HomeMy WebLinkAbout1972-10-31 - Orange Coast PilotI
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Defense Rebuts
Speed Allegations
In Oiiicer~s Trial
DAILY PILOT
* * * 10' * * *
TUESDAY AFTERNOON, OCTOBER 31, 1972
~ "" Mo. JIS. J SECTK>HS. a l'ACOIS
Spooking Ti111e .. '
Betls ~aetreat'
• on Ille
Athens Tour Bus
Slides Off Road;
5 A111eri~ans Die
Victim, 23,
Peace Deadline Resident
. .
_ • 0A1L Y" Pl LOT ...... IW" ltkfllr1l•ICMll""'
"" ith. a P\lJllpkin nearly as big as she is , ~·ye~ld Tra~i Valo~f of
'l'ffllntington Beach gets ready for some king-Stze •JX>oking tonight.
'fThe giant jack-o-lantern was carved from a pumpkin weighing 115
. ounas.
11J8riJ.-na Testimony
1 Allegations Rebutted
: In P olicemaJJ,' s Trial
By JACK CHAPPELL
ot "" O.llY Pllet 11"1
Expert testimony rebutting the pros·
eeution's allegations of extensive police
ci:r speed and evidence of marijuana and
~n beer cans has come forth in the
mlldemeanor manslaughter trial af San
Qtmeote policeman Gary Adams .
j..dams' trial in tbe Laguna Niguel
l'llmlcipal COUrt of Judge H. Warren lCnlibt stedis from a fatal crash over the
Meptorial Day weekend.
Adams' patrol vehicle collided with' ·a
P.'ll:iNP t~ heavy with camping equip-i&nt and four occupants, one of whom,
J'd!ery Brttt, 16, of Long Beach, died.
Britt and a companion were rlding in
tbi bed of the pickup truck along with at
~t three. cases of beer, sleeping bags
CRASH KILLS .
~ECOND VICTIM
PALERMO; Sicily (UPI) -An Alltalia
oltl,lne crash May I killed HS persons, il>-
dtudlng the daughter of farmer Matteo G11mna. \\'bile Gallina aod farmhand An!Dnlo
Oh1~na, !Tl, were praying at the crash
ihe Monday, a piece of steel from the
Wrtckage \umbled down and killed Giam-
mona. .,
'I
and other campihg items for a San
Onofn: outing.
Thomas R. Bates, an a c c id e n t
reconstnlction engineer with a firm hired
by Adams' attorney Gerald Williams
estimated the police car minimum speed
could have been 45 miles per hour before
braking began.
Previeas testimony by an Anaheim
Police· De~Jiu91t ·traffic invesligator,
officer G~fge P!Stfoot, peg'gt!<i the
ml,nimul!l s~ of .th:e. v~iPe.ai ~miles.
per hour. POsted .speed. Is 30 htiles per.
hour.
Bates engaged in a lengthy description
and explanation on the types of skids and
relative braking efficiency.
lte,furthei' eilimated ~t e'nine to It
r.1ile per hour difference between the two
vehicles' speE!$11 would be the tninimutn
required to throw a body from the back
of the pickup truck.
Eviden<:e of marijuana and open beer
cans wu found during an inventory of
personal articles in the pickup, Chief
Clifford 1M6tfay and narootlca deledive
Mich;lel ~ischl test!Ued Monday.
Reischl, who testified t&st while the
chief of police waited outside the
courtroom, said that while he was in-
ventorying the property at the impound
yard the day lollowing the crash he came
across the contraband material.
The deiectlve 11ld he found about 20
rolled marijuana cigarettes and a plastic
bag containing marijuana. He uid that
!Seo TRIAL, Pogo II
Passes in Viet
By United Prees Internatio nal
The Communists' Oct. 31 deadline for
signing a Vietnam cease-fire passed to-
day with no firm indication when it will
be signed.
The White House said President Nixon
is seeking a lasting peace and will not be
stampeded by Hanoi's deadline of today.
White House officials said earlier it
was improbable the cease-fire would be
signed before the Nov. 7 elections
although both the Hanoi and Viet Cong
delegations to the Paris ta1ks called on
the United States to sign "as soon as
possible."
This was a retreat from their previous
j<sign today" statements.
Presideatial adviser Henry A. Kiss--
inger said Thursday there were a
number of points that should be cleared
up in one more negotiating session.
A clue to one of the major snags came
today from Pham Dang Lam, chief
Saigon negotiator in Paris who was In
Tokyo to brief Japanese officials on
Saigon's position .
Lam told Japanese Viee Premier
Toke<> Miki that Saigon wants assurances
an agreement will mean' the withdrawal
of North Vietnamese troops from Sout h
Vietnam.
He said Saigon wanted "clarification"
on the future of these troops and on the
three-part "National council of ricon·
ciliatlon" which Saigon fears means a
Italian Plane'-_
Crasli Kills 27
BAJ{[, Italy (UPI) -An Italian
airliner smashed Into a farmhouse
on a stony hill near this southern
port city Monday night, killing all
'J:l persons aboard.
A .. ~;kesman for the ATI airline,
a subsidiary of the Alltalla line,
said there were no survivors
aboard the Fokker Frlendablp
which cruhed 31 miles in land from
Bari.· All the Vicllma apperently
were ltallan.
An ATI spokesman said. the
weatbtt wu perfect and the Algbt
apparently was proceed In I
nonnally wlieD the crash occurred.
"Only the lnvesllg•tlon can
determine what hawened," he
said.
I
coalition government.
White House spokesman Ronald L.
Ziegler took note of the Communist
deadline and said, "The only deadline
we're operating under is the ooe that will
bring about the right kind of an agree-
ment.
"'lbe President ha!'! -been v e r y
meticulous in making clear" that he will
not agree to the signing of a peace pact
until the remaining outstanding issues
are clarified, Ziegler said.
"rt is the President's firm intention to
have a settlement which will offer the
best hope for lasting peace and a peace
that does not leave the seed of a future
conflict/' Ziegler said.
Ziegler said that Nixon seeks to reach
(See PEACE, Page I)
Atliens Tour Bus
Slides Off Road
Killing 5 Women
ATHENS (UPI) -A busload of
American pllgrtrru:, retracing the steps of
the Apostle Paul. met death and injuries
today when their bus skidded off the
main highway to ancient Corinth and
slithered down a stony slope, police said.
Thirty-eight tourlets were in the bus,
together with a driver and bis assiJtant.
Police said four women k>st tbe1r Jives
lruitanUy, and a fifth died lateir In
hospital. (The Associated Pess said seven
were killed.)
Twenty-two persoooi less badly injured
were detained in a Corinth hospital and
another eight seriously wounded were
rushed to hospitals In the suburbs of
AtheM.
Police said three penons eaoaped
unhurt.
Name.! of the victims wlll not be
released unUI next of kin are notified,
U,S. Emba.uy aources said.
The group was visiting Greece ae part
of the American organized "Bible
LaDdJ" tour.
A spokeoman for Wbolesale Toun In
Athens, which organized the Grttk part
of the tour, said the tourlsll arrived here
on Monday and wtrt ICheduled to return
home Wedneaday, 1lter spending today
retracing the ateps of st. Paul to anclent
Cot1otb.
He st1ld participants In such toun
came from alJ OVtr the United Statt.1.
Ul"tT .......
T11i119 One On
Emery Mihaly, san Francisco's
registrar of voters, bas a mess·
age -and he puts it over in
distinctive fashion, if you'll
pardon the pun.
Spock Comes Out
For Marijuana
SAN LUIS OBISPO (AP! -P...,iden-
tial candidate Dr. Benjamin Spock
asserts marijuana laws are aimed al
youths and radicals and says he'll "'ork
to legalize use of the drug If elected.
"The poUce are not after the middle
class citizen and are not going Into the
home tp·see If he's smoking marljuanei ,"
the Peace and Freedom Party candidate
told newsmen Sunday.
"They're aftor the long-haired youths,
the blacll: and the white radle1l1, and
anybody the police hate."
Spock oaid Dr. Timothy Leary, who
escaped from the Cllifornla Men 't
COiony here in 1970 while serving a 1·10
year sentence for marijuana passeselon ' . In Laguna Beach, was "be.Ing persecuted
becauac of hit beliefs on the new drugs."
• '
Of Stanton
A redhead whose strangled body was
wrapped in old carpeting and dumped
within site of the posh Yorba Linda Coun·
try Club has been identified as Marla
Jean Hires, 23, of Stanton.
"And that's about all "·e know," sher-
iff s detective WiHie-Stansbury said today.
"Leads are hard to conle by and the
character of the victim doesn 't give us
any clues."
Stansbury said Mrs. Hires was a
claims adjustor for Southern Californ ia
Edison Company in Rosemead. "She was
very highly regarded by everyone who
knew her and her presence in that Joca·
lion is a mystery to us ." Stansbury said.
Investigators are today working on the
theory that Mrs. Hires was killed in some
other location, wrapped in old draperies
and ragged carpeting aM dumped near
the country club.
She was reported missing by her
parents with whom she lived late Sunday.
An all out search fo r the missing
Fullerton Junior College graduate pro-
duced her car with the keys in the ig·
nition a short distance from her home,
but no clue as to her fate until early
l\1onday.
Her body was discovered by a
maintenance man who spotted a hand
protruding from what he at first thought
was an old bundle of rags.
Orange Coast
Weather
Those cold northeasterly winds
should b e g i n to diminish by
Wednesday, according to t h e
weather service. Highs at the
beaches are expected to rtach 65
rising to 75 inland. Lows tonight,
• chilly 42-50.
INSIDE TODi\Y
A mw survey on 1tz life in
f'ra1tce, 1imilar to the old Km-
seu Report. d0tnagc1 the reputa-
t'ion of rrenchmtn cu c:rpert
lotMrs, See .t'°"JI, Page 12. ,,..._ ' ... .__, .. .. _ • -.. ClllMH ... .. .. MlltNI ,-.,... " -·· " "•l!Mtt "-• ,_ .. "Mo -• .... _ • _,. 1•11 ·~ ..... • .,.. MMI: ... 1•11
l..ttrltfllflltlll " ·--" ·-... -" ...... 11 ... ' ""-• MMtliCIM " ............ _ 1).lt ·--•
2 DA.IL V PILOT s TutSda~. OctoOtr 31 , l9n ----Hell ~s Angels Trial Geis Detar From Page l
TRIAL •.•
two or three betr caos wllb lbe puU labs
removed ...,.. al!o found IJ1 the truck.
OAKLAND fA Pl -Ttw trial of four
llelb Angels on chart1.es ol mu rdering a
TexM n0in ~tay 21 bart!ly got starled
before It wa.9 continued • ~·eek after the
prosecutio1. d1sc lo!it.'<1 It withheld M pagl'S
of potential evidence from I.he dti{erisc .
Senior trial dt'!puty prosecutor Oonald
P. \Vhlte told Superior Court Judge
\VUliam J . Hayes Monday be had hidde n
the material rrom the defense in goo:!
COfl.&cic11cc "to prottct the life" of a nc,v·
Jy discovered witness.
White told newsmen 1;1\er the \\'itncss
is an Alameda County jaH trusty v.•ho
was can ying notes back and forth
betw een the four defendants, all
members of lhe motorcycle club . while
thty have been awaiting trial on the 10th
floor of tht county building he.re.
Defense attorneys charged that the
pN!ttcution has been Ignoring an earUer
court order to tum over to the defd\M all
stntements niade ..:>ither by or about th~
defendants.
\Vhite said he purposely had not told
the defense al>out the notes becau»e to do
so would have di.sclO&ed the identity of
the infol'Olanl who, he ll&ld , "wouldn't
\i,,e to see the outside of the Jail" if lt
bf'Came kno~'n,
Out of court, defense atto rney Ja1nes
Crew said some of the notes were
purportedly written "by my client,"
Ralph "Sonny" Barg@r, and some by
other defendants, but that most were
\\ritten by the informant himse lf on the
UPI T ..... i.
basis of what tbt dtfendanta told him.
•Crew and other defense lawyen coo-
tend('d th.! notes ''could cbangt the entlre
complexion of the cue" and aald 1 cca-
tlnuance was vital IO they could study
them.
Judge iil\yes aranted a week but said
Jury selection mu.st be&in el 9 a.m. next
Monday. .
The four, Barger, St, former leader of
the lfells Angels be~; Stt1ey Walton,
27 · Gary Popkin, 27, and DooaJd Smith,
32: are charged with murder and all but
Smith are charged with 8.tflOh.
Their alleged vtctltn, Servlo Winston
Agero, 29, was found shot to death with a
single bullet in the bathtub of a buminl
home in the Oakland hUls.
Frotn Pa9e l
PEACE ...
an agreement that will wipe out the
possibility of a ne\v war as \\'ell as "lo
assure the people of South Vietnam with
the means of detennining their own
future."
Kisslnger was in the \Vhlte House to-
day, and while it ·.vas apparent he would
be traveling again soon to Paris, officlals
said there was no set timetable for
another round of negotiations with Com-
munist diplomats.
Reports had been circulating in
Washington that ·Kissinger would fly to
Paris Friday and be ready to alga an
end-the-war tr:::1ty by Sunday.
Officia ls today discounted the posslbili·
ty there y.·ould be any signing before
another round of consultations with
Hanoi 's delegates in Paris and another
probable trip by Kissinger to SalJ!on to
bring South Vietnamese Pr e s i (l e n t
Nguyen Van Thieu into the fold.
Officials said at this Point Klssiriger
had oo definite plans to 1 e a v e
Washington. But it was clear he was in
touch with Hanoi through secret negolia-
-lioos and al90 with Russia and China who
are putting pressure on their ally to keep
lines open.
THIS IS NO WAY TO PROVE YOUR POINT
Pony Expres5 Run Get5 Off to Bad Start
French authorities, who have been in
charge of the physical side of the 3'At-
year-<>ld talks, sent a crew of workers to
the conference hall on Paris' Avenue
Kleber todny to put into the meeting hall
steel stands and flashlights for television
crews.
Pony Express Riders
Trying to Best Mail
* * * Communists, U.S.
Trade Extensive
Vietnam Attacks
BAL TlMORE fUPl) -Pony express
riders for the National Association of
Professional Bureaucrats trotted along
U. S. 1 today, confident they'll get to
\Vashington well ahead of the letters they
mailed as they left Philadelphia .
James Boren, president of the associa·
lion. told the horsemen there was "no
rea.son to rush." He said they easily
would reach Washington before the mail.
The horsemen left h1onday, the day the
letters were mailed.
The only trouble Boren anticipated wa s
in Baltimore. where a 19th century
ordinance prohibits horse racing in the
city streets.
Police \\"arned the group they u•ould
enforce the law. Boren indicated there
would be no racing because he saw no
need for it.
Boren. a former St.ate Department of·
ficial, organized the pony exprw as part
or a continuing spoof of bureaucracyi
His group, whose motto is "When in
doubt, mumble," said the six riders and
eight horses could beat the regular mail
service between Philadelphia a n d
Washington.
Asked to comment on the race, a
Postal Service official said, "We only
have two words to say about this: No
comment."
Boren pi cked the wrong horse to carry
him on the initial leg of the trip.
Homburg in hand and dressed in a
well-tailored business suit, he n1ounted
OU.N•E COAST ST
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the steed and prompUy was tossed to the
pavement in front of Philadelphia's
Independence Hall. He then turned the
mailbags over to a professional rider.
Power Line Kills
Man in San Diego
SAN DIEGO (AP) - A citizen of San
Salvador was electrocuted when he
touched a power line that had been felled
by strong winds, officers says.
San Diego County Sheriff's officers
said Roberto Osmin Quintero, 2.1, was
k.llled Monday when he grabbed a 12,000-
volt power line that had fallen across a
v;ood pile and chicken coop of a ranch he
was visiting in Bonita.
Winds in the area gusted up to 40 miles
an hour, toppling trees and numerous
power lines. '
SAIGON (UPI) -Commtmist troops
att.acked relentlessly throughout South
Vietnam today while American 852
bombers responded with a near record
number of raids over the north, military
spokesmen reported.
The raids and cotder-raids ca~ on
the day the Communists had chosen for a
ceasefire.
On the battlefields the width and length
{)f South Vietnam, C:Ommunist attacks in-
creasl'd. the Saigon high command said.
The C{)mmand reported 121 shelling. ter-
ror and ground attacks between dawn
Monday and dawn today.
U.S. B52s flew at least 39 raids against
North Vietnam between noon Monday
and noon today, the U.S. command said.
Communist troops overran two dlstrict
capitals on South Vietnam's cenlral
coast, military sources sakl.
Field reports confirmed by military of-
ficers said government troops were forc-
ed out of Ba To. 300 irilles north of
Saigon, and Que Son, MO miles above the
capital.
Coming to California
Nixon Plans Television
Speech on Election Eve
WASHll'\GTON (AP \ -Preeldent Nix·
on has scheduled a round of television
and radio broadcasts Including a
television speech on election eve for the
.,.,·indup of his re-election campaign that
wlll lake him to Cal lfomla Saturday.
The White I-louse announced Nixon will
give a 30-minute address to the nation on
live radi<rTV from the White House
Thursday night at 4:30 p.m. PST for
what was described as "a look to the
future and discussion of his hopes for the
future of this cou ntry."
The three n1orc ra<llo and two
televi sion addresses are all paid political
broadcasts. press secretary Ronald L.
Zlcglcr sold, i!nd they will give Nixon a
C{)ncenlratlon of broadcasting for every
day e1cept &mday unUI the election.
The President and Mrs. Nlxon plan to
fly to California <urday a:nd land at the
Ontario IntemaUonat Airport In early
evenin~ for an airport rally in San
Bernardino County,
From there they wlll helicopter to Son
Clemente, wher@ they will stay to vote
Tuesday inornJng and return t o
Wuhlngton to receive election results Ht
lhc White I-louse.
Ziegler Indicated that there may be
other campaigning 11<Uvltle1. but he hAd
no firm det.alfs to provide today .
Nixon had canceled a major ·~
pe&rance in the Chicago art• for today
bc.1:0Juse or Monday's train wreck th@re.
Thurtday!1 tel1vblon broadcalt· will be
carried by the NBC Television network.
The Monday evenJng Jive broadcast,
which Will emtnate (rom tho Los Angtles
area, possibly the Western Wlllte House,
•
does not yet have an announced lime or
topic, Ziegler said.
Ziegler was aiked whether Nixon
would make any speeches doallng
specifically with Vietnam. He said Nixon
does not plan a specific address on that
subject, but it was obvkJw: that he might
ir.clude It in a discusllon of the future or
the country.
Jn his lll06t r~t radio speech Nixon
promlBcd If ..,..lecled "one ol my
highest-priority proposals" will be prop-.
erty·tnx relief for older citizens.
Fruit Picker's
Booty $100
A light-fingered thief plucked
about 100 pounds ol lrult from •
Costa Mesa man'• trfe Monday in
whal lnvesttgatorl evaluate as a
daring, dayUght avocodo caper.
Gus II. Beach, o1 S'1I E. ltst SI.,
caUed to complalh when be found
all but two avocadot -a $100 i...
hued on today'• ~tall prtces -
atriooed from hla baol<1•rd tree.
oflietr Dave Ketchum aald
whoever tovaded Beach'• backyard
with a stepladder mlll\ have done It
between sunrise and IWlMt due to
auch • thorough job.
They apparently just couldn't
reach the last two.
In court, Cn:w also demanded that the
court order the prosecution to turn over
to the dcfenae any statement& It bad In-
volving "t"t of a body lluld on a boat at
Bethel Island."
Judge Hayes aaid this refeJTed to
bloodstains but it was oot turther ex4
plained ln court.
Judge Hayes earlier denied a defense
moUon for an lndefinlte continuance or
the trial on grounds local news accounts
ol the case were prejudiclal to a fair
trtal.
He told lbe defense to "be reasonable"
about news C!>verage, saylng that under
the First Amend.men! lbe media have a
right to report the news.
!le also denied a defense motion to
dlsmjss the present panel of prospective
Jurors on grounds 11 \V&S selected before
h1arch and contaJns no one under 21.
Ttwi trial began under the heaviest
security ever seen here. .
Everyone entering the courtroom, Ul·
eluding the press, must pass metal detec-
tors and undergo body search. Once tn,
courtroont doors are locked, and on the
third floor where the court Is located, aU
stairwells and public restrooms are kept
locked.
Even Judge l{ayes' chnmbers have
chains across the window to prevent
anyone trying to leap three floors to the
g·round.
Celebrities Appear
Nixon Backers
• Gather Ill Capo
By JOHN VALTERZA
Of 1M O•llY Pll• 5ttft
Hundred! of top Orange County SU~
porters of Richard Nixon gathered in San
Juan Capistrano Monday to quickly
review the virtues of lbeir candidate,
then ••celebrate" the President's victory
next week.
Nonethel~. former U.S. Treasurer
(now California Treasurer) Ivy Baker
Priest urged lbe faithful not to be lulled
into complacency but instead to insure
that all supporters of Nixon's reelection
actually go to the polls to cast their vote.
"Tb.at is the best wa; for us tu achieve
that landslide we are waiting for ," she
said.
Billed as a fund raiser at the El Adobe
Restaurant in the Mission community,
the event also was marked by plaudits
for prominent Orange Coast Republican ·
leader Victor C. Andrews of Emerald
Bay, heralded as the key man in th°e
county's effort to re-elect the President.
Andrews received a decorated platter
for his efforts in the campaign.
Soon afterwards, political issUes gave
way to comedy.
Comic ~1orey Amsterdam took to the
dais to run through a series of Poli.sh and
Italian jokes,, then turned an acid wit
toward South Dakota, the home state of
Sen. Ge<lrge McGovern.
"But before . I go any further,"
Amsterdam , said, I h a v e to say one
thing:
··~cGovern's a schmuck!''
"And speaking abou t South Dakota , the
only good thing they got is the mountain
with the four faces on it.
"But now they're all looking down at
McGovern and . • . (Amsterdam gave
the crowd a facial expressiqn of in-
credulity.
"Then there's Watertown." he added.
'"l'hat place is so small, the head of the
~1afia there is Jewish."
When lbe rough Amsterdain humor
suLsided, the group watched another
comedy routine, followed by a brief stint
by Zsa Zsa Gabor, cloaked in mink.
The jaunty tone of the evening, besides
producing laughter among the Orange
County GOP leaders. also spawned one
new campaign song that may never
reaUy catch on in time for the election.
lt Is a derivation of a pop gospel song
that begins, "Put your hand in the hand
of the man from still blue watef's: ... "
'l1lia campaip'• veraion goes:
"Put your hand ln the hand of the man
who's in the White House,
"Put hour hand In the hand Ol the man
whose middle name is Milhous."
O•lt. Y PILOT 5t1ff .......
SUPPORTS THE PRESIDENT
Actress Zu 251 Gabor
Tustin .!\'Ian Killed
In F1·eeway Crash
Cletus T. llord, 50, of 1612 Amherst
Road , Tustin , \\'as killed early today
when he lost control of his car south-
bound on the Santa Ana Freeway near
Red Hill Avenue.
The Orange County Coroner's office
said he died of head injuries received
when the car rolled over scYeral times
after leaving lhe freeway.
All For The Family-
Reischl made a carefully worded
rebuttal to prosecutor Don Ctarent.-e's
charge that the sell'Ch was UlepL
lfe said the Ullcit material WU hap-
pened upon during a routine IJCCO\lltlng
of property which the department
nonnally widertaketi following a serious
llll<:idelll.
Clarence asked why a n1:1rcotlcs ofrJcer
was called into the matter and the mod-
haired, mustachioed detective replied
that it w1:1s his scheduled d'1tY day and he
wa<> the only detective on duty at the
time.
Chief MWTa)' along wlth another detec-1
tlve ,was present at the lime of tbe in-
ventory. Clarence again asked if it was
the policy of tbe San Clemente depart-
ment to in ventory the property of all
vehicles involved in serious aceident.s.
'"'Yes sir, •. is," the chief said firmly .
In other testimony Chief Murray said
he personall y had stood behind the stop
sign at the crash scene and had timed
police cars making test runs along El
Cc:mino Real in an effort to determine
the length or time a car would be vl!lble
rrom the point that it could first be seen
1.0 reaching the intersection.
Murray said that at a speed of 70 mile s
per hour a patrol car . would take 22
seconds to reach the intersection from
the point it was first visible; at 60 miles
per hour, 25 seconds; and at 50 miles per
hour, 30 seconds.
The 16-year-old driver ol the vehicle
testified that he had waited some 15 to 20
seconds at the stop sign at A venida
Dolores discussing whlch way to tum onto
El Camlno Real.
Previous testlmcny by the driver,
Daniel Cross and a passenger in the vehi·
cle had indicated that neither of them
bad drunk beer prior to the accident.
That testimony also included statements
that no other intoxicating substances
other than the beer were in the truck.
The chief also testified about finding a
pair of prescription glasses in a com·
partment ir the bed of the pickup truck.
He saitl he placed the glasses in the
glove compartment of the 11-year-<>ld
vehicle.
The driver, Cros .. , is required to wear
glasses to drive and the youth testified
that he was wearing his glasses at the
time of the accident. He said, however,
that he recovered them covered with
blood and gravel Crom the glove com·
partment vf the vehicle the day following
the accidt'fl.t.
Cross also testified that he first saw a
poltee car bearing down on him from
behind only after reaching the middle of
the intersection an<l !Mt he gunned his
truck and attemptec:. to awerve to the
right to get out or the poUce unit's way.
At the same time Adams too swerved
to the right attempting to pass the slow
movlng truck and the two vehicles met in
the death crash.
Adam> has been as.signed desk officer
duties with the department since the
manslaughter charges were filed
New York Black
Students Get
.Police Escort
NEW YORK (AP) -Amid jeers and
booing from hundred:; of white adults, 30
black and Puerto Ri can pupils guarded
by helmeted police walked into a junior
high school in the Carnarsie section or
Brooklyn today for their third day of
classes this year.
The adults. whose protests helped to
keep the minority group children from
entering the school until last week, were
kept behind police barricades as the
school opened for the day.
A scufne broke ou t as a white man
wrested a placard away from a black
woman who w3!: among a group of black
adults in ftont of the school to show sup-
port for the minority pupi!s' admission.
White r.rotest leaders said their
children's boycott continued to reduce at-
tendance !lharply at the acbool and at
other schools in the district.
WHAT CHANGES YOUR HOUSE MORE THAN ANY OTH ER THING?
WHAT IMPROVES ACCOUSTICS DRAMATICALLY?.,
WHAT WARMS UP A HOUSE?
WHAT IMPARTS UNIQUE BEAUTY AND COMFORT?
. . -CARPETING FROM ALDEN'S, THArs WHAT!
(IF YOUR HOUSE "STIFLES" YOU, STOP IN AND SEE US FAST.)
'
ALDEN'S
CARPETS e DRAPES
1663 Placentia Ave.
COST.A MESA
646-4038
HOURS: Mon. Thru Thu,..,, 9 11> 5:30 -FR I., 9 to 9 -SAT .• 9'30 to S
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s DAILY PILOT 3
M o'frile Care
Director Named
To Medical Unit
DAILY PILOT ll1UI ,,..M
Queen
Sharon Prather of Irvine ha s
been crowned Homecon1ing
Queen of Sa ddleback College.
Miss Prather is a sophomore.
Catholic Scl1ool
In Lag una Bea cl1
Makes Comeback
LaRUna BeArh'q SI. Catherinc·St.
Nicholas Catholic School now is fiscaTiy
~unn, hils allllOSt Altained its capacity
enrollment of 280 and has just purchased
a new 72-nasenc:er hus. it was reported at
the school's latest board meeting.
The school. rormerly called St.
Catherine's. was threatened with closure
last year 'vhen the Si~ters nf St. Joseph or Carondelet were obliged to leave thei r
teaching no<1ts for assil!nments in other
areas and lt appeared they could not be
repla~.
However. parents. pa rishioners and the
pi'!stor nf St. Catherinr of Siena Cl!thol ic
Church launched a drive to save the 16-
vear-(lld school and mailed hundreds of
letters to convents across the country
t.-v in(I' '" Jor..11tp JI group of teac.'hing nuns
to run the school.
The in vitallon was accepted bv lhe
Benf"dlctine Sisters of Rapid City, South
Dakota.
Because the durden of su pporting thl:
school ~·as Ix-coming loo hea\-y for the
Lainina p;irish. and becnuS4! so mnnv
i;1udcnts '''Prt cominJO! f r om th' S:id-
fl leb.,r:k V::illev area. it WR" af?rf"'d 1ha1
!he fiirilit\' !1hn11l'1 he jointly s11hc;i'1izPd
bv the L::iJYUna I-fill" o::irish of St. 1\?irholas
anl'I L"l{t'r>.,'s St. Catherin(' naris1·.
Under its new combined name, St.
r"llv•rinP-St Ni,-.hol:>c; h<is bcrornf' il pilot
rxperil'T'l'nl ir dual parish operation. the
fir<it In the ArrhdiOI'"~ of Los Anee\es.
Experts in parochial educ a t ion .
f"USlres IParnPrl l<i"' \VP.Pk. arP nhservfru~
the experir11ent with lntC'rf'"il as a pos.i:;i-
hlr fnr!'1ull'I fnr m::iinlaininl? th" n;irorh1a]
school svstem. which has suffered in re-
rf'"'t ve;~ f-r>'ll 1 .. rk of funds. f"lrc1ng
closure of many schools.
Disc ussio1is Set
On Pro1J os itions
Voters in doubt about the arp,uments
for and against the many prooosilions
appeAring on the Nov. 7 OOllot are
welcome to a special n1eeting of the
Capistrano Bay Area League of Woman
Voters Wednesdny evening.
The group will sponsor a discussion of
all the ballot items facinli! the electorale
in a meeting starting at. 8 p.m. at the San
Diego Gas and Electric meeting room in
San Clemente.
'Tricking' Kids
Noiv l t Felon y
Tl is a felon\· this year lo willfully
put gla!s. razor blades or any
harmful substance in Halloween
trr ... ts oiven in Cal ifornia.
Un<IPr a ne" slate law. conviction
Is punishable by up to 10 years in
prison.
Slate offlcials h:ivc recornm .. nded
that parents accompany children
on their round~ of nei~hh'lrh'!Ods
and look over the goodies they col·
lect for possibly harmful items.
A program designed to save the lives
of halt of Orange County'& heart attack
victims who die bef:ire receiving ade-
quate medical attention will get under
way next yea r.
Robert c. White, administrator of the
Lion Cou 1itry
Loses Two
Chinipa11 zees
T\\'O 3-year-old chimpanzees valued by
Lion Country Safari officials at $l.OOO
each were stolen Monday night from the
quarantine room at the Irv ine game
preserve.
The theft of "Bruce" and "Boxer,"
chimps acquired by Lion Country rrom
Sierra Leone, came just six wetks after
th~ theft of l·year-(lld Ling Pu from the
same location.
Orange County Sheriff's officers are
~'Orking on the theft of. all three animals
with the firm belief that the burglary
was an inside job.
"It certainly looks that way," a Lion
Country spokesman .igreed today. "We
arc very, very concerned about the con-
dition of these chimps -they will not
survive very long at this time of year
without the proper diet and treatment"
Ling Pu was never recovered. It is
believed that the infant chimp was sold
shortly after being carried off, possibly
by the same intruders who removed
Bruce and Boxer from their cages.
"It was someone who knows his way
<1round here and is familiar with security
routines," the Lion . Country spokesman
added. "And it was someone who cared
very little for the welfare of two delicate
animals."
Marine Draws
Sentence After
Killing of So11
C.amp Pendlf'lon Marine Steven George
Coleman has been sentenced to one to 15
years in stale prison for the killing of his
2-vear-(lld son.
·orangP r..ountv Superior Court Jud~e
James Turner imposed the punishment
011 Coleman, 21. ju~I si:it w~ks after a
jury in his courtroom ruled that. the
voun~ Ma rine wa~ sane whPn he Inflicted
fatal ~injuries on Brittian John Coleman
at his S'>nta Ana home.
The little bov nevPr recoverNI con·
sciousne!'s froni the lim,. he was first
treated for multiple injurie~ March 13 to
the tirn<' he died at Orange County
~tedical Center.
IY>clors whn e:itamined the child said
he died as a result of massive internal in·
juriP.s inflicted by a heavy and susta ined
beating.
Ma 11 Kills Wife,
Ta kes Own Life
EL CENTRO (APl -A 67·ve;ir-0ld
man \vlwse P~franged wife refused to
movP back 1vith him shot anrl killed her
~ •d then took his own life. officers said.
Imperial ))unty sheriff's deputies said
thev found the body of Charles W. Stiles.
a retired farmt •. and his wife Leaner' 60,
in their dauf!hlrr's house Monday.
A witness told officers Stiles came to
1?.~ house. '"h ~his ""'ifc had bef'n living
since their separation three weeks a~o.
and asked her to sew scme clothes. While
she was ..ewing, the witness ~id , he ask·
ed her to re join him and she refused .
Indian s in Car avan
ST. PAUL, l\.1inn. IAPl -A caravan or
more than 500 Indians is en route from
SI. Paul to Washin1?ton In turn over a list
nf grievances and demands to federal of-
ficials. The caravan of about 100 cars
and 1 .... ·o buses left St. Paul Monday after
a week·long encampment. The:v were to
reach Milwaukee Monday night. Colum·
hus. Ohio. by tonight and Washington by
Wednesda y.
Alleged Corona Victim
. Described us Pervert
l-~Affif!ELD (AP \ -One of the 25
t illncrMt farm workers Juan Coronn Is
charged with murdering in 1971 h11s been
de!ICflbed In the lnrm labor contr&C:tor's
trial as A rcgL,tered sex deviate.
The testimony MondAy by " Butte
County sheriff's deputy follows long con·
tentlon by drfense nttomey Richard E.
Howk thot the murders were l~ work of
' nn unknown homosexual who killed hi s
victim s after submitting to sod-On1y with
them.
Corona, he argued, ls a "hopelessly
beterotexual" fsmily man with several
children and could nr.t have commltted
the murders. which came to llt;thl In May
1971 "''hen the bodie~ were dug up near
Yuba City. 100 miles north of here.
Capt. Lloyd Fillmore of Oroville was
called to the stand r.londay by !peclnl
proseculor Bart \Yllllams to help iclenllfy
the remains of Pttul B. Alleri, the 17th
body e;thumcd from peach orchard
g-rnvcs along the fi'eathcr River. l{e said
Allen had been arrested in Buue County
111 11169 and WllJ t1 register«! sex deviate.
Wllllams has said homoae1uality may
be an Increasingly lengthy part of the
prosecution '-ase.
,,
Orange County Medical Center has an-
oounced the appolntmeqt of Ray Rieder
as director of the county1s mobile in·
tensive care programf effective at once.
Rieder has been an administrative
assistant at the m~ center for five
years.
Callfomla law authorizes a hospital
operated by a oounty to conduct pilot
programs using mobile intensive .care
paramedics and the Board of Supervisors
approved such a program in July.
The pilot program will combile
specially equipped and trained staff of
the medical center with specially trained
and equipped flre rescue un:lt personnel.
The law allows pBTamedics to furnish
medical care at the scene provided they
have received the necessary special
training.
The training program for fire se rv ices
personnel in .Huntington Beach, La Habra
and Orange County will start in January,
White said.
Six months of training is expected to
provide time to activate the ~rogram in
the two cities and the county fire depart·
ment. Future pfanajng will include. the
potential for life-saving s e r v 1 c e
throug)iout the cowity.
White said an estimated I.250 deaths
occur in Orange County every year due
to heart attacks. Half or these victims
di .. within the first hour after an attack.
many times before receiving any medical
attention, the hospital chief said.
"Studies have shown that manY of
these persons would survive if rapid and
effective treatment could be provided
immediately after the attack occurs."
White said. "Experience in other areas
has indicated that the mortality rate for
ht.art victims can be reduced by as much
as 50 percent when a mobile intensive
care system is in operation."
\Vhen the program is operational next
year. the system will be activated by a
call for help tO a fire dispatcher. While
the paramedics a r e rushing to the
scene, they will establish radio com·
municalion with a physician or nurse in a
hospital.
The physician and nurst: will advise the
paramedics on proper treatment after
they arrive at the scene. lf necessary,
monitoring equipment such as an elec·
trocardiogram machine can be attached
to the patient and the results transmitted
by telemetry for interpretation by a
physician or specially trained nurse.
Mary Lous Galore
Imitation is the sincerest form of fl attery, so third
and fourth graders at San Francisco's 1-lilJ,voo d Day
Co ffee, as their I lalloween prank. They also pre-
sented l\frs. Coffee with an autographed pumpkin.
School came disguised as_th_•_!_c_ac:he_r_, l\1ar~ ~~ _______ _
Squad to Probe
Obsce1iit y Vie·1vs
Tlirou ~liou.t State
SAN DIEGO (AP) -The police
department's traveling vice squad takes
to the road next week, as l\VO
plainclothes officers begin a month-long
jaunt to rind out \\'hat the rest of the
st11te considers obsct!ne.
A d:?partment spokesman says the lWJ
will visit 60 California cities. stopnin~ at
live sex shows. erotic inovies and adults·
only bookstands. In addition, they'll poll
I.000 persons statewide on their stand·
ard,<; of obscenity.
The pu.-~ is twofold. the spokesman
said: to !!Stablish the offi~rs as expert
witnesses 1n obscenity trials. and to
detennine community standards on
obscenity. a guideline used by courts.
The tour is made annually.
The Ci.y Council. which at first refused
to appropriate $2.130 for this year's tr!P·
changed its mind recently when the c~ty
attorney said it wou!l cost $9.000 to h1r~
outsiders as expert witnesses on obscen1·
ty.
Illinois All-year Scl1ool
Study Supports Di st1·ict
Spokesmen for the Capistrano Unified
School Di<il rirt to<hry inrti re<>tlv replied to
foes of the all-year concept by citing a
studv m11de in Lockport, Ill .. showlnJ?
that.the 45-1 5 program "Is a feasible and
wo rkable plan."
Dispatrhes from tbe district head·
quarters were iss ued ea rly this week in
the wake of another news release sut>-
mittcd la:;t \1'eek by parents oppos ing all·
yea r school.
The parents asserted that the concept
of keeping s1u der1s in class for 45 school
dAys followed by 15 days off _offered
more disadvantages than good points.
The opponcnu also cited stories
published in national school publications
citing many drawbacks to all-year
school.
But the Lockport study. conductl!<I in a
school district credited with launching 45-
15. asserts otherwise.
The success of the program. say the
researchers in the Miowest. lie ir careful
pl;onning for stuci<'nl and teacher
schedules. alons;: ~·ith "the developmenl
of a high level or tru st in the school
district by .:1.! mmunity."
District officials related that the
reseHrchers p:obed Lockport'!! program
for three years before detennining the
fei:i.sibility.
Tht results of the monitorinf asserted-
Jy showed that 45-15 hacl caused "no
si,nificant drops in academic ach.icve-
ment."
They added that the program allowed
for more explora lion of team teaching
and other innovations in education.
Loca!\y, the deba1e center:; on two
main points.
Parents voiCing dissatisfaction with the
idea have said they are oot convinced
that 45-15 offers better education to their
children.
The ~ond major fear is the personal
scheduling problem among families with
mure than one child in school.
STATION WAGONS
o Montego ~IX Villager
'
e Marquis Colony Park c Monterey Stati on Wagon
---LEASE---.
Specialist In Full Maintenance Lea sin9 !
SEE ONE ••• TRY ONE ••• BUY ONE ••• TODAY!
•0rcmo1 Count~·· 1omflw of Flu Car~
Rome Of The New car , • ,
"Golde• To11ela" ohnson& son Rome 01 Tbe New C.tr •••
"Goldear_.,,. ..
' . t I '-.{.! I I ;~ .i,.
.~ ,~ ...... ·,,,,;nu mv ,-t_• ... ,i;: ;j1 ..
. •• flt. . • '¥.' .. ..
2821 HARBOR BLVD., COSTA MESA • 640·&630
I
4 DAILY ~ILDT T-. llct'°" >l. 1972
Closing In
On the Wallet
MONEYBAGS OEM. -All )00 need
around our house is for the Uttle Woman
to lake off for a couple of days and
abruptly, lhe letnalife set n-.::ive<s in on the
Old Man'.s wallet like sbarb striking for
the kill.
Youngsters are wonderful. Li k e
predators of the sea. their beady eyes
are ever-vigilant, searching for some
weakness. some opening. whereupon they
may slash in quickly and strike -thus
~aping with an extra 75 cents or so.
TEENAGERS ARE particularly agile
in this department. They know when the
Little Woman is away. my mind is preoc·
cupied with urgent mallet's. Like trying
to unearth !he co ffee pol from the bowels
of the dishwasher. In such moments of
anguish, I'm likely to get something like
this:
"Dad. can I have two bits for milk at
school today!''
You are still groveling down there for
the coffee pot. It's an automatic
response. You start groping in your
pocket for loose change.
Abruptly , your mind goes back into
gear. ··Hey, wait a minute. Since when
has milk at school been a quarter?"
He looks at you coldly. "Dad, haven't
you ever heard of inflation?"
Economic lessons, I'm getting already,
over the coffee pot.
ESCAPE l1''TO the bathroom for a
shave proves futile. Another teenager at·
tacks the door with heavy knocking.
"Dad. can I have SJ.SO for my school
annual?"
"I thought you were supposed to pay
tor that oul of your allowance ... "
"Yeah, but I need the $3.50 oow
because 1 can get an e"tra 18 pages in
my annual if r pay early."
''Wait a minute . are you trying to tell
me that those who pay early get a bigger
book than those "'ho pay late? Are you
trying to tell me there are different .siz.ed
books for slow-payers and fast-payers?"
AHA! I'VE frNAU..Y trapped one of
the money-seekers "'ho tried to slip one
by me on the publi.shlng dodge. Even my
foggy early-morn brain cells tell me the
school people aren't about to put out two
differenl-sizcd year books.
"No. but if we all pay early, they say
"'e can have an extra 18 pages in the
book."
"You can pay early after your mother
gets hon1e ." Case dJsmissed.
NEXT FOLLOWS an argument over
surfboards. This is not the time of yea r
for riding them. Thi! is the time to strip
orr all the old fiberglass and reshape the
lhi ngs. Question is, who pays for the new
fiberglass and resin? Not me, I declare,
fleeing to put on my tic.
i\fiddle son confronts ive in the dreS!-
ing room. "Dad, I need a cou ple of
bucks.''
"What for~·-
··1 busted a guitar string. Gotta have a
new one."
"Play on four strings. You're good."
DAUGHTER. TllEN announces she
ntust have taxicab fa re because .she has
to leave school early for her dentist's ap-
pointment. "Okay, here's two dollars.".
She complains that one--way fare is
$1.~ and how is she going to get home'.'
"Walk -and bring me 75 cents in
change ... "
I sure hope the Litlle \Voman comes
home soon. I'm not sure how long 1 can
hold out.
Co1wnunists Backed
BOSOON !AP) -Angela Davis said
Mond11y that election of American Com-
munists to minor offices would be a step
toward bringing 90eiallsm to the United
States. "It is pos~lble for Communist
candidates to win, and they will be able
to ftght more militantly for socialism,"
RESCUERS SEARCH DEBRIS OF MINNESOTA VARIETY STORE AFTER BLAST
Six Per10ns Died in Explosion Linked to a Ruptured Gia Line
Gas Explosion Kills Six
100 Volu11teers Search Rubble of Min11esota Store
LAKE CITY, Minn. (APl -A search
ended today for more victims of a gas
line expl06ion that leveled a variety store
about the time several children were
going in and out to collect pri:z.es for a
llal!owecn coloring con test. Six people
v•ere killed and nine injured .
Three of those killed in the accident
Monday "'ere children. five other
youngsters were among the injured.
1'i10RE THAN 100 police. firemen and
volunteers searched throughout the night
for other possible victlms, but that was
temporarily called off at dawn and a
Police Department spokesman said there
Trudeau Liberals Lose
Majority_ Hold on House
OTTAWA (UPI) -Prime fl.linister
Pierre 'Trudeau 's ruling Liberal party
kl.st its majority control of Canda's
House of Commons in fl.1onday's national
elections, finishing i:'l a virtual deadlock
with the surprising Conservative party.
The balance or power was held by
minorit y parties and ob.servers said the
stalemate was almost sure to result in
another election in the near future to
give one party or another a clear n1an·
date.
LATE RETURNS k>day sho~·ed the
Liberals controlling 108 of the cou:ltry's
264-seat constituenci('s and t h e
Conservatives, led by Robert Stanfield,
had 107. The Socialist New Democralie
party (NOP) won 32 scats and the
Quebec-based Social Credit had 15.
Final resuJts rrom three scattered
ridings were not expected until late to-
day. These inelude the distanl northwest
constituencies of Meado>M-·\ake. Sask .. and
Chu rchill. Man.. where the N e w
Democratic party. and Pf ogress iv e
Conservatives were waging a close bat-
tle, and in Belchasse. Que .. whefe a
Social Credit candidate had been leading
the Liberal candidate but where con-
siderable rechecking was going on.
Trudeau needed 133 seats to form a
majority government. He had held 147
seats going into the election, compared to
73 for th e Conservatives.
TWO INDEPENDENT me1nbers -one
of them f{ou se Speaker Lu c i e n
Lamoureux and the other fnrmer
Conservative Roch Lasalle -were also
el~ted.
Either party cou ld govern with the
guaranteed support of the N e w
Democrats. bu1 NDP leader David 1,,wls
said he would not enter a coalition
goverrunent .
"IF THE LJBERALS form a minority
EATS INTO MAJORITY
Canada's Stanfield
government," he said. "we would go
along supporting good legislation but OP·
posing bad legislation. We would demand
ch::inge~ in the tnx system."
Should a 1Yorkable coalition be unat-
ta inable. new elections would ha..,e lo be
called -a possibility that is believed
almost certain to occu r.
When early returns showed the
Conservatives \eadin~ by two seats, Stan-
OeJd said his party was prepared to form
a govemment. But later he said . "I think
Wi! should wait to see what morning
brings.··
was no indication any others were trap-
ped' in the rubble.
There were 10 to IS persons in the
store when the explosion occurred sbortly
before the S p.m. closing time.
Nona Weinmann of Lake Clty said she
was in the .store aboul 20 minutes before
closing. She said most of those there at
that time "'ere children who had come to
collect the prizes.
About 10 minutes later the explosion
came.
"I HAPP ENED to be looking across
the street when I saw a flash of light, the
roof coming down and dust blowing out."
said Jm-y Nihart, a clerk at a store
across the street. "Then the noise
came."
The dead, all of the Lake City area,
"'ere identified as ~1rs. Ray Kehren; her
son. Timothy, 10, >M-'ho died in a
Rochester hospital; Kr istine McElmury.
about 4; Mrs. Ray Rodewald; and two
clerks at the store, Marjorie Freiheit.
about 40, and Elaine Dammrum, about
3'1.
Linda Farrington, who operated the
two-story concrete block-brick Ben
Franklin store with her widowed mother.
Mrs. M. G. Farrington, said both were
standing near an entrance when the blast
occurred .
"There was the boom .'' she said.
"That's abou t it. That's all I wan t to say
... all 1 can say now. We don't know
what to say, what to do .. what to
feel."
U.S. Asks Cuba
To Rettu·11 Four
Hijack Suspects
WASHINGTON (UPI) -Last week
Charles A. TUiier was a high-level
government execu tive holding a "policy·
making" position paying $26,463 a year.
Today , Tuller. 48, was a fugitive in
Cuba charged with parlicipating with his
teen·aged son in a Vi rginia bank robbe ry
and a Houston jetliner hijacking that kill·
ed a lotal of three persons.
Why was there this abrupt and violent
change in the life of Charles Tuller?
IUS FOR!\1ER rol\eagues al the U.S.
Commen:e Department were mystified .
One of them 1 described him as a ' . •·eonstderate and thoughtful" person who
enjoyed skeet shooting "but said he
didn"t like shooting small animals."
65-MPH Gusts Recorded But a probe by UPT reportert showed
that away from work Tuller had another
reputation -that of a quarrelsome and
dedicated revolutionary who kept a gun
collection at home.
Winds Continue for Second Day, Cause Havoc
Te111peratures
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The FB I says Tuller, his son, Bryce
~1athew Tuller, 19. and William White
Graham, 18, fled to Cuba Sunday night In
a hijacked Eastern Air Lines jet. A
fourth hijacker was not idenlified.
A ticket agent was shot to death when
the hijackers forced their way aboard the
jct at Houston, Tex .. and an ai rline
m~anlc wru; wounded.
DAILY '1LOT
DELIVERY SERVICE
Orll""' ot tllf o,rty Pl101
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•
Chicago Diluter
Train Collision '
.Probe Ordered _
CIUCAGO !AP) -Federal safety of-
fteialt lovestigatJnc the conunuter tn!n
collblon which kllled « perlOllS nised
qut.St lons toda.:1 about the 1trength of tile
lightweight steel cars used by commutfr
lines.
In addJUon to the detd, more than 300
were reported injured Monday when an
Illinois Central Gu1f Railroad commuter
backing into a South Slde station was
rammed by a second IC electric com-
muter during the morning rush hour.
TransJ)l>l'tation Secretary John Volpe
inspected the wreckage ln a 40-minute
tour. He and Hendy Wakeland, director
or the department's Bureau o £
Tramportation Safety, said the strength
or the lightweight steel and aluminum
can would be studied.
IT TOOK SIX hours to extricate lhe
last of the dead and injured from the
crumpled wreckage of two of tbe cars,
which "-ere crushed like empty beer
Carui.
President Nixon expressed hia sorrow
and canceled plans for a downtown cam-
paign motorcade scheduled for today in
Chicago.
The President said in a statement.
"The heart of the nation goes out to the
victims ol this tragedy and to the people
of Cbicago."
Sen. George McGo\lem, campaigning
in Pittsburgh. caUed off a totchlight
parade scheduJed for Wednesday in
Chicago.
The Democratic presidential candidate
said in a statement that his "heartfelt
sympathy goes out to he families of the
victims or the terrible tragedy ... "
VOLPE HEADED A federal in-
vestigation team dispatched f r o m
Washington to study the collision, the na-
tion's worst ran disaster since 1958 when
48 persons were killed in Ellzabethport,
N. J.
Gov. nichard B. Ogilvie ordered a
state lnvesUgalion.
Railroad officials said they couJd not
immediately determine bow fast the sec-
ond train was traveling when it struck
the rear of the first commuter.
The fint comm uter, a shiny, four-car,
double-decked HlghLiner overshot the
!7th Slreet statk>n and was backing up
when it was rammed by the second train.
The second t.ruln was t'l\8de up of six
1928 vintage coaches. Each train carried
about SOO passengers.
Official! said that when the first train
overshot the station it may have tripped
a s"itch which changed a signal observ·
ed by the second train from red to
yellow.
THEY SAID THE yellow signal
UPIT .......
PLATFORM DIAGNOSIS
Tr1in Victi m Gets Help
permitted the second train to travel
toward the station at approximately 30
miles an hour, but also indicated to tht
engineer that the track was clea r for
2,000 yards.
Nixon Promises Relief
For Elderly in Speech
WASHINGTON (APl -President Nix-
on, apparently backing away from
across-the-board property-tax relief. says
that if ~lected "one ol my highest-
priority proposals" will be property·tax
relief for older citizens.
Nixon made the scaled-do'>''ll pledge in
( CAMPAIGN '72 )
a nationally broadcast campaign radio
speech Mond'y afternoon.
SOl\.IE MONTHS ago, Nixon hinted his
re-election drive might feature, as its
central pockelbook appeal, a plan to
sharply reduce the local prope rty taxes
of mo.rt, ii not aJI, homeowners and
Israeli Troops
On 'Full Alert'
At Syria Border
TEL AVrv (UPI ) -l!taeli ground
troops along the frontier with Syria man·
n!d PoSlllons on fu ll alert today fo\IO"Nlng
Monday's air raids against guerrilla
bases near Dama.tcus and a Svrian
annored beadquartera In the north. It
was the heaviest round of fightln,q
between the two nations in nearly 27
months of the cutTent Middle East cease-
fire.
Syrian govt!rnment source!! in
Damascus aald the air !trikes, which hit
as close as 4 1~ miles from the
capital, killed 50 persons and "·oundcd 70.
ARAB CVF.RRlllAS .struck back in-
aide Tel Av\\/ today. An Arab guerrilla
bomb exploded on the th ird floor of
Israel's tallest building, sllghUy Injuring
lhret persons. ti was the third such
bombing in flve weekll and a polJce
spokesman i;aid "It woa dennltely
sabotage."
Following Monday's strikei, LI . Oen.
Davki Etazar. Israeli thief of 1tarf, said
he would not predict the next Syrian
move, but M outlJned what Israel ex·
peeled of Daznaacus government of·
flcl1l1.
"They are e.rpocted to remraln ttt·
rorist actlvlty and to continue to mftln·
lain I.he cta•fl~." he told newsmen
Monday night after two tsr1ell air strikes
Into Syria a.nd an artJllery barrage from
ther6.
I
b••sinessmen through a federal subsidy
system.
Early in the campaign. however. Nixon
began talking inste<id about a qualified
pledge to hold the line against federal tu
increases.
The qualification was that l he
Democratic-controlled Congress restrain·
ed what Nixon tenned "a spending
binge."
With the federal budget deep in the
red, even before Congress got Its hands
on major legislation, Nixon and, his ad·
visers apparently concluded that, in such
circumstances. lower local property tax-
es across the board could be purchased
only at the cost of higher federal taxes.
lo keeping with hi! change of strategy,
Nixon told his radio audience that the
average elderly citizen In the Northeast
must allol 30 percent of Income to pay
property taxes.
He asserted : "This is wrong. And 11te
must stop it. One of my highest-priority
proposals to the new Congress will be
property-lax relief for older Americans."
lN PITTSBURGH, Sen. George P.fc-
Govem. in an attack considered too
strong by his wife but cheered by the au-
dience, says the American people are
going lo tell President Nixon next Tues-
day to "take your bungling , bugging
burglars and get out of I.he Wbltt
House."
McGovern coupled the 1tnti-Nixon
language with a new appeal for
Democrats to rome "back home" to thelf
party as he spake Monday night to more
than 1,500 persons at a Democratic fund-
raising dinner tn Plttsburg.
\Vilh just a week remaining in the 1972
campoign. and polls showing him far
behind . the slill'<XlOr!dent.McGovem Oies
today to Syracu8C. N.Y., ll>r a rally
before heading to the New York area for
11ppearances in JerSey City, New
Brunswick. N.J., and Ne w York Clly.
AT THE PITTSBURGH d Inner.
McGovern said Republlcan off icl11ls ire
trying "lo persuade us th•! the spylng
and lying and burglary and sabotage w\11
not affect the election because people o ·
;>eel these things of poHticinns .
"Any pr@Sident of the United St1let.
who sets a mortl standard so low the peo-
ple are expected to think thnt these 11c·
tlvltlcs are a normal part of the pollllcal process of thll grent counlry, '' he added,•
••that k.ind of man doea not desel'\le to bl
presld(!flt of the United St.ates."
}le said "l think lhe American peoplt
nre going to mnke th•H perfectly clear to
fl.1r . Nixon on Nov. 7," drawing appllliUM '
and an 11nonymoo1 shout of "you better'
believe It!"
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·Rockwell
Makes Bid
'Put Him In Bo~
Witness Relates
On Firm
EL SEGUNDO (AP) -
Some $230 ml!Uon in common
BlnckmailAction
stock has been offettd by LOS ANGELES (AP) -One
North American R o c k w e 11 or three men charged wtth
Corp. for the acquisition of trying to blackmail Irwindale
Rockwell Manufacturing Co., Mayor Richard Diaz once sug-
a Pittsburgh-based dlverslfied gested putting Diaz "in a pine
manufacturer or construction box ln the. desert," a 28-year-
and transportaUon equipment, old divorcee testified.
a North Am&k:an 9p0kesman Patti Payne told a Superior
has confirmed. Court jury Monday Perlee
Louis Putze, president of 'nntary made the remark
R o c k w e I I Manufacturing, art.er an attempt to drug Diaz
made the disclosure of the of-failed in August 1971. She
fer Monday, saying North didn't elaborate on the
American had bid 1.1 shares remark.
of Us common stock for each Tintary, his brother, Jceeph,
of the 6.05 nilllion shares of ' and recenUy deposed lnvin-Rockwell Maoufacturing cur.. dale City ouncilman Richard
rently outstancllng. Breceda are on trial accused A North Am e r I ca n of attempting to blackmail
spokeSman In El Segundo Jater Diaz into supporting a plan to
verified the tmns and offer. legalize poker in~ city.
• Fll'.e Kills 1
LONG BEACH (AP) -One
sailor was lci\led and another
injured Monday when fire
broke out in the forward ·ca!1j:O
hold of the 30-year.old ship
USS F lorikan.
Mrs. Payne said she was
asked by another figure in the
case, Ronald Calmelat, to
participate in the alleged
blackmail attempt and was
told by Ronald Ballard, the
son·in·law of Joseph Tintary,
that "There was a person they
wanted to set up so they could
get draw poker in Irwindale." A Navy sPQkesman said the
fire was fed tiy lines, life rafts
and other equipment carried TESTIFYING for the pros-__________ ecution, she said she was in·
Mn:. Payne said s& met
Diaz at the bar, had several
drlnb with him and then in·
vlted him back. to the apart-
ment. She said she' served him
two drinks containing the
crushed pills but said while he
"seemed drunk and about to
pus out," he never lost con-
scloulness.
SHE ft.IET with her fellDw
plotters twice during the even-
ing, she said, and was told the
aecond time she'd have to un-
dress and be photographed
with Diaz. Sbe said she refu,s..
ed.
Diaz walked out of the
apartment then, she testified ,
and the plotters scattered
They met later at a coffee Another Addition
shop and it was then Perice A 5·year·old girl with no arms or legs who has
Tintary made the "pine box" spent all her life in a New York hospital was the
comment, she said . 15th child of the Robert Al\Vood·Debolt family, in
The prosecution identifies Piedmont. They have adopted eight children, three
Mrs. Payne and Calmelat as handicapped,
unindicted coconspirators. ----'--'-'------------------
State Tests Devices for GM
Tutsd.11, Octobtr 31, iq12
Slniver Appeals
To Youth, Blacks
DAIL V PILOT $
Jet La11.ds
Safe in. LA
LOS ANGELES (AP ) -
An Air France jetliner
OAKLAND (AP J
Listening to Sargent Shriver,
Calilomla audiences have
been told that on the issue of
politica1 corruption, President
Nixon can be found "hiding''
in the White House basement,
currying 112 persons lhe President on the war . on sheared ofr a vr'heeJ and
the economy and for a slld down a runway at L;,.ti
politJcal outlook. he s a I d A n g e I es Internallonal
threatens all social legislatioo Airport in a Durry or
s parks during en passed by Democrats over the emergency !anding, of·
past 40 years. fi<'ials say. None of the 99
passengers or 13 crewmen \YITll HIS eye never far ~·as reported injured.
(cAMP AIGN •12) from California's 45 electoral '~iiiiiiiiiiii:iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii:;;;;;;;~ votes, Shriver returned again l1
and again to the alleged pat-
tern of corruption he said is
or under the bed, or cowering becoming the biggest govem-
in the executive mansion "like ment scandal since the ad--
a monster in a cave." ministration of Warren G.
l\-1aking his last pre-election Harding, another Republican, SO years ago.
swing through Galifomia ~jon· ff Cal ifornia comes in for
day, lbe Democratic vice-George McGovern, Shriver
presidential candidate made predicted at stops in Los
special appeals to J e w s , Anieles, san Diego, Riverside,
blacks and the young. Richmond and Oakland, so
Shriver invoked the names wil l the rest of the nation.
of Jewish p ro phets , the nation.
philosophers and statesmen to Shriver's California sweep
a groop of Los Angeles Jewish takes him lo San Francisco,
community leaders as he urg· Fresno al\d Stockton before he
ed that any economic deals heads for Portland, Ore., and
with the Soviet Union be Lied Seattle.
to a firm promise that Russia Shriver used his tour of a
will revoke what he called the new Veterans Admin istration
onerous Soviet exit tax for hospital at La Jolla. near San
Jews wishing to leave the Diego, to attack Nixon vetoes
country. of 11 congressional money
Jn Richmond. just north of bills, including one Shriver
SEIKO
G.1111 St•inl•11 St••l
World Timer with 24 hr,
hand and data window
$119.50
fionJa
JEWELERS
C ) structed to pick up Diaz in a BRIEFS bar they frequented and take
Oakland, the candidate donned said would have permitted S•von'1 and Von• Canter SACRAMENTO (AP) Jy monitor the ability of the 50,000 miles of normal opera· a in-n baseball cap of the such VA hospitals to continue Huntinqton Beach
al M ha be •• -cal 8roo~hur1t & Ad•ms Gener otors s gun experimental systems to con· lion as part of the state's Los world champion Oak land to provide quality medi 969•2212 him to an apartment rented by
'--------the suspects.
Before she left for the bar.
she testified, she saw Ballard
and Joseph Tintary grinding
up pills in the bottom of two
glasses.
delivering 50 cars equipped"~tinll'u'.'e~f\llun"'.c":ti~olllni~ngg__f'.fo":r__".upll_~lO'__~An~ge~les~c~ar~poo~~l . _____ ~A~lhl~et~ics~an~d'-'-agll'a'.'.inll_'.c":ri~li~c1~·zed~~c~are~.--------~~~~~~~~~~~~ with experimental antismog by the submarine rescue craft.
He said the fire burned out of
controJ an hour, with fierce
heat and unusually dense
smoke.
The victim's identity was
withheld pending notification
of kin. The injured man was
18-yeaNJ!d Ralph White of
Lynwood.
e 5 Convieted ~
LOS ANGELES (AP)
major S o u t h er n CaUforn
distribution outlet foe hashish
oil, a highly concentrated
marijuana derivaUve. ha s
been disrupted by the con·
vktion of fi ve persons and
confiscation of five pounds of
the oil. says U,S, Atty.
William Keller.
Keller said Pi.fonday the
estimated street va lue of the
confiscated 1,800 grams of oil
was $75,000.
e College Appeal
LOS .\liGELES (AP ) -The
pi-esident of the Loi Angeles
Community Colleges' board of
trustees says the board may
appeal a state Supreme Court
ruling reinstating o u s t e d
Valley College instructor
Deena Metzger.
Trustee Mike Antonovich
told a news conference Mon-
day he has asked tbe county
counsel's office to study the
"prudence" of taking the case
to the U.S. Supreme Court
Mrs. Metz.ger, a JG.year-old
English instructor, was fired
for reading a poem in class
that contained s e v e r a I
obscenities and alleged pro-
fane references to Jehovah
•nd Christ.
'Authorities say the pills con-
tained a hypnotic drug called
Quaalude, which Ballard had
obtained on prescription.
PUC Urged
To Halt '20'
Mailings
LOS ANGELES (AP)
Three customers of t h e
Southern caJifomia E idson Co.
and Pacific Gas and Electric
asked the Public Utilities
Commission Monday to pre-
vent the utilities from mailing
literature opposed to Prop. 20,
the coastal initiative, with
monthly statements.
John R Phillips of the
Center for Law in the Pubiic
Interest, the complainants'
lawyer tOld a hearing the
monthly mailings gave the
utilities "unique and exclusive
access to millions of voters"
comparable to the use of radio
and television .
Lawyers for the utiLities
asked the commission to
dismiss the complaint, noting
the comoU.ssion had said
earlier this year it had no con-
trol over such political ac-
tivity.
devices lo the State of
California for prolonged
testing in the smog-choked Los
Angeles Basin.
Four of the cars were
delivered Monday to the stale
Public Works Department in
Los Angeles, a department
spokesman said.
The experimental systems
are GM 's main hope for com-
plying with the stringent
federal antismog standards
which take effect in 1975 and
which become even more
stringent in 1976. GM engl·
neers say the devices have
performed well in labs and on
controlled test tracks, but the
Southern California tests w111
be their first use in ·prolonged
normal service.
Gov. Ronald Reagan an-
nounced Monday that he and
General M o t o r s represen-
tatives had signed the agree-
ment under which the state
would lease the <'ars at
bargain rates and would close·
Smog Control
LOS ANGELES (AP) -The
state's top vehicle emissions
control officer says legislation
may soon be introduced. re-
quiring that all fleet vehicles
use low·sroog-producing fuels.
But other spokesmen for the
Air Resources Board say a
further step -requiring that
all six million S o u t h e r n
California autos use clean.
burning liquid petroleum gas
-would be i mpra c t lea I
because of a shortage of such
fuel
UNBELIEVABLE
P.RICES
"
LADIES
MENS
2 RACKS ONLY
MEN & LADIES
SA.LE SHOES
LIFE STRIDE -COBBLERS
KEDS -BASS
4 DAYS ONLY
REG. TO $25 . .. . ...... $1 TO $6
REG. TO $25 .. . . .... $2 TO $8
1052 IRVINE -WESTCLIFF PLAZA -NEWPORT BEACH
548-8684
Now you can get 10~ off
on Walter Kendall* Fives• Dog Biscuits or
Fives Kibbled Dog Food.
There's Meat. Vegetable. Cheese. Charcoal. And Ginger.
All in the same package. All made to make his mouth water.
And let him eat hearty.
Walter Kendall Fives Biscuits. In the morning to break
the long night fast or as a treat any time of day.
Walter Kendall Fives Kibbled Dog Food.
For a nutritionally balanced mea l.
·I ,
(~ •
. "
Di\ILY PROT E DI TORIAL PAGE
Prop. 22 Is 'Flawed
Proposition 22, the Agricultural Labor Relations
Act of 1972, is the outgrowth of Cesar Chavez' drive to
control Chicano labor in California.
To further his drive for power, Chavez has Jn.
nicte<l secondary boycotts harmful to workers, growers
and consumers alike. Atany of his union's actions would
be illegal if agricultural labor were under the National
Labor Relations Act.
But agricultural labor relations have not come
under that ac.'t because of the perishable nature or farm
crops and the seasonaljty or both crops and workers.
Proposition 22's professed purpose is to fill this
void. It seeks to protect California's economy against
strikes and boycotts which have devastating inlpact on
its major industry.
Employes \\'Ould have the rlght to organize and bar·
gain collectively, ernployers would have the right to man·
age their f arrns. The right of farm workers to choose
their union is protected by the secret ballot. And a
inediation period is provided to avoid ruinous strikes
at peak periods or harvest.
So far so good. Such a Ja,v is needed. But tWs one
has a serious flaw. It would take away the vote of most
seasonal and migrant workers because it limits seasonal
and migrant workers eligible to vote in representation
elections to the number of permanent workers.
Specifically, the workers must have worked for the
employer 14 of the previous 30 calendar days, and for
any farmer for 100 days in the previous year, and they
can't have voted in a similar election within 12 months.
The election date is set at a time \\•hen the number of
temporary \vorkers is not greater than the number of
permanent workers on the farm in question.
California's year-round rarm work force is about
96,000, compared to as many as a hail mllllon at peak
harvest time in August and September. IL appears, there-
fore, that more th.an 80 percent oC the men and women
who '"ork on farms would have no voice in deciding
for or against a partlcuiar union, -Or no union -and
none in approving or d.lsapproving contract: terms.
Much can be said for limiting tho temporary em·
ploye in decision-making affecting permanent, full-time
workers. But the proposed Act does not given even a
minor voice to the great majority who are seasonal and
migrant workers.
Proposition 22 should be revised to corre<t this
flaw. Vote NO on Nov. 7.
On 15; 16--NO; 10, 12--YES
Propositions 15 and 16 both are attempts to remove
tbe salary levels of state employes from budget-setting
activities by the governor or the Legislature. Both would
freeze into the constitution formulas for setting pay
scales -Proposition 15 for most state employes and
Proposition 16 for state hi ghway patrolmen.
Both are ill-advised beeause they freeze into the
constitution and take out or the hands of elected offi.
cials salary items that make up more than two-thirds
of the total state budget. A NO vote is recommended on
Propositions 15 and 16.
Proposi tions 10 and 12-$10,000 assessed. value prop-
erty tax exemptions for blind and disabled veterans-af·
feet relatively few persons and would involve no signifi-
cant tax loss. Considering sacrifices made by the individ·
uals in the two categories or service-related injuries, the
measures are reasonable. Vote YES.
•
·\
•
I'' ..... R16HT OUT OF MY iEETH!"
Somebody
Ought to
Be Arrested
Dear
Gloomy
Gus
Cost of Proposition 2: 50 Cents a Year
~YD NEY J. HARRI~
I have been reading a new book called
'Safely Last," written by a
pseudooomyCIWI "Captain X.'' and my
only conclusion is that somebody ought to
be arrested.
If "Captaln .;" is rtght Jn even half the
things he di!eloses about the dangers or
commercial aviation, the airlines and the
Federal Aviation Administration deserve
to be thrown Into the dee~t dungeon.
AND IF mE BOOK is a compllaUGn of
exaggerations, dJslortlons, or downright
lies, "Captain X"
shouJd be stripped of
his blindfold and,
together w I t h his
publisher, Dial
Press, should be put
in solitary on bread
and water for 40
years.
How is the aver·
age reader and air
traveJer to know the truth? 1be book will
no doubt be ignored by the airlines and
dismissed by the government. Yet the
charges are too serious for such cavalier
treatment -if even a substantial
percentage of them is true, l'd prefer
taking a covered wagon across the coun·
try to Oying a commercial airliner.
I WON'T CrrE his specific charges.
because it would be unfair to publicize
them before they have had a chance to
be rebutted by sorr.e responsible agency.
Suffice to say. they are shocking. end
almost paralyzing, if you are about to
call up for a plo.ne reservation.
Who is "Captnin X"? We ar~ told on
Jf vocational education has been
so neglected in our high schools,
and is becoming such a big thing
once more, why not let the young
men (and gals) get some exper·
ience by building their own schools?
-R.S.
Tt111 lutlJn rtfl4<tt ,......,... YI-., ""'
Nc:Hllrff'I' "*" ., ,,,. ~-. SflMI y-.......... te ~ O.S. Dally Piie!.
the book jacket that he is-a scheduled
jet alrllne captain, as well as a fighter
pilot in the Air Force Reserve, with 20
years of professional flying experience."
He has been a captain for 17 years, has
20,000 hours as a pilot, and ls rated as an
instrument instructor, a flight instructor
for sea planes, and a ground Instructor in
meteorology, radio navigation, civil air
regulations, aircraft, and engines.
WHAT HE REVEAU is so disturbing
-on every level from maintenance to
flight plans -that his book must either
be vindicated or repudiated by some im·
partial public agency. If "Safety Last"
tells the truth , or much of the truth,
some basic changes must be made in our
whole commercial airplane set-up ; iC it
does not, the author and the publisher
should be sued for every cent they have,
and then some.
I BA VE READ a number of books on
the subject, but none d them has dean
with the material offered in this one. It ls
hard to believe that the airliDe.s, airport!,
and regulatory agencies are as poorly
equipped and supervl9ed u his documen--
tatlon1 seem to indicate.
'l'he aviation industry as a whole owes
It to the American public to mount the
witness stand along wJth "Captain X"
and either prove him a cheap sensation·
monger or indict Jl!e1f for willful and
grievous negligence.
It's Roorback Season
RoorbAck ls a handy noun to know 1n
the final stages of an election campaign.
It ts defined as "a defamatory falsehood
publilbed for polillcal e(fect. '' Every na-
ti-1 election year produoes ti. shan! or
rooci>acb -lies, innuendoes. and oth<r
distortions of truth that often are dif-
ficult or lmJ>OSSJble to refute. Somelimes
they work, and 110metlmes t h e y
boomerang, but thty are an enduring
feature ol the American polltlcal scene.
The incident that gave birth to the
term roorb&ck occurred during lhe 1844
presidential contest between Democrat
James lC. Polk and Whig Henry Clay.
Shortly before Election Day, a
ncwsJJffper in Ithaca, N.Y., published nn
excerpt from ooe Baron von Roorback's
journal of A Tour Through the We!tern
and Soulhem Stat ... Tho baron told o!
watchlng Polk purcha.se 43 slaves. "the
mark of the brandlng lron and the lnltlals
of h1I name. on their .shoulders,
distloiullhlnl them ... "
Jn fact , no such ule ever took place;
the baron and hit: journal were niments
of some fevered pllrtlAn imagination.
Polk: wtnt on to win the tlection, but the
~ •plloodo II btlimd to have
damagtcl hll .......
TODAY, CANDIDATES are en-
COW'lltd to r<pcrt -u and similar
lnlractlcllll I<> the WaahlngtorM>ued Fair
OAmpiJp Pnctlcet CommJttee, a non-
partllan orpni%allon founded In 1954.
T1le comm.IUee bu received an &lmOlt
ldenll<al numbtr d complnlnll In each or
the three l)tflvto111 natk.nal ~ecUon years
-18 In ll'70 fl In 1968. Md 68 In 1006.
Throu&h 0</. U ol thll yur, ll had
.....t•ed 17 compialnll. lkll • commlttte
"'°""woman told EditorlJll Releorch
tha t, based on pa.st exparience, t'l"ice n.s
I
•
EDITORIAL
RESEARCH
many complaints wUI be nled In the fin11.I
two weeks or the campai,gn as in all the
preceding weeks cornblned.
For the most pa.rt, the dirty poli tical
tricks or today seem tame compared to
those of the pa.!L In the 1916 presidential
campaign, numerous cartoona 1howed
OOarded Republican nom.btte Charles
Evans J-lughcs wW'ing a Prussian
helmel. Tbe idea wu to confuse hlm In
lhe public mind with Gennany's Kalstr
Wilhelm. Finally, tbe Rtpubllcana felt
Impelled to poet banners proclalmtng :
"Absolute and Unqualified Loyalty to
Our Co.mtry -Hughes and Falrbonks l"
OUTRAGEOUS U~ suCh as these are
less common nowadays. As Broce L.
Fellmor observtcl in 1 1961 book, Dirty
Potttict. "The olcl-tlme.....,. 1rtlat la db-
appea.lins 1lowly, u the elect.orate
becomel more Ut«ate, and u lhe news
intdJa eapooe chtoanery more rutty and
rapidly. He II being ,.Paced by •.• •
new wave ol amoral poUlbl t«hnJci11111.
who are clever, indelallgoble, polaonous,
Md brilliant."
In a recent Interview. Felknor wu con-
ttmptUQl:I or those Involved In bugging
the Democratic National Committee's
headquarters in Washing too '1 Watergate
complex. "The guys who did the
Watergate caper," he said," ..• are not
so much the bloodle9a: scientist s (of elcc-
tlooeeringl, but people of the gumshoe
mentality Uke 11 house dick In a chee p
hotel" Evtn among pol iUcaJ uboteurt.
clMa tells.
California Needs ~ore Physicians
To the Editor :
All or the public and private medical
schools in California produce .a combined
total of only 600 physicians annually. And
three times that number will be required
each year just to maintain the existing
California ratio of physicians to popula-
tion. California depends on graduates
from out-of--state medical schools to ob-
tain an adequate number of doctors. By
1980, however, tbe United Stales will be
50.000 doctors short. Will out-of-state
graduates c o n t in u_ e to come to
California? will this stale be able to
maintain adequate health care?
ON NOV. 7, CALIFORNIA votenl will
be given the chance to help guarantee
that they will have adequate health care
in the future. Proposition 2, an act that
will provide for a bond issue of $115.9
million, gives the voters this chance. If
this act passes, the $115.9 million, plus
approximately $170 million in federal and
other non-state funds , will be used for
construction of facilities at University of
Galifornia medical schools.
TlllS CONSTRUCJ'ION has some inr
portant coosequences. Without t h e
buildings there won't be federal money
for expensive equipment and study
grants. Without the grants and the
buildings to use for teaching, the state
may lose many of the nation's leading
medical ez:pert.s to better facilities outside
the state. Seventy-[}ve percent of "our"
best medical people are from out~r
state. These experts improve the quality
of medical care in califomia.
TWO YEARS AGO, a bond issue for
$24&.3 n1illion for the same purposes was
defeated. A defeat of this proposition will
be a moral disaster to health care in
California. One of the newer UC medical
schools may be closed and California
could lose important medical experts
disgusted with in.adequate facilities.
Fewer available doctors, fewer facilities
and skyrocketing costs will result.
At a cost of just 50 cents per year per
person, Californians can help thwart
these problems. For the health ot all
CalifonUans, don't lose Propo1ltion 2
nmoog the myriad of Wues on Nov. 7.
Remember to vote yes on Proposition 2.
We are three or the man y concerned
:students who are involved in this bill.
RICK ROUSH
GREGORY S1UNE
RICHARD DALLAM
Prop. 14'• Impact
To the Editor :
J am an Instructor at Orange Coast
College and am concemed over the
sevorlty ol too impact Proposillon t4 will
have on the Coast O>mmWlit)' College
District and Its campuses.
Orange Q>ast O>llcge la coosklered one
of the most effective and Innovative com-
mw11ly colleges in the state. Through the
leadership of an outstanding ad-
mJnl.stralive staff and faculty, Its pro-
pwns, teac.bin& techniques, facilllles and
community klvolvement have reached
very large nwnben: of Harbor Area
mldtnta.
I BELIEVE IT would he tragic If 90
remarkable a re90Urte wern allowed to
wilher because ol the passage of Pn>posl·
!Jon Jf, ~hich removes nearly all fuods
from C8Womla.'s main source o( un-
dergraduate education, the two-yea.r col·
leg es.
This, combined with the. eKtn!me rise
In state income, sales and othfr,tax~.
provides a dl$8.strous comblrultton or
higher costs for fewer aervlcea and a tax
( MAILBOX J
LetteTl from readers are welcome.
Normally writers should convey their
messages ill 300 words or less. The
rig /it to condense le tters to fit space
or elimi'nate libel is reseroed. Att
lettef's must include signature and
mailing address. but names may be
withheld on request if sufficient
rea.sO?l. is apparent. Poetry wit! not be
published.
break for large corwrations, as you are
already aware.
tr the voters only realize and un·
derstand the consequences!
1UM S. GARRISON
Assistant Professor of l\farine Sciences
R e altors F a vor No. 14
To the Editor:
Insurance companies are claiming that
1£ Proposition 14 passes the state will get
les:s money from them in taxes than they
are paying now. Prop. 14 takes away
special exemptions from the insurance
companies that they have enjoyed
through special legislation in 1947. I sup-
pose the reason the insurance C()mpanies
are spending hundreds of thousands of
dollars (much of it coming from outside
the state) to defeat the issue is because
they want to keep on paying more taxes
for the good of the state.
I FIND nns very hard to believe and
I feel that since they fought to get s~ial
exemptions to pay less taxes in 1947 they
really don 't want to pay more than they
have to. I must conclude that the state
will indeed have increased revenue as a
result of Prop. 14. nie same flimsy
arguments are being used by other
groups, (schxils, etc.) to indicate finan·
cial disaster if Prop. 14 is pa~.
California1s property taxes have more
than tripled in the past 12 years, \Ve now
pay the highest property taxes in the na-
tion. Prop. 14 will put us back in the
mainstream ol slates enjoying equitable
taxaUon.
TAKING NcrTE OF the position that
the schools have taken aga inct Prop. 14,
it \.s Interesting to note that Dr. James E.
Gregg, fonner secretary or education for
Gov. Pat Brown, In a full-page open letw
ter lo scOOol teachers Jn the Los Angeles
Times and other major newspapers,
Sept. 16, 1972, staled: "In my opinion,
passage of the Watson Initiative could
well help in the long run to reverse the
erosion of confidence in the public
schools."
I urge you to vote YES on Prop. 14 -I
don't th.Ink you can afford to vote oo.
JERRY S. GILLESPIE
General Chairman YES on 14
Jluntlngton Beach-Fountain Valley
Board of Realtors
/tlarlj ua11u l11i tla t lve
To the Editor:
Concerning )'OUT editorial on Prop. 19,
the California Mari juana Initiative, I
mwrt strongly protest.
rlrst, before I give YoU my views, I
would llk c to give you the crimin.1!
penalties concerning m a r I j u a n a
possession and use alone under Section
11~ of the ltcalth and Safety Code :
flnrt violation : I lo 10 years ln prison
Stcond violation ; 2 to 20 years
Third and subsequent violations: 5
years to life lnprisonment.
NOW TllESK LAWS are unj ust and
immoral. These are the kinds ol Lan
that make today's youth looe respect for
all laws. 'Ibese laws do more hann than
any abuse oI marijuana could ever do.
Coming to the subject of potential
haz.arcb, one must l'OllSider tbal the
findings ol doctors, particularly the ones
of that British team you so heavily base
your arguments on, are a result «. :study·
ing individuals who are extremely
heavy users of caruiabis -persons wbo
use a great quantity daily. Any doctor
wiU tell you that that kind of use is not
considered average marijuana con-
swnption.
TRUE, MARJJUANA may be a Poten-
tial hazard, but so are alcohol and tobac-
co, and they are considered more than
jw.st potential dangers, but are legal to
possess and use. Marijuana does less
harm than both put together, but i.s il·
legal! We are harboring a double stan-
dard of justice In this state (and in tltis
country, for that matter) that should be
immediately eradicated.
As a matter of practicality, Prop. 19
should go through because the illegality
of marijuana use costs the taxpayers of
this state alone ln excess of $100 million.
Let's see Reagan cut back that much for
next year'• budget.
1 strongly suggest a YES vote on P!_"oP-
19.
PETER E. STONE
Proposition 19
• To the Editor :
ln your recent editorial concerning
Prop. 19 you referred to a repon by
President Nixon's National Commission
on Marijuana and DrUg Abuse; you
neglected, however, to report their rin·
dings . The colllIJtisslon after extensive
research recommended lifting penalties
fGr personal pos3eSSion of marijuana.
Judging from your editorial headline,
you apparently chose lo report a biased
interpretation o( the marljuana initiative
in lieu of the truth. 'Ibere are too many
misinformed voters already; your
headline only adds to the confusion.
PROPOSlTION 11 does not legalize
pot. I doubt the majority against the bill
have taken the time to read it. The bill
simply says that an adult may have the
freedom to choose indulgence of mali-
juana in his own home. This does not en-
dorse the sale of marijuana. For that
matter It will remain a criminal offense
tg buy the plant. The proposition only
protects the people's right to decide for
themselves.
The Calllomla Medical Association,
Bt1 Georg.: ---
Dear George:
r have received thret quite ex·
pensive J>l"e&enta from a man I
haven't been Introduced to and, in
fact. barely b9•· 19 this proper,
accepting gifts Crom a man I hard-
ly know , and what abouJd I do?
SUSAN
Dear Susan :
Well. I called my etiquette
authority and she tald to tell you It
d@finlte.ly Is not proper to accept
glrts from a man you hardly know!
At this paint my etiquette authortty
found I was calllng collect and
hung up on me -so, as to the sec-
ond pan of your question, I IJUeM
the only thing to do Is get to know
the guy bctler.
I
n.. °' -tlon """ the C.fffan. ~ • Meal.a.I Heall ll
ti. .. all ..... .did "'-ltloo tt. It is
about time tho c.Jtlomla public keeps
pocewilb1blouthorilla.
»JCllAEL C. GROOM
B•UIK'• G•me
To the F.ditor :
A recently issued brochure from the of.
f1ce of Supervisor Robert Battin states
that, "Bob has always stood up for our
police officers and he's pushed for
tougher laws to crack down on drug
pushers and other criminals." t take
issue with the above statement.
I would like to recall two incidents th at
took place during the primary election.
The first occurred on May 6, 1972, at the
Gemoo Store in Fountain Valley. Battin,
when asked to leave the premises by a
law enforcement officer, asked the
policeman for his badge number and
stated that, "! don't get mad, I just get
even ." Is this standing up for our
policemen? I don't believe so.
THE SECOND incident took place at
Fountain Valley High School. \Vhlle lec-
turing a class on gove rnment , Mr. Battin
said that he supported the issue ot
legaliz.atioo of marijuana. Again I ques·
tion whether this is taking a strong stand
on drugs and pushing for stronger laws.
The switcho-chango game that Battin
has played ror the last four years has to
come to an end. The list of his changes
on issues is a cootinuing one. The First
District has a choice to make. l feel that
Bill Wenke is that choice.
LORE'ITA M. ROBINSON
Ballotcee11 Sadbts
To the Editor:
AJJ Halloween approaches, I tind my-
self filled with apprehension, rather than
the expectation I held as a child.
I'm a mother of three young boys, and
they are filled with excitement end anti.
cipalion of the coming holiday. But they
are not old eoough to understand that
some people get "kicks" out of spiking
candy with something, or putting .sur.
prises in apples and oranges. However.
as I think about it, I don't think I'm old
enough to undentand It myself.
I DOPE TBlS year, these nuts· MU
think twice before harming little
childr~. SW'(!Jy they can find a le!s
dangerous and malicious way of letting
off Halloween steam.
·' I know I have n rf?sponsibllity to check
their treats thoroughJy, but Hll llowem
ju!il doesn't seem like much fun
anymore.
MRS. A.N. WINTERSTEI N
OIU.NGI COAST
DAILY PILOT
Robert N. Weed, Publii her
Thom41 Keevll, Editor
Albert W. Betit
Edi lorUU PC{le Edit01'
The roltMW 1111scc of the Dally
Pilot llNlka to lnfc>rm 11nd 1tlmu·
late rt'fldtt"a by p!'l"S£nllng thh'
nr"W11fJA()er'1 oplnlol'\ll •nd a>m·
mentary on tople1 of lntemt and 1lgnlflcs~. by pt•ovldlng • fl'lrum
far the cxprealon or our tteder~·
oplnk>n1, 11-nd by JJl'ttll'nl inir lhl' divft~ vll"Wpolht11 of Informed ob-
1rrvon and 1poketmfn on toplca .,, 1he day.
Tuesday, October 31, 1972
QUEENIE
"It takes me longer than other
vacation."
L. !JI. Boyd
Actors Mostly
Too Optimistic
Twin beds were for summer sleeping only, originally.
The great British furniture designer Thomas Sheraton,
who invented same, did not expect they'd be used in win·
ter. And can you name the maTTied couple who fu"St OC·
copied twin beds? The Duke and Duchess of Yock. There
have been several. This Duke of York was the second son
of King Grorge Ill.
THE U. S. ARMY vocational guidance experts con·
ducted one of those Jeogthy personal·
ity studies. On actors. To see what
they have in commoo, if anything.
Two traits tumed up frequently. So
frequently the military specialists de-
cided their conclusions coold be re-
garded as scientific. Virtually all ac-
tors, they said, seem to be "blindly
seH-centered" and "unrealistically op-
Umistic."
YOUNG LADY, if you ever have to defend yourself
ln court, better first bleach your hair. An extensive study
of legal cases against women turns up the peculiar fact
that blondes have been acquitted 45 percent more often
thari brunettes.
QUERY. Q. 11Are pigs colorblind?"
A. 'Ibey are. So are cows, horse8. dogs, cats, sheep.
Most all mammals, in facl Except people and some prim-
ates. Fi.5bea see color. So do most snake.s. But frogs don 't
1be why of all this is most mysterious.
IF THAT one cupful ol popcorn doesn't make at least
15 cupfuls of popped corn, somelhing is wrong with It •••
POU.S show that Christian hymn "Abide With Me" is
still a little more than twice as popular as "Rock ol Ages."
• • • SCIENCE sa]" you think four times faster than a
person generally talks to you. Hope so. Hope so ... MOST
contractors figure 80 percent of the cost of painting the
house Is labor . . . WITH careful carving, you can get
about ttree and ooe-haH tons of good red steaks out of
the average whale, I'm totd.
HEADACHES -"Headaches are most common among
perfectioo.ists." says a St. Loois medical man. "N'me out
of 10 headaches are caused bj fear. In people who are
scared ol. making mistakes." Interesting.
BUITERFUES and bats pal around together. So do
bumblebees and purple martins. Likewise antelopes and
rabbits. Without one another, say the wildlife scholars,
these unlike types appear to get lonely.
A CLERGYMAN who has performed counUess mar~
rlage ceremonies contends it's almost invariably the bride-
groom's voice that quivers with the "I do." The bride's
voice, he says, most usuaUy is clear and controlled.
port Beach, Calif. 92600.
Address mail to L. A-1. Boyd, P. 0. Bo:& 1875, New·
Unique Suit
Boyfriend Batters Baby
LA PUENTE (UPl)-Three-child syndrome," have agreed
year-old Thomas Robinson's to a settlement, aUomey
brain is permanently damag-Byroo J . Lawler, representing
ed. He weighs 23 pounds and the boy's fat.h!t, reported.
altrhough his life expectancy ls The suit, fl1ed by the child's
40 years, be may' never weigh father, Thomas H. Robison,
more than 35 pounds. charged tho defendants with
Thomas suffmod the !rain fal!Jng Jo roport the nonac-
damage in April, 1970 when he cidental Injuries to auttmties
was five montm old after a as required by law.
series of beattogs by his
mother's boyfrieOO. He was THE SE'ITLEMENT pro-
llegedl shuffled through t vldes for a $600,000 trust fund
Price Tag
Switching
Prevalent
Tllnd1y, Octoblt 31, 197Z
'
D41LY PILOT I
Bondsman ---Muscle and Charm
CLEARWATER, Fla. (AP) ~i.d belJind a • de 1 k tooeh. bMd and flee the .,.. before she NYI, "We beain dlalinl
-For blonde and buxom adorned with pink telepbones "YOU'RE DEALING with th•lr trial beca..,. "In ~'lorlda them 11 .... ., they fill Jo Randob~A Harris, chemical Mhac< Jnho ber oornblnat.ion olf~ ~ people who are In jail, .aOO you Gl'ten race a wor1t: rap on sl10lr for trtaJ. Undtt the law.
u:-g Irons are as muc a me across the street ""'m they need compassion and a bail J u m P i n g charge
part o( her worttng outfit as the Pinellas c.ounty JttiL Mi.s8 concern," she 11~s. "l just than you do ror the original of· we have custody ot them
SACRAMENTO (AP) bot pants and bigh boot>. A Harris says she got Into the thou•bt •••-L.-· fense ." anywhere In the Unllod Sl.attl, Middle-class Americam who • u.LIO' WU a uu:itness and we cu bring them bact w-·'·•.u.•t dr"'m of •'-•lifting bail bondsman never knows ball bood bus.ineal four years where 1 could do some good." IF SOMEONE jumps bond. any way we have to.,,
.._, .,.. '""'l' when lhe'll have to substitute e.go "beca111t J tbouaht lt was Mia Harris -who has1-------'--'--=....:...=:::...::.:::....::..:.=::.::_ __ _
are gettlng away with muscle for chann. a good place for a woman's custody of some J,900 clients
something equaUy illegal -bond $2 What d d
switching jM'!Ce tags Jo lower 11-----.... -------=---==d·' ~"i:' ol bonds T~ !:'.~ 0 octors recommend ~~.:.:.~ive items. COUPLE PERISH :~f~~:u::;:~~ ~orpatientsm· pam· ? The technique is simple. ' , charge to a $50,000 bond on a I• •
Pull a price tag off a cheap or ~ man i!-rested ,on narcotics Doc all .
mode ... tely priced item and charges. tors over the country dispense over 50 000,000 ~ !f :"'1at,IP'i!,~e ~ LO VJ NG T 0 END She says few people jwnp of these tablets to their patients eacb y~.
pay the clerk the lower price. There are many meIDcalions a
IF phy1ician or dentiilt can pr~ THE CLERK 1 doesn't MILWAUKEE (AP) -Karen Joy O'Hara, 23, kllled acribe for pain. Some are nar.
tors recommend moet than any
other leading tablet.
Headache and dental pain i•
n-lieved incrodibly fast; minor
po.in• o( arthritis are depend.
11bly eased for houn; even the
acOei and paint of colds and 1ht
res1>0nd to Anacin. So the ten·
sion end deprestion that can be
caused by auch pain will be fe'-o
lieved too. And millionl take
Anacin without stomach upeet..
spot it, the thier is home free. herseU. Relatives said she and her husband, Mlchael, 24, colic. m.&flY. are available only
U the clerk blows the were ha.Ying financial di.Hicullies. on preecnption. But there it one
whistle ~n a surprisingly low A medical examiner's report said she also had health pain reliever, a118ilable without · 't be ~ained nroblerwl. prescription, doctors diJ;pcOlle pnce, 1 can ex.,, as a II' again and again ... Anacin. 11mistake" made by whoever She left a note to her husband: "God knows [love you , • "NTHONY SCHOOLS
meho " Each year, doctor1 give over put the price tags on in the,, but 90 w it comes out all wrong." ~ 50,000,000 Anacin tablet. to
first pjace. While standing at his wife's grave in Evergreen Cem-. ~· .. ~!;~'!,!'.!I their patients in pain.. If doctors
"It is much m 0 re etery, O'Hara shot himseU and died several hours later. c..11 MtM, c111i. ... i. think enou1h eitout Anacin to
widespread than commonly On his body was a picture of his wile, smiling, and a Ph. (714) !7f·2JSJ diflperuie all these tablets. whet When you're in pain, why
don't you Collow the practice of
ao many docton and take the ~bl~t a doctor might give you
in hit own oftice. Tab Aftacin•.
believed" says Dr. John note: "Karen was and will be my me. There is nothing 1711 1• •.-ii.m st. bekti.rhereccrmmendation can you
' without her •• , She did it for me now I do it for her.' A1N1111tlrn, C£t ,_ as w n you are in pain? Steiner of Sonoma St ate n. (1141 116·11100 Yo11 see, Anacin co nt.aina
College, "because there's little• ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~.~ more of the pain reliever doc·
risk involved. Most stores ~1=
not have detectives and they
would have to actually witness
the label switclting to bring
charges."
STEINER BAS been stu-
dying t b e price-switching
pbenomeoon for about two
years, interviewing s t o r e
managers and price t a g
switchers who volWlteer in-
formation.
He admits thel'e is one gap
in his research, ju.st bow much
money retail stores 1 o s e
through price tag switching.
Steiner believs It is less
than the amount lost through
shop-lifting and employe theft
but adds that it is <liUicult to
pin down because companies
themselves are not sure.
"You're talking about
substanUal amounts," be says.
Cavities
Reduced
By Method
SAN FRANCISCO (UP[) -
Dr. Charles A. Clark's group
bad fewer cavities.
Clark, of the Metropolitan
Health Planning Corp. in
Cleveland, told the American
Dental AssociatM!n of a 20-
month study showing the
usefulness of t e a c h I n g
youngsters to remove plaque
from their teeth and gums
once a day.
Clark: sakl 110 children were
taught to remove plaque -
that sticky, e1most colorless
film of bacteria that con-
tinuously builds up on teeth -
by brushing properly end us-
ing dental nos.s.
The results showed that the
110 trained yoongsters had "a
smaller increase o ( n e w
cavities" than 141 other
children.
KNOW YOUR
CANDIDATE
VOTE
FOR
MARY
DEER
. j
WhalS Wrong with the
COASTAL INITIATIVE? ,
•
VOTE ON
PROPOSITION NO.
BECAUSE:
e It lowers the value of property in coastal areas without
compensation to the property owner-setting a prece-
dent for similar confiscation in every area ot the state.
• It reduces local tax revenues to counties, cities and
school districts In the coastal areas with no provision for
reimbursement from stale tax sources-forcing higher
taxes on local home owners.
e It provides for State zoning of all property within a so-
called "coastal zone "-bul aefines the coastal zone In
such a sloppy way that nobody knows exactly where It Is.
e It establishes a virtual mortltorium for almost five
years on all bullding within a "permit area" which ex·
tends not just along the ocean but to such Inland cities
as Sacramento and Stockton.
e It divides cities in two-giving new state and regional
commissions control over permits in one section of the
city and leaving local control In the rest of the city.
e It blocks public as well as private construction:
remodeling of residences In excess of, $7500, sewer
repairs, single family homes, harbor Improvements,
recreational development.
e It permits and encourages any person-who need not
even be a resident of the state-to block Indefinitely any
construction for any purpose, by going to court without
even having to post a bond.
