HomeMy WebLinkAbout1973-08-23 - Orange Coast Pilot1
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DAILY PILOT 2 Cult Me,..bers Boolaed
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THURSDAY AFTERNOON, AUGUST 23, 1973
For · Assault • ID Te1nple
VOL."' NO. US. I SRCTtONS,.14 PAHi
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Marines Study Public Airport Use
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We.st County Fracas
.Knif e-1hrowing.·
Suspect HQ.rt
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87 JOANNE REYNOLDS
Of ... Deify l"IMt Staff
A FCU'ltain Valley man, 'vbo police
alleged was throwing butcher knives at
them, was shot in the stomach by
p<trolmen early thi.s mornlng.
!Wold Eugene Lucas, 47, of 11623 San
Man:us St. was booked into Orange
County jau en charges of attempted mwiSer. · ·
Police Capt. Les Rowland dexrlbed Luca.• wouoch as superficial alter the
man was treated and released for book·
Ing from the Orange County Medical C<iillr. .
Rowland said Lucas was shot at least
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Wayward !Jus
Parks in. Cafe
SAii FRANCISCO (UPI) -A wayward
bus ]>uni through a plate glw window
at Vesuvio Cale In the North Beech Dight
club Wstricl, sm-., a silo reading
"Booths for toplesa lady psydiatrists."
'ftle driver of the Munlcipol Railways
bus had let his posoencers out moments
before because his air brakes weren't
working. «
Bartender Hal 'l'hunes said his patrons
wmn't too concerned once they were
sure the bus wasn't coming alt the wa}' in
the care.
"People stopped drinking for six
leCGOds. at least,'! he said
l oro1e
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Coast
twice by a contingent of four officers
arter the man allegedly refused to drop
one knile be was aboot to throw after
already heaving ooe at the officers.
Sergeants Fred Nourse and Lewis
Barlow and Officer.I Lee Pepka and
Donald Andenon were catjed to the
IAlcas i¥>me shortly alter mJdnlaht by
a . neighbor who omnpiained of a loud
disturbance.
The four men were met at the door by
Lucas who reportedly refused to tlllk to
any or the policemen. Ac<ording to the
police report, IAJcas ''proceeded to throw
butcher knives at.the o(ficeD."
Rowland aald the officers opened fire
on the suspect when he <:OnUnued tossing
knives at them alter they had ordered
him to stop.
None of the ol!icers was injured, police reported. .
1bis ..,oniing's shooting marks the
third sllcioting incident involving Foun-
tain Valley police since April '
Three of those shootings have resulted
in deaths.
In Aplil Miguel Anaei Estrada Ron-
quillo, lb, of Santa Ana, was ahot to
death in , Fountain Valley by Officer
Timothy Miller of the Wmmlnster
Poltce Department.
The Ronquillo ohooUni was &parked
when a Fountain VaQey officer had ·at-
tempted lo take Raaijlitllo and ·four com-
paniooo Into .-y for alie(ed drunlien
driving.
The Orange County Grand Jury cleared
Miller of wnJllldoing in the shooting.
Ronquillo'• famlly hill !lied a ISOO;QOO
tawsull against the citiel of Westminster
aod Folintain Valley, Mtllel' aod Officer
Robert ' Mosley of Fountain Valley w!lo
was with Miller when the ahooUng oc-
curred.
In June two ,.,.peeled bandits, pursued
from the scene of a holdup in Fountaln
Valley were ahot to death in the parking
lot of Hoag Memorial Hospital ·in Newport Beech. , The weather'• coolJng off, but it'll
atill ' be nice along the. Orange
4;eul ,Friday, lllghs of II at the
-hes will rise to IO Inland.
Jack Elvin ·Nation, 23, and 'nlomas
, Bernard Kozelub, 32, both of Canon were
• later Identified u the men wbo bold up a
small market for Ion than fl50. ' ' . .
JNSmE TODAY
" I •• I ' l. , . V0Luptuou1, ,attractive KaUi11
' K11to1i ls one of the wheels driv-
i11g a new entru into the fitld
of aophistf"'11ed sex maqoi:inea. 'Htr 'babv is Vivo, a 1ounool /01'
women. See ttoru Page 17.
I.~ IWC 1t ::... LtMtf'I '4
Pepi!& an<lcQlllcer Ed Ras..,.. with
Reserve ~ llOmllllc Batak aod CUiil• FOw~~~ ibo'iloo men I/Om
F...ntain '!(allet tJuouc1i Huntington Beach ·and Coit> M-before con\erlng
them in the.llQdl\•v*ldnl lol. The lour oltlCers find. shotcun blasts
' into. the car ·~ Ille-two men made some furtive .. .., ..... 1. after bei!>ll
olden>d lo --. , ~ J,1; MlltNI ,... ~ 1Q"..;.;:1 ~ N._.. ..... ( 1 ' =="-•J · r.=-·...:: . Y<>uth Drow.is ... ...,.. ,... ' lf9icl ..,..,. '4..U ·~ ... ,........... ,, ::0.:: ~-ll:l: =-~ WACO, Ter. (UPI) -A I~~ ........, • 11 .._.. n.n boy, riding on a nmaway lawn mower
1.1'1....., 'I " • •" ·''\hil•raced.Jnto 1 pond,,drowlied Wednol> •....:.,_..,....,.;:..:;·-~-_.,..,._.......i dly1ln.1J1feet.oC"W1t•.
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ID St:oekhol1n ,.
Ul"IT ....... . . · .. ; ·-'
Pollcemen and civilians take shelter behind cars in
front of a Stockholm, Sweden, bank where bandits
are holding six persons as hostages. So far,. one.per-.
son is repo,ted wounded. . .
Cornpromise LegislatWn
On Deatli Penalty Eyed ·
SACRAMENTO (AP) -T h,e
Legislature was looking today for a rnid-
dl¢ growid on an issue which has little
.roOtn for compromise -life or death !or .
coavicted murderers.
·A compronlise plan to reinstate capital
punishment for a three-year' test period
Is under heavy attack from both sup-
porters and foes of l!1" death penalty.
Negotiations have broken down on
limiting tmre close1y the crimes subject
to the death penalty . .
A long-delayed showdown vote QJl_fte
death penalty was scloeduled again~y,
for the fourth time, ln the Assembly
Criminal Justice Committee, the usual
final resting place for capltat punishment
lq:lslation.
But legislative leaders safd there would
be no· committee vote until after a
. closo<ktoor meeting of the majority
Democrato In the'lower house.
Democratic Aasembty Speaker Bob
Moretti, a death peoalty foe, said
WedneadaY he would make no auempt to
block death penalty l<glslaUon In the clooed.ooor ·Democratic eaUCltS on the
·~. Gtorge Deukmejtan attacked
• Moretti anew Wedlie"'-Y •for· what he
caned an attempt to liill capital punish-
ment legislation by "·subterfuge."
Morettl replied' that Deukmejian (R-
tong Beach), is using his Senate-pa"'ed
death penalty, bill as a launching pad for
a race next year for attorney general.
The speaker also said Deukmejian blS no
real interest in reaching: a compromise.
01Sen. Deukmejian at this point would
rather have the issue than to have it
resolved," Moretti said at a news con-
ference.
That exchange was triggered by a pro-
po6al to lm}lOSe-a llllil!datory death
(See 'PENALTY, P~ge !)
'HEAVENLY' AC.T
MAKES BELIEJ<J:'R.S
ROLAND, Iowa (AP) -II there were
any nonbelievers in. this small 'Certtrat
Iowa community, there aren't any more.
Wednesday night, a loud clap or
thunder shook the small town of 800 and
evidently triggered the chimes of Salem
IAJtheran Oiurch.
The hymn ''How Great Thou Ari" ranc
throu1h the town.
2 Hare KriShna
Cult Members . .
Held' iW A:ssau.It
Laguna Beach police and an Orange
County . ma:rshal arrested two members
of the Hare Krishna cult in Laguna
Beach Wednesday after a· detective was
allegedly at'8cked during the service of
an arrest warrant at the group's temple.
Douglas C. Russell, 21, of 641 Ramooa
Ave., was booked on suspicion of assault
oo a poUce ollicer, and interfering with
an officer in the line of duty.
Brian W. Nash, 19, also of 641 Ramona
Ave., was booked only on the charge of
interfering with an officer.
Both men were taken to South Orange
Col;nty Judicial District Court in Laguna
Niguel .for pi;aignment oo the mi•
meaoor chstges tOday. .
Detective Sgt. Neil Purcell said· that as
Detective Tony Smith and Deputy
Marshal Dick Ringler attempted to
search the Hare Krislma Temple for a
female named In a misdemeanor war·
rant, R~ll allegedly grabbed Smith
with a chokehold around the nec:k.
Marshal Ringler forcibly pulled the
costume..iad Russell from the Laguna
• Beach orncer and placed the cult
member under arrest. Smith was unin·
jured.
The two offie<rs bad tnlUaUy been
ordered to remove their sbooa before
(See KRISHNA, Paso I)
Corps · Hires
Rest;arch •
\:onsultant ·
By JOHN ZALLER
Of flle .,.,,, '"" lt9ff
The U.S. M1r1ne Corps has hired a ...,..
.sultant to find out if commercial jet use
at El Toro and camp Pendleton is feasi·
bte, Msrlne o!ficials disclosed today.
And a prellmloary conclusion is that it
would he "technicalty possible" to build
·an "attractive · Jetport" at Camp
Pendleton, but it would "cau.se ir-
ieversible ecolotllcal impact" on the
Coastline and would be "very expensive.''
The study, cooducied by Stanford
Research Institute (SRI) of Menlo Park
has not yet reached any conclusions
about possible '"'•t uae of the Marine
· Corjis ·Air Stiiuo'ri1t ·El Ti\io, •ccorcllnc
to H.B. Wilder, the man in charge of the
study f0< SRI.
Civilian use at either base could relieve
jet traffic at Orange County Airport and
many officials are pushing that approach
as an• alternative to an expansion ol the ~nty air facility.
" The proposal abo has prompted strong
OWOSition from some communities. .
, The investigation of possible civilian
use is part of an overall study under way
since January, which is designed to
determine Marine Corps needs throogh
1994 at tbe six Marine bases In Southern
californla.
Marine Corps .spokesmen today reaC-
firmed "that the corps is still opposed to
civi)jan ~fcial use at either El Toro
or Camp Pendleton.
However, spokesmen said that the iJ.
dependent oullide agency has been ask<ll
to make an objective study and to come to Its own concluaions. 1
''The. proposals for civilian use hav'
been made and they should be taken int•
account in any long range planninJ for
the two bases/'1Wilder said. _ ... __ J
"It's one th.Ing when the Marines ~
up every week and SlJY there shouldn't bi
any civilian use," added Lt. Col F.d!
"(See JET USE, Page !)
Airman. Still
In Seclusion
EDWARDS AIR FORCE BASE
(AP) -A young airman remained
holed up on the seecnd floor of his
barracks today despite efforts by
his sister and her husband to talk
him into endlng his four-day
seclusion. a base .spokesman said.
The enlisted man lnet for five
hours Wednesday '"8hl aod -ly
this morning with the -coupl« and
their 4-year<>id l!Ol1. They had !lown
in rrom St. Louis earlier IA the
evening, the spokesman sakt.
The airman, Earl Wttllams, 11,
also or St. Louis, still ham'!
disclosed ,why he tocked hlm,.lf ill
his room hehiod a small barrlcado
and fired five shots, officlals saicL
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~ 2 DAIL_Y _Pl_LOT ____ s ____ ;_Th:::ut:::l<l::'1,,_,'...:.:A""::='::'..:2:::3,:....:_l 9::_:73
U.S. lndict·s Agnew's
Successor Baltimor·e
BALTfMORB, Md. (AP) -Tbe man
who succeeded Vice President Spiro T.
Agnew as chief executive of Baltimore
County was indicted today by a federal
• grand jury in vestigating political cor·
! ruption in l\'laryland.
The defendant, Den1ocrat D a I e
Anderson, was charged with bribery and
exLortion.
Anderson is U1c ackno.,.,•ledged political
Boat Inc ident
slrq man in Baltilriore County,
Marylaqd's third largest government
unit. He wa's the only Individual named ln
the massive indictment returned by the
special jury after about eight months of
investigation.
There were about three dozen separate .......
Tb• same grand jury also ls in-
.vestigating Agne\v's involvement in an
alleged, klckbact ''*-""" wbe.n he was
lhe COU1Ji1'~ No. l ~ ~tlften 1962
and 1967 and later as governor of
M¥yland.
Named as a ~plrator but not a
defendant In today's indictment was
William E. Fomott wbo resiined In June
as county, admlnlttraUve director after
pleading guilty l<l a federal lax charge
linked to the receipt of funds from con·
tractors doing business with the county.
Fomoff served briefly aa head of ad·
mini:*8tlon when Agnew wu eounly ex·
ecuuve.
' • Goldwater's Curiosity
Aroused After Rescue
A source close to the investigation has
reported that Fomofrs Jestimony
prompted Investigators to question con-
sultants and contractors who In turn
brought the vice president In~ the con:
tinulng probe.
The Indictment charges• lhat the 16-
year-old Anderson ~ with various
con.suiting firms Including GaUdreau
Inc.; George William Stephens Jr. and
Assoclata, Inc.; Jobn Q. Funk
Associates, Inc.; Jam.es Petrlca and
Associates. Inc.; Whiteford, Falk, and
Mask, Inc.: Greiner Environmental
Services, Inc., and Matz, Childs and
Aasociates, Inc.
The North Hollywood couple rescued
off Corona del Mar by U.S. Sen. Barry
' M. Goldwater Tuesday bad been jarred
-not pushed -out or a fri end 's IS.foot
speedboat, Ney:port Beach police said t<r
~day.
· Se n a t o r Goldwater Wednesday
prompted an investigation into the incl·
dent when he said he was "puztled" be-
-cause the speedboat did not "try to rescue
or seem concerned about the cooditlon of
the people," Mr. and Mn. Glenn
:P..1achlitt.
Iiutead, ty,·o women in the boat who
F rom Page I
PENALTY ...
penalty for certaln crimes. but only for
three years. The idea would be that pro-
ponents could use that time to prove
their claim that capital punishment is a
deterTent to crime.
Deukmejlan rejected it as "absolutely
meaningless and worthless" and prof>
ably WJconstitutional . Moretti said he
didn't personally su pport the propasal,
, but that it soWlded "reasonable."
Leaders on both sides of the i!sue
agree that a majority of the A&sembly
· wOl,.l]d vote io send a tough death penally
· bill to Gov. Ronald Reagan, himself a
strong supporter or capital punishment.
Legislative sources said about half the
Assembly's 48 Democrats would vote for
a capital punishment bW. They add the
31·man GOP minority would give almost
unanimous support to such legislation.
The bill requires 41 votes for final
passage.
But death penalty foe1 hold a 4-3 edge
in the Criminal Justice Committee,
which has kept Dcukmejian's bill bottl ed
up since May 3, wben It passed the
. Senate on a 27· 12 vote.
Three death penalty foes on the com-
mittee have said that they will vote
against any extension of capital punish-
ment. Tbe fourth dealh penalty foe,
Democratic Assemblyman Julian Dixon
af Los Angeles, has said he would vote
for the compromise bill.
Dixon said he would cast his favorable
\'ole to divert any move to enact a broad
death penally bill by the voter initiative
process.
Nud e Hitchliiker
Gets 'Atte 1itio1i'
: FORT LA UDERDALE, Fla. (AP)
Donald Albert Schott didn't have any
luck when he tried to hitchhike a ride
during rush hour traffic in a business
di strict here. So. police sai d, he took off
his clothes to attract attention.
Schott, 21, of Cincinnati, Ohio. strolled
several blocks Wednesday In the nude,
shouting "somebody give me a ride''
v.·itnesses told police.
Office rs arrived minutes later and of-
. fcred Schott a ride. He was driven to jail
·where he was charged \\'ilh "hitchhiking
and creating a diversion."
OU.N•I COAST IT
DAILY PILOT
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managed to hold on when they crashed
into a huge wave had helped a third
person, the boat's operator, back into the
•speedboat and went directly to shore at
high speed.
Police Detective Sgt. Don Picker this
morning confinned the account or the in-
cident given Wednesday by the boat
operator, Paul Brown, of Van Nuys, frun
his bed at Hoag Memorial Hospital, '
Brown told lhe Daily Pilot be had been
rescued by his wife and another woman
in lbe boat and they returned l<J sl>ore
becayse be had been injured and Ibey
observed lhe Machlitls safely aboard
Senator Goldwater's 6().foot yacht, the
"Toh-Be-Kin."
Goldwater personally dove olf his boat
to rescue the Macblitts.
Brown, 46, a pilot, said he and Machlitt
are ~workers at a Lockheed aircraft
plant in the San Fernando Valley and l:..Jd
been friends for five or six years.
Goldwater said he was concerned
because be had observed lhe speedboat
acting suspiciously earlier in the af.
temooo.
"As we were going down the harbor
this !&-foot yellow~ speedboat cut in
front of us at a hlgh rate ()f speed," the
Senator said.
"I Jhouiht they were having a good
time so I forgot about it," be said.
"I look my boat out of lhe jelly l<J
demonst rate a new radar rangefinder
and about 500 yards out from the cJSt
jetty we beard a woman scream.
"I went out on deck and saw a woman
In !be water wearing a life jacket and a
man without ooe," be added. The speed-
boat was at some distance and one of my
passengers said they saw aomebody pull·
Ing somebody elae ool of the water.
"We tried to get the people a llne but
couldn't reach them so I dove In and took
a line to the woman and swam over to
the man.
"He was oby, but lhe wu bysterlcaJ,''
Sen. Goldwater gald. "We wrapped them
in warm blankets and gave her a shot of
bourbon and a few shots to the man."
The Senator explained that his concern
was heightened because at one point the
woman saJd that she had .. been bodily
thrown out'' of the boat.
"Whal was puzzling t.o me at the time
is that the speedboat made no effort to
check out what had happened to them,"
Senator Goldwater said.
Sergeant Picker said this morning he
had spoken with the senator after con-
ducting his investigation Wednesday
afterooon and ex pl a In e d the
circumstances involved.
"He understood after we explained all
the details," Picker said.
Invasion Threat
SANTIAGO, Chile (AP) -President
Salvador Allende met with his national
security COWlCll Wednesday night, and
congressional sources said they disCWlsed
the threat of an invasion by Bolivia.
U.S. Attorney George Beall, v:ho is
heading the probe, said that the 39-count
indictment charges Anderson "with con-
spiracy to obstruct interstate commerct
by means of extortion and bribery.
"All of these charges relate to
architectural, engineering, aurveying and
consultant services prov l d e d to
Baltimore County by various individuals
and business entities," Beill said.
The indictment alleges that Anderson
collected $23,920 from Gaudreau, $6,300
from Stephens, $1,500 from Funk , $4,500
from Petrica, $2,850 from Whiteford,
$1,750 from Greiner and $S,600 from
J..fatz.
The indictment alleges that Anderson
was given the money by Fornoff and
"another public official" who was not
identified.
The grand jury is investigating allega.
tions that officials of two of the firms
were involved. in kjckbacks to Agnew.
They are Jerome B. \VoUf, head of the
Greiner !inn, and Lester l\fatz of l\.fatz,
Oillds and Associates.
Both Wolff and Matz reportedly have
been offered immunity for t h e i r
testimony in the Agnew phase of the irJ..
vestlgation which is expected to go
before the 23-member jury early in
September.
FromPflflel
KRISHNA •••
entering the cult ,temple.
Both olfian declined to observe the
rellilous ritual, atatlng they were on of.
ficlal -not spiritual -bualness, and In·
tended l<l search all areas wbere lbe
fugitive might be biding, lully-sltod.
Tbe girl named in the warrant was not
found, althoogb several females did 'nee
as !be ollicen attempted l<J search the premises. ·
Nash was arrested as be allegedly in-
terfered wilh olfiC<rll outside !be temple
residence.
He allegedly pestered the lawmen and
refused to leave tbe area where h11 saf.
Iron-robed colleague was being detained
while awaiting a ride to jail, despite
repeated. orders to leave.
A Hare Krlsbna attorney queotloned
police motives in searching the residence
for the warrant suspect and asked wby
no allempt had been made to telephone
the cul t headquarters and seek voluntary
compliance with her surrender on the
warrant.
Prior to serving the warrant, a letter
had gone to the headquarters advising
them of the warrant and requesting a
voluntary turn-in, however it got no
response, Sgt. Purcell said.
Bed Tax Hassle
Pro stitute Refuses to Pay Demands
MULHOUSE, France (AP) - A P""'
stitute who suggested that her profession
be taxed has had her wiJh granted: she
has been slapped with a demand for
$37.500 in back taxes.
"I won't pay," Jacqueline Trappler
told newsmen today. "I didn't make all
that much money anyway, these last four
years."
Mrs. Trappler brought attention to
herself recently be demanding that the
government reopen French brothels. She
has been supported by Marthe Richard,
the former Paris city councillor who
sponsored the closure law in 1948.
Under present law, prostitution is
egal, but procuring and operallng
brothels are subject to severe prison
terms.
Mrs. Trappt.r, a m«llum .. lxed bru-
net who looks about 40, ae.ks "eros
centers '' in which prosltutes could prae-
tice their trade without needing the pro-
tection or a procurer.
Under such an arrangement , s.he said,
the government could perhaps levy a tax
l<l pay the costs.
The letter she got rrom the tax Jr>-
spector put her Jncome since 1969 at an
estimated M0.000 francs, or about
$115,000. Taxes were estimated at
137,500,
"!don'! know on What basis they have
figured lhis oul ," Mrs. Trappler Aid.
'The French Finance Ministry has se~eral times betn reported to be stud--
dying ~·ays ol taxing prostitutes but bas
not oome up wilb an enforceable system.
Mrs. RJchaid's turnaround on the
brothel question is motivatf!C) by the need
for . women to be truly Ilberated, she
says.
"The law which c.arrles my name is
out ol date," she laid in a recent radio
inten'iew. "I struggled all my life not
agalnat·prostltutloo but for lhe llberallon
ol women. And in 1973 a woman 's
lreedcxn requires lhat she be allowed lo
do whatever she likes wilh her body."
Mrs, Trappler's demands for belter
working cond.IUons seem to have annoyed
at least lour Mulhouse prostilutes. They
spotted Mrs. Trappler in a cafe Wednes.
day night and deacended on her.
"There is the one wbo wants to gild
herself al our expense, 11 she quoted the
"'Omen at saying.
"Then they grabbed me by lhe arma
and two of them slapped and scratched
mo," Mrs. Trappler recounled .
Out of prol.,slonal solidarlty, sbe did
not press charges.
Woman Killed
WEST 'CGVINA CAP) -A poftccman
acdden1ally lhol and killed a 21-year-old
woman he wu trying to amat Wednc,.
day !or lnV0$11galkln of buglary ,
authorities said. Tbe victim, ldenlllt.d as
Diane Walker, was pronounced dead on
arrival at County-USC Medical C<nlcr.
-..
lJl'I Ttlwhtlt
Seeks Her Freedom
Caril Ann Fugate, serving a life prison term for her part in the 1958
Char!es ~tarkweather murde~ spree, is escorted .by corrections offi·
cers in Li_ncoln, Neb., to a parole board hearing. Now 30, Miss Fugate
was convicted at the age of 14 of first-degree murder. A decision is
expected Friday.
Court Give s Green Light
To Niguel Housing Tract
Construction appears to be cleared to-
day for the controversial Laguna Nugiel
Avco project, but officials of the develop-
ment comp::iny are being cautious about
a state Supreme Court decision giving a
green light to the ,troubled development .
The court ruling, issu ed Wednesday,
declares that Coastal Zone Conservation
Act permits are not required il substan~
tia l construction had begun before Feb. 1,
1973.
Avco's oceanview housing projects on
both sides ol Pacific Coast ffigbway were stopped earlier this year by action or the
South Coast Regional Zone Conservation
Commission.· The flnn was refused a
permit.
"We haven't had lhe opportunity to
review and digest the decision. We are
not going to second-guess it and we have
no comment at this time," Gene White,
Avco director of community relatioos
said this morning.
The disputed Avco project consists of
72 acres of condominiums and other
developments wbieh originally called for
sevet>-&tory high-rise buildings.
Elsewhere along the Orange County
Frot11 Pflfle I
JET USE •.•
Janz, community Jiaison officer at El
Toro.
"But it would be another thing if some-
one on the outside who is widely
respected for independence would come
to the same conclusion."
The SRI sludy took as its slarting poinl
the level of operations the Marine Corps
says it needs at the two bases over the
next 20 years, Col. Janz said.
Investigators will then detennloe wha t,
if any, level of Civilian use of the two
bases ls compatible with the expected
level of mili tary use.
coast, the 4 to 3 court decision is e~
pected to have little Impact.
In Iiuntinglon Beach, a contro\•ersial
tract in the Huntington Harbour Area
had alrtady been approved by the com-
mission. City sources say the Coastal
Conservation Act, whiclt requires a
permit for any construction within 1,000
feet or the coast. did not impede any ma·
jor projects.
In Newport Beach, Jim Hewickcr.
assistant community development direc·
tor. said he did not know of any projects
that wou1d be cleared by the decision. He
added that none had been blocked by the
commission and that permits had been
issued for several projects.
Laguna Beach and San Clemente will
also remain unaffected by the Supreme
Court decision, which was won by See the
Sea Ltd . in San Diego.
The ruling, final in 30 days, means that
the San Diego deV<loper wiD "be able 14
proceed with work on a 72-unit con-
dominium on the San Diego waterfront .
\Vith the decision, the court reconciled
conflicting interpretations of two sections
of lhe act . One required a permit for any
development on the coast after Feb. 1.
The other exempted penons who had a
"esled. right before the act became ef.
fective.
The question was whether a develdper
who began building between Nov. 8. when
the state initiative took effect, and Feb. t
had such a vested right.
The law states that a person had such
a right if he had "in good faith and in
r~liance upon the building permit,
dillgently commenced construction and
performed substantial work on the
development.''
The court noted that the legi1Jature in
April had amended the law so that the
effective date for vesting of these rights
was Nov. 8.
.Dr. Swcum • ••
Loses Bid
In Cou rt
•
' I • A bid l<l avoid a lhlrd legal battle In the
same Orango · County Superior Court
~plex where he bu been Lrl~d in two
olher cases 1lnce 1916 ended In lallun
Wedne!day !or Dr. Wesley G. Slocum.
The Santa Ana physician Indicted f"
charges or grand lhelt and lalJllylng
Medi.Cal bills had appealed for a change
of venue.
California Supreme Court justices
refused in San Francisco to grant the re-
quest, resulting in an order for the
defendant to appear in court today, for
the setting or a trial dnte .
The Supreme Court refusal lo order a
change of venue for the surgeon and
general practitioner upheld an Oran1e
County Superior Court ruling.
A challent1e alleging Dr. Slocum could
not eipect a fair trial due to publicity
surrounding his past history was refused
at that time.
During the past seven years, the
former Costa Mesa resident has been
tried l'A1ice -once on felony charges of
assault on a police officer and once on a
murder charge -but was acquitted both
times.
'l1le murder case invol ved the 1970
discovery of the dismembered body ot in-
fant daughter Cynthia Slocum in a
freezer taken from the Slocwn home in
Costa Mesa's Mesa V~ district.
The baby had vanished six yW'f
earlier, not Jon' after her blrlh at Hoag
Memorial Hospital.
He and his wife Marion -since d.ivorc·
ed -accused each other ol involvement
in the disappearance, but lniUal murder
charges against her were dropped and
she testified against him.
Costa Mesa police arrested Dr. Slocum
on the child-murder charge in March,
1966, as he v.•aited in an Orange County
Court House corridor for a hearing on
settlement of a $6 mllllon suit against
Santa Ana police.
He was acquitted In 1966 of assault
charges following a shootout with officers
in which one of his hands was damaged.
The gunplay with police stemmed from
a domestic dispute In his Santa Ana
clinic with his wife, who was then
employed as a nurse--recepUonist.
He announced plans to go to Alaska for
a fresh start after being freed on charges
in the death of his daughter, but r~·
ed.a clinic in Sanla Ana Instead.
A few months ago, District Attorney's
investigators arrested h1m on charges in-
cluding one count of grand theft and 24
counts of falsifying bills to the state
health agency. Investigators claim 80me
of the blllinp '""" for decuaed or nonexistent paUents. ·'
Marine Killed
Near Pendleton
A 22-year-old Afarine was stabbed to
death Wedneeday night in a parking Jot
adjacent to Building 2147 In the Del Mar
area of Camp Pendleton near OceansJde.
Dead on arrival at the Naval HospltaJ
at 10:45 p.m. wa! Lance Corporal James
f\f. Quarles A-Company Third Amphib-
ian tractor battalion. No suspects have
been found .
Quarles is survived by his widow
Willa, of 515 Greenbriar, Oceanside'.
Camp Pendleton authorities said no
further information concerning the in·
cident was available.
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Thursday, Au9ust 2:3, 1973 S DAILY PILOT S 1
Nixon Faces Fights Anger.
'
The President Meets
The Press-at Last
By JOHN VALTERZA
Of .... Dally """ '""
PRESIDENT NIXON~ 32nd press conference of his career as Chief Execu-
tive came Wednesday as a deligbUul surprise to~ frustrated Washin~n Press
Corps which bad endured rive months of near silence from the Wh!-te House.
And when the alfresco affair held alongside the Secret Service Comm~nd
Post at the Western White House had ended, scrambling
reporters felt as if they had enough fodder for a full
day's writing. .
The event obviously had been arranged hur:1cdlv, and
the consensus among reporters waiting quietly 1n advance
of the 11 :30 a.m. session with Nixon was that the haste
had developed because of White House concern over the
President's image alter Monday's hectic events in New
Orleans and in San Clemente.
Up to Tuesday afternoon , Nixon spokesmen hinted that
vALT11UA the re was not even going to be a press conference.
REPLYING TO REPORTS of a possible cancellation in the works, Deputy
Press Secretary Gerald Warren Tuesday said, "How can we talk about can·
cellation when there hasn't even been one announced yet?"
But it was far from canceled. .
And between the time that rumors began to solidify Wednesday mormng
and the 11 :30 starting time the media and the White House staff had made
the arrangements for nationwide coverage. .
NBC News was assigned the duty of furnishlng equipnient and tecbnlc1~s
for the live coverage (all other networks tapped ,the NBC system) and wtre
services had arranged for typists to make transcripts as the President spoke.
. THE TELEPHONE PEOPLE bad prepared a mes!age center ror the san
Clemente Inn press headquarters (the first lime in memory that that has hap-
pened). he I And at the compound on the patches of grass and pavement near t ye·
low-stucco command posl, aides bad draped blue-velvet curt.a.ins for a back-
~ h~· Each reporter knew his seat by rea~g cards pasted on eac Cu"lf as-
signing it to a specified member of the media.
But, despite the efficiency, there were drawbacks.
FUJ....IN UGHT ON the President was dlm, and hard shadows caused a
JKKlr visual image of the President. . ~ for the substance of the press conference itself -the flfSt sit-you-down
affair for the press ever held at the Nixon enclave in San Clemente -about
a dozen biting Watergate-Agnew questions came from the corps.
And during the 4>minute affair only. one question ~me through on the
controversy sWTOUDding Iles to the Amencan people dunng the secret bomb-
ing of cambodia. The feeling among many journalists was thal had lhe conference been al·
lowed to CODtinue the very issues which the White House has declared as most
pressing to the .iauon -the food and !uel crisis, and runaway inflation -
would have surfaced. But -as it was -the session went 15 minutes past the customary ball·
hour. ~
DURING THAT TIMB the Prosidenl took more lhan a few '11htle swipes
at the media for dwelling on acandaL
But that did not deter the reporters. "i'
They kepi asking lhe questions which Nixon aides ~d ttfused to answer
for months on end. · .
And when they v.·ere done, they sat anxiously, but qu.ietly on the buses sbi~
ping them to the San Clemente lnn Press facilities.
EACH rS STEELED to criticism -even from lhe President of the United
Stai:' each would agree that if the Administration is still anxious to talk about
the pressing issues of the economy, they wouldn't mind another press confer·
encc even in a day or so.
Several veteran journalists on the scene credited the President with suc-
cessfully altering the public lmage of a man almost incapacitated by the pres-
sures of his office.
In fact, many stated flatly that the hastily contrived p~ ~erence ap.
peared to be a major attempt to en~ reports hat the Presiden lS an enraged,
exhausted man.
ONE EASTERN NEWS~tAN with a pair of Pullitzers to his credit mu~
on the conference late Wednesda y and sai~ it contained by far the most m-
cisive question s ever asked of a modern President.
But those 111en who and women who won the President's nod and the
chance to ask a question are wondering today if they have to wait five months
more to ask somethlng else.
Wins Trophy at Last
Waterg~te
Dominates-
Co11ference
By United Pm• 1.nternatloul ~
A dctennined President Nii:on, at his 1
first news conference in five months, mr
notu1ced the resignation of his Secretary ;
of State named Henry Kissinger bis suo-~essor ~nd opened the session to ques· 1
t1ons. t
At times appearing short ot b~ath and ;
nervous. Nixon gripped the podium and .
betrayed pent-up anger as he faced the j
correspondents. . . ·~ The questions dunng th e 47 ·minute
conference were inexorably on the sub-
ject of \Vatergatc and ~ixon's re_fusa l to ,
allo\V taped conversations o( h1~ talk..s ·
\Vith \Vhite House aides to be given to 1
either the Senate Watergate committee
or specia l prosecutor Archibald .cox . .
Ahnost seething with anger Nixon said,
''I accept it all," when asked how much
personal blame he "·ould take for
Watergate.
PRESIDENT NIXON DISPLAYS BOTH SERIOUS AND HUMOROUS MOODS AT PRESS CONFERENCE
Outdoor Meeting With Reporters First in Nine Months for Embattl•d Chief Executive
With a show or irritation, Nixon broke
off questioning abruptly at the »minute
mark to remind reporters there had been
no questioning on "the business of the
people." He leaned forward on . the
podium and kicked off a list of sub1ects
he considered important -efforts to
combat inflation, the development~ in
foreign policy, rapprochement with Nixon Doesn't Like It
Ru ssia and China.
Preside1it Laslies Out at Overprotection of Family
Watergate, he insisted, is "water under
the bridge."
But the questions kept coming, ilf'nry
Kissinger, just named as secretary of
state, was not discus~. By LINDA DEUTSCH
• AfMC;iltff Pre11 Writer
The Secret . Sec.vice is "still uptight"
about an alleged assassination con-
spiracy against President Nii:on, says a
top presidential aide. But Nixon himself
wants fewer agents protecting him.
"I frankly th.ink that one man is protr
* * Nixon's Response
Won't Stem Tide
Of Watergate
By Auoclated Press
President NlXOD's firsl responses in
five months to direct questions about
Watergate and bis declaration that Ille
IC8Ddal is "water under the bridge" ap-
parently will not succeed in stemming
the Senate Watergate investigation.
"I shall not resign," Nixon told a news
conferecce Wednesday as he gave ex-
planations for bis Watergate conduct
which conceded no personal negligence.
And in the latest of his attempts to put
Watergate behind him, he insisted it is
time to get on with the "business of the
people."
But Sen. Sam J. Ervin Jr. (0-N.C.J,
chairman of the Senate panel which has
probed the scandal for months, said "1
don't think any more light was shed than
has been shed before." And he said he
would not allow the investigation to rest
until the committee is satisfied !hat it
has exhausted every avenue.
Committee bearicgs are to resunte
Sept. 10. Most other members of the
committee were traveling or declining to
comment; though Sen. Joseph Montoya
(D-N.M.), said he thought Nixon "has
again dispelled any expectation that he
will surrender the tapes" of -recorded
presidential meetings. )
ab le as good against a threat as a hun-was changed witb the President's ap-Then caine a questioii about executive
drcd," Nixon told a news conference proval after the Secret Service said it privilege from Clark Mollenhoff, the Des
\Vednesday, revealing that he had asked had discovered a possible conspiracy to ~1oines Register bureau chief "'ho was
last "·eekcnd to have fewer men kill Nixon. There have been no arrests in once a Nixon aide. The President grin-.
guarding him. connection with the alleged conspiracy. ned, he seemed to enjoy telling newsmen
The President also said he believes A A fl that some of their telephoces had been
President John F. Kennedy's assassina-H W tapped in the Johnson and Kennedy ad-
tion was due to "a terrible breakdown in S S • ministrations.
our protective security area." ecret el-vJ.Ce Nixon seemed to get stronger. ap-
He suggested that had heavier wiretaps peared to gain control as be parried the
uncovered Lee Harvey Oswald's plan to N C • B k questions. H~ tapped his fingers on the
kill Kennedy in Dallas in 1963, it would Ot UttJn!?; aC ' side of the podium, waiting for the next
have been worth it. LI voll ey , the shouts of "Mr. President;"
Nixon gave a glimpse of the presiden-N fie said the press, some politi.cians and
ua1 1amny·, unhappiness al being co•-Agents on ixon members or the broadcas1 industry
stantly shadowed by agents. \\1anted to sec him "fail." A reporter ask-
" As far as protection generally is con-WASHINGTON (UPl) _ The Seeret ed whom the President meant In a cerned, I don't like it, and my family speech when he said some people were
does mt like it. Both oI my daughters Service said today it does not intend to trying to exploit Watergate. ~
would prefer to have no Secret Service -comply with President Nix(ln'a sug-"I would suggest that where-the shoes
my wife does not want to have Secret gestion that the number of agents pro-fit, some peoj>le should wear them," Ni.x-
Service," be said. tecting himself and his family be reduc-on said. ''l would think that some
But he said these desires will have to political figures, some members of the
give way to the majority oPinion that ed . press, perhaps, some membera of the:
heavy-security is 11ecessary fo r the presi-A spokesman for the agency I Jack broadcast iddwb'yi perhaps, •Nould u-
dent and his fan-Jly. Warner, declined to comment abOut the ploit It. •
"So I will still have a great number of President's remarks except to say: "The "Atter all." he said, "I know that most
Secret Service around me, more than Secret Service is not going to reduce Jts members of the press COrp5 were not
I want, more than my famlly wants," he ma11power." enthusiastic -and I understand that -
sa id. Al a news conference Wednesday, Nix-about either my elections in '68 er '72.
~1eanwhile, more details emerged on said neither his wife nor daughters That's not unusual. Frankly, U I bad
about the alleged assassination con-wanted any Secret Service protection and always follow~ what the pres! predicted
spiracy against Nixon. said he had recommended three days or the polls predicted, I would have never
Sources familiar with the investigation earlier that the White House detail be been elected President."
said the conspiracy involved an ex-reduced by one-third. He took all the questions, although he
trcmist group allegedly planning to use On Monday , a Nixon motorcade in New sometin1es manipulated the answers. He
high Powered rifles to kill the President Orleans was canceled a t recom-was trying tO repair an image damaged
during a motorcade in an open car mendation of the Secret Service after it Monday in New Orleans when he angrily
through downtown New Orelans on rw1on-reported a possible assassination plot shoved Press Secretary Ronald Ziegle~,
day. while Nixon was there to address the slurred \vords in his speech and appeared
The planned route of tbe motorcade Veterans of Foreign \Vars. to lack his usual poise. ~~~~~~~;;;;;;;:-:-----
Save 15 to 20% on tliis
Collection of decorator
WING CHAIRS
Coast's Ullman Top Sniper ~~ ... . -.. . • --•• -. ..
By ALMON LOCKABEY
OallY l'llel ... tint £clU..-
"J'm going to make one last try for the
lfeinzerllng." said 27-year~ld David
Ullman a week before the start of the
Snipe national championship regatta at
Mission Bay. (Other boating news Page
19).
"Earl Elms is still the one to beat,''
:nused Ullman. "And, ol course there is
always Tom Nute and Jeff Lenhart."
· Ullman should koow. He has sailed
with and against all of the above-named
trlo plus other veteran Snipers, for 10
years.
But as it turned out1 Ullman was the
man to beat in the 1973 Snipe national s
which concluded Wednesdday at Mission
Bay. ·
And the diminutive (llS pounds) skip-
per and his crewman Peter Connally (ISO
pounds) today are Ille proud possesgors
of the Hcinierllng Trophy, the emblem of
Ille U.S. National Snipe champlonslllp.
Ullman Is not resting on his laurels.
Today he is flying to Kingston, Ontario,
Canada where he will compete, slartlng
Saturday, In the 470 Class of the CORK
pre-Olympic Regatta.
(He will be jolnod lllere by three olller
local championship dinghy sailors -
Argyle C8mpbell (Tempest ), Henry
Sprngue and DaMy Thompson (Finn).
Wln\riloae or draw at Klngslon in the
4705, !Man will soon be back home In
Newport lo •WI his campalJll for the
world Snipe championship for which he
qualilicd 8' winner of Ille nationals.
Th<tt, aaaln, he will be up against Elms,
the defending world champion, and Jeff
•. ..;-::...,,.,-""" .... .,_-_-c::--~-~..,,..,.-~
---'---·-"'------_.
~
OMIV Plllt 11 .. i P'flllt
NATIONAL SNIPE CHAMP
B1lboa Y1thl Club's Ullm1n
Lenhart, runner.up lo Ullman in !be na·
tlonals.
In Spain Ullman will again be hoping
for tight airs. such as prevailed al
~1ission Bay this week. His light weight I
makes him vulnerable in hea vy going in
the 14-foot Snipe dinghy.
flow Ullman won the Heinzerllng at
l\1ission Bay has already been chronicled.
Jt was largely a matter oI swift light-air
sailing and staying out of foul trouble in
the hard-scrapping Snipe fleet. The only
time he got in trouble was 1D the fifth
race when the wlnd.5 whistled up over 15
knots and he finished 8th. A foul near the
weather mark, "'hich cost him a "720"
didn 't help keep him in contention.
Ullman finished second and third in the
final two races Wednesday. allowing hin1
to lhrow out the dreadful 8ttl (out of 33)
and keep finishes of 1-1·1·2-2-3 -giving
him a low score or ll points unOer the
Olympic scoring system.
The hot contender in the final three
races was Tom McLaughlin o~ ?\1ission
Bay. He matched Ullman's three
straight, but his poor showing in the
early races forced him to keep scores that
netJcd him no better than third in the
final standings.
The same was true for runner-up Jeff
Lenhart who had to keep races that were
worse than Ullma1fs throwout.
Defending champion Elms wound u.p
fourth In the fin.al scoring, a place he 1s
almost as accustomed to as the winner 's
circle. Every time Eln1s has lost the
championship -including his loss In 1971
-he has wound up in fourth place.
Ullman wa~ sailing a four-month-old
Eichenlaub-built Snipe with sails design·
eel and built by Ullman hlmscll.
Also during August we are
offering custom sofas, chairs
& love seals at 15 lo 20 %
saving-Choose from large
fabric selection.
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'1·'· ;,,, ., ~ ·• .,"tt.. •"' \._P,~ I , •.ti.. ,. • • .. , . ... .... -~·· ,.-t It~ 1' -.••{,.'•• \j-yu,;
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22 15 HARBOR BLVO. 646·0275
COSTA MESA, CALI F .~:dni::.>
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I
' '
I • 4 u~LY PILO'f Thursda)', August 23, 1973
I '
"r/l
.._. UPIT~
SUSPECT JAILED
Edwin M. Geudet
Secret Service
Digging Deep
Into Plot Roots
WASHINGTON (UPI) -The Secret
Service and FBI are working hard to
discover the roots of a "'very real" plot
to klD President Nlxon during his visit to
New ·0r1eans Monday.
Sources told UPI that the agencies are
working intensively on what they con-
sider "a very real thing," but the Secret
Service said Wednesday that former New
Orleans policeman Edwin Mi c h a e 1
Guadet Jr., arrested in northern New
Mexico for allegedly threatening Nixoo's
life, probably was not port of lhe con-
spiracy.
GAUDET, 30, surrendered to a posse of
Secret Servicemen near Taos, N.M.,
Wednesday, two days after be eluded
hoovily armed federal agents who sought
to arrest him on a warrant near the
"Morning Star'' commune.
1be Washington sources said Gaudet,
who alJecedly lbreatened last week lo kill
Nlzm:, was probably "a looe actor" but
they added, "You can never rule out
completely that he was port of it (lhe . ) .. -· Local police declined comment
Wednesday on a report by a New Orleans
television station that three persons are
being soultht in connectioo with the con-
spiracy. 'lbe station said the Justice
Depar1ment had autllorized the atTeSt of
three persons.
The Secrel Service said it is "ag-
gressively pursuing its investigation into
the possibility of a coospiracy lo
Usassi nate the PresldenL 'lbere is no
~peculation on what's going to happen or
what is going to occur."
Cambodians
Take Over
l(ey Sites
PHNOM PENH, C.mbodia (AP) -
Government troops have recaptured
three positions important to the defense
of the provlnclal capital of Kompong
Speu and Phoom Penh's highway lo the
sea, the cambodian military command
reported today. 1'le positions are five, six and seven
miles west of Kompcmg Speu, "1lich is 30
miles southwest of Phnom Penh on
Hlgbway 4. The highway connects Phnom
Penh with Kompong Som, the OJ1111try's
only seaport.
The commatid gavel. no tntonnation
about the r~apture.
'"lbe situation remains relatively
calm In the region of'Phnom l'<!nh," the
cormnand said. "The action of our troops
bas reduced the enemy activities."
GOVEl\NMENT forces slrengthened
PhnOm Penh'l·90Uthem defense line with
howitzers· supplied by tbe United States.
The forces advanced for nearly a mile
along lligb\V•Y 30 to link up with a pia·
tooo about -nine miles southeast of
Phnom Penh that had been cut off for
more ·than a week. There was no
resislanee lo the advance.
In South Vietnam, the Saigon military
command said the intensity of fighting
dropped off Wednesday. A Iota! of 42 Viet
Cong were reported killed in four
clashes, while government casualties
were two dead and nine wounded, the
conunand said.
The command claimed COmmunist
forces committed 79 cease-fire violations
Wednesday, about the same number as
on other days this month.
In south Vietnam, the Saigon military
command said the intensity of fighting
dropped off Wednesday. A total of 59 Viet
Cong and North Vietnamese troops were
reported killed in lhe 24-bour period end-
ing at dawn today, while government
casualties were seven dead and nine
wounded, the oommand said.
Five government infantrymen were
reported killed and six wounded W ednes-
day as Communist forces continued to
shell positions defending the southwest
side of Hue, the former imperial capital
on the northern coast.
FIVE OUTPOSTS took 337 rounds in a
dawn-to-dusk bombardnient, according to
the command.
The command claimed Qxnmunist
forces committed 79 other cease-fire
violalioos Wednesday, about the same
number as on other days this month.
They included·rocket attac.i.s in the ~
Ira! highlands and ground assaults in the
Mekong Delta.
UNITID STATll
·' Others Burgled Too.?
MEXICO
GUlf OF MEXICO
.=::
llMUATO ...,::,..Zi.i:. 0 ~
Q CA~P1CHl:J
l -Nixon Makes Claim; Officials Want Proof
by the President's stale-
Ml>tlCO ,_,, cnt • ' YlllAtlllMOIA ,
Wlpell Out Ul't """""''
Map locates Mexican town of
lrapuato where at least 300
persons died this week when a
dam burst, sending a seven·
foot wall of water churning
down on the city. Up to 40,000
homes were destroyed.
WASHINGTON (AP) -President Nix·
on claims burgllol'les sucll u the one In
the Daniel Ellsberg case occurred "on a
very large acale" during the loiwoo and
Kennedy years.
But some officials lrom those ad·
ministrations deny any knoWledge of
such break-ins.
11~0 a_cUvity was authorized by me and
I think we're entitled to inow what he's
talking about," said former Alty. Gen.
Nicllolas deB. Katzenbaeh, wt» served in
the Justice Deportment in various Po<i·
tlons under bolb Presidents Jobn F. Ken-
nedy and Lyncjon B. Johnson.
GEORGE CllBIS'l1AN, former pre53
secretary to Johnson, said : "I don't know
what he is talking about.''
Nixon, at bis press coofere!l<e Wednes-
Hot Spot Fires Plngue
Weary Forest Firemen ·
day in San Clemente, said he views as
.. illegal, unauthorized and completely
deplorable" the burglary of the office of
the psychiatrist of Pentagon Papers
delendant Daniel Ellsberg by a unit
dlrocted by While House aides.
But he also noted that under both Ken·
nedy and Johnson, "burglarizing of this
type" took place Hon a very large scale. 11
""Nixon did not elaborate and Deputy
Press Secretary Gerald L. Warren refus-
ed lo give details. -In Washington, a Justice Department
spokesman refused to confirm or deny
that such burglaries had taken place in
the past, saying the information "can onJy
come from the White House."
NIXON LAST May, in a lengthy state-
ment on Watergate, first mentiooed that
"mystlfled
menl"
Meanwhile, Sen. Sam J. Ervin com·
mented, "I don 't think any more light
was shed thnn has been shed before."
Ervin Is chairman of the Senate
Watergate committee probing the scan·
.dal.
Ervin pictured as mainly "generalities"
the President's answers to questions oa
Watergate during his news conference.
The North Carolina Democrat repeated
his contention that only release el White
House tapes of conversations between
Nixon and former White Hoose counsel
John W. Dean III could clear up the issue
ol how much Nixon knew about the
Watergate burglary and subsequent
cover-up.
there may have been burglaries for na-Sentence Appeal tional se<urity purposes engaged In by
the FBI during previous administrations .
But, he said, the FBI had balled such Brings 999 Years activities in 1966.
Katzenbach, who was deputy attorney l·IOUSTON (UPI) -A Dallas man,
general under former Atty. Gen. Robert whose murder conviction and 60-year
Kennedy and served as attorney general sentence were overturned by an appeals
from 1965-1966, said be felt Nixon's ac-court in i iay, has been convicted again
cusations were un!air. in his retrial and sentenced to 999 years
"He ought to say who authorized it and in prison.
By Ualted Prts1 Intuaatloaal bloody trail of police killings and armed \vho knew about it," said Katzenbach. "The jury wanted to convey a
Just as 10,000 fire fighters verged on robberies across the nation, were in· n1essage," prosecutor George Karam controllliJg seven major forest fires in A. SPOKESMAN for Sen. Edward M. said Wednesday.
the west, they were confronted today dieted today on charges ranging from Kennedy (D-Mass.), said a number or He asked for a sentence of 100 to 200
with 100 small l>bt dangerous timber and assault to murder. fomier Justice Department officials were years. brush blazes caused by lightning. -;--------------.:...:.~==~~.:::::::.:::::::::.::.~.'..:_::'.'..'.:_ ______ ---
The new fires, in Idaho and Montana
sent aerial tankers and ground crews on
a game of hop-scotch to keep them from
bursting into vast .conflagrations.
In Boise, IdaOO, the U.S. Forest
Service expressed hope for soon con-
taining the remaining seven major fires
which have consumed a total of 70 ooo
acres of timber brushland. They said 43
other large fires, covering 130,000 acres,
w.ere now under control.
e ltadlam Motie 111
DES MOINES, Iowa (UPI) -Ten
armed members of the American Indian
Movement took over the State Depart-
ment of Public 'Instruction offices
\Vednesday but surrendered peacefully
and were arrested after law enforcement
officers threatened a showdown.
The Indians occupied the DP! offices
on the second floor of the Grimes State
Office Building for more than 211.z hours
before scrapping plans for a con-
frontation with some 25 law enforcement
officers outside tbe statehouse complex.
e Youth Murdered
BELFAST, Northern Ireland (AP) -
Mass Murder Hearings
:Under Tight Security
Two carloads of men pulled up..,alongside
a young couple sitting in a car outside
the girl's home in Newry Wednesday
night, dragged the youth oul and told• the
gi rl, "We're going to kill him."
The youth's ~Y was found four miles
away a little later. He had been shot
through the chest.
e Vet• Reject W0taae11
NEW ORLEANS (AP) -The Veterans
of Foreign Wars have overwhelmingly
rejected a proposal to allow women to
join their organization.
HOUSTON, Tex. (AP) -A Barris
~ grand Jury re111med four ..,. in-
tdlctments tocky against two youths
cbargtd ID the ses:-torture 11aylnp case
in wblcb Z'l' bodies have been recoveml.
HOUSTON (UPI) -The district at-
torney's office ordered special security
precautions at the hearing for two teen-
agers accused of the worst mass murder
of the 20th Century.
The office has reOOved several
CONTROVERSIAL TEXTBOOK
FOUND IN CDRLL'S HOME, Page 5
tbre3tening telephone calls and letters, it
was revealed today.
Assistant District Attorney Michael
Hinton said one letter, bearing an out-of-
state postmark and addressed to the
district attorney's office, was turned over
lo lhe FBI.
HINTON said the letter "threatens
everybody."
Wednesday's hearing was on a petition
filed by the district attorney seeking a
psydtlatric hearing for Elmer Wayne
Henley, 17, and David Owen Brooks, 18.
They were indicted last week in three of
the 27 sex-torture slayings of young boys
linked to Dean Arnold Corll 33.
District Judge William M. Hinton over-
ruled objections from defense attorneys
who claimed they have not had time to
consult with the defendants and ordered
the two teen·agers to submit to the ex-
aminations.
HenJey and Brooks looked pale and
tired at the hearings. They wore baggy
green fatigues with no belts and sloppy t·
shirts with "oounty jail" stenciled across
the chest. Neither appeared very in-
terested in the proceedings.
BAILIFFS fonned a flank behind the
defendants and other court officials stood
outside the doors to form tbe extra
security. No one was permitted to enter
the courtroom after the hearing began.
District attorney Carol S. Vance said
he wanted the examinations because be
expected both defendants to enter in·
sanity pleas.
A bylaw proposed Wednesday at the
74th national convention would have
permitted women veterans to join on the
same basis as men. The motion failed to
receive a second and died before it could
reach the floor. Delegates then voted
almost unanimously to accept a com-
mittee report rejecting the proposed
amendment.
e Wiretap• llplaeld
NEW ORLEANS (AP) -An appeals
court in New Orleans has upheld the 1968
conviction of H. Rap Brown on a
firearms charge, ruling that government
wiretaps in the case were legal.
The 51h U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals
said Wednesday that the government's
secret ·electronic eavesdropping on the
black militant ·was ordered by the at-
tornex_ general Wlder the President's
"inherent power to protect national
~ty.''
e JltHltatats Held
NE\V YORK (UP!) -Nine lea~ers of
the '»called Black Liberation Army
(BLA), a group aC<:USed of leaving a
Floods • Ill Midwest Rains,
Quarter-size Hailstones Pelt Northwestern Iowa
to 73. lnl•nd Nmper'•IV!'a r•llllf rrom •2 to 12. Water 1empertl11r. 70.
..
" 1r1rwo1t~r•1r1• • 111, .. 1111
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m"::J ._ Alt l""-:.J~lfOWft' ·~ ltOW
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11011tht•tl1rn Ml!IMtO'I• dumped t.AS
ll'ICIWlt of r•ll'I Ol'I Pt~. IOWt ,
WHntt<lt'f 11lgl'll •nd .. ti'( lod•Y.
Cnn•lnl fff'nlller
MotllY ftlt lolH'(, l.llJhl Vlrftblt
w!ndi fllght tlld l"flOl'lllll!I holln btc:orn·
lf'IO *"' to notlllwtst lt to 11 kllO!I
!11 •lltmoont tod•Y •1111 Ftld.t'(, Hlgll
tooey Mar 7t.
Co.1111 ttmpe.-•l11rt1 r11119 lfOr'fl 'J
Sun, M001t. Tides
, TMUlltOAY
Secor!d hlOll ., •....... , •. .J:Otlp.m. 1t.•
Stcond low .•....... 5:Slp.m, 6.0
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Flnthlgh ........ , ....• l :Olt.m. 4.1
Ffr11 low .•......•....• 1:2'•.m. o.•
S'1:0nCI high ............ J:OD p.m. M
Steond low ......•. , ... 12:'7 p.m. 2.l
51111 llftM ':70 a.m. Sib 7:31 p.m.
MOOl'I lllMf l:M •• m ..... •:IGp.rn,
DAILY PILOT
DELIVERY SERVICE
Delivery of Ille Daily Pilol
~ guaraot!OO _l,..,, w ,. • Ill ... ,..
""' ~ 11 ........ ,.. "" ..
• Apt It ,... "" •• bbl 1111
J:JI ... Slftt•-·,.··-,.. c.,, ., • .... SrirUJ, •• u. -.......... ~ ....... . ,. (Ill n tiltl md 11 u.
MeJjtooes
llol hi•• ......... ll!-021 -·--""' • ....... . . . . ' ... , 141-1221
s.-~S.D~ .......
1111> 111-.1 .... -.. 112-«21
OIAHOI. .CJr, Drlw "GMdefl °'" '"""' • • Optn 0.lfy 10 tot P.M.
.~ltto1PM,
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Co1at1•acts Nixed
Teamsters Move
Startles Growers
From Wtre Servlce1
DELANO (AP) -Delano
table grape growers are
disturbed that the Teamsters
Union reneged on carefully
cultivated contracts a f t e r
organizers "made a pretty
good sweep of the crews'' to
get representation signatures.
CONTRACTS SIGNED here
10 days after United Farm
Workers Union pacts expired
were quickly repudiated by
Teamsters President Frank-
2 CliiWren
Burn Alive
l ri Accitlent
VAN NUYS (AP)
FltZl!limmons. He .said he
wanted to continue peace talks l~"~~l;,l:
broken off by UFW chief
Cesar Chavez after t h e
!!Ported agreements were an-
nounced. Fitzsimmons em-
phasized Ibis week in a letter
to the 30 Delano growers that
lhe Teamsters ''have no in-
terest in organizing your Fac l11g Charges
employes." Gerry Priddy, onetime
To the growers, it was a major league infielder,
t rtlin nd is scheduled to be tried 88 g a confusin g in U.S. District Court
reversal of Teamsters ag-in Los Angeles Dec. 4
gressiveness in CaHfornia on an extortion charge
agricuJture where they had stemming from a call
signed more than 500 other to a steamship com-
growers whose UF W pacts pany.
had expired earlier this year. ----------
Fitz.simmons' letter gave no
hint the Teamsters will quit
organizing other ranchers in
other areas, and in fact a
Teamsters' organizing drive in
San Diego County was an-
nounced the same day.
Norco Votes
Oust Ma yor,
Councihnen
"
Sex Text Found
In Dean Corll Home
'
SACRAMENTO (AP) -A
Californ ia asemblyman says
a controversial sex education
textbook to be used in lb~
state's classrooms was found
in the home of Dean Allen
Carll, the man linked to 'l'1
homosexual-torture mudrers
or young men in Texas.
"I'm trying to make t11e
2 California Blazes
Near Containmen t ,
point that all this type of stuff
leads to warped ntinds and a
waJ1>Cd sense of values." said
Assembl y 1na n Floyd
\Vakefie\d <R.·South Gate),
Wednesda y in an interview. "I
think it's high tin1e we paid at·
tention to what's happening to
youth in thi s respect ." he ad-
dcl:l..
WAKEFIELD "DOESN'T
kno\v \l1hat he's ta I king
about," said James L. By Tbe Associated Press fragile Eagle Rock line would McCary, the Ii 0 us l 0 n
Firefighters carved the Cina! check the fire along its last psychologist vl'ho authored the
lines around two Northern twirmile front. text.
C l·r · r· th t h The U.S. Forest Service The book referred to by a 1 om1a ires a ave \Vake£ield is "lluma n Sex·
b ed t of -t J 5· estimated the blaze ha s urn ou "'"" ro 1nce uality -A Guide for Young
Sunday, blackening 3 O, O O O destroyed 138 million board Adults." \Vakefield says the
acres of timber and brush. feet of Dougla s and V.'hite fir , book is too explicit for the
Foresters predicted that sugar and ponderosa pine and seventh and eighth graders
both fires, which threatened incense cedar valued at $JJ.S 1vho n1ay use it. small communities Wednes-After a statewide con·
day, Would be contained tir million. Authorities believe the troversy, the CaHfo mia State
day. fire was deliberatelv set. Board of Education earlier
The small resort area of this year adopted the book but
SOME 2.000 men using Kyburz was "still under Some ordered an extensive \•:ater-
shove ls and axes hacked out a threat, but looking much bet· ing down of its contents.
path-sized line in the steep, ter" Wednesday night. a fo rest Reagan and state schools chief
heavily forested Eagle Rock service spokesman said. U.S. In a letter to Gov . Ronald
area of Eldorado National Hi gh w a y 5 0 between Reagan and state schools chief
Forest. Foresters al re a d y Placerville and South L::ike \Vilson Riles, \Vakefield called
Thursd, /, l.ugust 2j, 1 •11 J DAILY PILOT $
P.~?.i.~c:s.~;;.~~~~
PAYS.
• %
on depo sifs of $100,000
for six months to one yea r
Th e number of these accounts that we can ac cept is li mited
WE PAY COMPETITIVE INTEREST RATES
ON ALL OTHER ACCOUNTS
FOURTEEN OFFICES TO SE RVE YOU IN
Are1di1 •ctrrito1 l1 Crtscent1 •or1nee .
'
,
Btll G1rd1m •costa Mesa Len Angtlts (2) ·•si n BtrMrdln1
•c1nog1 P1rk Down1y (21 Monttfly P1rk Whittier ~
five Add itional Olflces in Nort~ern Ca lifornia J
Pleasant Hill San Br1n1
IOpenin1 Soon)
foster City Mountain View Sa11 J11 r
'-'
I
\ Motorists stood helplessly as
two scream ing children burn-
ed to death in the wreckage of
their mother's station wagon
in this Los Angeles suburb,
police said.
Officers said p a s s i n g
motorists were able to pull the
children's mother from the
flaming wreckage Wednesday
after her vehicle was hit by
another vehicle.
Meanwhile, Chavez sent sup-
porters to 63 cities across the
nation today urging support
for another boycott of table
grapes. NORCO (AP ) _ Voters have drawn a 28-mile long line Tahoe will remain closed the book "curricular garbage"
have approved a recall of around the fire which has "indefinitely, but its status and urged that it be
•.a
·b ,,
.-i
ABOUT 100 members of the
United Farm Workers Union
were in the first contingent to
leave California's agricultural
heartland to work with UFW
sympathizers in the major
cities.
burned 10,500 acres of Limber will be rHva luated every 12 withdrawn for use
1'1ayor William Jarrett and .:_a~n~d~b'_'.ru':s~h'.:_. ~U~su':cc~es~sru~l._t~he~~hou~r~s~. "'._ _______ _'Ca:::1'1il~o':rn~i':a·~------~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~! two city councilmen i n1-
Police identiried the children
as Jennifer Warren, 4, and her
3-year-old brother, R icky.
Their mother, Kathleen War·
ren, 26, or Reseda, is reported
to have suffered third-degree
burns over 80 percent of her
body. 11er condition Y•as listed
as critical.
A spokesman for Chavez
said the boycotters will picket
stores, speak to schools and
ciVic groups, and do whatever
they can to help the union
cause.
balloting, tabulations ·showed
today.
The recall election came
after a citizen protest to the
officials' stand 1n favor of hav-
ing a proposed freeway bypass
rather than go through the ci·
ty.
The recall was held Tues-
day.
T-Hl=H'€it1-EST _,,, /,,,,, ':-
BUYS IN
TOWN!
S crape, wash, rinse a//
your dishes; glasses, s il ver,
pots and pans in one
quic k, easy motion. The
perfect gift. Easy to in1tall.
only s4 1aa
Rion Ha rdware is y.our local
hardware merchant with na·
tlonal ch.i in buying power -
so we buy fo r less, can sell to
,:YOU fo r less.
STARTS FRIDAY, AUGUST 24th
-illack & Decker·-
JIG SAW
Tilts to 45° for bevel and
mitre cuts. Double insulated
for safely. Cap,, 2.5 amps,
y, ma~ h~. 7110
BUY JIG SAW
FOR 29.99
GET 12.99 DRILL
FOR 1¢ MORE
Sin1le 1000-rpm speed.
Drives most popular acces·
sories. Burnout.pro tected 2.5
amp motor, 1/6 hp. 7524
3Dl
Security
Sy•tems
INTRUDER ALARM
Emits silent harmless high.frequency sound waves in
cone-shaped pitlern coverina up to 300 sq. ft Arry motion
In this area wlll switch on bedside radio or lamp connected
to alarm unit and, seconds later, wHI sound Internal alarm.
Uses household current 451 ................... $84.95
Atcnsory Exter11JAllno Hero 70 . .. . . . .. .. .. . . . $15.95
Opon Mond1y•Frld1y 9 im-9 pm; S.turd1y 9 1m-6 pm; Sund1y to •m-4 pm
e
• • I
earance.
Don't miss your
Ford Dealer's Clearance Sale.
It's the right time to check all 1he ex1ras that aren't
extra in a Ford. They're standard. Things like 35 1-cu.
in. V-8 power, Cruise-0-Matic transmission, power
fro nt disc brakes, power steering. Plus the pleasure of ·
Ford's famous quiet ride. So visit yo ur Ford Dealer.
And while you're there, check the Thunderbirds,
Torinos. Mavericks, Mustangs and Pintos he has in
stock. Remember, your Ford Dealer's prices have Road Tt:!!it Magazine
been frozen . That nleans they can't be raised. But named the 1973 Ford
that doesn't mean they can't be lowered! "Car of the Yeal'." /: -..,,-"'3-;;:>'":'C-:"";:;J1Z;;;z~ Powtr steer;ng, lhc coo,,.nien~!ea...,..
that 's in all big ford.St standard. ..... "° ~
Security for you and your
passengers: side-door Stttl
Guard Rail~ standard.
Ford L TO Brougham
2-0oor Hardtop
•,
Po""t'1 front di§t brakes
ror sare, sure stops.
standard.
JS l-eu. in. 2\' V-3 ac1ne.
standard.
Ford'• falDOU.! Front Room. full·ll'nath door
ll'W'CSt, plush color-keyed carpeling, standard.
J>rottttife inntr fenders thal
help ftatit rust and eorr05loa1 standard.
.The closer you look, the better we look.
Smart Time to see your Ford Dealer
FORD
FORD DIVISION . .,.
•
•
.
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·it .. :~
'M
·~ I: .,,
•O
<I ·• .1 :1
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...
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•q ,.
• ·"
-.
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"
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DAU,y PILOT EDITOBIAL PAGE
Time to -End CREEP
Orange County Republicans, along with olher GOP members acrpss the country, are annous to di sentangle
themJelves from the Committee to Re-elect the Presi·
dent (CREEP), which has brought so much woe upon the
parfy.
In a unanimous vote last week, 15 delegates of the
county's California Republican Assembly units urged
J>asjden1 Nixon and top GOP officials to dismantle the <.SEP organization, which they called "an invisible
government formed within the Republican Party."
It's no secret that local GOP organizations could
make good use of some of CREEP's leftover campaign
funds -a $4.8 million surplus as o! last Nov. 8. The
stain o! Watergate is not going to help fund-raising
efforts by any political party in the da ys to come.
But CREEP still is in business in \Vasbington, with
a staff including a public relations specialist, a lawyer
and half a dozen secretaries and clerks.
Its reported expenditures for the seco nd quarter o!
1973 amounted to $680,000, of which $80,000 went for
legal fees. CREEP's ground rules theoretically bar pay-
ment of le gal fees for defense of criminal charges, but
$37 ,700 of this amount went to attorneys for Maurice
Stans, CREEP's chief fund-raiser, now under indictment
for perjury. Stans himsel! remains on the CREEP pay-
roll at $30,000 a year.
It is clearly understandable why all this has raised
the blood pressure of GOP toilers trying to put together
their upcoming state and local campaigns.
Phone Refund Stall
More than a year ago, customers of Pacific Tele-
phone received $160 million in refunds of rate charges
ruled illegal by the California Sepreme Court.
But Gen Tel diects have not received any refunds,
and r.,<!:Ssibly may never receive them.
rhe court ruling struck down an 11accelerated de-
preciation" bookkeeping procedure under which the
utilities were gaining a tax benefit by writing of! equip-
ment investments over a period of five years, inStead
of the former 20 years, and pocketing the tax saving
instead of passing it on to customers.
The ruling was specifically directed at Pacific Tele-
phone, although Gen Tel had used the same procedure
from August, 1971, to August, 1972 . To avoid making
a similar repayme nt, Gen Tel obtained a stay of the re-.
fund directive in order to appeal its own case to the
cou rt.
The court order was based on the fact that public
hearings were not held by the Public Utilities Commis-
sion before the bookkeeping change was made. If the
procedure eventually is approved through proper proc-
esses, the utilities will obtain the rate benefit they
sought.
Meanwhile, Gen Tel's stalling operation deprives
its subscribers of the refund paid long ago by the larger
utility.
' . Miss Liherty-W est?
· The West Coast may get its own Statue of Liberty
ii the latest plan for the 1976 U.S. bicentennial works
out.
The American Historic and Cultural Society, whose
leadership includes Bob Hope and Billy Graham, would
like to place a sister monument to Miss Liberty, or some
similar symbol, in an appropriate West Coast location,
probably the San Francisco Bay area.
Tbe same ruling, if applied to General Telephone -
which includes Laguna Beach and Huntington Beach
customers among its 1.6 million subscribers -wou ld
entitle them to refunds totaling $19 million.
Though the name has unfortunate connotations.
there's no doubt the Bay Area's Alcatraz Island would
provide a conspicuous base for a monument marking the
West Coast gateway to the U.S. and symbolizing the
nation's hope for peace and freedom in the next 200
years.
~~ ......
'11'S M~~ COMFORTA8LE, ANb SU~E AS liELL MORE PROflTASiE!
Heroin Kin.gpins
Enjoy Lush Life
WASHJNGTON -The aristocrats of
the world heroin trade live millionaires'
lives in Europe with telephone-equipped
~1ercedes automobiles and friends in
cabinet rooms and mayors' mansions.
The behind·lhe-scenes activities of
these shadowy c rim in a Is who
manufacture heroin and ship it lo the
United States are described in detail in a
classified Justice Department document.
We have obtained
a copy of the Depart-
m en l's "French
D r u g Trafficking
ffierarchy" and have
stricken the names « the agents and !he
code numbers of
the informe~ to pre-
5e!VC their anooymi·
ly.
L'nlike the pathetic and often
dangerous addicts wbo roam U.S. streets.
1he merchanu wtx> supply lheir demands
confine their own intake to American
whiskey and London gin.
-mERE JS no single Big Boss of
Fmx:h drug trallicting," the Justice
narcotics ~ asserts. "Rather. as in
the case of most legitimate as well as il·
I.gal und<rtatings, small common in-
lerest groups are the b.illding blocks of
!he business.
··0n 011e hand, there are groups with
Quotes
U.S. Supreme Court Justice Lewis F.
Powell. In his opinion reqlliring court
warrants for electronic bugghlg -
"Government tends to view with suspi·
cion those that most fervently dispute its
policies . . . . unreserved executive
discretion may yield too readily to
pressures to obtain incriminating eVi·
dence and overlook potential invasions
of privacy and speech."
access to morphine base {the semi-fin·
ished heroin ) laboratory facilities and
chemists. Then the re are other in-
dividuals or groups with the capital to in-
vest for rapid, maximwn gain."
The ~otics trade to the United
States is presently so lucrative that these
financie rs, after backing only 1 0
shipments, can "retire" and then lend
out their money to others at "exorbitant
interest rata for use in drug or other ii·
licit operaUoos."
THE TRAFFICKERS meet with the
fma.nciers ''through criminal associations
at such places as the ~is Canards'
(or) Cafe Galvani in Paris ... , the
Royal Bu.s, a bar in Madrid ... , Ranch
Keotucky, a t.tarseilles area underworld
meeting place (and ) the Cravache Bar
near the Gagnes race track."
There. despite rings of thug-like pro-
tectors, they are under the watchful eyes
of French and U.S. "narcs'' and in·
form ers, and electronic surveillance
devices that would make a Waterbugger ·
rattle his bars with jealousy. The
"French Connect.ion-style" agents have
dogged the traffickers' hand-made shoe
prints and produced this rosler of the
men who make America's drug habit:
-AL THOUGH some top traffickers are
in custody and others are shifti ng to
West Germany, the docum ent idenlifies a
"mysterious Georges" of France as
heroin's prime move r. The muscular 50-
year-old has been spotted at Paris' posh
Plaza Athenee hotel and has been seen
parked in his phone-equipped tan
Mercedes 300 SL before rich, discreet
Parisian restaurants.
-Just beneath him the American
agents rank a man known only as "Ton·
Lon (wicle) Robert," a Corsican with
Dear
Gloo1ny
Gus
U Nixon isn't careful he won't have
Ron Zifgler to kick around any
more.
-P.O.
GliNtmr Gus ~""' ''' wbmlrt...i •1 ruden 1M 0. mot ftf<tsl&r'llY nflKt ""'
riewS of IM -.Uff. St111d rour "'' PM"ff M G'-r Gl!S. D1llY Piiot.
close friendships in the l\>larseilles
mayor's office. At "Uncle Robert 's"
level, are two others -Pierre
"Marseilles Pierrot" Roggiero, a hard·
bitten 34-year-old : and Henri Ronesio,
who slips into gun rwµUng when the drug
trade is bearish.
-BEFORE l:rilliant work by American
, customs and, nhrcotics agents sent him
into disgrace, Andre Hirsch, a 55-year-old
Swiss, was one of the most ingenious
shippers to the United States. He tried to
smuggle in a giant cache packed in
Spanish paella -rice and fish -cans,
but lost both his heroin and his liberty.
A narcotics "comer." according to the
report, is Jacques "Strasbourg Jack"
Engelhardt, a pal of "Mysterious
Georges." He came to the top through
his part in a '66 million shipment.
-The Gentleman Jim of the narcotics
world, who counts U.S. labor leaders and
Euro pean ministers and heads of state
among his friends, is Maurice Castellani.
He is as much at home in New York as
in Paris.
BESID~ these kingpins, there are
dozens of other colorfuJ smugglers listed,
ranging from printers, to driven to
"Claude Mareau," a mechanic famed for
fitting a Lancia car with a bidden com-
partment in whlch 160 pounds of pure
heroin were smuggled into the United
States.
Rich or poor, the Justice Department
document casts a cold, businesslike eye
on them all. "In essence," concludes the
study, "traffickers are llke individuals
with a saleable conunodity." They "seek
an association With other individuals who
can provide services for a mutual prof·
it. "
Too Many Missing Pieces
Roadblock for Watergate
WASHINGTON -The one point which
emerges with clarity following President
Nixon's recent television speech on
\Vatergate is this: unless the Senate in-
vestigators can get their bands on the
(rucHARD wn.so~
ped t. 'th J-•-Dean d whether or not it should continue its 1V ta cooversa ions WI ww an cular would become cademi
others in . the . President's office ~ ::Suse it would have run out or script. c
\Vatergate mqwry, so far as the Pres1-----This condition arises from the inability
de;nt is ~med, ol. the Watergate committee thus far to
w1U rwi into the assemble the myriad pieces of its jigsaw
ground: . puzzle into a horrifying picture ol. Presi·
Nothing lil the dent Nixon ensnared in a criminal con-
pl"Ol!lpectus of the spiracy.
hearings ' which will The pieces don't fit. A great many are
reopen in September missing. Large gaps are left so that Nix-
suggests any startl· on's image does not emerge as the chief -
ing new evidence to consplrator lurking behind the vJS.ae
incriminate t h e of John Dean. The final shape of the plc-
President. The Ervin ture is left to the imagination d. tbote
Committee is heading into a blind alley who are trying to fit together the pieces
without any guidance from Nixoo, as his of the puzzle spread helter-s,elter in mll-
televison speech so clearly indicated, if it lions of y:ords ol conflicting testimony .
can rely on no more than the disputed
evidence of the President's principal ac-THIS WAS the conditioo President Nix-
cuser who is motivated by a strong on correctly assessed when be addressed
desire to stay out of jail. the nation oo Watergate. He pointed unerringly at the great gap iA the middle
of !he puzzle. Nooe of ~ neceosary
pieces fitted precioely to shQw Nixoo in
the shadows behind Jolm Diln.
Evidence in !he tapes wooid, by the
President's implicit admlssiOn, poaibly
supply oome ol the missing pieces sought
by the Watergate puzzle solvers, but not
enouf!h to complete the picture they seek
to assemble. Thus he justifies !is
decision not to supply misslng pieces
which mlibl be twisted and bent into
the shapes desired.
IN SHORT, the Watergate In-
vestigators cannot link up the evidence
so far adduced into an wibreakable cbaJn
ol circumstances which would conrict
Nixoo beyond the shadow of a doubt.
'Ibey know that. Nixon knows that.
' IF BE NOW stands fi.rm on not releas·
ing the White House tapes -and
survives the implicatims of doing so -
he MIJ' yet bring the inve9li8aUoe to a
stacddll.
If Nixon's explanation la ~lete
and unsatilfying so is the case a&atnst
him. It will r<maln the kind of ca!e
which prod""'5 bung i\!ries and dismissed
trials. And there the · Watergate allair,
so rar as President Nlion is concerned,
'Aili rest unresolved and to be lived with,
or lived down, throughout the remainder
of his pr<sidency.
In reel life everybody knows that even
the l>l>~ problems are handled thal
way. People with problems U.., -~
solve just get on with other things, and
that iJ what lflxon has ask<d ol those
who woold pasa judgment on him end all
his works. • '
THIS BEING the case, interesUng
questions now begin lo.. form around
whether or not Nixon will ever deliver
the ta pes lo the Ervin COmmittee even if
ordered by a court to do so. HU only
comnlltment on this point is bigbly
qualified and contingent on the nature "-
the judicial decision, if, indeed, there is
any.
Beyond that, a thread runs through the
briefs submitted to the federal district
court leading to a possible decl.sioo by
him to withhold the tapes whatever the
court's decision. The power of the court
to force him to give up the tapes is not
recognized, and if as chief execuUve he
does not choose to do so there is no
judicial recourse. So it is argued.
lmitatnrs of Youth
IF NIXON chooses to stand firm on the
proposition that the presidency now and
in the future would not be able to func-
tion without tbe protection of con-
fidentiality, the Watergate committee
does not have far to go. The question or
On the Wrong Track
A boy or 17 I happen to know very well
was talking about one of bis school ad·
ministrators. "He's a scream," tjle boy
said. "All lhe kids laugh at him behind
his back."
~YDNEY J.HARRI~
West Point Influence Criticized
I asked why, and the boy explained,
"He tries so hard lo be 'with it' that k
kills you. He dresses the way we do , and
talb the way we do, aod he thinks this
brings him closer to us. But it does just
the opposite."
It remlcdod me of Bill Nye's old saying
that "when you try to make an im·
pressloo, that's the impressklin you
make.'' When you try to be at 3$ what
aomebody elae ii at 11, you loot like a,
fool -and a !awning loo! at that.
yet, which is why they keep trying out
different guises and disguises ; but ...,..
one iD mlddl&<1ge who affects bell-bot·
toms, beads, and "You know ... man •.•
like" dlctk>n is really betraying his own
lack of inner security more than he is
identifying With Ule credo or youth .
Haig Said Heading Acade my Cadre in, tlie Wliite House
Tt obcrt Bowie Johnson, J·r., is a
graduate of the West Point class of
1965. Now a ·leading critic of the mil·
lk1ry academy, he is c~uthor of the
recently published book, "West Point."
I-le is i nterviewed by the editors of
iVoshingt011 A1011thly,
q, You bave charred that West Point
alumni are taking over I.be civilian
brucb of the govenment. Wbo are
U1ty?
A: Perhaps the best example is that
perfect West Point martinet Gen. Alex-
ander Haig, who controls access lo the
President. Haig. who succeeded H.R.
Jialdeman, brought an entire West Point
cadre wtlil bim to Ille White House. For
example, Halg's chief assistant is John
J~nneu. a retired West Point major
general. Serving under Bennett are two
otner \Vest Pointers, a major Md a
colonel. All ol them were with Haig at
1he National Security Council before
L'Omlng to the White House.
q, Js ll•fl IM oaty exampl<?
.i,, Not 11 .U. Take J. Fred Buzhardt. a
West Pointer who U9Cd to be gtncral
counsel for the Jlfiense llepartmeot.
No1< ho Is wrillnl Nhon's Wa!trpte
t -And there's Fred Malek, deputy
( WHERETIIEY
STAND )
director of the Office of Management and
Budget (Oh-IB). Malek, who is the Nixon
aQminislration's effi ciency expert, is a
member of the West Point class or 1950.
Q: But I.I thil ttally unusual? There
art plenty of Harvard men In the govtrn·
ment, too, from Henry Kissinger on
dolt-n.
A: But West Point is qualitatively dif-
ferent from an institulton like Harvard or
Princeton. What We91. Point offers Is not
an education but an Ideology, a total way
of thinking and a character structure.
After my ex-perience at West Point, I nm
convinced that many of those now su r-
rounding President NiJ:on are men who
have absorbed a value system which is
authori!4rlan an d anti-democratic.
Sylvanus Thayer, who founded West
Point, once said, ''It's a young man's
only province to listen and obey."
q, Bal that was 15' yurt ago.
A: w .. 1 Point resu on Just this sort of
tradition. Gen. Haig'• c11aractcr and
pel'10Dl1ity are inseparable from il1e
West Point type ol man, It is irnpoMant
to realize that America had never known
anything like itbe symbiotic relationship
which now exists between the executive
branch of government and the Pentagon.
In many ways, the interests of the two
bodies have merged.
These days there is a military cast to
the entire Nixon administration. Melvin
Laird, who succeeded John Ehrlicbman
as the President's d:lief domestic ad-
viser, is a former Secretary or Delense.
Roy Ash, bead of OMB. came from Lit·
ton Industries, a leading military con·
tractor:
Q, But haven't military mea alwa)'I
been actJve la govenunea&!
A' Remember G«1. Haig ls oot run-
ning the Anny; he Is the chlef ol sta!f of
a civilian branch of government. lie Is a
graduate of a military academy which
has always had as its principal pl to in-
still obedience .)n Its cadets, am-
quently, Nixon iJ very happy with Haig
because. abov• all, Haig wiU J>e loyal.
q , t take ti that U we ever .. d uother
.. ,.,...P of tomelhlnr Uke Walergate,
Haig would be the Iut one lo bl°" tbe
wbllde on the adminlltraUon.
A: That's exactly righl. In fact, llalg Is
likely to out-llaldeman Haldeman. Lu·
cian Truscott IV, West Point class of
1969, pointed out recenUy in the Village
Voice that while Haig was on the staff or
West Point he participated in a series of
cover-ups of violations of West Point's
honor code. Now he's In the White House.
q, Bat Im~ West Point ,..,...... to
produce alamal wbo believe la IM baaor
code?
A: As we used to say when J was at
West Point, a cadet doe~rnot De, dleat or
steal, but ollieers and graduates can and
do.
q, Bat ti has beu yeon •laeo _, If
these .men bave beta at West Pabt. fty
do yoa bellew ~Well Poilll 11 1181 lo-
Outaclog tllelr -• la pvenuoeat?
A' Because Well Point -aa a
parent substitute during -years
when a boy turns into a man. It's a dll·
lilJl!t lour years and graduates teed to
believe that because It was hard It bad to
be worth It. And because they IJOI
through It, they believe they are hett8r
than ordinary men.
As Gen. Mark Clark °""" put l~ "'Ille w..i Point orncu despises the thought ol
failure." These -1• don't belie'le they
make mlslakes; they always find
scapogoala like U . Calley.
YOUNG PEOPLE have a great sense
of propriety, although It may seem
otherwise. They like parenu who look
!Ike parenla, and grandparents who act
like grandparenu. They respect teachtrl
and administrators wbo are what they are acd who don't try to bribe their
pupils' a!fectloo by adopting the DOW·
1eneratlon opeedi and clochinl habits.
WHAT THESE slavish Imitators ol the
young forget -il they ever -lt -II
that a youthful sp!rtt can lltlne thr.Ug!Ca
gray beard acd. a beqt -· A )'Outbful spirit klentmes With the pennaneot good·
-in youth, not With Its i.it1ng
English, Its ra!Jlah clotheo, or its musical
Idiom. 'll!eae are jllll ~ pbues
of youth, and have no real meanlllll or
value In terms ol aell~-
Klds with anY. --~ tab lbeir own paulng halilts toO aertoolly. ID the
back of their mlada, they m •ware how
ephemeral thelt lllHlyle-ls; and when ~ ... a presumable odalt takiai ll
more oerlously tlwl they do, end in>-
'lrinlng that empathy ls acltlevtd by such
aballow mlmkry, they klle faith Ia that
penoll'I authenticity. u "doinil JOUr .... Ullq" muns anyihtng, IC means beicg who 70U .....
Y-poople cloo't -""° they are
Young pe<iple loot askance upon the
older generation not because of their
traditional life-style but because their
minds have become rigid and their emo-
tions congealed over the years. That's
why, at 78, Bucky Fuller, 1n a stiff bow·
tie and a sack suit, still gl!:ts th.rough to
the kids.
OIAM .. COAIT
DAILY PILOT
Robm.N. w .. d, PtlbU.htr
Thoma.I Kt..U, Editor
Barbaro Krt~bkh
Ed.ttorloi Page Editor
The <dltorl&I '-ol 1l>o D&lly Pllot ·ieekt to lnlOnn and ittmutato
readers by .-,. "" U>la ....
ctivmirtfcommeatuy'on topl(I or ...
t....i by .;.oo1catec1 cotamnlsta and
cartoonl1ts, by PM'ldl• a forum for
rodm' vlew1 and by JX'llCllllnl OiJI
ftCWIPIJJtt'• oS>lnlonl ud tdMs m eumnt toptca. The edhcrlll ootn'°"9
of lhe Diily Pilot ...,..,. ooJy In l1'e
tdl:toc1&1 column' at tho "top or the
pact. Oplntoris ecoc:elRd by the COrf. ...-oo11..-oo11-
writtn lft tlkolr' own ud no.-. ... •••Jt ol ""11' -by ... Doll1 Pllot111auldbt-
Thursday, August 23, 1973
• .. . . ' .
Mental Hospitals
Get OK on Bills
SACRAMEtfl'O CAP! -'!be
state would he required to
give the legialature at least
thr.. months notlco 'before
closing any of ita 11 mental
ho1pltal1 under throe bµIs ap.
( BRIEFS )
proved by a Senate com-
mittee.
'!be Senate Health MC(
Welfare Comml~ee approved
two bills . Wednesday by
Altmblyman John Vascon.
cellos (!>-Son Jose ) and one by
A>aemblyman John L. Burton
( D-San Francboo).
Mental hoopltals c h I e f
Andrew G. Robertson told the
committee the state has oo
Faricy Pair
Hit Hotel,
Miss Cash
NEW YORK (UPI) -Two
muked gunmen wearing tux·
edos handcuffed and blindfold-
ed jazz: musician Maynard
Ferguson and siJ: o t h e r
peraons In an Eut Side hotel
early today, took a briefcase
containing 12,000, lelsurejy
broke Into 17 ale deposit bo•·
es and departed, p o 11 c e
reported.
The briefcase contained part
of an fll,000 payroll which
Ferpon, hil man11er• and
another auocllte were car·
rylng. Ferguaon 1aid b e
.........i the aocond brlefcaae
containing '8,000 with his body
and the robbers overlooked It.
No shota were fired and no
one wu Injured In the Incident
1t the Hotel Croyden.
Sarah Gets
$50 Fine-
Despite Note
BRIGHTON, England CAP)
-Actres3 Sarah !a.tiles has
been fined ISO by the Brigblon
magiatrate'1 court .for
apeedlng.
'!be JO.year-0ld B r it ls h
movie at.at, wife of acnen
writer Robert Bolt, pleaded
guilty to the charge and told
the cow1 In a letter:
"Alth:>ugh I am an actress,
pleue don~ let this color your
LOS ANGELES (AP) -A dedaloo."
Beverly Hill• attmiey bul-'==--======
betn convicted of sollCltlog I
police narcotics officer tn a
plan. never carried ou~ to
"plant" cocaine on Monroe Richman. president of the
board of lrUJtees of the Loi
An~eles Community Collece
sysWn.
--.~
The Looka of Fall:
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QUEENIE
1
Thurstiay, August 2l, 1973
..
"'It doesn 't seem .to want to accept yoar•crant letters
-maybe the post office is getting somewhere.''
Li~ense Taken
i , Joe Kennedy Loses Permit ¥ NANTUCKET, Ma". (UPI) below the waist due to spinal
~ - A spokesman for the injuries.
'i Massachuaetts Registry of The hospital reported !hat . Mw Kelley had been taken
:11 Motor v;emcles ~ys Joseph P · out of Us intensive care unit l Kennedy lll's drivers license anlfpla<:ed in a privatenom. ·
~ will be revoked for at least 60
~ days following his conviction .----------.1
' • this week on negligent driving
~ · charges .
.a A young woman seriously in-~!• ju red in the Aug. 13 car crash
here which resulted in Ken-
nedy's citation was reported
Unproved and in satisfactory
coodltioo at Cape C o d
f' Hospital. ..
~ A SPOKESMAN for the 11. registry said young Kennedy's
K liceme Mill be automatically
revoked as soon as abstracts
of the accident report are
received from authorities.-·
A review may be held after
60 days, he said, when the
license may be reinstated
depending on the "character
and ha1Jl!" ,of the driver.
N~. District Court Jud~~.~ Anastos found Ke~,:..2io;.1he eldest son of
the 1Rti :Sen. Robert F. Ken-
nedy, iuJlty of the misde-
meanor ~rge Monday and
fined him ' DO.
Bug Brains
Get Study
WASHINGTON (AP) -
The Agriculture Depart-
ment bas approved a
$10,000 grant to scientists
at North Dakota Slate
University, Fargo, for a
two-year study of insect
brains.
--The .department describ-
ed the project this way:
"Under tenns of.. the
agreement, the scienllsts
will study cultured Insect
brains to determine bow
neurohonnones produced
in the insect's brain func-
tion to control diapause,
development and water ·
balance. Disrupting lhese
functloos could be~ way
of biologically controlling ;,,......_ ..
l' -;-:---r ' /• . . . '. ' .. . -. ~ .
ACCORDING TO 'loiitmOny,
Kennedy w~s dri~')i1 Jeep-:,1!;:=
type vehicJe contaiuliW, ,six"
passengers on Nantucket Aug.
13 when be swerved to' avoid
hitting another car and his
vehicle overturned.
Kennedy's bcother, David,
18, suffered a sprained back in
the incident and a Grosse
Point, Mich., girl suffered a
fractured pelvis.
BUT THE MOST seriously
injured was Pamela Kelley,
18, of Centerville, Ma~ .• who
remains partially paralyud
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Bill May
Make Land
A Bargain
SACRAMENTO (AP) -
Calllomla lnight be able to
ooy 300 acres of borsaln-
'prlce<I park land norih of Santa en.. under lotrlllat1on
endoned by tho s.mte.
The B9oO vote eent the bill to
the Alaembly.
(OUTDOORS J
Sen. Arlen Gl'<l!Orio (0-San Mateo) said It lo 1enerally al!l'OO'i that the !00 ac,.. ...,.
the Pomponio Slate Buch
area woold be worth at leut
$1 million on the marl<d.
But G.....,..lo said the ..._
would sell tt to the state ror
$500,000 and deslj[nate the
balance of the value u a gi!t. e fAltNI Bulcell
SACRAMENTO (AP) -The
state parlca chlel says be
back• completion of the Santa
Monica Mountains Park pro~
ect by addinB at least another
28,000 acres to tho park.
WIU!am Perui Moll said Iha!
he wooJd like to see the llllta
1cqulre 1,000 to 11,000 acres In
t h e Topens•Rmti<>&!lllvan
canyon areas, another a.too io
10,000 ICl'fll 1n the Mslloo
area, and 12,000 to 15,000 at
Point MUBU.
CUmntly, the lllate owns
over 13,000 acres In the 200.-.. sycamar&<loti.d range nor1h of tho populous
l.Ds An&eleo Buln. e sltoff rneu
L05 ANGELES (AP) -'nie
county ol Los An5eles plans to
buy two j>rime shoreline --ertl.. on die Paloo Verdeo
Peninlula and turn them over
to the publlc for recreotlm.
'nle propertlot, -wlll open nearly tlllOe mlles of
coaMl!ne to the publlc. were
Inspected by a.p, AJphomo
Bell (JI.Los Aqeles) and
°"1nly Supervln' J I me I
Hay•.
One a( the proper1lel, It
acre1 at rt. MacArthur, hi,!
been decllred .. .,... by the
Army. 'l1le other Is pdvate
property at Abalone Cove, the
only esleJll!lve oandy beach
frontal" on the peninsula.
Jn 1ddiUon, the C0W1ty plans
to acquire one mile of
shonollne just llOUlh •ol the
Vmtura County line and ls negotillinl with the slate to
acquire 1.1 mlles ol 'l'o!>onl•
Oanyon beach. e lJ.S. P•re..,e_,
SAN FRANCISOO (AP) -
The federal ........,...i bu
boulht Ill inltlal f!.71 million
worth ol pdvately owned iands
within the Golden Gate Na-
tional RecroaUon area.
The properties are the 1,m.
,acre ·wllkins . Ranch near
~ Lqoon, wlllch tbe
g0Vft1U1l«lt baupt fnlm die
Trull for Puhllc Lands for
$1 ,151,000, and a IOWcr'e tract
in the Tama1pals area which .... prmte laodownen IOld
for "30,000.
The Nallonal Part Service
al!o ocquired a !..,.year OI>
tlon on the 1,212·acre
Marlncello property from the
Nabre Conservancy for M
egreed on prtoe ol ti.I mllllm.
Nature Conlervancy alto
agreed to sell the 131-acre
sfide Ranch for '315,700 and
donate the liOO-acre Groan
Gulch Ranch. Both parcels
f-the Padfte Ocean.
• Stlf'PIU Area
WASHINGTON (AP) -The
White -announced that throe parce!J of I u r p I u I
federal IBnd will be made
avalllble for park and recrea-
tion me under President Nix·
on'1 "Legacy o< Parks" pro.
gram.
The caurom1a propor11e1 1n-
ctude:
Cllstle Commlllllcalloos ~
ne1: Receiver, Atwater, Merc-
ed OJunty, 15 acreo, tll,000.
Camp Elliott M 111 tar y
a-mit1on, san Diego, 115
acres, $200,000
Lewiston Government
Camp, ninlty County. • ...
...... fl,000. er.,. Parks
~l!INTO (AP) -Ad-
dttlonal lend haa been acquired
foi: two otate parta l n
Northern California, Wiiliam
Penn Molt Jr .. director ol tbe
Clllfomla Department ol
Para and Reoreatlon , .,,.
~Id 1110 acret1 ware ld-ded~h north mil ol Mount
Dtablo State Parlt In Contra eo.t. County at a coet of
$1JO,OOO.
A parcel of 71 l<ftll WU ad·
ded lo Suprloof RJdse Stat.
Part In Sonoma ColUlty II the
ceot o1 ps,ooo: Mott 81!d a ...,.
ond 7kcre lract Is to . be 10-
qolred for Suaarloal Ridge In
fl"'"119'13-74.
eFee CHrgell
Copllol N... iervlce
SANTA CRUZ -A ll per
clay per car ""' fee ii belnl charred !or peraono who use
the new ploilc .,_ at the
F ..... t ol Nl11t11e Mara Slate
Park In Sant& CrUI Ollmty,
acoordlng to the Department
or Parts and Recreation.
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SWEATERY
COORPINATES
" .
Media mix for Foll '73 , • ,
orygle pottems on soft,sand-
colored knits, From Act.Ill,
~izes I 0-1 b. Argyle cardigan,
grey I camel or wine/block,
46.00. Sleeveless turt~. 20.00.
Pleettd diirt, 21.00 -Mi11es' Spomweer, 89
..)
GARLAND'S
ARGYLE SET
This year it's the snow!
forsure! Meking the most
of mensweor argyle knit sets.
Of Orlon9 acrylic, berry,
or brown.
Hip-length Cllrdigan, 19.00.
Vast, I l.00.
Junior Spomweer, 97
ALL THAT
GLITTERS
Knit tops by City Girl come plain
or come shine • • already rhine-
stoned or "you do your own thing".
Shown, the snort sleew 1coop
neck with sparkle plenty. Polyester I
cotton knit, S.M-L. White, red
or green, 16.00..
Hi-Deb Shop, 52
Tlio lrothoy ""'""" cnm &JI. IY -l'llTIYAL OI'
AWAU Wllllll• ITVllllT l'ILM1
MONDAY, AU.UST 27
fOX AIWtllM
22' W. Liocolo A••·• ANhtlM
1100 ,,t.t.
FRIE TICKETS .. tllt~lo now et ,..,
lroo~woy lo Jr. Wet!~. Mluo•' S,..,t1-
w••r, Uril•tttlty She,.
\S
------J5l19~ &ilt 11Iln® 1Jnrroo .......... """"""IT"\-n
ANAHEIM NEWl'OltT HUNTINCOTON IEACH ORANGE. MALL OF ORANQE
444 N. Evcll4 17141 1)1.1111 47 Fa1hlo11 lda114 11141 644 -121 1 7111 Edi119•t A¥t11 w• 17141 1•2.Jl l t 2)00 N. T1111ti11 Shtaf 1714) ttl·l l l l
t:HQp 10 A.M. to t iJO ,,M, MONDAY THROU6 H FRIDAY. SATURDAY 10 A.M. to 6 ,,M. SUNDAY 12 NOON to 5 P.M •
' •
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Rl~Y F~LL
COORDl-KNITS
n .... qood year for glen
,.!&id pofyeste1 sparked
with block/white. By
Comp11s Co1uel1, si1•s
10-18.
Shi rt jacket, 32.00
Pullon pants, 20.00. Dot
knit acrylic vest, S-M-L,
11.00.
Long sleeve tattersall
short, 16.00.
Plaza Sportswear, St. Fl ..
l>S.
l
t
MEDIA
MIX
Destined for travel, these easy
to-live-with ~nits from
Catalino in acrylic/polyester,
I 0-18. Block, brown or wine.
Shirtjocket, 28.00. Matching
puTion flares, I ?.00. Floral
print shirt of rayon, I 0-1 b.
Block or wine, long sleeve,
16.00.
Active Sportsweer, 78
CJI1"d}' CURITOS
500 lei C.rrlt.• Mall 121)) l.O.t41t
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:I 0 DAILY PILOT lhursday, August 23, 19/J
L.M. Boyd
'Wizard o ·Oz'
-.
Most Watched .
So you like lo walk around Ille.house ill your socks, do
you! All right, but U your n'8l are syntlletic fiber, nole
t~Jlease. Sock makers say nothlh& .wean out their mer--c ise faster. Can believe it. tt~s commealy known that
the craftsman who ruins more pairs of pants than any
other professional fellow is the carpet layer. •
Q. "What motion ~ure has been "
seen by tbe most ._..?"
A. "The Wizard GI. Oz" Is a fair
, guess.· It has been Jbown on TV about
JO times to audiences of at least 45
J million at each .showing.
Q. "What's 'SASE' mean?"
A. "Self-addreS>ed slamped en-
velope." I don't like it as well as
. "SWAK ," frankly.
WEDDING CEREMONY
Every bride and groom should keep a tape recording
of their \vedding ceremony. That's the contenUon of a
matrimonial counselor. No, not just as a sentitDental sou-
venir. Play the thlog, suggests this authority, as freqlJel\tly
as necessary to end quarrels.
Did 1 say Lana Turner was married seven times?
Wrong. Eight times. To Artie Shaw, twice to Steve Crane,
to Bob Topping, Lex Barker, Fred May, Robert Eaton and
Ronald Dante.
Young ladf, if you want your cul Dowers to last longer
in the vase, set them in one part water and one part Sprite
or ·7-Up, and toss in a half a teaspoonful of chlorine bleach.
Michigan State University researchers ;say that works in
a dandy manner.
LOVE AND WAR
Alany is the girl who discl08eS she was expectant when
she·went to the matrimonial altar. But relatively rare is
she who admits she was ei:pectant before her engagement.
A professor of family relationships at Pennsylvania UnJ-
versity found that out. In another of those intimate sur-
veys. Specifically, three out of IO wives said they were
pregnant prior to marriage. And three out of four said
they could have been. if they hadn't been lucky. Our Love
and War man continues to be amazed at the impertinent -
queries the surveytakers put to blushlng brides.
Q. "Whars the coldest I own in the 48 states?"
A. Munich, N.O. \Vilh an average winter temperature
of 6 degrees F. ·
Hardly anybody anymore gives appropriate credit to
that English inventor J. J. Stassen who in 1869 first coined
<he wont "bicycle." Unlortuoare.
It's said your southern windows get 47 times as much
sunshine as your northern \\indo"'S.
Address mail to L. l\f. Boyd, P.O. Box 1875 .New-port Beach, Calif. 92660. '
<¥/e ·<Make '
Gffouse
Calls
One of the
largest
collections
of wallcovering
drapery and
upholstery
fabrics
in Orange
County
. A. I. D.
INTERIOR DESIGN
iL'-\·~~
INTERIOR•
FURNISHINGS
1 SDO W, AOAJlo!S AVIHUC
C09TA ""CIA. CA. 92626
;
Hl91t Hopes
Little Eduardo Martin-
ez of Penasco, Mexico
hugs his stuffed Snoopy
dog after a bone grait
operation in Arizona
tbat. mat ave his right
• leg •!rom amputatlnn.
Bone tlssue was taken •lrom his left leg.
@ mstrong
. EXCELON FLOOR TI!.E
Handsome embossed pottern; 14]/
greaseproof and scuffprciof! . ·14(;
Easy ·10 ins!Oll. 12x q i.n. · SQ. fr.
.·1 / VIAS 181, NOW .......... ..
TUB1 ENCLOSURE
Sh1tt1rproof g1111
doors, 1tr.1rdv 1111111,·
inu111 fr1111•l E11y.
to in1t1U.
WAS $3'4.95 -........... .
21••
Durable olefin fibers!
Soll -edl 121<12 In.
WAS 39j,
Newt ..... 28~ fT,
DECOiATOR
CORK ·TILi
F'Qt bulletin bo9fds or entire Wlllsl Elsy!
WAS 11.9'
129 ~-...... --'"'"'
COLOR •o •••ooo , TILE ; • ...,.. ' \.•!o w1.-
% ·-
Fee · Rule s on Hiss Case
•
THE COMPLAINI' s a I d·
Hiss' statements • ' we r e ~
centered around the con-.
troyerslal contentlo,n. . .that •
he was neve r a member of the
Communist party, that he was '
! ~EC«;>1l4lTdR CERAMIC nLE
1°Ynstalls easily, 'fasts as long 6 q ·
as your walisf Natural ' red C ·
'·tiles 1 for fireplaces, patios, . .
accent 'Wiiis. ' . · • SQ.· FT.
Rich veins of color on a spark· ·
ling white"jield! Easy to install! 6l'( 13sts 'a lifetime! 4~x414 inch
:~le~-. "~' ' . sQ. ''rt W!.>S 191, NOW ........... '.. • · • • -· WA!i!-'.l!lf, NOW ........ .
COPPER GLAZE
. WALL TILE
Tarnish-proof brushed
copper surface en .. "c:n ... -kltc:l1· ' en. waHsf
~.":'.'. 75~ n
. .... ii!----SILl-ITICK VINn ·
'AJalSJOS '1001 · nu
SOLID VINYL noOR TIU
lhl2 In. tills shTtDty ·A llf•llme no·Wlll
preu In plKe on •t1Y .-l'llne! 12-13 lrtc:h lfi.t., d,y surfetaf Sinoottt, du,_ usy lo ln1!1ll Oltllf
•bi. P.•lfstolM l'lit.,,._ / MW dt)' SUrflcel
WAS 29' 18( SQ.
--fT.
w.s lit
NO.WAX VINYL
FLOORING
OAK PARQUET
FLOOR-TIU
'A du rib le, c•r•free
shine without waxiltll
6 fL widths., 188
SQ. YD.
Doi .... la Inch--
---ntlnit .
.:: ll.9!, 12~
'• , '
Pre-finished -ready
to walk onl 6Yax6Y.r In.
Choice, first~ualib' Pit:
terns for floors, wans1 counters! Approx. 1 sq.
ft. sheets.
AS 5~ LOW · AS .. _..:... lltlET'·
!>pol:!'!~~· COUNT!RTOP . " Supple, st'alnproof
vtnyl -Ill)' to i~
Sta'lll · • :~42'it·
Shett1rproof 9 ·l·1 1 t in •
1turdy 1lul!'tinu111 fre111e,
Stendetd 2'4 inch 1i1•.
WAS $21.95 -_, __ 2488
NO-SI.IP ,TUI KIT SILICONE
HALD .,,. --, ' I ~~l.f .
I,
owfy "C.prl" p1ttemt
1sy to Install, won't
hip or stain. 41,{x41A
n.
::. 12~"-
FREEi : . -'
PRINTED INSTRUCTIONS . . . ' .~ .
LOAN OF QUALITY Tools . .
.~l'IRT DECORATOR • AD~ICI
FULL R.EFUND ON UNUS.ED TILE!'
GROUT WHITEN
AND TILE C.LEANR •
Costa Mesa •• 2221· Harbor1 Blvd.·
645·1'126 ._ .' ' .
'. '
~TORI HOUIS: -•
OPIN SUNDAY -11 a.m. • 5 p.m.
THURSDAY, l'lllDAY -1 a.m.-t p.111. ,
MOlj.. ,,,..., WID., SAT. -I a.m. -5:30 ,....
AYS Pl.IN1'nJJ lUif1IRltllle
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FE-MAIL CARRIER -' Mary Chafee, 19, of Oxford; M..S. offers a new ilimen·
sion as a mall earner at the Marlboro Post Office. A student majoring in ele-
mentary education, she will work at the job for the rest of the summer. . ~f,fJt~ ~~ i 1
.• • t ;·~· ' .. , ; ' I ' '
W o.Me n Put.Away· Brooms . \ ... ~ ·' ~ :· . i t. . -R~y·for. ;Equality Day
\ l ' •
Nun Tells
Of Time
In Jail
TUCSON , Ariz. (AP) - A
Roman catholic nun arrested
in Fresno during a United
Farm Workers ·union
demoMtration says her twfl
weeks in jail were
1'dehumanizing. ''
""There's an 'assumption 0t ti!!! part ol lhe jailers lhat I
you're there, you deserve t•
• tse there," sister '. Rache1
fitzgerald said. "There's nc
consideration of innocence or
guilt."
SISTER RACHEL was one ot some1 60 nuns and priests
arrested July 31 and Aug. 2 in
Fresno for alleged unlawful
assembly and failure t o
disperse in violation of court·
ordered limitations on
picketing .
., . ' .
' "'. t . . •• ' By Unlled Pfo ~ state ~gislatures lo ·1 he the .President to · sign a bill
Wome · . : L.'\e ~-measure... . decla~ng Aug. 25 "Women's = : 1:,", 1:: ~ weekend activities will' can-Bui, sl)e added, "we demand l•••lilllll n ij· . . Elsewhere, Ms .. i>cotl said, Equalily Day."
. u Y · j. "' . centrate on economic issues he . take po_sn1ve action to
signatures r weekend m a and N6W's .. action year 8S6Ure equality and the first t::::::~=::::::=::::::t dwbl~ demonstratiQD.. agatnst .. ~v.eI't1." ~ ~--· :if,, is the ~inimum wage : ~
calling att~ lo 'Ille Equal· . . --· L . . fAtl nuARTEft'
ftjgbts ~ni and 'Irie "WI!; ·ARE em~· ONSATURDAY,picketlines • ~ . l
state or the eWnomY· economic equality this ·year," will.be. ·
The ~ set up In Los Angeles, Sept. 17 fftro NoY. 17 · js the 53rd an-she said. niversary of, t Jeth Am.end-: New York City, Austin , Tex., pa i 11 t int • l•1Jl••l•t•
ment to the1 t,.ftltituJ.i911 .. It 1 ·;r:!'rJl . if a =-of :i~er D_elro\t, T~nton, N . J . , Adva11ced, La11clscape;
went into elltcf ~1!_'.181 19'.!0, 0~.r· ..::Z,. pon':.,; ,. N:C )\lashlngton, DC., and in other DniwlJHJ -""'•• FltoN; ~~gave j'f r-rtllht.i1o said.' ~ ~: ' ~ ciUes at stores tha"t sell ·pants :~~~.::·i:
1 . ~· . slie said NOW's 500 chapters manu(actw-ed hi' . the Farah torlor Desip~ Jo-lry; a::in~ ~~: :iu::e~~ = ~ Q)F!:1 ~~chT':~.ploys ~.~~::~,:~~·::
NAttmal afJizltlon for PreSident to aign t h e most1y Mexican • Americans-Drowl•fJi Pob1t19t: C.....
Women ( ~ its .500. minimilm wage· bill recently more than la1f of lhem 0111fc1· PIMrtw >t r· i. dla'"•rs botl ·'""hide othtr -• women has been lhe target f ~ •• , •• ,·. --• ,... . •H"'· · · approv~.by Congress. , o ~ , wom.-.•a lli*aUoo· groups. a strike for more . than two
' Arlie SOOttt · tbe · natlonal "WE HAVE indicafjons that years in a dispute over wages Wriuor,boufor~h1tr1
coonlinator. for the.pi-asrain, he might veto lhe bill because and unlnn representatioo. 17141 4Mi1S20
said oc11viUeo In the 21 'states ii b inflationary," Ms. Scott NOW's national conference 638 .....,_ C.1p11t~
wtuch haft not ratified the last February approved a IA••M leacll 92651
Equal Ri&ftb Amendment will said. resolution calling for a boycott 1..-;:;;-.;-.-.--. ..
focus oo -attenUon to Ms. Scott said NOW expects of Farah products .
• •
I CA . •
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·. $' ~12c
Ril AIC wi'll.
't" J ' . '
• ,,_.. MODllUtlST
} • ~~ J' •• ·) ~
THE ·;GLASS TOP!
··~·aoYAl.TOH ' I' • • • • •
u na a-tM sa&.10111C
REMOTE SfiECIAL
,19 I I °'""''"'
BLACK &
WHl,TE
PORTABLE
SPECIAL
25•~L:_i';
. Splid Sta'8
·AccuColor
• e A ... F,_ 1 .. 1.,
• A•to Th1t a. c•r
9 lktdl Mcmhr Pict.re T•M
e lllNnt Pk
"
25'iL:; • 1 .
100% Sifld State
·:. Ae,cucotor • • . . '
eA• ...... T ...
• .... C•t.r & nn
• It.ct M..m PkhlN TllM ......... ,..
'WHY BUY AT ABC? • rh-'1il•ia Cllntn If ,.i• 11 90 Mys °' Low
DoWil '•4 H , "-"""' to hy lo.o.c. l • 1 Y-Frtt r-·re 1 'r.., i'too Stntco • J Y-Plc111r• T• W~ ...... Dellwory ...i Sot Up e ... kA--1...i/ -~c ..... Wo Some• wtiat WO Soll
•. ~·1 ~.-"'°'!UC! lnltlo ...i Owl e Noc .... lfttlllOI ......... l,, .
OUR WARRANTY IS NOT PRO·RATEDI
•
Ultra lllM C•blHt 1S l/z"
Aiito FIHT••I ..
Awto Tlllt CoRtrol
Attt9 Color Collh'ol
25··-· XL-100
Solid State
AccuColor
1111 l'ITC~IUllO--OR tM
J599
,1111 AIC Wll'fltty
25'~L:;; •
100% Solid State
AccuColor
•• .., lilJoO ,;...
• Am c.l•r I n.t
e ISKlt M.etrtx Pk,.,. T•
•ii.. Pk ' '
••
$3891
.1119 ARGOSY-I'• 47J
e Attto FlM T1111I ..
e Am Thtt & Color e llodl Matrf1 Plchlq T•be • '""••t"'Plchlr•
a..•tlflll Wood C111ttHt
"" ANTqlNlnt:-011 QI
B,CA -ZENITH -SYLVANIA
ttil ATlA"'A ST. 111 Mttiiltlkll
' HUNTINeTON UACH
HOURS1
MON.· F-1. 10. 1
SATURDAY 10 . 5;JO
CLOSED SUNDAY
OPIN WDNao+Y 'TIL t
' 962·5559
•
ttt46 llOOIHUUT Sf1
HUNT•NaTON llACH
HOUR.St ~
DAILY 10·7
SATURDAY 10 • 5:10
SUNDAY 12 .1
·969;.3329
·,
Thursday, August 23, 1973 DAILY PILOT JJ
"
o~ @Moo e1e1ooo[Q)rn 5)rn~ @Mv ~G{]@!P 5151
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PRICES EFFECTIVE
4 DAYS ONLY!
.-
7.99
Mini wheel
Give the 2 to 4 yeB( old this great
3-wheeler of blow·molded plastic.
54.99
Reg. 69.99
Boy's or girl's
10 speed bike
A rea l racing beauty. Bar-mounted shift
levers, side-pull caliper brakes, lots of
chrome. "Rat-trap" pedals, racing
style saddle. In carton price
Use your JC Penney card
-
4 .9
~eg.56.99
Boy's or girl's ,
~speed bike
cciol chrome fenders, standard handlebars
.w,llh 3-speed gearshitt. In carton pri<O
,,
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:13.49
Cycle carrier
Take the bikes along
on the back of the car.
Carries two. .,
OIANOf ••• City Or1Ye ti GttOtn GrM 8MJ,
•••• Dilly 11 to' f'.M.
SANTA ANA. • .JJOO ~ Br!Vol
•.. No.ti Souftl COM! Piila. .. CIJiln Diiiy II~ P.M.
••. ~ltll1'.M. •• ~M•ff'.M.
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J2 OAJLV PILOT ' Thursday, August 23, 1973
by B il Keane
aii":li"'t:r..
"T he 'lectrici ty Is off because al the storm and we tel
to eat all the ice creom in the frHterr'
For the Record
'·' JP PE[F'Ziilt'WW IM~~'&Q ..
Dissol1Qiot1 ,•.
Of Marrlqge
,lltd """"' ,. Sorl1, WyU1th1 G. and Etl11 .G.
Eppa11. J11nn11l1 M11 1nd pfinlel JlmfS '
Blrttl'(. W!IU1m Roberf Ind l"llYllll
Stt01U
Moro. Rodrllo H. Ind MtiMI ~-· Marlnelll, Edward Johl't 1nd 8-.dtttt c.
WtObtr, .k1lh1"9'1 ., JC!'l'CI MM! Eutt!ll G_.ge l"•,,· ·
Plttm1n.; Mt(ha:.i· llWltO!pl! 11!d Sheron
L" ; ~; .. ··~ f 81rK~·'"*·' J:r1n~H 1J'ld John
Pattlclt\', .
Bleck, 0.111.lit H,~llld Terri M.
Zellmtrj'''Rodlier Vf, ind JMn -l."
Tur,...,.., •onn11 'Lou 1nd It•• L. Cot!Of'I, ;Cynthia o: 1rM C1rl D.
Thlblulft'91_,,.. <•11h'JW..J~lrw
s11pn..,1, LIWflnC' O. and Agnes
Marlte-t, L1~1 J"• and Lmwr1nc1
Re"°'*• . I.
• Slllff, .-:.:;,. i1N1 "'wn Wprlfv.;'W,U'-.rd \'thtl.1nd Terri sw
Ttuerd.<~~I} VIVlen end R1nd11I G-v9 .,,.~,
WlJson, Lolt Mlir!'" .!ind Mlchffl Rtid RU1$ler, Anne M. Ind Oavld M.
Robertson. Arthllt' D. and Oorth;i J .
Am1dor. Sl'llUI o. and J-Louil C11tro
George, SMlll 0 . Ind S"9i'llfl W.
AberMtlly, C1ti.1nt E. end Clll.ldl £, Olck1y, Robtrt P. llld Ol-
M1pj11.. Thell'l'll Mlfllt lflCI Ln ltoY
Mancini, Fr1rw:I• W. 1nd a.tty L.
Atlen. Syllv1 L. Ind WIUl1lfl B. J.,,_,, Lln<ll Ind J1m11 EdW1rd
Mollet1, BtOIMlm M. Ind H1rrv D.
Cfl•ldes. Jllflnlrle Marie ind Ltor11rd
"""' Wecker, JI"'" Clement: end J1ntl
LDUh •
Hod&Pll, Linde LH Uld Giimore L.
UncepMr, S1n.dr1 C. Ind JOl'ln N. H1,kl'll, Rulfl Mlrv Ind ltlV"'°"d ......
de Bove:i, JllM J. •rid Julie It.
R11m11Uen, Chri1tlna S. 1nd ltnmo E. Kellv, J1nl11 Joy and Bl"uct James
Miller, Sand W. and kllh1eoen c.
Flanders. Ke<i11e111 A}tl1wor1h Jr. ind
C1th«lne ThlrllM Cotttt, Kirby LW1'11'd ChttYt ,A.
Lie, Edllll Mlrlt»and Kl Hwl"
AndlrMWI, ltoblrt C. $1'. Ind lo!wlle
'"" Burdtn, Mlrthl L. I nd ltObtrt D. Wllttr, LYM.'llt •nd ~ :1.
All1iieh, ~.[J .. n arg;:~~-11 Trotter, ltutfi'l.. 1nd · ·
V09el, F,._,. A. Ind ~ J,
Humpt!By, M:rr1 1nd,"o&wf A.
SChelltnD11'911', e111v Ell!"" Ind Rel .. kiri ~
C•rcl-.. R1nd1ll Rey' ai:ld Lome Ellllbelfl •
Lvman, PhfltJp J . and t.oudb s.
McConl, Edythe M. 11\d"R1~ L.
Be<iton, Lou!M Ann enG Wllltim Arthur (DUii!, ROM! M. Ind llobtrf M. Mlr$h1U J 1t111t111'1d"Hertltrt 1. AQton, Wiii/em VIUt and · Mw11 Tl'llr'"11
leveMOf'I, Si!: elld Jlldlth i'VIVll Johnson, 0 v L lfld Rv111i M l~1t, T 1 Gfot9I" fltld. Yona "'" kra111, Dalt Erwin J Ch1rlot1t Ell1abetl! . Garrell( Thllm1 JH11 Ind Stenlav
Lowe I " Trevprr1n, Mlr!Nrel A. •nd lt!~hlrd c . P1rk1r. Sandri J. and Robett w Jr E1rh1r1, enublth Rlllfl end ·9..,;°" Wavne
BaMl1t1. SUHn Ind WILlll!)'I fr1nclt OveYldo. L1JPott 11!d A1191I '
l1r119tt, Clllvln M. encl Slnctr1 J.
Knott. Chrftll!ll M111t llld Wlllllrll ,_ .
L1f1r, T1rry R!t'"' ~-.. WllSClf'l, J1 . . Ind ··J.
JOf'le" Ma:rJ:1 • 1nt1 11..-i Marrion Gabel, O<Wln. J~n Inf Ill# 0.VlCI Bran1eom1, Joen L. al'ld UOfl ,.-Ha11, Ml<l•n. 6Ulll'IM ~ Tenv" Alp Alberty, LJ ... Myt11M Ind 01,.,. L"
Hlt!Of'I, Mk:heel c.119 al!d Obd1 LH P11rlck, Ttmerl Ann Ind John L1wrl!f'l('I Hau, Rlch1ril A. Ind J1119t L. Levine. Sandri Lovin lhd Menwl Jr. HO!IPfr, O!age and Brv« w.
•FoorCI, F'rener.r M. and WIHl1m M., Ill ~udrv, Eui:ie-ne and Ellubtth A. J~enw~. M1rv Ellen •nd ltonald Sleptie" lorlftll, Del~ Ann Ind ltGlff EdWln Biker. 1tane1111 and Canil
Van1ilk, Hllblrl Frlflk Ind P1trlcll Gell Mer~lelr:_. Loli Ell""1il Jetln JOMph BroW!'I, l,IOllllr' "•v 1 Dollflll R11bv Ussery , EdM Giii I •&dw1rd E1rl Po-.,11t,c1rol C11111r1ne and Jgn1men Pevl
f'lltf A¥tCNI l,
!Slll'lltf, Pft\1111• "'l· 1nd M~ln W. ' itude\11, Vlrgln!l1 °Y Ind tn ft· ~"'-earlent , and ti.Ir tt Allred • "i,1 GMwvltv. E. Ind Ra,v RllDh w, t1r•, Edna Etrlt end ·eJNrsLtoillMll J~! OVICI Anthony, Jr, tnd Lui $""9d~homel M. Ind MarUyn Y. 519.uel, P•IM"-J. and P1tr1ck J.
$W-V1 Cele.I .1nd Mlcllael R, llll'rldM, D•ldre Ann ;1nd Htrl/lrl
M11rrtY Brull, Grt!IOJV Pav! 1rod t11r1)11r1 Ann "~1 Mtrv Chrllflnt Ind Rot>trt W1 lltm Wt,rd. Pit DI-I tl'IG H.ster Letr $1\Pr.f, $1111n Carrol tnd J1nws CM rt" KlnMV1 v1ron1~ 111d Doneld E11111n1 Mltc;hel,_flU!h , Ind lobb'll 0, French. f'!oYrN . lllld FloV<I LM Hudlow J~ E. •!Id Idella Tl'lnfdH ~t!s, Oionlco F. tlld C..-idell!att
Hoew!:i.ther, Al'IMlll Ind Jod~ Htlihan. Ta.hlkl Ind Jolln J Hlrdv, Judllh Anti 111(1 JlffV °""' Albert, Chtrfll Ind Gef•ld DonllO S<:ott, M1r1Jl.I A. •nd Rlch1rd W. Giibert, Ral1nd John Ind Velm1 JHft
M ..... , l<itll1 R-Ind Wll111m
lll1vmorid"' -McF1r11nd, C1rol "Nin Ind l<tnntth ·-. Wllflln; Jlmts D. Ind Eble Ektnll1m ... G1"1nl Ellen 1nd Gtr.W Hlfl"feflt.' homl• L end Marv E. Ret~. Marv R. Ind Llrrv DlllM oi.11, C•rl H. and Clrelvn RIOJ'f.', S1ndr1 M1r11 end Gary !I'"
Se1tes. Mich.Ml Rk:Mrd end Marcie MM ........ ...., 14
V1lll, Wlllll ft'I W1r~ lfld Jean M1rl1 Horton. Dl1M It. Ind Wllllam H. Miiier, DNn Al•n ~ Oolotn Fr1nc;11 c~. JudY AM ll'ld ltlcNrd St1nley
J•. tMl!drh1, C:lrt LM arid Ll\ITI LH k lM , It""' d 1"~111 atwl Sh.I"'" LDUkt ltJh, JHn EIJubtth 1"4 Wllll1m ,_,
Dtorr. Daf!M Mn Ind Garv WJIJOI\
Hotllt, Gltn A. Ind L"ll'I A. 8r'Oftwn, Jean L. and W1 ll1m Cla~nce
l.,....., Pauletfl P. Ind Cart E. RutlldOf, J1ntl Sue and Ger-aid D1v!d
F1rreoll, Eva JOM>Phlne 1...:1 Danny ·-~r!~o:11,~11'~';;11:°":1~1~nd ,5,!dir11f,v111
Char11s
INT!"llLOCUTOlltY Dl!'CllEl!'S
enterld """' • Bonkowski, Tt\acld11JI John I h d
Ellll~th Chrl1Till('
ltllrf, Vh1lan1 o. 1nd Ham D. Jr.
Whlt.. Edward A. Ind Phvl1l1 J,
H9mnton. John 8. Ind Betty A.
NellOl'I, Mery ElMnor lfld JettrtV Johri
$nyd.r, Mer911ret Alie• and Joel Ktn· -~It. 1t...i1111t A. and ltonttcll M. ~· l!'rnt'Mlw Lucine 11'1d o.r..., "'"' March, Owllht Mack 11'1d Lorttta
Judith C:J~ PavllM L Ind AndlT# H.
8U!riglmlr, W.ndll L~ Ind J.D.
BrtlM, Kev afld J UllllS J.
Krft1, Edw1nf St1911tn end 8ortnle
Lucllte
H1wll:l111, Suain't F. ll'ld Mldl1el L.
C1,..,1gher, Edllh M. end H!lfl(V
Nlc1K1111 R... GM'11dlM F•1nc" lr'!d Elmtr ""'M HOC*.ll. P1trlcl1 Ann lr'!d Cti.st.r O.'tkl
Kenl, Richard L" Incl M/<ry Elltn c__., Britv J"n 1l'MI 1!"1r1 Frenc"
o.o.bel, J1l1h Incl LI MO'fl'\8 D. Jr.
Gtllrlch, P1trrc11 8. 1nd Jtsse M. King, Ber~re J. Ind J-11 J.
Welsh, P1trlcl1 Ann end ThomlJ E1rl 1<•11er, Ruth and C1r1us
Knepp, Judith A. end H•rold L.
W1rr«1. ~I R. 1.-:I Vernon R.
Sl!Jbbs, Erne Ml• and Richard Ruthlrfortl, 0.bclrlh Lyn end wnn1m
Kenneth Sorr1H, Jr. Ch1rlls ... encl Oalorn J .
McM1hon, Glen111 JMn end J1m11
h trlck
lrtlty, ~IHI Incl John
Btf'ry, &NllSI M. and K1lhtrlne S.
Conkey, Donlld M. Jr. Incl K1thl11n M.
Busl!, J1m11 E. 1nd Eddve Lou s-... ..... .,, unc11 and Chester
NIWbl/I, Wllllam C•nil Ind s.uv. AM
Perco. Ciro! Sur.annt and Mlcll11l
Frencls
L_, L1ny Ind Arlltl
Killy. Cllntroon R. Ind ltH
0.Ck, Syllvl Olene Incl 0.tioifs L'frnond
R1111, H.,.,.,..n Sylvllltr Incl G1ll ·-Skonbel'"r. 81rt11r1 S. Ind EUDtnl P.
C•llbl•. Rey Ot•n Ind Miry Eslff l<W1!1!1, ltlchlrd E. Ind 511111 L.
Ar1f.. Miry Anlt1 1nd Wllll1m l"ffrY
Ollffttd, N1ncy Ch111dfer 1nd J«k ,.........,
,llld1 A\llllltf lt Gvvll!e, Christine el'ld W1llac1 Jr.
Ghan, L1rry D. Ind J 1nic1 M. ·Marchlnd. Miry J. Ind Alan R. 1'111« AUi"' 11 B"'ll, Jlnf'!fl Give end Ole
Getl, Yvonn• aM Gerrv T. Mltcllell, Carol Ann and L1wrene.
Whtth1r, Wftll1m P,..I• 1nd OleM JOS<eilh Ell?ebeth ~ Mtndo11, Sharyn 9. Ind Bernardo M.
Hotielmeler,· Toni Rlr Ind Chrlt S-!t. Adell Ind Cyou1 E.
01v1on · aeeos..,, Klthleeri A. ind G1rv w.
Pleltter, Evoene L. and C.rrol J1'i!t ._ Amadi, M1rl1nl'll 1nd Elvin Leo S~1r1ln11, Marian L. and DoNtd EV11en1 •CfiJt, Cler• Mtl end John 01vld
Havllno. EllHn Ellt11>1-til 11!d Ra!pl'I 8olildefl. 81verrv Ann and Wll1tlim Oevi, Cather~ and C1tl J . erven , ' ~
Btchlold, Mire J, Ind K!!thlten A. LOOPI. Chlrlollf Cvntl)ll and J.,,.... B~ll . Benv.A, and J~ E1rl
Honom!(~t. Oon11ld 0. and Miry I". R11mlreL DaVfd M. Ind Ooll!flS
Sarver. M.tlrv Francis anti Jam~ Alv!n Ell)inoi1
Brethe-n, Lynn V. Ind Fffdt<lck Robert Grahem, MlrY Addi end Altl!lndlr flll~er1, Thom1' Alltl'lony and Silly Btwrly, Shirley H, end Hflwy
0!1n1 Cltvelllt'ld ::::~pf,R~!le f'.:..&!lf SDtM.tr F. Gaw, JOM Ind Trinidad Ga1tlo J,11• vn ... ,..rry. ·~ Doug11s John, Wlk911ng. Ktllr •f't!I ASen Atfred
coodjll1_~Y Eil'1 Ind Sh11r1111 AIUI _PO'IYtll, cvnthl• f, Ind Thome• p , Mck n°"'J._81f'Mr•, •rid Robert E. Gtrl...0, Rhorldl A. Ind Rlctlard A. A~m! ~I t GladV$ 1nd Chari" RaWllJ, Vk:ICll" C. Ind PlltJdl R.
''"' Holll'ltlofrO. f'•mtl• A. •lld Grageil'Y L.
. '
I See by Today 's
Waat Ads
e MOBILE JlOl\.fE LOOK-
ERS: here's one that hu
J\e\Y carpets and curtainl
and has 2 bedrooms.
e AN ERRAND CAR; tbat't
what this '70 Satellite m..
tlon wagon was that's
now tor sale. Jt's In ex·
ce'llent condition w l t h
many extru. )1ust SEi1.
make an offer.
15°0
on back-to-school
shoes for kids.
4.24
Reg.4.99
Qlrl1' multicolor oxford.
Rubber sole, soft vinyl upper.
In black/red/grey. 8¥2 to 3, 4C.
s5
Reg.5.88
Women'1 u ddle1 with vinyl
upper, red crepe sole. Blue/
creme or black/white. 5 to 98.
< ~
. '
5.94
Reg.6.99
Boys Saddles with vinyl upper,
crepe sole. Chino/tan or
creme/blue. Youth 8ll: to 30.
Boyt' 3\12 to 60. Reg. 7.99 1.7'
5.94
Reg.6.99
Boys' Tu-tone oxfords
Vinyl uppers. long Wearing
sole and heel. Two!tone
brown in youth 8Vi to
30.Boys' 3V.to6D.
Ae<J. 7.99 6.79
.4.24
Reg.4.99
Girls' Hddle• with red rubber
.sole, easy care vinyl upper.
While/black or beige/navy.
II ~ to4C.
9.34
Reg.10.99
Men'1 Nddle1 of brushed or
smooth vinyl, crepe rubber
sole. Three color combina ..
lions. 6'12 to 11, 120,.
EE
Baggies and westerns ·
. '5 ~08
6.78
Reg. 7.98
Cuffed cotton denim
baggies. Blue denim,
chambray, while, 28·38.
3.98
Knit pull-on. Shaded zig·
zag in polyester/cotton.
S,M,l,XL
Reg.5.98 '
Corduroy )11n1. Great
jean at regular price, .
fantastic on ·sale. Sol kt
color cotton. 28-38.
6.78
Reg . 7.98
Bru1h1d cotton ba99lti.
Navy, wine or grey,
28 to 38.
3.98
Knit crew neck. Diamond
pattern In polyester/
cotton. S,M,l ,XL
4 days only to the
back -to-school
outML •• Clfy Orlw •I Gtrden Grow 81w:t. , , ..0,.....,. It .. t P.M. •••• ..,. 11 te 7 P.M. SANTA AHA. ,3PQO $outh lrl1to1 ••• No.,ol South Cot1t Pim
0,. 0.Uy 10 .. t P.M., .h1Mhiy1 10 to 7 P.M.
•
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' ' T here's a P lace •
' .. . . . .. . •,
First there was nudity on the Riviera. Then top-
less sunbathing at Paris public i>o<>ls, ,Now, toW
nudity comes to Paris as 3·year old Ozy 'I:r.uthanlt
frolics aboard !Us dad 's bouseboaton·theSeine River.
h1 the Service
Marine Lanc2 Corporal
Sergio 0 . 1Jam3', son of !i1r,
and Mi's. Casmere A .
Orszewski of 8902 Coral Circle,
Huntington Beach, was award·
ed a Meritorious Mast while
serving at tne Marine ~rps
Base on Subic B a y ,
Philllpines.
Midshi~an Mlch .. el P .
McCkllkej, son of Mr. and
Mrs. James 'C". McC"osk .. y of
of Huntington Beach, h a s
comnteted his s ummer
trahilng c;rui.se aboard the USS
Trui:tun.
r -·
Midshipman Mlchatl l\'.
Moru, son of Mr. and ~1rs.
&meraon D. ft1oran, of 6871
Spi~" Drive, Huntington ~. Jiiis ( com~ his sum.mu tralnlng c r u i a e
,'abollil tljt USS TiyWn· -,
Navy Seaman Apprentice
Daniel R. Doane, son or Mr.
and Mrs. Deric D. Doane of
21081 Shackleford Circle, Hun-
tington Beach. completed the
b a s i c operations specialist
school at the Great Lakes, Iii.
Marine Major R o b e r t
Leiker, husband of the former
Miss Linda E. Qmningham of
917 Georgia Ave .. HuntinglOJ!
Beach, graduated from tlie
Naval War Co1Jege · in
Newport, R.l.
Navy Seaman Appentiee
Barbara L. !Bario..,, daughter
of Mr. and Mrs. Joe'.L :Barlow
of 18263 Cltllbiil ,Cqurl, Foun-
tain Valley,; baa reported to
training ~tjad£0n 'l'Weply-iix
at the Chasf: Field Naval Air
Station at· Bteyllle., 'teias.
Coast <l'w,'d Seam~ Gerald
M. stewan. son or Mr. and
Mrs. William R. Stewart of
10308 Nlib!lnP!e, ~ountaln
Valley, graduat~ from basic
suboisteoce lpei:lallit school at
the Qloll Guan! training
center.
Pacific Ave., Laguna Beach,
narticipated in amr>hibious
landing exercis es. on'
Timakion, Greece w h 11 e
assigned to the battalion I.and·
ing team, second battalion.
sixth Marine Division.
Airman Glen L. Eagtilb
son of'Mr. Marjorie C. English
of 16331 Eagle !.ane, Htm-
tin~on Beach, has b e e n
assigned to Lowry AFB, Colo ..
afte::-CO"T''lleti ng Air Fqrce
basic training.
During his six weeks at the
Air Training C om ma nd 's
Lackland AFB. Tex., h e
studied the Air Force mission,
organization and customs and
received special instruction In
human telations.
The airman bas been assign-
ed to the Tedmical Training ·
Center at !Awry for spec\alll-
«L.tr•lning in the armameat
systems field .
Marine SiIC -3ack D .
DaaweU, soo-in·law of Mr. and
Mrs. J .0. Depue of Huntington
Beach has hem n a m e d
"Outstandidg Senior lnltruc-
tor of the ·Year" for Ur72 at
Lowry AFB. Re is now assis-
tant distriCt commissioner,
Frontier OiJtrict, BSA. '
l\llcbaet J. Duvall, son of
Mr. and l\.1rs. Jacque L.
Duvall of 2103 Via Mcnteclto,
San Clemente, receives his
com.,..Jssion as an ensign in
the Naval Reserve upon com~
pletion of Aviation Officer
5¢1001 from Captain R. E.
low commanidng officer of
tbe Naval Aviation SChool
Command here.
WAC Private Sandra K.
Porter, dauehter of Frank N.
Porter, 13572 Sisklyoo st.,
Westminster, completed an
eight-week ~1edica1 Corpsman
Coorse at the U.S. Army
Medical Training Cente<, • F,1.
Sam Houstoh, Tex.
cadet Rey K. EaNd, son of
Mr. and Mri .' Luverne 'Enltad,
Midshipman M. a r k R. 6351 Shields Drive, Huntlngttln
S.aaden, soo of Mr. and Mrs. Beach,. is ITeC<hi!ng practical
Walter II, Saunders o1 , 1151 work in military Ieadenhlp at
Boa Vista Circle, Colt& Mesa, the Anny Reserve Officer>'
has compleled ROTC Avla· Tralnilfg Qin>s advanced 811111-
tion indoctrination course at -Ft RI! r-mer cami> at-. ev, n.11:11.
the Naval Air Slallon at cadet Enstad, a student at
Corpus <llrisll, Texas. !ho New Mexico Mllllaf! ~ L lnstitute. Roswell, ls one j)f
Navy Seaman t'borles K. some 7.-students aUelJC(l~g
Bird, husband of the former Army ROTC trainin·g at five
Miss Catherine Jones of 1465 · instllllatl0111 In the· u :s.
L e gal Pai~s
Doct.or Cites Pot Myth
EAS'l'·LANS!NG, Mich. (UPI) -Although there is still
much research to be dooe on Its physical effects, Nobel
prlze.winninc pbarmacoioclst Julius Axelrod feell marijuana
use presents more ol a "legal problem" then a medical
one. "I tlllnk taking tarre amounts or marijuana at frequent
lntervall Is bad -just like heavy cigarette smoking or
laking alcohol," Axelrod, chie! laboratory pharmlcologlst
ol the National Institutes ol Mental Health, said In an
lnterview.
But be said he believes moot· marijuana .-. are
casual or social smokers and don-. generally suffer long·
term effects.
Axelrod, attendlni a meeting ol the American Sj)clety
!or PharmacolotlY and Experimental Therapeutics, em-
phasized he was not condoning marijuana use. But he
said ba lelt people were unduly concerned with the prob-
lem and that legal penalties are generally "harsh."
"Yoo've gol to remember the backgrooncl ol marl·
J
ana," be &aid. '11l'bere'1 all kiDm of mytbolocy cm marl·
uana,"
Thursda.r, Augwt 23, 1973 UAJLY PILOT I.JS
,.. J
Reg. and slim. Reg . 5.98
Husky. Reg. 6.49 2/$11
Boys' easy.care polyester/cotton
Jeans. Cuffed baggies in fancy patterns.
2/8.50sollds
Reg. and slim. Reg. 4.98
Huskyi Reg. 5:49 ' 2/$9
'
2/$7 .
Reg. and slim. Reg. 3.98
Husky. Reg. 4.49 2/$8
Western style with flare bottom, lots
of pockets.1 Solid color polyester I cotton.
A.2.49
Boys' polyester/cotton knit shirts.
Machine wash , no iron. Short
sleeve surf style. Solids in 8 to 18.
a.2.98
Permanent-press gingham check.
Polyester/cotton, short sleeve •.
Sizes 8 to 18.
c.2.98
100% cotton flannel, machine
wash. Long sleeve style in as-
sorted plaids. Sizes 8 to 18.
D.2.50
Fashion belt of grain leather.
Assorted colors in$, M, L.
' '
'
peeding ~llowed
4 days only to the bac.k·-to-s~h ool ex pressway.
Something nice for your sugar and spice. And
ii she spills, forget it. These all go from washer
to dryer, without ironi ng. Woven polye~!ers,
polyester blends in a super selection of colors
and styles. Sizes 3 to 6X and 7 to 14.
3.39to9
Reg . 3.99 to 10.99
OIANQI, , .City Dr\vt •I G•rdtn Grove BIYil
Opett hlfy 10 Mt P.M. , , .h~)'I 10 te 1 ,,M.
I
IAHTA ANA. , .3900 South Brlslof .•• No. of South C.... '-
0,... hUy 10 t9 t P.M. .......... 11,. 7 PA -----a·--'
•
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I
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I
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OAll. Y PILOT
the . reasury
The Store for
Sound Savings!
. 4
ON CHRYSALIS ON RCA
STEREO ALBUMS & TAPES STEREO ALBUMS I TAPES
Jethro Tull -A Pa5110n Play wry Alff -Lold, Mr. FOl"d
ON COLUMBIA ON WARNER BROS.
STEREO ALBUMS I TAPES STEREO ALBUMS I TAPES
ChC.90 VI Van lklmson-Hard Nose the H:ghway
ON A I M ON COlUMBIA
STEREO ALBUMS & TAPES STEREO ALBUMS & TAPES
Cifl Steveris -foreogner ·Janis Jop!Wi -Gttifffl Hits
8 TRACK TAPE SPECIAL
..... M __ e_m __ o_r_e_x_\i :;;,r~~~.!~.,.
SAVE NOW
ON MEMOREX 8 TRACK
BLANK RECORDING
TAPE CARTRIDGES
T!}IO 8-TRACK CARTRIDGES
9G MINUTES EA. CARTRIDGE
SPECIALLY PRICED
SALE
PRICE $3.99
JUST
ARRIVED
ALL TOP NAME
ARTISTS AND GROUP ' .
PRODUCED ON
OVERSEAS LABELS
SALE
PRICED ...
Choose from a wide selection
induding: ProaM Harem , Joe
Cocker, Jeff Beck, Super Hits
Vol 11, Eric Burdon & War
ADD A NEW DIMENSION TO
YOUR RECORD COLLECTION
ON EPIC
STEAEO ALBUMS I TAPES
O\&'" Ri::tl -Bllhn:l OoHd ~
ON CAPITOL
STEREO ALBUMS & TAPES
Merlit ~ -1 lov'I Di.it 81\Jff
RECORD CASE
Special ...
45-RPM Amfile
Record Case
Holds fifty 45-RPM Reco rds with
forty-five dividers .
Great protection against dust,
moisture and scratches .
.99 Each
BUDGET ALBUMS
ALL NEW
FROM PICKWICK
'-"' Pickwick's entire li ne of S 1.98 \
albums is now on safe at Treasury~
Choose from a wide selection of
music now specially priced.
