhf:r th e hearing on a zone change and oonditio~al us.e pernut \1 hith '''OUld replace a proposed school site with a 69- home planned development . from a little time. and the counc1l can proceed and rule on the project. U the plea is approved, the property -bounded by La Alameda, El Portal, l,a Tierra and Starfish Streets - will provide the d.lstrict with a site for its last scheduled neighborhood school. Considering the (\j,tern~tiv.e of lh~ school site, which ·~uld be bu~i'!be youngsters of the area to other schbc?ls, the s1~t delay is reasonable action. ' Lif es~Ving Heart Seamier ' l . Anyone Who knowt1hat yoqngJdblts and even teen· agers can occasionally suffer crippling heart attacks will appreciate ·ocean VieW School District's new heart screening program. Using a computerized scanner, the program is aimed at checking the heart or each child when he reaches the fourth grade. To some th.is may sound unnecessary. but heart experts say otherwise. They point out that there are generally just two times in a child's life \Yhen he is taken to a doctor: When he is very young and prone to crying, or when he is sick and prone to congestion. In either case, it wouJd be easy for an examining physician to miss a possible heart murmur or other irregularity. Thus even a well-cared-for child can slip into ado- lescence wilh an undetected J1ear\ problem, and from there to an early death. Ocean View's program has resulled in corrective heart surgery for one child already, and it will un- doubtedly save others in years ahead. •• ' . -. The delay will allow the Fountain Valley School District time to place a hardship plea before the st~te . \!locations Board for permis.sion to purchase the s~te. If the plea is not approved, nothing will be lost, aside The PTO mothers who raised money to buy the heart scanner and the district \Vhich is conducting the vigorous program warrant commendation for their \vorth\.vhile efforts. H ~-J::o.·~ •1'VE HEA~~ OF Cl\YIN6 DOLLS) 6UT NOT Of 5Pll11N6 f'UPPET5.11 K e nttedy, Not McGov ern, likely Leader Demos Are Thinking Ahead George! What A re You Up T o Now adays? We Badly Need \\'ASHl!\'.GTO~ -The post-'.\icGovem reconstruction of the Democratic party is being anticipated by some leaders even before they know for sure how the elec- li(Mlj; v.·ill tum out. A McGo'lern victory, of course. would make such anticipations academic. But the size and extent of a t-.1cGovern defeat would have a strong bearislg Oft what y.·ill happen in lhe future. The fairly obvious conclusion is th at Sen. Edward 1\1. Kennedy. ho\vever badly McC:overn is be21ten, will move in as the popular lead- er of the party and steadily advance toward the presidential nomination of 1976. IT IS NOT QUITE 1hat simple. Some other general conclusions are being reached which are subject. to ex- amination. One of them is that John Con- nally of Texas, serving as secretary of state, will lurn Republican and take the 1976 Republican nomination away from Spiro T. Agnew. Who says that Connally v.·ill either be appointed secrelary of state or turn Republican? He is a Democrat. leading lhe Democrali for Nixon and his future may lie in the Democratic party more strongly than in the Republican party. Experience shows thal if McGovern loses as badly as the polls now indicale, the Democratic party will be completely shattered and will have to start to rebuild from the bottom up. LITERALLY FROM the bottom up - (rucHARD WILSO~ the South. labor, ethnic groups. youth, liberated women, even the traditional liberals wiU have lost their moorings. Anyone who brings them back together wiU have to command respect over a brooder spect.rum than McGovern's and it is not even certain that Kenned)''! scope is that greal. Kenoody's greatest "'eakness ii fn the South, a fact which is not uwelated to bis growingly warm relationship with Rep. Wilbur C. Mills, chairman of the tax-writing House Ways and Means Com- mittee. Mills is not much known · to the general pub1ic, but he stands solid in the South as a signer of the contumacious Southern Manifesto on Racial Segrega- tion. and sound in Wall Street on taxes. ' MILLS' ABORTIVE bid for the presideocy (probably aimed more at the vice-presidency) did not improve his political stature. But at least Senator McGovern promised to nominale Mills for secretary of the treasury, and if that never happens, the Arkansas Democrat has a chance lo become speaker of the House of Representatives assuming the Democrats slill have control nexl January. This is mentioned here to show how carefully Kennedy i.s k~lng his options open and getting himself in a position to cultivate North and South, East and West. With a foot in the McGovem organization, and a foot In the South, Kennedy could step forward into his natural terrain, the urban ereas, to recapture the old coalition McGo vern had Jost . T.lUS IS ALL mGHL Y tenuous. Con- nally, remainng an ambitious Democrat, cou1d make the way harder for Kennedy . A recoostructed South which had voted for Nixon and Wallace might not make ( ART HOPPE ) Democratic leaders very hospitable to a LOS ANGELES -I was in Los Kennedy under any conditions. Angeles on busmess and whom should I ~ ~lusion can safely be drawn run ihto bul my old friend, George. that ll will oot be easy for Kennedy on, • Now George is one of lhe nicest guys anyone else to reunite a party so badly fou'd ever "'ant lo meet and it was a divided as the Democrats will be if ' · pleasure to see him again. Good old McGovern is swamped on Nov. 7. George. Another conclusion can be hazarded So we shake hands and I say, with reasonable safety. McGovern will "George! You're a sight for sore eyes. not fokl bit -~ ~1 away into the A1iiJ")fbat are you up to these days?" dark of 1dibt.J:Je ~given signs already ·~ tell you the truth," he says, "I'm that he is thinking past his possible ruaning for Prcsi- defeat and 8' a United States Senator dent." wil l try to rally ~ forces of opposition "No kidding!" says to Nixon and c~ the torch into the I. "That's a great campaigns of . Jn any case, idea. But you ought McGovern would have to keep righl on to tell people." campaigning if he.~anls to stay in the "I've been trying ." limelight He would'Oe up for reelection he says. "But I just to the Senate in llr'L4. can't seem to gel the I• message across." UNLIKE SENA.'f6it Hubert H. Hum-"The first thing phrey in 1968, McGgyem would still have you should do," says I, "is pass out a his pulpit in the Semte which Humphrey lot of buttons and bumper stickers to y,•as forced to relinquish for two years. spread the old name around." The importance of this is that McGovern "I've been doing that for more than a will have continuing access to lhe in-year," he says. formation media based in Washington. 'Is lhat right?" says I. "Well. ma~be McGovern's record in politics indicates people are keeping them for souveo1rs. he will try to assert his nominal What about a slogan? You'll need a slogan." leadership of the party, and, in any case, "Come home. America!" be calls out. hang on for dear life to whatever stature "Did you lose your dog?" says 1, look· being a defeated presidential nominee gives him. ing around. Th.:\l won't make the job of reuniling "NO," JIE SAYS. "That's my slogan: the Democrats any easier. Come Home. America." "It ought lo sew up the tourist vote," Metric Just to indicate ho;, badly this country needs the metric system. and bow bafOing oor whole present system of we.igtits and measures Is. today's word.- quiz deals wholly with this mischievous subject: I. If you asked for a "hogshead" of Ii· quid, how much would you get? 2. If you ordered a "cord" of fuel v.-ood, how much would it weigh? 3. How many sheets of paper make a "quire"? • 4. How long is a "chain" in surveying and engineering? 5. "Full fathom five thy fa t h er lies." says Shakespeare - how deep is Dad? 6. If a horse stands 18 "hands" high , how large is it? 7. U a tailor made up an "ell" of cloth for you, how much would you have? 8. How many "scruples" make a "dram"? 9. Can you distinguish "one ounce" avoirdupois from "one ounce" troy, and how much is a "fluid ounce"? 10. When Peter Piper picked his peck of pickled peppers, how many quarts did he pick, and what part of a bushel? ANSWERS' 1. A large cask, containing from 63 to System ~YDNEY J.HARRI~ 150 gallons, depending on whether it held wine or some other liquid. 2. A "cord" is a unit of volume, not of weight, equal to 128 cubic feet, usually 8 feet long. 4 feet wide, and 4 feet high. 3, A "quire" is 24 shee&s of paper. 4. A ··chain" ls 100 links of equal length, having a total length either of 64 feet (as in a surveyor's chain, or the distance between the wickets in crickel) or 100 feet , as in an engineer's chain. 5. THY FATHER lies 30 feet deep -a fathom iJ six feet. 6. A "hand" is four inches. 7. An ell of cloth varies in different countries; about. 45 lncbes. 8. A scruple is equal to 20 grains or 1-3 of a dram. 9. An ounce is 437 .2 grains or l/16 wund avoirdupois: it is 400 grains. or 1/12 pound troy ; a fluid ounce U: 1.11>47 cubic inches, or 1/16 of a pint. IO. A peck is a dry measure of eight quarts, equal to 537.6 cubic inehes, and is the fourth part of a bu.she.I. (I have a ream more of such absurd examples of our illogical and outmoded measuring system, but fir.it you have lo find out how many quires are in a ream.) Fuel Prices Headed Up Minneapol11 Tribune The No-Growth Movement says I. "Maybe what you need's an issue. Say! Aren 't you against the war in Viet· nam? Now, there's a good one. People are pretty sick of the war." "l'm for withdrawing all our troops. planes and used tanks in 90 days," he says. Two terms invariably appear in the growing number of reports about energy resources. One is shortage. The other is price increase. They are related. of course. but in ways that sometimes escape public notice. That relationship becomes especially important when ex- perts are rorecasting a doubling in U.S. energy requirements by 1985, an inability to meet tho.se needs domestically and uncertainties over cost and delivery of foreign resourees. supplied by oil Imports, prices 1n the United States will be tied still more closely to the rising cost of foreign oil. ANOTHER UPWARD push in prices could come from reducing the oil-deple· tion allowance on domestic produclion if that of'ten-cited loophole is closed in a tax-reform law. Forbes magazine describes lhe depletioo provision as a subsidy that holds down the retail price or a gallon of gasoline from the $1 iL might otherwise be. Growth is a six·letter word that is tak- ing on the connotation of a four-letter word in some localities. Cities and stales that once coorted new residents and new industries have come to the conclusion that growth brings more problems than progress in Its wake. As a resuJt, pro- posals to retard or halt growth are gaining an increasingly sympathetic hearing. California, the country's faslest-grow· ing state since World War IT, is in the rorefront of the think·small movement. At an Aug. 7 news conference. California Attorney General Evelle J. Younger said the state was prepared to SUt'. loca l governments to prevent people from • C>aANOI COAST DAILY PllOT .... ,• RofHi1 N. Wctd, Pobllmtr T-K.ml,®Ul<W A~W.Bbt<s Edik>ftal Paf/O Edllor The edltart.J ~ er ttw-n.u>· l>Slot 114'.!tka to lrlronn And 1Umu· la~ 1'"dtft b7 ~nunc thl11 nl!"l"IPl.Ptr'• o_plmon1 and oom- mctntary on toPka of fnlttrt"8t 11nd 1ianlnc9nec, by provldln1 a forum (ot tbe ~on of our readcni' oPinllnl. and by )ll'ne!Rl~ thtt dim'IC ;.•pa1nt1 al inlonnod ob-~ •nd •pokclrnm on taPcl ol fl'le&y. Friday, October 27, 1972 I I • EDITORIAL RESEARCH being allowed to move into area! where they would contribute to air pollution, overload sewage facilities, or otherwise. degrade the environment. "A city Is like an apartment house.'' Younger said. "If it is filled, there should be no effort to bring in any more people. The concept th<it 'there's room for one more' just doesn't apply." A Sll\ULAR VIEW WA$ expreased by John Tooker, California's director of planning and research, on Sept. 18, Test\· tying bofon!'~Slote AIM!mbly Ccmmll· limit population to 3.4 million . Possibly Influenced by that action, the Los Angeles County Board of Supervisors voted in lale September to frreie building-pennit awards on l.8 milUon acres of county land, Including 900.000 acr~ that are mostly held by-private builders and speculators. Henceforth, the board will grant permits only if plans call for no more than one unit per acre in the affeeted areas. The surprise n1ove immediately held up 1,600 building permits, representing $43 million in t'fln- struction. that were pending when the decision was made. · Growth no doubt will c:onlinue in Los Angeles end elsewhere, bul the days of unchec'kcd development appear num - beotd. "Wow!" says I. "A £earless un- compromising stand like that will really arouse the country. One way or another. Wait till you tell tbe people that!" "I did," says he. "But nobody seems to care much." ··well," says I. "Vietnam's pretty far <iway. What you need is something closer lG home. I've got it! Corruption. You know. mink coats and deep freezers. Scandals always rack the nation." "I think this administration," he says, "is the most corrupt in American his tory." But Americans, because of. tradition and lhe vaguene5! ol proposed solutiona, _ tend to defer worrylbg about the. matter. They have been condiU<>ned to abundant, cheap energy and the ~flcleocy of U.S. lechnology in energy and similar utility systems. When Americans sel the therm<>Stat, fiip the light switch. turn the faucet or piC'k up the telephone, it works; ln most other countries it works "(F 1 WERE YOU, f wouldn't say sometimes. Tho Idea f)f expensive or ir- th<it.'' says I. "All hell will break loose.'' regular energy supplies (or both) is "I already said it," he says. beyond the experience or lll06t of us. "Oh," says I. "Let's see. I know, what . if you said you were for closing tu • MOREOVER, SUCH alternatives as loopholes for the fat cats? Everybod)''ll .,...those recently orpropoeedn f b~ the ad· sore about that " ' . ~ratk>n's . ce o mergency t .. Iii Ellv~tal Quality, Tuol<tt bt..s\it~~iu=IJ "I d.d" tit My!. . .,...,tdn<ss are not the kind that in- . "' ~~... •• "H~m '' •r• 1. ''J.nywl'f, tlie .. ·a 'ai\lre tlllzens lo lndlvldual action. We are >"'... • ?·\ ;Jol!,of "'i... 'uii.,. ~ ~~y~ "'141d'1o ride mau tronsll and railroads '~ hta<t off populatlai arW!h. t«al s~~ that loullntlr ap-pri'we dev ti lo expond tllelr lu r bases "wool bl •Jtoundod.'' 1be .clded, t al how little ettra revenue they 'ftctlve 1 wi)<o the coot o! providing additional servlceo b t.Wn tnto a«01111l. The Los Angeles City Council and Planning Commission, tn a Ju\y 11 repon to Mayor Sam Yorty, recommended a 4.l·mllllon cclllog on the number of peo- ple wbo could live tn tbe city by 1990. Around 2.a mlllion people now reside wlthlo L.A. city llmtll, bot pm<nt zon. lng regulattona would permit a 1111...,.ttcal tlO!IUlatlon o! JO miltion. Tbn!e we<ki later, the plllMlng com- mission w .. 1 beyond tho report by adop- llnl.Jl :ZO.year mooing plan dt.lped •• ~" .;, 1 •. 1 ""''1.t :,,"T"" out for cut ~ dare often, make our houses better In-.,,, ... ~ ~ ~snd~usesolJrenergy.The ,_oomy spending! • _!!'::!!;B \JI> . •1 • . ' .,,...tlons are~.o.md-u thl. rneaM ••• we fa.re r~,,.H-.-s M>I arr ~ •••Uable and not too expel\81\'e. G li • f revls~ns of our bUng liOC al too" Whlch is wt\)' lhe prlCHUpply rela- 'J• ., . . ~ ' ~ I ·~~ ' • ,J Almost rveryone t11joy1 a circus -right? Why we.it for Ringling Brothers and Barnum & Balley when we can attend our local city cooncll meetings! -P.E.W. TMt ...... ~ .....,., ¥!nft, llOI --..ril'I' .......... -..-. h!M '"' .. """"' ti ....... ., G-. D.ily Piie!. tu:,e1· did " h ''And don't say llooship of enero eource• ii so lm-' . ,;, -e says. portant. In past yean, tntematlonal oU rad1c11I. compan.les earned high pronta ln the pro-"Oon't worry," aaya I, alter 1 few ductlon of foreign crude oil (told mostly minutes o~. silence. "You11l think of in 11()1\aU.S. marltctJl and tuMldlzed their lS01nethlng. reflolng and marketing operetlbns. The SO IT'S COMFORTING to Jcnow that "°""'" ol thooe proms is '8pidly good old ueorge Is out then somewhere dccllnlng a.s producln~ countries demand thinking up daring propoea.1.s which. -and get -owne'l"Bh1p of the.Ir oU well1 Mght or wrong, 1tlmulatb v1gorous pubUc and a hlgher ahare of production profits. de.bate nnd th'UJ keep the vital Julcles Fuel prices In tho United Stales seem of our democracy flowing. sure to be driven upward o,s 11 resull At ICQ&t they would rt anybody was And, bec11UJC of tho cq>ected lncreruic ln listening. the percentage of the American market 1be prospect of sharply increasing energy costs will, we hope, become leverage for overdue pol,ltlcal-eoonomic action. Recommendatioru1 for-conserving energy, developing other energy IOW"Ces and providing more efficient energy·U1'- ing systems such as mass transit are being heard frOm both busine8s and government. A good means of en- couraging consumer and vot.o.r oe- ce-ptance of those recommcndatioos is to create public nwnreness of the cost of failing to carry the:in out. That Is why we ore encollNlged by signs that the energy shorte.ge, and lhe effect it can have on prices. is becoming a political issue. .