• It stops people from building or remodelling even
though they received a legal permit to do so before the
November election. •
• It endangers financing and federal funds for exlatlng
redevelopment projects, planned airport, harbor and
civic Improvements oil all kinds.
• It provides no funds for new access roads to the
beaches, or for any expaosion of C&l"flplng, plchlpklng
and other recreatlonal facililleS fOr the publi'C. ··
• It superimposes a new expensive state bureaucracy
on existing planning agencies-without reducing the
work load and cost to the taxpayers of existing agencies.
•'It turns over decision making on development to
1ppolnted comminlons and their "executive directors'",
regardless of the wishes of the majority of the people In
the community affected.
e It sets up "stacked" commissions composed of mem.
bers required to have "expertise In conservation, recrea-
tion, ecological and physical sciences, planning and edu-
cation", with no provision for representation for labor.
business, agriculture or home owners, and no provision
for members with expertise In economics, taxation Or
employment problems.
• It makes land-use planning within tho coastal zone
a nightmare of confllctlng Jurisdictions by setting up new
reg ional boundaries that do not conform to the boun--
darles of existing regional planning bodies.
• It fall• to give the people of many attected countleo
1ny representation on the reglonal agencies that wlll
determine their Immediate building pollcle1 and Ion!>"
range planning.
• It lock• up the beechM from the public for new rec-
reational uae-whlle providing s windfall to the favored
few now fortunate enough to own beach front homes In
exclusive areas.
a Y wo in the bot'• name that will hospitals and four doctors L ~ ed .... ft h give him care he needs for ., rx:rore it was report wuat e lhe rest of his lile.
• It creates unemployment problems of major proper·
tlons In the coastal areas affected.
• It makes it lmpos1lble for the leglslature to '9n1Ct rea-
sonable coastal zoning controls for a four yaar period.
was a battered child. Lawler said it was the fLrst -· INSURERS FOR r .... doc· such 811it ID be filed a
tors, a hospital aod the San disposed of under a recent The voting age hu again
Luis Obl.'f>O poUce chief, ec· Callf~mla law r e q u i r I n g been lowered to give othen
cu&ed In a $5-million suit of reports of the Hbattered child the right to vote. Glrlll and
falling to ~ a "battered syndrome." boys attending any achool in -;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~II lht-Newport-Mesa arM can
1 win a trip t.o Sacramento
t10NG «ONG
CUITC>fll TAii.OU PllUMHlN'J IJll OlMIOil (OUMn ....... , .. ..,..c_..... XMAS
!.. .;r~~!~~ SALE
111Wu.t1 ..._.. SAYI., t. SK °""-'-l~lt ••••••. ·" ·1 °" a.t.. .... ..... o.r-w .......... -.,.. ....... ...... llllt Moo~•lr .... • •• .... 62 ........ _ ..
........ 1t1~ .......... ·ft M • WI m Alff ltU
Ml\ W .... , ••••.,..II It •ANT ITTU' C0'1ft C..•-••••••••·•.fl .. •NII ALT11UftCMll l~lrft . , , , , ••• • •. •. 10 6 •IA.IT 'AfMllllJf
., ....... & """ NGO "HKl WOOi.iHi SB •AllT' ... AfiO llOl.llll iNlll Mt .... .... , ..
, ... A~fl'tMe"' ~ IU.o111 1Ut2 MA<MhUI ttV.. • tum 44t • Mtft"A AIM A"-',_ N«ltl • °""'9110..... c-tt A'-"
1/ot h•• IHoOc/l"f h+r fl S.. IJl.fllt .......,.,
J
via Air canroml•. Ba1lota
available ln Westcllfr Ploza
1hor.>1 &t 17th & lMTK" Ave-
nue. Deposit one only In the
ballot box at Jett'• PettJna:
7..oo, Rppearina Oct 31 thru
Nov. 5.
Favorite Uncle
Ev~ryone·s f1vortte· uocle,
Uncle L<n, o!fert a -fl>U
or fun. prize• and tnt...ttln&
columns, anJcln .-ii pit>
tur<s every Satun!aY In !ht
DAILY PILOT. Someooe you mow would probably "'joy
It.
CONSERVATION-YES
but CONFISCATION-NO!
Vote NO on Proposition No. 20
CITIZENS AGAINST THE COASTAL INITIATIVE •
870 M.,_.t SlrMt • 8.,, ~1'1ncloco, C1 8ol102 / 1127 Wllshlro l!Nd. • Los Angelee, Ca 90017 I 233 A StrM~ Suite 1107•SinD\lgo,Ce1110!
Co-Ch1/rm1n
EDWIN W. WADE Mayor, Clly of Long Beoch, Pul P1'111dont, L11gue of C.llfom)I Chle1 )'
JOHN F. CROWLEY Secretary-Tr .. tul'I<, Sin Franclteo Labor CouncD (Al'l..clO)
A. L HAMILTON, lol Angelee, Attomoy ind tAgtl Colllllll lo trWl_,lll·Qn>UPo
'
• I '
DAJLY PILOT
ORANGE COllfTY
Contractor
To Finish
Pool Jobs
SANTA ANA -A Hun·
tington Beach swimming pool
coo~actor bas agreed to com--
plete the work on a mnnbu of
backyard pools and satisfy the
demands of Irate homeowners
whose complaints led to the
filing of a civil action by the
district attorney's office.
Orange County Su p e r i o r
Court Judge Jame.s F. Judge
accepted the pied~• made by
lawyers tor Jean A 11 d re
DeLonais who operates "Pools
by Jean" at 5582 Spa Drive.
But Judge Judge ordered
DeLona is to return to his
courtroom Feb. I to confirm
that unfinished pools listed in
the lawsu it have been com·
pleted. lie will keep his
restraining order in effect un.
til that time.
Candidate
Hits Parties
CLEVELAND, Ohio (AP) -
Presidential candidate John
Schmitz said his American
Independent party is a "sec·
Ond political party." no l a
third party. as he lashed out
at the Republican a n d
Democratic parties.
"Schmitz, a lamedu ck
Republican congressman from
CalUornia , J\.londay al~ e d
much of his criticis:n at Prcsi·.
dent Nixon.
Democrats. Republicans,
Socialists. Communists and ··au of them" ought to run in
the same primary, Schmitz
contended , "and we'll run
against the winner."
Beotia Notws
ARBUCKLE 6 SON
WESTCLIFF MORTUARY
4%7 E. 17th St., Cosll ?tle11
61M111 • BALTZ.BERGERON
FUNERAL HOME
Corona del Mar 173-1450
Costa Mna 141-tuc • BELL BROADWAY
MORTUARY
ltf Broadwaiy. Costa ~tesa u H43S • McCORMICK LACUNA
BEACH MORTUARY
1795 Lagana Canyoa Rd.
UM415 • PACIFIC VIEW
MEMORIAL PARK
Cemetery ~1tn1UJ
t'llepd
1511 Paelllc vi... Drift
Ntwpert Btacb. c.IU .....
141-1711 • PEEK PAMILY
COL()NIAL nJNERAL
HOME
1111 -.... w.-i.11u lt3 IW • SMl'l'RS' MOllnJAllY m Mahl st
lluntlnctoo llN<b
DlfDI
j
T......,, Ocl*f 31, 1'112
A Dlfferetice in Stiles
Moshenko, Burke Battling It Out
By O.C. llUSTlNGS
Of Ille DflltY "* llltff
Sponlng flllttd pants, a
doubl~brea.61.td coat, a n d
slightly longWt hair, the
D<mocrallc candidate . In tllO
70tA Al&ernbly District loots
Ill« tbe new slyle politician he
says be is.
"ID, I'm Ten-y Moshenko,"
reads a tag on bi! lapel. ''Fly
me to Sacramento."
A 30-ye1r-okt Los Alamitos
lawyer, MOl!benlw Is waging
what he says is a hard, uphill
fight against third-term in-
cumbent Robert Burke ror the
right to represent the 500,000
people in the 7oth district. The
largest AMembly district in
California, it Includes Hwit~
ington Beach. Costa Mesa,
Fountain Valley, Seal Beach
and parts of Santa Ana, Buena
Park, aid Garden Grove.
"l'VE BEEN WALKING
doo.r--to-doc.-Cot five months
oow." Moshenko boasts. "I've
personally taken my campaign
to the homes of 40 percent or
lhe voters in the district ."
And with the help of three
trotben, a a1!ter and his wife,
he add3 proudly, "70 percent
o( the voters in the district
will have been called on by
someone named Mosbenko by
election day.
"If we had just a few mort
weeks," he U)'3, "I'd "'
predicting a v!clocy by a good
margin. But there ,are still
whole areas (including Costa
Mesa) we haven't hit. All I
can say about nut week' is
that it'll be clooe."
BURKE, A srour. barrel-
cbested man with sborl-<:rop-
ped hair who prefers con-
servative business s u i ts,
forecasts the election ctif·
ferently.
"All the signs are with me,"'
he says confidently. "I predict
I'll win two-to-one, about the
same margin I v.un by in
1970 .••
'I'M TERRY, FLY ME'
Terry Moshenko
Among these "favorable
signs," Burke says, are Presi·
dent Ni.z:oo's Jong lead in the
national race over Senator
George McGovern. and the
l,8000 vote edge in Republican
over Democratic registration
in the 70th distri ct.
"l'l\1 GETl'ING no outside
money for my campaign
because this is considered a
'safe' district," Burke says.
"Of course you can never tell
unt il the votes are in, but it
looks pretty good."
Burke's campaign reflects
this. He says he is relying
primarily on selected mailings
and as lJ18ny personal ap-
pearances as he can manage.
His precinct work is being
handled by the local Com-
n1ittee to Re-elect the Presi·
dent, which he says is "in-
dlstingui.shable" from 'his
organization.
House-to-house wnlk.ing, he
says, is ineffective "because
thls distric t is jull too big. lt's
bigger than many ztates."
Paraplegic Admits
Shooting Case Role
SANl'A ANA Lo s
Alamitol paraplegic Raymond
Graves Monday pleaded guilty
to reduced charj:es in action
that halted what would have
been tbe second week of his
Orange County SUperior Court
trial on attempted murder
allegations.
$2,500 debt.
lt was a ss erted in
testimony that Garvas was
shot in the back on Graves'
orders by Joseph D'Ambn, it,
Cypress, who is currenlly
serving a state prison term of
si.I: months to 15 years after
pleading guilty to reduced
charges.
GARVAS TESTIFIED that
DESPITE TH BS E dlf.
ferences In style, both tan·
dldat.es expect to 1pend about
the same amount of money.
Burke plares h1s campaign
cost at $25,000, w h 11 e
Moshenko estimates his et
$20,000.
Burke is stressing what he
says ls a strong record of ac--
comptishment, as well as the
experience and seniority he
has earned after ili years in
Sacramento.
AMO NG llJS ac-
complishments", Burke, a
former Huntington B e a c b
elementary school trustee,
lists a bill to contiooe the re-
quirement that school tax over-
rides be voted by the pet>
pie, a bill to allow large high
school districts to be broken
into many smaller ones, and a
bill removing the requirement
for periodic school unification
elections in non-unilied areas:
Jle also supported the
Reagan-Moretti ta x com-
promise of last summer.
"It's pretty widely known
that I'm on the conservative
aide of my party," says the 50-
year-0ld Republican .
He also says, "1 feel I'm
very representative of the peo-
ple in thl3 district."
'SIGNS FAVORABLE'
Robert Burke
cooperate with Jocal officials
in securing needed !ii>eeial
legislation.
dltlooal start assistant .
Orlglnally, 1n a press release,
Moshenko aald he was going to
give the money "back. to the
people."
Burke, while generall y
slaying clear of dirt<! com-
ment oo Mosbenko'1 charges.
says that most ol what his
challenger alleges is
"ridiculous."
In defen,,e of his admitted
frequent "no vot.es," Burke
says "I believe iXWoeopbic:ally
that collectlvist-type measures
are not as good as in·
dividualistic ones, and l try
not to compromise that prln--
ciple. ''
Little
Marcy
NOV. 4th
HUNTINGTON
CENTER Speaking of his own plat-
form , Moshenko promises to
push for an overhaul of public Awerd wil111i119 c:hild reeotd l119
school finance, work for erti1t M•r<.Y li9ner .,.d p11pp•t
"tough but fair" pollution 'Little M•rc:v' will •ppeer in
restrictions on cars and in· l live 1how1 011 011r "'ell et
dustry, and "to double the ll •.m .. I & 3 P."' .. ertd will
s e r v i c e s ( r o m t h e •llfotr•ph •lbv"''· H1r .l1ow
CHALLENGER MOSBEN. Assemblyman's office lo local it 1pon1«.d bv
KO attacks Butte's rec--citizens and officials." Th• f•"'ily looai Stor•
ord whenever be gets a •rtd •Ihm• er• on 111•.
chance, dlarging that Burke is TO ACIDEVE this last Huntingto1t C•nf•r, !••eh
"one of the most negative point, Moshenko has promised et Edinger &
voters in the Assembly" and to use one-third of his $t9,000 Sen Di-to Frwy. H.I. 191.0556
opposes 80 percent of all bill.tol_sta::::l::•__:sal'.'.":."..Y_to::.._:::hi:'.:re:_:a:n_ad:::_·:========== presented. He especially at·
tacka what he says is Burke's
"philosopbical opposition to
public education."
''His accomplishments are
very i.Mignificant coosidering
he's bad slx years," Moshenko
continues. "He has exerted no
positive influence to aUempt a
solution of the school finance
crisis in California."
Denture Invention
MOSllENKO FURmER
condemns Burke for failure to
Forl'toplewlth
''Uppen'' and ''Lowers''
'Ibe neamit tbin1 lo bavin1 JOG' own teeth is possible now with a plutie cream dtsCOvery that actu·
ally holds both "uppers" alld
"'lowm·• as never heron: poMible.
I t'I a discovery calJcd F1XOOEHJ9
for daily home use (U.S. Pat. 13,003,988) and it has revolu·
tiooiicd denture wearini. F1XOO£NT
THE GLORY OF GOD
forlDI an elMtic membrane that
bdpa •beorb the ahocb of bitinJ: andchewillc.
W ith Ft:UIDl!NT many denture wearen may eat. speak,. lauclt, •ilh
little •any or dentutetcominc Joma.
One application may last for
houra. Dentures that fit are eac:n·
tial to health. See your dentiat
reiular1y.Geteaq-~mef'll.oolxt
Denture Adbe&ive Cru.m.
Baha'u'llah is the lltt1t in the succession of Dtvfne M.......,.
sent by GM since the beginning of mtn't eal1tence.
He is the Prontlse4 One of all rel igioos. His comln9
ushers In the Att of fulfillment mentioned in 111 tilt
prophecies of the past. lbha'u'll1h brings
God's ''•n for world ptlct, world justice and world unity.
FOR INFORMATION: 547°8811
Judge Byrm K. McMillan
accepted the plea and sen--
tenced Graves, 40, of 12332
Martha Arm Drive, to five
years to life in state prison. he was cl ubbed and shot by1j~""'!""'!""'!""'!""'!""'!""'!""'!""'!""'!""'!""'!""'!""'!""'!""'!""'!""'!""'!~""'!""'!""'!""'!""'!""'!""'!""'!""'!""'!""'!""'!~I
D' Am bra on Graves' orders,
JUDGE McMILLAN
ordered Graves to be returned
to bis courtroom Nov. 22
before leaving for state priaoo
for a ruling on the parole
violated by Graves last Jan. 19
when hil companion abot and
wounded Richard. Oarva.s, 29,
of 11110 Gull Lane, Jlunlington
Beach.
But it was made clear Mon-
day that whatever sentence is
lmpored will be served con-
currently.
Graves' plea Monday wu
on admlaalon ot nsponslblllly
for the ohootlhg of Carvaa at
lbe height of a quarrel apark·
ed by the Huntlnaton Beach
man's Insistence that he be
pald in lull for a long standing
ma~ed to stagger from · the
home and 6eek ll!lp at a
nearby house.
Graves was one of five men
prosecuted in 1969 for the kill-
ing of Bruce Beck, 30, a
Hollywood resident who was
shackled to a stand pipe in
Graves' garage.
Beck told police before he
died. from his burns that he set
fire to the structure to sum·
moo bdp In the belle! that he
would be murdered when
Graves and his companions
retumed from the nearby
racetrack.
Graves served a sit-month
term In county jail in tha
caae alter pleading guilly te
reduced charges.
~momin~
deJ br@ahfast
the drive-thru "non-stop" break/Ht for the e1rly blrdson-
th&go. NowbelngseMd otall Oel Taco locations-a
"""P""-• deluxe a>nllnontal b1011c/ut •• ClOlfeo,ollnge
Juke ond a piping hot Oanlsh •• all on a non-.pi.I
Jray •• Just 69cand IT ONLY TAktS A MINllm
NOW SUVING 7•11 AM
NEWPORT BEACH • .,. ..... ,,., ...... , .. c..,..
SANTA ANA TUSTIN ... It._. -,... ..... • .. Hll -._ Aoa .....
••• 1194 .... 0,.,. c:...., .........
01/}y Coast Qffors
• 63Guaraliteed Certificates
·Saturday Service
·The Insiders Club
Tho lnaldon Club: A new
way to beat Inflation. Its
membership card permits
you to buy nearly every·
thing yell need from the
finest clOSed-door shoW-
rooms at substantial sav·
lngs -appliances-. furni-
ture, stereo equipment,
sporting goOds, draperles
and much, much more.
You e1n even buy cars
at the "'fleet" price and
mobile homes and motor ..
cycles al substanUal sov-
lngs. The Insiders Club
,
Effective Annual
Earn!ngs
5.00%-5.13%
Passbook. No Minimum.
5.75%-5.92%
One Year Certificate
$1,000 Minimum.
6.00~.18%
Two to Five Year C&rtificates
$5,000 Minimum.
Up to 90 days loss of
Interest on amounts
withdrawn before maturity on all certificate accou nts.
also provides big dis·
counts on tickets to sport-
ing and entertainment
events ••• plus a whole
list of free services: safe
depC>Slt boxes, money or-
ders, travelers checks,
and notary services.
Membership require-
ment for savers-$2,500
mi nimum balance. Coast
borrowers now recelve as--
soclate memberships en-
titling them to all outside
referral services. Ask
•bout Joining at any Coast
office.
MAINorncl'.:
91h & HHI, LosAn8Bles e 62ioll51
other offices
W1LSHlltl: 9t GIWIOtef Pl.AC£:
3933 WUshl,_ Blvd .. L.A.• 381-12615
LA. CIVIC COfnlt:
2ncl &. Bl'O&CIWI,. • 62&ll02
HUNTINCTON HACH:
91 Huntl"8(on center• (714) 197·1047
!Wf1'A MOHICAt
718 WllllllN 81'rd •• 39S(l746 ... ..._
lOlll • PKJffOe 831..a.541 ....,_
D!Ul;nd Stqlplfll Qr, e 531.(UOt
PANOMMACl'l'ft
ChaM •Vim Nl.0'9 Btvd. • 89:N171
T-.
18151 V9tltura Blvd. e ~14
l.QHQ-
3/d 1. Locust • 437~7481
IAST LOS ANGEUS:
8th & Soto • 266-4~10
DIAMOND SAit: ffl4Y'ls:fmhr BMS. •
DallJHauro-9Alollo4PM
All -boOpt CMc .,.,,.,, Opon lolut*yo
9AMtoll'M
Opening Soon:
Offices In San Gabriel,
TusUn & La Mirada.
,
The Treasury
is hereto
' save you.
Prove it
yourself.
The8.88
Swiss calendar
watch, the
greatest buy
from
Switzerland
since cheese.
Tel ls you the time ri ght up to the second.
The date. And in some cases the
day of the week.
.. ... , .. '
Ladles' cal1nd1r,
•llv1rton1, 111theralrap
. '
t1•it1DA "IUS 1800 Cllfll~t.rlli SI. , T911ANCI S&Olllved1 mS llllWtllarnt wooou."o MILLS 21SOO Vlct1118fvlt. LAICIWOOD Cato1 St. tlld Par.tll'IOVAd 8111
llVllllDI 3520 1)'1• St. IUIMA PAllC kid •M Orlftf1\~
SANTA AMA JIOO ~ 8r1stal St OIAMOI CMdtft G'ovt Bl~d. ~ M.t11Chest
°''" .... w.,. ,, ... ,,. s;w ... ,. ·11 •• 1.
1104"
..
•
<
I
Yo11r M°"!fl• WortJa
I t I . . $
Contributions to Charities:
Plymoutlis,
Dodges Get.
Recall Note
KNOW YOUR
CANDIDATE
Make Most of Tax Benefits DETROIT ( U P ll
Chryoler Corp. hos """"'""'"' the r<eall ol ll.30i early pro-
ducllon 1173 Plvmoutha and
VOTE
B.v SYLVIA PORTF.R
Second in a Serit•
If yoo 're typical of millions
ol wi, YoU make y t1 u r
c h a r I t a b 1 e contrlbuUom
teward the end of each vear -
tlthough you may make yaur
pledg"' eorller. And If you're
typtcal, you ai.o try lo make
your contributions ht a way
giving yoo lhe max1111W!l lu
benefit.
Why not? Even usumi.n&
your prime motivaUon is
charity, what's wnq with
making your contribution cost
u little u possible, after tu·
es1
A CHARITABLE con·
trtl>Ytlon alwaya costa yoo less
than the ap-
parenl dol·
Jar figure -
as the fol-
a1 the follow-in& chart,
prepared by
the Research
Institute of
America,
A m e r -
}ca, drama-
tit.es. It shows the out-of·
pocket cost of a $100 contribu-
tion th1s year (dlsre~arding
the earned Income ctiling) If
you Itemize your deduction s
and are a married man flling
a )oint retum:
If your ta•ble incomt i1
Hop in your
car and come
as you are!
The Imperial
folks are
waiting for you!
~IBalic
Costa Mesa
Harbor Blvd. at Fair Drive
(714) 979-1 000
11.000 ~ 11,000, • $100 .....
trlbutlon coats yoo 111: u your
'#Table -me 1' IU.000, a
1100 conlrlbullon com you
118: If your touble Income Is
111,000, a 1100 conlrlbullon
com yoo 111.
If your taxable Income 11
ll0.000. • $100 cOntrlootlon
costs you '72; If your tax•ble
Income Is $34,000, a 1100 oon-
lrlbullon coota yoo 161; U your
taxable lllCOltl< Is 121.000. a
1100 ctnlrlb<lllon coals you
'84.; If your tau.bit income ts
132,000, • 1100 c:ootrlb<ltlon
COSl4 )'OU 161.
IF YOUR tauble income ia
134.000. • $t00 oontribullon
costs you '58: if your taxable
inoome ls '50 ,00'.I, a $100 con-
tributk>n costs you '5(); If your
taxable income J1 $70,000, a
~100 contribution cC>.'lt! you $45.
If your taxable inoome is
Tax Advice
Conference
In Anaheim
PICK OF THE SEASON
.,
Sht11 ado,.. you lor It. Diamond c:tust1r
ring• In 18 karot yellow gold. Top; •21250.
Bottom.
Do Som.thing Bt1ullflll. ••
Cll01'9t Acc.-.. 111\'1• -A-let• .... .. ... ......, .... ,. "' ~ °"""' ... .
SLAVICK'S
Jewalera Since !917
IC F' ~fl '".lN iSl./\Nb
NEWPOrT ')o.,CH -· 64~· I JIO
Optn Mon . 111nd Fr . 10 •.m. fo 9:10 p.rn.
Wiii! '9UllMI. M: 11fl.il(t, 0r"'11t, U (.,tltM U Hatti
.... ,,., "'" Oltof.• •""I..' v .......
,,
IU0.000, a 1100 conlrib<ltlon
COib you $38: if YCU' tu:able
Income ~ ll:!0,000, a 1100 ton·
trib<ltl•n com you 138: ~your
tar.ble income 13 siso.ooo. a
1100 oontrlbuUon cost> you $34.
If you are a single per10n,
the net after·talt cost to you la
lest: at a $11,000 Income, for
instance. a 1100 contribution
costs )'00 169, not 175. ff
you're a head of household,
the net 11fter-t.ax cost is also
less than the net for a married
man: at the $16,000 level, the
net after-tu cost of the $100
conlriOOtion ls $72. not $75.
FINANCE
l 11telco1n' s
Sales No·w
Out of Black
Dodlles for ad)Ullment ol
brake holes which could wear
through and cause a ~ ol
stooping pow«.
In New YOl'k Friday, Volvo
of America r.or,:i.. aakl Jt i.5
recalling about 40,000 can
equipped with f\Jel Injection
engines to correct malfunc-
tions in the throttle cab!li.
A Chry&ler spokesman said
about 110 of the Plymouth
Satellites, Dodge Coronets and
Dodge Cbargen being recalled
could have front brake hoses
rubbing against the c a r
frames because or 8 brake
FOi
KENNY
KANGAROO
Intelcom Industries of Santa hou9e mounting b r a c k e t
Ana reported net eaminlts of ml881\gnment.
$17,801, or i cents per share.1-j piiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiijjl"-l l on revenues of $987,022 for the [
fiscal six. months ended Sept.
30.
It was the first profit.able
period for the company, wh.lch.
was organiled ln late 1969.
For the comparable period
last year there waa a loss of
$35,107, or 7 cents per share,
on revenues of $716,320.
EFFICIENT
PERSONALIZED
SERVICE
and
QUALITY
MERCHANDISE
COAST
SUPER MARKET
The voting ai;e has again
been lo\\·e1~ to givt' others
the right to votC'. Girla and
boys attending any school In
the Newport-1\ileSl\ area can
\\·Jn a trip to Sacrftmento
via Air california. Ballots
available in Weatcliff Plaza
shops at 17th &: Irvine Ave-
nue. Deposit on~ only in the
ballot box at J ctt's Petting
Zoo, appearing OcL 31 thru
Nov. 5.
STANDARD CARS I
2 •44 "" ....... "" ...... l"IUI U. M $2.)ol ,~ . ........... _ .. ,,,.,
for BIG CAR:"'"
2 •45 .......... ··· ..... I
'"· h. , •• ·-·
for I
Charge it E •llat General Tire
..... """"' _,. ~· -· .. -""' " ..... N O """ ., ........ ·-·· " .... ·-"' ...... K .. MW'" """ .... _ ......... --· I
-111e S4/e-driver tire eotnpiU1J'e
•• •
•
TufSdu', Octotttr 11 lq72 • DAILY PILdl 8 ,
It's pure girl. The flowing
cape collar, the wide
azzo pant
1fl qui Softty llOYJll"lQ C.tpt' col!.H
u:inal palazros or on a lull length
ress Sm:io;,h1nQ ii1·h0n'lf> or N.1!-on-11.e-
own M15:!189SIZNlllo14.
A, Two-p1etc IOP anr1pal.v1n 11a11t Br"Jhl
bold i.iun!<i on arf'la1e1nyton.
B Lona dresr. 1n sol1d b1owro wnie or bl1cll:.
100"• acet11e.
15.99 each
'"m"f.Q.9.§,~,r,y
_ .... ,.,,..,. ~A """"'f l,off...-... ~ to "
....... 11111 ':'ltV••1\J Ullllt!'ll .r 'I' ,,._.,,,l ift'Ullll ••,,·o,,•· WfM,.H '-•rv , .. ,.,.~ ..
J
• . •
•
.
' .
.. • '
' .
" .. .. ..
.,
..
•• •
• • ·i •• ' ., .. . .. •• • • • ..
'• . . . , .. • .. '• '• .,
" •• " •• '· " ..
Mitt•."""..... ...,., _, ..... _.,._
o •11•1••u•• t 1Jft••1.aos.11 • 10t•'· i
' •1-.r:
JO DAILY PILOT
Tu1-.n Y ou1--Volk s
l..OS ANGE:l.ES ~ APl -The
\'olk.'iWHg1•n. t'V~r the ntnrk
for a tie11i• gimmick. has lkJW
bt!eu asked lv serve as a roll·
u1g Qillboarll for I u r i n g
college-age consun1ers.
Murketlng specialist Ckarlcs
!-;. Btrd calls the gaudllv
painted 11nd declared \'\V 's
"Beetleboards."
Bird 's idea was to enl~
studenL-driven Volksy,·agen11 1n
1.he pursuit or the college
market. .,.. hlch he says i:i.
··mobUe and very hard to
reach ."
So rnr United Air l.ines,
Marantz sowKI equipn1ent.
Time. Sports Illustrated and
Spun-lo Eidttlon have ' con-
tracted with Bird to have their
advertising n1essages Beetled
around campus. he says.
The advertiser 's cost is
about $100 per car per 1nonth.
Bird !>BYS students $20 per
month -calculated to pay for
monthly gas and oil costs -to
have their VW's done up in the
advertiser's chosen style. And
afterwards the car 1s re·
painted in any c o I o r
designated by the student.
Bi rd says college students
are "usually ne~ativc to
advertising, but 1heir attitude
was that co1npan ies must be
good guys to do something like
1his."
He has reckoned that one
Beetleboard for everv ~.000
st udents should be elfettivc :
thus it would take six to reach
the potential market at UCl .• A.
Applicants are interviewed,
said Bird , thei r driving Rnd
narcotics records checked and
their cars inspected.
"We even give each a
psychological test." he said.
"By the lime we 're through
y,•e can teU pretty well where
he's go ing In be with his car."
lie says he plans to have
Beetlel>oards on JOO campuses
~ n~ fall aocJ_he_s•Y:.1':_ hnsl
KNOW YOUR
CANDIDATE
VOTE
FOR
DON
DUCK
... o. ... ....... l
TODAY!
New Record
For Air Cal
Personalized • Stylish • Efficient
Order For You rMlf or a Friend
May b• u1•d on enYelope1 ei re turn addre''
l.h.h. Al10 very h.11ndy et identificetion
lo1bel' for m.11rkirHJ per,on•I it•m1 such o1 1
books, r•cord1, photo1 , etc. Lebe ls stic k on
91.11111 •nd mey b• u1ed for merking hom e
c.an n•d fo,d item1 . All la beh .11 re printed
.,ith stylish Voqu• type on fin• q uelity whit ..
9umm•d p•p•r.
OVER THE COUNTER t:OMPIEJ:E NEW .. YORK ·STOeK UST
'
NASO LI1tln91 for Monday, October 30, 1972 ... ____ .... __ ,
-(
'""' •ac Lt •1,..P .. , '"'• I~ t~ '•c Tl >tlM 'a IMO ·~Tm •~mid •tn /l 1tnM .,.,,,. •••••• '>•kN •1rkr
·~•co 'Rvltr .....
·~ ·~ '""01 ·~" 'f•11P .. , .,, ' .. 'Pl '•nn 'enn •nw1 ·~" ~ . .,. ·-'"""' 'ec:tl .... ~1 •et I ... , t
'tll ·~·"" •el•I" '"'"' '~Id •n,., .... , ..
•tt!I~ •ttlll" ·~i;• •ttli"-
'hl':I 'h"I •ttlt~ ·~1•10 ·~u;
·~11' .,,
•tt!IV 'lck 11"<1N •Uld• ··~ 11111" •ll!F
'illtl •1~n •11v
>ltl •ol •• '«• •all• ...
•otF •atE •~tr: ••• . , •• '•« '•" ... ~
'" "' '" '" •se ., . . ,,,
~ .... '" "" ... , • ·~· Pvlt .. ,,,,,
'"'
R.,h
Rtl• •• .. ... .. , .. , .. " " " •• •• "' ...
"' :
.... •• ••
' l • l ' • ,:
ii u u
" 1' ~ r. "
" • ~ •
•
s . DAlt V PILOT JJ
• Monday's Closing Prices-Complete New York Stock Exchange List
.Market G1·ipped Finance
By 'Uncertainty'
• , \
•
'
J 2 O'-ILY PILOT TL1t$day, Oclobtt )\, 1972
Fren~h111en Fizzle Official
Named
She's Only One of Kind-
Prof essionnl Fisherwoman Sex Survey Damages Reputatiorts Ntwport Beach r ' s 1 d e n t
Philip B. Robinson hes been
nnmed goveroor of t h e
California -Nevada -Hl!lwall
District of the Kiwanis Club . PARIS (AP ) -A new
survt)' on sex life ln France,
described as a Galik: KiMey
report, damages the reputa-
tion of Frenchmen as expert
lovers and shows similarities
between the French sex scene
of the 1970. and that of l(le
United St.ales in the 1930s and
'<Os.
"Whether the tourist offices
Hite It or not, the reputation of
the Frenchman as a great
Jover and a dispenser of
orgasms takes some pretty
hard knocks." says Dr. Pierre
Simon, in describing the
survey Of wblcb he is the chief
editor.
lt ls a 913-page volume call-
ed "Report of the Sexual
Behavior of the French ." A
canvas covered 2,625 persons
over' a three-month period in
197fJ and two years v.·tte
taken to compile the results.
TAKEN AS 8 whole, only a
thin majority of the !ample, 56
percent, Was satisfied with its
sexual experience.
tions with them "just to please
me. without really wanting
to."
And while $8 percent of the
f'renchmen in the sample
were asserting they "always,
or almost always," bring their
partners to an orgasm, only ~
percent of their women were
agreeing with them.
THE NO-CONFIDENCE vote
widened further in another
area. Asked if tbeY and I.heir
partners more often than not
achieve d a c lim ax
simultaneously, 56 percent of
the men replied "Yes," but
only 40 percent of the women
replied this was true.
Underlying much. of the
report wa s the feeling that
ll11derlying re·
port is feeling thal
French ser is
tnor e toorkaday
lhan oo·la-la.
that certain aspects surprised
him. nonetheless.
"l was . . . Vef":J surprised
to learn that 78 percent of the
women surveyed st.a ted that
they never had sexual rela·
lion!: during their marriage
with anyone but their husband.
I was also astonished by the
small amount of homosexua l
experience (six men and two
women out of a group of 100).
But they were the only sur·
prises -I believe in my re·
port.""
Fanaily Clre111
Robinson , 2242 Arana St ..
received h1I certl!icate of
election from the prt.!iident of
Kiwanis International durlng
the recent President's Ban-
quet in 01.icago.
The banquet was the flnal
event of a series of meetings
during which newly elected
governors and d is t r I ct
secretaries att: trained.
Robinson is a member of the
Kiwanis Club in Cypress.
by Bil Keane
SAN PEDRO (AP) -Cindi "I grabbed her as a net man
Marshall, a 21.year-Old blonde, because she'• the best pel'IOO
b a prolessional flsherwoman I've ever seen with a needle,"
on tbe lloful• K. a fishing boat !,ampncht said.
that works the S o u t 'h e t n The adventtue ls tempered
Call!oria coastal waters. by hard work though.
''I'm a skiff-man, "Cindi
says. "Al.so, I'm the only net-"WE AVERAGE about JZ
man en tl1e Donna K." hours a day," C{ndi said.
You can find her on San "The days become even
Pedro's fisherman 's wharf, longer when the crew n1111 ln-
her bare feel entwined in fish to obstacles -like net
nets, her hands stitching holes damage or walUng In line to
tom by sharks. unload. We fish at night and we &letp In the day. We usually
SHE'S THE ONLY woman1o------
leave here around midnight
and gel bacl: by .-. In the
winter it's cold and the
!IJbermen face ~ a r t I a I
unemployment. Y0t4 ve got to
love fishing to do il"
.NP.w, ~·s ~Vtng for
another boa,,. quite' convinced
she'll be In • the fishing
bulinesa. for years to.~·
"Married? No, not me." she
says, "not for a · while, 1
anybQw. I'm saTing to buy a
boat, a commercial ;!;sblng
boaL"
among San Pedro's hundreds
of fishermen, a five • year
veteran who's as hearty as the
toughest old salt.
She has to be. As a skiff.
man, she battles choppy
waters in a smaJl boat at night
to search out schools of r~
IS IT TRUE THAT OLD INSURANCE POLICIES MAY
ACTUALLY STILL HAVE VALUE EVEN THOUGH
THEIR PREMIUMS HAVE NOT BEEN PAID FOR
MANY YEl\RS 7
"The first woman fisherman
I've ever heard of," said Bob
Lamprecht, her boss. "And
l've been fishing since 1946.
"Oh, there are a few
fishennen's wives who help
by' EUGENE 0. BERGERON
Tiiis IS ff'Y ,..lbty tr ... LU. -11111 ,_1klls U..W ......, '9 ~ ., •• ,.,..
•'"'I ttiey ...... bHll ttior.qlifr' ci.cw ,_ ttielr ...,..,,, • .....,._. ...... WINI : 111oe-
'nlen come the indications
that Frenchmen are less ef·
feclive sexually than they
have convinced others to
believe -and some clear
signs that they are aware
something may be wrong.
French sex is more wookaday cut ln a husband-wife team,
than oo-la-la: most couj>les but mostly the wives just steer .
••c.ptfo11 of IJftlllP Dlld Nrwl 1_.,..... at.Mt all ....... ~ IMPM • c .. .,.._
sftl( tMy ..... beff I• effMt ..... a ltl1111!trte4 ..... ef .,....._ WW. ,,... .... ,._.
The most striking example
is that 77 percent of the men
said they believed their wives
sometimes had sexual rela·
make love in the dark, Satur· the boat. Cindi is the first
day night is still the big night, crewwoman of this type boat
for sex. and the condom still is I've ever seen.
the m06t widely used coo-lraceptive device. "SHE CAN DO any job a
A number of parallels were man can do," added Lam-
found between the Simon precht. report and the Kinsey report She got her start selling bait
oo American sexual behavior on a bait receiver anchortd in
in the 1930s and '4-0s. The the harbor off Santa Barbara.
similarities are ironic because Fishennen she met taught her
the French often ha ve ridicul-''P le h d sword-fishing, gill·netti.ng, and
poUc&es -. ttet pold • t"9y bee•• ..._ fth ccnlt 'lfllM It -4 .. ,.., tll9 p..-111•
a!tcl ... , ... pelky I• force for a ~lf&c period of ti-.
11 ..,· .......... '"-'t' h ..... J Mft'ke c.m ..._ .._ ,..W ,,.._ ... ,.., .. ,. ef
•tMfwfse ..... w ... fw9ottM llt. ........ ,... .. ......., ........ --
coM1n.l11 .. _•C• cOlltact • -H -4e ~ baw tlie ww -wil f9f It t. .,... W.......,......1 111..m..wlll Mw••tlll i.-tlih ~ ....
, .
Balt%•B ei-geron Funera l Home
COSTA MESA 2 LOCATIONS CORONA clel MAR 646-2424 673-9450
Irving
Teaching
lrimates
ed the United Stales as a eop w o on't gi't'W me anything get turned into a traps. At one time, she owned
FROG!" he puritanical societ.v. , in which ______________________ r_o_w_n_boa_l _____ _;.;=="'
sex has none of the allure or
eirpertise attributed to it in
France.
NE\V YORK (AP ) -Author
Clifford Irving, u·hose phony
book about billionaire Howard
Hughes led him to prison, is
teaching fellow inmates a
course in creative writing.
Irving, servlng a %1h-year
sentence at the minimum
security federal prison at Al-
lenwood , Pa., for conspiring to
defraud the McG raw Hill
publishing firm of $750,000,
told of his prbon activities in
an affidavit filed in U.S.
District Court here.
HE SOUGIIT se nt ence
reduction on the basis of his
need to be with his children
should his wife Edith have to
go to prison in Switzerland for
her role in the fraud. He also
referred to his help to other
inma tes.
The Simon report showed.
for example, that 55 percent of
Frenchwomen had sexual in·
tercourse before mariage, as
compared with 50 percent in
the United States in 1940.
About 30 percent of Fren·
rhmen admitted to cheating
on their wives in 1970, while
the American figure before
World War II was from 27 to
37 percent.
ONE POSSIBLE conclusion
drav.'tl from the similarities in
that the essential changes in
attitudes toward sex took
place in the period following
World War I. and that the so-
called sexual revolution of the
1960s was over-rated and
vastly less significaat
historicaUy.
Simon, who called Dr. Alfred
Kinsey "the father of us all,"
said he was conv inced of the
acturacy of his survey, but
14th Season
NEWPORT • HARBOR
KIWANIS FOUNDATION
PRESENTS
TRAVEL AND ADVENTURE
SERIES
Friday, November 3, 1972
8:00 p.m.
ORANGE COAST COLLEGE AUDITORIUM
2701 FAIRVIEW ROAD. COSTA MESA
Bill Stockdale
"ISRAEL"
OW ..,.In _..." .., le l"1M. I llolMI rkll 111 af~kll lllt:Mry, pn1miMftl 111
c..-..... tt1t1th, • 11t11 .. .,.m!M ,.., t1111t 111111,... •111 t1.c:•u1t tw111t1 n
I !llC"'afiftt lhlllY ., H atw:IMI i.fMI '*-"""'9 wlttl It.. Ylllllty ltf rnocle"'
,..,,...,.., ,......, •-11 r11IM 1<11111 Crvi.ac1...-1 cattln " "'*''"' Cl!lft Hiit
AIMH 11 .... llty rtli!'I ...... MrTWI PM1 ll1t1ttt. Tel AV!¥ • , , J1tf1 , , ,
H1•1 • . . C-rH. Tiie li.lk al ...... ., D111 •• _....... W.. city ..
................ Mill Ill L•IMI M1rt11t. A ''"'"''"'" ..... 111 Nat•relll .•• '""
lllM M J ............ , • , lottWe .... Cllvrdl tt IM Nlti'l'lty. ~ 0... SM,
19wftl Ml9f ... •rtfl ... tllllt Jef1iltlt •Nw . , • (1111 ltf OllllH , , , lltllo
1111 911 Ille IN llf GelllM, IClftt .. ...._.., l"IH1r1. Lit. In I modlnl KHtbllll
llllf 1119 1-11"' KC-.iiillmtllls ltf llM .-11 20 'l'Hrt. 'fM iy,tv Dlffrf,
II.,-19 llf'Ml"I fll""'-.• D9e't ..... , 11111 Milllendkltl flltn 11 "" ll'Oclldlle
W-.. ft "lttMI, Its La• 1'1111 ltl ..........
··~"""''
' ' \"j •
" laAIOlll T!Cltn'I
, .... ,... ..., ll• Nfnlllleml
AOllLT ............. .,ttt.• IAH" ..im1t11tit fl •r ., . 1 ..... It.Ml
nuo••T ............ • •M 111'""1 ..imttMH 11 •r . o .tt1
l•AIOM TtaCITi AVAU9LI AT < •
.......,., H•~ ......... CIQ, ••• 1J01. Ntwll'lrf 111c111. nw ..... tUJ
Al '9relt H•r•wtrt. JM.I w. 8~1&. 81Ycl., NtwPOrt INdl
Nf'#flOtf Htf'llff' °'""*' of C:ommtrt•. or MY ll'lllTlll« of Ille Newport H1rtlor K!W1nl1 Cl\lll,
..
BILL
••• ABOUT DRUG ABUSE?
Then join Bill Wenke.in your concern. He is opposed
to th.e legalization ~f marijuana. He knows the fight
against drug abuse 1s one of youth education and sup-
port of law enforcement agencies.
Bill Wenke cares enough , as he tells Scott one of
his three children, that is fight against drugs is not
mer one of words.
·I eilke rector of "Teen Challenge," a
group 1cat the cure and rehabil itation of hard·
core d cts. He has seen the need for more
ffec iv County progli'ms. Bill Wenke vowed to carry
1g t agail1St drugs 'to the post of FIRST DISTRICT
SUPERVISOR. '
••• ABOUT INTEGRITY?
Theti you and Bill Wenke share a common bond.
? •
CARES ·!
He knows there can be no compfomise:lntegrity·must
be restored to the office of FIRST DISTRICT SUPER·'
VISOR. Ther~ must be an end lo the pressure tacms
from political bosses who now pull the strings. , ·
• •• ABOUT A VOICE IN GOVERNMENT?
How could it be otherwise, Hving as you dO, In Orange
County's "forgotten district?~ Where are the needed
parks and recreational areas?'Why must otlr,real J!ror>
erty taxes keep going up wheli our income doesn t?
You know. Bill wenke k11ow5. It's because the OJ19o
term incumbent has turned his attention to the newer,
richer, southern sections of the County. Bill Wenke lives,
works, is raising a family and owns properfy In the First
Di stricf He knows what to do a9d· he will do it. It's tile
Wenke way. 1
Pthl for by'"' Wenk• for 511..-rwlMr Co'"mitt•'\.
Ch1lrmtn, He11ry T. Str9.,.tr-, •11 H. lro• ..... •f .. S111i1 A11e, C1nf.
..................................... '
•
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;
•
•
I
1
. -
·=
• •
' ' f • •
·Fashions Spring Ahea
. .
·~men
BEA ANDERSON, Editor
..... 11
With winter ju.t around the
corner, fashion de1i9ners
turn efforts to
sprin9 end summer with
the unveilin9 of new
collections. Jentzen
introduces the "dunker"
for men end a one-size fits
all bikini for women.
I
Chessa Devis wears "
skirt that is a
mish-mash of fabr>cs
repre,entin9 the
fun things in her
life. She's h11d
so much fun
with her walking
diary that she
has gone into
business
with it.
For spring,
C11lifornia de1i9ners
have for1aken the
young girl and
gone back to
dressing women
they jilted a
few sea1on1 ago.
Hems are back
around the knees
in the vested-dress
by Fred Rothschild.
David Barr offers
a trench jacket
with matching pants
and plaid shirt.
He Coats Multitude of Skins
By MARIAN CHRISTY
Oh, what a horror the fur business used
lo be. salesel• bowed and scraped.
Dowdy styles were geared mainly for
fat , rich matrons looking for well-defined
status symixlls purchased in rarefied at-
mospheres. And the young, who saw lhe ·
humor of lt all, were amused non-dients.
Famous Denmark fur designer Birger
Christensen -whose client& range from
secretaries wbo splurge on the $706-and-
under numbers to celebrllies who buy the
$2.000 run by the dot.en -teU• It like II
was:
"Well,'' he says, "you kneeled. down,
caned the little darlings 'Madame' and
willingly allowed them lo push )'Otl
Suede lapels slim
down bulky furs -
a signature
of Christensen.
around."
"Finally, the era of (ur stuffiness had
come to an end," says Christenc;en.
He sincerely wanted to change the im-
age of fur fashion. He bopped the next
plane to Paris and bought couture from
Louis Feraud, Ives Saint Laurent and
Ungaro. Later, back in Denmark. he had
the looks translated from f· "ric to fur -
with sensational results.
FASllJON POINT
Ula fa!hlon point i.s that fur roats
1hould look like clothes; ' '0 Id er
curt.omen lMtsted on shawl eolian, roll-
back sleeves and plenty of room. But fur
fashkm has to relate to fashion·ln-general
whlcll. In turn, la tied In wilh lllestyle.
We treated the fun like hairy fabrics and
made up-to-the-mll'lllte look!.''
People rtacted.
One day Chrlattnsen wu walking
through h I 1 Copenhagen salon and
bumped Into Shirley MacLalne. "I'm
awfully 10<rf )'Otl notlctd me." Alie 11ld.
"I hoped I could be very, very private."
Shirley had soocl rea10n lo be
dismayed, She bad bou!ll>I a ,..... of h<r
own clothes -pontaulll, dreue.1. &own•
-and wanted to try vsrlous flln wllh
I
them. Privacy wa! a must.
Otrlstensen gave up his office for lhe
day and Shirley turned It into a dressing
room. Among her dozen fur purchases
was a mink bolero and a calfskin suit.
When Merla Callas went t o
Copenhagen lo give a concert she called
C'hrlst.eMen and asked If he would please
open hb shop on Sunday. Oui.!tensen, us-
ed to the way ol the famous, agl'ffd. It
wu a hot summer day and the lhop was
air conditioned frostlly.
"We went from the Sahara to Alaska.,"
aays Christensen dramatically. "When
~tarla had bought a chinchilla jacket and
a black broacltall coat -t sakt It was
enough. I was xared ahe would get
hoAne and I'd have all those enthll!lastic
patrons angry at me."
CLIENTELE
ltarry Btllfonte alao d I 1 c o v er e d
Qlr\JtoMen fun. He ordered one of the
new '"'I> ooatl for hi.a wife and then, In
I bunt ol 1enm>lity. llld Ile -led a
mink stole !or hi• clllldm\'1 fa..nte nan-
ny.
alriltenoen, wi-oolltctlon II It
Bonwlt ,..Uer, dcdded thal ...,..
colotrilltl wllh limited bodaeto mlshi
get just as excited about affordable furs
as the rich .
But he knew he needed a barometer.
Wbat looks did the young want ll'ld
wear~ What Items rated automatic re-
jection?
Just how far did the essence of
"freedom'' -which was everywhere -
arfect the buying 'pettem or furs?
What dJd <llri!tensen learn?
"Status symbols mean not.hi~.'' he
says. '"lbe young want weuabtUty, a
cmain amount ol formality and styltt
that don't disguise their &llmness."
l~e promptly created whal turned out
to be a rod-hot coll<ctlon or und<r-l'IOO
fun -Imaginatively called "700BC."
Bm·11tllens are ellS)I wrap-on style!
made frcm muskrat, red fox or Chlntte
Kalgan lamb.
llJ.U8JON
Chrlltemen readily admlll ho cab
nothing over a site 14, and, even tllen. ts
punleil llbout wl>al thapu mete il>e °"'
Ucll W111lon or si!mnHI. "0-llu Ill
lhould Co on a protein die~" Ile ..,._
"And, my dear, Uley lhould lum ta
&bake dlolr ......., llDtl 111. no, tltllll you .•
I •
•
AWARDEES -Mrs. Paul J. Gruber Oeft). Harold B. Wickersham and Mrs.
Charlene Wrighton admire the Silver Anchor Award with which they \Vere hon·
ored by the Newport Harbor Chamber of Commerce Women's Division.
For Community Service
Annual Awards
Four people were honored
for their community servlce
by the Women's Division of the
Newport Harbor Chamber of
Commerce during the sixth
armual Silver Anchor Awards
presentation recently.
TI10se holl(lred with the
Silver Anchor Awards were
Mrs. Charlene Wrighton ,
Harold B. Wickersham and
Mrs. Paul J. Gruber.
~1argrelh de Nio Elliot, the
division 's official hostess. was
presented with an orchid as
Orchid Lady-of-the-year.
Silver Anchor Awards are
presented each year f o r
unusual and outstanding com·
munity service. Normally,
these are people who have not
previously received public ac-
claim and have done their
deeds on an individual Jevel.
Mrs. Wrighton currently is
teachioi sixth thn>ugh eighth
grade bandicapped students.
During her college yean, she
-lied wltb the high llCbool
e:ctensloo program which pro-
• vlde! continuing education to
drop.outs due to drug abuse,
pregnancy and other prob-
lems. She also worked with
~ the deaf Children at Falr\1ew
State Hospital.
A yootb sponsor, Sunday
school teacher and fund-raiser
for her church, Mrs. Wrighton
organized a working •party·
which first collected money
for food, clothing, toys a n d
paint and then drove to a Mex-
ican orphanage with the sup-
plies to complet e 11n-
provements there.
Wickersham has been most
active with the YMCA,
particularly the you th pro-
gram, building developn1enl
finance committe·e and
membership projects. 11c was
also instrumental in' landscap-
ing the area of the Y.
An elder oJ his church, he
has also produced a film on
America and another depic-
ting the story of Christmas
cards.
Mrs. Gruber bas given her
professional nurses training
only on a volunteer basis here.
She is a member of the Hoag
Hospital Auailiary and Copa
de Ora.
Her curr .mt service involves
giving special training and
therapy to stroke patients both
at weekly meetings and the
victims' homes.
Each year, the orchid is
presented to a member who
has also performed quiet com·
Given
munity service. ~1uch of f\trs.
Elliot's work has been in the
back.ground on committees.
She instigated the Silver
Anchor Awards program and
served as its first chairman in
1967.
Odors
Hampered
Clothes hamper o d o r
becomes especially con-
spicuous in the s u m m e r
montl\s -but• don't feel
hampered by ii.
Freshen your c l o t h e s
hamper by following these
suggestions:
First, clean hamper insides
thoroughly with a heavy duty
laundry detergent and water.
Use a damp spl)llie to avoid
saturating wood or wicker.
Allow to dry thoroughly in a
shaded area out of doors. if
possible. Siray with disin-
fectant.
i'Jang on air deodorant ball
inside hamper lid or any other
place where depositing laun-
dry won't be obstructed.
New M an About House No Dummy
By ERMA BOMBECK
Nclman-Afarrus u s u n I J y
brings out a Christmas catalog
v. Ith suggestions for t h e
woman who tul3 everything .
This year, they have a hot
little Item for the woman whu
has-i:iothlng. It's a life-s ize
1nodel or a husband with a
programmed tape recorder
that keeps it say lng what you
want it to say.
10 order me n Paul Newrn1n
~·ho will pull me on his lap
and say, "Turn off that stupid
ball game, Bupie, and tell me
ag11in how much iron you take
to stay so incredible."
AT
WIT'S
END At mealtime, I'll put Paul on
uutomntlc and he will assure
me over and over again, "I
didn't h4ve this for lunch. I
dldn'I. I never had thJs for
lu nch. No. never!"
iri carrying out the g'rbege,
find humor in the fact that the
SCrt."tDS are stored under the
firewood left over from~ the
~ar before, and never ques-
tion why I added the rent to
the balance instead 0£ sub-
tracting it.
They pointed. out how for
$3.000 you could nrdcr a
lifesize policeman for pro-
tection. Or a stand-in at the
office. Or a busy person who
wants to be two places at
onc.-e.
If I'm going to sink $3,000
into a }'ff?W live·in, I'm not
going lo fool around. I'm go ing
My instant Paul Newman
will never read the paper
when 1 am telling him about
the kids' ret~uners. He will
never check the thermostat
each evening to see if I have
tampered with the sea.J be put
on it. He will never get a
hickey on his nose everytime
I ask to use the car.
He will never sit in tho
driveway in the car laughing
at a disk jockey when I wait
dinner. He will never read in
bed when I have lost my
sunglasses. He will never offer My new toy will take pride
Clean Compliments
Are No Whitewash
DEAll ANN LANDERS : As a former
resident of Eau Cl aire, \Vise., r y,·as
fascina ted by your statement that when
ycu lived there, more than 20 years ago,
you had the whitest wash on Valmont
Avenue.
That statement also intrigued a
reporter for 'l'he University of \\'isconsin
cami; ...... J><!per who decided to do some
digging on her oWn. Thi s is what she
"'TOie :
"Dear Ann Landers: lt wasn't very
nice of you to publicly insult your fonner
neighbors in a column that circulates all
01·er the y,·orld. I contacted several
"'·omen \Vho lived near you in those days
and this is what they had to say about
ycu: claiming the whitest wash on Val·
mont A venue :
"Mrs. Emn1a Weiss of 1619 Valmont
Avenue commented: 'Ann was a won·
derful neighbor but I don't recall that her
\vash was any cleaner than anyone
else's.'
"Mrs. Paul Marg of 1610 Valmont said :
'I never paid mucb attention to my
neighbor's wash. I couldn't tell you if
Ann's was the cleanest or the dirtiest.
But I do remember her as a very sweet
and interesting person.'
"Mrs. G. W. Breml of 1618 Valmont
recalled: 'Mrs. Lederer (Ann now) was a
nice neighbor. Sbe minded her own
business.' "
A few others bad similar comments
b .. t they preferred to remain anonymous.
So it seems, Ann, that no one In Eau
Claire remembers your wash as well as
you do. Borrowing one of Your nuggets of
advice., I say, ''Count your blessings -
t ut make sure they're yours." -MAG-
GIC MENARD OF THE SPECTATOR
DEAR MAGGIE: l remember every
one of those women. They were all good
neighbors and they mlnded their own
business, too. I a pologize Jf 1 Insulted
their laundry. WUI you please go back
and give tbtm all my warm regard•?
DEAR ANN LANDERS : Now that the
great American home .....reeker (football)
is being glorified on all 1he networks, 1Yill
you please relay a message to my
husband? There is no chancr. that I can
get his attention until January, but he
might listen to you.
Dear Husband : I am fast slipping M!\o
a state of depression as I face another
season of watching you watch the idiot
box as if it were the only thing in life
that matters. But then I guess it is.
I find it quite remarkable that you chat
so easily 'vith the players, whom you
don't even know (and who never answer
you, of course), while I .sit there, the
woman who bas been married to you for
15 years, bore you three healthy,
beautiful children, and I could drop dead
in fronl of your eyes and you wouldn't
even notice.
I find it fascinating that you can call
each and every player by name. You
know where they were bom and how
much they weigh. I am certain you do
not know bow much your own children
welgb and at this point I wouldn't bet
that you could call them by name.
For the last three Thanksgivings you
have not come to the table to eat v.·ith us.
Christmas and New Year's it was the
same story. When your children grow up
they will remember that you ignored
them. Nature has a strange way of
paying people back. When you v.•ant their
love and affection, they will tell you to
get Jost. -THE GIRL IN YOUit WED-
DlNG PICTURE. REMEMBER ME'
DEAR GffiL: I'm pri nting this In
October In the hope thal things will
brighten up around your house before the
holidays. Thanks for writing.
to take me to dinner only
wh~ I have un Impacted
wisdo m tooth.
AB I told my bU>band, '"I
don't want to make you jn..
secure or anything, but I am
thinking or replacing you with
a $3,000 dummy."
He turned the page& of his
newspaper slowly. "What dots,
It do tor '3,000?"
''It will do or say anything I
want It to."
school _ .. or alts on the edge
nf the bathtub while you lbave
and Lelis you something b rat-
tling in the e&r . • . or , . . "
"Jlow much doel one COil
that OO..U1 do anything? You
just Jam ft In a clOJet and Ir
11ita there and starts?"
"Without sound, they~e n -
tra," r said.
•'I th!nk I knew before t
asked,'' be sighed.
"Can you 'et them in
women's sizes?' he asked. -----------
"'SuNI. You could get one to IF you really Mk you ~hat kind of a day
you had ... or one to call you want to lose at the office and as.k what
time you are comlng home. Or 1 ht
one who tW'Il! off the 11 we1g •••
o'clock news and tells you
What happened to your SOD at but you enjoy .......... ..,., ............
Peering
Around ~,,_..,._-=.,.. ..... nl
HONORED at a baby 1
shower and luncheon in Ben
Brown's restaurant was Mrs.
David M. Kawasaki. Hostess
for lhe affair, which was at-
tended. by 15 gue5ts, was Mrs.
Ted Inouye of Laguna Niguel.
good food
and
a lot of it
<r.:::.> •.• yJu'll love ORANGE COAST women
assisting with the
grandmothers' fashion show to
be presented by the University
of Southern Callfnrnia Geron-
tology Center in the
Ambassador Hotel on Thurs-
day, Nov. 9, include Marion
Phelps, Newport Beach; Mrs.
Herbert DeVries, South
Laguna llills and Minette
Williams, Santa Ana.
Weight Watchers! ~
q;.,,
FRANCIS-
~ORR el
FlNE STATIONERY
CHllSTM.t.S CAIDS
Am«kH Artllts • Of'll'fl'Jnt .......
INTl!ltl!ST1"G usa•uL G••Ts
clamp
The Weight WarcheB
program offers you an end1~s
variety of delicious foods,
including meat, fish, fowl,
~lads, fru its. vegetabl!!S,
potaloes, ~Sta and wonder·
ful desserts! And It realty
works. Over 4 million haf>PY
people have los< weight
with Weight Watchers. So
why wail I Come le•rn how
lo 11/m down safely, seniibly,
enjoyably.
CLASSES
NOW OPEN
Cosio Me,. Cony
H•rbor •f Wll10•
MON. 7:JO PM
TUES. 9:10 AM I 7:10 l'M
~OR INFORMATION
AND FREE BROCHURE
CALL: 835-5505
WEIGHT@WAlOiERS.
3-nlerior:J
28 Years in Business
Horoscope: Sagittarian Check Print 10010 0~~,~;~H~~~~K
-, , l/J N ICI -AHD f YI N LISS
SALE STARTS TOMORROW
2441 E. Coast Hwy.
• , • •
WEDNESDAY
NOVEMB ER I
By SYDNEY OMARR
ARIES (Man:h 21-April 19):
You may be trying to go in too
many directloos. Settle for
course which leads to ultimate
goal. Moderate pace. Older
relative could be helpful If yoo
are receptive. Don't pennit
pride to block progress.
TAURUS (April ~May 20):
meuage. What a p p e a r s
elwslve is actually quite soltd.
Do 90me investigating. Older
Individual can aid if ap-
proached correctly. You won't
get 90mething for nothing.
Know it and proceed ac-
cordingly.
LEO (July 2-Aug. 221' If
YoUJnsiatoncha slng
losing proposition . be
prepared to pay price. Wise
COW'le Js to finLsh , complete,
tie loose ends and digest
lessons learned in recent past.
New horuom are about to
open.
liming. Make new starts.
Emphasize original approach.
LIBRA (Sep!. 23-0ct. 221,
One who taught you in past
could make reappearance.
\·ou gain by sharin g
knowledge. Cooperate w i th
Aq uarlan. Accent is on being
quiet within. You have no need
to keep up with those who run
but don't know why.
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21 ):
Avoid scattering forces. Check
diet. Pace quickens but proper
nutrition remains essential.
Don't ri sk health for a lark.
Friend "'ho advocates
otherwise i s misinformed.
aware of subtle nuances. Leo
and Aquarius individuals could
play prominent roles. Ooe in
authority may not flave legal
right to grant you special con-
cession.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan.
19): Change ls featured in
form of transformed ideas,
travel. communication with
one who had b e e n in·
communicado, GemtnJ and
Virgo could play featured
roles. Take cal'efuJ steps, but
do take them.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb.
18): Change in home aindition
is Indicated. This comes es
famHy member makes geslure
of conciliation. Be diplomatic.
receptive . Emotional
responses are intensified. You
find out bow others actually
WOME""S WEA• Sl1•1 I 9-M HIS I:. c .. 11 Hwy. C..-1 .,., Mat'
11).?nf
Come i11 lo O'Br:1<1'1
ind h•v• f1i1h.
Corona del Mar "
673-3915
feel. "..._ ""'•1"11 .,...,1..., 1tor• J
PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20 )' Ir·~~==:==:==:=:::;;:::~~=::!~~~~~~~~~~~~
Gather end evaluate in·
formation. Take nothing for
granted. Aura of glamor.
mystery Is apt to prevail. Cut
through clouds or pretense. CHILDREN'S SHOES. Hold reins on extravagance.
Fine to purchase item which
makes family more comfort·
able-but don't smash budget.
Be a comparison shopper and
choose quality. Genuine
bargain is available especially
where luxury item is corr
l'i!med.
mtG0 (Aug. 23-Sept. 22 )'
You have more in your ravor
than is apparent. Refuse to be
bluffed, Make others show
their hands. Circumstances
now provide }'OU with good
Some of your fondest wishes·-----------------------11
Unbelievable GEMINI (May 21..Juiie 2tll:
Don 'l attempt 10 d u c k
responsibility. Yoo gain if you
can become realities.
SAGITIARIUS (Nov. 22·
Dec. 21 ): Chec k fine points -
read between the lines and be
are aware of potential. You,~.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;_,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;-tl lose if you delegate duties, 11
skip details. See .situatk>n in
reallstlc light. Be patient. All
(icll have yet to be evahlfled.
CANCER (June 21..July 22 ):
Obtain hlnl from Gcmlni
1'hl' nniest clothes
for chUdtt:n
from tht' ~t
amtrlc&n ' l!UT'Ope&n
deslgntri
---rr.·
d.o _.. ...,~,,.u,. ••••••' ""'""-'• ··-1 ....... R ... ,, ......
F11hlon ltland
NewPort Beach
(Opalq Novomber)
Ttn & Counlry
orange .mo s.iu1ts
lfutU. .... H1rboar
flll)~llN
I
Got • Sitler
Skip Lunch
Concol the Bridge Gome
Leave the Office Early
Bui Whot Evor You Do,
Don't Miss The -
FUN ANO FANCY BAZAAR
OF HOU DAY DECO RA TIO NS
& CHRISTMAS GIFTS
,, .... '114.., --....... & ............. 1
w._•t CIR
Friday, No ¥. 3, 1972
I 0 A.M.-9 P .M.
S1turd1y, Nov. 4, 1972
10 A.M.-5 P.M,
The Island House
F1shion l1l1nd, Newport Beach
Compllmintory ColfH & Cookies
LEONABD'S BACX WITI?
SAFABI SOMMEB SAUSAGE
$1.29
I
P • I rices.
Buster Brown •.• Child Life ..• Keds
REGULARLY TO $18
$ 00 $
to
VERY LIMITED GROUP
PLeASE, ALL SALES FI NAL-NO EXCHANGES DR REFUND S
.
Mew/v,rf. f CJ ' '.fc'.t7'W.£N'S aoomr
30 Fashion Island • Newport Beach • 644·2464
' ' • ,
•
•
DICK TRACY
TUMBLEWEEDS
MUTT AND JEFF
""" _JIFL
JEFF, I WANT IOU TO
MEET50MEOEO~olrrED
VaTER5-MR. Me ADAM,
Mc:NUTr, Mc:K6NNEDI(
McDoNAJ..D, McNrTT-
FIGMENTS
NANCY
........ _
-·-~-
YES-·-
by CheJter Gould
NCOM1S All INNOC!NT LOOIQNC; "CAMPER•
AND Ml!AOS FOR "rnE COONTIIV,
McGINNTY, McAR"n4UR
"'1C~WAIN, Mc GOLD BL.AT
McCOY, MCINTOSH-
••
by Tom K. Ryon
'ff:# AJrlf
MUCH !NA
KUSfO/l'lfR
by Al Smith
by Dole Hole
by Emie Bushmiller
ARIO YOU
WATCHING A
! LOVE
REPEATS
f M GLAD
YOU LIKE
REPEATS---
YOU.RE HAVING
LEFTOVERS
TONIGHT
f RERUN I • AGAIN ?
'
;!DAILY CROSSWORD •.• by R. A. POWER l
ACROSS ornament Yesta1day'1 Puizle Solved·
1 Eastern 47 Ciretree • Chu•ch title adv"nture
6 Moved 811up SO A1rpor1 code
speed lor Hemburg
10 Golfar's !il Kind of
n9CIS511'f statue
14 Stupid follow 52 Endanger
l!i Run ewav 56 G•ll'e proof of
16 Island of 60 Being the
Scotland only one
17 Af1ected by 61 Shipy11d
crippling wo1~er
19 Bete -·· 64 Pillage
20 Jewish 65 Turn ios•de
ascet•c '"' 21 Glues 66 Inside: Comb.
23 Eu1opttan torm
na11on 67 ConcluS1Dns 12 One 39 Vililic111•nn
Comb. lorm 68 VIPs 11 13 E•cludes 4-0 Web-k
26 Su1ve Baylor 1nd 18 Cognizant ol: 44 Discolo1ru
27 Ch11ers up Brock lnform1L 46 Piec11s of
30 Flight ol 69 Der11: Dilll. 22 Items ol paper
11eps DOWN baseball g111r 48 Ans ind······
34 Oescendfld 1 Century plan! 24 Acquire 49 hah1n wine
lroma 2 Round T1ble through center
vehicle knight elll)euence 52 •••• Rovele
35 Balance J Ifs, ands Of -··· 25 Outgrowth 53 E•hibit
she1t item 4 Denier ol on horte's leg lnlatua111
37 Southern: God '17 Futu1t officer 54 Move
Prt1!i11 5 Rescind 28 Tonv ·····: l1bor10usly
38 ContinuinQ 6 8t1ve11ge Minnesota 55 01 current
cacophony 7 Ceofl ... Twins 1111 interest
39 (Wl'rlbutes cotlltge 29 Baseball 57 Volcano
wide Iv 8 The lhad. for . teams 58 Group~ c.:
41 Two. Pre!•~ ont 31 N11t1on ol 1imilar
42 Wileot 9 No longer Asia obiectt
Adom hv!n~ 32 Bell sheped 59 Race for
<13 Mesouline 10 Motion 33 Kind of certain ,,( .,
44 Move to a picture hor1e1ace 62 ••· g11en : A
lower level 1h1a1er 36 Un1upponed C<'.>lor
45 Drapery 11 Med person a111emen1 63 See eagle
' l l • ,, ' 7 • • " " " "
" " _,., •
" " ~.' "
~ 21 " <.
' " " " " • -
" " " JO " " ll
PEANUTS
,. ·' " '
'I
®'(ATT"'1NEV,
LET'S ,\\AKE A
FEW l'HONl' CALLS.
AND SEE ILJH.\T Ill'
CAA FINDM •.
MISS PEACH
"WE l{NOWlHAT
lHE LAW " 6000 IF A MAN 115£
JT LAWFtllllf "
1111
0
0
cc.1'·
"
Tue~ay, Octobtr Jl, le)72 DAILY PILOT • ~~~~~~~~'--'---"-'~"-"'''-
DOOLEY'S WORLD
. ,.,, ..
ADMNVISl7<4noW
. .,MYS TN~ S/l.&Nr
hiA~r";/$
MNtAIP nt£M
IOO'(o /
by Roger Bradfleld
0 •
0
·1,, ;:~.
~--=::::::::i
'
SALLY BANANAS
GORDO
-VOt1 ~VASI-/'{
CATS
MUST NOT
J/AVE
AN'/ eo1o1t=s!
/P·3/
MOON MULLINS
ANIMAL CRACKERS
THE. !IOI.I..
600 ~lll:>S
611.~fD
~/j6Ti<E
Elll!Nlij(i;
61<1J •• HIS
smE1.-Gl'A'<
e<ie~ svr.veq
H6 CC/fl~~··
HOW CAW {< 'IOU &AR
J..VING ON
. 7'#05/E. ,.
I
I ·' ' . ...
.
'
HARO
/300K.5f
... /Ill EUE.lll!loO SUEZE
6€1Jn.l/ =5 HI!>
rA\11~<1 MME ...
by Charles M. Schulz
-
I WONPER IF JOHN DOE al
RICHAAD RoE Will !IE 111 COORT ...
I HATE CA5E5 1HAT DON'T
HA\IC JOll!l OOE OR RleliARO RDE ..
1(€5, !1D
UKf 10 Sl'!AK
1U 1HE HEAD
Of lllE ~l\tll.
11<>\AA l'LEA<E ..
'lllE CLIENT
CARES LITTLE
FOR A
'flEAVTIFllL'
CA5€"
by Mell
HI!> POWE~Rll.
t(IUSC.l.ES STlt.llD
~EAD<i TO GP!'IAl6
l~TO ,IGTICAI··· HIS
HO!<~S nESE~T
A ll>l..EAMI~ il~eAT
TO AO~ tllOOi.b·BE
~DVEl'SAR<l ···
\
Barsotti
by Gus Arriola
by Ferd Johnson
by Roger Bollen
... \111114 l>Ll THIS Eal.I""
FOlt ME.··· 'IOO'D T><1mc :t
IOOlll..D~'r H~VE !SO lliJCH
flWV!I.~ R~01~1" l>ATES .
"1111 -10-~/
"Babelte Is wby I was S<t lnsl~tent on your coming tbl1
t\lenlng -she's "'OD 1011 of ribbons too."
DENNIS THE MENACE
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" ,, " " PERl<INS by John Miles .
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DAILY PI LOT
\Charles Still Fights--FrOm Wheelchair
•
CHICAr.o ~AP) -Ezurd Charle&. Wl·
d.JJ:1~ned "A'or'ld ht•''Ywei ght bo)'.Jn.Q
chlmpwn 1wo decades ago. has been
. f1ghllng the battlt or his Ufe for the past
~,. yu • -frorn a wbct.lchalr.
The ~ time "Quiet Tiger" of the ring,
·who ruled the heavyweight r<\nks fro1n
• IM9 until 1n1Q-l9Sl. now is hel pless and
• speechlen.
• Thf only way tile ~1-year-old Charles
nov.• can e.xprus hin1selr is wilh his still
radiant smlle. which C1)mes Ui.e a sun--
bunt although, stricken with lateral
sclerosis. he has httle to smile about Ex-
ctpt. perhaps, for his incredible y,·ifc
Gladys and his lhret chlldN!n.
l\lrs. Charles. sttract1\'e und articul ate,
servus as Ezzanfs alter ego in lhtlr
neat, brick bungalow on Chicago's lar
south side.
Gladys, ~·ho married Charles ln 1!)<19 as
he neared his boxing pinnacle, does all
the talking for her helpless husband -
and 1nueh moi-e. Ukc hand·feedin g,
bathing and, with help of their 18-year-
old son Euard 11, lifting Cha rles to a ult
table for exercising.
•·Ezzard still is 1nentally all'rt , he
knows whnt you are t.a lk1ng about," sa id
~frs. Charles. "He can reply. but il takes
Says VS C Wliiz
I Perform Better
Under Pressure
LOS ANGELES ~APJ -He's being
oompared v.•ith fvlikc Garrclt and has the
last name of 1 he most recent outstanding
tailback al the University or Southern
California.
But there's no identity problem as far
as Anthony Davis is concerned. He knows
very well who he is -the reserve who
has advanced unexpectedly to become
the leading rusher on the nalion 's to~
. ranked football team.
· "He reminds me a lot of Mike Gar-
· reu." says USC coach John McKay, the
·comparsions of a leading use runner
to those of the past -Garrett , O.J.
Simpson and Clarence Davis (no rela-
·tion) -are inevitable.
Garrett is sn1alt and Anthony Davis.
Jistcd at 5 feet 9. 185 pounds , runs \vith
the san1e aggrcssi \·eness.
"If I remind people of hi1n, it dOl'sn't
Bus Accident
l11jm·e s 35
Prep Gridders
JOHNSTOWN, Pa. (CPI ! -The 35
members of a junior varsity football
team and one or the coaches were in-
jured Monday when a school bus taking
them to a game lost its brnkes on a
downhill highway ramp and overturned
in a deep culvert.
Two of the injured were in critical con-
-dition. Wllliam Frye, 14, and Drew Zim-
~merman. 13, both of Ligonier. Pa., were
hospit.alizetl with se rious he.ad injuries.
Police said the Frye boy was thrown
, through the windshield.
Four other students were hospitalized
'in fair condition. The other injured were
:treated and released.
Police said the driver. Domer Ross. 50,
Ligonier. attempted unsuccessfully to
sleet the bus into a field after a brake
line ruptured as the vehicle descended a
U.S. 219 exit ramp at Oavidsville, Pa.,
eight miles south of this western
Pennsy\\·ania community .
The bus carried the Ligonier Valley
lligh School junior varsity to a game
with Conemaugh Township High School
at Davidsville.
:Sports In Brief
bother n1e." says Anthon.v. "In fact. it's
a pretty nice complitnent. I'm only a
sophomore. I've got '"'0 more years to
establish myself. It "'ould seem he has
already done just that.
He was named Pacific-8 Conference of-
fensive player of the week r-.1onday for
gaining 206 yards in 25 carries and scor·
ing touchdo .... •ns on runs of 48 and 55
yards in USC 's 18-0 victory Saturday at
Ore goo.
McKay includes Davis with Rod
(\>!cNeitl and Allen Carter in his evalua·
tion of Trojan tailbacks: None is O.J.
Simpson but he's never had three such
outstanding tailbacks on the same team.
Davis has gained f>62 yards. f\.1cNei11
494 and Ca rter 217 . 1\lcNci\l was bothered
last Saturday b.v a Charley horse and
Carter didn't suit up because of a
hamstring pull.
That left much of the running burden
up to Davis, who scored two touchdowns
in relief of 1\lci'\eill against Stanford and
scored tv>icc against \\'ashington t~·o
Saturdays ago.
"I have performed heller under
pressure.'' said Davis , who contends he's
closei-to ~ reet IO.
Against Oregon. where the wet, sli!>'
pery artificial turf bothered most run-
ners. "I stayed aggressive throughout the
gnme. I just knew I'd break awa y. I
couldn 't make all the cuts I would make
oo a dry field but it didn't bother me as
much because or my v.'ide center of
gravity."
A former hlgb school quarterback in
suburban Pacoima, Davis is USC's all-
purpose performer. He runs. catches.
passes, throws on option plays and kicks
uff. He also plays baseball , an outfielder
v.·00 hits from either side .
Yet athlelics in the long run arc the
means to an end for Davis. )~e 's taking
17 units to\~ard a degree in urban
studies.
"'If I just wanted money, I'd have sign·
ed with Baltimore and played baseball."
The Orioles drafted him out of high
school. "I'm happy I have established
three goals as I will have three things to
fall back on. I feel fortunate J have two
sports and an academic career."
Davis has another. more immed iate
goal.
"I was recruited by Stanford and,
~·atching them in the Rose Bo~·l last
New Year's Day. I "'ondercd whether I
would be on th<it field some duy I
sure hope so."
J(uhn Nixes Expansion;
Ex-Lakers Coach Axed
NE \Y ORLEANS -Thill Deep South
city's hopes for a baseball franchise -or
even a part of one -weren 't giv1:1n any
boo6t by commissioner Bowie Kuhn. who
was here P.1onday .
Kuhn said expansion of major league
ba~ball Is nowhere on the horizon.
Kuhn, In town for a baseball general
managers' meeting, told newsmen that
be would like to see a team in the
LouislMa Superdome when it is com·
pleted in 1974.
"Howe.tr. realistically, 1 d-On 't 8Ce a
chance without eipansk>n and I can't see
any expansion at thls time." ...
PHOENIX -Phoenix Suns coach Bill
van Breda Kolff wu IJred fl1onday af-
ternoon by general mftnager Jerry
Colangelo, who wiU usume the coaching
duUH of the National Basketball
Aaoclatlon club hlmself.
Van Breda Ko1ff OOlclk.'<1 !ht Suns for
only seven 1ames. Jle WAI hired by
Phoenix ronowlng last lleA!O~ when Suns
coach Colton FlWlmmons resigned 10
btcomt coach ot the Atlanta 11awlri1.
V1n Breda Kolrf was also rtred as
co.ch of the Lot Angeles Leker1 several , ........ ....
STANFORD -Stanford's football
ltim bis k>lt one player for the 5eAIJ()fl
11ul mtY aet another blck for SAturdny'!I
1ame against UCLA at Los Angeles.
Slatllq offensive gu•rd Ch~ck Cordes.
trho nictlved pulled knee Ugomen ls
aplnsl WUhlngton Saturday, needed ~n
operation and will bt out the rest of the ee.uon, lbt team announced Monday.
But mJdd._ linebacker D e n n I s
relcrlon, who 1ulfered. a hip pointer
Saturday. may s r r action agan1sl !he
Bruins although he missed f\.1onday's
practice. ...
LOS ANGELES -Roger Crn1g. pitch-
ing coach for the S a n Diego Padres
since 1969. returned Monday to the Los
Angeles Dod gers as the National Lea~ue
team 's minor league pitching Instructor
Craig reports to th e Dodgers immedintt•ly
as pitching instructor for the Dodgers'
Arlzon3 Instructional Leogue tebm.
The Padres recently replaced Craig
with another ex-Dodger, Johnny Podre.s. ...
PlllLADELPl-IlA -The Philadelphia
Phillies traded third ba.!leman l>on
Money, pitcher lllll Champion and in·
fielder John Vuko vich to the l\-111w3ukec
~rewcni todny for sturting pitchers J l1n
Lonborg, Ken B.-ett and t~·o relievers.
The two rel~f pitchers acquired by lhe
National League Phllll~s are Ken
5anden and Earl Stephenton . ...
C.OTEBORr., Swcdrn -&>rkl'IC\ '9
Jeff Borowiak up~t No. 2 Sttd Arthur
Ashe of Miami. 8-1. 3-6. 7-8. Mondny nlllht
ln lhe first round nf the World Cham·
pionlhlp Ttnnl~ lflurnty.
Jn other action It WA!I No. I 8ctd John
Newcombe or Australia brttzln~ past
Arcldlata Tom Leonard. ft..3. S.2. and
sevtnth seeded ls1nAll f~I Shefel ot Ef{vpt
rallied tn beat Au!ltraliao John 'Alcx-
Ander. 7-8, 8-5
Also Roser Taylor of Greet BrU&ln
defeated Ove Bengts.'tlln of Sweden. W, 1·
C: Htroon Rnhlm of P"klstan downrd
Gerald Boltl'ick of Gmt Britain. &-4. &-•.
hlm a loni: ~·hilt• and he'd rathf'r reply by
~haking lus hend for yes or no.
··1te en1 : \\'f'll, but I have to !ihrcd his
food for him lie usually arises at JO.:JO
a n1., and i.:oes to bed about 10:30 p.n1 ··
Charles was stricken in February, 11166,
with an1yo1ropic lateral i;clerosis, refer·
red to as the Lou Gehrig disease.
II quu:li.ly proved fal.31 to the fain ed
Iron Man of the New York Yankees, but
l\-1rs. Cht1rles 1·x1>laincd · .. Gehrig was af-
fected 1n thi: upper body hilling the
rei;p1rator~· system. bu! E z ta r d
fortunately "as tut 10 the lower body."
.. Doctors ha ve no idea what causetl 11
10 Ezwrd, but feel tha t beins a fighter
hns kept him going as Inna as he has.
Lil tle pa ins hlt lllJn while he still was
boxing. but he was so active he threw it
off beforl' hr retired Crom the .. rill& In
L957."
Charles' last appearance before the
boxing public was at a touching
tt!stimonial given him here in 1968. 11 wa~
attended by six former chsmpions, In-
cluding the late Rocky Marciano. whose
battering of Charles in a title match for a
seC1:lnd time ln 1954 sent Eu.ard rapidly
Uo1vnh11I.
~luhantmad Ali, Archie ?wfoore, Henry
Arnutron1, Johnny COUion and JOt\Qny
Bratton aJso ettendtd UM testimonial at
"°'hich Charles was able to aay from hls
wheelchair: "This 11 the nJwt th;lna that
ever happened to Ole. All 1 can aay Is
Lhank you, lhank you."'
Late in 1970, Charles was elected to
Boxing's Hall of Fante along with for1ner
heavyweight champion Max Schmeling.
Harry Wiiiia, Professor Mlke Donovan
and Kid Williams.
But since then the !lght crowd, ex-
cepting an occasional . visit from Mar·
ci ano before his plane crash death and
Jersey Joe \\1alcott, who knocked out
Set Cbarlet Page 17
UPIT.._.,..
DETROIT'S MEL FARR 1241 FLIES OVER AND THROUGH DALLAS DEFENDERS IN NFL ACTION MONDAY .
DALLAS' CRAIG MORTON UNLEASHES ONE OF THREE TD PASSES.
Kilmer Ready;
Jm·gensen's
Fate in Doubt
\VASHINGTON (APl -Billy Kilmer
hns stepped into the \Y a s h i n g t o n
Red.<ikln s· job of No.I qut.1rterbnck for the
second .~1r:-.ight year following injuries to
Sonny Jurgensen .
"I feel bady for Sonny. honest lo God."
Kilmer said. ··1 didn't want the jo b this
1\'ay
.Jurgensen, the National Foot b a 11
League·s top c3rcer passe r, was lost for
the season when he underwent surgery
~1onday to repair a ruptured Achilles ten-
don heel cord.
Dr. P. f\.1 . Palumbo Jr., the team physi-
cian ~·ho pcrfonned the one-hour, 4~
minute operation, said the injury was
.. fairly extensive. I had to sew the ends
together."
The 38-year~ld Jurgensen was injured
in the first period ol Sunday's 23-Ui vic-
tory over the New York Giants. He had
just thrown his first pass of lhe game, a
13-yard completion to Roy Jelfenon,
when he crumpled to the ground.
"I just secn1cd to slip," Jurgensen
said. "lt felt as if somebody kicked me in
the heel, yet nobody was close to me."
A Washington doctor said he knew the
extent of Jurgensen's injury as soon as it
happened. "He looked dovm and back like
he thought somebody kicked him," the
doctor said.
"The same thing ho s happened to
squash players, tennis players, soccer
players and skiers. They all look back to
see who did it when it happens."
Several orthopedic surgeons agreed
that age was one cause of the injury.
"Our conne<.:tlve tissue gets brittle wilh
age, no matter what kind of physical con·
dit ion we're In," a Georgeto•n Universi-
ty doctor said. "Jurgensen 's injury
sounds like a classic example of an aging
3lhlete whose legs were suffering from
battle fatigue .''
Dr. Palumbo said the quarterback's
left foot will be in a casl for IO to 12
v.·ccks. followed by rehobllltatlon for two
or three months.
Adding a Woman's Touch
Girl Trainer Stops Locker Area Nudity
\VEST CHESTER . Pa 1 AP J -"Th is is
a roed traininR room No nudi ty permit·
ted." lhe sign reuds at \\'cs1 Chester
Slate Collci;te
Linda Trend .... :iy 1s th(' reu:i;on
Linda. 22. of \VQOdbury , NJ . is the
flrsl fenuile 1rn1ner tn work with men's
tt>ams at lhe school Sh<' 1s one of the h•w
remnl(' trMlners 111 the co untry
She is a grriduate nssistant at th('
sc hool and hopes to t:ikf' thr cxRrn ne xt
J11nuary gi vco by the Not ionul Athletic
Trainers Associntlon.
She has worked wit h the school's fCinl·
b111l end soccer teanls . as w('ll ns with
'
"·oml'n's field hockey, She dale!'i one of
thr M>Ccer p\ayt'rs
.. The guys. they ft'll strange al the
bl'g1nn!ng llke I did hut now rn1 Just
one of the crowd ," she explnincd
"I could sec how they felt in the hej'.l1n·
n1ng." she said. "They didn 't know if r
1vus any tfOOd or not A!; the word got
nm und. t~11ch day the hnc Ji:flt lon~er at
1ny tnble. You l..'Cluld rrally see thr d1f·
ferenl!C fron1 !he bcglnnlng lo U1c end .
They would even llsk for me ''
Thill(l:S they S15k for include l11p1ng llnd
first ald treBtmenl s. She also k«.ps on
eye oul ror pl8yer aafety. •·Jf thert'.11 a
hole 1n lhe field , .. she said, "you tell
somebody to flll it in.°'
Llndn . with one brother wko ls seven
ye<irs older, "kind of h11ted to go back to
~·omi'n Afl cr working with lht football
tcan1 "
The "vnriel y" of injuries ls one of the
re11.,on$. she s11id. An Interest ln things
mcriical p1u5 love of aUlletlc!l, added up
to her decision to become a tr111iner.
"I ju!lt really liked working wtlh tht
guys F'ootbnll's definitely a hnrder hit·
ting l'Olll11ct sport. II ju!JI lends 11.Ae.lf to
1nore Injuries. Plus I like \\'Orking with
guys They wc.rB run," she s:1ld.
'
Dallas Boos
Accepted
By Morton
OAL..L.\S (AP) -hut •em ..,., .. tald
a "t11rled Craig Monon. •'Whtn l'm
throwing louchdowna and lbe Dallas
Cowboys are wtnnlng, I cau Uve without
the cheers." .
The longtlme-No. t whipplna boy when
pro football fortunes wilted here. t.1ortoa
passed for three scores Monday night
and set up a fourth ln 1 28-24 beallna: of
the Detroit Llon!.
Dallas zipped to a 21-7 lead late in the
fint half bul !ht Uoos foul)it hack and
closed to 21·17 before the Cowboya put it
out of reach for good on Mortonra 1J..7ard
pass to Mike Montaomery, a former San
Diego Charger.
"Sure. I heard lh<m boo when I WU in·
troduced," said the 29-ye.aN>ld Monon.
"It's a free country. I'm not U:ll.lnt'them
who to vote tor ... and I'm not telling
'em who to applaud."
Morton's National Football Le-.ue life
has been one of stereophonic UDQirtalnty
-hurrahs in one ear, cursc1 ID the
other. He was the futile aymbol in tht
era when the Cowboys couldtl't win lhe
big ones.
Roger Staubach, engineer ol Daltu'
world championship of 1071, ii healed
from his preseason shoulder 1epan1tlCJ1.
He·s ready to play. hUJllry for a Mint·
back. But, Morton h11 lhe job and won 't
let go.
"As Jong as Rofer and I are in com-
petition, there wil be Staubach fans and
Morton fans," said the ~toot.--4 Clllfoi-·
nlan. "It's a way of life for me in Dalla!.
but all I can do is perform."
Coach Tom Lan4ry had Mid it .....
"mu.st game" for his Cowboya. ¥orton
said so. Everyone In gap tn.tbe-roof Tu·
as Stadium seemed to lellSe thl~eat
might deflate their world dlatit~ ~· .
A-1orton was a.point m~chine, heavl.ng 1
33-yard touchdown bomb to BUI)' Patb.
one or 33 yards to Calvin HUI and a lf>-
yarder to the heretofore unknown run·
ning back Montgomery.
A 27·ya rd screen from Morton to
.Montgon1ery set up a o n e • y 1 r d
touchdown smash by the aecood-year
man who came from San Diego in Ute
deal for the controversial, untalkative,
idle Duane Thomas.
Dallas, f>-2 , pulled withln a 1~' of
Washington's Redskins ln ~ Natlooal
Collference East while Detroit plungtf1
back into a tie at 4-3 with Green U.y in
the NFC Central.
··1 know you guys want to write about
me." said Alorton, toweling bis shower-
"·et hair. "But give the offensive llnt a
~r two. That's a tremendous bunch
th-al deserves recognition. They gave mt
time enough to have a picnic back there
on some playa."
"Detroit is better on offense than
defense," said Monon. "so we tried to
play keepaway."
Al 0.1111 -AtteftdltH:t , •S.000
Detroit 1..lot1s o I•
0..1111 Cow11Dy1 u I ] 1 -h • 1 -,,
l.loku c ..... ,.
F lr5t c:loWM 11 1'
"'"'"" -y8•fl 1f.!9 ...,...,, Ptulng Y••dl 2Jt * Rt111rn y11dl U
Pas1ts 12·21·1 ll·lM
Pvnlt J.41 >-a
F11mble1 -"'' M 1·1 Y1rd1 -,..,.111111 l•J 1-a
Del, -P1ru. 31 "'"" lrom MOl'fWI (FfllKh
•ictcl
Dlol. -LU!dry. 2 n.ft (MI M kick)
O.I -Montpom1ry, l run !Frll1c11 kick)
Oet. -T1y10r, 41 Pl'J• trvm Llftdry INl•nn
kick )
Del. -FG. Mll\n 11
0..l. -M..,rgom.ry, IJ ~I> Ir..., Morten
I Frlli<:ll kick )
Oet. -W10on, 21 p.111 ,,..., L•Nlry {M1n11
""" .... ... iw.11,....,..
......... -0.1'911. i...ndry ..... ow-;i.1;
0.1111. Hiii )NI, ~~ 1o.JL
Rec...,iflt -O.lrolt. S11'1dera J.U, '''' ).!f;
e»n11, GtrrllOn J.O. Perkt s..». M..,!gemery 2-4.
"''""" -o.tr.lt, l1ndry 11-»-G, 1'17 y11011 0.1111. Morion ll•lf.I, io. y1rd1,
Bruins Prove
Passntg Game
Also Potent
LOS ANGELES (AP) -Washington
State's defense "forced us to throw the
ball mort." says coach Pepper Rodgers
of UCLA's run-minded Bruins.
The fact that the Bruin quarterback.
r-.tark Harmon, attempted only eight
passes in Saturday's 35--20 victory over
WSU obviously doesn't mean UCLA is
putting more !lock in Its passing same.
It merely proved what RodJl'.ers claimed
all along -that his team can do more
than run out of the wlshbone·T forma-
tion.
"J thought Hermon had his best came
of the year." Rodgers told SOuthem
California footbsll writers Monday. "He
throw onlv eight limes but completed
five for 145 yards."
Harmon threw two touchdown pa1ses,
including a 5.1-ynrder to Brad Lyman. but
was ~uilty or his second Interception of
the se11son.
~fensivcly. ROOgen Sllid hlf!: te11m
"gave up too many ynrdA" but WSU
sholtld gel credit for belnf, 1 !oolh fl.
flffislve team. WSU's Ty P1 ne "looi:M as
good to me as any()ne t've seen 1n the
QURrl•rkark nollition."
Bruin,, dt fenders aren't overpowvtng
with &lie but "we m: a hltttn1 fOcltball
te.,m '' which C8Ules tumbles by the op-
position.
"Unless you have a 1upet 4efm1vt
teAm -like Sriuthem Cit ~r Nebnab -
It's herd to atop 1ny team."
~1 \ry1f1 ·1 of ,.11 the hoo"'" be.int
~enerated already for el&hth-nnked
lf('LA'~ Nnv , tR rnetU~ with top-rlM~ use. Rod<!•n .. 1d. "I hope out foothall
te:im realtt.tt that thl• 11 .a1 big • Po1'
a1 we'll have all ye1r."
H• referred 14 7·1 UCLA'• g11nt wtth 1-
2 Stanford S.turdly In Momorial
Coliteum
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.. af; Grid Stars Former Pirates Star Sisk
Finds New Life • Ill Mesa
JACK MURRY
Golden West OffenM
IUCK HARTSFIELD
Or.nge Co11t Offense
JOE JONES
Saddleback Offense
STEVE, HEIL
Golden Wffl °""'",.
ELDEll KIDD
Orange Coast 0.fenM
1. ..
BOB BURGES
S.ddloback O.l«tse
B1 llOIJ'ARD L. HANDY
01 tu o.nw .,.... ,,.,.
Tom Si& ls a retired
baseball pltdler at the tender
age of 30. But the Co8ta Mesa
resident lsn 't resentful of the
time he spent in baseball -
fir from tt.
But he b a realist and when
the Montreal Expos wanted to
move him around the minor
leagues, be hung up hls glove
and returned to his home to
begin another career in the ti·
tle insurance bus.ine$.! with
stewarl Tilln Company of San-
to Ana.
"! think l could still be
pitching," he says with self·
assurance. 1'But it would have
meant going back to the minor
lea~es to prove myself again alid 1 didn't want that.
"Besides, I find the title in-. surance business very in-
triguing and thina:s always
.~ to work out for the
best:'.J
After a full season away
from the game be was in for
mo~e than 10 years as a pro--
fessional pitcher, does he !ind
he· misses the action?
"! il)ought l would mis.. 11 a
'lot more t.han I do. Yes, 1 miss
the friendships I made in the
game but I don 't miss the
sport itself."
Sisk graduated from Long
Beach Poly lligh School in
19(;0 and signed a oonb"act
wilh the PUts.bUrgb Pirates
organlzation and scout Jerry
Gardner. He spent t.he rest of
that first season at Burlington
in class B ball.
After his high school rival at
Wilson, Bob Bailey, signed a
$100,000 pact with Pittsburgh,
the two spent the nei:t rew
years logeUter, Jl)OVing to the
Pirates in 1963.
During his major league
career, Sisk was p I ayer
representative at Pittsburgh
and San Diego.
"At times it gets pretty
sticky," he sa)'!. "But the pro-
blems are caused by just one
thing -a lack o( com-
munications between t h e
owners and the players.
Western, W estmi11ster
, In CIF's No .. I Game
"Whenever you bring in a
third party you lose Iba! com·
municaHom and both the
owners.Md the players have a
third party as representative
now."
Does he recall any specifJC
instances In which he had
prlbhms as a player rep.?
Saturday nighl 's S u n s e t
League showdown belween
No. 2 Western and No. 3
Weshninster Lions looms as
the top attraction in the CIF
Southern Section following the
weekly release or the Top IO
prep football ratings.