ON MOTOWN ON COLUMBIA
STEREO ALBUMS & TAPES STEREO ALBUMS I TAPES
0 111N. Aoss -Touc:ti Memlhe Mom1119 Al'4y WA.:uns' GtNllSI Hts V~. 2
ON CAPITOL ON RCA
STEREO ALBUMS & TAPES STEREO ALBUMS I TAPES
Heli n Rl;!Uo)' -Long Hald Clmb Oamy Oa<til -Caribbean Cvise
ON DOT ON MCA ON UNITED ARTISTS
STEREO Al.BUMS & TAPES
Soll\Clr;ack -Lrv11nd let O•
A.'llumt M.tt -T1Pt1 SS.ti
STEREO ALBUMl I TAPES
RoyOtlll;-~
STEREO ALBUMS & TAPES
JNme P!\.111!! -S;i.un Shetls
•
GUITAR KIT
19aa
Full Size
Guitar Kit
• Steel strings
• Light top with dark sides
& back
• Black plastic pick guard
. J· • Instruction book & record, Neck
(;.~':._-strap & Vinyl carrying case
~-------'
8-Track Tape Special
169 Chooseyour favori teartists
in stereo-major labets-
ea. Offer limited -Hurry!
Save (IOW on past Save ...
8-Track Hits. ...-----'--------...,
$
Browse through a complete
selection of Music Books,
Posters, wide variety of
45 RPM Oldies, and the
rest of our Complete
Accessory Line.
OFF
All Diamond
Needles in
our Stock.
Prices effective thru August 30th, 1973
••
Shop The Complete Record Dep~rtment And Save
IUINA PAIK. , .Beech •I Or1ngethorpt
••.Ope" O.lly t 1ict to t 130 SulMhlyt 10 te 7 P.M.
OIANOI ••• City Drive at Gareltfl Ctrove Bkl
• • .OpH Dolly 10 .. t P:M .•. .Sund..,, 10 .. 7 P.M.
UM1'A AHA. • ,3900 $0uth Bristo!. , .No. ol Sourtl Ca.sf Pl11•
0,." Dttlly 10 .. t P.M .... av.,.. II N 7 P.M.
,
:~JCPerriey
the reas ury
Hundreds
of exciting
ways to
shop 'n
save
HOUSEWARES
LIGHT BULBS
Long lasting, more reliable. Choice of 4o, 60, 75,
and 100 watt.
ORIG. 6 FOR $1.00
Now 12 For $1 OO
• •
DRESS BAGS·
SUIT BAGS·
B~ANKET BAGS •
SWEATER BAGS·
ORIG. 2 For 1.00
Now 4 For $1°0
I 5 PR. SLACK RACK
I 6 ; HOOK ;TOWEL .
RACK
ORIG. $1.00
Now 2 For $1 OO
RAYON MOP
Includes rectangular, petite and spiral shapes, all
exquisite creations in assorted co/ors.
Rayon mop washes easily, dries quickly. Dirt
clings with magnetic static action.
ORIG. $1.00
Now 2 For$1 OO
PLASTICS
· I 12 QT. WASTE BASKET I
UTILITY TUB I POLY
PITCHER I ROUND BASIN
ORIG. 2 FOR $1.00
Now 4 For $1 OO
GADGETS
e MAGNETS e CORN
HOLDERS e COASTERS
e MELMAINE UTENSILS e MEASURING CUPS
PIE PAN e ROUND CAKE PAN
ORIG. 2 FOR $1.00
NOW 4 For $1 oo
IORANGE
.
CANDLES ,
Includes rectangular, petite and spiral shapes, all
exquisite creations in assorted colors.
ORIG. 3/$1.00 Now 6/$1 00 .
ORIG. 2/$1.00 Now 4/$1 00
ORIG. 1.00 Now 2/ $1 00
' STATIONERY
STAPLER
WITH STAPLES
ApprOximately 3V2" Long sturdy stapler ... 3,000
stapfes included.
ORIG. $1.00
Now 2 For$1 OO
JUMBO FLORAL . PHOTO CUBE .
TOTE . HOLDER
For shopping, beach and utility. Heavy duty vinyl
wipes clean with damp cloth.
ORIG $1.00
Now 2 For $1 OO
5 Sided. Each side 3 3A" x 3 34". Sturdy plastic
stand and ·revolving base.
ORIG. 2 FOR $1.00
Now 4_ For $1 OO
.Jrsday, All9Ust 2.), .
'
Charge it
on your
JCPenney
charge
card
HARDWARE
. .• or J§
CARPET TAPE
• 1-'h" x 25'. Use it for hanging pictures and so
many other needs.
ELECTRICAL TAPE
3,4" x 60' Electrical tape with extra 60' roll as
bonus. ORIG. $1.00 .
.
Now 2 For $1 oo
HEAVY DUTY
TARPS
9x12" Plastic: .. weather and waterproof ... Wipes
clean with damp cloth.
" •
ORIG. 2 FOR '$1.00
NOW 4 For $1
WROUGHT IRON
NOVELTIES
REVOLVING 20 GALLON
Candlestick holders and ash trays brushed with
, an ant ique gold color finish.
ORIG. $1.00
. '
Now 2 For $1 oo
ASSORTED
BRASS BELLS
Elegant bells from India. Assorted shapes and
sizes.
ORIG. $1.00
Now 2 For $ l oo
APOTHECARY JARS
ldeaHor bubble bath and other toilet prepara-
tions. Amber, Blu~ or green.
ORIG. 2/1.00 Now 4/$1 00
ORIG. 2/1.50 Now 4r1s0
ORIG. 1.00 Now 2r1 00
FINE· HARDWOOD
JEWELRY BOX
4 Bottom drawers and large top storage area tor
all yoor valuables. Buy several at this low price.
ORIG. 2/5.00
Now $1 50
. -
PHOTO HOLDERS UTILITY BAGS
'
View 5 "swinger'' or instamatic photos ~f once.
Ideal for home and office.
ORIG. 2 For $3
Now 4 For $3 oo
10 bags per pkg./with ties. Use them tor' refuse,
grass, leaves or more uses.
ORIG. 2 FOR 1.00
Now 4 For $1 oo
ASSORTED VINYL I · MASKING TAPE
WASTE BASKETS
Buy several at this price for a number of uses ..
. Strong sturdy vinyl.
ORIG. 2 FOR $1.00
Now 4 For $1 oo
ASST. DIARl~~s
1 year and 5 year dairies in assorted styln 1nd
colors attractive covers ...
ORIG. $1.00
Now 2 For $1 oo
DELUXE
-PHOTO FRAMES
Wooden or metal frames 31h" x 3Va", 3"x5",
S"x7", 8"x10" and 11 "x1~" sizes .••
ORIG. 1.00
Now 2 for $1 oo
Handy l"x1800'' size. For home, business, school
and more .
~
ORIG. 2 FOR $1.00
Now 4 ~or $1 oo
13 PIECE
DRILL SET
What every handyman or home owner should
have ... 13 piece set at this very attractive price ..•
ORIG. $1.00
Now 2/$1°~
D-CELL
BATIE RIES
Package of 5 steel jacket batteries. Fully
guaranteed against leakage ...
ORIG. 2 FOR $1.00
Now 4 For $1 oo
ISANTA ANA ~ BUENA PARK
Garden Grove Blvd. at Manchester
Open Daily 10 to 9 ,,M. Sundays 10 to 7 ,,M.
3900 South Bristol
Open Dally 10 to 9, Sunclay1 10 to 7
Beach and Orangethorpe
t 30 to 9:30, Sunday 10 to 7 '.M.
I
l
I ..
I
f
lfJ DAILY PILOT
For the
Record
Dlssol11tlons
Of Marriage
~ Death Notlee•
I' •! 81THINS
'"iMOrlon Glf~I-All• Ml rnldlnl ot UM Be.ch. O•t• of dtlllh\ •-11, ]J. Survlv9d bv IOI!, A ftld S. GIT of VIJl'mon11 two cM~hl.n, Mn. '"~ C. Minter, Lto11n1 BtKhJ Mrs. CNI • G. S11yder, L•11Unt Buehl slK 11r• lldr1n; 11~ Qr11l-gr1ndthlldret1. S•'""'CH will be held Frld1r. A1.111u1f 14, 2 PM .'5l\fltt.r L1g11nt B11cll Cheliel. Inter· ment;,. fllrd CoU911r Ctmtlery, Annlnclilt NtW• York. Sheller Ltc111n1 8uch MorO-rv, Olritc:lar1. -J!' HINSLIY
S.r~ Htf1n M1n1l1v. Ave 57, of 1«1n Sprfljldtll St., Muntlngtorl Bu t h. Otlt gt IHaritf .. AUOUll 21 , lf73. S11rvlwd by l'lu,. """~HtnrYi brother, Allen Cr9wtl 1111'!! Ctr Hovllon. SMvlcn . Frlde v. 12:;m PM, k Ft mlly Colonltl f'lffltrl l Horne.
~ ,.oou.01
v~~M. P'odwdil. AliM 111 rHld.-nt °' Hun h l<ll. Deft ol' de•lfl. A1191,1:1I 21, Survlvtd b'f hutbend, Arnold;
brolllW Vll'9!1 V•n AM•, llldJ111apo!11. ,_f ...... 1ce1, S•tul'day, I PM, 5mlth1
ChlOll. Pdv1re lnttr,,.,.,,r. Sm I I h 1
~,...., DlrKIOl'I.
· ." TOWLI! ·;~••"°N. T~1. Ave 70; rt1ldtnt ol 01n• olnt. 0111 of dfftt., A1,111111t tt. im. ·~J~ bv wlf~. 811trl(t: lliree .;,.-_01 s, PhnlP Tow11, P•lo .AITOl Robert ;row , WOlldl•nd : C1rron Tow I•. .' -oio,,.do; 1111e h•lf-1ls•H"1 1-.I nl1e11 ~nd l'le'Phlwl. Prlv•lt ll rvl(fS I nd Ii.-
ii. rm1t1I. Ftmllv wo1111'1 tnMe wl1hln11 to '"•kt fl'llmor111 contrlbu!lon1. ole1se C$'1• ""lbllfe to !ht Hurt Fund. SMiier l.lllUllll
f.;11(1\,Mor1u1ry, Dlrlclorl. r .
· j WIL<:OX
R•tali R. Wiicox, Jr. 2....,, LJt!ltlon Pl1c1, Cost• 1N11. 01~ of d111h, Auqu11 71. 1t1J.Avr"1ved by wlff, All'("t l 1on, R1lph R. Wlkox N--1 811ehr dauqhi.r"&, 1(1t!Witeft Wlkox ind P1trlcl1 A. J1mn,
· befit <:fl/ Sin Ol'llO; flw 1r1nd<hJldr1n. ~rvl(M. Frld•v. August I, J ::JO PM, Paclfte vi.w Ch1pel, with Riv. D1vld A.
Crunf; offkl1tln11. F1mllv IUllCltJI l'hcMI wJs.hllig to m1kt ~morl1I eciiilrlbutlon1. ~""' tofllrlbVtt to tM Chlldrlftl Hom. SC4'1-of N1WPOrt 811ch, or the 8 u!ldln11 -f'urwfl 'of H99 Hoseoll1I. or 111.-Alsltbe'<I ol-o\.ll'dl(an Grovo, 710 N. Euclid, An1helm MICl11 P1elflc \lltw Morlu1ry, Dlrtclors.
" ARBUCKLE & SON
·w:-zs-rr~'CLIFF MORTUARY
U7 E. 17th Sl, Costa Mesa
1111811 • BALTZ-BERGERON
• ~ FUNERAL DOME
• Cdiona del l\tar 1'73-9450
Cotta l\le1a lfl--UU • BELL BROADWAY
MORTUARY
UO Broadway, Costa Meaa
: LI !-3l33
• •
DILDAY BROTHERS
MORTUARIES
17911 Beacb Blvd.
Hfatlllglon Beacb IC-'1771
•• Ut Redondo Ave.
I.Inf Beacb ZIJ-431-1115 • l\lcCORMICK LAGUNA
,;BEACH MORTUARY
f10& Laguna Canyon Rd.
'; ·~9115
PACmc VIEW
MEMORIAL PARK
·Cemetery l\fortuary
• Cbapel
"lSOI Pacific View Drive
Newport Be'acb. Callforala
;. 614-%700
•• • ;: PEEK FAMILY
•:'CQWNIAL FUNERAL ~ HOME
. 7801 Bolsa Ave.
We&tmlnster 893-3$%5 • :S~llTHS' MORTUARY
~~ Hu:~::: ~~ch
~~ 5JM539 •
lhursd11, Augusl 23, 1973 " Co11nty Airport. Political Notes
' Wots Criticize
Fi-xed Base Rule
Single P.ollution District Proposed
By JACK BROBAl::K
Of .. De;lf)< ...........
SANTA ANA -The Orange
County Airport Ordinance was
amended Wednesday with the
apJX"O\lal of flxod base
opera tors and to the disgust of
private pilots.
As approved by the county
Board of . Supervisors, the
regulations "irtually ban
mechanical y,·ork on airport
property by firms without
fixed bases there.
from a fixed base operator.
Barred are:
-Retail sales of goods or
serv'ice.s.
. -Pilot training and flight
training.
-Sale, rental or charter of '
aircraft.
-Air carriers or air taxi ~,
operations. il
-Sale ol av i a t i on Fair PresldeHt petroleum products.
-Sale of parts or In· Placentia p b y s i c i a n
struments. Maurice Nadridge is
By O.C. llUSTJNGS CM ,.. ~ ,,.,.. tl•H
A bill by Asumbly Speaker
Rob<lrt Morelli (D-Van Nuys)
that would consolidate six air
pollution dlstrict~, includiqg
Orange C:Ounty's, into a single
South CQast Air Basin Pollu-
tion Control Di11trict has gone
lo the state senate after pas,.
Ing the Assembly.
ORANGE COUNTY
resemblu 1 h e atmospbore
found 1n a sleazy pool hall."
Briggs' proposal says
notblni about chewing tobacco.
* * * ON A 44 vote, Santa Ana
city lathers have jolned their
counterparts in Anaheim In
su\ll)C\l't of the proposed Ch1no
Hills jelJ>Ort
Councilman Lorin Criset.
who made the motion at I.his
l\.'ttk's Santa Ana City-Council
meeting. said he ravors the
Chino HiUs location because
he believes airports should be
located in uninhabited areas.
meeting or the Orange County
League of·Citles. The league Is
expected to take a po&itlon on
the proposed Chino Hills fa cili-
ty during that meeting,
* * * ORANGE COUNTY
Supervisors d c c l de d Wed·
nesday they wouldn't lake a
position on AB 996, a measurt•
calling for consolidation or
April eieCtlons no w held in
general law cities with statt
primary elections.
County Registrar of Voters
David 1-litchcock said he
believes the bill has little
chance of passing .
l\1AYOR JERRY Patterson Supervisor Ralph Diedrich LARRY TANNAS, represent·
ing the Orange County Pilots
Association, objected
vigorously lo the proposals of
County Admtnlstrative Offictr
Robert Thomas.
-Repair, maintenance, the new president of
rebuilding, alteration or ex· the Orange County Fair
change of aircraft and aircraft board. He was elected
engines, components or other by fellow board mem·
opposed the moUo.n, but said said he thinks consolidation is
Assembly committee hearing he will back the' majority a good idea because it would
ASSEMBLYMAN John rooms are greeted by a visibl e decision when he represents guarantee larger turnQUts for
Moretti's bill (AB 2283)
\\'OUld lump all or Orange and
Ventura Counties in the new
district along with parts of
Los Angeles. San Bernardino
and Riveffide Counties. It 'vas
passed by the Assembly 60-0
Monda y.
* * *
partsCommeroial flying clubs. bers for 1973-74 after
Briggs CR-Fullerton ) fights on _1iaze __ o1_t00acco ___ •_mo_k_e_w_hi_-ch __ Sa_nta __ An_a_at_tb_e_Sepc.:_t_. _1_3_m_u_n1_c_i:..pa_l_e_lec_1_1o_n_s. ___ _
against tobacco. 1 -
serving the past two . He said four years or
dl!cU!slons had gone down the
drain with the elimination of a
"permit" system which the
pilots favor<d lo be able lo
avail themselves d repair ex·
perts without Jea...i bases at
the airport.
AU.OWED ARE owner years as vice president
maintenance or his own plane of tbe board.
He has called on his col-
leagues to ban the smoking of
to,baCco in all Assembly com-
mittee rooms where t h e
public's business is being con·
and non-commercial Oying -----------
clubs. Owners w i t ll a
The adopted regulations pro-
hibit a long list of activlti~s
without. a lease or sut>-leasc
mechanic's rating can do
other than maintenance work
under the supervision of the
airport management.
Tannus said his association
has a membership of 500 with
$4 million invested in equip-
ment. "We want to be able to
bring in specialists lo serve
private owners." he argued .
"The pern1it system would
allow this without the lease
provision."
Plea Made
By Juvenile
In Death
SAf\'TA ANA -A youth in·
itially charged with murder
after he plunged a knife into
duc ted.
"The way things stand
no\Y," says Briggs, "visitors to
Broker Sues
Land Group
Defendants
Huntington
Woman Gets
Probation
BOB FALLEN, also of lhe the chest of a companion dur-
pilots association. said the ing a quarrel has pleaded SANTA ANA - A Laguna changes would reduce county Beach real estate broker who
revenues. "You are only pro-guilty to lesser <=barges in claims a group of defendants
SANTA ANA _ A Hunting~ tecting the fixed base Orange Co:unty Superior Court are seeking to deprive him of
ton Beach woman accused on operators," he stated. He ad-and has been committed to the his $50,000 commission on a
arrest of attempted murder ded that the fixed base land deal Involving 40 acres in
when police found her with operators were not the California Youth Authority San Juan Capistrano has sued
her unconscious 2-year..old problem but pointed the finger (CYA ) for an indefinite ter1n. them for $400,000 in Orange
daughter in the smoke-filled at airport management. Judge James Tu r n er CoW1ty Superior Court.
family garage has pleaded Chester Briscoe, an attorney ordered the CYA comnlitmcnl John W. Cody of Century 21
guilty to lesser charges and .ind pilot said: for Steven Anthony Gardner, Real Estate, 1000 N. Coast
placed on three years pro-"We want a free choice of Highway, names Challenge
bation. owners to invite services and 17, Stanton, after the defend-Builders, Inc. and individuals
Orange Cowity S UP er i o r we should be allowed to ren t ant p I e a d e d guHty to Wayne 'L. Vaughn, James
Court Judge James 'J\Imer our planes ." danl pleadfd guilty to. Smith, James ~tiller, Murray
ordered the probation term for \llood and Security Tit I e
Nallie Rappap:irt, 33, of 190'll GEORGE COTE, represent· manslaughter. Insurance Company as ccr
Randi Lane. He agreed that ing ci..11 t he fixed base Gardner was booked as :'\ defendants .
Los Ange I es County operators sa id they had 250 juvenile March 26 by Buena Cody accuses the defendants
authorities should accept the employes who arc payed $1.5 Park police who said he stab-of conspiracy aimed at de-
case when the blonde def en· million a year in wages and bed Gary Alan Ril ey. 19, nying him the prom is e d
dant mo\les to that area. that the operators had $1.8 outside Ril ey's home. The boy $50,000 comission in a transac-
Mrs . Rappaport was ar· million invested . He supported was dead when officers ar-Uon that made the ·land
rested last Nov. 12 when police the new rules. rived at the scene. available to the defendants.
found her in her car in a clos· = .. ==-==-==-==-==-.,.--.:_.._:_.._:_"-:.c_::._:_ _____ :::::::::::::::.:::.:.:::.::::::.::.:__
eel garage with the engine run·
ning. ~Y said she told them
she had no intention of harm· I
ing herself or the child but
wM trying to avoid a beating I
from her husband and his tak·
ing the little girl away from 1 her.
Police qui ckly revived the
JitUe girl who has now been I
returned to her mother.
I Shop Owner: I
$30,000 I
In Damages I
SANTA ANA -A Balboa I
Island novelty shop owner
wants $30,000 in damages from I
a Newport Beach designer
who allegedJf made available I
to others the stitchery pillow
designs she thought were ex·
elusively hers. I
Eleanor L <? r a \\' a y of
Laraway's, 313 Marine Ave ., I
names designer Robert O'Con·
nor as defendant in her
Orange County Superior Court I
lawsuit and seeks an in-
junction against his alleged 1 acUoos. .
Mrs. Laraway claims that
O'Coonor designs for her slit· I
cbery pillows and kits were
for her products alone and I
should not be made available
to other parties or competitors.1
Rec Vehicle I
Show Slated I
ANAHEIM -The first I
George Colouris Recreational
Vehicle Show is scheduled
Sept. 19 through Sept. 23 in I
Anaheim Stadium.
THIS COUPON
GOOD FOR UP
TO 4 ORDERS
TAKE THE '
WHOLE
FAMILY
TO
Arby's ROAST IEEF
SANDWICH ............ Req.
FRENCH FRIES ........ le<J •
Arby's
SPECIAL SHAKE .... Re<J.
total
SALE
PRICE
Only
Arby's
7942 EDINGER AVE.
(Edinger and Beach)
HUNTINGTON BEACH Wallace Akerlind, show I director, said the newest tn all
types of recreational vehicles,
including motor homes , •••••
trailers and campers .
Coupon Gool '111 Aug.31, Midnight •••• ~
_IO_C-_
•St. 1,,...
2640 Harbor Blvd.
546-5527
COSTA MESA
OPEN DAILY 9 ·6
SUNDAYS 9 -5
DON'T MISS THESE
EXTRA BIG SAYINGS I •••
FRUIT TREES
• 'Ventura ' Peach
• 'Satsuma' Plum
• 'Royal' Apricot
• 'French Improved' Prune
• 'Early Elberta' Poach
• 'Winier Banana ' Apple
• 'Kadota' Fig
• Goldmine' Nectarine
En joy the pleasure of fresh fruit 9rowin9 in your own
yard, right at your fin9ertip1.
Re<J. 7:95 oa • NOW 3.98 \
HIBISCUS
So versatile, can be
grown in conta iners, as
a shrub, small tree or
grow a s a "screen" -
p I u s -spectacular
flowers.
MORE SUMMER
PlANT SPECIALS
FUCHSIAS -Jowel-like
flowers now in bloom.
l ikes sh•de. One of the
best for hanging b•sket5.
STAR JASMINE
Exc ellent ground cove r,
vine or small shrub.
Pl•nt where you can en·
joy it'i delightful frag.
rence, perh•ps near a n
entry.
All Are Coastal Area Favorites Reg. 2.25 SPECIAL .98 each
(SPECIALS THRU WED. AUG. 29TH)
Dwarf AVOCADO
"Littlceado"
Fa st becomin g a Calif. favoritt. Per·
fect for tha sm •ll ptfio conttiner
g rowth or large garden. Htndsom•
tree bear5 regul•r·si:rt avoc•dos.
9.95 ....
Ver5atile
DECORATIVE
BARK
Us • lark 11•w
oro1111d pla11t'I
lhr•bt to dltcoor09•
.... d. 011d n a "''lch.
L•rt• l c11. ft. bcnJ.
1.98
3 ·-4.98
h Looks Greotl
FROM OUR FLOWER AND GARDEN SHOP ...
A Single
Rose Says
So Much ...
E•q11i1ll• Rid Ro11 lop• 111
•11tr1¥•t•nt lorua 1t•m.
a .. ,1;1v11y
'Hollisttr
Gift-wrapped
,. .. ·-1.00
llG, llG 11laction of 1·i11th pott•d
HOUS I PLANTS. Ju11 rltht for l1rr arl.
u1111, di1h 1;111tcl•n1, clo11v pof1 ~11d your
f1vo,111 cont1ln 11r1 .
. 5' ea•-· 6 for 3.19
In..,_.,""' •tce...-4.,.._.
•,S..•1141,lty • W:1M1 Merril ·-• Colko C-.iM
Service a11d Quallt11
Sl11ce 1948. '1/'it Wot'ld of Greenery"
• •
•T-•lfofr, .. A 'I£ £ '5
• UJ.. t rl ""'-"•
' Mltlflf"r ,.., ... _ • S1111ri.-r
WITH MOU TO C0ML • K1141's I ...
6"'•1aA
Benet's .
Home
Landmark
( PEOPLE )
in SJ1ringfield, Mass. "Then
you must be able to entertain
them and malte people forget
your attire."
Liberace, appearing in a
week-long engagement, also
said that he considered
becoming a priest, a doctor
and an llldertaker before
deciding to stick woth shw
00,,,iness .
f * Rep. Herman Badillo ([).
N.Y.) has abandooed bis at·
tempi to be·
come th e
first Puerto
Rican Mayor
of the na-
tion's largest
ci ty.
"I am con·
vinced that
an independ·
•AOILLO ent candid·
acy is not feasible. Therefore
I will not be a candidate for
mayor," said Badillo.
He lost the Democratic pri-
mary runoff to city cootroller
Abe Beame.
* A. John Merlo, a Olico at·
torney and rice farmer, said
be will decide by November
Whether to run for lieutenant
pemor next year on the
Democratic ticket.
· ~For all practical purposes,
I am campaigning as though I
~ am in the race," Merlo said.
Other potential candidates
include State Sen. Mervyn M.
Dymally ol Los Angeles.
Merlo is former Northern
catifomia Democratic
chairman. He refuses to give
hiS age.
* The wife of Secretary or the
Navy Joba W. Warner has
been granted an mconteoted
divorce from her lwsband of
16 years.
Camas (Idaho ) County Clerk
George Gill said that Mrs.
Warner, lhe daughter of
philanthropist Pau1 Mellon,
met Idaho 's six-week residen·
cy requirement by living in
Sun Valley. Gill said terms ol
the setUement were "sealed
in£ormation."
_Navy sources sa id th e
Wamers will share custody of
their children -two teen-age
girls and an It-year-old boy.
* Actor Lou Go11ett , 37, and
hair dresser t:brl1ttaa
Atangos!ing, 26, applied for a
marriage license in Santa
Monica.
Gossett tomarrC'd w i t h
James Gamer In "Skin
Game."
* Queen Ellzabetb and the
vUke of Edinburgh will pay a
state visit to Indonesia March
15-23 of next year, Buck·
ingham Palace announced.
* He's got a name to match
his job. Arthur Sahr Is a sblft
superintendent at Im Angeles'
sewer treatment plant.
Mothers
Treated
CHICAGO (UPI)
Methadone maintenance
treatment or female drug
eddicta does not adversely
affect their ability to
become mo t h e rs , ac-
cording to an article in the
Journal of tho American
"Medical Association.
Drs. George Bllnlck,
!:uJogle Jerez and Robert
C. Wallach studied tlie-
pregnancles <if IOS addi ct.I
at Beth Israel Medical
Center in New York City.
• '.
• • • Thursd.:iy, Augu~l 23, 1973 DAILY PILOT ' \ l -
Sexy Kathy Means Business
J.
;'
6 FT. ALUMINUM
STEP
LADDER
• 1000/o all aluminum.
1\·•U.L·::•d.,§§
. llG.
. I 14.49 EA" . ' .
J.
UMIT 1 PEI CUST~
AGGREGATE
STEPPING
STONES
• Made of lomita
pebbles.
•Your choice of 12"
round or tquore.
•Block or Ta" color.
~~· 99• 1:1 EA.
4FT.x8FT.
PRE-FINISHED
PANELING
• Fvll sit• paneling. One
of our mott popular
colors.
•Enhance your home
• Smootf, 1anded, fir
plywood.
~~ ~§§
5.99 EA.
l "x 12''
PINE
SHELVING
•Surfaced four sites.
•Random ~"gtf,s.
• ldealfor o"y khd of
1heL-es.
OUR11n• REG. If
37•
UN.fl.
S FT.
PECKY
CEDAR
• 1"x6". boards,
•Ideal for fences ,
accent w'alls ... many
uses.
STOil HOUIS:
9T090AILY
I 106 SAT, I SUN ..
TRASH
CAN
LINERS
• HMvy duty plastic.
• 40 eaUon capacity. • a per packag•
•Finl quality.
dressing room, there was a
neat pile of the Financial
Times and heavy book.8, tba
kind you never expected a girl
to read," says Guccione. · (
HE PROMPTI. V offered her
-oot a photo spread -but~
15--pound a week job as \~'
space salesman for h i s
magazine.
r.-1 1 ~ UNION 7A I ~ 1 MOTOR 1:; Un1•l1 • 30we;ght. I<; •First grade. l ~S~~I ~:. ' • ¢
•
..:,:....::_ ·'~v·· l 27•
I 5'> • -·-OT.
#HP43
21NCH
SHOWER
HEAD
•Chrome ploted all
metal shower f,ead
... large 2" dia-
meter.
~~i4 . Q ••• EA.
NATURAL BEIGE
I
{' SHADE
SWAG
' ,\
•Full size 12 1/16" x 12 1/16" squares.
•Attractive gold vein design.
j i·. • Atlractive burlap covered
· ' shade witf, mulli-tone trim.
. • l"cludes all f,ardwore.
4 INCH
OUR
REG.
69·
BENDER
BOARD •full $/16" thickne11.
•Random length•
upto14ft. ·
• Long lasting Calif·
ornia Redwood.
70 FT. ROlL
FIBERGLASS
INSULATION
•Aluminum fo il vapor
barrier, plus h igf,.
lnsukltion fiberglass .
•Standard 1 S" width,.
3 ~,, thkk.
12260 I. OAIVlY
SkOClllAU '
22t40 VICTOIY llVO.
.~~n~n . \
4 FOOT,2 LIGHT SYLVANIA
FLUORESCENT
~ ""--" SHOP LIGHT
LIGHT
BUL•S
~ ~
"
OUR
REG.
12.86
•lndvcl•6h.N•. IO
9ov90 jotk choin, hal'lg· •r.. and 6 ft. cord.
• Flu•r•K•nt t11Mt
ovoilabl• ol •imila•
-.·.~119•.
• Nationally
. know f.or ""• quality.
• 60, 15 and
100 watts.
~E'::. '•¢ 31• -,EA.
MAGJCOLOR
LATEX
'.illl"""lll WA LL P Al NT
sAVl
2.00
•Satin-Plus for interior use.
•Easy clean-up.
•Dries in '20 mi"utes.
•Guaranteed fade and
S:tai" 'resistant.
OUR n·., REG. ' ::I
7.97. • GAL
EXTERIOR LATEX ·!'!* ~ HOUSE -' • l1111r1ot L•C.• • PAINT ,.._ ---·-.... _ --·~ • Wo"'t blister °' peel.
~"f~4v . -·· LINER •Cleans up easy witf,
water. ·-•For f,ous• ond tr im.
st.VE •. 600 Colors.
'l .oo ·4n' ' OUR
1s111.10 REG.-'
6.97 · GAL.
• SAN BIRNARDINO
FlllSTONI llVD. 6SS NO. MIUS 3309 10. lllSTOL Jl4 OIANGI \MOW ID, 10331 MAGNOUA
ol STUDllAKll "'" "°'' 1 It kl$, MO, Cf N r...-HN Kl t U ·~i fftOM
M ttll!OfM!.l .. 1'11' • • SOUTH (CAST "41.t, . AHCI AlllOWNllll lfl MAit
• GUDINA • ARDINGROVI • WHllTJIR HUNTINGTON llACH 'ONG llACH
12 .. 2 13$55 7100lOINGll 2117 1. SOUTH sr.
1Mt "· WIStlltl CHAPMAN A\11. TILIOIAPH 10, .... 110(.t.t.'90 ONltl.OCl Wllt M f llllf>' t kOCllS IAST Oflt&OI M.Yll. MJ HO.Oii tO&IClo\Ht M.t.llOt ti.YO, .......
' .
' ~
i
'
'
' r i
I
' ~
'
. ' ' ' <
;
I ~
J • f • ! • • • : •
I
'H u11ia11'
Course
AtGWC
Gold<'n \\1e_st College \\•ill be
'offering one of Orange Coun·
ly's first progran1s designed to
make human specialists more
adaptable to other phases or
their profession.
... , The ne\v program. called
' ,.i'hu·rnan service associate," ~ ;"'v.·ilt prepare persons to work
~ ~in any number or agencies fr-\Vith orientation in both the
l i prcventive and r e 111 e di a I
:11 aspects of human services.
' ~ Persons completing I he 1 course s!'!ould be prepared to
' v.'Ork in oommunity mental ! health, exceptional children
< ~ c e n t c r s . handica pped pro-
~ grams. family service, publiC
_ welfare, recreation agencies,
' correct.ion and rehabilitation, I l youth and senior citizens and
~ convelescent homes.
{ l_ The program's core courses ? ~ill stress the interretation-
u~• Telffholo
FIS Jet
Engine
Bm·ns Up
WASHINGTON (UPI)
The engine designed for the
new Air f<"orce F'IS righter
caught fii ·e and tore apart dur·
ing a crucial ground te'it,
threatening serious problems
for the full F'IS program, lbe
Defense Department h a s
reported.
\Vhen lhe Incident QCCurred
Tuesday in a Florida altitude
chamber. the engine v.·as said
to be just 18 hours short of its
required 150 hour endu rance
goal.
LT. GEN. Daniel James, a
Pentagon spokesman said
\Vednesday the engine was
destroyed while running as if
it were in a plane nying 2.3
times the speed or sound and
at an altitude of 40,000 feet.
The altitude chamber also was
damaged, he said.
1
•l'•hips of biological, psychologi-
cal and social aspects of man.
1 Two related majors in
fpsychiatrlc technology and ~at service will be offered.
( :: Several options lik"e child
: .:care. social service. cor-i ...... rections or neuropsychiatric
•v _care n1ay also be studied
~ depending on lhc individual
~ student's interest.
~ Appointn1ents to register for j the first class. September II ,
• are being taken at the :id-i missions office , and should
' i ' • •
spe<:ify an hour and date to
reg!ster bet.~·een August 21
and September 14.
Traffic Stopper
Charles Aden of the
Harvard Medical School
in B o s Lo n expertly
st e e rs his unicycle
through traffic. Drivers
often stop and rub their
eyes at the young
man's fetes.
James said engineers noti-
ced strange vibrations
moments before the incident
and tried to halt the test, but
were unable to act before the
en(l:ine caught fi!'e and its
artcr-burner section lore loose.
A SECOND engine and a sec-
ond altitude chamber are
a\·ailable at the test site.
operated by the Pratt an':!
Whitney Corp. \Vhich is build-
ing the engine, James said
.?roduction of the F15 has
~t''!Un . . -----
!
SKOP ''liC!. 9 10!!\llGHT ncn
18''
RCA
XL· 100 SPECIAL
THE MODERNmE
RC A1 fi11oit 19·i11ch di11901111!
).L.100 color. Fe11!ure1 ,-fj 1olid
1 ~11!t circ;uilrv. Aul:im•t ic; fin e
iL nin9, 11cc;um efic; color moni-
tor, super bright bl.tck mofriI
p'c•ure fube in, hend1ome w.tl
nut 9rei n1cl cebinef.
5TAN D on1r.NAL EXTr.A
Zenith Solid
State Portable
'Thd Madera'-Moci•I E4030X
1 f .. D!o9onal Cllromocolor II
LOW AA&D PRICE
'( ~" /C'fll • t. +O
o,,,cs fO~ ~"
AAf.D l" ~CTflONIC" l/d 1 •~ ,.T/,'f' TVI
275 E. 171h, COSTA MESA
642-8882 DQ·1, •. ~ ,. _.,
Sernnt i lle l.•r' c "'N
P.CA'S l lG·SCREEN
CO!.O~ PQRTAllf
THAT'S EASY TO
IUT
e F1m1tv slit col1r vlt•
ill\I "1•1'1 parlllllt -e On•1tl VHI' fine lllfl· .... e Two plll<)·in ActllC.ir-cu!t'i-' mo6ult1 fef .... l•r Hfvi,1119 e Vivid c1!or .,._m hit~
,.,tormtnco ctl•r hlbo
s279ss
SOLID STATE
CHROMACOLOR II
Zenith's Lownt
Price 17" Olag.
Why Buy From AA&D
• OM YMt ....., fUetOftf ..
e OM v•or ports werreltty
• Fiw. ,... pktw• "'" --• Dltc""' "rte"
• o .. .,.. .,... ..... ( ... .... . '' . ., ,..., .. , ...... .
• frlelfffly, """"•' ..me. -
we KNOW ••r """'" •ltd beck tfle1tt wl" SllVICI
-
I
Making Ends Meet LET'S IE FIDllY
Supervisor Asks Welfare to Proo~ Point If yota have new ne!lcbbcml
or knOW of 1nyone1movlng
to our •rtl, pl~so tell us
so that "'~ may exwnd a
friendly 11i-elco'mJ •ncl help
them to l>c<:ome .~nlcd
in their new 11urroundlnp.
SANTA CRUZ (AP) -A
county supervisor has applied
for welfare aid because he
as ;•part-time employe of the
county."
Llleky said he \Youldn't use
the welfare aid U he recieved says the co.unty doesn't pay
supervisors enough-to make jt.
ends meet. "I would find it Ironic if a
five supervisors who doesn't
have an QUtslde job. Two
supervisors a r e practicing
lawyers, the third operates a
laundromat and the loorth
recently sold bis cold storage
business.
The board's pay raise was
Se. c0ast Ylsiter
4M-057' 4M-H61
' Harbor Visitor
'4U174
· Supervisor J. Patrick Liteky
of Santa Cruz County applied
for \Yelfare Wednesday to call
uttention to what he says is
the need for a $188 per month
raise the supervisors appro\'ed
June 23.
supervisor does qualify for
aid , but it is also difficult for a
fatnily or three tQ live on the
$630 l take home a month
from my job as a suervlso r,''
Liteky said.
criticized by a citizens' group l~~~~~~~~~~~
which wants the supervisors to K! J _ L;ke To
resclnd the raise or submit it UU •
IQ a vote of the people.
Liteky said he supports a Ask Andy llE LISTED his occupation LITEKY IS Tl!E only one of referendum on 1he pay raise. ~-~~--~~~~~~~~~_;_~~~~~~~~~~~~~----'--~~~~~~~-'-~
llrlha Pall
With •very Orlho king or queen:
Fieldcrest No·lron Top Sheet, Fitted
Bottom Sheet & 2 Piiiowcases
• 2 Bolster Piiiows •Mattress Pad
• Metal Frame on Easy-ROii Casters.
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With •v•ry Ortho m.ttrna HI:
King or Queen-P•dded vtnyl He~
board AND Quilled Bedspread.
Twin or Full-Headboard AND Metal
Frame on Easy-Roll Casters.
ORTHO EASE li11Si11
Sleep like a king on an Orthol Huge size!
Genuine Ortho quality construction
throughout! Complete with Mattress,
2 Box Springs, Ortho-Pak
& Double Bonus!
DUBiii •
The perfect size when your bedroom'• too
small for a king! With.Mattress, Box Spring,
Orth~ak & Dou,ble Bonual
•
Iwins or fulls
*58 ~ .,
OR"THO ~SE
Your choice of twin or full size.,, It one
sensational low price I Complete with M•ttrees.
Box Spring & Double Bonus!
C1111r111111 .s1111 • CDPllP GPIUll
2445 N. Tustin Ave.
(dCtOtt from Orengo 1.:1U J
P~o,111 63 7 00SI t
& Fountain Valley
16131 Har:1o r Blvd.
(cornert of Ed l119or l N••t to Zoctr'•
Pho11t1 IJt.4\'•0
181 I West Lincoln Ave,
c~ 'y,·o· \ :u· lid end lro••h11r:t
/.vo11ue1
J11t t.~nt of Feel M11rt
Pfo11"te: 716.?.it O
• • BAl1 138
4433 Candlewood Ave.
Ctnclltwood Sho;"n
ltcro11 from lo••wood c~ ' ,
Phtno1 6)4-26~1
0Ytr 50 Stor"
t~ ScrYti You Int
LOS ANOELll MOO!STO
SAN FRANCISCO l'll:llSNO SAN DIEGO OAKLAND
ll.AN JOSE PHOI NIX SA Jl:AMENTO TUCSON STOCKTON ATLANTA SAi. T LAKE CITY
1
'
Welcome
Aboard
By ALMON LOCKABEY
Most boar owners know that any time that they are
Involved, in a serious boating accident a report must be
.. completed aod sent tq the p~per agency.
But the big quesUons are: What is a reportable acci·
l dent? \Vhcre is the report to be sent?
All boating accidents resulting lo $100 or more prop..
erty damage or accidents involving a personal injury that
disables a person for 72 hours or more must be reported
within rive days.
Accidents involving death must be reported \\'ithin 48
hours.
ALL REPORTS must be submitted to the Department
of Navigation and Ocean Development (DNOD) if they OC·
cur in California. DNOD in turn sends appropriate reports
to the Coast Guard.
Reports are used for statistical purposes only. They
carmot be used in a court of law. An admission of guilt
on the accident report is held in strict~t ,coofidence. · • What abollt the boat owner who' flilh to comply wllh
the state and federal law -eiVier th1'9u&b Ignorance or
obsUnence? It ~n result in heavy fihe.s.,. accordiog to
DNOD. A case In painl:
DNOD says it recently read a news clipping of a boat
owner involved in a rela tively minor accident with a docked
boat. Because damage exceeded llllO, the de~ent sent
a registered letljl'' to Pie owner requesting an accldent re-
port. / •
TR1l ~T owner refused to compile the report, in
spit; 7 ~tant prodding by DNOD. The department con-
tacted the district attorney in lhe appropriate county. The
DA contacted the boat owner, emphasising the merits of
complying with the law.
About two days later the department received a scrib-
bled copy oC an accident report. The report was not leg-
ible. The department then contacted the DA for prosecu-
tion.
The uncooperative boat owner was rmed $150, with
$50 suspended providing a legible accident report was
promptly submitted.
Moral : A boating accident can ruin your while day.
Failure to submit a report, or poor handwriting, can ruin
a whole week -to say nothing of your pocketbook.
Try Jack's 'Phue #5'
RECIPE for
REDUCING!
,1. s/Jr lo, 011e Mlnl·M!lllpr911ram of ~
exercise and nutritional gUldance.
2. Add our Figure Fitness Spas
for Men anq Luxurious Figure
Control Salons for Women .
3. Mix"one frosty, cool and
deliehtlul Swimming Pool.
4, A splasp of our Hydro
Whlrlpo:ol. I
5. Spice It · u p In our Steam
and Sa'f"a.
It all
·adds up tq
a pretty
sweet
deal.
Our'Speclal ~re-0.,.nlng
Offer takff the cake !
,
DON'T DELAY CALL
OR COME. IN TODAY
I ,
Thursday, A119ust 23, 1973 DAIL Y PILOT la
Eight Classes Invited
Ol ympic Regattns Urged
•
Star Cup
Captured
By North The U.S. Olympic Yachllng
Committee bas invited in·
terested yacht clubs and
8'.sSOclaUons to boat regional
regattas for the eight classes
represented in the Olympic
and Pan American Games.
Interested off i c e r s or Johnstone Ill, secretary, U.S.
associations or yacht club! Olympic Yachting Commitlee,
should contact ooe of the 1306 Greenwood , Wilmette,
SAN DIEGO -Lowell North
of San Diego Yacht Club won
the Star Class district cham·
pionsblp here Monday to lead
a quartet of San Diego sklir
pers in their bid for a shot at
the world championship to be
sailed here in October.
following before Oct. 1: Ill .. 6QOIJ I; William Bentsen.
Richard I. Ste a r n s , executive director. NAYRY
chainnan, USOYC, 2 4 O Class racing, Route 1, The
Shadowood Lane, Northfield , Birch~s. Lake., Geneva, \Vise.
111., 60093; Robert L . 53147.
Olympic classes are the•--------------------
Flnn, {70, Flying Dutchman, lr:;;imm:
North edged defending world
champion Dennis Conner by
one point. Other San Diego
skippers qualifying were Malin
Burnham and Pete Bennett.
North Is a former three ti.me
world champion in the Stars
and was the 1968 Olympic gold
medalist in the class.
Tornado, Tempest and Soling.
Pan Am Games classes in·
elude the Snipe and Llghlnlng.
Aa:onllng to the USOYC,
several such regattas each
season can help to build in·
terest in these classes. 'lbe
committee hopes that in ad·
dition to those a l ready
establi.shed, more can be. ad-
Natfonal Champion ~:tend~r.lhe aMual regalia
Challeng rs Blue Max, skippered by Bill Lewis of Marina de! "However, we also want to e Rey is tbe new Ericson 2-32 national champion. give special emphasis lo just · Lo one Olympic classes regatta in
F T Lewis placed 2-1-1 in winning the nationals at ng each region each year," the . 0 1' Oll Beach. Little Ships Fleet hosted the .championship committee said. "1bls will en·
regatta which is expected to become an· ahnual event courage the best sailors in a
C as the class grows. ; '1 • t d t 1 . Up Read y region o atten a east one
event each year where all of
._. them will compete together."
Tbe three U.S. challengera Try Saturday's News Quiz ll will also allow the USOYC for the one Ton Cup were win-to identify promising sailors
ners respectively of elimina-for possible f I n a n c i a I
tion series conducted by the we Dare y OU assistance through the U.S.
KAPX-
Music and News
of Orange County
At The 108 Apex
Of The FM Dial STEREO
Coral Ree f Yacht Club, San lnternational Sailing Assoc.is·
Diego Yacht Club and Boston ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;o;;/-jiiii;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~t~io~n·~s ~rund~in~g~prog~r~am~. -~~~~~~~~~~ Yacht Club. · Ii
1be One Ton championships lfO I • F d I s • ~:pf~~t~g,~·::7-:~~ cal · m1a e era aV1ngs,
the Yacht Club Cost a
smeralda. here I Ille' The three American con-I ca lenders are Lighlnln, sailed by ' •
R.E. "Ted" 'f.Umer of Atlanla, I
Gl.j Garnbare, sai led by Doug ~ 1
1
Peterson, San Diego, and 1
ROOln. sailed by Ted Hood, • ..._ grmr.dng to serw you ••• Boston. ... .......
G a m b a re simultaneously
won the North American
Yacht Raclog Union One Tun
Championship !or the Hawk
Trophy. ' 17
OFFICES
1 ...
•
51"---...
........
. . "
'
f
29
OFl'ICES
1173 .
The Nation's Largest Federal . . '
-wlle19 you get rates competitive with
any uvlngs and loan!
' ,
PmltoellACCGUnt. For
present and new account&. Open
with any amoun~ Add or withdraw
at anytime.
1-YearCerllftcate.Formw !=... 6 12"-accounta. Minimum deposit: $1,000.. .,_., •
Terms available: JZ to 23 monlha. '
. ..
6 3% .alt-•••'91'Cei11ncate. =.. 6 98"-i For n.W aCC:,unts..MIDimum dcpodt: .,-~ •
_,,., $5,000. Tcnnsavailable:Z~tolOycAr,. ,
18 Free Sen...-.ce•
Tuvelas checks, money
orders, notary service, trust
deed note collection and
photocopies of im~
documents are free wlth
account balances of $1,CXXl
or more.
And 11 otha services
are free with accounts of
any size!
C.rtlftcate Acctiunt.
Minimum deposit $100,00o.
Based on t.eDD. • ~ :
'
ltitcftllt on .U ~ CIOlllP(!Unckd daUJ, la~ wf1h the Ftdcral Home toe Bank Boatd ttgu.
lad~ -.itbdtawa.\11 ~ lluj'pew CtrtUlQte M:COUDtl abcwe are pumlncd bcfoN maturitr but the inrerest earned
on the amouat wtthdr.wq .tU be at the Pa.Nook rite the.a being paid (not the Ce:rtl6cate rite) &om the da1c of
""11.noe or rcnewal of the-Cntl8c:ate whitlteftf it later. Abo, no intCfllt will be P-i• foe th• 90-dtJ ptrifld immeo
diatdy prlor ro the date ol witbdrawal.Anllabilldm cl the catlBcatet atme ue mbfect to Fedcul quou.limitariont.
'
' "
;'! ~
•
'
979..JBOO NOW SERVING CO~TA MESA ·
-. SANTA ANA COMMUNITY.r ·
Enroll rlOW'tt our construction 11\e trailer and save during
Phaae f5, Open tlU 10 P.M. for your convtnltnot.
COMMUNITY EVENTS Costa
DON'T FORGn
THE "OLD TlMHS.NIW TIMUS PICNIC"
AITIST OP THI MONTH
ILINOI mHMAN Mesa
Office:
JACK ·lA lANNl'·S I ,,;,fi<>1111 HEAL1'H SPAS
361 1 SOUTH BRISTOL Construction site at corner
Bristol and MacArthur
WORLD'S LAAGHT AND FINEST CHAIN OP HrAl nt SPAI ,OR MIN AND WOMEN.
O'+'lr 125 loc1t10n1 coatt to Cotll OWned tnd 6per1ted by Health lnduttrlea, lnc. '
to bt held at "Estancia Park" on Au9ust 19th.
If '(OU wish to malct reserv•tions, c•ll either
COSTA MESA CHAMBER of COMMERCE •t
M6-0U6 or '-iRS.,LUCT PINKLEY •t 541-1505.
This is a potluck, so brin9 1 ci11strol1, 11l1d
or dessert and join the other loctls for • &ooCI
Old FHhion•d Get Together with loh of
remin is cin9.
Ellllff ltflllMfl win k lllVJftf flt!' Jllllt"l!ft t!1 1tl1"'' 11
(11 ... rttle ........ ""'""' Inf LNll 111 Ctttl MftA lrtM A\111111 lJ tl\t1I Stottntt.
Mn, ....._.., Wh Mftl '"' rtbtli !ft h11 Di.,. e1H1 !Mllf'M
Ill lrt. "" ,........,.. C1t1""'41 lteft Ulllw9"ity 1111 '" 0Mtt '"' _...,.. ......... tltntf•lllll.
Mn, .......... Mt IMlfl •IM'tlflil tlMlw Mtnt Mtrttltftl et "'"wY "' ............ ,.. ....
•..-tw ..... a ........... ._., "'"" "" '"' --.,.._ MfM ........ ""' ......,..,,
MIJ. ~" "'8l11f1illl .. •rt ........ ~ M S111t1 AM,
2700 Harbor BoutlYIRI
546-2300
NOW! OPEN ON
SATURDAYS 10 TO 2. '
' .
J
:!t DAIL V PILOT Thursda,., Au.gust 23.i i .....
I THE PICK OF Punch I
PUNCK
Newsman Loses
Tapes to Thief
. NEW YORK !AP)
\Vatergate-related material of
_ an· ABC News correspondeJlt
\Vas stolen this month from
morning of Aug. 10 by Bill
Gill, the correspondent, ac-
cording to John L y n ch ,
manager of the ABC News
bureau in Washington. He said
it wasn't precisely known
when t])e theft happened.
·his office at the ABC News
•building in \Vashington, the
network has reported.
-The th eft was discovered the
Drunk Case
·pelayed
. ·~ .
For Solon
HE SAID THE thieves stole
fi ve audio cassette tapes, one
of \vhich "had sensitive in-
formation he (Gill) had
recorded as part of his in-
vestigation" of the Watergate
case, as well as a manila
folder containing Gill's notes
on various aspects of the case .
Also taken were a radio and
two tape recorders, according
to L ync h, who said
SACRAJ\1ENTO (API -A \Vashington police and ABC's
Sacramento judge has again O\Vn security f o r c e s in-
.postponed the drunken driving vestigated the break-in but
case aga inst Assemblyman found nothing yeL
Edwin Z'berg, ( D-Sacramen·
1 GILL WAS ON assignment. 10
· Lynch sai~nothing else, of . Presiding J u d g e Sheldcn1· value was ~qi.ken from the
Grossfeld of the Sacramento tlii oil G'll h · ~tunicipal Court said:Tuesday 1 wf~d-~':; i1: ~o~! = '
he \vOuld delay for ai1nther ; · "'
month a decision on ~'Z'berg·s:,-;;;';i;esO:pon-d;;;;e;;;;n;;;;t ;;;;,· m-.:Jfrrl;.,·;;;;•I;;;;. -•I
attcn1pts to have a prior con-II
viction thrO\\'n out of court.
Ht: SAID he is \\'aiting for a
.Fuling and guidance from the
Ca lifornia Supreme Court on
constitutional issues raised in
anothei-drunken driving. c~.
The Ol'st.,~elaf o? that i'91ie
was ~-st Mar~. .:
Z'berg. 46, was charged
after an acci dent in
Sacrame.nto Nov. 16. He plead-
ed innocent Dec. 7.
His attorney is seeking to
set aside a previous drunk
drivi ng conviction foJIO'i\'ing
his arrest Sept. 21 . 1969. A sec-
ond conviction could mean a
five-day jail sentence.
Sa1i Diegcui
Held iii Big
Ba1ik Heist
SAN DIEGO (AP) -A San
Diego man has been arrested
in the area's biggest bank rob-
bery in a decade, authorities
say.
TO PARENTS OF HIGH
SCHOOL JI.GE
. STUDENTS :
w111 t11rr •fin, ., •..,-'., tlltlr tvn
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For "Vf1ll1r lnftnMllM, Ctnt~1
DUIRT SUN SCHOOL
Dr•w•r I", lclytlwltd, C111f. nMt
(1141 6$,_Hfl
Robert D. Kuns, 27, \vas ar·1~~~~~~
rested by FBI agents at his l ~
home Tuesday and arraigned Done by Dunn
on armed robbery charges. Pat Dunn gels things done. The FBI said he is accused
of taking $5J ,000 at gunpo int Thro~v her your challenge
from the north La Jolla and see how she handles It in
branch of the Bank 0 f her "At Your Service" col~
America ~1ay 22. ~mnd no:ednap~ring evFreryl
U.S. Magistrate Edward un ay, es ay and •
Infante set bail at $100,000. day in The DAILY PILOT.
Are you serious
•bool losing weightr
medical
weight ..,.
reduction
OMEGA'S PROCR.\M 15 THE SAFE
MfTHOO UNOCR ~TllCT MIOICAL
SUPEIVISION Of MEDICAL OQC.
JOIS. LOSI UNWANTED POUNDS
AND MAINTAIN PIOf'fR WEIGHT.
Omega Clinic
·COSY4 111154 646•1 U!· .... -
186f NIWl'ORT BLVD.
SANTA Mf.A ANAHEIM lmt Twttll, Av.. 7,._4141
• ...,.... 1"4 w. ···~·
•
Big 16 Quart
PRESS.URE
COOKER
• Thafes1weytlllf.,_1t.Msfw<1111tiliti
-1r..tfwcMlillfrM1b,•• -
fflir1...-1o
• Stwft, lifktw•ifltt, Msy M n1.
• IMW"Ht ... M1k•t'r1<ip1kff•.
REG. '39.99 s3299
Auorted
PLASTIC
·COllT.INERS • s..,.o..,1-1o.o.-. ,1,_ ......................
leftn...il
REG. 2f•
I 7~A.
• SNys tHI whil• yM'rt stirrint 11p rii•
1"4its.
• S-rll h1r4wH• -• ha114y •itdltft
...i.
REG. 35' 25c
Wide Mouth
l Pound.
CANNING
WAX
• K1tpsi•litlliufr1sh.
• Al1•1rHthfcoMl•111.kMlt-
REG. 59 '
39!.
'
Big 16 Quart Size 20 Quart
' Bes t Selection ln Town!
CANNING
JARS
• AU P•P:""' situ lw li..1 <Miit -•r H • '••™ ........ jw1& ,_.,,., ••
RlGUlAR MOUTH WITH 2 l'C. llDS
1n r1.
RIG. '2.lt
1 l'lflll
RlG. ti.2'
QUART
RlG. '2.St
$199 s2 •o!z.
llTRA WIDE MOUTH WITH 2 PC. LIDS
PINT QUART
REG. '2.St l(G. '2,ft
s2 1!., s2•~ ..
New From lin·Brookl
COLD PACK CORN ALUMINUM PRE?,RVING CUTTER K nLE CANNER FUNNEL
• tr.iititNl~lu• llflOlll\1le4ktttl•· , H.w. 7t1t1..-r1j111 -r11lly u1h • C11tlwhlt1ltrffhfrMlti•cM. • 1•-..-1tti11ri1Mlllilf • A,, ... ,.,,., tltWI, '"''· 41w••wtrllllll liwl• • • fer c11111iilt., -If ytu In• .,.. ................ ,.
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'"' REG. '5.95 REG. '2.79 REG. 69' REG. '3.19 s369 sr9 39~. s21'
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•ORANGE COAST
DAILY PILOT
Thurld1y, A"9Ult 23, 1973 .,
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{' . : . •••• ahead . '
" School bells will be· ringing · sdon and. 'you ng st ers sw ingi"g
back to sc.hool! Th~y 'll be-wearing .t~e very late st looks that
are "in " fo.r classro.o.ni ·an.d campus -style s you'll find right
h e re in our back·f<>·•chool fashions fbr "right-on" students.
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A· 2 DAILY PILOT
New Boor
,Look Sets
'
Fashions
Coeds arc singing the denim
fashion "blues" this fall,
sporting the jeanswear look
·,from head·to-toe. Instead of
' the faded jeans of y~steryear.
',the new blues cheer up with
.. inore coordinated, "dressy"
\•styles and brighter colors .
Popular features of this
casual-but-crisp mood include:
' Flared pants and matching
battle jackets, accented with
: : bandana print shirts and head·
. bands.
• • · Boots in the new bluejean
· .. shade footnote the favorite
. 'campus fashions, marching
• back-to-school in handsome
· 11>rushed..<fenim suede tht look!i
, . _trim and neat. f f ·anco· 'OO /t/!e ar '"1 According to the fashion ex-J
.perts at Scholl, the boot -which has earned top honors The dressed-up boot kicks off the new school year in more tailored shapes,
: ·in the college wardrobe_ will dressier fabrics, and brighter colors. Scholl's ankle-high denim suede style .~take a new course this season (above) provides rugged wearability and cushiony comfort. Crepe-soled and ~ward a more tailored shape, with raw seaming-stole details. the newhoot·look steers a new course from the ~~way from the bulky, beat-up bulky, beat-up styles of yesterday. {~tyies. ---'-----'---=----=----=----------------!
·, The newest bluejean boot is
.,. ankle-high, crepe-soled with
traw seaming-style details that
$hint at rugged wearability and
, ~ushiony-comfort. ~ Whether seen in the library
:,pr student center, t h e
'feanswear coordinates strike :-an up.beat fashion chord with ~this fall's active coeds.
State Statutes Strengthened
In Teacher Tenure Movement
" .',
~Craft Therne
: Is Artistry
Teacher tenure has become
an increasingly common topic
for discussion in both stale
legislative chambers and
teacher association meeting
halls in lhe last few years.
statewide statutes aud in some
other states teachers in cer·
lain COWlties or cities have
coverage. Severa l st a t es
strenghened their I a w s
recently, and some have
passed tenure or f a i r
dis1nissal laws for the first
time.
One of the National Educa·
tion Association 's major ob-
jectives is to enact and
strengthen state s t a t u t e s
which guarantee tea ch e r s
their right to minimal due
process before demotion.
dismissal or nonrene .. val for
cause. i The fine arts student. "''ho :)~ckily faces an era of growing
·regard for the American ~artist. will reap the rewards of a "cultural explosion" which
'.bas focused attention on the
\!lerits of new painters and
Tenure has been under un-
precedented attack. In 1971
and 1972, in about hair the
states, foes of tenure tried to
repeal or dilute t e n u r e
statutes. No teacher tenure
la\YS have been wiped from
the statute books, but a few
states have made their laws
stricter.
Moms Win Dirt Derby
· t_Sculptors. But even talented
_-pands must be \\-'ell-trained. Atlhough expressed in cur·
rently acceptable phrases such
as "more accountability" or
"increasing productivity," at·
lacks on tenure may.' s~
from School boards' desire to
hire less expensive begihn,tng
teachers to re pl a cc ex·
perienced -and more costly
-ones. Or boards ml'ly \vant
to get rid of "troublesome"
militant teacher association
leaders or other outspoken
critics, teacher groups claim.
With Modern Science
,. Typical of the \\-'ide-<>pen op-
~rtunities beckoning to the
.art-inspired. studeot ~are the
, new spet:ialized , "interior
architecture" asslpinents 'in
the building field. ·"
Interested in i n t e r i o r
design? A professional sug·
gests that art training in high
school, with special emnhasis
on mechanical dra\\-•ing ·is an
aid to every phase of fine art
or design· Whether the st ud ent
plan; to ~wte his future to
fine art. sculpfu,e, industrial
design. interiQt .decorating. or
architecture, an types of early
training will be useful
Despite tlqs rekindled oir
pmition, the tenure movement
bas been making headway.
Thirty .. ight slates (and the
District of Columbia) ha ve
Mothers m~y be anticipating
the apprQacbing school year
lWith,mixed einotions. With ac-
·tive·Younisters in the family,
most rooms think it's a toss-up
as to whether their charges
get clothes dirtier during sum·
mer vacation or after they've
returned .to school in the fall .
There's something about
getting together with school
chums that brings out the dirt·
gathering genius in t h e
younger set. That includes
ground-in playground d i r t ,
grease and grass stains and a
When the going
gets tough,
the tough shoes
get going.
Buster Brown .
BRUSHED . 2 TONE
LEATHERS
FASHION ISLAND •
WESTCUFF PLAZA •
Good looks,
good wear
come
together
AND THEY'RE FITTED
WITH OUR SPECIAL
CARE-ALLOWING JUST
THE RIGHT AMOUNT
OF GROW ROOM.
() J 6sf {f/ilf8HOBB YY,~ tHI 1wna'f/,'!.1LT
Newport Beach
Newport Beach • • ,
host of other, everyday spot·
ting and staining problems
such as blood, chocolate.
mustard, grape juice and
crayons.
, But today 1.iother can go a
long way toward beating the
back-to.school "dir:t derby"
thanks to modern science.
Researchers at Annour-Dial
have developed a new, "°"
phosphate, !10-enzyme prewash
cleaner that does away with
lengthy presoaking .
"Magic'', as it's aptly nam·
ed, is an aerosol spray-on
cleaner that loosens dirt and
stains in washable fabrics, in-
cluding permanent press. cot·
ton, wools, blends, synthetics
and silks.
Stains are sprayed until the
fabric is saturated, then left
for one or two minutes prior to
laundering. Unusually stub-
born stains may require a sec-
ond spraying.
Magic Pre-Wash cont&ins a
blend of solvents, detergents
and other ingredients that
penetrate fabric f i be rs ,
dis!(llving the stains which are
then removed in the regular
wash cycle. It's effective when
used with all types o f
detergents, including n o n •
phosphate products, with or
without bleach and at all wash
temperatures.
•
BACK TO ~..;HOOL SECTION
Swea,ters Are Sequel to Shirts
Whal do you suppose ibe
jeans set will be Wearing back
to school th1a: fall ? Jeans, fQr a
•tarter, but that's not au.
Shirts have had it, ''tbey0 say,
so teena,gers are looking for
new afid"lietter · waYB to e1·
press themoelves, fashionably.
A l0glcal sequel to the shirt·
tale ls the 1weater, but my,
how Ills c~pd. Hard to
believe there ever was: a time
when sweaters were worn
simply for warmth. This
season, they are gayer and
Jess. serloua .thtui ever. Some
go to extremes of leanness as
if you'd bought them a s17<! too
smill, wtiile others , loom to
coat proportions. The lean
ones literally stick to your ribs
while the others wrap you in a
woolly bearhug.
Skinny sweaters are meant
to be worn at least two -at a
titne, or u leyers of carefully
nonmatched patterns in
harmonizing colors, as a
sllghUy jazzy sweater set.
Imagine a zippy lemon colored
set combining a v .. necked
cardigan with abort sleeves,
over a matching long-sleeve
pullover, both In a Qat--finlshed
icrylic that clings to every
inch of you.
The news in cardigans this
Fall is the short aleeve. This
looks fresh and young, and
leads happily to layering. In
addition to rich autwnn shades
of walnut, cranberry, or
, . spruce, there's "a tWI range of
peachy-keen pastels too.
Gb'll who like to knit or
crochet will have a Ueld day
with the new sweater patterns.
Argyle and Fair Jslea patterns
are available· at your 'favorile
yam shop -as well as 1973
dlrettlons for knit-two, purl·
two versions of the classic
shawl-<:01lared Cardigan worn
by members of every first
1 .. m.
If you can't make a knitted
top from scratch, ttow about
recycling a piece of discarded
clothing? An old vest your
father used to wear can be
oonvcirted into a smashing
vest for you. Take b1 the sides
until It fits properlJ. CUI olf
those edgas holdlnf buttons
and button·holes, ind blnd
them with embroidery or
braid. A pullover discarded by
a big brother can bea>me your
favorite bulky cardigan. Roll
up the cuffs until they're the
right ~ogth for you, and stitch
ll1e roll& )nto plaoe. i
Cut the sweater body down
the middle, using several rows I
of machine stitching at each
raw edge to prevent raveling.
Finish the edges with mat-
ching binding, or to complete
ypur new fashion picture , use
bluejean material cut for thi.s
trim .
\Vhether you opt for the
bulky or ijle skin-tight look in
sweaters, one thing is certain.
The ·Singer Fa.II
ONLY
'res! A versatile
Singer' zig-zag
sewing machine
Sew back-to-books looks with an easy machine 1hat
offers st raight stitching and all !he zig-zag accom·
plishments -makes buttonholes. sews on buttons.
overedges. even mends, wilhoul aUachments. Also.
helpful features like a hinged presser fool for heavy
fabrics. numbered seem guidelines, and a tension
control dial, and much more.
Carrying case or cabinet eir:tra REG. 69.95
Luxury 1buch & Sew'
sewing machine with cabinet
The deluxe machine with a lot of
sew-how. II has 14 built·in
stitc hes including speed bast~
ing. And a built-in buttonholer.
And the exclusiYe Singm-• push-
button front drop-in bobbin.
Enjoy almost limitless sewing
possibilities. At a saying now,
complete wi1h a beautiful, func-
tional desk/cabinet.
$ . 756/69~
Bakerslield cabine1
SINGER 5-inll Centers and par.ticipatlng Approvecl_ Dealerl! .
Singer has a liberal lrade·in policy. Also, a Credit Plari is available.al Singer sewing Centers and mi:iny Apai-ovcd Dealers.
•A Tr1demaf'lll. of THE SINGER COMPANY Co17Yrighl !Ci 1973 THE SINGER COMPANY Alt Rlgh!t Reserv!!d Throughout th• World.
•
~''·
Levi cord bells
all colors all sioes
men's and boys'
The Hawaii!n ~irt
from ~rflina111el\·~ ancl.
boys'
Jaiitzer\s Rugby ~irt
Hang ·'llln. striped
crew -nttk; men's arv:I
bOys'
'@)~a@@)~@
44 faeNon llland, -Port centw 844·5070 .. ~ ~ '
_,(
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New Ideas
In Child's
Furniture ...
Now there ls a brand new
Idea ln children's fumlturt,'
providing a 11fe, "xcttlng
place for children to play and
grow. The furniture hu genUy
rounded edges ... no sharp cor·
ner anywhere and no folding
parts to pinch. Table, benches
and chain are molded of
t h I ck -walled , high-Impact
polystyrene for continual use.
The new furniture ls called
Zoodleland, from Kusan, Inc.,
cf Nashville, Teooessee.
The benches have non-sldd
•
tops '° they'"' safe to stand ZOODLl!LAND IS BRAND·NEW IDEA IN CHILDREN'S FURNITU RE oo, and the benches come with b four different anirnAI ~~~~-D_u_r•~l•~•n_d~D_1_ll~g_h~~·~IW~lt_h_N_o __ S_h_•~rp'--C~o~rn~•-r~s_o_r _F_o_ld_l~ng:_P_a_r1_s~~~~
characters. Each ls 17" long,
Lawsuit Filed
DAILY PILOT .. -Pa rents Can
\\:'ith Study
Help
Habits
'
To young people all over the
natio n. September meam the
end ~f , a long aod,' pleuant
vacation. Time for a change,
so they are eagerly looking
forward to returning to school
and to classmates t h e y
haven't seen all summer.
To get them of( to a &ood
start and to encourage good
~ludy habits parents can help
by providing well equipped,
•·,o-:erly lighted and cheerful
facilities.
Providing good study con·
ditions need not be difficul t or
t x 1ensive and often may in·
volve simply the rearange-
ment cf a student's room. Any
area selected must invite con·
ccnt:ation and be conducive to
the developments of proper
stc.dy habits.
Educators recontmend that
the abolc equlpmeal for .....
ying Include a desk, clra-
space, a portable typewriter.a stralgh~back chair and .;e-
quate lighting. ·
Lighting experta suuesl1 •
pair of wall lamps or a ~
study lamp which provklelJ a
high level of light W1ifGni!l1
distributed. over the 9*
area.
To take advantage ol 11>4l<•
lmum reflected Ugh~ the .....
should be located egalmtJ a
wall that is plain 8Dd Ugbt111l
color. A vold walls covered
with a busy distracting
wallpaper or a dark color.
The desk and cha1r lboakl
be high enough ,. that the tltl>-
dent can sit erect with bitb
feet squarely on the Ooor ~I A
straight·backed, upholstered
chair is recommended.
CHILDR~N AND DOGS WONDE~FUL COMPANIONS
Espacl1lly On Opposite Ends of • LoHh
11" wide (lnd has a 11est het..,.
of 10". All Zoodltland chain
have chalkboanl backs for
dill-lo draw on. Each
chair Is decorated .. the
revene side wtt11 a large <ol-
orful animal. The chllrl ....
17" long, 24" high and have
seat lleilhtl of 10". The tables
have a 20" top featurilg two
Zoodle animalJ, me on each
side of the pedestal. s.v.raI
coni>inatk:m are available,
and range ID retail price from
under five dollars to about
twenty-eeven clollon.
. .
Student Equality Is
1 ~
I ··r-~·~~~....:....__:_·~.;__-·~~·~~· Assured
Humane Animal Care
Good Child Project
Female students in one "Three of the areas where
Massaci"'8etts high school tlje public can easily see the
wm't be called "honey," adverse effects of sex bias are
"baby," "chick." or "broad" textbooks, physical education
by a certain unenlightened c.ourses, and the lack of
male teacher any more -women school ad·
I :
The center is working close-
ly with feminist and co 11-I
munity groups across the 0
ccuntry which are trying to
correct the stereotyped mrin·
ner in which women are
presented in school texts. o
Teachers,' students, parents, Back to school means back
to Girl seoui., Bay Scouls ond
all the other organizations that
enrich student life. And that
means the aMual search for
lively and interesting pro-
grams for these organizations.
What could be a better youth
project, suggests pet authority
F1eicia Ames, author of "The
Dog You Care For" and "The
Cat You Care For," than a
series oI programs based on
humane care of a11imals.
"Children and teen-agers
are naturally humane," you
say? "They love animals."
But in this nation of pet
lovers millions of dogs, allow·
ed to run free. are killed an--
nually by automobiles, M~
Ames points out. And more
than 13 million homeless dop thaob to a lawsuit filed by m I n i s t r a lo r s , • , claims
and cats are destroyed in pub-ooe <if the students and her Katherine Cole, director of the and school administrators also
Uc and private shelters every Frui"t Jm"ce P""'Ots protesti ng Ills new Resoun:e Center on Sex year. These sad statistics can behavior. Roles in Education. She adds
be changed, she feels, only by Likewise, min6nty students that minority students have
education in pet care. N • • have been concerned with the concern for these issues as
will be able to evaluate text·
books and curriculum through 0
a series of four separate ac·
"Pet ownership Is a joyful UtfltlQUS classroom u..e of racial jokes, well as other ways womeo and
experience," says Miss Amea:, dtscrimlna~ asignments, minorities are "tracked," or
consultant at F r I s k I .. Refreshment and other deVlcee 1hat operate restricted into n a r r 0 w Research Center. "But it's . to deny equality for all stereotyped roles.
also a responsibility. Childreo chlldrm.. Recently e s t ab Ii s be d
should be taught this at an After a busy cloy ol mental ' Action ii -Ir)' for tlJe through a $123,000 Ford Foun-
eariy age." and ph)'llcal dvity at elimination ol racist and sex-clltion grant, Ille center plans
tion kits the center is develop-
ing. Other materials will in·
fonn administrators and
teachers of sex Ciscrimination
legislation, and parents will
learn wh at they r an do to fight
stereotyping in the school s.
You might start off ,Miss school, your dlDdnll will pr. lit behavior and ater«>typing to counter racial and sex bi.as
Ames suggests, by having a babiy come home oayinc, o1 all types in tile scllooil. U>-in the tlemeotary and 5eCOlld-
representative from your local ••Mom. we're tirlty." Ing whatever "ammmliUon" l! ary schools by developin:; I
animal shelter or humane Wouldn't It be Dice tf you called for, women from all materials to assist individuals He that hat.h knowledge
Quiet Wisdonz
organization speak to your c.ouldenconce1hemllllfrink aegments of ~!Oclety are and organlzatioos, serving as · spareth his words ....
group about the JeaSh laws of more fruit juice ......-fewer dwllensJ• tradiUcaal text· a clearinghouse of human and Even a fool, y,•hcn he holdeth
your area. Nearly all com· cartiomted bewnpl? J'ndt boob, catDleilng, cur· material resources in these his peace, Ls counted wise:
mun.ities ha9"e such Jaws, but juices of coune., are nutrlUous riculum, and hlrtng and ad· areas, and providing technical and h'.! lhat rht1ttzth hi~ lip~ i:
not everyone koows about thtnt..qumcbera but llnce mlssioos practices, and they r ssist2.rce in resea:-ch, desicm · esteemed a man of un·
them and even fewer obey they are ,, __ ,... mD:ed. 1n are pdklog up support in the ing rf conferences, and demanding.
•
Your jeans'
new companion
in combinations of
Tan & Brown;
Tan & Navy.
. Comfortably priced.
$20
#21 FASHION ISLAND, rti ... :. 640.0176
FASHION SQUAii. Snta .1.H, l'tlo•: IJl·IJ71
Charge II :
Mandel~• M.lster Ch.irge • Bankamc1icard •American Express
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Need Own
them. FOUow this with a guld-bulky two :;1 containers ClOllmlilllity.. training. -Proverbs 17:Z1, 28
ed tour of your town's INmane Ibey can ca111e pro111 ... ·-liiiimliiiiiiir=.=.=.;;;;;;;=.=.=.=.=.:;;;;:;;;;:;;;;:;;;;:;;;;:;;;;:;;;;:;:;:;;;;:;:;::;::::::::....;;;;;;;;;....:::.;;:.;;:.;;.::...;.....;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;-;;;-~
shelter (but be '"'" to get riofrigorator spoce ii at 1
parent pennlssion before you premium.
come home with a cuddly Sean home ecooomica have
orphan in your arms). just the IOlution -do-it·
; A veterinarian could speak younelf concentrated drink
T . • lo your group about good "starters." Prepared from 1mep1ece bealtll care-tile shots need· frozen juice concentnteo, the
ed. to prevent illness, proper "starter' 11 kept In a amall
Being on the ball today Is feeding aDd grooming, and Ille covered jar in the
just as important for chlkiren importance of pet birth control nfrtgerator. To mil: e drink.
as for adults. And a great way measures to keep down the just spoon about V. cup (5
to be "with" is to start the population of unwanted soup spoocw) ol "starter'' Into
day with plenty of time to get anlmail. Who knows, this part a tl)oonce glus, odd 1co and
organized in a leisurely way . of your program might inspire fill with cokl water.
One surefire wsy to have the 1JOme future careers 1 n With the new Coldspot
time you need is to have an veterinary medicine. reftigerallal'I, cold water by
alann clock that gets you up in Visit a dog obedience school, the ~-ot pitcher It
the mornings and oo your way . or ask a trainer to ~·available anytime It the press
One of the. neatest clocks demonstrate bow to teach a ol. a button. Since the tap
arouad today, which really dog to obey simple.commands. auU>imtk:ally refllll, you ne::
does the job is a ball-shaped And as a climax to your pro-riot worrJ lbout rumlnc out
clock from Genral Electric. It ~ams, why not Stage a pet cold water, either.
has a lighted dial for easy show? This would give your For atra coownlence, the 1
viewing In the dark and easy-members a chance to show off refriaontor alto fellures 811 j
read dlai which makes it all thooe Howsers and Tabbies Ice mak.,. that 1UtomaUcally
simpler to tell time througti that are uOw a little better cliaipeues \ce' crtSCents as
tired, half-lthut eyes. cared for, "tbanb lo Your pet needed without the In-
An extra plus for you and project. donvmlence of ke cube trays.
the children Is tile repeat The followtng fruit juice .. _. ....... , .. recipe will help -·. alarm feature of this Snooz· G ·~·~ •-Alarm c1ock. 11 iet.s yoo sneak eneration Gap aet up your• ft• r -• ch o 01
an ex.tra seven minutes sleep refreshment center. Uae it as
in the morning with each "Young men, in the conduct a guideline for concocting your
press of the button but wUI and management of action&, own drink comblnatloos. Any I still k In I bra than ••· f......, juicel can be uaed -wa e you aga , aga n em oe more \.lrcy can let umir children mlx their and again. hold; stir more than they can 3 --
The compact shape makes it quiet: fly to the end without favorites .
an ideal clock· for your night considerations of the means ORANGE FRUIT PUNal
table, study desk, den shelf.or· and degrees ... Meo ol. age Makes ·m (11)...oi.) servtna:1.
for the chJldren11 rooms. And object too much , consult too 1 Can (I OI.) frozen fnzl tl
if your children are little and long, adventure too little, re-punch concentrate; thaw·
just learning to tell Ume, the pent too soon, and otldom ed.
easy to read numbers should drive 00.lness home to the full 1 can (I .. ) froRD onnae
help them learn what tile big period, but content themselves juice concmlrale, tbawod.
and little hands are for and with a mediocrity of succesa." Cold water
rhow-OitoOire-ad;;;the_m_co;;;rr;;;ec;;;;;iUyi;;.:=:======Fr=ucll==-=::;;:;;Orqe~ sllceo. If clellred
Tllo v.. RaauolaOf
1lrts, Heidi •d
Pal90. ore drauad
for llcryYlow 11 ......
1rf Scloool lo Mill-
bnok soparatn from
ne Roel l .. oOft, Ltd.
T111y are th chlklrlft
of Mr. & Mrs. E. M.
Van Ren 11 el a• r,
Nowpart -~.
. I fASHION "ISLAND
Newport Beach
,
What's in motion now!
Lat igo looks. Saddles riding high.
Dotty perts. Suede and smooth. Color-combos.
big on the bottom. New sock action.
for $1 and Sl .19. Put together with latigo look bag
at $7 .99. Fun and choices start here'
Use YoVr B1nkAmericard or Master Cll1rge
HUNTINGTON CENTER
Huntington 6oach
'
FASHION SQUARE
Santa Ana
Want'em?
·We got 'em!
Lots of
school stuff
for
8.99 to 12~99
SOUTH COAST PLAZA
Costa Mesa
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, \JOVer'Yl#renl · J. v1,'iJJ.t;. . .. , ' )
sun;;.t . Edu cation
,
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' I •' ~ ·~ •,.t;. I . .f),,.,_,~·~:.:1J9C
T eacilers ·Joi~~~)l~i~e;·'ft;t~ining 61onp
Teachers and other pobllc id~tion to lncreaoe the other orgaal&alloos ore Oo
employes -local, state and federal share ol the education peeled to eiCer Ille cooHUm In
national -this year formed a bill so that Uncle Sam will pay the near future.
vehicle to harness the col· for roughly one-thin! o1 the Amoo8, o!htt goals ol the
Jective power ,of their greet costs ol educating America's coal~lon are:
organizations In the lleld< ol children. The federal govern-• -Oblainlng a nal!l>lial col·
legislation, public • relotlons, mmt now funds Jess than ~ ' lective barg~ jaw, lot
II tile schools are to achieve would be asked to provide f litigotim, economic security petUnl, thus· placing . w~t publlc emp!Qye>.''ibe lll08IUl'O
the American ideal of pro-reJaUvely plOderote • mere~ ~nd., iWllticaJ action. some consider an unfatr fman.. WQUid set natMml1 '~
viding equal educational DI>' of anly 14 billion. ' The ,UO·of thegniup, lqiown clal burden on flates and for bargaining, "alllhn the
portunity for all of the ml11on's During the 19')2,73 sd>oql as the Coal)U<in ol American localltles. ; • right to organ!Je, and ,...-
45.8 million public school year, for example, the nation's Public Employees. is t o Mernbe~ of the coa,lition1 in mechanism!: J f> ~ resolvlnl
children, the federal govern-total school bill far elementary S!;engthen the !Mtitutloos o! ,additlon to the NEA, are the dlsRUtea. • ' '
men! is going to have to play a and seoondary educallon will government anil fo bring Ameclcan Fe!leration ol State, -Abolition, ·throllgh action
much larger role In support be an estimate<! 151.7 bllliOn benefits to both the public County and Mun I c i pa I of the U.S. supreme Court, ol
of educatim. with only '3.3 billion· coming worker and the p1bllc. Employes, AFJ,.\:10; t b·e the Hatch Act. The act hors
This is the opinion of the U from the federal govemment. One of the 1"'1n>llO' goeis· of International Association of federal employ,., f r o m
millton.member N a t i o n a I 'Ille NEA propooal would the coalition, ol whlch. the Na· Fire Fighleni, AFirC!O: and portlcipattng In P a r t I 1 • o
Education Assooialion. the na-reduce the state-local school tK>oal Education 'Association the National Association of political activities al)d serv•
tion's I a r g est professional support effort to 67 percent (NEA') is a founding member. Internal Revenue Ernployes, as: r ·~t for. ~'llttle Hatch
or an Ii at ion , w b I ch and ~ the federal share~· .,,,ts;;' ~to§§lnd;:;;;uce~Congre..~~· ~and;!':.~the=_;a~nc,',!'.ln~<!e:i!pend=!:en~t~or~ga=ruza=·=tio=n=. =A=ct=s·:· ==':nwn§§ber§::ol~-:::;:;·
calls on the federal govern-33 percent. J
ment to provide ooe-Olird of Many school o b ,s er v e r $
the total school dollar. argue ow the level of educa-
Presently· tlwl federal' el· t.jon that American students
fort i!· onJy 7.8 percent, '1lith recei.vetsmoreddmoreana·
the state share 41 percent 8nd tional t'OQCern. Its determina-
locar c.o mm u n 'l ties, 'coq-tiDn can no longer be left ·to
. tiibuting 51 percent' or elenien-the, sta~ ajone,;.they i8y. ),• '
.ta(y and s€oonflary. educa~ . ~r~ beg~n 'a~;url1-·'.
costs. • as Wort~·1war· 1, :wbeh-"'tfte .
-The 'NEA Suggests that~-· draft revealed a high le'vel 'of '.
PRESERVE THE PRECIOUS TIME THAT IS GONE TOO SOON
A Prof111ional Photographer Can Capture th• Moment
tionwide educational equality illiteracy, particularly in the
will require masive infusion of poorer states. World W~ Il
federal funds -specifically, showed that these cond1t1ons
an iadditional $20 billion an-persisted. The proven il-
During the 1972-73 school Jiteracy, plus c r o w d e d
Professional Portraits Provide
year. classroom conditions caused
NEA's proposed sch o o I by Jaek of building during
financing, termed the National World War JI and ihe popula-
Standard of Education, calls Hon growth engendered after
for a national outlay of $71 it, necessitated .federal help.
billion by 197&-Tl, which is $24 But federal aid to education
billion more than was spent in was slow in coming. In the
1971-72 on public school educa-early 1960s. the federal share
tion. State and I o c a I of the total school dollar was
governments, under the plan, still under three percent.
Home De€orating Possibilities
Many families are return-
ing home in August when sum-
mer courses, camps and vaca-
tions come to an end.
Since many children go
away to school and the family
may not be together again un-
til the year-end holidays, this
ii an ideal time to plan family
activities as a group -a time
to get back-to-schoo l
wardrobes together and to
have a contemporary, natural
portrait taken of the family by
a professional photographer. A
color photographic portrait
has marvelous gift-giving and
home-decorating possibilities.
A lamlly portrait ta1res only
an afternoon. The best way to
go about it is to call your 1oca1
professional photographer.
decide on an afternoon and
make plans together.
You will want to decide
whether the portrait shoul d be
!good ~ectlo11 )
,olyeslffl. -cetton1
C:Ol!Oll "1YHlff llMlllllS
indoors or out. Many suburban
families perfer to have . an en-
vi ron men ta I portrait
photograph done on their prop-
erty or .in an attractive near-
by location. For instance, your
family can be pbowgrapbed as
a group on the tennis court,
ice-skating in an indoor rink or
·at a local park.· Any of these
create an appealing setting for
an action portrait.
II the ;iortntt is to be done
in the studio, the photographer
will place the family into a
warm, natural grou p ing ,
designed w look relaxed and
happy, rat.her !ban fonnally
posed
Once the color pcrtrait is
complete, everyone can go
over the proofs togelher to
make an appropriate selection.
A 16 x 20 print of this type of
photographic art is especially
attractive when placed over a
- 2 WEEKS ONLY -
CcSSTA MESA -540-12•1
2975 FAIRVIEW et IAKEl -
sofa or firepalce. ·8S' the focal
Point of a room. Yoor, pro-
fessional photographer can ad-
vise you about· appropriate
framing . A· port',rait
photograph of your fami ly can
be used also as. a '\I/arm
personal ClU"istnlas card.
For a special surprise .when
the portrait prints a re
ordered, give Dad a ·large
family p;n-trait for hls office
with a tailored leather or
suede frame -or save'lt and
let Santa put It under the tree.
Make Mu sic
Enj oya bl e
It's about that time when
y<>tJ'll have to ~Ip ,yOIU\ child
decide whether or not to join
the school band, ~tart playing
an instrument, Make music a
part of his life. · ,
Coming amid the din of
· other decisions, the-question bl
music can get lost. Wise
parents give it the time it .
deserves as a most crucial
decision. The poWer .of music G W y Af to develop dexterity, good 0 est oung an
thinking habits aftd Qther vital qualiUes has long since been Pin striped brushed denim gives this young cow-
proved. The joy of music is boy the outdoor look and is designed of polyester
something that "'.as never and cotton with a snap-front jacket and flared-leg
'M...... Mweo.,0 11 ready tor 2nd G...de at Mariner'• School la a Fr_.
SlnOC!i ....i. • txcluslHly tor The Red Balloon. Her btottter. Aotolno, win -~rilew N~ School. His sweater Cati be mOftOC)rammtcl at n .. Rtcl lalloon.
~1 Gre the · chfklren of Mr. & Mrs. JoJo Mcrengo of Newport hocll. ~ ~ -·
..., iiiiiiiiidijoujiiibtiedi.iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii.lj~ea~n~s~elasticized at the wais_tb_a_n_d. ______ _ r ANNUAL CLEA~N~~.~·· <$~~~~,Aid
. . ,,. • ;~;' •'I
SALE PRICES
SLASHED
AGAIN
Thur., Fri., 10 'Iii 9. S.t. 10 'Iii 6. Sun. 12 'Ill' 5.
Formerly Sav·On Shoes
DIO Harbor • Harbor Center • Costa Mesa
Ph. s..uns
· ·· Found in
Own Home
Reference books in yo u r
home will mean a lot to your
children in the coming school
years. Educators often note
that a child's success bl school
is closely celated to the books
his parents have in their home
library.
Back-to-school time is ·a
good time to review your
family 's reference resources,
particularly lo see ii the books
are carrent and up-to-date on
facts. 'Iben, when you r •
children have questions or
homework imlgnments, they
will have reliable help right at
ha nd.
The core of any home
reference library is an u~to
date, respected encyclopedia.
There are many sets of widely
varying qtalities available but
you will itet your lop dollar
value if you imist on a top
quality encyclopedia -and
your best buy doesn't need to
be the most expensive en-
cyclopedia on the market.
Before you buy, check with
Independent, reliable sources.
General Encyclopedias i n
formation service for con-
sumers, is available at your
local library. While there, ask
your librarian for her opinions
and look over t h e en-
cyclopedias you are con-
sidering. Your chi Id ren' s
teachers are also excellent
guides in your selection.
Select an encyclopedia with
a long-standing reputation for
excellence and rev ls lo n.
Insist on quality. Oleck in-
dependent, reliable sources.
Look for long·standing reputa·
tlons and up-to-date l'evisioos.
Check lndeiing, writing style
and Illustrations. C o .n • I d e r
costs and guarantees.
A quality encyclopedia will
he a lasting Investment for
your family.
S.·22 . I YD.
MYll.OM
SLEEPWEAR
I 00'-/. m1c:hin1
washable nylon. Ideal
for c:o1y slelpweer •
45" widt.
99ycd
· C r -~r ,.., ... ~A • ' ... ' . e C .... t• '~· 'I
•
• \ , • 1 c... , •• ::::r.r 0
r;: l.:·l&JZ
CENTERS Daffy 10·6 Sun. 12·5
Pl!Clf>'•OOD TffUIS .. NI .. SAT .. SUN. • UliUST 23rd· 26111.
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For All O•
E11~iti1'CJ New
FaR Fashions
Come. See Us
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SPORnwEAR
'
Mi~e Curtiss is th9 reatlon '
A Slorekeepel"'Fhal's
Knowledgeable, Cou rteous, Dependable, Friendly &
. Wilfipg lo'Serlie: ThH~ are .om. or u.o BACK ;yo,:SCHOoL n.lngo. ...• . ' Co~.hlckets
Harri1 Sl1cki
I
A "1oN of 1xtr1ordJn1ry chlracter tor men a bop.
•
... per NHKAM!fllCAAD
MMTIR CHMG• --1028 l"'lne, Newport B••eh, Californ ia 9:2680.
Phone. CM2-.7081
'
.· . "'
•one-stop' shopping .
a.t its· finest! .
OPEN THURSDAY AND MONDAY EVENINGS
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The Spc;ld)~ ris Ba9k
I • -~ I. . . ' ... P•. "'(it~'it,•lft Ba ss. Saddres.' .. ~one~,& sro....,,n, Brown
·& ·Br9~h, B~_na & Navv,. Sar\p Su:ede &, Brown
" J " ,, /$_ I . . • ' . 28 " . ...~ . . . -.·
A.
. 1/!.esf(!litkoEs
fOI ... ltmtf'f J,!,,,l,
1052 IRVINE 548 8684
B.
. •f
'.
"
A leather-.bound classic
The look: Classical. Beyond' the ~hes 'of•
fad. And whims ol fashion.
.The band: Leather, fine and supple. 'Eiega!ll'•
Practical.
The name; Movado. A Swiss tradttlon for
more than four generations.
The price In 14K yellow gold;
A. $150. 8. $1 45. .
CHARL.ES H. BAR·R
•
SANDPIPER PRINT COTION KNIT CROP ToP '
e Fine Absorbent 100 1. Cotton; Knit
• Navy/Red and Brown/Go ld Prints e Matching Bikini
IRAS 4.00 HIP HUGGERS 4.00 BIKINI ,.50
Veta's .
INTIMATE "APPAREL
We•t~liff Pl9~· • .17th & l"'lne
H.wport Bl~ C.llforni•
Phone: 642-1197
Open · Thursd•y
& Moncloy ..J:•Ot1ing1
nAiµ PJ{Y's
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CLASSIC· NEW BLAZER ' The .fabric is a crisp dacron/wool
:blend that keeps its good looks all year
around.
. ' • Traditionally.:tailoced in the just right
Halliday manner •
Co-or · niteil slacks in patterns and
solids.
BLAZERS ~95. TROUSERS men ~30.
'\.
Westcli« Pim,
NewpOn. Beach, Calif.
218 Marine Avenue,
&.lboa Island, Cali£.
1.laster Charge
MEN'~ TR AD'T• N<L CLO'THING
,, ... & IRYINI AVE. -wn TCLIPP Pl.AJA
NIWPORT HACH -"-641-07•2
Dolly 10-6 e Moe.• Tlnrrs. 'T11 t
' BankAm<'ricard
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IAaK :ro !CHOOL SECTION
Plastic Bags Make
School Toting Easy
"Hey Mom-here CQ.'rltel the
3C!K>ol bus. Where's my lunch
and rr.y tote bag? Anr\ my
flotebook . . . and the water
Colors ror art lab?"
They're all safely z.lpped up
:fMide those see-through
ptastic hap that yQU've found
, so handy In the kitchen.
; Became, ttae same venatlle
~y.,.allng bags solve many
-!Ollng jobs for the back-lo-
schoolert. Home econom.l1ts ' 1">ffl the makers of Hand!-
.• wrap IDd Zlploc bop oiler
timely lips.
• Start with lunches. Potato
thip1 will 1tliy crl1p, chunlu Of
cboele wlll rem1ln mol1i, ond
pickle• won't le•' ailythlng
_when the•'fO safely zt\>P"d ill·
-'lo ln\llvldUll b I I •· liven ")ryllt 6dor1 111d 11ivctt, like
,.-. ol a Plll!ll 11ntlwlah,
•1a1 loclttd wldt thl b•c, in-
1t11d of 11travellng" insfde the
junch bolt. 'Mlat luscious slice
ol chocolate cake can be pro-
tected 8Slainst crushing too.
Instead of oressin q; out !he air
<before closL"lg the.bag, ~ea~ in
~ cushlcn of air.
·.' Organize schooJ suoolies in ~ rlurable, e?sv~pening
: _bags. Keeo writlnq; pens and
-'Pencils togethlY.' ln one ... 't· per and table~. Lri anothe:-.
· lnce .vou can ooen Pnd close
· ce '-•11:1s e/J Manv llmeo; as
·.~J'Dll like, they make id0 a1
"boldt:7!." A":.:i r''°'r'! f"'"f!Ct •pi•·· C"'-'! 1, two ,:tzps -
: l"Ua-t _...,1 .. -..... -. '"h"'! ... -·::11'
~ )1-~ 1~ ce·'-~ , .... " ........ ·.·--
· 1h.-ea ··s · ,..., · -:-"' , ... • • •• .., ...
·~™' , .... r\ .. -s .. <; ••• nails
'µi-1 tar 's f1'17 shop. hr .
•· ZJ., i'1 "-,1!1:'-'"s" '., c.voi-1
extra -e'l'ie! a"1 lo ... -~tee~
othe· i''!,...:; i" '"'~ 1-..,..,.s rr
,.brle(""'l"S. ~,.,,.,. JI(!":°! ""q!"!
or g'l'' lr1lde one ba~;
;·
' BAG IT, TAG L , ·. HEI: TO .& 17 TO SCHOOL;·
Kup No:1books an T-i>lo'.' Dry In '"' ol i!Jin
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'tAILORED -YOUNC A SNAPPY .... 1he lhlttdrm ~ ror
(Ill in• .ophislkaled houndllooth Ch«k plaid. Rayon Md. COiion Wend. Sim '-11 . Navy. Brown. $31.
J«WP(>lt1' PEAClf f.'athion Island LA HABRA Fasfl~ Sq u11e
lie-rt Bto<h op<n lak monday l frid" nljlli. 1a Htln open late rnoncby, 1hun.ci1)' A frkh)' nishU. E :.'-~~~~~~~~~~-'
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S<;:hool· Photographs Charming Tradition ··
Carolyo o o d Cllarllt
con.. chlWr• of Mr.
I. Mrs. Frtd R. Collo of
c..-dol M• wll
-d H.t.or Ylow
SchoOI ,.,, loL H•
drftl II by ""••i
11-. • I • •It 11y
... ,. .... ,'""1olllo •
'1110 ............. ..
Huntlntton H ctr b CM',
Foshlon Island, a n d
OrcrtlJC.
' . . . -gca eras
SINGLE LENS REFLEX
Wint F1.l LENS, CASE & ACCESSORY SHOE
• Profes1iona l Black Finish
• Interchangeable Pente x Mount Cosinon Lens
• Double CdS Thru-the-Lens Metering System with 'Meter Lock Switch
• Metal Copel Square Shutter·· 1-1 / 10QO shutter Speeds plus "B"
• Electronic Flash Synch at 1/125 Sec.
-·• f resntl Ground GlaH ipol Foouting
.1• ·Delayed Action Shutter Rele111
' • e M-X• Synch Outlets en Side of Camera
: 1 9 Fil~i n·Camer1 Indicator
18995 WITH PURCHASE
' Of COSINA STL
ll)IUS VALUE $71.00
SIL VER FLYER
PROiECTION SCREEN
• Sll•tr Ltntlcular Surlac•
• Wrinkle Fr••
• MJ111ts to an1 Po_sltlon
.~1 1Ce11t1ln1 Kallmar B/owtr lrush,
I '"llt Gato 8f111h, Sottl• of fine
"•Jictor 01 t and Book of Lent
Tl1•1111.
YANKEE
ROJO TRAYS
for GAF
' ~ Projectors
, Holds 100 SUdtt I
BORDERLESS
SILK PRINTS
•
21.91 VALUE
fl
FLASH PAK
• Aclltn Slo,,11111/1000 ti 1 St(.oni Speed
• !ullt•ln Rt1J11rtl1il1 l11t1rl11 and AC
• Fait 4 Stc~t111'ec7clinl
Guiff Ill .... el 4' with ASA 2S Fiim
)ti•l,,e Sw4t1fl ltr .. tt•r Licht Contiol
12.00 VALUE
2 TlffU ltCE.FILTE ns
29.95 VALUE
VELIOM VE 3E
TRIPOD
• 3 S.tllon Ch•nnel L111
• Clip L•1 Locks
• E•t•ndl to 57"
• H11v1 dutr Panhlld
• f/3.5 Precision Lens
• Remote Control
• Forward, Reverse, Focus
• 500 Wat t Bri 11 iance
• Pop-Up Ed itor for Sl ide Preview
• Carrying Case and GAF JOO Slide Tray
... ,. .. .
9s1
PH l~] 197 ,.3373
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-•/.CK TG SCHOOL SECTION / Tllllndq, ...... t 2.l, 197)
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':lo} "'r .I
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dress clas·sics
a carefree collection of girls' dresses
school colors and popular plaids
' ,
4.49 t~ 6.99 val. ~.00-12.00
•
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a. cotton knit dr.ess, in an assortment of iilaids, in sizes 7-14 (n)
b. same dress, long sleeved, ea. val. 12.00 6.99 4-6x, val. 11.00 5.99
c. one style from our collection of plaid skirts in carefree acrylic,
many colors, sizes 4-6x, val. 7.00 4.49 sizes 7-14 (n) val. 8.00 4.99
little girls 56, gids1 wear 7,7 .
· .
pigskin pantshoe
just for the girls'
7. 99 val.13.00-15.00
Nifty with either pants or skirts!
Beige, rust, brown combo on
crep~ sole goes with eve ry thing
young peoples' shots 70
boys' pants and
Jeans.for school
2. 99 . we~e~1os.so . ' Selection of solid· color pants
and double knee je1ns. Some of
our sturdiest. Junior sizes •
boys' pants and clothing 14
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knit.shirts for
boys' in cotton
1. 99 were 3.00 lo 4.00
Comfortable cotton knits, great
. school <>r playwear. A wasliable
and colorful assortment. 8-18. .
boys' furnishln1123
' .,.
,
. I . . .
' ' knit sport shirts
and sweat~r-vests
5 • 9.9 . each comp. val. 7.99
1Nyl!ln knit shirts in blue, gold,
toast,'6erry or navy. U-necli rib·
bed acryli~ vests in navy, brqwn,
black, burgundy. Both S·XL.:
budge:tstore5, men's sportswearlOS
. .
SHOP MONDAY TO FRIDAY 10:00 TO 9:3 0 e SUNDAYS NOON TO 5 e s1turd1y 10 to 6
may co, south .coast plaza, sin diego fwy. at bristol, 546-9321
MAVCO "' .
OAtll PILOT ,i -I!
Bell Tolls
Freedom
For Moms
' Whatever "back to ICbool"
may mean to the youngsteni, 1 IJ'Bteful motherl every•heJ'
that llOhool bell tolls jUlt ...
w:ri'~ "=!~' busy tj :]
-the dally shuttle to beach
ball·fitld, the niunds ol I
terlatnlni. the kids' bourlJ
clamor for snacks or ~.1
sneakers - a woman wants i
UtUe time to herself. '\
And even in the moeit
"together" family, ahe needs;
time for herself: time to tak~
a course in painting. tO
refinish an antique chair, or to
putter with recipes: time for
relaxation and for beauty, too,
And with the kids safely tuclt
ed away at school, she ~
fmally calls some Ume bor
own. \ ·' Making the ll\-06t of II ~
for doing something special,
and one of the nicest trealf
you can give yourself la a dq'
of beauty. • ,
EXPERIMENT " I
!l's a day to esperinlel$
with makeup, do a facia!;
maybe aphlrge and get a.
m11S11age. It's alao a day '9'1
think about changes you rna1
want to make, like changing
your hair style or your faalt
color. With the new sea!l(I(\
you 're ready for a new loot
and changing your hair gives
you a great head start!
One way to begin is to try 011
llOllle of lhe new fall wl(s kl
cletormlsie the shade !bat ta
moot flattering to your slda
torte11, But you don't need ti>
buy a wig becauae you can
dupilcate most colors euily al
home .
NEW COLORS
Yoo can go several sbMa
lighter 0< darker quite if>.
expensive!)' with Miss Clalnll
Shampoo P'ormula llalrcolol-
ing. 1liiJ. la. the f-.,.
''doe.s-9he-or-Ooesn't--lbe"' -nattiral-liioklng color· tllot. jai
aj>ply like sbanJPJ10. A · -
Natural Wear Fomiull -
fading and .red ~
so you'll have believable hlli'
color for weeb alter the -pli<atiOo. Ana lbt ldti .......
with everythlnc )'Oil need.
Even ii you ... iiever eOlor.d
your hair.be!ore.,Jewll!w col'
orists SUCIMI that "*"a few
-lflbler • ,~"" Ilse moot llatterlnl d9lir a
woman can do -~· lwtl ' older. So if you've .....,_bad'
dafk brown ba)r, ~1nlight
want to tr)l1 llllal', Cllilrol la ~triiit_Brilwn lcr 'o.'IO!ler ell~, !f yoia'.re a UJhl brown,
"""ls'·tlse time to lr)':1 a
blondO becauae you can a
pretty medium blood la
one 'pt<Jce!S with 'Ml8i!:a.ln>I '
Flaxen Blonde.
TRY FJIOSl'JNG
If ·you don't -t to Nib'
change yout coiot',)ut >'.av do
wa·nt to .add a little interest,
then frosting is for you. Tls!a II
where you lighten _,. ol
hair to create highllll"ta !bat
blend with your hair Clllor.
You can frost all around, ttp
around the face, or c:ru~
beautiful streaks. The melbod
you cboole depends on .,wr
hair nile. Tipping, for in-.._, II a perfect accent kr
die Jl!IW short, feathery cuts,
wllQe _.,, 1'allY adds flair
to mecllum or lq hair. So get
)"'Ul'll!lf a good prolesslonal
haJr.M before you color.
11'1 -ill spltll'glnc to get a
greol •haircut, but you can
do U.. lllPliihlini euily at bomf'witJi. d8!roi'1 Frost &
Tip. !l's a kit, ~ with
evelythlng you ----c.op,
gloves, even a mlXlng pm -
and you con1n>I the mulls.
They can be ooll and aiblle or
llllUUonailY dram&Ucj tbt'I
up to you. Chuteinl your hair is oftea
the tint 1l<p to making olher
....... 5fi the start ol ocbool
_, llarl ·;.>u off on _..
-tbtnp llW1 you thinl<I ..
The School Boy •
But 'to go lo·-la a
summer moni,
O! It drives all Joy awayt
Under a cruel .,. -.
The UtUe ones spend the
day
In sighilg and dismay.
How can the bird that ia
born for joy
Sit in a cage and sing?
How can a child, when fears
annoy,
BUI droop bis tender wing,
And forget bis youthful
1priogl __ .,..
For
Weekendei"
Adverti#ing 1•
Phone
642.Q21 ·
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A II DAIL y PILOT
Students
Require
Breakfast
An alar1ning number of
children are behind their
schoolmates before the school
day starts.
A report made to a Senate
committee studying nutritional
problems shows that 24 per-
cent or children in
Massachusetts go to school
each day with an inadequate
breakfast . Thirteen percent
have no breakfast at all. Only
S percent eat a g o o d
breakfast.
Studies made at t h e
University or Iowa show that
breakfast is the 1nost-im-
portant meal or the day.
because it follows a period or
10 to 11 hours or more withool
eating. The studies showed
that those who don't get a
nu t r i lion 8'11 y adequate
break.fast are I~ alert. Their
ability lo concentrate is IO\\'er
than others', and their skills
tail off late in the morning .
One adequate breakfast,
according to the U.S. Depart-
ment of Agriculture, includes
fruit or fruit juice, cereal with
milk, toast and spread, and
milk to drink. Other foods can
be substituted as the main
course for variety.
Dr. t.-1orris Fishbciri, noted
health authority, po~ts out:
"For most people, t he
primary factor in food selec-
tioo is pleasure." One key to
getting children lo eat a nutri-
tionaUy sowtd breakfast, ac·
cording to the Cereal Institute ,
is to provide foods the.v enjoy.
The wide assortmen t of
breakfast cereals available
ma kes sure that several will
be appealing· to every child.
Cereals combine important
needed nut rients with flavors
and textures that children like.
Being young is a fault which
improves daily.
-Sweden
'
• Thursda~. AugLJst 23, 1973
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Casserole
Gu arant ees
Nutr ition
Mothers wlth this particular
nutrition problenl -and there
are JOOre of you than yOu may
think -can take heart from
the experiences of Jane Ham·
ncr. wife of Earl Hamner,
author of the Peabody Awanl·
winning CBS.. TV show, "'l'be
\Valtons." Jane has alwa)·s
loved cooklng for her family.
Several months ago Scott
nnd Carrie, aged 17 and 14,
respectively, suddenly decided
to stop eating beef. At first
their mother didn't take it
•
seriously, bul as the -ks FAMIL y OF 'THE WA L TONS' CREATOR ENJOYS CASSEROLE
went by she realized she had a· Mr1. Earl H1mn•r S.rv•s T1•n .. 99rs Cirri• ind Scott
real rwtritioo problem on her ------------------'-------------'1"" hands. How to gel enough ~ , lJLo....:.;;.iiiloli&;;~
"SKIN MACHINE" f ASIEST WAY TO CLEAR COMPLEXION complete proteins into two
growing teenage children who
vo"on't eat beef? She decided to
establish correct eating pat·
terns immediately, before the
children went back to school.
Battery-Opt1r1t1d Brush Removes Dirt a nd Grime
Summer Tan Produces Unwanted A vegetable dish such as
this fresh mushroom casserole
Side Effects of· Skin Blemishes
made \vilh cheese and
Vc lvetized Evaparated Milk
gives the chlldr~n the rest of
their protein requirements at
dinnertime. It 's a simple, ORANGE COUNTY'S LARGEST CHILDREN'S STORE
Back to school means ?
reluctant gw:l·bye to summ!l'
sun and summer fun. A
'healthy. glowing tan is one
welcome remembrance a C
summer that can last way into
the fall. But Jots of tipie
spent in the sun produ6es
•another unwelcome side effect
lor young people -com·
plexion blemishes.
f\1any people believe sun is
good for skin problem s
because of its "drying" effect.
There may even seem ttJ be
t e m p o r a r y improvement
following a suntan because the
deepened skin color disgui.Ses
blemishes. but in the long run,
sun exposure tends ot ag-
gravate most complexion pro-
blems. 1 •
Outbreaks on the ·skin are
caused by the excess oil from
tbe sebaceous glatt$ blocking
the skin's pores. Exercise 1n
the sun means increased
perspiration which is usually
accompanied by increased ac-
tivity of lhe oil glands. In ad-
dition. the suntan oils and
creams· that most of us use
clog the tiny pores even more.
The beginning of the school
yea r means a fresh new !'tart
in many wa ys. Now is a good
time to establish a simple but
effective daily routine for skin
care geared to your oivn
individual needs. Don't ma;.;:e
the mistake of trying to stick
to an elaborate, time-<:on-
suming ritual that you'll aba:i-
(loo after ashort time. \Vork
·oot a plan of skin care for
yourself that is simple a'ld
realistic eQOl.lgh to be done
easily ever.tday.
The baSic foundation of anv
good skin care 'routine is keeP-
ing the face scrupuously clean.
practical solution to the prob-Wash with soap and warm !em. This d i n n e r menu
water at least three .times a typically is roWlded out with a
day ; this is important because fresh spinach salad and -for
any excess oil and dirt left on parents only _ a piece of
the face hardens and blocks roast beef. Everybody in the
the pores. A really effective family gets their proteins, in--
aid in keeping your face de.:p-eluding the teenage "vegetnr-
do.wn clea~ in Clairol's n~w I.ans." Virginia Piper, Direc-
Skm A-1ach1ne, an automa~1e, tor of. the Carnation Food Ser·
battery ~ po~ered clea~1ng v¥:e Center, suggests, "You
brush with it.my, soft bristles · may I want to serve this
!hat are scie~tifically desig~ meatless menu once a week
to remove du:t and ~xcess 011 yourself. It's a help wit h the
that _cause ~1n blemishes. food budget." The casserole
It is ~lso important to keep features undiluted Carnation
your hair an.d scalp very clea~ evapo rated milk which gives it
by sh~mpoorng ~ften. When ~l-a delicious creamy texture.
ly hair CO!fles tn contact with Fresh rt1ushroom b sserole
your. face 1t helps p~OOuce the (~Jakes 6 to 8 servings)
plex1on p~blems. ~iris ~Id J pound fresh cleaned, cho~
take special care 1n choosing ped or sliced mushroom.$
makeup. In getle~I, dry pow· ~4 cup melted butter
dcr type cosmetics are best, 1i2 cup chopped green onions
as anything with oil or cream li1 cup chopped celery
is just 8:flOthe~ irritant .to plug \i cup chopped green ~
up the hny skin pores. pers
PRINTS WrTH SOllDS.
V. teaspoon monosodiwn
glutamate
~· teaspoo!l salt v, teaspoon pepper
Yi cup mafonnaise
6 slices white bread
1;, cup fine ly c ho p pe d
parsley
3 beaten eggs
1 213 cups lllldllutff
evaporated milk
113 cup wat.r
y, cup grated Parmesan
cheese
Saute mushrooms in butter
s minutes over medium heat.
Add green onions, celery,
green peppers, monosodium
glutamate. salt and pepper.
Cook S minutes longer or until I
most of the liQuid is absorbed.
Remove from heat and stir in '
the mayonnaise. Cut c r u s t 1
from bread. Cut bread into 1-
inch cubes. Place half bread I
cubes in bottom of shallow 21h·
quart casserole. Spoon
mushroom-mixture over bread
cubes. Layer half parsley, re-
maining bread cubes and re-
maining parsley. Stir eggs,
eva-porated milk and water
together. Pour over casserole.
Bake in slow oven (325
degrees F.) 40 minutes.
Sprinkle top with Pannesan
• • • • •
LAYAWAY FOR
_,_~
•or·s
• SHIRTS
ANO ,J\[:~HIRTS
;,~ $149 .
LARGE SELECTION OF
LEVIS • BILLY THE KID
HANG TEN T SHntTS • HEALTH TEX
CINDERELLA DRESSES • PLAYMORE
GENNA WAY • COUNTRY AIRE
CARTERS • NANNETTE
.
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1
. I
I
I I ALL SUMMER STOCK UP TO 60% OFF 11
YOUNGLAND I
230~1,HH~~~~~ .. ~LVD. • T
COSTA MESA
545-1440
Use Your Youngl1nd/Gentry CHARGE
tngll$tl double •nn Kryllc
Notlolk BluerSJO, longpl•ld
P.i"$21 irw:I widf lq
llOUMm S:ZO. Sllti 5-IJ.
Add 11urrleflKll swutei SI?,.
1htntapwi11'11 ~ ltlll,
Of SandinrAl116tf1111-t S1J.
cheese and bake 10 minuteslL.------------------------------' longer or until knife inserted
Sirns.M·L
AR-wM~ Krylic..
In I xlection ol fiA colon..
in center comes out clean .
Back·to·School Stride llteS ...
Tim to put s1111111er feet back In shape.
Jessie
Lee
r
o, .
,,
" JUI.DEE When kids go back 10 school. w11h the solid conslruction
yoU,go back Jo worrying about whal's· you wan! !or them and all the style·
USA going back on !heir leet. Espeaall" they want. And our prolessional shoe
atter wearing ltghl looJwear wilh linlc litters guaran1ee !hey Ill, pnd 111 perteclly.
support all summer, Stri~eHl1es make everybody lee!
W1th,Stnde Riles, your kids gel shoes better aboul going back Jo school.
8ttjg!.Rlf!.
54 FASHION ISLAND
Newport Center -644:4223
I
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--·--
,
by Doug Wildey
MAYS£ H€'1.L 8E AT
THO 911.C<O WAITIM6 FOR US, OIKE t
'I OOU8T ITfU51S
JUMPY AND
LINPfQiOltTASli
TH,SEIMV$,.,,
,,. 14.111. SOIM6 TO AAVE Ml/ M.At()S
FULi. PUTTING THIS SHOW ON
O.K.GRoW ME A l\EAD
OF HA.IR,TRIM IT SHORT
• TAPf: .. \NORl<lNG WITH" •
ff!!GHT!HEO S1'A"'
by Al Smith
?
IN T'"'E BACK AND oH ~
11-\E ~IDES, GIMME A
SHAMPOO ANO PART:
WELL, COME ON!
Wl<AT ARE You
WAITING FoR.? ~
I GOTTA CATCH
rT ONiHE .
l.EFi SIDE! ~ ;'t . t;
A T RAIN /
• by Dale HalF
c .. _....,. ... __
' by Ernie llushmmer
DOOLl;Y'S WORLD . ·'
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••
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• ! : •
fllYtvoRo't <()Har aRe You ft
GORDO
• I GJas GOING
To 'l5oK 'r&U Tf.le saM·e
ouesr10N.
MOON MULLINS
A~ll:.'IAI. CRACl{ERS
•
~--,,.,.,,~~,-~~;.;;;;;....;;;...;;;.,._
.. ..
I WISH I COULD
FIND A .JOB :··
MAYBE I SHOULD
ADVERTISE
.., .. 111""'~
TODAY'S CRDSSWDBD PUZZLE
ACROSS
• 1 Ahiean eUy :e Beo;iat
l 1 "N0<1senn1"
14 Shun
av1Seotla
community
16 Samuel 1
-teacher
t 7 Outot ll'lis
j world
9 aecome\ h•ed
~o A rnlgrialion
l 1 Be a 1en1nl
2 Not geiie1al
l4 Roman da11
ll N11ullell
Alf1,m
Femmlne name
~2 Ten1b!1:Sl1ng
!3 Opposite ol
"lee": Geol.
Ii ~~~~et
!I Phanlom
9 Pronoun
lo Laroe moM•y
I Publi•h
2 Weapon
1
3 01110111
5 01eter'1
co11cer11
Q Robbed
8 Aope1rll!Ce
9 Smellf
..
I
50 01l11ln
52 Meat
56 Headpiec•
57 De;illng with
data
60 Rinll surlat•
61 Root pa11s
62 Sinua e1 ... ill••
63 Bo1rd'1
partner
64 Strenuous
labor
65 Hem In
DOWN
I Fling '
2 Oelcare
poaUlvely
3 Lynori
heroine
.,. Moir.I p11i!ou1
5 Ha1t1m room
ti FiHh_y PlilCIS
1 Great
hardness
8 Undersized
11\1mal
9 PlltMr'S stat.
10 Monetary
Ul\!11
11 Caneflhr'lll
12 N.V. S1&1fl el1y
13 Sir, lor one
18 Waste
ellowance
23 Moun111n:
Pre ft ii:
2S Fra1llom
llQUld
26 Ver!lell
pol•
21 _meter
28 0111r111nt
29 Un!lkely
to 1111
30 Throw roeka ..
3, Gre1t r..irntter
33 Leg Plrl
35 leogtl\ unit
36 A1temble
38 SmUe
39 PrinclJ>t,I "''"'.
2 word•
•
41 Ma1<e1 gl1d
42 Golfer _
Elder
44 Tree
45 Alone's-
ood
46 "Sir." In India
47 MINJte
1 quantll'f
48 Wei
SO A1ge
51 Grea\B1rri1r
l511nd
S3 Pl1y• 1 Plrt
54 Moon'1ttirtc
ar11
55 Sheep.'1 cry
58 Hebrew letter:
Var.
S9 Reataurant
clleck
JUDGE PA~Kl!I: ~y' 'Harold Le Doux
NO, HE 15M'T ! HE •
T!-115 tS GLORIA, MISS I.EFT HERE JUST A
SPENCER! IS MR. FEW MINUTES AG,,O!
If YOU HE AR FROM HIM
BEFORE I DO, WILL. "l'OV
PL.EASE TELL HIM
I'M &EGlNHING TO THINK
"r'OU'RE COMPLETELY wrrllOuT CONSCIENCE!
DR1YER THERE ? HE DROVE M ISS
MISS PEACH
F-R!MONT INTO
lOWN!
TO CAl..L ME?
b.y Mell
l.~~ 'Ye;!.( .'MY YOU ~ PA~f.NT'$ HAV! ONl.Y
. ~e~SNT~Y DilGIDeD -ro 1<ef P )'Of.< ? W!~l.1 .JL<ST ~A~T MONTH
TM•Y MOVED MY lll~TH
CSll:TIFICATI! FICOM THE.
l<ITGMEN L!JIA~l.limi IJOA"D
TO THf. JUNI( DltAWl'lt .,,
~o
}-;-
! •
DICK TRACY
WHAT MAKf!> YO<A. F!~l. THAT WAY?
WE t<Nl!W '°"' WERE WORKING ON
IT, DIET Slv\I
... o~ (..J~
LIKE "Ilia MlllCMl!TK SPlliCI
alUPl,IT IS Sii.EN'!' NIO
MAS ITS OWN GAAVITY
-NO DISAC.R!l!AllU
....___:_Wl!IGMTl.E-fff,
by Chester Gould
8UT TWIS
MOC>eL. CAN <:.MIRV
TWO Ml!N
' '
Thursday, .Au9ust 2J, 1973 • PtLOT 1\.9
oH,PLIASa,
fM)(l!
681' wm1 rrl
by Roljer Bradfield
by Charles Barsotti
by Gus Arriola
by Ferd Johnson
I
EMMA! Wf!o HID
MY VITAMINS?
by Ro9er Bollen
•;.,, ·-.. -···--------~-
THE GIRLS
j'l'd sure be good on~ Supreme Court -ever)'UllDc l
do eJidl: Ill confualoll."
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• •
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DAILY PILOT
I
. UYAWAY
NOW FOR
BACK TO
SCHOOL!
Great
selections to
choose from-
but the best for
styles and colors
Shop Elrly!
.. . . . . .
Th11rsday, August 23. 1q73
f!'!I LONG SUEVE
. ,~, SPORT SHIRTS
/.'' · i\ FOR BOYS
& " 't.\ br v .. "'"'" Strip11, pl1lds tnd
solidi in a v1ritl'f
of colors, Sitts 8-
'°· _ " $soo UP
DESIGNS ALIVE
SILK·
SCREEN
T-SHIRTS
S-Xl. Asst. Style•
•· .
)
HIGH FASHION
BOW TIES
Variety of Colors
and Patterns.
C.P.O.
-. UNLINED ~.:: SHIRTS
i .'l All Sizes
--~ Assorted
• Colors
levi's® Capitol of
the West for Summer
and Boele to Schoof I
•
LIE .
INNSllUCK
PANTS
All Sizt1
All Coltr1.
•
'
JUST AlllVlO
llnLI GlltU
TOPS and
• 1 BOHOMS:
H.:::,:::I ~;);
'rom Pandora' ~ -
Mix •)i M.tth Pints-I
J1tktts-Sw11t1r1-
Yt1h. ftll Co~s. . ·'· j . , .
lrn .. lur9.·Mil•'f·Grten ) ..... $999 ic-: Si111 UP V
KENNINGTON
FOR GALS •
Matte Jersey
Print BIOVIH
CUFFED
DENIMS
100% Cotton
Si1e1 5.13
High W1isted
limited Supply $13 00
6 -. FOR THE BIRDS
~-JP Just Arrived! ~ \/1'1 """ '" .... ,., \ );WJ' All !2~~LOlS · ,..r; From s1in1 111 hith
, w1i1tttl denirn lt•n• ..,-.,.._,
', j with cuff1. Sizes 7·14. l'llctl $1)99 ST~T AT 100 "/• c•tto11.
1199 -1249 ~ $1149
LEVI'S® FOR GALS
Plus A Great Line Of
Ladies Favorite Names •
,
UTUT
smn . ~-MAUT
FAU
FASHOllS Ji
All NOW ~
AT NAlfTSI
*EVERY
STYLE
*EVERY
COLOR
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•
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Curves are important
in th e Richard Tom
hom e (above ), while
wood plays 11 vital
rol e in Herbert
Brownell's design
(at .right).
' . , .. . . . ~
Arc • I 1tects
T alen,ts Showcased •
'tn
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By JO OLSON
Of 11111 o.liy ftlttf Stiff
. The dream or every ar~bHect is to
design and build his own home some day .
Jt may ;be an "eto trip-,'' as suggested
by Davkl'ISlages!>f' L1$11D• Beacll, wh\>6e
firm is In Newport Beach, or a way to
· get a bouoe that lias just the right
amoont of space, which has been ll<rbert
Brownell's rem· for building three
homes In Newport In the past 25 yesrs.
George Knowles or lrvine wanted to
meet the challenge ot an "unbltjklable''
Joi; lion Yeo remodeled an older borne In
Corona de! 1dar to meet his budget n>-
,.
BEA ANDERSON, Ed itor
t111.u•wa,, ""9Ust ti. 1tn '""' 11
A sl op ing lot pro vided 11 chall enge
for David Klages ( obov el . Ri s
shingled home is open to the sea.
Ro n Yeo dramotized his older ho me with
o spectoculor front potio I righ t ).
qu.irernents as a newlywed and Richard
Tom decided to build his dream house-in
Huntington Harbour while he was still
yoWlg enough to enjoy it.
Whatever the reason , lhe architects in·
_tervlewed agreed that designing and
bollding his own house is the best kind o(
experience an architect can have.
They share another opinion. which
resulta in a confli¢t they alinit is
troublesome : they love to use wood free-
ly but are cognizant of the scarcity or
trees.
ONE BEDROOM
Brownell, a "redwood nut," came to
Newport in 1945 and started construction
of a home in Bayshores shortly
thereafter. "That was a case of almost
building it myself," he said. "I started
with one bedroom." I
When the family's need for space ex-
panded, he built a larger home on St.
James Place in Newport, which also
represented 50 percent of his own labor.
A third move took them to another house
of his design , on Paioma Street , and he
now is designing a new smaller home in
Laguna.
Though his prime emphasis is on
redwood, Brownell also incorporates
masonry and glass in his buildings,
staying wilh natural materials which will
age well.
His first love is residential work,
though he bas done many commercial
buildings. ·-
For his first hon1e, he bought a
truckload or redwood in Northern
California, and he still has some of this
wood left. He also is a saver o! bits and
pieces of wood.
NO MAINTENANCE
Brownell, a graduate of the University
of California. Berkeley, designs his
homes so no maintenance will be needed
on the outside after the i n i ti a I
""-eatherproofing is done , He is disturbed
when someone stains or paints the
weathered wood.
The interiors of his homes also arc
predominately wood and are planned
with his wife Phoebe's assistance.
"I personally hope to design structures
that have an ageless quality," he said.
"You shouldn't have to update ia building
every year."
Klages1 hillside home in Laguna is a
triumph of time, effort and careful plan·
ning. _
He and his wife , Beverly, saved their
money and watched their friends buy
new tract homes while they lived in a lit·
tie old house, waiting for just the ,rjght
lot to come along.
SOLD CAR
When it did , they had to sell their car
to pay for it. The planning took three
Own ~ •
Home s
years and c:onsh]Uction was started in
1969. l<lages, t~ did moSt of the work
himself.
"It y,•as a marvelous experience," he
conin1en1ed. "I was my own gene ral con·
tractor. I did a lot or the excavating and
framing and other jobs, working nigh
and weekends.
"It's a thing every architect should do
at least once."
The sc rimping and \Vaiting were wort.JJ,
it. ho'tl cvcr. The home has been featured
in a magaz ine and now has a price tag oJ
$150,000.
It is a three-level design with a central
core for moving from one leve l to the
next. Ceda r shingles were his choice. tor~
the exterior and wood is lavishly uscil'-
throughout the interior.
'"I'm a wood freak." Klages said. '·(
love \1•ood and \Vhat you can do with t.
lt"s 1.1 \varm material."
\1lE\V OF SEA
The ho1ne's 180-degree view of the
ocean allows the Klageses to see if ~~
surf's up before they get out of bed, ,MJi
on clear days they can sec Catalin·a from:
their bedroom.
Kl age s is adama nt about the eronoml<:~
of having architects design both homes
and commercial buildings .
"You can't afford not to have an
architect," he said. ··An architect is arr
environmentalist and ecologi st. He has
been trained to be environmentally
sensitive. to put a building where it will
enhance the environment."
George Knowles, whose home in Palos
Verdes won a coveted honor award lrom·
the American Institute of Architects, also
had a difficult ·site to work \\1ilh.
}Jc was concerned. \Yilh three prob·
!ems: a sloping lot , a harsh breeze fron1
the sea al'ld the neet.-sslty .of providing a
protected play area for his children.
REAR ORJENTAT!ON
His wife Ann. also an architect. worked
\\'ith him to design a multi-level home
with a glassed gallery looking onto a· rear
courtyard and play area. By backing up
to the ocean, the home provided a
sheltered area for the children.
He chose plaster, resawn cedar and
concr.ete blocks for his materials, \
carefully ~lendipg the home into Ute J
hillside. ' •
He al so is partial to 1he use of wood ,
explaining that "wood has to be an im-
portant material. It is a human, natural
material ror people to be around." ••
Knowles , a graduate of · TeX f 's
Technological College, alSQ has wor\14
\vi th and been influenced by Frank Llb)fd
\Vright. ••
(See Archliect1, Page Z:Z)
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!! DAI L V P!LOT Th11rsday, A119ust 23, 1973
r.r
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From Page 21 • •
,. f.~orced to sell his home and
~ve to Ora nge C o u n t y
,~use or increasing ~ness
in the counly. he hopts lo
build a ho1nc in Irvine if he
can fnd a lot amidst the
-tracts.
/, Instead of building a new
me. J{on Yoo and bis
wcdi sh wile BrigUta chose to
uy a 25--year~ld hou~e. the
heapest one they could find in
rona del Mar, because they
r·anted to stay in the area
fter renting there for a year.
The small t °"''<>Story house
ppealed to them because of
e forest oC trees In the front
and all the posslbilltics
r remodeling inside.
Yeo has done most of the
rk himself and today the
200-square-foot home is ex·
iting, and oom!ortable, both
side and outside. The..yard,
emodeled for a "Sunset''
gazine contest. is a
ener's paradise witll its
I, deck and assortment of
fems and other plants.
(The architect put a
arkroom in the do"·nstairs
ster bedroom. uncovered
refinished the hanhwod
s. added a free-standing
place, opened up a skylight
the huge house plants and
t a secood..tory deck for
ed living area.
VEL INSTEAD
He admits he has no
ionate desire to design
build a new home for .. , ___ ,f. "I have satisfaction
working for others," he ell'.·
ined. "This house will
• ver be perfect but it suits
needs. I'll spend the
ney in traveling."
Yeo be I i eves architects'
vieeMre essential for even
smallest jobs. He does
modeling, which m a n y
rchitects 'viii not do. "Any
b worth doing deserves good
sign," he said .
He aloo likes to use wood but
a conservatiooist at heart.
It's a nice conflict," be said,
trees vs. wood ."
Tom, a native of Los
eles and graduate of the
Outdoor living is
University of South e rn
California, decided to move
his practice and hls family
from Anaheim to Huntington
Harbour so they could be near
the beach.
He purdlased a standard
50xl00 foot waterfront lot then
began drawing plans to meet
the challenge of th e narrow lot
and th e list of things he and
his wife had always wanted in
a home.
CURVING LINES
After several designs were
rejected and the final one ap-
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proved, he s t a r t e d COO·
stzuction on a ''Taos" home
tthough he has y<'t to go to
Taos, N.M.), which curves
gracefully, melding the ex·
tcrior with the interior.
There is no "gingerbread''
outside or inside. The tile
floors, original pieces of
modem furniture, spiraling
staircase and wood·accented
walls· give a feeling of peace
and harmony, and the white
and wood walls are a perfect
background for hi s w i C e
Marilynn's art ~·ork.
• Architects ·
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Like most. architects, he ·was
striving for perfection and was
frustrated when he found im·
perfection in the constnictioo.
"You don't have the
craftsmen you used to," he
said. In watching his home un-
der construction he "went
through all kinds of traumas."
It's like a doctor taking care
of himseU, be explained.
An archltert is challenged
by the task or building his own
home because he not (jl)y has
the job of designing shelter for
his famiy but he's trying to
•
create something functional
that will be an experience to
enter, Tom said.
OOST IMPORTANT
And, cost also is a factor fer
an architect, more so because
"he wants to design someUUng
extraordinary."
II he coold desigJI and build
another home for himself, Tom
said, he would do the same
thing but try to cut costs. (He
was lavish with lighting for
example.)
Anotbe< frus1ration for the
ardli.lect is living wit b
mistakes tae sees but can't
oorrect.
How did Tom's design
A deck extends the living room of -Ron Yeo's home. His wife
Brigitta ancl daughter,
Katerine, enjoy the
sunshine •.
his wile was reminding him I!
boors a day.
To the first·time visitor,
Tom's adaptaUoo of the Frank
Lloyd Wright and L o u I 1
Sullivan dictum that "form
follows function" has been ex·
tremely succe9Sful, because It
is an aeslhetJc experience just
to walk inside the 400().aquare-
foot house.
What Is all thls beauty
worth?
Try a $200,000 price tag for
a start.
BAG YOUR WINNINGS
IN OUR VERY
PERSONAL
BARN BAG.
CLASSIC IN
HANDPAINTED
WOOD. 40.00
..
But that's part of IUchanl
Tom's philosophy of "enjoy
yoorsell today."
He has $200,000 WOr1h of liv·
ing yet to do. lgw@'~all
finally evolve? It was a 00~1---------
bination of his ideas, his
iitalrs suggestions and his
wife's desires. 'l'bough be was
afraid he would f o r g e t
something, he admitted there
wasn't D'.IJcb chance because
fJ'al>adena
AT
NEWPORT BEACH
UFFELL'
UPHOLSTERY
W...Y .. W•
11oo -1m...._..._
c... ----Ml.nit
3400 Via Udo • 675..7810
•
bike mg with.
e1sy at Ron Y eo's
home. He shows flower
to Katerina in front
p1tio which is
19th
lushly l1ndscaped.
I
Featuring:
THOMASVILLE.
SEALY, SIMMONS,
REMBRANDT.
CAVALIER .
LA-Z-BOY,
ROYAL COACH,
CAL-SHOPS.
HECKMAN CABINET,
BRANDT,
HAMMARY,
BERKLINE.
• FREE
Delivery
Of Course
IANKAMERICA.RD 8 MA.STIR CHAJIGli
OUR OWN REVOLVING CHA.RGI
1865 HARBOR BLVD.
Dowt1town Co1ta MeM • 541·5111
'f 011r F111l S..-.lco F11111lr11re Store
EASTERN
WING CHAIR
From$14CJ50
fOR ONE WIEK ONLY
ie
ONLY ONE WEEK
LEFT OF OUR
ANNIVERSARY
. SALE
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.Azase cane in at youreanifist c~~ ...
We were only able 1o d:itain. 200'.l ~' .
44 fashion island , newport center 644·5070
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Campus
Casual
I
Neatness will count on
school campuses this
fall beginning with the
pre·scbool set. This
tbree-picce pants set
!eatures the layered
look with a knit long.
sleeved shirt in primary
colo1·s mated to pants
and a tunic top. Both
boys and girls will take
to cuffed pants and
n1ore sportswear.
Women Hailed
Superiority Observed
1\ noted male psychoa nalyst
today hailed \\'on1en as un-
derstanding men "heller than
1nen understand then1sclvcs"
and cha rged that "Won1en's
Lib see~ equality, but men,
unfortunately 1 seek superior-
ity."
Dr. Theodore Isaac Rubin,
writing in the September issue
of Ladies' Home Journal. at·
tributed the understanding to
the fact that "most women
arc basically more QPen than
men .... more accepting of
tiuman limitations" and "less
prideful."
The psychoanalyst stated ,
·•women seem to enjoy life
n1ore than men" because they
are not as threatened by life
"nor do they have to con-
tinually prove that they belong
to the superior sex."
ln hls article. Dr. Rubin
isolated characteristic s com-
mon to most men in ou'r socie-
ty. He stated. "Men fear
lonelines s even rnorc than
women" and "are much more·
prone to self-ha te ... Men
have built up such great il-
lusions about the •masculine
ideals ' (courage, strength. in-
dependence) that it is almost
in1po.ssible for any human
being to fulfill them. Failure
to reach these masculine
ideals," sa id Dr. R u b i n ,
"produces self-bate an d
depression."
Acco rdi ng to the
psychoanalyst. ··rirany men do
not like women. They need
and use women. bu t lhey do
not trust them and are fearful.
jealous and contemptuous of
them."
However, he wrote that men
are also "terrified by the
possibility of rejection by
women. They equate such a
rejeetion with lack o. f
mascu linity .... "
Dr. Rubin feels most men
"are concerned about the ade-
quacy of their s e x u a l
performance and have ex-
aggerated ideas about other
men's" sexual ability. He
stated, "Men won't admit it
but they crave affection and,
in times of stress, want to be
fussed o.ver. coddled and
presented with gifts."
Dr. Rubin also stated, many
"men fear homosexuality and
consequently draw a rigid line
bet11teen what they coosidel-
1veak ffemine) and strong
lmasculine). They will not ad-
, mit to soft, warm feelings,
\\'hich they consider
feminine," he said.
eine:rl's ROUNDUP
FINAL MARKDOWNS
HOUIJ:
•1~0 I• 6
END OF SUMMER
,,~~Women's
1
~ ~'Sportswear, Jack~t$, Tops,
1J Blouses, Skirts, Pants.
Values to. $25
Broken Sizes -Odd lots -
Super Voloes
IN co iTA MESA IT'S
tJinerls
#Ntf lllr.vtlri 5.tt"Uy
h i••Y Ni.Ml ·1i1 I f9'
Dl!PAftTMINT aTOft& .•
1816 NEWPORT BOULEVARD
COSTA MESA l!hone548-1212
. .. --Thursday, Augusl 23, 1973 DAILY PILOT JS •
Horosaope:· Scorpio Due to Travel 1
' .
FRIDAY
AUGUST. 24 ·.
By SYDNEY OMARJI
ARIES (Mardi !l·Aprll IJ):
Aacent is on practicaUIY·
Don't dodge basic issues. Get bowie in order. Budge~ •P-
praisals are necessary. 'Be
businesslike in m a k l'n g
assessments. C a pr le or a,
l:ancer persons mlibt fiiure
prominently. Yon are going to
receive substantial offer.
TAURUS (April 20-May '20):
Deal with neighbors, relatives.
Exchange ideas. Get rid of
buhien not rightfully your
own. Aid those willing to also
help themselves. Aries, IJbn.
persons could play key roles.
Your interests broaden -
you'll be.going places.
GEMINI (May 2I·June 20):
You earn more now by striv-
ing ror the new instead of
hanging on to past. Highllghl
originality, creativjty. Be in-
dependent in thought, action.
I.to, Aquarius persons oou1d
play important roles. lmprint
your style.
CANCER (Jone 21-July 22):
Obtain valid hint from Gemini
message. Highlight in-
dependence, optimism. Lead
rather than follow -take in·
itiative. Trust hunch. Judg·
ment is apt to be accurate,
more so Plan usual. Vitality
m~kes 1 comeback.
LEO (July 2$.Aug. 22): Ap-proaclf Jb4l la the opposite ol
!iMvy.ftaJ!d~ is most likely to
SUCC1!ed. Show that ·you do
have sense of humor -that
you are capable of laughing at
your own• foibles. Sagittarius,
Gemla.l persons are apt to be
involved;
VIRGO (Aug. 23·Sept. 22):
Some of your fondest desires
can become realities if you at-
tend to details. ·Key now is to
be specific, frank a n d
thorough. What you invested
in could pay dividends. Rela-
tions with professional
superior improve.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 22):
You get results. One in posi-
tion to flash green light works
in your comer. Know it and be
confident. Gemini, V I r g o
persons could figure in im-
por\ant ways. Be perceptive,
.analytical. Find the why of
events.
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21):
Your intellect is s h a r p ,
stimulated -learnjng process
dominates. You come alive!
You are more aware, percep-
tive. This enables you to cor-
rect error which exists in
domestic area . Vacation or
othor kind of journey might be way. Know lt and be prepared.
featured .
SAGJTrARIUS (Nov. :n-IF TODAY IS Y 0 UR
the arts, music and have
Wlusual voice. October c:oa.ld
be one of your most importaht
months of tm. 1 Dec. 21): Perceive financial BIRTllDAY you appreciate
situation as it affects
cooperative enterprise. Mate
or partner is concerned with!:/.==================:= budget , taxes, policies, leases.
Take second look and take
your time. Pisces could be in-
volved .
CAPRICORN I Dec. 22-Jan.
19): Emphasis ls on wh at you
sign, agree to . comm i l
xourself to achieving. You
asked for responsibility -now
you get it. You also find door
of opportunity opening for
grea ter potential reward . If
single, question of marriage
arises.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb.
18): Accent is on organization
-inCludes time and money.
Be practical where services
are concerned. One who aided
FAMOUS MAKER
SHORT DRESSES
(you will rocogni11 the labell
NOW
ONLY ........ s1oss
"You CAN save •t the betc:h"
105 Ma in
on B•1bo• P•n in1ul• ne •r B•lbo11 Pi••
b75-J084
'
in past could make reap-
pearance. Aries, Libra persons!~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ may be in picture. Finish whatl-
you start.
PISCES (Feb. 19·March 20):
You have greater freedom to
be creative. Member of op-
posite sex plays significant t
role. Highlight independence,
originality. Adhere to prin-
ciples. Be co nf id e nt ,
forthright. You will get your
Summer Vows Recited
CERF-DUY AN
Emmylou Duyan and David
Charles Cerf exchanged wed-
ding vows and rings before the
Rev. Dr. Olartes Dierenfield
in St. Andrew's Presbyterian
Qnacll, Newport Beach.
Their parents are Mr. and
Mrs. Peter Duyan Jr. of.
Newport Beach and Mrs. Vin-
ton 1burlMn Cerf of Tustin
and the late Mr. Cerf.
Attendlng as maid of honor
was Miss Jenifer Kirkland and
ser\'ing as be~ man was John
Gressard.
Others In the wedding porly
were the Mmes. Robert Cot-wn. Dooald Kline and David
Nelson, Miss Victoria Allen,
Miss Barbara Strauch, Kevin
Baker, Robert Brown, David
CMle, Peter Duyan, James
Edwards, Steven Rice and
Mid!ael Rocklin.
The bride is a graduate of
Newport Harbor High School
and the University o f
C3lifomia, Riverside. She also
attended Colorido S t at e
University.
A Pl1l Beta Kappa, the
bridegroom earned a, masters
degree from UCR. They will
reside in Palo Alto.
BRANDT·
SCHMISSRAUTER
Mrs. Marlene Schmlssr.urtei
of Irvine and Donald Brandt,
Balboa Island were manied in
the Newport Harbor UJtheran
Church with the Rev. Roger
Berg olllciatlng.
Altendants were Mn. Keith
Snyder, mitron of honor ;
MRS. CERF
Laurie S,.c b miss r'a u t er.
~;EarlWesse·t•J,
best man; Rogtt-Brandt,
Ilave Mitchell and George
Ge<onsln, ushers, and KeVln
Sclunlssraute<, ringbearer.,
'Ibe new ·MrS. Brand.t,
dal!8hter of Mrs. Evelyn We-
lpgarten ol Hayward; Wis .• at·
tended schools In Hayward
and Fullertbn Junior College.
Her husband, 900 of Mr. and
Mrs. Donald Brandl o I
Hankinson, N.D., is a graduate
of Concordia College,
Moor!Jead, Milm. and oow
teaches in Garden Grove.
FOX.JACKSON
Fountain Valley High School
gradua,tes V alori G a y I e
Jackson and Stephen Robert
Dear Customer,
Fox were · married in the
Blessed Sacrament Catholic
Church, Westminster.
Tbey are the daughter and
son of the Robert K. Jacksons
of Fountain Valley and the
Robert W. Foxes of Midway
City.
Altendanls were Mrs. c. A.