---Bu Geor ge ---, Dear George: Jt would seem that more and more advice columna are running in the newspapers of the nation. Could )oo ttll me U this 11 be<ausc America is in worse shape mentally and emotio·nauy than at any time In history? Or ls It becauae lhe average c!tizeri feel• alienated rrom his surrounding!? Or ls It because of a general sense of futility? W.E. Dear W.E.: Nah. The reason the newspapers are so full of advice columnlltt la because we work so cheap. (Send your problCJl\O to O.Orgc and see what happens. But don't say you weren't warned.) • ' Orange Coast EDITION -~\ ' I VOL. 65, NO. 301, 4 SECTIONS, 48 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA FRIDAY, OCTOBER 27, 1972 Paeifists Seized r Quakers Try to Block Vessel Off Coast . . . By JtHN ZALLER Of .. o.llY ~let Sl1ff Fifteen welsult-clad paciflsl'I were ar· rested Thursday after plunging into the ocean In 8n efforl to st.op the 16,~ton assault ship SS ~luth from leaving Seal Beach Naval Weapons Station. Police and harbor authorities, using five boats, wer:i required to remove demonstrators from the path of the Duluth, an amphibious vessel bound for an undi.scl~ port. Four Prange CounUans, a M-year-old man and a t>yw-old girl were among those jailed In the third "human blockade" try this year for a group representing the American Friends Service Committee, a Quaker-affiliated organization. niose arrestea from Orange County mre Claudia Jo Goodwin, 20, of 1405 Crestview Ave., Seal Beach; John' Frederick Mangels Ill, 20, ol 18032 Butler St., Irvine; anJ Michael Traub, 19, of 317 Goldenrcd Ave., and Timothy C. Wblsrnan, 21, pl 700 Heliotrope Ave., both of Corona de! Mar. Others arrested include Patti Sykes, "31 Santa M'>nica; Sherri Siegel, %9', Topanga; Steve Huston, 22, Altadena; Bo~ Levering, 28, Pasadena; Franklin 1.ahn, 64, Claremont; Phil Bernzott, 34, Santa Monica; Charles Swift, 54, Santa Monica; Nancy Peru, Los Angeles; Ann (See QUAKERS, Pqe Zl N. Viets: Peace Soon TOTAL COST l105 Ill. ifOTALiiDEAD'IN VIETNAM WAR (1.3 MILLION PERSONS) AMERlCAllS SOUTH VIETNAM OTHER MORlH PARIS (AP) - A North Vietnamese spokesman insiSted today that the peace agreement reached with the United States should be signed Tue...iay. He added that Hanoi negotiators would be willing to meet Henry A. Kissinger though "tbtte are no remaining ques- Uoll! ~t need anotl\er meeting. • 1e South China St o SOUTH Pattern Of Control I Areo• controlled by ~et Cong ond/or North V".etnomeM fore":• 45.114 10,211 112,414 2os.oo• ALLIES YIElllAM _,, -5.111 904,111 "But H alter the signing of the agree- (llent on Oct. 31, Di. Kissinger wants to meet with Le.Due Tho and Xuan Thly to discuss Pl'Oble!nJ of "'"""!l"' lnte~, we are ready. ' r '"1lle pe.ace Is at~ of rpen." Le ail .. llllistioJ U..t tbe 11nlled Slalelce81' rrOUt lbe ~lo 11gn 1'1e9daf. • ..,,~ FIGHTING CONTINUES AS PEACE PLANS MAPPED ,,,.p Sliowo Arfl!fl . Held by South Vlotnom, Communi~lf UPI ~ OVER ONE MILLION DEATHS IN VIETNAM WAR TO DATE IG-Yu r Conflict Cost U.S. T1xpayors $105 Biiiion Thieu Counters Proposal For Peace With Own Plan SAIGON (UPI) -President Nguyen Van Thieu said today there will be no peace in South Vietnam until be signs a treaty himself. He countered the Hanoi-Washington nine-point puce plan with a proposal for or any combination of two er more coun- to declde the makeup of a new Saigon government. 'Ib.ieu told pro-government legislators who marched to his downtown Independence Palace to show support for lhe president that be favors ,. South Viet- namese referencJum so the people could "voice tbelr O'.VR wish." The president said the United Nations or any combination of two or mor coun- tries could superv\se the referendum. He propsed that a government be formed between his administration and the Viet .Cong according to the percen- tage each side ~lved in the referen- dum. Thieu ba!.binted at such a r6'erendum for several weeka1bl..lt his proposal today was the first time be spelled out bLa Idea. The president has always Insisted that only Internationally supervised elections could replace his govenunent, but today's proposal o[ a referendum would not directly e.!.:.::t anyone. It would in- stead allow the cll00.5.ing of government officials by both sides. "For once, iJObody could say that ..he controlled 99.9 percent oft~ people~ and nobody could claim two-thirds eijher," Thieu said. . lt was an obvSou.! reference to the tbr..,.Jded coalition inoooed by Hanoi and W ashlngton to tab 0ver the rein> of c:nvernment. Both the Viet Cong and North Vlelnam have opposed any United Nations "in- terference" in South Vletnam in the past. "We have not agreed on anything yet (See THIEU, Pqe Zl Le told a '!fW!· a.nrmmce thlt "it was the presldenl ct tbe Ullited Slates wbo = the dila of Oct. !I for the ture." It was not precisely clear whether be was making the signing of the agreement a condition IW> another negoUatlng session. ln Washingtou, presidential press secretary Rooald L. Ziegler -to comment on lbe North Vietnamese of· ficlal's stateinents. Le .uid ,Kf.ulnger r<lerred Tbunday to an "boneat na1sunderstand.g" about the date. Le said: · "We don't believe tbere is a misun- derstanding. It was written blact on white in a message from the President on Oct. 20." "Tlie U.S. side claims there are aWI some tbiltis to !ettle. We consider this u a pretext to delay the signing ol the •<> cord on which the two parties reached agreement," Le said. He scoffed at what he said was Kiss- inger>s need to compare texts of the ac- cord In clarily questions of llngulstl<1c "This question has already been settled dellnltely'" Le Bald. He said that at a secret meeting on Oct. 11 that finished at 2 a.m. Oct. 12, expert translators ol both sides compared the (See PEACE, Page 2) McGO VERN DUE IN ANA.HEIM Democratic presidential can- didate George S. McGovern will be In Orange.County Saturday and wUI address a bre!Jtlast meotlng at a a.m. at Disneyland Hotel In Anaheim. For details, ,.. O. C. H\131Jnp' column today on Page. 9. President to Veto Nine Bills-'Exceed Budget' WASHINGTON (UP!/ -President Nixon said today he will ve.to nine measures because they woulC: exceed his budget by $2.75 billion over the next two fiscal years. He said he was taking the action despite advice tha! it .would be "politically very damaging." "If I were to sign these measures into law, I would , in effect, be making prom- ises lhat could not be kept since the funds required to finance the promised servlc:es are not availab!e and would not be available without the higher ta:a:es I have promised to resist," he said in a statement. He repeated his pledge to bold federal spending to '250 billion and claimed the nine measures if enacted into law, would breach lhe budget by $750 million in the 1973 nscal year and by nearly $2 billion in 1974. "Each of these measures by itself might seem justifiable or _even highly desirable'," Nixon, said, adding that the decisions bad been very difficul~ ones for him. -The appropriaUons for the Health, EducaUon and Welfare Department, a measure which Nbcon said inClucled !035 mJlUon in overspendlng. He vetoed an earlier version of tbe same measure which contained a budget· bulUng $1.1 bllllon Int August. -The public works and ecooomic development Act of 1972, which Nixon said would unnecessarily add new federal programs which have been demonstrably ineffective in creating jobs and stimulat· ing economic development -A measure aulhorlling federal funds to support mineral research and training Institutes ln each of the 50 states and Puerto ruco, legislation which Nixon said is unneeded because of workable existing programs. Laird Announces Halt to Bomb Raids in North LONDON (AP) -U.S. Defense Secretary ~felvin R. Laird announced to- day that American warplanes have halted all bombing operations of North Viet11am above the 20th parallel. Laird 1poke with newsmen after a meeting or ')e North Atlantic Alliance 's nuclear planning group. He refused to say whether the United States 8liJI Is Oylng reconnaissance missions north of the 10th parallel but appeared to take one step further an announcement In Washington on 'lb.trs- day by presidential adviser Henry A. Kissinger. Coron a del Mar Cat Complaints Prompt Demands By WILUAM SCJIJ\EUIER Offieer Assists Stork Kl88lnger told a news conference the United States Informed North Vietnam that "we would atop military activities north of the 20th parallel." Of "" Dally '"" '"" Two sisters who ttpOrtedly keep a houseful of cats in Corona del Mar prompting Newport Beach councilmen to ask for a new city ordinance limiting the number of small animals lhat can ~PY a single borne. 'I'be action wat taken Tuesday after Cooncllman lUchard Crout aald be bad received a nwnbe:r of complainll about a Jara:e number of cat.a -10met1mes at many u IO -at the home ol Mn. UI· lian carver and Mrt. Mlldr.d Mllbrat, 505 Larkspur Ave. "Thi.a problem has been around for at least eight years," Crout aald. 0 lt comes and goes but oow It 11 .tlack again." Mn. carver and Mn. Mllbrat, both aemketlred teeretarial workers aod acll- proclalmed animal retcUe workera, in3iat they have far fewer cats than ne.ighbon would bave people believe. . "Wa only have abOut a dozen cots and 1hey don't bl>tbet anybody," Mrs. carver uid. "Tlie lady next door jllll cloeln't (See FWNES, P11< I) New Mother More Calm Tlian Newport Police man By AR111UR R. VINSEL or '""'.,..,,.,....,..., One Newport Beach poUcen>an eot the c!wlc old rldJo.dlspatdled OAlllJllll<lll 1bout noon Tlmrlltlay lbat mak .. tehow' olflcen glad they weno home !or lunch when It went out. Patrolman Gone Senec1l, IS and L'io father of Iota' children, helped deU .. r one and came through wllh Oytn& colon. He Wll mote DetvOUI, perhaps, than the .... mother. Tlie ditpatchct ordved him to tho LA....,... A. Rucbo!lnoki ... ldliiiOOlt- 1141 W. Balboo BIY<l., aboul 1:30 p.a.,«> what ll known In tho JIO)lce prof-as a. I02M chlldblrth. "UP"' mivol, I found the treot diJoo locked, IO I t'1111 the doorbell, boneod «> t~• door •nd yelled tbtollP \bl mall •lot," Officer Sen<cal said In his rtport. nv .. foot, one-Inch, 1117 pound housewife. "Someone Inside yelled: 'Come In "lier comploxjon wu quite. whit" It "-··• lbe win.low,'," be cooUnued. """""" must have been a trying txpetlfnco for Racing around tho bulldlnl, he found her," OUlcv 5«>ecaJ said today. an unloClied window, lllld II open and scrambled lhrouah. unbt:ile•1blc," be remarked "I found the vlctim b'inl on tho 11>fa, abllll)' to koep cool during talklng on the telepbooe," 61.a rePort coo-phone conversauon. tinufld. ~ Offiotr 11 Aid UIOtber and IOO "I bnmediately cbecl<ed Ille vlcUm and ...med to be dolnl fine and hoapital of-_..., • mm chJld lylnc -lltlt lelt flciaJJ hav• conllnne<f his evaluation. thl1b," Olllcer Senecal'• repllt rollielt. · A -for 711 ycan now. ~rabblng • lheet from tho hollway Patrolin*i> s.ioe<al said today he bas linen ci<loel, be did what they tell l"'ll to riced 8everal notlMn-t .. bo to !'!>t.Pitsls do ln demlnotration lliml lbowu evay IO u. bis "lbad wllil llabts fl.uhlnl! and often durln& pollc. tralnln& e111&•. siren ac.rel.mln but he bad never befott u.. Aid falber ~ Old ., om· helped out. bulance mind limtll~~:v• 1lo Qyo Ide ma1111Cq olways old and comfort :0 Wloilted, Wllo WU ~td "'l8 ilia bod< IUI bllllied olt to Haq -lal I.._ -nger In .,.... tbev dldt, t drfve TM blbJ bor'• urlvll wu • lint-. up to tho emer niom iloof with two event for both Olllc.,. Smaeal ""' lbe , bock ... 1 f ' Laird confirmed that these activities have stopped. ••we are flying no sorties north of the 20tti parallt!l," Laird aald. AJlboUgh American mines In BaJJ)bona harbor arc Included In the U.S. mllitarj actMllet north of the 20th par-11•1, Laird refulod to II)' when tbae mlneo mjcht be deactlv1ted or how loog the procw would talce. U. ar.. declined to dilcuss the oub- 11ance ol the Illes! Vietnam poaco movH which .he described u "aerious, 1<11slUft and algnlflcant." Laird ta retnmlna to Washington liter In the day. Twin Boys, 2, Die AUBUllN (AP) -TwO-yeoM!d twill boy1 died Thursday In • n ...... h ftered In tbelr bedroom In MWl>Y '""'91 llilla, offlclail teported. The ~Ima ""'" Trevor and Tracy Qiubb, """ of Roy and Patricio C!lubb. TodaY's Flaal N.Y. StcH! N TEN CENTS Major Towns Ne ar Saigon Threatened SAIGON (UPI ) -ln apparent an- ticipation of a cease-fire, Communist troops stepped-up their attacks on populated areas throughout South Viet· nam today, capturing two village8'and threatening two major towns within 45 miles or Saigon, military sources said . Though sporadic and widespread, C.Om- munist forcu carried ou. 124 attacks in th ... 24 hours ending at 3 a.m. (PDT) to- day. the most since the Tet offensive of 1968. Tl:o · U.S. command said two Americans were killed and four WOWlded during the stepped-up fighting aroond South Viet- nam. - Viet Cong and North Vietnames~ sold· iers captured two hamlets on French-built Highway I northwest of the capital early today and though under counterattack by government reinforcements, the at· tackers held tbeir positions. The villages are 20 miles and 30 miles northwest of Saigon, and sit at the edge of the traditional Communist infiltration route from Cambodian b o r de r Sdtlctuaries. Southeast of Saigon, Communist troops surrounded Dat Do and Xuyen Moc district (county) capitals and fought their way through the lines of militia 4elenders to within 1,000 yards of the centen of both towns. Dat Do, 45 miles southeast of the capital, was captured once for 10 days by the Conu!\unlata last April during their spring offens!TI!. Both Jt and Xuyen Moc, 55 miles southeast of Saigon, are in Phuoc Tuy Province, a resort area when there ls no fighting. Phuoc Tuy was "pacified" by Australian forces before they pulled out last year. In the air war, the U.S. command said a U.S. Air Force F4 Phantom was abot down today by antilllrcralt fire over North Vietnam. The two crewmen parachuted Into the Gulf of Tonkin and were picked up by . helicopter 11 miles northeast of the Demilitarized Zone. U.S. figbter-bomben attacked North Vietrwn "more than 10 times Thursday. High-Dying B52 bomhen Joined the airstrikes With nine waves, all of them over the lower Panhandle, the U.S. com- mand reported. Carnival Slated For Hom ecoming Homecoming 1972 at Orange Coast College wlll be celebrated Saturday by a 12 to 7 p.m. carnival In front of LeBard Stadium and a 7:30 p.m. football game against Fullerton College. The carnival will Include games and prizes, refresbmentJ, homemade baked goods and displays set up by more than 20 campus clubs. Several live bands will perform tbroughoot the day. Before the game, a dinner will be serv- ~ from 5:30-7 p.m. In the Student Center. Ticket1 will be $2. The public ls Invited to all events. Orange Coast Weatller The weatherlady aetS a possi- bility of sprinklea throt.1gh Satur- day. becoming slightly wanner this weekend with highs of 68 at the beaches rising to 75 bdand. Lows tonight 50-57. INSm E TODAY Poul Laure-Nee Dilnbcr, ron of alavt• who btcamc t~ poeffc 1pQk1utin of rM block A~rl oon, ff b<biil "°"ored btl UC Ir· uint Ea:teui°" with tu fOJl.r.dQv e<n t<nnial cekwollon. ~Cf« and schol.or Roscoe Lt1 Bro111n1 wiU read hb works. Ste today'• Wttkertdu. -.... MtitMt ,.... 12 Ht ........... 4d ~e..iy ,,,, .... _ ..... • .,.... ......,, 11 -,,... . .... __ ·-. ----. -.."' ... l.).tt --.. : OAJLV PILOT ·----------- POW Centers Picked • Newspaper Report.s 3 Processing Areas SAN DIEGO 1APl -Amenean prisoners of wnr released after :in end to the fighting in Vietnam wlll be flo11rn to one of three processing sites in Cuan1, the Philippines and Okinav.·a, Jt wa s reported today. ln a ropyright story. the San Diego \Jnion said the Defense Department's top official fo r PO\V affairs. Dr. Ro)?er Shields, outlined a procedure under 111hich released POWs will 'remain in U1e centers until judged physlca11y able W rr11irn to the Un11ed States. the ntarut Air Fore. hospital Ull ., forth." If the hospital is in a different c:lly, the m1luary wlll fly the POW's family there, tbe Union quoted the spokesman as saying. At Agana. Guam , military authorities refused to confirm or deny the report that Guam will bt> one of the processing bases. "The Department ol Defnse does have rontingtncy plans to identify a number of medical facilities and military in- stallations where initial treatment and -.w.-11111 1!111111 tie ~... a tp0k ...... for the Na¥)' aald. "These will be consolidated (aclllties for processing the personnel of all services," he said. Guam has a large naval hospital com- ple1 that once treated many American servicemen wounded la Vielnam. lnfarm- ed sources said tbe hospital has had on hand for months contingency plans for handling freed POWs. Medlcal rues and personal hlstorie! of each of the POWs are kept available tbere. the source said. "fl could be a week. 10 days or longer, d('pending on his health conditions and the doctors' rt>commendation.'' the paper quoted a military ofri('1a1. A processin~ center has bet'n chosen ror f'ach PO\V, the report said. On ar- rival he 'M'ill receive a new uniform, any ribbons and medals he earned and in- lormation about his family 'Present f o r Mo ther' - The cen!er vdll ha\·e doc Io r s , chaplains. legal experts. psychiatrists and a friend in the same n1ilitary branch, the Union said. Two Black Bo xe s Tick, ' 'The friend will escort the POW by air to the United States. to Tra\•is and Norton ;\ir Force bases in CaHfomia and fro m there to n1ilitary hospitals, the n<'~·spaper said.' Empty Mesa Buildings .. ,Ve plan to take them to the service hospital of tus 011·n particula r branch of St.'t\ ice that is nearest to his home," a Pentagon spokesman "'as qooted as :saying . "Air Force patients 'M·ou1d go to Neivport Beach City Government Book Goes Out The city or Newport Beach b distributing 24.000 copies of its first an- nual report to permanent residents. The I ~ -p a g e . professionally-printed l:>rochure 1s a collection of photos and A pair of black, bomt>-like boxes -one tickin g ominously -forCi!Gevacuatlon of two Costa Mesa apartment buildings Thursday night. after being planted at 1he front door and in the car of their in- !ended target. Demolition experts from El Toro fo.1arine Corps Air Station removed them gingerly :.nd opened the one with the timing device from a distance, using speciaJ military apparatus designed for the purpose. They turned out to be relatively Carpenter Backs Initiative Plan, Hits Some Uses stories on the various aspects of city State Sen. Dennis E. Carpenter (R- go.~·~m~~rt will glve an insight as 10 Newport Beach) told UC Irvine faculty what the city has accomplished in past Thursday he would not support changes years. and give a glimpse of what is of California's initiative process even planned for the future ." said Mayor though he believes It Is being used Donald Mclnnis. unwisely. The report, which opens with a page af In a luncheon speech in the University pictures of the mayar and city a>Wl-Club on campus, the representative of cilmen, cmt nearly $5,000 to produce, ac-the nation's most heavily populated cording W City Manaeer Robert Wynn. single district, listed seven specific tallot "That's about $4,200 for the actual pro-measures he does not feel should have harmless but apparently created their builder's desired effect: fear. Officer Chuck Hamilton found the items, listed as destructive devices in his report after Lee A. Brelgbton, 18, of 1323 Baker St., took a grim telephone call about 9:30 p.m., police said. ''There is a present at the front door for your mother," the male stranger said. "If she doesn't like that one, there is another one in her car," he added, abruptly hanging up. Miss B~igbton lives with her mother, Mn. Gloria E. Williamson. Discovering the device!I, 0 f f i c e r Hamilton notified beadquartm and the watch commander, Sgt. Max Wilson, called El Toro MCAS authorities. Chief Warrant Officer Roger Larvle and Statt Sgt. Earl Drennen, of lhe ei- ploslvea demolition team were dispat- ched to handle the devices1 one of which was tlcking. They opened it, discovering an alann clock wired to three highway emergency Dares and packed in shredded pages from a newspaper. The second suspected bomb removed from Mrs. Willimson's locked car con· tained identical flares and newspaper packing, but bad no clock, police said. • Lido Hmne Wrecked DAIL T ~ILOT l llfl' ~ Even a Lldo Isle home must fall on occasion to make way fur a priv- ate urban renewal project. ln1 this case, it's a house al 536 Via Lido Nord onc:e occupied by carpeting exeeutive Paul RogerS'. It will be re- placed by a new single family home. Wa~ing_ Eloquent Big Candle W ill Light Up Sky The American Flag candle being poured today by a patriotic group of young Costa Mesans will weight 2,000 pounds more than expected. Jeff Overstreet, chief of the 25-man candle-making crew said this morning it would take at Ieast that much more wax to fill the candle's five-foot siJ.