St. Paul and Mate_t Dei, the
Angelus League's NO. 1 and 2
outfits, remain first and fourth
in the poll with Santa Fe filth.
. Edison, the only o t h e ~
Orange County eleven in the
Soccer Club
In 1-0 Loss . ' l .
A high wind and £allure to
score cost tpe Coast Rangers
a l~'F to vis14ng Te<:0l0Uan
of Ea!t LA Sunday afternoon
in soccer action on the
TeWinkle Park field in Costa
Mesa. ! The game oPefled t he
Pacific Soccer League home
·tlt:hedule for the Rangers wbo
1 face the Fullerton Rangers .5un4'Y at TeWinkle. Reserves
play at 12:30 with regulars
going at 2:30.
In Sunday'! loss t o
11Tecolotlan lhe first half was a
1 defetJSive struggle with both
. teams h.:1ving shols al goal but
'missing by narrow margins.
In . tbe second half coach
' George Harrison s w I t c b e d
personnel but the vbltors
acored the only goal of the
,. contest 20 minutes into the ac-'tJon. Harrison praised the play
11 bt captain Brian Oallagher for 11the. losers.
b. Jn 'the reserve contest. Rob-
bie COnn scored the rlrst goal
for Coast with Tom Sia.lay ad·
1'dtni th~ second and a 1rTecototlan player ticcidentally
" scoring the third.
"
AAAA ratings last week. drop.
ped out or the elite list follo\\'·
ing its 17-7 )oss to Corona del
1"far.
·~ ...
"'
"Buzzie Bavasi (San Diego
president) and I got along
quite well. Every once in
awhi le though he hollered at
me end 1 hollered right back
at him a few times but things
straightened out.
"Eddie Leishman (Buzzie's
assist.ant) is a real nice guy
and most or my dealings were
with him. In fact, I told him 1
was stepping Out as rep. aDd
he said be would draft me
again because he .liked my at-
Saints Hold
Faint I-lope
Against MD
1tt LONG BEACH S t . :l Anthony High School football
~} coach Bob Arboit still has
9' • some hope his Saints can beat
County Prep
Grid Poll
Five Orange County prep
football teanu remain with
perfect records following the
sixth week: of the 197% season
and four of them are in the top
five of the official Orange
County Top JO list as compiled
by'111e DAILY PILOT.
The Sun..t League tandem
of Western and Westminster
conUnue one-two and ttiey1ll
settle the question of which Is
No. 1 Saluroay nlgbl •l
Westminster.
• OIMIG• COUNTY TOf" II .. 'JM"' .... llK 1. Wftltm llMI), SS ~: w-r:,,, ~';!!> ~i •. ~~ .... ,I';, i
!. ~flfl Vo11111:.Y {6-f) I I: ~.1.::c ltlj !: 11.."'l·lfr.' I' I ' &_. "7J.1.11 ,
Mater Dei Thursday at the
Santa Ana Bowl, but it's a
very taint hope. '
"We'll try to control the ball
as much as we can," says
Arbolt, "and If we get a few
breaks and they make a few
mistakes maybe we can stay
close or, God willing, even
pull It out." •
However. Arboit admits the
Saints cannot match u p
physically againat Mater Dei.
"We had eight starters out
When we played B I s h o p
Amat ," be explains. "We don't
have a defense that can stop
Mater Del's otfensive line.
They'll outrr.qin us all down the
line."
Arbolt concedes that Mater
Dei, off two consecuUvc big
games with St. Paul '1nd
Bishop Amal , may be emo-
tionally flat against S t .
Anthony.
~Pickeroo Winners
"But even if they lll'e, I
don't think that fact will have
much bearing on the game,"
he adds.
"Lart year wu a good ei:-
ample. 1bey weren't up for us
and we were in about tM
same pc>1lton u th.ls year and
they dkln't have any trouble
handling ,,., ..
I'" Corona dtl Mar's 4n'1
· 1cClurg picked 29 out of 30
""imers to nab the sixth week
of the DAtLY PILOT Pigskin
t.Pk:keroo contest.
FoUowing McClurg were
Glen Byron of Huntington
i:,Beac:h, Gay Ducharm of Costa I-and steve Walton of ~ Meu, each with 28 wln-
1"""'· and Edward Bartnslk of
11)qoto Mesa with 17. 'l1lt '°°' teit'1 lie breaker wu .....S to ~~ Ille onler of the
!~r.up.
The contest is cwponsored
by the DAILY PJU)T and five
Orange Coast area shopping
centen: WestcUff J I a z a ,
University Park. 8 a y 1 J d e
Center, Eaalbluff Village and
the Harbor View Center.
Flrat place wirmcirt earn a
!IS g1ll ctrtlllcate, second
place $10 certi0C8Les a n d
third, fow'lh lltd llllb 1$. The
lint pl.I.. -·t 100 receives tldltts to ,the use.
Not .. Demo game.
After los.tng 240-pound tackle
and llnebacktr Brian C&rne:y,
moo! or the liu<den or coping
wllh Moler Del falls on the
shoulders of tto-pound
quarterback Ken Knorzer.
"He's 81 good u any
quarterback In the league for
what he does," ArbOll says.
"lie nms and P.11saes rquallr.
weU end he's our belt al •
around lootblll playor.''
titude. But I was traded."
Was the trade caused by his
problems as a player rep.?
"Not really. I was traded
because I was 2-11 the ~r
before. And l didn't lit Into tile
San Diego youth plans because
I was 28 at the time. It's hard
to realiz.e you are old at 28 but
that's the case in baseball."
lfow about his managus at
Pittsburgh, were they all ct
the same mold?
"Each one was different.
~fan.agers tend to manage In
the same way they played the
game.
"Danny Murtaugh was a
man you had to like. If you
couldn't get along with him,
you had better have looked ln
a mirror. He was a fun-
damentalist because he was a
second baseman as a player
and did things in this way.
"Harry Walker taught the
hitters to slap the ball around ·
for base hits. Alou really
blossomed under him but we
lost our power hitters.
11Larry Shepard was the
pitching type. But he didn't
Shotguns
To Greet
Drivers?
MEXICALI, B. C.
Rerouting of the Baja 1000 to
avoid both starti"ng in
Ensenada and running through
a flooded out disaster area
may result in unfairness to
many of the 300 compeUtors,
driver Bob Ferro charged to-
day, the eve of the race.
A detour across the northern
peninsula mountains a rid
plateau reglon of Va 11 e
Trinidad may be 'flnfair to
drivers starting late in the
day. said Ferro, twice winner
, or the Baja soo.
Ferro bas drawn starting
position No. 9 and doesn't
believe be will be affected, but
said, "This could turn ~l to
be a travesty, and there is no
excuse for it."
know anything aboot the ol·
fen&lve attack.''
Sisk saya Shepard Is the one
who turned hia career around.
l~ ISM Sisk finished with a
13-13 r......i bul led !he
TOM SISK
Pirates staff in iMings pit-
ched, complete games and
e.r.a.
"lie got Jim Bunning in the
off season and when we
started in 1969, he went with a
three-man rolation, using Bun-
ning. Bob Veale and Alvin
l\1cBean. I was the fourth
FINISH SWIN G WITH
LEFT \VRI ST FIRM
starter and didn't get a chance
to pitch for almost 30 days.
"Then I was doing pretty
well and we were playing in
Philadelphia and 1 wM win-
ning, 1-0, in the seventh lMlng
when I turned my ankle. I was
out for about six weeks and
never did get back Into. the
rotation.
"I was traded to San Diego
the next year and when I got
there, I made a statement I
never should have made about
being so happy to be there I
would sweep out the stands If
necessary.
"l tried to be a starter and a
relief pitcher at the same time
and It didn 't work out.
"But I'll never be able to
figure out why Shepard didn't
let me start after being the
No. 1 pitcher on the stare the
year before.
"It wasn't that he didn't
know me, either. I played for
him in the minor leagues. At
that, I like him personally.
even now."
Sisk isn't anti-establishment.
Far from it. But he does have
a definite outlook on the game
of baseball.
"The players are righting
for everything they can get
these days. They really don't
want to be greedy but they are
on such a short term of
employment, they have to try
and get everything they can
during that span."
A good thought for golfen; whose
swi ngs are too loose and wristy is to
finish the follo w·through with the
lefl hand still gripping firmly.
This thought will help you avoid
inward bending of the back of Uie
left wrist through impact -a prime
cause of mis-hit shots. -
F e r r o specifically com-
plained that the d e t o u r
through fanning and grazing
country near Valle Trinidad
. could enrage the inhabitants I '::~:;:;::;:=:::;:::=:===:=============-:} enough so that they erect bar-1 I ricades or post armed guards I GOLFING PRACTICE NOW CAN PAY OFF LATER! Th• all new
The ideal impact position for con-
sistent shotmaking finds absolutely
no wrink.ks appearing either at the
back of this Wrisl or on top of it -at
the base of the thumb -as it moves
through the hitting area.
to jusl·publ.l•hed Arnold Palmer booklet, "Prtetice." show1 yo~ h~ prevent racers fron1 going to precttce 1t home for power play on your fivorite course.
through the area, but probably Send .204-•nd • •t•mped, return •n'ff!Ope to Arnold Palmer only after the first five c/o lh1s n1wspeper. ,
vehicles have already passed !--'----:.;::=----------==:==:!.
by. '
''They (officials of the Na-
tional Off-Road Racing Assn.)
tell us that after we start the
detour about 80 miles 90Uth of
here." Ferro said. "the next
checkpaint will be Camalu on
the West Coast . and we are
allowed to get there anyway
we can.
"I'm glad I'm going to be
one of the first few. but t think
this whole idea is going to
create confusion for t h e
drivers near the end of the
starting order. All they will
have to follow will be the
tracks of the people through
ahead of them.
"By the time 100 or so of us
have gone through Valle
Trinidad l wouldn't be surpris.
eel to see ranchers \vith
shotgum closing the road."
Ferro had that very problem
in. a Palm Springs race, he
said. A landowner called
sheriff's deputies. who blocked.
the road durin~ a race which
Ferro was leading. After
waiting 20 minutes at gun-
point Ferro elected to drive
around the property, losing
time and eventually the race.
Ferro believes the additional
80 miles or 90 added to the
length or the Baja race -
through some of the roughest
terrain on the peninsula -will
add 60 to 90 minutes ol driv-
ing, but road improvement.s on
other portions and better race
cn rs will offset the lost time.
He predicted lhe 900-mile
distance between here and t...a
Paz will be J)OSSlble to oover
in an elapsed time close lo
Pamelli Jones' record of 14
hours 59 minutes ( f r om
EMenada lo La Paz) :;et last
ytar.
Grid Poll
'
CHARLES' BA TILE • • •
Contlnued from Page I&
the heavyweight title , has
forgotten Ezzard.
Although still employed as
consullant for the Illinois
Department of H u m a n
Resources to deal with youth
problems in the black com+
munity, Charles seldom lea ves
his home.
Once every two months, an
-ambulance takes him to the
muscular dystrophy clinic at
tbe University or Illinois
Medical Center. "They check
his condition and see ir there
is anythklrg he needs." said
Mrs. Charles.
Charles defeated Walcott in
1949 f~ the National Boxing
Association version of the
world title and then became
undisputed world champ by
oot-polntlng fading ex-cham-
pion Joe Louis on Sept. 27,
1950.
In a ring career that in-
cluded some JI championship
fights as he compiled a 96-2>1
record, Charles a m a s s e d
pui'ses totaling an estimated
$1.5 million.
The money Is all gone on in-
vestments that went sour, in-
cluding a restaurant, a bar, a
nlght club and other projects.
But when Charles settled down
In Chicago 10 years ago, he
said. "I have no debls, and
flghUng gave me a wonderful
life."
Mrs. Charle.."!, who gave up
working five years ago to lend
her husband alrrmt around·
the-clock , shrugs off t h e
family's financial situation.
"We're okay as far as
money goeo, bul ii Ezzard
IOlel h1J position with the
Human Resoorcos Depart·
ment, we'd be in a difficult
position," said Mrs. Charles.
Ezzard II and a daughter,
Deborah, 20, live at home and
another daughter, Leith, 19, is
married and lives in South
Chicago.
Does boxing still interest
Charles?
That big, gleaming smile
and an affirmative nod came
from Eu.ard. But his wife
said, "Outside ol' the Olym-
pics . there hasn't been much
boxing on TV for him to
watch ."
What about the potential
rematch between c u r r e o t
heavyweight champion Joe
Frazier and Muhammad All?
While Ezzard watched his
wife intently, Mrs. Oiarles
said: "We thought AU would
win their first match, but he
clowned around too much.
Frazier is pretty good and I
lean towards him the next
time.''
But Charles laboriously and
slowly shook his head "No."
"He thin~ All will win tM
next time,.. laughed Atrs.
Charles.
Ezzard again broke into that
million dollar smile.
Prep Football
GRAND PRIX
'113~~-MO.
Tundq, October 31, 19n DAILY PILOT J 7
Pilot Pigskin
PICKEROO
Co-Sponsored this wHk by
WESTCLIFF PLAZA
And The
DAILY PILOT
BE A PROPHET FOR PROFIT
s25
s10
s5
Top Weekly Prize in
Merchandise Certificates
For Weekly Second
Ploce Winner
Each for Third, Fourth
and Fifth Place Winners
Plus BONUS PRIZE
A pair .t tkll.ts to tti. '9G'M ef ttie ,..,. IUSC '"· Notr9
De!MI ... eoc• ..... , .-..r. C.""9sy of It. DAILY PILOT.
Be a pigskin prophet for profit. Play th• Pilot Pigskin
PICKEROO 9ame for weekly pri~e1. Top winner ••ch
week r•ceiv•s $25 CJift c•rtificete from the 1ponsorin9
1hoppin9 center. Second place winner gets $10 c•r·
tificat• .. nd third, fourth and fifth place winn•rs each
get $5 c•rtificete. Each certificate is spendabl•, just
like money, at any store in the sponsoring 1hoppin9
center.
Spon1orship rotates with a different center spon1or-
ing each week's confest. Particip•ting center• are:
Westcliff Pla ta, 17th and Irvine, Newport Beach:
Harbor View Center, Sen Joaquin Hills Road end
MacArthur Bou levard, Newport Beach; Eestbluff
Village Cent•r, Eastbluff Drive, N•wport B•ach; Bey-
sid• Center, Bayside Drive end Jamboree Ro•d, New-
port" B•ach; and Univ•rs i+y P•rli: Shoppin9 Center,
C ulver and Michelson. Irvine.
Watch for this player's form each week in the DAILY
PILOT Sports Section. C ircle th• team you think will
win in •ach pairin9 in the list of 30 9am•s and send in
the player's form entry blank or • r•asonable facsimile.
Then watch th• DAILY PILOT sports pa9•s for eech
week's list of five winners.
RULES
t. s..w It to: f"ILOT f"IGS«IN f"ICKEllOO CONTan. S,ert OttJ!lrllM!lfo
l',0. ••• 1.ue, enta Mal, CA. ruu.
l. Ont' -..... ,., w ,.,... .......
(. tlntlin """' lie ,...._,. .. -i.ter tM11 TilurMlay .,. """' M ftlr¥w-911 le tlN OAIL.Y l'IL.OT .,ffke ~' ,.m. Tlltlrsdlly.
$. "•f'fkl,a ..... ~I• .... OAll Y "llOT .....,...,_ •Ml ll'letr ,_
•1111 f1Mltie. lllOI ~ .. tflflor,
.. Tltl llltlAKI"• •LANK Mun II '11.1.tlD '"' OJI l"NY•Y IS VOID.
•••••••••••••••••••• • ENTftl' BLANK • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • ....... • • • • • • • • • • • • • •
Chcle ..... ,.. .... wfl .............. ..,.....
1-..... ............. U""1J
Atlanta vs LA Rams
Dallas vs San DltcJO
Cincinnati vs l'lttsbunJll
Oc:ikland vs KaMGS City
Chicago vs Detroit
USC vs Washington State
Stonford vs UCLA
Mississippi vs LSU
Georgia vs T •nnessee
Aubum vs Florida
Georgia Tech vs Duke
Nebraska vs Colorado
SMU vs Texas
Purdue vs Michigan State
Cerrito' vs Orange C-t
Golden West vs Santa Monica
Saddleback vs Miro Costa
St. Anthony YI Mater Del
Westem vs Westminster
Santa Ana vs Newport
Laguna Beach vs Sanora
El Modeno v1 San Clemente
Anaheim vs Marina
Estancia vs Magnolia
Fountain Valley vs CdM
University vs Dana Hills
Costa Mesa 'vs Los Alamitos
Edison vs SA Valley
Loara vs Huntington leach
• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Mission Viejo vs FoothlH • • • llI •RU.If.II -M'f ..... • "" 19tM ....... 9f .... weree
• Ill •I • ftMM lhlll ... .,. It • • •"-• ·--• ·~
• • • • • • -... . ·-. ••••••••••••••••••••
8 OAILY PILOT
TONIGHT'S
TV IDGHJ ,IGHTS
KllJ O 7·30 -"The Prl.e." Paul Newman and
Ed"•ard G. Robinson are Nobel Prize winners in
this 1963 dran1a. \VIU1 Elke So mmer providing the
feminine distraction.
ABC O 8:30 -"The Bounty Man." Clint Walker
plays a bounty hunter obsessed with finding the
man who caused the death of his wife, then falls
In love with his captive's girl !rlend. Richard Base-
hart, John Ericson, Margot Kidder.
NBC O 9:00 -The Bold One s. An intern re-
sumel' his romance with a former girlfriend only to
discover she is living with another v.1oman in a
lesbian rela4onsbip. Donna Mills guests.
CBS R 9:30 -"The Dunwich Horror." ,:\ demon
in human form (Dean Stockwell lures a young girl
(Sandra Dee) Into a terrflying attempt lo revive
the spirits of the dea1. Ed Begley also stars.
KTLA D 12:00 -'Of ~lice and Men." Burgess
Meredith and Lon Chaney portray derelicts in this
1939 drama.
~· .. ~· ·-. '
TV DAILY LOG
Tuesday
Evening
OCTOBER 31
'""BOO!D!ll!ll•,.•
(])9Ntn_..
D ,..,.'"' '1h1 Rld1"
11)'-t S.1rt
0 Wild Wiid West m TIM Fllntatones
ID Ca11tr l'ylt USMC
!lJl Carr11COlt11da1
ti) Ml Ouk• En1mt1ldl ED Mod11poclgt Lod1•
9 MIJbtrry RfD
al) LI St111ncl1 Espau
ffi Thrtt SIDOlll
a:lO 00 ttt1•11's Ht1oet
0 Mftle: (Cl (90) ''SMll Wo.
t•" (dra) '66-Annt 8anctoft, Sut
Lyon, Eddi1 Albtr1. Thi mtmbe11 ot
111 lsol1t1d ,t.merittn mission !ind
lhtm11t>m i11 jtootr~ wt11n th4
l1nd 1lon1 1111 Ct'lhtest·lilongoli1n
bord11 is inv1ded by the m11rdel0Ui
b1ndit Tun11 Kahn.
Cl) C1S Mnn W1lt11 Ctot1kilt 9 ...,.. ;ritfill SINr• m...,,..,...,
(l)Cllll.-'t INIM l1fl SdlMfl Wlltitut f 1Httr1 m ~ I "Tht E.trth, I" m )Hn111 tarMlll Show
9 ;r-.Atm
Cl) C.11 Dub
Q) Dot '2 PM m Uttlt b tc1ts
'""' a rn o m , ... e lnlln1 fer Ocrll1rs
({) Trvth tJ Co1111q11111011
()) Saf1rt to A4"11lll11
Q Wlllt'1 My Unt? m I LM LllCJ m I Dft1111 et .ll11mirl
{f#) l1Uot 72
ff) La hrtjl Si• hf m Thi f rtndl CHf OJ El Mor Tltnt Cllr1 dt Mujn
O'fi Mnlt: (C) ".lubll"
(GTuh llltl Aire m,....._
7:30 O l'tt ~ • s.crtt Monty Han
mi "Tenor Lov1n11: tart" Gampane.I·
I! is 1ued 101 m1lJ)f1t1lce when Ill
shouts II 1 temperamental \el!OI',
1:1~in1 him to lost his voice.. m Ho11n'1 Ktrotl
ID l'•rry Mason m Ktnn•nos Cofl\t ED 1HJ r111:i1J Ga111t "Tht Old
Gua1d" Emphasb on 111th estab·
llshed valws as work, l1mil1 1nd
toUrrtry. em ~Ill ain Pipono
al) LI l idtble ffi NOYil:: (2lll') "'Ca on th•
K\ldMln" ( r1) '40-n G1ffl1ld,
Ann Sherld
1:30 O (j) Hawaii flYe.-0 Keenan Wynn
1uas!J 1s lht ltusltd f1iend of 1
Chlntse diplomat wllo Is tht ob·
jetf ol 111 1wui11atlon plan. Din-
ny wimams stumblu upon tht plot
blll becomes injured 1nd unnot ft·
member the details.
0 TUES MOVI E OF WEEK * How tar can a laJITTlan
go? Clint Wal ker in
"The Bounty Man"
0 l3J ct) ffi ABC TllHday Movit:
(CJ (10) "Tht lollntf M111" (wts)
'72 -Cllnt Wilker . Rich11d B1sa·
h1rt. 10tln Ericson, M1rcot Kicldt1.
A bounty h11nlt1, obwssed with find·
Int 11\e man who c1uud the death
of his wi le, trat~i dO'fln • youni
autl1w, but his ven11unc1 is lem-
perrd "htn he falls in lo'tft "Ith his
captl'tt's innocenl· girllriend. m Mer1 Griffin Show
(lj) o.t1Unt: lrntriu
fD I lfl<IAL I Soirntbodr W1itln1
fl) LI MtldlciOll dt II l loMt
!:DO 0 ®J m Tiie Bald Dnts
IDY11th111
0) Un Ytr1n1 Pa11 Rtcord1r
EID (I)) lfhllld tl1t U1ta 9 Tiit Yittlnt.n
(l!) D1t111
l ;lO 0 Cl) C8S Tllfitdlf Movie: (C)
('°> "'The Dun'll'lcfl Honor" (s11s)
'7~Sand11 Ott, Dean Stoc~well,
0 Pepper Rodpn Show
om"""
flJ llJ '"'* -· Ul Rtwhtl Musical
iuest.s. t:4S flJ YM1111 HMtipra O l'olite $urtt• "Conflllld hn·
it" Nin• Foch 1uuts In this storJ 10:00 0 ~ €D HBC lttportl
•bout 1!oltn vl1l1 c:ont•inlnt dncn, e m ......
gt1m1 that muld sllrt t publlc 0 {})(I) aJ Mlrt0t Welby, M.D.
emer1ency. O 10!11 .. rklff hf:wnb Thriller
0 lllll'lit: (C) (2111) "'FM MITilt11 1.£) IHI Colby
Y1111 tt Etrttl" (ld·ll) '68--Mdrtw (lll flrl111 Unt
Keir, 811bar1 S111U1y. fJl) l'ltylloUM fttW Y11t "Throne Ill CIJ Tt Till Ille Trvtll BIOod" {R)
(I) ra111llJ C11ssia gj) L11da Sombr•
0 PAUL NEWMAN, E~KE G!Dr_, -" * SOMMER TONIGHT IN lfl ll•t"" • ~• Sn
"THE PRIZE" • • • ll>:.10 O T•lk ltct 0 Miiiion S Mo'fit: (C) (2lw) "nit m Tr11t Aitwtnt111
htre" (dr1) '6l-Pa~I Newman, £d. Qi Mwlt: .. luftnt E11ltl''
"''d G. Robirtson, Elllt $oml!llf, El) Outdtot Sptfbmtn
®I Moftywed ~am m Tllll 'Ir! 10:55 D Mtlal AnllOUllOllllltnl
Q)(l)Dn ... EE LI Mttit Odlol 11:00 IJ D Q U) m CD Me-n
fD ~ ''Saf'lfl $#tint (S) (I) ill Wtw1
Mount1it11" OluttS Cl\lmpllll Ind IJ Olt ·~ Seyond
M Stldenbai.rm lmeltlflll dblK!lt (I) Mlrshtl Dillon
•moni ri:Mdtfttl, 111\dowlllfl lfld O Morie: (C) "2' Hours to llll"
v1rioas crtlmu.' iaaocliUona owr (dfl) '65-MiCkey Rtlonty, le~ Bar·
PIOPOMd ptl\ dt\ltlopmtlll lfl llll kll.
llOflh SIR ftrMrtdo Y1llty, m Tnrtll tr C.t111111tt1W m Sb Who .t Kti!ry '111 "Cllh· C!J Ct1•Minf Colltat ftolbaD
trint Mcrwttd" fl) CtrMf TH Anlllron1
a:> PTlfulltl lhlH 11:15 e:I CilllN 3'
ED tt It Wlttttll It "Th M '1.J Mlam ft•llY ll:JO O (l)CISLl\IMov : I •• ..,.. (hof) 'Sf-ttlrisloph11 l", Pt-
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ttormy courb!'IP dtyt fOW Jttll ·~ 12:00 0 Mo.ti: "Ot Mlct 1nd lf11"
durlll1 1 prl'llOUI •I~ etmptfp . (drt) '39-&vr1eu Mtrtdilh, Lon
In 1 fltlllbltlt "4111111Cf, fllflt 1!11 Cl\lnty
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of M111dt'• Ntota. 'SG-StlWltl Gninaer, Gr1ct Killy. Cl 9 '°"""" "Tiit Twtntr·Slrlh CD Ctcrllt1J lf•liic
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titJ llld 11¥1111• 1 to11111 ..... J:Ot II llle"9: "Tiit SW'• 1111 U.lt" D (])Cl) II ,, .. ..,. • (tnin> ''3-f"' Aat•lft.
'l7-Joet ltk011, Mlrl1111 ltookl• W•dnesday U:O'O ._ lllPf" r•ra1 ·1s -
GlfJ Cooptt, MM Sttn, 1:eo m.,,....,,, ~ --DAYTIME MOVIES I"'! '46-UMlb H"""'· .... ,.
Britton,
.... (C)-Aloo1 .. -l ·lO l) ........ 1-) 'IO-°"" {i!M '3t-H1nry ftndt, Cl•lldett1 ' H!wn, O!Mt dt Hnih1fld,
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...... (Ifni) 'M -Vlc!Of M1t11tt, 3:00 (I) (C) -r1111 lonu" Part I (com)
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0 ...... Qn11 MW" (tomli lln.
Bad Guys on Campus
Providing some of the humor for the Saddleback College production of "Mrs.
McThing" will be (!roni left) Paul Barber, Richard Cordery and Andy Pugni.
1'hc comedy-fantasy opens Thursday and plays through Saturday in Building
It. on the l\lission VieJo campus. ~
~
Season Opens With a Yawn
As Mahler Work Presented
By TOa.f BARLEV
Of IN Dilly l'lltl Stiff
"Beethoven's Fifth, tum
tuni de d11m ,
"!ifnhler's Fifi //, tum,
t 1111i , tedium.''
An avid Orange County
Phil:irmonic Soc i e t y con-
certgoer Jaid that jingle on
your critic Sunday nigtit and lt
has to be admitted from this
corner that he had our review
or a strange season opener
right there in those two lines.
Yes, sir. it was tedium. And
before ~1ahler fans reach for
their pens let them admit as
they do so that it wasn't even
very good Mahler.
A nearby listener who
argued the merits of 1.!ahlcr
with great zeal during the ln-
tennission later commented
that the Los Angeles
Philarmonic Orchestra's ap-
proach to the work had been
the worst that he'd ever e~
countered.
THAT'S AS may be because
it has to be stated, in all
fairness, that there are
moments of great beauty in
the Mahler work, moments
when lovers of Wagner sud·
denly sit up in their chairs to
realize that someone has come
very close to recapturing the
breadth and chording of their
idol.
Mahler's greatest mo-
ment s, to this critic. come
in the first and final phases or
the work with the possible ex·
ception of much of an adagiet·
to movement that h a s
passages of great beauty and
eloquence.
But most of his Fifth is a
pointless exercise in musical
meandering with oo clear
Playhouse Lists Cast .
Of 'Wait Until Dark'
The I~untington B ea ch
l'layhou11e has announced the
cast for it.s second production
of the season. "\Vait Until
Dark." which opens next
weekend for a llktay run.
Jeani Gibbon will play the
central role of Suzy Hendrix, a
blind woman terrorized by
hoodlums in the Frederick
Knott drama. Paul Gersowitz
portrays the smooth and dead-
ly leader or the trio. Harry
Roat.
Anita Scores
HOLLYWOOD iUPll
Singer<0mposcr Anita Kerr
becomes the first woman to
score a major feature film
when she \I/rites the
background music for Mark
Robson 's ''Limbo'' at
Universal.
:Ado
INDS TONIG HT
"THE LAST OF THE
RE O HOT LOVERS" ....
"PLAY IT AGAIN
SAM"
Mike Talman,
pathetic" member
INDS TONICiHT
"WHERE DOES
IT HURT?" ....
"PRUDENCE AND
THE PILL"
kltri llJ
5TAm WI DN ISDAY
''The Garden of
the Flr11.l·Contlnisu ....
"Live for l lfe u
lotti hi c.1., Ill
theme lo light the way for an
aud ience that bei:!ame in·
crtasingly reslive -at least
they did around me -im·
mediately prior to those final
bars.
Zubin 1.1ehta. the deliverer
of an earlier deUghtful 1fozart
symphony. v•orked like a fiend
without ever convincing this
critic that hl.s earlier harsh
view cf ·Mahler should be
revised in any way except.
perhaps, downwards.
IT WAS A poor choice for
the opening concert of the
season. There are not enough
~fahler advocates in this part
of the world lo justify the in·
c\usion of the work in the
Crawford Hall program.
Pnmount Plcturu pr1Hnt9
.. lllA,-IT A.f>A.lllli, "'" .. ft9 T~" 11 P---p....,...,
ENDS TONIGHT
''THE FRENCH
CONNECTION"
•IH IRI
"M*A*S*H"
STARTS WEDNES DAY
C..Orte C. Scott
,...... O'T"I•
"THE BIBLE"
•lto (Gl
•oq1tel Wekh ,,
"ONE
MILLION B.C."
BARGAIN MATINEE
Every Wednesday 1 p.m.
FRE E REFRESHMENTS
ADULTS $1.00
21ulTO' ATIIACTION
IOl!fl llDRllll
-ntE Wlll1lllF' loll!~•~Dl);'"AJ rm---...... ,110· ..... lfl!ll
........................... • • •o o/., •I'"' •• OH•• • • • .. C•••'M""' 0 ....... ~,.,_ ... ··~· ....... ., .. ~" ....... ~
...
Lmag Beach Jtlttsica l
'Promises' Delivers
Rousing Good Time
By TOM TITUS
Of Ille D•llY l"lllf lllff "ll'•OM1s•s, "•OMit••" throughout the usty pro-
" m111k1I 11~. Ntll Simon, 8urt dUCt{Oll numbers. ltchlrK tnd H11 Dlv~1 dlrwttd bv "Promises. Promi:ies" was G,rv Dlvll::illnll\lc•I c;Mrtcior J,.,..1 Allkflfl. 1CO••lllW 11r Ju111,,. PACE 18, Indeed. one o( the a pleasant and engaging 1:.!."'&::rww. 'lf:ri~~ o~ RJ.:V .ri;r. _....,. I--'•• lrt ol the enough musical comedy on the t~11. 'U:rltd "' n. '"::J '"""~ g v ...... <a v ues
Broadway stage, but the ~~~. ~:~· .~~:t l:» entire show, which moves
sparkling production 11 0 w 11 Jordl11 Hiott k;rw1tor1um, smoothly from scene to scene
Altt11lk 1t Artts11, INdl. '•1.-··t ml ~·ble t i being presented by t~ Long 11:_....11on1 'lU~ ~.i.s . w1u11JU WlCO 01.. ram -
Beach Civic Light Opera Chuck ... ,... . . . Crllq Gardntr tion. The primary reuon for ~r•11 lfubii111r. . J111M1 H .. u this is because solo numbers fulfills all the promises to an J. o s11e1vr•lr.• WllB'I' Reyne>1d1
even greater degree than the ~ .. ~.'~0-.11 . 'fJ~•i'::f are fl.nished downstage In '
original version. ~~~~ikhk · ·· GtB'f11•= darkness with merely a bead
Long Bea.ch director Gary :~: ~~~ . ~~~ii; spot on the performer while
Davis has added another gem 'J.ue v1~11o1 . .. . P11r1<:1r. L•"" the scenery is c h a n g e d
to his collection of CLO hits t= ~T. "°"' · ... : ... ·~:.\:: \~i~ upstage, holding orchestral 'th .,_ bn . t . f s ... r ... r. Gllhoolw , ...... Roti't'fl ffdct.111., reprise to a minimum. WI 1M:i pres,,1ve s agtng 0 Gf-Pf!lnlkv .•. " .... LIM MIU~ "Prom'-•, p--la-" -n-this engaging musical with a CINftlne "" .... · J0t.1t O•iHr ,,_ roull4CI ....
blue-blooded pedigree. He is tinues what has become a
backed by capable hands in all with the plum supporting role tradiUon or excellence foi' the
departments -musical direc-of the neighboring doctor in a Long Beach Civic Ught Opera. r ho h ts d The musical continues for two ion, c reograp y, se an second act sequence tha~ is more weekends at the J~-n lighting -in the creaUon of a 0 -amlngly funny .,. 1•· r ~ ...... " BP IC' 0 High School auditorium on most immaculate production. the !act thal 1't re I vo ves Atlantic Avenue south o' the The story itself is a hit bas-around an atten1pted suicide. Artel5la Freeway in kg
ed on another hit -Neil Nancy Bond is splendid ln a
S i mo n ' s s c r i p t , B u r t delicious cameo role of an, JiiiBeaiiiiciihii. iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~
Bacharach's music and Hal agreeable bar girl, while GaryJl
David's lyrics doing their dan.-Brunson i.s an effective man of
diest with the screenplay of a few words as MJs,, HaJJ's
Billy Wilder and 1. A. L. trigger-tempered bii brother.
D i a m on d ' s Oscar-winning The executive row foursome
movie "The Apartment." But of BW Beadle, Lyon Roberts.
Davis' Long Beach production Paul Teschke and Patrick
outshines the New York show Lang -frustl'8ted key club.
both in musicaJ :z:ing and ef· bers aU -lends strong, comic
fective characterization. s uppq..rt and their ':*~==!
THE LONG BEACH cast. choreographic interplay is well ALFRED ) from top to bottom, ls ex· handled. Valeen Szabo has
cellent, with Craig Gardner some nine momen~ a s ~
scoring heaviest in his dema~ Reynolds' jealous secretary n1 I lllRIUW\ ~
ding central role of the while Josie Dapar does ~ MfRENZY"
nondescript accountant whose marvelous vignette as a
becom scrub -.. .._.-..,, ... ~ .Jill bachelor apartment es a woman. ....,.. .·~--~
trysting spot for the e:<· The main reason for the 11102 °
ecutives.and their ladyfriends. Long Beach show's precision! 7:00 • 10:40
Gardner possesses t.he excellence in the d an c e1 , ALSO
boundless energy and the ln· numbers is the presence of aJNT USTWOOD
terpretive skill to carry the choreographer Julane Stites, a
fast·moving, if a bit lengthy, member of the original New 91'1.AYMISTYJOIMI•
Pnxluction. York cast, who kicks 'up a .... ,_,.
\Orm • h D.b Iii --• Joanna Hall as his elusive s wtt n.u yn Fidchina ~ . ~
heartthrob ~·ins hi gh marks aod Lise Mills in th e, --~·~
for her performance and an Christmas party scene. Miss [ f:OO
extra hurrah for her strong,l ==S=li=to~s=' =pa=cin~g=infl=~ue~nce~=is~f~el~l~==c:.="=·=5='="=M="=·=•='":"==~ throaty voice wh ich refuses toll
play second fiddle to the WATCH PROS d CO S orchestra. a re:uning malady on N of tile
among musical ingenues. Herl NOVEMP,(R 7 BALLOT MEASURES
delivery of the s t a cc a to P'6en'"° ov tt1e
"Knowing When to Lcave"'t LEAGUE OF WOMEN YOT!lS OF OlANG-1 COAST number is fir st rate. .., IAVIHE COMMUNITY CA8LEVIHON -TOHICJHT •I ' ,.m..
The s h a r p e s t charac-N,.,..,.., 1 .i ' ""'· "'~""'* • ., 1 '·"'·
teriz.ation of the lot is creat ed l'=~-~~~~~~~mmmmmm1Dllii111111~ by Wiley Reynolds as the gold·!
plated heel personnel manager
with the company harem. Jn
the funniest scene of the night,
Reynolds employs his im-
peccable timing to browbeat
Ga rd ner's apartment key out
of him and their en.suing
number. "Our Little Secret,"
is a riot. _. -' -;.r<.L>
"8UTTllttrLIEI Aal trlt•P Cll'Gt
Glldlt Htwn & ldWt nl AIHn
11,. "l'LAY IT AOAIN, SAM"
E~c:lll1h•1 li"t.,..mtnl
H-Ht Rt:M"" 1 .. 1.
Wl11-.r ) Ac•l<lmy Aw11'11• ""'IDDLl lt OH TH• •oo .. ••
Mt r!MI 8rt ..... 11 "THE OOOtrATH!•" (I) • TARY JSMOND walks ol r
SFAO/UM•I .','!. .. ~ .. ~ "POINT 8lANI(" IR )
----Cl lr > $FAD/UM ·-2 ·.:' . ~,.,...,.·~---
---: ... $FAD/UM "I .-, . • --·.i. . ., .•. ---
"trl!T% TME CAT,. 00 • ''THIE SEC•ETAltY" (I)
"THE JlllW CflfTUIUONS,. I•)
w.t11 o...._ c. tc•tt
"~ "~LAY MISTY trO• Mt:,. Cit)
C~•r'" ,...,_ "THI! VALACHI PAll'S•S" [II ) • "X Y 8 %EE" !RI
thlle..-MWalfttt S..-Sltewtl
UA. Cltf CJ~ M.-UA S.at\ C.. ~ s.t.
H.id 0...rl ti~ 11'11111 WHk!
~rlon a r11'1dt "THI OOOFATH••"
Aln Cenl "STILITTO" 8011! 111 Ctl9rl Ill)
... _.
JOE DALLESANDRO
AND SYLVIA MILES
IN ''HEAT''
RATED X
"JOHN
llNOWLIS"
CLASSIC IRT·SILLll
llCO MU A CLASSIC
MOTION PICTUJF'
"A
SEPARATE
PEACE"
"****" .N1w Ye>rk D1 ily N1wd
ALSO
SU.N I UlY
"FRIENDS"
/ HllDOVtl
HEN
THE
LEGtNDs
,QIE ,_::,
lhtck ;=. ... ...,
, HIM, t:!~ ....:'E
~ .........
"'! .~:r-•1fi(p1 ~ NOW THlU TUISDAY "' -"'°""""' c1om~ _ ......... -.. ................
"MAIH"
taftl 111 Ctlilrl C•>
The UllllM1-Tritt "20011 A tJM;t Odyuty"
"Allt .. 1 lln t111n111f"
l•lll In Cllffl lll'O )
"" ., ... "'· ' CM Ctlll T"" 1ncllv1G
Tlllt
""' " . Clti•k
Publl
~ un
TH
'" ....
T
"'" ,.,
,~ ....
'"' Cl.,.k
WILLI aev.,t
'"'" "'-""
, ..
11; GI
flllt.
" Rlt11,
'"' lndlvld
This
""' By l!.t
Cle..k -O<I .. un
' ,,
fn11 ""' !Ills
"'" • •• Ci.rk. . ...
Fu
No.
01
03
04
11
12
13
22
23
24
25
26
31
32
51
52
53
91
92
ST
RE
----~-•
• PUBLIC NO'rlC& PlJBUC NOl'ICI PVBUC NOTICE P\IBIJC hOTIC£ PIJBLIC NOTICE PUBUC NOTIC!i ·~rTIOVt • ..,. ..... NOTtca INVrTIMO lllN Of OfflcW ...... P"ICTrTIOl.ll 1 vs1•us ·-AM• ITAT9.llll#T No!k• l1l!w:42'.:!~11\41._~ ._,...et IUt..liCT TO! .. ""'*' .. al lllCl'•M IJlAMa ITATIM.l#t ltOTIC• ro ca1onot1 TM totlowl"8 .. ,_ 11 .... bvllM'H fM'-Ill "" I Conwll,inlty ca: FICTITIOUS IYllMalJ .... ..,... IJIM!tld ,. """'*" fl/I "'*' "Tlw lllllllllllf'l9 ... -11 doln\I IM>"'9i S:ll,.•ll .. COUlT 0. '111 •l Ohtrkl CJI Or~~· c:.illwJ!k, 11 POtflont °' ..... llklU "" ..... .. U ' fT-'Tll OP" CALll"OllUA ~ ~~11.APHICA,. '1f) YI• CM-,..,._ ...... .. to 11itl &.II\,. M.&MI rTATRM.a:W'r ~ --"" "-tMOI ,,,.., " BllUCI Mlirt4U, P O ao. tf 121•1 Tiii CIOUlfTY 1W OllAMOl
Dr .. H ~ 9Htfl. C.lllOt'l\I• Nov.,ol9er •• 1m or u. =="' TM ~ _..,.., M• -........ ·~ . c:.-·"-........ .._,, Hl,lllll""'°" -..... "''4M1 Jltllte H. ICEHOlON. '1t! \'If er.ot. el 1.1111 _...... llfdrkt toe. ... ...._ ... ~_.,,.,.._ .. :~ c.u ........ ttWlll, €tn" rl WILL.I.AM tit. PIODHE'I',
c...... °' Hunli"910CI ••• c 11. 1'10 Adlm1 "'-· C•MI ,.....,. THI! WAL•us, U1 ·-A ...... wltll M ltl'Mt fdd,r ... .,_ ltM!ltr, t1•• So•lorttt .__. -· C•IUONll•. ., C•lllOt~ •I wflldl li"'f .. 14 tM4t 111111 IM U.-'-<:11. Ttm11 ot MN Uil' Ill loWfUI l'l'IOM'Y fl Hw!!IJIQt(ln ll..ct'I. ColllOr"'' ,.,.,., NOTICE IS Hl!.llllY GIVEN .. t11e
lllb. butlNu 11 toflno cOftdv<tta br 111 plllllldy OPellM •'Id rNd tor : l'9WA I . RO'j'M, ill l•mono 4V.., lhe UT!li.d ,, ... , .., CMflrmotlol't o1 ""· Tlll'I -'-. ll Ri"9 CClldllClllG 111 ~ U'*llllor1 ol ,,,. •-"''"" ~ ll'ldlvklu•I CHl'!MIJTltY. ~HYSICI, Ql!OLOQY, L'::" IMC:ll, r ... 11ttcot11 °' •tnCIUl!f 11111 tro "'011POtl1 .. lrldlvld..,.t. .. , au ...-1tOvl1'19 cl•lm' ~ln1t .... JAMI' H. l(ENORON llOLOQV.,... IOTANY EQUl,.Ma NT. 'l' O'OM' .. 1'41 CUii Ofl..,., l.00\1111 wltll Did, ltillU !(Moler "id o.c.clfnl ••• rffllllted Ir.> lls 1"9m, Tfll1 •1•1-1 tiled wllll tht Coi.or11y ~I Web .,.. 19 bl Ill ~ Wiii! -eio. or .,...,.. to IM 1n wri:ttfc. n Wiii Tlll1 1101-1 lllfd 'wllfl 11'19 ~ Mfll lllil MOllMrJ ~" In 1M oH1ot Clff\. DI Or•• c-rv °" OC!. :J:), 1'12. 11\f lmtrvc.U.,. ... COlldlll-.,,. Tiii• °""''*' !1 t191ng corooutlecl by • lie "9Cti ...... •I ti. =Id 11 .,,Y Ctetti; of or.np. C11Mly "" OctoMr 1 et TM c:k'rll ol W.. •-11111"'4 court. ff IV ...,.,.y J MadODx Dl!PVty COrilfll't' l,eldflc1ilOlll ~ .,.. -... ftlm .... gorwol oertMAll!o. !Imo •tlor ,,,. flfV lc•llot1 lltnol llld lf'1. WUll•'" II!. SI JMri. COUlllY G .. rt.. to ,........ "*"-'Wllh "" _..,., Clen. ' ' l'i'IOY lie ~ ~ lllil offtQI CJI lllil 5......,, •. ltorM netono ... .,. or ..... by lr;erly J, ~. Oepvty. _..,.., ,. .... Ul'iOk'\ltned ,, 1llil Office ,. nn ~~tf•lill KflMI dlt.1r1tt. OMy O'Gw• D11M !Ml Mltl My fl/I Oc:!Utltr. ttn. ·-tf Mr 1"1lnlly1. MM>SCN, JINNIHOS ~ ·! !:ldl """' ll,llwolll wllf\ .... llld • Thl1 1111-1 llled wtlfl the COl,ltlty I W. l(EM~l!lll Pllllllllled Or1r1gec Co.11 OOlty Piiot. NoC OOJolALO, d H._1 C........ Ori,.., ~llOtllllild Or•llll9 Coo,t O•llY PLlol, uaN..-•i tfllc:k. Olftltlid checll ... llllcf. c1ow11 or °".,. C011n1y ... ~ oc1. '· un. Mmlnl1lrltor of IM .. ,.,.. Odab« 17, lol, ~1 •I'd Ito_,... ~. Wt• l.10, f\19WM'"t IM<ll. C•IHor• tk!OMf ,,, •1141 No..,.mtofr 1, 14, 21. dfl"'• llOftd "'°"" ,.,,..., 1o ,~· orw o1 IY e--1\1 J. ~. Deputy COUllry °' .. 1o DecAdelll 1tn 211 .. n nwo. """kh 11 ni. 111eu of ...,..,.... ... 1tn m1 .n 1111 cw1t c-1tv College 011tr1ct c ..... 9. W. 11:.M .. a• , ... ~ 111 .. , """"-,.nfl11l110
PUBLIC NOTICE lloerd ol TAAi'" 111 •l'I lll'IOUlll nal 1-....., nui (•IMl'IO. s"""' PUBLIC NOTICE 10 ""' .. l•l• ot .. Id .:NcAclftlt, wllll/11 lew rtwf !Ive Pll'!Uftl U,._I fl/I 1111 111m llld 11 • Nwlll N~ Collt. t1it:I
OIM'fi'ltM llMI 'hi lllcld9I' wlU et'llW llllo l"Vblltlled Or.._ Coo1t Dolty Piiot, foll {t'lil SU,.l!llllOll COU2T Of' TMll: ,_ ... 111..-, ... fl4'91 piMlcfti.. of 11111
Oc:toller Ill, 11. >1. 11. 1m 1n1-n Atlllftrf .. ,,,_ Pw -·· ,ICTITK»UI •USINaSI 1111 ~ C...lnd If !tie -II SfATI' 01' CAL.lllOlllNIA Hll °''" OctolW fl', tm NA.Ma: STATll'Mf:Nt 1w1r to lllm, Ill 'hi 9VMI of lflkln lo PllllllllMMI ~~ COltl D4ilt'1' I'll°', THI! COUNTY OP OllAJIOI LUA.A LUCILLlf NOONl!Y TM '*""'1'18 Ptf'IOl'i I• lloll'l9 lluslr>Ha ..,!er Into Mte:ll COl'ltrKf, tlle pnicwU ol PUBLIC NOTICE Ociatofr JO, ~1 lfld ....,...,. '· 1tn '1110. f\10, A-1Ul1 e aeultf'IX of ti. wlll •1: Ille d'IKll wllt w torte!Md. or 11'1 1111 c•~ n OllO•lt TO SHOW CAUSI ol llM "'°"9 Mn'IH ~I. THE CALIF041tNl4 CRAIL"T GUILD, ol o bolld, IN lull ..,,.,. ttoweof wlll 09 Ill Ille metier of MICHA.fl. THOMAS MAOSINt llMNIN9S & MC DOM.AUi JOI wnr ov..-Rotd, Suite e , $1nt• tonelt~ IO Miki ecllOol dl51rlc:t. PUBLIC NOTICE Zll!.Ll NSKI, llto kl'IOWll 11 MICHAEL "' ltewtorl Cffter om., Stlto Ja AM. CoHfornl• ft7ll2 No bk:ldtr ~ .,..,,...,....., Ills bid for • CONOie. for Chfno• ol NOIM. • .......,. ~ Cl"lonlll ..... The Kl! 1111, :'.1111 Wtsl Oyer lllood, 11trlod of for .,.. f4f) doy1 •lier lhe ·-WHEREAS M•rv J-CON~ ~II· ,,., 17141 '444St1
Suite E. Stlll• Ant. C•lllomlo 91702 d•I• Mt fror "" OPlftlno ~. NOTIC• 0'° SALi! OF t!AL PICTITIOUS •USIN•ss ti-. fl llf!"e!li ot ll'IO lc.ent, ·~-l..cwtl'tx Tl!b bufJntSI II bellll conduclfd by • Tiit 9Dltd of TNllWI r._.. 1'flO P'RMSlllTY AT ~II/VATS SA.LI NAME STAT•MINT MICHAEL THOMAS ZIELINSKI, 1 l'rlfif "ul>ll Or..... Co.It 0.lly PllCllt,
(Ol'POl"•llon. ~ivl\ODI " r.ledlnl ..,., erod "" '""' Of H .. Ann• TIM IOllowlllQ P9r'llln 11 lllOlne MIM1t Ul\Cler Ille ~ ot ... 911,,.,._, .... "led fll OCIGbtr ll, atld ~ 7, 16. 11, J. R. F•lll11 ro ..,,,.,.. fllY 1""91111>'llla or 1,.. 111 !"-SUOiltlOI' Court or Ille 51•11 llt ••: eppllcolllon wllto tlll Cieri! of 11111 COi.Ori 1'71 rt21-n Tlll1 llOtefntnf !lied wlll'I Ille County torm11Uta. 111 111y bid tr 111 ll'le lllddl11g. caUfOt'i'll•, ,., '"' c...,ry or°'~· HOPCO ACOUSTICS. 111'.U I( Sil~ 1W •n 0.0sr CllMlllllG t11i1 ~lc.e11t'1
Cltr-of 0--• County Oti OCI. :JD. ltn. NORM.AH E, WATSON 111 lflO Ml"-' of Ille 1!1 ete ol Cln:lf, lrvlM, Ct/If. '2701 MrM ltOn'I MICHAEL T H 0 MA S PUBLIC NOTICE WtL.LIAM E. ST .t()HH, COU!llY Clet"k, by S«ty. SMrd of Trust ... GER HARD J. PETERSON, ftlO 1<.-n ll R-rt Cerl Hooll.tr, 1•3U Mt. Hirn-ZIELINSKI to MICHAEL THOMAS C<m·
e1vHly J . MMldox. ~ry 00.11: Nov. 20, 1f12 • 11:00 1.m. G. J. PETEtltSON, O.CuMKI. 11111, 11'-t•ln v.iiev. c 1111. f'170t Dlti
,.211D "Ubll.ned Or'"llf COO.I Dolty ,.llol NO!IC• I$ toereby 11lvtn '""' thf U!I· Tflls llullNP b MlllO eondo\Kled b'( •11 IT 1$ OttOERED THAT 111 .,..._, Ill" .....
Plllltll/'led Ot"l"'IM Co•" Dally Piiat, OC:~r 31, tl\d Nowmber 1, 1m 1929·12 denlgMd wltr wll al Ptlv•ll wle. 10 lllf lndlvkkltl. •-Nd 111 1llil uo.... ...,II*<! tdlon •P-SU~EtltlOtlt (OUlllT 0, TMI
Cklobtt' :n , tnd November 7, 1~. 11, lllgllftl fnd be'st bidder. lllbjKI 10 (l)n• A:otlert c . Hook., pnr Nfor• 11'111 C-1 11 t 10CI 1.m .. on !he STATI 01' CALIPOlll:NIA P09:
1m "3J·n PUBLIC NOTICE llmi.tlon of IOld ~ c_.t, on or Tl!l1 sl•'-lt ftlild wtlll Ille Counly 11th !Uoy of 09<:em!Mf, 1m, 111 Dlptrl· THI CIWHTY Of' CMU.H•t
alttr Ille tlh d•Y ~ NowmlMr, ltn. "' Cl81'"11 Of Or•llO'f C-ty on: OCtOlltr '· menl l of ll'le SuP9i"lor C-1 ot tlle Sl11t NO. A•Jtllll
PUBLIC NOTICE lflO office af I . W. KEMPER, 11~ 1'12. WILLIAM E. ST JOHN, COUNTY of CIUIOl'flll, Coul\ly M ()rtl'i(ll, Or~ NOTICI! OP: HIA•lltO 0,. PITITIOH ,IC'TITlot.11 llJSIN•IS C•mor!llo Strtet. Horth Molly"""OO<I, CLERK. by hYerlY J. MtddoX. Oipu'ly, CCllllllY Courtl'ool.lle. Santi AM, c.11,.,,,,11, l'OR '°lllOaAT• 0' WILL AJllO P:OR HAM• STATIMlllT C•trfornl• 9'U02, 111 the rl;hl, tl!1e •1141 In· ,_, 1rd ~ covte. ff llf'IV, vwtiy tho •P-Ll!TTl!lllS TalTAMIMTAlllY CIOND FIC'Tl'TtOUS IUSINl!"SS 1hll l!>llow11'1G Ptr90ft 11 doll'ilf bllllMll tern! of s1ld cle-ce&ted fl 1"'9 time al Putl!IJ.Md Or111g• Coo1t Dilly Piiot, p/lcoll11t1 '"'" clliil\Oll of ;;om11 lhovld "°' WAI VE.DI
NAMlf 5TATIMENT 11: Olfllfl 1rd 111 !tie rlgM, !Ille •lllflnterest 0c1o111r 10. 11. u , 21, 1tn 2115.72 tof gronled. Ellllt or FRl!D w. ROEwtKAM~. 1he lollowl11g Ptr90ft 11 Ooll'IO tlus(nes1 DAR.E. f>er1onnel COllWllll'IG, llol ""' IN Hl&te of H id dtce•sed has •C· IT IS FURTHER OROER6D 1'11111 • tMcrased.
'''GILLUM ENGINEEA:ING 11111 S t LUOOll .. St,. JMwrport hi(!!, c.lllOtnlo quired by CIP"'•llon ol l1w Ot Olherw1H PUBUC NOTICE CCO'I' ol 11!/I Of"def' lo Ir-CoUM be NOTICE IS HERESY GIVEH ttwll
• an • "'60. otnsr lt1o11 or 111 9ddlll1111 to !Nit OI 11ld pub!Fu.d Ill 0rlf199 Ct1111! 011ty Piiot, I SARAH AHN ROl'#l:KAMP 1Mo1 flled Rll1, FOllftllln V1lley, C•llton \11 Tld tit. Aue, SJA~ll St., Newpar1 ,,_.Md, •I 1111 ttrne o1 dNll!, fn 1nd to NWIHP« wDfllNd 111 the COUl'ltv of herrln • .,.u11on tor Pl'Wfl• of wm ~ lllkNrd tltlllJ Giiium Jr., 1n11 SOr1t1 Be11<h, C1Jttor1111 1H lflO otn1t11 re•I property 11!\llted In ,ICTITIOUS •USIH•ss 0<•1'19•· c1n,.,,,,11, anc• • _.. tor 16Ur for lnuanc• of Lrrte" Tnl•me11tory to> RI!•, Fount•ln Valley, C•llforn.I• This llullND I• llt-lno cond\lcled b'( en ii. COIH1~ of 0.-•fllle• $!1 .. of Cellfanl/f, NAM• STATSMIW'r 1ucce11J..,. WHks ptlor fo lflO d•lt' ut for PelllloMr (IOl\d W•lvHl, rtfertl'Oce fol Tiiis l>llslneu Is lllil'IO colldlJded bY 111 lndlvktU<ll. o.rllcuhir y clfftrlbed "follows, 10-wl!: T... foll-lllg ~ b dol,. llln!MU "''"'"II ,.,. •pp/l~•llon. Wllkh !1 m111e tor fllrtllfr ptrllcllli.ll"I. 11\d
lndlvldu•I Ttd It, Am Tlw "i i It.Ill of Ille Sl'IUthWHt qu•rter ••: 01ted OCf. :JD, lt12 11\11 !ht' llm1 •1141 Oloc• of lltofl11g Int tlt lCHAtltD ROY GILLUM Jll. Thl1 $IOI-I flltd Wllll 111'1 County ol tlll "°""°Ill C!U•l1er o1 the nortl! PACl!MATIC SYSTEMS, 1l7D F l00"1 HAit.MON G. SCOVILLE ""'" ~s bffn sel for Nowrnller 21, lt12, Thh 11•1..,.,.~1 Ill.ct wltll the Coun!y c1or11 of °'~ C-ty Oft OCt. ll. lm. ,.,.If ~ llMo ~I h•tf of 11te soulhe•sl St., Cot!• """'• COlllOml• t2UI Judge of 111e s....,.rk: cour1 el t :OO 1.m., In !!Mo courtroom or ~rl-CIM't ot 0.1"'9 C-ly on Oct. :>II, ltn. WILLIAM E. S JOHf\I, COUNTY CLl!ltl(, ou1rter o4 llw llorlh hat! ol Loi 3 111 lllidOllo 01vld Fwr1rf, 111S LOllll'llrw Publl1htcl Or•"lll Cot1t Dally Pltot, ....,., No. 3 OI w1d (;Ollf"I, •I 700 lllk
11'>' llf~r1Y J . Mtddox, Deputy COUlllY 9y 8overty J, ModdGx. Deputy. llock 11 Qf Tr-.:1 16. Coo1t lwlevard St .. CO<'Oftl, C .. llorllll tl110, Octotl8I'" JI, Ind NO'llllnlltr 7, 14. 21, Center Ortv1 W11r. 111 11\f Cl'V of SHI•
Clerk P"-..a F•rm1, os per mtp llwfeol rKOrdecl Jn Tioll b!J$1-II 11911'19 conclllet.d by fft 19n 7'1JO-n Ant. C11itornle.
"·tlltt PuDllsMd °''llO'e CDISI Dilly Pllr.ol, 9oolt 1D ptges 35 •M 3' ot Inell~. O•led October JI, 1m
htitlslM!d Orll'l{lf! C11111t O.lly Pilot, OC:talltr 17, 24. SI Ind Nr.>..,.mbef' 7, Ml.cell•-• Map~i. records ~ said Rodolfo D. Ferr.rt PUBLIC NOTICE WILLIAM E. $1 JOHN,
Ocl-r J1, ind Noverntofr 1, U, 21, 19n 211).12 Or•noe Counl't'i 1o!M4'htr w1111 1111 This s111-i flied with tlll County County C~k
ltD 2'9n·n """"ent1 Of lllQre11 •nd ~r111 10 a1141 Clerk of Or•r1gec Counry 1111 ~. n , lt72. HOSSAMAN, WAT•lllS,
PUBLIC NOTICE from rul Pl'OPll'"tv locoted Jn 11odl II WILLIAM E. ST JOHN, COUNTY CLERK, SUPl!ltlOR COU•T 0" Tltl' SCOTT, KlllU•o•• a RIOtltDA"
PUBLIC NOTICE OI Tr•c14' heretofore crt1ted 1nd llOW ly Beverly J. Mtddolt. ~. ~ STA.TE OP CAl.IPORNIA "Oil '45 SWiii I'll-· Jltll Pi.r,
nl1t111G fw 1111 bentnt 01 111s oDOve .. _ TME COUNTY 01' OltANO• L• Alllelll. Clllfenlla M11
"IC'TmOIJI IUSINUI dilscrlbld IM'ld, •1141 Publlsllld Orenpe CDfst O•ltv Piiot, HO. A·745U ""°"""" for ~'""-"ICTtTIOUS IUSIMESI HA.Ml STATlMt:NT TM wet! hflf cl !tie ~I Odolllf" 17, 24. JI ord l<tO'l'8l'llllt 7, MOTICE 0'° M9AalHG OP ,.ITITIOM f>vbllshed Dttnae Coal 0.Hy Piiot, KAMI nAT•MENT Tiie folk:Hll11g person. II dOlng llwl-C1U•rter or ttt.e SOll!lle•1I qu1rtl!1' ol the 1t12 :zrn..n "0111 PROIATI!" 0,. WILL MIO f>'Ol Ocr-r 31 9nd Hr.ovefl'ltler J, ,, 1'12 tJU.12 TIM lollowr1111 per51111 Is dol11g l>llslneu II: nartn l!tlf fnd the NII llOll OI the LarrERS Tf.STAMINTAaY (IOMO 11: GALILEE DESIGNS, 1122 22lld St .. narlhwest qutrter of Ille souinea~t WAIVl!O) PUBLIC NOTICE VILL.AG6, SUH FLOWER, rt5 311!1! St .• ·---· c1111om11 ,,... querier of 1M nor~ 1!11f of Lr.>! 3 lr1 PUBLIC NOTICE e1t•I• ol THEODORE •. KE'LLEY, N""porf 9Meh, C1UI. J. 1+1"9 9\Wnl, 242 22fld St., N""POtf Block 11 of TrKI I•, Coa1t 8avl1v1rd O.CU1ed. Lorett~. 9scorro, 19llll Mcl•r•n BNCll, C•lltor11I• '2460 F•rl'f\J, 01 Pl!" m•p tl>ereof recorded 111 f\IOT1Ce IS HEReeY GIVEN tnat FICTITIOUS •USINlll L.•""• H lnglon BH<ll, C1lll. TPth llUIJlllM 11 11911'18 condudlld ~ an Boolt 10 P'llf!S lS l»d 36 of ,IC'Tl'TIOUS IUllNISS FllAH(ES T, KELLEY 11•1 U!ed herel11 • NI.Ml STATllM•MT J"•• Mlftns 11 llelllQ cOllducltd by •11 11141J~ld!J;lt. MIK'Bll•,,_ Maps, recora. of uld NAM• nATlfM•HT 11111111111 tor praboltr ol' win mid tor Tiie lollowl11g per.on It dolllO bvlltltU l¥lduol. J. NuM 11.N'M Or"'ll'fl County. Jogrlller with on Tl!r fol'-11'11 ""°"' 1re dOI"' b1u1nce of L•llttt Tn1atne111try lo Piii-u ' Loretta M. I Kt'rr• Thb tllternenl "led wllfl the COUlll>/ Nlff'IWflh lot ~l!:U ond ~H1 fo Oncl llinllWIS •t: 11-r f&otod w11vec11 rm~ IO whlth LOYCE'S HUTRITtoN, 1 •J•3 ~J1 1t1!ff1W!ll IUH with 111r C!Klllly Clerk of Or'"llf County on OCI. 13, lf12. !tam re•I pr loea~ n llloek II HAMILTON-.JONEJ COMPAf\IY, 1"'4f It '"eOe for lurll'ill" ptrtlculars, ond !Nit •f'OOkhurll 51,, Fa1111t1Jn V•llff '210I c I< of Or111ge County, 1111: Oct. '· 19n. WILLIAM E. ST JOHN, COUNTY CLERIC, of Trsct N l'lere1ofor• crutlld •1141 NNI Scolcl! PIM Slrw!, F-11111 Volley, 11!1 llme •1141 1111« of l!rarl11g Ille 1•rne LOYCE MR~"l.EI(, 11"5 It~ Bt,_ aewrly J , Mlddox, Olpuly Coonly By Bevtrty J , MiddoM. Deputy. e•bt!ng tor !he t>enefll ol utd l•lld firs! C•llloml• '26"6 M1 bttn HI tor November 2), lt72, •I Wey, lrvlN, C•I fotnle f2'U c •. .. ...,, abOve deK rlbed, J1me1 RDbllrl ICW!k, 10ll02 Cr•flel t:OO 1.m., In !hr coortroorn or °'f>lort· Tiii$ C>\lllNU la being coMucllld lly Ill • "''" P1,1/Jlllllld Ot"•nite COii! Dolly Pllot, EXCEPTING tllerelrom 1U uranium, Drlw., Hllllll11glorl leKh, C11lforfll1 ment Na. 3 of wld court. •I 700 Civic lndlvldu•1 Publllhed Or1noe Co.11 Dolly Piiot, Ocloller "· 24, 31 '"' No"""1blt" I. llW!rlum ord OH otntr mlner•ls D•"ild Al ..... ~. 16UI Scolcll Cet'lftlr Ori'<• we11, In the Clty ol Senti Loyt9 Ml'llCMk ~r lG. 11, 24, )I, 1912 ,,,,.n "" 1m.n dele-rmlned to tie HMnlt•I lo Int pro-Pine Stf'MI, FGW1!1ln Vil..,, C"Flomlo An•, Cal1tor11l1. Th!• alol-1 fHed wllll Int COUf\tv
ducilon of "Mlolwllll• rntterlal eont•ined Thl1 Minns 11 IM!no COl\lhlcrod by • O.IK Octolltr lCI, lt72 a..11 or Or1t1ge C!Mlty on Oct. JO, 1t12
I" ..... tevrr COllU!llr•llon 111 6fllolih ln OS<M<M llllrl!wnlll#· WILLIAM E. 5T JOHN, WILLIAM E. ST JOHN, c-tv Clerk by
Nearly Everyone uld l•nd, IOOtlhsr wllh lllil rlgl'll of lllr J-Ill. ICublk Coll<llV c11r-,_,, J. M9ddclx. °""'"' Untied Srttin thr0U91! Ill •ulhorlZed Tl!la al•i.m...t tillld wllll Ille Counly J. JASON GALI! P'-211•
'9fnll «' r1P"nent1tlYM 11 1ny !tine to Cler~ ot Or ....... c-1y on: Oct. 6, 1971. IMI P1lol Vtfllff Drtwe Wt'll PulllllMd ~OllOI Coost DOiiy '°llOI,
en1rr upon 1ald 1•1141 •1141 pr~pecl for , Iii Bevwly J. Modclol(, DHMltv County ,.llOI Vlll'"ffl 1!1l•IM, CIHfom11 .0216 OclCllllr 31 , •1111 f\lr.>vtmtoff 7. U, 2',
Listens Landers mlM Ind remove .. ,,... •I tetel"Y4'd Ill c " T1h UUI '41-094 Ind UU) JJJ-4121 "" ,,,..,, to fl'>e deed fram the United Stales ol ·-AlllWMY tor Pellti-r
Amertc. fol Edythe II ~. rlKVl"dtd PVl!llallld Ol'af'lll9 Coolf Diiiy Piiot, Put>lllhed OrM1oge C1111J: Oalty PHol, PUBlJC NOTICE Sepr-2, 1949 rn •-1n1 P'9't * Oclaber , .. 11, 2', JI, 1'72 :Vtl·12 OC:tObtr 31 •!Id f\10Vfmbr1" I. 6. 1972 2931-n
PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE ,....
NOTICI TO CRIOtTOlll
CITY OF COSTA MESA 01' IUL• TllAMSl'lll
f\lot!t• 11 Mr•llV olvtn IO the Crlldlton.
ANALYSIS OF FUND BALANCES EXHIBIT ''A'' of LILLIAN'S OF CALIFORNIA, INC., I
June 30, 1972 C•lllornl• ~ollW!, Tr1l111terot, wllOtf bl,llln.esi f<ldr .. 1 !1 ml lrltlol Street.
Sol.Ill! COl•I P'l•.1.1 Mlal!Pl"8 c.nter, Coalt
Fund Fund Name Fund Balances Transfers Revenues Expenditures Adjustments: Fund Balances ~. Coo.inly ~ 0.-11\0f, 5!tle of
C1Jlloml1, ll'IOI • tllllk 11'-llf I• MOl.lf to No. July 1, 1971 In June 30, 1972 --01 General
03 Payroll
04 Capital Outlay
11 Spec. Gas Tax Str. lmpr -Sec. 2107.l
12 Spec. Gas Tax Str. lmpr -Sec. 2107.5
13 Spec. Gas Tax Str. lmpr -Sec. 2106
22 S!reet Lifhting District
23 'Veb. Par ing Dist. No. 1 -Improv.
24 Veh. Parking Dist. No. I -Acquls.
25 Veb. Parking Dist. No. 2 -lmprov.
26 Veh. Parking Dist. No. 2 -Acquis.
31 Dr.aiRage Dist. Improv. No. 2
32 =in1 Center Dist. lmprov.
51 ·c afety '
52 \Vater Acreage Fees & Improv.
53 Golf Course
91 Trust
92 Bond -1911 Act
TOTALS
$ 2,781 ,379.00
~
136,408.55
1,777,000.97
~
~
258,227.06
4,682.78
5,851.61
2,839.77
4,174.39
87,665.47
~
380,007.48
5,903.51
( 25,451 .16)
~
'~
$ 5,416,689.43
(Out)
$( 146.500.00)
~
154,000.00
( 1,039,559.57)
( 7,500.00)
1,039.559.57
~
~
~
~
~
~
~
~
$
(Exhibit "8")
s 7,826,406.98
~
5,406.90
305,630.46
7,500.00
463,948.75
265,806.16
235.39
470.77
157. 76
315.51
~
~
247,292.51
31,412.11
403,382.11
~
~
(Exhibit ''B'')
$ 7,065,172.60
~
94 ,814.71
815,563.41
~
767,601.43
308,419.30
4,144.49
~
2,124.57
~
87,665.47
~
119,403.42
18,312.90
379,123.35
~
~
$ 9.557,965.41 $ 9,662,345.65
EXHIBIT ''8'' -Drafting Pit $ 15,615.13
CITY OF COSTA MESA
STATEMENT OF REVENUES AND EXPENDITURES
Fiscal Year Ended June 30, 19n
GENERAL FUND
REVENUES
Property Taxes
State Subventions
-Homeowners'
Exemption
$ 1,875,846.30
-Business Inventory
Exemption
'Franchise Taxes
; Sales Tax
Cigarette Tax
rProperty Transfer Tax
1 Transient Occupancy Tax
,State Gasoline Tax
Licenses
•Fines
~Permits
Sale of Supplies
67,175.20
44,334.47
121 ,151.31
3,035,992.51
374,U3.20
43,623.49
69,157.32
161,054.29
209,530.99
43,854.45
258,110.96
Police Facility -
Security Modifications
City Hall -Computer
Room Modification s
Median Landscaping -
Adams A venue
Median Landscaping -
Merrimac Way
Fire Station Fuel
Storage Facility
Fire Station Headquarters
Improvement
Median Landscaping -
Bristol & San
Diego Frwy
City Hall -Electrical
System Modification
F ire Alarm
Syste1n Additions
Drainage Installation
City Hall ..:... Computer
Transformer
Installation
5,801.15
1,393.35
35,196.74
25,862.09
1,483.31
6,298.33
250.00
858.17
339.08
330.39
1,386.97
$(
(
(
$(
11 ,800 .44)
~
~
~
~
~
5,728.23)
~
~
~
~
~
~ •
20,475.00)
37,937.80)
$ 3,384,312.94
~
201,000.74
227,508 .45
~
735,906.89
207,885.69
773.68
6,322.38
872.96
4,489.90
~
~
487,421.57
19,002.72
1,126.53)
~
~
$ 5,274,371 .39
Right-of-way 2153
Placentia Maintenance
bl m•d• to MICICliY FINE, INC., • COi'·
por'lllol\, T'*'1W.., """-butJ:fteu lid-
drHI I• 1m WHslllr• lauteY&rd, ""'' MOl'llc.e, COUllty of LOI Allllfle&. St111 ol
C•Ulornl1.
'"' ··~"~ " .. tr-"n'9d • loc1ted ft Sovlh COHI Pleu 5h0PPlng
Ce<'llf'I', ml 8rtt.lol Sti'tel, CO.I• Mftl,
Cr.>UfllV ot Ol'll"lfl, SIOll of C•llfornl1,
S•ld ~ 11 OtsCrlbld 111 ...,..,.11
•s: All ll•Nr ... ~~'· IHMhold •nd
lns.i.old lm.prov-h of !tool ladl•• Apptrll Shop llvll-k,_ It KIM-
81!:tltLY'S Ind loctllld 11 3333 lr'11tol St..
South CDISI ,,.,. ~ng c... .. r. Cotll
Mew,. c-ty or or~. 11011 fl/I c11-
lfwlll•. T,,_ Ill.Ille ,....,,fer 111111 lie ~
on Of •lftr ""' l)ltl doy of NOWlii •llel, 1971, 11 lent fl/I Alllll"lc;t H1tlotlel Trust
11141 S.vl1191 MIOClellon, 525 SOU1fl Flovrm"
Strttl, LD9 """""' COl,lllty of Los A~H, Sl•l9 of C11llonllf . so f1r 11 1u1ow11 to 111e T...,,1f1rM, 1n
l>lltl"9U nomn •nd lddrllll'I vied b'I' Tr1n1!9(W for tN tllree yur1 1111 p01t,
.... , $0tnt,
D•tt<I: Oc:lotlw 22. Im,
S1""'1d by: LILLIAN'I OF c.ALIFOltNIA, IHC.
Rick Guy, Pr•ldlllt
Tro111ler" PublltMd Or•/1119 Colts! Diiiy Pllol,
October SI. 1,12 1191·12
and Rent $( 600.00)
Project 57 -Fairview
Road Construction -
San Diego Frwy
to Sunflower
Project 62 -Adams
A venue Bridge
Approach Widening
Project 64 -Wil son
Street 1mprovement -
Harbor Blvd. to
College Avenue
Project 68 -Victoria
Street lmprovement -
Charle Dr. to
Newport Blvd.
Project 68A -Surplus
Right-of-way
2151 Harbor Blvd .
Maintenance and Rent (
Project 75 -Median
Landscaping -Irvine
81,232.19
54,774.89
194,058.10
341,930.16
2,834.30)
and Property
,Rent or Property
Interest
8,099.85
61,374.65
247,918.04 Total Expenditures $
SPECIAL GAS TAX STREET
IMPROVEMENT FUND -Sec. 2107.1
REVENUE
94,814.71 and E. 17th S~dreet
Project 76 -Bri ge
Approact1 Landscaping
1,162.15
1subventions and Grants
t Fees and Charges
;MiscelJaneous lncome
• Total Revenues
JfXPENDITURES
~City Council
City Elections
AUorney
'City Clerk
'City Manager '= ~ FaelllUes and Equipment
Central Services
!fanagement Information Gon.t'iil AdmlnlstraUve
!~ Costa
l'ollce
Fire
Bullc!lng Safety
l ~vil Defense • ' ommunlcatlons
eed Abatement
ngineering
afflc Engineering
tree( Maintenance
lary
iscellaneous Projects
t Total Expenditures
s
1,121,320.76
61,233.33
22,215.86
26.?.66.59
11,705.73
82,782.45
47,936.94
131,414.95
190,625.13
145,296.18
244,374.25
55,125.50
145,707.35
854,633.77
2,138,576.67
1,134,529.70
136,148.38
14 ,661.50
240,984.08
14,070.55
214,958.24
194,447.48
357,312.46
512,337,00
171,277.70
I CAPITAL OUTLAY FUND
~eNUES ·~181 Income $ 3,020. 70
<&U.C6Ual:teou1 Income 2,386.:lll
Total Revenues
Pl!NDITURES
q pmen TNling
$ 7,826,406.98 State Allocation s
-Sec. 2107.I $
Orange County Allocation
Interest
Total Revenues
EXPENDITURES
Project 61 -Arlington
179,988.25
116,661. 75
8,980.46
Drive I1n provements $ 115,273.23
Project 67 -Placentia
Ave. Improvements -
Victoria St. to
Joann St.
Project 78 -I«>yal Palm
Dr. and Cinnamon
334,273.96
$ 305,830.46
-Adams Avenue
Bridge
Project 80 -Sunflower
Avenue Street
\Videoing
Project 83A -Surplus
Right-of-way 286 Del
~1ar Ave. h1aintenance
and Rent
Project 86 -E. 17th SI.
at Newport Blvd.
Street Widening
Project 88 -Street
Jmprovement -
Intersection Baker
4,091.99
20,217.46
( 835.71)
71,837.~
and Bristol Streets ~.1567.00
Total Expenditures $ 767,601.43
STREET LIGHTING DISTRICT FUND Ave. Storm Draln
Construction
Total Expenditures
366,016.22
$ 815,563.U REVENUES
Property Taxes
Contributions from Non~
Governmental 5ources
255,334.68 SPECIAL GAS TAX STREET
IMPROVEMENT FUND -Soc. 2107.5
REVENUES
State Allocations
-Sec. 2107.5
SPECIAL GAS. TAX STREET
$
$ 7 065 172 60 IMPROVEMENT FUND -Sec. 1106
• ' · REVENUES
Slate AUocations
-Sec. 2106 ~ $ Orange County oc ion
Interest
352,3711.59
95,985.99
15,583.17
7,500.00
5,406.00 Total Revenues $ 463,948. 75
EXPENDITURES
Project 5IA -Surplus
Subdlvlsion Charges
Miscellaneous
Total Revenues
EXPENDITURES
Street Llghilng
Maintettance and
Opera lion
Construction
-Lighting lnslAllatlon,
Sunflower Ave.
-MbcellaneoU$ Minor
Improvements
Total Expenditures
$
859.88
9,589.68
21.92
303,887.73
670.00
3,881.57
$ 265,806.16
• I08,W.30
---P\IBUC NOTICE PllBUC NOTICE
VEHICLE PARKI
REVENUES
NG DISTRICT NO. I
ement Fund -tmerov
Property Taxes
EXPENDITURES
Repairs and Malntenanc e s 4,144.49
VEHICLE PARKI NG DISTRICT NO: I
-Acqui• ltion Fund
REVENUES
Property Taxes $ 470.77
VEHICLE PARKI NG DISTRICT NO. 2 -wm.nt Fund lmero
REVENUES
Property Taxes $ IS7.76
EXPENDITURES
Repairs and Maintenanc e $ 2,124.57
VEHICLE PARKI NG DISTRICT NO. 2
-Acquis ltion Fund
REVENUES
Property Taxes $ 315.51
DRAINAGE DISTRI CT IMPROVEMENT
NO. 2 FUND
EXPENDITURES
\Vatson Avenue Storm
Drain Construction $ 87,665.47
TRAFFICS AFETY FUND
REVENUES
Court Fines 218,528.10
From Other Governmen
$
lal cs Agencies -TOPI 28,764.41
Total Revenues $ 247,292.51
EXPENDITURES
TOPICS Study and Repor t $
Street Function
Classification System
Traffic Signal lnstallalio n
-Fairview Road and
Paularino Avenue
Median Modification
-Newport Blvd .
Traffic Signal Modilicati on
t Harbor Blvd/Bay Stree
U> Baker Street
Traffic Signal lnstallatio
-Sunflower A venue
n
and Fairview Road
Pedestrian Safety
Walkways
Traffic Signal lnstallatio
-West 19th Street
D
and Park A venue
Traffic Management
Training Pro;:ct
Traffic Signal stallalio
-Adams Avenue and
n
Albatross Street
Traffic Signal Installatio
-Harbor Blvd and
n
Nutmeg Street
Traffic Signal Jnstallatio
-Adams A venue and
n
1,!"J;al Palm Drive
Tr ·c Signal Inter-
connect Line -Mesa
Verde Drive and
Goll Course Drive
41,004.08
146.90
13,661.54
13,172.33
( 3,350.00)
( 8,055.44)
348.65
16,215.49
7,453.20
20,208.93
150.57
17,824.53
622.64
Total Expenditure s ' 119,403.42
WATER AC
AND IMPRO
RE~GE FEES
VEMENT FUND
REVENUES
Subdivision charges ' 31,412.11
EXPENDITURES
Water Well Lease Costs $ IB,312.90
GOLF COURSE FUND
REVENUES
Greens Fees
Contractual Payments
from Clubhouse
Operator
Total Revenues
EXPENDITURES
$ 390,775.50
12,606.61
193,922.58
180,972.35
2,334.45
409.50
$ 403,382.11
PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE
A -AOV•lllTlllM•NT '°Ol l lOS
A·1 111 P<J•l..-.11(1 o1 • fl-lu!i.it ot the &o.•d o1 Ol•«IOrl of kM•
""' ~"''" C-11' Wit« Olalrkl, od09l9CI StMelM« IS, 191'1. fir.et'"' thfl l\Oltc:f, NOTICE IS H!REIT GIVEN tl'lot ll'i9 l"'rd of Oltl(10rl, ol Softll AM ~t•ln1 CClun'Y Weier Ollltld, wlll rtetl .... 11 Ille oltke ol Ill C-1111111
!nt11Mer. •· o. Woodside, C~tll'>g e..,!Mt, eM Auot:lfln, »t W9'l' Tl'llN
Slfwl, ltl\11 AM, CfHf9mlo tvlll, Mtllld llld• ~ h.trllltl'ilr"I fll ltllor, ""'"""*''•
lr•MPOrl11IOrl, nv1..-1o11 end •vcllo Olller fKllllln •1 1n1, tof r9'Cllllred •M tor
t-lrvo;tl1>9 ll'IOr-11'1 Tr•llvco Otlll Tntel ,Ne. "'' Wtl ... ),lltftl ,,,.,._"
IPrr.>lfl::!f.. W:S-CAL'"'-"'1 ContrKf HO. H402·0"1. Coplfl of 11\f' COtih'KI OOC\l"""I.\ ...,., 1M .. ,m"'9d •I 1119 ofllC:e
Ill' lflO ulflllg E11111Mer. IO<•led ., Jl)t W•• Tlll•d Sl1'991, S.1111 ""'· ea11 .... ~1 ••
A lei of 11\1 plfm, lf*:lfklllonl tnd 9fhet C ... lr-CI dOc-11 l'i'IOY tof .ot.ir..oi
ti Ille lbove rntfll!Ontd offke WOii PIYft*ll of 511 ... Ptr s9' ,,.,..,. PIWilble ..
Jlllff AM ~leiftl, CCIU'llfy Wtter Olttrkl Therf will ..... t9l\INI l'llr "'9
"""'"' or IUctl .-It tnd """'n 11 ..,.. requlr'ld.
C-"' of Ille Sltfld•rill loec11K•flonl, "ulft •nd Codtol ef hbllc """""" Ind A1ao<lff\on1 referred to Ill lheM pl""S •nO IO'<:llkllklm 1111111 IM ........
by PfOlpec:,llyt bidder• lrllfn Ille Mii""'• lllH.ol '' lllelr -.,.....,...,
A-l. E1<11 ttld Mill tof ~de In 1ccord•n<• "'"" ttrmt. tit ~ ,.,
lnlormetlorl lor awoer., '"° with ckot rolllklerelloft to Ml:ll ...owlallft ., ffl• COO!ltKI documtri ... , the p!fnl f..d IPICUk et1tn1, .,.., 1lt ..... #ttlflll fiorlh
1ny moo:1111c1111on1 or-lnte<PF•lltlOIW of "'' Mid dot-t'I.
A-0. llOO bid INlll bl ~ on "" torfil •NI In tM -~
111 '"' contrllCI ~ ... '""' ~~ bf 1Ctol'l'lll't11fc! ty • , .. ,H.., or ...., •• , Cfllcll Of bid bONI for" 11111 ,., """ 1 ... (101 ptftlllt .. ""' 1-i ., .. Will,
,,...,. IMYfllM ti ltftlt "'"" M-tllnt C-ty Wfter Qblrl(t, Or'tflH C...r,,
Cflllerrtllo, •M 11\111 lie !Uld 1,. 1 U.IH °"'""'"" with TM If"''-t'll ~ Olllrlct 11 ~11 ortk1 llK•t ... 11 )Of W"I Third .!il<MI, Sin!• AM, COtlforlillO "'°'·
IMtot'f 11\lP hOur of 1:• PM (PST), ,. ............. I, lt7t •I wtlkfl time 11Wt wlll
bl °""*' In IOlbtlc •N rffd ei.ud by ,,,. e1111~ ti ""' ... n1 of DI,.,.,.., .. 1111 ....... Mol.lrt111119 COUllty W1t1r Dl•trle1. °""..,.. c-iv. ('111,...., ... Tiit fl)l)\lt "*'llOl'IH choKt< Ot llld Wild Wll '" 91-st e oftl9Blll.,. "'fll Ille bidder wlll ""ter J.,to lllf conlrte:t ond ,......111'1 ,,,. ,..,.,.... Mnll wllllln ltl<I !Imel l'IOrflMlllfl' II•-I! lf>9 fwo'1[ II mldle to him, llfld In c.etoe f/I ~fl °' l•llvr• lo ifo to "''"'"' '""' (101 01n of l'IOtl(e ct tudt •-flll, IN d'ledl'. • •Id llOnd, fl Ille CIM may DI, WU IM ~ellid IO 111'1 Olilrk.I.
A_,. Un'"'' oth-ltf rtQU!rfll llY l•w, fll'OPtMll In fflO fl0rld1 fl/I """ fllO~r •I 1111 11.,.,. ,., fo.r _ _,. •r• lrr'IVKfblf '"°' llO blddw _, ....,,..,,.
hit, bid tor • period Of "'Wl"f UOI d•'fl 1"9r llMo Mlt 111 IOI' lflO .......... ,,_,_.,
A,fi iht l11<C.ttul lllOOtr. 1ltr1Ullen-..1r wllto lflO tlltltVllWI ef tft9
"'"'"""'• w111 IN t-lrld le f\lt'flith I llllOr end moi.rill ...,... Jillo .,, ..,_,,.I -I •o flf!v UO! pwcet'lt ef,,,. coritrl(I prl(f, and • ltllMUll ,_,.,lllloiet Wiid
Ill fl! l""""'t eQulll ti -l!ufldreilll ptf'Cet'lf fl~) or 11'11 tolltrKt ,.,~ Wllldl ~ t•• mor• NU~ dfKr1tlelll In 1 .. 10rmotloft i.r I~ flld 0-•I .............. A 1. TIMI llOCte'OllUI lllM9I' WU! lie r....,rl'ell 1IO _,,.... 9l'ilf -"'tiill
~lut•n<e, wtl lcl'i 11'11.urtnee i, ~ ""k\Mrly c!Kctlbed Ill !M ..,,.,._,loll 1or
l lcld1tt1 •!Id Gefo.r•I Pn:o~l•lon\.
/II I Notl<t 11 """m •l'nfl 1'11111 ~119111 .. ""9 lt11V!M sf !tie 11•1• ~ C.lt!Ot"Nf1. et IOC.11 llW _.... fppllt1bl9, fllt ... ,,, ol 1)(,....... ol <ile
Ma M°""'""" C1uruv w•rw Ollltlci, ,._, nctrlil\niW 1'flO ..,_,, ,.,..,.111111
r•t• Of Mr di-_,.., 9llol retwl "°' ""'°' l!lllM'f' .... .....nm. worto.. i,, ,,,.
••Utv i., wflkfl "'II -'! Ii ti lie ,.,.."*'• 10t M<fl '"°" _, "'" ef -'-'' lftO(IWlllc: ""°9d fol uecvtr ,,,. *"1<1 wftkll wUI ... ...,.,,... 19 ll'llt -. C"*fvl blrlffr.
Tht 11""1\llno r'lltt 10 fftenl'I ...... ett •1 foi.._,t
KNIOULI O'° P'l:tVAlLJMO •ATal O' Wll•ls
A.ND A. ... ltN'tlCW JCNaOULI'
SCNIDULa o'° PllllVAK.tJM llATll 0, WMll
Tf ... Or OetllNllN
.,,.
•
20 O.IJLV '!LOT . . 1972
PUBiJC NOTICIJ PUBLIC NOTlt'E
~ ,,... ,.,.._ "•>
VK<ll--Ne ,... ._,,
fwtnMn. V.tlell """" • _.. cAr-t M.,... -~ "' • IN. -llMll "-............. •t • for•,,..n •nd ..... M ,../WI "°' •• lflMI -"' ............... "'.., ,.,. llltf\al '"""~ ,_, --l(tl Ill llM 1MOe<".nl11 ~M•-'°"'~ lltOH WOltlCIEltS
H .. llfl ..... W.ll•N -6)C: "' '*" "-IOn llund -unc .,. "°"'" Yt.tellofl Fllf'llll -lie: W hoiM' l"w-111 Miii llu ltlM Jjt W llellr" mott 111111 ,,_ llOlll'IJ rtl• 9f 11'11
11'9Mlt claMlflalllOn -"""kll "9 ,.., 11J01f\IUIDll.. A:l'lnlorclnV lr.n-llft"
Sfrwlvf•I l""'-rlltf"
V.IOlt!'ltS
Ht•ltll •I'll Wett••t -Mc ,., Mvr ,..,_IOn -11. IO w "°"' VteeliOn -JDc W llO¥r
FOi'-: NOi .... -..n iOe .., llOl,Jt -· I~ !U l>Olirly rllt Of 11\t' lllOhMI eNasttiuti.. • ..., Wftiell ..,. N1 lt•G.,~lp.
LtblM'IH' -0-111 or C-ll'llttloll
~IOI' of PM"'rMtlc •lld £kctlrk T1111ll, \tlbrtllnt Mlchlrlft trld 1llTll-._, "-Mnlul IOO!l !IOI MP11r•WIY Cle•1Hl«I l'l•relft
l\WlfMlt klkw "' lr-r A.U!Mtt~
c_. °"'"'"'" I• 1 ~. or le""t ~., •rid 111r-iu~ tiulk cM'l'ltllll Concr.te Curtf' -1,...,..,..., MtfY!flr•N ltld l'Otm Oller Crltitio.r Olf Sflorel'
Ct,tltlnf Tordl Ojler1lvr (IJMMHllol'll
FIM C,.ci,, Hlgllfty Md $lfftl P11<1nf, A.lrpon RunWltt, lftd tlmJ.
,lflr If" l'INVY CONlrvcllon
l"lllOllW.. . LMd.UOt a.,......, •f'lll H......,.,. M111
Mlx11t -Tl'loCk Cl'lul• -"'-11
PIP91•Yet
Pl"i.y1r llKkll' l.,_ •"II MOrttrmen U...,g,_. ~..,.,, lnCl""'iroel C•!NOll eeuo,...r w-Ol"EllATINO fNOIHEl!ltS
H..mt lftd W1tt1r1 -1k Pitt hour
Vac1t1ort-Holld•r S..1<1119' Fllfld -llOc Ptr hOur
P..,tlOn 1'111111 -11.IO Ptr hour
foremari: Not 1111 !'-.SOC Pl" trlOl!r -• "''" !tit llollrlW •lfl of lfll clei.slllc••lol'I owr whicfl M IW• 111P1"1<iolon.
Air Compr-. P~ or G..,tr•IOf ()ptr•tor
E1111nMr -Oller and s~im.n
H .. "Y Ovty ll~lr,.....11•1 HelPllt c .... 11"M. P"'""' or COfnprfttOI' 0011t1t0r $1tlp1Ndtr -WllNI TYM -111 ytttd or l•t (wltfloul Att1cl'l111~11
Truc:k Cr1111 oner
A·Frtma or Wlncll Trvck OffrllOr
EQll'-'11 Gr11str' .
Ford, Fergonon or s1...,ii.r Type: (W11'11 Dr•lllYP' Alltc:l'lmanll)
Hy.:1ra.H1mmer or Sllf'lller TYPt EllUIPmtlll
Bor!"' MIClllnt Optr1tor
POWff' 5'#tltf)tf' .Ope1'1tw
Roller OP11t110r, Con\pKtlflll
Trtndll"11 MKlll111 <>Ptrltof cup to ._toot d'911'1 e1p1c!1V,
m&nuilChlflt'l r1U11Q)
MKlllnt TOOi OD1r1tor P11<tm..,1 lr ..... tr Optr1tor
llltbbtr-Tlr-1, E1flll Mo1<l"11 Equlpmtftl OPtrltor (1lnglt' tngl<M -ts v•rdt or t.s•l :Mllp l.oMlw W!'lttl Ty111 ovtr 3/4 y1rc1, u, fo •l'ICI lrw:hi<llng IV. v•nHI
Tr•<'or ~•tor -~ ~. 811lldor1r, Timper, k••Pll' ll'ICI
Pull! Trtctor 1100 F..,..._I H,P. or 1..,.,.,1 ~phll! Of' Concrl'lt 59fiMC!lnt. MICl'ltnktl Temping Ind Flrllllllng
Mlclllnt ()ptr•to•
HMl<Y Duty Rl'pllrrnl"
GrH•AH OtNr110r
LOIO« Oper1!0r -Altlrf, E11<lld, Sltrr1, HI~ M simHar IVPI
s1t1p Lotdtr -Whffl, Ty11t """' 1\1 y1rd• TrKfOf 0pt,.10r -Wlltl 8001n A!llCll""'""
Trtndlltlg MKll!nt C)ptr11or ,..,.,. •toot dtplll UOt<llY
mlnu!Klllrtr"t riling)
Stlowl, 81<k Hot, Or1111r1t, Cl1rn111tt1 Ope:r-ator fiver :l/I yard tr.cl UP lo 5 cu . .,.rd M.R.C.)
Motor ••trol °""'''°" tsklfle 91'Wjilntl
'·"
'·"' '·"' S.S., ..... ....
6,0QI ..... .,., ... ..... . ., .... ....
""' 5.425 .. ,.
J.62
7,11
7.11
1,tl
1.11
7.tl
7.tl 7.,,
7.91
J.tl
7.tl
7.tl
7.91
Trtctor Lotoellr ODlr•tor tCr1wlft' Type ltM:I Wl!lel Type Ol<ft' 6\, y1rd1!
7.tl
1.01
I.DI
TEAMSTEllS
KNl1'1'1 1/WI Wllll<I -~ per llol.tr
VltllkHI •IWI Holld•y Fund -7X pe:r .......,. ,._ion -•x per """"
Por1mtn: soi: P"' hl>llf "'°'e 1t1111 "'• hourly ••II of tilt l!tgl!etl cl101lllct!lon DWr """lcfi lw .... IUl>l'Vltlon. Driver of Vlllicll Of' CO!nblftMlon of Vllfikl• Ill:
t Alli" , ......
~or ~• Axle-I
Drll<tr of Tr1n1lt-Ml1 l rUCll -Urldtr 1 yd•.
Orl1<1r ol Tr1n1ll·Ml1 Truck -J yltl, or mort
W111r or T1n1t-Tv111 Truck Orlwf -t A1l11
Wat..-« T1M-Ty111 Tr1Kk Orlvw -l or more Axles
Truo::lt GroNttr •nd Tlr...,..n
Truck R1p.olrm1n
Truck !l1tP11lrmtn Htlll.,
Tr11<1t R~p.olrm1n Welder
Wfft(ll l rlKk Dtlv•r -l,~ "' "°"' .cldlllotwll Wllll'I Opt!'llll'ID POWlf
win(Jt, .,.. tlmlllr )!>Kiii 1t11cllmtnls
PJPE TRAOE5
Hulfll ~"" w1tl1rt -'""' el Gow.I P1yr0U Ptn•k>ti Pl1n -l''lo of Groit P1yroll
V1c111on -13'!-o ol Gnni Pt'(J'Oll
Appnnllcnhlp .. Jollflll)'IMft Tr1lnlng -1•:. of Oma P1yroll Plumber
'Nl!L0£115
$tme 1a11t 11 cr1h lo """ICPI .. ldlttg It inc1cM1111l
Mr clll11llka11on om\ntd """' "'°' 1111 *-1 Plut llTlPlclYtr ~VIMl'lls Mt IOfll'I in Ille colltdlve lllll"!lllnl!!I IOf'lt"*ll
•P01k1blt' to !flt ci.11 w cie.lfkatlon of !tit -km111 w INCl\lnlc
In.el-. •1 Otfll!ld In StdlDfl 1171.I of 1'111 L1bor Code.