Bolding. Cbenie Roberts , Jan
Kathy lleoder, Ava Jackson,
Kelly Solesbee, ·Phillip Maas,
Ted Kelly, Bill Solesbee, Louis
Schellk, Luis Villegas, Dean
Fox and Christi~ Francois.
'Ibe bride also is a graduate
of Southern calilornla College
of Medical and Dental Careers
and her husband ·attended
UCI. They will reside in
Westminster.
IMPORTANT NOTICE
Uniform Slue
..: 7MM Cultured Pe1r1i, s29 ·' f ine Lustre & Blue Color $88 .•••
.~ B1roque Cultured Pearls ~ ·
, White1Pink on h1nks, 8Mftl. ~ 116 '~·
it. ' Coad Color l Lustre $43 , ••• •••••••• ••• :.: '
·/.» Uniform Cullured Pe1rl Strlndl. '~ .
"' ""'· v .. , "" '"'" • ''""'' '196 '330 ~ Wh/P1nk Color. Jlance S!.90 to SHO .. -,
Uniform Blue Cultured Pt1tlS.
1·7\/i#IH Oetp Color & Lustre, strun1 '' 542 . W/Cl1sp, l!" len1th $126 ................... .
Cr~Ulltd Strlnds, lustrous. While Pifllt COior, Kln"lt art strunt • 122 .,,3 ,
.w1ct1SI) llan&t $66 to $190 •• _,., .••.• •• ~--u , I 3 DAYS ONLY!
Baroque Cultured halls
7.]lhMM Wllllt Pink ColOr ' I ·s9 '13 on h1nks, $29 to $36 ·········•t•··· -
Many Othef rrie C1Murec1
P'•I Strn~ at Y:-il¥' 5.lvings!
In regard to our recent letter requesting the addition of
your name to our permanent mailing list we would like to
encourage you to return the card enclosed with our Jetter.
Eyen if your name and address was correct we MUST
RECEIVE THE CARD BACK in order to place you on our own
maiii"ng list. ·
If you"ve misplaced the card or if our letter was lost on its
way to you, please call us and we"ll add your name to our list.
Phone 644·5070.
To those who have returned the cards ... Thanks very much
for contributing.to such a tremendous response. You 've helped
us to serve you better.
Sincerely,
\+, ~~ /g',u_ 5.ueA
Representing At-Ease Management Staff'
44 fashion Island, newport center 644-5070
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U DAILY PILOT 1lwl<"1ay, Allgust 2l , 197l
' ' ~ ' ;
DEAR ANN LANDERS: ~ buallaad" ilEAR S.C.:, n may wtU he that
and I are both 18. Our nwrl•RO wu fll1e, O.Orse'• tr.uble II due to Ille male
until two years ago. I don't know whether meaopaalfl. However, yoor meatlon of beadacbt1, fatlpe and ao latere1t In sex CeorRO should change jobs 0t see a HQesta anOlber posslbWty -bl&b blood
psycbiatrllt. p r e 1 1 a r e ( t e c II • ~ e ally called
He Is n garage mechanic and makca byptrten.1lonl. t
a:ood money but I'm not .ure it's worth ll'I U.e most common leriou1 dlttate
it. Maybe the exhalllt ftnnes he lnhlles 11 !Wa -try-ud neuy, too. Nearly
all day are doing thll lci him. 24 m11Uoa A r1 Ila It TbJ He has booome lrtitabie and abort of me cw ve~ • 1 meana
energy. He ComplliM Of frequent one ~ in It.
headaches that come and IJO. CA!r sex life HaU of tllese 1&ck petflt don't even
uaed to be wooderful but be hasn't even bow .-y are sick. becaiae often tlaere
made the effort In three months. The last are M •YID-•· 1'e penoo1 wbo llAS
few Ammpts were failures and I think sympMm.1 Is lucky, la a way, because lte
he's ashamed lo try again. juot mJiht co to • -BEFORE be
J've suggested that he see a doctor but lw a stroke or a Mar\ attack or I.I
he says he's not lick. (!!ls wwt record II •trlcku wUll blladoes.a or kidney !allure.
txcellont.) Cln he be &olni !hroulh the A -·· blood prejsure CID be mate menopauae! ls lt normal for a man mtat.ared ta le•s tm tw• minutes. It Is
ol l8 to be-llroul!> wl!ll sexl What about 1lmple ud pololeso. V!mallly every ea1e
ii, Ann? --~ICJNG COUNSEL el _,,__ '<;U be oucceaaluUy ..
treated today wt~ medlcatlto.
l llf'le eYtl')'Olle who rudt tldt co1,ma
to wrlle for a lr6e boOklel tbt lella you
wllal to look !or ud wllal do do abotlt h,
-H)IO<lally WOUlOD wbo lab lfle PJll, ner:e 11 ... ,dlaleal m...., tllatllleae
-nm Ille rlak ol alrote.
Addre11 your teller or canl to\
lt!CR BUlOD PllESSUl\E,
Natloul Instihlte1 of Healtll,
Bellleada, Md. lltU.
U you are too luy to "1'lte, to11 lb1s
colUDUt ID aa envtlope ud lltribble your
name <and addrul acreu tbe cohunn.
Tlley'U bow wbal yoa wut.
Nothfoe you have to do teday 11 a11.m ..
porlant as tlll1. For Ille prlee ol u keat
Stamp you ml&ht uve &1ae w~ a1 some-
one you love. Maybe Yim' 1wa.
DEAR ANN LANDERS : I have been
reading your senseles.s prattle for years 1
•
•
for Lack of Spark ·
•
and am ~ llllf wjth your asoault! Oil
aoclal drinken. Please find a less
11 ........ crusade. (~own guesa II that
you are a closet drinker.)
Just to demonstrate . the extent to
which you have poisone"06Ur society, last
night we went to a party, all set to enjoy
ourselves.
14• ,44'#flr4, ". , ..
The hostess announced an experiment.
"No booze toftlght," she cbJrptd, 11Aiin
Landers says ii peopl~ can't have •·good
time wilhout liquor they're in trouble."
Wl!hln 30 minutes, six people lelt.
Alter an hour my husbarul was ready .to
jump out of his akin. So we went home at
10 o'clock and had a few drinks to help us ,
unwind. Thanka le< ruining what could
have been a gr'eat evening. -D AND R.
Dear D AND R: Why not try an tx·
pertment on yoar own? Tonlgbt while
your husband ''wawiDdt:,,. 1tay oa 1omato
juice and U1ten to him. Tomorrow Jlilht,
--'-.-
YOU •1unWbtd" ud let bJm 1taY oa
tomato J11oe ud Ustea to YOO. It could
put you llalli 01 Ille ...,.. !or IUe.
' DEAR ANN LANDERS: I'm a 21-year·
old ex·hlgh school basketball player. Tile
letter from the "caae cat" who urged
parent! to take time out to go watch
their kl~ engage In sports brought back
some memories.
My parent! wanted to come to the
games to cheer me on but I asked them
not to. I thought I wouldn't play as well
because they were in the stands. So they
' . ,.
never saw me play until my laat same as
a aenior.
I played a great game (21 points. 12 re· bowKt.s)' and after lt was over I felt very
good about It and could see the happiness
in their faces.
I realize now that my parents mlued
seeing a wonderful part of their son's llfe
as be grew to be a man. Aod I missed a
lot of pleasure myself. -A PERSONAL
FOUL
DEAR P.F., Thanks !or being big
enough to admit you were wrong.
Perhaps 1ome other cage cat wlll learu
from your mbtakc .
Liberation Movement Has Passed Them By .~argeSiz~
NEW YORK (AP) -.Older
people are YiotJmS ol mont
cliJcJimlnajjon lhan any other
lf'OUP1 beUev• st.'00 Olrtin,
wbolJe eiperieaoes d v r l n g
ye1n1 ol ~ ond Uv ..
'rib 4hem have n.cuMed in a
-"In Sftlae ol old people ud In outrage al lhelr
bv!ine:M."
BlocU, QUcuos a n d
-tte orPm""', Wible ond • li1le bit llnatenlng, ond
A Family Affair
old people will have to follow
lbelr eumple ond orpnlze as
a p:iiitlcal force," says the
aulbor ot "Ncl>ody Ever DI¢
ol Old A(e."
"We have a whole ~ about old people
-we .ti ooceyl: pal them.
on the bead ud giv. them a
pacifier," 91,,)'S the SS-yeer..akl
regiolered nurse. '
She lhlnb lhol !hey ahoU!d
"robe I<> he pacified, refuse
to take nonsense from their hotels, ,sat with them on park
famllles aod 1social workers · 'benches, ate with them in
and demand a guaranteed in-'greasy .spoom' end even
, come~-wlth m oocial agency 1!1-fbllowed the owner ol "the
terlerence." '-st l!"ir o1 h~ in New
surprised as she moved about
the country to learn thal the
word "old" had come into
''such awful disrepute."
She was ...tdened, loo, by
seeing the struggles of the
elderly poor to stay alive.
stay young with w r i n k I e
creams and hair dyes, because
they have the money to do it."
CLASS IJNED
SIZES , /!ft::-.~\,
36 to 46 U,~1)
ISOLATION
Miss Curtin became in-
creasingly a\vare ol the is021·
lion and shelviilg of 'the na-
Uoo's 20 millloo peiii.d over
SS os she worked In mental
hospitals and DW'l!ing homes,
lived with them -in fleabag
York" on h<r llhopU!ting
rounds.
Asohe relued on the bed in
her h<UI roam here In blue
jeanl and pxple sweater, her
eyes spa r k e d i.nclignanUy,
from behind huge r o u n d
glasses a.s she recalled some
ol the lhqs obe had -..
"I ....-Ired In e lllll'Sing home
-a pooh, nice, ...n..,.. 198
type place -liut die 'dienll'
weren1 giV<!l the dignity ol
names~ they were aI1 called
honey and dearle ; !hey had no
p'ivac~~\ m control over when
or wllal they ale.
•'They were disaxlraged
from becpmiog lriendo with
each olhlor. The lndutlon
wanted them totally depen-
dent."
"Half the old people in this
country live below the poverty
level, on leas than 1240 a
month," she points out. "It
means they can't afford prop-
er medlca1 care; they don't
eat right md that means an
increase in disabilities."
LABELED
After talking to people lrom
50 to 100 she found that the
first reaUz.ation they had that
they were old came from
someone giv)ng them that la·
hel.
"Anybody who's been put
out ol v.wk even at 45 and
The !lrst thing old people
should do, Miss C u r t i n
declares, ls realii.e that their
problems cross class lines and
that no m a t t e r what their
backgrounds, they are more
alike than different.
"I hope my book will help
change atlitudes toward old
people," she says. "I like
being with them. getting into
their lives and trying to
undelistand 1hem.
"But J don 't want to become
the world's youngest advocate
Qf -Old age, a closed one-is.sue
person," adds Miss Curtin ,
who is working m a novel
about growing up in America
81'1 a iwoman.
findi it impossible to get
RET!llEMENI' another job knows the prej. r---.........
With an old lady who posed udices against age," she says. ....
as her mother, Alisa C\rtin She thinks old people wculd
made the rotnis d. retirement do well to start consciousness· i
villag... raising groups to raise their @
"They !eel I I k e con-own !'ride. BRASS R/N(J
cenlralion camps ·with their "Bui the poor old people
high walls and s e c u r i t Y doo't have time to do anything w .... · • .,,.,.. ltr
systems," she 68)'!! o1 them. but be old and poo<, trying to • -
''There''! no variety atl'Olg keep a roof over their heads; • Ner.e11 W._,.
ithe people. There are dumb the middle class people have • A.IHI SHOD
games a-I dumb lhingJ to do guilt feelings because they _._.
to fill the hourS. There's have bought the idea that once Cl ... • 5-ll•ls
Clouic sh irts ore bock
and we've 901 'eml /
The kind that !urn
an ordinary pair of
panh into an outfit
•.. lost year's 1lcirt
into a cost~Jnt. s ..
the smash collection
of tops at
Ella Nor's. lt'1
the NOW Look
in larger sites.
from$1S
f • ~
Sundoy Shoppe•?[
Fullt11on & ~L..J
Hunlinglon Beach J fl'/. •
Open 12 lo S ~,.
~il'flllor To /tdtondiM In Stock
Ella ", 1;) ~ ' Nor'sHALF·SIZE SHOP .
COSTA
MESA
1105 NIWP'OIT ILYD.
INertti ef 11tll Shfftl
HUNTINGTON
BEACH
14 HUNTIN•TON CINTll
I Na te hrtl• "-» nothing for people to \Qve you quit being .a prodUctivc 1121 E11t . _......._..1,,_'themae!ve.S." PULLllTON-214 0N"9efelt Mell, ot O_ot,. & H•rlter ~ merr~'. of society you. are a Co11t Hwv. Railed. in a small Wyoming supplicant. And the upper Coro111 d1I Mir Mo11. • Tll•n. • frl . 10-9 -TMS. • W-4. • Sat. 10·6
•tOwn w!lll grandpare<M close class old are loo busy t:ylng to .,,_.,.. ••n,ltAmer._ lrerd e Me•l•r t:h•r•• by ud many old people as
lriends, wtiere erowinl otd r--;::=======~==~~~~:==~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ wu regarded a.s a natural
process, the author w a s
Mom. "'"." Sit. ,, ' ,,.
DAILY CHltlSTMAS WOltKSHOP
PARENTS WHO CARE ...
Look to International Montessori Schools
LET YOUR CHILD
DISCOVER
Caple Maury A. Notch, USNR, swears his 20-year-old daughter_Maureen Notch,
of Oakland, into the regular Navy during a ceremony aboard one of two Cor-
onado-based PT boats that vi!ited the Berkeley Marina. Miss Notch will be a sea-
min apprentice.
°"'' 1n o..,. ...tll ••• 1t7J PE•SOHALllaD
CHltlSTMAS 20% CAltDS , ltl
ln1M• flit IOihtW1Hi CltiiGi'
HUNTINGTON 1£ACH
16141 ALGONQUIN 11 WAltHall
LEARNING CAN BE FUN
Smocks
Tell Troth ·
,__iiiii;;;;;;i;o;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;======~~~-nn
)1arina High S c b o o I
graduates Kim E. Smock · and
J ... ph I'{. Saunders plan to be
married Oc~ 20 in the home of
he1 parents. Mr. and Mrs.
Newell Smock of Seal Beach.
1be fiance, son or Mr. and
11trS~ Kenheth Saunders of
Huntington Beach. also at-
tended Gbldcn w .. t College ..
BERNARDO · 1
BERNARDO I
BERNARDO I
•
"we lailve
••re of diem ..... ,
lower Pfleell ' Ila•• anyone
In tlae
world."
eJI rAJHIOH Ill.MIO
• I
AD SOOD •tri T~:, A.IMJ. 21
•RIAT FOi
lllAICFlST
CANTALOPES
6/'100
LA.RGI FllSH
HU PEPPERS
2 ....
29'
SOLID' 'LOCAL
TOMATOES
'I\ '
1 OC111.
a1,., '
Charry
r-
'I oo
I lb. Ba~ CARROTS •. 2 bags 19c
RUSSET POT A TOES .. 2 lb./25c
FRESH SPINACH ...... I Oc bunch
ITALIAN PRUNES ....... .... I 9c lb.
"ATIINTION RESTAURANT OWNERS": ·
T•k• •dv1nt19e of our bwyifli power. The Produce Marl will s1ve you
.. M...y" and supply you with th1 lr1•h1st produce. L1rg1 or smell
tt1+1urant1, giYt u1 1 call. Wt cfeliver FREE. •
'INGARDIA . BROS. PRODUCE MART ... ,..,_.
ftOOO &TAMPS I 2140 Pl.A~
• Vlctorle
COSTA MISA
645-1 365
• •
Life long habits are
fanned early ...
be sure a love of learning
is one of them
Absorbing adventures
into music, art, science
and the fascinating
world of nature
THIS IS MONTESSORI
Phone todav tor IMMEDIATE ENROLLMENT
BREA
400 West Fir
(714) S29.03l 1
FOUNTAIN VALLEY
10551 McFadden
(714) 839·1750
' .
COSTA MES.\
381 University
(714) 646-1134
GARDEN GROVE
9851 B\Xbv
(714) 539-3244
NEWPORT BEACH
20221 Cy~ress St.
(714) 979.9241
-
• itternatzdnal
montl!ssuri sDhools
• W. C. CARLBERG ENTERPltlSES
•
•
To avoid dJ.sappolntmenl, prospective
bride"\. are reminded to have their wedding
atones with black and white glossy photo-
graphs lo the DAILY PILOT Women's De-
partment one week before the wedding.
Pictures received after that time will not
be used.
For engagement announcement• It is
imperative that the story, also accompanied
by a black and white glossy picture, be sub-
mitted six weeks or more before the wedding
date; otherwise it will not be published.
To help fill requirements on both wed-
ding and. engagement stories, forms are
available in all the DAILY PILOT offices.
Further questions will be an1wered by
Women's Section staff members at 6424321.
Members Hear
Rumors,
Irvine Juniors
Mrs. Norrnan Hayashi,
mtmbenhlp chairman of the
Irvil\e JlOllor Woman's Club,
will host an orientation coffee
in her home at 8 p.m. Monday,
Aug. 27.
Women between the ages of
18 and 3& who are interestedi in
joining the club are invited.
During the orientation. detail-
ed information about projects,
activiUe! and function of the
organization will be provided.
SC Juniors
South Coast Juniors of Foun-
tain . Valley will be hostesse&
for Los Cerritos District's
Round Table conference. to
take place at 8 p.m. ~fonday,
Aug. 27, in the Fountain Valley
O:mununity Center.
BSP
Beginning . Day meetings
have been planned by four
chapters of Beta Sigma Phi.
Mrs. Sidney Chappell, pre~
dent of Beta Alpha Xi, will
ho6t a salad supper and
meeting in her Huntington
Beach borne at 7:30 p.m. Mon-
day, Aug. 21.
Xi Rho Pl's year will open
DEBBIE BURKE
Rites Set
In October
Debbie Burke and Gary S.
Jacklon are p1anning rto marry
Oct. 7 in tile Soutll Shore Sail·
ing Club ol Newport Beech.
She is the daughter of Mra.
Claire Burke and Wlllfam P.
Burke, both oJ Santa Ana, and
h6 fiance's parents are Mr.
and Mrs. Dexter B. Ja~n Of
C.osta Mesa.
The betrothed are graduates
of N.wport Harllor High
School, and he attended
Orange Coast and Santa Ana
colleges.
)
Songs .
OES
A birthday party night ~
scheduled for Harbor Slar
Chapter, Order of the Eastern
Star at 8 p.m. Tuesday, Aug.
28, in the Newport Beach
Muonic Temple.
W~ patron and matron.
Mr. and Mrs. Arnold Arif will
celebraLe their birthdays by
havtng worthy matrons and
patrons in' the county fill
,..gular olOces.
Hootenanny
Old·fashloned '1hootenanny''
music will fill the air when El
Canilne Real PTA presenls its
amual tee a-eam 90ciat1 at
6:il0 p.m. Tuesd1y, Aug. 28, on
the -grounds.
"
M1N1ATufll•• • OLD DOL.1.8 . OLO OU
I MANNING'S
CoU..CTOR8
SHOI' ~
~T 8LVIJ, ..-,.. GAU ....
• • Hll•• 11.•:.a
. . . " . -. . . . ... . . .. . '
Leaves · Her Cold
AT
WIT'S
END
You are invited to visit···
to see -our decor1tive accessories
from aH over the worl d
and ···
t•t 1c1111u11nt~ with •ur 11rvi11• 1f1
c111tom flow1r 1rr111,ln9 f,,
yout ho1111 or offlc:• tom 011t
bt111tiful ,,11cli111 tf1
• • .. . •
·-
DAILY 'ILOT J §
TONIGHT'S
TV IDGHLIGHTS
KHJ ii 7:80 -"Batlle Cry." Van Herun and
Aldo Ray star In th!• lively war drama from 196&.
CBS 8 9:00 -"The Sergeant" Rod Stet.er as a
veteran Army sergeant attempUng to supprea hi&
homosexu&Ut)' and John Phllllr,• Law u tbe younc
soldier who attracts him In th • 18et film.
ABC D 9:00 -Good VibraUons From Cen)tal
Park. A blend of hard rock and genU• folk m\IJio
with Sly and the Family Stone, the Temptations,
John Sebastian, the Eagles and Meliua Manch ..
ter.
Sil~ Fltwtrt
Chi11• Flow1r1
Otiecl ,.lowtrJ
Weod Flow1r1
tl'ld ,Ft ltfYtd
............................................ ...oi
SAV~ $ ISO!.!
G~NV<N-E ~fRfC:RN MftH06 PtN'r'.
BROWN Lf~Tff~P. -rop toOL1:b (N
~"' t<1tRtr soi.b t.1:~r .
R-tGUl~R PRIC~ $ 4-B<f !!
SAL{ RI ({ t 33'!'1.!
-._,.....,,
THUP.S .'ffo 'f('r'IP.f.f)
SUN. ~ MON.
Ftli•t• TV DAILY LOG
., .. , ..... '"""' ... -. .... Cll Cll _., -(C) ~ ..,,,, -(!) (d11) ...
Friday
, .... _ ··--.... -w,•.,... c.... .,, ..._.
"llo-Ule~-... llclW' .
J:toe-...: •AtU•••.....,.
(j11) ~7 -h•I °""'""· "'
'· C.H•rd.
llOCE, CllANNIL II
Oran,. County'• UlfF tel1vtllon s11tlon, KOC&-TV, hu •.•-Jed the followlna 1pedlJ _.-.ms lodly. Dtlllled
hstlnp ol Chlnnel I0'1 PfOlrlJlll .,.. corrtod Jn Ille D91Jy
Pilot'• TV Week each SUnd1y.
'
••<
1111• .,:_.
••• ..q
l
..,~
. ,11
!:a
~
"" .. .,n
,.,,..1J
li Nl ,,,.,,
'>~
I
,,.
•. 'T:
"' •i
,I
26 DAILY PILOT
(
l nr.ol n Av•
Wll\ Of ftnort
111·1010
(ll NO ONf UHDll 11 ADMlmD (J.f
ANIMATIO 40UU SllOWl
HEAVY TIAfflC t.1tJ
~ HAMMER OF GOO 111
• • 1 • • • • • •
Th1,rrsday, August 23, 191.:.i
Mesa Mounts Melodrama
The latest community group
to unveil its plans for the 1973·
74 season is the Costa tdesa
Civic Playhou se. which will
open its ninth campaign at lhe
F:tirgrounds ao'dilorium wilh
son1ething I o c a I audiences
don't see too very oflen -a
r eal. old .fashioned
melodrama .
Intermission
Tom Titus
chance to see the \Vestminste r
Commwiity Th e a t e r 's eit·
cellent production of "Mame"
this weekend. Fred West '~
ambitious musical winds up its
t h r e e • weekend engagement
\Yith final perrormances ~~ri·
day and Saturday evenings at
8: 30 in the 17th Street School
auditorium.
•
OENlAAL CIN~MA CO APOAAllOl\I
fOUNIAI N VALLIY
•l9 D o"
"PAPER MOON" (P'G)
ALSO
'MAH WHO LOVED CAT DANCING'
fOUNlAIN \IAl\fY
ll9 1 ""
"N!'.lHT WATCH" IPGJ
AL!D
"L!G(NO C~
HELL Ho ur•E''
Pali 1'ambel lini, Cost a
ti.1csa's resident direc tor who's
stagi ng the opener as well as
all thi! other productions at the
playhouse this year, says it'll
bC' a trad it ional hcro-<:hccring.
villa in-booing ··mcller." It
goes on the boards Sept. 21 for
th ree. weekends.
Millie Bloss:in1: Al Jones :1s
the evil. mu stachioed, villain
Courtney Kenilworth, and Ron
G i b b as the stout-hearted
hero. Noble Humdinger.
Tiger'' n n d "f"Jssionclla."
Closing out the season with a
ti.1ay 24 opener wiU be another
·newc ome r , ''UTBU ',...
!Unhealthy to Be Unpleasant),
billed as a zany farce.
Doris Allen is M:une u·~ct
docs a first rate j:>b in an ex·
hausting role. Others in a fine
cast are Penny Hayes as ,;r.;;;<.~!foJ;~~
* AL.SO JN THE n1idst of
Vera, f{ic hard Riley as young
Patrick, Cyndi lt1cConnac as
Agnes Gooch i her solo is a
knockout ) and Don George as
Beauregard Jackson Pickett
tSee INTERMISSIO~ Page Zll)
CLINT EASTWOOD
llllUI fWllS mumn
.. . ' •
"
-· CINFOOMF ?O
"'-~'-·--:.....•t.::.l~··
-•;.l.L;;,I. •
ClllFOOMF 21 ;,:'.
.. £~ ...!.... '~'1•.t _._, .. ,
., .. ,,_ "•
SIAD/UM l :,
..... l.h<!u....Ll.tl<' JI •
••
"HIAVY TllA-'FIC" CXI
"WHAT Dn YOU $AY TO A
NAKED LADY1"
">Ol'f':[' o•: MU~IC''
NO MISEltVliD SEATS
With JuH• A11dNw1
...
"SCORPIO"
"PAPER l.\C'"'"'IN" IPG I ...
"HAROLD 6 MAUDE''
"LIVI AND LIT Dll" INI ...
''THE MECHANIC"
"THE MACKINTOSH MAN" IP'GI ...
"IULLET" IPGl
·-------
San 01•0" F"'~
11 81oolinuoi!
/So l
H2-2411
lieading the cast for Costa
t-.1esa's trip back to the Gay
Nine ties are Jeani Gibbon ns
the fragile blonde heroine,
Bernard Si1non, the last of
Costa l\1 esa'S Red Hot L:ivers,
returns to the Community
Center stage as the shop
keeper, with Denise ?i.1cCan!cs
as the shop girt Veteran ti.1esa
actress Shirl ey Dillon is the
hero's mot her. while Kathleen
Ames plays the society girl
out to capture his heart.
rehearsal is "Cactus Flower"
at the H un ting ton Beach
Playhouse where di rec t o r
Kent Johnson has finally col·fr-:====------111 --'-~[i~~
lcoted a complete cast. The • '! .• easily the best
movie so far this 6'0I:(';( c. scon
fiYI OUHAW.l'f
OKLAHOMA CRUDE ffGl
CHITINNl SOC!Al CLUI !lltl
l n•peir~I oetw n
, , , , He•<::h Bi.a.
• & >'11bo• Blva.
171-1912
MINO tlOWIMG SllSHNSI!
DAY OF THE JACKAL JPGJ
Woller Motthow Cwol l uriwtt
PETE 'N TILLIE i~!
Lincoln Avo
wo1I of Knoll
527·2213
ONL'f otl'l'l~N ~HG!
JESU5 CHRIST
SUPEISTAR ,~,
SILENT RUNNIN_G !Gl
S..nl• An• F<eew1y ne1r
ChtP••lln Ave.
5Sl·1022
' .. ,..;m;;;;;--' ........
MAIY POPPINS IOI .
SNOWIAlL EXPl!55 IOI
For
Weekender
Advertising
Phone
6424321
m MANN
THEATRES
ALL THfAT•IS
COOLIO IY
ltlF•IGl•ATION
arJpn.
I "3jtani/O l.itL
fi)aijs ,..--
1 -r4 "°~NEUND£~11"'°""'11f0
MOM. IHRU IHUllS. I P.i.
FRIOU l I Ul
SUUROll 2-7 I H5
SUMOI! 2·5 11
All S(ATS $4.00
CINEMA LAND ""I ..... 1uo .. •~•MI•
6JS.1601
"
I
Sooth Coast Plaza I
I .. llll!AI ""·•! •11Tl)t S4&·271 I
fiiiLY 1:15 . 5:30. f;I
2 BIG
Barbra Streisand Hits
"FUNNY GIRL" ~1
0.lll Y 3:SS·7:30
"OWL & PUSSY CAT"
3(~9 \Ii• I.ilk> Abe Burro1vs co1nedy i s New""n lkach
tirket.ed for a Sept. 7 opening. ""'""' 613-&:iso
John Loughman, the COUil· THE 8iS1 OF BARBRA
IN TH E OLlO. \11hich will ty's busiest actor {six shov.•s)
follow the melodrama, D.D. last season. is ge tting off to a
Oalhoun, Diana S p e n ce r . fast start this year in the
Barbar:i Grenrich and Mary leading role of the w3yward
Sull ivan v.'ill be seen as the dentist. Beth Titus, back on
Dance I-lall Darlings, 11·hile stage after presenting this col-1 Mike F'ant:-izi, Helene Briggs, urnnist with a son and helr in
Susan Recs and ex-villain July, wiU play the late-bloom-l
Jon e s h a v e sin g i n g ing denlal assistant. while La.1 assignments. Accompanying Donna deBa rros takes the rolel
them on the piano will be John of the doctor's kooky mistress.
Susman , who's following his Rounding out the Huntingtonr
p:irents. Bill and Helen, into Beach cast are Ron Lnng, I
communit~r theater. Hank Sorkin, Gabri e I,
The "meller" will kick off a ~docilnikar, Mary Modiano and I
v:iried season for the Costa Carol Ca m p b c I I . The
Mesa group. Following on playhouse's cameo spccialis1.1 Also
'II b "A Th d Barbro :itreisand Nov. 16 \l'I e ousa n. Colln Gui11e r, 1\'i\l be al 1·1
h G"org& S11gol Clo11•ns.'' the last s oiv again in four bit roles. "TMi! OWL AND TH !:
directed by Pali Tambe!lini * PUSSYCAT"
before she to~k up pcrn,anent ~~O;N;;;T~ll~E~R:O;A~R~D:S:.::..:L~a:s~t '==::::;;;;::;:;;;:;;;:;;:::;:;;~ f"!<idPnce al the ti.I es a - ---
playhouse. Then come.s a
countv premiere. Lu c i 11 e
Flcl chcr's "Night \Vatch ." a
mystery.suspense thriller by
the author of "Sorry, \Vrong
Number ," opening Jan. 18.
A three-part musical, "The
Apple Tree." takes the Costa
Mesa stage on March 15, tell·
ing the stories of "Adam and
Eve." "The Lady or th':''
MESA '~~;:
1 BB<i NE WPORT Bl \10
~.:iro 1 s~1
NOW!
ORANGE COUNTY
EXCLUSIVE!
IT'S
"SPECTACUlAI!"
"SUPERB!"
"THRILLING!"
"FUNNY!"
"DON'T MISS!"
f 1Excellent.''
PLUS:
DESI ARNAZ JR.
"RID SKY AT
MORNING"
COME EARLY
AVOID THE RUSH!
CONTINUOUS
SAT. & SUN. 2 P.M.
-·
HONK
In Concert With Special Guests
manna
An Outdoor Event on the Grass
Newport Harbor H.S. Stadium
NEWPORT BEACH
Friday, August 24, 8:00 PM
Ticket• •r• Three-Fifty •t lhti G•1e
A Mic:llMI Lt .... Pl'odl.o(.1'on
U.A. CITY AND SOUTH COAST CINEMAS-TUESDAY SOc
(LADIES AHO GOLD!'H AGERSl-OPEN TIL 2:ot P.M .
8 i r11r.l Slrltisind/Geor;t Se9<1I
"OWL AHO THE PUSSYCAT"
"FUNNY GlltL" llolh In Color! (PGl
J. COburll/R. Wtllll
"THE LAST 01'" SHELIA"
''THIE,. WHO CAME TO
DINNER" Cotor (PG)
10 ft.CAD:'ZIA Y
.\WARl>f. !
Liia Minelli
"CABARET"
Also
Oiona R1n1
"LADY SINGS
THE BLUES"
Both in Color I r.1
Year'' -Stepll<;>f'IFafbD< • NEW YORK TIMES,{"' ... '\. ~' Where were you in '62? 'I' •
EXCLUSIVE
ORANGE COUNTY
fNGAGEMENI
tiiWil
'lbelr
deadly
ml11lan:
ta Cl'IHk
1111 farblddel'I
Island
af
Han! ··---l!J..L=
'CilllgJ
ffiB f!m0ilil
"'"'\>·"'""• ... ., ... , ...... ~ ... '' ''
The ultimate in Martial Arts
adventure and excitement!
• ' ~
!
• • • ' i : • '
•• • •
BRUCE LEE ·JOHii SUON ·AHllA CAPRI o"EmRTHE DRAGOll"eos1~riig lOBWAll ·j
SHIH KIEll and lntrOOOOllg Jll KELLY MIJS(• L,jo StMrin · \~rnen by Ma.et Allin· Pltxl.<etl 111 Fred Wef!tt • I
ard PilulHeli~ in associat\>t ~lh'!Qymcnl C"°" ·Oirecletl 111 Robert Douse · PANAVISKJN•· TECHNKXXDR• I
0111G1N•l i;()IJNCltR•c1t Al&u• GIRi 11un.ctto ~ 1, -'" I Celebrating \Varrer Bros. 50th ~ ON w.i.1111U1 POs11tc0110S . . "'<_,,,,.... ,..,""-...,, u~...... A warner CcwnmunicatJ<ris Comp.}1y
STARTS
FRIQllY
AUGUST 24 """ ••• F<wv M" <•••-•
)
AT BOTH TlllATRlS a,,.,. .550.1022 l:::::;======::~NE~VE:R~B=EF~OR~E~~--'---:~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~i
SO MANY GREAT SHOWS
UNDER ONE
GEORGE C.SCOTT
FAYE DUNAWAY
JOHN MILLS
JACK PALANCE
Ul\L hUM1~
Gt<UDE
WEEKDAYS ·
I: 1S-3:1S·S:15·7:I5·9: 1 S
SATUllDAY
Ml , J,15 · l•ll
J,15 -9'15 -IUl
MATINEES
DAIL¥
•
Plus Ryan O'Neal "JHE
THIEF WHO CAME TO OINNER"
"THl[f" 1·5·!
'llST otSH£1U"
Plu. "SILVER fOI ind
SIM OIY£NP0Rf'
"POPPINS" 11
1~·1·10
J-l·ll
•&£ SCIW
.u:J:eindlan
!!lea-
.MIS GAMER • YBIA llm1$
"'191Cl! 'Oof0... •JINDO.Qf1t
2nd '(GI IATID SHOW
RW' 7Diiiisit~·
Ill• --
' I
Pt US
·CHARLES BRON
"THI
MICHANIC"
rt (PO)
•
:I . •
. . • . ' . . • • I
i • !
·1 •• • .. . ' · 1
I
• • j . ,,
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1
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_Niguel Park F ete
·:slated on Sunday ·
Opening ceremonlea for Ille
· i:.iiuna Niguel Reglooal Park .on La Paz Ro.ad have been set
for 8:30 p.m. ne•t Sunday. ;:The dedication will be
-foUowed by opening Ibo picnic
'ci:punds and an 8 p.m, pops
ooncert by the San Diego Sym-
.phOny Orchestra.
,'Jbe 155--acre park includes a
4$-acre lake, which has not yet been filled.
"We hope lo have ii filled by
REFLECl'IONS
~.
Reyn
Sheffer
I
"Mlny llttle1 mak• • much .. ...
Ct nant11
Whether '":e speak or feerning, ambiUon, Interest
th our fellow man, or saving tor the proverbial rainy day, Many littles do ••. In the
ft'ordl ot Ct'~antes • • •
~e'a much.
· IJtUe efforts or accom-
pllshments remain little un·
tll cumulatively they assume
ttspectable proporUons. Al· though It might appear that
the end o! winter, alter Ille
rairuJ," said Ralph Hudaon, a
opokesman for Ille Jtvbon,
Beaches, l\nd Parka Depart-ment.
When filled; the lake will be
available for noo-moto.rized
sailing craft and eventually
fishing.
Dmrict Atuimey Ce c i I
Hicks will be master or
ceremonJes for the dedi.CBtioo
wilb Fifth District &lpervtsor
RoMld Caspers and Tom
&Jdwin, Chainnan ol the
Orange County Harbors,
Beaches, and Parks Com-
mission officiating.
Tickets are available at the
Laguna Niguel Rec re at o n
.Department. 31000 Crown
Valley Parkway, or by calling
496-0456.
The symphony. directed by
Jo.hn Green. will present five
works: medleys from Bern-
stein's "West Side Story,"
• Bart-Oreen's ''Oliver!''
Gershwin's "Porgy and Bess,"
Dvorak's ''Carnival
Overture," and, Rod~ers and
Hammerstein's "Oklahoma!"
proa:ress ls IOl'Detlmes a pa.Jn. 11-----------
tully alow, step-by-step pro-l'r-----;;::::;;;;;;;;i cess, each lndividua.l step la Iii vitally important and must
be taken ll an ultimate goal
is to be reached.
J ~H€FF€R A mo1<TU.>.l<Y ~
A well~eloped capacity for taklnii lntlnlte palns
with small detallt ... those
Important "littles'' , .. has
been the buts for our un·
excelled repUta tlo n in this
community. which we have served for many yean.
''' ;OUTH COAST HIGHWAY I
LAGUNA BEACH
494-15)5
SAN CLEMENTE
15)] NORTH El CAMINO REAL
492.0100
hair odyss•y
139-<41<4<4
16 1l1 8tooH1ur1L •t Ecli1t9•r
Houn: 11>-7 T"""' • 5111.
Dr. David Gardner
announces the op•nin9
of his medic•I office
sp•cieli1in9 in f•mily practice
493·6333
24655 Le Plez•, Dene Point
Tux Rtntels & Mens Weijr
LACKS
SPORT CO.
SUITS
ALTERATIONS
FOR MEN & WOMEN
YOUR SUPPORTING
GIFT GUARANTEES . ,:,"'
0
YOU MORE INCOME~ . v YHc..tOCCrN~ ...... "'"""· IV/TY~
99frf ublt'Dllthil .......... wlllle CALL Ml. JIM HIND
hlpl11•••-l..._c .... ttir. .. h
S."" C-Co,...,.lty H ...... I .. 499·1311
..., "LM .. T• ,,_,,.. ... Wrtt. or
cen fer.,... .. ....,.. Ext. 600
SOUTH COAST COMMUNITY HOSPITAL .
J1171 CHlt H......,, S.... ........ C1ll11• tt•17
MEALS
. .
NEW HUNTINGTON BEACH CITY HALL TAKING SHAPE
One Question: What to do With Old, Downtown Facilities
Huntington Bicyclist,s
Urge~ to Get Licenses
With the start of school less than a
month away, police in Huntington Beach
are reminding residents, particularly
school age ones, that all bicycles ridden
on tjty streets must be licensed .
The purpose, according to Police Chief
Earle Robitaille, Is for identification
!hould the rider become involved. in an
accident or other emergency and to aid
in recovery lf the bike is lost or stolen.
Licensing requires only a $t fee. The
lie<nse Is good until Dec. 3t, 1'75.
Licenses can be obtained at the police
department's bicycle safety unit from a
a.m. ta 4:30 p.m. Mondax through Friday
$80,000 Grant
To Aid Students
and from 8 a.m. to 4 p.m. Saturday. The
bicycle safely unit is loealed at the police
range oo Goihard Street near Talbert
Avenue.
In addition . licenses can be obtained
from to local bike shops They are:
-Bike Rack Bicycle Center, 20.18t
Beach Blvd.
-!leech Cyclery, 17941 Beadt Blvd.
-Bicycle Trail, 9921 Hamilton Ave.
-George Bike Shop, 9941 Yorlttmm
Ave.
-Bicycle Baron, 16196 Pacilic Coast
lfighway.
-Valley Bike and Hobby, 1707t
Magnolia St., Fountain Valley.
-Huntington Beadt Bike Shop, 15862
Springdale St'.
-Westfair Bite Shop, 5885 Warner
Ave.
-Westmimter Bike Shop 14191 Beacll
Blvd.
-Del's Bike Sbop, 20.l Main st.
WhatchaDo
With Old
City Hall?
Thursday, August 23, 1973 s DAILY PILOT %l
Jail Physician ..
Denies Charges
SAN DIEGO (AP) -County not to coddle paUenta. • .'
jaU physician Jules Frank whether they come from tho
says a report to the San Diego jail or private practice."
County Bar A s s o c i a t i o n Frank said the jail bad only
recommending hls dismissal three full-time nurses when be
was "superficial and un· was hired, but now hU 10
By TERRY COVILLE founded." nurses and a p a r t ~ t l m e
Of "" DtllY l"ll•t '''" Frank said in a recent in· psychiatrist.
The changeover date from the old city terview he tw improved the "We now have a medical
ball downtown to the new five-story jairs health program since program in the jall so organ--
structure across from Huntinsi:ton Beach taking the $20,000-a-year job ized and staffed as to lnslre
High School ls rapidly approaching. siz years ago. He denied the that prompt medical care will ™ Dearnes.! of moving day _ ex-report's allegation that he con· be available to any Inmate
peeled the first week in February_ will siders inmates with physical who requests it," the doctor
soon .caused a tot rJ.. questions about what complaints "malingerers." said. •
to do 'With the old 3.5 acres of civic "'lbat word does not exist in Frank said he is on 24-hour
buildings at Fifth and 1i1ain street!:. my voca6ulary, either call at the jail. He said none of·
City Administrator David Rowlands personal or professional," he the atlorneys ever contacted
says no decision bas yet been made on
0
_sa_id_. _"_M.:.y_beds __ i_de_m_a_M_e_r_i_s_h_i_m_o_r_h_is_st_ar_r. _____ ,
the future ol the old city hall, but he '--------------------""I doubts if much, or any of it will be sold. 11
"We have to move cautiously in that
area because of the current i:lowntown
study," says the administrator. "'Mtls
could be a large parking comp!e• for a
new downtown."
The private engineering finn of
Voorheis, Trindle and Nelson (VTN) is
developing a comprehensive redevelop-
ment plan for the downtown.
F« its share of the work, the city has
agreed it will provide public parking as
needed to make the VTN plan work, so
city officials are oot eager to let go of
anything the city already OWl1.1 in the
area. Rowlands says three requests tiave
already been made for possible uses of
the old city hall buildings. They Involve :
-Senior citiz.en activities.
-Home for some type of community
museum.
-Using part or Ibo old police facility
as a new home for the Huntington Beach
Free Clinic.
Of course, if it all becomes a parking
complex. there won't he any old building>
left.
PRE-KINDERGARTEN
REGISTRATION CLINIC
Laguna Beach Unified School District
Aliso, Top et the World and El Morro
will be held
Thurs. & Fri.-Au9. 30 ·31
8:30-11 a.m. & 12·2 p.m.
Lagun• Beach High School
625 Park Ave.
No 11,polllhMltt h ltKftHry IMt If yo1 wl .. N ........ of
co.,httl99 rile cllalc wtftlh1 ... llo1r, '" _,. .-• ....,,.
ti-by cotlhHJ 494·114• (ht. 41J. Coll .... If.,.. ..... .......,_
portwrio1 problems or ltMd ftll'tMt 1itt.n.ot1... """' CMW, .. Im 4*tlfk.,., Mffllft., polio 011d DPT 1.._..wa.. ...,._
'-tho• et1'9ri!t1J tlll1 foll, MC .. ory 099 II I, H .., ~
0....MMr 2, 197), Rowlands aaid he l!nd his staff
members will zero in on the fate of oJd \~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
city hall during September and October.
Originally, the new city ball was to be
fmisbed by Oct. 7, but winter rains and
city-requested changes in construction
have delayed the work more than three
months.
Aubrey Hom, Ille city's proj ect
manager for the civic center, said the
sbeU of Ille grey five-story city ball and
threHtory police headquarters will ac-
tuaUy be finished by ·tbe lint of
December. .
He expects it to take nearly two
months to furnish Ille bl!IJdings with
carpets, phones, office equipment and all
other items, which is why city worter3
can't actually move in untll the first of
February.
-CALlfORMA '1'~~
1 ~Mr.JI{ -&r. SW. a!f 011. tO'I • sr H111C1:
13£Sl" ~MITY f.111&~ "T-$\1\trS M" 111£ llESt-P¢<i$-.....
~"ZA ,-........::;;;,;;;;:-
ll 'la
Da4
While city officials are ready to leave
their old quilrters, Rowlands did admit
the city saves money daily by. not mov~ About 575 students in kindergarten t tng. When the new city hall l! opened,
through third grades at Harper and Cul a} Arts more employes will be needed to nm it, Tamura schools in Fountain Valley will tor so for the moment their salaries are sav-benell!. this fall from an $80,000 grant ed.
from u1e state. h He added, however, that for the sake of
The money, funded through SB 1302, p aneliSts So, ug t efficiency and amooll) operations, he
will be used on a program to improve would much rather be in the new
-·••··, molb and •--···e Instruction building. ·~.. -... -. Fountain Valley residents who are iti-for the primary grade otudenla. tttested in ...-v1ng on a newly created The finance department Is CWTently
School ofllclals said the money will CUiturai Arla Committee are being reworking the entire budget department
provide addition&! teache" aides and sought by the city council. by department to reflect Ille actual cash
aecretarleSy more materials and equip-'Ibe commjttee, to be composed of savings in Salaries saved by not moving,
ment, release time to train teachers in repl'esentatives or each of the art and also saved by other, recent personnel
new techniques and expert consultants in forms, the schoolS' and the community. changes.
reading and math. will serve in an advisory capacity to the While the time line for civic center
The program, which ill to be initiated city's Parks and Recreation C<>mmissim. construction has changed, Hom did say
at the two schools, may be e1panded to The purpose of the committee is to im-the cost hasn't. The contract was bid at
the whole district over the nexX>t~fou~r.~pro§ve~oommuru~~g·ca~ti~on~and~~·~coope~~r~a~U~oo~~l6~,484~,500~,~w~i~lb~a~$~299~,500~~rese=~rv~e~fund~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~f yea... _ between cultural groups In lhe city. for additions and changes .
Saddle back
Tables Vote
On Hopefuls
Trustees of the Saddleback
Valley Unified School Dustrict
this week tabled action on sup-
port of candidates for six
Orange ColDlty vacancies in
the CalUornla School Boards
Asl!ociaUon Delegate Assem·
bly.
Mrs. Jane Boyd of the
Laguna Beach Board o r
EducaUon ls the only south
Orange County candidate for
one ot the vacancies. There
are 12 other candidates from
JlQrth and central Orange
County.
Board nlembers agreed to
discuss the melter at their
Sept. 4 meeting .
Orange County is entitled a
total of 11 positions in the
delegate ~bly. the policy
mating arm of the associa·
Uoo.
FURNITURE
RB MEANS FURNITURE AND THEN SOME. ORIGINAL DESIGNS!
We designed It, we made It, and we know It's terrific. Hara Is our new
104H basic contemporary sofa around which our free decorating ser·
vice will help you create Y.,.,r personal room setting. A fine Jon~
wearing Herculon fabric correlating
solids and bold stripes in a rich
comfortable texture. Free delivery,
of course, and our famous warranty
of quality. Also av1/lable, matching /oveseat, full size or queen aJNPer,
end lounge chairs.
On• of the most importent •spect1 of peti•nt c•r• is di•t•ry service. Oellclous
nourishing meel1, prj•red to the,atient's phyiicien's ord1r1 under +h• 1up1r-
vi1ion of • regist•r• di•titien an ettr•ctively s•rved, •r• oft•n the ht'9Hli9ht1
of • patient's day. The pf•esenVdlning room etmosphere lnvl+•• petie nts to en-
joy me•I• in comfo rt, b•euty, and fri1ndlint11 . Peti1nt1 mey hav• m•als ••rv•d
in tbtlr rooms; lf n•ce1stryt but •r• encourt9ed to eet in the dlnln~ room where
thiy c•n 1xp•rlenc1 1ociebility with other Beverly Menor p•ti•nt1.
I .::::= .. ,....~-=-=!': ................... . Lil b =-.... _ '"-" M-Cece 111 I ll111hill
JM10C.....C;tr: 11, c .. khm.._. ··-
lOS !lll(la, 6121 Wllshl11 Blvd. Mlr1<lo Miit: 11040 W, MCI> Bl•d, 8840 S. Wt1ttrn A... AIWUlll 1672 W. Um UIWflllD: 3010 Mlot A ... CHULA Y~Tk '76 Brolftiy
CWlllOllT/POMOltk 232 L Foolhlll COYIMk 945 N. AMI DOwttlY, 943$ E. Arntont IL CAJOll> 818 N. J°"""' A". Ct.!NDAL~ 333 ~ Cenu1t A ...
IWAllA HW. IOIOO 811bol Bl~ HUllTllllTON BUCH, t9431 Beach Blvd. LA MABlk• 1720 W. Wllltti<r IONI llACltl 2189 Ukewood Blvd. MOMlERlT PAM, 415 S. Atbollc Bi.do
PASAlllltk 85 s. ROHmtad IMISm~ 10.000 M11nolil SANTA AllA/TUSTlfl, 1703 L 17!11 St. SAN IHHIROINO: 99! s. "C' SL SAN 0~60: 7175 Cbir-t Mw B~~
SOUTH Lil: 15533 S. CttftWo< Bi.do TMDUSAMD OAKS. 214 """"1d 0.u Bi.do YDtlU!A. 3409 Ttl11r~h l\d. WOODLAND HILLS' 222lJ Ventura BNd. '"°'' °""" WlOC •WllXDAYI 10 utml.9. IA1\1"4Y 10UNT1l&• IUNDl\'t 1~ UNT'll&• nm: PM1{1HO· Nttl OECOlitATOll ltlMCt· rm ontm1'f •CONY!HIOY IAHIC· '""'' ~•1m•.....--.nr .• .w.u.-.•~c......,
'
I
• . . . . . • •
I za DAIL v PILOT Thursda11 Au91ut 23, lq?)
/I"' I Hot N111nher
1
1 Loretta Se xy a1id Fun1i y
By VERNON SCOTT
llOLLVWOOO (UPI )
Loretta Swit is a lraitor to her
class as a co-star In the
lelevision series "M·A-S-H."
Her class Ls blonde. lier
credentials: sexy. lier bo.som :
ample.
But instead of following in
the great tradition o f
Hollywood blondes by striving
to be cuddlesome a n d
adorable, Lotetta Is obnoxious
as nurse Hot Lips l~oulihan in
the weekly comedy series.
She strays from the usual
pattern of blonde actresses in
another category. Loretta's
head is not empty.
HOT U PS is obviously
played for laughs. But !here is
nothing particularly amusing
about U>retta's full figure -
often outlined in T-shirts -
and her sultry, sometimes
petulant face.
Asked how she overcon1es
this ambiva lence of sexiness
and hatefu.Jness. L o r e t t a
pursued the question with the
zeal or a real nurse taking a
blood sample.
"~lot Lips is obnoxious at
times." she agreed. "But 1
always look for something
amusing about her so au-
diences will laugh instead of
just being angry with her.
"She's a career \VOman and
sticks by Army regulations.
She also happens to fall apart
over Major Burns in lhe show.
SHE 'S 'HOT LIPS'
Lo retta Swit
"\\!hen \\'e got together thi s
n1onth to start the new season
it was like a reunion or school
kids -all the hugging,
laughing and screaming.
"\Ve're extraordinarily close
because we're all (rom the
theater and lived on the East
Coast. So we have a similar
approach to our y.·ork . \Ve help
one another and criticize
ourselves to 1nake the show
better."
l.O RETIA IS delighted that
she plays a female who is hav.
ing an affair \\'ith a married
man -another first for a
situation comedy.
"IT'S DIFFICULT lo play "\Vhen you stop to think
an attractive v.·oman \Vho about it. the situation is really
plays the heavy week after risque for 1elevision,'' she
\\'eek. I can't be .'?<'· heavy said. "But viewers accept it as
because. after all, 11 ts a com-a reflection of life. We haven't
edy. But · I have lo put do\vn had one letter objecting to the
the men and .lay !~en1 out as · romance.
aften as possible. . Loretta is the envy of ."I work hard at making }lot
almost every actress i n Ups understanda~le. As an
~lollywood. She is the lone army nurse . she hv~s by ~he
regular £emale in a cast of book except 1.n her pr~vatc hfe .
five males. Her co-stars arc ~fost of the lime she 1s the an-
Alan Alda. Wayne Rogers, tag~nist who puts the story in
J\JcLean Stevenson. La r r y motion.
Jn\·ille and Gary Burghoff. ''Naturally, it's not all act-
She often refers to them as ing. Part of Hot Lips is me.
"my five guys." They in turn Physically \.\o'i! arc the same
·are protective of her. She is person ." _
the only unmarried performer Off the set, hov.,ever. Loret-
in the group. ta Swit is free of Hot Lips' o~
"\Ve've only been on the air jectionable traits. leaving only
a year. but the fa'l'lll .v feeling a \'erv attractive blonde who.
of this case is just about the lik~ it or not, is in the bes!
best known s Io r y in tral!.ition of Hollywood se x
Holly\\'ood." Lo!'etta said . symbols.
Ma y-Dece1nber Lore
Will Inspire Mo vie
WAYCROSS. Ga . (AP) -
Lydia Slone at age G3 married
22-year~ld Melton Crews. one
of her hired fann hands. and
her Slory "'ill soon be a movie.
Colonial Production5 Ltd ..
and an Atlanta-based motion
picture company h~r1ded by
\\'aycross native Buck Blalock
and Bing Crosby's son
LindsaY. plan to £ilm the tale
of l\1rs. Stone's days in
southeast Georgia as a
wealthy. demanding and
fascinating v.·idow ·who, at 63,
married one or her farm
hands .
Lydia , six feet la!! and il-
literate. inherited a fortune
and thousands of acres of
timberland and farmland al
the death of her doctor hus-
band in \\'aycross in the 1930s.
Her property included part of
Okefenokee S"·amp.
SII E RODE over her lands
on a \.\o'hite horse and carried a
bull whip.
\\'hen Lydia fell in love and
married Cre"'S in 1938 in
Folkston. the event \Vas then
called the "wedding of the
century.·• The bride wore a
beaded white dress that took
three months tn make.
She \\•as later buried in rhe
same gam1ent when she di ed
or cancer in 1945.
The highlight of the legcnd
is the effort Lydia put into
getting "Doll Baby," the name
sh<:! called CreYt'S in public and
pri\1ale. out of prison after he
u•as con\'icted of killing a
neighbor.
AFTER A personal appeal
tn then Gov. Gene Talmadge.
she succeeded in 1942. and
Crews cheated the law out of 28
years of the sentence. having
spent just two yea rs in jail.
Before her death, Lydia ar-
ranged another marriage for
Crews and left him half a
million dollars. plus a timber
and turpentine business "'Orth
much more.
Cre1\'S. "'ho died on I y
recently, ga ve Blalock an
insight into his lite with Lydia
in a !aped 15-hour interview.
BLALOCK SAJD the movie
would C{Jst more than SJ
million. He said ii \\'ill show
scenes of Georgia's old chain
gangs. and "holy roller"
episodes or wavside churches
attended by Lydia and Cre"'S.
Blalock said Crews was once
kncl\vn as a carouser, but in
his later days h'e "saw
!he li ght." and built several
~trllll chu .. chC's in southeast
Georgia before he died.
INTERMISSI ON ...
(From P31c Z&J
Burnside. Call 897-9881 for
rtservaUons.
The only other show on
stage locally is South Coast
Repertory's production of
''Catch 22," another to~notch
piece of theater. Af ar LI n
Benson's direction is at its
peak and lhe cast, headed by
.Jim f\olcKie. Gary Bell. Heath
Park and William Brady, is
to~ drawer.
The Joseph Heller military
satire is presented Wednes-
days through Sundays at 8
o'clock in the Third step
Theater. 1827 Newport Blvd ..
Cost:i J\1 es a . Reservations
646-1303.
Sta rt Weekend Early
The weekend begins along the Orange Coast on
Friday. That's lhe day lhc DAILY PILOT publishes ill!
WEEKENDER, • lively section about the lively arts -
and where to dine out and otber interesting things that
can make • weekend a mini vacation for you and the
spec\11 people In your me. Start your weekend early nul
Fricloy. swt II wllh the WEEKENDER.
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!
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Strong and long lasting con-
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Exterior Stain
In «>lid or semi-transparent
cola~-Excellent preservative
and beautifier for woods.
R~. 549 ·6Jf Gol.
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Drip Coffel! Mak1!r
Make rich, delicious .coffee
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.......
COSTA
llllll
•
. '
, SANTAANA ... ' .
• • . ~· .. ,.
1.
I
. . ....... , . . . . . . .. . . -~
Cuban Brawlers Get Off With Reprimand
MOSCOW (i'P) -The Qlban basket·
II !tam, which attacked American
yers during Ille fadlng mcment.t Qf
.Wnesday night's game, received no
tillln a •lap oo the 1'Tlst from the
hnlcal committee at the World
nJversity Games.
Alter a heated meoting In which Ross
lck o! Washington, the U . S .
sentative, demanded stiff measures
,Uken agai!lat lhe o!lenders, Ille
·, eel committee decided loday to
Issue a mild statement of censure.
In Ille slatemenl, tbe Qlban authorltlca were urged to take dloclpllnary action
against the players involved.
In the game, woo by tho Americans 96-
76, the Cu,lian players surged o!! the
bench during a scramble for a loose ball
on the floor and began swinging punches
at the U.S. players.
They also swung chain and threw a
water pitcher which aent lhattered gla..,
over the Door.
UPIT .........
KEENA ROTHHAMMER CELEBRATES WORLD RECORD.
iss BalJashoff 3rd
Keena Rothhammer Sets
400 Free World Reco1·d
LOUISVILLE, Ky. (AP) -Teenage
tJon Keena Rothhammer set a world
Wednesday in the women's 400
lreesl}1e, bot sbe doesn't thin);
t Is eqalvalonl lo wlnDlng a gold
in the Olympics.
thing will compare to that," said
Rothhammer, reJerring to her gold
In Ille •meter freestyle in the
~ Muolcb Olympics. "Except maybe
~ another record in the Olympics."
set a world record of 4:18.07 in the
ter freestyle in the National AAU
""""" swimming and diving cham-
\!jiomhips at the Plantalion Country Club, ic!lpo!ng the world remrd of 1:19.04 set
.,,. Aastralla 's Shane Gould in last year's ~s. Slllrtey BabasboU o! Fountain Valley bi swimming for the Huntington each
' ' uaUcs Club, finished third behind Miss ~=:mmer and Heather Greenwood of ) . Miss Babasbo!f was timed in
:SU!S.
Kurt Krumpbolz o! Corona del Mar and
inming for the Santa Clara Swim
finished siilh in the men's 400
ylc while Dave Baron of Mission
\Vas eighth in the !~meter
mtroke.
F Rotbhammer, a junior at Santa a High School, added she didn't in·
to beat anyone else. ''I swam my
own race,'' she aald .
Swimming contlnutd loday In the meet
with competition set for six events. They
include men's and women's ~meter
freestyle, -er individual medley
and·fGO.meter medley relay. 'Another: · OJYmi>ic veteran, Deena
Deardurff ol the Clncinruiti Pepoi
Marlins. set an American record in the
women's 100-meter butterfly with a time
Qf 1:00.855, breaking her previous mark
o! 1:00.95.
John Hencken of the Santa Clara Swim
Club set an American record during
preliminaries in the men's 100-meter
breaststroke in 1 :05, eclipsjng the record
o! I :05.43 set by Tom Bruce of the U.S. in
last year's Olympics. He then lowered
the existing record wilh a time of
1:05.117 in Wednesday night's linals.
••• 10!).METER 8REAST$TROKE -l. Htr!cken (Sin·
I• Cl•r• Swim Club), 1:05.lni 2. Cot•tla CTol•m L•ke SC), 1:07.GU; l. 0.hlbef'v (Getor.oe SCI,
1:01.1"' Olttln -I. I•,_ (~ Viti• SCI, l r".m .
200-BACKSTAOKE -I. N•W (Udflo• 0.tu Alhlellc Club)l_2;0S.,7l; 2. How ICll'ICfnMll Pt>PSI ""rUM), 2;06.Jl5l' 3. H•rdc•1ti. (Lodi SCI, 2:06.71<1. ..00 FAEESTV E -1. O.Mont 11.\•rln ACI,
':00.1'6; 2. S,,.w !PNlllpe .. ), ':~fi '· Tl"' (G•tor~ SC), ';02.to9; ,, Krv (IC C), 4:t4 • .W2.
WOM•N
«IQ FREESTYLE -1. Rothhemintr ISCSCJ 4:11,071 (_.kl rwconl); 2. G GrMn~ tF,....,0 AC), 4:20.3'7; 1. a1a.1P11tff (HV11ll11ttllrr INdl AC), 4:U.1l5.
20l>8ACKSTROtCf -1, Belot! {Solotlr Swim Te1m). 2:20.1J7; 2. Gr•IMm Mew Aquttlc1), 2:ts.1531 l. KlrkJMrlrlck ISCSCJ, l;2t.117. H'O-llREASTSTll:Ol(f -1. #tony !Otc1t.,-SCJ,
1:11.1!146; 2. Cotell• (Totem LHt SC), l;l •• 111; J. Gr..,! (UMt,), 1:17.Solt.
Drysdale, Morgan Tips
:r;ive Stanton Impetus
When you're going bad, what is a hitter
Ito do?
If you're Lee Stanton or the Cillfomia
A.p.eis you heed all the advice you can
t., even from pitchers who aml't sup.
to know anything about hilling.
Wedneocley night. Stanton put Into
A119ers 'Sr.te
7:JJ p.m.
''" !)."1. l·SJ p,m.
""-,.,.-.,,-'-:--':;--.,,--,:-:Sill p,m.
ce tips from Don Drysdale and
Morgan -both former pitchers.
''Coke up on the bat," suggested ~l"f.ale, oow an Angels broadcaster.
. "Ulc a bigger handled bat," offered
Moi(an, the California pilching coach.
In !he lotb Inning Stanton did both and
"l'olulled In 1 home run which enabll!d
, i.Angels to defeat the Milwaukee
rs M.
'll marked the first time In five
tings thal the Angels bad bested Utt
11ws al Anaheim Stadium.
'lboJ'll lry to make ii lwo tonlfhl by
lollbonder Clyde Wrtcht, •171 lnll ettbor Billy Ownpion, · W, or
Lockwood, $-7.
was so <Jcsperate I was willing to
listen to anyone," S81d Stanton who
hadn't hit a homer since July 21:
The Angels slugger, inserted as a
defensive replacement in the ninth innlng
with the Angels breezing 3--0 behind Bill
Singer. also revealed he ~'as trying to hit
the ball out of sight In the 10th.
"I N!ally 'las thinking home run."
Stanton said. Or, at least an extra base
hit. But l wanted a home run. That way
we wouldn't need any more hits."
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-t:ll. it.-t.Mt.
The American players tried to· prolocl •
themselves but did DOI rtgbt back lest
they draw a disqualification and be lost
!or the vllaI final games againsl Brazil
and possibly RUssla.
The brawl apparently af(ected the
United States ployers more thao they
realized as America was forced to strug·
&le ror the fir st time in the Games today,
outlasting Brazil 66-60. ·
Merrick urged that the technical ·com-
mittee hold a press conference and
publicly reprimand the CUblins. This was
turned down. The oommlttee agreed · to
Jssue 'a statement only after' strong urg-
ing.
The tedmlcal committee is headed by
Frank Hepp of Hungary, the man who
heaQed t~'commlttee•that voted against
the American protest in tbe •cootroversJal
51 ·50 IOS8 to the Soviet' Union in the
Olympic· Games at Mtlnich.
A spokesman for Hepp -said CUban
players were chastened for what was
caned ''non-sporting conduct" and warn-
ed that any repetiUon would result In
suspension.
The American swimmers didn't have a
happy day Wednesday either. They were
expected to clean up all, or most, of the
six gold medals at stake but instead
sl .ared them 3-3 with the Russians.
Cathy carr, world record holder for the
100-rneter breaststroke, wa s 'beaten
tu1ce by Russia's Lubov Rusanova.
Miss Rusanova won Miss Garr's
specialty, in 1:15.5. Cathy was one-tenth
of a second behind in second place.
The Russian girt again outswam the 11-
year-old Albuquerque, N.M .. star in the
second leg of the 400-meter medley relay.
But Sally Tutt le, 20-year-old freestyler
from Ventura, Calif., swam a great last
leg and anchored the U.S. team to vic-
tory in 4:29.8.
Allen Poucher of Jacksonville, Fla ..
\\'OO his second gold medal by clocking
2:05.7 in the 200-meter butterfly .
Will Ninth Inning Lightning Bolt
Strike the Dodgers Again Tonight?
NEW YORK (AP) -Opporlunity
keeps knocking, but the Los ~geles
Dodgers can't seem to be able to answer
the door.
Two nights In a row the Dodgers have
had chances to widen their lead in the
National League West and two nights to
a row they've been unable to do so.
Twice the CinciMatl Reds lost and so
did the Dodgers. And both Dodgers
defeats al the hands of the New York
Mets came with two out in the ninth in-
ning.
Both tim es it was New York 's John
Milner who delivered the base hit that
brought in the winning run. Wednesday
' ·--' I
I V,IT~ ANDY MESSERSMITH DROPS FLY BALL, COSTING LA 2 RUNS.
night the Mets rallied for two runs in the
ninth inning for a 4·3 victory.
Still holding a two game edge over the
·Reds, the Dodgers sent Claude Osteen,
14-6, against the Mets and Jon Matlack,
l(}.15, in the final game or the three game
series tonight.
"If we could catch a pop fiy, we'd be
all right," said'Dodgers manager Walter
Alston, a reference to the t\vo unearned
Dodgers Slate
An Gantn "' Kfl; IMll
Auo. n lot A•I• 11 New York Aug. '4 Lm Anoelm al Phll~l!fli• Aug. li lot Anffln •I Phlledtllll'll•
Au;. 26 LOI AncM:le5 11 Phllt<itlph.11
3 p.m.
4:'lfl p.m.
4:XI p.m.
lll::lO 1.m.
runs handed the Mets when Los Angeles
starter Andy Messersmith dropped a pop
Dy in the fourth inning.
Messersmith walked Milner with one
out in the fourth and gave up singles to
Ed Kranepoot and Jerry Grote. Ted
Martinei then hit a high pop behind the
mound. Messersmith backpedalled and
muffed It, allowing two runs to score and
putting the Mets in front 2·1.
Asked if he tripped on anything, the
Dodgers righthander said disgustedly, "I
fell on my rear. It was a stupid, rookie
play. I messed up the play terribly."
Dodgers third baseman Ken McMullen
could bave handled the pop with ease.
Sports In Brief
Still, the Dodgers tied it in the sixth on
Joe Ferguson's double and Steve
Garvey's single ofr Mets' starter George
Stone, \vho had settled down after allow·
ing Los Angeles a 1-0 advantage in the
first.
Los Angeles went ahead 3·2 in the
seventh on singles by Steve Yeager,
Dave Lopes and Manny ~1ota followed by
\Villie Davis' sacrifice fly.
L•s Afl!lllH UJ Hew Yorlr: 14)
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LOIM'$, 1b • o 1 o WGarrell, lb 4 o o o Mol1,lf 4110Mlllan,2b 5 1 31
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Mssrsth, p 2 o o O Boswell, ph 1 o o o
Cey, 3b 1 o o O McGr•w, p o o o o
~~ DltJ ~Is U 4122
T-out when wfnnir19 run scored. Los Ar19ele1 IOB 001 100 -J
New York 000 200 002 -4
E-W. G1rr•ll, T. Mlr!lnez. Messtr1mlth. DP-Lo1 AniJe!es I. LOB-LO$ Angtl&s 7, New Yorll 10.
18-T. Marllnez, F1rguson. S.-M11Mr""llh, Kr•M-
pool, McGr•w. SF-F1rvuson, W. t>evls. IP' M R Elt 11 SO
Messl!fsmllh 7 1 2 o 1 5
Brewer (L, .. SJ 1 2/l 4 2 1 O o
RiCh•rt 0 1000 1
St-6 2/Jll3 10
H.P•rktr 1/lOOOOt McGr•w {W, 1-4) 2 0 0 O O J
HBP-by Mas1r1mlth W. G•rrtlf. T-2;27, A-ll.~2.
Aaron Clouts No. 705;
Al"len Censors Rookie
A11..ANTA -Hank Aaron lowered the
count.down to nine Wednesday night in
his relentless chase of Babe Ruth's home
run record , but the Atlanta star's No. 705
came In a losing efrort.
Aaron's 32nd homer of the baseball
season was a vicious line drive to left
field that never got over 15 feet off the
ground. lt came on a two-6trike pitch
from Reggie Cleveland, who went the
distance to record his 13th victory in 19
decisions.
"I hit It good,'' said Aaron, who has
smashed four home runs in the last seven
days. "It was a slider, outside, but I
guess he wanted it a little further out."
Aaron had described himself as "a
singles, doubles hitter now," after getting
three hits against the Cardinals Tuesday
night.
eNoDlary
WAS!IlNGTON -Coach G<Orge Allen
of the Washington R<dskins bas ordered
rookie guard Charles Cantrell to di.scan~
tinue a daily news "diary" of his ac-
tivities during the National Football
League team's training camp.
Allen told Cantrell. the Redskins' top
draft choice, that although the rookie
was selected in the first round, he
wanted him to concentrate on malting the
team and suggested that the daily
newspaper story might hurt his chances. ;
e Ruby Flies J
ONTARIO -Old pro Lloyd Ruby .
swooped around Ontario Motor Speedway 1
at 195.865 miles per hour Wednesday in
the closing minute of practice for the 1 California 500. .
The speed was nearly 20 miles an hour \
faster than the 171.567 that Ruby ran to
capture the pole position for the in-·
augural California 500 four years ago. J e llnitas Hurt
What will coach Harland Svare do tc
John Unitas' painful back spasms con·
tlnue when the San Diego Chargers open
their season Sept 16 against the
Washington Redskins?
"Punt," quipped Svare, when asked
Wednesday.
Unltas experienced the spasms for the
second time this summer before the start
of practice Wednesday. When the spasms
ended, he walked slowly to the training
room for heat treatments. Later, he ad-
mitted he had been in extreme pain.
e Deelsfon Due
A Superior Court decision was expected
today on Los Angeles Rams wide
receiver Lance Rentzel's fight against bis
suspension by the National Football
League.
V,I T ...... .,_
FELIX MILLAN FINDS THE DODGERS' STEVE YEAGER COVERING FIRST BASE AND TRIES TO STOP.
Judge David A. Thomas at Wedne$.
day's hearing. took undet submissim
Rentzel 's request for a preliminary in-
jWJCtion against NFL commissioner Pete
Rozelle and the Rams .
Walther Reealls Two Months of Hell
DAYTON, Ohio (AP) -"I saw 13 or II
. people come into that bum ward and 75
peroent ot the@ went out Jatcr .with a
sheet o~r them."
David "Salt" Walther sat across the
!able and talked calmly, If sadly, about
what he called "two mcnths of hell/'
The 2i-year~d auto and hydroplane
rioeer "1ho has been home !ro111 the
UniversJty of.Michia•n Burn Center for a *eek, saya the days since he was
aerioualy Injured in a May 2il crlsh at the
lndlanapolls Motor Speedway seem like a
bad dream.
"When I got lo !he burn ward !hey put
me in a bed all the way in the back of the
room," Walther said. ''Th.at\ where they
put the worst ones, so they can keep a
c10$C eye on them. M~__of them lhal go
in thot beck bed don'tineke it.
"I kept moving closer and closer to the
front of the room, meaning 1 was getting
better."
But U wasn'I all uphill. In late June,
W~ther suffered total kldoey !allure
llom an infection thal spread from his
badly·bumed leg1. He had a live percent
chance ol recovery.
But Wednesday , the wavy-haired
bachelor sat talking In a plush Dayton
country club, stlll scarred and bandagtd
but on the mend .
He helped answer the queltlon or wba>
happened on the aborted start or the In·
dlanapoils !Oil when his car exploded,
spewing fuel and fire into the stands a_nd
leaving him crlllcally burned.
"Something definitely hit me," he said.
"I was totally aware throughout the
whole thing and I know aomethlng hit
me. When r got lo the lnlldd hospital. the
!lrst thing I said to my dad was 'dammit,
somebody hit me.'
"l won't say who hit me because t
•
won't bring names Into this. Those things
happt'.11 In racing. But I know who did It.
A few of the drivers called me in the
hospital and told me. They agreed.
"I'm going to race boats again for sure
but about racing cars, I just don't know
yet. Chances arc pretty good, but I've got
to look into tbe rule change11 and safety
precautions," he explained.
As a result of Walther11 accklent IOd.
the fatal fiery mishap of Swede Savqe.
the L.S. Auto Cub has reduced tho !\lel
load of cars in an effort to help pr.-
naming crashes such as his.
I
(
t
I
SCAT of the Year
Kyle Gayner, a student at Estancia High School in Costa Mesa and a
leading contender for a berth on the 1976 U.S. Olympic team, was
named SCAT of the Year by the Southern California Aero Team re·
cenUy. Miss Gayner is recognized as one of the world's top perform·
ers on the balance beam.
Co-win1ring Is Taboo
Says Co-seeded Smith
NEW YORK (AP) -"As long as we're
t co-winners, it's okay with. me," said
Stan SmJth when told he and Jlie Nastase
were co-seeded ror the U.S. Open tennis
hampionships· which start next \Yeek.
The tournament acceptance committee
ouJdn't decide who was the No. teJayer ~ lhe world so, for the first time In the
· tory of the prestigious event at Forest
11$, N.Y., there a:re co-seeds.
1 "·We really haven't played that much,''
'd Stnith from Toronto where he lost a
· irst~tound match in the canadian Open.
'Maybe we'll meet in the final and that
ill decide who is No. I."
A Smith-Nastase final is possible. A
pokesman said in announcing the seeds
ednesday that the l\\'O will be in dif·
erent brackets of the draw which is
adleduled for 11 a.m. today at the United
a lions.
Smith and Nastase have met only once
far this year, in the Davis CUp
emifmals earlier this week, when Smith
ted Nastase in five sets.
Nastase is the defending U.S. Open
hampion, but Smith beat the Romanian
or the Wimbledon tille last year, one of
our victories against Nastase in their
ive meetings.
"I onJy temember the ones I won from
Stan Smith,'' said Nastase, ln New York
to accept an award Wednesday. "I beat
him in Barcelona and that should count
for something."
Nastase didn't get a chance for
revenge at Wimbledon this yea r because
Smith and about 70 oiher members ol the
Association of Tennis Professionals
boycotted the tournament.
Nastase, a member of ATP who defied
the boycott, gained the to p seed but was
knocked out in the fourth round by
unheralded Sandy Mayer of Wayne, N.J.
"If I had played Wimbledon and if I
had won it, I mig1lt have been No. t,"
said Smith, of Sea Pines, S.C. "But
tournaments aren't \\'OD on seedings."
Billie Jean King gained the top
women's seed as the defending U.S. Open
titlist and "'inner of Wimbledon in June.
1-fargaret Court, who surpassed Mrs.
King's single-season earnings record
earlier th.is year, is No. 2.
Other seeds are Chris Evert, No. 3;
Evonne Goolagong, No. 4; Kerry
Melville, No. 5; Rosemary Casals, No. 6;
\1irginia Wade, No. 7, and Olga
11orozova, No. 8. All except the last two
are from America or Australia. Miss
\Vade is from England and Mrs.
J\1orozova from the Soviet Union.
GWCFrosh
Crop Called
Best Ever
A bumper crop of freshmen with more
size than any previous footba.Jl turnout,
supplemented by 1& lettermen, greeted
coach Ray Shackleford at Golden West
College Wednesday night for physical ex-
aminations.
The Rustlers will begin drills In shorts
and shoes Wednesday on a two-a-day
basis (9-11 and 4-6 ) with pad s in vogue
for the first time on Saturday, Aug. 31.
With such names as Dan Acwmando.
Larry Grady and Gary Jennings from
Westminster; Luther Dean ol Rancho
Alamitos: Jt,ick Hoover and Leslie Curry
of 1.a·-Quinta; and Robin Luken of
Pacifica along \vith three out"f-state
transfers and t"·o ex-servicemen, the
first-year crop appears loaded.
"This bu to be the best group of
freshmen by far that \ve have ever had,"
an enthusiastic Shackleford says.
"We are going to be more physical and
we'll have much better depth than we
have had.
"There will be some excellent com-
petition for starting positions -some
real battles -which is great from a
coaching stand]Xlint.
"When you get this many fr eshmen, it
has to be good for a coop le of years."
Shackleford didn't pinpoint any one
position or any one player for future
stardom but a check of the roster &hows
several outstanding newcomers from
other areas. ·
Jerry White, a graduate of Mira Costa
High and a Navy veteran, is a top tackle
proopect •t S.2 and 250 pounds.
Emmett Leopardi, a graduate of
Chaminade High in Florida. is a top can-
didate for a starting defensive tackle
berth.
Bryce Adkins is another Navy vet and
a graduate of McKinley Higt in Ohio. At
6-1 and 21S pounds, be is an offensive line
candidate.
\.ETTEllMEN 1111 RodMY Brown IE), Jot Btnh (Tl, Gi.ry C.arro110 ICJ, JI-.., Ferrero (HB), Ollver Gr1111 (OT /• Wlltllm Grob 40EJ, John HIYH (58f.), L1rry Ii rl ITE'I, Tom l'Mu/1r !OBJ, 0.01'118 P.aKOe IOE), Jim
Pott.I' !OTJI Mlkt Purcell {Sal.I, Bfll Sll141rt 1S1t.J, Jim SparQ LB/, ~II Tho!'pe (H8), Brlll Whlle (I(), J«ry WIHl.ams LBJ, Tltl'ry VOi.ing (LBJ. FllllfSHMEN Ut ) waSTMINSTl lt -L•rrv Sttm, 011'11'1'1' Ac· Com.l'ldo, W1U1r M.aOl:lock.1, Sltvtl'I Spoor11more, IUck L..r1, L•rrv GrlCY, Marc Houle, G1ry Jtn11ln;1, Glr,.. Gu111, ltOl'lllld W1t11ee.
HUNTINGTON MACH -J111 Berg, C/Kldl; SllntY,
~t Or1»tltl', Biii Herbin, Kri. Ven AnMr1tor1, JUc..,_r"d Altlaon.
EDISOH -Joul)ll Otmtlr1tos, Fr•r>k Oviedo, Mk'-1 Domts. JlffAY Lftll,, Alfred Ht~1. OAlllOI" OltOVI' -John 0•-, K1...,. Ytrgler,
AtllHll Svtttr, Kirk Oat~. RobllM Clcirro. IOL.IA HANOI! -Dtnnl1 Hurley, LIW Cllumlch, A"°"" a-i.t, A1ndv All'hMI'. JtAJKHO ALAMITOS -Merk Sowdef', M•rk Peirce. Otln Luthlr. SANTlll,00 -Greg Tromb1ty, J11M1 Du rr, Slev1 Rlct. MAltlHA -MkNle1 Krcttlc, Let G1lnt y, Bry•n Klfnt.
l. YNWOOD -JllTlff Oginby, Mlchatl Ltwl1, Fr1ncls McC1.1t.
LA OUIHTA -Rick Hoovtr, Lo!1ro Ell11r1, Lnll1 Clrry.
K8NNEOY -Nlchol•S Weber, MkhHI lklrn. MlltA COITA -Jtrry White. l"OOTHl\.L -llrtl'lt P1rtrld!JI. IL ltANCHO -Don Wiiey.
l!STiliN(IA -M.a""' Wulr.ewllt. PACIP'ICA -ltobln L11kitn.
Hl:W.-OltT HAltllO• -Junn KemPltf. l.OS lliMIGOS -ltlclllrd M.artln. SAN Ollillltlll. -Steven Thr1pp. CHAMl"AOE HS (P'l1,) -Emmett Leopardi. •AST LtVEltP'OO\. (Ohio) -Mlch•el or PliQUllt. LINOaN MCl(l"Ll:Y {Ohio) -Bryct AdklM.
Sadclleback Tickets
On Sale Monday
Saddleback C.Ollege will host rour
Mission C.Onference foe:!! at ,.fission Viejo
High School during the 1973 footba,11
season and tickets for the home outinJt!>
will go on sale at the school on Aug. Tl .
Tickets for the four home games are S9
for reserved seats and $8 for general ad·
mission.
The Gauchos of coach George Hartman
will face Chaffey on Sept. 22, San Diego
City on Oct. 6, Southwestern on Oct. 20
and Palomar on Nov. 17 in borne games.
DEAN LEWIS
TOYOTA
VOLVO
Baseball Standings
•
VACATION
SPECIALS
'66 DODG~ CAMPER
l~ TON
11i11to1N11lc tr.ant .• Vt, Tl8111
$1677
'70 ARISTOCRAT
TRAILER
11 fl. L .... n,..r. Uk• ne•, ••Ir.a
hMltlt• Wt! _, ' tltclrk1I llooit· --$1877
'ff IL CAM INO
CUlfOM. Awt91n•llc Ir•""· ......, ... ,. 11n. Jrttt1 .xtol1tr • llf•ck 1.._
MtiM', m.ua.
$217·1
71 ••• ,
$3677
•
American League
East w L
Baltimore 71 52
Boston 68 57
Detroit 68 58
New York 68 61
i\1ilwaukee 60 '63
Cleveland 52 75
\\lest
Oakland 74 52
Kansas City 73 55
Minnesota 59 66
Chicago 59 67
Angels 57 65
Texas 43 81
WtdRndty'1 G1rnn
crev111nd 1, Chlc•llO o. 1J Inning•
Balllmore '· Mlnnttol• J
K1n$11 tJty I, New YOl'k 7, ID lnnlnot
llol!on t. Texa, I
0•-l•lld 7, Oe!rotl J
Clllforn!.a 5. Mllw1ukH 4, 10 rnnl"9'
Tltdl1'1 0 111111
Pct. GB
.577
.544 4
.54-0 411
.527 6
.488 ll
.4-0S 21
.587
.570 2
.472 14112
.468 15
.467 15
.347 30
M.llWIUkff (LOCkWOOCI !1·1 or 8t\I t.aJ 11 ilillftlt
IWrlfll'lt .. 11)
Only game Khldulfd
l'rld•Y'I G.amn
ICll'IMI CllY •I Bl!l!mar•
Tn11 •I c~w!1nc1
Ot1rci1 at Chl<l90
MllWIU~~ t i MIN1tsol1
Ntw York 11 0•~111111 l ouon 11 Artttlt
National League
East w L St. Louis 64 62
Pittsburgh 61 62 .
Chicago 60 65
Montreal 59 66
Philadelphia 58 67
New York 57 67
West
Dodgers 77 49
Cincinnati 76 52
San Francisco 70 55
HousUm 66 63
Atlan ta 61 68
San Diego 46 79
Wltdllftd1y'1 0111111
Ch!Cl90 ,, ClllClnNll !I
$.an OltvO I, PMlldl!Phll J
S.an Fr•nclKO l. Monlr"I 2
Nr.it Y«ll: .., Oof9tn J
St. LOUii 6. Al18nle 4
Pltllbur;ll 4, HOU.Ion 0
TMl)"ll•-
Pct. GB
.5-08
.496 l ~2
.480 311
.472 411
.464 SI>
.460 6
.6ll
.5!14 2
.560 6'h
.512 121,.)
.473 1711
.368 30'h
Clnclflrllll {Gfhnslr.f 12·1} 1t Chic.a~ 18onllllTI S...)
10fen OllOO fl(lrby 1· J) 11 Ptllltdelpn!1 ILonellfv111·
t>Ht•n (OSIM!f 11-6) el Nrw Yotk IM1llock , .. ,s, Ol'lly g1.,,.. KlltOulld
Prid•r. °'""' Dod9tt'I •I Phllldl'IQPI I Sen Oleta .al Montrul S.n Fre11Cl1Co .al New York
SI, LOV.I 11 Clncln,..11 Pl!hburgfl 11 Alll"'I ChlClfO 11 H-IOll
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Dave Season Opens
SEPTEMBER 1st
-~:.
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I I I ,
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L·ar9e1t Collectiow of lifle1, Ha11cl9un1 & Shotguns!
• WHKNUna • ITNACA • llAMA
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.. AIMAUTI • SMITN & wrsSOM • SAKO
• llMHIGTOM • CNAlllS DALT • COlT
• llOWNING • WALfNll • N & I
• WIATMlllY • IElmA • IUGll
OVl!R 1000 GUNS ON DISP1AY Ar 801H GRANJ BOYSr
• SALE ITEMS llMITID
. TO STOCK Ott HANO
REMINGTOll 870 VEIT Rll PlllllP lCTIOI SHOT8Ull
12 GA. and 20 GA. i1 field c~1kes
SllAllTS SPICIAL .. ICI
BROWNING VEIT Rll SEMl-lUTillllTIC SHOTGUN
ll·12 and LT·20 in field ch1kes
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12 GA. and 20 GA. in field chokes
SllAllTS SPIOAL .. ICI
REMINGTOtl 100 VEIT Rll SEMl-AUTillllATIC SHOTIIUll
12 GA. and 20 GA. i1 field cltokes
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HlRRltlGTOll AND RICHARDSOll M0D£L 151 TOPP'ER
Single Sbot Shotp1 12 GA. 20 GA. 410 GA.
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12 GA. 20 GA. 410 GA.
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ITHlCl MODEL 200 SIDE IY SIDE SHOTGU11
12 GA. and 20 GA. in field cbokes
SllAllTS SPIOAL .. ICE
GET YOUR HUNTING AND FllHINC LICENSE AT THE GIANT BDYll
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DOVE VESTS .
REMINGTON ' 31MI CAllUfLJ;(
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DOVE LOADS 1 JIUI lltft IELUl£
W1£ W fl'ST. .• SS.91
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SHOT 1391:~ SPICW
HAllTS Wlf lllT
SPECIAL MODEL ••·2 ,.,a Sital •• ,. .... $3.11 ,,,. ...... ... SHOAL '1" -20GL MOHL ft.1 410 GA. .,... .... he-SUI --= '2 .. ..... . .
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BROWNING GRADE I SfMl0AUTOMATIC RIFLE
.... 11!1 SIMUr~ Call*•
GIMTS SHUAL PllCI .•.... , ...................... , ........ $11t.Q
REMINGTON 700 BDL BOLT ACTION RIFLES
MAGNUM CALllllS, •• , , •••..•...........•..•.... , ..• , •.•• , ••• $14LSO ;
STAIOAID CAl.tlllS •••••.•..•....•..•. , •••.•.•••••••••••••••. S1J1.2S
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INSULATED HUNTING .
STOOLS
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,...c •••
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-Singles &
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Th11rsd1y, A119ust 23, 1973 DAILY PILOT :SJ
Portugal
Mata do res
In· Bullring
--Bubble Guin, Pi~ P1·ev~
But Girls Take It Seriously 1
A horseback star rrom
Portugal and three exciting
young Mexican matador·s
share the cartel for SUnday at
the bullring by the sea, ~laza
Mo.numcntal de Tijuana.
They are the excellent re-
joneador Pedro Loucelro plus
Acapulco star An t o n i o
Lomelin, teen-ager C u r r o
Leal, and daring Jorge Blan·
do.
Beginning at i p.m. they will
face bulls Qf the magnificent
old ranch. Piedras Negras,
v.•hlch has not sent toros to Ti-
juana for several years.
Louceiro, wearing t h e
tricornered hat, frilly shirt,
long coat, and black boo,ts of
the Portuguese horsemen, has
been competing extensively in J
Mexico. M
His only other Tijuana ·•!> It's a Super s....ant B••nnie pearance was May 16, 1971, r· • -:1:1
w~en he shared the action Rand)r Lowe of Irvine will be among the top en-Others entered from Orange County include Costa
with Me~can Evaristo Zam· tri.nts in a super sprint buggie and Baja sprint se-Mesa's Jim Chamberlain, Bill Friedauer and Dave br~. His wo.rk was well· dan race at Ascot Park in Gardena Saturday night. Greiner.
received . -~·---------------~---='----------------------~ Lomelin is the 1972 Golden
Sword winner. The handsome
28-year-<1ld in the last three
sea90ns has fought his way in·
to the top echelon or tonros in
both Mexico and Spain. Checking Women's Golf
Jackie La.mb, San Juart Ace of Year
Bubble gum ls a matter of routine, and pig-
tails with multi-colored ribbons or strings
accentuate the fact the participants are in
the 13-15 age bracket. ~
But from the opening pitch of any game
in this week's annual Bobby Sox national soft·
ball tournament at Bellis Park in Buena
Park, the action on the field is deadly seri·
ous.
The girls may not run as fast as their
male counterparts. And they may not field
HO\VARD
HANDY
quite as well in some instances.
But the desire rand enthusiasm is every bit
as great, if not greater, than that of any
Little League game.
On the Bobby Sox Tourney's opening \Veek-
end, o(ficials report that 17,000 fans vie\.\•ed
the action.
This doesn't mean that many fans were
in attendance at one game. There were 16
games and all of them had near-capacity
crowds with standing room only around the
outfield fences.
Parents, friends and softball enthusiasts
are there in great numbers and one team
from San Diego had several hundred purple-
clad rooters yelling with every pitch.
The enthusiasm is inrecuous and the girls
show they are only human with errors and
disgust with themselves when they make a
mistake.
The original concept or Bobby Sox softball
is still in existence. This means women will
manage and control the teams. although they
In his other Tijuana corrida
this season, on July 22, he cut
l\•o ean from a fine Reyes
Jtuerta bull. Lo.melin. 28, is
one of the fiesta 's best with
sword and banderillas. Jackie Lamb posted a 71 to
win ace or the year honors 3l
San Juan Hills C.Ountry Club
over seven other monthly ace
winners recently.
'1:1. Lou Manley had 28. the women's golf club at In a low net tournament, are allowed two male assistant coaches.
Rancho San Joaquin this week. Phyllis Stafford and Carolyn It also means tha t every girl participates In C flight it was Joyce
Crowell , Phyllis Sharp and
Jlortensc Carlin tied at .30.
in every game her team is playing and that Ruth Hall, Kay May . and Walbridge tied for first with 74 proper uniforms and equipment are used.
Sally Owsley all tied for the followed by Sally Owsley at Each girl must be in the game for al
to be the most prevalent manner of getting
all the girls into the game.
These girls bat eighth and nJnth In the
lineup and unless the team has a first lnn!ng
rally. they do not get to bat with better
hitters kept on the sidelines early in the
action to get them In play when their bats
are more needed.
There is no sliding, no deliberate collisions
are allowed and sometimes these rules are
broken in a natural tendency to emulate
their male brothers. On such occasions, the
girl running the bases is prpmptly called ou~.
White blouses are in ~ wilh multi·
colored shorts and bright stockings or vari·
ous hues adding to the' colorful caps and
pigtail ribbons worn.
The Navajos from the San Diego area go
a bit further in their nourish or color and
add a feather to their caps. Warmup jackets
vary in color hue.
Proud parents in the stands often answer
to the call of "\Vho's girl is that?" when a
member of their tea m docs something out-
standing.
But all in all, Bobby Sox softball is a seri·
ous business to the girls on the field .
In one instance, a member of the infield
for a certain team had a bad final inning.
committing tY.'O errors and making a mental
goof. But her team held on to win by a six·
run margin.
This \\'as small consolation for the girl but
she ca me back the next day to play a superb
game.
Bobby Sox softball and its national touma·
ment iM Buena Park may be a \Veil-kept SC·
ere! in many media quarters.
But it hasn't been kept completely in the
tf1rJc Thnc:P. 17.000 netiole iust ttldii't come
from nP.iuhhnrh11!' .TaMn~e Deer Park to \\'it.
OP~<:: an arlrl{"'f ~ttracl.ion.
ThP.11 wp_rP therr> '" r.heer their favorites
"'l ?'ld if lhPv didn't have one, thev soon
fr>1111cl <'11e tn ba~k and lhP "iris themselves
n•1t on a "I\()() .c:hnw -bubble gum and hafr
ribbons. not.,vithstandin.1?.
Leal , 19, of Mexico City, has
enjoyed two sensational af-
ternoons at Tijuana this sum·
mer. This fll'St was his debut
July 15 when he won two ears
from a foe of Las Huerta s.
The other was Aug. S when he
\\'On the tail from a Santo
Domlngo bull after an en-
thusiastic raena or whirling
passes.
In a point tournament , Jean
Donaldson ::was the rlrst flight
winner with a 351h followed by
Bobby Wakeham at 34: Rose
Ann Mason at 31 1h:: and Ruth
Van Ausdeln at 301h.
Sylvia Pranauski and Dot top spot with 341h. In B flight 77. In B flight Bever I y least six oots. Juggling of outfielders seems
Jones tied at 31 for runnerup. it was Marion Keeler at 32, Cornwell was the winner at 80 -------='-'-----------------------
In a kicker tournament Trudy Bone at 34 and Vi Sax· fol!Owed by Zola Bartholomew Challenge the News Quiz
Leal. no relation lo long-
time star Alfredo Leal , has
extensive taurine her it a g e
\\·hich includes a grandfather,
Cayetano Leal (Pepe-Hillo l.
\\'ho fought in l..f a d r i d
alongside the famed J\.fauan.
In a t\vo better balls of
foursome tournament. t h e
WiMing team o[ Thelma
Bates, Fern Holmes, Dee
Craig and Dotty La Fever
posted a score of 118 for top
honors ..
ton al 35. NataJie Mathews, at 81.
where players pick a number Joy'ce Roberts and Maxine Maxine StrickJand won C
between 60 and 70 that bas Strickland tied for C honors at n· h ·1h 70 I 11 ed b bee!) p>sted in the clubhouse 1g t w1 o ow y
secreUy and with their hand-30. Charlenel:V>Uins (75) and Bct-Grace Wehe was the D win-ty Poinde1"ter (82 ).
icaps, try to make that score. ner with 33, Betty Blakemore Sue Iseri won D flight with a
l-1arion Schulte and J 3 n and Jewell Keuster tied for 69. Grace Wehe was second at
. .. on Saturday's Family Page
Dowers were lbe winners with second at 3&1h. 81 64~hirk!y Callaghan and Josie jpmmmmmlii!iiiiiiPmiiiiim. mmmmmmmm!mmmmmmm;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;liiiiiliiiliiiiiiiiliiiliiiliiiliiiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii
~· lini.
~
Second place went to F:iy
\Vohl. Lil Braught. Bobby
Tipping tied at 65 while Dot
Sato aod Winilred Nichols tied
at 6.1 for runnerup. "A TIRE FOR EVERY DRIVING NEED"
t• W estminstel' '
\Vakeham and Sue Hill at 125. M~ado1clark
In third place at 129 wa s a team of Chris Behm. Pat Members of the Meadowlark
Cjhristie, Betty Clldwell and Country Club women's golf
Anita McLeod . group staged an even holes
IN VALUES
IN SELECTIONS
IN QUALITY ' Net Signttp Ellen Bass broke 100 for the tournament with half handicap
first time and was awarded a recently.
The Westminster Tennis pin in honor of the event. Anita Appleton won A flight
Association will hold the' Sec-wltlt 331At followed by Diana /lfesa Verde Hooper at 34'1 and Helen ond A n n u a I \Vestminster Moulton at 35.
Open Tennis Tournament on In a least putts tournament In B flight it was Jean Hig}\t
the v.·eekends of September I~ at Mesa Verde Country Club the winner at 35 with Fiona
16 and 2!·23. The divisions will this week . a tie for first place Moore next at 38~ and Pat
dbe1v;"'A1·ons' B, w~il Dincfu! m~ in A flight. Hood at 37. In C flight it was .,, Lucille Paddock and Phyllis Betty Kretz the Vrinner with
categories of Men's Singles Smith each used 26 putts to 38. foll owed by Esther
and Doubles and Y.'omen's complete their round . A three-Krc.nwinkle (3811.z) and Shirley
Siflli!les and Doubles and Mix· wav tie al 28 found June Stebbings at 40.
ed Doubles. Haily, Lee Lowrey and Verda
111e tournament is open to Shirley in contention. Rat1f!l10 SJ
anyone and the entry fees are Jt was Dot Morris at 25 in B A three.way tic resulted for
SS for singles and $7 for fl ight with Betty Potts, Pat fi rst place in an even holes doubles.
The main location !or the 1 p;G;;;;•;;;;· u;;a;i;nd;;i;;;;;M;;;a;i;r;iio;in;;;O;i;lso~n;;;ne;;;;x;;;t;;;a;;;t;;;;;tou;;i;;;;;r;i;n;i;am;;;;;;;;e-n;i;-t;;-~f oi;r;;;m;;;;;;;;•m;;;;be;;;;;;;;r;;;;s ;;io~ll
t ou rnament \\'ill bell
Westminster High Schoo I ,
14325 Goldenwest.,
Westminster.
Other location..s will also be
used due to the large number
of matches. Interested persons
can obtain infonnation and en-
try blanks by calling Susan
Claudius at (714) 962-S436.
Entries are due Sept. 7.
DH Exams
Dana Hills High wiU conduct
physicals for cross country
and freshman football can-
didates Friday at 6 p.m. ln
thc'scllool tra1nlng room.
Call 496-0066 if furthcf in-
formalioil is desired.
TURN ON TO TENNIS
During the Summer Program at the
COST A MESA TENNIS CLUB
10 LESSONS
510
UNDEI THI DlllCTION Of TINNIS PllOS , , , e RUSTY MOORE and MIKE DUNN e
REGISTRATIONS: AUG. 25
(Come t•rly fo r t11ured 111rollm1ntl
• Morning • Afternoon e Evening Classes e
Beginning· Intermediate· Advanced
JUNIORS and ADULTS
tor lflfer1t1allon <Ill -COSTA MESA, TENNIS Cl.UI -JJ7 .. 211
880 JUNIPERO DR., COSTA MESA
Into and out of, Plenty of
parking. And the crowds
haven't found ii yeL Your
travel a.gen! knows the way. ......... ,.... ....
IN SERVICE
S tl E
7 D0-1 J
FAL 1ck-FOR V
PL VM catVtnE CAMAAO MU$TNfG
OOOGC FAlll'LAHE ll'fVlElllA P'ONTIAC
VW &VOL.VO. F"lll'EBlll':D MOST CAlllS
2 •0 "29" · 2 •0 •_3.3"
HIGH .-···
PERFORMANCE
HEADQUARTERS FOR
CA~S . TRUCKS CAMPERS
Trres. Mar & Chrome Wheels
J11iif ,ii11.J l .,ilf.ib".J
SIZ~S FITS SIZES FITS "'"'" """'. '·""'" -·· J,Ju1• J ,UKt• -.. u ,.,.,.,.. .,... ••
2 •0 08" 2 •0 •44"
(.,l211s ••. I
SIZES FITS .,. .. ,. .""" ...... ,. . .......
(,, 124 •S 11.J
SIZES FITS -··· ··-·· """" .........
A 80\l'C: PllllC£S TU8£L.£SS 81..ACtCWAL.L.S-•OMIJ ....... 9.
ADO SI '' F'Ol'I Wl11T£WALL.5-£K;CISC TA K; 'I 'ff> TO 'l. 81
BRAKE REUNE C'\ 40,000 MILE 'CJ GUARANTEE
C1..tarant••
~ .. _ ........ ''"'"°' ..... .;...,. -·-0•• .... •M•"""" •• .... ··-"·~·· -· ...... _ ........................ . ...•..•. ·-· ...... ,_ ................ -··-........ -. .................... _ ...................... , ... -..... . --: ·-·--··· ................. -··-· .................. -.
TRUCK-CAMPER
MOTOR HOME
1565
••i.l' MCllC16
l lG SlLICTION Of !1115
SID PlllCI SIZl PRICE
670-15 •••••• 21 .ts 100.16.s ..•• Jt.ts
700·14 •. , .•. Zl.t5 175·16.5 ..• , 47.16
100.16 ..•••• zt.t5 950-16.5 ...• 56.75
750-,16 ..••.• 36.71 1~16 .5 •... 49.15
12-16.5 .... s•.•s
f.l.T. 1.14 TO 6.41
Phones
646-4421
.540-4343
••CAR
OWNERS
CADIL.LAC hLIN COL.N
DOU•LI •ILTID
WHITEWALL
TUBELESS
30,000 MILES
34 95
Sii l S
' 1TI L7•-·~ .. EG •
<tOO-•~ VAL.UE
'II'\-I~ $48,65
ALL SIZES
40,000
MILES
ll•c• W•ll Tltbol T~Pt
f ,l .T. 1.11TO1.ff + Strvkt
I
'" r•'I lff-4 ....... d.I.
IHUll-.111 ,,,·
IHllUUU
L(T US TRUE 6: 395 BALANCE
YOUR TIRES HOW -------REPACK BEARINGS &
GREASE SEALS
Wil'LL IOIE ... OVIE Al'o!O
CLIEA,lol VOUA ,.AOl'olt 3 88 Wl'olt"IEL •IEA,Al"IGll
...... 0 Al[PA,('" ... , rH
G At"A,•IE, WIE'LL AL•O
,,.STALL N('W GAIEA•IE
~IEALS , PA IC( ..-OA
OA<I"' RAAKC t"•RS.
-DISC iAKE RELiNE-
... 1[ IHSTA,LL f'OU0.
. ;::.~:·;i,;:•:oo•• 2988 S(A,IUNGS ..... o IH-
SPIECT C A,L1Pl[ .. S ,
"0 TOA5 •"ID "IEA"
•• A,f\(!I: "0T0A!I
""AC"llOllEO, C AL IPIA!I
llllE•u oLT A,T IE KTlll•
CO•T. --------LUBE & OIL CHANGE
WC•LL LU 9 .. 1t"•l1E
YOVlll CA,A A,NO
Cl'olA,HGC l[NGl"llE OIL,
PIO •el IMf:LU OlS U"
TO' Qu Alll T !I 0,.-
QUALlfY OIL, -----WHEEL
BALANCE
488 ---149
.... u ..
'*'l •Q .. T"' --------LIFITIMI
DELCO
Batteries 24'5
MOST CAAS VALUE $33,86 ·------·--·--· WHEEL
ALIGNMENT 5ss
ftEGo VAL.UE St.IS
------------AIR
SHOCKS
•
r---OPEN---. a A.M TO 6 PM
MONO-"Y T~RU F'RIOA
SATURDAY
8 AM TO S PM
•
. -·
I
4
. ' . . . . . ...
·'-"''
What's Doing
Outdoors
Alamitos
Racing
Results
Alamitos Racing Entries. POOL
TABLES
'395~
JIM NIEMIEC
Ocean fishing remains good for surface feeders as continued
gqod catches of calico bass, small barracuda, bonito and a few
yellowta.H are made daily by sportfishers. Sacks are by no mean.'i
empty when anglers return to the docks 81 most skippers are
topping off surfa ce fishing with a run out to the always produc·
ti~c! rock cod reefs.
Loods are light bot there ts plenty of action to keep even ex·
pe'rienced anglers happy. Expectation is that cootinued good
fishing for mixed species will continue well into October.
Yellowtall action in San Diego is up and down, but steady
catches of 1,000 or more fish are being recorded daily. This
v.1iter spent a delightful day fishing aboard a charter boat last
v.·eekend. We went to the Coronado Ulands well and the !pCl't-
fi"er was positioned at the right .spot when the yellows put oo
a spectacular showing under the lights. The rant goldentail came
over the rail at 3:30 a.m. under cover of complete darkness,
then all hell broke loose as free swimmers were reported all
around the boat.
By 6 more than 50 yellows were sacked with at least twice
that number Jost and at times the corners were bowed over
with bending rods. A "half a hump" was not too bad {or some
2..i anglers.
After the yellows disappeared, we made a shot for the secrel
rocks some 20 miles below South Island. As a deck hand for
nine years and as an ardent angler for 25 years, this writer has
never seen such good fishing for sculpin, the best tasting bottom
fish of the Pacific. In no less than 1 \'z boors or fishing , sacks
uwe full of the spi nny rock fish, all to be transferred to home
freezers.
l'ello11ltln, Dolphha Expected
For fear that the e:1otlc game fish will hear, skippers are not
t;Oking too loudly aboot their predictions for the remainder of
the sportfishing season. The t'Ul'ISensus is lhere is a good chance
yellowfm twia and dolphin will show up around ,the lint part of
September. Dolphins have already been spoUed under kelp pat-
ties. but to date have been very reluctant to bit bait, jigs or
feathers . •
· A few boats are going to be making some runs out to the
'Dumping Grounds" this weekend searching for fish and by this
time next week we should have a better picture of what's to
come.
1Harlln Bard to"Flnd
Marlin fishing has not developed off lhe coast. to date, and
predictions of an early season have been scuttled. Boats working
the channels reported spolling very few spikebills this past wee\;,
and not one marlin was weighed in at the Balboa Angling Club.
Only one striped marlin was boated in San Diego waters, but a
nwnber of big game anglers reported strikes and lost hookups.
Conditions are good on the outside and maybe it will just
lake a change in the moon phase to put the marlin in a biting
mood . Anglers say that most of the strikes are by marlin hitting
psychedelic lures trolled at a fa st clip. It's always good insur-
ance for private boaters to stop by a kelp patty and jig up a
few mackerel for the live bait tank, just in case they run uilo
a school or feeders.
Tro11t at Ul9J1 Lakes
.......... ,, A..-.• =· 1t7) c...,. , ...
Pl•ST •.t.c• -J50 v1rd1. t yett otds.. c1.rm1,., P11rw 11900.
0...0V'I El.PfHI (Tr .. 11.1t1>
1(•111 Gold (MYU.)
Mlt.1 0..rlallells U'1114)
Tlmt -11.0.
l.60 •.60 3.olO ........
··~ i'.ho rtl'I -l'tlrnl P'tlltO. Oft Tiii
Hlll,IW, l el•Y LM Bid, WIM Cell, Btl·
.. 11.,., I Van.
SJ •xac.I• -S.Da•M ... ,,_ a .. 1(1111 ~ I'_,. MIM.
SlfCONO llAClt: -110 W"il•ch. J yt•r
oklJ I. "'f'· Clalmlf!o;J. PLH'M I UOO.
Fit EOdlt
ITrM111r1I sm J . .io 7.60
Fancy Will-(Knlgttl) 3 • .0 J.03
Mt11 Q.onooo IH1r1) l.6CI
Tl,,.. -'5.tS.
Aho ''" -T119 Sidi, Hiii To Trot, Olrtk.
THlllD llACE -4tO yard1. l YNr
Gkl1. Atl-ance. P'ww l2300. The Edw.n:t1 Uboralorln.
0 ... 1~ P1rr •
lC1rda11) lMI 2.olO 2.20 l"lloeGe'I Limn (Mlll\IGA} t.IO ~.ol(I
Sn .. k #lillack CH1rO 2.JQ Time -1f.11.
AllO r1n -B1rbH Allen. Col(N" ~
Pl/Ill., T~ MoanlJllrn1r. Twl1t1r er .. 1e,
One lold ero.d.
POUllTH llAClf -400 v1ro1. 3 ...... 11101 & 1111. Clalmfng. Purw snoo.
Sne1ky T11ky
(W1rdJ 1$.00 6.«I 3.60 1nmen'1 Litt Two (0,.ytrJ 1.20 J.IO
Spur Clly (H•rl) •.1111 Time -~ . .Q.
Ali.o ran -MOOl'I A1'1 Bkk, Go Ille
Go, Roy1I SUwtr Btr.
l'IPTH lli'.Cll -11D yan:t1. l Yt•r
llld1 .. up. AU-M!Ct. PurH U2QO The LIWVtrl Tlllt Hight 11 n.. RIC.et •.
Old• !moolhl•
!Smltttl 21JO '"° J 00 TH CH'I ChOlc• (Tni11ur1) •. 60 1:00
Un Ctiarve (MYlet) • 2 «I Tlmt -4S.7l. '
A.too r1n -DllrttlY'• Panto. Rciy11 PIH, lltd ll:otltlle.
llXTH llAC• -350 yarcu. J yttr oldt. Cl1lmlr111. P'l.lrN J1900.
Gil lle"1Y
!l(nloh!I "1.60 JlAG •.oo Dullldffdoo ITre1sur1i ).60 S.00
JOYOUI Pr~ (G.ruJ 12.00
Tlm1 -lt.17.
Al111 rl" -Dutt Dlvll 1, Wilch z·s
Finey, llarCWt O.ncty, Hy OVtrdrlve,
F•do, 0.Nrt lkt , Ooh L• LI.
$S l!x•ct1 -IMiet II.Uy & &. OuptcMectoo, Paid i.114.00. •
SEVENTH RACE -110 y•rd1. 3 ye1r
olds & i;p. Allowtnca. Purw '3200 Thi
El Bet.al J•il•rl Court Ho. 161. ·
G1v1lm1n IC1rcl11lll ) •.oo J.60 l.00
S1v1nnah'1 BCIY IWtrdl J.20 2.9'1
SPOttld Bir Bull (Tr•asur1) J.ta Timi -4.S.36.
Al111 ran -T1x11 Trtctr, CllJll Bir
ThrH Strl~I. '
EIGHTH IAC• -3.SO v•rd1. l year
aids & i;p, Cl1lmlng. Pur:se Sll'OO.
Wll(tt CrHk Chic
!Dr..,erl 7.00 J.IO J.00 Parr Cl1'*tr (Tre11urel •.flO ~.20
Raymond Bir l oY (C1rdo11) J.00
Tlmt -17.JI,
Allll rtrl -Slwpy Char11e, i'.(t\a~tr,
Dlln1 Mier, B•rrCWt Bid, Fiabber.
iJ Exac11 -2·Wltcll CrHll Clllc & '-
Parr Cl•~r, P'ald 1151.00.
Bike Race
Date Set
The second annua1 Tour de
Mission Viejo bicycle race is
schedu1ed !or Sept. 9 with a
noon start.
Its the fourth in a national
series and riders will be vying
for more than $1 ,200 in prizes.
The race is a direct
outgrowth ol a pilot event J'U/l
in September of 1972 at
:Pi.fission Viejo when more than
150 riders competed.
This year's event features
senior and junior riders in
races up to 30 miles in ltngth.
The course begins on Oso
Parkway, proceeds up to Mon-
tano.so Place and around the
Marguerite Parkway.
Because of the steep Mon-
tanoso ascent the race has
been shortened to 30 miles
from last year's 6 2.5-mile
circuit. . th Calil 000 f ..J:~ NINTH llACE -Jj() Y•rdt. ? yrar Lakes m Sou ern · omia above 5, eet are rewarui.ug llld•. c1a1m1"". Purse 519ll0. 1 ~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;II
trout fishermen with fair to good angling in the 13-lo-l&.inch supar.ori I•
range. Still fishing in 30 to 40 feet of water has produced near ~=~81(w1rol s.60 1~:: t: NEWPORT LEASES
limib: of stocked rainbows from such popular lakes as Big Bear, C•ndY MOCWI Jal !O•l'Ytrl 3 • ..o 2400 Wnt Coast Hivliwoy Tlmt -ll.l6.
si"lverwood, Hemet and Cuyamaca. AllO rln -w..11 ..... My Pala Moon. L .. sing •II Vehlcl" Wlsl\lwood, Al's 8old 811, Biondi Jot, ' Eilewhere in lhe SOuthland, only limiled action is on tap for c11ampa11-cherw. fOlllGN & DOMUTIC
' ailglers fishing the wann water !ates. Irvine is good for catfish Ho tcritc11ts. 64§.2202
aDd bluegill, as is Vail. Lakes ln San Diego County are only con-•t'~:~l·~~~~:.:';;·~~.--•·."~"~'·--·."'.".•-•• '·i:.mmm=::::;:::::1••== sidered fair for a duke's mixture of fresh water fish. II
Lakes In Northern California list bass as most acti•e fished DON'T DISCARD THOSE
at depths below 20 feet, and occasional good catches of lrout
from thooe Jakes stocked regularly. OLD TENNIS SHOES!!
Baja Fi•hlnn Do .... n WI , ........ r••ttwn "' ~ " M*9 ... T,...,. ...... " -ANTHONY.'$ SHO£ SERVICE
Big game fishing below the border has been hit by tropical1 ... ~·~·~·~"~'~'~"~'~"~'~'~·~·~"~'°.;.,..;"~"~'~"~'°"~'~'";;;;;"~·~•;.;';••;°";'~•;•~'~M;:;••~~il storms, which ha.s hekl down fishing. Only a few reports indicate1 -
good fishing, where as the general total picture is for fair to
good action on small game fish, highlighted occasionally by a
fl).lrrY of billflsh catches.
For a complete update on Baja fishing conditions it would
be best to contact Anglers Center al 673-7091, or phone Rancho
Buena Vista reservattoo..s and information at 644--8838.
We•t•er Scatters Dove
Thundershowers which hit the Southland earlier this week
~tiered dove in the desert areas. There still is an excellent
population of both mourning and white wing dove, but if more
rain falls the game flyers will not have to migrate from feed-
ing area to watering holes to roosting spots as they would under
very hot and dry conditions.
, John Oslerkamp of Newport, who operates a large ranch in
the Imperial Valley near Brawley, says there is a good popula·
tion of dove in the area and that birds seem.to be congregating
around the wheat fields.
Deep Sea Fish Report
AT LAST
A COMPLETE R/V
PARTS, SUPPLY
& SF.RVICE
aNTER!
• •
c:•llco ba11. ll!DOl\IDO -234 l"'llltr1: 3
y11lowt•ll, 2 wl'lllt -lulss, 11 btr· rac~. 97' bl\19 iu.11, '.154 ctllco btn,
'" bonllo. 1 ti.11bvl. Bl'" -215 •naler•: 3 yel1""'1t111 10 barrecvoa, 276 baflllo, i1S rntctrrll'I, 1S1 rott cod, 6' blve ben. OXNARD -2tt •nqlert : 1 yrllowll!I tl bafl!lo. 1 tt11fbul, Sf6 calico ben, ~
bl•'I ba$1. 300 •oct cod. 13 llnci (Od.
SAN l"EORO (tilld 51. Ltlldl119) -61 1n111er1: 11 canco Nu. 1 Mind ba11. 65
bonllo, '' m1ctc1rel, 1911 rod: cod, l°' 1111111 1111$1. (S1tOr1fl1111111J -S6 ano1er1: 11 l!Otltto. 11 ct11c:o bl•_!11 »I roclr. cod SEAL •l!i'.CN -:ni anqlrra: i(
bonito, ff .. rid be11, S llllrr1c1.K11, soo roe:~ cod, J! meclr.trel. Bini• -210
anal1r1; 20 b1rr1c:U1Ja. 400 llonlto, lf u~" "~••· 1• "''""'"· 7~ "'"'"••ti. AVILA IAY (~rt Stn L.ulO -11
an~•~ ... 5 Ung cod. U4 roe~ crvl.
VENTURA -61 tnalrr" 107 callc11 beH, 1'1 blue ba11, 1• llonlto, J12 rock , ....
,,,O,tlt('I •.t,V fVI""" L11ndlt11I -~ll!DI'": ~I lfl!O cOd. 796 roclr. c:Od. IS•"
""'"") -114 anolers: 11 Uno cod • .,.,
rock C'Od. \9"'"1) -16 ario .. r1: 2.fO ,,.....,. ~"'1. I n,.., Cf'd, 1 1~t""'". P'OltT HUl!NIMI! -13• e1111ter1: 391 cttlc~ .,~,~. t~ ,,.,,, 97 bonito, II iu.r. r1cUO.. l l'llll!Mlt,
SDNSET
6BbF ·I· BINNER
$22.613
Per Couple
Tuesday • Wednesday • 'lbunday • Sunday
From 2P.M.
Includes Green r... • Elect.riC Cart • Dinner
•.• FABULOUS ••. .
SDSINESSMAN.'S bDNett
Tueod&y • Fllc!Jy
11·2 P.M. -
@;
Reotawant )IJIJlf Huntt"lt<>n ~mt
\ Country Club
• I
'
GI .Ill....,, CH, CfllllT) '" fllMlt ........ ~ A.tNdll1on. a..-"'"' Chk. CC. Smltlll 1ft
MllMI t. 10, ICl\ltlltl In ,,,....., "'-IL f_.I '" -·-l---...:=. ind
MDOrl llh'lt. IN. '•ttlol 1ft htrlM. IK. HW1l 1Y Tiii SVT!dlu•• IH. P•I
lllOtl 11'11-. (I(. HMO '" ftw ,._, tN. l"tltlo) 1ft NlllfW tllllllY• IC. Smltlll Stlallt M Ull. (0. C.nlou) "' ~ 10. KrltM) "' 0ett.U hy, 1..1, WW'dl
SIXTH "AC8 -· ao t•nlt. ' ,...... Mdtfr l(llllM {~ Wtrfl '" olclt ' .. CWmlnf.. P\11'11 St100. ll'llilftd lft. 10. Monitl '" Cltlmlllll ,,let '2000. Dtll" Land'1 .._,, II. O•rU) • Ill
"' MlclWty Tem. (M, llctfj) "' ,, .. .:1,. Horfl, 10. Kn•rr> Ot~ld "Cockll, IM. lltlwl "' 819tf'ni tu.Cl -'-t•f'dl. S YMf' ''w'• Jay 9o\I, II. Ti"MW1'1I "' old• & 1111. Clllll'llllG. P'lll.. ti40I. ~ Trlpl1 C Trtllt, IC. $tnlth) 1ft
Bro.btlck. (H. C1'11&byJ 1ft c .. 1m1no P'rk• s1• Ala Crlc:kett, (I!. Garul 1111'1 11.tqUffl. (O. Cerclou) '" lto.-11'• ll..,.,, (J. Mltwudll Tip 511111, CD. Motrll) '" llockel Oltl Jr (,, Wardl "' $'*'1\11 l.,ovl, (H. P~I
'''' c.trl11, CE. Gan.ti "' A.Jtmlto. St.,, CM. a k .. l
Trul~ Up Tltflt, IH. Pt04l lit Mt. '""'°""'"t,JH• Cr~I OtM1 wektl. 1 . cw1 ...
s•v•NTM •.t.e• -110 Vard•. , AouatlOull, IS. T"'.Wfl YMr oldl I. wp. Clt lmli:· PurM U000 1Ctr1' McGte, (J. Ward C1•lml"'f Prlcl tUOO. M C.Hlorl\lt .. f.~ (0. Mor-ml
General
Calibrated®
SCRAMBLER
• Glass-Belted
tor Long Mileage
• Polyester Cord Body
for Smooth Ride
• Sporty Raised Whit e Letters
-.Charge it at
i Ill · .. : • .:lj I 1 ... 1•1•1:1•: -··-
General Tire
1ft 1n.
1!7
1H 1H
lft on IH 1ft
N11m1 uc1--:::-0 y~. s ,_
d*-OlllNl'lf, ,,_ 11100. Clalmlno up --· • .,. .. ,,.,._,., (M. P'atel l'' Tom'I tw. (f.. J..•tul tt $11W.._ T«i. I l tcutl lit
ICllMI T-((, Smith) llt Htrlll!Uf11 Qwlft, jO. MllClllUJ 117 .,, .. ,.llU, {J, '#Wei) 117
T111ekll11 ,o.,.i, tG. P',_.1klfl) llt llllft• lewy, IH. Cl'OMrYI 119
HMIN h Yciu. ID, Morrl1J 111 ._,...,. Gil IJ. Mlttlll!Nl 117 .., .......... NloQ, fC, Srnl!llJ "'
50 Sill REPLACES REGULAR SALE FED.tr.
PRICE PRICE TAX
E70·14 7.35·14 $47.95 $33.50 $2.48
Reg. $47.95 F70·14 7.75-14 49.95 35.00 2.6 1
size E70-14 670·14 8.25-14 51.95 36.00 2.82
tubeless H70·14 8.55·14 54.95 38.00 3.09
lellerwhite
plus $2.48 G7~15 8.25-15 51.95 37.00 2.86
Fed.Ex. Tax
H70·15 8.55·15 55.95 39.00 3.06
YOU SAVE $14.45 to $16 .95 PER TIRE
Glass-Belt 70 Series Whiteline Specials
SIZE REPLACES
E70·14 7.35·14
REGULAR
PRICE
545.95
SALE
PRICE
$31.50
FED. EX.
TAX • $2.48
f70·14 7.75·14 47.95 33.00 1.61
H70·14 8.55·1 4 51.95 36.50 3.09
G70·15 8.25-15 50.95 35.00 2.86
WHILE THEY LAST .•. LIMITED SUPPLIES .•• BRAND NEW
...• NOT BLEMS •. NoT RETREADS
Brake Reline
Guaranteed 24,000 Miles
In cludes new Delco brake
linings on all four
wheels. Brake drum and
wheel cylinder inspection.
Adjust ~rakes and
restore brake fluid ...
FREE ROAD TEST!
STANDARD $
& COMPACT
AMERICAN CARS
'
Extra Charge for disc brakeJ, larger
cars, and addilional parts If nftded.
z•mum.m GUARANTEED IN WRITINGI •ppa1
Delco Brake Llnings Installed by us are Quaranleed
against arw and all defects for the numtlllr of years or
miles Indicated. Should this brake lining become d•
fective or wear out through no fault of the uaer, we
-will replace it chargin g only for the mileage uHd.
Guarantee does not apply to brake llnlngs Installed on
commercial v1hicres or linings d1m1pd In auto eccl--
dents. Aajustment charges bated on selling prices
current at tlm1of1dju1tment. ·····==••&a•••UJtU••=•
FRONT END
ALIGNMENT
We corr1ct Caster, Camber,
Toe-In , Toe-out to 'your car
m anulacture r' 1 spe<:lficaUont
•.. Safety check ind adJu1t your
sleerln'J!
Only,;. $8.~0
•
...
DtU ll1'W: ......... CAH WIT'll A• tolftmoflllM Oii Y01tto1t ._
USED TIRES
Lots of Non°Skld
Tread 011 These s5•!.
Don Swedlund
COMPLETE CAR CARE
SINQi 1959
COAST GENERAL TIRE
640-5033 HOURS:
7::IO to 6:00 Dollf 540-5710
'
•
' . •
•
..... -. -' , ...........
PUBUC NOTIC~ PUBUC NOTICE State Actima
Comity's Solons
Vote on Issues
~ .... ,,. PUBLIC NOTICE It nu w11h to MtlC 111e •••let tt t11 11-----,,,,=,,,..,..,.--· ----1 torlltl' 111 ttll• meittr. '" 11\0uld 41 ,. l'ICTITIOU5 8US1NRSS lll"Oll'lllllY It !Mt YMt Wflnt1t rtl!l'lll ... If
NAM!!: STATEMRNT '"'' mev be Hltd 1111 !lint. Tl'ltl lolle>Wll\ll PIUllOlll tre 11olno Otlld M<ly ,, lt73. D11•llll" 11: WILLIAM E. Sr J0Hp.I,
TUSTIN Tl'!EATRE, 6tO Et C<1rt'lll'IO Clerk ll1tl. Tuu ln, Ctll!ornl1 916'0 Bv Floy R1y
Mr. Fttd $t1ln, '11 Chino Ctll!IOll 0copvl'!' Roe<!, Ptlm SPflnQ1, Ctlltorn!a tn62 (SEAL\
Mr. lloberl $!tin, 312• OOn1 Sotle llOll!:llT L. HUMl'Hlt£Y$
.. I AllWlllY ti LIW vt, $1\IOlo Clly, C11lllofnl1 t1IO' 1$00 Adtml.. S1llt ,.. Thll 111!1ln11s II COndllCltd bY I Gtlllrtl Ctlll Mtt.I, C1ll1-I• tUJI
P1rjner1h!p. Ttl Cm) -f...O Sl•in 1 Robert Sttlll All_., for ,.llUIMtr Thi• si.t11Nnl W~I llit(I with Ille Covt>• PUOlhllfd Orlnpt Coast 01lly P!to1.
ty Cltrk 01 OrlllQO C0vntr on A1.111111I 14. Au;utl 2, 9, 16. 23. 1913 'nll·7J
The lollowing are the major
actions taken by th e
Legislature in Sacramento last
week and tho voles or area
Orange Co u n t y represen--
tatives.
Senate Action
SALES TAX REPEAL
Unanimous I y approved
Assembly-Senate compromise
bill repealing [or six months
beginning Oct. I the recwtly
enacted one-cent state sales -( ) l'ACHT, 1055 WARNE, UBL! ~=~llO' SIA•S. INC. p c NOTICE CAPITOL
1 .. AYllllll Of l~t $t•rt·Slllll S0t
Ce111ury (l!'f RISOLUT10N 1NVIT1HO l'llOllOSALI ·-------------~ LOI An1t111, C1Hlor11l1 "°61 1'011 JOINT OCCUllAHCY LIAll """ 1'1700 WHEREAS, 111.e Fov'll•IM V1l11y ~llool OllltlCI II Ille OWfllr of that (trltln rNI l"S-OC
..iut1Uine11 orar>0• co.it oilly l•llOI, proper!~ loe11e!I 11 !ht 11u1h••d S<:hool. l 23 lO s be 6 1969f E!lucallon L•n•, Hunll1111ton k1d1 ~,,,u11 6, • ' •nd epllm 2llt.li !111(141 d•Krlptlon of tile 11>Pllc1blt portlorl
---------------Ion 1111 11 tilt D11trlt l oHlcel 11ld, WHEREAS, the 8~rd hll ~em'llntd
Ill~! ll would 0. 111v11nt119tov1 !o lht PUBLIC NOTICE Dl1trld 10 lea'e lht 1fl)f'!mtnllontd prOP· -~-------------e••v lo a Pfl''°"' tlrm of CO<'por<1!1«1
tax Bill also provides one·
respomibllity under old agl'
security program lo IJUl)l)Otl
needy recipient&. No refa.Uve
woold be held legally liable IA>
support his or he< ~Ill. AB
57 reaffirmed by margin sul·
ficient to cancel Gov .. Reagan
veto , 64-t3. Yes, Assemblyman
Kl!Meth E. Cory (D • Ganlen
Grove. No. Assemblymen
Robert E. Badham (R'New·
port Bead!), John V. BMggs
<R·Fullerton) and Robert H.
Burke (R-Huntlngtoo Beach).
UNEMPLOYMENT BEN-
EFITS -Ends ~ne-week wait·
lng period for jobless persons
to receive state insurance ben-
efits if unemployment is ex·
peeled to be less than 6 days In
length . AB 507 passed 51-18,
to Senate Yes, Briggs and
Cory. No, Burke. Absent or
abstaining, Badham.
•
; -OAJLY PILOT
OVER THE COUNTER
NASO Li1ting1 for Wodno..t.y, A1111u1t 22, 1973
1N 11\'J T1mo1-
N ~U 'l!':m )(JO Tevlor W •
''" • tlecm 'E. ~ 1., ...... i.JnmtDCt-.10
l llVr l11r. 1· ' 1\o\14 owtMf ';\
• t" ... '" l~t 111. •i; ,,\'. ~~ t:~ 1 \l ft: *·· u """' ,. • S'" 5;,., ff u11r c r. r1 1, 1~~ UMIOl'I 1~ 1U~ 1 , ( "" 'E' ""'" ;r,; f "' '"'I "l •• Ht "' l . ~ ~\ TrliL. 1 17 Ill,\ 8,, .... 1'"4• : "' 1~•)J
17YI II~ tJnY ,Mob! 6 Mt. I)
1\'t 1\~ ""'"' HO' 6Wi 1Vt 1~~ I VtnC:t Sn '"" .J 14V. 11 Van PYk 10 '!';: )(IV, I Vin ihcll ~ ''"' 1,~ klOl'I it Im 1 . ..., •• v1 ... ,,. a l ~7\liYtutlic I Ul't 11\4 \I Simi ,, I 1•1 2 ••h MG IN 2114 22 1111 Mf IS.. l~ u""l6'i\ 111m11 I N I ,1 n• !!: t~ Rt ''" 4\t 11 :tf\' WffCHfl Va • 1'~ V. Wt'8f WI 11 lJ ,1 • tt~ tllflll M IN 14~
1l 1 ktl Pt """'!~ iW W•IP11l:I n IV!e 1 14\.li J ttr l'"d ll\OJ 1 . , llVt 1t1.lo llaml J 20~ 1.U 11\'i 1111 H 161.4 111111•1
'' 'Ull~ nl ,..._ 1-M; ''"" 11 'H 2' W!ec PLt 1114 11-. •
614 Ni ood Lth 16~'. 16~ I I\.\ WOrld Jy ,,,,. 14 '"
1' 'f.l rl11hf W j ·" ,,~ ,," :;r"· ~~ ~m ,, s 6 1ieolr r o 6 1'h l 3t i 6 l lDIU Ulh JtVr 24 Jr
NIWPOllT·Ml!iA UNll'llO which will Vflollerttlr.e tl\fl conalructlon of I seitoot. OllTlllCT tllilh:llt>V tor tt.. lolnt occopency of llll
Nelke 111¥111111 •Id• Ol1!rlcl ind tho lesstt Oft flll followl119
NOTICE IS H151lEll'I' GI V'EN 11\I! 1111 twrm1:
time income tax rebate in
April 1974 ranging from 20 to
3S percent. SB 90 passed 31.0,
to Gov. Reagan. Yes, Sens.
Denni! E. Carpetner (R·
Newport Beach) and James E.
Whetmore (R·La Habra).
JOB DEVELOPMENT -
Creates new state agency to
handle s t a t e employment
services. SB 601 passed 21 ·8.
To Assembly. Absent or al>
staining, Carpenter and Whet·
more.
CHILD CARE -Provides
$31.8 million in state funds to
replace federal a.id cuts for
child care programs. AB 1244
passed 66-11, to Senate. Yes,
C.ory. No, Badham, Briggs and
Burke.
Great Beefstakes?
80.•d ol EOllClllOfl ol 1111 N.wpol'l·Mell I. Tl\fl porjlon of !I'll blllldlng OCCUllltd
UMfll.cl S<:hoal Dlltrlct ol Or111t• Countv. l:IY The Ol11rlCT will De utl!ltld by ·•~If C1lll0tnl1, wilt recelvo -ltd bid• up lo Pf"Orw'ltl oril, lo .c1ndMl1lr1tlvt allll
II :00 A.M. Ol'I , .... Jhl dllV of Al.l!IUll. 191'l resa .. rce pUfpl)HI.
II ~ offk• of p l(I kNIOI Dl11rlct. 2. Tiit Ol1lrlct'1 OCCUOI~ will bt loc:lle!I II 11S1 Plec1nll1 AW11'1UI. Cotti llmllld lo I ,_,, epproirJrn.111'1' 16 • :n
Mew, C1Utornl1, ti whlcl1 11,,,. ulcl t1lcl1 IHI. wi ll bl PVl>lkly -'*' •nd r1tc1 tor: 3. T!\e tll.llldlfttl mull meet Flelcl Ad
p H y s I c Al e D u c AT I 0 H 1t1rtdtreb 11111 •II Educel'lon Codi Pr•
eou1PME"IT v11Jons relal1no 10 !ht phnlctl 1tr1Ktwt
All bldl <1r1 to tit in .,cordaf\Ct with of IChool llUl1dlnos. Clltld!t1onl 11111r11e11on1 •nd SpKltlc11lon1 ~-LHsff wlll 0. rtciu1red lo lilt a 111r•
which art -on Ille In IM olllce of ll'lt IV lloll'll l«' pttforM"191l« of the \11M. Purchtilng Aeinl of 1e!(I 5chOOI OIUrlct, 5, Tlw fNN IM"m wlfl bl tor SO 'fHtl.
18.SI PIK11'1ll1 AV11'1111, CO'llil MIU. 6. Tilt "°'"°"' ol !ht bullclllltl occvplfd C:•tllotr>li. DY '"'" wltl rtmaln 1.11.cluslvtlY lht
tech 1114ckr mu11 11111n1U 1 Did de9Dlll pe,_I Dl"OCllf"IY of ltuttl 11111 10
lfl !f\t fOf"m of e ctrlllltd or cttllltr'1 Dl1h1tl'\ POl'llon 11l11I vttl In 011trld on
c'*k Of , bl<I r:oo...d fll'U•I to u ... perttnl complt llon end tcctlll•~• Md fr• of
ll.,.l ol lht emown1 ol 11>1 bid, meOe '"" •tnl•I or otlle• cr.eroes. p.eV11>11 111 11'11 ordltl' 01 llltl p.1-pOr"l•Mf'll NOW, THEREl=OltE, llE IT ll:ESOLVEO
U11lh1oe1 kl'IOGI Ol11rtc1. A P1rlotm111C1 llltl lhl1 SO.rd d«li1rt1 Its lnltnllon
BOlld ma! br r1QulrM1 11 rl'll dltcr1UCN1 of 01 lflvlllf'IGI prllj)OMll ourw111t to EdlKl-
the Dl1tr ct. In the tvWll of fe1Jur1 to 11011 C«lt Stcilon1 1601S-101; 1nv pl1n1
enter lnlo we/\ tontr~cl, Ille fvll aum OI' prOPOUll Wiii 1:11 rKtl'ttd Ind COl'l-
lllOl'itOI wUI bl !orfeJlld to will $cllool 1!4trtd l:lv the lotrd tt th r1911ltr
Dliltflct o! O<tt'IQt Coun1r. m.,.111111 to 1:11 Mid on tM 6th <ll'f ol
Mo Dld<ltf" mty wl!hdrlw 1111 1:1111 IOI' I Oecrmbe<, "''· pttlod of torrv.nv1 ('S) dav1 .u ... Ille $TATE OF CALIFORNIA l
di .. Ml for ll'>e llj)tfl)n9 lhtrtol. )II Tht llPlrd ol Ed1K1!10t1 ~ 1111 Nowporl · COUNTY OF ORANGE I MUt U11lfltd School Dlttrlcl t1$1f\ftt 1111 I, Roqer 1119en. Cler• ol tllt 801rd of
rlglll tc rel«! 1ny or all bl<lt, 1nd l"\ot TruslfOI of Fou111tln V1llev ktiool
11ec9s1•rlty t ct"'I tilt IO'*ffl Dl(I, end to Ohtrlcl of Or•not Cou111v. C1lllor11l1,
w1f'le enY ln!ormeUrv or lrrr;iulorhv In lwrtbY certify ltlat IM ttlOYt Ind ~ tll\', 1114 rec•lvtd. 1119 Retolvtlon wa1 dvlY tll<I r11111l1rty
De!ld Avv1111 IS. i.1J. 1doeited bV 1111 Miid bOlr(I ti I ragvltr
• NEWPORT-·MESA mH11nu lhtreof hel(I on 11\e 2"11 dtv of
UNIF!EO SCHOOL A""U$1, lfl), Ind Pl'M'd 11'1' I VNnlmovt
DISTRICT of wo1• or talcl llOlrd. 0<1nge COllnh, Ctlllor11l1 1N WITHES$ WHEREOF, t 111v1
Bt Oorotllv l'!t•Vl'I' FlsMr 119' ...... IO .. , ,,,., htfld Ind .... 1111, tfl(I
P .. rtllltl"ll Agtnl OIV of All'1\lll, 1tn. MS·11DO RoVfr lltlQtfl P~Dllihtd Oreng.e C011t Oe!1y Piiot Putlll!Md Or~e Coal Otlly ,.Uot,
A""''' 1• end AV9u1t n, 1•n 2sn-1l A1.111u11 t , 14. 2J, lt1'l 2..._1l
PUBLIC NOTICE PUBUC NOTICE
. NOTICI TO CONTllACTOllS or H1W Concrtte ...•. S 5.tJS
CALLIMO FOR SIM Fi"" Gr•der. HIQhWtV Ind Slrwt Ptvtt'IQ.
Sthool Olstrltl: COAST COMMUNITY Alrporll, RllllW•V•• tlld slmll1r IVPfl
COLLEGE OISTRICT ,,. • ...., conHrlKl!Oll .• '5.1,,
aid O.edll,..: t :DO o'cloc~ p.m . or tlw OWis Hendters • , 5 S.6A5
11",d•I' ot Sfo11t•mt11r. 1q11. FltoQmtn S J,6-1\
Plloc• of 814 Recr!pt· Ollkt ot r11e L1Dor1<'1, Geller"tl or Conuructlor! s S.IAS
Pun:h11l1W1 A"'ltnl, COAST COMMUNITY LllldKIPI G1'"°'11er & NUfMry Miii lhtS
COLLEGE OtSTRICT. U10 Mtml --1tdot of pl1n1 nllltr"ltll encl how to
"""'"'· CCSIA ,,.,., •• (Alllor1111. t?•1'-r11n1 tl'>tm. L•Y• o.rt plan! ••· Pnl«I t "1n1I f Ic 1 1 lo n Name· ••no-" 10 f<ollow llK' l1ndK"Pfl
T•Cll'llloll>VV "•l'llll'IO Loi A<ldlllOfl tn!I plenl .. • .•.• s S.7.U
•.••• $ J.SI
M!W::ell1...ous $trtet COflstr11ctlon •' M0tlt1m1n . •. • .•.••••. S 1"'5 Oll:'ANGE COAST COLLEGE !&Id No. 0"ERlTING llMGINl!llll: ll&l. Hfflll\ &. Welllfl · ?Sc ptl'" hcvl'
l'l1ce Plt111 ,,, Of' Ii"' 0111ct of tM P•n1lon . ' I.XI per hour
l'llf'tl'>ellllQ Agtnt. COAST COMMUNITY Ytt1lton·Silv!11111 •
COlLEGE O!Sl"RICT, 1310 Aa1m1 HotldtY lOc Pll'" hour
A....,,W, Cas11 Mna, Ctlllornl1, t'!t.26. Fortman~ JOc par l'lour 0\'9r till •al• ol
, "40TICE 15 l'!Ell:Efl'I' GIVEN 11111 the lllf h1Qht$1 paid E"Olflttr vrtdtr 1111
111o'\fto<\ttnld khool Ol•lrlct of Ortflft 1uper11l1lon. '
rC111n1Y, Ctlllorr>l1, 1Cll"11 !IY Ind th•OV9h GrO<.IO 2 • ' .$ '·'' lh Govltl'nlnv 801r<I, l\tl'tln11l1tt rtl•••«I concrete ml11r ooer1lor. skip IYJlt
to ti "DtSTFtlCT", W'lll •«tlw U11 ID. WI Sk1oloacl..-• Whttl !Ypt, uo IO 1' y(I.
t10l l1lltl' Ill•" 11'1 etoov1-1t11tc1 t!fl'M, Mal· wllttout el!echfl'leflf
111 bicl• tor 11'11 award ol I tOfllrtct IOt Gt"OllP ) •. , • ,
111e 1bov1 oroJecl. C~1lnm111 81111 shlll bl ,.ct'lvld lfl Ille 011ce l<ltn· POW11r Contrtte Sew OptrtlOt
lifltd tbo\lt, •nd 1111 11 bl Oftlfttd alld Group • . .• .. S '·'' ,1111111!ctr rted 11oud et tile ab0vt·1t11.c1 lo•m•n v Ml•er,,..n (Al.pfltll or Con-
t!""' end ol•c•. cr1t1J Rodm1n
ll>lf"• ""111 "' I IWl'fllV·ll~ Cldt1r Gr-s ... 11.11 deootl! •eqvlred for eec:h 111 ot Did Backtlot 0Ptr•lor (uo lo 1rtd l11Clvdl11g
docv,.....1$ to f lllftto!H Ille r.ivrn In 'ii Yd.)
oood aot1c1lll011 wllhlM ,...,,., days t!IM" lht Rolltr 00t11ror (111)hell or 1'11111111
DIJii _,.,11'111 dllt. Rvllber Tlrlfd Etrlh MOYlllG EQ\lh~rntnt Eac~ Did mv'I corilorm tncJ De f1l 110lt 1"81M, Iii> to ..-1111 ltlClvdlllO 2.5
rllPOl'lll.,. to TM c;or!trecl docu"""'"· 'I'd. ll•VCkl
WffiSKEY TAX -Set aside
portion of alcohol taxes for
prevention and rehabilitation
programs. SB 204 passed 29-0.
To Assembly. Absent or ab-
staining Carpenter. Yes, Whet-
more.
JUDICIAL PREJUDICE -
Bans any appeals judge from
hearing mrtters when a party
or his attorney establishes
prejudice. SB 922 passed 21·1G.
To Assembly. No, Carpenter,
Wetmore.
NOISE CONTROL -
Creates new state ageacy to
combat noise pollution. SB
1220 passed 27-4. to Assembly.
Yes, Wetmore. No, Cilrpenter.
INDIAN EDUCATION -
Appropriates $1.fl million for
20 California Indian learning
centers. SB 1269 passed 31-5,
to Assembly. No, Carpenter
and Whetmore.
NO HUNGRY PUPILS -
Sets state policy that no school
child shall go hungry and re-
quires school districts to use
federal and state funds to pro-
vide breakfast and /or lunch
for pupils of low ·income
families . SB 1264 passed 22-13.
to As.scmbly. No, Carpenter
and Whetmore.
FAIR CAMPAIGNING -
Establl!bes state Fair Cam-
paign Practices Commis~oo
to investigate and penahze
violators of state campaign
codes. SB 352 passed 27-8 to
Assembly. Yes, Carpenter and
Whetmore..
