HomeMy WebLinkAbout1973-08-28 - Orange Coast Pilotl
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6-unnaan Brutal With Hostages
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Derby Ba~er Told •oowntown Rapist~
Win~~ Atta~ks Housewife
Un~le Reveals In Coast Ho111e
DAILY PILOT are oun
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I 1 ·· · .~ •• ~ ·I I : ·
VOL "' NO. ,..., 1 SECTIQJ<IS, J2 l"AG&S
Huntington •cheat to Win~ Po llice Use
Woman Hit 1 U11cle Advised Derby Race Winner Einergency
ARTIST ASKEW AND HIS 20.FOOT MUSCLE MAN
Paul Bunyan, Superman end Other L1rge,...th1n-llfe Heroe1
Artist's Folk Heroes
Stand Larger Than Life
By RUDI NIEDZIELSKI
ot tt1e Dlilr ll'llet 11.tf
Paul Bunyan docs exist and you can
see him "topless" In Costa Mesa.
Anti-nudity ordinance or not. be stands
at 1861 Superior Ave., arms akimbo, with
his enor1nous Cect planted six feet apart.
Artist Eric Askew left his 20.foot alant
to shiver there in thl!i sea breeze, wearing
nothing but bikini brtefs, until the good
ladles in Leke Forest made him 10me
ciothcs.
Then. properly attired, he will preside
over the community's Paul Bunyan Days.
But it will take some doing because this
Paul Bunyan is 20 feet tall.
An even bigger job was building the
fiberglass colossus in the first place, ac-
cording to Askew. It Jook three months to
get the job done.
The statue, consisting of a rlbcr glass
shell over a steel frame. was built In sec·
lions. Hancb, feet and head were made
separately, the front and back torao tn
tWo large sections, and the whole thing
cemented together.
"With dllrleulty," Askew adds.
"The job v.·ould have been easier. If we.
could have used more resin but the flnlsh·
(See GIANT, Page ti
By Rapist
A man known to police as the
"Downtown Rapist" struck again early
Otis morning, attacking a Geneva Avenue
housewife in her bed.
According to police, the latest victim
was beaten by her attacker, unlike other
women who have been victimized by the
rapist.
Details of the attack were sketchy this
morning, but police confirmed that the
man broke into the woman's home as she
slept and attacked her in her bedroom.
The housewife decribed her as.5ailant
as a caucasian in his mid-twenties with
dark and curly long hair, about five feet
eight inches tall and weighing about 150
powxls.
The .so<:alled Downtown Rapist is
thought to be responsible for at least 12
rapes in the older s~tion of the city dur·
the past year. MoSt·or the victims have
been alone at home when the rapist
broke in.
62% Favor Courts
NEW YORK (AP) -The Harris Poll
says 62 percent of those it slll'Veycd
recently agreed with President Nixon's
contention that the Watergate affair
should be turned over to the courts. The
poll reported Monday that 32 percent
disagreed when asked if it were "time to
tum the wOOle question or Watergate
over to the courts and allow the Pres-
ident to concentrate on more important
things."
SKID ROW LIFE
VISITED TODAY
Skid Row Is an alfllcUon of almost
every major American city. The
derelicts and cutoffs of society gravitate
there and scratch out a life most people
would never call living.
Associated Press sent a photograph<r
nnd1reporter into one such area to record
a documentary on life along Skid Row.
The results are on i!ag~24 today.
BOULDER, Colo. (UPI) -Rober!
Lange Sr. admitted today he told his
nephew to cheat to win the 1973 National
Soapbox Derby by building a magnetic
device in the nose or his green racer.
';I determined that he should build and
install a magnetic nose so as to be com·
petitive with the proressional cars he
would be racing agains t," Lange said.
"I knew that this was a violation of th e
official derby rules and consider it now
to be a serious mistake in judgment ," he
said.
James Gronen, 14, was disqualified by
derby officials and forfeited a $7 ,500
scholarship for winning the race because
or an electromagnet found in his car. The
device, discovered by X-ray after the
race, pushed Gronen 's car away from the
derby's rnetal starting gate.
An Elk Grove, Calif., boy was named
winner after Gronen was disqualified.
Lange. young Gronen 's legal guardian,
released his statement after talks witlt
his attorney. tie said the admission was
his last word on the incident and that
Gronen still was vacationing i n
Wisconsin.
Lange, president of the Lange Ski Boot
Company, outside Boulder, said the cars
of the other top 10 finishers should be in·
IS.. CHEATS, Page Z)
Polleeman Wounded
Vault Becomes Torture
Chamber in Stockholni
STOCKHOLM .(UPl I - A psycliopathic
gunman locked into a downtown bank
vault with a convict friend and four
hostages for six days wounded a
policeman and has turned the vault into a
virtual torture chamber police sources
said today. They said he was extremely
brutal in dealings with tbe hostages.
Police drilled a series of one-foot holes
In the rool of the vault today to keep an
eye on gunman Jan-Erik Olsson, 32, and
posslbly pick him off with a
sharpshooter, But Olsson fired a burst or
submachine gun fire through one of the
holes and wounded a policeman.
Olle Abrahamson, a 44-year-old police
technician hit in the face and in one
hand, was the second police officer shot·
since the drama began Thursday with
what appeared to be a normal bank rob-
bery. He was reported in satisfactory
condJtion.
Stockholm Police Chief Kurt Lindroth
canceled all news briefings today whUe
the police put into motion a new plan to
end the drama, which has lasted for
more than 125 hours.
Miiitary psychologists warned that lhe
victims risked serious mental injuries If
the drama continues much longer.
Llndroth In an emotional statement
~fonday called Olsson a "beast" and
other police officials described him as "a
completely cold and e m o t I o n I e s s
psychopath, who might just kill tho
hostages if he feels like il."
They said his companion, c:onviclcd
murderer Clatk Oloflson, 26, was not
much better. ·
Police Superintendent Aake Aakesson
said the gunman had carried out "ex·
tremely brutal" acts against the three
female hostages but that he could not
confirm rumors that Olsson repeatedly
raped one of the hostages, a 31-year~ld
Jnother of two.
One police ofricer, who refused to be
identified by name . said Olsson and his
accomplice "have turned the vauJt into a
torture chamber. They are extremely
brutal. What 's happening down there
(See TORTURE, Page Z)
Attendant Took
His Work Home
ROCKY MOUN:t'. Va. (AP) -Police in
FrankJln County cut three truckloads of
marijuana from fields and buried the
6,950 pounds of weed at the county
landfill.
Later Monday. the 23-year-old at·
lendanL at the landfill was charged with
possessing marijuana with intent to
distribute it.
Police said Gary Hardy Brown of
Roanoke is accused of digging up 200
pounds or the weed with earth-moving
equipment, hauli ng the plant! several
hundred yards and reburying them.
~-Je!icopter
A woman patient at Hoag Memorial
Hospital was surviving today, after a
predawn race against time by the
Newport Beach police helicopter, fer·
rying a rare blood shipment from Los
Angeles, as surgeons fmlght to save the
victim's life.
The three vital pints of B-negative
blood were delivered to the hospital
helipad shortly before 2:30 a.m. into the
waiting hands of medical personnel.
Helicopter Officer Don Anderson and
his observer, Patrolman Harry Williams,
made the return trip on the 44-mile run
at 120 miles per hour, landing only 22
minutes· afte r takeoff.
Hosp ital officials said today the patient
was in regul arly scheduled surgery when
the crisis arose, arid so policy did not
allow identification of the victim or the
nature of her operation.
She was listed in serious condition, but
improving.
Hospital officer John Taylor issued a
plea for help to police at 12:58 a.m.,
v.•hen the B-Negative blood couJd not irn·
(See BLOOD, Page ZI
Orange Coast
Weather
It'll be wanner along the Orange
Coast Wednesday with tempera-
tures at the beaches in the 70s ris·
ing to the low 80s inland. Patchy
low clouds \\111 clear by mid-morn-
ing to fair skies.
INSIDE TODA\'
Their names may ftot be a&
1oelt known a& Hughes, Getty and
Hunt, but more than o dozen
me11 Jiave risen /ror11 relative
ob$cUrity to1ortunas of $100 mil·
lion or more i11 f ive years -
despite an uncertain stock mar·
ket. See Page 7.
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2 DAI LY PILOT s
Tl11~eats Fail
To.Daunt
Evangelist
LONDON (AP) -American evangelist
Dilly Graham launched his fifth British
crusade today . undaunted by bon1b
scnrcs et his teach-in at London's F.arl's
Court Stadlu1n .
Graham's activ ities Y.'ere attacked last
v.·eck by one Anglican y.•eekly as "hit-
and·run" evangelism. and a British
chu rchman called his crusade "wealth y
BOMBS GIVE BRITAIN
THE JITTERS-Story, P19e 4
Christians in the West indulging in fi ve
days of spiritual luxury."
But as the crusade opened, no dissen-
ting voices were heard. and among
Graham's sponsors v.·cre some English
churches.
An estimated 20 ,000 persons were in
the London stadium for the star to
"Spre-e 73" -for "Spiritual Re-em-
phasis" -in which the 54-year-old
Graham plans to train evangelists and
Christian crusaders.
The week·long session, described by
Graham's organi1.ation as a '·Bible teach·
in" will end Saturday with a mass rally
in the huge Wembley Stadium, where
Graham will be backed up by singing
st.ars Johnny Cash and Cliff Richard.
The bomb warnings came alter a week
or terrorist incidents that have left Lon-
don jumpy. Police searched lhe stadium
but found no explosives.
The 7S.minute sess ion Monday, a
warm-up rally for the marathon teach:in,
opened with perfonnances from pop
singers and a Swedish choir clad in blue
jeans and yellow sweaters. The stage
was Oanked by two giant screens on
whlch images of the performers flashed.
Graham strode onto the bare stage to
begin his address with a prayer.
"AU the world seems to be caught up
in a very climactic moment in history,"
he said. "What an hour for thousands of
young people to be meeting here not in a
drug scene but in a scene glorified by
Jesus Christ. This generation cannot
escape Christ."
Graham will speak every night on di£-
ferent aspects of religion to the
estimated 12.000 delegates from Christian
organizations around the world who are
to attend the training sessions from 9
a.m. to 9 p.m. every day until Friday.
The $550,000 cost of the teach-in has
aroused criticism, too. Church groups
claimed Graham's crusade was siphoning
church funds.
The evangelist's multimillion-dollar
organization, based in the United States,
denied thi s and said the teach-in was
financed by money from other sources.
AH delegates pay an $8. 75 registration fee.
From Page 1
CHEATS ...
spccted for alterations that were against
derby rules.
He denit'd pouring large sums of
money into development of Gronen's
racer and the car in which his son,
Rober! Lange Jr., won the national derby
title in 1972. The Boulder district at-
torney had said the 1972 car cost betwee n
$10.000 and $20.000 to build.
Derby rules limit spending on develop-
ment of racers to $40.
"It is foolish to suggest that any
substantial expense went into either of
them/' Lange said.
Lange said his nephew was not alone in
tampering wiih his car and that the
event had become "tainted" with
tampering not discovered "because of
poor inspection and Jack of supervision."
He said he wanted Groncn 's ca r to be
"con1 pctitive. Rule violations are com·
mon. The most frequently violated rule is
tampering with or altering the axles and
wheels which the derby supplies to each
entrant.··
In his five-page statement. Lange said
his son's 1972 derby·winning racer \\'DS
"clean. Neither a ma gnetic device nor
anything sim ilar !o it was incorporated in
or used in the \\·inning car by my son ,
Bobby, in the 1972 race."
OlAHGI COAST Sf
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Tursday, August 28, l'i7l
Ul"I TtllPl!ttt HELD IN BANK -Bank clerks held hostage in Swedish bank vau lt
are Gunnc l Lu ndblad, 32, top left, Kristin Enmark, 23, top right;
Elizabeth Oldgren, bottom left and Sven Safstrum, 25.
Nurse Beaten
By Burglar
In Newport
A Kansas nurse visiting at a Balboa
Island apartment is hospitalized today,
after being beaten unconscious with a
steel cooking pan by a burglar who broke
in Monday.
Alice N. Dubrin, 45, a registered nurse
from Smolan, Kan .. was listed in good
condition today at. •loag Memorial
llospital where she is being treated for a
concussion.
The unseen assailant escaped from 127
Agate Ave., with $240 in cash taken from
the victim's purse, after ransacking lug-
gage belonging to her son and a traveling
companion.
Officer Mark Johnston was dispatched
to the scene shortly after 1 p.m., when
Mrs. Dubrin was found sprawled on her
bed, semiconscious.
Her son Richard A. Dubrln, 16, and
Darlene Losik, 25, a family friend from
Salina, Kans., said they returned to their
rooms at 1 p.m. and heard Mrs. Dubrin
inside groaning.
The manager opened the Jocked door
with a passkey and they discovered the
victim with two severe bruises, one on
her temple.
Police said the dazed victim told of
getting up from resting and reading a
magazine to investigate a noise about
11 :45 a.m., then suddenly blacking out.
The intruder who pulled a latched
bathroom window open lo gain entry fled
wilh only the $240 in cash, leaving behind
the pan taken from the small unit 's
kitchen sink.
Investigators said he struck l\1rs.
Oubrin so bard the ,hand.le broke off the
steel pan.
Buena Park's
City Manager
Dies at Age 53
George Bahner. 53. city manager of
Buena Park, died Sunday in La Mirada
Community Hospital of an apparent
heart attack.
Bahner had been manager of the city
for the past seven years. fie ent ered the
hospital last Tuesday after suffering a
hea rt attack.
Before taking the Buena Park position
in 1966 he was assistant city manager of
Hawthorne and city manager or Tulare.
A veteran of both \Vorld \Var JI and the
Korean conflict. Bahner had been crip-
pled by polio since 1953.
Rick Wykoff, named acting city
manager last week, \\'ill continue to serve
in that capacity until a permanent suc-
cessor is chosen, Buena Park officials
sa id.
3 Killed in Cafe
CLEVELAND (UPI ) -Three persons
were killed and two persons seriously
wounded late Monday in a shooting at the
Goodtime Cafe. Dead were Charl es Scott,
26, J im my Lee 11icks, 28, and Ezekiel
Maryland, '11 of Cleveland.
From Pagel
TORTURE. • •
makes me \\'ant to throw up."
The three \\'Omen hostages were iden·
tified as Mrs. irgilta Lundblad, 31 ; ~tiss
Kristin Enmark, 23, M~ Elisabeth
Oldgren , 21, Sven Saelstroem, 25, is the
fourth hostage.
The psychologi sts said the risks for the
tv.'o older women appeared the greatest,
especially Olsson's threat to hang them.
Police sources said the new plan in·
eluded a combined attack through the
holes in the roof and the double steel
door to the vault.
The holes were covered by bulletproof
glass and Lindroth placed p o I i c e
sharpshooters at each one of them in the
hope that Olsson and Olofsson might
relax for a moment and give the police a
chance to shoot before they could hann
the hostages, the sources said.
Police aJso brought new cutting torches
into the bank hall this morning. The
torches are capable of cutting open the
double aoor to the vault .
Police are monitoring every word said
inside the vault via s e n s I t i v e
microphones and other wiretapping
equipment.
Officers working at the monitors sajd
Olsson "uses a language and behaves in
a way one wouldn't believe if we didn't
know it was true."
F.-.. Pqe l
BLOOD • • •
mediately be found in Orange County.
Limited supplies were available at the
Los Angeles County Blood Bank and St.
Vincent's Hospital, where they were
picked up by Los Angeles policemen in
cars racing with red lights and sirens.
Officer Anderson landed the Newport
Beach chopper at LAPD headquarters in
downtown Los Angeles and took off
within seconds for the return flight.
Fran Fordyce, a spokesman for the
American Red Cross Blood Banlc Jn Los
Angeles said two factors led lo the
decision lo fly the blood the 44 miles to
Newport Beach.
"It is very rare and there was an ex-
treme emergency situation involved,"
she explained.
If lime had not been so critical, she
said it might have been possible to locate
some B-negative blood somewhere in
Orange County.
She added that B·negative blood is such
a rare type it turns up statistically only
l lh: times among each 100 blood donors
\\'ho give to the Red Cross supply.
Mae West Judge
Of Kissi1ig Meet
LOS ANGELES (UPI) -Mae West Is
listed as the judge for UCLA's "first An·
nual Romeo and Juliet Kissing COntest"
tonight.
"Her name is a symbol or love," said
Rick Rose, the student coordinator of the
event. "She's the most expert judge on
this subject in the whole world.··
Four finaJists, selected from a field of
32 in earlier rounds, are to be judged on
"beauty of embrace, position of lips dur·
ing osculation, breath and oolse control,
inventiveness and sex appeal engen·
dered."
Boy Nabs Coke
G~taivay Tricycle, Toy Gun Left
STEVENAGE, England (UPl)-"How much is that can of Coke?"
asked the little boy, barely peering over the &hop counter.
A clerk quoted lhe price to him and put the can on the counter.
The boy pulled out a gu n, let fly with a volley of Ping.Pong balls.
grabbed the Coke and ran. But he left his gun and getaway vehicle
-an orange and while tricycle.
Shop manager Ray Stanford has offered amnesty.
"If he plucks up the oourage to oome clean andlay for lbe Coke,
he can have the blke, the gun and the balls he pelte everyone with,"
Stanfo rd sald .
"The little fellow was no more than 4 and it is worrying me
how miserable he must be feeling about losing his lrike and his gun
for a can or Coke."
Gas Scare ,,,.om Page 1
Mayor Def ends
Police Actions
GIANT • • •
ed model ,~·ould have been too heavy to
mo ve."
Pi1obilily is an important element of the
giant's makeup. lfe's not jUJt Paul Bun-
yan but instantly convertible into a ._
foot tall football star, Supennan, or
virtually 9ny other bigger than life hero.
All he needs is the right clothes.
Newport Beach Mayor Donald A .•
Mcinnis staunchly detended the police
department Monday against published
charges that it over-reacted to the poison
gas scare of two weekends ago.
Mcinnis said the department's decision
to clear nearly 75,000 persons Crom city
beaches on a swmy Saturday afternoon
\Vas reasonable in vietv of fears that a
cloud of noxious gas might enguU the
coast.
"I think the police acted correctly even
though the gas never actually showed
up,'' Mcinnis asserted at an afternoon
study session of the city council.
"And if an error was lo be made," the
maror added, "I'm glad that it was made
on the side of safety."
Vice mayar Howard Rogers said he
agreed with Mcinnis' views.
"The action of the police was proper,"
Rogers said. "If there was any over-
reaclion , it was the press that over-
reacted for criticizing what was right
and proper for the police to do."
The Daily Pilot Sunday published an
editorial in which it said the evacuation
ptans of Newport Beach and Huntington
Beach were confused. lt urged that more
"orderly" emergency procedures be
devised for future use.
Mcinnis went on to urge that Newpart
Beach join with other cities in Orange
County in coordinating emergency pro-
cedures.
"This city should take the initiative to
Party Crasher
Stabs Stt1dent
PINOLE, (AP) -Police say an IS.
year-old high school student was fatally
stabbed by a gate-<:rasher at a
OOusewarming party.
Danlel llernandez of 373 Bonnie Drive,
San Pablo, was pronounced dead of stab
l\'ounds in the throat upon arrival at a
local hospital Sunday night.
Hernandez was reportedly slashed
when he and his two brothers ordered
St:Veral gate-crashers t-0 leave a party. A
fight began and one intruder attacked the
three brothers with a knife, authorities
said.
MEXICO
• -~ '
find out how we should handle this kind
or problem In the future,'' Mcinnis said.
ri.tclnnis added, "Last Saturday showed
that if we do have a countywide
en1ergency proc edure, it doesn't work."
Newport Beach police said last Satur-
day that they made the decision to clear
city beaches alter they received official
notification that a cloud of "noxious gas''
was drifting In the direction of Orange
County.
However, the gas cloud, !rClm a leaking
chemical plant in Carson, never reached
the Orange Coast. It drilled inland over
port.ions of Westminster, Los Alamltos,
and Cypress, according to police ac-
co unts.
Porno Czar
Back in Jail
On Sex Raps
Joseph Reitano was held in Costa l\1esa
City Jail today in lieu of $50,000 ball on
suspicion of lwo further cases of felony
child molesting.
The 60-year-old Costa li1esan , who
already faces ... an earlier charge of
molesting an 11-year-old girl , was rear·
rested Monday morning by Del. George
Wilson.
\Vilson declined to reveal details of !he
new allegations but said that Reitano of
1845 Anaheim Ave., was taken into
custody because of his alleged in-
volvement with a 10-year-old girl and an
11 -year-old girl, both from Costa ?\-lesa.
All three alleged molestation incidents
were alleged to have occurred since the
firs t of the year, Wilson said.
Reitano had been free on his own
recognizance while awaiting arraignment
on the first molestation charge, but bail
was placed at $50 ,000 by Harbor JIJdiciaJ
District Court Judge Donald Dungan
after he learned of the additional
charges.
Reitano lists his profession as self·
employed watchmaker.
Earlier thls year, Reitano was arrested
in connection with the discovery of 1,000
reels of ellegedly pornographic movies
by Newport Beach police.
GULF OF MEXICO
However, most of the time he will
stand outside Zuver's (:ym Jn Costa
Mesa, encouragi ng men to bu lge in the
same places he doe~.
Lat er in the year, the 57-year-old artist
v.·ill build a taller. 50-foot 1nodcl. The
hands and feet are already n1adc but
Askew won't say for what purpose the
larger giant is being built.
"It woo 't be as dilfl cult as It sounds ,''
he announces cheerfully. "I learned an
awful IClt from the small one."
The "small one" was bullt on a light
budget, but the lack of financial reward
was more than balanced by the satisfac-
tion he derived from the project, Askew
maintains.
"The model is expected to interest
many boys in y.·cightlifling and if just a
few youngsters get as mu ch benefit rron1
training with weights as I have, I'll feel
well repaid."
To Askew, now a resident of 201 52
Orchard St ., Santa Ana •Ieights, exercis·
ing with weights has always been one of
lhe keys to good health . When he was 14,
he stood four feet six in sneakers and
'·sported n1usclcs like spa r row s '
kneecaps."
lie might still be in that kind of shape
today if he hadn't seen some old
"Strength'' magazines while browsing
through a second hand bookstore.
Seized by y.·eightlifting fever. he decid-
ed 10 put on some muscle but discovered
weighl ifting equipment was not available
in the New Zealand town "·here he lived.
So he made his own .
Lead fish weights, melted in an old can
and poured into a flat hole in the ground
made clumsy but se rviceable weights
which he fitted to a length or pipe.
Aske\\''s mother. somey.·hat less en-
thlLSiaslic, enrolled him in the AuckJaod
School of Art to distract him from
weightlifting. Instead, he pursued both,
becoming an artist and ultimately the
Junior Australian -New Zealand
Featherweight lifting champ.
Art and wcighUi!ting have cn:med
paths many times throughout the years.
On one occasion, while acting as judge in
the World Weightlifting Champions!Ups,
he was besieged by visiting athletes with
requests for portraits. A few years later,
he was called lo York , Pa ., to apint a
series of murals for the Weightlifting
Hall of Fame.
Weightlifting and art combined again
thls summer when he was commissioned
to design the giant for gym owner Bob
Zuver. A-1ore recently, he has been engag.
ed lo illustrate a book on that ancient
strongman, •lercules.
At present, Askew is completing work
on an exhibition of paintings lo be given
in Texas, Jbe subject of this showing ia
another type of strongman, the American
cowboy.
A cowboy 's life was rough, difricult and
unglamorous, according to Askew, who
bas traveled from Montana to Texas in
search or genuine cowboy folklore .
Makeup Bandits
Hold Up Hospital:
I Two men wearing coveralls and wilb
their faces covered with theatricali
makeup robbed the emergency room of
the Santa Ana Commwtity HospitaJ, 600
E. Washington St. early today.
Police said the pair entered the room
.at 5:40 a.m. through the ambulance door.
One suspect held three employes at gun-
point while the Clther pried open the
narcotics locker. Quake Hits Hard They escaped with a large quantity or
narcotics including Demerol and Nern· Map locates cities in Mexico where severe earthquake struck this butal, officers said.
morning causing widespread damage and more than 100 deaths so The victims said the makeup the ban·
far. Many buildings collapsed in the temblor, which registered about dits wore was very heavy with huge
6.0 on the Richter scale. See details Page 4. eyebrows possibly made of cotton wads. ~"----~~~~~~~~~~~·~~~~~~-
Buying A New Tract Home?
Many people buying homes are under tho impression the y HA VE
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this is not true , although the sales office wiN try lo make you think so.
The minute the home center tries lo upgrade tho standard carpet,
then you are free to shop for carpeting. To prevent shopping should
constitute restraint of trade.
· In many cases they will left you that tho carpel aDowance do es not
apply ii you buy carpel outside. II they feel this is legal, HAVE THEM
PUT IT IN WRITING.
Ordinarily, we can save you a lot of money over what the home
center offers. We provide a larger selection -and we usually come up
with less yardage, plu s a superior installation.
ALDEN'S
HOUR.S: Moo. '111n1 'l1ltln., 9 IO l :!O
CARPETS o DRAPES
1663 Placentia Awe.
COSTA MESA
646-4038
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Tltf.'1day, Augu~l 28, 1973 S DAILY PILOT ;i -----------------_.,...._...., ____ .:·· "" n
'
Goldwater Warns Against Disarming
By L. PETER KRIEG
01 th• oan, Piiot s1111
America is disarming and isolating
itself and thereby inviting \Vorld War Ill
that would be fought between Russia aild
Red China vying to become the world
lea der, U.S. Sen. Barry M. Goldwater
said during a talk in Irvine Monday.
The Arizona Republican, an outspoken
conservative. said that "a nice little
depression might be the best thing that
could happen" to wake up the A1nerican
people to their problems.
"I lived through one and I'm still
scared," Goldwater told more than 600
persons attending a \Vorld Affairs Coun-
cil of Orange County meeting at I.he
Airporter lnn.
The former presidential candidate,
beaten substantially by Lyndon B.
Johnson in 1964, v.1as inlroduced by actor
John Wayne, a Ne.,.,•port Beach resident
and Jong-time friend.
\Vayne called Goldwater one of the
n1ost respected men in'America and said
lhc Goldwater presidential race was ''a
screaming example of the treachery of
LS..
Rock Grou p
A rtist H iirt
111 Ca r Crash
MACON. Ga. (:\Pl -The Allman
Brothers Band canceled an Aug. 31 con-
cert in Jersey City. N .. J. today after
drumnler Claude "Butch" Trucks was in-
jured in a weekend traffic accident.
Trucks, 26, was reported in fair con-
dition at a hospital. A band spokesman
said due to chest injuries he would be
unable to work for at least two v.·eeks.
Bunky Odom. who represents the
band's management firm . said Trucks
,.,.ouJd return in time for a West Coast
tou r v.·hich begins Sept. 13 in Seattle.
Police sa id Trucks, a member of the
rock band since it \\'as formed by the late
Duane Allman in 1969, \\'as charged wi th
spet'di ng and driving und er the innuence
of intoxicants after the Saturday night ac-
cident.
The driver or the othE'r car, 40-yea r-old
Dor'.s Farguson, was treated and releas-
ed.
Duane Allman, 25. lead guitarist and
founder of the six-man band. v.1as killed
in a motorcycle ac,cident Oct. 29. 1971. ln
~facon. A year later. bass player Berry
Oakley. 2~. v.'as killed in a motorcycle
mishap three blocks from the ·site of
Duane Allman's accident.
Duane's death came as the Macon-bas..
eel band 's fame was cresting. Under the
leadership of his brother Gregg, the
All man Brothers Band moved into the
major rock concert circuit.
The band shared top billing at \Vatkins
Glen , N.Y.. this sumn1er with the
Grateful Dead and the Band.
Italians Protest
Erotic Danisl1
Film on Christ
ROf\.1E (UPI) -Self-styled filnl
censors hurled gasoline bombs in the
courtyard of the residence of Danish
Ambassador Hans T11bor today in protest
against a film supported by the Danish
government but criticized by Pope Paul
VI as "blasphemous."
Police said one bomb exploded in the
courtyard of the ambassador's residence
and another against a car owned by a
Pakistan servant of the ambassador,
Ismail Parnais. 23.
Leaflets found on the side\valk in front
or the residence said: "Catholics against
the Danish government who financed the
blasp hemous film. Denmark -the pigs1y
of Europe."
The leaflets referred to the film "The
Loves or Jesus Christ,'' which is being
produced with a grant from the Danish
government.
On Sunday, Pope Paul VI strongly
criticized the film calling it "vile,
disgusting and deplorable."
lnjtrred Stude,nt
Receives $5,000
A $500,000 lawsuit filed against lhe San
Joaquin School District when an eight·
year-old student at Aliso School fell from
playground equipment has been settled in
Orange County Superior Court for $5.000.
Lawyers for Richard F;rederick, 23161
La Vaca , El Toro, accepted the set-
tlement in Judge William S. Lee's
chambers and closed the file opened
when Joline Marie Frederick, now l l,
was injured Dec. 3, 1970, at the Aliso
School , 22882 Loumont Drive.
It was alleged in the original complaint
tbat school authorities' negligence led to
the little girl's fall from crossing bars at
the school.
Wou1an Slays Rival
As llusband Watches
TANANARIVE, Malagasy Republic
(AP\ -A wife\ caught her hu sband
i!leeplng with ano her \voman and killed
the rival in a knife duel.
Police said t~e and looked on Im·
passively as t · n hacked at each
other in a fores ring.
The wife gave herself up to police when
the battle was over ,
the irresponsible members of the nev.·s
media.''
Gold\vatcr, too, took hi s pot shots at
the press, especiall y t e I e v i s i o n
newscasters whont be called "those all-
wise people who nightly discuss son1c
things even though they don 't know wh<it
they're talking about."
But Goldwater marle it plain he wanted
to talk about U1c future of the United
States and to spread \\'hat he snid is his
growing concern about Congressional at-
titudes t0\1'al'cl dis::irming the country.
"Over the past fc1v years I have sensed
a division of the people -especially the
people too young to remember the hor·
rors of \Vorld \Vars I and 11." he said.
"They feel v.·e've reached a point
\1•here \l'C can establish a detentc. y,•ith
our enemies. But \1•c're forgetting that
our enemies arc interested in only one
thing -domination of the \\'Orld. ''
He said ""<Jll over the United Stntcs"
he's linding people 1vho feel the country
has attained and exerted all the 1vcirld
leadership that ls necessary.
But "'e have lo have the leadership. \Ve
. -
can't assume the t lnitcd States is going
to enjoy all the thlngli it has had to enjoy
just because y,•e h:1d the drive and the
destiny to be tht 11·orld 's leader,"
Goldwater said.
'''fhere are some of us who would let
down," he said. "and thttt is going to be
the beginning of \Vorld \Var Ill.
"Russin and China 1viH go to war to sec
\Vho wi!l be the \VOrld 's leader,"' he said.
lie said if that happened. the United
States would fight .,.,,ith Ru ssia because
\VC have nh1•ays been allied \l'ilh Russia
in \Var.
!·le said Wor!d \Var Ill doesn"t have to
happen. ho1vever. if Congress and the
American people keep the country
prepared mentally and niilitarity.
"The fastest ro:id to \\'orld \Var Il l
\\'OulcJ be to doy,•ngrade our prepared-
ness.·· Goldwater said.
"I've never seen this country so on the
verge of the pocople being so poorly
prepored. There arc grov.•ing nwnbers in
Congress -perhaps even a majority -
1.\'ho \1·ould disarm this country." he said.
He said the $84 billion defense budget.
CAST STONE ARCHES HIGHLIGHT SLUMPSTONE WALLS
Laguna Hill s Ma ll Is $SO-million Complex Opening Soon
Grand Openi11g
Lllg1utu Hills Mcill to Debut
A 30-day grand opening celebration a
\\"CCk from this \\o'ednesday v.1ill herald
the beginning or bus;1ess at the ne,.,.
Laguna Hills Mall. a $50 million complex
serving sou\h Orange County.
The 70-acrc site at the S..in Diego
Frecv.·ay and El Toro Road has so far
featured a Sears, Roebuck and Company
store open since spring.
Grand opening festivities v.·ill center
around the ne1v Buffurn 's Department
slorc. a double-level. 50.000-squarc-foot
en1porium featuring the firm 's full line of
n1erchandlsc.
Buffum's door-opening ceremony will
be fol101\'ed by a series of events marking
the start of business for 45 specialty
shops, climaxing Oct. 4, which is the
Mall's official grand opening date.
Joint developers of the mall con-
structed in a Spanish motif wit h
simulated adobe walls. stained wood.
arches and wrought·iron fixtures set off
by Mexican nl :>saic and sculptur.e work
arc Ernest W. Hahn Inc., of Hawthorne.
and the llossn1oor Cor1)0ration.
Laguna •!ills Mall will ('•:cntually in·
elude more than 900.000 square (eel of
retail sales :;pace. following con1pletion
of a second phase of construction begin-
ning in 60 days.
F'inal completion date is fall, 1976,
\vhcn a J .C. Penney's store opens.
Archilecturc of the modern mall ad-
jacent to El Camino Real \Vas designed
b) Burke. Kober. Nicolais and Archuleta,
of Los Angeles, \l'ith conslruction by lhe
!-Jahn development firm .
A large exhibition area featuring space
for arts and crafts displays, plus fashion
or other types of shows and seasonal
cn1ertainment will be highlighted by
no.live shrubbery, trees, prornenades and
terrace.
General ~1anager Richard McC. Hay
nnd his assistant and promotional direc·
tor Jack \V. Singer say tenants signed to
leases by agents Cold\vcll , Banker and
Con1pany represent top So u t h I a n d
retailers.
They include: Joan Buck, \Vet Sen!,
l·lnrris & Frank. Thom McAn, Florsheim
Shoes, J-Jatfield-Neilna11, Regal Shoes,
Helen Grace Candies, Baskin-Robbins·,
:JL F'lavors Ic e Cream, Hiland Tobacco,
Tie Shak, Kings for Men. Jackie's, The
Pantry, Hansel & Gretel. Chess King,
\Veisfield's Jewe1ers, 1'~ashion Fabrics,
\Vaiden Book. Organ Ex c h an g c ,
\Vcthcrby-Kayser. Fiddlers Three,
Rit>der·s, J\otusicland and 11aj of India.
Others include Ella Nor's. }~oxmoor,
On-Tht.'-Go Travel. Vanguard. Flytrap,
Bonnie's, Morrow's Nut. !\tall Photo.
Motherhood Maternil.y, Aloha, King's
Row. Hardee's, Rug Crafter. Magic
Razor, Gregory & Co., Stride-Rite, and
Carousel.
Herit ae-e Show at M11seu1n
LI
The Laguna Beach ~1useu1n of Art will
open· the Burl Proctor Retrospective
shO\V featuring art work, artifacts and
memorabilia of America's western
heritage at 11 :30 a.m. Saturday lit the
museum .
A western style lunch reception
originaWy scheduled £or the opening will
1Je held al 4 p.m. Sept. 8. .
The show includes the collection or
Burt Proctor pointlngs of the west in·
clurling ranch scenes and Indian life .
The show also features :i collectfon or
western life bronzes by Sid Burnes or
L:iguna Beach : Navajo rugs and jewelry
and \l'rstcrn m~morabil ia loaned by
Norm f\i1oldenhauer of South Laguna and
a selection of Indian basket:i: owned by
Eugenia Foster or ~lonrovla.
Th e show will be on di splay through the
month of September, declared ''Western
J)nys" In Laguna Beach by Mayor Roy
Holm in recognilion of both the museum
event ~nd the production of ''Annie Get
Your Gun'' by the Lyric Opera Associa·
tion .
The mu:;eun1 tll 307 Clifr Drive is open
fron1 11 :30 a.m. to 4:30 p.n1 . daily
while the ltlrgest in histor~'. is the
s1nallest in history \\ h1.'ll con1parcd \l.'it.h
gross national product.
He said Russin's Arn1y and Navy are
stronger than ours.
lie ~aid the Shah of Iran is buying
1nore airplanes than tht' United States i$.
Go!dv<'aler said th e United States nlust
Cnd its ''preoccupation witll Europe,"
y,•hi ch he called "decadent and living in
the pa st.''
lie said \\'e must continue tu rely on
;1nd treat Europeans as allies. "but they
are going no place."
';The Pacific is the bright spot of the
future.·· he said.
!·le said Japan \\'ill be !he strongest
cconon1ic nation in the \Vorld by the year
2000.
tic said the real reason the U.S. was
fighting in Vietnan1 \l'<IS to keep CQntrol
of the Pacific and sa id "that was a story
never told lo the Anlerlcan people.··
lie predicted Ca1nbodia \Viii soon f:.ill -
and 1l'oilld have even \\'ith continued air
support -but he said the United States
rnust be prepared to defend 1'hailand.
"lf C11mbodia falls , we will see the
domino theory put to a test ," Go!d.,.,•atL·r
predicted.
"Thailand will be ncxl.
"And we rnust defend it. if not, there
goes a circ le in the Pacific." he said.
11e said if the Co1nn1unists gain control.
of Thailand they \viii control the Straits
of Mulacc:i and the U.S. will be cut off
from all oil and gas supplies rron1 lhe
~1iddle East.
"If the :>:traits fall, tl1e Communists
'''ill be able to deny the U.S. and its allies
like Japan, free China the va~l sup1>lies
or oil -and gas if we can gel it, from
the Mideast," he said.
"\Ve cannot lose it. If it fr11\s. a great
pnrt of our future goe s do1vn the drain.'·
he said.
Goldv,,ater obviously didn't 11•ant to t:ilk
about the \Vnlergate" affair . although he
clid call it •'the 1vorst sca ndal 1n
An1erican politics in the Inst 40 years."
lie disinissed s1)el'Ula!ton by eon·
scrvativc colun1nis1 \Villian1 F. Buckley
that. Il e could talk President Kixon intu
resigning.
Ul'I TeltPl'IOIO
CONSERVATI VE SPEAKS OUT
Sen. Barry Goldwater
'
Cle1ne1ate. Sa•• J 11a ta
Judge Halts Recycle Fight
An Orange County Superior Court
judge stepped in rvlonday to halt a battle
over recycling privileges in San C\cn1ente
<lnd S;in Juan Capistrano by ordering
bo!h sides to appca1· in his courtroom
Scot . 6.
Judi?<' \Valier Charamza signed the
rcstt·a ining order that will undery,•rite the
ooerations of \Vorld Repair. Inc .. of San
Juan. pending his ruling on charges filed
by the non-profi t corporation against
defendants Lionel Burt and Richard
~'icNan1ee.
\Vor ld Repair accuses Burt of in-
terfering with its trash collection opera-
tion by damaging the firm's receptacles
and putting his ov.·n containers at key
sites in direct coinpetilion to tht! firm.
World Repair operates from its San
Juan Capistrano premises under a $1-a-
year lease signed by city councilmen last
~1arch 26. The firm accuses Burt of ap-
proaching the city council with a view to
taking over the recycling operation.
The firm and thi' city agreed that
\Vorld Repair should be allowed to
remove a portion of the city's trash, as it
does in San Clemente. in a progran1
designed to increase the recovery of ra'v
materials through recycling.
World Repair accuses Burt of issuing
statements to local newspaper reporters
in \l.'hich he allegedly made the clain1
that the firm "is getting fat off its pro-
cecds ·· of the trash collection routes.
It is furth er alleged lhat he told the
San Juan Capistrano city attorney thnt
\Vorld Repair had also used stolen
nl1.1terials in its trash processing.
The restrain ing order signed by Judge
Charamza also prevents Burt from
damaging \Vorld Repair equipment. a
charge contained in the Superior Court
action.
]z tdge Orde rs S latton
To Face Murder Charge
South County J\otunicipal Court Judge
Richard Hamilton !\·londay ordered Starr
Ra nch employe Robert "Whip" Slatton
bound over to face murder charges in
Superior Court Sept. l !.'
Slatton is accused of kiling Dennis
Glahn. 21. of La Mirada \\'hen the youth
refused to leave the Ortega liot Springs
on July 11.
Judge Ha1nilton 's ruling CQncluded
slightly less than tiw·o days of testimony.
Obcservers \\•ere barred from the
cou rtroon1 Friday when the jurist ac-
cepted a motion for a closed hearing
fron1 Slatton's attorney.
Duriiig the preliminary hea ring. to re-
vie1v evidence in the case, Dep. Dist. Atty.
Ted ~tollard <.:ailed two witnesses who
were just steps away \Vhen the shooting
took place at the spa.
Law enforcement officials and
residents along . Ortega liighway long
have considered the hot springs. nO'N
abandoned. a haven for transients and
drug users.
Sla tton. 41, · of 31671 Mesa Drive.
Trabuco Canyon, also is charged with
assault \\'ith a deadly wepon.
Investigators assert that just prior to
!he shooting, Slatton threatened another
La Mirada youth with his pistol.
Slatton. a longtime hand with the Starr
Ranch, has pleaded innocent of the
charges. He is cilrrently being held in
Orange County Jail in lieu of $250,000
b<!il.
THE
$55
TELEPHONE
CAii
Each day, Pacific Telephone
Operators receive over one
million calls for numbers
that are already listed in the
tele~e book. In a
single Year, the operator
expense for handling all
thi:.sc calls is fifty-five
n1illion dollars. So if you're
concerned about the cost
of your telephone service.
please look up numbers in
tl1c phone book \Vhenever
you can. Of course, when·
ever you can't ti.nd tl1c
nwnber, \Vc're here to help.
@) Pacific Telephone
-......... -
• ¥ .•
·-----------------------------
.:L-=-·-·._·_·_-•_· ________ 1_,_.,._.,_. _.,._,._,_2_s._1_•_1;
Quake Rocks Mexico;
Deaths, Damage Told
From Wirt Strvlctt
MEXJCO CITY -A severe earthquake
jolted four states from Mexico City to the
Gull coast today and the Red Cross sald
more than JOO persons were killed when
lhe quake toppled a lZ.story apartmenl
building ln Orizaba, 120 miles southeast
ol Mexico City.
At least 34 other de11ths were reported
and more than 1,000 persons were in-
jured.
"Dozens more are trapped in the
building (in Orizaba) waiting to be cut
out," Jose Garduno. secretary of the
Mexican Red Cross. told UPI.
"The situation is extremely grave. We
are preparing to send rescue expeditions
from Mexico City to Orizaba."
India, Pakistan Heal
Some Wounds of Battle
NEW DEL!U (AP) -India and
Pakistan, striving to heal the wounds of a
.war that ended 20 montM ago, today
signed an agreement permitting the
release of about 90,000 P a k i s t a n i
prisoners of war.
The Pakistanis were taken during the
December Lg'/I India-Pakistan war
fought over tDe creation of Bangladesh in
what had been the eastern wing of
Pakistan.
Their continued detention by India was
the chief stumbling block to a final set·
tlemeot of the war. The Bangladesh
government of Prime Minister Mujlbur
Rahman had threatened to try a small
group of them on war crimes charges for
alleged atrocities during the war and the
Pakistani military occupation t h a t
preceded it.
e Skylab Shooting
HOUSTON (UPI) -The Skylab
astronauts add photographs of volcanos,
swamps and possible hidden oil deposits
to their scientific treasure chest today.
Alan L. Bean, Owen K. Garriott and
Jack R. Lousma, in the 33rd day of their
record 59-day flight, also planned
medkaJ experiments, sun gazing and a
televised guided tour through their living
quarters In the elght·room space home.
e Gaudet Stlll lalled
TAOS, N.M. !AP) -Edwin Gaudet ,._
malned In the Taos Coonty Jail today in
lieu of $25,000 bond on a charge of assault
with intent to kill a city policeman during
a Secret Service manhunt last week.
v.·here a commemorative LBJ stamp was
issued. It went on sale in post offices
across the nation today .
e E.r-1u1n a Shoplifter?
GLEN BURNIE. Md. (UPI) -Of.
ficials of Sears Roebuck Company refus--
ed to comment Monday on reports that
Elizabeth McAlister, a defendant in the
Harrisburg, Pa., trial on charges in-
volving antiwar activities had been ar·
rested on shoplifting charges.
The former nun and wife of antiwar
priest Phillip Berrigan was arrested with
another woman, Judith Lafemina, also a
former nun, on charges by a security
guard at the Sears store ln Glen Burnie,
Md.
Bombing Jitters
Sweep Britain
In New Attacks
LONDON (AP) -Police sealed off the
chamber of the House of Commons today
after a suspected terrorist bomb was
discovered in the building.
London, hit by 30 explosive devices in
the last 10 days, was suffering a bad case
of the jitters and the city wa.s on a tense
bomb alert.
POUCE, WHO believe the bombs are
' ~,' the work of the Irish
1be Red Cross also reported two dead
In Cordoba and two in Puebla. The
governor of Puebla State said 30 persons
probably died in Quecholac village.
There were unconfinned reports oC
deaths in Japala and Tehuacan, in Vera
Cruz State.
"More than hall the buildings of Ori·
zaba have been destroyed ," Ricardo
Mejla, the local Red Croos chief said.
"We have more than I.000 pel'SOM in-
jured. Three hundred of them are in
hoopitals."
SGT. RAFAEL Limon of the Puebla
Fire Department said five homes and
two churches in and around Puebla were
reported destroyed or badly damaged.
The earthquake, measured in Mexico
City at 7.0 on the open.ended Wchter
scale, hit moments before 4 a.m. local
time (3 a.m. PDT ). The seismology sta-
tion reported it was centered about 129
miles south of here near the Puebla.
Oaxaca state line.
Quakes reading 4.5 and up are con-
sidered potentially dangerous.
"The Church of Our Lady of Perpetual
Help in the center of town collapsed ,·•
Limon reported. "We have had man y
calls."
Limon said another church, in the
village of Tonazintla near Puebla, had
also suffered serious damage.
"The earthquake was strong here. f
don't remember another one as strong."
There were no reports of serious
damage or injuries in Mexico City. But
several hundred tourists, most of them
Americans, fled into the streets and
afterward stood in front of hotels or sat
on the curb at the U.S. Embassy
awaiting word on the Safety of their lodg-
ings.
THE QUAKE knocked out power.
however, in parts of the capital and
police reported hundreds of calls from
frightened citizens.
Earthquakes and tremors are not
unusual in the Mexican capital. In 1957 a
quake measuring 7.0 on the Richter scale
caused widespread damage and several
deaths. Another lighter quake in 1968
caused one death. Seismologists say they
record more than 2,000 tremors a year in
Mexico City.
The December earthquake that ravag-
ed Managua, Nicaragua, was reported
variously from 6.5 to 7.2 on the Richter
scale but damage was severe there
because the quake was centered under
the city.
Slll~ tlll .
. , U~IT ........
AERIAL RECONNAISSANCE PHOTO SHOWS HUGE COMMUNIST BUILDUP AT BASE
Expanded Runway Could Hold Jets; lntens ified Supply Systtm Staged from Khe S1nh
Khe Sanh Bigger Thata Ever
Reds Rebuild Ex-U.S. Base
WAS!IlNGTON (AP) -The North
Vietnamese have violated peace accords
by trans£onning the onetime U.S. base at
Khe Sanh in South Vietnam into a major
military complex, say Pentagon officials.
Defense Department analysts say the
Communists have built new roads
leading south and west, big storage and
repair facilities and restored and enlarg-
ed the old air field.
* * * * * * Cambodia Troops Fight
To Open ,Supply Lines
From Wlre Servicts
PHNOM PENH -Conflicting reports
out of the Cambodian capital today in-
dicated at least one and po&5ibly both
Communist roadblocks on vital Route 4
to the sea may have been smashed by a
lightning thrust of government annored
troops.
KJIE SANH, they said, is now p~
tected with an air de£ense shield reminis-
eent of that surrounding Hanoi.
A new road network along the western
si de of South Vietnam as well as the
revitalization of the Khe Sanh previously
have been reported but not in such detail.
Jt was not clear why, with apparently
little or no chance that Congress would
approve any return of U.S. airpower to
Indochina, that Pentagon officials cOOse
now to comment again on the Khe Sanh
buildup.
Officials, wbo asked not to be quoted by
name, deny they are preparing Congress
for any ne\1,1 request for new authority to
bomb. Such authority disappeared by law
\\'ith the Aug. 15 bombing halt in Cam·
bodia.
IN DETAILING THE Communist build·
ing in northern South Vietnam, one offi-
cial said trucks have been moving large
quantities of supplies into the Khe Sanh
since the cease-fire.
Gaudet appeared alone be f o r e
Magistrate Norberto Martinez on Mon-
day. He said he would have to oonrult
with an attorney before entering a plea
to the charge, but he told a newsman he
would plead innocent.
e Center Renamed
Re.publican A-rm y
wbich is fighting to
drive Britain from
Northern Ireland,
warned more bombs
were expected. Paid to Watch Democrats?
Associated Press reported t o d a y
govemme'!!.,forces drove all the way
down the mgnway to the seaport totin of
Kompong Son, Cambodia's only
deepwater port and a vital link in the
supply chain.
Some 300 tons of material is stockpiled
In the open, protected by hundreds of
37rnm and 57mm antiaircraft guns and
surface-to-air missiles the size of
telephone poles, he said. HOUSTON (UPI) -11>e Manned
Spacecraft Center was of f I c i a 11 y
dedicated the "Lyndon B. Jobnson Space
Center" on the 65th anniversary of the
late president's birthday Monday. His
widow, Lady Bird Johnson, attended
ceremonies renaming the Houston space
complex.
A day of events in Johnson's honor
began in Austin, al the LBJ Library,
Senator Bible
To End Career
LAS VEGAS , Nev. (AP) -Sen.
Alan Bible (0-Nev.), today an-
nounced he would not seek re-e.Jec..
tion, ending speculation about his
politicaJ plans.
Bible said he was making the an·
nouncement more than a full year
in advance of his retirement
because he believed "it is only ·fair
to give Nevadans ample op-
portunity to make a detennioation
as to my successor.
"I bow out of the Senate at a
time when my state has many fine
potential Democratic candidates,
who, in my opinion, are extremely
well qualified to represent our
9tate."
First reports of the
Parliament find in·
dicated the SUS•
Mlts. Mu1t1tAY pected cigarette
pack bomb was spotted by a bomb-
detecting device in a lobby near the
chamber. But some experts believed tin
foU lining in the pack could have activa·
ted 1he detector.
Some of the bombs planted ln London
have been hidden in cigarette packs.
These were incendiary devices and few
ignited.
Poli<e took no chances and halted all
tours of the building. Parliament is cur·
rently in recess, and no legislators were
believed to be in the Commons, the Jower
house of the British Parliament.
The rash of bombs in Britain spread to
the British--Embassy in Paris today after
hitting the Washington embassy Monday,
wounding Nora Murray, an Irish-born
secretary .
INVESTIGATIONS by Brit Is h
authorities and the FBI are continuing
today after it was learned the bomb was
mailed from Britain.
Mrs. Murray's left hand was tom off
by the blast and her rigbt hand was
severely injured. She was openi ng mail
at the time. She was listed in good con·
di ti on today.
The bombing wave has resulted in
tightened security precautions for the
visit to Ireland today of British Prime
Minister Edward Heath.
Chotiner Reveals Second
Agent in 1972 Campaign
WASHINGTON (AP) - A second
$1,000.a-week Nixon campaign agent was
identified today by Newport Beach's
Murray Chotiner, a Jong-time Nixon
political associate.
Chotiner said he hired Correspondent
Seymour Freidin to report on the ac·
livities of Democratic presidential can·
didates in 1971 and 1972.
CH011NER said Freidin, no \V
reportedly based in London, sent him
first-hand reports on the activities of all
the leading contenders for t h c
Democratic presidential nomination dur-
ing the period leading up to last year's
party convention..
He said threse included Sens. Edmund
S. Muskie of Maine, Hubert H. Humphrey
ol Minnesota and Henry M. Jackson
of Washington, as well as the eventual
nominee, George S. McGovern of South
Dakota.
Chotiner said be also received in·
cidental infonnation about the campaign
former Los Angeles ~1ayor Sam Yorty.
but that Freidin did not join Yorty's en-
tourage.
Freidin follo'1.·ed the McGovern cam-
paign for a time after the Miami Beach
convention, but found other employment
in September and quit the political agent
job. Chotiner said.
IT WAS then that Chotiner hired Lucy
Goldberg, who also posed as a reporter
\vhile filing daily reports to Chotiner.
Mrs. Goldberg stayed with the McGovern
campaign until the November election.
Columnist Jack Anderson, who disclos-
ed Freidin's job with the Nixon campaign
in a column published today, quoted
Freidin as acknowledging that he worked
as an agent for Cbotiner. (Anderson's col·
umn appears regularly on the editorial
page ol the Daily Pilot.)
Anderson identified Freidin as a
fonner executive foreign editor of the
now-<lefunct New York Herald Tribune,
and said he is now head of the London of·
lice of Hearst newspapers.
Fair Skies Brighten U.S.
"What I was trying to do was pull a
Joe McGiMls," Freidin was quoted as
saying. McGinnis is author of "The Sell·
ing of the President," an insider account
of Nixon's 1968 campaign.
•
Temperatures in the 70s and 80s Over Nation
..
Cooler •Ir 1tttll'd over !ht Not111-.sl, IC)W9f'lllO ltmP9"•furts le> ttle JOI tll""'l!h fftt notttltrn Ji:ockln •rid of. ttrlno l\opt ot rtlftf to ltlt O•kol1s, wlltf1 litft'IPttl tvr• wer• ln tlle IDOi
Mond1y. A ~ rt\undtrlllOw'll'• were actttlf'td 11°"9 tM tlOl'li'llf'fl Plaln., tlW Gulf
CNll tl'lroutfl Florldl lllCI In llOl'!Mtfl
Hf"# l rlOllncl, Couial R'eatller
Molill'f Ml!YY' todlf. L.11111 Ylr11ble
w11'1d1 l'llfM lfld momlnt l'IOllrt bK~
11111 .,,.., to IOUfl!wftt It to 1t kl'Ott
In •ftltn'IOOl'lt fO<lfiy .tl\4 Wadnttday.
Hlgll tod•Y MM 10 •
\
Co.tlfll lemper.tlllrn range tram 62
lo 73. lnlatld .. mperaturn r•1111• from 61 to I~. W•ler ll!mperature 70.
Sun, Jlfoon, Tldes
TUISOAY
Second lllotl ......... lO;Otp.m, 6.1
SKOl'ld low ..... , . . 4:0) p,m. 0,1
WION!'SDAY
f in.I lllgl'I •.•. , , , , • , . , , . 10:46 a,m. S.6
First low ............. , 4:31 e.m . .0.1
SKOnd Plltll'I ... , ... ., .... IO:S2p,m. 5,S
SKOlld low ............ 4:4tp.m. 0.6
Sun RIMI 6:U.t.l'll. sett 7:2(p.m,
MOM •IMt 7101 e.m. S.h 7::13 p.m.
DAILY PILOT
DELIVERY SERVICE
Delivery of Ihe Daify Pilot
Is ~r"1teed ...,lrWlf. ft ,. ....... ,.
,...~~~ ...... ,..., ..
.. --It ,. '* •• bbl ... l~JA loldlf•-· ;..••-,. "'9' ., I u. s.tnlr. • I ia -...... .., ... _.
fll tall n tlNtllll Iii.a
J~erroies ................. ll!~l!I -"""""' .... --....... -140-1221 Sao-~Sao .. Ca!is* .. 1'"',
S.• tapn1, hp11 llil'tl .. l91~420
ALTHOUGH acknowledging that he fll.
ed reports to Chotiner, Freidin protested
vigorously that "I never spied , • '
Anderson said.
Chotiner also avoided using the word
"spy."
"l do want to·emphasize that there was
nothing there that a good reporter
would not have been able to pick up," he
said of Freldin's reports,.
He said the reports were faster, longer
and more detailed than what often was
found in newspaper accounts of the cam·
paigns. He said they included details of'
schedules, speeches. crowd reactions and
the like. Chotlner had previously char·
acterized Mrs. Goldberg's work in the
same maMer.
2 Meet Over Chamber
MOSCOW (UPI) -Communist Party
General Secretary Leonid I. Brezhnev
met today with Donald M. Kendall,
chairman, of the board of the new U.S.·
Soviet Chamber of Commerce and
chairman of Pepsico, Inc., the Tass news
agency said. T3!S said the two discussed
.. the Importance of the actJvtUes of the
chamber In expanding commercial and
economic cooperation between the two
countries."
United Press International, howeter,
indicated one stubborn guerrilla P>Sition
across the highway was preventing its
complete reopening.
THE CAMBODIAN capital's other ma-
jor supply road, Highway 5 to the rice
belt in lhe northwest, still was blocked by
the insurgents.
Associated Press reported f r o m
Highway 4 that a dozen armored person·
nel carriers and some 300 infantrymen
pushed through a road crossing at Thnal
Totoeng, 18 miles west or Phnom Penh.
and began patrolling both sides or the
highway.
11ie general commanding the Cam·
bodian force said that the Khmer Rouge
insurgents had withdrawn a mile off the
road after being pounded with artillery
and heavy mortars.
Recent heavy rains have helped slow
down the fighting and have widened the
~!ekong River to such an extent that su{r
ply convoys can usually escape fire from
the banks by staying in the middle of the
stream. A convoy carrying ammunition
and fuel arrived in Phnom Penh during a
90-minute downpour Monday that
dumped so much rain on the city many
of the streets were flooded.
THE AR RIV AL of the convoy came
just as residents or refugee jammed
Phnom Penh were beginning to feel the
pinch of higher prices brought on by
shortages of rice and fuel .
Food prices have skyrocketed in the
capital because of the cut roads with rice
rising 30 percent and pork doubling In the
past two weeks.
In other action, the government sent
fresh troops to the south of Phnom Penh
today for an apparent new push to recair
ture the town of Sethbo, which has
changed hands twice in Jess than a week.
Field reports said government soldiers
were heading down Highway 30 in U.S.·
made tramport trucks and massing at
Prek Tapao, a mi le and a half from
S.thho.
AEC Monitors
Russ Signals
WAS!IlNGTON (UPI) -The
Atomic Energy Commission said
today it monitored seismic signals
of an apparent new Soviet un·
derground nucJ(!ar te.llit.
The signals, recorded at air
pro<imately S p.m. (PDT) Monday,
originated In the norlh@m Kazakh
desert In the Soviet Union, the AEC
said.
An AEC spokesman said the blast
signals wm equivalent to an
underground nuclear explosion in
the range ol 2Q to 200 kllOU>na.
'
He said troop barracks also are visible,
and that one of the new roads into Khe
Sanh includes a recently cormructed 150-
foot steel bridge. He said another road
runs south lo Kontum province, site of
some of the heaviest recent fighting
between South Vietnamese and Com-
munist forces.
Most roads are said to be tw<rlane
while some are paved or covered with
gravel. Officials: said they carry all types ,
of military supplies.
TIIE S.UIE officials indicated other
smaller North Vietnamese bases are
under construction in other parts of
South Vietnam.
U.S. Air Force photographs of Khe
Sanh are taken from higb-flying un-
matined drone planes.
Officials said the runway at Khe Sanh
has been lengthened from 3,!00 feet to
nearly a mile Jong, allowing it to handle
the largest Soviet MIG jets and other
planes. None have shown up so far.
A Pentagon analyst said the North
Vietnamese have established a forward
base ''from which to stage future air
operations."
Held fn Sii-ting UPt T....._
Carter Ca!np, president ol the
American Indian Movement
(AB!) has been arrested and
charged with crlt!cally wound·
Ing fellow Alli leader Clyde
Bellecourt In a dispute. Belle-
court is in a stable conditiotl
following long surgery.
UAll'f fllliJI fi
' Kidnap, Rape ·Case Son's Resurrection 200 Avalon
Visito rs
Miss Boat
I
2 Iiids to View • ,
Suspect's Photo Awaited by Parents ,..
AVALON (AP) -When the :
Big White Steamer departs 1
Catalina Island on its final ._.
voyage each weekend, more
LOS ANGELES CAP) -
Photographs of a self-describ-
ed screenwriter were to be'
shown today to ll·year-0ld
Tracy Gayle Greenfield and
her 9-year~ld b r o t h e r ,
Andrew, as authorities sought
to determine conclusively the
identity of a kidnap-rapist.
A police spokesman said
Monday that the Greenfield
children would be asked if
they could identify Robert Lee
Ray, 45, as the man who of·
fered lhem $2 each last Thurs.
day to distribute advertising
leaflets at suburban shopping
Getty Death
'Probably'
Deliberate
LOS ANGELES (AP)
Behavorial scientists studying
the death of George F. Getty
II say the overdose of drugs
and alcohol that killed him
probably was t 8.ke n
deliberately.
Getty. 48. son of billionaire
oilman J. Paul Getty, coUap!:·
cd at a poolside barbecue J?8r-
ty at his home June 5 and ({Jed
early the next day. Coroner's
investigator James Kono said
Getty had taken diet pills,
depressant drugs and alcohol
before and during the party.
"A "psychological autopsy"
-the pi ecing together of
observations abou t Getty's
frame of mind just before he
died -revealed that Getty
~·as in an ''agitated mood .. the
night beefore his death and
threatened to kill himself.
T h e scientists concluded
that Getty's death probably
was intentional. although they
found no specific motive for
suicide.
Getty y;as executive vice
president and chief operations
orticer of Getty Oil Co.
Tee1t Drink
Bill Moves
SACRAMENTO (AP) -
A move to drop the drink-
ing age in California from
21 to 18 has cleared the
Assembly's Constitutional
Amendments C.Ommlttee:
on a ~2 vote.
The propos e d con-
stitutional amendment by
Assemblyman Ro be r t
NI mm o (R·Atas<:adero),
went to the Assembly Door
r..fooday.
A similar proposal was
defeated last year in the
state Senate.
centers and lhen abducted·the
girL
TRACY WAS found in a
coma the following day, a.ban·
doned behind a garbage bin in
a west-side shopping center,
She had been brutally beaten, ii:<
drugged and raped. She was to
be released today from UCLA
Medical Center after making Kill f Hi rapid Improvement s i n c e • Or• re
Ul"I 1'tl""'91•
S11spects
regaining consciousness late Friday. Bail totaling $200,000 has been set for Waldis Lea
Ra II led b th w · Copleman (right) and James Gerow Jr., in a plot
y, s Y e riters Sacramento police say would have ended 1·n the Guild of America as Robert Reynolds and known also as death of Mrs. Copleman's husband, veteran Cali-
Robert Connors, wa1 arrested forrita Highway Patrol off icer Ronald W. Copleman.
Without incident at his Canoga The man wh o said he was hired to do the killing in-
Park home and booked for Jn-formed police of the plan.
vestigatlon of kidnaping in the ----'-----''-----------
abduction of Greenfield girt
The California Department of
Corrections said Ray, under
the name Robert Reynolds,
was discharged from active
parole last Aug. 10, on a 1968
kidnaping sentence.
DETECTIVES, WBO plan·
Mill Valley Gunrnan
Guilty, Jury Claims
ned lo seek a formal rom-SAN RAFAEL (AP ) -A
plaint against Ray today, said jury that convicted Brent
he is married and haa si:r step-Bedayan on three counts of
children between the t:ges of 9 voluntary manslaughter in the
and 18. Ray's wife of two shotgun slayings of a Mill
years, Joyce, reportedly was" Valley couple and their son
in shock following h er now must decide the sanity of
husband's arrest. the 22-yeaMld f o r m e r
Ray was quoted a.s telling lifeguard and grocery clerk.
police that he was a writer for The seven-woman, five-man
the t e I e v i s i on series jury returned their verdict
"Gilligan's Island," but the Monday night a f ter
\Vriter's Guild said that he deliberating 15 hours. They
had apperenUy done only were ordered back to court at
minor writing chores and had 11 a.m. today to start the sani-
been suspended twice for non·
payment of dues .
Detectives said the Green-
field girl told them that a mld-
dlc-aged man with long hair
and a mustaehe bad driven
her and her brother to shop-
ping centers near her Mis,,ion
Hills home to d is t ribute
advertising leaflet&.
Guards Hit
Female Bid
SACRAMENTO (AP) -A
plan to use women guards in
all-male state prisons is "ex·
AT ONE parl<Jng lot, Tracy perlmentaUonwtthdeath,"the
said he let her brother out to C&lifomia Correctional Of-
put the leaflets on auto ficus Association charged
windshields and then sped Monday.
away with her. In a Jetter to Health and
Officers s.aid she told them Welfare Secretary Earl Brian.
that the man had ordered her CCOA president Roscoe
to read a book and not to look Antrim complained that Brian
up and had then forced her to had failed to consult his
swallow three yellow pills association when plarutlng a
a]ong with a drink of cola. pilot program with 55 women
Tracy $8.id she became un-guards in all'iDaJe prisons.
COMCious a little later and did Antrim said his association.
not remember anything more representing 3,200 guards, op-
until she awakened in the poses the plan.
ty phase of the trial.
THE JURORS s tarted
deliberations Friday n i g h t
after 20 days of t r i a I
testimony. They had recessed
f-0r the weekend.
Involuntary manslaughter
had been removed from con-
sideration by stipulation, and
voluntary manslaughter was
the least serious charge on
which the jury could have con·
victed Bedayan.
The conviction carries a
penally of up to ts years in
prison. Marin County Superior
C.ourt Judge Henry J .
Broderick delayed sentencing
until the sanity trial is
finished.
A first or second-degree con-
viction would have mea n t
Bedayan tmderstood he was
committing a crime at the
time he pulled the trigger.
BEDAYAN'S FATHER was
the only spectator in the
courtroom when the verdict
was read. The defendant sat
motionaless throughout , as he
had during the trial.
Bedayan had pleaded in·
nocent and innocent by reason
of insanity to killing Melvin
Schallock. 61 , his wi fe, Ruth .
S6, and their son, Daniel, 19, at
their Mill Valley home and
then setting the house on fire
last March 16.
BARSTOW CAP) -An an-
nouncement is e x p e c t e d
Wednesday on whet h e r
criminal charges will be filed
against the parents of \Vesley
Parker, the II-year-old boy
who died in a diabetic coma
after his parents threw away
his insulin.
Lawrence Parker, 34, and
his \Vile Alice, 29, said they
believed Wesley had been
cured of the diabetes he had
had for five years by a faith
$50 Million
In Parkland
Fees Eyed
SACRAMENTO CAPl
There would be $50 mi llio n in
the kitty for coas tline and
other parkland acquisitions
under a bill that clear ed one
Senate committee hurdle and
beaded for another tough one.
The legislation scraped out
of the Senate Natur a l
Resources and \Vildlife Com·
mittee Monday on a 5-3 vote -
the bare majority required to
clear the nine-member com·
mittee.
ASSEr..1BLYJ\1AN John Dun·
lap, (0.Napa) said he expects
the Senate Finance Comm it-
tee -next stop for his plan
-to be "a major hurdle."
The legislature in c 1 u d e d
several million in the 1972-73
budget for park acqu isitions.
But Dunlap said he believes
that should be boosted by ·150
million.
Dunlap introduced his bi ll
after The Associated Press
disclosed state park officials
had been Wlable to take ad-
vantage of several offers to
sell prime coastline property
at half the market value
because of insufficient funds .
The bargain prices were of·
fered after enactment of the
coastline initiative I a s t
November.
HALF OF THE $50 million
would go to the state Depart·
ment of Parks and Re creation
for acquisitions. The balance
would be land acquisition
grants to cities and counties
along the coast.
The bin is AB 332.
~:iives aald a 1963 ioodel'li-~--~------.-;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;_...;-;.;;;;;;;;•-·-.;-...;-.;;;;-io
When the going
gets tough.,
the tough shoes
get going.
station believed to have been
used by the kidnap-rapist was
spotted Monday ln a wrecking
yard in suburban Lynwood.
partially dismantled and ready
to be aent lo a crushing mill.
Polk:e '31d Ray apparently
bought the station wagon
several months ago from a
private party but did not
notify tile Department of
Motor Vehicles of the change
in ownmltlp.
Buster
Brown.
GIRLS
Super Light, Yet Sup•r
Tough. Two-Tone leather
for D14.19hter
BOYS -
T ou9h1 suede le1thi r with
thick 9rip rubber sole~.
Sup•r for play end schoo l.
~il lo Per/eclion t'! our Gxperl~
GETAWAY -""="""~;'r+-""---ni&1etitfssoEB YY! t• tMTill~ ;,r:.,ILY -' South Coast Village .,_ ~ s •
Sunflower at Plaza Drive ; ·:i; I
nexl 10 Soulh Coasl Plaza ~·1="""'~ .. ~· ,;I~,.~~;:;,,~= I Costa Mesa ~
714•556•8276 FASHION ISLAND •
WESTCLIFF PLAZA •
Newport Beach • M4-2464
Newport Beach • 548-8684
heaJer at the Assembly ot God
church here. than just thee hearts of visitors
may be left in A vat on. TJIE BOY \Vas buried ~1on
day in a cemetery in this
Southern California des e r t
community. Only a mortician
and a grave-digger looked on.
His parents. t1vo sisters, a
brother and friends stayed
away. \Vesley's father said the
buria l was u n i m po rt ant
because "he's not going to
stay there."
said he was disappointed his
son dld not rise fron1 the dead
Sunday at services for him.
but "I think God is letting it
go this far so he can receive
the most glory from this when
\Vesley con1es back."
Kennet h Pike, chief trial
deputy for the San Bernardino
County District Attorney's of·
rice , said 1\londay prclitninary
police reports surrounding the
child's dC'ath V.'Cre "being
revie,,..·ed ," but that a decision
on \1•hether the case ~·ould be
prosecuted \vould not be made
until \Vednesday.
Specificall y, officials say,
both body and soul may be left
on the island because of COO· : J
fused booking and the tendency ~,
of many weekend vis itors to I
catch the las t big steamship
back to Los Angeles.
..
•.,
Parker said he believes his
son will be resurrected after
four days in ihe grave. He
~~~~~~~~~~~~
um mer
The last steamer pulled out
Sunday 'vilh 200 persons still
on tha docks, including one
fathe r booked for investigation
of disturbing the peace 'vhen
he conlp lained that the vessrl
had departed with his young
son.
ale
WHEN DT REALI. Y COUNTS!
on our entire stock of
Spring-Su mmer & Early Fall
Dresses-Sportswear & Accessories
PANTS • Great Selection of
fabrics and styles Sizes 3-4 thru 11-12
VALUES TO $30.00 NOW ALL Y2 PRICE
TOPS-SWEATERS-SHIRTS-HALTERS
Hundreds to choose ftom
All Styles from Sleeveless Halters
to Long Sleeve Body Shirts
Plus Lots , of Sweater Sets
GREAT GREAT VALUES ALL Y2 PRICE
PANTSUITS • What THE LOOK is known for
Many Imported from Europe and
Lots to choose from. Sizes 3 thru 11
VALUES TO $90.00 NOW .ALL Y2 PRICE .
BLAZERS • Short and Long Sleeve
Good ~ction of fabrics & Styles
ALL GOOD VALUES AT Y2 PRICE
DRESSES • Short & Long
Lots of 2 pc Skirt Coordinates
Sizes 3 thru 11-12. Good Selection
WHILE THEY LAST THEY ARE ALL Y2 OFF
BIKINIS • All from Europe
& very Sexy. Sizes 3 thru 11
VALUES TO $30.00 WHILE THEY LAST $10.00
HEY GALS! This is the SALE
That You've Waited All Summer For
SALE STARTS
Wed., Aug. 29, 10:00 a.m.
The.lPo1'
/,,! Arlan. ':J.fau1t•
33 Fashion Island, Newport Beaeh-644-2400
Sorry! No Holds or Layaways at ThHt Prict1 -Ail ~•Its Final
Bankamericard -Masterchar<Je -Cash
'· .. ..
• .
. ,
.,
'·
" • ·-
.
;I
. • " • .
.
" t .. :·
.
1 . •
• DAU,y PILOT EDITORIAL PAGE
·Unhappy Wander ers
• The Marine Corps, which officially has opposed pro-
posals to create commercial jetports at either Cam p
Pendleton or El Toro, has made the gesture of hiring
an outside consulting firm to examine the P.lans.
So far, the consultant has come up with the news
that an "attractive" jetport could be Installed at Pendle-
ton, but only at great expense and with "irreversible ec·
ological impact" on the coastline. 1'he El Toro report
is still pendin g.
As the studies continue, any decision as to eventual
location of a new airport seems to remain as far in the
future as ever.
Meanwhile, travelers leaving from overburdened
Orange County Airport face a new discomfort. Once past
the airport security checkpoint, the hapless passengers
are herded into an outdoor corral to await their planes.
There tbey find no shade, no seats -and no way to re-
enter the airport building. ·
It's not so bad if planes are on time, but some un-
fortunates ·have wilted for an hour or more in the wait·
ing area -an experience not likely to be soothed by any
of the on·board comforts touted by the airlines.
Since airport authorities inevitably know in ad-
vance of major flight delays, it would seem only reason-
able in those instances to delay the skyjack security
check -for which passengers pay a few cents ext ra on
their tickets -and let the customers wait out the time
indoors.
No Help to County
A bill now making its way through the state Legis-
lature would wipe out the Orange County Air Pollution
Control District and make it a part of a new, six-county
South Coast Air Basin APCD, extending from San Ber·
nardino through Ventura Counties.
The theory is that a larger, regional body would
have more clout for enforcing tougher pollution con-
trol rules throughout the air basin.
Half of the 10-member controlling board would rep-
·Birds and
Beasts of
Poetic Fame
. (SmNEY J.HARRI~
' One o{ my daughters, who likes poetry
and is also fond of animals, asked me if I
could devise a simpler word.quiz that
would combine the two. Each of the
following lines of verse contains a blank
to be filled in with the name of some
animal. Anything around 50 percent is an
exceUent score:
I. "The .•• limped trembling through
the frozen grass." (Keats)
2. "Like to the ... at break or day
arising ." (Shakespeare)
3. "A •.. in a cage, puts all Heaven in
a rage." (Blake)
4. "1bey say the •.. and the ... keep '
the C.Ourts where Jamshyd gloried and
drank deep." (Omar Khayyam·
Fitzgerald)
5. "The .•. days are spent in sleep; at
night he hunts." (T. S. Eliot)
6. "What shall I call my dear little
... ?" (A.A. Milne)
7. "Stolid and stUMed he stands, a
brother to the •• , " (Markham)
8. "'Will you walk a little faster,' said
• the ... to the ... ; 'There's a •.. close
behind me, and he's treading on my
· tail.' " (Carroll)
9. "Lile goes on forever like the gnaw·
ing of a ... " (Millay )
10. 0 The moan of ... in immemorial
elms I And murmuring of innumerable
• . . " (Tennyson ).
11. "My heart's in the Highlands,
Dear
Gloomy
Gus
Dateline Chicago: Wilbur McD:>n-
ald , serving 100 to 150 years for
murder, released after three years
when another man confessed the
crime. Another argument against
the death penalty?
B.C.
Gloomy Oui <O-h t r1 sllllmlfttll lly
, .. ..,.. '"' .. not M<.,,..•itv m1tct ~
vltWI •t "" --· Stftll rour Mt Pff,,. t11 Gl9011W Ou1, Dally Plitt.
a-chasing the .• ," (Burns)
12. "The hungry .•• look up, and are
not fed!' (Milton)
13. HAnd honored among ... and •••
by the gay house.'' (Dylan Thomas)
14. "The brawling of a • • . in the
eaves." (Yeats )
IS. "The Assyrian came dovm like the
... on the fold ." (Byron)
16. "Out of the ... throat, the musical
shuttle." (Whitman )
17. "That, like a wounded .•. , drags
its slow length along." (Pope)
18. "And after many a summer dies
the ... " (Tennyson)
19. "The ..• at eve had drunk his
rm ... (Scott)
20. "And entertains the most exclusive
... " (Dorothy Parker)
ANSWERS:
1. Hare. 2. Lark. 3. Robin Redbreast. 4.
Lion and Lizard. S. Hippopotamus.
6.Dormouse. 7. Ox 8. Whiting, SnaH
and Porpoise. 9. J\'!ouse. 10. Doves and
Bees.
11. Deer. 12. Sheep. 13. Foxes and
Pheasants. 14. Sparrow. 15. Wolf.
16. Mocking·Bird. 17. Snake 18. Swan.
19. Stag. 20. Worms.
How to S urvive 1984
It was during the \Vatergate affair that
young Freddie Frisbee first developed
-the initial symptoms of a classic case of
·paranoia.
As he read the daily revelations of
•widespread bugging s , wire·tappings.
spyings, infiltrations and burglaries by
, government agents, bis sense of unease
grew.
•' The first outward sign that the was
·suffering from delusions of persecution
" came on a ~1onday
evening. He picked
., up the phone to call
.... a liberal attorney he
~knew and then, afte1·
moment's thought..
bung up the receiver.
• .. There's a good
_.dlance they've tap·
hls line," he ex·
1.u>iaiDed to his wife. ..-FeUcla. "Or ours.''
"Really, dear," said Felicia blithely,
1you're just overwrought."
'But when a friend attempted to take a
olJy group picture at a picnic the follow·
ng Sunday, Frisbee dove head first into
u.nd, burying hi s head up to his ears.
-ivou know. Army Intelligence agents
r..;.~_~_!ways taking crowd shots to compile
--aomers," be explained to Felicia . "Well, ~11 no sense taking chances."
A •·orrled Felicia Insisted he sec a
paycbiatrist. And a reluctant Frisbee was
~-lo the offices of Dr. lll'l'mann
• ·~, Afr. Frisbee,' sald Dr.
~ fuldin& hls band, "just tell me -wbol _,,.. to be bothering you." .. r ~'Ould doctor," .said Frisbee
cnllously. "But the rifclence i!hows
there's 1 good chance your omces will lit
barllarlud by the CIA who will seize the
irecorcb of our loUmate conversation for
.. ho knoWI Whal ends. 11
Dr. Sdrlnclt shook bis bead sac!Iy . .,.,,_., the l1mel wr Uve In,'' he &aid. u11m
afraid they've made you an Incurable •
I
( ART HOPPE J
paranoid. All 1 can offer you, Mr.
Frisbee, is my deepest sympathy."
l'~rom th ere, Frisbee went steadily
downhill . He refused all dinner in·
vitations on the grounds he hadn't ade-
quate facilities to check the guest lists.
lie triple locked all the doors and arose
thrice nightly to make sure no one had
taped open the latches.
J•'elicia grew increasingly distra ught.
"Please, dear," she said, sobbing, "tell
me what's the matter."
•t WOULD," sai d Frisbee, frowning.
"But how do I know you're not an FBI
agent or a White House consultant? lf
they can infiltrate political groups to spy
on them, there's no reason they can't in·
fill rate my household.''
Felicia left him. lie burned all his
membership cards, including that of the
Red Cross. He slept with his hi-fi on in
case he talked in his sleep. And he never
e1nerged from the house without his red
wig and black moustache.
llJs friends never called any more , nor
did his neighbors speak to him con·
side ring him, at best,"odd.''
Then came 1be Coup of 1984.
ONE BY ONE, his former friends and
neighbors were led off to jail on the
evidence compiled in their thick dossiers ...
And It came as no surprise to F'rlsbee to
see Dr. Schrinck being dragged orr to a
government mental institution f o r
''rehabilitation.''
"It's you who art" the lncurabl(!
paranoid," the slruggllng Dr. Schrinck
shouted angrily at Frisbee as he paSJed.
"Not I.''
"Aii I can orfer you, Doctor," said
Frisbee with a lain! smile as he strolled
oU. a free man, "ls my deepest sym-
pathy."
resent Los Angeles city and co un ty, with a single supel'
visor from each of the five remaining counties filling out
the membership. This would give Orange Counly only
one of 10 votes.
Proponents of the measure claim It would not create
a new layer of bureaucracy, just wipe out several old
ones.
For Orange County it more than lllcely would mean
that attempts to control poll ution on the basis Qf local
conditions would rapidly be lost in the shuffle of de-
cisions affecting areas whose pollution problems, at this
point, are far more pressi ng.
Muddled Thin king
An apparently disparaging remark about public
school job-trai ning programs by the new president of the
California Teachers Association has rightly raised the ire
of Assem blyman Robert E. Badham (R·Newport Beach).
Stressing the importance of social science and hu-
manities programs, CTA President Bryan Stevens Com-
mented, "We have to teach these great human values
and not just how to make a buck." True enough.
But the CTA leader went on, "If we teach kids to
make a buck, the result is corruption in government
••. disrespect for the political process, violence and
vandalism •.. and a spiritual degeneration of unprec-
edented proportions."
Perhaps he was just carried away by his theme, but
as Badham points out, a denunciaMon of job-training
programs, probably the most valuable addition to the
high school curricula in decades. is indefensible.
The youth who emerges from high school to find
he isn't qualified to do anything more than pump gas ·
or wash dishes is the one who'll be getting into trouble,
not the young person who has been trained ·to find gain·
ful emplo~ent through a vocational program.
FLAG
llURNIN6 21\
SS.AS!s1NA;10N 914
PlOTTINEi
R IOT
I NCITI NG
f;t~tlN
The teacher-president badly needs to clarify his
thinking. ... AfTER I 4RADUA1E, t'M 60IN ' INTO BllSINESS FO~ MYS ELF.~
Can He Control State Department Bureatreracy?
Joh Could Tarnish Kissinger Image
WASHINGTON -For beleaguered
President Nixon, the elevation of Dr.
Henry A. Kissinger to Secretary of State
was a political master stroke, but tor
Kissinger himself it is fr~ught with
dangers that threaten his charmed life.
.For the President, the move takes ad-
vantage of by far the brightest shining
figure in his pallid adn1instration. By
elevating Ki ssinger
to the No. I cabine t
post, the President
at once exploits the
mystica l public a~
peal of his ace for-
eign policy adviser
and reinforces his
administration at its
weakest point : the
State Department.
cleanly vacuumed of all power by Kiss-
inger's staff at the White House, The im·
pact is fel t simultaneously on domestic
and world opinion .
But Kissinger could become the victim
of the dormant State Department
bureaucracy he will now try to energize.
Jf he is undercut in that struggle. U.S.
foreign policy and the battered President
wW suffer along with Kissinger.
KISSINGER'S au ra even in these grim
\Vaterga te days is indisputable con·
sidering his routine experience wherever
he goes. He is literally besieged by
citizens , of every age and shape, see king
his autograph and a handshake. He is the
only inner-circle Nixon man to have risen
( EVANS·NOVAK J
and stayed above the sordid W h i t e
House climate of fear and secrecy th at
marked the ascendancy of H , R •
Haldeman and John D. Ehrlicbman.
Kissinger was himself a prime 'victim
of that climate. According to second-level
White House aides, he was sometimes
deliberately kept away from crowds . on
Haldeman's orders to avoid comparison
with the President in terms of applause.
The Kissinger appointment w a·a
desperately needed by Mr. Nixon 8s
domestic tonic in the wake of his widely
criticized Watergate speech and his
dismal performance in New Orleans last
week. Likewise, it is of ines1imable
political value in relations with foreign
nations, particularly Moscow and Peking,
which are ominously concerned about the
credibility and vigor of the Nixon ad-
ministration's remaining years. Kissing·
er's elevation is the first solid indi·
cation, since he was forced to fire
Haldeman and Ehrlichman April 30. that
the President can act boldly and imag-
inatively.
mAT WAS clearly a central reason for
relentless persuasion by the new White
House chief of staff, Alexander M. Haig,
Jr., that the President transfer Kissinger
to the polished se venth Ooor of the State
Department . Quietly and patiently, Haig
had been displaying to Mr. Nixon the
political assets he predicted could pile up
if Kissinger were given the foreign
portfolio in name as well as deed.
The President, desperate for such
assets, first indicated his mind was made
up on August 18, when he !asked Kissin·
ger to cancel all foreign trips for the
immediate future. Tiie hard offer came
three days later.
Kissinger acce pted instantly. assuring
a bureaucratic revolutioo in the mori·
Wicks
bund Sta te Department that K.i.sslnger.
no tidy bureaucrat, may not be able to
control. Kissinger is an intellectual and a
strategic planner, not a paper-pusher
keeping tabs on fitness reports.
KISS INGER intends to use his ntW
post to "institu tionalize" the vast foreign
policy changes he and the president have
made. He wants to take unconventional
patlems of diplomacy developed in the
\Vhite House and graft them onto coo-
ventiona l State Department patterns.
TI1at means taking the regular Foreign
Service Into hi s full confidence and giving
it real authority.
Such State Department offices .as the
Bureau of European Affairs. the Bureau
or Int elligence and Research and !he
Bureau of Plaming and Coordination
have boo1 virtually bypassed in the
Nixon-Kissinger foreign policy revolution.
As Secretary of State. Kissinger either
must return these and other bureaus to
their old eminence or risk fatal
bureaucratic ambush.
"It's going to be turbulent and chaotic
here for a while," says one top State
Department official who has long hoped
for the departure of outgoing Secretary
Will iam P. Rogers.
Whether Kissinger continues to Jead hi s
Charmed life or is irretrievably bloodied
by th is predictable turbulence now
·depends on Henry Ki ssinger. No man
since John Foster Dulles has been given
such supreme power over foreign policy.
The possiblities and risks are immense.
Study Disputes Reports on Indians .
By JACK ANDERSON
and LES WHITTEN
\VASIIlNGTON -To put the Indians
\vho rampaged through the Bureau of In-
dian Affairs in the worst possible light,
the government grossly overstated the
damage they had done . It also grossly
understated the support of their goals
among other Indians.
When the militant Trail of Broken
Treaties caravan va-
cated the building
I a s t November,
the government an-
nounced that only
t h e burning of
Washington by the
British in 1814 and
the San Francisco
earthquake caused
greater damage.
Fearful that th e militants' ideas would
be adopted by young Indians all over
America, the government paid to ny tn·
dians to \Vashington to join it in de-
nouncing the BIA occupiers as urban
upstarts who had no support among
reservation tribes.
WE HA VE NOW obtained an in-depth
study by the House Appropriations Com-
mittee marked "Not for :teleasc UnUI
Authorized by Comn1ittee." In calm
language, It finnly disputes many of the
Nixon Administration's assertions.
The document reports t.hat instead of
the $2.28 million damage estimated by
the Administration, the actual total is
closer to $1 .5 million. Both figures in-
clude lost wages and similar costs.
As to charges that the occupier& were
merely rabble-rousing city malcontent.1
withOut rea,J reservation membership, the
House staff study round just the oppo<lto
was lnl•. Based oo the best available
figures.. .. om SO per cent ol the TrtiiJ of
Broken Tr(!atle1 participants w e r e
reservation Indians. 0 When rural and
college Indians temporarlly away from
reservation& •·ere included, the figure was "close to ••. 10 per ceni"
LIKE MOST Americans, many Indians
saw the BIA takeover as ''an exercise in
futility" and they viewed the destruction
with "scorn." But Indians also confided
to the House probeis' that the militants'
"Twenty Points . . . embodied long·hekl
Indian grievances end established a po-
sition they would support,"
All but forgotten in the hysteria of the
BIA coup, the Twenty Points were
demands for enforcement of present
treaties, home rule by Indians on,Jndian
lands, return of much Indian Jarid and
federal social help.
Jn South Dakota, for instance,.the hi;
dia ns "aC(.'(lunt for merely l'llC-twelflh of
the populaiion (but) one·half of the girls
committed to reform schools and one.
third of the male inmates at the state
prison," said the report.
THF. HOUSE investigatorJ spent more
than three months truaging through six
states to interview Indians of all
persuasions and found generally they
"believe they have betn maldng grealel'
strides than ever before • • . through
legitimate channels by a u t b c r i z e d
Ieaderlb!P.''
They lound that many Indians de-
nounced the American Indian Movement
which led the BIA takeover. But "among young people • , • a new sense of pride in
being Indian bas created a fertile lield
(for) AIM."
The House prober's vigorously attacked
'1the dual standards of certain law en-
In Defense of Tattoos
Wasldllpe Sllr-Ntll'I
The chief ol dermAtol08)' at the San
Diego Naval Hospital, 1 captain William car.on. has heel pricking California's
t:onscience Jn an effort to have the state
ouUaw the city's famous tattoo parlors,
patrvnl7.ed by lhoUsandJ ol Slilors in this
centun'.
In squeamlstb minds, tattoos have
always raised fear or infection, although
the alcohol that traditionally leads tile
novice to the tattooer ,seems to have. been
an adequate antidote. PsycblatrlstA ha".e
tried saying that getting tattooed ls an er-
presslon of doubt as to the aufOcleney or
one's libido, a theory challenged by
bumper stickers which "'""proeWm that
sailors "have more fun."
It's our leellng tb1t taltoos are !ID<! for
those who Uke them. and that while the
art may be ol doubtful 9uality, the
themes expressed are eremptary -God,
country, mother ana sweethearts all
(GUEST REP~RT J
recet•ing their due, along with sundry
dragons, dripping daggers and ships of
the ltne under lull sail.
We think a sailor should get tattooed -
and ...,.. soldiers, too, especlaily those
who are Ilkely to forget their rifle
numben.
Many lugjtlves from justice have
thougbtlully provided thems<Ives wtth
tattoos which greatly l>elp th<loe who are
looking for them, and tattooed ladles are
sttll very much tn the picture, lrom all
aocounts, tneludlng those w1-mark·
logs ire '° discreet they are only seen by
the best friends, A praotlce almOlll as old
as mankind Is not going lo be snuffed out
by an aet ol the California Legislature.
Learn to Uve with It, w• say .
forcement agencies in thelr treatment or
Indians, ranging from neglect to barass.-
ment. depending on '"hcther Indians are
lhe victims or perpetrators of the
crime.''
THE INVESTIGATIO~ also dealt
courageously with what pro-Indian whites
only whisper about and n1ost Jndians
prefer to forget: the corruption and in-
efficiency among tr lbal councilmen who
Are denouncM by young Indians as
"Uncle Tomahawks."
Because councilmen grt $50 a day and
per diem eicpenses "'bile their councils
are tn session , "the job has be..:cme
highly desirable and has ""iven rise to ex-
cesses in political mat'hbtations .•. "
Many _councilmen "are unqualified [or
leadership, sutrer Inadequacies because
of personal problems, lack the business
aeumen ~ary . . . &nd generally
oegleet the responsibilities ... "
DAILY PILOT
Rol>m N. Wred, l'lil>U.h<t'
Thomc1 K<evil, Edftor
Bo:rbaro Kreibich
.Editorial Page Edl1or
The · edltorlal 1Plle o( 100 DaJIJf
Pilot .:teeka 10 lntonn. and .Umulate ·
ruder. . by pmenting on tllis Pl&•
divetllf!•'commentary· on fop1es Of tn.-
ttteaf by i)indicated cotumn!sl• end canoontats, by proyi(llftl a forum lot
ttadm' vlC!¥11 and by preHfrtlnK this
newsp.tpreT't ·()fMnkwtt and ideu on
CUJm!t topics. '""' <dltoriol ot>lnlont ol the Daily Eliot appear ~ tn •h•
editorial cotunm• at 1he top o1 UM
pace. Opinklnt expreaed by the Qllll..
umnlllls and -and -Mttera are their own and no enc1cJnt...
m<nt o1 U>tlr v!<.... by Ult Dau,
Pllol -14 lio -
Tuesday, August 28, 1973
~· '
Two Do ze n A re-Mi llionaires Committee
Gets-Cash
For Ni xon
' " ,.
Despiro Dncer (a in Market
NEW YORK (UPI) -More / eorP7Tarrytown, N.Y.
than a dozen indivktuals have
risen from relative obscurity
to fortunes of $100 million or
more in five yeal'S' despite an
uricertaln stock market situa-
tion, a Fortune magaz.lne
survey disclosed.
Two dozen individuals built
fortunes raORing from $50
million to $100 million in that
period.
Io the $200 million to $300
million class :
-Roy J. Carver, 63, tire
retreads and e q·u i p m e n t :
chairman and founder of Ban-
dag, Inc., Muscatine, Iowa.
-~ard Davis, .49, low-
cost msurance ; founder or
Colonial PeM G r o u p ,
Philadelphia, Pa.
-Milton J. Petrie, 7 1 ,
women 's clothing stores ; foun-JN A PREVIOUS survey• der of Petri Stores Corp.,
the new rich made it, [or the Secaucus, N.J ..
most part, ln high-technology
companies. Today's new rich -In the $150 million to $200
produce faucets , tire treads million group : .
and industrial cleaners or sell -Arthur G. ·c.Oben, 43, real
~·
million group:
-Curtis L. Carlson,_ , 5~.
trading slamP6 Gold nQM,
hotels and o,thers , prii,:ately
held enterprises, Mii;.neapolis.
-Arthur S. DeMoss, 47 ,' in-
surance by mail ; founder of
National Liberty Corp., V""lley
Forge, Pa.
-John K. Hanson, 60, motor
homes; chairman and founder
of W I n n e b a' g o Industries,
rarest City, Iowa .
-Alex Manoogian, 72,
faucets and other meta) pro-
ducts ; founder oC Masco
Corp., Taylor, Mich.
U,.IT ......
COMPU TER EXECUTIVE
H. Rose Perot
PROVIDENCE , R.J. (AP) -
An organization formed to de-
fend President Nixon against
Watergate charges claims it
has raised $86,000 in con-
tributions, including o n e
woman's grocery money and
$5 from former presidential
special counsel C h a r I e s
Colson.
Rabbi Baruch K o r f f,
pet foods , ice -cream and estate; chairman of Arlen l"" __ .... ...,_....,, .. LI!..._ __ ..,.,_-"',.._'"'U
chairman of the National
Citizens Committee for
Fairness to the President, said
r.tonday he hopes to raise
$500,000 to purchase
n e w spaper advertisements
proclaiming N i x o n ' s in·
nocence. vitrus juices. Realty & Development Corp.,
Jn the $500 million to $700 New York.
million class, according to the -Jack h-f. Eckerd, 6 O • ~ "IN LESS THAN f 0 u r magazine, is : drugstores ; found er of the
-Leonard N. Stem. 35, pets, J a ck Eck er d c 0 r p . ' Crasl• Involves T v Host weeks, we have gone from a pet foods, ac.;:essories real Clearwater, Fla. ~ committee of 18 to over 10,000
Carson Cited
estate ; heads Hartz Mountain -Leo Goodwin Jr., 58, in-contributors from Maine to
Corp., Harrison, N.J: surance; a director of Govern-LAS VEGAS, Nev. (AP) -Television talk California," the rabbi said.
llio ment Employes Insurance show host :Johnny Carson has been cited for run· The 0 r g 8 n i z at i 0 n has
In the $300 mi · n to $500 Co., Washington, D.C. ning a red light after a three·car collision~ here, srv....1::1\r'ed nrn..Nixon ads in 15 million category: -Henry S. McNeil, · 56, police reported. r-·~~ rv H n---Perot 43 com cities and plans eventually to
-• l\.Ul)ll ' • • drugs ; beaded Mc Ne i I Las Vegas metropolitan police officer James puter services, 5 e cur i 1 i es La boratorles, Philadelphia , Roush said Monday Carson's rented 1973 auto col-advertise in 200 cities.
brokerage ; founder of Elec-now an an affiliate of Johnson lided with another car Sunday morning, forcing the Rabbi Korff said the con-
tronic Data Systems, Dallas ; & Johnson. second auto to smash into a third vehicle. There tributions come from Midd.Je principal owner of DuPont -G 1 J Ro h St t k America, people "who reel as a en . us , . rue · were no in1·uries. · · · · Walston Inc., New York. · ch · f R d we do that a gross m1ust1ce IS 1ng ; amnan ° oa way Carson, whose car had to be towed away, is bem' g perpetrated by the -Edwin C. Whitehead, Sl, Express Akron O medical equipment; chairman ' ' · t appearing at a Las Vegas strip hotel. Senate Watergate committee
~aod~co-~fo~un~d~e:_r ~o.'._f _".T~ec~hn~ico~n-~In~th~e_l$~too~m~i~lli~on~to>_$~t~50~~~!....'~~2"'-~·~,.~ ~illl!llll~~~~~~!'!!.~an~d:'the~pu~bli~·c~m~edi~··:::·" __
tri nd sa1 hello to an old c .•
sin the Roaring Twenties
Its heyd~Y %~king a comebac~ded this andGne~:r~ Telephone hatss ~~o~tor line.
. h ne to 1 hite.
'
Candlestick P .0 . black or red or w ir g
You can get it inet it simply by ca in
And you can g
our business offic~.ou want to talk to an
Just tell them
old friend. ~ ne
RA\. TELEPHO &EOE .1 employer.
I ortun• Y An equ• opp
um mer ale
When it really counts!
on our entire stock of
Spring --Summer & Early Fall
SUITS --SPORTSWEAR --SHOES
PANTS • Casuals to Dressy
Many fabrics & styles sizes 28 thru 36
Values to $40.00 NOW ALL Y2 PRICE
SffiRTS • Our famous European ones
Short & Long Sleeve-Great Prints & Solids
Values to $30.00 NOW ALL Y2 OFF
VESTS • for the Layered Look
Values to $18.00 NOW ALL Y2 OFF
SWEATERS • Short and Long Sleeve
Turtle Necks -Crew Necks -V & U Necks
Lots of Easy Care Fabrics
Values to $25.00 NOW ALL Y2 PRICE
BLAZERS & SPORT JACKETS
Good Selection Sizes 36 thru 42
WERE $35.00 Now While They Last $15
SUITS • 2 and 3 Piece
Good Selection & Many Styles to choose from
VALUES TO $175 NOW ALL Y2 PRICE
CHAMOIS: Pants Shirts Jackets
What More Can We Say
THEY WERE $75.00 & $80.00
Now While They Last
THEY ARE $37.50 & $40.00
SHOES and BOOTS
All Sizes & Good Selection of Styles
VALUES TO $44.00 NOW ALL Y2 PRICE
LOTS OF OTHER THINGS TOO
NUMEROUS TO MENTION!
If You haven't been to one
of our SALES you have
missed one ; of Lifes Experiences.
Don't Miss It Again!!
SALE STARTS
Wed., AIP~u::i ~9 ai' 1@:00 a.m.
65 Fashion Island. Newport Beach -644-6500
No 1-l~k'~ or ~CIV" •r1vs · · All Scl <-s Final
MastG!r Char9e -Ba11k:i • '1ri;crd -Money
I
I
8 OAIL Y ..-ILO r Tutsday, A~ust 2d, 1q1_,
Wiggling Rigoletto~
Topless Dcuicers Fig ht Operct Ouster
SAN FRANCISCO (AP \ -
Nine topless dancers have
~ busted from the cast or
the San ·rrancisco Opera's
production of "Rigoletto."
The opera's decision to hire
lhe bare-breasted beauties last
Yt'eek touched off a minor
sensation -Vlith one columnist
suggesting the riarn e or the
opera should be changed from
''Rigoletto'' U> "Wlggoletto."
mONICALLY, JT v.·as the
publicity that spurrM the
opera to bust the girls and
order a coverup.
"\\1len it started to appear
that the whole producllon \Vas
going to be o~~shadowed by a
FAIRMONT PRIVATE SCHOOL
~· Don't keep your child in <;. lf 4' nursery school if he is ·~
ready for kindergarten. ·141\
Full academic program ... Enroll now.
Kindergarten thru 8th. , ~~~
Trad iti onal 3 R's. Cafeteria ... '~~"
Transportation ... Extended day.
1557 W. Mable St., ~~ Phone
Anaheim '~ 774·1052
--------
Be
llecessary
A lot of people need you.
And. they need you right now! There's a vital
need for quali&ed people of all ages in the
dynamic medical and dental fields!
Learn it right!
Southern California College of Medical & Dental
Careers offers excellent courses for MEDICAL
ASSISTANTS -DENTAL TECHNICIANS
-MEDICAL RECEPTIONISTS -and -
DENTAL ASSISTANTS. Yoo get superb pro-
fessional instruction for an exciting future in
health care!
Learn It fast!
These are 'no-nontenSe' oowses. Crammed with
critical information. You're tau9ht quickly.
Eftlclently. And, you go to worl< -last!
CAil. 635.3450
Do It right nowt Vou1J get"'°''" inlormaUon -•nd -you'I
discowr just houi many people really do need you!
PLACEMENT ASSISTANCE FOR GRADUATES AT NO
EXTRA COST! ACCREDITED MEMBER. NATl,ONAL
ASSOCIATION OF TRADE & TEOINICAL SCHOOLS.
AU. PROGRAMS APPROVED FO R VETERANS.
SOUJHERN CALIFORNIA COIIBiEOF
MEDICAL & DENTAL CAREERS
1717 SOUlliBROOKHURST,ANAHEIM
635-3450
;Jt·' The Cost
/:;1 of the Funeral.
f tlJ
J:t ' is a decision which only
few naktld dancers. the direc·
tor, Jean-Pierre Pont 11 e,
decided to forget II," opera
spokesman llichard Rodz.inskl
sa id l\fonday.
Davey Rosenber~L publicist
for North Beach's topless
clubs which supplied the girls,
v.•as irate about the opera's
decision lo reverse gears.
Cycle Gangs
Give Blood
LOS ANGELES (UPI)
Members or two d o z e n
motorcycle clubs, including
the Hells Angels, shed their
anti-social image and turned
humanitarians.
The clubs, affiliated with the
i\lodified !\·Io tor c y c I e As·
sociation, gave blood to help
1he Red Cross provide for ac-
cident victims over the Labor
Day \lo'eekend.