-incb plywood mold. "lt looks like our candle Will weigh 5,000 pounds Instead of 3,000 pounds," he predicted. "1bat should make it the big- gest candle in the world, but l haven't ed to seem to support the candle idea, he claims he has also received two threaten~ ing phon~ calls. "One said that we would be sorry for building it and the other guy said the candle would never make it to the White House," OverstMet asaerted. From P lljfeJ duction and $MlO for diatribuUon," he ~t;n ~t . W vote,rs ~ause tbey said. ''We are hanckarrytng it to all dte-'· -ftpteseftt---J'mal:lrtft ·ieglslJrtlort" at tM San Diego Sued Over 'Sex Bias' .. ~been·~~ to COl}~jt)'e~" ~.- Overstreet plans to cootact Mdiu OU Company for an ad4!tionaJ paraffin dona- tion to finish the joll} Meanwhile workers ac;, pouring the_~ round th~ cloc~ ana hope to hl've tht basic unit finished FELINES .. homes of permanent residents in the polls instead of within the "crucible"of city." the Legislature. \\1yhn said the city has em " ed U:Je Sen. Carpenter objec1ed to the placing ACI Postal System, a JPta~ of propositions 14, 15, 18, 20, 21, and 22, service , to carry ~. 1 ,;<i~ifically because these are "not yes or homeowners. · ) ' ~ ~· Pes," he said. "This is our first reaJ· effort lo imi· V '&W>orting his contention that the the citizens that everytbin& isn't really ~res are too diflicult for the all that bad ," Wynn said. average voter to understand, Sen. Sidewalk Lawyer Needs a Lawyer A self-styled Salt Lake City sidewalk lawyer wound up in Newport Beach City Jail Thursday night. after police alleged he was heckling ofUcers making a drunk arrtst near McFadden Square. Officer Vince Battit asserted the 2.>- year-old visitor sauntered up and began questioning him as he administered the sobriety test . resulting in a warning to get lost. The suspect eventually arrested and booked on suspicion of disturbing the peact!' assertedly said he had a right to be present, since he just might be the defendant's attorney. A crowd including women and children began to gather and, according to Officer Battit and his partner Officer Clay Lyon, the sidewalk observer's speech gradually became quite coarse. lie was finally chased across the sired by the officers. arrested and handcuffed after a brief struggle. OIAN•I COAST • DAILY PILOT n. Or-.. COttl DAILY ~ILOT, wH11 wfllidl " COl'nlllMll ~ ,.,,.....~ ...... " 111,111/llMd by 1IW Ot ..... CO.it l"llllllM'tlfl9 eorn-r,. ~ ,..,,. ldh""' .,.. Plllll"'*I, MOrWr lllrOlillllt FrlUy, f9I' Coll• MtM, H""""1 llN<.h. HunlltlgtlM lltlldllf<-t•ltl V1U1y, L9t- lltldl, ll'Ylnt/Stddlntcll ..i sin cw.i....111 S.n J"'911 C.ot1tr•nt A •lllCllt '"'-' ..inlM +, ll'Ublk!Md lellnrta tnd Svndtrt. flle prlMIPtl oub!Wllnt Jlllnl Ii 11 Ul Wt'l B•r £•mt. C..t• Mtw, c.11"""'-· nu1. Ro ... 1t N. W••-' ~ttolltftl Ind ·~l .... ft' J1ck JI, C11rl1y \'IC» "'"''""' 1/1111 Gentr.11 ~MVW Th•11111 1< ..... 11 E:OllOr 1"M1t A, M 11rp .. h11 ~C.iuw L. , • .., krl•t .. ...,.,.._.CltJ'YW ............. om. JJJJ Now,_. 1 •• 1,.,.,,4 Maltbtt AiUn..1P.O.1 .. 1171, fl"J .,,..._ C..'9 ... I• WM..,..,.., ....... ~1 m ........ A....,... "9ftf"'9tM if,ld'lt,_ JJIJJ ~ 1ow1 ....... a... a.-i.r as ""'1tl 11 Qi,..11111 • ., Ttl.,.._ fJ,41 MMJJI C,_... Mlu11I .. HJ.1171 ~. ''11. Or... a..t . ,.""""' CMl'llpt11y, ... ""' ,.,.... •mi•"'-o .. ,..,'-, ....... ., ~, .... ::... """' mlY °' ,.,.,.._.. ..,,_. I ,... ,,....... llf CJIJ!"lf'llN ..... ~ """"" <I-........ •W .e C.. --. C.•11""'1Me. ~-W ~ IUI "llllflll•I 9ilr !Nit U.11 ~I lflillf•Y ......... ... fMftlhlY. Carpenter released latest results of a California Poll on the public's current un- derstanding of the propositions. He said those late findings indicated lhe following percentages of people in CaJifornia are "unaware aod haven 't rtad the ballot measures" -Prop. 14, the Wa~n property tax in- itiative -82 percent are unaware it is on the ballot, Carpenter said. -Proposition II, obscenity : M percent are unaware. -Propositlon +o, coastline initiative : 77 percent unawm. -l'ropooilloo 21, school bullng : 8ii per· cent unaware . -Propasttlon 22, farm labor: 80 per- cent una1'ai-e. Carpenter •loo hit lhe lttnd In misleading advertising on both sides of ballot measures and said he was prepared to vote for a state law requiring the news media to "make readlly available to voters presentations of both sides of issues." Workshop Set In Jotu·nalism At Harbor Higl1 More han 400 Orange County student journalists a.re expected to attend an all- day journalism workshop Saturday at Ntwport Harbor High School. Student.a from 39 lntennedlate and htah schools will attend classes ranging from ba.q\c newswritlng to In-depth reportlr11. During Interview sessions after the classes, the stuclent.s will gather matt!!rlal for stories h1 specific areas -news, sports and feature. They will then prepnre stories to be critiqued at special afternoon &e•slons. interview aubject.s wlll Include U.S. Olympic swimmer Dana Shrader: Gail Zeros. a Cal State Fullerton 1tudent and delegate to tht!! Democratic convenUon and DAILY PfLOT ttPorter William Schreiber .• The second 1nnual eonfem>ee ta spoosored by the Journalism Education Auociation and arrangements are bel.n1 made by Ralph Stegmeir, N,...port Harbor High joomall.ml advlaer. Blacks Face Action HONOLULU (UPI) -Sil blacu Aboard the nett otler ffuuyfttl\pe. flee courts-m11rti•l ~ltln&. from • racial b«wl WbilC'tbe lhlp wo at,SUblc Bay .Jn th\ Plrtltppllles. A ·~,for Ibo comm&.nder In chief of the Pacific FlHt said 'nluroday that the nve IMn, betw"'!h the ages of 19 and ll, wer. charged with aa3ault In conntcllon wlth the HaNayam- pa '"""rf Oct. "· • SAN DfEGO (AP) -A complaint ac· cusing the city of San Diego or "ram- pant" sex discrimination in hiring and promotion has been filed by the National Organization for Women. Mayor Pete Wilson denied the charges. The complaint was filed with the U.S. Equal Opportunity Commission. The group's San Diego chapter declared that discrimination against them is "pervasive and Includes all aspects of their employment , _ . particulary blatant in hiring of women at all levels and particularlt}> so in higher job classifications." Peron Give11 OK To Make Return BUENOS AIRES (AP) -Juan D. Peron's way has been cleared for the former dictator to return to Argentina b-om ezile In Spain next month. The government said Thursday night It ""thorlzed lhe Italian airline Alltalla to Oy Peron here Nov. 17. Peron has said repeatedly he plans to return to Argentina prior to national elections scheduled for March, but hu never set a date. Peron, 77, was ousted by a coup in 1955 and has lived itt Spain since 1960. by .. ~,~ i:~ ny chUces on lb• bottom la)len ,coolll!a. U Ibey do, then the new layers won't-adhere and we would be in 'trouble. SO We've been work- ing through the night /' 'Overstreat e.i- plalned. As of this morning, 500 pounds of wax had been poured Into lhe wedge-shaped mold at TeWinkle Park. "It just covered the bottom," said Overstrett. Plans are to pull the plywood off the cooled candle by Tuesday or Wednesday. Meanwhile, the candle makers will be working on the Stars and Stripes facia which will be attached to the main candle block later. The enthusiastic young candle makers Maintain they will be able to deliver the finished candle to the White House by Christmu. It will be inscribed with the words, "Peace, Unity and Freedom for all Mankind." A new 40-foot refrigerated truck was promlted to the candle builders ThW'Miay by a Tena ahlpping magnate who heard about the project on a Dallas radio sta· lion, Overstreet said. "He's donated the truck, two drivers and all the gas we need for the trip. We 'll bti traveling through the South and will be making several slope aJong the way.·· \Vhile most people Overstreet has talk- 1,200 Attend Ceremon y For Facility in Valley Urbain H. Plavln School1 a £aclllty tmi-- que in the state for ita mingling of physically handicapped and non-han- dicapped students was dedicated In Fountain VaUey Thursday night In a two- hour ceremony at ten · -~ by 1,200 persona. Children wh:> wUI never walk, run, -0r play baseball were the atara of the show, p..'lrtlclpating actively in lht numerous skil.3 and games that marlced the ceremonies. There were some tense momtnts for some or the handicapped children but the non·handlc:apped always chipped in to smooth Ovtr the dlmculty arid the show went on without atopplng . Plavln School, which serv., han- dicapped children m.n the Newport- Me .. , Huntington Beach ,Cll)I, Ocean flow, on<! Fountain Vllley ocbool dl1trict1 , Is the llnt Ill the ttate to In- tegrate handicapped chlldmi and non- handicapped ones, accordtna to tchool of. flclals. It has a present ecrollment of 83 phyalcally handicapped atudenl1 and 311 rer,tar 1tudents. 11 can't tell you how 1"11 the ln- tearallon hAS worked out,'' 11)'1 Prin- cipal Waldo Price. "II wi cinY prob- lem at all, It's that the ~dlceppecl children are le.Uhlng too much alteJitlon on the handicapped ono1 . "We're trying to t~1tch Mlf-sufftctency, but there ls to .much help 1v1llable that some of the impetUJ to learn is gone." Dr. Price aa{d that the two groupt not only work togelher In many classes, but even play togethe.1 at recess. "You should see the kickball ," says Or. Price. "1£ a child has to remain in a wheelchair, he's allowed to slue the ball , and then aomeone will help push him around the bases. "The spirit here ia better than we ever hoped It could be. ll The aim of the school Is to bring the handicapped "Into the mainstream of life." "So olten tbe handicapped are kepi off by themaelvn in sr.booll where they can't lltlOClate with typical children," '8Y1 Plavln School pttycltoJoilst Phil Hall. "By brlnl!lng them Into contact with tht!! re1l world, we hope they'll have a chance for normal emotlooaJ deYelop- ment." lntl!srauon at Plavtn la not complete, however. Separate clauroom. are built' around a huge central open space. On one aide are the bandlcaf ped cb1ldten. on the other •r1 the typlca ones. Foe thoropy, lell-eulllcle!>cY 1.....,, ond remedial wort wl>Jch tbe han- dicapped children oltel! lll!cld, they re- main In tbt.lr own ctauroom1. But lot much of bulc 1ebool work, pliJa music, lunch and receu, Ibey ml"ll• with the typlcol chlldr<n. · Iike cafs and she has aJwa)ll tried to find ways to make things hard oo us. "She and One or two otben hue been the only ones complaining all these yearS, ''she said. "Sbe'a even tried to use a trap on the cats!" Mrs. Carver said she and her sister keep the cat.& because they have worked in animal resc:ue ln the past and don't wanL to see them killed by the animal control people. "We even had the Newport animal con· trol officer drop by and give us ~tties," said Mrs. Carver. "He didn't want to see them die and we always tried to find good homes for them." Mrs. Carver was referring lo ~Animal Control Officer Ray Johnson, who retired three years ago. "We keep our place real clean, too," she added. The next-door neighbor, Mrs. Mary Davis, has been one of the prime movers in getting the city to take action against the cats. "Mn. Davis told me th.!t at night the two women put 10 or 15 cats ln an old abandoned car in front of the house and at time.s It smells ao bad you can't open the bedroom window,'' councilman Croul asserted. City Attorney Dennis O'Neil has also been working closely with the case !or some lime. "We tried to restrict the problem by sending the health department out there but so far, we have only been able to find housing code violations," he said. '!As for the cats, our bands are tied.." he said. \ "An ordinance would help," be added. ''Other cities have thete thingt llmJting th.l number to three or ao." O'Neil aaid today lhe ordinance would probobly have little or no ellec:t oo Mn. Carver's and Mrs. Mllbrat's call beclUse It would not be retroacttve. Fro• Pllffe l PEACE ... text of the qreement. ln another meeting on the afternoon of Oct. 12, expert! of the two Bides again worked on the text in Vletuarnese and En811Sh, he added. Le said lhat on Ocl 17 Kissinger and Xuan Thuy, chle.f of the North Viet· namese peace delq1tlon1 "went over the test chapter by chapter, artlcle by article, oentenco by Mlltence, word by word. Thero It no question ol llntiulllko pendlna.'' AWOL GI Surrenders BONN (UPil-An AWOL American Cl auspected oI &hooting two U.S. Mrgeants and a German woman and twrllnc their bodltl from the apeedlna Alplna •llPr•" tra.in ln West Gem.any Oct. e sur- ,..det<d Thunday aL the American l!:mbuay In Lebanon Ginn.an poUce 1Dld. ,The soldier, Identified u S(ll. Thomu de Grtf>rlo, •. ol lllaleal>, Via. / hid been the oublect of an lntematlCllat hunl QUAKERS ... Mac.Kinney, 'of Santa Monica, and Shalom Michelin, 21, Pasadena. A Navy spoteanw: said lifter the rn. ddont that the Duluth had uperlaaoed no delay d<spll6 lht fact that aome pro. tetton were able w swim wtthin 1 few ,yards of her hull ils 1be exited Ana.helm Bay. The 15 pac.Jflsts were arrested •n a variety or Chnrges Including unlawfuJ assembly, 'failure to disperse, brinjing unautborlztd vessels Into a harbor, and trespassing. Jn addition, the juvenile gir1 was cha.ried with reslsling arrest. By midnight Thursday, the 14 adults had been released on bail ranging from $250 to $$00. The girl was released Into custody of her father. 'nle nlne men, five women , and one I.Ir! demonstrators began their so-called blockade about 3 p.m. u the Dulu\h 'fas preparing for departure. Three small aluminum craft, each with four pawngers, pulled into tbe l)llr· rowest part of the Aria.htim Bay channeJ. AJ the Duluth reared them, they dove in the water .and swam toward the giant vessel. At the :..l.. ~ Ume, the three remalning protesten climbed imder a barbed wire fence on the _\)Ubbc beach immediately north of the ,..rbor and began moving down the beach ~oward the same narrow part of Lhe chan'l"I. Harbor autbor1tles and offlclals, ap- parently with advance warning on the protest, immediately swung into action as wetsu.it~lad Seal Beach lifeguards dove from boats to forcibly remove pro- testors from the path or the ves,,el. Meanwhile, uniformed security police chased the other three protesters down the shore, and later waded fully-uniform.. eel into the surf, waving their billy clubs above their heads, in an errort to a~ prehend them. Sailors lineu the starboard side of tbe Duluth, watcblog the whole operation. When the last protester was picked up they gave a loud cbeer. A SPokesman for the pacUists said the purpose of the demomtration wu to pro- mote public awareness that weapons t.:e shipped from Seal Beach to Vietnam. From Page l THIEU .. and yet the Communists boasted that there will be a cease-fire and are prepar· ing for it," Thieu said in a speecb top~ government legislators at the presiden- tial palace. "We are not afraid of a cease-fire and 1 the peact. I am aure it will come, but it will only come when I personally sign the treaty for a cease-fire and peace,'' Thieu sajd. "Without my algnature it means it bas not been qreed to by lhe people. "Tbe Communists can use 10 hands and 10 legs to sign treaUes, but wltboat my sigrJllft, it meanithere' has been no agreement by the people," Thieu sal•. .. ,i \vllJ'be Invalid In South Vietnam. I am not an obstacle to peace. I reflect the will of the Vietnamese people." OAIL Y PILOT llJH ....... SUCC UMBS AT 64 N•wport•r Inn'• Ro.1 Douglas Ross, N ewpoi:ter Inn Manager, Dea d Funeral services will be held Sunday in Corona del Mar for Douglas A. Ross. manager of the Newport Inn, who died Wedne!lday at the age of 64. Mr. Ross collapsed Monday In the hotel's kitchen. He was taken to lloag Memorial Hospital where he auccumbed two dayt later to a etrebral hemorrhage. The London-born Mr. Rou ran the Newporter for mort!! than six Jt!!art. He had an mwlVe beckgrnund 1n th< hotel and ttstaurant management field and had ,....ked In Phoenhc, 8an Otego, Loi Angeles, Lake Tahoe, San Francl9co, Las Vegas and London. Under his guidance. lht!! hott!!l became one of the ahowplacn of the Orange C<!ast and became a magnet ror visiting VIPs. Hit collection or antiques ire dl>played throu91tout the Inn. He leavet his w1re, Eliubeth, of the family home at 2815 Broad St ., Newport Beach: two brothers. Eric: and Maurtce Ros$, and a sister, Mn. Nan Arnold, all of England. Services will be h<ld at i p.m. at the Paelflc vi.w Chapel. Arrangements ar. being bandied by Pacific View Mortuary. " Ul'IT1 ........ PAUL SHERWIN ESCORTS DAUGHTER TO CAR Secret1ry of Stat• Convicted in Bribery Trial I Highwav Bid Top N.J. Advise1· Guilty. in B1·ibe .. FREEHOLD, N.J. (UPfl - New Jersey Secretary of State Paul J . Sherwin, \op adviser to a sovemor who swept into or- nce on en anticorruptlon plat- form, was convlcted Thursday J>('rsonal and political friend of Gov. William T. Cahill, who campaigned largely on the promise that he would clean out corruption in the state's political circles. of consplrlnl and offering to AU. THREE SAID they receive a bribe. • would appeal. Superk>r Court Princess Sees Star LE!:PS, Engl~nd (AP! -Princess G!-ace or Monaco went to a ball and met her onetlme screen klver, Cary Grant • "I'm delighted to see you aaatn,.. the princess, former ectress G r a c e Kelly, t.old the 68-year-old Grant ttw.rsday n i g h t when they met at a \tarie- ty Club o! Great Britain ball. !Jul'Jng her Holl)'1'·ood days, the princeM and Grant starred in the furn "To catch a Thief." Frld1J1 October 27, 1m DAllY PILOT 5 MacGregor Admits Special Fund-'Not for Espionage' WASllJNC'l'ON (AP l -The some additk>nal tunds oon· chairman o( President Nixon's trlbuted in 1971. He sald tbe canlpalgn committee h a s acknowledged for tile first time the existence of a special campaign Curl<L nut he denied the money was ever used to finance political espionage against Democratic presiden- tiill hopef1:1ls. fund wa s used for "preliminary plnnning !or the primary elections." A COMMITTEE spokesman said later the money was not left over from 1968 but was contributed in lfll and early this year for J>03Sible primary use . of at least $350.000, whole roceipls and diabuttemeoLI v.