Asse11ibly
Action
WELFARE VETO OVER-
RIDE -Eliminates relatives'
Eec:h Did 111111 bt eccOfl"lp.etolld trt tt.e !~lplollltr C»trtlof IC rtwlltl' end WllHI
!l(toll"llv rt!ttred to \n tn. confTKI Type over \lo ¥4. incl 11p to efld In· PUBUC NOTICE
dOC\IFT\t flh end IJy IM 11•1 of pr(l!)OSed clvdlflO lV. y(ls,) 1---------------•\ltlCOfllr~clo<t. Grovp 6 •. S 7.tl NOTICI OP TllUST•l'I SALe
Tht O!STRICT r111rvtt IM rl11M lo r.. AIOll1ll or Con<rttt Si""tldlf'IO OCltt'tlor M•. l'·t"4t
fKI e11v or all bld1 or to welvt •n~ Ir· !11mc>l1>9 ,"II llnlN>IMl Of1 AUfUSI 30. 1m, ti 11:00 A.M.,
reaul1rltln QI'" lnforrnelillH In ~ny bids OI'" A111h1ll Ptvl119 Mechlllf Oplrelor IMPERl/\L C 0 RP 0 RAT I 0 N Of
In 1111 l:lld41no, lll1rblr Grffl' OI'" \lmll1r f\lpt • ! AMERICA, t C•lllornlt cOl'"pOl"lflorl. 11
Thi DISTRICT 1\11 lletermllltld the tcrffd"""" rf'Ql.llrtdl Trv1lw 11nd1r tlld pur1u1n1 to I dnd of PUltltll Pfl'ttl!lfltl •111 of per dltnl WIOf°I G•ldt Cl'lt<:•tr 1ru1t ll1ttd Jlllv ,., .. 11. ••Kiited by H.
In the locetJlv In which !his -Ir. 11 IO be Gr1d1U Operetor (0111!' OI'" J-lllYrr'ltn-C. AlphllOn, Trutl .. vndtr Ille Wlll of
perfO<'mld !or tech crt!I or tvoo of tr1I"" rtc1ulredl Emlly McCall\IFTI, 1111d1r Court Ord9r Hltct workrnefl neldtd lo IJKUll Ille COfllrKI, GrouP ' .••••• s 1.01 M1y lf, lf611, Ca11 No, lndlo "10, 1c bt .,. tollOWI: #lotor Petrol • llllKlt Oper1tor l1lnul1 lltt'ttnlcHI Ctllll'lty, c1ll~r11!1, 11 TMfOr,
Any c1t1tltlc1llon flOI tflllclP1led &nd @nolntl and rkordtd AVVUll S, 1969, •1 3706. IOOk
below 1111111 .,,tit be ptld et TM curr9111 TEAMSTlltl• 974, ~ SI, of OH/di\ llecorcll lfl lhe
""IO' ralft •or tti. •Pi!llc•DI• trade •n<f l'!ullh .. We!lt•t . 1k w nour Df!lc• or IM Record ... of Or•llOI COl.IMIY,
cl1t11Hctllon. Ptn.ion · 6k Pl!' hour Celllornlt, wlll utl ti pUDllc eucllon to
II rtltl 1111td btlow 1r1 1101 currt MI or VKtll011-Sevl11Q1 • tlw hlOht$1 DlddM" for ca1h {p1y1Dlt •I
•re r1YIHCI l:IY l•DOr •orttm1n11 dur!no Holld&V • I 1.00 per hol.I• 11m• of Nit In 11.,,...ul mon1v or lht U"lltd
IM blcltll"ll tlrnt or COll•lnitt!Ol'I time, Fortmtfl: Whtn I Con!rector tmplovt Ofl Slttlll et Newport ll11cll City Hell, S)IXI
ti/Ch r1vl1lPIU thlll bt COl'llldtr•d • ptrl "I• n•Yf'Ol1 f OI' moot'"I Te.,m,,~., Ntwoort •••th 81Yd •• In Ill• Cllv of ot Int 11t1ow·tl1ttd re111 eotrtllllf tQUlpmtnl undtr lht jurltdlt-HiWl)Otl IHch, Cauf!t, oi Oran;t, Slete
CARPINTIRS: !Ion ol Ille Te.tmtlert. l!MCludlllO eny of C1lllOl'nl1, 111 11t11t, llllt and lfllllttl
HHllh • w..it1r1 · ltc. per llol.I• 9QVlpmeMI lhs thin srx Ion• 1fld ton\'IYe'd 10 •nd llO'W htld bY II uodtr 111c1
P.nsion • tk Pl• roour m•lnl•fl•l'K• 1qvlPl'Y>tfll, !ht ConlrKlor dltd ot lrvtl, I" tilt n•t pr<>PfflV llllltlld
Vtt1tlon·StYlr1t11 • '11t11 dft!tntlt ont Tttrnslll'I' 11 Crtll Jn 111ld Counl'I' and Sttlt dtterlbld 111: HoU41Y -IOcc per hour F0ttm1n IM ht .,,All rte'4'tt J0c Pt• Loi SI of TrKI No. 706, ln lht County of
Foremen: RecelY11 "°' '"' 11\IM 60c per hOUr "'°'' then the hlOllMI Tt11'ft1I..-Orlt'IQf, Sltlt or Calltorn!a, as ,.... Map hovr mOt'I than the llourly ••'-or t"" cltnllltlll"'1 iw., wlllch M 11 l"ertmtfl lhertof ~Id 111 &coll 11 Pl9f 2S or
ltlthll! C1rPtt1ter cle11lllc1tlon over Drlvltl' 1)1' Tr1n1!1·Mi• Truck· llndtt" 3 mh.otlllntC!W ""Pl• In 1111 offlct of the
wltldl he II•• r11pon1IDllll,, ••C"' vd• •• ' •• 74 CCMllV Rkordll or Mid covntv.
"f'Mul'Nlllt Ntlttr or Power s11ptM"." O<lvtt" of Translt·Mlx Truell· 3 ydt, or /'NJ!lt cOll'll'flOl'll\I known 1s 20271 Au<l1
(:arpenttr I 7.a!I m°" S '·" SlrMi, Senta An1, CeU!Otlllt. ''CEMINT MASONS! Orl..,.r or Ovmo lrvc~ of; Tiit s.el1 will bt mt01 wllhol.ll covtnf,nl
HHl1h a Wtlltrf ltlk. Pt• l'lollr Ll•I lfllll 12 "01. w111r l•'ttl $6.51 or w1rrentv rr;i1rd111G 11111, pmsn.slon Of
,.lfl\lon • t1c Pl' ltol.I• 12 ~. 11111 \eu then 16 'I'd•. 1ncvml:lr1nctt, to 11tl1ty Ille obll01llon1 V~t11!on·S1vlf'Ot • w1lltl' IMI • . . · '6.M MCVrld b'I' s.t14 dltd ol trutl.
Hol!(l1y • toe 119• hOl.lf P l119l1M IMO UTllllY WOl't<lflO Tnick Nolle• ol 0.111111 afld 'Elec:tlon to S.11
P't:witmen: W"'4!11 Hirte or "!Ort c....,..,, Orlvtr. l11thldl"8 Wll'lth Truck, bl.It 1tltl rttl pr'PClll1y vr>eltr s.eld (lttd of
MllOllS lfl emptgy~ °" • IOI!. -Hmllld IO l•11elr.1 tPPllctb11 10 plpallM l<ull Wll rttordld Aprll )0, Hn. •• ooc.
111111 be •mPIO'fld ., I l=or1mtn Ind lfld u!lll!Y -·· w!Mrt • COll'IOOllll Ho. 301)t 1)1 11'11 Olllcl1I Rtcon:lt In !ht
ll\111 rec1lve-"°' 11,t ll'Mlfl 60t per ..._ crew It uted •. I 6.n Office of lfll Recorder of 11!d COi.iniy Ind
mot• tr.en tile hOllrlY r•lt ot Ille ~IQhtSI WAler Trvc~ si.11. C~tnl M1ton tl1ulflc111on over Wiiie~ vncier ..000 01!10M ·····' 6.•s 011111 : Jutv 31, rt7l
i-. htS •ttpont!bUlty. 4000 .. ~uon1 •fld "''' •.. I 1.4S IM,.ERIAL COllPOltATION
Jolirn!IYMtn: . . • I •.16 llLl!CTlllCIANt OF AMElt:tCA, l11tlvClll\o bul fl(lt ttllrl(1td ID th• H11tth & Wtlllrt • •k Plf" hClur as TrutlM
f9!!owlM11 : Chlppl"9; .,.1c111no ; HlllflO Pon1lon • 7k Ptt" llol.lr By: Clavcll1 MteMlll1n
cvrb torm 1nd pt1n•, tenl"O of 1!11•t. Gtn1r11 FortmaM , • , .••. 110.91 A11l•t1n1 Stcrt11ry
Jftkt• efld greOlt; 1ertt110 1cr1cdt. Fortm111 , . •• • •••. s t .tl SI'S l6fU . wll1ch IMtl\.1411 1erM'd p,lnt: cvll!nti. C1Dlt Sollter l=or..,;fn , •..••.. 110.:M ,.ublttMcl Orangt COllf Dilly Pl\ol, ~r1"9 iflrl t1wlrt0 ntW concrtltl PIUO· CIDll Soll~ • •• • . ••• "' ••.•. ' f,31 AllOllSl 9, 1•, 'll. 197:1 2tlf.7l
qlno, 11111no Shtt•l o!I hottti llrv P•<klno Wlr•m111 •. • ..••.. I I.to
t"Ontrlll 1nd Embco1 ttM(llnt m1tttl•l Ll"tm•n • • ··• · •· .•. t I.to PUBUC NOTICE
PUBLIC EMPLOYMENT -
Appropriates $110 million of
state money to fund $81 mlllion
public employment program
(PEP) and $2'9 million sum-.
mer youth opJ>OrtlU'lity pr<r
gr~m each ol which formerly
were federally aided. AB 322
passed 64--10, to Senate. Yes.
Cory. No, Badham, Briggs and
Burke.
TIPS ARE WAGES -
Treats employe tips over $20
per week as wa~es for
purposes of determining
employer-employe unemploy-
ment insurance fund con·
tributlons. AB 736 passed 52·
16, to Senate. Yes, Cory. No,
Badham, Burke '8nd Briggs.
Freelandia:
Flights to
Anyw1iere
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -
The airline's flying stock is
painted bright yellow, features
rock music, organic food ,
chess and checkers and a
format that might allow
passengers to play "destina·
lion bingo" on some flights.
"Freelandia," a one--plane
airline that won it.s license
recently from the Federal
A via lion Administration, will
operate its elderly DC8 on a
travel-club !"Jllte b e t w e e n
Hawaii, the mainland and
Europe.
THE COUNTER culture·~
ansl\'er to the regularly
scheduled airlines, FreelandJa
is the brainchild cl former
Wall Street whiz Kenneth Moss.
Moss. 30, made $1 million
playing the stock market by
the time he was 26 •Del dropped
out a year later to become
a wealthy vagabond.
"It's a travel club you need
$50 to join; and if you have It.
we can squeeze you in. '111ere'5
always one more scat," said
Afoss.
Member! who pay the ini-
tiation fee \viii be able lo fly
from HonotuJu to San Franci!·
co for $69, from San Francisco
to Los Anqeles for $12.50, from
Los An11ele! to New Yo.rk for
S69 and from N'ew York to
Brosseb for 1100, Moss said.
The first flhiht Of Freelandia
will take o!f Crom Hawaii "no
later than Sept. 21, and earlier
if we reach our minimum
membership level of 3,000 be·
forr that." Moss said.
"It's goine: to be 1 n
alternative style of travel;
we've even loved with the Idea
of taking off from HAwall and
having somP.thinl! like a bingo
1H1me to decide where wP
should go on the fuel we had."
1w-,1 O!I ••~tis. !llll!fl ~n<I d11<~•1 bu•ll Tttl'>nki~n •. • ·· ·• · '1.ta.1---------------/\lmmtrlflGI p1lth!110 e"° Mt•l1111r rod· PAINT•llS: TRAVF.LlNG HECA!'t1E part
Olt>e !$•"~1no. DI! W'lll! •oddlr>Q, llWIChln• Httllh .. Wtlftrt . )tc per rtou• NOTIC• TO CRIOITOllS Ot' ('If Mot.~· J;fest vle after he left
llMI 1lml ,,,, !¥pet bull llO!lollno. P1ntl0fl • :noc ptt hOUf •ULK TaANll'lll
curt> & Gl.ottet MK~lnt 0111r11or {ctmtMI Liit 1n111t""tn« IOc ,., l'lollo" (llcl. '1tl-tlt7 U.C.C.) the "W&TI Street trip tlf
llfl1Vl i '''' V•ctt1on 60e par hour Nolle• I• htrtbv 111""' to credll«• of \.AIOll•JIS• .. Ol'ftlnl\trtUvt k per hOllr 1111 WlllllM """Id p,trlln lllat I 1111~ m&nipuJatifl~ penoJC." ~fe
llNllfl • Wttl••e He: Plf TIOUr i\OPrtrttlCIP\IP OJc per hol.lt" 1••Mtltt 11 lnltnOld lo bt lt'lldt on werit to Sfl!lin , fhf'n Tl\clii:i . l'et\•100" • s I .JS~ l'IOl.lr Fortm1n (' mtn or 11111 1 f).jO ~bo"' persanel pr°'""ty htrtln•lltr dtlcrlbld.
V.ctlion.S.vlnv1 • Joo.1,......,m.,, T"" llllfl'll Ind tll.lllMll lddrnt of 1111 b11rk In Nl'W \fork arid finnll v
Holldll, »c per "°'"'' 11"0tefl'la" (S mtfl or mort) , 0.1S ll:lll'tt IMltncled trenlffl'Of 11: Frtnk Stl'rtno, .. h
F«*fN": Hot ltll 111e11 ~ ptr ll!lllr Joo.1rlltl'(l'nlfl ~ AWflut Atropwrte. 5111 Jiian "''l"f'" UO rit fl ("'..,'"'1lflll nn I C
-• , •• , "' ,, .. ,, ""' r9t• o1 !ht ,0 ,,_1 __ •-•• , 1 •• cep1t1r1no, ca111orn1a. o:o_,, Fr•••I•-Peninsula
iiitl'lltl1';°1a11tflc11i0ri O'lfl' Wlllcll lie "'' j,1,.i"" 'l'i'OU\ •· ... t"" ,,.,,,. •1111 b4tllntM td<l•n. of ""1 -~-··---·~·'-'"-----·--l~ff'lfilp, Hffllll a w1111r1 • 10-. of gros• 0tvroll lflltflllld lran1IHff I•: Jofln S. ltl:lvt, I
""""" !liker, Lultm111 & 1r0ntr t S.H5 ,.lfttlOI\ • 16~ o1 oros• p11vro11 P.O. 101t 1-. Sprlno ltKll, tary, PUBLIC NOTICE
,...,.,.11 Showier .• I l.7~S \lte1llorMiotkllY 13'!!0 o1 8t'OI• 11t,roll llHllO!I. ~-------------&1.ofOYmobll• Mall .. •. 1 5.W APPl'tfltlct • Journey-Th1I tt1t Pfl!Cltrl'I' Pfrtlntfll hlrl1o 11 • "IJ•1•
Clflll"'' Dllll'IPI' Con 1 yard Of II,.... m.n Trtlfllne , .. 111rou Plvroll dlKrlbtcl tJ lollO'ft: •QUlpmt111, l'OOb, SU,.IRIOll COUllT OP THI
ml•lf' Ind l'llltdllTIO 1:111111 """'nl) t S.US Utlllty "IPfflnt 1'-m111 ........ 'I.It 'tffllcMl. triltw, ooodlllllU •NI lftdtn•rnt, STATI n• f"Alt•ttP•lll.to •"'Ill
c't«:f'fl• Curtr.+WIPfl'YIOl.lt rntmtlnM Ind Ul111'1' PIPllhW JwrntYmen •. , I J.9;1 OI I 111,o•lnett lr.nown 111 CA,.llTllAHO TMI COUNTY OP Ollo\NOI
,orm O!ltl' . .. • s.ais ltrlgtllon tlld l.nm Sprinkler• .... I ,,,s SWlitPliiR SliR\llClli. 16000 AWl\llt Mo .• ,,," •
Co..crert llw M111. C111t1nv. korlPIQ 014 Stwtt • S10tm Dr•ln Plpel1v1r ,, .. I S.2.5 Atrotvtrto. Stt\ Jvtn C 1 PI 'tr t 11 o, NOTICI OF KEAlttNG 011 ,.&TITION C1lllOl'fll1. r:~ l'1tn!l1n nir WILi. A"' n
Al',lllHTtCI SCHIOUll AND JIATS Th1I lflt tot•I '°"'ldtl'lllOll IOI' flle HOLOCRAPHIC CODICIL ANO FOil
Tiit AWtllllU Rift 11 toy "° tf Tilt J~l'f'MM"ll Rtlt lttn•'9r of ltlo 1Nth1t .. It 1t-f """' of t,.FTTlltS Tl!~TA-YIEHTAllY
Crin lntln'•t• hi 2nd Jnl "'" Slh "" 711'1 "" 11•.D.OO. Wl'hldl contllll of lllt foilowt1111 : E•l•lt Ill AllSEN M. THOMAS, Dtc•lt•
Clfllltl MttcWll • '"°'i. 15 1' I) 17 t i 9$ Otto:r1ptt... AIMWlll fld.
lrti11llO!I • Cl!ec:k l'Or 114,JOO.OO. NOTICE IS HEltEllY GIVEN that
LIWll SprU• S )'r-.. 1?. .. 74 tS t0 Tfltl Nkt llullr. lr1t11!1r It lntwfldlcl ~ 1:141 ALICI N. 'l'HOM.-,$ hi• llltcl l\lrtln •
Ptfnltr' 6 lnOI . .., 6j 10 7~ ts tt 100 (Ol'ltumm1tld 11111• o!llc• of GEORGE L. otlll\O!I '1lr ,.,Obttt of Wiii 1nd
Ootr•llnsr &Otto. Allorllt'I' Al l.Jlw, ) Mon.trQI •• ., HOle.tt•P"IC C061dl Inf IOI' ltl\ltM• nf
l11tlf!Mr• • ll>lll. 10 10 IS 00 " '° ts ti Pltra. Sult• 10S. LlllUlll Nlo\111, C•lltorn•• Ltflirf1 Tttl--nl1tY .. tl\t Hllll-r
Stfltf • .il•rm t')4n, °" or 1tttt' Stlll~btr 111tni. rtffrlll« lo W!llch 11 ~l'!t IOI' lllfl~#r
Dr1ln1 J yr1, • U ,., fl It SO ltf tt II lr.llOWll lo Nd In~ pert!c\1111'1. end 1htl lht tlmt •n<t p1ac1
Tr111•1"' .. 1t!CI 1nltflCl'l(I lr1n1ftror vMd 61 fltlrlJIO llw IAl'llt "'' bltfl '!' fOf lJI• f«.ollll'lf KMl'lll!t o• .,., dltll'I 111 fllr !hf" openl/lf ot 111,,.. !h• to11DW1no eeld!t!Ofltl DllllMI• n•"11• hftltmbtr" 11, Hn. 1f t100 1.m .. n 1111 ~H 11 1:11"°' \lt:IOfl e wor111111 •tY ol I< -•vnitnl llOllO 1fld 1 111rtorm•11C• -'1111 l'(klr•U.• within Ille llVN Yttr• ltll covrlroom of Ototrlm•fll No, 3 Ill 111d
•
':i' Ill Mi.wt. T"" ''" IDf' llollOly Ind bond •Ill"" l'tllW!rfllll prior to t'JlecvflOll Ill Pill: "-· court. II 7QCI CIYIC Ctl'lhrf Orl\'f Wtll, lfl o lfrnt Wlltk lllltll DI ti INtl llmt Ind !tit COlltrlct. ·TllO PIYmtMI l:lllfld lll'llH bt Dlll'd~ l<VVWtl II, "11 1111 City ti Saftll A"~· (ltlfomtl.
O!I Mitt. In 1111 form Mt fl)rlh In "" «l\lrKl fllV>NK Sill:RANO O.ltd """"" '°' ltn If t11f11 llt fl'llflltlttrY vpon t/\t CON· dot11met1ts. lt\ltttdtel TtlMlfl'GI' WILLIAM I . ST JOHN,
t RACTOll:: It MIOM fllt COtllfllCI 11 GOwr11in9 ... ,. JOHN I . IAIUT Ctvnf\' C""' • ...,rftd, Ind ~ tl'ty liltrCOfllfKIOt 91! Normtn l . WllW! tl'tll!'ldll4 '''"''*'" 111111(1, WILLIA~• " IOll•WSIN
VftlJtl' hl!n. II llllV riol IHl fNtn tllt Miq *"1•1'1'• lolrd If Tnil'"5 °"""' l.. ltlJtl Mf lownt CMln SI., Slllft t9
Mftllltcl , .... 10 1n ... ~""" emplo\"ld OflliN: kell. ,, 1911 • l :OO p..m. "'*"" Al ~-L .. "-'et, C1Ht. ,.,.
1:1'( ttwm"',.... ••tcvtlof'I of'"" con1r1c.t. 1 10 NO. 4' I JM!llrdl .. , ........ tltltt lM T-41 Cllll llM1'1
No ~clCltf" l'!llY WlltwftlW Piii bid IOI' I Pvbtl1hH °'anti (Ofltl DlllY l"IJO'.I, Lii'"" N~~. Clllttnlil '1'17 A~ fllrt ,.tttlll'IM" ··~·~ .. :_:~:..;~~1:'1Y:..;<:":'~"::.:':' ~·:"":...:"":_:°':::"::A:-::!::'~"-::..'"::..~"'1:::_ _____ :""':::"'~1 ''*I._ ~l\09 Co.1tl Oitll'( ~ Pvlllltttd Orit10t C011t Diiiy "'!lot, • lluOWI D. •• ,, us1 .n A~! n. D. 2'. lt)'J ,.,~,,
l
.The Montreal Gazette, taking advantage of high
beef prices, ran a full page advertisement recently
offering a side of beef to three lucky winners in a
circulation drive. In its ad, t.De Gazette showed a
security guard protecting a side of beer.
Southern Calif orniu
Job 'Slowdown' Seen.
LOS ANGELES (AP I -The
anticipated business slowdown
in 1974 may curb further
employment g r o w t h in
Southern California says Dr.
Robert T. Parry. chief
economist for Security Pacific
National Bank.
He predicted that the area·s
leading employment cate-
gories w o u I d continue to
expand this year but at a
somewhat slower rate than in
1972, when the ·economy re-
bounded from lhe l 9 7 0
recession.
PARRY SAID he anticipated
in 1974 a bJsiness slowdown
which will exert ' ' s o m e
upward pressure on unemploy·
ment as growth in Southern
California's labor force out-
paces over-all employment
growth."
Irvine Firm
Revenue Up,
Income Dips
VTN COrp. has reported
revenues [or the fiscal year
ended May 31 of $19,463,736, up
18 percent compared t o
$16,473,881 ror the previous
year.
Net income for fiscal 1973
was $287 ,879, equal to 26 cents
per share, compared to net in·
come of $623,150, or 67 cents
per share for the year ended
May 31, 1972. The 1973-figures
are based on J,O'l9,802 average
shares out.standing. There were
933,792 average shares
outstanding in 1972.
The decrease in earnings in
the 1973 fiscal year compared
to 1972 was a result of losses
incurred during the fourth
quarter ended May 31, ac-
cording to James J. Trindle,
chairman of the Irvine based
firm.
"Fourth quarter resulls,"
Trindle!: sakl, "were primarily
due to a material decrease in
the level of revenu& from pro--
fessiooal senlees during the
period as compared with the
same period in 1972, while
personnel costs and business
development expenses were
based on anticiP11tcd revenue
levels that were not realized."
jobless rate ha s fallen from
last summer's 5.5 percent to a
current average of 4.8 percent.
During 1971, when the
economy ~·as just beginning to
recover from the recession,
unemployment ave.rag~ 7
percent.
Although Los Angel es
dominates the Sou the r n
HE SAJD Orange and San
Diego counties, which account:lu .. ,,....,.,,,.,.., • .,.,.,,,...,..,. .............. ..
for nearly 10 and 9 percent,
respectively, of Sou t be r n
California's work rorce, have MUTUAL FUNDS
re<:orded rapid gains in jobs/,. ... a••••••IC!D••••••Olillllllllllllg
and workers. He predicted a OM Fd to.ot l1.ot '"" ll" .c.a. J.• '"'" ,..., ~.., continuation of this recent ~~ 11Y~1\1,1F~ ~ F<1 ,,,, J.'1 1 s 1: v111a r: 13.11 -!!·
strong growth pattern. ~~ •odOll •1k'f:~ so 1~ 1~~ 't::; ~ l:zt ti 11:~': F ~,, 10· IF..'!'1.·.J~ 1:11(1 r:ov Jm.J'd 1.:.:~ lir 1?if T~:; ~ 1~ ·~ ;.ll!~:' Eq i· i:1l. ,
'"" • Gr t.11 1 . .Q Ill" PM I'. 11111r • A & I'll' Fl.Wld P'd I t2
E • u ......... , HOW.t.aO• JP G.th • . ~ SO I~ !.>Z arn1 n gs p A""' "1,l,m,... &:!ii, •i .• u: l~ll ltll:l 1'.: 'I: 1:l! ~"li"r:: n'·"irn· I ADMIR.U.TY\ lll(me: J.13 1.J1 JHtn lo J 1.61 tltne 1 l Grwth 4 7 1.$1 so.di F &.t2 7,il Johflllll %l Zl.21 om 1 I ll'ICOlft J.Jt ':fl StcA F4 lt.2J '1-'1 K•YITONI• I .• 21. 50 Perce11t dir:..;" Hi rrl l~Mri!.~;a ,~,! IP.l rit.ttlj ~' ~r.y t ·;.11
Aefnl In 13.41 14.61 ECllY Gr '·ff 1.12 : ff Ir~ & f:C
AW:lvre t.39 t )t {!""' P• I: "~ 11·n I L •D . A e I'd u1 1.n nc1 Arri .1 1,tt : • r d ' At Certr'Oll Al"'" "l! '>'j. ... , ., "·" "·" :ll' :~ 1· ·1·· Aichi ,-d 'l:n J. lflll'I Tl'f lS.'1 111 4 A.6J :r• 1 ~~1.Gvf. a.n ;: 6 = 1l~? 1tll o11~ l;U . f:'trY F 1J i" I Am lCrtv A.:M ,,,, F•lrfld J.7' 1..u .f..:1car ~ 6 IMAalMLD ,. " Certron Corp. of Anaheim AM IX~RISI Ffl'I Bur• t ,lf .19 ~· Gltl ' 7 ~"'"' t l:ll aMounced sales and earnings "c~'!f.f· 7 21 7_...• ~fg~~ l.tt ••. L~m·~d \. t r:rllfrrd c'.o:J .
• lntOM •.lo I ORoV..-1 L ORovii1 1r1>r ' J.10 for the nine montm ended Ju· !",,..'m 1.61 1.37 1nc1 dtb •12 t.n 11 Ledr 1tn 16.14 "' L I '"·
I II h d Pfci J,il 7." ~Dttl 11 , f lt.12 rwlll lj •:tt t (I l"cl ~7M y 31 were we a ea of the stock '·Jl 1.11 011tr• •· i... Hrch 1 ,~ i". IMIAR$O~ ,
Prior year's results Am or1t1 J. ... sSK 6.'1 1.:u. Lltotf Fd 12 jJ APO!'c 1. ,~ • Am 1n1J11 "·'° J,l" "' 6.00 •• ~!It trilY '4 . lllQ!m 6. I"'
Edwin R Ganison. presi· ~ ~~I tt tff ~=:, ~~ 11:44 t~ ... ~i·P 6 76 ~" .... C:!.M 1T· 11::
f A.mN! Gr 2.lt 2.3' Furld l4,lt ll:l4 smli I j111e Fii 6:tt
1
... dent o the c o n s u m e r AWC"OR P11r11n Jj" .41 ca~ " 12.43 I' u !OMA 'uiii6t;· · t uf I OltOU,.1 Selem F .ft ._,J M~IHll U.Cl ,.01 IP Sl'lr 7.IJ .1' magnetic ape man ac urer, c1ote1 '·" '·"' Trlfld 7 utt LO o All: "" t.IO l!:!l
said that net income for the ~,~nv ~~ I~ ~'M1A\1 :~1',l.., tB 1:5 v~vr ~~ :Ji
first three quarten rose ap-~= t~ ~ ~~ 1,J t:rf 1\'i t~tMr~" J:fl j1m 1 ~~ 1'1·.3:11!~· proximately 50 percent to w1 Nett 11.:w 1w ~~ IM ~ 3,u VllW10, I••"",'·" 1 F 1 .o> 11 , A•IT'Ofl 3 if ,.,. Vll'll l.t7 J.97 ~ .. ~'iP I , ,,,. -ti I· $214,000, equal to Seven cents :.X"°l" f 7.76 t.• 1•11,f'r Vt 10All1AI ~ri:-::,1 r~ t:Jl7t •..:.in G 1l:ll 11.
per share (after giving effect NOuottTOwi n1Vinoa1, P 'i: 1~ ~ 21 ~"' ~ s. to a special credit from tax FUIMI A 4•51 (.to DIK Fd s.•t S.ffl M CO; • .t.Tl~.D II I FUN:I I t.tl 7.C Gtth Fd 6.P 7 .... F~ 7.S f.lj om " , ffi loss carryforward of $981000, L'°:ksc1 ta !.~ 1!:0Cr: ... 1fi l~ :.~ :,.,"°° F, f~ it' '1""11 "· or three cents per share) over eLc Gtn 10.7' n.n POflUM o•ou,.: MA'll ,.ttcl:· os 11 '":r"hr t,, i ltblll!'I I0,1410.74 100 FllCI 10.!lt 10.)t MIT \011 it I Fr Inc 1.74 a ' the comparable period In 1972, ltvroc 1.n 7.36 tol Fnd 77, 1.7• MtG 12:,,,,. r•+• Sir .u'.11•(12
med 111¥111 or S.51 5.f4 Colvm f.1t 1.7? MID lj '1 l•:Jl IAOMAW 'ffi when the company ea llMC:n HI • 43 1.t.:1 2s Fu11d s 13 1.u MFg , ·i 13° m 111d 2 '°
I 11 flNCOll 10 .... 111,;it FdM Gr '·.U 4.ll MC 1~ ' !1 jtllO Fd f11 °14 $144,000. equa to uVC cents 11/"Qtt K 11.0011.ft POUMOElll Mtlll .... : :cw """"' 1:29 1:,,
per share (or whlch the ~~1' ~:ll ;·Of. •:,o.J:: .s.ao i ~4t11tAm 1 ·§ 1 ' ~~~ "0Tu·~'D!~1, '~ial credi·1 from tax loss &0.1 Fon ,,,.,101s lnt;61'r1 11ao1t. Mottv F<1 1 .131 ~1p111 .06 f0.e11i ,. ... ~ 8rvwn 3.t4 l.J4 F Mtuel \.SI 9 M~& !J I .41> IOCk 4.JI 14.31
carr,yforward amounted to =H~'D~" lw$Pf(~ 1t!: 1i:t ~\F '!fd Ji • ~OUl"~.88 '·"' $64 00() Or two cents per lull F<I j2~ 1S,$1 l'R~f:kLIW Mii' Gro 4. 4. !Mom 7.t2 I.ff
' Cdn trd 1,., %l.4' O~OUI": Mv°"" '' 4. 4. "''"II 1.«I t .21 share). Div Shr J,lt 3.113 NTC 1•j 1·'' uO<'!'I In I. t. 4 tChMI f" j~ N•l'Wd '"' 10.s:i w111 Sr 7 1 .17 Mui snrt u.~ 1".6' tvncro F J , f'or the i·ust concluded nine-NV vm 10.ft11,41 fr 1ncm 185 I 'I {ii U7 I·" Mii A" • ' , Brnhm I· t,2' US Gv S t 51 lj· ~' I H"" ·" tmtol' G 9. 4 month period net sales were rG F•Of'ld . If·" u111111. '·'"" . T s , J 1 , -c M7 ,
$11 ,194,000, up' 10 percent from ~~'~~!' lf::.l,:~ :re~t: !:n !: 11:::r,ncsr ,· i:f,T~:~clg l:i}·1"1t:l:
• rHANNING 1=~1 LIEll 11 ,, 12 S Div <In 3 .XI Tvctor H ID. 1 ·a $10.072,000 [or lhe hke period l'UNOSr tM' "11 8.13 1:t3 r,•tt s11t s~ 6.:u 111 rn 2. ,
I t ll~lll(d 10 1311111 , MDI INC,. nccwn •. i·r. :IOlll Cl '·" • ' as year. llnd "'d •. ., t 7•)1tOV,.; S•ock Sr 1· . un1n111 ~" 1. Com Sllr. I.'' 1,)1 Cornm • ~I t 37 Grwtll 5 • 4 Unllund A1 tA r.rwtti s.~ ~,. tmrHC 7.~ ~ ,, Ml!W ING : UM10N 1111 c• ,. I
rncom 6.<6 7,11 lfldus 1, tti rr ll 1'1 E1111Hv 1 i IMS 011ou,.. , ~"'""' I" ,._, ,O!ttf 7~ ,,, Grwffl I I' '"' 1 IY 'l ... 14.16 BofA Acqm·1·es F1·ench ,v..-::·; • 11 .: .. ~";:,. J·f: 1: .. Ns~a: ~, ,._ ;1, ~~"c~: i:l3 1i::i . '"°'"'' Gm ·,K I"' "" NN ""' " •.11 w'~" '·"' _,, , Ffld loJ I 0t 6,7' OllOUI' ,. , Nwwlfl tj llUMITID fUNDSt I ~ • ..,.r11 ~M c11 APIX F .SIO t'1NIJWtOI> 1 j4· Aaum ,tl l.46 ~~Tr 91 ~.8~ 711 fr.Al Flld i A •'.1• t!W t:,:!'! 1
1 ',· ,ftcl. Fd 7.SS t .77
c ...... 1 ~ .. "-'" rorn lflo: 10.so 11,. "1w "" 1 · --t.>6 lt,X C• F' F• r~.,.. ,, .. ion1111 ft>llAm ._,, 4·5,Nlct11a1 1~ f' Con11nc t..n10 • ., 1ne1na 1nance u·n1 ;~·.o;,j"" · · ~'!'~"" ~~,:i::~ ~.:.:."" ' · ~ e= 'ti! 't.i: ............. • ,. '"It" .. 4¥,L'Totf .R,.1 N•ll Id 11 I Hw c. ,i:u 11:B "'iw~t... ~-Ill , ... ....... I"~ A""' Wiii It If, I (;yt • ,. 11
•·-•I• lfl,.. Gr'#lll ,S'I 1'.1. P•NKM I ¥ ~UI LIWrn. • ' PARIS Bank Of Am •• · h · cd l t · Cwtll ,,., "'' 1,......., ,,. A.•1 /\Im 'I vo 1-• ;\ -u 1ca. as acqu1r a percen 1n· 1"".-, •• 1A ,, 04,,_1 1n.01 1n ~' ,net : , v 1 ..... ti ~,
leading financer oI t h e T•
C'llfornl. based lllm Industry lar•cst r· a 1th 1 """' .. "l'IHWL.TM "~-• ·~ ""'"•mt· 1 "" , • • , • b 1n nctr o e c ncma ,. .... ,= ... erikl<! ,,., , •• l'•u• 11,... 6: :. s•N0'11tli
lJ tiJ i ties lJ p
Special to the Daily Pilot
SACRAMENTO (AP) -
Call[ornla's private utilities
ire valued al $18..4 billion,
'8ys the stale Board of
Equalization. Tbe board vol«!
4-0 lo reject appeab by eight
major utlllly companies to
chop back asswments by 1421
mUllon.
mdustry in France It was · • e '·1 • , '·~····'" 1' •11•.1• ,.,., ... F '· ' '"""'' ~ w 1 • • ,. 1..., 1 •• 'm"l'I fp • •t 1" 1' ,.91111 Mt t.11 , I vs r.om lM t 'f, rcporlcd Wednesday. .. .......... , ·• , ........... ~· .,,.. .,. ,._ $e " t~ :u r.o "~"'" ,..., ~ ,, • • • '"'< I"~.., 1• •1 1~ u-11,.11, Fii t . , Vl'ldrtllt .)6 ._)'7 The investment by the San .......... ·~ · .. · •• .... ...... • •• • •· P1111 s1 '·II ·""•""rd '·'' 1.s.. '""m" tzd 1.,, ••• ,,... F'\M ''O 1~J !'If. Tl't 1. J,ll 111'1 IM iii Franclsco-bBsed bank 's In· • .,...,.,,. • •• • •· ........ ,., •• , P1 1i11111 1'01 ""''• 1 ' ~ "•·~ lflv 1~ •• It 11 •ti lflv~·I ~· ••)I •• P Olo El'\ I'" t.i \•l!>11'1 Or I te.matlonal in vest men t •.,... .... •" • •· ....... ,. • •• • ., l'lf!I trd 1 ·°''I· Wit11s1 er . : b "di B .. ,...,,, •n • ,, ••1 '"'" r .. 1 1• .,,,,.., l'loilr II ·'l . W•\11 Mv 10.411 .)II
'1"1" at~y -I f ' a m .e Ir~~~ l ;:;~.:",. ,:'(' ,·,:· :~;; ,:;;;;, ~ ~ # ~ tl•'lr'f,,_r, J:ii il: ::l.i::,,!;a,.;t i
n erna 1ona 1nanc1a \.,Ul·p ....... ,...,, • " ~ .... ,. 11"\ 10 ~~ 111." ~ 1tO•\!. "1"'"'P'
-enables Bank or America ~·:: •. t»v ; : •" ::·::::.~.. a::"i!r1 ll:i1 li·:; !.::':"'" "~~ B:U
and Sofet-Sofidi to share film "::·:·-:-: .... :•1 , •• ~::;:-... !:: :: p.,.. ,.rr 1:1,.·;! ~~-= :.
financing oxpcrtlse ......... , .... 1 ......... • -·-1d1 i' 4 '-' ~..... 1 ... , • .... -o I '" I"~'•--•-• ,...,,..,... ~f'!Wd ft! ' I,., -·t'ot !I ~1 1
AIJ a result of the bank's -~ ............. ,.,.~ , ... · ;:i;' .. !': . 1ot1 :;:,:::. '"~' ·
equity participation. It will be .:::.:.. T ~;:~::, :~,:,, :~ ::: '?::!1 "J.I' .. "'::..'~ i:n : represented on Sofet.SOOdl's .,_,., r ,. .~:;, ,: : ;:::;1 , .... .,. ,.. 111111w 1,. '· 1111.,_ {..." __,. ,......-,._ 1'. ..,....... •,tit 1 boatd or directors. ..,._., " ...... •.r ... _. • ... ••· o-wi. in. 1 ....... 1 ...... -.
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3<f OAILV PILOT s
Contract Detnatads
Cln·ysle1· Brief eel
By UAW Leade1~s
DETROIT (UPI) -United
Auto Workers leaden con-
frooted Chrysler with contract
demands Wednesday, 24 hours
after plck:lng the company as
• strike target If a new con·
tract ls not signed by Sept. 15.
UAW President Leonard
Woodcock seemed In a good
mood as he arrived at
Chrysler headquarters to start
the oountdown negotiations.
company by threatening it
with a shutdown whllc t~
rnain competitors continue to
bu.lid cars.
"WE ARE HOPEFUL and
confident v•e can RCt a set-
tlement without loss of pn>-
duction, '' said W 1111 am
O'Brien, a Chrysler vice presi-
dent who heads the company
negotiating team.
"I feel fine," he said. TV Antenna
lF CHRYSLER and the
UAW fail to reach agreement
by 11 :59 p.m. Sept. t4. the
unk>n will order its 128,500
U.S. and Canadian members
to. strike.
lt means that Chrysler could
be shut down while General
Motors and Ford continue to
build cars.
'Dangero11s'
Says Panel
The UAW selected Chry!fter
as the strike targe t Tuesday in
Milwaukee.
WOODCOCK SA ID a chie£
factor in picking Chrysle r was
the emphasis the union will
put on impro\'ed working con-
ditions in the new contract,
which sets the pattern for con-
tracts with other members of
the "Big Three" manufac-
turers.
The strategy in picking a
target company. first used by
the UAW in 1!155. is simple:
"It adds pressure on one auto
PRIVATE· nusr
flllDS AVAii.AiLE
P0R RfAL ESTATE LOAMI a. & 2lld TRUST D£EDS
S1.fi00 1o $250,000
UI' TO IO% LOAHS ON TIIUIST DEED COUA TUAt.
W&POflT ICIUtTT l'\W
N~Cetli.t ao "-Port c..iw Dr1w ~ 8Ndt, C11Jll'. C114) 64M1N
-ORDER -~, t. ' J •
{• YOURS '
\
/,.-
TODAY!
Personalized • Stylish
1000
Beautiful • Stick-on
LABELS
• Efficient
Order for Yourself or • Friend·
MJ,y b• used on envelopes es return t ddreis
l•h•ls. Also very hendY as identification
l•b•lf for merkin9 personal items such 11
1:.oolts, records, photos, etc. Labels stic k on
9l1ss and rn•y bt ustd for marking home
c1nntd foe:d items. All labels e re prin+•d
'With stylish Vo9ut type on fint quality whit ..
gummed ptper.
r-----------------------1 I ,Ml"' 1"1t CH-, Cllll •"d 11\lll •llll "·"Ill I 1"1191 '"""'"" LtWI Dh·.., r.o. •~ \Mt I c.... ,,,...., c;111t. nu• I
I I
I I l-~-~~l:.C?.!_~!!!!!!l!<._ ___ J
§
Cliief Quits
At Crocker
Special to th• Dally Piiot
SAN FRANCISCO
Emmett G. Solomon,
chairman of Crocker Na·
tlonal Corp. and of lt.'i
pr In cl pa I subsidiary,
Q-ocker National Bank,
Tuesday announced 1c--
ceptance of the resigna·
lion of Dr. Leslie C.
Peacock from his ]>OSltlon
a.s president or the cor-
poration and Ille bank. The
resignation LI e£fectlve
Aug. 31.
Peacock joined Ille bank
In 1964 and became Ill
president lo 1970.
Solrun011 will assume tho
additional Utle of pnisi·
"e•t or bolli the Crocker
Nationa l Corp, and the
Crocker Nalionol Bank for
an interim period.
'
CO~lete New Yor.k Stock List
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W ed';lesday's Clos~g, ~r~~e.~~omplete New York Stock Exchange List . . ................................... ,.,,.,..,1:1 ............... 11:1.,,,f ,,.·
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Sto-cks Tumble
Six More Pomts r
, • NEW YORK (AP)--The slook market continued·
to smk Monday, dragged down by inflation hl~her
Interest rates, and the political trouijle~of th'e 'Nixon
admiruslratlon, The Dow Jones average Jost 5.94
pomt..
"The market is nervous and fearful that inter-
est rates will go hi gher and ls worr~ed about the
po~1bil1ly of a credit crunch," said Monie Gordon
of urey!us Corp.
I I
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1973 s DAILY PILOT
e Paper Bi ke
SAN FRANCISCO (AP)
Crown Zellerbach has an-
nounced 1t will seek an in-
crease in the price of all
grade s of newsp.rlnl sold in
eight western states.
The proposal, subject to
Phase 4 regulations, Is ex-
pected to parallel an mcreMe
by Crown 7.ellerbach Canada,
a company spokesman said
f..1onday. The Canadian finn
raised its new~int prices, ef-
fec tive Monday, by $10 a ton
or about 6 percent.
~•IQ Ne1,---------------p e (lldl) Hloh Low l •1I Cng
j
Briefs
•Hewlett
PALO ALTO -Hewlett·
Packard Co. Tuesday rei>ontd
a 31 percent increase In sales
and .a 14 percent increase tn
earrungs for the third quarter
of the company's fiseal year.
Sales for the third quarter
ended July 31 t o ta lo d
$164,079,000, "'mpared with
$124,9'17,000 for t h e cor-
responding quarter of lbcaJ
1972.
0 ltlotorola
NEW YOR K (AP)
Consumers in Japan will be
able lo purchase 2>-inch U.S.·
made color teelvision sets for
the first time under an agree-
ment announced by Motorola
Inc. '
Motorola saia on Mond.y
that tnlhal sales in Japan or
the large-scr~n sets were
planned for this fall
e Aeq11Wtlota
Special lo the Dally Pilot
SANTA MONICA _
Consolid31ed Recreilliou Corp.
has acquired certain assets of
Ralph E. Stagg, president of
Staggs-Enterprises lne 0 r
Phoenlr. manufacturer of
Sl•gg·Bllt Firearms, II ...
announced Tuesday by J. H
li. Overholser, chairman and
president ol Conreco.
e VR S Ser viees
Special to the Dally Pilot
SAN MATEO -For the
th1"I quarter ended July 31
URS Systems Corp announced
net income b e Io r e e1-
traordmary items or $528,000,
or 15 cents per share, on
revenues of $7,289,000
This compares with rest.Aird
net Income of $199.000, or H
cents per share. on revenu's
of $7.121,000 during lh• same
period lut year.
Socdal to lbe DaUy Pilot
REDWOOD CITY -Ampol
Co rp . Tuesday reported ntt
eaxnings of ssn.0001 equal to a
cents per share on aa1e1 or
$62,!>3.000 for tht nr.t qllllW
of II! 1174 fi9c31 year ondod
July 23.
Earnings Included t a x
benefits of 1278.000 frt>n1
utilization of a ne< operatfna
1 ... carryforward.
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VAi.,( PILOT Thursd,iY, Auoun 23, 1973
PUllUC NOTICE
PUBLIC NOTICE
' -.
WAth
TO
CWN
UP
ON
YOUR
CLEAN
OUT?
FOR .
FAST!
FAST!
CAU
DAILY
PILOT
CLASS·
IFIED
DEPT.
D
I
A
L
D
I
·R
E c
T
--
6
4
2 -5
6
7
8
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1
[.._ ___ ,.,_ .... __,l[ieJ [ -Jor$* I~
5 JEPROOMS
UNDER 540',ooo
General
LA CUESTA VILLAS
Plenty ot room for the larp Av•ilable prior fam~ly in !Illa tv.<0 story, 5 tO school! I
BAUOA
·INCOME
Leas•/ Option
-home. lle<uttlully ~... c--· "··-·· ' maintained l'nside and out • U\te to 1-..'\ul ""'""""""ns. B•Y It Oct•n View
ONE or 11iE :P~lNSUL.A'S
BEST BUYS FOR A 3 BR.
&. 1'\'0 2 BR. UNrrs. AU.
APART~IENTS ARE
CHEERJo"'UL & ALWA\'S
RENTEP. li'E\Y Sl'K'PS TO
EITliER BAV OR ~AN.
and the backyard ti an en. e Not. a Col.to or Townhouse ~ deltpt. Best e You O-.vn The Land news ot all -· priced at
$37,900. For appointment to
see call 842-25.'15.
OPEN TIL.t • ,ff'S M 10 BE NICE/
m--~ E REAL
TllTERS
Triplfx Rxer
Start your Hta[e here? ":tessy
b.ut tound, 2 BR units •
po.int, polish and ptoOt!
Listed at S39.900 -10% Uown
or TRADE!!! Call 64.5-8400.
IBIT
BITS?
c
L
A
5
5
I
F
I
E
D
S·Atl
CAii!
These-are single tamlly, con1·
mon wall bomell "'\Ui 3 BR
• 2 BA . lg tan1 rm • liv tin
• kitchen 1vilh n.11 b!tns ·
front yW'd landscaping 1vith
.l!(>rlnklers . side yard !ern.."l'S,
full detached 2 car pr.,
!hektl & l\tisslon Ille roors
and ABOVE ALL . BUILT
BY AYRES~!
1342 Sq. Ft. from
$30,490
Co11vention1I 10 -J. Down '
l\1odcl al Adwns &. Florida ·
OM block \V, ot Bcat.'il,
J-luntlnlton Beach.
536-1445
SPARKLE
PLENTY
Wipe )'OOr feet first~ Shows·
PLEASE C4LL
675-lOOCI
mn.n ,\ Ill U'll
111:.\l :t \ 1.\1'.
1 E~' 1]\l 1',Jf:J:
PRIVATE !Si.AND
NEWPORT BEACH
BY OWNER
Leaving areo, ln1n1~ate OC·
cupancy, 4 BR, 5 BA lu.xucy
2 year old horne. fl.1any de-
lu.~e. custon1 (ealllro1 have
bee11 built Into this outstand·
ing "'aterfront home • cus-
IGm fu1-nHure & 1967 Cruiler
included. Excellent terms.
$219,000. Abo available un·
furnished. 1'~Gr info .. call
673-7782. '
CHARMl~G
TOWNHOUSE
l\!ost poptllar hlrie a bed·
room1ctin!ng room model,
paUo. dOuble aaia&e, bhins,
clubhouse I: 3 pools. Best
of aH, I)() yard \\"Ork. Lo\\-elt
p1iced big three at $)1,300.
540-1151 Open .....
~~ ~:..-. HERITAGE
. • REALTORS
likl'-a·modcl home. SEE thls 1 .,...,.,.~~~~~!!!~
5 bedroon1 Mesa <kl ~lar 1' F. OR.EVER
bea"ty · one hed< of • ""''
I home in a qu;ei "";,hb•><· OCEAN VIEW hood. • in lhls unusul\I family hcime.
I ~ COATS 4 bedrooms, den, family -C I. room. . Mott lhoughtfully · W WALLACE plann00 with a d.....,, kl>
REAL TORS """" '"" M°""" ...... •~rl<-~1. shop, dark room~tioat or -~5,..IM4141-trruleo' '"''"''· y...,i (Open Evtnl"t•I and "'-""" lo' ll<l ~iar's finetll beaches.
$911,500. Tee. Call 613-8550.
EASTSIDE
COSTA MESA
$25,000
This 3 bedroom home has
lat"ge shade trees and •
large k>t. It's tClday's buy
and "·ill be romomnv's steal.
Take a quick look ! ·646-7171.
OPENT/L f • trS FUN TO BE NICE/
If ~
POOLTIMEI
$35,950.
Charming 3 bedroom, 2 balh
, home \\'ilh large family
room and huge b r I c k
fireplace. 14 x 28 pool "'ith
loads of decking. Lari:;e
\\•ork shop In rear for the
handy man. This Is a hot
one! CaJI Red Carpet,
Realtors 5464!640 ( o p e n
eventna:s)
$2900 Total
Down
Auume 71' % VA Loan!
Tr1m 4 BR, 2 BA Ranch
Style, shake roof, bllns,
huge !am nn • decorator
fresh! Asking $37,950. Sub-
mit any offer! No loan
costs!!! Broker 64.>2133,
HorHs OKI
Excellent area for ktdl. Top
3 bedrm., 2 bath In Santa
Ana 1-leights, F.amlly rm,
tlrepla~e. Dining rm. $36,fiOO.
brl< 541).lT.n.
TARBELL
-*-TR~EESHAD'"E"'D-*,
Lovecy 3 bdrm. Good East·
aide loc. Extra large lot.
Sp&c. living rm. w/frpl.
All for $32. 500
BALBOA BAY PROP.
--*~. 642-7491 _ *'---EASTSIDE
GIANT COUNTRY
KITCHEN
3 Bedroom, 2 bath plus faml·
ly room with bcauUful new
nil eh:ctrlc country kitchen.
Large 11haded paUo •ur· rou~ by titau . A· rtal
bcl.uey for $39,950. Call Red
Carptt, R<alton -<open evenlnasl
THERl'S ONLY ONE
In I.ten Verde, at least. Low,
rambJing 2500 1141 ft, one
1tory. lhake roof home • 4
big B'rt, 3 BA. and nr
Country Cl•b. Und<r $00,000.
CALL Stan J.feyer, Aaebt.
-5'9-l366. ' Pllll I. SLIP
Lovely 4 bedroom. 3 bath
wat.rlront •hornt. Choice
Dalbo<: NlNW. locallon.
Completer wtth pJtr 'A slip,
home i-omp'letely remodeled
And \I/Mt a buutif\11 vtewi.
PricfJI . to Ith at •$211).GGD.
C&1I for aoooln,_ -Red Carpe~ Jful""' ll>8llllO (or;n ewnlnp)
Aey day·l1 the BES!' DAY ..
""' an adl Doll'! clolay, .call--
CW'EN nL t • IT:S ''IJN 10 8£ NIU,
HJ Ill I
FRUIT SALAD
... \n your own back yard! A
variety of fJ'e'Sh picked truit
is yours • 14 bear1ng fruit
trees It grape arOOr, A1kl.
Uve as you please ln this
great fam home !eaturine
.4 BR, 2 BA, bltins and lge
fam rm . Concrete bo&V
trailer &Ct'eSS. wtred to !ltl'i <220) at S38.900.
larwin r••lty Inc.
, .. 4405 (24 hr1)
BEAUTIFUL
FAMILY ROOM
EASTSIOEI
Lovely 3 bedroom, 2 bath,
fan11ly room "!us 14X28'
pool \\'ith loads of dtcklria, Choice Eastslde: location
nnd lmaa:ine th\1 for S33,9!JO,
This orie will not last loiwl
CaU Red Carpc!t, Realtors -(,,,,.., ......... ).
* 4 BEDROOM, 2 baths,
double garage. P>.IQl. Best
of terms. * COM"IJ!:RC!At ZONE • 2 BR two 1tory' oldflr hoim,
corner lot. 12'ii500. Roy McCor le Rooltot
l8ID Nawm:'~d., c.Jll.
RIAOY TO IUILDI
'"'"LI YOU LIVI
Cutt 2 bedroom, l ba\h home ~"' room to build lhtte ad-dttlonal unlta. BWJd wtth a
view. Rldlc:ulouoly low 1>110-
'ld ~ s.10.m Call Re<!
Coll>et. Rtalt<><a -.. _ tt a Reop'I
From ln!uun:• tu inb
• 'T\u>I tllen> '"'° -CALL Dolly Piiot
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31
••
, 4 if'he Btglest MarketP.l~e o" t~e· ora.,~o85t
DAI.LY·. ·R.I . CLAS·s1·FtED -' ADS
' .. Announc:emer°'I r ~ • . -: soo -,~ Mobile Hom.I for Sole '
huoidl, , I , , ,
hli cnt Wpplie\ , .
.. 125. M9
'.s:u ·$>19
.. aso . 899
• . 150 • t99
Autot11obles. • •••• 950 • 99o
... ' ....... ~iomn 9QO . 914
...... ,,..,.. . . • lllO ~m • . ba1 E~tote G.n.rcl. .......... . ' . •. :wq . 299
, , ,IOO ·ll4
I"-, , S50 • $74
.. aoa .... ~~n ~ !\~~'::! !J [ 642 :5618 }. ~~~·~ lhrotol ' . . . . . . •
~""•~ ond Rfpoin .
lfo~tollon.
• . 300.""
.600,· 699
. 91S • 94q
I ~~~~~ .. I~ lltRORS. Ad•frll,.n 1h0uld chock their' [ "°""''"·"" ji-J [
. .
· odl d•lly" rt~rl orron lmmodl•t•ly. The """'"'"..,,~ -"'"" ClAl ~Y PILOT ,a11umo1 ll•blllly fo r th• flr1t .1 ~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~liiij~---~-;;~;:. ,, ..
Inco rrect lnMrtloft only. · ·11
-
-_ .-f.._..., ____ ------__ Gen•r•I 1 0.nera) ~ .. ~
[ ~ .......
Gonorol
MESA VERDE RANCH STYLE
· BEAUT. RAMBLING 4 BR., 2 BA. one-story
home. Heavy shake roof. picturesque atriun1 ,
lrg mod kitch, family rm, beaut carpeting
and paneling1 Spacious lot on quiet cul-de-
sac close to new regional park. Offered at
only $49,500. CALL 546-5880
• ROOM TO RAMBLE. .
OVER isoo SQ . FT. IN MESA VERDE for
only $36,500. 3 -Big bedroom s, 2 baths,
huge bonus room \\•ith room for pool table.
Lotstof privacy with low maintenance. CALL
546-SllO
GOVERNMENT REPOSSESSION
FIXER UPPE~
Bring your paint and mop, and check o.ut this
bargain. 3 Bedrooms, 2 baths, hardwood
floors, family rm, oversized double garage,
patio and lots of fruit trees. Good Nd. Costa
Mesa location close to everything. Unbelieva-
ble low price $2&,500. ONLY $1 ,000 OOWN .
Bids dose soon. CALL FOR COMPLETE DE·
TAILS. 546-5880
~· ~.x--HERITAGE
REALTORS
~-· Open Eves.
General Gener ii
3 Bedroom & large famil y room , or 5 bed -
roomi;, with 6 baths. Lido Nord. Spectacular
view! Waterfront living room with step-down
wet bar.'Pier & float. $275,000 .
BILL · GRUNDY, REALTOR
341 Bayside Dr., Suite 1, N. B. 675-6161
·H~~a ~fo(i~ ·t!IITY your ..... ~.
Half gone in half a year and the rest will not
last long. Hurry to see this distinctive Newport
Beach development of condominium homes,
buill·ln clusters "found h,andsome courtyards.
Eight superb mOdels,· each·a masterpiece of
luxury, comfort, convenJence and quality
construction. Sundecks, fireplace, wet-bar,
eleg~nt Master Suite, Sun·Litec kitc~en,
private enclosed double garage. Recreational
facilities include heated swimming pool,
lighted tennis ~ourts, sauna, therapy pool.
All exterior building and grounds maintenance
. . provided. Satisfy your curiosity-see
Newport Crest today!
Two, Three, arid F~ur Bedl4)0ID Condominium Homes
from $62,995 ~.--Financing Available at 73/4 •/o *
~-nor1I Gene ref -~;.......----1 ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; f~ ,, '
MATURE
~NDSCAPING
lj)UIET CHARM
1'1\r~ bedrooms. one and a
half be.th& on a COmM' lot
rnake this an id'1ll starter
OOme. Neslled in a quiet
neighborhood, this carpeted
Ind draped home Is near
IC'hool. Its n1any pluses
add u.p to mo"' than the
126,9'0 price. Call 9»8851.
~nL9•ITT FUN10tlE ~I
ASSUMABLE
LOAN!! .. '
Looking for a low Interest
loan! Sec thls lovely 3 bcd-roont/famil)' rooin home From Pacific Coast Hlghw11v
complete with shag carpels, • end Superior Avenue (Balboa
firepll1Ct', builtins and Jol!t -,..· Blvd.). drive up'Superlor to
ot extras. Present a~~ 'Z. loen Ticonderoga, and directly to
can Ix> as..<rumed or rn.'\v ri-Newport Crest Information
nanclng 11vailabll". Full Cenlet.Telcphone:(714)~6141
pril'"e S33,9;.(). Sales Office open 4aily
540--1151 Open Eves. 10 &.m:to S'wuet
~(' -IJ&JI -----.... •
.MESA VERDE NEWPORT!
~~> HERITAGE
' • REALTORS * Typical conventional financing of 30 year loan:
Cash price of Plen 1 $62,995; down pa.yment
$12,695: 360 monthly payments of $.361.00 {prin· ·
cipol &: interest J at 81. % ANNU~ PERCENT-
AGE RATE. IMMACULATE! 4 BDR BACK BAY $67,SOO
Almost new, beauti(ul 4 bdr, 5 bedroom plus office/den, 2
2 bath home on irre.1.'Ular lot bath !'nd lovely a1riu1n. ~a. ... ,...._., ..... M.c .. -.
in lovely 11.lesa Verde. Only Ov.cr 2500 sq. fl. of luxurious ~-iw.tH.Gt.t~Gew .. ~ --· •Ao: living. Beautllul d o u b I e l.:.lt: · . --....;,950. llWT)' on this one~ bril'k fireplace, beained ::.:::-'.i..';'..'l::'.=!~!=::::".:::..,"'~~'t:,,·;ia~~i:: ~~a(rpc~, Re~ 11
1° r ~ celling custo1n home. Red _._.,.. • .__-... .. ..-.. .... .------.
open evenings · Carpet. Reallors 645-SOSOJl~--~-----~~-~-----
Waqt ad ~suits 642-5678 ! (open e\teningsl Ganeral General
l)ener•I General
"""""""""'"'! * CORONA DEL MAR * 2 COLORFUL COTTAGES
General ' Genertl ,.
•
' * * * * * :* ' * .TAYLOR CO.··*
SPYGLASS MILL-$115,000·
.t ':"
Enjoy that !eelinli' ot: O)Vnlng a oral)'d 'NEW
home! Pop,ular pJpn )Jy b usk> spacioui rms
&·lge yard:4 Bdrms, FR, DR & huge rumpus·
rm (could be 2 add: tidrmsj, :k:ar gar. Fee. NEW TP.IPLEX£S & DUPLEXES
"Our '"'I!. '(~f''. in COSTA MESA
WESLEY N;. T~YL,Qlf(:~ •• ReaitO,fs ,_ B,.eH:1~~tEoRN _ 45% SOLD.OUT .IN 10 DAYSI
,, 211 l Sin ~oaq.ulfi Hiii -R~o'·" . · 11 " • CONDOMINIUltl _This lo\'c-Opeo Daily Placentia Av9. at Wilson
Overlooking 819.Canyon C6untry Club ·• ly 2-filory t>ncl uni! has ORANGE COUNTY APARTMENT NEWPORT CENTER, ·t1ill. . 644-4910 everylhlng -even a BOAT
Generel r G°tneriil SLI~. Ultra n1odem. kllchen ,...,""'""'""E"'X"'C"'L"'U"'S"'l"V"'E"'A"'G"'E"'"N!!T!!SI!, !054!!7!!-6"'7"9"'l"""""""I \vlth all new bullt1ns. At-1.,,
U-acUve glop.! fireplace, 2 General General
NEW OCEAN CONDOMINIUMS
NEWPORT CREST ,RESALES ...
Beclroorns, 21,: .Q a t h s .1 .:c=::.:'--------=-=::.:::-------
SUNDECK O\•etlooking the
v.·atttr. All this can be ~urs
ror $86.,500.
2, 3 & 4 Bedrooms -2 ot 2'h Baths. Formal
Dining Rooms . Pool, Sauna & Tennis Courts.' . .
WIDE SELECTIONS ALL PLANS .
AT SPECIAL ·PRICES
BROkER' PARTICIPAT1GN . .
Real Ei tete Consultant1
644~7270
CORONA DEL MAR
--DUPLEX -
.
• 1525 Su~rior -Suite 3
Newport llHch (7141 645-3230
Beautitul rustic· 2 bedtuom,
open beam cellirlg11 with ·
charn)..ing bcick fireplace,
builtin Js:itchen in this front
unli. JUSf · BEING COltt-
PLITED. ·so you can pick
your oWn colors a n d cai·pets. 3 Bech;oom, 2 bath.
/:OZ)' fireelate~, b li i 1· t in
kitchen. Best location In ,Old
CG1:ona del Mar .. $9'5,500.
. DO YOU BELIEVE
NEWPORT BEACH?
Generel . Gener•I ===;;o;;;;·1
A private wooded lol on CHERRY LAKE
in area Of qt.ti'et, exclusive homes. Reserve
for your PRIVACY now!
IRVINE
TERRACE
Front Row
SPLENDID VIE\Y OF THE
HARBOR'S BOATING AC-
TMTY FROl\1 T 1-f I S.
BEAtrrIFULLY DECO-
RATED 3 BR. &: DEN
HOME. 0\\-'NER rs REAL-
LY MOTI VATED TO SE!LL.
PLEASE CALL
675-3000
f311 U ,\ Ill: It'll
111:.llJ'\' 1\1'.
f )0 • l ''-~"
DOCK AND ..
. SHOP
Beautifully maintained 3 bed-
room home on an · ideal lot
for ixlat or camper near ex-
cellent shopping. This hooSe
Is planned for famllY living.
The owner will take a large
second T.D. against the low
price of $29,900. See ii to-
day -ship in tOnlOITOW: 001
962-8851.
BACK BAY
BONANZA
$57,850 644-7270
Secluded cul-de-sac property ·BEST &UY
in prestige estate area of AND ENJOY THIS
finer homes. Dramalic ca-_ .. lovely hon1e: new car· General
thedral ceilinJs in living pets and drapes, family ---------,=~if~re~=li:en~~-room or forma l · din-ASSUME
family room, spacious gar-inp: roorp,r but '"hat a value VA LOAN
den . view, formaJ dining this 3 bcdl'Oon1, .2\~ bath,
room, 4 ljlrPe bedrooms, flN"plaC'e · hOme is! Large Ptimt' Euslside Costa r.1 esa.
and gourm;f~ kitchen with patiO ·for your eotertaining 3 Bedroom, 11:;, Baths,
bree.kfast bar. Peek-a-boo pleasures. All yours for ooly Fan1ily Room. Heatc::I and
view ~ Nl"\vport Bay. $31,450. 1 filtered 2 year ne1v pool.
Ple-dse call today for an ap-644 7270 Huge Bar-B-Q In Back poinlment to inspect this . , . -. yard. 3 ~ear new roof, con-
higtil)o desirable property. ~te drive, copper. plu~b;
Call 54&-2313.' _-. u:ig. Excellent ronclit1on in-
side and out. If you don't
call 64&--0555 NO\V It \\'on't
be there. ~.700.
.ASSUME FHA .
BEAUTY AND
THE BEAST
The beast is an unforse<>n
lJ'an5(er and U1c beauty is
a sparkl.ing n~' hon1e tl'lllol
mu.st be sold quickly. At
S39.850 fr!! a steal for pne
lucky buyer (you?) becauR:
all of the upgrading Is al·
ready in, including deluxe
rar~ling throughout and a
hUgC' bril:k patio. Lovcly lo-
cation near the beach.
847-EiOOC. ,
LOAN I"· "",· ',-.,"' Blue \\1a ter Vieo.v. Well
almost ... one of MeS!\ del
"lr1ar's best neighborhoods: ~~~~~~~~~ . * TEN ·uNrtS * $105,000: · . S.nd lo; y our frH
Eight -1 BR apts pJu"s '~'O • Home for , L:iving
2 BR deluxe a pts. Income magazine of Newport
ronsislent at $'1225. ~ mo: Beach are• proper.t ies
Ideal for ta.'<. shettl't'.and in-with pictures & prices. come. Subnut your fe'rn1'S. • , .
N.;,port 2128 E. .Coast Hlw•y
RACQUET CLUB
IN
IRVINE
OPEN rll 9 • rrs FUN ro BE NICE•· I I lfi&'ll:tl _ If Co,rora ,d~I Ml!ir
P I I · IMMEOIATE
• rv °" · .POSSESSION I
646-1111 4 BDR·CAPE COD
REFRESH YOURSELF in :
·your own swi.,rn'i:nlng pPOL.
YoUr wife Thay enjoy the
luxury of her 01vn dining
room and 2 ""'atC'r vi e,,·"
bedrooms. plus a n o t h e r
bedroom and flreplac-e. You
may appreciate 67'.
i!lsumable financing: owll('r
will help too. Today"s spct ial
..• $37 .950. Call 645-{J.}5.S.
3 BR completely upgrnded
lush cal'JX'li:ig, drupes &
prime !and~cap\ng -lo
see It is to LOVE IT!
Walker&Lee Spate Race?? (1nytl;,,.) FAMILY HOME
Extl<1 large two storY Mme
Roomy l BR. 2 BA home on l\'ilh over 2600 ·sq ft Of liV·
tree shaded C'Orll('r lot. Cptg, EASTSIDE-SPECIAi.11 ing . .i bedroon1, 4 bath fanli·
drps, bUns, private. patio, Brinht and ain1 new all e"fec-ly room, fonnal dining work shop! Clt:ibhouse & ""' r~ room -.. I "e co r a I d Irie country kitchen, large ,~ .. Y u e swimming pool near by! family room "''Ith Wied !)lick 'ho nl e. Im me di at e;l-~::;;::::;;::::;;::~::;;::;::;.1--c
$33,SOQ • low do"n OK! ~ fireplace, large patio, lo8ds pGSSesskln to that fast act.
Call 645-8400. of glas,g and what a deltght. ing fa'.mily, priced for fast * BAYCREST.*
I I J bedroom. 2 bitth lovely sale at $45,IXXI, Call Red ON A BUDGET VISleH llcM'ard'& Co. home for -only $39.950. Call Carpet, Rea.lion 546--8640 Large ·4 BR., 3 ba.. family
. Rm! r-·~ . . , Red Carpet, Re al 1 ors C~n e~ningsl home on a lge., •weU locatl'!i
546-8640 (open eveningsl ~II Idle Items '··· 642-56'lll lot. Ownei' is. leaving tO\\'l'i
o'llAl llTllYI
[;4G--00'2 ~I K.INGS RD.
Lovely VIE'\\· & pool. 3 Bed·
rooms , plus lanai. O\\·ner
movim oul of area\ $67.500.
Call for drtP.il!I.
Rare offering of ocean side of the bY"Y· prop-
erty of 1\\'0 bouses on one lot, live in one,
have income from the other. First time of·
fered, at $89,500.
Genei1f Gener1I ·General '& has priced the home for
I r;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;.1 quick sale. $69, 750. 11 . CORBl~MARTIN
PETE BARRETI
-REALTOR-
642-s200
~ ~Diego. 2BR . F1-IA.
As..'lume only $2'1,500. Tenant
OC'"llPf. Bal. approx $18,300.
&l:r-1•193
SPACE-VIEW-COMFORT
Beautiful greenbelt views from this spac-
ious 5 BR. home with large LR & FR w /
wet bar. Located adj. to pool. $79,900.
Gary Knox ·
BLUFFS-NEW ON r,\ARKET
Paging couples for immac. townhouse
condo with 2 bdrms., d'"lt terrazo entry &
kitchen. Upgraded carpets & drapes. $63,·
500. M. Barr
' FIRST TIME OFFEREO-LIOO ISLE
Artistically decorated & arch. designed ; 4
bdrms. incl. M/bdrm. suite & guesi qtrs.
w/priv. ent. & kitchenette. Ext. use of tile
flooring. So. patio. -$135,000. Kathryn Raul·
ston
BEAUTIFUL PRIVACY ,.
Charming home surrounded by custom pa·
tlos & gardens ; spacious :i bdrm. w/con.
vert. den & large family kitchen. $69,500.
Mary Harvey
OCEAN SIOE-N,IGUEL SH9RES
Immaculate 3 BR., den, in priv. comm.
Llke new. Great beach, tennis, pool, sauna.
Just reduced for quick ' sale. A best buy at
'89,500. Bob Yorke
7%% INTEREST-INCOME PROPERTY
Triplex -spectacular location, main bay.
Rent the 3 BR., 2 ba. apts. or convert lo
condominiums. Sandy beach plus rm. for
small boat fleet. $270,000. Bill Bents
•
US.0700
'44-2430
J50 NEWPORT CENTER DR,. N.B.
CORBIN -MARTIN
REALTORS C•ll Anytime 644-7662
G -~~·-•_r_•_l_~~~~-l -G_•_n_•_••_I ___ ~~-
ASSUME V.A.
MESA VERDE
$36,950
Everything is right about tills
one! Expanded 3 bedroom
2 bath home, nev .. ly dero-
rited \\"ith lush caTpets· and
drapes . ~· dispogal a"nd
dish,11asher -two private
patio8 . cement drive \shake
roor • walking ctlstance to
shopping and school&. C a 11
>J6.2lU !or Inspection. NEWPORT· HEIGHTS
OPfN f/L t • ITS FIJH 10 BE ffCll 1'his 3 be<h'OOm hon1e \\0ilh: •E$1n1 [~:~~s~s
NEW 'PLEX -,'IOI. · loolco hills and Harbor. 'R•· ""' .,.. ceniJy redecorated. Otfcr'Cd
NO FINANCING ' at 11$,000 ..•
PROBLEM ' UNIQUE HOMES
SCUer wU I support financing! -REA\.TORS -
Beautiful ncl\V 4--plcx vacant 645-6500,
and ready ror that tint ""!!!!!!!!!!!!""'!!!!!!""'""'""'!!!! O\vner taic ad\1-anra~. Sub--=
mlt lnnd exch.ngt&, cotn· MESA VERDEi
n1erclal or untl.8 In this POOL TIME I
Al'Cl. Call lled C~rpel, BeAutUul\y c1toorAtfd, lovtly "R=•=•':::10::.rs~54IHl640~=~-'-pool honie just 2 blocks to SEE USI Mesa Venl~ Couniry Club. 3
For the light borne for :you, bedroon1 2 bath pht1 family
Complete 11electkln of homes room, large lot "'ith c;'Wltom
in the ~ach ma. PCIOI A JAcuizi with Joad~ of HAllOI VllW HOMES brlclr deckllla. A , e a I
llA~TY dellght lo show an<l 0\\0ncrs
UM711 are n10llvl\ttd to atll. Pr\c·
<d 16 110 1&11 a1 119,500. Call
The "Yei.tw ~•",of RC!d ,Carpet, Re"ltor1 cl.u&Wod •• ', ,&\l.Q78. 64.)..ClSO (open evenings)
'
,
-,
HARBOR VIEW .. HOMES · · ·
' ..
ONE·OP,A·KIND MONTEGO
4 bedrooms, family room , forn1al dining, creative ·deCdt.
You'll love the landscaping .. Priced for you ~t $74,500
BRING YOUR SWIMSUIT •• ;
\Vhen yo.~ move into ~l,lis Jmrnacqlate 4 Bdrm1'fathily
room Harbor View Home-next to commuruty· J>OQI
& park. Includes :' Wetbar, 2 fireplaces, w/w shag &
many other extras. Submit yoUl' tenns. $11,SOO
ISLAND HOME
Scan:est of 411 , Hardest to find , Nicest to own , Water·
fron t/pier, S bedrooms, famUy room, .island.loeation.
You own the land ; 80% avaU. at prime rate. All for
under $100,000 '
H.ARBOR VIEW HOMES
REALTY
NEWPORT BEACH
B33·0780
INFORMATION ON OTHER HOMES AVAll,ABLE
..
RHUors 644-7662
·COND0-421 ,000
Very shaTp 2 · bcdroon1, 1~~
bath condo located In <'hoice
HuntiOiton Beach location.
Cti.11 Red can>et. Realtors
54&-8640 topen e~nlng~) .:
Gtner.t.
It"!! a breeze ... sell your
iten1s. \\ilh ease. ute Daily
PJlot Oassified .. 642-5673. ·
' '.
MACNAB
.IRVIN·E
~":......--'-----""·-·------
·VINTAG E BALBOA ISLANO
2 BR cottage on prime end of island. 1h
block to beach. A cute ~ental until vou are
ready to build . $61.000. Appl. 'ohiy. 11artha
'. Macnab 642-8235. (E28)
• . SPACIOUS & GR~CIOUS
, Eleg8(lt 5 BR: 3 b~th ..., 2-storr. Bea ut!·
!u). Spanish tile ent.y. Wrought iron stair·
~ase ;_ lJeam ceiling. Olympic POQI HJF,
· 1acuZZ1 , outdoor shower. Gas BBQ . $7'2,000.
Lo1S Egan 644-6200. (E37) · ,
CA'REFREE CON0o LIVING
Newly listed S BR, 21-> bath Bluff's beauty.
Lovel y cpts. & drps. Immediate occupan·
cy. $<7,500. Bob Owens 64~. (E361
[ Irvine I -.. ..,1 .. 1 .. " .. 11,eom,.nr
101 Dover Drlve 142·12)5
18" .,.cArth1.1r 144•t200
" " J •!U
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DAILY PILOT Thursday, August 23, 1973
3728 Ocean
Blvd. Old
Corona del Mar
Go By!
Beautiful 014 Spanish ,home
oo double lot bu.,e ~•iouah
for th~ hu~st tanilly. Spe(_ ..
t&culu.r view only lile~ 10
the beal'h, Take a look at
th1$ rabulou!I home and then
gi\'t"I us a. c~ll. 67~
oPf:'HTIL 0•trSFUN10 8E NICE!
~-~I
"WANTED'' I
SIX CHILDREN
IN ,
SOUTH COAST PLAZA I
J\l'IOther super' t"-'O story 4
BR/forml\I dl11i.ng roo1n &
den model home. ·r"·o
fireplaces -wet bar -
paneling & fi le floors. Great
family home 15 n1onlhs old
in Sand?Jinte.
"
o.Lrol
VERMONT
FARM HOUSE
~ ACRE • REDUCED
$29,950
Rolling green lawns ;1nd
!llately \.rf>C$ sur1"Uunel pie·
turesque \1 cr n1o nl
tnrmho4se. Old w or Id
char111 11nd at•chitectur11.
f,.onnol 1}11try. Step down
ntruih~r suite \vilh 5th bath.
Man iiize tlep \l'ilh rugged
beams. Maids quartcrs. 23'
TAVEllN KlTCHEN ~·Ith
cathedral beams. Banquet
forn1al dining. E I e g a n I
French doors to secluded
garden paradise>. Walled
patio with ou!door fireplace
and B.B.Q. RED BARN 1nd
story in-Jaw apartment, 2
guest (.'OtlBies and covered
dance pa\iillion overlooking
_ma.gnilicent free forn1 pool.
ENTERT/\lNERS PAilA -
DJSE. CALL 6-15-0303.
IORl.\T l OISO~
"' RCALTORS
j~ [....__" -.·"·-1 .. s-•• ;;j~~l1~[ jiiiiii;.;_iifii;.,~...;...-1r;;l~(~z·';;..jiiij~ !'jiiiii!-•-··'."~'j~~·~I [ -.-j~ A~~~t" ~I C~ -.!"""'-"'~j~~I
-$ i( ( I ) I i ii I I ) • ., MObiio Homn • 'fnc!Ottie Property · 166 • DON'T · BORROW' Hv~llngffn JkKli Mes. \(•nle 5 'Tll. YOU CALL IJ,51 Corona del Mer
We'd Like To
Buy A DuP.l•x
••• But
\\1~1'tl will ttie kids pla..v??
l IO"-' about the nearby youth
N'nh·r or the park aeross
U1c ~reet from this out-
st&ndlng J Bed1wm. 2 bath
ov.-ner·~ unit And 'l Bedroom
rental . t«<S,500,
CALL 644-7211
Ma
OCEAN VIEW
Huntington Beoch
HIGHL'Y bESIRABLE
J\1t!ado\vlurk 11rN1, ou1stand-
i11t: t<'lr1s1ructlon, ft"aturitli
:~ bedt'OOtlls, 2 00.ths, -,1rlun1,
2 firfplnci'i;, ('Ulitom patio,
proft'ssion;il de~'Orating in·
sidr and uut. Sl1<J\l'll v.•llh
pridt-Ill $-16.500. CAL!.
M&-33n . .
PRIOE OF,,
OWNERSHIP
3 &-droonis, 1 a' hs.th~. din Ina
areu, block v.·all fence, i.-e.p-
1u·1Uf' laundry nx>m. Uioki;
like· a n10di,1l iu~l<le anrl ouL
f<~a111nsti(· Hun1ington Bcach
area, cloSt' 10 all major
shoppin~. &:hools and frce-
1VliY". $32.m:. 96:1-5621.
GOLOENWEST
ESTATES
. Mm Verde 1poot honie:, 3 For Si le 12 POSITIVE,'CASH BotTOw on.Your hOmc equUy
Colifornla Classic Bit .. 2 ll'A, lam tm'& office. NASHUA 12X40 + cabuna. 1 FLOW FROM A for any good purpo.C.'Sc•V·
WOW !; I T · a;,lle Etlcld· ai,Junt.plual 149,950. BR, full ba, fullY fu1·n. 4 yn SWIMMING POOL? Ing Los Angclee County for
r •• t o · VI By owner. , Mt. ,J{ e..Jt t -old, xlnt cone.I. ldeal loc-bay This ono 11 leased ror $220 over 20 yMrli--&00 NO\V in
...-.~. 'It! I • 5-8431. view. Rent on op!. to buy or a ino to 4.pltvl owners Jn 01·1:u1ge County!
ON TIIE t.10DEL STREET. Newport Beach <:llllh out. No. 18 Lido tdditl~ )'00 gt!'( a' 'tro-SIGNAl. MORTGAGE o:>.
By owner, 3 ycai-s . Old, 3 -. Vlllagt!; NB. 67$-7G47. men<tooS rocreaUon room + (7141 556--0106 ~r. 2 Ba. plus fanul.Y rm. OUPLEX $10,500. _ 1-tuw .s lhat (or a l2l 3 Bdrm Ai)ts. tor only 4500 Can1pus Driver N.)3.
includes an all glus k•lchen, loW on near new OW Lancer $57,500. The c:holcc WI of $500 to $100,000 f01·
Ca.rf,l('ts & drapes1 fully lw.\d· 6 DOORS TO tn beautiful SJC Park? Ideal an apt. complex, this "-'On'l Bu8inM111 or J)l'l"SOnlll needii sca~I. . inelud1ng bnck BE. ACH tor di.$crlmlnaling lady or last long~ O"-·nct· ""'lll fi. No (.'Ollatl'nil required patiO wuh cove1·. By apt. couple. 493--0663, 4~9. nance at gi,:. Upon proor of ability to PllY
Only, 8''6-5-194 alt. 6:00 pm. Don't pay high !iummor rent 10 x tJQ WITH 13 x 26 Ex·
when you can collect it, and pando' L.v. rni. 8 x 21
still reserve the befit period Screened rm, 2 BR. Adult
for yuu and your$. 3 Bed· Pk. nr l-loag Hospital $4500,
H 'illirim l-i1x, INC.
' STORY BOOK
-ENGLISH-'!'he Action Brolter
Collect 111 2131386-7433
$84,500 tee. lOVv down.I -20-,000--M-O~B~l~LE-~H~o-m-e-fo-1· I Q Mort919ff, 260 roon1s do\1
1
n, 2 Bedrooms up. 645-2549 ~~~~~~~~~
CALL 644-721i sale. SacrlUce for $16,950. I ;;T;r;;";p'f;;D;;;;eod;;;;';;;;;;;;;;;;;;I All conveniences. 646-4600 I•
alt 6. Sparling lnvHtmont PUT.YOUR MONEY
NEWPORT '8AY Corp. 833-3544 TO WORK FOR YOUI
10'/o Down 81/4°4 Loa n Hnn1c \\'ith pool . 4 Bcdrootns, New 2 BR, l BA Jiving rm. J% A b( l Eorn lO'/O i111ercst <.tn well -
D1-an1atic 3 BR, 2 BA hon11• 1 ~~ baths, accomnu>datlon Adult park w/private bl'ach ssuma e oan s.-cUred 2nd Trust Deed}; ou
ha:.-; walled privacy on strc-t•r fani!ly and dining area on· a Spacious, n1ulti-level 4 BR.. GRANO OPENING l16.500 . 540-36'12 Orange' ~aunty real estate.
/Jn NIL[I
UAIL(Y &
A550CIAT£5
.. on ll'f'e lined Slrt"et
Graclous Jiving 1m. sun
splashed kitch tan1Hy nll, 3
sp.a\'ious bclrn1s.. park·like
g1>0uuds. $30,450.,D~;nl'l v.•uit.
~~4;s'[b.e Re;al Estate Falr.
LARGE .FAMILY??
!lide al!d spectaeular ocean eu! di:-sac. BeautifuJ Hunt. family rn1., 2~ ba., formal Ntw~rt Bey Towers B'i:" Owner, like new, 2 BR, 10 Units $130,000 SIGNAL MORTGAGE <X>.
views from breakfast nook , ing1on &ach ai~. No main-dining n11.. pool room. 1 &. 2 BEDRooM Llke new carpets . & cur-Nice Costa Mosa Area. t714) 556-0108
family rm, Hvin~ rn1, 11 nd tenance back yard,· Jots of $57,500. CON001'11Nll/rt1 HOMES tains. $5,300. 541--0235 lncomo $l6,068 4500 Campus Or .. N,B ,
master suite. Carpetsl dt·ps Urick flcr.ver plante1<&. heavy BALBOA BAY PROP, Bayfront H.omes
Uke new. Lots of S'lorage. shakc roof and Priced to * 556-8800 ·* Boat Slips Bkr 6705800 6 6 '"'-"'·' FOR Sale, ~.588 1st or all· ~~ ~/~~t 1~5~ aw~ ~¥.3~~'k at $J4,900. CALL REPOSSESSIONS ~~,~~~1~l:~~ction I Rui Estatt. J !Jal (21 ~Pl:es ~ore:~~ j~ ;~: ~~5M T~. ~%0 ~~10 \V~
4.7, 4733 Cortland Dr. '.:'ot informolion and location Private Balconies ~[ iiiiii-iiiiiiiiiiiilli.iiiiiiii'miiill tington Beach. $43.950. 2 ronsider sn1aller T 0' s
in Cameo lI i g h I ands. of these? FJIA & VA honies, z garage spaces per unit. • BJl. lnron1e $600 pet• n10. p/pymnt. 6TJ...6Ta6.
$n.soo. 673-3177 t'Or.tact . · Roof top sundeck Acruge for salt 150 S.l2-3546. 1 ~~~~~~~~~~1
ADORABLE duplex. So. ol KASABIAN l!nusu·ai ·Opportunity to Pu_r. • Industrial Property 168 I: ~
Hwy. Xlnt loc:alion. z br & chase Baylront Property in 1-
den, 1 ba & 2 br, t ba apt. .R;al. Estate 962-6644 Nev»port Beach. *** 625 FOOT ffiONT-** M--1 . ** .-...forRent R:J
Looking for Home
Plus Guest House?
By o\vner. 673-4821 eves, 3 BR d' l I bli 310 Feouvxlo Rd,, N.B. AGE. Brooktiurst St.. COSTA MESA . ~ 269 kd • Ul l"'Ol, rp • ns, 675-8551 'Fountain Valley, 9
ROOM FOR . ·ext. • ~'ce icys. I"'""""""'"'"""""""""" snag, 2 Ba, patio, pool, te11·1-iiiiiiiiiiii0iji;;;;o'!!';;""m Acres • $450,!XXI. 63 x 100 FT. BOATS & TRAILERS Coste Mesa .\nis. 5%'7~ $22.COO. o""·nr, ''BLUFFS CONDO'' Plans for· new bldg. Houses Furnished 300
WALK TO \VESTCLrFF
Eastside lx>auty . in1macu·
late:13Bedroom, fom1al din·
ing plllii breakfast area in
kit~ei1. Nicely ldscp<.I, dou-
ble garage off alley. Room
for trailer or boat. Addition-
al room & bath for inlawA
FOR THE GI cou·ntry Ranch _!JSS._m~s ______ , *** 245 FOOT FRONT-RIVIERA REALTY 1\lost desirable Bluffs loca· AGE • Beach Blvd., Lovely, panelled & 4 hr's $25.750. MONTICELLO CON-R..'\n1bling Calif. Raoch home Irvine tion. 4 Bdrm, S Ba. Lovely Huntington Beach. 2~2 149 Broadway, C.M.
huge lovely patio & yard on DO - 3 Bedroom, 1%. bath, fralures 4 big bedrooms.1-;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;I private patio on greenbelt. Acres • SZl7.000. Fan-642-7007 645-5690 Eves.
a corner lot. Oflered . a~. best shag. $ij2 Pf,: mo. pays n1an size den, huge Old I• Opcn beams thruout. Low tastic sales lot or nio-Lots for S.ie 170
$29,000 o~ Veterans terms. all. 159 Yol'ktown, right on \Vest family rm, mammoth Cambridge Model "leasehold. $67,500. tel location, 1-;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;.
No down. lhe square. · master reh·eat has t'Onver-1vitti its unique fireplace and GRUBB & ELLIS f•
sation area, dressins; nn & wood box arrangement plus Realtors * * * 5 ACRES, R·3 · Choiff' BIG CANYON
or ? Room to add-on fo the w lk I! l home, many po'5ibillU.,, a er 1J ee OPEN THURS FRI & SUN 1111.~ 11tAT1
i-5 pm, ·471 Bnladway, C.M. 54&--0022
400E.17° • fOR,~M =N .,;:;EA=. R~H~A~RB~O~R~H=I
C.M. : : NEW LISTING
POOL HOME
•ASSUMABLE
LOAN·
4 Bedroom 2 BA comp
painted inside & out, ne\Y
carpeting coming. R-2 lot,
room for another unit. Lrg
lot. Owner will help finance.
call us for more det'ails. e CALL ANYTIME e
646-3928 or Eve. 67J.-1577
S36.!l50. l\1ESA DEL l\1AR . 3
Bedroom, 2 hath, com 1>
refurbished in & o u I .
Assumable FHA loan. $262
pet· mo. 2878 Monterey,
ON ALL ABOVE ADS,
AFTER 6 PM, CALL 557-4617
Costa Mesa Realty . * 541-n.11 *
vanity bath. Big gaJley kit-garden atrium for inside en-'"""'" E c-H CdM Huntington Beach lo-Fantastic falnvay lot
ehcn \vilh pantry and all joyment. 3 bdrn\s., 2 ba., ~ "67S..7o'Sl " j cation. Near schools. In prinie location
thc latest qpplianccs. in-dining room and double gar.1""""""""""""""""""""! parks & shopping. $64,200 eluding an ISLAND COOI{ age. All for $42,500. -F
c ENTER! m., '"'"n nvin• Vi"si"on-* BAYCREST * ~ HARBOR rn1 \Vith crackling \Vestern fireplaCT' viC'l\'S huge spatk-BY O\VNER. Elegant cu!!lom
ling CUSTOl\1 POOL. l\!an-red h,.
111
built 4 BR + lrg. Fam Rm, ""°"9f7M)963-'4561 ieurcd grounds surround 2 !\·Jaster BR + 2 trplcs,
your •'MINI RANCH." 1-fuge LR, Fo1111al Dr. Com .
Priet.'1:1 ot $43,750. BRR. pletely private 28' coveN'rl Commercial
962-5511. REALTY outdoor living area \vith lush Prope.rty landscaping. O,~·ncr will WE BUY HOMES Unf\'. Park Center. Irvine finance responsible buyer. Call Anytime ·552. T;)I)'.) 1. Cash for yo11r equity Offic~ hOW'S 8 AM_ to 8 P~l Principals only 66--7500
2. Will pick up back paymts DOVER SHORES 3. No charge fol' a ppr.
CALL us _L_•,,g_u_na_e_ .. _c_n ____ 15 Bedroom, 4 Bath, living
FOR AN ESTIMATE: room, dining room & den.
NO \VAITING DRAMATIC Super pool. Automatic g"dl'·
158
RF:ALTORS
SI~CE 1944
673-4400
General
$ LANDLORDS $
Let us rent your proper!il's.
We're back to SF.RYE YOU
AGAIN . Many Oients.? Call
r)fior to vaC"t\nc;v. Save $$.
$ ALA RENTALS $
Newport & Bny, C1\t 642'.-s:i,g:~
LITTLE Balboa I s 1 an d .
\Vinter rental, beaut 2 BH
hon1c, nicely furn, &. very
deluxe, \\'alk · by 1 5 1 l
Abalone Pl and see before
calling 673--0207 daily or
673-2195 \1·eekend. $300 pcr
mo,
3 BR, 3 BA house. Ba.yftont.
Pier. Al.so 4 BR, 2 BA 011
Grund Ca nal. $450 mo. each.
9 mos. lcruie, 675-7762
\\'inter Renlal·Also apt.
3 or 4/2 Ba. Sun d<'Ck.
Guest room. 675-6299
Sharp 3 bedroom home • just
pa1nted completely inside
and out. Sparkling pool is
less U1an 2 yNirs old and 1
has automatic pool sweep &
chlorinator. AH lbis for only
$33,750. 'Present lorui can be
assumed at 1~:',t. To see
call 8<2-2535.
Lachenmyer
Realtor
KEEP YOUR MONEY
NO DOWN VA Bright ne1\'
paint & carpers. a truly
lovcly hon1e \Yith g11rdens
beau1iful on tree-shaded
lane. Only $27,500 (10'1
T\VO CUTIES ON A LOT.
Roaring fireplace. country
kitchen. 2 big bednns each,
big garage. No qua1ifying.
Assume 7% VA l oan
balance with a small do·~·n.
Only $290. per mo. pays
everything. Rents $160 .• i::
$175. per. mo. Live in one,
rent lhe other. Only $40,900.
Bkr. 962-5511
CUS'T'OM BUrLT HOl\<IE
On corncr lot, Q.·I Back Bay
area, 4 Br. & 2 Ba upstairs,
!iv. 11n, din. rm .. kitchen,
f'am., den & Ba do\vnstairs.
Lots of closet space. Lrg
db!e car gar., 2 patio
CASH NO\\' OLD WORLD CHARM! age, sprinklers ·& lighting.
842-9371 B I J'b I k' $139,000. 1315 Santiago Dr.,
Corona del Mar NEWPORT beach -c"stom
Tu•o rare lots. South of High. Rl lot 153' frontage on 8th
'A'ay . 47' . \\•ith plans for Fai1"A'ay of · Big Canyon
\lll(ferground parking for Country Club. View of
fourt~n cars and a 1~· cor-Fashion Island & Col'ona del
ner \~;1h additional prop('rly l\1ar. Private pl11Mcd Con1-
possibly available. Ca 11. rnunily \\'ilh guard gate.
6T;>-Tll5. Priced to sell! Tern1s
available. Pvt Pty. 640-1537. a cony 1 rary over oo 1ng N.B. By Oirner, 645-S2T.i.
living room & formal dining Principals only. roon1, sparkling new gour·1~-,."='=~'===-
n1et kitchen, 3 Bedrooms, 2 * OCEANFRONT * ,
baths. deck plus unfinished 4 Furn. units. Lg. sundeek •
upstairs room. Closc in, 2 Dbl. garages. Will trade
slreet to slr('{'t lot. Spectacu-for income in San Clemente
Jar Yolhite \\•ater view. One or Dana Pt. $125,000.
LRG. 4 Br. Conver!, Den
HouSf> s4oo \Vintcr $52'5 "\'r·
Cl-IOTCE location on Balboa ly. 67:' .. 2472 or 12131 3,55.6001. -:...__, Penin. Zoned R·l. by
of a kind! kking lllll,000. BALBOA BAY PROP. * 673-7420 *-CQ\'ers. Citrus I r c e s . 1 'iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiim \Voodland Sehl d I s t r i c1 . 1 •
$87,500 Owner 548-!732 o« 4 BIG
-STORYBOOK--Walker & Lee 531.-PORTOFINo. H. vu. H001es
CHARM "" '""' $23 250 BEDROOMS ! ! , · t Year new, many ""4Jj_
In Harbor View Homes 541>--0022 ' Used brlck fireplace, extra D r -J\ T 3 BR, 3\,!i BA, bonus l'OOftl,
One of thC' lowest priced ----------Cozy home on R-2 comer lot. l11rge kitchen, l~ Balhs. ~ available school openinJ:.
homes in this most .sought SPACIOUS! 4 BDR Nice trees & large, clear $31,500. . OWNER ~·ill finance rctrp,
O\vner, 893-5091 or Eves, 'Balboa Peninsula
493-4429
-~~iiiiiii~ii:::;;::;;:.. .. 1 ocean .~ hay bchs. Respon. 'i Mountain, 0.Hrt adults. 67H".il!I.
* 3-UNrT +, Resort 174 2BR. garage. garbage disp. <X>~e.IA.li·s·U>G: f.' · · dsh/wsh,'-•was~ '"'Of.ch . #etJ ' ~led 'Wi'otf-str(!Qf. SUNNY PALM SPRINGS \Vinter -College stdnl! ok.
~king.' Owner "''iU caITf Biltmore Condos, 1-3 Br, $225. 675--5-470.
T.D. $59,000. ' beaut. furn. Pool, Jacuzzi,
tennis, gas bbq~. Wknds. Corcna del Mar a 1 t er nei.ghbot:hood. 3 bldg. site for 1¥10lhcr uni!. CALL 842·!3Zl 494-6561 buyer. Fee ~.500 641-4448
wkly, n10 or IS<' .. 171.ii I i~~~imiiii~~·-1 327-6274. \\''rite L. Fowler, I I
1·116 s. Camino Real. P.S. VIEW + POOL
Bedrooms with c u stom $45,000 CALL cg '"6·24'14 Ontu l715Newporll-lills0r. \V * 59.'x29' LOT*
details thruout, that give a Sharp large fam ily home , •• !,_.AL ~ BEACH DUPLEX C-1 ZONE
There's a ganlen patio off ing. I1nnu."(!i11tc possession REALTY 2 & 3 Bdrnt units. one blook Roy McCardle Realtor SPEND Christmas 1n thc
warn1, homey atmosphere. 1vith over 2600 sq. It. of \iv-.......... 21 $3'2,500. E·Z TEH.'.\.15
3 Bedroom -3 Bath
$475 WINTER LEASE
Rltr. 644;7270 :~:t i~ri~ht~~t'1iie1i:~!c~~~, :v~~~~le f~"m\~~s ~~roo:d Nr•rWNh'y"'w"a' ,.•101t Offic r ~ ~:f:Yl~n1 ~n~~=t~~~ ~mu:ea:stN~ :int11! lino Ne~rin8219vd., c.~l. ~~'~c~;J~ng~~se !ni ~~~
f I d. . t\.\ ' ' • • . 6........, be h $69 500 .,_.. outdoor dining. Reasonnbly ! otrma h iningDo'?"t mh, ., t'O 'Til Interest Rates 17301 Beach Blvd,, H.B. come. .Location providcs CENacTUR. y'..., · <"A<> 17711 i:=:==: Ne'>'•ly furn. Frplc. Ver-y priced at $64.950 & you own ~ ory ome. n esi a c easy waik tQ f .e st i-v a 1 _ "l vu· Ii good rental. $ J 1, 9 O O .
<Che lafmi.C I rth I ~ea1f~~ R61~~arfo~~ Assurn?=~~:::c!~astside FIREPLACE & WINE grounds, ~~pp i_ng & WESTCLIFF $61,500 NEIGHBORHOOD _63_7_-3_140_. ------1,~E~~~~~::i.i~~~i
• • 0 eSWO Y evenin.r;sl 3 BR, 2 Ba home, fam rm. Dea?~· Ui~ or!(' & 3 Br. 2 Ba. Dining rm, froni SHOPPING CENTER R1nchn, l'•rms. I 1 409 JJ '
Realtors• C640-tl~20 *BEACH DUPLEX* :1;,P~~1-S~~~c~~~~~,J_~ ~~axf~~~~~t '~~t~o~r :':fe you.A$11 want to o1i"'" it. $75,CXXJ. :a~:S~rxJntti:iid~·~t ci; Mile S~~~ Park 1--"G-'-r"o"v•c.•o.... ____ lo.IOc. ~~n~;:;;o: :.:ch ,s.
Spanish as e Block to Water t-r. of \vine & a bear skin rug~ ~ .. ,,, 6" -art 6 P~t 646--1219. F 10+ acre beautiful young
I-luge hacienda with n1a.;;sive Real cutie! I & 2 Bd1ms.H c~U~R~R~Y~:-:Nc-e-wpo-,"'t~H-g-t",-. ~~1'e<fr~;:~~~. s;~~~~ REA.,L.ES-:'~:T~E Harbor $V7i7•,w500P1lermo ou$~',;~~.~.lley !lass avocado grove going \~~Lg~s1/:n1il~:~.er.A1! -~:i: tile roof, a11nost '3()00 sq. ft. Ideal home & Income. "J t"' on four yrs. Good set for ONLY $59,000 Area 3 BR, 2 BA, AnthOny 10 spotless 3 BR/fam rm Call no.v ior details. next ft'ar. Fenced. $ll5,000. tage in canyon $150 In n1irJ.
of plush, !hick, designer CHI" CAYWOOD REALTY pool, P.V. stone frplc., home localed on quiet cul-. ll90 Glenrieyre St. 2 S1y, 4 BR, 2~2 BA, \vel bar. ~ die of forest & Bachelor
pets and decorator lea:t1.ll'f.'S. fi1·c·•·"", new cop p •c de A 'I 7''"' 49-1-9473 "'·'"n.,..,6 co ·1vai~ 1718 ~~ AbL-Owner wHI calT)" papers, un•'t.• '$90 walk lo Y.'alcr. * 541-1290 * • ,..., ... -sac. ssumaue ,11;1r • . ........ ,"" w i u; .~ ...... , ""'Y· , Principals only. 714-278-2341. ·' S\l•eeping :~irs t~ upper ~~--plumb'g, ne\vly n>dec. Much FHA ,Joan. Only $36,900. LARGE F.AMILY?-By appt: 644-5569. Agt. r~ee. 5.1&-2?i75
maze 01 ·~ts ·pent· Baib0a-i$1;nd more! Vacant $:1'8,500. CALL T.ODAY. • O••· of •·oguna's largc-1''0Rsalebyo\vner,BluffsE ~-...... U7 Real Esta'• L19un1 BOich house master s uite. Secluded I 01vner &14-2595 I I '" u: "' ·-",._ -artist's relrt'at tor huge M ltw~n rea ty inc. family homes. 6 BR., 4.·~ Plan. Widest Greenbelt. I,. ... .,._,.. __ ..,.,,,..( Exchange 182
domiilory). Foiinal living • ISLAND CHAR 2 BR house. Eastside Costa 968-4405 (24 hrs) ba. '1,000 Sq. It. Fain. rm. Prine. only, call 644-1680 for c 2 LOT 19 800 Sq ft $120 · Util Pd. Bach, sto:-·e &
.tin & dining, huge fiesta rni :i Br, 2 B;:, sm. play room + l\·tesa. Lg. lot. new crpting I"'""""""'""'"-"""'"""'"""-w/frpl. It S\Veep1ng OC'ean appointment Newport Blvd: nr Del· 1\iar: BRAND NJfW .. Oceans!de, 3 refrig. Snll. pet. So. Laguna
viev.•s 18• x 4(1' custoni tile I rental unit Lg. sundeck, too? & drps. Y.'asher. dryer, On Blk T Beach views. $10.J,OOO BLUF:FS CondO $60,000. 3 61., Ready !or deveL or can be BR, 2 BA: Pr1~ale h1lls1de $150 -Ut11 p,J, Lri.;:" Bach, Iull
pool, Cordon bleu gournlel Old \l'Orld charn1. Lots of stove & relrlg incl. $27,000. e 0 Turner & Assoc. 2t2 Ba. owner. Walk to ten· held W/present inc. $3.2.~ l~t. tall pine llee.s -ocean kit. In ro""·n, near beach!
ki.tctum. Can't be dupli(.'att.•d. \~ood. vaulted open tx>am 20•,; down. 0\'-'Jler. &tZ-4750. Ch~iih!gakra~~ .. -styStilc11 ho1 mke 1105 N. Coast Hwy .. Laguna nls clb. 640-l090 Sq. ft. Ownr/Brkr &l:?--0590. ~1~~b~~11~ ... 1!.s.~~ $39~ $175 -Uli,l Pd. Ocl·a.nfront 1
Plumbing tycoon wi;J sacl'i-Iiv. rm. iv/balcony. Xlnt COSTA 1\'fesa 4 BR & den, Wlu1 s e •<JUI. oo s 494-1177 Anytime A BDR,M, '1"11 Ba. 5:ot~,'f:, loan. "''"''& .... w,. Br. Vie1v. deck. Yearly! fice for irnniedialP sale at co11d, Z13 Topaz. SUG,000. 2200 Sq. ft., 1 story, bargain brand ne1~·! Gourmet patio " "nr ")16 Condominlum1. erty or 1'D! ! Broker &15-~00 $300 . Util pd. 2 BR, lrplc,
$65;500! BKR. ~·~IL __ OY:ncr. 6T.'r7604. al $38,000. Quiet dead end kitchen hns all color coor--W ith-View &-Poof Boat yard $75,000. Write S. for sale 160 Real Estate Wanted 184 yu.rd, patio. I. blk beach!
SALE I · s•-et, p«cstigo are a , dinated appliances, sunny $48,750. Just 3 mos. old! Lonpre. Gen. Del. CM. Q\\7!. NU·VIEW RENTALS
LOVELY GARDEN or ease o Pt 1 o n: '-'"' · LAGUNA H'll L · ·
SEnl G Charming 48R 28A older Broker. 968-8182. breakfast room views mani· Great floor plan. Big living 3BR house, near ocean y,r Id N 1 s,3 JR s ~.~ -*CLIENT* -673-4030 or 494-:rMS
N hon1c -Beaut hrick patio, CliARl\1lNG duplex. tree cured grounds, massive rn1, din ing rn1. Beamed $59,CXXJ Lo dwn. !\tiles Lan;on R:i~:. ~3.3-7266 ' wishes!~ purchllse distressed l Br h.se for ialarit'd Ne~ llarbor High l n huiltins. $77,500. 675-24ll shaded estate type R·2 lot roaring fireplace in elegant ceiling. Family nn. 4 bdm1s, Realtor 673-8563 propertJes, homes or Income bachelor, $l70 & 3 Br 'semi
H>!Jf'ts/Newport Be a c h . O•~cr. 2 . b 1lving m1, sparkling vanily 2 baths. H.<\S Ev ER Y . A FRAME :am& 2 BLKS Duplexes/Units units ror the pucpo.e ol 1 h SJ d' -7 ••
48 . • b 11 I . 10J'x13 '. $:>1,500. Drive y '--th 3 de . c_, TIJING h k ••• 8003 urn se. u 10 "" .;,.., ·l a 1 w spacious ~--~--~---21i2 Mint>r, Agt. 5-1!µ)2HI ., .. s, n-size ......... iroonls. 1 · r .. ,,..,. · 3 Br 1600 sq ft '.community salt 162 renovating&: re-selling, For responsible salaried adults. ·i-1 f8in1ly & dining roon1s. Balboa Penin:.ula A real ocean retreat "'ith a TAR~ELL center. 646-00'3~: , info call 545-8424 SouthCo 494-8
·; :t ~='ti·~~zdong, $62,950. * BEACH HOUSE * ~~SE?!!?N1 n$~~ sti starter price! BKR. 962-5511. *OCEAN VIEW*, TRADE 'tit1i'p6t'r. Beach OCEAN View. New Duplex Investment Co., Realtors. LlST:,t:~~-Surf from this " 0 $50.000 Buys cute 2 bdrm., GovC'rnn1ent loans Call brk Huge, OC(>fjl view Jiv. rm7 '?top. Fpr ·Out-Of-Town by Builder. Open llOuse WANTED Resldential Lot unique 2 BR tum hqrnt tor
.'i ·:. ; "a-.~u~ sharp, rustic cle<.'Or. \Valk 5-16-7739 * FOUR * w/trpl; difi'"-area. 2 BR, den Prop; Bkr. TI.f/673-2058. Sat/Sun l·Spm. 2 BR, 2 BA, !)oo() to 6000 sq. ft. HB. area. rent! $425. "\.\1nter rental or ~ --·-00 ~ plus 3 BR, 2 ~~. <;::rpts. & Will pay cash, call alt 6 Pl\t J 497 1081 ..... to beach. Valuable R-2 lot! Fountain Vall•Y -BEDR M:>--+ guest rm. w/w carp, Newport Heights drps & ~ bltins. Prine. 000 ""!. r~·"""' e,ase. -0 r
l 21 GEM 1 ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; thruout. ·central kit. n1 -.~ 500 607 N j~~~~~~~~~~~~ ~~ .. 1, ~ I20·F Tu~tin Avc7s: I• Mpfu~hin c~~~~.h°2l :~: iv/range oven, flish\vshr. NEW LISTING ~d~ _,. ' arclS5U8, DELIGHTf.lJL Vacation 4 -~ 11 lBR HOME & See this one! $5.1,500. . . l 1 ~ Br. 3' Ba. pool home. $950 • REALTORS fH2·41'i23 GUEST HOUSE bltins and quiet tree.shaded Mission Realty , 494-0731 2-Story, custom built home NEW Deluxe Duplex, 3 Br. ·n..ncw • Sept l /Nov. 15, 491_0451 .J -. '.l,133 \V.estcliff Or .. N.B. BA YVTE\V DUPLEX location. Only $32,500. BEST B . with ·sha.ke··root. 'Bdrn1s., 2 2 Ba. &: 2 Br. 1 Ba, has 3 car . . 1 -POOR MAN'S 2 BH, 2 BA, one year old. $31,900. HURRY! Call 545-8420 EAUTJFUL location -bo. tge. mstr. BR.; 2 gar. 618 W. Balboa Blvd.I'--------' 2 BR tw-n hwsc on Vk.1.olia •j 1 'INVESTMENT 2 Obie garages lflcal nrrangemen! w/mode-1 SouthCo Realtors. SO~TH LAGUNA. 1 block (rplcs. 500 Sq. ft. recreatiot1 8TI·9467 or (213) 342-9812 Beach: Sept to June $225.
'"en< * 548 2121 rond, 3 BR, 2~~ BA CONDO :::::::::::I to ach.· Ne"'.IY remodeled rni. Come see & buy! MESA v--•e, 2 & 3 BR, 3 Busi'noll mo. 497-2746 l* EXce)I nt rentals! o ...,.·ncd !Jy ''6. -& a huge guest ho\L~ w / 2 Bdrm, family rm. large $G8 fiOO ~-"·' l,'I . i& Dulchman & clean as a Corona del 'Mar st·p hath & walk in closet . TIARA ESTATES deck w/ocean vle\v, Guest " car gar., min upkeep. by Opportunity 200 1,So_u_t_h_L_a_,g:_u_n_• ____ 1 _ plii! Both renter! by long Features hl!ins, gold w/\\' apl. .$62.500 firm. 13y ownc>r. CALL e 64,•1414 ~r 549--0504 $59,400. ·.1;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;.
l tet-m tenarus at $1 85 earh. SPYGLASS 1 1 d · DESPERATE OWNER Call 499-1204. \Vould con· 91 ' ' ' ow.;:LEX Sharp Santa Ana 2 BEDROOM '" Dcn.bO<can .· --. Thi• 'sharp duplex i' n "tax I s iait cus ni rps, n11r1'0rs, sidor suminer rentals also. d ~--' ' • Cocktail bar $1SM down View. La.ri,.-e deck, 1 Lock to . OO 0011loor gas B-B-Q & pool. l\1AKE OFFER • Huge two ..... eights. Pl:lnc1pals only, e Electronics Sys _ sales beach. All rcmodt':led, '1nd
shelter" \\•\th no "\.\'OITics at I Reduced $5,0 Nr ~1i!e Square Goll Course. story \\•ith bonus room, pool BEAUTIFUL oc<!an view lot lllALT·Y Term!J. $37,500. 642-3729 •Children's Store_ beach tedecoratN.t. Oelu.-.;e. $350
'_[' ~;500. I Funtnstie sit~own b..."lY view CAl..L TODAY.. sizc yard plus niuch more. Only $12,000 Ntar Nt:wport:P••C Offltt: Income Property 166 e Sweeying Serv. 6S accts pcr monlh Sept. 15th lhru
, , ,
1
on n. qu ic t cul-de-sac for larwin realty inc. All te1ms, only·$.'l,6,900, Oceanview Realty 673-8500 ASSUME 7% VA 3 BR, 2 NEW
4
·PLEX "" ~.0710 and Bus s.
54
1!s .... ,"11 June 15th. South Lultuna.
• You r f nm i J Y. f our 968-4405 (24 hrs) ll Lag.una °tiills BA, Fam nm·, fp, on cUI.<Je. O"W"""""l.1 or \MMIO 213: 464-4686 eveg. 213':
W. lk & l IJl'drooms. family roo1n, ~~--------1 sac, S45,()(X) '6'f6..1Sl4 or '":!!""'""'"""""""""""""" 721--5U5 days. : I a er ee i n1n ld.~ and of.ltce .. Move in NESTL",D-BEfllND l'UG-E 4 BR, /nm rm, lease/option 52\p7560, no agts. Brllnd new. Spanl~h motif, 31;W"~ 11 ~ bl ,CL"-ld;.o°"'l1~le=""-----I ~ "' .. 962-.... 71 (~"I • ., 8103 BR. 2 bn. deJuxe unlt iu~• to se 5""" pum ng
• • lll.r.\ ,,,,.,, 1101\', $129,900. Call 6~'"""' PlNES . EUCALYPTUS is I '"""~"".,._,'",.'.· .,'" ... •,,· ... .,.j ;300/mo. S36.~. Avail for -BLUFFS . , /!rpl &: 3 2-BR nit repair business In Newport 'l ·~ ~22 n nunbling 4 bC'droon1 opening of 8Chool year. 2 yrs BY ·owner 3 Br 2% Ba oV~ w,~ u~·· ud ' •ka. Bcac" area Take over hun. SALE • LEASE Bc&ut. home J ,1 onv"'\N $26-950 Id t~· d rd 673--0216 I , -• w .,a\IY or s u n e c , " .
I t ''Classic" home wllh a , 0 • nee Yfl · · look n& bay, ... $67,50()., ~ -1'.EMistde Costa Meia nr. dreds of regular custon1ers. 5 Br,· 37' Iv. rn1, paUo &
, .. (~NERY ROW heavy shake roof plush BRING YOUR POOLTABLE Owner/Agent. Vi$1:a Parada. 644-ll81l:, ,Newport tits. Buye~ gett 1st .~64"'2-3~1=28'-~---""'"" po0!, 70' lot $1.200 n10.
! · INCOME carpel-; and unique Ughling, for !his beaut. 2 BR condo. Laguna Nlilvel ~~tax dcpreclatlon. Alk• Money to La.n 240 "6"7!Hl359-----~---i I In thJ pr! I superbly equipped kllchen. Bonus rm ~· x zr.. 2 car . Sf' .• tnc ~110 (XX) • CONTEMPO 4 Br. 3 Ba, flop!,
I
I 4x~11~urut~ to~:i~ai ~~~~er1o~d1!e ~iths:~~~·~ fnn~1~. g:i~~ b1.~~·. ~ill~~~ t.r:~··~"fr~~u,;i· s*R .. I 1
Md>i•Jklmel (, ~' ~·~ ~L • CD '4'·2•1• 1st TD Loans ~~ih.c~1~e~~ 67~e923.$485
1 ci!rt~&JW:~-Ews ; lfg:;w.~~'.'~~\1lastat e~:r!i:~~!~'ji"El~ 32~!~~!?fv!~~oi:n1•,M. ~111· Ho'l-. ~ ~' ~-· UP TO 90% 40:,.R·J~~$~~·,' den, Sept.
I * NEWU STINGT REPO l ~~~~~~,,.~~~r·yncant now! o,... ,mff ~~!!!'!"-''" OUiu 2nd TD Loa11s 675-7667
Sh1Jrp rlup!~x on bi•11uriful BEACl1 house, 3 Br. A~mime •PL.ACE REALTY • For Sile 125 YOU WON'T 0 1!'1 Newport• Beach
trt •' lint'd fitrec l. lmmac. $750 DOWN existing loan, $28,500 .F'uU 494-9'ro~;!J!~1:,--:_,_ ___ 4!j!Jl~-97~29~j 1;u,o;rEjlj'.;;i~M;;b\J. associated
.:
'
BROKERS -REAL TORS
1n1r;, W lolboo 67 1-Jt.~l cnnd. Newly pain!('(i out!ide. 2 or 3 BR Townhou!!e, bge priet>. 5JG.:m5, :; , . BUOGER f:x:pando Mob\Je BELIEVE ITI lo"rest rates Orengt Co. A ltOM'E TO BE
Nk't"!y land1>Cnpt-d. Xlnt rumpus room dbJe gar, Bl ff N X Model Lido ISie Home in MobUe '"Pllrk In 91.arp Triplex located near ttltr...M.tg . Co, , CHElUSHED \'111!!!!~~~~~::'!""""'/ l"'l"nlal /lrT':1. Priced under S'\Vln1 pool, few left. Hun-y! U S IW \ I , Newport Beach 6464148 or bff.('f:J with llS!llUmable lOW '42-2171 145-0611 &mu! houses ru-en't ftiuch
POOL TIME I f?Q,000 . ~2-4421 Of~~~.c~'~ccba~ ~~'~ii'.5 5 .. :,.~fr.2~9,500hoon• .... on large bus 642--31.28 , 1ntettS! loan. Priced for SerVlng HarbOr ma 21 m . more than 4 wall11 & "roof,
' '-$35,950 MORGAN REALTY First Pioneer Realty daily, 2749 v is.ta u~bro1'1t . j;'.'~i "'i{R, & ;icn, open OCEANFRONT TRATLER l.mmcdiateml~. -·· -but OOro'sonoyuu'll love.·2
""·· Chmnl"JI ~ bedroon1, 2 bath 673-6642 675..6459 NB, $64,900. 644-0290 Qw1ner. bt'aml!', 'int<'rtstJn,i fpl. Near Lrg. alaSSQd·ln deck. quick 2ND Trust Deeds lots .ffOm Ute ooe.\in. 9
hmne "-'ilh large ftinllly BY 0 \\1NER -Un J CJ u c !-'-==='------Udo tennis cl. Mlle • $8000 cash, Call master br, 21.4 ba1 pan'ld
room Rnrl bu.gr b r I c kj SPNGLASS1 Hiii's Best. \'.II fnrnier model. 4 BR. 3 BA. TIME •AR LI DO REAL TY I '"'4~"~~509""'=~,,..c___ PRtVA',rE Ft.JNDS AVA~. den \\•/a prof. pool table .
..(lr:epla.ce.. lit x :lS pool with New 4JlR, 2,11ha. Sep. d1n1ng st!p. flun . rm. "'/wet b{1r, rv 3377 Via Lld<> N'pl Beach 8xl5 l\fOBILE home, space Any Amount 1 4c w/[ll)Js. opl. [
lott<h of dc'Cklna. l.>rgc Rm. 21! Ct nn<I S.y Dr. By many "'"· Incl. louds or "'UIC, K CASH t ' a7•7'300 * ·~·t $47.50. 327 Wilson St, * Call 675-4494 BKR. McNASH REALTY"
work ihop \n rtar for tlJt: "o'-wnc"=',,r·=="°'--,--"'Ullpnprr, 3 pntlos, 1cust. ,., :..... ~ S~L~ 38, Qf. &42-7863'. .:l::;:;!~~~::i~ INVESTMENTS
hancl)' 11\!Ul, This iJ! a Mt DtJPl.EX..COrner Lot rlrp$ 11restig~ Io c a l Q n . THROUGH A 3Uft, 3 BA (Ot t.rnde .ror u~ to Trade? our Trllder'a • Eat Profit ll atllll~ when I ~,,:64~2-;,1"'3.14'"", ,,~c;.vc;;•;..642:;;o,:!-il5.::":.:13~
one' Ca)I Rt'd Cul'JICI, Xlnt cond. 38~1~2BA. + n~w A~sun\<' 7~" perccnl loan. ILOT COM, sinKJe or duplcx) P.aracfi.se column 11 for you! , you Mill lhrough rcsult•tal• LOVELY .4BR. ba\;, outside
ll<alto" ;.; IO I o p • n 2BR, JBA. ""' Pol""'i!la, '~ tor appt. 15.'.900. DAILY P 61J.0005 qr 6r:r<l3.14 5 U.... ~ days fer »· Call Sparling. in•••-Dally Pilot Ouslfied shower, ~ln>ot, Winter
.......,,., ;;-=.:.,:1:,;'4;;;·=;;--;;=-:--.:-l'n<t LT"'"'"" Ju" •Jlhone WANT AD CLASSIFIED wlll ""1 ltl ·Joclay ••• W..16111 ' , Cor.p. 133-3544 .A.::ds,::..:!!i:!l-!i67=:::,•1----1<nt11. «J038th St. • I You·u find ii lr1 Classified ~·t"(d 1 "P.3d"' Pia('(' en adl call aw~· 642-{i67lt. -
J
-.. . --. . ... -
J
DAILY P)l.OT
I ]~ [ __.. ... -]rt)
•• ---I~ I --Roe ]~IC•--~ J~ I ---I~ 1-,... ......... l!J .,_. ... _ [!] I ..... -........ :.miiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~~ :.iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiim;;;; Apt,. '"'"" 3'0 •-Univ tlau .. s un1u,.._ 305 Ho-Unlvrn. 305 -Furn. or ~:=--:~.:=:----='J1Ap~l!_!•·::!_F~ur~n!:.. ___ 3~60~ ..,.1. · r n. -
I['---iiiiiiiiiiiiiii"'-~'~~~ ,, '1-L ·I
HCHllU Furnl~ 300 . tlouH1 Unlum.
365 Ae'· Unhlrft.
.. -
~ .. • I I·
I
• ·-
• ~ 1 ·-U~l•rn. · 310 c;.... Moll HuntlngtOn -h .....,, ... llo..::tclt;;;;..____ • ...::::i:;::.;.:! ___ _:::.:; :;;.:;:..o:=::;......;..:.-__ Newport BHch Coste Mow
• Newport ... ch C _._ 0
---~~;.;.;.;;....;.;...,
Newport ... ch Gonorel DELUXE ----· --------$185 • Ntoe I BR. All redee. LRG. Baell 1110. Utll pd. Kil
Balboa Isle. Winter. , trr closets '
$210 .2 BR, gor, patio, I bik •FLAT 2 BR, $14(), I\! Bo
beach. Yearly, , Bltns/refr, chlld/sm pet.
$235 • NICel)' furn 1 Br. Frplc. WOW! Oceantrnt 2 Br $2'25
Pool, Car. CdM. 1 Nicely fUl'n ga1· Jg deck
NU-VIEW RENTALS GOOD areat'l Br. 2Ba1235.
673-4030 or 494-3248 E'ncd, ~ar. CID. tamlly ok.
1 BR. ho~,.. $150 utll pd. ALA Rentels 642.e3U
Also C.M. $90 Cottage & HB ,
1 BR hie, ""'a'.lk to water. Balboa Island
Att. Fet. 979-8430.
Houses Unfurn. 305
PRIVATEw/vtew! 1BR$195.
Or w/patio, frpl c util pd.
Crpt&, drpli. Tkke your pick!
GOODIE! 3 Br, 2 Ba, $315
1'"'Um or unt. Frpl + xtras!
RARE! 4 Br, 2 Ba, $425.
l\lrn/unf. Frplc, crpta, dipi,
stove, refrlg.
ALA Rent•I• 642-1313
OECORATO)\S 1how place. EMDtALD BAY, 1,vall. mid GIG us ro WINTER rental. Avail Sept.
All new inter, 2 story, frple, Sept,~ Ju.nt. SS5Q mo. 2 ~ AU. t.rrJLlTll':S PAID 3BR. den. 2 BA. $315/mo, 2
2 br, l~l be., 11love, retrig, 1BJIU, .rl71~·;~~ ~a & •LOVELY , Con1pare-beCoreyOU rent BR, 2 BA. $225tmo. Also
washer It dryer. Adult com· ac 1· ~1""""' ' BAYCREST * custom designed, featurtna:: avail. Yearly. St."e at 5000
munltY. Pool; club hOUse, UPP~R 'lb~ Arch ~. 2 4 Bedroom. dlnlng room e Spacious kitchen with in-Neptune NB. or ph: S.15-0l»
11teps from II.hopping. Lease Bit, 2 ba; pnv ~ch, $400. and de n. 2400 SQ. tt, Best d1rect lightina or n4: =32>-:;:..,:34:,:1:,:6:.,· ~~~
nai mo or rent $235. mq. 1 ~-~--=83;:1-0064;::::::.:......:.· __ school district. e Separate din'g area YEARLY LEASES
962-2913 or 534-3896 L .. una Hiiia , Agent, 642-5200 e Home--llke storage PRIVATE BEACH
$:alO UP. 3 .\ 4 Br. No lease _,o.. __ ,,_ ____ l ,...~!!~-~~-~~-~~-~~-~-~j • Private patios Several 1 A 2 br trailer/
required. Others avail in 3 BR .. , 2 be .. 'bltnl! lticl. Co~o-;;fuJ;m;-~ : g<>~e ~ull:a:·/atorage cabanas. Adults only. Brok·
Org Cty.' Call Dept of dishwsht., wuher/dtyer. •Furn. 315 • King-st Bdrms er. 5.16-4680. Tr a n 1 po r t at ion ~ POQl member s.b. l p & •Pool -Ba........,ues _ slll'-ISEA'=,;C!~J=FF°""~M~a-no_r_A_p_t_•.
213/s»-331.0 trom 9 • 3 gardener incl $225 ~r mo. Newport BMch • ....... \\!kdays, CAPl\l Realty· 644-1'525 rounded with plush land-Bachelor apt. $150 ulit pd.
LOVELY 4 Br. 2 Ba, design· FOR l~ue n6 Ires Br Condo acaping PC>ol. Ask about out dis·
ed for family llvtng. Gra~-L•IUM N'9wl Eastbluff area,· 1,.,.,. mo. A<lulta. No Pets cowit plan. 1525 Placentia "" ....,... LARGE 1 BR, $190 Ave. NB. 548-2682.
& Hi-Schools Immediate 3 BR.· 2 Ba. View. Pool g71:..n41 aft 6. 36:> \V WUIOn 642-1971 r. Cl
area, ~~ rnlle front Beach. · tac8ltles. $323 Month C · · -n ement• Lease .JOO. Available Agt. 494-97M 494-9729 ondominlvm• LOW WEEKLY RATES .
9-f:-73. 646-'.1T72 after 6 pm. .. _..;U:;nfu:.:.:.;:::.rn.::;.. ___ .;320;:; Executive Suites 1 BR Furn apt nr beach. 3 BR, 3 ba, $300. mo. 181. & -2080 Newport Blvd. Couple only, no chlldl'en. , no 4 BR. 2 Ba. Walking distance last + cleaning. 25151 Huntln,.ton. 8ffCh pets $150 I 624 3652 to all sch, carpeted $330. Armagosa, 495-0552 • Cost• Met• . ' ·mo, · · ·
B•'(thore1 mo. water pflld, 1 year LC. 2 BR Studio in a 4-plex. 642-2611 Apt. Unfurn. 365
CORNER lot. Lrg. 2 Br, ~:oo· cleaning deposit Me .. V•nh ~~~· =il~u, :. STUDIOS & 1 BR'S Balboa Island
433 w. 19th St., Costa Mesa I frpl., Pf.tio, crpts, appl., '°""='""'~~-~-~~ 3 BR 2 BA · tamlly & game s27-0:25 • Io""'REE Linens
APARTMENTS
Air Cond • Frplc's . 3 S\1.'l.m·
ming Pools • Health Spa •
Tennls Courts • Gy1n and
Billiard Room,
1 BR. From $15(1
t BR & Den From $190
2 BR fron1 $210
2 RR. 1\vnhses F1'01n $250
MEDITERRANEAN
VILLAGE
2400 HarhJr Blvd., C.)t.
(7l4J 5.'>7-8020
OPEN EVERYDAY
HOUl'!i: F1'i·TUes 10·6
\Vfd. & Thurs. 10-7
El Puerto Mesa
1 & 2 BR Apts., Unfurn.
SLlo. & Up.
All Utilities Paid
Pool & He<.Teation
Garage for rent
1959 M•ple Ave, C.M.
Hunll'!1!9" 11e.-r " ... -· ~, FOR rtnt or Jeue, brand
new 28R Tgwnbo\lle, awim·
ming pool It rec., clie to
ocean. Patio lt very private.
Must see to appreelate, call
collect, 213 : 32'J-442i aft
1 ':J.
Tpm
r • .. ...
L U X U RJOUS wattrfl'oni r
1,"'0lldo. Priv. boat sup at your
door. Spectacular m a I n
channel view. Be au t .
decorated 2 BR.. 2 Ba ..
frplc.. patio, garate. l5tXl
Mo., lease. 544-4223.
I'" ,. ..,.
LAGUNA estp.te Uv1ng on "'
acres ot maintained
gardens. Pool & spa. Ocean
views. Close to beach & ~ ...
shopping. Lge. 2 BR., 2 ba. 11
apt. w/a1neniUes. AlJO, •: ••
studio apt., $185-$350 mo., J.~ partially fun1 ., incl. utn. .,..
~tature adults. 494-4653 Or ,. your broker. .. " .. , .... ,.., "" S. Co H .... ..d •r.oc • ...i J LOVELY 2 br unlurn, adult ' ' "" e ffiEE Util'1tles BRANO new roomy 2 br •pt .......... asl wy., Laguna I ir.cuuener . ..,.... ,.,y ease. _ _._ ~ _ .. _ & room. frplc, fncd yard-. u 646·5430. <..vnuu. uy<C, waAIR::r $321/ 54>3182 L19un1 Hills • Full Kitchen inclds dshwshr, !rash com·
COSTA MESA OFFICE I Corona del M•r rl.ryer, pool & re c· mo. ' ;;;.;:;,<;:::.:;:::_;;::::;:_ ____ e Heated Pool pactor, elec range & oven, LOW DENSITY APTS DLX 2 & 3 BR. 2 Ba, encl
$85 & UP. Furn Bach, son1e Privilege&. $3XI. per mo. IMMEDIATE Occupancy • LAGUNA Hills!! 23366 San e Launcb:y Facilities reh'ig, if needed. See to al' Available. 2 BR, 2 BA. At! gar. $170 up. fre!1tal Otc., ·::
cooking. Ideal for students. • • • • • • • • • 1 968-2'290 Lovely 3 BR. $285. Optlqn Miguel, to""·nhouse 3 hr, 2 e TV &:. mald serv avail. prec. ll81A Garnet. 673.fi918. extras int.,J'd. Closed gar. 3095 ~'lace Ave. 546-1034.. "
$145. SEPARATE 2 Br. Gar. • e • BRAND new 3 br, 2 ba,· lrg possible. BkT. ~ eVes. ba w/view. Bltns, dshw.hr, e Phone Service WATERFRONT Ba Ibo a $190. Ad~lts, no pets. N•wnert 8ffch ~~~
'•
Kids/petsz~ NEAR BEACH, deluxe
3
BR, lan1 + Uv rm. Dbl cat gar. N forced air ht, comm pool, ** WORKING WOMAN 5.'l, Island. 2 Bedroom apart· 2126 1'hur1n St. 545-.5800 . '.:.::1ti:;.;.o""-;,..;;;o.oc;;,; ____ l ~·
$150 • CO Y 2 .Br Cottage. 2.% BA. Huge owner's unit Space ,fol'.,. wash/qtyer. $300 ewport IHcb ::. ~a&c~~~t:t~~ will share 3RM furnished ment. Yearly. $225 a month. NEW 2 Br, 2 Ba, bltns, di:p;, BEACON BAY ,,
• Stove, crpts, dJ:ps, beam&. in new custom duplex, beam mo, 5.36-485(1,,sas.;1.2Tl. LRG Bach. $90. Close to Bch. ty Mortgage. n4/537/7393 apt. with ,same for ~) rent Call 613-9388. c1i;itg, pool, gar. Spac. mu, WATERFJtONT a .~ $160 ·NICE 2 Br Home. Enclt clng, view, patios, (pie, nr WALK to \\!S:tl?r 2 BR hse, Stv/ref. Util pd. , $65. Mo. plus l,S. utilities quiet secluded con1 plex. OtrrSTANDlNG VIEW!
gar. Yard for kids/pet, . shopping, no pets, $425 mo. singles/famlliea. Also 3 BR NEW h!ie, 2 Br; l%' .Ba. $215. Newport B•aCb (water (utnisbed). Not " .. !!Ja1 Penlnsuta Adults, oo pets. 316 \V. Bay Beautifully decora~ed. 1!f
; ..
I I
v•;_~·olrBsrn,g'1,Ba. Appl s. 67• AaLA E.!5:.A30C.M. Agt. Fee. Fncd, cpt/drp, bltns. Now. --'----''---·I del luxe -mlb urtat blreasoandnable, BAO!ELOR to 2 Br St., C?i-1. 3 BR. Private Beach .,~
iuuiwt"'' . ~ "''""'"°"' PRIVAeY." 2·m• + auiK!eck. BRAND cean. "" o e near . 1 & 2 BR, 2BA, Sll> & $165. Boat Dock. Tennis. '"' Call 645-0lll 4 BDRM 2fr'batbs tw t $325 y I Bl lrpl . NEW Bay & Newport, C.M. no monthly. 1st & last.. Crpts, drp•, bltn. r"n""' & Adul'", No """"· '""'
• • • • • • • • •
IS. , o s ory • eer Y: · tns, c, Lease with oMon to ni,,.. J cl · f 1 t & 12131 6!17 1496 -... ~ ..,. ...... ~ ; -~. --1 tn xlnt )oc; $350. Ask for gar. , tn• ~-· ease, eamng ee or s -oven. Covered carport, elose Yrly Lse $600 mo. 6i5-2555 ""'
LAGUNA BEACH OFnCE IRVINE Terrace fa m 11 y Dale 962-Wil llGHTS Home. 3 br, DR, ~m. echue2 &!3°!,0}' .. ~alim·sty? last. SEE -after SPM, eves Corona del Mir to shops & beaeh. Children THE NEW ·r~,
$140 -l Br furn, Ocean vlew. home, Jge l!v rm, formal din · -~~ or wk ends Avail Sept 1S'I' OK 830 C -. St <.•o -Nr. Town. rm, screened lanai, 4 BR, 4 3BR, 2 BA, ~ly decorated. on cor. NPl •. )iu', nu CID. • 2 Car Garages :2079~[_!T~~ur~i~!1N~o.J2L.:::·:_~~' liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii::miiiiiiiiiii I · enu:r ·~~..'...""~ HAYWOOD APARTMENTS
$235 -2 Br. Stove, refrlg, BA, 2 huge yards comp! fen· Nl'. the be&Ch. $265. lse. ALA Rental• 6424313 Avail. September ..: 1 ~R • $1?0 mo. inc!. clcc. in Newport Beach are
patio, chlld/pet ok. ced. $600 mo. i n c 1 d g 968-6215 or 962-8851. S260 .-2 BR, frP,lc, dbl gar, NEWPORT CREST $30 WE Ek & UP .,,.. nite Ille VI!\\'. adlts, 1"? pets, ready, The sales otfice ls
$250 -2 Br House. Din Rm. gardener call 6'1~2 aft 3BR, ZBA. widen, good loc:a· lrg yard. NeY:port Hgts, SALES OFFICE • Studio & 1 BR Apts. ntSb ..... " Days -54&--5240, Eves -open daUy from 10 Mt to
frplc, huge yard for 4:30. fion, nrshpg. Avail Sept 1st, $350 . Ne\v 4·BR frpJc, deck, Phone 645:filA1 •TV & Mald Service Avail. fl',.. ~ 6:30 PM. MacArthur Blvd.
kids/pet. 23=9=,H~ru=~OTRO==p=E~. ~,~B~R. $215 mo. can 968-6181 1 blk Deach! NeWport Shores. NEWPORT Crest, 2 Br. 2 • Phone Service -Htd. Pool . . . or~6 LRG 3 BR, 2 BA, erpts. drps, & San Joaquin Hills Road. ...q * Lc;~c~,::rS * 2BA, 1 blk beach, crpts, Irvine $500 ·Very lrg 3 BR, 3 BA, 2 Ba, Lease, $475mo. 545--0171 e ~il1fe:,!:~l~t~~ ON TEN ACRES ~tn~, $ l ~5 !;32° · 787 644--5565 ~!
FREE RENTAL SERVICE drps. frplc, stve, refrig, frolc's, Yard, de<:k. CdM. Avail Sept. 548-9755 or 645-3967 Apti.. furn .1wifurn. Lease a mar.
1 if no SEACLIFF Manor Apt&. 1
auto gar door' opener, NU-VIEW RENTALS Coftd:o. Fur.n. or (Ad good for$5 on rent) fll'eplace / prtv. patios. ~~·~512· Br. 1Untum. $145. Pool. Ask ~"'
-r-owNE.RS-OF_$_ co.verect patio, $375 mo/Yr-3 BR., 2 ba. •·•··••• $375/475 6'73-4030 or 494-3248 Unfurn. 3 Pool T · c • t'I Bkfst 2 BEDROOM, quiet at· about our discount plan. •l"t
$REAL PROPERTY$ .IY,,;·,.:675-::.:.,,::1485::;'::.·~-~=-3.BR., 2% ba ....... $385/450 BLUFFS 25 NEWLY decor. 2 BR, 114 Ba, s ennis on.n mosphett, Sl45/mo. Adults 1525 Placentia AYe. NB. ~ -"' 2 BR, ~ ba den, A/C ..• $275 · • · new sect i 0 n • ---------$200. 1 BR $190. Incld's gas 900 Sea Lane, CdM 644·2611 or married cpl pref'd. 548-82. .:
We are back to SERVE YOU HARBOR View H 11 1 s. 4 BR, 2i,s ba ....•.•.... $475 pobepltular
5Z. BplanR , ":ide ~~ Fountain Valley & ""1r. Adults, no pets. tMa.cAi·lhur nr Coast lhvy/ 968-8064 . Y&:•RLY RENT/4L 0~
AG A IN ! FREE OF rm, pool, spectacular w . 2 nr tenn... "·'" ·'095 114 E 20th SI ~ ~IARGE C JI ' M M tal • 0~ 'th BR. 2 baths, tam nn. $.'\50 cl"c/pool. "~A;•t. C""t d-•, 3 BR 2 Ba C ndo dbl ll'tU-'t • • " 2 BR A I R I I . .._,. , a prior to o. to o. ren -"-1 3 BR 2 bath ~A1111 UJJ ,,.....,., ..... ..... • o • e gr. C.M. 2 BR Upper apt. Aval! Sep1 · P · e rig. urn. 1 blk from ocean 2 br 1 ba
Do 'l ! IS pool malnt 64'2359 · 1 .......... ..-dpts, adultl, nope•-. •-t & w.,her dryer I -rm Newl" decorated Ch ildren ' ' ' 11t vacancy. n ose · · ..-4 BR 2 b ...... •.t75 .... ..., • .• poo • """' • 1175 • Attraco·ve furn. lront 1st. So of hwy. Gal'rlen, e.ncl " · patio ampJe parking. $260 ' Save tirne. RUS"MC 3 Br, 2 Ba home, ' v!"'":i " ........ "'" last + dep. $575 mo. Avail ~1191 or 9fi8..1781 eves. 2 R gar Walk to everything O.K. Mature Pers ons per il,o 67:1·6935
$ •LA REN••LS $ ed 1s1on-~Ap.t.01..., Call eves or wknds. B · Quiet, clean. Patio. · . . · 646-1809 548-8638 · · ~ " ''" completely remodel on ..,.....-.,.u.o TownhouM Unfurn. 335 Garage. Adults, no pet. ~ mo 1nclds uni. Call · · WALK to Boaches -dtx 2 Br.