Red Cross spokesman Gerry
SohJe said the blood drive was
orgBJllzed by Bob La\ITellOe,
Los Angeles president of the
Hells Angels, Louis Costello of
the Mongols and 5am Wilion
of the Hessians.
• •
The Family Can Make
i'~r .; .... .
lri f'tt ' . ' ~·.; . Traditional or Cremation only
Mortuary •. Cemefery • Crematory
"Ei•erything in
011e Beautiful Place" ..
CAll OR WRITE FOR
YOUR FREE FAf/JlY ESTATE POITTOUO
NO OSUGATKlN Of COURSE
14801 BEACH BLVD.
WESTMINSTER
(21Jl 431 .. sn (7141193-2421
(1141 53Mn5
Gratings
ff3111rdo11 s
To Bikers
......... s.n 1\-~ Sll.J7 tndudt111ax.
11111ct_.,,..,_tDSMtw:Oo. J21.T7 lndullnc&ax.
into and out of. Plenty of
parking. And the crowds
haven't found it yet Your
travel agent knows the way.
Try . Saturday's News Quiz
We Dare You
•
Many savers are. People who have kept their savings at the bank where
they have their checking account are discovering how much more they
can earn at Western Federal Savings.
Where does the 17 % come from? That's the difference in the interest
you earn, with daily compounding, when you move to a harder working
5 !4% Western Federal account from a bank passbook paying 4)1%. On
$3000. fo r example, thi s amounts to $23.55 per year. We will be
happy to determine the difference for your account, and arrange the
transfer fo r you quickly and efficiently. It's easy to give yoµr passbook
a raise.
The interest on Western Federal p.Ssbooks is paid from date of deposit
to date of wi thdrawal. And deposits you make by the 10th of the month
earn from the 1st.
Western Federal also offers a broad range of higher yield ~ificate ac-
counts, with maturities ranging from 12 months 19 4 years. Plus free
services, including the Capital Club, to all acoount holders with minimum
balance.
& ACC;Ounts are Feder~ly insured to $20,000. A family of 4 can keep up
~ to $280,000 fully insured at Western Fed.
•
Assets over $340 million • Hugh Evans, Jr., President
Beverly Hill• a La Habra a Dd A:oo a Northridge a Sixth & Hill a USC a
Panorama City a City ol Orange a Larchmont a Corona Dd Mar a lng)ewood
a Hollywood/Vcnnont.
Corona Del Mar
2744 E. Coast Hwy./ Jim Park, Manager I Telephone: (714) 644-7255 w
Olynapic Regatta
Local
By ALMON LOCKABEV
... t1111 ••1tor
Three Newport H a r b o r
small boat skippers were
holding down top spots Mon-
day arter the second day of
racing in the canadlan Olym-
pic Training Regatta a t
Kingston, Ontario, Canada.
Argyle campbell w a s
leading the Tempest Class
with two straight victories.
Dave Ullman was still ln first
pla~ in the 470 Class with a
first and seeond, and Dan
Thompson was leading the
Finn Class with linlsbes ol
filth and second.
Sailors
Henry Sprague III was stand-
in& fifth In the Fino Class. He
is a fonner national champion
in the elm.
The regatta, which has
drawn compelitiors from nino
countries, is officially known
as CORK (canadian Olympic
Ra c Ing KinJSlon). Kingston
will be the site ot the 1976
yachting Olympic games.
Campbell and Ullman are
both from Balboa Yacht Club
and Sprague and Thompson
represent Newport Harbor
Yacht Club.
Besides the six Olympic
classes, the regatta is also
Lead
featuring ouch ~ther hlgh-
performance &ailing dinghies
as the Fireball, OK Dinghy
and Lightning.
Olympic classes represented
are the Tempest, 470, Finn,
Flying Dutchman and Tornado
and Soling. BOATING Leading In the Soling Class
alter two races ts William Ab-'--------.J bott of C3nada; Robert James
of Virginia ls leading in the
Flying Dutchman Class; John
Winsor of canada is topping
the Fireball Class, T a I
Freeman is leading in the
Tornados, and C h a r t e s
Roberts of New Zealand is
ahead in the OK Dinghies.
Pair Score
Qualifying
Heat Wins
Harbor Woman
Skipper Second
GREENWICH, Conn. (AP)
-Katie Wilford, of Tred Avon
Yacht Club. Oxford, Md., took
the lead In the three-day North
American Women's sailing
championships on Long Island
SoW'ld after opening races
Monday.
She saUed 27-foot Soling
class sloops to one fifth·place
finish and two firsts to gain
20.5 points.
on a windward·leeward twice
around course.
The races were sailed in
average wind conditions or
five knots.
The North American Yacht
Racing Union, sponsor or the
championships, is divided into
eight areas. Eight female
sailors earned the right to
compete in the N o r t h
American championships by
winning regional qualifying
events.
Tuesday, August 28, 197.3 DAILY PILOT 9 ,
~ ........
THE SMILE OF A HAPPY CHILO
in CYBIS porcelain
Walsh Cup
Races End
In Deadlock
Classes in Handling
Of Boats Under Way
Marshall Gram of Newport
Harbor Fleet I and Ed
Rodriguez of Alamitos Bay
Fleet 6 won their· respective
flights Monday in tile quali-
fying heats lor the Lido-II Na-
tional sailing championship at
King Harbor Yacht Club.
Her closest competitor after
the first day of the eight-race
series at the Indian Harbor
Yacht Club was Carolyn
Newoomb of the Newport
Harbor Yacht Club with 18.25
points. She finished first and
sixth on modilled Gold Cup
CQUrses and came in second
The top scorer after the
eight races have e n d e d
Wednesday will win the Mrs.
Charles Francis Adams Cup.
the top women's sailing prize
in North America since 1924.
U.S. Boat Nips Aussie,
Takes 2-0 Series ~dge
Eskimo parents do something beautiful for
every child: surround him with love.
So his first response to life is also
something beautiful : the smile of a happy
child, which he never quite loses. Now
CYBIS presents it to you in porcelain. in
color. "Snow Bunting" is 10Yz" high on It's never too early to plan
to attend a United States
Ron Stowell's Fre-Luv from Power Squadron course in
South Bay Yacht Racing Club, smal1 boat handling.
and Hasty Arnold's Gremlin, Right now is particularly ap.
Pacific Mariners Yacht Club pr 0 pr i ate since three
wound up in an unbreakable squadrons in Orange County
tie in the six race Matt Walsh -have announced the dates for
Series sponsored by California their !all oourses in elemen-
Yacht Club. tary piloting.
Jn Saturday's final race to The first squadron to laWlcb
Malibu and return Gremlin II fall classes will be the Dana
'"-'as leading when she had a Point Power Squadron which
gear failure which put her out will conduct classes in two
of the race. Fre-Luv was the locations. The first class got
Class A wlMer and second under way this -afternoon at
the Dana Point Yadlt Club
on 1Dana Island. overall.
&suits of Malibu race:
OVERALL -(1) Live Wire,
Duke Jones, WYC ; (2) Fre
Luv, Ron Stowell, SBVRC; (3)
Plum Half, Brad Godfrey,
KHYC; CO CC & Water, Clyde
Leecll. WYC.
MORF-A -(1) Fre-Luv :
(2) Plum Hall; (3) Magic,
Henry Peper. SMYC; ( 4)
Retreat II, Bob Smith, PMYC.
MORF-B -(1) Live Wire;
(2) CC ~ Water; 13) Medusa
II. Don Adams, SMYC.
PHRF-A -(1) Vamanos.
Dave Wallerstadt, PMYC; (2)
Super Star, Sid Blinder, \VYC:
(3) Windborne, Howard Ryan.
CYC.
PHRF-B -(1) Vastanvind,
0. MCC.M, SBYRC; (2) Fan-
cy, Bill Martin, SMYC; (3)
Noviacita, Marty B e n d e r ,
SMYC; (4) Veracity, H.
Williams, SBVRC.
Wednesday night another
class will start taking regis-
trations at the La Sierra
Recreation Center, comer of
La Sierra and Margrave
Streets, Dana Point. For
details on both thes-e classes
call 46&-0749.
The HWltington B e a c h
Power Squadron will also oon-
duct classes at two locations
-Marina High School, Room
132, Springdale and Edinger
Streets, Huntington Beach,
and Fountain Valley High
School, Bushard S t r e e t
between Slater and Talbot.
Both these oourses start Sept.
11 at 7 p.m. For details call
96&-0494.
Balboa Power Squadron, the
largest and oldest of the
Orange Colmty units will start
its traditional fall class at
Newport Harbor Yacht Club,
720 W. Bay St., Newport
Beach on Sept. 17 at 6:30 p.m.
USPS courses are open to
men and women who have
power, sail or no boat at 11.
They are presented annually
to more than 100,000 students
by trained volunteer in·
st.ructors in over 4 o O
"Jlladrons in the United States
and abroad. Even classroom
lecture materials are paid for
by the proceeds ol a fund
donated by USPS members.
The USPS cuniculum is the
result of experience of the
squadrons since they were
formed in 1914, together with
a thorough review in 1972
which added much material of
special interest to th e
operators of small boats.
Course material includes
such important information to
boat operators as th e
mariner's oompass, b o a t
handling under adverse con-
ditions, seamanship and com-
mon emergencies, aids to
navigation, Inland Rules ol the
Road, trailer boating, position
detennlnation by co=e plot-
ting and shore bearings.
The courses usually continue
lor 13 week5. Per.ions passing
the examination at the con-
clusion of the elementary
course are eligible f o r
membership in a 1 o c a I
squadron. As squadron
members they may take
advantage of 'the many ad-
vanced courses ollered by
USPS, including w e a th e r ,
engine maintenance, sailing
advanced piloting and celestial
navigation.
Qualifying heats continued
today alter which the fleet will .
be equally divided into cham-SAN FRANCISCO {AP) -ruling overnight a g a i n s t
pionship and con so I a t i o n The U.S. entry. St. Francis v, Pacemaker, winner of Sun.
flights for the national cham· beat Australia's Pacemaker day's opening race.
pionship races s t a r t i n g by one minute Monday in the "The incident was very in·
Wednesday. Monday resuJts: second race of the best-of-volved and it dealt with slight
RED AND BLACK FLIGHT s e·v en American-Australian spinnaker contact against the
- (1) Marshall Gram, Fleet Cup challenge series for six-St. Francis' backstay on the
1; (2) Harry Wood. Fleet 6; meter yachts. · final turn," the protest com·
(3) Rowland Lohman, Fleet I. The victory gave the mittee announced after
base. 5165.
Do Something Beautiful., ...
Charge Actounl5 •~vl!rd -Amtrlc:an 1!:~1,,t11
81nkAm1nc•nl ~ml M~ster c1u r9e, 100
SLAVICK'S
Jt'\\"r!rrs S\nrl' 1917
18 FASHION ISLAND
NEWPORT BEACH -6"44·1310
Wl!h 1oc1t1on1 of: T11rr1nct. Orang1, LI c1rrfl••• LI Ha1>r1
Also: Sin Olr<JO tnd Lit V .. 11
BLUE AND GREEN American crew a 2~ lead disallowing Pacemaker's Sun-
FLIGHT -(1) Ed Rodriguez, _!bec~~au~s~e~o:!_l _!!th!!;e~d!!!i•!!jQ!!;Ual:!!!!ifi~ca~t:!!io~n'-'d!!:a~y:.:v~i~ct2_0r2y::_. -----~-===================== Fleet 6; Charles Babcock,.-
Fleet 6; (3) Dick Lineberger,
Fleet 6.
First Races
To Deaver,
Moorehottse
Dick Deaver of Los Angeles
Yacht Club, Glen Foster ol
Long 1'land and S k I p
Mocrebouse of Mantoloking,
N.J. woo their respective matches Monday in the open.
ing races of the Prince of
Wales Bowl competition for
the match racing champion-
ship of North America.
The series is being sailed out
of Long Beach Yacht Club in
C.l-2> sloops.
Deaver beat Bill Buchan of
Seattle three stralgbt, Foster
took two out ol three from
TMy Smyth ol Texas, and
Moorehouse defeated John
McNeary of the South Atlantic
Ya<ht Racing Association 3· L
PARENTS WHO CARE ...
Look to International Montessori Schools
LET YOUR CHILD
DISCOVER
LEARNING CAN.BE FUN
Life long habits are
formed early_ ..
be sure a love of learning
is one of them
Absorbing adventures
into music, art, science
and the fascinating
world of nature
rms IS MONTESSORI
Phone todav for IMMEDIATE ENROLLMENT
BREA
400 Westfir
1714) 529.0321
FOUNTAIN VALLEY
10551 McFadden
(714) 839-1750
COSTA MESA
381 University
1714) 646-2134
GARDEN GROVE
. 9851 B!xby
(714) 539-3244
NEWPORT BEACH
20221 Cypress St
(714) 979-9241
nternab(Jna/
montessori schools
W. C. CARLBERG ENTERPRISES
Heit fl"Om cold: Huge depo.siu of
n1tur1I gas have been discovcml
in places like Alaska, Northwest
Canada and the Canadian Arctic
Islands. We can bring some of it
here in tankers. Some 1hrough
a pi~linc. And "''t''ve been
involved in extensive Arctic
research to find out the best way
to build that pipeline without
harnung the cnuilonmcnt.
Ca from lndonai.l:This projct1
could bttn.s up to one billion
cubic feet per day of n1tural 1a•
(in liqu.id form) to the West
Co&M ol the United States.
LNC from Au.cr1li•: In 1he P1lm
Valley field of Central Australia,
there may be as much as 10
trillion cubic fctt of natural gu.
If 1he g1s proves to be there,
and the Au~tralian and U.S.
Govc.rnments 1pprove, this
~upply aiuld be converted 10
liquid form .and shlPJ>cd home •i• spcci•lly consttucttd tankers.
Stor1ge; We StOl'f! gas in under-
ground storage fields in the
summer xi you'll have enough
for the winter.
Substitute gu from natural
rctoun:cs; Coal gasification is
simply the reaction of coal with
oxygen and hydrogen from steam
in a suitable reacwr. The result,
a methane gas, is then purified
to produce elcan·burning
substitute gas. Gas Iron\ CO.Ii.
With all the properties of
natural gas.
G1s from Ccntr1 ind South
Al'llCrica: Although somewhat
less far along than other sources,
Latin American gas is $till a very
f<"Jl ~~d11lll)'. Our plans call
for ddlhng test Wt"ll s in Pan3m1
and Colombia ~n.
This country is facing an energy shortage. And it includes Whichever, it's obviously going to cost more. But we
natural gas. think you'll agree that it's a. lot better than no gas. Espe-
Does that mean the Gas Company is running out? ciallysince it'll still }>('your most economical energy source.
Not exactly. But we'll have to go to the ends of the earth And one of the cleanest.
in order to keep those home fires burning. •---Asi far as your immediate needs arc concerned, we'll be
Jn fact, in a few yurs, the gas that supplies the fltme
6
able to supply all our "firm" custome..rs, such as
that supplies the heat that cooks your rout may come homes and busint5scs. But until we have those new
from Alaska. Or Indonesia.Or Ausualia. lt'll be supplies coming in, we will have to interrupt dcliv·
natural gas that we reduce to a liquid and ship home cries more often to our industrial customers who .ire
in unkers. -equipped to switch to other fuel$ whenever "firm"
Or maybe it'll be substitute gas produced from a>&l. 99;§ customers' needs require.
........ c.Jifomlo .... "-
•
I
Id liA1L t PILOT Tutsday, A11911st 28, 1973
••
For The Record Drug Directory Set T1ial Set
For Couple
, .,
Dlssolutlo11s
Of ltlurrluge
Brown, 06tien. lt•Y ..,. J-AlWI
YtHlllQ, Loll A. Ind W•yflf H.
811r111. Mlldr<ICI LO\lltt fl'd C.1,1ttl1 Albert
List Will Offer All County Programs SANTA ANA A
Alamitos couple accused of in·
(licting niultlplc injur les on
, .... A111111t U
Mftlfn, Jofln JMtOll I nd Evt!vn Dll llf ~ltvtn1. Kol!hrvn Je•n arid M•oon Nell '''~· Cw•n J •n<I 0 1vle1 Fredt1lc~ ehu ny, Gltnn E •11<1 R1rnooa E. l..••vln, Wlnlh fd L. 111<1 Georo1 H. Orr, Norm• Jt•n •11<1 Triom11 J•me1 01111, S11•1ll L. •l'ld Eow1ro f . fltll. OorOlll• M•1 •nO 01roict 6\lll•flt: HIOrv,, Gr1c1 r10C11 1n;1 TllOml l Alt>trl s't'v~:vir.ltowen• t 11Mrlne •"'I J•c~
8e>wm1n, Jt well EUtn l nel Dtl0tm1 MOOI'"""' -· ...,. M"' 1nd C••v•on J°"pn RtP~H. Kennetll L 1no G1,1t •n F. 600111, C11tlttn IOCI J<11"'-1 11~r.,.,..n
Fonlll,.,, It_,, E. •lld Kflt>t<"ln1 M. Mtlf, EClllll M. Ind l't>IWllO It.
S1l1z1r, ElolM I nd Pllllllp A~Y WUwv, 80l'lf'llt J11n •NI Woodrow WrlOl'll, W..,01 itnel Wllllt WIYM ~"-· Vlrol11l1 Bllllock Ind Tllom•• G•li co., Jt"Y Cllllord 1nd Chrl1U.,. Ann lllodOll
E11t1, ... AIOIUll 14 11111. All<t M1r;1 •nd Olt11 Let E!11n...,n, Siiiy Deln Ind C1rm<1n
M1rlt Freed. SMlll Ri1t Ind 111rrY Mark Fl~beln. Mt •$11111 A. l r>d B••W•• a. Rt11. AKetillOn It. Ind Oemt<IO VllOUt l. Mtrla E~I and Tot1v Quick. Helen A. •nd Tflom•• W. Tenni!IO!I, Judllfl A . .nO Jemtl E. H1m•nn, Norm• L. 1nd John Carl Jr. 8l1nktn1hl11. JO<fln P. end Wllllt m Eooen<1tr1Nr. P11tlcl1 Oi1nn1 Ind l l!>Ct Mlcllttl
' ~· -•. I
Otlier J
Deaths
SAN DIEGO (AP)
Priva te funeral scrv icts ore
scheduled tod:iy for retired
Navy Vice Adm. Thomas B.
Blnlord. a veteran of three
Y.'ars ¥;ho was decorated by
the United Sta tes and Holland
for service in the Pacific dur·
ing World \Var II. Binford , 77.
died Sunday at Naval Hospit3J
here.
NEW YORK I AP) -Carl
Lerner. woo edited the films
"Klute"' and "Twelve Angry
1'-len" among others died Sun-
d ay in t he University Hospital
after an extended Illness. He
was 61.
Death Notices
Gltl'P:
David Groff. lll tt.lden! ot (Mii Mt11; d1lf of dt•lll, Aug1111 16, 1'71. Su,~lv.d by ·1tept0n, J1ck Brown, H11nll"l'lon &Mcl'I; 11111,..jn.llw, EVI MCIOM"f'• Mii M9tt. ~ICH, lodfy, T11Hd1y, 4 PM, Wt1lcllff (1111)11, wllh A.tv. &r11<• Kurrie l'I·
llclttlno, lntermtnl El T-Cem1terv. WH!cllll Chapel Morllll'Y• "'6· .... ,
Olrtc!O<'I.
PAUUIEN M•rv P•utwn. A.e1ielen1 of L11;111n1 HIUs; d1I• ol dtllh, AUOUtl 17, lt1l. Svrvlvtd
by ll11SlMlnd, Frtorlckr Ot ugnter1, Mri. CJ. Motm1nn, Corot1• ael Marr Mro. lt,0, Hywn, Norin HollyWOOCI. services, lod1y, TUfldfy, 1 PM, Wt1tclll! (lllPfl, with ,-,. JOl'lll D11vl1 offici"llnci. lnlt•· rntr1I. F1lrhtYlft M-i•I f>•rk, We-st·
cl.Ill Cti•Plf MorNlry. ~. Olreclo's.
l"Ellllll F"ldel Perez. ISl w. 111h St .. C1>11T1 M1s1. Dale OI Otath, AU1J11ll U. 191). S11rvlvtd
OY 1l1ters. Mrs. Ml'Y N1v1rro Ind Antoni• llodrlo.,.t. lto••ry, lonklht. Tllft· °'r.• 1:lD PM, 8tll 8,0fdWIY Cli.!11tl. ltl·
ltM(lf, cn.t'ln W. MO Oorottty C.
Archit•. Cnlrll• Mlll'DllY •ncl ,.hy111• Mta.ll'll lli l!(Mllll, Manny I ncl Rost Pric., Mlf't Ll-nclf Incl Oanf~ EdW ln
pifio... K•ren 111.,,... Incl LIW'""' AUIJ'l MtcMurrfy, $1141rielfn A, .l.n.d Roci.rl D. Nicholl, s1to1111., I'. •no OI!~ <. Morel1nd, l'tot1fld •M Glor 1 Powell, M1ro•111 A. Incl Norm1n Allt n Sh<ICl1rowkfl, Peltr Jot.tllll end C1a•l• .Utile$ JOtl"lllll' Mlcl'ltl• Yvtl1f •nd Witte• J.1me~ • Grit~e, T1rr•nce Owlt ht 1nd P1lrlclt
C.M
YOUtlfl, J \ldllll Wynne 11'1'1 JOl'ln
Edw•rd MllCl'lel1, 011>1"1 A. fnd l(fl'Mlll &,
T•t111tr. NIMY fl••lty Ind Rcl'llld,
M.O.
Mc1Cnlot11, Fr1nc et M11 •nd Ooft•ld Li mber! HOlml, J\lffr 81111 I nd ltot111d Attn Mt"90kl, ll1•0tr1 M11y lllCI JOI\'!
fdwl 'd ltl,htrd!IO!I, Lorr11,,. L. 11'ld lil!ch110 1t1lllh Jr.
M1nr, ROllfrt s. •nd Lind• .5.
Comer. A.khlrd H.,...1re1 1..0 &tnv Louhe Cf!O, C1rmen Dlt nt end SICIJWr Alie<'! COt!ftef. Niie Edwlrd fnd Sulall V1!trlt Ot Wits. 00..0111 ~.n •rod G•Ke ~\1ll1nd, lt lC,,.ld J . Ind C1rolvn KIV Brtwole<>. (llht<IM 0. tnd L~rry M. H1v1:1. Jllnfl w. Ind Ntncv J. Oo~lt. Mltt11fl F. IU tnd Ell11belh R. L_,, MildrNI Ind LIWtenc t ltobtrl
Oel MOiiie, Ed\l!f\e I nd Mlrla S1l1k, (l..uck l..adl1t1v t nd JI'! 0••• .l.\1~er, Vltt0tta F: 1nd Frederrlch W. Hovqh. Dl1nt Ellene Ind S!t~lltll ··-l:ftltf'Hi "'""" ,. Todtro, M1gr1ret end CIMrlts Aller, H1nrv fnd Flortnct II . H1n•on. Dl•lt! 0 . itnel Dtvld L. Akllln, Wind• 9 . Ind Jo~topl! J. 1111t1e~lh1r O"o Ind Sidon!• M•rl1 Shor!, ltebe<:c1 Ann Ind JJmlS Ctden
8o!h, J111111-'!t A. l l'>d Gto,oe F. G1,1!k"ecM, Artu' 11"1<1 Etle M1,<1••et Evi n,, &"rnlct E. •nd ll:lchl'd A. Howtrd1 w..,on111 and Aubrey Oele 1=10.,.,.,-ofY, J"'"" 0. 11'1<1 Thon"las w. Jennlno9, Elmer Mo,. Ison 1 II d M1N1arel Ann AUl>rf'V, Jov Ann •nd John Allen 'lu~~h, Alison 0 , er>d Nun•ddln S"'allev. Lois Je.in end aenl1rnln How .. rd Kiili, Cll•rvl L. 1n-d T110rn1s C0Hln1, P11r1e11 A. and Jl)lin E. WlOhl, lt ld\1rd 11. Ind Je .. llrtt C. F"l!llOt!, P .. tr!cl• M. •nd 1tona1d IC P1llOllll. Ellerlno 0 . Ind H•rlle M. lorll'I•, 011n1 M••ie Ind Terrv L't M1urlce, CecU1 I!. and Illa~ H.
rtv•••, N•lson M 11'1<1 Liii C W•tton, D1rvl EVltfllll Ind Elillbelll ,_ .
C11rti1, M. l'11y •nd F"ro>d Ii.
A•r .. • 1t lcll11•d He•oltl 11M N1nrv•nn ~'"''"!"'"'· E1«1tl"lf' H ~nd Pll•lcl1 I. llt<io, Finny l . 1nd Gllld1: .. ~
U'"l~I'-• .... , 8•'""1 ,&l~n ~""LI""• M"<lt .. ,.,.._ L'l"~n ['I•"'"'" •'Id A"'" c ... ,..~n ,.,,..,,,., .,,.,, R...,. .. .,.,. Mwl r ....... , l'••n
0111.>1n. T""'"""' w1111,.,... 11""1 ~ .. lll'lr1 Sue ""th•..,•v, A•t"''' r . 1NI' .h"!ll'll A. L'lu,fl!'tt, S11r1nnt Ctir!J!lnt •nd
µ1 ... "••I L-S!•"'"'n!IOfl, JO!eoh H••rv i nd Vl~lnlt F•"I "'••••, Cl•'"nfl L. 1n" 1(••tn ~ llA""""· Deb0• .. 11 Su11n Ind L1rrv Leroy
1111~"'11-"ll .
1-l••bert
~lfMI AlllPll 2' Merflyn Jov 11\0
T•"'"<ll"· <."•11 "I. •I'll W•vn• A.
Mii"•· C11rol l , l!ld OOIXllll 8.
01111
A.~ .... , M1r1ene M1rv i nd Ala~
r t11<i•• "~" •"lt• .... >fl .,.., K""""''" Arl'lur r•aM•11. Elite" Ann 11Nf John c. Jr.
1: ... ,,..,, rarf<I T. """ JAmH w. ,,,
~''lllbll•n. Gl!'Oroe Dewey •!Id Allcw M.
•"'~"'""· lflr~••" \.. •nA Lind" t""' H•wlt:1, Rus.Hll F. Ind 91rblrl Ellttl ..,,,...,o, .., •• y L. """ ,,...., E.
1-luole, S•llY·Lvnn 1nd GrtoOl"Y s, ,,...,,.,,,.. v.,..,.... A. 1nf1 Jot>n,.., M. Jr,
s1tanr, E1ten1 1nd John Junf0t Jr. "•~I,..,,.,. M••lorl• L. And C1rt II. Etitnnt, 8l1r11tr11 E. 1nd Lorrtr1 G.
r:·~r·. st-All'"fl 111<1 Lo"ll1 J1nelle M1U!oan, Terrv Anen ltnc:I K1rtn
L•'•1,....,., l!lunr>Y Lvn11 1nd Ktnneln
WIYM 1-.,1.>o, '"""' A . ..,.., Ca•olvn L. Cl11•k, Pe1rici1 Mat Ind OOt!l ld Gt"'
~· Je•~ Oillnn, Flore M. Ind Don1lcl Hou1lot1
Ai'4'b•I~ Pllll'ltll J , Ind SllPllM
L1Wf'tne:e JOtWS, P1t~ci1 L. i nd ~le~ Kent
M11ctdo. M1rl1 o . Ind Adotto
JOl'W!S. Kallll Ind Rot1a1d Sl•nltV erook~ Cllervl Am itnd Gitry Dean 1tlc1Mtd$0tt, P1trlcl1 G•hr •nd G1,11d
CH
7•1din, l!u"'" E. and Nor1on
5otll, '°'lt~IJ Ind K11unori Mooney, C1.-olyn AM Incl Nie\ C. Jr,
Ouk •. He!fn A, flld Thom11 W. 8r01lou., MtrlCI Dllnl ff!d RoOHI Dudley Tovty, Cfl1rlol1• A. I M 8rU(I H. Holltrt, Stlldy Incl Wlllllll'! Jl mtl Htl11I, Greqorv S. 11\d Ellen It,
Johnlon, Rlllectl L. t nd N0tbt1! A.
WHIOfl, Bonnlt Lte Ind RObt'I L1wr..,(t
DeLOtn , NoHICy Ind Oon1kl Harold
StlllOf!Y, Ev1ngtllne Ind WIH110 Ltt P1ynt, Slllr A. Incl Liiiy e . Mini.on, Edw1rd C. 1nc1 N1ncy A 8UfrOWI, Mon1 D. 1nd Cll1rle1 w.
P•ntotl, Ctrrol Jo 1n.d R_,, MIXUf
L11ter, Joe Dt nni1 •nd 811u11ll E1 l111>1lll H1r111r, v1le111 K. anel M&1vlf'l E.
~n1nll1v. M1rU<1tn A . .1nd H11ot1 R. Fl lll, Marilyn R. Ind Ooflitkl A.I Y
1'1a1•riage
Lieenses
Jlll'lf 11, lfU WEl.LNEl't·MllllltEN -Alle'd Lloyd, 26, 2010 E. S1nr1 Cl1•1, S1nl1 Ant
1nd B•rt>ctrt Ann, :n, ''°' Otetn l'ron!, Newpcrl Su ch YOUNGS-MASSA -~nnl1 Pall!, 20,
J.IJS N. COISI Hloflw1v, All!. S·A, l toYnl 811Cfl I M P1lrlell JOV. 21, U3S N. COISI Highway .S.A. Lll(lllftl 8e1<h. !llJRGE·LINDAHL -Chtrlt• Thatn•s, •I , 1911 Lltoerly Avt.. H11nll"'I"°" 8e1c11 •"41 Kt1h, ... n Jean. 4.1. •09 N. Cll,111, 0•1noe. !ILUST·HALLOCK -Harrr (f11rte1, J6. IW \:. Et.i 81lbo1, 8tlbol Ind S!tofl1nle Ellt&be111, 76, t'33\i Et sl 8&1tfOll, lll fbol. Al(INS·lt08ERTS -Bruce l(evl", 21, llO!I StlcrH I, Coront Ot ! Mar I nd
Linda Lw, "20, 12.11 E, Senti Clari, Ant. H, Sln!I Ant, BLOCK·AMUNOSON -Dean M1,tln,
"20. 6lS7 9t1Drtvt . G1,0en Grove •nd Rtnet J11n .... 11. sm Alfre-d Avt ., W11lmln1ter. Dl'l"-~E NEC"Al -AlnCIY Jamtt, "?2. 11'11 Clmtron SI., A11!. I. Huntlnoton ~•~ch ~nd Anlnnlertt Ma•lt, :io, 1S2!1 L"f<" Circle, Wt1rmi"11er. M!"!ORSECK·PAltKER -Ric ky Alan, "20, '535 N~b SI., Alff. (, San
ll"'ntntln~ ind Terri Ann, II, lt91l 01kl'1'1 (Itel&, Hunliftlllot1 Setth.
LOTTEll·LITTLE -lt usst11 Jonn, 3<1,
-1.!0 S. (MJI HIOflWIY. llOllOI 8tlcll 111d M1rt1 Marlt, 19, 00 S. Coasr
Hlgllw1v. LNun1 fletch.
l"AltENTE .. U·KNAPP -R lch•rd ltOblrl, ?S. ¢1 Asltr 51.. Legun1
Such ~ T111w , \I, 225 Emert ld 81v. L19u111 ee1cll. JOHNSON·W!LSON -Richard JOI, :11. n y Ptclllc, A111. A, Cos!• Mn • Ind
Kimmie Ttr1, "20. SN N. Or1ng1 St .. ...... FltANKl!·SMITH -Theo6orf (lrY. JO, 1n.nnci St.. Cm!1 Me\1 and Ida Mtr!e, 11, tt2I S. ltt!!t Drive, S11n1a ·~· CHl.RNEY·WHEATLEV -Kirn J1m,1,
21, '911 S.•lhor• Drive, Nt wl>O•I
Beach •nd C....,.yt Ann, ''· .un Seasllort Drive, Ntwl>O'I Beach, SEGUltA·SEGUltA -,lo't Anay1, ~,;.
1401·1Slh, W111minsttr end Jo1eflna Contr1r11, ?J, U01·1S111, WMlmln~ter.
REVNOLOS·CAOISETTE 01vid Phllll11, 20, 1~1 Foolhlll, Sanla An"
ind .511unne. 20, 611 Avenld• VI· Qutro, Sin C.lem..,te.
GOLICH·YOUNG -Jolln X•vler, 16,
1051 S•"'• An• St .. Laoun1 aea(I\ •nd Vicki LY"ne, 22, 1211 V11t1 Vbt1 Orlve. FulltrtM POSTHVMA·YAN S C H e NC K
T110m11 Dir~. 69. 3900 lla•kview LIM, A11t. 1·0, l'vlnt Ind Glenn1 Mor1l1nd, St. 3IOO P1rkvitw L1rtt, Apt. n.D, 1r111 ....
SNYOEll-lTECKLAllt J 1 mt i Hllll•nl. 22, 105 81rceloM. San c1-11 •nd JoAt!n K111'1«f.,., 32,
10$ 81rcl4on1. Sin Cltrner1te.
ERICKS<m.M.ACY -Wllll1m David, ZS, OI Fernle1f Ave .• Corot11 del Mitr
•Nf Chrlsll111 Merv, 21, .QI Ftrnlt•I Ave .• CoroM de1 ~r.
MELENOEZ·TllEJO -Otnlel, 21. 112'
s. Hickory, S•nl1 An• "nd Marv
EJthlr. It. 1941 Martllt Circle, W1tslmlns1er.
WOOD, Jr.-MacWHINNEY -J1m11
Byron, 2•. :nll Vtr-Pltce, lfvine
1'1d M111r1 JHn, 26, 2134 Wnt Syc1rnor1, Oranve.
,.ltOVOST.JOHNSTON R 11 be r f Byron, 2', m Udo P•rk Drive.
Newport Bltcfl •nd Dtbrf, 22, '32 l ido P1rk Orl\tf, NtWllOft lletch
SA/\'TA ANA -A d ir ectory
ol a ll organizations in Ora n ge
County providing drug abuse
preventjon and t r e a t rn e 11 t
servicts will be published by
the cowuy Drug Prograrn
Coordina tion Office.
The directory 1vlll list all
public and private agenci~
vfferlng program s d eigned lo
prt>YCOt the spread Of drug
ubusc or trC'a t those affected
by the proble n1.
Tiie Drug l""r og r11 m
Coordina tion Office ""as ac·
t.ivatcd at tbc end of July.
Grand Jury Gi ,ves
Support of C,anal
SANTA ANA -"Vigorous
s upport" for the peripheral
c anal \\'hich \1·HI tra nsport
water around the delta of the
Sacramento and San J oaquin
ri\'ers to Southe rn California
has been voiced by the Orange
County Grand Jury.
In a resolution made public
~fonday by jury Forema n
t-.Ia rica f\-1. Bents of Newport
Beach, "the Congress of the
United States is slrongty urged
to enact l eg i s l a tion
authorizing t h e peripheral
canal a s a joint use facility of
the federa l Central Va lley
Project and the State Water
Project."
The resolution points o ut
that a feasibility r e por t by the
U .S. Department of Interior
has been a pproved by the
state . as u·ell as s tate
a ssembly a nd senate com·
mittees.
"The peripheral canal offe rs
by far the best solution to the
problems of both water supply
and \Yate r quality,'' the rcsolu·
lion s ratcs.
"~1t1ny years o r study have
dete rmined that by provid ing
regulaled releases of fres h
1\•a te r s into d e lta cha nnels at
more than 12 di(ferent points,
the can::i l will serve to protect
a nd Im prove the e nvironme nt
nnd ec ol ogy o f the
Sacramento-San J oaquin Delta
a nd San Francisco Ba y ," the
resolution adds.
The j ury states that the net
centra l basin d e pletion at the
delta for export to all of
Southern California "'ill be
Jess tha n 10 percent of the
total sup p ly of \Va t.e r from the
Sacrame n to a nd San Joaquin
river sys tem.
Copies of the r esolution are
being sent to Governor Ronald
Reagan . U.S. Senators Alan
Cranston a nd J ohn Tunney.
each county r epresentative in
Congr ess and the county
Board of Supervisors.
The r esolution has be en
adopted by th e Los Angeles
Gra nd J ury a nd is under con·
sideration b\• the Riverside
and San Be r flardioo juries .
Widow Sues Doctor
In Husband's Death
SANTA ANA - A Costa
?\fesa physician is one of three
d efendants sued for $250,000
by a widow who claims he r
husband's death resulted from
his being told that it was no
longer n ecessary for him to
ta ke a vital anti-coagulant
drug.
to p revent the possible clotting
of a ffected arteries an d
artificial valves.
Huntingto11
Man GuiltY J
SANTA A NA A l lun·
tington Beach m a n "'h o
agreed to !e t a n Orange Coun·
ty Super ior Cou rt judge r ule
State legisla tion requires that
it coordina ted all d r ug p rob-their two sm311 children ha s
!em s in the county . been ordered to face trial Nov.
"Initially, It seeks to cnrry 1,1 in Oi·angc County Su1X'rior
out its n1ission by coord ina ting
r esources a nd Information lur Cour t.
all a gencies and drug pro-Judge Jnmes Turne r set the
gran1s dea ling with drug abu~e loca lly ,1' accordin g to tri(l[ d nte ti·londay ror Shirley
Richard ~ckcrt. who heads ORANGE COUNTY Ann Urban. ,4. ond her hus·
the program. bGnd . J ohn . 2·t of 11932 Pine
In addition to Eckert. !he of-SL The <.'O uplc is fr~ on $6.500
rice staff includes Jial F'rnn~'. ba il (!<!Ch,
'"'Hh Joa n Celrud lending ad· lliml~ijjiiiii~ n1inistrativc and clerica l su1r 1;-;;,;-;.-.------------·
port.
E ckert was fol'n1erly ex-.-~
r c utivc assistant to Su pervisor Soles and or 8rolit er li,enseo
Ralph Clark and mo r c COLLEGE TRAINING r ecently h as served as ad· PHARMACY
min1stra tive analyst on the Phone for Free Folder • 4.0 F1lr Of",
staff of the county a d-al Hark• a ANTHONY SCHOOLS
HARBOR CENTER m inistrative OffiC'Cr. (~eras~ l•om Fairview S1a1e Ho.Ool<1I)
F ra nk Ytas recently d irector coil• Mi u s.a.111'
or Teen Help in Fountain : ~.~~~c~T~oENNsTALs
J)Dt H1rtlor (1"lt r
Ca1l1 M11•, (ll!fOl'nla
"'· (714) 979·2353 Va lley a nd h as bee n president • HOLLISTER OSTOMY • HUDSON VITAMINS 111' 5. lrooknur11 51, of the Ora n ge County Coalition • JoasT STOCKINGS A~•hllm, c11, nu• or Community Service Centers • CAMP SUPPORTS Ph. 1714) 77•·&BOO
a nd F'r cc Clinics. 11~·~·~·~,,~,.,~~··~~~'~'i'~O~M~'~'~"~'~'~'~·~··~·~~~~~~~~~~~ fi'frs. Gelrud has \Yor ked as
a dispatcher for the l.agunu
Beach Polic e Depa rtmc nl. American Indian Artifacts
ln addition to the d irectory,
a monthly nc\vsle tte r is plan·
ned to cha nnel informa tion
between local progr an1 s and
dissem inate information from
state a nd federal agencies.
L1ra1 rl11g1,
AUCTION
ANCIENT POnERY~LO SAIKETS-ARROWHl!ADS
coll~!lo11 o• tvrciuoi~ & solvtr squ;i5'1 blo1t.0m ntckl1c11. b11cel111,
w11c11 1>1nd1, ptnGi nlJ, 11so lride bt1d1, 1qu1w ntckl•cn, lie.
APPlt0.11 : )00 LOTS
W•d. Ev• .. Auq , 29 -7:10 p."1. lf'rewlew ho1t1 • p.m.I
HOLIDAY INN -3131 Bristol St., Co1110 Me1a
(Whett Sin OI.,. "'"""IV ""°'" CtHIH Srl"•H
DON McLEOD, AUCTIONEER
(2 13) 447-9520
\Vo rkshops will be organized
lo provide specia lized and
gene ra l training or programs
and individua ls seeking to im ·
p rove their knowledge of the
druga buse~p~r~o~bl~e~m~.~;;;;;;;;;;~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-~~==~;:::::::::::~
f,
'
OUR FAMILY IS C 0 NF R 0 NT ED WITH A SERIOUS
PROBLEM , SH 0 UL D WE TELL OUR CRITJCALLY ILL
FATHER THAT HIS DISEASE JS INCURABLE AND THAT HE
HAS ONLY A LIMITED TIME TO LIVE ?
by EUGENE 0 . BERGERON
• trmposl111t1 pro!Md fl•• topic "~oth 011d Drhtq: Attlt11des of l'ot!.nt ond Docto1.''
l'ethops 111 tfleir concl1111ions you mar find on 0111wer to your problem.
hycholo9lst cloJ191ed tflot "'f~o to 90 -,• of the-phyilclons ore 111 mo, of not Nlll"'I tile
potleltt ht' is dyhtq, whereas, 771/1 to Bf1 o of tfte potle1h wo11t to •now."
Ml'dlcol Doctor, "I cannot 09re• lilot the a~c..,toec:t of deottl eows ttle ~011fllct. I don't
have any ldeo how we con help a person to die, but I Ofl'I sure we con do m11ch to help
• penon to u.,e u11til the ti-of deolh."
1'5ychlatrist, "$h1ce I do"'t think we are obi• lo distt11.,11lllt occ11rirttly betwMI! potlenn
who ore ready lo die 011d potl•ftll who ore 1tol. it is perlt.ps 11.ffl for Hie physlclo11 to
stn1ct11re 11111 sto~l'lleftts so 1ho1 tH-potlHt 1;011 l'IOke his own choice between dl"f!lol and
occeplo11ce of death."
Wheftner poulble, q11e1tio1t1 will IM onwered In ttlb col1111'111.
B11lt::-Be1'!JCro1i F111ae1•11l llo1ne
COSTA MESA 2 LOCATIONS CORONA d•I MAR 646·2424 673-9450
j ll em MIU· Wtd,,..$d1y. ' A.M, St. oacnlm' C•lhoUc Chv•cfl, with Fr. Thoml' J. Ntvln alllel1tl11Q. lnte,men\. Holv Stl)lllchor Ctrntltf"y. Btll 8r0<11dway MOrt11aty, Dlr9clor1.
Tn115. Oline Je•n Cr1v• 1"4! lt odn•v
Rolalld
Rueh1tfl, ltllllh Edw•rd ind P•l,lcl1
8AltA.Y·8ELTZ -1"1111 Anlhotly, SI, m a1ywood Drl11e, H...._.1 Bt•cll
Ind JO\lcf ElflM, l1, ISlS Pl1cet1!11, NIWIJO'"I Befell.
~its. George tte Dean names
the King Family Medical
G roup, t h e Para-Medica l
Ciinic Laboratory and Dr.
E.L. Courtla nd!, 845 19th St..
Costa Mesa, as defendants in
her action. o n hls guilt or innocence after -=~:.:... ____ ..c:·"'~~:._:,,,,..~~~~::".~'~~~--
\1'aiving a jury trial has be{'!! -
VAN l"ILT Arlhur J. Vin Pell, )~ HlrbOr Blvd .• COlll Mnl. Datt OI dttlll, A11111111 16. lt1~. Survived bY wilt, Ann ; d1ugM1r, Joe" R1mbo, Cost• Mnt; :IOtl, Ptltr Vin Pell. New York; one grtlld<lllld. Prlv1te ....-vlCH ftnd ln!tf"mfllf will bf lllld. Ftmll'I SUOOtSIS ~ w!1lll11g to m1~1 ~ltl contrlllvllotlt, l)lt11t con1rltH.11t to tile Amtrktn C1ncer 5ocle1y, Ortnoe COU!ltv Uni!, lllSt 1,vlnt llYd., Tustin '2690. SIU 8rOMIWIY Morlu•ry, Olre<!orl.
WHITE H11el L. Whir.. !HS E. Salooe ll lwl., Newiiotl 8e1cll. O"le OI OH!ll, A11911sl V , 1•n. S11rvlvfll DY two oaugtire,., L1 v.,nt WMeltr. NIWllOft 8tlcll; H1rel L. Whitt. lndlfN; ,.,.,, son1. lll lpll Whitt. Si n JMt;
Arlh11r ~tt. Hunll11glon 9et<l'I; b<o1'11!r, All....0 Drtptr, L1nc1111r. Penntylvtnlt ; lhr tt ~r1nocl'IUOren. 51!"Vk t" Wed""O•'I. 11 ·)1) AM, 8111 8rOldw1y cnapel. lnle•· ~I. l'0ttst Part, nnnol1. F1m1lr S"9· ;1111 ll'IOoJt wl5'!!nt1 111 m1k1 mtm«lll cont•lblltlons. 1)111se conlrlblllt lo !he Slrokt Acllv1ty Ctnler, c/o M1rlrttrs
Lit1r1ry, XOS Dover Or., Newport Bttch. 8ell &'OlldWIY Morl111ry, Olrtclo••
ARBUCKLE & SON
WESTCL!FF MORTUARY
4%7 E. 171h St., Costa l\1esa
SIS-4888 • BALT7,BERGERON
FUNERAL HOME
Corona del l\far 673-9150
Costa l\1esa 6·t6-24!4 • BELL BROADWAY
MORTUARY
JIO Broad"·ay, Costa 1\-fesa
LI 1-3433 • DILDAY BnOTIJERS
MORTUARIES
17911 Stach Blvd.
llunllngcon Stach ltZ..7771
%44 Redondo Ave.
Long Beach Zll--431-1145 • ~leCORMICK LAGUNA
dEACll MO RTUARY
1706 Laguna Can yon Rd.
4!fl·9415 • PACIFIC VIEW
l\IE~10RIAL PARK
Cem e tery f\Tortuary
Cha!>'!
l500 Pacific View Dri,·e
Ne "''"J>Or& Bench. California
&44-!iOO • PEEK FAMILV
COLON IAL FUNERAL
HOM E
7&01 Bolsa Ave.
\\'estmln1cer 19l-JSZ5 • S~UTHS' MORTUARY
U7 Main SJ.
llu.atJngton Beach -
Foi·
Weekender
Advertising
Phone
6424321
'"" eovct . Johnny Jvw.<1 lftd Wfl!ft Nell M1-ndtnh1l1, Cvnlhl• J1ne 1nd Ltt
Arthur ~1,eicek, Shfrlev Lou and Vclker a .
Pr\1111, ll ownne M•r;•ret and ltoblrl Mlcllaet
FOllf,, Gordon T. •nd Linell M. Jutas. Cot1sl1nce N. end JOhn J.
GOclderd. Sa!lv Lo11h1 1nd Guy lt~rt
PMle,, Lllld• L. Ind R1ymond WtrM
Suolvam1. Mlrv Ellen •f'ld Antl'lotlr ltoberl
1t1nd1no. Joey Vlnc•nl ind lli•rrol ......... M~rtty, Gtrv E, 1nd Judv A.
Smllh. St•nltv Jose1111 ind ~rv
Ell11bforll Strombol11t. Jemes Slel)h.tn alld Ariel
S10i1, Joseph W. and Mary Julll! Slll1y, Cllarln L. I nd Miidred D. 11•oge, JI~ Henry I nd A11netln E.
Fr11m1n, Slndr1 Kay 1nd Cll11ler
Gan-el M.111rY. C1ro!YJ> Jpyce and Jerre Ltr"Y
D11vrt, Bt<nard S. Ind 1t1chel 0.
M11rr1.on. Ntnl H. Ind ll lch1rd E. ~!HAL DECRl!'l!S
E~ltnd A1111v11 17
Fl\fltlllrn, Wiiiiam F, ano Oli ne L.
NI•, l!lovd aM Leslie Irene Sh!pley, Wiiiiam Jos.eph i nd Oonn1
"" Casr>n, Raymond H. Jr, 1no r111,.,. Jean
MOl"ris, K11her!M Elltotietro 11\d Rol>trl
EdWl'd C1rpt11le<>, Jor>n Thom11 1nd D0tolhr
" ll t<ker, Pauline M1 rl1 •nd Ktvln Jotlll
W!lintrv, A.obt•I s . 1nd Joann M, O~•rslrom, El"nor Cftf\trioe •nel
Ocr11ld E111rd
Tarlor, Teryf J, tnd Aob!rt F. Buch1n1n, Oevld E. lflel Seundrl S. Slke, Bonn!e LOii Ind siewn Lynn
Owen,. R1vmond H. 1nd Lorr1lne M .
N111m1n, Rober! WIYM Ind K1th•rn ... NH\tr, J•net Sue 1nd RlllJ.ell Tnomtt E11tertd •urirtt Tt
Por!1. JOl"9• and C1meH1 Ferrf" ~log
P1rts, Chfryl D1rt111e and M1rtln A. A.ffeS, K1re<1 Rae Ind Thitnflt'I" S. Mayo, c11rri1 1nd Hallie M .
Gvvortle. Christine 1nd W11lftce Jr.
Birch, Marg..-el JO<fll'I •lld Ge!'"lkl 0. \Vll!!e!'", JO!oftlll W. 1~ M1rl111 I.
McMtckJn, SYl4Yn J. end John
Kot"cflff, C1•ol 0 . tnd Jeflry "-1.
l!lrlcker. Janlct L . .no Wllllam 0 .
Perer. Ros1ll1 ltnc:I Antonio M. Allom, Normi n St1w1rl 4nd 9tVf'rlV MM CiVl nau(lll. Ve!'"a L. 11"111 Chlrl11 0.
F1rQU!IO!I. Ot r!en' J. 11"111 0.111d S.
Chavet, Ignacio Gardt •!Id Antonio
C•ndtl&1i1
llensc1111er, Jc1n and K"'Mlll G.
S•loldo. ltoll' tnd Johll Ill. LunOQulJI, Ftlll(ll R. t l'l(I ltOOf>rl 0 ,
&lllltr. Lois A. tnd ltol1•nd John wa,,tn, &•rl>lr• S. Ind Hetoe11 P. Simmot11. Ellen A. Ind Cn1rlt1 D .
C1ll•neo, l"llY11h Anne &nd Jol'ln ltt ll obinsco", P11rlcl• .&nn and Jackie
IY1yne
Snvcler, 1Aatg111e1 Alice and Joel IC~n·
·~' Me1dor, C1rrit L. 1nd L•wrenct
HOlg, Fr1nc:t1 H1rntd i nd Thornes
Ln1He Wlllte<1m1n, S1ndr1 A. •nd (;1ry A.
S!tveni.on, Robert Louis •nd Mary Jo ... Sp19no l1, E1e1110tt (11ol Incl CMrles
Ttiom•J Pe'ltry. Ch1rlt1 Eugene Ind Donn•
Merl•
Hlllmf11, Artl llf! I(. •lld Gf"e,ory Joh" Allyn, 1"1trlc11 Af!l'tt end Wlllltm
'""""' Geldlf', GIOl"itHt A. l'!ld Oon•ld LN>
G1•lnoer. JOIH'! T•ylor Ind ''"''' i:te1nor Kennedy, Kllt"1 L. Ind 1"11rlc!1 Ill
ltQbtrll, L'11r&1t1 J. Ind R1 ymond T. St,., i htrrY N. f nd Jimmie 0.
J>rlflll'!O!'I , .51ndr1 A. Ind Slmmy Let P1r\~, 511 .. n 01J'lllt I nd Robffl w.,..
P1lmw, i\lllo6Y •rid R1nd1lt Ill,
Webb, UI• E. •ncl Alberf H,
ICve-rHc, SMIOl'I Jtfn Ind Je-ro!,ot
C1smlr
Fo•, Non•.M. Ind OfttOrY L
kllll, 0.i>rl EL!l.IOl'th •nd Jtck EUloll
" e......,.. H.lln M. ~ l(tf"IY w,
Ew11d, Jer-11d1 Odefl• 111d Jfrnt1i L4'0
Mith. R.ocln Lee 1nd ltOC!ln Lvron H-. E1rl Amos 11"1d"D1rlim1 Mevis
AT•IMf!, J._ M1rtJn lfMI John W!l!l1'" CroWt, E'ltlYll It. ll'ld Frink K.
ltmes, Doris l.. •nd A1chlt L.
C111it1", 0.llOP"lh L. Ind Frtnk W•lltf", llle1Mft1 1.. •net O.tt w, hfwtd ....,., 11
O'Brle<n, 0.1!1111 9111 tnd Cl'llrltl Hiii ''· l'tk 1. C..Vlrtot •nd 01vld
D"Orsl, llnytt11 Ind "''""' G
OA\OIS.HELLElt -OWlghl Willl1m, 2'-
36' Y f'ltte, Aot. C, Litg11n1 l!le1ch
Ind Ecll!ll Ann, 2.f. lU Y Pl•ce, Apl,
(, LitgUN lltlch. NOSAN l.SCHVMA.CHElt Ahmed
tt><1lllm, n. 111 wut &1y, CMl1
Mnl Ind Miry Cerole, 20, lll7" Wiii e1r sr., c,.t• Mtw.
8RAD8URY·WOOOAA.O -Ooft tld Lee, ZS. lWV. W. 81lbol 9lvd., NIWP()rt
&ttcll tl"ICI Su11n Lyn.n, 23. •247 Htl•rl1 Wey, Newport Sttch.
SALTZ·PONTIDUS -Robert F!1negan,
21, 211 Goleltnrod, Corona del M1r •nd S1111n Ani11, %2, SS4 Plerponr, CM!• MtSit.
CARLTON·PIASTA -Mlchttl Dale, 10. sos.12111 sr .• A111. A, H11nt111111on a11(n
•nd Ell z1belh, la, 1529 E. :!iveretr. 0r1noe.
eo~O·RUS BERT -Grl'fjOtY. u . 3100
P1rtv""', A11t. ll, O. lrvr"' and 81•bl,I Mtt, 2'01 s. RIMOl'll, San1a An•.
BAllON·VOIOA -Thom a1 E4Wl•d, 71,
1'011 Vloltl Lantern, Dina Poinl •nd
Ml•I• Annertt. lt, •11 E. T~n!O:"\ Av•~ Or1rioe.
V"'N CLEAVE·JOH NSON -Jonl!~.,n EOwl rd, :M. llrl Clllf Drfw , Anl. 9,
L19un• Be1cfl 1nC1 DebO,afl Horie. 13, llrl Cliff Orlvt, A111. 9, LagYn1 6t>ach,
GOOOAllO.STUMM -Edwin Newell U, IJ•S Cliff Drive, Lagun1 lleac~
•nd M1•v Ellz111e1h. 60. J!Oi Tvrol Orlvt., Lffluna Be1ch.
She claims that her hus·
band, James N. Dean. was
told after treatment for a
heart attack that he must re·
main on the drug, Coumadin.
"for the rest of his life."
She blames the defendants
for allegedly advising him Oct.
20, 1972, to dispense with the
drug. f\frs. Dean states her
husband died of anothe r hea rt
seizure lwo months late r .
Coumadin is a blood thinne r
used by per sons \\•ilh heart
conditions and persons who
have undergone hea rt surge ry
Kids Like To
Ask A1idy
found guilty of chi I d
n1olc sting.
Judge Hober t P. Knee.land
fo und Turkis h-born .J a \Vi d
Nouri Shc msedd in . 51. o f 324
Clay Ave .. guilty of those
charges afte r read ing the
t ranscript Of \\'est Orange I
County f\1unicipal Cour t a c tion
against lhe defendant.
11e ::.et Sept. 17 as t be
sentencing date for the m isdc-
meanor·levcl offense a n C
dismissed all other charge s
agains t Shcmsed din.
She mseddin \l'o'.lS a rre sted
last F eb. I by police 11'hO in·
vcstigated complaints filed by
rhc parents o f t\1·0 children,
e nc of \vhom lived in an ad·
jaccn t a pa rtn1cnt. He was
charged on arres t "'ith child
m olest, indecent e x pos ure a nd
crin1es a gains t chillren.
June 12. lt1J
GULEWIC H·&LANKENSHIP -Rick John, 2•. 61111 Marilyn, Hunt1n111on
Btlth Ind aartHHI Let. 1J. 6812
Marilyn, 1-tunllnglon Beacll. i ~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;.,..,;.,,,;;;;;;.., ... ~ RAMSEY·MARKL ANO -M '< o,,' M ... Allen, 70. l10l Brlllol. Santi Ana and ~~ ·-------"l:t•
J1_11e1 Rtt . lt, 16400 Evt rest, FOlm· t-·. ....~ 111~ Vtlll"f'. P. • fi s • CISNEltOZ·POSWINSKr -Pe<1ro, ,,, act IC a:v1ngs 15700 8 ro o khu rs 1 A111 s. We11min,1er ctn-d P1rrlfla Ltti :I• l)11 W. H111,o, S1nr1 Ana . ' • • • • • • • • • • ••I l O•ll •5SGCll llCM SNELL·LA PIERRE -M I ch 1 1 I
LlfldSllY 21, JSl .. 21\d SI NeW110rt
B.e1c11 •rid Candace Ann', "· .Siii PAY s L•e<:1e 0,1.,., H11ntlno1on 8 e1<t1 SMOOT·THOMSON -01nlt1 J°oseOll SS, .. 10 Par~ NtwQOrl, AD I. 12:), Nl'Noor! 8e1<1'1 ind Vl<g!ni11 Sette SJ. "?240 Park NtWSIOl"I Apt •171 ' Ne>o"llOfl 8e1ct1. ' · '
WllJGHT·JA.NKE -JOl'lll Anlnon ... 2• 9'9 Serr1 Wty, CO'lll "'l~Sll '1,.J Jiiiene K•v, It, 145111 Tilden S1 We$1mlns1er. ., ~IOWAR O·KEETON -J1mes DO\IOllS 2•, ll1·111h SI., Apl. A, Hv11Ut>0lo.i
8e1c11 1ne1 Mlro1r11 Ann. 2l lll·l21h Sr., Apt, A, H>Jnllno ron &t1ct1.
CLAY·SAIN!CK -Chlrlts Eric U 1sn 81v1110tt Orlye, Nl'Nport Beac~ t:.i 1~~h~o, ,., lt•l LHS Ave.,
SNELL·SEED8DRG -Hol!ls Dennis,
11, Int Port C1rcllfl Place, Newpo•! 811ch •nd Oetio,•h Jean, 19, 1'31 Porr C1rdlll Pl1ce, NtwDOrl a ench SEALS·SALEEN -S!evtn Cralq j4 2'463 Calle Sfn Lui5, ;an 'Ju~~
C•11!srr1no ~n<1 Lt,l!t Jo-An11• \~. 195 LI CIHIS!I. Sa~ Clemente NELSON·SONNA lt -Rod11er Lo1en 71 , 1710! S!. A"<lrew~ Lane, Hlin: !!"'!Ion 6e1c11 •l>d Pa!rlcla Anne 11 11tll1 St. Andrtws Liinf", Hunrll\Q1M Belch. SMITLEY·STEVENS -01nh~t Euqene 16, 191$ StllrlnQ!on Pl1ct . A111 E.JO~. Ntwll0r1 &11c11 1nd Chtrvl Ailee, 1i 7«()? Et Cfnl.01 Mlu lon Viel~ ' EKOVICH·PHELP~ -Sl•v111 R!.tliy 7• 11• 01,rel1 SI,. Cooi;t• Mti• 'ind
H1yWfl. 10, 61t Narc!U4!t, (Oflll'll dol ......
MILLEllll~ATOll. -Ltwl1 Frenkll11 .. )HJ SDI D•jve, l111<1Tl119I011 Be•.n ·,,..;
Plltrlel1 M ldrtd, "· 1'•S2 ca111111 (lrclt, Hvfrlllltllon S.tcl'I. OVERHULSER•LA MM -G~ Gtor9f, 40, IJSfl Ttl'lol St., W1t1!,,,!nster 1r<C1 El•I.,. CtrOll, )I, '"'' k ll.,.,1111, Wtslmfnsier. MclNTOSH-OLSON -S(Oll Alen. n.
10~ Cllfr"llrll<* t.1ne, Aot. a, COSll
MMI •ncl Blrtllr1 Je111, It, 2011
f'l•mlllQO, Cost• M.-11. LOVE•PARl(HILL -"J" "T". 76, 721· lttll 51 .. A111. (, Hunlf110lot1 8tecfl I nd Ct""9 LM, n. 1,1 S. Ou:r!Qller, (O!"Ot!I Clel Mfr llEC KElll·llAltlCElii -Jtflr1Y Bruce, n, 1l06S Clll Lindi, A111. Bl O.rdtll Greve •nd C1rol1 A11nt. •, lrlll Almtlo Lfnt, N= &ff<h. l(LISS.JAlllA -Jn i.e. a , •1t
E111tt1N:•, 5tn Cllmltl1e lf'ld ""'1'11
lmtkle Per1r, 11. n.c Cellrillo, $.111 St~1J':f~~HWAN -Allin OOUl!l.,t1 t-J. tn.:J .,.'"° P'llCI. ,,.,.r.,.. · •nG J•nt1 M• \ n, 156.U P•Mdon• .Ive .• Ao!. a, Ttl'l111. SVLLIVAH·Bl.IEVANj -MIC h It 1 P.ir4ct:.. rt. m t TflorDf Aw ., w111m1nu11r 1n11 .5UHfl l!llubl1h,
It, 1011J Llll'IO-. Aot. J 2 , Wn1m1,,.1~t.
SN'l'Ol lt"'TICINSOflf -~ltrlttt M11ry,
11. 1•1n ~ st~ w111,,,1M1rr •no
"-""lcl1 "'""· If, Ion llllttMWt Drh•t. lh1et1• ,.,,~
• %
on deposits of $100 ,000
for six months to one year
The number of these accounts that we
can accept is limited
WE PAY COMPETITIVE INTEREST RATES
ON ALL OTHER ACCOUNTS
FOURTEEN OFFICES TO SE RV E YOU IN
Arcadia •tt"itn Lt Crnc1n11 •or1np
8111 G1rdtn1 •cost1 Mts1 Len An9Mt1 (2) •sin 81rn1rdino
'C1nog1 Ptrii: Oownty f'zl MonttftY Park Whitti1r
Fivt Addit ional Off ices in Nort~ent Califr:irn ia
Plus .. t Hill s .. Brill
(Opeoi11 S101I
foster CitJ M111ntain View Saft Jose
llT'I A rEIMllNA....._L _
CASI
Bulletin:
The Department of Airports requests
that you avoid driving your car to
Los Angeles International Airport
because of terminal congestion.
~!~~Nr~~e~a~!~!~~L Bu~o: 84.00
U. INT'L AJllPOffr
OllAMGI OOUNTY Allll'OflT
I
UQUHAHILLS
MISllOH VIEJO
ANAHEIM (Olan1r1and)
IChUlktf'I S·n ... 112 r.ar11
(((-
AIRPORT SERVICE INC.
I UBStDIAl'IV OF CHAOMALl.0'1' AM(fl!ICAN COii,..
1 tJ I W, ltl!IDI .Sllltl M Anlheifl'I, (aijfornl• 92802
FOR INFORMATION
SEE YOUR TRAVEL AGENT
ORCAU
(714) 776·9210
•
OAtl y PllbT 11
Fa mily Clreus by B U Kea ne Killer of NY Boys Sought Need a
pl•e•
to Sleepf
ttTI,,,,.~ ... "• , .. r,,._.., .. ..,,
'1A lot of my friends have neat metal thing• on their
teeth! Con I get tome?"
After I Week
Civilian POW
Gets Annulment
F'rom Wlre Services
Former civilian war
prisoner Alton ~ewlngham
and his bride have had their
marriage annulled a week
after returning from a Carib-
bean honeymoon.
No reason was given.
Newingham, 26, and Cindy
1\11lton, 20. were married July
21 in the First Baptist Church
at Shern1an Tex. The i r
courtship included dinner with
President Nixon and at the
Texas governor's mansion in
Austin.
* About 100 transvestites cos-
tumed to resemble Caro l
Channing attended the star's
performance in the musical
"Lorelei" in San Francisco.
r..1iss Char.ning was reported
"simpl y thrilled by this
turnout" ,ind later served as a
judge of a Channing look·alike
contest.
and \\'elfare, arrived In
Warsaw for a six-<iay visit to
Poland.
He said he had come to see
the "results of our remarkable
cooperative program with
Poland."
* Roy Robinett e of Incline
Village. a retired paint com-
pany executive, has been
elected president of t h e
League to save Lake Tahoe.
Robinette succeeds Steve
Brandt of Palo Alto. who
resigned last month after ex-
pressing dissatisfaction with
the work of the Tahoe
Regional Planning Agency.
* Summer Bartholomew, a
21-year-old business major
from Merced College, was
picked as 1973 Maid of
California to reign over the
C-alifornia State Fair.
Miss Bartholomew,
representing Merced County,
was one of 31 finalists in the ( J contest at the fairgrounds in
... _P_E_O_P_l_.E _ _,· sacram<nto. *
_ Rep. Fortney H. hPete"
Some 1,000 persoos stood at
the entrance ot the Ou-ran
Theater and cheered as each
bewigged and bogus "Carol
Channing'' alighted from cab
with escort.
* A state appeals court has
upheld a judgment giving half
the profit's -about $400,000 -
of novelist Leon Uris' book
"Topaz" to former French
Secret Service official Phil·
lippc de Vesjoli , an attorney
for Vcsjoli said .
De Vesjo!i sued Uris,
stating that the novelist paid
him only $65,000 after prom·
ising him half the book's
profits. The story u·as based
partly on material de Vesjoli
prepared about hi s ex-
periences during the 1962
Cuban missile crisis, Fried·
man said.
* San Mateo County
supervisor and former San
Francisco 4.9cr football star
Bob St. Clair has filed for
divorce from his wife, Ann.
Tbe couple had b e e n
separated since Wednesday.
They had been married almost
25 years, living in Millbrae
with three of t h e i r six
children.
* Casper \\'. Weinberger,
secretary of Health, Education
Stark, ()).Calif.), has been
sued for divorce by his wife,
Ellnor.
After the petition was filed
in Contra Costa C o u n t y
Superior Court, Stark, 41. who
is on a trip to Cambodia,
issued a statement from his
office saying:
"Our points of view even-
tually became unrecoocilablr.
so we mutually agreed this
cOurse of action would be
best."
His wife or 18 years was
away from their home at Dan-
ville and unreachable for com-
ment. They have f o u r
children.
* WUUam P. Rogers will re-
join the Gannett Co., Irw::.
board of directors after he
leaves his post as secretary of
State Sept. 3.
Rogers was on the board of.
the communications f i r m
before he was appointed to the
Cabinet job in December 1968.
* Entertainer Connie Stevens
said she Jost an estimated
$20.oo:> worth of jewels she left
in a purse in the coffee shop of
the Flamingo Hotel in Las
Vegas, authorities said.
Miss Stevens said she left
the purse in the coffee shop
after her second show one
morning and. when she return-
ed later, it was gone.
ARE YOU SERIOUS
ABOUT LOSING WEIGHT?
NEW YORK (UPI)
Steven Cropper. Wendell Hub-
bard. Luis Ortiz. Douglas
Owens. All were black or
Hispanic boys under 11 years
old. All died by a klll•r's
bJade, \heir bodies mutilated
and left o.n New York roortops
or in alleyways.
Their deaths the past 16
months have prompted a wide-
ranging police search that in-
cludes psychiatrists' profiles
of the suspected killer or
killers who left three of the
boys laid out in ceremonial
fashion on rooftops.
THEIR DEATHS a l s o
brought fear lo neighborhoods
where children once played
joyfully in the streets and to
parents who in one instance
attacked a man who vaguely
resembled the police descri~
lion of a suspect.
Detectives theorize the four
boys may have been victims
of the same killer. a white
man between 25 and 30 with
Anti-Hughes
Suit Tells
Of Payoff
LOS ANGELES (AP)
Papers filed ln a $17.5 million
libel suit against billionaire
Howard Hughes indicate a
reputed underworld figure
received at least $50,000 for
the money Hughes paid for
two Las Vegas. Nev. hotels,
the Los Angeles Herald-Ex-
aminer reports.
THE RECIPIENT was iden·
tified as John Roselli, 67, who
is serving a prison sentence
for conspiring to cheat gin
rummy players at the Friar's
Club in Beverly Hills by using
a ceiling peekhole.
The payments were describ-
ed iA a memorandwn sum-
marizing the testimony that
Hu~hes' attorneys expect to
elicite during trial of the suit
brought by Robert A. Maheu.
former boss or Hughes'
Nevada operations.
THE HERALD -Examiner
said Monday the memoran-
dum and a proposed exhibit
also list more than $350,000 in
payments Maheu m a d e
"purJX>rtedly as political con-
tributions on behalf of
Hughes" between t965 and
1970, when !\1aheu was ousted.
The newspaper said the
memorandum gave the sum-
mary of the expec_ted
testimQny of Edward P .
Morgan. a Washington, D.C.
attorney.
Ex-official
Wins Parole
WASHINGTON (AP)
Former Alabama Atty. Gen.
Riclunond M. Flowers has
been paroled by the U.S.
Board of Parole, effective Oct.
15.
Flowers u·as convicted in
1969 of conspiring to illegally
exact payments from persons
and companies while in office.
Flowers, 56, was sentenced
to eight years in prison on
eight counts or conspiracy to
obstruct and delay and affect
commerce by extortion.
He has been serving his sen·
tcnce at the federal prison
camp at Eglin Air Force Base,
Fla.
Lindoro's unique program is a safe and pra ctical
method for the entire fomily to lose weight a nd
leorn how to maintain proper weight ... under
the strict supervision of Medica l Doctori.
medical
weight
reduction
LINDou+
MEDICAL CLINICl
Call for info rm1fion
Monday thru Friday 8 A.m. to 0 P.M.
COSTA MESA
Adams at Mesa Vlnle 557-1H3
NEWPORT BEACH
404 w ..... , ...... 645-3740
NEWPORT BEACH 'ARDEN 'ROVE LON' BEACH
645-3740 5 34-205 l 426-6549
PASADENA
796-26 14 ORAN'E 538-2395
, ••• ,,.1.11;,, ... 1
'"• 1'1010 , •• 1 .........• Id •. Kt tl'•ol•1tiet1•I ""•· c .. 1~"
... ~k 1111,.
t11,1i.,.Cl>op"'o" , ..... ,..,..1 tldf.
WOODLAND HILLS SHERMAN OAKS WEST COVINA FULLERTON LA HABRA
694°1 029 347-5647 7 89-7 103 962°3431 870-9501
w ....... v.,,..,
M•d>1:•I tltl9.
G.,lt;,..v.,. Oyl
tl'toftUltf'IDl lhi9.
""91.-f'I
lklt.
COSTA MESA
55 7°189 3
SANTA MONICA
821 -451 3
POMONA
6 23°1 655 ......... .,,. ..... , ...
,,., ..... ...i11., ':"'""-' '"'
SAN BERNARDINO
886-4788
A11owh1od
Mtd1(ol &ldg
, ........ Vllil•t 111,..,,.ic .......
E. LON' BEACH
597-0 378
Lo' Al10'
Mtdi<ol Cl"'''
Stolt Ctlltt•
Mtdl{•I lklt,
CERRITOS
924.5741
c ... ,, ..
, • .i ........ 1tw1.
l'l•tlcr1tl
Mtd;c.itl41.
RIVERSIDE
787-8250 ~1diccl
\q1.1ar•
MISSIOll HILLS
365-1138
Mi,,io.,
M1cli<ol &ld9,
"very pronounced ad'.le scars
on hi!I face" and a limp.
One psychiatrist ooruiulted
by police believes the klller ls
a religious person "who thinks
he may be God or a divine
Cropper, 6, was found a week was set upon and roughed up
ago on a tenement roof in the last week.
lower East Side of Manhattan. Police rescued the mnn and
'fhe corQner said he bled to took hlm to the neighborhood
death from a slashed artery in stationhouse, but as word
his arm. Razor blades u·ere spr~ad through tt1e community
found near the sprawled body. that a "suspect" was in
custody a crowd of about 500 For Classified Ad ACilON
Call
A Daily Pilot Ad-visor
642-5678
••• t he way t h e
k iller plaees the
bodies on ihe root•
t ops b 'lik e a eere•
' 11101111 •••
UNLIKE THE other vie· residents gathered o u t s i d e
tinu, who were killed on the trying to get at the man. He 1
upper West Side or in Harlem, was finally disguised as a 1
the boy was not sexually policeman and spirited away
mulUlated, but a nine-inch long ~i~n~a~sq~ua~d~c~a~r·~---~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ "X" was carved o.n his chest. ii
Terror and anger have gri~
ped tbe narrow streets where
Steven used to play. Some
mothers 00\Y keep their sons
inside, and there has been talk
among the nl en sitting on
Porches of taking the la\Y into
their o.wn hands.
person and Is doing thi! for
some unknown r e a s o n , ' •
homicide detective Nicholas
Passero said.
ORDER TODAY Your Labor Day HAM HAMS
TUE PSYCITIATRIST ad-
vanced this theory because the
way the killer places the
bodies on the rooftops "is like
a ceremony," Passero said.
Composite photos of the
suspect, describing him as
sli ghtly built with a pock·
marked face and a ]imp and
based on descriotions collected
in the other killings, have been
widely circulated and posted
througho.ut the neighborhood .
Spiral Sliced
Whole or Hall
''So Good ..• It \Vil[
Haunt You 'Til Its Go11e.1'
The detective would oot
elaborate.
Ano.ther psychiatris t
believes the killer is seeking a
perverted sexual gratification
and may have himsel f been
sexually molested as a child
by a black adult, Passero said.
SO INTENSE is the fear and
hatred generated by the latest
slaying that an innocent man
who resembled the suspect
• R•~Y ,, StrYt Will! Honty .,. Spic• Gl•I• e Spir•t Sllcecl From Top 10 eonom
• Wt P•<k•o• lrld Slllp ln1m C••ll ,, Cot•f
e Full S1rv1<1 ~llttttt.Mn
e 1mp0rttc1 c~"''' .1nc1 Wl111l
e Ctt1rln~A $pecl11ity
1700 E. Cffft Hl9hway, Cerena def M• -673·9000
I Black Well of s Crown1 R1s11ur.1nl
1222 S. lrookhunt, at loll Rd •• AHMltn 615·2461 The latest victim, Steven
h-
•
lnlrodacing
e United Account.
It accounts for everything.
At United California Bank, we figured that if we could simplify day-to-day banking, the world
would beat a path to our vault.
So we came up with The United Account.
The United Account takes a wealth of everyday banking services and unites
them into one convenient package. Instead of paying a separate fee each time you
use one of these services, you pay just one low monthly charge that
covers them all.
There are two United Account plans:
The $2-a-month plan includes a UCB personal checking account,
regular savings account, Master Charge Card and Balance Plus/Check
G uarantee Account. Plus all the other
banking services you're likely to want,
at no additional charge. (Of course,
monthly interest charges for Master
Charge® and Balance Plus® are not
covered by the $2 charge.)
Money orders
The $3-a-month plan includes the
UCB personal checking account and
the regular savings account. Plus the
other banking services at no additional
charge.
Whichever plan yo u choose, there's
no minimum balance required.
and cashier's checks.
Now that we've told you how The
United Account works. the pictures
will tell you what you get.
You can get as many as you want
There's no additional service charge.
mfil UNITED
~~~~ORNIA
Mf..WUFDJ.C.-
,
Vnlimited check writing and
overdraft protection.
Master Charge Card.
Master Charge (included in
$2 plan) is accepted at over
1.000.000 places. from Coli-
Jorn1a lo the New York Island .
And good lor cash al 5,600
banks.
Write as manv checks
as you need, \vith no
additional service
charge. And if you ever
get carried away, your
Balance Plus (included
in $2 plan) will cover '
any overdrafts up to
your established
credll limit.
. ' -';"
•
Banlc-by·mail.
We pay tha postage,
coming and going.
·-..... -
pl ~ • •
Safe deposit .x.
You get a $6 size.
Or a $6 credit on
a larger size.
UnHmited peraonaliaecl
checks •. Cbeclc Guarantee Card.
Pick your checks from a wide 4 µ ""'
selection, including our new
Ca!ilom1a Scenic checks. Reduced rat.son Joans.
Your Check Guarantee Card
(included in $2 pion) gels them
accepled by all UCB offices and
man y merch4J1ts.
Traveler's checks.
First National City Bank Traveler's
Checks are as 96od as money,
but a lot safer Anet you can get as
many as you hke w ith no extra
service chtirge
When yciu qualify for your personal loon of
$ l ,()(X) or more-boat l~n. vtication lwn,
\vhatever -you quabfy for a special reduced
simple·1nterest rate. -
,_
QUEENIE By Phil lnlerlandi -... ...... ' .
'· -<
"Hi! What's coOking?~·
L.M. Boyd
Nixon, Johnso11
Proposed Early
Consider that unattached woman who is looking for a
husband in hi s 40s. Let her forget the never-married fel-
low, suggests our Love and V..'ar man. It's three times as
easy for her to land a wido"·er, fives times as easy to land
a divorced man . \Vhat. you say that's not properly her aim?
That it's rather more rightfully the business of these two
elusive gentlemen to land her? All right.
Young lady, how frequently do you use a kitchen knife
on any given day? Typically, say the
statistics, that feminine house engineer
known as the homemaker employs said
tool daily about 32 times.
Client asks what proportion of the
women nation .... ide can be described as
natural platinum blondes. Fairly rare.
those. About three out of 100, actually.
\Vas no Chisholm Trail in Texas, si r. Tom B. Saunders
told me that.
TANGLED WEB
Q. "\Vasn't it Don llerold Who said, '\Vhen in doubt ,
tell the truth'?"
A. No, that was Mark Ty,•ain. Don Herold sald, "Oh,
what a tangled web we weave v.·hen fll'St we practice to
conceive."
Q. "\Vhat's the life span or expectancy of a seagull?"
A. Span - about 25 years. Expectancy -about 21h
years.
' Q. "\Vhat age does the average youngster leave home
in this country?"
A. At 17.
Just about 100 years ago, the term "silent majority"
referred a]y,·ays to the dead, reports our Language man.
POLYGAMY
No, an Arab sheik with several wives doesn't just go
eeny, meeny, miny, moe to pick which wife he intends to
visit on any given evening. r.1oslem law requires he di -
vide his leisure amOllg them equally. He can go eeny,
meeny, miny, moe to select his concubines, though. That's
expected.
Can you inherit that th ing called card sense? I mean
the way some souls seem to inherit a genius for the game
of chess? Recently put that query to an authority on poker,
pinochle and blackjack. Negative. said he, no one natural
knack makes a superior card player. Card sense is just
intelli gence. desire. concentration and experience. all fitted
together. You might pick up a tendency toward three of
these from your ancestors. But in that matter of experi-
ence, you 're on you r own.
The ex-husband is twice as likely to commit suicide
during the fi rst 12 months after the divorce as is the ex·
wi fe ... Wait. don't store those potatores in same bag with
those onions. The onions therein will make the po tatoes
spoil fas1er ... Do you pay $358 or thereabouts a year for
doctor. medicines health care? Latest available statistics
show Lhat's average.
Address Tll(lil to L. ~I. Boyd, P.O. Box 1875, New-
port Beach. Calif. 92660.
MARJORIE STAMPER SAYS
Fas hion Boutique
UPSTAIRS
445 EAST 17TH STREET
COSTA MESA, 645·8322
WE MUST MAKE ROOM
FOR NEW
e JACK WIN TER •
SH IPMENTS!
SO-WE ARE OFFERING
PRICE REDUCTIONS
& CLOSEGUTS
ON
PANTS • BL6USES · BLAZERS · SWEA'iERS
DRESSES FROM $5.00 & UP
ODDS & ENDS AT $2.00 To $5.00
• CHARGE CARDS WELCOME!
Airline FiI1ed o,,er· False Ads .................
~":'\\' • Of?Y tU"'"' Puerto Rico for $230 during disclose thot tile oonwmer GET OFF HIS BACK ' American Airllnts ha s p"id Febroarv when the price was, would have to pay an ad-1
the ~ta t e of New York in fact. $254. dltional charge ror bus or c~r
$1.000 and agreed to enrt .\lc;o. in adv~,.tisin"' a Utah r""'al to the ski slopes, hel
'\'11" :t"t" t~~~llf'" General ski tour. the firm failed to said.
For the fi"t t lme •inc• World Wer II we do not llve in fter of enothtr
World Wer -e nucleer holocou1t.
,. t.c!ko\•lti snld "''ere .. ---------------------o-•3lsn and mi!LeP1in~ ..,,,_
ve'11sement s c on ~ern lng
prices and services offered.
• e'ltowil• sstl.: "mf!ric<>n's
advertisement that passenRers
ENROLLMENT NOW OPEN
for o""'f• 1fudettt1 worllitt below trode le,el
h1 ... or mo,. •"*41•
in the 7tr1 LuxuryVnt>r will l•A Firm discipline .....:. Small classes sea ted two acroas m the coach S""lion were faJse. Homework 4 nights per week
WHY?
W• ore 11ow tolklftl) wit• tfle R..ufans
We •• aow talkhMJ with tilt Red Chinese
We art NW out of Viet Nam (with some honor)
WHO DID IT?
OUR ADMINISTRATION
H., also said American High moral 1t1nd1td1 maintained
Airlines had been f<>lsel" · ~ Let's let them to back to work
· •-•-;nq o· 1-nlvLo< tha t all ~A DCllffr:; HALL Let'• let t~• Coartl det...,IH tullt
;L" IV;IO jetliners have lounges , Let's qet the Senate off TV
for bflth coach and first class. Grodn 1 tflro11gll 1 O TronpOl'tatlo• t0 •II or•os P1id for by Jerry Cc:hlH,* 24b4 Bey1hore Or., Newport Beech
-~Le~fl<~ow~ltz~a~lso~ch~ar~g~ed~t'...h~at~~~~:..1:..2:..1 :..S:..o.~C~lt~ro~n~·~A~n~•~h~o~im~~~6:..3:..S:..·7:..8:..92~~~~~~~~~~~'!!·'!!•!'~"~-"" ...... 111t1r 11e ._ ........ _, 111 ,.11t1c• ... .......,.!Mii, 1111;;;•!-!!'·~~~~~ ,. American advertised tours to ~
' •
New buses, new routes, new times
and new schedule!!. You might
say we knew y..·hal you \Vantcd.
We're doing our best to
provide ii fo r yo u.
aerve 22 of the 26 cities in Orange .'
County. All of the routes have been
d esigned to take you to most or the
major shopping centers and
r ecreation areas in our county.
The new times rriea n increased service.
On some routes, buses are scheduled
every 30 minutes. 'f his means more
Ou r new buses, for
example, are the mosl
comfortable 've've ever
used. Air·conditioned,
vinyl bucket seals. pac~SJ.'!f!
racks and the latest in
pollution control ~qt'lipment
Now, our ne\v schedules. We've virtually
0 ·convenience /or you. ~
r ei nvented lhe bus schedule. We've o ~
color-coded the routes to the schedules for Ill S~
your convenie nce. All to insure that you get 1-..C..-----_.
what you need. What you need is a schedule
that does what
show you how, and when, lo get from one point to another.
Each schedule has a section for lime tables, a section for
general information and an overall services map (like the
one below). We've a specific service area map that !!how"
in detail, where the route goes. There
is even a seclion that -----
tells you how to read
and understand the
other sections, quickly;
easily and accurately.
these changes, ooe
thing remaioa the same.
Our fare. It's still only %5~
•.• only a quarter, for a
one-way fare, Transfers
are free and children,
under 1Z, ride free when
accompa nied h}' a fare-paying passenger.
-So look us over. Chec k out our new routes
and times. Ride ou r new buses and read
our new schedules. You'll find that the
''Two-Bit" Bus Line is a real alternative lo
todays traffic, conges tion and pollullon
problems. The lime is right.
110 :·:'""'""----: f • • : • ~ .. . .. : .c: • l i: ,;: ...
•AEA
Here's where you stBl't and
the hue stops. These sign1
are at all major bus stops.
announcing the most
economical and reliable
transportation around, Look
for it on your corner .•. it's a
sign of the timel. i : !i o: 'i! I • ·.: ru.et:flllTIA ::c : .e : : •i Mall Today •••
\ FULLEATOH : 11, i: ;n!
'ii Cl>a ptf\an•A•. :n .. HHl•'11 i \ °' ... ...,_ ....... :.,.... • • .
BUENAPAAIC lo u.::".::•· '\~,,!» .... "'\!·
1.lnc""'"''·\1. __ , .. ~~--J.U~l
To get your new schednle, simply determln&
the service area(e) you'll be traveling and
check the box(ee) below. Then mail the
.coupon to the "Two-Bif' Bus Line, 1126 East
Washington/\. ve., Santa /\.na, California 02701. ~"·--------ti. 11o-1 : :: C'l'PAESS -1i1 ANAHEIM(~~ .... : •:~
U.MAllTOI ,,; STAHT'ON 11: ..... ,, .... :M' :!: i · •M•J • ! z•••••••••••••• •••-• etV.•!"'9••• \llLLA PAllllC 1· I ~",, ..... ::"'' ..---------------------------. l : >11111"'"11"""""'"'""1)it n.o., : ! GAllO£N GRO'Yl .. -c: • SANTA•..t.HA OMiHGf D. •• > -"'"-Aw.. • _, ... .----------------c ,-:.~ WESTMINtST'Elil :! ·-M . 4 1: C-,.. ,..,,. ·----"·"'·--, • "' a• ' .... ~ ! ~= ·~ """" .. ..· . \ -.• l
FOUNT AUf •: ~
VALLE\' • •
I need a lift. Pleue Nnd my new Khedule1 at no coat :
11 check ed below. I
ADD,RE!IS-----------~
CJTYr----------Zl•·--
I
I
I
I
I
I
O l{oule-ft, so, 110 0 ltoule-128, U7, 128, 132 :
1 ORoute-49, 118, 133, 138 0 Route-53, 57185.71 :
I QRoate-80,64,t.fS,148 QA1t1Khcd11.lel I I , DP I
·----·······----··········--·
·Bit" Bus I.iae
ORANGE COUNTY TRANSIT DIS I A.ICT
··~·-
••
1
1
With the music of Lynn Willis and his
combo as a background, the 1973 collection
of designer Phyllis Sues will be unveiled in
the Irvine Coast Country , Club Thursday,
Sept. 20.
The occasion will be a champagne tea
benefiting the Orange County Heart Associa·
lion, which will be given in ·conjunction with
the second annual goll classic the same day
al lhe club.
According to Mrs: Charles J. Fishback,
Women's Committee chairman, Miss Sues will
personally describe her fashions during the
2 p.m. event.
The designer, also a ballerina, has a~
peared in such hits as "Brigadoon." "Kismet"
and "High Button Shoes," and lias performed
with the Ballet Russe de Monte Carlo.
During a tour of ltaly in a lavish musical
revue she began to design and make clothes.
Back in µ,s Angeles she created her first col-
lection and now, five years later, her label
has been described as "hot" in the California
1narket.
lt also has been said of Miss Sues that
"her sensitivity of design and color gives
every woman who identifies with her clothes
a spirit of freedom and inner sense of confi·
dence ."
Assisting with plans are the Mmes. For·
rest Smith, Ray Hanes and William H. Mead,
members of the women's committee.
Co-chairman of the golf tournament are
Fishback and Ralph Dixon.
Proceeds from the tournament and
fashion show will be used for local program
activities of the Heart Association, according
to Fishback and Dixon.
Anyone wishing further iinformation may
call Fishback at 645-1811.
~men
BEA ANDERSON, Editor
Tllndtr, Autllll U, IJTI ..... 11
. ·.:. " • -
Phyllis Sues sketches 11 lovely
evening ( righ_t). At far right, she
zips up ~ dress for ii casual
afternoon. The designer,
pictured above right, will
bring her Fall, 1973 collection
to Newport Beach Sept. 20 . ...
"
Energy in Design
Coal's Cool
''Jf women wear carbon in terms of diamonds, why not wear carbOn in
terms of coal?" asks designer Stanley Hegler. At left is a high-low neck·
lace or cut, polished and treated coal with a teardrop set tn naraware
and a complete round encased in free form . At right ls a couage 01
watch faces and parts suspended from faceted coal jets, rhinestones ana
gold. Earrings match.
•
at Fa
I
Was Wife Sh-h-h-irking?
DEAR ANN LANDERS: I can't stand
bigots who make di>wngrading remarks
aboul certain ethnic groups. But I find
myself reluctant to say anything for fear
of starting an argument or incurring the
wrath of a person I don't know well.
I belong to a minority group but one
would not know It by looking at me. Oc-
casionally someone will say something
unflattering about my people and I lee! a
lltUe guilty remaining silent My husband
says my restraint is a sign of good man·
ners. What do you say? -QUIET IN
MARYLAND
DEAR Q.: SU-lu't always golden.
Sometimes it's just yellow.
DEAR ANN LANDERS: l hope you
will publish this rebuttal of SS's com-
ment abool the Doberman plnscher:
"True to the bre<d -unpredictable snd
vicious."
OUr llobermall ls alfectiona1e snd °""'
dient. He's a good watchdog (with two
barks: fierce for strangers and a
perfmict«y "woof wool" for friends snd
neighbors).
He loves children snd knows he can't
play wilh a Z.year-old the same way he
plays wilh a 10.year-old, When we argue,
be alts Inane spot.and looks perfecOy
mioerable.
There Is eo much pr<judlco In this
world -let's mt extend It to dogs. I'm
aure there are plenty of vlclou•
Doberman• Al'OUl\d but there are vicious
Gto1t Dones, German shepherds and
boxm as wtD.
When we walk our dog (on a leash,
heeling) some mothers will snatch up
their children and say, "Watch out, darl-
ing. That's I!. killer dog.''
Incidentally, someone should tell SS's
husband that dog experts insist no
private citizen should try to train a dog
to attack. It can lead to disaster. - A
BOSTON DOBERMAN LOVER
DEAR LOVER : If there's any room In
the doghouse, tell Rover to move over. or
course, you are rlgbL Thanks for the let· ... _
DEAR ANN LANDERS: You are
wrong. To have a brown-eyed child. at
least one or the parents must have brown
eyes because the gene producing brown
eyes is dominant.
My authorities are: J. E. Wodsedalek,
General Zoology, (Wm. C. Brown Co.,
1963), C. A. Ville, Biology, (4th Ed
Saunders, 1962), 0. 1.Jarsland. Principles
ol Modem Biology, (Roll and Rinehart,
1964 ).
What Is YOUR authority, Ann Lan·
ders? -ASSISTANT PROF. 0 F
GENETICS WHO WISHES TO REMAIN
ANO('IYMOUS Al.THOUOH I AM SIGN·
ING THIS LE'l'l'ER
DEAR PROFESSOR: I will, of cou,.,.,
respect your wish for anonymity. First
because you requested It, and second
because I would not bumJllate you by
pointing out that YoUr Uterature Is
woefully out of date. You are wrong.
My authority Is Dr. Carl Witkop,
former bead of the Genetics Branch of
The National InstUutes of Health In
Bethesda, Md.
Dr. \Vltkop says: "In tbe e.arly days of
genetics it was beUeved th.a& the eye col-
or was determJned by a single pair of
genes. We now know that this Is f.Dcorrect
and that eye color Is traasmlt1eel by at
least three genes.
"In the vast majority of cases, t1'·o
blue-eyed parents wtll produce a blue--
eyed child. But It Is now an establlsbK
fact that tM'O blue-eyed J>Art:llts can pn>
duce a brown-eyed cbDd.''
Your apologies are accepted.
A.ro your parents too strict? Hard to 1 rc;ich? Ann L.ander's,;o<>klet. "Bugged •
by Parerits? How to Get More Freedom,''
could help you bridge the gencratlo!I gap. ,
Send 50 cents in coin with your requect ,
and a long. stamped. seU·addrmed '
envelope to th<> Dally Pilot
' .~-'
r'ILO I
Horoscope: Information Gained by Aq.uarius Saves Money
•
WEDNESDAY
AUGUST 29
By SYDNEY O~tARR
Nothing oceurs hallway . There
is full commitment.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-S<pt. 221:
ARI ES (r..tarch 21·April 191:
\'ou dt•ttl vdth realities. Facts
are on table and you are
capable of evaluating them.
Aquarius. Leo and Scorpio
persons could figure pro-
1ninent!y.
Make peace at honu~. Solidi£y
contacts. Che<:k costs, accowlts
Hnd policies. Lease that was
questioned needs attention.
Take nothing for granted. Do
some remodeling . home im·
provement. Eliminate lire and
safety hazards.
CANCER (June 21-July 22):
Accent on discerning what is
real and otherwise. Relatives,
neighbors talk a grea t game.
But you must make ultimate
decision where time, cost and
emotions are concerned.
I.earn to "let go." Welcome
rather than fight change. Cy·
cle remains high -you get
what you want but you mus t
go after It. Means nothing will
be handed you on sliver plat-
ter. One who promise s
otherwise hu plenty of hot
air, little else. TAURUS (April 2().May 20):
Nothing remains Ute same -
change dominates. Move with
\Vith the times. Flexibility
1nay not be easy but it is now
your strong a 11 y • Be
analytical.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22):
?o.1oney position is emphasized.
There is added responsibility.
Relationships are intensi fied.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 221:
What occurs now m a y
resemble 11newbom chick."
Means what had b e e n
obscured sees li2ht of day. You
are on thresbola of discovery.
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov.
' " t 1.; '' .. \
GEMINI (May 21.June 20):
Powers Girls H.m
The Look & The Style!
YOU CAN 9'11nn1nc& "O~WCOllrM1
LOOK BEnER. • M•~• U1>& H11rStyonc
FEEL EXCIT!J\G, • r,1,,..eCont•oi
GAIN CONFIDENCE •W1•0•0be&f1,~ion
& SUCCESS • 1'1•1"-•nc & Pootu••
IN YOUR LIFE • ""''°"'1~y~~t •Yoa&Dictiooi
Couple
Honored
Call 01 come inloday for a !ree pe1wnal a~!ysis. • l'Wr!tuionl!Modelinc
John Robert Powers
Notion'• O'de1t & lorge1t School for f ini•hing & Modeling
ORANGE 3 Town & Country• 547-8228
RIVERSIDE Riverside Plo xo Center • 684-3012
WELCOME
ALL UNION & MEDICAL
INSURANCE PROGRAMS
~
t MAD ~\Of.S
Omega Clinic
COSTA MESA 646-1633
186t NEWPORT BLVD.
.\O~UNT!N«;TON
IEACH
Cunent
Fashion ..
Dlsco11nt Prices
ANAHEIM
'ho.lt9 'M tttl nHl<I 1IOU A~S 11 lr'IM:llwnt
m1111un from Cml• M.a
11'111 N~ Blsdl
Dally lM Frldly tll t P.M, ,, ... ,.,
sew your own coordinates
Firsl quality fashion fabrics, colors, patterns, textures.
Accessori es to mix and malch-to your heart's content.
mixed print seersuckers
for shirts, smocks, swirl dresses. These
petite florals are like an autumn bouquet.1 49 $ Fresh reds, greens, navy, burgundy. Very
easy care plus no ironing. Values to $2.00. • yd
Plaza Fabric Reg.
pinwale corduroy
makes great suits and jumpers to mix and
match. So velvet soft. Rich cotors. Ideal 1 59 $ weight for pants, vests and lovely trimmed
dresses. It's easy to sew. Machine washable a yd
cotton. Values to $2.00. Now a squeaky low
creatlv braids
will add the designer's touCh. Washable
cottons and polyesters In traditional folk
and mod contemporary. Test your
creativity by mix ing and matching for
original fashion excitement. Value to
$1 .29. Plaza Fabric Reg . to 79c.
Three day speclal low
jacquard knits
sew lovely pull-over and all·length
casual dresses. EJtciting variety of
"P.a!lerns. The great swi tchmates _1 8 8 • with panls, jumpers and blazers T
et al. ~~~,}~~~a~~~:~~·a'~'ri • yd
occasional ironing. Value to
$4. Ptaza Fabric reg. $2.49. . "'
This real low 3 dey special ~"
NEWPORT IEACH 20 Fashion Island
LAGUNA BEACH 278 Forest Avenua
WHITTIER QUAD 8448 Quad Way •
21): Follow through on hunch.
You know without knowing -
you do what should be done
without formal r e a s o n s .
Friend trusts you. Know it
and let your conscience guide.
Money picture will I o o k
brighter. Romantic tnterestl
are stimulated.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22·
Dec. 21 ): You have more pro-
fessional opportunities than
have been present in recent
past. Element of luck or tim-
ing rides with you. One who
can make room for you at top
Is so inclined. Gemh:ll ls active
and really hopes for your suc-
cess.
CAPRICORN (De<. 22-Jan.
19): You receive message
from one who is in transit.
You feel fulfilled if you write
now, publish, distribute views.
Don't bottle emotions. Ex·
press yourself. Learn, ·Give
full pray to intellectual curiosi·
ty. Study a language.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb.
18): Ask questions. Study
Capricorn 1nessage. Y o U" -;;::-~-=:;;;;;;;;:=:-
might gain access to ln:l ~~ ·~
form ation which saves you ~
money. Gemini, Virgo persons -~ 3 Full Service
intrigue~ It is fine to be amus· Locations In
~ FRANCIS-
\.ORR ~ ed but draw the line when it · Huntington Beach
comes to signing on dotted '! PRESCRIPTIONS
line. e cMree Ac~tt • 0t11v1r1n PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20 ): L•t u1 ..,u1 ...-ur Jr111111 FI NE STATIONER\'
You might become in· !nM;tlplif'I•
CHRISTMAS CARDS
20 1/• OFf
P'lt'WflllhlCI -Hlghttl Q1111nv -warm E•1ortt11oft
extricably involved in hopeless
situation if you are careless.
Listen, learn, observe and n1 stti '''"' . . . . . . . . »&4Ms
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By ERMA BOMBECK
If one more product comes
on the market that is "lemon
flavored," my moulh l''iil
become perma-puckered.
I mean it. My floors smell
like lemon, rriy dishes smell
like lemon. my furniture reeks
of it, my clothes are scented
\\ith it, my hair squeaks of it,
we shower in it and my hus-
band slaps it on after he
shaves.
The other day I put a lemon
air freshener in his closet.
"What's that for?" asked
my husband.
"To make your shoes smell
like lemon."
AT
WIT'S
END
nightcrawlcrs after a rain,
dead fish , musty closets,
sauerkraut cooking, or cocoa
burning?
All I knoy,· is it is a rare day
when you can walk aloog the
supermarket aisles and be
given a choice of scents. The
other day I stood in front of a
display of bubble ba lh £or 2
minutes deciding ""'het her I
wanted to smell like a "mist
at dawn or a "water nymph
at sunrise." (The competition
in the bathroom was so keeit, I
ended up smelling like a
lemonade stand at 6 p.m.) I
I don't know how things are
at your house, but I knew the
lemons had taken over when \
my husband discovered me
the other night spraying the
inside or the refrigerator with
Jemon-£1avored freshener to
take away the odor of two
fresh lemons that had turned
rotten. · j
• Modem cvrrtc11 ..
• Highest 1udtmlc ltlnd1nl1
• AU l11th1 wtlco111
• Door-to-doer bu11en1ct
• Belort and 1htr 1cltool can
• R1adlng (will! phonk:1),
writing, arllf'lm1tlc,
r1adln11s, nlf-dlaclplllt
1mpba1iz1d
• School unllorms lo reduct
clothing CGSU
• llt11onabl1 llltfon
In Fountain Valley:
16835 Brookhurst Street I 714-952·3312
'"Why would I want my feell-;:=====================================:::;-to smell like lemons?"
"For the same reason J
want my fish to smell like
lemons, and the dirty clothes
inside the clothes hamper to
smell like lemons. The whole
country is high on lemons."
"But why?" he persisted.
"It's like living in a fruit
basket."
He is right, of course.
Americans are strange. For
years they 've reen collecting
all their odors together and
giving them a common
denominator. One year, we
all smelled like a Michigan
Christmas tree, the next , lilies
of the valley, and the next,
daisies. This year it is lemoos.
l know lt is against all
argu ments of reason. but what
would happen H a table
smelled like wood? Or onions
frying smelled llke onions?
Or just for the sake of varie--
ty, why coultln1 an altet-
shave lotion smell like the in·
side of. a new Mercedes? Or a
furniture wax smell like
newly-printed money? Or a
garbage can like frem.cut
grass? I personally think men
would be driven to the crazies
by a woman who put e dab of
garlic behind each ear.
How are children of today
going to appreciate freshness
when they have never smelled
mi Ide 'V!, sweaty feet ,
Wl%ardof0%
Wed., Aug. 29
Thru Sun., Sept. 2
Schmrad< PlaJitn 111'"..U
the Wizard of Oz !Dlth the
tin f'lt(ln, •career-ow and the
COtDOrdly lion. Huntington
Center11 air cmtdittomd
""'!os<d .Moll. Beach and
Eding<1 GI" Iii• Son m.go
Fwy.
DISCOVER. OUR
''INTERLUDE'
TREASURE CHEST.
A $15 VALUE. YOU RS FOR JUST $6 AND
ANY FRAN CES DENNEY PURCHASE.