·ere unaccounted for. 1be W ashlngU>n Post bu report<d the fund contalntd as much ea 1700,000 which -u.sed to finance the Watergate brea.k- in and ror a wldelpread effort to d~rupt the campaigns of Democratic pt<&ldential ~ tenders last tprq and IUffi- mer. William C. Loul!hran, a Judge Francis X. Crahy set Repiublice.n flmd raiser, also sentencing f~r Nov. 10. Each was convicted of the same faces a maxunum sentence of charge by the jury of five·· s.ix years in jail and a $6,000 '----------...J women and seven men, and fine. Clark MacGregor said in a televislon interview Thursday that the money was both a "carryover" from the 1968 presidential campaign and The General Accounting Of. fice has reported the Nixon campaign had on band a fund ti.tacGregor was interviewed by Elizabeth Drew on National Public Affairs Center for Television. Michael J. Mamo, owner of a Sherwin, flanked by his wife, construction firm. was found three sons and t h r e e guilty of co~piring and of-daughters, sat motionless as fering to give a bribe. the jury foreman read the verdict. But his wife, Elva, 'No Mess' Polaroid Marketed THE THREE WERE cbarg-burst into tears. 'Their oldest MJAM[ BEACH, Fla . (AP) only three things -focus, developini picture unit within !\1ACGREGOR, chairman o( !he Committee for the Re- election of the President since July I, when fonner Alty. Gen. John N. Mitchell resign- ed, also for the first time listed five perSIOm wbo were authorized to make payments from the fund . 2 Fund Commitrees Fail to -File Reports ed with trying to get state daughter, Mrs. Jean Mooney, -After four years and $250 push the shutter button and an invisible, stiff protective Transportation Commissioner put her arm around her million, the Polaroid Corp. has wait plastic structure. The uniL John C. Kohl to give Manz.o's mother, and wept herself. introduced a new self-develop-One sec 0 n d after the represents 17 layers of com- construcllon company spec1al When the family left the ing color camera it says will photographer pushes the shut-pounds, some only 1 0 · consideration on a $600,000 courtroom, Sherwin helped his "change our lives." ter, the camera ejects a thousands of an inch thick. highway coDtract ln return for youngest daughter, Carol, into About the size or a 1 -~:;;jiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiji;;;;=---a $10,000 cbntrlbutloo to the the car. paperback book and weighlng Republican party. He shook hands with some only 24 ounces. the SX·70 will w ASmNGTON (AP) _ Two campaign financial reports Witnesses testified t b a t reporters but told them he retail for $180 and be available hlch ha I Sherwin attempted to in-would have no comment. nationally shortly after the co mmittees w ve un· night at a Washington hotel. fluence Kohl. However, the first of next year, Polaroid neled large amounts of money He will be accompanied by his company which submitted the "I CAN'T BELrEVE it ." said Thursday night. It will go !~~~ ~~::i~ ~~~~·~;i~~ wife, Comella. low bid for the contract kept said Mrs. Sherwin, "how could on sa1e in Florida Nov. 10. file reglstralion statements in e Koren Bid it this happen?" The camera, brainchild of Sherwin took a leave of Cahill said he would not Polaroid founder Dr. Edwin apparent violation or federal SEOUL {UPI) -T h e absence from his job when he comment in view of the ap-L a n d . r e q u i re s t h e law. government of President Park was indicted. He was a close I photographer essentially to do Examination of hundreds of Chunghee proposed a new con-__________ _;pee_•_· ____ . ____ ::..__::___:_ ___ __:.___ - EXCITING ART Costa Mesa Art Leogue Now Thru S•t. Soatb Coast ?tua stitution today whicb gives thel--------------------------'-'"-"-''_11t_"_"'_'_"'_1~,_-_, ------------------------- ( ) president more powers, ex-BRJEFS lends his lenn from four to six years and weakens the '--------"" powers of parliament. pouring Into the C<neral Ac· countina; Office also shows a $25,000 Joan to Democratic Presidential candidate George McGovern from a secretary who refused to say bow a secretary could afford such a loan. e Botnb SNspect In Tokyo, a South Korean opposition leader, Kim Dae- jung, said Park was at- tempting to install himself as a dictator "forever." September's Beef P1ices Took Slide TEL AVIV (AP) -A 22- yu.r-<>ld American tourist has been arrested f<>r investigation in connection with the murder- by·mail bombs addressed to President Nixon, Secretary of state William P. Rogers and Defense, Secretary Melvin R. \VASHINGTON (AP) Laird, the state radio reported Consumers paid less for beef oda last month because of a slide t ~· broadcast identified the in cattle prices and the first .su,,pect as Dennis Feinstein dip in middleman markuPi and aaJd he came to Israel as since last J u n e , the a viait<ir several weeks ago. Agriculture Department said .. today. •• e a-s Seatt The September "'tail price ANClfO"itAGE, A 1 ask a of beef, a key indicator in the (UPI) -Divers were called cost of living, was slightly Jess Into the l!le8TCb for House Ma· than $1.13 per pound on an all- jority Leader Hale Boggs to--cut basis, including ham- day to probe an area where an burger as well as steak. oil slick was sighted in That was almost three cents Alaskan waters. less than in August and 4.4 The 11llck, first sighted cents cheaper than the record Wednesday near Cordova in high in July. In August. Prince Wtlllam Sound, was wJthln th~ scheduled night however, the price spread - pattern carry;"" Boggs and the markup -from cattlemen ""' to consumers was a record three others wben their plane di ed Oct 18 44.8 cents per J>Olllld. sappear · · Last month, according to a e WaUace Aid "market basket" report on WASlllNGTON (UPI) -U.S. farm-produced food, tho Alabama Gov. George: C. middleman share for bee.f was Wallace will come back to the 43.3 cents per pound, a decline Washington area this weekend of 3.3 per001t in a month. to raise funds for Holy Cross -==========.! Hoop!<& al Silver Spring, Md ., where be was treated for gun shot wowxls received in May at a Maryland campaj.gn rally. Hospital officials s a i d Thursday that Wallace had ac- cepted an invllatlon to attend the eighth annual fund-raising ball for the hospital Saturday Prosperity Next Goal Says Nixon WASHINGTON (AP) President Nlxon, his quiet campaign I o r re-election bolsla<d by new Vietnam peace llopa, says "U you give me the chance In lb• nut four yea rt," he will work for pros- perity and "full employment without war and without ln- OaUon." Nixon, using a propeller· driven ¥"craft not usually (cAMP AIGN '7~ associated w I t h presidents those days, made a Oylng trip Thttrlday night to Huntington, W. Va .. and Ashland, Ky., to stump for hit own candidacy and for beleaauered !Upubllcana ... king 1tata of-n,,... . Crowdt esllmlled by polltt and newsmen to tDtal more than l0,000 tunitd oul a(°"' the way. Few derisive crin wort beard ml vtrtually all curb81de placards f a v o r e d Nixon'• cause. At an airport rally in Hun- linllon. wllm police aald 3,000 were on hml, Nixon bulll hJ.o impromptu campalan !J)MCh around whit be termed Ws conndenco lbal lbe Unlled States will acbJeve "peace wlth honor and not peace wltb KHOW YOUR CANDIDATE VOTE FOR GORDON GOOSE The voUng age hu aga!n bf.en lowered to gtve otht!nl the right to vote. Girl.I and boys attending any 1Chool 1h tho Ntv.'JX)rt·Mtta are. can win a trip to SAcr.mtnto via Air Calllomla. Ballot.I available Jn Westcllft Plan ahop& al 17lh A lr'Vlno Ave- nur. Deposit one onty In lhe b&.llot box at JeU'1 Pettlna Zoo. appearlnl; OcL 31 thru Nov. 5. SHOP ••• WESTCLIFF PlAZA 17th & Irvine Avenue • ofCalifomiaRegentsandSl:eUniVtt· sity and College Thlstees. Does that mean a generous board can nm away with the taxpaya's'auey? .Absolutely not. Proposition 15 limits the increases (or deaeases) pay boanls can recommend. State salaries, by law, will be kept equal to the average paid fir the same jobs in private industry. In other words, a lab technician working fur the state will get the avet'- age salary paid to lab technicians in the private sectoi: No more. No less. As a safeguard. your elected repre- sentatives in the State Legislature have the right tX> turn down raises which might unbalaixethe budget. Thefinal vote belongs tX> you. Does PropositionlS mean higher taxes? No. The state has collected enough of your money to cover easily any and all salary a<ijustments affected by Proposi· tion 15. (0nJune 30, 1972, the budget sur· ~~~=r surrender In Vlctnllm." IL ________ .JI---------------------------------------------------------- n • D AD.Y PILOT EDITORIAL PAGE Good Manners Needed Some of the words tossed around the Newport Beach City Co uncil meeting Tuesday night were tot.Uy uncalled for. Some critics or the Newport Beach police hellcop. ters we11t far overboard in trying to vilify the chief of police for carrying out his assigned responsibility of pro- tecting the residents of Newport Beach. There were also threats ol Wilialive and.recall th'l '" - have no p1ace as responsible ~lected officials try to e;.. ... tablish policy for that chief ~!'police t9follow. , We fin d It somewhat ironic and di!ltresslng that the recaJI remark was made by recently r"tired school board nlember Donald Straus who lfOu1d have been the first to take orfepse, the sh~rpest to rebuke lhe·offender and the last 'to bend under that kind of preSiure when be was a boa.rd member. 1 Small wonder cou-ncilmen'" turned a deaf ear to the helicopter protesters again. _ Still, councilmen cannot ignore the seed of disCOn· tent that is manifesting itself through small but staunch· /y organized opposition to the helicopters. The perennial agin'ers are part of it1 to be sure; but so are some responsible members of the Newport Beach community who are distressed at the noise and the cost of the air patrols. The DAILY PILOT has long endorsed the helicopter as a viable police tool We still do. But we have also continued to see merit in joint use of helicopters by neighboring communities. We still do. It wouJd be wise for Newport Beach councilmen to give the idea some serious thought and be prepared to discuss the merits and problems. Joint use may not be an easy thing to accomplish. There are differences in patrol techniques and the type of services that different communities require. A study of joint use would certainly be worth the effort. whatever the outcome. Meanwhile, the anti-helicopter activists might take a lesson front the young surfers who found that good manners and reasoned. presentations made more of an impact on councilmen than rough talk and threats. Each of Us Can Be Gco1·ge , For much of the yeir, oiost Orange Coast residents bask in the gli:IW of aflluence•ln a bountiful area. But as man; churches have learned. when the time' comes to .contribute a ·little hard cash for the good of our fellow man, the attitu,de change·s to that of Appalachia -we're suddenIY poverty stricken. That, of course, is human -nature. "Let George Do ll" is a slogan issuing from the subconscious. · But there are humati needs 'which must be met. And the United Way is the best way -a single contribu· tion to cover a multiplicity of good causes. For instance, these gifts will provide: -$250: an average homebound patient with Visit- ing Nurse service for a year, including physical therapy and home health aid service. -$150: Five sessions with a Jiained psychiatrist at the Child Guidance Clinic for an emotionally-disturbed child. -$75: Food and temporary shelter for five home- less families through the Salvation Army for one da y. -$58: One day of care and training for 10 people at one of Southern Orange County's ce nters for the re- tarded. · -$20: A family counseling session \vith the Family Service Association. Emergencies of every kind are met by the helping hands of 54 agencies. The current campaign goa l is $1 ,315,000 for operating funds. If each of us gives his share, we 'll each be a Georl'(e, or a Georgia, doing the job himself or herself. N "i'VE HEA~~ Of C!'IYING POLLS) 6UT NOT OF 5Pl1/I N6 fUPPE.75."' Kennedy, Not McGovern, Likely Leader Demos Are Thinking Ahead \\'ASJ-llNGTON -The post-McGovern reconstruction of the Democratic party is tieing anticipated by some leaders even be£ore they know for sure how the elec· tion will tum out. A t..1cGovem vic\ory, of course, would make such anticipations academic. But the size and extent of a McGovern defeat wou1d have a strong bearing OD v.·bat v.<\Jl happen in.the future. ~ I Tho fairly obvious conclusion Is that Sen. Edward M. Kennedy. ho1vever badly AtcGovern is beaten, will move in as the popular lead· er of the party and steadily advance toward the presidential nomination of 1976. TT IS NOT QUITE that simple. Some other general conclusions are being reached which are subject to ex~ amlnation . One of the m is that John Con-- nal\y of Texas, seniing as .secretary of state, will turn Republi can and take lhe 1976 Republican nomination away from Sl-tiro T. Agnew. Who says that Connally will either be appointed secretary of state or tum Republican? He is a Democrat, leading the Democrats for Nlxon and his future n1ay Jie in the Democratic: party more strongly than in the Republican party. Experience shows that if McGovern loses as badly as the polls now indicate, the Democral ic party will be compleflly shattered and will have to start to rebuild from the bottom up. LITERALLY FROl\f the bottom up - ~CHARD WILSO~ the South, labor, ethnic groops, youth, liberated women, even the traditional liberals will have lost their moorings. Anyone who brings them back tqgether will have to command respect over a broader spectrum than ~vtrn's and it is nQt even certain that ltennedy'.s scope is that great. Kennedy 's greatest weakness ls in the South, a fact which is not unrelated to his growingly wann relationship with Rep. Wilbur C. Mills, chairn1an of the tax-writing House Ways and Means Com- mittee. Mills is not much known t.o the gefteral public, but he stands solid In the South as a signer of the contumac ious Southern Manifesto on Racial Segrega· tion, and sound in Wall Street on taxes. MILLS' ABORTIVE bid for the presidency (p robably aimed morf' at the vice-prtsidency) did not improve his political stature. But at least Senator McGovern promised to nominate Mills for secretary of the treasury. and U that never happens, the Arkar.sas Democrat has a chance to become speaker of the House of Representatives asswning the Democrats still have control next January. This Is mentioned here to show bow carefully Kennedy is keep.Ing his Options open and getting himself in a position to cultivate North aod South, East and West. With a foot in the McGovern organization, and a foot in the South, Kennedy coutd step forward Into his natural terialn, the urban areas, to recapture the old coalition McG<ivern had lost. TIUS JS ALL ffiGBLY tenuous. Con· nally, remainng an ambitious Democrat. could make the way harder for Kennedy. A reconstructed South which had voted for Nixon and Wallace might not make Democratic leaders very hospitable to a Kennedy under any conditions. The conclusion can safely be drawn that it will not be easy for Kennedy or ao,yone else 'to reunite a party so badly divide.:! as the Democrats will be if McGovern is swamped on Nov. 7. Another conclusion can be hazarded with reasonable safety. McGovern will no! fold his tent and ·steal away into the dark Of night. He has given signs already that he is thinking past his possible defeat and as a United States Senator will try to rally the forces of opposition to Nixon and carry the torch into the campaigns of 1976.. In any case, McGovern would have to keep right on campaignillg if he wants to stay in the limelight. He would be up for reelection to the Senate in 1974. UNLIKE SENATOR Hube.rt H. Hum· phrey in 1968, McGovern would still have his pulpit in lhe Senate which Humphrey was forced to relinquish for two years. The importance of this is that McGovern will have continuing access to the in· fonnation media based in Washington. McGovern's record in politics indicates he will try to assert his nominal leadership of the party, and, in any case, hang on for dear life to whatever stature being a defeated presidential nominee gives him. That won't make the job of reuniting the Democrats any easier. The No-Growth Movement Growth is a six·letter word that is tak- in., on the connotation of a !our-letter word in some localltles. Cities and-ttates that once courted new residents and new industries have come to the conclusion that growth brings more problemJ than progress in ita wake. As a resu:!t, pro- posals to retard or halt growth are gaining an increasingly sympathetic bearing. California, the country'• fastest-grow- ing state since World War ll, Js Jn the forefront of the think-small movement. At nn Aug. 1 news conference, Calllon1la Attorney Genera] Evelle J. Younger sc.id the stale was prepared to sue local covemmeots to prtvent people from OtlANOI C041T DAILY PILOT ~·, RoOlrt lt.11;"Hd; {'oblf>Mr ,.,..,.., <nil, idllor Al!'<n W. Btft., lc!lloQol POf/C 1411or lbc.o cdiforlal ~ of the 0.Uy Pflot 1ttkl to Wdrm and 1Umu- late fttdttt bf l)l'ftmtlnic this IK!'WIJ*per'• oplntornl and ~mt:ntary on topla; ot lnt.t'sut 11nd •lic.n1ncance. by pmvkllns • fon1ni f<W the ul)l'ftlkm ol our ret1dm· OJ:Cnk>m. and by preM1ntJll( the dh'enllt vlftwpolnll ol Jntonned ob-tforvtrs and •pokeimen on topjCI o!tho .i.,-, frlday, Octob<r 27, 1972 ( EDITORIAL RESEARCH J belng allowed to move lnlo areas where they would contribute lo air pollution, overload sewage faclllUes, tit otherwise t.lcgrade the envlronment. "A city is like an apartment house,'' Younger said. "If it is filled , there shduld be no effort lo bring in any more people. The concept that 'there's TOOm ror one more' 1ust doesn't apply." A SIMILAR VIEW WAI erpressed by John Tooker, CalifomJa's director of plaMlng and research, on Scpt.l8. Testi- fying before the State Asl<mbiy Commit· tee on EhVb'Onmental Quallty, Tooker ~i4 lhl1 eMentlal "lt?Vicee may have to be.willillild'b\ IO(lle .,..., ol Collforn,._to , ~ bead 'Ill Jl!!Welcome -lllJ<lo g-tb:. I lll<.J .,...mmtntl that ~Und,y I)> prove deVelODlnenC. to expatul thtir th bdes ''wtlilld be a.si.otmdtd,,,. he added, at bow .