Newport & Bay, CM (l42.83IO large comer lot. 4 0 0 OPEN 2234.-A Rutgers Or., =";;""~1'8:::;::3c,. =~~~~~ NEW l BR. Bltns, drps, encl gar. Adults over 21. No mi
LANDLORDS
! Jaam1ne. $425. im-1658 THE .BLUFFS Coron• Crel Mor CM . UPPER 3 BR 2 BA trpl 2 crptg, pool. BBQ. Go<. pets. Yearly. $215. lm-1990
• SPAC. home 3 Br, 3 Ba, 2 d h•11 SHARP NEw ·3-er, Pool '& · d ks blt ·' N ~h Adults. No pets. 3"ffl W. Bay or 213: 214-3933. ,:! We s I II e in N ........... $500 re I yard,' maintenance custom NEW 1 BR. 3 blktl to Beach! STUDIO apt, furn. Person ec • -'!18· r. . St 01 pee a i e .. _. frplcs, yrd, patio. , mo. & d°"· ••15 ·~•tmo. Utll Pd. 1 or 2 over 40. $115/mo. 2191 stores. $325/mo. Ls e. . . -1700-•~e·s·T··c LIFF DR '''
Beach e Coron3. de! Mr.r • Avail 9/1. 601 Poppy. crpU, •va· ·-·per mo. .,....., 962-2'110 $140. UP. 2 Br; 3 Br., 2 Ba. "' . ' '
1
& LagUna. O:•r Reotal Ser· · """"'~""~-'=-~--:;c-=.,-ht ~ last .Ii deposit. Adults. Avail 9/1. 673-8911 Harbor Blvd., Od across;1,c==='-,---=~-Pool, blt·ins, play yard. 2 BR., 2 BA. mt:n. appliances. ~
vice '" FREF to You! Try •SO. of H'A')', 3 BR, 2 BA. REALTY &W-)846 .evenings & wknds. Oupl•xts Furn. 345 from K-~1art, Space 19. 2 BR, yai:d, garage, $2W per Under New Management. Pool, ~-6Z74, )
Nu-View! Like ne~" 407 Heliotrope. A Company With Vision -JIARB0if\!J:EWifc)~fES-SM apt in REAR -l older mo. Will show Sat 9-l2. 221!! College No. 1 646-6032 NICE 2 BR, 1 ~ BA, yrly, ~
NU-VIEW RENTALS cl400~~yr~lY~·------.Univ. Park Center, Irvine $575'per mo with gardener, Laguna 'Be•ch adult only. Furn. Util pd. 508~ Mari g 0 1 d · No 2 BDRM, crpts, drps, bltns, dishwshr, garage, 1,~ block J
67J.4030 or 494.324g &ta Mell Call Anytime, 552-1500· . 5BR., 3BA, pl-1J, near pool ;;.;;,(;;::;::..,:;;:.::;.____ $125. inquire Apt. No. 4 mchiidre c~=n~/~pe~"~·-----washing facil. Nr. shop'g, to beach. $275. s.18-12.o4. e·!I )
RENT
2
BR houses _
4
on ._________ O!rlce hours 8 AM to 8 PM Ir ·clubhouse. ;1860 Port 1 'BR lo~·er Oplx, furn, FA REAR. 2335 Elden, C.a.t. BRAND new large 2 Br apt $180/mo. Adults only. J69-B 2 hr, l-blk-ocean: patio r
lot. $160 ea. Avail now. GARAGE Apt. 1 bt Sl«l utU Oµiow. Re8dy' Sept. 15. heat, priv patio, enclosed 1 & 2 BR, lrg, $165 & $195. w/be_am ceilll_lgs, bltns ,S:. Og\e St. CM. 644-4359. $ZlD yrly; no pets; refrig " llliOO)-~th St., off Pioneer, pd. stove/rd", CID. Sngl. 'XU ''IE HAVE RENTALS 644-1295 or-"2-2222 gar. Near beacbo.avaU Sept New . crpt• Swim'g pool. tree . top view. ~ 0 0 ;:i NEWLY DECORATED 128~ 41? ~; stiag; 6(2-3331 ,}.~
'-1· .. -.• Se 1• Cit' SR CITIZEN ~~--·le 2 ' ' NEWPORT • n"ach. S.e I I l5th. 4s.Hl601 Adults. Ideal for Bachelor. Jasmine, $350. 673-1658 2 · , ....,,,ewuuu. nrul" 1zens . /rlJ.1-a .,..:r 'May we be of ~e sx: 2 B 1 BR w/gar. Water pd. Call BLUFFS, 2 BR, newly ,~1
preferred. 213-422-8237 or I br, 1~ ba, $175. Lovely. in soMne . "$72,rioG or lease $5.50/mo. Newport &..ch l99.'l Oiurch St. 548-9633 R, ne~· Y decor. Carp, btwn 1 & 5, 636-4120 decorated, pools, view, eltt .:i
714-&l2-4603 NEW PAINT in & out'. 3 Br, Your bouSing need. s? Spac. Condo 3-BR, pool &: 3 BR, 1~~ BA. djs, bltns; pool. $220 ~lo. 2116 "E" Placentia $145. 2 car gar, lse $.150. 67$-0175 .~., I
2 Ba I-Fpl Pets/kt'~ yard •maint. Cusf. ......,,ts &: HURRY -Won:t La.st Long. Upstal-. _yr_ Y_· Le.,._ · 644-1662 Agent. Need a .. Pad"? Place an ad! ~. · \ll" drp Jst &: last ~ d Oceanrront, winier. Beaut. ·~ 2 BOID.I. New carp. pa.int. UNF1.JRN l"uxurlous Spacious ) Call 642-5678 f'.i"EAT 4 br 2 ba on ~ch Da;&'5.s1-<N'"lf~ ~ furn. lo'A't'r 2 BR, 1%. BA. 757 Shalimar Dr., C.l\l Encl. patio. No pets $200. 2 BR apt w/frplc, 1731 Bed· ,
• S375 yrly. Nwpt Shrs w/'tfJr. -''¥'• Fr p 1 c, washer/dryer. NleE 1 & 2 BR Trailers. $80 -See ~'lgr at 2533 Orange. ford Ln. .NB, 646-8372" ~
crpt'd, fncd, dbl gar , I "'-""2830'=~-----lSth St. 642-t265 'lJ,., """r•s LRG redec. 2 BR, shag TOWNHOUSE, 38&, 2% ba, > ALA Rentals 642-8313 WESTC'LIFF-3 '.1 B'A.,' 2 BA, rA" & Up. Mature aduJts 133 E. ~b'"""v + !
CLASSIFIED
HOURS
Advertisers may place
their ads by telephone
8:00 a.m. to 5:30 p.m.
i1onday thru Friday
8 to noon Saturday
COSTA MESA 'omCE
330 w. Bsy
642-1!678
NEWPORT BEACH
3333 Newport Blvd.
642.5678
HUN'nNGTON BEACH
17875 Beach Blvd.
540-1220
LAGUNA BEACH
222 Forest Ave.
494.9456
SAN CLEMENTE
305 N. El Camino Real
492-4420
SA V ROE
..._ •~"""/mo •-t •-~ d WINTER Lease 2 BR furn .,.. • crpts, bltns. ln neat 4-plex. pool, on BluUs nr Hoag 1
ME E 1nrff ......., · ~ • i.an\, sec ep. ' ' · ·* SHADY ~"'"POOL $160/ 642 7 ' bedroom _ Sharp .& "SINCE ~•u"" n4t792-'1828 aft 6 Pm. bltins, crpts, drps,' else t0 e Adult ~);id $l4.5 mo. -315 Hosp. $300. 548-3993. 1
~ -,-B~R-.2--ba,.:.adul=t°'s"'.-=1".-N-e-w··. 1 ocean & bay,· $275 mo. Joo e up. TOWNHOUSE e TROPICAL POOL e Sin Cl1n'Mftte 1
cle•n, quiet street near ht Western Bank Bldg. ly painted .in/out,~ crpt.. Avail Sept. 15th. ca 11 1
2
77 E.
2
St. CM 642-3645. 2 Br, fireplace, pool, private 2 Br Studlo, 1~2: Ba. Frpl, --';"
schools. R1r• req'd, Unl~t-' P11.rk, Irv~ No pets. $285 per mo. 675-0544 or SIJ4.;.1858. BR, -BA fum apt. No patios, continental break· spiral strcse. $200. E/side NEW large 2 BR. 1%. ha, il
no pets. $275. per D•y1 552·7000 N'9htt George ~7071'. • · OCEANFRONT . _ On the ~t11~re~ts. ~ Center fast. Spacious &TOunds, near on 18th. 548-1168 plus gar & shop, 314 A. Del ~
month, CALL 540-1151 3 BDRM in Back Bay. New Sand, winter. 3 Br, 2 Ba. · shopping Ii: fine beach. Fur. 2BR, lBa, dsh/vosh, bltins, rar~ality extras. Adults, ·\
HERITAGE REAL-NEW 3 Br. 2BA. Univer. crpts & drps, frplc &. bltns, $32.S/mo. Avail · 9/15 . nished or unfurnished, from enclsd gar, 1 child ok. No 9'i-· f
TORS
Park. \V/w cpts, drps, 2 car .,.,.... & b'"' ard 675-0366 cH;..u;..n..;t_in_,gtoc:.:;.;;•..;:;8.:;e:.••::::h::_ __ 1 $240 Corona del Mar pets. $160 rho. Call 846-7129. NEAR beach, 2 BR, 1% BA >
• • pools, tennis Nr. schls. ·--re ..... y · 1 .,0-"'-~'-~---~= -644-isll ' 1100 f /d $185 t
I -_ . . ~'l375=·:..::S5::2--'8lO'l8=.. ,-----I $275. mo. 540-4013 ' .";..•:.•;.ol•:.•;c•:;•;..;.ll.:;n:;.tu:;m:.:.:.:._..;350~ $145 • $165 1 '!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!. !!!!11!!!!!11!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! $1Poo40.1UPBJ.t2. Br; 31 Br, 2 rdBa. h~ru:e ~~3.gts rps. " ,
CLOSE to new Bullocks, So .. -LUXURY HOME. S Br, 3 Ba, J}ACHELOR. & 1 BR., patlos,PC • ·ms, Pay ya · . ' v
Coast Plaza. New 3 BR, 2 _L_•;:;g_u_n_•_Bo.u._c_hc____ 2 trplcs, lrg tam. rms. $515. Corona del Mar trplc's priv. garages -.i-•-•;.;l;..•_Me-"'"-,.'-----1996 Ma~le Ave .. _ . ...:...642-3813 Sin Juan C•plstr•no •
Ba. Greenbrook home . SlGS . 1 BR. Near beach! Avllil.·intm. 642--·"' Divided bath & lots of NEW 2 & 3 BR Esid1 ;EW 2 BR studio condo ~ CMl385_l~-~111992 carnation, Child & pet welcome. S.n Jun• C•pistr.,. OCE~ Vu lig 2 Bl', refrig, closets. Rec.' hall, pool & TIRED OF NOISE? Call 675-6488 eves. bltins, D/W crpt,s, drp&: , ~~o~"~~~-----$250 . 2 BR. 2 BA, apt. All ~ve. -pe.liQ. Priv. heh. pool tables, sauna baths. \\'ilson Garden Apta. 2 Br, . 1
LEASE· Lease Option. Love-bltns. Deck. Ocean· Vu? NEW 3· B~ 2. lt&,. f.1n nn 67~45 no pets_: Ue $275. See for yourself. 1730l l14 Ba, crpts, drps. Pool. D1n1 Point b~· Y.'8Sh fa c '
ly 2 BR Condo. $235/mo. $325 . 3 BR, 2 BA ocean view 119gie. $325, l~as.e. ... Adlts. Keel.son Ln. (1 blk W. of Mature adults, no pets.
2400 Elden. Avail Sept. 15th. home~ 5 min, malk beach! POOl;lake prtv. abt pr, cpl, Oal\I· POfnt , Beach, 1 blk ~of Slater). ONLY $162.50/MO. 2 BR. deluxe paneled apt, Apt1 •1
Bkr. 838--6341 eves. NU-V_IEW R,ENTALS· drps, o.w. 49f.100.1ext609 842-8 2283w Fountain Way East downstairs, crpts, d rps, Furn •. or Unfur:n. 370 :
•--H t..&.. PANORAMIC OCEAN VIEW MEN, small beach hotel. C · Of Harbo1· on Wilson) bltns, gar. $ 2 O O / m 0 ,
LEASE -3 Br. home. East 6i3-4030 or , .494-3248 $anta --. •rtl Xtra Irt 3 Br. leu than 1 yr Rooms sn.50 per y,•k. Apts Call 646-2846 831--0834. Costa Mesi
end Costa Mesa. Avail TOP OF nra \\'ORl.D .c-...:. • • · old, 27' livllli . rm, bltn $95 "°' Oct. 1st. IW6-«n.O aft 5pm OCEAN VIE\V, large 3 '~ ACRE, horse corrals. 2 Jtitchen. Spectacular view of per month. 536-7056 Bf~ULT LIVING!! 2 Br. S\.\•eeping harbor vu. THE EX1...'T!'ING .,~
I BR UUI ~.... t'g ~-m. 2 bath new"• BR. '1 BA, ~ mo. 1,.. hts at night l30ll Lanuna Be•ch R Units .\ 1 BR's Water & gas incl'd. Adults,. PALM ME. ri APT$. ,,, · um,.........,, crp • ucuiuu :1v Rtferencea required. · mo. -·=-•--"'-"'----·I w/Loflll. Frplc's, beam N d $195 493-6039 ..,....
Enclosed yard. $150/mo. d_erorated, new Qraperiest ,s.;:7,.-03.3s ' •• ·~ -<';:~=2895=~,---o----OCEAN beach front, 2 BR, ceil., patio & pool, bltins, &
0
ogs. · • l\'JINUTES TO NPT. Bal.
1
642-364ROOM5 Bachelor Hou··. ftrep1aoe, family room. bull "-""'=".°"p~.w-n.--or-'-~-·fi~rt Bue" 2 bas, $350. mo. 141 Ocean· refrig avail. $160 to $225. Huntlnnton Beach FURN. OR UNFURN. ..., ins, $425.00 per J114?11th -lront, 4" ·~i. Util pd. No ..,.ts. ----'"<---'-.;..... Unbelievably 1·-e apla ,
'
-1 & 1 · 1 .::644-o:,.::2>::;13,,_ ___ ~~ Unfum. 310 · ~ ~ -
0
$
".'%.
1
c, · sNotov~ «A~ ~J· 1 · -===--~_;;c:;: NEWPORT'S FINEST 1 BR upper· tum Nr. beach & ~ }},8fl0il,t'!~,, ~~; VILLA YORBA hi uge hpool, Jatc~~ect bit· ~:
CLASSIFIED wi mo. ~·· -· LAGUNA N;guel; •BR, 2 ba. 0.0.r•I $185 d ~ ~ APTS. "'• ' ag crp '• -~ """" -: 2 BR + gar, $145. 3 BR, Sl8S liV'-rm & din . afea, trplc, :;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; BEACH town. . mo, A ulls, oo ALL ELECTRIC f!tc. Adults, no pet.S: i1•
DEADLINES kld•/pell/s!ngles OK. Agt. b!l-ins, relrig-!reeUr, cpt, • j!RAND NEW 3 BR, 2 BA. pets. 494-5380 GOLD MEDALLION 16000 Villa Yorba SINGLES From 1150 "'
NORTH COUNTY
dial free 540.1220
Deadline tor COPY le k~ Fee. 9'19-S430 drps, 2 car gar. Ex.eel view, CdM 3 BR. 2 be. •• view. Fum. ~ec kit. W/w crpt'g, drps. 51if'lO Apt, $145 includes 2 BR Apt / ti 1 (Off ::gron ~h So ~ BEDRM. From $165 ;:
ls 5:30 p.m. the day NEW
3
Br ,_ ho \\'Orkshop, Imriiac. $350. ht, $500 Mo/yearly. i:~Jy. $~'MO. uti itles. l\.1ale only. 1st & I w pa o, enc gar, Be B ego ·• · !)n BEDRM. From S18S fore publication. except ovwn me, nr last, deposit. lease. 495-42~. Penln. Pt. 3. BR, 2 .. bL Unl. 548-2119 last. 497-1838 w 91orage &: laund. facil. ach lvd., 1 blk. beyond Unfurn Apl8 A·Jail Froin $10
for Sunday A J\.tonday pool. Ready foroccup. Sept RENT ocean view home, $37SMol}: arJy • L'd Isl Adlts only, no p ets. Edinger to Stark, E. to to SU LESS. F,ditlons when deadline 1st. $285. 'Jack, ~1633 ,e · • 1 O 1 $165/mo. Melody Ln. in Malaga, tum right.! Yqu're right, they're under·
ts Saturday, 12 noon. MONTlCELLO Condo, 3 Br 2 ~cl!: Jea~~·H~ho~~~ D&:ELU~El>~~~x3 ~~ r~~ 2 BR, 2 BA. bnck tprlc, dbl C.M. 64&-0977 or 646--1809. 714/142-9622 priced! 1561 ?.tesa Dr.
CLASSIFIED Ba newly deco"rated, $250 Shag ept"g, open 'beam ceil· trplc, bltns, dshwht, shag gar, Winter rental. S350 plus 2 BR, w/w shag crpts. drps, --F.RESH_A.IR--(5 blks from Newport Blvd.'
REGULATIONS mo, no pets, 833-0328 tng, tncd yard. Avail mid crptg. Yrly/mo. $350. Ut'il. 673-1593 aft 5 pm. sty, full BA & %. Fenced 3 Blocks to beach. L.rg 3 br 54S·9'.llSO
ERRORS: Adverli9en: Dana Point Sep!. $315 mo. 494-7109 M.;-1346. Newport BHch r:.0Ma1::ire~u1~:iy.e~~ apt. 2 Car gar. W/w crpt/ PREVIEW OPENING
should check their ada NT LEASE 3 A,RCll BAY .. 3 Br. 2 Ba.,l'!!'!!!!"'"!!!!!!!!".,..,.l!!!..;1!!! 3 BR. part furn. w/2 car child, pets. Park-like sur· drps, bltns, dsh"'Shr'. No Award wirtni"' 1, 'l & 3 br
dally A report errors O:w~2BRO:SA split t!et. Beam O!:iling llYing nn, ~""-. lttaftCI gar. Lrg sundeck. ~-blk Beach R1ntal-Yrly. roundings. $l7S/mo. pets. $245 per mo. Call apts w/1amily nns. No
Immediately._. THE Walk 10 Doheny State trplc. Charm. lease opt., I _..._._'-------~ I from 1beach. Yearly. 213: 2 br 2 ba patio 50 rt from 548-6920 536-lID. lease. Sorry, no pets. From >
DAILY PlLOT assumes Beach. Vac. $200. (n41 ml» dwn. $425 mo, Own/ YEARLY, lrg modem 3BR, 94¥4890. 122 42nd St. oce8n. 1 fr old, (ar. $280 per FOUR SEASONS APTS. H~BOUR VJLLAGE, Hun· ~~ur.$1~Pts.O~ n>:!
U,.billty tor the first In. 7'l2..:s5flO Agt. 494-0451 2BA Shag crpts wlk in Newport Bch. mo. 6'73-693.S. Spac, 2 s'"" 2 BR, l•L BA, tington Harbour area, only A Ad
correct insertion only. HOUSE tor rent; 3 BR, 2 closets, l30 Pearl. 6'15-4158 YEARLY Lease, 3 BR, 2BA, •6CEANFRONT 1 BR bltM, crp~ts, drps,n priv 'l1 2 & 3 Br. on 2 acres. cv•,.· M alnsPhoat Farizi~12·
Fountaln V•ll9'/ bath, ChU~n ok, Excellent bltlns, frplc, crpts. drps, VI · Adult & Fam sections. os eaa. ne OJiN"V. w.
1
CANCEtJ..ATIONS: loca'"'"'· 1315 mo. 491-7134 lapuna, 8Hd\ . w/deck. 5 hoU1e1 to ocean. !!~:ed a~tsposa\"''$200• pamotio, pnpet"°,· ' $1pooS5l, .$2,nvJ.oalocnn. NSto Brand nu. From $180. 4561 * CASA VICTORIA * ~~ntoki:ifea:·~~o~ 3bf:n';, k~A~:1°iJi~'lc1d~ Any;;lsthe'BESTDAYto 5m. bOU&e turn/unfurn, 3 U'iO per 'mo. Call ~· . . C.M: 646-14s0.;)J . Hei1St.846-3166or846-507G. l, 2 & 3 BR. Furn & Uni.
o! the un' NUMBER OK. Like new. Only $255. ru11 an ad! Don't delay. .. bl.kl from.t;e .. ch, bachJ pref. 615-0544/884-18S8. ' BRIGHT & Ch rt 1 2 B ** $149 ** Carpets, drapes, DAV, TV n..w..i.. ..... __._.. ~-",..,,.., YEARLY Se ee u .r. 2 BR, crpts, drps, bltns. Call a.... . 2 BR A '"'-"-ant. Pool, etc. 525 Victoria ..
given you by your .ad \;.;"'°~·;N;::o;lee=:""'E"::':842-4421====call==totlli.Y==-=·:-::·~=1•:·====':"°:;"'°::·:-~~;'.:=== -ashore by 51st. apt., Ba,ytront. Prlv. paUo. 548-8196 or 61:>-6616 or see ~CKMI pts. ~.-..St. at Harbor, Cf,f. 642-8970 taker as receipt of .your 1 "T'f'"" Lrg 2 BRIJOO. lmmed. oc-Winter only, no Pets . 2'246 A Canyon Dr. Rent drpg. N'ear Beach A Slater. Ask about M 0 v e-1 n
cancellation. This kOI ~ cupancy. · 548-1601 I 1673-3053' $150/mo. 1st & last + $100 Pool. Pets It children wel-Allowance
number mu.at be r::· d.OQ"O .&\'-f _ f) 'C ~s· · • 213: 33.3-M52. · % BLK from heh, 3 Br, 2 Ba, deposit req. No pets. come. 842-3546. EXTRA Large 1 or 2 Br. 1
aented by the dadve ser ~\!::) J..'"J .~).. '!:J P([• Ouol1xH, . sundeck, gar. Winter or BRAND new 2 Bdrm. $2'2S. $140 • % MI. N. of Hntg Bch. Heated pool. From-.._$14;;.
In .... of • lopute. ~ That Intriguing w oro' Game with a c •oc•t. _.:.F.;:•::;m:;;·..;•;.:r..;U;cnfv:::.=:.:m::·...:355;: Summer. $300. Av! Sept. 8. Open for your !mpeeUon 2 Br, bltna. cpts, drps, pool, Mature adults. lnlant o!C No CA?{CELLATION 0 R n « 177 44th St. 67"a-07n bet. 4 PM & 6 PM Wed. thru pl laycll yCpardl • carport & lndry pets. 1881 ~I 0 n r 0 v i a .
CORRECI10N OF NEW MW~ CLAY L POUAH------81tbn Pentntule OCEANFRONT - 2 BR Sun. at m E. 16th St. 1st a · e .\ 1 &m child ok. 645-2174.
AO BEFO~ RUNNING: 0 Reorranoe' r.tt.r• of tti. duplex. Sept. la-June ,15, Mo. rent + $100 deposit. 842-4004 aft 5:30 pm. IRE '=o"E°'c'°'.::....u.N"F·.· 2-B-,-12-Ba-.I i,,1
Every eUort 11 made to four xrombi.d WOfdt be-~rrr-.BA~ 1&;1~~~~· 0~ lower -$250. upper -$300. NEWLY decor. 2 Br, 2 Ba WALK TO BEACH $215. FURN 2 Br/t~ Ba, ,::' ~~~lorbaCOIT<!Cs be<!~• o~":~d low to f0tm lovr litliP'9 worda. harbor. 911 E. Balboa. , 642-6277 $21& 5. 1 BR,dSl170. lncld'a gas . l & 2 BR, Crpt/drps, bit· $200, 1 Br $190. Ad20tults, no ....,, · '""" $35 .\ Up. 1 BR., 2 BR It v.1r. A u ts, no pets. 1ns, gar. 308 16th. 536-8548 or pets. 114 E. h St.[ • ~ t~oC::i.~t~'"!d 1 · H ·o K S RE ' I Bachelora1. TheColorM TV,4m15aNW C~I . 114 E. ~h St., 847·3957. 205 15th. 960-17"9. ~· .;7
has appeared fn the ·1 1•· ] I I ] -11•1 ,.rv, poo · esa, · ·" · 2-STORY Villa. Pacllic 2 BR WEST BAY 21 paper. Apart"*"" for"9Rt Newport Bl., N.B. S46-0081. * STUNNING 1 Br. Garden ea. w/RA. ~A down, !iv. 2 BR 1 BA furn Jni
, , 2 BR, upstairs, near bch. & Apt. Pool. Rec area. $145. nn. din, rm. kit. w/bltns. 2 BR 2 BA unfurn UJ5
DIME-A·UNE ADS: i stores. Utll. pd. Wtnter. 710 W. 18th St. C.~f. Adults. Brand new. 968-S497 151 E. 21st. &'t., C.M.
Th<se . ads att str~ MAB LY ; Apts. Furn. 360 $175.300'4thSt.N.B. 1175-Lrg3 BR,2BA,clean, DOWNTOWN 3 BR. crpts. * 6<6-8666 *
cuh Jn tdv•nce by, 1-~;..,;......,r....:,,.-1, 1 i f -"'=.;...;=;..... __ _..;;.; t..RG 1 Br. t ea. apt. 1 blk to crpts & drps, adults, no drps, Huntiftl'°" leleh fi~ ~'g '::o::! ~c;i ' ' I . lllboe ltl•ncf Bay sC?f.~anci yearly, S19'5 pets. 765 Shalimar, 547-115.5. bl~ D/\V, a:ar,;J i aro.19 • DE ,
Cl>S
°'· •,.•"-M' .,.3 p •• m
0
.mFrldayc•
12
• I ' mo. aya, 1 BR, pool, adults, $130. Also ........ n10. * ...,..,...,., LUXE Adwl Pcolslde ,....., I \VATER.Jo"RONT. t BR. fplc, 2 BR cloae to ~an furn wtr 2BR · $150 NEW 2 BR D/W .1-Gardtn Bu-1
-.. N r .
noon _ all bnuteh DI· I G A T' N Y ' ! prlv patio. J>lil!lna, 1vaU pd. Av.U Sept. 1 s 3is East 11th Place. ..,.... drps, '•ha• et\>ts. r<; ocean. Frr>lc,•iii" \)ltlo, 6 Clees. ~-~, :....:;.r..;...;.I ;....;r-~· Mark Twotn: "Owr Heovel')o. Sept lit. inq: 400 s. 213/~ or Len 521 .... BDRM, stove, retrli, Huntington Harbour. Adlta. pools, aauna, ten n t s. u.
. . _ . _ ly Fother invfinted men be-B&yfronl No. 5• Iii BLOCK to beach. 1 4 2 dl$hwhr. 103 Shallmlll'. $1fi0. no pets, $200 846-4360 846-4259.
mi; DAlLh YrtllLOT, to .. ~ ._ ....... _,_,_ ...... _. cause he was di.Op'pointed in Balbol Penlmut-BR, ~ ...... ..,e. wt n t c r , mo. 962-8936 3 BR, 2 BA. crpts, -'-.
1
Bdrm. From $135.
""""'t • ... -· ~ • ' · ---~ N rt •---sU'y, ,edit, censor or re-I H I T LE B l 1ne -. ii t·aa •vallabe Sept. 1. 673--(i640 LARGE, newly decor. 3 BR, bltns, walk to park, tennis ewpo 1MKt. tt... any advertl~L 1-..-_;p~~;o....;--l $U WEEK &. UP 2 br. l·blk«'<an: patio 2 tiled ba11. Adulto. no pats. cts. 13SO/mo. 213/592/5143. BA FRO
and to change tu rates I ] I ] I' G Complft,tht d111e~l ... qucih(I • &NpqRooma S21S yrly; adUtt, no pets $22$mo.Agt.64&4114. * 3 BR, 2 BA Stud io. lt;ae ~t~ldlS:-tn 1~:!
A reiuJ•tloos without ~~.__._..__.__.__, by flll lng ·tn the lllW"!I wotd... : ~U::;'1~ A~m• 128-46 St: shat: 6424331 LRG 2 BR. CJ1)ll. drps. blb\4, $195/mo. Mature family. del. l.Jda..' AcJlts. ~
prior not.let. vou d9"1elop fr«11 .np No. 3 below. IA\,BOA INN * 2, 3, 4 BR apta * pl'l.v. pa.Uo, no pets . Avail 8121. 84l-0350. bldg.~ or 673-ll.ft
CLAJSll'llD PRINT NUMBERED l EITIRS IN lfXI Mal11 Sine! I> blk to beach. )'<'atly $165Jmo. lli7.-. 3BR. 2BA, w/d<n aood loea· OCEANl'RONT 2 or 3 Dr.
MAILING ADDRESS !H[Sf SQUARES omn«1 67W60tl or 673-6310 IMMAC 2 br, Nearly new, bon nr sh.PC· Av.U Sept. Day1 213, -.... 419
• · ... 'l" "• d "f MAr 2 BR. 2 SA, all blt-ina, near Dlt.hwasher, range, Xlnt 1st S2'15 mo. OlU fl68.41.8'l or wkncb It an ~ c:olled·
P. ~~ lll60,
1
f u.;sc0RGA~Bl! •• ~~~~E lETIEIS ] , ] I I, ] I ]· bay l beach. Av.U. Sept 15. srea. PX! mo. 6~. I-RO 2 Br. 11\ Ba, atudlo. 213: -ll\51 \
. eta ·-"'~ ~ . . . .. . . . 5r\1DJO Apts. Beaut. Joe. 2 $215. 673--04'13. tJm\JRN l It 2 BR Cardt.n Encl gar, mat~ couple. oo OCEANFRONT YllitY 2
92626 SCllAuLETS ANSWERS IN CLASSIRC ano·N· '118 w..1 from $121 to 1110. llle t-••draw 1n th• WesL AP"· l'rpk. otw, ~riv. pats. 1157.50/mo. 812-0350. BR w/de<I< ~ a: . .,.. · :."" Jncld'a uUI. eTh-4174. .a Dl11t PUot Oasslfied patio, $160-$190. 551..:ZS.U. Nted a "Pad"! P\l.ce a n ad? '* Call ......,. 1"
•I • • .. ~
JO D.lll Y PILOT ThurSd.,, August 23, 19i>
I~ I { ... UM 1~1 1 Loot•-][SJ 1---1~ I ---l ~ ~I ~_ ....... _. -,fill . [ lft I rn ... )!IM
-L; ... 13_. 1(11] ll llII (
Aptt., Offlc:o Rtnltl 4tc) Rentals Wtnt.d 4.lO II ~loiiaiitiiiiiiiiiiii;;;;;;5;5S Cement, Coner.It
Fum. or Unfum. J70 I;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;::;::::;::;::::;;;;; HovwlNOl!!f Htlp Wanted, M&F 710 Htlp Wonted. M & I' 710 HtlpWanttd, M & I' lit •:
S.1:1 Clement• .PRESTIGE Rn~:!~~:k,~flrat~~ 1~:1-:i~'1U~~ 1 •GENEROUS• c:t1~:fa11C:~·:-e~~lvc:~~:
OFFIC::ES or dupli>x. ~18,)' considt>r I Replace w/concrete ~-fl.
llOUSF. OF CLEAN
Steanl carptt cleaning, Wln·
dol'o'8 &. floorl'I, tree est. 6'2-6824. EXCITING Nf.:\V APTS 1'~ountaJn Vt.lley, 8eftUtl• sharing. !IOB·S-161 art . 5. • REWARD. No delays. Fr~ l!lll. Walks,
Ready by Scho01t1m<• ful new building, if'Ol.lnd * \\1,\1\'TED : 1 B!t apt. ful'n, I alab!, p111los. No job too LITE Housell:eeplng,
l, 2, 3, Bit Apt$. St>e at floor, 3,000 1q1uu•e feet, quicr loc11.tion. $150. 1n11x. I For retuni or any lnlont'&· ;;';;'"o;al;,I:;;. ,..638-33-_.25~ . .,.-,-~-Care-One-two days ~~~ ~ ~m1tJ:~s ~ill dlvtde into smaller Cr<1.d student. 9 A~f·a PJ\1.1 lion leadhia to relutn of a PATIOS, walb-, drive1. Saw, Rc!U..-'32-6529
Clenltntc Gen'! lloapl1all . ffficn. 50c per 8QU&rt' S33-S193, afi s. 97~9'..'30_. -~old four leaf clover pin, break, reniove & replace L•ncftcaping
Child -··
492--1021 * * * 492-8700 Ool, lncludeic cnrpets, OiJ\I Fa;nily ,of '.l, non· .i.pprox, 2 inches in dlamete1· concrete. 548-8668 (or est.
drapes, all utilities, jani· drinkers. No pets dt>sirt's 3 v.•lth je\\"elt.'<I horitllhoe Iii CUSTOJ\.1 CEMl!:N1' \VORK FOR a Unique and
tor service. Cali 1tfarilyn Br hDme $325. l'~f. 673-1999 <-4'ntcr: al50, "Old locket Drives WALKS, Patios, Pool Personalized S l y I e ln I~ ~:Sl~ov~all;,~(n~4~)~832-;M40~~·!!!!!•i '~~~~~~~~~ • d--'--Do "" ••1• Land 1 1 & (was on t'hain\, approx. ~ ~. n, "''v-<hl ,, scap rtg, co oncaplng
-NE 0 size of a niekel, lnscribt!d Child Co1re and interior designing. Con·
i iiiiiiiiiimiiiil j· W FFICES [ ]~ !n scr'.pt, FL;\. 111cse are tact James C. Elmer, AIRPORT ,_..OMii deeply treasured family LICENSED DA y CARE Landscaping &: Plant Co.
Rooms 400 No lease req'd, ftJU l'ICrvicc, 1nemenlos & the loss is Ir. Opening for h\'O children Free Est. 642--6165
drps, cpl.II, music. 11lr cond., f'\":placeable. p LE As E e 646--0160 • M • NICE room. pvt homf'. \Volk
dl&tance OCX: & Jo,airview
Hocp. $13 \.\•k. $50 nlO. ~o
ROOMS $20 "·k up w/klt S::.J "* up apts. Children & pet
section. 2376 Ne\.\'J)Orl Blvd.,
CM. 548-9755, 645-3967.
RM. P\•1. bath. Sep. entry.
Nr. bch. t person. $70 . .300
3-lttl Sr .. N.B.
R00~1 w/kltchen. pool priv.
Near OCC. Fen1ale only.
Ref. req. can 963-3731
Guest Home 415
• Private Roont or Cot1age
for eltferty, ambulatory man
or lady, Quiet surroundings.
Good men.ls. Call 5@-4753.
LIC. nurse "A'ould like 2
senior citi2'Jls who need
nut1ing care tO live In home
Good food & laundry. Ph
'1:~,.utll. Single offices from PerM>n•ls 530 PLEASE help ·ic you hav~ C"o_n_,l,_r-.~ct,-o~r~=-"---o11onry
-· m<>. _. any inJorn1ato'on -"'2.••~ --PALISADES CENTER ~ _, -·---------SLUMPSTONE, block walls. · -DIVORCE Eve•. & wc~keods. 2082 S. E. 13r141ol JACK Taulane, rep al r, Planters, mar b I e en·
Newporl Beach 557-7010 Do )'OUr o11o·n 11,·ith our book by LOST blaC'k long haired 1-en1od, add. I~lc B -1 tryways. Expertly ln.ttal'd:
(Cfl.mpus-Irvlne lntersectlonl A!!y, C.f.;. Sherniait Our Persian cat, w/blg green 2b'90i'l. l'\ly \Vay Co. S.l7·003G reasonably priced. Bob:
-FOR LEASE--1ra.ined stafl 1rill assist by eyes, \i·earing silver chain Electrical G<l!H93U
Professional OUice Suite !yping the forms for $55. \\ith heart shaped name tag
11,636 Square .Feel suitable The \\'ave Project bcarlng !he name "Ashley' ELECTRICIAN-License No. P•lntlng &
for Large Group Practice. Costa fi1esn, Santa Ann & a lifichlgan addreffs. Very 2331M. Small jobs, nmlnt & P•perh•nging
Arljacent to Jloag Meinorial Ne"·po1t Beoeh & Utguna kind & i;entte. $25. l't'!Ward. repairs. S-18-5203.
Hosp;tal. A,. a I I• b I e ,·m-673·ll66 8P;;a900sc2. call 64-1-MSl or F • Goorge Palnting & Decor'n,g ed I ....,... urniture Interior & Exterior
n1 lately. Coniact: Lou f'UU..Y LICENSED LO-ST , C"ro'clay eve, 8117 vie. Guaran. Top Quality Pro!. l\aa or Kl.'ith Walley .
1
* SPl/lITUALlST * r Jo~URNITURE SI rip p Ing &1:>-8600. Spiritual readings 10 anl·lO Sandpoint & Windo\•cr, CdM i·etinishlng, rl'paln;. an-\\'ol'lunanshlp & ~faterlals
BAYFRONT OFFICES pn1. Advice on all n1atter1 (Harbor View Highlands liqu.ing. Chem-Clean West Free est. 6-15-8616
P t. 11. I k' 31.2 N. El Camino Real, San Broadmoor) Burmese sabll' 89'.H:l389 PAINTER NEEDS \VORK. ~ 1ge o tees over oo mg Clemente 49:z-9136 492-9034 fen1ale, stile ~ar on nose. REASONABLE
Balboa Bay in Newport . . Reward. 673--0417. G d · 1-IIGl-ILY Q U A L I F I E D Beach. Various size &Ultes PROBLEJ\1 Pregnancy. Con. •r ening S45-87S6 as low as Sl20 per mo. Jn. fident, s y n1 pathetic WST: Long haired Tiger
eludes drps, crpt, utilities, pregnancy counseling. Abor-cat, Fem. Approx. 3 year MOW & EDGE PAL'ITING & repair, ~ yrs
janHorial services. Monthly t.lon & adoptions ref. old. in Vic. of 27th St. NB, EXPERT & \\'Otkmanship guar. Take
or lease. J700 Neivport Blvd., APCARE 642-443'6 wearing Rea collar, friendly DEPENDABLE advantage of my exp,
NB 6-1220 but s h y d<!Speratcly C II F p 536-7056. • 1:>-• LADIE5 July ~peclal l )T mi~. 6734949 • or rompt,
* COSTA MESA * membership $5. ca 11 Free Estlm•te. PAINTING in C.M. in·
New offi·-'"''ldo'n< . Thr"'° 'Partner' 8 3 6-1271 or AIREDALE, fcn1 . 6 n1os. 9". ".12 ler I ex1er. &nail jobs L"' .. " ~8-1179 ' 'Z l be I i n e' ' V i c. --\\'elcome. Fl'ee est. J im.
roon1 sui!1' avaitable, 700 sq. -Roc.hester/Ne\vport. 1 8 ;1 GAH.DEi.'l.:ING s cl' vi cc 979-8186.
rt. At.SO 2.00'.> i;q. n. -all PREGNANT? Th 1 n kill g Rochester, CJ\.'I 837·9:n:l E....:t con1plcte la\\'ll mali1tcn1lnce:
Sum-r Rentals 420 or """""'· AU "tititi-·. ,·anl-a.bortion? Koo\v all the facts f>O<> • 1 PROF. wallcovering &tate ,,_ ~·' '° 1 r-ll L E u:10 c eru1-1Jp, l'Otoli!Hng, l:iwn 1· -14 · 11
----------tor servk--e. 2706 llarbor trst! ........ IF LlNE -2-1 1 all . 1c. no. "'';JJ , msur .. a
642-9278
Bl I R~ N hrs 541 5522 RE\VARD. Lost BI a ck nst ation. expr. an d types ol pa~r n" 84"'386 3 BR. 2 Ba hse. 2 blk' OCean. V(. ....,.,.rt I attress, RJtr. 0 ~~·~--~-· -----I' bl f ' r-' "' ...-. 642..1-185 .,.'OU be r· I rninlature male poodle , 1·e1a c, I'Ce est1n1atcs. INTERIOR p . JI " pool, linens, phone furn , _. I ne ti more or much \Vearing flea collar. 536-B26-I 968--0832 1 a1n ng "'"
frplc, patkl, W/D. szrs. P. OCEAN VIEW I l~ss . Corona de! Mar Ten· bef noon, or Zl3-.... "' "281 EXPERT Carpet cleRning. Fr c e
Fenton 673-2110 54" '159 S . . . I uis Club. 673-5nl. .>,>.TV estin1ateE. 642-7059 1 7'~="-;.c~~C:o'or=~c..:::::;· pac1ou~. exet'. office in -----~----collect JAPANESE AVAIL. 9/1·9/8. 3 Br. 2 Ba, Unio11 Bank Bid" N1•\\•port ALCOHOLICS Anonyn1ous. L-cO~s=ro"-C~a~H~co--n-,o~th-o-,.-c-at. GARDENING INT/EXT PAlNTfNG
$175. 2 Br, t Ba, $150. Nr. Center 11,•/re«'pj,' a .re a, Phone 542-7217 ur \vrlte F Id \ 171 . h Quality 'Vo1·k. Reasonable ocean. GT;>-5366. phone sci...,·ice. Xerox & part P.O.Box 1123. Costa J\fesa. r ay. 'ug. 11 111 1 e Complete Gardening Service Ref's. 675--0160, 673-8186 Vlr. of 21.st & Santa Ana. Free Estin1ates 5''6-07'>-4 LAGUNA·s fioei;t, 2 BR, bar, tlnl<' secy. J\lr. ~lcFa1·lnnd, Soci•I Clubs S3S Cl'\1. 6 hungry babies at No Wuting
lrpl. grea1 vu, bch, avail. 644-9440 honle. Cell 642-7268. JAPANESE Gardener, ex· * WALLPAPER *
Aug. 25th $150 "'k 499-4124 1617 WESTCLIFF-NB * INTRADATA * REll'ARD . part Sc'an>c•·ft '"'(. P••,·: Cleanups, ya rd serv. \\rtien you call "Mac" ""L" Kc ia. & neat. 1'"'ree est. ~14-W
1
1980, 912. 756 & ~O Sq. Ft. QUALITY matches <Declav.·edl beige & white. &15--0694. eves.
Rent•ls to Sh•rt 430 Ampl<' parking. Util. Baum-\\''PHO'l'O Ans. lo Happy. Vic. o! HI-QUALITY, LOW S
* * * WORKING grirdner. 5'11-5032. "l..1rgt>st in CaJir." LnPala. J\.Tisslon Viejo, Sun l\dlOW d&blcdgc.11"xpert and Slate Lie, No. 280044
NE\\,..b.11 {Call NO\V ror FREE; srun-<'vc. Please call 837-6615 epen a e, ca for prompt 542-1 701 WOMAN SS Ill h J t g ... ocean vle1v. 2,000 free est. \Valt 842--0-lll H.B. . . . . .. • W I •re 1 sq. ft . avail, 40c per sq ft pie profile on I prospective LOST dog, Chihuahua Bro1\·n ai-ea. PROF. painter, honett work,
3 RM fu rnished apt Brookhursl St. 962-668.l . · match. 24 hrs.J !!:1e
28
!'°, '.collar or to gs. Call cG"'A"RD=°'E~N'°'IN~G".---,CL=-E~AN=u~p~ reas. Int/ext. fJ"'e(' est.
with same for 1/2 rent 1 714 · 638·5920 / LA 65,S.i;;283 """'" , Refs. 548-2759. &12-3913.
($65) & 1ho1r1 utilities. Business Rent.11 445 I Reasona.ble54P11-·~~3-•rree Est.
I ...... Pla:.ter, Po1tc'1, Rep•ir
wd "1'•r fburnishtd., Not MOBIL OIL CORP I J[g}1[ r ------~][1•] Complote Lawn. Garrlenmg * PATCH PLASTERING • • uxe ut com ort,... lfas high volume ""rvicc ,1,. Lott ,.. , ... _.. Servlce · ffaulln.,. &
bl I bl "'" _,,,, ~n1trucciolt CJ •oe All types. Frtt esUmates •, C ••n, r••son• • tlo<1 1\ hh good back room eanuP!I. 5'18-0405 Call 54Q...6825.
and neo1r 8o1y & New· sale.• potcnlial in th<' Ana· EXPER. Japanese Gardener.
port Blvd., C.M . SEE hein1 area. Paid training to Found (free ads) SSO Yard serv. Oeanups. Relia. Plumbing
-after SPM eves or wk 111a11 inHnetllately, PhonE> Schools & & neat. Fl'e<" est. 642-43.s!I. L.R. OTIS PLUJ\.ffilNG
nd N I I Sani RNldiek. Tl..1·.'.i21·1381 LAST seen ,.,,,nlo>• ,,0,,-, Instructions 575 F"XPERIENCED J R od I • R '-I" t • I. 0 ••st, C ••n-days, 714-96il-!l2+t cve8 & , • • apanese en1 es 4'l" epau s. ,.a er inv fff or Jst & lo1st. ii·ccken,<•. Chari<' St.. Costa il-fesa. \'ie Gardener. l'\1alnten11nce & heaters. disposals. furnaces,
A •1 S S of llun1il1on &: lfarbor Blvd. CHESS Lessons . begin· Cleanup. Call 979-8798 dsh1vashl'l!I. ~ J\.1/C & var ept, I T. 2079 I -FOR LEASE--2 )·oung dogs on the run . ning/intem1ediate b)• ac· B/A. Complete Plumbing Thurln #2 ,. o -" bl k V co n1 p I i11hed 1ournnn1c n1 l\IOW & Edge>. Expert & .,~ · -· .• _. • . • e11· s:ores or offit·e11 \\'iii be> nC' ''""· one ac . ery de,..,,ndn.blc. Call for prompt .,.,rvtel'.
RES I ·1 bl · Josi pla~'CI'. $8 lesson or SJO for 8 ,..~ PONSIBLE man 01·cr a1·111 a e tn about 3 n1ontlL~. · lessons. f>I0-8lffi. free est. John, ;")ojfi-3446. PLUMBING REPAIR
40, lo sharl.' my 4 br 21i ha Ideal llunlington Be a c h F'OUNO si:o t of keys! Keys to 1'i'o job too small
Costu ~fesa l.'Ondo.' Comp'. location in shopping center. V\r. rorcl & General l\loiors H,\i\'D\\'HITING AnalyS('s JAPANESE Ga I'd en er· * * 642-3128 * *
furn. $150. n10. or 2 men $75. 1'~?r ln~o1·n1nfion call Jerry '""°hlc·Jc. Vicinily of Bristol <'lass teaches s e Ir un· Gard<'ning-Service, trini-
ea. G46-3110 aft 5pm or alt. Gillespie tlf'ar Baker St., Costa ,\1c~a. clcrstnnding-, ch a l' n c 1 c r n'ing, cleanup. 64~1796 ..>ew1ng/Alt•r•li?ns
10 am Sat & Sun \11llage neal Estate Identify, 893-7406. lraits begi ns &-pt . 11 ROTOTILLING, Lawn in-Alttrltlons--642•5145
A FUN l'LACE
TO WORK
N-Hlrlnv
DISHWASHER
Full Time
Apply 3.5 dally
151 E. Coast Hwy.
Newport Booch
F.qual Oppor. Empkiytr
APT HOUSE
MANAGER
Exp'd c."Ouplc, tu1·n. apt, gar,
good salary. Some maint.
Ref's. 'Bendable. Costa li1esa.
&12-4150.
ASSE1'1BLY
VARIAN
HAS
2ND SHIFT
OPENINGS!
VARIAN DATA
MACHINES
Opening~ f o r a1sen1bll'rs
"'llling to \\'Ork 2nd shift.
Varian pay~ a shift di!·
ferent!al + theS<' regular
outstanding oon1pany
\>efl('fi\s;
• Competitive
Salaries
• Basic: Malor
& Medic:ol
• 6 Days Vaca·
tion after 6
months, 12
days after 1
year.
'•
• Christmas Ir
New Years
wffk off.
Profit Sharing,
stoc:k options,
retirement
plan. NEED ,.mal' -mmoce, 962-2-l:'J:i or Eves, 968-2974 BE ''MCA. 642-9900. stallation, sprinkler1, soil ......... --JAUTIFUL, ft>maJr Irish ~...,_ .. 1110 Neat, -.ccurate. 20 yean exp. 1'1esa Verde condo, SUCCESSFUL Setter \\'/leather s 1 ring PIANO lessons, beginners. preps . ....,.,........, Thesr positions n.>qulrc ex-
$1 00/mo. 556-8638 aft 7:30 EAST 17TH STREET around neck. Found 8122 Reasonable. 1-lunUngton Gnrdening & l·lean-ups Televlslon Rep•lr perlenc.-t in the follo\\•ina:
i.;c'c:"':;· =--=-~~--' Loc1ttion, C..osta i\lesa 1'1onticcllo Apts, .C.l'\f. Cn!l . Beach. ~-5063. 554-0657 COLOR TV Repalr, expert, 11.rea!I. Cabling, \1·lre\.\Tllp,
SHARE my Park Nc\1·po1·t lUJ Sq, ri. 11•i1h additional 5.)i-mL General Services reasonable, most in hon1e. or 111Prhanlcal aiuiembly.
AUTO~IOBILE Cl.EANING penon UUme
WARRANn' CLEnK for ofc Jn ~wpt Ctr. Stnd
E.'tp'd girl or will traln. Typ.. resun1e to Clusltled ad no. in.a: 50 v.·pm l Ute l:lclOk· 932 c/o 0..1\y Pilot, P.O.
keeping required. Salary Bo.i: 1560, C:O.ta Mesa, Ca
$100 to "2.), !\ton thru Fri, 81 ii92mii'iii. """"iiiiiiii;;-.~ili;f wn to 5 ptn . Phone BaUi!rl •
&!ck. 97!>-2500, Mn Caron CLERK TYPIST
alter 10 am, Varied duties. 50 w.p.m.
D A B y Sl'ITER/hOusekeep-typ~. Expcr 011 10 key.
e-r, mature, genUe, 10\'lng \Vo1·k in Lo5 Ani;:cles until
\\.'Om&n w/fiexible schedule company n1ovcs to Newport,
to care daily for 2 chlldn>n 2 October, 1973. 1
&. 4. Prefer pre. sch. Call MI'S. Enge-Ikey
training, mu.st have own (213) 62.;-7411, ext 2134
;;"'=""co"':=·"=· :~oc"'o,.· ""-o=-.:09993=~-1 Sto1t1 MLttuel Sevingt
BABYSITTERfllakpr -\Ve t;qual ~'" .lTIJployer
are 7 & 8, mon1nl)' nee<1s1 ..,,.;.~~=-=':'::""!!!!!!!!!!~J housekeeper \\1cdy1, usuallyl.., CLERKS-84. You nluat have car rets., &: 11•ant to love us: VARIETY STORE
S48-8459. Ca.Miet'I, Floor Oeric:a • No
BABYSITI'ER needed, for furl time ,i.1udent~. Coo d
aft. school, this full. Within i~tur(', xln t bener11s. Pttm.
1\•lking dist. of l\fontc Vista f ~time. A~ In ~n.
Sehl, CM. Appl'OX .. U:30 _ ~ck N Save, 3-lZi Bri•ol,
5: 30. 64&-Q463 aft 6pm S."'·urt=a~ru,,'"~·.,..,--.,..--=oc I
B A BYS f TT ER-nioth<'r's C..'LERl<·Typisl, for sales ~
helper for teachet''!li 2 dept. Call bet~'een 9-5PM
daughttts. Oli·n lranspor!u-t\tON·&\T ~2.
Uon l't'!fettnCi!s required. CLUBHOUSE man£:er , 2
536-4-ll"l clays per wk. 8141 Atlanta,
BABYSJITER Won1an belw. H.B. 536-8091.
30-35. Must haw 0\\11 car. t'OCKTAIL \\-altress & O'OOP
Babysit for 2 children. Qc. for entertalnmenl. •
cu. over nighh1. 675-3936. * :H&-9988 *
BABYSnTER \\'llllted for1~---------1 21.~ yr old girl 1rom 6:301•
am·3 p1u. Will pay $25 a lvk.
Laguna llills area. 830-9807.
BABYSI'ITlNG & I I t e
housckeeping. Room &
board + salary. 842-7636 or
644-0023 ask for Call.
BABYSIITER in n1y hon1e.
lite hskpzig:, near Brookhursr
& Victoria. 7:45 -4pm, 1tfon
thru Fri. 646-6700.
BABYSITTER, Iii~
housekeeping. Live in -+
8'1.lary Call 5-i6-5286.
Commercial
Teller
Ex{>C'rienccd P /time
UNITED
CALIFORNIA BANK
:00 i\lain Sti'cet
liw11!11gtun Beach
$'6.8811 BAB"YSl'M'l<:R needed pal'!
tltnf' for 2 yr old. Refs. Equal Oppor. En1ployer
req'd. Call aft 5, 55&-lS!M .
BACK Office Nun;e (30-50 ~
)TS oldl Hrs 8-12, J\lon.·Frl.
Pref. w/X-ray exp. 646-1694 * * S.4 pn1 fCall 1tfon. 8121'
GANK
St•t• Mutual S•vlnv•
!:?13) 625-7411, (!XI 264
BAR Maid, Queen Bee, [552
Ne\\'port Bl\'CI, Cos!a Mesa t;l&-99:Jj .
COMPUTER
OPERATORS
VDM
•
'
!.Pl., 2 BJR , 2 Ba. furn. Fcn1. 400 sq. f1 . or storagr. \VHITE male cat 11·ith sll,.,ht I ]~ -Free estimate, H.B .. N.B . .t: Don't&~. left out .-Apply 833~~2622 an &10-1480 or REALONOMICSCORP. black n1arklng on beck0 of SenicelandRtpllini ALL types home repairs. C.M. Bert Gallemore, nov.• JC>lll a gJ'Ol\'Jng l'On1· BEAUTICIANS, hair Sl)•\tsts Verl•n D•t• M•chines
-· BROKERS 675-6700 head, Vic: l!vine & Clay, . . Actual time & n1aterial. 968--2783. pany. & aggr<'sslve manager net>d· ,
ELEGANTLY furn . lrg 2 -----~-&t&-OJ.i9. Fast Serv. No job too sm. Top Soll Please Apply ed for ~{arbor Area Salon. 2712 Michelson Dr.
BR, 2 BA, apt, Cdl'\T, I O~CE 011 Nci\·port Blvd. FOUND n1ale puppy, nuffy Bo1bysittlng F&B Home Re Pair· In Person In terestlng opportunllles. Irvine
Malure \\'Onian. 2.1 yr or Avail on leas<'. P8I'tially \\'hite ful' wlth spot~. viclni· 612-l403. * QUALITY * Or Contact .. J, rullcr &16-l'808 or 49-1°""'3&1 eves, tlJ..2400, ext. 33' 1
over. &W-7153 eves. furn, carpeted, alr/cond, ty Newport Pier, Newport LICENSED Babysitter has Si\N CLEMENTE AREA * !\IULCH & TOP SOIL * BE 1 1FEMALE v.•anted !o ~hare j ~~~1~'. A\e;:~:; sq8i~ Bench, &IG-370.i opening tor l child, ages 3.4 Palnt'g · Plumb'g . Repair!:. 586-6930 v DM f 0~~1;1t~g bia~ es~:~~ Equal Oppor. Empklyer l
luxury 3 BR house w/tplc, avail. Jdcal for contractor FOUND black Afghan Hun-yn;. Weekdays only. Meals, ~lob. Ji1m &: Apts. <196-5717, Tree Service Sal-benefits. 962-2.444. _ ' e~c. with same. $100 mo. No 1 j·IS-2616 · Hngton Beach. Beach Bh'd. fenced yard. 968-4971 646--0977. BECOl\tE an In 8 u ran cc COOKS
kids. no pets. 968-1146. CUTE ADOBE HOUSE, loo:> .t .P!lciflc Coast H1vy BABYSIITL'IC by week only, Ho1uling TREE !rimming tncluding agent. Opportunity to leam DISHWASHERS
SHAREApt o1·HouseSaveSS ~q. fl., adjoining busy cor-Sl6-J312 ~fore 3:00 p.m. n1y home. Npt. Bch. Xln't Rl.'BBISll haulin y rd palm trees and tr~e Insurance b.Jslneu. Part Dick Chun•n's H.l'staurant
Call HOME PARTNt.R ncr, for business or ofUce , CALICO kitten w/green col-cond. 646-7656. g: a • removal. Gen. c 1 e a nu p, 2722 M ichelson Dr. time e\•es. & v.-eekends. run a;:ga Ncwrx>rt Blvd CM
&"lfr.ll94 or 548-1479 u -~ C'. Cos, a Me 5 a. , lnr & bell . Vic Tustin Ave & BABYSlTI'ING n1y home garage, warehse, clean-up. reas. &: Insured, 847-1791. time when qua 11 fi e d ~ ----·· .
20 YR. feml "'Ill share ba ch 6~5-2020/6-12-6560 , Clay. N.B. 642-5173 or fenced yard -loving ca.re Remove tree.~. •hr u b s, ~ Irvine, Callfoml• \\'/unlllnited opportunity & COOK -Expe11cnced, all
t I I heh , 1 ol2 ="" ~= """::: unsighfiy trash & debns of ~1 fil]IJ 13~2400, ext. 336 high -·arani--, b•-m• shifts available. Applv In ap w poo nr • NB. S50. "TllE Facto-" ""' a 1-• ....,,~~""'~'"=~-~~-~ ~ II ty 7 d k •y omu '"" J Alt 5 & *nd 6r:>--38l ., •a .~ a pes. BYS a \\'ee · • ¢';:ml Fannen Jnsura~ Group: person. :iO'J9 S. 811stol, CM. . · " ~. 4. i;hop nvail. $165/mo. In I Jo~OUND: Blk cat, flutly tall, J\.1ATIJRE, dependable, fenc-Jo'ast, reliable, reas. South Equal Oppor. Employer Phone 4~ Mr. TulU~. VandeKamp's, A division ol
Gar1g11 for Rent 435 Cann<!ry \1lllage 425 30th St. i green eyes, \\!caring collar. ed yard. ~ly home. Refs. Coast l lau\ing. 673-90?.6. I ~ --Tlnv Naylor's . NB. 673-9606 or 642-8520. I Vic. ?.lagnolia & r.IcFadden Good lunches. 5-15-1007. I ~ Boat Repalrm•n ·• ·
GARAGE for rent S?.O. ~I/OP STORAGE 1350 '"· fl. I 8117. 892-1923 I :;o--c-~~~="---GE.I RID OF UNSIGHTLY Job Wo1ntecl, F•mafe 702 ASSE~ffiLERS "'aterfront expe.r pret'd COOK, middle agod woman,
month. Costa fi.1esa 548-0019.1 in rC"nl' nr. Npl Poat 0"11o·ce, roL~'D: '~-Blk & Tan C•rptntar TRASlf & DEBRIS. $12 ELECTRONIC Pernl. Full tin1t. Musi hav~ for am.all nunlng home, 5 ' Naar DCC and UC! ......,'"" LO AD· COLLEGE NEED help at home'. \Ve short hao'r • cl '"' .,_,.,., days per week. Lagunt1 I • !17.·1. A"cnt. ,,.,, '"J•t. Sh<p. n1ix ma.le. Vic. Tern •. \LTERATIONS " REPAIRS STUDENT 5•0 "'2i ASSrMBLY <II: e .... ~"O''-U<U Be I all I n
" U'tu-t't · ' · lol-O't ' have aldl'.'s, n u rse Ii , • Blackle 's Boet Yard New'. ac 1• c or appt, .f: ** DOUBLE garage, off 1600 sq ft l'.'JDUST shop pl(' Hills & Thalia, Ln(una, Patio co\·ers, decks, aU types J\.1 0 V I N G & ha u I in Ii ho us ekprs, con1panlons. Exp e r . Lon lr I e rm port Ikach. ' 49f....80T5 ~~0Ne~f?'!.!! eight ·'· ·s:l'lj. ,\lso JOO sq ri ouice ~'c,"o,.·34""'6"'. ------of carpentry. Draivings anywhere. Furniture. misc. Homemakers up john, ass I gnments. Soldering, 800--v;,EEPER/C'--COOK for year a.round child
l .,.._.,q · Il'l..-vu.w. 'fl.",, C.:\L 616-21~" LADIES watch & bra-let available. Ph. 548-7806 ·c 1 Bill • Sic • 7 .,.,,..., ""'irewrappinu all phues of nn. oX\: P I r d • H d ~ ..., '"" 1 ems, e c. "" eeler, 5'1 ~i. ..... 1 1 I · a.y cart' t:enler. ~ rs al-GARAGE for rent, alley 11c. I Sun. ,\)I. Vic of Pomona & C1\RPENTRY 643-2161 electronica. 8. r, a P & taxl?t, I girl of· ly, Corner Blly Sl" Orange
ceu, nr. 19th & Ne\\•port, fnduatrial Rent•f 450 19Th .. C.'har!es ~1. Allen . GENERAL REPAIR Help W•nttd, M & F 710 Irvine 54()...«50 fice. ad \\'Orktng cond., Call c M 645-0070 ' CM. $32/rrio. 897--0196 ofln._. 6;&.~1SO. * 61.>-5711 * SKIPLOADEH. & dwnp truck 178tn Sky Park &tJ.7343 Immed. Opening. ·• . .
t-, ;;;-;;-==-o-"7.,,,--,,--\1·ork. Concrete. BAphalt, ACCOU1'1ANT Anaheim s:B.2322 BOOKKEE_P_E_R COOK -Calbre1 .~~!!.,& lunch. Office Jtent11 440 NOW LEASING I BLK poodle. Aug. 15th, Nr. Co1rpet Service SS.\ving, breaking. 846-IDO. CPA finn aeeki ambitious 1730 \V La Pal ·~
H II B h 31.'t St. N.B. 673-2G72 aft: GI-.:N Hauling. Tree/Shrub accountant knowledgeable NEVER A 1:EE AT~ R,1r'1 Oerd1n1 ask for Bill BUSIEST intersection i n un ngton eac 4:30 P~1 JOHN'S Carpet & Upholste"'' t •--d"'' NC(>(f X!Ok' ., .. ,, .... , be~ Ne<vport Harhor. C',-~,d NEW M·l ""~=--,---~ '' trim. Car & \'d cleanup. n ..,.es, au lung, m~age· Tempo Temporary Help 1 •• i ..... ~r v.·1 111<' COUPLES v.•anted. Bulld
•X"°'-"' Jo'NO Blk """k I Ori Shampoo free Stotch· 1.·-i. "I '377. "7 ~. ment atrvicet &. aurorv1slng l==:: == S<hooll::r, ln acco11n11--, •~. y-·· own ~·a•--,, W• storv ln Uniq,_ Homes "'0 ~. f 't. " UP · ~"'" -a-poo, ma e ~-• So'I R I ~ t J (;,'! .J.l -u ...., ......,.,... I -•· I "'" .,,.. V>AJ. uu ""' ·
B l.l,dl 800 "" "'l "'" nr Edison lflgh school H.B. g .... u. 1 e a.uan ~ · for aml cUent pract re. Send • -.. · ng -heipl\zl tut not train. Pl'lonc for app't for $350'~ 1 ng. """ sq. f1t. nt J lla1nilton & Nll"'lund 002-3932 Deareasers & all t.'Olor llAULING&. lit~_, m o1v I n g, resume to Box 92-1 Daily Aillembll!T!I req. i\full't be penonable &: personal Interview ;;:;7-3367
· mo.; \NV sr1. t. at 1 646-0697 or 833-0519 brighteners & 10 minute garage y .... u c eanups. Pilot, PO Box l:itlO, Coata E • t I wllltng to Jeam. Salary $f501;i;ii;iiiiioiiiiiiiiii ... iiii;iiiof
S300/mo. Bo1h "'ilh Vll!\\'~· 1 ·~~~~ ...... ~!'!'!!!!!l !:i')f. bl'OllTI nutle Terrier type bleach for white carpets, 548-3129 or 548--040:;. Mesa., Calif. 92626. 1per1men a n10 .. or Up depcndina on'Oata Procei1sina
6i'":i-QXXI. MISSION YIEJ dog. Vu.:. S.A. injured. Save your money by saving 32 FT. Jo·uttNITURE Van for ADULT Babysitter (or quahflcntlons. Apply In Jltr· ·'O
· f-ULL SEf<VICE I 0 ~3003hl~m"==~---me extra trip" Wm clean loc I f I I & 'I & p • • soo at oor r<le 222 PRO""RAMMER W~1tcliff Building 1600 SQ. F1'. & lJP. DOG FL'\'DERS SERVICE living rm. dining r1n., & ha~lin~.ur~g..~~2~ 5l1-2fJ6~ ~~s.~2r:~.' s:i:S": rec1s1on Fairview Rd~ Col~a ~esa.1
W
Comer \\'eslctiff Drive & AVAILABLE NOWI tr-~ YOU FIND OR LOSE A hall $t5. Any rm. s7.50, LOCAL 1 & h .... b EQO•wEEPER N r. ~. 1 all o•i ~::: couch $10. Qiair $5. 15 .,...,, n10v ng a\Wng Y ~· 00 en_• w.... M h , 1 nn -on-profit .ii:pe.r. 300 BAL Jrvinp Blvd.. N c "'po r ! ON SAi'l DIEGO FR\VY. uvv-P eaKe c <H ·<RQ,J exp. is whnt counts, '~t 11tudent. Lorge truck. Rens. .._._.._ ·w -• ec an 1ca corp. w I hand I ca pp ed (370 Early '74)
Beech. Mr. Ho1\arO 27992 Caniino C3pistrano SIL\'ER/Gray female poo. mclhod. 1 do work inyself. Barry. 534-1.846 or 673-0947, After 5 Pl\t By Appointment children &: adults, Payroll,'
_Gti-GIOI. 831 -1600 clle nan1cd Susl<'·Vic. 1-larbor Good ref. 5Jl.(llOl. Houucltaning Clvi1 Engineer $1BK+ As bl A/R, A/P, gen. ledger, etc. On line environment. f.:x.
C.D.M. 900, 800, j()(l Sq, ft. 4001 BIRCH, NB .i:: Llln1pson, 530-ii88. caze:. Cltanl::r.. ~Iethodt: & Procedures sem ers ~spot for relll'td pet'IOn ~':f .1~ary I& ~netlta.
Fro1n 31 cenls. Air oond. :?l)X). 2(M)(I, 3600 811, ft. or com. FND. lllllt' blk puppy. wtry EXPERIENCED, depen· Analyst, S&L exp SUK+ .. ,..., needs I wanta wortc A auvu re ocaung lo ~~v. park i n ~, \l'lll bo. !hereof. Av8'tl. lO/l/"73. hair. ''il" Cuprien Laguna Floor art & Win WI dable lady will cll'tln your Proposal Wrlter/BSEE $121( ~2 ' Orange Co. October 19'73..
•'-"1.Jecorate. 2700 E. CoJ111t flfr. Baumgardner, 541-5032. &:h. 49J....18:;J. Du tch Mnlnt. Scrv. 537-1508 hoor-e. \.,.ork by U1e day. Control t:nrr/BSEE to $121\ 2nd Shift BREAKFAST & lunch cook Stet• Mutvo1I Sevl"ll
H\.\')', c.w. J\lasters Owne1·. 4 DEL XE rCES FND .. Pair BifOC'al glasses. DIBERi'lAROO and SONS 636--097~ Digital Test Tech lo S8G6 So 0 I nttded. I-fours fi.2:30. 10 (213) 62>74.ll. ext 264 Realtor, 673-41al C • U.I J OF.Fed . w/black co·•, ,.,·, Ama'"n ca'""""t sales, installation & '16.~ PROFESSIONAL, e."· filemory Test Tet..il to S866 tne Yerf' me yrars exper, & all around 1-nrpetro, l luminat Ceil· ;><.; ..., • ,,~ ~ "V ·• Co 1r Secret $750 kit h E al Op STORE/Office for len~. ings. Plus 400• Warehouse H.B. Sl7-G171. repaln. Frte Est. 963-26::9 per The Custodian. Please •1ns ary 50 c en 11'0rk. Some local qu PQT. Employer
1300 ~ ft , F.V. Shopping Space. 1370 D Logan, 01 FND: Slruncse kitten on \lie-Sieve's Rug Doctor. Carpet leave nan1c & phone Jo C Bkkpr/AIA to $75 Wlll perform.close 1°'cn.nce t'efer. :10 ''1. Fomt, Santa1-:::::z:::;1
Center. p u r 1 I t1l 1 )' 11811 j. ..,,., ......., l"ll!11.ning . SteO.nl, hot rinse ... 496-5.165. PC Brd IMpecltlr to Si50 astten1b!y '\'Ork on heavy cAn==•c.· ='~~~---1-" ned 1~~ , -~~~~--~~-~--~ toMa nr H11rbor O ·f. Con'I <II: Exec. Secretaries to sao ~ll't'!I met11.1 m I as I J e BREA'"F;\ST Cook n -1 Day H•1 uo · ~. mo. uay~I c::100 ,_ n M J If I keep Seal Point 0 ·••7220 rotn'""' shampoo. 646-7811 * HOUSECLEANING * Co O $-M ~ n ~ S36-0 l9 0, 96s-o 327 1 ·. ,.,..1 ·• •t rom O· · . .,..~ -r n1putcr pc to ,;..., hardware. ust ... ve ex· "'bi. .. N Cal
I L d $Jso "ND G s h h c I c ,. HELlABLE • f n"'ai ·--retan'es 1700 . I fill lltO e ~ '{'"'porter Jnn. I Wan ... eves/weekends tee. rg rear oor. mo. r : erman e p er d emen , oncre REJo~RENCES A/P~ .,.~~keeper 10 •~+ pcnence n ng, . ng, aief r·rcd, 644-l'iOO. •• 1-&16-.i033 r!ays. Evts puppy, vie. HB area DINJ\. -1V punching & r e am l na .
DESK IP&~ avail&ble $.'l1 646-0681. ]791 \\rhlttier, CM 5.1!6-5154. CONCRETE \YORK. Patios, 556455 AIR Cr &: Collect· to $633 Kro.vtedi:eabte tn f111!1:ent"f' e CABINET l\fakers e Kitchen
no. WW provide furn iture 01•11CE • IV ~.. ~·o Blk • brown P"fiPY driveways, w a I kw a y 1 Ltke to Tr:ulc! Our Trader·s Gener.I Office $600 techniques, cold !let. rivets. At'ust be exp. N.8. area. e Buslloy at $S mo. Ani~-ering service w: oreraruM!! space :r '~ a; 645-3802, or 557 .. 1898 for est. Paradl J t. f • t ..M...... $000 1. 645-1536 av~lable. 17875 BeMh Blvd. avail l...aguna Nlguel, 2.IXll Wired collar &: fl~a co Jar -;:========;.:.::;;::;;::"::;'°::;"m;:;n;;;;;"';;;;"°"~· ~~;";;,":n T~~~er to $tlOO ~plat::X,~~l!I~ ~l°'j:y:·nu~ CABINET maker. & flntah e Ho1te11 lhmtln<>ton Beach. 642-43'11 SQ fl or more U needed. 17c Vic. Cdl\f. 6"4-8790. " C "" e Malntanence
NEW O"rn-bi·'g. ,,,.rport pct sq n. 831-1882. ln1. Ia.Ima Asslslallt $5"' t:e.mpi.atO# hMd tools, • carpe111er needed Newport "'"' u F'ND -\Valch Rcccpttonlst ~ turt1, and 5hop aids, Stach area. 67;).-7429 A 1,,. in Penon
area. FUii service. i5c .. , Storage 455 Vic: Balboa Plrr Trader's Parad1'se . Orrler Desk "'sl<tant lo S:.00 CARPET cleaner he Ip. r ANC1 '1'NT MARINER IC!• h. 600 to zm Mf, r1. s-~-,~G-F.-1 -,---_-, 673--4928 R~pt/Typlal lo $$15 Apply In PerHn \\'Anted Ne I ener .... etf Mullan Realty, 3400 trvlnc, '" v lA · ot, <>ck(!(( Ylll•u. OU> English Sheep Dor. Vic. A/J> Clerk to $~25 ' a.' • c, 301 No. Tuat.ln, S.A. N.~--Be.ch ~2960 &au, trlrs, r1c. Si.50 nxi. 17th St t Costa 'I l'B.'' •-·pt~-. 14°" 3333 Herbor Blvd. wa~ open. Ste;11n l\taster 5-12-1488
J!m SQ~ .Ft., ~ C-t, con· N1•1n ~t'On, tnc .• 531-lli~. MB-0041 ree "elD., I I 1' nes cAW:-T'RrS~r·HoPKJNS (!\I Cost• M11e, Cellf. Carprt OW\e111. 1 7 4 ol!"~~~ ... ~ ........... 1
R I I W
'
d '60 J"'.RRI \1111ITE'f0RE ~perior Ave., Of DENTAL Rttflpllonlst. venJ .. nt V.'/fllenly of park· en I I In • " • f'OUll."'D Pa1'"Rkect Nr. tllgh-r_ " ~· CASHIER It C~nt>ral omce Orthodontic pr act I ce, ~,:_ ~ Jiq. fl. ~ \\1 , 'fRl.Y renral dntred on )and, N.B. & Somer~. t1' mes fRVJNE PERSONNEL 'Vork. full k part llmfJ. oubltandlng OPJ)()rtunlty ror
,,.._..,, Cl!. Ph: SIZ.3'J2D or &10011 l.J:la nd. \\'ill 111.ke 646-~-t-I. CCD\t1rce •,Al""'CNCY I ~•l•a~ I • P.1ust be over 2:;, ContAct qullllf~d pcreon. To rrc».
"1)-l(XX), sta!OJ\i.11 H nt('. No J'Oln1·1 GER~1AN Shorthair pointer ..JLIVl\..L.) l"""f\JI,:, ~ ~Ir. FI ci Is eh e r C(O Send mume 10 Clwlilea omCE SPJCC., Start your OlRI"•· A.elillblc 28 )T. ,('ll). maJt., Vic. HB -536-8532 -.u;s E. 17th St. {RI Jrvlnel Ci\I l!oelschtri:, Soulh CoUt Ad No. 901. Dally PU.. ~ with a Harbour Vif'"''· 1 B~ fum/untum, n>.\,1>. Lost SSS dollars Suite 224 '42·1470 -Plan., Co11ta ~ltaa. P.-0; Box 1560oCol't& Mesa, ~Ct! row •'·&JI In lhe l.ido rrrit in exchange lor stable fl .. y • ~ " ' CATERING & S.le!l Director C.. 92626. RepUe• stric~
1-"li\llldlnc. 61)-;IL"I& Trnunl who wants a hon~·1 2 SHEPlrt.ROS,. Black &: -¥ • F.qual Oppor. b'mpioytt m/f txper., typing nee. Sa.laey1,.:conllde;;;::;=;:"'=laloo,'-~----I
())r'oM cki-1 ,.far, Im iUTid Da>'! • 4 ! 3-3 t l 5 • e\lc' V111h1:, "Thor" & "Baby" '------------------" li\JltPORTER Inn Hole.I Sales + Comm. Apply In penon. DENTAL Reeepttontll,
floor, AJC. utll, ample ~t-.1.53. vie BoJ~ & ~iarnoll11, '&J DODGE V11n, VS, aulo, HAVE 21' 7J f'lreball m1r & Cat:er!ni:;, 1en offlc.-e, gd AUTOMOTIVE -Bn.ke le Mr. Marman flolldAY rnn &.c'y, El Toro &r'f'8. All prq, $1-IS mo 67~ URGENT I R(!ward. s.92-5231 nu brkl, nu tlrn A ctiron1e homf: on J T'. Doda:e Chasil:~. typl1t, Apply In pl!rton. 2-tronl-c!nd men .. (2) netded. CM. J>hue• mastered. S&l cpen .
•. ~'lit Prufil ta llfa.iftt'd wntn Sold hon1(', "'fdo1''l'r 50 \\ 4 ~fO. Old fem. Irish Stuer rims, m1 rtbullt mo1or, stllJ undt>r wan-. 7400 ml, SPM XJnt a&lary It "'Ol"k.lnr con-OilLD CARE; Te ache t' ktplies oonftdentlal. C'f14) ~100 11"11 lMNlh rnult~· )OUfll'. r.on de111lres dupl~ t.lr pup, Vic: fl u n 11 n 1 t 0 n 1rade far any lite utlJ \\'lU acef1)t car In lrd or ? A /II s w ER [NG H:rvi~ dlllons, ~ Alt. 8, netdt lovil'll child ca.tt: 2 DrlUO . . It"' Pfllly PilOt 01.Wfted '1JeRI hou~ nc.'9.r :o;!'\\'lm'f Harbour, an1 • •Ke 11 y' ', truck. &12-9003. 54$.3166/586-5&)'1 opc.ralor. aJlnoon Jhlfl, 223 6~2-1140. Jirl1, ll wi In pref fsep entr Fast resuh• In' JU~ a~ ~·'d' &4)..M11 Y.\IC"\. ~5635 hPfOf'f" Sam. Reii.•ant M-<ISSI. fQf'e!ll, U,Una Beach, NHd a "Pod"? .,1-il..,:e e adl A bath) or live out~ Cftll &wt.)' S0..5673.
-1
' I I
T • . , . . . .. . . ~ . •
" TbUf1day, Augull 23, 1973 DAILY PILOT
lrttl. I ""'".f4l ll I fill ! l[IlJ ..... I _ ...... _, ,_l[fi]I l[Il] l.___ ........ _i .. _·· __,l[IlJ ..... I _""""_,._ .. __, l[UJ ._.I, l[i]]
Help W•nttd, M & F 710Ha lp Wanted, M & F 710 H I .... ~ M&F 710 Help W•nttd MI F 710 Htlp W•n ttd, MI F 7IO Help W•nttd, M & I! 7IO
• p ... n.-, • SECIU:'l'AR:t I !\eccpdonlst TOP .Notch Cal Fl'lday --
PRE$S OPE RATOR ROOM Clerk, exper. prol'd., lo.-prQl-1 olllct, ed to handle all otc .....,. 1or o '.ENTAL A111lstan1
Qiairslde, at leaat 6 mo's
expc'.r. H.B. area. 846--3S40
betwn. &-12 am or 5-8 pm.
DENTAL Auiltant .. Exp'd
only 4 handed dentistry, 3-4
days wk, 5.18-2311.
MACHINISTS Wom,. to •'"1< ,tor plastic INt will train. App\y: Holl-Newport Center. Typing, growing Cella M ... Manul.
nioldi.ng !ant ~3370 day Inn, Brlatol St. at San dlctaphone, no shorthand. ..:'°;::·~-"""="-'=-:~-=--
To£ ~!~t~ /:i.~~n:~'t1 P~f!i~li~~d ah;:1!'. ft ; ~LES , ;,.go ;ALE~~EN * ~~i·;~·~~~ No T,,';~1~:-,,:~ =wi·
Long term security. Male or Female . . Do )'OU take "Salesmen 885, Daily Pilot, P.O. Box ky '? odvance wl• ~~
MOTOR ROUTE DRIVER
DISHWASHER eve shift,
Wed lhN Swi. Bahla
Corinthian Yacht Club, 1601
Bayside 01-., CdM. See Clef
Debus.
Dl1hw•1her Wanted
548.9249 '
DOMESTIC Help George
Allen Byland Agency, 106-B
E. 16th SI., S.A. 1i47--0395 -
DEMONSTRATORS needed now. Unlimited earnlnis
pouible. For info call, 84:H743. • '
OONtrr Shop, 6 am-2:30 pm.
Female, age 25-45. Apply In
pel'80n, 135 East 17th, CM
KATELLA REALTY wanted" nch wilh a grJln of 1000, Costa A1ea:a, Calli grow~ houlewartt~~ ,..AJ Royal Industries, a major manUfacturer of nu-salt? can't say 1 blame )'Ou. 92626. 1>ener1ta. $475 to ....... ...-
clear components, ls now hiring experienced FDR DAILY PILOT INC. r loilowed up a~ mr.:u S EC'YS 1 BKKPRS Ann Chr1•tie, ill6-BS05. Con·
machinists in the following categories. All ~tf;.~~test gTO\\'ing R.E. oo. jf~e~!·~~ecr.:;,,setn~':, Great wuidy; sht no 8h ~ency~ J~
shifts. IN SOUTH LAGUNA • Inimed. floor t1me avail. ad. Cep'I, Sales, Land Dev, Mkt NB. •
J• • Earn up to 80% comm. Do yourself a favor A ex· Lri/&m ofc $.50().$800 IT . .:;YP=:.,l_Sf;...--rece-n_t_inar--card-
ICJ lore Machi1_1ist e Full page ailvertising plore this o~e. It you'd !Ure FRE E F R E E FREE e<P, A,;.,utacy & good ref\!. (DeVlig) Liberal profit plus generous car· allowance. nothing off top O{ comm. to make $250 a week un· Lil Reinders ~ncy req Contact Barb a r a Must live in area & have valid drivers li~ • \Ve are not a franchise mediately, w1th en eye to 4l.Z1 Westerly Pl.ace 64..,:1890 ' Profile Machinist cense. Dependable auto & cash bond re-• National reternJ program much more in the future, Suito ns. NB 833-8190 U d 1,_ T 1 quired. • 17 ofcs in Orange County I'd like to talk to you. If SECRETARY . n erwr ,.r r• Me (Hydrotel) • Managc1nent opportunltie11 your qualifications match .1 Receptionist AM firm .otters outstanding
Call H S I 642 '3211 • Both resale .\ new hontes our requirements, this could !or CPA office. Skills . re· oppor. tor coJjege graduate. NC Machinist arry ee ey ... • Train;og loc oew licensees be the .,.,.... you've been quired, . Accurate typ>ng, Accow>ti.. b<>d<ground a • 11 unlicen··-,, • \\'e assts· t looking tor. some d1ctatwn, let, t_ er plus. Salary to S:8'25. Catt = I t _,_ . tm t l" • writing, 10 key, tiling. Ed W .. '"'" lYV:.f:. ,.._ __ . ._, E I Lath M h' I t An Equal Opportunity Employer n en~w appom en ~ Potential promotion to of--· 0•1 ~. ~~ ftCJ ft8 e _ GC lft S ~et With PM, weekdays_ 58&-3182. fice manager. Salary Clpen. Pet"llQMel Agency, 2790 Har·
Sales 645--0844 bor Blvd., CM. Grinder Machinist ID·OD Help W1nttd, MI F 710 Help W1nted, M&F 710 Katella Now TOY • Gll'T PARTIES EC/ USED CAR
Call Bob Wig inton Housewives demonstrators, s REC~PT. Dr's Assistant Mllllnn Mach1'n1'st earn to $2,000 by Dec. 1. No heovy .,.. .... .... ssl.s "7 MAINTENANCE MAN "+4384 delivery -no collection, xlnt salary & benefits. MANAGER Young lady (18-w) to 8 t ~r. in hospita1 maint. NEEDED NOWI Or Tom Ca ruso Exceptional environment. ln health spa. WW tra.ln, DO Personnel Department wt'!! be open for In· -~ • 83 --Free llostess gifts, need Call Barbara at 64'1-1~.
A I in n • Good starting salary. 7-~ car 523-5484 .Gifts 'n• ~==~~=--•~ :~· ::;1c. or P~e. ~. terviews 8 AM-6 PM Mon-Fri. & 8-noon Sat Insurance. b-inge benefits ..., ...... ..,..,..,.., ... ..,,l_G2_al<!d.!!!!et!'~~~~~-' SECURITY GUARD-
COast Hwy., N.B. Other interviewing times can be arranged, lmm*ed~7=~ings. e DISHWASHERS REAL ESTAl'l:. SALES SALESGIRL. full time. $2.00 El(per. P/tim.c. Contact Mr.
i\'1ust have pl"O'ml. baek·
groond In used car manage-
n1t>nl. Call Bob Robins fur
interview. 642-0010. e BUSBOY SUCCBSS CAREER hr start. Good ,vorkil!g Ford, Security Supervisor.
DRILL pre" operator $235 ROYAL INDUSTRIES MAINTENANC-E MAN e WAITRESSES New oroxperlenced. Joio the cond. Plea,. apply "' Balboa Boy Club per hr. to start. Exper. \\lorld's lal!{est a.¢ fa,atest person, 10an1-5 pm, 1221 W. Coast Hwy., NB THEODORE Jftferred. 557~. 2040 E. Dyer Rd,, Must be familiar w/plumb, 1\1ust be clean & neat. Over growing resale orgariUJl tlon Wed-Sat. Aaron Brothers, SHOE Sales, nlale or Iem.
(Redhill & Dyer) ~~ ... !pergen~~~e:. 21. Dependable. Xln't V.'Ork· with a network of over 300 Lal90gunaSoulh Coast Hwy, Full & p/time. Busy
Electron le Development S.nta An1, Ca. ~}Manager. ~ ing conditions. offices and become a childrens bootery. Salary +
Technician 540-3210' n-lboo n -y Club Apoly in person member of our Millionaire SALES girl exper ladies xlnt incentives. Xlnt work· ROBINS
FORD IHI IHI SURF & SIRLOIN Club. Multi-million dollar wear 4 days wk, gd pay. Vic ing conds. Exp. necess. Alr.
Design, layout, test & build An Equal Opportunity Employer MA1221ILIWNG. CoestDEPTH.wy., N.B. 5930 advertising program. Free Adams & Brook h u rs l Milter, 644-2464, N.B.
solid state test equipment v.,r. Coast l-lwy. guaranteed licensing s~l. 968-8181 Mr. Kur st in SHOE SALESMAN ~:-:'i~i:.~ sy:~;;: ~ , G~eI~t ~~!!'anlty . Ne\vport Beach ~~~llfsntyo:ral~~n!!a!~1; s:;~~~·S, exper. Over * 644-0424 * ~ c!~~!vd.,
Some college electronics l ~;-;;!.!J;!!..!;;~~-:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; I Get in on the ground level NITE Chef, lrge food opera· to you? Check our monthly the counter sales. Salary + SERVICE S~. M11~gcr, ex-52 Years in Oranae Coum;y ~rable, I' JANITOR & Aiaint. Man of the most Rapidly Grow-tionii looking for nite chef. bonus program \Vhich means bonus Call Alberts Hosiery per. Smog lie. Lile mech. WAITRESSES wanted,
"--ter s-i'alti't• HOMEMAKERS w/f.lxlt abilities, club work, Ing Malling Firm fn Orange ~ 1re900sumNe & refs, toBeP.Oh. ™v· ':.t~ yJou! P835J~a~11 call for aPpt, 540-4997 Vpeorry moncat in,· ap~_!f· $800A 1+ Mature ladies, Perlonable, ~ ,.--UPJOHN PM shift. Apj>ly 720 W. Bay Co. Expanding daily, our uvx ' ewpor ac • irginia ones .... ~ · 0 Suu,. PP Y rellable & dependable. P'nr'
1640 Monrovl1 Ave., Batboa. Closed Mon. !inn is looking tor resp. in· Calif.~92660. SCHOOL BUS morns, 2590 Nev,rport Blvd., perm position. Apply 1n
Co1t1 Mis. ''PeoPI• Helplng JUNIOR SALESMAN: dividuals for our ntailing NIGHT Waterman. Irvine REAL ESTATE SALES ~. D_ RIVERS SCJIER,VICE Sta. Att•ndants. I person aft 5 pm, Open Poople'' dept who have or do not Coast Country Out>. Apply Sesame, 2400 West Coast Equal Oppor. Employer Eam $20.$40 per week work· · · · Appbcations being accepted FuU & 1 p/time. Neat in H N B
EXECUTIVES
$12,000 to $75.000
Send resunte or call TODAY
!or C.'Ontidentinl NO COST
exttutive interview.
EXECUTIVE SERVICES,
INC
1 888·N. Main, Santa Ana
(714) 547-9625.
Experienc:ecl
Boat Carpenter
to work on 31' Trawler
yachts.
Pacinc Trawler Corp. 547-6908
~ER. )oving care for ney
;1 mo old boy. My home,
'.Bal. Island. Own transp.
1Refs. Call Collect aft 6pm,
'(714! 6U-!ll89.
Don'l Be Fooled!!
Our Name Is Homemaken
But Our Business Is People
People Who Need Catt!
If you care & have a Apecial
concern for others, become
a homemakttS employee.
Enjoy a new identity in the
medical community.
e RN-LVN's
• Prac. Nur1e1 e Conv. Aides
• Nurus A11istant'1 e Companion AldH
• HouHkHper1
One Visit With Us,
And You·re On Your Way To
CreatJng Your Own
Work Week!!
ing after school and Satur· hav:e e:'PC'l'· m. the d!ret..>t ;im~persoiiiiiini;. ""'""'""'""'""" New office in Lagu119. Beach. for Sept. employment ~Y appear. Can traln sharp lii•"'iiii' ._·.,· .... ..,.., ... ..,;I
days selling new subscrip. m~. flcld . nus tyi>e ot NOTE CLERK 1\.lust be liee~secl. bu: \\·ill contrac!or opet'Bting in man. Apply morns. 2590 W I Dini
tions tor the DAILY PD.OT. pos1tioi:t wuul~ posslbly be L'Onsidci.· e:it::er, nc""· sales· Irvine UnH:ied School Dist. Newpoi1 Blvd. Cf.I a tr elHI-"I
This is not a paper route mo~ interesting to female \Ve presently have an open. people. i~Ia.nv adv!'nta<!"eS. Persons holding valid school '. Expei'ienced
and does not include de-applicants. ing in our Note Dept. Pref. Contact: Dor.ie Smith hus <!river certificate pref'd. SERVICE StatiOn Cd M . for prestige house. 'Apply in
Liveries or collecting. Open-Call Now for appt._540-185-j exper., but \\"ill train, Per· Ame rt'can Home Training progi·am avail foi-area. Out of the smog. Ex· person to Dtana Rudy. inaw: in Costa Mesa, Fountain Address-0-Print !IOn must be good w /llgures, . 'fl per. attendant \V a n t e d . Marquis. 1670 New po r t . .,.v Center Inc Neatne•.· & a-uracy ,-, In•-Realtor Umse I\ ith~ut certi ca!_es. Phone 67' ~s. lor pt. Bl d ~-M Valley and Sot,1th Huntington • · ""' '"'" ' Xln't salaries & bcnef1ts. ..-oo.L ap v ·• """ta esa.
Beach. Apply now by calling Equal Oppor. Employer perativc. 875 N. Cs•L~.r1,wY., Laguna Cali: i\Irs. Walp, (714) SERVICE station mechanic '!!!~~~~~'!'l!!!llel 548-3013. MALE 18 yrs or older. Apply Contact Mr. Newland * ....... 001 * 544.1170. & attendant, run or part WAITRESSES
Equal Oppor. Employer In person at Surf Theatre Bank of America : REAL ESTATE SALES time, Harbor & Baker
JR. CLERK
Beginning position for young man. Must type.
Appl_y In Person
MARINERS
SAVINGS & LOAN
1515 WestclW Dr.
Newport Beach
eves only. 121 Sth St, Hun-~ewpor~~s~:.r Office FREE LICENSE SALESGIRL, Boutique Shop. Union, Costa Mesa
tington Beach. TRAINING 21 or over. Exper. only need SERVICE Station Help. Full
Apply In Person
Wedi, Thurs, Fri 10 AM A~LEY WEST
2106 W. Oceanfront, NB MAN or couple, early AM 1..,.,Eq!!u!!a!!l !!O!!ppo!!!!!!!c . .,E.,m"p"l"oye,;·.,',. IFamous RE!al Estate Licens· apply. Beach area. Chance or p/tbne. 990 E. Coa1t
newspaper delivery in I : ing Course now available for n:ianagement. Reply to Hwy. Newport Bch. w AITRESS-experlenced, ~
Irvine area. Xlnt route Nurses thl'u Tarbell Realtors. Free Gs:ssitled ad no. 933, c/o SERVICE Station Attendant shitta available, Appl)' in ?Jl!~ .. $300 mo. approx. 117 &RNoth·LVN-shl~IDToE vt Placement Servlee. Free CoDaily MPl\ot, CaP.O~x 1560, fulltime. Apply Dana Point person. 3099 S. Bristol, CM. ::iv~ • er us. P P Training Program. .Earn sta esa,, "-· Shell 34137 Coast Hwy. VllndeKamp's, A divlaion of
MAN to work f/time in ren-
tal yard. Short hair. Very
neat handwriting. Will train.
Apply morns, 1930 Nwport
duty pay, lmmed. pay for while you learn. Call Al SALESMAN, f/time. Mens Tiny Naylor's.
floor duty. C 0 u n t Y wide Sloan (TI4) g.,2.5440. furnishings & sportsv.-ear. Ship/Rec Clrk $3.50 hr I 'w"'AI1'RESll""===='-'-ex"pe-r.-F=an_,.lal-,,.tic
Irrtrvws. Mon-Fri 9.s. R E SALESMAN Ex~. pref'd. Contact Mr. U:k>/B1ue Label e:xper. Lescoulie Nurses Registry, •. • FlelSCher, Hoelscher's. 3333 Westclitt' chance for a prolealonal 351 Hospital Rd., NB (Lob-Invest;tgate t~e.new approach S. Biistol Costa Mesa. (So. p 1 An.a ·wattresa. GraVeyd shift,
by Park Lido B I d g) & 1!100vatlve marketing Cst P1ai.ai. '"'"" ersoE ~!;n:!:ncyS Xln't tlpg. Reta: req'd. E P C Blvd, CM HOMEMAKERS K J UN H MAN lor Rental Yard work.
FACTORY UPJOHN some meohanical ex-
1 petience. 492-2688. 1805 N. BrO.dway, S.A. Varian Data ~lachines a I~--------
! . ,..,,.. ... ,.54,...7-668!!!!!!!!'1!!!!!!!!!!"!,..,l Ieaderintheminicomputer MANAGER TRAINEE
642-9955, 540·9954. techniques of THE GAL-.•.u..u • "'-"""''6"'", .A. 64&-5304.
LERY OF HOMES. You SALES, Full time will train, (Mark III Center) WA1TRE$ & kitchen help, Nurus Aides.-
Orderlies
Openings all shllts. Good
starting wages • xln't bene-
fits. Trainees accepted,
older women pref'd. LVN .
Olarge 11· 7 shift. Relief
L VN • All shitt.9. Bayview
Conv. Hospital 540-5690.
NURSES.Ward Clerk, 7-3:30
Weekends off. Xln't wages
...,ill be glad you did ; Call -opportunity. Apply at 1819 ~ full &:: part time. Lquna,
963-5611 for appointment Newport Blvd., CM St•tion Attindant 494-I:m ~~ or unlicensed we Cl~ cut, tor pa.rt time, col· WANTED Female B eer TRAINEES 1 ~f!42E!;:p:;-r"T"' = ~~!r,~ Outstanding opportwllty to
I Hotpit•lity Hostess area for the following: ~~~ ~ ~-~ i::;:
Service K ch 0 rent manaeers eam la ~ng tor women to eypun pr. llllOO-l!SOO mo. Must hove
Jobs Av1!11ble
, In Irvine &
welcome & interview new l·l years reee:nt exper. on the door to door canvassing ex~
residents. Sales or adver! 029, 059. Make own drum perience.
ti.sing exper. helpful. Must cards & do own verifying. Call Mr. Newman 979-5222 !Newport Beach Areas
1 Immediate Work
On All 3 Shifts
No Experience
Nec••s•rY
+ S.I.S.
; TEMPORARY SERVICE i ICM S. Grand, Santa Ana
!Foreign cir mechanic
' anted. 642-5133
& Part Time Help
, Wanted.• Over 21, w/neat
' clean appearance. Apply In
person, ?.le &. Ed's Pizza,
.Qo East 17th St. Costa Mesa
1\l"RNITURE Upholsterers,
Cutters. Arm makers &
seamstresses. New lrg fac.
tory, many benefits. Apply
at 23%1' South East Ma.in St.,
trvlne M on-Fri, bet
8am-4:30pm.
*GARDENER*
Be your own Bo11
Full or p/tiute In your
own are&t High in<.'On1e,
Guar1nteed Customers
No C•sh Down
Eam Now, Pay Later
96Ull2
have · car &: rypewtitet.
547-3095. Eve• " wknds, I Softwear 846-9004.
HOSTESS Preparation Clerk
Lei.w.re World Clubhouse. 2nd shi!L Keypunch exper.
Recreation & saciaJ ac-pre:fernd. Previous data
Hvttres background helpful control exper. helpful.
Part time pot;ition, J..5..a:l If you n1eet these qualifies·
hrs/wk., wknds I: ewnings. lions & are interested in
Apply penonnel off.ice M·F, joining a growing company
. 94, Administration Bldg, that oUers .•.
23522 Pueo de Valencia, La-
guna Hills.
HOSTESSES
Apply In Person
Intervws Fri. 2-5 pm Only
Alrporte r Inn
Hofe I
18700 MacArthur Blvd., NB
Opposite Qrange Co. Airport
JiOUSEKEEPER, live in, for
employed couple. $75. wk.
refs. req'd. Reply to P.O.
Box 1438, Laguna Beach.
1-ISKPR/supervise boy 8 yrs,
1-5 Pl'il. 5 days, refs. $2. hr.
Nwpt Sch Pen. 675-6502
e Xln't Benefits e Modern Facilities e Competitive Pay
Please Apply In Person
Or Contact
B. Krafka
VDM
Va rl•n Dita M1ch ine1
Irvine
2722 Michelson Dr
833-2400, ext 336
eves. GIRL Friday wit h EXCElr
LENT typing t80 to 120 LEGAL Secretary, min .. 2 WPM) & Secretarial skills HOUSE\VORK, 4 hours each yrs Calif. expel'. \Vestcli.ft
wanred by constilting firm momlng. Mon thi'u Fri. S40 area. N.B. Call 642-2330 for
I • __ ,, n-ch Start a week. Own car. ~1577 n ~..., 1a U<Oa • appt.
Sept. 1. Call E 11 z ab e I h HOUSEWORK light duty LIQUOR Store clerk, night
494-8592. after ,surgery. References. shift. Spm-lam. Apply at
Gm.I. Friday for general ot· 1,..reo...,. iicaliilii84ii02--0.l..,77..,..,..,;;; 2072 S.E. Bristol (Nr. OC
flee work, w Isome S ECTOR Airport) S.A. knowledge of bookkeeping, IN p -LVN~.,~,_ll~&-11--7-, ~lul~l~U-m-e,
any are. f373..l534 . Precision sheet metal shop. modern facllltles, x Int
'Girl Wanted. Shop Work Must be experienced & re. M1tking cond. Gordon Lane
Colta Mesa. c.all .Between liable. Sa1ary open. Convalescent Hospital, 1821
8 . 3 ... -SPACE-TEK . ~ E. Chapman Ave.,
HEATING & ventilator malo-INDUSTRIES Fullertoo.
tenance num. j()ul"neymen 1.9'22 Placentia
!evd. Expcr jn Installation, , Ollta Mesa
maintenance & repair. Apply 1n pehOO, Capistrano Uni·
flod 5<1.,.,1 ' l)is\rl<l, 26126
Victoria Blvd., Capistrano
Beach.
HELP!
Volt Instant
PerS11nel
INSURANCE SALES
MANAGE Apartments, Older & benefits. Apply at 1445
couple, handy, bondable, 1 ==Su"pe=rio=r_A7v"'e~., ~N~.B=---~~
Newport Heights. Resume NURSES Aids • Day shift.
to 12427 Ventura mvd, Hntg. Sch are a . C.On-
Studk> City. 91604, or call valescent Hosp. Exper.
213-m-I&00/762-9873. pref. 842-5551
MARINE ENGINE
1.fEOlANIC
Must be exper. & current on
plea.sure boet gas &: diesel
engines, transmissions, out.
drive, etc. Highest wages in
industry. Brand new
facilities at Sunset Aquatic
Park. Call 1st for appt.
n4:846-412i or 213: 59'.l-1645
anytime.
Marketing Trolnee
Fee Paid. Nationally known
finn. Gree.t chance for ad·
vancement. A lat of PR in-
volved. ~lust have 2 yrs
NURSES Aide, exper. Pvt
duty sitter. 3-U Shift. Call
67l-0.'115.
OFFICE Manager, I i t e
bkkpng, lite typing.
Interesting work. 5 Days
per wk, 10-5. 8141 Atlanta,
H.B. 536-8091.
<.'Ollege, pref'd in marketing. omCE help. aerical, typ-
Start $700 + car&: expenses. ing & filing . Apply at 2323
1\lr-0 Fee Jobs. Call Ed Wolf, South East Milin St., Irvine,
54().6055, Coastal Personnel Mon-Fri. bet 8am-4:30pm
Agency, 2190 Harbor Blvd., PAINTER CM.
will train. * 1'ege stUdent pref. good pay, Tender. Part time.
R.E. SALESMEN Arco Station, ~ Diego ** 496-90'J3 Days **
Why not work in the hottest Flwy. &: Harbor Blvd. I "':--,"'"'---~--
a r e a • Huntington s t • STOREKEEPER -Qualified WE need a stronr ~man Beach/FOWl~n Valley. Let ecre ar1es person w/knoweldg<! of ~~w!lllordoa~mr;:: us train you. Ask for Mr. marine hardware & flnlshea 80-3546
Snider, Vll.J..AGE REAL to & I ' ESTATE !lf32...44TI Varian Data Machines has serve as store. rece V· \VHO WANTS TO WORK? ' immediate openings tor lng clerk. Apply m person, DRIVE A CABI
Real Estate -Rental olnce SecretarieS with ·excellent Lido Shipyard, 900 Udo CHOOSE hours work
_Personable guy or gal with skills & the ability to handle ~rk Dr., Newport ~ach. tor yourJ:ttU: be yo.ii-own !tUnseR~~ ~"28J&l a variety of sitl.!ations in a STUpENTS, ap~ly r:iow for boa. Men or women. Can
---------mature, profess.1onal man· p/tune OO?lt'UIUOn JObe. $2 be slJ&bdy handicapped. ---------1 ner. If you are looking for a hr. Over 17. M.S. Tait, Ne a t..Oean Appearance.
RECEPTIONIST JlO'ltion with a growing 838-1186 bet noon. Vlt, ,.tired. Age 25 to 71l.
Orange County company Supplement your lncomt'.
Day or night, no exp. nee.,
easy. fun job. \\'ill train, no
1yping or shorthand, etc .
Apply in person any aft or
eve. at 2930 West Cst Hlft'Y.,
N.B.
RECEPTIONIS'I' tor Irvine
law C1Hice. Lt. bkkpg ... &
clerical skills req. 833-362'1.
Restaurant
A FUN PLACE
TO WORK
~he fee uten
that olfers excellent benefits Drive a cab 6 hrs or more a
& •~rking conditions. TECHNICIAN day. Apply in person,
Please Apply In Penon To become in\.'Oived in a Yelbw Cab Co., 186 E. 16th
C broad spectrum of electrical St., Cmita Mesa.
Or ont•ct &: mechanical project's as· WOMAN to work in ·Donut
B. Krafk• sociated wHh our research shop f. nites, no phone calls
VDM
Vari•n D1t• M•chln11
lr vl,,.
2722 Michelson Dr.
833-2400, ext 336
ia'bora.tory. 1 Qr 2 years ex-pl&ate.. Winchell'6 Donut
perience required on electro-stKIP1 2947 Harbor Blvd. CM
mechanical or vacuum ap-WOMEN need e d for
paralus. how1ecl.,.n\ng, Cail RDbb!e'a
PLEASE CONTACT: Ila& A Mop 548--0157
A. J , ARMINI
ll§l 97'""80
SIMULATION
PHYSICS INC. mm "B" Sky Parl< Blvd. Equal Oppor. Employer Irvine 800
•
J •
I
I
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4J DAILY PlLOI T!Msdly, August 2), 1973 -I~ I ..... lr§J [ TrlMS)OC1atlon liil ...... ]~;.I -~.;.;I~.;;· i ~! ~-~!;;;~I .... *~ !~I ~ l~I
818 Planos/O~ans 826 n....1 ... Boots, S.ll 909 CyclH, Bikes, ~".'1'etHomRent" ...Ji Auction IOI FurnilUN 810 Goroge Soto 112 Mlscelloneou• ·• -.,. -925 ~ ''""
INDIAN JEWELRY 1 ·w_oo_o_EN_"'_ /c!Jo_u_na_'"_b1-. -& ESTATF: s•u:: 146 Via free Onran Lessons • PUPPY WORLD • * CONTEST 31 *, Scootors • w1nnobago-For soi.
T ON r:haihi u:;, BR ~t. sc1>arate J'11ncc"8, San Clcntentc. * AUCTION * '6 E NG [,IS H &ll ntlx, E..XECUTIVE DEMO SAl..E * BICYCLE SALE * 27' c:.i11er1on pr! ply 641·546i
AUC I or tO(eU1er; 1lJlnda.rd size •El CJJn11no HeaJ exit, from · ChibuabU.(ls,. Amer I cao ! ! DIESEL ! ! NEW 10 SPE~~o' l'l:ALIAN phone 8-G PM on1y ' J-~d';;~n~:. ~l~n~~1 int1.ttre" w/box sp1·1t11:11 San Dit¥<> f'recway, sou1h FRIDAY 7 PM As Long A1 You Like! Eskbno (Spitz), Pit Bulls $31,000 INVENTORY BICYCLES $;:i9.9;i. Beach Tr1iler1 Trave1 945
• 1d 'J.. $l}; Lrg:. dresser $30; on a unino Real to Vlllen-AUGUST 24 Noll•playl'I'S &. players Y.'CI· Greyhound, Bull Terrier, ONLY $27,950 Ulcycles. 806 E. &lholl ;.;.;:==· ..c....;;.. ___ ...;.1
itll!)'lC<.1,iun l''r ny 12·• c:lothcs dry~. nhtMll new cia. \\'fSl on Valencla, left Don't 1nis.s this 81\\c . , , un. <:Onie 10 uucntl Tue#l11y T-cup Poodles, l tll I ian Blvd .. 6T:r-7282. AuUKlri:.:cd e REAL BUY e
2722 N. Ma in St., S.A. $175: \\'bite aota $00; out· at f!Nt street Uwn quick elalmed foltorage, personal night at 7:30 P M. We want Greyhound, Bull Terrier, Completely Comnll!IS'k>n\.'<.I NISHIKl dealer. 18, xS' o·uvel trlr . Covered
CALL 543--4941 door 1ilcntc table S25: ping r ight 10 eod !>l long bloch k). t'ffccts. bedroom stts in Pl'o-t11'',.cn0~,~ .. }1.0 ~r1•1•m,,,,1•,,,",,1•1Y, OocPUPkasl':"'s· >ud100ServMoee' X~E10,01 Md Jtoody tor ln11nediatc '69 HONDA Choppt•r, 0000 ~'ago.ti, 1111-entnd, \Vtr, htr,
8 fld. M f 806 pong table w/paddlcs $15. Ofar·nond rang, o t e r vincial .~ 1\fodf•rn, dining ., ..... , " ., Del' il a Al t Se<'' f I I toJJet sh ' _ u '"I ahlrl• 1 Asairt.ed turnlturt, ~tale lab-je1-\'elry, 1 ome cut glass, i1ll'.lnl Sc'l!I, chesll'I, coffee rum i.sln'{J. Brcc<IS • OPEN E V ES ' 1~ m es. ean. u~ · re · ga• i: cc. ' . wr, u h · 'ruin t>1cttl'ieh • iu <'hurgc. r.11 soil · OR· Best offer . 642--229'" alt 6.1 leveling Jacks, awn t n g. • Surplu1. Building by cat, f1"eC to gd. bon1e, s· ver, c • n a . lo i~s, ta[)le!i, 2 pianos, divans, re. Phone 642-2851 ,,, - . ORDF.'R NO\V FOR \VINTER Ask for Bob Paris. 761 Scott $1•100 cash. Pvt. Pty. ~fA1'Ef{IAI •. JOOO's of NEW ~7 aft. 6:30PM priinitives, vlnta1:e c thlng, c..'liners, c<ilor 1V ':s, sterco8, IRISH smER DELIVERY AND SAVI-~ $$$ Place, Apt. 3, Cl\1 * J'h. 5'lll-.m8 * . \Vlek~r. old u•wing n1ach., itrereo cornJX)nents, pictures, COAST MUSIC lTEi\:IS! Doon, lumber, ply-9 DRA\VER chest w/mu·ror frl\mcs + Interesting o!d lrun ps. Jans. 1>'i.'Wing ma-.N~\\'JJOrt Blv<I. at I-larbor * AKC MALE , all $24,260 SAIL AWAY A Great Bike! ':>4 TRAILER, 8 x 31. Ston~
Vl'OOd, alum sheeting, mold· $100. 2 lmr stools for $10. furn etc. \\'ed to Fri, hn JO fros ft-ee f't"tt h t I t di It' lnclWL-s DIC9el Engine, 1970 Kawasaki 350 Villa Trlt· Pk. 646-7914, nol Ing, win~. etc. Dlnette set w/4 high back 1 3 1 chil'K's, :l ig. l'osta ?i1esa s o s,. X n spos 1~n. \Vorking Salls, Pu1plts J. ufler 7:30 PM ' BUt LDERS SURPLUS groen chrs. $.15. Hcrcul(ln ° • on Y· erators, w!Ulhcrs, dryers, Super good with child· and Lile Lines, Two SpeOO Xlnt 1:ond. $3:!0 calf 1111
2406 So. Main St., S.A. t11bric green nnn chair $Xi 2ND Gc~::tf,f ''~~ND lot11 ot interesting mi:«:~!~ PIANOS -ORGANS ren. $50 963-1584. \Vinchcs and '-1u<.'i1 :P.1ore. ·n liON~A~~ • bl Lo Trailers, Utlltty '47
Mon thru Sat J0-5 ~,s:rv.,g._,7foss.refrfg. ~a.ke of-,.1ore new camping equip. WINDY'S AUCTION Nc"o"'m~,u,,~,,:v'': GP"•·"ic'e~.'.l"orpeoo•nn'. SPlllNGER Spaniel, ll mo. OPEN J-'OR INSPECTION ·1 ...,.1·a md eMc t BOAT ·rrullt>r, 4 Ton Ca.pact. TI4 : 546-1032 • ...-,,._ .,_ .~ Noon to Sunset Aug. 25 & 26 m1 cage, new con . us W"-n[ ~i.. , SOLID Sal Ma 1 1 · Jgloo coolers, Pr i mu 11 E\'f's. & Sund:1ys. The best AKC. braut. cout. good Slip 3A scll. Leave ovt>rseas , $55() ty, Ta ndem 1s.." '· .... --.ee:, Cameris &. cin P e wui stove!l. Sleeping bags, reg & com:; BRO\VSE AROUND d•ul" "'"' ,1,,,,,. •t·. a round children, hsebroken, ..... Ir "'" "176 · jl600~~o~r~o!tl~or~.!!162!!"""9!!~!!!ii!!~;j po.sler beds. chest. dresser, ' .......... ' 13 ' " ~ " n. • """' Ne11·port Arches Marina ' I co"~'~~~·~·~·~·~~""'~~,.-~ . Equipment 808 in'Ol' & . ht land 1500 2 lb. goose dOwn -Tenrus ...... J~'• N-ewport ' lvd. w 11· h M • c·1 i;payed $75. 833-.)'1\l"I. . m . rug s . TR<.'<fUets, g<tlf sell:!;, 1nini Bcliind Tony's Bldg. htaH's. a IC s USIC I y (Bt'iHnd Cenlil'll'la Bank~ ·71 llONDA CL 350. Looks §] Maple cJl,alr & rocker $25 De · PLAYFlJL, Goid('ll Cocker Holland Yacht!l/Nev.•port like ney,•, Needs clut ch I NlKON -FTn, filter ~ Jense
included. $325 or best offer.
675-3971 or 642-0072
each. Dinelle, S chain; $35. ~(~~wai!i:mp de~~ COb'ta Mesa * G46·8&SG l.&!!!"'!!!'.,",.c.,oa,..•t~P!!l!!a',."!!!!!"5'1().!!!!!!!283tl!!, Spaniel, 1\KC, 9 1nos. male, 714-644-0139 plate. Must st"ll S400 or AutosfOfS* .Qi
646-7216 aft. " wood s I' very a!Joctio<"'le $100 to COLUMBIA 22 MK t-de for u~ck. 556--0216. ~-----~·;;;~ divider 50lid · tove 8' RET~L fro'ten food ca~ }o'JSCHER Baby Grand, dark good honie only. 831-184.S. II .·~12 KAIVASAKJ 750, In>· PAlR of beaut. Con tE'nlp. hood wiU1 light & fan. Mftny $200. 30 ~ 30 x 15 old 1vulnut _ deooi'aUve. Xlnt
.F • .;:u.;.rnc;l;ol.:;Uo."'::_ ___ _;:l;:..:10 chairs. pttle bl ue velvet nwre misc. items. 1867 fashioned chopping block ronrl. STJO. or subniit offer. AKC Bo.xer Pupµ)', Brt~dle n1ac. \1•ndshld. & cvt'. Ant iques/Classlcs 953 Teak end table. Gold velve1 Bayport \Vay be t ween $65. Postage stamp nln<:hlne :\i2--945.l f e n1 a I e . C ~a m p 1.0 n steeps 5 adults, head, galley, 833-9627 Days, 5 5 6 -7 o 3 4 c;:.;.;..;:o_;..:;...;... ____ _ ~~ -reclint'r. Xlnt co 11 d · Tuslin & Irvine. Friday & $40. Convex SeeAll n1irrors, .::::::..o:=------background. Good pnce. loack>d \vi.l'h gear including Eves. '47 BUICK Super. Good FJorel Davenport, 6T:>-7465. Sal 9-4P,.'I 18,, $l" ....... 1~, 36 .. .,.,?,. P LAYER Pinno, Kiniball 968-2oaJ bow .... .1 ., d li! 1. 1 . .;o:.:::;~~0-----=;--::-~ .. • 11 . ~........A mo-.. ond. ' "' "" ..., "'" ronsolette 6 lessons old. \Viii · • yu.ipt an .e uies, '66 BSA (!lopp(lt', 14 " ex-INl.ly, gofJ( ire.· 6""""' '-"'· Excell,ent C . $40. DIVORCED · !\lust sell CANE baskeTs & hampers. Old fashioned cell ing fan Saerifil'e. 644-0788 eves, Golden Retrievers l1lSt.Om decorator trim, shag tension y.,i bars, tear drop Nt'C'\IS rtar end work . Makt
480 Broadway velvet sofa. pi c l u r e s . Old Mal)()g' dining rm set. $15. Rotisserie $25. Aln1ar ,vkends. AKC. 6 \\'ks. 551·5442 carpet, pompass, R.D.F., tank. reblt 650 cng. $500. _":::':::''o.'":..c":.:'..:"':.:1().4564.:...c·c..o--~ Cotti Mesa Hcrculon sora & LS, hide·a-ornate; 6 uphol ehrs. 2 relail di splay steel shelving, .-"''='=------Horses 856 anchor. hne, and Dares. ~.8 493-2447. LEA YING State. niust sell t«I, lamps, refrig, etc. leaves, silence pads, mclal half price, like new. 14' x lf L!KF. nu \furHtzPr Chot'CI ;,.:;;c.:,;:;_ _____ ...:,:.: horsepower lifcrc. Main, , ,56 Chcvy Pickup, •64 Buick ~ 675-0869. inla-, ~. or best otter. \vith \\'t'8P basc & backs, Organ Us('(! 6 \rks, Call 1nulP, a nd 167';0 Genoa 3 '73 YM1AHA 125 MX all ex-....., tt I -'-"-="-------,. ~ "11 1661 {J\10 VINGl 9 yr A pp y ~-f " & JI ble e»g. $800 or ...,st o er. P..fEDITERRANEAN couch Coldspot refrig. S15. Crih, both for $400. 10 lb"hflnging ,,. -. Days or 5~17411,1 Barlow wtncbes boardint .. ...,, very as, · "-' a . .,,,2_81,,,,· 165. "-w lrultwood -"ee VELVET high back chr. $90. 1 1 NCR C 1 E Gelding. Reg-papers. 16~~ 1 • must sell by the 1st "·•JO 01• o · ,.,., .... u 1 135 comp! 1~~. l\f!SC ITEMS! scac 15. a s 1 ~-'-v-'-"c,'·---~---11 1 1 l'~be adder and more. This ls · oro • 1-lexagon commode tb . '-" .,:::= CR :. · . p cai;ure Jf)J'SC. ~ st " """1096 R t• 1 table, end tables $150. 2 646--0827 * 378 La Perle register, 4 item, ..,A.., N PIANO, Kim"·tll, ""ti~o -n-olfe•·, ,.,_,,,7, an exc..~plionally clean boot .ouer, ~ ecrea 1on1 · 1 11., !Gng size orange quilted bed b ·1 I l9Jl 1~{\{\ .... "-' ., ... ., • "'" ....,. I <.'t'ra.mie amps ..... each. spread $30. All xlnt con<!, Lane, CM. factory re u1 t n • ·""'· sole, Feneh, lruitY.'ood, $78.l. and had !rest\ bottom paint TRIUMPH 650 CC 1966, runs Vehic e1
55&-8324. 642_2977. CUSTOM furn. Glass top cof-Meat hanging scale to 500 494-1769 in Augus:t. Replacement cost very good. Also Bultaco 350 95~
10' OOUCH, ;-slnt co11CI. Must fee table, sofa, light fix· lb. $25. GE store clock $15.S -'-"'-=. ;__Goo--d---83-0 I -"°'&:'· oment lltL l well over $10,000. Owner CC Pursang 1973. \Viii talk : sell $100 or best offer. 10' ·SECrIONAL $250. Obie tu h . 10 to 2PM, Sat. Aug. 25, 112 , :;cpo<:;;;r..;1;;'"~9,_;:.;:;:.;:;' __ = buying largt>r boat. Asking a bout prices. 548-8027 art 6 .• """ w/H/B .,,,,.. 'IWin bed res, occas. c a 1 r 5 ' M F dden Pl NB I h the ' · s-H wporter ~ bet 7:30. a .in.· .,..,.,. torchiere lamps, wall con-c a · · Y POOL tablc. gc n u i n c 'i••;;·~-~~~1 .1·~-~·~o;r~n~>:ak~e~o~U~er~.:J!W~ill'.ITAKE it out & play wi th 11! e
NEW '73
5 pm wkdays. $20. Reel chr, $60. 54~l!!. sole, nrim>r, call)et. paint-pier). Brunmvick, 4'li x 9, slate, ~ help fmance. TI4-84'2-3737. ~H~~ bored to 327. Santa Cruz ~~!di~:h~~~1:r~at1~~v~ ·~~ S~~:1 17uch, good ~rcht>n ~~t. ~P s~;~;: SCRAM-LETS ~~~~ie~J!7~ts, acct!ssories Boats, General 900 * AUCTION * n ~MK, fast bike -good I Yan Conversion
octagon end tables. All good ' ' 644-262:1. ANSWERS DIVING Equip. &uba P1TJ 9 fT BOSTON WHALER Aqu:~~~~ble 218.8"~~~ 26 rondition. • EquiJlpcd with Bubble Top,
cond. 837-7908. Girage Sal• 812 GOOD clean, originally f':'t· Alnlmt ne1\·. Co111plctc set Sealed Bids \l'ith $lOO Re-8304669 1 12 Vol1 B.c>rrig, Range, Ove11,
2 USED Steel Desks. !\far-pensive turn. Bassett BR Call eves. 673-7896. SQUALL fundablc Deposit accepted '69 l!ONOA MINI 1'Rt\IL. I Jen~n 1'oilet, ay,•ning, Ot1
Proof tops, Exec. chair, * SALE _ Sat !O to 3. 3100 set, Ba.byLine crib & Kosh(>r -Balmy -Tangy -FULL set Golf Clubs, like nu from 10 AM to 4 P !\1 Sat. Good condition u Dodgt> cha,;sis and a lof
Xlnt rond. 833-3410 days on-Clay St Npl Bch Games drt•i;ser, Qn sz ~Jon Blithe -l'l'fONl\EY + nu bag, g<l bu>'•~". 1~1~ and s "-day 8/:,,./73. 494·1458 1nort' 1#012723). ly 9 lo 4 " . . • Hide· a-Bed. bo\'!I' Otmpaign M k 'J\v . "O 11 7977 ~ I~ ·~ ..... ~ $5995 · toy~. books, records, TV, furn, mP8lm lam p s . ar a111: ur eavl"n-* 545-. * Ideal fiberglass dingey, Ex-Bids ~'ill be opened at 4 RALEIGli ''Chopper·· Bo ys
8 DRWR Drexel dresser, stereo-spkn;, goodies ' & 963-~-Jy f ather invented 1nan be-TV R d ' H .F . ce llent rondil:ion. Only $350. PM. Boots may be inspe<.1ed bicycle, 3 ~. Xlnl corld. . k' • $100 '"' h . . ed . ' a 10, I I, N ·~~ w/lrg mirror + dbl bed Jun . x to · cause e .,.,,as d1sappo1nt in Stereo 836 714·842·3737. at fu\lSCRAF"l' Boat SaJes, $65. 846-5306.
bkca&e bdbnl Only $75. LEAVING •.t"te, must sell GAitAGE SALE ALL the ,,10 NKEY ." ..;:;..::;,,;;;:._ ____ = BOSTO Dana Point a.tarina Dana i ~::::...==::::...~~-~~ ·' " WEEK. Comer group, crib, -N \I/haler, 13', ex. · . ' '72 KAWASAI<I 115, dirt bike fi45.-5060. all misc. items. Aug 25 & baby's chest. dinette set, ~ DUE lo n1edicnl bill I need cond. $1000. s.-~:: hp motor, Porn!. 496-JTil. Gd. cond. Must sell $425.
$87.89 per mo.
for 84 month~'.!)% ON , Cfl!ilh
Pritt $&108.70. De fclTf'(I
price S!lli&t.50. A.P.R. ll.~.
0 .A.C.
* COUCH & LOVESEAT * 26th, 1M54 LaDespcnsa, refrig., bar &. misc. llttn· With This Ad rome cash fast~! SO I have less than 10 hrs. $350. ISLANDER 32, Modified to 551-5070.
brand new, both for $150. F.V. 9611-7789. ,,·-gto• Conto'nen•n!, i i:17..., d . H'· !·"-" !o sncrificc a panasonic: Pri\·ate party 673-3438 34. 5 Bags + Spin. Roller cz"°"'"'J\v=::,-,-1~,,~.~V~e---.. ~1 .. -,_
Usuall)• home. 968·7910 SACP.JFICE Sa t on l y , " " L<1 , .. Tl'ea le Se\\'lng mac ipe Jv. slcreo ta pe r eco r de r *C t d d . h Ree f , E 1 e c t wa t e r 0 a e • · G?s "isc}' G I bs Ur I k C I are n1 on t Ln ., HB. 0 1<1 refrig. Sl5. Chrotn<' kil-1v/auton1ati~· reverse. Uses us om ma e 1ng y Fathometer 0 p t i s . I ' w/e.'ctnls. Jeff :>-• ~~S'I'u6~l~~~U~~ r~ !:S~ ho~g~ufi" ~f tu:O~ 691g :v~ 968-4~. ~1en sc;. $~21).~·k ~1~e an1pcx 71~ t'e('\S and tapes, S95. 646-0023 Geared ~-inches, ~~r: Frank 673--5076 . EXPLORER ..•
HUNTINGTON BEACh ~3298 Ocean front NB. GARAGE Sale -Med· 'Un l se · a. c ves includes 3 speeds, 2 sten 'O Radio, RDF o 1v 11 er * 1971 Kawasaki 75, SlJ5
furniture, 1vasher. refrig, S5. Bookcase l·leadboard $10. si>ea kcrs. headphones, 1;-1 Boats/Marine 675-1371 . ' ' Ex c e 11 c n t condition!!!
FOR Sale furn, 2 Br, 40' * * SAT .i:.i Sun, Furniture, freezer, 'household it£'ms. Ends Aug. 28. USED US-pre rel'Ordt•d tapes ,r,. blank Equip. 904 \VANTED _Lido 14 or Hobie,l ,::6"75-021="5::,·~~=~~=
mobile home located Mam-cl othes & misc. 969 Grove Very reasonable. 2 3 2 2 ABLES, 2J60 Ne'vJIOrt Blvd., reels • all equipnient is 12. Will trade Nikormat 'TI YAMAHA RT-l, 360 MX. ----------'-I
moth Lakes, Easlern Built, Pl.. Cos1a Mesa 64&-7007 Palisades Rd .• Santa Ana. CM . Tues. thru Sat. brand nu. asking $27:> or 18 ~IP EVIN~UDE with lens, apProx value Curnutt shocks, other xtras. •1973 ClfE.VY Blazer. 4·"'·hl.
181i()I fllt.t " ~,,[, ~,:, ,&J
HuNt ~ .1o•i flf.\l ..
forced heat. 962-5.".69. 4 FAMILY Garage Sall! F ri-919-1496. ~ tnakl' offl'r. 846--5494 Bh.'("t. s tarter $85 takes S600 8C6 N B;: vfront, $600 cash ,v/trlr. 67r>-5751 dr. 350 w/auto lran.s. aif,
Twin Beds, xfn't cond Sat.sun 1597 Baker St, Costa Jewelry 815 41/::<9' BRUNS\VICK pool tbt * Summar Special * 327 \V. WilS011, Sp, 5, CM ~1boa Island. Good ihru g.. '73 HONDA, Cl 450 ;;~~-n1~~f~~ ;j~~ t~~
Best Offer 6~74H5 1 c'M::.e::"::c.· ~--~~~~ \V/equip $.l50. Maytag elec. Rebuilt~Picture Tube 10 hp ,.1~cury Outboard, :m-13. $875. Immac cond. 3nl0 old. bar
"Weed it & Reap" F"ROi\>I Thurs. on-Beds, TV, e GENEROUS e wash.r/gas dt)'l' $300. Exec $87.5~21'' or 25" Color 1970, hkf' OCY.'. $250 F'UU. Race, Snipe, reg. In 642-1933 n11.' s.;r;::: J~Ol..lllt, 5000 f'rom treasures to trash ch.rs , Misc. Much more! 138 steel desk 40x70, 2 niateh Call 673-4335 N 1, S . 1 Tum tbem
'
·-to c~ei. E. 18, C.t.i. 548-4-t85. chairs $295. Credenza SiO. * 2 YEAR \VARRANTY 12 VO'T Bait & B>'lge _!'er n1pe c a~s1. Traile1r. 'TindS!:ORTS'I'ERC Xl.Jb" f , ex· 1971 J EEPSTER Comman<b
A-I cond, \Varn Hubs,
f\olichclin radials, n I u nt ,
n1ags. rear lire racks, 500 1h
capacity luggage rack, drlt ·
Ing lilt's. $1200. 6T;3204
" =• REWARD J al ~ b I .,= T'I Tnstallat10n Availa ble I ... .._.,v . new sa.1 s, new y te .. ..., forks o ra scat CALLDallyp;lol N·-" "P d"•p•-ad' • • 1 ,-~uv. rse .~. t e Pt Cl t 11•= fi 'h•• ak II ' ' =u a a · mce an · top Coffee table. ~ Also Rice's Television Serv1Cf' imps. ose ou · ... ""ea. tt n1s ~•. M e o er . 714-~ miles. $1700. 968-715.1.
l\fisc. 448 DeSola Terr. forn1erly Mesa North Center * 548--035.1 * 645-2381, .213-3.11-3758
A COHVENIEHT SHOPPING AN
SEWING GUIDE FOR lHE
CAI. ON THE CO.
For an' Id ln Woman's World
Call Mary· Beth 642.5678, ext. 330
tj)ulc:k Cuts! Fun to Croc:het!
I I' 7386
For return or any in-
formation leading to return
of a ~Id four leaf clover
pi.n, approx. 2 inches in
diameter , with j e we I c d
horseshoe in center; also,
gold locket (was on chain).
approx. the si:.:e of a nickel,
inscribed in script, FLA.
These are deeply treasu red
family mementos & the loss
is irreplaceable. PLEASE.
PLEASE help if you have
any information -642-35&1
Eves. & y,·eekends.
Cdl\1. 673--0"6.j. l Bick S. or Baker 54&-6002 Boats, Powet". 906 Boats, Sllps/l>ocks 910 Motot" Homes
HOOVER ui:iright Vaeuu n1 Ol)t'n 9-5 {G days) Sale/Rent
$35, Hvy metal 2 dta\V('l" fil-CURTIS '-fathes, vertical ANNUAL MID SU1'fMER * 34' Slip *
ing cabinet $20. Decorator \l'alnut cah. Color TV, clearant:l' sale. Fantru.1ic Huntington Harbour $68 mo. NEW' •73
Spanish wood y,•all shelf sterro am/fm, radio & savings on our invcntory of call 846-3272
\V/pair of rnatching "'all record player. 675-7465. ne\v & used boats. No reas. D--ts 5--' & Sk. 9l I EXPLORER 24'
Pl ..i oifr. refused. Mesa Boat -' ~ I sconces. $15. ate &'ass COLOR TV, Admiral 25" C N GAUCHO n1irror 89x24" $15. ~22.'ID. \\ith stand. Sl65. Ca 1 J ent('r, l595 ewpon Blvd., ALTA Craft 18' Cab i n . _
PATIO Sale, Fri, Sat, Aug 5.16--4769. CM. 64&-6269 or 64&-0539. Cruiser. 50 hp Johnson elt>e· I Ton ~. 454 Eng, Dual
2-1, 25. 10 am-4 pm. Fu1,,j. 2 LA NCER SC6 Speukers. '71 SIDEWINDER, 85 HP tric. Ski-Fish-Cruise. Full Battt'.'ries, Divitk-r drape,
ture, plants. ldtchen 1va.re, SZ-JO each new, SlOO each Oul-Board Chrysler~ gold & covers, etc. $600 inc. l mo. Arm Chair seat, SlOVf'. O\lf"n,
books, rec..'Ords. stereoi;. XI 1 6'73-4&'13 bronze. Xlnt ccrnd. $2400. free dock. Bayshore Park. sllo"·er, toilet &. ett:.
1'.luch more. 2705 s. Coast i"ioiwi. iiini.iii,,.i.iiiiiiiil 64fr.6032. 2212 College No. l , Slip 50. (#24353),
NE\V '73 Landcruiser, 900 I n11le.s. Soft top, roll bai,
\Van·en hubs, a ll xtras.
Sacrifice -l'vlakc otter.
646-2189 aft. 6.
DUNE Buggy Lall' n:iodel 140
hp, comp! bug & Lrlr, sand
& dir1, !ires + spal'\'. Ert
ready, lving. o v ers~as .
1700 or bst otter 646-0176 .•
Trucks 962 Hy,·y., eor of Sunscf, La-C.M. 20' FORMULA, used twice. $9295
guna. 494-394::0. 1~ LET us sell your trailera.ble New $7500 Sacrifice $6500! SACRIFICE Free to You .. fibcrglas.'! boat. For fast Pvt ply, r&-862.5 $121 32 #72. GMC
CUSTOM Spanish wrought L. _____ __J • C:~:; 6~ M~S:.~t 16' SKI boat & trailer, 2S.1 to"1 .. dn, i2U ,:~ c';:· prii·(' I Ton SiC"1·1-a -auro -air concf.
Miscellaneous 818
iron, 2 room dividers, 1 7·11 A Pa nasonic stereo l!IJX' 3 L• 2 To'mes $2 00 , . Chevy. good cond. $900. MO'lt< 10 Oef I . P. Stl'CTlng &; brakes. stiru,, recordt>r \vith automatic ines, • · ·72 SKJPJACK 20'. Open-2'25 675-8163. ~~· · err,ec Pr 1 c,l' • . (1$17K I. Only by 3', 1, 7' Ux4'. 1 gate, s k h d s•0 0= 21 • 1 ll 10 62 <1'6x3'. Decorotors staircase reverse. pea ers, ea · OMC. Under 100 hrs. Trailer 16' GLASPAR 75 hp \\i th oAC: · ''· · · · · $3699.00
to n1a tch. 2 High Back phoncs-lols of. tapes. Bst of· PUG .t: Cocker, m i x . & extras. X1nl c o n d · trailer ssoo HOWARD Chevrolet
S1vivel chairs & sml round fr. R46-5494 Female, 5 1nos old. all 714/494-7901. 6'i&.ro1s Newport Beach
coffee table. SacriI at 1~ "DRAPERY 1'~ABfUC" shots, xlnt \vith k ids! 17' -CRUIZON Jnbd. Unfin, CLASSIC 1-liggins inbrd 120 1
1
1.iacArlhvr 8hrd &-Jambo~
ol'ig cost. Approx. 60 yrd11 27,000 Ya rds lst's c>:::36-1:....:17':.:-:_:>5.:::l7c:-289=1:,,.. ___ 1 011TI trlr, mahog deck, hp, Oirysier, ' R e c 'en t &3J..0555
thick red shag crpts & pad. Special l\lill Purchasc POODLE plyv.·d hu!I, glse. $400 or of. o/haul. $850. 71~44-2929 1----=:..:=:....---I
Xlnl cond. Cost $600 Sacrlt $2.00 -$7.50 value 1,~ price Chocolate brown niale. Free fer. 5'1H 118. '7t FORD. t.n1ck .~ caniper,
$200. 846-2230. 1510 E. Edingf'r, SA. 541-2080 to good home. 54G-284S. GRAND BANKS 36 • SALl:S • 1 300 V·8. auto, air, caniper
~EREO. Qu a d a f e c t -4 COPPERTONE Ref & I 1~ special 1200 lG.5 Vre11 freari n1atehing high efiiciency l'al'"e, like new, ilkitc~~ BEAUT Blk/Silver Gcr1nan Lo eng hours. Flllly equp'd. -.._ . • e SERVICE • loaded! l l' fl a r v e 5 I "" ~ Shepherd n--•· loV>'ng l>ome $38,500. Owner 675--0743. 'D -,..._m-r, "-1, Bo u -r e s pea ke rs , .LJV \Vatt sets, one 'is n1aple. 2 =<•" • REHTALS • ..,,. ,~ vvv " A t.1/1'"M/MPX Receiver. Holl}'\\'OOd lii•in b e d s . \Ve have no )'I'd. 96S-8752 1971 STARFIRE 19'. Mere ahvays. surelifts, t e I e
Gari-ard professional size 543--04:ili KIITENS - 2 Lovable little 165 1/0. Deep V. Excellent bumper, gas/elec rcbig.,
lurntable , 8 track tape deek. males. Black/y,·hite color. C..'Ond. 642-3692 Eves Camnar1, Sele/Rent 920 must !'l<>e to apprec! $500 l\10VING! Must Sell Hcren· r-xJ t k 1 Pr' Still brand new in box and don formal dinina rni set Litter trained . 548--5579 I<I' FISH/Ski hoat , 3.mp , aJ a e overpymn s. 1v EXPLORER ,.,
HUNTINGTON BEACH
"'uaranleed. \Vill sacrifice . .., 1notor, trailer. S.t:;o or oiler, 36" CAMPER Shell w/75 lb. party. 586-2.jfjl. ' $400 Ch•'na cl-·t $400 °·a LOVABLE Sn>all n1a1c C0i:ka-all Jar $12i.36. or for small · """ · "" · aft 4, !)62-&388 bit-in ice box, curtains &
I ly King size bed. J\Iisc poo 10 good borne. Ca 11 U·-• 3 u· 1325 rnonthly payments, c a 1 itl'n1s. 673--0176 541'1·3738 after 5:30 p.n1 . 2.l' TROJAN, only 170 hni. ~~2254~ mes. ·
Cl't'dit 1nanager 893--0501. 1,.:==.=..o:::::...____ Best offer over •~IV\{\. Ex •====~7'0'==== 2 BOYS Bikes. 1 P.a!eigh * BEAUTIFUL young male 'f"IVVV '69 FORD r· 250 Ra ' FURS: Natural jaguar &i choppel' 3 Speed. ForemOst ki!ty. Aolle['(>(!, shots, box cond. 673-1849 -nger GMC
length coat, Russian sable ""'" 2 Fi h k 20 1 "-1· tra>'ned. "14~139 * 21' Cl lRIS Crall 1968 10' Camper Special, pwr brks, scarf, beaver ; jacket ""' · s tan s ga ,..:; :J "' -,, · ' • air cond, e tc., 1v/IO~:· self. Motorhomes
\Vfrnink collar. Call altE'r 5 gal tuU y f!QU ip, C a 11 FREE cute kittens, gTay & beam. Super &>an, nmny cont. camper. 213: 421-1440 23' & 26'
" ~934 5.'>2-9415. Ch I ,. r s t r . p extras. Make offer. 673--85.~ ••tMED!•TE DELIVERY pn1, :;..,()-.,, . . art"Oa 1ge . 1 e s . ", 91~· FUILY e qu ip p ed 1.J• "
50 GAL. + 2_10 gal lanks, BOGEN P.A. An1p. 60 "'all, 832-93.i) a rt 6. 50 DIES~L Trowler Alaskan Cabover Camper, must sell, Orange Co.'s
stand & fish, all equipment. use iv/horns or speakers. AKC Sl-IEJPlfERD gentle, 5 type, $65.:;_.,.,_00 make ofter! 548-8182 Exclusive Dealer
18~(,I t\l•\fH f'lVI: cl.li /i8C]
HUNllN<·IO"oi BlAt'.H
71 SPORTS CUSTOM
F-100 Super sharp. 4 spd ,
rad & heat. New 12 x 16.5
tires plus or ig tires & rims * 892-1832 *
Sl75. O'Kecre & r.territt tri-Any ohnt"S SlOO. or \l'ill tra(k· yr. fen1. Free to lovi ng ~--,..::.:::..:'::o~-~~~1 """'==~==-.--c-Bill Barry Pontiac for con1pnrable elc'(:-tric . I 492-1222 B t R t /Ch t' 908 8' CAMPER, water, ice box, GMC REC. CENTER ple OVl'n, Coppertonc. $75. gUitar or bass. 847-47i2. hon1c, paJX'I~ me, . ,,!!._S, en Ir r pro~ stve, $250 or offer. """" 'i7 LUV, S\\'ett l\fag whls,
892-41685. r:;i• LUXURY Yacht--"Joy 548--0lll, 3227 Broad, N.B. ~ E. ~:~_11·000• Santa Ana wide tires, n11 padded inter
'70 INT1':RNATI0NAL % T
cnl) & chassis, suitable for
<'anJper or pickup. Days
52'1--0121 or eves 642-0116.
bl , , C MUST sell Ring bed, Din., .. """ -"'O & ho! I J ·1 r;~~s ~~~.d~.l 3 e'~d ·~lbl;~ :;~~n;!~1:n~~~~h~l~~t I r.ts ll'ld Supplin JrLI r:00~t~~.0~;f c~l~~J ·~u~a~~pef:o~:· 1°C~i1i NEW '73 VIVA Sl ~. 968-00f9.'
0
nu eage.
l coft tbl $50, 2 lamps $14. & mech tools, cameras, pro-_thl or {l ) 213/430-0330. 548-7584 MOTORHOME '56 FORD P.U. 11,i Ton. ~
S42-20l9 jectors, 642--S2Ti or ~4 Boats, Sail 909 '68 Cf-IEV C-30, chas mtd engint>. $300. Call 646-lll7
SACRlF! dishes, snl ap-17" eleclrie cress Kiln S:iO. Pets, General 850 ()penroad, sell cont, bt rack'. 1'Ully Self Cont~ined, rang'(!, ,c""'""c:,'..:5,;P::.'"o:.' -----
pliances, linens, tools, patio Pht"Jne --'---'-'-"---.......: H-28 KETCH, Very best Very clean, Jo mi, 546--0067 ~n, dual sinks, du ':!. J '67 CHEVY 1,~ Ton Pickup,
turn. very gd cond., rcas. 536-2CH1 AT'TEi'JTION PETS~ cond 4 cyl inbrt.I . Asking ALASK')N 8' 1971 all tra \\heels, 1 Ton Dodg~ ChflSS!s, i\uto, V·8, can1per shell, I 1'1;1 11 "n 1his bcii ulHul c11pe _64~1-61~99~-----~M ~~~-==.:.:..___ l lon1c ;.nvay [ron1 hon1C', Sll.500 g• F/G dinghy $100 used very Utile i~: &; nnwh nn1ch more. (V..SOSJ $1300/or ofter, 5.52-8175.
9157 l lH•i"1n1pl1l•1 .1ou1·\\'fll'd1'0bc. ROYAL ul t r oni c fl iscell1neous Built just tor you! Inspect & offer. Avery & ~222'1 S6595 LIKE 1'\('\I' ·~Chevy 1,~ T.
I ,, I HrijJitinl lririp-s1l!c1·h horderds type\vrlter, fully auton1atic , _.cW;,;,;:•;;nc;led:;:. ___ _.,.:820 Boarding/grooming 546-2848 Co. 675-8990 C I Blk Nt'W 1·it'l'S, lo mi, $1400. SIZES 10}/J-18}2 af'i'<•nt n~,eklinC', ront an electric, perfect cond, $75. I' Cats 852 26' LUDERS lb S I o op ye es, II After 6, 5.)6-8516
I r..,......,. '1fi" l.>fH.'n111g;; ol this shc-ll·slitch B62-2528. \VANT to buy: Auxilinry "Ca""-Paw," xlnt racing Scooters 925 $92.19 per mo. -,,,~'-"'0:,::=----
1 lllMt""" llf"""T...,. vnpo:. c·rvd1l·l 111 3 C..'Olors ot tanks to flt GMC ~I lun ~""' ----------90 mo 1v/2Q% dn, Ca.sh pric<' * 'f!O Cl-lEVY 1,i ton, good
ki;l1tinJ;: 11·or;;1{'(]. t>artem GEM top 28'' camper slkheU Jlickup. 5-14·3417. · B~~~''°'E'k~~p. S ""s 800:ord. 2 se1ts sails, o/b, '71 STEEN 100, Dirt bike, $7048.70; Defei1·~ 11 r1 c e condltiCln, $450 or best.oiler. ON~ MAIN l'AP .. T for r aeh 1:1~· :'lli!'!(l's· Siz1~ 10·20 incl. /or 'TI E l Camino or the 1 e. \VANT TO BUY: ""IV"' ..,11r.. l ' 675--078 seldom used, xlnt cond, $3.50 $9706.84. A.P.R, 10.96. 0 .A.C. "'6:..1_-0S:::.c.":..'-----~"I I • -·-·c, pants, short~. skir.1. St;\'t~NT\'.t'"t\'I'.; CENTS Baby stroUer gretn I gold I TI4-':;J7--<1144 CAL 2.), Reduced to $5!KXI or bst oUr. $46-8547 ,'Vons 963 ·-" ht 1 1 ·~•Ms Engine for Austin. 1 dress! Save dollars, and \\1Hp for each pattern -add 25 w v ny -.;:r_.....:i~ • e Ml·3.il7 e Ooqs 854 SuJ,ler Clean. Sparkling cond. (2) TAC'O Mini Bike!'l Sl50 & I
) up tWls new fall \\10'!1Vbc In t•enlg for cach patten1 Jor '69 GMC Van $1800 or bes t -'--------·I ~A~ll,.,.},::>· U77. 0 wn e r, $100. Xltras Included. Call OIEV '67 Sport van ]08, 6 I~ plain or pat1er~ knits. • Air Mail a nd Special Jlandl-offer. Pool lllble $300. M1.1sical Instruments 822 BEAUTIFU L Pure h r e d ~ MIHR53. cyl auto. p/h radio, ttlow,
1Printed P a I I er n 9L:i7: !n~: othen l'ise third-class Honey· comb bed 548--3013 1 Gcrnmn Shepherd puppy. RHODES ••CJas · -c· g 11ink, lrl•, 1-k, ~. -·· ' " l l ri I' ak "leGEN PA a p '" It F I 9 k $ 3 O . ~.. sic '" in,, '~ PEIJGEJOT vv &"""" ''""' 1,1-11 Sizes 101.2, 1~'-1:. 1 ~· e 1very 'viii t c thre!! AM i; • • m · vv wa • ema e, . w g, , h HANAHUL! i.> '!l'Cttl. $1•150/nr. I> ff e r ~ 4 (1 .,. k Se d use w/horns 01• eYV>aken; '" .. 8TI6 c ampt0n . . _ · Used VC""' little $85. "' 16\.ii, ~-Size l \.J ro~1 .• 11 wee!. s or ,morr, o" 'vo ME!\IBERSHIP to Irvine A --•--1100 "'ii1'h-d" .N • Top condition. $651X). Ph: 6~1708 64f1-1446 * RENTALS *64 .'"::..~c.:124:::::0· _______ , tunic l 3/8 )'(h. 5+in.: f.l'i.lll!'l A ice Broo !ii, the AIL c c Cl b i I ny Utuu~ · · or"'' ~ " OBEDIENCE Class to stari 673-1232 ~,~. CHEVY v ~ PlllJT. 105. Needlecraft oast ountry u (Ir Ml r . for t.'Qfll""rallle ~lcct ncal ' '70 HONDA 750-L"ctl-c, su~r···•·, o-'IV't an, runs &""'-" 1 5/8. Do Bo 6 Old Cl 1 SI""". 529-9991. Wkends alt . ro. ,.. -• \\'ed .. Aug 29, 7:30 p,m, in BEAUT ,... "'"' u ,... • ... JU ....... •'IM ...... m··'·c of(er. See at ·-• v~ c-·-pt • l ~ ie ~"a ""'" m•ltnr or ba-· 84t4 m h 1 / ..... nlamaran .u Cl ~ •-•, • "ndau, 0v .. ,.1antl & 'l'o>IN .,., HI' sg., ........... " o:-, .. ~,,~·'' '' ·' '" ·""" 6. 673-1518 .,.. ""'' · I c rv1ne NB area. inclds alum rnasl, dacron ean. $!l00 . .,.,,,.lll!X? '""'™-' ......, ._ Hi-TI:;)!e Liquor or call
(er each pattern -add 2j Station, N4;lw York, N.Y. Office Furniture/ * 546-4928 * \Vinncbago a.rororhon1es 7'·'" ....... , ask tor Skip. ct"J'lt.<e tor each pattern for 10011, I>rint Name, Addr-e!111, MOVING & STORAGE sa11, SS rigging, <.'8.r rack1 '71 HONDA CI'70 Mini 'troll, RECREATION "'1"'"'1!