A PLEASANT, AND VAUJABLE, SURPRISE! OUR FRAGRANT-FILLED 'l'REASURE IS LADEN 'WITH FRANCES
DENNEY FAVORITES:' BODY LOTION, PERFUME MIS'r PURSER, PERFUMED COLOGNE, PERFUME MIST, AHO
DUSTING POWDER. A FABULOUS WEALTH OF SCENTS! MAIL/PHONE. COSMETIC!. I
2 FASHION ISLAND SHOP TUESDAY, WEONESOAY 10 :00-5:30 644-2800
I CHI STAtl> tN n4AT SR0C::W. . Ct.Oser ANO 6fT A LOCK
!'\T EV£R¥0N6 WMO 60E:S
1N1t> NN OFJ:lCf SUtTE !
TUMBLEWEEDS
WHA"f ARE
'ltlU >Yl1 Nl10N
'iOUf\ HEAii?
MUTT & JEFF
' J
0 -::-J.~
t
' ..
I .
~.
ii <t ·' ,. ·I
by Doug Wildey
••
.by Tom K. Ryan
C:R!l5f!INli \lAN\lRUfl'.
j~
-rf~
by Al Smith
NOW M'LDVE THE IDEA IS
TO KIT ,.HE SALL AS ClDSE
IO"'THKT 'f'LAG AS f'OSSI 8LE !
ITS ONLY SIX.
INCHES FROM
FIGMENTS
L£T'S 5££ ... WEVE DONE A
txl6EIE F<:R .ENNY AN!> A
AIEL F~ KEl'IN ••. f'l:1'//
.18'.Xlf A RlNMY ~ KIT "!
.,/' ,,
NANCY
T HE FRUIT 'STORE
MAN GAVE
ME THESE
BANANAS
I'LL MAKE
A SIGN AND
S ELL
THEM
BUY A
BAN
-! --L.
~-
WHAT ARE
YOU DOING '?
by Dole Hale
by Ernie Bushmiller
WH ENEVER I WR ITE
BANANA, I CAN'T
STOP f ,P ,,.
BUY A
B A NANA NANANANAt ---. ·'.~~· ' -'
PEANUTS
TODAY'S CIDSSWDID PUZZLE
WHEN I STAKT SCHOOL
NEXT WEEK, WILL I 6ET"TllE
5M\E JIESK I HAD LA5f '/EAR?
ACROSS 45 _bug: Wood
louse
1 Perai.i coin of 46 Swindle: St.a.g
old •7 Bud
s c~ 49 le.111o!e
9 Pl•Y a bilfl]O machine
14 Small marsh !:>3 ---°'
15 Swiss 11¥1!• 309ali<1ng
\(l Amoy 57 River ol
ll "lumlnl.fti Albefla
pou1s1!um 58 ''Easy --
StJ!tale 59 Globule
18 Peraonllicalion 81 Acto1 Bufl-
19 Eer!y South 62 Anoil'lt·
/\merlcens Archaic
20 SwOl'd 63 $of'I ol
22 Small oittces ls1ac
ol wood 84 frG!lsh
24 Brought count1
d11g1eee 65 Bird
upon sl1uctures
26 Jogs 66 Sflllt
27 Dock _: 67 Suoefl11iftl
NFL star ending•
29 lt>os• lft
oower
30 Ardent
cleTOlee
33 Autrors·~ -· 37 Delic.819
"""" 38 W•rn
39 Cutting
,...,,.rk
40 Whisky
dflnks
.. , Omit
.-2 c.u, up
44 E111CllY ~ht
DOWN
· 1 P 11t1 up
2 Word in !tie
Phll'nl
3 Wei;\ Indies
Island
• l hlMs ol ag•in
5 Ballet step
6 Asian klf'IQdOtl'I
7 Explode
8 MusiclM.
ol 11 sort:
2 words
9 Llrn!tatlonl
Yesterday's Puule Solved·
SL A.11.S PLOW 0c"'o=,"o
T ~ N
l
N
0
'
10 C:wwa' J7 One
sne11e1s rescmblmg
11 New!ourdland eno1her
cape .-o Slippers. e g,
12 US Army '2 Leceralild
Aes. 43 Cooking
IJ Muddle vessel
2 1 Be anocted by 45 BowlITTQ
events SCDlllS
23. Charged • 7 Srna!I marine
p1truc1es ""' 75 SurrtnercloCll. 48 l8COfl•C
teerure: Abbr. !iO S!ores
28 Raflle$1'11tke 5 I Occur•er>e:e
30 Rur111 oeity t.2 Mus•COI
. 3 1 l.lnl! ot are11 symbols
32 EncflnO with 53 Neighbor ol
sore and bl!il Russia
33 lncllried 54 Ood<;l1.ir1 or
oar>sago Expor>
3• Chflrles Lamb !IS Co1n1s d1mk s
35 Witty 1ernar11 56 Ho150 color
36 Pe1roleum 60 At1•1bu111-
JUDGE PARKER
5LADE ROe EFtT5 MAY
NOW, WI\...\.. YOU PLEASE
ANSWER SLADE ROBERTS'
CALL? I'D LIKE 10 5EE YOU
GET SOME JH1"ERE5T G
MEN A5 CLIENTS!
MISS PEACH
MAR'C:1A, WOlA CO YOU
PESCR'ISE Mf!: M; BEING<
"UPWAR'P l>O!.lND'?
DICI{ TRACY
''. -~' ·'
BE lNTERE5TING 6 UT
HE'S A MO-NO FOR
YOUNG, NAIVE, LEGAL
5ECRETARIE5!
DOOLEY'S WORLD
• I
J .
' '
.; • •
h '• • •
SALLY BANANAS
t.lODN MULLINS
RATS ',ANOTHER
FALSE START'
/'JIOON.,WOUl-D
you HELP ME
W11H MY ""''"I~ Po~TRY ~rs:J_.J
WRITIN<O?
·~·" '~¥$
'
ANIMAL CRACKERS
DOESIJ'T IT BOl\.ll:R
«01J TO ~E ME
W/.ITl!l@ HERE FOR.
H()()l(S UlHIL.E '100 .
l-06 Tt-IE Ul~n:RHOL.E?
8·18
by Charles M. Schulz ..-.,....----,---
ffOllA~L'( NOT HOW !JIU. I KNOl<l 'THAT M~ NEiii DESK HP6ti'T
15fEN 8066ED ?
by Harold Le Doux
--~--,-""""
CAUTION!
2VICTIMS
DEAD.
A WOUNDED.
by Mell
tR'A, Y0!-1 COUl.DN'T st:
DfSlR'!SEP AS 'UPWAIW
00~ND' IF YDU WfR'E<
1.M;i-<EP 1'0 THE HUI.L-
OI' AN ATl.AS MIS~lt.E
IN Fl.l&MT ....
by Chester Gould
..
Tu~sd,11y, August 28, 1q73 DAILY PILOT f 5
1
I ,
by Roqer Bradfield
T(.IJIJIS,
ANYONE?
by Gus Arriola
MAYeE S?.f!IJT"f//AT' OVM5 Mlli!/10 ~~
'fl2.IE:O I T,
/.WGT//1"15/!E
1"'57J:AD OF
AC/i?DSSf
by Ferd Johnson
NO-r NEEDTt-ilS lJ
SMPTJED... ~: r----~ 1~
by Roger Bollen
,.---....
Nt.W, Tt-li!J15 CJ<A4 .• !/0J
<aO Rl@HT
to.HEAD·
THE GIRLS
"You're •·onderlng if you should tell your husband some·
thing lhls evening and , if so, bow Is he going to take It."'
DENNIS THE MENACE
,.
" •
'TMT HNI SUR£ WA1mD TO 6E PAt'i ! l)D YA NOTilI HE llEUl
MY llANO ALL 1!lt TIME r..E WERE. 1N -m<RE ~'
\
; 6 OAll Y PILOT
90-pound Gridder Is
YUBA CJT'i'. Calif. (/\Pl -Diane
Thompson, a 90-poond blonde wilh
cheerleader looks, Is trying out ins1ead
for $pill end on thl! Live Oak High School
junior varsity football te.am
"\Vhen practict slarted last ""'eek. I
didn't think she'd last. But she 's really
been surprising." says coach Gary
Featherstone.
The California Interscholastic federa·
lion changed its rules last spring to allow
girls to compete with boys on teams in
• • a ••r• -. .... --
all high school sports. The decision made
moot severa l t.'1.,..'suits filed on behalf of
girl athlC'IC$.
"I've al v.'ays been a football fan and
when the new rule was passed I couldn't
""'alt for the season to begin," says
Diane, a five-foot freshman.
Her boyfriend. Mark Harris, is a varsi-
ty starter. He'd rather see Diane in a
chcerleader1s unlfonn.
'"She could get hurt ou t there. Practice
isn't that rough yet. \Va!t witll tackling •
Low Slide Pays Off
and contact drills start. That's when they
separate the men from the boys," he said
after failing to talk Diane oot ol her
decision to try out for football.
lier parents approve .
"Diane hus wanted to play football
since the seventh grade when they had
nag teams for girls," saya Mrs. Joanne
Thompson. "It wasn't enough, I gue~."
"She set her mind to it, and that's the
way it's going to be," she added.
The 14-year-old football candidate says,
...
Dtlly P'llot Sltfl P'Mlt
San Diego's Dave Roberts managed to get under-
neath the tag of New York Mets catcher Jerry Grote
Monday ni ght after Nate Col bert's triple in the
eighth inning. It wasn't enough, however, as the host
J\1ets edged San Diego, 6·5, in National League base-
ball action.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Another Net Controversy
Billie Jecnt, Newco nibe May Be Barred
NE\V YORK (AP I -Professional ten·
nis was plwiged into its second major
controversy in less than two months
hfonday, when as many as 20 top pros -
including Wimbledon champ Mrs. Billie
Jean King and Australian star John
Newcombe -were faced ""ith being
barred from the U.S. Open.
The pros could be ruled ineligible to
co mpete in the Open, scheduled to begin
Wednesday at Forest Hills, as late as
··one minute before they step on the
court for their first match," accorcting to
officials of the United States Lawn Ten·
nis Association.
The players could face suspension from
the tourney as a result of having signed
contracts with the fledgli ng World Team
Tennis organization.
The International Lawn Tennis Federa·
tion, v.•hich governs the USLTA, has an-
nounced that players would face
suspension if they enter tournaments not
sanctioned by the in ternational federa-
tion. WTT play -scheduled to begin in
May -could come under that label.
And, if it is so ruled , the Open might
commence without big name stars like
Mrs. King. who has signed with
the Phil adelphia franchise; Newcombe,
who has sig ned with Houston; Linda
Tuero, who agreed to terms with Min-
nesota, and others wtx>se signings have
yet to be announced.
The ban of Yugoslavian star Nikki Pilic
from the Wimbledon tournament in Jwie
had caused a controversy. In sympathy
with Pil ic's cause, 70 members of the
Association of Tennis Professionals
boycotted the tournament. It wasn't im·
mediately kno\vn if the s i mi I a r
suspension of the stars at the Open would
Socce1· Fans Stampede;
Four Die, 100 Injured
TERESINA, Brazil (APl -Four soc·
cer fans were crushed to death and more
rhan 100 others were injured when panic
broke out during the inaugural game at 11
stadium in a small Brazilian cily, police
said l\fonday.
The incident happened Sunday af.
temoon in Teresi na , capital or the
remote northern state of Piaui. The
governor and 35.000 fans had packed into
a new stadium lo watch Teresina 's first
game eve r in Brazil's national pro-
fessional soccer tou rnament.
Early in the first period of a match
between local team Tiradentes and the
famous Ftum.inense clu b of Rio de
Janeiro fans began scrambling to climb
Spitter Costly
To Merritt
BALTIMORE !AP I -Aflcr hurling a
three-hitter on Sunday. Jim Merritt or
the Telas Rangers JOk<.'d about throwing
an alleged spitball pitch and said: "You
take it from there."
over a high fence I hat separated the
grandstand from the playing field,
witne sses said.
Police and sta te officials said they did
not know what caused the pan ic. There
were rumors that someone in the crowd
had yelled that the stadium was to l-
lapsing. Another vers ion said a fight
started after a fan threw a bottle at
another person.
The game was suspended for nearly
two hours, as policemen and firemen
restored order and rus hed injured fan s to
local hospitals. The teams decided to
r~ume play, to help c.alm the crowd, and
the game ended in a scoreless lie.
Police confirmed the death toll but did
not identify the victims. Local newsnten
said they were three middle-aged men
and a boy around 18.
Piaui is regarded as this south
American country's poorest and most
bac kward state. There had been much
excitement precedi ng Teresina's entry
Into Brazil 's ma jor soccer league. Gov.
Alberto Sliva grabbed the public 3ddress
microphone at the stadium and told the
fans the near-riot ·'will not affect our
state's progress."
bring about the same reaction.
In fact. plans for suspension weren 't
made clear. Walter E. Elcock, the Presi-
dent of the USLTA said, "I don't think
there's any possibility of a ban at the
moment.
"Where the real problem could come is
next spring il these players enter unsanc-
tioned tournaments (like \VTI' play)."
The question of suspension arose when
Miss Tuero - a Wightman Cup member
-was .warned by the USLTA about sign·
ing with the WIT Minnesota Buckskins.
"We under stand through Linda's at-
torney, Eugene Scott, that she was warn-
ed she'd be barred from the Forest Hills
tournament if she signed," said Lee
Meade, one of lhe owners of the
Buckskins.
Scott added that Elcock said" ... that
the USLTA v.'OUld recognize the ban and
prohibit her from playing in the U.S.
Open."
Mike Bums, executive director of the
USLTA. said, however, that no action
had taken place as yet.
"Under current laws, the ILTF is en-
titled to take such action, but it doesn 't
mean the ILTF will."
Scott said he was amazed at Elcock's
statement. "I couldn't believe what I
heard. I told Elcock he was acting in
violation of anti-trust Jaws and was
laying himself and the USLTA open to
legal reprisal.
"lf the ILTF were going to suspend
players who sign with W'M'. it would
have suspended King and Ne"·combe,
who signed weeks ago with the ILTF du-
ly nolified."
Angels Host NY
The New York Yankees, who have
faJlen from contention in the American
l.A'!ague's Eastern Division, and the
California Angels. one-.half game out of
third place in the Western Division ,
square off tonight in the opening salvo
of a th~game series.
Game time is 8 at Angels Stadium.
The Yankees, who led their division ror
a good portion of the season suddenly
find themselves nine games back, with a
~ record , while the Angels stand 59-
fll.
a Girl
'Tm only going to play one >"" and
that 's it. I want to prove to myself that I
can compete wtth the boys, because 11
feel that girls can.
"My friends are behind me and I hope
they will aecept me as a girl, and not as
one of the boys. Because I'm not one o{
the boys. I'm just playing football ."
Her coach rates her as "st.rang in the
running and agility drills, weak ln
strength but exceptional in desire."
Arrested;
Riggs, 5-2
.Wl!ITE PLAINS, N.Y. -Chicago
Bears defensive back Lee Calland was
arrested Monday on charges of possess-
ing a dangerous weapon and attempted
second degree assault.
Police sa.ld Galland threatened to kill
Norman YowtR, an investment manager
indicted on charges of embezzling
thousands of dollars Crom his clients, who
include many professional athletes.
Calland said Young had $30,000 of his.
At his arraignment in White Plains City
Court, Call&nd. was released on $500 cash
bail pending further court action.
e Riggs Favored
LAS VEGAS -Oddsmaker Jimmy
"the Greek" Snyder has made Bobby
Riggs the 5-2 favorite over Billie Jean
King in !heir $100,000 winner-take-all ten-
nis match Sept. 20 in Houston.
Snyder also made Riggs, 55, a 3--2
choice to beat the ~year-old Mrs. King
in any one set.
e Roberts Out
NEW ORLEANS -New Orleans Saints
head coach J.D. Roberts, whose team ""'°" only seven games in his two and a
half seasons with the National Football
League club, was fired Monday night by
owner John Mecom.
~1ecom replaced Roberts, the third
head coach in the six-year span of the
club, v.ith Saints offensive coordinator
John North. Roberts' contract had tv.·o
more years to run.
e Horkey Chau9e
NEW YORK -A league realignment
and revised Stanley OJp playoff system
for the 1974-75 system were announced
Monday by the National Hockey ~ague
President C1arence Campbell.
Two new teams, Washington and
Kansas City, will be added in 1974-75 and
the league will be realigned into four
divisions, two composed of four teams.
and two other five team divisions as
follows :
Division I -Atlanta, New York
Islanders, New York Rangers,
Philadelphia .
Division !J -Detroit, Los Angeles,
Montreal , Pittsburgh, \Vashington.
Division Ill -Chicago, Kansas City,
Minnesota, St. Louis, Vancouver.
Division JV -Boston, Buffalo.
California, Toronto.
Two additional teams, in cities still to
be selected, will be added for the 197~77
season.
e Asher SeC!Ond
OKLAHOMA CITY -Coota Mesa's
Barry Asher Is in second place after two
days of qualifying in the $70.000 national
championships of the Profes si on a I
Bowlers Association here .
Asher's pinfall of 1.836 after eight
games is 45 off the pace of Jeader Don
McCune.
The field will be cut to the top 48 after
24 qualifying games. Only the top five
will advance to Saturday's finals.
esuuonOK
LOS ANGELES -Encouraged by Dr.
Frank Jobe's examination of Don Sut-
ton's ailing right shoulder, the Dodgers
said Monday they expect Sutton will be
ready to take hi.s tum in the starting
rotation Friday.
"Don has a slight inflamation on the
backside on hi s right shoulder wbleh
makes it 30n\ewhat painful for him to
throw," Dr. Jobe said after examining
Sutton "-fon~y.
e Two-mile Rerord
LONDON -British runner Brendan
Foster broke the world record for two
miles Monday, but was unaware of his
achievement tor nearly half an hour.
The time set by Foster, a 25-year~ld
chemistry teacher in Northern England,
was given as eight minutes, 14 seconds
by two of the three timekeepers. The
third timekeeper, at the Crystal Palace
track in south London, clocked Foster at
8:13.8.
•
:--
' '
Sutaday Escapades
?1-fatador Jorge Blando was knocked flying twice Sunday at Tijuana's
Bullring by the Sea . Despite surviving both spills and making the ktlls,
he wa s awarded no trophies .
..
Chargers Aren't Worried;
Rruns, Troy Get Se1ious
SAN DIEGO -Bill Malinehak has
returned to the W~ Redskins.
San Diego's opponent m the league
opener Sept. 16. and with him has taken
a detailed knowledge of the Chargers or-
fense.
Chargers coach Harland Svare said he
is aware that Malinchak will be in·
terrogated, but traded the S!lC(ial teams
man to the Skins Monday for two draft
choices. one in 1974 and one in 1975. He
also waived 10 other players, including
rookie linebacker-guard Skip Singletary,
the Cllargers' number four draft pick In
1973, to reach a mandatory NFL limit of
49.
"I don't think it is that dangerous,"
Svare said of the Malinchak deal. "For
him to tell them anything meaningful, he
would have to know when we are going to
do something."
Nevertheless Chargers players got a
laugh out of the transaction. e VSC Starts
LOS ANGELES -The defending na-
tional champion University of Southern
California Trojans have begun their 1973
practice season in shorts and expect to
graduate to pads by Thursday, a
spokesman says.
··we 're clapping better this year." ~aid
coach John f.fcKay as he explained it
was loo early to evaluate his players at
their firs t practice session hfonday. The
85-member squad \YOrked out twice in
two hour bursts. McKay said.
Anthony Davis, the tailback v.·ho cut a
knee tendon in January, was in the prac·
tlce lineup Monday. e 6rat Cut
The Los Angeles Ran1s have been whit-
tled down lo thei r 49-inan limit with die
release on ~aivers of offensive guard
Allan Grat and JI other players, a
spokesman said.
Graf, a Universily of So ut h ern
California veteran who played in the All·
star game, and the others were released •
Monday.
A spokesman said the team kicked off
practioe Monday for its match Frid•y
with San Diego at lhe Los Angeles
Coliseum.
Osteen Goes Tonight
Expos Pitcher Sinks
J;Jodgers With Sinker
MONTREAL (AP ) -Gene Mauch,
manager of the Montreal Expos has seen
a great many pitchers during his manag-
ing and playing career.
"But I don't think I've seen anyone as
keyed up as Steve Rogers was tonight,"
said Mauch after his rookie right.hander
had fashioned a nifty three-hitter as the
Dodgers Slate
AM o-.t .. K .. : ( ... )
Au-o. 21 LOI A"9tlft ti MOl'llrttl
Aw. 2f LOI AftHlft 9t MDnl'rNI
A1o9. )0 Hou1lon ti Los Angtltl
J "·'"· 5 11.m. 7:15 .,,,.,.
Expos blanked the Los Angeles Dodgers
4--0 in a National l.A'!ague baseball game
Monday night.
"There were a lot of outaide influences
-national 'IV in the United States, and
us desperately trying for a win -and be
was trying to get ii for us ."
But after the game, Rogers did not
seem too concerned about the !act the
g8me was carried on U.S. television, nor
that lhe Expos W10re playing tlie mighty
Dodgers, who had won slx of nine
previous outings against Montreal.
"Since I came up, I've tried not to be
concerned about who we've been playing.
I doo 'l think you can let a thing like lhat
bother you.
"What it all boils down to is me throw-
ing my pitches over the plate ."
The win, Rogers' fifth in eight
decisions since being called up from the
Peninsula Whips of the cla!s AAA ,
International League, snapped a personal
two-game losing streak. The righthander
said his performance ~fonday reminded
him a good deal ot his first major league
win -a · one.hit shutout over the
Philadelphia Phillies July 26.
"I didn't have a good breaking ball
tonight and I didn't have one there
either,'' he said. "My sinker was my big
pitch tonight. When I got behind, t went
with the sinker and got outs with it."
It marked the rhird time Rollers has
tossed a complete-ga me shutout.
A.not.her hero of the evening was
former Dodger Bob Stinson. Stinson, ac-
quired this season by the Ea:pos· to be •
their No. 3 catcher. slammed his second
home run of the season In the second in·
ning and a two-run double In the eighth.
•
..
President Joe Cronin or the American
League took the lcfthander at his word
and announced Monr!ay he was taking it
Iran MerrlU -In the form of a fine for
an undisclosed amount.
Little Leaguers Under Investigation
The two teams meet again tonight with
Dodgers leflhander Claude Osteen, 1M,
gbing against . .Montreal southpaw Balor
Moore, 7-13. ..~. •
'-" """'" (11 Mt11~I {41 •-rllrltl •rlll"ltl
Looes. 2b 4 0 0 0 J•rt1nt11, lb ' 0 I 0
"While we have no octual evidence,"
Cronin said , "by his own admission he
Violated the rtile -and therefore the
fine."
After beating the Indians 9-0 in
Cleveland on Sunday, t\1erritt v.·ns quoted
as saying he threw about 25 or 30
"Gaylord fastballs." Asked If he mtant
spitballs, Merritt smiled and said : ··vou
take U from therr:."
Gaylord Perry of the Jndl1111.1 has long
been accused by pl1<yers and manngers
al throwing the spltter. and' In an up-
oamJnc book he admlla IO uaillg tht Illegal
pitch "ut1LiJ about five years a.go."
I
WILLIAMSPORT. Pa. (AP I -l.illl e
League headquarters here plans a specia l
investigation of Taiwan's baseball pro-
gram to find out v.·hy its teams are
dominating competition.
Little League president Pet er J.
McGovern announced Monday that a
committee will be 11ppolnted to probe a
series of undocumented charge1 about the
1'alwan teams.
"Whether Ibey go by all the rul .. Is a
question that must · be answered,"
McGovern said. "The tens ion was al high
point at limes during the series."
Tainan City, Taiw~ captured the
island's third straight Little League
world championship Saturda,y, defeat Ina
Tue30ll, Ariz .. 12-0, with 11' third n<>hit·
ter of the serlM. The team broke six bl~
ting marks in the three games, downlna
Bltsburg, Germany, A.F.B. lM IJld ,...,.
pa. Fla. 27--0.
Earlier In the month, Hua l!atnc,
Taiwan. won the UlUe LeqUe•a Hlllor
dlvlston champlOlllhlp, for 1:1-1'>15-year-
olds. In Gary. Ind. ' -
Volunlcer Utile Lea1111• olflct.11 from
many parts of the United St.its W.mbl·
ed in Wiiiiamsport for the rt1ular series
and were bitter over the Taiwanese
perlonnance.
a.tany accused the team of violating
rutoa on ellgibllitY, district size and pra<>
lice time.
'"" Utile LelCYU J.J.memJ>•J' !>Oard or lru•-authorized a study of the
Talwan11e program at a meeting beJore
the championship game, McGovern said.
OfrlclaLs have no evtdence Indi cating
lhe Taiwan team ·did not obey the t5-le>
12-year-old age bracket, he aald.
He told a reporter Jul week that
districts on the Island are "substanUally
larger" than those In North America.
which are usuall y limited lo a general
population of 15,~.
Taiwan has only 23 leagues, with a
PQPl!lallon ol more than 14 mllllon, MCGoveni aald. But I t II uncenaln
whether the leagues cover tbc entire
PoPU}atlon.
· McGovern said tht new commltt~.
sUIJ to be appointed, will roport back to
the lrllsteet by October.
lllCklltf", If 3 0 0 0 Llnll. :>ti 1 1 t o ,
WO.vis, cf 4 o 1 o l'•lnr, " t o o o •
l"lf9UIO!I, c 4 0 1 0 Mtnt~I. II O I t 0 wcr1wtron1, rt 1 o O O Slrlelelon, rt • I) I 1
GtNIY, lb 1 0 0 0 0.'I', Cf I 0 0 0 t llli.ttll,u lOOOWOOOl.cl 1000 Cty,)11 JOOOIAll«l,3b J t oo ' M•Mflmltn. o 1 o o o l•Uer, pl'I o t o o JOftM,Pft t 0 0 O Fri••• >b O o o o Rtv,p OO O OS!lnaon,c Jlti '
f'oll,M 4000 Rottrt.P tooo '
TOllll " 0 i 0 T.itlt 27 4 4 , L• MOtltt ODO 000 000 -4
MMitrHl no 00t th -•
OP.l.MonlrHI 1. Loa-a.o. """'" •• MontrHI 1 t8~ffnMlfl, Hlt-$11lllOl't 2. 11-Llnll, Mll'IDUtl • .._: '""'· II' H It tit •• 10 Mtltfl'M'l'IUl'I tL. II.fl 1 i 2 ' • J
""' 112,21 lltOQtr• (W, s-JI t J 0 0 2 4 Ht .. -~ """""'mhfl Lll'lll, Wiil-ltottn, T-21111. A-20,ofl.
"
•
Otllr P'llol 11111 Photo
DR . BEN MASON, COACH DICK TUCKER CHECK MIKE MAGNER'S BLOOD PRESSURE.
83 Ca.rididates at Pliysicals
OCC's Tucker Opti.mistic
By HO\\'ARD L.. IIANDY
Of Ille O•Hr P'il•I SI.all
Completing one of the best tc<'ruiting
r'ears and facing lhe toughest schedule in
he school's history. Orange Coast
.::Ollege football coach Dick Tucker is OJ>
:imishc Oil the eve of opening drills for
he 1973 campaign after greeting 83 can-
lidates Monday night for physical ex·
1minations.
"\Ve 've got a very Cine group of
reshmen . We got most of the ones we
\'anted in addition to a fe\V pleasant
;urprise."I," Tucker says of the rreshman
k>minated squad.
"We also have a good nucleus to build
1round but \\'e've got lo fill in son1e key
iositions \\'here ..-.·e lost players by
:raduation. ''
Tucker was smiling "'·hen t"•o transfl'r
1tudents from the university level "·ere
nentioncd.
One is Rocky \\'han from \Vashington
:tate and a former Edison High stand-
"''· The other is Grant Gelker. a middle
ruard who played fr eshman ball at the
Jniversity or Colorado after graduating
rom Newport Harbor High.
Gelker is a question ntark at 235
t0unds and six feet tall.
He suffered a spine injury in the North-
ioulh Shrine game several years ago and
DEAN LEWIS
TOYOTA
VOLVO
BACK TO
SCHOOL
SPECIALS!
1964 VOLVO
122 CPE.
4 (yt., • .,..., r1cllo, h1111r IOTMt
Hew rtd 1111!11 •l•ck hlHghl,
$877
1970 VW IUG
4 C'fl .. 4 ,,..., r•dlo, hHlor t J110E.
Dk ''"" •• ,, bl~ lfll,
$1377
1t67 VOLVO
4 Dlt 144
• ,~1.. '""°· tr11•1t., rlodlo, llMltr UHl411. WMtl 1x1., M1I 1111.
$1177
1f70 TOYOTA
COit.ONA 4 Dlt
$1277
after playing fre shman ball at Colorado,
his back acted up again and he sat out
last season.
An operation was delayed wi th Gelker
put on a strict exercise program that he
says has helped bring the injury back to
normal.
1\oother player bringing a sm ile lo
Tucker's countenance is AA All.Of•~
player of the year, Mike Nanko, a
tailback who gained over 1,300 yards last
season at Temple City High.
11ow about the size of the Orange Coast
players this season: \Vill they be a bit
bigger than last year:
"That was one of the smallest teams
\.\'e have ever had at Orange Coast. And
we're not going to be a big team this
year but we will have a lot or guys in the
205-pound range."
\Vilh Alvin White gone at quarterback,
\\'ho \l'ill inherit the signal-caJling berth :
"\Yell, ·I really don't know right now
but we have Reed Johnson and Flip
Darnell back, along with Mike Magner
from Estancia."
\Yhat about the schedule this season?
"El Camino was the to~rated team in
the state until the final game. Long
Beach is always tough tn Its league. And
~·lenlo Park was 7-2 last year and is the
only private junior college in the state
allowing !hem to recruit anywhere.
"And our ov.11 conference is one of lhe
toughest around," he says. * {::: * LETTERMEN CUI Bob deLl11<ello!ll !LB), Mike Lacy !08), J°"" Oi•'1fl (F8J, 01nny &.ker (Fla.I. G1rv Bald'I (OEJ.
Johft Larson fMGJ, Miki Balch (G), Flip DlrTMll
tQBJ, l ee Joyce (WR ), Cr11g Frln1JI <O E), Jon
Mlrchlori.111 (0El, T""f Clarelll (TE), Rffd Jollns«I 108), LOI.I Flore~ Cl. Greg ColUM CTI, Jot Dlcama tT). S<!uldme<!: Chu<:k Hogue CS). Ml!IOn H~itrlonl ISE), Mike l(rHmer (l'l\G ), Ml-e F1ragalll tSJ, Eric khroe<kr CHB l.
EOISON -BDb Gr1n11h, Bill ForCI Mike Morado, Rltk Campbell, Artie Blgelow, Cr1\g Way, Mark
Well'llrbM, Ed We1nDlf9er.
, ESTANCIA -Sh1W11 Mckin, Scott G1vner, Otn
Prl11Ceolfo, l(,lm Shol'u, Mike M1111ner, Stevo $peer,
Merk MontoOl'l'lffY.
CORONA OEL MAR -Pat wan, RoDIM Jon11,
M1rll Gerr11!, M11 Cox, Jerrt Kohltr, srev•
s111111ker, Brief NelMlf'I, Joh11 IC&nner.
C0$TA MESA, -M1rk Scnrupp, Jim Miiier. Ktll y
srro1cn. C111Kk Gl11py. Don Johnson.
MARINA -Don Spr-n, Frink 1(11!n, Jerry W1t10n. srew R..,trow, 0111 w111s.
WESTMINSTER -Bob Drt!tus, Rl,h1rd 5l111Hry, Andy l 1ss1r. Jerry Oslerbtrg.
MATER DE • -Jim Mttllln. Grev P~dtuk, LOU B1cc1, Jim N1nry.
FOUNTAIN VALLEY -JOH'Pll R~. Ron S!OM,
Rltlr. C1se.
NEWPORT HARBOR -R1ndy H1mll1on, W1rrm Ray, M1rlr. Ollfly.
SANT A ANA -Hlfb MlrWli!I.
LOARA -Din H11111lnger.
S.t.NTIAGO -Scoll P~nn.
TEMPLE CITY -Ma:I N1J'llr.e.
LA CA N.t.OA -R~ He1111.
ROYAL OAK -Greg Kllma.
SkYVIEW HIGH-(Srnlttwflle. Ullnl-G•N Chris·
Htn .. n.
BIRMINGHAM IV•,, N""'sJ -Miki Mllln.
ALHAMBRA -Miki VlH1nuev1.
CLAREMONT -JoM Flemlllf!, Miki C1rdonl.
RIO LINOA -Randy Phillll:ol.
KENNEOV CGr4n4'111 HllllJ -Jefl Vin GrlMUtn.
TRANSl"ElltS W...SHINC TON STATE -ROCllY Wl'-ln !lBI.
COLORADO -Gr1nl Gellr.l'I' (MG).
Baseball Standings
AMERICAN LEAGUE
East Division
Baltimore
Boston
Detroit
New York
Milwaukee
(,1cveland
IV L
75 52
71 58
70 61
68 64
61 66
54 77
West
Oakland
Kansas Cit y
Chicago
J\1innesota
California
Texas
77 53
73 58
62 69
61 68
59 67
45 84
Mondl'f'O ·-Bllltlmore 6. Tex•s I
Mlnnot0l1 5. Detroit l
Chkitgo 6, MllWIUkM l
Boston 5, 011kl11r>d ]
Only "''""' schedu!td
T1d1y'1 .. meS
Pct. GB
.591
.550 5
.534 7
.515 91lz
.484 13\\
,412 23
.592
.557 4~~
.473 151~
.473 15~~
.468 16
.349 3111
KlnlU CllY (FJUmorrl1 J-2 or Or.,_ 12-12) 11 c11 v1l111d lllrnmermen 7·•1 Tlllll lHucttori l-1111 Bt!Hl'l'IOfe (McN11!y 1J.1J) M1nnHol1 (Oec~tr I .. ) •I Detroit !Lollctl 12·111 MllWIU~N (LOC:kWood UJ I t Chicago (Slont •·ll
cw JOllnson 2.Jl 80$IOl'I !Pole l ·1) 11t 01~11nd !Hunttr IW)
New Vcwk fP1l1r..on ... 11) 41 C1lllotnl1 IWrlghl I ·
"' Wecllllld•'f'• G•mts
BOlllOl'I 11 01kl111d
New York al Ct ll!OM!la
MUWlillkN II Ct11ctr Minnnote 11 Otlrol
t1;1nsu City et CllYt lend Ttxll 11 Bllllmor1
NATIONAL LEAGUE
East Division
St. Loui s
Pillsburgti
Chicago
Montreal
Philadelphia
New York
Los Angeles
Cincinnati
San Francisco
Houston
AUanta
San Diego
IV L
66 61
62 64
6.1 66
61 68
60 70
59 w
West
81 50
78 54
7'l 57
67 66
6.1 69
48 82
MOllCl•Y"I ••fllff
Ph11tc111r111, 1. S•n Francl•co •
Montr .. ., Lot "~"' o NIW Ym •• San 0 0 } St. lou11 •· Houlton , 14 Inning•
Only lll mH IChedlllect
Tod4V'I .. m11
Pel.
.508
.492
.488
.473
.4&?
.457
.618
GB
2
.591 31h:
.5S8 8
.504 15
.477 18\f.i
.369 32'h
Sin Fr1nclsco (M1rk:l'lll 10.10} 11 Phll~lph+•
(Twl!chtlt 12.e1
l ot Angoln tOSINfl 15.e) ot Mont~1I !Moor. 7•UJ ~•n Olego IKlrbY 1·1•) •I Ntw YOl'k !Miii-ck 11). '" Chfc•oo !P•=: 6'101 11 At1tn11IStnut!1r1·11
J)Plt11bllr9h I 101·111 41 ClllCIMlll \Grlrmley 11·
St. Louis !Fotlor lo-61 11 Houston (Rtu1t l•.fl
Wodlllodl'f'I .. '""
LOii A!lllelft 11 MonltMl
$an Diego 11 Ntw YOl'k SI,, Fttl'ldlCO 11 PhllldflPl'tlt Cltf«90 ....... ..,,.
Pln1t111,.11 •r Clt1Clrw11tl SI. Lwll •I Houtton
DEAN LEWIS@
ii~~t-Jli~.
1966 HARBOR BLVD., COSTA MESA 646-9303
Tueiday, All9U5l 28, 1973 DAILY PILOT 11
Pitched Balls Explained
CLEVELAND (AP) -Bernoulli,
MagnUJ and Venturi. WOO are they.
baseball fans? 1bey aren't an expert
double-play combination. They aren't a
super-slugging threesome.
Dr. Stanley Corrsin t06SeS their names
around when he explains why a ba!eball
reacts the way it does after leaving a pitch
er's hand·.
Dr. Corrsin, a professor in Johns
Hopkins University's Me ch an i ca I
Engineering Department , is an
aerodynamicist and a specialist in the
field of turbulence.
He never did a controlled study or
General
Calibrated®
SCRAMBLER
• Glass-Belled
for Long Mil eage
• Polyester Cord Body
for Smooth Aide
• Sporty Raised White Letters
Charge it at
~ . -. -, f.ii -
·"":' I -.... ,~1·: .... 1 ., .... ~, ... ' "'""'-
General Tire
pitched balls, bul Corrsin ill a ba&-ball
fan and baa bee11 qooted widely on why
knuckleballs and spitters do v.·hat they
do.
When a baseball goes through air, it
separates the opposing no\v of air and
creates a mass of mixed air in its wake,
Comin said.
A normally spiMing fast ball, thrown
overhand, Collows a straight path because
of the top and bottom air pressures, sa id
Corrsin. The spin keep the wake from
being irregular enough to change the
path.
A curve ball is different. Corrsin said
SIZE
[70·1 4
Reg. $47.95 F70·14
size E?0-14 G70·l 4
lube less
lelterwhite H70·14
plus $2.48 G70·15
Fed. Ex . Tax
H70·15
spinning the ball wi1h a forward motion
makes the airnow around It unequal.
That makes the ball curve. he said,
despite the pundits who have over the.
years tried to prove a baseball doesn't
curve.
The less the ball spi ns, the more move-
ment the ball will have because the main
force is coming from the irregular
airflow behind it.
Spitballs, knuckleballs. greaseballs.
fork balls, palm balls all have little or no
spin . A good one appears to jerk through
the ai r.
REPLACES REGULAR SALE FED.EX.
PRICE PRICE TAX
7.31·14 S47.95 $33.50 ~2.48
7.71·14 49.95 35.00 261
8 25·14 11.95 36.00 2.81
8 55·14 14.95 38.00 3.09
8.11 11 51.95 37.00 2.86
g 15·15 55 95 39.00 3.06
YOU SAVE $14 .45 to $16.95 PER TIRE
Glass-Belt 70 Series Whiteline Specials
SIZE REPLACES
£70·14 7 35·14
REGULAR
PRICE
S45.95
SAU
PR!Cl
$31 .50
HO. EX,
TH
~? ~s
f7Q .J4 7.75·14 47.95 33.00 2 GL
H70·14 8.55·14 51.95 J6.50 309
G/Q.J5 8.15·15 50.95 35.00 186
WHILE THEY LAST ... LIMITED SUPPLIES ... BRAND NEW
. .. NOT BLEMS .. NOT RETREADS
Brake Reline
Guaranteed 24,000 Miles
r In cludes new Delco brake
linings on all fou r
wheels. Brake drum and
wheel cylinder inspectio n.
Adjust prakes and
restore brake lluid ...
FREE ROAD TEST!
STANDARD $
& COMPACT
AMERICAN CARS
Extra Charge for disc brakes, larger
cars, and add ii Iona I parts U needed.
'llllll3!l!MMl GUARANTEED IN WRITING! ll!l!MJ\l!O,!l
Delco Brake Lin ings installed by us are guaranteed
against any and all defects for the number of years or
miles indicated. Should th is brake lining become de·
feclive or wear out through no fault of the user, we
wltl replace it charging only for ttie mileage used.
Guarantee does not apply 10 brake linings ins1alled on
commercial vetiicles or linings damaged in auto acci·
denls. Ad justment charges based on selling prices
current at lime of adjustment.
Only.:.
FRONT END
ALIGNMENT
We correct Caster, CamOer,
Toe·ln, Toe-out to'your car
manufacturer'• apecitications
... Se!ety check and adjust your
steerin~!
$8c~~
c ...
UTRl st:rmctCMMlf'OR CARS WITM l11 COllllT10MIHC Oii TOlll1CNI Ud __ ,
USED TIRES
Lots of Non-Skid
Tread on These s5s.~.
Don Swedlund
COMPLETE CAI!. CARE
SINCE 19$9 ,
COAST GENERAL TIRE
646-5033 540-5710 HOURS:
7:30 to 6:00 O.ily
•
' 1
' 1
•I
.I
(
•I
.,
I
'
J8 UAJLY t'I LUI
Jlave Depth
70 Turn Out
For Gauchos
'.R \' llANK "'ESCtl
01 tl'tt O•llt l"llol St•ll
Coach Geo rge 1-fartman
greeted 70 football hopefuls as
Saddleback College staged its
physical exami nati o ns
\Vednesclay at the school 's
physical education department.
The Gauchos. 1972
~
Mission
Conference co-champions and
state JC playoff semifinalists,
"'ill be out to maintain a tradi·
tlon \\•hich has seen them win
t\\'O conference championships
and finish second in the last
three years.
"\\'e've got more depth,
especially at running back,
than we've ever had before.
But we don't kno\v if we've got
enough depth in the line,"
Hartman says.
"We're satisfied with the
freshmen who have come out.
but \Ye won 't know "'here any
of them fit in until \Ve start
hitting later on."
The Gauchos start twice dai-
ly drills today (~11 :30 a.m.
and 2·5 p.m. ), •Nilhout pads,
and begin contact \\'Ork Satur·
day.
The annual intrasquad
scrimmage and open house at
the school is scheduled Mon-
day.
' .
oauy Pi101 stall Pnolo
••
SC HIRES
NEW COACH
Oharles lwfcFate, a veteran
track and field coach from
Alhambra High, was named
head track coach at Sin
Clemente High School follow·
ing approval of the Capistrano
Unified School District board
Monday night.
McFate, 49, CJ a former
All-CIF football player and
later went on to play for
UCLA.
He has coached for 20 years
at Alhambra High, racking up
an enviable record and pro-
ducing several outstanding
runners, the latest of which
was this year's California 880
champion Randy Lopez.
McFate will teach In the
physical education department
at San Clemente, and will be
an assistant football coach this
fall under Allie Schaff, hand.I·
ing the defensive backfield.
Baseball's
Top Ten
AMERIC/'" LEAGUI! l"l•Ytt' Clvll e Al R H
Car11w M!11 U? 416 n 161 W.HDrlon Ott 90 lJI 37 101 Mvrctr NY 131 SOI 68 1$9
!'cl. ·"' .m
Saddleback College Aided
By Superior Court V er<J,ict
A liberalized California junior college pollcy
on residence requirements seems to be work·
ing to the advantage of Saddleback College
for the coming football season.
Coach George Hartman and his staff used
to draw players only from the South 'eoast
area wi~ its perennially losing group of
schools (San Clemente, Mission Viejo Lii·
guna Beach, University) then so.mellow 'torge
a winning season from those players.
But since a Superior CoW't judge in Santa
Cruz County ruled the junior college resi-
dence requirements unconstitutional, Saddle-
back has been acquiring the services of some
high school winners. .
Marty Mikkelsen. who quarterbacked Pa·
cifica High to a Garden Grove League cham-
pionship. and his center, Bill McNulty are
both ticketed for Saddleback.
duUes to cea<:b. Botb haw beea worked o~
aeeardln1 to Schaff.
Saa Clemente Is 1Ult tbort oae coaCb wld
the departure of Barry Wattn to u a1sl1I
ant position at Edison HIP in Uuatingto:
Beath, but tlult opening 1bollld be fllle
1horlly.
* * * The first football confrontations betwee
San Clemente and Dana llllls High went ~
Dana Hills. The Dolphins finished 342 in m
informal passi ng league against San Cle
mente this summer.
However, that probably won't mean muc
when the two schools meet for the Orst lira
on a varsity level regular season basis Nov
2 at San Clemente.
Dana Hills wilt have a coach-player brot~
er act on the gridiron th.is fall with defensi\'•
line coach Tony Chicas and his brother, Pal
The Chicas are the sons of Capistrano Uni
ifed school district administrator Sam Chica~
Forfeit to Mesans
Running backs A u n d r e
Holmes and Joe Jones are COACH GEORGE HARTMAN CHECKS RICK JACOBS. keys among the 22 lettermen _____________________ ....:_
O.Mav Ml! 114 S04 11 151
MYnM1n NY 111 4:12 68 129
.313
.312 ·"' "'' ..,, And so is La Habra lineman Jerry Wight,
who was a key man in his team's 11·1 sea-
son last year on the way to the Freeway
League championship.
BELL GARDENS -Costa Mesa's Royall
girls softball team won its first game in th•
Division Ill Southern C81ifomi a Municipa
Federation Pony Tail championship tourna
ment at John Anson Ford Park. here ~onda;
night without a single pitch being made.
PEGGY TOSDAL
Tosdal
In Europe
Peggy Tosdal of Dana
Point arrives in Belgrade,
Yugoslavia this week after
realizing a year-Jong goal
of gaining a place on the
United States team to the
Wor ld Aquatic Cham-
pionships which s tart
there Friday.
Miss Tosdal. an 18-vear
old junior at Dana Hills
High School. qualified for
the world competition by
swimming to a second
place fin ish in lhe 100-
meter butterfly at the
AAU long course chan1-
pion ships in Louisville last
week.
Deena Deardurff \\'On in
American llecord time of
I :03.855, Mi ss To s d a I
finished second "'ith a
1:04.59.
Along with her coach.
f\.1ark Schubert of the
Mission Viejo Nadadores.
Miss Tosdal left Monday
from i\C\\' York for
Belgrade . Openin~
ceremon ies for the games
are Friday. Miss Tosdal's
oompetilion in the too.
meter butterfly is schedul ·
ed Sept. 6.
Alaniitos
Entries
,..or Tt,tesd•y, August JI Flrtl PDil 1:45 p.m.
,..IRST RACE -JSO yard$. 2 v~•r c.lds. (laimlng. Pvrse l l600. Cl1im!n9
price 5.4000. Bloode Jo. (Treasvre ) 1111
Cool Mist CSmlll!) 111 Kalil Gold {Myles) 120
Dttp In Love c K11i9lltl 117 Rockln' Dot (Morris) 111
Sl!iagoer (W1rd) 111 Oe!lgnlfylly {C1rdD1•l 117
Llt1!e Redd Hen (Hart) 111 SECOND RACE -JSO y1rds. :J year
Didi & vp. Clafming, Pur51 s:z.:io.
Claiming price ll>OO.
Wl!cll Cr~ek Ch!c {Tre•1vrel
Je!lare [Knfohll Rov111 Silver ear (6anlcs) Thi! Cov11I (CardazaJ
Oft() Tonio rP11ge l Mr. Upse! (Oreyet)
Sid Who (Ad"frl Dlvlde11d't 8"r (Crosby)
m
"' '" "' "' "' " ' '" THIRD RACE -l~ y1 rds. 1 year
olds. Atlow•ncl . Callf·bred. Purse '""'· Mr. Arr<YW•Y {Ward) ll'O
FDxllre 61y (Garz11l na Clllckaga (Ortyer l 111
Nev..:l•'i Parr (Hartl 111 Sy11dlcator (M11:1..,,.,a) 111
Oandy'I Express {Carda1a! 110 Our Preroga!lve (Treasure) 111
Aml!r!can Ge111 !Ad.tlr) 110 Lfttle Tiny Go fCra1byl 111
,..OURTH RACE -•00 v.trds. 3 year
olds. Clalmi119. Pvrse 11000. Cl1iming
Price~. Famllv Alfa lr (Tre•sure/ Ovplk ate D!!b (Oreyerl
Sam·s Wonder Ma11 [Ward]
Gel ~HdY ( l(n/glll) Hali!v V•n fl•r {6111ks ) Third Image !My!e1)
M111 Goad 6 ird CG1r1•l
"' '" ". '" '" "' "' ,..f,..TN RAC! -JSO vlrds. l vear
olds & vp. Cl1lmf11g. Pvrse $3.cOO. C!•fmlng pr!ct Sl 'l>O.
Jtoxkef To Me !Mll'!"•lsl 111
RubY 8arreditt IH:>IOrooltJ 1!1
Mr, Eskl.,,o !Myle~) 111
Niiiy Note (San~'~ )If Sir Mur (C1rdo1al I'• J onn11v Marble 1PiJ9e1 1•1
Hv 8oU<>d (l(lllOMJ 1l9
Niie Ftlol!t (Sml!nl 11~
Suddv W1wn" (W~•'1! 11Q L~ s~r y,,, .. '"d•!r1 11•
SIXTH ltACE -HO y.trd1. 3 year
olds & up. C"l~i,,..lrn;i. Pv"e suoo. r 11tmlnp 11rk• 1100"
8111ft>r C\IM' 81r !P~el tlt
F1lr Bl•lr {Myles) 11 9
8 111'1 RllQ!lffl !C•rd01al 119 1"1!110 Roff (Dreyer) in
Jene Me (Adl1rJ 113 Gotta Sar TDO !Bank!) 119
OnlW PllV (Hirt) 12?
ClndO Say 8•r (Tr11su~! 117 ~ A.1M• (KnlQhil 119
llYl!NTH RACI' -400 yar11> l vtar
olds • uP. AllOW•n(e. PurM! ~. A•lui't'd Coov f8•n~s l 11 1 Rocty Oftluendo (7 re•svrf) 1u
v 1.,.,..i11 IAd1l') '" ll:tltof'• Qo-n Har•) ,,.
I K-Tllat Glrl (Or1~e•) 111
P..::,.-cllrlt> !W•td1 111 I'"'! Nol s1,.,,v 1c1rdor11 111 •IOHTH ll:ACI -MIO y•rc11. l ve•' olcf1, .Allow•~•· PurM suoo. MtUtt•t CM,_,, fWlfdl tlt 5nffll; AMICk fClf'dofll 127
1¥lf"llt't Wl'lll t"•rfl 111 ~ ~:~ f;(lll!:!-.1 <j~ <:oior Me "'""' l'Morri•I 111 PllOIM'-' Limit IMltwM) \17
lt.+oMncl St•r fMyld.) llt
Fiie-. O«Jr. (Ad•lrJ ~ C"""''"' .Qn I D"J')'el' I llllflfTM aACI -l10 ~ds. S eldt 6 "P. Clll"'lkle. P • c .. 1m1no pt'k• "9iOO. l• i.1111 IP"9l Ut ,...,'tY o....nc1 1W•fllll ',nn
Ooll IC...-(0.rt•i
C•"'°"''' Jll!dt 8111bJ •'i" ,.,.ui "''"' <s111111> I Mf l"I• 1.llClltl:t: H Cl'luflt') ROii 1C11lfltlj >11'
Hy l lr.....-r t twd• lf
I• ~.
A:.Jac~r.on Oak 130 •Tl 94 10
returning for the Gauchos this Otfs KC 126 497 12 150 C11pe<1a fhn 11e ..is ,, uo
T.Oavls 6al 110 4'f 4' 133 season, but Saddleback "'ill be
faced with rebuilding a pass-
ing attack after losing last
year's quarterback. Bob
Dulich, and leading receiver
Bob Haupert.
Youthful Bowler Wins M.Aloy NY 1 It 42 $9 145
Plldllf19 Ul DtcblOM)
.~· ·~· .~·
Hvnltr, OJld•nd, 14.J. • I 4 1 ;
Previously, the players 'wouldn 't have been
able to attend Saddleback College unless
their fam ilies moved into the district. But
that requirement has been waived as a re-
sult of the judge's ruling.
Lynwood, the scheduled opponent, failed 11
show in time and Was forced to forfeit ti
Costa Mesa. McOanl11, New YOl'k. 11·3. .1!6;
Letterman quarterback John
Springman and f r e s h m a n
M·arty Mikkelsen will battle
for the starting position.
Kona Match Crow11 -
Palmer, 6 alt!more, 11", .1SO; 81\11!,
Oak!•11d, 15.7, .'81; C o I b o r n ,
Mllwft"i<l!I!, 11·1, .6'Q1 Hl!l•r, Oetroit. ~· ,, .667i LH, lloston, 1,4, .66-31
Holt1m•n. Oakl1nd, lf·ll, .w . H~~an. like most junior C()Jlege coaches,
~asn t 1n favor of the ruling when it was
first announced. But maybe after this sea-
son it'U grow on him.
Costa ~1esa will return to action Wednesda!
night at 8:30 against the winner of a gam1
between San Bernardino and Sepulveda wiiJ
the championship game Friday evening.
Key freshmen Brian Hester
of Villa Park. Dave Caldwell
of Mission Viejo, and Sam
Peek of Foothill provide the
Gauchos with unprecedented
depth in the offensive
backfield . Jerry \\light of l..a
Habra, Pa c i f i ca 's Bill
McNulty and others figure to
bolster the line .
Out-0f-state freshmen who
Hartman will be looking at in·
elude John Forness (Hawaii ),
Jim Revell (Clearwater, Fla.),
and Ga ry DaPelo of White
River, \Vashington.
Rervrnlr19 L•lltrmtn (U) Jerry (hdrl•on !El. Jim Wan<I (LB), Joe Jones (FBJ, J im Oimmlck (7 ), 6111 RDtl~TS (QG), Clark Jarrell (06)
Madllen fGJ. Jot Kno• ITJ, Ge ry Gr~ We~r (0El. Riel( Jacabs (L BJ. Aundre Halmes {R8), Fred Mayrl>Qter
fLS·E), Wayne Ordas {G.(), 0011 Br1nn1n fOR·IC), Don RDy IOG). Gvy Ounn (OG). 8 i1 n STeinbls !OE ), Randy
P,.vlson (OC·TJ. John Springmlln fQBl,
Oom DeRldo COT ), 80b Baltllr !OE J,
Sill Crumley (R61.
l'r•lhmen (471 FOOTHILL -Chlo Hackett, Sam Pee~. Glenn Bradlev. LA, MABRA -Jerry Wight.
MATER OEI -Jim Poel!gen. 11.llSSlON VIEJO -Tadd LIYPQf l, Sill Henry, Oave Caldwell, Jon
McGraw, Randy Eckl>oldt, Terry Sten· nan, Mark Mofflll, flab Tarnella, 6ob
5andala, Jell Carta. PACIFICA -M1rty Mlkkel>en, Mike
Meya•I. Biii Mt Nu1>1. SAN CLEMENTE -Gary fllDugh, J I.,, BDyer, CDrky FIJl\er, 11:1111 S111c he1,
Jerry Key, Cave Har!man, Greg J an1"811, 8111 Oo\lgalt, Rk k Arorit, Pete
Spier•. TUSTIN -Rad BrDWn, Rick Johnson, Sean Mearh. Jim Leno. Gil Rl~as, Ken Galdslone, Brooke Ounn, Steve Marsh.
UNIVERSITY -Ray Halt, J°"n O'Annvnzlo. FJayd Balley.
VILLA PARK -flrlan H1s!l!r, s11ve
Calles. El!SHOP GORMAN {L115 Veg11) -
Oave Singery, CAMPflELL (k•wail) -J D h n For11ess.
CLEARWATER {Fl•.) -Jim Revell. HART (Newnall) -Cr•lg Nelson.
flURROUGHS IRldgecrestl -Harry
Watwn. WH17E RIVER (Wa1hinglon) -Gary Oa PelD.
Fish Report
Munt1119ton lll!lc~ -16 1ng1er1: 7~
bOlll!o, 15 Darracvd1, 6.5 W P>d l!l~S. 3
halibut, l9S rock cad. NEWPORT t DavlV'i LKktt') -12, anglert: 3 1>1rr1cvd1, 116 f!onilo. 101 sand ba~\. 6 vel1ow•~11 . 131 rnck r "C!. 7
l!allbut. fArl'• L•nd;ng) -SS anglers: 2 b~rr1cuda. 11 bollito. 106 c•llco bau.
1 wMte tea N H, 14 yellowt1il. 11 rock
cad, 10 mackerel.
OANA WHARF -213 •nolers: fQ8 sand Dau., 6 bonito, 1 halibvl, 13 mackerel.
By HOWARD !.. HANDY
Of tll• D•ll~ Pilot 51~11
Art Jackson. Jr., an 18-year-
old Harbor Co1Jege student
from Lomita . rattled off a
string of six: straight strikes in
the first of l\\'o games to take
a 32-pin edge and an ultimate
victory, 461-431, over Mission
Viejo's Dwayne Hicks Monday
night at Kona Lanes in Costa
l'\1esa.
The victory gave youn g
Jackson the West Coast match
g a m e eliminations cham-
pionship and the right to
represent Ute South against
two Northern Cal ifomia win-
ners in a 12-game showdown
this weekend.
The first four games will be
bowled at Kona Lanes Sunday
aft ernoon at 4:30.
Both Northern California
champions are repeat winners.
Don Bickford of Stockton is
also the defending \\lestern
States champion after winning
last year's 12-game rolloff.
Tom Wright, a 21-year-old,
will represent San Francisco
after repeating in that city as
champion.
Hicks began play ti.1onday
night in third place and bat-
tled through t11,·o foes to reach
the t\vo-game finals. He
defeated Lee Taylor, 222-181.
after Taylor had eliminated
Dan Tschannen, 21()..173.
The Mission Viejo bowler
then swePt past Bob Rami rez
of Anaheim, 206-182. Ramirez
had started the night in seC{lnd
place.
This set the stage for the
showdown between Hicks and
Jackson.
After a shaky start that saw
hlm post spares in the first
two frames , Jackson began his
string of strikes in the third
frame . had a nine count on his
first ball in the ninth frame
with a spare and finished with
three strikes in the tenth for a
258 game.
Quarter Horses
Ala1nitos Results
For MondlY
Cl•1t & F•1I
FIRST RACI' -400 yards. 2 year
old1. Cla!.,,lng. Puru Sl600. Clafm!no
Price SXIOO.
Miz Cltme11tln1 {H•rt) 3.20 2.40 2 '10
Wl!lsller'1 Gold (Cardoza ) 3.60 3.1~
Above RebP.IUon (Oreyer) J.•;
7111'\f -20.68.
Also ran -Elmer Glick, Frasl 01
Oawn. Swaps 61r. Savanal! MOOfl, Miu Azure 6or. Coke TH Nole.
Scralct.ed -SlflW 8olo. My 61! 0 1
HDn'Y· Qv1r!er Sender. F1mllv Fight,
i! EXACTA -lO·Ml1 Ctemenll111 A
t·Wlllslltr's Gold, paid tll.00.
SECOND ltACE -3)0 Y•rds. l ye~r
olds & vp. Claiming. For llllles &
mares. Pvrse · Sl?OO. Tl>e Hvnllnglcn
Beach Elks Ledge Na. l9St 8ulldln~
Fvnd Orlve.
Miu Roc:k•nl11er {C1rdDtal ~l .llO 8.80 3.!tO
OH-Truly M•rsie {Page) 2.60 2.60
OH-A:vnnlng M111ic CW•rd) 2.llCI 1.60
Time -11.lt.
AlJG ran -My Tt••1 V•ndV· War
Prl11ce,i1, Slttk 1!1r.
~D ..:r11c11t1.
OH-DeOdl\eat •or $8Cond.
THlltD RACE -350 v•rds. 1 Vl!Ar
Olds. t;l~lmlng. PurM 11700.
Red River Rvsty (Pltrt) 12.~ 6.20 l.IO
Jr's Paylld OU ((lk ktl) B.60 7.10
Fresr.o ~tk Ch11ro• il re•1v•el 2.llO Tim~ -lt.•2.
AIM! ri ll -JO!I 8rH !'I. Rov'1 Que~!.
W!nkln MDOn, Cut• N Qvlcll.. Wl11"11
LOu. Marl Tloer, Ouelo.
SCt•lcl!ad ~ Go Nolt Go, Jett FO!IY,
'A'ln11wooc1, L.Ollllt Sis.
l'OUJITN NCE -4.(1 yards. ) vear
Olds & y"· Cl•fmlnt. PIH' .. 11600. Thf
O•al'lllf CDtll Alumni Clltlllll' of Phi
AlpM 0.1!1 Ll w Fral.,nllY.
GDid lflto! IOte'ferJ tt . .O t.l'O 4.00
My Roma11 lndlan (Adair) J.IO J.:HI
Moort Rein CTre•wrt l "'°
TlfPlf -22.•2.
ltlO r•n -Joflnl'lll 8tll. All
Cr!t ll.ttt, 0•"'4 Cockll, Ol1MIUll, Mr, 11'11POl"llnl.
"IFTH RACI -Sit v1rd1. ~ yur olds &. uo. $18rlft AllDW•nct. Pvr~•
12*QO. ttlt lelwrt World ltdltt GOii t lllb.
Gooo:I COOT IAoal•) l ~ '·'° ''°
tnman's Lto TwD !Treasvrt) 6.Ml 3.IJ'I
Lvnn CN (Ba11k1) J.lO Time -21.41,
Also r1n -Art Pippin, Mr.
8 ;or, Tvrlyl«~. Altl'\llitlc.
Na scr1!ch11.
SIXTH RACE -lSO v1rds, 3 year
olds. ClalmlMj, Pvr1t Sl900.
Cutt Oevn CW1•dl 11.,;i lS.20 6.40 Mr. Ol~mond Moon (HBrl) 6.20 4,20
Ooh La l • (OreYtt) 3.10
T'me -18.21.
Al!O ran -MlHI Puppy, Walt h Z'I
F1111cy. Fftda, Moonllo111 flev, 011.
lowlldltty, Moon 8•n•. lm1 Oleklt Bir. Srrali:h~ -Wl'ol!t• Rl!lvr11.
tJ EXACTA -1·0Ull OtvU 1 I 4-Mr Oiatnond Moon, P•ld JUf..00. •
SEVE"TH RACE -lSO yardt. 3 vear t>lds & v~ flllles & meres. Allowance.
Pvrie f.'000. Tilt 'E•<h•ngt Club of Ntwiiort Harbor.
llarllmlts (S mlttl) •.OO 4,00 ).BO
.A--MIH 0oo Wn {Ward}
Atam!IDS Svslt (8a11k1)
Time -11.11.
AllD r•n -. ·~ebel OoU, Go GD
Je•11le, J•yl!awkH .\\QOll, L I n d a
M!Kl!tch1, Bust Wiiiow, Country
C•rouw l.
l!IONTH RAC!!: -870 yardt. 3 Y11•r
oldl & vp. Clalm!ng, Pvrst UJOO.
l"tvnder flC11!gl!tJ 3.olO 2.?0 2.40
TOI> Side CP•oe) 3.00 1.10 FOllV N•r•< (P111tlo) J.ol(I
Tlll'll -'f,.53.
AIM! ran -Oorls Jant, Yo Qlero,
C•lh BnWll'I, Flirel A:vll ah, Svfgl11 LUIY.
S<ratched -Big Sf>'f, Glllfl•' $Im,
Ytndl LI~. kooper $por!.
IJ l!'XACTA -S-l"lvncltl' & 4·TOft
Slff, lll•lf IUM. '
NINTN ll:AC• -.00 Ylrd._ 2 \'ill r
oldJ, Allollo•11c1. PIJrM $1@,
Mlny A:ockll (Orevilrl t.60 •.llO 1,olO
Fly Aw1y l(Jd <ll•nkl) '·'° 1.2?
Ofdit'it Gl'ITI IMtlrl 2 • .0
Tim. -20.Sf.
Also r1n -ShldY Ever.it, Jeep
JHO, El R11tro. Rocky MUNCii. ~llltOI fll'tMI*• P1lqul11, Sllf111 *· kr•ICl'ted -Syncltc•!OI', Mr. OMp
MW. JtOllYJ Rotkftl, Cl'llckaoo.
'' IXACTA -4·Mli1y Rotll•t & 6< "IY AWIY l(lf, •alf »"IM.
NATIONAL LEAOUI!:
H. k ed P11\'ilr Clvb G Al 11. H 1c s slart strong in the R(lse c111 131 M2 M '"
nd d f I Watson Htn 1ll 497 ts 1S6 seco an ina game with c"'eno H•n 111 4li 66 130
h T.Pere1 Cln n• 461 51 1u t ree straight strikes bu t had Maddox SF u •ST M u2
Cardenal Chi 111 QI! 11 13S an open frame in the eighth Matthews SF n1 423 s1 uo Hvnl Mon 1(19 392 61 110 when he failed to pick up a 7.9 un1er Phi 110 346 51 10s GC!OdsDn SF 102 :l84 J7 116 split and settled for nine pins.
"'" "'' .314 . lll
.311 .3 11 ·"" ..,, ...
"' "'' Pilthlnt (11 l>t(l5lon'1 Hicks took the final game. Slone. N-'f(lr~. l·l .. '21; Bryant, Sin Fra11tl•co, 10·1 . .ru: Osteen, La• 205-203 bUt ]OSf lhe series by 30 Anoeles. 15~, .1l4; fi re!!, Plllllldelpllla,
P·lnS. 12·5, .706; P. N!ekrD, All1n1a. 13"· .61•; Staver. New YDrk, 1S·7, .612: 8111· At 18, Jackson is the second ingr.am. c 1ncin11a!I, u.a, .667; svtt011, Lo-s Ano~es. 16.a, .667.
It appean Sa n Clemente Hlgb principal
Darrel Taylor ~ill be making good on bis
inteations to assist Allie Schaff wUb the V8J'·
sity football team.
Taylor's desires to ~erve as a line coach
"·ere eontingenc on the approval of school
superintendent Trum an Benedict and finding
enough free time away from admlnistratl"e
A loss Wednesday will eliminate Costi
Mesa while a victory will place the Royals ii
the championship encounter Friday .
Costa Mesa's starting lineup as announce4
Monday night included : Sari Duncan at firs
base; Julie Feenstra at. third base; Jil Ange
at shortstop : Sandy Allen. pticher: DeDel
Ruiz, catcher ; Sharon To\•.'ner in left field
Kim Aydelotte in right field; Ginny F~egos
at second base; and Laura Brown in cente:
field. ·
youngest bowler to win a lriiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii-.,;;;;;;,,I
1'-tatch Game Eliminations ti· NEWPORT LEASES
tie in the 13-year history of the 2400 West Cocnt Hltftway
event. Barry Asher of Costa L • II v hi I Mesa won the crov.'n in 1963 at easing a • c es
1---- -
XEROX COPIES 1:
le
24 HO UR ~ERYICE I:
DON'T DISCARD THOSE
OLD TENNIS SHOES!!
<ige 17. He is c1Jrrenlly one of FOREIGN & DOMESTIC KINKOS -933.3397 1 I W1 l'ffllr '"" l'f-llottom •II ly1111 of AdiN1 •l'ld Tr.Jim SllM1.
lhe leaders on the pro bowlers I 645-2202 : i 4121 Co"'P'"'' Dr., 1 .... 1n~ I L=~ --~--=.= ----'
ANTHONY'S SHOE SERVICE
• Wl'STCLU'I' PLAZA. LIDO. P'ASMION ISLA"D. co•ONA DEL MAR
tour.
"A TIRE' FOR EVERY DRIVING NEED II
PLYM CORVETTE CAMAfltO
DODGE FAIRLANE AIVIEAA PONTIAC
V'll &VOLVO. FlltE81RO MOST CA.AS 2 rn•29" 2 •0•33"
1.,11111 •• 1 1 .. 11+10 ••. 1
SIZES FITS SIZES F°ITS __ .. • 0"111'14 ' ,,JU>I -·1• '·""'" '···" -.... .. .... u . • .....
2 •0 \18" l 1r s211s ••. I
S I ZES FITS ........ "'""" •,11><1• ........
2 ·0 ·44"
!11s 2••S••i
SIZES FITS ........ .., .. 11
"DOVE PRIC E S TUOCLCSS O l. ... Cl<W ... Lt..S-10 .. r •L'"''·
"DD tz 'J~ f"OR WHITCW ... -L l..S-E l<CISC r ... x ,!,'tb ro 'l ~·
IN VALUES
IN SELECTIONS
IN QUALITY
IN SERVICE
"
I • 9w ......
HIGH
PERFORMANCE
HEADQUARTERS FOR CA~S . TRUCKS CAMPERS
Tires-Mag & Chrome Wheels
BRAKE RELINE A 40,000 MILE
'CJ GUARANTEE
alG CAR
OWNERS
SPORTS CAR
SPECIAL
NEW RADIAL
... -··"· ····· ... -. _, ........ -............... .. ·--.-.................. -................... _ .. ' .. ········ ·-· ... ····-· ............... -·-.......... . ...................... _ ........................ _ ..... . -· .,, ... ,, .. ,,,.,.., •o M•ooo -1••0 00••-··-_,,,_ "
TRUCK-CAMPER
MOTOR HOME
1565
a1zt: 600)1( ''
llG SILICTION OF SIZIS
Sltl PllCE SIZl PllCE
670·15 ••.••• 21 .tS 100·16.S •••. 39.95
700-1• •••.•• 21.95 175-16.i ...• 47.16
700°16 '' •.•• 29.95 f50·1 6.J •••• 56.75
750·16 ..•.•• li.71 10-16.S ••• , 49,I S
CAD ILLAC .\L.INCOLN
DOUaLI alLTID
WHITEWALL
TU IE LESS
30,000 MILES
f' ITS ._,,_,,
'100-'' 'ill\-!'
34 95
"EG. VALUE
ALL SIZES
40,000
MILES
$29
&IKk wan T111111 Ty"
11',E.T. 1.n TO 2.4' + Strvk•
'• c•'t lftM t• ""'9~
lllAl&ll .... ~
IHl-111 .
L.fT US TRUE &
BALANCE
VOUR TIRES NOW
95 •'-'" 3 ... ~~~:. -------REPACK BEARINGS &
GREASE SEALS
.... , ..... "'"'°"' ... 0 Ci.IE"'"' VOu• '•OOIT
W .. lfl.. •l A•t..C.t
... .. o """ .. "''" ... ITH G ••At (. Wl'l.I. ALtO . ... , ......... , ........ , ... ~[
~''"''-~· .,.,,er .-o• o .. ., ............ l""'•s .
388
-DISC BRAKE R£LiNE-
WI" , ... T .. LL .-ov •
H (W ..... IC( ..... DS,
•::==~~~ti::: ,:.._OOIT 2988 tPl:CT C"'l.1.-C•it, •oto•s ..,,.o •r"'• ••..,>111:s: •o ro•s ,....,c,.1,.ro, C"'L•.-r•s
•1:•11 11.T Ar ••T•"'
COST. --------LUBE & OIL CHANGE
we• .. ._ i..v •••l':"'Tl
Y~• C."'lt AHO
CH ... HGI IMG>HI 011.. P•1c1 ,,.('LtlDt:• u.-
10 ~ Qv..,•Ts or
IOIV A L l t V 0 11., ••cl .. • •••~•o .,,.,,..,
488 --------WHEEL
BALANCE 149
.-Lu ..
Wl.tGH1'• ---LIFETIMI -----
DELCO
Batteries 24'5
MOsir CA~. VALUE $33, 86
~--------·---WHEEL
ALIGNMENT 5ss
PlllG0 VAL.UC St.IS
-------------AIR 3·4so SHOCKS 12-16.$ ...• St.IS
F.l.T. 2.14 TO 6.41 "CG. VAL.Ult SQ.so -···.•·.'·•"•"•"'•"•' •"•"•'<•'• .. iiiDiiEi1iiiLCO &HI JACKERS
B fl(,.,,-,<1r11 h ---JONES TIRE SERVICE Phones
646-4421
.540-4343
-1 --2049 ~AllOR BLVD. !!!! ~ ~ "' +°"' {AT BAY ) -!Bl
COSTA MESA ALL MAJOR
C•IDfT CARDS
HONOHD ~
, B F.Good/ll h
~~.,,
,.---Of 1£N---.
8 AM 'TO 6 PM
MONDAY THfUJ FRIDA
SAlUROAY
I AM 10 S P"'4
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PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NO'rlCE
,_C'.TITl(KJS lllSIM•SI
IUP•RIOlt C()UtT 01' YH• NAMI STATIM.lftT ITATI 01' Clll.ll'OaNIA lfOll Tiit ~llowll\ll l)ttMin 1. oolnu tx11IM'I
THI COUNTY O" Ol:ANOll ••: . '°'Civic C••lftr Drtw Wttt, u .s. PAHEL.S. lMI I!. ~· $1 .. SMlli Aftl $a11rt ""' t'l'IU CASI HUM••• IM4.)14 Roll UIU•llu, 1m R11lltnd Rd .. • NOTICI! 01' Hfl.AltlNG TO MOOIFY .. IWlflOl'f 8MCll, CA tH60
J UOGMEN'r Thi• ~Mt• I• aw'lducled DY lfl In.
h1 '' 11-f!'Wlrrito-of Pot!lflo!llrt Olvldv.I.
CAAOL PAGE SIMMONL ~· Re'llOlldtnll Roff Ultutter
ROIERT LEE SIMMONS Thia 1ltt1ment w11 t!l«I with ~ COi.in<
Sales Up
At Firm
In Irvine scheduled to open a t Soulh
Coast Plaza Sept. :W. NOTICE IS HERE.IV GIVEN tlltl hll· ly Clttk OI OrM!M COllf!ly on AllOl/ll 21, llotltl', CAROL PAGE SIMMONS, n.1 Ill· ltn
'•' lld lwrtln • 11111111on f6r HN rlllt To •tnn
MOdlty JuctQmtnl rt11r~ 10 wllld1 l1 P11biltlltd Ol'•"Dt: Coest O.lly Piiot,
m.01 for turfller N•lk 11l1r1, tlld 11111 tilt Augutt 2t •net Upl1mber 1, ll, JI, 1 !!.,... lno:I 1)11<1 O'I llet tlnQ Ille ll!Tlt hll lt13 26t.l•n
Computer Automation Inc.,
an lrvlne·based manuractu rer
of minicomputers, announctd
Monday record earnings and
sales during fiscal 1973.
Eleven directors ha ve been
el~cted for the new Irvine Na-
tlon.nl Bank. The new directors
include Dr. Charles W.
ll011Uer, Hostler lnves tinent
Co.; Hqgh B. Coates,
Microvislon. Inc.: Jumes B.
Slemons 11, Jim Slemon.s
Imports; Richard S. Sttven,
\Vrather Investme nts, Inc.;
Harry S. Rinker, Rlnker Co.
Joseplt lncaudo has been
na n1cd general manager for
the Costa Mesa department
store. He will be assisted by
t'barles Troy.
.' bMll :.ti fot" Stpltf'l'ltllr II, 1t7', 11 ~;00'1 -"--------------
•:I o.,.,,. In The (OUrlreom of OtN•lmtnl Mo, P UBLIC NOTICE • ol u ld <OUtt, 11 100 Civic Ce11"1' Orlvt
WH I, In lht Cltv of Stnlfl An1, CttlfOl't1lt • .l---------------EHlld AflVlll.f IQ, Im ,ICTITlOUt SUSINISS ~It Yfl\11-E. St J.n.t. NA.Ml STATIMENT
COvniy Clttk Theo lollowl119 Ptr~ ll't Ooll!Q President D.H. Methvin said
fully taxed net income for the
year ended Jwie 30 was
Jl.005,000, equal to 63 cents
per s hare, three Umes
fiscal um earnings when Com-
puter Automation reported its
first profitable year ol opera-
tion with fully taxed net in·
come of $31~,000. or 24 cents
per share.
lncaudo has been associated
with the compa ny for the past
five years, serving as ge neral
manager of Bullock's La
Ha bra store and assistant
gener al manager of t h e
Sherman Oa ks store prior· to
that. He and h1s wife reslde ln
Irvine.
C:•OSIY ANO 1.Ullllll/rCK b11tln .. 1 11:
1• NOf'tll ~Ill llrffl JlillANKS l,.IQUOlt MAJIT. 1..0 W,
S11!11 ... Mldortlwr, 111111 A111. C11!f, '11o. Other director!i Include $.atll AM, Ctllftorllll ,r1M1 Enlwjwl ... , \fl(., 1 C1Ulornl1 ·~ Tell (711J OMtU COl'POl'tllon. 2SO N. U: B~I A.,.., I"'
A!ftnMYI fot •11111-r OlfWOOd, Ctlll. 90301 James B. Lynch, Irvine Na-
tional Bank pr es id e nt: Publltl!Q Or~ COi~! Di lly Pllol, Thi• \llUtlnMt It (.Orldvcttd b'f I cor. •, A119111t 14, 21, ltl, 1nd &tptembtr 4. pof'ttlon.
1913 Ulf-13 Rlcl\Md Y11U01, P•itsldtnl Richard P. llausn1an, Allergan
Pha r m a c e utlcals. Inc.: J ' Thlt lfllt,.,.....1 Wit filed wllh 1119 Coun.-
~·I
i.
r;~ .. '
" .,
PUBUC NOTICE tv (lfl't of 0 11no1 Counlv on Aut111tl 24. ------------1'"' ,......,
T"' u'
,ICTITIOUS IUSINESS fl-t713S
MAMI STATIMl!NT f>ul)l f1h4d Ortll!M: (O.)I Dolly Piiot,
foll(1iillr'lg PtfMl!I ts doing bullntit ~~ull 21 •!Id Seple<nDer ~. lii.~~
eXOTICA, 11J Matltl• Av•.. B•lbOt
PUBLIC NOTICE lll<U'IG, C•lll. '2642
Alme Wu, '24 HllYtner, NllWPO•ll--------------Bt~h. CaUI, tlUO flCTITIOUS IUllNl!!S Thl1 lllnlllfll 11 corlG!X1td b'f en lfl; NAME STAtlMfNT dlvlclu11. T,.,. following ptrlOn 11 doing bu1lne11 Almt W11 111:
l'Mt 1ti1t1m1nl Wtl flltd with .... Coun-MILE$ SQUAllE FLORIST, 1•.wll ty Clfl'k ol O•t"99 Co1m1y °" Avuull 13, BrOOkhU!'sl, Fountain Valley nn t hH Mtredlltl Tucler, 112' P1lmt1 f ·lH» Ct,. LOll{I Btaeh, C1. 90806 Publts.htd Oc°tnot Co111t 011\y Piiot, Thll OU$IR8ll I• c:ondlKhld by •n rn. Augwt 14, 21, 21, •rid S1plemtfe.t •• dlYld111!.
Credits from tox losses car-
ried forward accounted for an
additiooal 12 cents per share
in 197$ and 22 cents per share
in 1972. In fiscal 1973 pretax
income was $2,005,000, or 17.8
percent of sales, he added.
Richard E. Duffy, Airporter
Inn; Gerald \V. McClellan,
inland Marketing Co.; Jack K.
ffamUton, Anja Engineering
Corp. and Dr. Martin ~.
Hansen, physician.
* Barbara A. Roberts has
been appointed manag er of
First Western Rank 's
University Park office in-
Jrvine.
Troy, of La Hal)ra, began
his career with Bullock's at
the Santa Ana store and has
served as assistant to the
director of operations a t the
corporate office_apd as opera-
tions manage r and assistant
general manager of BuTiock's
Northridge store.
* Gene J. Adams, president of
lt7J 1"9·73 Tht1 Tuder ::. .. f -------------'--Cl This tlll1mtt1t Wll filed Wiii! !ht Cool\·
PUBLIC NOTICE IV Clerk ot Or1rig. C011n1v on Alf9ull 14.
The naked minicomputer's
audited sta tement for fiscal
1973 showed net sa les of
Sll,264.000 were more than
twice the $4,875,000 sales
reported in fiscal 1972.
She comes
to Univer-
sity Park
Shacco, Inc., of Newport
Beach, bas been named to the
board of directors of Pulse
Network International. ,,
-------------1•m f27731 01Uy f'llo!,
'· n , 1a. :l661 ·73
S\.P·llO NOTICI TO CRE01tOltS SUPllllOlt COUJlT OP THE STAT• OP CAllPOllNIA 1'011 TH£ COUNTY 01' OllANG l
No. A·7105•
Put1ll1~ Or•l'l(lt C0111I
A119. 2S •nd Seotem~r
1•73
PUBLIC NOTICE
from the
E1t1lt of SOPH IE CHWAT, AKAl --------------.~l· SOf>HJE REILLY, AKA SO PH IE flCYITIOUS IUS•N•ss MACKIEWICZ. Otcttled. NAME STAYeMEHT
He said he was pleased by
demand for the "component"
computer designed to be built
into systems produced by the
company's oirginal equipmen t
manufacturer customers for
sale to end users, noting that
th.is de mand is demonstrated
by the $11.6 million backlog of
orders as of Aug. 23.
bank's La
H a br a office
where she
served a s
manager.
Miss Roberts
Pulse is a Te xas-based con-
5t:lomerate of distributors, im-
port-export service and com-
mercial locators. Adams is
also treasurer o f the UCI
Foundation. NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN to !hoe The fOllowlftO Pll"S.olll art doing credllor1 of ll>t tboY1 nemfll dectflnl bu1l11111 11:
II : th11 111 perl<M'lt h1vlf111 Clelm1 1t1ln1I ll>t $HAMR0CI( ANT I Q U E S , 214
-.aid dK«lent 1r1 r•q11lrl'd to tllt 11\tm, Brol'dw1y. L11111111 Baee1'1, CA tt6.Sl is a specialist
lending.
ROBERT$
ln consumer * * \\IUHam C. P ar"er of San
wl!h Thoe necawrY vl)UCl\tri, In lllt Oltlct Myle• c. Mc.Gqh, 32'9? B Sin ot lht cltf'k of Ille •bo..,. entllled court, or Am1dao, L1gun1 Hiii•, CA '10.U
lo Prtttnt lhtm. w!lh •llt ntc1•111rv 1(1y Rv1n MeGouQh, 3291 a Sin VOIK._,1, lo thl unGtr-.lgr>ed 11 THE LAW Am&dto, L111un1 HUI$, CA 92,$3
•!+' OFFICE OF DURYEA. JlANDOlPH, This bu1h.eu Is Conditt;led bY 111-111 MALCOLM &. DALY, 4301 ~""'R.JHUR p1r1ner1hlp. Costa 'Mesa re s ident
Ciemente has been promoted
to ass istant vice president and
I -; • llLVO. No. 211, NEWPORT &EACH, MYlltl C. MCGougFI CALIF .. wrilch h mt plec1 ot bul!neu of Tnl• 111ttm•nt WI• tiled with lllt Coon· tht U'llder1lgnld In 111 m1n1r1 pertalntng ty Clerk ol Or1119t COi.iniy °"' A1,1111111 24.
Gary \Vest has been pro-
moted to assistant vice pres i·
dent for Joans of the Downey
Bank of America.
na med man-
a ger of one
of crocker
Bank's G a r-
den Grove
branch offi.
ces .
,,
"
"
to l1'lt ttt1te at wld dec~er11, Within louf 1973 months •tier !tit tlr" P11bllc11l1111 ot 11111
nollct .
01rfd Aut. 1. ltn
Frank Remy , E•t<utOI° ol Ille will ol lhe
Pllbll1~
AVQulf U
197)
•m" Oreng.e Coo1t Otltv Piiot,
•nd $t0lembtr 4, 11, 18,
26fl.7J
Autonetics
, , , OU1tYe~V: ... ~-=p:~cc11en1
M.t.U:OLM 6 DALY ··~
PUBLIC NOTICE
Gets Big
Contract
He advances to the post
after a year as credit o(ficer
with the bank's Orange a nd
Southe11stem Los Angeles
County Regional Headquarters
staff. Previously he was
manager of an oUlce in
Downey and assis t ant
manager of the West Fullerton
He wa s 001 MKArthw tlvd., No. Ul NOTICE INVITING ••os
"'I' N-jlfff l•kPI, Cllll. The County S&nl .. Uon Olllrkl1 ol :>i ttl: fn4) OH,,. Oc°1119e County, C.1lltc:rnl1, wlll ••«lv1
AllorrltJ'• for l!xKutor Haled bld5 u11t!I 5eptembllr t \tr.I, 1t -!:,, • Pllblllhed OretlOe C11411I 01Uy Piiot, 11 :00 l .m. Bids mull be •Kl'lved It !!It Ai.gull 14. 21, 11 ,,..,,.. s.s>temt>er •• Dl1trlcts' Admlnt1lr111 .... atflCtl by the Autonetics Divis i 0 n of
ion 1533-13 d•'• erld llrN 11ert111et>ov• let lorlh, '' Rockwell 1 n tern 0 t 1• 0 n a I which t1m1 theV w1U be PVtlllcly op.ntd
•nd '~''"',..,.., 11 '"' ott1c1 of 1111 Corporation has been awarded office. PUBLIC NOTICE Dltlrlcts. lot" EMl1 Avenu., Foun!1ln
;_... "'··-------venev. c1111orn1a, 1or lhe ta11aw1no : a $184,000 contract to develop *
' SlP·M BAR SCREEN CHAIN protective coatin~ for optical
I su,.•11101t COUltT OF CAlll'-OllMIA. SPECIFICATION NO. £4119 ...... H 1· l B h .d t 1 couNTY OF o•AHGe Bid• mu11 M 1uDm1t1ect on 111t torm components used wilh high-un tng on eac rest en
I nt Civic C...ler Drt" w111, iuppUld Dv the o111r1c11 In accont1nce power lasers and I a Se r s Eula F. Palmer has been Silfttl .1n1, Clll'9nllt wllh 111 puwl•I-o1 1M 1peclflc1t1anJ. ed
,, .. Nurnlltl" on1" S1>«111c111ons. ~Id Dian~• and turltltf' operating in infrared fre-nam assistant vice president SUMMONS lh\ARRIAOI) lt1form1tlon Inly be oblllllfd 11 lht lbo~I . f
1 In ,. ,,,. m1rrl1o11e of P•llllant r: l . eodre1s, 1tl9Plione t62·2•11 or $.60.2'10. quenc1es. or opera· I • JEAN TISDALE 11'111 llffl*'dtnl: BOBBY J. WIYlll SylYetl .... S.C:rtltrv 'Mte contract with ... A1'r tions at Bank t_ ~UGENE TISOALE Bo.rdi OI Dlftcle.ts "4.1 f A • ' • To in. RttPOMC1t11t~ BOBBY evGENE C011t1h' S1n11111on Ol$lrlc11 Force Cambridge Research o mencn s TISDALE No». 1, 1, 3, 5. 6, 1. and lJ, F U J I e rton ThoJ pe1111_,. he• 1u.., , peuu°" cOfl· of Oc°1110e count¥, c1111a1nl• Laboratories is s ponsored by
·•r111ng ¥our m1rrllQt. You may 1111 • Putlll11\ed Or•nv-<:111$1 Delly Pllol, the Defense Advance d main office.
:,"'""" ruoonw wlt]'ln thirty d1¥1 ol the Augu11 n. 1'73 169~13 Mr P·'
f ormerly
m anager of
the r i r m 's PAAKe 1t
Garden Grovc-Brookhurst of·
flee . also in Garden Grove.
Parker join ed Crocker Bank
in 1965 afte r serving 22 years
in the Marine Corps and retir·
ing as a major in 1964.
Move Told
At Airwest .c11i. tn11 tttt• wmmons 1• s.ervW on you. PUBLIC NOTICE Research Projects Agency. s . .u·
•tf you 1111 to 1111 • wrlnen rt1110t1t• Und h m er, wit h within '""' time. vour default m1v tie,1------------·1 er t e contract, various S 'al to h 0 il PU 1 .,....,Id at\CI '"' court '"'" ...,,., • l\ldo· P.1CT1T1ous aus•N•ss organic materials will be the b a n k pec1 t e a y o •;lr*tt can11lnlnt tnlun,tlve or other Ol'l$tf'1, NAMIE STATIEMEHT ed since 1963 SAN MATEO _ Hughes • ... n11111 dh 111on °' prop.riy, ._.1 Thi 1o11owl1111' per1on• ••• OOll'IO test as special coatings to •
...,...,,.,, C11lld c11t1oc1v. cn1111 woPort, ,,. bu1lnft1 ••: ' protect the halide optics used former Jy Airwest has completed a move
'tomtv'I ·-'°'''" Ind tU(h other rtt\_tf INOUSTRIAL -SAFETY ASSOCIATE&. \""""assistant PAl.Mlilt lo 1'Js n·· ..... 4't:.2 mi' Ilion ,·n· "'y .. .,.nttdh lhe'*'•'·, # ........ E. inn h. su11.~21.._ &Int• Ma. in laser · instruments from ~-" .. ""' . ,.... w1111 te .-t11t Mvic• .,-••' c..ut. 92101 t manager f or o,_..,,.tions at t " l h d · ...., 111 '* -""·.,. .,_., .. to 0ona1c1 JOMPh Brown. 26SC Lino cir· h umidity while enabling r-·-erna,..ona ea quarters tn
,..,_,.., .. t1111 .,..... ""'"• ,..,....., 11 c:I•. Mission v1e10, ceuf. '1615 transmission of i 0 f r a r e d the South Santa Ana office. San Mateo _ its first con·
-· fll.l'J 11t flltd • """· 011r111 Jtandllll Sri.tPOtrd. ms. LVOO'I She has completed numero s 1·d D1ttd June" 1nJ. st .• s11111 Ane, c1111. t:i10S !Apt, JM) radiation in the 10.6 micron · u so 1 a ted corporate ho me
w1L\.lAM 1. sr JOHN, T1111 Du$ln••• 11 canctuc1e<1 by , 9-r•l range. Aiethods for depositing professional courses at the since being formed by merger
CMrk parin.,,;.11) American Institute of Bank· · 1968 ar M. B. Obtr11 Jr.. oor.a1<1 J. a,_ the coating on sodiwn or . m ·
o.puty T"!' tl•lll'l'lf'lt w11 ~ with 1111 Coun· · chi 'd · ing. U ff be JOHN .t.. HUOHl!s, tv c1er1t of 011""' COW11r °"' Au;utt 6, postass1um or1 e prisms * p to now, o ices have en '* w..1 '"" "'"' im and lenses used in lasers will scatter ed on different floors in
C•11 MMI, Calltoml• run r ,.,,., I be d I ped T h Tw 0 Co cliff b Id ~Tit: 014,......... Pu111 lllfld o ranoe-C:CM$t 0111v Piiot a so eve o . e o range unty men erent ui ings at three l~:.'~i C::::!~out 01111 Piiot A,_r'_n_"_'_'_"_'_"_~_._"'_"_''_---="~\,....:.#i Autonetlcs Division is located have been a ppointed managers separate sites in two differe nt
~t 1~. 21, 21. 1nd SCPltmt>e• '" in Anaheim. of the new Bullock's store, San Francisco Bay area cities.
nn 253~·73 1 ---------------------------------------~1
PUBLIC NOTICE ------1 HOTICll TO CllEOITOltl
No. A·m1'
PUBLIC NOTICE
StATIMIMT Of' WITNDltAWAI. Pit.OM PAJtfMElS IOP
Ol"lltATINO UNOll P'l(TITIOUS IUllMEIS NAM• Sul)tl'lor C_.t ol ll>t $1111 ot C1tl(ornt1 The tallowlnt pel"Mlf\ nes wlthdriwn 11
fg.r tl>t C°"nlY ot Orenve. 1 oe11tr11 Plrl!'ltlf' from the p1rtn1 .. hla Etl1lt ol JULIU!. BRUNO KLEIN, lkl 0Pt:r1tlng undlr 1t1t flclltlou1 bu1ln1n JULIUS 8. KLEIN, ek1 JULES KLEI N, 11tmt al
Dtce•Md. INFRARED SURVEY, 199' South No!ICI II l\lre(ly gl~tt'I lo c:redltor1 OI Cotti Hlgl'lwa¥, l1gun1 Bitch C1IU.
c57lt Coast'Pederal'We Qffer
ll>t lboW 11tmfd de<;e<ltnl !Fiii Iii fUjl '
,.,_ h1vlrlo cl1lm1 191ln1I the wld Tl>t flctltlout bu1lness n•m• 11111mer11
dtudtnl e.r1 r1qulred lo 1111 Jhtm, w1t11 for Ille partne•tftlp was fll~ an Mirth 'I/•
11111 nKfti.lrY vouchers, Ill Ille Olllce GI ltJl In the (out1ty of O•lllil•·
1119 d.,.k Of-H'lot •Dov9 ...,lltlfd court, or ta Full Name lt\CI Address of tl>t Per.on pf.,..,! tlllm with the ne<t111ry vouchers Wllhdr1wl"'ll·
11) Ille Ul'dlrtlOtltd II Ille ottlct of Ch1•le1 . F Sllotmektr 1955 Sin CONJlAO LEE KLEIN Ind KURLANOER 11:..mo, L1gun1 l1Nth, Celli. '2651
& HAJlt, 1155 Llnca!t1 Blvd .• S.1111 Jon H K1we0t Pertntr
i MOnl(I, CA fCMOl, WFllCh If ll>t PllCt ol • ' ,.nffl
buflntlf If lilt UN1tr1l1ntd 111 •II m1ll•r1 p bll Md O ....... Cot t p ·1 Piiot Ptf'l•lnlnv to tl>t 11tat• ot 11ld d«edenl, u 1 r1 ...... 1 $ 11 Y . wlmln louf mon!hl llltr ll>t llrtl PVbllCI · Augllll 7, Uo 11, 11, '13 208·73
PUBLIC NOTICE 11on DI' 111!1 notice. Ollld Al,l\'IUll 11, 1913 CONRAO LeE KLEIN 1nd RIC.HARO DAVID KLEIN l'IC'TITIOUS IUSINi.SS
tiiec:lllOf1 of Ille Wiii NAMI STATIMINT ot w ld clectdent, '"" folkiwlng pe1ion1 ire dolrig (ONltAD LEI!· KLEIN Ind Dutllllll 1\: KUR.LANDalt & HART BRDOKHUllST INlER'OllS, llttJ llJJ Ul!Ctht ll'tll. Bett ft Baultv1rd, S!1nton. C1!Uort1l1 S1nlt Mel!ICI, CA "401 '°6tO Altontey9 fllr l •K¥1ert S.I 11:. Dl'¥tlQPtr1, Inc. !C1Ulort1l1),
"4\11 llt3:1 Bt t<tl 8oulev•rd~ S t • n l o 11 , PutlMIMd Orengt Coe1t 0.11'1' Pilot. C11Ulornl• il0680
Avo. JI, 11 11111 $1pt. 4. 11, 1973 :iAM•n 1"1• bullt1t11 II conducted Dy e CorPOr1tlo11.
PUBLIC NOTICE S.IJI:. Ol!VELOPEA:S, INC. A.W. Som1111rnetd. V.P, & Stctv.
l'ICTITIOUS IUSIN•ls This •l•l•mtnl "''' flied With 1111 COiin· Nit.Ml STATl.MIHT fy Cltrl!; OI Ori1noe Coun1Y on AUQUtl 3,
The follOWlllGI Ptf'Wll art idolflO ltn. bullltltfl 111 lfJS.()( s &. T CATTLE COMPANY, 91" LI Zll',.lllN AHO znrP'ltlH, Att)'l. B11rt11 Clrcl•, F011t1!tlt1 V1Uty, Catlt. lMlt Wlllhl,. llllltYlrd
n10t · LM Anttl-. C11lfenll1 toO'tf Jahn D. TOWnHnd, t llt La 81rc1 CJr. "·272&4 elf, FOUl'lllll'I V11l1y, C•llf. 927111 Publlll'led Or1ngt CNS! Delly Piiot. IUcllerd $(ftt r, 4S W11trldllt Clult. A1191n1 7. 11. 21 . 21, 197) t•2t·n An1111!m. c1111. Thi• Duslneu I• oollducled ti)' a (ltl'!tr11 "rt....,,,.lp,
JOhn o. T owns1nd
PUBLIC NOTICE
lhlt altltmlllf w11 filtd with ,,.,. C.OUnly t 7USI
Oerk ot Or•noe Counl)' on A119u1t l. lt7l. P'1(TIYIOUS I US\NISS
' t' P•»HJ HAMI STATIMIPIT Pul:lllil'lld 0t1no1 C<>est Dilly Pllot. The follOWll'lll Plf~I .,. dolt11 AllGuUJ. M, 21. n, 1973 2'27·n llulltltll I I! .-OOLOEN ICEV ASSOCATES, ltu
PUBLIC NOTICE
f lCTITIOUI BUSINe:S•
NAMI STATIMINT
SFlertlng Pl .• Newport l eech, C1. 11'60 C. A. Shtfll)lrd, IN5 Sl>trllng Pll(t, Newport llttcll. ca. '2660 Ht ltnl c, Grtl'lllrn, 19'$ Sllertlno Pl ..
N~I 8eec:tl, Ca. t?..0 The ..,.lowlng Ptr'SOll I$ doing Dustt11s1 l hl1 bu1l111t1 b bllf!O COndutled by 1 . M : ptr!ntrlhll)>. LEVINE SCHOOL. 0 1' Re AL c. A, S~r(I EITATE, 2.UOI LI Pl l. l•oun1 Hiiis, Tht1 1t111>m1nt fllfd Wiiii IM COUf'llY
"•llf, t:l6J)L , ,.-vr C Clerk of Or1no1 County qn Auguft 1d, obe>rt • ""111, "'""' • uervo. 1m. Mluion Vll]O. Cal. '2675 P'·V-442
Thi• IM111at I• conouctld by 1111 lrt-'°"" c. IALYI• 41~1, ATTOJtflll'r At I.AW ltOMrt Levlt11 toU Wtttdlff DrtW, ~111i. Jl7
T.... t11t1rntt1t Wll 'llld wltll Ille ,...,.... 191<11. C1Uf9nli1 tw.
County Cltl'k of Oi'•not COllnlY on AllllU•I Publlll'ltd OrMQt CCIII! 01lly Pllot
14. 19ti ALIOull '" 21 . a Ind StPNnilltf •. P-unJ 1'13 JDS-n f'IJbl JIMd Or~ CNll Dt llY Piiot.
AlllMI 2' Ind $1pltmbtr 4. 11, 11, PUBLIC NOTICE I 1m 261f.n,1 ____ _
PUBLIC NOTICE l'ICTITIOUS •USINISS Nit.Ml STATIMaHT
TM 11'11ow1fl0 pt1110n 11 Oolno buslnt•• 1 l'ICTITIOUS IUSINISS as:
NAMI STATIMINT NE WJ>OllT V!LlA·Hl ALtHCAll:E, Th• tonowlno Pfnotlt 1r1 ooino 4000 Hll1111 w1v, Newport 8HCh, I ~ff\111 111 C1UIOf'llll n6!4
fUN SERVICIS. JO'JI Ca.plan Or . Pll'll ""I"""'.. CorPOr•!lon, A fhintlnolon lalldl. C•llf. ~· o.i.,.,..m C:orpor1Uon, lllO N. Or111d
1 klty ,,,,., 0.111n, 'S011 CatJl•f'I Cr.. ,..,...,, Sullt 2SO. S1nta A1111, c.l!f0tfll1
Hunlll"lflon llMd'I. Callf, nta "101
JIY Oreln Ad1m11 5021 C1tPl.ll'I Cr., •1111 JI. l!.11YC9, ISlO N. GrllllCI Aw ..
1 Hunt1!19llln 9Ndt. ca11f. ~ St/119 no, 511111 Ana, C1lltornll t2'01
Tlll1 M ll'ltll II C'OfldU(fld br .. •tntf'•I Thf\• b\ltlnen 11 COflduclld IW • C"l1fo
JJflrtMnntp. POl"•llOll. • I ••lty MIY Glilln 1'1"11 ttffl""' .. (Of'llOf'6tlon JtJ' O, Adflml . 1••11 If. l0vc9, Vic. Pr1tldent This 1t1ttrntnt w11 n11<1 with tllt c-Thlt tltfMlllll w11 flltd with tl>t COUl'lo fit Cltrlf of Or111111 COunlV Ol'I Auo111t t4, ty Cltr'k ot Or1no1 CaunfY on Julr ,,, I
Ttn 1913. 1"<211* Pm• I
• 73 Guaranteed Certificates
' ·Saturday Service
·The Insiders Club
Art LJl"lkletlflr
The Insider-$ C!ut;: A new
way to beat inflation. Its
membership ca rd permits
you to buy nearly every·
thing you need from the
finest closed·door show-
rooms at substantial sav·
lngs -appliances, furni"
ture, stereo equipment,
SPorting goods. draperies
and much, much more.
You can even buy cars
at the "fleet" price and
mobile homes and motor·
cycles at subs:antial sav·
lngs, The Insiders Club
Annuil l Annual
Rate Y1ald
7.00%·7.25%
4 ye11r certlflc.t!es,
$1,000 mlnlm1.1m
6.75%·6.98%
30 montn cerlil1cates,
$!),000 minimum
6.50%·6.72%
One year certificates,
$1,000 minimum
(Penailty on au cer1ltlc11te accounts withdrawn prior to maturity )
5.25%·5.39%
On existinlj'. and new p.JSSbot>k, no minimum. Maw!murn
nexlb1tl1y.
All interests comP01Jnl1ed d~ily.
also provides big dis-
counts on tickets to sport-
ing and en tertainment
events ..• plus a whole
lis t of free services: safe
deposit boxes, money or·
ders. trave lers checks,
and notary services.
Membership require-
ment for savers -$1,000
minimum balance. Coast
borrowers now receive as-
sociate memberships en·
titling them lo all outside
referral services. Ask
at any Coast of1ice.