~tUe extsa novenue tllef rocel•e when thO' eost of providing addltloonl services Is taktn into aC<lOWJt. The Los Angeles City Council ond Plarullni CommlJlllon, In I Julj> t8 rtport to Mayor Sam Yorty, recornmtndl!d 1 4.1·million ceillng on the number of J>("()- ple wbo could live In the city by 1990. Around 1.8 miHJon people now reside within L,A. ell)' limltl, but ptt"nt 1.on- 1111 ttgulaUons would permit a theomlcal populaUoo of 10 million. Three weeks later, the planning com- mission went beyood the report by adop- ting a ~y•ar ..,,..1ng plan designed to limit population to 3.4 million . Possibly influenced by that action, the U>s Angeles County Board of Supervisors voted in late September to freeze building-permit awards on 1.8 million aaes of county land, including !I00,000 acres that are mostly held by private builders and speculators. Henceforth, the board will grant permits only ii plans eall for no more than one unit per acre in the afrected areas. The surprise n1ovc immediately held up 1.61H.l building permits, representing ;43 million in t <•n- .struction , that were pending when t11c ciecision was made. Growth no doubt will continue in Los Angeles and elsewru?re, but the days or uneltecked development appear num-bered. \ Dear . '~. f. I Gloomy_~ Gu Almost everyone enjoys a circus -right? Why wait for Rlngtlng Brothers and Barnum & Balley when we can attend our local city council mcetlngs? -P.E.W. Tlll1 .... _ ftfttctl rNW1' "'""" Nit llltftHtlly ttl9M (If ,... ......... ,_. ,._, ll'f ,...... t. Of-. ..,._ Ollly Pllfl. George! What Are You Up To Nowadays? We Badly Need Metric System (...__A_R_T_H_o_P_P_E_J LOS ANGELES -I was in Los Angeles on business and whom sbou1d I run intQ but my old friend, George. NoW George is one of the nicest guys you'd ever want to meet and it was a pleasure to see him again. Good old George. So we shake hands and I say, "Geo rge! You're a sight for sore eyes. And what are you up to these days?" "To "tell you the truth," he says, "I'm running for Presi- dent." "No kidding !" says I. "That's a great idea. But you ought to tell people." "I've been trying." he says. "But I just can't seem to get the message acroos." "The first thing you should do," says I, "is pass out a lot of buttons and bumper stickers to spread the old name around." "I've been doing that for more than a year," he says. 'ls thlit right?" says I. "Well, maybe J>C9ple are keeping them ror souvenirs. Wflat about a slogan? You'll ~ a slogan." Just to indicate how badly this country needs the melrlc system, and how baffling our whole present system of weights and measures is, today's word- quiz deals wholly wilh this mischievous subject: 1. U you asked for a "hogshead" of li- quid, how much wou1d you get? 2:. U you ordered a "cord" o( fuel wood, how much would it weigh? 3. How many sheets of paper make a "quire"? 4. How long is a "chain" in surveying and engineering? S. "Full fathom five thy father lies." says Shakespeare - how deep i.s Dad? 6. If a horse stands 18 "hands" high, how large is it? 7. If a tailor made up an "ell" of cloth for you, how much would you have? 8. How many "scruples'' make a "dram"? 9. can you dislinguisb "one ounce" avoirdupois from "one ounce" troy, and ho,,. much Is a "nuid ounce"? 10. Wbe1. Peter Piper picked his peck of pickled peppers, how many quarts did be pick, and what part of a bushel? ANSWERS, I. A large cask, containing from 63 to ~YDNEY J.HARRis) 150 gallons, dependln$'. on whether it held wine or some other liquid. 2. A "cord" is a unit of volume, not of weight . equal to 128 cubic feet , usually a feet long, 4 feet wide, and 4 feet high. .. A,"qulre" is 24. sheets of paper. 4.' A "chain" is JOO links of equal length , havtng a tota1 lehgth. either of 66 feet (as iri a surveyor's cbain, or the distance between the wickets in cricket) or 100 feet, as in an engilleer's chain. 5. TUY FATHER lies 30 feet deep-a . ft:thom is six feet. 6. A "hand" is four inches. 1. An ell of cloth varies in different countries; about 45 inches. 8. A scruple is equal to 20 grains or 1""3 of a dram. 9. An ounce is 437 .2 grains or 1/16 """pOund avoirdupois ; it is 480 grains, or l/12 pound troy; a fluid OWlce is 1.8047 cubic inches, or 1/16 of a pint. 10. A peck is a dry measure of eight quar'", equal to 537.6 cubic inches, and is the fourth part of a bushel. (I have a ream more of such absurd ez:amples of our illogical and outmoded. measuring S)"stem, but first you have to tmd oul how many quires are in a ream.) "Come home , America!" he calls out. "Did you lose your dog'!" says I, look- in j around. '~NO," lfE SAYS. "That's my slogan: Fuel Prices Headed Up Come I-tome. America." "lt ought to sew up the tourist vote," says I. "Maybe what you need 's an issue. Say! Aren't you against the war in Viet· nam? Now, there's a good one. People are pretty sick of the war." "I'm for withdrawing all our troops, planes and used tanks in 90 days," be says. "Wow!" says I. "A fearles,, un- compromising stand like that will really arouse the country. One way or another. Wait till you tell the people that!" "I did,'' says .he. "But nobody seems to care much." "WeJI," says I, "Vietnam's pretty far away. What you need is something closer lo home. l've got it! Corruption. You know. mink coats and deep freezers. Scandals always rack the nation/' "l think this administration ," he says, "is the most corrupt in American h!Stotj'." "IF J WERE YOU, J wouldn't say that," says J, "AU hell wUI break loose." "f already saJd It," he says. ''Oh," says r. "Let's see. I know, what Minneapolis Tribune Two tenns invariably appear in the growing number of reports about energy resources. One is shortage. The other is price increase. They are !'elated, of course, but in ways that sometimes escape public notice. That relationship becomes especially important when ex:· perts ire forecasting a doubling in U.S. energy requirements by 1985, an Inability to meet those needs domestically and uncertainties ove.i cost and delivery of r,...1gn resources. But Americans, because of tradition and the V3gueness of proposed solutions, tend to defer ~ about the matter. They have oeen conditioned to abundant, cheap energy and the proficiency of U.S. technology in energy and slmUar utility systems. When American!' set the thermostat, flip the light switch, turn the faucet or pick up the telephone, It works: in most other countries lt works sometimes. The Idea of expensive or ir- regular energy auppllcs (or both) Is beyond the experience of most or us. U you said you were for closing tax l\10REOVER, SUCH alternatives as loopholes for the fat cats? Everybody's those recently proposed by the ad- sore about that.'' ~stration's Office of Emergency "I did ," he says. Prepored_.,... aro not the kind that ln- "llmmmm,'' says J. "Anyway, t~1 'i>W Citizens to hldivtdual actlon. We are loll of otljettlllnp wonytng ~pie. You ,1t14).IO. ride mw transit and railroads could ootne aut for •cuttlOI! """! · ""'n,~ften, make our bolllO!I better ln-spcndlng, cltaliio( up·poµutl'°, llltjl ·llU!itted .and mayb<. """oolar energy. Tbe weUare rt(omu llld s1t:nQar ta l\llMSl1on1.,.. IOllod-lf the IJleanl are revision' of our cmnbUna: 90Clal atruc-aVahable and not too tzpenal\!e. ture." ' Wlrtch II why tbe prlce-oupply rela- "I did " he says "And don 't say tlonshlp o1 energy aourc .. II IO lm- 'radlcul.'I' ' portant. -In put )'Mrl, tnternaUonal oil "Don't won-y '' aays I R.ft~r a rew comPtnlet earned hl&h pro{ltl In the pro- minutes of sll~ce. "YOu·n th.ink of ducdoo ol forel(n crude oil (1ald mostly something " in non-U.S. market.I) and 1t1bildlzed t.btir · .-.ilnlng and marketln8 openitlons. Tbe so rr·s COMFORTING to tnow that -of u-proflti Is rapidly good old Grorge IS out there tomewhere declining as prod(lclng countries demand thinking up daring proposall which, -end &e• -ownerthlp or thtlr oil wells right or wrong, lllmulate vigorous J>':lblie and 1 higher ahar-= of production profits. debote and thus keep tbe vital julcfe• Fuel pr1ofo In tbe United States seem of our democracy flowing. sure to ,be dl'lven upward u a result. At least they would ff llnybody wu And, because of lhe expected lncre ... In listening. the percentage of tbe American market ). supplied by oil Imports, prices in the United States will be tied still more closely to the rising cost of foreign oil. ANOTHER UPWARD pu!h In prices could come from reducing lhe oil-deple- tion allowance on Jomestlc production if that ofteiH:ited loophole is clo.1ed in a tax-refonn 18w. Forbes mag a z t n e describes the depletion provision as a subsidy that bolds down the retail price of a gallon of gasoline from the $1 it might olbcrwlse be. The prospect of sharply increasing energy costs will we hope, become leverage for overdue political-economic action. Recommt?ndations for cmsttvlng energy , developing other energy aources and providing more efficient energy-us- ing systems such as mass transit are being beard from botb business and govemmet')t. A good m~s or en- couraging consumer and 1oter ac- ceptance of those recommendatlona ts 10 create public awareness of .the cost of 1 failing to carry them out. That Is why we , are encouraged by signs that the energy I Mortage, and the effect it can have on prices, is becoming a poliHcal iasue. I B11 George --.... Dear George: It would seem tbal more and more advice columns art running in the newspapers of the nation. Could Y9U t•ll me ~ lhll 11 becaD>e America ia In worJe shape mentally and ·moUonally than at any tlmt ln lrtstory? tJr L. It beca"'° tbe average ci tif.en ltels a1ltnated from hla surroundinp? Or 11 Jt beclluse ol a gtneral senae of f\JUtlty! W.E. Dear W.E.: \ Nab. Tbe reuon iii;, newspapers are so full of ad1lce columntslt Js bec.11.use we work110 cheap. (Sbxl your probleml to George •nd ,.. whjlt bappem. But don'I ssy you weren't warned.) Orange Coast EDITION Today'• F ... I N.Y. Stocki VOL 65, NO. 301, 5 SECTIONS, 56 PAGES I ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA FRIDAY, OCTOBEI\ 27, 1972 c TEN CENTS Law Would Require $25 Garage Sale Permits A new ordinance bas been drafted to discourage "professional" garage sales in the city of Costa Mesa. The statute, Wftich would fequire a t25 permit lee lo. eacb garage sale, goes )>el°"' the city COWICil Nov. 6, IndJcations are that it will pass unanlmou.sly since c o u n c 11 m e n themselves requested its drafting a few months ago. Garage sales are presently unlawfUI througboul tho city excepl In '''"" merclaUy·zooed areas, according to Ctty Manager Fred SorsabaL Tlvr mne in- fractions have gone uttpt'OSeCUted, however, becaUJe of the atreme popularlcy of garage end .pitl6 ules. But the preamble or the proposed now law assert& that "the practice ol holding garage, poUo and yard sales In the City of Costa Mesa has surpamd the oosuat nature, and in aome instances become a • Ill ' CAil. y l"h.OT ,,.,, ..... ''THE PUBLIC NO LONGER ACCEPTS VISUAL POLLUTION" 'Bo1utillc1tion Group Soya Slgna Ovtllvod 'fh9 Tlmff Jleaoiy Ca111paign Mesans Fight Ugly Advertising By RUDI MEDZIELSKI Of .. 0.111' l'lltl ,,.,, 1'_ Costa Mesa citizens gro<..1p is mount- inR a campaign to rid the city of billboards and unslghtJy advertising. The drive Is being organized by the lit- tle-known Costa Mesa Beautification Committee, beaded by Mrs. Marueen Di Domenico. During tbe "Nov. 6 city cowicil meeting, Mn. Domenico and the. other nine com- mittee members plan to launch their at- tack by asking for immediate removal of nine billboards. Th<se ·billboards have exceeded their time limitation and are being kept up in violatioo of signed agreements with the city, Mrs. Di Domenico asserta. Further, she maintains, that 60 percent or Costa Mesa's 40 billboards have been er.:.::ted in the so-called "red zone" which Orange Coast Weu•er The weatberlAdy sees a possi- bility or sprinlc)es through Satu .. day, becoming slightly warmer lhiJ weekend with highs ol 68 at the beachea rising to 75 inland. Low1 tonight ~7, INS~ETODAY Paul Laufence Dunbar, ion of 1lave1 who becomt the poetic 1poke"""" of lht black Amen· con, is being honored bv UC Ir· vine Extem«m 1Dfth the four-do11 crn~·niat celtbrotion. Actor and 1cholaT Ro1coe Lee Browne ~ll read hU work.I. Stt today'1 Weekender. prohibits such types of outdoor ad- vertising. "Only 17 of the 40 are l'Onstructed on pro;:~rty by individuals residing or doing business in Costa Mesa,'' sbe said. "Financial benefits to the city are minimal and notH"xistent when esthetics af'P considered. The property owner receives a. fee on leased Jand, but is that justifiable to the majority of residents?" Removal ol the expired billhoa?ds Is only the first step of tbe'carnpalgn, Other remejlies the BeauU(i.cation C.Ommittee will be seeklng is an onfulance bannJng construction of new billboards and a program whereby currently I e g a l billboardJ would be phased out over a p.Jrlod or yean. "'lbe trend is against outdoor ad- vertising. The public no longer accepts visual pallutioo. Although it present)y fights a strong legal battle, Ute outdoor advertising indus~ itself can foresee a limited existence, ' the Beautification Commltte chairman believes .• "Many cities have greatly ieduced or eliminated billboards. C4tta Mesa must ren1ove those whose pe:nnits have u- pired, those which stand in the red zone, and sbouJd carefully consider the possibility ol onloring aU billhoanls removed.'! .. Mn. DI Domenico assert& lhlt blllhoa?ds are ooly a part of ca.ta Me&1'1 aign pollution =em. Aller lbe blllboord battle she to challeJICe other forms of ~ advertlslog. '"!'here are just too many ol them. Each js -.. ming louder trying to capture the attention of driven who ahouldn't look at them co beg.in with," ahe says. "l could count on the ttngers of one band the si,rts I like In Costa Mesa, It would he nice II Costa Mesa were the lint city In the l~arbor Area to do away with the old 'J to : ~ up more ~st.nctic signs.'' Twin Boys, 2, Die .AUBURN (AP) -'J'wo.yearoGld tlfln hoys died 'nlunday In a fire which Oared In their bedroom tn nearby Foroat llllla, o!Oclala reported. The vlctlma were TtoVQr llld Trocy Olubb, ION of Roy and Patrlcl1 Olubb. .. continuous professional, commercial ac· tivity." Some persoM have made garage sales their businossff and are holding them every weekend, often offering brand-new merchandise, ruch as typewrlten:, for sale, the city manager said. It Is against this type of enterprise the · new atatute is aimed, "not against the person who is planning to move and Seal Beach Protesters Hauled In By JLHN ZALLER ot ffHo O•llt '''-' Staff Fifteen w~tsuit-clad paciflSls were ar· rested Thursday alter plunging Into the ocean in an effort to stop the 18,900-ton aasaiilt sliip SS Duluth from leaving Seal Beach Naval Weapana Station. Police and baJbor autbOri!iea, using five boats, .wer':l: required lo remove dernomUaoWS from the Jlloth ,of ·Ube Duluth, an ·amphlblowl vt!s8o1 bound for an undisclosed port. " Four Orange CountllD!, a "1'ear-<>ld man and a li?'W'old girl were among -Jalled In the tbW "btunan blockade" Ir!' thlt yexr for a lrM representing the American Fri<mli Service Qmnnittff, a Quaker-affiliated organization. Those anesteo from Orange County were Claudia Jo Goodwin, 20, ol 1405 Crestview Ave., Seal Beach; John Frederick Mangela m, 20, of.18032 Butler St., Irvine; anJ Michael Traub, 19, of 317 Goldenrod Ave,, and 'l'lmotll)' C. Whisman, 21, of 700 Heliotrope Ave., both o( Corona del Mar. Others arrested Include Palll Sykes, 43, Santa M'lllica; Sherri Siegel, 2 9 , Topanga; Steve Huston. 22, Altadena; Bob Levering, %8, Pasadena; Franltlln Zahn, 64, Claremont; Phil Bermott, 34, Saiita Mooica; Cbar!ea Swift, 54, Santa ~c8; Nancy Peru. Los Angeles; Ann MacKiMey, of Santa Monica, and Shalom Michelin, 21, Pasadena. A Navy spokesmar. said after the in. cident that the Duluth bad experienced no delay despite lhe fact that some pro- testors were able to swim within a few yards of her hul1 as she exited Anaheim Bay. The 15 pacifists were arrested on a (Seo QUAKERS, Page I) Garden Grove's Nudie Campaign Parallels Mesa Garden Grove'• attempts to stamp out nudity have gone as unrewarded as t.:..;se in Costa Mesa . The last of three urgency ordlnances aimed at nude dancing at the Shangri La cocktail lounge was overturned earlier this week by superior Court Judge James F. Judge, Two earlier ordininces enacted by Garden Grove met the same fate. Meanwhile, Garden Grove haa been shackled by a pr•llmlnary lnJllllCllon P"" blbltlne lln1her enforcement of the ordinances. Cooto Meso, which enacted ill own onU-oudlty law to pohil)lt performancea In · the buff at 11Papa Joe's" and the "ll"tnt BOUie," prOleCuted its statute 2' times end lost 21 tlmea. t1M! other four aiaes are beina ap- pealed to the supreme Court ol the United Sl&Jea. McGOVERN DUE l N ANAHEIM Demooratlc pmi<lehtW can. dldatt O<orge S. McGovern will be tn Oronae County s.1un111 •nd WO! address a bro•klast meeting at a a.m. at J;llslleYland Hot.I In Anaheim, Por detail*, .,. O. C. Hustlnp' coloam toc111 on Poge.,t. wani:s to clean out his garage," ac· cordjng to Sorse bal. "People buy their homes in an R·l area for the purpose of living there, not to conduct ~. '.' he said, adding that his <>Ulce has received numerous com- plaints from persons objecting to their neighbors spreading junk around their front yards. To en.sure that garage, patio and yar:I sales occur on a less frequent basis permit holders wlU not be allowed to bold a second sale until 90 de1s have passed. Garage sales are being regulated by four other Orange County cities. but none or them impose a pemtit fee. To obtain a permit, appUcations must be filed, before the city council wblcb will" have the sole power of approving it or denying it. Sovth China Stci SOUTH VIETNAM OUINMOM ........... ... I Pattern Of COntrol J Aroo• c°"t""lecl by Vlei Cong ond/ .. North ~tnomeM fo<cos:. U,I ....._,, FIGHTING CONTINUES AS PEACE PLANS MAPPED Map Shows Arns Held by South Vittn1m, COf1'!1"'Unl1ts Reds Step Up Attacks; Two Americans Killed / SAIGON (UP!) -In apparent an· ticipation of a cease.fire, Communist troops stepped-up their . attacks on popu1ated areas throughout South Viet· nam today, capturing two villages and threatening two major towns within 4S miles of Saigon, military sourcea said. Though sporadic and widespread, Com- munist forces carried ou: 124 attacks in th ... 24 hours ending at 3 a.m. (PDT) to- day, the most since the Tet offenslve of 1968. n. U.S. command said two Americans were killed and four wounded during the stepped.up fighting around South Viet· nam . Viet Cong and North Vietnames w sold· iers captured two hamlets on Freoch-bttilt Highway 1 northwest of the capital early today and though under counterattack by government relnforcementa, the at- tackers held their poe:itions. The' villages are 20 miles and 30 miles northwest of Saigon, and sit at the edge of the traditional Communist infiltration route from Cambodian b or de r sanctuaries. Southeast of Saigon, Communist troops surrounded Dat Do and Xuyen a.toe district (county) capitals and fought their way through the lines of militia defenders to within 11000 yards of the {See FIGlrl1NG1 Pq:e Z) Under the new ordlnanct the council \.