·~ 6.15 • •• 6.14
·~ 6.1$
6.15 •u '" 6.15
··~
•••
o ... erilme sur111an ltld Holklln -"°' lft• w..n -a/WI -.llllf n v.1 tl"'8 !ht bilk IQirty .-.11 P1u1i 1ppllcabi. ~ Pl)'fMnts. Tiit l!olkllY1.
Vl*'I wl'lkll tvdl ~•In tl'llll bt IJlld IMll 1111 •II holldlVI rwcognhld 1n 1111 Ulltcilw bltlJllnlng 19~ •PClllerilllto hi !tie ptr1kuler cren, clftllflutlon
or type Df -otmen ~-' °" Ill• profllC'I.
Tiit IOrrvolnO Kllldllle of ~ Is bttld upon • \lroOrl(lnf °"" of tluhl cal 11o1.tr1..
A .... •MTtc• KMIDUL.I
"""""11«1 rn.v bit tfnPloy'lld 1n contormlty wltti ~Ion tm.5 of ""
Catl*°"tlll L..lbOr COIN. I!_., 11o01 ~mllc>I WI! Ill ~Id !tie 11tndtnl w1111
Plld 1a IPPl"'ftll~ vno;lw lftt '""""'flona of 1111 tntdl If wl'l lCll ht 11 ...,p!Oyed.
lllfOllTnlollcwi tllttl .... 1a ~1119111 of 9PPl"f!Tkft 1111111 be obl•k*I ffom "" DlrlC!Of of !tit Deplo""*>f of lndutlrllll RllltkQ; wl'lo Is !tit Altm!11l1tratlv1
Otlktr of llM C.lllornlll A~lkftlllp C-11. •
PEltlOO ANO llATI!'
1'111 Appr'l'!llkl ,.le 11 by ~11111 01 !fie IMMYIMl'l't rite 11 shown In 11'11 tvllowtng lablt1
CNft lftlll'Ylb Id Jnf ~ '"11 lltl '* 1111 1111 ttll 'tOlll
&rlCIC .. Y"" ' .._. .50 AO .7fl .to .90 .t5
Ctrpt11t.A ' mot. .IO .•5 .70 .75 .IO .ij .90 ,tJ
CIONM M1ton1 I moL .1~ .Jt .el .• 7 .'1 .n
1ron-11;.,. ' mot. .111 .11 .11 .ti .ts .M
P1umt>or1 1 "'°" .IO .« .7J .11 .m '*" .u .n .t31 Lon
Ptl11t11n ' ""°'· ... .i!i .70 .15 ..U .t$ 1.00 It 111111 ~ ~IJOr'f ll!IDn Ill• COntrtctor lo whom !tit cvntract Is ..-1w1rdtd, •l'ICI llPOl'I 1nr MJO.<onlrtctor \ll'ldll' lllm, JO PllV !IOI 1111 lll•n 1111 "Id
N*:lfltd rolts lo 111 ~ _.,,,,,..,, •nd mKlll11kl ·~ by llltm In
Ille •tcullon of 11'11 cvntr1et,
Tr\e U.S, DIP1rl"*'f of L1bor 1111 1~4* fllt O-tfl "'"'1tllnq
r1i. of I*' dl«n w"'" In Tiit "''''-loc1lltlet wl111ln !flt $1111 Of CtllfQ.l'nl1 for 1111 Wlrlout «llli 11111 ~ 6f -ltmtll « '"9dlll111Q tmQloytd 1r1 the <:Oft.-
1trvctlol'I of pvblk ~ Appel\Old ..... .i,..rter II • 1:1XJY Of d«kloft No. A.P-200
.S.ltd July 1, 1'72.
W!wre -• dlH""'1<• kt r11n 1111..:11 for .,. .. me tl1ultlcatlof> ot
WWklMn bl-. ll'IOH 111!9d llM'•lnOtfwt oY 11'11 Santa AIWI MDlll'lllln1 Couft!r
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"'Diii('! lo .iw.hd, N'le lllOhtr r1N wlll Pl'""•ll. Sr1tc: C.llt«nlfl SUPERSEOEA.S OECISION
COONTIE5: 1""'*'111, 111.,., K.,11, U. Angeles, Mor>o, OrtftQf, lll1<er1id~ ~n
Benwnllno, Sift L.1111 ~. s.nt1 ll1rblr1, ' V<lflh1r1.
OECISIOH NO.: AP-20I DATE: July 1, 1'12
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DAIL'/ PILOT Jtl
Everyone He1
Something Thot
Someone Else Wants
DAILY PILOT CLASSIFIED ADS ' .
You Con Sell It,
Find It,! Trade It
With o Want Ad ·r~:Biggest M~rketplace on the Orange Coast-Dial 642-5678 for Fast Results '. .
' MACNAB-IRVINE ·
FINER HOMES
HE WHO HESITATES
may lose out on this nearly new 2 BR ~ 2
bath -den, DR Monaco Model In Ha1'bor
View Homes. Close to park, pool & social
activities. An excellent value -$53,500.
Belly Kerr 644-6200. (L22)
LIDO PENINSULA-BAYFRONT
Choice 35' bayfront home. 3 'BR's, 2 baths,
fireplace, boat slip available. ~500. Frank
Peralta 64U235. (L25)
A WINNER FOR VETERANS ,
Cinderella styled beauty located on tree-
liped street. Park & school I blk away. New-
ly painted & redecorated 3 BR, 2 bath, shag
cpts. Immediate occupancy. An excellent
buy at $27,000: all terms. Joyce Edlund
642-8235. (L28)
FAIRWAY VIEW
Stunning Big Canyon 4 BR, pool home w/all
the extras; now under construction & await·
ing your choice of colors. Lois Miller ~5.
(L27)
UPPER BAY-NEW LISTING
Beautiful 4 BR, panelled FR, firepla~e in
MBR, quiet street, HOUSE & GROUNDS EX-
TREMELY SHARP. Open Sat. & Sun. -
2415 Tustin, C.M. (L23)
DOVER SHORES SIMPLY ELEGANT
Beautiful 3 BR, 31> bath, FR, formal DR,
view home. Immense covered paUo & garden
room. Tile entry -dbl. fireplace. Excellent-
ly priced at $139,900. Laszlo Sharkany
644-11200. (1.281
BILLIARDS ANYONE?
A gorgeous pool table room enhances this
beautiful 3 or 4 BR, FR, 21> bath Harbor :.
View Hills beauty. Ron Sherman 642-8235. ·
(L29)
"ORANGE BLOSSOM TIME"
Lovely 3 BR, FR home nesUed on huge
66xl54 lot. Exquisite part-like yard. 8 val.
orange trees! Electronic oven included to
help Mom with the orange pres~rves. Great
value at $49,500. Vee Stinson 642-8235. (LIS)
LUXURY PRESIDENT HOME!
Magnificent panoramic view! -Beautiful 4
BR, FR, DR, central air cond. OverSized, ;
special lot! Laszlo Sharkany 64U200,. (.L3()) '
NEW-ON A TREE-LINED STREET •
Large trees -surround this lovely new home ;·
,
General
NEED FIVE BEDROOMS? RELAXI
Whoever needs 5 pedrooms n~ to rilax!
We know they're hard to find and we know
it's hard tO relax-(when you need 5!) But
here's the answer: Lusk-built EastblUff, close
to schools (Catholic and otherwise), close to
shops, churches (Catholic and otherwise)
close to tennis, close to the beach and Back
Bay.
The fioor plan is fabulous! Formal dining
family r~eplace aqd 3 bedrooms up:
2 down! If you need five, let Unique sell
y9u five. A1 $ Seventy Two FIVE!
PMONI 11N19U1 HOMO. coaoNA DIL ..... ...:..n~ooa
I U~l()Ut: t1()Mf:S
REAL ESTATE
- --heavy shake roof -3 BR's -lg. FR -', Genorol Generol
I~ [
m BAY & BEACl-l HEALTY ... m \ll•~(, !H[ ~ .... ,,. ...... ''"' '"
~neral
OPEN HOUSE
WEDNESDAY
1 TO 5 PM
125 VIA MENTONE
LIDO ISLE
Perfection on Lido Isle. Roomy remodeled 3
bedroom, brand ne\v kitchen & baths. Sunny
south patio.
C. f. COLESWORTHY
& COMPANY
640-0020
General
formal DR. Close to schools & Westcllfl;S!iop-J=;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; ft;~1°!;i;;'F:J5:~·1-~ar~aE~=~:: Exclusive Corona del Mar 1;G;;•;;;••;;'";;1
;;;;;;;;;::;;;;;;;;;;;::Ge;;;;;;••::;'"::;';;;;;;;;;;;;;::;;;;;;;;;;;* n /I,
]~[
General
I 01!1.\ i L OI \0\ . " J?,A,TQ.lt
VIEW
FANTASTIC
I NEWPORT 1$53,7501
2200 Ml · 114 beauty in better
1han new condilion! 4 IX'd·
1"00111<;, 3 balhs, large f!linily
rt.l(lnl with inspiring r1n.'·
11l;1c1·. additional fin·pt&('t'
111 lovt•ly light li ving rY10111,
all t...fet.11'1C "AWW'd" buth
in kitrhen. Parln overlooks
gorJi:e<>Us rear yard . pic!Ul"!'
IX'l'fet•t landscaping. lik1 .
54()..1720.
TARBELL
2955 Harbor, Co.ta Mesa
Westcliff Area·
$40,900 .
LarCJ9 Rumpus
Room-Poal
Jusl begins to tcll the story
nbout this Nf'WPOt't Beach
hon1c, an exciting poo!.sklt>
par lo sphere that fioy,·s
lhrou.i.:h the rumpus roon1
y,•iJh fireplace and lfl~p
do-.1.·n hui.-e Wt'I ba.r. Three
hedroorns. 646-Tiil.
-<THE REAL
ESTATERS OPEN 'fll 9PM
--Coldwell,Banks
~
CANNOT
BE REPLACED
Turtle Rock President home.
Vic\\' · 4 BR, fant nn., 2
11a!ios. (>rof. dl't'O r. Prof.
ndsc~. Pricerl u n rl e r
today s t.'Ost al $82,500. Fee.
1~aul Ouick. BIG CANYON Cpnsidered one of the best areas on the oft cl j ~ f/.)a Oa
Elegant new Ivan Wells Custom Home over-~ side of the Coast Hwy. This older • ·.c
looking 18th fai rway. Dramatic sunkin LR. family home is situated on 2 residential lots. · tn a "' e BRANO NEW EXCLUSIVE LISTING
Large FR w/wet bar & outstanding view. Excellent appreciation situation. PRESTIGE WATERFRONT HOMES •
644-2430
MESA VERDE
PACESmER $198,500. (L32) . Offered at $79,500
BUCKINGHAM PALACE? SHOWN BY APPOINTMENT
No, but the Queen herself would marvel at · CORBIN MARTIN 3 Lind• Isle Drive the sight of this exquisite home. 45• of choice , • · Beautiful new 5 BR., 4¥.z Ba. home. Water·
Extra large, immaculate 4 bdrm .. complete·
ly furnished \Valerfron t home plus apart·
ment.
I 5 bedrooms. 2% l>Alhs ol J>W'f'
rlrllghl arC' (<'titurt'd ln 2
... 1orif"8 of this all llvl'ubl('
llon1l'. Sil y()Ur bcaulifuUy
poncl('<I livin1: roon1 and
run Y"..,.1~ tc)l'S lht'OU&'h the
nt''' ru!..., • shag carpeting
\\'hll<' you view the fireplacl'
ond your kids playing in thl'
huge park·llke yard. Just
OfK' block from lhe Ba.lcaric
School, and priced at only
So\:tJ,900. Call 546-2313.
Lido Isle Bayfront. Elegant private master front living rm . & formal dining. l·land~me
suite w/f.p. Additional 2 BR's provide pan<>-REALTORS 644-7662 oak paneled lam. rm., frplc, wet bar. Utrge
ramie view of bay. Den + 2¥.t baths + master suite has frplc. & cozy lounge area.
$180,000 -EXCELLENT TERMS
SALISBURY. REALTY
673-6900
gourmet k1tcben. (L.13) ~ Gener1I General View of Bay & the mountains .... $179,500. 315 MARINE AVE., BALBOA ISLAJ:tg.
MACNAB ·IRVINE
REALTY COMPANY
For Complete Information
:, --WELCOME TO On All Homes lo Lots, Pleuo C•ll:
MARLBORO BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR --
675-3210 642·8235 : =•"Aill,a.ikar COUNTRY 341 B•yslde D•., Suite 1, N.B. 615-6161
1080 B.ty1Jde Drive 901 Dover Dri~ ' lllALTOR~ and bring your bOrse to this Coldvvell Banker
Newport Buch 1 -neat 2 bedroom rancb-styleGe :;:;.;"::"':.:•:.;1 ______ J ;G:.;•;:;•::••:.:•:.:'------•
ROOM FOR A POOL ;:_~.,:n~:& ~ ~~ 50 ~ ~~~~~I· 'BR, 211 hath<; 1,.. kit· animals & wkle op' n THE MOTHER S27 ,7 ! Genorol Genorol '-"'<n; sunken ram. rm .. 4 ...-. Lo<:atod juat a l•w SAVER BAYFRONT SPECIAL l.;..t,;;,;;:-s~:;;;i;;-I ~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiml ftplc. &: bar. La:e. patio blocks from Newport Beach. No Down Terms 4 &'()room honu• . 35· I Secret Formula \If/wood _beam cover. Laad New on the market. Call m This beautifully derorated 3 Ne11r schools, sho!)pin!:'. 3 n1aRnif11:ent I.lay fronlnJ?e.
F• u lOcluded, $69,500. Howard qtiiclc. bedroom home has a large bedroon1!!, :i lovf'ly l.N1ths, Sandy beach · pir.r & •Ho To Be Mixed 11er pper Wella. Call 54&-6880 (Open evt?!J) finished "bonus room". for hui\1-ln ROUMllC'l kltchen n f~ land • OU.'llf'r says "ffl.•ll ~30 &33-0700 · · lh.! children to play in. In· rangr. oven & Olsh\i·as/;cr. todny!" Asktt1i: $175,000. With Pleasure M-La V--'e· eluding Dall wtth his pool Grai:iou!I l!v1ni:: room . B\11 Bents. ft Cf'U table. Modern Yi'!'ll-0rgan· -'-arm •nh••··" by 1, ...... 644--2430 83J..0700 T:~ t!msC~ ~!h~ $28,950 It Houses Coul..t izcd kitchen. Lari::(' back-~('('. Fttsh1;" ... ;,.,tnted ~~. --
double "=e anc1 a com· i Tallc r yard and the rhildre:n can side & out. 0e11ghltu1 i SWIM POOL walk to sc/'M)()I. CJose lo
plctely l·~ cust om 4 8 A · . I !!"'!"~!'!~""'!!~~~!! m<•V.• '"°~'"•· This Costa pa!io for ooldoor 'fa.mily run 523 900 kitchen, and ilcrve at a lb R )2 B .. i cul·de-sac lot thl~ one would have a lcw ''NEel) SPA.CE Me-;_· hom'e is perfect. At &.rn!<'rlllinlng. Br~ S40-1720 t reduced price of $32,900. . ~!. • !i1X1 you can buy ~ories 10 tell.· Gorgeous
Follow these dlrectlont and at "'" OOwn •.. a REAL llp&Ciow: famUy home in FOR BOAT & a truly realistic price of
.General
Bi9 Family Home
For !he family \\'llh growing
youngslers. this is the place ~·!221~~ to livf'. Great 5 Bedroom, ~
tYIO story plan with fonnal
dining room and sunkC>n hv· '::;;;;;;;~,_~~\lfil~~·~™~~ ing roon1 for lhe arlulls: ii
Gian! family room and In-
formal eatJng area for the A RARE FIND
kids, with doors opening on-4 bedn:iom, 2 bath, hual'
to large patio and decking fR.mll v roon1 11·Uh beamed
art'B.S be~idc a aparkling 3.1' rl'illn'g.~. fircpl11cc, Dooblr
pool. Thi" nelghborhoorl 111 a:arago;> + bonllll of another
Newt>Ort's belt for a.r·1ivr ovcMll:ted double gantgf'-
lnmili1·s Ca.U 6Ta-ttl.i. 1hop v.•lth 220 ~et le loo;
£ or ext...,. All lo• only rn f' ~ S?.2,500 FlL\ or VA lf'l'ms adem C~~l~ris\"°"' 6"~~ Ev"
• 'A;. HERITAGE SUll\!Ot~llY O• rttf C'OlW1~l CO. ' . REALTORS you'll enjoy tllC ultimate in opportunity for the handy pride of Ownership neigh· TRAILER'' $35,000. Call now. &16-7171. No Down Terms
livlnir. Just minutes from n1an and w1fc. Vacant! C&n i:ibthood. s bedrooms beau· "Tlomrl1ke" almosphtTe y,·1th A mNTl•N ~~M~'ffi~ and the see any time. ~ .. ,_ 1andRscap1.,.,ton· \vilh Thi.sh big four tobedroom on ~-·ES'TKB:1·a~sij 2955 HaJ'hoc''oCostaEP.1'etia ~,·,.,h"""• ',':1~:· ra'm,·1.~~.'.." I v .A. auYrRs
• s.,. .. IAKn. ecroa room uge comt'r t has room 1 ~·AR IN M " · "'"" · ···~""· ~ · ~ ~~ Newport ·~ .. awlmming pool. J car !or all 1L-!hi""• _,.,. 2 aif:N TR. 9PM Bullun lott'hl'n. Bt"n ur1ful I Ju~t h!<lt·1! 11 ctre1lm of n ·::.: 'THBES""'• ; at ;'~e. Step& awa_y from bath."! and~bcaU'iiM~tone l ~~;;;~~~:;:~~I $345 MONTHLY p;iric·l1k11 ~round!\. No 1nriir1 tiomr f••fllllrll\~ 3 ll('ffn1urn,., Coldwell,B11·--'bArk and school. All or this fireplace. It's vacant & lf'nnn•'I' ror you. Bkr. 2 hflthl\ 111111 n ~·on,·crtH1h· _...,.. __ Fairview ;,o;.. $40,900. Call to ~e and T'e1liay. Dreiun up your own --, 1 1 1 !>40·Ii20. <ltn. Just 1~1lnh'fl lns1d" urwl
j""" ~ "•••~•• t nd bmlt but h :, u111t11 cos<' lo s10ppng · outwlthcovor<'<lp;1111\lll,..,,(' ~-AIEALTOAI 6464111 ~e '"r youn:e · ov-w.;o;>. e~I a IU • · VI'-Hoon1 to hu rl nmre. Prk.'ed 11torexr Al"f'a, :ind cn1Pt;;:c ~---(onytlmol ~·:£f'IA'l'1'.twJiij ry. S28.450. ,..ALia-Ji Banker 6410 !it'll N E· •• o," .• !r6~·r54-3 ror .)•'ll.lr hon( 01· c'an1prr. •· • """"ftVUt ZM Hl\l'hor, C<>&ia h-fes11 l.1lCptl>tl on 11u11·! !rC"o··llnNI J FIRST TIME
1 !!!!!!!!!!!!11!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!11[ ~IALTOR~ 1·111 t11•·JI1t' i;!!'l'l't. $Zl,500. ADVERTISED ,,.. ColdvwalJ.Blnker I' CFEN ym. ifM Realton: SG-9491 .....__. lB'EDRM., 2 BATH f ;,1'J :)46.Z3ll You'll wt1ri1 to 11ee Ulla t:x
M S B So Open Eves. $26,900 THA ~lli\ltP lldull OCl"UP"' t ~EALTOR~ Omu U T E LO $25 900 NEW Thl3 oon1I' It far real, \\ilh 11 3 Brt. l\.s ba. horn~. SU111 _......._ , Xlnt kicatlon In Coata M~sn. 1 LINDA ISLE HOME bullt·u i kitctwn. forred air· ('(lm<'r l'X'aUon. One or ou1·
21 3 BR., 11;) bnlh•, C1111>ort SWIM POOL Sltu11ted on prime 1•-n lot. 1 1 1 Ml d ]·" lot •~·· he•t lll'ta!I. SM,,500. Cull liurl
BIG CANYON ~ with room for boat or tn\ll· 4 BR. IRe. Jamlly m.':" f;lt"C· ~f: ~e. Ui1~ "'~ illl(;-'~; '.':::==~~~~~:::'. i\u~lln . • , VIEW LOT ~ I I er, ·Nffdl 80~ <'if'aning • A lovt•iy 3 bedroom, 2 bath Ironic oven · all llpl!Clllll .iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii;il;;i;i;;;iiiiiiio\ 11u and the ov.·ncr Ill anxious LARGE FAMILY 644-2430 IU-0700
.. Iden I 11tte for IPftdowl &. ra1t ~·. Pri\.'Cd to .ell! home. all rlt'Ctric puah l>ut· eqUip. 2 Wet Ban. 3 f'rplcs. 4 B--' H to fell, makt· n,, y """'"""~""'~"'"'~ ... ,..I
elca;ant home, ovetlooldna * 3 BOR~I near 0ttM . . . MORGAN REAL TY ton built-In ll:ttehen, lllhf il $289.500. Eileen Hud9M. llHlrOOm , Onie 1"099()nable oacr. Call RM WANTED I $21,750 ~THTNKfNG OF lnlrw~• &: ~na. Ptok:td f'1::'~t Ac o.ir-corid. ;3 67~2 675-64.59 i;hC'ertul! Della:httul pn.Uo. 644-2430 UJ.4700 2 baths, l'nclose<t patto. dou· Cl'IJ"pf'I, R~altort S.'6-8640. LArir fnmlly \v~ll klv1• th\11 INCOME TAX?
attractively to sell toda_y! ha.naina-bUkttl wlth ~" =========I ble garage, ntw•(11.l'J)cts Ir J •bedroom Mme \\'ilh 2 full 1 1 4 1 11 •. , Ca.U Bob Yorke,. BDRM, MlJUme S230~~ l't"JI. load1 or docidng, lllsh <lrt1fM''ll, lmm('ll\Ale --b.1ttuc, IA'lff'·llJVt'r l:iulltin I'll'\\ .:'1'18r· i~ex P\:" .. 644-2430 833-0700 Mitakl80nRVMicjo • •• • • • • .._....._ low malntl'Mnl.~ yard arvl OCEANFRONT pc.1!1scs11ii111. i::aat C n a 111 l'lrenin 'kill'hl'n. J\N>tJ ('fl()I c•ut 51:. or n O"mat n · .. * 4 rK"ar bl·ea.n •. · ~ ~ "hc1111Htul llWlm poolt Br1<, TRIPLEX M~ $211"!00 ~ ',' HOUSE HUNTING? $54JIOO . ' r;.t0.1'120. Roy .McCardle RNlior wllh l\lr roniitnontor. l.n~..,
u' BEST VALUE AT lTJ3 Ws~~Dr., N.11. ~Binker ~.81W:b!. ~~jt~~8~~ 1!10 NewPort Blvd .• C.M. ~Banks ::ro~ :_.~ryw~~1e1'~~t:. ~~~~111~; ~ . $21,500 BUSINESS OU~ QF ~EALTOfl~ turn., ~ ~~~~~ 54&-7729 ~EALTOR~ tlon. Patio. All cotJVf'nlc~
"a' l\b.:ilutely &Ofl'COUll 3. )'t'Clr ~ . I XI t l h'~ I 4 -near by! Brk. Ml).1720.
'*I home in ml"t oondltlon. YOUR HoM 2!lM Harbor1 C..ia Meoa """' '· " nmta -•'>'· BAYFRONT LIDO ISLE 3 becl,..m 2 balJ\o, -Thlo·IB •one ol • 'l::i • 3 LINE UP. n-r-Style H-""<"i" (!~~ .... ~-(lf•••ll•11_,f -... ····'··· -=•""· ~ ~-In ·-~-'·ouR ,,.ulLY -" -·-Call' .,).3163_ ~-U:x> PENINWl.A NEAR CLUB-J\!•111 --.~ .u-" wv --...yum_.,,. ....,,._ T "'"' Eti..rth lover'• kli;id of Uvin'' Lu;ruriowl 3 ll!\• 2 bacon. ~Udo_,,., ol lifo Incl. --·••• --bullr-m ldtchr.n, tlP• 2 oon;tltkln With ~lpx l0\11 Go With ut to ace tl'tt1 pretty Warm b'P14; kids nna . domlnlum.1._ M ternce on '°"' ol _:.:::: .. -...1.1 II•· • 2955 Harbor, CM:t.a M<'t4 ear prqe, Ul>lll'aded ldult euDetlqr ~ Doon 6 bdrm. 1potlt11 home on a f ldich 'twi 900 Da " the ...... llC' uUtUJ nd · '"""'''' "' , ... ._..
°""'pied and . roedy !or "'°"' C~ !Or .,...,,...,.., IJ<>. lot. with Iott o1 INll' =~I " -· · "I ""°' ku r."'@• c.;· lruc· Tunlt. yad\tirw A dub N DUPLEX .. .. .. .IOO
pw1 easton. )'OU M>n't ftnd buAnN ttttttde JocaUon. trNs ln Harbor View nw.. R AL ESTAT~ 11oat 111~ .,,,. sY act:tvtdta. tftarm. 4 SR •1 1..ma & J...lBR •rit. tSl £. &ll>'lhloir llke It kr .,. Don't ;;;J. It fo< 129\IXIO Call Jim Miiil<r. a -A a...... WJ1Y1<, ~. Coot& llU •~ .......,. Cali Ret1 Caipot, Ret1 earp.t, R•• tors . 6444430 IJ3.0700 TRl!ASURES OWNER. C!r641M&11l 644':Wf 1U4700 _,, ta. •
·Rellllonr 54&-8&10. 5*-8640. ' 183~121Y!;01~t<;!ll'!!fl':.,. ~NB.!!!:_JM>-'110~-~~l m.-•!!I!""'..,""""'"'"' N~ • "P•d''T Placcai\Jdl "'ant •cl n!tU lt~ •. M)...-i6Tt --~---~--
• \ I
•
•
DAILY PILOT
I~ I le 1~1 1 _ ... WI ]~ ( _ .... I~ ( _ ..... I~ PARK THE BOAT I -..... l~I ~------'-----~ I ~;;;;;;;;;;;:~;: MPt beads lblt lmm.acWtte · -
J 1 2 """' 3 boM>on>, ZI> bath
_ .... _ Huntington Buch _ .....
G.nor~I G•nortl Cotto -F..,nllln Vallew buui,. Wllk to heocb •n<I 1..;N.;.•;...w...:port.__llo..;.;;..•dl;;;.. ___ Naw=;;.po=rt:..;llo=a;;.dt.;....__ Nd.port \wights * DUPLEXES * ;:::::::::;:;:;;;;;;;;miiiiO;;i ;;;;;;:;;;;;;;:;;;:;;;;;;;,;-;;;; ::;;:;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;; patk.Fullprk•o•lrl39.9t>O. 1-....:.--...0..---~-------1
l NEW LISTINGS 4 x. MARK SPITZ NEW LA QUESTA Pre Grand Opening Sale! BY OWNER -Build Three Units : "" "'" , "" ..... 1 's ~ej\ss GREW UP WITH SAN MIGUE~ • 3 Belt., 2 Baths. ll<•utilul Mvu.ou>tlotreod)llorunlll
til'l'1u1a11· 1\ <JL"••lln vlr"' ' • G · U A POOL Comer loc., poulble boat ae-ki&cbe\, la.rte m 11 t er ln the Wntt'm White tlome ~.>Aul ""'' Nr11l> defili 28 UNITS Realty C'bm~ eeta, 4 bdrm, 3 bath, 3 car bedroom ,.,.,_ I pri. bath 'i area. Onr block from San I NEW -ON A TREE .. a.nd so can your chll· dreulnc~•. trpk:. Owocr ,.._ ... l11~uft• A: •I'll. l C'l!r parku1 dn!n. Sloe this super 4 bed· carage, sharp, clean and motivat~, Terml Av a . Clemente Countl')' ~.
Sli.'i.000 E"•':.. 6T~~. COSTA MESA LINED STREET room wtih family room and ~ tbruout. Only $38,5Cll. 11,._1658 or &lW684. Golt Coune and •tat e
Olt A~AlR, .i Ult. up. 3 BR $'K-Q 000 t...arvr trtet . 1l,llTCll.l.l'kl this covered patio Sol Vlata for $43,900 ..• HURRY! park. Scller nuay 111~!j doY.n: 2 !laths ~a-cnll ... ' • lovely new bon1e . hea,-y CA.U.. ~ 3 Br, conv. den, tam rm .. din nate. Prtce Sll,950. .......
car;M·tt;t, ctr11pcd , n1·\\ly EXCLUSIVE WITH Makl' n>o! • 3 BR .. 1&e. only $44,750. rm., '*' !:>CW, pl~. 54&-19.XI. ""'
palntl'<.I in"\1ct._, & ou1: OC'l'un FR . lormW OR. Cose to BE A WINNER ••. Min.\' extra.I. ist,500 . IN~ DMSlvi'
\it'"'· $69.000 t: l' c !I . Newport ~hools & Wl'1tcliff shQpplng Elegant 4 bedroom 2 bath 645-S2. ~'rim jriilAl.L~
6-12·2'.?M. I t an.:a. $53,00J. Barbara Awie with family room, covered
ON BAY AVE.: 2 BR .. 2 Ba, • ..~= tl.311 and""''°""' patio, I .... ""' CjJUICK CASH rkI&R& ~·•· wut. Frpl<'!i., elN'. b!tns. Fairview ptts and drapes, ~ &plll'kl-1:::::::::::::::::: I THROUGH A C»iN3\J!!!~ ti~!!'.,!! b;ly. 17'1.500. E"''· I .. pool. N•ar """"UUng. CONDOMINIUMS ·~-~ 646-8811 D ~ILY PILOT ER'S REPO "'" 6"' ~~ 642 •235 ,.. '200 Onlr $46.500. $25 990 ,. BUILD ~: •~ (anyfoM)
1
, .... ,.1!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~!!!!!!!-~~!" WIDE OPEN SPACES • Sell u Is! CtaclJed ~ab-Best
1
•1!!!!!1!!!!!![!!!!'1!!!!!!!!!!!!1!!!!!1!!!!!!!! ' --l las -"· tL-'-' 4 BR 2 batl> lge •-·t•• $5'1"'!95 \VANT AD otter! l Bf., 1 BL, vla Santo SKINNY DIP OR ~~ 0 i I Wwo, CO •~w ' . . • ""•" w ,. ~. ceilings, sunny lcitchen, lot, oo1lt-m range I-oven, 642 5678 ~ San Clemente', ....... associated
BR OK ERS-RE ALTORS
1015 W 6alboo ~7).J66 J
SPYGLASS PLAN 74
:li(lO plu.-. sq. ft. in th~s 5
bdnn., 4 ba. plus bonus 111\
home on a V.l.P. location. Cen1ral air concl .. inlercon1 J.-buillin record player. No-
wax vinyl. sha~ carpctini;:.
v.'&lnut cabinet!'> in kitchen.
pool·sized lot & brealh-tak-
ing vie\\' of ocean &
roastliTK'. You 1·an celebrnll'
the holidays 1n your ne....·
home. Call no"' $1-15,00'.l in·
rludlng larnt.
BACK BAY FAm DIP? screeaed-ln lanai, 3 bdrm, double oven, plenty of cui> c!'=::!. Lofty living awaits you! __ • only. 546JSQL , ·~:;::!i~~ '"ll'n=-...:r.-= ::-.:.,; =-::;::. ~':E-1:'. ·-....::=..--::::.,,. i.i,o1f'_TTMJTµP .. l.N1fi VA loan at 6''. $167. 1ier t'Ountry kill'ben, 1onna1 din-pet, ~. FA heat. $1-300 Vis~the temporary offices of lhe
n\o P.1.T.I. Only asking ing room, huge bedrooms. •• down, paymenta less than New C 1 $2S,OOO. separatt> utility area, double ..,. , rent port rett Informal on Center,
GINNY MORRISON car garage plus olympic conveniently located at
siu' swimming pool plus 1 I' 2400 West Coast Highway
8redhill
REALTY
Univ. Park Centl'r, Irvine
Call Anytime. 833--0820 Office hours 8 A1'1 to 6 P1'1
"ASSUMABLE
LOAN"
$4000
* •*•• -REALTORS-bedroom apt and bachelor •!!!!!!!!!O!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!I Suite 8, Newport Beach, .. ,_..,. * 1505 Mesa unit. All terms at $39,950. OWNER sacrifitt, llMUme t'2Mn ( -...,., ...._.lOJ Open oauy,10 a...m. to sunset. *UITI •Verde Dr. East_
• .. ---.. Costa Mesa apr VA loan now on P~J::::::::::::::::::J *•* 557-4130 perty at 6o/11 ~ your!• Realtors 545--0465 monthly installments are
tOpen Evening.s1 Open Eves. less than rent! Generous AN EXOTIC
W~"I 11 sized bedrooms, custom INnRIOR · Corona del Mar
OWNER VERY
anxiOUJi to niove into his 11e"'
Home and dot'sn•t nl!ed this
l'Xtra house. Assume the
5~ ';1 loan and your n100th·
ly investment will be $156.
O\\'IK'r n1ay carry 2nd Trust
Dt'ed. l Bedrooms, 2 Baths,
Fireplace, Shake Rool. Ac-
ccssiblr Huntington Beach
Area. Offered for $33,750.
Call 646-0555.
vn ""utten. boilh• dream STEAL IT! I kitchen, full dining room, Feast your eyes on intimate,
&i!.utllul 3 bednn., 2 balh profe'SaKlnal landscaped artlMica.lly colorful deoor &.
home ln Costa 111: e s a s grounds. Enjoy the view Ulls like new S bedroom, 2%
College Park. on a tree-lin-from the deli~httul enclosed bath, large famlbi room,
ed stn!et. cul-de-sac Jot, of-patio. Brk. $27,COO, 962-88659 fonnal dining room. Special
fcrs total quiet seclusion, Open House Sun. shag carpets. Most unusua l1
~E"rything you need, built-i n 9CJ26 La Crescenta wallpaper. Triple ceramic
kitchen, double g a r a g e , 4 BR. 2 ba, fllillilY rm. \Vas sink. And ao many extras.
fiunily rm. Priced below model honie for plush La Pool-sized lot. fifust see.
market seller has bought Linda tract. F'ully air cond.. Call 963-4456.
larger home and must sell, covered patio. i;:ara1:e door
asking $30,500. Call Red opener. sr., do"'"·
Carpet realtors, 546-8640. larwin realty Inc.
•
REPO ,.._.,,,,
Fixer Upper OWNER desperate, 4/'!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~/Lagun• Beach
'YOURSELF
(You're Not Dreaming)
But You Can
TOTAL DOWN
Yes, hel'f! is one of a kind.
2100 square f<.>et , 5 bed-
rooms. 3 baths. custom
made drapes, fantastic shag
carpets throughout. If you
have lots of kids you should
!lee this for only $4.000 d<>-.l•n.
Call now 842-2535.
dil
SUl'iS!01.1.IY Of 1141 (OlWW. CO.
$L"JOO. DOWN TO AU... QuiC't :J';U:OO~~~:; CUSTOM POOL: HOME FAMILY HOME '
res. area, huge lot, all bll-fil'eplace otf the' deluxe ON V:a ACRE ESTATE Top of the World l r.1 1t;JI t
ins, frpl. & 2 BA's. PriC't"d bu 11 t -i n k I t ch en, 4 bedrooms, family room, Ocean v I e w Beautllu"" under all others at $28.950. dishWMher. Patio. No wax ~cious li·d-r 0 0 m 1 _ _. __ pd 3 BR. 2 Ba , n~ Realty Company
Call 545-8424. SOUTH linolrom. gorgeou11 ihag ~rlooks the ... u~ & h~e 1j~ ~. w/~ass!ve'. s~ DOVER SHORES
COAST REALTORS. carpeting thruout. Beautiful gro un ds . Automatic trplc. llt1,ge family nn., SIMPLY ELEGANT 'PINCH YOUR
LARGE
BAYCREST
BEAUTY
Adobe brick fireplaces, v.·ell-
cared-for home with 4 large
bedrooms, dining room &
family room on \\'ind..,,·ani.
Exceptkxlally priced at
$87.500.
PETE BARRETI
-REALTOR-
642.s200
2 BR ·TRIPLEX
$77,500
Build for that rainy day.
Quality built -uni!s . in
choict' Corona de! P.far loca-
!ion. 2 BR each. Built-in kit-
chen "'ilh dishwashers · one
unit has fireplace and } l!j
baths. Quality W /\V Cpts &
Drps * Excellent Income
askin~ $71,500. Call f.or
details 613--8550.
(•ilf~'WJ
OLDER DUPLEX
Cozy, freshly painted duplex,
f.lexible Door plan, good in-
come projected. Try low
51J's. Call ~7225.
Ulkll
* F.H.A. R£PO * patlo awaiting your outdoor sprinklers &: water softener. w/slldlng glass wall to Beautiful 3 BR, 3'12 bath,
p&r.:-.ll'H! Bkr, S 3 2 , 5 0 0 . In quiet rural area. Only priv. patio. Cheery lcltchen formal DR, View home. Jm-
962-a.:.. $41.900. w/lge. dining area. Over mense rovered patio &: gar-4 8Dfilf., 2 ha. on
c:orner lot. $25,150.
$1.500 down
Authorized Broker
Chvner Anxious. 3 bedroom, CALL THE REAL 2.000 sq. rt. of family Jiving. den room. Tile entry -dbl.
den, 2 bath home. Elegant ESTATE FAIR Good neighborhood, clORe to fireplace. Excellently priced
lireplact' lends added charm 536-2551 schools. Anxk>us owner ask-at $139,900. Laszlo Sharil:any * 548-6S70 * lo gracious living room. Ing $49,500. 644-6200 (L28)
Game room with pool table, • -400-2800 *
Near all schools & shoppmg. Macnab-Irvine DELUXE 2 STORY
Located in Costa Mesa best
area tlW; rustic ranch style
-I bdrm .. 2 bath home has
ankle deep shag carpeting
thrroghoot. elegant built-in
kitch<>n, fonnal dining 1m.:
heavy she.ke roof, large
manicured yards, block \\'8.ll
fencing, owner has reduced price for fast sale total
'"" ba•. loterrom ""'em. MORE COLORFUL -~~
Brk, $25,900. 842-2561. than a rainbow ls this lovely 642..a235 644-6200
OWNER arodous 3 bedroom home. lndlviduill interior ,_ ao. CCII* ..we I;;:;:;:;;:;;;;;;:;:;:;:! I den, 2 be.lb hcHne. EJegani ~ with Spanish touch aourt+ lJIOl,loM,. Ciiia
fireplace lends added cha.rm v.ilich blends ll9ell to _._.,...a.-
to gracious living room. gracious entertaining. 3
Game room with poot tabl1! bedrooms, family room,
wet bar. Intercom RY!:lem'. ~RY formal dining room.
Near all schools & .shopping. ~~Close to beach.
BRK, $25,900, 842-2561.
prltt $36,000, CaH Red BY Owner: Choice 4 Br.
Carpet. nealton, 546-$40. + fam. rm. + 2 ba. +
MESA Verde 5 Br Paceset-frplc. Nr Mile Sq. Park. 1~
ter. 1MMED POSSF..SffiON. Yrs. old. S3000 down. T.0.P.
INCOMPARABLE
4 Bdrm., 2 beth home, lo-
cated in a higbly desirable
&: very peaceful area. You
will be amazed at I.he never
ending mqnltude or the city
& coastal view. A lruly de-
lighthtl home. CaU Joe Tom·
kins.on. $72,001
}o'onn din nn, frplc, 214 be, VA $281 PITl. 833-1103,/~~!!!!~"'l!!!!'~~"'l'"
elect. kit ch. , sprinklers 833-3886. From Red Tile Roof ~~I,,.,.
front & rear. Ga1 fireplt. To Beamed Ceilings .,,,,;'T"Oe~,~
Ne'YI shag cpt. BY OWNER. ;;H;;";;";;'i;;";91;;o;;n;;;;llu;;;;c;;h;;;;;;;;;IEvery inch of lhis plush -4 REAL ESTA'JE $39,950. 2800 S h a n I a r • bt>droom is Spanish. On cor-1"
ON THE POINT
BAUOA PENIN.
Located less than a block oft
the oceanfront & • a block
from Newport Bay. Large 4
bedroom, 2-story home. 2
belh..5, llll'ge liYins room
with fireplace, family room
& shaded pa Uo. Some vif!w
of ocean &. bay from apper
level. Full price $65,<XXI.
Call 540-11$1 Open Eves.
•
'
'
c;545-l:=...;o735=.· ~~~~=~ $25 000 ner lot, 1-story with thou-U90 Glermcyre St.
BY Owner-Beautiful 2BR, • • sands of dollan of upgrad-49+94n 549-0316 ~
1 '~BA. located in quiet Delight(ul, 4 BR, 2 BA, that ing. Sharp &t clean as any EMERALD BAY I •!!!i!!!!i!;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; J
· ~, §.• HER ITAGE
REA LTORS 'UISIDU.IY Of JH( cot.wru co.
Very Special Home
Hard to find in Corona del
Mar. 4 Bf!droom, 3% bath,
family room and ab8olutely priceless viE'W on fl!e Jtnd.
E.,ide adults on\y com-I• '""" """'" has Grand· model. A PEACH 1
munity $21,900. Conventional father clock that is built CALL THE REAL FINEST LOT
financing a v a 11 a bl e . into wait, upgraded crpts & ESTATE F Al R Vt EW • $50,000 On Peach Tree Lo. See this
963-2187. drps, xtra Jrg icitch, block TED HUBERT charming, qua I i 1 y con-
LOVEl. y LRG 2 sty 4BR, waU fence and 2 blks from l----=-SU.::.25=5..:1___ and Associates structed 4 bdrm., <Hning rm.
home, 2~J ha, trplc, bltln Grade School. J.1in. $1300 dn WAU.S OPEN AND CLOSE, J4TI Via L;do NB & large ts.mil)' rm., 2'iii
gaS kitch dsh/wsh. Furn. & paymts $230. covers all. parties move Indoors and 675-1500· baths. BeautifuJI)' decorated
Hoge ·-~. Sp rink\ er 8 I' out, dance Door and adjoins & landscaped. And a A~ ,.,.,: ..... u """' bar and pato. Ro .... 1 .... has OCEAN VIEW covered patio bes1de a $-w,uuu. Dwner. ,,.1u DC'nver rock & rolled he~ ..... i) Afo. SP ARK LING POOL.
DI' .. C.M. 541>-2''2. 531·5111 ( =J '"·5111 old. N-ft'ar lawn and GAZEBO $52,500. NI 3 BR, den, 2 baths. Slall! en-C SOUTH OF HWY. MESA Verde, on golf course. bedroom ~s BK R. try, sunken !iv. rm., (pl. HI CA L fS) 646·1414
Beaut. 4 hr. 3 ba, fam rm., OWNER mu.st move 1 ~!J&.5.5~=1l~·-------peaked ceil., open beams, 9! .~ _.
2 ~ DeT n .& new 2 Bdrm. Ionn. din rm., ltg. liv rm. decorator's de Ii t e . 4 O\VNER tran.<tfcrcd, G.T. glass gables. Bl!n kitchen.> .......
unit. emfic location! Good w/frplc, bll.ns, lrg. patk>. beiroom~. 2 beth.!!, large terms _ low-low down A prii.e winner at $55,0CC. l&ALTY IP7'7~rty & a bargain for ,153.=="";:..;0wnc"=°''°''C:..,_o:=-'=501'=". ~ family room with lovely non-vet!!! 5 bt"droomi, large Mls.sion Realty 494..()TJl Ne•r Ne.,,or1 P••I Offlc•
·"""'· HOME & INCOME -Spark!-c:rygtal chandelier and most family room with inspiring PORTAFINA NEWPORT BEACH MORGAN REAL TY ing new duplex $48.950. appealing fireplace. Builtin fireplace, gourmet's pride & SEXYI I
673-6642 675-6459 Beautiful 3 bdrm owners kitchen, indoor-outdoor joy built-in k Itch en , LAGUNA
...____ unit + 2 bdrm rental unit. carpeting. Like new cloud dishwasher. WeU pl~ On the blufis above Newport Costa n-.. Xlnt location. 151 E. Bay, soft shag carpeting. Loads home. Pool sb:ed grounds! Custom building site1 & Bay, this homf! will drive
EASTSIDE C.M. 645-1137/642-48.l7. or di!eklng. Patio, lush low BRK, $.16,850, 84H691. ~~t.a1:c~. on Nyes Place ~.d2 ~~ bl~v:i~,i
East Bluff m a intenance landscaping LOOKING FOR A B E A C H 1....aguna Be h 494-9388 room for entertalnini, ttUa
Nice quif!t area. 3 BR &1----------~a beauU~ swim pool COTTAGE? Hear the surf. ac OOme ofiers pr ivacy,
family rm., fireplace, large WANTED \\'1th vacuum included. W\ndy location 3 BRS L•gUM Nlguel K'Clusiou and even hp a
patio with barbecue. Dbl. 3, -4 br Lusk !tome, fam nn. BRK, $33.000. 962-l31l. heavy shake ~ and built: 1--=---''-".;...___ hicklen bedroom just for full.
..
PENNIES
with a •
PILOT
KaJ' .• alley access for boat din rm. Principals only. LISTEN TO THE ins. \Valk to Rand on your NEW CONDO on East 9. hlll.!lde location with iObl Gt
or camper itorage. S31.500. 12131 ~1501. WAVES CRASH private path In 5 min. view goU course, 3 Br., 2 blj: trees just Jike the moun-SOUTHSIDE hum thi• 3 """"°m Orlontal Rod Carpet 962..SSll t-=Ba=·c..• =ownor="-'-'615-0033"--'=·'--ta..,. Now VACANT and
Near Newport Hghts:. 3 BR, 2 ~F..;°"""'":;;l•::;l:;;nc.,V.;;.;;a;.:11.:oy!....--1 -~ory. Atrium entrance. ONE FAMILY COMMUNE 1;:L;.:ldo;o;...ol;;;•l.:a ______ I ;:~to~ :.oors: PENNY PINCHER
liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiOi Ba. & seporate rumpus rm. BRAND NEW c 8 r Pe! s • complete with herb garden. CHOI $4T,lm fur fast sale. Call 11 2 ~k:s. &: b a r be c u c . O\VNER lea vi,. swim ponl. drape11, paint & l~scaping. All glass kltchl!n with hang· * CE * Red Carpet R ea I t 0 r 1 ~ nlobtl~.4 ~-garage, ,Ev, ... ~ wrooalml rv' Aw•ttredennafo•, Behomttc• l~ha'"a ~~1tng ,• "'1 w 1ng potted plantA. French 5 BdNord 3~rneba,! Lptot d' ,~-==:::·-----~ ............. . ...,.,-Mr· "''~"' • e. ~ s uua ga e, oo. "Country" style 11v 1 n g . nn.11., 711 u•S WI in CALL '-.'\.• ,46•2414 spacious bedroom.11, large for only S.13,000. RE 0 C A R p E T rm. plwi IJl:e, sundeck. 3 Br., 1" ha w/apec. den + ColdweU Banker 9!~ ~ family room with inspiring CALL THE REAL REALTORS, !J62-511. $85.COl brand new room addit. All
REAL{ORS .• •• ~LTillYafL ~~~:n~e, d17:~I~~ ~I~-~~ ESTATE FAIR OWNER MOVING 3.17? L~~!.E{//'~L ~ach ~f ~~oo':2~ i~ ~ n~~
handl!IOITle bn>aldast bar. 5J6..2551 Wants aC"tion. J1uge 4 bed-* 673-7 * Another exclusive from Ne•r Ntw••r• P••t Office High block wall fence for REPOSS S 2-st Ith , Kingaard Real E .state
CAMEO SHORES REPOSSEmONS supreme ptivocy '" the • ESSION :;:::;: 149.,;i ;_,,, .J;~ ULTRA MODERN 64>-2:122.
OCEAN VIEW Local A Miuion Viejo area. lovely contour pool! No For lnfonnaUon and location OWNER ANXlOUS Exclling 5 BR. 4 Ba. View Walk to Beach
4 BR's .. 3 bath.11. 90x200' lot. $25 to S30M. For info call down G. I. lerm.l!ll, low down of thta,,.t FHA A VA bomet, Sharp 4 bedroom, 2 bath. pool I-patio, form. liv., din. Fa rm lln rm vie of Broker, 546-7139. non-vets! Brk, S 2 8, 7 5 0 . con c _ & family m1s. \Vet bar; 1-Sty. 3 BR., 1~ ba. Carp., ~ & ~an Fine ~111 BY owner 3 hr 2 ba ttplc 2 846-<9M. KASAllAN $~.SOO. Immedl&te l)OS.'IC&-parquet tloon drpa. frpl., bltns. Tennis,
bit. 4fe. nuitr. ·aulte. Priv: car gar. S26.900. ' ' Like to Trade? Our TradE"r's R I E .!non. Bier, 842-l.(lB. ---GE:!Mlit---pools nearby. $32,900.
t>taches. tt42,500. G e 0 . -====*=540-5567=~=*===.;_,P;;•;nt;:d:=;=,.=:"'='"'":=":=''o,:':o"':=,youo=!.:..:::="::•;;::':;t:;•:;la'=::::iff;2,::W;,;44/ 4~ ~2 BA. By Owner. 1610 W. Cout llwy., NB CAYWOOD REAL TY
Gntpe. • n beam lam nn.. REAL:OORS "'" ••~ * 548-1290 * 644-2430 133-0700 ll')>lc, \I lk ID p<U'k & schlo. ~
$2S,900
$1300 DOWN
3 btK bcdroom1, 2 be.th•. fir.-.
place, d e. Just Ul!lled~ ~ So
llunyl!
•
co:Ts
WALLACE
REALTORS
--54166 ... 4141-
(0pon EY9nlntsl
AP Zone $25,000
2 lM!droom, 1 bath borne op.
PoAile COii.A Me• Hocpltal.
Ideal lor --°"""'· Houle will dlT)' lnvf!ltm~nt
wtUki awa1u,. devt.loipmtnt.
llUMY!
Roy McCanlle RNllO<
1llD N-Blvd., C.M.
-mt
$lit DOWN
1v\ /!,'£,tr 131;900. 119+-'1157. AT THE BEACH $@\\. ~ -Q.ll• LA CUESTA, 3 BR. family IM=°';:;•:...:do.:.:.I ;cfM;;::r____ 2 \:) DUPLEX, le!. 4 Br. &-Br.
rm-, frplc., 2 ha., lhar l\1ESA Del l\lar. 4 Bedroom, Like new. Great live-in and
The Puu.le with the Built-In Chuckle tltruout OWNER !16&-7450. 2 batl>. '""'''""late. a-n!ntal. $70.tlNl Priv Pty. UNUSUAL KNICKS &: to schools. Price Mid 30's. 642--6793. '
CRANNlES lo dean.ti'!. By owner. 540-4009 Jlarbor Vu Horne. 2 DR + Uw lD1tU'k on-3 levels, 3 I -'"-'==..::.:::.c:::::::.___ Oen. Ftt. Ready to mov!
e PilNT N\JMllUED lHTfRS IN
THESE SQUAll:f.S
· 'Cf UNSCR~ LE!lUS TO I
G!T •NSWI•
111·rr1·r1
I I I 1111 1 I I
BA, 4 BRS, unusual hou8e Mission Vlelo In. Owner. 6f4..82A9, betwn
plan "'' has all the "'""I'-"==..;.;=---" ~ dolly. 2124 Port ~~~~s. RED VACANT •.• READY Provence PI.
Irvine Newly decorated -4 btdrm BALBOA Covet. N, B .
home fe1.lurf!1 klng.alte waterfront. Prtvate ramp A
master bedrm, with fi~pt. flo&t. MO<lt!m 3 br. $77,500.
CUICK OCCUPANCY between t1v1.,. "" l IMr• Call °"""'· ~ for 1ep. famtlY rm. Locn.tro n-i_ ... ..,., n1 Owot!r hM been 1'1"8nsft!rrtd Al'Jt'8n Jlllls. Prtt:e $44,500.1..:•:::P.:cP'..:tc..n:.c:•=~~='c..0=Ycc· __
and must move hnmedlatf!-call 837.9400,
1y. llb 4 bdnn., 3 b<. home KATELLA REAL TY Newport Holghtt
with IU: fonnal d1nlna: arft.
and wet w In family room Newport Blach Newport Heights CM M-youn ln a vtty short 1.;.c;..:."-'.;..;...;;.;;;;.::;;____ _._
lime:. Prlcefl for quick .ale BAYVIEW DUPLEX Du,,. ... x ·
QI S<l.!00. D<c. 1 compl•tlon. ht """ $Z7 500 ired hill
REALTY
UnJv. Pm Center, ltv!M
C&ll Aeytlme 833..o820
Office houri 8 AM to 6 P~f
write off. o""" 6JS.7"17 o• ,
645-1460 Two quaint one bedroom
BLUFFS • Vlew 4 Br, 2'4 apartnuinll with rood in-Bt.. Twnhle tam area come In d"1rabM "'Newport
Pool. curt.' By ~ Jte~. To IC'e c a 11
$44,11511. t144.<J215, 1(46. 171.
0up1 .. ., ..... Ille oewt (ic. [i;'l~HK!!QRE<!j~-'L~J Miles*~ ~~tor ~ 11Ba4Nt\1'
•HMBOR VIEW JIOY..ES _
Classified l..d
••
3 LINES
2 T'MES · 4 4)
'
$2.00
Any Item Priced
$58. or less
'' J
••
(II "'°" than ono Ihm, the comblnocl totll
cannot exCMd $50.)
'.64l-5678 TQ Vtl Jmrnae. 2 Br .. wJw
l'PC., SyMdlah r.,,le, k>tt o'tlle lao. )'II. Boat. campor -. On!> 121 ,uo .
Ownor/Aaont 64M2ltl. SCRAM-Lm ANSWERS IN CLASSIFICATION 800
Jt's a breew, .en 1W" ttf!TTUI
v.1th Hit. ~ t>al11 Pilot
Cluatllod. -
~ BR, 2 BA, ptuf lndscpd, Dl;::lll';;m~Pllot~~W~lt>l!;'._:Adl:.l>o:.:vo~· ! ..................... .. 162.500 by OWttt' 6l+-m3 ....,.._plonJ.
j / o
I '
'
R
B
I
t
j
/'1
' I l.IC)d,i)', Octobtt 31 1972 0.-ILY '!LOT
[ ---_ ... ,.,. I~ I _.,._ 1~1==::[ __ ... iiiiiii-~J~~ L '-:::~I~ L-•-1[! [ "'"-m•••3 ~-' L-_;:;;;,..,..;;;,._;;;;,~;;;1 J ;miiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~iiiii~/-4ph. Furn 360 • • • _..,.. J-* t-fouMt Unfu,f'ft. .S DuplexM Unfum. ut ' 4 91 . Unturn. JU Aot. Unturn. )65 .... , Untun. ~S
Irvin• c;;t. Mt11 Coit, MNa Genetti General '-i-.,-n-li_n_g-ton;....;.lle_o_c_h_....,_,
Mollll• tlemH , ,...,, Houtoo Untvrn.
"'r hi• 125 • o..,..rt•n!t'! 10I 'Goneral
S!-10\VPl.ACE, dui l wide Affllltl te t -----J,;;;;;;;==;;;;:;J-* $27.SO Wltl( & UP I :;;;,;;;;;;;;,;;;;iilji;iiijjj-,;;;;;,;;;;;;:;;,::;;.;;;:
lllNTAU -·""'· * Ut•Ottl *
Peindm>a, ru· clubhouae, on U'lCAL P.fET>TC".AI. GROUP
COl'IW, &du.II S Star Park, EXPANOJNC INTO TT.XAS
lit ocean. M&ve rlt;:ht In! \\l"Jlll EXCEL J. EN T S6'l9l1 Caah down/111swn\e G1lOWTH P AT 1' E R N
p mt.I. Owner. 646--~. ESTAB. li-Jl''•.JTMUM 0 r
2-bt60 We.terrier. 1ikt new. 2 $500) AT END OP lSI'
Br., den, wet bar. alr COlld. YF.A!' rnn EAClt $1000
Acrou !It. from bcb . INVESTED. I w.ttlhCOITAMllA
\'ES, wo ho\'e ttnt.al• _ P.ta,y f BIL Sl.61 flriv, p:lliol, New e Studio • 1 :JR AptA j• BEACH BLUFF Apt1. w• be Of ~rvlt .. to VOU In ~t .. No ablldrto, no pelL e TV A Ma.\d Service ,\v11.1I EL CORDOVA APTS. 2 & 3 BR. Pool. pslio
')'Ollr houaing nt!i!d•~ ~ W. h)I *·· 815-1317. • Pholll' $ervl-Oe.Hld ~Xll From $145 "Iii ~I ElliL U1493
' • ChJldrtn t Pet section 1 & 2 Bedrooms 1.nr.-:-2 BR In qui~ 4-plex.
HuntlngM IMch 2.37& ~rr Blvd., Cl'll Dishvrashcr -Shag ('arpeting · \Valk in l 'los-Sl.)(l. lnlanl ok. No ~ti.
luu D occup.& "' 5:00 "'°~ -:-:: els, .. ~orced. Air treat -F.xtra l . .arge Roums -1 1-:nC'I KU.!,:. f~yrd. lt2-0". ~E • "N~Y HOLID• L'I A-Beautiful Game l\oom ·Healed Pool · BBQ's· c.gun• Booch
' : 1d1 l 11 lid
5.:J6.-4816 or 642 .7323. Olli fl>r . Anoot11tn\C!nl ft'lr "
BARGAIN Udo Parle 2 ortvate interv~v &. full Th.:at Mt Jllll A . F" Of btlrM. Tl\ke O\lt!r ~ta, ~~~ detaU.. Sil &: SUn. Our MANY RENTALS . , .
. . .. . I ii·11ll11•·
New 2 I-3 Br apt.I "" "" Obi cance. dlhwshr PF.LUXE Spacklut 1 UH Enclosed Garages. Quiet surroundings and e VIEW e
OCEANfKONT C.ot J{unt1" .. rnnlf\rfem1, KB fuJ'TI apt. $135. lteatM Pool. close to ~hopping. INr Harhnr & lfam H1on St )
VSJNCE 19'8'1 5~1tl Ample perldna, AduJt5, no Adult Liv ing . No Pets.
111 \Vtstern Bank Bid&:. I:;;;;;;;;; pet1. 2077 Ch1rle St., Coste tMu '2700. 22' Sallbolt $600. Mr. ·victor 1714) S3l-Wl2 *
613--3817. --~ ---m . HANDY! 1 BJl Stove, 642·4470
:! 13R. 1 BA. !...ell.II('. Motlil'f
Adult11, no pcu. Elevalor to
be&.ch. PooL Socul'h.y. 31~
COIUI lfW)' .. S. l.ag\.11\A. NE\V :G' Tn!Jlf'r & 25· LAUNDROMAT retrl1. SlnalPJ rlnt. Vacant.
eabena. ~rk ne11r IJdo. 2 W•1h, -qry, -Fluff, * Unlver<1ll• p .. ..ic, Jrvtllt' 196S Pomona A\'&., C".:-01
Doys SJ2-7000 Nlfl>tl 2 ar. ~ m11. Coowo lor. HACIENDA HARBOR
Br. furn. pvt. beach. Pets -Fold type laundry I $1:i5. SECLUDED! 2 Br. Cot·
_!Uoomt. $9,'r&O. 5.1t;.2438, & cleanlnt service, Co.. tasre. Lovely garden. Ideal
ron• del Mar on Coast for couple.
3 BR. 2 both•
4 BR. 2 "-fhs lriiil Brick planter &: sneck b.'l r. From S1S4
.m .,_,tnents twftant ~ :~me~~i'iat 11~0~ ~:,t DEl.U.U: I & 2 Bl:!:UR<)<)~1S ~I ~------.::~.; fo'ree re'lt 11nlll Nov. I. SltiO. Furnished & Unfurnished
e 499-2W e
2 Br. 11 block oc-ean view,
lil.'l' 1() apn. Lease, 231
l\gn1c. 49+2ll8. ,,_I SS1 Victoria. Apt 4 1 leated Pool -Gara_ges -Shag Carpeting
Artt1 Furn, 160 BACllELOR 1 & 2 BR Oish\\•asher -All Utilities Paid .
Belbo• ltl•nd Furn &: unfum Adults Only . No Pets
.. ~ '""" l ~· Hwy. $22,000. l0clud11 * c.n.r• all equipm•nt. PETE $145 -VACANT & N!8<$yl 2 l 'jj·----~-;;;1 BARRETT REAL TY Br. Gae. l'l>c* tor kid~
3 BR., bonus nn.
ired hill LAGUNA NIGUEL Xb .. nice. Pool, BBQ. 1nrtry. 2•1 Avocado St., Cotta Meu Clean. Nr ihopg & bch. ~~iir~u3 ,.~~ii,,~: Acllts. From $120. &IG-2:l7:l VILLA MARSEILLES
II 642-43SJ $175 . OLO_t;R 2 BR! Porch. l"'l~s Pl'OIMrtv 154 . Beauty College I E/1ll1e. Klf"l11/JM!'l'I welcome.
646-1204 AP41rtments
1 Br .. 1 ua.: SllJS • :Z Br .. I
Bil : $225. e 2 Br., 2 Ba.; trple, pa.lio. BBQ. t.aaae CHARMING t Br. furn-r1;:;'. SPACIOUS I & 2 BEDROOM APT.
th I' u June . plex, new ctpls, drp~ & FurnlshH & Unfurnished
5 ACllF'': S79~ TOl'AL Butcher Sho~ · NPtl> $20,000 LANDLORDS!
$S0 dn $9 mo. nr Sa.n Pff)(' &: Tobncro Store -New F"Rf"E P.V.NT.4L ~'PVtrE
REALTY
Univ. Park Cenu.•r, Irvine SZ.15 ;
BernMlloo ,.,...,., c 11 y . BEACON RENTALS Rlvel'l!lrt~ County. Ownr Need r.tig. Buslnes es * '4Mll1 * Call Anytime. 833-{)82()
OfflN hot1n I Ml to 6 PM 8JS.1470/~:N-88:n. paint. Lovel,y gard1>n Jlur· Adult Living
BALBOA I.land' turn' I -... roundlnp. $135. '.\I at u r" u· h . h I d' l d 1·
lncld Gas, TV C.h1' &: \\'tr
Fully rrpld i: dr-pd. R~
[aC'il. !ltd Pool. BUQ area. •• ... 1•· 1 5<8 =20 1s \Vas er co or cuor tna e app lances 8:"1. $160 l'll'r n•o, UUI ln,.lfi, , ---•-~-•-"~Y~·--·-"'---, -Plush shag carpet mirrored wardrobe doo rs· (TI4) 675-5837 or (213) 01n1 Point · d' · · k ' h kl b 213, "4-3;7S.,____ HOLLAND Bus. Sale1
(ommerclal 1716 Orange, c.M. 645-tl70 B41boa Penh•IU1•
L•gun1 Beach 29041 Aloma Ave.
Pr-rty ,....!!! ii" liquor llc1n10 *
FOR Salt' or leaae ~ unit of-Ori.n~e On Sale GeneN\J
{let bldg., 1.i 1eaM!d, ,~ (Public Premi!!"e~Cockhtllsl
avail. Nov. 15th. 1,00) sq. ft . F.n~rgency-Sfl.ve $$$ (Pric-
each 11nlL 186.).71 Park ed for quk-k salel. Call
Ave., CM Do not disturb \\'1n!lt.on Collerf. ..
BAYVIEW 2 br, fonnal din,
frplc, plu1h Ahag, palnlf'd In
& out. 1; hlk lo bay. 1 blk lo
bcb. $300, yrl!.· 642--8029 •
Coro"• QI Mlir
$165 · UtU bd. Oceanfront! Lrr. 1tudlo. Av-.u. yearly.
$175 • UtU pd. Victoria
Beach. Lrg redec 1 Br.
Ocean view,
231...i4ti. 111 1rect l1gbtmg 1n 1tc en bree ast ar -
3 BY't. 2 BA. frpll:'. $2115/mo. LGE 2 Br. 2 Ba, new crpt, huge private fenced patio -plush landscair
\Vn•ild rent u n f urn. rlrps. h'O~t-frl'f· r,., r r 1 ~, 1ng · bri'!k Be r-be-Ques -large heated pools ---· ----
4!&-2'177 or 495-5274
Me s• Verde
$'n:;1.,,n. i111~ Diamond. muM>r ciof!te". SI 9 O I n1 o. & lanai. Air conditioning. DF.LUXE 2 ~ 3 Br., 1 Ba .. 6T:>-~:·~~. M681 Cordova. 0 Pen· 3101 So. Bristol St., Senta Ana 5$7-1200 en1.·I pr, $100 up. Rental
WTNTER : 2 BR., $200 To 492.-4225. COLDWELL, BANKER & CO. 9f~j ..... ~3W5 ~1ace Ave.,
oocup&ntL 01\'fler 830-7651. !213) 272-42~9 2 BORM. frplc, ·lovt>lv Ca!K!
SD) -2 BR. 2 Nks hrA!'h.
Beaut view. Quiet. Private
patio.
NU·VIEW RENTALS
•'}'"'r. 1 B ..... ~1 '".0. M·1nt•!1q1on 8e•Ch MANAGING AGENT >t ....., ·
Mnrshall Realty Gia-4600 J .;;;.;;;;:;!;,;;;;,;;;;;;;;;,;;;,;;;;.;;;;I I Midway .,Sitv.~---· I Courtegy to bkn. DTl:ITRIBUTOR, whO)PAAle Cod Cottage. $275. 673-1~. ~ •or 4~8 Balboa Penlnsula L QUINTA HERMOSA -1 !\•·t Unfurn. JU Apt. Unfurn. 36Sl2 BOR~lS., 2 ha, studle •l>t· ~TER Costa ~leia-2 ad-blcyC":le acee11~ries. Good >.,_,. rt ·1y "= All 5 C t M e SPACIOUS~ Bach. Steps Srvu1ls11 Counlf".' U ti1.1e Liv··-·--------Carp., drapt'S, blt-ln1 . joining oomntercia1 prop.. oppo uni . .,.wuu. · os a eu ... 1 1 1 e $25 Wk & Un On Cler!11.n . • '·lie•. Gr,• I potenth•l 96&-2832. 1-;;;;,;;;;;;;;;,;;;,;;;;,;;;;,;;;;,;;;;;;;.;; to bch. Sm! pct. Uu nC' lng & SP11c1ws Ap!s. Tl"r Corona del Mar Costa Men ~!:_l'age:._!!40~onth 893-2812 :• J.1 3.~. 1.ovf'lv Barh-1 Rr-Rr.om~
Will sell one or both. Call Money t• LNn 240 I NEAR S.A.C.C. Goll Coo™' . ALA Rentals e 645-3900 llfAld ~Nice -Pnol -UUI pd
for detaUs, 6&-2020 or 1 Bedrm ivith yard, pa lio e r.all 6Th-8740e
&12-6560. 1st TD Loans and garage l\lature adults • BEACH Living? Furn 1 I 2 BR. 1 1.~ BA. pntlo, ba1ronv,
racert pool: sunken ~a•1 ·-p;.;;;;;;;;;;;;;iiii;;;;;iiii;;;;;. iiiiimmiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil[ '."~'~w~oo~r:!IJB~··~c~h~---1 WlQ llnhrllf'VHhle L1v1ng -I~
(Jn!)> PARK NEWPOllT
APARTMENTS
on the boy
RARE -·~'"'.·I '-L ,._,, -·-•• .• 1, •. ,, '". . I ~ ~ ~ •-1tJ " ' " .,., Br. \'I udl l·u·I. 'li141l. , :n5 F. Bny. $2";() n'l"l. ,.., ,,.,.,,, I BR. FURN. $175
2 BR·. FURN. $210
2 BR. STUDIO $195
ALl UTIUTll<:S t-'All 1
~-~.;~ HARBOR GREENS
ha.ve N.t1 retail o~ralion~ B"•% INTER EST Roy McCardle Realtor ALA Rent•ls e 645-3900 ~ li::c. Inq. at Apt C 673--1521 on finrt noor and '"'o 7~ . ---------or 54R-7771 ~rtti~e.nts Upttaln. Great 2nd TD Loaps 1810 Nei~i:;117~'t)., C.?il. 2 BR house, child & pets OK I =~~.~.-·-~~--Furnished &
Unfurnished ........ "" .,_ ''7 $285, 494-5378, employed ~1llO \\1nter, 1 br rlt'11•ly BF· m-72'S. I""""'""""'"""'""'"!!!""'""'" I people only, avail Nov. 11. rlf'<.'Ol't-tted. Arlulls No pet~
l)N TEN ACRES
Apt~. larn.1u.nhu11. LP1St" Lu.~ury apa.r1n1P:n1 llvlng ov·
C • d I . I..oweo;t rat~s ~n,.e Cn. • SPACIUOS! 1 Br. S1ove, Ne port Bei ·h ___ C_a1_1_6_1'_·959_1 __ _
tf:°:i:•ums 160 "WE BUY TO'S" rerrig. sin\ child. Utll Incl. w •
~'il't!!•lltCeS I pnv. petioa.
•4 blks S. 01 San Die~ F'rlvy Poole Tennis C.ontnf"I Bklst.
on &11.ch. 1 blk \V on Holl !lOO Sea Lane. CdM 644-261)
From $130 to $215 mo erlooking Lh~ water. Ell.JOY
$750.'.XXl he11.lth spe., 'l swim·
n1!111 pooJ1, 7 ll&hted ten·
nl!' courts, plu1 mllea of
b1eycll" trails, punlnc:, ~uf
fleb.Jll.rrl. c·roquet. Junior l's
CONOO SP~l'BI l"l'S Sattlor Mlg. Co. J.f A Rentals e 645-3900 THE BLUFFS
lfAVE oNE TO "sEu! \Vi. 642~2171 st.S.0611 , HERMOSA 2 blks to B!g Corona. Bnch.
10 IG211 Park11lde LRne. l ~1nt•Arthur ru Coul Hwv 1
1714• 847-Mtl .
81chelor1 e I Bdrms
2 Bdrm1 e l Bdrms
CAN 00 rr• \VANNA RTTV I Servin::t H11.rbor Area 21 yn, .• A quiet PluCt". l Br. Fun1. Dellghttul tov.·nhouse styll'; Sl2'5, ulll pd. Yenl"l v. ONE' WE.YE GOTl'EM•· Sn1I prt. lllll lne\. SJ25. foyer entry. 2 BR, 2 bathii, 1 adlt, no pets. 645-1624
VA 'F1fA· 50' 2 3 & 4. ALA Rentals• 645--3900 forma.\ din. n11 . Sp.."\cious rURNlSllED-Mf'tWlnr-toT-
-. -. :l IX'drooms ral"h. Bhlru:, csr· l\laiic.-sizr bC'clroonis " lro1n Sl14.;iQ monthly: also 1 S14:i -Slo;.o . pi.•ls & drape~. choit.>e loca ·
I YJ or 2 Pull BathJ
eritOOMS. ' , IN , A I. L NEED CASH! $1.000, Or up SHARP MESA VER 0 E ~~ ~~'°:>~l~~ai~in_!'kll~ ~~!~~rson. ·$130. Util. pd.
AREAS. SBMTT OFFERS. to $3,000, $10,000 and morl". PACESF.TI'ER -3 BR, 1~ r:furath . ''h c0ccc'~=~------
Bal'hc,lor & l BR, pallOS, Hon. Leasf' $200 i>r rnonlh. hii:h beam c:ei!lnya, lnrgC' and 2-bedroom plans aM
frplc s, prlv. ga.roges . Call 673.1(5.-11) RLTR. llvln~ roon1 \\" gw; 01· 2·Slory i.own hOUsea. Elec-
Dlvirled batb & lots of --wood bunung rireplat>t>. t1·1r k!tchf'IUI, private pall°'
larwtn realty, inc.~-&>~ Avco Thrift for A Real BA, firepl&Ct, gold Aha.g Co~fl Meu
BY 0-.vner--Beauttful 28R~ E.<ttate l.l.lan. Upon approval, crfll, CIOVet'ed "Pa t Io, ,·;f~ closets. Rec M.11. ·pool & 3 BR & den duplex, 21ii ba, Convenient laundry area or balconies. carpetln&. dra-
pool !ables, sauna baths. adults, no pets. $32j, Lease. off kltchcn. Encloi>ed pa· pi>nes. Subterraneao park-
tit BA. Joci-ted In qu ie t 11seU1e111oneyhowevl'.'ryou se parate dog )'ard. &. -~·
E-llidC" ~d11lts only corn-like. Atao ask about our ~=kin Pl NovC MT, :!: i:Sf ~--:' .• } !?ff munlry $21 ,900. ConvenHonal unsecured peraonal loans. 546-7'159. ·• • · · :·
fint1n,.tng av a i I ab l c . AVCO THRIF1'. 620 Ne\\•port 93-'2187. Ctr. Dr., Suite IOI, Newport NF.A R town, 3 RR. Mme. ::..._ ... ~1 rcu ( y
c d 0 See fo r younielf t 17301 ln11 . 617 h·1s. apl A, CdM. tlo11. 2 swimn1ing pool5, GIG 9 ro Keelson Ln. (1 blk \V. of Avail. Nov. Isl. 644-7358 SH.Una, 1·ecrcalion facil i· Ing ivilh tl~ator't. Optional
AU. lITlLITIES PAID Beach, 1 blk N. of Slater). liC'1 Set'urity guard. Jlio 1n11ld strvtce. J u11 north oJ
Compare before you ren! 842-7848 Costa Mesa pets. F'ast11un Island at Jambottl'
Ciu1tom designed. fealurini:i; YfF:N, small beach hotel. IU!d San Joaquin Hiiia Read.
• Spacious kitche n \\'ith in· Rooms $22.SO \\'eek. apl~ $95 DELUXE Modelt Open 10 til 1 pm TelPphonne f7141 644-1900 -·-; -1-Cpt, nnge, dble r.11.r, _.,..
Duplexes Un ts Beach, Ph. 833-3440. gard'nr I: wate-r pd. Chrir 1 2414 Vista del Oro <lirecl lighllnf( per rr.o. 536-7056. APARTMENTS 12700 Peterson Way C.M tur rcn1a1 tnforn1ation
s1le 162 tia.n familv. no pets. Sal '
mo, 1st &: last. S»-5148, Newport Beach : i?o':~1~~ed!~~~a:erea 2-BR~upslatt'll, crpts. drp;,IAlr_ Con<l . Jo'rplc"s . 3 S1vlm· nr Harbor Blvd '& wH-ERE
NEW DUPLEXES
BUILDER. SELLING NO\\'.
$45.950
,S.•rlh of Adan1s on H1111tlng-
loo St.l'ffl, 11.B.
SU.STU
i>uPi.Ex, 11'1" lot. xlnt cone!.
Balboa Pt:nlnnla, $$,tm.
Owner/ Agent. ~-
1 ncom• Proptrty 166
IWlF:S'I'OltS • 5 H()Useti, One
3 BR, Three 2 BR & 1 BR.
Lge tttes, freshly pAintNI.
Inc. $805. mo. $75,00'.I.
Terms aWlllablf'. \Viii trade
for House in Newport
Height~ area. 0 w n er
64&-0484.
INVESl'ORS! Brnnd ne'v
duple,., fully rented. $48,gj(),
S10,000 do1rn, 7~~ r-;., loon.
Good rf't11n1. Quirk ao-
pl'f!'Clation. 151 ~. Bay St.,
C.M. Ma-1117 &42-4837.
OWNERSACRfFTCING
l..Hrger near new duplex, ·~
blk to OC"An. ~fusl !IC'll.
$i6,000.
Mortgeps, 5-18-7745 644-1133 ANYTIME e Prh•ste patios bl!ins. no pets. 1 (;1ild . $lj(l. ming Pools lteallh Spa CONGENIALITY
--RARE BLUFFS • Closed garagt-\v/stoi·age 8~6-7337 a ll 1. Tennis Courts . 011.m~ ru1d Adams PREVAILS Trust Deeds 260 e Out 011 your Own! 1 Br.
E·MOOEL LEASE • l\larble pu11man BACHELOR Apt. Close to Billhird Room. 54fQJJQ Ore11n vie~·. 24 hour Mu"lf' $.~. l11t TD, $55. Per mo.
Including 9~ due 3 yrs.
rovers $10,000 Lag 11 n a
Reach ocean ,·ie'v lot . $2800
bond Pl'id off. 10'1'-discount.
C'714l 493-1154. ·----
I~
HoUMS Furnished 30Q
LEASE. Li<lo Sll.nds. Pool A
park across the lft'ef>I . Steps
to beach. Choice location.
~~ 3 lxfn"ll~. 2 00 ., 2
patios, pool table, flroplnce,
wet bar , h l t-1nl,
rli~!''l'";>~hl"r. ...ri ~h1>r 1\[')'fr.
PArlil'll\' fnmlshed or un-
furni11lll'd, your choice. Will
l\PV<"llil\te "<ilh re.'<ponslble
pR.rtil"s with reference~. S415
~arly, $425 wintP r ,
Children OK. Ph. &f&-69.12.
Fum. AJI utll ir>"J. $85.
ALA R1nt•l1 e 645-3900 Lra. 2 fltOry 3 BR. fam ·m1, • Klng·sz Bdrtn1 beach &. shopnl~. 10011no. l BR, F'ron1 $100 U" M'CUrity. a par 1men11 212 ba, frplc. ON BLUF1'~ • Pool -Barbeq\le• -sur-Ga11 & water pd. 54T~566i. I BR. It Den From S185 flf'!!is:mM ,vith a t.1aater ·,;
• Zoned for 1-\lds! 2 Br. Nr. w/full Upper Bay vie\\'. In rounded with plush land-L-aQ"una -a.ach_____ MEDITERRANEAN IOu('h, CX('\U!live club with !1<'h1~ Fncd yrrl. Encl 1:ar. or iginal area on qu iet cul-scuping. unique AquabAr , founta\1111
$l30. de-111c.'" Whil8 crpt's lhru· Adult living at it!I best BACH . nr bf-nrh. $1J5...SI:,.;. VILLAGE Time To Step Up and fnrmal ,;ardens, All
ALAR t I • '4J..3t00 out, drps, appli's., bHn pr LARGE 1 BR $180. Col. TV. l-ll5 N. Coast. 2-100 Harbor Blvd., C.f<.l, oart of thr Sou01 Coa1fs en • s storage. 'Drek. patio. Cl .. SC" No PetA Open eves. 6 7 :> -4 3 6 7: Your apartment in a Ft~nch finest apartment com-NEA°RSo. C1!. PlllZl!. Beaut. to pooL .S300 /mo11thly Incl 365 \V. \\'ilson 642·1971 494-25M. afl 4. 17141 M7-8020 Country l..iun.k·n -Yl!t neui· n1unlly.
3 Br.. tam rm., 1'4 ba. al80C. dues. Call l\lrs. Stein-WEEKL Y-MONTHL y h.. "\ITAL OFFICE shopping a n d activities. 1 bedroom/studk111 rrom $195. ~ .. •-· bl•n• .-.: .. t.•-,, .... tvr>n 644"""" N•woort lelch OPEN JO A'-f to 6 PM ln1pttcably 111 an a gt! d, 2 Bedroom from ..... = • ..... ., , ..... I"'• .. _ 9)1" ..... ~. er U9'9"11,,,..., or ......uu. E ti 5 It al · •~ I --• !"" J I L"'==7'7-'"-'0'-=7-= xecu Ye U e1 penon private. T w o ""-1,•ve 3 bed-m . l"n'-"""''· ~·J fl""\l'l. ~t. nst. $125 -Balboa Penin. 1 BR. \\' h \VI I R I ls bedroo ~"'" ""'
dep. &: n!fs . 598 Stul'l!'con Bltn&, fK''A' ..... ts. Child ok. 2080 Newport Blvd. ewi8iiv~aken s~~de~!1,• UJeSliBJIU 21 llo m1s. <k'buo"· ,' ,. ba,,.ths, fllodel~ opt>n 9 A.?.t. ,,... i; P.111. Dr 5-16-732..:) ~·r Cost• Met• I P8 ' P ctur<'· lie n. VERSAIWS " ·-----$225 -2 BR. 2 BA. Redee. AIM> oceanfi'onts avail. Fireplace and othi•r vluse5. 3 Bedroom. '\'Ith large 111.mily Newport Shores. Child/sml 6C2-2611 3 Bdrms., 2 baths, frplc 2 Bedroom, 2 bath S205 From $195, adult Sl'Ctlon. on the BLUFFS
room & big rumpus room pet. STUDIOS & l BR'S Unfurn., yearly • $275 3 Brdroom, 2 bath ... 1255 THE VENDOME at NEWPORT
over "Ara"e. NicP t."1•1 rte ~uc $275 -3 BR, 2 BA. Frplc, e !"REE Lln""-4 BR 2 BA 1325/350 n _ 1·1 I •· I t ~1"' • • .. " •• • °'"811 1 u new ap.... \\' I>'' 1045 Anaheim Avenui· Fro111 Newport Blvd., tum st CA.Stsidl' localiori. $295 pr. bl!ns, deck. gar. Child/pet. • Jo'REE Utilities 3 BR. 2 BA ........... $285 palios, garaae. pool, spa. "' II Jal Road (l hlock
mo.1st Ii: l:ist month rent in NU-VIEW RENTALS • f"ull Kitchen l BR. 1 BA ............. $175 Lush garden se1tir11. Adult,, Call Mn. Phillips 641-1824 oep t
advance. 64&-nn. 673-40ll or 49'1-3248 e Heated Pool 2 BR. 1 Ba. Penm ... $250 no pets. 151 E. '18t, C.llf. • RF.AL VAi ue! '.>t!iel 2 BR. ~·~:c11.J~~c-~~~.W)'. at
RENT \v/opllon to b(l,y. 3 BLUFFS -View 4 BR. 2'2 • Laundry Facilities CAl.L: 673.3663 6'16·S666. . CprtA, ~-n-f~:;. i<:lov1t. 900 CQJ!nt'Y Lane, Newport
Br., 2 Ba. l!Ulcre!it Home. Ba .. 'l'wnh... lam ·-a. • TV & .d a·1 11~1 ~i I P k llk S di dshwhr, JIOl?l . $1l~ .. ~1aluri~ 8 e a e h ' C !I • 9 2 g 6 0 . F · kl h "~·d a ""c n1a1 serv av l 1 · , ar • • urroun nn adull11. 229:) P11c1flc i\\·r. T•lepho,, •. 11141 .,. -. am. size le · uuw rs., Pool. Custom. S 3 9 5. e Pt Se I · 1 • " " Mir'"\IUllU ~~· Jf n~ ~ P~~ w~~ to. beach: 1 BR. oonv. NB~~:~~~s ~C¥pl~~~ts ~~~· + (\;fr•J N . ~:~!B;E~~'s:ools ~~~11 2de:J-~M11 ~,!~· ~-2 •di;•w·~~~k .
· ' -Nr Shop'g • AdUll!i Onl.v · · '"''I''"''" r'Jll, ......,., gar. UNFURNJSHF:n 2 OO:tmorn, den, % ba., bllns, pntlo. No 1"1:1 cclllng11, '4'00d panel Ing, BAt"'HELOR t blk M • . Crp1~. ~lrpt1, Po'!'· . hl ln'I. Adultl'I, no pets. S 170 . ea.~tl!ide loeation. CarpeB, pets. S275 Yrly 548-1290. f'R rpeling, drapes. Rerren-orean. swim ~1.' gar. $1JO. art1n1que Apts. prlv. patios. Sl :i.a. fcluld ok. su-ro:n.
nrane11. all bulltimi, no LRG new C"Ust. 3 Br, 3 Ba. lion building 1~1ith pool. 210 Cedar. Npt Shorf!s. 1m Santa Ana Ave., C.llt. .!i.o_eetll. 5-18-Tlf>.J. 2 Bel 1, Ba 1 1 children, no pets. $165 fJl' hon1c v.·lgolr courst.' v\e-.,·. Furn & unfurn. Bli.chelnr ,l',i ~it-ll:'il bt>fr ri: aff 5 pm. l\lgr. Apt. 11:1 646-~2 NE.IVl.Y DECORATED rni., 1 .. ., ~ r. A .. lbn111 Pttnlnaul1 inonlh. 646-!509 BKR. lst & lnst. 1545/nio. 557_9409. l bdrms. from $1 .15. 140 \V. · · p11t\n, bltnA. new w/111 \V ll!tlln rJust west 0 f _:>48-7290. ** 3 Br., l'h ba. ** 2 Br w/gur. N1·'11 crpt'g. crpt11, encl gar. Steps to
3 BR. 21 ~ b11.th. AH new I~ 3 Br. corner house • P.1esa 2 BR priv. homl', $175. has Newport Blvd.I. NE\V f'hiinl"lf'lrront -Virw La1>ge, rw~·ly decor. encl Fncd yrrl \\'/patio. \\'Ir .J:1· P .. ~_.,., Yrly Ii;(:. 64-t-7597,
6 Unlt!I . ~~ blli; to beach. Nr. tl'rlor. \Vlnter rentfl]. l)ij Vf'rrl!. Nl'IVlv redec. New e.verylhintt. Fncd, ?.i'r. apt. 4 BR. ;': Ba. or 3 BR. pntio, bltns. crpt, drp:ii. Call h 11n 1 & ·'-· 636·41 · &Th-3906. '
doivnlmvn l.ong B,. 11 ch . Montero. 1-8m..59!U. I poinl/rrpt. $350 mo. Oct . 27 Rtnt-A·House 979--8430 •* SIAdl>AllD°'YPEoo· Lll1,1
1dSe ·51"2°,,1,· ... plus den. Sldr tic fl\"!l.il. $125 CIOM.• to C'Vl"rythin~. $170 2224-A l'lt•c>l"ntl t1 Avf'. $!45 NEAR HOAG llOSPTTAL.-2
Call 642-8520
-lhn1 2!"I c~ll ~1a-2781. After ----"" M y I 0 RBQ C ! St Cl\! C 11 ba l Income $.i65/mo. $35.000. Corona del Mir that_T1 4/346-87_80._ ~~-i S:..•:..•_C_la_m...c•_•_I• ____ • C:hiidri>n nr..:1 hlor'· 1 .0 -~ar y. wncr _ mo. en t-r · ·· · · 11 LARGE 1 BR. Apt. Prlv. BR. 2 • fourp l'X spl. Bkr. 213: 596--«93. _ _ Free Furniture Pl•n 167:)-1972 67.;....41173 art 3 pn1 \\'kdys. all dl\y p1u lo. AU uHI pd. Bl1 -111... O-pl1, drpg, bltM. d11tnvshr.
FOURPLE:X $52,000. F' A BJ;"'.AUT 3 br, 2 ba. HArOOr 3 Bedrooms, 2 balhi;. Very 0JAIU-1ING 2BR, 2BA, Lrg l n F.. 22nd St., C'.\t 612.:;fi.l."> FOR Rent : T r 11 11 c r ivknd~. 00-!LYIO. Sh&g cpts, rlrpg. $140. S17S mo. Adults. 642-4M1 or
heat, new dshwshrs. 720 ViC'•1· IP11<=. A'""'I 11.15. 2 ot ~hn rn. Utrge fenced van!. Room!I rl"Plc, pRnoramif' --\\"/cah•.na, $110 + u!ll pf'r * SHAD Y EL!\o1S -POOL • 641r49~1 or :>4.'i-1517. 642-1n1.
Stalimu, CM, owner, 3 mos. Adlt11. 844-11(5 S 22, 5 / m 0 c' •11c I u0d l n g ocean vu, \Vlk to bch & golf 2 BR. UTIL PO $175 mn, All nrllt pk. F'nr qu iet e ,\dulls Poolsidl' $140 u11 *" * RF:Al JTJF:UL 1&28R. EAsriU.UFF beaul n I' w
6'S--08!4. -==·-,,-= '"'''"tln"t"'" Beach :•n,,,rner . a ave, eourse. S30tJ mo. 673-6004, Allrnr. rum. llrrl pool. Arf11,ci fllrtt>rly_ coupll":..518·Wl _ • ( "fiildrrn J"IM(I block Contl!mporery Garden Ap!s. t.tudlo apt :z BR, 2 BA. new
lndV tt'i I p -· rty Id ---------S40.USI_. ""'~-~~-1 ~•-'"2"»_,1211=-. ~-----Nn pets. linfanl okl OCEANFRONT NP1v tu t"TI. 3 Free Furniture Plan I Pal""'. frpll'., J'll<ll . SI» bltnr., pool avail, $29S. 1 a rope ---211R l'lnu~. Jrs: frll"'d .vnr<l, 3 4-BR, 2-BA. f r PI c , ConCfOminlums &4:?-9620 RR, 2 RA. lrpl. S:lOO. 177 E. 22nd St.. CM 64 2·36-15 $1ERI. C11ll 546-316.1 1544--0355 _____ ~-
FULLY lmprowd lot•. 25% hlk'I tn tw-1\e:h. 1100 mo. B11v tt<lecot'A.led $325 mo. Nr. U fu '20 * $25 PER WEEK * \Vint1>r. Adlts only. No pct1. l • 2 BR w/furn. avali.' -. -------~ *. BciUTIFUL 3 Sr. 2 Ba. •-o DI..,.. Freeway. n rn. • -..,,,,., H •--h fkw.'fl , Al!a ne'\v 1\1·1 bldr..: f11mltUl'I'! • cti,,.,,.~. 2 .-~ ... -1--'"--------.l Up. Pool &: mnllf .~rrviC'c. 61.roooo. lle11ted ponl. S130 &. un. unttngton -c 1~ block to ocean. Unlum.
10.000 or 31.C'1 sq It. 15!1 J?nom ,,,,," rrtlt~. 9'<12 '"'1f!. 5't&-l69B or 546-7045· Costa Mesa Kltrhens ;avail. i\fo!rl Tahiti, * Balboa Penin. :i RR , '2 BA Adull1. 8.l3 Center St. Blt-1111. Crp11., drpg. Garage.
down. SUilivan, 8 k r , Kint n hPd, nr nu, E!ert 28R. crptin&'., drt1.pes, fcnC'ed 1.;;.=.;...;.;.;.______ corner Harbor 6. Viclorin. owr gartge. On b 11. y &15--8965. HF. ONE OF' TllE rtr.ST ~121}1. 54~ anytlme. ____ hl"1111"1• ~"""l<t. rA~r~ k pe.t'llJ, no prt~. $180. 2515 3 BR, 2 Bn , 1•rpts., drupe~, E/SlDf AttraC'. furn 2 Br. 1\·lbeRch. lllll PAld . $."\50.1110 Sp11.r. i & :1. Br-;;pt.-S140Un Tfl I.JV}~ IN Tl\J,o;;; SP'-'A.,;Cl~t;c.JU"'S~2 ~B~<.~2~8a.,-,-1 7bl"°kl
Mountain, 0.Hrt, ~':°.:!· ;~~;~~'=£ ':i=: Elclen Ave, Ot~--~--blUna, children ok. sml pet 11, Ba. Pool. Nr. Mehl, k 213: 63>-7233 collect. Pool. cpl drp. bllns, kids ok JUST COMPLETED lo ba.y, t blk to oc.an.
Resort 174 ''idr R bed, che!:• n,.,..Wf' ... , ** 3 Br .. 2 Ba .. tncd yd. ~~~3710._ :.r::i~k. No pe-ts. SI ~. * 3 81 •. 2 BA .. 19!16 P.IAplr No. 1 642-JSJ:: : ~ri'·y t br apt. ·-,.1,rly. $200 Bkr. 67s..4HII. '~"•1"f'r ,_ ...A""r, Color TV. FAmlly only. $250 mo. Huntington B•ach -~-~-------OVERLOOh."JNG BEActf. nli Collegr No. 5 842.7005 • Di~h\vashrni f:A!n'BLUFJI". oLX. all •ltt. ~~n ~~~"!:I~~=::~ STOO. ~'l50 l,N_:.~;!'~1"\1:r1yo.,· 837::,c.;...:1;,2;1::.~;.,-.~2-bac-.~~-e :l Br Condo, Brookhurst &: * ~;:r~ ~BR. ra=r $~2.l/010. 61~ 2 BR, 2 BA, dhl l{Or. l:'pt~. • Chol('r ot 2 lt1lor &thl"nic1 2 BR, 2~t BA. frJ>lc, pool,
L 8 ath Artam1, Child/pets ok. UlO Apt . . A un . . WATEiifR.ONT ,-.,;. 2-Bli° drps, bltirui. d !I h "'sh ~. • Cu11rom ~nrpe1!ni: dbl i:ar._.1.utlo. &t·l-64Gl~
London tlllBrl~!~I '!"'1""1y ao11na • . \,~1i:nvsf.8~S:..:f mo. 1 536-4230 Rec atta. 710 w. 18th St, $260 winter. $3oOY~"-rly. S2f!O/mo. Avail. 1o12 J. • Jacuz~i :1. BR. 2 &. VfEW. P'rpl.
clott to ...,...,,, s .. c . "'"' . T'TfT rn. q,, ..... "1' 1-=~~~-----='""=-· =~""· 07.,.--.,..,..,,--1 CM. lit Cnll M4-20l3 ... 6"5-4203. -• lll1t1ten pool Carp, dra~: JI:~ Year-
$9000 or will tn.rl~ ft.or Ccf'IR he,.rh A town . .Avt1!1 Yellrly. Fountoln' Valley 1 Bit. unf\Jrn. Refrig,' hltne. BACHELOR, I & 2 Br. npls. OC-E N mo~ Ba hel -2BR, 1BA. To~-nh9e w/pool. e DMd-bolt kt1.'k~ Jy $JOO 1\ofo. 64:>-oll;l. Ptleu or NeW110rt Beach 111-('.,,1rilt' I'll(. Crpu, drps. patio. $155/mo. Encl. C8J1)tlrla, hid pool ., A •~ • c or, Me-.a Verd<-bl tins crpti. • {>nlv ~lo\O Pl'r "10. 38 -2 ,.-!>pl h
"°"'"prop. 644-4M?. s1 1~. 1rn1. rn. 9rnAll, bnt 3 J\R l'llx t(l'lvnhouae. 2 ba. all Les Luyme11, Bkr. 540-U51. Adlt11/no pets, $1~ & up. (no kltchc.inl . C11.ragt'. S120. i.irps, rcnc·d' pt&t~. 0
gar, ft~ BAHIA PUERTO rr:i· ~flo ~lt:w ~~i:
R .. I Eatat• W•nted 114 ",~Mi"'"· l BR. Nr. cent"' or blttn11. 2 car garage, patki, rMMEO. Occ. Oean 4 BR. &l3 Center St. 64~!l965. _ mo. 642-3443. . _ llChl§_!....S~ • ~2069 2810 Ji rh St., 11 .0 :iJ6.4Jl15 r1~h~:11nr. ~mo. 64;.34u.' .. .. I 1 • I 1~ Ba., Nr IC.hi&. ahopping, VERY nice 1 BR. dpl x. BEACHFRONT I br., pal.kl, 1 l 2 BR. Adul ... no ...... ,,;. •
C h-*· ,_ . 1 'TI\. ·~ Prl,•ol• l l'l<I\" rot~, 11r ng A\\'1•11 poo . 1,,.,n ., .• n .,.,~, 1160 <o.o J II' ho • 1150 Ill " Apt I * ft , ... L '"v .-,_. .. Kid OK 1245 "'~" ~-~-'°'""-'"'' '°"""" Oun, Quirt. $r![l. hy lft\N!"Ci<. lill r, uryer. , U II BAY M'EAOO\\'!li Al>'fS. * :-01()\IF. TN T(H)AY ... " ,,u 1;A GS Rr. Cottnge W/pool. No. ~ ' mo. '"r-r1•.1.; Townhouse Unfum. 335 Adll11 over ?.Cl. No pets. incl. IW&-123'1, Ron. 3S7 \\'. &y st., C.M. MS-0073 $139 A MO. Furn. •r Unh.m. J10
\VUI buy )'OUt fll'OPf~. All ,m, ' ~'TnS ---548-1021. 4 BR. 2 BA. M bcAC'h: -E .$1DE_2_B_R-:-s1Jo-S!lll•'. 2 ' 3 Bl'l In 4--pll"'<
ca"' wllhln 72 hl'I. Call NU.VIEW RENTALS 1.H;:;:;";"-;tl';n~r';o;'.n"";'B";u'.:"c":h:7"::-· j !H~u~n!!:t~in~.t~o~n~lloac~.~"~h'.!..., __ BACHELOR Apts. JtlS &: up. SJ.50/mo. Avnll. thni June, . Se\.C'ral avo1l. ALL EX· Cos ta Mne 673-4030 or 49·1-l24R J, ~ -~ No children 0,. oet!I. 213.) '7:l. 645-0245 or MT-9'126 Blhi~. IYi \\, 1,-.fng. 1"?>1 TRAS, Pool, N"'" blAA. Kldaj,;;;;.;;;;,;;;;;;;;:;,;;;;;;;,;;;;;j
' I' I I FOR. LEASE-3 bdr. 11 ~ bfl .. 2 Br, w11lr/d"", lllv/relr. El"" •--u-6 Doh. Ad11ll !1, no prr11. 642·!t520 -\Vi'lron1f'. F'mn1 $139. g,._.