MAIN OfflCE
9th & Hill • (213) 623·13!)1
WtlSHl"E OFFIC E
3933 Wilshire Slvd. • (213) 388-1265
LI. CIVIC CENTER omcE
21"1d & Sroaidwey • (213) 626-1102
D0IAMOND 8AR Ofl'IC£
32S So. DilHTIOl'ld Ber Blvd .•
(714) 59~7525
EAST LOS ANGELES OFflC(
J350 so. Soto St.• 1213) 26~!)10
HUNTINGTON IEACH OFFICE
91 Huntin11to1"1 tel'lter • (714) 897·1047
I.A MIRADA OFFICE
15222 Rosecrans Bl~d. •
(7 1 ~) !)22.fi751
LONG Bt ACH OfFlCE
3rd & Locvst • (213J 437·7481
ORANG£ OFflCE
2 City BlvCI. East . (714) 639·9071
PANORAMA CITY OFFICE
8450 Van Nuys Bl~a.• !21Jl 892·l l71
SAN GABRIEL OFFICE
117 So. Del Mar Ave.• (213) 2S7·99'1l
SAN n:ofto omcE
10th & Paclltc • (2131831-2341
SANTA MON ICA OFFICE
11S Wllstlire 61~'1. • (213) 393<17A6
TA.RV.NA OF"CE
187!)1 Ventura Blvd.• r21JJ 345-fl614
TUSTIN OF'1Cl
530 E. first $1. • (71 4} 832-61110
WEST COVINA OFFICE
£11M111nrt s11oorin e, Cente1 •
1213! 331·220
Open Saturdays 9 AM to 1 PM
Ho .. /1t
Northtrtl
C.l/foml•
ASSETS OVER ONE BIUION OOLLAR5
P\ltrlf*11td Ol'INll Coe\t 01ll't' Piiot, Pubtl1!Wld Dr1no• CO.st Dlllf Piiot, I ~!iU•I ti Ind StP!tl'fltlfr .. 11, II, AUOUll 21, " ancl Slplttnlllr •• n.r~------------------------------------------;:i1 ~ , ... n 1tn 2Jt1.n 1'
111rMlay, AllQUSt 28, 1913 OAILY PILOT J9
Small's ln ,OVER THE COUNTER
Say Ford
Top Pair
By CARL CAR.sTENSEN
Of'"' 0111, Jttl011fl•ll
CORON ADO -Ford Molor
Jn a statement to n e ws m e n
here to vie w the company's
1974 models, Henry Ford I I,
board chairman, and Lee A.
Jacocca, president, said the
new Mustang II and Cougar ,
are "responsive to the gro;wing
tendency of new car buyers to
think small."
model!," Ford and lacocca
said, "wlJI total lt.8 million
FORD
ca rs and lit
le ast three
·ID i 11 i On
trucks. This
means !hat
model year
the industry
is a g a
a b ou t
break
in
to
all
sales records by the same m a r-
gin as la st year-more than a
million cars a nd more than a
halt million truc ks.
a row. The
health of the
e conomy
ca lls for a
s lowdown in
the exce s-
s ive rate of
nationa l 1.1coccA
e c o n o m i c growlh. Strong
s a I e s of 1974 models at
somewhat less tha n record
breaking levels would be a
good s ign for the country and
its hopes or containing in-
flation without dropping into a
recession .
"We believe that the effect
of the economic slowdown on
next year's car sales vt'ill be
cushioned by expansion of
s mall car production capac ity
and recovery of some o f the
small car sales that were lost
NASO Ll1tlng1 for Mond1y, August 27, 1973 -
•b + '• H'i'lo + '• 601•+ '• 2$1~+ '. ·~··" ~,!ti + 1·· ,..,,..,+ •\
" + 6 .•• 1\'o-+,
'
'" "' 1990 ,.,,
this year because of Hmited1.1.,,,, • .,_.,_8.,...,....,..,..,,.._ .. ,.,...,,.,,.,.,...,t:<.,..a•""•,..••• a vailability . I' J
•ioN BALANCE. we believe MUTUAL FUNDS
that industry retail deliveries 1.,.""'""""""',."""'"m"'"_,...,,,,..,,. • .,.,.. ... ..,..,..,....,
of 1974 model cars will prot>-1 '"
·a bly top 11 millioo -second 1.!Fi: 1,vo:k1151F~i Pit1~~ 11'H 1i ~~ :!!;1F~~ ~:t; 1l:il :rnv,~• r 1tlf 1·39
only to sales of 1973 models bld "nd ••l\ed P•i· J•d c1n1 9.8l 10 n J P Gw-111 1.11 t .>4 s.1ec Eq 1.01 8.75 ·tel on Mutu1I E&-E Mu 3.19 J.l9 J11nu$ Fd 17..0:51 7.05 56olttar 2.2S 2.25 Truck s ales should stay steady Fund$ as QUol«t by E1ale Gr a.SJ 7.51 JH•n 11111 1.n 1 39 khu$ Fd 1.21 t .()S ll>t NASO Inc. EATOM & JH1n Slo 8.04 1.76 Sd'IUI SiJ •43 9 21 at the record level of three HOWARD: Joronitn 2l.&5 U.65 scuooE1t •Os : · ·11· .f h Mondav Sein Fd 9.36 10.tl KEYSTONE• fnlr In¥ l~.IS 15.15 m 1 Jon even 1 I e economy Auout.1 21. 1113 G"''" F lj.89 15.18 Cu•t 81 ii n 19 Yf B1l111e; 15.70 lS 10 slows down " Ir.cm• .M 6.38 cus r e2 1,·23 11•09 com 10.41 10.•1 • Bid Atk SpecU F 7.01 1.M Cust B4 ,·15 9·93 SClll'Cal 21.M :11.84
Both F d d •••\•ALTY: Stell, Fd 12.•313.!tli Cu" Kl '°" 1'ss Sbd Lt¥ 4.30 4.11 or an Ja cocca Grw h •.11 •.~1 E'Dtrstd. 10.01 11.01 cu11 K2 5·90 6·~ !ECU1t1TY FDS·
h 'zed th h' lncom J.60 3.95 eDte Sp 21.8821.88 c 1 51 -· ... "· EQl,llty 334 '366 emp as1 at t 1s foreca st 1111urn 1.so •.ss El<c MGMT ottP: c~!, s2 tif67;-u 1nv111 643 ios ·IS b d th . AdYller 4,11 4,49 Eoly Gr 1.S9 8.30 C ' · iJltra F in f ,2 ase on e assumption Aetn11 Fd 1.11 8.94 E11rv Pr 2.9' 3.26 cu~: ~ ~·?: !: seLECTEO ioos··
"that the go.vernment wlU su e-~~~:re.111 1~:l~ 1;:~~ /ii~~' AG: 1~:~ 1~:i' A't:,110 4:sa s,01 ~~ s,',' ~.'II,, ,i'.•,•,
ed . . I . • AG'!: FO '72 'a2 Elhm Trt u 90 Po11rs l.61 l.95 -. ' ce In its p a n to m a 1nta1n a Alls111t · 12.'~ 13:c• Emeni 3:62 3,96 KMckr s.9c 6.Sl .. ~~., ",hs 11,..,S612.S6
d g ff. I d Alo"e Fd 12.1913 tA Eneniv 11.1011 20 Knk r Glh 7.17 7.15 _, '11 IG." e ree O 1sca a n mone tary Amceo F 4.61 5:os F~ll'fld 1.11 1:61 Lt1om•k 6 . .u. 1.<M Sentrv F 13.3111•.s1
restraint tha t w·rll reduce · Am Ovrs 9.os t.a9 Fm Bure 9.js 9.ls Lenx Fd 5.10 ~10 s_t4_~e:,•LD,,•,•,-' 1n-Am Eqty 4.311 4.80 Ftd RA:s 9. s •. LEJt GROUP : ..... ,,. . ·"
fla ti onary demand pressures AM EJtP1tEs! FIOEL•YY Cl) Ledr 14.10 16 13 ,',~,,.,·, ,'-,~, .S.9a . · FUNDS; GROUP : Grwlh 6.27 6.!5 '" · •.Tl "'1thout throwing Jhe economy C11)111 7.1-4 1.02 Bnd ott1 a.M 9.4~ R.,s•ch 13.2:11•.M ","'" L 51.12 1.11 . lt1com '·'J 1.91 i &IJll ! 11.lS 12.co l lb!Y Fd s 21 5 69 eqal ·'' 6.!ll Jn!O a receSSiOn " lnv1lm 1.1 l ."5 onlra f.06 ll~ ll'llY 1:16 1:tt PIC:,p, Fd 1.23 1.90 . . . SO«I 1."6 8.lS y ssec 6.9• 7.U LOOMIS SHBAltSON POI: Po1ntmg out tha t the S!O<:k 7.32 7.90 °"' 6.10 SAYLIS1 "~ 17.171t53
M Am Grth S.n 6.2S e ~~·~ 10,lc Cap DY 12111112 IO ln<:om 16.Jt ll.ll u slang JI is a smaller Am 11111n •.16 s:io e verst io.~11.63 Mu rvi l 1,iz14:22 1nv1111 9.ltlO.G• . f Am lt1vs! 4,IM C.6' Fund 15,}C 16.61 I.ORO Atl· 111 Deen 12.U 12 6S version O the coo c e pt Am Mui 7.93 1.61 Purttn 1.90 t.n AUUet ·6.16 6.aa Ide Fd 6.13 1:-H · ed b ,._mNI Gr 2.24 2.45 Trend 2l .S6 2.S.JS Am But 2.IS l.09 SIGMA l"UNOS• pioneer y the original APICl401t l'INANC IAL Bnd clflb '62 10 Sl Cll) Stir '·" 7.vo
Mustang in t96•. Jacocca e x-Gc~~:!r 1 •.st s.03 Pri~Go't~s~.14 '·1' t~~n,l"I 1i·fs 1i:TI ~"~, ;·~ 't~
pl;i·nec1 th l ·1 . hs Fnd lllV 7.40 8.11 Fin Ind ~.78 4,78 Minh! in ·21 Vt11111r ··.sa •'.39 I a I Weig nearlv Grwlh 7,,1 8.)4 e1n Inc s.c2 5.42 MASS,..,CO• 4. Smith 11 t '11 ,17
500 pounds less than the i3 i:r ::;? ~JJ ,,,~~ va 1~·.~ 11:~~ Freem • '·"' 1.21 S!:B T&G,• ',',·•,. ',',"!:
M I d h W• Nill H 60 1211 FIRST lndp F 1.92 1.68 ~ · · us a n!! an t e larger of its A$1ron 1:~ l :91 INVESTORS : Mau F 11.14 12.ll svm l'a 7.75 •·
two engines is only t\\-·o thirds ~:x F 7·80 8·53 g~~~ ~~ 1s~ ~.a1 ~~1 FNc1~'.9611.99 S:v~"rn 1f::J 1tn the s' f Jhe JJ • HOUONtON: Stock F 'cg ··~ MIG 12.93 14.0'J $otclrl 4.!5 S.l2 · ize O · sma est eng ine Fund A 4.Sc. ,,93 h t M111n a'.36 8:36 Mio lJ.oe 1c 11 S&P 1no 6M 6 . .u now availa ble ~llf'ld II 6.16 J,46 ,OJIUM GAOUP ! MFO 11,9' 14,20 s,TATE IHO GRPi · Stock s.61 6.IJ 100 fnd 10.SJ 10.SJ MCO u.oo 15.lO om Fd 10 I" Ax.,. Sci 4.00 •.~ 101 Fnd 1.16 116 M•l<>S Iv 2.(18 l.01 DIV~(/ I'! •I Bo llLC Giil 10,981 2.00 COlum 8J2 t:ts Met!ltr 10.91 10.97 Proars r u TH EXECUT I VES llabSOl"I 10,1910.19 25 F11nd 6.0'l •.02 Mid Am S.IS 5."3 5111'9 Sir AS.01 45 .o
d Bavroc 1.02 1.jl Fdn Gr C.45 4,U onv Fd 10 • ..0 11.l1 STl!ADMAN l'D:S escr ibe th e new Cougar as a B•vrk or $.n 6. 4 l<OUHOEAS MSB Fd ll 5t 13 st Am Jt1d 1.95 2 95 8e4cn HI I.ls 8.75 OltOUP: MU e nG 9:60 10:S2 Also Fd L15 1:1s new entry in the mid-sized Se.icon 10.7• 10.14 Grwiri s.32 /·U M•F Fd 1 ...o 1 00 lnvM1 T.JJ 1.11
I Beroer K 11.G611 .oe fncam r1 1 il MIF Gro 4.ll ,;6' stelN JtO• FO:S persona Cilr market \Yith Berksl!r 4.00 4.31 F Mii.ia! t.76 9.51 MuOm 01 4.67 5 ot 8e1enc 20 . .U. '°,44 -uch f I f 6on115!k ,.6S ~.08 FSOe<ll 10.9711.99Mu0m lt1 1 61 9~ Ciolli 10 1410 1• '" o uxury, com ort and 8011 Fein J·1f 1lu Foursq F 1.s2 9.ll Mut snrs 1i11 1 ... 11 Stock 14:5114:s1
a cc essorv eauipment tvpic al :u•tt"ocK · 5 ·" ::~Pc~~IN Mull Trs xi.as 1,95 'bs GRou•~ 1
or lhe larRer luxurv cars. ,J'u~1°i~ 11.n1J.n R~,hc~. ~:ii 'i1J ~Bi'r 1~'t ,~U ;·: ~£'i?, ::;: l1~
F ord and Iacocca both ~dn Fd 21.6l lJ·~ '1-r lncm !.85 .OJ a e ,:in\ ."13 .s 'j' Te<:Flnl 6 14 ::~~ Nly SFlr 3.S6 . USr?r S 9.6110.60 Dfv!dn r j 4o 3 2 Svncro F" 6'.•I 7,08
:icireerf tha t the wrirld "1a rket N~~.,, 1g·i! l~·t: N~~ 'c~I) :ff {·# Pret S1k s:11 6:•2 TMR Al) 1.63 9,"3 ._
f?r . motor ve hicles is con. 2G11"F:ino 'r'.tt 1~:~ F~f c,w~ ,f!~ iftt ~~~Sr ::1l 1:~ +~~pi:.~ :.~ ::M
!Jn111n t? lo grow and thev nnJerl 1•0 t rfn I .01 n.OJ Fd ffi' do 9.04 9.04 Grw1h 6 . .fll 1.09 !'!.~1 E"o ',',·~~ 1, ',·',.' tnl Sns J,111•.40 ,.U OS INCP NlW ENG LF: •Uuvr _..,, that th(' U.S. sha re o f .... ·orl-' HANNING GR UP : Eoulty 15.4916.84 20!~ CG 2.!tt )tJ • !I FUPIDS: Comm 9.116 9 ~ Grw!h 10.60 l~.S1 70!11 Cl 3 87 t.19 a11tnn1ot1ve 1narkels has he ld Balt><:d 10,1311.11 lmpac 1.6.:J ~:J• s111t 1& . .0 11.1:1 UNI ON SERv1cE
l • Bnd Fd I,?() 9,~ Indus tr 10.811!.!! NEA Ml 9 20 t l"I Unlfut1d l .M 94• S e.:idv 1n the last fe\V vears com snt 1.26 1. Piloi 7.3.1 1. 2 Ntu cent 4.'9 ..:11 01tou•:
d I . Grw!h S.12 S, Ga!&~ 6.11 1.•1 N~wlh 815 a 75 Un!ll<'d l ,"6 9,7~ ~an COii d flcg1n IO Climb in fhe lncam 6.63 1.15 gE S· P .\5.A2 Nt>wloo 1~:.11& 14:1lf Brei S TY 1),791c,S2
Y I d Soecl 1.IJ 1 llO ~n !.?S 6.7~ Nw Pers lJ CS l • 13 Brei S IY 1).'9 H.51 (>;i r s ll lea , Ven1ur 8.l!i 9.13 llOUP SEC : N•w Wld n:t• 13:os N~!l Inv 1..:1 t,1 ,
WJth ret?nrd to the en{'rt:!'f i~tlNH, :!'r•Fn~ J:~~ t:tt0' ~~;~1~~1r lt~ :;·U ~~.~:,gt ,;:~~ 1i~
C'riSiS F' d h · -1 Fnd Bo• 1.29 t .O Com S!W; 1~.64 11. OcNtla 1':14 0-t UNITED FUNOS: • · -Or e mu ASli<:e•i lh::il F r~n Co ~·'J ~·6.S Gin FAm 4.70 '· '0""11:1e '.s 7.AO .. ecum "·" 1 U the e11coll"e ~hl'l,.f :u1,.. rannot ~~1 B• ~·;, 6·ijg~1.~dino;1 ~·g:n·fi o N111 'd ••.1s 11.1• ~nc1 Fe1 ;.:~1~:~~ l•P "Olv~fi hv ~l,.nicl "JI h 'c11<:m Fd I0'.511(•9 HAMtlTON GrtPr' 8~i-&~l~M'1r~.16.oe c::f~ , · · •· l'\'1 ~"-COLONIAL F11n(! t 94 t.J1 ,.,._ •>m >O ·,, tncom i'i·~~ l~·;! ...,,.,. 1· · l'UNl)S· Grw!h 6 il 1 ~ ""' •21 ,f j S • . . ,.1 nr I'll'>,,., 171""' nrn~ .. ,..;,,,. COl"I~,; tll 10.01 ,~(om 5 , 6·~1 Oo F<1d 1.i) ,.l"J c ti(: ,71 1.)6
nf ,.~,.s t-1n'1 ene inrs a"'<iv" a ~~~tv f~ 1~:~ ~:~r""tv 'i. 11:~~ o~ T~ ~::, 1~:~ v~~'l'dc• 1~ :116.r,
r1>rl.,ln Ri.,,. Grwth S.'9 •·"HfJdblo 1.'1 t.11 P,•",m,• '·.," ',·!? Vi,u"",",,,l,";.,0.1~ "' !ntom ! . .SI 10.19 1-<ed<lt 1·21 t11 "' 6. ·-· ·~F,, ........ 1L in17 th" ""'"""~r· .. Vtnlu• .16 l·'.S Htrltw .6• 1.10 P<'ll~US F' •••• ''1 v'''r \M 5 ,',' J.6,,' 'I • "' 1 l qlum G 11 . ..0 1 .olO HMefe 1 It l~.6~ Pc<1t1 Mt 1.l~ t . .l" 8 !'IC • J
,1111/n inrl110.t t"V ll All"A~;f,, .... ,1 OMMONWLTH l'"P~ CiJ •n 103<1 Ptiln S<'I •.St •.St v'w, •,·"' ',·" ,',," ' .~ ... -RUST! ma Gr 1 IJ 1.ri hll~ Fd !·'• '··· I DC .Cl '"'" 1111 lh" ffi19J1 f'9r S jl CR'1 A & 8 I.QI 1 !6 Inc tOAm 11<011 •• (111)!,JI .JO ~.IA V~l\lo"os • ' C Li• 1.A5 Inc Bo»! 6.~ ~.~• l1>tom ,,;; •.21 llN I : •, ~ h \1 1lrl 11n<I Is .,,ovlno ra.,i-il" In omo 11.• 6 .S• 1 !$Ind FAm 2.11 1,\0 Pl1cirm 1.n 1.•S 1n.v111 I'' ,. · amiJ CP •IO s.1s •~tfo<'lon e:io 101 Pin,. s1 1112 '" v,, com si !:it f'••n;in•l 1t...,11ll rarrant1rif1: 11n..f omo ffd ,.~!"!'It ltt'O'f'I l).5S lf..7? P1Qffl llE ll ,.o, ' soec1 7JU '·" . omo fd ,11 .I tlvtrn G t .11 ~.' Pion En t.tl tu Vt1drlllt •Jt • 1' f•n" flf..,"r \\•:P\111 lo jm""nv,. oncrd ,,s '' 111vCoA1 12.601j.11 Ion 1=o;1 11n11.1e v .. "'u1 1 t0 1-Sl
I I , ont 111v 1 l'O 11.:111 _11v Gu d 6.!l+I .k ~lonr ll t ts 1011 Vent !!1'0 6 O" u,-. f'""'l'lt'l...,V 'Ford Sllhi nstn ow j" r:"l"v rn<tlc 107 P•&"lld •;· t't0V11•ll'd 1 l n A t~ • . OllMI In "' ,•1 !'IV B~ 10 90 11.to Pl! CRO Ii 13A V!klltJ G• 5.n S.1) ontrtlt .09 .11 Hlffr'I ,.ll:t"• ll:OW 1 W•llS! nf 1 'O l.)f! """"'r.> Mii:'~"' ,.. Olllr~C l~ . .SSJJ,J,t"()ON ll!L ~ G•Wt~ 13101,,_ W11~" My 10 .• 11.!6 . ..,. ..,,..,,4,,~ ,.,.,...,,.., wn •II 1·'i j·S8 l'.~"6"! 11• 1• ~"'Fri 111•111•'''"'""-111 •1 \0M , WI'! I~ .JI ft l"11~t• Iv '"' '" I ,..•lllHGTGM '"''",.""" '" 1•'1 '""" <>ntf ,..,,..,,. _ 8u11 13 .-... r• <t.'" • ,. • ~· w HiJr ' 1 'n ti""' I"· e~ld<I tn113 1•"'1'1•1'n"'" .. "' '"11FrT 11•10.-'· '•·~' ,.,.... .. ..,,..., l."4' ._.,.,.,, .... ,. P" "t-AWAltl ' 1n<t. ,...... a. ltt'n~ldt 1 91 •.J' f.•elor Tl"' :1-11 Jt0UP· ,..;, "'rJ ·""' "·-·<! r.• ~ '' • i"' u"'' • .... 10.11 "'"'" bl"'"'e.r (Yln'lirf,.,...,tl,.., jn ~•I ' 9" 1on· 'fl•P· .,.,. ... ,., ,.,,,I' l"o If."'"" 11 n t1t5 , rt· F .d t6 q fO """ f' ~ -• • ,, ..... 4 t""IY 7.21 ''-" ........ 1,~ .. ,. ,.r ,,..,,. .. '' t .. _.....,....,._ I~ f 4' 1 , ••. .,.., 1'1'~"'•1 1'r,nl II ~ !J.TJ
§ Vltlh SI :f !>!! f• •·•~r· 1 ... • .. ,. ... ,,... 10 •111 "' W.-1•fv n "'11 ~
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vlrfe 't\'f\111 consumers a re 81t':~P5s ~:'P t.u fii7~ j!i : ;1 l~ l U 1! ~ :::!ir \'... !'l. detl'anding " Orl'f f!o lj " l1 '1 Tru u1 ll\ I v"'" ~ 10 ,.. 11 ,, f!...,rtt .is 1 n ' • !olY J;d 11 ) f7 TrH Sn 1? •3 13 5" \liJY""' 10 » 11.Jt ll'f_.•Cffvld('Nll.
l
' '
I
• l • • •
JO DAILY PILOT s
SIO lflillio11 Syste11a
Dial 'I' P1·ogran1
Expe nsive in LA
By LEROY POPE
U,I lutlMH Wrll•
NEW YORK <UPI) -Peo-
ple v.·ho nlove around the
country have been puzzled
recently to discover in a
num ber of communitie~ that
you first mwit dial the number
"!'' to place a long distance
call.
It seems the telephone
companies are running out of
numbers in this population ex-
plosion and greater depen-
dence on phones.
"IN s ~1 A LL ER com-
munities, it may mean that
the equipment is a little old
fashioned and not up to hand!·
ing long distance calls with the
usual 10 digits. including the
area code," said a New York
Telephone Co. spokesman.
"This is true In Southern Con·
necticut and some o t h e r
regions."
Jn Los Angeles, the whole ci-
ty was put on the number I
prefix system in July for direct
dialing of long distance calls.
It will happen in New York by
the end of this decade, prob-
abl)' in 1978. Chicago, Washing·
ton, Boston and other metropoi-·
ilan complexes probably are in
for the same change in the
near future.
"\Ye don't actually need the
number 1 prefix in Ne\v York
yet, but we have been an-
ticipating it for some month!!
and already have made half
the mechanical changeover
necessary to adapt t h e
systen1," the spokesman said.
IN LOS ANGELES, Pacific
Telephone & Telegraph Co.
said it cost about $10 million
f o r mechanical equipment
changes and about $575,000 for
an advertising campaign to
educa te the public to use the
number 1 prefix , for direct
dialing or long distance calls.
The number I system is not
expected to solve permanently
the mathematical problem
that Is causing the telephone
companies to adopt I t .
Something better \\.'ill be
devised in the next 10 or 15
years.
The telephone companies
have no trouble in getting suf-
ficient nwnbcr combinations
to keep up with their ex-
panding business out of the
regular seven digit individual
line numbers. A computer can
toss out enough of these to
prevent dupllca1lon in even the
largest cities.
THE THREE-DIGIT area
codes are something else.
Three digits don't provide
e n o u g h numerical com·
binations to avoid duplication.
But the Number "1 '' used as
"a prefix to the prefix" makes
it clear to sophisticated dialing
machinery that D call is long
distance not local. That will
give greater Los Angeles up to
152 more area code com·
binatioos, such as New York's
212 or \llashington's 202.
The switching machinery's
detector "'ill tell by the
Number 1 prefix that the Los
Angeles subscriber is trying to
dial New York instead of some
nearby community th&t has
been given the area code 212.
When New York, Boston,
Chicago and other cities adopt
the number I system, parts or
their areas will be able to use
area code numbers now con·
fined to other parts of the
country.
THE LONG RANGE wlu-
tion? The only ones in sight
are a complicated time delay
system or one which would
divide all big cities into two or
more artificial zones for
telephone purposes.
Watch Firm Selling
'Tickers' to Swiss?
, NEW YORK (UP I) -Sellin•
1-American-made watches in
Switzerland is akin to carrying
coals to Newcastle, but it 's
being done.
The Swiss have bought a rew
• American watches for years
•, just because they are in-
" teresled i n watchmaking
~ everywhere. No A m e r i c a n
manufacturer, however, ever
ma de a serious effort to
mark e t watches in
Switzerland home of the
v;orld's biggest horological in·
dustry, until Bulova began
doing so in the past year.
~fore recently, Microma, Inc.,
of CUpertino, Calif., con-
tracted to supply quartz watch
movements to a SWiss firm.
BULOVA IS NOT looked on
as a foreign company by the
Swiss because it has main-
tained factories and a
resea rch laOOratory in the
Alpine country for years.
Under the leadership of
ORDER
YOURS
TODAY!
Presiden t Harry Hen s h e I ,
grandson of found er Joseph
Bulova, the New York·based
company has become a global
operator. It makes jeweled
watches abroad but manu!a~
tures battery powered Ac-
cutron and A cc uquartz
timepieces in the United
States. These are being sold
successfully to Swiss con·
sumers in competition with
the finest output or their own
faclories.
EconomicaJly, BuJova i s
able to make the Accutron and
the Accuquartz movements in
the United States because,
although all watchmaking is
labor intensive, the advanced
tuning fork and quart i
watches require much less
assembly labor than spring.
powered jeweled timepieces.
HENSHEL TOLD United
Press International t h a t
devaluation of the dollar has
helped him market watches to
the $\\•iss. 'nle general price
scale in Swi tzerland currenUy
is one of the h.ighest in the
world. T-he Accutron at $95
and up and the Accuquartz at
$200 and up probably don't
look as expensive to the Swiss
as to Amel'icans.
ll•autiful
Stick-on LABELS
Personalized • Stylish • Efficient
Order For You,...lf or 1 Friend'
May be used on envelopes as return .ddress
labels. Al10 very h•ndy •s identificetion
l.bels for mark ing personef items such as
l>ooks, record1, photos , etc. Labe/J stick on
gl•ss •nd m•y be ustd for m•r•in g home
ctnned focd ittms. All ltbels ere printed
with stylish Vogut typ• on fin e qutlity whit ..
gumMed p•ptr.
'----------------------, lllffl M tfllt '"""'' c1;, 11111 rn•ll wltll ll,ll NI I
' , .... , """' .. L.llMI DI• .. l".O. ha IWO I I c.M,.... caw. rnu
I I I I I I I I I l L ----~~L-~!-~!~I!~~----J
' ' . . -" .. ' .
Kio Listens
To Landers?
'I
SINCE
SHE'S
ONE
OF
THE
TEN
MOST
INFLUENTIAL
WOMEN
IN
AMERICA •••
• •• Just
About
~veryone
Does
Thtit's Mo
You Can 'Listen' to Ann Lander1
Daily in The
DAILY PILOT
Stocks Prosper
Despite Hikes
NEW \'ORK (AP) -An undervalued market
encouraged prices to go higher Mond11 de•plte tbe
latest" rise tn the Prime lendJng rate bY commercial
banks. This I! wually an inhlbiUng facler on tbe market.
' The commercial banking Industry, led by ChHo
. Manhattan, the nation's third ·1arge1t commerclal
bank, wa~ the first to raise the prime lending rate
. to ~~ percent from 91>. But the normally dJscour·
aging news loft the market unperturbed.
Abroad, the dollar experienced an early sharp
decline, which was recovered suddenly as the U.S.
banks . raised in terest rates. Tbat dJd not have any effel:t, either.
Au1u1l lt7J s
American
10 llfosc Aetl"e
Finance
Briefs
eDoHarDfps
• ..
BRUSSELS (UPI) -The
dollar opened'slightly lower on
Europeap markets today while
the big exchanges In Loodon
took the day off for a bank
holiday.
Banking sources In Brussels
said the slight decline from
Friday's rates probably was
caU!ed by the nonnat effects
of supply and demand.
They said the dollar supply
may have lncrtased somewhat
as dollar hold!rs, who bought
at low rates, now felt the
prlcel were sufficiently rugh
to cash in for other currencies
at a prolit.
e Preee11or1
'\VASl!INGTON (UPI) -
Workers . who procet!ed and
sold the nation's food hist year
collected nearly as much in
wages as the farmers who
grew the cnips, an Agricultutt
Department report shows.
The report, made public
Sunday, sald the average per
hour productivity of food in-
dustry workers declined last
year despite pressure lo help
bold down food oosis by step-
ping up producttvlty.
e Monograna
LOS ANGELES (AP) -
Monogram Industries. Jnc ..
reported Friday that Its earn-
ings ror the year endt'd June
30 lncrwed to $5.36 million,
or $1 .04 a share.
Earnings d u r I n g lhe
previous ye-ar totaled $4. 77
mllllon1 or 89 cents 11 share.
Sales·f09e to $163.27 million
from $140-91 million.
e Clift Hotel
{
I • I
•
\
%! OAJl Y PILO r Tund.ay, Augun 28, 1~1 ...
TONIGHT'S
TV HIGHLIGHTS
NBC Ill 8:00 -i'The Stranger." An astronaut
crashes on another planet and becomes a fugitive
from the power structure there. Glenn Corbett,
Cameron Mitchell , Sharon Acker, Lew Ayres.
ABC 0 8:30 -"Class ol '63." A jealous hus-
band, convinced that his wife still loves his college
rival, disrupts his school's 10-year reunion. James
Brolln, Joan Hackett, Cliff Gorman. 1
" I .> KCET !l!l 9:00 -Swan Lake. The Nationa Ballet • of Canada presents the classic Tchaikovsky ballet
with Erik Bruhn and Lois Smith.
TV DAILY LOG
Tuesday
Evening
AUGUST 21
'"1111B0Illa.l1113111-
(1) 119-o-· @ CotrbMp ~ f.ddlt'• ftthlr
0 w..w °"' ... Allvt mt11e ri111t11t111
m1t1rTrft.
&JltaTtmt fl!)_,.., ......
llll-ltot ...
UICIJ_•_ a Mlwlt: (tO) "VIJ•I' 11 t11t w
ff· tltt ··~ .. (~l·fl) '64-0tn-
1111 St1ph1As, frtnda lmolen.
(J) en ,.... w111" Crollkit1
D KM 1i1111 Will''""' al Mtrw lrlftlll Sllw
GI""'"""
fEI Slit'""''"", .. m """'"" GI!) ..... Ill"""'"' ... lfl4""""'"
7"1111 rn 111 m -
(to) *Cina of '&3" (A) (dt1) '72-
JtmtS Btolln, Jotn Htckttt, Clift
Gorman. Al 1 t1n·y1ar ttuniOn I
j11loU1 husblnd, eonvlnctd that hit
wlf1 1tm lovft hi• coU•1• 1tv11,
pl111t I Milt$ of d1spe.r1t1 chtl·
lenges lor th• UTllU$pectin1 lorrntr
ln~er.
n '~'" Crlth Sllf9
€:)Dr11111
t:OD r) IM ltt fMf Ult n Ora"Ml
(') ti.,11'~ Un1ut11 "'••• f.J Lll'~@!J Sn• lib £tlk
Bruhn ~nd prim• b1t11rlna lols
5ml1h stir In the National Btllel of
C1n1da performtnct of the cl1ssic
Tr~aiklNSkv billet.
M "r.:he TRpati11
9:l0 r'°'I (1'"l r.11! Tulldlf llwir. (C)
(!Kl) Trllo.-, fl) .. Kttp • (" Oii
Dflt!M" stars Jackie Cooper 1nd
lynnt Fr~erick; .. 1S11 Wd(' stirs
Roosevelt Grier 1nd Helen Martin;
.. D~d:ty's Clrt" sllr1 Eddlt Albert
and nawn Lyn.
M ftews
fl Cet S111art
f"1 Hwthldla lllli111
a:l.fHWll MtliUM
D llwlq ltt o.nen 10:00 O :1Q) e;, NBC leporft "Hospittb. Cil *"9: (Ziii') .. ,, OW Cltkllt" Doctors and Pa!ien!J" A probe Into
(dr1) 'l! ...,. TrtoN Powar, Niu two deeply trooblesom1 1spetli ot
F171. m~dicine in this count11 lad~
(I) Slfll'l to M¥enttn the p11ctlce of 'del1nsivt medidnt'
I llkl1'
1
1 Mr Unt? and the 1kyrock1tin1 costs of ttoi-
1.nt Lucy 11'tall•11i11n.
I Dn .. If#"'* ft 19 frl New• II S1••'1111 MW ~ TT'lilll'flt Zone
II TM frtttdl CW 0 (!) f') M1rcu1 Wtlby M.D. I M•• "Hetrtbe•t lor Vtsterd•y" (R) Dr. ~Ort• Welby Joins • llyin1 physiei#n to UI"'" ... 91VI lhl Ute ol I young Hopi In·
7:• IJ ltblty lekbMrt SMw (R) difn ljllnsl !he wi~hes of the
Burl Ives 111uta. JOUlh's 1r1ndla!h1r. Chief 0111
(}) ttop11•1 """' Georae ind William Sh1tner pest
0 Met Svrpt1 "A Bullet for 0 Mowt1: (C) (lhr40.I) "Captll11
tht Genertl" Dr. lock• ind Ott.·ll frot11 Toledo .. (actY) '&6--Stephtn
Dtrt Ptlmtr uncover an 1ss1$$1n•· Forsyth. Norm1 Ben1ill. .
lion plot whtn 1 \lisitln1 foreirn dis· Ct E'llni111 at Poos '1he BoltOfl
nit1ry Is $!Kldtnly ttriden with 1 Ball1t-D111dn1 'Round th• World"'
CIRHlllJ' 1tltck. Gtorlt Ch1klris ID:lO A Tilt he•
flltsll. (A) Ont Sttr> hyoH 0 Http 'fty hl&M* (J) Tnit Adwellt1ttt 00 TPtb 11 fMr Lift r-1 Y!dat e11 ~lctl
1J Mini. t MM: (C) (2ht) Pl Los D~11 Ftllces
"IM Mlstms" (•dv) ·~ -Al•n ('!) Newt /Sporti
Ltdd. Vlr1in11 Mayo. @I""-'"'"" GI 11MtC1• m-m Citpltcf*l "R1m1liontl V•
hleles" m ShMI u, 11d Chelf
11!) ... oly
ll<OfllrJAl"ll'll!lN1ft
~ (ii) (l"J f"l Nm
,, Ont S'.ep Beyond
p;'l Perl'J Mason
(II) Trdtl tr ConMqot11m m M0¥1t: "larull(' (dra)
John Payne, Din Durye1.
. .,_
m n. M4tlll ''"'"' ll:JOfJ (!}CIS Litt Movie: •NlaM If
1:00 8 (I) lblldt (R) W1lttr It dt· Ult: l1u1Rt '" (dt1) '64 -Rlth1rd ~ about his 1ppmchln1 50th !•1rtcn. >va G~rdner, Debor•h Kerr. I
birthday. and Mtudt can't lift his 0 ®J m John"J' Cal1H Joey
spirits. Bisho'l i1 1u!st hcst.
0 IJ.J m HBC lllldl)' Movie: (C) ,_, Mowle: "!lar tf Texas" (wtS)
(Zllr) "'Tiit Strtnstr"' (R) (scl.fi) '72 W1yne Morris, P1u! frx.
-Gltnn Corbett, Clmeron Ml!chell, () (J) War •nd l'tac:t P1r1 II of
Shtnin Ac.ket, Ltw Ayr1s. An ntro-lour parts. Arthur Hill n1rr1te:s this
n1u1 cr1slles on 1riother p!111et and Russian.made film v111ion of Count
bewmts 1 furitivt from tht powt1 Leo To!sloy's cl1ssic about the RI.JS.
atrudyrt thtre. si1n 1rlstocr1cy duri"I t~t Napol. 0 Mowlr. (C) (2111r) "fortrt Intl !onle years.
Stem" (Ki·fl) 'JG--Akjo tto. m To Tell t11t Tnrth
fJ ()) (!) T1•p1r1tum • 111111 "RX: Nott Job" (R) Mllllt wints 11:40 ~ Mowlt: HMu1der by Pmy" (mys)
,11stic surpry on her JIOM tRd 65-lv1n Disney. Witter Preiss.
NOltlMI UIS up I cJostd·dro.ift P'Y 12:00 (;l;) M1r111~1 Dillon
TV sltow to pldl; up lht t1b. (I) Allrtd Hltdtcoct Pmtllb m---• Tiit ltittMMblt•
Gt ll StllClrt """ f£I filfll1U111
12:30 (I) MnYlt: "The RlfOfllltf 1M 1111
lhdtleed" (t0m) '50-JuM AllylOn,
Dlt~ Powell.
1!110 Llllldo" "1-a;J-I <O IX) "" I'll 1"1 .... r1 If ~lll'flJ' PttJof
1:30 A('!) Ntwt
1:45 8 Mll¥ft: "Wht1 Wltlle Cot11n
•• ' !,. ' . ' ~ I ., • ••
'
'Annie' Readie.d .for Lyric Opera _
ln the past three season111
si nce it.s transition rrom ltf&nd
opera to light QPera. Laguna
Beach's Lyric Opera Associa-
tion tw choser: professional
performers from medium·
densitv ga J$>xies of show
business ~o headline Its annual
late summer productions.
fessional actress -she left
the cast of "A J..ittle Night
Music" on Broadway to do the
show -but she's also a
"home town girl" as well.
TERI RALSTON, who hasn't
performed in her n a t i v e
Intermission
Tom Titus
wotked up (0 die lerullng rolo 1 ol Tony and toor<d most °' ~land and S<o!alnd. In !he ,
latler country he wu spotted
by Noel Cow•rd and ~gned for
the land In "5811 Aw1y." ,
While "Man of La Mancha"
was in :ts Jong New York run,
Holliday spelled Richard Kile1
as Don Quixote in maUneet
and played Dr. carrasco at
evening performances. He c:xr
starred with Burt Lancaster in
the West Coast production of
"Knickerbocker Holiday" and
won a '11leater World aware
for his role in "Coco" with
Katharine Ii e p b u r n on
Broadway.
I~'' Gina
The first Broadway • type
show, in 1969, S!Xltlight.ed
Marni Nixon ln "The Sound of
Music." The combined L)71c
Onera -Laguna Moulton
Playhouse staging of "Oliver,"
which ran all summer in 1970,
featured Ben Wrigley as
Fagin. And Marilyn Savage
headlined "The Music Man" in
1971 and returned as "My Fair
Lady" last year.
This season, as Lyric Opera
heads into the final two weeks
of rehearsaJ for "Annie Get
Your Gun," the leading lady is
indeed a well-trained pro-
HOLLIDAY
Laguna Beach since s h e
shared the ingenue role in
"The Fantas ticks" in 1965, will
don buckskin and take up the
blunderbuss as Irving Berlin's
irrepressible Annie Oak1ey.
The show opeos Sept. 7 for
three weekends under the
Laguna stars tn the Irvine
Bowl -vacated just two days
ago by Ute Pageant of the
P.1asters.
It'll be a triumphant return
for Teri, who prior to joining
the "Night Music" cast played
Jenny ln "Company" on the
New York stage, ln Los
Angeles, San Francisco and
London . Her wide vocal range
will be included on a recorded
musical tribute to composer.
lyricist Stephen Sondheim,
just released this month.
Behind ti1e w:g and
glasses is Gina Lollo·
brigida in the disguise
she u >ed to shoot some
20.000 pict ure·; for her
boo!: of photographs of
Italian people titled
''Italia Mia."
Celestial
Miss Holm Gives Views
·-----
Jerry Lewis
Telethon
,5et Sunday
Srw>rlAI ff\ the 'lallv Pilot
I.AS ''""~·"S -'!"'>~ .T~rry
Lewis Labor t)ay Telethon,
granddaddy rr all vid'?Q furid
raisers, Rets under way for the
eiehth t•nie Sunday evening .
The 20-hour telethon,
broadcast from the S;ihara
flotel here, was moved from
New York to Las Vegas this
year.
Entertainers signed to ap-
pear live or in pretaped
segments inclu(l~ Buddy
Hackett. hosting the New York
s~~mPnt. R:h~rt Goul;t, Sam·
my Davis .Jr., Alan King.
Carol Ilnmett. R'lwan and
Martin, Johnny Mathis, Dion-
ne Warwicke, Wayne Newton,
Don Rickles, Johnny Cash,
Shelley Berman , Merv Griffin,
Vicki Carr, Richie Havens,
Jerry Vale, Don .<\.dams , Patti
Page, Della Reese, John
Davidson, Roy Clark and
Sandler and Young.
In addition to the en·
tertainers signed to perform, a
special contingent of
Hollywood television personal-
ities will be Dying in from Los
Angeles to man the celebrities
telephones and take viewer
pied gs.
U.A. CITY AND SOUTH COAST CINEMAS-TUESDAY SOc
il.AOIES AHO GOLDEN AGl!RSl-0,.EN TIL 2:IO """'·
Co11t F"'m lilt OMl'l)e St!l•I
Cl"e"'• M1k1n ot Gk-r.cll J1d111n Lil T1ylor
D 1""" Frlr. Tfl• "A TOUCH I L. "'"'l'I t1~e1 71111 • C1I ••• , • OF CLASS" • "NIGHT & Mol.J · "HEAVY _,iu1--WATCH"
11 :U '9· TRAFFIC" P11tlei:: Ht I -11'1-
i:OO P.m. ·-:.:J~:.Y ?,c.;f,/~E';! ''THE OTHER"
aurt R..,-.t11df "MAlil ''THI: MECHANIC" ::;:· .. ~~~;t~f~i~\~· .. ~:;:; ;;;,;,:~.. 111: I
'~ •• easily the best
movie so far this
Year'' -S1ephenF11•tie1
• NEW YORK TIMES ~~
... WW. you in '62? it •
EXCLUSIVE ORANGE COUNTY
ENGAGEMENT "'•'-"-•·~•r.Jn •
Starring opposite M 1 s s
Ralston .. tbe sharpshooting
Frank Butler will be another
well-credentialed pro, David
Holliday -and it should be an
easier role this time around.
The last lime he did Ute part
was in Copenhagen, and Holli·
day didn't speak Danish so he
leanied it phonetically.
HOLLIDAY GOT into show
business by walking into an
tmderstudies' audition for
"West Side Story" in New
York and landed the cameo
role of Glad Hand . He stuck
with the show and eventually
Ernest Sarracino, w h o
stepped In Co direct "My Fair
Lady" las t year, will return to
stage "Annie ,Get Your Gun."
Curtain time will be 8 o'clock
at the 2,572--seat bowl, where-·
"AMie" will play Fridays and
Salurdays through Sept. 23.
Pianist in Acting
Debut With Soaper
m MANN
THEATRES
llSflYID SIATS
~ S.0 5,1 ~I H
ffi.. Sil. Sa ....
IOI. THIU 11ttlll. I P.I.
fi~I! 1 I HS
Sllilltll 1-J I Ul
Sllllll l·S 11
All SEATS $4.00
~1 .. rt!dt
''""'•Y •I t .rno" SI. llf.)121
Ll~Olr\AVI.
Wiii Of .. "OU
l)t ... 171
(l)NOOMl-11AllllmtW . • ""--.ml .... , ..... ·-·
HIAYY TlAfflC 111
+ HAMMER Of GOD 111
• n Oiego F..,.
, , 1 C1p._1 .. no
O!f·r•"'P .....
11\11 un &OmfMl1
THI SUNSHINE SIA ~I --THI HOT ROCK ~I
511' Ol~gp F..,
•I BID(l\hwrll
!So J
Ml·Z411
GIOIGf t. KOn llYI DUNAW.lY
OKLAHOMA CIUDI ..
Be•ch Bl¥tl. So. of G11811
010 .. ft1tw1y !34-lftl
IUll lmlOUIS
WHITI LIGHTNING ('°I
llUS I IUIT UN<lJffl
SCOIPIO t'°i
m1111l1I fH11w'11 / •
, •• , Bt1ch Bl•d.
' I H"llG• Blvd. 111.1ui
MM 1tOWINO WIHMMI
DAT Of IHI JACKAL t>tl
Wllter ...... C-.j ..,_..
Pill 'N TILLll IHI
!il M"'• _.,, (211<) "City r.r
~tit" (dr1) '40 -James C•r·
n1y, Ann Sh1rid1n.
'!t fJ((}HIWll fift.O (R) An In·
fllrl: 11 ftMll from his stroller on •
Hollolwlu sine!, but McG1rr1tt 1nd
his flw.O forces welt wnsuceesslul·
Ir fof 1 nnsom demand.
M1rchln1 Hom•" (com) '50-0111 1 ----~~~~~~~~~~~~~~;~---1 Dilley, Col'inn1 C1lvet.
Z:!O f') All·Nl~t Show: "'Tht ltlt'•
Rkttr," "IJ.231 11141 the Wrtell Doc-
~.-
0 ill Ill llC '""" "°"'' (C)
•
Wednesday
, llAYTIME MOVIES
t:• 8 (C) "Ent ti Min" (1dv) ·~
~ Qw)'ft, Sllvl1 Syms. • IOM (I) -..tO.i Jn tht Junllt" (doc)
'51-tiiri tt111hts, JtfMl Wiison. 8 ..., H 1 0.M Korst" {wet) 1'-»8 VIY)'an, Bruc1 Gordon.
l:t:te.""" .... CMS Wtst'' (com)
·~dft Al~fl. Gtlt Storm. "Slit
.... " .... ...,.. (dtl) '58-81!1
CM.
3:10 1J MoM: ''Slbway la Ille Sl:J''
.(d11) '56-Vtn JohnsOl'I.
1:00 ID "Ttnslen" (my;) '49-Rlchtrd
B1sth1rt, Audrey Totter.
l:lO 1J (C) "My FlftlMI Flkb'" (dra) '43
-Roddy Mdlow1ll, Rlt1 Jollnson.
J:OO (() "01 .. ludl" Conti. (drt)
'59--A¥1 G!rdner. Grteory Ptck.
Iii (C) """' Addl•1 -(com) '69-flh1U11 Oilltr.
3:30 CJ (C) "'Stmt tf M1111t Crlstt"
(ildw) '6l-Rory C1lhoun, P1trlci•
Bredin.
l<011 (C) "l1M lobJ '"' tlM 1-Mlp" (com) ·ss->ohn MHI&. Rich·
•rd Attenbcro111h •
UO ill-11 lOAll illtlq
KOCE, CHANNEL 50
t
STARTS WEDNESDAY
AUG . 29 IN BOTH THEATRES
lJISt~itL'}>afis
is a genuine masterpiece of staggerlng
propor lions." -Eriwardthhr, NtwSW'ttlt
[JISt~itL'}>afis
is not a 'dirty' movl&. The film Is stark:, sensitive
and completely shattering in its in tensity. Yes,
by all means. see 'Last Tango'."
·Aaron Schindler, Famlf y Circle
X RATEO·NO ONE UNDER
18 .AOM!TTE
Mode with DELlcklu1ftour
tortlU11, emottMired with our
-1•1 relrled b-• ind topped
with 1 mlkf Red IMlt uuce,
or Hot Green ChMI uuce tnd
gralld 111t11Fll chlddlr ch1111,
NEWPORT HACH
lrktel CP•lhodetl
SANTA ANA
.... Sttfft .,.,
TUSTIN
RH 1-1111
,_.. Ane fwy . tit c •• , .. ""''°" fwy.
HUNTINGTON liACH COSTA MESA
1111 w.,
e'f folnltiw
fi1tY'l 1l S • J1H • 9-;f
2 110
811~1 Stnislld Hits
"FUNNY GIRL" ~1
"OWL & PUSSY CU';
'"'"'' F19•••t "81\11 &t. ""'"',
J
I
DAILY lo'1LOf 23
01.-Record Heiss11ed
Alistak Cook e .J1e Singer? ijolden TV~s 'Blue Knight'
Actor Stars iii Four-part Se ries
Y SHARBUTf Thine Eyes" to "T·Bone HAmerica" series: '1'he Xerox. Dy JA · Corp., wh1·ch is •-~rm· g II
EARNING HIS PAY
Wiii iam Holden
Reagan Set
For Roast
' SACRAMENTO IAPI
Gov. Ronald Reagan will be
the target or some good·
natured ribbing on the Sept. 14
Dean Martin television show,
Reagan's office h a s an·
noone<d.
The show will be taped Fri·
By BOB TIIOMAS
LOS ANGELES (AP)
Bystanders at the broken-down
hotel next to the Harbor
Freeway gazed twice at t~
deeply tanned patrolman '4n
the blue uniform or the Los
Angeles Police Department.
"No, It couldn't be," they
muttered.
But it was William Holden.
For six weeks citizens in the
downtown area ..ba.xe spotted
the actor in his pOllceman's
garb. One man even asked for
street directions.
Holden is starring in "The
Blue Knight," an unusual ven-
ture io television and rum pro-
gramming. The Joseph Wam·
baugh novel is being filmed
simultaneously for U.S. and
Canadian television and for
movie lheaters in other coun·
tries.
"THE BLUE Knight" is
scheduled to appear in four 6()..
minute segments on NBC on
successive nights, Nov. 13-16.
Later foreign audiences will
see ~ 100-minute version in
theaters.
"'Ibe theatrical version will
not merely be a trimmed·
down version of the four
television hours," es:plained
day at the NBC studios in S •
Burbank. Young umg
"Apparently, the D e a n
Martin Show this year is going HOLLYWOOD (UPI) -Gig
to roasl prominent Young is suing Warner Bros.,
personalilies,.. said Edwin r11r $100,000 charging the
Gray, R e a g a n ' s press studio reneged on a contract
secretary. "This is the Ronald for him to star in the film
Reagan Roast. l~e is the _'_'B_l_•_ck_B_ar_t=.'=' =====-
roastee." '·
cwrr
EASTWOOD mrwm
DlUftEI
10 ACADEMY
AWARD$ I
Liza Ml .. 111
"CABARET"
Aho
DlaH Ross
"LADY SINGS
THE BLUES"
Iott. I• Colot IRI
NEVER BEFORE
SO MANY GREAT SHOW
UNDER ON~
I . GEORGE C. SCOTT
FAYE DUNAWAY
JOHN MILLS
JACK PALANCE
OKL HOMA
CRllOE
Walter Coblenz, who is pro-
ducing the film for Lorim.ar
Productions, the con1 pany that
makes "The Waltons."
Many of the scenes are shot
two ways. The theater version
is a bit rougher, both in action
and in language. There's one
sequence where Holden walks
into a burlesque house.
"The theater version will
show seminudity on the stage.
Naturally that won't appear in
the television rum ...
Toward the end or the "Blue
Knight" filming , Bill Holden
was playing a scene in which
he burst into a sleazy hotel
room and arrested a suspect.
THE SCENE was rehearsed
and filmed by director Robert
Butler with amazing speed,
considering th e close quarters
in which the film crew had t.o
work .
Afterward flolden, S 5 ,
sauntered downstairs to his
dressing room trailer, opened
a beer and explained why he is
making his dramatic debut in
television.
"It's a good script and a
good character," he said.
"Also, the deal is financially
advantageous for me.
"I can get a three-way
return on the project. First is
the television play in this
country; NBC has the ri ght to
tw.o showings. Second is the
showing of the film in theaters
overseas.
''THIRD IS the subsequent
sale or the film t.o television in
those countries. I participate
in all three operations."
Blues.'' Each rendition 1s _..~
Holden is earning his pay. NE\V YORK (AP) -This is preceded by informed, i~-again thls year, says tt11 be
He said he· had never worked rerun year for Alistalt Cooke, teresting musings about music repeated on at least 110
so hard, not even during his and it's a good deal for WI in and musicians. television s tat Ions on
early career under slave-drlV· two respects. Cooke , ·a -sertous student of Saturdays or Sundays.
ing Harry Cohn at Columbia. Respect one is that. }\la jazz, describes his piano style Most of the stations will
"I found the greatest sleep-ENTERTAINMENT a \Ya rd-winning "Ameriea" this way: "Let's say it's, ah. a begin it on Sept. IS or 16 and
ing pill in the world: this television series will b'.e starry-eyed amateur's attempt show it at 7 p.m. local time to
script ," he said with a grin. repeat~. starting next month. to imitate Fatha Hines." give younger viewers a chance
"Not that it's dull . But when I R~spect two is a Columbia He even sings one of his O\Vn 1o see It. h1any kids mis.sect it
got home after a 13-hour da y ReCords album called "An compositions on the album. the first time because NBC
on the picture, 1 started to loo k Evening with Alistair Cooke at It's a 1nelody he wrote during ran it at 10 p.m.
at what I had to do the next capture und ship animals for the Piano." in which the his younger days and attached Xerox also says the tl-part
day end I fell asleep.'' zoos ahnd gam1de preserves all British·born journalist, com· to a lyric that begins: "Cupid. seri es will appear on a weekly
The "Blue Knight" script is over I e wor . mentator and critic fearlessly ease a lovesick maid, send basis. in contrast to its twice·
almost double the size or a .. \Ve've cut dO\\'n our losses, sings, \Vhistles and plays thy qui\'er to her aid." h h
normal feature and calls for but it's still an expensive pi·ano. <1·n1on1 appearance -w en
nd · " "d 11 I d l'OU ~I UST get this record. it wasn't pre-empted -on the 100 speaking parts a 140 enterprise. sat o e n · h. NBC Tcle\'ision network.
locations, all in real·life parts ''Many of the animal s are llE RECORDED it about 20 __ N_••_•·_. _r_c_g_a_r _d_i_n_g __ " __________ _
of Los Angeles. Yet the deli cate and can't take the years ago. Columbia recentlY1·
schedule extends, a mere 36 changes in altitude a n cl reissued it, and you should
days, about the same as a climate; we lose a lot of thein dash do\Yn to your record
normal film. in shipping. dealer right now and get it.
,VHY DOES Holden "'ork so '·Also there is a great deal Th rtatcn to play troinbone at
of expen se in ridding the hin1 if he \\'On "t come across.
hard? anl!nals of parasites nnd It is a truly different kind of
He ~. after all'. o~e of th_e ticks: each aninial has at least ;:i.lb~n;1• The select ions ; unge
wealthiest actors .1n flin1s. HlS $100 in antibiotics before it is froin ·'Drink lo Mc Only \\"ilh I
incorrie from "Bridge Over the shippecl ·• 1-------' River Kwai" alone pays him
1
_ · __ ---~
$50,000 a year, and payments I
will extend into the 21st cen·
tury. I
OINERAL CINEMA CORPORATION
"I have an expensive hob-
by," the actor explR!ned. He1
referred to tht: wild animal
operation that he and partner
Don Hunt run in Kenya. They
Youth Dehuts
'.'APCR MOON" IPGI
ALSO:
'MAN WHO LOVE:.D CAT DANCING'
HOLLY\\100 0 {UPI) 'N.G HT 'r'!i'.i"=i~" "
Steven \Vright , a 19·yea!'-ol · ALso
California colJeae student, \\'i11 .. LEGEND r.>F
i. HELL HOUSE"
make his r.lovie debut willi l'~----------; Liv Ullmann i'1 "Z~n·'y's 11
Bride" for \Varner Bros.
•
:t4S9\'11!.1<10
f'l'e,.·p0r1 U..ach
J'hone: 613·8~!t0
NOW!
ORANGE COUNTY
EXCLUSIVE!
1r·s
"SPECTACULAR!"
"SUPERB!"
"THRILLING!"
"FUNNY!''
"DON'T MISS!"
:·Excellent."
,.
The ultimate in Martial Arts
adventure and excitement!
~ -.--...
:,.,-~· :":>.-"' 71• ~~,.?';. p ·11:,. .. -~-..... .-*" ........
" _,_ ~· CINIDDMI 20 :.
fl.. A-~'• "-"-'~.!.I ......
"HEAVY TRAFFIC" IXI
"WHAT DO YOU ~AY TO A
NAii.ED LADY?"
'iHE fh:~T OF BA R:lf:A
-'O ' -L ... CINI DOM I 21 :.:.
......... '"-''.:-11'1'~1£.
-" -·•l S IAOIUM l ~·:
.... 'l(l'..l..C.f •t. '.;"'. -.. -... SIAD/UM ·J :::
0. ..&.:.1;.1\•.L <.:..!.•<.:.~'""'
..SOllND OF MUSIC ..
NO RESERVEO SEATS
With J11I~ Andrewt
...
"SCORPIO"
'"PAP;l~ 11r ( U" il 'GJ ....
"HAr.C"tD .; l.'tU~i.:"
"LIVE AND LIT DIE" IPGI ....
'"THE MECHANIC"
"THE MACKINTOSH MAN" IPG) """ . "IULLO.. IPGI
''JFSUS CHRISf
SUPERSTAR"
PLUS:
DESI ARNAZ JR.
"RED .SKY AT
MORNING"
COME EARLY
AVOID THE RUSH!
CONTINUOUS
SAT. & SUN. 2 P.M.
AT BOTH
THEATRES
Slln11 An• Fr'#V.M• j:NpnMn
Or Ml .. • 558' 7022
-.
Plus Ryan O'Nea1 "THE
THIEF WHO CAME 10 DINNER" ~: ... ~ .. ;,•~T~H!l:.~A~T~~~-~ .. !iri. ;! •••• !!148•3102 •••••
HAlll•O• AT ADAM S.(;0$lA M!S.& "",..,_ .,.., •••11 •o"' •••O"""'•'·
RYAN
O'NEAL
TATUM O'NEAL
(PG)
"lHIEr ' 1-5-!
'llSlolSHEIU"
3-l ·II,,.. ..
I
TtCHtl!CClOll" ffi 0 (l·w-11 ....
lllCHARD BetJAm·DYAM CAllllll --·
PLUS
ROCK"
{PGJ
MATINEES
· .. ~:RLE S BRON ON
MECHANIC"
tPGI
•
FROM Fashion Island
Newport Beach STER·EO SOUNDS OF THE HARBOR
l
I
•
\
. . . . . • • • • • ' • .. • • 't'
...... 11 .... 1~' l'ILO I T11esday, August 28, 1973
Skid Row: Last Stop 11-0r Nation's Castoffs
PETE LIVES FOR SERMONS, FREE MISSION MEALS
SKID ROW MARY -MUGGED IN PARK FOR $4
By DAVE PELLEGRIN
AUKlllM PAI• Wrlltr
PHILADELPHIA (AP) -Four blocks from Independence Hall, Francis
watches a wrecking crew knock down a Skid Row warehouse.
It 's just the beginning. Within the next few months the state hopes to buy
up and tear down the half-mile stretch of flop-house s, pawnshops, bars and
· missions, to clear a path for a. new expressway.
Francis has lived there almost 20 years. Now he and the several hundred
other Skid Row dwellers will have to find another home.
THERE ARE a half-million men living on Skid Rows in cities across the
country, and urban renewal is putting the squeeze on them alJ. A new hospl·
ta! here, new college there, even new parking lots are taking over this land in
the heart of the city.
And as the demolition picks up speed, the rest of the city starts to wonder :
You tear down Skid Row today, where's it going to pop up tomorrow?
But a group of Phlladelphia social workers thinks thJs city bas a chance to
show the rest of the country that it doesn't have to pop back Bnywhere, that
you can make Skid Row disappear for good.
For Francis, however, standlng on the comer of 7th end Vine, there are
other things to think about.
IT'S A COLD, rainy morning, and he's still 50 cents short of the $1.28 he
needs for a quart of cheap wine. If you look like you've got it, he asks for
spare change.
Francis calls himself a bum. He's too old. he says, to stop drinking. So
'vhen the bulldozers arrive in force, he figures he'll just start walking till
he hits the nearest bar that will cash his wellare check.
He Isn't worried. '.'There'll always be a Row somewhere," he says.
That's just what a lot of other people tblnk.
When the Pennsylvania Department of Transportation <PennDOT) announced
plans for the expressway back in 1969, it commented offhandedly that there
were enough hotels and boarding houses in. nearby South Philadelphia to ac-
commodate the displaced men. That hardly pleased the predominantly Italian working class residents of
South Philly. Some even started a movement called "Save Skid Row."
PENNDOT HAS since backed off from that proposal. "We just mentioned
South Philadelphia as an example of available housing," a spokesman says.
"We weren't promising it as the site for a new Skid Row."
Bob McCarthy and other social workers at the Diagnostic and Rehabilita-
tion Center -a privately run agency working with Skid Row alcoholics -
say The Row can be dispersed instead of transplanted.
McCarthy likes to joke that his views are backed up by some solid, first-
hand research. "I was a drunk," he says. "It cost me my job and my wife and
kids. It also put me on The Row £or eight years"
He contends that if you can destroy Skid Row with one stroke -which is
what the expressway is going to do -you can treat more effectively the men
who want to stop drinking. "And that includes every man down there," be
adds.
"It's not just the buck-a-night flops and the cheap bars and pawnshops
that attract you," he says. "It's also the brotherhood of the other-down-and-
outers.
"WE HAD our O\VD name for The Row," he says. "The City of Brotherly
Bums."
To wipe out The Row for good, says the center's director, Irv Shand.1er,
the right kind of replacement housing is essential.
"With the state tearing down The Row in one big package deal," he says,
"it has the authority to pro~e replacement housing for every man down
there. It's the only real chance we'll have of getting rid of The Row for good.
so why not provide the right kind? This is what we have to convince the state
to do."
Shantller admits it won't be easy.
PennOOT has prepared a list or "suitable alternative housing" for the
men on The Row. H the rent is more than a man is paying now, PeMDOT -
with state and federal funds -\Vill pay a rent subsidy of up to $30 a month
for four years. And it will give the men a lump sum $220 for moving expenses.
BUT A PennDOT spokesman counters that bis department can only do so
muc~. ''We aren't in the business of rehabilitation,'' he says.
Shandler says the Skid Row dwellers want the kind of inexpensive, "whole-
some" housing that would help them get off booze. But he says they're just
not ready to fight for what they deserve .
"The guys on The Row aren't militant. They don't cause trouble. They're
just an esthetic problem."
In Philadelphia. just 10 years ago, there were several thousand on The
Row. But as the urban renewal squeeze kept getting tighter, the character of
The Row changed.
Many part-timers still' return for occasional binges. The ones who hang
on, however, are no longer the rough-and-tough hell raisers, but rather sick
old men who simply have fallen as far as they can.
They are, as ex-drunk Bob McCarthy puts it, the ones who need help the
most.
The 11 a.m. sermon at Harbor Light Mission bas already begun and the
front doors have been locked. Pete can't get in.
There aren't many things Pete has to be on time for these days, but that
short, five-minute sermon is one.
Not that he really wanted to hear the "ear-banging," as he calls it. But if
you don't make the sermon, you don't get the free bowl of soup that follows.
And for Pete, that free soup is ertra special. A few weeks back he pawned
his false teeth for a dollar.
INSIDE, James Geddes ls telling the men that alcohol is a thief. "That's
right, a thief. It robs you of your chance to stand on your own two feet and
have a good relationship with God."
The 40 or 50 men stare at their shoes.
'nlen Geddes pauses. "I know that some of you men are here just for the
soup. And I know a couple of you are here just for free bread to feed to the
pigeons."
After the sermon, the men file upstairs silently for the soup line.
LeRoy Rivers lives in an abandoned, wheel-less panel truck and cooks over
a SO-gallon oil drum. The wood he gets from a nearby fence the city put around
its demolition work.
ANOTHER black derelict has smelled the cooking and cautiously moves
toward the fire.
"Move on, you .•. scum!" LeRoy shouts. "Go get yourself a job!"
LeRoy has only one leg. He has a buddy he sends oot to cash bis weliare
checks and bring hack hali-gallon jugs of Double-A Tokay.
SKID ROW A DEAD END STREET FOR MEN LIKE THIS
DAYS ARE LONELY ONLY SOUP'S FREE
LEROY RIVERS PEERS "FROM BACK OF PANEL TRUCK THAT SERVES AS HOME LONGTIME ROW RESIDENT PAUSES OUTSIDE PAWN SHOP WITH MONEY FOR WINE .
1 ..
-..
Pla11ing for .Keeps PUBLIC NOTICE
1---.=o"°CT"l~T'IOUS eUSINlSS
HAMI STATa'-\ENT
NY Cracks Down Ttle toltowlne .,....,., •• dolltl ~11f!et1 ••: Gl.ASLll"I AU T 0 'iC'fUOltllS.
113'0 lllltbtll A¥t., f!ovn .. 111 V1llty, c.1. moe !'•"' l(IU""'fl, "* ll"'""t A,,_., ~
Fourit1l11 v11i.v. (11, '""'
On Drug Pushers Tll1t 111n!n111 11 c.ond~l.O tiv 1n !n•
cl!vlc:l1.1tl. Irle. 1(111""
Tiii• tl11.-1 w11 tUtd wlltl tt1t COUl'I· tv Cieri! or Or•"O• C:ovntv on J11lv ,,, 1973
ll-16l'tl
l'11bllilhtd 0,,.-Co.11 011/y Piiot,
NEW YOllK (AP) -"Don't
'"t caught holding the bog,"
N•W York state Is warning in
an advertising blitz berore one
of the oatloo's toughest drug
laws goes lntQ effect Saturday.
The new law requires that
persoos convicted of selling
one ounce or more of any hard
drur'suCh ns heroin be sen·
tenced to life imprisonment
and serve a minimum of 15 to
13 years before becoming el·
igible for parole.
THE SAME penalty applies
to t~ convicted or ~s
ing two ~ or more of any
major narooUc.
Similar 0 mandaf.Oi'Y life"
oeatences, but with shorter
court-set mlninwm t er m s,
mlist be meted tQ persons con·
vidted of selling or possessing
Jtsser amounts of bard drugs
or specified amounts of "soft
drugs" such as LSD.
The only parole available in
all tbeae cases is parole !or
life.
Penalties for the possession
and sale of marijuana are
..,.Dlially Ullcllanged in the
new law enacted two months
ago.
UNDER THE pre5eot Jaw a
person must be convicted of
selling a pound o.r more of
Newton's
Weapon.
Case Ends
OAKLAND (AP) -The
trial of Black Panther Party
founder Huey P. Newton and
his bodyguard on charges ol
battery and carrying con-
cealed weapons bas ended in a
hlllll jury.
• The !&-man municipal oourt
jury deliberated two hours
Ftldly and ·all day Mom!ay
"""9 ~ the)"'-.
deld1ocked.
• NeWton. 30, and Robert L. Bay: 29. were arrested alter
former disc jocltey Alonzo
Mlllor claimed U..y heat him.
e J.ot'-tf Plcn
SACRAMENTO (AP) -A
state lottery plan that once·
oppeared doomed in a hostile
Alse:mbly committee ha! won
approval on the votes of two
(...__B_RI_EF_'S _)
rDembers added to the ·com-
mittee during the summer.
'll>e lottecy would gross an
estimated '400 million a year
on the l!ale ol up to ooe billion
-Uckets, proponents
uld.
The state would collect up to mo million a year. ' 1plitUng
its take 5&-50 with local
govemmenl.
AUf\ISI 14, 2\, :ta Ind Stplembtr ., 1t73.
herojn lo receive lhe 15-year 21011-n
to Iii• lmprbcnmeoi penalty. PUBLIC NOTICE
And the sale of.any amount ofl---===-~---LSD ls punishable by 8 term "n1T1ous •0~11o1l!'ss NAMI'!! STATl!Ml!'NT of 2 to 7 years. Th• 1ontiwlrM1 '*'-• •r• o:1o11111
A k butl-•R ~•: apo esrnan said that p A R K SUPERIOR-MEAL TMCARE.
"taken as a whole," he bellev-t4A• 5,_.,,... 11~~. NeWl'IO•t 11uc11. C11!1t>rnl1. 91660 ed the new law was the Flr•' KNttlw:11•• co-~11,,,,, 11 o.i •. tQUgheSt in the nation. Wire toroorJ!lon, 2$10 Nnrtlt Gr1"(1 Av1,. Slilte 1$0, S1nl• Ant, C.1lf0f"nf1, '1791 To bring home the impact of B111it F, BQyc1, 2.510 NQrlh Gru>e1 the new penalties, the New ~v~. s11111 250, ~nt• An11, c1111orn1,,
York State Drug Abu s e ~:~~on~11ne1~ 11 t'<IMuctld 11r • eor-
Program has spent $500.000 on Flr11 M1a1tllc•r1. COl'flOl"lllon
th "Do 't h ,, 1111111 F. BoV<:e, VI~ !'rt1ldent e 0 get C8Ug t 3d• This 1111-1 w11 ll*' with Ille Coun-
Vertising campaign. ~~J"•k of Or.n;• counl't' on Julr 21,
. F·1711• !
BECAUSE OF t d Pllbll1hed or11no1 COllf 01Uy Piiot,, ex p e c e Al>Clu11 21. »-.tmf S9Ptll!TIW '· 11. l
arrest increases, the state has 1973 2599.n
called for establish'Tient of PUf\LIC NOTICE
Spe!'ial "dnig courts" to deal , 1:uos
exclusively with narcotics fll"TIT10ll'\ J1u~11o1F.ss
violationS-l The new law pro-TN 1a1~.! STi!~:'.l!N!,, dorn11 vldes f-00 dditi al · d buslne-s1 111· _, a on JU ges, I.EASE 0All.SAN OlEGO 1'79 Sol/Ill
at least 15 of whom will be in M11nct1es1er, A11111e1m, c11ntOr..111 mm New ¥ork City wht"ch has an Rotsert M. 1..uv1r1on, 17'26 c11n.c11e111c~ , L.lln1, Newporl BtKh, CA f'J.660 estimated 125 ()()() add j C t S WUUem l. LA1vertcn, 4924 Esl11!111 "bl ' ' Way, E1 C1lon, C11lfor11la poss1 y many more. e a. o £qulpment co., im south Money has been provided for Manchfft1r, Anaheim, California nm · This busl11111 Is bollng conducted 11y 1
more staff personnel at the Limited P•rtnet"sl'llp. . ha di Robert /IA. le11V91'1on prtso.ns to n e the an· This 1111ement filed wl!h 1t1e Coufttv
tlclpated inmate increase it:.::.•,;, c~;:;. °"0,:~~.1~13;
there. Kt11t1' WIUl11m1
The tough, even harsh, ap-Atton!IY •I ~•
proach to dealing with New :'~=:. ~~~: ~
York's drug problems has Tel: 1714) w.1Nt
bee I
, FmH n we corned by some police Publl!hld Or•"" eo.rt O•llY p11or • and manv in the addict-treat· August ~1. ,. and S191t"1ber '· l!;J:~
ment community as a tool for
forcing addicts to seek treat.
1
___ P_UBL __ l~C,,N:..OTl.::...:..C~E:..._ __
ment and for discouraging a 7'61• pushers. SUP1a1oa COURT OF THI STATI OF CALIJl'OaNJA FOa
THt: COUNTY OF OllANGt:
DEPUTY POLICE Inspec· NOT1ce: of ::.t.:i:::' of 1"n1T1oN tor James A McGowan head FOi: P•OIATE OF WILL ANO FOR ,' • LETT•l:S Tl!STAMl!NTAll.Y of the Pohce Deoartment's E1!1te of FREORICK J 0 s E pH
t. d" . . b' . COUSINEAU. l>lclt•fflll narco JCS IVISIOn, says IS In· NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN thll formation is that the new law virglN• corlfl'l•n hi• ftlld ~1n 1 pet!-. . . 11on for Prow1e of Wiii 11\d tor l»u1nc1
IS causing an1.1ety among of Lift~ Ttst1ment1N 10 thl petu1oner
d I d ddi reftnHICI lo Which 11 mlidt fOf' furll>tr ea ers an a cts. pertlcu11rs. end fll/il thl 11me 1nd Plfol:e "11te word is that after ol llelrl1"19 the Mll'll hit belfl Ml for
Se , , . Selllll!Tlbet' '· 1'73. al t :DO 1.m., In thl nt. 1, I m dropping out or courtroom ot Dt'Hrtment No. l 01 wld dea);na ... )o•-amounts 1 ., COUf'I, Iii 100 Civic Centtl' Orlw Wfll, In --o .... , , ttw CllY ol S1n11 Anll. C11llornl1.
says ?.-tcGowan citing various 01red Auoust 11. 1973, • Wit.LIAM S:. SI JOHN, sources on the street. "Amon~ county c1ert
ma'. •-j th , •t Wm. C. O'OOllMU or ~a ers. ere is a wa1 · flU E111 w111n1tr 11v111
and-see attitude Pk• •1_.,, c.111. ~ · , · T1h (Ut) 6tt ... 11 "I thmk when you've got -'"-r ..,, Pttn._.. dealers of this caliber saving Pubii.r.w or1ng1 c°''' 0111y P11c1 . Augulf 21, 22, ti, 1913 260)·73
they're concerned. I think 1-------'-----==
we've got good law. When PUBLIC NOTICE
you're talking 15 years 10 1
-----,.-,,..,--"----
life, you!re talking gO,Od law." flCTITIOUS •USINISS
'NAM• STATSMINT
DR. ROBERT Baird. a •• ;111 fo(lowlr19 perlOll II doing llv$lne!S
white anti-narcotics crusader SECURITY & IHDUSTRIAL SERV· • ICES. UU South Grind, ~nl1 Ana,
Jn Harlem, praised the law's c.n1. '2705
Stiff sentenc!es becaO!e they c!;1~·ni!' ~:' S1rvlcn, Inc ..
have announced Uie state's in-TN• llYllnn• 11 conc111e1.i 11r • cor· • POrlllon t.entioo that "we're playing for s.1.s. Tl'!l'IP«wv
kee " H tinued Strvlctt. Inc. ps. e COil : 81n!1mln D. lrown
"The best thin bout thi Presl~. . . g a S TNI st1ttmtnl w11 fl ied wllh Ille Coun· law ts that 1t takes penalties tr cin o1 Orlftlol countv on Au;. 1. 1973.
out of ~ hands of bleedinjt· NAGEL. REGAN .. DAVIDSON. lfll~:tnll
heart Judges, the molly-cod-ATTOl:NIYS AT LAW
di' . d nd ltlt fll. Mii• St, mg JU ges, a makes man-'"'' .U•. CA tml datQl'V sentences for pushers Publlt.hed Ora1191 c~st 01ur Piiot
nd . " Auouu 14. ?1, 2t •nd Slplembtr •· a users . 1,73 15.).t.n
The Rev. James Gusweller, PUBUC NrinCE
a dope fi~hter in Greenwich1----------
ViRa,;e. had onlv good things NOTtce: TO CRl!'OITOflS
t bout th l N._ A-76ttl o say a e new aw ,....,.,. CWtt e1 n.. s11te .,. c.11foWftl•
because "already a Jot of peo-tor 1111 c:.wt1 ., °'""'
pie have sought treatment wf~lm,11:,°!t1 ~ll:~fL\NN w"! :,~gs~.?.
I'm oonvinced the problem is cec11sed. • • • • Notke r1 hl'relW glw-n to crldltor1 of no.w dtmuushing." the •110vo n1mld c1ec:ecten1 ltlft .u ~IOl'll hlivlno d1lm1 •111lnsl lh1 111d
cteclld'enl ••• ~red to tllt l'hlm. w!tll
AT TIIE SAME 'n"'fE. the ffll nectu1ry YOOChen, I" Ille office of
I
1111 Cl1rk of tile •bOvo er1tlltfll CCHirt, or
aw has come under attack 10 preMnt them w1111 ffll nec11s.ry
from Ma o John v L" d 'fOllChef'I to 1t1e Ulldf:nkinld •' t111 office v r . m sav. of RICHARD T. SYKES lsnG V1nhir1
civil I i be r t a r i a n s the e 1v11., Ste. m. Encino. cA tU16 w111c11 11 • • the plK1 ol blnln111 of the und'"lll!lld In
C.onservative party and othfl" •II mlff•r• llW•lnlftg to the ''''" o1 wtd
Ou.rt • l bee f decl>denl, wllllln tour monllls •fttr the ers, matn v ause o 11r1t pullllc1t!on of 11111 no11ce.
the "mandatory" tile pro-011«1 AllOutt 1. i•n. • , WltL.IAM W. WlNOSOR v1s1ons. EllKUIOI' Of "" WHI
Oppon ,_ iso •te w... of said· dtcldlnt. en~ 8 Cl resu .. ,. ltlCHAlD T. IYKl!'S e Aftortfens tions on plea barJtainin'!'. for ~s_:,:.·~:1 fi~""·· si.. no
defendants and assert that the AHtmtY tor ExK.,., H!!~NTOP er a \~J by new law will be decli:i.red un· ,.u111ts~~"" Or•• C01it 0111y PU 1
-t" constitutionaJ at the ftnt COUl"f August 1, IA, 21, 21, 1973 2.01·<;,
religious groups would have Th the right to refuse to permit test . ev also ttoint to possi-PUBLIC NOTICE
abortiool in their facilities ble abuses that may. arise a.s a -----,,-=----
result of thf': law's $1,000 • '"" lmder a bill approved by the -w··.. !or t'nlormati·on on NOTtt• To c1t101Toas •---bly Health ~~--•ttee .... ""'l su,.Ealolt couaT OP TN• ~ · ~·u rf .I ) STATI Of CALl,.OaNIA fOI: Sen. 'David Roberti. (D-Los rul! i•eJI ers. THI COUNTY 0,. o•ANGI! •~et ) b d Ne. A-16m n.i• es , au t ore · the PUBUC NOTICE E111i. °'JOHN c. O'BR1E'N, oeceastd. meuure which would require NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN 10 '"'
clli
•l C-l!dllon of thl 1110vo mimed 6tcedfril
fa 'ues rtf~ to permit ,.lf:T•T1011' 1111•1M•'S lhat 111 persons hlivln; cl•lm1119aJMt the abortions to tVWt a notice to NA.NII STATIM•NT ufd dKIClllll 1rt r,qu!rtd to ftl1 them, r-T~• fnll"'Wlno panon1 1r. dolno With the necnHl'Y vovcllln. In tilt cflkt that effect: bl.lllr.4111 11: Df thl cltrlt ol thl 1110W "'l!llld court, or
!'•RI( l loo.ME'A.LTHt:ARE. ,,, to prlltl'lt them. wllll 1111 ne<:t1s•rv
•. n.t-•-ff AH•--rl F110sfl111 llotd. NIWllOl'I B, 1 ch , vovclllrs. to the und1r1l11nld '' !ht ofllce .,........ VI·~ Ctll,..,..nl1 . nMO of hit llfotner. THOMAS A. REYNOLOS,
Ff,..! H .. llhclP'O Corporation. 1 60t SOU!h Grtnd AY9111,11, lot A•lti. LOS ANGELES (AP) -Oii_,.,.. C111""!1'111Jnn, 2.510 Notti> Gr"'l'Wf Cetlfornll 90017 which 11 tilt plKI ol
U.S. ~-tricl ~-·rt Judge "·tt Aw .. Suitt 250. knl1 Arwr. C1lllOl'Tll1, "~"'" of thl i.moenlonld rn 111 m•H•fl UIO '-'VI.I lflG '2701 perl1lnl1151 to the estltl Df H id Cll(:ld'"t, Byrne denied a request for a a..sll F. aov<:t. rng Nor1h Grind w11111n '°'"' mon11>s 111 ... thl 11r1t pu11Uc1·
pr•'imlnary injunction Mon Avto •• su111 iso, s1n11 AIMI, c1111om11 iron of t111t notice. ~ -'17111 ' Ollld AllCIUtl t, 197'
day which would provide that ~:~~on~ll'llU 11 conduc:t111 iw 1 tor· !k~,~~~1~· O'BRIEN
50 percent of all new officers F\rst M11tll'l(1,.. c""*''"°" of "" 11111• of
hired
l•lll F. torce, Vic• PrHldtnt the 11boYt n•IMl:I dlUdlflt · by the Loi Angeles This'''""'"*"' w1s tried w!lh 1111 ~ ™~''"· allYNOLDI P<llice [)en.ortft\Ant be women tr Cltr1t of or11111 Counf)' on Ju1r 11. 1m ._ ~ OfeM A.,..,. V-_,,.... ' ,..m19 L• ........ (lflf. "'17
Howtver, ~e ordered the '"""'''hid 0r1ntt ct1111 01uy p11o1, T111 1111) ......
Cl
•ty •-.a.-~ite "--•in AllllUtl 21. 21 Ind ltPflfl'llllt 4. 11 A"°""' tor Allfl'Jll .. tr1trt11. w '11;:;.t.f"llU ~ r---g 1m t"9·7i l"ublllfled Ortnot COISI D111Y Pllo! ol 200 ISdicatlons by females Auou11 ,., 21. 21 1nc1 St$11tll'lblr .,
now on . fuO. HO said thal an PUBLIC NOTICE "" .....,,
all-male class ol 70 persoos I ""' PUBLIC NOTICE
IChed"led lo llart Sept_ • may MO'nCa TO C:llllOITO.I "' , IUl"WalDl COUlf OF "4• I n'4f --A ITATS OF CAL.lfOllJOA ,Oil IUl"la,tott COUaT OF THI t'~-. ... ~ THI COU1"Y OP OltANOI $TATI 0,. CAl.IPCMIMIA fOlll N1, A•mtl TMll COUNTY OIP MANOI e· De111e..,traCor• e1111i. °' AIMA i; Hva11u1:, 0tcMlld N• A·""' NOTICE 1$ Meifi;ay GIVEN lo the MOT1CI OP NIAltlNO °" l"mTION ~ DIEGO (AP) -Elgh\. cl'Odltort of "" •llOYt 11tmt11 cttetftnt lfOll ttaO.ATI" Off Wh..L AND --"•·ts -!Jo sav, offl-rs trt"ed !Ml Ill WIOlll l!IY!ht cltlMt 9jltlntt IN! CODICIL ANO ,.O't LI TT• ll 1 KUYIB .. ~I ... .., Mid llltctdl!'lt ••• requl"«I to fllt llltln TISTAMINTA•Y to teen. them trom atl•""ing 11 with '"* lll«INN '"'°'1Cl\9r1, In tht 0111cf Etllft of R.l.MONA •• MARTIN, r . :-'r of IM dlft of tl!I tbov• tl'lltltf·court, OleffNd. campaign rally fO'f' Prfiskfe.nt Ot to ptlfttl'lf thfm, wlltl thl nec..-ity NOTICE 1$ HEREBY GIVIN t111t
N,_ I ha f"ed YOUtl'llr•. It"" lllMMnitM(I ,, ""omct ft.AMONA M. SE.ATTY 1111 !!led lltrflfl • .-ut year ve u 'a o1 11er 11tornn. JONAH JONIS.. Jiil .. 1~t11 pe11non tor '"l'Obf'•-ot w111 .no Coc11t11 ~ d. vii 1Uit whlch in-n--of Jtrolt11 Tr'Y't auu.,1no. t.ont '"" fot "--".,. 'Ttt.t1tMnt1ry, ret.,tnca tMCtl. C.111. totm, wtlJcll 11 111t p/Kt of to wtrlCh IS mtdl for fvrTMr plltll(l,llltl, TrealW"Y Secretary IWtlnnt of lflt Vfldtnlt* If! •II ll'lltllfl Ind tllfl lht time •lld plk.I o! M1rlt'19 !ht
n-.. Sch i'• th ~1 nd Ptrt•lnlfll lo 1111 •t•i. °' Mid ~ """ tilJo llMn Mt fol' ftpfffnl;iet 11. 1tn, ~r U w, e r u a ""'I'll"' flWt montll• '"*' ll'lt fl"t ~ice: 11 t 100 1.m .. In t11t couril'OO!fl or Dlplrl•
,...._ lil..J..-J ri.-.t..,.. U d.J""""-lion of~· l!llfltt. (Miii Ho. 3 o! UJd COllf'I, 11 1'lO CIVIC ~~a. '3CIVI.... .,.~ De'!Cld A-• 11.1m. Ctn,ffr Df!YO w.n1. Ill tM.Cl!Y of SIJll•
U&tm& JOYC• COM.IS A111, C11lfornf•.
An American Civil lJbertJes ,..d..,1n111r11r1x o1 the '""" o.Nct Augult .n, tm
I
ol t111 1btvo nlmfill dtc«lttlt, , W~LLIAM I!. IT JOMN, "Onion attomey, M I(! b a e ,i(INAN '°"'ts, .1a. County c1ott:
---told U S Dtl 'cl 11111 '"""' '""'"' ,,_.. ..... AaTMUa O, OUYl:ilO. ~~w, . . tr1 ..._, .. ~ C•llf. t..a m .,..,... °"""' ·If a ' ";.Nt'l't Monday the actions by Tl'• t1121 u1-1cn NewllWI -..c~ c 1, nw. :i;;-..:_ bis , Arto('liltY .., MIJll\lll1tr1tn11 T1h (114) M1""7 UUJI,.~ violated clleQta l"ubl!JtitO Orlnt' CM•I 0•11• '''°' AMl"!lrf .. I 1"1ttti.tr clvJI rlg'hll. Ailti..I 21, 21 •nd Slptfmbtt ~. ii, Pvtlll•l'lod Ot'l"91 CNll Dilly ,.,IOt, 19n 2607.n Auq. 21. 2' 1111:1 hPI. 3. 1tn n1 .. n
6
'~ l
2 -
5
6
7
8
c
L
A
s
s
I
F
I
E
D
6
4
2 -
5
6
7
8
D
A
I
L
y
p
I
L
0
T
1
............. ., .... ,..,.. .............................. .;.;Tue~a~ August 2a 1913 DAILY PILOT 25
ll.All .. Y Pll .. 4tT WANT ADS
_,,, ..
MOVE IN NOW
*Vacant*
BAR HARBOR -4 Bedroon1
and family rm plus den.
Crammar school & park
"a i.1one's throw away."
Will seU NO OOWN TO
VETS!
$41 ,500
Newport
•I
Available prior
to schooll I
Due to CJ.'edit Rejections!
• Not a Condo or Townhouae
• You Own The Land
These are single family, con1·
mon wall ho1nes with 3 BR
-2 BA -lg tam rm . liv rm
• kitchen \vlth . all blms •
front yard landscaping with
sprinklers • side yard fenres,
full detached 2 car gar.,
shake & r..tission tile roofs
and ABOVE ALL • BUILT
BY AYRES!?
HcMnforS•
DO YOU BELIEVE
NEWPORT BEACH?
I~
A private wooded lot on CHERRY LAKE
in area of quiet, exclusive homes. Reserve
!or your PRIVACY now! MOVE THE
FAMILY IN 1342 Sq. Ft. from and enjoy this lovely home:
C
,$30,490 • I new carpets and drape~.
COMMERCIAL
BUY
One short block to 17th St.,
now used as 3 BR rental
plus bachelor pad. Incon1e
$315/mo. Price $ 3 3 , 7 5 O .
Corner lot 80'x87.5' Buy
OO\\', hold for value in-
crease. There is a scarcity
o( commercial property.
Drive by 170 E. \Veils Pl.,
C.M. for further info. Call
FB HA\' ,\ l11:.lf·i1
111: u:r\' 1 :\c.
f~•1,\'1 b 7S ~O~J - - ---
NEWPORT BEACH-
CUSTOM BUil T
Built by the owner/builder to
his own high standards. 3
Large bedrooms, fatnily
room, formal dining roonlt
Tastefully decorated thruout.
Heavy shake rocf. Low
maintenance landscaping &
a completely fenced 20 x 40
heated pOol. Bull t-in gas
BBQ. Priced for tbe
market ... $52,500
C. F. Colesworttiy
Realtor• ~o
* 2 SMALL HOl>.fES on one lot. Good, cJose.·in Joe. wilh
alley access. $32,900. * 4 BEOROOl\1, 2 baths,
double garage. $30,f()(I, Best
of terms.
onvenf1on•I I 0 V. Down family roon1 or formal din· ing room, but what a value
Model at Adams & Florida -this 3 bedroom, 2%. bath, , ~~-~
one _block W. of Beach, fireplace hon1e ls! Large 1-General
1-lunungton Beach. patio for your entertaining I ;;;;:::;;:::;;;:::;:::;:;::;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;J 536-1445 pleasures. All yours for only 11
$31,4j(). * CORONA DEL MAR
-2 COLORFU'-COTIAGES * -----WANT TO-
TRADE?
3 year New Triplex with
large 3 bedroom 2 bath
Owners apartment plus two
2 bedroom apartments. On
quiet cul~c street near
all schools. Owner will
trade for 18 to 2{) units?
$81,500. Call COLWEU.. -
Super t\vo sotry 4 br/fonnal
dining & den. T\\'O fireplaces
-wet bar -peneling &
go1-geous tile floors. Great
ne\r fan1ily home in
Sandpo inte.
Walker&lee llllL 1•TATI
3 HOUSES ON
300 FT. LOT
$46,000
Zoned to build more units -
convenient east Costa Mesa
location. Rents could be
$5,520 annually. Belter bur·
ry on this one. Call 646-TI 7L
644-7270
BEST BUY
COM DUPLEX
DOUBLE YOUR. FUN -own
this deluxe duplex, just 3
blocks from Corona del Mar
beach! Both have 3 spackius
bedrooms, cozy den, 2
baths, gracious b u i I t I n
kitchen, patio on sun deck! Lovely u-ee lined street and
close to shopping. For a
HAPPY FUTURE -yours
for -$98,500.
644-7270
Send for your free
Home for Living
magazine of Newport
Beach area properties
with pictures & prices.
2828 E. Coast Hiway
Corona del Mar
Rare offering of ocean. side of the hwy. prop·
erty of t\\'O houses on one lot, live in one
have income from the other. First time of~
fered, at $89,500.
CORBIN-·MARTIN
REALTORS Call Anytime
Gener.ii
VERMONT
FARM HOUSE
% ACRE · REDUCED
$29,950
Gener1I
644-7662
Rolling q:t'een la1\•ns and UNll'l.U"' "'()._.,.., stately trees surround pie-"-' L • 1 ~La
turesque Ve1·n1ont farmhouse. Old ,.,. or l d MESA VERDE
charm and architecture. Set on the golf course, 5
Forrnal entry. 'Step dO\~·n bedrooms, including ma.id's
master suite \\·ith 5th bath. quarters. Classic 1u·t·hite<:-
1\1an size den \\·ith rugged tut"!>, SycamoJ'e trees 3-cal·
beams. 1\faids quarters. 23' garage and C'xciling 'decor
TAVERN KITCHEN v:ith 1vilh praclicaJ design. Ex·
cathedral bean1s. Banquet elusive at $125.000.
4000 S Ft tormat dining. E '' •an' I UNIQUE HOMES q. • 1''n>nch doors to secluded -REA.L TORS -
Corono del Mar . ""~'n par•d'"'· wa11e<1 546-5
F ·~-who . patio \\'Ith o-r.tdoor fi1·eplace 1 ,..~~""'":"990~'""~'""" j ?r 1-1.......,. a~te and B.B.Q. RED BARN 2nd
fine custom construction and story in-law apartment 2 f1"9ht I flat"
excellent terms. 5 ~~s, guest cottages and covefed n IOft famfty room, iormal dining dance pavillion overlooking Grow YO\u· own vegetables room }arge .... me room and own your own hOme' , . e-·· . ntagnilicent free fom1 pool. Fe,....i vnur family abun: and a _glorlOUS panoranuc ENTERTAINERS PARA-~· 3~ ocean view. OISE CALL 645-030J dantly from this producing PLUS • · garden, plus hluit trees. At-
Removal of one ncm-structur-tractive 3 bedroom, 2 bath
. aJ partition expands the h?n.1e with family room &
game room to a full 2-tx2.6 dining area. New carpeting
rwnpu:s roam. New [Joor in kitchen & bath'.
AND Inclosed patio. Santa Ana
80% financing currently address -Garden Grove
available at approx. g~2%. school district. No down. VA
Top value at $1$,000. BOATSMAN tcnns. $31,800. 637-9101.
CALL 644-7211 * C01\1MERCIAL ZONE - 2 BR two story older home, I oiiiiiiii;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii t:JD.NIGEL• -
GAILEY &
ASSO CIATES
Purchase your family and
your yacht one o! the most
beautiful custom built ho1nes
on Newport's waterfront.
Imagine 4 bedrooms includ-
ing master bedroom \vilh
fireplace and sun deck, lam·
ily room with pit & fireplace,
sepata1e dining room, Ja-
cuzzi lX)Ol and a large sli p
for your boat. \Ve would
be proud to show it to you!
673-8"'°.
corner lot. $24,500.
Roy Mccardle Reoaltor
1810 Newport Blvd., C.r.1.
548-m9
*PENINSULA PT*
3 Bdrm., 2 bath home, im·
mac. cond. 2 Patios .
Bit-ins. \Valk to beach &
bay. $79.500
Call: 673-3£i63 673-6688 Eves.
associated
BROKERS.-REAL TORS
202S W Bolbccr 67l-l 66J
Information Regarrling
NEW ZEALAND
Homes -:ff Fanns * Dairies
Pacific Properties
105 !ltain, Balboa
675-6TI2 or 5-18-8796
----Assume 51/49/0 Lo•in-
Immaculate 4. bdrm with
family rm, fireplace. Dining
rm, built-ins & dishwasher.
Patio. Near schools. $33,250.
brk 540-1720
TARBELL
The
DAI .LY
PILOT
ORANGE
tOAST'S
leading
Marketplace
PRIVATE ISLAND
NEWPORT BEACH
BY OWNER
Leaving area. immediate oc·
cupancy. 4 BR, 5 BA lu.'l:ury
2 year ol.d home. r...tany de-
luxe, custom features have
been built into this outstand·
ing waterlront home • cus·
tom furniture & 1967 Cruiser
included. Excellent tel.'ms.
$279,000. Aloo available un-
furnished. For info • call
673-7782.
Bright new paint & carpets,
a h"\lly lovely home with
gardens beautiful on
tree-shaded lane. 0 n I y
$27.500.
Walker &lee llllol llTATI
546-0022
MESA DEL MAR
LARGE 4 bedroom home on
one of Costa Mesa's finest
street close to all schools,
a large park ~ shopping.
Full price $40,500. co: Ts
WALLACE
REALTORS
5464141-
IOpon E...,l"tsl
ARE-YOU A
BEACH Nut?
l mini block from the water.
Plu.s 8J1 Income_ unit above
•
HORSES
WELCOMED
rt you're looking foc an un.
usual home in ea.st Costa
Mesa v.·e have it! TIUs
charming two story Cape
COO home is a stDn(>'s throw
from the Santa Ana Country
Club. You decide if it's to
be 3 bedrooms, den or 4,
As a special bonus, this out-
standing home is located on
an R4 Jot Ali this for $39,000.
Call today! 546-2313.1
NEW TRIPLEXES
and DUPLEXES
in COSTA MESA
OPEN DAILY
Placentia at Wilson
Orange Coun ty Apartment
Exclusive Ni:ent ~7-6791
* DANA-POINT *
A secluded, ocean front
estate on the very tip of
historic Dana Point. 3 BR.,
3 ba. Spanish home on 165
ft. fronte.ge. $275,000
TURNER ASSOC.
ll05 N. CO:'\~I Hwy .. Laguna
4M-11n.:--:-:---
I~"-"" FUN ro ~ "~" ~
BAYSHORES •
$112,000
over 3,000 sq. ft. of comfort
and luxury available in this
5 bedroom, 5 bath seaside
ntansion wiU1 private beach
provided. One of the favorite
residential areas of screen
stars and entertainers. You
might like it also! ShO\vn by
appoinlment only to quali-
fied prospects, 2043 West·
cliff Dr., Open Eves. 646-7711
Lachenmyer
Realtor
ALL YEAR
AT THE BEACH
R-2/\Vest Newport: Existing
2 bedroon1 beach h 0 u $ t
briogit: xlnt Summet'/'Vint('r
Income. Ocean sic1e o( Bal·
boa Blvd. CALL for details.
PETE BARRETT
-REALTOR-
642-5200
VA $22,500 -
NO MORE
No closiru!" ("O..<its -no <kl\\'n 3
br in J;"\'lOd Santa Ana area
l • I
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•
I
·26 DAILY PILOT Turs.Cl'"Y· AUQllSt 28, 1~1.
. , • SOO ·S14
•... 9SO ·m
., _ The Biggest Marketplace on the Oranp Coast
DAILY PILOT CLASSIFIED ADS
Mobilt Horr. for Solt . • • 12:5 • 1.,
-· ....... , .Sl$•W
........ s..,,pr... . . . • ' 8$0 • '99
Reol E1tat1 Gtnffol, • · • • ISO • t99
I
I
lost & found
Mer<hondiit
... 100 -m
... 200 ·299
••• 100 • 124
• • S.SO • S74
.. 800 ·849
You Can Sell It , Find It ,
Trade It With a Want Ad [642-5678) One Cal I Service
Fast Credit Approval
....... ' ' •.•.•••• JOO· "99
Schooli ond lmtNC.lian • , . iTS • S99
Wvi<" ond RfPC!it1 . • . 600 • 699
franip<Hlalian. •••.•.. q15 • 949
• I.'------_,~~ I
I
ERRO RS. AdvertiMrS should check their
edt daily & report errors immedietely; The
DAILY PILOT assumes liability for the fint
incorrect insertion only.
HaulH for Salt )~( ..... forS•I• ]~I [~--"f_ .. ···~)~[ -. .. f.,,.. )~ I _f,,, ..
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General General
( -.. forS•• l~[~ .. f«5"o ]~
1 General General
'1· TRANS~RRED
ARTIST MUST LEAVE . Talentedly dcc'd. 3 r , Bil to,vnhouse. Spac grounds w/beaut pool
& landscpg. Lots of trees, ocean breeze in
quiet adult only community. Pe'rfect loca·
tion near Newport Back Bay. Priced only
I 42,500.
1' NEAR SO. COAST PLAZA
f' MUST HAVE QUICK SALE. Adult occup.
J 3 BR , 2 BA , w/lrg kit., brick fpl & beaut
1 covered patio. fluge cul-de-sac lot w/many j fruit trees & rm for your own garden. Own-
• er leaving state. Offered at only $32,500. I
" . ' I.
'
~HERITAGE 0J)Gn Eves.
H ~ f}hµtning a ~~~~
REALTORS
' , ........................................................... ....
General
• IYITY IUI your"'" IYICe.
Half gone in half a year and the rest will not
last long. Hurry to see this distinctive Newport
Beach development of condominium homes,
built-in clusters around handsome courtyards.
''
I'
1'
/t
General
** ** ** *TAYLOR CO.*
IRVINE TERRACE-$172,500
You'll LOVE this fabulous view of the ocean,
jetty & boating activity. Plus custom qua I·
ily-built 3 bdrm home. Walnut paneled FR ,
formal DR & 3 baths. New sauna , 3 fr-
places. Beautiful pool in frt courtyard .
''Our 21th Year"
WESLEY N. TAYLOR CO., Realtors
• 2111 San Joaquin Hills Road I ''Overlooking Big Canyon Country Club"
NEWPORT CENTER, N.B. 644-4910 I; General
/,;_CASA DE ~-SANTIAGO
: 9 ' Executive home! Ultimae in
•I privacy & deeor. LoV<'ly
' gardens provide exquisite
I General
WEIGH
ANCHOR
From your O'Nn 45 root doc k.
Huge 5 bedroon1. 3 bath
home on v.'ater. f'ully 4ir
corxJil1oned and · 1 r e s h J y
painted inside. tluge \\'atcr-
lront palio for when the sun
is avt'.T the yardarm. Pi·es·
Eight superb models. each a masterpiece of
luxury. comfort, convenience and quality
construction. Sundecks, fireplace, wet-bar,
elegant Ma ster Suite, Sun·LiteC kitchen,
private enclosed double garage. Recreational
facilities include heated swimming pool,
ligh ted tennis courts, sa una, therapy pool.
All exterior building and grounds maintenance
provided. Satisfy your curiosity-see
Newport Crest toda y!
Two, Three, and Four Bedroom Condominium Homes
from $62 ,995 r=~AL
Financing Available at 73/4 °/o *
It "'"' setting fur unique pool! 01-
fered a1 S.'"i<l.500 in Santn
-Ana's I i ne s t residential
J , area.
rnt IOC1n assuptabie at 7~i':~. from P!!cific Coast Highway t-;J;~=-;
Prk-ed at Sll;J,000. To sec and Su~ior Avenue (Balboa
/':. t'all ~2·2535. Blvd.). driote -up Superior to riOPfi;ii";ii"i;''j;'j"ji'i;i';jUf'.ijjj708fi;iij"~ij'i1'1 · Ticonder oga, end di rectly to .. Walker &Lee
~I.AL (I T ATI. ~n [ll llVftil!ll ~l~~:F~~J.~!~~1!§
I.' ........ iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiim.I * T.REE-SHADED *
: 1 LAST chance for prime Lovely 3 bdrni. Qxx1 Easl-
location condominiums. side toe. Extra large Joi.