\'Ould also have the.· right to Impose further conditions on the permit, these including: -The hours of the day during which the sale is aUowed. -The number and type of signs which will be ·allowed to advertise the sale. -The number of consecutive days that the sale may be held, not CO ext"eed two consecutive days. e Operations Broken Off, Says Laird LONDON (API -U.S. Defense Secretary A1elvin R. Laird announced t~ day that American warplanes have halted all bombing operations of North Viet.iam above the 20th parallel. Laird .;poke with newsmen after a meeting of t:ie North Atlantic Alliance's nuclear planning group. He refused to say whether the United States still is flying reconnalsaance missions north of the 2<1th parallel but appeared to take oae 1tep further an announcement in Washington on n:tur. day by presidential adviser Henry A. Kiapagor. Kissinger told a news conference the United lltalea lnlonned North Vietnam that ''We would atop military actlvitJe1 north ol the 20th parallel." Laird, confirmed that these activities have stopped. "We are fiylng no sorties north of the 20th parallel ," Lulrd said. Altbougt: American mines in Haiphong harbor are included in the U.S. military activities north o~ the 20th parallel, Laird rcrused to say when lhese mines migbt be deactivated or bow long the process: "·ould take. He also declined to discuss the sub-st~ce of the latest Vietnam peace moves wblch he described as "serious, sensitive and slg.nilicant." Laird is returning to Washington later In the day. North Vietnam ia situated between the 17th and 2.1rd paraUels, tbe former mart- ing the demilitarized r.one. But the vast majority of the popula· lion, incJudJng the capital of Hanoi and the port of Haiphong, lies north of the 20th ParraUel. Carnival Slated For Homecoming Homecoming l!tn at Orange Coast C'.ollege will be celebrated Saturday by a 12 to 7 p.m. carnival in front of Le.Bard Stadium and a 7:30 p.m. tootbell game a.gain.st Fullerton College. The carnival will ln<:lude 1ames and prlxes, refreshments, homemade baked goods and displays set up by mort! than 20 ~ampus clubs. Several live bands will perform throughout the day . Before the game, a dinner will be serv· e<! from 5:30-7 p.m. in the Student CA!nter. Tickets will be $2. The public is invited to all event!. Offit!er Assists S1erk New Mother More Calm Than Newport Policeman By ARTllUR R. VINSEL Of .. _,, PUtt ..... One N..,,,.... Beoch polictman IOI the cl..,.ic old radle><llspatchod ualgnment about noon Thursday that maktt fellow Officers glad they wue home for lunch when lt went out. Patrolmar\ Ot.ne Senecal, 33 and t!'-,e fathtr of tour children. helped dt.Uver one and came Lhrough with flying color1. He was more nervous, perhaps, than the new mother. The dlapatcher ordered h1m lo the La""°"' A, RudYiilllkl reatdence at 1148 W. Balboa Blvd., about 1:30 p.m .. on whit la known in the police profeaton as a 1112M chlldbirtt., "Upon arrival, I found the lronL door locked, ao I rang the doorbell, bonged en Cie door and yelled ~ the meil " slot," Officer Senecal '8Jd In hll report, "Someone lnetdo yeUed: ;Come in tbrough the wtn.low,'," he continued. Raclng around the building, he found an unlocked window, slid It open and scrambled through. "I found the vlctlm tying on lhe 90ra, talk ing on the telephone," his report ~ tlnued. "I Immediately checked the victim and ob9erved "' male cliild lylng near her left thigh,'' Olfict>.r Senecal'• rel)Ol't related. Grabbltfg • 1heet from the hallway ll""" cloaet. be did. whit they t•ll you to do tn demoosttaUoo Wmt shown evtl'J IO olten during pollco training -.. Jle &aid lither Lawrence and an am- bulanoe arrived. almultaneously to atve old and comfort .o Winifred, ill, who wu hustled all to Hoac Memorial liospllll. The baby boy'1 arrival wu • Ora~ event for both O!!ictt Senecal .00 tho • tive-foot, one-fncb, 107 pound housewife. "Her compleDon wu quite white. lt must have been 1 lryJni upertence for her.'' Officer Senecal said todly. "It was unbellev1b'9,11 be ftTD&rked reganllng her ablUcy lb keep cool during a c:onUnuaJ ttlephone con..-erutloo. OCflcer Senecal 11.Jd mothtr ind son seemed to be doing fine Ind hospital of· fl clal1 have conllrmed his eval~lon. A policeman tor 7\i Yt•rs now, Patrolman Senecal sald tod.y he has raced teveral .notbtn·Lc>-be to holpltaJs b, hi• aquod car wlth lights fla'11!11J and alren &maminc 1'ul be bid never be!or< helped out · He 11y1 hit bed.side. me.noer alwayt managed to <onvln<e hla back seol [>lllOflJl" to mll<e llJl'l they dim,, drive up to the <!Mf'ionq _. door with two blck aeat pauen,at'rs. 1 I I I • I DAILY PILOT c -• 1 ' . Red s Urge Signing ·On Tuesday Hanoi Negotiators T ell Wi llin g nes s to See Kissinger PARIS 1AP ) -A North Vietnamese spokesman insisted today that the peace ngreement reached with the United ~une:s SOOUld be signed 'I'uc!Way. He added that Hanoi negotiators would t>c willing to meet licnry A. Kissinger lhough •·there are no rt>1nalning qucs· tloru that need another meeting. "But If after the signing of the ag~ ment on Oct 31. Dr. Kissinger wants tu 111L'i'l \\1th Le Due Tho and Xuan Thuy lo d1~ctL"S proble1ns of common interc!>tt. w~' arc re.idy. "The pt·~1<:t:! It' ut Ute tip OI ,1 \k'll " L~, TOTA L COST ••Id. lllllllfnl Ui•t the IJnited Stales ca~ ry ool the agreement lo stgn Tuelday. Le told a news conference that "it ..... as the president of the United States who propostd the date of Oct. 31 for the signalurc. '' It \\US not precisely clcur wh~ther he Mes a ~10~111. -[.1--------~ gTOiAL -=DEAD'IN VIETNAM WAR ~I (1 .3 MILLION PERSONS) ~ AMERICANS SOUTH VIETNAM OTHER NORTH Calendar TONIGHT FOOTBALL -Costa J\,fe • .1 vs. Estancia at Newport Harbor's Davidson Field, 8 p.rn. Mesa High's homecoming. n.• 45,114 10.211 112.494 205,000 ALLIES VIETNAM .(-() ,_,,_, '""'"'' --5,199 904,000 Jtt1Alt, "\1E AND THEE " -Costa Mesa Civic Playhouse. .Community Center Auditoriun1 on Orange Co u n l Y fllirgrounds, Fri. and Sat. through Nov. 4 8.30 p.nl. Hcservalions. 834-5300. UPI Tt'-llefe "THE TORCHBEARERS" -Soulh Coast Repertory theater, through Sun· day . Itt7 Newport Blvd . 8 p.m. Reserva· lions. 6'16-1363. OVER ONE MILLION DEATHS IN VIE TNAM WAR TO DATE 10.Year Conflict Coit U.S. Taxpayers $105 Bill ion OCC FILM SERIES "Performance." Forum. 7 p. m. Admission SL "MONEY'S WORTII" -OCC Lecture Series. Fridays, Oct. 20-Nov. 17. Science Hall. 7:30-9 :30 p.m. COSTA MESA ART LEAGUE -Setn;. annual Art Show and Salt. South Coast Plaza. Friday and Saturday. Tliieu Counters Proposal Fo1· Peace With Own Plan SAruRO . .\''· OCT. 2S HO~!E TOCR -Costa .\fesa·~ Punth and Jody Guil~ of Children's Hospnal presents· its tour and uniqut boutique from noon 10 ~ pm T1tke1s. S2.50. Res.enations ~frs Willl21Tl Engel or !'.trs. ,\f1 chael ~eeler. OCC l~O:\fECll\U~G E\'E~'TS - :\oon to game time on c-ampus : Carnival, booths, games. drawings. proceeds to United Way: Pre-game buffet. pre-game parade, football game v. Fullerton. SIJNDAY, OCT. ZI PlllLHARMONJC CONCERT Orange County Philbarmonic Society presents LA Pbilbannonic Orchestra, Zubin Mehta conducting. Crawford Hall, 8'30 p.m. Tlckds, -II. S..\IGON (UPI ) -President Nguyen \'an Thieu said today there will be no peace in South Vietnam ll.ntil be signs a treaty himself. He countered the Hanoi-Washington nine-point peace plan with a proposal for or any CQffibination of two or more coun- {r {r {r POW s Released After War to Go To Process Sites SAN DIEGO (AP I -Amerlcan San Die go ~u, erl prisoners ar war released after an end to ·. . l' lhe fighting in \'ietnam will be flown to O•'er 'Sex •-:da ' .. 01 three processing sites in Guam, Y D~ • hilippines and Okinawa. ii was .;l' ' re· ed today . S~N DIEG? (AP) -A. complaim ac.. rn. a copyright story. !he San Dieg cus1ng the city of San Diego of "tam-, , , 0 pant" sex discrimination in hirinf ,oo Un.10.n said the Defense J?e?artment s top promotion has been filed by the National off~c1al for ~OW affairs. Dr. RoJ!:er Organization for Women. Sh1.e\ds, outlined a P.rocedur~ .under Mayor Pete Wilson denied the charges. which relea~ POWs will remam 1n the The complaint was filed with the U.S. centers until ju~ged physically able to Equal Opportunity C.Ommission. ~~~rn to the United States. The group's San Diego chapter It ~Id be a.week, 10 days.or longer, declared that discrimination against depending ?n bis health .co~1tions and them Is "pervasive and includes all the doctors. recommen~alion, the paper aspects of their employment . . . quoted a mi!itary official. pa.rticulary blatant in hiring of women at A processing center has been chosen all levels and particular1'y so in higher f?r each ~OW• l!Je rt port ~-Qn 81'- job classifications." f!val he will ~Y'-a rew .wPI~ any ribbons and meda~ he earned and In- l\'l esa Drive r Unhurt As J eep Skids, F lips Eighteen-year-old Mark deRimanoczy of 2111 Sterling Ave., Costa ~lesa escaped serious injury Thursday evening when his jeep skidded and rolled ove r on rain-dampened streets. , Police said the accident occured at 5:30 p.m, at the intersection o{ Maple Avenue and Victoria Street. They reported several minor traffic mishaps as the result of the rainstorm that hit the area Thursday afternoon. OIANH COAIT .. DAILY PllOT Tll•OrAftO" (Mii OAIL'I' PILOT, w+l!I lfflkfl lo COf'ft~ "'41 tt'*'''"'"'· I• S'llbllll'lclll .... !tie Or•nv-Co.it ""*""'"' ~r. S- ~-Mll!IDH 1r1 p.,bll&l\tcl, "'-•Y "''°""'" r rld1v. far C0t11 Mts•. ,...._, INdl. H...,rt.,..ion 8.-t;1'/,oun111" v1111v ltoun• &<11c1', 1,...l.,.,$10dleback liid $~~ Ci.n.t<>tt/ $•" J"•" Cfllll,,I.,., A 111'01~ rtvlo<Y! toe1111or1 11 1M11i.11e11 s..1im11.,... •"" s .. roa • .,.., TM p<lnclPll po;OllM'llfto planl II •1 J.» WM! 111 Slfll't, Co.I• Miii, C:lllfomlol, tit7t. Jtob1•t N. Weed l"ttoldlnt •l'ICI f111111!"""" J.1ck lit. Curl • ., Yb~ Ind 0-.1,.......,.. Tiiorna1 ke1•ll .~ ... 1\•MH A. Mut,t.:1• _ ...... a...t. H. Lff1 ~char4 P. Hell AMltl...t MIMl"'9 ...,_,. C....M-0..... lJO W•1t ley Str11t M•mftf Mii,.•~: ,.0. 1111 I S.0, tl626 --"'"""" tttcfll = .. ,.,.,.. ... !.....,... ~hldli nt~t·A Mwi\t1"et911 hedl1 1711'S ~ 9o\111¥••d aa.. Ciem.nt11 m """"' II C.ffti..t •••I Tel ...... IT1 4J '4MJJ' ct..NW MIMttt• I '42·1671 ~ 1rn. Or-.. C*t l"VMt•ll!t ~r. ,Jtl ~ 1"""-Ul•tr.t""", ..-..... 1NtNr .., ~,..,,...,,. ,,...... _, .. ,..,..."°" wlllllvl ~ ...... ...... ., tiifrrltll' -· ~ cl ...... , .... •II •I CMt1 Mwl. "'"......., ~-11¥ mrrttr a.u MllllN¥1 W •" U.ll ...,...1,, rnllitery ............. 119f1Wr, formation about his family. The center will have d o..c tors . chaplains, le.gal e.zperls, . ps)IChU11lrists and a friend kt the same milita·ry bi-anch, the Union said. The fri end will escort the POW by air to lhe United Stales. lo Travi.5 and Norton Air Force bases in California and from there to military hospitals. lhe newspaper said. "We plan lo lake them to the servic(' hospital of his own particular branch of service thal is nearest to his home,'' a Pentagon SPokesman was quoted as saylng. "Air Force patients would go to the nearest Air Force hospital and so forth." If the hospital is in a diffeffllt dty, the mili tary will fly the POW's family there. the Unkri quoted the SPokesman as saying. At Agana, Guam, military authorltie3 refused to confirm or deny the report that Guam will be one of the processing baSf!S. ''The Department of Defnse does have contingency plans 10 id<'ntily a number of medical facilitie s and military in- .~111!Jat!on~ where initia l lreatn1ent and ptor~S!'ling might be arcnmplishcd." :i ~pok<'Sn11111 for the N;ivv said ''These \\'ill be t·onsi1Hdatcd f11c1!itics for processing the personnel of all services," he said. Cuum has a large naval hospltal com- plex that once treated rnany American servicemen wounded in Vietnam. Inform- ed sources said the hospital bu had on 'hand tor month., contingency plans for handling freed POWs. M~lcal rues and personal histories of each of the POWs are kept available there, the source aa1d. P laza T hief Captures Shopper'i; Silverware Virgtni:t E. Morrls wtnt 1l)opptrw for kitchenware at Coat1 Mesa's South Coast Plaz11 Thunday and came back to her cir to find she needtf! to 10 11l¥Jpptn1 again ror kitchenware. Silverware eervlce for 12, 1 W.UW and an egg cooke:r won h more thin taOO In aU bad been 11t.olen In 1 bural1ry af her car's locked trunk. said Mn. Morrt11 of 26411 Mira Villa Orlvr, Mtuion Viejo. She told police the ltrt lua wrench l"U taken too. to decide the makeup of a new Saigon government. Thieu told pro-govel'JU!!enl legislators v"ha marched Iv his d o w n t o w n Independence Palace to show support for the president that he favors s> South Viet· namese referenJum so the people could ·;voice their o·.\'n wish." The presiden~ said the United Nations er any combination cf two er mor coUJl- tries could supervise the referendum. He propsed that a govenJID.ent be formed between his administntion and the Viet C.Ong according to the percm- tage each side received in the referen- dwn. Thieu bas hinted at such a referendum for several weeks,but his proposal today was the ftnt time he spelled out his idea. 'lbe president has always insisted that only internationally supervised elections could replace his government, but today's proposal of a referendum would not directly e'.::t anyone. It would in· stead allc1,1,· the choosing of governmtp':· officials by both sides. • '"' "For once, .t0bod.y could Sa'/ that be controlled 99.9 percent of the people, and nobOOy could claim two-thirds either," Thi eu said. It was an obvious reference to the three-sided coalition proposed by Hanoi and Washington to take over the reins of rnvernment.. .. ,_ Both the Viet CObg and North Vietnam have 01>P05Cd any United Nations "in- terference" in South Vil!tnam in the past. "We have not agreed on anything yet and yet the Communists boasted that there will be a cease-fire and are prepar- io~ ror it," Thieu said in a speech lo pro-- government legislators at lbe presiden- ti.aJ palace. "'\'e -are not afraid ot a cease-frre and tbe peace. l am sure i~ will come, but it wnl only come when I' personally siin the treaty for a cease-fire and peace." Thieu said. "Wilhout my signature it means fl ha s not been agreed to by the people. "The Communists can use 10 hands and 10 legs to sign treaties. but without n1y signature, it means there has been no ag reement by the people," Thieu said. "It will be invalid in South Vietnam. I am not an obstacle to peace. l reflect the will of the Vietnamese people." {r * * Sc hmitz Says Vietna1n Allies Stob bed in Ba,ck f;RAND RAPIDS. Mich. (API -The An1t•rlcan Party's candidate ror the presidency has called the impending peace in Vietnam a "stab in the back for our allies." Rep .. John 0 . Schmitz of Tustin said Thursday the announcement that peace could be near was "a sellout and SUI"" render." "President Kissinger's revelations con- tinue oor ttllout in Soutbeut Asla,1' Schmitz said. "Any IUCb mtlaUon one week before the electlon ls tallored more toward the electlon than toward peace. tr that 's ptaC'e at •ll. It'• peace of the greve," he sald. Schmitz said he refemd to presiden- tial adviser Henry KiliinJer aa "Presi- dent Kissinaer" because "Henry Kl .. lnger ll the: de facto {In fact ) Prtaldent of the Un\~ States." Schmlti brought his l••"k•Y campalan to Mlchlg11n Thursday and pr~ he wUI do well Jn the state Nov. 7. Schmitz said be should do well In Michigan because It has a st.ron1 an- llbusln~ platlorm, Is aaslnll e1t1bll1h~ stronger gµn control l•w• and oppoaes 11btrallied abortion t1w1. ..., matlna; the algDlnc ol lhe agreement a pondlllon for another negotiating session. Ir> Washington , presidential press St.'Crtlary Ronald L. Ziegler refused to co1nment on the North Vietnamese of· fl chi l's statements. Le said Kissinger referred Thursday to llf1 "honest misunderstanding" about the date. Le said: ''We don't believe '1Jere i.s a misun- derstanding. It was wr1tten1 black on white in a message from the President on Oct. 20." "The U.S. side claim! the.re are still some things to settle. We consider this as a pretext lo delay the signing ol the ac- cord oo which the two parties reached agreement," Le said. . He scolfed at what be said was Kiss- inger's need to compare texts of the ac- cord lo clarily quealkm ol llngulstics. "Tim quealloo bu already been setUed delinilely," Le said. . He said that at a secret meeting on Oct. 11 that Unished at 2 a.m. Oct. 12, expert translators af both sides compared the le.tt of the agreement. In another meeting on the aftenioon of Oct. 12, experts of the two sides again worked on the text in Vietnamese and English, he added. \ ' Le snid that on Oct. 17 Kissinger and Xuan Thu y, chief of the North Viet- namese peace delegation, "went over the text chapter by chapter, article by artil!le, sentence by sentence, word by word. There is no question of linguistics pending." l'ronlP .. eI FIGHTING ... centers of both toWDs. Oat Do, 45 miles aoutheast of the capital, \vas captured once for 10 days by the Communists last April during their spring offensive, Both it and Xuyen Moc. 55 miles southeast of Saigon, are in Phuoc Tuy Province, a resort area when there is no fi gl!ling. Phuoc Tuy was "pacified'' by Australian forces before they pulled out last year. In the air war, the U.S. command said a U.S. Air Force F4 Phantom was shot down today by antiaircraft fire over North Vietnam. The two crewmen parachuted Into the Gull of Tonkin and were picked up by helicopter 11 miles northeast of the Demilllari7.ed 7.one. U.S. fighter-bombers attacked North Vietn~ "more th8Q 10 Umes Thursday. High-fljing B52 bOmbers joined the airs.trikes with nine waves, all of them over the lower Panhandle, the U.S. com· ~ ?Jl!lrled, ., ... ' ~ ... ~··''' If • I ' "· J From Page l Q-UAKERS .