Air Mail and Speel&J Randi· Zip, PaUern Number. ln.\'est rat£$ in area Equip. 824 WEIMARANER pUpples 1or 6"13-45l-I xlllt oond, under 600 mi, RENTAL AND SERVICE '69 F'OR'D El:on. 300, expertly ~. otbuwi1e tbird-elus NE E 0 L ECRAIT '72? 968-4765 sale, AKC. M<1cGreg. V1>nture Cat. Musi $185 962-1763 216 N. Clan\, SA dl•s'lgnl'<I interior set up • ·u taM three Crochet, knit, etc. Free EXEC desk $150. exec chair I00-4l:i8 II .r·used { I y MX n o....-,, ca1npin<r. Very good mech. ~~or ""~ore. Send to directions. 50c, CRAF'T
1
S50MAN power hack $-G. sec't desk & chair $75. se , ncvtr • achoo J Mi1 AltA 125 , fast, just 4-836-oo.S cond:-Make otter 49f.6396.
J.fuian Martin, the DAILY lsilifut Mqcr•me Book. say," · elec type & table $275. bant· A5~c Standard troPood*1 ~1~ Xlnt cond. l5'. S450. 586-4831 rebuilt $350. llAVE 21 ' 73 FirebaJI mtr
PILOT. 442, Pa ttem Dept., Basic, fancy knots, pat· * a.M·::l-117 * bOO filing cab $50. Storage IO~ or ~78n189Hi--~u •CORONADO XI, No. ~ . 962-7219 home on 1 T Dodge eh49sis, '68 OOOCE Van. V8 •:·nu -w--18th St, . New ten1!I:, $l.OO. HIGH Chr, $6. Car seat $8. cabinet S20. Ca11 646-0CsT.il sen ct. · ' xlnt cond. Dehrx features. YAMAllA J25 MK, fast, just SHU undf'r \WllT, i400 mi. brakes. Ill.I tirebu•
11
& ~
-.,.,. n..i·.. In••-1 ~-•-1 R • "· b ~ 16 \V rd be POl NTF.RS fEns:Htthl, See & 1nake offer. 968-58:30. l'e""·U1 • ., ....... , WJU accepl cnr 11, ,~ or r ims, nu re t mo~-. York N.Y. 100U. ..-.... t ... n ..,no1mo:: oo.. -w l Y "'"em . a ro EXF.C mvvJ chrs n5/25 &-c ""' .., ~ n 1 llt!llll will ~tk. 642·9600.
NAME. ADDRESS with Learn by pictureJ! Pa t· closc>t $15. 6T~904. chra $8/24 Desks $20/00 AKC. Champ. i;ired 3 n1os JR' \' Flyer Sailboat sod 962-7219 w b a I • h a v c • y 0 u . "'"'
2.IP. SIZE and 8UUC t~~'n'pl.1;~·1..,ant Olft -· SLIDING s;:lnss,,r.tio ,Joor ~ P ie.rec 867 \V 19 CM 642--3408 old, 2 n1alcs $50, 6Ta-86l3 tr11iler. Planing. hull. X1nl * JIONOA ·2:!0 XL Perfect SG-.1766/5$i-~. '61,Dln~wDCs·,E 1V1•300P,·~" ';r~l,
..... , ..... n ....... .., frame xl-t ,~ 10' I y 6'8" O"FlCE l t n .. ks * Miniature $chn1t111,er • cond. (213) 330-5228 Lmtd\'1-M. Reccn11;y eervlced. * •n KODIAK * la! .,.....,,,..., '"u-· -more than 100 atft.s -' " .v ' 1 r cqu pmt'.n -ves · ~·1 6302 West Coa8t Jlwy, NB. SEE ?tfOR.E Q u It k $LOO. $.(j(}. or bs t. offr. IY16-5r:>O. chnirs, machines, lables. Stud Service 12· KORAt~LE ,fr. Stlllboot Call l\urt, 979-1579 Nu, ·$6400. Slp!t 6, fu ll t-quip,
Taahions and choose: one O>mplde Aliltan Boot .. NEEDLE point rug cro_fl !N'<''~''<l~Ufll"']".O~tc'o~lt~e'::"-'""'!!f.~tl~14~. I :;;;;;::;;:i;;;-;64i;4-4;;;;;;390;';;;;;;;:;;;;< I w/Lrler. Xlnt con<I. Pri pty, "72 360 IRJSK¥. LJkc new. List $9aX>. 642-4933. '69 Ot~'l Van, ~a.a ~ ~ free Crom our $1.'10. yal'Tlti ana CAnvruo l\fllcrame IBM Executive e i r c 1 r i c 1\KC1r1Sh Setl er Pupplc~. 6 makr oUcr. 21l-5~.Ki161 Must see to afl(Jl'eciatt. 1''0R aalc \Vintie~ Motm-~~:. ~~-~~,
..Summl"f C.talog~ AU JI J UI.)' Rua Bot1l " • 50c. con1, all 15"i of!, 846-85.10. ly~writl't', model B. $100 wks, !st shots. rca.'!Onable MONTGOMERY 10, priced 541J:3916 home 24' xlnt cond., $8,000. . -INST~~ BOOK ~ or JJ l"rile Af&liaq. GIRL'S 3 spd bike $l5. Lady Lnguna .Beach. 4~. 537-1953· to mov" winner In Its clw . KA\VASAKI "Big Hom". =Ca~il-'!nll--'-'-'7"'85.1""-, ----'64 FORD VAN, 1411
......... t morrow :ioc. t<enn1ore d!l-wMr $ 1 o p• /0 826 MALTESE i\l\C, 6-8 \\i<s, $600. ~1772 after 6 pm. 3;j()t S,000 ml!.~· e Orange County's Fine.st • 6#-JJM or· 6'15-0!M7
"'1t' c""'"""'. wtar o • ,z'' Boot-1 -16 patterns. ~. 5'10--014-1 Bob. . ianot ,.,ans sho~· lfne!I, !\f. $125. r . $150. 1'1..YlNG Jr. 14' w/road trlr, Call ~7071 Dtle'a Motor Home R'cntnls '72 -ro.RD ,Econolioe 100. ~~ lf~lO~ J: == Quirt llclM a .. ~~~nn'i~~~~nhip $100. U~~~!~1~~~.m~-~7, ~=~•nian Puppies :~r6-r;.17ti.s t,:1&,~ *;..:·~.P~~-1\~~ N~~~~ 2(u~: =cs l ..!:~!!!-C:.;.'!M~·~~~'•~·:!.t.;~;::~c;P..:1-cc:B'-!,P;:'~::.7000_1
fashion tacts. $1. • QnBlt N TedQ•• tJ,•lttc • • &J-O..OOt'; * S4j...3182 5i9-279J lfOBtE 16 Full race, m!U'IY off~r. 675-5633 • FOR RENT: Owncl"!I '73 Stl!· J966 J"ORD staUun Wason
Scll Wle lfem. • ~ • fO-Sl'8 15 bea»tirul P•llt«rrn*. 50!:. For 1h11.l iten1 11nder $SO, tr)' Plano-Upright. r'11st l"l'tolli nri"! ]usl 11 pl>OnC cxtrR.s:. Nen.r new cond. J im. LUm ti) Tradet Our Thdtr a cootalned motor home. $16.l Van. Eit·. cond. Re=.
the Penny Pincher. 642-<M97 call a\\·ay • &12-5bi8. 7t416f'S.GR91. ' Pvad.ise column ls tor lOl:I! ~k. 6c mJ. 897-6700. Call eve or SU11day ·
(
• ., ~
l
.
'
•
• ··-----· ~ ... "' .. •
ThurS<Uy, Auguit 23, 1973 DAIL V PILOT 4!1 -..... 1§1 I 1§1 [ Autos for Sal• ]§] [ 1§) I -..... I§] [ Autoi(<YSM ... _I~ I _.,.. llel [ ~ .. -u. I~ I -...... I~
970 Autos, l""!!!:'ed 970 Auto<, lmportod 970 ~A:u;;.t;o;s"-';..::u:...i:;;..~~~~~-990~i !I ;Aiiuiitotiiiiii, iiUiisodiiiiiiiiiiii;:;ii990~J
VANS
FORD-DODGE
&>\"l!l'nl lo d'IOOl>e frorn
T!h·ad1 jh11p1111!i: f;:t IJl)(J l'I l o>1 ll•I""'' N''""'-"' l!t •" IA'> 1,Jl"i
Al.FA ROJ\1EO -SAAB
in N'E'IVPOR'r
Autos Wanted
TOP
DOLLAR
PAID
IMMEDIATELY
FOR ALL
FOREIGN
CARS
WE ARE 11'1
DESPERATE l'IEED
OF GOOD, CLEAi'!
968 Autos, Imported 970 Autos, hnported 970 Autos, Imported
TOP CASH
* TOP DOLLAR
J UNK CAHS.
l)ay or night. * 6.'!9-17G.t "
FOR
BMW
LEASE A 1973
BAVARll\
Wo Buy U11d
BMW's
Top Doller Pold
CREVIER BMW
~es • Service • Leating
208 W. lat St., Santa Ana
835-3171
'69 2800 CSA Cpl'?. SllO\V·
CAR COND. Loaded. 4 spd.
$6500. Pvt pt)!. 642-7315.
CAPRI
Autos, Imported 970 ----------.....:.-.:...._;.;_.....;.;..;;_
ALFA ROMEO
ALFA ROMEO
SAAB
Buy or Lease
Sales · &'1"\'icc -LC'asinl; .
R1:ntuhi
T!lr;irh jJi11i11111!i tt IA!lj II \ ,,._1 ""'"""" r;,,,.,,.,t He,•J '4~ h40t. . --. -
ALFA ROMEO -SAAB
in NEWPOR'r
AUDI
AUD I '12, 23,000 miles, Slick
shill, A?\l lFM, in1maculate!
1335(), im.8'158
AUSTIN HEAUY
'62 AUSTIN 1-lealy 3000, 3
cart( nr\V pearl \\11!, paint.
i\lusr sell. $1,300. 4!!~-S:->87
BMW
ORAl'IGE COUl'ITY'S
OLDEST
~ l'IOW OWN THE
FABULOUS 1973
CAPRI
Sport coupe decor, body side
n1ouldings, recli~ng fl'oot
seaUI, L'Ontour rear Sl?ats, 4
1peed transmission, po1vcr
Iron! disc brakes, slylc st<!cl
wheels, bucket scn!s, radial
ply lil'f's. {CAECN899742).
OVERSTOCKED I
IMMEDIATE
DELIVERY
GUSTAFSON
Lincoln-Mercury
16800 Beach al Warner
Huntington Beach
142.a844 * (213) 592.5544
''Home of the Viking"
'iJ CAPRI V-8. Air. Prot.
trim, etc. Decor. Lo1v nti.
646-1~4
CORTINA
DATSUN OPEL
'71 DATSUN 510 '69 Opel GT
~ Dr. Air O>nd, New Tires, Silver .tirrish with red interior,
(693DLT). (ZRR071).
$1395 BIL~2~~XEY
HARBOUR VW TOYOTA
1-lun"':". ~h·. 84~~ 18881 BEACl-1 BL. 841-8555 -:~=:-'=77::=.~~=-I HUNTINGTON BEACH: 1973 DA TSU NS OPEl.'Raliye '68; Xlnt oond.,
ALL MODELS o'lg ownec, 17;o, o' make oUer. 968--9041 Priv party.
IN STOCK PORSCHE
BARWICK IMPORTS
33375 Camino Capistrano
San Juan Capistrano
493-3375 or 8.'ll·l.."75
* '62 PORSC1-IE s -r.1usr
SEU. THIS \VEEK! !
~tANY' EXTRAS? $2100. 6!0-85.'i9 '69 DATSUN Truck, burgun-1,=="--------
dy 4 speed mags & wide 62 PORSCHE. Xlnt cond,
ovals, ton~au, runs good Everything new. Must sell
SUOO. 494-7451 or 497-1549 & $1850. 714/839-t3549
leave me•sage. RENAULT
DATSUN '73 240Z, air, xlnt
cond, must &e\l . REN AUL T 10, 1968 *83.l-8380* automatic: like new. Lo FIAT mlleage $700., 4~1436.
'71 Fiat 850 Spider1 __ T_O_Y_O_T_A __
svec1a1s1'495•nd $2021.95
. . -.
'D.l1\trh ]l111p1111!i
' t o? ·~· .. ...,......,,
". , , • t , 1 tA' --. --· ALF A RO~fEO -SAAB
in NEWPORT
'G9 FIAT 850 Convertible
gas saver
644-7661
FIAT 124 Spyder, 1969, 5 spd,
burgundy, good col)d. Sl650. art 5, 493-5297.
'67 FIAT Sta. \Vgn. R/H,
factory air, 40 mpg, runs
great. $725. 960-1851
is the
Delivered Price
for a
'73 TOYOTA
COROLLA
at
J)m le.uri&
-TOYOTA
VOLKSW_A_G-EN-VOLKSWAGEN CHEVROUT FORD
1972 VW BUS
9 fl8SSl'ngcr, 17,146 miles, all-
* '70 VW Bug:, rt'blt tngi.ne, sunroof, clean. $2100.
64-l-74<12
VOLVO
'6' CORVETT!!-
FASTBACK
'72 lo.1A VERICK coupe Auto ·rrnns., Pl:>wer Stttrlna,
rudio, heatl'r 250 (:U rn ;lj() V8, uu!o trans, po\\'t>r ECONOMY 6 C)'I engine,
i;olutely immaculate, blue ---------steering aod brakes, air 1 Prl cond, tilt 11·hed, A?\1/fo"i\l , ow nillea. • Pt 'Y • with black interior.
1967 YW CAMPER
Fully Factory Equipped,
l!as it all.
$1395
NEWPORT
IMPORTS
3100 \V. Coast 1-lwy .. N.B.
642-9405
'68 Westphalia
Camper
(XDE8331
$1595
HARBOUR VW
18TI1 Beach Blvd.
l--lunt. Bch. 842-4435
VW'S
Several to choose from
'64'S-'72'S
FR0~1
$595 . .. . . -.
T!lrarh jh11p1111!i'
+~ 1?<)\) ••• •• ' ... ,.....' ' . -:::"".•'''".:'_·_:·.tel-"_;
ALFA ROr.fEO -SAAB
in NEWPORT
'69 vw
Kharman Ghia
COME 11'1 TODAY
TEST DRIVE
luxury with
economy
'73 Fuel injected
VOLVOS
111.nv tires. Special paint, I<> c84oo7o..-3oc09S=·------1
n1ilclj • l>cuutiful. 305BEX. 1970 FORD Cortina 1600, 4
$3599 00 speed, R&ll mall!, wide
• tltt.s. headers, etc. New HOWARD Chtvrolet clutch, brake!!, etc . .Must
Newport Beech 11('_11. 54&-9181 afler 6.
?\facArthur Blvd l Jarnborec Good Transportation
· 833-0SSS ·oo FORD 4 dr, VS, auto,
71CHEVROLE·T-1;:1~At 2nd car, sr.i0, or ,.,.ill
V2 PICKUP trade for rurinture or :'
3 spd. r.i<lio & hf'aler. 2-IJ7311 * 5~3-3691 •
-CXt_~IJent -Only '70 LTD \\'agon. lo milc-llge 'f\ l • $2499,00 i...QQtlcd. A/C'--an1 / f m
-
UJl tu1i4 HOWARD Chevrolet stereo, p/wln & seats.
01 vg Newport Beach S73--IS9.> . y Lt ~1a('Arthur Blvd ,t, JanliX>ree 1968 i\IUSTANG. PO\\·l'r st«T-
833-0555 ing, automal1l· t rans.,
1966 1-larhor, C.i\1. 6.JG.9303 .=-co=·--sf)('llk£.'1'5, clean. Phone I ~A~=-u·'"'-=-"----'-C:..:C-'69 CllE\'ROLET ilnpHl a :>1&-3.'367. utos, sed 990 Custoni 35£1. po"·er s!cerin~. I c._:c:c=c..,...-~~--·.;.;cc.;;;....;:.o:"---....:.:.: factory ah·. tinted g:lass '.".~At.A.XV 500: 2;dr. hrdtp, BUICK con1pletc, auton1atic trans 1 •111 · pis, Pfb, IH~gle ow~r.
---------in console, strato But·kcl 1\!ust M.'IJ . $2959. Office,
'68 BUICK Skylark. Ont'! seats, Vinvl roof, radiul \ill' fi.lj}.136().Home, 846-1492.
O\\•ncr. 24.000 1111. Like ne1v! Kaver tiJ~s. radio. hcatel'. ·u:.: FAIRLANE. Runs good.
Sl595. 32'1 E. 20th. Nu. l, Ci\I good condition. Sl,750, phone I-las sa(ety cheek $190.
548-1618. 644-4687 • 557-8870 •
'68 SPOllT \Vg,,, ' '""'· All '71 MOl'ITE CARLO JAVEUN p .,...r, Gor..1 111 i le s . COUPE
2 13-382-6286 days , . 714-644-2929 nllcs ,t, wkcnds. Aur a. tr~is. air '-'Ond, VS. '68 JAVELIN
• l'ad10, vinyl roof, P. steer-556-8'l.t9 $005. * ~ . 6a CUSTOt.1. full p\vr ing & brakes, 337ET\·. Only
Riviera, $1100. C;ill after $3199.00
4,30 646-869! HOWARD Chevrolet '64 Le ~brc, runs good. a..1 B h S200 or best of!ca-i,ewport eac * 5-18""4162 * i\tacArthw· Blvd & Jambortt 83J.-0555 BLUE '67 Buick. 29,500 mi.
VS. Air. Radio. Needs new '71 CHEVY Kings\\lX>d Sta
tires. $850-$900. 548--0297 \Vag, A/C. ps/pb, bl'O\\TI
SZ200. Call Susan bchvn 7 &
CADILLAC 4' s33-2!so. ---------11962 NOVA, good transporta-
EL DORADOS
JEEP
'69 CJ5 Jeep, 1 0\\'11Cr. All
xtras: Vecy lo mile&ge. See
10 appree. 836-7289 aft 4pnt
MERCURY
'61 l\IERC. Comm uter
\Vagon, tnglnt tr'llnl, rear
end all over hauled/rebuilt
past 18 mo. tires nu. $666.66
548-7777.
FOREIGl'I CARS
TOP DOLLAR-PAID
FOR OR l'IOTI 0 '67 CORTINA $250.
536-6385 JAGUAR 1966 Harbor, C.1\1. 646-9303 CJX!. orange, lo miles j998-0rder Your Color Today! ADX).
14 TO ~HOOSE
COUPES-CONVERTIBLES
tion car, reblt eng, new
tires & brakes, asking $250. Call ~1146. -,7-0-C'0H~E~v=R~O~L~E~T~
~~ Ton pick-up. 3 spd, heater
& defiustc>r . clean -[O\V
'73 COLONY Pane \Va.gon,
metallic blue, lo mileage.
!\Jany e1t.lras. 642-2917
Call or conte In to sec us.
NEWPORT
IMPORTS
SALES-SER VICE· LEASING
OVERSEAS DELIVERY
ROY CARVER, Inc.
2::4 E. 17th St.
Costa ?ltcsa ~44
311X' w. c .. .i llwy., N.a. '64 BMW 4 DR.
642·9405 \\.'hi1e tOWR974)
\VE HUY $999 IMPORTED AUTOS
BEST PRICES PAID! BILL MAXEY
DHn Lowis Imports TOYOTA
1966 Hal'bor, C.1-t. lB88'1 BEACH BL. 847-8555
646-9303 HUNTING'I'Oi~ BEACH
IMPORTS WAJ\'TED
Or:mge County'• 8ob Mclaren, BMW TOP I BUYER
BILL ltWCF.Y TOYOTA lftC.
DATSUN
WE'RE MOVING
BIG SAVINGS ON
'73 Dc-n1os
510's
Pickups
610'!1
Nf:'\''~r DATSUN
888 Dove
Newport Bch
83.'J.1300 Open SUnday
240Z 'TI, Mag Wheels, RIH,
---------NEW
XJ-12
E Type Cpe. + Conv.
XJ·6
Great Selection
Roody For
lmmodlalo O.llvory
~lll ,11 'i""' ll\it!ill', . . ' \ .
xlnt oond . For sale by ~=-~---=c~"'°
ownec. Reduced t.r quick '71 Jagaar V·12
'71 Toyoto
Land Cruiser HT
\Varn Hubl. Green, {479DAN)
$3099
BILL MAXEY
TOYOTA
18881 BEACH BL. 847-8555
HUNTINGTON BEACH
WE BUY
USED
TOYOTAS
$1549
BILL MAXEY
TOYOTA
1~1 BEACH BL. 847-8555
HUNTINGTON BEACH
'70 VW Fastback IMMACU-
LATE. Auto, R&H, nu tires.
brakes, tune-up, battery,
JOK mi. $l!i00. 673-9402.
VW Parts -Engines, trans,
front ends & many other
parts. Want old VW's.
64>-3415
'68 VW Bug. Radk>. rear seat
speakers, good tires, new
battery, low mileage. $975.
644-<687
• DE VILLES
31 TO CHOOSE
L'OUPES
SEDANS
CONVERTIBLES
?llany excellent colors
Otolce of interiors
CCloth & leather}
r~actory air conditioning
Full power. Choice of:
Stereo AM:IFM radio
Cn.11.se control
Trunk opener & more
All in lmmaculate t.'Ondition
Largest selection in
Orange County
Nabers Cadillac
ntilcs (572471'~). ·
$1999.00
HOWARD Chevrolol
Newport Beach
fo..tacArlhur Blvd &: Jamboree
833-0555
'66 CHEVY Impala 4 dr,
hrdtp. ReaJ nice -hurry!
$500. Good deal. 7 1 4 :
!J68.0893 * '72 t.fONTE CARLO * Very clean, many xtras,
493-3720
'71 VEGA
·HATCHBACK
AtrrnORIZED DEALER Four speed. Heater le-De-
2600 HARBOR BL., troster • radio. Dix interior,
. OOSTA MESA economical. kl miles #1858
MUSTANG
'69 MUSTANG, 351, p/s,
p/b, auto lrlµ'IS, a/c, aoocS
m!lco.ge, good cond, must
sell, $1575. or best ofr.
s.MH4Sl bet 7:30 am--5pm
wkda.ya.
'67 MUsr ANG GT Fast back
!harp body, need• motor
work. will sac rlfi ee,
962-5759, 9391 El Blanco,
F.V. * o..EAN, '65 Mustang 289,
Auto, air, PIS, ~
radials, $700. ~7609.
'65 MUSTANG, ncl w/wht
vinyl .... r/h, air amd., "' cond .. best otter, ~'1'65t
11881 Beach Blv ·-Sales -Service -Leasirw
, H. Ekirh Ph. IU7-855a 850 North &>ach Blvd.,
-· $3300. 673-<285. c '61 DATSUN Rd•tr 1GOO, 2 E Type oupe
lops, asking $800 or best of-B. R. green, loaded, lcx:al
fer, call bet 4 PM, 536-8867. car (IJ627BW I.
ALL 1973 MODELS
11'1 STOCK
'72 GHIA, orange, 21000 ini .. 4.
speed stick, radi.!i.l.s, tadlo,
top cond, $2200 F ~rm
&14--0609
540-9100 Open Sunda; $1599.00
·72 CADILLAC Sedan de HOWARD Chevrolol
OLDSMOBILE
,.
' '' •
I. • :• .
La Habra Llke to trade? Our Trader's fTI4) 87!}.562.l
P aradise rolumn i~ for you! ...,.,..,..,..,..,..,..,...,
Motor Home1 Motor Hornet -
Classified Ads •.•••. &t2-".i678. $6666
Motor Homes
Se lo/Roni
~llfon111 "' 111111111-0
IJl\,,.I ~ 1.11'-'I l.' > ~ ,~.ot
'73 VW. Lo mileage, arn/lm
radio. 5 year .... -a1Tanly.
$2395. or offer. 557-&i26 or
979-1397.
Ville. Must be sold at a Newport Beach ~criflce. Has been lovingly MacArthur Blvd & Jamboree
C8.red for by one owner • r · · 832-0555
Sales I: SttviCe
OLDSMOBILE'
GMC TRUCKS '
HONDA CARS. Sale/Roni 940 Sale/Roni 940
20' MOTOR·HOME Roadliner by Redman
l burn..-r11ng1 with OYfll'I, blilhroom. fvr11t~. D.0 .H. t1g, DoO!i• c;111uis, v-e.-•11to. tr•ti•·· ~ 1teeflng & dlK br•kh, !!II wMel, du.I rur wlllel•, 1lec:l'ronlt lgril!lon. tSlGJ002St ) •s966FULL PRICE
1660 Down 181 A Mo.
t.660 Is IOI•! dn. pymt. Kl It 'lolll mo. pymt, Incl. l1w,
llcfni• & •II c1rryirig d'wlrges on •PPf'· crldll ror ao monlhs. Ottlt1Tecl IMYl'l'rlnl prlc1 SI03IO.OO lllCI, flX I. 11·
c1nse. ANNUAL PERCENTAGE RATE 11.45%
28' MOTORHOME Roadliner by Redman
_-·I Dodge 440 chassis, V.8, automatic trans-
·~ . . . . . ' ~ ~~\~m ission, plus full fa ctory equipped. I s20.
.1'm!Utl 300385) " . ,__ ·1,·8366FULL
PRICE
20' MINI • MQJQRHOME Fling by Redman
•
l60 tu. iri, Dodg• v.t e n9ln1, •ufo. tt1ri1., 4 b urn·
•r r1n91, b1throoll'I, d1ul r111r wh11lt, b•tf•ty con·
"trttr, pow•t it11rin9 1 pow1r br1k11. ( F20S .J.
0811 ) $5688 FULL PRICE
$688 Down $74 a Mo.
~lll.1n1111,; lll11t111~;
"G': I ,., ·' • • ~.
.. .
'61 Toyota
Corona 4 Door
'68 SporUter XI.CH AU'to Trans Radials CUOC·
New 77 cu. in. eng. & trans. 312). ' '
Call eves; STa-4609.
KARMANN GHIA
'69 GHIA, New tires &: paint,
Motor xlnt, auto stick shift,
49!>-3433
$895
HARBOUR VW
18711 Beach Blvd.
Hunt. Sch. 842-4435
LOTUS '72 TOYOTA Mark n wagon
---------wfair, xln 't cond. Call
'65 LCYJ1JS Elan, new twtn 536-1671 aft 6pm.
cam eng., perfect cond. RED Toyota Station \\'ag '70,
67fr.3968 aII. 6 -w k d y s , Corolla 64;;..4533 reas.
wknds -all day
MAZi>A * Mazda 73 Rotary * $66 MOl'ITH
36 MONTHS OPEN LEASE
Will accept trade-ins CAIL ll!R. FRY 842-6666
Hunt. Beach
MAZDA
17111 Beach Bl. 842-66j6
19TJ r.tAZDA RX2 O:iupc,
Radio & air cond. Immacu-
late cond. 900-uzt If no
ans. 567·100.
TRIUMPH
Orange County's
Newest
TRIUMPH
DEALER
FERRARRI
LOTUS
MG
AUSTll'I MARll'IA
1.() years experierM...-e in foreign
c"".
NEWPORT
IMPORTS
since birth Lhru 16,000 ·=-==-"~-=::..--miles. Call 646-7227 for '67 IMPALA. station wagon,
details. A-1 rond, Pwr, rack, Make '56 Kharman Ghia '73 COUPE DE VllLE offer, 496--0708 2850 Harbor Blvd.
(FLA4n) Body & Interior brown ext., bro'N?l ILttr lnt.: '64 CHEVY i1npala Wag. Costa Mesa 540-
UNIVERSITY OLDS
0K, Needs ~ & Engine. full' pwr, frnt split pwr seat, Rblt eng. New paint. Clean, '69 TORONAOO, tu 11 )' BEST OFfER 6000 nil.. toke over lease. R/H. $400. 645-Z768. equ.lped, AM/FM stereo,
HARBO .. UR VW · payment 552-9728 '68 CHEVROLET ..,. windows & ...... s.it.
SUPER clean 1962 Cad IMPALA SWOO/best otr. 67l-<»379
18711 Beach Blvd._ , Coupe deVille. $500. or Sport Coope • V8, auto, P. PINTO
Hunt. Bch. 842-4435 reasonable offer. 646-2398 Steering bnJrf!s air cond I ---------· I
·n VIV Fastback. a\>to, alt & heatec & de!lm~r. WVJ233'. 1971 Pinto Runa""d am/fm rad. 22,000 mi's. '&t CAD. Cpe de Ville. AH Only llWUL
Orig. ownr. lmmac. $1800. xlras, newly painted, good $1199.00
546-4788 after 5 pm. cond. $300. 645-1531 HOWARD Chevrolet
66 V\V SQUAREBACK CAD. '72 CdV, loaded, air, Newport Beach
radio & hc<tler $650. stereo. Excellent, $5200. MacArthur Bl~ & Jamboree
•847-1751* 4!>!-2900 13J.0555
'61 VW Squareback. Xlnt '72 CAD Eldorado, 12,00) .
running cond. $8li Call miles all xtras hicld tape 66 CHEV Bel Air 4DR auto
ST:r-6884. deck., lmmac. $ 6 9 o o • ~~l~ean xlm cond.
FOR Sale V\V Bus, '68, Gd. 6~4-4144 --..:._ __ -"'-----
cond. S1?50. wk day s, ·~ SEO DeVille. wht w/blk '69 CAMA~Q
598-7819. Landau top. 36,000 mJ's. 350 • 3 i.-pd, R &: H. New tires
'72 VW '411' WAGOl'I $2800. 540-1524. · Low Miles <:1&18J Only $1699.00
31.130 miles, Auto Trans,
Radio, Heater, flawless, 1
0\\-rter cond, Bronze with tan
plaid int·crtor,
$2095
NEWPORT
IMPORTS
Autontatic, R & H. Exception-
al. t907EOA \. Only
$2699.00
HOWARD Chevrolet
Newport Beach
MacArthur B!vrl & Jan1bor('e
CA MARO HOWARD Chovrolol 3100 w. Co<st u,.,,., N.B.
83J.055S
'70 RALLYE SPT. Like nC\v. Newport\ Beach '42-9405\
1 owner. AH xtras. Air, l\otacArthur Blvd & Jamboree '71 PINTO Sedan. big eng, 4
stereo. copper color, BL top 833-0555 1peed, 8 track & FM.
,16,000 mi. $2595. &14--1376. I headen. 4 nu Wide Track
CHEVROLET CONTINENTAL tires IUOO. '846-37ll . _ _;:~::.;;.;_::.;=;:_-I.-::-::::=-:-:-::--:=---::-•* * '72 PINTO Runabout, 4
'73 MONTE CARLO . '73 CONT. 4 Dr. "Town car''. speed, .mags, AM IF M Every conceivable extra. stereo, all'. SZD'.>. 67l-8730
Coupe. -automatic ~·· P. Only 7100 mi. ABSOLUTE-s~ect·1ng &.brakes .. air cond, LY Int1.1ACULATE ! Blue
vinyl rOof, TroO m1.les. Save Book $7,235. Will sacrifice
PLYMOUTH
'67 V\V, Pop top camper lo
mi, nu engine, I\fach. xlnt,
very clean. S1450. GT:>--05.55
'70 VW Sq back. real clean,
runs good $1350. or take
over payments. 53&-l:m
TRADE R.X..:Z, 1972 ~fazda. 3lOO \V. Coast lhvy., N.B. '65 V.\\'. BUS. Good cond .
1.flnt cond. for Toyota Land 642-9405 am-fm stereo, $900. Laguna,
SS00.00 fi:mt orlg1nal sug-for $6,l!li. Can financt 'iO SATEWTE Wgn. Wife's
gcsled pnce. #182F'SQ. $5,775. ?riv. ply. car. X1nt cond. Extras.
HOWARD Chevrolet 552-7000 or SJ0.1999 l\fusl aell. Make offer.
Cruiser, similar •ha Pe '64 TRI Spitfire, \v/'189 V-8 _4:::!!4:..m;=-::.· --~=~-Eve•. 497-2670 LaguM. Needs little •u,k. Sl-00. ,69 VW BUG
•·n. RX2, 30,cm mi i1int.1..::&<;-::"c:l526::o-=--------'"""· SI•~=· VOLKSWAGEN
MERCEDES BENZ '68 VIV CONVERTIBLE
NEW ENGINE
• 646-9247 .
Green A~f/Fl\'f, f39SF'ZR) . S1095
HARBOUR VW
Newport Beech '72 MARK IV, Ml/F'~f. I -'9-"79-:.:>rl=6:..· ------
i\IacArlhur Blvd &. J amborre cruise control, lilt wheel 196.> PLYl\fOUTH Satellltfl, 83~555 door locks. Pvt. party. l\tust V-8, RlcH, air, P/S, good •
"65 Ii\i PALA Wagon alr $295 sell. $6595. OWC1? 640-1360 cond. $395. ~75ll '
1401 ""'"' And,...;,, santa home. 846-1492. PONTIAC Ana. 545--0782. '70 MARK III. 23',000 ml, --..:.....:..._..:...;..;;. __ I
~IMPALA Sedan, 4 cir, alr, leather, vinyl lop. Like new. 1 7 LEMANS
auto, P/S, low miles, $495. All e.xtras. 642-5424. IL Top C.OUpe • Autumatic . 50 USED
MERCEDES
ON DISPLAY
Sharp New Car
Like to Trade? Our Trader's lS7ll Beach Bl\'!i. 548-4113 COUGAR Bucke'! Se.ab, Power Stcer-
Paradise column Is for you! 1--''.::'":::".::t...:B::c':::"·c...,::".::'_;·<.::<'!5;:.'~ '64 CHEVY Impala SS, Auto•I---.,.;.._____ ing • Air Conti. (SZ'l.5Zl).
Trad&-ins
Coming In Evory Day
Ask About Our Unlquo
Used Morcodos Loaso
Plans
Hause of Imports
6862 Manchester, Buena Part<
i:in the Santa Ana Fn.'Y
!i23-72SO
JIM SLEMONS
IMPORTS
MERCEDES BENZ
Aun!ORIZED
SALES A SERVICE
Jim Slemons
Imports
1301 Quall
Ntwpart Beach
833-9300
ENTEIU'llOM MacARTHUR
'&6 MERCEDES Benl 200
Sedan Dieael, reblt eng,
slick, pr! &· 49H276
MG
'67 MG Midi<!. 0.M, low
mll<t !650. Priv. Ply. Day1
640-1500 Ext 100$, t!Yel
557-3994
~ linC'S, 5 da,vs for $5. Call Need a "Pad''? P lace a n ad! trans. P/B, PI S, runs pert. '68 COUG,\R. air, p 's. p/b, Only $I099.DO
.:lod:2ay"=':. ,:· i:' ="=:hl6.;;:,1;;8===;Cal=l =642==·567=8=· ====--=1=4"°=· =5.'1&-==7238===== AF/FM. gd oond,. $139:i 01· --·---orrr. a ft s 541-3100 HOWARD Chevrolet
•
DODGE Newport BHch
---------MacArU>llr Blvd & J•mbore<
'00 DODGE Dart, good con·
dilion. Best offer.
&1&-,1439
1967 OODGE Coronet, 4 door,
Xlnt cond. $300.
&12-8387
FORD
1970 LTD Country Squirt
\Vagon, 9 pass, factory air.
loaded. luggage ra1,;k, xlnt
cond. $2400. 9'79-8393
1972 FORD Torino Squire
SIAlton Wagon, 3 seats, air.
luggage rack, 15, 700 miles.
642-8'ffl.1
1961 FORD FALCON • Run a
C"tO()(I • Netds Brakes for on·
ly $100. MIKE 839-J.tZl
'&I 1'"'0RD Galaxit v.s xlnt
cond. clean, ale, new tirts,
sacrifice $.'\50. &12--0009
'&l COUNTR\' Sedan, 9
panengtr .... -~n. Air, nck,
elean. $1695. 9163--1850.
'89 FORD Galaxie 500, 4 dr
hd1p, air, vinyl top, $800.
8;iO.OOI5.
83U555
LEASE OR BUY
·n th.ru '73 Pontlacs
DAVE RCSS
PONTIAC
2m Harbor Blvd.~ at Fair
Drive, Costa Meaa Sl&-8017
roRP. Exec. Vehic le s .
0100le !>om (2) •n Ellec .
Pontiac wag or '69 CTO
Pontiac. Both a/c In xl'D'I
cond. 979-ZZ80. d a y I ,
983-3796 evea.
MUS'r Sell·Movhlg ' i 9
LtMans Pont. P/S, air
cond. Orig D"'11t', $1150.
!m-0146.
'65 PONTIAC GTO, nu ~.
plllnt, tire11, 4 apeed, fnl.l1.
hit of ewrythlllC $'BO.
&lot-4000 Ste\.'t
'72 GRA.r..'JO P r \ x , ~·
e<ptltmal . All "°""'• MUsl u ll. Best ofter. S4l)...5S$'1
'fi6 PON1'1AC Sta. Wac. Lo,.
mlltASCt or trade for' P.U.
10406 •'l'lcon, FV. -* 'SS PONTIAC Lo lllut, v.s, rlh, or!& .-.-. $Z!O.
m-3348
..
• ...
-
'73CHARGE s
These are all BRAND NEW 1973 CHARGERS. Fully equipped.
Ser. # 's (WL21-C3G-242330 (WL21:.C3G-249669) (WL2 lcC3G·
242329)
IMMEDBA TIE DE LIVE RY
$78 DOWN $78 A MONTH
YOUR $2
CHOICE
·$71 i1 tot1I dn, pyml. $78 ;, tol•I mo. pymt. incl. tax, licen1e and all c1rrying char91s
on appt. cr•dit for 42 rnp1. D1ferred pymt. pric1 $]354 incl. lax & licen••· ~NNUAL
PllCINTA.61IATE11 .30'%. ..
·' , 2 oOO'R . '73 DART. HARDlOP
Power steering, radio, heater, high bock seats. Used, low mileage.
(221FWC)
IMMIEDDATE DELAVE RY
$75 DOWN $75 A MONTH
FULL
PRICE
52188
$75 i1 tot•I dn. pymt. $75 i1 totel mo. pymt. incl. tax, lic:tn11 l 1U c1rrying ch•t9'' on
1ppr. credit for 311 mo1. D1f1rrod pvmt. pric1 $2775 i11cl. t1K & lic1n10, ANNUAL PER·
CENTAGE RA.Tl 11,41°/1,
•
'·WAGONS \ ~ 1 73:~·.JoDGE SE·OANS " . ~
EVERY ..!RAl\ID NEW 19 73 POLARA,.MONA.CO-CORONET ;
rs~~~~R ~~V~I~~~ WILL BE SOLD THIS WEEK FOR ONLY,, t
•MMEDIA TE DELI VERY,
YOUR · $ OVER
CHOICE . INVOICE •
PLUS ADMIRAL PORTABLE TV
With purchase of Pola ra -Monaco -Coronet
· W1gon or Sedan ..
t "
l
' r
' • ..
I
I
" l • .. .. ...................................................... 1111 ................................ :
LARGE ST SEL ECTI ON OF DODGE VANS IN 'THE WORLD! 1
'73 DODG"I · • SUPER VANS • COFFIN VANS. WINDOW VANS e CUSTOM VANS e ALL COLORS AND OPTIONS
' '73 SPORTSMAN
B·100
.B-100 VAN
. V-8, autq. tr1ns., m191 & tires, r1dio
& htater plus full f1ctory tquipment.
Used, low miluge. (83026Nl
$102 DOWN
SALE PRICED NOW..;..IMMEDIATE DELIVERY WINDOW
FULL
PRICE
IMMEDIATE DELIVER~
110! 11 IOlll llln. ,.,mt, 110! It i..
tll mo. Ptml. lllCL hlX,·lktnM &
Ill Cl,...,lllf cllll'lll 1111 appr, crrclil for U /llOl. Dtl'ttrff pymt. price "714 ind, lex & It.
ClnM, .l.NNU.l.L r ER:CINT.l.GI
RATE II • .._
WAGON
Y-8 engine, auto. trans., AM/FM radio, . $ 3 6 8 8
pow•r stHring, horn bt;r, dual mirrors,
bright bumpers fror:tt & rear, 5 whuls
15x550. (8 I 2AF3VJ151417)
s111 DOWN
FULL
PRICE
·A ·N '
IMMEDIATE OEtlVERY
COMPACT / CAR CENTER ONE OF THE LARGEST SELECTIONS
IN ORANGE COUNTY!
J
!PINTOS e VEG•S e DATSUNS • DARTS e TOYOTAS e COLTS e MAVERICl!(S e VW'S
1971 FORD PINTO
Redio, heeler, fyl!y f1ctory eqyipped. !20lFWCI
YOU:R CHOIC E
$31 Dn. $31 Mo.
$88 8
'72 DODGE C01 T . YOUR CHO.ICE
$340n.$34Mo. 1971 DODGE COLT
Radio, heeler, chrome whetl1. !6H2lK15105l46l
1971 TO YOTA 1 Coroll 1. Radio, healer. fy!l y factory equipped. (61 SDBV)
4 SPEED TRANSMISSION, RADIO, HEATER
BUCKET SEATS. I 430-EXE I
1969 DOD GE GT DART
Dart. Hardtop, 1u;omolic, power 1ltirin9, ~inyl top. IZU5l61
Sl I i1 tot•I down pymf. Sl r i1 tote I monthly pymt. incl.
l11r, lic1n1e, and ell c1rtyin9 char9e1 on appr. credit for
36 mo1. Deferred pyml. price i1 $1147 incl.+•• & license.
ANNUAL PERCENTAGE RATE Jl.51,-•.
'72 DODGE COLT
FULLY FACTORY EQUIPPED, RADIO,
HEATER. 1981HFRl
$1299 .
$4] i1 tot1I dow1t,Pytnf. $4.l -I• l1t1t mo1tfhly pymt. incl.
'tfx, lice..,--., end ell carryin9 '~Mrgos .on appr, credit for
]6 mos. D1f1rted pymt. price it $1591 inti. tex & lic1n11.
ANNUAL PERCENT AGE RATE I 0.311 % •
'69 ROADRUNNER $J4oN. 3 4M o.
R&H, fectory e jr, power 1lp1ring, !anday top, IYQY7l7l
$34 i1 tot1I down pyml. $34 i1 tota l monthly pymt. incl. 5988
ta•, licen11, end 111 c•rryin9 ch•rge1 on eppr. credit .for F1dl
36 mo1. Def~rreO pymt. price i1 $1258 incl. tax & 1ic1n11. Prlc•
ANNUAL PERCENTAGE RATE 12.50'/.
'67 COUGAR XR7 S25oN. $25 Mo,
Heiler, m19 wheel1. l X'.EV1l4 ) $25 i1 lotel down pymt.
$25 i1 total monthly pyml. incl. tax, lic1n1e. and all cerry-$688
in9 chorge1 on eppr. credit for 3~ mo1. Deferred pyml. fvll
price i1 $925 i11cl. lox & licen se. "NNUAL PERCENTAGE . Prtc.
R"TE 16.38 %.
170 PL YM~ '.-FURY Ill S34
Aulon'ltl•ic, air cond., R&H. poweer sle1rin9. 19tJAVKl ON. 34 MO ...
$14 ii tot1I down pymt. $34 i1 tol1I monthly pyml. incl. 59S
111, lieen1e, end ell urryin9 ch1r9e1 on 1ppr. cr1dit for 8 .. II
)6 mos. D1fered pymt. price is $125l incl. ta1r & lic:enie. Prkti '
ANNUAL PERCENTAGE RATE 12\50~. '
1 '70 MONTE CARLO $51 DN. S51 Mo.
AYlomalic. power steering, redio. !861AFWI $SI i1 totel
down pyml. $5 1 i1 total monthly pymt. inc l. I••, lic:1n1e, $1488
end 1!1 c1rrvi n9 char9e1 on "PP" eredit for 16 mos. 01. , ; F11ll
ferred py mt. price is $!88? incl. t11r & licen11. ANNUAL , Price
PERCENTAGE RAT E 12.28 ".. • ~·
'69 CHRYSLER 300 · $J 4 oN. 34 MO.
\1 8, air cond .. 1ulomolic, lo ndeu roof, pwr. 1te1ring.
IX'.XC348 J $]4 i1 tote) down pyml. $34 i1 !0+11 menthly 5988
pymt. incl. ta1r, li et'ln1e, i nd "II cerrying ch 11 r9t'IJ on eppr. Full
credit for 36 mo1. Deferred pymt. price i1 S 1258 incl. t11r Pflce
& licen11. ANNUAL PERCENTAGE RATE 12.50 %. ' ...
:~~met~t~~!:n, ~~!~ llOJSI $11 .ii totel$3 t ON. $31 MO.'
down pymt. Sl I it tot•I mo11thly pymt. incl. t••, licen11, sass
tnd etl cerryin9 cher9e1 on eppt, credit for ]6 n'IOI. De-, Full
fetred pymt. price i1 $1147 jncl. fix. & licen1e. ANNUAL Prfc•
PERCENTAGE RATE 13.51 '/.,
'71 FORD COBRA $48 o>J. S48 Mo.
H11dtop. Vt, 4 1peed lr1n1mi11ion. (b85F8Cl $4l i1 tot"I
down pymt. $48 ;, lo!el month ly pyml. incl. t•:., licen1e. s1300
1"d 11! carryinq ch1r911 on appr. crtdit for lb mo1. De· Full
ferr1d pyml. price i1 $177b incl . l11t & license. "NNUAL Price
PERCENTAGE RATE 1 2.o;1 ~:. ·
'72 DODGE DEMON -$55 oN. S55 Mo.
2 Dr. H.T., tedio, heal1r, mtg whtel1. 194lFF6l $55 i1
totol down pymt. $55 i1 total monthly pymt. incl. le•, 51 sas·
lic1n11, •nd oll c1rryi119 ch1rge1 on 1ppr. crtdit for 36 Fill
mo1. Deferred pymf.. price i1 $2035" incl. lax & lic:en1e. . ' , Pt1n
ANNUAL PERCENTAGE RATE 13 .04 r •.
·11 FORD TORINO $38 ON s3a -
AYlomelic tr1n1mi11ion, 1ir conditio11iM9. (507CQW) Sll • MO.
is tol1I down pyn'll. $3l is total monthly pyml. inCI. fex, 510SS
lici1n11, and ell c1rryln9 cli1r911 On appr. credit for 36 Fi•ll ·
mot. Ooferr,ed pvmt .• pric1 i1 $1406 in,I. 111 & l~c1n1e. Prld
ANNUAt PERCENfAGE-RAT~ 13.5'9°% ' 1
'72 DODGE PICKUP $68oN $68Mo
A11tom1tic tr1!11mi1tion, VI 1ngi1111. l90924l ) $6l ii tot1l ' '
dow11 pyml, $6l i1 lotot monthly pyml. ind. l11r, lic1n11, $1"988 and ell cerrying charg11 011 •ppr, credit for l 6 mos. Dt· fvll
f1rr1d pymt. price i1 $2516 incl. t•• & licen11. ANNUAL Price
PERCENTAGE RATE 12.17 '/..
'69 DOD(.;E HARDTOP S25ori. $2 5M o.
Radio, heeter, B cylinder, (LL2909B384153J. $25 i1 totel
clown pymt. S25 i1 lotel ,.,onthly pymf. incl. lex, licen1e, $'688
end 111 c1rryin9 ch1r9e 1 on appr. credit for 36 mos. De-Fall
ferrtd pymt.~ piice i1 S925 incl. t1x & lic1n11. "NNUAL 'Price
PERCENTAGE RATE I b.18 '!..
:r~'''~~,,~~~.~~ ,,w .. ,,,.,;,,. """ ,.,S48oN., $48Mo.'.
i1 tot1I down pymt. $41 is tot1I monthly pymt. incl. tex, $138' 8 li'cens1, end all carrying c:h1r91• on eppr. credit for 36 FtiH
n'IOI. •Def1rred pymf. price i1 S 1776 incl. tex &: license. · . p,ac.
ANNUAL PERCENTAGE RATE 12 .91 %.
''69 -MUSTANG --· s31 ON. s31·Mo.
F11ll fec:lory eq1upm1nt. [l>l 2EPO J. SJ I is tot1I down .
pyml. $1 l i1 tot1I monthly pyml. incl. lex, lic1n1e, end 5888 •11 c1,.fyjn9 ch1r911 on appr. cred it for 36 moi. Def1rr1d Full
pymt. pric1 ii S 1147 incl. t•x & license. ANNUAL PER· , Pricao
CENTA6E RATE J J.5 1 % •
'69 DODG• POLARA $27'DN $27 MO
A11tom1fit; P.S., fectory e!r, radio, he1t1r. IYRJlll) $27 " •
i1 totel d.own pymf, .$27 i1 tot1I menlhiy pymt. inti, tex, $788
'lic1ns•, i nd 1U carryinq cherqls on lppr. cr1dit for ].6 • ftlll \
mos. D1f1rred pymt. prjc• i1 999 lncl.";f•x & Hc1111•. .....
.ANNUAL PERCENTAGE RATE 12.IJY.. • . •
' ' . • • '
•
San Clem~nie
apistra-n
VOL 66, NO. 235, 5 SECTIONS, 74 PAGES
• .. • • " "*"
I ORANG!; COUNTY, CALIFORNIA ' , . •
THURSDAY, AUGUST 23, 1973
Today's Final
TEN CENTS
Fatalities Resurrect Coast's .. 'Slaughter Alley'
> •
By JOHN VALTERZA
Of rlMi O.llY ruot Staff The grim nickname of "Slaughter
Alley" once applied to the deadly stretch
of: highway between San Clemente and
Oceansi~ is being resurrected by the
California HJgbway Patrol because of a
major increase of fatalities in recent
montM.
Patrol spokesmen from., Oceanside said
that the rate Of traffic deaths on the now-
modem stretch of freeway in the area
through Camp Pendleton has jumped 27
• '•
percent for the first few six months of
this year, cc:impared to the same period
in 1m.
They blamed the new crush of traffic
brought on by the racing season at Del
Mar as well as ever-increasing vacation
traffic as two factors in the rapid in·
crease. •
CllP spokesmen said !hat during the
first six months of this year eight
persons died along the 19-mile stretch of
freeway, compared to only one the year
before. During the same period 226 ac-
ar1ne
23 Heists Probed
Marines Facing
.
Crime Spree Rap
San Clemente police announc~ today three men.
that three M~ arrested. early this Police allege the group victimized small
week after a robbery attempt no_w face tiusinesses -primarily convenience
cbargt.s in 23· other holdups -many of storeo during lhe nigbltime hours.
them occurring along the South Orange It was a such a conveflience store early coast. this wek that the entire case came to
'Officers said that the trio being held on -light.·
$25,000 bail apiece were assertedly in-MWU'O, credi,led Patrol Sgt. Ardon
vOlved iq a fiv~man robbery ring which Saunders with making the arrest after
has """¥ alibul $6,0llq lnin more !)Jon a the' patrol officer noticed a carload o!
_. Of emalMlusinen bokhipo. ~~ IJl!Cfer 1USpiciOW5 cll'CUIMancos
Tile lhree men arrested by patrolmen a few block$ lr!llll !he bol~ scene.
early Tuesday are all from the same After arresting the three ' nervous and
artillery battery at Comp Pendleton, (See BOBERRY, Page J)
Steve Dale Jackson, 21: David Waype
Spurgeon, 20, and 91en Dovtd Plnktto\
21. ':AU 1hree were armted a !ew minulet
alter a lhwarted robbery at 1be 7·Eleven
market on Soolh El Comino Real. The at·
tempts to rob !be market failed when
customers flustered two gunmen, and as
the pair tried to Oee ·a market clerk and
witness scufOed with the woultt.be holdup
men, police said.
Court Gives
Niguel Units
Green Light
cidents were report~ on the stretch.
Officers said that yet another factor
this year also has contri buted
significantly to the death totals.
lllegal aliens being dumped from
smugglers' cars ahead of the San Onolre
Border Pat?QI Checkpoint have caused
tbe major new prol)lem.
Earll.er in the year four persons died in
two ,incldeftW. related directly to alien
smuggling.
All were struck: by f3st.moving cars a
few miles doWDcoast of the roadblock,
• Ir
... ... . ....... /,
and all had been trying to run across the
busy roadway to walk north.
The CPH pijlns to beef up patrols along
the sketch in an effort to reduce the ac-
cident rate, and seven new urlits will be
Pressed · into se rvice, said C H P
spokestnan Dave Helsel.
Besides the extra patrols, the CHP has
convinced the state Department of
Transportation to examine the ~eadly
stretch to detern;Une if changes could be
made to the freeway in the interest of
safety.
"It's very renliniscent of the
nightn1arish days of the past," ~lelsel
said.
Tite roadway n decade ago bore the
deadly reputation because of the ma ssiv e
number of deaths due to accidents.
One crash, wh ich drew nationwide at-
tention -and sparked an emergency
program to complete the freeway sooner
than planned -involved tan ker trucks
and passenger cars in a grinding series
of <X>llisions in the Cog. Six persons were
San Clemente Police Detective .David
Munro, who has followed the c.ase since
the .arrests, said the three -assertedly
aided by several other .Marines still al
large -will be charged with 23 separate
Const.ruction appears to be cleared tcr
day ror tbe controversial Laguna Nugiel
Avco project, but officials of the develop-
ment company are being cautious about
a state Supreme Court decision giving a
green light to the troubled development
• • • • • ,., •! ' • ' :.· • ' .,.,._,. ·~'""'"'
TRW DA'l'.A COLLECTION ROO"! IN. CAP,IS1'.RAN9 VALLEY RECORDS DETAILS DURING. FIRlfiG
. Four Rocket Engines ~gMd for U~. Spoco:ShVt/le·S~ook,'M HIJl1 for Miln c' ' counts of armed robbery.
Among those userted crimes, he said,
the 1hree are alleged to have pulled two
convenience market jobs in Laguna
Beach, several others in the South Co~
1$ area patrolled by !he Orange Cowity
Sheriff's Office, several more i n
Anaheim and a total of 10 in the city of
Oceanside.
«'We still are looking for ,more suspects
in the ring and we expect more arrests
soon," Munro uid.
lnlonnaUon of the broad·based holdup
rln~ began to !low in from other police
junsdlctions soon after the arrest of the •
Marine Killed
Near Pendleton
A 22-year-old Marine was stabbed to
death Wedneoday night in a parking lot
lldj0001t to Building 2147 in the Del Mar
area of Camp Pendleton near Oceanside.
ll!oad on al'lival it the Naval Hospital
at 10:45 p.m. was Lance Corporal James 1\1. Quarlea A.('.ompany 'Illini· Amphilr
Ian troctor bllltallon. No SWJpecta have been found.
·Quarles Is survived by bis widow.
Willa, of 515 Greenbriar, Oceanside.
Camp Pendleton autbor!Ues said no 'fllrlher lnlonnatioo coocmiing the in· :ctctent was available. ·
.Surf Subsides;
~dution, Urged
. The yellow caution nag Is sUll up on
Sen Clememe beaches but !he roaring ¢ ol lhe past several days baa aubsld'
ed to two to tour r~t. mesuards said ·to-
'i&Y· . -• 1]!ater tomperature stands . at 14 doimt and no major moue incidents
""e" report<d ll;~Y· IUe11111nLLt. ·m.nrc uarneo ,.,., .
At !he Daoa Point Jlari>or, !he ~lrjlat~ awed open all night
)Viilllftday for !he llrst tjme this ,...k,
Olllgel'OUI splasbovera early In the "'cU prolllpt"!I closure of t h e
breekW1tor during the early morning ·~· •
The court ruling, issued Wednesday, K . h C l . · declans that Coastal Zone Conservation ris na u ·ttst,s .
Act permits are not required if substaJl.. , 1. .• -• ---·· ••
tial construction bad begun before Feb. 1, · '~~co·• oceanvlew housing projects o• H el.d by, Police ·
both !ides of Pacific Coast Highway were
stopped earlier Ibis year by action of the J.n Temp·le~trµc· k ,· Soolh Coast Regional Zone Qinservation ,
Commission. 'Ille firm was refused a
pennlt. Laguna Beach police d an Orange
hwe haven't had the opp:>rlunity to COunty marshal arrested two members
review and digest the decision. We are Or the Hare J(rj~a cult in Laguna not going to Second-guess it aod we have no comment at this time." Gene White, Beach Wednesday after a detective was
Avco director of community relations allegedly attacked during the service of
said this morning. an aJTeSt warrant at the group's·,temple.
The diSputed Avc;o project consists of ~las C. R4$Stl1, 21, of 641 Ramona
72 acres of condominiums and other Ave., was booked on suspicion of assault
developments which origipally called for on a police officer,. and interfering with
seven-story high-rise buildings. an officer: in the'line ol. duty.
Elsew.bere along lb~ Ot'ange CounlY' Brian W: Nub, 19, also.of 64l·Ramona
coast, the f to 3 court decision is ex~ Ave.~ was .booked oruy on the cluirge' of"
pected to nave little impact. ilfterlering with an officer ..
In Huntington Beach, a controversial Both men were taken to South Orange
tract in the Huntington Harbour Area Col;.nty Judicial District Court in Laguna
had already been approved by the com· Niguel ~ arraignment on the Jllisde.
mission. City soun:es aay the Coastal meanor charges today.
ConserV11tion Act. wbicb require a Delectlve Sgt NOil Purcell said that as
permit for any construct.ion witbln 1,000 Detective Tony Smith and Deputy
fed ol lhe coast, did not Impede any ma· · Marsilal Dick Ringler attempted to
jor projects. searclJ, tbe Hare Krishna Temple for a
Jn Newport Beach. Jim Hewlcker, female named in a misdemeanor war·
a!!istant community development direc-rant, Russell allegedly grabbed Smith
tor, aaid be did not know o! any projects with a cbokebo!d around !he neck.
!hat would be cleared by the decision. He Marshal Ringler· forcibly pulled the
added !hat none had been blocked by the coslume-cled Russell from !he Laguna
commission and that permits had been Beach officer and placed the · cult
~ issued for Several projects. member under arrest. Smith was unin·
Laguna Beach 3nd San· Clemente will jured.
also remain unaffected by the supreme The two officers had initially been
Court decision, which was won by See the ordered to re.move their shoes before
Sea Ltd. in san Diego. entering the cult temple.
Tiie ruling, final to 30 days, m<ans that . Both officers declined to observe the
the 5an Diego developer will be able to religious ritual, staling they were on of.
procoed With work on • '12-unlt con-ficial -not spiritual -business, and ln-
domlnium on the San Diego waterfront. tended to search all areas where tho
Wllh !be decision, !he court reconciled fugitive m1ciit be hldinJ, fully-shod.
conOicling Interpretations of two stct1cw Tiie girl lllmed lo 1he warrant was not
9! the act. One required a P'!Tlllt for any !ound, al~ several !emales did nee
development on the coast alter Feb. l. as tho ollloefs attempted to search !he
Tile other exempted ·persons who bad a • premises.
rested righl belora, lhe, act became el· Nash was al'l'Ollt.,I as be allegedly-in·
lcctlve. · terlcred with Cllllcers out.side !he temple
The question was whether a developer residence.
who began building bet-n Nov. 8, wben He allegedly pestered the lawmen and
. the state tniUallve took el!ect, Ind Feb~ l relu!ed lo lea-. 1he ·area where bis aal·
bad such a vested right. (Set •IUllBBNA, Page I)
.. ' ' ' . \'
·~U;q}istran~--Valley Shaltes
. . ' ' . .
In R~cket :.~ngi1:1e Testing
By JAN WORTH ortt1t DIOY """Stiff
With a. roar that shook the ·deSerted
Capistrano· Valley .billa foi: miles. around,
lour rocket engines designed for !he U.S.
space shuttle proefam were test fired
Thursday.
Lagu.na W1iter's
Daughter Badly
Hurt in Accident
Lori Hano, 19-year-old daughter of
Laguna Beach writer Arnold Hano. sh9w·
ed slight Improvement today, following
surgery for injuri .. ~ sustained in an'unex·
plained mOtorcycle accident ~day to
San Juan C8pi.strano.
Miss Hano, of 1565 BIUJbinl canyon
Drive, Laguna Beach, underwent leogtby
surgery Wednesday at sOutb Coast Com·
mtmity Hospital for -femoval of a blood
clot in the brain,,~
A hospital aide said today she remains
In critical condition in 'the intensive care
unit. but has lbown some respome
following the surgery.
lnvesUgators for !he C a 111 or n I a
!Ilghway Patrol are balfied ·•• to bow !he
accld(!nt occurred.
She was found Injured near !he comer
o! Del Obispo and StooebiU roads Tue ..
day and transporlod to !he hospital..
Tuesday morning, invest Jg a.tor 1
discovered a motorcycle in ibe vielllity of
the intersection. It Is not known,
however, whether Miss Hano was
cp<raUng o~ riding the motorcycle.
Officers said the veblcfe.b'CW!led by a
Los An(eles tnan.
'
Some 60 reporters, scienUs1s, and
engineers watched the test on the ground
of TRW, Inc., between San Juan
Capistr1V19 and, San Clemente.
TRW is wjnd!Jli up analyses of the 2QO.
pound machin.e. cal.led an or b 'I t a I
maneuvering engine (OME) before sulr
mitting a bid to NASA in October.
In a small, computer.filled control
room, data on 100 diilerent parameters
of the test firings· poured in. TRW
employes inside said.jt can take years to
analyze all the information from one test.
The $2 million project has been in the
works two years. The engine is Wlique in
that unlike much, of the existing space
equipment, it is designed to be used on as
many as 100 missions.
The OME's duties include inserting the
space shuttle into orbit, maintaining or
modifying that orbit, and getting the
shuttle out of orbit for return to earth.
To do th is, the engine is designed to
burn for 8.djUStments of four to 300
seconds with an ability to re-fire tWo or
three seconds after the last firing.
At the test Thursday, the engine was
fired four times in a sequence of 12
seconds on, eight off, four on, 12 off,
eight on, 40 off, and 30 on.
The engine used liquid fuel called
monometll)'I h)'dnnene-providing 6,000
pounds of thru,,t.
Gerard W. Elverum, chief of the
C.platrano Valley operations and
man.ager of energy systems operations in
lh,e TRW Redondo Beach plant, said cool·
ing the engine has been the biggest
technfcal problem so rar.
When it fires. the englnc reglsten t,600
degrees Inside and lOO to 300 degrttS
outside.
Qtief competitors for the bid are Bell
Laboratories and Aerojet.
Elverum said the companlu will be
(Soe Sl!AllS, P1go Zl
' ~ I
burned to death and several others were
gravel y injured in that tragedy.
The patrol's Oceanside office compiled
the data related to the deaths and the
spokesman for that district, Dave
Henderson, said that subtle factors along
the monotonous stretch or freeway also
could be ci>ntributing to the death rate.
"We have to agree that there aren 't
any ramps or other features to keep a
driver alert along the stretch. It's a little
like 19 miles of nothing." he said.
Pendleton
Jetport Said
'Possible' •
By JOHN ZALLtR
Of rtie 0.llY '"M St9ff
The U.S. Marine Co[1Js has hired a con·
sultant to find out if ct1mmercia1 jet use
at El Toro and Camp Pendleton. ii feasi·
ble, Marine officials disclosed today.
And a preliminary conclusion is that it
would be "technically possible" to build --. ~ ~ an "attractive ~tport" at Ca~ p
Pendleton, but It 'WO\lld · "''claW· Ir,
reversible eco1011ca1 Impact" Oii the
coastllDe and would be "v~ expensive.'~
The study, conducted by Stanford
Research Institute (SRJI of Men!O P11rll
has not yet reaclied any conclusionS.
about possible jQint use of the Mitine
Corps Air StaUon at El 'l'oro, according
to H.a. WJlder ,jlle man Jn £.IJ!rge: _of the
atudy l1or SRI.
Civilian use at either base couJd relieve
jet tralfi~ at O!oD&e County Airport and
many officials are pushing !hat approach
aa an alternative· to an expansion of the
county air facility . ·
Tiie proposal also ha! prompted alrong
opposition from some communities.
The investigation of possible civilian
use is part of an overall study under way
since January, which is d~signed tb
determine Marine Corps need! through
1994 at the six Marine bases in Southern
California.
Marine Corps spokesmen today reaf·
firmed that the corps is still oppoted to
civilian ~mmercia1 use at either El two
or Camp Pendleton.
However, spokesmen said that the in·
dependent out~ide agency bu been asked
to make an objective study and.Jo come
to its own conclusions.
0 1be proposals ~for civilian use have
been made and they should be taken into
account in any long range planning for
the two bases," Wild& said.
"It's one thing when the Marines stand
up every week and say there shouldn 't be
any civilian use," added Lt. Col. F.<I .
Janz, community liaison officer at El
Toro.
"But it would be another lhing ii some-
()lle on the outside who is wi<lely
respected for independence would come
to the same conclusion."
The SRI study took as its starting point
the le.vel of oper~lions ttie ~ine Corps
says 1t needs at the two bases over the
next 20 years, Col. Janz said.
Jnvestigatora will then detennine w~at,
i( any, level of civilian 'use of the two
bases is . compatible wllh !he et(Nicted ·
(See JET USE, PO(e I)·
Weder
The weather's cooling off, but It'll
still be nice along the Oranee
Coast Friday. !Ughs of 63 at the
beaches will rise to 80 inland.
INSIDE TODA 'Y
Voluptuo..,, attractiv• Kathy
Keeton is one of the wMel• drlV:
ing a new entry tnto the (Mid
of sophisticated sex magaiint i.
Her baby Is Vivo, a jouMl4l for
women. See 1to111 Page 11.
• •
•
Z DAILY PILOT SC Thnrsday, A1191.1st 23, 1973
Lady-of Night Fights
She Won't" Pay Back Taxes for Trade .
MULHOUSE, France (AP) - A pros.
stitute who suggested th:it her prof~s.slon
be taxed bas had her wish granted : !he
has been slapped "'ith a demand for
$37,500 in back taxes.
•·1 won 't pay," Jocqueline Trappler
told newsmen today. "I didn 't make all
that much money anyway, these last four
ve1trs."
· Mrs. 'n'appler brought attention to
herself recently be demanding that the
government reopen French brothels. She
has been supported by ~tarthe Richard,
the former Pnrls city councillor who
s~ the clclure law In 1946. .
Uodu pment law, prooiltullon la
egal, but pnicurlng and operating
brothels are aubjttt to severe prison
tenm.
Mrs. Trappler, a medlurtHLzed bro·
nel who looks about 40, aeekl "eros
centers" in which prositutes could prac-
tice their trade without needing the pro-
UctlOll ol • procuttl".
Under such an arrangement, she said.
the govemment could perhapo levy a tax
to pay the costs.
The letter she got from the tax in-
Point by Point
Nixort Conference Highlights
By-Th• Asaoclai.i Pr<u
Herc at a glance, are the major points covered by President Nixon at his
Wednesday news conference:
ROGERS-Announced the resignation of William P. Rogers as se<'relary of
State and said be v.'OU!d nominate Henry A. Kissinger to succeed him.
AGNEW-Said his confidence lo Vice President Spiro T. Agnew was un-
shaken, but denounced "outrageous leaks" in the investigation involving Agnew
and allegations of political corruption.
WATERGATE IN GENERAi-Defended his actions in the scandal, re-
peated earlier claims that be had neither advance knowledge of the break-in
nor participated in the cover-up, and said he \.l.'ill not resign.
WATERGATE TAPES-Repeated that he would not turn over taped presi-
dential conversations to anyone, even to a select group of officials, unless
ordered to do so by the U.S. Supreme Court.
WATERGATE WARNING-Said he considered that a directive to former
acting FBI chief L. Patrick Gray Ill to investigate Watergate thoroughly was
adequate response to the warning Gra y said he gave the President in July 1972.
EHRLICHMAN AND HALDEMAN-PredicU!d that his two former top aide•,
John D. Ehrlichman and H. R. Haldeman, would eventually be exonerated for
their actions involving Watergate.
l\llTCBEUr-Said he would have "blown his stack" if former re-election
campaign director and Atty. Gen. John N. Mitchell had told him the Cull
facts or the Watergate case, as Mitche ll bas testified he would have done if
Nixon had only as ked.
Aides Pleased, President
May Hold 2nd Conference
l!y HELEN THOMAS
United Presa Internallonal
White House aide!, convinced Presi·
dent Nixon came through "with flying
colors" at bis first meeting with
reporters in five months, indicated in San
Clemente today that he might • liold
another news conference in a few days.
Presidential aides also said NiJ:cm will
be stepping up bis public activity with
more appearances to demonstrate that
he "is in command " despite the malaise
of Watergate. (Related stories, Page 3)
The aides appeared especially pleased
wi th the fight stance the Pres.ident
assumed here during Wednesday's news
conference, where he vigorousl y reaf.
Wayward Bus
Parks in. Cafe
SAN FRANCISCO (UP!) - A wayward
bus burSt through a plate glass window
at Vesuvio Cafe in the North Beach night
club district, smas hing a sign reading
"Booths for topless lady psychiatrists."
The driver of the Municipal Railways
bus had let his passengers out moments
before because his air brakes weren't
v,'Orking.
Bartender Hal Thun es said his patrons
weren't too concerned once they \Vere
sure the bus wasn't coming all the way in
the care.
"People stopped drinking for six
seconds at least.'' he said.
I
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firmed that he had no intention of resign-
ing because ol. Watergate and charged
that some of bis critics "would prefer
tha t I fail."
Presidential aides expressed delight
with Nixon's perfonnai1ce and reactions
the White House bad received to It,
saying he "came throogh with ~ col-
NIXON SAYS OTHERS
BURGLED, TOO-Story, P1ge 4
ors" and indicating be may decide to
meet with reporten again as early as
next week.
Meanwhile, Henry A. Kissinger ar-
ranged to meet with reporters for the
first time since the President announced
\Vednesday that he would be succeeding
William P. Rogers as secretary of state.
Kissinger, who also will conti nue to
serve as Nixon's t.op adviser for national
security affairs, was expected to outline
his new dual diplomatic role at the
scheduled press conference.
Machines Begin
Clearing Tunnel
To Trapped Men
CASA GRANDE, Ari z. (AP) - A giant
earth mover today began clearing tons of
muck from a mine tunnel where two men
have been trapped nearly a quarter mile
underground for seven da ys.
Jerry Turnbow, Hecla Mining Co.
spokesman, said the rescue teams began
scooping out the wet sand and gravel
afte r reinforcing the fire-damaged turr
nel.
"The temperature has dropped to a lit·
tle over 100 degrees and working COll-
ditions are n1uch improved," SIJd
Turnbow.
Turnbow estima ted that 90 tons of
muck had been removed in seven loads
by sunrise. He said the ,."Ork seemed to
be going smoothly, but that there has
been no sign of a 40-lon loader buried by
the muck Friday, sealing the men off in
1he 500-foot north tunnel.
The pair became trapped late Friday
morning when tons of rock and debris
tumbled down a mine shaft they •.vC're
drilli ng J ,200 feet underground in Hecia
Mining Co. 's Lakesllore mJne, 35 miles
south of here.
The men are David Deeder, 41 , or Casa
Grande and Terry Udall, 24, of Ft.
Collins, Colo.
Rescue workers completed erecting
Wednesday new support Umbers whlcll
had been burned in a fire which raged for
several days after tbe cave-in and forced
rescum from the mine.
Although there has be<n no contact
with the trapped men, mine officials
t}ave said throughout the rescue opera·
tlon they believe the men are alive and
are trapped In a chamber 500 f .. t loug
behind the debris ol the cave-in.
Air and water has betn pumped lo the
arca through a two-Inch pipe fonnerly
used to remove wntcr from the mine.
I
Spector put her income since 11111 at on
estimated 480,000· frm:s, ·or lbout
'111,000. TBX!'I ~ estlmljed at
$31,500.
"I don't know on What basil Ibey have
rlgured this out," Mn. Trappler said.
The French Finance Minlstry has
several times been reported to be stud·
dying ways ol taxing pro.siltutes but ha•
not come up with an enforceabte system.
Mrs. Richard's turnaroond on the
brothel question is motivated by the need
for women to be truly liberated, she
says.
"The law which carries my name is
out of date," she said in a recent radio
Interview. "I struggled all my We not
against prostitution but for the liberation
of women. And in 197S a woman's
freedom requires that 1he be allowed lo
do whatever she likes with her body.'"
Mrs. Trappler's demands for better
working conditions seem t~ have annoyed
at least £our Mulhouse prostitutes. They
spotted Mrs. Trappler in a cafe Wedo~
day night and descended on her.
"There is the one who wants to gild
herself at our expense," she quoted the
women as sayins.
"Then they grabbed me by the arms
and two ol them slapped and acratohed
me," Mrs. Trappler iecounted.
Out of professional solidarity, sbe did
not press charges.
Police .Shoot
Valley Man
In Attack
By JOANNE REYNOIJlS °' ""' °""' P ... sa.n
A Fountain Valley man, who police
alleged was throwing butcher knives at
them, was shot in the stomach by
pt. trolmen early this morning.
Harold Eugene Lucas. 47, ol 1111123 San
Marcus St. was booked into Orange
County Jail oo charges ol attempted
murder.
Police C8pt. Les Rowland described
Lucas' wounds as superficial alter the
man was treated and released for book·
Ing from the Orange County Medical
Center.
Rowlana. said Lucas was shot at lea.st
twice by a contingent of four officers
alter the man allegediy re!U!ed to drop
one knile he was about to throw after
already heaving one at the officers.
Sergeants Fred Nourse and Lewis
Barlow and Officers Lee Pepka and
Donald Anderson were called to the
U!cu home shortly after midnight by
a neighbor who tunplained ol a loud
disturbance.
The four men were met at the door by
Lucas who reportedly re!U!ed to talk to
any of the policemen. A«wding to the
police report, Lucas "proceeded to throw
butcher knives at the officers."
Rowland said the ofliem opened lire
on the suspect when he continued tossing
knives at them after they bad ordered
him to stop.
None ol the olficecs was Injured, police
reported.
This morning's shooting marks the
third shooting incident involving ·Foun-
tain Valley police since April.
Three of those shootings have resulted
in deaths.
In April Miguel Angel Estrada Rotr
quillo, 20, of Santa Ana, was shot to
death in Fountain Valley by Officer
Timothy Miller of the Westminster
Police Department.
The Ronquillo shooting was sparked
when a Fountain Valley officer had at4
tempted to take Ronquillo and four com·
paJlions into custody for alleged drunken
driving.
The Orange County Grand Jury cleared
Miller of wron~doing in the shooting.
Ronquillo's family ha s filed ,a $500,000
lawsuit against the cities of Westminster
and Fountain Valley, Miller and Officer
Robert Mosley of Fountain Valley who
was with Miller when the shooting oc-
curred.
In June two suspected bandits, pursued
from the scene of a holdup in Foun tain
Valley. were shot to death in the parking
lot of Hoag Memorial Hospital in
Newport Beach.
Jack Elvin Na tion, 23, and Thomas
Bernard Kozeluh, 32, both or Carson were
later identified as the men who held up a
small. market for Jess than $150.
Pepla and Officer Ed Rasmussen with
Reeerve Of!icers Dominic Burak and
CUrtlss Fowler chased the two men from
Fountain Valley throogh Huntington
Beach and Costa Mesa before cornering
them in the hospital parking lot.
The four officers fired shotgun blasts
into the car when the two men mad e
some furtive movements after being
ordered to freeze,
FromP .. eJ
ROBBERY • • •
sweaty" men in the car Saunders
discovered the two large revolvers allcg·
eel to be the holdup weapons.
The guns bad heen thrown In bushes
near the car.
All three lm!St .. s an being htld at
Orange County Jail pending completion
of compiainta charging muiUple counta of
anned robbery.
"Once the ClO!J,rt cases are over for
them In Oranr. County, San Dle10 Coun-
ty plans to fi • on them for all the Job•
they are suspected of commltUng in that
area," Munro said.
l
UPI T""""'• It's a Dilly
Bob Carlisle of Tustin, Texas has a culinary specially that beats the
beef shortage, too. It's basted armadillo stuffed with ripe vegetables
and sn1othcred with melted butter. It may sound a bit like something
off the old frontier but scarce steaks and roasts are making the ar)lla·
dillo recipes more and more popul ar.
Reinecke Proposes 'Bear'
Satellite fo1· State Use
After watching a test ftring of a space
shuttle rocke t engine Thursday in
Capistrano, California U . Gov. Ed
Relnecke said he woUld like to see "a
Golden Bear satellite just for the state of
California."
"It could be used for resource manage--
ment , commwtlcations, educational TV,
and all ki nds or plaMing," he said.
Reinecke, an engineer by training,
toured the test grounds of TRW, Inc.,
"ith about 60 reJlOl'ters, scientists, and
engineers.
,.,..,.P ... J t ll KRISHNA ••.•
-fron.nibed COIJugllO Wal !1.lli d•tained
while awaiting a ride to jail, despite
repeated orders to leave.
A Hare Krishna attorney questio~
., police motives in searchini the residence
for the warTIDt IUSpect and" wed ~
no 1tt.mpt bad heen made to tei•phoo<
the cult hendquarlen and ... k voluntary
compliance with her surrender on tbe
warraot. :
Prior to serving the warrant, a letter
had aone to the headl!narters advlshic
them of the warrant and requesting 1.11
voluntary tum·in, however It &Qt Jio
response, Sgt. PurceU said.
From Pagel
JET USE .•.
level ol military use.
. .
Based on the,. usumptlons Wildir
said he has tentatively concluded that:,
"From a technical engineering stand4
point, it is possible to construct an al.
tractive civilian airport on the Can\p
Pendleton base. .'•
"But that is the only advantage lje
found. It would be very C03tly, acceis
would he difficult, heavy jet tralflc wou)I
have an irreversible effect on the coastal
wildlife inside the base and it would hate
an adverse effect on military operf·
tions." ~
Wilder said that . studies of ~
joint use of El Toro are just bq:inulng.•
He said the study .would be bao;d 'l!
two poalble levels of commercial jet Ufe
-600,000 passencer-filghts per year .,
1975 and 6.7 million pusenger fllghta lb
1985. :
Both figures were suggested In a 1972
study done by William Pereira artl
Associates of Corona de! ~lar for Uie
Southern Californ ia Association oj
Governments (SCAG). ~
The Current level of operations at
Orange ColDlty Airport is about Ot)e
million commercial passtnger flights 1*"
year. according to recent statistics. l.
Col. Janz laid the SRI study woull
calculate the number of jet ntght.s ~
day required to carry pro J e c t elf
passenger loads. It would then make-Jl
finding whether this level of commercial
jet activity would be compatible with t~
expected level or military flight operJ·
tions at El Toro. 1 t
"There ts 1 lot or military 1ctivtty •t
this base that Im~ found at most conl-
mercial airports," Col Janz sald. "W.e
fly close fonnaUon.s. practice aircraft
take offs and landings among many othf(
things. •
"It has alway! been our position ~
this type of multary aetlvky would not tie
compatible with civilian ute,'1 he sakl .•
In effttt, he said, the Marines are not'
asking an independent consultant if It
shares that opinion. '.
-.
He praised TRW for its "diverse
achievements" and participation in the
space program.
.. .
notified by late December.
The TRW orbiting maneuver engine is
a direct outgrowth of the Apollo Ltmar
~fodule Descent Engine and the Delta
launch vehicle"second s~~e engine.
Elverum said the Cap~anoJ'lant bas
been in operation 10 yeln, an ~as 100
employes.
Oregon Agencie s
Conserve Energy
SALEM. Ore. (AP ) -Oregon 1tale
agencies have started e!forts to conserve
energy after Gov. Tom McCall declared
a statewide energy emergency and
ordered reductions in state energy con·
swnption .
lie outlined Tuesday to state agency
heads a I~point mandatory conservation
program that included shutting off air
, conditioning and UMecessary Jighting in
buildings and along hig hways.
Voluntary cutbacks will be requested
from the businesses i8nd residences.
"The space 9hutlle pr()gram ls as mucb
a breakthrough as we've seen in any
other level or technology," he said. "Ap-
plications and application research ..(Tom
the space program are \\'bat will ·);ecp
the shuttle program alive."
Uing a boolter for aeroapace mearch,
Reinecke said he believes "There iS no-
where else in the ,..orld where so many
resources and talent are available for the
space program as in California.
"Continuing the aerospace program
here means not only jobs, but gives us
the edge that we have over the rest of
the world," Reinecke said.
Discussing the aerospace slump of the
late 1960s , Reinecke said he believes peo.
pie "turned against aerospace because
the industry itself forgot to tell the peo.-
ple what aerospace meant to all
AmeriCB.$.
"It got too far ahead or the people -
and didn't ta ke the lime to let the people
catch up . . . In less than 10 years,
aerospace went from the most respected
industry in our country to an industry
facing serious decline and criticism of
heavy spending."
Nude Hitchhiker :
.,Gets 'Attention'
• .
' . . .
' • •FORT LAUDERDALE, Fil. (AP) -~d ,1.ibert Schott didn't have a!Jo
luck when he tried to hitchhike a ri~
during rush hour traffic in a busine*
di strict here. So, police said, he ti)Ok o11
his clothes to attract attention. !
Schott, 21 , of anclnnati, Ohio. stroll,.r
several blocks Wednesday ln the ~~
shouting "somebody give me a ~·
v.·itnesses told police. ~
Officers arrived minutes later ind of-
fered Schott a ride. He was driven to Jal
where he was charged with "hitchh~
and creating a diversion.'' : !
Invasion Threat
. • ' ' • • •
SANTIAGO, Chile (AP) -Pre!lde,I,_
Salvador Allende met with bis nauonf~
security council Wetble9day night, anl
congressional 90Urces said they discussre8.
the threat of an invasion by Bolivia. l
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gcrlptlon~ doctora \\'l'lte tor
their l)(tticnts 11.ro n vcr fill·
ed.· Thus the patient nevc>r
eets the result from , tho
medicine that hi• doctor
wantl.'d him to have. There are aevtral reuons why an
Rx may go untllled; doubt
about why fhe doctor want~
ed him to have It In the
nnt place; difficulty in flnd-
lnlJ a pharmacy 1tocklng the
Ingredient.I or t~r of high
oost arc just a few ot the
expl.anationL
U tor any reuon you l!Ver
hcsitat.c to havfl an Rx. tilled
plMSe check with ua . \VMI·
f!\l'!t the reuon we wrlcome
the opportunity to di!ICUSS It
With ygu. Wt Mtry 1t corn.
ple\e supply of drugs.
YOU OR YOUR DOCTOR
CAN PHONE US when YO\I
need a delivery. \Vt w\11 de--liver promptly without extra
charge, A great m&JU' peQl')oft
tt1.)' on us tor their hMlth
needs. We welcome l'CQ\lftll tor del\very 1 t r v I ct and
cfllrge accounts.
PARK LIDO "4ARMACY
151 ..... t.1 ....
NN"''""'"°' .... rt -Ml-ISM ,,. 0.11......,
2 Banks Jun1p
Rates to 9\/2%
SAN FRANCISCO (AP )
Two other California based
banks joined the Bank or
America in raising their prime
lending rates to 9~ percent
from 9 percent Tuesday.
Following the lead of Bank
of America, the world's
largest commercial b a n k 1 were the Los Angeles-based
Security Pacific N a t i on a I
Bank and United Galllomla
Bani<.
'
Conip~ete New York Stock List
PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NO'nCE State Action
,ICTITIOUS aUSIHISS SUPl•IO• CCKllT 0, t.Ulroat.IA,
HAM• l'TATSMINT COUNTY Of" Olt.AflfO•
TM lollowll'lol PfraoN ate Oolr'I Jet Clwk (~tw ~ ... Wut,.
buainft1 Iii 11•11 AM County's Solons OVER THE COUNTER
COUl:ME'T CATlitlllNO, Im Whlllt... CASS HUM•e• 0.1'15'
CM11 ~ '2'27 'UMMONI tMAllUAGll . ltatokl M11'T1mat1, 117S Whl'111K. C0\11 111 rt lt>t m.l'f'IAQt Of PetlllOlllt: ~ Cellt, '2621 \llAICitHIA L. CUilll:Y •fld l:e..poncltftl ~
JNll KWlllkln, Mt lllower, Cotll RtCH.6.11:0 1.l!fl (Ultll:Y
M...a, C1Ut. nu1 To "" ••uionotnt: l)lf. Ptll!I-NI Tllli wtll'ltH -r, cond1,1Cttc1 llV 111 Jn. fllfod • pell!IOll ~"Cl ~ .,,.,rl1~.
dlYM11o11t. You ,,.,.,. file 1 wrllltfl r~ wlltlln •
JOI!'! Htrl'Mlon dlY~ Of ''°" dlll 11111 !hi• wmmotll !1 Tiii• ••••-• w11 !lied wl•n 1111 CClllll· 111vtd Oii ~ov. !I vou 1111 10 flit 1 wrlnan
tv Cltrk OI Ot•l'IQlt Coun1v on A.1191111 u , t'1ol)OnM wllllln 111(1\ tlrnt, <rour d1l11111
lt13. rn.Y be Mlfff.-d lnG !ht COUrl l'l'lfY f'l>le<"
,.17q7 ti IU09tn1n1 eoru1!.,ln11 lnlUMll\1'9 or 0111er
Vote on Issues
Puo&li.Md Orlr\01 Co.11 o.n.,. Pllol, .. def"• CO"'C .. 111119 dlVlllOll "' ll!'OPfr!y,
A119u1t h, 2l, 30, 1nd ~IP!lmber •· N)OUMI 1ug.por1. c/\lld t1.1'lodV, Cfllld 1111> '"' ·:.:._ ___ ·:_ ______ _::'"':::_·:_:73I PQrt, •nor....,•1 lff1, (otl$, 11'(1 1vcl'I
-Ol'-r r1!1~1 11 m1y be 9r1nt.cl by !flt """''· PUB LIC NOTICE If YW Wlt11 IO --tti. M!Vlte of 11'1 II•
--------------1 t.rllfY Ill lh11 in1t11r, "°" ..,_,.,. ct. ..
'ICTITIOUS BUSIHEIS lll'Oll'IOtlY 11 tfl1t Y-writ! .. ,,..,..._, II
HAMI! ST.t.T•M•HT I..,., m1y lie Iii.ct Clfl tlm1, T~ loll-'"9 l)tf"Mllll 1r1 dol"9 Ol!td M1y l. 1'73.
bu1h ... u 11: WILLIAM E. SI JOHN,
TUSTIN THE ... TRE. Ito El Clmll\O Clerk ill:Ht, lu11tn, C1llfol'nl1 9')'80 Bv Flov ll.1y
Mr. FrlJd Stel11, Sii Cl'llno C1nyon ~DlllY
ROlld. P1lm "'rl1191, C1llf'Of'rtl1 m.2 (SEALl
Mr. ltoOtrf Sltfl\, l!ll Don. SolJ1 ltOBEltT L. HUM,HltlYS
Orlvr, SludlG (1ty, C1ll!Ornl1 t1604 r:.:: 11 Lti11 2"
Tlli1 b<nlnHI II (Of>d\ICI~ by I Ge111r1I COiii M::: c:llflfllll t UH
P1rlntr11\lp. ' ,. <n•J •--· Frid St1ln I · .....-v>..,
ltober! Sleln Atlornl't' for fllflllollff'
ll\11 lllll!'l'llnt w11 1111<4 whl'I tl>e Cou~ Publli.llfd Ori~ Co.IOI C)1lly Piiot,
The followlng are the major
actions taken by t h e
Legislature in Sacramenlo last
w1.'Ck and the votes of area
Orwige Co u n I y represen-
tatives.
Senate A ction
SALES TAX REPEAL -
Un an I mou s I y approved
Assembly-Senate comprom ise
bill repeal ing for six ntonths
beginning Oct. I the recently
enacted one-cent state sales
•v CMrk ot Or•• Countt on Augu11 14. Augu11 2. I, 11, 23. lf1l 1lU·13 -( ) PACltf, ltOSS WAltHI!, :~:,:~•D .. sa•s. •Hc. 1 ___ P_u_B_u_c_N_o_TI_CE ___
1
CAPITOL
k:,:;~,, If
01
• Sll rl·SUlll . RESOLUTION IHVITIHQ; Pll:OPOJALt '-------------u.. A111t1 .... C.illorftl• f'ONJ FOR JOINT OCCUl'AHCY LEASE
Ft14fll WHEREAS, !he Founlaln V1!1tv Sd1oet
1•1,.oc Olstrl(! 1, lhe owner ol !twit cu11l11 '''I
PubllNltd O••"G4 Coa~I DtllY Pilat, P."Ofjtrly lot•led It lh1 Sutl\.llrd Sc,_,,
A t 11 23. :JO nd s llffllMr I 1'699 Edut lllon Lin~. Hunllnglon B11c11 1~111 ' ' 1 ep 25Sl -ri (legel dti.crlptlon oft~ 1ppllc1bl• porltot1 CC.:: ___________ c;.__:1on tilt ti !ht Dl11rfc1 offke) and,
PUBLIC NOTICE WHEREAS, Ille 8011rd has ~l&rmlnrd
!hit II would be .Jdv&n!"IJeolJl lo Tho
Ol•lrlcl lo l&IUt It>! eforem~nTIOf\ed prap-
---------------1rty to I pe1wn. firm or corPO<.tll'1fl
HI WPOtltT·MIS• UHI Fll O which will undtrllkt !ht conilructlon ol I
K HOOL DISTRICT bulldlng fer fflt lolnl OtCUP811(\t or Ills
Holle• 1111(111111 aid• Oislrlct and 1~ lflsee °"' ll'lt tolldW1no
NOTICE IS HEllE8Y GIVE N l1!1t 11-.. terms:
8 0.rd of Edutatlon of Ille Newport·Mtw 1. The l>Ol"llOll of ll!t bul1dl119 9CCUPltd Unll~..:l Scl\OOI Dlltrlcl cl Or11>M C:ounlY. bY Ille 0!1lrfcl wUI be utllllld by 1t1H
C1Utornl1. Wiii rwce!ve iNled bldi up to ~rsonnel 0t1tr '°' 1dmlnl1lr11lvt 1nd n :00 A,M, on 1111 3ht dty o1 Augu11, 1n3 re.lOUrce purpo•e~.
11 thl olfke ot 11!d Sd!OGI Olllrlct, 2. The Oltlrlcl 1 occwtncv w111 be loc1led 11 1t57 Pl1c1n!l1 Aven.ut, co.r. llml!td lo 1 room 1pe1ro•lm1lely 11 x l2
MHI, C11Jfor11I•, ,, whfcl'I lime llld bkh IHI.
will bl Pllblldy epefllV Ind reed tor: ,_The t>ulldl119 must ITlftf Fl1ld Act
P H Y S I C A l E O U C AT I 0 N sl1ndlr6i Ind Ill EOUUtlon Codi pr1>
lax. Bill also provides o~
lime iflC()mc tax rebate in
April 1974 ranging from 20 to
35 percent. SD 90 passed 31..0,
to · Gov. lleagan. Yes. Sens.
Dennis E. Carpetner (R-
Newport Beach ) and James E.
Whetmore (fl.La Habra ).
JOB DEVELOPMENT -
Creates new state agency to
handle s tate employment
services. SB 601 passed 21·8.
To Assembly. Absent or air
staining, Carpenter and 'Vhet·
more .
responsibility under old a1"
security program to support
nei..--dy reclplents. No relative
would be beld legally liable to
support his or her parents. AB
57 reaffinned by margin suf-
ficient to cancel Gov. Reagan
veto, 64-13. Yes, Assemblyman
Kenneth E. Cory (D . Garden
Grove. No, Assemblymen
Robert E. Badham (R-New-
port Boocil), John V. Brigg.s
fR-FuUerton ) and Robert II.
Burke (R-Huntington Beach).
UNEMPLOYMENT BEN-
EFJTS -Ends one-week wait-
ing period for jobless persons
to receive st.ate insurance ben-
efits If unemployment is ex-
pected to be less than 6 days in
length. AB 507 passed 51-16,
lo Senate. Yes, Briggs and
Cory. No, Burke. Absent or
abstaining, Badharn.
CHILD CARE -Provides
$31.6 million in slate funds to
replace federal aid cuts for
child care programs. AB 1244
passed 66-11, to Senate. Yes.
Cory. No, Badham , Briggs and
Burke.
NASD Llllt1191 for Wodnosdoy, _August ~ 1973
Great Beefstakes?
EQUIPMENT vl~on1 relllll'IO 1o 1111 physlC.111 ttrKlur'
AU bldl •rt to be In 1ecordlrw:t with DI KllOOI bulldlnts.
Condlllon• tn1trvctl-Ind SP1Clflc1Uon1 •· Le1M1t wrn bt l"fi!Ulred to fll• 1 sur• w!llcl! ere now on 1111 In 1h1 0111(1 OI 1111 IY bonCI for CM'•tormanu of lllt le1i.e.
Pvrct1t1!119 A\':nl ol 1110 SchOol Olff•lc:I l . T,.. le•M l~m will be lor SO years.
11S7 Plg1nt 1 AVltllle Cost1 Mita; 6. TM portion of tlit bulkll"'I oc:cvpll'd
WHISKEY TAX -Set aside
portion of alcohol taxes for
prevention and tthabilitation
programs. SB 204 passed 29-0.
To Assembly. Absent or air
staining Carpenter. Yes, Whet-
more.
PUBLIC EMPLOYMENT -
Appropriates $1 10 million of
stale money to fund 18 1 million
public .employment program
(PEP) and $29 million sum-
mer youth opportunity pro-
gram each of which formerly
were federally aided. AB 322
passed 64-10, to Senate. Yes,
Cory. No, Badham, Briggs and
The ·Montreal Gazette, laking advantage of high
beef prices, ran a full page advertisement recently
offering a side of beef to three lucky winners in a
circulation drive. In its ad, the Gazette showed a
security guard protecting a side of beef. "' ,, "'1· "" -.,
C1llfornl1. ' b'o' ltHff Wiii r1m1in ucluslvely the
EICll blddlr ITIUll Wbmll • bid deposit pe""*I (trOlltrt-t ot ltst"I 1111• to 111 the form of 1 c.,l!lltd or c1M11..,..., Di1Trlc l'• oorllon 1hlll VHI In District on
clleck or 1 Did OOr!d equal to five pwc11111 completion and •«ec>f•llCI I nd trN of u •.1 of Ille emount ot Ill• bid, ""* •nv ""''~I or other (hll'flfl. NVl blt lo IM ordfr ot tM NN'POl"t-Mnl NOW, THEltE"FOltE, S E IT ltESOLVEO
Unified Sd>oM Dltltkl, A Perform1nc1 tlllt thb 90illrd decl1•1!$ 111 lntffillOll
8ond may bt rlqUlrtcl 11 lht dlKretlon ti of lrivl!lng pl'OOOllls pursuant to Edvc•·
Ille Oh lrlct. lh thl .,.Int ol 11Hur1 lo tlon COde S«Hon1 1607S-1.oll7; 1ny pl1n1
enl1r 11110 such conltkl, Ille Ml sum or Pfopo11l1 Wiii be reul~td t lltf con·
tl>trl'Cf win bt · forftlltd to wld School slde<fll b'V ttw Soard 11 lt1 r09ul1r
Dls.,lcl or Orll'>(ll COUlllY. ITW!lling 1G be held on 11\t "h dey of
No bidder m•T withdraw hl1 bid for 1 ~...,ber. 1913.
period of tor1Y·llv1 (•S> davt 1tter tht STATE OF CALIFORNIA I
date Ill for 1111 OP1nl119 thereof, hs
The Board ot Edu<:1TfOfJ of Ille Nt'NP0!1· COUNTY OF ORANGE )
Ma.a Unllled School 0111r1c1 rewve1 Ille I, Roger Belgtn, Clerk of tile 8 <>11rd 01
rlolll lo r1jtct 1nv or 1!1 bids, 1nct f!OI Tr1,1s!Kli of Foun11ln Valley SthOl!I
nl'l:ttMrlly ICclfll 1111 lowtSI bid, 1!1<1 lo Ol1lrlct of Or•llOf! County, Calllorn!t ,
waive 1nv lnlorr!'W111ty or lrrtq\11,rl~ In herlby certify tllat lhe •t>Ove e l'(! lor'1(0-
1nY bid rtcelved. 11111 RlliOlu!IOll WIS duly end r99ul1rly
Otltd AUVUll 15, 191). adop!ed by Ille Mld board •I I r19u11r
NEWPOltT-MESA mtt11"9 lhereot lltld on the 2nd day ol
UNIFIED SCHOOL A119u11, 1113. llld passed by • 11n1nfmout
DlSTltlCT of vole ot said Board,
Or1ng41 County, C11if(ln'lll IN WITNESS Wl-IEREOF, I fMllW
By Dorothy M1rv1Y Fl,h.tr ~ereunto ~t my ~no and 1e1t l~ls 2nd
Purclll1lnQ Aten! OIY ol A119111t, 1913.
'--S-1100 Rog1r Belgen
P ubUlMd Or1nte Coa1t 01!tr Piiot Publlihed Or1119t COl51 011ly Piiot,
Augull 16 Ind AUQu•I 23. lt73 lSIJ-73 A119111! '· 16, 13. 197) 2"'6-7J
PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLI C NOTICE
JUDJCIAL PREJUDICE -
Bans any appeals judge from
hearing m.rtters when a party
or his attorney establishes
prejudice. SB 922 passed 21·16.
To Assembly. No, Carpenter,
Wet more.
NOISE CON TR OL -
Creates ntw sta te agency to
combat noise Pollution. SB
1220 passed 27-4, to Assembly.
Yes, Wetmore. No, Cafll':nter.
INDIAN EDUCATION -
Appropriates $1.6 million for
20 California Indian teaming
centers. SB 1269 passed 31-5,
to Assembly. No, Carpenter
and Whetmore.
Burke.
TIPS ARE WAGES
Treats employc tips over $20
per wee k as wages for
purposes of determin in g
employer-employe unemploy-
ment inswance fund con·
tributions. AB 736 passed 52·
16, to Senate. Yes, Cory. No,
Badham, 'Burke rutd Briggs.
Freelandia:
Fliglits to
Southern California
Job 'Slowdown' See1i
LOS ANGELES I AP) -The
anticipated business slowdown
in 1974 1nay curb further
employment growth in
Southern California says Dr.
Robert T. Parry, chie f
economist for Security Pacific
Natiooal Bank.
,,
HOTICI! TO CONTRACTORS or Ntw Concrete S S.t1S
CALLIHCJ POR 1101 Fine Gr&der. HIQllway Gnd Slrttt P1vl11g, NO HUNGRY PUPILS -
Sets state policy th.at no school
child shall go hungry and re-
quires school districts lo use
federal and stale funds to ~
vide breakfast and/or lunch
for pupils of l ow-income
families . SB 1264 passed 22-13,
to Assembly. No, Carpenter
and Whetmore.
A1iywliere
He predicted that the area's
leading employment cate-
gories \Vo u I d continue to
expand this year but at a
somewhat slower rate than in
1972. when the economy re-
bounded from the I 9 7 0
recession.
g:: l!:I •.
Sci'!ool Ol1trlcl : COAST COMMUNITY Airport1. Runw1y1, and $lmll1r !Vpt
COL.LEGE DISTRICT h11vy con1tro.1Ct!on . t 5.US
Sid Otldtlnt: 2:00 o'clotll. p.m. of the OH>ri• Hindi«• .. . ....•. t 5.145
1111 dlY of Slpterntllr. 1973. Fl19m1n •, .. t S.&.LS
Piie• ol 81d RK1lpt: 01/ke ot tne L1DDrer1, ~•I or Con1tr\1Ctlon .• t S.'4J Purtl\tllnq Aoent, COAST COMMUNITY l1ndsc1pe G1rdener & Nursery Min Illas
COLLEGE DISTRICT, 1310 Mimi kn-ledge of plant m11..-lall 1nd how to
A-, Cost• Mft.I, Cell fornl1, '1•M. t"llanl ll'>tm. L1y1 OU1 plant ••·
ProlKf I d II n I ! f I c I I J 0 n N1n'11: •l~Q .... Mll to follow 1111 llndKlpe
TKllnol09y P1rlllt19 LOI Addlnon 11111 otanl ....... , •.••.... , .S S.7..S
Mii.c;tll1neou1 Sln!ef Con11ruc:tlon ti Mort1rm1n .•• , ..... S S.6tS
ORANGE COAST COLLEGE (Sid No. OPEll:ATIHG EHGINEEll:S:
')I,).. Heall!! & W1U1re • 7k per hour
P1ac1 Pl1n1 1r1 on Ille: Of/let ol ''-Pension • s 1.11> Pl' hctlr
Pun:h11l119 AgMt, COAST COMlloU~ITY V1c1llon-Savlng• •
COL LEGE DIST RICT. 1110 · AG'a1m1 ' flolld1y • .lClc: per hour
Ave'n1111, '°''' .Y.e-11, C1ll!crn!t. 91626. Foreman: 50c per tiour over ltle rite GI
NOTICE Ii l-IEREB'1' GIVEN tn1t The tl'le l'liolltll paid Engineer under his
aoov&-nam&a Scl\GOI Olslrltt or Ortnoe •11pervi1ion, roun!y, r~111ornla, «ll~Q CY ~nd ll>r,ooh Group 2 S 7.27
115 G<>vernlr>11 8oerd, l>e•elnaner referred Concrele mlKer oPl!rlfor, skip IYPtt
te Ii ""OISTRt(T", wlll •K~VI 110 Ip, but Skloloeder • w~• type, uo !o ~· yd. n-01 leter !/Ian !hf al>Ove·1!atlld llme, '4!11· wl!hotJt &lltcllmel'I "° bld1 i:>r 1111 1w1rd 01 a conrr1c1 for Grou11 J •.
ll'le 1bove prolecl. Ch1lnm1n 1 7.SI
Bld• sllatl be rKtiYto on tne plfce Iden-Power Contrett S•w OPf•llor
!lfled above, and shalt be ~Pned 1nd Group c .. .• . •.••. t T.62
cutlll(lv rt1d aloud 11 !ht 1t>o•1-st1led 8oKman or Mlkerm1n (As~lt or Con-ti~ •nd pl1ce. crelt ) Rodman
Tlltrt Wiii be I IWtnly-llVt doller GrOUP S I 7 .• 1
deposit rKW!red for each "' of bid Backhce oi>er1lor (IJl"I lo and Including dOC:UfTllfll• lo guar1ntee !tie rel11rn In >..Yd.)
900d cand!llon wttllln ill!VM dlYI 1rt« !ht Rolltr Octr•lor (1Soh1fl or llnllhl
bid 'llOlll'ling dltl. Rubber T!l'W'd E1r!I> Moving Ecul"""'t
Etch bid mu11 conform 1nd be f1lngle Mllint, up To 1nd Including :u fl:SPOllll•e to the contr..;t docun'lll'lts. vd. 11ruck )
EKl'I bid sh.Ill bt eccon•,,.nled by ttlt Skip.loeder Ooer1tor !Cr1wler Ind Whttl
ttcuri!Y relerrld 10 in Ille contr1C! Tviie over •;. Yd. and UP lo Ind lti·
FAIR CAMPAIGNING -
Establishes state Fair Cam-
paign Practices Commiss~on
to investigat~ and penalize
violators of state campaign
codes. SB 352 passed 27-8 to
Assembly. Yes, Car penter and
\Vhetmore.
Asse1nbly
Action
WELFARE VETO OVER-
RIDE -Eliminates relatives'
PUBLIC l\'OTICE documt11ls 111d by Thi list of preposed cluclillQ 11> vds.J .l---------~--cc,--
wtxonrrac1or1. Grout:I I . S 791 NOTICE 0,. TRUSTl!l!'1 SAL&: The DISTRICT rtHrve1 !ht riglll IG re Asohalt or Concrete Sf'l"e•ding Octr1!or Ht . F-2'42
let! 1n• or 11! bld1 or 1G waive 1nv Ir· flamoi,,.g and flnislllnQ) On All9U'll 30, lf73, 11 11:00 A.M.,
r1gV11r!tles or lnlorm1lllle1 !n Jny bids or Asol'l•lt Pevtng Machine 0Per1!or IMPERIAL CO R p D RA T I O N OF
In !tie blodlnG. (B1rber Green Of' slmll•r lype • 2 AME RICA. 1 C1lllornl• corpor1lion. 11 Thi DISTR ICT ~I delerm!11td Ille !.Ctft'dmen r~ulredl TntslK under Ind pUrsuan! to I deed of
oenw11 crev1ill119 riff of otr doem wages Gr1de Checker Truil d1tf'd Julv 71, lt71, eke<uted by H.
In Ille 1oc111tv In wtllcl'I t~ls wor~ 11 to be Gr1d1U Operator tOfler or JD1Jrnt~m111. c Alphson, Trutlte vnder 1111 Wiii or
ctrform.a for u th (,1n or tvne of tralntt •e<iulredl E'mny McC1llum, undtr Court Order tiled
workmtn needed !G tllKU!e !hi conlrecl, GrOUP 1 .... t l.Gl Mly lf, 19611, C•H Ho. 11111!0 8910,
to be a1 loll11W1: Motor Pa!rol • 8!ade Oper1!or f1l11gl1 Rlver11c1t county, C11lfornl1, 11 Trutlor,
Arry cl1stlllc1!lon no! 1nUclNltd and e,.olnt l 1nd recorded AUOU$1 $, 1969. 11 37Gf,, Boo!<
bel-l11!td 11/1111 bt paid II Tiie currtnl TEAMSTeJts: 97'11. PIQI 587 of Offltl11 Records In 11>e
w19" ra!11 for tile 1pll'llcablt lrlde Ind Ha.Ill! a. Welfare · 7k per hour 0111'9~ of ,,.. Rtcordtr of Or•niM CounlY.
cJaulncallon. P11111!on • •Sc Pl'" t>our c1tllornl1, wilt Hll •t PVbllc 1uC11on to II r1ra1 listed below •re not cvrre~I or Vec•tlon·Stvlngs • Ille l'llgllt1I blddl:I' for c1sn (payable at
1rt r1vh..:l by labor 11Jrttmen11 Ourl~ H0Hd1y · S 1.00 iier hOOr time of I.ti• In t1wlut money ot lht United
the bidding time or (on11rvc!lon time, Fore-min: Whtn a Conlraclcr "'"'nlovl on st1t1tl 11 NIWPOfl 801c~ City Hill, 3300
1vch revisions w.111 bt con1ldered 1 part hi• P.t~roll I or more T&1m•ter1 Newp01t Btlc~ 8tvd., Ill 1111 CllY of
of the below·llsltd rale1: Ol)tr'lllng oqufpme11t under Ille Jurhd!c-NeWIJOl"I Bitch, County of Drlngt, Slate
CARPEHTEltS1 lion ol lhl T11m1ters, l'kt!kldlng In¥ of Catllorn11 111 tsllle, !Ille Ind fnler11I
HNtth • W1lt1rt • 1•c lier hour t'Qulpmenl 1e11 lhan 1ik tons Ind conveyed to iw.d -lltld bv II under Hid
Pension • 95c Ptr hD!Jr malntvn1ne' ,qulcmenl, the C011!r,.ctor dted of trull, Jn tilt r11l property slf\Jeled
V1c1Tlon·S•vir\gl • J.1>111 de1lgn1te one Te1m11!' 11 Crall In 11ld Coun!v tnd Stalt de1crlbed ti:
Hol ldlv • 11k per llour l'orem•n and l'le t/\1!1 rece•vt 50c oer Lot SI of Trlcl No 10!!, In 11>1 CounlJ' of
Forem•n: R"'el~t not tes1 than 60<: per nour more ll'lln lhe higllesl Tt.tm1ler or1nge, SMte of C01Utornl1. 11 ctr Map
llotlr m.,,.. lllen ll'le hourfv rile of Ille Cl•s1illc1Hon f"JY•f wftlcll l'le Is For1m1n thlreol recordtd In !GOii 21 P"'I 25 ot
l'li911e1r Ca•Pel'lt• claul!l(atlon over Driver ol Tr1n1ll·Mlir Truck· under l m l1cell1neou1 maps, ff'.I th~ oftlct or 11\tr w"lc~ tie 118, re1DO'lllblllty, tkc1pt vd• · '1.1• Coun!Y Rtcoroer of 11ld countv.
"•n111n1a!it Nll!er or Pow.11r ST1pl2r."' Oriver of Tr.trllfl·Mb Truck-l yds. or More (ommonlv known 11 20271 Ac1el1 C•r~te~ l 7.0~ more 5 6.91 Street, s~n!1 An1, C1lltornle.
CEMENT M•SOHS: 0,1~ ot OIJmp trvc~ of: Tiit sale "'·111 be mlde w!lhoul covlf'llnl
He1ltl\ & W1H1r1 • 90c Pl' l'IOU• Le-ss 111111 12 vos. w11er le•tl W.S& or w1rr1nt¥ reiiat'dln1 title, pcKi.eulon or
P"'tlon • •Sc Pl' hour 12 Yd!. bl.II ltu ll!in 16 'Ids. t11cum11r1nct1. to 11!1sly Ille obllg.atlont
Vecatlon·S1vlngs • W1llr level , . . · ' 6,U HCUTtd by 111d detd of lrutt.
Hplldlv • 70c Pl'" llOUr p,pelint Ind UtHllV Working Truck NOiiet of Otl1ult Ind Electlon to Stll For1m1n: When lhret or more C1m1111 Orl~r. lnchldlnv Wlncn Truck. Ill.If Hid real prOPf"'IY undff 111d 6ted of
MtMlll• are emp!ovtd on • lob, one llmlltd lo lruc:U IPOllC;&blt IG (tlPf/1111 !ru1t w~!I rtcorclt'O April >o. 1173, 11 Doc.
s/>111 be ernotovtd I S a Foreman Ind Ind utlllty _., whfl"t I comco11lt No. JOllf of ''-O!flc!1I Rtcord1 in tilt
sllall r1cll¥11 not I•~~ ltlan loOc per hQur crl"' Is ustd .................. S •.IS Office of 11\t Recorder ol 11ld COO.Inly Ind more tl'lln 1111 hourly 111t DI tl1e h!gllllf W1t1r Truell. Sl1!1.
Cerntnl M11or1 c11u1nc1llon ovtr Which Und1r «>OD gallons . .•. •• ..S •.65 011td: July 31, 1913
ht 1'111 r11ponllb!llly. «XXt 011Hons 11'(1 ovtr . . S 7.4S IMPERIAL CORPORATIO N Joumeym111 : S 6.16 ELECTIUCIAN : OF AMERICA,
Jnc:tudlng bl.It no! ''''"<led to the Health & Welfare · ~k oer hour 11 Tru1lfol
totlowlng: Cl'l!pp!ng; p1lchln11 ; selling Pension • 7k ptY hour By; Clekldll MKMIU~n
cw b /orm "nd plink, 1t1t!ng ol ll"es. General Foreman S10.ll AHlsltnl S1Crel1ry
1-r.kes 1nd oraclls. te1tl~1 screeds, Forem11n .. 1 9.91 SPS 2'f0~
Wfllch lncl!;~e1 K•eed Dins: cut!l1111. Ceblt ~olicer l'orem•ti • 110.:>6 P11bllslltd Or1n11e Coatl Oalfy Piiot,
t.<;orlng alld stwing new toncre!e: plu11· Cab1e Solker •• s 1.31 Augul! 9, 1,, 23, 1'1J 2411-73
of11g, lllJl119 ~Me-Boll ~011s c drv picking w1remat"1 , t '·'°'l--------------
C4nertl• 1nd Embco. ten~lng mft!erl•I Llnem1n ,I I.to PUBI IC NOTICE
hOll on 1!1G1. floor\ and Oec•\: bush Tt<hnlclan •• I l .tol------·--------h.mmlrl119: paUhlnu ~nd \ICk•n;: rod· PAINTEltS1
dfno l1mprnp, bit Wtll roo:Jdlng, Mlchlo11 H11lll'I ~ Welf1r1 • l9c per hour NOTICE TO CRl!DITORS DI'
afld slmll1r tyo11 bull t1oat!ng. Pen1I011 • ltc ~r hour BULK TJl•HIFIR
Curb & Gufltr M1cl!lne Octrt!or !cement Lift tnsurante 10!; ptr hour (SllCI. •lll .. 107 U,C.C.I
ontyl . ... .. '6.1• V~c1tlon eoc p..-hour Nollet 11 heretiy g!vM IG crldltor1 of
U lott•I Sr ,O.omin111r11lve k "" l\OUf 1111 wllh!n n•mtd 111rt1tt ll'lat • bUlk
llHllll & Well•••· 6k per l'lour AoorMllCe1Mo OJ.: Otr tlour tran1ftr I• lnllndld IG .,. mtde on
P-Jor1 • ~ 13S oer !'lour For...,en (4 m111 "' kul s It.SO 1bO•I penon.al propttty hlfllln1111r dtiscrlbtd, V1ottl~vlng1 • Journl'"fmtn Tiie ntmt llld llullnt11 lddrttl ol 1111
11o!ld•Y llc cer l'lour For~m~n rs mtn or mor1) 1 0.75 •bov• ltiftndfd tr1nlf..-or I': Frank Slrr1no. f~111: Not 1111 tl\.ln »I: ctr hour Jourll"Ymtn 26000 A.....,ue A.,-ooutrla,. Sin Ju•n
rtywt lhlf'.I !hi !lourlY w191 r•I~ of TM Journeyn'!ln sor•r • , , 7,61 C1P11tr1no, C1lllornl1, h~I cl1s1Jlfc11lon OVl'r "'"•ti! lie /\ts PIPE TltADE1: Tiii n-Ind OU~MIJ lddr\rQ of '"'
SAN FRANCISCO IAPI -
The airline's flying stock is
painted bright yellow, feature s
rock music, organic food,
chess and checkers and a
format that might alklw
pe.aengers to pfa y "destina-
tion bingo" on some flights.
"Freelandia.'' a one-plane
airline that won its license
recently from the Federal
A\•iation Administration. will
operate its elderly DC8 on a
travel·club !'l)Ute b e t w e e n
Hawaii, the mainland and
Euroj:k.
11lE COUNTER cuJture's
answet to the regularl y
scheduled airlines. Freelandia
is the bl"ainchild or fonncr
Wall Street whiz Kenneth Moss.
Moss. 30. made $1 million
playing the stock market by
the time he was 2ti and dropped
out a year later to become
a wea lthy vagabond.
"It's a traYel club you n~
$50 to join; and if YQU have it,
we can squeeze you in, There 's
always one more seat," said
Moss.
Members who pay the ini·
tiation fee ""'ill be able to fly
from Honolulu to San Francis-
co for $69, from San Francisco
to Los Angeles for $12.50. from
Los Angeles to Ne\\' York for
$69 and fro'll Ne1v York to
B"tlssels for $100. ~toss said.
The first ni,e;ht of Freelandia
will take off from Hawaii "no
later than Sept. 21. and earlier
if we reach our minimum
membership level of 3,000 be·
fore that," 1ifoss said.
"lt's going to be an
alternative style or travel;
we've even loved \vllh thP Idea
of takin~ off ft'flm Hawaii 11nd
having ii::omPthinl? llkl' a bin~o
j?"ame to decide "'here ,,.,,
should go on the fuel \ve had."
TR AVF.LING BECAl\fE P..'rt
(lf Mos<l ' lifestu le arter he left
the "Wall Street trip of
manipuJaUng pcoole." He
went to S.,ai1t !hen fnff ia.
bar.k to New York ~nd finall v
PnrfeA un 111 a C""l.,..unP on the
Stin Francisco Peninsula.
l•d..-1111(1 ll~llHl'I I. Welt1r~ • II)";, 01 111051 Pl'Vroll lnlendl'll lr1r1tflf" la: Jolln $, 8tl>Uf,
AS0111ll R1kE•, LUl.,.n I. "°"'' 1 St51 P~,1on . 16•• ol oroi1 NYro!I P.O. Box !)DI, Spring B11en, C1ry, PUBLIC NOTTCE
A11>h1lt Shovell'r ' S 70 V&o;•llon.Holld•v 13...,, GI orou ,_YT"O~ lllil'IOll, ----
llu<;9Ymotii1t Ml" I S 15' ADOrtnl0<e & Joyrnty. Tiii! 1111 Pf"Ol)trly J)trllnent ... tllO 11 a t3•1£
Ceh\etll Dum1Mr !on l Vl•ll tr 'nrqtr "''" T••;nfno I•• of orois ~yroU Clh<rlbtd ~I lollow1~ EQuloment, tools, SUPl!llOR COUIT 0' THI! f'11xtr •l'ld hllldlln9 bvlk (flm~nll 1 S ISS U!lllty P\ottilM' l'or,man I 119 ""lllcltt. lrall1t, II-Wiii 11'(1 h'~mf, fTATI l'I• t'l ll"l'lltlUA Jll'llfl
Ccnc:rtte Cvr1r-lml)ll'"v1wt mtmllrl"I tfldlUlll•h P<oth"I JOUtneym•n 1 1:'4 GI 1 bullntSs k"'Wll ••: CAPISTRANO THE COUNTY Of' Oll:ANOI!
Form Olltr I S.ll5 lrrlgll!on •'kl L•wn Sprlllkltr, I 675 SWEEPER SER\llCE, 160t» AYltlW HI, "'''7'
Concrllt $1w M1n, C11nlno. 5cOl'l"!I Olll ~"''' A ~!orfTI 011ln Po1>1l1v~ 1 S.2S A.,OPutrto, Sin JUln C I P I I Ir t n O • "'OTICE OF HEAii: i NG OF" PETITION
C11ilornl1. II~ PRrt~ATE f"ll< Wtll, Ii N "I
Thi! 1111 IOltl contldtr1tlon for tflt MOlOGRAPHIC COOICll ANO FOJt
PARRY SAID he anticipaled
in 1974 a business slowdown
which will exert ' ' s o m e
upward pressure on unemploy-
ment as growth in Southern
California's labor force out-
paces over-all employment
growth.''
Irvine Firm
Revenue Up,
Income Dips
VTN Corp. has reported
revenues for the fiscal year
ended May 31 of$19,463,736, up
18 percent compared to
$16,473.881 for the previous
year.
Net income for fiscal 1973
was $287 ,879, equal to 26 cents
per share, compared to net in·
come of '623,150. or 67 cents
per share for the year ended
May 31, Im, The 1973-figures
are based on l,099,802 average
shares outstanding. There wer~
933. 792 average s h a r e s
outstanding in 1972.
The decrease in earnings in
the 1973 fisca l year compared
t() 1972 was a result of losses
incurred during the fourth
quarter ended May 311 ac-
conHng to James J. Trindle.
chairman of th e Irvine based
firm.
"F'ourth quarter results,''
Trindle said, "were primarily
due to a material decrease in
th e leve l o( revenue from pro-
f essiona l services during thf'
period as compared wi th the
same period in 1972, while
personnel costs and business
development expenses were
based on anticipated revenue
levels that were not realized ."
Off ~-· Otf 1,.7
ON 14.l Off 1~ .• ON 13.l Off 12.S °" ll:l 2!! n.1 est; 10.• ~ ~=~ Ott lD.t
(!ff lG," Off 111,11
"" ln.~ °" '!·'· M 1 ,11
HE SAJO Orange and San
Diego counties, which account
for nearly 10 and 9 percent.
respectively, of S o u t h e r n
Ca lifornia's work force, have
•
MUTUAL FUNDS
ON 111.1 1, ~ ·~! Off 1.2 °" •.1
Off '·'
recorded rapid gains in jobs 111!%,.,,..,.,,.,,....,.,. .. z.o~•na••'""•""'••n and w:orkers. He predicted a Ii
Continuation Of lhiS recent ~~ lly~IJi."":t ~~ ~~ 1t.n ·t~ 1n: ~ltl 4.IJ S.» tr.:11 JI ,:f. l~J
Sl-g growth pattern. bld •nd ••ktd prl-Drvt L" l'-11 1),j( G<fwl11 :ttJ •.31., ,v°"" .. M, .. ",-_." '"'' ts on Mvfu•I So 1ncm 7.22 7.t l jll(om lfl '-,....,.1 r .61 ~unds 11 quotltd by lnl C1111t l.eJ 10..» rll Ut J.36 tUntrf 1Jj M
'"' NA5D Inc. E!.l. 't~ ~}1 ~~b /"'J' ,.~ ~17 ~f~tl ~~•~' 2'.21 lu --••TDH & vy F11nc1 ~ I liul Fd 11' •.n U Wt*t11•1y HOWARD: JP Gwlh I . /\vi S.9 1..)4 1.12 1 P A119UJI "l2 1t1J &11" ~d t .20 10,0.S j'""' Fd 16 1'.fO :UDOIJI JIDS1 9141 Al-Gwlll F 13.61 1".IS Min 9111 1.54 •.2'0 lnlr l"v ll'B 15.'1 Earnings
50 Perce11t
AC>MlltALTY: lncme )IJ 6.31 JH1n ~ 1.n ... I ~•ltnc . 1S.6l Grwlh '17 •.S7 SOKll F 1.n 1.•S Jol'ln1!11 rl.21 nl7 om I , 10.2' lr>CD<'l JJt 3.n Sick Fd 12.JJU.tl KIYITOHl'1 DKll :J;1t..U
1n1urn 7.11 I.SJ Eberald 1.11 101f !usl B1 11.61 It S4 j~ Lev •. '·" Aov11rr •.Ot '-"1EDIE ~p Jl.!i011.JO vii B? 11.1111.02 cu,'"',"!il'
Ae1n1 Fd 1 10 176 IP:C MGMT GltP· vii B' 1.12 ,.to au :r ·• f:ll 'Mina In 13;41 1•:66 Eaty Gr 1 . .Q 1:12 c:::J ~~ fJI LJg wi-: 11 ::n .4 ~~~d I::t ::~ ~!' :;; J:rl ~-~ c~:: s1 fj·~ R:n •r~·~~o "':'~ At Ce...,,0 n A11, .. ,, 11.1113.0t E••" Gt 11.,. 1112 >u•• §1 :u l'.l' OOct fd i·n 1·U ..LJ,J. Alphe Fd 17.58 lJ 7J Elfun Trt 15 II ~~I {; '03 A Sol Shrl Im li a A.mc111 F •.55 •.t7 Emtrll 3,S7 3 '1 A lo 'j • !Et.ntl . '14
Am ~vrs •.n '·'' e"';N.v 11.01 n .01 ~ 1,1 3· 3 y F 1 ,,,,. , Certron Corp. of Anaheim ~ eW~11t11·l' '·1
' ~~ .~ .... ~·n ::t: 11irk'ct11 f f -~f"LD t•"i.i
• PUNDS: Ffd Ritt •.t6 . ndmrk 'l4 6 {!nlrpr I-" :iJ announced sales and earnmgs <•P'•• 1.n 1.• J11D•LITY ""'~ ,d it1 4:1 ~ •• , F4 ff ,., r h . lncom 1.10 •.U OltOUP1 ~,1( OltOUP1 f"l•tbl' . 1,10 or t e nine months ended Ju-1nv11rn '·" 1.11 ~deb •.•2 1.u 11 t.ldr ''·'! 'j·l• ~1111 ~ J~ 0:...1
ly 31 were ~·ell ahead of the ir:~ ~:~ :.;t ,,:::~! 1J:•f 12·13 ~c\ 1':i 1 i ~~1/j" sr"' 1 Prior year 's results Am Grtl'I s.1s 1.21 v ssac 1,91 1.n tlbtv ,.d 1.12 t DPrc: 1. ~I • Am lntln •.7t :5.14 t 100 • lie 11'.11 ~ •j4 1, ncom 6. ' , • Am lnY1t •.JI •JI EINll:o: 10.os Inc 'let ' ' r. n~I 1 , Edu•an R. Gan1son, pres1. -*"' Mut 1.•• 1..s1 Ever~t 10.1111.°" 0011111 DMn 11.611 M d t I h AmNt Gr 211 Uf Fund 14 ... lt,2• IAYLI 1 d~ F• 1.15 A) en 0 t e c 0 n sum e r AHCHOlt Purhn I.rt '·'1 C111 IJy ,J.U 12.U lGMA •uy•t: magnel'c lape manu raclurer GltOUP~ s.1.m F l .ff • 21 M111.,.11 4.r.l 1•.01 •• Slit f·' " , C•11l1I 453 •.t• Trtlld tz,jt24ft \.OltD Alli Inv . I ·1' said that net income for the Fnd 1nv 7.31) 1.00 111H•NCIAL AHU•1• l:n 6.7• ~,.., 1. . ' Grwtll T.J1 1.2• PltOGRAMS1 Am vs .12 J 0$ ,•tntl.H'" , .3'Z first thr"" quarters rose 0 lncom 6.-'I 1 s.t Fin Ovn I 03 4 03 BllCI llHI ·"' 1!~' fTlfl!I 8 . 1.11 , '"' p-V1n1ur 1.2• tO.l Fin Ind 1,lt 4..lt L~tnern I .1~1 0111 ll Gr 10.3310.J:t prox1malely 50 percent lo W• N1t1 11.M 11 . .s F;~ Inc S.J.1 s.l.I ~u111n0, •n. !2
0
OI 5?._10-~ n.o:i 1,...,
A•''°" 342 19' ven1 it1 391 ...... " .. u,.. s: sw···T,,., ,.., I S214,000, equal to seven cents Akld1J1 F 1.1, •·• 111Fd v1 10.un.11 f1ot11 '•'i "•i~:"r G 1!~-",f h . •XI F tlt$T ~om • · 5 n · • per s are (after giving effect HOUGHTON : IHVISTOltt: : '!! 1,., ••. ' ~·i.o •' :. t · ) cre(f't f t Fund A 4.31 4.90 Oise Fd $.It SM In . ., • · ATI N f'
i:ss
3 :'~orwarc11 or•.~~ i:\c~ }li !~ ,t~;~ ?·.§ lff fl!H 0
= ~if f~i r-:: :·fs1i~ or three cents per share) over BLC Gth 10:,.,11.7' P:OltUM G-OtlP : M'1.'s't 11':.cl'1 I .o5 I'~°" t~ ~~
the comparable period in tm ::= ~~~·1JJ: I~ ~::= 1J:n 'JJ: ~l~ 11· ll·?i .~~ .. W JJ~.!:1; when the company earned l::C~ W. ::n :~ ifr.~ t:; ~ G M1 0 12: l 1"':Tf ;.~ .. ~..,. "°':
B .. con 10 ., 11'1 M' Fdll Gr .c.•i • o ~o I JlM .., rn ~ j·'° 2.to $1'4.,000, equal to nve cents Btrtef' I( 11 :00 11:00 l'OUHDlll:I . M1t1~ IY l • f" 1: .. d :~ 11: per ·•are (O£ Wh">cfJ the lltt.ll'lr J.11 •.11 OltOUP: 1.1.11,,.r 1 1 l l N ltOI rn• :WI 8ontf1tk 1"3 S.06 Grwlh .S.30 S.11 Mid "''" , fl•l'IC 20. ,I, S"""'ial credi t from lax loss"'°'',." !·"10.15 ll'ICOll'I 11 ;to1l .... MDllV fil 1 · I •111" i•jt ·i' ,... .... .., Brown .24 J.U F Miu~! I.SI t.Jt MS!I "d J. 1;D'l;1; 1• I I
carryforward amounted to =~~~f:K fou~c~ 1~::: 1;;;; ~\'F s~d :_u 1y: 'bsrwi:ou"k§ 1-., $64 000 or two cents per 11u11 F« ''·~ 1.,.s, P"ltAHKLIH Mii' Gro •.'Ii '· •ncom 1. ;,,
i can FO' 21.iC 23,lt GROUP: Mu~ " <B1 I· jmmlt !· ,t 1 Share), Dlv~r '·" l,ll ONTC 7.•3 •,14 llou In I . . 9Cllnl .ot '~ N.t f,6l 10. Gwfl'I Sr T.l, !.17 Mii Sl!r1 14. 14, !vf'.lr.ro " I"' , For the just concluded nine-NY •n 10.4111.•1 ,., 1ncm 1,t! .03 Mull m 1 1, MR Ao ~ ;
B•l'lllM '·" I,,. us Gv $ t.sa '!·ff NII I " f.46 ,_ .. ;emol G . " month period net sales were ta F11~• •.1111n . .(t u1m111 4,14 . ~· c •fs i 11Wtr c I .
$11,194,000, Up, 10 percent from '~1 lt': lt~1 l:~ !l:'E~T: ::n ::!if 111
"\r i:liO 1'~.l rn''~1'lf: ·1: 1i 0 . t:HAHHIH• Fl.I LIE11 ll.1111.U vld11 . • udor H •O, $1 .072,000 for the hke period PUNDt1 ,.~Ml ck> f .'3 J3 rll It\ · j "fie • I l ,.lncd "I0,1311.ol' .. NDS IMCP llCom "'· . • ' as year. nd F<f Ltl f:',.) OUP1 !~Sr · f· n fl • •
BofA Acquires French
o'::t~'k J;! f~ w J:aS1 ::fl y:i·~NOl I~-nl, SH .
Vf"t!'r I.II l .N lltlWY t. 7 7.61 t'!EA Mj " n Ct9f ' • ;s;;:,.1 0:., S·t.: :ML-ft '-ti ~1u Ctn ~; U ~ I t
::w t.n .:i: ~.M .. ~: ·i:ii ~ ~~ ,t: •
01
.,.
Ftwl 1.. 1.04 t" o•ou, si c= ~=;. I Jt ~'-~~;'; ;~ t:,: ,:: ::r•,.,:. 4t.: 1s:n · JrJ · · ;g "~ ff~ ("*!!I '-~~ A.111 '°"' Snt 10.50 1 . .-m;. ' , :: r.: Cl'nenta F1'nance F1°1""" :::;-;;.r,~,,.n ... ,, :~:::: '~1:1: ~.~~.. · tIS~ ··,~~ ··,.
aaa ')~~· •" ''" ~&:.,;,,..."c.':.,;" • .,r W 't: I ..... <• J'.11J jj
,,,_ 1 t i1n,ft Grwtll f•" 1,lt ,.IN M ' I 'I ~\UI Liii. .
liti!c lrtfl\ltr ol s1ld INM111u I\ IM M.111'1 OI LETTERS TE5TAMENTIJltY lrd of!~ $11> 611'1 71!1 Ith Sl•,$00.00, Wl'llch canM111 of I .... t,ilOwl"I: Elltte of ARSEN M. THOMAS, Otce•t-U •1 ,I t$ DllulpflOll A.,_h Id.
Cl'llc:k IOI" tl .. J».00. NOTICE IS HERESY OIVEN thll
•Mglv ~ 1~ '-:o" il'tJn.. '-'~ 4 .,.. t_ w 1 1 ul •~ ~ l
PAH IS -Bank of America, has acquired a 5 percent in· = f·;f ,:·?! ~=-1 :~1~~ ~J: 1 ~1 v:J ~nt •·s
le!lding financer of I h c I rest ln Sofet Solidi the V•ntur ·~' :f.ll ... ,, L¥ '·"" T.1111 ftfll r ... r.~ 8. e -• r..i ..... fl. 11 l!M 'l«fbM 1.U 1.41 ~ UC . 1 ' ,. ... ~ .a (:aJJfornin-based film indUSlry, lar1est flnancer Of lhe Cine.ma ;~~;T~NW\.TM ~::,:. ~l~ ,•i :.T;'t stlft.ts1 industry in France It wa1 A a • ,,.,. '·'1 .....,.11'.'t 1tiji1. 1.l' ~' -r-J~' •-, <7.N ·j~ 7t •l to
10 JS ts fJ" '"
.,,..., llld bull< lr•llJftr 11 lnttfldld 10 bl ALICE N, THOMAI hff """ ntreln I
contumm1ttd •t tile ottl<re Of OEOlt(;E L. M!H!ori for Probtl• 01 wm 1f'.ld
80 l10. Atf°"""" Al L.tw, 3 MOll•rtn a 1y Holoar•plllc Codlcll ind lot l.uvtt'IC"t ol
6 "'°'· 711 70 7$ 10 •) to 'S fl Pl111, &ulle IOS, L•gllftl Hl{lwl, Ctllleml1 Ltlltn Tttl•tn1t1!1ry lo "11 lltllfl!lllff
'1671, on or 111..-~ltmbtr l, 111). "'~• 11 wlll(ll It '!'Ide IOr f\lrtlltr
Utilities Up
• C 1,Jt 1,,• lmor1 G• t JI I ~ ~V· (.'"' M , reported Wednesday ... ,...,. .. r '·"' T,.. _, n, , .,., • Penn [· •
Th I tm l b th Sa ,.._., "" .,. " • ,. •-llllltf ,:.., ~ •• P "' • v~"":J"'T J e nveJ en )' e n """"'"" ,, 7 .,. , ,9 ·~ f'Am ue "., "11 *1 1111 ,
S '''· .Cf " 7• I' 911 SO f1r 1• 11 kllOWn lo ttld lnltndtd P1rtkul1n, •nd !Ml tllt 111111 Ind .iect
Trttn'"'" u ld lnlttllttd Tr•nlftrw lllld of 1111•1"" 1111 llltnf lllt Ottn 1111 f'Of' T!Mr lor'H!"'9 ~ult ol PW dl1m Mt •or tilt ot>tnlng ot bid.. lhl loll-Ing lddlt\on•I bual-ntn'ltf Stpl1m1>1>r ti, lt1'-•t 9 ;00 1.m .. 1n '""
...... II tllM'd Upon • -lr.!llf d•Y llf " DIVfTIMI bond llnd I ~rlorn'l•nt"I •rid tddrttM1 wl!hln "'II 11\rff Yfftl ,.,, (0Urlf001!'I "' o.t)tflfll4'f!I Ho, l Df Mid •ltM ff l hol,rr1 TM r1t1 lor llO!ldey •nd bOnd will i... rtaulrld prlor !G ftlt'llllon of pall: Nont. court, 11-100 Clvfc Ctnlfr Orl'lt West, In ~t'!lt ~ .i..n bt 11 i+ttt tlroM end'"' con•,-«. T1't Pl"fn!lnf bond 11>111-111 01tld: A119u1t 11, lt7l. 111• rr1v of S11111 An'" C1llloml1. -·l-fllff. In '"' lorm ... lor1h In , ... conrn1c1 fllt4HK SE•ll:ANO Dllld AUfUP 20. tm II "len bt fTllndl!ory "'*' IM CON· detvrnerot._ lnltl)dld Trentltrw WIU.IAM I . $T JOKN, Tl!.ACTO!t ,. '#II-lllt conl•Kt 11 Govtrn"'O loard JOMN I . t AIUT eountt Cltrlt
•llWl(MO, 1"11 "llOll I"" 1UbCOlltrKIOI" I';: Norm1n l , W~lton !nttndtd Tr1n,l1rn l llltl(f, Wll l JAMt & tQltlNSIH """"t """'· .. PIY l'IOI "'' l"•n "" .. Id Stcr1111y, 80l(f Of TrVllKt. Otlttl L .. UI ... SO.Ill 011 .... St .. lllltt , .. .llMC.fn. ''* lo 111 "'°''"""' Mlii'"911 OPliH: Sio1. 7 ttl') • J·OO p "1, •tlll'MT Al Ulw LOI •fltflff, CIUf, "'14 ~1"'-"' 11'1 lfll IXIC.llli., of tn. conlrl(f. 110 NO. 4.M I MIHn:fll llY 1111111, '41111 ltJ T~1 ft ll) ..Ulfl
-
... 910• PnlY llll!Nlf..,. flli 11111 ,.,. I f'U~fVlf'll 0r•"91 Cull O•llr P1tof. UfUlll Hl."'4, C.nflnll1 """ ............... ,.,., ""'"'-
.. "'41"tt (lf) ~ 1tter 1i. fllt AlllVJI n. ,,, "1> 71ff•1J ,.,_ • .,_, 0....... (Ohl OtllY l"llOI l"llblllNd Ortl!OI Co." Diiiy f'l1llt,
Autvt' u. t•n iu1.n ""'~' n.. 21. "· It" uu.n
Specllf to tbe Dall)' Pilot
SACRAMENTO (l\P)
C.lllomla 's privalo uUlltieJ
arc valued al •18.4 billion.
sa)'! Ill• slate Boord of
Equalization. The board voled
+o to re)e<I appeals by eight
major utility companies to
chop back usessmenia by 1423
million.
• f"IWM f'• '"" t,1) 'lie ~AM 1t,M1:1'PI "]'"'~ I •
Francisto-based bank's I...._ .. _.,. • •• .... ''"'-r" ,., 1·• 111 '°" l ' "'~' fJ •r .. ..,•l!T"lll.•l•tt•111""""1J:•r r ... jS 'f 'fi OI' • J; I tematlonal Investme n t ··-·.,-'" ........... ,..•~· ... " it,, 1 . •1 ,,.,,. "'-U• In 111 ''' ,..,, ,-,. " 1•~1•r f'trrr II • · '"'••II Mt1
I I F. I Co .. "".," r r•I ,., .... , , ..... ,.. ',,. 1 ,,. Jnternn t ona mancla rp ........ "." •l"I , .. , ... ,"I·•' 10M11•·111~~ •• ., •• '!l:1 ,,~,ij~
-enables Bank of America :::: •• Di., :: , .. ~';.'.'.'::'.~,. ~-': : · 't:H L.";!" ,,·Q1 ·' and Sorel •·ijdl [ b ffl ,..,~..._ • S1 I " "•••• l l'9 ''° ,.;: ,; ' !~ Tclwo!¥ :ts " ' . ~ o s are m ::~~,:·•~ . ;:::: !'~ ~:: :;: :,.....,.1 > i :J,:;:•" , 1f'. financing expertise. -... , 1 ••• ,~~· ...... ..,. /\ .... , •• , -~~f~ : 10. w.11~ l1'·,, I~~ As a rmult or the bank's l'lo>• .... ~ ~ • ., '" tl'le ttr" • • , ~"""'1 "' -wi,...~ ~ !'~ ."•~• T ',. •tto ''" flllO •~ i• PUf">l1 • \ltil\o,Ot l".'11 b l ' l equity partlcfpalion, It will be ~""'fl ".,,,." '"'". i~ ·~ ~"" •m•t ="or .~ ·:J represented on Softt-So[Jdl'• ~~II ,~ ~ ,: :: ~~·1 ,t;t;:... UlfY ,,, ', ne.t~ -~~ 1lif1 board I d1........... "I-• I ... t.n ....... •'" t _. """' • )l._'df~ 0 u 11:1,;wrl. OltlYJllll 1 1111 Vtt pr; t..n '·" M • M ,._,,.an1tirt;
'
I
( .,
,f
I
I
l ..
l
" ' I
-·
lhutsday, August 23, 1973
Thursday's Closing P1·ices4mplete New York Stock Exchange List
Market Rallies,.