I
no S • u!lllty mi., 2 ear a-ar., ren· "' '-"'11 Ave., .,.,., • .,... Apl • Bf 11 F'rftl ccd yd., newly paint~!, CrptJ. Rec factl. Avl 11/15. C.At $140. CLEAN 1 Br. Furn. Sl!'iO I ki t~1 JI!. e., ~f"1'. 1'l'371 l\rtlMn "8" I * * * NEW * * * FURN. 4 Br., den, 4 Ba Ir. 2 clean. 2 "'k•. -m ~a...i. •..: Dy8 968-!ltm. eve1 ~-••N'-1 & 2 BR T 11 11111 . pd. Nn kid~ or pets. 410 beams, pat . n ~'·~no~"· blk \\' or IJ1"·1rh Blvd. n1f ·
B , R "'' 61"....,,... "' '~" 6'"-'" ~ '"---• ... .,., ra <'rs. 11,~,·-. "7-ll""" ~ 01·11n~._Au_,_. ,...._lu7•1. S1111cr. ~'illO or '1.17-4200. r.. -.. . •'lier. ;'"""" ml. trotn btach, SJ6-0Gtl0 Duplexes Furn. 345 S.'15 &: up, '.\laturc ndull11, n• .... ..., ""' · --!'"----LA COSTA APTS or 2JS: 44~486. ----f'h lld ok. 542.1265. -.; Vt"" clean. 1 BR~Apt~ Ni=°: 1 4 :Z BR. (;antun A11111. r ool. :". n nT:\1 .. 1 IL\. frpl• ., , ----,· Alone on lot , irngls or f11m-N •--h ·• n h h U1pl ....i SISO up 11 '-hit •· & BROM'CDCI INC. New"°rt Beech 111~. Sl40, has aar. Klcls ' ewoort ~c 2 BR. utU .....,,,., SJ7~ !)!•)'-No prts. ~ ~,. r. ·~·· ·, 1 s iw1111r, n~. crp..,. _ ~ L..;. 1......., fi7:\-4!m 21':....!:, 2)!h $1 .. M:;...r'ml. _ rlrn'! Src:io1111. l..11.wn, Nr • a_..1 '11?1.ci. R tu l I 11e11. 2277 tll11[ll,. cil. k hi ~11• n I • l D9UrMm 962-1151 $,()5 • BaclJP\or, l\lto llnylront $13.'i, t 8 m 1 or coup fl ---3 BR 2 BA 11hr•\I: crot '1rflli; par M' s. '"'" """ •tii~10 $1~ ut1l p11I". Rent-A-House 979..MJO prel. Wlnlt!r 1!141. \Valer & ~~~·~54g...oo13 • CLEAN Barh. n.pt. UllllllP!ll enri~ rr: oc.c. u 1;,_111.1ni: 11•flC'Omt•, no pet11. $\A.i. e Dullt·im •Shag ca.rpel11 -------
R."t·'·House 97• •••• · 3 B CONOO .. .. truh pd. UO 36th St. 213: 1 BR. rurnlstted Jt&r"let' 0111. ll'IC'ludcd. Sll5 '-1o. 3 Blk..'I. to Sll 9/ ....... ~97S6 170J:1 l'.1 ··r~1 l1I 008·&'3.':. • DntP4111 • "'alk In c\oMt11
"" 7-* r ' cry, ..... nrp11 , 'mlt-4.\"18 Ow i Nn ptl• 27S Broed i bl'ach. 6T;rl>l44 n>0 . ...,. _ __:._ ---~ -~ --• SWtmm\na Pool
lr:;;-J C'N' ritl:' BfACl-1 l...nwil 3 pool, w~/dryer, RJO, . . . net nr prof>l:r y (:?ii StfO/ w y, -f liJ" SPAC. bad'll ipt. nr IChls I $140 mo. 1, ml. no. nf lh1nt. e Blir·l>Que$ ~ BR. 2 BA. Comr>ietely h~. l"f'frlg, S . MS-1405. Sit/Sun. sTls .\UP. ~~ly furn. r & 2 Apt. Un urn. sho~li-.:. No./:.'A. $130 n"IO. Rt·h. :z br. bltns. M'fll/drps. • tkloffd Gt.raat I;;;;;;;··-~:..: I J?!"O '""'· /\VI.II. 2 OZ' 3 m(lll. 3 BR, ~ ram rm. CnfA, -·-·-··-·~·-·_u_._,_u_r_n_. __ ,_so BR Tral!e". Adultll only. 8 t.1 fbo• P•"ln1ul• Ull ~· Call Ol:W. ' r· ,,tay ynr1·1 1&1'-i f(lcl\ All Utillti'"" Paid
675-7017. d.,,., bltlna. Bttnd new;-132 \V. \\rllt10n, C.\1. &4:7-4~. T aRT BA.-PATTO-11~11rp>rt... J,'.. c·'~1· u~
l ntlrtbl 2-sr6RY~llv., din. 2 br. $275 per mo. 147"33"1. Agt. t:orentt ••I Mir • vCJ::ANFRONT T o.,.. n · Sli"O. ~tMA rtel f\t11r. SU.ID ~f.i(M . ''ft' Pft•· n
O ... rtu"lty •eo Ollf..?T,N $7., 1 ·~ bi!. SlllJI" tn $150 :t Br. fTrilc. bltnll, 2 . !'"'''·'I\' ~ Jl.N'"'"IOm, 2 b..'llh. l ~rp. 111301•1 "1'"'1' • .. dullAh olnly. hml,.,., fantnstl(' VIC\¥, 3 BR. • 2 -Apl S1--. -w·L-·K-TO-BE.CH-l\lalure a®lta. no pet&
W&lklftl dl1tance lo ~hnppli\K ctn!«.
ll4 Avocado St., C.M.
642·f7ot
1------------·-heh , mtl'ur,.nt11, shops. S-195 rondo. 19142 Cove:n!I')'. l'o O'l 'r(I or I' f' on. fnm rm 3 frplo.. ~ Bo un.. • . .,, "" "" I 673-0072 &\."1-llOO rl•ve. 546-!l7M 8Ve". IO'Ollnd Ooor. $3.IJO pr, nlonth 1993 Churc.h St., 3'8·9633. 240() sq. ·n. $700l mo, \'rl)' Nll'W 8hq 4 drp11, No pcl.t. N•"' 1 ' 2 Bil, c.pt/tll'fl." FAST gl'O\Vlna: eo. be•I 14!'11· lnfil productl'I, Income a~
prO:<. $1,500.00. per yr., net.
Scekt lnveslof'A 61'3-GG6.1
TIME FOii
l;>UICk C:ASH
THROU~H A
DAILY PILOT
WANT AD
642·5671
eaMl, ·---. -~ 1111111 •rmek1111 1 bi:Mlroom uT1L·s-PD7°B11c~\or. QnlM 673~'1. Nr.~rbor ~enter.:_._5'f0-i-&84 d-\1-.hr. 316 IG1h. 538-1"6lor
Hout•• Unfvrn. 305 3 Br., 2 Bl cpta, dms. l:.a.wn up!ltaln with pttvate 11n. 1 adult only. No petJ. Sl3'..1. _.,.PS TO 8.,.~01 2 Rr $140, CLEAN 2 Br. C.r-pet-. 847-3!1~1.
0-neral
LANDLOllDSI
\\Ir ~11llt• If! N~1r
11\r~"n e ~ dfil flfar •
I l~NL nut Rental !el""
.. vb-11 ma: to Your Try
r-:n·Vt..w!
NU·VllW llllNT~~S m.«J30 . •. ~
r11re-. fncd vd. Rd.t. $225. ll"l'nct, S2!i Pf' nl0h1h. Oot h G41--ml or M&-14m. '"''~ """' •1 _.,,j' dra~. Waln pcl. No pet.A .-,-~---~~~-
Aft s 9&2--m7. un lu fll'xt to_ park I 1ennla. -.,. _ _ yearly. AdH,, .. no pe •· _..,. i&.\ Pbalmllr, c.~1• M7·l l&"i I BR. w/n!Mt . s1:io.. Crp1'J•""' .. 'l"!"::::'lil~"l"••J I-~ I r11,ll Bnlley'8'13·SX.0 Al{!. I Br furn apt. S\fO, No Pf"lA, 1\73-1990; Gn-1603. ~--drpl;' dt hwhr, bhl'll. No
rv M 2 BR. 1 Ball\. ~Ith f!i>1c. "" chlldMn, 83> Center St .. Coron.-d9f Mir ~~:i!~ONr: &t-~ ~· ~~'. pets. 1112' Enwn.ld Lant. I~
4 BR 2 Baths re~ V11.rd 11lfW· bh·lns, 11 s'h w •, t CM. 80-5818. ., Call M&-6121. BNnd ·cw bel\C(C Unftl
r.crfaUon j. t IV l I 1 I:~: M t l'ifr t dryer. doMI I "c:f)R\f '"""· U!lltf\tll pc.I. 2 BR., 2 Ba.. uplllaln, ~C!._Pd~ Sll3, ~ 2 Rf? Sl~. 1.;. lco\'tlY J\P'. ~ .i':...r:' -~ n Ar If en" r . ~~'1(1 / rno. I garqe w/~ec op ener . $13l/mo. Adult• onJy. tlown'l1alric.. Altr11.f't. nnt. • 2 nn Apl. CTpl, drptt, \\1•Jhtf • ctrywor hookup. .. ! mo'• he 1'lflt 1 BR. l •
l\\).'1!3 lit 6 pm or wkndl Vlt\v dtck. SZlO lnclll'SJ ulll -132 Cent.r St.. Ma-3078 S'A'Cdllh ttDlc. 1.t ti-• I 1 0 mrpon. ~~:Wmo. N1lli'lrtn ok. ~Tl. t= 6 din. 2 8R'~ a. J Bk'11.
V de# t nt)ll Rent l ~ar lf"ue. Eves '11-)41)4. VA~ c.wt ITICMM!')'I Rm t~o1: 6'73-4ilr1-fl.Cp111. Older Sift d, • ~llr~ion St., IL& f'"°Jn J1 M. O*niw' wl ::r" Mu-: ~pt., ~tOft Any day ls t.M BfiiDAY~M your Mu-... •ot.. 1toq1 2 BR"'" •n.d Ncw lJt, walk -~2-bt', epg-;"".-Don't ctw llP Ow ~IP1 ~r, •trJii.' -liQ•
Ndfl'.., ete. thnl a Datb' Pllot n1n ah ad! Don't dcla)'. . 1'lld1 •• elc, lhN 1 bally Plloc lo bclldl. ad11ll , $305. aarllqt dllp".. S\i) Ma. "LiM"lt In "'-lf'llld. m.tp ~~ f
c ... 1""" Ad. .ca11 10t111 &<Hm. o...in..i M. llO-:im. sn-1m or !HMm. Ho JI!"' 161·71~ IO l1IW>N """'"' llMl1I. • $toll Pl., e.M.I ,
I I r I
• •
4 DAILY PILOT
Apts.,
Fur". or Unturn. :J10
Co.5ta Mew
SPACIOUS
Luxu1;. 11pl&.
F11r \rlulll' only
I Or 2 B1·rlroo1na
S1111.~ l"U1"f>Cl1, Lluiluns
Pool, l'r1,•I. Kfll"t&l(Cit --
Ort\'•' hy 2311 Elitrn Av<'.
•
Schools Call: 640-57&1
1'"ron1 $160 Pc-r 1nQnlh
llE;\LTOHS
SINCE lfl4~
673-4400
1 and
1Instructions1
1-......... -........... -1 This variety of fiuc sch ools
1 Newport Beach 1--'------1 could iutroduce
live , F .. ,:~~:: ;::.: .. ::~:9.~~::1~h:r::· Pilot
CALL 642-5678, EXT. 325
ere worth tr1inin9 for
•TRAVEL
• ADVANCEMENT .
• SECURITY
AIRUNE
SCHOOLS PACIFIC
Learn How You Can Qualify
Call 543·6655
610 E. 17th St., Santo An•
ACCREDITED SCHOOL
bl"g <ichooh and lnstruc:tion Directory
-------·--·------" • • • • • • , • • • • • • r • • • • from $140 Interested · In
A Real Estate Career?
IN FOUR WEEKS
PREPARE FOR STATE EXAM
LICENSING PREPARATION FOR
• Real Estate Salesmen & Brokers
Children discover .great things
at our school. Themselves.
Our school. Early Achievement Center.
Unlike most pr~schools, we do more than
keep little ha nds busy.
We keep little minds busy.
Oakwood Is $1 million in
recreation Swimming
pools Health clubs.
Saunas Tennis courts.
Billiards. Indoor golf driv-
ing range. Sand Volleyball
Whirlpool Baths And lols
more A residenl 1ennis
pro and ac1 1v111es d1rec1or
~v h a plans free Sunday
brunches and barbecues.
Starting as low as $140.
S ingles, one and t~vo
bedrooms. furn ished and
unfurnished. Sorry no
• Employment Assistance For -'
Graduates With
leading Brokers. ID
With science. Math. Language. Art.
Social Studies.
Things like that.
Impressed? Don't be.
• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •
COSTA MESA
PRE-SCHOOL
• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •
1 cri 11aren or pets Models
open daily 10 to 7
• Day And Evening Classes ' It's not what we teach th at's so special.
H's the special way we teach.
We encourage children to discuss things.
1797 Monrovia Avenue
(Corner of 18th Street & Monrovia)
• Broker Referral Program Touch things. Act out things. Costa Mesa
I
I Oakwood I
So they will better know th eir capabilities.
And themselves.
Sunflower Early Ac hievement Cenler
2515 West Sunflower Avenue 642-4050 or 838-5237
I
Garden Apartments
Newport Beach
I Irvine and 16rh
645-0550· 642-8170
• $110·Full Course
For Infor mation-Brochure
Free Guest Lecture
(Which is just about the greatest
lesson of all.)
Ok, like to discover more about us?
Santa Ana, California 92704
714/540-4750 Open 6:30 AM 'Iii 6:30 PM
STATE LICENSED
()CEA:\ ~ RONT. 2 RR. UJ>-
111•t·. ~hai.: 1•arrio··ts, garat.:\'.
,~·~::oo;m·•'"•"•-"'••'-~".'•'·iiiiiii
Newport, 315 No. (Old) Newport Blvd.
548-1192
EDMOND F. JACKSON
Call or write for our free brochure. Or drop by
our Sunflower school.
We're open year 'round.
So parents can come in anytime. And
children car. be enrolled anytime.
Full & Half Day Sessions
Ages 1 to 6 Yeart
11 _.1 II Real Estate Education Since 1964
e Planned Program, Loving Care,
Clean, Reasonable Rates.
• • • -ACADEMY REAL ESTATE e Introductory Off~er W ith
l 'i;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiim~ CONTRACTING & INSURANCE SCHOOLS This Ad. 11t WHk 1/i Price.
I I I •__l~I _l_l _l __ ._l_._1_._U___I Rooms 400 I' I Gl-Master Charge & B of A
FOR rrnt in private horfll•-~~~=
lurnishefl roo1n with or \
\\'Lthout kitchen priv\ll'l.(t'!I
,vn1idng lady p~ferred. I
~lis11\on Vie)o, 58&-2918.
REnRr.t -V11/ pvt tm .. -in pvt
Lni::una Nii;:"ucl horn!'. Pvt I
1•nfr. l.inr'rl~ furn. $9:1 nio .. ·l!l~i-4729 Cvt'!I. I Afternoon &
Business
Careers
Newport-Riviera
earfy achievement center
2 ROOMS, own rntrnnc.'<', $70.
& S6/l. rnnnthly, rl'1i"li1r
nil'n. 275 FI0\11r!r SI, Costa
L\1C'sn. fi<\6-fll?.6
Evening
Classes Now
Forming In
The Art of
SECRET ARIAL
l...egal. Executive, ~tedical Secretary,
grapher, Clerk-Typist, Receptionist.
PRE · SCHOOL
THRU JRD GRADE J)("luxe:-~-1. L'l"'llr ~ & b11.
~laifi <.\prvi•'t'. ~n ic..,1nl;crs.
ITTj-()310 or fl48-7197
I'> \1.Bfl ,~I • l··rul-=-~11•' •17 ."'I
nr•r 11·k. TV r'"'l .• kitrhcn.
127 AJ.:11te. 6T.'l"":ui13.
FLORAL
DESIGN
ACCOUNTING
Bookkeeping, Accounting Clerk.
e Professional Exper. Teachers
e Accredited Program K-3rd Gr
PVT -mo..,,:-niN' Co~tn '-1r~a ,
hOmC". SIQ mo.
KAY VJRBILA, FUllERTON
DATA PROCESSING
Keypunch , Keytape.
e Half Day & Full Day Program1 A9es 2·S
Call 3,IS-9:'Wfi
ROOl\1 -for \\Yltkin~ -wom11.n I "r frn111lr !'l"d""' fQfl rno.
Nr Arlams. 11.R. 962·:U~l.
c .. IOd jobs nff'd lo11 skills and lop skills 1i_>qui11•
go1id training. Thr jul1s arc nvnila.blt'. 1u1d Rft1·1·
our trnininl.!, ""'' l\1·111 you find th~m. If yn11 \\"IUll
a jnh or a bt't\.cr job. call or v.rite for more infor·
maliun.
e Phonics·Number
Concept5-Science
•15 ORANGE COUNTY BUSINESS COLLEGE
Day & Evening Classes
Approved For Veterans
Free Placement Assistance
Extended Payment Plans
e Arts & Crafts, Music &
Dance
* Private Room * '"' Afl""ll:l11\1tn1v Ltvty nr ~Inn
1101 So. Anaheim Blvd., Anaheim
772-6941
Plca.'il' send ffi(' n1ore informat iun. \Vithoul ohli-Shirley & Sidney's
e Conversational
Spanish
Fr•"ch &
r,()1)(1. n111rHl1JU!I Food.
Nice. rh,.rrf11l :it ... •n!lphrrr. * C'n11 54.~·fT!").1 *
J:?atinn nf cnurs:f'. H f Fl 541-2673 .. • -• • • • • -• • • • • -• • .. ouse o owers
: ~:~-A<O I MTI BUSINESS COLLEGE child with advanced education
Stt"•'Ct ·· · · • I HOURS 7 AM-6:30 PM 675·4022
I Cit.v Si.it.-. Zip Sa A , .,,.,,. • 2100 N. Main St., nta na
Lai;! ::;:rn.<lr f'on11,J,•t!'rl D.P.1 :;::::::;~;;;;;~\~;;~~~!
V~itlon R ttnt111IS ~415 Marguerite & Sth, Corona del Mar
PALM DESERT
1 Hr. hnv"r' OIV'l ... 1 1•n• r, ".
wknd-<. "''•1y. mo. IH4-t~~ ,_ -..... - --~-~-~-~-~-:::-~·~·==:1, ... ~-~:==--~~~~~1'. .----... -.-.• --11 ~1 1 i *'":: .. '" i;11 ''"""'
, .......... t =-.~-
.. -,• .,,,, •n Shar~--~O
!'(:J~ ""nman nr1•1i"l ronm-
..,.,,,......Shr l'~~n!'IC'"'. JI n
/lr'('ll.
Lost and Foood Lott and FflUnd
. 1 4401 ~torage 4SS PA,rsonals li30 Found (free ads) SSO Lost
l~ 1-·""-l~ 1-·"-l~
• rail '1.111-£'.lAA *
"f""C"",,;-j:-r ,,v..,,""'"'r ''':>"''"'
flR-221. ~ant. Sonr. nr>I nn
hrarh . $72.!iO. m-~'.'.121.
C35
~RA(:"" -20 'i:: T> ,,..,,,..1<
hi-111 2fi2tl Nrwport Rlvd.
r~t. s:JO. Srhworer
fin-7n.l't
CAll.AGf; for rPn\. 191.h ~I .. t-
N<'IYOflI1 Blvrl ., f'n!lltl M!' .. H.
C'nll flfl 6. lm--0100.
Offic1t A:1tntal 440
Office Renta I ---------------~
----~ -;;;;:;;:F.O !tlom~e nren ·'' A * HtNIJU SPIRITUAl.IST *
1
. OJ.11ER mall' K I TT fo_: N , ORANGE n1ale kitten, 5 mos LOST Oct 213, in Dover JOHN"S Carpt."I: & UphOJstery
:.00 ~q. ft. C.mtnYl floor l\;nti-Mo; "111 rd]1 ~0 : Lei 1hu; ;u! change your yt'llnw tnbb_y. ~olrl eyes, Vic old SlriP<•I legs, wht Clle!<! Shorr-.; iln"'". Blfl ·': t ··~ 11r1-:il111.n1pov ( r l' ~· &.u •• •,,.
. at C~f G7:l-2(1."l4 j !\ultahlC" fnr bo:ttK, tmllrr~. ,,hnl!" ouU<"'k on life f•JI' tlw ; r'tiarlr S1, C:oslR Me"R. & rm~·s, flea collar. Child's ?<nil<'. male. No f.D. ~uard !Soil Ret;u·danHH.
17:16 /"\0Ahl'1m, · hen\!)" C'fJtlhl'ncnt, C!IC. C.l\1_ lx'llt'r Profl'ssional advit'' .1411--0127 1~·1·ar11q:: flcfl -col-(l('t. Nr. 700 blk W. ISlh St, &12-1536. De1ercnsers & all color
.. 5 I area. 645-7161. __ 011 hr<'. Lie. Rendings daily. lrtrl. Cl\1. 645-ilil. bn1.:l1lcners & 10 minute 11o;in~ss 1•n1el LnttNO 1 -bleach f o r white R.nt.11 W.nt.d 460 10 1\1\.1 -10 Pi\I 4!12·!1!:!6. r' lin;:c tiin 1·ri1 (kt. 1\.1/"\LE cat, tiger striped. ~lh T n I La · 1 •aq~ls. Save your money by '"TITE FACT'ORY" hn!\ '2 <1!12-003-1, 312 Nn El Camino ~;i · erry '., ~una. Gray-bro1o,•11 Pcni.1an. \Vhitc sav\na me extra trips. \Viii
Oflf'llinivi In Ow ~!:ill rnnc-!Nf)US"J'RIAI. llNlt'l' \Vnn1C'd : R<'a.I. San CIC'n1<'nle. Dnrk ... ~rt.'yl&~h blH<'k \\•(wilt bib & boots. 12 yrs oSclrl. 11',I'~ Instruction clenn"'llvln~ nn., dini~ rm.
I f •~" lrl<'l l fnr I f"O'l."; fl(lfl .,. fl \\'llN'il(I""" - - -nn C'rn·~! S 1 o nl II. C' h . rolh1r. Tr\Vlnklc h "" 11 ';Q ng ronl .,.w. TllQ. 1 '' -TRAVELING A..., vn" ·"17 13"" I SI 97"1752 & hall Sl5. Any rm. " • ~,11n11 l"t'l11\1 shorui. An1l(lu•· ~lnrnl!f' nrrn. Month IO n1n ·~ · '" .,, -·"'· O\Ya · ,,.... · 1.,111ch SIO. Chair S:l. 1~1 yrs.
11hop, Cnndy shOp 11•antrd. nr fi rnn. lr11.'ll'. &17-!'IG.~.1. ):(fling \n ,lhr CrinhlX'Hn 1'"011nd !-'nil 8C"[l!~lr n1lx? CARTON Lost I a 11 ! chool1 I. cxn. is what coun!s, not
S N
'
o.. I -----l~r11.ls or South S..'lls~ C_nn n,.1, 27llt ,, .. •-·_,·1,, •• ,nl• ".'I., 571 " If
SS~ Lost SSS a rpet Service
67J.-9G06. 11·~;i f'l'I"" ~1·11, r1 t. lllll!lll sRlary_ Lovf' 111 :~ ·~"·' :'1~·:!14J or llB 1-llgh Sehl. Rcwru'ti. Goodre!.531{1101.
•1Zi :ttl!'1 I., e~·por ....:nel. 4
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1
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LAGUNA-BEACH I f'·ill 21.~: 6.'t'\-111:;(1. 1rnv1•1.Cal1646-3li~:!. si ... fi:!.iG -54*-7611. Gold & Sllv•r SOlLEf\ CARPETS-
,,~:"" ''lll1• .,..,,,1.~hl,. ,r.ii :~Jnl. clo111n1nwn loc, 11"", Mlsc~R9ntal1--461.1•1 r. 21 1,., •.. ." 1''0\JNO: V!r. Villn !\111Cfll•n, LOST: Lgc Afghan. Gold w. Jewelry Cla11 FLOORS?
mo W!ll prnv1rle lurinl'lrt Bnnk of Aml'rlrn. S11itRhk· "" ~' yrs 11."· ~:""' .rl"<'\Y Cdl\1, lite J;:ray fluffy cn1 Blk n1ask, i;havcn. Vic . Stnrtlng 1~1 wk. lr1 Nov. Call Professional .Car Pel
11• S1, mn A"!•1\lf': ·nl' .... n ·lr'f' ror jCi••elry or 1-aody slon•. PARKING 11paN''1 11.vnil. 7:'!5 1~l1lnn nn -~ailing )IH'hl 11•rnrin'! 1\"hite flea collar. Orange & 18th, C , JI.I . Learn. lo11t WllX mcl.hod. Cll'All('.-S klr quahtv ~~1r'{ 111
llVKllnble l7'!75Af>1v·t1Rl"•t '.!fen }o·ore!ll Avr . "'· l!lth ~t .. C.M. SlO p<_T ~ti"rlolrawlany1vhere .,for ·l~-73'16. &j;,-s9fj7 "r:·•11ra•' urt>f<"•~"'"'il"··· I, n prlrC! You can afford.
lh11'ltln111nn Al-1'11'1'1 ll42 '1~ 71 1) 'l!'t·l-~1677. mo, 64~107. Dcnni~·~7\,;1;~~~Ti.1•• (:.di ~·nrl: fr11-;;;;1dM1 hro11 n--p;jj7. •__:MA1 ... F: Golrl"n Rl'"lr\e\'l'r. from !he beginning. Mnke .::":c.'-c:':.:1.::7:1:.-------
DESK lfll'Ctl l'Vlllllnhlr S.iO FOR-1_.eaiiC(3)1:m 8Q rt !'Y 1111\h r.1rt hlk l:it'<'. \"II'. ~, yril ol1~. ilCCds ml!1:Hcatlon. your own Ch r I At n1 a II
I I Bu.,, ,, • T" ,. I' 1-'1""· n~.ll"RD, N" Q•"'!I· PrcM.'nls. !">t0-81!'J1. --<':ttment, Concret_• _____ _ mo. Will ~mvlfk' f11rniltll"I" ... 1nn•111, t:-1 Zone:. ("qt I •1! I I~ Soci.ll Clubs 53~ .~111 uUCilr, r . . ·~·"' ~-" " "" -· -
al $5 mo. Af1!1W1'rlni: acrvlN-ll'lrtn • .t-Adruni., llB 1 Pef'son• 1 'lfi.~ 2'1S.'l 110""· ~~l4--6.1M. PATIOS-PLANTERS
llV!lllnhle. 222 F'nn•llt A.ve. ; .. -u;.144'J. I · f"INO YOUP.SFJ .F' )rnrl: Blk & 11hl pupJl)' 11!. <.:rtF.'i" li~er iJ1riix'li ~I cat. ll _cl All Conrrele work. Brick.
LAJ;t\ll'lfl BPArh, fl.M !MG6 G:"in-aq~fl;--l(l'Otlnd-lloor nt IN Wi\!f;ONF. F.l~~F. \\"irr haiml Tt·n·irr! Vii . Sn1 . build. sm. 11·hitC' tnark s.rvic.. tndw.p.lrl .,., dunipslone wk._~~"i.'\3,
- -lr.tit A n 8 hr f ni , CM. 1 p I I 11iano Ln &: Lriln L.1., JI,' B. on n1'f'k, lovt!d \'ery n1u1:h. CUST0~1 CE'-1-ENT ·WORK
BAY VIEW OFFICES Srhv.-ol'"t'r _ 613-3154. erson• t 530 OtCOVER &-!&.Olli flft ti. li l0·1402. Dri\'e<;, \\'ALKS. n.'lti91!.
Deluxe. Air.(:onfllllonf'll PR.<)RlETlf f'T'I" c DI COVERY fo'OUN0A 1i:1111;fr"7ti-;tf.'LOST-1tr26. l\11x le ml B b I • pool dN:kl§. Don . 642-A:i14._
Rr;l"'°'""'"I. l~litn "~" tndustri•I A:4ntal 4SO flril'nl.' iiymr;;_7~·,..1i; 711/&\'>-6.ll~ 213/~-l"tq~ vl1·lnu,. Ralho11 rn,·il ion, ('hlhuahua. vt'ry old. Vic _!.~Y-•_»_1_"9..._ ___ _ l~l'l\lonomk'!I, l~kr. m-67"1 nl'f',irn·onrv ~··Mt•lln". Al.,..r -----I Nr'lvporl Br11ch, ti73-1'll8 f;lrlen .\ Me!!a. Dr. C.J\1. ''OUNG S..'I School -Opt>n fir~;~~·;~~~~ dr~~t"5n..~~~ A'f"l1ii\rr~ :1 rmrn trfr JUST COMPLETED 'Inn t'..i. n<ll)fltlnm rtf. AP aCtc'r 4 p.ni .\lq-91;l5. d~•: j:45--7:30 PM, 21, 10 1 oonrrelto. 54~-llf.AA for""'·
Atdlf', Wf\'I rrrt. fll'n'I;, n~ 1600 t 3300 Sq Ft C1\R1'~ fil2 14?.fi I losl and klund Jlnl F01tNO ki1trn. lii.:rr In \"lr. \VEl.Sll t":nri:::I. Pt'nlbronkr. 6. Proles.•li•nn1 trachcr.s. $20 -s 1nf;\\'A ' •·C:.1"'\Tft')S -~2fi-i'':~bJ~~~lO. IN ~ANTA ANA ' ('l'lllPl .f<~~-PARTTF:<:: 1·:111 LiJ \Vll!Wln ,i. <'11pren . Call 10 RM A \\lhltio, Fl'rtl, V!r: _!'C«:_kl)':_.6-16-2~-I & DRIVE\VAYS
I E STORE Ne"' tlll·uri hlr!R 11•/Khnrr. Phll U p.n1. I irlt'fll ~!l-i-:\46!l. SpruC"C & Pallsodrs. 10129· \VT·'.f.:t.:f-:NOS. holirt11y8, dnv Ur'd/Bon,INI 6 1~,.-70.·,o
OFF C • crpld J»lnf'ffo.(t offices & :'i.~1:\-1•1 11.>\nflAO<)Jt R<'ltl<'Vrr ~·ll': j<J&-4'.l2'1. -or night. I.ow rnte11 cnh Child C ---·-sz ~· ft. Vtll palci, u:· '"' ll t n f 11 R c m r i :t 11 n I n e ~\'INC.ISO !\lnR1~• rnlt Jim Found (frH 1d1) 550 T11I1lclTIC'k. Irvine, ll3J--3159. PUREBRfu-Blk lAhrnclor S.16-12!l7. 11.R. are
l'fl!rl< "· 2002 NetY:pott. C'Of . overnt.11d 101ltHnl[ doc.vii, 110-. . -r!'rn Anll ··Gvpey," Vlr: s. I . of Bay SI, 64$-1252. ZK).:'\ E"""' pwr. 2-8 p.m. ., f'f)Ul'ln yuung Sl11n1{':!W' ('ll! l.nct SSS Corolla d~l l\1~r. 6'15'-3.111. .-i r.,.nter ccmA ~t£,~A. rn.F:~lf\(11..
Co 5.19a .• 127 v\r l!cll .ti C.ollll'rl \\1('!11, I "' 181h &. '-fonrovla. NE\V ROOMS SIB wk. up ~·'kit.· HUN AKER DEV. • ALCo~iOi.rcs -AMnymou~. llun1. Hrh, ll-12--7'.125. 1..0'1" Crry p .... ,111n r111. BL" Mnlt: l-?btnc1or PUllJ1Y· lndut/Comm'l/Retld llC)lJRS f;·:JO 11.n1.f::30 nn1.
•21.!ll) 1vk un Apl1. f:'Tli 546-5460 Phol"lf' ;142_7217 or ivrilr fo"Nl)'i'olll11t !nit trill•"f'I ··nr C'Jr11r Of'n m~lnr. lh_l\~Bl'f'l . •o lh , \\ l1.1r l11llar 9 r 1'1\ All l,YJlC~ ,,~irk R.t.•n1orit!I. Mu111c. 11t?rieA. 11i:_. Rc_1111.
Newpbrt Blvrl., CM . TNnUS. Unu-:-1000 -Ml IL P.O. Ame 1223. C0111t1 Me1111. vlr. M'lrlrw:·ni. tlhrnrv, N.H. I Plt•nll(' t"11W /J:lll'"l •lf'li. lit![, 6t2--0438. ----11iltf'11Jrtlo11, (i ·1l11h, ~rnn1f', ""If'•. 1.lc d. 6<12 40;j), E\ P.!I.
IB-!nM, NeWf'OI1 Tl1:h. SUO por mo. ---, fi42-U. I I.OST'. R n1n, nlrl h1 •h Sc>tll'r, ~llORT' h.11lr frn1I ~ln.mc,'f'", rm·~l. rh· !'32·1961. . 1138--5237, _
Put A 1111' "100\" In your _CM1~646-t724. _ _ V11c1tnrl~ M!ll mo7y. '~;;:, fll(l i\pflt'll'( 1 yr old !'(•'<•· ,..l'"n11d<" No, Ln~unit. ~·onit· senlpoint. BluflA llT'f'A. Lo~t ICARPENTftY~MALL JOB.<; Havt' i;ornel/1lng you WBnl lo ~~!',,,~~U l~jf m.!:~~,,: 500 SO. FT. $65/Mp. ~~ rt~ ~ru ,."'&;·uv 'h1o1 •11' ,·r romrr nr Tr\'nlt' .t U11i-'1 ly <lo'Aprr11tr, <197~2(1.18. f)1. !!:~~· 6'1-1-1&10. --llE:ASOeNr~7R!!?... en.ATES lk'l11'1 Cl"11",'.'0"1"v' a~~ls u18"° Ii M~~.-""' .....,._ r.ost.a MPM. 646-?llJ C11si'1tle(I M . 642~5678. \'1·r~try 'lR fl7"'-Z"t'l'"I C'h1~"'h·!I 1\1t-. ... 642-!"Jlml N1of'd R ''Pn!"f"~ P1.-.r<' nn 11•t'. _:.!:'"VII~---~~ ·Cl ,,,........., ~
I
Contractor
Additions tr Ren)()dcllng
Gerv.ick &r: Son, Lic:'d
673-00!1 .. ~t9-~170
JAO< Taulanc -~pair
rcnlOd .. addit. Z> yni. exp,
t.tc'd. ~Ty Way Co. ~17--002.6.
Drafting
Pl..ANS-Hou!IC~, R e m o d s ,
Roon1 Additions. S50 up.
..J1-0 26. Evt'!i. ri57-:iKi::l5.
•
G1rdening * LANDSCAPING * New lawns, Sprinkler•
rk'l"Q, cleanup. State Uc'd1 536-1'25. ______ ,
EXP. Hawaiian Gardener.
rorn~lcte ganlcn !I I' r v ,
Kemalanl. 1)46-4676,
&12-1337. -ooe··s~~G~A~R~T'l~F.N=1N~G~-1
& LANOSC' .APING
Irvine 1nduS1rlnl
Complexe1.
557-4299 alter 5pm.
A.\fERJf.AN annlener. 'Mttd
of "Gra.q C11th·rs" doln1t:
half A job? For ettln'lJ\te
r•11l Co"lon'I Giif'l'klnet, Johri
l\toruro, 6("">-2008. EXP~ Jenrdenlna, 1-.-od-..,.-..
" hrirk work. haultna,
R.t7-39il llfl<.'t 6 p . m . :
536-23!M.~--,=--.., "7if l.iln•'·""&pulJ(, Tl'ff. f'I'•
moval. YIU'd re1oodf'lhrl
"'t-<18h h1111Hn~. lol ,.fe11n11p,
ReJ)lllt aprlnldt-n, 673--1166.
Put 11, lllile "tool" In your
''"''~' rll 1•me tw11•hlc>1 lo
"l111(')(1t". Ca.U Cl• 612.-r~.
•
y
H
,,
6
J
L
p
'
p
I
l
r.....,, -ll, 1972 DAILY PILOT 25
_.1-iiiiiiiiiii--~l ii1[ -7"-I~ l.___" .... _.-__,J[IJJ I lfDJ I lfDJ [ l[Il1 [ lfDJl.____"""'1_···__,J[Il] I ][II] L1 ... )o:ml re.,..,,, .... ...... , ...
••
Go-I'!! Polnt11111 & Holp Wontod, M & f' 710 Help Wontod, M & P 710Holp Wanted, M & F 710 Help Wonr.d, M & F 710 Help W1ntod, M & F 710 Help Wonlod, M & F 71D H•lp Wontod, M & F 710
EX PERT Japan e111 P•pertl•ng1n9
p.rdfntr, knowhow, upkeep, ... ,.,. •-.,._ ACCOUNTING SECY
The 1i!d eommuntcaUons
"""'-..-ntty Ila• .,. opeo!nc tor a attttt1ry who ts polaed, has shrthOO, xtnt
tyglnj: I recent exp In the accou.nlina nekl. Apply Mon
thru Fri., 8 am to 4: :J> pm
Contact Carol Dunlea".)'.
714 : 557-640'2. 'IM O:in1·
municatlona, t.m SIJnf}oy.'f'r
Ave., Costa Meau.
Deliver Tolophono Dlroctorln -
KENNEL Ma.nQ.er f or PB.'< A111werln& Sf'Mnt, SERVICE Station Sal.elman.. WHO WANTS TO WORK!
animal holp.. N.B. To $4.00 E\'!!nlfliB ~ve yard l,n.. Mectwllc. eitPf'I', o 11 I)'. DRIVE A CAB! Plant, peat, trlrn, cleanup. u '1 • • ... t~r. Actous. cell-~ Wat IJlra.yed. Uc., Jll.f.
PROFESSlONAL Japanese Local refs. 64tr-0809, Chuck.
C --oer Rtllable Frt>t! FOR. clean I ncal palntln~. n~'&u 9gs...ey4, • lrrttriot, rru. •rates. Call
Men or Women 18 or over with can, station
wagons, or light trucks. Pleasant ouldoor
wofk. Your available daylight h<lurs. Calil.
lice nse plates required. Apply for job de ..
criplion & training. 8:30, 10:30 or I :30 P.M.
at lhe location nearest you, dally beginnillg
tno. Crowlna: I dl!anilll t'X· eluding ends. Costa F/Ume, Uc, Pftrd. Ne.t OfOOSE your hours. WGrfl: ~~ euen. St-ad ~ lO Mesa area. lJM. in apptarance. kPPb A.bf, for )"(>Ur'RU, be )'CU' own
'&ij'if)ed ad no. 483, e/o Practlc•I Nurus 2500 Nl!WpOl't Bl., C.M.. bo9s Men or \\'Omtn. Can bt
YJ>Uol. P. 0 . Box 1!!60, & Al.I-SERVICE Station n~hani..: lll~hlly handical'."'ll. Vt.I,
Dick, 968-4005. Costa -Ca. il2Q. ~• I •-S lo ml-• •-21 ~ j.iiiiiiiiiiiimiiil&iiio.., .. j.A11 On.nae Co. Pvt l'luty or or ........ v Lal n at 17th A '""'· •>f>~ ,..., mup.
KEYPUNCH noor a1 pvt dut,Y wagH. No lrvlnt', C~I ruu time + :! plemf>nt ~ ineorne. Drtv-e JAPANESE Gardener . Complet" Yardworll •nd INT &: EXT painting. J>llpl'r
aeanup. Free est. 6'2-S102. hanging, natural w o o d Wed., Nov. 1st al -*' wait for pay. Rdl neceas. !&land Salesmen w /lube-" cab 6 or matt R day.
OPERATOR Interview•. regtat:ration S-S ='-,-'o,"'~"=·'="::""::.·-----A11ply In ~a. Yrllow Cab finishing. SCll-7905. *EXP. J~&e Gardentt,
B job CM PROF. J)linter, honest work, 1980 No. Gl1uell Ave. -On!lgo
6441 Ceball1ro -Buono Pork
332' W. First St. -S•nta An•
CITY OF dally, <'Xc.-epl Si.in. LelSCOUl.le SHOE Saleama.n, I/time, e<· ~~ 186 1':. lGtb St., eo.ta
NEWPORT BEACH N~ Registry, 3s1 per. ~. Xlnt opp0r tor -tiiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiilll y mont . NB, , 1..1.(una 1rea. 54S-M'79. reu. lic/inl. Int/ext. tret-
G NG -"~l."R.r""•=·-i""S-~Zl'l9"".==~
EqUAI Opportunity Empt°""'
Adv•rtl1lng S.cretery
Grettt oppor. for an\bitlous, hi~)' ~tUed alrl. Bralu,
Initiative A lh required.
2nd Shilt 14 pm·12·30 am) llosp1tal Rd., S .B. Call advanct"ment. Apply S&A •
S3.J3 Pi!r HoUr anytime, 6 4 2 -9 9 S 5 or Shoes, 333 E. 17th St., Cosla 1~ =1c1e&nu~."~":rt -WALLPAPER HUNG
4:30 tree Eatimatt. SM-9933. C11.ll Rebco 646-2449
1 81 Fair Drive -Costa Mesa
(Orange Co. Fairgrounds -
Enter from Nwpl. Blvd.)
TCJTIIXICVY posl.don until 541).9954. ,.., ... ' ... oo;·...................... .. I «I ei....
'""" 30t!o, ""'· Req·, 6 PRODUCTION I" 'jjjiiijiiijiiijiiijiiij~·~V~
General Services Pla•ter, Patch, Repair mo's exper oo IBM 026. TECHNICAL Stat Typist • C.OOtac.t Penonrwi:I Office, TRAINEE Perm. Par1·Tin1~ Pos111on 133-1670
• PATCH PLASTERING It ANYMAN-Llltht Plum· All types. Fret estimates
Sterting Tuesday th• 31st.
at 8:30, 10,30 & I P .M •••••
3300 Newport Blvd., New· lGlau to Metal Seals) Receptionist
port Beach, CaUf. 673-6633. Growing l..'O. dditts depend· PBX. Pel"9'>nal Contact.
able peM10n, high school Secretary
gm.d wlbuic machine shop No sOOrttwlnd ~ulrod
math &. acience classes or Girl Friday
bing _ F.lectricfl.1 & Carpen· Call MO-Q2S Adver&lng Display Sales, ·
try Work 548-5116. Some f!Xp. necessary. Plumbing ll<H750. 9 am~ pm 14056 Willow Ln., Wutmln1t1r Keyp11nch
Haullnt ARE YOU SA.YING. •·1 E I AU Shifts. full &: p/timc. rl'lated exper. to ass.1st prod. For Eltttrlcal Coniraclor
Antlquet -SCRAM-LETS
ANSWERS
foreman or manufacturing NIGUEL
englnl'C'r. F .1tlinC'. Xln't op-Per·--·I A·oncy Broken -Cynic -Glant -1JOr1unity. ...."_ .-.., Turkey -KJCK in IT
'YARD le Garage Cleanup. COLE PLUMBING Wieb," lnttead of "I will"! qua Oppor. Employer Temporary. To $3 hr.
,_ t 7 d C ll Z.1 hr. service. 645-1161 Start now earn1na the xtra f1"ine 540-4450
l"n:'C" es · ayi. a mo_, .....,, wart.L Full or Help Wanted, M & F 710 Help Wanted, M & F 710 AnaJ-lm !133---an,ytime, 548--5031. Drains uncloggi'd -$7.50 ·-1 1--ln t -;~;;;;;;;;::;;::;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;\ ~ -• GEN. Hauling. T"ree/ahrub Sewer line to 100' _ $15 ~Um~-For tervk.'W call CAR Wash em p I 0 ye e A I• NEVER A FEE AT TEMPO
trim. Gar & yd cleanup. Est * 549--2502 '* wanted f/tlme. Apply to Exec. .5.cretary TemP') Temporary Help
Please Apply 27635 Forbes Rd. Magician"• boa 1 t : "I
GULTON INDUSTRIES Laguna Ni.Ruel crossed a mulf. and a cow
839-2303, M7-6904. PLUMBING REPAm APPLIANCE TECHNICI~ n1alJll,&ef', Fountain Valley Must have top skills 1: be KITCHEN Aldes-Jmffi('c:f.
SKIPLOADtii &: dump truck No job too small Exp In Frigidaire appl s. Car' Waah 1™ Ellis Ave self 5tarter. Hrs S:30-l2:30, opentnp, fUU l p/time. No
822 Production Pl. 831-14n and got milk with a KICK
Newport Beach \ 'l!!"'!'~""!!!!!!!!!!!!!~'!' 1 _i,_IT~·-"~-~-~--
work. Concrete, asphall, * 642--3128 * Worlc from radk> dispatch F.V. ' ' ., 5 days a wk. Located In t'Xper. ftec. Call Park Lido lnl.cka. Gd co. f r l n g e Cbn\o c.entrr 642-*)44 from
642-0163 Stat Clerk to $500 • ANTIQUE GLASS SHO\V
sawing, breaking. 846-nlo. Sewlnq/Alterati">n_. ~""·Davis Bm"-. Call CAR Wash employee s Laguna Beach are•. Sal to " ' ""'"'"u .... cd f fun l500. Fee Pai<i/Also Fee H 0 CLOCK ONLY, or ~p.. Equal Oppor. Employer K~·Iedge of 10 kl'y Largest <..'()llectlbles glus
Real Estate Sales Good figur@ aptitude m>w &: sa1e ever held. Nov.
FREE Call Lo""""' 4 ~ s. Sal. '"'· Sun '"'· WESI'CLl.IT 1TI7 S. Harbol' BI v d, ,
Personnel Agpncy Anahein1.
Haullna A cleanup by exp J ack Webater, Service Dept. want I . e. Apply to Job•. ply in penon 466 Flagship,
oolleae student, lge Irk. 534_ • Dreumalring -Altmtions Mgr 543-3430 manager, Lido Car Wash, ., ;.N;,.B:;:·==--;--=-I 1846 or 534--21::S4".----Oestirned to suit you ., ' 418 E. 17th St., Costa Mesa. NIGUEL 1; --~~C:;all~J:;,•°"•=64&-£446~~"=--A bl t $1 80 Personnel Arwncy LAUNDRY worker, p/timl' YARD, garage cleanups. ssam Y o • , CASHIER· •· S2 per hr. Pref 0118. For 'Remove trees. dirt, ivy. SEWING-DESIGNING WeekAllendo.Sh!;;:atnee AnENDANT 21635 Forbes Rd. eves, hrs&: days adJ.U!tabte. L. lcenn Tralnl:;,,
roll W¥slcllff Dr. NB WANTED. Large ch I n a
64>2770 t ea.binf't . Re as on a b I e .
Drl Men/Women. RP11'{. RAI<'~ ,..., La,:una NiSNcl L ltod Tl ~ vewys, an.ding. 847-2666. SlO mln. Call 846-7450 831_14n Huntington Be a ch C.011-1m me -1 y
Houaecleenlnt p .P .S. NO FEES \y.:__.~ traw•1'1" ,"!.",iuorem .•Id· valeacent Ho1Pilal. li!S.11 Famous license coune now CUSTOMS DESIGNS ........... ., • ""'"'""'"""""''"""'""'""'""'j Florida, 842-7788 uk for available thru Tarbell Com· Mod to Hl ta.shlon alterations Pacific \\'oman to 'M>rk as ca1hlt>r $ EXTRAS $ Mr. Small. pany. Applicants fully re-
HOUSE OF CLEAN 1 ·--8 • 'IO Personnel So-Ices attendant in our n ew · F1oors window alls n ~ '-"'""'""'"" -ani-.:. prn. • • Also BH Part Players LAUNDRESS, FJtime. Mes:l tmbursed upon qUaliflcatkm.
' s, crp!,. w ' Alterations--642-5845 1.12 No Tower coir>-<>p setvice station in Movies, TV, Commercials vent(' Conv. H.,.-.. 661 New or experienced Wea 6 yrs. In area. 642-6824. 0,,.0 Bank. ~ .. --c ... ta Mesa. 2PM-10PM CASTING SE -pl Ope · ana••-Neat, aceuralr. 20 years exi;. "' ...... .., .!hilt Good Sal & RVICE Center St., C.M. ~-51i85. ..-y e. rungs av we. Xlnt HOU9PCleaning Orange Ca II open. · N •• all •-Complete training progTam. ~. D Own Tran!-"•llo Tllo ' · benefits. e ...... s ages .,. types LEGAL Secretary, exper. F "' 'I/·* ·~•• .~-" . :.;.::________ 547-6446 Apply in ....,r90n between for Independent & major Good skill•. C" .. 1 ...... ""'°"· uture management oppor-...,.,...,,.... -.,... _,,,. '""•-tuniti~. Call Mr. Sloan at
Jant"torl•I C"ERA!\fTC tile Tle\\' & Ask lor Rachel May 10 am & 2 pm at 295 E. 11U1 production companies. Harbor area. Reply to 8:32-5440
remodel. Free C'S!. Small ATI'RACTIVE girl, good St., CM. Ask lor Russ. Licensed -Recent Castings: classified ad no. 508, clo TA. RB ELL
jobs Y."e\corne. 536-2426. STAR IS MADE Dally Pilot, P. 0. Box 1500,
\VINOOWS, carpet11, uphol, £'~~'°"'"'-"":=:!"'---I Ufgure, model bikinis, e.!.S_;., 1 CHARGE NURSE KISS KI SS KILL KIU.. Costa t>.fesa, ca 92626. draperies, house cleaning. Tutoring a ternoon per week. Te,11uc . e Yit J Parts Deluxe Cleaning s e r v. pay, strictly private. Write RN • 3-11. Shift. 1',ull tlmC'. 0 ai!kenstein LEGAL secrrtai:v, at leMt 5 REAL TORS ~7732 CH IL OREN'S Begtnni~ P.O. Box lll516, Santa Ana Starting, Nov. 13. e Black-Gold yrs general experience. Ca.11 REAL ESTATE SALES
L•ndsc•plng Guitar Leitsonii S2 per ~~ hr. 927ll Huntington Beach • Cheerleaders Elaine tn4J557-8333. Why not sell in the "boom-
• 646-1287 • Automotive Convalescent Hospital a BJ Hammer LVNS EXPER. ingist" cities in the!!' U.S.-
OIT-SEASON SPECIAL! * Sales Train.es (15) 18811 Florida St., H.B. Sandford Catting• &: Nurses Aides. 549-3061 HuntiJlilon Beach/Fountaln
Patio covers I: sprinklers. ][jl] Hug<' expansion program. CHECKER-AUTO PARTS !213) 464-3171 MACHINIST Valley. Call Phil McNamee,
Comp! lndscPC avail. Sad-ln4*'lmtnl i I Career opportunltie1. Inside SALES Q.ERKS &:: PARTS EXP'D S CE Ge al s A 1y VII.LAGE REAL ESTATE,
dleback Valley Landscape. l :.iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~~t~ I selling ot tire11 &:: aulomotive MEN. SOME SALES EXP. ERVI STATION ner . yrs .ex~r. PP 'r,96>-44;:'-"-"n.""'~=-~--837-3856, ..,..,uip. MMy beoefil•. Apply U1 E. 19th ST. C.M. I iiMiiAN;;i;i'oiperni;ii;ii"""iiiiiii"iil.;i673-iioijl783iiii'•J Adva.ncC'd Kinetics, JJl("., ~EAL ESTATE ~-'" I' 1231 Victoria, CM. 646-7165, R -1wu ex-
COMPLETE landscaping &: Job W a nted, Mal , 700 Ma!1< C. Bloom. Costa Mesa, CLEANING penon, 3-5 eves Fee Paid equal oppor. employer. perienced salesmen needed.
Installation State licenM!d. .. 3005 1-larbor Blvd. Buena per wk. Ofc. in Npt Center. Adh · Sal Re Larger commission split, Comm, Industrial, Apt. Pk. 6962 Uncoln Blvd. Gar-&nd resume 10: ClaasUied esive es. P SUK MAID work in exchange for bonus plan. Call Ginny ~82'1. TRAVELING · An! you den Grove, 14040 Brook· Ad No. 4S3, D&ily Pllol, Industrial Engineer $14K motel apt. 2376 Newport S57-1lll ' guing to the Caribbean h F.ull 1321 So Exec. Sec'y-Real E. to S650 Blvd., C.M. 543-9755. ='Cc..o:::::·~~· -~~~~I
Painting I. Islands or South Seas? Can unt. ' erton, . P .O. Box 1560, Costa Mesa, General Ledger Acct $700 MAINTENANCE M REAI.J.Y r;harp ial for legal p h I cook, bartend , etc. For Euclid 81• Calif., 92626. Sec'y Santa Ana $650 an for secretary trainee. Mu at
aper •!!t "! 5mall pJary. Love to AVON CHRISTMAS EARN· CLEANING woman for P/tin1e Gen'I Ofc $2'25 h motel, In ex.chanee for apt. have good 11k!lla. Employer
Interior-Exterior travel. Call 646-3632. INGS can help make the Newport Center ottlce bl~. Secretaries t~ $7~ 2376 N_;wport Blvd., C.M. willing to train. Full tbne.
Cullom work guarran, Com· Jab Wllnted , Female J0'2 holidaYS happier for your Nite \\'()rk, bondable, pd. PBX/Gen'! Ofc $450 S4&-9r:.x:i. Harbor area. Reply to petitive prict'S, Spec. price cntiretfamnyt It's easy sell-vacation & ins. 40 Hrs. wk. Gen. Ofc/Cashler $2.25 hr * Manager • cl~ ad no. 509, c/o °" apts/vacancles. Free GOOD TYPIST ing, fin e Avon products for 644--0814. Also FPe Positions 1..l!l'Re 0rg Cnty car wa.sh. Daily Pilot, P. O. Box 1500, our irTeliltlble Ou'tltmas NEWPORT Exp fX!t :req_ Must have Costa Me111, Ca. 92626.
Color Corulliting il Est., Wiil do your typlnt .t Catalogue. Call Now 540-7041 n1echan1ca1 aptitude &:
Refer., Lie. Bonded, Ins. her •---, Wiii rlckup BABY"~ Lak ... n...., Cle.t1cal Personnel Agency supervisory ability Xlnt RECEPfIONIST/typl.at, fiO 642-6005 OUflT9 ,,.,,,., .. ,,. ........ 833 Dover Dr., N.8. future\\•/ grmvin11; cO. 6«iny w.p.m. Must .be attractive.
·No Wutl:Nt. •nd dellver loca H.EJ,, Sehl. Dlllt., Hntgn. Bch. TYPISTS 642_3870 wk during training. 5 dayg C.M. area. 545-9425. * WALLPAPeR * F.V., West, 7Sc per f'9• ll~30 am to 5:30 pm. t.hereatter. St art sal RESTAURANT applicants
--n ~· call ... 1..... or wlll work by hour 84 -'1215. NEEDED NOW -='1•~• ~ _ .. ,_ h $185-$225, depending on belng accepted for nite &
"'IE .z--.. .. BABY M • Th .. """"uu..a;. V'ellllUll?; mac . at-).,a.--.!. Call 'Ir. ·--. ~~n1 ····-. "-1··-. MS--1444 64&-lm call 847-3095. :s.i.i-iut, on un lendant. Local high school. i'ffi')947-1012. "' """" cl~~t a~':-'t'e.,. o~y·. nites. 5: 30 to 9: 30, H.B. cv-pref'd "'" ~, ~ PAINTING Ir PAPER.ING, 1'~[Jl be}p at home?., \: area, own trans. 147-oz-~ Skill N "'"Y"'' · ......,,-=<> · Jack N The Box, 385 E. 17th
sn.JDENT 17 &. over, part
time job. Eve 4 hn., t>.1-F
and 4 hrs. Sat. a .m. Salary + bonua. Apply 15006 Jack·
IK>ll, Midway City.
SUPERINTENDENT-tract-
home11. Please send
reaume: Drawer A, Hu~
tlngton Beach, CA, 931411
SYSTEMS
ANALYST
&14-<687.
Appl lances I02
Rent Washers/Dryers
$2'. \\'k. Full maiaL
• 639-llO'l *
OVER 200 wuhen, dryers,
refrlgerators from $39.95.
54.>-0780.
e DISH\VASHERS, wuhen,
dryers. reblt, guarn &:
delv'd. ~763): 5t6-52l.8.
m. 1 YR. guam, del 6 in-
stall. Late mod. all cycle
NEWPORT BEACH Finan-Kenmore wuher. m-1m..
~e!ttaf~=:P ~:r ~ff: G.E. J>O!l dlshwuhtt. Uke
ANALYST. Must have min. new. SBa. 20381 Cypreu, S.A.
of 5 yrs. heary exper. w/lrg Heights. 540-732.S
computrr systems It ability FumltuN 110
lo anab'zie U I e r re-!----'-----""-!
· qUtrements. In addition, col· JUST In time tor tbe football
Jeae education & familiarity seuon! Large b I a ck
w /GROUP INSUR.ANC£ naugahyde recliner, very
I: Jo r PERS 0 N-good oondidon. S1!iO new,
N E L I P A YR 0 LL ap-userd 2 years. $50. 548-3036
p.Ucatiorui moat de1irabJe. an. S:l'.> wkdys, anytime
wknds.
Pol!lltlon ~Ives documen• OFFICE FUR. 60"x34" Ex·
taH?n, . specification I: co-ec. Desk and Oialr w/anna
ordinal10n of programrnlne S15. Reception room couch.
&:: lnrtallaUon of theAe matching chair, hassock.
l}'"llem1. AllO club and Qcca. chairs
Top beneflta &. unique work
environment. F o r con·
aide.ration please submit
n!9Ume, including uJary re·
QUtrementa In conf:idence to
Claultled ad M . 534, C/O
Dally Pilot, P. 0. Box 1560,
Costa Mesa, Calif.
An F.qual Oppor. Employn
and tables.
6424627
8' Quilted 9ofa and love seat,
blue and green fknl.
Contemporary m o d e r n ,
need! recovertna;. s 5 0 .
~7-4861 .
19 yn,'ln Rarbor att8.. Lie have ~ Nu-r.se 6:30 PM. uuu S ece1s. FIBERGLASS MAJH MAJORS St, Costa Mesa.
&. banded. Ref'll furn. HoU11ekeepers, Companlo BABYSITTER needed 2 Insurance :r.r· help.tul, but Exper. lam.inator needed. RN-LVN TEACHER Elcper. for
60-2356. Homemakers. U P j o h childrl'n ages 3 & s.' My not ellien · piece wori<. Helmet manuf. Pvt duty • all shlft.11. Coun· pre-sctx>ol wanted 2 hr * PAIN'I'ING • PAPERING 1..:0""0:::--,,,,,::..· ---'-'--+ home. 968-7071. aft 5:30. APJl(y in the personnel dept. Arply 1777 Placentia, CM. ~de. J n t er v t e w 1 , daily. 10:30 - l 2 : 3 0 •
1 ft . greien crushed ~!vet
couch I: loveseal Perfect
condition. 1 \\"eek old. $225.
557-4861.
WA L N U T Conremporary
Dining set 11eats 8 with 2'
leaves. 2 Arm & 6 side chra.
$100. M6-:u34 Interior Exterior * Bookkeeper, Mon-Fri, g BABYSITTER • weekends between 9 am &: U noon. Flberglas1 Tooling NEWPORT BEAOI registration 9-~ dally, except 1 w~iili1ii051iii.. •iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiio
Lie. Insured Guaranteed AM -3 P1<1: or wUI do Yo r only. 1 child, age 3; lltgn Mon _ Fri. Exper. Manager Financial institution has lm· Sun. LelCOUlie Nu r 11e 11 I' TRAINEE (:all Harris 642-4558 books at homl'. 644-1074. Beach re S4&-0121 6(2-0512 mediate 0 pen 1 n g for Regi!ltry, 351 Hoi;pltal Rd.,
PROF. Painting, also roofs, BABYSl'M'ING. My ho Bank.Inga a. ' PACIFIC MUTUAL Equal Oppor. Employer management tralnee. ~rB~~nytlme, 642-8955
acrou1. Cell. I nter/exter. Fenced yard. Good lcwi 700 Newport Center Dr. Uc/Ins. Free est. 645-5191. care. Refs. 645-030. TELLER Newport Beach De~~ PN~H~! h 11.fINIMUM SAWYER home n ee ds I Commertial banking exper. I'!""!'!,.;.~;,,, ...... ;,,.,... illl-v, .... ....., • <X"ac QUALIFICATIONS mature woman for ~ ~:n~et:~l'l'coa~~ He p Wanted, M l F 1 D CENTINELA BANK 100MPANION _ hskpr, for * 979-4030 * . * College Deartt housekeeping & practical
Neat wori<. Roy, 894-50.58. ACCOUNTING, bookkeepi g Newport Beach Area l'ldcrly larly in CdM. Peri HANDYMAN -40 hn week. *Math Major nursing. 64&-6116.
HOUSE pa1ntlne. Int/ext. Secretary, . Why d~e to Call ~Jnergwion health, but mentally dl'fi-Over 40. 31~ S. Cout Hwy. * 1% Yrs. Work Exper. e SeamstreueA wanted. to
a.ecoua. celll~. reas. Free or L:B· Chal~ertjilU1JC". i. r-"ual Oppo<. Emp""'•er clent, forgets, etc. Lovely So. l.Aguna. aew at home no exp nee. est. n4/~58Sl. teresting, poslt10n. fema . °"'~""""-""f=-7.'~-=''-· I home. TBlrd to drive. $350 HELP wanted for cabJe Only _those with t bes e Sb'.>uld be good home wwer. VOLT
Costa ~fesa. CPA ofl.I Bartender..,Walter• mo. Aft 3 pm, ~3468. television salel. Good pay, qualifications need apply. Call 64&-1910 bet 9 It 6. lnst.m Personnel
PAINTING -Honest, clean. Commensurate pay n Polynesian cxper. Mln. 5 yrs. DELIVERY ol DA J Ly FI ex Ible hour s. SECRETARY RECEP guaranteed work. Llcen!erl I educaUon & exp. 5'S-S814 p Tel--~~ A ~ SUbmit resume w/salary re. -• Temporary Service •---• -~740 enn & p/time. Apply aft 5 PILOT SUNDAY ONLY to ~,.. • .,,,, '"'· n ,_ TJONJST· Fee Paid Local 3848 "--nn• ....... 0 ··ile 106 l u .. =. u1;1-.i . for appoint. • · Opportu ty Emnlr...•er qu .. n:ment in confidence k>: · . • ...aiu..-..... ~ pm. neW!lpaper caITlers. Re-Alan Linde su..&~ ClasiWed ad no. 532 clo corp net!d9 confident person Newport Beach MG-4741
ASSEMBLERS
Female
No Exper. Neceuary
~*•Sofa & matching love
scat, never used. Both $150.
Usually home, 968-7910.
2'-picese living room aet
green. $60.
""'1340
ORIENTAL FUrnlture, Bar,
llC'l"ftn It carved chain,
Wfftmln11ter, 21.3-431·26l:il>.
VELVET sofa, $175. Mat.
ching Jove seat, S 11 O.
Lamps. Ph. 642-2396.
r .. •••e 112 ::....;.=--~"' Don "MlC Beachcombc>r quires the use of a Station · D il PUOt p O Box •=n. who adore! variety & i;o..,,,., 0-. Employer 3001 E ~--1 Hwy Cri\! HOUSEKEEPER a y ' ' ' ~. ''!'!!'~~-i!ol~"!'l~B.0.!!! * · \,AHU> •• • Wagon or Van. Contact Mr. Costa btesa, Ca. 93i26. groovy co-workers. Start I; POWER mower $15., 1te.fti0
, *BEAUTICIAN WJNEAT Han')' Seeley, 330 Weit Ba)' Full-Ti.me. 54i;.'Vl61 Equal Oppor. Empklyer SSSO. Also Fee POOlions. TRAVEL-4ooklna: for sharp $25., Danlah recliner $:§., ,------------------'!., APPEARANCE, FOR St., Costa b-leaa. J-IOSTESS-ex....,.. hel f I but Call Helen Ha)'l'!I, 54(Hi()$, Yltl woman or man wtth Portocrlb $9., Prof. ha.Ir * * * * *
Busy SHOP .,.,. ,,...,,. r-• Pu Coastal Perlonnel "--....... In 1 I I dryer SJO '---"~-1 · .....,.....,.,""". DENTAL front ofc, prioT ex-not neee:u. Over 21. Apply -Harbor DhJ. CM.~._,_,., m · yr, r • v e exp. ·· ~"' ....,.....,.. J L "''"" Dl•u • 01o~ location sa1aJ'y winch, miac. items. 3089 Body Shop Mgr per prefd. Appt. makh1!:, n Per 5 o n, o Ye· s n-...... ~n ., ___ .. , __ C M • fllina:, ting typing Restaurant. Brookhurst & ~ open. neply .... .......,ed ad ~...,..e .......,.., • ·
.,tMPOH.T DEALE, RSH.IP as "bac':p tO otc. I 0:: Adams, H.B. * m . Sec'y, many SMKI-= 507 c/o Daily Pilot P.O. ~7654. " ust be aggress ve and have Sal hrl ., • .._2481 H SP • Girl Fridays Box 1560 Cot.ta Mesa. I I 815 complete knov.'ledge of full ary open & y. ......... 0 ITAL Maid · Inimed. -• F/C BkkJll', Conatr ewe ry Trader's J>ilradise
i.JBR, 2BA, & 2-4BR, 2BA
hOu!lel In Oranp Co. WJU
trd any or o.U for com'I or
lneome. E:qty $24,00J. aat.
~. 646-1896 eve1.
700 acres, Ocean vu, Rec
Ind, 4 m l. from oce11.n, l ml.
trom lrg lake In Morro Bay
!RL Trd for corn'! units,
ete. 83&-&U'.>/648-1898 eves.
1 UNITS Cotta Mesa, 7%
VA loan, balance $47,200. J5000 eqty. Will tn.de for
.10Uae or 11 Broker 5.17-8180 "-· HAVE 1912 Continental
Town Sedan. Fully equip-
ped. Only 10.500 ml. \YUi
trade for Good tat b'Utl
deed I: up. 644-7070.
N. CAL-Redding-Whiskey.
town Area Ne11r Rtservolr 1ro acHt $XIO/ac $24,000
I'Nde tor S. Oran.go. co.
Owntr Cn4l 496-Q.5
TRADE 1959 Chevy AJ)lct\t
PU truck $!500 valut; lot'
van o"i 1aroe value.
845-1108 Myg
642-2149 eves
'11 Tord Pl.clrup Ranchero.
'.64 Pontle.c Grand Prix,
1 9wlp for motorcyclr. Plu1
ar m1ttU1 !!!!?
548-'JS59
WYLL trade Dall'a 1ll(nfd
I lithoanph "Symphonic
Slcyclrtte'' for 1d marirte
.xtant -Plath pttftd, or
wtll ..., ~. 81U2Jl.
* *
lines
times
dollars
operdtion. Phone Mr. \\"iJ. days. fJID.2@5 alt 6· Opening, p/tlme, no exper. OOn 100% Fee Pnkl By Company ;:ch=~ Ji::: I
0WED--D-!N'"G-rl-"1~• :-m-an-.,-.-.-,,,.
1ian111, 646-93ro. • DENTAL 9CCJ'etal')'·bkkpr, ncress. Call park Lido Uz Re~-""'r'11 "-..... ..,.., _ .... ,tel '" K d'-mond. Pd I I ·~="7'-="""'o-C"-~-1 C.Onv. Center, 642-S>W from R. 4500 "c~am .... ::6~~.1 2688 N__.,_rt Blvd., CM ....... ,. "' Body Shop Painter & 2850 E. Mesa Verde Dr.. 9-6 O'CLOCK ONLY t •-v• "i\¥iffi-~-~~-:'°ii,;;;;i"-;; \~S3lll~_!,.~l~l _!S1!!25!!:._. ~548-'!:.!1.1831!!!_.:...,.=j Solle A, CM. &46-3000. . or ap· :"146-2ll8 Newport Beach WAl'I'RE$ES . -Food &
for i mPo~e":fe~e~hip. Ex-DISHWASHER wanted no ~ ~ rl'IOD 466 Fh.g!hlp a er ~ Cackt:a11 exptt. only. Skl.'1 MlaqlleMOUI 111
cellent opportuntty for high f'X p. nee. mu!ll work days. ' · · SECRETARY p/ttme for mue Beet. 613-9904. eamin~. Full Co. benefits 628 N. Cout Hwy. L.B. HOµSEKEEPER. full time. . CPA firm . slat t)'plnc, Ute WAITERS 1: wattresM1t,
phone Mr. w 1111 ams . r-.:::49:.:7_:-'5SO:=c.· -~----References r e qui r c d . We are now •cceptlng bltkpng. Exper. necen. BW steady a:· part time tor
646-9303. DRAPERY _ Carpct-5alcs. Newport Beach arc a · application• for -Todd 640-0680. private countr)' club. Must
BookkMper Derorator type gal to assist, ~1243· SERVICE Station salesman be experienced. App1y in
We need one Automotive busy store, $350 mo. to * Houaekeeper, to do work Coo/, and Iubeman, full and part t>PrtlDll to Don Lynch, Big
HA VE C'hannlng pool home
ln large lot wi th fruit ftteJI
in Rancho ~f.lrage. \V11nt
Newport area Income prop-
l!rty. Bkr. 675-7225.
Bookkeeper with OMV ex-litart. Penn. 492-2254. on 'Itlundays for 5 hrs, time ava. Top pe,y and Can.Yon Country Oub, 1 Bia:
.perience. Send resume to El tr • I0.3. Expd. 644-6887. fringe benefits. exp. prefer· Canyon Dr, Newport Beach.
Box 501, c/o Daily Pilot, ec OftlCS lIOUSEKEEPER/conk e.x· red apply at Shell 17th and WANTED: Gala! r..rt time
330 West Bley Street. Costa 11.nmed. Openings perienced, live-in. $300. Irvine, N.B. S2 per hr. Training &::
TRADE $4400 eqty 26' Da""
I.sh wood hull sailboat, aux
mtr; for self con! mtr
~~.!z_ land or ! Owner,
tM-trtJa: G'IS-8800.
l\1esa, CalU. ~-Inspectors 673-1879 Exr.:rlenced • f ut f'fflllta att just a phont mater:iala furn I 1 he d .
Bookkeeper Assemblers INSURANCE: PJtJme, ex· Broi er & Prep call awa.y -&0-5671. lln.aerle. 675-7900. 675-7877.
We need ooe Automotive Lite Experienef' Pf •. CdM l111. agency, (".d Help W.ntecf, M & F 710 Help Wanted, M & F 710
Bdokkeeptr with ma.chine Long or short term aa.lary. Send resume P. O. Days run Time!--'-------
PROP in Ore. on Hiwy.
1~ iu;. 2 BR hse. Deep well,
creek, septic tnnk. Trd for
On pymt on 3 or -4 B.~i.. ~!
here or ? , $951)) i'P ~
COLORADO River . Vidal
Arca 4 ac:n?s l mlle to
RJver $6.000 value. Trade
for S. Orange County. Own-
er {714) $4055.
experience. Send resume to assignments Box 8, Corona del Mar, Ca
Box 501 c/o De.Uy Pilot, 330 trvlnc SiW-4450 92625. Please Apply
lVest Bay S~t. Costa Anaheim S..\l-232'.Z INSURANCE girl, exp'd, Bl'twn 8.A ll am A 2 Ir 5 pm
Mesa, Calif. 92626. NEVER A FEE AT TEMPO For ·belly Doctor's otc,
Bookkeeper Tempo Temporal')' 1-lelp Newport Beach. 646-3003 18St2 MacArthur
We need one automotive ELECTRONIC _ Exp'd M/F - - - - -........... {Aerou from O.C. Airport)
Bookkeepel.'. Send resume aSH('mblt'rA I: Inspector f1 1 _.__ ___ ._ Newport Beach
to Bax 501, c/o Dally Pilot, Telefllt' CompUtcr Product! ~ ~ Equal Oppor. Emp)oytt
330 West Bay Street, Costa 17795 Sky Park Circlt' CC"D\nrr:.c--.Al""l:ll..V""V Mesa, C.111, 9'1326. Irv!"" '557-<00J -""""'-"'>~"""""'-' NEWCOM>:R WELCOMING'
BUSBOY, l1Xper. pref'd. A~ -f're<> & Fee Posltlo1111 Hospitality Hosteu
I I ESCROW Adhesive Slgm to SW< To Call LOCALLY on new P y n penon, Alley West, Ore Clerk/Male $433.33 n?ll<knt farolllet: brinail'lll
CANYON lake lot, "°'' ene 2I06 W. CJce..,J>oo1, N.B. OFFICER Supply Cle•k/Male h> "'1(J •"" • civic '"'°· Good pay
view, nr. lake. und. utll. BUYER &-cn •!Jiry to $650 P/llme. Moat have hapf)Y
SI0,000 free le clt>ar. Trade Sec'y/to Treallln!r to $l600 smile, car, typing abillty,
for Income property or 11 C)pportunity to jn\11 O!l<' of thr• Sei''y/llle 8h $5CKli,;;54~7-309S;;'.".~· ...,.....,...,..-,-,---.,
Brk. 547-6469. Newport Beach financial in-nflfiort'11 larKei"I anvln(l!i & Gui Fl'iday to $.i25 NURSING Asalst.nt tor 111!11\I
S'15M eq~on 95{1 ncrn nr. tMtutton ha 11 \mmt'dU1tc loan IWOC'iationt. Min. 3 yrll Arcou.ntlng Cieri< $500 invalid lady, 2 1l.11yt wk.
Yuclapa. lial. $4{X).OOO. int opening ror n profeulonaJ P:'1t;!;se1:::t~"1~~r ~~ P.!~ E"""""tr /Typ( l~ .. S2.SOC hr. dRtlltf .~~ a~ onM...W~ only 771), ltantwrtic views, w/atrong expertenoe. Ycn1 Tln '000 :. 17th at •••rM!) .1'.f. uty t w·111ft """"' ruat !Jiil" hUltt, valleys. t'or lnc. prop. "-111 pUrchaite otflcc 5UP-MCM ofll N'. Excel nt work· 642 .. 1470 nh1e to lift. Expd. $2.25 ht. ~";;;,' ,;B;;la:,:.""''7·;:,6469=·,..,-,-,,-,-I pllet1, auto Deet11 & offlce In& conditi0n1 la fringe bent'· ~ !-"~""";::;:';..· ~=~==--
PRIME 1nd. bldg. AAA Nit. equ pment. fltPieasc Call Pmonn.cl JUNIOR Salesmen: 10.15. NURSES AIDES
Tennnt, 2Q yr 18e. SSO.QOO We wm consider (}nly ap-For Appointment Enrn S3>-$40 per wtek gtt-Exp pref. 011 ah.lit. Bevtrty
N.N.N. Inc. Trad~ Sl :ZS..000 pJlcanl1 w/tt proven record (213) 243-6251 tlng IWW customers fot' lhf ~ ... CoJ!.v'} .. ~tr.Ci 24452
eqty for lge o.pl11, or t"'Onl· of the highest Integrity Ir ExtenalOn 339 DAl'L\' PILOT. '11ll1 It not a .. .-ra • ._ 1·
rmrrclal, Bier. 547-&169. honesty &: wbO ¥t8tl)' gain a ~pAper route and doc• mrRS!S Aidt., U-7 11httt.
sao.co:i eqty In S500,000 conndtnce & admlrnOon of Glendale Feder•I not Include coUecttrc tit FUii &: p/Ume, Meaa Vmk
bldg Portland, Ort.,.~A manapment & vcrxlor1. Savings dc.llvtrtn1. ~don ti Canv. Hosp., 861 Ctnter St.,
N provided. We """" tour, .CM~·..:-'.:;;:~''="'--.,.-1tlon111 Tcnnnt, on N.N.N. Send rHUmt It 1 n 1 a r y 401 ·No. Brand Blvd hours ftner tchool lllld 8 on'P./Hmo omee c I e., n 1 n 1 :t:;""'?fai!r:r~ =?nec1in adce~~~ ~~ ~~.c:mi::: ~=a:•v~T"~ Plulh •mlll b&nk. Newport'.
TRADE • ,-, -ol -"" Pilot p 0 Box •~ 1..,,.. .............. -...... 1 Hi.mtl.-..... 8tach UNI ~ Approx. 2 hrs nJ~Jy. ~!!ii ~ '-"" '"'""""" ~ ' ' ' MIUU,l"i Jy. YOll·-mood be ... , 01 =~e only. ~·IV: Ull" .... etct1on. Road on a lktea, COit. Maa. Cal if. 92626. -~ Tap JJe1 c a 11
Nt'fU' VIC'tOrvtlle, for Orange 1,..,"".;'.,".,',,0!>,;.;,"".,r.,. ,,E"'.,;,•1,;'""!!!•I TIME FOR =~pet~ 'F.x~ m!s27--0U=$.~-· ~~~
Coun1y tm>peey. I' DAILY PILOT boys a1wn pr Io r It y . PART llme omce WOii!. II• ~ *' vi:.~ :i:~ i CLASSIFIED ADS ,,..=-::;:::, ... =,.-c1n-.-1n~""~,.-..._-1 ~~:;""'::1m.~..,...!!:.-,· ,,_""""-"'_· 0v-,-"'.,,
11
_,·
=~~1~\'""' CALL 642·5678 i..i..~P!lot 0 -L,. ~=ldlo=,,,.!,.0:1'"'":...• _-' __ c.i_1 * ,
•
WANnD FOR
Hoch man's
Delicatessen &
Restaurant
Opening In November
Delicatessen Counter Men
e Waitresses/lloste."ses/Cashiers
• Bakery Sales Girl•
• Sandwich /Salad Men
e Busboys/Dishwashers
Catering Truck Driver
All Appllc1ntl To Bo 21 & 0..r
Apply In Person, 1 PM -5PM
421 E. I 7th Slrwl
Costo Moso
An Equal Opportunity Employer M/i'
*AUCTION* nne P'umlture
6 APPiiances
Aucuont Frll!ay, 7:30 p.m.
W.ndy 's Auction Barn
-N""'°", CM -Beb+iid Tan1'a Blda: Mat')
PERSIAN RUG SALE
SAVE 30% ocr 27 Ihm NOV •
CALI.. KERMN"i'S
IN CORONA DEL fl.IAR
10:30 '" 5:30 * 67!>-T.340
TO BE MOVED -Ux18
bldg., 2 nns, wood const.
$895. Dlv1I. 10 ml. or trade
ror! 546-Q56
SCANDINVIAN
F r R EPlJ\g:, complete,
$.50. 138 E. 18th, C.M.
548-44~-
DINETTE llCI, rood oond .
$35. Hand mower $5.. 1513 °""""· CM. 64Hlal. NYLON earpctl incl. pM,
avocado, I'm 9CI )'ds, SGS...
tectloMI sofa $SO. m-G584.
POOL TABLE 5.-<9 A<ft,er, 114
•ate. Prof~ typl!:. 54&-7725.
MEN'S MJtla .. t.laclcs, o C'l,
l>ltor.d by Sy °""'"· porf. cond. 614-llDJ.
M ftcelt•neou•
Wonlocl ** WANTEDtt F'rl~. --· for ldont)\l\e Silky Ttniu tci-
male puppy. All lbol.s. a.
blm.
830-&m
w:oosm--hl.te+"". -
I
•
•
)[i] L,-.... l§l I -·-l§J11l~ ___ ., .. _1§11 ~I ~-~ ... -~l§J~1,;;I _ .... _ .... ~] ~~:·i
;,;A.;.u'°'=.;.W;.;•:;.;n...;tod.;;,.._...;.HI;.. AUtOI, Im~ 97D Autoo. l'"e!'od 970 Allhlo, lmponed 970 Autoo, uwo ttG :
OAJLV PILOT T"'1d01> lk:l*t SI, 1972 '
][B l[ ---
rv, RacflO, H1Fi, Oog1 154 1 ~vclot•, 6tlc.e1,
REWARD DATSUN PORSCHE VOLKSWAGE~ CADILLAC :
-,7-D_D_A,::T::S::.U:.;N:=W:;:A:_GON __ j·-;:,7:;-I ~P::O::R::SC::;:-:HE"":t:;"11;;T;-'ff.V.W. Camper '&&.Cad Sedon w/l.andau top '
Al.-Coed., 4. Spd. Lib new 5 Spd. Rac:Uo, facloty Alloy R&dto, ~lck. 1t1pdior con-Xlnt cond. AU Xtru. Pri
Stereo Q6 1"--"''------....;.;... 0Sco.,tert tU
OLDS Studio trump•t v.lth ---------A V 0 t D RU 1 N ED ----....;
cue and mutes. Like IX'V.'. 1!'13 ZENr1'H & RCA TVa on OIRJSTMAS i'i:UGEO'r 10 11peedt PX and ld~I Chrtstm"" ;;111. $1'40.
1
au!~ a t OrMMc Count)''ll TREES &.: Glf'TS PA Leu than 100 mllet
Mu1bl Instruments Ill
&t&-1281. llU'KClt delllel'. Cub 00 ut no Stan now to train )'OW' doQ: Perft:cl conditic:ln. Both tor
Ct\al'gl" Of lt'~S to 36 \l(iforl' the hol\dlyl f( ha.ve a $275, 516--0\35.
Office fur nlf'U re/ I 1nont1~. 3 yr picturt' tube, l v.·eU behavt>d put that )'OU 19691-tONDA""-3"'0-, -...,--.. -..,~
Equip. 1'14 )Ir part11 & &erviCt' "''UT• v.·Ul I)(> proud or. Clas~• front <'IM'I, custom seat Ir: 1-.;;;.:!;;.:i:._;______ rant}'. All avnll. rnodel1 in have J'\1111 11uirted YQU can pipe&. S415. or best olfer.
EXJo:X: S\\'VI ehr ·Sl~. 23 St>c 11t0<:k. ABC Color TV, 9021 join now. Mon n i I es i'lion~ 646-l395-
('hr $8 . 18 de&ks lile11 1tll1 Alla nth, llunHngton Beach, 7· 30-8;30 &. Werl nl!t" 11-9.
867 \\'. 191.h Cr-.t 642-3408 968-33~ Ut1'\J :u Oct. MAR 'T I NCRE:Sf KF.N-'Tl Yan1aha t25 MX. Dnn'I
Planos/Orsans 826
ORGAN HOBBY
Don't buy any Ot"Kan until you
can play! Non·rlny1•r11 Wt'I·
come 10 all"nd fr~ v.•01·k
shops, For lnform[lllon
Contact: Tom Diet<'rlch
642-2151
Coast Music Service
Newport Blv<1. ar i111i·Ullr
Costa Mesa
AJ\1/Fl\1 Turner \\'ilh nil'e R
in. ail· suspension stps. 3
P.lonths old SlOO. Ca 11
S46-9657 Joe.
.._''"_t•v_"' __,J [I
3 Lines, 2 Times, $2.00
tK:l!s, M6-0089. buy ~"' '72 until you'w ** \VANTED: fo'rll'rw.UY ~·n this one. $52!> or best
lo\' in~ horne for darling ofr · &W-233.'>.
f<'ma\e Silky Te•Tirr pups. '71 Yamaha 360 Endu.ro.
Housebroken. AU 11 ho 111 . Looks gd, runs good. $575.
:'11ust sell itn1nOO. l!.10-11333. ;,48--0259 days: 6 4 5 • 0 Z 6 3
AFGllAN mRk-, 8 mos. with l'\'(!I.
papcr!I, AKC reg., Champ '69 Honda 90. trail & Stl'f'<!l.
stock, good w/chUdren. Xlnt cond. $189. _.
Re3lt0nable. S\6-3757. 53&-82-17 aft 6pm
GREAT Dnl'K' Pup p I es . '70 BSA 650 Xlnt cond.
NEED good home for lge Inlern'I C'hamp. blood line. \1'/matching helmet.
n1ale Labrador c r o s s . AKC. R<'g. $ljl}, Aft 4, Call 962-5159 aft :>.
Housebroken_ XI n t wat-1 ~-=-:.":::"::.:·------·n Suzuki Tl\1-400. C'hdog. 493-4787.,_____ Good rond. $600.
WILL PAY OVER
Kefty Blue Book.
For l•te m~1, clean,
low mlluge domes.
tics, Imports, trucks or
c•mpert.
Call an<.! Uk tor Buyer
DAYE.ROSS
PONTIAC
2480 Harbor Blvd.
Costo MoH 546-8017
WE PAY TOP
CASH
condition. Very low miles, WhttlL dltton. (YXT862). pt,y. Sl.500 613-*
C9968'l'G). $6275 $2299 CA ..... RO I $J6'~ NEWPORT CONNEL.L CHEVROl.E'f ..... I
NEWPORT DATSUN d!! ~::.':'' Jli'.'Ji., 1970 Camoro air, auto, PIS, I
DATSUN V roof. Excel -"~· $2500,
1IXX) W. Oou,t ~· LEAVING country, must sell 842--4108 or 847-3871. I
1000 W. Coal! 11'1.'Y
Nwpt Bcb 645-6400
'72 DATSUN
PICKUP
•I speed, radlo, heater, like
brand new (246FLZ) $1995
dlr. 8.16-6535.
'71 DATSUN 240-Z. Xlnt con~t·Air, mags. Pvt PtY.
8.»-.ffl4
HONDA
·n Honda car.
GREAT! $900.
Nwpt Bch 6e-'68 ,VW V~ (Ko1nbi w1wln° '8T Camaro, tuU l)Wr, ne +
TOYOTA dows) orm ownr, xlnt n1ech tires. Gd. cond. $1200.' I
t'Ond. $1350 or beat offer. '61 ~11
A INGS V\V !led. C.000. trans. $32j. I-=::.!'.=------I S Y or "'"t o!l<r. Mu•t "'" CHEVROLET before Sun! 64-Ml616
As Never Before
Oo An ftenh.intl\I "Tl
TOYDTAS
-··6f'VW BUS $1595 l970 °"'' toncouK Dtate, i , ~o ,.,.. wagon. Excell••t , Pua. .... w"" Pwr. I conct,. Low miles. Stl!ft"ina & bnJcas AM J"M
NEWPORT IMPORTS Stem> radio, tilt .ieer. ~
3100 W. Cout Hwy •• Newport .ractQI')' Air, ha&le .v.,k.
Beach, 642-MOS. oew tittl A braket. Panel·
'66 VW. Oiocolate Brown. Ing .1..w-. t'l"Wli 567..-i RtbuUt engine. Hu rst · .._..,. ,.-·-· ' •hilt.,., Cragar ....,. ,,..... '70 MALIBU traction tires. To r q u e PIANOS • ORGAN S
llammond, \\ u rl!IL111, n1any
others. Prf'·St·llllOU 11111.·1·11\ls.
model clo.~<>·OLJts. 1'11100 &
Organ t'Cll!als. M11ncv sa\'·
Ing bargain-. 1rr hrrr rii;:hl
'* COLLIE-Cocker Spaniel Fish 855 __ _:•c_5'b--l=.c.::TI:::2..:•:_ __ pu~~es. ~~0~ks old. Good l-2 1;'-,-,.-.-0-..,-.,.-,.-.-33-G-,-11-on
.:._v~ · s~"'----Show Tank \\'/stand, in-* KITTEN * KJTI'ENS * cludus a1..'C('SB. $45. 557-ffiJO. 1 male tlat'r stripe, 2 fem, l Horses 156
Motor Homes
Solo/Rent
ktr Uted can A trQc:lca., ju.a ___ ._675--0453._~~·---
~w.LtADiA W TOYOTA
1%6 Harbor, C.M. 646-9303 Master. $825. 6f6-.2862. 2 Door hardtop .Y-8, auto.
1700 CC vw. close ratio trans., tact.Dry alr, power •
trans. Fifteens '4 ml. 100 steerinc and br"Qe111, radio, HJ! Eng & t.nu 6 000 · htr, white wall tlrft. {311· $2500 1iivested.15'$95o1on1:.:: AGFJ $2195 dlr. 8J6..653S.
540--9529. 1964 CHEVY Greenbrier V
caU Ill tc.r free fttimatea.
GROTH CHEYROlfl MD JAGUAR '70 To>0ta Marl< II 4 o •..•
---------1pd., 108 hp, O.H.C., Fae·
solid blk. e\'es 491-6&44.
PO'."/\" and all tac-k. now at: Phone H42-9180.
$100.
Motor Home Rentals
SALES & LEAS.ING
AU fot Sa-. Manqer um Beach Blvd.
Hunt1naton Beacb
'70 JAGUAR ·XKE coupe
w/wire wheels, 4-speed.
Regency . red. Xlnt cond.
$3899. Call >l:Hl355.
to'}' Air, Ll~ht Oreen, Drives Xtta Good, $1395 •
'68 Toyotn Corona 4 ~r
Sedan, 4 spd, light blue
finish w/matchiOR" bucket
'70 vw .... 7 pa•• M-"n" for sale. Motor recently 1 ~. -· ~v rebuilt In good running COii·
lull service facility
Danmar Motor Homes
Wallichs Music City JrD Ask for I ;z. :~~~;~1S;~~G:~: I ~; .. ;;";"'";;";"';~;611;;~~~~ l ~~~~~~~J~f .~ ,e~l 1}47-008'1 I Kl 9'-3.\31
IMPORTS WANTED
Orange Counties
TOP$ BUYER
BILL MAXEY TOYOTA
* J aguar 19TI, red. V12 eng. seats, Only 50,000 miles
2 + 2 seatin~. air cond, auto S795. 645-6644.
U-ans. 8'12-3841 '69 Corolla 2 dr. New tires.
'5!1 Jag 3.4 New paint, Rebll trana. $600. 642-5864
uphols. runs good, $900. or 646-356.
X1f'8;!1· Xlnt rond. $2300. d!Uon. 'Body lt(Kld, doe• need
Bua1ness hrS, 646-2624 {l!tlnt. Call 557-4305 to see
·72 VS bug. 19,000 mt. Still $700.00 or beat oUer.
under w~ty. $1700 or '54 Chevy auto trans, Cd tlrea
Going Out For Business I 1 ...::l~;ctl'l'Ml'lt 1'..
Bes! quRlity · pt'ices · serv. Cat~ 152 531-6800 &.1'1--7116 or 547-6llll. I-~~~~-----
best offer. 557-5718 & radio lnt/ext. gd. cond.,
VOl VO needs •-r .,.k. a41-3ll5 •
Ka1\•ai-Strin"·ay-B:ildwin, etc Player P innos & Rolls PERSIANS and Himalayan
R I I II' B Sell hybreeds, CFA n>g., shots, en as ...... e uy-1 $35 d Dail>' 10-6 Sun 12-5 many C'O ors, an up. * 892-2970 • FIEJ.n'S PIANOS --'-~'=="'---
Cosla l\le;i;a !TI.t) &1~3231 \VANTED: Finl \\'hile Manx <:at .
• PLAYER PlANOS * 979· 7616. Ivers & Pon<t Con!I ... , . S980
S1ory & Clark uprt ..... SI085 Dogs &Se Chandler upright ........ $875
a nd 3 others, all 6 pianos ALASh.1.AN r-.talmute pups,
restored. Davtd T . Dupree, TiKata Hne AKC, 3 blk
2940 D Grace La. C.f.1. m:isk11, ~ \\'OH gray.
545-4650 * 546-6108 TI4-5-16-4321i.
PRIVATE PARTY \VANTS \VIRE fox terrier puppies,
TO BUY PIANO Jo,OR AKC, chan1p s i r e <l •
CASH. Adorable. Real beauties. e t:·::i-??7~ • 547-8jJ7.
Used Organs Needed AKC !\fin Chocolate Poodles.
Hit?hC'<=! ~<: !"l'l.id in Cash S;iO & up. 532-7865 or eves &
Call 1'1 213 ; 874-6762 \\·knds. 543-2759.
llAJ\ll\tlOl\ln ~au ~lei SCHNAUZER pups, hscbrkn,
l\f-111. \\'nlnul., !tffc QteSl't ~hots. Stud ser vice, groom·
& gt·ill. S.~. Evcs. 673-5122. ing, l<'rms. (714) 522-8366.
CABLF:-NF:l .SON PLAYER BEAGLE Pups, Ah:C. 3
PJANP ("nlt<'t"10r item. Mini mall', 2 ft>mall', fron1 .i::cntle
rond. 6-16-3-1!)7 . artcr 4 pin. family prl ~. 495-4939.
FISCHER-Baby Grand '* !RISH Setters. 6 v.·ks old.
Piano. Excf'I. cond. $9j() or AKC reg, 1 male, l fenll.
Best ofter. 333-386'9. c84&-="""'=·'------t••• .. ••• •••••••••••
For an •d In Wom•n'1 World
Ca ll Mary Beth 642~5671, ext S30
Belted Toppers!
\
I
·f:~ 9378
. ~ 8 -18
,"f 11f...,; .... 11fe..-T'~
WllAT dO )'OU need nl081 of
all now':' TOPf!, tops, tops to
team wllh shorts, pants,
skirts all through winter.
Whip up tight gres1 11htm
and ow.rbloui.es ln t'Otton,
polyester.
Printed Palhn·n 9378: NtW
Mlt1e1' Slze1 8, 10, 12, 1'1, 16,
18. Yardages in pattern. 8t;~N'f\:of>1Vt; C'f>:asT!4
f,or each pattern -ndd 2S cents for each patte.rn for
Air Mall and Special Hsndl·
inA;" .othet'WtM thlrd-clul ctttivery will takr t~
wee:b or more. send to
Marlain Martin, the DAILY PtLO'l'. 442, Pattern Deot.,
2l2 Well 11th SL, New
York, N.V. J0011. Print
Pl'AMI:. ADP.Rr.88 with
ZIP, SIZE •nd 8TVLE
!l\IMllEll.