H 621 Via Park Drive, Spac. liv ing rn1. ·\\'/fr.pl.
Lido Isle. 1st & 3rd All for S32.500
., , floor. $144,500. 675-7710. BALBOA BA9Y PROP. * 642-74 1 *
* Typical conventlonol finan cing o( 30 year loon :
Cash prlcC of Plan 1 $62.995; dO\\'TI payment
$12,695; 360 monthly payments or $36 1.00 (prin-
cipal & interes t) al 8 1~ '(, ANNUAL PERCE!\T·
.. CLASSI"FIED 642-56 i8 I \Vant ad results
Genera l
~-642-5678 \ . .......
..
,-• ,_
I ;
!·
'
01
--o·
.....
~ ~Oalil•lll'..;.ctofP.itieN.C.,lnc. •
~r-""-lletrelK.~Cor..,.•tloft,0.-MC:-..ar. -..::
General
l ....... ~ .. 1111'111 .......... _"""-'•--l<t'•~-""'""-"'"'"olo'ho-to""""'M~l>o"'4•""• ::.":":..."':'=•:,,:;;;::-~-.!t"~~~~,=~:.'::"..!.~.:..:~<...I"'-
.I
THE BLUFFS BEST BUY!
"X'' Is this super floor plan. One y r. old
condo is being offered for $69,500 INCL.
LAND' 3 BR's., 2'h ba ., lam. rm . 1800 Sq.
ft. Call Toni Escobar
$79,500 TO $129,500
French, Spanish or Ca lifornian -\Ve have
7 Ha rbor View Hills. Lusk built homes.
Pool s. panoramic vie\vs. Excel. com. loc.
Let Us sh O\V You. Burns.
EARTH TONES
... hi ghlight the interior of this 3 bdrm.,
2 bath borne. Recent \Vinner of Home &
Garden 1'our. $69,900. To see, call Howard
Wells
BAYFRONT CONOOMINIUM
Three BR1s .. three baths. Over 2,000 square
feet. Complete pri vacy. $149,000 Full Price.
E. M. Vreela nd
BALBOA ISLE BAYFRONT
Larg~ home. 2 lots : pier & floa t. 5 DR., den. ~nus playroo1n ; 5 ba. Sandy beach. 111ove
tn for summer. Excell ent financing.
$317,000. Huss Flynn
General Genera l
Otf LUXURIOUS BIG CANYON
Beautifully decorated bv Can nell & Chaffin · s. BR. _residence. 3 Fireplaces . Good loca'.
lion, With outstanding landscaping. $142,500 . P at Hug
-~ . "' ,r, o···
" ~
'
CAMEO SHORES BARGAIN
Beautiful ocean view. Very la rge living rm
& mstr. bdrm. with parqu et noors. Beamed
ceilings . 4 Bedrooms, 3 baths. $119,500.
Carol Tatum
132-4700
644-2430
--COldWill, Banl<ilr ? AIAlTO"Sr1 UUllt11Ui .. :~ .., 5 J
THE REAL
ESTATERS
VANISHING
BREED
General General
Jln,/a JJt
PRESTIGE WATERFRONT HOMES
SHOWN BY APPOINTMENT
Linda ltile Waterfront
Custom 4 bdrm., 5 bath home with view of
main channel. Soft colors, rich \VOOd panel·
ing & 3 frplcs., give a warm intimate feel·
ing. Waterfront mstr. suite has dbl. bath,
sitting area, view decks ......... $295,000.
For Complete Information
On Al.I Homes & Lots, Please Call:
BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR
341 Bayside Dr., Suite 1, N.B. 67S-6161
General General
~******************j SUPER SPECIA L-BRAND NEW
Choice of two of finest 4BR, 3BA homes in
Ne\vport Beach-Spacious interiors, super
location
OPEN DAILY 1 TO 5 PM, STOP IN & SEE
1801 Santiago Dr., N.B.
1600 Harrow Place, N.8 .
~~ • 645-7221
VI llU~211 733 WESTCLIFF DR. ~ NEWPOltr BEACH
~******************* General General
CHARMING TOWNHOUSE
MOST POPULAR large 3 bedroom/dinin g
room model, patio, double garage, bltins.
clubhouse & 3 pools. Best of all, no yard
work. Lowest priced big three at $24,300.
LOW INTER~ LOAN
LOVELY, BRI & CHEERFUL 3 bedroom
hon1e w/family room, on quiet tree lined
street. Present 53.4 t;O loan can be assumed, or
ne\v finan cing available.
.,,.~3'-HERITAGE
• • REALTORS'
540-1151
Open Eves.
General
ONLY $25,950
. . , .for this 3 BR, 2 BA,
huge 20'xZ'l' rumpus rm ..
ney.• cr11ts. Close to Estancia
High. Priced Wider market.
BACK BAY DUPLEX
2 BR units, dbl det. gar, on
large TI'xlOO' lot in country
atmosphere. Prlct!d right at
$39,950.
BEACH DUPLEX
Exterior ney.·Jy painted, 3 BR
& 2 BR, units, !'lrepl, dbl
gar. In process o( comp in·
terior decorating. Best buy
on the beach.
$76,500
1797 Orange, C.rtf. 642-tm
9='21
VIEW
Coron1, del Mar Costa Mesa
SPYGLASS! 125.150. MONTICELLO CON-
' dd . 00 - 3 Bedroom, l'' bath, The maglc l'IEl"'' a reS1J UI best shag. $192 per nw. pa.ya
Corona dt>t Mkr. We hav~ all. t.19 Yorktown, rl&ht on
thm.• tY•04rtoefand on~ tow the sciuare. bedroo!n one story available
on tease option purchase $36.950. MESA DEL rtIAn • 3
plans. Do NOT pay lodtl)''s B<.'<iroo1n, 2 bath, comp
high interest but 00 pay refurbished ln & o u t •
today's pri~ before anotht•1· Assumable FHA loan. $262
round ol appreciation! ~aJI per mo. 2878 Monterey.
67>7"'25.
CUSJ'OM BUILT HOME
On corner 101, CM Back Bay
area, 4 Br. & 2 Ba upstaira,
!iv, rn1, din. rm .. kitchen,
Jo~am., den & Ba downstairs.
OCEAN VIEW Loto of closet space. i.,..
dble car gar., 2 patio
coV<'l'S. Citrus t r e e a .
100/o DOWN \Voodland Sehl d Is tr I ct .
Dramatic 3 BR, 2 BA hozne $81,500 Owner 5-18-4732 or
has y.·allod privacy on street 531-0060
•kle and •o«mculac ""''" =n=u'-1-C_K_S~A~LE=I -vleu·s from b,..akf.,t oook, 'P' •
family nn, living m1, and Owner's request • Bring
master suite. Cll.l'pe!s/drps often! BeautlfUlty kept '3
like new. l.()(s of storage. bedrocnn 2 be.th home with
Acceu to 3 pvt be a c h e s . all the modem convroiences.
Open Sot/Sw1 1·5, \Verl/Frl Covf'red pet.io and mani·
4-7. 473.1 Cortland Dr. <'\Ired yard. Owner will h1.-o!p
in Cameo H I g h I a n d s . finance. $36,950. CAU.
$71.SOO. 67:J..3177 ~ SouthCo RealtOn.
Lovely custoni built 2 story
home on large lot \\'ith alley
access for boat, trailer or
camper. Fun game room downstairs \Vilh \\'a r n1 CllARJl.llNG vine covered
fi replace, comfortable 4 single story duplex. South of D1n1 Po1nt
bedrooms, formal din ing I highy.·ay on quiet dead-end ---------
room and full built-In · street. Units have large FOR Sale by o\\lll.'t. Xlnt
kitchen -view of bay ! · v.•ood decks with permanent cond, 2 BR, 2 BA, fam rm,
$79,500. 3043 \Vestcliff Dr., I view of can)'On. 2rxJ floor w/w crpls, drps, 2 111\nt
Open ('\:es., 646. mt. addition v.·ould have view or from niarlna, S 3 8 , 0 0 0 , ,
bay. $72,i:m. Seller will< ·c::'""="=· -------1 finance. Broker, 642-21TI or -
Walker &Lee ···~ ,,,,,.
IMMACULATE!
Adult occupied 4 bedroom
ho me in tip top condition.
The oy,•ner has taken great
pride in keeping it like nC\\'.
Yo u'll love thf.' deep plushy
carpeting and e I e g a n t
draperies. nnrl fhl' super
landscaping i:5 \\"ell cared
for. 1''ull price is just
S36.IXXl. Call lo ser. 847...0010.
6~7865. Fount•in Valley
CORNER DUPLEX NESTLED BF.IHND HUGE
South of Hwy. ~alk to the PINES & EUC\LYPTUS U! beach from tlus cha.nning . ' duplex. 2 Bdmts. car.h. ~ ram~bng ·1 ~room
F'rplcs.; y.•hite picket fencl". Classic home \\'Ith a
A reRI ~ bt.tv! heavy shake roof, pl.ush
MORGAN REAL TY carpet,, and u_nique ll~htmg, superbly t>qu1ppf.'d kitchen, 673-6642 675-lt459 master suite Y.ith private
-Old Corona de l Mar-b."'llh, loads of sq u 11. re
footagf". Hurry, \\'On't last at
$39,!m. BKR. 962-551l. So. of t11\'y. Oldt>r immac.
ho1uc, big 49' lot, gorgeous
ganlens + rental. $t(9,500. If REPO
yoo're lucky 11l Deni.son ""°"· 673-1311 $750 DOWN
DUPLEX-Comer Lot 2 or 3 BR Tov.'nhouae, hge
Xlnt cond. 3BR, 2BA, + ney.• rurytpus room dhle gar,
2BR, l.BA. 500 Poinsettia, swun pool, few left, Hurry?
open 1-5. M2-442l
First PIOMOr RHlty
Coda Mesa
General General OWNER-sharp 3 br, FIR 2
-;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; / for this immaculate, upgrad. ...,., 950 MESA DEL ?.JAR ba, S2SOO dn, 7',~ VA assum, THE COMPLETE • ed 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, only ...,.., · -tt1 pymnt& $309., 83.rUOJ;
CAMEO 2 mile. from \he beach. Vacant 3 BR 2 BA, plush 552'-950.1.
HOME shag, spotless move-m cond .. l-"==------1
Seller will pay loan fees so CO\'cred patio. IH assumable u ti gt •--h It has 1'..""VERYTHlNG from HIGHLANDS you can buy ftlA v.'ith as 7~~'iO Joan. $2G2. per mo . or ..... un n on -.c
be little as $1,(0) down, or yoo the 4 sru.,.ious bedroon1s and \\'ith :l Pvt at•he~. You nre 10~0 dn. ms t.lontercy, ,........ 1nay wftnl to assume the ex· large f1.1n1ily roon1 10 till' en-\l"l'lcome lo drop by & !'!('(' isling loan at only 51,4 ~: .. $2!1 900 POOL _ 5 Bedroom THE BIG WHOPPER
teJ1ainer's backyard. Con1-tltis 3 BR, ~,,BA + ran1. rni. 2043 Weslcllff Dr., open 3 baths, custorn frplc., qut!i H~ 2,000 sq tt single story
plete "'ilh toumllin and gas hf'auly a t ....,15 ~\'ayne Rrl., eves, 646-77ll ......_lra1J·,c ••-t. ~-"",th giant pool, 4 Bed~s. lirering. Good C'd.l'peting and Corona de! Mar. Prit·c ,..,.. ... ~. ... .. :01u 111 1 .. , ,_ .._ ._ al "'~ "o 500 II 3380 l{kF pool in hUge private "' .,..1,.,,, •urnl uuung, a brand ne\v dish\\'asher ~. . Ca 833· for yard. 1003 Post Road. Own-famlty i:oom w(!lrepl: cov·
frosls !he cake. Full price app't, er .,..111 c•~ ,_ TD at 8,1,, ered patio and la x 48 poo_!.
is just s.1!1,5/ll anc1 the 6'.~ W lk a Lee -·J i.">1. , w l 1 s49 99 VA loan .,.;,h momhly ,,., .. 1 LAGUNA HILLS a er u mm;mum clO<ing -· c::;: 84~. oo. • ,,
men~ or 1 ~ ma~ be as-RC"tu111 to nature without ....::::::::;:'o;"'_:':;'.'0::"~'~''.:' :::::::::'. $25,i';l(). l\fOt-rr'[CEU..O CON-OWNER .~uni . · ,\ ~ ls ~nc ~ g~I havinJ!: !O tame it. Sta11Ung BUDGET 00 • 3 Bedroon1, 1%. btith, location, 100. Don t rn1ss this tx>autifu l 3 BR, 2 BA. file lush shag, $192 per mo. pe.ys TRANSFERRED
one -caJI TIO"-'· 847-6010. roofed tav.nhouse n-es tled Jn 'PRICE TAG all. 15.9 Yorktown, right on Says to sell his hardly~
OPEN (IL ii• n·s FUN ro BE NICE/ \'acant rolling Laguna Hills. \Ve point with pride at this thf.' square. 4 bedroom, 3 bath Parlt,aidt-
Prit·e $26.400. _ ~1l story. This t~ the fa\IOC-THE REAL
ESTATERS
CALL &33·3.1.80 one. Great schools, near $41,fJXJ. 1-IESA VERDE _ 4 ite model wlth lonnal dln-
4225 Campus Dr., Irvine beach in Corona del ~tar, Bedroom, 2 bath, firepla<'t'. Ing huge' family room v.'ilh
MACNAB
IRVINE
~-------""·~-------
CAREFREE CONDOMINIUM
Newly listed Bluffs beauty near pool &
overlooking serene greenbelt. 3BR's, 2lf.i
baths-lush cpts. & drps. Owner anxious.
$77,500. Bob Owehs 642-8235. (F26)
ACCESS TO DOVER SHORES
PRIVATE BEACH
Bright; sunny, spacious hom&-lg. corner
lot -beautifully land scaped for rrivacy.
Prestigious neighborhood . 4BR s, 3~
baths, lg. LR, formal DR. FR & efficient
kitchen. Sl25,000 lee . B. Owens /G. Fay
64z.a235. (Fl8 )
EASTSIOE COSTA MESA
Convenient location-near library & park.
3BR home on lg. lot. Good potential.
$32,500. folfy Johnston 64z.a235. (F22)
"" Irvine M•cn•b·lrvl,. A•ltyComp•ny
901 Oov1r Drive 142·1235
'"'MacArthur "44-1200
and play yard. J ~rooms, 1.800 sq. ft. on cul-de-sac wef.' bar. Pricf'd $48,400.
2 _baths. lovely lanuly room street. Unique blending ol Tunitlc buy. CALI.. 96.1-5671 .
with Swedish (!replace. ~~, red clay tile Moor w/blo.ck
land. Only $59,500. 67~. ~'J'OU8'ht iron dividers creal\! FIXER UPPER
OPEN TIL ii • rT'S FUN 70 BE. HICl.t a fabulow;; kitt"hen-fam/dtn POOL HOME ~ ~ , ~ area. One of a kind. 6'.li 4 Bedroom J-% bath family ~mable loan, or !Or,{ area and kitch to 'the rear of
• down. 1(53 P:tlau. Do not the house On cul de sac
disturb tenant, call for ap-~ltl'et, Jo\'ely No. HWltlng-
polntment. ton Beach area close to GOLF COURSE
VIEW
By Owner
Beautlfully decorated, 11dult
~pied 3 BR & family
room overlooking lake and
Santa Ana C.C. 2 years old.
Breathtaking view. l\:tust be
seen to be appreciated.
Owner leaving area. $62,500.
177 The Masters Cl.re.le, C.i\1.
557-65.i6.
Triplex Fixer
Stan your estate he:t'I!! 1'Iessy
but sound, 2 BR units -
paint, polish and profit!
Usted at $39,000 . 10% down
or TRADE'!! CaU 645-8400.
Balboa lsl1na
1 Coste Mesa Realty
*541-7711 * A·fter 6 PM, Call 5674617
Why Wa lt •.•.
'Tll Interest Rates
Go Down??
As.<rume 6% FlfA on East!lde
3 BR, 2 Ba home, fam rm,
frplc, high beams, lgf' yd
on cul-de·sac. 645-6646. Brok-er.
Golden West CoJJere. Hard-
ly any lawn care. $34,900.
Woul d be 1nuch more if prop-
erty wllJI up to par. CAU.
84&-3317.
OWNER-popular "T" plan
home, Mesa dfi Mar. 3 IJ..e. ASSUMABLE b• w/dbl closeis, 2 ba. 2 car
gar, new cptg llv rm & m.t• -LOANS -
br, new Armstronir Solarlan BEAT 'MfE
floor cove.ring ln kit. Ideal INTEREST RATE •
loc. Walk tO all schla. TWO . FOUR BDRMS !J>me
$37,500. 545--0270. low down "'ith 2nd. Othen
GORGEOUS Mean Verde 5 u tittle as l-4500, to assume.
Br .. 3 ba.; ,2800 Sq. ft. Huge Priced a:s lowe.s S~.000. Md
country 1e1tch, bltn. elee-up.
tronlc ove:n & BBQ. 150 yds. larwln realty Inc. ~a~;:~iJ.~ ~~~st. 96M40S (24 hrs)
ISLAND CHARM CHARMING 3 "'" Ill i...l========I 5 Br, 2 Ba, sm. play room + !rpl I I flnl hed ELEG rental unit, 4J. sundf!ck, loo! 1 c, nu pan ' uni bsl ANT Old Id h , _ f p 8J.> rm, copper p un1 ng,
WO• c arm. ~t• 0 dbl. rer. lg. fenced yd on SPANISH wood, vaulted open beam llv. rm. w/balcony. Xlnt = itreet. 186 Flower St, Huge 5 BR two-Y!Or)' cbe 'kl
cond. 213 Topar. $116,000. r 548-0514 OCl'l\11. 9.mken Roman bll.th,
Owntt. 675-7604. * BY OWNER: Beautifully hrdwd' Ort bP-tttK dofl'taih!d
8albol Ponfn ula decorated ' Bt\, fam rm, and assumC si1% VA 10&Ji
------·----3 BA, comp wtbltinl, flrepl or 1ubmll Only $46 500 BAYVIEW DUPLEX &. lrt poot. Murt llff to aoo. ' ' ·
2 BR, 2 BA, one year old. , Asldnr only $42,000. 557~783 1lll~;lllll!fl
2 Obie garage~ COZY COTTAGE --·---Agent * 543-2121 2 BR, covered pallo, double fu.44 1 ( :r..J 101
Coron• del Mir garl\ge. v.'OtkAhop. Fruit'-:::::::::/ tree•. R-2 Lot. Bkr. 548-972t I'
ADORABLE duplex. So. ot 0' 61t"'C61° CaRfornla -Classic
Hwy. Xlnt locellon. 2 b• & BY Owner • 1% GI Illa!\, MY WOW •-f • •-J•--den, 1 be & 2 br, 1 bl 11.pt. Ont can take OVt!I" • 3 br. 2 ~• t • O 1n1 ......
Sy OWT!fr. 67S-48Z1 eves, ba , upgni.ded crpt, nu ltl I 54ti::B020, ext. ~,....,wtoekd&f.l d~hyce w~ 10f1ne.r. Pr1n· ON THE MODEL STREET.
SPYGLASS Hlll'11 Be11 Vu r c1pal!1 only, ~ By own~. 3 ye111rt~d. -3
R 2 ba 0 E> iou LA 2 Br. 2 Bl. i>lus la:inll,y nn New 48 • ~ • Stop. dlnlng WN.i;:.R Anx •· rce nl"ludn an au gtua kitchen'
,.~ 550 N~WPORT CENTER DR., N.B. Ntwporl 8t1ch, Callfornfa 92113
Rm. 25 Carmel Ba.y Dr. By .story, 5 BR.. huae FT. Tty Cat'Jltt• le draJ)tl tulJ land'
owner. $48,cm. Broker, '48-77S9. 111c4lped, lncltKlfng Y brick n.usrrc 1 Ut In CdM on R·2 OWNER • l Br, 2 BA, trplc, ptUo wllh cover. By apt.
loL $45,000. Princlpala only. ,.,,...ned patio on iall" lot. ooly, 816-5494 alt. 6:00 pm.
By Owner. 613-4169. ~126~.,!!llOO!!!;.c.!!32-5SIA~~!:..· ___ l!!!!.!!'!!1-.,.ea!!iii.I
[ _,., ..
dlage Reill Estate
_,
CALIF. RUSTIC
On tree lineft Sll'eci. Dra-
matic entry to ram stze Ii\'
rm w,' unus11aJ cteslgr1M
fire'pl, A dls1i1x1lvely dif-
ferent wood 1ia.neled social
center w/!.lland behind 11't"I
bar, lux a.hag Cl'Pta; 3 lrg
BR. huge fncd be.ck yard
abundnnt 1vilh tro1>ical O'\lil
trees. Uniquely dee thruout.
A niusl·Sl'!f' 'lo appl'eciate.
CALL 'The Reta! Estate ~·a1r
5,16.2551.
J
I~ I _,., .. --.
Mobll•H-~tESA Vt.nit pool home, 3 For S.le 125 BR, 2 BA, fam nn & officf'. ___ ..;;.;.;;.... ___ ...;;;.
Encld atrium plug! $49,950.
By owner. ~tr. Kent .
566-8431.
Newport leach
.,
associated
BR OKE RS -REALTO ~~
1r"l~ W 8olba,. t.11 l..,l l
I
• I •
i-
I
l
2• DAIL V PILOl
i BR, 21J ba., In Sea Tt!rr. Good octa~ view. Avail.
9/1. on yr. ltase $380.
614-161~
Puplexe1 Furn. 345
,S.llloa Island
L~ ISLE . 1vintPr to
1/10: '1·/~I ~OC'k, 12xZ&
.LR, 2 BR. food bar, stereo
mU1lc c., gar. 2 11.dult1. $115.
6"""644
WlNTER Rental. Little Isle.
\~ blk to beach. 2 le Den, 2
BA. All elec. kitchen. l..u'gt
patio, $275 w/util. Pri. ply.
Owner, 125 Jade. 675-7817
!!lboa Po~lnsula
% & 3 BR. Winter. $245 &
$~/~10. 114 E. Balboa.
7141879-5991; 2l3/3J5.-4696.
Newport Be1ch
W1NTER LeaR, 2 BR tum,
bltins, crpu, drps, close to
OCPan & bay. $250/n'lO.
Avail Sept 15th. Ca 11
675--0544 or 884-1838 or
87!nl831
l BR. ~2 blk ()ff beach,
M\deck, w/2-atr garage
• Yrly. Utlls pd. 213: S.14-4800,
;122 42nd St. NB
YEARLY-Seashor e by 5lst.
Lg 2 br, lmmed. occupancy.
$300. 548-1007/21~2
OCEANFRONT nice upper 2
Br furn. Sept. to J une. $225.
mo Adul ts, 673-8367.
OCEANFRONT -On the Sandl winter. 3 Br, 2 Ba.
$3)) mo. Avail 9/15. 675-5.lJG
Ouplexu Unturn. 350
Gen1ri1I
(..RG. 3 BR, 2 BA duplex,
pvt. yrd. I child ok, bltns,
$195mo. 847-~ll. Ask for
Cheryl Llmbe11.
Bi1lbo• Pentn1ul•
OCEANFRONT upper 3 Br 3
Ba + Den &. diahwa!iher.
.$550/mo. Yearly. 673-57'.?9
iAYFRONT yrly lease, 2
,BR, 2 BA, frplc, 2 yrs old.
·Pvt bch. $450 mo. 67;)..8762.
Oan1 Point
PANORAMIC OCEAN VIE\V
Xtra lrg 3 Br, less than I yr
.old, 27· li ving rm, bltn
kitchen. Spectacular view of
lights a l night $300. mo.
'499-2895
Newport Beach
NEWPORT'S FINEST
BEACH
BRAND r\E\V J BR, 2 BA,
Elcc kit. \V/11· erpt'~, drps.
Yearly. $350/ro.fO.
541-2819
DELUXE duplex, near heach
&. Lldo iihops. 3 Br, 2 Ba.
frplc, bltns, dshwhr, shai:
erpl6'. \'rly/mo. $ 3 5 0 ,
~1346.
Nt>w cu~1on1 duplex. l ipper 4
br, 2 ha. Bayvw. $4JO nto
yr. Lo\\·er :I br, 2 b8 $350 mo
yr. 545-2241, 644-2451.
Duplexes,
Furn. or Unfurn.
..
•
Are you BORED
with a dead-end job? Call PACIFIC
TRAVEL SCHOOL today to see if you
qualify for an exciting career in the
AIR TRAVEL INDUSTRY. Day or eve-
ning classes can prepare you for a
position as:
• Reservations Agent
• .Ramp Agent • Air-Freight Agent
• Ticket Agent •· Travel Agent
Tuition financing also available.
Pacific Travel School
610 East 17th Street, Santa Ana
543-6655
Approved for Veteran s' Trai ning
FIRST CHRISTIAN PRE-SCHOOL
Victoria & Placentio, Costa Mesa
"O ur intent is to p rovide each chil d the op-
portu nity to d evelop •s an individu•I in the best
possible way physically, m entell y e nd emotion-
e lly."
Excellent Staff -Small Cla sses -Reading
Readiness -Sp anish -Music -Kinder m•th
-Art -Science -Awa reness of Self &
others.
Pleas e phone 548·4778/073°7127 for f•ll reg·
istration info rmation.
B•lbo. Peninsula 360 Apts. Furn. I;::;:::.:::.::..:...::;.:;;::.:.::;;::; __ Apts. Furn. 360
2 Bft, 1 B!l. 212 ?.oth St., An-1 ~--------Huntington 8e1ch nual $225. Near markets. Cost• Mesi ---";.;;..:...:.:..;.;.;;_ __
644--0386 eve &: v.·eekends. $145 -$165 Casa de Oro BACHELOR & i BR .. r>ali•'·
~ ALL UTILITIES PAID I Apattmen11 for Rent [ .:;:, Compare before you l'('nt l;mmmmmilii~~T-~ICtJstom designed. featuring: e Spt1cious kitchen with in-
direct lighting
AetL Furn. 360 • Separate din'g area ,;i;;.:;...o...;::.:;.; ___ _.;,;:.:;1e 1-lomt'-like storage
rrplc's priv. garages -
Divided bath & tots of
closets. Rec. hall, pool &
pool tables, sauna baths.
s('(> for yourself. 17301
Keelson Ln. fl blk \\/. of
Beach, 1 blk N. of Slater). s.12-78-iS 1Nlbo1 Island • Private patios
---------• Closed garage \\•/storage 3 BR. 2 BA, ci<'C bltns, frplc,
\VINTER OR Y E A R L Y . e l\tarble pulhnan crpts, drps, fncd y rd .
124%1 Garnet. 2 Br, den, 2 • King-sz Bdrn1s Brookhurst & Pacific Coast.
BA. • Pool -Barbeques -sur-S290tn10. 213: 697-0042
*673-3245• rounded \\1th plush land-l\TEN, sn1all beach hotel.
WATERFRONT, 1 BR. fplc, scaping Roon1s $21.50 per \\'k. Apl.S
priv patio parking avail Adults. No Pct;; $9.i per month. 536-7056
Sept 1st.' Jnq. 4oo s. ~ LAR.GE 1 BR. $190 _ I
Baytront No. 5. 36a \V. \Vil.son · &42-19il Laguna Beach
DELUXE 2 Be. Gnrago, YCM· LOW WEEKLY RATES
l .,~ S I 1 BR npt, vie\\', close in y . ....,.,.,mo. Executive utes patio. Utlls,-1)(1. $1 9 0 . *67.>-3063 • 2080 Newport Blvd. 4!l-i.-Ji23 or 43+-9643
Balbol Penlnsul1 Costa Mesa
$35 WEEK & UP e Sleeping Rooms e Housekeeping Rooms e Ocean View Apts
642-2611
STUDIOS & 1 BR'S e FREE L~s
e FREE Utilities
• Full Kllchtn
lll'> t.tain Strttt • Heated Pool e Laundry Facilities
BALBOA INN
1 ____ 6:::Q-8::..:::lc;4-0:..... ___ e TV & maid serv avail.
\TINTER Lc11se · t2l · 2 Br. • Phone Service
OCEAN bc'ach front, 2 BR,
2 bas, .J.l50. mo. 741 Ocean.
front. •19.l4GOI.
Lido Isl•
2 BR, 2 BA, bnck fprlc, dbl
gar. \Vinrer rental. $l;O plus
util. 6i3·7593 aft 5 pm.
Newport Btillch
1 or 2 ba. Elec. bit~~· P~I ** \\!ORKlNG WO~TAN 5..i
pat. r.tature adlts. $11;,-$195. \\'ill share 3Rl\f furnished 0CF.AN!'R01\'T . 2 BR clu· 67~5.JW. apt. \\'i th same for ~~ rent plPx. Scpl. lj · June 15.
LRG 1 or ~R Oceanfront $&:;. ~lo. plus i,~ utilities lo\\·er -$250, upper -$300.
apt, $300r p!}r n10. \\'lnler f\\'Qler rurnishedl. Not ~64002-0-;;-27_,7.,-..,-=--oc-=~
rental. &16-599j deluxe but reasonable, $35 & Up. 1 BR., 2 BR &
Schools and
Instructions
Interested In
A Real Estate Career?
IN FOUR WEEKS
PREPARE FOR STATE EXAM
LICENSING PREPARATION FOR
• Real Estate Salesmen & Brokers
• Employment Assrstance For .r
Graduates With
Leading Brokers. •
• Day And Evening Classes
• Broker Referral Program
• $110.full Course /
For Information-Brochure
Free Guest Lecture
Newport, 325 No. (Old) Newport Blvd .
548-1192
EDMOND F. JACKSON
Real Estate Education Since 1964
ACADEMY REAL ESTATE
CONTRACTING & INSURANCE SCHOOLS
GI-Master Charge & B of A
I
...
This variety of fine schools
could introduce
you to a new tomorrow.
EBRONIX
TUTORING
CLINIC
READING -MATH
SPELLING
DIAGNOSTIC TESTING (No Charge)
Your Child Will Receive
Guillr1nteed l ·to-1 Instruction
At EBRONIX-Where Reading
Is Enjoyabla
2750 Harbor Suite 7B C.M. 979~ 1626
ONE WEEK FREE
SULLIVAN PRE:-SCHOOL
(Kindergarten and elementary programs also)
In c1se you aren't alre1dy f1mlll1r with the Sulllvin Pre·School ind El•
mentary School Programs, we would llke to Introduce you to our school
with a Speci1I FREE G1t-Acqu1lnt1d Week.
Without obllg1Uon, we Invite you to COMPARE :
•All STAFF FULLY QUALIFIED I SPECIALIZEO CREATIVE PROGRAMS
TEACHERS IN ART, MUSIC AND MOVEMENT
e NATIONALLY·RESPECTED SULLIVAN EXPLORATION
ACADEMIC READINESS PROGRAMS e FINEST PRE·SCHOOL FACILITIES
... HELPING OVER 5,000,000 AND EQUIPMENT, WITH NUTRITIOUS
CHILDREN HOT MEALS .
e INDIVIDUALLV·PLANNED LEARNING •GUARANTEEO NO INCREAS E IN
EXPERIENCE FOR EACH CHILO TUITION FOR VOUR CHILO
ENROLLMENT IS LIMITED.
~-~.,., CALL TODAY!
· '"'~ ~ Director of Parent Relations: Donna Finnegan or ~ 11H011l ~-~~[Y\s.J!Ulliwn 9B6e8~44r5h1 M83o-~66o
PAE-SCHOOL CENTERS rountJin V;illey Mission Viejo
{1-./'-._.>'" ••• , ........ ,,~ .. •• ....... , ..... ,11•"<• '"""""""
Yorktown Pre-School
9861 Yorktown, Huntington Beach
968-8833
-State Licensed
Opening Aug. 27th
A Gerber
Children's
Center
-Serving Mesa Verde, Huntin9ton Beach,
-Fountain Valley.
-21/2·5 Years
-8:30 AM· 12 noon-Half Dayo
7:30 AM·6 PM • Extended Day
Carol Bruder · Director
Aparl men11 for Rent
State Licensed Experi•nced
R9C)ister Now!!
Temple Sharon Pre-School
617 W. Hamlkon St.
Costa Mtsa, CA 92627
For further information r~ardlng placem•nt of
advertising In th• O.lly Pilot Schools and
lnstrucf ion Olr•ctory
CALL 642-5678, EXT. 325
Newport Air Associates
Flight School & Flying Club
LEARN TO FLY
$500.
ffhteHlet AvellelWe1 * FAA APPROVED *
Course lnclude5:
35 H ours flig ht ti,.,e i, Cessn• I SO's with
20 houri dua l instruction. Club m•mbership.
3 Month's free dues, Ind ividual in itructlon,
tailored tQ YO UR a bility.
15 AIRCRAFT AVAILABLE AT
LOWcST R.ATES IN ORANGE COUNTY
Learn to fiy now --ind hive fun I * Fly Mexico & Canada * Special Ra tes for Commercial or
Instrument Students.
For Complete Details Call NOW
979-1155
* TO PARENTS OF HIGH SCHOOL*
ASE STUDENTS:
Will they drift, or develop lhelr full potential?
The Desert Sun School, esta blished in 1930, is still
somewhat old fa shioned. We still believe in, and
offer, a co-educalional, non.sectarian high school
experience, strongly base d on sound moral , spiritual
and eth ical educat ion as well as all ol the basic aca-
demic study programs necessary to develop the
leadership and self felianc e to continue through
college, and lead meaningful successful lives. Lo-
cated 90 miles from Los Angeles in !he San Jacinto
mountains, Desert Sun has a most beautiful, peace-
ful environment; conducive to study and the devet.
opment of the whole person. Fully college accred·
lted-an outstanding, dedicated staff, with the
prorram tliat is needed by today's youth to face the
ct\allenges of the future. Energetic, involved stu-
dent eovernment backed by the administration and
trustees has led te> the enthusiastic student sup-
port of popu lar, fair discipline, allowing current
teen styles in ha ir and dress, while, at the same
time, 1 policy of, ''we don 't tolerate involvement
in drugs, liquor or tobacco". The students at Desert
Sun WANT to be there! Shouldn't ynur son or daugh-
ter be there also?
FOR FURTl/ER
INFORMATION
PLEASE COllTACT
US TODAY!
THE DESERT
SUN SCHOOi.
ldyllwlld, CL 92348
C7141659-2191
VaA<juel
Studio o/
'JJance
NOW REGISTERING
FOR FALL CLASSES
IN
TAP
JAZZ
BALLET
ACROBATIC
Ages 4 t o Adult
442 W. 19tfl St., Costa Mesa
Studio Homo
646-7286 846-3021
Teacher Director
Gloria V oliquet
Cornna del M.1r clean, comfort.able and near Bachclor11. Color TV, maid
Bay & Neu·1X11't, C.~I. no serv, pool. The l\·fesa, 415 N.
lease, cleaning fee or "l & Newport Bl., N.B. 646-9681.
Inst. SEE -afler 5Pi\1. eves OCEAN1'-RONT 2 Br, 2 Ba.
or \\'k ends. Avail Sept. lST. Crpts, drps, rcfrig, "A>.'lr,
TEACHERS LOOKING
Private 2 br, Cd.\!, 11·inff'r
rental. 623·3121 or 8J3..1691.
~pts. Fur~ ___ 3_60_ Apt. Unfurn. 365 Apt. Unfurn.
Newport Blach Salboa Peninsula Corona del Mar
365 Apt. Unlurn.
Corona del Mar
365 Apt. Unlurn.
":ost1 Niel"'
365 Apt. Unlum.
Cost1 Mesi
2079 Thurin No. 2. dryer. $37~. Avail Sep! Ll.
BACH apt. Ava.ii Scp1. _4i~. $30 WEEk & UP <213) 286-5ji0 or 646·2138.
3 BDR~1. 2 Ba house 3 BR, 2 BA, Oceanfront Con·
Newpo11 Shores area. Com· clo. Unlurn. I~ n l boa
iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii I * STUNNING 1 Br. Gitrden Apt. Pool. Ree 1:1rea. $145.
SUO per mo. Call 673-121J. f13-!MOO e Studio & 1 Bit 1\pts. OCEAN'fo.ROto.'T, Z BR,
.-__ u.--e TV & ~f&.id ~rviec Avail. decorator rul'n, "'inler or ~r• ,..... • Phone Sc1vlt-e -Htd. Pool yearly rental avail. 71'1 :
3 BR, 11:.l BJ\.
Upstain;.
757 Sha.limar Dr., C.~I.
• Children & Pl't Seerlon 548-75i5 or 213; 6;>4-7698
2376 NCl\'fXlrt Blvd .. Ci\I
548-97"".il or 64:>-3967
(Ad good roi· $5 on rent)
ClITE & fumi11hed. 2 Br. apt.
Bayfront. Priv. pRtio. \\.'inter
only, no pets. 673·30.JJ.
tnunity pool & tennis. ? e 11 i n s u I a . $jOO/nK>.
Gardcnl'r & u1il pd . _6_r.H;_296_. _____ _
$375/1\10. 642-~ or
645-4599. CHAR~11NG duple:<.. 2 BR,
newly dee., aclutts only,
YEARLY LEASES close to ocean/bay/shops.
PRIVATE BEACH Gr-:>-SJW oc 98.>-"822.
~~~~~~ ~~~~~$-
TOWNHOUSE ON TEN ACRES
2 Ilr. flr@pta.ee. pool , private Apia. furn./W\fum. Lease
al Fireplace I pr\v. patios patio&, conlinenl break· Pooi11 Tennis Contnl'I Bkfiil NICE l & 2 BR Tri.lit>~. SSO & Up. M•lure odulls ll1 E. HOLIDAY PLAZA
16th St. &U-UW DEI.UXE ~f)llclous 1 BR.
• BR 2 BA tu 1 r-; furn. apl Sl JO. He11!ed pool.
Several l & 2 br trailer/ BACHELOR to 2 Br.
2 br, l·hlk-ocean: perlo eabanas. Adults ooly. Brok· monthly. Ist & la11t .
$215 yrly; adult, no JX'IS er. 536-468{), (213) 697wl496
last. Spacious grounds, ll{'ar shopping & fine beach. Fur. 9CWl Sea Lane, CdM 644-2611
nlshed or unturnf!d'IM, from !(!!~!!ta!!cArtlt!!!!!!u!!c!!nr!!!!C!!oa!!1!!t!!f!!lwy!!!!•
• • rn ap · 0 Ample parking. Adults. no 12846 St: shq: 6'12-3331 ---------SEACLIFF l\J1:n10r A p t s . Coron1 dt l Mar $240. C.Orona d<'I ~far,
children or petg. 820 Ctnter ...,.1•
St. • &U-5M8. ,. "' 191);1 Po1nona 1\\1'., f .f\I.
LRG l Br. J Ba. apt. 1 blk to
Bay or ocean, yearly, $100
mo. GT.>-4600 day.!!. * SKA.DY EUIS-POOL l\.F\VL \' decor 2 Bit 11 Ba e Adults Ptlolllde $150 up._ slli. 1 BR SJ9o. lt1t:ic1·; ga~ 2 BR close lo ocean furn wlr
177 E. 22nd St. CM 642-364a. & \\1r. Aclulti'I, M pc1i.. pcl. Av.all Sep!. l ~,.
SPACIOUS 2 Bdrm. apt. In 6-'6-4095. 114 t.:. 20th St., 213/!M3-2928 or Len 521w9,J50
Nell Verde! Utt, older chld C.~t. \J: BWCK to beach. l & 2
OK, $160 a mo. £.9:541 sru="'D~IO~ap-t,""'"tu-m-.~p-,...,-. n BR. gara~. "'I n I er, * TRAILER 2 BR. No pt.Ui. over 40. $115/mo. 2191 avall1.ble Scpl. 1. 67J..$10
S11J utll. pd, llarillr Blvd., 0.1 across * 2, 3, 4 BR aptt * 646--UO!t. from K-ti.tart, Space 19. •2 btk IG beach, yearly
MESA Vmle 3 Br, 3 bo, I & 2 BR, lrg, $165 & $\!Ii. ~-6_13-0606 __ o_c_6_7~~1-0_
carpell A dnpes. buUUr11. N~ crp1. Swim'g pool. 2 BR. 2 BA, all bit-Ins, pc11:r
$290. 17t-m-1 Adults. Ideal tor Bachelor. hAy & beach. Avail. Sept 15.
AllY dll)' u Ille BEST' UAY 10 IB93 0.un:h SI. 5l8-9633 1275. 613-0413.
n.in an ad1 Don't tllllJ, . Need a "Patt"! P1ace an ad! ra11 ttaulll are 1u1t a pnone
taJJ !ody 6'~. CalJ 6·l2-j671, call IWlt.,Y • 642..51:1'78.
•
644-:~;u .
Bachelor 1tpl. $150 ulit pc.I. "!I!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! Pool. Ask aboul (l!Jt dii'I-I HR. Avail Sept 1~ .• $175 ~
rount plan. t52j Placentia J>('r 1no. Call 673--7245 or
Ave. NB. 548-~2. 673-9-103
\VINTER Rental 2 br, 2 bft.. 2 BR. 11pti1, frorn $210 10 $300.
l\fodern, prt, pa!io, $250. per Al90, unfurn. houses.
mo. 673-4657 \V ken d 11, BOYD Realtors 6/a-5930
~2'-l'.l-c..=='-'703=-"""-=k_d_•Y~'-· --1 $T.J0..2 BR. KIOve, frplc, vu.
South Laguna
lncld'g elec. Adult1, no ptoli'!.
32'2 lfcllottopc. Apt C, CdM
Sl\1. MChtlor for older 2 BDRM'-new crpt, redC!C·
\\-Ornnn lntcmted In earnlna orated. n>0I. $2'25/mo.
pl!rt or 1111 of rent by doing -....,,,,,.....,s,..13,,.·3850...,..'="-::-
i;:cn<>r11 I housework &: help-I "Weed It & Reap"
ing 11tith aviary. No heavy From treasure• to trash
drlnkeni or s m o k e r a . Turn them into cash
499·14)) aft. 2 P}.t. CAL.L Oflily Piiot
Br.AND Me\v 1argc 2 Br apt
w/be11.m cclllng!I, bltna &:
tree top ViC\V. 4 0 0 lt
JA~mlne, $350. 673-16.18
PRIVATE, quiet 1 bt,
w/amall sun deck. Yearly,
No. of Hwy. $190. per mo.
Avilil ~pt 151 h. 644-4064
3 BR. 2 ba $330. 435\I Oshll•. Open Sat & Sun J~. 6~1154.
SS.-2 BR. 11tove, trplc, vu.
lncld's elcc. Adullll', no pell!.
322 llellolrope, Apt C, CdM.
Claultled Ada • • •••• 642-5678. .
•••••••• • 1 • • • NF.AR BEAOI, delui<r 3 BR.
21i BA. llugc o"•nrr·~ untf
in new custom duplex. l.lc11n1 clnK. view, pntio!. fplc, nr
11hopplng, no pct11, $42:> n10.
67:J.OHO
J.jl •••!!!!!!!••
PWSH EXEC. APT.
For Le1111e. NU VJEW APT. 4
hr, 3 Ba, lam rm. All elect.
bltn!I, crpt/drps. SIJO ptr
mo. Too many exlr&11 to
menllon!? CAii 61J.69!'.12
You'll find it In t.."lttMtlltd
710 \V. 18th St. C.M.
ALL Elce. 2 BR, 1 BA . l
child OK, $1~ 1no. See 120
Albert No. 7, C~f 646-5996.
* BRAND NEW Deluxe 2 Br
In triplex. $220/nio.
&&2-3370 or 6i.H350
3 BR 1 !4BA, Spacious. $170.
2286 Canyon Dr. Re11.dy
Sept. 1st. &12-2'222.
2 BR apt near Orange Coa!il college. $170. UUls pd, a\'llll
00\\', 645-3520 ti.ft 6
LRG 2 BR. crpts, rlrps, bl!.11s, prlv. pa11o, no p e 1 s,
$165/mo. 557·5000.
SO. of I ith SL Lge ne\l.•ly
dee. 3 BR, Z ba. Adll.s, no
pcls. $225. 646-2414 A&t.
2 BDRM apt !or rent, crpt,
stove.
645-4512
NEW spacious 2 Br., carpets,
drape&, dlsh/wth, garage, 1
ptl ok. 14H81$ alt 5.
Don 't gtvl! UO the •hip!
"Liit" It In clauUled, Ship
to Shore Rewlts! 642-s618.
e TROPICAr~ POOL e
2 Br Studio, l'' Ba. Frpl.
spiral stre!';e. $200. £/aide
on 18th. 548-1168
2BR, llla, di:h/wsh, bltlns,
4!nclsd gar. l child ok. No
pets. $160 mo. Call 84&-7129.
$140. UP. Z Br; 3 Br, 2 Ba.
Pool, Bll·lr.tt, play yard.
1996 Maple Ave .... 6C-3813
NEW2 & 3 BR Eslde
Call 675-tl488 eves.
Now 2 & 3 BR E/11da
Call 6i'S-M'JS eves.
2 BR, 11'J BA Dix Studio
Sl T.> ulil pd. Shag. pool. 1978
i\Iaplc. &15-5617.
LRC. 3 BR. 2 BA, upstairs,
crpl:o;, drpt, fresh paint, nr. occ. 1119. 557--035()
A,,.R.AC. lge 2 Br, l~fi Ba 2
aty apt. Sl75. 3038 J'!Dmcn
apt 153. 494-4J•OO '
LARGE 2 Br, 2 Ila, crplK
<!rps, bl tn1. 1110. No pea J
11ma1l child. 540-8722 '
2 BORP.1, 1110\<t, refrtt
dish1vhr. T0.1 Shalimar. $160'.
mo. 96)..8936
t
sponsored by
A11l1tonce LHguo of Newport &..ch
HELP FOR WORKING MOTHERS!
NON-PROFIT DAY CARE CENTER for
preschool children, 21-0 to 5.
LOCATION: Corner of Bay Street and
Orange Avenue, Costa Mesa (St. John th e
Divine Church)
FEES : based entirely on your income
HOURS : 6:30 a.m. to 6 p.m., Monday thru
Friday, year around.
PROFESSIONAL STAFF
CALL 64U.!70 or 546-1375
ENROLL NOW!
COLLEGE PREP
HIGH SCHOOL
· e 15 to I Pupil·Teac.htr
ratio e Co1,ir111li119·Ac1dtll'llc,
Mor•I. Soci1I, Spiritu1I
COLLEGIATE JR.
HI SCHOOL
IC•rfttf•, Col .... rr.,.J
e E111ph•tisin9 R••din9
•nd M•th Pt•p•t•t1ion
for Coll•9• Pr1p High
School Pro9r11111
e E111ph11i1 011 the u11dtr• • Uniqu• Cl•1troo111
Dttign tnd Cl11t
Schtcl111in9 •la11dl119 of the 111c.1t·
1itv for ord1r 111d dit·
c:ip lin1 in 111 ar1a1 of
lift e M1ulc, Atftl1tic:1,
Oc111109r1phv
• New ClttltOOlll o • .i,,.
111d Cl111 Sch1duli119
• lrtdividu1I Atf111tion e R1!1v111t l lblt Cour111
HUHTINGTON
VALLEY
CHRISTIAH
HIGH SCHOOL
9779 Shtff'hll -
h•tn Y9'1ey ,,2.2•n
e II to I Pupa Tt•eh•r
Rttio
e M111!c, S,.-teh, Typin9,
Oettno9r1phy,
Athlttic1, ttc.
e Co11nttlint-Prt1tntin9
B1tie Principl11 of l ift,
Ac•d1111 ie p,1p1r1dn111 ,,.cf Voc1tio111I
Pl1•i1197
COLLEGIATE JR.
. HIGH SCHOO~
P.O .... ll04 ......... ,...,, c.. '2711
....._ C71 41 t62·247J
FALL SCHOOL
DAY & EVENING
TV SERVICING
CLASSES
e NEW FALL CLASSES FORMING
e LAST CLASS BEFORE INCREASE
e STUDENT LOANS AVAIL.
e V.A. APPROVED
WESTERN TECHNICAL INSTITUTE
772-7856
STUDENT JOS READY UPON COMPLETION
1440 SO. STATE COLLE6E -ANAHEIM
Schools and
Instructions
Ocean Safety Classes
For.fhlldren
$25 for c:ourse
SCUBA DIVING
LESSONS
$35
for c:ourse
TEENS
& ADULTS
Offered Mornings, Afternoons & ,,,.
Evenings. Group & Private
Lessons.
Certified Instructors
Underwater Educators
557-0035 Costa Mesa
WOOLBRIGHT~
' 4f INDIV!DUAUZID f11S11UCTIOll
-U1111NOJOH MAOt llADltfO cana-
GIAOES 1 10 12
m,~.,~
~ ......,I<_
HllM.·IM ,,M.
---llmPM!'llol ..
~l)u .... l • P.::::!n~ .............. lftUI·---·-..... -.-.
UTO ICNOOl IUOll!G & llAll QlllC
llOUlll IAllS S.7 P.M.
FIU. SPIKH & "IAlllO CUii( nnm .((( ... AlllA
SCHOOf. l'S'rOfOlOGft.At SIWICJS • MMI' IDUCAnc:w
ONISIOll • HIGH KHOOi O#'t.OMA • YOCAl'JOfMl OCMMCI
A. fUU. IWNllfO .., llUCAJION l'll08UM
PIE·SCHOGl All Pll•AIY PI05WI SQE'lllll.E'D FOi OCTDIEI
a1•J1 I ,IU..-·"-t..••-•IUIMllL•a••
897-2855
Yorktown Kindergarten
9861 Yorktown, H1111tington Beach
968-8833
Opening
September 11th
K1 r1n Travers-Teacher •.• 101/z Y11rs ex·
perlence in kind1rg1rt1n readiness, in re1d·
ing & math.
-Mu1ic
-Science
Emphasizing
-Art
-Sociel StudlH
A well rounded program for
. I st 9rade readiness
This variety of fine schools
could introduce
you to a new tomorrow.
ST. ANDREW'S
KINDERGARTEN
• Individual attentloo
• Small Class Room
• Enriched
Curriculum
• Christian Nuture
• Accredited
Fill Registrations Available
St Andrew's Presbyterian Church
600 St. Andrews Rd., Newport BHch
* * 646-4646 * * * * 646-7147 * *
Astrology Classes
NOW FORMING
Begtnnen ... Advanced
Offers Complete Astrology
Services
* PERSONAL HOROSCOPES
* ASTROLOGY BOOKS
*UNIQUE GIFTS
*CLASS INSTRUCTION
Barton Morse Judy Zintl
712 E. BALBOA BLVD.
BALBOA PENINSULA
Houn 11 A.M •• 4 P.M.-Cloaod Sunday
675-6661 • 67$.2140 • 49:1-3893
.. •
T _ ...... _~r._•_uoun:__Z~8:_1~91~3---~~~~o~~~L~Y~Pl~LO~T~2~9~~
..... Jf,il I
For further in!ormati011 regarding placement of 1 ';iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~~-~ advertisinf in the Daily Pilol Schools and 11 nstructlon Directory Rentals to Shire
CALL 642-5678. EXT. 325
Positions Available
VETERANS
Earn up to $2,200 going to '
ORANGE COAST COLLEGE
for the school year
Got questions? Call the new OCC
Veteran's Affairs Office
in Student Services 834-5646
Monday-Friday 8 a.m. to 5 p.m
You can get help with tutorial
assistance, financial aid,
counseling, and many more
services.
REGISTRATION
Aug. 16 through Sept. 14
SHARE rny PlLl'k Ntwpo11
apt. 2 BR, 2 Ba. Furn. fe1n.
25-35 Jan 64irl480 or I
113.1-2622.
3 BR 2 Ba house to share in J
llB, $85 mo ut'ilities. * 962-2913 * 1
for Roni
Office RentaJ 440 i
OFRCE SPACE . I
7200 sq. ft, all or part, single !
offices or suites, near l Harbor &. Newport, Costa
Me58 3.5c per sq. tt. Mr. I
Denver No. 293 -Phorw= I
630-1so1 I
PRESTIGE
OFFICES
FounteJn Valley, Beauti·
lul new bulldhlg, ground
floor, 3,000 square teet.
will divide into smaller 1
offices. 50c per square
foot, includes carpeta,
drapes, all utiJJtles, Jan1·
tor service. Call Marib1n
Stovall (nil 832-5440. 11"'""N'!"E!!w~o!'!!F~P'!"1c:!'lE:!'ls"""~1
1
·
~~~~~ AIRPORT ;;: No leue req 'd, tull service; '
drps, Cpll, music, air cond.~
all util. Single omcea from
$125. mo. NEWPORT CHRISTIAN
CENTER· PRE-SCHOOL
883 W. 15th Street
Newport Beac:lf
ENROLL NOW
FOR FALL
Superb
Facilities
Hot Lunches
Qu1llflod
Teachers
Near H019
Ho1plt1I
For Further lnform•tion
Plea1e Call 646-7117
PALISADES CENTER i
211112 S. E. Bristol
Newport Beach 557-1010 I
<Ca.!!1PU5-}fvtne Intersection}
BAYFRONT OFFICES ·i' Prestige offices overlookin
Balboa Bay in Newport
Beach. Various size suiteS 'I
as 10\v as $120 per mo. In· I eludes drps, crpt, utilities,
janitorial services. Monthly 1 or lease. 3700 Newport Blvd., '
NB. 675-1220. I
*COSTA MESA* I New office building . Three
J'OOm suite available, 700 sq. tt. ALSO 2,000 sq. n .. all
or part, All utilities, jani.
tor S<'rvlce. 2706 Harbor
Blvd. Robert Nattress, Rltr.
642·1485.
OCEAN VIEW
Spacious. exec. of'flee in )I
Union Bank Bldg., Newpo
Center w/recept. are a,
phone service. Xerox & part 1
tin1e secy. i'llr. McFarland, J
644-9440. .
Ap.nmont5 for Rent
LEASE -4 rm office '
Bldg, C.M. $250 per mo . 1•
Perfect for architects, ·
small mfg business, etc.
M·l zone. AGT. 6(6.3255
BUSIEST lntenection i n I
Newport Har~r. Second .
story In Umque Hornes l
Building. 800 sq. ft. at ;
$350/mo.; 600 sq. ft. at 1
$300/mo. Both \vith views. I~! --tar-I~ I ~----;;ll!l;;:1~~~fflee for lea,., 'iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii.:~~ ·--------1300 sq ft, F.V. Shopping I Center. P a r t i al 1 y part!·
~pt." Unfum;..... __ 365 Apt. Unl~m. __ ...;365::: Apt. Unfum. 365 Apia !~~. ,,!.~-mo. / days
·-·1rn. r.ir Unfurn 370 ~. '11J!J"'V.U1 eves week· Co1t1 Mau Huntington Buch Newport Beach ends.
·---Huntiftgton Buch FUU. SERVICE NEWLY decor. 2 Br, 2 Ba LRG 2 Br, 1~ Ba, studio. THE NEW Westcliff Buikii"I 1 $215. 1 BR, $170. lnctd's gas Encl gar, mature couple, oo BAYVIOOD APART'MENTS DGELUXE AdWl Poolside Corner Westcli!f Drive & I
& wtr. Adults, no pets. pets. $15?.50/mo. 842--0350. in Newport Beach are arden Bungalow. N r . Irvine Blvd., Newport :
646-4095. 114 E. ~lh St., EXTRA Lrg -2 BR, 2 BA ready, The sales office is ~· F)-plc, lrg patio, 6 Beach. Mr. Howard : !
C.M. Dlx poolside apt. Nr. beach. open daily from 10 AM to ~~ ... sauna, tennis . 645-6101.
Dana Potnl $160. 2320 F1orida. 53&-5882. 6: 30 PM. MacArthur Blvd. ~ "'=--,;::::--=.....,,::-::--: Hu.ti~ Herbour & San Joaquin Hills Road. 1 Bc:tnn. From $135. C.D.M. 900, 800, 500 Sq. Ft. I
OCEAN vi · 2 1 ,,.,_, N From 37 cents. Air cond, ew, spacious, ge :..o===;...:..=;:.::;::.._ 644-5555 ewport Buch priv. parking . will '.
bdrmsd • •. 2 _Ba, new crpbl ts, && FOR rent or lease. brand OCEANFRONT • or 3 Br redecorate. 2700 E. c.cut ·I rps, 1n1ng area, tns new 2BR Townhouse, awim· BACHELOR APARTMENT • H CW Mast Owner
yard. $1~. 837-3927 or ming pool & rec,. clae to -Near the Ocean, New, Days 213: 338-8461 ext. 419 Re~f.or' 6~ ers • ; :
837-5178 ocean. Patio & very private. FuU, Securlty, Pool, Gym, or wknd11 A: aft 5, collect ' t
2 BDRM with Jots of grass, Must see to appreciat~. call Sauna, $180. Aak for 1 ~213~,~695-~IOS~l~~~~~ l2CXI SQ. Ft. office bid&· I "'ell landscpd. 4 unit build· collect, 213; :Q2-442i a.ft Maureen, 64.7-6242. Harbor Blvd K-Mart, Pen·
\ng. $190. TI<l-968-3563, coUec· 7pm ney'11 area. Plenty of prk'g. 1 I
five toll. LUXURIOUS waterfront LARGE 2 Br, 2 Ba. Gar. UiO I~ 380 w. Wilson CM. 20c per I
condo. Priv, boat slip at your mo. Yearly. Call; 543-a912 II:.,.. ~ st. ft. Ph: 642-D I
Huntington Beach door. Spectacular ma i n or 675-3600 I ~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~iiiii~ DESK space available $.30
channel view. Be au t . 11 mo. Will provide turnlture
VILLA YORBA d ted 2 BR 2 B San Clemente R at IS mo. Ans-"'·• oervke 'I ecora " a., ~c..:;::;::;::::;:::.... ___ I ooms 400 available. 1'1875Be:'ch Blvd. I APTS. trptc.. patkl, garage. 1500
16000 Villa Yorba Mo., lease. 544-4223. NEW large 2 BR, 1%. ha, ROOMS $20 wk up w/ktt S30 Huntington Beach. 642-4321 '
Huntington Beach plu.s gar & shop, 314 A. Del -.vk up apts. Children & pet OFFICE Space, Start your
(Otf San Diego F'nvy .. So. on Mes• Verda Mar, quality extras. Adults, section. 2376 Newport Blvd., day with a Harbour View.
Beach Blvd .. 1 blk. beyond '-'=-'-=;.;:..____ 492--2264. CM. 548-9755, 645.-3967. Space now avail In the Lido
Edinger to Stark, E. to DLX 2 & 3 BR, 2 Ba, encl San Ju•n Capllfr•no Rooms $20 &: Up. Overlook· building. 673-4156 • 1
Malaga, tum right.) gar. $170 up. Rental Ofc., ing harbor & ocean. 'ii -blk 1617 WESTCLIFF-NB !
714/842·9622 3095 Mace Ave. 546-1034. 2BR condo, 1 ha, stove, ocean. 2500 Seaview, Cc:lM. 2300, ~ • ~Sq, Ft. Ample -, refrlg, crpts, drpa. 2 miles ·-"' ~ HARBOUR VILLAGE H""'-Newport Beach New Marina f"lf'VI -~-Ulil Ba,, .......... ~~-I
tington Harbour are~. 0;;fy ----'---"=---496-71ai ' _., mo. Vacation Rentals 425 54'i'..5002: ' ..... 56
......... «=>., • I
'll 2 & 3 Br. on 2 acres. OCEANFRONT 3 BR., 2 ba.
Adult & Fam sections. Yearly. $450 Month South Lanuna AVAJ.L for 3--3~ wks In Business Rental 445 .
Brand nu. From $180. 4561 2 BR., 1 ba. Frplc. 1-Bllc. to • Country Club ~nvlrn. Furn 2 j'
l-leil St. 846-3166 or 846-5076. ocean. Yearly. $325 1 BR. 1 ba, yard $175 + util Br, 2 Ba, garden view apt. FOR LEASE ~
RENT I 2 B Ask For Mike '""arty. 1st & last mo's ad· Complex offers 7 pools, 7 Nt?\v stores or offices will be · or ease new r J ONES REALTY 673-6210 ~~ce. 4~~. tenrus courts, comp. health available in about 3 months. :• :J:b~;, =~ ~ts~.w:~ New Custom Beyfront spa. $340-SO + use of Ideal Huntington B e a c b j . I bch M w/PRIV BCH & PIER. 3 Apts., facilities & utU Incl. Call locatioh ln shopping cenrer patio, c ose to . ust Fum. or Unfum. 370 10-2 A~t 7-10 PM Call· . · • see. $220/mo. Call collect, BR. 2 BA. Frplc BBQ. 644-559S NB · ' F~r information call Jerry j
365 213f37S.4815. $485/mo. Yearly. Cost• Mesa · · Gillespie
** $149 ** 979-0631 or 644-4510 .::.:;::.;:..=.;;;:..----I Rent•ll . lo _Shore <13() ~~ ~g~~4 . I Apt. Unium. J65 A~~f_u_rn_. ___ 3_65;.;. Apt. Unfum.
1~--------
365 Apt. Unlurn.
Coat1 Moto Coat• Mo11 Costa Mesa 1--------1 NEW AOUL T LIVING! I DE LUXE GRAND OPENING
PRIMA CASA APTS
1838 Placentia Ave, CM
ALL UTILITIES PAID
BACHELOR Units & 1 BR'• APARTMENTS
w/Lofts. F'rplc'1, beam Air C.ond • Frplc's . 3 Swtm.
c<U .. pallo & pool, bllin1, & ming Pools • Health Spa •
refrl& ava.11. Sl6() to $225. Tennis Courts • Gym and
UUI pd. No pets. Billiard Room.
393 HamUlon C.M. 1 BR. From $150
Family Units -Children
\Velcome. Large 2 BR, 1
BA. Refrlg, dshwhrs, btlns,
patios, walk--in closets, gar,
crpts, drps & P 0 0 L .
1220-$230/MO.
64S-4"ll or 642•8520 1 BR & Den From $190
ALL ELECTRIC
GOLD MEDALLION
2 BR Apt w/pe.tlo, encl gar,
w/storage & laund. tacit.
Adlts only, oo pet•.
11115/mo. Melody Ln. In
C.M. 64&0077 or 64<!·1809.
TIRED OF NOISE?
Willon Garden Apta. 2 Br.
1\1 n., crpl>, drps. Poot.
Matun adul~"' no pets. ONLY lw.50/MO.
2283 Fountain W1Y EAi!
(W. Of Harl:Jch· on W\lllOll) cau 646-2846
2 BR, w/w WI crpu, drpt!,
1117, lul BA A Ii· Fenced
patio. Laundry room. encl
gar. Mature e.dulll only. No
ohUd, pet&. Patk~ike aur-tOWld""". $175/mo. JH8.69jl)
•
2 BR from $210
2 RR. Twnhses From $250
MEDITERRANEAN Call C.J.S. Real Estate
M8-l168 or 833-0584
VILLAGE BRAND new 2 Bdrm. $225.
2400 Harbor Blvd .. C.M. Op<on for your inspect.Ion
tn4l !61"11120 het. 4 PM & 6 PM Wed . thni
OPEN EVERYDAY Sun. at 201 E. 16th St. 1st
Hours: Fri-Tues 10-6 l\fo. rent + $100 depo1dt.
Wed, & Thun, 10-7 JMMAC. 2 BR triplex on
FOUR S£ASONS APTS. quiet street, prage plus
Spac. 2 1fY 2 BR, 1% BA, prkg, bltns, carpets, drapes.
bltn11, crpta, drps, pri\t $200. 761 Scott Pl. Apt t.
tlo I 673-8364 pa , poo, conv. toe. No ~~~------
pet1. $165. '1li Joann St. 1 &: 2 BR, 2BA, ~135 & $165.
C.M. M&-1450. Crpts, drpa, bltn. ranee &
4 UNITS Avail. 2 Br, crptc, ovtn. Q,vtrmJ carport, cloae ~· bltna. Upper or lowtt to 1hops & btach. Children
$150/mo. lit A lut + $50 OK. 831'1 Center St. 54&-7900
dtp. No petg, Cill 548-3196 3 BR, 11' Ba in 4-plex. nr.
or 6'7S-6676 or tee 2:246-A Can· 11Chl, but, shops. $1 75.
yon Dr.~ C.M. M&--3226 ar 54~225.
Spacto"' 2 BR Apt.s. Crpt•. SEACLIFF Manor Apts. I PREVIEW OPENING El Puerto Mesa drps. Near S.ach & SlaJ.r. Br. Unlurn. $145. Pool. A<k Award wiruting I. 2 & 3 hr w*oMA* N~· WOllRI ~!NG 0
J!liCEon°n 1.".:.~~ ' Pool. Pets &: children wel· about our discount plan. apts \V/family rms. No ~, w ..-.•re turn, carpeted, alr/cond,
1 & 2 B~l~:·u~nfurn. ,::e~'-s:~· l Ht Bch ~~~acentia Ave. NB. ~~~· mr· ~uru·~~ 3 j:M furfonl~ ap1t ~/ . ApWprox;,.~ ICl:",!,l,:
All UtllitJes P•ld · 11 ' ' 0 n i ' Family Apts, 1250 Adams w ••me r n ren _,., mo. are,~ twlU 2 Br, bltns, cpts, drps, pool, OCEAn e wN, Vl0EW11• h2wBar', h2 •Bar·. Ave. {Adams at Fairvie'''I, {$65) & sh•re utllltfes avail. Ideal for contractor .. 1 Pool & Recreation play yard, carport &: lndry W I f 1-L-..1 ' 548-2616 •
G cl~! I Fl-pla-. ~ Clu'""~·~ Costa Mesa. Phone ·~ "166. a tr um anni. Not l\rage 1or rent fa . e & 1 sm chi d ok. ·~ ""' .--"""' \nrvu= i.lilll"\I ctrrE USE.
1959 Maple Ave, C.M. 842 aft 5:30 pm. area. $385. ABk for Kay, THE EXCITING deluxe bvt comfort• ft ~~tn!HObu !000 l
J;<H;242. PALM MESA APTS. ble, clHn, rHIOfteble ~r. i.;/J;:;;.1ne'! "'"'0t:;'. $l~~lt~~~; p1a~r):a~~· 1':°~~~. ~t~d~~b~· PENIN. Water Front, Spac, 3 l\llNUTES TO NI>t. BCIT. and near Bay & New-use . Cost a l\I ea a . 'J
Under New Management. ins, gar. 308 16th. 536-8548 or Br. 28' boat slip, Avail, $.325. Bach, 1 le 2 BR. from $150 port Blvd., C.M. SEE 6'15--2020/6(2...6560 I
22L2 CoUege No. J 641).f,()32 847-3957. 205 15th. 961).1749. W~/$350 yr, IM! <n4) Adults, No Peta. -after SPM eves or wit Thfft story-7200' available ·
2 BEDROOM, quiet at· 2 BR twnht.e w I f r p 1 c, S4&-439S I &74-2796 (5 blks l~rn Mr:'~ Blvd ) ends, No lease, clta"" tit 24c a ntonth. Opposite
mtsphere, $145/mo. Adults ,vasher & dryer, b\Uns. BEAUTIFULLY decorated 2 546-9860 · ing fee or 1st & last. Newport Center. Possible ~"~rricd cpl pref'd. Ldrps, $185. mo . :;rt°';~~~u9Bi~.1s,r3e50: RA Large 1 or 2 Br. Av•ll Sept. 1ST. 2079 ~~e~nJocal fourplex.
675-0175 Heated pool. From $145. Thurln #2. ..nr£ Factory" hu a 1-•
LRG 3 BR, 2 BA, crpts, drps, NEW 2 BR, DAV, elect BA YFRONT Condo. 1..u.'<· ~tature adults. lnf&nt ok. No \VORKING ....irl will share Shop avall. $l8S/rno. i~ ; I bltns, $17 5/mo. 781 range, drps, 11hag crpu, Nr rto •• urt Pool pet's. 1887 Monrovia . ..i.A-t 2•• Shllllmar. 551-.5932 if oo Huntington Harbour, Adll.s, u us. ,-,,:C ty Bldg. · 645-2174 · ,., ... .,, ng Br, 2 Ba. In Cannery Vtllact 4.25 30th SL '•l
answer, 64.5-4512. no -ts, $200 846-4360 Y6~r;A11_fdults. SJpg avail. ' ~· Frplc, t>Alcony, etc. NB. 6'f3..9606 or 64M52Q.. 1 r· ,;.,_ REDEC. UNF. 2 Br/2 Ba, ~t 1 enjoy a -accful 3 ROOMS $85/mo. 1 adult 2-STORY Villa Paelf1c 2 BR . sns. FURN 2 Br/l1' Ba, ho ~ ""' 1600 sq ft INDUST. sh:lp1 l
ovtr 35. No pets. 2036 ea. w/BA. \iiBA down. llv. 'A ~ from be~ Br'o2 ~ Sil(!, t Br $190. Adults, no SJr:':~ A 7153 eves. $225. Also 300 IQ ft ottloe >
Wetlminst.er Avt. lnq: 240 rm. din, rm. kit w/bltl'ls. ~th St ·rA.ar~ · petll. 114 E. 20th St Call HK~ Hoire Sa.ve SS $95. C.~t &16-2130.
Slerlcs St. CM. AdUlta. Brand new. 968--M97 ' . 646-4095. ·• PART~f:;: Corona del Mar, sm amd
PRIME Me"' Verde area -3BR. 2BA. w/tlen Rood toca. 1700 WESTCLIFF DR. SJ&.U!J.t or 543-1419 floor. AtC. utll, ample •
Oown•tairs 2 BR w/•ar. tion nr 1•-. Avail S.ft. 2 BR. 2 BA. Bltn. •pp!Jance1. 91e&liBA8 &I v d .1 ~ prl<g. $145 mo. 615-6900
M d I • ·•~Cal -~8 Poot "2 b""·' ~ou on ,,...-vw a gun to ature a u ti. No pets. ht $275 mo. 1 iMr"Ql • vo ~ f'•, 2 BR 1 BA fum $220 "[)l';\w Fast" when YoU NEW bldg., ocean view. 2.000 •
$160/MO. 963-1155. NE\V 3 br, 2 ba, 2 car gar. 2 br, 1·blk-ocean; patio 2 BR 2 BA unfw-n s:m PIAce an ad in I.he Daily IKI· fl , l\VAlt tOe~. fl ;
Need a "Pad"? Place an &di $195. 548-3'446 days, 4~ $210 yrly; no pets; ref.rig 151 E. 2lat. St., C.M. Pilot Want Ada! Call mw Brookhursl St. I
Call 64M6'1'1. l'VCS. 128\~ 46 St: shag: 642.Jlll • 64&-:W * • 64l-5678. Want ad resul~ . ,, , ,IC.5rJ1
Cost1 Mes.
I !I
i10 OA.ILY PILOT ~11rsday, August 28, iq73 ~~~~~~~~~,~~~ !· ..... 1~1 1 ""*'"-J[g_j!! ............ -J~~! ..... " ........ J~ '-I _ ...... _.-_][Ill I ._,_ llrn I ._,.,.,. Uill 1.;I -~--~l[(I]~J~ l ;;~iimi ..... ,~ .. ··~l[ll]~IJ 1
!
! lndustrlol Rental 450 ~F.ouiiniidiiii(f.remeiiiiad;s;I ~;55:0 ~ VJlltong Hauling I Help Wonted , M & F 710 Help Wanted, MA F 710 Help Wonted, M A F 710 Help Wonted, MA F 710 Help Wonlod, M A F 7fO
11 ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;; I 1'HASll JL\Ul.ING -·--· · 1 mo UTlt'I I It' fl-::'11. puppy, part L'OCkrr & B,\HYSrrr1:-..r. ln ul) ho.nil•'. CA!li\f:+·: C'L~:.\N~UI' \ ANS. hair ~tylish;COOK, i\&.i1t ~lana.:t'r , • llOUSEKEEPER, ten 01
l
NOW LEASING : l'lrh<'r tf'rrif't' or p00c11r. cu s 111 ri.1 c" n l• r 1·". • J l ~I • 54G--OIOI I ANCIENT I & aggres:c:l\'e nian.tgcr '"'ed· i.:ra,·cyard shift, 6 day v.•k. Experienced clllzcn needil full lime.
H I B h '
/bl• I< I "l''-"''•'-I -l"<i for Harbor Area Salon. linii··• 0,~,,lng 0 pa•·d I \lvt--ln, mahU'e \l.'Om&.n, a1
I unt ngton ••c Bt'IJ."' •· ~r'l't\111. 11' i" •' '"1~'"l't'>;, "' '~-r /1 1\!JLI~"\{:. 1!11· 111 p 1• in a.:, Io. t.P1'e!ftlug o~~rtunitics, benefi~s. _hi,.k 1~ Thf. Box, Boat Carpenter houM?kcepcr &: helper to
NEW M·I 0,1'1'1·1one11 \ •r F~1.1nl;i 11 :'111\TllRE, dt•petKluble, IC'nl"-ga1'<ig<' & 1~.1~1 l'l\·11nu1~-I MARINER 6-lli-J80M o~~ t•1'l.'t1:_. 1205 Baker !-)t., Costa J\lesa. to 11 ork on 37' Ti'H\l'ler cu1'e !or li<'n1._invalld y.•ife.
!140 ::M1. J.'L .~UP '·f1llll')i ~1a~11~n~ ~:'lJoff l ('(I ~·111\I. ~ly hoinc. ltcf11. I 51S-:il2\I nr 5.t>i~Oi Bl!:AUTICTAN . Bl' Yf)Ur 0""" Apply In P\'r11011. )'lll·hts. Nul'!lf'J trulnlng \\'00\d help.
lltt1nilto11 & N1'1v\11nd ,'·. s ~ us :u -~ Good lunches. 54.'>-1007. .. .• .,~. rt·l'''ITL·r,c· \'"'' !•~,. I ----p ·rt r C tiH-28,jl , l 9 83 0
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., 1 .; • • u ;.. .. " "Mhi>. N'lll )'QUI' 011·n i:t11t1un. COOKS tlCI <'' rawler 01'1). ~C::""-'---~~~~~
1..,..,..,,....,_.,. .......... ~ 1Dt·('l:111••d• hr1:rc• &, 11h1h• I l haulln;:, J-IS-11'62. ~ij7-27:lii. 1\11pl1{';1I un~ For -~. ---DISHWASHERS • . . n
, 646-06 1 or 3· S19 11.r.\\ A • • fML'! ,,ian:esc !:a· C•rpenter local furn hauls .~ f:1~11·1 No11 .. \i 1•1•1111111; N"'Pl Bch S20 646-~16 rH7 6908 liOUSEKEt.:Pt-;RS Sal&.: Su
"' SSION VIE 0 ,\n.•. !() lif1pl_Jy . \u'. 01 CARPENTHY --. ---BKKPR-BAYSIDE OFC Ol1•k Chun:h'!I Tlc!ll!l\U"Llll t:XP. olfh .. "C i[irl. p/linlt\ Rp-r1t·a8Slnt Y.'Ol'kh1 co~ t1.ppty
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4 Ml J l .. 11P.d:1, '.\!1ssion VLt>YJ, &111 GENERAL REPi\lll Hou5eclean1ng I HELP Substiintlal invt•J:1tn11!11! t.'O. in 2698 Ncii·rort Blv<I. C~I pro.~., 19 h1-s/y.•k. Typing, n1 Pl'rsc;.:1 1~n ,y , cw~
IG""' "'' .. ~,· • UP 4'1(' Pl<''li't' l"lll ~:17-(i61 i • ri1· '211 * N.B. ha~ Of~llh"• fur u bk. k11 ~ & l~l,Yl'Oll •• A.pply v llR . ea teAl(',
Ml .-...,. • '" · • ' ' '· • 1 .r.i IJC>US E Ot' CLl:".A:"li bookkecpl"rs us-;' i II la 11 1 ** COOKS ** \\.e<I. Thurs 1 }o l'I, 8 lillarla \Vny NB
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AVAILABLE NOW! ~'\'I): H!k r1111 P•x•1ll" l\'lpal'· C•rpe1 Servlc• Stl·•un Ctu·pct cleaning, \1·i11· I 11'h'u:ciu·u11· 1v. p\nro !!kills. t'irst .-:: second 1ooks, :\:Int AM-noon on.ly. :n.13 \V. *HOUSEKEEPER *
I ()N :\,\N DIEGO FR\VY. pl(• 1ullar .\: fli•;i 1·•;Jl11r· Jori~ du"·s ,'(, floors. free c1>l. I Broiler -Kitchen . .,,. k C H SI 402 NB 27992 C.-111 inf1 Cr11)1:'lr'ano I !;111 \·1C'. llt.'11 & (~th:ird JOHN'S Cul'JK'I & Uphol11lt>ry lil2--G.112.L Musi hC' a non-s,n1okt•r, \\yl! 11·or, ing 1.1ou~·s~ E1nploy~ oast i\y.,. u le , -Xlnt i1·v1'kh1i;; L'Onditkln.~. f.1n-~:ll ·lli00 H.B. Dri Shnnipoo rrCi-' Stolch· -~o E:q>!'r, Nt·l"Cs><. g1'001)1et l, & CllJt)Y 1nf'e!lllJ.:: 111'n(flt s. 612-3:io:>. EXPER. loving care for niy J)loyc+> OCnerltt<. No ~p.
---,1-1r·1· 1 -1 1 ··' Ll'rJ.: 1-loust>k.l.'ctllng, Chlld f>l'OIJlt•. Please send rt·swnt• COOK • •.·,,,.,,.,,,, •. •. "'' 7 n'o old boy. My hotne, n~lcd. 64'' ""'"'"·
4001 BIRCH. NB--I · ,-·.J •• l J,:::jl'f. :-iOI {C!la1-u<1.nt:c;. llnun; !) Ulll·I 11n1 I ' c~ l•~'iiii"iii;i;i~~iiiiii•••-1 C1tl'('·On..,.11vo days \1 cek. & sa at)' rcqu1_1·cn,ents n.J sh'1f111 a\Pallnble. ApJ>i)' in 13111. Island. Own 1r11nsp.
I 2000 •-•. ,,.,.,. "".· J. II. o• ,.0,11, 3 lo I ?110 kitten, Ol'llr111;C D<'J.::l'<'llSl'l'S & a ll color no •!•., '32 o·,~. p 0 "··· 171 N \ f 6 ~VVll """"'"' • 1 1 1 & JO · " "'11 .....,,~" :\t•t)ly In P •r··'ni _. · ou..x _.J. £'1vpor 111;r:;0n, 30!)9 s. Brls:tol, CM. R<-t&. Call Collect at p111, INSPECTOR
• " '·' 11 hi 1 h fo· 1 t l•c c Masonry • 31in1·5 pm, '.\h111·F1·i ac • a ~w.; \lnndcKan1p'11, A division of t7\41 624-9-J89. r · I 1 1 I-"-I bo.· 11,,,., •• r .. \i·.·oil. l" 1 -,,, .. 1ni>1~l . 1,h1tC' frv."I .. ""I lt'1gi1cn.--•1'.'> · nunutt> --• • ;,< Be h C 9~''
i\lr. &uinroarrllll'I', ;)IJ.j().'{:,? I r·c·r/\IC':il & ran1a~?n· . 1•a 1.' •l' 1 1· 1 l\rpe1s. J'('(:1s1on i; lee mt> a ..,..,p. o i"'(lllal' Call :J!t 6. 61.,_.12:r:, OI' Sn1'(' youl' n'IOl1C'Y by saving 2607 \\I, Coast lh1·v. BR!'.:AK1'"J\ST & lunch cook Tiny Naylor·s. l\1us! be £');l)(!ri('l1Cl'<I & i·e.
, 01-'J.,.ICI·: ,(. \\'iu'C'houSl' sp;u·•· lii:i-.·1.i:iG 111!' extra 1rip~. \\'ill cle1111 SLUi\IPSTO'.'lE, blCICk 11·alls. Nt'\\J)01't &'at·h &Jo.0201 nl.'t'dc<l.. Hours S.2:30. 10 COOK. 111iddlc aged \\'0111an, FACTORY lit1blc. Sah1ry ()pt'll.
I a,·a1l Ln~una :"i!(ucl , 2,000 1 ., li\·ing 1·m. 11i11ing rrn., & PlantC'rs, n1a r ble C'n· yt>ars €':\:f>C-l'. & all around for sniall nuri;ing hon1c. 5 SPACE-TEK ~ft 01. n10rc if nt•edL'(\. 171,1 F0~1 ~n: /\ug .. '-· Loni;-hnll $15. /\ny rni. S7.50, t1'}·11ays. ExIX-·r1ly 1nstul'rl; kitchen \\Urk. Son'e local days per y,•c-ek, Laguna INDUSTRIES
I prr sq fl. S..11-1AA2. hall'f'•I g1L')' stnpi'<I CAI. l'Ouch SlO. Chair $5. 15 yrs. rl'asonably priced. Bob; ANS\\'ERING St> r \' 1 t' C'. 1'\:[l'L'. :110 \\'. 4th St., Santu Reach, call for tlf'lpl, 714 :
1100 I flf'11 <'t'lll:u·: rt'('C'n1 i\tottwr; · I fi~.H!l:.O ~·a.~hiQn I:.l11nd u r L' 11 , '",_na 19'!2 Plncentln
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. I ·-·SI'" \II . ~I-\ 1,ac I•-• 11'1t>lhod. I do \\'Ork 1nyi;ell. p . . & P/l!nlf' & F'/1tn1r slufts uuonny 0 .oina nelll I Sqfl 1\l-l,11/1Y111!nf·I .. Cl ·o•ll h on·s C':-:p. is "'lat count.~. 001 , . 494--8075 TRAINEES r. •1
l<-e. ,rg rcar {......,1 , .... 1 rHo. lri·uu' -.i2-9 l.'\~ Good f .. ., 0 0 a1nt1ng iu·ail: G~G-1'0?3 "' "'°'-' • ays, nn !'!I:· COOKS "dinnc>r & Brnilcr" l""'""""""""""""""""~I
I 616-31).U da ys E1·!'s , , . " . rr · a.,\. 1 I. Paperhanging 1x-:rl.enceo nccesscu)', just a Apply in per.son !lours 2 to 6 I i 0. ·
&1&-0681. 1791 \Vhitr1CJ'. Cl\! I GHi\ \ . ·~ \~·hl!t' Prrsiri.n \I\': ,\LTEHATIONS . ltEP/\lRS I AN ~\VE n I !\' c ' . " I 11·1l11ru;ness to learn. 210 Hungry Tij:er Rest. 16'\l \V, nter or signer
I J\t-1. CORN"·n, 127X90 ' R"'' 1 ~11K sl~nC',c<1ll.ai '.1
1'·'11\1lioc'Q\ll'rs.d11l'ks.alllypcs Grot~C' Painting-& ON..-or'ngl · f • 1 '1C'L\~11 !llc1vporl Ccntcr Dr .. N.B. !5unrlo\\'C'rS1111taAna E:..:p fl('Cl'SMry . \V~ll • [ r,f 1~1,shore~ Nr11 poo 1 1 0 . 1 .·. . .· opt>ra1or. i• rrlOCln ,.,111, ~•.:> "·'"'"""I . · J b A 'I bl rstablished store 1\'ith the
1,•/builrllng. 991 \\'. \!Ith SL, ~IS . .,,.;.:1."i ·' • • o c;u·p<•n l'y. r 11 "' 1 n g s; 111c1101 & F.x1~1 1or )-'('Ire~!. Lai.:unn Bruch. 0 ,..,__~ o s va1 a e
C.1\1 S225 642-:1•190. ·" -.:.." availnhl£'. Phofl':•; 548-78(6. Guaran. Top Quah1y Prof. BUSBOY full lin1c, 1nust t>c CREDIT UNION In Irvine & ~~~~~. 1~:i~· t2~a9w& i~a!~!~
I St · ' •SS F~D B!k Lab Rctricvrr 6 1.-. r 1\ R p F. T c I r n n i 11 g 1\'01·kr1111nshi p & ~fatt-ri11li. A bl & T • able to Y.'Ol'k split shift Newport Beach A reas 642 21l50
o rage s 111(1. Vic l.agu;_1a Ni;::11C\ & Rca!IOnnhlc, C'fflcit>nl. J.'rt•t; Fret· C'st. O-l~S61 6 155~m .,•rs rainees lunch -~ dinner. llt111gl'y Immediate Work -·
' STO" CF-I I "· I ·• I 1\lonH'l't•y Bay 118'"6-ij() tlSk esli1>r1tcs l'AJNTl"G I ·-/\ l , s~~ IS. i\ppty ;II gr!.lt> 'rigc>r 1641 \V, Sun fJO"'l'L' oN<•"•i>.· \·0>11· l·l1·l1• n.J\. OI. oc"~'-}·11'(. tor l-:ildiC' . ' ' "···l'l.'jll\!l',.}J)'l'i'! 7nnl-J llll1 & 1111111. Santa/\na • OnA113Shifts ? Boals, trlrs, e1c. S1.50 1no. . • 540-9919 • 1\'0rkn1anship guru·. Take ~lart;rC',t:OI' \'acht Corp, •. "-· --~~~~ liA~l-'IPi\1 l\\011-r1·i ! Nt>ill Neon, Inc., J31-I'l74. I F'E!'l<l. Calleo killen l n Carpet Cleanln-J ~1dy11n!'!gt· of n1y exp. !6:;1 Plnc,·nlia, Cosla i\lt•sit. [ BUSBO\S "'nntt'd, Bench No Experience
Necessary
INSURANCE SALES
, NeY.'J)Ol't Hgls .. Approx 6 Fl C & .1:16-10:-Xi. I-louse 11111, 61\l Slt'('py
•' Rentals W anted 460 1 '""'··· Gree•• c~llar 11•/'··11. oor are Win ows [ H 11 w N h·1
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5107
·" '-"' Dutch Main!. Scr v. :i:~T-!!;(18 l'AJNTING in C.i\L in· AUTOMOTIVE: O 01v ay, Lllguna Beach. o exp nee., cam W I e you
Cr1·tht union l'xpcr. p1x·t.
• RF.T!Rt:D 1 I 1er I i'Xlrr. Small jobs Pnrts rlep!. has several open· \\'ANTED Busboys apply in C II M Th S.l.S. IC'flm, Pfl11 t!m(", eves le
1 d~sperately g ~~ds e ~~\.~ F'OUND Gt>nnan Sh~phe.rcl Cement, Concrete . 11·C'l!'01ne. rrce est. Jin1. ingi;. Jncludlng p :l 1' 1 s person. Alley West 2106 \\'. a r. ompson TJ<:MPORARY SERVICE ·~·~,7.ds, full llnlc IYhcn qua)i. I NO\V in Adult Trnllt>r J>ark n1alc, ~ro1vn & 1.black, vie. CUSTO~f Concrete \\'ork. 979-8186. counter 1nan, pa r1s hr\pl'._'1', Ol't'an rront NB 075-1714. (714) 640-.3410 l :'.!!!1 ~12~1~S~·~G~··~'~"'~'·~'~··~n~la!!!A~n~a~l 1''anneJ":( lnslU'ance Group
j for a 12' x 52' 11·i1h porch & ~~f~~~74& \\ii.son, C.i\-t. RC'inovc AsphAH drivi-wys. No \\lasting ·~ pa;·ts dl'ii•f't'. g()()(~ Co.1 • C1\BTNET ~takel's PACIFIC MUTUAL Ed Lani * ~1834
• callX>rt . Prcfrr C.i\-1. area . · RPplHC'l' 11·/con('l'C'IC 6fx=._ ft. *WALLPAPER * benefits, phone 1 'l 4 1 ~lu~t be exp. N.B. area. 700 Neii·porl Cl'nll'r J)r f',\C'J'ORY help, "'ill rrain.1..,~!"'!"''!"~!!!!!!"'!!!!!!!!!I
l \\.'ill con!iidcr buy ing i;imilar I FND. Gray long hair cal NI'/ dC'ln.vs. Frcc est. \Vntks, \\lhen you call "i\la.c" 616-9303 6-l:>-1536. Nf'\\'port Bcnt'h Young ffialure \\' 0 nl 11 nr JRON\VORKE'R EXPER.
11"ilh lease of lot. :1~13:>. 11·/\\·hitt> marking:i; 1i·earing slahs, 1mtios. No job too 548·1.f.14 eves. CARE f~r 1 yr. old baby. pi~f'tl . St $2·10 hr. C.~t. OHNA!\.IENTAL
, Aft 6 Pr..! or all day 1vhite flea collar. Vic of 20th limnll. 6.18-3325. \\" I r ,. · h fnuaJ 011por. En1ployt>1' area. ~,l~Ol. ', "'N'kends. & Tustin 6-6-1382 Aft J:30 PROF. 11·al\covering s1n1r. ASSEi\1BLY ·e< • urs, ri, 11\\' onic, ...., -. LAG UNA ~94-6376 PATIOS, 11-lks, oc;v-. Sa"'. 1;, 00 27°~1·• · r all (Turtle Rock) SllO nio. Fa.!ALE Con1pan1011 for ·"· =c. =,_;c..---~"-'-"""'I • S rd v · f " "'" .. ' ' ;,;, '"• insu " 83.~7. sa1nc ~. Live in/out for ITS F uu to \\'Ori< at Far·
NURSE urgent!)' neC'ds 2 or 3 FOUND L Be(a · Cc. f 1 breflk, remove & replace l)'pcs o( paper. 71•1: 812-1'.!Sfi VAR I AN ~==~~-----COUPLES 11·anlcd. Builri Sept.' Possibly longer. Pn>f. r~:!ll's" rind. out \to't\y. Posi-
: BR furn, apt or homt> in N. Costa l\ esa. a concrcle. 548-8668 for est. INT/EXT PAINTING C1\RPET C'leancr he J p e.' )Our 01,.11 business. \\'e ,1,,·,.,, .. ~••1·;~,~. tlOns avail for bus
• Cd1.1 Hi~h Sehl tlis. Hal'C a.i6-366.l tcd N I ~ " • :purchat'led honlf' in h'\•inc DOG FINDERS SE"VICE CUITTQf\1 CEf\1ENT \YORK Qualily \\'ork. Reasonable 1 \\:an ·-ea , energellc, !rain. Phone for a11p't tor FULL ~ 1, r · 11 1 hoy/dishw1uo::her. No exp.
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TeITflef'. Unable 10 take IF YOU FIND OR w" SE A Drives \VALKS, Pa I i o s; Ref's. 6Ta-Olli0, 673-81~ HAS 'c1agcs ... pen. S1ean1 1\lnster personr1I inlC'l'\Piei\' 551-1167 11. _ ... • ,..,_art 21
1n1C' / e P1 nee. Rapid ndvoncement Pool fiC'Cks. Don, 6-12-8514 ar11t"1 CJcanrrs, 11 ~ 0 • 11, . & N' anh:u. v•'\'I' · "' llC'~ possihlC', Apply l\.fon·Thurs.
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• poss. until Oct. 3. Refs. OOG please call 541·5965 Ht-QUALITY, LO\\'$ Superior /\ve. Ci\! DA\ IHlrcsscs lie cleAn appearance. Apply 1n 2.00.S·OO RI 16301 Beach
&I0--8222. 595-5'104. Tf~L~R -,,,,,·1·. Ko·11e". 3 Contractor State Lie. No. 28001·1 2ND SHIFT -. -----Cook. Ol'i'I' 18. AJ)pl)' in person. ~le & r:d's Pizza, B·l ·d ·,,. . Be h • •~M •· ... 5-12·1701 . . . 1 CASHIER/SECTY fll'l'SOn, 2-!'>pn1, l\lon thru 410 !'.:Ast 17th s1. Costa \ · unting1on .ac
, RESPON. epic 1\/I sn1\ nlos. old vie. 1::1 T.-.m J/\CJ\ Tnulanc, i't>p alr, ~ Brokerage Iirnl nt'('{I~ Cash· fl'l. I •ife<a. · Equa~~pportunlt~En1pJoyer
I child "'ants 2·3 BR l""USC •.• fl II 0•< 0 ·7· PROF. painh.'1'. honest \\'Ork, 1
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•, ~~;.is,& 4~~('r $2oo. t~~-~;ar~:n11eap~P=~1:;:;:~~~ ~~~'.· ~1;1~~!~Y &~· 5-11~~ ;~f~: ~1~~'fi~9'.· n iJ~~i:~. est. OPENINGS! :~~!'~c~~i!IE~1;~i~r~.~~1~1~1:~~ G~'\2 ~~1~1=~SA~1~·11 .R. ; GARDENER-full Time No~1~~~~~·~~:.~x ln·
11·ht, airier do~. V11; Del Electrical s~uu·11 gal 11·ho_ !YIX-'l' 11 l'll. IDELll'!'ll\-.\t ,,-10 .-. -1 , 1 <~i1·ldouls 10 11urk Ni;:ht or
1 GARAG8 in Newport BC'h ., ~la1•,i:,Eldl'n,...C~l.&l2.£.ti7. ----------foor;ippt ca!l:Sh!'r ··D1n ~ ' ·'· 1 tllr) (' y 1 SI -fl J · ' CdM , Costa f\1t>sa area. El.ECTf'ICIAN-l.o·cro''· c No. P la!.ter, Patcr1, Ril pair VARIAN DAT A ttl ·l9-l·'l7~J 1 > 1 11· rl)(ll'nini.: L.A. Tinl<'ll hon11' \\'a111cd 5 ditys per 1vt'(•k; •"
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'(· arr · 11 ( unng
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1, 644-0788 J.::ves + ll'knrls. • ,, --_ · · · . d<•l\\'el',V 1'flu!r. 1\lusl hnve <I c pendable, ('xprr!e11c<'<l. Sl'hool nionlhs. l •.
Lost SSS 233108. S1nnll jobs, rnaint & * PATCH PLASTERING * MACHINES C,\SHIE!t 8.· GC'nl't'nl OfflCL' l't~1i11111\i('al l'nr. {.ioo{[ SUJ). gardt>n('r for lanclsca~d Apply In I e1son
; 1 BR-rclir'f'd lady -TIO pct l'C'prtil'.'(. ;l'!S-5203. All types. F1't'!e cstin1u1cs \\'ork. full & put'\ tin1l'. ph•nu •nl:uy irtt"OITit'. No co111n1crciul propcrlit>s In fo'L:lday hC\\'ll 3 & 5 JJ'.\I., ! :~1~ts;r~~k i1~~~9church & e GENEROUS e Furniture Call 5'10-&l.25. 0(X'ninl.(s t'n r asSC'nlblers tllust I~ oyt>r 25. Con1;1ct solicidniz, no cotlccling. 21~ Nt•\\'pc>1'l BC'ach. Refrrenccs li16-12 Bt•a<·h Blvd., H.B.
,• Plumbing "'illing 10 ii·ork 2nd shift. i\lr. J. I<'• st' h <' r C10 hri>. c1uily. 0\'el' 23 years 1·cquu'('(!, Ca.II 9 to 10 \\'t'C'k· J/\NITOR p/tl1:1C'. Se m I 1·1~~~~~~~~~~~ e REWARD e FURN ITUHE St r i pp i n g Varian p.iys :i. shift dl f· HOC'lsc:het·s, Sou1h Coast o I cl . \\'C'stmiMler/Gardt>n clays for inlN'\'il'\\', &rl·l626. relii'ed. No ex per. ntcess. , j refinishing, repairs, an· L.R. OTIS PLUi\1BlNG fcrenlial + thC'sc l'cgular Plaza, Costa Mt•su. Grove/H11111inglon B e a ch * GARDENER * 1\~r. Scane 01· i\1r. \Villian111. : l ______ ~]( lifl4) Hq"I""· Chem-Cle"" We.I R'"Hxlel• & Rcpa;r.. W'tcr o" I • 1 and ; n g compa"y CATERING & Sales Dh·ce· """· •18-2924. B Bo S1lve""'""" 45 ,-...,Ion Announcement' For retum or any inforrra· 892~!) ht>alC'rs, disposals. furnaces. bcncfils; tor. cxper , typing nf'C. DE:LIVER'l' t<.1cn. perm pan .~1 you~ ~w~ 51 Island, Ne\\·pt. Ce nter.
j 11011 leading 10 return of a Gardening dsh\\'ashrs. 6.J2-{i263 tll/C & e I &llary. & con1n1. llt>ply to rin1e. Ea.rly n1 or n in g t' u or P ~~'·n~ 1~ your JANITORIAL _ p 11 rt
'I••••••••••• gold four leaf clovt>r pin. ::.:::.::;::;c::.;;,,______ li/,\. Complf'te Plunihing Competitive Cla_ssif1~ arl no. 934, yto tll'\1·spapcor delivery I o own area. ig inconH'. tinle/full tinic, local, cwt.
Announcements 500 dpprox. 2 inches in dian\etcr, MOW & EDGE Sel'l'iec. S I ' Daily Pilot. P .O. Box 1560, lloinrs in N.B. $200 pt>r mo. Guarante«I Customers J::xp'd adulls only. $2.40 per
11-ith je~·c>\t>d hoN;eshoe in EXPERT & t>LUMBING REPAIR a ar1eS 1 Costa J\fcsa, Ca 92626. & bonu~. Cn1t L \ Tin1cs No Cash Down Jir. 979-.1923 • : NE\V talent, nC'I\' n1:ll('1'inl
!l('etlcd imn1t>dialrl)' fnr nC'11•
<'<'11ter: also. gold locke1 DEPENDABLE ~ No job too s1nall • Basic Mai"or CHEF 11C'<'dcd. Expcril'nct-d &!2-1~· t-;ai11 ;-.;9·~:· .. ~1•2Y L:nrr 1 ~J~U~N~l~O~R~S~A~L~E~S~MA~-N-.-
f\\·as on chain), approx. lhc) 1t * 642-3128 * * Appl~ Denvt•r J\1ininL: Co. DELI\IEJtY ,(,. Sloek "'Ork. -Eat S20·S.JO ·£'C.'k -ozii
slLc of a nickel, inscri bed Call For Prompt, Sewing/Alferafi'lni & Medical 719 \V. 191h St. Cosla l\1t•sa, fltirnc. Applv, /\u101no1i\·C' Genera l Machiniit
11
11 -. , ::;1"' d Sa~ · in sc:r:p1, FLA_ These art> Free Estimate. 6~:)..:C.-13 Sup11ly ·co ·15'!2 N • · ·1 uii; a t'I .sc an tur· • 6 Days Vaca I ------· ·-~iipoi Prorotypc y,·ork. AdvanCC'd day,: 5<'ll1ng: nc"· sul):l('tip-
dccply t1'CasUrcd fan1ily 968-0812 J::.'\PERIENCED ltestyling .. *** CHILD CARE IJlvd., Cosl;t i\tcsa. Kinl'1ici1, Ill<'. 1231 Vic1oria rion~ ror lhC' DA IL\' PILOT.
1 radio sho11' on l\:~J\C.
Singles, duos. t dos. groupi;,
i. ii-ISO for cluh \\'Ork &
ovc-1'SCall Io u 1· s . SRD memC'nlos & the loss ii: ir· & \I · R bl t' ft 6 replaceable. p LE As E' EXPERT ' ' 1ei;1~5so6('~Sl)na c. ion a er I h(l-8 yr. old g irl) & lite DENTAL Rt>cept lonisL St., C~I. 6f-7165. Equal 0p. ~!I l~llOI a ~Pl', r l'OUIC'
PLEASE help it you havl' JAPANESE months, 12 ousework for teaching Orthodont ic pra c ti c e por. mp oycr. ~ .' no:I i~c udC' de·
any inforn1a1jon _ &!2·3589 I GARDENING Alterations-642-584S I family, from 2 to S p.m . outslancling opportunity fo~ Girl Friday $700 i:;~~-sC~~'OJ\J~~mf. 0r:e~· Eve~. & \\'C('k<>ncls. Conip!C'te Gardening Service Neat, accurate. 20 years exp. days after 1 daily-perm. for s chool qualUicd person. To ~7.00. t,ec-Paid. A dl\"an1 spol w/ Vaill')' and South Hun~~~~
Fr('(' Estimates 546-0'n4. Television Repair y a N Bol ch· St>nd resume lo Class1r1ed grt'nt developer~ If you likt> Be 1y b .