•. variety of charges including unlawful assembly, failure to disperse, bringing unauthorized vessela into a harbor, and trespassing. In addJtion, the juvenile girl was charged with resisting arrest. By midnight Thuraday, the 14 adults had been released on boil ranging Crom 12.50 lo !500. The girl waa released into custody of her rather. The nine men, five women, and one girl demonstrators began their so-called blockade about 3 p.m. as the Duluth was preparing for departure. Three small aluminum craft, each with fou r passengers, pulled into the nar- rowest part of the Anaheim Bay channel. As the Duluth reared them, Chey dove in 1he water and swam towa:-d the giant vessel. At the :.l. '.! time, the three remaining protesters climbed under a barbed wire fence on the pubhc beach immediately north of lhe harbor and began movlng down the beach toward the aame narrow part of the ch:annel Harbor . authorities and official!, ap- parentl1 wilh 1tlv1mce wamlq on the protest, lmmedlalely .....,g into action as welsult.eJad Seal Beach lifeguards dove from boats UI forcibly remove pro- testors from the path of the veuet ~1eanwbile, unifonned security police chased the other three prote!ten down the shore, and later waded full y-unlfonn- cd into t))e surf, waving their billy club,, above their ~ds, in an effort to ap- prehend them. Sailors lin&.1 the starboard side of the Duluth. watching the whole cperation. \Vhen the last protester was picked up they gave a loud cheer. A spokesman for the pacifists said the purpose of the demonstration waa to pro- mote public aware.ne:sa that weapons 1.-e shipped lrom Seal Beach lo Vietnam. Flying Their Flag OAIL Y PILOT Pllltt.s 1ty ·~ ........ , ' An American nag that once waved over the U.S. capitol now flies over the Central Branch of the Harbor Area Boys Club in Costa • Mesa. The banner was presented by the Children of the American . Revolution in observance of Patriotic Education Week. .• Waxing Eloquent ~ Big Candle Will Ligl~t Up Sky The Arr.crican Flag candle being poured today by a patriotic group of you ng Costa Mesans will weight 2,IXX> pounds more than expected. Jere Overstreet, chief or the 25-man candle-making crew said this morning il would take at least that much more v.•ax lo fill the candle'! five-foot si:r-inch plywood mold. "lt looks Jike our candle will weigh 5,000 pound.s instead of 3,000 pounds," he predicted. "That should make it the big- gest candle in the world, but I haven't been able to confirm it yet." Overstreet plans to contact Mobil OH tompany for an additional paraffin dona. lion ta finish the job. Meanwhile workers are pouring the candle round the clock and hope to have the basic unit finished by tonight. "We don't want to take any chances on the bottom layers cooling. If they do, then the new layers won't adhere and we would be in trouble. So we've been work- ing through the night," Overstreat ex- plained. As of this morning. 500 pounds of wax had been poured into the wedge-shaped mold at TeWintle Park. ''It just covered the bottom," sakl Overstreet. Plans are lo pull lhe plywood 01£ the coaled candle by Tuesday or Wednesday. Meanwhile, the candle makers will be working on the Stars and Stripes facia which will be attached to the main candle block later. The enthusiastic young candle makers Maintain they wil: be able to deliver the finished candl e to the White House hy Christmas. l\ will be inscribed with ~he words , "Peace, Un ity and Freedam for . all Mankind.'' A new 40-foot refrigerated truck was promised to the candle builders Thursday by a Texas shipping magnate who heard about the project on a Dallas radio sta- tion, Overstreet said. "He's donated the truck, two drivers and all the gas we need for the trip. We'll b.. traveling through the South and will be making several stops along the way," Mesa Chamber Calls Meet on P ropositions Directors of lhe Costa Mesa Chamber of Commerce havt scheduled a joint session with the legislative committee for noon Monday. Purpose of tile meeting at the Coral Reef Restaurant. 2645 Harbor Blvd., is to discus,s the propos itions on the Nov. 7 ballot aud to make recommendations prior to the electlon. Reservations should be made with the Chamber of Com· me~. 646-05.16, by 5 p.m. today . While most people Overstreet hns talif.. ed to seem to SUPPort the candle idea he claims he has also received two threat~ ing phone calb. • ','One said that we would be sorry for building II and lhe other guy said the candle W"Ould never make It to the White Howe ," Overslrt!et asserted. ~ Nixon, A111iounce~ He'JJ: Veto Nine Different Items WASHINGTON (IJPJ; -President Nixon said today he will veto nine measures because they woulL exceed hb budget by $2.75 billion over the next two fiscal years. He said he was taking the actioo despite advice that it would be "poUtically very damaging." "If I were to sign these measures Into Jaw, I would, in e!fect, be making prom- ises that could not be kept since die funds required to finance the promised services are not availablt> and would not be available without the higher taxes I have promised to resist," he said in a statement. He repeated his pledge to hold federal spending lo $250 biJlion and claimed the nine measures if enacted into law, would breach the budget by $750 million in the 1973 fiscal year and by nearly $2 billion in 197~. "Each of these measures by itself might seem justifiable or even highly de.sirable," Nixon said, adding that the decisions had been very dJfflcul~ ones for him. -'!be approprlallons for lhe Health, Education and WeUare Department, a mea.sure which Nixon said included $535 million in overspending. He vetoed an earlier version of the same mea.sure which contained a budget- busting Sl.8 billion last August. -The public works and economic development Act of 1m. which Nlxo'n said 'A'OUld unnecessarily add new federal programs wltich have been demonstrably ineffective in creating jobs and stimulat- ing economic development. -A meRsure authorizing federal funds lo support mine ral re1earch and training institutes in each of the 50 states and Puerto Rico, legislation wh ich Nixon said is: unneeded because of workable exlstln~ programs. Residents Evaeuated T wo 'Bombs' Planted at Apartment, Car in Mesa A pair ol black, bomb-Ult< boxes -one Ucklng ominously -forced evacuation of two Costa Meaa apartment bUlldlngs Thursday nlcht, after being planted st the lronl door and In lhe Cir ol lbelr In· tended target. Demolition experts lrom El Toro Marine Corps Air Stlltoo removed them &lngerly Md opened the one ·wtlb lhe liming devloe from a distance, using spec\111 military apparatus designed !or the IMJ'O"C. They turned ouL lo he relatively harmleu but apparently created their buildtr's desired effect: fe11r. Officer Chuck 11amllton found tho iteml', listed as destructive davlcea ln his report after Lee A. Breighton, 18, of lnl Balter St., took a grim telephone call about 9:30 p.m .. police said. "'l,'lJere Lt a present at the front door ror ojOOr mothe:r." the male stranger aald. "J( she doesn't Uke that one, there la another one ln her cnr," he 11dded1 abruptly hanging up. M'lu Brelghton lives with her mother, Mrs. Glorla E, Wllllamscm. olscoverlng the dev\cet, 0 f r I c e r llamilton notified he&dqu•rtera and the ..1ch commander, Sci. M8' Wlboo, called El Toro MCAS authorities. Chie:f Warrant Officer Roger Larvle and Staff Sgt. Earl Drennen. or the u- ploslves demolition team were dlspat· chcd to handle tht devices, one of whlc:h WflS ticking. They opened lt., cli.scoverlnlJ nn •lann clock wired to three highway emergency (Jares and packed in shredded Pla:es from a newapaper. • Th• aea>nd ouspected bomb re1T19V<d from Mn . Wlllbuon's locked car con- tained tdentlcal Dares and newspaper packlna, but had no clock. police said. UPIT....._ PAUL SHERWIN ESCORTS DAUGHTER TO CAR Sec:rotory of State Convicted In Brlbory Trial 2 Fund Committees Fail to File Reports Frld.11. <klobtf 27, 1«172 O>ILY PILOT g Bigh w au B id Top N.J. Adviser Princess Sees .Star MacGregor Admit,s Special · f I Guilty. in Bribe LEEDS, England (AP) -Priocts Grace ol Monaco went to 1 ball and met her onetime x:reen lovor, Cary Oraut • Fund-'Not f or Espwnage' .. FREEHOLD, N.J. (UPI) -peraonal and political friend of New J~ Socretary of State G<Jv. William T. Cablll, who Pau.1 J, Sherwin, top adviser to campaigned largely on the promise that be would clean a goVetrft who swept into of-out corruption In the stu.te's flee on alt antiCOrTUptlon plat· political circles. form, wa1 convicted Thursday of coruipirlng and ottering to ALL THREE SAID they receive a bribe. would appeal. SUperlor Court "I'm delJ&hted to ,.. you again," the princess. former ..ctress G r a c e Ktlly, told the 88-yta!'Old Grant Thursd&y n I g ht when they met at a Varie- ty Club of Great Britain ball. DJ.ring her HoUywood days, the princess and Grant starred Jn the lunJ "To Catch a Thief.'' WASHINGTON (AP) -The chairman cl President Nixon'• <-'&mpaign eorrunlttee h a 1 acknowledged for the Orst time the existence. of a special campaign fund. But he denied the money '"'as ever used lo finance political espionage against Democratic presiden- tial hopefuls. 10me addltk>nal fUnds con· trlbuted In 1171. He Bald the fund wa1 used tor "pnollmlnary planning for the primary elections." A coMMmEE spokesman said later the money was oot left over from 1968 but was oontrlbuted in 1971 and early this year for possible primary .... WOilam C. LolJ&hrJln, a Judge Francis X. Crahy set Republlcan fund ralstr, also sentencing ror Nov. IO. Each wu convicted of tM same faces a maximum sentence of charge by the jury of five six years In jaU and a 16,000 ~-------~ • women aod HYen men. ahd fine. . Clark MacGregor said in a television interview Thursday that the money was both a .. carryover" from the 1968 presidential campaign and . The General Accounting Of- fice has reported the Nixon campaign had on hand a fund Michael J. MlllZO, owner ol a Sherwin, llanlted by his wife, constructlon ftrm, wu found three sons and three guilty of COlllplrtng and of· daughters, sat motionless as {erlnf to give a bribe. the jury fOl'e!Dan md the verdict. But his wife, Elva, 'No Mess' Polaroid Marketed TRB TllllEE WERE dwt· burst Into tears. Their oldest MIAMI BEACH, F1a. (AP) only three things -focus, developing picture unit within ed with trytna to get state daughter, Mrs. Jean Mooney, -After four years and $250 push the shutter button and an invisible, stiff protective Transportation '(Dnmlg~ put her ann around her million, the Polaroid Corp. has wait. plastic structure. The unit John C. Kohl to give Mam.o's mother, and wept herself. introduced a new self-develop-One sec 0 n d after the represents 17 layers of com· con1tructlon company special When the family left the ing color camera it says will photographer pushes the shut· pounds, some only l 0 · or at least '350,000, ..- reoelptl I D d dJsbune- were UMOcOUn""1 for. Thi Washington Poat hu repor1'd the fund contained aa much ea $700,000 which was URd to finance the W1t.ergate breakT in and for a wldupread etfort to disrupt the campalgm of Democratic pretklentl.al con· tenders lut aprlne and sum- mer. MacGregor was interviewed by Elizabeth Drtw on National Public Allain Center for Television. MACGREGOR, cbainnaD ol the Qmmitt.e for the Re- election of the PreakSmt since July I. wbeo former Atty. Gen. John N. Mltdieli "81gn- ed. abo ro.. the first ttme listed five perJOfll who were authorized to rllake payments consideraUon on a '800,000 courtroom, Sherwin helped his "change our lives." ter, the camera ejeet3 a thousands of an inch thick. hlghway contract In return for youngest daughter, Carol, into About the size of a 1--~---~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii;;;::--a $10,000 contribution to the the car. , paperback book and weighing I from the fund . Republican party. He shook hands with some only 24 ounces, the SX-70 will w ASHINGTON {AP) _ Two campaign financial re Ports Witnesses testified th • t reporters but told. them he retail for $180 and be available ltt Whl h ha f Sherwin attempted to In-would have no comment. naUonally shortly after the EXCITING ART comm ees c ve un-night at a Washington hotel. fluence Kohl. However, Uie first of next year, Polaroid neled large amounts of money He will be accompanied by his company which submltted the "I CAN'T BELIEVE it,·• said Thursday night. It will go !~~~~ctr~ ~=~~·sra'iJ':lTo wife. Qimelia. low bid for the contract kept said Mrs. Sherwin, "how could on sale in Florida Nov. 10. file registration statements in • Korea BW JtSh-ln tooL a leave or this happen?" The camera, brainchild of "" .. a. Cahill said he would not Polaroid founder Dr. Edwin Costa M11• Art L1agu• Now Thru Sat. apParent -Violation of federal SEOUL (UPI) -The absence from his job when he comment in view of the ap-Land ,· require s the law. government of Presidmt Park ~w~as~indi~·~cled~. ~H~e~w~as(i_a~cl~ose;__j~a1.~:_:_::_:~:_::_jp~bo~''~-a~~e~r~esse~n~tia~U~~to~do~=::~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~:__-EnminaUon of hwx!tt:ds of Cll~ proposed, a new con-.-""'&" stlWtio.nt«faywbich~v~tbe , ______ ~~-----------------•-••-""'-"-Q_'~-""-'~--'------------------------ $oat11 Coast '1111 ( ) president more powers, ex-' BRIEFS teods hia term 1rom four to _ six years and weakens the ...._ ______ _.. poftl"S of parliament. pouring Into the G«1eral AC· counting Oftl,ce also shows a $25,000 Joan to Democnitic Presidential candidate George McGovern from a secretary who refused to say how a secretary could alford such a loan. e Bon1h Suspect TEL AVIV (AP) -A 22- year-old American tourist has been arrested for investigation in canneclJon with the murder- by-mall bombs addttssed to Presld<nt Nixon, Semlary of Jn Tokyo, a South ~rean opposition leader, Kim Dae. Jung, said Park was at- tempting to install himsel! as a dictator "forever ... September's Beef P1ices Took Slide State William P. Hogen and WASHINGTON (AP) Defense, Semtary Melvin R. Consumers paid less far beef Laird, !be state radio "ported last month because of a slide ~ lroadcasl ldent!lied the In catUe prices and the lint S\1!1P9Ct 15 De:nniJ Feinstein dip in middleman markups and II.id he came to Israel as since last June , the a vlsltor aevenl weeb ago, Agriculture Department said e ........ Search tod~ Septem.l!er retail price ANCHORAGE, A I a sk a of beef, a 'kertn4icator in the (UPJ) -Diver• were called cost of llv!ng, wa8 slighUy less into...tb; search for House Ma· than $1.13 per pound 00 an all· jority Leader Hale Boggs to-cut basts, including ham- day to probe an area where an burger as well as ateak. oil slick was sighted in That was almost three cents Alaskan waters. 1 han t d The tUck, first sighted ess t in Augus an 4.4 ctnts cheaper than the record Wednesday near Cordova in high in July. In August, Prince Wllliam Sound, was however, the price spread - within the echedu1ed Oight the markup -from cattlemen pattern caJT)ing Boggs and to consumers was a record three others when their plane pound "·· ~ Oct 16 44.8 ceots per . w.>IPI"'"•-· · Last month, according to a e W•llace Aid "market basket" report oo WASlllNGTON (UPI) -U.S. fann-preduced food. the Alabama Gov. George C. middleman share for beet was Wallace wiD axne back to the 43.3 cents per" pound, a decline Wulllnltob aru this weekend ol 3.S percent in a month. to ra1ai funds for Holy Cross ;:;;;:;========.\ Hoopltal at SUve< Spring, Md., where he was treated for gun shot wounds received ln May al a Maryland campaign rally. Hospital officials s a i d Thursday that Wallace had ac- cepted an invitation to attend the eighth annual fund -raising ball for the hospital Saturday Prosperity Next Goal Says Nixon WASIUNGTON (AP) - Pmldent Nixon, his quiet campaign f o l" n-electlon bolstered by new Vietnam peace hopes, says "if you give me tbe ch•nce In the next four years," he will V.'Ork for pros- perity and "full employment without war and without in- Oatlon." Nllon, using a propeller· driven alrcraft not usually (cAMP AIGN •12) auoclaled w Ith P"81dents U-dayl, made a !lyJni trip Tbunday olpl to Hunllngton, W. Va., and Mbland, Ky., to stump for h1J own candJdacy 8.Dd for bel e11uered Repoblko111 ...idll!I stale or-Oces. Crowds estimated by poll« and ntwnntn to total more than 20,000 turned out alon1 the w1y. Few der1J1ve cries were heard and virtually 111 curbside pl1carda f a v o r t d Nlxon't c1use. At an airport rally In Hun- tington, wbe,. police .. Id 1,000 wm on hand, Nlroli bulll hit Impromptu campaign lpeech around Whal he tenned hi.I conlldence that the Unite! States wlll achieve 1•pe1ce with honor and DOI peace with surrender In Vietnam." KNOW YOUR CANDIDATE VOTE / J.' FOR GORDON GOOSE .,.,....,,,,_ ,r o , I The voling I.gt' hU anln been lower-ft\ to ctve oti)en the right to vote. Girls and boYI attend.Ing any IChool In thr Newport-Mesa lltta can v.•ln a lrlp lo Sat'Tamf!nto VII\ Air C&lllornia. Ballot1 i.\·11iltthlr In Wt"ltcllft Plu:a •ho1• at 17th Ir lrvtn& A~ nur. Oepo1Jlt Ont' only In lhe bfllot box •t Jett'• Pettlnit Zoo. eppearina Oct. 31 thru Nov.~. SHOP ••• WESTCLIFF PLAZA 17th & Irvine Awnue ....._c."""'i. L~1\lllt W.!lr!~ c;..a.."..... m~ ~ ~ o.a~il!::''"' o.,p_.MC."M qjD, a~ c.r..tuO.rJ.{.a., Ofl..YfO!IMll:lllnr~ ~ c.11,_. ~ ArUM H. 111)11-M"' ...... •• 1 J.loMfll.(:.dt. tr.~-Danit! C.in'°'· ~ Aki D. AWi PllilliJ t.. C.. 1~ ai£d~· • ' .. """" i~· &11: I -· fiCalifomiaRegenlsandStaleUiiitS'• sity and College 'Ihlstees. Does thatmeanagenemus board cannmawaywiththetaxpayers'rmneJ? Absolat.ely not. Proposition 15 limits the increases (or decreases) pay boards can recommend State salaries, by .law, will be kept equal to the average paid fur the same jobs in pri vate industry. In other words, a Jab technician working for the state will get the aver· age salary paid to Jab technicians in the private sectol: No more. No less. As a sateguard. ycur elected repie- senl>!lives in the State Legislature haw the right to tum down railel which might wibalanc:e the budget The final vote belongs to YoU- Does Propositianl5 mean higher taxes? No. The st.ate has collected enough cl your IllOileY to rovet easily any and all salary adjustmeuta affected by Proposi· tion15.(0n]une30, 1972, the budgetsur· plus was already $565. 7 million.) C•1 1 'a •I« Y•ee .11 Lt1t1i,r.mM l(,,....t>i 1t H11tb'a fa;V.M~llftr.W D. i-:r~"t: 11"i11MP.Slar. (Al,Jvb t.~H (J!ttl "'(';t.: ··~ MR-. Btf'lflfl ~.(M '"""''·~ lion. w lrt Jt! J•mu R.MUlt •••-o:;i: . tr-Dr. Kt'llllldl b. Sllidl Mri. llonce ,ra, Rdlard H, llnftl S. bpr'IOllll! Mtmn Mrt. !l't'fl elwr ~.,_,.,. R' M;"l· BUI GrMM ltt•.Jiilt.11 K"w ll:'"""""' ""'·""'r.'-""' s. klldifte. .. . Rolw11 B.H ... C. M. CMKl l.tnu ~IMOMM ~l~rt A. ...... Mr\. Rlllll I. h....,. )IOl'Tiiil.-" ........ Mra.1tsc:1tn.. Jilet". M. II. H••:tt J>d< """" Dr: N•l'li ii!·~ ~:'1f:LH ........ ~it!« Kt~ tdt,Lll.M. ll<ll'. illdlnd N ... ~ir-~~ ~ ,,,_ 1:-.i "'r.'e.: """ -......... .::::.-~~-=-=e"~ .. =-I s-..'ilJ Re H f.:'I:= ~Loo~:. ··g.i:a-~".:-,=:f\!r: tf~ . ..::c. ..... ~ . ... ~~ I Sll ~II = --11:"~-.. ')::. "o.'L """·,, 1.-1 . .... _ .. _ ' ' DAILY PILOT EDITORIAL PAGE • A Good Idea-Stalled Recent uproars over the operation of animal con- trol departments in various Orange Coast cities is steer· lng five municipalities toward construction o! a joint facility. Talks an1ong city ntanagers of Fountain Valley, Seal Beach, Huntington Beach, Westminster and Costa Mesa ar~ ~greu and •Jlll!y l'ef<Ho,. _ poun~'l'Qfllaps to 'be locatecl ne\f tbe 'Orange Couly Sanitai,o>n District! headquarters. 