SEE MOR.£ QuJ ck
ruhlonl and choaee one
pattern tree from our
SPl1nr.sunun<I' Catalof. All
olu•I OnlY !Mlc. !NSTAN'.I' SEWING BOOK
ICW today, wear ICmoi IOW'.
IJ, !NSl'ANT FASHION
BOOK -Huri4redit o f
lulJlon -SJ. Jlave aneth1na ,_. waDt to
ltllf C•lllQed adl do It
w<t!·ca!lNOW&IH6'll.
7000 ..
----------------
Boats, Power 906
Rent A Motor Home
for your Vac•tlon * 839-4301 * 18'81 Beach Bl•d. BLACK '66 XKE 4.2; w.. VOLKSWAGEN
l'l Be8ch. P)\. 841~ rims, new Mich X tires.1----------
Aft. 6 p.m., ask tor Jeny, ~
SAYINGS 'SS CHEVY, 2 QR.
FANTASY 27' F/G
Sportflsh('r w/Vanson dual
axle trier. 1\vn f\I er c
cruiser 160's, lo hours,
8'xl2' cockpU, enc Io s e d
,,·/nu can\'a!i lop &: side
C'Ul'l ain s. By Dino.
213442-0695. TI4-29&-3l3J.
:\totor home for rent.
'Tl \VJNNEBAGO, Z1'.
AUTOS BOUGHT Low .,;.,SZ!00.·64&-2600 · '70 VW Camper w .. tt•lln
1970 Jaguar, 2+2._ Low ~p Top. Clean, new
We pay top dollars for mileage, ail'. Loaded, $439']. M1chelln radials, S 3 0 O 0 .
late mode l, clean cars i ..:•:.."o:'o,· -764S-<71'7'~0:... ~~~~· l~4:;;97~-~-=·"""eveo.~_,,.....,_._-
At Never Before
On All Remaining '72
New tires. Needs minor wotk
$150 Firm 5U-369l.
1965 Q)evy Cbe'v1!lle, stat wan-New tlret, auto trans,
R/11 $495 ph. 9-5, 613-2030,
aft 5 8.U--0142.
Slecps 6. 640--0t82
l§J
K'.I 1~5,;!~1..,.,1 KARMANN GHIA ''fi2 ... vw N~·,~ A~";'r,;
Costa :\1esa radio, sun roof. Must sell.
YOLYOS
Autos lor Sale
1912 SKIPJACK 2.1
OPEN CRUISER 225 OltfC, tandem trailer, Antiques/Classics 953
Autos, Imported 970
AUSTIN AMERICA chemical head, Bimini top, __ ,__..._ ____ _
complete covers, compass, RARE, 1938 Plymouth. woody '69, Am-Fm radio, auto, low VH>' s s di Lo ho Y:agon, one of six orlginally ' ' ra o. w urs, built for the U.S. Border mileage. sr.,o. Pvt pty
like nc\Y S7850. OC2-1830. I Palrol. Still has dashboard _67::.::....,..=::...:'::_'.:':.::46-'..cl:::83:.1:;.. __
"19TI SEA P..A Y" s\vitch panel tor lights, AUSTIN HEAf EY 455 Olds, Pack-a-jet, 20'. 200 I sirt•n. radio, etc. Original "
Series. Equipped for \Vater · engine runs like a top. Wir·
Skiing & fishing, tandem ing ls re-Oone, original '61 AUSTIN Heal£'y :m<l· · · nd nd Neiu:. 111int 1..'0nd. 42,000 orig trailer. Call after 12:00 transmission is sou a mi. Sl200 firm. 5.1&-4744 noon. 1114·1 830--6482. :r..rusr originul v.·ood needs re·
SELL! doing. A treasure for ap-BMW preciative collector with !---;..;..;...;... ___ _
I9TI i r SEA RAY FIB time to finish the job right.
Spt!isher 2:15 llP Nooneelsehasormlikeil,
OP.1C-Ta.ndcm trailer -full since others are known to
cover-$9,750. (TI4) 644-5229. have been junkl'd. Former
1968 TROJAN 26' l!XI HP, O\\TICr drove it out from
F'\VC interceptor , flybridgc, Connecticut. Some spare
SS F BT trlgg parts available. Firm at
• D · • ou ers, Sl,IXKI. Call 979-7HS after 6
Visit our new home!
& ROY CARVER, Inc. xhn. (714)846-4871 H.H.
19' Runabout &: 4 whl trier,
in good cond.
pm. 234 E. 17th St.
Trucks 96'..I. Costa P.tesa ~ 1.:..:.:=---.....C:. 835-7459
8oet1, Rent/Ch•rt'r 908
'73 Chevrolet
Pickups & Vans
Big Stock
Low Prices LEASE: 40 day1 yrly $400.
26' Sail. 10 HP, sips 4. S to
S. Pvt pty. 542-5020. HOWARD Chevrolet SALES-SERVICE-LEASING
Newport Beach Overseas Delivery
Mac/u·thur & Jamboree Blvd CREVIER MOTORS
8 Meter Sloop, converted for 833-0~55 208 \V. 1st St,, Santa Ana
9D9 Boats, Sall
cruising. Xlnt s hape . REAL Nice ,61 F 0 T d 835-3171
Sacrlfice at S 15 • O O 0 · Econoline P. U. 400 ml. on CLASSIC 1969 BMW Bug. 642-5146. new eng $600 firm. Also '62 Xlnt cond. Freeway spd. 70
Duffield Racing Sa.bot, Nova Station Wagon, nins MPH: , 50 MPG. $ 5 0 0 .
NUMBER noo. $150. Good body & tires. 846-4715.
• 673·2'16 • 642-L\22 alt 5PM. DATSUN
'20 Glaspar Sloop, New paint, '56 Ford, C'herry body, new ---------
4 cyl. inbrd. GM eng, great paint, seats, batt., gen ..
cruising boat. 49-1-5834. brks., R&H., etc. Like new,
WANTED: Side Tie for 20' 5'18-6786.
Sailboat Newport llarbor. c,67c=:.C;chev=.'-o,~T~o-n~'l'n>-,~,,~12'
646--!K)lS eves. alum. body w/lift gate. Call
SACRIFICE 22' Albatross 4"6-6919.
Aallboet. 2 J!("ts of sa.ils. Xlnt -.~ ... =O!EV~-.-,-,l-t-o-n,-6-cy-1.
slip. $500. 613-3817. Good cond. $1650. Call
Boots, Speed lo Ski 911 645-3109 alt 6.
~ Ft Sea Ray 2® series'. 1 'SS CHEVY P.U.
year new. 455 Cl Oldsmobile tf> cyl. 3 speed $350.
pack-a-jet engine. Equipped =~c-"•~S<>-=-o""".::"•~-for fishing & v.·atl!r skling. 1967 % Ton GMC Pick up.
Fully equipped tan do m V-6 $1050. "
trailer. Thls outfit is like 545-2498 all. 5 P!\1.
new. Original cos! $9200.'5 --,-C~h~evy-,-,-~~T-o~h-P-;,-,-,-, •.
Sacrlnce $500). P h o n e SfiOO, Good c 0 n d i t i o 11 .
831)-&182, MiMiion Viejo, 837-8586.
MUST sell 14' Ski boat
Trailer.
531-2164, 548.8995
& Autos Wanted 968
l[i]
WE t,uy :tll makPS of clean
used spor1s cars. paid lor
or no~. Please drive \n lor
tree Appraiaal.
NEWPORT
IMPORTS
(
"
NEWPORT
DATSUN
Now Open
;n
NEWPORT
BEACH
IDOO W. CoHI Hwy.
645-6400
WE HAVE THE
NEWEST OF
DATSUN$ IN
INVENTORY FOR
YOUR SELECTION
1971 Karmann Ghia Coupe .a::n ..... _ "A A97 low nilleage. Xlnt condition ._,..,or ""'°t ou.,r. .. -2795. CHRYSLER
St,950 ••• 493-41::;1 '&I VW Sunroof. Cocoa brm\'t'l. Nu tires, shoch
'65 Chrys lmpl'rial. Deperl-
dable I: beaut. $695 or maJce
offer. 548-3915. MAZDA
MAZDA
LEASE SP.EClf\L
New '12 RX3
$57.56
$485. Seo Hur Gas, Harbor
& Bay, C.M.
·70 vw sundial eampec. ...., =""'~"""";;:"~'·;;ic"'.M::.·......::646-"i9303iiil ~C:::O~NTl:.!.:!:N'.:E:.'.NT:.!.:A:L~
body, 1tron& eng. Financing Auto•, UMCI 990 avail. $2200. or T.O.P. ;..:::..:;.::,..;;;.:::;: ___ .;.;:.c I ('661 4 Dooa·, good oond., new
&15-1720. BUICK tin'!. Must .. u srn.
'68 VW bus, R/H, xlnl en-* 968--0290 aft 6 Pl\f *
gine Sl.500 Blue/\\'hi!e, call '70 Buick Custom Skylark CORYAIR
MS-6237 Wht. Blk vinyl top. P.S .. 1---------
L<>aded. ROTARY powf>.red. '62 V\V Bug, sunroof, good P.B. R&H. tact air. Under '65 Monza. Xlnt cond.
36 mo. + T & L. For resp. cond. $495. Call aftet 6 pm. ~M. $425 under book. thn1out. Mech. sound .
pty. Trades cons, .~673-""-7567'-"'::,·------b1&-l252, 644-2228. $350/best ofti!r:/ or tradtt. e FOR Salo, -,t969 vw Von. __ .=C:'.:A::::!:D'..'.l~L~LA'.:::::C~-l-55_7·..:U"jSl~, 'j..s.;"7.f,'12i'i!~. lD-
?2 ROTARY'S Good eontl. 11,000. COUGAR "Demo Sale" ·-·13 Cadillac '63 V\V. Sunroof. Great Cpe De Villa 1')67 r.ot~r. Bl k tOl'.I. RIH, transportaUon. lo ml. l owner. ~rf cond.
10 TO CHOOSE * 675-3115 • f'\111 po"1-er, Air O>nd., Vinyl Sl:"OO. Dys 547-0054, vee
''BIGGEST SAVINGS'' 1968 vw Westphalia., cmpr.. Roof, Dual Comfort Se<.110:, 6~18.
"Servtce ls the di.Her-nee" pop-top, tent. stel"eO, im· Beautiful Firemist Finish, -~=F-IR_EB_l-RD--
HUNTINGTON BEACH mac. Sl995. 536-7751 eve. S-""oay seats, stereo tape cruise control 1----------1 MAZDA '68 vw Bug. auto, rat11o, $17 6. '68 FffiEBIRD Conv. loaded,
f'Xce ot l ona l ro nd .
Eveeything right. This car
'von't depreciate. S 1 7 0 O.
• 32.0Cll mi. Sharp!
17331 Beach Blvd. * 54&-1526 *
842-fi666 Lease Mgr. Mr. Fry 'fi4 vw Bug, suroor. EnOne
'65, reblt in 'TI .. Good tond.
$475. Pvt. 5.)7-7827
'60 VW BUS
BEST OFFER * 54H8Z7. * '69 VW. 31,0Cll actual ml.
Radio, gd. tires. X1nt cond.
~.
• per month
36 mo. O.E.L,. t;r·
Immediate Delivery
LEASING
ALL MODELS
673-5507 . .=.,FO~R=D~-
AND MAKES '69 & '70 GALAXIE >ll'1,
' '73's Retirln<t Couple buy Inv
CamP<'r. Both excel cond. Santloam cardornia Undor $2.000 co. Ca II UUUIG 83~9576.
BEW"' 'TI Super Beatie 20 000 mi lst National 'Bl FORI) v,111 '''lfll1"'r ('II.II· ~ Excel rond. SI6s0. ' flllC'd. f,1\. n1r-tor. ,.,1, lire1, --------* cau B92-4lG9 * <>IC'. Sa,•rifil'e N50. prvt. I '60 300 SL RDSTR B k L . • ply., 645-~;)2
AM/FM Radio, Real Collect-•7o ~ Sundial Camper. 10 eaSlng . '70 ~~ , •• 'il-T-. A-uto. v.a.~ or 's Jtem, #6160 Jmmacu-~-FM stereo radio, oew r un• ...,, tu"eS $2500 °~131-windows, bAck sc11t. Qi late. .,....,.. ir.-root Michelson Drive cond. 493-3229: 83()-64()(. e:•vE v.w. '61. Bug. Good con-cc-· 01 Ma··-• .. ·1 ----
NEW..,PORT d;tton, $350. or S..t oiler, 1•. CaliL~,,;;.;r FORD '64 VAN, BOOy & ~675o:>-ll'4=:::'::· ------· I n4/~ 213/621--0367 engine In good condition. DATSUN '59 vw BUS YOUR ONL y $65tl. 5.l7·TI7S.
"'"'' engino. 1421 So. JAVELIN ArapMoe, Santa Ana. FACTORY
vw s ... M"'t "'"· AUTHORIZED
• ~ • CADILLAC
'10 VW Bus, reblt eng, $1650,
or trade for. older Bug plus
cash. 645-7358
--'61 VW Bug. $350.
Rebuilt engine.
• Ugly, but strong. 4~3485
~====~ _. ___ '66 VW Bug. Orlg. owner,
'71 MERCEDES 2SDC xlnt cond. Strn.
Loaded, Silver, Auto Trans, • 96&-7903 •
AM/FM Radio, Power '69 VW BUS, SNRF,
Steering, Power Windows. Bed. $1625.
$7295 * 673·8293 •
NEWPORT '" vw. Swuoot
DATSUN .., • .,"":.~im •
'70 Jawlln. Still under n'lajcr
\\'&!Tan. r..o.ded w/xtrns,
PIS .. A/C. 837-2959.
',,
•
·~ ••
' '
'
•••
. .
•
San Cle111enie Today's l'lual
•
Ca istrano N.Y. Stooks
L 65, NO. 305, 3 SECTIONS, 38 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA TUESDAY, OCTOBER 31, 1972 TEN CENTS
N.ixon's
87 JORN VALTERZA
Of .. Deir ...........
-~ of top Orange County "'I>'
ponera of llldwd NW>n galher<d In San
JilOn Caplatrano Monday 10 qulckly
...,... the virtues of th<lr candidate,
tbta. '•ct1ebrate:" the President'a victory
nut week.
Nonetheless, ' former U.S. Treasurer
(liilw Calllornla Treasurer) Ivy Baker
Pi'lest urged the faithful not to be lulled
Into ccimplacency but tnatead , 10 Insure
thal all aupporten of NW>n's re-electkln
ictgally go to the polls to cast lbe1r vote.
x.-n..t la tbe belt we; for us W achieve ,.,
Supporters Celebrate
that landslide we are waiting for," she
said.
Billed ss a fund ralse< at the El Adobe
Restaurant in the Mission community,
the event ah9 waa marked by plaudlts
for prominent Orange COast Republican
leader Victor C. Andrews of Emerald
Bay, heralded as the key man · in the
county's effort to re-elect the Presiden1.
Andrews received a decorated platter
fer his efforts in the campaign.
Soon afterwarlis, political issues gave
way to comedy. •
COmic Morey Amsterdam took to the
dais to run through a series of Polish and
Italian jokes, then turned an acid wit
toward South Dakota; the home state of
Sen. George McGovern.
"But before .. 1 go any further,''
Amsterdam said, I b a v e to say one
thing : ·.....:..._
"McGovern's a schmuck!"
"And speaking about South Dakota, the
only good trung they got is lhe mountain
with the four faces on it.
"But now they're all looking down at
McGovl!rn and , . . (Amsterdam gave
the crowd a facial expression of in-
credulity,
"Then there 's W_atertown," he added.
"That place is IO small, the bead of the
Mafia there ls Jewish."
When the rough Amst!rdam humor
sul,sided, the group watched another
comedy routine, followed by a brief stint
by Zsa Zsa Gabor, cloaked in mink .
The jaunty tone of the evening, besides
producing laughter among the Orange
County GOP leaders, also spawned one
new campaign song that may never
really catch on in time for the election .
It is a derivation of a pop gospel song
lhat begins, "Put your hand in the band
(See FUND-RAISER, !'age %)
Clemente Police Trial
Witness Rebuts Charge
• I
Woman,23, ....
Strangled;
' .
Body Found
. • .,. -whose ltraqled body ,. ..
upped In old corpetlni and dmnped
1'ltbln gj~ of the posh y-Lloda eo-
tri. Club bas been ldllltiOed as Marla Jeiin Hire!, ·23, of stantoo.
~'And that's lbbut all we know," sher-
lff'<.1 detective Willie Stansbury said today.
''Leads are hard to come by and the
-of th< victim doem~ give us
any clues."
'sianary said lllrs. llir<s waa a
~ ldjuslor for Southern California
E4taon Company in Rosemead. "She was
very hlgb1y regarded by everyone who
'ltDew her and ber p......,ce In that toe.
tioD is a mystery to us," Stansbury said.
Jnveslii•lon .,. today workins .. the ~ that Mrs. Birts waa killed In 90me
iil)ler location, wrapped In old draperies
~ raged '"'Pttlni and dumped neor 1¥ country club.
. She WIS reported mJsslng by her ~ .. wlth.w1'Jm the lived late Sunday. All aU . GUI aearcb for the missing
l'lallertbn Jmdor College graduate pro-
Glced her car with the keys In the ig· ...won a -distance from her home, but' no clue as to bet fate tmU1 early
llOnclay.
::)!er bocly wgg di.scoVered by a
1fialntenanoe man who spotted a hand "~ from what be •t first thought .will an old bundle of raga. ' .·.:.:~ tests are being carried ~~ today '4 plnpont the cauae of death.
.,.. sheriff's lnvestiga10n ssld th<y were ,.otJsfled that Mrs. llir<s was slrangled r-N". her assailant .~JI Is not yet known H Mrs. Hires was
.., YictJm of a suua1 ssaault.
ltesidents Voice
.J
'Street Problems . .. To City Council
! f1Jisade1 reaident.s flghtlng to save 16
-which Ibey assert Is a public park -~Caplslrano Beach were oet 10 resume
~ battle before county planning com·
.,uaiJajooua this afternoon.
•. 1lbe....group met Monday afternoon with
. S¥perV\lor David Baker, who aoes not of·
.Gtially rep1:e5ent them on the t.oard -to
.present further ariument.s against the
dandonment of a county road which
would pave the way for a major con-
domlnlwn project.
!lb meellng with the supervlJor was
IQtlgbt by tho group wboee leaden have
liitlsted that they have received little
lielp from their own supervilol , Ronald ·
.. ~·· .• , ~ resklenls pmdueed old clocummll
1 lch they •Mert prov• the ezllteoce of
ptcatod par~ on Ille II~ .. lifloOld\lc .
. ~· . Harbor dt<ldb ·aao.· '
'!be afternoon meeting, said' Mn.
rank Rainey of Ceplstrano Beach, 11was
~uctlve."
,i;. 'At lout we were flnall,y able to
11nsent our cue to a supervlaor who
-.Id lllten to us," lbe added.
'l'Oday'I lpeclflc Issue .. lo battle I
oompromtae ollw yl!Jch already bu the
fllee PAJIK, Pqe I) . . •
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Read9 for BaUow~en
0All Y PILOT ""°'' lw Ric~ bellltr
With a pumpkin nearly as big as she is, 3-year-old Traci Valoff of
Huntington Beach gets ready lo~ some kmg-size spoolting tonight.
Th e giant jack-o-lantern was carved from a pumpkin we1ghmg 115
pounds. ·
..
Public Mee iing Called
By Dana Point Citizens
I A public meeting called to hear com-
munity problems from citizens .at large
- a session held in advance of a session
with county officials -will be held
ThurSday evening by the Dana Point
Citizens for ~on.
The groarr,"'already armed wlth ,a long
list of current gripes about development
density and other issues In the com.-
munlty, will start at 7:3d" p.m. in the
Richard Henry Dana Elementary School
auditoriwn. ·
Spokesmen for the busy cJUzen'! group
said the sess ion would be held primarily
to hear issues of concern to citizens so
that tbey can be included on the list to be
presented SOOD to Fifth D i s t r i c t .
Supervisor Ronald Caspers atxl other
county officials.
one strong issue wilt be a new policy
by the group seeking environmental 1m·
pact statements for each project in the~
community which would stir concern
among re;ants.
other keJ"" items on the list to be
(See DANA, Page 2J
Burt's Gone
Pinup Taken From Was liroo m
MIAMI (Al!) -A nude pbolollraph of actor Burt ~.once gractd
tho walls of fhi women'• lounge of a ooclally elite club neor Mialnl, l>ut not for
,~;'lt"'**·lllllef .. ~«i," said club iDem1J<rSIUp.db<clor Pat Gib-' son. .~
She reportod Mond•y that an unknown powder 1'<>0lll patron s101t ti>&
framed photo, tak .. from the centerfold pages of Cosmqwljtan m11Culne.
Miss Gibson said the photograph of Re)>nold& In tho ·ball was put In place
about four we<ks ago at the Munlty Club at Sailboat Bay (A ~urban Coconut
Giove. , . .
She said a ""'"d q>!>Y of th< photo~ belilg encased,111 o bollet·~roof &!au
and steel lrame and wlll be llnnly bolted to the will In Ill lounge.
•
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Squad Car's
Speed Rate
'Not Gr eat'
• BJ JACK . CHAPPELL ,. ............ , ....
Ezpert teotbnony rebu~g the pro ..
ecutton's allegatiom of eitensive police
car speed and evidence of marijuana and
open beer cans bas come forth in the
mlsdemeanbr man.slaughter trial of San
Clemente policeman GIU")' Adams.
Adams' trial in the Laguna Niguel
Municipal C.ourt of Judge H. Warren
Knight stems from a fatal crash over t~
Memorial Day weekend.
Adams' patrol vehicle collided with
pickup lruek heavy with camping equi
ment and four occupants, one of whom,
Jeffery Britt, 16, o( l.oog Beach, died ..
Britt and a companion were rlding m
tir-bed of the pickup truck along with at
least three cases of beer, sleeping bags
and other camping items for a San
0norre outing.
Thomas R. Bates, an accident
reconstruction engineer with a firm hired
by Adams' attorney Gerald Williams
estimated the police car minimum speed
cou1d have been 45 miles per hour before
braking began.
Previous testimony by an Anahelm
Police Department traffic Investigator,
officer George PlaUoot, pegged the
minimum .speed of the vehicle at 67 miles
per hour. Posted speed is 30 miles per
hour. .
Bates engaged in a lengthy description
and explanation oo the types of skids and
relative braking efficiency.
He further estimated that a nine to 11
r .• Ue per hour diHerence between the two
vehicles' speeds would be the minimum
required to throw a body from the back
of the pickup truck.
Evidence or marijuana and open beer
cans was found during an inventory of
penonal articles in the pickup, Chief
CIHford Mqn-ay and narcotics detective
Michael Rebcbl testified Monday.
Reischl , who testified first while the
chief of poUct waJted outside the
courtroom, said that w~J he was in-
ventorying the property at the impound
yard the day following the crash he came
across the contraband material.
The detective said he found about 20
rolled marijuana cigarettP! and a plastic
bag containing marijuana. He said that
two or three beer cans with lbe pull tabs
removed were also found in the truck. ,
Rel9chl made 1 carefully worded
rebuttal to prowecutor Don Clarence's
charge that the search was Illegal.
He said tbe 11Uclt material was haP" Peoed upoo during a routlne accounting
of property which the departmtnt
nonnally undertakes following a serious
accldonl
• Oarence asked why a narcotics otflctr
was called Into the matter Md the mod-
halred, mustaddoed detective replied
that It was his lclleduled duty day and he
was the only detect.Ive on duty at the
time.
Chit( Murray atons wtth another deleC>
tlva •• ,......u at the time of th< ln-
ventoa. Clarence agaln asked If it wu
the ~ ol the Sin Cltmenle deport-
ment to tnveutory lhe property of all
vehl et involved In terlooa accidents.
"Yea sir, •. Is," the chief said flnnly.
In other testimony Chief Murray said
lie ponooally hlld •tood behind the stop
sip at the crash ocene and bad timed
Pollet ca11 making test runs &loo& El
Cr.dttno Real 1n an effort to determine
tbo ftngth of time a car would be vl!lblo
(Ste TRIAL, Pa,. ll
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• Ill Capistrano
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DAIL 't l"ILOT ,_,, PMlit
USED HIS CAUSTIC WIT AT SAN JUAN POLITICAL DINNER
Entertainer Am1terd1m in Support of President's R ... lectlon
Coming to California
Nixon Plaits Television
Speech on Election Eve
WASffiNGTON (AP) -President Nix-
pn-.fmnic.heduled a round or television
and radio broadcasts Including a
television speech on election eve for the
windup of his re-election campaign th.at
will take him to California Saturday.
The White House announced Nixon will
give a 36-minute address to the nation on
live. ra~TV from the White House
Thursday night at 4:30 p.m. PST for
what wu described as '.'a look to the
future and discussion of his hopes {or the
Hanoi Retreats
On Set Deadli11.e
For Viet Peace
By United ~11 lnternaUonal
The Communists' Oct. 31 deadline for
signing a Vietnam cease-fire passed to-
day with no rtrm Indication when It will
be signed.
The White House said President Nixon
ts seeking a 1asting peace and will not be
stampeded by Hanoi's deadline of today.
White House officials said earlier it
was improbable the ctase-Cire wouJd be
signed before the Nov. 7 elections:
although both the Hanoi and Viet Cong
delegations to the Parla talks called on
the United States to slgn "as soon as
possible." nm was a retreat from their previous
"sign today" stalements.
Presidential adviser Henry A. Kiss-
inger said Thunday there were a
number of Points that should be cleared
up in one more negotlatlng session.
A clue, to one of the major snags came
today from Pham Dang Lam, chief
Saigon negotiator In Paris who was in
Tokyo to brief Japanese officials on
satgon's position.
Lam told Japanese Vice Premier
Takeo Miki that Saigon wants auurances
an a_greement wUI mean the wlthdrawal
or North Vk!tnatnMe troop:t from South
Vietnam.
He said Saigon wanted "clarification"
on the future of thtse troops and on the
three-part "Natk>nal councU of rtCOn-
ciliaUoo" which Saigon rean means a
coal!Uon govemmtnt.
White Houae l(JOkesm•n Ronald L.
Ziegler toott note of the Communist
deadline and said, "The only deadline
we're -•ting under 11 theone thot will
bring about the rlibt kind of •• -ment.
"'!be Presl4ent hu been v • r y
mellculoul Jn ma~ clear" that he will
not agree 10 the 1l1111tac of a pesqa pact
untll the remalnlng outltandlna taue1
are clarified, Zlttlcr said.
"Tt le the Preaidcnt11 firm tntentk>n to
bave a 1ettlement which wilt ofler the
best ~ for la1t1n1 peace and • peace
tllal doei not leave the aeed ol a Mliie
(!lot PEACE. Pap 1)
{uture of this country."
The three more radio and two
television addresses are all paid poliUcal
broadcasts, press secretary Ronald L..
Ziegler said, and they will give Nixon a
concentration of broadcasting for every
day e1.ceJ!t Sunday until the election..
The President and Mrs. Nli:on plan to
fly to California Saturday and land at the
Ontario IntemaUonal Airport in early
evening for an airport rally in San
Bernardino County. .
From there they wUI heUcopter to San
Clemente, where they will stay to vote
Tuesday morning and return t o
Washington to receive election results at
the White~-
Ziegler lndicated that there may be
other campaigning activitJes, but be had
no firm details to provide today.
Nli:on bad canceled a major ap.
pearance in the Chicago area for today
because of Monday 's train wreck there.
Thursday 's television broadcast will be
carried by the NBC Televlaion network.
The Monday evening live broadcast.
which will emanate from the Los Angeles
area, possibly the Western White House,
does not yet have an announced time or
topic, Ziegler said.
Ziegler was asked whether Nlxon
would make any speeches dealing
specifically with Vietnam. He aald Nil.on
does not plan a specl!ic address on that
subject, but it w.1s obvious th•t he might
ir.clude it in a discussion of lhe future of
the country.
In his most recent rad1o speech Nixon
promised ii re-elected "one of my
highest-priorily proposa.Js" wUI be prop-
erty-tax relief for older citizen.91. (See
story. Page 4). ..
Co•st
We.alte r
Those cold northeasterly wind!
~uld b e g I n to diminish by
Wednesday, acrordJng to t h e
weather service. Hlghe at the
beaches are expected lo reacb SS
rising to 75 ioW Lowl &onJ&ht, o cbiUy U-50,
INSIDE TODA 'Y
A MtD IMf"'Dey on IU ~ft fA
Franct, timflar to tM old 'Kln.-
ltU R<porl, ""-' the l'fJ>U10· iion of-'1-ewc:"Mal oa aprrt
towr1, Stt 1tor)t, PQfl 12.
AN u.tln 1t -... _,...,,.... .. --. ,,...... ,....,. ' ..... .. .. ·--~ ... " .......... " -.. -. .,..... .. .._.U.M --. •
•
"'.,....... THIS IS NO WAY TO PROVE YOUR POINT
Pony Expreu Run G.t1 Off to Bad St1rt
Pony Express Riders
Trying to Beat Mail
BALTIMORE (UPI) -Pony express
riders for the National Association <>f
Professional Bureaucrats trotted along
U. S. 1 today. confident they'll get to
\Vashington well ahead of the letters they
mailed as they left Philadelphia.
James Boren, president of the associa·
lion, told the horsemen there was "no
reason to rush." He said they easily
\\'OUld reach Washington before the mail.
The horsemen left Monday. the day the
letters were mailed.
The only trouble Boren anticipated was
in Baltimore , where a 19th century
ordinance prohibits horse racing in the
city streets.
Police warned the group t~ \\'OUid enfor~ the law. Boren indi6:ted .here
would be no racing because -he saw no
need for it.
Boren, a former State Department of·
ftcial, organized the pony expre~ as part
of a continuing spoof of buttaucracy,
His group. whose motto is "When in
doubt, mumble," said the si x riders and
eight horses could beat the regular mail
service between Philadelphia and
Washington.
Asked to comment on lhc race. a
Rites Conducted
'
For Floyd Ballou
Private family services were con-
ducted early this week for Floyd Ballou.
74. of Capistrano Beach. ?tfr. Ballou died
J-''riday naming in San Clemente.
~tr. Ballou. of 26914 Avenida Las
Palmas, leaves his widow, Margaret
Ruth Ballou, of the home: three
daughters, \"irginia Bismukes of Covina,
Carol Kesler o( La Mesa and Suzanne
Lane of Orange ; a sister, Mrs. Effie
Crabbe of Media, Pa., and l 5
grandchildren.
The memorial ntes wtre conducted at
Lesneski Mortuary Chapel. Burial follow·
ed in El Toro.
Producer's Rites Set
WOODLAND ~ltLLS (A Pl -Funeral
services are planned Friday for Mitchell
Leisen, a Hollywood producer-director
who served 12 years as art director
under Cecil B. DeMille. Leisen died
Saturday at the Motion Picture Relief
Hospital in Woodland Hills. He was 74.
DAILY PILOT
~ Ol'•ll9t C4111t OAIL Y PILOT, wilft ""'k ll
II COmlllned 1"-H-·Pr1,1, 11 pUbt!lft .. ~
tt>e Or•noe co111 Pu1111,111ne C01T11N~. Sti>•
nit .Olllor>i ''' ...... llllld, Mlltld1y llir01f911
,rlday, !fir C•t• .Mbl, lf••PMI •e1ec11.
H ...... 11!\lloft lffCll/f'-iil" V•Uty, Lag....,, ·~• lrwlM/SlldlllltbM.11 Miii ~In C ...... M,I
San .lwtfl (1111"''""· A \lllflt ""'-"I
tdlllOll if pUl!Uil'IM lltturdtY• tnd Sund1y,,
1"-jll'l!!c!Hf pu1Hlllt""9 ~Ill I' 11 1.i Wt1I
•11 )lr"I, Cl•I• MtM, C..l!IOfn~, tl6J4,
R•O.rt N. W1•J ,, ... ..,_I ttM! ,VOllthtt'
J•ck II, Cwrl•Y
~· Pr•ld111t Ind GtMfll M•n~tr
lhotr1 tf K11wll
~ 6dltor
Tltom•• A. Murphin t
M1,,..'"9 l!d itw
Ch1rl11 H . Looi lllc.kt r4 P. Nill
"*•lf.11111 M..,..llw ldl1'1f1.
S.. Cl....,_ Offkt
t+i E.t Cimino l 11I, 92672 --M.M: )311 ........ , '""'
a...ui: »» ,......,_,., '°"""''. ~I 11'QJ ..... 91\1~
LlfWlt IMClll :tn ,., ... , """""'
, ... ,, •• ff14)·'41-4Jl1
C._..., .W. .... i41-U71
S. C ...... Al Dlfl!IW"'I
fall11t111 491-MH
QtlrrftM, 1r1a,. Of•nte CHtl '*'tMlll
'"""'"'· Ho ,..... ••IN UM1rt1""'-etiltor1el fNflW ., ~11....,,. ...,. .,.., .. ~.. '"'"""" ...... '""*" ., '"""""' ....,..,, ...... a.. ... , ... ,.. .. " c:..t• ,.,,...
c.115'f'llMI, lijlh(r~ ... n''"' a.u ,,_,..,,, flW' NII U.lt IMl'lllll11 Mtlit...,
ltltlMltlM GM INflflll'r. ,..
•.
Postal Ser\'ict official said. "\Ve only
have two words to say about this: No
comment."
Boren picked the '-'TOng horse to carry
him on the initial leg of the trip.
Homburg in hand and dressed In a
well·tailored business suit. he · mounted
the steed and promptl y "'as tossed to the
pavement in front of Philadelphia's
Independence Hall. He then turned the
mailbags ove r to a professional rider.
Memorial Mast
Will Be Dedicatecl
To La te Rep. V tt
A memorial nautical IJl8S1 will be
dedicated Thursday at Dana Harbor to
the memory o( the late James B. Utt ,
longtime congressman.
Fifth District Supervisor Ronald W.
Caspers will preside at the event
scheduled for 2:30 p.m.
"If· it had not been for Jimmy Utt and
hh, belief in the harbor . project, the
beautiful facility that exists today might
not be there," Ca!pcrs said today in
tribute to the representative who served
in Congress from 19{il to his death in
197{1.
Caspe,..aid the late Mr. Utt was in-
strumenl1f in securing federal participa-
tion in harbor design and construction of
the breakwaters.
A memorial to Mr. Utt was approved
by the Board of Supervison ln 1970.
The memorial mast adjoins the Orange
Cc.unty Harbor Patrol building. It is 60
feet high and flags of the U.S.,
California, and Orange County as weU as
maritime banners fl y from Its four anns.
A bronze plaque bearing a likeness of
Mr. Utt will be unveiled at lbe Thursday
ceremony, Caspers said.
'
The harbor can be reached by Del
Obispo Street. Free parking is o(fe'red to
those attending the ceremony at the west
end of Dana Island and shuttle buses will
c<-rry them to the memorial site, Caspers
said.
Segretti Placed
l:all to Cl1apin?
WASHTNG~N (AP) -A California
lawyer alleg ly engaged In sabotage
against the mocrats apparently made
a telephone call to President Nixon's ap-
pointment secrelary within minutes of
being informed he was being investigated
by the Washin gton Post. the newspaper
said today.
Records of credit telephone calls show,
the Post said. that a caU was plac:ed to
t'.1e home of the appointments secretary,
Dwight L. Chapin. at 4:54 p.m. on Sept.
30. less than 30 minutes after the at·
tomey, Donald H. Segretti, learned that a
reporter wanted to questton him.
All of the ca lls, the Post said, were
<:harged to the credit card or Lawrence
Young, A Crlcnd of Segrttli. Young said
f\:londay the calls could have been made
only by Segrttti.
San Jose ~ea
Feels Temblor
SAN JOSE CAP) -A mild earthquake
rolled through the Santa Clara Valley
early today, jolting residenta but causing
DO 11pparent damage, a stlsmologl!t sakl.
'fbe temblor, reg1sterln& 3.t on the
Rlcbter Selle, wa.t centered about 15
miles 110Ulhea1t of here, said Roy Miller.
o( the UC seismographic station at
Berkeley. ·
Miiier said a tremor o( thet magnitude ·
''would be felt but shouldn't cause •nr
~amge."
He uid the...guake occurred 1long the
Calaveras Faufi at 7;S4 a.m.
, -\· •
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Hos pital's
Aide Led
Loan Okay?
ll\' T0~1 BARLEY of lftl O•llY 'lltl Jt8ft
A St. Bemard1ne Hospital official today
lc.sli!ied that 250.000 shares of stock used
as collateral for a $.500.000 loan gnnted
by the san .Bernardino faclllty were
valued by their holders at $7 a share In
pre-loan negotiations.
But assistant administrator Clement
Gurkow pointed out as a prosecution
witness in the Orange County Superior
C.OOrt "Taj ?ttahal'' trial that none of the
Au.lea Mobile Homes stock handed to
th~ hospital could be sold a year later.
GW'kow testified that hospital con·
troUer Robert Machan played a major
role in negotiations that led the witness
and three Roman Catholic nuns "'ho con-
trolled the financial affairs of their
hospital to approve the loan to a group
headed by Laguna Hills stockbroker
Joseph Dulaney.
Financier Fred Riley testified before
Gurkow that he owned the Ala.lea stock
and that be loaned it to defendant James
Shipley for $90,000.
Riley, who "'as also indicted by the
Cr8nd. Jury and lat~r cleared of all
charges when be testified as a pros-
ecution "'·itness. said he received only
$60,000 for the loan of the stock used by
Shipley.
~lacban. SO. has been similarly cleared
of all charges after appearing as a pros·
eculion 'A'itness. He testified that be
received S.12.000 described by prosecutor
S1uart Grant as "kickbacks" shortly
after the loan went through in January
l~.
Grant claims that the Azalea stock,
limited to sale on the open market, was
"'orthless in terms or the hospital
recovering its funds by selling the
shares.
Only $10.000 of the loan was repaid.
And that, Grant claUns, was deducted
when the $500,000 draft was cashed and
shared out among the defendants.
On trial with Dulaney, 38, of 2631 Via
Cascadita, San Clemente are Shipley, 38,
of 16951 Lowell Circle, Daniel Hayes, 40,
of 8211 Snowbird Drive, both of Hun-
tin gton Beach and Riverside broker Wen-
dell Warren Austin, 38.
All were indicted with Mrs. itarlene
Dulaney, 32, on charges of grand theft,
rraud and conspiracy.
The first phase or the trial belore
Judge James Turner ls limited to the
alleged defrauding ol the SI. Bernardln<
tlospitaJ.
~ llulaoeY will join her husband and
Shipley for the seoood phase of the trial
which will be confined to allegations that
they defrauded a number of investors in
Oulaney's World Financial Trends syn-
dicate.
From Page 1
DANA ...
presented to C8spers and the county
aides include:
-Demands that new 7.0lling rul"' be
imposed on residential lots which would
erase the minimlllll square footage of one
unit on every 1,000 square feet, and open
up the lot to require one unit on a
minimum of 2,000 square feet.
-Altering the varianc.e policy which
allows encroachment into front and side
yard setbacb. The group wants to see
stricter adherence to setback re-
quirements to eliminate a "wa:JJ.to-wall"
character of new deve lop pitn t ,
spokesmen said.
-Elimination etf the SI partiug fee at
public lots in Dana Harbor. ·
-Swift completion of a lon1-delayed
revision of the Capistrano Bay area
master plan by the county .
-A swift resolution of the alignment of
an improved Pacific Coast Highway.
-Provision of a toll-free number lo
allow no-cost calls to county offices from
phones along the South Coast.
"We want to report definite positWns
by our group on many pressing matters
!acing the community," saJd Chuck
Cross, an officer _ ln the group.
Rummage S~e
Set at School
Members of the new Dana Hills ltla:h
School Parent-Teacher.Student Auocla-
llon are conducting a Jut-minute round-
up of donated Items for a three-day
rummage sale this weekend at the Elks
Lodge Patio In San Clemente.
Voluntl'Jfrr wlll be able to pick up any
donated ltema If donors need the servlct.
Arran11ement! for that service can be
ma.de by calling 496-2984 or 493-4268.
nie salJ will be held Saturday. Sunday
and t.1onday. The timeJ for the flrst two
da.y1 are: 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. Mooday'1 boon
will be rrom 10 a.m. to i p.m.
All proceeds from the sale will hclp fill
the treasury for the PTSA group aiding
the n"tw high school.
Thieves Take Mixer,
Halt Niguel Work
Work was halted today on a Laguna
N~el construction 1lte whl.le workers
wruted for a rtplacement for the cement
mixer trundled olf Mondey nJcht by
unknown intrude.rs.
Orange County Sherlff't offlc:rs said
thf: mixer and a wheelbarrow were taken
from a housing development at Magellan
Isle end Clbrlllo Isle In Niguel Shoret.
Subcootnctor Michael Zulpo valu.d the
stolen equipment at $440.
DAILY PILOT Sltff .......
SUPPORTS THE PRESIDENT
Adrtu 2.u Isa Gabor
From Page 1
FUND-RAISER ..
of the man from still blue waters .. .''
This campaign's version goes:
"Put your haOO in the hand of the man
who's in the White House,
"Put hour hand in the hand o. the man
whose middle name is Milhous.''
Last Rites Held
Fof'Juan Luna
Roman calbolic funeral rites were con-
duct..i Monday evening and this morning
for Juan Li.wa Sr., 72, of San Clemente.
Mr. Lim• dfed Sunday ~ In Sooth
Coast Community 11o!plt41.'
Services were conducted at Our Lady
of Fatima CatD>Uc Church followed by
burial In A8cenSlon'Cemetery, El Toro.
Mr. Luna, of 114 W. Cristobal, leaves
his widow, Refugio· three sons, Ricardo,
Octavio end Jullll 'l..Wia Jr., all ol San
Clemente; a daugbteJ', C h a r Jot t e
Norwood of Orange and 12 grandchildren.
Other survivors tnclude three brothers
and sh: sisters, all residents of Mc.
Luna's native Mexico~ \
Lesneski Mortuary was in cUrge of
arrangements.
From Pagel
PEACE ..•
conflict," Ziegler said.
Ziegler said that Nil:oo seeks to reach
an agreement that will wipe out the
possibility of a new war as well as "to
assure the people of ·South Vietnam with
the means of determining their own
future."
Kissinger was in the White House to-
day, and while ii. \vas apparent be would
be !raveling 11.gain soon to Paris, officials
said there was no set timetable for
another round of negotiations with Com-
munist diplomats.
'Does Exist'
•
Organi~ed Crime
~
In · California?
SACRAMENTO (AP) -Ally. Gen.
Evelle J. YO!.lnger today cited 8 number
of indicaUons whtch "alert us to the
pos.1.ible presence of organiied crime" in
California.
the indications "suggest that organiz·
ed crime does eil!t in CalUornla in visi-
bl e and subtle forms,'' be said.
In a statement, Younger said the in-
dications include gang slayings, a high
activity in vice, hidden ownerships, and ' costly sophlsUcated legal maneuvers by
dealers in erotica.
Younger said th~ indications were cited
in a report to the Callfomia ~glslature
written by the Organized Qime and
Criminal lntelligence Branch of the State
Department of Justice.
"A1J would be expected,'' he said, "the
more populous areas of the state
Clementean
R. Russell
Dead at 72
RusscU ~1irick Russell, a well-li:nown
retired metallurgist and later a
businessman in Sao Clemente, died late
last week in Ft. Lauderdale, Fla.
Mr. Russell left his profession as a
researcher in metallurgy to found .
Russell 's Stationers in San Clemente in '
1950.
Private rites for the 72-year-old local
civic leader were conducted this weelt in
Lesneski Mortuary in San Clemente.
Mr. Russell was a fonner member of
tlfre San Clemente Ro tary Club and was a
member of Sao Clemente Masonic· Lodge
671 at the time of his death. He also was
active with the ·Elks Lodge In Sao
Clemente. ·
He wa.s a graduate of the CSmegie
Institute of Teclmology In Pitt,sburgh.
He leaves his' widow, Mrs. Ethel
RUS$<11 of the family home al !!04 w. a.seo de Cristobal.
Othen surviving Include a son, Cheri"'
Russell, and two grendsoos, David and
Dean Russell.
The private services were cooducted
by the Rev. Samuel Bulkley of Sao
Clemente First Baptist Church.
Friends who wish may make cOn-
tribuUons to the SalvatJon Anny in ca~
of Ralph IQaasen, 601 N. El Camino
Real, or their faYWite charity.
From Pagel~
PARK ••.
endorsement of the county planning, and
road departments covering the abazi..
dorunent of the road in exchange for a
view park and new access road proposed
by the developer of lbe 100-plus unit cam·
munity.
Tb<. Dana Bluffs Development Com-
pany proposes 1" Install a small view
park overlooking the harbor, accessible
by a new public street.
The residents( armed with petlUons
bearing nearly 2,000 slgnalules, Insist
that no private development should take
place.
The latest compronilse by t h e
developer also lnclud"' the Ultlng of
private designations to roads throqgh the
new colony, the elimination of a
guardhouse at the entrance, and the low·
ering of walls proposed to surrowid the
parcel which Iles on a polnt at the up-
~st edge of the Caplstrano~Beach Pa1·
iscuies.
evidence the greatest amount of organlz.
ed crlm6 ~ctivity."
The report, given to I" ... lslators today ,
a;Ud that at least 100 gang-type ~laylnp
have occurred In Californ ia In five yean.
41Tbe £.eat pttpor; ·anceof these klU-
lngs have been the result or Chlneoe
youth gang confllcts, ouUaw motorcyc le
gang warfare, and increased competition
in nareotics traffic," the statement said.
"OnJy a few of the killings have been the
Eastern syndicate type or killing ...
On vice, Younger saiC: a study revealed
"a rapid growth rate in the opening of
massage parlors. and that 90 percent or
the parlors surveyed engaged in Jlliclt
activities."
Bookmaking, he said, is concentrated
in Southern Ca1ifornia.
"Many individuals lnvolved in such ac-
tivities are linked with associates
operating ~hroughout the nation," he
said.
An example of hidden ownerships,
Younger said is Emprise COrp. Younger
said Emprise and sil persona were in-
dicted by a federal r,aod jury in Los
Angeles this year an convicted of con·
cealing hidden organized crime lnterest.s
in a Nevada gambling casino.
The firm, he said, operates as a con-
cessionaire at race tracks and sporting
event.s, and bas holdings in bowling
alleys, vending machines and drive-in
theaters.
Costly sophistii:aled legll maneuvers,
he said, "are being most ovtrtly ex·
hibited by dealers in erotica," the stale-
ment said.,
Fromt;,qel
TRIAL ...
from the point that it could first I» seen
to reaching the intersection.
Murray said that at a speed of 70 miles
per hour JI patrol car would take 23
seconds to ~ad! the intersection from
the point It was first vlsjble; at 60 miles
per hour, 2$ seconds; and at 50 miles per
hour , 3<l seconds.
The 16-year'()ld driver or the vehicle
testified thcit be bad waited some 15 to 20
seconds at the stop sign at Aveoida
Dolores disCussing "Qhich way to tum onto
El Camino Real.
Previous teslimcny by the driver,
Dariiel Cross and a passenger In the vehi·
cle had Indicated that p'!ither of Uiem
had drunk beer prior to the accident.
That testimony also included state.mel\ts
that no other intoxicating substances
other than the beer were in the truck.
The chief, ltlso testlfied about finding a
pa~· of rescription glasses ln a com·
p ii-tbe bed of the -pickup truck.
He J he placed the glasses In the
glove compartment of ~ ll·year-old
vehicle.
The driver. Cros.., is required to wear
glasses to· d;ive· and the youth testified
that he was wearing his glasses at the
time of the accident. He said, however,
that be recOver'ed them covered with
blood arid gravel from the glove com-
partment ,,f tl)e vehicle the day followi.Qg
the accident. J
Tustin Man Killed
In Freeway Crash
Cletus T. Hord, so, of 1612 Amher:st
Road, Tustin, was killed early today
when be lost contf.ol of hiS car south-
bqund on the Santa Ana Freeway near
Red Hill Avenue.
The Orange County Coroner's office
said he died of head injuries rece..lved
when the car rolled over several times
alter leaving the freeway.
All For The Fmpily-
•
WHAT CHANGES YOUR HOUSE MORE THAN AtJY'OTHER THIN~?. • WHAT IMPROVES ACCOUSllCS DRAMATICALLY7
WHAT WARMS UP A HOUSE7 . '
WHAT IMPARTS UNIQUE BEAUTY AND COMFORT7
• •• CARPETIN G FROM ALDEN'S, THArs wHATI
• •
(IF YOUR HOUSE "STIFLES" YOU, STOP IN AN D SEE US FAST.}
•
ALDEN'S
•,
CARPETS G D~APES .
1663 Placentia Av,.
COSTA MESA
646-4838
HOURS: Mon. Thrv Thurt., 9 lo 5:30-FRI., 9 to 9 -SAT., 9:30 to I
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DAILY fllOT SC
Turn Your Volks
Into Beetlehoa1·d
LOO ANGELES (AP) -The
Volkswagen , ever lhe mark
for 8 MW glmmlck, bu DOW
been asked LO serve as a roll-
int billboard for I u r I n I
collego-age conswners.
Markellng apedaJlst Charles
E. Bird Calls the gaudily
painted Ind deciand VW 's
"Beetleboard.s."
Bird'• idea was to enlist
atudent.-drtven Volkswagens ln
the pursuJl of Ute college
market. which he says is
"mobile and very hard to
reach."
So far United Air Unes,
Maranti sound equipment,
Time, SpoN illustrated and
Spun-lo Elderton have con-
tracted with Bird to have their
advertising messages Beetled
around campus, he says.
'lbe adverti.Ser's cost ls
about ftOO per cor per month.
Bird pays students 120 per
month -calculated to pay for
monthly gas aod oil eo:ita -to
have their VW's done up In the
advertiser's chosen style. And
afterwards the car i3 re-
painted tn any c o 1 o r
designated by the lltudent.
Bi.rd says college students
are "usually negative to
advertising, but their attitude
was that companiee must be
good guys to do something like
this."
He has reckoned that one
Beetleboard for every 5,000
studentt should be effective ;
thus It Would take sis to reach
the potenllal market at UCLA.
Applicants are interviewed,
said Bird, their driving and
narcotics records checked and
their cars inspected.
"We even give each a
psychological test," he said.
"By the time we're through
we can tell pretty well where
he's going to be with his car."
He says be plans to have
Beetleboards on 100 -campuses
by next fall and be says he has
KNOW YOUR
CANDIDATE
VOTE
FOR
YOURS
TODAY!
For Air Cal
\
Personalized • Stylish • Efficient
Ord•r For YourMlf or a Friand·
May be used on envelopes as return 11ddre11
lebtls. Also very hendy as identification
lebels for merkin9 personel items such ••
b60kf! records, photot., etc. Libels stick on
9!•11 end mey be u1td for mtrkin9 home
c:enned focd items. AU l•bels eri printed
with stylish VcMJu• type on fine qutlify whitt'
9ummtd p•p1r. . ,
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OVER THE COUNTER t:O~fPLETE NEW YORK STOCK UST
NASO L •11"9' f.,. Mondoy, Octobor 30, 1972
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• Tuadq, DcUbtr ll, 1'172 DAILY PILOT f
YOtU" Moneu'• Wonh .
Cont1ihutio11s to Charities:
Plymoutlis,
Dodges Get
Recall Note
KHOW YOUR
CANDIDAT£
Make Most of Tax Benefits DETROIT ( UP I)
Chry1ler Corp. has announced
tl1e recall of 11.302 ••rly pro.
ductlon 1m Plymoulh& and
Dodges for adjustment of
broke ho6el whlcll coold ,.....
through and cauae a lolS of
stopping powtr.
VOTE
By SVLVIA PORTER
Second in a Series
1r you're typical of mlllion!
ol us, you make y o u r
c h a r i t a b I e <:0ntributions
toward the end of each year -
although you may make your
pledges earlier. And ii you're
typical. you atso try to make
your contrihutions in a way
giving you !he maximum tax
benefit.
Why not~ Even assuming
your prime motivation is
charity, what's wrong wilh
making your contribution cost
as little as possible, after tax.·
es!
A CHARITABLE con·
tribution a\v.·ays costs you less
than the ap-
parent dol·
Jar figure -
as the fol-
as the follow ·
ing chart.
prepared by
the Research
Institute o(
America,
A m e r •
ica, drama-
tizes. It Sho\vs the out-of·
pocket cost of a SIOO contribu-
tion this yl"ar ldisrei;:arding
the eamed 1nco1ne ceiling l if
you Itemize your deduclion!'
and are a married man riling
a joint return :
Tf your taxable inrome is
Hop in your
car and come
as you are I
\The Imperial
folks are
waiting tor you 1
knperialBank
Costa Mesa
Harbor Blvd. at Fair Drive
(71 4)979-1000
$6.000 to sa.ooo. a $100 con-
tribut\on costs you $81; If yoor
'.t"":'llble income is $12.000. a·
$100 contribut\on CMts you
S78 : if your taxable Income is
$16.000, a $100 contribution
costs you f7S.
If your taxable income is
$20.000, a $100 contribution
costs you $72; if your taxable
income is $24.000. a StOO oon-
tribution costs you $68; if ~r
taxable income is $28,000, a
$100 contribution co1ts you
$64 : If your taxable income is
$32,000, a $100 contribution
costs you $61.
IF YOUR taxable income is
$36\000, a $100 oontribulion
cosls you $58: if your taxable
income is $50,000, .a $100 con-
tribution costs you $SO: if your
taxable income is $70.000. a
$103 contribution coots you $45.
If your taxable income is
Tax Advice
Conference
In Anaheim
"11o"' to Play the Titx Ga·me
I Ac•'Qrrlin~ to the Rules \ and
Win" is the theme of the
Federated Chambers of Com·
merce of Orange County's tax
advisorv conference slated
Wednesday at the Anaheim
Convention Center.
PICK OF THE SEASON
I
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She'll adore you foJ it. Diamoiid cluster
rlnga In 18 kor•t yellow gold. Top, $2.250.
Bottom.
Do Something Beautiful . ....,
()NNt ""*""" 111•1•-A_,.;. lx,..nl ltlll!A-k•"' ... Maltw °'""' "9,
SLAVJC:K'S
Jewelers Since l9F
18 Fl SH ION ISl:AND
NEWPO~T CEACH -644-1180
Open'Mot1. ind Fr . 10 a.m. to •:30 p.m.
W•lfl ltCalttM "' Torftrin, Ot••· La C•"'''°'· ... t'""''· .... I ~ Dltf' '•. Lat V-. ~
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\110.000, a $100 C()ntribution
costs you $38; If your taxable
income 11 $130,000, a $100 con-
tribution costs you $.16: if your
taxable lncome is $1~.000. a
$100 contribution <.'OSts you $34.
FINANCE
I ntelcorp' s
Sales No'W
Out of Black
In New Yon Friday, Volvo
of America Corp. said It b
recalling about 40,000 cars
equipped with fuel lnjec\IOO
engines to correc\ malfunc-
tloru ln the throtUe cable.
A Chrysler apokesman said
aboot !lO of tl1e P\ymouth
Satellites. Dodge Coronets and
Dodge Chorg<n being recalled
oould have !root brW 1-s
rubbing agaimt the ca r
~ames because of a brake
FOi
KENNY
KANGAROO
If you are a single person.
the net after-tax cost to you is
less : at a $16.000 iocome. for
instance. a $100 rontrlbution
rosts you $69, no1 $75. If
you 're a head of household.
the net after-tax cost is also
less lhan the net for a married
man : at the $16.000 level, the
net after-tax co.5t of the SIOO
contribution is $72, not. $7S. Intelcom Industries of Senta house mounting bracket
NOW. HEED these ways to Ana reported net ea min.is of misaligrment.
increase your tax 58.vings and $17.80l. or 2 cents per share,r---..;iiiiii!iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii-11
thereby reduce your after-tax on revenues of $987 .022 for the
cost of a contribution even fiscal six months ended Sept.
more : 30.
-Estimate whether you It was the first profitable
will be in a higher tax bracket period for 1he co1npany , which
in '72 or '73. for you will save was organized in late 1969.
more taxes if you make your For the comparable perlod
contribution in the year in last year the~ was a k>ss of
\vhich you expect to be in the $35,107, or 7 cents per share,
higher bracket, But if your on re'/enues.of $716,320.
hlgher bracket year is '73, ,-----'------1
measure against the larger
tax saving next year ~ fact
lhat a 1972 contribution will
give you an immediate
(though smaller ) tax benefit
by cuttirtg ·your Apr. 15. 1973.
payments. You won't have to
wait until Apr. 15. 1974. to get
the larger tax sal'ings from
your '73 contribution.
To illustrate, say you are a
married man with a 1972 tax·
able income of $20,000 and you
expect a boost to $32.000 in
1973. You are considering a
$SOO charitable contribution.
LOSE WEIGHT
THIS WEEK
Od1inex can help you become th1 trf111
slim peraon you want to be. Octrin11 ti
a liny table! and easily sw1Uowed. Con·
tains no dan1ttous dru1s. tto st1rvini.
Ne> speciJI extttise. Gel 1ld ol excess
lat and Jive lon11f. Odrlnex h11 betn
used successfully by thousands 111 ovtr
the coontry for l.C ye11s. Odrlnex P11n
costs $3.25 ind th1 lar1e economy size
$5.25. You must lose u1ly lat or your
mC111eywiU be refunded byye1urd1u st.
Ne> questions asked. Accept
stitu!es. Sold with this 1u111nt11 by:
EFFICIENT
PERSONALIZED
SERVICE
and
QUALITY
MERCHANDISE
COAST
SUPER MARKET
W• .d•liv•r.
Fin• Groc•ries,
Liquor, Fresh•st
of Produce end
Mannings Buf.
673-3510
The voling ~ has a.gain
been lowered to give others
the right to vote. Girls and
boys attending any school in
the Newport-Mesa area can
win a trip to Sacramento
via A1r callfomia. Ballots
available in W~tcliff Plaza
abope at 17~ Irvine Ave--
nue. Deposit one only In the
ballot box at Jett'• Petting
Zoo, -appearing Oct 31 thru
Nov. 5.
For Sports·
The DAILY PILOT is the
newspaper for sports along
the Orange Coast. .. complete
statistics on local home and
away games, staff coverage,
more exclusive storiea on
Orange Coast sports than any
other I o c a 11 y distributed
newspaper.
STANDARD CARS
2 •44 ~" ....... "" ....... ~ Plw $2.2' OI $2.W fed.
Ea. Ta1. aadl, daCM!ldlnt tor ' Oft all•.
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BIG CARS
2.!46 ........... ~ ....... I ""' , .. , la. Tu tMll. . . I
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Charge It IEl•llat General Tire
""'" .,.,., ........ ~· ~ .... " -""' ~ "M• .. , ...... ''"" ., .. -.. -~ .. -· .. -· ,,_._ ............ ,..., .......... -~,~ ·I
RADIAL TIRES ... For Import Cars SI EB. RAOIALS ... For U.S. Cars
General SPRINT·JET Gll;leral Callbrat.cf
e 2 Rr,ort Coro l'la61 .. 8octy PllM
• 4-Ply R*YO" Cord e.11 DUAt.-ltlW& MDIM.
-The s4k-driver tire company.
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Ifs pure girl.~ fl"wing
eape collar, the wide
palazzo pant.
FOi' the all girl girl. Sollty !lowing cape collar
cwersensationa1 palazzos or on a lull length
dress. Smashing at·home or out-on·the-
1own. Disses alzes e fo 1-4.
A Two-piece. top and palaz.zo pant Brigt1t.
bold prints 1n acetate/nylon.
rown, wine or black.
15. 9 each
11"""4 IUHS )IOOl C&• .,,~, <t. 1"hl(l "-'"' _,. ~.,., .. WIOllMllHUS '1•/lll , •·olo •I. LUIWllt C1 .... ~• ,...,,,. • ...,.<lll"-
11'1Hl'4 1 ., . .,I' WIN '.\ti M11<"~1'1("1'1•'.,"'
SAllllUM '""''°"'k~••>t IU!IU 11WltrPtlo" .oil ....
Ol'afl W••ktl• '•130 t• •130 S ... ntl• I 10 I• 7,
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1......,, Ocl-31, 1972 . .. esday's Cloging Pri~omplete New York Stock Exchange List
•
Stocks G~ Up 9
' On w·a11 Street
' NEW ,YORK (AP)-Prices were geoerally high-
er In the t!IO<k market Tuesday a! a broad range of
Issues pos;ted steady gain s. Turnover was moderate.
The pow .Jones average of 30 industrials was
up 9.10 !!Dinis !or' the day.
Galll'.ing Issues had a steady lead of 2 to 1 over
losers on the New ,York Stock Exchange.
"Tbe news from Vietnam Is getUng more con-
..crete." said Alan R. Shaw of Harris, Upham & Co.
"The IJ\Uket wants to stage a'rally,. but not a baaly
one ~ on rumors. The feeling is that a peace
oetUcml!nt Is getting closer and Investors are getting
some oonfidence."
/
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DAICY PILOT lJ.
TAKE THE
NEWS QUIZ
-
JI DAJLV PILOT Tutsdal, October ll, 1972
•
Freneh111e n Fizzle Official
Named
She's Only One of Kiml-
• Sex Survey Damages Reputations Newport Beach r e 1 I d e n t
Phillp B. RobiMM hu betn
named governor of t b e
California -Nevada • Hawaii
District ol the Kiwanis Club.
Prof essinnal Fi.sherwoman
PARIS (AP) -A new
surveJ on 1tx life ln France,
described as a Galllc Kliuey
J'\1)0r1, dam.aget the repuLa·
UOn of Frendunen as expert
lovers and shows similarities
between the French se.x scene
of the IMO. and that of the
United Slate& ln the 1930s and
'40s.
"Whether the tourlst offices
like it or not. the reputaUon of
the Frenchman as a great
lover and a dispenser of
orgasms takes some pretty
bard knocks," says Dr. Pierre
Simon, in describing the
IUl"Tef Of which he is the chief
editor.
It Is a 923-page volume call-
ed "Report of the Sexual
Behavior of .the French." A
canvas covered 2,625 persons
over a three-month period in
19'10 and two years ~·ere
taken to compile the results.
TAKEN AS a whol e, only a
thin majority of the sample, 56
percent. was satisfied with its
sexual experience.
Then come the indications
that Frenchmen are less ef-
fective sexually th.an they
have convinced others to
believe -and some clear
signs that they are aware
something may be wrong.
1be most striking example
is that Tl percent of the men
said they believed their wives
sometimes had sexual rela-.
tions with them "just to please
me, without really wanting
to.''
And while $8 percent of the
Frenchmen in the sample
were asserting they "always,
or almost always," bring their
partners to an orgasm, only 55
percent of their women were
agreeing with them.
mE NO-CONFIDENCE vote
widened further in another
area. Asked lf they and their
partners more often U1:0n not
achieved a climax
simultaneously, 5i6 percent of
the men replied ''Yes," but
only 40 perttnt of the women
replied this was tn1e.
Underlying much of the
f<llOrl was the r~ that
(Jnderl!Jing r e ·
port ls feeling t hat
F renc h sex b
... qr e workaday
than 00°la0 la.
that certain aspects surprised
him, nonetheless.
"I was . . . very surprised
to learn that 78 percent of the
women surveyed ~st.ated that
they never had sexual rela-
tion! during their marriage
with a""1)ne but their husba nd.
I was also astonlshed by the
small amount of homosexual
experience (sh men and two
women out ol a group of 100).
But they were the only sur-
prises -I believe in my re-
port."
Robinson, 22Q Aral~ St.,
~eived bis certitlcate ot
election from the preBldent of
Kiwanis International during
the recent President'!! Ban-
quet in Chicago.
The banquet was the final
event of a series of meetings durin~ wh.ich newly elected
governors and d i s t r l c t
secn>taries are trained.
Robinson is a member of the
Kiwanis Club in Cypress.
SAN PEDRO (AP) -Cindi
Manholl, a 21-year<>ld bloode,
Is a pro!wlonal !lsherwoman
on the Donna K, a ft9hlna boel
that works the Southern
Callforia coaata1 waten.
"I'm a skiff-man, ''Clndl
says. "Also, I'm the only net--
man on the Donna K."
You can find her oo San
Pedro's llshennj111'• wharf,
her bare feet enilNined In flsh
nets, her hands stitching boles
tom by sharks.
SHE'S THE ONLY woman
among San Pedro's hlllldreds
of fishermen, a five -year
veteran wbo's as hearty as the
toughest old salt.
She has to 1>e. >,, a skiff.
man, she battles choppy
waler.I In a small boal at night
to search out schools of fish.
"1be first woman fisherman
I've ever beard of," said
Lamprecht, her boss. "And
I've been fishing since 1946.
"Oh, there are a few
fishermen's wives who help
French sex is more wOrkaday out ln a husband-wife team,
than oo-la-la: most couples but moatly the wives just steer
make Jove in the dark, Satur-the boat. Cindi is the first
day night is still the big night crewwoman of this type boat
for sex. and the condom still is · I've ever seen.
the most widely used con-traceptive device. "SHE CAN DO any job a
A number of parallels were man can do," added Lam-
found between the Simon precht.
report and the Kinsey report She got her start selling bait
on American sexual behavior on a bait receiver ancbored in
in the 1930s and '40s. The the harbor off Santa Barbara.
similarities are ironic beca11Se '-----~ ® Fishennen she met taught her
the F'rench often have ridicul-''Peop'-wh o don't giw me a nyt hing gettur ned 1·010 a sword-fishing, gill-netting, and
11 g?'lbbed her u a net man
beca1111e sb&'a the heot pera0n I've ever aeen with a needle,"
Lamprecllt said.
The adventure Is tempered
\by hard WOlt llloogh.
"WE A VEllAGE about ll jioun.a day," Cindi said.
"The da)'I • liecome even
looget' when the crew runs Jn. I<> obslades ~ like net
damage or waltlng In line to
unload. We fish at nlghl IOlld
\¥0 aloep ID the dlly. We uaually
leave here around midnight
and get bock by noon. In Ille
winter It'• cold and the
flsbermen lace par 11 a I
unemployment. You'Ve got to
love llshing to do ti.:'.
Now, she's saY!ng I o r
another boa~ quite coovinetd
she'll be In the flshing
business for years to come.
"Matrled? N~ not~·· she
says, "not for a while,
anymw. I'm saving to buy a
boat, a commercial fisl)ing
boat."
IS IT TRUE THAT OLD INSURANCE POLICIES MAY
ACTUALLY STILL HAVE VALUE EVEN THOUGH
THEIR PREMIUMS HAVE NOT BEEN PAID f'OR
MANY YEA'RS 1
by EUGENE 0 . B~RGERON
ft& k "'f ,_.ly ,.. ... Life •:::r;:ldea ...W ...,.. ... +"•r:M., ~!'I!,.
•otl-1 tfley -~ -.......... er••1•fr .• fw tllW nraa•all 11 It: •t• ...... Wllft ,
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~ ..... 11 .............................. ,.....-....... ...... .....
C1n , .... , .. , I •-t•-HwelleWbew ... ....., ......... ltfwyM,
Wt ••ps11-la..•••"'-wlAMwww.tla~....... •
Balt%•Bergeron ·Funeral B.,.ae
COSTA MBA. 2 LOCATIONS CORONA 1111 !olAlt 646-24~ · 673-MIO Irving
T eaching
Inmates
ed the United States as a traJ15. At one time, she owned FROG,_.. he
puritanical society. in which'.!---------------------...C.:::.r..:o::.wn::.:boa=t::.. ____ _..:~
sex has none of the allure or
expertise attributed to it in
NEW YORK (AP) -Author
Clifford Irvin!(, v.·hose phonv
book about billionaire Howard
Hu'hes led him to prison, is
teaching fellow inmates a
course in creative writing.
Irving, serving a 21h-year
sentence at the minimum
security federal prison at Al-
lenwood, Pa., for conspiring to
defraud the McGraw Hill
publishing finn of $750,000,
told of his prison activities in
an affidavit filed in U.S.
District Court here.
HE SOUGHT sentence
reduction on the basis of his
need lo be with his children
should hi..s wife Edith have to
go to prison in Switzerland for
her role in the fraud. He also
referred to his help to other
· inmates.
Franci!.
The Simon report showed.
fOT example, that 55 percent of
Frenchwomen had sexual in-
tercourse before mariage, as
compared with fiO pe~t in
the United States in 1940.
About 30 percent of Fren-
chmen admitted to cheating
on their wives in 1970, while
the American figure before
World War lJ was from 'll to
'n percent.
ONE POSSIBLE conclusion
drawn from the similarities in
that the essential changes in
attitudes toward sex took
place in the period following
World War I, and that the ,so.
called sexual revolution of the
1960s was over-rated and
vastly less significant
historically.
Simon, who called Dr. Alfred
Kinsey .. the father of us all,"
said he was convinced of th.e accura~ of h.is survey, but
14tti Season
•
NEWPORT • HARBOR
KIWANIS FOUNDATION
TRAVEL AND ADVENTURE
SERIES
Friday, November 3, 1971
8:00 p.m.
ORANGE COAST COLLEGE AUDITORIUM
\ 2701 FAIRVIEW ROA D, COSTA MESA
Bill Stockdale
"ISRAEL"
OW -"" _., .. .., '9 Ii.rift, • lallll rk-Ill allllkll Ill•"""· ,....,IMfll 111
nt'TtM -tt. .... ftlll II llf'9MfM lw Ille fihlN. alO Sloa•11t llfiftw1 in
I llKIHllolf 1twy II M IN:...., _,.. -rnllll wilt! tllt •llltlty llf "'"'"' ,.....,.. ,,,_ It-• nllM Hiii Cn!Mller'1 cfttlel M ll'lllhno Clllel 11111
AIM9ll illwl ll'W' rtlMi ... II ii. ...... taMI .....,_ Tel AYI¥ , • , J-"1 • • ,
H1111 • • • c-. Ti.. a11111u1 lnlll tf o.n .• _........., Ille city tf
Al<nMfll. 111111 tll """* M•tlllltt. A c•l'1ltll"W 1Mf 1111 N11arl'lll ••• ""
...... Hr-'-... IMlllt lie C'""1:ft II tlll N1t1Ylty. nto D9H S.1 •
.._. 9"t 911 •rlll ....... JefMll lll•lll" ••• ~ tf OllllM ••. ti~
1111 M "'9 .. tf 0.11 .... Ki.t ~ 1"1111,... L'" 11'11 1M111n1 klMll!h
11111 1111 _.... 8CC1ftlfllell-tl ef 1111 ,_., H .,...,... TM N...,, o.sm,
ktY "' llf'Nf't ,...,..., D9ll"t 1111tt ll'tlt lllht.Mlllf lllnt .. am Sttckd.llt
"'""' ............ tll Liii ............. .
laAtolil TKk.llTI
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lo.I fw "t Mir ~•I . ~
••• •• ... llUI f,,..n ......._ .. ..., .... , ...... 1:1.NJ
............ I JM 11..._.: lll"'ltt»tt 11..., ........ II.IOI
MAIOM TJCKITI AV,llilU.al.• AT1 ti.,., ...... It Clilll, ltl lffl, ....... ,, INC-, f1MI ..... tlQ
Al l'Wlll Har\lwel'f, 2* W. lalbclli llYll,. HtwllOl't INCh Hllil'JIOrT Htl,.., CNtmll9r of (°""""«· or .. ~lt'f' """'*"' ., !tit NIWPOl'I Htrtior 'ti*"'" ciw.
, .... ~, 1 I
•
..
llJI;I,
•
••• ABOUT DRUG ABUSE?
Then join Bill Wenke In your concern. He is opposed
to ~he legalization ~f IT!arijuana. He knows the fight
against drug abu se 1s one of youth education and suP.
port of law enforcement a~ncies. •
. ·Bill Wenk~ cares enough, as he tells Scott, one of
his three children, that his fight aga inst drugs is not merely one ·of words.
Bill We~ke is ii> director of "Teen Challenge," a
group dedicated to the cure and rehabilitation of hard·
core ~rug addicts. He has seen the need for more
effective Cb'!nty programs. Bill Wenke vowed to carry ·
his fight against drµgs to the post of FIRST DISTRICT SUPERVISOR.
• • • ABOUT INTEGRlm
Then you and Bill Wenke share a common bond.
' •
• .. •
J
? •
OARES !0
He knows there dan;be no comprom ise. lntegr~ must
be restored to tHe ~ff ice of FIRST DJ STRICT ·SUPER·
VISOR. There must be an end to the· presiure·ta'ctks
from political ~who now pull the strings. •.
• • • 1
••• ABOUT A VO.IC~ IN GOVE'.RNMENn
How could it be othltwise, living as you do, in Orance
County's "forgotten diStrict?" Wh ere are the needed
parks and recreational area·s? Why must our real £•Of>'
erty taxes keep going up when our income doesn t?
You know. Bill Wenke knows. It's .because th!' on.
term incumbent has tum~ his attention to the newer,
richer, south em s.ection s oflheCoun\Y. J3iil Wenke rives.·
works, Is raising a fa mily and owns property in the First
District. He knows what to.dO and he wMI do it. )l's the
Wenke way •
•
•
..
•
•
17
•
7
•
/•
' .
Lag1111a Bea~h
EDITION
VOL 65, NO. 305, 3 SECTIONS, 38 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA TUESDAY, OCTOBER 31, 1972 TEN CENTS
"' Claims of Excessive Police Car Speed Denied
7
By JACK CHAPPEIL
Of ... Deltr .... '""
Expert testimony rebutting the pros-
teutian's allegaliom of excessive police
car speed, and evidence of nuuijuana and
open beer cans have come forth in the
misdemeanor manslaughter trial of San
Clemente policeman Gary Adams.
Adanu' trial in the Laguna Niguel
1.luntclpal Court of Judge ff. Warren
Knight stems from 'I fatal crash over the
• Memorial Day weekend.
•
Adams' patrol vehicle collided with a
pickup truck heavy with camping equip-
ment and four occupants, one of whom,
Jeffery Brit~ I!, of 1-Beach, died.
Britt and a companion were riding Jn
th~ bed of tbe pickup truck along with at
ttast three cases of beer, sleeping bag5
and other camping items for a San
Onofre outing.
Thomas R. Bates. an a c c id e n t
reconstruction engineer with a finn hired
by Adams' attorney Gerald Williams
estimated the Police car minimum speed
could have been 45 miles per hour before
bmking began.
Previous testimony by an Anaheim
Police Department traffic investigator,
officer George Platloot, pegged the
minimum speed of the vehicle at m miles
per hour. Posted speed is 30 miles per
hour. :
Bates engaged in a lengthy description
and explanation on the types of skids and
relative braking efficiency.
He further estimated Uiat a nine to 11
r .• ile per hour difference between the two
vehicles' speed! would be the minimum
required to throw a body from the back
or the pickup truck.
Evidence of marijuana and open beer
cans was rowid during an inventory of
personal articles in the pickup, Chief
Clifford Murray and narcotics detective
MJchael Relscbl testified Monday.
Reischl, who testified first while the
chief of police waited outside the
a1n oman's
•
Communists ·
.Retreat on
Cease-fire
By United Pre11 InteruUonal
The Communists' Oct. 31 deadline for
signing a Vietnam cease-fire passed to--
"4Y with no firm tndi.cation when it will
be signed.
n,e White House said President Nixon
is seeking 1 luting peace and will not be
stampeded by Hanoi's deadline of today.
White House officials said earlier it
was Improbable the ceaae-fire -.Id be
signed before the Nov. ? eleclioDs
llthCiugb both the Haoot and Viet Coog .
delegatlona to tbe r.rts talb called oo
the United States to &ign "as aoon as
possible."
This was a retreat from lhelr previous
"sign today" statements.
Presidential' adviser Henry A. Kiss·
Inger said Thursday there were a
nwnber of points that should be cleared
up in one more negotiating session.
A clue to OOe of the major snags came
today from Pham Dang Lam, chief
SaJgon negotiator in Paris who was in
Tokyo to brief Japanese officials on
Salgon's position.
Lam told Ja~ Vice Premier
Takeo Miki that Saigon wants assurances
an ~t will mean tbe withdrawal
of North Vietnamese troops from South
Vietnam.
r He said Salgoo wanted "clarification"
oo the future of Chese troops and on tbe
Jllree-part "National council of recon·
ciliaUoo" which Saigon fears means a
coalition government.
-While House spokesman Ronald L.
Ziegler took note of the Communist
deadline and said, "'!be only deadline
we're operating under is the one that will
bring about the right kind of an agree-
ment.
.. "1be President has been v e r y
meticulous In making clear" that he will
not agree to the slgii{ng of a peace pact
mitil the remaining out.standing issues are clarified, Ziegler said.
,. "It Ls the President's firm intention to
have 1 settlement which will offer the
tie.st hope for lasUng peace and a peace
that does not leave the seed of a future
dxlflict," Ziegler said.
.. Ziegler said tbat Ni.J:oo seeks to reach
an agreement that will wipe out the
pusibllity of a new war as well as "to
assure the people of Soulh Vietnam wilh
the means of determining their own
fUture.''
Coast
Weatller
'lbose cold northeasterly winds
llhoold b e g I n to diminish by
Wednelday, iccordlng to the
weather service. Highs at the
beacbel are expected to reach 85
rising to 75 Inland. Lowo tonight,
a chilly 4UO.
INSIDE TODA. Y
A nelD aurwv on it:: Ji/e in
France, limllar to tlu! old Kln-
•fll RIJ>Of't, damage• iM rrputa-
Uon of 1Trnchmen GI t::prrt
lootn. Sre 1tory, Page 12.
• -.
DAILY "ILOT ~ W R;ca.nl Ktltllw
Arch Beach
Plan Near ·
Completion
The controversial Arch Beach Heights
Assessment District (69-1) Will move into
a !inal phase Wednesday night. more
than three years after it was initiated,
when the Laguna Beach City Council
::..-~'"a<Jlipts a bulky packet or resolutions
designed to get construction rolling in
Fel>rnary.
The $833,000 project will provide sewer
mains and laterals to every building site
in-the developed area west of Qro Street,
bounded roughly by Summit Drive and
Norla, Baja and Alisos Streets. It also
provides for reauiacing of streets
following the ,.,,.... Installations.
The area now is two months into the
second 1ear of a building moratorium,
Imposed to halt development when coun-
ty health orficlals ruled out further septic
tank use.
It ls estimated construction will take
six to nine months and cost to property
owners will average $1,:Jro pe.· lot.
Ready for Halloween ·
The schedule propased :or approval by
the council calls for presentation of the
engineer's report, plans, specifications
and maps Wednesday night, followed Lt
authorization of a bid call and setting of
With a pumpkin nearly as big as she is, 3-year-old Traci Valoff of
Huntington Beach gets ready for some king·size spooking tonight.
The giant jack-o-lantern was carved from a pumpkin weighing 115
pounds.
(See HEIGHTS, Pege ZI
Revived Coastal
Committee Plans
Laguna Meeting Loan Witness Says Stock
Wouldn't Sell Year Later The reactivated Coaslal Liaison Com-
mittee, charged ·with formulating goals
for new development along the ocean·
front blufrs between Laguna Avenue and
Sleepy Hollow will m e e t at 3 p.m.
Wednesday at Laguna Beach City Hall. By TOM BARLEY
Of tlM C.llr "1'-' , ....
A St. Bernsrdine Hospital official today
testified that 250,000 shares of stock u~
as collateral for a $500,000 loan granted
by the San Bernardino facility were
valued by their holders at f7 a share in
pre-loan negotiations.
But as,,istant administrator Clement
Gurkow pointed out as a pfP$CCUUon
witness in the Orange County Superior
Court .. Taj Mahal" trial that oooe of the
Azalea Mobile Homes stock banded to
th~ hospital could be sold a year later.
Gurkow testified that• hospital con-
troller ,Robert Machan played a major
role in negoUations that led tR witness
and three Roman Catholic nuns who con-
trolled the financial affairs of their
hospital to approve the loan to a group
beaded by Laguna Hills stockbroker
Joseph Dulaney.
Financier Fred Riley testified before
Gurkow that be owned the Azalea stock
and that he loaned it to derendant James
Shipley for $90,00CI.
Riley, who was alto Indicted by the
Grand Jury and law cleared of all
charges when he testified as a pros-
ecution witness, said he received only
'80,000 for the loan of the stock U5ed by
Shipley.
Machan, 50, has t>Mn similarly cleared
of all charges after appearing as 1 pros-
ecution witness. He testUied that he
received '32,000 d<ICtibed by pro8eCUtor
Stuart Grant as '~t:lckbackl" 1hortly
after the loan went through In Jinu«ry
1969.
Grant claims thal the Azalea otoclt,
llmlted to sale on the open market, was
worthless In terms of the ho!pltal
recovering Its fW1ds by ,.Jllng the
sham.
Only '10,000 of the loan was r<peid.
•
A.nd that, Grant claims, was deducted
when the $SOO;OOO draft was cashed and
shared out among the defendants.
On trial with Dulaney, 381 of ·2631 Via
Cascadita, San Clemente·are Shipley, 38,
of 16951 bowen Circle:Daniel "Hayes:; 40,
of 8211 Snowbird Drive, both of Hun-
tington Beach and Riverside broker Wen-
deU Warren Austin, 38.
All were indicted, with Mn. Marlene
l>Jlaney, 32, on charges of grand tbe£t,
fraud and conspirlji)'.
. '!be rint pbase .... r the trill before
Judge James · Turner is limited to the
alleged derrauding of the St. Bernardine
Hospital.
Mrs. Dulaney will join her husband and
Shipley for the second phase of the trial
which will be confined to allegations that
they defrauded a number of Investors in
Dulaney's World Financial Trends syn-
dicate. ·
Burt"s
The committee b composed of city of-
ficials and citizens. Its first report sug·
gested a "Ports-Of.call" type of develo~
ment In the bluffs area.
Upland lndll!trles, a major property
holder in the oce8.nfrvnt area involved,
has said It would not be economically
feasible to develop the properties in that
way. Upland bas in the past presented
plaM1or development as a condominium
or resort hotel.
Arter hearing comments by property
owners anc. citizens at the last city coun-
cil meeting the council decided to
reinstate· the Coastal IJaiason Committee
to pick up more citizen Ideas.
Committee members include two coun-
cilmen, Roy Holm and Eeter Ostrander;
two planning commlsaloners, Larry
Campbell, and Michael May; and two
citizens ttpresentatives, Ca th e r I n e
MacQuarr1e and Harry Jeffrey.
Gone
Pinup Taken From W asliroom
MIAMI (AP) -A nude ·photograph of act.er Burt Reynolds one<! gra<ed
the walls or the women's lounge of a 90cla.Dy eDte clu.b near Miami, but not for
long. .
"It probably turned ....,..., oo," said club membenhlp dire<IO• Pat·OJb.
son.
She r<porltd Monday that an unknown powder room patron stole the
framed photo, uken from Jhe cenlet'!old paps of Cosmopolllan m.ogaztne.
MiSI Qiboon said Jhe photograph of Reynold! In the bull was pot In place
about four w..U ago at Jhe Munlty Club at Sailboat Bay In suburban Coconut
Orove.
• She said a ""'°"d copy or I photo ii being encased In a bullet·P"'°' glaBI
and Alee! frame and wlll be nnly boll<d to the will In the lounge.• .
courtroom, said that while he was hr
ventorying the property at the impound
yard the day foUowing the crash be came
a~ross the contraband material.
'lbe detective said be found about 20
rolled marijuana cigarettes and a plastic
bag containing marijuana. He said that
two or three beer cans with the pull tabs
removed were also found in the truck.
Reischl made a carefully worded
rebuttal to prosecutor Don Clarence's
charge that the search wu illegal.
He said the illicit material was hi~
pe::.:C: -,... during 1 rootlne accounting
or propel't) """"' the department
normally undertakes following a serious
accident.
Clarence asked why a narcotics om.cer
was called into the maUer and the mod-
haired, mustachioed detective replied
that it was his scheduled duty day and be
(See TRIAL, Page !)
oun
OAU.'t .. lLOT St.tf ..._..
SUPPORTS THE PRESIDENT
Actress Isa Z11 G1bor
Nixon's Backers
Celebrate 'Wi1i'
In Capistrano
By JOHN VALTERZA
Of 1tM O.llY ...... SI.rt
Hundreds or lop Orange County su~
porters of Richard Nixon gathered in San
Juan Capistrano Monday to quickly
review the virtue! of their candidate,
then "celebrate" the President's victory
next week.
Nonetheless, former U.S. Treasurer
(now CaUfomia •ea.surer) Ivy Bak.er
Priest urged the faithful not to be lulled
Into complacency but Instead to lnsure
that all supporters of Nixon's re-electlon
actually go to the polls to cast their vote.
"That Is the be.1t wa; for us to achieve
·that land.slide we are waitlng for ," she
said. L. Billed as a lund ralsef'W. the El Adobe
Restaurant In the Mission communlly,
the event also wu marked by plaudits
for pr'Omlnent Orange Coa5t Republican
Je~der Victor C. Andrew1 or Emerald
Biy, heralded as the key man ln the
county's effort to re-elect the President.
Andrews recelved a decorated platter
for h!,s efforu la the campaign.
Soon afterward.!, political issues gave
way lO comedy.
Comic Morey Amsterdam took to the
dais to run throug.h a aeries of Poli&h and
?taUin · jokta, then turned an acid wit
:.~~~~~~'."' i-. 11a1e or
''Dul before t go an)' further ,"
Amsterdam ukt, J. h a v ~ to uy ooe
thing:
"McGovt"\'.I I schmuck!"
"And •peeklng about Sou'.h Dakou, the
otliy good Jhlng they got is the mounuln
with the: four facu on It.
•1eui noW they're all looting down at
McGovem ind •.. (Am!terdam give
(See FUNl).IWSJIR, !'age li
•
Victim, 23,
Resident
Of Stanton
A redhead whose strangled body was
w.·apped in old carpeting and. dumped
within site of the posh Yorba Llnd1 ColJD.
try Club has been Identified as Marla
Jean Hires, 23, of Stanton.
"And that's about all we know,'' sher--
iff's detective Willie Stansbury said today.
"Leads are bard to come by and the
character of the victim doesn't &tve us
any clues."
Stansbury said Mrs. Hires was 1
claims adjustor for Soutbem Califorall
Edison Company in Rosemead. "Sbe wu
very highly regarded. by everyone who
knew her and her prellelt<e In that loca·
tioo is a mystery to us, 11 Stansbury uid.
Investigatars are today working on the
theory that Mrs. Hires was killed 1n some
other location, wrapped in old draperies
and ragged carpeting and dumped near
the collDtry club.
She was reported missing by her.
parents with whom she lived late Sunday.
An all out search for the missing
Fullerton JIUlior Col lege graduate pro-
duced her car with lhe keys ID the ii·
nition a short distance from her home,
but no clue as to her fate until early
Monday.
Her body was discovered by 1
maintenance man who spotted 1 band
protruding from what be at flrst thought
~as an old bundle of rags.
Toxicological tests are being carried
out today to pinpont the cause of death..
But sheriff's investigators said they were
satisfied that Mrs. Hires was strangled
by her assailant. •
It is oot yet known If Mn. Hires WN
the victim of a sexual assault.
Boys Lectured
After Starting
Blaze in "Laguna
Two small Laguna Beach boys, 1ged 5
and 6 paid 1 visit to the city police
department Mondly !or 1 personal chat
wilh ofli<en r<gardiog the hazanls of
playing with matches.
The youngsters received their personal
lecture 1fter firemen reported their
match experiments apparently started a
blaze that blackened a quarter ltCt'e or
bru&h 1bove Crestview Drive and licked
to within 40 feet of one adjacent home.
Tw'o f1re engines were at the scene for
an hour while a third unit responded to
reports of another fire: in the Arch Beach
Heights area. This turned out to be mo!'!!
than smoke blowing from the Cre.stvtei'
blaze.
Firemen noted that the flre, whlch
broke out shortly before 3 p.m., could
have bee:~uch more serious lf strong early · g winds hod not died down
by that . The youngsten Wert turned
ov~r to thel rents after t.hclr chat with
the polk:e .
Thieves Take Mixer,
llalt Niguel Work
Work was halted today on 1 Lqunti
Niguel conAtructi-On Ille wblle ~ wilted for a rep!actment for the ~
ml .. r trundled off Monday nl;hl by
unknown intruders.
Orange County Sheriff'• ofrc:n said
the mlxer and a wheelbarrow wt.re tahn
from a boualng development al Ml&ellan
Isle and Cabrtilo Ille In Nll\ld si-.
Subcontractor Mlchael .Ztllpo valued ._ ·
1tolen equipment 11 $440.
"
•
"2 DAIL 'I PILOT LI r-.,, -ll, nn
It's A Biggie
"Is this the magic pumpkin?" asks 2·year·old Jason Payne of Laguna
Beach son of ltobe11 and Teresa Payne. rle and other youngsters
\vill bC on the n1ove tonight to try their hand at "Trick or Treat." The
pu1npki11 . \vhich wei ghs 102 pounds, is part of the decor at the Cot·
tage J?estaurant.
$2,000 Fee for Militant
Attacked by Legislator
An allegation by state Senator James
E. \Vhetmore fR·Fullertonl that tax
funds are being spent on an appearance
by Angela Davis at Cal State Fullerton
was refuted today by uni versity oUicials.
A campus spokesman indicated the
Associa ted Students will pay Miss Davis'
$2,000 fee, a $50 rental fee for the gym-
nasium and all costs for main tenan<:i!,
security. sound amplification and rental
chairs for the expected audience of 3,500.
Senator Whetmore, in a news release
calling attention to the Nov. 17 lecturt,
said he is "appalled."
"My office has been nooded with
telephone calls {from 35 to 50, Whetmore
estimates) from irate constituents who
feel that in allowing someone like htiss
Davis to speak to the students on cam-
pus, the school is naunting in the face of
the taxpayers the fact that it is possible
to deliberately use tax monies in a way
offensive to a majority of taxpayers,"
Whetmore said.
Miss Davis will spuk at 8 p.m. NQV. 17
as part of a lecture serle! whic'h include!
a January appearance by U.S. Senator
John Tower (R·TeJ:as).
Fac ulty and students launched the lec-
ture series this year in response to
budget cuts which E!liminated ad-
ministrative sources of money for cam·
pus speakers. a spokesman explained.
Cal State President L. Donald Shields,
earlier this year, said he wa s
"distressed" that students and facu1ty
had planned the series without con-
sulting administrators. llowever. since
Hospital Hosting
Talk on Diabetes
The th ird in a series or public
discu!lsions on diabetes mellitus will be
presented at 7:30 p.m. Wednesday in the
auditorium of South Coast Community
llospital.
The puhlic service pro g r a m ,
coordinated by Dr. Peter Bramwell.
features explanations by a physician of
the nature. control and management of
the disease. which affects ap estimated
fi ve percent of the population.
The discussion!! are planned to assist
both the diabetic pa tient and family
members. The program will be presented
again Nov. IS.
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a contract with Miss Davis had been
signed, Shields did not interfere with the
scheduled program.
An agreement to provide balance on
subsequent programs was reached, the
spokesman said, and evidence of
students' desires to seek a balance was a
now-abandoned attempt to schedule con-
servative spokesman William Buckley on
the same bill with Miss Davis.
Italian Plane
Crash Kills 27
BARI, llaly (UPI) -An llalian
airliner smashed into a ~
on a stony bill near this aouthem
port cily Mooday night, l:illing all
Zl peisons aboard.
A ~l Jkesman for the ATI airline,
a subsidiary ol. the Alitalia line,
said there were no survivors
aboard the Fokker Friendship
which crashed 31 miles inland from
Bari. All the victims apparently
were Italian.
An A TI spokesman said the
weather was perfect and the flight
apparently was proceeding
no rmally wl.e.i the crash occurred.
"Only the investigation can
determine what happened," he
said.
Front Pagel
TRIAL •..
was the only detective on duty at the
time.
Chief Murray along with another detec-
tive was present at the time of the in~
ventory. Clarence again asked if it was
the policy of the San Clemente depart-
ment to inventory the property of all
vehicles involved in serious accidents.
"Yes sir, .. is," the chief said finnly.
In other testimony Chier Murray said
he personally had stood behind the stop
sign at the crash scene and had Urned
police cars making test runs a1ong El
Cr.mino Real in an effort to determine
the length oi time a car would be visible
from the point that it could first be aeen
to reaching the intersection.
Murray said that at a speed of 70 miles
per hour a patrol car would take 22
seconds to reach the intersection from
the point it wu first visible ; at 60 miles
pe r hour, 25 seCoJnds; and at 50 mllea per
hour. 30 5ecilnds.
The 16-year-old driver ol the velllcle
testified that be bad waited some l~ to to
seconds at the stop Algn at Avenida
Dolores discussing which way to tum onto
El Camino Real .
Previous t.estln1cny by the driver,
Daniel Cross and a passenger In the vehi-
cle had indicated that neither of them
had drunk beer prior to the accident.
That testimony also Included statements,
thnt no other into1lcatlng aubl!ltances
other than t~ beer were in the truck.
The chief Hl90 testified about finding a
pair or prncrlptlon glasae1 In a com-
partment Ir the bed of the pickup Lruck.
He sa\J he pieced the ala1SCS In the
glov e compartment or the ll·year-old
vehicle .
Fre,,. Pa9e 1
HEIGHTS ...
a Dec. 20 public hearing to confirm the
aS!ltssment.
The. construction contr1ct ll expected
to be awarded Feb. 7. A one-year e1-
ten.\ion or the buUdlnat moratortum was
votL'<I ]ly the council two montha ago,
with the understandin5 It could be llftf!'d
earlier If the sewer project were com·
pl et ed .
Organized
Crime Cited
In State
SACRAMENTO (AP) -At1y. Gen .
Evelle J . Yo'.lnger ~ cited• nurqber
of indications which "alert us 1o the
possible presence of organized crime" In
California.
The indications "suggest that orpnlz·
ed crime does exist in California in vlsi·
ble and subtle forms,·· be said.
In a statement, Younger said the ffi.
dicat ions include gang s1ayings, a high
activity in vice, hidden ownerships, and
costly sophisticated legal maneuvers by
dealers in erotica .
Younger said th~ UidicatiOll! were cited
In a report to the California Legislature
-ATilten by the Organized Crime and
Criminal Intelligence Branch of the St.ate
Department of Justice.
"As would be expected," he said, "the
more populous areas of the state
evidence the g1·!!Rtest amount of organil-
ed crime Pctivily."
The report. given to I· :,islators today,
said that at least 100 gang-type slayings
have occurred in California in five years.
"The r.. eat prepor ~nee ~f these. kill-
ings have been the result of Chrnese
youth gang conflicts, outlaw motorcycle
gang warfare, and increased competition
in narcotics traffic," the statement said.
"Only a few of the killings havt been the
Eastern syndicate type of killing."
On vice, Younger sail a study revealed
"a rapid growth rate in the opening of
massage parlors, and that 90 percent of
the parlors surveyed engaged in illicit
activities."
Bookmaking. he said, is concentrated
in Southern California.
"Many individuals involved in such ac·
tivities are linked with associates
operating :hrougboot the nation," he
said.
An example of hidden ownei:shlps,
Younger said is Emprise Corp. Younger
said Emprise and six persons Wert in-
dicted by a federal grand jury in Los
Angeles this year and convicted or con·
cealing hidden organized crime interests
in a Nevada gambling casino.
The !inn, he said, operates as a con-
cessionaire at race tracks and sporting
events, and has holdings in bowling
alleys. vending machines and drive-in
theaters.
Costly sophisticated leg'll maneuvers,
he said, "are being most overtly e1-
hibited by dealers in erotica," the state-
menl said.