• Enterprises, 771 \\', 19th SI.,
; f Co" a ""'" '7M 1&12-89Ki
d , .... ,.. 11•1 LOST tcn1ale s i a mt> ll l' E A G d year• & e .;; t •a.r saPI ica Ad No. 901. Daily P ilot, ('halll'"Ke & people this ls 541111~!:1 App now Y t•alling
wtflC'a color vicinity Terry ~P· mer. ar ener COLOR TV Repair, l'xpert, e Christmas & es minster. ease P.O. Box ljlj(), Costa J\fesa, yolu' (~.u·eer. Also l"ce Johs. : · ·
& B<-·11ch Blvd., H.B. (Ba n· r..11:1.1n1, C!C'anup, D!'t.'01'. Shrub reasonable, 1nost in honie. C a 1 I after 6 p.m. Ca. 92626, Itcplics strictly Call Elly Ellis, 556·8505. Equal Oppor. Employer
hury Aplsf. 641-6169 01' ~;111, Lndsep & Sprnklr Free estimate, H.B. N.B. & New Years 892-0560. ("f)nfidentiaL Control Cnt'('('r r:mploymt•nt JR. SECRETARY
"'7-974'. ~·rv. &15-19.'lD. C 'I Be l G 11 A 3100 I . Bl I U -~ t . ' ·' 0'1 " ·"· • r a e Ill o I' t> • week Off. CH rLD care & snil umounl !)ENT AL 1ti'lsi1"11ant -!t•nl· gell('Y. ' rv1ne V< ., i;r your "'""" yp1ng « ,..1
• :1-----: Personals 530
LOST: Misma.rked Siamese
killrn. 9 \\·ks. N t' e cl s
n1N:lication. Vie. 401 h &
Ri\l(lr, N.B. 673-714.2 01·
675-4986.
JAPANESE Gardener, C.'I:· 968-2783. house c:irC', n1v honle. 2 til 6 porary -1 n1onth. '.\lust be N.H. llk illll & land thi,: outsl-andlng • Profit Sharinn, Daih, i\'l/F siart 9.\J Call well trainc'I -quick -c>f· GIRi_, Friday, purt time. position. Oynan1le gr'O\\ing Happy
Anniversary
p<'L'. Clcnnups, yard se1v, T So'I Jtelia. & neat. Fl'ec e.sL -•~P __ , ____ _
&15--069-1.
GARDENING -CLB/\NUP
Reasonablr Priec -F"ree Est.
* QUALITY * * J\IULCH & TOP SOIL * J!!tHl930
to the
LOSf 10 sp, Blue Dawes,
Sch"•inn, Vic. 17th ,~
Pomona, Plact'ntia C.1.·I.
Re1vnrd R('lUrn to 2211 B.
Canyon Dr .. Costa l\'lesa.
LOST: 2 dogl!, 1 male p/G.
Dane, 1 fem. in hC'at, p/G.
Shep & Collie, 8 n1o's olrl.
979-32.'l.'i, 979-1461, 540-7640,
ext. 33.
• ~1-~3 • Tree Service
Completc Lawn & Gardening ----------
Service . Haulin~ & TREE Trimming including MOST WONDERFUL Cleanups. 54S·0405 Pflln1 trees, anrl Ir c e
removal. GC'n. clean up, E..XPER. Japanese Gardener. Reas. & Insured. 8-17-1791. \'ard se1v, Clcanups. Relia. parents 1n fhe world
LOVE FROM
KATHY, JOHN
BILLY & DENNIS RUST hro1,•n small mixed
F'ULLY LICENSED dog, y,•/short tail. Lost ,\ug.
& neat. Free est. &lz...1389.
JAPANESB Ga r dener. j lfi1lfl
Gardening St>rvicl', trin1-'iiiiiiiiEiiii;iil ;J•ii-Miiii.:ll!!J;,:~~~ niing. cleanup. &lj...Ii96 1 ROTOTILWNG, L.111·n in ., * SPJR.JTUALIST * Z.'l. H.B. /\ns '' P 11 g e''
, Spiritual readings 10 am.JO f'lorida lags. Reward! stallation, sprinklers. soli Job Wanted, Female 702
• pm. Advice on nil niatters 962-{i\79.
, 312 N. El Ca1nino Real, San RE\VARD, Lost BI a ck
preps. 5!16-3010
General Services
Clen1l'nte. 492-91?.6 492-903.J n1iniaturc n1ale po o d I c .
PROBLDI Pr('i;nancy. Con-\\'earing flea oollar. 5.36-8264 ALL types ho1nc rcpairs.
fidcnt, s y nl pa 1 hc 1 i e ocr noon, or 213-335-0281 Actual ti1nc & niatcrial.
pregnancy counseling. Abor· i c'°,="~"~·1 ~. -~-~---Fast Scrv. ~o job too sn1. · I F'&B llome Repair,
1 Hon & adoptions J't>. RE\V1\RD~ Jo);t nr J-lw1r. llrh. &12_1'103.
APCARE 612-l-t'.m "F'n1I org, ll'ht, blk CaliNl.
PREGNANT? Th i n k in g Snookie. Nels med. 84&-7356 PORT,\BLE ' 11 h t \VELDING SEllVJCE , abortion? !\:no1v a t r acr s ?IJALE: \Vein1ara11e r niixed • r· C II Llf.E LINE "' \\'ill Nl111e to you evcninro~. irst! a -"'" P"PPY. i n10. Tan 11·/s""'"kl· "' h 541 5522 ,,.,... wC'ckcnds. No job loo Small. : I--"~·~----·-----t"fl tai l. R('\1·:u·d. 962-3620. 5-tii;-.\l21 2, 6"6-1S2•1
• ALCOHOLJCS Anonymous. BLK Fein cat. Lost \tfc l51h • Phone 542-7217 or \llilc &· Tustin 0.1. &-IB-::8!7 S/\N CLEi\·tENTE ARF.A
P 0 n. 1223 C 1 'I Pain!'g · Plumh'g . J~<'pairs. .. uvX . OS a " C'sa. Hc\\·ard. 1\·lob. Jlms & Apts. 496-5717,
• Social Clubs 535 LOST . \Vhi!e 11·/lrg tabby &.16--0971 ·
spots, frrn. cat. Any info c11~,,~N~'D~\~.,~,~A~N~--,1~1-k~;~,~.,,-0, * INTRADAT A * c'oc"c." ~"~'>-~1~02~'-----"""'· smoll j-01" "
QU,\Lrn· rnarchcs
11· 'Pl IO'TO
"l.argt'sl in Calif."
/Call N0\\1 for F'Rt:E SA!U·
ple pl'ofil,., on 1 prospccri1·c
n1arr h. 2·1 hr~.1
il4 . &t.~·~19'2() L\ GJS-62&1
LOST. Sniall Black Poodlr, SfX'cirtlly. 979-4636, 546-9723.
H3eaul Vic. So. Laguna Call
C'ves. •l99-ll5S. Hauling ~~~!!~!!!~~~[GET RID 0 1'" UNSIGl-ITLY
I ·-~ ..... ~ j~ 0roc"':c~1so;H7.'•,,.· -""D=E"s"R'--1s_. ,,..--112 ......-..-... go _... LOAD . COLLEGE
STUDENT. 51.4'!28
~10\IING & ha u ling ; LADIES -Sumn1e r Special 1
yr mcmhcrship $.i. Call
'PARTNER' S?.G-1271 or Babysitting
any1vherc. Furniture,4 misc,
ifl'ms, etc. Bill & Sk('eter.
NEED help at home? \re
have aides, n u r s r s ,
h o u s ekprs, wmp.1nions.
l-lon1emakcrs U p j o h n ,
5-17-fiGSl .
DAY \Vork. General Clean·
ing, housekC'c p i n g ,
Trani:portation. ltealiablL·,
5-11-933().
Help Wanted, M & F 710
ACCOUNTING
NCR O~rator
?ilajor Nev:port Bra('h firm
needs ell:pcr . NCR·:l95 op-
C'rator for ,\ R & A P 11·ho
1'Rn lyjl(' 50 11·.p.111. Somc
forn111! C11ura!ion in account·
ing \\'OO]d bc desirable. Ex·
ccilent benefits.
Pleasr C/\11
i\lrs. t'ield1'r
9;3Q.t2 Noon
&11-1~"'9
THE IRVINE
COMPANY 6'15-2161 LJCENSED Babysitter has F .. 1 0 opening for I child, a~es 3.4 SKJPLOADJ::R & dunlp lrtLC'k '..Q'\llU ppor. En1ploycr
:148-1•179. --'----"-------
I l[g] ~1'!:. \Vcckdays only. i\feals, 11·ork. Concrete , asphalt, I"'"""""'"""'"""""""""' Lolt and Found F!'nccd yard. !l68-49TI sa1ving, b1~ak1ng. 846-7110. ~
l~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~;.~~ I BABYSITTING n1y hon1e GEN 11auling. 'T'rCE"/!'hruh After 5 PM By ,\p[)OintnK·nl II f!'nccd yard -loving care trim. Gar &. Ycl cleanup. Civil Engi r)('t'r S181\ +
Found (fru ads) 550 l-''=-'6--085.;c.==-·'-------Es!. S.11 ~7. i'>7-600-I. l\tethorls & Proccrlures
I------------LICENSED llabysiller -J\1y LOCAL 1novlng & houling by Analyst, S&L <'XI) SJ2K+
}"ND "111.le Chihauhau Vie honir. ,\vail ill 0 n. s I\ I . ~tudrnt. l.flrge truck. Rc-a5. C.On1rol Engr/BSEE lo $12K
l71h & Orange', :\f. "Pcrsonnl Cart'" 645-76.11. Barry. 5.1·1-1846 or 6~1. 1*c'y Bookkccf)l·r to $900 ~-&..¥.I~ ~;;;;:::;;;::;::;;:;::::;;;:;;;;;;_;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;_;;~ J' Digital Test Tech 10 $866
f'ND: !\tale Jrish Scllt>r " 1\lemo~· Test T('r h 10 $866
•1 v d c'~ V Conslr &erelary St'i() " csa er e. .~.. 1--1c Bookkeepers 10 S750
54•·2.'l!l'· Trader's Par:ad1'se PC AN! 1"'occ10' 1• 1"~ f"ND: Blk & \vhil C' J\illt>n F:xcc. Scl'rttarici; lo $7';>(1
F'lea collar \'u· 2 5 I Con1putrr Opcrnlor to $T.i0
\Ye1tn1instcr A\'(', 612~1~ I I 1' nes l...cRal Seot:retarie!I $i00
AIALE Killen Jtcd tigr1' -1\ P Bkkttpcr EDP to SG50+
HArbor View hrlnK"~ -Port A/H. Cr & ColleC'I IO $63.i
()untlegh Cir. 644-0177 t • I 1)ictaphon<' T)pl~I to $600 I mes I JomTicym>" P>'inler $600
FOUND i;crey klHcn "llot Reetpt!T'ypii:t 10 tii5 Doe''' virln.lty N c "'P o r I Rcc:tp!lonl11! s.;:;o ~I. ~7220 d 11 Cft1CrRI Ortic(' lo $-17:>
f'OUND: Blk & 1vhile sh<ii;:gy 0 ars C:AJ.L TRISll HOPKINS daft , fo"'(!m81e. older, merllurn J8RHI \\i'HfTTEMORt:
""· Mlsslo" Vi<Jo -5m!I 1 '----------------J' IRYINE PERSQNNR
FOUND. small i;t~ ktur n Al'PHOX ?II ACllC:S J~ \\'11.L 11-nd(' b'f.'e & clc11r cER\/ICES .. Ar<•V'"V °" lrigh Or.. L 8 X u n ll ' COltl)N.I\. Ry o\\1ncr. \\1111 1 ""-.JU""'"-1
<l!»-2971 lrt11I" nil or pan fo r O.C. hr:intt', NB addr~sll. $58,000 .• 48S F:. 171h Stint lrvinclC'1
FOUND: Si11n1iM ca f, l>r'oJ>('rty or \\rhat h/l.VI.' for unit.A, t!x('r upper, small Suite 224 642-1470
Laeun~ Bei.ch, 714--086-2800 you!~ MS·9TI.O E'VCS f> y.·k· home oi-land in local am\. ~
BLKttt1dte Jd11tn. 2500 U'rtt nds or ~-16-36TI; days. AGT. 646·m'l.
A'~· &U-4196. Need a "Patt"? PlaC"f' an 11id'
':II aft 6 54;r(i.\89. ficienL i\!<'sa Verdc i'!l'Ca. nral, good typist, call for ro. Rapid ad,•anccmenl. Stock options, CLEANING pcr~"n fill"'' 545-49.'18 app!. ;,:'17-.\11 .J Start S52i Call SaUy Hart, """ ~. Coastal P<'r'SlnneJ retirement for otc in N1"P I Cn·. Send DENTAL. ~::xp'd Chairside GIRL delivery dri\'et 19-25 ,\,. Zi90 H ho resunie to ClassifiC'd ad no. As..o;istant for Co~!a ~lesa of· yrs. O\'erscas Motor Parts, o;·ncy, 1 .ar r Blvd., plan. 932 C'/O Dailv Pilot, P .O. flee. Please apply to Box no 1900 !-{arbor Bl1·d. CM l~=·=~-------
Box 1560, CoSta Mesa, Ca !HO, 1· o Daily Pill'JI. PO Box GRJN & Bee It need KENNEL ~·orker for animal
92626. 156 Costa J\lcsa, Calif 92626 1 • r . - s hosfltal. NB-Irvine area. Tht>sc positions require ex·
pcriencc in rhe rollo11·ing
<irC'<Js. Cablin~. 11·1 re\\'rap.
or nicchaniC'al n.~SC'n1bh•.
Dori'! bf' IC'fl out -,\ppiy
t101\' .~ join a i;:1'011·ing ro1n ·
pany.
Plt>ast> Apply
In Person
Or Con1ac1. ,J. ~·uucr
s.harp .reliable girls for full Fu! or PT. \Vrite aassified CLE/\l';f~G goal, needed I day DENT i\ L A s sis 1 an t !•mt> n1
9
g:ht l\'Ork. Please call Ad No. !)()6, Daily Pilot,
a 11C't'k. Nc1\'P· Is., local Chau'l!idc, at lcast 6 mo's ~9!i-I p 0 rC'fs. l'cquircd. 675·0102 l'Xpcr. H.A. art>a . 8-16·35.JO · · Box 1.)6(), C.OSta l\fesa.
CLERIC/\L
WE NEED
Typish-SO+ w .p.m.
and
hch\·n. ~12 am or ~...S pn1. 9'2ti26
DENTAL Assistant, Exp'd
only <I handed dentii;try, 3-11
da~s 11·k, 538--231 1.
D!Slf\\'ASHER C\'e !!hilt,
\\'cd lhru Swi. Bahia
Corinthinn Yaeht Club, .1601
Bayside Dr., Cdi\1, See Chet
Debul!.
HELP!
Volt Instant
KEYPUNCH
Top $$S
All shift s available
!n.'inc 51G4150
17802 Sky Park
Anahei1n 5.'.3·2322 VDM I D0~1ESTIC Help George
I MATH CLERKS Allen Byland Agency, lffi..-B Personnel
17JO \\'. l.a Palma
NEVER A F!::t:; AT TEMPO
Ten1po Te111porary Help
2722 M ichelson Dr.
Irvine, Californi11
833-2400, ut. 336
I
\\'1th. ~ta!islics aplitudc E. 161h SL, S./\. 547--0395
DEMONSTRATORS n(•cded
1
1\pply tll the pcl'Sl'lnfl('l dC'p1. no1Y, Unllnlitcd C'arnings
i\lon<!J.1y lhru }<-1"i d n y , possible. f',or info call,
' f>A~l-12 noon. 1.::•~12~-<~l~l?~,·-------
NEEDS
LADY for 1,'Till in fast food
1'C'stauranr, 10 n111 to 3 pm,
no wknds. 5.'J6.....l.'l.'>5
~:qua! Oppoi·. J::n1ployer PACIFIC MUTUAL OONUT Shop, 6 a.ni.·2.30
p.m. F'cn1ale, agl' 25-45. Ap-
700 Nc1\'porl CenlPr Dr ply in person, t<.tr. Donut,
LIVE in housekcc.pcr & com-
f)l1n ion tor l Indy \\'ho want.a
home & i>alary, J\lust cook.
HoUl'S 8:30 Al\1 to 4:30 PJ\-f
Phone &12-4630
ATTENDANTS & \\'nitrrsscs Ne11·porl B<:'aeh J:l.5 Easl l71h, Cf\1
f',/limc. t.1a!urt:> 1\·omt>n 1 ..,E~q~"~"~' ~O~p~po!!!r .... E~n~,p~l~o~,-e~o~· ,
1
DRE."Si\1AKER: need skillrd
pref'rl. Good e o 111 pa n y drcss111Rkrr to copy dress.
bC'n t'fils. Plensant 11·orking COCKTAJL ivaiu~·ss & group Citll 4gg..373J.
• • • •
Secretories
Typists
Keypunch
PBX Oprs LO,\N li\'for tgagcl
ProcC's11or • Re s ld
Temporn.ry Service bulldcr-alrport ntl'a ln
rond. Apply in JX'r.<i011, for en!ertainn1ent . loiiiii.iiii.iiiii:i;;;_._._,_,,.
NP11'JXl!1 \111lfl J·f!'nllhcare, * 5~S-99RS *
'.18-1~ Can1pus Or., Suire 1(6 N.B.. C.i li 833-1390; For
Nc1\·port Bca('h 546-4741 App\, 1 ,~.,,~·~"~ru!!!O~p~po!!!ll!•·.~E'!!!!m~p~lo~y~e~r ~ILcU""N·~ci~l~~Wc,711-rc-,-,-.~La~C-av-,
Young lady ClS-281 to assist I' Rcsta.ur1111t, 16!)j Irv Inc in health spa. \Viii trnln, no H EL P \VRnlcd·RichArd's Avl'., C.M. Apply in pel'90n
C'Xp. nee. A!Jpl)' in pel"SOn f\birk et. lfifiO MacArthur 2nd noor. J\1on .. 8t 28/73
aey aft or eve. 2930 \V. Blvd, NB & :W.U Via Lido, 10um-2pm '
4000 Hilaria \\',~~'. N.B.
/\ITRACT!Vt; c• o ck t a i J !
11•3itress. expcr. undC'r :\0.
/\pply Bench Ball, 2l16 \V.
Oef'an rron1 , NB Tues . Sat.
1 0A~1-1Pl\1 .
BAB\'SITTF.R . Subsl ilU1C' !
tc11chcr needs rl'sponslblc I
\\'on1an on part tin1!' b.<lsil!.
2-3 days <l WC('k, 7am-:~·::m
pn1. Refer. Cur 11 r c . 1
&M~061 I
Commercial
Teller
E.,.J)Cl'lenCed P1'time
UNITED
CALIFORNIA BANK
Dr's Assistant
Coast !fwy., N.B. NB. LVN or ~tedlct1.lkl11s 7-3, full
He lp! HousekHper or p/t!mt>. Tcmp or perm.
DRILL press operato1· $235 fl(':eded, some child care. Nut"SC's /\ides 3-11, cxper
per hr. to start. Expcr. Cdi\'1, beat•h area. f)4().946S. pl'('f'd. WU! tmin mature
prcrrrrcd. 557-5220. Hospital'ty Hostess pcraon. lntrrvws "'1on-Fri,
S I 10an1-2pm, l\'fesa Ve rd c
EXECUTIVE Service Conv. l lrnip, 661 Ct>ntcr St.,
$12,000 to $75,000 Is: looki ng (or \\'Ol'n!'n to C,..1 548-~.
:':1)9 l\·lnin Slt'ee! $C'nd resurne or 1·all TODAY y.·cl.('On1c & Interview new•l 1c.VN;-.c.,-,~.~ll~. ~&""ll7_7~.-1c,7.11-171m-e
1 run linglon B<:'ar.h for t"flnfldcnliol NO C.'OST 1't•s1denls. SnJe11 or advt>r· modern fAcilltlc1t x ln (
B/\BYSITTER·niaturc sillcr A:i.6.~U Ee~cECcutlve1 i~tc1:115IeEwR.VIC S filling cxpcr. helpful. ~1ust w•ot•kin~ L'OOd·. Gordon Lttnc
ft)r 2 1110. old infant. 3 dys <1 ·' UT Vf, · E • ha_ye car & typciiTiter. Convale11ce nt tlospllal, 1821
1verk. rny hon1e. during fnll Equal 0pfl0r. J::n1ployer INC. ~1·3095. E ves & wknds, E. Ch tt pm a n Ave.,
semr.Mtcr. 83.1-3759 SSS N '-1a1n, $Mia Ana 846-9004. F\illcr1on. ' :::=ro:::ro:::======·' ( 714) 547-962:'1. ~""'=""~~~---I BAB\' S ITT EH 1}('('(frrl I· ··,1.1_. ...... iii;;;i;i;;;i;i;ii;;;iii_, lfOTJo.L -~nl desk clerk, LVN for 3'·11 & 11·7 rel\e(,
J\>lon-f:ri, 2-6pm. \Voodland $700 exper. pref d. Apply In Xln't wagc1. Call 642-2410
Srhl 1u'l'n. 642-19().1aft6 pm. COMMERCIAL ~i ~;:tary 10 $T:i0 pel'90n. The ~cway Jnn. or a'IJ'.ly, 144S Superior
T ELLE RS 1400 $.E. Bnstol, CM. J\w B BABYSITTER, hourly. pick In Hous<' Counctl 557...$700 ., · '
up chilrl from St"hool nt Experienced Sccrr11u')' $650 HOTEL hou LVN lull or p/timc. 3-ll noon. 645-6075; 833·8182. Ex1"'C. Sre')' $700 11eman. · no ex· Hunt Bch Conv. Jlosp, 18SU
I Full & P /ti'me To Dirrctm· ol opcra1\oni; • JX'r. nee . Apply m peraoEn, 1''1orlda St.. 1-1.B. 847-3515.
TIME FOR
QUICK CASH
THROUGH A1
DAILY PILOT
WANT AD
642-5678
o· M I o... 1 llOO The Rodeway Inn, 1400 $. .1 ~=-~-~~~='-r 1nan 11 .~.,.; ys O Btis-tol C l\f 551-8700 LVN full &: p/tlm(I Modern
UNITED Sales $e(·'y5 $600 ' • ' ' co . I t hoc. C 11 A P Clf'rk $500 1-IOUSEKEEPER I Sitter. 64~ esctn p. a
CALIFORNIA BANK R('('eptlonls-t S550 beginning Sept. 4 r o r1,,-"='-=·==-..,-=~ 1 26151 La P a:i Rd: NCR Opt•rator $1j(J 1• lr.fl chcr, 7:3().4 Musi have J\-fACHJNIST Clas11 /\,Mill or
1 ..... asin~ gal Fri $.i50 tr1:1115p or llw nr OCTD. lathe. 4 day wrk ~k. lOhn
M ission Viejo, Callf. t"iC Bkkpr Corono. $16-7254. P<'r d{ly Mon-Thurs. A1>9ly
837-0066 • ' S In ~t'!IOn. Vought Dlviaion, Title c:<J)<'I', 16s~ HOU EKEEPER 290 f"lsi:her Ave CM
SeC':y Co,nsulllng ...,, l..agunll Niguel llrta ~1024. " '
S.C y • f.>Crow 1625 2 day• Pl" w<ek ...... """"""""""""~IP/C Bkpr/Con~' 11'0 496-09;8 MACHINIST
COOK for yrar Rround chllrl F C BkP!:J BoRtng $700 HOUSEKEEPER II i r !~the le Mill ~:<per. Job shop
Equal Ot>por. En1p:ayer
1 ~ H d · Memory r est 1'1!'Ch $4·$.'l hr • • ve n, or & proprietary prod u c t 1
<flY Cfl t~ cenll'r . ., NI aJ• Digll11l T~ Tec-h $4-$5 hr "mplo~. coup11:i. $7S. wk. J11cobl Industries, 2120
ly. Cor~r _!lay SIS:. Orange, NEWPORT rets. reqd. Reply to P.O. Placenlla, Cl\f 646-32ll
C.M. &t:>-6370. Ba.~ 1438, Laguna BeRch. ~ -~='""' -
COOi\ rc.n11tle, Convnte:w-111 Personnel A~ncy "White ElephMts" ov!!r• MACHINl~T
HospitRI. Full & part 1imc. 833 Dover Or., N.8. ruMing your house? Tum Pert or full 1Ume. Da.y or
\\l\JI train. 642--0598 I .641-3870 them into "Cash" ... 11811 night shU~i Top PAY·
A good \Yani ad 1.a ~ l100d In-them Ulro • DaUy Piiot Co ~206 ve~ment. CLASSIFIED will 1ell ii! clwlUtd ad! CLASSJnm · ....•. 66«11
I
em.,,w,..,, JLml r. • ..., .... J(ll] I !trflo);;a* l[Il]I ~ _L .... _, .... _ JITT] l.__-,_· ... __,l[Il], .._I _i:.,,i.,_. "--').[jJJ [
MOTOR ROUTE DRIVER
Male or Female
FDR DAILY PILOT
IN SOUTH LAGUNA
Liberal profit plus generous car allowance.
Must live in area & have valid drivers Ii·
cense. Dependable auto & cash bond re-
quired.
Call Harry Seeley 642-4321
An Equal Opportunity Employer
Htlp Wonted, M&F 710 Help Wanted, M & F 710
N""'"' RN·LVN-AIDE
U·7 & other shifts, Top pvt
dut,y pay, Immed. pey tor
floor duty. Count)' wide
Intrvws. MOn·Ftt 9-5.
Lesl'Olllie Nurses Registry,
351 llospita.I Rd., NB (l.Qb.
by Parle Lido B I d g )
642-9955, 540-9954.
NURSES Aids. • Day shift.
Hnlg. Bch a r c a . Con.
valescent Hosp. Exp er.
pref. 842-·.'>551
NURSE Aides wanted, will
train. Laguna Beach urea,
call 494-8075 for appt.
2 OFFICE. o;IRLS
NEEOED
nadlo telephone dispatch
'\lust be 25, able to drive
Apply In Pt>rson
YELLOW CAB CO.
186 E. 16th, Costa Ml'sa.
MAID~no exper nee. Apply MANAGE Apartments. Older OR.DER DESK
in f)('rson, The Rodeway couple, handy. bondable, I Job duties include. written
Inn, 1400 S.E. Bristol, C.M. Newport Heigh!s. Resunw correspondenc.e with CW>·
557-8700. to 12427 Ventura Blvd, to1ner, handlt~ of _ _orders
•1 ID F~R MOTEi Studio City. 9100.1 or call and customer 1nqu1J1es by 1• A • ·v " 213-877-1606/762--9873. le~ephone an_d coordi~t!on Laguna Reel Motel with producl10n & shipping
30800 S. C'oast H\vy., Mechanical Assembly depts. Requires good typing
!Aguna Beach. 499-~ Lile manuf-F/time. Min. skills & abilHy to use the
MAINTENANCE Job exp. req'd. 979-2290, Jim telephone eUect:ively. Pleai;e
Opening Cline weekdays. apply at:
Building mairrtenance Middl•Aged.Couple CAMBRO MFG.
Reg. hrs., 5 day week lull lime Maintenance-clean-7601 CLAY, HB
Contact Manager ing for 'aparttnent complex. 847-3531
Anchorage Apts. 54S-1501 Live-In . No children or pe1.'l.. (Wrst oU Bea~h just So. of
Daily S.5 Salary Open Garfield)
Call 644-26U Equal Opportunity Employer
MAINTENANCE MAN Exper. in hospital maint. l\.10RNINC auto route w/the
Good starting salary. Register in the Costa ~tesa
I r . c--f' area. Approx. hrs 4-Gam. nsurant'e -nngc> ~'"'"its Xln't perm. p/time situa·
lJ11n1ediatc openings. r "'~" """"' * 540.7095 * IOn . ...,"""""°. lo;;:::::::::::::: I MOTEL Mald-5 hrs v.'Ork in !• exchange for apt or .salary,
Exp'd. 2376 Newport Blvd.,
C~J. MS--91:>5. MANAGER
TRAINEE
No Exper. Necess
Earn As You Learn
I! you are amhilious, carerr
n1indcd & \\'ant tatal lnYol\/e-
n1ent \.\•/people .,.,.e can de-
velop )'OOl' management
abilities lhru our training
progran1,
JobStabir.ty
Group Insurance
Paid Vacation
Automatic Salary
~10TEL MAID WANTED
will lrain, apply ln person
Costa Mem Inn.
MOTOR Route Driver for
Dally Pilot in South Laguna.
l\fust live in area and have
valld drivers : ! ~ens e.
Dependable auto and cash
bond required. Call Harry
Seeley, 642-4321
Equal Oppor. Employer
MTST OPERATOR
Experienced. 4:45 to 9 PM.
!rVine Complex area, Call
I Mrs. Patton, 546-6170.
Nii. Rec:optlonl1t
Re11id. care facUlty, ll:30
l1'ARKJNG-Attendant, over
18. CaJH lie. Part & f/time.
CaJI betwn 9am & 4pm.
4"'5162
PARKING Attendant, clean
(.'lit, over 18, for large apt
complex. Apply at 31423
Coast Hwy, So. Laguna
PART time sale51ady wanted
in: new art gallery in
Laguna. Must be attractive
& over 25 yrs. Average 15
hrs. per wk. Starting at
$2.25 w/early advancement.
Personal interview btwn.
11 At\1 & 5 PM at 1516 S.
Coast 11 .... 'Y. Laguna.
P/tin1e Sllkscreener, exper.
on semi auto silk screen
press. Fabric exper. pref'd.
Student ok. Studio 12,
>l().!l<95
PBX Operator, answering
service, HB Eve hoW"S.
~
PET SHOP anistant, must
be able to v.·ork momlngt.
962-8000
PICTURE FRAMER
Increases
Advancement
Oppor.
P!'t1 -7:30 AM. 842-7788.
The •luntington, 1 8 8 5 1
Florida St., Hunt. Sch. Orange County's most com-
plete & fastm growing
------... --•I cuslom framing operation.
NEEDED ND .. WI. M"" haw "perience ;, a11
,
(714) 835-7417
Tic Toe Systems, Inc
e DISHWASHERS e BUSBOY
MAN or couple, early AM
newspaper delivel)' in
Irvine area. Xlnt route
open. $300 rpo. approx.
96"4633
MAN, young & husky, tor
Skady \\'Ork v.ith Soft \Vatt>r
Co., in: SJC. No intp. nee:.
Vac, ins. 493-4535.
TOK, T5K, 25K, SOK
SALARIES • NECOOTIAILI
Are You Unemployed Now -Are You Seeking
A Ch1n9e -Worried Aboui Your Age -
Tired of Brok en Promises -Undecided As To
A Proper Course of Action -
ARE YOU UNDER PAID?
Tl You Can An1wor Tho Following Cotogorlo1
In The Afflrmatlvo, We'~ Like An loterYlew
Witt. You
IF YOUR ANSWERS ARE TRUTl!FUL
-WE CAN HELP YOU
A, Do yO\I ht¥t thong voe•lion•I drivtt7
I. Do YO\I h•vt 9ood ntlivt i11ttlli9111ct?
C. Do you fttl t1,1ffieitnlly motivti•d to tehltvt7
D. Do you h1vt !ht 1bllily to m•k• deeitlont?
E. Art yo11 reedy to 11t • rt•li1tle c•r••r objteflvt1
F. If you were co11vl11ctcf the! h•lp ""'' •vt ileblt, wo11ld
yo11 eceepl 1t without dtl•v7
YOU SHOULD KNOW
e Tht bt lttr jobt ere not tdvtrllttd e Third p•rly prof111fo 11•I lnf1uene• it sorn1tl11111
ntet111ry e Gtltln9 th• right doott optn, ti lht right lt v•I r•·
q111tt1 techniqutl e Elc•c11tivt po11Hons •rt filled throu9h tlltt\lflvt in•
f•rvltwt e M111 rt111m1 mtill119, h not 1 tote! 1n1w1r
EXECUTIVE SERVICES, INC.
May Havo Ao Ao1wer fOf Y°"l
S1nd R11u111t Or Cell Tod•v
-For-
NO COST DICUTlYI INTIRYllW
IXICUTIVE SERVICES INCORPORATED
111 H, MAIN IT, -HOMI OF•ICI -SANTA ANA
Stc·urily l 111k 811ildl119
S,,.ift ?02
PHONE1 (7141 547·9625
\
phases. Top wages. 646-2996.
New oft1ce In Laguna Beach.
Must be licensed, but will
consider eager, new sales.
people. Many ndvunlages.
Contact: Dorlt Smith
American Home
Realtor
875 N. Cs1. H"'Y·· l.A.guna
• 494-1001 *
REAL ESTATE SALES
FREE LICENSE
TRAINING
Famou11 Real Eii:ltlt-0 1.lcens·
lng Course now available
thru Tarbell Realtors. Fre1?
Plncemcnt SC'rvlce. Free
TNIJnlng Proar•m. Eam
while you Ieam. call Al
Sloan (TI4} 8:>2-5440.
R.E. SALESMEN
Why not work in the hottest
area , Hunl i n1tton
Bf!ach/Founta!n Valley. Let
ll* tn1ln: you! Alk lor Mr,
Snider, VILLAGE REAL
ESTATE, 962-44n
RECEPT'!ONIST for lrvfn<
lll\V ottlct. Lt. bkkpg. It
clerical s"ktlls req. 833-3622.
RECEPTIONIST
Dny or 1Ught, no exp. nee.,
~, fun job. WU! train, no
typing or shorthand, etc.
Apply In PtnOn any aft or
we. at 29.30 West Cat Hwy.,
N.B,
Major land development finn
haa lmtnedlate opening& for
St.'(.Tetaries w/substantlal
exper. in the 1 i e Id of !!!!!~!""!!~~~"'!"~~~I 8lles(n1klng. finance. public RECEPTIONIST relauons oc ICll•I re6l e<l•I•
Roger~• Gardens
Personable &: dependat>le per·
son needed weekends only
to answer phone and do light
typing. Apply In person at
m:t. Fsirv1ew Road, Costa
Mesa.
Reuben's
Plankhouse
Is Now Hiring
Full Time
Day Dishwasher
&
Busboy
Apply In Person
12342 Brookhurst Ave.
Garden Grove S39-3202
Equal Oppor. Employer
background. Sh 80 w.p.111.,
typing 70 w.p.m. Must have
good public & lelephone per.
aonality. Excellent working
conditions & berlt'tits.
Call Mn. F !elder
644.3319 9-12 PM
THE IRVINE CO.
SECURITY
GUARDS
F/t.ime. Exper. Contact Mr.
Ford, Security Supv.
Balboa B•y Club * SALESMEN * l2ZJ W. Coast Hwy., NB.
Do you take "Salesmen SECURITY GUARD
wanted'' ads with a grain of Ex.per. P/time. Contact Mr.
salt? Can't say I blame you. Ford, Security Supervisor.
I followed up a few myself Balboa Bay Club
In the past. The job seldom 1221 W. Coast Hwy., NB
lived up to the claim in the SERVICE Sta. M4118ger, ex.
ad. per. Smog lie. Lite tnech. Do yoursE;}f a favor & ex-\iel)' neat in appear. $800+
plore this one. It you'd like pt>r mo to start. Apply
to make $250 a week im· niorns, 2590 Ne"'pot1 Blvd., mediately, with an eye to CM
much more in: the future, '°"==~~-~-~ I'd like to talk to you. If SERVICE Station Attend ants
your qualifications match Xlnt working cone!. Benefits.
our requirements, this could Apply wkdays Sam-~n.
be the career you've been Bill Rash Chevron Station.
looking for. 24081 El Toro Rd, Laguna
Interview appointment 10-4 Hills.
PM, weekdays, 586-3182.
• Sh SO w.p.m. Typing 70
\V.p.m. Must have good
public & t e lephone
per.ona\ity. Excellent \.\'Ork·
1n.g condHlons.
Call Mrs. Fielder
~319
THE IRVINE CO.
Equal Oppor. En1plo)'('t'
TEST
""'9)11atl ,
•
Tutsday, A11911st 28, 197) DAILY PILOT lJ f
l!Ill [ I --
• REWARD•
&,-,.ATE Sale: Quality An-
Uq~ & Ob Jee ts D' A.11.
Byuu11 !tie IC<>1l!l, Ha~·kes
Cl'YSlal, Chinese teakwood
chaiNi, st~rllng silver. oil
paintings, sculpture & much
more~ l-72-l--0949 eves.
-BLUFFS-CARPirr-
f'ulJ 1:a1'Pfling fqr De-lores
n1orlel In Bluffs. C,,olrl color,
tine t'Olldition & C'lcaned. A
real buy! Appro .. '<. 1n yds,
Sl!O. Call lor details.
ST.i-3730.
SACRIF! dishes, am ap.
pliances, linens, tools, patio
furn. very gd cond., reaa.
6-44~199
FOR SfLle srnl gas !love I:
O\'en $15. Surfboard 6' 8"
$25. Call Linda 5.16-6232
1--.:ves or 6.19-6472 Days
MOVING & S'I'ORAGE
Lowest rates in area
963-4163
SLIDING glass patio door I
frame. xlnt cond. 10· by 6'8"
$00. Ol" bst. offr. 646-5251).
YOU benelit more for much
less • Corona de! ~1a.r Ten-
nis Club. 673-STit. * PICASSO, DAU. OTHER
GRAPHICS. PVT. P'l'Y.
~!UST SELL! 535-5595
'70 175 CB Honda. 800 ml, "70
Opel GT. '62 Olds 88, must
sell, 979-3958.
SMALL Oriental chandellff.
Antique dishes. Other items.
• 646-8436 •
.... ,, .--'"""-===--==--=--....... . .. l:i
... ~~q#~
-;;;; "' ,.. . ... l_ A CONVENIENT SHOPf>tNG ANO
"'<7, SEWING GUIDE FOR TH(
i:_ CALONTHECO. --
For an ad In Woman~s World
Call Mary Beth 642·5678, oxt. 330
Five for Fun!
mn.
'
New, Longer Look
7324
·,
: • -~;:Jri.
... :.:· . ·~ .~-· ··~·~ .~ ..
' -
\\'arm up to \Vlnter v.ilh
this dashing, new Jong cardi-
j
•
:J2 DAILY PILOT Tuesday, Aitiust 28, }q73
lfiJ · 1 ......... l§J I .. *..... l§J I .......... l§J I '-------~l§J~1~1._~, .. _ .... _ .. ~1§1~1 .;;;;;;;;;;;;;.A;;;;,.l~x~Uf~O·l•,~ ....... -.......... ~,.,10 1 ...
V11u ..,. Autot, tmporfod 970 Autot, Used 990 Aulol, UMd 990
I~ ~I --~1~~··1 I ...:.:-'r:.=-I~ I •ctw.d!N
' .
Ml-ll antous 818 TV, Radio, HIFI, Boa ts, Power 906 Cycln, Blkn
---'------Slerto 836 FANTASTIC BUY s-ters 925 * AUCTION * STE REOS and Quad A 21) >"T. OPEN·DAYCRUIS. FREE SAFETY CHECK
Fine F'w'nlture systi>nrs. (8uyer!I beware!) ER, inboard 318 cu/in. \VITI-I TUNE UP
& Appliances Don't puy 100 much for a Oirysltt V-8, bucket seats XL 250 $10.50
Auctlf411 f'rlday, T:30 p.ln. ~ tHC."l'CO sysli'.'rn! We havi: + fuU stern scat, 30 gal. 650 Triumph $15. Windy's Auction Barn U..ern troo1 SSS. Nan1e cap., complete navla:. t'qUlp, LABOR ONl..'i
20'1!H~ Newport, O.t 64S-8686 brands. Check on our prices in<"Juding compass. two PICKUP ANO DELIVERY
Behind Totly'& Bldg l\1at'I. ix'f01'1' you huy. A 11 bilge pun1pe1 bilge blOW'el', Norm's l\totorcycle Haven n1ercha11diiw is guaranteed, horn, gpare 'uv battery + 1629 S. Slandard, S.A.
Dlsplay props irK'loding an-E·Z payrncnts. 893-0501 full boat cover, four scoop • 835--5102 • lique Stove, old la~hioot'd bal k/ dut · tank comnlOdc In v.·o.rk1ng SYMPltONlC slereo BSR 1.tan heavy ytnulcr. * BICYCLE SALE *
condlHon. Old porccliun tum h1blt> AM/f''l\f ta11e dk Asking $6200 or best oUer. NE\V 10 SPEED ITALIAN
hand paJn1cd tub. 8 coun(er -1 lge floors spkrs. Brand nu Call: M2-5980. BICYCLES $59.95. Beach
cabinets, 3 x 5' on cttsters. cost S300 wtll SJ.IC $170. ANNUAL MJD SUMMER Bicyc\e11, 806 E. Balboa
Av1dlable 1n1mt"diatt>ly. The 552-0129 clearance sale. Fantastic Blvd., 675-7282. Authorized
House & I. 1803 \\lcstcliil savings on our inventory of NISHIKJ dealer.
l"Jr. 548-3300 new & used boats. No reas. .69 HONDA ChOpper, 6000
HOO\'ER upng' ht Vacuuin I!' olfr. refuse<I. Mesa Boat ·1 Cl M « Se ' rrte to You Center, 1595 Newport Blvd., nu es. ean. U:-. e. $35, Hvy metal 2 drn.1.vcr !ii· ,__ _____ _, CM. 646--M.69 or &1S--053g, Beat offer. 642-2295 aft 6. ing cabinet $20. Dt>corat01· -Ask for Bob Paris. 761 5'.."0tt
Spanish v.·ood wall shelt 3 Lines, 2 Timts, $2.00 16 Pr. Fbgls RW18bout, 120 Place. Apt. 3, CM
\\'/pair Cl( rnatching wall outdrive. Trailer, elec. mtr A Great Sikel
sconl'i"S. sl5. Plate glass lift, new top & canvl\ll 1970 Kawasaki' 350 inirror 89x24" $15. 846-22'.lO. PEACHES is peachy keen, cover. Xlnt cond. Call
she is a real-live doll Kil· CAA """"' XI d so= II Jl ~T. 0 -Jvag•. New ,,·d·walk ~~ • n1 ron . ,....., ca 1u r n. .,., ... " !en, box trn'd velvet claws e 536-7867 e bike $10. Toys, lamps, la"•n &12-1534 'TI SIDEWINDER, 85 HP
mo\v('r, new & used Out-Board Chrysler, gold & '71 HONDA 350 Scrambler Lo
clothing. dishes, s1uden1 FRAZIER's look-a-like is a bronze. Xlnt cond. $2400. mileage, new cond. Must
desk, n1any other iten111. gcntlcmau kitten & not so 646-6032. 2212 College No. 1, sell. Leave overseas, $550 T,h~~rs-Sun. 10-5, 54&-4903. ~~.~~ trn'd, velvt't 100c~.M"=. ==~~-~-or best olr. 646-0176
3wo Sicily, 01. 25' CUSTOM ti berg lass * HONDA 250 XL Perfect
MUST Sell-coin col!ection, FREE Prin"lO PI.IP Pies• Lyman. FWC-V8, loaded condition. RecE'nlly serviced.
l\1odel 12 Shot gun, 1906-22 Lab/Afghan combo, 6 with equipment. lnunac. Call Kurt, 979-7579
Cal r'·n Lark o•nt 1 ·1 \llCC'ks, ready &: v.-eaned. ~""'n "A" "'~•A · e. " ra1 er. .,......,. O't<T""U.l't't FREJUS Semi-Pro, smooth
Valued Sl<XXI, scll $800. Hunt-671-1447 Boats~ Sail 909 running, some campy equip.
Ulg ®gs, 6 \vks old. URGENT! Need home for 2 $150. 642-3186
545--0266 cats, 1 ~ yrs, housebroken.
Atrror-.1ATIC GAR AGE Please call 4M--5642 COLUMBlA 26 MK II
Sleeps 5 adults, head, galley,
loaded with gear including
bow ' pulpit and life lines,
custom de<..'Orator trim, :'!hag
carpet, compass, R.D.F ..
anchor, line, and Oares. 9.8
horsepower Mere. Main,
mul(', and 167'il· Genoa 3
Barlo\V \\'inches, boardine
ladder and more. This is
an exceptionaJ!y clean boat
and had fresh lx>ttom palnt
in August. Replacement cost
well over $10,000. Owner
buying larger boat. Asking
$7800 or make offer. Will
help finance. 714-842-3737.
rutODES 33·Cl~slc racing
champion "HANAHUU.''
To1> condition. $6500. Ph:
671-1232,
Mobile Homes 935 DOOR OPENER. Finest AFFECTIONATE l yr rust
known brand. Reg. $200. male kitty, altered, shots,
Speeial $ 1 3 9 . 9 5 installed lx>x trained 644-0139.
RETIRED gentlentan
rlespcrately needs space
NO\V in Adult Trailer Park
for a 12' x 52' \Vllh porch &
carport. Prefer C.M. area.
\Viii consider buying similar
v.·i th lease of lot. 546-0135.
Aft 6 PM or aU day
\\•eekends.
w/5 yr guar. 893-357'1 or ONE kitten left: 6 wks. old.
530-1<115. Playmate of "Pal", the TV
50 GAL. + 2-10 !)'.Ill lanks, talking dog. 642-9846.
stand & fish. an equipment. $175. O'Keefe & Merritt tri-TRI-colored collie. Fenlale,
pie oven, Coppe.rtone. $75. to good home.
89'2--8685. 545-7761
"DRAPERY FABRIC" FOUR extreme I y af-
17.000 Yards 1st's fectionate kittens, need good * 790 SQ. ft furn. at less
than $5/sq. ft. $3750. In no
pet park. $65 rent in NB.
645--2549.
Special ]\fill Purcl1asf' • home. 84&-5819 anytime.
$2.00 -$7.50 value ~~ pric1•
1510 F.. Edinger, SA. 541·2080
COPPERTONE Ref &· gas
range, likl? ne1\', 2 Kitchen
sets, on!' is n1nptl'. 2
Hollywood t1\·Ui 0 c d s.
543-0436
MOVING! Mu!ll Sell! '70
Dishwasher, '70 gas dryer.
crib, '62 Honda 150. Odds,
ends, 646-6867.
Miscellaneous
l[B
Pets, General 850
ATTENTION PETS!
1-foine a1~·ay from home,
Huilt just for you!
Boarding/grooming 546--2848
SAVE HOMELESS
PET
12' KORALLE Sailboat
Sloop, like new. 846-4353:
16342 \Voodstock L a n e ,
Hntgn Beach.
18' Y Flyer Sailboat and
trailer. Planing, hull. X1nt
cond. (213J 330--5228
Motor Homes
Sole/Rent
e SALl:S e
940
• SERVICE • e RENTALS e
EXPLORER .,
HUNTINGTON BEACH
18801 f:!fA(H i,lVD 841 8803
HUNT r,_,rQN BEACH
Wanted 820 1---------534-3228 or 4'*-4853 -~~~~~~= FL YING Jr. 14' w/road trlr,
WANTED : En~ i 11{' and
ttu!oMatic• trai1~111iss1on for
1960 thru 1969 Fah-on, 6 cyl.
Must be in good shaJ)I.'.
Hcasonablc. !)('.S-1971
\VANT TO BUY:
Engine for Au~lin.
• 544-3117 .
Musical Instruments 822
BOGEN P.A. amp. 60 watt,
use \V/horns or speakers.
Any ohms $100. or 1vil! trade
for con1parablc electrical
guitar or bass. 847-4772.
Piano $175, good c:ond
979-325.i or !!79·1161
Offi ce Furntture/
Equip. 824
3 OLYMPIA typewriters,
heavy duly, clec. 13" car-
riage, fabric/carbon ribbon,
JO pitch, 6 mo. old. Sell new
$550, 1vi1J sen for $300 ea.
>l<H!!Ol.
, EXEC swvl Chl'S $15/25 Sec
chrs $8124 Desks $20/90
Piel'c.e S67 \\' 19 CM 642-340R
Pianos/Organs 826
cover, 2 sets sails. $700. GMC
Dogs 854 days 6T:r1700, eves 642~980
8' SAIL boat, rully equipped Motorhomes e PUPPY WORLD e must rell, $175. 23· & 26'
I'.: NG LISH Bull mix, * 673-3359 * l t'ilMEDJATE DELIVERY
Chihuahuas, American SAILING dinghy, fully rii::-· Orange Co.'s
Eskimo (Spitz), Pit Bulls ged. A-l. $125. 644-0788 F:xr-lusivc Vealer
Greyhound, Bull Terrier, l?\'l?s/wknds. Bill Barry Pontiac:
T-cup Poodles, I la I ian Gl\1C REC. CENTER Greyhound, Bull Terrier. 1-IOBIE 16 Full race, many 2000 E. lst St., Santa Ana Cockapoo. 100 MIXED extras. Near ne-.v rond. Jim,
PUPS!! Stud Service Most 71416T::>-6891. 558-lCKXI
Breeds. OPEN EVES' Jac k Solmon Sloop 14'/, * RENTALS * 531-5027. $950. 58&5964 Pg. K-316 Lifetime, Superior, Open
AKC Silky Terrier Pups. P·CAT 2'29-Good race record. Road, Landau, Overland &
Starline bred, champ sired. M , / · kr Tri \Vinnebago Motorhomes Reduced. $100-$200. any extras sprm . r. RECREATION Odorlrs~. no sherlding. w/storage box, 645-76Sl. RENTAL ANO SERVICE
Call 557-4672 LIDO 14, like ne\11, trailer, 216 N Cl SA
N 3509 SJ......,. . ara, KEESHONO ll mo old male. rover, o. · ~-714-836·8615
All ho & AKC 833-2704 day, 6'/H719 Eves. s Is papers. e Orange County's Finest e $175. or best olf. 536--0143. VENTURE 24, outboard, Dale's Motor Home Rentals
Guard Dog. trailer , 3 sails. Ready to Nl?w Minis, 23-26' Lifetimes
ALASKAN MALAMUTE sail. (714) 846-3134 aft 5 "Carefree fun" 838-0900
AKC pups, m a I e If em I. Boats, Slips/l>OC:kt 910 IMMAC. 24' Pace Arrow.
Shots. Wormed. 646--5601. L o ad e d w Ix tr as.
SILKY TeJTiers.5 females. No 24' BOAT slip, lt Un t • Rent/Sa.le. (\Vill sacrifice).
reas. oUer refused. Call Harlx>ur $45 mo. 714: 586-4411 Call 846--2678 832-9422. FOR Rent '73 PaceArrow
\VEIMARANER pups, 9 wks. DOCK for rent, power only. 27'. Loaded, sleeps 10.
old; AKC. wormed & shots. Up 10 26'· Newport Island. 548-4037 or 540-7196 ~'" Call 4. 522 13 \Vinter only. 673-3ffi3.
F 0 l ,,,.111. : !71 ) -3 3. FOR Rent ree rgan essons DOXIE PUPS. BOAT slip, up lo 40· in 28 Fl Moloe Home
AKC $6JJ Ballx>a Coves. Avail Sept. 546-1452 , . each. 1 1 $65 557 -= , =~~--''=-"-==,---~~ A 213-869-0178 s · · mo. ""'\J.)\/() 1; As Long s You l ike! SLIP for rent \Vest Newport Trailers,· Travel 945
Non-players & players we!-Horses 856 can accommodate 40' power come to attend Tuesday FOR the small car & lite
night at 7:30 PM. \Ve \vant 8 BARGAIN $1000. Reg. boat, $50 mo. 573-6637. weight towing, 12' Papoose.
everyone to learn to play TB Gelding S yrs, for $395. Boats, Speed & Ski 911 1:1 & 15' Field & Stream.
·s2 EcoNoUNE van. R<,1 ___ c_A_PRI ___ ;,,;;M"'E""R-"c ""ED..;;.;l!"""s"'"B-E_NZ.;..; VOLKSWAGEN CHEVROLET
cent valve job. Rebuilt
trans, wheels. i·n l:rtat run·
ning cond. $700 or best ol-
ter; Or trade ror a good vw. ~2773.
50 USED "ft V\Y Bus, ax:x> milet 0n '73-VEGA G1', hatch back, 4
new eng lt clutch. $2250. spttd, AF/FM radk>. Red, • MERCEDES 548-9645 12;000 ml, perf<~t sbape,
Y '68 SQ. Back. l\lust .. n. 1900 $2400. !148-3243 CHEV 'b'7 Spcrt van 108, 6 NOW OWN THE ON DISPLA or ofter. Good mechllnlcal '72 EL CAMJNO, b I u e
cyl auto, p/b radio, stove, FABULOUS 1973 Sh . N Car condition. 644-8012 w/fl00-ltl.S$ to1uwau, air, sink, lr1g, looks brood. rum CAPRI arp ew .,.
great. $L450tnr. or fer e.....11 '°"~ d-. body ,1 .. -Tra de-ins 66 VW SQUAREBACK r>1s. P/B. auto, 10,000 n11., .. -7240 "I"' -.-........... u.: c I I E D rudio & healu $650. $3Z75. or orrer. 675-$31 .... :r · mouldings reelinlng !'ront om "9 n very •Y '72 FORD Van -Custom seat5, uoniour rear seats, 4 A1k About Our Unique •847-1751* '63 CHEV. Nova. ti cyl. 3 spd.
paint & int. New tires, runs 8~..1 transmission, power UHCI Mercedes LNM ·~ V.\V, BUS, Good oond, Runs good. Great traru;p.
I "700 s-& ~ am-Im slereo, $900. 1 .,,,.. .. ,8, car. 673.--0172 or 644-4528. X ut. .,.. or ~"""' rrout dUc brakes. style steel Plans 494 -"'. ~ .... ,~S2Sll-'=.======,..,--
T.0.P. 1135-3074 wheel• •. buckel seats, radial Hou•• f I ports ~ ,.
·n !'ORO Van."'"'' "II. V8, ply tores. 2000ce eng. ~ 0 m VOLVO CONTINENTAL
auto. trans, lo mi, mags, CGAECNB42801). 6862 Manchester, Buena Pull I ___ ..;_::.;~..:..---I :::':::::::-:-:--::;;::--:-::-:::;
shag rug, xlnt cond. Call OVERSTOCKED I ..in the Santa Ana Frwy COME IN '73 CONT. 4 Or. "Town c..'l.r".
557·1142 aft. 5 p.m. IMMEDIATE Sll-7250 TODAY r,;very COll(,i>!vable extra.
'73 B·lOO ~-e Van. 31R V·8, DELIVERY PORSCHE Only 7100 ml. ABSOLUTE· '"""'16 L\' TMMACULATF.! Blue auto, hvy duty spl'ings. mag GUSTAFSON Book $7,235. Will i>acrifice
whls. Make offer_ 548-5358. PORS'CHE •72 911T, Xlnr: TEST DRIVE for $6,195. Can finance
'64 FORD VAN, .$450 Llncoln·Mercury condltlon. ~•pd, AM/FM luxury wilh 15.775. Prlv. poy.
644-1354 or 67S-0947 16800 Beach at Warner stt"IW, Maintained 1.."0mpany economy 552·7000 01'
1967 FORD Su V I I Hunllngton Beach ""· 168511. n•, !ISJ.3&19 '73 Fuel inJ"ected CORVmE 530-1999
pee an, x n 842-8844 * (213) 592.5544 l---===="'==-
cond. 3 spd. $950. RENAULT VOLVOS ·~ ~2 "Home of the Viking" ;,ta-v.oi 1966 CORVETTE Convmible
Autos Wanted 968 DATSUN RENAULT lfardtop. 427, 4 SJX'ed.
AM/FM radio. New tires.
Top R·l2 4 DOOR'S "'••,. l•i.:i Real c 1eDanO! ID19GOO.E54&-1879 WE'RE MOVING Automatic Tran,ml'8ion 9'""" Ulllll
DOLLAR BIG SAVINGS ON SALE $2499.00 YOLYO
--------
P ID '73 Demos '67 MONACO Stalion Wgn, A P~1~~sP" DICK MILLER 1966 Harben', C.M. 646-9303 all pwr, lac air. r/h dlsc
IMMEDIATELY 0 MOTORS _ brks xlnt ennd. $ 9 5 0 . 610's Autos, UseG 7711 6·14~4.
FOR ALL Nf:il'ro~r l>J w .• ~17·~~·2e, S.A. BUICK le,,.,=, ~oo=oc~E~S-La-tio-.. -,-.a-g\-m. FOREIGN w ,...., S.100 or Best Offer. r-.1011·1-'ri
CARS DATSUN IR ENA1 I (T4, .-~w-n-!-~1-~-~-~-llar_Li_:~-.-,~,-~;' i·5, 1134·3'1;0 ·:.;4075 e"'·
oes':~R~~~ ~EEO N~po~v:ch .JI ,I V m:7s1r E. 20th, No. l, 01 '72 MAVERICK COUDC Auto
OF GOOD, CLEAN 833-1300 Open Sunday OYOTA '61 BUICK $150 Trans.. Power Steering,
FOREIGN CARS 1973 DA TSU NS _ T 2 dr, Vi. auto. Good body & radio, healer 250 CU In ECONOMY 6 cyl engine, TO~J>r?~~A~ortlD ALL MODELS $2021 95 int. Ru;~,"':)" firm . ~j,1095"'.'I" Pri. p I y.
Call or come In to see us. IN STOCK • ~ • 1971 BUICK Riviera, Lite Good T t I
NEWPORT
IMPORTS
31()(' W, Coast Hwy., N.B.
642-9405
BARWICK IMPORTS is the green nJet., beige int. Load-. ranspor at on Delive red Price ed. Xlnt lhru-<>Ut $3500 -or 60 FORD 4 dr. V8, .. auto, 33375 Camino Caplstraoo best. 642-2184 aft ?pm great 2nd ca~, $250. or will
San J uan Capistrano for a trade for turinture or ?
49J.3375 or 83!·1375 '73 TOYOTA CADILLAC * >IJ.:J69I * .67 DATSUN Rdsor 1600. 2 '60 FORD $200
lops, asking $800 or best of-COROLlA Factory air conditioning 4 dr, V8, auto. Runs good .
fer, call bef 4 PM, 536-8867. Full po\vcr . Choice of: Price firm.
--------loATSUN '73 240Z, air, xlnt Stereo AM/FM radio * 543-3691 *
cond, must SE'll. a t Cruise contl'OI 196I FORD FALCON -Runs
•833-8380• Trunk opener&: more Good • Nl"t'ds Brakes for on.
for clean late model can .71 DATSUN W 4 pd ~f.Gll, ti...:.1 All in immaculate L'Ondltlon ly $lOO. MIKE 839-1427
TOP CASH
and trucks! . ag., s ·• ~to Largest selectlon in
H d Ch ol R/H., all', lugg. rack, clean Orange County 'TI FORD Galaxie 2 dr hdtp, M?c:':Ur ancl J!n"!oreeet :is~. =~ P~r83;::~nts TOYOTA Nabers Cadillac Extra Cl~'.~395·
Newport Beach on '73 Datsun 610 sta. Wgn. AUTHORIZED DEALER •61 FORD Galaxy $~ 833-0'5.55 646-8234. 1966 Harbor, C.M. 640-9300 2600 ltARBOR BL.. best ofr Aft S or
\VE ffiJY '7l DATSUN Pick·up, im.mac Order Your Color Today! COSTA MESA · 893-4447 I~PORTED AlITOS cond low mi. WE BUY 540-9100 Open SUnday BEST PRICES PAIDI *646-837'9* '64 CAD. Cpe de Ville. All $399 O_R bst offr,. '63 Ford
Dean lewis Imports FIAT xtras, newly painted, 'good Galaxi<:" convertible, gd
1966 Harbor, C.M. USED cond. $300. ~1531 ~70nd. 644-0 7Jl;J.
Jl.16.9303 '69 FIAT 850 C-Onverlible EL DORADOS F c~i? J.I~ $l300
Jr-.fPORTS \VANTED gas saver TOYOTAS 14 TO CHOOSE
Ocange County's 644-7661 COUPES-C01'VERTIBLES MERCURY TOP S BUYER BIU. MAXEY TOYOTA flAT 124 Spyder, 1969, 5 s~, e
18881 Beach Blv · burgundy, good cond. $!651l. ALL 1973 MODELS DE VILLES '63 ,_fERCURY Sedan
Solid Transportahon Car
54..~5748 H. Beach Pb. M7.a555 aft 5' '93-529!. IN STOCK 31 TO CHOOSE
\VE PAY TOP DOLLAR '67 FIAT Sla. W~: Fae air, COUPES
FOR TOP USED CARS ~'if· ~~l~ndillOn. $695. SEDANS
If your car is extra clean. CONVERTIBLES
'73 COLONY Parle Wagon,
metallic blue, lo n1ileage.
Many extrrui. 642-2917 see us first. MAZDA Many excellent colors
BAUER BUICK Choicl? of interiors MUSTANG 2925 Harbor Blvd. * M•zda '73 Rotary * · fClo lh & leather}
Co.la Mesa 979·25<!0 $66 MONTH TRIUMPH '72 CADILLAC Sedan de ·59 MUSTANG. 1\l, Pi•. * TOP DOLLAR FOR 36 MONTHS O?EN LEASE Ville. MU.!! be sold at a p/b, auto trans. a/c, good
J UNK CARS. Will accept trade-ins Orang• County's sacri~. Has been lovingly mileage, good oond, must
Day or night. CALL MR. FRY 842-0666 Newest cared for by one owner sell, $1575. or best otr.
* ~17 .. * ff B h TRIUMPH since birth thru 16.000 'llH'" .. , ,,30 am-5pm unt, eac mile~. Call 646-7227 foe wkoays. Autos, lmpon9d 970 details. '69 MuS'T'=A~li~G-.Qm-vertlb-.~Je-1
MAZDA DEALER '69 CADULAC Eldorado, 302 V·8, auto, p/s, p/b, ALFA ROMEO FERRARI fully loaded, only 44000 ml, AM/FM slerro 36 000 mi LOTUS nu tires, sharp. Priv. party. $1400 562-8647 ' ' "
ALFA ROMEO
SAAB
Buy or Lease
Sales . Service -Leasing .
Rentals ----~J1\1rl1 jft11p1111!i f i! 1.'0(J w l '. 11-V'>'•-.. r,, "·''' A• "t> •-l' ""10.: -.__ .. ---
173.11 Beaeh Bl. 842-SC:i!i
BOB LONGPRE
MAZDA
-SERVICE FIRST-
EXCLUSIVE
MAZDA LEASE
MG $3ffi0. 642-29'17. '65 MUSTANG, red \v/wht
AUSTIN MARINA '68 SED DeVH1e, v.·ht wtblk vinyl top, rth, air CQnd., gd
Landau top. 36,CKXI mi's. rond., best offer, 642-7654
20 years experience in foreign S$~2ll00~~54{}-~:!15~24~==--1 '69Hiffiff:-ic~~:;;:";;;~ I cars. ....:. · · '69 1-·fUST. Conv, pis. p/b, CAMARO radio, white w/blck top, NEWPORT
IMPORTS
'68 CAMARO 327. Clean,
good cond. smo.
673-1158
hick lthr int. $1400. 833-8246
OLDSMOBILE
the organ! All materials Beaut. markings. Gentle Mesa Camper Sales, 2036
furnished, S38-2646 16' GLASPAR 75 hp with Harbor, Costa Mesa ALFA ROMEO· SAAB
Tont Dieterich • i.11 rhargc. trailer $800. 1970 NOMAD. 21 i,~'' fully selt in NEWPORT Isl Street at the
3100 W, Coast fhvy., N.B.
642-9405 CHEVROLET
Phone 642-2851 1~ 646-6078 con tained. Xlnt cond. p1i AUSTIN ifil'E:4: ~~i
COAST MUSIC I M.l:'~~ t,f 16' SKI lx>at & trailer, 283 ~pt~y_. !16_2"~36-70_. _____ ---------Santa Ana 558--7871
Ne\\'flOrl Bl\·rl. at Harbor ~------;;;;;;; ~~iSJ good cond. SOOO. '69 SHASTA 13', clean. CLASSIC Astin Martin 084 .73 MAZDA Rotary Wagon,
l;iiiiiiiiiiiiC-OiisiilaOiiMiieii,.iiiiiiiiiiiii I :~~~~~~~~~ Sacrifice $625. or make of· Xlnt cond. Very fast, 2+2, air. & other extrss. Assume fer. Must sell 64&-5.166 *714 492-5680• a oats, General 900 . : lease -30 mo. to go. $97.77 PIANOS -ORGANS _ _ l[i] AUSTIN HEALEY mo. If interested, phone
Ne\v & Uscrl. Great selcc11on. 11. FIBERGLASS, cathedral Transportation 1111
1
.
1
1M·l I----------5~1615 or 548-2lll, 1-tPM.
Competetive prices. Opeo I II k"Jf/ ho ' -------' A f •-•· Eves. & Sundays, The best .. 1.u · s 1•1. cai: top k'at. -utos or .,_ '62 AUSTIN Healy 3000, 3 '73 MAZDA. RX-2, 2 dr, auto
,, oam oalation. As 1ng 1 1~. mmmmmm;;;m;; carb ~w pearl wht ..,,,;,..., trans, air cond, R&H, Angel deals are al"•ays al: ~75 D 4nA85~2 ' ' ..,..... ..
W II. h M . c· #l • ays ;rt-I • ('VI? & Campers, Sale/Rent 920 Must sell, $1,300. 493'-8587 Bl ue, 2500 mi Orig ownet', a IC S us1c 1ty \vknds 646-4780. 953 $.3800. or best oUer. 494-4892 Antiques/Classics '6.3 Austin Healey Sprite,
South Coast Plara >10-2830 9 FT BOSTON WHALER 'll VW Advon!Uree IV cami> $375 MERCEDES BENZ
SQUALL er, custom built wilh many 1956 T-Bird, new tires, paint, 675-0320
KIMBALL electronic organ
dbl kbd mint cond. 1\1erltr
1vilh lrquois inlay. $200
down take over pmt.s.
537-4547
Ideal fiberglass dingey, E:<· extras, xlnt cond ., rerent ne\v chrome, new interior, BMW
cellent t'Olldition. Only $350. rings & valves. r..tust sell. nC\\' engine, Cost $4,500 to
714-$42-3737. PrvL ply. 592-3269. restore, will sell for $<1,000
16' OPEN Bow, 28.1 Chev. LET us sell your camper or firm. 64+-05TI days.
FISCHER Bahy Grand, dark
walnut -d~·corat ive. Xlnt
cond. $750. or !lubmit offer.
552-94j5
Berkley jct, fish/ski 50 trailer for you. l\1 e sa
mph. New Jrg whl trailer. Camper Sales, 2036 1-larbor,
Wes, 673-64Il or 646-3213. Costa Mesa. 646-4002
Recreational
Vehicles 956
WURLITZER Spinet piano,
xlnt cond, like nu. $475.
5.1<Hi965
Uprig~h-t~G-r-an-d~P~ia_n_o_
15' OUTBOARD "'-'/40 hp TRADE '71, 8' Pilgrim •1973 CHEVY Blazer , 4·whl.
Evinrude. $300 or BEST cabover camper for good dr. 350 w/auto tran!I, air,
OFFER. 646-6984. running V.W. Bus or Bug. Taco1na \Vhls. w I Gates
Boats, Maint./ _4_99-3~77_9~~-----tit·cs. A11/FM stereo, roll
0 I k bar, rear tire mount. 5000 Service 902 Cyc es, Bi er, =.-. 6 3 ·~·
642-56-1:{
EMERSON Baby Grand
Piano. Good condition $325.
or best offer. Call 494 .. \861
Sporting Goods 830
EXPER. yacht maintenance,
painting, varnishing &
general work. Satisfaction
,guaranteM. $4 per hr. Call
645-1320
Boats/Marin•
Equ ip. 904 FULL set Golf clubs, like nu + nu bag, gd buy $~. * 545-7977 * 12 VOLT Ball & Brtge
TV R d . H·F-Pumps. Close out, $14.95 ca. , I 10, I I, * 548"-035.)' *
....;S_l•_,_ .. _____ c.83.:..c6 Boats, Power 906
Jte4, ·Zenith, Sy I v a n i R : Laraest selecBon cc I 0 r . 172 SKIPJACK 20'. Open-225
black & white TV & t<ti-rros Oi\.tC. Undrr 100 hrs. Trailer
• In So. caur. Priced less & extras. Xlnt eo n d ,
, th.an the di&coW1tcr'I w/3 }T '11<1/494-7901.
ptc:IW't" tube, 1 )T parts & LET us sell ~ur trailerable
1 ten-lee. Most '74 models in fi berglass boat. For fASl
stock. '73 modcls prtccd to rei;uJ1.• call Mesa Boat
.clear. Cash 90 plftn ot tern15 C<:nte-r. 64~269 nr 646-0039.
CO 36 mo. ABC Color TV, 2.i' TH.OJAN, only 170 hric.
902.1 Atbnta, or 1 9 0 4 6 Best offer over S400J. Ex
8 r o o khunC, Hunlfogton conrl. 67:1-1849
Beach. 968-3329 or 96%-6559.1 •"n".-""rn=R""1s~era-,n,.., "'r968=.""10· * Summer Sptelal * beam. Super clean, many
R.atufft-Plctur• Tub'e l'"Xtl'a!I. r-..1ake offer. 67:l-8:i"I
$17.50-21'' ar 25'' Color 50' DIESEL Trawler AJaskan * 2 YEAR WARRANTY oype, 165.000.
fnstallatloll Available 646·7588
R.lol't Tclevtdcm Servlot .. White ElephantJ" over.
lorml!f\v Alesi North Coentct NMlnR your bOU5e7 Turn
l Didi S. of Balcer ~ them fnto "Cagh" ••• 111!11 o~ M (6 dAya) thtm thru a Dally Piiot
a.med Adi • . • &G-5671 clasalfied ad!
I
Scooters nti. $5:i.iu. 7 ""V.JQIJ _________ 9_25_ 1140 HP CQrvair Sandrail
Y Al\otAHA 250 Enfluro, 500
miles. $450. Helmet in-
cluded. Xlnt cond. 552-8013 * 1971 Kawasaki 75, SU5
w/sand & flotation tires &
trlr. Dave ait fl, 54$--3697.
Trucks 962
Ex ee 11 en t condition! !I 71 SPORTS CUSTOM 6r"""5· • F-100 Super sharp. 4 spd.
'70 NORTON r:.i0cc, gd rad & heat. New 12 x 18.5
shape. Must sell quickly. tires plus orig tires & rims
$650. 962-2739 aft 5 PM. * S92-lS32 *
'65 YAMAHA. Fair condition. I'""'""""'""'""'""'""'""'"!!!!' $125. or best offer. Call '65 FORD FlOO. 8' Styleside
84&-0409 P.U. New Radial tires.
'73 HONDA , Cl 4SO custom cab. V8. Auto. Air.
$875. tmmac COrKt 3mo old. Llk:c. new 645-8614.
642-193.1 '70 1 Ton cab & Ola!IS1!1, 4
Cl> TACO Mini Bikes $150 & speed, duals, p/b, p/$,
$100. X1tras included. Call radio $1650. 839-4090
54&-4653. '65 CHEVY % T. fiat bed, ·n HONDA CT70 1\-lini Trail, good shape, $500. firm.
xlnt cood, under 600 ml, &~3520 aft 6
$185 962-1763 •n DATSUN Pick-up, lmmac
'T.l 750 HONDA. 9,000 mi. cond, low mi.
Pert cond. $1375/or best ol· •646-8379•
fer. 830--0464 ~tom/Eves.
'71 KAWASAKJ 175. desert
bike, many extraa. Must sell
$375. Jim-644-7901
ffilUMP!l 'T.l Ttrler. 750ce, like new.
64!Hl361
·119 YAMAHA 125 Endro,
lltrf>et lf"(l61, &ft 5
• 642--08>13 *
.
Vans
. "'
LEASE A 1973
BAVARIA
I '
VOLKSWAGEN
I
'70 GTO 400, P/S, P/B,
a/c, ralley wheels, vinyl
top. Xlnt rond In & out. Pri
piy. smi. 554--0865
'65 PONTIAC GTO, nu eng,
pain1, Ures, 4 speed, mags,
l:lst ot everything $750.
~Stl?ve
'72 ORANO Pr Ix, ex-
ceptional. All power. Mwt
sell. Best offer. 540-55.57
·n PONTIAC Bonneville, ex-
tra clean, P/S, P/B, A/C.
$2100. 842--0371
T·BIRD
T·BIRO '69 Land&u Coupe.
Full power. AJr. 4 3 9
ThunderJet. 1 owner. $1695,
6~11. 64+-0183.
'55 T·Blrd, reblt ena ..
hardlOp, or1ginal, x l n t
">nc! .• $1-:;iO. 8.18-6988.
VEGA
'71 VEGA l:fatchb&ck,
Mtom upholstery, b t g
engine, perfect condltloft.
847-..1650. •
Like to Trade? OUr Trader's
Paradltoe column II !or )'O!!I
7
7
\
San Clemente '.f.oday's Final
Capistrano EDITION N.Y. Stocks
VOL 66, NO. 240, 2 SECTIONS, 32 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY , CALIFORNIA TUESDAY, AUGUST 28, 1973 TEN CENTS
lfncle Vrged Soap Box Winner to Che.at
BOULDER, Colo. (UPI) -Robert
Lange Sr. admitted today he told his
nephew to cheat to win the 1973 National
Soapbox Derby by building a magnetic
device in the ncse cf his green racer.
"1 determined that he should bui1d and
Install a magnetic nose so as to be com-
petitive with the professional cars he
would be racing against," Lange said.
"l knew that this was a violation of the
officiaJ derby rules and consider it now
$6 Per Ter11a
to be a serious mlstake in judgment ," he
said.
James Gronen, 14, was disqualified by
derby officials and forfeited a $7 ,500
scholarship for winning the race because
of an electromagnet found in his car. The
device, discovered by X·ray after the
race, pushed Gronen's car away from the
derby's metal starting gate.
An Elk Grove, Calif., boy was named
winner after Gronen was disqualified .
CUSD
Adult
Approves
Fee Drop
A tuition of $6 per • term for adult
education school was approved ~I by the
Capistrano Unified School District Board
of Trustees h-1onday night.
Senior citi::!ls will be charged $3.
The decision switches board policy
from last year, when the tuition \Vas
raJed from $S for as many courses as a
per90n wanted to take each tenn to $6
per course.
Following .. lhe fee hike, enrollment In
the program dropped .. and lhe district
made oo epdilional profit
~ Gordon Petenoo, wt>o lnlllated
the tuition hike Wt year, cast the sole no
vote.
"I still think the $6 a COW'ae is
reasonable. I don't know any place else
'':here you can get such a good deal."
Peterson said.
Trustee George White said h e
su!pected the fee didn't have anythin~ to
do with the enrollment figures, but
rather \\'ilh the courses offered.
Jn other business, the board :
-Apt-:-oved hiring one additional school
psychologist for-the 1973-74 school year.
-Authorized advertising for bids tO
replace the sound system at Marco
Fo1·ster Junior High.
-Learned that the di strict tax rate will
be one cent higher .than the 42.~ cents 'ln
SIOO assessed valuation passed earlier
this month due to an unanticipated drop
in the public utilities assessed valuation.
-Approved an application to the State
Department of Education for aid in set·
ting up a multi-handicapped student
facility at Richard Henry Dana School
'open to qualifying children from the local
district as well as Laguna and Sad·
dleback valley.
Nixort Departirig·
Clemeri te Hom e
Befor e Holiday
President Nixon reportedly plans to cut
short his Labor Day weekend visit to San
Clemente and fly back to the nation's
capital late Wednesday, reliable sources
said earlier today.
The only confiml1tlon to come thus tM:
from the White House staff, however, Is
that the Otlef Execi.tlve pl&Med to leave
"later in the week." Early in the visit,
the working vacation was planned to last
well beyond the i..abor Day weekend .
Reports circulatlltt.. in San Clemente to-
day said that initially '..he departure was
to have been today, but that notice was
too short for a pullout.
Deputy Press Secrelary Gerald Warren
gave no specific reason !or t.he change in
plans, but did coocede that the President
hoped to be wllh "as much of th< family
as possible" over the three-day weekend.
Warren added !hat the so]Oum pro!>
ably would be at lh< Presidential
relreat at camp David, Md.
SKID ROW LIFE
VISITE D TODA.¥
Skld Row Is an affliction of almost
every maj(lr American city. The
lkrellcts and casloffs of society gravllalc
tnere and scratch out a Ure most people
would never caU living.
As!ool aled Press. sent a phntograpller
and reporter Into one such area to record
• documenlary Oil life along Skid Row.
'!be resuli. are on Page 24 Ioday.
-Authorized a price increase from a
nickel to a dime for a half-pint of milk in
the district food service program, caused
by a cutoff in U.S. government subsidies
on milk.
Billy Graham
Crusade Hit
•
With Threats
LONDON (AP) -American evangelist
Billy Graham launched his filth British
crusade today, undaunted by bomb
scares at his teach-in at London's Earl's
Court Stadium.
Graham's activities were attacked last
v.·eek by one Anglican weekly as "hit-
and-run" evangelism, and a British
churchman called his crusade "wealthy
llOMBS GIVE BRITAIN
THE JITTERS-Story, P•v• 4
Christians in the West indulging in five
days of spiritual luxury ."
But as the crusade opened, no dissen·
Ung voices were heard, and among
Graham's sponsors were some English
churches.
An estimated 20,000 persons were in
the London stadlwn for the star to
"Spre-e 73" -for "Spiritual Re-em··
phasis" -in which the 54-year-old
Graham plans to train evangelists and
Christian cru.saders. .
The week·k>ng session, described by
Graham's organi7.atlon as a "Bible teach-
in" will end Saturday with a mass rally
in the huge Wembley Stadium, where
Graham will be backed u.p by singing
stars Johnny Cash and Cliff Richard.
The bomb warnings came-after a week
of terrorist incidents that have left Lon-
don jumpy. Police searched the stadium
but found no explosives.
The 7~minute session Monday, a
wann-up rally for the marathon \each-in,
opened with performancos from pop
singers and a Swedish choir clad in blue
jeans and yellow sweaters. The stage
was flanked by two giant screens on
which Images of the performers nashe«.
Graham strode onto the bare stage to
begin his address with a prayer.
"AU the world seems to be caught up
in a very climactic moment in history,"
he said. "What an hour lor thousands of
young people lo be meeUng here not In a
drug scene but in a scene glorified by
Jesus Christ. This generation cannot
escape Christ."
Graham will speak every night on dlf·
ferent aspects of religion to the
estimated 12,000 delegates from Christian
organizations around the world who are
to attend the training sessions from 9
a.m. to 9 p.m. every day until Friday.
The $550,000 cost or the teach-in has
arou.!ed crlllcl.ml. too. Church groups
(Set Tl'IREATS, Page I)
Marine Found Dead
Near Camp Pendleton
A Marine from Auburn, ?.1aine, has
been found dead on i San Onofrt beach
near camp Pendleton. He Apparently
drowned, a camp spokesman said,
Pvt. Willard D. Hopkins, 21, was pro-
nounced dead on arrival al the base
hospital afltr his body wRJ found by •
beach allllldant Sunday.
George W. Brittain, president of the
All-American Soap Box Derby, Inc., de-
clined comment on Lange 's letter until
he had a chance to study it.
Lange, young Gronen's legal guardian,
released his statement after talks with
his attorney. He said the admission was
hi s last word on the incident and that
Gronen still was vacationing i n
Wisconsin.
Lange, president of the Lange Ski Bool
Company, Olttside Boulder, said the cars
of the other top IO finishers should be in-
specte<t' for alterations that were against
derby rules.
He denied pouring large sums or
money into development of Gronen's
racer and the car in which his son,
Robert Lange Jr., won the national derby
titl e in 1972. The Boulder district al·
torney had said the 19n car cost between
$10,000 and $20,000 lo build.
Derby rules limit spending on develop-
ment of racers to $40.
"It is foollsh to sugges t that any
substantial expense went into either or
them ," Lange said.
Lange said his nephew "'as not alone in
tampering with his car and that the
event had become "tainted" with
tampering oot discovered "because of
poor impection and lack of supervision.··
He said he wanted Groncn 's car to be
D1l1T ,"91 Sllfl f'~
TRAFFIC OF BIG TRUCKS SERVING DANA BLUFFS OEVELOPMENT HAS NEIGHBORS IRATE
''We're Doing Everything Within The l aw and Br eaking Our Backs to Keep Roads Clea n and Neet"
Dana Bluffs Under Fire
•
Su perv isors Get Petitions From 500 Residents
The rontroversial Dana Bluffs develop-
ment in Capistrano Beach is rankling ad-
jacent residents' nerves Jgain.
A petition signed by 500 residents along
Via Verde and camino Capistrano has
been presented lo the Board o(
Supervisors asking that the county panel
"lake immediate act ion to stop the iJ.
legal Md dangerou s acts" assertedJy
cc.used by constru ction.
down their speed. We've also called the
highway patrol to keep their eyes on the
drivers, who are inde~ndent."
\Vright said the 20-ton trucks move 500
loads a day.
"We took the higher bidd er because he
premised to get the dirt-moving part or
this project done in 30 da )'s as opposed to
the 57 days which every other bidder re--
quired," he said.
"We koo\V this is a-problem, and we're
h1.:.man too. We're spending more money
to get the job done fast for the residents,
and \Ve ha ve been harassed unfairly,"
\Vright said .
~re said all aspects of the earth-moving
operation had been discussed \vith the
county road department.
"The roads are old and already in a
(See NERVF.s, Page Z)
h1rs. Carmen 5achs, a nearby resident,
said trucks carrying dirt from the site at
the rate of one every 20 seconds are
"raping and ravishing our streets, crack·
Ing We in our homes, filling our houses
with dust,· and creating so much noise
that we are developing n e r v o u 3
symptoms.''
Nixon's Clemente Deals
She added the trucks have damaged
sewers and water lines, causing raw
sewage to fill the streets at seve ral
points.
Financed by 2 Friends
"They start those tru cks at six in the
morning,'' Mrs. Sachs said. "At least 10
women have gone to their doctors
already with nervous reactions," she
said.
George Wright, supervisor of the Dana
Bluffs Ltd. project , sa id "we're doing
everything within the law and breaking
our backs to keep the roads clean and
neat.
11We've installed every safety device
available and told the drivers to hold
By JOHN VALTERZA
OI 1111 D1llr ltilol Sllff
Details of an intricate series or secret
purchase agreements involving La Casa
Pacifica and nearly 30 acres or prime
oceanfront land in San Clemente came
forth from the White House Monday
along with revelations G.C. "Bebe"
Rebozo lvas one of the two millionaire
friends or President Nixon involved in
most of the financing.
The disclosure made by Deputy Press
Boy Nabs Coke
Getaway Tr icycle, To y Gun Left
STEVENAGE, England (UPl)-"How much Is that can or Coke?"
asked tbe lltUe boy, barely peering over the shop counter.
A clerk quoted the price to hlm and put the can on the counter.
The boy pulled out a gun, let Cly with a volley or Ping-Pong bails,
grabbed the Coke and ran. But he left his gun and getaway vehicle
-an orange and white tricycle_
Shop manager Ray Stanford has offered amnesty.
"ll he plucks up the courage to come clean and pay for the Coke ,
he can have the bike, the gun and the balls he pelted everyone with,"
Stanford said.
"The little fellow was no more than 4 and it is worryin g me
how miserable he must be feeling about losing his trike and his gun
for a can or Coke." '
Secretary Gerald Warren was an ad·
milted attempt 1'to put assertions of im·
propriety to rest" by issuing a full
auditing of the transactions since July 15,
1969 -the C:itte that the President sealed
the deal.
The prime issue has not ~n the
parcel on which the Presidential Villa
sits -about 5.9 acres -but, instead,
more than 20 acres or fallow land which
lie immediately inland of the old Cotton
estate.
That parcel Is actually a blend of onl!
major purchase from the Cotton heirs
and a minor buy from Nixon's neighbor
J. J. Elmore, a millionaire Democrat.
Jn all, the one financier throughout the
entire series of transactions w a s
millionaire New Y o r k industrialist
Robert Abplanalp, whose interest in the
loans to the President amounted to $1.2
million. A partner during one phase ol
the transactions was Rebozo, the Florida
millionaire who with Abplanalp was an
original partner in a finn set up as the
owner of the fallow land near the Nixon
estate.
The rationale for the intricate ex·
changes since 1969 holds that the Pre!d·
dent did not went so much land, but was
forced to commit himself to purchasi ng
the vacant section In order to obtain
what was deemed a famil y goal -the
5.&-acre estate 'Nhere the residence sits.
Abplanalp l! listed now o.s the owner of
Ihe fallow lane!, bul witil lhe White House
(Set VILLA, P11e I)
"competitive. Rule violations are com·
mon. The most frequently violated rule is
tampering with or altering the axles and
\11heels which the derby su pplies to each
entrant."
In hi s fi ve-page statement, Lange said
his son's 1972 derby-winning racer was
''clean. Neither a magnetic device nor
anything similar to it v1as incorporated In
or used in the \\'inning car by my son.
Bobby. in the 1972 race."
Of fice1· Hit
By Bullets
h1 Sweden
STOCKHOLM (UPI) - A psychopalhic
gunman loc ked into ·a downtown bank
vault with a convict {riend and four
hostages for six days wounded a
policeman and has turned the vault into a
virtual torture chamber police sources
said today. They said he was extremely
brutal in dealings with the hostages.
Police drilled a series of one-foot holes
in the roof of the vault today to keep an
eye on gunman Jan-Erik Olsson, 32, and
possibly pick him off with a
sharpshooter. Bui Olssoo fired a burst of
submachine gun fire ' through one of the
holes and wounded a policeman.
Olle Abrahamson, a 44·year-old police
technician hit in the face and ln one
hand, waa the second police officer shot
since the drama began Thursday with
what appeared to be a normal bank rob-
bery. He was reported in satisfactory
condition.
Stockholm Police Chief Kurt Llndroth
canceled all news briefings today while
Lhe police put into moUon a new plan to
end the drama. which has lasted for
more than 125 hours.
Military psychologists warned that the
victims risked serious mental injuries if
the drama continues much longer.
Llndroth in an emotional statement
Monday called Olsson a "beast" and
other police officials described him as "a
completely cold and e m o t i o n l e s s
psychopath, who might just. kill the
hostages if be feels lil:e it."
They said his companion, convicted
murderer Clark Oloffson, 26, was not
much better.
Poli ce Superintendent Aa ke Aakesson
said the gunman had carried out "ex·
tremely brutal'' acts against the three
female hostages but that he could not
confirm rumors that Olsson repeatedly
raped one of the hostages, a 31-year"ld
mother of two.
One police officer, who refused to be
Identified by name , said Olsson and his
accomplice "have turned the vault into a
torture chamber. They are extremely
bru tal. Whafs happening down there
makes me want to throw up."
The three women hostages were iden·
tified as Mrs. irgitta Lundblad, 31; Miss
Kristin Erunark. 23. l\1iss Elisabeth
Oldgren, 21, Sven Saefstroem, 25, is the
fourUt hostage.
The psycholoJZists s~id the risk.s ror the
(See TORTURE, Page %)
Orange Coast
Weather
It'll be warmer along the Orange
Coast \Veclnesday with tempera-
tures at the beaches in the ~ ris·
ing to the low 80s inland. Patchy
low clouds will clear by mld·morn-
ing to fair skies.
1Ns111t: ·r out\"
The ir na~nes may not be as
well known as Hughe!, Getty and
llunt. but more thati a do zen
tntn have ri.ttn frtmi relative
obscurity to fortunes of $ l 00 mtl·
lio n or more i·n fi ve ytars -
despae an uncertaha stock mar·
ket. See Page 7.
L.M. 11,. 12
lottllltl t
c1111t111r1 s. ts
Cl•••lll.. twJ
c-1c1 1, c,.., • .,...,.. 1S
DHttl IMllCM II
•11tw11I '•" 4 111i..1t1111Mf11 l').11
1']111M1 """ '=.::.:1e.,.i ::
Z 0All..1 PILOI SC
From Page I
VILLA • • •
d1Scl0$ed details of ownership it wa s
known only that the entire. matter \Vas in
trust administered by Title Insurance
and Trust Company.
The disclosures and !ulJ accounting,
Warren said. ca1ne at the President's
porsonal expense {the sum ·was not
detailed ).
\\'arren s<:iid I he ''internationally
rcspeetcd" flnn or Coopers and Lybrand
of Nev• York did the probing of Nixon'J>
rccords and legal documents related to
1hc transactions.
The Nev.· York Times reported today
Coopers and Lybrand used to be callr<l
Lybrand, Ross B r o t h e r s 11nd
J\1ontgo111cry, and three top executiv es of
the company weer convicted in !968 of
mail fraud and filing false statements.
The Times said Nixon gave all three 1ncn
a compl ete pardon Dec. 20. 1972.
However. White House press secretary
Ronald Ziegler told the Times that the
men pardoned by President Nixon had
v.'ithdrawn from the accounting firm.
have not been vl'ith the firm for years and
that the present partners had nothing to
do with any presidential pardon.
The firm 's report shov.•s that as of th e
end of las t J\1ay the President ov.'ed
S.'M0,000 on hi s share of the costs for La
Casa Pacifica . The property ha s been
valued at about $1.5 million on the
current market
Under the deal, Abplanalp and RebcYLo
paid $1,249,000 for 23 acres of the estate,
enabling Nixon to write off $625,000 in
unsecured Joans fro m Abplanalp and to
purchase the remaining 5.9 acres that in·
eludes his homesitc at a cost of $340,000.
The property 'vhich Abplanalp owns
lies at the downcoast side along the coun·
ly line and farther south lies the Coast
Guard Loran Station which doubles as
the Western White House.
On !he inland si de the border is a fence
rwming along the access road to the
Loran gate, and on the upcoast portion
pastur es still owned by Elmore (a
thoroughbred breeder) serve as the boun·
dary.
Toward the coast lies the driveway
linking the Nixion home with the Western
White House.
Ironically, while the La Casa Pacifica's
grounds are i1nmaculately tended, the
portion owned by Abplanalp is a dry,
weed.choked section co ntaining mounds
of dirt and rubble.
Dead trees also dot the landscape and
no improvements have been made there.
It is visible from the Cyprus Shore colony
-the most expensive neighborhood in
San Clemente.
The repcrt showed Nixon had paid out
a total of $402,439 in interest, principal
and improvements. The president still
ow~ $264,440 on an estate which cost
him , along with the improvements he
subsequently made, a total of $468,424.
Although Warren detailed the audit
was complete, nowhere in the documents
is there an indication as to the exact
amowit of cash which Rebozo kicked in
when he and Abplanalp formed the B and
C Investment Company in December of
t959.
Sometime thi s past month Rebozo sold
his interest to his partner {the sum again.
was not disclosed in the audit report)
and, thus, Abplanalp emerged as. the
man holding all the notes to the entire
Cotton Estate parcels.
White House spokesmen have stressed
that no actual cash has changed hands in
·the transactions involving Abplanalp and
th e President.
Local sources related to securi ty have
said that the spare acreage forms a
crucial buffer zone between the heavily
traveled San Diego Freeway and the
President's house and that were the land
available to any bu yer on the open
market and developed for residential use
it could pose problems in protecting the
President .
As it stands, the deed to the land has a
condition significant to ils future use.
Under the restriction no use can be made
of the land without the express
permissi on of the owner of La Casa
Paclfica -President Nixon.
The auditors sai d the President has
spent fro m his personal funds $217,270 for
improvements to the residence.
Tursct111, August 28, lql ..
ARTIST ASKEW AND HIS 20·FOOT MUSCLE MAN
Paul Bunyan, Superman and Other Larger·than·lift Heroes
Artist's Folk Heroes
Stand Larger Than Life
By RUDI NIEDZIELSKI
Of the 0.llY l"llot Slaff
Paul Bunyan does ex:ist and you can
see him "topless'' in Costa Mesa.
Anti·nudity ordinance or not, he stands
at 1661 Superior Ave., arms akimbo , with
his eoormous feet planted six feet apart.
Artist Eric Askew left his 20-foot giant
to shiver there in the sea breeze, wearing
nothing but bikini briefs, until the good
ladies in Lake Forest made him some
clothes.
Then, properly attired, he will preside
over the community's Paul Bunyan Days.
But it will take some doing because this
Paul Bunyan is 20 feet tall.
An even bigger job was building the
fiberglass colossus in the first place. ac·
cording to Askew. It took three months to
gel the job done.
The statue, consisting of a fibe r glass
shell over a steel frame. v.·as built in sec·
tions. Hands. feet and head were made
separately, the front and back torso in
tv•o large sections, and the whole thing
cemented together.
"With difficulty," Askew adds.
'·The job would have been easier if we
could have used more resin but the finish·
ed model would have been too heavy to
move."
few youngsters get as much benefit from
training with weights as I have, I'll feel
well repaid."
To Askew, now a resident of 20152
Orchard St., Santa Ana Heights, exercis-
ing with weights has aJways been one of
the keys to good health. When he was 14,
he stood four feet six in sneakers and
"sported muscles like s p a r r o w s '
kneecaps."
He might still be in that kind of shape
today if he hadn't seen some old
''Strength" magazines while browsing
through a second hand bookstore.
Seized by weightlifting fever, he decid·
ed to put on some muscle but discovered
weighlifting equipment was not available
in the New Zealand town where he lived.
So he made his own .
Lead fish \\'eights, melled in an old can
and poured into a flat hole in the ground
made clumsy but serviceable weights
which he fi tted to a length of pipe.
Askew's mother, somewhat less en-
thusiastic, enrolled him in the Auckland
School of Art to distract him from
weightlifting. Instead, he pursued both.
l\tobilitr is an important element of the becoming an art ist and ultimately the
giant's makeup. He's not just Paul Bun· Junior Australian -New Zealand Featherweight lifting champ. yan but instantly convertible into a 20-AM and weightlifting have crossed
fvot tall football star, Supennan, or paths many times throughout the years.
virtually any other bigger than life hero. On one occasion, while acting as judge in
All he needs is the right clothes. the \Vorld Weightl ifting Championshi ps.
However, most of the lime he will he was besieged by visiting athletes with
requests for portraits. A few years later, stand outside Zuver's Gym in Costa he was called lo York , Pa., to apint a
Mesa. encouraging men to bulge in the series of murals for the Weightlifting
same places he does. Hall of Fame.
Later in the year, the 57-year·old artist \Veightlifting and art combined again
will bui ld a taller, 50-foot model. The this summer when he was commiss ioned
hands and feet are already made but to design the giant for gym owner Bob
They include $55.000 for furnishings:
about $57,000 for kitchen remodeling and
other remodeling of the old residence:
$14,950 for a heated swimming pool and
$7 .804 for landscaping.
Askew won't say for v.•hat purpose the Zuver. More recently, he has been engag-
larger giant is being built. ed to ill ustrate a book on that ancient
So far the President has pa id an ad·
ded $167,290 in operating expenses -in·
eluding property taxes of $72.298.
ORANGE COAST IC
DAILY PILOT
Tiie Ort not Coltll DAIL V PILOT, wltrl wflich
II eo....blllf!CI Ille NtWl·P•tts, Is pUl!lllM(I by
"'' Orarioe Co.u1 PllblltllfnO COtnpeny. $ffN.
note .. !!lam '" PVbU1P1«1, MOl!d•r lt!roug!I
Frljlt~, lo.-Cont MtM, lrltwiiorl &e•dl,
H11nll"11ton 8tildl/F'OUfll•ln Vtll9y, Uolllll
8 .. dl, l...,lr>el$tddl~ I ncl Sen C""-11/
Siii JIH" C•pil1r1no, A 1111111 r.oion.1
tdi!lol! I\ P11bU1h"!I '"""''V-lt'ld ~•r•.
T ... PflftoCllMI pUbl~lllno Pltrrt ~ '9 JJ0 Wt1I
a.r s1rer1, '"'' Mtu, Ctlilotnlt. f'Hlll.
Rober! N. Wied
PretlOlnr •P'MI Pu011'1111'
J1(.k A. Cv,lty
Viet Prttio1111 tP'MI Gt,,.•11 Ml"'ffr
Thom•• 11:,.,,u
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MOfttNYt ..,. fNljl Q,11 """"''~l 111IHl»tY
Mfl•l"'it SUI "*""'"'·
"ll \11on 't be as difficult as it sounds." strongman, 11ercules.
he announces cheerfully. "I learned an At present, Askew is completing work
a\\'ful lot from the sma ll one." on an exhibition of pa.in lings to be given
The "small one" was built on a tight in Texas. The subject of this showing is
budget. but the lack of financial reward another type of strongman, the American
\Vas more than ba lanced by the satisfac· cowboy.
lion he derived from the project, Askew A cowboy's life was rough, difficult and
maintains. unglamorous , acco rding to Askew, who
"The model is expected to interest has traveled from Montana to Texas in
many boys in \\'eightlifting and if just a search of genuine cowboy folklore.
~~~~~~~~-'-~~~~~~ ~~
U.S.A.
GULF OF MEXICO
MEXICO
...
Qtcake Hits Ha1•d
Map local.es cities in Mexico where severe earthquake struck this
mornin g cau sing widespread dama ge and more than 100 deaths so
far. Many bu ildings collapsed in the tem blor, which registered about
6.0 on the Richter scale. See details Page 4.
Power Limits 'Low'
AEC Ruling Won 't Cramp Style of Plants
WASlllNGTON (AP) -The Atom ic
Energy Commission· has rcpnrted thal
precautionary oper a t ing limilatlons
ordered Friday on 10 of the nation's 34
nuclear power plants necessitated pow('r·
level reductions in four of them.
That is. the other six reported they
found it possible fo maintain current out·
puts of electricity even though carrying
out the new restrictions placttd on them.
an AEC spokesman said 'Monday .
The plants which reported they had to
re<lucc the.Ir power output levels were:
Nine-Mile Point Unit I JI Scriba. N.Y ..
whi ch reduced power levels 10 percent:
Oresdcn Unit 2. tl-1orri s, Ill., 8 percent ;
Vermont Yankee, at Vernon. Vt ., 20 per·
cen t, and Oyster Creek, al 'Ton1s River.
N.J., 9 percent.
'l'he plants 'viH operntc nt those reduc·
cd output levels at least until near the
end of the year, the AEC spokesman
sa id.
The order in1posing operaling llmita·
lions on atl IO plants was issued, the A~:c
said at the llnll!, as u prccnutionr.r;;
measure against tt possible hazard
relftted Lo so~nllcd fuel densificntion.
The Inlier is n ne\vly not e cl
phcnornenon or the nuclc.-i r po~·er pro<"-ess. discovered only last yenr.
It involves the shrinkage of uranlu1n
pellets in the fuel rods.
Police Probing Causes
1'he AEC spokesm.-in s3id the co111·
mission feels thnt fu('I densification. of
itself, does not l'Onstilutc a ha zard. But it
said that the question remains \vhether.
under certain conditions, it could make
matters 1\'0rse in the event an acciden t
befell a reactor -specifically, an ac·
<"idcn t involving the release of a reactor's
l.'OOlant waler, Of Fiery Freeway Crash The six pl.-ints 1vhich reported their
po wer output rc1nni ned unaffected by th!!
ne\v operating limitations were : California lligh1vay Pa tr o I in·
vestigators as well as coroner's deputies
continued an intense probe today into the
possib!C causes or the deadly coll isio n
and explosion of tl\'O trucks in San
Front Pagel
TORTURE ...
two older \Vomen appeared the greatesl,
especially Olsson's threat to hang them .
Police sources said the ne1v plan in-
cluded a combined attack through !he
holes in the roof and the double steel
door to the vault.
The holes were covered by bulletproof
glass and Lindroth placed p o I i c e
sharpshooters at each one of them in the
hope that Olsson and Olofsson might
relax for a moment and give the police a
chance to shoot before they could hann
the hostages, the sources said.
Police also brought new cutting torches
into the bank hall this morning. The
torches are capable of cutting open the
double door to the vault.
Police are monitoring every word said
inside the vault via s e o s i t i v e
microphones and other wiretapping
equipmellt.
Officers working at the moni tors said
Olsson "uses a language and behaves in
a way one wouldn't believe if we didn't
know it was true."
Attendant Took
His Work Home
ROCKY MOUNT, Va. (AP) -Police in
Franklin County cut three truckloads of
marijuana from fields and buried the
6,950 pounds of weed at the county
landfill.
Later Monday, the 2.'J..year-0ld at-
tendant at the landfill was charged with
~essing marijuana with intent to
distribute it.
Police said Ga ry Hardy BroY.·n of
Roanoke is accused of digging up 200
po unds of the weed with earth·moving
equipment, hauling the plants several
hundred yards and reburying them.
GAO Charges Laxness
WASHINGTON (UP!) T h e
government's General Accoun ting Office
charged l\1onday there has been laxness
in the enforcement or antipollution laws
because agencies have relied too heavily
on voluntary compliance. The GAO, the
investigative ann of Congress, said in a
report that many violators of an·
tipollution regulations do not obey the
law volunta rily.
Clemente Monday.
But so far no firm clues to the
holocaust have been released.
Coroner's deputi es are continuing their
exa n1inatlons or the body of Bakersfi eld
trucker Gordon Roper, 53, \\'ho was in-
cinerated in !he cab of his sand-hopper
rig after it ran into the rear of a 10,(K)(}
gallon gasoline tanker at dawn.
The condition of the body, aides said,
posed problems in detennining if the
man rnay have suffered a seizure or if
his body contained substances which
could have affected his driving.
CHP spokesma n Gerry Maxwell said
that so far it has been deter1nincd that
Roper arrived at the ya rd in Los Angeles
lo rnake a run to San Diego at 3 a.m .
His truck 11•as empty when it slammed
al about 50 1niles per hour into the rear
of the lanker 01vned by 11crculcs Oil
Con1pany of Long Beach.
The in1pact apparently rendered Roper
unconscious. and the victim was im·
1nediately engulfed in flaming gasoline.
The driver of the tanker , Clyde McNall
Shinn , 60, of La Palma , leaped from his
rig immediately after the impact and ran
as fast as he could away fro m the blazing
wreckage. He was unhurt.