But Volume Low·
NEW YO!lK (AP) -Economic, political, :.na
teclimcal coosidera\tons combit1ed'Thursday to touch
off the strongest rally on Wall Street ln nearly a'
month. . . . . .
Volume was low, howe~er, .an<l.)>rpkers dqubt~·
that the rally meant any kind of .a turnarouqd hr
the market. }llgh 111terest rates and m!lat(on con•
t1nue to worry Jnvestors, they said.
Alter a long downward slide -in the previous
five sessions the Dow Jones industrial average last
more than 23 pomts -m,ost brokers agreed that
the market was in a tremendously oversold condi·
tion, ready for bargain-hunting investors.
..
SC DAIL v PILOT H
Sunday is
Flltl&Af
in tt-e l1P!Qijl!1ll
Finance
Briefs
0 Vniro11al
LOS ANGELES (AP) -
Uniroyal, one of the largest
rubber manufacturers, said
Wednesd.1y that the rubber In-
dustry faces reductions or
shutdowns m aperations unless
the national energy supply
situation qu1ckJy begins to im-
prove.
The company's operations ln
California could be affected,
mud George R. V i I a ,
chatnnan
He made the statement in
letters to Califor;nla
Democratic Senators Alan M.
Cranston and John V. Tunney,
and Rep. Chet Holifield (i).
Cahl).
• Bums Corp.
Speelal to the Dally Pilot
SAN BERNARDINO -R
L Burns Corp. reported
Wednesday record revenues
and eamlngs tor fiscal year
ended July 31
Revenues advanced S3 per.
cent to $3t69f,024 compattd
with last year's ervenues of
$2:,247,849 Net income rose 51
pcrecnt to $1.4.17,228 <Ofiipared
}V1th last year's net income of
$964,008. Net income per share
increased to $1.20 average
shatts 911tota¢lng.
OFotomat
Spe<lal lo tbe DaDy Pilot
LA JOLLA -Fotomat Corp
,.ported Wednesday n e L
revenues of Sl7,9ZS,OOO for the
second quarter ended July 31
compared to 112,507,000 !or the
hke period of 1972.
Net Income for the seeoncl
quarter "as $2,101,000, or 29
cents per shatt, compared to
$2,577,000, or 35 cents ]let'
share, for lhe Uke 1972 per1od~
0 /tln11 Co.
Speelal to the Daily Pilot
ST LOUIS, Mo -Tbe May
Department S t o r e s Co.
Wednesday reported that Its
"growth 1n sales and earning1
continued 111 the s e c on d
quarter of 1973, etllbUJtdng
new records for a 9tiCOnd
quar(er and brst hall."
Total salts for the 13 wttb
ended Aue . 4 •ere
$351,117.000, an incr-(lf 7.1
petceflt over second cruarler
1972 .. 1 .. or $32$,1513,IOll, ad
not earnings for the .....,.
quarter this year w 1 r 1 17,358,000, or 18 ceols .,...
shart or commorl atoct. JI.I
porcent ahead or -
quarter 1972 earnlop • r
14.190,000, or 40 .-""' sban:.
'
J
36 DAil Y PILOT
PUDUC NOTICE PUBUC NOTICE PUllUC NOTICE PIJBLIC NOTICE
WANT
TO
UP
ON
CWll
OUT?·
FOR
FAST!
FAST!
ILP-16 su,•••Ott cou•T Ofl Td N01'1CI INVITIN• l lDI
.. ., (OllllfY WM'ttlouM ltt-•Pr1111d ~It fl1C1'1TIOUI 11"111fhS ,IC'TtTIOUS Mlflll.SS STATI °' ULll'OlltillA "°" Notlc• I• tlWtlW tlwn tMI .. ~r• .. '"'wtnl to OnilMntt 11" of IM NA.Ml: ITA1'IMI.,. NAMI 11'AT1Mllr'I THI COUlfTY OI' O&AHH T"*-ot tt. Cot•I Comn'Mlfilly tolMtf CodUIOCI °'41110nc• ol "" ,_ty Of Tiit follor#lftll ........ \f dol111 .... _ lllll~llt ,.,_ ...... ...,.,._,, ' .... •rrm . Ol•lrlcl of 0r.,.. County, C11llotftJe.-wlll
Ortfttt, a.II~ tllo' Uftdltll......., 111: ,,. NOTK• OP HIAltlNO .o• PftfTICIN ,.......,. -ltd Oldt up to ll!ot a.m.,. flrl-
l'vr<'111lno Ai>ent of rho C-ty ol l i ACHCOMlllR COl'FEE SHOP, 'NI W tM.4GI, C., CIMPUt ()ffv., f OI 'ltOfATV Cl" W~ ANO COOICU, Mv, '9ptotnlltf 1, 1tn. 11 ttie l"vrcf!1tlnt
Oron;•. Ol'I ""' Ulfl dlly of Aueutt. 1m. 26.)3 w. (<Mott • .....,., '-". ,... N ..... I I Mdl. C1 .... (Ul19 l011 NO l'OI "UTTlltl TllJMtlNTA.'Y o.t. ol .. w school dl1lrld loc•IM ..
,, 1119 "°""'Of t ;)O A.M. to 1:)0 ,.M, Erwin Hlfletrt. .. t . ~ktt $t.. AntrllftY ... $0ftrtlll. 13'11-D lttd 11111 {BONO WA1V£01 1110 AdllN 11.-. COii• """' ONl.Y. ,, ttw Covnly f'wtN Mne Surot11' L°"8 lffctl. C•llf, tol05. AYtl'l\MI· T1111L11. c.. tUIO l 1t1r. 9f KE:NHIETH f'ETl!:lt McHALt, C.Hlornl1, ., 'fltlk'1 !Im. ••Id tlldt wlH llt
W••ll'IOll•• '' 1)00 SoutPI 04'"'41 AYlftW, TPll1 blltlntH ,, ctinduc:ttd tit' •11 111· Thi• blll1MU la COl\dl,l(ttd bY ... Ill> 0.C.•HCI. "*ltt'I 090nlld Ind r•lld for ,.IUNllNG S111t1 AllO, C1I. SOUTH Ent,.nct. will dlYld111I, dl'vldllll · NOTIC!' IS HEllEtY GIV£N ttllt 0, Oft.ANGE COAST COLI.EO E
ult lllOl'O>tlmtlll'f' len ft'lol.lw lld $11tpl11t Erwin H1Mtrl A,""'°"" , S.v•tlfll CAll OLE J, McKAl.I! ,_ fl!H """'" I tilEWS,AHlt. "COAST I.TM!&." FOtl
LllltlrY l ott.t -' lOC Melt. fOr "m Till1 tll '-llN ....,, fllod wltfl 1111 C-· Tllh iTetOl\'IOl'll W11 llltd \1(11'1 tM C-pollMll fot ffatMl_fll of Mii lftll Codldl ltJ).14 SCHOOL Yf!All,
M•K .. lllllltoo.lt VMd ,,.,rte. lltr111 ,.,. (jll1I ., on .... CO\lnt'f Oft At.IO\ltl ,1, ,., Cltfk ol or.no-c-IY Oii Aue11•t s. •nd for IMUl!)Ce ol ~ T .. ""*''MY L "'" '-'14' ·m _,. bt Ill ICnll'dll'ICI w!t'1
•1111 ,, ., aoo111 Wl:llwt 10 IOtml Ind lt11. 1m to ,,lltlOlltf' (IOM•W1lwl:O. f~I ta -11111ruc.n Ind CONllllOlll •ktl
torldll!Ofl• II &hOwn ... Nollet of ,.urut fl.Vitt wtlldl •• ~ tor f\lrll'llt PtrllCvl11'1. ~ :.Spoclflc.ltlont Wlllch .,. -Oii n .. Ind
W1rollo\l1t S11l1. 'Wllttwcll Ott* COHt O.lly Piiot, f'ubHltlM OrlllOI Cotd ·04111Y i>tlot, ftlet tM 11-Ind fH«o of htorffiilliil -V bt ..,_ In 1t1e olfk1 ot ltlo "co"'~~,.,~ A. CHEllllY A\IOllM 2l, ». Ind Sfftol'l!Wr .. n. Avoont • H ,,, '°· 1111 • !Uforl .. -hi• """' ... lor SIOttmlHr c, 1tn. f'vrctltll .... "'""'of Mid IChlcll db lrtct.
""' • ,.UR CHAii NO A.GENT lt1' 2'Jl·1l ' ' If t :OO .. m .. 111 tllo1 COllrttoofl'I " Oopirl• El!¢Jl tiilddll' ntllfl> fUllmlt -I* 1114 II CLEAN
•OOM 1'.lt ' • PU""C NOTICE 1'ltllf No. i ol .Ml~ QCIUl'I, 1t * Civic (Ulli«."\-c~ qtrllll-4 cllo<t; 01 Dlf':1 '· , 1:soo S?YT~ GllAND AVeNU& IWnn..., NOTICE .PJ41 -· c.,.to, OtTw w .. t, 111 tfll at¥ et """ iltM-kM,.,.. '""'Ill' ta 11to cww·.~,,, SA.NTA :ANA. CALlFIUtNIA. .-vou.."' -.ltll, Cllllornl1. !hi COii! eomnwnfty Col"9t Ohf,kl All9USI 20. ltn ,,C1'tTIOUI •USUll•lS D1tlld A~l lS, ttn. lo.rd "'Tr\111111 In Ill llnOl,lltf llOI "" P~liJ\ld Clr•11gt Cot1t O.llY ,.llot. -MAllll• STAT•MINT WIM!ltn £, II John. ltllft ""''POrcplll (~) (II thl Mn b1c1 1$ ""°""' ZS. lt7l ~n i1CTITIOUI •utlNlll ,,.. followlng ptrlOll •• dolllO ou.ifllt. COlll'lt'I' O.rll • 1u1r•nllo IPltl ll'la l)lddtr wJll ont.r Int•
-NAM• ITATIMINT I S; •U\.I•. llOUTOft. IUllNI lflt ~ COnlf'Kt If tfM Mmt h ,.,,, f0Howh111 plr-•r• dOl~O TOllltC~T. uu ~ ........ ~o M,K,TIRICIL • ....,. tq lllM. ,,. "" O)'tn~ of ltll"" M PUBliC NOT1CI!: b\nl-• 11: . No ... co.11 ,,.,..,, c111t. tM2f • 1 uw c......-• • · .,..., into~ eotittKt,• ,,,.. ......-o1
AMERICAN POOL SERVICE. 1A11 Ook• Oa]d!IO"k. 1n 1• E. Ko'#Clt1I $1 .. "" .......... ~ 1111chock1"11,,.. tottlli.d, Ol ln 1tle UM
0rl"fl ""'" C°'ll Mt$•, Cllll, n.21 Wlli"ltf", C.I. fOIOI ..-..m Hlll9,, CM! .... "1;11 Of • Wld. file' ·tiji1 tum. ftltrool wt11 llt
• N• JM:k ll>otnlt Creohlll, i.117 Of'll\lll 1'M1 ltvJl"tSI 11 corw:l11Cl4ld by IA Ill-T•h ('111 2"""' "'(714) UMWI fofllt!IM to1 Nld xllool dll"lct. -IN THI SUf'.••1oa COUAT 0, Ava .. COlll Miu, CA mv ll!Yldual. •l'l'WMY'I ..,, ,. .... ....., N' tl!Odaf', ml)' ""1llldr1w '11• bid IOt •
Tltl ITATa OP CAL11'01NIA IN W1llltrt1 Pltff ODlln> Ill, 1'6 MOl!ll Ooka DolclflOYIC P\lllllahld Or.Mii CO.st 01lly ,llDI. pt!'lcl8 ot lorty fl• 145) dlYI •ltft the
AND PO& TH• COUMT'I' o" OAAHO• V11111. eo..11 MIMI. CA m 11 - -T'11• '1•l1ment w1u """' w1111 tht c-· A\lewt 1., 11 n 1tn ~n Nto dt"ror 1111 0001111141 "*"°"· , YOUR NI. "71)11 Tllll bllllftlU It COl'IOuelld b'o' • ,_,,4 ty Clerk ol Or1ng1 COltl'IY on J\lly 11 , ' • Tho.'iktrd off TIVllWI rnorYU 1M
OltD•ll TO SHOW CAUi• lfOtl; JttrtlllfVil11, nn. PUBUC NOTICE prlvl"91 of. rollcill19 any •1111 111 bldl or CM .... OI" 'llAM• J1tk T, Cr19"tlll "11H to WllY• art'o' lrrt111J1Jl•r1lln or 111-
111 lllo M.lor'OI 1111 li.oPUe1llOll tf,IUTA Thl1 1t1toMOnt Wit lllod wll'1 1111 Co.1n-,ubll$111d (H'lllQI _Clllllsl 0.11y Piiot fol'INllnff 11111\Y 'bld or In thlt blddlflG.
Mli.ltV LAlllN$kl For Cho11g1 of N-. ty Cllrt. of 0r'11tt C-ty Oft Allg\!11 21, Auglltl t. t, 16, n. 1tn 21')..t) I 'tt"... . lioMd: tii09MAN t . WATSON
Tllo •llPl>etrlofl of JtlTA MAR'I' tm su,•atc>lt C9URT •OP, TM• ' _,ot.,Y.~-.-oird ~ Tr111IM•
LAlllNSKI -tor d\ltltf o1 n11M. lli--1l'IO """' PUBLIC N:Of'ICE STATI o" CALll'OllMIA '°" OD1111 $tPI. 1. 1tn . 11 :00 •.m. tlllll flltd HI eowt, Ind 11 ~rll\O fl-om Publlll'lod ORfltt CNrt 01!1Y 'n~. TH• COUNTY Of' OIANO• Bid No. 4'0
•Mel •PPllt:tl1on 11111 ltlTA Ml.AV AUlll\111 n. JP) .. $tpltfftllor .. 13. l'ICTmOVS 1u11...-11 .... A·1"21 P\11111""" °"'"" CO.It 'O.llV ,1101 LAlllNSICI llM tnWd Ml 1tpllca!IOll PfO. ltn • • "34-73 """'. STATl'.M•NT MOTICa O' H•AlllHO Of' lltTt'TtOM A"91"I :t;l, )Cl, lt73 2650-71 lfliOtl!>I !hit lier Mtnt bt ctwil'IQOll ,_ Tht l~kYNfllO pertom 1,1 Oolt'IO ,OR 0 a Te It MI Iii AT I 0 M TMAT
REDE LAlt. PUBLIC NO'l10E t>u$1""' 11: , ••• SONI 01•0 UNDIA
NIW, lh<lflforo. n 11 htr.tw ordttld •nd TllO I: St09t 2'30 J Grae• L1n1, Coste ClllCUMSTAHC•I WMlltl Tift•• IS PUBUC NOTICE d!rwtld, 1111! 1U P1rtont lflflfetlld In M Cit '261, MO SU,fllCllNT llVIDINCW TMATl--------------salll A\llllf dO I PHtr blfor1 tlll• COi.ir! 111 ~~htrct "O 8lft)t · '°31 Attldll A"' TI41V 0110 OTltlllWISa THAM ~rtlN!nl 3 Oii IM hMI .UV"' Oct •• 1tn. STAT•MINT 0, WITHOll.AYl'AL ..... 61, Siii G.11r1t1.' Ctl. t17'5 • ·SIMULTA•IOUSLY f'ICTITIOUI 1us1:1ss
at 2.00 II ttock P.M .. of Wild qy to ·-,.OM ,ARTNlll$Mlf' O,.il.AT1NO Staniey,.. $hollk. "' 'N. Mlrlpot.1 St., E511IO ot JOHN C, VA~ DINE, DI<:..... Tllo 1a1r"'r· STATl!M ,.!r. doll'll ClllM WllY ""' •oPlk 1tlt.wl tor th1ng1 ol UNDllt ,ICTITIOUI •UllNISS Mii.Mi!: Alt.d•n• c11. '!1001 . lld. ow ng Wton•
n1rne lllould llOI bo 11r1nled • Thi fo!IOW'int PlflOll Ill~ wltlldriwn 11 Tllk ttv.fntu '11 COllllV(led lw , ·felltf'll NOTICE IS He REBV GIVEN 11111 bl.Ill:~ 'ti:>MPANV llUl' Vtrmotrl St,, II 11 hlrtlltr ordlrod 11111 1 co:tpy o1 f'bl1 1 ~II Plrlft.er !,am Ille pt rlN•Jhlp P1rltler1hi0 STEVEN E. VAN DINE Ms lllod lltrll11·1 ' 0ro.r bl 1111tlll$hed In 1M Otlt' Pilar, 1 oper1ttng lllldlr tht flc!lllOllS bulln1•1 It o" llmt' Pll1tloll lor tn ordlt dllltrmlnl119 11'111 lflt Wntml11111r, C1. '2693
ntWSNPtr of ttN r1I d rwlt llOll. printed 111rn1 ot Thll si•t~I Wll fll td with Ille Court-d,cldtnf tftd thll qlhcr ~i.od, Ptl'ton 't'\ICI Sle!*"lll Oolill>J, l,lU! ,Vtrtl\Ollt
In Mid ~ty. at IH1! OllCO 11<:'1 WHlll C 1. W PAINT 1. BOOV SHO,, 1955 1y Cltr'll of Drangi Counly on Julr ll, Jf1J iu-n II Eris L. Vin OlM; lkl Erlt SI., W95tmll\Sftr, Ct. t1613
lor fol.Ir IUCtlhlYI Wiiks llrlor ,to IM day Cllurch St., coar1 Mlw. C1lltornl1 t'l621 • 'mu L1Vonn1 Vin Dino, lkl Erlt Mldlsorl Ven M1rf1 Pl1 Oobb1. 15'262 Vtrmolll st~ ot »Id hlltrl1111. lhO nclltlous bullllHI 111,,.,. S11ttm1111 Publllfllld or111ge COit! Ottly Piiot, Ol11e, lllld 1111<11r clr<:~llWk'll Wllar1 Wntmln."•'· C1. t':IW
011111 1'11• 20tll d1y of A1191111. 1t13. tor "" P1rtnersrilp wa1 Hiid on J•ll<llfY August 2. '· 16, 23. ltn ms.n ""'' 11 ftO tuffkl1111 ~ thll lfteY Tiii• tiwlnat I• COlldt.Klod by , stntf•I Clallde M. Owefl$ 29, 1tn In 1111 '°"'",.,. ol Ot'111111. dltd otl>l1wlse ,thlft lll'tll.llf.,_,.iy p1f1n1r~p.
JllllOI ot Mid l1,1p11r1or COl.lrt Full N1rne 11111 Addros1 of tile Ptrllll'I U C NOTIC rlftrora f9 wt.ktt It mldit fol' tvrtllol' 1ruc1 s. Dabbs
LION S. KA,.U.M Wl!hdr1Wlno: P BU E p1rtlevl1ra. •!Id 11111 IM.llm1 and• plee. Tiiis 1titam111t wis Plied Wiit! tile CIUll· TM l.eNI Clh1k: of JacMr a M1y1r1 Dontld W. w-i,, "511 Jolnn st., cos11 of 11Hrl1111 1111 wmo hi• blen wt tor fY Cltrk of oranoo COUlllY on A1111111t 14. ,,. s .. LI .,... Mlsl, C1lllornll tWl' 'ICTITtoU'S IUSINISS A\IOll!I )0, lt73, 11 t :OO *·'"·· In "" 1m
I ......... C'*'"'ll OOl\lld w. Womlt HA.Ml STAT•MIMT counroom of Otpertmont No. 3 of &eld ,,,, ...
"'""""' ... Atltttk•lll ,~.n lllo fcfllowlna ""'°"' .... dOlfl!I c.urf,,., 71111 CIYk c .... OrWo Wftl, In lltrblllhld Or11111t COii! l'>•llv Pilot. Pvb!IM!od OrlftOI: Co.1.t Dilly Pllol, Publlthlld 0!'11111• C01st 01llr PllOI, M in"• a1: _ the Cltv,O'I Sin!• A111, Cllltornl.. Awusl 1•. ia, :io,. 1nd Septeml!Of I.
•
. llAll .. Y Pil .. ft'F· j·
'CLASSlt.,IED-,
I• ~ . • •
c .-·: .... '.J~ [' -.l•Sllo.
Gener.I
5 IE.DRQOMS
UNDER $40,000
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LA CUESTA VILLAS
P!enty or roont IOI" 1he ~ Av1ll1bl1 prior
family In lhb two story. 5 to achooll I
bedroom harne. Beautifu!b Du "'~ n~· lo nialntaincd inside and out • e """~t n . .:Jeet ns!
tlnd the backyard b an en-• Not a Cbndo or Tu\\'nllou$e
..,..,._.. detig!rt. Beat e Yoo Olm The Land
l'PN• of all • priced at •
$37,900. 'For appol:ntment. to ~are single tamily1 eotn·
see call 8C-%l3$. moo wall homel with 3 BR
O#'E#ffLl•IT'SRIN'TO/itNICE/ • 2 BA · la: tam rm . ltv nn • kitchen \\'Ith all bltns ·
f.l'Oet yard la1)dscaplng with
sprlnk"rs • side yard feoces,
lull de(Qched 2 car pt ..
dtiake 4 Mission tile roofs
and ABOVE AU. • BUILT
BY AYRES!?
~IT°rlirllilll
~ATE R S I
Triplex Axer I Hl Sq. Ft. from
$30,490
IA~OA
INCOME
LeaseYOptlon
Bey A OcNn Vl-
o:~F~m~ ~~l~S'f":~
&-TWO 1 BR. (INJTS. ALL
APARTMENT S ARE
CHEERFUL & ALWAYS
"RENTED. FEW STEPS TO
Ermt:R BAY OR' OCEAN.
PLEASE CALL
675-3000 m II\\ ,\ 111: \I'll
Ill-. \LI\ I \I ".
L f ',' ' I ;, •' ; '' start your e.tit~ hUe! Messy
but sound, 2 BR uhtta •
paint, pol.Isl) and profit!
Usted at $39,900 • 10% down
or TRADE!!! call M.S-8400.
Conventionel IO Y. Down 1==========
Model at Adams & F:lorlda •
one block \\'. of Beach,
Huntington Beach.
536-1+45
-PRIVATE ISLAND
NEWPORT BEACH
BY OWNER
I ' . ' •'
' " ',,
I '
Auo1111 n. lO, and Slflltmo.r ,, Tl, A\19Utl n , 30, 11111 St¢emo.r ,, 13, THE MESSAGE CENTER; 21't h Kh 0.1.d AulllltSf 1 .. lti't. • 1t73 2W0.73 ACTI. ON!
1tn U»-73 1tn 2S7.,n st. LIO\ll'I• B•Kll. c.111. m51 WILLIAM 1. s1 JOMM, I•-----------· N!'.'91s1~'=1·A,::.''C:ii. :;;;r-Aw. IAltS~.f'o ~~QUE · •,
' PUBUC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE Nor1111 ·~'· 1001 w, SloY-Ii.YI, ntr TtirnllCll •IYf., Ho. 1SI, S1"11 ,An1, C1Ht. '21'01 Tin'-, e.#f.'tlltl
PUBLIC NOTICE
MOTICI TO CONTAACTOllS,CALLINO flOll •IOS TNt Ml11ttu. It~ by a 9'ntrll Tiil (ill) ...... \ School Ohlrlt;t: COAST COMMUNITY COLLl!GE OISTlll:ICT parlntrdllp. AltwMTt •: ...... IL ....
Bid Dffclllna: tlhen o'clodl tm ot tht 111111 di~ of SecMmber. lt73 Jot l rtfnotll Publllhld Orinoo Co.11! Otlly Piiot, 'ICTITIOUS •USllllSI
Plk• of lid Rw.iiot• Offlco OI the Purdltslt'IO A9Ml, Coltt C0tnm.11nlty Collete lhl• llllllllenl 11111 Plied wllh !hi CCll.fft.-Al/OUll 16, \7, :q. lt13 , 2564-13 NA.Ml STATl!MIM'T
Oiltrlct. 1310 Adll'll$ AYl!nlll, COii• Mew, (lllfGrnl1 ty Clerk of 0t1ngo countv Oii A119u1t i. lM fotlowln; 111rlllft1 1ro dolno
Pro!ICI ldertlll!~tlon N1mo: lHE INSTALLATION OP A T!tAFFIC SIGNAL 1m • PUBUC NOTICE bullri.u ": ANO HIGHWAY 1.IG!jTING AT THE INTERSECTION OF FAlllVIE.W lll:IJiAO '·21U1 • . HUNTINGTON BEACH OISTIUBU·
ANO MONllOtt WAY, Cl'TY OF COSTA MESA, CA • ,libllillod DrlllOI Ccwill DlllY Piiot, TION ASSOCIATES. 500 N~ Ctnllf
P11<1 "'"' lfl IHI lllo: Dfflc• ot th• o;11f'k1 ,.lolf'dln\llg ~'· Goll! Cl!n-Augu11 ,, "· 2J, 30. ltn 2"62-73 • Jlltl OrlYI, Sult• Ul, Nawport 811<:h,
mun1ty (Ollf01 Dltlrict, 131'0 Acl•m.s """'"'' COst1. ~. OrwiOo COunly, Call· NOTICE 0' SALi! 0, llt:AL C11lfornl1 nuo
1om11. · . LIC NOTICE '"°'"•llTY AT 'RIVATI SALi! NEWPORT rtARBOR TRUST. xm
NOTtCE IS HEAEBV GIVEN ,,,,, Ille lf)OY-med Sd'loDI 011trict of Ol'•not PUB A 76At "•dflc Co.Ill ltlghw•Y· SU1to '°"
CO\lnly, C•lllornll, Kllno by 1nd t'1rOVlll'I 115 Govlrnlng Bolrd, n.r.in11fler ~rod In 1111 Silplrlor Court o4 IM N_.I B11<ll. C1ll!or1111 t':IUO
to •s "DISTRICT'', wilt r1t .. Y• up lq, bul not .. , ... !Mn lilt <1tloY••l•l8d time, ,tcTlTIOUI auitN•Ss Sflll of C11lfornl1. lor Jann 0. 0•0on11111. Si» NIWPOl'I
.-.led bids for Ille •Wlrd of 1 conlrKI !or 1111tboYI11n111<1. Nii.Ml STAT&M•N'T Ille C-ty of OrtftQt Cenltr OrlYt, Sul!• MO. Nawporl B11eh.
Bkb th.Ill bl rtellYOd ln t1M pl1co ldtnllflld 1bov1, Ind 11\11/ bl Open«! •nd Tha tollowlflll Plfllll'I 11 doing Mlna11 In Ille Mllltr , Of lllo E1t1t41 n°' C•lll. '2660
flUblk ly rtld 1ICIUll 1t Mio ltloYHllled 11""" Ind piece. 11: BLOSSOM G. SWEET, llJO known Tiiis bviln1111 Is candt.Kll!d bV I G-•I Tlloro wlll bo • SU.OD declOlll requlrod tor Mdt 111 of bid dclcutrltnb to 1111tr· JJ'S NATUlt,llL HAlltCUTTING, ICl1 8L05SOM GUIO SWEET, ()ltil1sed. '•rlnlrslllo -
1n111 ""9 return 11'1 toOd COlldlliOl'I wllllln ten d1y,-1u ... tht bid 09lfllng d11.. Mlfn St., l!lllbM '*1 Nollca II twiroby glwn ftlel l1lo 1111-John 0 . O'Donnell El<h bid rn115t oinlorm 11111 o. reJPOl'l'th·'O ta lllo c:ontrKI docu111«1b. Wlllltm. J°'lft 8,uno, 01 SHw1rd ltd , dtnl(lnld will Mii 1t Prlv111 1111. to the 'l'his tl1tall'\lfll w11 filed with 1111 ,_.
EKll tile( 111111 bo ICCOl'l'IS*nll!d by "" tee11rlty l'lftrrtd ta In Iha at11lr1Ct COron• di-I Mar, Cthl. "'"· '11ghffl and bltl tlldOfr, 1ubllt:I to con-ty Clerk of Or•n11t COi.iniy Oii Juty 5, 1m
llOCvr'flln1• ind bl' Itta lrsl of pr'llPOHd subcontr1cfor1. lhll ltvllnMt I• eOllduc1ed bl' an In· 11rm.1tlon of wld Sllpfflor C-1, on or -fl411Sn
TM DISTRICT --"" rlllhl to n tect Ill)' or Ill bids or to walYI lllY dlYlllUll. lfl<ll' l'IM Vin My of August, 1m II thl f'vblflhl!d Dr11191 COis! O•llY Plj.ot, lr1"1QUl1rlllts or l11formtllllos ln any bids or lrl the bkkllfll, Wllll•lfl J, ~""" offlc. "' RICMARO W, SPRAGUE, 611 AUDlllt ,, ,,, n, 30, ltn iut-73
Tiii Oll TltlCl his Olllf'fl'llMd "" oenor•I· Pl'tV•ltl1111 ,. .. of Pl' dl"" waon Tllb llllt!Ml!t w•s flltd wllfl"" Cll!.llt-Wnl Slxtll S_t,MI, Sult• 1514, LOI "'"II''''·
In '"' loclllty 1f1 Whldl 11111 woft: I• to be Pl'l'l'llrllMd tor Mcfl craft or lype of ly Clort of Dr•no• COlll'llY Oii July 31, 1'13 C1Uloml1 t0011. CoufllY of· Los An;eles, PUBUC NOTICE wortm1" neldod to ••e.:u!e tM contr•c1, 111 be " lollowt: ,.m .. s111.i Of c1Utornl1, <111 ""' ,,11,,,, tiHe •nd
SIX 8.1.SIC T!tAOl!:S Addlllon1I Coll ,.utillshed Orl!IG't CO.st 01lly Piie!, Intern! of Mid deceutd al 1111 11rM 1111---==;==--=='°'=----·I
lltfnt: For SUM/llt'nc• AU--CIJ'tr•IJ111 Ef'IOI-·: Gr~p I (7·1-nl AllllWI 2. '· '" u lm Z36l·i'l 1111111 •!Id •II 1111 f1v,llt, tiltl •nd 1n11..-,1 ,ICTITIOUS •USllfESS Tr..woortellOl'I Ind Tr~._..I Tlmt AlllW· Entlnter, Oller I. ti,.t !fie 1511le ot wld de<:Nsed '111 IC• NAllll! ITATl'MIN1'
1nce, O...rt1m1, AJH>ront!;o Pro!rJm Si9ntlrn1n ····-··· ..... 1.oi PUBLIC NOTICE qulAd by OOll'lllon o4 11w or ofhtrwlH TllO following per10t11 ''' doing COfltrll>Ullons. llld~try Pr'>IMl!on•I Heavy 011!Y Rep1lrm.1n otller•tl\ln or 111 lddll\Oll hi th1t ot w.td bllllntt1 '''
F\111111, Ad111lnl1tr1IPY'e Funds, Ctsh Helper ·· ...... ,, ...... 1.03 . SU·ltt CIKHsed, 11 the time ti dMlll, In 1fld IO AM I. M METALS, 173 W. 111h SI.
IOl'ld 0.poslts. -''-• eontKI 1111 Llc,ll GrOUp.2 IU,t:•lott CDUltT .OP THIE Ill tlll c1rtaln pt~ly slt111ltd In !ht Cosl1 M1111, C1UI. '2627 Ulllln ar Ill Olltrld Cauncll lllYlllQ Concrtle Miitt Oper1tor STATE 01' (ALl,OltMIA ,Oil C111111Y of Or1ng_,, S!Me of C1llfornl1. Robert L. McElrov. n3 W. WILSON,
lurlsdldlon. fSklp Type) · .... · · .. ·• ............ 7.f1 TMIE COUNT'Y O' OltAlfOI. p1cllcvltr1v descrlbld 1• follow•. to-wit; Cost1 Me11, Cell!. '2627 RIOOtrl lo W.klln for 1111 lhl 8<11lt Flrtrnl n . .I.. ~, ......... , .............. 7.21 N .. A-713W ,.ARCEL I: Owtl1tnt Unll 2·F In Rlcllard A. Mc:Elrov. 261S Apt. A,
'l'rldn: Sln'\I WHO K<llH IS cr1fls lo " NOT1Cll °" Nl.AlllNO OP ,.l!n TIOM aulldlng ND. :zm, II $1ld Unit ls lllctwn $.lnl• AN 51,, C111!1 Mew. C1llt. w111<c11 rl(lolllf Ind wtld!llQ 1re In-E4\llpmtnl Gf'HHt (Recill ........ 7.11 ,<Ml ,.llOMTa Of' 'li!ILL ANO 'OR.,. tnlt clf11l11 Condominium 'lltl 11· T'11s bull,_. 11 condu<:led bY I o-rll
cldlflt1l. Gt'oup 4 LITTIRS Tl.STAMIJl"TAllY IKhtd to Ind m..o. • Piltl DI 11'111 cerltl" p1rtrt.r.htp, C•AFT, CLASS IF IC AT 1 0 N, OR Aspll1U 'ltnl FlrlfT\ln ··'· ..... 7.•2 Eiltte of ANSON A HAMNER JR Oecl1r1rlon DI COYIHll"ts, Condlllon1 1nd Alclllrd A. McElrcy TV,E WAGE ltAlf Boxman or Milt« l o• 0pe,1tor Oll:Hwd • ' •• Aostrlctton• recordtd Oleflflblr 11. 1969, This sltlemenl WIS fl'4ld wllh !hi County
Ellcirlcl1n: (t-1-n l CConcret1 or As~ll Pl1nt1 ....•. 7.•2 NOTICE IS HEltEIV GIVEN llllt In look t1"6.. """ 1$,3, Of Ottlcl1t Cllfk of Or11101 C-ly on Augull 1 ~, lt7l
G-r1I Fortl'Nln .................. 10.t l Gtl\ICI S FIAST HAllONAL 9'.N,I( OF OftANGE Rteorcll In tho Offtc1 of 1111 CounJy '·tf"9 '°""'"" ., .......................... t.fl Asptiall Pllnl Engl-r ............ 7.11 COUNTY P!at\filld 'i,er./ll 1 PlllH;;in tor R«ordlr of wlcl County, tnd 1. l·UOlh Publlshld 0nngo Cotll 01Uy Pllot.
Sub FonMll! ...•... , •.... • · .•.... t .«I Mlcll1'11ctl Flnl1Pllr Oper1tor Probll• of Wiii Ind f 0 r Lill•r• undfYldlll l"llr11I I" tnd to LOii ,, 1, I """"""' 1•. 2l. JO, Ind Soptemblf' ..
C1bl1 Sptkl!' Flll'tm1n ......•..... 10.3' CConcr1!1 -Cl1ry, Jol\lllOftolld111eU Ttlltrnenlery reterenc• ID w h ich llnd II ol Tract No. S11t 11 "'map ltn . 2~n C1bl• Spflcor ..................... t.31 or 1lmll1rJ ......................... 1.11 11 midi lor tvrthlr PIMlc\ll•rt, •nd recorcftd ln Boole U.., Ptges 1• lo It. ln-l---~-:-~,.-,""C"cc==,----
Wlrem•n ............................ t .tO HeaY¥ OufY lll:~11rm1n · ......... 1.t1 111at tilt' II Mid pt " Af tiurl 1111 clusiYI OI Mlsc.iltrleOlll M1ps. [n thlt Of· PUBUC NOTICE
Lh\efftan .......................... t.90 TrlClor °""'tor CluOdoier, m.'"1'111 1:.n ltt i:•S»I '.C. l';/3, I ftct o1 w ld C-tv 1lKOrc!1r, Ji'loWn llldo---~===:-c==::-=:-:---Techl'llcl1n .......................... l .tO Timper, Ser_. and w,., 1•·•• ' ·..,. 1 Hf!~_,.. "Common Arn" 111'1 lho ltloY•1-l'!CllTIOUI IUSINESS C1rtllllll Wtldw .................. l .tO _ _[>1,11'1 Trlclor) ... ,., ................ 7.11 t : l .11'1., 11 •ht co.1rtroorn , OIP91't-tifffftf 11 Condominium Pl1n. ., lfAMI STAT•MllNT
Ht1lth' Wlll•r• .................... 4.5 C'lnc 1 Ml G.,.•OUSI'' • ~ ~~ °'W.::114111<f"~ ct!.i:': C(¥.lc '£sc--"flll ittJY porll011 1'1 LOf A al TrM:t Tllo totlowlno ll*f'IOll 11 dalno ttvsl11tttl ,.e11sl1111 ............................ 75 r• • ier r•tor-P1Y Ill • '' 511!1' ....... 9''""' m•P rKlfded In BoOll-256. ••·
A.ppronllce ....................... .o3 (Oller or JOVflll"t'1l'l..,...rilMt . ~. CiUfomli. 1 ,..911Q 43 t lld '.U DI Mlt.ctll11110Ut MIPl In . ACTION SWEEPING 5EllVICE GOO HEB, . .•... .. .•.. ............. \,q. rlQl.llrod) •······ .... : ............... 7.tl 0111111 AUii. t1, ltn. lllo Offlco 'ot ltll C111,mty R1eorct1r of 111d Park Ntwporf. Apt. 213, Niwport 8e1c11, Ciri>Ol'llt1'J: (5-l·T.1 ) Cn.o1'1fng ,lift! O,er1t,111-.1 ............ 1.91 WILLIAM I . SI JO.MN, CDllll!Y. · , Gall! 9"60
C•r111nt1r ·1···············,·········1.0! Motor P1trol OP'1'11t11• .•••.......... 1.01 C1111n1Y Cl ... k AllD IXCtptlng, •1111 rtstr"l'll'IO UfllO Ille Joh ROlllld Crl!chl.., aoo P1rk Drvwtll IM .tltr .. , .... , ........... t.3Z $1\oYei, Bltkllol, Dr61111,..., KALMI ACH1 OIMARCO, • Gn111«, th 1ucc1H«1 and' asllons, lrom N~ Apt 213 Nlwiwf l!ludl. Ct lll
Slll ngltr .................... 7.11 Cl111'\SMll Ooentar .. · ... · ·· · ·, ... J.tl KH"'" A CHILLltilaWO•TM llld 1·120!11 lll'WHYldod lnllfeJI In Mid Loli nwo,. ' · ' '
H1f'Gw1ro Flool'·WDrtl• .•. •" ...... 7.71 ~"If' .. Welf1r1 -1S Ctl'lh "" llow Ill ,... ,.,..,,..,,:, ,, 1, I 1114 ' llOIHXChlSIYI tlllfl'letlh <11111 Thlt bou•lneu 11 COl'ldllCled b')' •n In· MHtW1'1Qht •......••.•......•• , .•.. 1.21 en11111 -l.20 per PIOl.lr l.• ..........,. t i nt. •n 11CW1-Ud!JSlv1 right• of woy OYtr, 11nd1r di Id 1 Stw Flllf' .... ,.., ••.......•........ 7.13 V1 c1ll1111,Hollll1y Fund -30 Clllll Hr 11 ...... 2111 •nd upOr1 llloM portions ot 11ld Lots'· 1, y UI j llOl'llld Crlti:.'1leY
T1ble P'ower Saw F"°4/r . 50 how Atl9nlo'ft ltr: 1"11\lllMr I tnd 8 upon wfllell no bulldl"' or ollllr lhb •l•rement Wll llled wlttt IPll C°"'"· O!)ff1lor ........................ J.lS or1111111. conh P"I' o~ IM Pvblllhld Or•llG't Caal! 01itv Pilol. 11rvctur1 1115 blln Oflcilld for flKIHMV ty Cl k of 0 COUfllV on Auoull fl
"""""''tlc N1Utr or '''' of tP11 hlolMlst Pllct EnoglnMT' Autin! 22. n. 2t, 1m 2621-n " dHlrnilo lt10rns or -orus, w11v111Dn 1,71 er ''""' ' ,._. s11pllf' ............ ~-7.llll uncllf' hll 1uPtrV1slot1. c•bl11. undlrgroulld wlru ind condulh f17U.
Wood Fence BulkJitr ltlmtter: (J.1·73) PUBUC NOTICE lor tlwtrlcltv, tol~hones •flll oilier PIJblliPlld ~ng• Coast OlllV Piiot, on Rtll""'ll•I Pro/ICb ''' ...... S.ft OrlYor Of Ovrttp lrudt 111 ytrda. bl/I ~ •nd ICCOVl ......... I• thtrtto. August n. 30. Ind Sepl1mblt' '· 13,
lloal Loacllr of IHI tt\tll 16 Y•rds sewen,. drtlfll. w1t1r, a•• llld sl1•m l'13 2•2'-73 SllintlK ,,, ............. -· S,11 Wl l ... leYllJ . . ••. •• . ...... PICTITIOUS IUS1N•ss plPll, .... 1ttovl•llm"1IJ lllerlto, Ind 1or, _____________ _
Piii OrlYlf' For11111n .............. 1,11 Or(Yff DI OUmll Tr\ICk II• Y•rds, Nii.Ml STATEM•NT suo:'1 root DWrhll'llfl •lld otller ...,. PUBLIC NOTICE p111 O•IYlf ~11-.~ l1s1 than 2S Yl rds Tiie lollowlno ll0'1111 11 de-Ing llllslnes1 cr111<hm•ntl. of 1 Uko or dlu/mll1r kind,
llrldg1 or Dock C1r11tnter wller llWI) ....................... 11 IS: 1nd 1<1Nm1nh on 1dl1a11t Loh In 11Jc1 l--------------•nd Ci ble S11Utlt' ........ , .• ,,, 1.11 Orlytr Of Oum.11 T,uck (2S Yl,clt, or BOl'S PET SHO,, 111 No. Svc1mor1 Tree! tor roof llY .. lllllOI Ind olhtr .,,._ NOTICE OF INTEKTION
Piie Ortwr Min-,,_. Wlltt llY<ll) ••·•·· .•..• . .. 7.4.!l Slreel, S.nt1 Ano, C1rtf. ttl01 croechmnl•, of 1 Ilka or diu.lmllir killll, TO ENGAGE IN THE
Dflr•k k Blr'9""'1n ........... 7.11 OrlYlt' of Rotd Oii Mlch•ll• OenlK• Vick. f9'1 l.omps&11. together wH'1 llll right to eonvcy tlld SALi. 0, ALCOHOLIC l lrVl!llAOES
Heid Aock1Uno1r .••.•••... , ••....• 7.21 Spr-.dar Truck ·············· ..... ,.61 G1r'11111 Gr0Y1. Ctllf, t':l'-11. enemet1ls to any Pfl'IOI\ firm. pvbllc Auou11 20, 1971
Aocllltllflil'll" ................... 1.18 OriYlr Of lr1111•ll·M!x Truck '•ul W. K1111x. S2S West Vlctorl1, Apt. llll~!Y or OOYtrnmtnlll tiodv T11 Whom 11 May CDnelf":
lock 11r1Nlfll" or Cuflder l VdJ.) ................... 6.14 ''· Cotlt MeM, C11ltorn11 n.21. Exc~lng from Mid \.oh. 1 111111 a' Sutiftct to W 111nce of IPll lkense 10-ScOW'mtn .. .•. . ..•..•• 1.0I Driver ot Tr•nslt-Ml111 Tr\ICk This blnfnns'I• conducted by P1u1 W. 111 91, all llYdroaorbons ,;.l~•I• 11111 piled tor. l'IO!lca 11 llll'etty given !NI 1111
Men worlllng from 1 bos'n's chllr, 1w· I) Yd IT C!f. rnct'I) .. •• .. ,. .. • ..... , ·'-" l(ftOX. olhlr .'.ub.t~ncH IV1"9 btiow 1 dtplll of llllCll'f'tignl'd pt'llPOIH 111 till 1lcollollc
lnglfllt x 1ltold or l\lllllflll9d from • r-ocie Wlltt ~ lliln6er 4000, · · • · · · ·• · .•.M Mlehlllt 0. Vick 500 oo tMI tivt WlllloVI 1111 rlotil to 1nt1r lltver1911 1t 1111 porml~1. d11e;rlbtd M or c•ble, 1h11I rtUlve 1S eenh per flour W1ttr Trvcll: Orlvtr (.fOOO Thi• 111......,nt w11 11114 wt111 1111 Cou"" • • rt 1 °' M111$11rtK1 of tlll IOllOWI;
1boYe t'11 1pptlc.tll1 IDllnll'o'l'ftln or •P-O•lt;1or morW al .. .. .. ,.,. 1.45 ty Cllfk of Ot'lflOI Coun,.,. on ,A.1191111 21, ~:.i:w·~ dept'1 of SO!JOD fell for 'l261 F1lrYl1w Ro.cl
prtr1tk• ''"' H•• "lo e1t1r1 -15 ''n~ "'hour 1t11 ...,.. ' cas11 MeM C1Jl fornl1 HN-11'1 1o Wetl•r• ...........• 1, par '1r Pension -.&!i eonh Pl!' l'lour f'·116fl 1ny pur1)0M wl'llllOl"lir, 11 nHrYld 1" '"""su1nt to 1uc'11 lnlonllon, Ille un·
,111$1on • . ............... '5 ptr '1r V~!lon lo HolldlY Fu!ICI -1.00 Pl!' 'ubnsllld On1191 Cott51 Otlly Piiot. ~Co~Lr'i?"'Non-txcluslYI ellllmtlil9 dftr\l;nld It 1pplvl1111 hi Ille Dlplrtm.nl
v1,111o11, S•lllna•• ' Auoinl 23. 30, •!Id Stpttm.b~r ,, 13. 1t 73 · et Alcoholic l!leYar11• Control tor IU1H1K1 Holldly ..........•...••...•• 10 per '1r For1rt11n: Whtn • Contrtetor ~~!oy• :iS.l·Jl lor lngr191 ,•nd -ortss, pullllc ulll!tln , of .., •lcOflollc blverige llce"H (or
"-n" llecelvn ·!IOI Ins """ '° on '11s 111ytofl t or mor• Tt1ms~,.. '""'''• •nd tor tll purpows lncklental UctnMd for lhftt prt mlsos 11 tollOWJ ' '"'''Pit' "°"" rnor1 lllln 1M Plour1Y r1I• oper•llng equipment Ufldt r I 111 llllf'llD. Including, bVI ftlll l!mllOCI 111 ltwi ON SALE llEER ANO WINE '
al ,,.,. hlfhlll C.t11111ter cilttllk tllon lurlsolctlon of thl le1m11H t, ex-PUBLIC NOTICE con1trucllon, lntl•llatlon, repl1ctmont. (BONA FIDE PUBLIC EATING PLACI!) owr which lie 1111 TUl)Olltlbll11Y. ••· c1uclln; 1nv 1qulpmen1 less then sl.1 rep;11lr, m1lntenu1c1, opar1t!on •nd u11 ul RIGOLETTO, Inc.
cllldlng .,,.nevmiflc N•lltr or Power I0111 Ind m1lnle11tnc• 1qulpm.1n1, lht NOTICI! TO ClttDITOllS 111 "ec11s1rv OI dnlrtlll• roadw1y1, Publlt.hed Or•noo Co.ISi Dtlly 'llol,
Stt pler ., Conlrtttor lh1U G'"lgnal1 o n , SU,.IRIOtl COUllT OP TN• 1ld-1lks 1"4 concll/lt1 over IM land AUDUlf n, 1973 2'651.13 cerneni M1sons , .. 1.121 TNIOlllll'f II Cr•fl Fortrn•n Ind Ill dlsc:rlbld In P•,t •I 2 of 11111 c•rf•ln dead --------------·I C I M J rMYm1n• lnch.'61no slllll re.:tlve ~ ce"ll Ptr how morl STATa .0' CALl,ORNIA '0R rKordtd July 11, lfft, ln look t031, PIO• ;~nnot ~:::;,le~ 111 t'1• · totlowlft9: tllan 1111 hi91les1 T!ams•er c11s1Ult•· Tffl ~N'TI.,C::,10ltAM!ll lot of Off!cl1I A1eord• 111 the Offlc• ot tM
Chi I tchlnt· itlllno Cllf'b torm t!on llYllr wllltll h• is For1m1n. .,. CounfY llt<:orc:ler of "ld COl.lntv, 4lndl'flpl':;. p~t!nq 'o1 lines stt••• i nd Any cl111ilfc1Uon net 1.-,tklpitld i nd Esllile al 'JERltY OAVIO LONG, ,PrlVldld !'11! 1'11t deed 11 1cc1pled t nd
PUBLIC NOTICE
~ICTITIOUI •USlN~SS
NAMI. STATIMliNT
tollawlng perlllln Is doing tlvslllfU
. ' I sc•Hd wt.1th llK11111es listed 1'1111 bl p1ld 11 Ille cvrrenl O«qSld. mid• 1\IOllCI 11) !hi blneflh and bur._ gr=·pl11'! 1111 n' s. orll'IQ lo w w\1'19 w191 r1111 tor t111 IPPllcib .. frlldi NOTICE IS HEllEIV 'GIVEN lo 1111 Imposed 11111111 lh• land dex rllled In w ld Tiie ~ c ~~i.~ 't'' !IC fllllng Shff. Ind cl11$1fk1tlon In tllKI with lht credlforl pl the •tloYI Mmld c:lllclCll!lt Ptreol 1 •bovl for lllo rnulull tleM!ll of •• , -·~--~oft II~-0;.y p ~~r':' concrete 1114 l bOYI 1111«1 Tr1d1s C~ncllJ. 11 '"' ~I 111 ~~·"'Ying cl1lm1 i!Ollnll ltio 1111 owMrl of 1ny porllons thtreof lily thtl COPY-,RINT, 2131 S•'1 JOIQufn H1115
Etnbto· ieftdll!ll mtlo!'ltl llol• on r•tos llsted ,,.. not cvrrent or 1r1 " ctK .... 111 •r• r<IQUlrOCI to fll• lllem., c1rt1tn Oe.:l1r1t1on of C0Yt111nh, Con· lt01d. NIWPOl'f llHCll, C1lltornl1 92UO
1111n ffoers ir>d c1ec1u · ltndlftO mixer· ttYl»d by l1bor 39r"m1nt1 durlno Wiit! IM noc:1:1wrv YOU<hlrs. In !ho offlc• dlll-1114 ll"trlctl0rtt r o c ord • d Jollrl M1rttn Durbin. 24011 onwr•
trwk' cllule 5111:11. ,._:1 lo Mets; bulh 1111 blOcllno 11-or contlructlllft tlrM, = 1111 clor~ of Ille •~11 *"~94 court. or OK1rnbll" 11, lNt, In Book '1116. '•'SJ Orly1, Ml1slon Vl•lo. C1llfoml1 '2615 hlmmtrll!ll: pitehl1>11 i nd 1tcklng,; we'1 rtvlslon1 1llall be con11derOC1 • prHln ~ I I MC:Hlllry of Olflcl1I Re'Cllfd• I" 1'11 Ottlc1 Ill $t ld Tiiis bllsl11-1!S Is cOfldU(:llld bl' In 111•
roddl ie'mp;1111, bit won roddlno. Plrf o1 IM llttOd ra le1. YGVCh«t. lo IM '"'""' llnlld • 1111 ofllct c111111tv Rworder. dlYid111I. ~n~ tnd i lml1ir typel bull APPRENTICES: All1nl!on ft dlrecttd lo of 1111' 111or'111y, LAWRENCE IC. SUI J ECT TO: All c0Ytn1nl1, eon· JOHN MARTIN DURBHl flillng ........ '16 the provl1ion1 ol ltbor COiie St<:llon HARVEY, A"orl\Ojl II Lew, ml E11! lflllOlll. rntrle'llOlll. te$1PVlllOlll. tX· Tbb .i1temerot w11 lllld wfl'1 tM Coun•
c 1 "'1 11 ·,· • · · 'M 1 l· on · · · · ···' • lm.s concern In; ll"nploYm.1111 of &p.. ~1.st 1 Hlgl'twey, CorOl'll dot Mir, c1ptlon1. ,,,,.,.,, .. ,., t1o'1t Ind rtoht1 DI ty Cilr'll of Or•l'llO COl.ln!Y on Auou1t 21,
IM<l!lnllll1. rn•9111Sllt-T1rr1uo lo prllllltt l. ""'•torn a t'26U. wllldl 11 1tle 11Mc1 of w1y ol record. ltn.
CALL ..
DAILY
PILOT
CLASS·
IFIED
DEPT.
D ,.--
1
A
L
D
I
R
E c
T
l'!'llstlc ComP01illon 11 rtqulrtt contr1 ttor1 or iub-'*''"'''of llll•Ul'Mllf.igllld In Ill ml"lf' ll!NM
EOOXY Ot!l-0.Tt•I' ...•.•. 11 conlr1clors em11lo'l'lno lrldesmen In "'1tlnlng to Illa t•t•I• of 11td d1<1d111t. mort cornmonly known 11: ntt.JF Vii Pullll111od Or1nog1 Co.11 Oalty Piiot __
c-f MIMIM FIOlii~ i... any 1ppr111tlc1blo occup1tl0fl lo •llfllt within four lnO!I"" Ille!" lbl fltll publlCI· M1rlP011 Wey, ~IOUlll HUb. A\19. 23. 311 I nd Seflt. '· 13. ltn 2'l7·7j
l rowe!lnt Mld'llll• ()ptritor ..... •.~I to the 1ppllc1bl• i•l"f I P11f0flllcoihl11 111111 of !his llO!iCI, Tor""' el' wl• c•sll In llwtvl monov of'l---------------1
Curto a. Gulltr M1ehlne cornrnlllee tor 1 cerllllcet1 of ·~ D•i.d AUU'\111 L 1ti'l. !hi Unlttd Sl1tn on e011!1rm•ll011 of 1111. PUBLIC NOTICE
09ari1or 1comen1 only\ , ... , •.•.. ·'·'' Pl'llY•I •nd ,flxlno lllO rtllo of 111-~~~:;. !fHG Pit E 1 Tin· porc1nt of 1mounl 1114 ta &l·dfP!)Sllod __ ~,,.,---·I
Clary I. ·S1nil11r Type DI' prtnllces IO !OUrftO\lmtn Uwd Oii !I'll 1 Ir 111 ol I ~ llt' wflll bid. ' : "ICTITIOUS IUSl•t:SS J~':tnt ~~I~ oPt~•to;:·· '' 6'16 c~~!~~~· mey be r~l'lll ~ mtka UWRt':k:'~~.~~ dlc9dent 11118!::e1~f-~ ::..:..w;1::c.~ :'~ •AME ITAlliMIMT
1111 IYP1s) ...... ·• ...•. . •.•• 1, eontrlttvtlon to 1ppr1ntlcHhlp '4'• AllWMY .i ""' • tlmo lf'llf' the flrtl publlcellcin llerlOf Ind ~hi foflowlftll perllll'I 11 dolnt tMl11tu
Ji cklOll v1or1torv a. Simit1r or1m1. ' • 17)_1_,._ .. , Ctilll .....,...r btlot• doll• of wla. "·. Typt krffd Oper1tor '16 COl'llrlC!or Ind tUllConlr•clors lhlif aito cw-. H1 ~!-.• C•Ui.ntl• mts '0•"4 !Ills 15th,., Of AU0\111 1973 G ll AN VILLE MANUFACTURING SCorillg MK'111'11 Optr110..""''······4" camp!J W!tn Section 1m, 111 th• T"ll 1 1714) '1i:tai . SUSANNE' t lAVLOR • co .• ns J1sml111 Circle. COlll ,.,,..., ~~t !:1~'oronsu~1'i::;:; F;"'P~~~ppr~~t1~. ta •11-"'=:,:r\~~;:•'t1C::~ D111y llllof, ~!~~ ~:.:o sW!!El . Mct1!1om, G~'•w=· Bt1ck,H•1"°'• ,·", v1,o
wllelhtr •W'lnolng or rlold, 1b0Ye or Pftnll<:Mlllp 9hlnd1rd1, eonl•d Olritc-AllOllSt '· , .. 23. >O, 1m w"n Wiii of u ld o.cec1en1. ,~:i:J"°" •11• L6111,1n11 •· •1 torn•
11ekiw gl'Olllld, 1h1ll •ecitv• 2s cont• 1r .i 1nctu11Ne1 R111t1on1. s1111 Fr•n-pueu"c NOTICE lllCHAltD w, s,llAOUE Thh ·bu11,,.., 11 conductod bV 111 1.,. Pl!' hour OYlf' "" 1pp1lc1bhl r1111. c tee, C1tllornla or Olvllloll of All" 111 Wttl .ill Sll'Hf, llllN 1114 dlYldlltl
AllOCIUon: u et1111 OH hour _ s-1-n ~tlc.sllfP Stlnd1rd5 t1r1ncn offlett. LM ,,.......... C.11. •11 L Gri llYlllo Bleck
HNtlh & W.tltro -.to ptr llouf' TM '°'":"110 IChtdlllt of per dlom N•WP'Olfr-MISA Uflll,110 IUS) ...... Tlll1 tt'1-1 w11 lllld wll'1 tM C-
,eMlon -'5 Ctllls 1111' ho\I, W*INi bloseci VPOll I --.11111 diy Of SCHOOL DISTltlCT Al""'*" fer C•l'.•llWI.... ty Clerk of 0 ll'IO Cou 1Y t A I 1 V1<ltlOll -10 «nit Pit l!ol,ir eight (I) llou,., TIM r1t1 tor hdi!diY lfofke lll"flflflll ... PUbllsllOCI Orlfllll Cotsl Oll1Y f'llol lt1J. ~ 1 n n 11111"' '
Fof'tMl11! Wl'llll '""'" or '"°'' Cerneti! •,nd OYtrl1rt1• -k lh•tl bo I t .... , NOTICE II ~'"-'-•V GIVEN '"'' ,,.,. A'llOllll , .. 17, 2l. lf73 2511.n •·27*
,,,,.l<OI" tro l'!'ft911o/14 Oii I lllb. -$1!1lt I "'1 lfld one-llltl. IMrd of Edutttlcift lif ll'lo Newport-Mal . 'utitllhld Ot'll!Ot C t O lly Piiot
" -".,.• For'""" a1111 sri.n 11 TS::~T~1t n;~,:Z .~ "", .S .. ,· u 111flod sc11oo1 D111r1c1 o1 0r-.. '""'"'' PUBUC NOTfCE 11.uu1111 ,, 16, n. '°· ,,,,°"' • WJ.n AC;llW l'IOI Int II 40 eenls per ,_, w ,,. COl't r ... , I C11flornl1, wOI l'llCllllt tN+od bldt up IO•---ccc-=°""""""°""'cc----1--'--------------rnort !Mn !tit llovrly ••le of the 1\1911151 IW•rdld. •nd upon •nv M.lbcontr1ctor 11 ·00 A.M Oii the 3111 cl1r el' AUlllUll 1171r CTITIOUI u I
(«l'llfll Mnon cl1s1lflc1tlon OYlf Wflkll un,! .... lllm, to PIY not '"' ll'llu'I ttll •t' !ho offlct ol· .. Id $chool otltrlcl, ·~of.Mt ITA:t::~HNl1 PUBUC NOTICE
... hi• rHporllltlllltr. "'"' IPOdfled rilts 10 •II work"""' locllld •I 1151 .. lt«l'lfll Avtnw C111l1 iron WOl'llfrt: (1·1.,1ll ~ovw lily them I" tr.. eucUllOl'I .i Mole. Cillforflll. If Wlllch litM Mid tHI Tllll tollowfnt Plf'IOll 11 dol119 1Ml11111
llllnfarClrlV lrOfl WOtklf •. , .t.7J IPll t 011lr1e1. will 111 ~l,IY °"flld tl'lcl rMd fol'• 111 • · •tCTITIOUI •USUllll
!itructur1.I Iron WorkOf . • 1.71 No blG!llr m1y Wl lftd,•w nt1 bid tor • MUSICAi. IN$TaVM£NTS " ' TMREE DOLLS. 10S M1!11 St .. l•lbol, f'ilAM• STATIMaMT •
()m:l""'7flll Iron WOl"l<;er 1.7t l>e•lllll Of for'IY.fl~• l':il d1y1 l fltr lf'll ,._11 bldl f ft lo bl In l«Ol'd•llCI wffh (1111, flUI .._ l ht followl119 Pll'toft b ctolnt tlullllUI
,fl\Ct £rtelM _ '·'' d1lt •ti for !kt 11Ptn11111 of tll1t1. COllCllllont INtnlctlent •lld IPOdfk•ttllM llYOrlY Ann BtnlMll, tll\'I E, """" 11: HMlfll ~ Wlll•I• -6t Clfl1J per l'lour A IMYfrl .. t bond Ind 1 P«'°"'Wlllc'O wtlkll are llOW' Ofl lllt In lht offkt ot l1ll l"ronf, l albol. C.111. t':l•61 OftANGI! JULIUS NO. 1M. 1191 ,..,.llfl -1rn ~· por flout bOflCI \¥111 bf •tqul,ld prior to Ill• '""'Cl'l•ilno """' II' 1114 school Dllttkt · lltti blnlntu II conctuc:lld b')' 111 111-Harbor llYd., '°''' Mtto. C1Ut. nl2f V~fklll -IS Clflll por '*" e<vtlon Ill "'' '°"''ICI. ""' INYA\tlll llS1 ,t 111111 'A c I Ml • ctl¥1dUll. ICl!ll M. Mceltsh, 6'•1 Chllrch Clrtlf, Portn'llR• Rt<llYOd 11111 1111 lh,o'" 7~ bond 111111 bf 111 lflt lorm llf forth In Ci llfOrnl •c 1 wnue, 1111 "• 8rllrir Ann Beflntll 'It. Hunltntlon ancll, C•llf. 91.e
c....U pt, flollr lllClff lhall !I'll "°'1flY !I'll contr41c1 dOc""*''" E.ICI! ~dde I bll'lll bid dopoill Tllll 111111'1'111111 Wll filed with the {;.OUflo Tllh bllltntM It c~ld .... Ill ..,.
,.,, "' tM lllfP!Otl Wlldlnt 1,..,.1 GCMl'lllng l ottrd 111 11\o form rofm~t C:t1Mld 'or cell'illt'I IY ci.rt of Orffltt COUl'ltf Ol'I JulY' 11, dlYIMI.
··-'llltlldl "' ,,., l y HortMn E. w1t11111. • 1"1. l(lnt M. McClltll d 11.. _. *rt11ry, l!lo.rd o1 Trvu clloclt or • bid lltl'ld oqu.i tan .... PltCOf!I lt1N71 Tiii• 1t•llmtlll w•• flltd With tht Covil· =::.WO:,..~~~ mor..:i 11
1':: 'ublllhocl 0t11100 Coo1t 0111';' ,itot, ~~!.:.:~•=tot oftht ~= rvtillshM Ortnv• COW Ollly '11111, ty Clttl of Orano• Co.ln!Y on JlllY 31,
....... bV IM E~ lo l et 95 A119w 1 1 .. 23, lt73 • """1:1 Urllfl«I SCktl Oktrid, A ~ ~.Ttt 14 2S. )0. IM lorpttm~ It.,,_ 1'411.S '""°"""' • ltlld '"" IN rtqulnd It fhit IUKl'lffoll If "*'._. °'"""' c.tt Dt!IY ,.ilot ~; 1s-1·n1 PUBLIC NOTICE tf'tl °'"f'lct. 111 t11t ~ of I.ill.In " PU~UC NOTICE , .t.wwi a. t . ,., ». 1m 2327.73 #JC:Nll •••• L\llolfllfl tf'llot l11to 1«'11 c .. lr~, ttw Mt •""" •lid I'*""" ............ 5.t$S tfMrt9I Wiii bo flll'follod .. Mltl klleol PVBUC NOTICE ....,,,.,, IMWl'Jlfr ............. : •••• 5.1'$ l'tCTIT10US •USINfll -.. Dl1frld .. er.. t:Mlf1. 'ICTIT!OUI. IUSllt•ss
f l111 Qf'Mer IHIOftWtY.. fllAMI STATIMINT ' No b1411i1r ll'il'f' wl!Mr-hit llhl tor 1 . ,. .. I TAlSMl!lfT
Stretl '°''°'"'' , ......... • S.1'$ lht IOll!loil11!f fltl'IOll1 ,,.. 111111 Wlod o1 lwTY·flllot (fJ/ ......... ,..,. ""' lhl tolt0w41'11 """°"" • ~ IM1· '~LT'°'"I ITA:::.1::~· Flat-• .. ~............... S."'5 INslfllltl n : dlltt Mt for tri. ootnll!f"fl'ltttoDI'. 'nflt 11: 1 -..
L•W'W ~~·n •• • JU • .. L ENOINl!EJt\NC. ,.,., u . ""' IMrd of £dUCll/oll ot '"' ~ H 'M WEUJING .. SHEi l METAL. ""' followlnt W IOll " fOlnt boutlfltff OMfllOl'I of "'*'"'•lk, Gls. rll!OI. N•WMrt &Mell, 12701. MtH Ulllllld kllool Ofstrlcf tllOf'\'tt !NI 206 a ColltllJ, lal'lf• A111. C1. '27V5 11:
&loctr'k TCtOlt. VIWotlM "*"'-& Sl_tpl:Mft '""' Llfcl'lt. 11Cll: w. l(lmtNr• ""'' IO ,.lo(t .,,., or 111-.... -"" k«I D. Mm'llrd. t•1 ·~ Cfr., OOL." IMTERNAllONAI.. JO«I C.1 il'W!ilaofEIQI IOOlt ftol ,., '1 .. Alllhtftn. Callfornl1 ""2. '""'""''II' kCf1M the lowttl bid. 1nct fl l~f!Oo Cf, '2105 Lant. C:.11 Mow, C .. llotnl1 t'1Ul · .... ,.. e.'-M~ -.iit _ ... Kl Dllltl !'\lflM L", IO?l) JltftOCI Or• w.111'1 •llY il'llOrmlllly or lrrt1ll4•rlty 'II NOl'l'Nfl 1.. H•.....,.· 411 Chlrlo\'lttl Vlctorl• Molro•r. ,.., C~I (,tM,
lrtt Cl r· ,.,!er', CMlll t.ew '"· '°"n1111n V.fllty t1Jt19 • •nv bid roctfYfd, l" Ctr .. lrvlM a . "'°' CO.I•~. C•Ulornl• .,.,., ' "°"''" or .rm1...-lrPI l Mt llvllnaM la mnducl(CI by • tentrll Dt-1«1 '"""' IS. ltn . Thia ~""' I• CCll'lcl\lclld b')' a ,.,.....1 lhl• bullllet<I •• 811119 (Of'ldv<lld tlY rift lrw!I ...... ,.. " •• I W per'lnlt'INp. NI WPOflT-Ml!JA p1r!Ml'1fli,. lncllvldllOI.
HHlll'I a Witt.,. -'5 utlfl """..... Sli>OIMll ~ UHll'll O SCHOOL SC:ofl D, MtyMrd Vkl0r11 Mllllllr ~ -1.U .... "'"" TMs ~ti""'"' WI• flltd v.·!111 tht C'l\lft-OISTltlCT o1 Titi lflf't!Mllf W.t fl11d wllll 1Plt ~ TN• tla~ 11"4 Wflll tri. Clllll'llY Vkdoll ~ is""''"' NM.It' "'C1erll ot Or•noo CM!f'r Dft AU0\111 7, Orlnoe C111111fy, C•llfonll• ty C11rk"' Or111111 COl#llY Oft li."91111 11. Ctort el°''""' Cou111Y on Al/VUll 7, ttn ,ontNllt NOi 191& tftllll » -'i ,., ltn. I r OOl'lftlV Hll'ltY f';ltW lt1J • ., Tlllr$ M. Wll'd, DflW!y COi/iiiy
"-' ..... ltltn ... ~ ..... ,... • ...,,,.. .. ~ ""'"' P..mt7 °"' If ""'-,..,,.,.., ~ ...... ,......., Ort• CNtt Dint "flot ~llot llWClflttlM Orflllt COit! OlllY' •lfot, 114"'1
Wllidt ....... , •••• ,.. Mlti11f t .142'.JO,lt7l fM,W) ,.1M1.,...10tM1t c .... DMlr 'ltli 11...-».-ti\ Mt fft/tlmblr .. lJ. hbll'lllld ~ 0.tl Otl" '"°' "'°""'' ,, .,.,. A\llUrt ,,, wn un.1 1m "''"n Auou.1 '• it. n. a 1t1i t-...n
6
4
2 -5
6
7
• 8
InfOTmatlon Regarding
NEW ZEALAND
Homes • Fanns * DairlCfJ
Pacific Properties
105 Main , Balboa
675-0712 or S;IS-8796
No Down G.I .
3 bdrms, 2 baths. Close lo
schools. Huge family rm,
fireplace, Dream kitchen
with built ins. Dining rm.
$28,500. brk 540-1720 TARBELL
"'Make Room For Daddy"
• , • clean out the garq:e
... tum that junk into ca.sh
with a Daily Pilot Classified
ad. Call 6G-5678.
llST
llYS!
c
L
A
5
5
I
F
I
E •
D
SAYE
' CAii!
SPARKLE
PLENTY
Wipe your feet first! Shoo.i."S·
like-a -model home. SEE thb1
5 bedroo1n l\.1esa del htar
beauty • one heck of a niC"e
home in ar ~I ntighOOr-
hood.
COATS . &
. WALLACE
<AEAL TORS
-S;9,414l-
(Opon "!f•l'i111•l
EASTSIDE
COSTA MESA
$25,QOO
Thi!! J be:froorn home hai
large diadt" trees and a
large Jcit It's today's buy
and \\ill br tomgmi~·s s~.
!fake a' quick k>ok! 646-7171.
OPE" TU. a• (f."S FUN 70 BE NICE f
't¥ilf1 r'~ THE REAL
ESTATE RS
--POoL TIME I
$35,950.
Charming .3 bedroom, 2 balh
home \r1th large family
roon1 a.lid huge b r i c k
fireplace. 14 x 28 pool with
loads of decking. Large
\\'Ork shop in rear for the
handy n1nn. This is a hol
one! Call Bed Carpet,
Rca.lton M&-8640 ( o p e n
C'\•enl11gs1
$2900 Total
Down
Assume 7~ % VA Loan!
Trim 4, BR, 'J BA Ranch
Style, !'ihake root, bltna.
huge fam rm -decorator
fresh! Asking $37,950. Sub-
mit any offer! No loan
cmil:I! ! ! Broker ~2133.
HorMs OK I
Excellent area for kids. Top
3 bedrm., 2 bath in Santa
Ana Heights. f amily nn,
rireplace. Dining rm. $36,500.
blk S4o-1m. • TARBELL
...,.*"""'T"'R'""E"E SH"~A-=o-=E-=D-*~
Love!)' 3 bdrm. Gooa Easl·
side• k>c. Extra tar&e lot.
Spac. living rm. w/frpl.
All for $31.500
BALBOA BAY PROP.
·~H~RMING
TOWNHOUSE
Most populiir i..,.. ·3 bed·
mom/dining room mod<!,
patio, double ga.rage, bttin&,
clubhouse &: 3 pools. Be«:
of aM, no yard \\'Ork. ~1?lll
priced big three at $)1,300.
54G-ll51 Open ·-· -·-~HERITAGE
. . REALTORS
FOREVER
OCEAN VIEW
in this unusual family iiofnt:.
4 bedrooms. den, family
room. 1'1ost thougbtfuUy
planned \\'ith a dream kit-
chen tor Mother1 plus \\'Ork·
sfiop, dark room, boat or
!r ailer SIOl"llgt?, pla,y )'Ji;d
""" ............ c0taa&11i:i f!Iar's UIK'Gt be a e h e.i1,
$9!1,500. Fee. CAU 673-1950.
Ol'f_N fil 0 • ff'S FUN 10 SE Nitti
[tll li~lllil
FRUIT SALAD
..• tn YoUr °"'U ·back yard! A
variety of tretti picked fruit
is yours • 14 bearing tnrit
trees &: grape arttor. And
live as )'OU please In th.hi
gre8.t lam iloln e fe&turtna:
•I BR, 2 BA, ijltlns and 18'
/11111 rm. Concrete,. boat/ ~er accetlS. Wtrtd to 9'11
l220) at $38,900.
l•rwln rHlly Inc.
961 4405 (24 hrs)
-* '°'14tl *---BEAUTl .. UL.
' 'EASTSIDE FAMILY ltOOM
GIANT COUNTRY IASTSIDll
. ~ITCHEN LOvel)',3 beclroo:r., 2"balh,
3' Bedroom. 2 bath plus tamt. family room. p u1 14X28\
ly room ..yith beautiful new pool with loads ot ~·
a.JI electnc coontry kitchen. Chotce Eutalde ioc.:BOrt Larae shaded patio AUr-and in1ag'ltM' lhla for SlS,950.
rounded by glasa. A reQI Thl$ one will. not Jo.at lona-!
beauty fOr $39,950. Call Red C4'11' Rfd Carprtl, ltel!lorl
Carpet, Realtors 645--QO 6f5..8t1!0 foptn eVl!!ill.np),
(open evenings) I •iiiiiiiliiii;iiiiiiliiili&
THIRE'S ONL y ONE * 4 BEDROOM. 2 bltba,
in Mesa Ve:rde, at Jea1t. Low, OOuble garage. $30J'.I». B«il ra.m~hia: 2500 Ml fl, one of terms. , story, lhake roof hl.lme • 4 * COMMERCIAi~ ZONE • 2
big BR, I BA, IJ1d nr BR IW9 ltOl'l' oldtt home, ~---~ Cl b Under OM 000 COmttt lot.. $24,500. ~., u . -· ' Roy McC•nlle RHl!w ~~~~~-~er~·~A&<-•_t. l!JO l'.$'.;~<L,'C.M.
PTl!"R & SLIP
Lo\o<ly • ""'""""'· 3 b>tb 2RIADY*'To=1u11~0-.1 ::Jb!.lrori~, 1= WHILE .YOU LIVI
COmpleter With picr It 1111p, ~1ie'!2 'bec:\l:Wm. l bl.I~ home
home completely ,_modelf!d wJlh room to build tlmM! ad.
and what a beautl~~mY. dltlon"t t!;1l15. BuUd with a
.Prlctd ·to oeU it !00. 111~. l\l<!lc\llO!ltb low pric-
e.II ror 4PJtOlnlm<jlt • Red ed Lot $30,:>ao. Call Re<I
CatJ>olt, Rialtilq 645-llOflO C..,,.~ R"'ll'°" -· C:J...J;~·t I (open evenl.np) -0.Weed 1t' A RHp"' Iii Any dl1 t. the BES!' DAY "3 From ..........., to 1""" ·~a'li -&::1~~· :rue.rd.~~~~
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Laguna Be~~h
-.EDITI ON
Today's Final
N.Y. Stoeks
VOL. 66, NO. 235, 5 SECTIO NS, 74 PAGES THURSDAY, AUGUST 23, 1971 TEN CENTS
Cult Members BQoked For Assault in Temple
Laguna Beach Ponce and an Orange
County marshal arrested two members
of · the Hare Krishna cult ln Laguna
Bea"ch Wednesday after a detective was
allegedly attackeci during the service of
an arrest wamlllt at the group's temple.
Douglas C. Russell, 211 of 641 Ramona
Ave., was booked on suspicion of assault
on,: 1'.poUce officer, and interfering with
an officer ln the line of duty.
" .
Brian W. Nash, 19, also of 641 Ramona
Ave., was booked only on the charge of .
interfering with an officer.
Both men were taken to South Orange
CcWlty Judicial District Court in Laguna
Niguel for arraignment oo the misde-
meanor charges today.
Detectiv~ Sgt. Neil' Purcell said that as
Detective Tony Smith and Deputy
Marshal Dick RJngler attempted to
search the Hare Krishna Temple for a
• female named in a rilisdemeanor war·
ranr, RUSle!l allegedly grabbed Smith
with a chokebolj:l around the neck.
Marshal Ringler 'forcibly pulled the
oostume-cli.d Russell from the Laguna
Beach . officer and placed the cull
member under arre3l. Smith was unin-
jured.
~ two officers had initially been
ordered to remove their shoes before
entering the cult temple .
Both Officers declined to observe the
reijgipus ritual, stating they were on of-..
fieial -not splritual -business, and in-
tended to seareh all areas where the
fugitive might be hiding, fully-shod .
The girl named in the warrant was not
found, altl)ough several females did Dee
as the officers attempted to search the
premises.
•
Nash wa s arrested as he allegedly in·
terfered \\'ith office rs outside the temple
residence.
He allegedly pestered the lawmen and
refused to leave the area where bis saf-
fron-robed colletgue was being detained
while awaiting a ride to jail, despite
rej>eated orders to leave.
A Hare Krishna attorney questioned
pvlice motives in se arching the residence
for the warrant suspect and asked why
no attempt had been made to telephofle
the cult headquarters and seek voluntary
compliance with her surrender on the
\\'arrant.
Prior to serving the warrant, a letter
had gone to the headquarters advising
them or the warrant and. requesting a
voluntary tum-in, however it gol no
response, Sgt. Purcell said.
ence eac I _ooms
tonstiltant Hired
Marine
·-Cou11ty Hits
Lagunita Airp.ort
Proposal ~tudied ,, WithCharge . .. :~
By JOHN ZALLER
Of !'lie 0.UY Piiot Sll ll
The U.S. f\.farine Corps has hired a con-
:Juljant to find out if commercial jet use
at.El Toro and Camp Pendleton is feasi-
bl~ Marine officials disclosed today.
-~d a preliminary conclusion is that it
wOOld be "technically possible" to build
...
Mall Complex
'f o Get StiulJ r.
in Laguna
The Laguna Beach Board of Ad-
justment will meet at 7:30 tonight at city
hall to further consider the $2.5 million
"Lumber Yard" mall complex.
1be board had previously delayed ac·
lion approving or modifying the project
lo allow drafting of traffic and economic
studies on the shopping area located on
the Laguna Lumber property on Forest
Avenue.
Since the first design review meeting-
by the board. however, the Laguna
S..ch City Council bas ordered that all
11pificant construction projects must
have an environmental impact report.
Developers of the l.Almber Yard were
ordered to submit an ElR and it is an-
ticipated the matter will again be con·
tinU~ ahead from tonlght's meeting.
Other matters to be considered by the
Board of Adjustment include:
r;-A request by William C. Clapet for a
copditional use permit to allow develop-
ment ol six separate dwellings and a
jointly used tennis court, pool and guest
~king in the area of 1125 through 1195
KJ:ller Way, a single family residential
zobe.
-Design review ol a new facade and
r"'1ce for a double garage and patio by
Wesley Plueger, 367 Lower Cliff Drive.
Laguna Writer's
Daughter Badly
Hurt in Accident
Lori Hano, 19-year~ld daughter or
Laguna Beach writer Arnold Hano, show-
ed sUghl improvement today, following
surgery for lnjuri ·:sustained In an unex·
plained motorcycle accident Monday in
SM Juan Capistrano.
&1lss Hano, of 156$ Bluebird Canyon
Drive, Laguna Beach, underwent lengthy
suriery Wednesday at south Coast Com-
m1µ1ity Hospital for removal Qf a blood ctP,t Jn the brain.
A bospllal aide said today she remains
in critical condition in the intensive care
unit, ~t has shown some response
followiug the surgery.
·tnvestlgators for the C a I I f o r n I a
Hijbway Palrol are baCfled as to how the
accident OCCUITed.
;Shit was found injured near the comer
ot .Pel Obilpo and Stonehlll roads Tues-
day and tran1ported to the hospital.
Tuesday morning, invest lga tors
dlscoWred 1 DIOtorcytle In the vicinity of
the Intersection. It Is not known,
however, whether Mlu Hano was
optr1Una or riding the motor<yclc.
• Offictta aaid the vehicl• is owned by a
tos AnteJea man,
• • •
I
an "attractive jetport" at Cam p
Pendleton, but it would "cause ir·
reversible ecologica l impact" on the
coastline and would be "very expensive."
The study, conducted by Stanford
Research Institute (SRI) or Menlo Park
has not yet reached any conclusions
~bout possible joint use of the Marine
Corps Air Station at El Toro, according
to 11.B. W!lder, the man in charge of the
study for SRI.
Civilian use at either base could relieve
jet traUic at Orange Cqinty Airport and
many officiaJs are pusb¥1g that approach
as an aJternative to an expansion of the
cotlnly air facility. • '
'!'he.proposal also bas Jl'Ofli'pted strong
oppos1Uon from some communities.
The Investigation of possible civilian
use is part of an overall study under way
since January, which is designed to
detennine A1arine Corps needs through
1994 at the six Marine bases in Southern
Caliromia.
Marine Corps spokesmen today reaf-
firmed that the corps is still opposed to
civilian commercial use at either El Toro
or Camp Pendleton.
However, spokesmen said that the In·
dependent outside agency bas been asked
to make an objective study and to come
to its own conclusions.
"The proposals for civilian use have
been made and they should be taken into
account in any long range planning for
the two bases." Wilder said.
"It's one thing when the Marines stand
up every week and say there shouldn't be
any civilian use," added Lt. Col. Ed.
Janz, community liaison officer at El
Toro.
"But it would be another thing if some-
one on the outside who is widely
respected for independence would come
to the same conclusion."
The SRI study took as its starting point
the level of operations the Marine Corps
says it needs at the two bases over the
next 20 years, Col. Janz said.
Investigators' will then determine what ,
if any, level or civilian use of the two
bases is compatible with the expected
level of military use.
Based on these assumptions Wilder
said he has tentatively concluded that :
•·From a technical engineering stand-
point, it is possib le to construct an at-
tractive civilian airport on the camp
Pendleton base.
"But that is the only advantage we
found. It would be very costly, access
(See JET USE, Page I)
.
-• , • ; Dallr 1'1111 '"" ,,,.... MEXICAN CHIEF JUSTICE .VISITS EA\!RA D BAY; FINDS THE NATIVES FRIENDLY
From Left to Right, C•rolyn ~nks, Fr1ril Ba.,ks, Efvir• d• I• V•, Rene Gonzalez d1 l1 Vega
Natives. are Friendly
Mexica1t Judge, Wife Enchanted Witli Emerald Ba y
· By JAtK CHAPPELL
Ol t11e O.MY l'J'tl' Sliff
Like typical tourists traveling through
a foreign country, the couple found the
natives friendly, the pace across the
border slower and more restful, the road
system confusing and were antidpatmg
buying 1-0caI crafts and products. ·
The couple in this case, ·though, is Rene
Gonzalez de lli Vega ind his wife Elvira
or the states, and it's P,Urely a pleasure
trip. .
Sra. de la Vega said they wished to
stop and visit' all the little towns and not
just hit the large cities.
They were due to leave Lagun"°today ·
and trav~I ~ coastµne to San ,Francisco
and then gi> to Yosemite N<!tianal Park.
vi~ting Lagunans Frank and CarolY,D 'HE A. VEN'l•Y' A.CT Banks of Emerald 'Bay. · P
Sr. de la Vega js the Magistrado del _i..
Tribunal Superior de Juslioia de! Dis!rito MA.KES -nELlEYER S
y Territorios Federates, the equivalent of ~
th.e Chief Justice of the U.S. Supreme RoLAJ'ii Jo,va (AP) ...:. If there \Vere
Court. any nopfielievers in this small central The Ban~ and. the de la Vegas , Io~a , unity there aren't any more. met on a ~t _trip by both couples to __ 1 ' ,
Mulege located oo the gulf side of the ,,, ettne..i., "'1(ht, a. loud dap ol
llaja califoo1iia ,.rounder shoOl t.t>eismaU town·of 800 and
The excbangea, names and the Banks•,..... evidently triggered the chimes of Salem
ailfecMhe de la Vegas to visit wheo.'lhey Lutheran Cllurch. · ·
came to lberUniled States. The hymn "How Great ntou·Art" rang
1be MeDcan justice and his wife are through the town •.
making'~ their· first au'torilobile excursion
·'In all part s, the people are very kind
with us." de la Vega said. "This-Place is
"°·onderful, '' he said motioning to the
View 0£ tlle blue Pacific Occaii from the
Banks~ balcoriy.
Asked if :;he \Vanted to purchase
anything special on her trip nonh, Sra.
de ·1a Vega sa1d, "Everything I see."
Residents of Mexico-City, the de la
Vegas said they found northern ter·
ritories less hurried.
"ln Mexico City, it' is rush, rush, all the
day," de la Vega said.
11c said he first came to the United
States 38 years ago when he visited San
Antonio1 Texas.
One or the changes over the years he
espec ially noted was the ending of
segregation of. races.
"The people are more kindly now," he
said. and-he ·remarked about the "grow-
ing up of the country and the builditigs"
that bas taken place.
Al tbough be said he found no changes
he did not like, he and his wife looked
somewhat as~ce at the hippie move-
ment.
Niguel Project Mavltig
j'lt starts with the American youth and
then the Mexican youth copy," de la
Vega said.
"We have no reason for that kind of
life," he said noting that his country had
not been involved in any recent wars, or
other turmoil which spawned the protest
rnovement in the United States. Avco Given Green Light
Construction appears to be cleared to-
day for the controversial Laguna Nugiel
Avco project,tbut officials of the develop-
ment compady are being cautious about
a state Suprelne Court decision giving a
green light to the troubled development.
The court ruling, Issued Wednesdty,
declares that Coastal Zone Conservation
Act permits are not required if substan·
tial coostrucUon had begun before Feb. 11
1973.
Avco's oceMvlew housing projects on
both sides of Pacific Coast Highway were
stoppe<t earlier this year by action of the
South Coast Regional 1.one Coosorvatlon
Commission. Tile firm was refused a
perm.IL
11We haven't had the opportwtity to
rtvlcw and d1&est the decision. We •rt
I
not going to second-guess it and we have
no comment atihls time," Gene White,
Avco directot' of mmmunlty relations
said thll m0ming.
The disputed Avco project coosists of
72 acres of condominJums and other
development& wblch originally called for
seveJHtory high-rl9e buildings.
Elsewhere aloac the Orange Coonty
coast, thO 4 to i court d~ Is ex·
peeled to haw liltle Impact.
In Huntington Beach, a conlrover.sial
traot In the Huntington Horbour Ar.a
had already been approved by the com·
ml,.ioo. Clty llOUroa 'llY the Coastal
Oomtlvatlon Act, which "'!lllrei a
permit for any OONllrucllon within J.000
feet ol •the coast, did not impede any ma, Jor projodJ.
In Newport Beach, Jim Hewlcker,
assistant commuoity development direc--
tor, said he did not know of any projects
that would be cleated by the decision. He
added !bot none hid been blocked by the
commlaaion and that pennita had been
issued for several projects.
Lacuna Beach and San Clemente Will
alJO remain unoffected by the Suprule
Court decision, whlcll w11 won bf See the
Sea Ltd. in San Diego. '
The ruling, final In 30 dn~I, means that
the San Diego developer wlll be able to
procied with work on a 72-unlt con-
domlnlum on the San Diego waterfront.
With the docl11on, the court r<eoncllcd
conmcUng Interpretations of two sections
o( the act. One required a permll for any
(See AVCO, Page %)
'
"It is only an imitation or the
American youth ," he said. He com-
mented that while the professed ideas of
the hippies such as peace and freedom
may be good, the actuality-of the move-
mtnt was an exeuse for "vagrancy,
doing nothing, being dirty and using
drugs."
The crime of Mex1co i!!I remarkably
Uke the crime of the United States. The
cities have murders thievery and frauds,
the countryside Js plagued now with Heat·
tie robbery," he !lid.
Mex.ico abandoned capital pwnishment
in 1929, and has shifted to a
humanitorian rehabilitation program for
aU prisoners, de In Vega said.
Some of the Mexican states have a
greater penalty for catUe theft than
murder, he said.
Unlike tile United Stales. there have
(See MEXICAN, Pqe I)
. .
By FREDERICK SCHOEMEllL
Of lfle O.ltr l'u.t Sl.tt
An Orange County Building and Safety
Department official said Wednesday a
criminal complaint will be sought against
the Lagunita Association for building a
fence on the beach.
John Wolfe, chief of the zoning Jaw en-
forcement division, said his stall will
meet a deputy district attorney today or
tomorrow to discuss the case.
The chain link fence was constructed
along Lagunita's northerly property line
in mid.July. It extends aCf06S the beach
for about 100 feet.
Barry Todd Miller, presiilent ol the
Lagunita Associatioil, could not be reach-
ed for comment. A secretary, however,
said the a.saociatioo would ~ nouncement on the matter .AQ
unspedfled date.
Wolfe said Lagunita orflcils have
declined to respond to letters from his
dlv!.sloo concerning the alleged violation
of the county's Beach and Recreation
District (BRO) ordinance.
That statute prohibits construction of
structures and fences on the beach unless
a use permit has been obtained from the
Orange County Planning Commission.
Registered letters have requested the
association to either apply for a use
permit or remove the fence.
Violation of the BRO ordinance, Wolfe
said, is a misdemeanor offense. He
stressed that the object of legal pro-
ceedings would not be punishment but
conformance with the BRD ordinaoce.
The feoce first was discovered by a
Laguna Beach building official July 11,
who later notilied Orange County of.
ficials since Lagunita is under county
jurisdiction.
One county building inspector noted the
fence was constructed to replace an u -
isting barrier washed out during high
surf.
Lagunita also has posted large sigru: at
both ends of the beach stating the strand
is off limits to the general public.
Lagunita is directly south of Victoria
Beach, a pubLic beach maintained by the
city of Laguna Beach.
Boycott Ended
SAN DIEGO (AP) -San Diego county
supervisors voted Wednesday to end their
boycott or a countywide planning group,
the Comprehensive Planning Organiza·
lion. Supervisors voted +.o lo draw an
agreement f.or the county to join CPO on
a six·month trial basis.
Oraage Cout
Weather
The weather's_cooling off, but it'll
still be nice along the Orange
Coast Friday. Highs of 68 at the
beaches will rise lo 80 inland:
INSmE TODAY
VoluptuoUJ, attractivt Katl&fl
Keeton i.1 one of the wheels driv-
ing a new tntr11 i-nto the field
of tophisticated se:r magazines.
Her babu U Viva., a j ournal for
women. See stOTJI Page 17.
L.M ... ,. It
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-u 111 s-kt II
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' '"'% OAJL Y PILOT LB
Mine Hunt
For Buried
Men Starts
CASA GRANDE, Ariz. ~AP\ -A giant
earth mover today began clearing tons of
muck from a mine tunnel '''here t"'o men
ha\'C been !rapped nearly 2 quarter mile
underground for seven days.
Jerry Turnbo\v, Hecla Mining Co.
spokesman. said the rescue teams began
scooping out the wet sand and gravel
afler reinforcing the £ire-damaged tun·
ncl .
"The temperature has dropped to a lit·
tie over 100 degrees and working con·
ditions are much improved," said
Turnbo"'·
Turnb<H\' estimated that 90 tons of
muck had been removed in seven loads
by sunrise. He said the work seemed to
be going smoothly. but I hat there has
been no sign of a 4G-ton loader buried by
the muck Friday, sealing the men off in
the 500-foot north tunnel.
The pair became trapped late Jo'riday
morning when tons of rock and debris
tumbled down a mine shaft th ey ·.v~·r,..
drilling 1,200 feet underground in Hecia
Mining Co. 's Lakeshore mine, 35 miles
south of here.
The men are David Deeder, 41, of Ca sa
Grande and Terry Udall , 24, of Ft.
Collins. Colo. -
Rescue workers compl(!ted erecting
\Yednesday new support timbers \\•hich
had been burned in a fire which raged for
~veral days after the cave-in and forced
rescuers from the mine.
Although there has been no --.'Onfact
with the lrapped men, mine officials
have said throu ghout the rescue opera-
tion they believe the men are alive and
are trapped in a chamber 500 feet lo1:g
behind the debris of the cave-in.
Air and water has been pumped to the
area through a two-inch pipe formerly
used to remove water from the mine.
From Page I
JET USE .•.
would be difficult, heavy jet traffic would
have an irreversible effect on the coastal
wildlife inside the base and it would have
an adverse effect on military opera-
tions."
-Wilder said that studies of possible
joint use of EI Toro are just beginning.
He said the study would be based on
two possible levels of commercial jet use
-600,000 passenger-flights per year in
1975 and 6.7 million passenger flights in
1985.
Both figures were suggested in a 1972
study done by William Pereira and
Associates or Corona del Pr1ar for the
Southern Galifomia Association o f
Governments (ScAGJ.
The current level of operations at
Orange County Airport is about one
milliori' commercial passenger flights per
year. according to recent statistics.
Col. Jani. said the SRI study would
calculate the number of jet flights per
day required to carry p r o j e c t e d
passenger loads. It would then make a
finding whether this level of commercial
jet activity would be compatible with the
expected level of ntilitary flight opera-
tions at El Toro.
"There is a Jot of military activity at
thls base that isn't found at most com-
mercial airports," Col. Janz said. "We
fly close formations , practice aircraft
take offs and landings among many other
things.
"It has always been our position that
this type of military activity would not be
compatible with civilian use ." he said.
Jn effect, he said, the Marines are now
asking an independent consultant if it
sha res that opinion.
' Storm Drain Project
Renewed in La!!lllla
~
An agreement between the Orange
County Flood Control District for con-
stn1ction of Boat Canyon storm drain has
been rene"'ed at lhe request of the city of
Laguna Beach.
The previous agreement for the project
expired last June 30. A supplementa l
agreemC'nl continuing the fonner p!Ct
was adopted by the Board of Supef\risors.
OU.NII CO.AST La
DAILY PILOT
"fl'llt Ori"'" CO..t DAILY PILOT, 1'!lfl 'l'flldl
II eornbl...il tilt H-..Prtu, II Pliltllllllelf tr,.
~ Or1'.'19 Co.11 Pulllltfllnt C.IT'IPtny, s.p..
r1'.1 i!'Cl1I00111 l rt PUblblltlll. ~'I' l'lrOUgll
Fr~y, lor eoi.11 Ma., H~ •te<ll,
H""fi119IOI!. B~lllF01111!1l11 V111.-,., ut-
a..cti, lrvlne/SAOdlebiic-tnd S.t1 tllnMnlt/
S.n JllA!I C"1nl1tr1no. A 11noi. "VlllMI
tllll!ki01 i• P110•!111M Sllwdtn Ind Sundt"!'L
floe P""'-:•1>41 Mlldolne pl111! 11 11 llll W..! ••r ltrtott, C01t1 Mtu, c.111omi., mi..
Rob1rt N. W1ff.
P•niG111t Ind Pw1111 ..... J,,. R. Cw'11y
Vb ~r11.,,..,1 t nd G.tiertl M1~,.,
Tho11111 l(,, .. ;1
Efltor
Tho1t111 A, Murphi11 1
M1111g1r19 Et1!0!'
Ch1rlo1 H. L.1u Jlic:h1rd '· Nill
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&..,.. IMcll Offlco
2JZ fott.i """•11111
ll'•ili119 Atltlr1t11 P.O. lo, 666, 91651 0-.-C.I• MM; Al Wftl ••r Strt'fl .....,...,, hlcll: U» N...,,.,, lll°'il'-"tl'f H1111t11111"" lltac!I: 11'IJ aMCfl a"1!ntf'd
JllllC""*'tei IDS NOtfll El Ct,,,.,_ llNI
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Q ..... .w. ..... 1 MJ.ff71
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""9llfllly1 M< -· U.IJ -lll!'t1 tl'lffltery _._._O,M~.
Thur5dl)t, August 23, 1~73
West Cou1it11 Fracas
Knife-throwing
'
Suspect Hurt
By JOANNE REYNOLDS
Of ftlt Otltr .. Utt $1•1f /
A Fountain VaUey man, who police
alleged was throwing butcher knives at
lhem, was shot µt the stoma.ch by.
p:.trolmen early this morning.
Harold Eugene Wcas, 47, or 18623 Sau
Marcus St. was booked into Orange
County Jail on charges of attempted
murder.
Police capt. Les Rowland described
Lucas' wounds as superficial after the
man was treated and released for book·
ing from the Orange County Medical
Center.
Rowland said Lucas was shot at least
twice by a contingent of four officers
alter the man allegedly refused to drop
one knUe he was about to throw after
already heaving one at the officers.
Aides Happy;
Nixon Plans
More Talks
By HELEN THOMAS
United Press International
\\fhite House aides, convinced Pres i-
dent Nixon came through "with flying
colors" at his first meeting with
reporters in five months, indicated in San
Clemente today that he might hold
another news conference in a few days.
Presidential aides also said Nixon will
be stepping up his public activity with
NIXON SAYS OTHERS
BURGLED, TOO-Story, Pige 4
more appearances to demonstrate that
he "Is in command" despite the malaise
of Watergate. (Related stories, Page 3)
The aides appeared especWly pleased
with the fight stance the President
a!.sumed here during Wednesday-'.s news
conlerence, where he vigorously real·
firmed that he bad no intention of resign-
ing because ol Watergate and charged
that some or his critics "would prefer
that I fail ."
Presidential aides expressed deHght
with Nixon's performance and reactions
the White House bad received to it,
saying he "came through with f!yfug col-
ors" and indicating be may decide to
meet with reporters again as early as
next week. ·
Meanwhile, Henry A. J(jsslnger ar·
ranged to meet with reporters for the
first time since the President annoWJced
\Vednesday that he would be suceeeding
William P. Rogers as secretary of state.
~issingeri, who also will continue to
~rve as Nixon's top adv1ser for natiot11.I
security alla!rs, was expected to outline
his new dual diplomatic role at the
scheduled press conference.
From Pqe I
AVCO • • •
development on the coast after Feb. J.
The other exempted persons who had a
~vested right berore the act became ef-
fective .
The question was whether a developer
"'ho began building between Nov. !, when
the state initiative took effect, and Feb. 1
had such a vested right.
The Jaw states that a person had such
a right if he had "in good faith and in
reliance upon the building pennit,
dili gently com1nenced construction and
perlormed substantial work on the
development."
The court noted that the legislature in
April had amended the law so that the
effective date for vesting of these rights
was Nov. 8.
The majority held that the law had not
intended lo provide a moratorium on
construction between Nov. 8 and Feb. 1
and to require a permit would have had
such an effect.
Sergeants Fred Nourse and Lewis
Barlow and Offictn Lee Pepka and
Donald Anderson were called to the
Lucas home shortly after mldnlght by
a neighbor who complained ol a loud
disturbance.
The four men ·were met at the door by
Lucas who reportedly refused to talk lo
any or the pallcemen. According to the
JXllice report, Lucas "proceeded to throw
butcher knives at the ofDcers.'1
Rowland said the olfiws opened fire
on the suapect when he continued tosalng
knives at them after they had ordered
him to stop.
None of the officer~ wa1 injured, police
re Ported.
This morning's shooting ~ts the
lhird shooting incident involving Foun-
tain Valley police s.ince April
Three of those· shooting~ hive resulted
in deaths. .
In April ~1iguel Angel Estrada Ro.,..
qulllo, 20, of Santa An1, na shot to
death in Fountain Valley by Officer
Timothy Miller of the Westminster
Police Department.
The Ronquillo shooting was sparked
when a Fountain Valley officer had at-
tempted to take Ronquillo and four com-
panions into custody for alleged drunken
driving.
The Orange County Grand Jury cleared
Miller of wrongdoing in the shooting.
Ronqulllo's family has filed a $500,000
lawsuit against the cities of Westminster
and Fountain Valley, Miller and Officer
Robert Mosley of Fountain Valley who
was wil.h Miller when the shootini oc-
curred.
In June two llWlpected bandits, punued
from the scene of a holdup in Fountain
Valley were shot to death In the parting
lot o( Hoag Memorial Hospital in
Newport Beach.
Jack Elvin Nation, 23, and Thomas
Bernard Koulul!, 32, both of canon were
later identified as the men who held up a
small market for less than $150.
Pepka and Officer Ed RasmlllleD with
Reserve Officers Dominic Burak and
CUrtiss Fowler chased the two men from
Fountain Valley through Huntington
Beach and co.ta Mesa before corilering
them In the hospital parking lol
'!be four officers fired shotgun bluts
into the car when the two men made
some furtive ?Mvemenb after being
ordered to freeze.
F"""P•J
MEXICAN. • •
been no cases of mass Sex murders.
The basis of the prison prosraln ls that
a man la not lmpriJooed for pwtlabment,
but for rebabUltatlon, "so they oan live
again in society."
"It is humane treatment for a man who
made a mistake, not pwt.ishment or
revenge," he said.
Asked about women's liberation in his
country, de la Vega said "well, in }.tex-
ico, we do not have this."
"Oh, maybe 15 or 20 ladies have lunch
and talk and talk and talk," he quipped.
He said the women of Mexico have "all
the possibilities a man has.
"l don't really believe in that move-
ment." He said there are women
senators and high government officials
he desribed them as "intellectuals want-
ing to do their work.''
A frequent traveler to the United
States, de la Vega said he personaUy felt
that the two counlries were drawing
closer together.
"Every day, the relationship between
the two countries is better and better,"
he said.
He said the two oe.iihbors exhibited
mutual respect for each other, and the
good neighbor feeling was internaUonally
imPortant.
"We can be an example for the whole
world," be said.
Bed Tax Hassle
Prostitute Refuses t-0 Pay Demands
MULHOUSE, France (AP) -A pro ..
stitute who suggested that her profession
be laxed has had her wish granted: she
has been slapped with a demand for
$37 ,500 in back taxes.
"I won ·t pay," Jacqueline Trappler
told newsmen today. "I didn't make all
that much money anyway, these last four
years."
Mrs. Trappler brought attention to
herself recen Uy be demanding that the
government reopen French brothels. She
has been supported by Marthe Richard,
the former Paris city councillor who
sponsored the closure Jaw In 1946.
Under present law, prostitution ls
egal, but procuring and operating
brothels are subject to severe prison
terms.
Mrs. Trappter, a medlum-siud bru·
ntt who looks about 40, seekt "en:is
center3" in which prositutes could prac-
tice their trade wtlhout needing the pro-
tection of a procurer.
Under such an arrangement, she said,
the government could perhaps levy a uix
to pay the costs.
The letter she got from the tax In-
spector put her income since 1969 at an
estimated 460,000 francs, or about
$115,000. Taxes were estimated at
$37,500.
"I don't know on what basis they have
figured this out," Mrs . Trappler said.
The French Finance Ministry has
several times been reported to be stud-
dyinl ways of taxing prostitutes but has
not come up with an enforteable system.
1'-1rs. Richard's turnaround on the
brothel question is motivated by the need
for women to be truly liberated, she
says.
"The law which carries my name I!
out ol date," she said in a recent radio
interview. "J struggled all my Ufe not
against prostitution but for the liberation
of women. And in 1973 a woman'•
freedom requires that she be allowed to
do whatever she likes with her body.n ·
Mrs. Trappler's dellllllds for better
working conditions seem to have annoyed
at least Coor Mulhouse J)l'Ollltutes. They
spotted Mrs. Trappler In a core Wednu-
day night and descended on her.
"There Is the one who wants to gild
herself at oor ex-." she quoted the
'Mlmen u sayin.:.
"Then they v•bbed me by the arms
and two ol them slipped and ocratched
me," Mrs. Trapp I er recounted.
Out of prolesalonal aolldartty, she did
not press charges. I
. ' ..
' ' ' OtllY "" ., ... ~ l
TRW DATA COLLECTION ROOM IN CAPISTRANO VALLEY RECORDS DETAILS DURING FIRING {
Four Rocket Engine~ Designed for U.S. Space Shuttle Shook the Hill s for Miles • \
Capistrano Valley .Shakes
In Rocket Engine Testing
By JAN WORTH
CH tllt °"" ..... 119"
With a roar that sl>ook the deserted
C&plstrano Valley hills for miles around,
four rocket engines designed for the U.S.
apace shuttle program were test fired
Thur>day.
Sleepy Hollow
Oil Oieck Set
By Technicians
TecbniciaM of San Diego Regional
Water Quality Control Board will be in
Lasuna, Beach llfonday to begin an in-
ve1Ug1Uoo ol SUJpected greue and oil on
sandy strands atong Sleepy Hollow.
Ladln Delaney, ...Uor l"ter quality
engineer, today confirmed ,\bat a ,,.mple
ol meal-like matter forwarded to his of-
fice ill May contaiDed Jrt11U and oil.
"It's 'virtually l!nP*lbl!! to tell the
source ol the material,'' aald Delaney,
"without Instituting a surveillance p~
gram."
"Since there was a high concentration
of grease and oil in the sample, it
behooves us to look," he added.
The sample was collected by Bruce
Hopping or the KaiOOI Kagathoo Foun-
dation between Cleo Street Beach and
Sleepy Hollow Beach.
Hopping said he has seen the substance
on the beach from time to lime over the
past several years.
The Orange County Health Department
environmental health division, which
monitors water quality or all Orange
County beaches, will watch for the
greasy substance and forward findings to
the water quality control boo.rd staff,
Delaney noted.
Some 60 reporters, scienti.!:ts, and
engineers watched the test on the ground
of TR\Y, Inc., between San Juan
Capistrano and San Clemente.
TRW l! winding up analyses of the 2IJO.
pound machine called an o r b i t a I
maneuvering engine (OME:) before sub-
mitting a bid to NASA in October.
In a small, computer-filled control
room, data on 100 dllferent parameters
of the test firings poured in. TRW
employes inside said it can take years lo
analyu aJJ the information from one test.
The $2 million project has been in the
works two years. The engine is unique in
that unlike much or the exi!ting space
, equipment, it is designed to be u.sed on as
many as 100 missions.
The OME's duties include inserting the
space shuttle into orbit, maintaining or
modifying that orbit, and getting the
shuttle out of orbit for return to earth.
To do thiis, the engine is designed to
,):>um for adjustments of four to 300
seconds with an ability to re-fire tWQ or
three seconds after the last fu'lng.
At the test Thursday, the engine w?s
fired four times in a sequence of 12
seconds on, eight off, four on, 12 off,
eight on, 40 off, and 30 on.
The engine used liquid fuel called
monomethyt hydrozene providing 6,000
pounds of thrust.
Gerard ,V. Elverum, chief of the
C.1pistiano Valley operations and
manager of energy systems operations.in
the TRW Redondo Beach plant , said cool-
ing the engine has been the biggest
technical problem so far.
When it fires, the engine registers 1,600
degrees inside and aio to 300 degrees
outside.
Chief competitors for the bid are Bell
Laboratories and Aerojet.
Elverum said the companies will be
notified by late December.
I
Rei11.ecke Says ' • ' .
State Needs J • I
' Oivn, Satellite 1 1
J
Arter v.'atching a test firing of a spaC'I
shuttle rocket engine Thursday tQ
Capistrano, California U . Gov. E4
Reinecke said he would Jike to see ~~a
Golden Bear satellite just for the state qj'
Calilomia." j
"It could be used for resource manage.
ment. communications, educationa l Ti
and all kinds of planning," he said. ;
Reinecke, an engineer by tralnin'
toured the test grounds of TRW, Inci
with about 60 reporters, scientisU, an'
t"ngineers. \
He praised TR\V for its "diver-st
achievements" and participation in t~
space program . i.
"The space shuttle program is as mtd
a breakthrough as we've seen in anJ
olhet level of technology," he said. "Ajlr
plications and application research fro~
the space program are \\'hat will keei
the stn.itt!e probam alive.'' .: , 4>~ p boostet for aerospace ruear1
Reinecke said he believes "There is not
~·here else in the world where so mani
resources and talent are available for th4
space program as in California. ~
"Continuing the aerospace prograrf
here means not only jobs, but gives uC
tbe edge that we have over the nst oa
the world ," Reinecke said. :
Discussing the aerospace slump of thl
late 1960s, Reinecke said he believes pea:
pie "turned against aerospace becaus(
the industry itself forgot to tell the pe<e
pie what aerospace meant to art
Americans. •
"It got too far ahead or the people ~
and didn't lake the time to let the peopli
catch up . . . In Jess than IP yearsj
aerospace went from the most respectet.
Industry in our country to an lndustz1
facing serious decline and criUclsm o(
heavy spending." :
!
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• Saddleliaek
EDITION
VOL 66, NO. 235, S SECTIONS, 74 PAGES
r::o '""'"'
-<CW.MU(IAI, BE M ..
~ oPl"ISMCf
~ Ctl\ltC"
TURTLE ROCK VILLAGE PLAN, ENVIRONMENTAL IMPACTS FACE HEARING
Access, Density vs. 35 Percent Open Space and Added 11,000 Residents on 1,000 Acres S..n .~ l11uea
Prostitut.e Hit
JJ'itli 1Ji15 lJill
for lJack T a~e~
MULHOUSE, France (AP) - A pros-
aUtute who suggested that her profeS81on
be taxed has had her wish granted: she
hes been slapped with a demand for
'31 ,500 in back taxei.
"1 won't pay." Jacqueline Trappler
told newsmen today. "I didn't make all
ttiat much money anyway, these last four
yiats ... '
Mrs. Trappler brought attention to
htne1f r~ntly be demanding that the
aovemment reopen French brothels. She
bas been supported by Marthe_ Richard,
the former Paris city CQU11cillor who
sponsored the closure law io 1946. . .
Under present , law, prostitution . IS
legal, but pnlC111ing and oper~hng
brothels are subject to severe pnson
terms. . · Mn. Trappler, a medium-sized" bru-
net who looks about 40, &eeks eros
centers" in which prositutes could prac-
tk:e lheir trade without needing the pro-
tlction of a procurer. . ),Under such an arrangement, she said,
the government could perhaps levy a tax
t6 Day the costs. . 'The letter she got f~m the tax in-
ipector put her income since 1969 a~ an
ejtimated 4e0 ooo francs, or about
,115,ooo. Tax:S were estimated at
!fl ,500. . he ha "I don't know on what basis t ~ ve
flgUred this out," Mrs. Trapp!~ said.
The French Finance Ministry has
several llJnes been reported to be stud-
dying ways of tlllng prostitutes but has
not come up with an enforceable system .
Mrs. Richard's turnaround on the
brothel question is motivated by tbe need ~or! women to be truly liberated, she
'":\"'!'he law which carries my name is
cut ol date," ahe said in a recen~ radio
Interview. "I itruggl~ all my life !"'t
.. alnsl pnistttution but !or th~ UbOratJ~n
<ii wo~. And In ms a woman s
freedom feQulres "that she be allowed to
do 'whatever Ille likex with he~ body." MN. Trappler's dema001 for better
"fO!'king condiUons seem to have annoyed
at least lour Mulhouse prostllUtes. They
apotted Mn. T,rappler In a cafe Wednes-
4'Y night and descended on her. .
"There Is the one who wants to gild
tiersell at our expense," she quoted the
• (See PROSTITIJTE, Page I) •
Tu11le Rock Village Zone
Projections to ~t. ~mdy
• Yet .another set of numben comparing
p....e;li Turtle Rock Village zoning pro-
jectlolis with those chaltod In a:revi..ect
pl&n "11i be dl!Cllllied imlclil by Irvine
Planning CommlHioners.
City officials have recommended ap-
proval of the enviroomentat impact study
during a 7:30 public hearing at Universi-
ty High SChool.
City Planners, however, are !1.lggesting
the hearing be contlnued pending final
recommendatioos by the city's hillslde
study committee which haSD't finished its
deliberations ol lbe ameded Irvine Com-
pany development plan.
Wednesday, Commissioner Frank Hunl
cballenged Irvine Company population
and density data. He argues the in-
creases are more than are needed to
justify the addition of 321 acres of un-
developed open space -35 pen:eot of the
1,400 acre village.
Irvine Company data is contained in
the planned community woe text.
Such "texts" with maps become law
when the city council utimately adopts
them, following plaMing commission . .
hearing•... ..M
U a~ Hi'~. tlie Irvine =~f=l1.e"! than 4,501
'I'hlt II I··-... .w:::!'nrio acre Tuitle , IUll iIIOwl (the city
added 3U acres to the Village).
If all unit& """ to be, built, Turtle
Rock's populatioll, mulmum would be
15,156 -an tna:o-of. 4.335 people over
tbooe who Would be served by the max·
imum 3,'51 dwe1lia& units allowed Ill the
present mlO piaa.."
Density comporbom between tbe new,
lll'ger 1,4IJO.aal '!illage and tbe old,
1,100..cre rillap -that the new plan
resulll Ill 3.ll units per a..... Tbe old
plan .-1ec1· ID 0 1.17 unlll per acre,
duta prepared by city plaoniq stall In-
dicates. • .
Population per-acre under the new plan
would be 10.8 compared to U peroons
pe.· acre If tbe old plan Is retained.
Turtle Rock's .new h<mel are to be
clliSlered· in !Olds of. the bllla· but ol ~t.
They are expectecf lo ranee In <Oii from
$50,000 to as hlllb, as ~125,000.
·Coast 'Slaughter Alky'
Claiming More Victi~
By JOHN VALTERZA
Of .... ~IY P"9t llefl'
The grim nickname of "Slaughter
Alley" once applied to the deadly stretch
of highway between San Clemente ind
Oceaiislde ls being resumcted by ,tbe
Calirornla Rigbway Patrol beciuae 61 a
major Increase of fataliUes in' reqent
months.
Patrol spokesmen from Oceanelde "81d
that the rate 0£..lraffic deaths on the now·
modern stretch of freeway 1n the .area
through camp P.,idleton has Jumped rr
percent for the flr9t few six months of
this year , compared to the same period
in 1m.
The CPR plans to beef up patrols along
tbe sti'etCb·to an·e!lort to rdlco the ·ac-c\dent ri\e1 and .. ..,, new unltrwtll be
~ n ~ =· . A!~. CH_I> egna !'. ... .
· llesidel the extra patrnls, the CllP baa
convlnc!ed the state Department of.
Tranaporlftlon to examine the deadlY
stretch lo;liefumlhe 11 cbli~ Could be
ma!fe . io °'° ~way In the blterext o! safety. •
'11t's very . reminiscent of t h e
nlghlmarbb days o/..the past," Helsel
said. · .
The madway a tlecade ago bore the
(See,FAT.u.n'IES; Pare I)
. '
\.
Today's Fl•••
N.Y. Stoeks
TEN CENTS
Marine Airports'
et Use Weighed
By JORN ZAU.ER
Of ttll D .. h' Piltt St•"
The U.S. Marine Corps has hi<W a con·
sultant to find out If commercial jet !!Se
at El Toro and Camp Pendleton is feasi·
hie, Morine oflicials disclosed today.
And a prelimlnary conclusion Is that ii
would be "technically possible" to build
an "attractive jetport" ·at Ca m p
Pend!e_ton, but it would "cause ir-
reversible ecological impact" on the
cqaatllne and would be "very expensive."
The study, conducted by Stan!ord
Research Institute (SRI) of Menlo Park
has not yet reached any coocl~
about posslble joint use of · the Marine
Corps Air Statkln at El Toro, acoording
'W mi't Do It
Again,'' Cries
Dr. Hartelius
By TOM BARLEY
Of ..... DINW' P"' Steff
LOS ANGELES -Fighting back tears,
a contrite Dr. Ebbe llartelius today prom-
ised the three physicians who ""' his
judges: "I will never let anything like
this ·happen again. ..
"It was" the .greatest mistike I ever
tiaa;ele1"." tbe Dini~ doctor almo5t
~-In an obviou,1 reference. to bis
-.if.U-wllll bltlode 'Reba Yaugbn,.!l, of"'e.il' ....... 4 ' ' • • . . ... , '·•1-tllirt ..... ;, U:-~:l!Jil~l!Nril;"' 1,1~(' Eninfuen coinmlttee which must iul•
c•rbll &llil*'« ln8ocence on dlargeo ol
moral turpilode a¢ unprofessional con· ...:.. _.. •. ; ~ ...... i... .. "l!l1 '-·lfu .~ MY~...,....,... and ' l owe. ••tl!dn5 to -li<t -~ my
!llltlly al this UlDt," he IDld tl!e com-
mittee.
Hartelius, ~l, who practices In tbe
Harbor Area and mates bis home in El
Toro, weut to the witness st>md Wednes-
day in a new bid . by both sides to
reach an agreement that would end tbe
..... that bas -before medical el·
aminers (or two ye.an.
An earlier -Mbat would have
put llarlellus . on· jlvt years probation
wblle Co.Wcierably' restricting bis use of certaln ·~us 'clnlgs was rejected by
the three surviving memberl of the
original panel o! five doctors.
Harteliux . bas .been examined by
defenae 1ttorney Matthew Kurilich, but
now facts cron1esamination by deQuty
atton>e1• general Mark).Ovm and Rbliert
Mukai. •• .
\Kurillcb .eerller·toolt·Hartelius step by
step JbloaCb alf H ~tions filed by
tbe _llate ipltist 'tl!e l'il•er-hl!ired pbysi· clan . Ill/I Obtained firm ond vehement
deniall .~ bis cUmt oo every count.
llartellUI denied that be had ad·
mlalstmd Dm>enll .ta Mrs . Vaughn and
the late Wanda Melendroz, 29, o! Costa
-.... .....,,. of. inducing and enhanc-
ing oexuaJ relatkmblps with both
womm. .
Hartellus testified that tbe only oc-
casMJlll Mrs. VaUJbn got Demerol from
him wu for the relief of pain created by
''an ,indUIU'ial-injur)'. '' He< ldmltted · moving Into her Wilson
sir-i-)>ome but be .repeatedly denied
that Iii )!lid ever-ldcke<I. and beaten her.
HarteUua blame4 Mn. Viqgbn !or the !Ul!l~ual llionages of D e m e r o I
reported by • state llo!ird. of Narcotics
EnfGl'\WlllUt· lnveot!Pti>i who audited
t11e-p1iy11ctaii'1 'c1rug i:econls to 1969.
He • accused .. bis• fOrmer mistress of
matine out,•ictt.<:k for'$2,000 about that
Ume 8Dd forging• bis name to tbe docu·
ment. And llartelius branded as "all
lits" Mn .• Vauabn's testimooy that he
twice performed abortions on her while
(See IWITELIUS, Pate I)
to H.B. Wilder, the man in charge of the
study for SRI.
Civilian use at either base could relieve
jet traffic at Orange County A.lrport and
many officials are pushing that approach
as an altemaUve to an expansion of. the
county air facility.
Tbe proposal also has prompted strong
opppsition from some communities.
'The Investigation of possible civilian
use is part of an overall study under way
since January, which Is designed to
determine Marine Corps needs through
1994 at the six Marine bases in Southern
California.
Marine Corps spokesmen today reaf-
firmed that the corps is still opposed to
civilian commercial use at either El Toro
or Camp Pendleton.
'HEA. J'ENLY' ACT
MAKES BELIEVERS
ROLAND, Iowa (AP) -If there were
any nonbelievers in this small central
Iowa ,communlty, there aren't any more.
Wednesday night, a loud clap of
thunder shook the small town of 800 and
evi~tly triggered the chimes of Salem
Lu\heran Church.
The hymn "How Great Thou Art" rang
through "tbe town.
Supervisors OK
Service Station
J • t~ ... 'C I ; v' • i ' .,IJ11f ''Ul . ICJO
All ov~t8y .zoriliig which wiU restrict
the number of service stalions in Mission
YlQ to II WU vlrtuallr -ved by the BooH d SUperiloon WedaesdOy. 'nit "8mi propooal1 were lent blck lo
thlr PIMolng C«nmiss!IXI with orders to
return if in one weet with one cbailge
from the commiSsioo's formula.
The change will allqw an AUontic
Richfield station and car wash at
Marguerite Parkway and Le Paz Road in
place of a service station alone.
A ~ar station in connection with a
shoppinj center at the same location was
elil'hlnated to PrOvide for tbe·car wash.
Altbouib the 'area as now developed is
limlted to 18 stations, more may he ad·
ded later111p to !I oo roadways yet to be
constructl!d, Van SteVens of the Mission
Viejo Co. said. He indicated'the company
"'ould apply for the additional facilities
later.
The supervisors substituted the station
with a car wash !or a regu1ar station
because of the wis~ of residents of the
area. !ft will be the only car wash In
Miss(on Viejo.
Bob Taylor, representing AUantic
Rlcbli<ld, said constructiOll would.begin
immediately on the car wash and station
which he said wouJd occupy 3,100 more
square feet than an ordinary staUon.
He promised a modem, quiet car wash.
Supervl.Or Ralph Diedrich wanted the
board to allow three staUons at
Marguerite and La Paz and eliminate
another proPQSed station somewhere 011
land still owned by the Mission Viejo Co.
He voted against the proposition for that
reason.
Resolution Adopted
HONOLULU (AP) -Delegates to the
American Legion nation~ convention
here adopted a resolution Wednesday de-
nouncing "persons for their actions and
ror the.Ir verbal attacks upon our
prisoners of war." The measure was
adopted after an unsuccessful attempt to
criticize actress Jane Fonda by name for
her actions and statements against the
ex-prisoners.
Ho\vever , spokesmen said that the in--
dependent outside agency has been asked
to make an objective study and to come
to ils own conclusions.
"The proposals for civilian use have
been 1nade and they should be taken into
account in any long range planning for
the two bases," Wilder said.
"It's one thing when the Marines stand
up every week and say there shouldn't be
any civilian use," added Lt. Col. Ed.
Janz, community liaison officer at El
Toro. '
"But it \vould be another thing ii some-
one on the outside who is widely
respected for independence would come
to the same conclusion."
The SRI study took as its starting point
(See JET USE, Page I)
Mission · Viejo
Roadblocks to
Come Down
By JACK BROBACK
Of ,... 0.1,,, ,-1191 SltH
Two roadblocks in Mission Viejo will be
eliminated and a third modified in
recommendations adopted by a special
community committee.
The committee, appointed b y
Supervisor Ronald Caspen met twice
and finaUy approv.ed plans for reaolving
the controversial roadbloq.s.
Tbe County Road Department, bowing
to the demands of restdeaU ol three
•treets who said they were being ....i u
a li>eedway; blocked -eitrance from
Jeronimo Road to Cordillera Drive car .
ranza Drive and Montilla Lane. '
The action was taken after two pUbliC
hearings in which all those attending favored the move. ·
• But no sooner bad the roadblocks been
installed than Iii even larger group of
residents of the area protested vlgOt'OU!-
ly. They piclreled the intersectiool and
even threatened a recall against Caspers
The interim sol utions to be proposed ~ ~he Board of Supervisors next Tuesday
Include:
-~blish . a four-way stop a t
eort;illera Drive and Jeronimo Road iQ..
cludmg "Stop. Ahead" signing and a
Dashing yellow light.
-Effective Sept. IO for the reopening
of ~ool, modify the barrier on
Cordillera Drive to permit traffic to exit
from Cordillera onio Jeronimo but pro. ~ibit traffic from the north entering. This
is to accommodate school buses and cars -
transPorttng students to and from the
Cordillera Elementary School.
-Effective Sept. 10 remove the barrier
from Carranza Drive and install 25 miles
per hour speed zone signing and pave-.
ment stencils on Carranza.
-Install crosswalks on Jeronimo Road
at. Montilla Lane and on Jeronimo at Carranza Drive.
-Modify the signal at La Paz Road
and Muirlands Boulevard to allow left
turn traffic.
-Establish a four-way stop at the in-
te~ection of Alicia Parkway with
Mwrlands Boulevard and with Jeronimo
Road.
-Establish a four-way stop at the in-
tersection of Marguerite Parkway with
La Paz Road and with Jeronimo Road.
-AcceJerate· the construction o f
Jeronimo between Clierry Avenue and
Los Alisos Boulevard.
The special committee wlll meet agaio
on Sept. 25 to review data and new traf-
(See BLOCKS, Page Z)
Orange Coast
Weadler
Wayward lJus
' Parks in. Cafe
They blamed the new crush of traffic
brought on by the racing season at Del
Mar as well as ever-Increasing vacation
traffic as two factors in lhe rapid in-
crease.
CHP spokesmen said that durloi the
first six months of. this year eight
pcl'DI! died along the ! .. mile stretch of
freeway, compared to only one the year
before. During tbe same period 226 ao-
cidents were reported on the stretch.
Rail Crossing Bids Eyed The weather1s cooling of!, but it'll
still be nice along the Orange
Coast Friday. Highs of 68 at the
beaches will rise to 80 Inland.
•
SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) -A wayward
\!ii• bunt lllnlul!h a plate glaSI window ¥ Vesuvlo ca!e ln the North Btach night
oJub dl1trlct. smashlne a sign reading
''llooths !or topless lady psyclilatrlstl."
The driver of the Munlclpol Rallways
)!!ls hld let hi• p31sengcrs out moments 'lltrore because 'his air brakes weren1t
\r/orklng.
Bartender Hal 111.unes said his patrons ,..,..,•t too Clll1COJ'lled once Ibey were
Mire the bul wasn't coming all lbe way in
~car..
~"""°'le •topped drlnkln1 !or six ~ 1t least ," he said.
Officers said that yet anotbet !octM
this year also has contributed
slgnificanUy to the death totals.
Illegal ali<!IS being dumped !rom
smugglers' cars ahead o! the San Onofre
.Border Patrol Checl<polnt have caused
the major new probfem.
Earlier in the year four persons died In
two incidents related directly to alien
smuggling.
All were strock by fast-moving cart a
few miles downcoast ol the roadblock,
and all had been trying to run acrosa lbe
busy roadway to .,alk lllN'th.
1
.
The city of Irvllla If 1"1'1"91 1 bid !or
state !uncling of. Ill leut -nllorad
srade .. l'Watlon' bi time for October
hearlnp by tho, llate Publlc Utilities Commlailoo. '
BIOllt Mudwnr.clty public -U direc-
tor, .. Id loday, ·:1 am WOrtlnf with
engineers beMDns """1 °" ~s for prlortty lll'8n-" on•oome oort of
.. paratlon ol car and train tnlflc.'' n.. atate PUC de!Bmlnoo !lri!>rltfu
for opondilar ol • ile nilUlon calllomla !lllhWlY Commlloloo.twid. . hiof"1o lncarpontlon of. tho new clty, Mftdlow .... the c.mey Road Deport.
;-
ment hid pl1n1 to tap that !und !or •
llridp carrytoi CU!vtr Drive molarlsta ever llit liuta Fe RallnJad tracU In ..,..
tral Irvine, •
"''A\ thla,tlme It -CUiver D\'l•e would -continue to be the city's top priori-
ty, but I hope to lllve some engineering
CQ11Jultanl determlJ1C) the o v e r a 11
prlorltlef •for Crld• s e P·l rat l•o n s ,_'
Muchow said.
Aller talu with several e..,inetrbtg
firms, Mucbow said, be wUI bring a
IP<Clllc P'til pl to tbe city council.
Predae plans ml/It be Mlhmllted to tbe
tale PUC for comlderatlon.
~t preaent tbere are lour clty street
'
and train crosslrtp -Harvard Avenue,
<;ulver; Jeflrey Road and Sand Canyon
Avenue.
Sllice tbe city Incorporated, there Ills
been one train-car fatality. A bakery
truck was slnlck by a passenger train at
the Jeffrey Rood crossing. Since then,
tj)e city Ills begun a Jelfrey Road wldcn-
log .Pll>Jeol which lncl~des upgraded
warning s:lgnal,.
The PUC hearings on 1971 grade
sepoiaticm 11penc1Jna.hegln Oct. t8 In Los
Anples. Later hearing• are set for Oct.
2S and 2$ In San Francisco.
Qfy nquesta must be filed by Sept. 21
to be considered !or tbe prlortUea list
•
' '
INSWE TODAY
Voluptuow, attractive Kathy
Keeton ii one of tile whtel..s driv-
ing a tteto entrv tnto tht fUld
of sophisticated st:c magazine1.
Her baby Is Vioo, a journal f or
womtti. See storu Page 11.
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•
I
I
2 DAIL< PILO(
'
IS Thursday, A119ust 23, 1973
Officer Ch<i)ked
Krishna Member
-Held • Ill
Wi.guna Beach police and an Orange
County marshal arreslcd two members
of the Hare Krishna cult in LagW1a
Beach WNinesday after a detective was
allegedly attack~ during the service or
an arrest warrant at the group's temple.
Ooulll:i " C. Russell, 21, o{ 641 Ramona
Ave., "'as L"Oked on suspicion of assault
on a poLicc c.fficer. and interfering with
an orncer 1n the line of duty.
Brian \\'. Nash. 19, also of 641 Ramona
Ave .. was booked only on the charge of
in1crfering with an of£iccr.
Court Gives
N iguel Units
Green Lig ht
Construction appears to be cleared to-
day for the controversial Laguna Niguel
Avco project, but ofticials of the de velop-
ment company are belng cautious about
a state Supreme Court deci!ion giving a
green light to the troubled development.
Tbe court ruling, Issued Wednesday,
declares that Coasta1 l.one Conservation
Act permits are not required if substan·
tia1 construction had begun before Feb. 1.
1973.
Avco's oceanvlew housing projects on
both sides of Pacific Coast Highway were
stopped earlier this yea r by action of the
South Coast Regional Zone Conservation
Commission. The firm was refused a
permit
. "We haven't had the opixirtunity to
review and digest the decision. We are
not going to second-guess it and we have
no comment at this time," Gene White,
Avco director o[ community relations
said this morning.
The disputed Avco project consists of
72 acres of condominiums and other
developments which ori ginally called for
seve n·story high·rise bui1dings.
Elsewhere along the Orange County
coast, the 4 to 3 court decision is ex-
pected to have Jittle impact.
In Huntington Beach. a controversial
tract in the Huntington Harbour Area
had already been approved by the com-
mission. City sources say the Coastal
Conservation Act, which requires a
permit for any construction within 1,000
feet of tbe coast, did not impede any ma-
jor projects.
ln Newport Beach, Jim Hewicker,
, assistant community development direc-
tor, said he did not know or any projects
that would be cleared by the dec ision. He
added that none had been blocked by the
commission and that pennits had ~
issued for several projects. '
Laguna Beach and San Clemente Will
also remain unaffected by the Supreme
Court decision, wh ich was won by See the
Sea Ltd. in San Diego.
The ruling, final in 30 days. means that
the San Diego developer will be able lo
proceed with work on a 72·unit con-
dominium on the San Diego waterfront.
With the decision, the court reconciled
conflicting interpretations of two sections
of the act. One required a permit for any
development on the coast alter Feb. l.
The other exempted persons who had a
vested right before the act became ef.
fecli ve.
The question was whether a developer
who began building between Nov. 8. when
the state initiative took eficct, and Feb. 1
had such a vested right.
The law states that a person had such
a right i£ he had "in good faith and in
reliance uµon the building permit.
diligently comm<!nced construction and
performed slibstantial work on the
development." The court noted that the legislature in
April had amended the law so that the
effective date for vesting of these rights
was Nov. 8.
The majority held that the law had not
intended to provide a moratorium on
construction between Nov. 8 and Feb. 1
and to requ ire a perm it would have had
such an effect .
OU.NGI COAST 11
DAILY PILOT
Tl'le Or•nllS Co.tit o .. tL Y PILOT, wilt! wtilc:ll
It c.,.,.,bl...-1 !tit NIWI·"'"'• It publ!!.lled 1PV
!fie O••nv• Co.tit PubU•nl"ll Cllrr!P9"'· s.p,.
••k .OillD"I ~·· 1>UOU1nt11, Mond,ty llll'Ollllll
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H...,tl'19lot0 Btt<nl"OUM•ln Vt lltY, l•gun•
lhe<fl. lrwl1>t/5Wdlfbeck I nd S111 ClelTWllttl
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edition II OllD!<\l'IM Stl11r<1111 ~not ""41~.
Tiit Pflllclotl 1>110h!.lll"'11 planl ii 11 llO WM!
D•r 111· .. t. C111t1 Mt .. , C•ln.,.nl•, tH»..
Robert N, W11cl
Prnklft!t •NI Puo111ntr
J1c~ R. C urler
Viol ~t'Hidll'I -Gtntrl1 Ml.,.ltt'"
Tliom11 Kttwil
El•lo•
Ttiorn•t A, Mur pll•n1
Ml<'lfOlfto El•!or
Cfri•~•• H. Lo oi ltich1rd P. Nill Atallt1llf M-gl"' Ellto•t
Offlc ..
CMll MMI! ,,. W11t l•r Srrttt
N.wport tttdl! :tW H1WP1rl 80\lllwlrl
t.~ l•ctH tn "Cll"ttl .,_
Hwi#n9tOll lwefl: 11111 BtKn &eulrv .. 1
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s.c.._..A • ..,_ ..... :
Assault
Both men were taken to South Orange
Cc1..nty Judicial District C.Ourt In Laguna
Niguel for arraignment on the misde-
meanor charges today.
Detective Sgt Nell Purcell said that as
Del«:tive Tony Smith and Deputy
Marshal Dick RJngler attempted to
search the llare Kri shna Temple for a
1emaie oan1ed In a misdemeanor war-
rant, Russell allegedly grabbed Smith
with a chokehold around the neck.
Marshal Rlngler forcibly pulled the
costume..clad Russell from the Laguna
Beach officer and placed the cult
member wider arrest. Smith was unin·
iured.
The two officers had initially been
ordered to remove their shoes before
entering the cult temple.
Both officers declined to observe the
rtllgious ritual, stating they were on of-
ficial -not spiritual -business and in-
tended to search all areas where the
fugitive might be hiding, fully-shod .
'11le W.rl named in the warrant was not
fotmd, although several females did flee
as the officers attempted to search the
premises.
Nash was arrested as he allegedly in-
terfered with officers outside the temple
residence.
He allegedly pestered the lawmen and
refused to leave the area where bls saf.
fro.n·robed .~llecgue . was being detained
while awaiting a ride to jail, despite
repeated orders lo leave.
A Hare Krishna attorney questioned
police motives in searching the residence
for the warrant suspect and asked why
no attemp t bad been made to telephone
the cult headquarters and seek voluntary
compliance with her surrender on the
warrant.
Prior to serving the warrant, a letter
had gone to the headquarters advising
them of the w~rant and requesting a
voluntary turn-m, howi'ver it got no
response, Sgt Purcell 'said.
Police Shoot
Valley Man
In Attack
By JOANNE REYNOLDS
Of tflt Dlll'f fll .. t St1H
A Fountain Vaney man, w1J<> poli ce
alleged was lhrowing butcher knives at
them, was shot in the stotnllcb by
pctrolmen early this morning.
Harold Eugene Lucas, 47, of 18623 San ~{arcus St. was booked into Orange
County Jail on charges of attempted
murder.
Police Capt. Les Rowland described
Lucas' wounds as superficial after the
man was treated and released for book·
ing from the Orange County Medical
Center.
Rowland said Lucas was shot at ]east
twice by a contingent of four officers
after the man allegedly refused to drop
one knife he was about to throw after
already heaving one al the officers.
Sergeants Fred Nourse and Lewis
Barlow and Officers: Lee Pepka and
IA>nald Anderson were called to the
Lucas home shortly afler midnight by
a f!eighbor who complained of a Joud
disturbance.
The four men \Vere met at the door by
Lucas viho reµortedly refused to talk to
any of the Policemen. According to the
police repart, Lucas "proceeded to throw
butcher knives at the officers."
Rowland said the offi cers opened fire
on the suspect when he continued tossing
knives at them after t~y had ordered
him to stop.
None of the officers was injured, police
reported.
This morning's shootln~ marks the
third shooting incident involving Foun-
tain Valley police since April.
Three of tOOse shootings have resulted
in deaths.
In April Miguel Angel Estrada Ron-
quillo, 20, of Santa Ana , was shot to
death in Fountain Valley by Officer
Timothy Miller of the Westminster
Police Department.
Marine Killed
Near P endleton
A 22-year-old Marine was stabbed to
death \Vednesday night In a parking lot
adjacent to Building 2147 in the Del Mar
area of Camp Pendleton near Oceanside.
Dead on arrival at the Naval Hospital
at 10:45 p.m. was Lan~e Corporal James
~1. Quarles A-Company Third Amphib-
ian tractor battalion. No suspects have
been found.
Quarles is survived by tus widow,
Willa, of jJ5 Greenbriar, Oceanside.
Camp Pendleton authorities said no
further Information concerning the ln·
cidenL was available.
From Page l
PROSTITUTE • •
women as sayin6.
''Then they grabbed me by the anns
and two of them slapped and scratched
me." ~1.rs. 'J'rftppler recounted.
Out of proresslonal solidarity, sbe did
not press charges.
..
~tr .... lteff ,_,.
...
f'ron1P-fel
J ET USE .••
• the level of operatlono the Marine Corpe
1ay1 it needs at the two bases over the
next ~ years, Col. Jam said.
Investigators will then determine wttai.
lf any, level of dvlllan 1J1e cl ~ tW:. ba~ is compatible with the expec1<ii
level OJ military use. :
&aSed on these assuinptions Wildet
said 'be Mi tentatively concluded that:~
"From a technical engineering stancJ.
point, It ls possible to construct an a\.
lractive civilian airport on the .eaq,
Pendleton base. l
"But that is the only advantage ~ ' . found. It would be very costly, acce•
would be difficult, heavy jet traffh: woulJ
have an irreversible effect on the coastN
\l.'ildlife Inside the base and it would hav;
an adverse effect on military oper(·
lions.'' •
Wilder said that studies of possib\t
,oint use of El Toro are just beginning. ~
He said the study would be based <11
two possible levels of commercial jet usj
-600,000 passenger-nights: per year ~
1975 and 6.? million paS!enger flighll i11
1985. . . ;
Both figures were suggested lli a inf:
study done by W!Ulam Pe~ anll
Associates of Corona. del Mar for tht
Southern Callfomia Association o1
Governments ($GAG). :·
The current level of operations 3).
TRW DATA COLLECTION ROOM IN CAPISTRANO VALLEY RECORDS DETAILS DURING FIRING
Four Rocket Engines Designed for U.S. Space Shuttle Shook the Hill s for Miles
Orange County Airport is about ~
million commercial pasatnger fliaftts per
year, according to recent statistics. \.
Col. Janz said the SRl study woul41
calcuJate the number of jet (lights per
day required to carry p r o j e c t e 0
passenger loads. It would then make l
finding whether this level of commerci._t
jet activity would be compatible with ~
expecled level of military flight oper°"
lions at El Toro. '
Capistrano Valley Shakes Rei1iec ke Says
Swte Ne eds
O·wn Satellite In · Rocket Engine Te sting
"There is a lot of mil itary activity al
thiJ base tbat isn't found at most com.
mercial airports," Col. Jam saKt. "W~
fly close ronnations, practice aircraft
take offs and landings among many othet
things. ~ By JAN WORTH
Of ttll Dllrr ~Ult lll ff
With a roar that shook the deserted
Capistrano Valley hills for miles around,
four-rocket engines designed for the U.S.
space shuttle progtam were test fired
Thursday.
Some 60 reporters, scientists, and
engineers watched the test on the ground
of TRW, Inc., between San Juan
Capistrano and San Clemente.
TRW is winding up analyses of the 20().
pound machine called an o r b i t a 1
maneuvering engine (OME) before sub-
mitting a bid to NASA in October.
In a small, computer·filled control
room, data on 100 ditferent parameters
of the test firings poured !n. TRW
employes inside sald it can take years to
analy..e all the inlonnatioo from one test.
The $1l million project ball been 1n the
works two years. The engine is unique in
that unlike much of the existing space
equipment, it is designed to be used on as
many as 100 missions.
The OME's duties include inserting the
space shuttle into orbit, mainta~ing or
modifying that orbit, and getttng the
shuttle out of orbit for return to earth.
To do this, the engine is designed to
bum for adjustments of four to 300
seconds with an ability to re-fire two or
three seconds after the last firing.
At the test Thursday, the engine was
fired four times in a sequence of 12
seconds: on, eight off, four on, 12 off,
eight on, 40 off, and 30 on.
The engine used liquid fuel called
rnonomethYI byd'°"""' providing a,000
pounds ol thrust.
From Page l
HARTELIU S . • •
the couple lived together.
Hartelius denied any responsibility for
the narcotics addiction that led to Mrs.
Vaughn'S commitment to California
Rehabilitation Center at Norco in late
1968. Hartelius reminded the panel via ·
Kurillch's questions that he had been
cleared in the Orange County Superior
Court trial of charge.!! of arson , fraud,
conspiracy and bribery .
And he blamed the publicity stemming
from those trials, a grand jury in-
dictment and the marathon state hearing
for ~ he ffitirnated at $l2tl,OOO.
Before that publicity erupted, he said,
he had a prosperous general practice in
Costa Mesa and at 2345 E. Coast
Highway; Corona del Mar. Toda y.
Hartellus stated, he is practically limited
to treating elderly patients in con-
valescent homes and making house calls
"that very few doctors care to make."
Hartelius also denied that he had brib-
ed Mrs. Vaughn's brother Jim Blevins, to
leave the state at a time when It seemed
likely that the Tennessee man would be
called as a witness against him.
Blevins testified in a Superior Court
trial that Hartelius paid him to set fire to
the Corona de\ ~1ar office and that he
helped Hartelius fake the theft of lhe
doctor's car. Hartelius was clea red in
that trial
Do11.key Se renade
Hits Sour Note
BELO HOR!ZONTE, Brazil (UPI) -A
singer of popular Brazilian music went to
the police ... king to lile criminal
charges against a local transport boS!I
who named his donkey after him.