3 Garner Prizes
In Bike Rodeo
At Laguna Beach
David Cbristanson, John Hess and
Todd Thorton each captured first place
prizes 8nd trophies in this weekerxl'a
Bike Rodeo sponoored by the Laguna
Beach Police Department.
The trio roade away from the event on
brand new bikes donated by lbe Laguna
Beach Jaycees after clocking the best
times in three separate events.
Second place lrtlphies ,..,.. banded out
to Jeff McMJchael, Eric Ridder and John
Garmschausen. Third place awards went
to Peter Campbell, Jim Kendall and
Mike Cowan.
According to Officer Jim Stinson, 50
young riders and many adults watched
1ho rodeo, held at the Laguna Beach High
School parking lot Saturday afternoon.
The purpose of the event was to license
bicycle,, and promole bike safely,
Residents Voice
Street Problems -To City Council
Clllng annual problems from plugged
up storm drains and muddy streeta and
driveways in rainy weather, a group of
Morningside Drive residents wW appeal
to the Laguna Beach City COun<1I f<><
..tie! Wednesday nighl
In a letter to the COUDcil, the property
owners explain that two street drains:, in-
tended to handle norrnaJ water nnioU,
have proved inadequate since the cowty
denuded adja<ent hiU. for fire prolectloo ,
chewed up brush, leaves and tree limbs
and blew the residue back on the ground
for compost.
This material regularly washes down
and results lo plugged up dralna, the
residents compJain, o cc a 1Iona 11 y
resuJUng in aerloua backup of debris and
fiooding of bomea.
"Each time It ralos, Morningside Drive
Is a muddy meas," sayt the letter, aeeka
Ing installation of an improved dralnage
system .
San Jose Area
Feels Temblor
SAN JOSE (AP) -A mild earth(Jualte
rolled throuJ)I tho s..ta Clara Valley
early !Oday, joltlnfl raldenll but eauslng
ti> apparent damaae. a telamok>altt s•ld.
The "temblor, ...,g1attr1111 U on tho
Richter Scale, was centered about 15
miles 10UtM:11t ol here, &aid Roy Mlller,
of the UC .. 1amocraphlc /talion at
Berkeley.
Miller said a t.....,. ct that mapllude
"would be ltlt but ahouldn't CIU!ll any
d1tmge."
He said the quake occurred along the
f,Jilaveras Fault I\ 7:$4 a.nl.
• •
•
0411..Y •ILOT St.aft .......
USED HIS CAUSTIC WIT AT SAN JUAN POLITICAL DINNER
Entertainer Am1terdam in Support of President's R ... lection
From Pagel
FUND-RAISER .•
the crowd a facial expression of in-
credulity.
"Then there's Watertown," he added.
"That place is so small, the bead of the
Mafia there is Jewish."
When the rough Amsterdam humor
suLsided, the group watched another
comedy rootine, followed by a brief stint
by Zsa Zsa Gabor, cloaked in mink.
The jaunty tone of the evening, besides
producing laughter among the Orange
County GOP leaders, also spawned one
new campaign song that may never
really catch on in time for the election.
It is a derivation of a pop gospel song
that begins , "Put your hand in the hand
of the man from still blue waters ... "
'Ibis campaign's version goes :
"Put your hand in the hand of the man
who's in the White House,
"Put hour hand in the band o. the man
whose middle name is Milhous."
Segretti Placed
Ca ll to Cha pin?
WASHINGTON (AP) -A California
lawyer allegedly engaged in sabotage
against the Democrats apparenUy made
a telephone call to President Nixon's ap-
pointment secretary within minutes of
being informed he was being investigated
by the Washington Post, the newspaper
said today.
Records of cttdit telephone calls show,
the Post said, that a call was placed to
t::ie home of the appointments secretary,
Dwight L. Chapin, at 4:54 p.m. on Sept.
30, less than 30 minutes after the at-
torney, Donald H. Segretti, learned that a
reporter wanted to question him.
All of the calls, the Pf\st said, were
charged to the credit card of Lawrence
Young, a friend of Segretti. Young said
Monday the calls could have been made
only by Segretti.
City Officials Meet
' County Governmental
Council ·Nearer Reality
By JOANNE REYNOLDS
Of flll Dllf'f Plllt Stiff
Formation or a countywid e in·
tergovemmental council moved a step
closer Monday night during a meeting at-
tended by tts>resentatives of 25 of Orange
County's 26 cities.
The proposal, made by the Supervisors
and Mayors Council (SAMCO), is that all
the cities and the county create a volun-
tary agency through a joint powers
agreement.
Membership would be limited to
elected representatives of the cities and
the county Board of Supervisors, with
other governmental boards. commissions
£Od spec1al district trustees having nan·
voting membership.
six months of operation is estimated' at
$17,200.
The purpose of the intergovernmental
council would be to foster better coopera-
tion and communication between the
various levels of government in the coun-
ty, with the possibility of using the
organization to apply for state and
federal grants and as a basis for other
joint powers agreements for services
between the individual members.
The idea was unanimously endorsed by
SAMCO. but at Mooclay 's meeting, it
became apparent that many of the cities
had reservations about some parts of the
agreement. And a few of the cities have
some reservatioru about the agreement
itself.
-
Nixon Sets
Election
Eve Speech
WASHINCYTON (AP) -Pr<oli!cnt Ni ,.
on \as scheduled a round ot televl!lon
and radio broadcasts including a
television speech on election, eve !or the
windup of his re--electlon campaign that
will take him to Californla Saturday.
The White House announced Nixon will
give a ~minute address to the nation on
live radio-TV from the White House
Thursday night at 4:~ p.m. PST for
what was described as '"a look to the
future and discuslion of his hopes for the
future of this country."
The three more radio and two
television addressu are all paid political
broadcasts, press secretary Ronald L.
Ziegler said, and they will give Nixon a
concentration of broadcasting for every
day except Sunday until the election.
The President and Mrs. Nixon ' plan to
fly to California Saturday and land at the
Ontario International Airport in early
eveninis: for an airport rally in San
Bernardino County.
From there they wlll helicopter to .Ban
Clemente, where they will stay to vote
Tuesday morning and return t o
Washington to receive election results at
tbe White House.
Ziegler indicated that there may be
other campaigning activities, but be had
no finn details to provide today.
Nixon had canceled a major ap..
pearance in the Clllcago area for today
tx.causi of Monday's train wreck there.
Thursday's television broadcast will be
carried by the NBC Television network.
The Monday evening live · broadcut,
which will emanate from the Los Angeles
area, possibly the Western White House,
does not yet have an announced time or
topic, Ziegler said.
Ziegler was asked whether Nixon
would make any speecl\M dealing
specifically with Vietnam. He said Nii.on
does not plan a specific address on that
subject, but it Wdl obvious th"lt he might
ir.clude it In a discussion of the future of
the country.
Memorial Mast
Will Be Dedicate
To Lat.e Rep. Utt
A memorial noutlcal mut will be
dedicated 'J'lun. .y ot Dona Harbor to
the memory m tho late James B. Utl,
longtlme""'l'ftllDln.
Fiflh Dlslri<t Supervisor Ronald W.
Caspers will pmlde at the event
scheduled for 2:30 p.m.
"lf it had not been for Jimmy Utt and
hi... belief in the harbor project, the
beautilul facility that exists today might
not be there," Caspcn said t\)day in
tribute to the representative who served
if1 Congress from 1953 to his death in
1970.
Caspers said the late Mr. Utt was in-
strumental in securing federal participa-
tion in harbor design and construdk>n o(
the breakwaters.
A memorial to Mr. Utt was approved
by the Board of Supervisors in 1970.
1be memorial mast adjoins the Orange
Q.unty Ha-Patrol blilldlog. It is IO
feet high and flags of the U.S ..
California, and Orange County as well as
maritime banners fly from it.1 four arms .
The ciUes would have one vote each
and the board of supervisors would have
five votes -one for eacb supervisor.
One of lbe primary concerll!l was first
voiced by Councilman Ray Quigley of
Irvine. One portion of the agreement
gives the organization the power to incur
debts and obligations. Quigley said he
does not believe this needs to be in·
eluded.
A bronze plaque bearing a likeness of
Mr. Utt will he un~ed al the Thursday
cel'fJDony, Caspers said.
1be harbor can be reached by Del.
To finance the proposed new organiza-
'tion &acb city and the county would pay
dues based on both assessed valuation
and population. The budget for the fi rst
Obispo Street. Free parting is offered to
~ attending the ceremony at the west
end of Dana Island and shuttle buses will
cury them tG the memorial site, Caspers
saJd.
All For The Family-
. -_,
•
WHAT CHANGES YOUR HOUSE MORE THAN ANY OTHER THING?
WHAT IMPROVES ACCOUSTICS DRAMATICALLY?
WHAT WARMS UP A HOUSE?
WHAT IMPARTS UNIQUE BEAUTY AND COMFORT?
• • • CARPETING FROM ALDEN'S, THA rs WHAT!
(IF '!;OUR HOUSE "STIFLES" YOU, STOP IN AND SEE US FAST.)
ALDEN'S
CARPETS e DRAPES
1663 Plac•ntia A••· ,
COSTA MESA
646-4836 .
HOURS: Mon. Thrv Thurs., 9 to 5:30 -FRI., 9 to 9 -SAT., 9:30 to 5
( '
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Saddleha~k
EDITION
VOL 65, NO. 305, 3 SECTIONS, 38 PAGES ORANGE COU NTY, CALIFORNIA TUESDAY, OCTOBER 31, 1972
Loan Witness-Stock Wouldn't Sell
By TOM BARLEY
Of ... D911J P»ft Sllff
A St. Bernardine Hospital orficial today
testified that 250,IXKt shares of stock used
as collate;al for a $500,000 loan granted
by the San Bernardino facility were
valued by their holders at fl a share in
pre-loan negotiations.
But assistant administrator Clement
Gurkow pointed out as a presecution
witness in the Orange County Superior
Court "Taj Mahal" trial that none or the
Aulea Mobile Homes stock banded to
tho"bospital could he !Old a year later.
Gurkow testified that hospital con·
troller Robert Machan played a major
role in negotiatlOOJ that led the witness
and tbiee Roman C8tbolic DUil! Who con-
trolled the flnanctal affairs of their
hospital to approve the loan to a group
headed by Laguna HUis stockbroker
Joseph Dulaney.
-
-OA ILT Pit.OT ..... ..., •ldll,,_ kMll•
Readfl for HalloWeen
With a pumpkin nearly as big as she is, S-year-old Traci Valofi of
Huntington Beach gets ready for some king-size spooking tonight.
The giant jack-a-lantern was carved from a pumpkin weighing 115
pounds.
Nixon Plans Television ...
Speech .on Election ~ve
WASIUNGTON (AP) -President Nix·
on has scheduled a round of television
and radio broadcasts including a
television speech on election eve for the
wiridlJp of his re-election campaign that
will tak:e him to California Saturday.
The White House announced Nixon will
give a 30-minute address to the nation on
Jive radio-TV from the White House
Thunday night at 4:30 p.m. PST for
what was described as "a look to the
future and discussion of his hopes for the
future of Ws country.''
11le three more radio and two
television addresses are all paid political
broadcasts, press secretary Ronald L.
Ziegler said, and they will give Nixon a
concentration of broadcasting for every
day except Sunday until the election.
1be President and Mrs. Nixon plan to
Dy to California Saturday and land at the
Ontario International Airport in early
evenin~ for an airport rall>· in San
Bernardino County.
From there they will helicopter to San
Clemente, where they will stay to ' vote
(
Orange Coast
Weather
Those C()Jd northeaste.rly winds
should be g i n to diminish by
Wednesday , according to the
weather 1 ryice. Highs at the
beaches expected Lo reach 6.5
rising to Inland. Lows tonight,
a chilly 424(1. ' . '
INSIDE TOD/\ Y
A new rurwv on uz life fn
France, limilor to the old Kin·
11e11 Report; damage• the reputa-
tion I)/ Frenchmen cu ~t
lovers. See storJI, Page 12.
"" UNln '' -.. M41MI hllB M .............. ' SY1¥1• ..... t ....,,. ''"'' St.ell Maftltlt 1 .. 11 ,......... ,,
-It WH,,.., I
... _., ..... JJ..U
Wtf'lil 11..n •
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Tuesday morning and return t o
Washington to receive election results 11.t
the White House.
Ziegler indicated that there may be
other campaigning activities, but he had
no finn details to provide today.
Nixon bad canceled a major ap-
pearance in the Chicago area for today
ht.co.use of Monday's train wreck there.
Thursday's television broadcast will be
carried by the NBC Television network.
The Monday evening live broadcast,
which will emanate from the Los Angeles
area, possibly the Western White House,
does not yet have an announced time or
topic, Ziegler said.
Ziegler was asked whether Nixon
would make any speeches dealing
specifically, with Vietnam. He said Nixon
does not plan a specific address on that
subject, but It waa•obvious th'lt he .might
ir.clude It in a d!Jcussion of the future of
the COWltry.
In his most recent radio speech Nixon
promised if re-el~ed. '.'one. of my
highest·priorlty proposalt" will be proi>
erty-tax reJief for older cltizens. (See
story,. Page 4).
$500 TV Set Taken
At Leisure World
A $500 television set was stolen Monday
night from tbe home of a Laguna Hills
Leisure World resident who Is on vaca·
tion,
Orange Count)> Sheriff's o[ficers said
intruders who entered the apartment of
M~. Ada B. Hinman, 8(1, of 629 P
Avenida Sevilla, may have bad a master
key to the premises. Mn. Hmm111 ii cur-
rently vacationing ln Hawaii. Dtputlq
said the theft wu reported "I' IOCUrity
ofrieera. ' •
Kellogg Finns Struck
BATTLE CREEK, Mic~. (AP) -Some
5,000 worktn struck Kelloca CO. plants
In rour cities Mond•Y· haltlni J)nlductlon
by the nation's largest· certal-mater.
Contract negot1atlons between Kellogg
and the American Ftderallon of Grain
Miiien broke do,.. Friday. Company and
union officials met with a federal
n1edlator on &.lnday.
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Financier Fred Riley testified before
Gurkow that be owned the ~lea stock
and that he loaned it to defendant James
Shipley for $90,000.
Riley, who was also indicted by the
Grand Jury and later cleared of all
charges when he testified as a pros·
ecution witness, said he received only
$60,000 for the loan of the stock used by
Shipley. · .
Machan, 50, has been similarly cleared
of all charges after appearing u a pros-
ecution witness. He testified that be
received $32,IXX> described by prosecutor
Stuart Grant as "k.ickhacks" shortly
after the loan went througb in January
1969.
Grant claims that the Azalea stock,
limited to saJe on the open market, was
worthless in terms or the hospital
recovering its funds by selling the
Shares.
Only $10,000 of the loan was repaid.
And that, Grant claims, was deducted
when the $500,000 draft was: cashed and
shared out among the defendants.
On trial with Dulaney, SB, of 2631 Via
Cascadita, San Clemente are Shipley, 38.
of 16951 Lowell Circle, Daniel Hayes, 40,
of 8211 Snowbird Drive, both of Hun-
tington Beach and Riverside broker Wen-
dell Warren Austin, 38.
All were indicted with Mrs. Marlene
Deadline Elapses
Vietnam Peace Signing Delayed
By UnJted Press lntematlonal
The Communists' Oct. 31 deadline for
si&Qina a Vietnam cease-fire passed t~ miy' with no firm i.ndi1etion when it will
be signed.
The White House said President Nixon
is seeking a lasting peace and will not be
stampeded. by Hanoi's deadline o( today.
White House officlals said earlier it
was improbable the cease-fire would be
signed before the Nov. 7 elections
although both the Hanoi and Viet c.ong
de1egations to the Paris talks called on
the United States to sign "as soon as
possible."
•
This was a retreat from their previous
"sign today" statements.
Presidential adviser Henry A. Kiss-
inger ~ Thursday there Were a
nwnber of points: that should be cleared
up in one more negotiating session.
A clue to one of the major snags came
today from Pham Dang Laqi, chi~f
Saigon negotiator in Paris who was tn
Tokyo to brief Japanese officials on
Saigon's position.
Lam told Japanese Vice Premier
Takeo Miki that Saigon wants assurances
an agreement will mean the withdrawal
of North Vietnamese troops from South
•Vietnam.
He said Saigon wanted "clarification"
on the future of these troops: and on the
three-part "National council of reeoo·
ciliation" which Saigon fears means a
coalition government.
White House spokesman Ronald L.
Ziegler took note of the Communist
deadline and said, "The only deadline
we're operating under is the one that will
bring about the right kind of an agree-
ment.
"The President has been v e r Y
meticulous in making clear" that he will
not agree to the signing of a peace pact
until the remaining outstanding issues
(See PEACE, Page %)
Baker Assails
Battin's Ad-
'Hurt County'
Body of Slain Woman
Found Near Golf Club
By JACK BROBACK
Of 1M IMlltr Pn.t Sr.ft
Supervisor David L. Baker today at-
tacked a campaign advertisement by
Supervisor Robert W. Battin which Baker
asserte4Jtad jeopardized' the county's ac-
quisition of the 48>acre Mile Square
Park in Fountain Valley.
Baker referred to an ad in a mail
publication title..!, "An Open Letter About
Mile Squate" placed by Battin.
Baker called the letter "false and
deceitful" and 1·~ bl::tant lie."
Battin replied that Baker was just
trying to help his opponent, William
Wenke, in tbe Nov. 7 election.
"Batlin's letter is destructive, lr-
responsible and sell-serving at the ex-
pense of the pu-·· ~." bi. charged. "It im-
pugns the integrity of every o t h e r
member of the Board of Supervisors."
A redhead whose strangled body was
w.-apped in old carpeting and dumped
within site of the posh Yorba Linda Coun-
try Club has been identified as~ Marla
Jean Hires, 23, of Stanton.
"And that's about all we know," sher-
iff's detective Willie Stansbury said today.
1'Leads are hard to come by and the
character of the victim doesn't give us
any clues.''
Stansbury said Mrs. Hires was a
claims adjustor for Southern California
Edison Company in Rosemc::.£. "She was
very highly regarded by everyone who
knew her and her presence in that loca-
tion is a mystery to us," Stansbury said.
Investigaton are today working on the
theory that Mrs. Hires was killed in some
other location, wrapped in old draperies
and ragged carpeting and dumped near
the countr')" club.
She was reported missing by her
parents with whom she lived late Sunday.
Ao all out search for the missing
Fullerton Junior College graduate pro-
duced her car with t.be keys in the ig-
nition a short distance from her home,
but no clue as to her fate untU early
Monday .
Her body was discovered by a
maintenance man · who spotted a hand
protruding from what he at first thought
l'as an old btmdle of rags.
Toxicological tests are being carried
out today to pinpont the cause of death.
But sheriff's investigators said they were
satisfied that Mrs. Hires was strangled
by her assailant.
It is not yet known if Mrs. Hires was
the victim of a sexual assault.
Battin's letter, which appeared last
week, attacks the }:?ase of 213 acres of
the 485-acre park to F<iuntain Valley
farmers.
It is the same park land where an
eigbt-montt lea~<. extension to Murai
Farms became the subject of recent In-
dictments by tbe Orange County Grand
Jury in connection with an alleged
shakedown of farmer George Murai by
former Westminster mayor D e r e k
McWhinney and Planning Commissioner
Tad Fujita.
$2,000 Fee for Militant
Attacl{ed ·by Legislator
The jury indictment alleges that
McWhinn~y aod Fujita demanded a
$10,000 contributio11 to the campaign fund
of "a supervisor" or Murai might find It
difficult to get an extension of his (ive-
year-0ld lease on the 213 acres.
Today. Baker demanded and received
approval of a resolution by lhe board
reaffirming the COWlty's plan to continue
the orderly development of the park as
provided in the agreement with the
federal government.
Battin is engaged ·n a touet campaign
to retain bis seat on the Board or
Supervisors. His opponent, Santa A. a at-
torney William Wenke polled almost 4,000
more votes in the primary than did the
incumbent.
Baker claimed Bi<ttin's opt.n letter had
delayed transfer of the deed to the park
(See BA'MlN, Page !)
Burt ~s
An allegation by state Se"ator James
E. Whetmore <R-Fullerton) that tax
fund s are being spent on an appearance
by Angela Davis at Cal State Fullerton
was refuted today by university officials.
A campus spokesman Indicated the
Amociated Students will pay Miss Davis'
sz.~ fee. a $50 rental fee 1or the gym-
nulum and all costs for malnten•ce.
security, sound ampllflcatlon and rental
chairs for the expected audience of 3,500.
Senator Whetmore, in a OO'\li'.S release
calling attention to the Nov. 17 lecture,
said he is 0 appalled."
"My office bas been flooded with
telephone calls (from SS to SO, Whetmore
tsUmat.es) from irate constituents who
feel that ln allowing llOMeu."19 like Mi.
Davia: to speak to tbe atudents on ca
pus, the school 19 naunting in the face f
-taxpayers lhe fact that tt is poulbl•
to deliberately use tax monies in a wey •
Gone
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Pinup Taken From Was hroom
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M1AAll (AP) -A nude photograph qJ ICUlr Bwt Roynol<b _.. graced
tho waI1a or tho women'• ioonge or a llOCIA!iy elite club ntar Miami, :.it not for
long.
•rt probably turned someone on," said club membersblp dlrector Pat Gil>-.....
She ~ Monday that an unknown powder room patron ltole the
framed photo, taken from the centerfold pagea of CoomopoUlan mas8%lne .
Mlsa Gibson said the phot011raph or a.ynolda in tbe bulf wu put In ploce
about four weeks ago at the Munlty Club at Sailboat Bay in subu~n Coconut
Grove.
She old a semnd copy of the photo Is being encaacd ln A buUet·proof alau
and llet1 ITBrnt aod will be firmly boltecno Ille wall In the lowlge. ..
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offensive to a majority of taxpayers,"
Whetmore said.
Miss Davis will speak at 8 p.m. Nov. 17
as part of a lectu re series which includes
" January appearance by U.S. Senator
John Tower CR-Tex.as).
Faculty and students launched the lee·
ture series this year in respome to
budget cuts which l!liminated ad-
ministrative soutUS of money for cam-
J>WI speakers, a spokesman aplatned.
Cal State President L. Donald Shields,
..earlier this year, said he w a s
"distresJed" that students and faculty
had planned Lhe series without con-
sultillJ ~lnlslrators. However. since
· a contract wllh Pdiss Davis: bad been
signed, Shields ·a1cl"not Interfere with the
scheduled program.
An agreement to provide balance on
subsequent prosrams was reached, the
spokesman said, and evldence of
student.I' desires to lletk a balance wu a
now-abandoned attempt to schedule con-
servative tp0kesman William Buckley on
the same bill with Miss Dllvls.
Monkeys Stolen
From Zoo in SD
SAN DfE<lO (AP\ -Somebody 1tole
two monkeya lrom the San Diego Zoo by
prylnl open 1 wire door to their cage .
It .... the lint monkey theft here in
memory, zoo.officlals uid Monday.
T1Mo Uny monkeys are p I g m y
mannoaeta, only 1\x lnche• long and
wtlghlng four ounces.
They are native.a of the Amamn River
basin In South Ame.rica and nctd a
sptelal environment and 1pec:lal diet to
live.
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Today's Fmal
N.Y. Stocks
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TEN CENT~
Later
Dulaney, 32, on charges of grand theft,
fraud and conspiracy.
The first pha.se of the trial before
Judge James Turner is limited to the
alleged defrauding of the St. Bernardine
Hospital.
Mrs. Dulaney wW join her husbend.,aod
Shipley for the second phase of tlJt, trial
which will be confined to allega&ns that
they defrauded a number of investors in
Dulaney's World Financial Trends Bl""'
dicate.
SUPPORTS THE PRESIDENT
Actress Zu Isa G1bor
Nixo11's Backers
Cew brate 'Win'
In Capistrano
By JOHN VAL TERZA
Of Ille C.Hy l"Uet Sto1n
HWldred.!i of top Orange County IU~
porten of Richard Nixon gathered in San
Juan Capistrano Monday to quickly
review the virtues of their candidate,
then "celebrate" the President's Victory
next week.
Nonetheless, rormer U.S. Treasurer
(now California Treasurer) Ivy Baker
Priest urged the fa ithful not to be luUed
into co~cency but lll!llead to insure
that au supf>orters or Nixon's re-election
actually go to the polls: to cast lhelr vote.
"That Is the best wa_i for us tu achieve
that landslide we are wailing for,'' lhe
said.
Billed as a fund raiser at the El Adobe
Restaurant In the Mission community,
the event also w marked by plaudltl
for prominent Or gc Coast Republican
lePdE!f' Victor C. Andrews of Emerald
Bay, heralded a; the key man in q.e
COW'lty's effort re-elect the Prestdent.
AndreW1 rece ved a decorated platter
for hts efforts in the campaign.
Soon afterwards, polltlcal Issues gavt
way to comedy.
Comic Morey Amsterdam took to the
dal!I to run through a series of Polish and
Italian jokes, then turned an ocld ,.tt
toward South Dakota. the home state of
Sen. George McGovern .
'"But before I go any further:·
Amsterdam said, 1 ha v .. to say one
thing: •
"McGovern's a schmuck!''
"And IJ)Mktng about Sou:h Dakota, tbt
only good lhlng they got I! the mountain
wtlh the four facts on it. )
"But ..,.. they're all Jocking down 1t
McGovem and . . . (Amsterdam gave
the cro..,; a flclal •xpnmioo of in.
credulity. '
"'Ihen lhue'• Watertown," he added.
'"lbat place 1110 small, the htad of tlle
Mafia there Is J°'"'h."
When the rough Amtterdam humor
..,IAlded, the lll'OUP Witched anothet
oomedy roullne, follo"ed by o brief Jtint
by Zia 1Aa 01bor, clo1ked ln mlnk.
The Jouncy tone of the evonlng, besldd
J)nld•clnc laUlhtor •monc the Orone•
County GOP 1eadenl, tllO spawned or»
new campt1\gn song that may ne.v-a
ttM FUNl).!WSER. !'Ito I)
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Z DAILY PILOT IS ' ...... -31,un
l'rom Pa9el
BATI'IN ...
luld lrom tbt federal pvennnen1.
"There h4ve alreody boon clel1ya In !ht
conveya.r~:e of MUe Square because of
earlier l'"hlldly," 8Ue< llld In
relerenct 14 U.. llc\Vblaney-t'ujka mil-
let. • ·'Battln's Irresponsible and un1roe
statement. !.er'Ve only to jeopardiie the
county's a('qul!ltLon and to deceive the
public.•·
Baker 1lso charged that Battin 's ac-
tions had W:ao delayed the lransfer of 41
acres to the city of Fountain Valley for
recreational use.
He said the city h81 already budgeted
$850,000 to develop the acreage along
Brook.hunt Street to ball parks, teMis
courts and other recreatWJnal f..cUilies.
Battin replied to Baker's attack by de-
nying that hill acts had causeJ any delay
in the transfer of the property and c~1r~
cd lbat Baker was only trying t.o'belll.._.
\Venke.
Baker attacked what be co.lied Battin's
"allegations and inuendoes" in the open
Jetter point.by-point.
Battin had charged that "as long as a
few people can lease lhis land for
themselves for a pitt~ and reap hun-
dreds of thousands of dollan: in profits
from its use, the citizens are going to be
denied its recreational use."
Baker replied : "The interim
agricult ural leases on portiops of Mile
Square have never been a ronstralnt on
park development. There are two basic
reasons .,.;hy the undeveloped lands are
subleased for agricultural purposes. One
is to provide weed and dust abatement on
the property, a cost of which would
otherwise fall on the county.
"Tbe federal government was very
ccmcerned about complaints from Foun-
tab Valley resident regarding weed and
d u 1 t nuisances originating I r o m un-
developed lands at ltiik Square.
"The lease terrM obligate the county to
control weeds and dust and the county
was specifically autboriZed by the federal
lease to sublease land for Canning
purposes to exerci.Je weed and dust con-
trol."
Frot11 P .. e l
PEACE ...
are clarified, Ziegler sa.ML
"ft Is U>e President'• firm Intention 14
have a aetUement which will offer the
belt hope for lutlni peace end a peace
that does not leave U>e .....S of 1 future
confllct," Ziegler llld.
Ziegler uld thal Nbmn ...U to reac:h
ID ..,..ment that will wipe out lbe
pollib1llty of a new war as well u "to
.....,. U>e peopt. of Soulb Vietnam wilb
U>e means of dewmlnlnl • thelt own
fUtare."
Klalnge WU In tbe White HOUR to-
day, end wblle It wu appomrt be would
be traveling again llOOll 14 Parts, offldall
aa1d theft wu no let timetable for
another ...md of ..,.U.tlcm wllh Coo>-
munt.lt diplomata.
Reports bad been drculatlnl In
WnhlngU>n that '°""'C" wotllll !'114 Paris Friday end be ready 14 algn an
enckhe-war treaty by Sunday.
Ofllclals loday dllcounted tbe ]>CIOllbill·
ly there would be nny algnlng before
ano\her round of conaullltlona wilb
Hanoi'• dele11i.. In Parts and another
probable trtp by Klsslnger 14 Saigon to
bring South Vietnamese P re s i de n t
,Nguyen Van Thieu lnto the fold.
Officlals said at this point Ki!slnger
had no definite plans to I e a v e
Washington. But lt was clear be was in
touch with Hanoi through aicret negotia·
tion1 and alao with Russia 81Kf'Qlina who
are putting pressure on their ally to keep
line.a open.
French autborlUe1, who have been in
charge of the physical side of the 31n-
year-old talb, sent a crew of wwken to
the conference hall on Paris' Avenue
Kleber today to put Into the meeting hall
steel stands and flashlights for television
crews.
Bonanno Plea Nixed
WASHINGTON CAP) -Salvato"'
"8111" Bonanno, son of fahner COsa
Nostra chieftain Joseph "Joe Banan83"
Bonanno, we.s denied parole Mooday
from hil five-year sentence for mail
fraud llld perjury. Bonanno, IO, of San
Jose, will remaln ln the federal tn-
atituUon 1t Termlnal Island untll the ex·
plratlon of hi> l.J'm on Sept. 24, 19'1t.
01401 COAn rs
~ ~ILY PILOT
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DAU,Y PILOT ltl" "'-"
Classicists Convene •
"Does Edst'
Organized Crime
In California?
SACRAMENTO (AP) -Ally. Geo.
EveUe J . Yo'.lllger toda.) cited a number
ot indications which "alert us to the
possible presence of organized crime" ln
Ca!Uomla.
1be lndlcatJona "suggest that oraani%·
ed. crime doe& exist in Calllornia ln vtat-
ble and 1t1bUe fornu," be sai<.i.
In a statement, Younger said the in-
dicaUon.s include gang slayings, a high
activity In vice, hidden ownerships, and
costly aophiatic1ted legal maneuvers by
dealers in erotica. '
Younger said lh~ !J.idlcaUom were cited
in a report to the California Legislature
written by the Organtud Crime and
Criminal Intelligence Branch of the State
Department of Justice.
The firm, he said, operates as a ~n·
cesa:ionalre at race ltacks and sportu1g
event!, and has boldlngit in boWlinG
alleys, vending machines nnd drive-in
theaters.
Costly aophistlc3ted leg1J maneuvers.
be said, "are being most overtly ex·
hibited by dealen in erotica," the state·
ment said.
Police Car
Speed 'Not
Excessive'
UC Irvine classics professor, Theodore Brunner,
standing, welcomes scholars from Canada, Germany
and the U.S. to opening of three-day meeting to set
policies for development of the world's first thesaur-
us of the ancient Greek language. Effort at UCI is
being launched by $1 million anonymous grant
from mystery woman. Among those visiting the
campus are computer experts and officials from the
Latin thesaurus effort under way since the 1890s at
Mun ich, ~rmany. Dr. Brunner heads Thesaurus
Linguae Graecae effort that visiting classics scbol·
ars will influence.
"As would be upectc:d," bl! said, "the
more populous areas of the state
evidence the IJ&'tllltest amount of organiz4
ed crime 2ctiVfty."
The re pert, given to legislators t&iay ,
said that at least 100 gang-type slayings
have oceurred in California in five years.
"The great preponderance of u,,.. klll·
inga have been the result of C'hlnese
youth gang confltcll, ootlaw motorcycle
gang wariare, and lncreued cmnpel!Uon
ln narcotics traffic," the statement said.
"Only a few of tbt klillnp bav. been U>e
Eastern sy,xllcate type of killlng."
By JACK CRAPPEIJ.
Of lfll Dellr ,Utt Sllff
Expert testimony rebutting the pros-
ecution's allegations of excessive police
car speed, Md evidence of npvijuana and
open beer caos have come, forth In the
misdemeanor mana~u1hter tt1al of San
Clemente policeman Gary Adams. -County Council Unit Near · On vice, YotlllJer aall a~ revealed
"a rapid growth rate In U>e opening of
mamge parlon, end that 90 percent of
the parlon surveyed engqed In lillclt
activities."
Adams' tt1al In Ule LIS-Nl1utl
Municipal Court of Judge H. Warren Knllhl stems from a fatal crash over U>e
Memnt1al Day weekend.
Adams' palrol vehicle ooillded wilb a
pickup Uuclt heavy wilb camping equlp-
menl end four occupanu, ooe of wbom,
Jeffery Brtl~ 11, of !mg Beacb, died. Cities Progress Toivard lritergovernmental Council Bookmaldni, be aald, II coocentnted
ill Southern Ciillomla. Britt end ii oompanloo ,..,. rtd!Dg In
u,, bed of lbe pickup Uuck along wflb ll
leut three cues ol. beer, sleepinc bags
end other campln& lleml for 1 San
Onofre outing.
By JOANNE REYNOIDS
O! ,... DlllY "" ....
Formation of a countywide in-
tergovernmental council moved a step
closer Monday night during a meeting at-
tended by representatives of 2S of Orange
Cotmty's 26 cities.
The proposal, mode by the Supervisors
and Mayors Council (SAMCO), Is tbat all
the cities and the county create a volun-
tary agency through a )<>int powers
agreement.
Membersblp wouJd be limited to
elected representatives of the cities and
the county Board of Supervl90rs, with
other governmental boards, commissions
and special district trustees having non-
voting memberahi.p.
1be ciUes would have ooe vote each
and the board of supervisors would have
five votes -one for each supervisor.
To finance the proposed new organil.a-
Uon eac:h city end U>e coonty would pay
dues based oo. both assessed. valuation
and popW.ation. ~ budget for the first
six mon~ of operation is estimated at
117.200.
The purpose of the intergovernmental
council would be to ·roster better coopera-
tion and communication between the
various levels of government in the ooun-
ly, wilh the possibility of using the
organization to apply for state and
federal grants and as a basis for other
joint powers agreements for services
between the individual members.
The idea was unanimously endorsed by
SAMCO, but at Monday's meeting, it
became apparent that many of the cities
had reservations about some parts of the
agreement. And a few of the cities have
some reservations about the agreement
itself.
One of the primary concerns was first
voiced by Councilman Ray Quigley of
Irvine. One portion of the agreement
gives the organization the power to incur
debts and obligations. Quigley said he
does not believe this needs to be in-
cluded.
"If the council at some future time
wants to go lnto some kind of a bond pro-
gram, then there is the power to do that
in the agreement. But we don't need this
proviso in there as it is now," be said. A
half dozen other city representatives, ln·
Male vs. Mail
Bureaucrat Challenges System
WASlDNGTON (UPI) -Like a portly theatrical agency carried a bag of letters
Buffalo Bill, profesaional spoofster Jim in relays on the 140-mile journey from
Boren rode the last leg of his modem day Philadelphia.
Polly Express 14 Capitol HUI !Oday, •· Boren mailed letters through U>e
claiming he delivered mall f r o m Postal Service at the same ti.me he left
Philadelphia faster than the U.S. Postal Philadelphia on the first leg of the trip.
Service. Several of those to whom he wrote
"Give me that old-tlme delivery -it's turned up to rep!ive the&-pony-delivered
good enough for me," Boren chortled as mail and reported they had yet to receive
he plodded to his goaJ aboard a red mare those handled by the government.
named Ginger. Boren, a former State Department of-
Boren, a Wuhlngton consultant who ftcial, organized the pony upresa as part
also serves u president of a tonpin· of a cootinulng spoof of bureaucracy.
cheek organitation known as the National llis group. whos&> motto is "When in
,. Association of Professional Bureaucrats, doubt , mumble," said the six riders and
initiated his Pony Eipress in eight horses ct1Uld beat the regular mail
Philadelphla Monday and promptly fell of service between Philadelphia a n d
his mount. Washington.
"I could have fallen off a horse every Asked to comment on the race, a
halI mile and still beaten the Postal Postal Service offi~lal said, "We only
Service," he told reporten. have two words to say about this: No
A corps of six riders from a New York comment." ..
"''' ...... THIS rs NO WAY TO PROVE YOUR POINT
Pony Expr••• Run G.ts Off lo 81d St•rt
!
cl uding Councilman Bob Wilson of Cost.a
Mesa agreed with Quigley.
Frank Sales, mayor of Seal Beach, pos-
ed one of the hardest questions of the
evening when he asked, "What do we need
U for?''
"We are presently pretty well covered
by SCAG (Soutbtm CaUlomia As00<:ia·
tlon of Governments), th~ ,League of
Cities and SAMCO and I just feel we
should not saddle our constituents With
another layer of government tbat they do
not need and quite probably do not
want," ht ~·
"Many lndlv1duals Involved In such ac-
tivlUes are linked with auoc:l1tes
operatlnl :hroqbout U>e natton," be said. ~
An eumple of hidden ownmblpe,
Younger lllid II Emprile Co11>. Younger
said Emprise Ind six persons were fn..
dlcled by a federal grand Jury In Los
Angeles tb1s year and convicted of con-
c:t>illng hidden organized crime totemta
in a m:vada gambling casino.
Tbomu R. Batel, an accident
nconstruclion ~ wllb a firm hired
by Adams' atl4mey Gerald Williams
eslimlted the police car mlnlmmn apeed
could have been t5 milea per bour before
braking began.
Previowl testimony by .. Anaheim
Police Deplrtmenl lrafilc lnvestlga14r.
o!flcer George Platfoot, pegged U>e
mlnlmtJm speed of U>e vehicle at 117 miles
per bour. Poated apeed Is 30 miles per
!tour. Ray Villa, a Santa Ana councilman who
has been ooe of the active supporters of
the intergovernmental council, replied:
"The organization of Ibis councll i.. a
genuine concern, but t think we should be
able to work it out .... The greatest concern
here is our owb seU--defense -our pro-
tection.
New York Black
Students Get
f
Police Escort
Bate.t engaged In a ll!llilby cte..crtptlnn
end uplanatlon on U>e types of skid> end
, relative braking efficiency.
"lf we don't organize ourselves, some-
one bigger ii going to s t e p in and
they it organlr.e lor Us."
Tbe organizing committee, Jed by
Councilman Doll'. smith of Orange, will
meet again l.n two weeks to consider the
revislons proposed at Menday's meettv:.
Sm!tb uld he will theQ forward a copy
of the revised agreement to all the city
counclli' and county supervisors for
•ludy. .
NEW YORK (AP ) -Amtd jeers end
booing from hundred:i of white adulll, 30
black tlrPuerto Rican pupils llWded
by belniijted poltce walked Into 1 ~
high school In Uie Carnante -of Brooklyn !Oday for U>elr lblrd dly of
classes this year.
The adults, whose protest• helped to
keep Ule minority group c:*"'1 from
enterlnc the school until lut ,...eek, were
kept behind pollc.e barricades as the
schooi opened !Jr the day.
A scume broke out as a white man
wrested 4' placard away from a black
woman who wa:; among a group of black
adults in front of the school lo show sup-
port for the mlnority pupils' admlulon.
As soon as 50 percent of the cities
which represent 50 percent of the popula-
tion have approved the agreement, the
coi.ncil will be formed. White r.rotest leaden aald their
• ., children's boycott continued to redu ~e at-
tendance ~harply at the school and at
other schools in the district. San Jose Area
Feels Teiqblor
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SAN JOSE (AP) - A mild earthquake
rolled through the Santa Clara Valley
early today, Jolting residents but causing
no apparent damage, a seismologist said.
The temblor, registering 3.6 on the
Richter Scale, was centered about 15
miles southeast. of here, said R4y Miller,
of 1 the UC seismographic station at
nlitetey. •
From Pagel
FUND-RAISER ..
really catch on in time for the election.
It ts '9 derlvatk>n of a pop goepel song
lhal begins, "l'llt your band In U>e bend
of the man from sUll blue waters ... "
This campaign'• venlon goes:
"Put your hand in the hand of the man
who's In the White HOUie,
"Put hour hand in the band 01 the man
whose middle name lJJ Mllhou1."
He fw1ber eslimlted that a nine 14 II
r..Jle per hour dlfterence between the two
vehicles' speeds woold be the minim=
required 14 -• body !?om U>e bacl< of U>e pickup truck.
Evidence ~ llW'ljunna end open beor
C1D1 ns -durlng ID lnmrtory O(
penooal artl~ In the plc!ruJ>. Chief
Clifford MWTIJ and narcotic. Getectlve
Miclutel Reischl testllled Mooday.
Reischl, who tesUfled first while the
c:hlef of pollce waited outalde the
courtroom, said that while he was in-
ventorying the property al Uie Impound
yard the day following the crash he came
across the contraband material.
Irvine Seeks
Crossi.IJg Guards
The city ~ Irvine ha! openings for
persons willing to serve as school cross-
ing guards al a aalary of $2.20 per hour.
Intenections at whic.b the city hopes to
provide guards are Micbelson Avenue at
Culver Drive, Mlclle!Jon at Sandburg and
Turtlerock Drive at AmalO Drive.
Hours will be acbeduled belWffil 7:ts
a.m. and t p.IJl.. The city will provide all
necessary equipment
Applicationa are"lvallib"~e Irvine
Police Department, 19002 l""'t (at
Campus Drive). For.,1nformalion ca1l
Mrs Joan Gumina at S.W.WS.
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WHAT CHANGES YOUR HOUSE MORE THAN ANY OTHER THING?.
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WHAT IMPROVES ACCOUSTICS DRAMATICALLY?
WHAT WARMS UP A HOUSE?
WHAT IMPARTS UNIQUE BEAU'f'I' AND COMFORT?
••• CARPETING FROM ALDEN'S, THArS WHAT!
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(IF YOUR HOUSE "STIFLES" YOU, STOP IN AND SEE US FAST.)
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'1.l'.~(~ ' ~· '1iiiii r1 I "'~-· :l~I~~~ O'l 1 .. _11.
ALDEN'S
11 1-. • '·· -,,....__ ,I 1, __ '..;,•-'Ct~ _l ·--.\:'-
CARPETS o DRAPES
1663 Placentla A••·
llNCI "" COST A MESA IN
COSTA 11111.l ) 646-4838 '
HOURS: ""'1!:. Thrv Thurw.. 9 hi 5:30-'RI., 9 hi 9 -SAT., tiJO hi S
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Dunting1on Beaeh
Fountain Valle,.
VOL 65, NO. 305, 3 SECTIONS, 38 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA TUESDAY, OCTOBER 31, 1972
Today'•Flaal
N.Y. Steek.8
TEN CENTS
Valli!y Woinan Tells Terror in C!ganda
-. . .
DAILY PILOT St.ft .......
BACK FROM UGANDA
Fountain V1lley'1 West
Two Trustees
Hit Critical
Policy Report
By MICHAEL GOODRICH
Of .. D9lrr l"tttt ·-
Two trustees of the Huotlngton Beach
Untoo Iilgb School oistrlct said today
that Trustee George Logan's sharp
aiticism ·of state labor o ff l c i a I s
...,,..e.11 bis opinion and not that of the .cbool board. . ' .
Trustees 'Dennis Mangen an d John
Bentley said they beUeve Logan's blast
at a report criUcat cf the . district's
employp>ent policies was premature.
jlowever, a lhird truatee , Ray Schmitt,
slid he concurred with what Logan had
said, agreeing the report was to some ex-
tent prejudiced.
Trustee Ralph Bauer was out of town
and not available for comment.
The Logan letter released Monday
cxiticlzel a report by the !tate Fair
Employment P r a ct i c e s Commission
which crillcized the district for alleged
employinent inequities.
Amoog the charges in the state report
is one that Anglo-Cau cas ian ad-
ministrators had no reat recogniUon of
the minority community's .needs aod
desires for its children.
Logan labeled such criticism as reflec-
ting "the lowest d e p t h s of
irrespomlblllty, per s ec u ti on and
racism." .
Bentley said he was surprised by
Logan'• action , but added he did not
think the report had been eµtirely fair to
the district. "I feel that U-blasts (Logan's let·
ter~ should reflect the consensus of the
board and not just one individuaJ,"
BenUey added. "'George should have complained to the
rest of tile board before he went off on
his own," Bentley said.
Bentley also said he believes the
FEPC's criticism was too sharp and that
the commission had not given the district
the proper guidelines to work with
originally. . "It seemed like they evaded us until
they decided to blast us ," he said.
Bentley said the distri._ct had requested
help lrom the FEPC in February . .but Ill<
commission bad not responded until July
when members of the Mexican-American
committee on Education requested an in-
veatlgaUon. . Board President Dennis Mangers said
thfl trustees would not react as a group
until they had more time to study the
report and get reactions from Mexicafl"
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(See REPORT, Page Z)
Fru it Picker's
Booty $100
A ligh~lingered thief pluckat
about 100 pounds of ~ult from a
Costa Mesa man's tree Monday in
wbal lnveollgators e..iuatAO as a
dsrlng daylight avocado capet.
GUI Ii. Beach, of m E. 2111 SI.,
called lo complain when be found
oll but two avocados - a $100 loot 0based on today'• retail erlces -
strlpoed rrom h1t bacQard tree.
Of/leer Dave Ketchum satd
whoever Inv Beacl\'.s backyard
with a 1tepla must have don& It
between irunr t due to
auch a lhorough
They ·~··tJY reach the '-lf"a.. couldn't
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By JOHN ZAILER
Of .. DIJrr ...........
Allee West of Fouollin Valley baJ
found that it takes more than a wUllng
heart and a helping band to rescue an un.
derdeveloped r¥1tion from povuty.
Her Peace Corps mission tAl Uganda,
East Africa, turned into a nightmare of
murdered friends, drunken soldiers and
senseless mobs.
Todliy, just three months after she ..t
out on what was to J;>e a two.year
mission, she is grateful to be back in her
tract home at 8717 NlghtfQgaJe Lane. \
"I went trying to help," she says. "But
cooditions were just too chaotic. The pe<>-
ple need so much help, but I couldn'l
stay."
She remembers one scene especially
well.
"I was in a store buying shampoo," she
recalls, "when suddenJy the people out on
the streets beg'an running. Thousands of
them ran by, going as fast as they could.
"I rmally found some of the more
educated ones who spoke English and
asked them what was happening. They
didn't know. All they knew was that
everyone else was running, so they ran,
too.
"Later we found out that another town
so miles away beard our people were run-
ning and Ibey sllrted running, too. But
nobody ever found out what started ll
"Alter tbat we were tA>ld tAl stay in-
doors and never go out on the street.
\Ye were very close to being evacuated
by then."
The reason for the disorder, Mrs. West
believes, can be traced to ooe man
·-President Ida Amin. An anny genertil
who seized power two years ago from a
parliamentary regime, Am.in was always
considered a staunch lafl and order man.
But this summer ltis rule stJ.ddenly stiff.
ened1 according to Mrs. West.
'"lbere were regulations on
everything," she says. "Even length of
hair for men and skirt length for
women."
One of the first slgrls of trouble came in
August when one young volunteer -was
an-ested for wearing cut-off sbo~.
"HE! wasn't hurt or anything," says Mrs.
West. "But that worried us. We were
willing to go along with the rulea because
we wanted to help, except that we d.idn~
know that short pants were not allowed."
Soon after that came another jolt.
Amin announced that all Asians would
have to ~ave the country by Novembier
or lose all cltiun.ship rlghll. Mrs. West
says this was a disastroulll -as well as
reprehensible -, action because the
Asians were o:>ostly busineumen and
es.senliaUy ran the economy or the na-
tioo.
''There was one man, a Mexl~
American frorp Texu, who couldn't take
that order." says Mrs. West. "He felt be
had been discriminated against in Teus,
and that he would have no part at all in
supporting a raclst regime."
In what Mrs. West believes was a
(See UGANDA, Page ll -'
'Deadline'
Past With
Baker Hits Battin Ad
No Peace
By Ualled Press lntmlallollll
'l'1e Communb:ts' Oct. 31 deadline for
signing a Vietnam cease-fire p8'3ed to-
day with no firm indication when it will
he signed.
Tbe White House said President Nixoo
is seeking a lasting peace and will not be
stampeded by Hanoi's deadline of today.
White House officials said earlier it
was improbable the cease-fire would he
signed before the Nov. 1 elections
although both the Hanoi llDd Viet Cong
delegations to the Paris ta.Its called on
the United States to sign "as soon as
possible."
'Ibi! WBJ a retreat from their previous
"sign today" statements.
Presidential advller Henry A. KJS>-
inger said Tbunday there were a
number of poinll that sbould be cleared
up in one 'more negotiating session.
A clue tAl one of the ma~snags came
today -""""' Dong Lam, chlef Saigon negoUatAlr In Pam wh> was in
'!IJQo to brlef J-!llfldaJs OD
Saigon'• position.
Lam IAlld J-Vice Premier
Titkeo Mild that Saigon wants assurances
an aJreement wUJ mean the withdrawal
of North Vietnamese troops from South
Vitbulln. -
He said Saigon wanted "clarification"
on the future of lbe!e troops llDd on the
three-part "National councll of recon~
ciliation" which Saigon fears means a
coalition government .
White House spol<esman Ronald L.
Ziegler took note of the Communist
deadline and said, "The only deadline
we're operating under is the one that will
bring about the rl&bl ~ of an agree-
ment
"The President bas been v e r y
meticulous in making clear" that be will not agree tAl the signing of a peace pact
(See PEACE, Page I)
Valley Tot Dies
In Stadium Fall
A 2·year-old Fountain Valley boy died
Monday of injuries suffered when he fell
out of a grandstand at the Fullerton High
School football stadium.
Police said John Hogg, son of Woodrow
and Karen Hogg , 1'732f Euclid St., was in
the care of a baby sitter when be aP"'
parenUy fell out of the 10.foot slanf/s llDd
severed his spine.
He was pronounced dead at 9:20 a.m.
at St. Jude Hoopltal following the Sahlr-
day night accident, according to police.
Services for the youngster are schedul-
ed for 'Z:!O p.m. Tbunday al the Peek
Family Colonial Home, Westminster,
with lriterment to follow at the Good
Shepherd cemetery, Huntington Beach.
He ts surv1ved by b1I parents, a~ sister
and a brother.
WRITES OPEN LETTER
. SupenllOI' Bottin
Organized Crime
Seen in State,
younger s a,·s
SACRAMENTO (AP) -Atty. Gen.
Evelle J. Yo'.lnger todar cited a number
of indications wbi~ "alert us to the
pOssible presence of organized crime" in
Caliiornia.
The indications "suggest that organiz-
ed crime does exist in CaliComia in visi·
ble and subtle forms," he saici.
In a statement, Younger said the iJt..
dications include gang slayings, a high
activity in. vice, hidden ownerships, and
costly sophisticated legal maneuvers by
dealers in J!rotica.
Younger said lht i:ndicaUons were cited
in a repOrt to the California Legislature
written by the Organized Crime and
Cr::..:inal Intelligence Branch of the State
Department of Justic:t?.
"As w.>uld be expectc!t," hP. said, "the
more populous areas of ·the state
evidence the g1 ..:ntest amount of organiz·
ed crime PCtivity,"
'lbe report, given to legislators today,
said that at least 100 ganc·type slayings
have occurred in California in five years.
"The ~t preponderans:e of these kill·
ings have been the result of Chinese
youth gang conflicts, ouUaw motorcycle
gang.warfare, and increased competition
in narcotics 1raffic, '' the statement said.
"Only a few of J>e killings :iavt: been the
Eastern sy,tdicate type of killing."
They Preserve
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'Hurt County Pur~hase'
By JACK BROBACK
Of llilt DlltW Pfltt SIMI
Supervisor David L. Baker today at-
tacked a compaign advertisement by
Supervisor Rc>~rt W. Battin which Baker
asserted bad j~pardized the county's ac-·
quisltlon of the 48S-acre Mile Square
Park in Fountain Valley.
Baker referred to an ad in a mail
publication title.!, "Au Open Letter About
Mile Squme" plceed by Battin.
Baker calleJ the letter "false and
deceitful" tind "~ blrtant lie."
Battin replied that Baker was just
trying to help his opponent, William
Wenke, in the Nov. 7 election.
"Battin's letter is destructive, ir·
responsible and self-serving at the ex-
pense of the pu ··-:," ~ charged. "It im-
pugns the integrity of every o t h e r
member of the Board~f pervisors."
Battin'• letter. which ppeared last
week, attacks the I" 213 acres of
the 48>acre park to Fomrtain Valley
farmers. ·
11 II !lie ..me park liuir 1'!>m an
elgbt·monU: lea."t-e&IMion to Murai
F8f111S 1><came the sµbject of recent u..
dictments by the Orange County Grand
Density Deerease
Jury in connect ion with an alleged
shakedown of farmer George Murai by
former Westminster mayor D e r e k
McWhinney and Planning Commissioner
Tad Fujita. ,
The jury Indictment alleges that
McWhinn~y and Fujita demanded a
$10,000 contrlbutlou tc the campaign fund
of "a S'Jpervlsor" or Mural might find it
difficult to get an extension of his five-
year-old lease on the 213 acres.
Today, Bater demanded and received
approval of a reSolutlon by the board
reaffirming the county's plan to continue
the ordP.rly development of the park as
provided In the agreement with the
federal government.
Battin is engaged :n a touet campaign
to ~ln his seat oo the Board of
Supervi9ors. His opponent, Santa A.. a at-
torney William Wenke polled almost 4,<*I
more votes in the primary than did the
incumbent.
Baker claimed &ttin's opui letter bad
deloyed transfer of tbe deed to !hf ear•
land fr'om tbe fedetal ....,.mneut .
"There bave olready ~ jleloyl in the
conveyance of Mile Square because of
(See BATl'IN, Pai• II
Hunting ton Aides Seek
Population Growth
Huntington Beach city councilmen and
planning commissioners Monday nJght
moved to curb the city's population
growth by recommending a decrease in
the building density of planned residen-
tial developmenls,
In a joint study session, the planners
and councilmen agreed that the building
density per acre in Rl planned
developments should be decreased from
seven to 6.5.
Along with thiJ they tagged an
altemaUve that would allow develcpers
to exceed the 6.5 limit if no more than 20
bedrooms per acre were planned.
The plan was suggested by Councilman
Jack Green.
"1 don't care about the density as Jong
Others led by Matney llDd Councilmao
Henry Duke have contended that high
density would bring more people to the
city.
The councilmen placed a moratorium
on all planned developments last Aug. 21
until the changes in the ordinance could
be worked out.
The moratorium ended Oct. 20, but
councllmen and pJaMing conuniAsioners
indicated they would not renew it in view
of the agreemonl,reached Monday night.
The new ordlnance will get its first
public hearing Nov. 14.
Athe1is Tour Bus
Sl ides Off Road
as we put a limit on the bedrooms,'' said K U
Councilman Jerry Matney, a long Ume i ing 5 women
foe of planned developments. .
Some couocllmen and planning com-ATHENS (UPI) -A bulload of
mlssiooen have iigued in the past that American pilgrims, retracing the iteps of
unless developers were allowed more -.ithe Apostl: Paul, met death and injuries
homes per acre, no more planned today when their bus skidded oU the
... developments would be built beceuse of main highway to ancient c.ortatb and
flhancing difficulties. slithered down a stony slope, police laid.
Itelies
Tblrty-elght tourists were In the llUI,
together with a driver and hls aalstanl
Huntin gton, Histor ical Society Gets Ball Rolling
Police said four women los~ tbetr Uvea
Instantly, and a fllth died later tn
ho11pltal. (The A!LSoclateO Pess aal~ aeven
were killed.)
Twenty-two per90111 less badly Injured
were detained In a Corinth bospltal and
"There'• a lol of old Hunllnglon Beach material like thiJ." Higgins said.
history that Jt's almost too late to aave." The meeting, called to enlist members
Eighty upirinK hlstory OOfft were and organlu them into workln& c:om-
greeted with Ibis warning by city ·mlttees, produced severol previoualy
historian Delbert "Bud'' Higgins Monday unknown documents and p r I v a t e
nlghl at the flnl public meeting of the artifacts.
HW1tlngton ne.cll lllstorlcll Society. "Poople may havo been reluctant lo
''We'Ye K0t to a:ather all the material m1.ke their private collections public rM'
we can and get it preserved," Higgins rear they wouldn't be handled properly,"
said. "In aome places there should be said IOclely f)l"Clldfnt Jim Shepherd.
monuments." 11We hopo to c&ange that. ..
The ~year-old Higgins related tbat hll She""°I'! said the IOclety ho• plaM t~
grandmother -"who wu like a-pack rat take cWll' the old planning departmenf
the way she saved things" -ii now lell, ~ nexl .yell' wbeo the ,,.,. civic
big much voluoblo materlll .irom &r -~~ ii OM-_lld II> 1lJe It u a ilome
• i.rage. He Ol]ll'<ll!ed cqnctm lbiif 11 fat hlllDricil 4ilpll1f and exhlblti.
might be removed from the area or lMt Ulthnatcly, Shepherd Hid, the 11oelety
tAl the public. ilopes tAl expand lhl• serle1 of uhlbitlons
"With on ici~e hbtorlcat ooclety, I to lnclud< llfMiu numolklns or early set·
hope wt11 have 1 way tAl prM<rva tlert and models of the lowlr at <farlour ., •
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stages of Its development. another ,eight serloully wounded were
"Somedoy, maybe in 10 or. 15 years, rushed ·oo ilo!pltsls In lhe sullw:bl of
we'd like to have a muaeum bulldln8 of Athtnt. our own to that people could come oil lb< Pollee .sald three pel'IOlll MClped
-and .... l!ll!npse af the culture ol •nhurt. the Nrly dayl o1 the dty." . · Names or the victims will nol be
"We w111t oo build 1 .._ of com-• reliutd until next bf tin an notU!od,
munlty ldenUty In Huntington Beach.:' · U.S. Embply IOUrces~ld. '81d city Ubrarllll Walter Jol!Mon, "so The pdlp WH viii G....., u port
tl\Al.our city Ion' jurt another bedzoom ' of the American pnlzed "Bible
community to the people that Uve In it." Lands" tour.
The hlJIAlrlcal IOC!ety 1J now forming · A 1pol<esm1n for Wbolesalt Tours In
cominJttees oo conduct 11pe<ecorded tn-Atbens, which orgaallt<I tho Ortelt Jllrl
tervi<l'• with city old·tlmers, tAl cata1o1 or the tour, '81d the tourilta orrlved bel:•
ulJUll& materials, tAl a1$1.tt ll'Cheoloilsll °"E Y and.wtre acheduled IO rttum . In preserving u.. city's Indian herlllge, bo' Wedaeldsy, au.. spending today
and ' to retearch aelo:.100 topics. • retr g tt\e atepe offat. Paul to ancient
Anyone Interested in helping con ...,. C9rlnth. . .t
tact Walter Johni!Ol1 at the ·m•tn c j t y WI• 111d portlclpanta In iuc1! tAllln
llbrsry. c.me from all .ovtr lhi United Slltat.
DAk.Y •tLOT ...,"""'
'A BLATANT LIE'
Supervl-llbr
Two Top-le vel
Posts Created
In Beac1i System
Two new positions for top 1eftl acJ..
ministraton, both with saJary rana~
from $11,600 tAl '20.100 annually, have
been created by trustees of tho H..,.
Ungton Beach City (elementary) Scbooi
District.
1be posts are director of curricWurn
and dirF or fiscal services. They were
app-oved arter trustees were told that
the growing district Is too big for Its old
administrative set-up.
The position for • curriculum dlrecto•
Is especially slgnlRcant, according to
Supeilntendent s. A. Moffett.
"We :.1sed to keep track of our pro.
gram1 llDd send down ~ by word of
mouth," Moffett said. "But that's not
working anymore. 11
The dlstrlct, which now hu nine
schools, has had the same basic ad-
ministrative arrangement since 1965.
when It had only two achools.
Moffett said the currtculwn dlreclor
will write the diltrld.'1 whole education
program Into a series oi coocrete goala
and objecllves, Jmllr8llll-and poliey
manuala. He said tfi1a wlll enabfe the
district tAl make· 1lplfJcant progt11
toward lndividuallzalion of Instruction.
Oraage
lfeatller
Those cold northeasterly wlllds
shoold b • g I o to diminish by
Wtdnttday. &ee0rdlng to the
weather service. lfl&ho •t the
E .,. upected tAl reodl •
lo 75 lnllnd. Lows tml&bt.
ChUJ,Y ·U-IO.
INSWE TODAW
A ntto .. ,,,.,. Oii HZ fff• lo
"""'"· lfmllor to u.. old 11'.n.. ttV ilfl'Ol'f, ®-• U.. "!"'l<J.
don of Fmu:hmm u C%p<1'I l<>wrt. s .. 1tory, POi/< U.
.......... 1 ... ........ fi
I Q ...... ,_....,. llM -.............. .... ~ ............... . I ·~i:u-•• 11 nm.,.,_ • I ...,. .... tJ
...... ... • .... MM'kflft ... ..
11 ~ 11
t-11 .,,.....,. --.. ..... .: =.i: ..... 11o1l --' •
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I DAILY PILllT H
Nixon Sets
Election
Eve Speech
WASffiNGTON (AP ) -Pruldcnl Nix-
on has schedu~ a round or television
and radio broadcasts l~lud.Jng a
television speech on elec tion eve for the
windup or bis re-elflctlon campal.gn that
will take him lo camorn1a Saluroay.
The White HOWie announced NW>o wU1
give a 30-minute address to the D&.Uon on
live ra~TV from lbe White House
'l'bunday nigbl at •:!O p.m. PST for
what was described as "a loot to the
future and discussioo of hi:!: hopes for the
future of this country."
1be three more radio and two
television addreMes are all paid political
broadcasts, press secretary Ronald L.
Ziegler said, and they will give Nixon a
concentration of broadcasting for every
day e:rcept Sunday until the election.
nie President and Mn. NIJ:on plan to
fly to California Saturday and land at the
Ontario International Airport In early
evenin~ for an airport rally in San
Bernardino County. • DAILY ,II.OT PIHi .. iW lltkNnl l( .... llf'
From there they will helicopter to San
Clemente, where they will .stay to vote
Tuesctax morning and return t o
Washington to receive election results al
the White Rouse.
Ready for Halloween
Ziegler ibdicated that there may be
other campaigning activities, but he had
no finn detaijs to provide today.
With. a pumpkin nearly as bi g as she is, 3-year-<>ld Traci Valo!f ol
HuntiJ?gton. Beach gets ready for some king-size spooking tonight.
The giant 1ack-o-lantern was carved from a pumpkin weighing 115
pounds.
Nixon had canceled a major ap-
pearance in the Chicago area for tod~
b!..cttuse of Monday's train wreck there.
Thursday's television broadcast will
carried by tho NBC Television network.
The Monday evening live broadwt,
wbicll will emanal< from the l.o8 Angeles
afU, possibly the Western Whit< ll<l\IM'•
does oot yet have an announced time or
topic, Ziegler aald. \
County Governmental
Council Nearer Reality
~
Ziegler WU uked wbetber Nixon
would make any speeches dealing
specifically with Vietnam. He aald Nixon
does not pl~ a apeclfic address on that
subject, but It wM obvious th•I he mlght
tr.elude it in a discusskm of the future of
the country.
In his most l'l!Cellt radio apeech Nixon
promiaed U re-elected "one of my
highest·priorlty proposals" will he prop-
erly-tu relief for older cltlaens. (See
story, Page 4.).
Bike Trails Due
For 'Seal Beach •
By JOANNE REYNOLDS
Of ... Dlllr ""' lltff
Formation of a countywlde in-
tergovernmental council moved a step
closer Monday night during a meeting at-
tended by representatives of 25 of Orange
Comity's 26 cities.
Tbe proposal. made by the Supervisor<
and Mayors Council (SAMCO), 11 that all
the ciUes and the county create a volun-
tary agency through a joint pcwers
agreement. ?Ii .
Membership would he llmi ted lo
elected representaUves of the. cities and
the county Board cf Supervison, with
other governmental ooards, commissions
Blqde trails and 1-1 oloog Pacific ond opeda1 district trustees having noo-
eoa.t-llJi!rway through Sell Beach have voting membership.
been approved for immedlate con-The cities woold have one vote each
struction by the cit~ eotmd1, · ~. and the board of aupervisors would have
Tbe ~Jon alael the ''gR:ay Si part.." f1ve votes -one for each supervisor.
of a IS-mile procr&m for bicycle trails To finance the proposed new organiza-
approved last v.:eet by the Seal Beach Cl4 tiou each city and the county would pay
ty Council. Estimated cost Is $16,000 for dues based on both assessed valuation
the entire J6 milei. and population. The budget for the first
Another part of the trails srs;em will six months of operation is estimated at
be along Seal Bea<:h Boulevard from $17.200
Rossmoor Center to Electric Avenue. Tbe · f th · t The trails and lanes will be set off on . purpose o e rntergovemmenta
the roadways by signs and. clearly visible ~ WQU].d be to f011ter better coopera-
pavement markings, city officials said. t1on and communlcatlon between the
· various levels of govei;pment in the coun-
· Realtors Set Meet
'J'he, HunUngtoo Beach -Foun;:tl
Valley Boan! of IWlllors has scheduled a
breakfast meeting and discusslon for 8
a.m. Wednesday al lhe Sheraton Beach
Inn.
~e speaker on the ~ver Success" will be R.
Hall, president of Imagination
Institute, Inc.
subject
Carlton
Control
Weather Halts Search
ANCHORAGE, Alaska (UP I) -Snow
and fog Monday prevented Air Force
planes from conilnuinl the lf>.doy aeat<h
for Houae Majority Leader Hal• Bogg$
and three other men wbo dllappeartd in
a light plane.· "We are 1tandlng by.''
Maj. Charles Shelley said at the Elmen-
dorf Air Force Bue search center.
-co.ur ..
DAILY PILOT
ty. with the possibility of using the
organiz.atlon to apply for state and
federal grants: and aa a basis fOr other
joint powen agreements for services
between the individual members.
The idea was unanimously endorsed by
SAMCO, but at Mandap IJl<#Ung, it
became apparent that many of the cities
had reservations about some parts cf the
agreement. And a few of the cities have
some reservations about the agreement
itself.
One of the primary concerns was first
voiced by Councilman Ray Quigley of
Irvine. One pcrtion of lhe agreement
give1 the organization the power to lncur
debts and obligations. Quigley said he
does not believe this need!: to be in-·
eluded.
"If the council at some future time
wants to go into some kind of a bond pro-
gram, then there is the power to do that
in the a~ment. But we don't need this
proviso 1n there as It Is now ," he said. A
half dozen other city representatives, in·
eluding Councilman Bob Wilson of Costa
Mesa agreed with Quigley .
Fountain Valley
Recreation Unit
Slates Cla!'ses
Christmas Crarl,, Educational Foo.tball
ror Women and Holiday Bak.Ing Fa!cies
are three new clusea beiq offered this
ran by the Fountain Valley Recreation
Department.
Frank Sales, mayor of Seal Beach, pos-
ed cne of the hardest questions cf the
evening when he asked, "What de we need
it for?"
"We are presently pretty well covered
by SCAG (Southern califomia Associa-
tion of Governments), th.! League of
Cities and SAMCO and I just feel we
should not saddle our constituents with
another layer cf government that they do
not need and quite probably do not
want," he said.
Ray Villa, a santa Ana councilman who
has been one of the active supporters of
the intergovernmental council, replied:
"1be organization cf this council is a
genuine concern, but I think we should be
able to work it out. The greatest concern
here is our own sell defense -our p~
tectlon.
"If we don't organize ourselves, some-
one bigger is going to s t e p in and
they'll crganize for us."
The organiiing committee, led by
Councilman Don Smith of Orange, will
meet again in two week!! to consider the
revisions proposed at Monday's meeting.
' Smith said he will then forward a copy
of the revised agreement to all the city
councils and county supervisors for
study.
As soon as 50 percent or the cities
which represent SO percent cf the popula-
tion have approved the agreement, the
roi..ncil will be formed.~
Mom, Daughter
Activities Set
If Grant Okayed
Mother and daughter sewing, family
counseling and cake decorating are some
of the tommunlty programs that ·may be
offered at Fountain Valley High School
next year, it the campus wins an $8,500
grant. .
The grant from the Community
Services Project, a combined federal-
state-eounty task force in Fountain
Valley, would allow the school to employ
a community-school director to establish
programs tailored. to the neflls of the
CJtrununlty's residenlS.
The proj .. A.'l would be modeled after the!
Mott Program, a plan to use achool
facllitles more extensively for famUy and
community-activities. •
"The communily school-director woold
be constantly assessing the needs of
Fountain Valley and establishing nextble
claasea around those needs," explain&
Ken Joneo, director of adult educaUon
for tbe Hlllltinltoo Beach Union Hiib
School District.
Jones said that prognma would be
e11tabllshed &nd continued as tong as peo-
ple were interested.
"We could have a iecture scrles for one
night or seven weeks, dependlna: on bow
l)l-Ople rcspondet!," Jones 11id.
Jones also said the program could
\Vork very closely wflh tbe district's
already existing adult education classes. Two Chrl11tml!IS Craftt cJa.sw wlll be
given begiMing Nov. 14 llt' the Com-
mW11ty Center. One closa will at.art e.t
9:30 a.m. and the other at 7:30 p.m.
The class will offer novel ldeas on the ·
con.,tructlon Md design of home decora-
tions and gifts for the holiday seuon.
Thtrt is a M fee for t.be COW'lf:,
''If the director round a need In the ci-
ty, he could establish a lecture aeries as
part cf the adult education proJr•m and
we would be able. to receive "8te fundlni
for it," he aid.
Those i>roeruns which. were created I"""; the •<lull education cluaol -.Id Educatlooal Football for Women will
begin at 7:!0 p.m. Nw. 7 In room 103 at
POW>taln Valley Hiib School. The class
will cover the n!le1 lli1d u-1<t of the
1ame f••tllrinl """'" lllld !alb by local coaches. A M fee will be charged.
~ on vohmtetra to ttach than, ac>
cor to Jones. ~ • . .
·. ~ ..• .
Headline Incorrect -
l're•P .. el I Ota 'Peace' Dav
BATTIN ••.
urtler pulolldty," Biker ald I n
..i ....... lo lb. llcWblnney-Plljlta mat-
ter.
War St~pped Up
"'Bltllll'• lmllpll>llble .... *'ill
Ila-ts ..... Only lo lec>l>ordtM lliO
county"s i.cqubllloa aod tO clecdve the
piibllc.•
~ a1lo chlrged tbal Battin's IC·
tlons had •bo d.Wyed the transfer of 41
.,,,... to the clly of Foonlain Valley for
recreational use.
By Reds, Allies
He aald the city has alrudy budgeted
'850.000 to develop the acreage aJong
Brookhurst Street to ball parks. tennls
court! and other r~atkmat f..c:Wttes.
Battin refilled lo Bal:er'a attack by de-
nying that his acll bad caus<J any dtlay
In the transfer or the property and cbar;·
ed that Baker was only trying to help
Wenke.
Bakor attacked what he <4lled Baltin's
"allegations and inuendoes" ln the open
letter point-by-point.
Battin had charged that "as long ., a
few people can lease thi3 land for
themselves for a pittance and reap hun-
dreds of thousand.o of dollan in prolits
from lt.s use, the citizeQs are gohJg to be
denied Its recreational ~."
Baker reylied: "The i n i e r I m.
agricultural leases on portk>na of Mile
Square have never been a constraint on
park development. There are two basic
reasons why the undeveloped lands are
subleased £or agricultural purposes. One
is to provide weed and dust abatement on
the property, a cost of which would
otherwise fall on the county.
"The federal government was very
concerned about complaiDta from Foun·
tai""' Valley resident regarding weed and
d u s t nuisances originating fro m un-
developed lands at Ml1c Square.
"Tbe lease tenns obligate the county to
control weeds and dust and the county
was specifically aulhorized by the federal
lease to sublease land for farming
purposes to exercise weed and dust con-
trol."
Battin, in his open letter, also charged
that land at Mile Square "Is again set
aside under a county lease for the ex-
clusive use of a small group of select
farmers to make money."
Baker replied, 0 1'be agricultural sub-
leases at Mile Square were put out to
sealed bid In accordance with strict coun-
ty procedures.
u Any fanner could bid on the proposed
leases and a minimum rent was
established. Battin Is well aware of this
but would have the public believe that
the present agricultural lessees obtained
their leases by fraud."
Baker attacked Battin's assertion that
there are reported moves of subdivlders
to grab a parcel of Mile Square for
homes or apartments.
"Ajlalo he exhibits a callous disregard
for the truth. Under no circUmstaDCH
can lhe county use Mlle Square for borne
sites or apartmenta either unaer our ei:4
isling lease er the proposed deed to the
county." Baker further charged that Battin 's
moves were "purely and simply a callOU!
attempt to mislead the public and garner
votes JD.the P~".:t' '. "rri his zeal for." fe..elecUon, Battin has
trampled on reason and abandoned truth.
1n tbe process he is doing a tremendous
disservice to this board and to the peo-
ple 'cf Orange County a,p9 ~cularly
the ~ple of Fountain V~
In his statement to the board, Baker
s:..id that the agreement for ronveyance
of the park lands "worth many millions
of dollars at no cost to the people of
Orange County represents almost 10
years of painstaking negotiations widl the
federal government." He charged that
BatUn's "fal!e statement bad served to
jeopardize the negotiations."
Baker said that the pa,erwork had
been completed on the transfer of the
property to the county and that any delay
in consummation of the deed could be
blamed on Battin and Battin alone.
Producer's Rites Set
WOODLAND HILLS (AP) -Funeral
services are planned Friday for Mitchen
Lelsen, a Hollywood produceM.irector
who served 12 years as art director
under Cecll B. DeMille.
SAIGON IUPl l -Communist troops
attacked relentlessly throughout South
Vietnam today while American 852
bombers responded with a near record
number of raids cveio the north, military
spok<smen reported.
Tbe raids and countt:r·rak!s came on
the daf the Commwlists had chosen for a
ceasefire.
On the baltlefielda the width and length
of South Vietnam, Communist attacks in-=ued. the Saigon blgh command said.
The command reported 121 shelling, ter-
ror and ground attacks between dawn
~1onday and dawn today.
U.S. B5.2s new at least 39 raids aglllnst
North Vietnam between noon Monday
and noon today, the U.S. command said.
Communist troops overran two district
capllals .on South Vietnam's central
coast. military ,sources Said.
Field reports confirmed by military ol-
ficers said government troops were forc-
ed out of Ba Tc, 300 miles north or
Saigon, and Que Son, 340 miles above the
capital.
Both towns had been wrecked by O>m·
From Page I
PEACE •..
until the remaming out.standing issues
are clarified, Ziegler said.
"It is the President's firm intention to
have a setUement which will offer the
best hope for lasting peace and a peace
that does not leave the seed of a future
conflict," Ziegler said.
Ziegler said that Niten seeb to reach
an a~ment that will wipe out the
possibility of a new war u well as "to
assure the people of South Vietnam with
the means cf determining their cwn
future."
Kissinger was in the WbJte House Ur
day, and while It :vu apparent he would
be traveling ~gain soon to Paris officials
said there was no set timet'.able for
another round or negotiations with C.Om-
munist diplomats.
Reparts had been circulating in
Washington that Kissinger would fly to
Paris Friday and be ready to sign an
end-the-war tr~1ty by Sunday.
Officials today discounted the pcssibili·
ty there would be any signing befcre
anolher round of coosultations with
Hanoi's delegates in Paris and another
probable trip by Kissinger to SaJgoo to
bring South Vietnamese P r e s i d e n t
Nguyen Van TbJeu lnto the fold.
Officials aald at this point Kissinger
had no definite plam to 1 e a v e
W as~gton,. But It \f&S clear he was in
touch with Hanoi through secret negotia-
tions and also with Russia and China who
are putting pressure on their ally to keep
lines open.
French authorities, who have been in
charge of the physical side of the 31h-
year-old talks, sent a crew of workers to
the conference hall on Paris' Avenue
Kleber toda.)' to put Into ~he meetlng ball
st~stands ll.?ld nashiights for television
crews.
From Page I
REPORT ...
Americans and school administrators.
"I don't think we can determine if the
criticism was fair until we decide if the
repo rt was correct," Mangers said .
The board president also noted that no
other district in California has a fair
employment program and that the FEPC
officials had admitted Huntington Beach
was pioneering in the field.
"Once we set up a program we will be
the first district ln the state to do it,"
Mangers said.
All For The Family-
muni.st artillery att¥ks and Allied bomb-
lng raids in earUer lighting in the se\'1il n·
month-old North Vietnamese offensive .
UPI correspondent Edward Baslscll
said Que Son wa1 nothing more than ''a
pile of rubble" tnd was abandoned by its
gowniment defenders early today under
heavy Communist pressure.
Bassett also reported the fall of Ba To.
alter government rangers held out
agaimt a two-month siege by regular
North Vietnamae Anny troops.
At least ~ of the battered rangers
wm reporled missing, although the bulk
of the town's defenders made It to two
nearby south Vietnamese army camps.
The BS2 raids came in a series of 13
waves. According to U.S. spokesmen, the
number of Strategic Air Command
missions matched the record aet Aug. U.
At least 130 jet fighter-bombers hit
North Vietnam Monday, and a Utree-shlp
naval task force bombanh!d shore
targets on at least five occasions during
the day, spokesmen reported.
All U.S.· offensive actlens against the
north were below the 20th .parallel, which
runs 65 miles south of Hanoi, in line with
the U.S. attempt to show "good wlD"
during peace negotiations.
From Page I
UGANDA ...
freak border incident, however. he was
machine-gunned to death in trying to
leave the country.
After that, instances of drunken
soldiers, tem>ri%1ng the public at will,
became more common. Basic order was
breaking down, and Mrs. West was hav-
ing serious doubts about whelher she
should stay in the country.
"We couldn't get any information ex-
cept what Amin put out," she says, 11so I
bought a short-wave radio to hear what
the BBC and Voice of America had to
say. That really scared me."
In late September, just as Mrs. West
was C<lmpleting her cultural adjustment
training. conditions beeamr so bad that
the Peace Corps advised her to leave.
"I was really sorry. because the pewle
were in more need of help than ever. But
there was nothing lo do, and besides, l
was really afraid and insecure."
Mn. Wes\ is )ftSel!Uy trying lo gather
up eoough courage to continue her Peace
Corps commibnent in another country,
probably in lndoneisla.
"I'm going lo check voey cattluDy Into
the political conditions this Ume," she
says. "I doo~ know If I could take
another experience like the one I had."
Spock Comes Out
For Marijuana
SAN LUIS OBISPO (AP) -Presiden-
tial candidate Dr. Benjamin Spc>ek
asserts marijuana !aws are aimed at
yootbs lllld radicals and says ~II work
to legalize use of the drug U elected.
"The police are not after the middle
class cllizen and are not going into the
home to see U he's smoting marijuana,"
the Peace and Freedom Party candidate
told newsmen Sunday.
"They're alter the long.haired youths,
the black and the white radicals, and
anybody the police hate."
Spock aaid Dr. Timothy Leary, wilo
escaped from the Calilomla Men's
Colony here in Ul70 while serving a 1-10
year sentence for marlju~a possession
in Laguna Beach, WU ''being persecuted
because of bis beliefs en the new drugs."
WHAT CHANGES YOUR HOUSE MORE THAN ANY OTHER THING?.
WHAT IMPROVES ACCOUSTlCS DRAMATICALLY?
WHAT WARMS UP A HOUSE?
WHAT IMPARTS UNIQUE BEAUTY AND COMPORT?
• • • CARPETING FROM ALDEN'S, THATS WHATI
(IF YOUR HOUSE "STIFLES" YOU, STOP IN AND SEE US FAST.) •
ALDEN'S
llollday Baking Fonclea wlllbellln al 7
p.m. oo Nov. 20 1n room 245 at F"ountain
Valley Hip School. Thi course will offer
Milts In cake decoralln1. cookie recipes
11111 stnierbread boo,. bakiJtl, all
<:entered around lhe holldoy 1euon.
'l1l<rt i. a !IS charge.
A Dally Pilol hoadltne Monday ln-
comclly lndlclted the plea In Sin Diep
SUperlor C....t by Byn>n R. Handy of
Westmlnatar who facea cb1t1 .. of kid·
naplng wealthy tndu1trlallst J. T. II~~· Handy pleaded lnnocint. Thi ln~~t plea was eorm:Uy reported In
CARPETS e DRAPES
1663 Placentia An.
•'
1
•
To rt&lster for the cla&Sel oont1ct the
Foonlaln Valley Recreatloo Dtpartmonl
at llfl2-~-~~grots rheof he~~iozro~ .::;'.~· .. ...._.,. .....
I
• •
•
..
a •
COSTA ·MESA
646-4838
~URS: Mo•. Thrv Thur1., 9 lo !130 -FRI., 9 lo 9 -SA,,,, 9:30 lo 5
~
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•
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I
H DAILY PIL.OT
Mystery Shrouds Redhead's Death
Police Car
Speed 'Not
Excessive'
By JACK CHAPPELL
Of ... 0.1,, , .... ,,..,
Expert testimony ttbuttlng the pros-
ecution's allegations of excessive police
car speed, and evidence of mRrijuana and
open beer cans have come forth ·in the
Il'isdemeanor manslaughter trial of San
Clement..: policeman Gary Adams.
Adams' trial ln the Laguna Niguel
Munlclpal Court of Judge H. Warren
Knight stems from a fat.al crash over the
Memorial Day weekend.
Adams' patrol vehicle collided with a
ptckup truck heavy wtl .. camping equip-
ment and four occupants, one of whom,
Jeffery Britt, 16, of Long Bearh, died.
Britt and a companion were riding in
tt~ bed of the pickup truck along with at
least three cases of Leer, sleeping bags
and other camping items for a San
Onofre outing.
'Ibomas R. Bates. an a c c i d e n t
reconstruction engineer with a firm hired
by Adams' attorney Gerald Williams
estimated the police car minimum speed
couJd have been 45 miles per hour before
braking began.
Previous testimony by an Anaheim
Polk:! Department traffic investigator,
officer George Plat!oot, pegged the
minimum speed of the vehicle at fl1 miles
per bout. Posted speed is 30 miles per
hour.
Bates engaged in a lengthy description
and explanation on the types ol skids and
relative braking efficiency.
He further estimated that a nine to 11
I ,;le per hour d!Ueren~ between the lv.'o
vehicles' speeds woulJ be the minimum
required to throw a body from the back
... ; the pickup truck.
Evidence of marijuana and open beer
cans was found during an inventory of
personal articles in the pickup, Chief
Clifford Murray and narcotics detective
Michael Reischl testified Monday.
Reischl, who testified first while !he
chief of police waited outside the
courtroom, said that while he was in·
ventarylng the property at the impound
yard the day following the crash he came
across the contraband material
Squad t;o Probe
Obscenity Views
Throughout State
SAN DIEGO (AP) -The police
dt>partment 's traveling vice squad ~kes
to the road next week, as two
plalnclothee.ofricers begin a month-long
jaunt to find out what the rest of the
state considers obscene.
A d~partment spokesman says the twJ
will visit 60 California cities. stopl'ling at
live sex shows, erotic movies and adults-
only bookstand!. In addition, they 'll poll
1,000 persons statewkle on their stand-
ards of obscenity.
The pu.-pose Is twofold, the spokesman
said: to tstablish the oflicers as expert
witnesses In obscenity trials, and to
detennlne community standards pn
obscenity, a guideline used by courts.
~ tour is made annually.
Tbe Cl~y Council, which at first refused
•to appropriate $2.130 for this year's trip,
changed Its mind recently when the city
attorney said it woul~ cost $9,000 to hire
outsiders as expert witnesses on obsceni·
ty.
Tying 011e 011
Emery Mihaly, San Francisco's
registrar of voters, has a mess·
age ---and he puts it over in
distinctive fas:iion, if you'll
pardon the pun.
Two Chimpanzees
Reported Stolen
From Compound
Two 3-year-old chimparu.ees valued by
Lion Country Safari offic.ials at $1,000
each were stolen Monday night from the
quarantine room at the Irvine game
preserve.
The theft of "Bruce" and "Boxer,"
chimps acquired by Lion Country from
Sierra Leone, came just six weeks after
th~ theft of 1-year-old Llng Pu from the
same location . Orange County Sheriff's officers are
working on the theft of all three animals
with the finn belief that the burglary
was an Inside job.
"It certainly looks that way," a Lion
Country spokesman .igreed today. "We
::ire very, very concerned about the con·
dition of these chimps -they will not
survive very long at this time of year
without the proper diet and treatment.1'
Ling Pu was never recovered. It is
believed that the infant chimp was sold
shortly after being carried off, JXISSibly
by the same intruders who removed
Bruce and Boxer from their cages.
"It was someone who knows his way
around here and is familiar with security
routines," the Lion C:Ountry spokesman
added. "And it was someone who cared
very little for the welfare of two delicate
animals." '
Indians in Caravan
ST. PAUL, Minn. (AP) - A caravan of
more than 500 Indians is en route from
St. Paul to Washington to turn over a list
of grievances and demands to federal of·
ficiaJs. The caravan of about JOO cars
and two buses left St. Paul Monday after
a week-long encampment. They were to
reach Milwaukee Monday night, Colum·
bus. Ohio. by tonight and Washington by
Wednesday.
Director Na med to U 1iit
For Mobile Health Care
A program designed to save the lives
cf hall of Orange County's heart attack
victim! who die be.fore receiving ade-
quate medical attention will get under
way next year.
Robert C. White, administrator of the
nge County Medical Center has an·
ced the appoin tment or Ray Rieder
director of the county1s mobile in-
tensive care program, effective at once.
Rieder has been an admlnlstrative
assistant at the medical center for five
yean.
California law authorizes a hospital
operated by a county to conduct pilot
progr8mJ using mobile interu:tve care
paramedtcs and the Board of Supervisors
approved such a program in July.
The pilot program wW combile
specially equipped and trained 1t11U of
the mediCal centtr with IJ)OClally trained
and equipped flNI rescue unJt personnel.
The law allows pnramedlct to fumish
medical care al the scene provided they
have r~lved the necessary special
lralntng.
The trBlnlng program for fire services
personnel In •runtlngton .Beach, La Habra
and Orange Counly will start ln January,
Whitt .. id.
Six month!s of lrrilnlng ls expected to
provide time to activate the program in
the two cities and the county Ure depart·
' ' .
ment. Future planning will include the
potential for life-saving s e r v i c e
throughout the county.
White said an estimated 1,250 deaths
occur in Orange County every year due
to heart attacks. Half of these victims
di ... within the first hour a·t1er an attack,
many times before receiving any medicaJ
attention, the hoipital chief said.
"Studies have shown that many er
these persons wauld survive if rapid and
effective treatment could be provided
immediately after the attack occurs,"
White said. "Experience in other areas
has indicated that the mortality rate for
h<.art victims can be reduced by as much
as 50 percent when a mobile intensive
care system ls In operation."
When the program Is operaUorull rw:xt
year. the system will be activated by a
can for belp to 8 fire dispatcher. While
the paramedics a r e rushing to OMI
8CCDe, they wlll es"'bllsh radlo com.
munlc.ation with a physlclan or nurte in a
hospital.
The physician and nur11c will advtse the
paramedics on proper trc"tment 'after
they arrive at the scene. IJ neccss1u·y,
monltorb)a equipment such as ' an elec-
lrOCllrdlogram machine con be attached
lO the patient and the results tnmsmltted
by telemetry for lntcrpretaUon by 1
physician or $peclally trained nurse.
/.
Legislator
Flays Fee
For Davis
An allegation by state. Senator James
E. Whetmore CR·Fullertonl that tax
funds are being spent on an appearance
by Angela Davis at Cal State Fullerton
was refuted today by university officials.
A campus spokesman Indicated the
As¥lated. Students will pay Miss Davis'
$2,000 fee, a $50 rental fee for the gym·
naslum .and all costs ror maintenance.
security, 90Und amplification and rental
chairs for the expected audience of 3,500.
Senator Whetmore, in a news release
calling attention to the Nov. 17 lecture.
said he is "appalled."
"My office bu been flooded with
telephOne calls (from 35 to 50, "'1ttmore\
estimates) from irate constltu .. ls who
feel that in allowing someone like Miu
Davis to speak to the studentJ on cam·
pus , the school is flaunting ln the face of
the taxpayers lhe fact that it is possible
to deliberately use tax monies In a way
offensive to a majority of taxpayers,"
Whetmore said.
P.fiS!I Davis will speak at a.p.m. Nov. 17
as part of a lecture series whJch Includes
,, January appearance by U.S. senator
John Tower CR-Texas).
Faculty and students launched the lee·
ture series this year in response to
budget cuts which eliminated ad·
ministrative sources of money for cam·
pus speakers. a spokesman explained.
Cal State President L. Ponald Shields,
earlier this year, said he was
"distressed" that studenU and faculty
had planned the series wltbout con·
sultin~ administrators. HowevP.r. since
a contract with Miss Davis bad been
signed, Shields did not interfere with the
scheduled program .
An agreentent to provi<le balance on
subsequent programs was reached, the
spokesman said, and evidence of
students' desires to seek a balance was a
now-abandoned attempt to schedule con·
servative ~kesman William Buckley on
the same bill with Miss Davis.
Celebrities Aepear
Nixon Backers
Gather
By JOHN VA!.TERZA
Of .,. Dllllr '*' ft•ft
Hundreds of top Orange County aup-
porten cf Richard Nixon gathered in San
Juan Capistrano Monday to quickly
review the virtues of their candidate,
then "celebrate" the President's victory
nei:t week.
, Nonetheless, former U.S. Treasurer
(now California Treasurer) Ivy Baker
Priest urged the faithful not to be lulled
Into complacency but Instead to insure
that all supporters of Nixon's re-election
actually go to the polls to ca.st their vote.
"That Is the best wa.' for us tc achieve
that landslide we are waiting for," she
said.
Billed as a fund raiser at the El Adobe
Restaurant in the Mission community,
the event also was marked by plaudits
for prominent Orange Coast Republican
leflder Victor C. Andrews of Emerald
Bay. heralded as the key man in the
county's effort to re-elect the President
Andrews received a decorated platter
for his efforts in the campaign.
Soon afterwards, political issues gave
way to comedy.
Comic Morey Amsterdam took to the
dais to run through a series of Polish and
Italian jokes, then turned an acid wit
toward South Dakota, the bomt. stale of
Sen. George McGovern.
"But before I go any further,"
Amsterdam said, I h a v"' to say one
thing:
"McGovern's a schmuck!"
"And speaking about Sou'~ Dakota, the
anly good thin,( they got is the mountain
with the four faces on it.
"But now they're all looking down at
McGovern and . . . (Am sterdam gave
the crowo a facial expression of in·
credulity.
"Then there's Watertown ," he added.
'"l'hat place is so small, the bead of the
Mafia there Is Jewish."
• Ill Capo
'
When the rough Amsterdam humor
suLalded, the group watched another
comedy routine, followed by a brief stint
by 7sa 7sa Gabor, claaked in mink.
DAILY PILOT S11ff l"llol"t
SUPPORTS THE PRESIDENT
Actress Zn Zsai Gabor
Body Found
' •
~
Wrapped Up
.,_. .,, Old Rag s
A redhead whose strangled body was .
w. apped in old carpeting and dumped ~~
"'·ithin site of the posh Yorba Linda C.OW..
try Club has been Identified as Marla •1
Jean Hires, 23, of Stanton.
.. And lhal 's about all we know ," sher-
iff's dete<'tive Willie Stansbury said today.
"Leads are hard to come by and the
character or the victim doesn't give us ·
any clues." :
Stansbury said Mrs. Hires was a'
claims adjuster for Southern Caliromia
Edison Company In Rosemead. "She waa
very highly regarded by everyone who
knew her and her prestnce In that loca·
tion is a mystery to us," Stansbury ta id.
Investigators are today working on the
theory that Mrs. Hires was killed in some
other location, wrapped in old draperies i'
and ragged carpeting and dumped aear
the country c.lub.
She was reported missing by her
parents with whom she lived late Sunday.
An all out search for the mi.ulng
Fullerton Junior College graduate pro-
duced her car with the keys in the lg·
nitioo a short distance from her home, '
but no clue as to her fate until early
Monday.
Her bOOy was discovered by a ·
maintenance man who spoUed a hand
protruding from what he at first thought
v.as an old bundle of rags.
Toxicological tests are be.Ing carried
out today to pinpont the cause of death.
But sheriff's investigators said they were
satisfij!(f that Mrs. Hires was strangled
by her assailant.
Tustin Man Killed
In Freeway Crash
Cletus T. Hord. 50, cf 1612 Amherst -
Road , Tustin, was ltllled early toc!B}' .•
when he lost control or his car 90Ulh-
00und on the Santa Ana Freeway near,
Red Hill Avenue. :
The Orange County Coroner's office
said he died cf head injuries received·
v.·hen the car rolled over several times :
after leaving the freeway. •
STATION WAGONS
e Montego MX Villager
'
e Marquis Colony Park e Monterey Station Wagon
---LEASE---
Specialist In Full Maintenance Leasi ng !
'
SEE ONE • • • TRY ONE • • .. BUY ONE • • • TODAY!
Romo or Tit• New car • , •
"fi•W•• r-•"
I
-I
ohnson&son
:Ma HAAIOA BLVD. COSTA MESA • ~30
•
I • •
j
•
4 DAILY PIUIT
with
Tom
arpbine
Closillg In
On the.W~et
ritONEYBAGS DEPT. -All you need
around our house is for the Little Woman
to taK'e off for a couple of days and
abruptly, the teenage set moves 1n on th e
Old \-I an's wallet like sharks striking for
the kill.
Youngsters are y.·onderful. Like
predators of the sea. their beady eyes
are ever-vigilant, searching for some
y.•eakness, some opening. y.·hereupon they
may slash in qu ickly and strike -thu s
esca ping with an extra 75 cents or so.
TEENAGERS ARE particularly agile
in this department They know when the
Little Woman is away, my mind is preoc-
cupied with urgent matters. Like trying
to unearth the coffee pot from the bowels
of the dishwasher. Jn such moments of
anguish, rm likely to get something like
this:
"Dad. can I have tv.·o bits for milk at
school toda y?"
You are still groveling down there for
!ht> C'Offee pot. It's an automa tic
response. Yoo sta rt groping in your
pocket for loose change.
Abruptly, your mind goes back into
gear. "Hey, wait a minute . Since when
has milk at school been a quarter?"
lie looks at you coldly. "Dad, haven'l
you ever heard of inflation?"
Econo mic lessons, I'm getting already,
over lhe cofiee pot.
ESCA PE JT'lo~O the bathroom for a
shave proves futile. Another teenager at·
tacks the door with heavy knocking.
"Dad. can J have $3.50 for my school
annual ?"
"I thought you were supposed to pay
for that out of your al\ov.•ance ... "
"Yeah. but I need the $3.50 now
because r can get an extra 16 pages jn
my,11nnual if I pay early."
. , r ' .. \\1ait a minute, are you trying to tell
me that those who pay early get a bigger
book than those who pay late? Are you
trying to tell me there are different sized
books for slow-payers aod fast-payers?"