On e factor wh.ich figures prominently
in the probe is the placement of the
v.Teckage -not directly in th e slow Jane
of the free \vay, but partially in the off-
ramp leading to Avenida Palizada,
Officers said it possible that the Lanker
may have been pulling out of or into the
slow lane when the crash occurred.
NY State Power
Cut 5 Percent
l1i Heat Wave
NEW YORK (AP) -Voltqe""' cut 5
percent across New York state today as
the State Power Pool acted to protect the
generating system against a massive
blowout in the second day of a heat
wave.
Consol idated Edison Co. complied im·
mediately wit h the cutback requested by
the po"'er pool, representing seven
private utilities and the New York State
Po"'er Authority, by red ucing voltage in-
New York City and Westchester County.
The temperature at IO a.m. PDT was
92 degrees. Hwnidity was 57 percent.
The voltage cut -designed to stretch
available po"·er without disconnecting
any customers -could be increased to 8
percent before load·shedding would be
necessary lo keep from overloading elec-
trical generators.
Con Ed said it might be forced to
disconnect some outlying sections of the
city in rotation fo r brief periods if It is
unable to meet the load demand , created
mainly by air conditioners.
Monticello Plant, Monticello, J\1inn.;
Millstone Unit 1. Vi'eaterford. Conn.:
Dresden Unit 3 at Morri s. Ill.; Quad
Cities Uni1s l and 2. Cordova, Ill.: and
Pilgrim Plant , Plymouth l\1ass.
A\1 the plants involved in Friday's
order were plants utilizing boiling 1vater
reactors manufactured by the General
Electric Co.
The AEC spokcsmao said that of the
four pl.-ints where po1ver level reductions
resulted froin the ne\\.' operating restric-
tions. two had prev iously been opcratin~
at less than 100 percent po~·er levels.
These are Vermont Yt1nkee and Nine
J\'1ile Point.
The spokesma n said four additional
boiling water reactor plants are stl!1
undergoing evaluation by the AEC's
regulatory staff as resgards the effects
of fuel densi!icalion, but are not yet, at
least. involved in the operating restric·
lion order.
These four. whose reactors were also
manufactured by GE. are: Humboldt
Bay plant , Eu reka , Calif.; Dresd en Unit
I, 1'.1orris, Ill.; Big Rock plant
Charl evoix. Mich.: and the La Crosse
plant, La Crosse, Wis.
Fro111 Page 1
NERVES • • •
stttc of deterioratio n." he said. "They 'll
be repaired afterwar'."'._,"
The Dana Bluffs development, some 16
acres · scheduled for several hundred con-
dominium units, is virtually the last
chunk of undeveloped land along the
Capistrano Beach Palisades.
Presentation iof the plans set off th~
most bitter resident.-Oeveloper hassle in
the hi.story "r Capistrano Beach.
Suits are pending .against a group of
residents who circulated petitions to
block the project initially, The developer
claimed libel and slander.
Residents claimed the land had been
deeded fo r a public park . The case is not
scheduled to come up for a court hearing
for six months.
The defendants in the suit filed a
cou ntc rsuit protesting harassment by the
d1.:relopers. The original document 11.•hich
purportedly contained libelous remarks
\ ..:i.; a letter urging resident s to write to
their legislators regarding land use in the
colony.
From Pagel
THREATS • • •
claimed Graham's crusade was siphoning
church funds.
The evangelis t's nlultimillion-dollar
organization, based in the United States,
den ied lhis and sai d the teach-in wa s
financed by money from other sources.
All delegates pay an $8.75 registration fee.
B11ying A New Tract Horne?
Many people buying homes are under the impression they HA VE
to buy carpeting from the home sales cent .... In the majority of cases
th is is not true, although the sales office will try to make you think so.
The minute the home center tries to upgrade tho standard carpel,
then you ere free to shop for carpeting. To prevent shopping should
con stitute restraint of trade.
In many cases they will tell you that the carpet aRowence does not
apply if you buy carpet outside. If they feel this is legal, HAVE THEM
PUT IT IN WRITING.
Ordinarily, we can save you • lot of money over whet the home
center offers. We provide a larger selection -and we usually come up
with less yardage, plus a superior installation.
HOURS: M ... Tllru Tllurt.. t IO 5:30
ALDEN'S
CARPETS o DRAPES
1663 Placentia Ave.
COSTA MESA
646-4838
FRJ., f 10 f -SAT., f :JO IO S
., DAILY PILOT SC r....,_.,, .. , .. , 2e, 191;
'Withi•• Gui"eJines-'
Cln·ysler's Qff e1·
Rejected by UAW
DETROIT (AP ) -Chrysler
Corp. hll offered the United
Auto Worken a ·proposed eon-
-tract caw~ for three percent
.Increases 1n wages ~during
~each of lhe next three years,
* * * :Auto Hike
No-profit
Requestell·
WASHINGTON (UPI)
The auto industry urged the
• Cost of Living Council Tuesday
to approve a "n<rprofit" price
Increase ranging up to $106 per
car on 1974 models to pay for
safety devices required by the
government.
T h e requested increases
range from $SS a car for
American Motors to $106 for
Ford. General Motors pro.
Posed a $10'l increase and
Chrysler a $71 increase.
~ 1 n d ustry representatives
said . the price hlkes were
needed to pay for stronger
shock ab.sorbing systems and
improved antipollution equip-
ment. The 1974 model cars
• must also be equipped with an
interlock system requiring
drivers to buckle seat belts
before a car can be started.
F 0 R D COMPTROILER
Kenneth C. Merrill told the
~council at a one-day hearing
that Ford wants to recover
"only the cost or safety
devices" on 1974 models.
A General P..1otors vice presi-
..,dent, Henr/ W. Welch, another
~r witness al the hearing, said
,,...G~1's request "Includes no
... protit ror GM -these cost in-
···creases represent equipment
:•changes requi red to meet
! government mandated safety
• standards."
.... Peter J. Petkas, an attorney
~ tepresenting the Ralph Nader-
'backed Cor pora le Ac-
.• countability Research Group,
attacked industry arguments. ~ He said the cost or the safety ~devices was rar below in-
_. a-eases proposed by ~ automaken ... ,
~ "ANY PRICE lntrease at 'f this time is unwarranted,"
.i.: Petkas said.
James W. 1'-fcLane, deputy
~director of the Council which
administers the admf~istration
economic control J)rogram,
said 'lUto industry price in-
•' creases have sut:6tantlal im-
pact on the economy.
"The council also is con-
cerned not only with the im-
mediate numerical effects of
,, the automobile price increases
bot also with the impact of
·• sud! increase on the country's
innauonary psychology," he
said.
..
"
VTN Corp.
Shows 18%
Sales Hike
~ VTN Corporation of Irvine
haa reported revenue.s for the
fiscal year ended May 31, of
$19,463,736, up 18 percent com-
pared to $16,473,881 for the 7f previoJ.W yea r.
' 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
.,1 May 31, 1972. The 1973 figures
•. are based.on 1,099,802 a'(erage
.shares outstanding; there
t were 933,792 average shares
ootstanding in 1972.
California
Banks Hike
Prime Rate
From Wirt Services
Six California banks raised
their prime interest rate level
to 9% percent, following the
lead of an Eastern bank Mon-
day.
The banks were Wells Fargo
Bank, Crocker National Bank.
Bank of California, Bank of
America. United Cali fornia
Bank and Security Pacific Na-
tional Bank.
The prime rate is the in·
terest that the t o p·ra t e d
businesses are charged for
bank loans.
The boost was ~ of one per-
cent and was the 15th this
year.
. The hike v.·as led off by
Chase Manhattan Bank which
said the move was a matter of
"catching up with market con·
ditions."
Other banks following ~'ere
First Pennsylvania Bank and
Trust Co. and Philadelphia
NaUonal Bank, Philadelphia :
Continental (Dllnoil) National
Bink and Trust Co., Chicago:
and FrankJJn National Bank.
New York.
Milk Ads
01i Weight
Too Heav)·
WASHINGTON (AP ) -The
Federal Trade Commission
announced Monda y !he
American Dairy Association
has agreed to limit the weight-
reducing claims in its ad-
vertising campaign, "1bere's
a new you oomin'."
The ITC bad complained
th.al an ad saying, "If there
was a little less of you. she'd
love you a whole lot more,''
falsely implied a significant
benefit amon g weight watch-
ers by drinking more milk.
In rca lil)', said the FTC
complai nt, it is not des irable
for dieters to drink a suMtan-
tial amount of whole milk .
The consent o rd e r
negotiatcC: with the American
Dairy Association also forb ids
ad verti sement or milk as "96
percent fat free.''
Dentalloy
Earnings
For Year
• The decrease in earnings in
" the 1973 fiscal year compared
,1 to 1972 wu a result of losse.s
.,. Jncurred during the fourth
, quarter end«! h1ay 31, i!C-
! cording to James J . Trindle,
VTN chairman. Growers Fight Union
.,
'
'
Economy Slows San DieO'o Far1ners Do11't Wa1it
WAS!fiNGTON (UPI) -0
The nation's economic ex· SAN DIEGO (AP) -Farm
panslon slowed sUghtly In Ju-growers, who hnve b cc n
ly, the Commerce Department generally r ec e pt Ive to
said Tuesday. Tearmters Union organizing The department Issued a report ol leadlng economic Jn. efforts In California, ony they
dicators, regarded a.s an plan to fight the union in San
ecooomlc early warn Ing Diego County.
system, which showed a 1.1 '"Mwl organlulion of farm
percent overall rise In July "'orkers will mean the ln·
compared to an average ot dlvldual grower will be faced
more than 1.5 percent In the with greater costs ond farm
Hrst three months (If 11\e year. \\'ages will be Included In the
l'O!t of produce to the con·
sumer ," Ed Backus. pr 1tdent ar the San Diego County Farm
Bureau, said ln an interview.
"AS ~!EMBERS ol farm
management. \\"e have. no
other choice than lo oppotU
any Teamsters effort t o
unionize workers here.''
The Tl!llmsters announced
la st week U1cy arc sending
organizers to north San Diego
County where 5,000 persons.
many or them green-card
holders who live In ~1exlco,
pick tomat"!' and other crops.
'Mle TeimSten say they will
be of!ering their normal form
labor ~tract of $2 .41 ttn
hour. Local wokrers earn $2
an hour, and BAckus saJd
growers believe they're con-
ttnl with their pay.
A TEAMSTERS ofliclal
her~, J ames Bar ha m,
aecrttary·treasurer of Local
542, said the organizers have
!'tarted looking at north county
• Complete New York Stock List
•
1 I
PUBLIC N011CE PUBLIC NOTICE
lljCTltlOUS IUStNISS
IUPUIOlt COUltt 0' THE ft,t.Mll STATIMIENT
HAT• 0,. CALl'01NIA 1'01: Ttlf IOUo.,l'IQ Pt•loOtl Ii CIOl119 1>\11•.,.••
TMI c;OUNT'I' OP OIANGE •': N (l"'t Ctllltl' l)r'lw W11I, U.S. "ANELS. 1t4 E. P~t !>1
IHll AN $1n11 An1 tJ70l
Ur.St MUMllllt OMlll ltolt Ulllt,,fl". 1111 Rlltltncl Rll.,
NOTIC1: OF' HEARING TO MOOlftY NtwPOl'I &H<tl. CA '2'60 JUOCMINT Thll 1>u1IMH l1 tonellltttd Pt .an Ill•
In tt ni..~1r1<1rr1.,... ot l"ttlll-• e11vlclwt. CAlltOL ,it.G41 l lMMOHS. v1 R1"*'°'nt. Roll Ulltttltr
ltOllilltT I.Ee SIMMONS Tlll1 1l1tfl'Ml\t w11 lilt<! With !1'11 [-
NOTICE IS tte•e•Y Gl\IEN "''' l"ttl• "' Clt•k or Cr111ot (O!llllY Oii A119ut1 ''· ti-. CAltOL PAO£ SIMMONS. ,.._ Ill• 1tn
.0 htrtln 1 Hlillori IOt Httrlno To '''"'
, MoOlty JUOOIMl'lt rt'f .. ~t IO wlllch 11 PllbllSMCI °''"°' Co.11 0.lly PllOI,
m.ff tor l\lrlMr p.irt\(111111, 11'\d !NI !fie """"''' 11 alld k!>ltmlM• t , I\, 11, time •NI 111a'' ot 1M1rl""" 111t ''"'' 1111 itn 1•n·n
llM<I :.el !or Sepltmbl'r u . 117J, •I t :00•1 -------------
PUBLIC NOTICE p,m., In Ille courlr°"'l of ~r11'Mlll No.
' of w ld c-t. •I 100 Civic C.11ttr Drlvt wur. ln ft'MI Cllr Of''"'• A111. C1lll01"11l• .. I -------D•l.0 ... ll!ilOAI I~ lt7J PICT ITlOU• IUSIHllS
WUH-9. ti Jol\l'I, MA.Mt tT&TIMINT C°"nlv c11rk Thi loUowlnt Pt•to11• 1r1 <lol"9
CltOSaY AND LUISlaltlNK bu1l1111t 11.
t20f Ntrlll M•l11 Slntl FRANKS LIQUO~ MAll:T , 1~0 W,
S111t1 tlO M•cArll1~r. S..n11 ""'· C1lll. tJIQ.I S•nll A111, CIM..,.,,.I• Fr111k1 E11r ... prlte~. Inc., 1 C11l'1lr11l1
'Tith U UI IUl""7 tOl'POflllon, 'l50 N. Lo 6r1t1 Avit., 111· Al'-r l tor ,.lll!llMr OINOO(I, Ctlll. 90301 ~11l101l'lfa Ort"" Co.11 Diiiy Piiot, Tlllt ti.,111n11s h tOllCIW.ltd Dy 1 <~AU0111t 14 21. 21, •nd 5tp11mti.r ~ POttlfon.
ltn 2SJl.1l Rlcri1rd Y111>d1, Pre1•d&ll1
PUBUC NOTICE
-~~~~~~~~1
Tllll 11111men1 Wll Ill.cl Wiii'! '"' COi/fi. fy Cl11<k of Or•llQt COUfl!Y 0<1 A11911tt )4. 1t1J
l'ICT ITIOUS aUSIJrU!SS F•tnH NA.Ml! STATIMf.NT Pullll.ntd Ortl'l9t COl'I Otll't' Pllol,
Tiit followllll pert0n I• aolng 11uth1tn All91111 21 •nO Stpternoer 4, 11, •L .. , 1m 2'16-73
PUBUC N011CE EXOTICA. 112 M1rl111 A,..,, 8tlbot
1 .. 1..:1, CtLlr, '2"62
Al"'41 w11. '24 Hll~•r1er, "'-"'POr''l-------------
1•..:ll. CaUI. t1ttO ,ICTITIOUS aUSIHESS 'Tr..!1 blitll\IH It <O!ldlltll>G bY 1'1 In· NAM.I: STATEMENT
dlvlclu tl. Tt>e followl119 1>1ri.on 11 dol..g 11<1sln1u Almt Wu 11: Yf\11 1l1!1m9nl w11 ll1ed wllfl Thi Cou11-MILES SQUAll:E FLORIST, 16lo01 ty Cllrk of 0111191 Countv 0<1 A119u1f ll, 6t00111'1ur,!, F<Wn!lln V1llt't' 1913 Tiit• Mrrrcinri Tlldtr, 1126 Ptlmer •·11411 C! .. L01'19 Bell<~. C1. tOeO.
Publllhtd Or•nt• COftl Otlly Piiot. TMI OU1!11Cll 11 (Ol\d1Kted Dy Ill Ill· Auauu u , 21, 21, 11\d S1pl1mber 4, dlvldu1L
.jJJ 2Jl9·'3 The• TU'lltr
Tnlt '"""""'' Wll lilt<! With ,,.,. Coul'I• .., PUBLIC NOTICE 1Y Cltrk ol 011119• Co~n!Y on A1.111u11 14, "" ------5'-,-.-IM------I l't7U&
NOTICE TO Cll:l!OlfOlll "uDll1ht'd Or1119t Coa'I 01lly Piiot. SUPERIOll COUltT 01' THI AOJ9, 21 and Stpltmbtr 4, 11, lf,
STAfl 01' CALll'Oll:NI& 1'011 l~ll 2'41·13
PUBLIC NOTICE TMa COUNTY 01' OltANGI. No. A·77Ut
E'l•tl of SOPHI E CHWAT, AKAl ---.,.--=,--------
SOPHIE REILLY, AKA S 0 PH IE PIC'T1TIOUS aUSINl!SS MAClllEWICL 0.C:tt'ltd. NAMI STATIMINT NOTICE LS HEltESV GIVE N to 1M Thi follow1119 PfflOlll 1rt Ooi119 crodltco of l1'lt ttlO,.. 11•mod decl'Citnt tlusllllll •s: !111! t ll PfT'Mlllt 111\11119 cl1lm1 101/11\1 1111 SHAMROCK A N T I Q U E S 214
Hid dl<Htftl l rt rfQUlrfG lo file lhom, l!lr0f<lw1y, Ltl)\lnl 8rtCh. CA ttist
with 1111 nee;~,.,..,. VO.OCl'lfr1, 111 Ille oUlt t MYltt C. MCCiOUOh, 3292 B S1n
of !I'll cltrk of !Ill •bowo 1nlllltG court, or Amedto. L•ount Hlllt, CA 916SJ
10 IM'IM<lt tllfm. with 111r 111<e111ry Kit 1ty111 McGouoh. 3292 a S•n
voucf11<'1, to tho llllder1l0Md II THE LAW ...... ..,..,. L•OUl\I Hllll. CA "'" OFFICE OF DUll:YE A, 11.1.NOOL PH, This 111.Kl!lfll h <ondtXlrd bV • Otnffll M.ALCOlM ~ DALY, 4301 Mt~ltTHUlt pttll\lftl'llo.
BLVD. No. 212, Nl!!WPOllT BEACH. Myles c . M<G0V9h
CALI F .. wnk h 11 "" PLltt O! bu1l11111 of Thl1 llt lffT'>fl'll Wll l!lfl;I with !ht Coun· tri.r undfr1!91\fd In 111 m11t1r1 P1rt•lnl1\9 ly Clt rk ol Or11191 County on Augull 24,
to Int 111•1• of uld o.c-•. wllhln tour 1913
rnonth1 1111r tho flr11 publlcttlon or thl1 l!Olltf. Oiied Aug, 7. lt73
Fr•nk Rtlll'f, E1ecutor of tlle wlll or thl
l bc>'n named lllC~llfnl OUltVl.&. llANOOL~N, MALCOLM & DALY
l'U7M 0.lngt CO.ti D•llY Pllo!, 11\d Sept1ma.r 4, 11 , 11, 21.1).73
PUBLIC NOTICE
G I MHArtllltlt SMI,. Ht. UI NOTICI&: INVITINO SIDS
.. ...,., ... ch, C11tl. Thi COUflfy S1111!1!lon Ol1!rlclt of
t• Tth ln41 NM7:111 Ort~• County, C1lllornl1, wilt rtctl,,.. ', Al~J'll for a aocvtw H•lt'd bldl 1111111 S1pt11r1Der 5, 1973, 11
Publllt>ed 0•111111 CGllU Ot!ly Piiot. 11 .00 I m, &ld1 mu1t bt received 11 1111
.t.1191151 14. 21 , 21 11\d se11ttmber 4, Olttrl<ll' A.Clmlnl1lr111ve oltlc11 by the
lt7l 2S2:J...I) Clllt al\CI llrne 11tr1!n&110vt 111 lortfl, 11 ''' wtrl(FI lime 11\eY win Oe 11ulltlcty OC>tfl..t •n.o 1a1mlllld 11 1111 ot!lct of tl<t
PUBLIC NOTICE 01,1rl<t1. I~ Elll1 Aven11t. Founl1ln ______ 1v.11,,.,, C1lll01"nf1, tor lilt following: j tLP-f' II.I.II: SCREeN CHA IN
I' SUPllUO• COUltT OF CALl,OllNIA, SPECI FICAT10H NO. E~t COUNTY 0, Oll:ANGI l!l ld1 ITl~tl 0e 1~bmllled 011 I~ torm
,... Ch'lc ( .. Ill' Dt'I ... Wnl, ·~Uod b't' the Olttr\cll In •C<Ol'Clll'ICI
! S111t1 ........ C•lllCll'nl• wllh Ill Ol'OYltlont ol N speclnt•ll0111.
1 c-N""""'° DnliJ SPtClllc•lfoti•. bid 111111~1 •ncl turllllr
I SUMMONS IMARll:l&G~l r111orm111ori m1y be Ollllff\ICI ,, .,,. 100 ... 1 In re ttte merrloo-of PelltlOMI'; L. •ddret1. Ill~ '62-2411 or S«l-1910. l JEAN TISDALE Incl ltHPOndtfll: SOSBY J. W•yM SYIYfflff', Stoc rtl•rV EUGENE TISDALE So.rd1 ol Olrtctor1 'to Ille lt"4IOl'ldfllf; BOllll'f EUGENE County S1111t11lort Oltlrltlt 'TtSOAL.! NOi. I, 2. 1. S, f. 7. fn<I 11,
The Ptllllaner 1111 flltel 1 Pfllllon con-o1 Or11191 County, C1llfornl• nm1119 YOUI" ,,..rrl1oe. Yo... m1y 1111 • t>utlll ll'led Or.noe CG111t 01nv Piiot. ~ wri"911 ""'°"" wllltln thirty <l•Ys of 11'11 August 21. 1'7l ,,,5.73
PUBLIC NOTICE clflfl tl\ll tlllt ....-nmont 11 u l"Jlfd on you,
If YoV fill to !IN 1 wrltten rt~
wllhln MtCll 11mt, your c1t11utt lrl•Y btl--------------1 Ollltrtd •nd the covrl ••llY .,.,., • ludt· FICTITIOUS &USINISS
l'nttll cot1l1lnl .... lt1lllflCll ... or ol/llr order. NA.Ml STATEMENT ~·119 dlvl1I011 ol tlfOPft'ly, IPll\ll•I TM followl~ pttlOl'll •rt dClf!g ~· dllkl cu1todv. child 1upport, •I· twsll\ISt •i: ~· fNI, Cflll. • l<Kh Ollltr rtlltf ...-llttOUST-'l:IAL ~FETY ASSOCIATES,
M m.t'f bl ormnt.., DY Ille courl. "' E. l11h SI., Suitt 214, San!• An•,
ti .,.. wli.11 ti tMll 1111 ldvl't tf In ti• C1Uf. t7101 """'°" Ill lhll m1Hef, 'fW t~l4, •• • Oon1ld JO!.ellh Brawn, 26SIQ Llr1 Clr·
'""""" i.o lllJI .,...r wrllltn ""f'llllM, If c.lt, Mission VlefO, C•lll, 92675
•"'• 11'11'1' 1'f flltd on t1mt. Cll1•1H R11\d1ll Shepperd, 720 S. Lyo11 D•lod June 4, "73, St .. Sl nl l Ana, Calif, 92~ (Apl. 3QI)
WIU.IAM a. 51 JOHN, Thi• blll!Jtt1s Is Conduclod by 1 OIJttt•I
Cltrll par1T11r•11ip ay.M. s. Obtrtt Jr .. · 00111kl J. Brown Otputy Tl!~ 1111eme111 w11 flied wit/\ lllt COUii·
IOMN A. HUGMlt. IV Cllrk of OrOllOf County on A119u1I 6,
M WHI ltnt Sll'tlf 1t73
Cid• Mfu, CtHltnla 926:11 l'-rttfO T•h cn•1 ......... PuOll•lled Or""O• Co.11 0•11¥ PllOI
Al19nlly ,..1 ""~ Awusr 14. i i. • •ncl S1pt1mbtr 4,
4 _ P'\lblltNcl O•tllff Cotti 01llv Pllol lfl'l 2l21-13
1m 2s:u.n
PUBLIC NOTICE
Sales Up
At Firn1
In Irvine
Computer Automa tion Inc .•
an l rvlne·based manufacturer
o! m lnicomputen, a nnounced
Monday record earnings and
sales during fiscal 1973.
President D.H . Methvin said
f ully taxed net income for the
year ended Jwie 30 was
Sl .005,000, equal to 63 cents
per sh a r e. three tlmL-s
fiscal 1972 earnings when Com·
puter Automal!on reported Its
first profitable year of ope.ra-
tion with fully taxed net In-
com e of $315,000, or 24 cents
per shar e.
Credits from tax losses car-
ried forward acrounted for an
additional 12 cents per share
in 1973 and 22 cents per share
in 1972. In fiscal 1973 pretax
income was $2,005,000. or 17.8
percent of sales, he add ed.
The naked minicomputer's
audited s taten1ent for fiscal
1973 showed net sales of
$11 ,264,000 were more than
twice the $4,875,000 sales
reported in fiscal 1972.
He said he was pleased by
demand for the "component"
computer designed to be built
into systems produced by the
company's olrginal equipment
manufacturer rustomers for
sale lo end users. noting that
this demand Is demonstrated
by the $11.6 m illion backlog of
orders as of Aug. 23.
Auto1ietics
Gets Big
Contract
Autone tics Di vis i o n ol
Roc ky,·ell r n t e rn at I on a I
Corporation has been awarded
a $184.000 contract to develop
protective coatings for optical
componen ts used \\'ilh high.
power lasers and I a s e r s
operating in infra red fre-
quencies.
The contract with the Air
Force Cambridge Researc h
Laboratories is sponsored by
the Defense Advanced
Research Projects Agency.
Under the contract, various
organic materia ls will be
tested as special coatings to
·protect the halide optics used
In la!er instruments from
humidity while er:iabling
transmission of i nfrared
rad iation in the 10.6 micron
range. Methods for depositing
the coating on sodium or
postas sium chloride prisms
a nd lenses used in lasers will
also be developed. T h e
Autonellcs Division is located
in Anaheim .
Eleven d lrecLora have been
elected for the new lrvtne Na·
tlonal Ba.Ilk. The new d irect.ors
lnclude Dr. Charles W.
HosUer , Hos!IY Jnvestment
Co.; Hugh B. C&ates,
Mlcrovlslon, lnc.: Jpmes B.
Slcmons JI, Jim Sle1nons
Imports; Richard s. SUJven,
\Vra ther Inves tments, Inc.;
llarry S. Rinker, Rinker Co.
Other director s Include
James B. Lynch , Irvine Na-
tlonaJ Bank presi d e nt ;
Richard P. Hausm an, Allergan
Ph a rm ace utic<'.lls, Inc.;
Richard E. Duf(y , Airporter
Inn; Gerald W. ~tcClellan,
Inland Marketing Co.; Jack K.
Hamilton, An ja Engineering
COrp. and Dr. i\1artln t:.
Hansen, physician.
* Barbara A. Roberts has
ber..n appointNi manager of
Flrst Western 8 a o k ' s
University Park office In·
lr1Jine.
She comes
to Univrr-
s ity Park
from the
bank's La
llabra offiee
where she
served as
manag er.
?i.Llss Roberts Ro•E11:Ts
is a specialist in consumer
lending.
* Costa ~fesa re si d en t
Gary West has been pro-
moted to assistant Viet': presi-
dent for Joans of lhe Downey
Bank of America.
He advances to the post
after a year as credit ofCicer
with the bank's Orange and
Southeastern Los Angeles
County R egiona l Headquarters
staff. Previously he was
manage r of an office in
Downey and assis ta n t
manager of the West Fullerton
office.
* Huntington Beach resident
Eula F. Palmer has been
named assistant vice presid ent
r 0 r opera-
tions at Bank
of Americ:i's
Fulle r ton
main office.
Mrs. P~
mer, with
the ba nk
s ince 1963,
r ormerJy
was a ssistant PALMl1t
manager f or operations a t
the South Santa Ana office.
She has completed numerous
professional courses at the
American Institute of Bank-
ing.
* Two Orange County m e n
h ave been appointed managers
of tbe new Bullock's store,
scheduled lo open at South
Coast Plaza SepL 2:6.
Jm«pb Jnc1Dclo bas been
named general man.ager for
the Coota M... department
store. He will be wisted by
Charles Troy.
lncaudo hos been associated
\Yllh the company for the past
five years, serving as general
manager of Bullock's La
tlabra store a nd assl.stMt
gencrftl manager or t h e
ShermM Oaks store prior to
that. He and hls wile reside in
Irvine.
Troy, ol La Habra, began
his career with Bullock's at
the Santa Ana store and has
served as assistant to the
director of operations at the
corporate office and 8! opera·
tions manager and assi,tant
general manager of Buliock's
Northridge store.
* Gene J. Adams, president of
Sbacco, Inc., of Newport
Beach, has bee n named to the
board of d irectors of Pulse
Net\1Jork International.
Pulse is a Texas-based con·
Rlcmerate of distributors, im·
port-export service and com-
mercial locators. Adams is
a lso treasurer of the UCI
Foundation.
* \\'illlam C. Parker of San
Cicmente has been promoted
to assistant vice president and
named man-
ager or one
of Crocker
Bank1s Gar-
den Grove
branch offi·
ces.
He 'va:s
for merly
manager of
the f i rm's PARKEll:
G11rden Grove-Brookhurst of-
fice, also in Carden Grove.
Parker joined Crocker Bank
in 1965 a fter serving 22 years
in the Marine Corps and retir-
ing as a major in 1964..
Move Toul
At A irwest
Special lo the Dally POot
SAN MATEO -Hughes
Airwest has completed a move
to its new $6.2 miilion in-
te rnational h eadquarters in
San Mateo -its. first con·
solidated corpoiate hom e
since being formed by merger
in 1968.
Up to now, offices have been
scattered on different floors in
different buildings at three
separate sites in two d ifferent
San Francisco Bay a rea cities. -f AV9U&I 14, 21., 2', Ind ~ltmbtf 4
PUBUC NOTICE 1 --,~T~•~T~.~.~.~,T-o-,-w-,.-,-.-.-.-w-.,~lir"""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""'
• -----------l'ROM PAltTH ERSMIP ,. NOTI CI TO CRE'OIT'ORS Of"lltATIMG UNOlll
t Nt. A·ntl6 1'1CTITIOUS IUSINE"t1 N&M• SuPtrlor Court of !rit Stilt ot C11tfornl1 Tiit followlno ptrson hat wlllldrewn "
for the Countv of Or•~•· 1 oe11 ... 11 lfltlllef' lrom ,,... P.trln1rshl11
.,. E111l1 ol JULI US BR UN O KLEIN, •~1 OP1r1tl11g under tho lkllllou1 bu1ln1u
9 J ULIUS l!I. KLEIN, •k• JULES KLEIN, ni mt of ~ Doc:n M<I. INFllAllEO SUllVEY, l'l'ff Soulh ' Nollet I• /llrtOy olvt11 lo crodllon of Cotll Hl91'rw1y, LIOUfll B11ch C1llf Tttt 1b0v1 ntmtd dectdtnt !hit •II 91651 ' · f' ptn.0n1 lltvtno cl1!m1 1111!n1t l/11 •tld Tiie trctlllous IJl.ltlness ntmt st1ltrntt1I
, OKitdtlll 1'9 rtQ~lrtd lo lilt lhom. with for Ille p~rtlll•Shlp w•s liltd 011 Mire/\ 11
f ffle nac:osttl'Y vouc:lllr1, In Thi olllct or 1'13 In tilt county OI Or1noe '
I/II d ... k ol Ille •bo\lt t11llllod co...rt, or 10 Full Nt mt 11\d Adelrtts of ihe PtriDll l"'...elll llltm wl!FI !hf TIKftSll"JI YOUCl!fr6 Wl!lldr•w!119·
lo 10 !hi unclor1l9nod t i lllf ofl!CI ol Ch1rl1s 'F SFIOff'l\l~tr 19S5 Stn COMRAO LEE KLEIN •1111 KU ltLANDER lttn'IO L1gun1 ll•~tfl c111i t'.1651 ~ .. HART, 12l5 Llncoln 61VCI .. 511111 Jl)l'l ... K1wf<11: Ptfliwtr i Monie•. CA fOCll, which 11 lhe ploto of p 21194 ~· DU1l11111 ol Ill• unctor1IQMd In ftll m1t11r1 Pub!Jil'Ml<I orino1 Cold Ot ily ·Piiot
" per111111119 to ll1t ttlt le of lllCI dec.Otnl, Autuil 1. 14. 21. 11 1973 1•7S·7l • within tour monlh1 11!1r !I'll llr1t pulll k•· ------·-------• 11on of lhl1 ncll<I.
!I.-01tod A119u1r 17. lt 1J
W, CON ll:AD LEE KLE IN end
PUBLIC N011CE
; RICH.I.RO OAV ID ltL'EtN ,ICTITIOUS a USINISt
~ EaKulor1 of the WUI NA"'l.I: STATIMINT
l. of u ld *.c11n1 Tiit lollowl1111 ptrson1 •rt dolf\9 COMltAD Ll'IE JCLl!IN tlld Du1lflfl• t •:
JCURLANOllt & HART l!IR OOKHUll:ST INTElt'OR'S, l"ll
).. lW UllCOl11 al..... lltlth Soulev1rd, 5!•n!On, C1lllC!'nl1 f' ~1111 MOlllCI, CA tMOI 1061C1
Ir Allflf'M'f' tor 111oc'ion 1..1 It. Oevel-rt, lPIC. {C•lllornl•l, ) M4" 1 ltl3 Stien aoulevtrd, s 11 n ton , ( Publlllr.cl Or1119• Cot1t D•llY Piiot, C1lltorn!• f06ID Avg. 21. 21 t nd Sttll. 4, 11, nil 260e-73 Thi• bWlllU b conducted D't' • ---,,..,,,.-'°'="'"=-=---I Corpor1t1on. ! PUBUC NOTICE S.l.lt. DEVELOPEllS, INC. A.W, S°"'mertleld,
• ---==,.,,-,-.,.-,.,,-=,---I v.~. ' *"· l'ICTITIDUt •USINISS Tiii• 1l1temr11t ... I rited W!lh Ille Coun·
• NAMI JTATIMINT tr Cltrk ot Or"'" County on All'l'JU J,
"" Tho hllkrwlflt Wl.(lllS t rt dol~ 1t1a. ':s butllllUI IS: 14ff.OC : S & T CATTLE COMPANY, tl" LI lll"l'R•N ANO ZIFl'ltEN, AllYl. t Birt• Clr<l-. Fwnl•ln Vtllty, Ctllf, '"" Wllslll,. IOVllV•r'lt ,. t210I L" Alllfltt. C•tlfon1l1 tttU
Jol'lll O. TO'Wlltencl, t llt L• S1rc1 Ctr• "·l l'UI
Clf, l'out11t1n Vt lln . C•llf. mot Publ!•hld Or•"" Cc•~I 01llv Piiot.
Rlch1rd SCf\wr, 'SJ Wtslrklo• Clrcl•, Augui.t 7. I'-21, 211. ltl3 242'1-T.1 A11aMlm. (•Ill.
'Tl'll• 1111111'\f\s 11 (l)l'ldUC!od 11'1' I 9tntrll p1rll\lralllp. PUBLIC N011CE
Jofln 0 . TOWMt!ld
Tfllt tl1ttme11! w11 1111!d w!lh the COUll!y a 7'5$11
"(ltrlC Of 9'•110t Cou11ty Oii Augu~t l. lt13. l"l(TlflOVS llUSIMISS fl.mu NA.Ml STATIMINT
Publltlltd Or•l'lllf (otll Otlly Pl101, Tiit followi"" P1 rson1 •re Cl!Mn'l Avou1 t 1, 1•, 21. 21. lt1J 2417·73 busln1u 11:
PUBLIC NOTICE
P'ICTITIOUJ llUSINlll
NA.Ml ITATIMINT
GOLOIEN kEY ASSOCATES, 196$ Sllfrll"'ll Pl., Newport Bitch, Ct , 1'1660
C. A. Sllfl>Oll'd, lN! Sllt!'ll~ Plitt,
Newport 8Hd'I, C1. 92660 HtlOlll C. Grtlvtrn, 1"6l Stlfl'lin9 PL, Ntw$1(1rl lot<h, C•. 92660 Tiie followllll PfrlOll II dDl"'ll bus!1111' Thlt b!Jl/l'llSS 11 o.!119 cond1Kltd bY • a1: ... , LIVlNl $.CHOOL OF 11: EAL P•rtJttr..., p, c. A. $.f\900lrd ESTATE. U201 1.t Ptl, L-.aun1 HUI,, Tn11 1ttftn'lfllf llll'd w11h 11\t Countv
Ctlll. '16" Cl.,!{ of Or•t1Vt County on AllllUI' Id. I 11~1 Ltvlno. 2..o1 Vl1 C111r..-o, 1t7l I
Mhlllll'I Vlitl o. Ctl. t267' ' P·214'J 'Tiiis ow.IM:11 11 COlldUCl8d b' t n In· JOHN(, IAL'flR I dlvldual. ATTOllNEY AT LAW Rabtr1 L1v1no 204.J w1,1c!lff ort ..... 1•111 ,., Thi tlt tltMnl w•1 flied .,.1111 IM Ntwll0!1 •Hell, Clltfonllt ""° I
Courity C ltr!o. Of Ortt19t Counlv 0<1 &1111u11 Publl1htd Ort "" Cotti O•lly Piiot I
t.li, lt73 41191111 It, 21. 21 1111<1 Stp!.mlMlr 4. I f'.21121 1tn lJJ5•7J I
Pvbtl"""9 °''""' Co111 0111.,. l'llot. Allll""' 21 tncl StOl•'"lllr t, ll. II. PUBLIC NOTICE
ttn , 2~~nl-----·--------I
PUBLIC ~OTICE l'ICTITIOUS •Ul lNllJ NAll\E tTATl"Ml"NT
PICTtTtOUI au11H1ts ••~llt •l)llOW1"'9 Pttion 1• Clolne bu•lnn• I
HA.Ml ITAT&:MIMT NE WPOltT VILLA·MllAL THCAll:I!!,
TM foll-'1111 PIT-I Ire dol"f «m Hll1rra w,,, NIWPOl'I ll••cFI, I Mfflftlf'' C•t!fornr1 f'l..0 !'UN llRV!Cf.I, ~JI Clltolffl Dr, "'"' H1tllh<1tt COl"llOl'lllon, ... ~on llttCll, c1111. """· OtltWllrt CorPOr•llot1. 1)10 N, Ottl'l(I a.tty Ml'f O•tllt1, sc.Jl C1~l1n Cr,, llvt~ $.ultt lSOI $4n!1 An1. Colltor1'111 H1111tl1191on Botcl'I, C..111. n.n '2701
• JIY Dttn Ad1t11•, 5031 C1.o!111 Cr.. &1dt I'. Boycf, 2510 N. Grind Avr.,
Hlllllll!Ohlll lllOCI\, Ctl!f, t164f 5'1111 )jO, $1n11 At11, C•llfornr1 t)101 ffllt lllltl11111 It con<lucltd by 1 9-r•l Thll IJl.lllflbt 11 CO!ld<Klld "" I COi'· ptttnonhll•· POftllon
1 Self)' M.tr 0.ttln Flr•I Ht1lt11<1rt CPrPOttllon "r. D-A<lll'llS 111111 F. I Ovtfo, Vic• Prrsldtn! Tlllt •tt tf'llllfll wtl I/Itel wlll\ till COUii-Thll it1ltl'Mfll w11 tllrd w!l1'1 11\0 C°""'
.tr Ctttt. • oroflf• '°"""' on Aut1111 t1. w Cltrl. Of Qrtft9t countv 0<1 Jiiiy 21, l•~ nn.
11-tn• "'",.
c5llt CoastPederal~ Qffer
• 73 Guaranteed Certificates
·Saturday Service
·The Insiders Club
Art ~lnkl('ltcr
The Insiders Club: A new
way to beat lnfla lion. Us
membership ca rd permits
you to buy nearly every-
thing you need from the
finest closed-door show-
rooms at substantial sav-
ings -appliances, furni·
lure, steteo equipment,
sporting gOOds , draperies
and much, much more.
You can even buy cars
at the "fleet" price and
mobile homes and motor-
cycles at substantial sav-
ings, The Insiders Club
J\l'lnual Annual 11a1e v.e1r1
7.00%·7.25%
<I year certlhcales,
Sl,000 m•n1m11m
6.75%-6.98%
30 l'Tl(.lntri certificate•
$5,000 minimum
6.50%-6.72%
One year <er\iliuites, $1,000 minimum
IPenattv on all cet!lflcate
at;eOUnli withdrawn prior to rn11turlty.J
5.25%·5.39%
On ~~l5tln~ 1:1nd nl:)W oa~sbOok, no mln•mum. M;Jilmum
lle•101111y.
ll,/l ln1Cfll$1' CDmPQUmlel/ d•1ly,
also p rovides big dis-
counts on tickets to sport.
ing and entertainment
e1Jents •.. plus a whole
list of free services: Safe
depasit boxes, money or·
de rs, travelers checks,
and notary services.
Membership reQuire-
ment for savers-$1,000
minimum balance. Coast
borrowers now receive as-
sociate membershipS en-
titling them to au outside
referral services. Ask
at any Coast office.
MAIN OFF'ICE
9th & Hiii • (2131152J.13Sl
WILSHIRE: OFFICE
3933 Wllsnlre Blvd.• (213) 388-1265
LA. CIVIC CENTI.It OFFlCE
2rnt & BroadWay • {2131626-1102
OIAMONO 11.< OfflC[
328 so. Diamond ear Blvd.•
{714) 59$-7525
EAST LOI ANOnis omCE
1350 So. Solo St.• 1213) u.6-4$10
HUNTINGTON 1£.ACH o mc1
91 Huntlniton centtir •
(71•) 897-1047
LA MIRADA OfFlC[
15222 Rosecrans BIYd, •
(7 14) 522-67$1
LONQ llU.CH OFflt[
Jrd & Locust • (213) 437·7481
ORANGE OF,IC[
2 City Blvd. E.lll • (714) 639-9071
,.ANORAMA CITY omcr
S•!IO Yan Nuys Blvd. • 1213) 892·1171
1AN GAlfUEL On'ICE
117 SO. Del Mar Avr.. • (213) 287-9941
SAN 1'£DRO orr1cr
lOlll &. P~clllc • (213) 831~341
SAN'TA MONICA Off/CE
7111 Wlli1i lr1 Bl'ld. • (213) 39J.0746
TARZANA Off'ICt:
187&1 Ver,tu1a BIYd. • 1213) J.4S-8fil"
TUSTIN orncE
&30 [. Fll'!.1 SI.• !714} 832-15810
Wll'T COVINA Of',,CI
0111enc1 Shopr 1n1 center. 1213) 331·220
Open S.turd1p 9 AM to 1 N
COAST ._! _FECl:R~L SAVl'.'JGS t
Now /n
NoNbtnt
Coll,oMlt
. ~
ASSETS OVER ONE BIWON DOLt.ARS
PIMl1lllll OrMl9f Cot)I Dlll~ l"tlol. P..to!ll/\td Orff!IOI (Ollf Otlty ~llo•.1.======================================='l I "'""' 111 tllCI $.ttlt"""' L 11, If, Ju ... ulf 21, lll ll'ICI ~lem0tr 4. 11 , ~1l ,...,n 1t73 ,,.,,,l
•
r~. Ail9"' 28, 1973 DAILY PILOT J 9
Small's ln,OVER THE COUNTER
Say Ford NASO Ll1tl1191 for Mond1y, A1191111 '11, 1973
........... ------"""" T P • T'*I llUOl•tloftt l'rlm It n 1l lut kr Cn 1t9 M •r.'~ w 'I .... "•" Op mr sullClllfll DY 1111 Nt· l'•jl Pelf; '11 I Uffn C1 lOlili 11 ~-11-1 Aaocltllon ot Fu It!' H Ul'I 1)14 l lnr CO tot 1'11!'& lill'IY OC IV. 1111 SKu~lllfl 0.tlr.r'i Fut* 541• t "' 1~. lt t ll'tf .. !.'ii ~'• ::..~""Ofldw:.~ iliw: t~fl'lt r1U'"';~c .~ II' ow'1'. ~· u:: P\~
,., ... , ,.,0 _.,SEN toi,o1111r elf.elf" lu 111 LfJ ! m ~!I\ ltc 'al6'J\I * ~:"o~~P lm'i.ff. By """nt.t ...-,n.;Ji-... •~ oltltr 11 o1 lco C11 I 12._ ;n Univ IJ-~~ rn Oc'" 1 I • or..,. o .. ty PKtt 1tttf cl-. IE1ii.rn Gn Autm Sll'J 34\'t ll" Pl•1 6\.\ rnoh l'n , j'rnt.) Tht O\IOI•· Gn AuloP af.~!'i &A fit: .. li~ Ct~ 11u 11?:
CORONADO -Ford Motor r~I ~~~~r.: ~ (~ .. u::: ~~ Ro':! fiJ ~ Hur,~ . I t. 1~ ...
Compeny'a top olflcoi'I said =~ ~ c:""'r!:i ~rfm ",I.; 1~~ 11 ~~~. t i~ frti:
here they expect expanded f~~::ri~1. ICIWI &~:"A~ :~ m a::-: f:, 'm ~ UlllY '1d1 "'i'11~ 1~ H&Ch Ch 11~ Ruel" " I \.\ Unv MODI \'t
'mall Car produc"on t 0 MOllCllY Ht/11'1 ew I~ 7~ ll:u1 IT ~ \II V•o"' He
T"' Auo\111 ''· 1m ~·u Fl'lk 1-Ali """ I ... • Ytntf Sn ,11 ~.
CUShlOn the e{(ect Of &n ex· ,H ouSTltlALS H=~~~ B~ S'4 Ht. •mllllt I 'f 1j• •r:" $ '-~
llgh I AND UTll. Tl•I-M1r1111r A V1 6lti Sch-.rtr 3 \\ V ctorl SI I \II 1'111 pected s t e c 0 n 0 m c ll!d Atk Hewth Fl ,,,. 1&4 ~hon Ill I\.) 211.o; y CllQ Sv1 1 • 6
slowdown in 1874 car sales. HIUlo Mi 1',~~ 1~i! c:11l1L
111B •1~ '~ ~~u·~h~ n~ 1~~~ Al11 Atx 21~ ~21\ Mt•ctl C 7 & r D9S H r.1, Jll• Wt1FI NG •I/~' lllto
Jn a statement to newsmen :u~ ~ne1, ui.< 1• ~= 11v. n"' •• wr1e1 "" H.._ w1s11 Ml 1 I\ 'ru .., l J~ ~ Hun! MIO \II Ul4 l\I Me•(h ·= ~~ Wl:l~n'tlllt I 1 \\ ' here t.o view the company's :n~ l~ .,, 5\1 HY•" c 12l1 ,12~ ;~J"LP ~"" ll ~!!1.n. • •ll'l :1
• Am ADr1l I U t\'t Hyiltr C 20n I hlllr Co Pl 11,1;1. W~ WI 1 iii !4\~
1974 models, Heru-y Ford II, ••mN•i"•"' l"' 31.i 1nc11 w11 11'1li ""' hofew 1~• .-. w1n111t "' , i. ••~
board hairman d Le A At11 £xpr Mtt> 60\'f .llfor9li. !Vt I 11 Tol1 $1\11 jf\11 W11t>UD n .b ,.. Inda N...c:I 17" d \/o ~""°'°" 11 12 W11c1t Pt lllo 51.li c . an e . Am Flrw;I l1'1t 11~ lntfl C!"D 5'\11 60 Ind P•O 14~., lS X16tli 14'1
Iaoocca., president, said the::~~~~~:~~~,~,~~ r.~ I 1·11 l'rn"=r.11ZJdJ 1m~,;:
new Mustang 11 and Cougar, Am TtltY 2S ,. !" SltW A 61~ 6\11 Ill It Alt 261.lt \II w I Pk! 4\11 14"4 AMlrc Sy 11\11 ,, nt Alvm ... ~ Jyt ~d ltfflll •Ill 1 •!Ill H 6¥1 1n..
... w kl '°" !~..... ,.,,.., Cp ,~ 10!\ IXN Srw 1 • K "'iti ,l~ 11~1 are "respomlve to the gro,wing :::~r111 ·~~ ·~~ Jzi,,: R 1~ ,t}. :-,: "'TJ 1,,,., ,,vi :~ L~ l ~ l~
tendency of new car buyers to :rs•c,c:.c.0 1~ :n; ~:!~'~ 11~ 1: =~ !J "'a: 1t .. ~~~' c. ''-~ ,
'
' • f llO Fd 4U !.'6 Q~m! F~ n I thlnk small " A•dll Mvf 21• • 11' 1 1l•1 14 Ttllv Cro 3\t 4 !I"' r Co 6'>'1 "• ' Artow Hr lS'' I'"• K1J\o1r C "'°,,, ",,~ Tl l'1lllK 105" IO&li. Olll Ulh 23 '4'h Arvllla 1io '"" IC11rn 'T-.. AHO Cole 21ut n\'J KtUWoCI 14\i 1SI~ "INDUSTRY SALES of 1m .1.11 G• Lt ,~. 1•vi k.,11 co1111 ,.,, lo..;.1-------------
models," Ford and Jacocca :~~d ~i: !~ !~ ~:~.,o.~~ 1'~\~ ,f' 10 Moat At!tl"e 8tlrd Wr 161\ 1~: k~\1 \nl 1 \i li~t~l-----~------
sald, "will tota l l~.8 million l!~11F~ :15111 !ov. ~n•o. C1 1 1~ ''~' He.w YOR:J::.11::" r ~ 10 mos1 ' ' . .,, .m .~ Koo•r Pr 2 t:. 'l" 1cr1,.. 1toc.k It on '"' c m1rk.,1 cars and at •~Y "' "" """" 1Crut01r l \'i MOllCl•Y •• DY N o.
,
=~nk B~ M,,., lll'l t~.;:.rn ,.;,1 ~:~ r:~ VIII-•If Alktd C1111.
·,'!-least three 1:~~1 ~ L~ ~:~ L:~:" ~~ g',~ ::~ lij::,. lffl ~~ 1f~11 :: m I. I I 1' 0 n '•'"'",!! ' , •• 10Uir ~·wi.t c .. AmFr EMI) I R~ ~ I •..-•"• •tt t1tY 80,1' ~ ti Bur11u11 S!mJ ts ' ~'
trucks. This t:,,~Y l~ 2~~ ~~ LJ~-~~ ~ t~t ~~ c1r11f'Ollrc1 Ott , ~r:r.:. 1-; i•.
llttl Prd ... .u·~ L I c~'"" f!<i .~t =::-.... 11~: : 1!4) ~ ~ ;::
j m ean s that :r~ Lt~ Jt~ 11'1 t:: ~r~: 6t? JU NorflllVP ilf1111 H ~\) •r
od I • -· t-•lr 3 Bt11\d lnulll , s.,,. I ... m e year l~o ~1 ~~:Z ~\':. 't.wt' co ~ 55" C•bl• Fvnllln11 _,_, •h l't-\o
the industry =~E~": ~"-=:: M.a Gt' 1113~ l4Uir NA$0 Volumo TOhV, ,,,n,.q
is a g 8 I n Btt!ncO ' 21 ... n i., M•J fl.lry X.S\1 S'lt Adv•ncn "' •• Brll>ll.t y., 11 11"< ~ lc~t Oocllflfl
b t Brown ,1, S14 '"" x43 f.I U11Ch&r1C11d a 0 U t 0 r 15 ,,1., Maril Fri 161'> 17 Tottl
k II 1::gti. !'lo 6v. M1ry K' 31•~ )1\'> ""' ,.,,
,ORD b re a a Burn:w s1 251, 2s1, Mc Cnick 401) ,,,.,l-----~-·------
11 lie M ... .., 4S\~ McQu1v l•\1 151,. r I 1 . Lo saJeS records by the same m a r· C~m,Tta 201 71 M,.clcm 11'• • uG n e r S &K SerS . th C1ol s-,,,Z S\' 11.'*J~rn 51':. £11,1-------------gm as last year-more an a CM v1Ps ,, ,.~ t::;., t; 1f 'I 1J~~
ml'lli'on c ars a nd more than 3 c,~,m,'!... P! 141• 1J MIUloor 1.1\ 49v, N-York CUPIJ -Tllf '1lilO'l"lt11 1111
n ..,. ., 11 l7l1 Ml>L1 G•i 21\\ 32 ""°""' '"' llOCkt '"'' Fii .... 11tlllfd lllf Chtlll Co S'~ $'\ Ml11t1 F•O ' 6v, m1111 Ind IOlt lhtr tl'IOll 0.Md 1)1'1 porc1111
half ml·11,·on trucks Clltm c a Jn~ l"\'1 Mociul c 20 !1 o1 c1vt11111 on "" o ...... 111t-Cou1u1r . (Fil Sr Lr f6\::o 11'1 MoleA I~ 36 1 m•rktt II CIUOll'd bY 1111 NASO.
"\\' d t peel however c11r11 S« xu1 1s1 Moen Sa 211• 21 Net •nd Pff<9nlftt tl\lnott ••• 1r..1 e 0 00 e x 1 1 Cll!i U A J2\.\ J:li;o Morrllll . It~ 2! dl llOAnct btlwtll'I Tiit 11AVfOU1 1111 bid . ill ' (lt\lldc 9\IJ 10\lo MOlor Cl ti.. 9\lo O<'lCf •n d Iha c..,,.rtnl 1111 Did PrlCf,
that the industry W again c1ow cro 10 11 MS1 0.11 11 ''• OAtN&:ltS • he CoceC La 11 11\li NII CnvS1 91~ !O , break all sales records 1n I corn• Sllr )(7' 11 "''t LlDtv 6 ~. 1 YIOOlll CM-ml 1>.0+ 1.v. uo 1t.! CmwTl p 7J 74 NI McllCr 10\~ Ill. 2 M.-rlt. IVHomt 31.+ \'I Uo II.! 1974 model i Conf111t p 141'i lJ Nt Pt11111 1ov, 11)1;• l t>r1mif"tl Mad 1~~ '4 uo 16.1 Cou1l11s ni.1 1)1h Nft<Shn'I t 1g t ~!toclr'lk Tr111 1'1 • .. Up lS.•
Y""r, for the Cros.s co :io1~ ,, Ntwll co tt~ 1 i;, s ocilcon lll(rp 4 }\ uo 1(.l
h'rd · · Curl Nolf 1115•1, 16~ NJ Ntl G I I.of 1, 1 Am Ml<:ro SYt 11\li 21• U11 ll.O ,,,.. crv1c~ 1t '"" •"'1 NE"' Ge ,lli ,6 ~ Sor~rco 111Cor11 1 t u11 14.s
t i tim e m o1111 11111 ,., ' )M ~J~r::, i~ 3 I:'.: 3~ i ~i.~r: ·~ ii~ ill ~: l\1 a row. The D1111Y M )(f II~ NltllO!l' B 311\ ~ 10 Gf'nCmolr S~I \;i Uo 11.1 °':1 2_~ ,1~ ~,~ NorClt!r 11 Pl~Prod .l~O ll.'I \o Ull 11
h ealth Or the Ot I vcl >< I x20 ""''"" 11 All•11llc ln.dllt 2l4 \lo U11 I'·' D•ll Gin '2 , 4?,_ Nws NIG ~ f"'·~ 1l Cobl L1M1ror 271.'i ,1_, Uo g.o
e C 0 n 0 my Die!' 01 11• .. 13"· NO••ll Co U V) 14 L-h•m111 11.i "" Up l 0 O.C:cr 111 41't Ji.'! NW.Ir At 11'1 IJ Ul'd Cornm u111 ~• '~ Up t ,1
11.s r DMlll Alt n·~ SJV.. ~-wcl H 71, • ,, AoolCIOlcll! n1 \(o Uo 9,1 ca o r a o.,,1h1 11111 .s 5\'J ,1,, or 521.. li.l'lo 11 0111111b 1ncor11 1 1, up • 1
I d . Oe1uq c 3J\'J 36'4 111 £• I" "' ll Lnlor•-l1>1;oro 7',• \o Uo t 1 S OW 0\111 l1l 011m C•s ,,., nu f\Qr Ml 1., I ... Nur:llJ•r lltK i1, '• Uo t .1
th 0 1m Hd 1D>1o 10'• ~h Lii• I'• U!ll oln S.rv l \.'t \\ U11 t .t e exces-oiek .1. 11 141:. 's\. 11vy M 19 20l.'> 11 0 1r1 ruci n 7~ \, u11 1.•
SiVC r ate Of Olvrs Scl tV, lOV1 Ferro x7 1\o 22 N~-1 CSS Inc 'lSVI 1 Uo l .S DQcuttl 31 <~ n 11 Cot! lj"" ,,..., n C 111 0<1 M•v 1•• \\ uo 11 n a t i on a I IA.COCCA t>Qltr Gr11 Ti• N rmont 7\o'! 24 F nt w11t Fl" ,.,. '' uo l .l · wth St O-JC11 1~•• ~ ~rmvt l \t 6\o Jj S11k!11 RobO n 10 ~ Up 1.1
Se ac 01 .n,o moll c197g4ro mode. lsronagt g:-re J~ r,~ n.... 11f.' ,~: :~ :;: 1.0$.lltl
Ou .. 111 D l 3l\ 11:Kt Br W't 4~ I Or"0.11 Coro 2\lo-II~ Uo J.1
hat le S than record Eccin L•ll n•• 41'11 ,.KCI• ,,,. •• .IQl<o 2 C•ti.111 CMCll I -\lo Uo i some~ S El P•so 110• 12 t>ac <nm 11'1!. 2i:. J Miii Trv11 wh v.-\o 011
break..ing levels would be a F.• Nucrl s·~ ''' P,K,.Lum 37\1 1-'• • ~•IDIOChem 111;-2 uo s. f'llOnlY c ,., Iii • Bui Ji.. I'• s P ProductC" ,.,__ v. U11 I good ~gn for the country and eov S&L """ 12~ P111 OcOI 15\0 1•1• • r1111r" corp ,1~ ~ u11 i . · Elhtn A :t.J 2A P1ul lie~ •lllt I~ 7 tfdfrl<-lllH -.., Up l.l
its hopes of containing in-E•IC\I '" l\'J 4 P,•111tv P 3v, l":. • 1ur>remt E11111 111.,_ 1'.\ 011 l ! , , El P•l"I 4 7 YIU C11 11~ 16'• t lnc:/\lrt lmt 3,,._ .. Up ..,
flation w ithout dropplllg into a F•I• Ln t 71~ N P,".N SY I " ''"' 10 l lO!'OP Coro 2i'•~ ~ •• U• • . , ' '' ...,,_ ~.,. I II. W II H11111n11S1s G• ;-U11 6 recession • •r"" ~ ...... , • •'1'4 11•1 n l'lnithun c.11 v.-'• u11 1 · F•rm llr 11<t1?Jo pei H&H 'ji..:t.J\013Coburn Olllk: lj,,_11'1 uo 31
"\Ve believe that the e ffect ~t:;'"'?rci ,;1~ ,; ~~Pl 5~": , i 1 ,~ 11 ~~J/i~ 111 ~ 1.~ ~: , t
of the economic s lO\\ldown on r,~1 1-.0:~ ~:: ~~ ~:=:.'!" w ~r: NI ,. :~ F,Or"~~·~ ·~ m:: ~? M: l.~
next year's car sales will be ',',' wo,tF !.-.. 1
1.: t>t-rn11 11 1~ II>. 11 M1011Pr11 .13 l -11 u11 • IU nc ,l'f .. Pl1nd M~ 1t 1•>1 It Scrloto 111coro v.-t• Ui$ J
cushioned by expansion of F•• T11ao 1 n1 , • ..., Pol>LI l!lro s !1' 20 11v111 t11tt•n11 l,..._ •1 Up 1.• Flldl!M' 11 ll"lt Prof Goll 11-\r1 11 Ao<U lndt!rl11 •-1• Uo J
smaU car produc tion capacity ~~~I ~I ~ .. I~ ~~':1''-'•r ~g;: l ~ :q 5:l1~1ci,.t,.t::i: i~t ~ ~= :
a ndal
1
recoveryt of
1
hso
1
mc ol lothe
1
~;~~· ic ~!'' ~i.t ~.~: :~ :!!' }1 ~~: c~rc:'~ \ll=. ~ uo 1
s m car sa es a were s Up 3
this year because of limited °"'"""'°""~"'= a vailability. Gil:. '7. -
"ON BALANCE , "'e believe MUTUAL FUNDS
that indw;try retail deliveries11,.=...,ma,,.mo:::i,._.."'1W.•..om•mm m:.D1mm..-of 1974 model cars will prob-I'
ably top 11 million -~~..i I "1~ 1v"",, Fol· Otyf Lv U,331S10 ht.I Fl'ICI 20.t411.jf Rntrf " 6.7' 7.Jt "'"""'"'""' ow nci I • II of 50 1ntm 7.26 ~ ... Ivy Fund •. ., 6.65 Rlnlrt 12A1 only to sales or 1973 models b/11 '""' '"~ orl· Jrci ce111 t .t:I lj.n JP Gw11r 1.11 t.M s.ft.<: E11 1.11 1.1s . trs O<l ... i.rtu11 E&E Mu 3.lt .1• JI""" Fd 17.(15 11,QS Slollll• 2. J 2.2\ Truck sales should stay steady F,,'"'•'•!o' -, 111 DY E111t• Gr •.u .s1 JH1n 0111 1.n •,. k1>us Fd &.11 •.05
al h d 1 nc. IATON & JHan S111 I.°' 1.7, :kl'lln lo 1.43 t .21 ! e recor level of three M .. HOWARO: Jahflllfl 2J.•5 !14 KUDOllt P'OSJ 'II' 'f he on y B1l11 Fd t.l6 10.:t.J KIYITONlr ~Ir Inv IS.15 \S.13 m1 ion even 1 t economy Auo11t1 11. 1m Gw1r.. F 1.J.19 n .11 cuit s1 11 n ,, ,. •ltnc. 15.1'0 '' 10
slows down " 11, AN! ~..,. ~.a.i 1.ll Cuti B1 1t:n 21:oe om K>.41 10.0
, AOMlll:AlTY: SlrtllF: 11·~ 1'·~ Cu1t 1!14 l.\j l .t) r 2t.M 211.t'
Both Ford and Jacocca G11 ""'' •,:11 41s1 l!btrsta 1 '.01 1f:o1 ~~!: ~11 ',",. ',-"_.. t1cu•ih ~~s:'· 1
. . ncorn .60 .ts ~DIE $p 21. .. 21.U ¥ .... • E '" 3.)1 3 6' emphasized that this for ecast ~'I:'" '·ff 1.5, fie MOMT ORP: ~~: ~~ Fi'll ~'·ff 1n~11 .:43 ,:001
is based on the assumption Attn!'1°Fd t,, ;:;4 ~ ~: ~:I: f~ Cust Sl 1.10 I:. Ji1(r:_c/eD .. ,1105~·~1
" h h · Altna In 13.Sl 14.n Fnd Am 1 21 1 N Cull $4 4.1, •.!6 · I at I e government w1U su e-Atut""' t.&t '"' E11•rt Gt u'.0113:01 >.oono 4 st ,.01 ~ ~·, ',·~, ~·\"
ed · '[ I · · AGE FCI 1.12 4.12 Ellun Trt 15 911 Pol•,, 3.61 3.H "'-· · 6 ce 1n 1 s pan to ma1nta1n a AJlltt•t• 12.so U-'4 Emert1 3:D 3.96 1C11lck• '·'' 6.s2 .~~ •• -~s 12,l! ',"'•
deg f I. I d •A A 111'11 Fd 12.7' lj·" Ener;y 11 1110 ICnkr Giii 1.11 7.15 _,,....., .-O.• ree 0 1sca an rnoneM:llry All'IC•O F •.62 .OJ F1frlkl 1: 1:11 Lnclmrlr 4.M 1,0ol S.111,.,. F 13.3' 14,!7
r estraint that will r educ e in-:~ ii~ !:~ 4:U ~?n 'Lf. ::tl ' . .l~ t~"; tf11:<1oui·:0 s.io '~sf"l.Ol.2~"1.5~ fl~tionary demand pressures Jt'"o!: 1trsi olrlJPrv ~ ... ':'' 't~ '~.~ ~~"'f=d l:! ~.~t
w ithout throwing the economy c1111a 1.J.4 (·~ !B"" 4fll •·n •·•• 1te,,c11 13.g 14."6 Hi.::"", , ,",1,2 1.11 lncorn I.ls .tl •PJ•I 11. U.40 LIDIY Fd !21 s.. I . 6.51 Jnto a recession " '"vum 1.1J 1.4S on r1 '· Lii• 1M1v 1:16 1;91 •c,. Fd 1.2J 1.90 , · SOK.I 1."6 l.lS v SSer:: 6.f4 7.25 LOOMIS ~HEARSON l'DS:
Polntmg out that the ston t.:n 1.90 ~1 j· o s&vi.11: AllDl'c 11.11 1• n Am G•ttl s.12 •.:U ne• 1 .1' cio ov 12 ID u to lncom 11.st 11.13 Mus tang II ls a smaller .... m '1""~ 4.76 5.20 vtr1I 1 .6'1 11.6l Mu!ut1 ,.:n 1~:n •nvttl t.1• IO.k . m llVfl .... ._64 und 15.20 16.61 LORD Alli SF! PNn 12.6!112.65 ver sion of the co nc e pt :m•"'o !·'3 1.61 Turlrn 1.to ,,13 At111,1 tt:u • 11 s111t l'ci t.$) 7.4'
p oneer Y ! e original a:t't.'r. ~1M00 CIAL l!lnd 11tb ,·,21o:s1 Cap $1\r 7.2J 7.90 I ed b h m I r ,14 2.45 f~ HJ4 2S,lj Am Bus il5 J0()1 SIGMA l'UHOS1
Mustang in 1964, Iacocca ex-~:1111 · 1·5' s.ol ~1n .:!"41~.u 4.14 t~lt~ntn 'i·~~ l~·TI ~' 1:t 1: ~
olsiined that it weighs nearly f:~ nv ~::!' ;~ e~~ I~ j:fl 1:~ =1T.'"cor in ,:. ~"'·r~111 B :·H ;::J
500 pounds less than the 73 v111tlll" !:!J ,jf 111Fd v1 10·'b ,:·~ Freem 1.1t 1.21 • 1&0r, 110.• 10 ...
M W11 Ntll I .60 1j,7l "lll:ST ' ' 11\dp F I.ft I... Gt11 j·°' 11 H ustane: a nd the larlle r of its Astr0<1 j·ll _.,. 1Nv EsTo11:s 1 M•ss F 11,u 11.21 ws: ''2' s:i' 1.:11
two engines is only two thirds :ti• " .IO i.s:i 8~ ~~ 5~ 1-ll ~~t l'NC:0'.'6 11.t1 w r~n 11:0~ 1t.;';
the size f the all · NOUONION: s1ock F j·. 1·10 "''G 12.13 14.Clll Sooctr1 4.15 S.l2 o sm est engine F111111 4~ •.n 111 M\1111 1'.36 .~ M1D 13.06 ,, n s&P 1n0 ,..,. 6 .... now a vailable Func1 a I 7.44 'o•u1o1 o•ou~. MFD 12.tt H,20 J~TATI '"o 01t~:
' Stock*· ·' '·j IOI Fn<I 10.5.3 10.$3 MCD 14.00 ls.JO I •10• "l l" Al!P .a..I I . 4 101 FllCI 7.76! 714 Mtt,.. Iv i'" j·'" .., I 'I
BOTH E X E C U T J V E B~~lh l~:" l~: is111}~ f&, f~ :t.1111' m 1 '.t~ 1 :'7 j':.r:'~"' ' t 4 t.,
d . s '"~ 7!! ·~ 'i" ·~ • " • M -;. ,1 ... ! II T .. OMA •• ,. escr1be the ne w Cougar as a l•Yrll ,, sJf 1· P UN 111s · · MSB Fd n:" 1J'.st At11 1nc1 2.tt 2.t:1 · ilKfl HI j .1$ · 5 G OU l Mfl SrtG t ta 10.$2 AIM F• l1lS 1.U new entry 1n -the mid-sized MCon 1 .1., . • Grw111 s.r.1·!' MIF Fd i • 1.00 tfl'rflt 1..tJ 1.u
I k troitr K 11.06 I . lnc:orn ti • MIF Gro • ti '" ST•IN •o• "0·$ persona car ma r et with 1rtw ,,oo F M~I g j "MuOm 111 ..;,, 5·°' 11:,,nc "°"~44
much of luxurv, comfort and '1:f'~':t,. i~1j: {ou~~,. 1,:n1,'.,, ~~~ 1ltl 1frr cl~1 ~f.Uu'.~;
acces sorv equipment typical ~own~~K '· · 5 0:~ ~IN Mull Trs at.IS 1.a:s ' ... '-~,11,ou,, ,,
f h I U 1 2NT 1 S2 I~ N•t ln<lu t.5t f.St ...,.,.. J, 6.54 0 f e ari;i:er lu:rurv cars. ·~ n : ~i·H a·ll ~;-111 Sr fH !:~ "a".T..e'C "f.fci t .2' '1=1 l·C I.~
Ford and Iacocca both trfv hr ~·J6 '90 us ¢!7 t tf 1 ·60 = sr 4.~ \ 1j ~n ,,,, 6.n
:iareM that the wnrld ,,,arket ~~"'Jen 10J~ l :t: ~!~11c~~ t)! l~ r.~~tt ll' I:~ ln'f0 ~ t.:J ::~
ror motor v h' I • l!lr11hm t.s.I t 5'I RI Eqry • 15 i"' ncom "·~ .04 lCll'!'llll 0 1·n I.la e ic es IS con-CG Fund f.tt10.:12 Ftl LIEo 11·,,11'u Stoc~SI' '· 6.t• +r•n CIP . t.00 1in11ine to P.row a nd thev ,,,.1., ~•o Tri" 11 .0IJl·G.l FCIMt di ,;04 ·04 orw• t· 7.ll'l ,r~l" 110.,.0111.or ' ,,, tnt Shs 13.11 .4C l"UNOS NCP . N•w NG jll; u-H I. I ~
th:it the U.S. !™'re o f Wnr lrl ""'"llNO G~OU,.~ EQUtty IS .... 1 .... =CG '·l! '·"
t II UNO ; omn>i l!l j' .. c;rwttl 10.60 Hi UNI Cl s •.1t au nmo ve m a rkets has heJtf !"ncci 1;:ZJ 11.11 li: ; .~ s1<1e I·"° 11. ON saitv1cr •-d · th n<I Fd .tO t.13 ut IT l ·t! I .11 N!A Ml 20 t Untf\lfld 1.6' ',14 Si.o:A v 1n e last few vears om &tk .M 1.:z 01 1i .02 Ntu Cent 4 ... •· 1 tR:ou,., amt conlrl begin to climb fn lhe r= J:ll i:u §r.~ P lt:i -" ~~~ 1J:U 1!:IJ u~r:.'11v ,l;# 1::I~ •-d SOtt:I '·j 4 LfO sec 1.25 •.U Nw P1r1 lj.• 14.r.J ~rel S v 112' 11.52 ;.'Pi:l"S 3n~8 • Ytntvr I, 5 t.13 OUP SE : Ntw Wkl I .9' 1l,OJ Ill l"Y t" '·ll
With rd CHAS.I: eoex F 1 ·1 NlcN•• 16. "I 16 a 11 C•ltt 'il •. ree:i to the e ncr qv •OSTONI ,., Fnc! . ,. Nnl tvtr lj·°' u: Whll'\fl l 1i.5CI
crisis Ford emuhasl1.et1 thAI. itp~'?" ·~~J'ffii!["'l~ 1:: 14. 8=i": ·~ f·60 u:,1~0 .,N7 ~
the R:a.cioHne shortAefll cannot f'~, •• l:l4 ft1~'t"ra111d Ji: ~:,4 g.:.i• fd i 1.1511 :11 ~= 'd ~·.~ 1.36 ~ solvert b v J~~islation ba "· iW~f1L 1
·
511
.4t "£~~ToN s~f ~_,1 o&,".t,~1o1:/!1 ~:: fS,:O: ,'j':H ~:U nn'I~ or oen1111lz1nll nrorluclio., li:"' ... r •211001 fll((lltl 1·U ~·fl 2! FM 1.01 i·:i tcJtne ·H 1.3'
or cars itnrt engines tibove a F~ty f:l! ,f~ t1:W"r... 1 '.ti 1j:ti ~fc TC t~ 1 :n 81~~ 1o:uil:ft
crrt0in sir.e. r~c: 1·n ,s~ ~=' i:U .II ,.:~T~'.v : ... ;::, v LU• LTM'i ,.&,:
"L"nr •-thlnq lhe dnmeAll~ Vll'lllK :" i:4s ""''°' :"' 1.~ Poe1u• F "''' t '1 v"I \~ '117 '·'' r ··.: , ,-iium G 11 . .0 11 . ..0 Hor9" 1,.tf lt P-Ml 2.3, 1-'1 II llC 4,ll O.H
8010 in"""lrv II alre1trhr sell-MMONWLTH 1rnor1 co · 110. t>tf!ft so 6.st '·" ~.., 0~111 " 6.A~ ut.T1 mo Or .1 1. hlltr Fd f·" ,.Ill "11 J, 3.3'
'"" Al! lh"I ~mall cars it cari t& s l:ll j~1 I~'~ 1: 11·~ f~~ r.~ :t .::~ ••1
r"IM ••• i• movin• ra'>l•lv I• .., i' •·1 ·1 I"' ,.., · ,:r., ""'~ 1~ ·" IM~• lj '·" -11 4. 1 n1-· . 1.t p1111 St • n vs COIT\ t.?11 ""'""'n.A ·'"'11111 r11r rft'lal"ltv an-' Clnl9 d [' . " 111wat '1·1t ''ONl"!R 11 Uo! • ~ • '·'' . orno d • nvwn o ,4 ·' ~IOtll11 "" 7S6 4 '" (i'l.I ,., .... ,. W•'1'11 fn jn'\n"'nV• ontrd . 1 • ~nY '' A I ·~ IJ.77 Ff "·jj 'j·H V•l'llllr j• 1.SJ Oltl l l\V I • . nv Ollld ' .... lont ' t 1 ,, VMtt , '
'""'' """""'"'"·" Fo"'1,_ltf. n•~ ow . • ""rr,1c t>'•flflCI ,~·· :.i v11,1111 1 J! ,,o4 :::::i;~n'" ;09 ~!1 f\)'19, 1 · 11.M ~\i\,.°f"iol;· 11.cs ~~f:I, ~ ; f~!!
""' l:' Oii i I ~ 1 · 11"..P.':!H I'-0"'111 'l l'.r,: W•~ll Mu 10. 11 ;l » Mlf'CICZAnc: r .. .,,.,. ~I 1·· .se ~~,,, J-l! 7"' ~" l'~I 1 , lji; ""~'"" -tn1141o'M '"·#"""' '"',. .. ),..,,,I""" ,.l,.111• -1:11~D\I , '.U ,.;::,'I!~ '30 1~ ~;:.r.* ~or :n JM ;:k~~•TON . ~(1 17J l,."l~T IJ'""P• ~f 'fi • I ... M:ll~ t,.~• ,.,.,..,...,..,., )o"f .,._.....,_,, .A" .... • • JDS (;h1 • di l,V 1 ~ •• ~
• 1Pi• NO • ., ' •• ,-ci "' • .... " ~ I ·' PV,.., birurer """'IM-tlnft J., ,, t.n 10.fl'I IDSI'~ 4 , ••• ~ "".!"' ~t> 10. 4 H.• ~." 1 j . r. " d ft t 7t ~~""''' 1 •• ·~ t' ,,~,.-T'."'tllil.v , •i..A .............. ,..,.1 .. ., ...... ,., ........ "' 1 , 4.u ·~· '""' 1 """~ l'llND 1 ,,,,., I \~n ~v!Mlfl 5'1_,. M , V1<-c' t 11 ~ •• r,.,,v,,, lj'.! lj.MI W-••l'r 1'i .... ,.., .. ;,....,,,, "P"'°' w• #IHI l'Ol"U-Kl CD 41J '' VIit PllV .,, ... teullY :;: ... t~~ 11 , ..
1 .. ., r~ r11•t n.~ fl"'l••il'•'11: lrt nf't\o • 14,1111•. , l"v ._.. '., Ji· Ott II 11~,. jt4; w..d'j".1111 ~E-'! '"~I i·t! t Sh 1 ·, '.., ~rift :.1 'iol W~ftd Or • rl vi"i wh111 consumers are 'i Os Gillo .... P;;:: .',j '·" I~ .t11 's,.. WIM*lt .ti (f~mandlnJr." ~ ; 1lff 1l:JJ ~~; k'.: 11.'3 IJ.SI ~::. p Un~ !':~-
•
I
I
Analys ts Please d
As Stocl{S Steady
NEW YORK (AP) -Stock market prices moved
side ways Tuesday drifting fractlonaur up and then
losing in very light late summer tradmg But many
analysts found tbe action reasonably encouraging
"Usually th!S kind of Sldeward movement with
no downward thrusts ln a low volume market means
that accumulahon or stocks 1s going on and 1nst1tu·
tional n1bbl1ng ts increased, ' said Robert Stovall ot
Reynolds Secur1t1es ' Then as part1c1pat1on broad·
ens, the next upward movement will take on mo-mentum"
OAlL V PH.OT
Co1nplete Closing Prices-American Stock Exchan ge List
10
A1nerlcan
1Uost Aetlt'e
+ l\l ! "' .. .. b _,
I
Fi11ance '
Briefs
• Albertson'•
BOISE Idaho -Subsiantlal
sales Increases coupled wllh
reduction m operating costs
enabled Albertson s Inc to
mamtam earnings growth, It
was announced Monday
Robert D Bohnder pres1
dent or thi s Western states
supermarket cham reparted
sales for the 26-week flrst ha.I!
totaled $4-04 652 354 an In
crease of 31 percent over last
year s sales of $308 751,175
0 Canoga
Speclal to the n.uy Pilot
EL MONTE Canoga
Industries had net income of
$320 000 or 24 cents a share an
sales af $8 737 000 for the nine
months ended July 31 com
pared wllh $348 000 or 26 cents
earned on sales of S6 804 000 1n
the like penod a vear ago
president Stanley E Beale an
nounced
Income from Ope.r3hons
assuming full provision fur in
come taxes \vas $169 000 or 13
cents a share as compared
with $181 000 or 14 cents the
• Litto n Goal
previous year
LOS ANGELES (AP) -L1I
ton Industries said today that
new cost targets for :io
destroyers being built at
Pascagoula Miss 1 are "well
w1th1n contract c e 111 n g
pnces"
Litton issued a statement In
reply to Rep Lee Asp1n (0.
W1s) whG s<::ud the company
has told the Navy it need~
another $77 m1lhon to cover
cost Increases on its S2 2
b1lhon ship contract
0 Dolla r Up
LONDON (UPI) The
dollar Inched upward In Euro--
pean money markets Tuesdav.
reversing ~tonday's downward
trend Cold s price rose tUght .. ly
The fluctuattons 1n August
ha ve little to do with the
underlying trend whldt Is a
gradual improvt!mcnt of the
dollar, a Parts banker '8id
O Frattd Charge
LOS ANGELES (AP) -
tJn1ty Securftlcs Corp • .i.
Beverly JldJs broker~ealrr
firm htls been accu$CCf in-a
s..mtdts and .Excbangt Com-
mission c omplnlnl or
fraudulooUy manlPIJlAltiw lhe
stoc:k or Ore<W1 Inc , a '\Jtah
Cllfll'1r1Uoo with Ill principal
pliu:• of bu..._ In IUli.i>an
Woodland HUJ1
'I
.I
'
•
111tiday, AU911St 28, 197;.
TO M(;HT'S
TV IDGHL~GHTS
NBC O 8:00 -"The Stranger." An astronaut
crashes on another planet and becomes a Cugitive
from the power structure there. Glenn Corbett,
Cameron Mitchell, Sharon Acker, Lew Ayres.
ABC U 8:30 -"Class of '63." A jealous hus-
band, convinced that his wife still loves his college
rival, disrupts his school's 10-year reunion. James
Brolin, Joan Ha ckett, Cliff Gorman.
KCET !l!l 9:00 -Swan Lake. The National Ballet
of Canada presents the classic 'f chaikovsky ballet
with Erik Bruhn and Lois Smith.
TV DAILY LOG
Tuesday
Evening
AUGUST 28
1:00 IJ DU el !1'1 ll'l m -m®J -e louw
(i) Cturbtl!, t i Eddlt's ftttllr
fJ W111W DtM tJ Alltt m n.. fl lntattl!IS
C8Star Tr1k
fJ)Ln Torm ·
ll!I ............... m TlirM SfMitl
l:lO 00 Ht111'1 Htiats O Movie: (90) "YoY•1e lo lht End
ti th1 UnlnrM" (sci-Ii) '64--0!n·
(90) "C11u ol '61" (R) (dr1) 72-
Jimes B1olin. Joan Hackett, CHff
Go1m1n. At 1 ten-year reunion 1
}t1!ous husband, convinced that Ilia
wife still loves his tollt&t 11Y1I,
plans 1 serin ol desiteratt th•l·
l~nJ!eS fo1 the un:wsPtCtln1 termer
lrwer. n r~elY Criff111 ,.._
OOra••
9:00 n R1111 for Your Utt
MDrt~
£".) $'1l'!fl'.ttl llllp•at """'• EZ;J Li!!E.@ S..1 lakl Erik
Bruhn ind prim1 b1Uerin1 Lois
Sniilll stir in Ille N1tlorla1 B1l1tl of
Canad• pelform1nct of th• c!1uit
Tc~1ikovsky ballet.
€") P'loclle T1pltl•1
nis Stephens, fr1ncis lmolen. t:JO n (f1 CBS Tuad., llowle: (C)
CJ) ctS Mews Willer Cronkite (911) Triloa (R) "lffp 111 [JI on
Q "'°''Suit Will TrMf Denl1r" s!1n 'J1ekie C.OOptl tnd
®)Miff llfffill Sllow Lynne Frederick; .. Bl1 D1ddy" stirs m hdJ Sriffltll ROOSMlt Grltr 1nd Helen Mtrtln;
fD Slit. Yu111 'fhl& YN .. thd~• &Ill" stirs Elldi1 Albert
(n l.Mel EUJ 1nd Oi?Wn L,o. --· w:.1 ,., News
ED Desert Tilulll fl 6et S11111t
f!1 uttlt Raab f1 Muc.h1ch1 ltall1n1
7:00 B rn D m NIWS a> futinl Mnle1111
11 llwfl~& fot Oo!l•rs " 10:00 r:J@) e;) NBC leporb ''HMplt.tls,
(j) 11o;vie. (Zhl} h1 Otd CP11e111 Doctors 1nd Patients" A probt into
(dr•) 38 -Tyrone Powu, Allee Ml deeply troublesome 1speels of
f1ye. medicine in this counlry lod•Y-
(j) Safer! to AIMntuni Ill! pr&ctice of 'ddenslve medicine' 0 Wlllt't MJ Line? and the sky1ocketinf cOru ol hos· m I love Lllt'Y p!tali1.ation.
ti) I Drl•• of Je11111t ft f!J ('i) Plfews fB Si111ple1111ntt Merli ~ Jl'rill"11t Zont
@I Thi frtndl CIMt 0 (j) ~ M1rar1 W•llly M.D.
I!) ll11t1e1 "He1rtbe1t !or Yesle1d1y" (R) Dr. ! ~ ltlctr Wetbv joins 1 flyin1 physlcl1n to
ll:U -SIVe the life of I JOUMf Hopi ln-
7:)0 IJ lobby 'eldsboni Show (R) dian 111insl the wishes of th1
81111Ives1uesb. youth's 111 ndlather. Chlff Dtn
11) Htpl'a HtfMI Geor11 ind Willlam Sh1tner fUISt.
O l"olkl Swflff• "A Bullet for D Mowlt: It) (lhr40!n) "Capt1i1
1111 6ener1I" Dr, Loeb and Def.·lt from Toledo" (adv) '66-Stephen
Din P1lmer unc:ov1r 1n assnsi fll· Forsyth, Norma BenliH.
lion plot when 1 visitln1 lorelan dif· 0 Evenfn1 •I Pops '1he Boston
nit•IJ is iudden!1 stricken with 1 Ballel-Dancin1 'Round the Worhf'
coronary ett1ek. Geor11 Ch1kiris 10:30 "Ttlk Itek
fUUlS. (1i),_ One Step leyvnd
B Help Thy Ntifltbor D') Troe Adventurt 00 Tllis Is four Lift pi) Vldts en c,nfllctt 0 Million $ MM: (C) (2111) M L~i 0!11 Felices
"Im MlstnSI" (edv) '52 -Al1n ~ Nnn/Sports
Ladd, Virginia Mayo.
®l-""m mn.t Cirl
llJ Df1111et
@ID Citylfltclltn "R1cte1tion1I Ve-
hicles" m stand u, tntl Chtff
ll'l C.."'1 m nt Ad41 .. '•MltJ
11:00.., A A f"'I M m -r'fJ (7f') l"'l Er.) Nin
f5' Ont S'ep BeJOntl
Pl Pmy M1son n T tilt" er COMtqutnm IB Mowle: "Larct'llJ" (dr1) '48-
John Payne, Di n Duryea.
11:30 EJ (11) CBS l.atl Morit: "Mlpt: of
l :llO B Cl) ll1ud1 (R) Wtlter 11 dt· the 11!11'"•" (dr~) '64 -Rlth.ird
prmed 1bout his 1pproactiin1 50th B"rto~. f"a G•r!lrier, Oebor1h Kerr.
birthd1y, Ind M1ude c1n'I lifl his 0 I]§) m lohnl!J C.l'IOll joey
spirits. Cbhc'I i; 1uest hl)SI.
0 ®J in NBC Tuesday Movi•: (C) f',') Movie: ~ar ef Tew" (wes)
(2:111) "The Strupr"' (R) (sci.fi) '72 Wayne Morris, P1ul Fil.
-Glenn Corbrll, C1meron Mitchell, C'I G"I Wu rnd Petet Part 11 or
Sha11>11 Aclcer, Ltw Ayres. An •Sita· four oarts. Arthur Hill n1rr1tes this I
naul er1shes on 1nolher pl•nel and Rus$ian.made film version of Count
becomes 1 fugitive from th! power Leo Tolstoy's dis.sit 1bout the Rus.
structure there. sian iris!etracy during the Hipol. IJ Mowie: CC) (Zhr) "VOJ11• Into eo~ic yeal"l.
Si>lct'" (scl·fi) '70--Ali:jo Ito. (9 To Tell ttie Truth
O @ alT•nipmtures Risi111 "RX: Nox Job" (RJ Millie winl.s: 11:44 ~ Movie: "PAurd~r bJ l'mJ" (mys)
plastic sur111y on her llOSe ind ·65--lvan Desney, Wa lter Pr1iu.
Nolend sets up 1 closed-circuit pry 12:00 (7:) Marsh·! OiUon
TV show to pick' up the lab. t" Allred Hlt~cd ht1tnb m Allrtd Hikkod l"mellb
ti) The Untouclltblts
EB LI Senora Jew1
@) flrlnr Une
O!) El [dllldo dt Enfrtnte
l!'lC.•"1
12:30 Pl '1~w!e: ''Tht Reformer 1nd ltll
R;illl~td" lcom) 'SO-June Allyson,
Dick Powtll.
l :00 r!f) ..., f"I r"'i Ntws
rt! fol"~h\~'f P1trol
l:lO~(';:J News
1:45 B M11rit: "When Wiiiie Comes
I
'Annie' Readied for Lyric Opera
I t's Gitaa
ln lbe past three. seasons
since it! transition frotn grand
opera to light opera, Laguna
Beach's Lyric Opera Assocla·
tion has chosen professional
performers from medium-
densily galaxies or show
business to headline its annual
late summer productions.
'Ille first Broadway -type
show, in 1969, spotlighted
Marni Nixon in "The Sound of
Music ." The combined Lyric
Opera -Laguna Moulton
Playhouse staging of "Oliver,"
which ran all summer in 1970,
fea tured Ben \Vrigley as
Fagin. And ~1arilyn Savage
headlined "The ~1usic Man " in
1971 and returned as "~1y Fair
Lad y" la st yea r.
This season. as Lyric Opera
heads into the fin al two weeks
of rehearsa l for "Annie Get
Your Gun," the leadi ng lad y is
indeed a \1'ell-1rai ned pro-
fessional actress -she IC'ft
the cast of "A Little Night
Music" on Broadway to do the
show -bu t she's also a
"home town girl" as well.
TERJ RALSl'ON, who hasn't
performed in her n a t i v e
ttOLLIDAY A ALSTON
Laguna Beach since s h e
shared the ingenue role in
"The Fantasticks " in 1965. will
don buckskin and take up the
blunderbuss as Irving Be r1in's
Intermission
Tom Titus
irrepre&'.SibJe Annie Oakley.
The show opens Sept. 7 for
three weekends under the
Laguna stars in the Irvine
Bowl -vacated just two days
ago by the Pageant of the
Masters.
It 'II be a triumphant return
for Teri, \\'ho prior to joining
the "Night Music" cast played
Jenny in "Company" on the
New York stage, in Ws
Angeles, San Francisco and
London. Her \\'ide voca l range
will be included on a recorded
musical tribute to comooser-
lyricist Stephen Sondheim,
just released this month.
Starring opposite 1\11 s s
Ralston as the sharpsliOoting
Frank Butler will be another
well-credentialed pro, David
Holliday -and it should be al)
easier role this time around.
The last time he did the part
\Vas In Copenhagen, and Holli·
day didn't speak Danish, so he
learned it phonetically.
HOU.IDA Y GOT into show
business by walking into an
understudies' audit ion for
"West Side Story" in New
York and landed the cameo
role of Glad Hand. l~c stuck
with the show and eventually
worked up to ti:>< lea}· ioli of Tony and ~ I ol
Eniland and SCotalnd. n the
latter COWllrY be waa tt.td
by Noel C<>wiird and si !Or
the lead in "8a:\1 Away, 1
While "~an ~f La Mtncbl"
was in ~ts long New York run,
Holliday &~lied Richard Kiley
as Don Qulxote in J!1lllntc1
and played Dr. C.rtastO at
evening performance!. He co-
starred with Burt Lanc&.!ttr In
the West Coast prodl!Cllon ol
"Knickerbocker Holldly" and
won a Theat.,-World awml
for his role Jn "Coco'' with
Katharine He pburn on
Broadway. I
Ernest Sarracino, who
stepped in to direct "My ralr
Lady" last year I will return to
stage "Annie Get Your Gun."
Curtain time will be S o'clock
at the 2,572·seat bowl, where
"Annie" will play Friday! and
Saturdays through S.pt. 22 .
Behind the wig and
glasses is Gina Lollo·
brigida in the di sguise
she u-;ed to shoot some
20.000 picture:: for her
boo!-. of photograph~ of
Italian people titled
"Italia Mia ."
Celestial Pianist in Acting
Miss Holm Gives Vieivs
Jerry Lewis
Te !ethort
Set Siinda.v ·' S!)eclal to the Daily Pilot
LAS V~GAS -Tlie Jerry
Lewis Labor nay Telethon.
granddaddy r f all v;deo fund
raisers , gets under way for the
eiPhtli ti ""e S11~dav evening.
The 2Q-hour t eleth on ,
broadcast from the S.~hara
Hotel here , was moved fr nm
New York to Las Vegas this
year.
Enterfc.iners siimed to ap-
pear live or in oretaoed
segments incl··d'! B u d d :v
Hackett . hosting the Ne\V York
segment. Rebert Goul-:?t. San1·
my Davis Jr., Alan King,
Carol Burnett. Rowan and
Ma rtin , Johnny Mathis. Dion·
ne \Varwicke, Wayne Newton,
Don Rickles, Johnny Cash,
Shelley Berman. Merv Griffin,
Vicki Carr, Riehle Havens,
Jerry Vale. Don Adams , Patti
Page, Della Reese, John
Davidson, Roy Clark and
Sandler and Young.
In addition lo the en-
tertainers signed to perform, a
special contingent of
Hollywood television personal-
ities will be flying in from Los
Angeles to man the celeb?"ities
telephones and take vie\ver
pied gs.
By HAL BOYLE
NEW YORK (AP I -"The
trouble with putting armor
on," said Celeste Holm, "is
that, while it protects you
from pain, it also protects you
from pleasure."
The remark is typical of
of Miss Holm, who has a rep-
utation of being one of the wit·
tiest as well as ablest ladies or
the theater in our time.
Since her fi rst role as Juliet
at the age of 6 -minus two
front teeth -Celeste has
starred in every branch of
show business, fro m musicals
to lectures. She was nominated
three times for an Oscar and
won one for her work in the
film , "Gentleman's Agree-
ment."
In her most recent success,
she played "Aunt Polly" in the
late st screen treatment. of
"Tom Sawyer." Seeing her
blonde vitality today, it is hard
to believe that it has been
nearly 30 years si nce she used
to slop the Broadway hit
"Oklahoma," with• her song
about the girl who couldn't say
no.
U.A, CITY AND $0UTH COAST CIHEMA$-TUESDAY !oOc
!LADIES AND OOLOl!H AG&RS)-OPEN TIL 2:00 P.M.
soutl'I ·
From Ille
Mlktn of
Frltr Tflt
•
C•I ••.. "HEAllY
TRAFFIC"
"PUTNEY
SWOPE"
Boll! In Color1 "'
Barl>r• Str.innd/Georgt Se-gal
"OWL AHO THE PUSSYCAT"
"FUNNY GHI L"
lloth In Colort (PGJ ~~ml
Georgi Se91I Gter.da J•ckun Ll1 T1yter "A TOUCH L, Harver
op; CLASS" \ "HIGHT "1._ -Jlln-• WATCH" V Pllrlci~ NI I -plut-
Scott Jac•"Y ...... , 0,HE•" "IAXTER" '
•oltl 111 COlOf'I (POI
(PO) 8 0th In Color I
Bii" Rt)'llOldl A "WHITE LIGNTHING" y "SCORPIO"
IO!h In Colorl (PGI
'~ •• easily the best
movie so far this
Year'' -S!epl"!en F•rbe• • NEWYORKTI M ES-r:~
Wtwe"*'*yat.1S'l'62? . ' ,~
• ~~. D,
EXCLUSIVE
ORANGE COUNTY
ENGAGEMENT
.TRYOURRED
OR .GREEN
' Debut With Soaper
m MANN
THEATRES
llSll\llD SUH
01 $ale 5:ll '111 1:1
fri.. $al.. Sil IMI
MOI. ffiRU THUil. I l.l
FilDll l I HS
SIFURDll l·l I !,ij
SUIDll l·S I I
ALL SU.TS $4.00
ONEMALAND .... I ........... Mrl .. ~
•1S·7601
"l don't know why, but he
said, 'Do yoo think she'd do
an episode 'in the i·show?' "
Miss Scott laughed "! told
hi m I thought it'd be a reel
hoot.
"I TOLD HIM the names of
all the ch<:.racters on the show
and lhat I knew everything
about it because I always
v.·atch it."
A deal was arranged and
now Miss Scott is scheduled to
tape two segments on Sept. 13
and 14 here. ABC saya the
sOOws will air Oct. 3 and 4.
In the two episodes, Clrla
Gray played by Ellen Holly
will march up the ais1e with
dashing police U. Ed Hall
played by Al Freeman Jr.
l l...:01n w.
W91t" .... .. , "
OQ ..OOM:\l.all-...... , . ..,..
HIAVY rumc ~I
+ HAMMll Of OOll 01
h n Olttll wy
•l •oolhllltt '!S..I
Ml-ff f
OIOlcN t. KOn ran OUNAW•T
Qt(~ CIUDI""
OtlYINNI ** ClUI""
9t1c~ Bl~d.
5'. OI G•fdeft
!hOVt F11 .. tr U•-tiU
II*' llTNOl.DS
WHIT! llGHTNING IKJ
HUI t Mltr UiMC.UTll
SCO.,IO tlOJ
;:.=~=·""'' .,;.;::,.;:,':'" , , 1 11 .. C~ BIYd.
• {& H11t>or l l'ld,
t71·1Nt
0l MO'tle Cl1stle1: (Zhr) "City for
Conciutrt" (dra) 'olO -J.imes C11·
ney. Ann Sheridan.
.ii fJ (I) Hntii flvt·O (R) An In·
tint is 1;iken from his slroll1r on 1
Honolulu street, birt McG1rrett ind
his fl\ll·O lorces wait unsuccessful·
!.-for 1 nnSGm dem1nd.
M1rthin1 Heme"' (com) '50--0111 ,---~;~~~~~~~~~~~~;~---Dailey, Corinne Cat~t.
!:30 A All·Ni1.M Shew; "Thi Stor11
Rldtr," "U·Z38 and the Wltdl Oot· .. ~
BURRITO!
:ru;,_,...Ji_' so e
u m m '" '""" .,,.., cc1
Wednesday
DAYTIME MOVIES
t :lO 0 (C) "list of M111H (11lv) '64-
Anthon1 Qu•yle, Silvi• Syms.
10:00 Cl) "Mntim In the Junclt" (doc)
'SB-hbln H111hn, J1mes Wilson. a ""INer tit I Dead Hort1" (WeS)
'62-John \llY)'•n. Bruce Gordon.
lbOCI 8 "Jh hde Cit11 Wtst" (com)
''3-Eddl1 Albtrt, Gate Storm, "SM
..., If an IHf" (dr11 '58-1111 ..,__
3:10 0 Mowlt: "SllbWIJ In the sty"
(drt) 'S6-Yan Johnso!\.
1:00 m "Tensiu" (mys) '(9-Rlth1rd
B1wh1rt, Audrey Totttr.
l :JO 0 (C) "M7 fritlld mW" (dr1) '4J
-Rodd1 McOo'll'all, Rita Johnson.
3:00 ({) "Ot UM htch" Conti. (d11)
'59-:Av• G3rdner, Gregory Peck.
®) (C) "Tiit Adelina M•chlftt'"
(com) '69-Pllyllls Diller.
3:30 0 (C) "Semt el Monte Criste"
(•dv) '61-Ror}' Calhoun, Patrlcl1
Bredin.
4:00 II (C) "TM ltb7 Ind tllt lettl ..
..,,.. (eomJ 'SS-John Mills, Rich·
trd Att•nbcr~uah.
4:!0 (1) S-is1MM lhti•r
KOCE , CHANNEL 50
of 0.."'f!e Countv with Hott Jim
C0009r, llld S-lor J•mn E. W,..I• .....
7·00 C"tr1Jlff l"-1" ••YWw IC I ClolllUrll, t«lll, pollllc11. lt'ICI' COl'l\-
nrt .. ~"f't'nlt kif tl'>t' wNk.
1::'9 M11n ll.lllft, M"" Dtttmt ((:) "SI~ Fllhomt ~" Set 11111119 Sun• • , ,._,,..,,._, ~-"·-"k"•OO.Jl.0.--
1:00 Whlt't Thi l lt lfe•"' ICI
m· rr~111 t.11:.• /lvtl\Ol'lf"f'" A
dlk111•lon 11 kl!llC Ceoe Cod,
\' !'i • "'"· •:oo MllNcll l11Ctvnter iC! "K•11tv1 .1<1rl<1.; Sino~••" preHfll .> "'Plllolrc
~t t•l!Oet ffott1 the mlltk l l'ld d1ncn
Cl "Olyllftll lo ••Jttllt C hf I 1 I $11Pfr1l1r,"
t1l0 1'911Uli. lCI "Thi Dulcl1ntr" SH
Utllno Mond11, it.UOUll 2111\, If J:OO "·"'·
STARTS WEDNESDAY
AUG. 29 IN BOTH THEATRES
lJISt'J'llfp Jn..'}>afis
is a genu ine masterpiece of staggering
proportions," ·'2dw1rdBehr, Newsweek
[lst'J'llfp Jn..'}>afis
is not a 'dirty• movie. The film Is stark, sensitive
and complelely shattering In· its intensi ty. Yes,
by alt means, see 'Last Tango'."
-Aaron Schindler, Fam;tyCircle
X RATED-NO ONE UNDER
18 ADMITTED
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Laguna Bea~h Today's Final
N.Y~ Stooks
VOL 66, NO. 24-0, 2 SECTIONS, 32 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA TUESDAY, AUGUST 28, 1973 TEN CENTS
Revised Sycamore Hills Proposal Submitted
By FREDERICK SCHOEMEHL
Ot Ille Dilly Pll•t Stiff
A development proposal differing only
slightly from an original 2,0.lS.unit plan
for Sycamore Hills was submitted to the
Laguna Beach PlaMing Commission
Monday night by Newport Investments
In<.
Despite requests for immediate action
on the proposal, commissioners agreed to
continue the entire Sycamore Hills
Uncle Told
Derby Kid
To Cheat
BOULDER, Colo. (UP!) -Robert
Y,.nge Sr. admitted today he told his
nephew to cheat to win the 1973 National
Soapbox Derby by building a magnetic
device in lhe nose cf his green racer.
"! d<tennined lhal he should buUd and
lnatall a magnetic nose so as to be com-
petitive with the professional cars he
would be racing against," Lange Wd.
"I knew that th.is was a 'riolatklb of the
of!lcia.I derby rules and c»nllder lt now
to . be a serious mistake in juq:mlllt," ~
wd.
James Gronen, 14, was disqualified by
derby o!ficials and forfeited a fl ,500
!Cholarship for winning the race because
of an electromagnet found in his car. The
device. discovered by X-ray after the
race. pushed Gronen's car away from the
derby's rnet4l starting gate.
An Elk Grove. Calif., boy was named
wlMer after Gronen was disqualified .