1 In vl<lw or the .complllints w ch have illrfaced ii> U~e"o( these cities'(Huntington ~ach, cti'sta ¥esa, and 5$1 Beach), this would appear to 11>8 an rexcel!ent Ide~ '!1>_e_ sheller t:Duld be c:Qllilruct~ancl operated on a sheie bf.s,ls, leaving the participan free to provide, or arrange for, their own stray picku services. . The obvious advantagt!s are that the titles. could exercise control over operation of the pound and realize significant savings compared to individual construction or shelters. The current neg<>tiations 1ollaw an encQuraglng pat- tern of municipal cooperation among Orange Coast area cities . Cooperative ventures are being practiced in other service areas. such as fire and police, and they could ex- tend to animal control as well. Each of Us Ca n Be Ge orge ' tion to cover a multiplicity of good causes. For instance, these gilts wlll provide: -$250: an average homebound patient with Vi.sit- ing Nurse service for a year, including physical therapy and home health aid service. · -$150: Five sessions with a trained psychiatrist al the Child Guidance Clinic for an emotionally-disturbed · ,. child,. · '' ·f -$,75: Focd and temporary shelter for five qpm .. less families thro».gh the Salvation Army;-for one da1v. -$58: One day of care and training'for 10 peope at one of Southe1n Orange County's centers for •the re- tarded. , -$20: A family couns~llng session ·with the Family Service Association. 1 Emergencies of ev0ry kind are met by the helping hands of 54 agencies. The current campaign g!)QI is $1,315,000 for operating funds. If each of us gives his share, we'll 'each be a George, or a Georgia, doing the job himseU or herseU. A Gift to the Nation· Costa A1esa may find itself in the national news-if a product of the labor and ingenuity of a group of some 25 local young men wins acceptance at the White House. They're attempting to build a 3,000-pound candle in the shape of colors of the American flag. lf th~y sur- ceed -and they have expert advice from a profession- al candle maker -they plan to haul it to \Vashington in a refrigerated truck. • • -For much or the year, most Orange Coast residents bask in the glow of affi.uence in a bountiful area. But as many churches have learned, when the. time comes to contribute a little hard cash for the good of our fellow man, the attitude changes to that of Appalachia -we're suddenly poverty stricken. That, of course, is human nature. "Let George Do It" is a slogan issuing from the subconscious. But there are human needs which must be met. And the United \Vay is the best way - a single contribu· Carrying the inscription, HPeace, Freedom, Unity and Equality for All Mankind," the giant candle will be fueled by an "eternal" gas flame and offered to Pres- ident Nixon as a Christmas gift to the nation. It would seem an odds-on-bet that Orange County's ~ative son in the White House will accept with enthus· 1asm. c .~~,.... +11VE HEAKD OF C~YlNEi POLL5, SUT NOT Of SPl111N~ fUPPET5'."' K e n1iedy, Not McGovern, Likely Leader Demos Are Thinking Ahead \\IASHINGTON -The post-McGovern reconstruclion of the Democratic part y is being anticipated by some leaders even before the)' know for sure how the elec-- tion will tum out. A McGovern victory, of course, would make such anticipations academic. But the size and extent of a McGovern defeat would hlW.e ~ bearing On· Mia! ~llt. happen tn li(Mtay.: ~ I The fairly}Jl>yilili1- conclusion -m.j~ Sen. Edward \ii'~ Kennedy. ho\vever badly h1cGovern is beaten. wil~ mo~e in as the populaf lead- er of fhe party and steadily advance toward the presldtntial nomination of 1976. tT ts NOT QUITE that simple. Some other general conclusions are being reached which are subject to ex- amination. One of them hi that John eo~ ~ally or Texas,. serving as secreiary of state. will tum Republican and take the 1976 Republican nomination away from S~iro T. Agnew. Who says that Connally will either be appointed sec_E!!tarY. of state or tum RepublicaJ\?' If i'·~, Democrat, leading the Dem~ts_fofNl'lon and his future may lie LR the Dempcratic party more strongly tbaa in the Republican party. Experience shoWs that if McGovern loses as badly as ,the polls OO'f indicate, the lieJnocratic party will be a>mpletely shattered and will have to start to rebuild from the bottom up. LITER.ALLY FROM the bottom up - (rucHARD WILSO~ the South, labor, ethnic groupo, yOUlh, liberated women, even the traditional liberals will have lost their moorings. Anyone who brings them back togethe.r will have to command respect over a broader spectrum than McGovern's '8nd it is not even certain that Kennedy's scope is that great. Kennedy's greatest weakness is in tfle South, a fact which is not unrelated to his growingly warm relationship with ~ WillNr 1C. Mills, c~ ,talo'wdllq llouoe Ways and l\f...,. Ootn' mfttet. Milli is not much known to the gon<ral pobl!c, but be stands solld i~ the Soulb .a• a signer of the contumacious Soutbtrn Manifesto on Racial Segrega- tion., and aound in Wall Street on taxes. MILLS' ABORTIVE bid for the presidency (probably aimed more. at the vice-presidency) did not improve bis politicaJ 'stature. But at least Senator McGovern promised to nominate Mill! !or secretary of the treasury, and il tllat never happens, the Arkar.sas Democrat bas a chance to become speaker of the House of Representatives assuming the Democrats still have conirol next January. This is mentioned here to • sllow how carefully Kennedy is keeping bis options open and getting himself in a position to Cttltivate North and South, East aod West. With a foot in the McGovern organization, and a foot in the South, Kennedy could step forward into his natural terrain, the urban areas, to recapture the old coalition McGovern had lost. THIS JS ALL IDGBL Y tenuous. Co~ nally, remainng an ambitious Democr::it, could make.Qle way harder for Kennedy. A reconstructed-South which bad voted for Nixon and Wallace might oot make Democratic leaders very hospitable to a Kennedy under any conditions. The conclusion can safely be drawn that it will not be easy for Kennedy or anyoQt else to reunlte a party so badly divided as the Democrats will be if McGovern is swamped on Nov. 7. Another conclusion can be hazarded with reasonable safety. McGovern will "'\I lold W. lelt and stetl away into the ltar\: Of-~ ii!" given signs already that he tj i~ past his pessible defeat and 1ti a · ted States Senator will try to. ri1ly forces of opposition to Nl:J'on and carrt. the torch into the campaigns of DJ6. In any case, McGovern would ve to keep right on campaigning if ~nts to stay in the limellgbl He WOldt be up for reelection to the Senate in I. UNLIKE SENA R Hubert H. Hum- phrey in 1968, McGqyem would still have his pulpit in the sa:t!ate which Humphrey was forced to relli(quish for two years. The importance of·ffiis is that McGovern will have continuing access to the in- formation media based in Washington. McGovern's record in politics indicates he will try to assert his nominal leadership of the party, and, in any case, hang on for dear life to whatever stature being a. defeated presidential nominee gives him. That won't make the job of reuniting the Democrats any easier. The No-Growth Movement Growth is a si:r·letter woid that ls ·tak· in,,. on the connotation of a four-letter word in some localities. Cities and states that once courted oew residents and neW'., industries have come to the conclusidn that growth brings more problems thOO progress In Its wake. As a result, p~ posals to retard or halt growth are gaining p,n increasingly sympathetic hearing. California, the country's fastest-grow- ing state since World War n. is in the forefront of the lhink·small movement. At an Aug. 7 news conference. Califon1ia Attorney General Evelle J. Younger !<ild the state was prepared to sue local governments to prevent people from The fdltorial pq.t of th<-De.Uy PU6l aeekl to iNorm •hd ~umu latc l'Nikn by ptttentJn1: this nCWSP11-per'• 011tnlohl and <"Om· mcntll')' on topics of lnt~t end tJ1nltlcanot, bt provldlna a ftirum tor the ~ ol out readen' ·-.... by .,._,ting th< "''"""~"'Informed ... ~ •nd SQOktlmC!ft on tos)lcs ""'""''-!'.: . Friday, October 27, 1Jl72 EDITORIAL RESEARCH be~g ~fiowed to mo9e into areas "''here they would contribute to air pollul1on. overload sewage facillUes, or otherwise Uegrade the environment. "A dly 1s like an apartment house," Younger said. "If It ls fllled, there should be no effort to bring In any more people. The concept that 'there's room for one more' Ju.st doesn't apply." A SIMILAR VIEW was expresaed by Johh Tooker, C81itomta'1 dlrtctor of plBMing and .-mb, 00 sei.t, 18. Testi- fying~[ I .l)le State Aloemfliy Commit- tee on fllomnenta1 :Qual!tr, Tooter ••id ._tlll lltl)YICei !it.~· to ~ ~~1*"81(ln •are.. ol ' a to .. bead illf ~ J>OllUI• growjh. Local ,gov•~ 'that .... ui,ly IP' prove dtvel to expand_ ~ir lAX ~· "'llql Ile> u(9w1ded," )le added; al how little ..W tevenue they' receive when lhe cnst ot j)n>Vldlng additional 9trvleet ls taken b'llO account. 1be Loi AOielel City Council and Pl11Min1 COmmi!lk>n, in a July II report to Mayor Sam Yorty recommended • u-mllllon celllng on U.. nurnb<r of - pie who noold Uvo In the city by 1990. Aroond U milllon ~ now reside within LA. dty Utnlts, but pr<S<rrt zoo. Ing regulailoOa would permit • lheoretk:al oooulitlon of 10 mllllon. Thttt weeki later, the plBMlng com- mlulon went btyond the report by ldoi>' tin& a ZO.year rezoning plan designed to ,, limit population to 3.4 million. Possibly influenced by that action, the IAs Angeles CoWlty Board of Supervi.lors voted in late September to freeze building-pennit awards on 1.8 million acres of county land, including !J00,000 acres that are mostly held by private builders and sperulators. Henceforth, the board will grant pennits only If plans call for no more than one unit per acre in the affected areas. The surprise n1ove lmmedlately held up J.600 bullding pennits, representing $43 million in wn- struclion, that were pending when the decision was made. Growth no, doubt will eontlnue in Los Angeles and elsewhere, but U>e days of uDcbecked development appear num· -· ' I \Dear · • . . . ,,, " ... Gl®my ' ' Glig " Almost t!Veryone enjoys a circus -right? Wby wait for Ringling Brothers and Barnum & Balley when we can attend our local city councU meetings? -P.E.W. ""' ,..,.,. ~ ,..... ,...... Mt """""" , ....... "'-..... "'. "" ,_ ,.. ............... °""' o.tl'r ....... ' George! What Are You Up To N owadayst? ~e Badly Need Metric System ( ART HOPPE ) Just to indicate how badly this rountry needs the metric system, and how baffling our whole present system or weights and measures ls, today's word· quiz deals wholly with this mischievous LOS ANGELES -l was in Lot subject: Angeles on business and whom should 1 1. If you asked for a "hogshead" of Ji. run iflto but my old friend, <,teorge. quid, how much would you get? 'NGW, George is one of the nicest guys 2. If you ordered a "cord" of fuel wood , you'd ever want to meet and it was a how much would it weigh? pleasure to see him again. Good old 3. Jjow many sheets of paper make a George. "quirl:"? So we shake hands and I say, 4. How long is a "Geor~e ! You're a sight for sore eyes. ''chain" Jn surveying .}'t\at ""' yOu up .to th5e days?" 'i ~ Lflllgineering? till )'OU the truth," ·he aays, "I'm '5. a1Fa11 fathom five ruiming for Presi-thy I a t h er lies.'' dent." says Shakespeare -~ "No kktding!" says bow deep is Dad? I. "That's a great 1 6. If a horse stands klea. But YoU ought 18 "hands" high, to tell people." h9w large is it? ' "I've been trying,'' 47. U a tailor made up an "ell" of cloth be says. "But I just ~you, bow much would you have? can't seem to get ~ J. How many "scruples" make a message across." "~"? "The first thing t. Qin you distinguish "one ounce" you should do,'' &aY• I, "~ pass out a avoinJupois from "one ounce" troy, and lot of buUom and bumper stickers to bo.J.. ~ch is a "fluid ounce"? spread the old name around." iO. Wher. Peter Piper picked bis peck "I've been doing that for more than a of ptckJed peppers, how many quarts did year," he says. he pick, and what part of a bushel? 'Is tbat •right?'.' says I. "Well, ma~be ANSWERS· people are ,.Jteepmg them for souvenirs. · . . What about a slogan? You'll need a 1. A large cask, contammg from 63 to slogan." ~YDNEY J.HARRI~ 150 gallons, depeoding on whether It beld wine or some olher liquid. 2. A "cord" ls a unit of volume, not of weight, equal to 128 cubic feet, usually 8 feet long, 4 feet wide, and 4 feet high. ~. A "qulre" is 24 sheets of paper. 4. A "chain" is 100 links of equal length. having a total length either of SS feet ('l.s in a stlrveyor's. chalri, or the distance between ·the wickets lil cricket) or 100 feet, as in an engineer's.chain. 5. THY FATHER lies :xi feet deep -a hitbom is siJ: feet. 6. A "hand" is four inches. 7. An eU of cloth varies in different countries; aboui 45 inches. 8. A scruple iS equal to 20 grains or t-3 of a dram. 9. An ounce ls 437 .2 grains or 1/16 poond avoirdupois; It Js 480 grains, or l/12 pound troy; a fluid ounce is 1.8047 cubic inches, or U16 of a pint. 10. A peck is a dry measure of eight quart ... equal to 537 .6 cubic inches, and is the fourth part of a busheL (I have a ream more of such absurd examples of our Illogical and outmoded measuring S}'S!lm, bUl first you have to find out how many qialres are in a ream.) "c.ome home, America!" he calls out. "Did you lose your dog?" says I, Jook- inr;: around. "NO," HE SAYS. "That's my slogan : nFuel Prices Headed Vp Come Rome, America." "lt ought to sew up the tourist vote," says I. "Maybe what you need's an issue. Sayl Aren't you against the war in Viet· nam ? Now, there's a good one. People are pretty sick of the war." "I'm for withdrawing all our troops, planes and used tanks in 90 days," he says. "Wow!" says I. "A fearless un- compn>mlsing stand like lllat will really arouse the country. One way or another. Wait till you tell the people that!" "l did," says be. "But nobody seems to care much." "Well," says J, 11Vietnam's pretty far away. What you need is something closer to home. I've got lt! Corruption. You know, mink coats and deep freezers . Scandals always rack the nation ." "I think this adminlstratloo," he says, "is the most corrupt in American history." '41F I WERE YOU, 1 v.wldn't aay that," says I. "All beU will break loooe." "I already said tt," be says. "Oh," says I. "Let'• see. I know, what if you said you were for closint tu loopholes for tbe fat ab? Everybody'• sore about that." · MlnDeapoll1 Tri~ , Two terms invariably appear in the growing iiumber of reports about energy resources. One is shortage. The other is price increase. They are related, of course, but in ways that sometimes eJC:ape public notice. That relationship ~es especlally important when ex· pOhs are forecasting a doubling In U.S. energy requirements by 1985, an Inability to meet those needs domestically and l rtainties over cost and delivery of gn reaources. t Americans, because or tradition the vagueness of propos~ solutions, to defer worrying about the matter. "nley have i>een coodltioned to abundant ~ cheap energy and the proficiency of U.S. technology in energy and similar utility sVtitems. When Americanr set the tbtrmostat, flip the light switch, turn the fiucet or pick up the telephone, it works: in mO!t other countries it works Sf.!11eUmes. The idea ol ez:pensive or ir· ~ular energy auppUes (or both) is ! beyond the experience of most or us. MOREOVER, SUCH atternallv., u ll>oee .....,tly pr_.i by the ad- Uon's Office of Emergency ness are oot the ktnd that ln- 'cittx.ens to lndivldual action. We are .lo ride """ tranalt and railroads "I did," be ~· ' _. • "Hmmmm.'.' "'llY1 1, "ltn)'!IJ, theff'• ' , ~lots of otber lhlnp "!ll17fn& i;,.Dle.ic • l.'tOuld come ·oot !lit" .,ntin&'~ • · ' IP<ndinc. c1 .. n~g up pbllu ~ flllC welfart rtfonDs ana· •imil rad~ \ ) rcvltlol\J Of our erumbhng soc 1 stru"'" • ture." · orten, make our hou8es better in- ~and ma)'b< use solar enerl)'. The etllonl are IOUnd -lf the means are Uable and not too e'lpensive. fch ts why tbe prlCMUpply rela- hlp of energy IQW'CeS IS 90 lm· "I did," be says. "And c!otl't say 'radical.'" "Don't worry,'' says J, aflt:r a few minutes of silence. "You'll think of something." · SO IT'S COMFORTING to 1moW that good old Georae ii out then oomewhete thlnklnc up daring ~" which. right or wniog, llllmulate Y!gorwl pubUc debate and thus keep lhe. vital juld,. ol our democracy nowtna. M le8't they would U anybody was listenin1. ant. Jn past )'ean, lntematlona.I oil nl<1 earned high profits In the pro- on of foreign crude oil (told mOAtly In non-U.S. markets) and 1uboldi2ed their refining and marketing openllons. The """"" of tbole prollll ts rapidly dec:lloJn& Al produclng countries demand , -.and pt -ownership or their oil welt. 1 hl&htr share of productlon profits. I prlcell In tbe United States 11eem to be driven upward •• a reault. , because of the expected lncreaHJ In peroo>tage ol the American matket .. supplied by oil imports, prices in the United States will be tied still more closely to the rising cost of foreign oU. ANOTHER UPWARD push in prices could come from reducing the oil-deple- tion allowance on•Jomestic production il that often-cited loophole is closed in a tax-reform law. Forbes magazine describes the depletion provision as a subsidy that holds down lhe retail price of a gallon of gasoline from the '1 it might otherwise be. The prospect or sharply increasing energy costs will, we hope, become leverage for overdue polltical~nomic action. RecommendatiGns for conserving energy. developioj: other energy sources and providing more efficient energy-us- ing systems such as m~ss transit are being , heard from both busines:s and government. A good means· of e~ courag\ng consumer and voter ac- ceptance of those recommendatiOOI is to create public awareness of the coet of falling to carry them out. That is why we are encourijged by 1igns that the energy 1hortag1, and tbe effect It lltn havt on pncesr Is becoming a polittcal i.aue. ~--By George --..., Dear Ceorge: It woukl .aeem that more and more advice colWJ\llll are running In the newspapens of the nalM>ri. Could xou tell me 11 this Is because AmerJca is In wore shape mentally and ·motlonally than al any tlme ln history? Or I. It becall!6 the average citizen fttl1 alienated from h1s aurroun<ilngs? Or ~ It because of a general sense of futility? W.E. Dear W.E.: Nab. The reason the newspapers are ao (ull of •dvkt columnlU ls ~Wit we W'Ork ID cheap. !Send yoor problems to Gtoorce and aee what happen1. But don't say you weren•t warned.) . r ~ n v ' 7 ,,