AHA ! I'VE FINALLY trapped one of
the money-seekers who tried to slip .one ,
by me on the p~lishing dodge. Even my
foggy early-mom brain cells It me the
school people aren't about t pot out two
different-sized yearbooks.
"No. but if we all pay ear , they .say
v.e can ha\'e an extra 16 es in the
book."
··You can pay earl your mother
gets ho1ne." Ca ismissed.
NEXT WS an argument over
s s. 'Mlis is not the time of year
for riding them. This is the time to strip
off all the old fiberglass and reshape the
things. Question is. who pays for the new
fiberglass and resin? Not me, l declare,
fleeing to put on my tie.
Middle son confronts me in the dress-
ing room. "Dad, I need a couple of
bucks."
"What ror?"
"l bwted a guitar string. Gotta have a
new one."
"Play on four strings. You're good."
DAUGHTER THEN announces she
must have taxicab fare because she has
to leave school early for her dentist's ap-
pointment. "Okay. here's tv.·o dollars."
She complains that one-v.·ay fare ts
$1.25 and how is she going to get home ?
"Walk -and bring me 75 cents in
change .. .''
l 11ure hope the Lillie \Voman comes
home soon. I'm not sure how long l can
hold oul.
Conununists Backed
BOSTON {AP) -Angela Davis said
~1onday that election of American Com-
munists to minor offices would be a step
toward bringing socialism to the United
State..11. "It is possible for Communist
candidates to win, and they will be able
to 6ght more mllitantly for 10Clallsm,"
UPtT.._..
RESCUERS SEARCH DEBRIS OF MINNESOTA VARIETY STORE AFTER BLAST
Six Persons Died in Explosion Linked to a Ruptured G11 Line
'
Gas Explosion Kills Six
100 Volunteers Search Rubble of Minnesota Store
LAKE CJTY, Minn. (AP ) -A search
ended today for more victims of a gas
Ii~ explosion that leveled a variety store
about the time seve ral children were
going in and out to collect prizes for a
Halloween coloring contest. Six people
were killed and nine injured.
Three of those killed in the accident
Monday were children. ·Five other
youngsters were among the injured.
MORE TRAN 100 police, firemen and
volunteel'1 searched throughout the night
for other possible victims, but that Was
temporarily called off at dawn end a
Police Department spokesman said the.re
Trudeau Liberals Lose
Majority Hold o House
OITAWA (UPI) -Prime Minister
Pierre Trudeau's ruling Liberal party
lost its majority control of Canda's
House of Commons in Monday's national
elections, finishing in a virtual deadlock:
with. the surprising Conservative party.
The balaoce of power was held by
minority parties and observers said the
stalemate was almost sure to result in
another election in the near fut ure to
give one party or another a clear man-
date.
LATE RETUltNS today showed the .
Liberals controll ing 108 of the country's
264-seat constituencies and the
Conservatives. led by Robert Stanfield.
had 107. The Socialist New Democratic
party (NDPl won 32 seats and the
Quebec·based Social Credit had 15.
Final results from three scattered
ridings y.•ere not expected until late to-
day. These include the distant northwest
constituencies of Meadowlake, Sask .. and
Churchill, Man., where the N e w
Democratic party and P r o g r e s s i v e
Conservatives were waging a close bat-
tle. and in Belchasse, Que .. where a
Social Credit candidate had been leading
the Liberal candidate but where con-
siderable rechecking was going on.
Trudeau needed 133 seats to form a
majority government. He had held 147
~eats going into the election, compared to
73 for the Conservati11es.
TWO INDEPENDENT members -one or them House Speaker Lu c i en
Lamoureux and the other former
Conservative Roch Lasalle -were also
elected.
Either party could govern wit h the
guaranteed support of the Ne w
Democrats, but NOP leader David Lewis
said he would not enter a coalition
go vernment .
"IF THE LIBERALS form a minority
EATS INTO MAJORITY
CM\ada's Stanfield
government," he said, "we would go
along supporting good legislation but op-
posing bad legislation. We would demand
changes in the tax system."
Should a workable coalition be unat-
tainable, new elections would ha ve to be
called -a possibility that is believed
allll06t certain to occur.
When early returns showed the
Qmservatives leading by two seats, Stan-
field said h.is party was prepared to form
a govefnm~nt. But later he 11aid, "I think
we shoul<f waiL to see what morning
brings."
was no indication any ()thers were trap-
ped in the rubble.
There were 10 to 15 persons in the
store when the explosion ocxurred shortly
before the 5 p.m. closing time.
Nona Weinmann of Lake City said she
was in the store about 20 minutes before
closing. She .said most of tOOse there at
that time were children who bad come to
collect the prizes.
About 10 minutes later the explosion
came.
"I HAPPENED to be looking across
the street when I saw a nash of light, the
roof coming down Md dust blowing out,"
said JerT'Y Nihart, a clerk: at a store
across the street. "Then the noise
came."
The dead, all of the Lake City area.
were identified as Mrs. Ray Kt!lren; her
son. Timothy, 10, who died in a
Rochester hospital; Kristine McElmury,
a bout 4; h-frs. Ray Rodewald ; and two
clerks at the store, Marjorie Freiheit,
about 40, and Elaine Dammann. about
32.
Linda Farrington, \11ho operated the
two-story concrete block-brick B e n
F'ranklin store with her wido~ mother.
Mrs. M. G. Farrington. said both were
standing near an entrance when the blast
OC<Un'ed.
"'nlere was the boom ," she said.
"That's 1.1bout it. That's all I want to say
.. , all I can say now. We don't know
what to say, wh.at to do . . what to
feel."
U.S. Asks Cuba
To Return Four
Hijack Suspects
WASHI NGTON (UPI) -Last week
Charles A. Tuller was a high-level
government executive holding a "policy-
making'' position paying $26,463 a year.
Today. Tuller, 48, was a fugitive in
Cuba charged with participating with his
teen-aged son in a Virginia bank robbery
and a Houston jetliner hijacking that kill·
ed a total of three persons.
Why was there th.is abrupt and violent
change in the life of Charles Tuller?
IUS FORMER colleagues at the U.S.
Commerce Department were mystified.
One of them described him as a
"considerate and thoughtful" peraon who
enjoyed skeet shooting "but said he
didn't like shooting small animals."
65-MPH Gusts Recorded
But a probe by UPI reporters !lhowed
that away from work Tuller had 811()\her
reputation -that of a quarrelsome and
dedicated revoluUooary wbo kept a gun
collection at home.
Winds Contiriue for Second Day, Cause Havoc
Te111peracure1
Mi.II L-
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Thi N•llor>•I W"lll•• wrvk t 1•ld
'"' Ufllt!•tor1•bl• <:O!l<ll!IOl'!t 1hc>u!d .,..,111 r" Soutlltr~ C•lllo•"I• 11 le111 Ill•-" Wl!(l....O~y "'O<"l"'I ~ ~..,,..,.,,.,~, •"Or.llO w•tm to\11 wlllClt
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S""• 1110011, Tides
TUQDAY
l«OM 1'!l9fl ...... • :n pm II
W•OMISOAY
''"' ... . . " •m ••
Fl'11 I~ " " • m. ••• .K .. hltl't f.ir •m. ••
$1C;Olld l-.. ,r .. o.m . .,
'
The FBI says Tuller, his son, Bryce
Mathew Tuller, 19, and William White
Graham, 18, fled to Cuba Sunday nlght in
a hijacked Eastern Air Lines jet. A
fourth hija cker was not identified.
A ticket agent was shot to death when
the hijackers forcclli their way aboard the
jet at Houston, Tex., and an airlille
mechanic was wounded .
. ..
DAILY PILOT
DELIVERY SERVICE
Dtllvet')' of tht Dally Pilot
It tj!uaranttfd
~ ,,..,, It --.. Ml ... y. "°"'
.. "' D¥ I•• •·'"" ~n '"' _....... corr will M """'°"' '-.... '"•Ill •r• ..._... unt!I ':II co,m
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5•" J\11111 , .... , ...... Ot"• ""'"'· $wltl L..-LIOllf'• M!fUtl .... 4f!"'.tM
' f
.. ' •
Claieago Disaster
Train Collision
Probe Ordered
CHICAGO (AP) -Fedttal 11fely of-
f1clal• lnvestlgaling the couu:nuter train
collision which kllled 14 peno111 ralsod
questlonl loday aboul the •tnncth of the
Ugbtwel&ht lteel can used by commuter
lines.
In addition to lbe de.ad, more than 300 were r<pOrted injured Monday when ..,
Jllinoil Central Gull llailn>ad commuter
backing into a Soulb Side station wu
nmmed~aaecoodJC~ectrlcoom
rnuta' during the morning rush hour.
Transportation Secretary John Volpe
Jnspected the wreckage ln 1 40-minute
tour. He and Hend)' Wakeland, director
of the department's Bureau of
Transportation Safety, said the strength
of the ligbtweighl steel and aluminum
can would be studied.
IT TOOK SIX boUi'I to extricate the
last ol Lile dead and Injured from tbe
crumpled wreckage of two of the can,
which were crushed like empty beer
cans.
President Nixon erpressed bis son-ow
and canceled plans for a downtown cam-
paign motorcade scheduled for loday in
Chtoago.
,.The President said in a statement,
'"r'M..heart of the nati()n goes out to the
victim! of tiu. tragedy and to Lile peopl<!
of Chicago."
_Sert Gecrge McGovern, campaigning
-rill'!ttsburgh, called off a ton:hllght
parade scheduled for Wednesday in
Chicago.
The Democratic presidential candidate
said in a statement that his "heartfelt
sympathy goes out to be families of the
vict.ims of the terrible tragedy ... "
VOLPE BEADED A federal in-
vestigation team dispatched fro m
Washington to study the collision, the na-
tion's worst rail disaster since 1958 when
48 person.s were killed in Ellzabethport,
N. J .
Gov. flichard B. Ogilvie ordered a
state investigation.
RaUroad officials said they could not
immediately determine how fast the sec-
ond train was traveling when it struck
the rear of the first commuter.
The first commuter, a shiny, four-car,
double-decked Highl..iner overshot the
27th Street station and was backing up
when it wu rammed by the second train.
The second truin was made up of six
1926 vintage coache!. Each train carried
about 500 passengers.
Officials said that when the flnt train
overshot the station it may have tripped
a switch which changed a signal observ·
ed by the sec<>nd train from red to
yellow.
11.tEY SAID THE yellow signal
PLATFORM DIAGNOSIS
Train Victim Gets Help
perm.itted the second train to travel
toward the station 1t approximately '6
miles an hour, but also indicated to the
engineer that the track was clear for
2,000 yards.
Nixon Promises Relief
• •
For Einerly in Speech.
WASIUNGTON (AP) -President Nill-
oo. apparenUy backing away from
across-the--board property-tax relief, says
that if rHJected "ooe of my highest-
prlority proposals" will be property-tax
relief for older citizens.
Nixon made the scaled-down pledge in
( CAMPAIGN '72 )
-a nationally broadc&.!t campaign radio
speech Monday afternoon.
SOME MONTHS ago, Nixon hinted his
re-election drive might feature, as its
central pocketbook appeal, a plan to
sharply reduce the local property taxes
of most, if not all, homeowners and
·Israeli Troops
Ori 'Full Alert'
At Syria Border
TEL AVIV (UPll -brae\I ground
troops aJong the frontier with Syria man-
ned positions on full alert today folk:rwing
Monday's air raicb dlJainst guerrilla
bases near Darn.ucus and a Syrian
ar;nored headquarten In the north. It
was the heaviest round of fighting
between the two nations ln nearly 27
monlhll ()f tbe cun-ent Middle East CN&e-
flr~.
Syrian
Darn""'""
a!I clole at .
cnpllal, kill
• nment -.;ourees I n
air strikes, whlth hit
'.\ mlle11 from the
p0(1<iJl! and wounded 70.
ARAB GU k back ln-
llde Te\, Aviv today. An guerrilla
bomb eq>loded on the noor of
i.rael's tallelt bulldlng, ly Injuring
three pel'IOR!I. Ji wat the third such
bombing in five weeks a police
spokeaman said "it wa• cW~lt.ely
aabotage."
Following Monday's atrtkff, U . Gen .
David Elaur, laraell cllltl' of staff. aild
be would nol predict the nut Syrian
move, but he outlined whet llr'ttl ex-
pected of Damucus aovernqieot of·
flclals .
"They are expecte:lt.to restniln ter-
rorist activity Jlnd to continue to main-
tain the cease-fire," be told newsmen
Monday nlibt after two Israeli air 111-ll<es
Into Syri• and an artillery barrage from
the"' •
..
bitsinessmcn through a federal subsidy
system.
Early in the campaign. however, Nixon
began talking Instead about a qualified
pledge to hold the line against federal tas:
increases.
The qualification was that t hie
Democratit'-COfltrolled Ccingress restrain-
ed what Nison termed "a spending
binge."
With the federal budget deep in the
red, even before Congress got it.s bands
on major legislation , Nixon and his ad-
visers apparently coocluded tha~ in aucb
circumstances, lower local property tax·
es across the board could be purchased.
only at the cost of higher fed.era] taxes. I
In keeping with his change of strategy•
Nixon told his radio audience th11:t the
average elderly citizen in the Northeast
must allot 30 percent or income to paJ
pr:c>perty taxes.
H~ a~ed: "This is wrong. And we
must stop it. One of my highest-priority
proposals l() the new Congress will be
property-tax relief for older Americana."
IN PJ'M'SBURGH, Sen. George M~
Govern, in an attack C<tsidered too
-strong by l\ls wlfe but cheered by the au-
dience. says the American people ar.
going to tell President Nixon next Tuet-
day to "take your bungling, bugging
burglars a n d get out of the White
House." ,
McGovern coupled lhe anti-~
tanguase with a new appeal for
Democr)ts to oome "back borne'' to their
party af he spoke Monday night to more ..
than t,500 persons at a Democratic funQ.
raisi.ng dinner in Pittsburg.
With just a week: remaining in the 1972
campaign, and polla showing hlm far
behind . the still-confident McGovern Oles
today to Syracuse, N.Y., for a rally
before heading to the Ne" York area for
appearances in Jersey City , 1 New
Brunswick, l'l.J ., and New York City .
} T THE Pl'M'SBURGU d I n n a r •
McGovern said Re.publican officials are
trying "to penuade us that the spylnl
and lytng and burglary and aabota&e wlU
not affect the election because ,people e>
j)e<I tbelO thing• ol pollticta111 •
"Any president ol the United Stale!!
who sei. a moral tlandard to low the peo-
ple are expected to think that these '°'
Uvlties are a nonnar part of lbe political
process or thit areat country," he added.
"th11t kind of man does not deserve to be
president of I.ht UnJted Slates."
He said "l thlnk thl. American people
ere golng to mm thaT perfectly clear ti
Mr. Nllon on Nov . 7," drawina applaust
and an anoilymou1 shout of "you better
believe It!"
> t
•
Orange Coast
EDITION
~ •
•
" DAILY '!LOT ltaff ,....,.
WRITES OPEN LEnER s...,. .. ,_ Bottin·
Red Deadline
F()rSigning -. .
Pact Passes
By Uolltd Prtu ln~itlonal
·lllle ~!Jilots' Qct. 31,deldline for
signing • Vlelnam cease-fire passed to-
dll)' 'fith no firm Indication when It will
be signed.
•1 The White,House said President Nixon
11 Seeking a lasting peace and will not be
slunpedOd by Hanoi's deadline ol today.
~ Wblte House officials said earlier it
-imnrobable !be cease-fire would be spd-,,.belOI.. !be 'Nov. 1 eie<tiolJs
..,,..,.., both !be -and Viet c.., cr.legal!Om to !be Paris talks can.ct ..,
tbe tJiiil<d Slates to 1ign "as'_, as
pol.Sible."
•·.Thill was a retreat from tbeir previous
''sign tdday" sta~ments.
· · Presidential adviser Henry A. K:iss-
ioger said 1bursday there were a
number of points tbel !bould be cleared ill in one more.necvtJating &eSSion. " t A clue to one of the major snags came
today 'from Pll8m Dang Lam, chief
sjilgOn negotiator in Paris wbo was in 1iiliYo to brief Japanese olOdah on
11¢gon's position. ~Lain told Japanese Vice Premier
Tbkeo Mlki !bat Salgm wants assurances
ah agreement will mean the Wilhdrawal
14 North Vietnamese troops from Soutb
Vittnam.
· He saJd Sligon wanted "clarification"
Ob the fu-of these troop! and on tbe three-part "National cowicil of recoo-
dliation" whiCh Salg111 fears means a
ooaliticn government
Wbite House spokesman Ronald L.
Ziegler took note of !be Communisl
deadline and said, "1be ooly deadline
1ft:'re operating under ls the one that will
bring about !be rlgbt ldod of an agree-
ment
. .. ' Fruit Picker's
ORANGE 'COUNTY, CALIFORNIA TUESDAY, OCTOBER 31, 19n
Battin's ·Campaign Ad Assailed
By JACK BROBACK
Of .. ...,,..., .....
SUperviaor David L. Baker today a:-
tacked a enmpalgn odverllwnent by
supervisor Rcl>ert w. Ballin wblcb Baker
asserted bad jtopardWld !be county'• ..,.
quis!Uon of the '854cre Mlle :iquare
Part In F-.Jn Valley.
Baker referred to an ad In a mall
publication title.:, "Au Open J,.etter About
Mile Squaie" pk:ced by Ba\tm.
Bater called !be lel\er "fat..e and
deceitful" and ".s. b1r.tant lie!'
Ballin replied \ha\ Baker was Just
trying to help Illa opponent, William
Wenke, in lhe Nov. 7 election.
''Battin'• letter is destructive, ir-
resporialble and self-serving at the ex-
pcnoe 'OI tbe PL ···," lk charged. "It Im.
pop the integrity of every o t h e r
member of the Board of Supervisors."
Blttin'• letter, which appeared last
week, attacb the l:!Ue of 213 acres of
!be ......., perk to Fountain Valley
tanners.
It It !be same par1< Jand...,.Jiere an
eigbt-monU Jere extensioo to Murai
Farm1 became !be subjec\ of recent In-
dictments by !be Orange' Counly Grand
Jury in connection with an alleged
shakedown of tanner George Mural by
foaner Westminster mayor D e re k
McWhiMey and Planning Commissioner
Tad Fujita.
The jury indictment alleges tbat
McWhinni:!y and Fujita de.manded a
$10,000 contrlbutlo11 tc the campaign fund
of "a 8'Jpervl9or" or Murai mJgbt find it
difficult to get an extension of his five-
yt!ar~ld lease on the 213 acres.
Today, Baker demanded and received
approval of a reaolu.Uoo by the board
reaffirming the counfy's plan to continue
the ordP.rly development of ·the park as
•
provided in the agreement with the
federal government .
Battin is engaged n a tougt campaign
to retain his seat on the Board of
Supervisors. His opponent, Santa A. a at-
torney William Wenke polled aimo.!t 4,000
more votes in the primary than did the
'incumbent.
Baker claimed &ttin's opw letter bad
delayed transfer of the deed to the park
land from the federal government. .
"There have already been delays in the
conveyance of Mile Square because of
(See BA1TIN, Pace %)
Three Bodies Dug Up
~ arrants Issued for Motorcycle Club Memb~rs
From Wire Servlcel
UKIAH -1bree bodies bave been dug
from makeshift graves on rolling farm-
land soutb of bere, and !be Mendocino
County sberiff's office said \oday It Is
looking for more burial sites.
Warrant.a bave been issued for several
memben of the Hell's Angels motorcycle
gang, the sber!H's office reported.
Sherlll Reno Bartolome! said !be bod-
ies, only ooe of which has been positive-
ly identified, were found Mondiy Dlght
Newport Council
Will C.Onsider
Versailles Unit
The dispute over !be number of apart·
ment! Newport Beach wtll allow in a
major West Newport apartment projec\
may be setUed in a speclal meeting of
city cowtcilmeo Wednesday at 5:30 p.m.
in city ball.
AttomeY> for iiJe Dooald Scholz Com-
pany, developer of Versailles on the
Bluffs said they '"' filing a 112.5 million
lawsuit agalnst !be city today, bu\ also
have offered a deal to settle the issue
out of court.
City Attorney Dennis O'Neil refused
to discl-09e details of the offer, but called
It a good one. He said part of ft calls
for cowtcilmen to meet immediately to
accept the tenns. Bearing that, Mayor
Donald A. Mcinnis called !be special
session. • Center of the dispute is the number of
dwelling units in !be second stage of !be
controversial blufftop complez near Hoag
Memorial Hospital.
Councilmen had been scheduled lo con-
duct a public bearing Nov. 13 on a pJan.
nlllg commiasion recommendation I hat
!be density of !be secood atsge be cut
from 35 to II dwelling units per acre.
That recommendatim came a l t e r
Scbolz, feeling the public pressure for a
density cutback, bad ollered ~· the
nmnber of units in Pbue U y u 738 to
below 650. . ,
on property near Hopland belongqig, to
George and Helen Wetbem after sher--
iff's officials and other law officers ar-
rested lhem on a variety of drug coudts
including possessing marijuana for sale.
Wethern also was booked for investi-
gation of possessing stolen property, in-
cluding two riOes, Bartolomei said.
Two of the victims were linked to sev-
eral Hell's Angels in Contra Costa Cowr
ty, and warrants have been issued for
tbose persons, the sheriff "8id.
Hop land is a fanning town in the coast-
al valley of Meridocino County. It is
generally a quiet place, but has been
occasionally the scene of motorcycle
gang gatherings.
Bartolomei refused comment on the
case beyond a printed release distribut-
ed at a news conferenCi! also attended
by Djst. Atty. Duncan Jll;ITles and Pub-
lic Defender Joseph Allen.
Authorities ~Id the Wethems were
booked only on the drug and stolen prop-
DAILY l'ILOT ...... " ltkMrd Kotlller
Read11 for Halloween
erty cpunts.
Bartolomei said his deputies and
offiCi!rs from the Cot:ltra Costa County
sheriffs department and the C&lifomla
State Department of JustlCi! began dl~
gin on the property for possible grave-
sites and "at 5 p.m. (last night ) we
definitely uncovered two human bodies.
In excava~ another test hole we dis-
covered a third body."
Bartolomei would not say what led
(See BODIES, Page II
* * * Younger Cites
Org anized Crime
I .inks in State
SACRAMENTO (AP) -'Atty, Gen'.
Evelle J. YO'.mger today cited a number
of indicationJ which "alert us to the
pos.sible presence of organized crime" in
Calilornls. .
The indications "suggest that organiz-
ed crime does exist In California in visi-
ble and subtle forms," he saici.
In a statement, Younger said the in-
dications include gang alayings, a high
activity in viCi!, hidden ownerships, and
cosUy sophisticated legal maneuven by
dealers in erotica.
Younger said th~ indications were cited
in a report to the C&llfornia Legislature
written by lhe Organized Crime and
Cri..-:linal Inte1ligence Branch of the State
Department of JU!:tice.
"As wi>Uld be eipectcd," M saJd, "the
more populous areas of the state
evidence the g.~11test amount of organlz.
ed crime Pctivity."
'Ibe report, gjven to legislators tOOay,
said that at least 100 gang-type slayings
have in California ht five years.
"1be t preponderance ol thele kill·
ings have been the result of Chinese
youth g g conflicts, outlaw motorcycle
gang are, and Increased competttJon
-nr,;;,,.ld.ics traffic," the statement aaid.
"Onl few of \he killings :lavt: been the
syndicate type of killing."
vice, Younger saiC: a study rtY
rapid growth rale In the Openilljf'
!See CRIME, Page I)
T edaY's ....
N.Y.
N TEN CENTS
DAILY Pll.01' SW ....
'A BLATANT LIE'
Supervisor &.k.,.
·Communists;
U.S. Trade
Viet Attacks
SAIGON (UPI) -Communilt troops
attacked relentlessly thrnugboul llooth•
Vietnam today while American 851
bombers responded with a near recmt
n~mber of raids over the oortb, mWtary
spokesmen reported.
The rai~ and ccnmter-ralda: came on
Ure day the Communiats .had chosen for a
ceasefire.
On !be batUefields !be wldtb and leq\h
ol Sou\h Vlelnam, Communist alllCb in-
creased, !be SaJgoo hlgb comm•nd Aid:
The eommand repo1ted m ...... .....
... and ll'OUDd atta<U ....... ....
Monday and dawn today.
U.S. 11128 Oew at least st raids....._
N~rth Vle\nam between noon !loodaj.
and noon today, !be U.S. command g14.·
Communist troops overran two c9triet
capltalt on Soutb Vlelnam'• central
coast, military IOW'cel uld.
Field reports confJnned by militarr of-
ficers said government troops were forc-
ed out of Ba To, 300 m!let riortb ol
Saigon, and Que Son, SIO mile1 above the capital.
Bo!b towna bad been wrecked by Com.
monist arliliery attacks and Allled bomb-
ing raids in earlier fighUng in the aeven-
monli>old North Vletnameae olleDllve.
Monkey Business
W asn.'t Funny
Steve Taylor WU just standlnc theA
on !be sidewalk watching all !be girts iO
by, or watching whatever 9-yeaM>ld bo)'1
wa and It wasn~ even Hal-bat
at happened was a\lll pretty llCU)' •
The young-. wbo. llvet at 17111
M8J1Uerile Ave., Corona de! Mar, told
Newport Beacb police MDnda,y tbal ht
wu waul\ed by a mookey in the 1100
bloct of Paclflc View Drive. Booty $100
~, A light-fingered thief plucked
about 100 poonds of fruit from a
Costa Mesa man's tree Monday In
what investigators evaluate as a
Commissionen turned a deaf ear on
that 8111.r. however, and voted to cut the
Iota! to about 360.
The compromise worked out between
Versailles attorney Thomas Peckenbaugh
and City Attorney Dennis O'Neil It some-
where in between, O'Neil confinned this
morning.
With a pumpkin nearly as big as she is, 3-year-old. Traci Valoff of
Huntington Beach gets ready for some king-size spooking tonight.
The giant jack-o-Jantern was carved from a pumpkin weighing 115
pounds.
• Planne1·s to T alk
Over DellSities
With Residents
~~R_e said a lady in a car cootalninJ two
s, one a Dalmatian, stopped where he
stood and !be door opened and a mooter
jumped out. •
I• daring, daylight avocado e1per.
11 Gus H. Beach, of 3'19 E. list st.,
called to complain when be foond
, , all bot two avocados -a $100 ioSI '.;baaed OD today's retail prices -, strio!>ed from his backyard tree.
• Officer Dave Ketchum said
whoever invaded Beach's backyard
i with a stepladder must have done It
, between sunrise and sunset due to
!Ucb a thoroUgb job.
They apparenUy just couldn't
reach the last two.
•
"I think it's a great deal for the city,"
O'Neil said, dlacloslng Iba\ it Is the re-
sult "of monthl of oegotlaUona between
Tom and myaelf."
1be lawsuit Dled by Peckenpau
pattei'efted after • formal claim
filed against !be clly last moo
counclbnen bave Ignored.
County Governmentnl
uncil Nearer R eality
In I~ Peckenpaugh olleges !bat By JOANNE REYNOLDS
will Jose the $12.5 mUlkn if p Of tM O.llY l'la.t Slaff
isn't allowed to be built u plawm"-";:...-Formation of a co u n t y w i d e in-•
cause of .several stipW.aUons placed on tergovemmental council moved a step
!be projec\ by !be city. closer Monday nlgbt during a meeting at·
tended by representatives of 25 ~e
County's 26 cities.
The proposal, made by the Supervisors
and Mayors Council (SAMCO}, Is that all
the cities and the cotmty create a vol~
tary agency through a joint poWi!n:
Newp9rt Quake Peril Seen·
•
agreement. ·
Membership would be ltmlted to
elected. represenlatives of !be cities~
!be county Board of SUpervtoors, wllb
other governmental boards, commissims
and special district trusteea hovlng noo-
vo\lng membenhlp. Geologic Cons ultants' Report No Surp rise to City
•• A moderate earthquake olong nearily
fault systems or 1 major quake on tbe
huge San Andreas Fault oould cauee 1es1 of ure and heavy d1mage In ljew-
port Beacb, accordlna to a report by !be
city'• geologic consuftants.
But the news relealed by Wooch•ard-
McNeUl and Auoclates MondoY hasn't
llllaken city olficlalt. "We've \nown fot 100 years we've
been on a !Ault," ~Id Ci Mmagor Robert Wynn. "I'm not Ill amu-
cd or even 1re1tl7 "
However. WY111 uld tbe report will
. ~
I
prompt the city to beef up Its building
code requlrem..ts !bat in turn will force
up !be cost of COOl\nlctlon In ams mo!I endange~ by '•rthquako activity.
According lo !be report. !be hWllY
1ctive Newport • W.lewood !Ault ancf1lle
1 ..... c11vo Pcllcln llJll fault nm tbroqh
~~eS:~ most populous areu of New·
Newport-Inglewood system, which
trtgge !be dltas\rou1 L o n g Beacb
of Matth 10, 1113 In wblcb 11$
-'• died, nw direc\lJ under Bolbol l>etilnaula, .i.o-Newport Bly and partl
,
of Corona de! Mar.
"1be epicenter of !be 1113 even t ti.1
been uslgned to a loeaUon• 10me three
miles oflibore of N~wport Beach," the
report aald. "But due to =e Joca..
lion, It WU called !be Loni tar\b-
quake ."
At the time, the. report goes on, New-
port Beacb ooosistcd primarily of Ugh>
weight, wood frame ·ltnlcttJres and most
ot, the damage was llm1ted to water main
leab. cracti Jn !be rtr.et and oeltling.
More exlenel,. damage fnxn !be Loni
(See QUADS, l'lp ll
• •
•
1be cities woul have one vote.:. ei<!h
and !be board of pervlaors Would have
five votet -one i r each supervisor.
Tq flnll\CO the new organizl·
lion each city and !be county would pay
due• bliled on asseued valuallon
and popujatlon. budge! for the lint
alz mcmtha ol ration Is estimated at
fl7,200.
The parpooe of the lntersovernmentai
council would be to I01ter belier cooper•
tk>tl and oommunlcaUon between the
va rloas levels o( government Ill the coun-
(y, with tbe -lbUlty ol oalng the
organization to apply for 11ate and
federal pnts and u a bas1t for other
' (8ee SMKX>, P-.ce I)
• 1
Balboa llland, lJnda Isle, Harbor
Island and Beacon Bay realdenlt wUl
bave a cbance Wednesday to talt with
Newport Beach planners about prol)OSed
density controls In the city.
This wU1 be U.. !eCOnd In a series of
elgh! mee1lnga ordered by City Coun·
cllmen and Planning Commisslooera to
hear dtizem' opinions on potential
runaway growth in !be ctty.
In a recent report to the city 'fathers,
the planning iiaa reported !ho! 11 the
current ralfl, Newport Beaeh will more
tban dooble In population and denllly by
lll90.
1be l\afl offered several aitemauv.,,
lncludJni Vltiolll rezoning tecbniquel,
from wblcb the CouncU and com-
mluionen were asked to plclr: one. ·
1be meetinp were arranged to bear
.wbat residents Qf various par1I of !be cf.
ty feU about !be 11ternativea. •
Wednetday'1 meelin&. which Wiii• be
held 11 7:30 p.m. In the City Council
cbamben at city ball. Is open to any
clll..,, but ii apecillcally delillned to u -
plain !be potential problems ol !be mu
Involved.
i PI notified of Ibis week'• -""I
: Balboa !lland Improvement
tlon, Beacon Bly Communi()'
tloo, Harbor llland Comtminlly -tloo and !be Linda Ille Com-
nwnit)' A.-iatlon •
. -
The ~-eyed beast cbar~, bit hinl
OD the 1., 01ld tbecl reltelted bact lo !be
car~ ..... n1y,ballld. ,
lnvestlpton llJd young steve went to
his. doctor for a tetanus shot after the
mookey pulled the dirty \riot, and tbat
was no treat
Oraqe
Weat .. er
'l11ote cold ...-erly wlndl
lhould be i l~~mlnlsb by W-y, to the
-tber ..,.lee. mp. at !hi
bead!u ... expected to reach •
rltlnt to 'II lnlud. !.owl ........ '
I cbUlr .-
INSIDE TOD.t.Y
.+ ..., '""'"¥ O!I "" 11/t I•
'"""''• llmU.r IO Ill< old IC"" l<V Report. daMagc1 llw • ,..pi11o.
"'"' o/ ,.,...,h..,. a 1rper1
IOllfrt. ~.• ""'11, Pago IJ. , .... _ ' ... ._ i: -• --.... --• ,_ •• --• -" .......... • -·-• -"'r. --• ,,... ............ , .• ,. . .. ·-= ·-... -~ ........ • sr.-... 1 -.. -.
•
• I
l
•
I
'
,.
•
. '
fl DAILY PILOT
Valley Wo•nan T. lls Terror in IJganda
By JOllN ZAu.ER
" -o.llr ..,... .....
AU.. w.. el l'OWlllln Vllley bu
found that II !MM a wil1lnl
he1 rt •nd 1 helping hand to en un-
dcrde\ rloped natlon from erty.
lier Peace Corps mlssl lO Uganda.
Ea~I Afrien. turned lnlo a nightmare of
murdered fr iends, drunken soldiers and
senseless mobs.
Today, just three months afler she set
out 011 \\'h~t \\ !l.S to be a two-year
mllaloll, Ibo II .,..1o1111 to ho hacl< lq her
tract home •11117 Nl(hUll(ale lAlDI.
"I '"'11 tr'*1I to help," a ...,._ ''!lot
condltloaa ..... ""'1 loo ahaotlc. Tho .....
pie otad " muob bei,, but I couldn1
111Y." g,;, ramombore ..,. ,.... -lalJy
well .
''I was ln a store buying $hampoo,'' she
recalls, "when suddenly the people out on
the stretts began ruMlng. Thousands of
them ran by, going as fast as they could.
!'I flnally found ,.... o! Ille _. """'•lid -wbo spoke £na!illl and ub4 them wllat wu happinllw. 'l'bly
.._, -· AD tltoy --~ ::)W 1laa WU """'/"'• IO ti., ru,
111.Attr we found out tblt another town
50 mites away heard our people WeN run-
ning and they started numing, too. Bui
nobody ever found out what started !l
"After that we were told to stay in-
doors and never go out on the street.
We '""' ruy olOIO to being eVactllled
b)' thea.''
Tho -for Ille-· Mra. Wiit ~ OIO ho traced to one ,... -Ida Amin. An anny gonerot
who·allld powtr two yeari ago trom a
parl~lary ,..im., Amin WU alway•
conJldered 1 munch llw and order man.
But thls summer,hls rule suddenly sill!·
ened aoconllng 10 Mrs. Wost.
"There were regulations on
everylhl11g," she says. '1Even length of
hair for men and skirt length for
women."
Ont el the llnl 11CJt1 of lnMlbl• C11D1 In AUllill Wlteo ... YOW11 wluntaw WU
arrested [Dr wearinl c:ut~ff aborts.
1'He wasn 't hurt or an,ytbfng," aays Mrs.
Wtst.. 11But that worried us. We Wert
wlllfng to go along with the rules ho<lu..
we wanted to help, except that we didn't
know that short pants were not llloWed."
Soon after that came another jolt.
Amln announced that all Aalanl """Id
have to leave the COWllry by Novembt<
or I• Ill clUwDlhlp riabla. 1o1ra. Wtol ..,. w. ..... a dloulnlGo -.. wtll ..
npreboaslble -IClioa bocaUIO lhe
Aalons 'Were lllOlll1 buslnesmnen and
tuent.lally ran the teenomy of the na~ Uon.
''There was one man, a Muk:an.
Amtrlcan from Tuaa, who eoulcln'I take
thal onler," 11)'1 Mrs. Wesj, "He fell he
had been dllcrimlnaled qaln.!t In Tew
and lhal he would have no pert at all Di
1upportlag a racld regime."
Conai1a9 to California •
In whit Mrs. Wl!ll bell.... -i &eat bonier lncldeo11 bowe .. r, he was llllCl1flle.cun to aealh 'In trying to ·
leave Ibo COlllllry.
Nixo11 Plans Television Alter Iha~ laltanoel ol c1n1n111a
ooldlen, ~ Ibo publlc at will. bee.amt moni common. Bute order was
breaklnr down, and Mn. Wl!ll waa hav· inf eerlous doubls aboul whether she
aboold flt&y In the COWllry. Speecl1 on Election Eve "We. couldn'I 1<1 aey lnlonnallol> ex· cept What Amin put out," abe saya, i.so r boUibl a abort-wave radio to hear what
the BBC and Voice of America had to Uf, 'Jbat really scared mo. II ' \\'ASHINGTON (AP) -President Nix·
on has scheduled a round or television
and radio broadcasts Including a
television speech on election eve for the
windup of his re-election campaign that
will take him lo caUiomia Saturday.
The White Howie announced NiJ:on will
give a JO.minute address to the nation on
live radio-TV from the White House
From Pagel
QUAKES ...
Beach quake and the dozens or alter·
shocks in later yean was caused in more
built-up coastal areas, the report added.
Ho,vever, another quake of similar
magnitude (the 1933 quake was 6.3 on
the Richter scale of 10) could cause
ground breakage and similarly heavy
damage under now-Oensely ~ted
areas of the city. the report S&Jd.
The consultant's report said that the
Newport·Tng1ev.'00d fault could trigger an
earthquake as strong as magnitude seven
on the Richter scale and couJd last up to
Z5 seconds.
The 1933 quake lasted only 15 seconds
and at an intensity of oo1y 6.3 had 7 .000
pe~nt less power than the largest pos-
sible qua'u in Newport Beach. Accord-
ing to the Richter scale each tenth of a
point 1s a 1.000 percent increase in pow· ...
Gn>Jnd brealtage and heavy damage,
for e:rample, could occur in Big Canyon.
Harbor View Hills, Corcm: del ltlar.
Westcliff. Marinrer's Mile and in the oil
fit1ds on the West ~ Bhlfts. ac-
conling Ill maps iDduded m lhe ..,,.n.
In addition. the ccnsultaDts said. a
modon.t. quake cm lhe Newpor1-1Dilo-
-faWI or 1 mjor quake ea lhe San
Andrus Fault • milet away could
.,._ -..rtling ci.. .. tiqumctiaD in most~-....
Uqlle!actioo results -.. -au& -......, .,.,,plded ... -sod! as SUld or lilt -badly ....p lo
..... it Doid ml incapable "' support·
• ' ... lhe report. Uqn.r.ctinn ~. buildlnp
~ eanhqwlR could ca-!be
type ol st'\'ere dama&e in NewtlOrt
u hal>(>ellOd in Seward ml Vol-
Alaslta in tbe 1914 earthquolte !hero
.+ whJch was 8.25 on the scale.
"We are not too cooeemed about most
existing structures in the high liquefac-
tion areas becaUR usually there is V'ef'Y
little coDapsing of buildin.,," said city
Bulldtn2 Officer Bobby Fowler.
"Usually what happens is that the
houses lean at crazy anf!les or sink into
the ground a bit," he said.
Areas subject to major liquefaction
damage ln ease of an earthauake in·
elude : most of West Newoort , the entire
Balboa Peninsula. all tht residential
islands in Newport Harbor. most areas
below the Upper Newport Bay bluffs and
most of coastal Corona del Mar.
Fowler aald that all the buildings in
Newport Beacli have been designed to
meet the mtnlmum earthquake stand-
1rdl contained in the city's Urllfonn
Buildlnr r.ode. ''But tbe codf: 11 already being revised
becl1111 of the new seimtic studJes,"
Fowler said. "Most or our buildings
wau1d ride out a fairly moderate quake
with minor damage but a big quake
'ofOU1d seod. some older one!I toppling
down" -possibly with lou of life.
OUM61 COAST •
DAILY PILOT
1119 .... C.. DIUt. V l'lt.O't, "'WI ""*ti
.. ~the ,,. .................... ..,
... Or ... °""' Mlhlrl'"9 ~. s_.
............ M!llMll. """""" ""'°""' ~' • ONt9 Mel. H--1 a.ell.
HIWl!'lNllllii lwtl/"-Mln Vtlley, '"""""
B.edt, l,..._.Sllcfdr.-t llnd Sen C..._,i./
... ..__ C.ltltil,.,. A ....... ....,...
~ " .,,,..... .. 1\lf'drtl; .,.. ~ ......
"" ~I lllolb4Wl"'9 l'iaftl b fl )JO ~I
.. ., Sw.t, CM'll ~. GIUtomlfl, n.».
aoNrt N. w,..i
...... ICllnt fnd P'*'itfllt J••• R. C11rl•y Vlo l'TftlNnl end Geiwtll MtBIVff
TII_,, KerAI ·-Thotw•t. A. M11rphh1•
MMellnt EtHIW
t.. , .. ff "'•• ........,, ._,_ C1ly .. .,. ..
"'.,,.. .... Offke 3J)J Newport lowlfftfli
M1llif11A44Nu1 P.O.11111175, t164J ...... .._
c.tt Mtltt atO w.1 ..., Stt"' u,... t.c:t11 m ,.,.., ... ....._ fflMliltvJOll .. tall Jl"1J aMcfl .... ,...,. ... ,, '"'"'*"''1 •• Not1l'I ,, C."""9 ....
Tiie' ts (7141 M2-4U1
C~ A"'2rthkt "4J·l671 -~llM. 1'7!,, °''"" c.... ,..,"'-~"'''" Ht fttWI t!OrlM, Hliistr11..,._ ~fllrit.f ~ I# .,.,.,.,WftlfOI" ,.,.. .... ,.. t .. ....,..._., wlffle;ot tHCNI ,_.
,. I ~ ti _.,,ltM ,_,
..... CS.. ....... •11 •I (•II ~ ~,.......... ~,..,, II\' (ft'l'lor nM
fl!MMfT1 W INR U,1. IMMf'iP'r1 rnUllWY .....,_.._ eM 1"""'IY•
...
( • •
•
Thursday nlgbl at 4:30 p.m. PST !OT
what WAI described as "a look to the
future and di!cussian of his hopes for the "
future of this country."
In late September, Jiii! 11 Mn. w.-wu completlnr her c:llltural adlultnw>I .
tnlnlnc, !"Jlldllloos -· .. bod lhll Ibo Ptace Corpe advtaed her to ...... ~ '!be lhroe more l'ldlo and two
televlalon addresaea are all paid polillcal
broadcasll, preaa oecretary Ronald L.
Ziegler aald, and they will give Nh:on a
concentration of broadcasUng for every
day escept Sunday until the election.
The President and Mn. Nixon plan to
!ly Ill California saturday and land al the
Ontario lntemaUonal Airport in early
evenin" tor an airport rally in · San
Bernanlino County.
From there they will helicopter to San
Clemente, where they will stay to vote
Tuesday morning and return t o
Washington to receive election results at
the Wlilt. -·
Sacramento Stomp
D.llL Y l'ILOT PM" 7" hll •dWMft
"I wu really IOITJI, becauae the peoolo
were In more need of help than over. B\lt
there WU llOlhJbi to do, and hooldel, I
WU Nl1y afraid and fnaecure. ~
Mra. Wetrt la -Uy 1ry1ng to rather
up """"lb cour111e to conilnue her l>-
Corpo commllmenl In anolhor C01111try,
probtbly In lndonelala.
"I'm going to check very cmfWly Intl>
the pollUcaJ COlldllloM thla tlmo," she
says. "I don~ ltnow If I could take
another experience like the one 1 had.''
f'....,.P-.eJ
Ziegler indicated that there may be • ... Sixth graders at Woodland School squash aluminum
cans they gathered for recycling. Students of Miss
Barbara Robb and Mrs. Jean Gardner have raised
about $300 of the $1 ,500 they need for a trip they
are planning to Sacramento to see state government
in action. They plan a combination car wash and
garage sale at the school Saturday to raise more
money.
SAMCO ..• other campaigning activities, but be had
no firm details to provide today.
N'1.100 hid caMeled a major ap-
~ Jn the Olicago area for today
be cUll of M 'a traln wreck there.
'lbunday'• -broadcast will he carried by Ibo Televlllon netwwk.
'!be Monday live broadcaat,
wblcll will emana from the Los Angeles
area, -'bly Ibo m Whlll House,
does oot yet have an time or
topic, Zlealer said.
Ziegler wu Wed -lher Nixon
would make any speeches dealing
specil.ically with Vietnam. He said Nixon
does oot plan a spedflc addreu oo that
subject. but it Wil obvious th11.t he might
ir.clude it in • disaission the future of
!be country.
In hia most t radio
promised if re-eected ·~
bigbest1'fiority proposals"
er1}'-t.u relief foe older )lfttzens
story, Pa&• 4J.
Burglar Heists
87,000 in Loot
From Developer
A bzrglm' collected c a I c u I a t o r
-and typewrilen WQrth nearly
S7.IJOO Inf" Rancho CalUornia corporate
oltices in Newport Beach Monday.
Jack 11uct. JI, dlacovered the break·in
at mo Campus Drive. when be al'Tived
for wort Monday and found his own desk
calculator missing.
Notlctni gluo louvera removed from
one window, Buck checked the rest tif the
company headquarters near Orange
County Airporl and found Olher equip.
ment mislini.
'!be Jou included six typewrlllrs and
nve calculators.
Police lnveati8:aton theorize t b e
burglary toak place Sunday ulght or ear·
Jy Monday mornmg, llince Janitorial
crews normally work inside on Swldaya.
The bur&Jar waa able to slide out the
louvers that led to his enLry because the
window he chose ts hidden from pauing
t1 affic Ly a decorative fence , p<>llce
nol ed.
From Pagel
BODIES •..
•
From Pagel
BATIIN ...
earlier publicity," Baker said t n
reference to tb.. McWbinney-Fujlta. mat·
Joint powvs agreemeni. for smlcel
between the individual members.
'!be Idea waa unaatmousty endot'9ed bt
SAMCO, but at ·Mooda1'1 meeUnr, II Lo W"t s St k hecame •pporut !hit many or tile c1u .. an , I n ess ays OC had ......vauons about ..... pans 01 the agreemeal And a tew of the cities have
some re&el'Yltlool about the agreement
llsell. Wouldn't Sell Year Later .. ~o~tbe~~~"i":~: ter. lr\rine. One portion of the agreement
"Battin's irresponsible and untrue givts the organluUoo. tbe power to incur
statements .!K!rve only to jeopardize the By T0~1 BARLEY But assistant administrator Clemenl debta and obllgatJofts. Qu.Jaley aa1d be
county's :.rm•isillon and to d-1ve the °' ... c.itr Pl~ st• · doescJ·•.aA .. not believe this needs to be in-_,M ""'= Gurkow pointed oat as a ~tlon -
Public." A St. Bernardine Hospital official today "If ,._ -·~u at -!Uture ~-witness tn the' Orange County SUpertor ~ __... _,.,.., ._ ...
Balter alao charged that Battin'• ac-lesJIJled that 250,000 shares of stock used court "Taj Mahal" trial thal ,_ of the Willis to ro into.,... tlnd d a -pro-
lioos had allo delayed the transfer of 41 as collateral !or a !500.llOO loan granted Azalea Mobile Homes stock handed to gram, then lbore la the power to do thal
'"""' to the city of Fountain Vllley for by the San Bernanlioo · facUI~ w•re in the ~l. But we don' aoed tbla •J th ') hospital could be sold a year later. • .. _ u.A_ u 1.. ,, 1. ....... 1.r A recreational Ule. valued by their bolders at $7 a share in pt0v1DU UA'.R'I u a now, ua -· Gurkow teaJIJled that ,,_Ital coo-ball doseo other cl•• -dva flt. He eald the city bu alreedy budgeted pre-loan nqoliaUons. troUer Robert Machan pla;;l' a major ., ·-r '
llS0,000 to develop the acreage along ' role in negotiations that Jed Ibo witness ~':!~,.:"0u~1"'~~ d · Colla
Brookbunt Streel to ball para, tennis' ·I!. and three Roman CalhoUc nuna Wllo <lllD-Frank Sales, maya~ Beach, pos.
couns and olber """"'ttonal f.cilltlcs. f'rO'lle f'age l trolled the rU1111Ctal allalrs of tltelr ed one of the hardelt qu of Ibo
Battin replied to Baker's attack by de-M hospital to approve the Joan to a group evenln~ when be asked, ''What e need
nying thal his •CU had caust.J eny delay CHI E , • • heaJ dedh Dulby Laguna Hilla stockbrolter It for! '
in the tranlfer o! the property and charg· oaep aney. "We are -Uy prellY well
ed lhal BaW was only lryfng to help masaage parlOl'S, and that 90 -~ent or Financier Fred Riley testified before by SCAG (Soulhem Calllornla
Wenke. _... Gurkow that he owned the Azalea stock tlon of OovenuDIDtJ), tb..l· League
Balter attacked what he coUed Battin'• the parlon surveyed engaged In lllicil and thal hoped II lo defendanl Jamea CilleJ and SAMCO and I Ju..I feel
"allegatlonl and Jnuendoes" Jn the open activities." Shipley for $911,000. should oot saddle our co111tlluenla
letter polnJ..bYj>Oinl. Bookmakln(!, he said, Is concentrated Riley, wbo was also lndlcted by Ibo anotber layer of goymunenl that they
Ballin bad Cbarged lhat "aa long as a in Southern California. Grand Jury and later cleaftd al 111 not need and quite probably do-
few people can Ieue thiJ land for "Many individual.! involved in such ac-charges when be testlfied u a proe-want," be Aid.
themlelves for a pittance: and reap bun-tlvlUe!I are linked with associates eeution witness, said he receJved only Ray Villa, a Santa Ana councllman who
dreda of thousandll 'Of dollan Ill protlla operating Jiroogbout lhe naUoo." he l60,000 for the loan of the stocl< used by bu heen one of the active aupporten of
from Ila uae, the cltl2eM an going to he . said. ShlMpl•yh. 50 ha ~--1 Uarl -•--red the Intergovernmental council, repUed: denied its recreational me." An example of bidden ownerships. ac an, ' s ...-:u a m Y ~ ''The organization of tbia council la a
Baker rei.Iled: 0 Tbe t n t er Im Younger said is Emprise Corp. Younger of all charges after appearing as a pro. genuine concern, but I think we should be
agricultural leaaes on P«tJons of Mile said Emprtse and six persons were in-ecuUon wlin61. He teaUfled that be able to wort It out. The cruieat concern
Square have never boon 1 constraint on dieted by a federal grand Jury in Los received 132,000 described by P"""""tor here la our own sell def..,. -our pn>
park development. There are two baste Angeles this year and convicted. of con· Stuart Grant as "kJckback.s" shortly tectlon.
reaaona why the undeveloped Jandl are cPalln1 bidden organized crime Interests after the loan went through in January HU we don't organize ouraetvea, aome:-
subleued for 1grtcultural purpoeea. One In a Nevada g@mbling casino. 1969. q,_ _ one bigger Is goJng to a t e p in and
Is to prcvide weed and dust abatement on The firm, he sa\d, operates as a con-Grant clabru that the Millea stoet. they'll organiu for ua." .
the property, a ooal of wblch would cessionalre al race lracka and sporting limited Ill sale oe the open mart.~ w11 '!be orglDlzlng committee, led by
otlierwile fall on tbe county. event!, and has boldln&~ 1n bowllng worthless 1n tenns of the bolpltal C'.ouncllman D.on Sinlth of Orange, wW
"The federal aovemment wu very alleys, vending machines and drive-ln recovering its funds by eelllng the meet qlln In two weeb to consider the
coocemed about complatntl from Foun· theaters. shares. revlak>nl proposed at Monday'• meetiq.
tal ' Valley realdent regarding weed and CooUy aopblsUcoted ltg•I maneuvers, Only 110,IJOO of the loan waa repaid. Smith said he will then forward 1 copy
d u 1 t nuiaaneea ortglnatlng from un-he aald, "are btl.ng moat overtb' ex:-And that, Grant claimt, wu deducted of tbe revised agreement to all the city
developed landa at Mlle. Square. h!blted by dealers in erotica," the state-when the '500,000 draft was cubed and coUDclls and county aupervilorl for
"The leaite terms obllgate the county to ment said. shared out among the defendants. study.
control weeds and dwit and the county j -;;::;::;::;::;::;::;::;::;::;::;::;::;::;::;::;::;::;::~;::;::;::;::;::;::;::;:;;::;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;; was specifically authorized by the fedenl
lease to sublease land for fanning
purposes to exercise weed and dust con-
trol."
Battin. in his open letter, al.!IO charged
that land at Mile Square "is again set
aside under a county lease for the ex-
clusive use of a small group of select
farmers to make money."
All For The Family-
Baker replied, '"Tbe agricultural sub-
leases at Mlle Square were put out . to investigatars to search for bodies on the sealed bid in accordance with strict coun-
property. ty procedures .
He said the bodies were in "fairly "Any farmer oquld bid on the proposed
good" condition but declined to com-leases and a minimum rent waa ~~~~ how lonf I.hey might have been established. Battin ts well aware of th1I
Allen told newsmen that "it ts fair to but would have the public believe that
say the chances of lhe death! beina not the present agricultural lessees obtained
natural are es:trtmely good." th'1r lease1 by fraud ."
Bartolomei said his men were "con· Baker attacked BatUn's assertion that
tlnulnR our work for possJble burlal thert1 are reported moves of aubdlvlders
.!lites. to grab a parctl of Mlle Square for
He aald one body was posltJvely Iden-..... homes or apartment.I.
lilied. another tentatively, and the th1rd "Again he e.xhlblt.t a callous dlsreaard
unldentlfltd. But he dtclined to release for the truth. Under ·no clrcum1tanct1
any name11. can the county UMl Mile Square for home
The Wet.hems were being held In Men-1ltea or apartments either under our e1·
doclno County jaU In Uldab, 100 miles tatlng Je1ae or !be propoaed deed to the
north of San Frane1'at, and were to be county."
. arralped Ill Ukiah Justice c.un before Baker further chargl!d thet Battln'a
Judie llale McCowtn Jr. Allen said he moves were "purely and 11Vlply a callou1
would probably be appolnled by lhe court ollempi to mtalead the public ond garner
to represent them. votM In the procea
Wethern.__ 3:3, and h11 lft, who la 29, "In hil leal for r&.etec.t\on BJ.tun has
)Isled Oakrand a&I...... W Y Wtl'C led nd nd' ned h booked the thtrUf said tramp on realOh a 1ba o trut .
' · In the proco311 he la dollli • tremendous
Weather Halt
ANCHORAGE. Al11ka I) -Snow
and fog Monday ~vented Air Force
t>la1101 ln>m ooollnulng the IMay awth
lor H0111t Majority Lellder Hole Bo&p
and th1'0 other men who dlNppoared In
a li&ht plane. "We are ttandlng by,"
M1j. Cbarles Shelley said •I the Elmt ..
dorl Air Poree Bue 1e1rcb otnter.
\
dilaervlce Ill this board and to the peo-
ple o! Orange County and parUcularJy
the peopl< o! Fountain V~lley."
In h\1 statement to the board, Baker
a. Id that the agreement for convey1nce
of the park landa "worth many mUllon1
of dollars at rm c:oat to the people of
Orange County -II all!IOll 10
• y<1r1 of polnatatJnc negollatlotll 1wlth Iha
fed,ral aovemrnent." lit cbar1ed lhit
BatUn'I "lllH lllltmenl had .-..cl to
jeopordiro tho llO!iotlallons ...
r
WHAT CHANGES YOUR HOUSE MORE THAN Al'('( OTHER THING?.
wHAT IMPROVES ACCOUSTlCS DRAMATICALLY?
WHAT WARMS UP A HOUSE?
WHAT IMPARTS UNIQUE BEAUTY AND COMFORT?
CARPETING FROM ALDEN'S, THArs WHATI
I
' (IF YOUR HOUSE "STIFLES" YOU, STOP IN AND SEE US FAST.]
\
ALDEN'S
CARPETS e DRAPES
\
1663 Placentlo Awe.
COSTA MISA
646-4138
HQURS1 Men. Thrv Thiln., 9 to 5'30-fRI ... 9 lo 9-SAT., 9:30 lo 5 •
• I I
e oast
EDITION
I
VOL:. 65, NO. 305, 3 SECTIONS, 38 PAGES ORANG E COU NTY, CALIFORNIA TUESDAY, OCTOBER 31, 19n c TEN CENTS
•
;Proposal for .Countywide Agency ·Moves Near
By JOANNE REYNOLDS
OI' -.,..... .........
Formation of a countywide m.
tergoverm:nental muncU moved a stf:P . .,.... lloada.Y nigh( durillg a meeting' at-
lended by representatives ol 15 of Orange
CcultY'• • •cities. •
The pnipaial, made by tbe 'supervisors
and Mayon Council (SAMCO), is tbat all
tbe ciUt1 Ud the county create a volWl-lary qency I throllgh a joint powers
lgniemenl. '
. • 1 •.
Memben;bip would be Umfted to
elected representatives of lhe c!Ues and
the eotmty Board of Supervi.sora, with
other governmental boards, commissions
and spedaJ dlstrlct trustees having non-
voting memberahtp.
Tbe cities would have me yote each
aod the board of superv!fon woold have
five votes -one·for each supervbor.
· Te fU1811Ce the propoled new .organiq.
Uon e~ city and the county would pay
dues based "Ort both assessed. valuation
• • Ill
r
1 DAILY ~lt.OT~ h' •Jdlwf .........
1.fetid!I for B•lloweea
With ••pumpkin nearly as big as sbe is, 3-year-old Ind Valofi o!
•Huiltlllgton Beach gets ready for some king-size spooking tonight.
'The l!lant jack-o-lantern was, carved from a pumpkin weighing 115
J>OUnils. .
Policy-makers -of Mesa . . '
chamber· Debate Issues
'Policy-makers 0£ the Costa Mesa
Qlamber of Commerce met Monday in
spirited debate to m a k e recom-
raeodaUons for voting on 22 propositions
otm.ing up on Election Day.
ntey ran out of time and a quorum ill'I barely hallway through, agreeing to
fOliow the State Chamber of C.Ommerce's
•toted 1'0"ltloo on 1J remaining prop-
Ollllons. d!m~ of about 30 members of the 11 Legislative Conuni~ and
Board ol Directors met1 for the
•wdown, which was hardly a showdown Ill all oo some sensitive issues. The vote was ,21 to 5 In favor of
~Uon 17, which would reinstate the
<le•th penalty.
obscenity and pornography.
They also voted 12 to 8 in favor of
Proposition 22, which would impose con-
trols <>ver agricultural labor union ac-
tivities.
Proposition 17, the Watson lnitiaUve
for tax relief, was given a 14 to 7 m voUt,
despite arguments by realty lnterestt
present.
These all involved voting by a show of
hands.
A YOCal'vnte on Proi>!>SfUon •l9, which
would make pmessloa of an ounce of
marijuana for personal use legal without
relaxing penalties on dealers, was sound-
ly shouted down to defeat.
Similar vocal ballots went against
Proposition 2L, for 1 prohibition of busing
for sPw>ol integration and Proposition 20,
the coastal protection wne initiative.
.
aod populattoo. '!be budget lor the flnt
six months of operatlon is estimated at
117,200.
The purpose of the intergovernmental
council would be to foster better coopera-
tion and communicaUoo between the
various levels of govemmeiit in the coun-
ty. with the possibility of using the
organization to apply' for state and
feHeral.,rants and as a basis for other
joint )owers , agreements for services
between tbe lnilividual members.
3 Bodies
Uncovered
On Farm
From Wire Servlcel
uK!AH -Three bodlea have been dug
from makeshift graves on rolling farm.
land south of here, and the · Mendocino
C.OUOty sheriff's .office said today it. is
looting for more burial sites.
Warrants have been issued for several
members of tlle Hell's Angels motorcycle
gang, the sheriff's offi.Ce reported.
Sherill -Bartolomei ·aald the bod-
ies, only·-of wblch bu been ~
ly· ldenttlled, ........ ~~ on prqJl'l'.11 _.. Ililplllld to
~ lllil HOien Wethenl
111'1 ~ and other law 111'-
reste<Hhem oo· a variety of counts
Including ·posaeaing marijuana ' or sale.
· Wet.hem also WU booted for investi-
gation of ,-"1g stolen property, in-
cludlng two rifles, Bartolomei said.
Two of the victims were linked to sev~
era! Hell's Angels in Contra Costa· Coon·
ty, Pnd warrants have been issued for
those penoos, the sheriff said.
HoplQ!ld is a farming town In the coast·
al valley of Meudocino County. It is
generally ,_a quiet place, but bas been
occasionauy the scene of motorcycle
gang gatherings. Bartolomei refused comment on the
case beyolid a printed release distribut-
ed at a news cooference also attended
by [!ist. Atty. llllncan James aod Pub-
lic Defender Joseph Allen.
Authorities said the Wetberm were
booked only on the drug aod stolen prop-
erty counts. Bartolomei said his deputies and
officers from the Cootra Costa County
sheriff's department and the Califonila
(See BODIES, Page %)
Bicyclist Hurt
In Mesa Crash
Albert Anastasia and Joe BoSle col-
lided beadori in Costa Mesa Mooday
nigh~ but contrary to the image the
names may conjure up, it wasn't a
revival of Cllicago gang wars.
Anastasia was on a bicycle.
Bosse drove a car, Costa Mesa police
said.
Investigators said Anastasia, 25, ()f 918
Deming St., Santa Ana, was treated
for • leg abruionl at Costa Mesa
Memorial Hosplial and t<leased, follow-
ing the accident at college Avenue and
Avocado street. Bosae, 54, <>f 241 E. 21st
St., Costa Mesa. wasn't injured.
• The Idea WIS tfhantmoUsly endorsed by
SAMOO, but-at Monday's meeting, it
became apparent that many of the cities
bad reservations abOUt some parts of the
agreement. And a few ()f the cities have
soine reservatiom about ttw:l' agreement
Itself.
One of the primary concerns was first
voiced bY ·cooncilman 'Ray Quigley of
Irvine. one portioo of the -men!
gives the organization the power t'o incur
de;l>ts 8¢ obligaiic!n'. Quigley said he
' .
n
~l.Y ,ILOT .............
wlm•'°"'N LETnR'. ~...i-e.tt1n
..
Mesan, 2. Others
Held on Narco,
car Theft Raps
From Wire Services
TUCSON, Ariz. -Still bail bas been
set-tor a Costa .Mesa man and two com-
flllliQol arraigned in U.S. District COurl
here, followb1g their an-est on fec:tera.I
charges fnvolving ·marijuana possession
and car iheft.
Elmer R. Kent, 24, c..f 720 James Place;
Robert Kent, 23, of Long. Beach and
Jeanne Windham, 2-4., of Orange, were ar-
rested Thursday by federal agents.
Elmer Kent allegedly carried 280
pounds of marijuana packed in seven
sacks in the trunk of his car, according
to authorities.
They said Robert Kent aod Miss
Windham, also taken into cwtody at the
Ume, had followed the lone motorist
from rJogales to Tucson lo a car reported
Stolen in Santa Ana.
Crossing ' a state line in a stolen car
aDow1 federal prosecution under the
Dyer Act.
Bail was set .at fltli ,000 for Elmer Kent
when he appeared ho.Jore U.S. Magistrate
Raymond Terlim.
The other two suspects ln the case are
held In lleu ol 110.000 bood each. Officers and committee members Ytited 17 to 8 ln favor of Proposition 181 bJCb would allow · JocaJ control of ..
Fruit P icker's
Booty $100
'
The panel voted in favor of Proposition
1, to provide bonds for more community
college bulldlngs blit ·turned down
Proposition 9; which woul~ give bonds for
repair of unsafe school buildings.
'
Ru1iaway Ti ge r
Returns Hom e
Equip1nent ·Taken
Stereo Shop Loss Se t at $1,700
• A llghl<flngertd thid plucked
about 100 pounds of lrult from a
COsta Mesa man'• tree Monday in
what tnvestlgator1 evaluate as a
darlq, daylight avocado caper.
Gus H. Beach, of l?ll E. ltst SI.,
called to complaln wben be foood
alt bill t.,o avocados -1 1100 loss buodC1 todaY't retail prices -strt !rdln his .backyard tree.
Of Davt Kettjlum said
whoever 1.nveded Beach'• backyard
with 1 stepladder mmt have done it
beiwe<n sunrtse and llUllS<I dde to
IUCh I thoroUib job,
They apparenUy jllll couldnl
re.ch lhe last two.
" ' d ' • ..
A sUgbtly-butlt burglar who apparently
turmelled through the ceillnR from ao od-
jolnlng attic stole 11,700 In JOUl1d equlp-
• ment from a O:>sta Mesa stereo lhoi>, I\
SAN FERN~ (AP) -A wlly was discovered Monday. Jleoial ttcer cub that eacaped caiittvlty Olllw Dave Ketchum, new on the
through JI> opm door returned me<kly to . force, questioned one ol the first peraoN
• ber owner today alter a day of -m be -near the _,., • In the San Garbrlet Mountains. ' , Costa Mea Cooncllman Alvin L. nkl. a &-lllOllllH>ld tub, appeared 1t "Pink" Pinkley oonfeaed , but only to
7:10 a.m. on the doormp of lier o., bavinf seen the rur doqr of The Stereo
OordoO Mer<dl= The !C).polmd ball)' Hut standing -on Saturday. ~· lipr bad d~ ar<d Into the foothlJls · He Aid l>I' cJoaed k for ltobsrt I.
Monday mom hell high winds blew, • :>toftr • .=,llf tho.owner or the llrm at -•door to Mer<dlth't Lopes CU}'OI M: ~ llld lortottcn to do · ao • tiom.i. when hoclMlld<W sbop ihe nlghl before.
Mm>dllh. who ~u., animals for Patroilllan ~um 1ald It was ap-
movie productkm, values Ttkl at fl.500. parently the l?CJrglar'a exi t, notln&
• ' 1-.. . •
'" • •• ' • •
evidence aomeone gained entry to
aoother 'Oftlce sulte In the "tammerdal
bulldlna and cllmbed Into the attic •
A small bole !tad been chopped through
the celling, providing C11try to tbe stereo
lhop, whert II tels Incl 100 elgbt•trick
ta,pe1 were toond mlulng from mercban-
dW..
lnvestlgaton said the 1011 alto In-
cluded ail< alectronlc tranoducer devlcn
.. ,11111 thnlugb Stover'• llort but
y ~y Lu!ber W. RaVOlll,
11 at 137 Broadwof.
m 1ald RoYri told him l!il ~ctr• are tstremaly un-
colllJllOn anl no one else In thla oru
wl\lld tiavo.111 lib them.
.. ' , '
does not believe tJtls needs to be in·
eluded.
"If the council at 10me future lime
wants to go into some kind of a bond pro-
gram, theg there is lhe power to do that
in the agreement. But we doll'! need this
proviso in there as it is now," he said. A
half dozen other city representatives, in-
cluding CouncUman Bob Wilson of Costa
Meaa agreed with Quigley.
Frank Sales, mayor of Seal Beach, pos-
ed one of the hardest questions of the
e~ when he asked. "Wt'.at do we-need
it for! '
"'fe are presently pretty well covered
by SCAG iSOuthem California Aaocia-
tion of Governments), th.: I.tape of
Cities aod SAMCO aod I just feel we
should not saddle our oonstituenll with
another layer of government that they do
not need and quite probably do not
Wafll," be said,
Ray Villa, a Santa Ana councilman who
. !See SAMCO, Pqe 11
core
Supervisor
Says County
Jeo pardized
By JACK BRODA.CK
Of ... DaftY .. , ... lNllt
Supervisor David L. Baker today at-
tacked a crunpA.lgn 11.Jvertisement by
Supervisor Rc<!Jert W. Battin which Baker
asserted bad jt:opardized the county's ac-
quisition of the 485-acre Mile !'AJ;uare
Park in Fountaln Valley.
Baker referred to an 1d in a mail
publication title.:, "Au Open Letter About
Mile Squai e" µI.:ced by Battm.
Baker called the letter "false and
deceitful" r;,nd "" bl~tant lie." Ba\lln reoll"" lhlt Bater waa cJl!sl
'!eying to lletf bls oppOtient, Wui1lii{")
Wenke, in the Nov. 7 election. J
"Battin'• le:Uer iJ destructive, ir-
respo111lble aod sell-servl!!tl at the ...
pcllle ()f the pl . ~'" hi charged. ••tt im-
pugns the integrity of every o t b e r
member of the Board of Supenolsors."
:Battin's letter, which appeared last
week, attacka the l:?ase of 213 acres of
the 485-acre park to Fouotsln Valley
fanncr1 .
It ii the same park land where an
eight-monU lea:t extension to Murai
Farms became the subject of recent in·
dictments by the Orange County Grand
Jury in connectloo with an alleged
shakedown of fanner George Mural by
former Westminster mayor D e r e k
McWhinney and Planning Commissioner
Tad Fujita.
'I1»e jury indictment aJleges that
McWhlm>!y iod FuPta demanded a
(See BATllN, Plge Zl
Hanoi Retreats
On Se t Deadli1ie
For Viet Peace
By Unltttl Pre11 hltemaUonal
11le Communists' Ocl 31 deadline for
signing a Vietnam cea.se.fire passed ~
day with no firm indication when it will
be signed.
The Wblte Hoose said President Nil<oo
is seeking a lasting peace and will mt be
stampeded by Hanoi'• deadline ol today.
White House officials uld -lier it
was bnprobable the cease-fire would be
signed before the Nov. 7 et.ct1ons
althoucJ! both the Hanoi.and Vtet .COl!g
delegations to the Parll talks called on
lbe United States to tlll' "U aooo U
possible."
This was a retreat from tbelr previous
"sign today" statement.a.
Presidential adviser Henry A. Kiss-
inger saJd Thursday there were a
number or points that abould be cleared
up ln one more negotlatins seulon.
A clue to one of the majOr soags came
today from Pham Dang Lam, chief
Sataoo -tlator In Parii who WU In
Tokyo to brief Japanese olflclalt Oil
Salgoo'1 pooltloo.
Lam told Japanese Vtoe Promler
T•keo Miki lhlt Saigon wants ..,.ranees
an ~t wm meao the withdrawal
of North VtotnameR troops rrom SOuth
~ .• l:llln. L. __ _ He said .._ wanted "elarlllcatloo"
oo the Mure of U-u.opa aod oo the
tine-port "National councll of ..-
clliatJon" which Slip> lean means a
coalitloo government.
Whlla Htuse apokesman Ronald L.
Zlql<r took note of the Communlat
deadllal aod uld, "The only deadline
we'rs'eper•tlna under II the ..,. Ula! wilt
brlni •bout the right kind o( Ill -
-!.' '"nle Prtlldent baa been-v • r r.
l"Otictilou&.Jn maklng,clelr" thalJie wtn
PA1L T ~ll.01' .........
'A BLATANT LI!'
Supervl10r I.Iker
Joan C.~Gainey,
City Hall Aide,
Succumbs at 39
FW'leral services will be held aL J p.m.
Thursday r or Joan C. Gainey, Oleta
V.esa city employe wbo died &mday at
the age of 39.
Mn. Gainey had been the Cotta &leaa
City · Hall cashier aln6e 1111 , ond
treasurer of the Costa Mesa City
Emplnyes A!soclaUon since 1970.
A ·native-of New York City, the
perlodi<ally made ber residence In Costa
Mesa since 1946.
She b survived by her husband, Bill, ~
the·famtI;· home at 1993 Rosemory Pll<t,
Costa Mesa; aon Bob, of the U.S. Anny;
daughter, Mrs .. Sandy Freeman, Colta
Mesa ; parents, Mr. and Mrs. Philip Hall.
Costa Mesa ; and sister, Karol James of
Huntington Beach.
Services are scheduled at Be 1 I
Broadway Chapel in Costa Meu. with In-
terment to follow at Pacific Vlelrr
Memorial Park, C.Orona del Mar.
Radio Director Dies
BEYERL Y HILLS (AP) -Funerol ~ wm be held Wednesda1 for
Anthony Stanford, an early radio dil'ec:tor
and producer, who died Amday.
Weatller
'lbose cold northeasterly wmda
•hould b e g I n to dlmJnllh by
Wedoesday, according to I ht
weather service .' Highl at the
beaches ore upecled to reocb Iii
rising to 75 Inland. Lnt tanldit.
I chilly 12.W.
INSIDE TODAY
A ..., ,.,,,.. on -Ufr In
Pmnce, nmilor to 1M old Ki.
ltU Rrport, do-1 1M "l"'lo-
tloft of p,.nchmt• aa up.rt
lowrs. Ste story, Pogt 12. .......... ==. -aaaablf ---·-
,
I -u
II I • • ·n-·" ;;:: I • .:
_,_ M c .... : --. ,, ........... . :=-...... ::f ·-.. ::::; ': . ................ --. -;\."(SM PEA.CB, Pip I) '------------'"
• ,•
•
'
•
'
DAIW PILOT c Tu...,, Ocl4low )l,. lm
Valley Won1an Tell3 ferror in llganda
.. JOSH IALl.Elt ' er. ... Dffl'I' .........
Allee Wat ol FOWlllla Valley bu
fOWld lllot tt llltet mon titan .a w!IJinl
htaltlld I lJetpq IJandJo -m llft-derdeveloptd natlon from poverty_
~11er Peace Corps minion to Ug.andl.
Ea st Africa, turned Into M nl&htmare of
murdered friends. drunken 10ldien aod
i;enseless mob.t.
Today, just three months alter w aet
out on what was to be a two--year
-. "'" Is lrlteall to • -la lier tl'ltl -at W NJcbtlQpla Lana.
"l """lr7trc to belg," iltt -"But OClllllltlou ...,., )Ill too dtoollc. Tiii -
pie need ., much llllp, but I ~'
stay."
She mnemben ooe "'""' Mplda'ly well.
"I was ln a store buying shampoo," Ibo
recalls, "when suddenly the people out on
lht streotl began running. Thoosands of
them ran by, going as last as they could ...
"I flnlD1 ,_ -"' Illa _,, edllcated ..,.. wllo opclke El!llfsll and
-them mt -"-'DJ. ,,,..,
didn't -· All ..,. --11111 ::''* ciM "' ~ ... lhoJ ?Ill,
"Later wt fOUDd aut lhal --54 mllet away hllfd our people were run·
nlJl8 and lhey mrted rur.nin,, too. But
nobody ever found out what started it.
"Alter lhat we wore to1d · 1o 1tay In-
doors and never 'go out on the street.
Wa ...,. ...,, -to beJnc evacuated
by Iha"
Tiii ,_ for Ult dbanler, Mn, Wat
-....... bti -to -111111 -J>i-4 Ida Amin. An army lcntral
who llilod l"""t two years ago from 1 ~ ntillJ>I, Amin was always
conaldered a staunch law and order man.
But UUs llUJlmer hl.s role suddenly stiff.
ened, •ccordlng to Mn. West.
'"lbere were regulations on cverythJnai" ahe u,ys. "Even length of
hair for men and altlrt llllJilh f0< womeo."
<l>e ol the flnl alpl ol lnluble -Jn
A""'51 ,.hen ona -voluni. -arrested tor wearing cut~rr ahorta.
"He wasn't hurt or llD,Ythlna." 1ay1 Mn.
Weal "But that worried us. We were
willing lo go along with the rule1 because
we wan ted to help, except that we didn't
know that short pants were not allowed.''
Soon after that came another jolt.
Amin announced that all Aa:tans would
have lo leave tbe oountry by November
or looa all citiJenlblp rlpta. Mfl. \II'•
.. )'I 11115 Wu I dlwttoUa -U wtll 11 ~ble -ICllon becauoo the
M ans were most.Ly businessmen ind
M.Stntially ran the economy of lhe n1-
1Wo.
"There was one man, a Afe:rican-
Americao from Teus. wM couldn't tl)l:1
I.hat order,11 says Mrs. West. "He felt he
had been discrlmlmoled agalmt In Tons,
and that he would have no pirt at all In
supportlng a racist regime."
Burt~s Gone Coming to California In what Mrs. West believes w1s 1
freak border Incident, however, be wu m.1c~ to dtalh In trying lo leave: the country.
PinuJJ Taken From Wash:'roo1n
fl.11A~ll !AP \ -A nude photograph of actor Burt Reynolds once grac!d
the wall s of the women's lounge of a socially eUte club near Mian1i, but not for
long.
"It probably !urned someone on," said club membershlp dJrector Pat Gfb.
son .
She reported Monday that an Wlknown , Powder room patron !i~le the
framed photo. taken from the centerfold pages of Cosmopolitan magazllle.
Miss Gibson said the photograph of Reynolds in the buff was put In place
about four weeks ago at the Munity Club at Sailboat Bay tn suburban Coconut
Grove.
She said a serond ropy of the photo is being encased in a bullet-proof glass
and steel frame and will be ri nnl:,. bolted to the wall in the lounge.
Mesa
Calendar
LE :
Ii',..... Pagel
BATTIN ...
$10.000 cootributlou le the campaign fund
o! "a S'Jpervisor" or Murai might find it
diffic ult to get an extension of his five--
y~ar-old lease on the 213 acres. '\
Today, Baker demanded and ,...Jvtd
approval of a resolution by the board
reaffirming the county's plan to eontlnue
the ord~rly development of the park as
TONIGlIT provided in the agreement with the
HALLOWEEN -Watch out for federal government.
goblins! Battin iJ engaged u a touft campaign
"INVESTMENTS" _ occ· Lecture to retain his seat on the Board of
Supervisors. His opponent, Santa A a at-Series presents William L. O'Bryon in torney William Wenke polled almost 4,000
third of five-part series. Easlbluff more votes in the primary than did tbe
Elementary School, Ne"Nport Beach, 7:30-incumbent.
9 30 N t I · Baker claimed Bi.Uin's opt.n letter had : p.m. 0 uhon. d I d f fth deed he k SQUARE DANCING -Community e aye trans er 0 e to t par land ~rom the federal government. Recreation Center, Fairgrounds 8-10 p.m. '·There have alrtady been delays in the
Tuesdays. $1.25 per lesson. convtyance of Mile Square because of
WEDNESDAY, NOV. I earlier publicity," Baker said In
COAST OOMMt/NrrY COLLE G E J reference to tht. McWhinne)'·Fujlta mat.
DISTRICT BOARD -Regular meeting, ter.
·-••---8 "Battin's irre"""""ible and UDtnie µov ~·~. p.m. "~-
PREPARATION FOR PARENTHOOD statements ""'1t only to je<>pardi2e the
-OCC Lecture Serles, Lecturtr: Mar-county's ..c.qu.Wtion and to deee.ive the
jorie Pyle, R.N. Oct. 4 ·Nov. 8. Estancia public."
HS F«um, 7:30-9:.30 p.m. · Baker also charged that Baffin's ae--
UCI SERIES ON NUTRITION AND lions bad "1so dtbyed the transfer of 41
HEALTH -"Vegetarlattlsm and Other acres to the city of Fountain Valley for 'Way Ckit' Diets," Room 151 Humanities
Hall, 7_10 p.m. recreational use . Xi
UC! SERIES ON ARTa 111 THERAPY He said the city hss alread budgeted
-"Role of Movement a.od Dance in $850,000 to develop the a age along
Therapy Experience," Admission $5.50. Brookburst Street to ball parb, tennis
't "INCOME TAX SAVINGS THROUGH courts anJ. other recr~ational f<icilltics.
TRUSI'S ANO GIFl'S" -UCI Lecture Battin :'e:>lied to Baker's attack by de-
Series . 7·10 p,m. Room 178, Humanities nying that t-Js acts had ca~J any delay
Hall. in the transfer of the ;>ropertJ and charg-
BODIES .•.
State Department of Justice began dig-
gln on the P.:roperty for possible gra ve-
sitts and ' at 5 p.m. (last night ) we
definitely unCO\lered two human bodles.
In excavalin& another t.cs l hole we dis-
covered a thfrd body." \ Bartolomei would not say what led
investigators to 1earch for bodies on the property.
He said the bodies were in "fa irly
good" condition but declined to com-
ment on how loo.& they might have been
burled.
Allen told newsmen that "I t is fair to
say the chancel of the deaths being not
natural are eJ:lremely good."
Bartolomei aaJd hJs men were "con-
linu!'W our work for poMible burlal
sites. '
J{e s~ud one body was pc>Jitlvely Iden-
tified, another tentatively, end the third
unidentilled. But he declined to release
any names.
OIAN51 C041T
DAILY PILOT
"' '
"'-°'-c..tt CIAll Y l'llOT. wtlfl Wfllctl
......... fM "._..,.,..., ,, ..... ~ "' .. °""""' CIMlt l"IAll\tll'"9 ~-.... rt'-•tti... •r'I llUbu"'*I, ,,.__,, ~
,,apy, -c.... Ma9, ,.....,.... '-di.
HIMll••Wttifl I NtfllP"-'•l" "Y•lltY, l.Jlvun•
a.di. ,,...._.~ Al Sin C.._,te/
11111 _,_ C.p111r-. " .inoi. .... 1orw1
.Ol'llln II M llli.td StilwMys .-.t !.wnd1,s.
~ prtr.(lltll llUblfthlnl IM•nt II 11 lJO 'R~t
.. , Strwt, C0.11 N.91, Cllllllnlr., tJt?t,
leti.,,t H. W.N
,., ... i..nt '"" P'llDll ....
Jtcl: It. C11rf,.,
vie. ~t .,,.. o.n.r.1 ~
Tho191•• K••vll ••rfol'
Tli•m11 A. M11rithh1e
Mlftlllnil ••trw
C..rlN H. L..e1 l lc.Jri1r4 1, N•ft
.a..l.tMt MtNtlnt .. lliln
c ......... Offk.
JJO W•1f l•y Str•••
M•l11 .. A,,U,.111 P'.O. lei ll•O, f1•Z4i --
c.
•
ed that Bater was only trying to help Wenke.
Baker attacked what he cnlled Battin's
"allegations and inuendoes" In the open
letter paint-by-.point.
Battin bad charged that "as long as a
flw people can lease this land for
themselves for a pittance and reap hun-
dreds of thousands of dollan in profits
from its use, the citizens are going to be
denied its recreational use."
Baker rei.Ued : 0 1be inter Im
agricu)tura] leases on portions of Mlle
Square have never been a COMtraint on
park development. There are two basic
reasons why the undevelo~ lands are
subleased fer agricultural purpmes, One
is to prc7tde weed and dust abatement on
the property, a cost of which would
oti.ierwise fall on We county.
''Tbe federal government was very
concerned about complaints from Foun-
tai • Valley resident regarding weed and
d u s t nuisances originatiDg I r o m un--
developed lands at Mile. Square.
''Tbe le8'fe ternu obligate tbe county to
control weeds and du.st and the county
was spec ifically authorized by the federal
lease to sublease land for farm.lng
purposes to exercise weed and dust con-trol."
Battin. in bis open lelter, also charged
thal land al MJle Square "Ls again aet
aside under a county lease for the u-
clusive use of a. small group of .elect
farmers to make money."
Baker replied, '"The agricultural sub-
lealle! at Mile Square were put out to
sealed bid In accordance with strlct coun-
ty procedures.
"Any far.ner could bid 00 the proposed
leases and a minimum rent waa
est ablished. Battin Is well taware of this
but woul d have the public be.Ueve that
the present agricultural lessees obtained
their leases by fra1.1d."
BRker attacked Battin'• au ertion that
there are reported moves of 1ubdlvider1
to grab a parctl of Mlle Square for
homes or apartments.
"AgaJn he exhlbill a callous di.sreg1rd
for the truth. Under no clrcumstancu
can the county use Mlle Square for home
sites or apartmenta either under 01.1r el"·
Isling least or the proposed <d to lhe cou nly,"
House Destroyed,
But Not by Explo~ion
A "POrl of a hou.. IJlll8Notly
destro,ed by an uploslon -Newport
Buch Fire O.partmtnt tnlcb ""'"" Ing down lht Newport-Balboa l'enlnlula
Monda1 lnomlng. '
They arrived at I04 E. Balboa Blvd,, lo
find no evldence of an o:ploslon. Tht
holue It limply being demoll1bocl by
workmen who were nay.
•
Nixon Plans Television After that, lnstances or dtunken
soldiers, terroriting the public l't wtll,
became more common. Basic order was
breaking down. ud Mrs. Wesl was hav-
ing serious doubts about whether she
should. stay in the ~· Speech on Election Eve "We couldn't get any lnlormalk>n ex-
cept. what Am.1n put out," lhfl says, ''IO I
bought a short-wave radio to hear what
the BBC and Voice of America had to
say. That really scared me." WASlllNGTON (AP) -President Nix-
on hu scheduled a round of television
and rad.lo broadcasts loclllding 1
television speech on election eve for the
windup of his re-election campaign that
_Communists, U.S.
Trade Extensive
Vietnam Attacks
SAIGON I UPI) -Communist troops
attacked releotlessly tliroupoul South
Vietnam todaJ while American 852
bomber! respo-Willi I Dear record
number pl raids over the north, military
spokosmtn r<ported.
The nids and counter-raids came on
the day the Communists had .-for I
ceaatflrO.
On tbe batlle.fields lhe Widlh and length
of South Vielnam, Communist attacks ;.,,
creased, lhe Saigon high t'Ommand said.
The t'OIIll118lld reported 121 shelling, ter-
ror and ground attacks between dawn
Monday 11111 dawn today,
U.S. ll52s Oew at less! 39 raids against
North Vietnam between DOOO Moaday
and DOOD today, the U.S. command aald.
Communist troops · overran two district
capitala on South vie.tnam•a central
coast, military llOU1'CtS said,
Field reports confirmed by military of-
ficers said government troops were forc-
ed out of Ba To, \'IJO miles north of
Saigon, and Qu• Son, 340 milts above lhe
capltal.
Both towns had been wrecked by Com--
mtmist artillery attacks and Allied bomb-
ing raids in earlier fighting in the seven-
month-<ld North Vietnamese offensive.
UPI t'O'™JIOllC!tot Edward Basselt
said Que Son was'i:totbing. JDOre than "a
pile or rubble" and was abandoned by its
government defenders early today under
heavy Communist pressure.
Bassett also reported lho fall of Ba To,
after government rangers held out
aga inst a two-mootb siege by regular
North Vietnamese Army troops.
Al least 49 of the battered rangers
were reported missing, although the bulk
or the town's defenders made it to two
nearby South Vietnamese army camps.
The 1"% raids came in a series of 13
waves. According to U.S. spokesmen, the
number of Strate&ic Air Command
missions matched the record set Aug. 11.
At least 130 Jet lighter-bomhtn blt
North Vietnam Monday, and a lhrte1blp
naval tuk for<e bombarded 1hont
target. on at least. five oora1kw during
tho day, spokesmen rtlJOrted.
, All U.S. offensjve actlona against the
north ,...., below the IOlh parallel, whlch
nm1 ~milts south of Hanoi, Jn Une With
the U.S. attempt to . show "good will"
during peace negoUaUons.
Police Impound
Auto Involved
In Mesa Mishap
A Vermont visitor perhaps lttla ill«
JOlng hack home to Jjyde Pari to hide to-
day, following a Monday night epiaode in
Costa Mesa which fen blm without a·car ror the retum lrlp .
Divld E. Goodwin, 37, of Jjyda Park,
\\.'OUnd up bmponrUy In l>Ollce c::ua:tody
following a car crash on Adami Avenue
at Royal Palm Drive about 7:30 p.m., ac-
cording to tnvtstlg:aton.
Ofncer Rob Fl1then aakl Ooodw!n't
ca r was forced to pull to the curb a mile
from the scene by a paulng motorltt
Who SUJpected ht mlgbl 1UJ1 ht planning
to lltc.p and w11lt for police.
lnveollgators oald lhe cndhp!ed -or the cnr bad been waVinj: up·apd down
as he drove and aJl the doors were
sprung 1hut, r<qulrtna Off1ctr Fblhera
to pry Goodwin ool ao 1ie <IOUld Dntllr be qUCllloncd .
Tile motorllt -clalmJnc ho wu
friahtencd away by all the hcakitlc car
homa -':t'U lalef tele1Md: pendJQI
pooslble fllln1 of chal..-'Iater.
H1a: car, Which llJIC•W !Mjor dem-
•ge aloo1 • wllh the -vehicle Jn. volved, wu l.mpounded. by -pollce u evl-
denct lrJ evaluattni the cue.
Motortst Peter ll.antobo«, 20, or 1ou
Million Drive, Costa ~ -treated
It Coota Mt11 Memollal lloapllal for I
minor head lnJury and t.loued.
He told police ht Col tut of hla baltmd
spor\a Ctr to COllfroot Goadwi., :tzappod
In hi• own manaled ~ lo ,..
what he \IU &0ln1 to lftJ7 :. -. ~.
Ramohoff lllld ht ran to i hllitl>uraor
atand and lfttd ""ploya to call an 1111-
buh1nce when Goodwln drove •wtY· •
•
will take blm to California Saturday,
The White House announced Nixon will
give a »-minute address to the naUon on
live radio-1V from the White House
Thursday night at 4:30 p.m, PST for
what waa described as "a look to the
future and dbcussion of his hopes for the
future of this country."
The three nlore radio and two
televillon addre..., are all paid Political
broadcosta, Pl'"" secretary Ronald L.
Zlegl!llr said, and they will give Nixon a
C()ncentration of broadcastiitg for every
day ttctpl Sunday 1mtll the election.
The President and Mrs. Nixon plan to
fly to California Saturday and land at the
Ontario International Alrport in early
evening for an airport rally in San
Bernardino County.
From there they will helicopter to San
Clemente, where they will stay to vote
Tuesday morning and return to
Washington to receive election results at
the White House.
Ziegler indicated that there may be
other campaigning activiUes, but be bad
no firm details to provide today.
Nixon had canceled a major ap-
pearance in the Chicago area for today
bl.cause o( Monday 's train wreck there.
Thursday's tel.evision broadcast will be
carried by the NBC Television network.
The Monday evening live broadcast,
which will emanate from the Los Angeles
area, possibly the Western White House,
doe1 not yet have an announced time or
topic, Ziegler said.
Ziegler was asked whether Nixon
would make any speeches dealing
specilJcally Wilh Vietnam. He said Nixon
does not plan a specific address on that
subject, but it was obvious tbitt be might
ir.clude n in a discussion of the foture of
the country. •
ID ·b.11 most reoeot radio speech NiJ:on
promised ii re-e1tcted "one of my
highest-priority proposals" will ht prop-
erty-tu: relief for older citiz.ens. (See
story, Page f ).'
I
F..-Plllfel
SAMCO ...
has been one of the active SUPJ>O:rters of
the intergovernmental council, rei>lled:
"The organization of this council is a
genuine concern, but I think we should be
able to wort it ouz::. '1be grea t concern
he.re ls our own self -rr pro-tection.
"lf we don't o · ourselves, some--
one bigger Is going to s t e p in and
they'll organize for us."
The •r&anlzing committee, led by
Cowicllman Don Smith of Orange, will
meet again 1D two weeks to coo.sider the
revl.skms: proposed at Monday's meeting.
Smith said he will then forward a copy
of the revised agreement to all the city
counclla and county supervisors for
study. •
As soon as 50 percent of the cities
which represent 50 pucent of the popula-
tion have approved the agreement, the
cot.ncll will be fonned.
OCTOBER HONOREE
Pilot Randy Nutt
Mesa Helicopter
Pilot Selected
Officer of Month
Patrolman Randy Nutt, Costa Mesa's
Officer for the Month in October, enjoys
traveling in bis Cree time, In addition to
bridge, howling and puttering UOWld the
yard.
He gets plenty of OD-the-job travel In
too, as ooe of the department's
Emeigency Ah-Ground Law Enlorce-
meot (EAGLE) unit's heli<opter pilots,
<l10Sen for chopper pilot training in
1970, Officer Nutt has logged more than
2, 100 hours aloft since COOlpleUon of bis
six months' training at World Associates
flying school In Loog Beach.
Now 30, Officer Nutt Joined the local
rorce In t964 and bas w o r k e d
assignments in both the patrol divtsion
and traffic en.(orcement and accident ln--
vestigation. '\
During aerial ~trols over Costa Mesa,
he bas landed se¥eral times at accident
scenes to beain administering first aid to
the injured.
He holds an AA degree in Police
science from Orange Coast College, bas
attended Cal State. Long Beach and
graduated from the Orange County
Peace OfUcers' Academy and Advanced
Officers Academy at Golden West
CoUege in Huntington Beach.
A Lo.s Angeles native, Patrolman Nutt
was raised both there and in Newport
Beach, but moved to f.o!ta Mesa nine
years ago after marrying bis wife Dean--
r Kimberly, 6, and
In bte September, just as Mrs. West
was completing her cultural adjustment
training, condlUons becamr so lMtd tha t
the Peace Corps advised her to leave.
"I was really sorry, because the peo~e
were in more need of help than ever. t
there w~s nothing to do, and besides.
was really afrald and insecure.'•
Mrs. West Is presently trying to gatller
up enouah courage to conUnue htt Peact>
Corps eommttmeol In another country,
probably in lndonclna. "rm going to check very carefully into
the politic.al condition.a this time." she
says. ''I don't know if I could lake
another experience like the one J had ...
f' ..... P .. eJ
PEACE ••• ·
not agree to the signing GI a peace plCI
until lhe remainlnt oubtaodJni lalues
are clorilied, Ziegler said.
"It 13 the President's firm lntenllao to
have a setUemeat wblch will offer lhe
best hope .for wUng peaoe aid ape-
lhal dots ool le•Ve lhe teed of a Mure
confJJct," Ziegler aald.
Ziegler said lhat Nixon ... i.. to reach
an agreement that will wipe out the
possibility or a new war as well as .. to
assuno the people of SOUlh Vletwlm wUh
the means of detenninlng tbelr own future."
Kls$inier was Jn lhe White HWllO to-
day, ancf whlle It ,... apparent be would
ht traveling "ialn soon to Paris, offlclala
aa1d there WU DO set t1metaple for
another round of negoUatloos with Qom.
mWlist diplomats.
RePorts llad been <in:ulaUng Jn
W asbington that Kissinger woold 111 to
Paris Friday and ht ready to &Ip en
--tr'1ty by Sunday, Offtclala today discounted lhe posslhlll-
ty there "°"Id ht any algning htfCJ!e anoO.I ~ of consultation> wtqi •
Hanoi's delegates in Paris and aoof/it1
probable trip by Kissinger to Saiaoli to
bring South Vietnamese p r ••• a • n t
Nguyen Van Thieu Into the fold.
Officials said at tbls point Kllatnpr
had ..,. definite plans to 1, a Y e
Wasbington, But It was clear ho -Jn
toucl! With Hanoi tbrough -~tiations and also with RUMia and China who
are putting press11tt OD their ally to keep
lines open,
French authoriUes, who hive been in
charge of the t>h3slcal aide of ~ 31>-
year-<>ld talks, sent a crew of wwka-1 1o
tbe conference ball cm Paril' Avenue
Kleber todoy to put into :he meetq hall
steel stands &nd flashlights for television
crews.
Producer's Rites Set
WOODLAND HllLS (AP! -Funeral
tervices are planned Friday for Mitchell
Lei.sen, a Hollywood producer-<il.rector
who served U years u art director
under Cecil B. DeMUle.
All For The Fajrlly-
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WHAT IMPARTS UNIQUE BEAUTY AND COMPORT?
. • . CARPETING FROM ALDEN'S, THAT'S WHAT!
!IF YOUR HOUSE "STIFLES" YOU, STOP IN AND SEE US FAST.)
HOUll
ALDEN'S
CARPETS e DRAPES
1663 Placentia Avt.
COSTA MESA
646-4838
-· ThrJThun., t to 5:30-,RI., 9 to 9-SAT., 9:30 to 5
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