Guido Ag .. Unho dos Reis 83ld be nam-
eU one of hls dbnkeys Toni Dlmlto "after
t hoard him sing over the radio."
Damito said I.ht incident has cau8ed
him to become the objed of ridlcul• of
the community. He said one anonymous
admirer sent him five pounds ot hay.
Gerard W. Elverum, chief of th e
Capistrano Valley operations an d
manager of energy systems operations in
the TRW Redondo Beach plant, said cool·
ing the engine has been the biggest
technical problem so far.
\Vhen it fires, the engine registers 1,600
degrees inside and aicl to 300 degrees
outside.
After watching a test firing of a space
shutUe rocket engine Thursday in
Capistrano, California U. Gov. Ed
Reinecke said he would like to see "a
Golden Bear satellite just for the state of
California ." ·
"lt could be used for resource manage-
ment, communications, educational TV,
and all kinds of planning," he said.
"It bas always been our position ttut
this type of military activity would not bf
compatible with civilian use,"M aaid. '
In effect, he said, the Marines are noW
asking an Independent consultant U t
shares that opllUon. :
Frott1P .. el
•
• • .
Chief competitors for the bid are Bell
Laboratories and Aerojet. Reinecke, an engineer by training,
toured the test grounds or TRW, Inc.,
with about 60 reporters, scientists, and
engineers.
BLOCKS ... " Elverum said the companies will be
notified by late December.
The TRW orbiting maneuver engine is 1
a direct outgrowth of the Apollo Lunar
Module Descent Engine and the Delta
launch vehicle second stage engine.
Elverum said the Capistrano plant has
been in operation 10 years and has 100
employes.
FroaP-.el
F ATALl'I'IES • • •
deadly reputation ~~of tile l!llSlive
number of deaths due to accidents.
One crash, which drew nationwide at·
tention -and sparked an emergen<:y
program to complete the freeway sooner
than planned -involved tanker trucks
and passenger cars in a grinding M:ries
of collisions in the fog. Six persons were
burned to death and several others were
gravely injured in that tragedy.
The patrol's Oceanside office compiled
the data related to the deaths and the
spokesman for that district, Dave
Henderson, said that subtle factors along
the monotonous stretch oC freeway also
could be contributing to the dea th rate.
"We have to agree that there aren't
any ramps or other features to keep a
driver alert along the stretch. It's a little
like 19 miles or nothing." be said.
He praised TR\V for its "diverse
achievements" and participation in the
space program.
"'Ibe space shutUe program is as much
a breakthrough a.s we've seen in any
other leVet or technology," be aid. "Ap-
plications and application research from
the space program are what will keep
the sb.lttle program alive." '' '·
Lo"ng a booster for aerospace research,
Reinecke said he believes '"There .is nc>-
where else in the world where so many
resources and talent are available for the
space program as in California.
"Continuing the aerospace program
here means not only jobs, but gives us
the edge that we have over the rest of
the wor1a," Reinecke said.
Discussing the aerospace slump or the
late 1960s, Reinecke said be believes peo-
ple "turned against aerospace because
the industry Itself forgo\ to tell the peo.
pie what aerospace meant to all
Amertcam.
"It !IOI too far ahead of tbe people -
and didn 't take the time to let the people
catch up . . . In less than 10 years.
aerospace went from the mmt respected
industry in our country to an industry
facing serious decline and criticism of
heavy spending."
' • •
fie counts resuJUng from the chana;es. :
The Alisslon Viejo Co. hu CO!TI}
missioned a special study of the problelO
by Raub, Be!n and Fro!\, conwltiDC
engineers. :
"This i.!I a ftne example of cooperative
efforts by both sides of the ""'d clOIUll
controversy," CUpers Pkt. :
"!have stated liefore IDd I slate llAi"I
that It is my desire to implement onlJ
what Is lhe decision of the MlAlon Vie,_
• cammunlt1<1 l1n c:oooemed •bouj Mlelt
aod -lnlorlm oolutlonl ore lafet),
orlentod yet slW recocn!ze oonveolenct
due maPy auto drivm in the area." ~
• •
Graham Suppo~.
•
Candor by Nixon I
•
LONDON (U PI) -Ev1111elllll Blllj
Graham said today President Nllolil
should hold more news conferences. '~
He also said he doubts Nlxoil or anyont
knowa or ever will know the whole trutb
about the Watergate affair. :'
"But I believe it will have a greal
cleansln& effect on the United Stale!," ht
said. ;
Graham made the comments at a new\
conference called to announce "Spree 72'~
-a Bible training event he will lead hen
next week. !
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' Huniingion Beaeh T--1.ay's Final
Fouoiain ·V .alley
. EDITllON
N.Y . Stocks
VOL 66, NO. 235, 5 SECTIONS, 74 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA THURSDAY. AUGUST 23, 1973 TEN CENTS
, .
Police Still Want . Central Park Landing Strip
Despite opposition from the parks com-
mlsslon, the Huntington Beach Police
Department still wants to land its new
$35,000 observation plane next to the cen-
tral park.
Police Chief Earle Robitaille said
\Vednesday he expects a team' from the
public works department.. to survey a
possibfe landing pad site next to the
police heliport.
"It's the most logical site if we can gel
it," RobilaiUe said. "Naturally, I don't
Jet Flights
Get Study
By Marines
By JOHN ZAIJ.ER
Of .... Dal,., ,. ... l llff
The U.S. Marine Corps has hired a coo-
aultant to find out iC commercial jet use
at El Toro and camp Pendleton is feasi-
ble, Marine officials disclosed today.
And a prtlimlnary conclusion b that it
would be "teclmlcally possible" to build
an "attractive jetport'' at Camp
Pendleton, but it would "cause ir-
reversible ecological impact'' on the
coastline and would be ''very expensive."
The study, conducted by Stanford
Research Institute (SRI) of Menlo Park
has -not yet reached any conclusions
about possible joint use of the Marine
Corps Air Station . at El Toro, according
to H.B. Wilder, the man in charge or the
study for SRI.
avWan use at either base could relieve
jet tralftc 11 or.nee County Airport and
many officials aie pushing that approach
as an altemati'ft to an apans.ion of the
county air facility.
The proposal also hM prompted strong
opposition from some conumililtiea.
concur with the parks comnilsslon
report.'' •
In June, parks commissioners took a
firm stand, saying the heliport itSeU
ought to be.moved away from the riew
220-acre central park, and in no way
should it be expanded to handJe fixe<j .
wing aircrafL
The police department has recently ac-
quired a four-passenger plane to sup-
plement its five patrol helioopters. The
plane is currently based at Orange Coun-
ty Airport, and is not yet ln use. ·
Robitaille said a landing pad could be
built for the STOL (short takeoU and land-
ing ) plane on a , plot about 71 Ieet by 1,llOlli feet.
The proposed STOL pad ;., between the
police !wing range (next to the heliport)
and the old Bruce Brothers Stone Quarry
now owned by the city.
The survey crews xnust measure the
.slte to de.tennlne how much fill dirt
... rould be needed to make It level, and
how much the project would cost.
Robitaille said a STOL port could be
graded and built in foµr to five days. The
surface only needs a gr~ covering.
.,..., ,..., . ..,, ....... The investigation of possible civilian
use is part of an overall study under way
since January. which is designed to
determine Marine Corps needs through
t9!M at the six Marine bases in Southern
California.
MOOERN UNITS RISE ON 'PACIFIC CITY' WASTELAND TRACT
Area of 20th StrHt, Pec1n Avenue O..tined for Development
Marine Corps spoke:smeri today reaf.
finned that the corps is still opposed lo
civilian Commercial use at either El Toro
or Camp Pendleton. Town Lot Plans
However, spokesmen said that the in-
dependent outside agency has been asked
to make an objective study and to come
to its own conclusions.
' '"tbe proposals for civilian use have
been made and they should be taken into
account in any long range planning for
the two bases/' Wilder said.
Bliglited Area Deve lopmen:t · See.n
"It's one thing when the Marines stand
up every week and say there shouldn't be
any civilian use," added U . Col. Ed.
Janz, community liaison officer at El
Toro.,
"But it would be another thing if some-
one on the outside who is widely
respected for independence wou1d come
to the same ,conclusion."
The SRI study took as its starting point
the level of operations the Marine Corps
says it needs at the two bases over the
next 20 years, COi. Janz said.
Investigators will then detennlne what,
If any, level or civilian use of the two
bases ls compatible with tbe expected
(See JET USE, Page !)
Search for Lost
By TERRY COVILLE
Of tlM DlllY "lhl 1110
The curbs are cracked and shattered .
\Veeds grow in the gutters and S>me
streets are covered with more dirt than
asphalt:
A strong wind blows dust across acres
of dry, vacant land , sometimes crossing
lhe path ol an old oil well or an emply,
rusted storage tank. .
It could be a ghost town. but there Isn 't
any town -just empty streets and
·undeveloped lots.
The old Huntington Beach to""11 lots are
mostly considered btighted now, hard lo
properly deveJop, except in the sections
closel,' to the downtown area .
The vacant vista is sometimes broken
up by the rising skeleton of a new apart-
ment under construction, or a recently·
buil t stucco co mplex.
City officials hope a new plan -a 57-
acre assessment district -will provide a
brighter ending to the long, empty tale of
the old town lots.
')} Al the tum of the ~ntury, the town :Bo y 10 Sb lost were laid out in .~foo.t-wide sect!ons
' ' • as the base for Pacific City, a glowing,
beach recreatioo area expected tO rival 'On m' Huntington '. the Easl Coast's AUantlc City. , • Some homes were built on the lots,
to .lry and establish an ~ment
district covering . 18 city blocks, or 57
acres, in the most northeastern section.
The dlStrict will cover the . area
between 17th and Golden West streets,
and Orange and Palm avenues. If it suc-
ceeds, the landowners will pump ap--
pro:iimately $1.5 million into the area for
new streets, curbs and gutters; new
water lines and street ligbll; more
landscaping Utan most city stioeel!
feature ; and more on-ttreet patting, by
blocking some intersection!I and making
them parking courts.
Propert owners will pay for all of Ute
work, even though the city physically
does II.
Bill Hartge, CWTent public works
director, says the property owners can
choose . to provide the full $1.5 million at
one time, or possibly pay it off through
bonds over JO years.
Planners say if the assessment district
fails -more than 50 percent ot. the prop-
erty owners opposing it would kill it
-the area will eventually be covered by
tour-plex apartments, won't feature much
open space and could become something
(See TOWN LO'l'S, Pap l)
. ' "U It w<re built there, we could t .. p
the p_lane near 0tr own maintenance
shed," he said. "And supply our own
gas."
The chief said the prjce of gas alone -
the city buys it for less than 30 cents a
gallon -would be a substanllal saving.
"During park use, in the daytime, the
plane would be in api out of the area no
more than twice a day," he added. "I
think we're obligated to study this site."
Dick Harlow, e1eculive assistant to the
city administrator, said here are some
problems with lhe STOL si te.
"Jt's partly oo ~nty land given to us
for park use," he said today. "And partly
on our land which may have been bought
with federal money for park use.''
If that is the case, lhe city would ti.ave
to arrange a lransfer of other land, or
lose some county and federal park sup-
port.
The city is currently working on a
"paper trade" to clear the land title on
the heliport, whi ch was also county land
given to Huntington Beach for park use.
Harlow said the survey is "just a
study" and hasn't been conducted yet. He
also said the survey creWs report the
land does have a 12·16 root dif!erence in
eleva tion in spots, and because it was an
old county dump, might be di!ficult to
build on.
Robitaille said the de.~artment had
planned a slightly di!fereot landing arr
proach. but on a field trip to the helipad,
some city councilinen had suggested the
cun·ent, possible site which would keep
the ai rcraft a\vay from the new central
library.
Valley Man Shot
Police Say Suspect Threw J(nives
By JOANNE REYNOLDS
Of fflll IMlll' 'lllt Sf1ff
A Fountain Valley man, who police
alleged was throwing butcher knives at
them, was shot in the stomach by
p&trolmen early this morning-. ..
Harold Eugene 1'1cas, 47, of 18823 San
Marcus St. waa booted into Orange
County Jail oo charges of attempted
murder. 1
Police Capt. Les Rowland described
Lucas' -00.. as superficial after tbe
man was treated and rele.ased for book-
ing from the Orange County Medical
Center.
ft9wland said Lucas was shot at least
Gol.dwater' s
sf;R~~led J1y •..
B·oat Rescue
The North ~ couple rescued
off Corona del Mor by U.S. Sen. Barry
!11. Goldwater Tuesday ,had be:en jarred
-not pushed -out of a friend's 18-foot
speedboat, Newport Beach police said to-
day .
S en at or Goldwater Wednesday
prompted an· investigation into the inci-
denr when be ,,.id he was "puzzled"· be-
came the speedboat did not "try to rescue
or teem concemed 1bout the conditioo of
the people," Mt. and Mrs. Glenn
Machlltt.
Instead, two women in the boat wbo
manag¢d lo bold on wtien they crashed
into a huge wave bad helped a third
peraon, the boat's operatgr. back into the
speedboat and went direclly to shore at
bigb speed.
· Police Detective Sgt. Doo Picker this
morning conprmed the -.ccount of the in·
cideut glv.n Wednesday by the boat
operator, Paul Brown, of Van Nuys, from
bis bed at Hoag Memorial Hospital.
Brown told the Dally Pilot be had been
rescued by bil wife and another woman
in the bo:at and they returned to shore
becauae be bad been injured and they
observ<d the Machlltll safely aboard
Senator Goldwater's GO-foot yacht, the
U'fob•Be-Kin.''
Goidwa~ peraonally dove off bis boat
lo rescue lbe Macblitts.
Brown, 46, a pilot, said be ll1d Machlitt
are co-workers at a Lockheed aircraft
plant in the San Fernando Valley and J.:d
been friends far five or six: years.
Goldwater said he was concerned
beca"'° be bad .observed the speedboat
acting suspiciously earlier in the af-
ternoon.
"As we were going down the harbor
tbls 18-foot yellow.green speedboat cul in
front of us at a high rate of speed," the
(See GOLDWATER, P11e !)
twice by a contingent of four officers
after the man allegedly re!used to drop
ooe kni!e he was about lo throw after
already heaving one at the officers.
Sergeants Fred Nourse and Lewis
Barlow and Officers Lee Pepka and
Donald Anderson were called to the
Lucas home shortly after midnight by
a neighbor who complained o( a loud
disturbance.
The four men were met at the door by
Lucas who reportedly refused to talk to
any of the palicemen. According to the
police report, LUcas "proceeded to throw
butcher knives at the officers."
Rowlcp1d said the officers opened fire
Trophy at Last
on the suspect when he continued tossing
knives at them after they had ordered
him to slop.
None of the officers was injured, police
reported.
This morning's sbootin~ marks the
third shooting incident involving Foun·
tain Valley police since April.
Three of those shootings have resulted
in deaths.
In April Miguel Angel Estrada Ron-
quillo, 20, of Santa Ana, was shot to
death in Fountain Valley by Officer
Tioiothy Miller of the Westminster
(See POLICE, Page %)
_ ~~P~:N~tional Regatta
Won by Coast's Ullman
By AIMON LOCIVJIEY
Dlfb' , • .., ... ,..,. .......
"I'm going to make one last try for the
Heinzerling," said 27·year-old David
Ulbnan a Week before the start of the
Snipe natiooal championship regatta at
Mission Bay. (Other boating news Page
19).
"Earl Elms is still the one to beat,"
:nu9ed Ullman. "And, of course there is
aJways Tom Nute and Jeff Lenhart."
Ullman should know. lie has sailed
with and against all of the above-named
trio plus other veteran Snipers, for 10
ytiars.
~ut as it t~ed out, Ullman was the
man to beat in the 1973 Sn1pe nationals
which concluded .Wednesdday at Mission
Bay.
And the diminutive (115 pounds) skip-
per and bis Crewman Peter Coonally (150 ·
pounds) today are the proud possessors
of the Heinzerling Tropby, the emblem or
the U.S. National Snipe championship.
Ullman is not resting on his laurels.
Today he is flying to IQngston, Ontario,
Canada where he will compete, starting
Saturday, in the 470 Class of the CORK
pre-Olympic Regatta.
{He will be joined there by three other
local championship dinghy sailors -
Argyle Campbell (Tempest ), Henry
Sprague and Daney Thompson (Finn).
Win, Jose or draw at Kingston in the
470s, Ullman will soon be back home in
Newport to start his campaign for the
workl Snipe championship for which he
qualified as winner of the nationals.
There, again, he will be up against Elms,
the defending world champion, and Jeff
Lenhart, runoer..up to Ullman in lhe na-
tionals.
In Spain Ullman will again be hoping
for light airs, such as prevailed at
NATIONAL SNIPE CHAMP
Bal boa Ya cht Club's Ull man
Mission Bay this week. His light weight
makes him vulnerable in heavy going in
the 14-foot Snipe dinghy.
HoW Ullman won the Heinzerling at
Mission Bay has already been chronicled.
!See IJIJ.MAN, Page 11
Orange C:oast
Hartelius Admits 'Mistake'
1 says J. Sherman Denny, an oldtime resi-
Huntington Beach police today were dent and former manager of the Hul)-
continulng their search for a IO-year-old tington Beach Company .
. boy who vanished from his home four The homes were clea red in the late
days ago. 19205 during the oil boom. says Denny Weather The ·child, John Dennis O'Neill , is and homes weren't built On the lots again
thought to hive, run away from his home when the oil boom subsided.
'i1t 21282 Fleet Circle Monday aft.emoon. Apartments have been creeping north
but officers who are seeking the child say across the vacant town lots in recent
thtir now fear for bis safety. years, but most of the northeastern sec-
"Thtre ix notbini lo Indicate foul play lion still remains empty -and a prob-
ln the disappearance of the boy, but we !em for clty planners.
don't know what might have hlll{lpened to ~1onday night , city councilmeri gave
hJm since then," said Detective Ray llat~ the Public Works Department permission
ta1>4ugh. .
'n\e freckle-factd youngster left home
weertnc a white sweat shirt with tan
steeves, dark panl.5, blue tennis shoes, a
blue Jacket ll1d a green baseball cap.
Plllice Aid be was riding ' green sting· ray bicycle and had abo\Jt 12(1 wlih
him.
The missing child, son or Mr. and Mrs.
John P. O'NctD, stands four feet eight
lncbeJ tall and bas blue eyes and brown
hair. '
POiice are asking anyontl with in-
formoUon on the child to contact the doJIOl1rMlll at 536-5311 .
Resolution Adopted
HONOLULU (AP) -Delegates lo the
American Ll!glon national convMUon
here adopted a resolution Wednesday de-
nounclng "persons for their actions and
(or their verbal attacks upon our
prisoners of war." The measure was
adopted alter an unsuccessfUI attempt to
criticize actress Jane Fonda by name for
her actions and statements aaainsL the
ex-prtsont11.
Hear ing Panel Told Doctor Won 't Repeat Actio ns
By TOM BARLEY
Offllt De1J ...... St1ff
LOS ANGELES -Fighting back tears,
a contrite Dr. Ebl>e llarW1111 today prom-
ised the three physicians who are his
judgea: "I wW never let anything like
this happen again.
"It was the 111Ut.eat mistake I ever
made,'1 the illlllsMlom doctor almo!t
whl.sp,tred In an ob\'loul nlertoce to his
love aUalr with blonde Reba Vaughn; 3t,
of Coots Mesa .
·"[ can never erase what I hive done,"
Hartell111 told the Stolt Boin! of Mtdlcal
Euminm commltlte w!llcb must rule
on Illa guilt or lnno<ence 9n charges of
mwll turpitude ...i uoprof..alonal ....
duel
"My wile baa betn very Wlderstandlng
afl4 l owe everything to her and my
family al tbis lhne," he told the com·
mittee.
Hartellwi, 51, who practices in thti
Harbor Area and makes his home Jn El
Toro, went to thtf wltness stand \Vednes-
day in a new bid by both sides to
reach an agreement that would end ·ihe
case that baa been before mtdlcal ex·
amlnera for two years.
An earlier agreement that woold have
pul Hartellus on five yean probation
while c:onslderobly restricting his uae ol
certain dangerous drugs was rejected by
the tbr.. surviving members of the
origlnl) panel of nve doctors.
H1rlell111 baa been txamined by
defense attorney Matthew Kurilich, but
now faces cross examination by deputy
attorneys general Mark Levin and Robert
Mukll.
Kurillch earlier took Hartelius slep by
step through all II allegations filed by
the state against the silver-haired physi-
cian and obtained finn and vehement
dtnials from his client on every counL
llarttllus denied that he had ad-
mlnlslerod Demerol lo Mrs. Vaughn and
lhe latt Wanda Melendrez, 29, of Coota
~1~ as a means of inducing and enhanc-
ing sexual relatlonsblps with both women.
Harttllus testified that the only oc·
wioos Mrs. Vaughn gol Demerol from
ISee llAJ\TELltJS, Page !)
The weather's cooling off, but It'll
still be nice along the Orange
Coast Friday. ffighs of 68 at the
beaches will rise to 80 inland.
INSIDE TOD AY
Voluptuous, attractive Kathy
Keeton is one of the wlieels driv-
it1g a 1iew tntru tiito the field
of sophisticated sex tn<1gazi11es.
Her bab~ it v;va, a jo11.rt1al for
women. See story Page 17.
' { I
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1'Jayor ll11s111•e
Council to Eye
Station Again
To allow or not to allow a gas station is
the question which currently befuddles
lluntington Beach city councilmen.
On Aug. 6, they voted S to I with only
'I'ed Bartlett oppc>sed to prohibit the con-
:;truction of a gas station on the
southy,·esl corner of Talbert A\'enue and
Beach Boulevard. •
ti.1ooday night. ho.,.,·ever, 1"1ayor Jerry
Matney reversed his position and asked
the council to reconsider the reque st.
Councilmen, over the objeclion of Coun-
cilman Jack Green, agreed and have now
schedu led the tinlc for their Sept. 4
meeting.
Spiders Dine
On Morsels
During Tests
HOUSTON (UPI) -S k y I ab 's
astronauts fed their spider companions a
tiny morsel of filet mignon today and
practiced for a strenuous walk in space
to fix their ailing contr:ol system.
Owen K. Garriott and Jack R. Lousma
were scheduled to work outside the 118-
foot station Friday connecting a special
package of gyroscopes to stabilize the
craft and reloading fihn in their solar
obse rvatory telescope.
Mission commander Alan L. Bean
elected to remain inside to work the sta-
tion's backup control system should his
rookie crewmales run into trouble.
(Related story, Page 7J
Garriott shared housefly-sized bites of
his rare • filet mignon with spiders
A~abeUa a~d Anita so the tiny arachnids
will be altve for lhe trip home next
month.
Arabella has spun several webs in her
glass cage, but Garri ott will return her to
a travelling vial Saturday and let Anita '
in to the cage for her chance at
weightless web-spinning.
Researchers were interested tQ see if
the spiders could spin geometric webs
without gravity's aid and plan to study
the spiders after splashdown Sept. 25 lo
sec how the anitnals re-adapt to gravit y.
The pilots were given three hou rs to-
day to prepare their gear for the
space\valk and check procedures for the
task. Bean said he wanted lo rehearse
1 the work so everything would go
smoothly on the walk.
From Pagel
POLICE ...
Police Department.
The Ronquillo shooting was sparked
when a Fountain Valley officer had at-
tempted to take Ronquillo and four com-
panions into custody for alleged drunken
driving.
The Orange County Grand Jury cleared
Miller of wron$doing in the shooting.
Ronquillo's fam ily has filed a $500,000
lawsuit against the cities of Westminster
and Fountain Valley, h-1iller and Officer
Robert l\·losley of Fountain Valley who
was with Miller when the shooting oc-
curred.
In June two suspected bandits, pursued
from the scene of a holdup in Fountain
Valley were shot to death in the parking
lot of Hoag lt1emorial Hospital in
Newport Beach .
Jack Elvin Nation, 23, and Thomas
Bernard Kozeluh, 32, both of Carson were
later identified as the men who held up a
sn1all market for Jess than $150.
Pepka and Officer Ed Rasmussen with
Reserve Officers Dominic Burak and
Curtiss Fov.·ler chased the two men from
Fountain Valley through Huntington
Beach and Costa Mesa be.lore cornering
them in the hospital parking lot.
The four officers fired shotgun blasts
into the car. y,•hcn lhe two men made
some furtive 1noven1ents after being
orde red to freeze.
OllANGE. COAST Ha
DAILY PILOT
Tiit Or1n11f CNll OAIL'I' PILOT wllh wMcfl
II <O"'ID•fled 1'11 Nl~·PrtH, 11 PVbillh.O by
tilt Or•nqe CN1! Putoll•M"9 Com1>4nf. 5-
rdlf ~.1...,1 lrt pUDll1"-0, Mond1y lll•oUOll
Fr>d1y, tot Coste Mtlf , H•W!JO•I &t•cll,
Hun•l1111""'. llfKll/~Oltll!t!n V•llty. L.Hvn.
8HCll, ';"·"I J'>!IOOleb.)<k •nd 5411 c ... me-nte!
5111 J.,.n C.111.i1r1no, " 1Jngl1 f'llloMI
edi!oon r1 wtll"i'lt'd S1turd1y1 i nd 511r.c.,...,,.
r~e prl!>tlP&I 11VDl11n111~ 1111M " 11 lJO W11t
81y SlrHI, co1T1 MtH. (tlolOfllll, .,.,..
AoD1•t N. W11d
Prn io.n1 '1'11!1 P11Dll,,,. ..
Jack R. C11tl1y
VICI Prtoklitnt ~ncl {orntrtl Mtll~tf"
l hom11 K11•il
Tho11111 ;.., M11rphin1
M1Mt1111 EO•IOt
Ct.arln H. lo11 llich 11d P. N•U
Aul111n1 M•n1~1--o Edltou y,,,, co~ill1
Wal Or..-.v<! C11111" Edllolr
H•ltlllf'H ihocll Offke
17175 l•ach l owl1•1rtl
M•ilini Mdr111; P.O. lo• 1•0. t2t.41 .,_ °""" l..19\IM SNCfl' m ll'O•ftl Avitnu.
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J\layl!r ~1atncy told his council mates
!hat he me! \\•lth owners of the property
i\nd was convinced that a full shopping
c:enter they propose can't be built wi thout
a gas station on the lip of the comer.
"'You can say why not build a bank, or
a restaurant , but that doesn't solve the
problem," !\.latney said.
!\.1atney asked for a blueprint of the full
shopping center to be pinned to the wail
or the council chamber.
Green objected . saying, "This is totally
improper. It's a zone change matter and
lhe possible development plans cannot be
considered. They don't have to build
~·hat they show us ."
City Attorney Don Bonfa. when asked,
said Green was correct, that the plans
could not be considered.
Matney replied: "Those aren't plans j~st a concept," and had the bluti>rinl~
pinned on the wall anyway.
"Irregardl~s of whether It's legal or
not, my basts £or reconsideration is the
attempt to put together a commercial
development ," he then added .
Councilman Henry Duke suggested he
\l'OUld also like to see the whole project
bul mov~ to have it brought up Sept. 4:
so councilmen could see a request for a
use permit on the whole project.
Green opposed the move, but the vote
was 4 to 1 (Councilmen Donald Shipley
and ~I Coen were absent) in favor. thus
keeping the station bid alive for at least
<.1nother two weeks.
Krisli11a Cultists
HeM by Police
In Templ,e Attack
Laguna Beach police and an Orange
C.Ounty marshal arrested two members
of the Hare Krishna cult in Laguna
Beach \Vednesday after a detective was
allegedly attacketi during the se rvice of
an arrest wa1Tant at the group's temple.
Douglas C. Russell , 2.1, of 641 Ramona
Ave., was booked on suspicion -of assault
on a police officer, and interfering wilh
an officer in the line of duty.
Brian W. Nash, 19, also or 641 Ramona
Ave., was booked only on the charge ()f
interfering with an officer.
Both men were taken to South Orange
~nty Judlcial District Court in Laguna
Niguel for arraignment on the misde-
meanor charges today.
Detective Sgt. Neil Purcell said that as
Detective Tony Smith and Deputy
Marsha l Dick Ringler attempted to
searcb the Hare Krishna Temple for a
female named in a misdemeanor war-
rant, Russell allegedly grabbed Smith
\vith a ch>kehold aNUTid the neck.
Marshal Ringler forcibly pulled the
coslume<lad Russell from the Laguna
Beach officer and plactd the cult
mem ber under arrest. Smith was unin-
jured.
The two officers had iniUally been
ordered to remove their shoes before
entering the cult temple.
~~h orf~cers declined to ()bserve the
r~l.1gious ritual, .sta ting they \lere on of-
f1c1al -not spiritual -business, and in· ten~~ to . search all areas where the
fug1t1ve ought be hiding, fully-shod
The girl named in the warrant ~as not
found , although several females did flee
as th~ officers attempted to search the
prenuses.
Nash wa.s arr~ed as be allegedly in-
ten:ered with officers outsi de the temple
residence.
He allegedly pestered the lawmen and
refused to leave the area where his saf-
fro!1·robed .c~lle&gue was being detained
v.·htle awa1lmg a ride to jail, despite
repeated orders to leave.
A_ Hare . Kri~hna attorney quest ioned
police motives 1n searching the residence
for the warrant suspect and asked why
no attempt had been made to telephone
the cult he:idquarters and seek voluntary
compliance v.·ilh ~r surr ender on the
warrant.
Prior to serving the warrant a letter
had. gone to the headquarters ' advising
them of the w~rrant and requesting a
voluntary turn-in, however it got no
response, Sgt. Purcell said.
From Pagel
HARTELIUS. • •
him was for the relief of pain created by
.. an industrial injury."
Ile admitted n1oving into her ·Wilson
Street home but he repeatedly denied
that he had ever kicked and beaten her.
flartelius blamed 11-trs. Vaughn for the
substantial shortages of Demer o I
reported by a stale Boa rd of Narcotics
Enforcement investigator who audi ted
the physician's drug record:. in 1969.
He accused his former mistress of
ma king out a check for $2,000 about that
time nnd forging his name to the docu-
ment. And Hartelius branded as "all
lies" Mrs. Vaughn's testimony that he
twice performed abortions on her while
the couple lived together.
llarte\iw: denied any responsibility for
the nart'Otics addiction that led to ~1rs.
Vaughn's con1milmcnt to Califomla
RchabilitaUon Center at Norco In late
1968.
Hartelius reminded the panel via
Kurilich's questions that he had been
cleared In the Orange County Suµtrk>r
Court trial of charges or arson, fraud,
conspiracy and bribery.
And he blamed the publicity stemming
from those trtals, a grand jury in·
d1ctment and the mara thon state hearing
for losses he estimated at $120,000.
' l
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•
I TOWN W'l'S .:· ..
of an apartment gllttto.
But the otrtet and beautification Im·
provements made pc:mlble by the U.!e5S-"
rnent dlstrlct could encourage developers
to CONIOlldate much of the properly,
tbeteby building bigger, moro un~onn
projects whJch offer more open space
and increased estheUc values.
One of the ·primary purposes of the -
project, says Hartge, is to change the
rather square, grid street pattern now
existing In the town Jots.
That wlJJ be accompll.shed by planUng
trees at the end of some street! and con-
verting them to cul-de-sacs with extra
parking.
'!be major landholder is the Hun-
tington Beach Company with 34.5 percent
of tlte property. The city Is second with
6.3 percent, v:hJch Jn01lly involves the
recreation center at 17th Sstreet and
Orange Avenue.
Hartge says about half the land is own-
ed by 10 percent of the property owners.
The rest is scattered in small lot! among
many owners, which adds to the develop-
ment difficulUea.
Owners will have to pay from $(.000 to
16,SOO per 51J.foot Joi (two olthe town lots)
for !he assessment district, Hartge said.
Like a Dog to Water
The city won't pay a penny, unless the
district falls , in which case It wUI cost all
taxpayers · ftbout $&,000 for th e
preliminary work -establishing tht
district and writing an environmental Im·
pact report on it. Heidi, an eight-year veteran of water skiing pra~ .
!ices with her master, Robert Borth, at Bolton' Land·
ing on Lake George, N.Y., for a sttint the pair will
perform in a benefit water skill show.
Hartge says about 47 percen t of . tht:
owned land 1' already committed to tit•
district and if all goes well, street c:oo-
struction could be under way in eight te
10 month!.
Beach Civic Group Leader JET..,US~~~ ~ JI the 11.5 million project 1' auccwlul
in converting this gll!>stly palcb of
Pacific City to a modern, weU-plaMed
apartment community, the assessment
district proposal wW be e1le.nded to
other sections of the town Iota. Vera Podsade Dies at 7 4 level of military use.
Based on these assumptions W.tlder
said he has tentatively concluded that:
Vera 11-f. Podsade, well-known in Hun-
tington Beach women's civic groups for
the past 21 years, died Wednesday at the
age of 74.
"She was such a happy-go.lucky
person," recalled Mamie Seltzer, close
friend of Mrs. Podsade and widow of the
late Police Chief John Seltzer.
"She was always smiling, and no one
ever had a bad thlng'to say about her."
Before Mrs. Podsade became ill in
1970, she could be seen either leading or
participating in many civic groups in
town . In 1968 she was president of the
Huntington Beach Women's Club.
She also headed the Women 's Divi!ion
of the Huntington Beach Chamber of
Co mmerce in 1970. and was a charter
member and office r of the Ladies Aux-
iliary of the Huntington Beach Boys Club.
Frot1tPflflel
GOLDWATER • •
senator said. ~ught they were having a good
time so I forgot about it," he said.
··1 took my boat out of the jetty to
demonstrate a new radar rangefmder
and about 500 yards out from the ,:st
jetty we heard a woman scream.
"l went out on deck and saw a woman
in the water wearing a life jacket and a
man without one," be added. 1be speed·
boat was at some distance and one of my
passengers said they saw somebOOy pull-
ing somebody else out of the water.
•·we tried to get the people a line but
couldn't reach them so I dove in and took
a line to the woman and swam over to
the man. "He was okay, but she was hysterical,"
Sen. Goldwater said. "We wrapped them
in warm blankets and gave her a shot of
bourbon and a few shots to the man .. "
The Senator explained that hii!i concern
was heightened because at one point the
y.•oman said that she had "been bodily
thrown out'' of the boat.
"What was puzzling to me at the time
is that the speedboat made no eUon to
cQeck out what had happened to them,"
Senator Goldwater said.
Sergeant Picker said this morning he
had spoken with the senator after con-
ducting his investigation \Vednesday
afternoon and e x p I a i n e d the
circumstances involved.
"He und erstood after -we explained all
the details," Picker said.
Bill to Combat
Drug Approved
SACRAMENTO (AP) -It would he a
misdenle8110r to possess the recently
popularized drug me1hequalone i n
Cali£ornia under legislation headed for
the Assembly floor on a 14-3 vote.
Assemblyman Jack Fento (D·tdon-
tebello) told the Assembly Ways and
h-1eans Committee Wednesday I ha I
"recently there has been y,•idesprcad
abuse of methaq uelone. Over 145 million
tablets were produced last year and, at
the same time, there is evidence lhat lhe
drug Is indeed addictive."
Many young people take the drug on
the theory it Is "a safe one -nonad·
dictive," a Fenton aide explained.
But research has shown to the con-
trary, he added.
'
Student Shot
PHOENIX, AJii. (AP) -One studenl
was klll..i and anotlter wounded Wedne&-
day when a gunman opened fire oo a
line of studenls waiting to register for
the fall semester at Phoenix College,
police said. Peter Jestk n. I former
Arizona Golden Gloves boxing champion,
was fatally wounded a1 he waited to pay
his college fees, authorities said.
"From a technical engineering stand-
She 31'o belonged to the Rl!publlcan Club. point, it ls possible to construct an at-ULLMAN ... Those who worked with her, such as tractive civilian airport on the Camp
Peggy Freeman, current president of the Pendleton base.
Women's Division of the Chamber of Commerce, .say Mrs. Podsade wa.s a "But that is the only advantage we It was largely a matter of swift light..air
kind, loving pe,.,.n. • found. It would bi very costly, access sailing and staying oul of foul trouble in
"She was willing to do whatever would would be difficult, heavy jet traffic would the bard-scrapping Snipe fleet. The ooly
help someone, a really fine worker,'' said have an lrreversihle effect on the coastal time he got in trouble was ln the flftb
Mrs. Freeman. wlldl·r •-~d the race when the winds whbtled up over IS Mrs. Podsade, described as "matronly l e ui;,i e base and it would have knot!: and he finished 8th. A foul ne.ar the
-although just over five feet tall" _ an adverse ef(ect on -military opera-weather mark, which cost him a "713''
had smiling eyes that made her friends tions." didn't help keep him in contention.
with nearly everyone she met. Wilder said that l!ltudles of poss.ible Ullman finished second and third ln tht
Mrs. Podsade is survived by her bus-Joint use of El Toro are just beginning. final two races Wednesday, aUowing him band, Arnold, and her brother Virgil Van to throw out the dreedful tJth (out ol 33)
Atta, of Indianapoll!, Ind. He said the study would be based on and keep finlshes of l·l+Z.:1-3 -glvlllf
Services will, be conducted at 1 p.m. two possible levels of commercial jet use him a low score of 11 points under the
Saturday at the chapel al Smith -600,000 passenger-Olghts per year in Olympic scoring system.
Mortuary, 627 h-tain St., Huntington 1975 and 6.7 inillion pa5'enger flights in The hot contender 1n the final three
Beach. 1985. races was Tom McLaughlin of Mission
Three Teen Boys
Held in .. Arson
' '
At Beach School
Three teen-age boys who allegedly set
fire to a Huntington Seach elementary
school, have been released lo their
parents by police.
The three boys, aged 14, 15 and 16,
v.•ere picked up by patrolmen aft.er
witnesses to the fire at Kettler School,
8750 Dorsett Drive, said the trio were
responsible for the small blaze.
Firemen said the flames caused minor
damage to an out.side wlill of the school.
A group of children playing on the
school grounds told officers the three
boys piled cardboard boxes against the
\\·all and touched them off with cigarette
lighters.
The children called firemen who dous-
ed the fire before it could do more than
sco rch the walls.
Both f Bay. He matched Ullman's three lgures Were suggested in a 1972 straight, but his poor showing in the
study done ·by William Pereira and early races forced him to teep scores that
Associates of C.Orona del Mar for the netted him DO better than third in the
Southern. CalUomia Association o f final standings.
Governments (SCAG). 'tbe same was true for runner-up Jeff
'nfe current level of opeifstioM at · l.f.nhart who had to, keep races that.were
Orange County Airport 11 ~ t ~ worse ~ Ullman 1 throwout.
million commercial pa .... ger =t• ~ lleleidlne champion Elms 1I01Dld up year according to recent statlSti · fourth 1n the final scoring, 1 place he 11 eoi. Janz said the SRI stud~s.would a.hnost as accustomed to as the winner's
calculate the number of jet flights per circle. , Every time Elms has k>lt the
day required to carry Project e d cbamp1oru:hip -Including hi! loss in 1171
passenger loads. lt would thCn make a -he has wound u~ in fourth place.
finding whether this level of Commercial Ullman was wllng a four·month-old
jet activity would be compatible with the Eichenlaub-built Snipe with Wis deatp.
e1pected level of mJHtary flight opera-eel and built by Ullman himself .
lions at El Toro.
"There ls a lot of military activity at
this base that isn't found at most com-
mercial airports," Col. Janz said. "We
fly close formations, practice aircraft
take offs and landings among many other
things.
"It has: always been our position that
this type of military activity would not be
compatible with civilian use," he said.
In effect, he said, the f\1arines are now
asking an independent consultant if it
shares that opinion.
Derby Discussion
BOULDER, Colo. (UPI ) -Local Soap
Boie Derby official! decided Wednesday
:~~a;i!!1ri~~a~-o~~ J:°~n!l·~~ti:
tie for cheating, before deciding whether
to demand repayment of $100 In J>rl••
money he won In local competition.
Gronen had to win locally to t!'t to the
national competition in Akron, Ohio.
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Thursday, August 23, 1973 H DAILY PILOT 3
.Fatalities: Resurrect Co~st's 'Slaughter Alley'
., . ·-By JOUN VALTERZA
Of tti. D•llY ,.IMI Sl•ll
' The grim nickname of "Slaughter
through camp Peodlelon 11111 jumped 17
percent far the first few six moolbs o(
this year, oompared to the same wt~od
in 1972. ~ 1 Alley" once applied to the! deadly stretch !':• They bla.Qted the new crush of traffic
broughl on by the rl\Cl!)g setllO!t al Del
Mar as well aa ever4ncreatmg vacitUon
traffic as tw~ factors Jn the' rapid in·
crease .
of highway between San Clemente and
•'"' Oceanside is bei g resurrected by the
California Highway Pat rol because of a
~ major increase o( fatalities in recent ... months.
I\~ Patrol spokesmen fro1n Oceanside said
that the rate of traffic deaths on the now-
t modern stretclt o! freeway in the area
CHP spokesmen said that during the
first six montbl · 1 ot th~ year eight
pt.riOOS died aloq:• the 19-mlle stretch Of
freeway, oom~ to only one the year
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The President Meets
The Press-at Last
'
By JOHN VALTERZA
Of Tll• 0.llJ' Pilitt Shlff
PRESIDENT. NIXON'S 32nd press conference of his career as Chief Execu-
tive came Wednesday as a delightful surprise to a frustrated Washington Press
Corps which had endured five months of near silence from the White House.
And when the alfresco affair held alongside the Secret Service Command
Post at the Western Whi ie House had ended, scrambling
reporters felt as if they had enough fodder for a ·full
day's writing.
The event obviously had been arranged hurriedly , and
the consensus among reporters waiting quietly in advance
of the IJ :30 a.m. session with Nixon was that the J:iaste
had developed because of White House concern over the
President's image alter Monday 's hectic events in New
Orleans and in San Clemente .
Up to Tuesday afternoon , Nixon spckesmen hinted that
VALT••:u there was not even going to be a press conference~
REPLYING TO REPORTS of a possible cancellat ion in the works, Deputy
Press Secretary Gerald.tWarren Tuesday said, "How can we talk about can-
cellation when there hasn't even been one announced yet?"
But It was far from canceled.
And between the time that rumors began to solidify Wednesday morning
and the 11 :30 stanrng time the media and the White House staff had made
the arrangements for nationwide coverage. . . . .
NBC News was assigned the duty of furnishing eqwpmeot and techniCI~S
foi the live coverage (all other networks tapped the NBC system) and wire
services bad arranged for typists to make transcripts as the President spoke.
THE TELEPHONE PEOPLE bad prepared a mess.age center for the San
Clemente Inn press headquarters (the first time in memory that that has ba~
pened).
And al the compound , on the patches of grew and pavement near the yel-
low-stucco command post, aides had draped blue-velvet curtains for a back-
drop.
Each reporter knew his seat by reading cards pasted on each chair as-
signing it to a specified member of the media.
But, despite the efficiency. there wett drawbacks.
' FILL-IN LIGHT ON the President was dim, and hard shadows caused a
JIC¥lr visual image of the President.
As for the subslance .. r the· press ~erence itseli -the lint sit-you-down
affair for the preu ever held at the Nixon enclave In San Clemente -about
a dozen biting ,Walerl!~l&ApW ~s ~e lrom the corps.
And during the 4~nu1" aflair ditty one quesUon came through on lhe
conlroVersy surrounding lies to the American people during the secret bomb-
ing of Cambodia. ··
The feeling among many journalists was that bad the conference been al-
lowed to continue. the very issues: which the White House has declared as most
press ing to the nation -the food and fuel criils, and runaway inflation -
would have surfaced.
But -as it was -the session went lS minutes past the customary ha.If·
hour.
DURING THAT mra the President took more than a few subtle swipes
al the media for dwelling on scandal.
But that did not deter the reporters.
They kept asking the questions which Nixon aides bad refused to answer
for months on end .
And when they were done , they sat anxiously, but quietly on lhe buses shi~
ping them to the San Clemente Inn Press faciliti es.·
EACll IS STEELED to criticism -even from the President of the United
States.
And each would agree that if the Administration is sti ll anxious to talk
about lhe pressing issues of the economy, they wouldn't mind another press
conference even in a day or so.
Several vete ran journalists on the scene credited the President with suc-
cessfuUy altering the public image of a man almost incapacitated by the pres-
sure1 ol bis office.
In fact, many stated flatly that the hastily contrived pres,, conference ap-
peared lo be a major attempt to end reports that the President is an enraged,
exha usted man.
ONE EASTERN NEWSMAN with a pair of Pulitzers to his credit mused
on the conference late Wednesday and said it contained by far the most in-
cisive questions ever asked of a modern President.
But those men who and women who won the President's nod and the
chance to ask a question are wondering today If they have to wait five months
roore to ask something else. '
: ·~..,.. ................ ~ ... .,. ................. ~ ... ..,.. .......... .,. ..................... ..... • I ! Marylatul Cor1•ilptima Case
before. Durlng lbt same period %26 ac-
cidentl were reported on the stretch.
Officers said that yet another factor
this year also has c ontribu ted
signlficootly 10 tbe death totals.
Illegal aliens being dwnix.'d from
s1nugglers' cars ahead or the San Onofre
Bprder Patrol Checkpoint ha ve cau.st:d
the major new problem.
f;qrlier In the year four persons died in
tv.·O incidents relaled directly to aUen
smuggling.
All were struck by fast-moving cars a '
Court Gives
Niguel Units
Green Light
Construction appears to be cleared to-
day for the contrpversial Laguna Niguel
Avco project, but officials 0£ the develop-
ment company are being cautious about
a state Supreme Court decision giving a
green light to the troubled development.
The court ruling, issued \Vednesday,
declares that Coastal Zone Conserva tion
Act permil5 are not required if substan-
tial construction had begun before Feb. I,
1973.
Avco's oceanview housing projects on
both sides or Pacific Coast fl.ighway were
stoppc(t. earlier th.is year by actKln of the
South Coast Regional Zone Conservation
Commission. The £inn was refused a
permit:
"We haven't bad the opportunity to
review and digest the decision. We are
not going to second-guess it and we have
no comment at this time ," Gene White.
Avco director of commUnity relation s
said this morning.
The disputed Avco project consists or
72 acres of coadominiums and other
developments which originally called [or
sevell-"story high·rise buildings.
Elsewhere aloog the orange County
coast. the 4 to 3 court decision is ex-
pected to have little impact.
In Huntington Beach, a controversial
traot in the Huntington Harbour Area
had already been approved by the com-
mi&mn. City sources say the Coastal
Conservation Act, which requires a
permit for any construction within 1,000
feet of the coast, did not impede any ma-
jor projects.
In Newport Beach, Jim Hewicker,
assistant community development direc-
tor, said be did not know o( any projects
that would be cleared by the decision. He
added tbal none had been blocj<ed by the
comnils!hon ind that perm1tr had been
issued for several projects.
Laguna Beach and San Clemente will
also remain unaffected by the SUpreme
Court decision, which was won by See the
Sea Lid. in Sen DlOgo.
The ruling, final 1n 30 days, means that
the San Diego developer will be able to
~ with work on a 72-unit con-
dominium on the San Diego waterfront.
With the decision,· the court reconciled
conflicting interpretations ol two sections
of the act. One required a permit for any
development on the coast after Feb. I.
'Ibe other exempted persons who had a
vested right before the act became ef-
fective.
The question was whether a developer
who began building between Nov. 8, when
the state initiative took effect, and Feb. 1
had such a vested right.
Nude Hitchhiker
Gets 'Attentio11'
FORT LAUDERDALE, Fla. (AP)
Doaald Albert Scholl didn'I have an y
luck when he tried to hitchhike a ride
during rush hour traffic in a business
district here. So, police said, he took of(
his clothes to attract attention.
Sc.hc>tt, 21, of Cincinnati , Ohio, strolled
several blocks Wednesday in the nude,
shouting "somebody give me a ride"
v.itnesses told police.
Officers arrived minutes later and of·
fered SChott a ride. He was driven to jail
where he was charged with "hitchhiking
and creating a diversion."
I •, • • l ' • i
Agn.ew's Successor Cited
•
l BAL T!MORE, Md. (AP> -The man
: who sucCt?eded Vice President Spiro T. ~ Agnew as chief executive of Baltimore
4 County was indicted today by a federal i grand jury investigating political oor-
j rupllon In Maryland.
' The defendant. Democrat D a I e l Anderson, was charged wilh bribery and
l extortion. ~ Anderson is: the acknowledged political j strong man In Baltimore County,
: Maryland's third largest government ! un it. He was the only Individual named in
; the massive indictment retumed by the ~ 1peelal Jury after aboul eight months of ~tnve.Ugatlon. J There were about three dozen separate
'!count.t. , The same grand Jury also is ln-
vesUgaUbg Agnew's Involvement in an
alleged kickback scheme When he was
the OOt1111,)1 '1 No. I ollici~ •jletwecn 1962
,an.d 1,90' and Jater as governor of ~Maryt*1d,
! Alt.• the tndlctmen l wu llMOUllOed, tA81Jew ,b;ued the lollow'i(tg slatement
from his ofrlce in Washington:
"! know Mr. Anderson personally,
find the charges against him totally at
variance with mv impressions of him
and everylblng I know about him.
"Despite oUr political differences, in an my associations with lt1r. Anderm.
both olflcial and prlvale. he baa uhlblled
unusual candor and integrity."
Named as a co-conspfrator but not a
defendant in today's lndlctmenl was
Wllllam E. Fornoll, who resigned In June
aa county administrative director after
pleading guUly 10 a federal lax ch•'le
linked 'to lhe rteelpl ol lunds lrom oon-
lracton dolni buSlnw with the county.
Fomoff served briefly aa head of ad·
ministration when Agnew was county ex-
ecutive.
A source close to the lnveatlgaUon haa
reported that Fomolf'1 lestimony
prompted lnvcs!lotors to queallon con-
sultants: and con1ractors who, In turn,
l>roughl the vice pmidenl Into the con-
llmling probe.
The lndlctmenl charges that lbe S&-
year-old And erson conspir('d with various
consulting firms including Gaudreau.
Inc.: George William Stephens Jr. and
Associates. tnc..: John B. F u n k
Associates, Inc.; James Petrica 11nd
Associates, Inc.; Whiteford. Falk, and
Muk, tnc.; Greiner Environmental
Services, Inc., snd Matz, Childs and
A!sociates. Inc.
U.S. Attome:y George Beall, who is:
heading the probe, aaid that tht: S9-count
lpdlctrnent charges Anderson "with con-
•Piracy to obstruct interstatJ commerce
by meana ol exlot'tlon and bribery.
1'Ail or tbele" charges relate to
architectural, erlgineerlng, surveying and
consultant services p r o v i d e d to
Baltimore County by vartoua Individuals
and btplness enlj!ifs," Beall said.
The lndlctmcnl alleges lhal Anderson
collected $23,920 lrortt G•lldreau, 16,300
!tom Stephens, ft ,50t from Funk. 14,500
from Ptlrtcs, ~8IO lrom Whlle!ord,
fl,7l0 from Greiner and fS ,600 lrom
Mali.
few miles downcoa5t of the roadblock,
and all had been tr)'fng to run across the
busy roadway to walk north .
The CPH plans to beef up patro 5 along
the stretch in an eUort to reduce the ac·
cldent ratC1 and seven new units will be
pi:essed Into service, said C •1 P
spokesman Dave• Helsel.
Besld s the extr8 patrols, the CHP has
convinced the st4te Department of
Tran!portation to examine the deadly
stretch to determine if changes could be
made to the fretiwny in the interest of
surety.
"It's very reminiscent of l he
nighunarlsh days of Ute past," Helsel
said .
The roadway a decade ago bore the
deadly reputation because of the massi ve
number of deaths due to accidents.
One crash, which drew nationwide at-
tention -and sparked an emergency
program to compl ete the freeway sooner
than planned -involved tanker trucks
and passenger cars in a grinding series
Point by Point
Nixon Co1 ifere1ice Higlilig li ts
By The Associated l'ress
Here at a glance, are the major points covered by President Nixon at his
Wednesday news conference :
ROGERS-Announced the resignation of \Villiam P. l~ogers as secretary or
State and said he \Vould nominate fienry A. Kis!iinger to succeed him ,
AGNEW-Said his confidence in Vice Presidenl Spiro T. Agne\¥ was un-
shaken, but denounced ·•outrageous leaks" in the investigat ion involving Agnew
and allegations or political corruption .
WATERGATE IN GENERAL-Defended his actions in the scandal, re-
peated eaNier claims that he had neither advance knowledge or the break-in
nor participated in the cover-up, and said he Y.'ill not resign.
WATERGATE TAPES-Repeated that he would not turn over taped presi-
dential conversations to anyone, even to a select group of officials, unless
ordered lo do so by the U.S. Supreme Court.
WATERGATE WARNING-Said he considered that a directive to former
acting FBI chief L. Patrick Gray Ill to investigate Watergate thoroughly was
adequate response to the warning Gray said he gave the President in July 1972.
EHRLlCHMAN AND HALDEMAN-Predicted that his two former top aides,
John D. Ehrlichman and H. R. Haldeman , would eventually be exonerated for
their actions involving \Vatergate.
l\1ITCHELL-Said he would have "blown his stack" if former re-election
campaign director and Atty. Gen. John N. Mitchell had told him the full
fac1s or the \Vatergate case, as Mitchell has testified he would have done if
Nixon had only asked.
Compromise Legislation
On Death Penalty Eyed
SACRAMENTO (AP ) T oe
Legislature was looking today £or a mid-
dle ground on an issue which has little
room for compromise -life or death for
convicted murderers.
A compromise plan to reinstate capital
punishment fQT a three-year test period
i under he.avy, attack:from both SUJ>
porters and foes of the death penalty.
Negotiations have broken down on
Hmiting;more closely the crimes subject
to the death penalty.
A long-delayed showdown vote on the
death penalty was scheduled again today,
£or the fourth time. in the Assembly
Criminal Justice Committee, the usual
fina l resting place for capital punishment
legislation.
Bui legislative leaders said there would
be no committee vote until after a
closed-door rn eeting of the majority
Democrats in the lower house.
Democratic Assembly Speaker Bob
!\loretti. a death penalty foe. said
\\!ednesday he would make no attempt to
block death penalty legislation in the
closed-door Democratic caucus on the
issue.
Sen. George Deukmejian attacked
Moretti anew Wednesday for what he
called an attempt to kill capital pw1isl;-
ment.. legislation by "subterfuge."
Morel!I replied1 t.hal Deukme~IUI tR-
Long l Beach), is Wllng hla senate-passed
death penalty bill as a launching pad for
a race next year for attorney general.
The speaker also said Deukmejlan h~s no
real interest in reaching a compromise.
"Sen. Deukmejian at this point would
rather have the' issue than to ha ve it
resolved ," Moretti said at a news con-
ference .
That exchange was triggered by a pro-
p<>sal to imp<>se a mandatory death
penalty for certain crimes, but only for
three years. The idea would be that pro-
ponents could use that time to prove
their claim that capital punishment is a
deterrent to crime.
of collisions in the fog. Six persons were
burned to death and several others v.~re
gravely injured in that iraeedy.
The patrol's Ocean.side office compiled
the data related to lhc. deaths and the
spckesman tor Umt district, Dave
•lenderson, said that subtle factors aloq
the monotonous stretch or freeY.·ay also
could be contributing to the death rate.
"We have to agree that there llrtn't
itny ramps or other features to keep a
driver alert along the stretch. It's 1 Uttle
like 19 miles of nothing," he l'lald.
,4ides Happy;
Nixo11 Plans
Mor e T alks
Uy HELEN THOMAS
United Preis lnten1allo nal ,
\Vhite House aides, convinced Presi·
dent Nixon ca me through "with fiying
co lors" at his fi rst meeting \vith
reporters in five months, indicated in San
Clemente today that. be might hold
another news conference in a few days.
Presidential aides also said Nixon will
be stepping up his public activity with
NIXON SAYS OTHERS
BURGLED, TOO-Story, Pogo 4
more appearances to demonstrate that
he "is in command'' despite the nwlaise
or Watergate. ~
The aides appeared especially pleased
with the fight stance the Presi.dent
a!.swned here during Wednesday 's news
conference, where he vigoro usly reaf-
finned that he had no Intention of resign-
ing because or Watergate and charged
that some or his critics ''would prefer
that I fail ."
Presidential aides expressed delight
with Nixon's Performance and reactions
the \Vhite House had received to it,
saying he "came through "'ith flying col-
ors" and indicating he may decide to
meet with reporters again as early as
next v.'eek.
Meanwhile, Henry A. Kissinger ar-
ranged to meet with reporters for the
first tim e since the President announced
Wednesday that he would be succeeding
\Villiam P. Rogers as secretary of state.
Kissinger, who also will continue to
serve as Nixon's top adviser for national
security affairs, outlined his new dual
diplomalic role at the press C(liUeDCe fo
San Clemente.
'HEAVENLY' ACT
MAK 6S BELIEVERS
ROLAND, Iowa (AP) -Jf there were
any nonbelievers in this small central
Iowa community, there aren't any more .
Wednesday night, a loud clap o{
thunder shook the small town of 800 and
evidently triggered the chimes of Salem
lA.!theran Church.
The hymn "How Great Thou Art" rang
through the town.
Save 15 to 20% on tit.is
•
Also during August wo aro
offering custom sofas, chairs
& love seats at 15 lo 20 %
•••ing--Choose from largo
fa bric selection. l''• i, h., A
Collection of decorator
WI NG CHAIRS
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INTERIOR OESIGN ERS Thurs. & Fri. Eves. COSTA MESA, CALIF. !EJ.~~r6 KtlY.,\.JI
• Ultl. V PILOT Thursda1, August 23, l q13
SUSPECT ,JAILED
Edwin M. Gaudet
Secret Service
'Digging Deep
Into Plot Roots
WASlllNGTON (UPI) -The Secret
Service and FBI are working hard to
discoVer the roots of a "very real" plot
to kill President Nixon during bis visit to
New Orleans ?t!onday.
Sources told. UPI that the agencies are
working intensiYely on what they con-
sider "a very real thing,'' but the Secret
Serv1ce said Wednesday that fonner New
Orleans policeman Edwin M i c b a e I
Guadet Jr., arrested in northern New
Mexico for allegedly threatening Nixon's
life, probably was not part of the con-
spiracy.
GAUDl!:l', It, surrendered to a posse of
Secret Servicemen near Taos, N.M.,
Wednesday, two days after he eluded
heavily armed federal agents woo sought
to arrest him on a. warrant near the
"Morning Star" commW>e.
The Washington sources said Gaudet,
woo allegedly threotened last week to klll
Nixon, was probably "a Jone actor" but
~i!p1!~~t~YC: ;'~ :ierof~te (~
oonspiracy)." Local police declined c o m m e n t
Wednesday on a report by a New Orleans
television station that three persons are
being sougbl In connection with the con-
spiracy. 'Ibe station said the Justice
Department had authorized the arrest of
three persons. The Secret Service said it is "ag·
gresstvely pursuing its investigation into
the possibility o[ a conspiracy to
assa.ssinate the Presldenl 'Ibere iJ no
speculation an what's gotng to happen or
what is going to occur."
Cambodians
Take Over
Key Sites
PHNOM PENH, Cambodia (AP) -
Govenunent troops have recaptured
three positions important to the defense
of the provincial capital of Kompong
Speu and Phnom Penh's highwa'y to the
sea. the Cambodian military command
reported today.
The positions are five , six and seven
miles west of Kompoog Spell+ which is 30
miles southwest of Phnom Penh on
Highway 4. The highway connects Phnom
Penh with Kornpong Som, the country's
only seaport.
The command gave no information
about the recapture.
"The situation remains relatively
calm in the region of Phnom Penh," the
command said. "The action of oor troops
has reduced the enemy activities."
GOVERNMENT forces strengthened
Phnom Penh's southern defense llne with
howitzers supplied by the United States.
The forces advanced for nearly a mile
along Highway 30 to Jlnk up with a pla·
toon about nine miles southeast or
Phnom Penh that had been cut off for
more than a week. There was no
resistance to the advance.
In SOUth Vietnam. the Saigon military
oommand said the intensity of fighting
dropped off Wednesday. A total of U Viet
Cong were reported killed in foor
clashes, while government casualties
were two dead and nine wounded, the
command said.
The command claimed Communist
forces committed 79 cease-fire violations
Wednesday, about the same number as
on other days this month.
In South Vietnam, the Saigon military
command said the intensity of fighting
dropped olf Wednesday. A total of 59 Viet
Cong and North Vietnamese troops were
reported killed In the 24-hour period end·
ing at dawn today, while government
casualties were seven dead and nine
wOWlded, the command said.
Five government infantrymen u·ere
reported killed and six wounded Wednes-
day as Communist forces d:intinued to
shell positloos defending the southwest
side of Hue, the former imperial capital
on the northern coast.
FIVE OUTPOSTS took 337 rounds in a
dawn-to-dusk bombardment. according to
the command.
The conunand claimed Communist
forces committed 79 other cease-fire
vialatioos \Vednesday, about t:he same
number as on other days this Irionth.
They included rocket atlacks in the cen·
tral highlands and ground assaults In the
Mekong Delta. ·
UMtltD STAllS
• ... . '. ·: Others Burgled -Too?
llOOCO
GULi Of lllUK:O Nixon Makes. Claim; Officials W a~t Proof
tt'iped Out
Map locates Mexican town of
Irapuato whell at least 300
persons died this week when a
dam burst, sending a seven-
foot wall of water churning
down on the city. Up to 40,000
homes were destroyed.
WASIUNGTON (AP) -President Nix-
on clalml burgl&rles such a.s the one In
the Daniel Etlsberg case occurred '"on a
very large scale" during the Jolmson and
Keruiedy years.
But aome o!ftclal• from those ad-
ministrations deny any knowledge of
such break·iN.
"No activity was authorized by me and
I think1 we're entitled to know what he's
talking about," said former Atty. Gen.
Nicholas deB. Katsenblc~ served in
the Justice Deparlmellt In various posi·
lions under both Presidents John F. Ken·
nedy and Lyndon B. Joilnsoo.
GEORGE alRISTlAN, former press
secretary to Johnson, said: "'I don't know
\Vhat be is talking about."
Nixon, at bla press confen!Dl'e Wednes-
Hot Spot Fires Plague
Weary F 01·est Firemen ·
day In Sin Clemente. said he views a'•
"Illegal, unauthorized and completoly
dOl>b"able" the burgl1ry of the office ol
the psychiatrist of Pentagon Papers
defendant Daniel Etlsberg by a unit
dire<ted by White Hoose aldea.
But be also noted that under both Ken-
nedy and John.ton, 11burglartz1ng of this
type" took place '400 a very large S<'ale."
"Nixon did not elaborate and Deputy
~ Secretary Gerald L. Warren re1u ..
~ve details. ·
mwashington, a Justice Department
spokesman refused to oon!inn or deny
that such burglaries had taken place In
the past, saying the information '"can only
come from the White House."
'"inysUfied by the Pre~dent'a state-
ment."
Meanwillle, Sen. Sam J. Ervin com-
mented, "! don't think any more Ught
was shed than has beet! shed before "
Ervin ls chairman of the Senate
Watergate committee probing the acan·
dal.
Ervin pictured aa mainly 11generalitles"
the President's answers to questiOl1$ on
Watergate during hb news conference.
The North Carollua Democrat repeated
his oootmtion that ooly releose of White
House tapes d. conversations between
Nixon and former White House counsel
John W. Dean ID could clear up the Issue
of bow much Nixon knew about the
Watergate burglary and subsequent
cover.up. NIXON LAST P.1ay. in a lengthy state-
ment on Watergate, first mentiooed that
there may have been burglaries for. na~ S A a) tiOllal security purposes •engaged in by . entence ppe .
the FBI during previous admlnJstrations.
But, he said, the FBI had halted such Bnn· gs 999 Years
activities In 1966.
Katzenbach, who was deputy attorney HOUSTON (UPI ) -A Dallas man
general under former Atty. Gen. Robert whose murder conviction and 60-yea;
Kennedy and served as attorney general sentence were overturned by an 8ppeals
from 1965-1966, said he felt Nixon's ac-court in May, has been convicted again
cusations were unfair. in ~ retrial and sentenced to 999 years
"He ought to say who authorized 1t and in prison.
By United Pren International bloody trail of police killings and anned \vho knew about it," said Katzenbach. "The jury wanted to convey a
Just as 10,000 fire fight.en verged on robberies across the nation, were in· message," prosecutor George Karam controlling seven major forest fires in A SPOKESMAN for Sen. Edward M. said Wednesday.
the west, they were confronted today dieted today on charges ranging from Kennedy (D-Mass.), said a number of He asked for a sentence of 100 to 200
with 100 small but dangerous timber and _
1
as_sa_ul_t_to_m_unl_e_r. _______ _:f::orm:::.::er:...:J::u:s":· ce:::_:Departm~::.:::e'.:n'.'.t.'.'.ol'.'.f'.'.:lct~a'.'.'ls:_:w~er~e-~':.s:_ _______ ----~ -· h=• blazes caused by lightning.
The new fires, in Idaho and Montana
sent aerial tankers and ground crews ~
a game of hop-scotch to keep them from
bursting into vast conflagrations.
In Boise. Idaho, the U.S. Forest
Service expressed hope for soon con·
taining the remaining seven major fires
which have consumed a total or 70,000
acres of timber brusbland. They said 43
other large fires , covering 130,000 acres,
were now under control.
8 l11dlans ltlove In
DES MOINES, Iowa (UPJ) -Ten
armed members of the American Indian
Movement took over the State Depart-
ment of Public Instruction offices
Wednesday but surrendered peacefully
and were arrested after law enforcement
officers threatened a showdown.
· The Indians occupied the DPI offices
on the second noor of the Grimes State
Office Building for more than 2Yz hours
before scrapping plam for a corr
frontation with some 25 law enforcement
officers outside the statehouse complex.
e Youth /tlurdered
Mass Murder Hearings
Unde .r Tight Secur.ity
BELFAST, Northern Ireland (AP) -
Two carloads of men pulled up alongside
a young couple sitting in a car outside
the girl's home in Newry Wednesday
night, dragged the youth out and told the
girl, "We're going to kill him."
The youth's body was found four mlleS".
away a little later. He had been shot
through the chest.
e Vet.s Reject Won1en
NEW ORLEANS IAP) -The Veterans
of Foreign Wars have overwhelmingly
rejected a proposal to allow women to
join their organization. '
HOUSTON, Te<. (AP) -A Harris
CowllY snnd jury retuned four new In-
dictments today agaiDlt two youths
<'barged iD the 1ez-torture 1laylng!I case
in wbkb %1 bodies have been recovered.
HOUSTON (UPI) -'l11e district al·
tomey's office ordered special security
precautions at the hearing for two teen·
agers accused of die worst mass murder
of the 2llth Century.
The office has received several
CONTROVERS!AL TEXTBOOK
FOUND IN CORLL'S HOME, Page 5
,threatening telephone <'alls and letters, It
was revealed today.
Assistant District Attorney Michael
Hinton said one letter, bearing an out-of·
state postmark and addressed to the
district attorney's office, waJ turned over
to the FBI.
JDNI'ON said the letter "threatens
everybody."
Wednesday 's hearing was on a petition
filed by the district attorney seeking a
psychiatric hearing for Elmer Wayne
Henley, 17. and David Owen Brook!, 18.
They v.-ere indicted last week in three of
the 27 sex-torture slaylngs of young boys
linked to Dean Amold Corll 33.
District Judge William M. Hinton over·
ruled objections from defense attorneys
who claimed they have not had time to
consult with the defendants and ordered
the t\\-·o teen-agers to submit to the ex-
aminations.
Henley and Brooks looked pale and
tired at the hearings. They wore baggy
green f¥tigues with no belts and sloppy l·
shlrts with "county jail" stenciled across
the chest. Neither appeared very in·
terested in the proceedings.
BAILIFFS formed a flank behind the
defendants and other court officials stood
outside the doors to form the extra
security. No one was permitted to enter
the courtroom after the hearing began.
District attorney Carol S. Vance said
he want.<! the eumlnatioM beca-he
expected both defendants to enter In-
sanity pleas.
A bylaw proposed Wednesday at the
74th national convention would have
pernUtted women veterans to join on the
same basis as men. 'l1le motion failed to
receive a second and died before it could
reach the floor. Delegates tllen voted
almost wuutimously to ac<:ept a com·
rnit\fe report rejecting the proposed
amendment.
e Wiretap• Vpheld
NEW ORLEANS (AP) -An appeals
, court in New Orleans has upheld the 1968
conviction of H. Rap Brown on a
firearms charge, ruling that government
wiretaps in the case were legal .
The 5th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals
said Wednesday that the government's
secret electronic eavesdropping on the
black militant was ordered by the at·
torney general Wlder the President's
"inherent p:>wer to protect natiooal
security."
e HUit-ts Held
NEW YORK (UPI) -Nine leaders or
the S<>Called Black Liberatioo Army
(BLA), a group accused of leaving a
Floods • Ill Midwest _Rains,
Quarter-size Hailstones Pelt Northwestern, Iowa
to 73. lnl•lld ttmper•f\lrM r•not trom .i 10 H. Wiler t1mper1IU,.. 79.
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• Today's Final
'N.Y~ Stocks
VOL,· 66, NO. 235, 5 SECTIONS, 74 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY. CALIFORNI~ THURSDAY. AUGUST 23, 1973 N TEN CENTS •
' '
Kissinger . Sees Foreign Policy Improvement
By JOHN VALTERZA
ot 1M CleUJ "119t St.tf
Dr. Henry Kissinger, President Nixon's
new secretary of state-designate ap-
peared today at his first news conference
since it was learned William Rogers
would step down.
But Kissinger. skirted any major com.
mentary on pressing foreign relation
matters at the open air meetinf at the
Western White House because he still
Banging Tight
has to be confJnned by tbe Senate.
Kissinger pledged -ii be Is c:onflnned
-to "leave the country 's fore ign policy
in a· much better state than the admin-
istratioo found it."
Kissinger's nontelevised conrerence be-
gan in a somber mood, but quickly
stiowed a display of the colorful Nixon
adviser of old .
Dr. Kisainger said that soon after the
announcement of ooqtination wa s made
It takes--keen balance, nimble hands and strong legs to chum around
-the dirt track o! Te Winkle Park's motocross course in Costa Mesa.
More than 200 youngsters showed up to participate in the first format
bicycle motocross recently and the res u 1 ts are inside today on
Page 27.
liartelius Cites · 'Mistake,'
rromises No Repetitions
• I . By TOM B~RLEV
Of !tie Dtll'f ''"' Slllf
t1)S ANGELES -Fighting back tears,
a'cootrite Dr. Ebbe Hartelius today prom-
ised the three physicians who are his
j\t(iges : "I will never let anything like
~ happen again. •
•'it was the greatest mistake I ever Jtade," the Danish-born doctor almost
$ISpered in an obvious reference to his
!eve allair.wllh blonde Reba Vaughn, 31 , ol Costa Mesa.
~·1 can never erase what I have done,"
l{attelius told lhe State Board of Medical l!Xaminera c:ommlltee wl>ich must rule '!' ·his guilt or innocence on charges of
~al turpitude and unprofe&SionaJ con-
dilct.
:"My 'wife has been very understanding
a,id I owe everything to her and my
family at this tlme, '' he told the com·
mlttee.
'ing sex ual relationships with· both
women.
Hartelius testified that the only oc~
casions Mrs. Vaughn got Demerol from
him was for the relief of pain created by
"an industrial injury."
He admitted moving into her Wilson
Street home but he repeatedly denied
that be bad ever kicked and beaten her.
Hartelius blamed Mrs. Vaughn for the
sub.$tantlat shortages of D e m e r o I
reported by a state Board of Narcotics
Enforcement investigator who audited
the physician'• drug i-ecord• in 1969.
He accused his former mi.slrets of
making out a check for $2,000 .about that
time and forging his name to the docu-
ment. And Harteliu.s branded as "all
lies" Mrs. Vauahn's testimony that he
twice performed abortions on her y.ohilc
(See HARTEIJUS, Page Z)
by the President at a news oonrerence
Wednesday the cabinet 10ember-designa1e
spoke personally with all members of
the Senate Foreign Relations Comm ittee
and then bekan making the rounds of
the professionals in the state depa rtmen t.
"J told them au that they had better
get to know their wives very well be-
cause after my confinn ation they will
not be seeing them very much," he said.
Kissinger said that if he indeed assumes
the post he plans a trip to PekUig but he
added that he could not promise that
there was a possibility that the journey
would involve continuing negotiations
in the Indochi na situation.
Kissinger's appointment marks the first
time that the President's adviser on na-
tional security affairs would also be a full
fledged member of the cabinet answer-
able to Congress .
Kissinger underscored the importance
of the merger of the t\\'O roles and said
that for the first time it would open a
direct link between the Congress and the
President on all foreign poUcy matt ers.
\Vhen Kissinger held his or1ginal post
only, he met constantl y with the Presi-
dent and assisted in ma king major de·
cisions on all foreign policy matters but
never \ras cal\e~ upon to defend his ad·
vice befo re n1embers of Congress.
Long a fuvor ite of the press, Kissinger
throughout his briefing attempted to keep
il on a low-keyed level but the fonner
Harvard professor could not resist a part-
ing quip.
One reporter ended lhe affair today by
asking if the cabinet nominee preferred
to be called ·'~1r. Secrelary or Dr. Secre-
ta ry."
''l don't stand on protocol,'' Kissinger
joked . "Just call me excellency if you
\van t."
Marines Study Jet Use
Commercial Flights Feasible at Two Bases?
By JOHN ZALLER
Of !'lie o.u ... ''"'' ll•ff
The U.S. ?i.iarine Corps has hired a con-
sultant to find out if commercial jet use
at El Toro and Camp Pendleton is feasi·
ble, Marine officials disclosed tod ay.
And a preliminary conclusion is that it
would be "technically possible" to build
an "attractive jetport" at Camp Pendl~ton, but it would "cause ir·
reversible ecological impact" on the
coastline and would be "very expens ive."
Goldwater's
Puzzled By
Boat Rescue
The North Hollyw~ couple rescued
off Corona de! ~· by U.S. Sen. Barry ~t'. Gpldwater Tu ~y°"llad been jal!l'Cd
-not pushed -d a friend's J&.foot
speedboat, fiewport ~acb'. police said to-
day. ., _ . . Sen at o r Goldwater Wediiesday
prompted an inve~ation into the inci·
dent when he sald lie was "puzzled" be-
cause the speedboat did not "try to rescue
or seem concerned about the condition of
the people,'' fttr. and h1rs. Glenn
Machlitt.
tnstead, two women in the boat who
managed to hold oo when they crashed
into a huge wave bad helped a third
person. the boat's operator, back into the
speedboat and went directly to shore at
high speed .
Police Detective Sgt. Don Picker this
morning confirmed the account of the in·
cident given Wednesday by the boat
operator, Paul Brown, of Van Nuys, from
his bed at Hoag Memorial Hospital.
Brown told lhe Daily Pilot he had been
rescued by his wife and another woman
in the boat and they returned to shore
because he had been injured and they
observed the Machlitts safely aboard
Senator Goldwater's fiO.:foot yacht.. the
''Toh-Be-Kin."
Goliiwater personally dove off his boat
to. rescue the Machlitts.
Brown, 46, a pilot, said he and Machlitt
are co-workers at a Lockheed aircraft
plant in the San Fernando Valley and l.::f
been friends for five or six years.
Goldwater said he was concerned
because be bad observed lhe speedboa t
acting suspiciously earlier in the af-
ternoon.
HAs we were going down the harbor
this 18-foot yellow.green speedboat cut In
front of us at a high rate of speed," the
senator said.
"I thought they· were having a good
time so I forgot about it," he said.
"I took my boat out of the jetty to
demonstrate a new radar rangefinder
and about 500 yards out from the l ·st
jetty we heard a woman scream.
"I went out on deck and saw a \\'Oman
(See GOLDWATER, Page !i
The study, conducted by Stanford
Research Institute (SRI ) of Menlo Park
has not yet reached any conclusions
about possible joint use of the Marine
Corps Air Station at El Toro, according
to H.B. Wilder, the man in charge of the
study for SRI.
Civilian use at either base· could relieve
jet traffi c at Orange County Airport and
many officials are pushing that approach
as ah alternative to an expansion of the
county air facility.
Trophy, at Last
The proposal al so has prompted strong
opposition from some communi ties.
The inves tigation of possible civilia n
use is part of an overall study under way
since January, which is designed to
determine J\.1arine Corps needs through
1994 at the six Marine bases in Southern
California.
Marine Corps spokesmen today reaf-
firmed that the corps is still opposed to
civilian commercial use at either El Toro
or Camp Pendleton.
Snipe N atio11al Regatta
Won by Coast's Ullman
By ALMON LOCltABEY
\ . ~..-''"' ... ""' hltw
; "~ng•to malce one IMt'try for ~
Hei.rJing," said 27·year-old David
Ull:mm-a week before the start of the
Sni~ nation~ championship regatta at
MisS.irm B!y. (Other' boating news Page
19).
"Earl Elm.! is still the one to beat,"
mused Ullman. "And, of course: there is
always Tom Nute and Jeff Lenhart."
Ullman should know. He has sailed
with and against all of the above-named
trio pfus oilier veteran Snipe.rs, for 10
years.
But as it turned out, Ullman was the
m~n to beat in the 1973 Snipe nationals
which concluded Wedne.sdday at Mis.sion
Bay.
And the diminutive (115 pounds) skip-
per and his crewman Peter Connally (150
PoundS) today are the proud possessors
of the Heinzerling Trophy, the emblem of
the U.S. National Snipe championship.
l:Jllman is not ·resting· on his laurels.
Today he is flying to Kingston, Ontario,
Canada where he will compete, starting
Saturday, in the 470 Class of the CORK
pre-Olympic Regatta.
(He will be joined there by three other
local championship dinghy sailors -
Argyle Campbell (Tempest), Henry
(See ULLMAN, Page Zl
Dtlll' ,Ito! Sl•lf Pl'ltlo
NATIONAL SNIPE CHAMP
Balboa Y•cht Club's Ullman
Major Carripaign Funds
Hit -$79 Million Total
WASHINGTON (UPI) -Majo r con·
tributions to presJdential and vice
presidential candidates during a nine-
month period last year totaled about $79
million, the General Accounting Office
announced today, clearl y the lar gest
amount ever collected for national ca m·
paigns.
However, spokesm en said that the lrr
dependent outside agency has been asked
to make an objective study and lo come
to its own conclusions.
"The proposals for civilian use have
been made and they should be taken into
account in any long range planning for
the. two bases," Wilder said .
"It's one thing when the l\1arines stand
up every week and say there shou1dn't be
any civilian use," added Lt. Col. Ed .
(See JET USE, Page Zt
Police Shoot
Valley Man
In Attack
By JOANNE REYNOLDS
Of tt11 cwr, '''-' 1t•lf
A Fountain ValJey man , who -pplice
alleged was throwing but~ knives at
them, was shot in the stomach by
pttralmen early tllia morning.
Harold Eugene lAlcas, 47. of U623 San
Marcus St. wu booked into O~ge
COunty Jail on charges of attempted.
murder.
Police Capt. Les Rowland de5Cri.bed
Lucas' wounds as superficial after the
man was treated and released for book-
ing from the Orange County Medical
Center.
Rowland said Lucas was shot at least
twice by a contingent of four officers
after the man allegedly refused to drop
one knife he was about to throw after
already heaving one at the offiCers.
Sergeants Fred Nourse and Lewis
Barlow and Officers Lee Pepka arld
Donald Anderson were called lo the
Lucas home shortly alter midnight. by
a neighbor who complained of a loud
disturbance.
The four men were met at the door by
Ltocas who reportedly refused to talk to
any or the Policemen. According to the
Police report, Lucas "proceeded to throw
butcher knives at the officers."
Rowland said the officers opened fire
on the suspect when he continued tossing
knives at them after they had ordered
him to stop.
None of the officers was injured, police
report,ed.
This morning's shootin5 marks the
third shootin g incident involving Foun-
tain Valley police since April.
Three of those: shootings ha ve resulted
in deaths.
In April Miguel Angel Estrada Ron·
quillo, 20, of Santa Ana, was shot to
death in Fountain Valley by Orfice r
Timothy Miller of the Westminster
Police Department
The Ronquillo shooting was sparked
when a ¥ountain Valley officer had at-
tempted to take Ronquillo and four com-
(See POLICE, Page Z)
Orange Coast
rtellus, 51, who praCtices In the
bor Area and makes his home in El , went to the witness stand Wednes·
bt a new bid by both sides to
Net Loss 'Reported
A 1,900-page compilation by the GAO's
Office 0£ Federal Elections reflected con·
tributions in excess of $100 to all can·
didates for President and Vice Presidenj.
in the fonn of donations, ticket sales1 loans, transfers, interest, rebates and
other payments for the period of April 7 •
Dec. 31, 1972.
"The total of these contributions . . .
comes to approxi mately 179 million.''
the GAO, an investigative ann of
Congress, said In a statement ac-
companying the four-volume rePort.
reach an agieement that would end the ciise that has. been before medical ex·
aishlnen: for two years.
An earlier agreement that would have ..
l'JI, llarteli111 on n.. yun probaUon
whllo ~ldenbl1 restricting his use of ~In dangerous drup wu rejected by
the three surviving members of • the
original panel or !Ive doctors.
lll"'1h• h .. ,been examined by
derense attorney Matthew Kurillch1 but
DbW faces ~ examlnaUon by deputy
attorneys ..,..ra1 Mark Levin and Robert
~ukal.
J(urlildl earlier took Harteiius step by
s p throuah ,all 14 allegallons med by
lfie state against the silver-haired phys!·
cJan and obtained !lrm and vehement
dj!ni•ll from hil client on every c:ount
Harteltus denied Iha! he hod ad·
mlnlete..t Demerol to Mra. Vaughn and
Ille lafe Wonda MelendrtJ, 29, ol C...ta
MeA 11 1 mew ol inducing and e11haoc-
Fun. Zone Shutting Down
The Fun Zone, a iandm~rk ol old
Balboa, slDce 1940 will shut down forever
al the end or the pext month, the owner
or lhe property C<ll)Ormed Wednesday.
John Konwlser, head ol JAK Construc-
tion C.mP.enr ol Cotta Mesa, said he has
decided to close down tbe Fun Zone Sept.
30 because "it is barely produci ng eoough
money to pay ror the peroperty ·tax ea and
ii is conlrlbuilng almoot nothing at all
toward intercal payments" on lite loon
he took out :.o buy the J.25-acre FUn 1.or.e:
property.
l(onwiset sald he has invested 1116.000
in the 1""I and in plans to bulld a con-
dominium project on the Fun Zone alte at
300 Palm and Edgewater Avenues.
Konwlscr, who bough! lhe property
about a year ago, said-he has suffered a
"net loss" on the Fun Zone since his
purchase.
"The declston ia a ma nagement
decision I have made based on the
rtYe!Jues l'm getting front the project,"
he~ald.
Konwlscr declined to say what he
would do ~ith the property once tbe Fun
7.one is olooed.
At pl'e8ftlt, there are a number of
small CCIK'elSionaires OJ.lf{aling on the
property With leases £rom Konwlser.
Ultimately. Kon wiser hopes t o
demotfth the Fun Zone and replace it
.. . ;
with condominiums.
The Newport lleach City Council has
approved hl s proposal, and it Is currently
under review by the South Coast
Regional Zone Conservation Commission.
Konwiscr made his origina l an·
nouncement that he plaMed to close the
Fun Zone ,before the coas tal commission
Monday.
Allan Beek, part owner of the Balboa
Isla nd Ferry QOmpany and vocal op-
ponent of KOl'tWiser's plans for con·
domlniums, said he has mallf!d out
poa:tcards to evlb registered voter on
the Baiboo P<!nfuslj]a asking wbetber
they favor dell1!1illon or the Fun Zone to
make way fQf·tt>ndominlums. ,
The report covers contributions not only
to the campaigns or President Nixon
and his Democratic opponent, Sen.
George S. McGovern, but also to those or
more than a doz.en hopefuls who contested
the Republican and Oemocrallc nomina·
tions for President and Vice President
C-Olllributlons 10 Soclalis~ Workers,
A m e r I c a n Independent, Communist,
Progressive and other minor party can-
didates were Included.
The report was the first Issued unde r
the 1071 Federal Election Campaign Act,
which requires an ann ual accounling of
total contributions and expenditures for
all presidential flnd vice presldentJa l can·
dldates and Identification of all those who
contributed In excess or $100 to these
candidates.
OtheJ; portion• or the report will be
publlslied later.
• •
Weather
The weather's cooling oU, but it'll
still be nice along the Orange
Coast Ftiday, Highs or 68 nt lhe
beaches will rise to 80 In land.
INSWE TODAY
Voluptuo1is, attractive Kathy
Keeton is 011t of the wheel$ drlt>-
ing a ' ucw entru hlto the f ield
of sophisticoted sex naogozlne.s.
Her babu Is Viva, a j ournal f or
wonien. See story Page l7.
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UCI Students· to Use Dr. Slocum · •
'Ancient Laguna Hotel Loses Bid
In Court
By FREDERICK SCllOEMEUL
01 tl'lt 0.UY ftllol Sl1tt ••it certainly wasn't the kind of place
that would get a four star rating in the
AAA vacation book."
That's the way Det. Jolm Saporito. a
veteran Laguna Beach narcotics agent .
remembers tbe Hacienda Hotel, n
landmark that has attracted the pillars
and dregs of society in its 4G )'ear
history.
The Hacienda's most recent distinction
as a flophouse for transients. drug users
and drug dealers now is of the past.
The landmark hotel has been purchas-
ed for $300,000 by Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth
Price of Laguna Beach, who plan to
spend another $50,000 to renovate the 52-
room structure into an off-campus room-
ing house for UC Irvine students.
"It's a beautiful buiJding in a nice loca-
tion," said Mrs. Price, po in ling out the
pnooramic Pacific Ocean vie'v from !he vent tht return of the occupants.
top of the three story hotel, 1289 S. Coast An anned guard also ha3 been hired to
Highway. keep the building secure at night.
"\Ve don't hnve any low cost housing The Prices plan to patch cracked walls,
for students in Uiguna Beach. Either the paint the interior and refunllsh all the
.students have to live on campus or in rooms. They hope to have at least two
Costa Mesa . And they don't like that," floors ready for occupancy by Sept. 24 -
ti.trs. Price added. just one week before classes resume at
Purchase of the hotel from the former
o\\·ner. \\'i lliam Hosler. \\'as completed
last week. Since then, the Price fi:lmily
has wasted no time cleaning and repair·
ing the aging structure.
All but 10 "of about 100" persons have
been evicted from the hotel. 'Those who
remain will be gone within a week, noted
Bob Price. 24, wbo will manage the
residence hall.
The clutter of trash, clothes, broken
furniture and dishes has been cleared out
of most rooms and doors removed to pre--
UC!.
Another task is to replace door jambs
in the building. During the past several
years every room has been broken into
during narcotics raids by police officers.
Del. Sgt. Neil Purcell said he welcomes
the new image for the hotel, to be
renamed "Casa Nova."
"From what I've heard, it sounds like
a positive move. I'm optimistic," the
veteran narcotics investigator said.
"The amount of crime and narcotics
activity in its heyday was staggering,"
he added.
A bid to avoid a thltd legal battle In the
'""" Orange County SUperlor Court
complex where be has ~n trJed in two
other cases since 1966 ended in failure
Wednesday for Dr. Wesley G. Slocum .
The Santa Ana physician Indicted on
charges of grand theft and falsifying
Medi.cal bills had appealed for a change
of venue.
Califo'rnia Supreme Court justices
refused in San Francisco to grant the re·
quest, resulting ln an order for the
defendanl to appear in court today, for
the setting of a trial date.
The Supreme Court refusal to order 1
cbanae of V<11Ue for the surgeon and
general pracUUoner upheld an Orange
County Superior Court ruling.
Bed Tax Hassle
Saporito who has been on scores of
police raids on the hotel during the past
six years painted a more vivid picture.
l1e remembers the night one youth,
high on LSD, jumped from the roof of the
build ing to the street below. "One time
v.•e had a guy on LSD who slashed his
veins in his arms and started writing 'I
love you mother' on the \l.'all with his
blood ,·• Saporito said.
A challenge alleging Dr. Slocum could
not expect a fair trial due to publicity
surrounding his past history was refused
at that time.
Prostitute Refuses to Pay Demands
MULHOUSE, France (AP) -A pros.
slitute who suggested that her profession
be taxed has had her wish granted : she
has been slapped with a demand for
$37.500 in back taxes.
"I won't pay," Jacqueline Trappler
told newsmen today. "I didn 't make all
that much money anyway, these last four
years."
Mrs. Trappler brought attention to
herself recently be demanding that the
government reopen French brothels. She
has been supported by Marthe Richard,
the.' former Paris city councillor who
sponsored the closure law in.1946. ·
Under present law, prostitution is
legal, but procuring and operating
brothels are subject to severe prison
terms.
Mrs. Trappler, a medium-sized bru·
net who looks about 40, seeks "eros
centers" in which prositutes could prac-
tice their trade without needing the pro.
tee lion or a procurer.
Und er such an arrangement, she said,
the goverrunent could perhaps levy a tax
to pay the costs.
The letter she got from the tax in-
spector put her income since 1969 at an
~timated 460,000 francs, or about
$115,000. Taxes were estimated at
$37,500. •
"I don't kno'v on .... ·hat basis they have
figured this out," Mrs. Trappler said.
The French Finance Ministry has
several times been reported to be stud·
dying ways or taxing prostitutes but has
not come up with an enforceable system.
Mrs. Richard's turnaround on the
brothel question Is motivated by the need
for women to be truly liberated, she
says.
"The law which carries my name is
out of date," she sai d in a recent radio
interview. "I struggled all my life not
against prostitution but for the liberation
of women. And in 1973 a woman's
freedom requires that she be allowed to
do whatever she likes w'i.th her body."
ti.1rs. Trappler's demands for better
\li'orking conditions seem to have annoyed
at least tour fl.1ulhouse prostitutes. They
spotted Mrs. Trappler in a cafe Wednes-
day night and descended on her.
"There is the one who wants to gild
herself at our expense," she quoted the
\'!omen as sayin.;.
"Then they grabbed me by the anns
and two of them slapped and scratched
me," Mrs. Trappler recounted.
Out of professional solidarity, she did
not press charges.
Krishna Cult Members
Held in Police Attack
Laguna Beach police and an Orange
County marshal arrested l¥l0 members
or the Hare Krishna cult in Laguna
Beach Wednesday after a detective was
allegedly attacke<i during the service of
an arrest warrant at the group's temple.
Douglas c. Russell, 21, of 641 Ramona
Ave., was booked on suspicion of assault
on a police (ifficer, and interfering with
an officer in the line or duty.
Brian W. Nash, 19, al90 of 641 Ramona
Ave., was booked only on U:~ charge of
interfering with an officer.
Both men \Vere taken !:> SoiJth Orange
Col.nty Judicial District Court in Laguna
Niguel for arraignment on the misde-
meanor charges today.
Detective Sgt. Neil Purcell said that as
Detective Tony Smith and Deputy
fl.1a rshal Dick Ringler attempted to
search the Hare Krishna Temple for a
female named in a misdemeanor war·
rant, Russell allegedly grabbed Smith
\l.'ith a cbokehold around the neck.
Marshal Ringler forcibl y pulled the
coslume-clad Russell from the Laguna
Beach officer and placed the cult
member under arrest. Smith was unin-
jured.
The t\l.'O officers had initially been
OlANGI COAST '
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ordered to N!move their shoes before
entering the cult temple.
~th officers decl.ined to observe the
religious ritual, stating they wen! on of·
ficial -not spiritual -business, and in·
tended to search all areas where the
fugitive might be hiding, fully-shod.
The girl named in the warrant was not
found, although several females did flee
as the officers attempted to search the
premises.
Nash was arrested as he allegedly in-
terfered with officers outside the temple
residence.
He allegedly pestered the lawmen and
refused to leave the area where his saf·
fro~robed colle&gue was being detained
while awaiting a ride to jail, despite
repeated orders to leave.
A Hare Krishna attorney questioned
police motives in searching the residen ce
for the warrant suspect and asked why
no attempt had been made to telephone
the cult he.:idquarters and seek voluntary
compliance with her surrender on the
v•arrant.
Prior to serving the warrant, a letter
had gone to the headquarters advising
them of the wa rrant and requesting a
voluntary turn-in, however it got no
response, Sgt. Purcell said.
From Pagel
JET USE ..•
Janz, com1nunity liaison officer at El
Toro.
"But It would be another thing if some--
one on the outside who is Widely
respected for independence would come
to the same conclusion.''
The SRI study too k as its starting point
the level of operations the Marine Corps
says it needs at the two bases over the
next 2tl years, Col. Janz said.
Investigators will then determine what,
if any, level of civilian use of the two
bases is compatible with the expected
level of military use.
Based on these assumptions \Vildcr
said he has tentatively concluded that :
"From a technical engineering stand-
point, lt is possible to construct an at-
tractive civilian alrport on the Camp
Pendleton base.
"But that is the only advanlage we
found . It would be very cosUy, access
would be difficult, heavy jet traffic would
have an irreversible effect on the coastal
wildlife inside lhe base and it would have
an adverse effect un military opera·
r ion!."
\Vilder said that studies of possible
,,oint use of El Toro are just beginning.
He said the study would be based on
two possible levels or commercial jct use
-600,000 passengcr·Oights per year in
197$ and 6.7 million passenger flights in
19~.
Dllff' •1111 Stiff •111'9
The LSD craze passed in 1970 and
since, police have had to deal with more
violent crimes, including rape, assault
and assault with deadly weapons.
It's Auction Ti11ae
While cleaning the hotel , the Prices
have discovered several "stachcs" of
various narcotics and a bayonet.
Sgt. Les Thompson of Newport Beach Police Department prepares
items for auction of lost, stolen, or unclaimed items collected by po-
lice in recent months. Auction is scheduled for 10 a.m. Saturday at
the Newport City Yard on Superior Avenue.
One door .in a rooftop penthouse was
found literally splintered after being used
as a knife-throwing target.
Walls of several rooms and several
doors are adorned with all sorts of
messages. "Smoke It" was boldly
scrawled on one wall; "Love" on
another.
Lifeguards Log
177 Rescues as
Surf Stays High "Come and pay your rent," "Paul, 1
went to Lombardy, love ya, Cathi" and
"Rolling Stones tomorrow night, I've got
some coke (cocaine)" are a few com-Newport Beach lifeguards made 177
munications penned on doors to the rescues Wednesday as big surf and big
crowds mixed it up on city beaches for r~:Haeienda, however, has not alway~ lhe second straight day.
been so lurid. Lifeguards, however, described most of
The Spanish-style st ructure then known the rescues as routine. "There were so
as La Casa del Camino was built in 1927 many people in the wate r that anytime
by William Riddell, a retired Chicago even a moderate rip formed it would in·
professor and artist who later served on volve a number of people," said Marine
!he Laguna Beach City Council. Safety Lt. U>gan Lockabey.
In the early days, according to Mrs. "So our guards kept running up the
ti.1erle Ramsey, a local historian, the rescue totals all day, eVen though the
hote1 attracted movie personalities. surf was running only four to fi ve feet,''
Tales abound !hat during Prohibition Lockabey said.
gin was smuggled into the hotel for its Lockabey said tbat the surf was
fancy occupants. smaller this marnq: and tbet the tem-
Later, the hotel provided inexpensive, perature has falleo,. from 67 degrees
but clean lodging for Art Colony visitors We<ioe*iay to 65 degry,es.
who couldn't afford rhe Hotel Laguna. Beach attendance Wednesday was
Most locals who remember the hotel 1 estimated at 95,000 one of 1be biggest
say It and its tllentele began to I weekday cr~wds '° 1{ar tb!s !wnmer,
deteriorate in the eatly 1980s. Lockabey said. •
FromPqel
ULLMAN ...
Sprague and Danny Thompson (Finn).
Win. lose or draw at Kingston in the
470s, Ullman will soon be back home in
Newport to start his campaign for the
world Snipe championship for which he
qualified as winner of the nationals.
There, again, he will be up against Elms,
the defending world champion, and Jeff
Lenhart, runner-up to Ulhnan in the na·
1ionals.
In Spain Ullman will again be hoping
for light airs, such as prevailed at
Mi ssion Bay this week. His light weight
makes him vulnerable in heavy going in
the 14--foot Snipe dinghy.
WaywardBris
Parks in Cafe
SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) - A wayward
bus burst through a plate glass window
at Vesuvio Cafe In the North Beach night
club district, smashing a sign N!ading
"Booths tor topless lady psychiatrists."
The driver of the MWl.i.cipal Railways
bus bad' let his passengers out moments
before because his air brakes weren't
working.
Bartender Hal Thunes said his patrons
\\'er en 't too concerned once they were
sure the bus. wasn't coming all the way in
the care.
FretaP .. el
HARTELIUS. • •
the couple lived together.
Halltelius denied any responsibility for
the narcotics addictiop that led 10 Mrs.
Vaughn's commitment to C8Wornia
Rehabilitation Center at Norco in late
1968.
Hartelius reminded the panel via
Kurlllcb's questions that he had been
cleared in the Orange County Superior
Court trial of c~ges of arson, fraud,
compiracy and bribery.
And he blamed the publicity slemming'
from those trials, a grand jury in-
dictment and the marathon state bearing
ror losses he estimated at $120,000.
Before that publicity erupted, he said,
he had a prosperous general practice in
Costa Mesa and at 1345 E. Coast
Highway, Corona del Mar. Today,
Hartelius stated, he is practically llmlted
to treating elderly paUenls in con-
valescent homes and making home calls
"that very few doctors ca.re to make."
' ·F,....P .. el
GOLDWATER ••
in the water wearing a life jacket and a
man without one," he added. The speed-
boat was at some distance and one of my
passengers said they saw somebody pull·
ing somebody else out of the water.
"We tried to get the people a line but
couldn't reach them so I dove in and took
a line to the woman and swam over to
the man.
"He was okay, but she was hysterical,"
Sen. Goldwater said. "We wrapped them
in warm blankets and gave her a shot of
bourbon and a few shots to the man."
The Senator explained that his concern
was heightened because at one point the
woman said that she had ''been bodily
lhrovm out" of the boat.
Dwing the past seven years, tht
former Costa Mesa resident bas been
tried twice -once oo felony charges of
assault on a police officer and once on a
murder charge -but was acquitted both
times.
The murder case involved the 197~
discovery of the dJsmembei'ed body of irt
fant daughter Cynthia ~IOCIJl!l in a "'°"' taken lroni the 'i!liJcwn fiome in
Costa Mesa's M..a Verde dlstrlct.
1be baby hid vanls}wf U ~
earlier, not lOllJ alter ber bfrUI at Hoq
Memorial HOlpltal.
He and bis wtle Marlon -since dl"°""
ed -accused each other o( lavOlvement
In the disappearanco, but initial munler
charge1 qllnst her were dropped and
she testified against him. ·
Costa Mw police arresled Dr. Slocum
on the child-murder charge in March,
19&6, u he waited in an Orange County
Court House corridor for 1 hearing on
settlement of a $8 :million suit qaimt
Sant.a Ana police.
He was acquitted in 196S of ISllUlt
charges following a shootout with officers
in which one of his hands wu daml1ed.
The gunplay with police stemmed from
a domesUc dispute 1n his Santa Ana
clinic with his wife, 'who wu theo
employed u a nurse-receptionist.
He announced plus to go to Alaska for
a !resb start after being freed on chariea
in the dMth o! bis daughter, but '"1'<11·
ed • clinic In Santa Ana Instead.
A few months qo, District Attomq'I
invesUgator1 arrested blm on d>arsa iJ>.
eluding one couol ol fll'and tbefl and M
counta of lalollying billl to the state
bealth' apocy. lnveatlgaton claim oame
of 1the bllllnp -. for deceaed «
nodellltant potlenta.
11 1•
FretAP .. el
POLICE •..
pan.ions into custody rt>r alleged drunken
driving.
Tht Orange County Grand Jury clMred
Miller of wrongdoing in the !hooting.
Ronqulllo'1 !amlly has filed a IS00.000
lawsult ag1in1t the cities or WestrnlnRe:r
and Fountain Valley, Miller and Officer
Robert Mosley of Fountain Valley who
wu with Miller when the shooting OC·
curred.
In June two =P<Cted bandlta, PIJflQe!I
from the scene of a holdup ln F0W1taln
Valley were shot to death ln the parking
lot of Hoag Memorial Hospilal in
Newport. Beach.
How Ullman won the Heinzerling at
Mission Bay has already been chronicled.
Jt was largely a matter of swift light-air
sailing and staying out of foul trouble in
the hard-scrapping Snipe fleet. The only
lime he got in trouble was in the fifth
race when the winds whistled up over 15
knots and he finished 8th. A foul near the
weather mark, which cost him a "720"
didn't help keep him in contention.
Nobody Sells GE Dishwashers For Less Than 1>uld4P
Ullman finis hed second and third in the
final two races Wednesday, allowing him
to throw out the dreadful 8th {out of 33)
and keep finishes of 1·1·1·2-2-3 -giving
him a low score of 11 points under the
Olympic scoring system.
Castleman Smith
Services F1iday
In Palm Desert
Funeral services for Dr. Cast lemnn
Smith, a former commodore or the
Balboa Yacht Club, \Viii be held r~riday
in Palm Desert.
Ile died Aug. 20 0£ cancer at the age
of 76.
Dr. Smith, a 1927 graduate of the
University of Southern California School
of Dentistry, lived in Corona de! Mar
prior to moving to Palm Desert upon his
ret!N!ment 11 years ago.
While in the Harbor Arca, he was an
active member of the 1.fasonic Seafaring
Lodge and, in 1949, served as commodore
of the Balboa Yacht Club. He \•:as a World
\Var I and II veteran.
Servi~ "'ill be at 11 :30 11.m. et SL ~1argaret's Episcopal Church in P:alm
Desert. Masonic and mllltary graveside
services wUI follow at Forest Lawn Mor.
tuary in Glendale.
He leaves hi!: wife Fr9ned: a daugh.-
ter, Comflla Cl\Udrw of Corona del
Mar : a brother, Robert S. Smith of La-
guna Hills : a •~tcr Evotyn Smith Davis
of Palm O.sert and two grandsons.
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' I '
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1
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i i ~ .. ? ..
f •
,
MERLE HOWE CLEARS JUMP
Grand Prix ·
Mesa 'Bike Racers Get Test
By RUDI NIEDZIELSKI
Of "'9 P.MY Pitt Sflff
It was the day of the big Grand llrtx!
The renslon was apparent as they nervously wheeled their
batue iron to tbe ¥rid at TeWinkle Park. 'Crosser after 'Crosser
passed by the oflicials, each one fitted with some kind of "trick"
modification -cross·braced handlebars, banana seats, and knobby 14<s.
Any advantage, no matter how small, is important when the
competition is tough and the track a torture There are nine turns
in the Costa Mesa course, and each one of them "hairy."
A starter's pistol bellowed and lhe field roared of!.
In absolute silence.
1This was real motocross all right, wild slides off the berms.
spine-tingling leaps over the jumps, riders crashing in a cloud of
dust and untangling themselves from a heap of handlebars and
spokes.
But there was no cacophony of raspy two-stroke exhausts. Each
engine had only two reciprocating parts: legs.
The silent, smogless motocross Aug. 9 was organized by the
Department of Leisure Services to bust the turf on the city's brand
new race track, on Junipero Drive just off Arlington Avenue. It is
the first bicycle motocross track in Orange County.
Organizers originally only expected a field of 100, severely mis·
gauging the popularity of this new sport. They expected the race to
be over in about one hour.
Actually registration alone took that long because 250 kids
showed up to pump pedals for the honor of being the first grand
prix winner -including girls.
Races wtre held in four classes for both sexes. divided in var·
ious age groups ranging from seven through 16. Male chauvinism
was apparent: The boys outnumbered the girls by about five to one.
The fastest time of the day was clocked by Scott Mathews, win-
ner in Div. A for boys aged 13·16. Cris Crandall1 9, streaked through
t'brthewin in Div. C for boys aged 7·9. ~
Just who the other winners were is a mystery. In all the excite·
ment the Leisure Services Department lost the results. Those who
won the blue n'bbons know who they are. .
The Leisure Services Department has promised more grand
epreuves later this summer. Next year bicycle motocros~ racing m~f
even be as big as Pop Warner football and Little League basebaJI.
\ '
l
Thursday, Au9ust 23, 1q73 N DAI LY PILOT
CITY HELPER RUNS TO AID OF FALLEN RACER
l 1 • r
EVEN THE LITTLE LADIES TRIED THEIR HAND AT BICYCLE MOTO-CROSS RACING
•
TEWINKLE PARK RACEWAY BREEDS TOUGH COMPETITION
' •
DAILY PILOT
PHOTOS BY ·
PAT O'DONNELL
KRIS NUTE, 9, TAKES DREAD FAR TURN TOO TIGHT AND EATS A LITTLE DUST
CRIS CRANDALL, 9, WON HIS c~ss HANDILY
THIS IS TURN ONE -MESA'S WIPEOUT HEAVEN
...
: u o.iLv PILOT
Bot N111nber
• Loretta Sexy an'd Furuty
By VERNON SCQn
RoLLVWOOD (UPI)
Lote\ta wit is a trait.qr to her
i clua as a co-star in the ,
Wlevision series "M-A·S-H."
Her class is blonde. Her
credentials: sexy. Her bo,som:
ample.
But instead or following in
lhe great tradition 0 r
Hollylvood blondes by slriving
to be cuddlesome an d
adorable, Loretta is obnoxious
as nurse }fol Lips Houlihan in
the weekly comedy series.
She · strays from the usual
pattern ol blonde actresses in
another category. Loretta 's
bead is not empty.
BOT UPS is obviously
1 played for laughs. But there is
1 nothing particularly amusing
about Loretta's full figure -
often outlined in T-shirts -
and her sultry, sometimes
petulant face.
Asked how she overcomes
this ambivalence of sexiness
and hatefulness. L o r e t t a
pursued the question with the
r.eal of a real nurse taking a
blood sample .
"Hot Lips is obnoxious at
times." she agreed. "But I
always look for something
amusing aboot her so au·
diences will laugh instead of
just being angry with her.
"She's a career y,•oman and
sticks by Army regulations.
She also happens to fall apart
over ~fajor Burns in the show .
"IT 'S DIFFICULT to play
an attractive ·woman who
plays the heavy week after
week. I can't be too. heavy
because, after all. it is a com·
edy. But 1 have to put down
the men and lay them out as
al ten as possible."
Loretta is the envy or
almost every actress i n
Hollywood. She is the lone
regular female in a cast of
five males. Her co-stars are
Alan Alda. \\'ayne Rogers,
f\1cLean S1evenson . La r r y
Invil!e and Gary BurghofL
She often refers to them as
"my five guys." They in turn
are protecti\•e of her. She is
the only unmarried performer
in the group.
"\Ve've only been on the air
a year, but the family feeling
of thi s case is just about the
best known s t o r y in
Hollywood:' Loretta s a id .
SHE'S 'HOT LIPS'
Loretta Swit
"When we got together this
month to start the new season
it was like a reunion of school
kids -all the hugging,
laughing and screa ming.
"\Ve're extraordina rily close
because . we're all from the
theater and lived on the East
Coast. So we ha ve a similar
approach to our wor k. \Ve help
one another and criticize
ourselves to make the show
better."
LORE'M'A lS delighted that
she plays a female \vho is hav-
ing an affair with a married
man -another first for a
situation comedy.
"When you slop to think
about it. the situation is really
risque for television ," ,she
said. "But viewers accept it as
a renection of life. We haven't
had one letter objecting to the
roniance.
"I work hard at making Hot
Lips understandable. As an
army nurse she lives by 1he
book except in her private life.
~1ost of the time she is the an·
tagoni st who puts the story in
n1otion.
"Naturally, it's not all act-
ing. Part of Hot Lips is me.
Physically we are the same
person .'' _
Off the set. ho\\'C\'er. Lorct·
I.a Swit is free of Hot Lips' ob-
jectionable traitt. leaving onl y
a verv attractive blonde who.
like it or not. is in the be st
tradition or Holly\Yood sex
symbols.
May-December Lo,,;e
Will Ins pi re Movie
\\!AYCROSS. Ga . (APl -
Lydia Stone at age 63 married
22-year-old A1elton Crews, one
' or her hired farm hands, and
her story y,1ill soon be a mov ie.
C.Olonial Productions Ltd ..
and an Atlanta-based motion
picture company headed by
\Vaycross native Buck Blalock
and Bing Q-osby 's son
Lindsay, plan to film the talc
of ~1rs. Stone's days in
southeast Georgia as a
wealthv, demanding a n d
fascinti ting widow \vh o. at 63.
married one of her farm
hands.
Lydia. six feet tall and iJ.
literate, inherited a fortune
and thousands of acres of
limberland and farmland at
the death of her doctor hus--
band in \Vaycross in the 1930s.
Her property included part or
Okefenokee Swamp.
SHE RODE over her lands
on a white horse and carried a
bull whip.
When J.,ydia fell in love and
married Crews in 1938 in
Folkston. the event was then
called the "wedding of the
century." The bride \Yore a
beaded white dress that took
three months to make.
She "'as later buried in the
same ga m1ent \\'hen she died
of cancer in 1945.
The highlight of the legend
is the effort Lydia put into
getting "Doll Baby." the name
she called Crews in public and
private. out of prison after he
was convicted of killing a
neighbor.
AFL'ER A personal appeal
to then Gov. Gene Talmadge.
she succeeded in 1942, and
Crews cheated the law out of 28
years of the sentence. having
spent just two years in jail.
Before her death . Lydia a r·
ranged ano.tber marriage for
Creu•s and left him half a
million dollars. plus a timber
and turpentine business \Vorth
1nuch n1ore.
CrC\\."S, \\'ho <lied o n 1 v
recently. gave Blalock ail
insight into his life with Ly~in
in a taped IS-hou r interviey,•.
BLALOCK SAID the mo\P ie
wou1d cost more than $1
million. He said it will show 1 scenes of Georgia's old cha in
gangs, and "holy roller"
episodes of wayside churches
attended by Lydia and Cre\\·s.
Blalock said Crews was once
known as a carouser. but in
his later days he "sav.i
the light." and built sever;il
sn"all churches in southeast
Georgia before he died.
INTERMISSION ...
(From Page 26)
Burnside. Call 897·9881 for
reservations.
The only other show on
stage locally is South Coast
Repertory's prod uction o r
"Catch 22," another top-notch
piece of theater. "la rt in
Benaon'• direction is at its
peak and the cast. headed by
Ji1n f\1cKie, Gary Bell, ~leath
Park and \Yilliam Brady, is
top drawer.
The Joseph Heller military
satire is presented Wednes·
days throogh Sundays at 8
o'clock in the Third Step
Theater, 1827 Newport Blvd.,
C.Osta M e s a . Reservat!Ons
64&.1363.
Start Weekend Early
The weekend begins along the Orange Coast on
Friday. That's the day the DAILY PILOT publishes Its
WEEKENDER, a lively sedion about the lively arts -
and where to dine out and other interesting thin gs that
ctn make a weekend a mini vacation for you and the
spedal people Jn your Ufe. Start your we.?kend ~arty next
Frlclay. S!Art 11 with the WEEKENDER.
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/Xi, NO. 235, 6 SECTIONS, 82 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA THURSDAY, AUGUST 23, 1973
, Today's F l•al
c
N.Y. Stoeks
I
TEN CENTS
•
(issinger Sees Foreign Policy Improvement
By JOHN VAL TERZA
01 "'-~u, Piie! Sl•lf
Dr. Henry Kissinger, President Nixon's
new secretary o{ state-Oesignate ap-
l>¢ared today at his first news conference
since it was learned WiUiam Rogers
would step down. (Other stories. Page 3.)
But Kissinger skirted any major com-
mentary on pressing foreign relation
mp.tters at the open air meeting at the
Western White House because he stilJ·
••
Bangitag Tight
has to be confirmed by the Senate.
Kissinger pledged -if he is confirmed
-to '''leave the country's foreign policy
in a much better state than the admin·
istration found it."
Kissinger's nontelevised conference be-
gan in a somber mood, but quickly
showed a display of the colorful Nixon
adviser of old.
Dr. Kissinger said that soon after the
announcement of nomination was made
'·It takes keen balance, nimble hands and strong legs to chu,rn around
t.l)e dirt track of TeWinkle Park's motocross course in Costa Mesa.
. More than 200 youngsters showed up ta participate in the first formal
_.:bicycle motocross recently and the res u Its are inside today on
· Page 27 .
Hartelius Cites 'Mistake,'
•
~romises No Repetitions
By TOM BARLEY
Of llN D1llT l"ll1f Slaff
t-l.05 ANGELES -Fighting back tears,
a contrite Dr. Eb be Harte Ii us today prom-
ised · the, three physicians 'vho are his
j~gcs : "I will never let anything like
Uili happen again.
HJt was the greatest mistake I ever
J'Ul,de," the Danish-born doctor almost
whispered in an obvious reference to his
loYe affair with blonde Reba Vaughn, 31,
of, Costa Mesa. ffh. can never erase what I have done,"
118.rtelius told the State Board 0£ Medical
Examiners committee which must ruJe
on bis guilt or innocence on charges or
mor{ll turpitude and unprofeM1ional con-
duct.
''"'My wife has been very understanding
aod I owe everything to her and my
ftmily at this time," he told the com·
lljlttee.
ing sexual relationships with both
women. 1
Hartelius testified that the only oc·
casions Mrs. Vaughn got Demerol from
him was for the relief or pain created by
"an industrial injury."
He admitted moving into her \Vilson
Street home but be repeatedly denied
that he had ever kicked and beaten her.
Hartelius blamed Mrs. Vaughn for the
substantial shortages of D e m e r o 1
reported by a state Board of Narcotics
Enforcement investigator who audited
lhe physician's drug'record:.. in 1969.
He accused his former mistress of
making out a check for $2,000 about that
time and forging his name to the docu·
ment. And Hartelius branded as "all
lies" Mrs. Vaughn's testimony that he
twice performed abortions on her whil e
!See llARTEUUS, Page II
by the President at a news conference
Wednesday the cabinet member-designate
spoke personally with all members of
the Senate Foreign Relations Committee
and then began making the rounds of
the profe~siooals in the state department.
"I told them all that they had better
get to know their wives very well be-
cause after my confinnation they will
not be seeing them very much," he said.
Kissinger said that if he indeed assumes
the post he plans a trip to Pekin$' but he
added that he could not promise that
there was a possibility that the journey
would involve continuing negotiations
in the Indochina situation.
Kiss inger's appointment marks the first
time that the President's adviser on na-
tional security affairs would also be a full
fledged member of the cabinet answer·
able to C.Ongress.
Kissinger W1derscored the importance
ot the merger of the two roles and said
that £or the £irst time it would open a
direct link between the Congress and the
President on all foreign palicr matters.
\Yhen Kissjnger held his original post
only, he met constantly with the Presi·
dent and assisted in making major de·
cisions on all foreign policy matters but
never was called upon to defend his ad·
vice before members of Congress.
Long a favorite of the press, Kis singer
throughout his briefing atten1p1ed lo keep
it on a low·keyed level bu t the fonner
.11arvard professor couJd not resist a part-
mg quip.
One reporter ended the affair today by
asking if the cabinet nominee preferred
lo be called "ri.1r. Secretary or Dr. Secre-
tary."
"1 don't stand on protocol," Kissinger
joked. "Just call me excellency if you
want. '1
Marines ·Study Jet Use
Commercial Flights Feasible at Two Bases?
By JOHN ZALLER
01 ltlt D•llY Pllel Sl11f
The U.S. Marine Corps has hired a con·
sultant to find out if commercial jet use
at El Toro and Camp Pendleton is feasi·
ble, Marine officials disclosed today.
And a preliminary conclusion is that it
would be "technically possible" lo build
an "attractive jetport" at Camp
Pendleton, but it would "cause ir-
reversible ecological impact" on the
coastline and would be "very expensive."
Goldwater's
Puzzwd By
Boat Rescue
The North Holly\l.'ood couple rescued
off Corona del Mar by U.S. Sen. Barry
1t1. Goldwater Tuesday bad been jan:ed
-not pushed -out of a frlend's ta.root
speedboat, Newport Beach police said to-
day. . -·
S e n a to r Goldwater Wednesday
prompted an investiption into the iru::i·
dent wtien be said he was "puzzled" be-
cause the speedboat did not "try to rescue
or seem concerned about the condition or
the people," Mr. and Mrs. Glenn
Machlitt.
Instead, two women in the boat who
managed to hold on when they crashed
into a huge wave had helped a third
person;-lhe boat's operator, back into the
speedboat and went directly to shore at
high speed.
Police Detective ~gt. Don Pit:ker this
morning corJinned the account or the in·
cideot given Wednesday by the boat
operator, Paul Brown, of Van Nuys, from
his bed at Hoag Memorial Hospital.
Brown told the Daily Pilot he had been
rescued by his wife and another woman
in the boat and they returned to shore
be<:ause he had been injured and they
observed. the Machlitts safely · aboard
Senator Goldwater's 60-foot yacht, the
"Toh-Be-Kin."
Goldwater personally dove off his boat
to rescue the Machlitts.
Brown. 46, a pilot. said he and Machlitt
are ~workers at a Lockheed aircra£t
plant in the San Fernando Valley and l..~:I
been friends for five or six years.
Goldwater said he was concerned
because be had observed the speedboat
acting suspiciously earlier in the af-
ternoon.
"As we were going down the harbor
this HJ-foot yellow-green speedboat cut in
front of us at a high rate of speed," the
senator said.
"I thought they were having a good
-time so I forgot about it ," he said.
"I took my boat out of the jetty to
demonstrate a new radar rangefindcr
and about 500 yards out from the ~ st
jetty \Ve heard a woman scream.
"I \l.'ent out on deck and saw a wo1nan
(See GOLDWATER, Page IJ
The study, conducted by Stanford
Research Institute (SRI) of Menlo Park
has not yet reached any conclusions
about possible joint use of the Marine
Corps Air Station at El Toro, according
to H.B. Wilder, the man in charge of the
study for SRI.
Civilian use at either base could relieve
jet traffic at Orange County Airport and
many officials are pushing that approach
as an alternative to an expansion of the
county air facility.
Trophy at Last
The proposal also has prompted strong
opposition from some communities.
The investigation of possible civilian
use is part of an overall study under way
since January, which is designed to
determine Marine Corps needs through
1994 at the six Marine baSes in Southern
California.
Marine Corps spokesmen today reaf-
firmed that the corps is still opposed to
civilian commercial use at either El Toro
or Camp Pendleton.
Snipe Natio11al Regatta
Won by Coast's Ullman
By ALMON LOCKABEV
D911Y Pl .. t '"""' E'ltor
"I'm going to make one last try for the
Heinzerling," said 27-year-old David
Ullman a week before the atart of the
Snipe national championship regatta at
Mission Bay. (Other boating news Page
191.
"Earl Elms i.s still the one to beat,"
mused Ullman. "And, of course there is
always Tom Nute and Jeff Lenhart."
Ullman should know. He bas sailed
with and against all of the above-named
trio plus other veteran Snipers, for 10
years .
But as it turned out, Ullman was the
man to beat in the 1973 Snipe nationals
which concluded Wednesdday at Mission
Bay.
And the diminutive (115 pounds) skip-
per and his crewman Peter Connally (150
pounds) today are the proud possessors
of the Heinzerling Trophy, the emblem of
the U.S. National Snipe championship.
Ullman is not resting on his laurels .
Today be is flying to Kingston, Ontario,
Canada where be will compete, starting
Saturday, in the 470 Class of the CORK
pre-Olympic Regatta.
(He will be joined there by three other
local championship dinghy sailors -
Argyle Campbell (Tempest), Henry
(See Vu.MAN, Page II
0-11'f .. llDI $tiff Plloto
NATIONAL SNIPE CHAMP
B1lbol Y1cht Club's Ullm1n
Major Cauipaign Funds
Hit $79 Million Total
WASlllNGTON (UPI) -Major coll"
tributions to presidential and vice
presidential candidates during a nine·
month period last year totaled about $79
million, the General Accounting Office
1 announced today, clearly the largest
amount ever collected for national cam-
paigns.
11owever, spokesmen sa~d that lhe in-
dependent outside agency has been asked
to make an objective study and to come
to its own conclusions.
"The proposals for civilian use havt
been made and they should be taken into
account in any long range planning for
the two bases." Wilder said.
"It's one thing when the Marines stand
up every week and say there shouldn't be
any civilian use," added Lt. Col. Ed.
(S.e JET USE, Page I)
Police Shoot
Valley Man
In Attack
By JOANNE REYNOLDS
OI lflt Diii'( r11 .. Sl&lf
A Fol.Dltain Valley man, who police
alleged was throwing butcher knives at
them, was shot in the st'omach by
pr.trolmen early this morning. .
Harold Eugene Lucas, 47, of 18623 san
Marcus St. was booked Into Orange
County Jail on charges of attempted
murder.
Police Capt. Les Rowland described
Lucis' wounds as superficial after the
man was treated and released for boolt·
ing from the Ora11ge County Medical
Center.
Rowland said Lucas was shot at least
twice by a contingent or £our officers
after the man allegedly refused to drop
one knife he. was about to throw after
already heaving one at the officers.
Sergeants Fred Nourse and Lewis
Barlow and Officers Lee Pepka and
Donald Anderson were called to the
Lucas home shortly after midnight by
a neighbor who complained or a loud
disturbance.
The four men were met at the door by
Lucas who reportedly refused to talk to
any of the policemen. According to the
police report, Lucas "proceeded to throw
butcher knives at the officers."
Rowland said the officers opened ftre
on the suspect when he continued tossing
knives at them after they had ordered
him to stop.
None of the officers was injured, police
reported.
This morning's shootint; marks the
third shooting incident involving 1''oun-
tai11 Valley police since April.
Three of those shootings have resulted
in deaths .
In April Miguel Angel Estrada Ron-
quillo, 20, pf Santa Ana. was shot to.
death in tountain VaUey by Officer
Timothy Miller of the Westminster
Police Department.
The Ronquillo shooting was sparked
when a Fountain Valley officer had at·
tempted to take Ronquillo and four com-
(S.e POUCE, Page I)
Orange Coast
tllartellus, 51. who practices in tpc
Harbor Area and makes his home in El
Tpro, went to the witness stand .Wednes-
day in a 11ew bid by both sides to
rtach· an agreement that would end the cP.e lhat has been before medical ex-
.ainlners for two years.
Net Loss Re'Pf!rted
A 1,@page compilation by the GAO's
Office of Federal Elections reflected con-
tributions in excess of $100 to all can-
didates for President aod Vice President
in the fonn of donations, ticket sales,
loans, transfers, interest, rebates and
other payments for the periO<I or April 7 .
Dec. 31, 1972.
''The total of these contributions ...
comes to approximately $79 million,''
the GAO, an investigative ann or
Cbngress, said ia a statement ac·
companying the four-volume report.
.
Weather T
' . An earlier agreement that would have tNt' l:lartelius on 'five years ptlObaUon
while considerably restricting his use of
Fun Zone Shutting Down
·certain dangerous drugs was rejected by The h'un 7.one, a landmark of old
Jhe three surviving members 0£ lhe Balboa, since 1940 will shut down forever
ptlglnal panel of live doctorS. at the 'end of the next month. the owner
'.llartclius bas been examined by ~fense attorney Matthe# Kurillch, but or the property connnned Wednesday.
Row faces cross examination by deputy John Konwiser, head or JAK Construc-
&ttoi;neys general Mark Levin and Robert lion Company of Costa Mesa, said he has
lljukai. dcclded to close down the Fun Zone S.pt.
J<urlllch earHer teok Hartelius step by 30 because "it is barely producing enough
step through all t4 allegations nled by mOlley to pay 10< tho peroperty laxes and
jbe state against the silver-haired physi· it is contrlbuUn.g almost nothlng at all
cian and oblalncd nrm and vehement toward interest payments" on the loan
dcnla11 from bis client on every count. he tQOk out '.o buy the 1.25-acre Fun Zone
· Hartellus denied tl1at • he had ad· property,
lnini\tered DO!merol to Mn. Vaughn and Konwlser said ho h8' Invested 1196,000
tMJ!it• Wanda Melend~ Ill of Costa In t~ lan<L~Jll pta111 to )lulld a """
-Mesa as a meatii of iiiduc111g anCI enliiil~ domlnlum project .on the fUn Zone site at
•
300 PaJm and 600 Edgewat~r Avenues.
Konwlser, who 'bought the property
about a year ago, said he has suffered a
"nel loss" on the Fun Zone since his
purchase.
"The decision is a manageinent
decision I have made based on the
revenues I'm gettlng from the project,"
be said.
Konwiser declined to say what he
would do with the property once the Fun
Zone is clooed.
Al present, there are a iiumber o(
small concesak>nalres operatlnf on the
property with leases from KonwJSe.r.
UIUm.olely, Konwtsec. bo!* to
demolish lbc Fun 2.onc and replace it
with condominlums.
The Newport Beach City Council has.
approved his proposal , and It is currently
under review by the South Coast
Regional Zone Conservation Commission.
Konwlser made his original an·
nouncement that ht! planned to close the
Fun Zone before the coasta l commission
Monday.
Allan Beclc. part owner of the Balboa
Island Ferry Company and vocal op-
ponent or Konwiscr's plans for con-
dominiums, said he has mailed out
postcards to every registered voter on
the Balboa Ptninsula asking whether
they fa'°' demolltton of the fUn Zone to
make wa.y for condominiums.
The report covers contributions not only
to the campaigns of President Nixon
and his Democratic opponent, Sen.
George S. McGovern, but also to those' of
more than a dozen hopefuls who contested
the Republican and Democratic nomina-
tions for President and Vice President
Q>nlri!>':'tions to Socialis;. Workers,
A m e r t c a n Independent, Communist,
Progressive trKJ other minor party can. 1 dldates were Included.
The report was the first issued under
the 1971 Fodera! Election Campaign Act,
wh1ch requires an annual accounting of
total contributions and expenditures for
all presidential and vlce presidcntlnl can-
didates and idcntiflcatlon of all those who
contrlbtlted in cxceu of $100 to these
candidates.
Other portions of the rtport will be
published later.
The weather's cooling off, but it'll
still be nice along the Orange
Coast Friday. IDghs of 68 at the
beaches will rise to 80 inland.
INSIDE TODAY
Voluptuolls, attractive Kathy
Keeton 1s one of t11e w11cef.s driv-
itt!} a ttew entry htto tilt field
of sophisticottd sex 11uigaz&nes.
1'1.er baby '' Viva, a journal for
wome1t. See story Paue 17.
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Debi Brothers, 17, oC Costa
Mesa. will vie for ?.-1iss Orange
Coun'ty title Sunday in Santa
Ana. Debi, who is studying to
be a dental assistant, hopes to
win the county crown and go
on to the Miss California Pag·
eant in November.
Library Offering
'Civilization'
Film at College
The Mesa Verde branch of the Orange
County Eublic Library in conjunction
with Southern California College '>''ill
present the British "Civilization" seriC'5
Sept. 10 through Dec. 4.
The 13 color films , a production of the
BBC, will be shown to the public at 7:30
p.m. Mondays in the college auditorium,
2525 Newport Blvd., Costa ?.fcsa.
Admission is free.
"Civilzatlon" was written and directed
by Lord Kenneth Clark, a well-known
English historian and author. Jt was
filmed over a period of two years.
Leading off the series on Sept. 10 is
"The Frozen \Vor1d" In which Clark ex-
amines the ideas and \'alues of \\·estern
civilization by describing the ideal which
was inhtrited from Greece and lasted
more than 600 yea rs.
Schedules or the showings are available
from the branch library. For in-
formation. call Dorise Jesko or Judy
Smith, Sf&.lim.
Cyclist Killed
In T111ck Crasl1
A motorcyclist was killed early today
in Anaheim when his cycle collided with
the rear of a pickup truck.
The coroner's office said the man, 28,
died at 3:30 a.m. in the intensive care
unit of the Orange County Medical
Center from severe head injuries.
Police said the accident 'Occurred on
Harbor Boulevard at Freedman Way at
1:56 a.m. vl'hen the cyclist ran in to the
rear or a truck driven by Lawson A.
Gray of British Columbia.
The Orange County Coroner's office is
trying to contact next of kin before
releasing the victim's name. He \vas said
to be from Orange County.
OUN•l COAST
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f'rorn Page 1
UI:iLMAN ..•
Sprague and Daony Thon1pson (Finn).
Win, lose or draw al Kingston in the
4700, Ulbnan will soon be bac~ homo In
Newport to start his campaign for thu
"''Orld Sttlpe championship for wh ich he
qualliled as winner or the nationals.
There, again, he will be up against Elms,
the defending world champion, and Jeff
Lenhart, runner·up to Ullman ln the na·
tionals.
In Spairi Ullman will again be hoping
for light airs, such as prevailed at
Mission Bay this week. His light weight
makes him vulnerable in heavy going in
the 14-lool Sniff dinghy.
How Ullftt'1t'~(.,.on the llcl nze rling at
lifission Bay has already been chronicled.
It was largely a matter of swift·light-air
sailing and staying oul of foul trouble in
the hard-scrapping Snipe fleet. The only
time he got in trouble was in the fifth
race when the winds whistled up over 15
knots aod he finished 8th. A foul near the
weather mark, which cost him a "720"
didn't help keep him in con tention.
Ullman finished SC(.'()Od and third in the
nnal two races Wednesday, allowing him
to throw out the dreadful 8th (out of 33)
and keep finishes or 1-1-1-2-2·3 -giving
him a low SC<>re of 11 points under the
Olympic scoring system.
F,.o,,, Page I
JET USE ...
Janz, community liaison officer at El
Toro.
';But it would be another thing if soinc-
one on the outside who is widely
respected for independence would come
to the same conclusion."
The SRI study took as its starting point
the level of operations the ~farine Corps
says it needs 'at the two bases over the
next 20 years, Col. Janz said.
Investigato rs will then detennine what,
if any, level of civilian use of the two
bases is compatible with the expected
level of military use.
Based on these assumptions Wilder
said he has tentati vely concluded that :
"From a teclmical engineering stand-
point. it is possible to construct an at-
tractive civilian airport on the Camp
Pendleton base. ·
"But that is the only advantage we
found. It \.vould be very costly. access
\vould be difficult. heavy jet traffic would
have an irreve rsible effect on the coastal
wildlife inside the base and it would have
an adverse effect on military opera -
tions."
Wilder sai d that studi es of possible
joint use of El Toro are just beginning.
He said the study would be based on
two possible levels of commercial jet use
-600,000 passenger-flights per year in
1975 and 6.7' milllon passenger flights in
1985.
f'l'Otn Page I
GOLDWATER • •
in the water wearing a life jacket and a
man without one," he added . The speed-
boat was at some distance and one of my
passengers sald they saw somebody pull-
ing somebody else out of the water.
"We tried to get the people a line but
couldn 't reach them so I dove in and took
a line to the woman and swam over to
the man.
''He was okay, but she was hysterical,"
Sen. Gold\\·ater said. "\Ve wrapped them
in wann blankets and gave her a shot of
bourbon and a few shots to the man."
The Senator explained that his concern
was heightened because at one point the
woman said that she had "been bodily
111o th~own out" of the boat.
"What was puzzling to me at the Ume
is that the speedboat made no effort to
check out wha t had ha ppened to them ,"
Senator Goldwater said.
It's Atictio1a Ti"••ae
o.llr l"llol Sl•ff 1"1101115
Wntcla Tlais, Gn11g
Dr. Slocum
Loses' Bid
In Court
A bid to avoid a third legal battle in t.hr
.\ salne Oran"C County Superior courl
• e ldin!Y!'O complex where he h11s been tr e • -• . .6 <k!d In failure olhcr cases since 100 en I 1 G Slocurn · \Vednesdav for Dr. \Vcs ey · . ·
The S~ta Ana physician Indict~ on
.. r grand theft and fals1fylng cuorges o h r Medi-Cal bills had appe<ilL'<I for a c ang
of venue.
California Suµren1e Court justlcr~
refused In San Francisco to gr.int the rt"
It' g in an ordtr for the quest, resu m od ( r defendant lo apµeur in court 1 ay. 0
the setting of a 1rinl date.
The Supren1c court rt rusal lo order· l'l
cha nge or venue for the surgt>0n aod
general practilioner uph~ld an Orange
County Superior Court ruling . ·
City Councilman Don1inic Raciti pr?mises a home
run but delivers only a base hit during Wednesday
ni ght's Costa Mesa .. City Pops" b~seball .g~me. 'l'he
Playground All-Stars defeated city 01!1cials. 10·9.
Despite son1e injuries -Ma yor Jac k Hammett lost
a fingernail and Police Capt. Ed Glasgow hurt his
knee -city officials were ahead 9-3 until the last
inning when the opposition started hitting the ball
into areas of TeWinkle Park field where the pops
didn't have any players.
A challenge alleging Dr. SJocu1n c~uld
not expect a fair trial due to pubhctty
surrounding his past history was rcfu~
at that tin1c.
During the past seven years, Uie
former Costa f\.1csa resident has ~n
tried twice -once on felony charges • o!
assault on a police officer and once Oil a
murder charge -but was acqui tted ~lh
times. Lagu11a's Hacie11da Hotel
Will House UCI Students
From Page I
HARTELIUS • • •
the couple lived together.
Hartelius denied any responsibility for
the narcotics addiction that led to Mrs.
Vaughn 's commitment to California
Rehabilitation Center at Norco in late
1968.
The murder cllse involved the 1t10
discovery of the dismembered body of l11·
fant daughter Cynthia Slocum in , 2
freezer taken from the Slocwn home .jn
·Costa P.iesa's P.f~sa Verde district.
The baby had vanished six yerrs
earlier, not Ion' aft.er her birth 1t ll~g
By FREDERI CK SCHOEMEHL
01 tllo El•llJ P'ilot Sii.ff
"It certainly wasn't the kind of place
that would get a four star rating in the
AAA vacation book ."
That's the way Del. John Saporito, a
veteran Laguna Beach narcotics agent.
remembers the ~lacicnda J.Iotel. a
landn1ark that has attracted the pillars
and dregs of society in its 46 year
history.
The Hacienda 's most recent distinction
as a flophou se for transients. drug users
and drug dealers now is or the past.
The landmark hotel has been purchas-
ed for $300,000 by l\tr. and Mrs. Kenneth
Price of Laguna Beach, who plan to
spend another $!)0.000 to renovate the 52-
room structure into an off-campus room·
ing house for UC Irvine students.
"It's a beautiful building in a nice loca-
tion ," said l\1rs. Price, pointing 01.Jt the
panoramic Pacific Ocean viey,· from the
top of the three story hotel, 1289 S. Coast
J~ighway.
•·\Ve don't have any low cost housing
for students in Laguna Beach. Either the
students have le Jive on campus or in
Costa Mesa. And they don't 1ike that,"
Mrs. Price added.
Purchase of the hotel from the former
O\vner, Willilim Hosler, was completed
last '>''eek. Since then, the Price family
has wasted no time clea ning and repair-
ing the aging stru cture.
All but 10 "of about 100" persons have
been evicted from the hotel. Those who
remain will be gone within a week , noted
Bob Price, 24, who will manage the
residence hall.
The clutter of trash, clothes, broken
furniture and dishes has been cleared out
of most rooms and doors removed to pre-
vent the return of the occupants.
An anned guard also has been hired to
keep the building secure at night.
The Prices plan to patch cracked v.·alls,
paint the interior and refurnish all the
rooms. They hope to have at least tv.·o
floors ready for occupancy by Sept. 24 -
just one week before classes resume at
UC!.
Another task is to replace door jambs
in the buildink. D\iring the past several
years every roo m has been broken into
during narcot ics raids by police officers.
Det. Sgt. Neil Purcell said he \velcomes
the new image for the hotel, to be
renamed "Casa Nova."
"From \\•hat I've heard. it sounds like
a positive move. I'll!. op!imistic," the
9'eteran narcotics investigator .said.
··the amount of crime and narcotics
activity in its heyday was staggering,"
he added.
Saporito who has been on scores of
police raids on the hotel during the past
six years painted a more vivid picture.
He remembers the night one youth,
high on LS D, jumped from the roof of the
build ing to the street below. "One time
we had a guy on LSD who slashed his
veins in his arms and started writing 'l
love you mother' on the wall with his
blood," Saporito said. ~
The LSD craze p~ssed in 1970 and
since, police have had to deal with more
violent crimes, including rape, assault
and assault with deadly weapons.
While cleaning the hotel, the Prices
have discovered several "stacbes" of
various narcotics and a bayonet.
One door ln a rooftop penthouse was
found literally splintered after being used
as a knife-throwing target.
\Valls of several rooms and several
doors are adorned with all sorts of
messages. "Smoke It" was boldly
scrawled on one wall; "Love" on
another.
.. Come and pay your rent ," "Paul. I
,,·ent to Lombardy, Jove ya, Cathi" and
.. Rolling Stones tomorrow night , I've got
so me coke (cocai ne)" are a few com-
munications penned on doors to the
rooms.
The Hacienda, hov.·ever, has not alwayo;
been so lurid.
Hartellus reminded th~ panel via
Kurlllch's qu estions that he had been
cleared in the Orange County Superior
Court trtal of charges of arson, fraud,
conspiracy and bribery.
And he blamed the publicity stemming
from those trials, a grand jury in·
clictment and the marathon state hearing
for losses he estimated at $120,000.
Before that publicity erupted, he said,
he had a prosperous general practice in
Costa Mesa and at 2345 E. COast
liighway, Corona de) Mar. Today ,
Hartelius stated, he is practically limited
to treating elderly patients in co~
valescent homes and making house calls
··that very few doctors care to make."
•fartelius also denied that he had brib-
ed Mrs. Vaughn's brother Jim Bleviru, lo
leave the state at a Ume when it seemed
likely that the Tennessee man would be
called as a witness against him.
TONIGHT
"CHILI FEED" -Dept. of Leisure
Se rvices first annual "f ies ta del
Pasado," Chili dinner. family en·
tertainment. Com mun i t y Recreation
Center, 6-8 :30 p.in. Adults SI. children iS
cents.
.. CATClf 22" -South Coast Repertory
Thea ter , through Sun. 8 p.m.
FRIDAY, AUG. %4
MOTORCYCLE SPEEDWAY RACING
-Fairgrounds. 8: 15 p.m.
HONK CONCERT -Newpon Harbor
Jligh Audi torium , 8 p.m. Ad m. $3.50.
Memorial Hospital. . .
He and bis wife Marlon -smce divotc·
ed _ accused each other of lnvolvement
in the disappearance, but initial mur~r
charges agaimt her ~ere dropped lpd
she testi fied against him. :
Costa Mesa police arrested Dr. Slocum
on the child-murde r charge in P.lar4li,
1966, as he waited in an Orange 90ut:1ty
Court House corridor for a hearing i>n
settlement of a $6 million suit agatqst
Santa Ana police. .
He was acquitted in 1966 .or ~It
charges following a shootout with officers
in which one of his hands was damagecl.
The gunplay with police stemmed fr6m
a domestic dispute in his Santa Ana
clinic with his wife, v.·ho was tben
employed as a nurse-rectptlonist . lo.
He announced plans to go to Alaska r
a fresh start after being freed on charges
in the death of his daughter. but ~
ed a clinic in Santa Ana instead.
A few months ago. Di!trict Attorney 's
investigators arrested him on charges bl-
cluding one count o( grand theft and.24
counts of fal!lfylng bills to the state
health agency. lnvtstigatora clalm SOQle
of the billings were for deceued .or
nonesiatent pallents.
f',.o,,. Pflfle l
POLICE ..•
panions into custody lbr alleged drunkfn
driving.
The Orange County Grand Jury cleared
Miller of wron~doing in the shootirig.
Ronquino·s family has liltd a $500,000
lawsuit against the cities of Westmlnstt.r
and Fountain Valley. Pi.filler and Offi<J!r
Robert 1'1osley of Fountain Valley ~
\\'as with 1'1 iller when the shooting oc-
curred .
In June two suspected bandits, puraµed
from the scene of a holdup in Fountain
Valley v.·ere shot lo death in the parking
lot of Hoag Memorial llospital Jn
Newport Beach.
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WliH .,,.Ont
CUDIT
Sgt. Les Thompson of Newport Beach Police Department prepares
Jtems for auclion of lost, stolen. or unclaimed items collected by po-
'lce in recent months. Auclion is scheduled ror 10 a.m. Saturday at
the Newport City Yard on Superior Avenue.
Aulhorlud
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1815 NEWPORT BLVD. Dmtown Costa Mesa -Phone Mi-7788 •
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