George W. Brittain, president of the
All-Am erican Soap Box Derby, Inc., de-
clined comment on Lange's letter until
he had a chance to study it.
Lange, young Gronen's legal guardian,
released his statement after t1lks with
his attorney. He said the admission ·was
his last word on the incident and that
GrOnen ·still was vacationing i o
Wisconsin.
Lange, president of the Lange Ski Boot
Company, outside Boulder. said the cars
of the other top 10 finishers should be in-
spected for alterations that were against
derby rules.
He denied -pouring large sums of
money into development of Gronen's
racer and the car in which his son,
Robert Lange Jr., won the national derby
title in 1972. The Boulder district at-
torney had said the 1972 car cost between
110,000 and 120.000 lo build.
Derby rules limit spending on develop-
ment of racers to $40.
"It is foolish to suggest that any
s~bstantial expense went Into either of
them," Lange said.
Lange said his nephew was not alone in
tampering with bis car and that the
event had become "tainted" with
tampering not discovered "because of
(See CHEATS, Pafe I)
Orange Coast
Weather
It'll ht warmer along the Orange
C...t Wednesday with tempera •
lures at the beaches In the 70s ris·
Ing lo tbe low !Os Inland. Patcby
low cloud> will clear by mid-morn-
ing to fair skies.
INSIDE TODA\'
Their names mau not be as
tDeU known as HuQh<s, Gettv and
Hunt, but more than a dozen
men have risen from reJatiV«
ob•curitv to /ortunn o/ $100 mil·
Uon or more tn five uears -
despite an uncertabi stock mar·
ke1. S•e Page 7.
L.M. loyti 12 .t.1111 LHdm tr ... ,.,.. ' Me~.. ,.,.,,
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MtfttetM 14 WtrN flltWI ~
development controversy until study
sessions in September,
At the opening of the Sycamore Hills
discussion, the city planning staff had
prepared to resolutions setting guidelines
for development of Sycamore Hills.
One set of guidelines was lifted directly
from Newport Investments original 2,01&-
unit proposal. The second set of
guidelines called for 1,181 units and
sub.stantial redesign of the entire project.
Rodger Howell, in presenting "Plan 3r"
Hostages Alnued
tem\ed the 1.181-unit density proposal a
"no-plan."
Plan 3, Howell said, would result in
sUghtly more open space than the 72 per-
cent proposed originally by Newport
Investments and would stipulate the ma-
jority of the open areas be public and
deeded to the city.
The new proposal, he said, also would
delay consideration of a culturaJ center
on Sycamore Flats until 1975 and
establish stricter standards for the
preservation of heritage trees.
Howell's approach to the microphone
brought on some unexpected fanfare
from rollowen of Love Animals Don't
Eat Them who stood outside the city
COWlCll chambers playing flutes and
ringing bells. They left soon afterwards.
After outlining Plan 3, Howell delivered
a lengthy history of the relationship
between past and present owners of
SYCarJ\ore Hills and the city of Laguna
Beach.
The historical sketch concluded with
Newport Investments role with the pro~
erty.
Howell asserted lhat Ne wport
Investments has assumed a cost of
$1 ,360,000 just to hold the land for the
past 19 months.
"I don't know how you feel about it,
but I feel that is a siginificant price to
pay for moratoriums.'' said Howell.
referring to two city council-imposed
Bank 'Torture •
GUlf OF MEXICO
,. '
. "!' ..
Chamber' Told MEXICO
• "' ... ,,
STOCKHOLM (UP!) -A psychopalhic
gunman locked into a downtown bank
vault with a convict friend and four
hostages for six da ys wounded a
-policeman and has turned the vault into a
virtual ·~orture chamber -police sources
aaid today. They said he was extremely
bru!AI 1n dealings with the hos!Ages.
Polle» drilled a ltl'ie.s of ~foot holes
1n the ioof ol the vault lo_day lo keep an
eye,an gunman J1D-Erlk Olsaon, 32, and
[)0811bly pick him oU with a
sharpshooter. But Olsson fired a burst of
submachine gun fin: through one of the
holes and wounded a policeman.
Olle Abrahamson, a 44-year-old -police
technician hit in the face and Jn one
band. was the second police officer shot
since the drama began Thursday \Yith
what appeared to be a normal bank rob-
bery. He was re-ported in satisfactory
condition.
Stockholm Police Chief Kurt Lindroth
canceled all news briefings today while
the police put into mot.ion a new plan to
end the drama, which bas lasted for
more than 125 hours.
Mililary psychologists warned that the
victims risked serious mental injuries if
the drama continues much longer.
Lindroth In an emotional statement
Monday called Olsson a "beast" and
other -police officials described him as "a
completely cold and e m o t i o n I e s s
psychopath, who mighl just klll !he
hostages if he feels like ii."
They said his companion, convicted
murderer Clark Oloffsoo, 26, was not
much better.
Police Superintendent Aake Aakesson
said the gunman had carried out "ex-
tremely brutal" acts agaimt the three
female hostages but that he could not
confirm rumors that Olsson repeatedly
raped one of the hostages, !L 31-year'(lld
mother of two.
One police officer, who refused to be
identified by name, said Olsson and his
accomplice "have turned the vault into a
torture chamber. They are extremely
brutal. What's happening down there
makes me want to throw up."
The three women hostages were iden·
tified as Mrs. irgitta l.Amdblad, 31; Miss
Kristin Enmark, 23, Miss Elisabeth
Laguna's T e11nis
Tournament Set
This Weekend
The city o! Laguna Beach's 18th An·
nual Tennis Tournament will be held on
Saturday, Sunday and Monday with
semlfln4It and finals on Sept. 8 and 9 al
city tennis courts.
The tournament ls sponsored by the
Laguna Beach City RA!cr<aUon Depart·
m<nt and proceeds wllJ be deposited In
the public tennls trust account for use In
building moro 1ennls facJUU.S .
The tournament Is open to players who
reside or work within the Laguna Beach
Unified · School Di strict boundaries, or
wbo are members of the Laguna BeBich
Tennis Association.
"'EVent!ln~l\Jdo men's and women's A,
B. and C singles: Men's A, B and c
doubles; women's AB doubles; Mixed AB
doubles and mixed BC doubles.
Play wUI hegln at 8 1,m. with the final
malch starting at 4 p.m. each day ol the
lourllament. Seeding and drawing for the
•tralght ellmlnaUon tournament was lo
be bCld allu close of reg!stn&n loday.
Oldgren, 21, Sven Saefstroem , 25, is the
fourth hostage.
The psychologists said the risks for the
two older women appeared the greatest,
especially Olsson's threat to hang them.
PoUce sources said the new plan in-
cluded a combined attack through the
holes in the rqof and the double S!Ofl
door to the vault.
"' qua~ J(ij! Ba.-.J The holes were covered by bulletprool
glass and Llndrotb placed p o 11 c e
sharpohooteri at' .. eh one of lhein In the
hope tb~t Olsson and Olorsson might
relax for a moment and give the police a
chance to shoot before they could harm
(See TORTURE, Page I)
Map locates cities in Mexico where severe earthquake struck this
morning causing widespread damage and more than 100 deaths so
far. Many buildings collapsed in the temblor, which registered about
6.0 on the Richter scale. See details Page 4. -------
Evangelist Begins Crusade
Billy Graliam Ope11s Without Dissent in Londo11
LONDON (AP) -American evangelist
Billy Graham launched his fifth British
cruSade today , undaunted by bomb
scares at his teach-in at London's Earl's
Court S!Adium.
Graham's activities were attacked last
week by one Anglican weekly as "hit·
and-run" evangelism, and a British
churchman called his crusade "wealthy
BOMBS GIVE BRITAIN
THE JITTERS-Story, Pogo 4
Christians in the West indulging in five
days of. spiritual luxury."
opened with performances rrom pop
singers and a Swedish choir clad in blue
jeans and yellow sweaters. The stage
was nanked by two giant screens on
which Images or the performers flashed.
Graham strode onto the bare stage to
begin his address with a prayer.
"All the world seems to be caught up
In a very climactic moment in history,"
he said. "What an hour for thousands or
young people to be meeting here not in a
drug scene but in a scene glorified by
Jesus Christ. This generation cannot
escape Christ."
Graham will speak every night on dif-
ferent aspects of religion to the
estimated 12,000 delegates from Christian
organizations around the world who are
to · attend the training sessions from 9
a.m. to 9 p.m . every day until Friday.
Tbe $550,000 cost or the teach-in has
aroused criticism. too. Church groups
claimed "Graham's crusade was siphoning
church funds.
The evangelist's multimillion-dollar
organization, based In the United States,
denied this and said the teach-in was
financed by money from other sources.
All delegates pay an $8. 75 registration fee.
But as lhe crusade opened, no dissen-
ting voices were heard, and among
Graham's sponsors were some English
churches.
An estimated 20,000 persons were in
the London stadium for the star to
"Spre-e: 73" -ror "Spiritual Re-em-
phasis" -in which the 54-year-old
Graham plans to train evangelists and
Christian crusaders.
Environment Report 01{
For Main Beach Project
The week-long session, described by
Graham's organi1.ation as a "Bible teach-
in" will end Saturday with a mass rally
in the huge Wembley Stadium, where
Graham will be backed up by singing
stars Johnny Cash and Cliff Richard.
The bomb warnings came after a week
of terrorist Incidents that have left Lon-.
don jumpy. PoUce searched the stadium
but fotmd no explosives.
The 75-minute session Monday, a
warm-up rally for the marathon teach-in,
' Laguna Beach planning commissioners
Monday night accepted a draft en·
vironmental impact report ror Main
Beach Park and agreed the $611,000 proJ·
ect conforms with the general pl an.
After a number of smaJI corrections
are made ln the document, it will be
placed in final form and resubmitted to
the commission final approval. That ac-
tion It expecled Sept. 4.
Boy Nabs Coke
Getaway Tricycle, Toy Gu11 Left
STEVENAGE, England (UPl}-"How much is that can of Coke!"
asked the little boy, barely peering over the shop coll!lter.
A clerk quoted the price to him and put the"<an Olfthe counter.
Tbe boy pulled out a gun, let fly with a volley of Ping-Pong baits,
grabbed lhe Coke and ran . But h11--lelt his gun and getaway vehlclo
-an orange and white tricycle.
Shop manager Ray Stanford has offered amnesty. ·
"li he plucks up the courage to come clean and!ay for the Coke,
he can have the bike, the gun and the balls he pelte everyone with,"
Stanford said.
"The little fellow was no more than 4 and It Is worrying me
how miserable be must be feeling about losing his trike and his gun
for a can of Coke."
•
Planners Monday night praised the im-
pact statement prepared by Eckbo,
Dean, Austin and Williams as a fine
document.
Plans for the park include replacement
of the boardwalk with a curved walkway
along the beach, a new IU'eguard racility
and observation tower, e 1 tensive
landscaping, a children's play area and
improvements lo Coast Highway ad·
jacent to the area.
During the public bearing on the EIB,
William Leak-asserted the city was "giv-
ing up'' about 2,000 square feet of city-
park land lo the s!Ate for widening of the
hlgbway.
SKID ROW UFE
VISITED TODAY
Skid Row is an affliction of aJmo."lt
every major American city. The
derelicts and castoffs of society gravitate
there and scratch out a life most people
would never call living.
Asoocialed !'ms stnl a pholograpber
and reporter tnto one such area to record
a docwn<nlary on me al0111 Skid Row.
The results are on P1ge M today.
bans on construction beginning in early
1972.
"The only city service ~·e have asked
for in the past 19 months is plaruting,"
the attorney noted.
Referring to the city stafr suggestion
for 1.181 units. Howell said, "The city
· has not sho\vn justification for low densi·
ty. \Ve cannot suffer indcfintely under an
economic impact of that magnitude ."
Citing four California court cases in-
(See SYCAl\10RE, Page 2)
Councilman
Boyd Backs
Meter Boost
By JACK CHAPPELL
Of Ill• DallY flllort ,, • .,
City Councilman Charlton Boyd and
Mark Gumbiner, chairman of the
Economic Priorities Committee, today
blasted the referendum effort aimed al
rolling back parking meter fee in·
creases.
CouncUman Boyd said the lee·Jncre-.
111d the lns!AUation of additimal motlu!
Is the "key to tile solution of the city's
parking problem." Boyd Is the council's
"economic environment" coordinator.
Gumbiner termed the referendum ef·
fort "iDogical" and compared it to
"burying your head in the sand."
He said thea the entire matter would
be discussed by the Economic Priority
Committee at its meeting Thursday and
predicted it is likely a stance against the
referendum will be taken by the com-
mittee, composed of businessmen,
developers , and residents.
The referendum drive has heed Jed by
Richard Willetts, owner of the Hairem
Beauty Salon, 282 Forest Avenue.
A referendum is a citizen action to
overturn a law enacted by the city coun·
cil.
Wiletts has tmtil Sept. 14 to gather the
987 signatures of registered Laguna Beach
voters needed to petition the council
either to repeal the Jaw itself, or set a
special election for a citizen vote on the
ordinance.
Councilman Boyd said the parking prob-
lems in Laguna Beach are historic, and
ste!ll from the inability of the city to
previously arrive at a consensus on solv-
ing the parking woes, plus an inability on
the part or the city to raise the money to
finance parking facilities.
"This approach as opposed to the op-
tion of raising the property taxes im-
posed only on the Laguna Beach citizen
rather than equally on visiting people as
well; as well as the option of just throw-
ing it open to outside contractors with all
the abuses that can result, has r~led
from having asked the opinions of the
planning commission, the traffi c and
circulation committee and the economic
priorities group" Boyd said.
"Ir the city wants to .solve its parking
structure problems, it bas no alternative
bu! to go this way" he said.
Gumbiner said that by Increasing rates
on the meters, the cost o[ providing
parking is being directly placed on the
user of the parking, not spread to the
property owner as would be the case if
the council were forced to raise property
taxes to m.ake up revenues provided bY.
(See PARKING, Page I)
* * * Parking Petition
Drive 01i Move
The referendum to overt.um a recently
approved Increase in the fees charged for
t..aguna Beach parking meters was
reported moving ahead well today by
organizer Richard Willetts.
He said lhat about 40 petiliom each,
with spaces for 30 names, had been
d~lrlbuted. He said also he doem't know
the number of signatures garnered ao
far.
The referendum requires t h e
signatures of ten percent or the
registered 1.Al.guna Beach voten on !lie
with the secretary ol Slate.
Thal equalt 98'1 names 1nd Willetts
said he plans m getting about I.lot
algnoture to allow for a percenta1• ot
names alWIJ'I ruled Invalil.
Deadline for subm!Ulng the potitlons ~
Sept. 14 •
. 2 DAILY PILOT LB Tutsday, A119ust 28. 1971
D·ightvay Ciarve
Lagunan Fears
Gas Tanker Fire
Wh.at if a gas tanker fire like that
"'hlch occurred In San Clemente ~1onday
happened instead in Laguna Beach on
crowded Coast High\\1ay?
"We ,~·orry about that 'S' curve in the
\Pacifi c Coast ) highway by Worki Sav-
ings. The \Yay those tankers roll through
there . . . .. said Acting Fire Chier
Charley Kutm.
"We've never had a fire like that. The
closest thing we had vl'as a tanker gas
spill up on Legion and South Coast
(Highway)," Chief Kuhn said.
* * * Police Probe
Fiery Crash
In Clement,e
California Highv.•ay P a t r o I in·
vestigators as well as coroner's deputies
continued an intense probe today into the
possible causes of the deadly collision
and explosion of tv.·o trucks in San
Clemente Monday.
But so far no firm clues to the
holocaust have been released.
Coroner's deputies are continuing their
examinations of the body of Bakersfield
trucker Gardon Roper, 53. who was in·
cinerated in the cab of his sand·hopper
rig after it ran into the rear of a 10,000.
gallon gasoline tanker at dawn .
The condition of the body, aides said,
posed problems in detennining if the
man may have suffered a seizure or if
his body contained substances which
could have affected his driving.
CHP spokesman Gerry Maxwell said
that so far it has been determined that
Roper arrived at the yard in Los Angeles
to make a run to San Diego at 3 a.m.
His truck was empty when it slammed
at about 50 miles per hour into the rear
of the tanker owned by Hercules Oil
Company of Long Beach.
The impact apparently rendered Roper
unconscious and the victim was im·
mediately engulled in flaming gasoline.
The driver of the tanker, Clyde McNaU
Shinn, 60, of La Palma, leaped from his
rig immediately after the impact and ran
as fast as he could away from the blazing
l'iTeckage. He was unhurt.
One factor which figures prominently
in the probe is the placement of lhe
wreckage -not directly in the slow lane
of the freeway, but partially in the oU·
• ramp leading to Avenida Paliiada.
Officers said it possible that the tanker
may have been pulling out of or into the
slow lane when the crash occurred.
Nixo1i Departing
Cleme11.te Home
Before Holiday
President Nixon reportedly plans to cut
short his Labor Day weekend visit to San
Clemente and ny back to the nation's
capital late Wednesday, reliable sources
said earlier today.
The only confirmaUon to come thus r ... r
from the White House staff, however, is
that the Chief Exec1..tive planned to leave
"later in the week." Early in the visit,
1:1c working vacation was planned to last
well beyond the Wabor Day weekend.
Reports circulatiut,. in San Clemente to.
day said that initially '.he departure was
to have been today, but that notice was
too short for a pullout.
Deputy Press Secretary Gerald Warren
gave oo specific reason for the change in
plans, but did concede that the President
hoped to be with "as much of the family
as possible" over the three.day weekend.
Warren added that the sojourn prob-
ably would be at the Presidential
retreat at Camp David, Md.
OU.N&I COAST La
DAILY PILOT
TM O•l"fe COii! OA!LY PILOT, wllfl wflk:fl
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Then, the highway was blocked ofr and
firemen flushed the leaking gasoline into
the storm se\\'ers and washed it into the
ocean. Chief Kuhn said about 500 to 600
gallons of gasoline were involved .
The San Clemente fire occurred when a
double trailer gasoline tanker carrying
10,000 gallons as gasoline was ni.mmed by
a trailing gravel hopper semi, killing the
driver of the gravel rig and spewing blaz·
ing fuel across the freeway.
Chief Kuhn said that when it comes to
bad fires, the gas tanker fire is "right up
there on top" of the list.
"That's really something \\'hcn one of
those things gets going," he said.
Fire tactics to be used in battling a
lanker holocaust would depend on
\Yhether the tailks had actually been rup-
tured, or were spreading burning gasoline
through open or defectiYe valves, the
chief said.
In any event, one of the rtrst things
Laguna fire authorlties v•ould do is radio
for assistance from surrounding fire.
departments on mutua l aid agreements
to bring as much equipment and man·
power to bear as possible .
The city does have special foam
generating equipment, however its
equipment and supplies of foam chemical
alone would not be sufficient for a sus·
tained fight , the chief said.
Foam is a suds-like substance used to
smother and cool chemical fires. Fog
nozzles would be used to battle back
names and to assist firefighters who
may attempt to reach emergency cutoff
valves on tankers, Chief Kuhn said.
He said that with the buildings im·
mediately adjacent to the roadway, it
"·as likely that structures could become
involved. With crowded streets. and
pedestrians possib ly close lo the blaze.
au thorities, too, would be concerned with
loss of human life.
In San Clemente. intense heat from the
gasoline fire scored the pavement of the
freeway. Burning gasoline flowed into
storm sewers and started small fires in
other areas.
"This tanker business is really
something," Chief Kuhn said.
CUSD Trustees
Approve Tuition
For Adult Units
A tuition of $6 per term for adult
education school was approved S.l by the
Capistrano Unified School District Board
of Trustees !\1onday nighl.
Senior cili::-:1s will be charged $3.
The decision switches board policy
from last year, when the tuition was
ra: ;ed from $5 for as many courses as a
person wanted to lake each tenn to $6
per course.
Following the fee hike , enrollment in
the program dropped and the district
made no additional profit.
Trustee Gardon Peterson, who initiated
the tuition hike last year, cast the sole no
vote.
"I still think the $6 a course is
reasonable. l don't know any place else
where you can get such a good deal."
Peterson said.
Trustee George White said h e
su~pected the fee didn't have anything to
do with the enrollment figures, but
rather with the courses offered.
In other business, the board :
-Apt";oved hiring one additional school
psychologist for the l97J.74 school year.
-Authorized advertising for bids to
replace the sound system at Marco
Forster Junior High.
-Learned that the district tax rate will
be one cent higher than the 42.5 cents on
$100 assessed valuation passed earlier
this month due to an Wlanticipated drop
in the public utilities assessed valuation.
-Approved an application to the Slate
Department of Education for aid in set·
ting up a multi·handicapped student
facility at Richard Henry Dana School
open to qualifying chlldren from the local
district as well as Laguna and Sad-
dleback valley.
-Authorized a price increase from a
nickel to a dime for a hali·pint of milk in
the district food service program . caused
by a cutoff in U.S. government subsidies
on milk.
From Page 1
TORTURE ...
the hostages, the sources said.
Police also brought new culling torches
Into the bank haU this morning. 11lC
torches are capable of cutting open the
double door to the vault.
Police are monitoring every word said
Inside the vault vi.a s e n s l t I v e
microphones and other wlretapping
equipment.
Laguna Children's
Art To Be Displayed
Children's arts and crafts wlll be on
display at a special show to be held at
from 9 a.m. to noon Thursday at the
Laguna Beach High School calelerla .
The show will display works of chiklren
entered in the Laguna Beach Recreation
Department's Krafts for Kids summer
program. Awards and prizes will be
1iven.
•
' •
01111 Pllal Sl1fl l"llott
Pai"tialitv •
Of Planner
Prompts Bid
An attorney !or NewrJOrl Investment!
Inc. Monday night urged th:it Laguna
Beach Planning Con1misi.ion Chairman
Jlo~r Lanphear absta in from all future
ac1ions on the Syca1nore Hills develop-
ment plan .
Citing Lanpheu r's p..1st position as a
board member or the Lai;:una Crfi?nbelt
Inc .• !lodger I-Jowell t)f !he Rutan and
Tucker law fir1n suggested Lanphear
might not b{' irnp~rtial toward the proj·
ect.
·· 11 might be more comfortable ... 1r
his involvements cease," !·Jowell S3id Jll
the conclusion or a long stateme1\l on Jhe
history of Sycamore •fills.
Newport Investments wants lo build
2,016 units 00 the s2a-acrc parcel, long
l'onsidercd the .. keystone" of the Laguna
Greenbelt due to ils locn tion between
L;iguna and El 'l'oro canyons.
Lanphear, al so an attorney, indlc;ited
he was not going to step down .
..I will do everything \\•ithln my power
to see the specific 1>lan procedures for
this project are adopted and the will of
1he conunission carried forward," the
chairman told lio11·ell.
Ge1atle11teta Start Y 011r Legs
.. l will also contlnue my criticism of
this plan," added Lanphear, \Vho cast the
sole vote July 9 against a specific plan
approach to development of the property. Among those watching Unser do a ''\vheelie" or the
line are (front row. fronl left) Jerry Grant, organizer
Ed Le,v1s. and Bobby Unser.
Louie Unser, a multiple sclerosis victim, acts as
"pace car" for a field of racing personalities who
walked do\\'Il Crown Valley Parkway in Laguna I-fill s
~-londay to raise money for a hemophilia fund.
~-'----~~~~~~~~~~--~~~~~~~~~~~
"I sincerely believe in the need to
preserve vast areas of' o~n space. I
think there are 1vays to offer !he prop-
erty owner a reasonable return at the
same time." Lanphear said.
Nixo11's Oemente Deals Fro111 Page 1
PARI(ING
The cbainnan also received support
from fello\v commissioner John
Jli!cDowell and the executive director of
the Gr~nbelt. Michael Schley.
''I hope Mr. Lanphear continues to
serve despite any Involvement with the
Greenbelt. I respect his ability to be
honest," said McDowell. former
chairman of the commission.
•••
Financed by 2 Frie11ds the r.:i te hike.
.. \\'{' h'.1d to do son1ething. V11e 've got to
J:('I fQr\l':l!'d to look for\\'ard \Yhere We
\1r1nt in gn. r:l1h\1t than ROing from hand
(J n1ou1h all thi.' tillll'."' Gumbiner said.
Schley chided Ho weu·s suggestion 3 5
nkin to telling a mcrnber of the Chamber
of Co1nn1ercc not to vote on matters in·
volving economics. He also questioned
Howell's involvement ~·ith Sycamore
Hills due to past work v.·ith the city of
Irvine and the Rossmoor Corporation.
By JO:tN VALTERZA
01 !ht 011111 Plkll Sltft
Dciails of an intricate series of secret
purchase agreements involving La Ca~a
Pacifica and nearly 30 acres of prime
oceanfront land in San Clemente came
forth from the \Vhile House l\londay
along with revelations G.C. "Bebe"
Rebozo was one of the l\\'O millionaire
friends of President Nixon involved in
most of the financing.
The disclosure made by Deputy Press
Secretary Gerald Warren \\•as an ad·
milted attempt "to put assertions of im·
propriety to rest" by issuing a full
auditing of the transactions since July 15,
1~9 -the C:ate that the President sealed
the deal.
The prime issue has not been the
parcel on which the Presidential Villa
sits -about 5.9 acres -but, instead ,
more than 2Q acres of fallow land \vhich
lie immediately inland of the old Cotton
estate.
That parcel is actually a blend of one
major purchase from the Cotton heirs
and a minor buy from Nixon's neighbor
J . J. Elmore, a millionaire Democrat.
Jn all, the one financier throughout the
entire series of trans~clions w a s
millionaire New York industrialist
Robert Abplanalp, whose interest in the
loans to the President amounted to $1.2
million. A partner during one phase of
the transactions was Rebozo. the Florida
millionaire who with Abplanalp was an
original partner in a firm set up as the
owner of the fallow land near the Nixon
estate.
The rationale for the intricate ex·
changes since 1969 holds that the Presi·
dent did not want so much land, but was
forced to commit himself to purchasing
the vacant section in order to obtain
\\·hat was deemed a family goal -!he
5.9·acre estate where the residence sits.
Abplanalp is listed 00\V as the owner of
the fallow land. but until the White House
di~losed details of ownership ii was
knov.n only that the entire matter was in
trust administered by Title In suran ce
and Trust Company. ,
The disclosures and fuU accounting,
\Yarren said , came at the President's
personal expense (the sum was not
detailed ).
Warren said t he "internationally
respected" ftrm of Coopers and Lybrand
of New York did the probing of Nixon's
records and legal documents related to
the transaclions.
The New York Times reported today
Coopers and Lybrand used to be called
Lybrand, Ross B r o t h e r s and
l\1ontgomery, and three top executives of
the company were convicted in 1968 of
mail fraud and filing false statements.
The Times said Nixon gave all three men
a complete pardon Dec. 20, 1972.
However, \Vhite House press secretary
Ronald Ziegler told the Times that the
men pardoned by President Nixon had
withdrawn from the accounting firm ,
have not been with the firm for years and
that the present partners had nothing to
do with any presidential pardon.
The firm s report shows that as of the
end ol last May the President owed
$34-0,000 on his share of the costs for La
Ca.sa. Pacifica. The property has been 1
valued at about. $1.5 milllon on the
current market.
Under the deal, Abplanalp and Rebozo
~id ~1,2-49,00U for 2a ucres of the est<1te .
enabling Nilon to write off £625,000 in
unsecured loans from Abplanalp and to
purchase the remaining 5.g ticrei; that In·
eludes his hon1esit~.at a cost of ~340,000.
The property lVhich Abplanalp owns
lies at the doWJ'lcoast side along tbe coun·
ty line and farther south lies the Coast
Guard Loran Stallon which doubles as
the Western White House.
On the inland side the border Is a lence
running along the access road to the
Loran gale, and on the upcoast portion
p<1sturcs still O\rncd by El morl· 1 a
thoroughbred breede r) serve as the boun·
d<1ry.
TO\\'ard the coast Hes !he rlri\"{'\\'ilY
linking the Nixion home l\'ith thr 'Veslt•rn
\Vhite liouse.
Ironically. v.•hile the La Casa Pacifica's
grounds arc immaculatrly tended. the
portion owned by Abplanalp is a dry,
1reed<hoked section rontaining mowtds
of dirt and rubble.
Dead trfi?s also dot the landscape and
no improvements have been made there.
It is visible from the Cyprus Shore colony
-the most expensive neighborhood in
San Clemente.
The report showed Nixon had paid out
a total or $402.439 in interest, principal
and improvements. The president still
owes $264.440 on an estate which cost
him, along with the improvements he
subsequently made. a total of $468.42t
Although 'Varren detailed the audit
was con1plete.,, DO\\o'here in the documents
is there an indication as to Lhe exact
amow1t of cash which Rebozo kicked in
when he and Abplanalp formed th e B and
C Investment Company in Decen1ber of
1959.
Sometime th is past month Rcbozo sold
his interest to his partner (the sum again.
was not disclosed in the audit rc?<Jrl 1
and, thus, Abplanalp eme:-ged as the
man holding all the notes to the entire
Cotton Estate parcels.
\Vhite House spokesmen have stressed
that no actual cash has changed hands in
the transactions involving Abplan alp and
the President.
Local sources rel ated to security have
said that the spare acreage forms a
crucial buffer zone between the heavily
traveled San Diego Freeway and the
President's house and that \Yere the land
available to any buyer on the open
market and developed for residential use
it could pose problems in protecting the
J>resident.
\\'illl•lls h:is suppJrtt:d formation of a
parking assessment district to levy park·
1ng costs dlrect ly on merchanls in the ci-
ly.
{;u1nb111l·r said this appro3ch had been
tried ht·for1~. but 1\'as unsuccessful for a
number or re asons. However he said a
study of the assessment district possibili·
ly could bc undert aken by the Economics
Priorities Committee.
..The re31ity ... to shopping dov.'fltown
is finding a place to park. If there is a
place to pa rk , you will park. If there is
not, you v.rill go someplace else. U there
is a place to park. you will park. Whether
it is a din1e or 20 cents an hour t"js pot
releva nt/' he said. ..._
Fro1n Page l
CHEATS ...
1>00r inspection and lack of supervision.•·
tfe said he wanted Gronen's car to be
"con1pctitive. Rule violations are com·
1non. The n1ost frequently violated rule is
t amp<_•rin~ with or altering the axles and
\vhet!IS \.\'hich the derby supplies to each
entrant.··
Jn his five·page statement. Lange said
his so n's 1972 derby·winning racer was
"clean. Neith er a magnetic device nor
anything similar to it \'las incorporated in
or used in the winning car by my son,
Eobby. in the 1972 race."
3 J(illed in Cafe
CLEVELA ND (UPI ) -Three persons
\Yere kl!lcd and tv.·o persons seriously
.. ... :ounrled late Monday in a shooting at the
r.oo<ltime Cafe. Dead v.·ere Charles Scott.
:'fi. Jin11ny I.cc I licks. 28. and Ezekiel
~·lary!und. all of Cleveland.
llowell tempered his con1ments to Laa-
phear, saying. "In all the many hearings
you have asked brilliant and penetrating
questions. l\ly reaction is that you have
treated us very fairly ," the attorney
said.
"But as I collect information in recent
w~ks concerning the chairman's in-
volvement with the Greenbelt, it might
be more comfortable if his involvements
cease," Howell said.
Howell said he has received "some
documents" concerning Lanphear's role
with the Greenbelt, but did not specify
what. the documents said.
"The appliant is entitled lo a degrfi? of
impartiality," Howell reminded com·
missioners.
From Page 1
SYCAMORE. ••
vol\•ing relationships bet\veen cities and
developers , Howell said. "We only urge
the standard of conduct enunciated in
those cases ... those standards have not
been met by the city of Laguna. \Y e
think we are entitled lo a deci sion.''
William Leak, however. took issue with
Howell's assertion. "You cited court ca~ which indicate the city haS been a
bad boy. Given time. we will be able to
quote as many or more cases that the ci·
ty was quite right,'' Leak said.
James W. Dilley, president of the
Laguna Greenbelt, termed Howell's
statements, "folderol from Newport
Beach''.
"I wish our attorneys were
here," Dilley fumed, "they could ans\\·er
l\-1r . Howell point by point."
B11yii1g A New Ti~act Home?
Mony people buying homes ore under the impression they HAVE
to buy carpeting from the home sales center. In the majority of ceses
this is not true, olthough the soles office will try lo make you think so.
The minute the hom e center tries to upgrade the standard carpet,
t hen you are free to shop fo r carpeting, To prevent shopping should
constitute restraint of trade.
In many coses they will tell you that the carpet ollowonce does not
apply if you buy carpet outside, If they feel this i• legol, HAVE THEM
PUT IT IN WRITING.
Ordinarily, we con sove you a lot of money over what the homo
center offers. We provide a larger selection -and we usually come up
with less yardage, plus a superior installation.
ALDEN'S
CAl?Pl:TS o DRAPES
1663 Placentia Ave .
COSTA MESA
646-4838
HO URS : MOft, Thru Thurt., t lo 5:30 -FRI,, t lo t -SAT,. t :JO to 5 '~~__;,;:.:;;:;~.;:.:..;.~~-----------------1
(
Saddlehaek Today's F inal
N.Y. Stocks
EDI TI O N
VO L ~6, NO. 240, 2 SECTION S, 32 PAGES ORANGE COU NTY, CALIFORNIA TU ESDAY, AUGUST 28, 1973 TEN CENTS
School Dropouts Get Second Chance
By JAN WORTH
01 IM ~I)' Pilot Stiff
Mike and Sharon were married young,
and droPpcd out of high school soon
arterward.
Later, with one-year-old twins to sup-
port, the couple thought things over and
decided to try for their diplomas.
Thanks to a continuation sChool like
one opening this fall in El Toro, Mike and
Sharon made it.
Since students are required to attend
only half-day sessions in a continuation
school, both Mike and Sharon were able
to work and care for the children.
Mike worked a night shift, came home
at 7 a.m. and attended school until 11 :30
a.m.
Then he relieved Sharon of the
youngsters so she could auend ~he af-
ternoon session. When she returned after
3:30 p.m., Mike fin ally got to sleep before
going back to work by II p.m,
The El Toro continuation high school,
which \\'ill start with 60 students, four
leachers, a cowiselor. and a couple of
relocatable buildings in the back yard of
the Good Shepherd Lutheran Home on El
Toro Road, has yet no name.
But Bailey Daugherty, the school's
enthusiastic principal, hopes it 's called
"Nueva Vida High School ," Spanish for
"new life."
That's what he believes continuation
school has to offer students stymied by
the prevailing educational structure.
Their problems can be anything from
pregnancy to dope, truancy' to delin-
quency, long-term illness to low achieve-
ment.
Like Mike and Sharon, they may need
to work to support their family . Or a
parent may recognize that his child
"freezes in the competition of regular
school," Daughtery said.
Whatever the reason, \\'hen students
come to the continuation school , as far as
Swede Gunman 'Brutal'
Bandit Wounds Policenian, Abuses Hostages
STOCKHOLM I UPI) -A psychopathic
gunman locked into a downtown bank
vault with a convict friend and four
hostages for six days wounded a
policeman and has turned the vault into a
virtual torture chamber police sources
said today. They said he was extremely
brutal in dealings with the hostages.
Police drilled a series of one-root holes
in the roof of the vault today to keep an
eye on gunman Jan-Erik Olsson, 32, and
possibly pick him off with a
Billy Grahft ni
·Crusade Hit
With Threats
LONDON (AP) -American evangelist
BiUy Graham launched his fifth British
crusade today , undaunted by bomb
scares at his teach-in at U>ndon's Earl's
Court Stadium.
Graham's activities were attacked last
week by one Anglican weekly as hhit-
and-run" evangelism, and a British
churchman called his crusade "wealthy
BOMBS GIVE BRITAIN
THE JfTTERS-Story, P•gt 4
Christians in the West indulging in five
days of spiritual luxury."
But as the crusade opened, no dissen·
ting voices were heard, and among
Graham 's sponsors were some English
churches.
An estimated 20,000 persons were in
the London stadiwn for the star to
"Spre-e 73" -for "Spiritual Re-em·
phasis" -in which the 54-year-old
Graham plans to train evangelists and
Oiristian crusaders.
The week-long session, descr ibed by
Graham's organization as a ''Bible teach·
io" will end Saturday with a mass rally
hi the huge Wembley Stadium. where
Graham will be backed up by singing
stars Johnny Cash and Cliff Richard.
The bomb warnings came after a week
of terrorist incidents that have left Lon-
don jumpy. Police searched the stadiwtt
but found no explosives.
The 75-minute session Monday, a
warm-up rally for the marathon teach-in,
opened with performances trom pop
si.ngers and a Swedish choir clad in blue
jeans and yellow swea ters. The stage
was nanked by two giant screens on
(See THREATS, Page I)
sharpshooter. But Olsson fired a burst of
submachine gun firt: through one of the
holes and wounded a policeman.
Olle Abrahamson, a 44-year..ald police
technician hit in the face and in one
hand, was the second palice officer shot
since the drama began Thursday with
what appeared to be a normal bank rob-
bery. He was reported in satisfactory
condition.
Stockholm Police Chief Kurt Lindroth
canceled all news briefings today \Vhile
Irvine Mon Down
the police put into motion a new plan to
end the drama, which has lasted for
more than 125 hours.
Military psychologists warned that the
victims risked serious mental injuries if
the drama continues much longer.
Lindroth in an emotional statement
Monday called Olsson a "beast" and
other police officials described him as "a
completely cold and e m o t i o n I e s s
psychopath, who might just kill the
hostages if he feels like it."
D•llf l"ilol l"tlOlot by Rlcll•rd Kotlllff'
Crowd gathered around Charles C. Paulk, including his wife, experi·
ences tense moment as the 60-year-old motorcycle rider is placed on a
stretcher. Paulk, 3952 Claremont St., was struck by VW at right after
car got into a slide while turning onto Wayne Avenue. Originally
thought to be injured seriously, Paulk wa s released after treatment
at Tustin Community Hospital Monday.
Soap Box Cheating Told
Uncle Ad1nits Advisi1ig Devious Derb y Winn er
BOULDER, Colo. (UPI) -Robert
L8nge Sr. admitted today he told his
,;phew to cheat to win the 1973 National
Soapbox Derby by building a magnetic
device in the nose of his green racer.
·"I detennined that he should build and
tnstall a magnetic nose so as to be com-
petitive with the professional cars he
would be racing against,'' Lange said.
"I knew that this was a violation of the
official derby rules and coAsider it now
to be a serious mistake ln judgment," he
said.
James Gronen, 14, was disqualllled by
derby officials and forfelled a $7,WO
scholarship for winning the race beca~
of an electromagnet found in his car. The
device, discovered by X·rBy alter the
race, pushed Gronen's car away from the
derby's metal starting gate.
An Elk Grove, cam., boy wu named
winner after Gronen was disqualified .
George W. Brittain, president or the
All-American Soop Box Derby, Inc., de-
-cllned comrfl.e"t on Lange's· Jetter until he had a chance to study il
Lange, young Gronen's legal guardian,
released his statement after talks with
his attorney. He said the admission was
his last word on the incident and that
Grooen ·sWI was vacationing i n
Wisconsin.
Lange, president of the Lange Ski Boot
Company, outside Boulder, said the cars
of the other top 10 finishers should be in4
spected for alterations that were against
derby rules.
He ' denied pouring large sums of
money into development of Gronen's
racer and the car in which his son,
Fr ied an: 'Sabotage'
WASIUNGTON (AP) -A feminist
author charged Monday that OP,poncntii of
women's rights have used •Watergate-
type subotage" against the women's
movement. Betty Friedan spoke to about
200 persons marking the ~th anniversary
of women's suffrage In the Unlttd Stat ..
at • Capllol rally.
• I
Robert Lange Jr., won the natiol)al derby
title in 1972. The Boulder district at·
torney had said the 1972 car cost between
$10,000 and $20,000 to build .
Derby rules limit spending on develop-
ment of racers to $40.
''It is foolish to suggest that any
substantial expense went into either of
them ," Lange said.
Lange said his nephew was not alone in
tampering with his car and that the
event had become "tainted'' with
tampering not discovered i•because of
poor Inspection and lack of supervision."
He said he wanted Gronen's car to be
"competitive. Rule vlotations are com·
mon. 1'le most frequentcy violated rule ls
tampering with or altering the axles and
wheels which lhe derby supplies to each
entrant." ·
In bis five-page statement. Lange said
his son's 1972 derby-winning racer was
"clean. Neither a magnetic dcv1ce nor
anything similar to It was Incorporated In
or . used in the winning car by my son;
Bobby, in lhe 1912 race.''
They said his companion. convicted
murderer Clark Oloffson, 26, was not
much better.
Police Superintendent Aake Aakesson
said the gunman had carried out "ex-
tremely brutal" acts against the three
female hostages but tflat he could not
confirm rwnors that Olsson repeatedly
raped one of the hostages, a 31-year..ald
mother of two.
One police officer, who refused to be
(See TORTURE, Page %)
Girl Scouts
From County
In Quake _..\rea
No word had been received this mom·
ing from eight traveling Orange County
Girl Scouts and two adult advisers, who
had been due to trilvel today f.rom earth-q~~sha}._en M'e xi co CitY to
Cuernavaca, also in the damage zone.
The high school students from the
Harbor Area and five other county cities
were scheduled to attend an annual in·
temational Girl Scout meeting this week.
Girls who left Aug. 23 on the t~o-week
MEXICO QUAKE KILLS MORE
THAN JOO-Story, Page 4
Mexico trip include Terri Bergman and
Sandra Kleeman , Costa Mesa ; Mary Lou
Horner, Tustin; Barbara L in d s a y ,
~Iidway City; Jill Black, Los Alamitos:
Karen Kalar, Garden Grove, and Susan
Thomas and Judy Leonard, both of
Cypress.
Their adult advisors are Mrs. Michael
\Veit, of Newport Beach and Mrs.
Edward Spurgeon, of Cypress,
The IO-member party is due back Sept.
5.
A spokesman for the Girl Scouts in the
Harbor Area said she did not know what
time the county girls and their leaders
had planned to leave Mexico City on their
journey today.
Authorities locally said they did not ex-
pect any inunediate word, n 'ng it takes
two hours to get a telephone ca rough
under normal, non~mergency con · 'ons.
Fears ror the girls' safety \V e
minimized somewhat by disclosure that
severest damage apparently occurred in
smaller towns and native quarters of the
quake-ravaged cities.
A spokesman 3t Girl Scout head-
quarters in Orange County said anxious
relatives bad been calling, but damaged
communications systems in the Mexican
capital city were creating problems.
Reports trickling out of the quake-rock·
ed region indicated the site of the con·
(See SCOUTS, Page I )
Irvine Council
To Tackle Long
Agenda T oniglit
Irvine City Council members tonight
will face their longest agenda in 18
months, when they hold their first
regular meeting in nearly six wee.ks.
Topping the list of 45 agenda items are
a request from College Park homeowners
for $190.000 in park improvements, a re-
quest from Greentree homeowners to
convert a public park in their area to
private ownership and a choice of what
firm will provide emergency ambulance
service in the city.
The council, which has not met since
July 14, will also set the orrlcial city tax
rate for lhe 1973-74 fiscal year.
City Manager William \Voollett recom·
mends It be set at 33 · cents per $100
assessed valuation, the same rate 8..'I this
year.
The meeting will be at 7:30 o'clock In
council chambers at the Irvine Town
Center.
I
Daugherty ls concerned their pasts are
forgotten.
"There are people who say the kids in
continuation school are s c r o u n g y • ' '
Daugherty said. "But nobody can tell 1ne
that after I've y.•orked y.•ith kids like
Mike and Sharon."
Respect for the innate possibilities of
each student is a keystone for the con-
tinuation program.
1'he method is total dedication to in-
dividualized instruction.
A student can begin school on any day
of the year and graduate on any day. His
program is \Vorked oul between him and
his teacher via a contract system record·
ed on specially designed form s.
ln a given classroom, the students may
be working on different courses or be
doing different projects on varying levels
of progress in the same course. Class
si?:e is limited to 20.
The El Toro school, genera11y for
(See DROPOUTS, Page %)
CU.Uy Pllof Steff l"llolo
ARTIST ASKEW AND HIS 20.FOOT MUSCLE MAN
Paul Bunyan, Superman and Other Larger-than-life Heroes
Artist's Folk H eroes
Stand Larger Than Life
By RUDI NIEOZIF.LSKI
Of ltlt D&llY PllClt Sl•ff
Paul Bunyan does exist and you can
see him "topless" in Costa Mesa.
Anti-nudity ordinance or not, he stands
at 1661 Superior Ave., arms akimbo, with
his enormous feet planted six feet apart.
Artist Eric Askew left his 20-foot giant
to shiver there in the sea breeze, wearing
nothing but bikini briefs, until the good
ladies in Lake Forest made him some
clothes.
Then, properly attired, he will preside
over the community's Paul Bunyan Day~.
But it will take some doing because this
Paul Bunyan is 20 feet tall.
An even bigger job was building the
fiberglass colossus in the first place, ac-
cording to Askew. It took three months to
get the job done.
The statue, consisting of a fiber glass
shell over a steel frame, was built in ,see.
lions. Hands, feet and head were made
separately, the front and back torso in
two large sections, and the whole thing
cemented together.
"With difficulty," Askew adds.
"The job wou ld have been easier if 'w\le
could have used more resin but the finish-
ed model would have been too heavy to
move ."
Mobility is an important element of the
giant's makeup. He·s not just Paul Bun·
yan but instanUy convertible Into a 20-
fc.ot tall football star, Supennan, or
SKID. ROW LIFE
VISITED TOD AY
Sldd Row ls an afnlctlon of almost
eve:ry major American city. Th c
dert!:Hcts and castoffs of society gravilat~
there and scratch out a Ille most people
would never ca11 living.
Associated Press sent a photographer
nnd reporter into one such area to record
a documentary on Ille along Skid Ro\v,
The result Is on Page 24 today.
virtually any other bigger than life hero .
All he needs is the right clothes.
However, most of the time he will
stand outside Zuver's Gym in Costa
Mesa , encouraging men to bulge in the
same places he does.
Later in the year, the 57-year-old artist
will build a taller, SO-foot model. The
hands and feet are already made but
Askew won 't say for what purpose the
larger giant is being built.
"It \Von 't be as difficult as it sounds."
he announces cheerfully. ';I learned 3n
awful lot from the small one."
The "small one" was built on a tight
budget , but the lack of financial reward
(See GIANT, Page I)
Orange Coast
Weather
It'll be warmer along the Orange
Coast Wednesday with tempera-
tures at the beaches in the 70s ris·
ing to the low 80s inland. Patchy
low clouds y,ilJ clear by · mid-morn-
ing to fair skies.
INSIDE TOlti\l'
Tltcir 11aTnes may ?Wt be as
welL knototi as Hugl"'s, Getty and
Hunt. but more than a dozen
men have risen front relative
obscurity to fortunes of $100 mil·
lion or more i·n five 11eors -
despi te an uncertott1 stock mar·
ket. See Poge 1.
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it DAIL'!' PILOT IS Tutsd.!.Y, August 28, J'l/.J --------
Transactions Unfold
GULF OF MEXICO
MEXICO ,,, Clemente Deals Financed by Two Fri:ends
' ..
Qa1ake Hits Hard
By JOtlN VALTERZA
01 ttlt o.llY ,It .. Iliff
Details of an Intricate series of secret
purchase agreements Involving La casa
Pacifica and nearly 30 acres of prime
oceanfront land in San Clemente came
forth from the \Vhile House r.1onday
along with revelations G.C. "Bebe"
Rebozo was one of the two millionaire
From Page 1
GIANT • • •
Map locates cities in 1i1exico where severe earthquake struck this
morning causing widespread damage and more than 100 deaths so
far. Many buildings collapsed in the temblor, which registered about
6.0 on the Richter scale. See details Page 4.
\\'as more than balanced by the satisfac-
tion he derived from the project, Askev1
maintains .
"The model is expected to interest
many boys in weightlifting and if just a
few youngsters get as much benefit from
training with weights as I have, I'll feel
well repaid.·~ Women 'Bandits', 18, 19, To Askew, now a resident of 2<l152
Orchard St.. Santa Ana Heights, exercis-
ing with weights has always been one of
the keys to good health. When he was 14,
he stood four feet six in sneakers and
"sported muscles like sparrows'
kneecaps."
Pull Harbor Court Prank
A pair of Claremont women who al~
legedly threw the night traffic calendar
into turmoil may be back in Harbor
Judicial District Court on criminal
charges soon, following a bizarre Monday
night incident.
They were initially taken into custody
on charges of anned robbery, when
Newport Beach police arrived at the
courthouse at 4201 Jambo ree Road.
Investigators questioned the suspects,
aged 18 and 19, at headquarters, then
ordered them released for lack or evi-
dence, but today are seeking complaints
charging the pair with disturbing the
Trustees Decide
Not to Extend
Chief's Contract
The Saddleback Valley Unified School
District board of trustees decided in a
closed session Monday night not to act on
extending the contract of Saddleback
Superintendent William Zogg.
Dermis Smith, a trustee who sald Mon·
day be opposes the extension proposed to
July 1, 1977, commented after the
meeting that he will ~stpone a formal
protest until the contract extension is ac·
tually proposed.
Several members of the board say they
favor the extension, whlch would go two
years beyond the next trustee election at
which the terms of all five members of
the board end.
Smith said he opposes the extension
because it would take away powers of a
new board to choose distric t ad-
ministrators.
'Creature Logs'
Deadline Nears
For Viejo Kids
There are only 21h more days to turn
"Creature Logs" in to the f\.1ission Viejo
Public Library, Children's Librarian
Trish Melcher said today.
A summer's end party for all young
readers in the "\Ile Feature Creatures"
program is set for I p.m. Friday at La
Paz Intermediate School.
To qualify, the green book lists, called
Creature Logs, showing what each child
read this summer, must be traded in for
tickets at the library.
A full-length movie, "The Phantom
Tollbooth," is the party's scheduled at-
traction. Also shown wi ll be ''Dracula."
Mrs. ~1elcher said 59 children have
read 50 or more books this summer, with
more thafl 1,000 participating in the pro-
gram.
OUNGI COAST lf
DAILY PILOT
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peace.
Detective Sam Amburgey is handling
the case. which authorities suspect may
have been a girlish prank that backfired.
Court cashier Ionia Wright, 36, told
police she was confronted about 8 p.m.
by the girls, who sought directions to a
specific courtroom .
"Go ahead, do it," one of the girls
reportedly told the other as the stood
there.
The cashier claimed one suspect rea ch-
ed into her cubicle, tore off a desk calen-
dar page, scribbled on it and handed it
back,
"This is a holdup," it allegedly. said ,
with an additional reference to a gun.
which one of the women assertedly
simulated by sticking a finger under her
blou~.
Investigators said this touched off a
great commotion involving the two young
women, cashier Wright, and a second
witness.
The alleged lady bandits apparently
panicked, fled upstairs on the run and
barricaded themselves in the women's
rest room, police said.
Braving the feminine facility, Sgt.
Thomas Gleason of the Orange County
Marshal's Office burst into the ladies'
room and took the pair captive while the
cashier called police.
Frmn Page 1
TORTURE ..•
identified by name, said Olsson and his
accompllce "have turned the vault into a
torture chamber. They are extremely
brutal. What's happening down there
makes me want to throw up."
The three wome.n hostages were iden-
tified as Mrs. irgitta Lundblad, 31; Miss
Kristin Enmark, 23, _Miss Elisabeth
Oldgren. 21, Sve.n Saefstroem, 25, is the
fourth hostage.
The psychologists said the risks for the
two older women appeared the greatest,
especially Olsson's threat to bang them.
Police sources said the new plan in·
el uded a corilbined attack through the
holes in the roof and the double steel
door to the vault.
The holes were covered by bulletproof
glass and Lindroth placed po 1 ice
sharpshooters at each one of them in the
hope that Olsson and Olofsson might
relax for a moment and give the police a
chance to shoot before they could harm
the hostages, the sources said.
Police also brought new cutting torches
into the bank hall this morning. The
torches are capable of cutting open the
double door to the vault. ,
Police are monitoring every word said
inside the vault via se nsitive
microphones and other wiretapping
equipment.
From Page 1
SCOUTS ...
ference, our cabana, an international
Girl Scouts-operated hospital, might have
to be used for an emergency medical
center.
Cuernavaca was among the area cities
listed where damage occurred due to the
jolting earthquake which struck 3 a.m.
(PDT), routing thousands from their
homes and hotels.
The death toll shortly before noon stood
at more than 100, according to
Associa ted Press and United Press
International.
He might still be in that kind of shape
today if he hadn't seen some old
"S trength" magaz ines while browsing
through a second hand bookstore.
Seized by weightlifting fever, he decid·
ed to pu t on some muscle but discovered
weighlifting equipment was not available
in the New Zealand town where he lived.
So he made his own.
Lead fish weights, melted in an old can
and poured into a flat hole in the ground
made clumsy but serviceable weights
which he fitted to a length of pipe.
Askew's mother, somewhat less en-
th usiastic, enrolled him in the Auckland
School of Art to distract him from
weightlifting, Instead, he pursued both,
becoming an artist and ultimately the
Junior Australian -Ne\v Zealand
Featherweight lifting champ.
Art and weightlifting have crossed
paths n1any times throughout the years.
On one occasion, while acting as judge in
lhe World Weightlifting Cham pionships,
he was besieged by visiting athletes with
requests for portraits. A few years later,
he was called to York, Pa., to apint a
series of murals for the Weightlifting
Hall of Fame.
Weightlifting and art combined again
this summer when he was commissioned
to design the giant for gym owner Bob
Zuver, More recently, be has been engag.
ed. to illustrate a book on that ancient
strongman, Hercules.
At prese nt, Askew is completing work
on an exhibition of paintings to be given
in Texas. The subject of this showing is
another type of strongman, the American
cowboy.
A cowboy's life was rough, difficult and
unglamorous, according to ~kew, who
bas traveled from Montana to · Texas in
search of genuine cowboy folklore.
NY Stnte Power
Cut 5 Percent
l1i Heat Wave
NEW VORK (AP) -Voltage was cut 5
percent across New York stale today as
the State Power Pool acted to protect the
generating system against a massive
blowout In the second day of a heat
wave .
Consolidated Edison Co. complied hn·
mediately "ith the cutback requested by
the power pool, representing seven
private utilities and the New York State
Power Authority, by reducing voltage in·
New York City and Westchester County.
The temperature at 10 a.m, PDT ,.,.as
92 degrees. Humidity was 57 percent.
The voltage cut -designed to stretch
available power without disconnecting
any customers -could be increased to 8
percent befor e load-shedding would be
necessary to keep from overloading elec-
trical generators.
Con Ed said it might be forced to
disconnect some outlying sections or the
city in rotation for brief periods U it is
unable to meet the load demand, created
rnalnly by air conditioners.
Boy Nabs Coke
Getnway Tricycle, Toy Gun Left
STEVENAGE, England (UPl)-"How much Is that can of Coke?"
asked the little boy, barely peering over the shop counter.
A clerk quoted the price to hlm and put the can on the counter.
The boy pulled out a gun, let fly with a volley of Ping-Pong balls,
grabbed the Coke and ran. But he left his gun and getaway vehicle
-an orange and white tricycle .
Shop manager Ray Stanford has offered amnesty.
"If he plucks up the courage to come clean and pay for lbe Coke,
he can have the bike, the gun and the balls he pelted everyone with ,"
Stanford said.
"The little fellow was no more than 4 and II Is worrying me
how miserable he must be feeling about losing hls trike and bis gun
for a ca n of Coke."
friends or President Nixon invol v1.'<l in
most of the financing.
The disclosure made by Deputy Press
Secretary Gerald Warren \vas an ad·
mitted attempt "to put asJertions or ln1-
propriety to rest" by issuing a full
auditing of the trnnsac tions since July 15,
!fl69 -the t:a te tl111t the President sealed
the deal.
* * * Nixon to Cut
Holiday Shol't
In Clemente
President Nixon reportedly plans to rut
short his Labor Day weekend visit to San
Clemente and fly back to the nation's
capital late Wednesday, reliable sources
said earlier today .
The only confirmation to come thu s 1 .. :
from the White House staff. bo\vevcr, is
that the Chief Exect.tive planned to leave
"later in the \\'eek." Early in the visit,
t!1c "'orking vacation was planned to last
well beyond the i,abor Day weekend.
Reports circulaliHL in San Clemente to·
day said that initial ly '.he departure was
lo have been today,. but that notice \Yas
too short for a pullout.
Deputy Press Secretary Gerald Warren
gave no specific reason for the change in
plans. but did concede tha t the President
hoi;-ed to be \\'ilh .. as much of the family
as possible" over the three-day weekend.
Warren added that the sojourn pr*
ably would be at the Presidential
retreat at Camp David, Md,
Makeup Bandits
Hold Up Hospital
Two men wearing coveralls and with
their faces covered with theatrical
makeup robbed the emergency room of
the Santa Ana Community Hospital, 600
E. Washington St. early today.
Police said the pair entered the room
at 5:40 a.m . through the ambulance door.
One suspect held three empfoyes at gun.
point white the other pried open the
narcotics locker.
They escaped with a large quantity of.
narcotics including Demerol and Nern·
butal, officers said.
The victims said the makeup the t)an·
dits wore was very heavy with huge
eyebrows possibly made of cotton wads.
From Pqe 1
THREATS • • •
whicb im.ages of the performers flashed .
Graham strode on to the bare stage to
begin bis address with a prayer.
"All the world seems to be caught up
in a very climactic moment in history,''
he said. "What an hour for thousands of
young people to be meeting here not in a
drug scene but in a scene glorified by
Jesus Christ. This generation cannot
escape Christ."
Graham will speak every night on dif·
ferent aspects of religion to the
estimated 12,000 delegates from Christian
organizations around the world who are
to attend the training sessions from 9
a.m. to 9 p .. m. every day until Friday.
The $550,000 cost or the teach-in has
aroused criticism, too. Church groups
claimed Graham's crusade was siphoning
church funds.
The evangelist's multimillion-dollar
organization, based in the United States,
denied this and said the teach-in was
financed by money from other sources.
All delegates pay an $8.75 registration fee .
The prline issue bas not been the
parcel on whJch the Presidential Villa
sits -about 5.9 acres -but, instead,
more than 20 acres of fallow land whlch
lie im1nediately inland of t_he old Cotton
estate.
'l'h:it parcel is actually a blend of one
n1ojor 1n1rchase rrom the Cotton heirs
and a minor buy from Nixon's neighbor
J. J. Elmore, a millionaire Democrat
In all, the one financier throughout the
entire series of trans&<:tions w a s
1nillionaire Ne\V Yo r k industrialist
l{obert Abplanalp, whose interest in the
loans to the President amounted to $1.2
n1illion. A partner during one phase of
the transactions was Rcbozo. the Florida
rnillionaire who with Abplanalp was an
original partner in a firm se t up as the
o"ner of the fallow land near the Nixon
estate.
The rationale for the ·intricate ex-
changes since 1969 holds that the Presi-
dent did not want so much land, but was
forced to commit himself to purchasing
the vacant section in order to obtain
1'.'hat was deemed a family goal -the
5.9-acre estate where the residence sits.
Abplanalp is listed now ns the owner or
the fallo\V land, but until the White House
dis..:losed details of owners.hip it was
known only that the entire matter was in
trust administered by Title Insurance
and Trust Company.
The disclosures alld full accounting,
\Varren said, came at the President's
personal expense (the sum was not
detailed ).
Warren said t he "internationally
rcsJ)f:.'ctcd" firn1 of Coopers and Lybrand
of Ne\I' York did the probing of Nixon's
records and legal documents related to
the transactions.
The New York Times reported today
Coopers and Lybrand used to be called
Lybrand, Ross B r o t h e r s and
r.1ontgomery, and three top executives of
the company v.·ere convicted in 1968 of
mail fraud and fi ling false statements.
The Times said Nixon gave all three men
a complete pardon Dec. 20, 1972.
However, White House press secretary
Ronald Ziegler told the Times that the
men pardoned by President Nixon had
\\'ithdra"n from the accounting firm.
have not been with the firm for years and
that the present partners bad nothing to
do with any presidential pardon.
The firm 's report shows that as of the
end of last f\1ay the President owed
$340.000 on his share of the costs for La
Casa Pacifica. The property has been
\'alued at about $1.5 million on the
current market.
Under the deal, Abplanalp and Rebozo
paid $1,249,000 for 23 acres of the estate,
enabling Nixon to wrile off $625,000 in
unsecured Joans from Abplanal p and to
purchase the remaining 5.9 acres that in-
cludes his homesite at a cost of $340,000.
The property which Abplanalp owns
lies at the downcoast side along the coun-
ty line and farther soulb lies the Cea.st
Guard L«an Station which doubles: as
the \Vestem White House .
On the inland side the border is a fence
rwutlng along the acceSJ road .to_the
Loran ga te, and on the upcoast portion
pastures still owned by Elmore (a
thoroughbred breeder) serve as the boun-
dary.
Toward the coast lies the driveway
linking the Nixion home with the Western
\Vhite House.
Ironically, while the La Casa Pacifica's
grounds are immaculately tended, the
portion owned by Abplanalp Is a dry
\Yecd-choked section containing mound.S
of dirt and rubble.
D:ead trees also dot the landscape and
no improvements have been made there.
It is visible from the Cyprus Shore colony
-the most expensive neighborhood in
San Clem ente.
The report showed Nixon had paid out
a total of $402,439 in Interes t, principal
and improvements. The president still
owes $264,440 on an estate which cost
him . along with the improvements he
subsequently made, a total of $468,424.
0 111'1' ,!IOI Sl1ll Piiot•
BELIEVES IN NEW LIFE
Prlncip1l Bailey Daugherty
Fron1Page1
DROPO UTS. ••
students over 16 and under the il'gal high·
school dropout age of J 8. was formed for
the newly unified district.
Most students starting at the school
were formerly at Hillvie\\' J·ligh in Tustin,
They will be offered a curriculum of
English, developmental reading, world
history, civics, U.S. history, economics,
science and math, health and drivers
education.
111ey v.·ill also have choie€s in arts,
crafts. 1nusic, cabinet making. home
economics ,and construction trades such
as brick laying, welding, plumbing, and
electrical installations.
"What we offer depends on what our
students want!' Daugherty said. "Any of
them can satisfy the state requirements
for a diploma."
How long that takes is entirely up to
the student .
"As far as we're cone€rned. a student
can put his head on his desk for 10 days
straight if he so choos('s," Daugherty
said.
"Don't expect to be treated llke or
compared to anyone else but you."
Daugherty tells his new st udents, "Your
achievements will be your own."
The results. according to Daugherty,
are "success story after !illccess story."
"Some go on to college -though the
percentage isn't as great as fonn a
regular school. But \Ye've found that
those who do go are ·stickers and
finishers .' "
Generally, grades go up and diseipllne
problems shrink.
Daugherty brings six yea rs of e~·
perience as assistant principal at L.1
Vista High School in Fullerton, a con-
tinuation scbool. ·
Between them, his staff of four
teachers have 15 years experience in con-
tinuation schools.
They're used to taking a special ln-
te.rest in each student.
"Everybody does co u n se 1 i ng,''
Daugherty said . "Even the custodian and
my secretary."
Students at the continuation school
come from famiHes of varied income
level, race and intelligence. At La Vista,
children of four teachers were students
at the school.
"The most important thing "'e try to
do is make students feel at ease. For
many of them , this is the first school
where they've ever been able to say 'I
belong.' Once that happens, we 're on the
road."
3 Killed in Cafe
CLEVELAND (U PI) -Three persons
were killed and two persons seriously
wounded late Monday in a shooting at the
Goodtime Cafe. Dead were Charles Scott,
26. Jim my Lee Hicks, 28, and Ezekiel
f\.1aryland , all of Cleveland.
Buying A New Tract Home?
,
Many people buying homes ore under the impression they HA VE
to buy corpelin g from the home so les center. In !he mo jorily of cases
this is not true, although the soles office will try to make you think so.
The minute the home center tries to upgrade the slondord corpet,
then you are~ free to shop for corpeting. To preve nt shopping should
constitute restraint of trade.
In mony coses they will tell you that the carpet allowance does not
apply if you buy carpet ouhide. If they feel this is legal, HA VE THEM
PUT IT IN WRITING.
Ordinarily, we con save you a lot of money over what the home
center offers. We provide a larger 5election -and we usually come up
with less yardoge, plus a superior instollotion.
ALDEN'S
CARPETS o DRAPES
1663 Placentia Ave.
COSTA MESA
646-4838
HOURS: MOft. Thru fhm., f to l :JO -FRI., t to t -SAT. t :30 lo S
J
\
Huntington Beaeh
Fountain ·Valley
VOL. 66, NO. 240, 2 SECTIONS, 32 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA TUESDAY, AUGUST 28 , 1973
Today's Final
N.Y. Stoeks
TEN CENTS
Council Ol(s Continuing Ocean Monitoring
By TERRY COVILLE
OI IM O.Uy ,.llllt St•lf
Harbors and Beaches Director Vince
Moorhouse won at least a partial "vote or
confidence" Monday night from the Hun·
lington Beach City Council for his
department's ocean water monitoring
program .
Councilmen, meeting in an informal
study session, agreed that Moorhouse's
special environmental project team
should carry on with its monitoring prcr
gram and other environmental studies.
The ocean study, conducted over the
past two years, has been questioned by
some councilmen and some marine
biologists as to the need for it and the
validity of it.
While councilmen said "go ahead" with
the work, they also asked David
Rowlands , the city administrator, to :
-Determine what agencies should
have responsibility for monitoring the
basic ingredients (chemical, biological,
physical) of the local ocean.
-Seek county. state and federal finan-
cial help for the Huntington Beach
monitoring program.
--Outline specific projects with v.tiich
the environmental project team will be
involved during the coming year.
~fonday's study session was called
primarily for the Moorhouse report. The
harbors and beaches director repeated
his view that the city is the onJy agency
vdth a comprehensive ocean study off
Huntington Beach.
For t'i''O years his staff, under the
direction of environmental engineer Jer-
ry Jackson, has divided the offshore
waters and the channels of Huntington
Harbour into quadrants and taken
periodic water and sediment samples
from different locations.
The department has recorded a wide
variety of biological and chemical data
and information about ocean conditions.
Moorhouse says the information col-
lected will form an ocean data baseline,
against which future changes in the
v.·ater quality can be measured.
He told councilmen !\1onday that the
ocean monitoring program itself is near-
ly complete, and now awaits the evalua-
tion of a dozen e'xperts in various fields.
He said Jackson's environmental team
is doing other work in the city, such as:
\vriting environmental impact reports for
city projects, checking on . air "fallout"
from the Edlson power ·plant, in-
vestigating the cause of rotting door sills
in south Huntington Beach.
Those con1ments sparked concern from
some councilmen as whether Jack.son 's
group was doing work not properly
within the harbors and beaches depart-
ment.
"There ought to be a clear 1lne of
responsibilities between the harbors and
beaches deparlment and our new en-
(See MONITORING, Page !)
Swede Gunman 'Brutal'
Bandit Wounds Policeman, Abuses Hostages
Dally PUt! Staff ,..,.
ARTIST ASKEW AND HIS 20-FOOT MUSCLE MAN
Paul Bunyan, Superman and Other Larger-than-life Heroet
Artist's Folk Heroes
Stand Larger Than Life
By RUDI NIEDZl~LSKI
01 flit 0•11'1' Piiot Sllff
Paul Bunyan does exist and you can
see him "topless" in Costa Mesa.
Anti-nudity ordinance or not, he stands
at 1661 Superior Ave .. arms akimbo. with
his enormous feet planted six feet apart.
Artist Eric Askew left his 20-foot giant
to shive r there in the sea br~ze. wearing
nothing but bikini briefs. until the good
ladies in Lake Forest made him some
clothes.
Then. properly attired, he will preside
over the community's Paul Bunyan Days.
But it will take some doing because this
Paul Bunyan ls 20 feet tall.
yan but instantly convertible into a 20-
fuot tall football star, Supemian, or
virtually any other bigger than life hero.
All he needs is the rig ht clothes.
Ho1,vever. most of the time he \Viii
stand outside Zuvcr's Gym in Costa
Mesa, encouraging men to bulge in the
same places he does.
Later in the year, the 57-year-old artist
will build a taller, 50-foot model. The
hands and feet are already made but
Askew won't say for what purpose the
larger giant is being built.
"Jt won't be as difficult a11 it sounds,"
(Set GIANT, Page%)
STOCKHOLM (UPI) -A psychopathic
gunman locked into a downtown bank
vault with a convict friend and four
hostages for six days wounded a
policeman and has turned lhe vault into a
virtual torture chamber, police sources
said today. They said he was extremely
brutal in dealings with the hostages.
Police drilled a series of one-foot holes
ln the roof of the vault today to keep an
eye on gunman Jan-Erik Olsson, 32, and
J)OSsibly pick him off with a
GiI·l Scouts
From County
In Quake Area
~
Ko v.•ord had been received ttUs morn-
ing from eight traveling Orange County
Girl Scouts and two adull advisers, y,·ho
had been due to travel today from earth-
quake-shaken M e x i c o City to
Cuernavaca, also in the damage ZJne.
The high school students from the
Harbor Area and five other county cities
were scheduled to attend an annual in-
ternational Girl Scout meeting this week.
Girls who left Aug. 23 on the tw!>week
MEXICO QUAKE KILLS MORE
THAN 100-Story, Page 4
f.1exico trip include Terri Bergman and
Sandra Kleeman, Cosla Mesa; Mary Lou
Horner, Tustin ; Barbara L ind say,
~1idway City; Jill Black. Los Alamitos;
Karen Kalar, Garden Grove, and Susan
Thomas and Judy Leonard, both of
Cypress.
Their adult advisers are Mrs. Michael
\Veit, of Newport Beach and Mrs.
Edward Spurgoon, or Cypress.
The IO-member party is due back Sept.
5.
A spokesma n for the Girl Scouts in the
Harbor Area said she did not know what
time the county girls and their leaders
had planned to leave MexiCil City on their
journey today.
Authorities locally said they did not ex-
pect any immediate word, noting it takes
two hours to get a telephone call through
under normal , non-emergency conditions.
Fears for the girls' safety were
minimized spmewhat by disclosure that
severest damage apparently occurred in
smaller towns and native quarters of the
quake-ravaged cities.
A spokesman at Girl Scout head-
(See SCOUTS, Page !)
An even bigger job was building the
fiberglass Cillossus in the first place, ac-
.cording to Askew. It took three months to
get the job done. •cheat to W • ~ ID
The statue, con!listing of a fiber glass
shell over a steel frame, was built in sec-
tions. Hands, feet and head were made
separately, the front and back torso in
two large sections, and the whole thing
cemented together.
f'With difficulty," Askew adds.
"The job would have been easier if we
could have used more resin but the finish-
ed model would have been too heavy to
move."
~1oblllly is an importa nt element of the
~lanl's makeup. He's not just Paul Bun--
SKID ROW LIFE
VISITED TODAY
Skid Row is an alfflction ol almost
every major America n city. T h e
derelicts and castoffs of society gravitate
there and scrat.ch out a life most people
would never call living.
AssocJated Press sent a photographer
and reporter Into one such area lo record
a documentary on life nlong Skid Row.
Tho result Is on Pago U today.
U1icle Advised Derby Race Winner
BOULDER. Colo. (UPI) -Robert
Lange Sr. admitted today he told his
nephew to cheat to win the 1973 National
Soapbox Derby by building a msgnetic
device in the oosc of his green racer.
"I determined that he should build and
install a magnetJc nose so as to be com-
petitive with the professional cars he
would be racing against," Lange said .
"I knew that this was a vloleition of the
official derby rules and consider it now
to be a serious mistake in judgment," he
said.
James Gronen, 14. was dlsquall[ied by
derbr, olficial• and forfeited a $7,500
8Cho arahip for winning the race because
of an electromagnet found ln hb car. The
device, discovered by X-ray after the
race, ~shed Groncn'a car away from the
derby s metal starling gate.
An Elk Grove. Calli., boy was named
winner after Gronen was disqualified.
George W. Brittain, president or the
All-American Soap Box Derby, Inc., de-
clined con\ment on Lange's Jetter untU
he had a cbance to study it.
~
Lange, young Gronen's legal guardian,
released his statement after talks with
his attorney. He said the admission was
his last word on the incident and that
Gronen still was vacationing in
\Vlsconsin.
Lange, president of the Lange Ski Boot
Company, outside Boulder, said the cars
of the other top 10 finishers should be in-
spected for alterations that were against
derby rules.
He denJed pouring large swns of
money lnto development of Gronen's
racer and the car In which his son,
Robert Lange Jr., won the national derby
title in 1972. The Boulder district at·
tomey had said the 1972 car, cost between
110,000 and $20,000 to build.
Derby rules limit spending on develop-
ment of racers to $40.
"'It Is foolish to suggest that any
substantial expense went into eilher of
(See CHEATS, Pap I)
sharpshoote r. But Olsson fired a burst of
submachine gun flrti through one of the
holes and wounded a policeman.
Olle Abrahamson, a 44-year-old police
teclmician hit in the face and in one
hand, was the second police officer shot
since the drama began Thursday with
what appeared to be a normal bank rob-
bery. He was reported in satisfactory
condition.
Stockholm Police Chief Kurt Lindroth
canceled all news briefmgs today while
lhe police put into motion a new plan to
end the drama, which has lasted for
more than 125 hours.
Military psychologists warned that the
victims risked serious mental injuries if
the drama continues much longer.
Lindroth in an emotional statement
Monday called Olsson a "beast" and
other police officials described him as "a
completely cold and e m o t i o n 1 e s s
psychopath, who might just kill the
hostages if he feels like it."
U.S.A.
GUlf OF MEXICO
MEXICO
'.. .... .
--"'
Quake Hits Hard
UPI Htwsma.
Map locates cities in Mexico where severe earthquake struck this
morning causing widespread damage and 1nore than 100 deaths so
far. Many buildings collapsed in the temblor. which registered about
6.0 on the Richter scale. See details Page 4.
Astronaut Tells of Work
On Flying Research Ship
HOUSTON (UPI) -Skylab astronaut
Owen K. Garriott returned to his old job
or science teaching today to explain ho\v
he and crewmates keep a watchful eye
on the sun to record its spectacular ac-
tivity.
As they predicted they would do before
starting the tw~month research voyage,
Garriott, Alan L. Bean and Jack R.
Lcusma busily plugged away a t
biomedical tests and solar observation,
•
UPI T...._.fit
ADMITS OERBY CHEATING
Winner'• Un<ft L.an~
with little to say to night controllers.
Garriott was also snapping pictures out
of a space station window of a swamp in
Sudan and the Gran Chaco plain in
Paraguay and Argentina.
It is hoped that photos of the Sudan
swamp near the Sudanese city of Fangak
will be helpful to ground teams planning
transportation a n d communications
systems. 1be pictures might al3o yield
(See SKYLAB, Page 1!
Beach Housewife
Raped in Home
By Lo,.ie Gunma1i
A man known to police as the
"Downtown Rapist" struck again early
this morning, attacking a Geneva Avenue
housewife tn her bed.
Aca>rding to police, the latest victim
was beaten by her attacker, unlike other
women who have been victimized by the
rapist.
Details ol tbe attack were sketchy this
morning, but police confirmed that the
man broke into the woman's home as she
slept and attacked her In her bedroom.
The housewife deoribed her assailant
u a Caucasian in his mid-twentle11 with
dark and curly loog hair, about five leet
eight Inches tall and weighing about 150
pounds.
The so-called Downtown Rl\piat is
thought to be responsible for at least 12
rapes In the older section of the city dur-
the past year. Most of the victim& have
been alone at home when the rapist
broke In.
They said hi!! companion, ronvicted
murderer Clark Oloffson, 26, was not
much better.
Police Superintendent Aake Aakesson
said the gunman had carried out "ex-
tremely brutal" acts against the three
female hostages but that he could not
confirm rumors that Olsson repeatedly
raped one of the hostages, a 31-year-old
mother of two.
One police officer. who refused to be
(See TORTURE, Page !)
Mcinnis Says
Police Acted
Correctly
Newport Beach Mayor Donald A.
MclMis stauochly def'mded the police
department Monday against· publilhed
charges that it over-reacted to the poison
gas scare nine days ago.
Mcinnis said the department's decision
to clear nearly 75,000 persons from city
beac hes on a SUMy Saturday afternoon
\"as reasonable in view of fears that a
cloud of noxious gas might engulf the
coast.
" [ think the police acted correctly even
though the gas never actually showed
up," Mcinnis asserted at an afternoon
study session of the city council.
"And if an error was lo be made," the
mayor added, "I'm glad that it was made
on the side of safety."
Vice mayor Howard Rogers said he
agreed with Mclnnis' views.
"The.1ction of the police was proper,''
Rogers said. "If there was any over-
reaction, it was the press: that over-
reacted for criticizing what was right
and proper for the police to do ...
The Daily Pilot Sunday published an
editorial in which it said the evacuation
plans of Newport Beach and Huntington
Beach were confused. It urged that more
"orderly" emergency procedures be
devised for future use.
Mcinnis went on to urge that Newport
Beach join with other cities in Orange
County in coordinating emergency pro-
cedures.
"This city should take the initiative to
find out how we should handJe this kind
of problem ln the future," Mclnnis said.
Mcinnis added. 00Lasl Saturday showed
that if we do have a countywtde
emergency procedure, it doesn't work:."
Newport Beach police said last Satur·
day that they made the decision to clear
(See POLICE, Pap I)
Orange Cout ..
Weather
It'll be warmer along tbe Orange
Coast Wednesday wttb tempera-
tures at the beaches In the 70s ris·
ing to the low 8(13 Inland. Patchy
low clouds will clear by mid-morn-
ing to !air skies.
INSIDE TODA\'
Tlte ir tutm.tr may not be a.s
toell knoum ru Hughe1, Getfli and
flunt, bu' more than a dozen
men have rl$e" from relativt
obttUrity to fortune! of $100 miJ...
lion or more tn fii>e 11eor1 -
ckspite an unctrklin !tock mar-
lut. S•e Page 7.
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.
I
!' UAJLY .. JLOI •
'P1•ot11.iscuo1rs'
\
College Teacher
Tells of Affair
By TOM BARLEY
01 Ill• D.lllf PllOI S!•tl
A college instructor today testified that
he had sexual intercourse vt'ith murdered
cocktail \\1aitress Nanette Post on a nun1-
ber or occasions 'before she was raped
and strangled last Feb. 9 in the Hun·
ti1.gton Beach area.
Respirator therapy tectmician James
Vincent Poliandro testified at the Orange
County Superior Court murde1 trial of El
Toro Marine Sgt. Jared Allan Wallace.
He said he met J\.frs. Post, 27, of Foun-
tain Valley. when she became one of his
students.
Called by Deputy Public Defender
Ron Butler to back the lawyer's argu·
ment that Mrs. Post was sexually pro-
miscuous, Poliandro said he had sexual
Fron1 Page 1
GI AN T .; ' . •
he announces cheerfully. ''I learned an
awful lot fro1n the small one."
The "small one" v.•as built on a tight
budget, but the lack of financial reward
was more than balanced by the sa tisfac-
tion he derived from the project, Askew
1naintains.
"The model is expected to interest
many boys in weightlifting and jf just a
fe\v youngsters get as much benefit from
training with weights as I have, I'll feel
\\'ell repaid."
To Aske\1', no1v a resident of 20152
Orchard St., Santa Ana Heights, exercis-
ing with weights has always been one of
the keys to good health. \\i'hen he was 14,
he stood four feet six in sneakers and
"sported muscles like spa r row s'
kneecaps.''
He might still be in that kind of shape
today if he hadn 't seen some old
"Strength" magazines while browsing
through a second hand bookstore.
Seized by \Veightliftlng fever, he decid-
ed to put on some muscle but discovered
y,•eighlifting equipment was not available
in the New Zealand town where he lived.
So he made his own.
Lead fish weights, melted in an old can
and poured into a flat hole in the ground
made clumsy but serviceable weights
which he fitted to a length of pipe.
Askew's mother, somewhat less en-
thusiastic, enrolled him in the Auckland
School of Art to distra ct him from
weightlifting. Instead, he pursued both,
becoming an artist and ultimately the
Junior Australian -New Zealand
Feathery,•eight lifting champ.
Art an~ weightlifting have crossed
paths many times throughout the years.
On one occasion, 'A-'hile acting as judge In
the World Weightlift ing Championships,
he was besieged by visiting athletes with
requests for portraits. A few years later.
he was called to York, Pa., to apint a
series of murals for the Weightlifting
Hall of Fame.
Weightlifting and art combined again
this summer when he was commissioned
to design the giant for gym owner Bob
Zuver. More recently, he has been engag-
ed to illustrate a book on that ancient
strongman, Hercules.
At present. Askew is completing \\'Ork
on an exhibition of paintings to be given
in Texas. The subject of this showing is
another type of strongman, the American
cowboy.
A co1ovboy's life was rough, difficult and
unglamorous. according to Askew. who
has traveled from !ltontana to Texas in
search of genuine cowboy folklore.
"The old-time cowboy," says Askew,
"was a rugged. hard·Y.'orklng. Jong-suf-
fering individual. often belligerent when
drunk, but friendly and peacable v.·hen
sober.
"But glamorous he was not. Nor col-
orful. Except in the eyes of an artist."
ORANGE COAST Ml
DAILY PILOT
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relations with her on a number or oc-
casions.
The teacher, who lectures in inhalation
tfchniques at USC and at a Los Angeles
County Veterans Hospital. !old both
Butler and prosecutor Robert Chat-
terton that he was sure !11rs, Post's hus-
band, David Post, 'Yas not aware of their
relationship.
Poliandro, the father of tlro children,
admitted to Challcrton that he denied
any intimacy \vith !\1rs. Post \Vhen he
was questioned by district attorney's in·
vestigators shortly berore \Vallace, 26,
was arrested.
The teacher said he \\'as informed of
her slaying by Judy Wrigi it. a fellow stu-
dent of Mrs. Post's in his class. He said
he then called Mrs. Post's husband to
confirm her death and eX"press his sym-
pathy.
\Val/ace repeatedly denied from the
witness stand Monday thal he had
;1nything to do 11,ith the killing of the at-
trat1ive lavern waitress and he denied
that he drove her to 11untington Bca<-'h
last Feb. 9.
It is alleged that the !11arine picked
Mrs. Post up shortly after she left Good
Time Charley 's bar, handcuffed her,
raped and strangled her and then shoved
her nude body under a juniper bush on a
Huntington Beach housing tract.
Police said they found l\1rs . Post's
1vallet and chec!.book in \Vallacc 's
possession when they questioned the part
time security guard about the kidnaping
five days earlier of South Laguna X-ray
tcl'hnician Carole Ann Rowan.
Miss Ro\1•an. 24, testfied earlier in the
trial that Wallace drove his car. roof
light flashing, immediately behinj her
auto on the San Diego Freeway while she
was respanding to an emergency call
from a San Clemente hospital.
She testified that she was forced to join
W<..llace in his static• wagon and that the
defendant then ordered her at gunpoint
to put on a pair of handcuffs he tossed in
her direction.
Miss Rowan told the jury' that she strug-
gled with her abductor and forced him to
turn off the free\vay and allow her to
escape from the vehicle.
CHEATS ...
them ," Lange said.
Lange said his nephew was not alone in
tampering with his car and that the
event had beC1Jme "ta inted" 'vith
tampering not discovered "because of
poor inspection and lack of supervision.''
He said he wanted Gronen's car to be
"C1lmpetitive. Rule violations are com-
mon. The most frequently violated rule is
tampering with or altering the axles and
"'heels which th e derby supplies to each
entrant."
In his five-page statement , Lange said
his son's 1972 derby-winning racer was
"clean. Neither a. magnetic device nor
anything similar to it v1as incorporated in
or used in the winning c~ by my son,
Bobby, in the 1972 race."
Fro11• Page 1
SKYLAB ...
data on the wetlands vegetation and Jand-
water demarcation lines.
The Gra n ChaC1J, a wide expanse of
swamps and grassy prairie. was being
studied to learn more about its water
sources, -possible transportation routes
and settled areas.
A physics professor at Stanford
University before he became an
3stronaut, Garriott explain~d in the
simplest terms possible during a taped
television sho\v ho1v lhe complex sola r
observation instruments work.
''The C1Jronograph does the job of an
eclipse of the sun," he said of one of th e
battery of cameras and telescopes. ;'We
essentially are looking at a solar eclipse
all day long."
Before ·flying to Skylab 32 days ago,
Lousma predicted there would be many
da ys aboard the elght-room space house
\Vhen he and his crewmates would have
no time for chit-chat because of the work
to be done.
'There's no way to get bored." he said.
"I'm more worried lh3t there's so much
to do that we won't get it all done. If you
don 't have enough to do on the flight
plan, there's alv.'ays something else that
needs to be done. I don 't think there's
enough missions to get everything done
that we can do in Skylab.''
From Page 1
POLIC E ...
city beaches aft(lr they received official
notification that a cloud of "noxious gas"
was drifting in the direction of Orange
County.
However. the gas cloud, from a leaking
chemical plant in Carson , never rt'!ached
the Orange Coast. It drifted lnlt1nd over
portions of \Vestminster, Los Alamitos ,
and Cypress, according to police ac-
COW1ts.
3 Killed in Cafe
CLEVELAND (UPI ) -Three P<rsons
'¥\'ere killed and two persons seriously
"'ounded late h1onday in 11 shooting at the
Coodtime care. Dead were Charles Scott,
26. Jimmy Lee Hicks. 28. and Ezekiel
~tttrylend. all of Cleveland.
UPI TtllPhOlt
From Page l
MO NITORING • •
vlrorunental departmtmt." Councilman
Jack Grten said. "If Jerry is writing im·
pact reports, It sounds like he ought to be
in the environm ental deparllnent. \Ve'rc
fragmenting our effort."
The city recently <.'Onsolldated much of
its environmental activity into one
department under the control of tJlck
Harlow, executive assistant to the city
administrator. Ji'ive people were moved
from the planning department to
Harlow's department.
The flloorhouse environmental tean1
(three people! has a $52.000 approved
budget for 1973-74. On a six-year pro-
jection, he expects to spend about sm,ooo in his department on en-
vironmental studies. including monitor·
Ing pl'ograms in the central park 1akes.
Rowlands said he \viii also study thu
possibility of shifting the work now done
in the harbors and beaches department
to the new environmental department un ·
der Harlow, though no specific recom·
mendii.tion was ntade on that.
One item Moorhouse requested but did
not get was a $10,000 ato1nic absorption
spectrophotometer, Seve ral councilmen
indicated they still oppose the city
purchase of such equipment used for the
measurement of heavy metals in the
ocean wat er.
POLICEMA" (CENTER ;, AI DED BY OTHERS AFTER BE ING SHOT BY SWED ISH GUNMAN
Dra ma in Stockholm Bank Vault Took Violent Turn in Week·long Confrontation NY State Power
Cut 5 Percent
In. Heat Wave
UPI Te1t11h~lo
From Pagel
TORT URE ...
identified by name, said Olsson and his
nccompllce "have turned the vault into a
torture chamber. They arc extremely
brutal. \Vhat's happening do\\·n there
makrs me \\'ant to throw up.11
The three \VOmen hostages \vere iden-
tified as ~trs. Birgitta Lundblad, 31: Miss
Kristin Enmark, 23. Miss Elisabeth
Oldgren, 21. Sven Saerstroem, 25, is the
fourth hostage.
The psychologists said the risks for the
two older women appeared the greatest,
especially Olsson's threat to hang them.
Police sources said the new plan in-
cluded a combined attack through the
holes in the roof and the double steel
door to the vault.
The holes were covered by bulletproof
glass and Lindroth placed p o I i c e
sharpshooters at each one or them in the
hope that Olsson and Olorsson might
relax for a moment and give the police a
chance to shoot before they could harm
the hostages, the sources said.
Police also brought new cutting torches
into the bank hall this morning. The
torches are capable of cu tting open the
double door to the vault.
Police are monitoring every word said
inside the vault via sensi t ive
microphones and other wiretapping
equi pm ent.
NE\V YORK (AP) -Voltage was cut 5
percent across New York state tod11y as
the State Power Pool acted to protect the
generating system against a nlassive
blowout in the second day of a heat
wave. .
Consolidated Edison Co. complied un·
mediately with the cutback requested by
the power J>OOI, representing seven
private utilities and the New York State
Power Authority, by reducing voltage in-
New York City and Westchester County.
Tbe temperature at 10 a.m. PDT was
92 degrees. Humidity was 57 percent.
The voltage cut -designed to stre~ch
available power without disconnecting
any customers -C1Juld be increased to 8
percent before load-shedding w.ould be
necessary to keep from overloading elec·
trical generators.
Con Ed said it might be forced to
discoMect some outlying sections of the
city in rotation for brief periods if it is
unable to meet the load demand, created
mainly by air conditioners.
HELD IN BANK -Bank clerks held hostage in Swedish baok vault
are Birgitta Lundblad. 31. top left, Kristin Enmark, 3. top right;
Elisabeth Oldgren, 21 , botton1 left and Sven Saefstroem. 25.
Officers working at the monitors said
Olsson "uses a language and behaves in
a way one wouldn 't believe if we didn 't
know it \\'as true,"
King's Condition
Still Critical
HELSINBORG, Sweden IAPI -King
Gustaf VJ Adolf remained in a co ma and
in serious condition today, the morning
medic8l IW.lletin reported. •
Zookeeper Arrested Again The communique said the 90-year-old
monarch's condition was characterized
by "bleeding tendencies with greater and
smaller bleeding, apparently from the
upper part of the stomach and intestine.
Except for a couple of hours Sunday
afternoon, we have so far been able to
balance this situation through blood
transfusions.'' Sec ond Dese rti on C1i<t rge Leveled After Suit Filed
The bulletin added that the king's heart
function has been satisfactory since
~londay but his lungs have shown cer-
tain variations.
SAN DIEGO (A P) -Zookeeper
\\litliam R. Sutherland, who insisted that
his first arrest as a suspected ~larine
deserter was a c3se of n1istn ken identity.
was arrested again today, the l\ilarines
said.
Sutherland. 27, \\'ho filed a $I-million
s1;it gainst the !IIarlnes and Navy aficr
his Cirst arrest. was apprehended after
reportipg for work at the Wild Animal
Park in San Pasqual. a Marine
spt.kesman said.
He said Sutherland is accused of posin~
as his brother Joseph to enter the
!lfarines, th~ deserting , and filing a
fa lse claim against the government.
Sutherland is being held at rhe J\tarine
Corps Recruit Depot pending possible
court-martial charges, the spokesman
1
said.
Sutherland's attorney couldn't be
reached for comment.
Sutherland \\'as first arrested June B
and hEild in the brig for three d:iys. The
Attenda11t Took
His Work Ho me
ROCKY MOUNT, Va. (AP) -Police in J
Franklin County cut three truckloads of
marijuana from fields and buried the j
6.950 pounds of v.·eed at the county
landfill.
Later l\1onday, the 23-year-old at-
tendant at the landfill was charged with
possessing marijuana with intent to
distribute it.
Police said Gary tlardy Brown or
Roanoke is accused of digging up 200
pounds of the \veed ~\'ith earth-moving
equipment. hauling !he plants severa l
hundred yards and reburying them .
From Page l
SCOUTS ...
quarters In Orange County said anxious
relatives had been callliig, bul damaged
commun~aJions systems in the Mexican
capltaJ clt)"Wero creating problems.
Reports trickling out ol the quake·rock·
ed region indicated lhe site of !he con·
fercncc, OUr Cabana, an intemotlonal
Girt Soouts-<>fieratcd hosphal, might have
to be used for en emergency medical
t'enter.
l\f.:.rines said he y,·as believed to be Lance
Cpl. Joseph M. Sutherland. v•ho v.·as
declared a dese rter Feb . ', \Vhen he fail-
ed to report for duty in Naples. Jtaly,
After his relez.se. Sutherland filed suit
claiming false arrest and mistreatment
while in the brig. He said he'd never been
in the t<.1arines. but had been di scharged
from the Army in 1967.
Capt. 1'.1ichael Kelly, public affa irs of-
ficer at the recruit depot. said evidence
sho1ved \Villiam R. Sutherland enlisted in
the Marines at the depot last September
under the name Joseph !11. Sutherland
and \~·as excused from boot camp as a re·
enlister.
Joseph ~L Suthe rland had been
discharged from the Marines in 1969,
Kelly said.
The man scr\·ed at the depat until
January. \11hen he was assigned to Naples
but failed to report, Kelly said.
"•tis father, \V illiam Roo sevel t
Sutherland , and brother, Joseph M.
Sutherland , \Vere both contacted in
Chicago, during the course of the in-
vestigation,'' Kely said. "According to
tx th. \Villiam was last seen in Chicago at
Christmas of 1972. when he said he was
coming to San Diego to get a job."
Friedan: 'Sabotage'
\VASHlNGTON (AP) -A feminist
author charged Monday that opponents of
women 's rights have used "Watergate·
type sabotage" against the women's
movement. Betty Friedan spoke to about
200 persons marking the 54th anniversary
of women's suffrage in the United States
at a Capi tol rally.
B11yh1g A New Tract Home?
Ma ny people buying homes are under the impression th ey HAVE
to buy carpeting from the home sales center. In the majority of cases
this is not true, although the sa les office will try to male you thinl so.
The mi nute the home center tries to upgrade the standard ca rpet,
then you are free to shop for carpeting. To prevent shopping should
constitute restra int of trade.
In ma ny-eases they will toll you that tho carpet allowance does not
ao ply ii you buy carpet outsi de. If they feel th is is legal, HAVE THEM
PUT IT IN WRITING.
Ordina rily, we eon save you • lot of money over what the home
center offers. We provide • larger selection -and we usua lly come up
with leu ya rd age, plus a superior inst allation.
ALDEN'S
CARPETS o D~APES
1663 Placentia Ave.
COSTA MESA
646 -4838
HOU RS: Mon. Thrv Thun., t lo 5:30 -FRI., t lo t -SAT., 9:30 lo 5
Tutsdll)', August 28, 1q73 H OAll Y PILOT :J
Goldwater Warns Against Disarming
By L. PETER KRIEG
Of tll9 ClilY l'IMI $11ff
America Is disarming and isolating
itself and thereby ioviting World War III
that \\·ould be fought between Ilussia and
lle<I China vying to become the world
leader. U.S. Sen . Barry M. Gold\vater
said during a talk in Irvine Monday.
The Arizona Republican, an outspoken
conservative, said that "a Nee little
depression migh t be the best thing that
could happen " to wake up the A1nerican
people to their problems.
"I lived through one and I'm still
scared," Goldwater told n1ore than 600
persons attending a \Vorld Affairs Coun-
cil of Orange County meeting at the
Airporttr Inn.
The former presidential candidate,
beaten substantially by Lyndon B.
Johnson in 1964, \\las introduced by actor
John \Vayne, a Newport Beach resident
and long-time friend .
Wayne called Goldwater one of the
most respected men in America and said
the Goldwater presidential race was "a
screaming example of the treachery of
c -
the irresponsible members of the news
media."
Goldwa ter. too, took his pot shots at
the press. especially t e I e vision
newscasters whom he called "those all·
wise people who nJghtly discus:s some
thl.ngs even though they don't know what
tliey~re talking about."
But Goldw11ter made it plain he wanted
to talk about tbe future or the United
States and to spread what he said is his
growing concern about Congressional at·
titudes t<n~:ard di sa rming the country.
"Over the past few years r h"avc sensed
a division of the people -especially the
people too young to remember the hor·
rors of World Wars I and JI," he said.
"They feel we've reached a point
where we can establish a detente Yl'ith
our enemies. But we're forgetting that
our enemies are in terested in only one
thing -domination of the world."
He said "all over the United States"
he's finding people who feel the country
has attained and e~:erted all lhe "·orld
leadership I.hat is nece ssary.
But we haYe to have the leadership. \Ve
can't assume the. United States is going
to enjoY all the. things lt has had to enjoy
just because 'A'e h.ld the drive and the
destiny to be the world's leader,"
Goldwater said.
"There are some of us who would let
down," he said. "and that is going to be
the beginning or \Vorld War Ill.
''Russia and China w'ill go to war to sec
"'ho \viii be the world 's leader." he said.
l{e said II that happened, the United
States "'ould fight with Russ ia because
\1·e have al\Yays been allied \Vith Russia
In war.
He said World \Var Ill doesn't ha ve to
happen. however. if Congress and the
American people keep the co untry
prepared mentally and mililarily.
"The fastest road to World \Var III
would be to downgrade our prepared·
ness," Goldwater said.
"I've never seen this cowitry so on the
verge of the poeople being so poorly
prepared. There are growing numbers in
Congress -perhaps even a majority -
who "'ould disarm this count ry," he said.
lie said the $84 billion defense budget, .. -
\\'hile the largest in history. ls the
smallest tn history "'hen compared with
gross national producl.
He said Russia's Ar1ny and Navy are
stronger than ours.
~le said the Shah of Iran is buying
more airplanes than the United States is.
Goldwater said the Un ited States n1ust
end its '·preoccupation with F.urope."
which he called .. decadent and li ving in
the past."
lie said \\'(' must continue to rl!ly on
and treat Europeans as allies, "but they
are going no place."
"The Pacific is the bright spot or the
future," he said.
He said Japan "'ill be the strongest
economi c nation in the \vor!d by the year
2000.
He said the real reaso n the U.S. was
fighting in Victna1n \vas to keep control
of the Jlacific and said "that was a story
never told to the American people."
He predicted Cambodia will soon fall -
an would have even with con tinued air
:;u pport -but he said. the United States
1nust be prepared to defend Thailand.
Wliite llo11se lss11es Details
"If Cambodia falls. we wU\ see the
domino theory pot to a test," Goldwater
prcdlctcd.
"'l'hailand "'ill be next.
''And we niust defend it, if not. there
goes a circle in the Pacific." he said.
He said if the Com nu1ni sts gain con trol
of Thailand they will cont ro l the Straits
or Malacca and the U.S. will be cut off
from all oil and gas supplies from the
Middl e East.
"If the straits fall, ti1c Communis ts
\viii be able to deny the U.S. and its allies
like Japan, Free Ch ina the vast supplies
of oil -and gas if we can get it, fron1
the l\'tideast," he said.
"\Ve cannot lose it If it falls. a grea t
part of our future goes down the drain ,"
he said.
Gold\\'aler obviously dirln't \Vant to talk
about the Watergate affnir, although he
did call it "lhe \\'Orsi scandal Ill
A1nerican politics in the last 40 vears. •·
He dismissed speculation 'by con-
servat ive colwnnist \Vitlian1 F. Bucklev
lhat he cou ld talk Pt·c~ident Nixon intO
resigning.
UPI Tt l .... "9
CONSERVATIVE SPEAKS OUT
Sen. Barry Goldwater
Boy Nabs Coke Bared Estate Nixon Transactions Getaivay Tric ycle, To y Gu1i Left
STEVENAGE, England IUPI)-"How much is that can of Coke?"
asked the little boy, barely peering over the shop co unter.
A clerk quoted fhe price to him and put the can on the counter.
The boy pulled out a gun, let fly with a volley of Ping·Pong balls,
grabbed the Coke and r an. But he left his gun and getaway vehirle
-an orange and white tricyrle.
Shop manager Ra y Stanford has offered amnesty.
"If he plucks up the courage to come clean and pay for the Co ke.
he can have the bike, the gun and the balls he pelted1everyone with,"
Stanford said.
"The little feUow was no more than 4 and it is worrying me
how miserable he nlust be feel ing about losing hi s trike and his gun
for a can of Coke." ·
Pornography Charges
Thrown Oztt by Judge
Overruling vigorous protests by the
prosecu!ion. an Orange County Superior
Court judge late ~londay threw out all
charges flied against a man the district
attorney's office has claimed is a prin-
Buena Park's
City Manager
Dies at Age 53
C.rorge Bahner. 53. city manager of
Buena Park, died Sunday in La ~firada
Community Hospital of an apparent
heart attack.
Bahner had been manager of the city
for the past seven years. He entered the
hospital last Tu esd ay after suffering a
heart attack.
Be.fore taking the Buena Park position
in 1966 he wa s assistant city manager or
liawthorne and city manager of Tulare.
A veteran of both World \\'ar II and the
Korean conflict, Bahner had been criir
pied by polio since 1953.
Rick Wykoff. named acting city
manager last week, will continue to serve
in that capacity until a permanent suc·
cessor is chosen, Buena Park officials
said.
cipal in a nationwide pornography
racket.
Judge James H. \Valsworth's ruling
eliminates Tony Zappi, 48. from the
group of defendants "'ho must now go on
trial Oct. 9 on charges stemming rrom
the confiscation of a 11 e g e d l y
pornographic literature unCQvered in a
Uis Alamitos "'arehouse.
Zappi is the son of reputed fi.1affia
chieftain Ettore Zappi. 68, a New Yorker
1\·ho currently faces extradition pro-
ceedin gs after an earlier scheduled trip
to Orange County v.·as postponed by a
series of illnesses.
The elder Zappi and most of bis eight
codefendanls ha ve been indicted by the
Uis Angeles Coun!y Grand Jury on ide!}-
tical pornography charges and arc
awaiting court action in that city.
Named \\'ifh the nine individuals in the
Orange County indictment is Suki Inc. a
distributor or allegedly pornographic
materials that is identified by pros-
cutors as the age-ncY to-Which some
100.000 magazines valued at more than $1
million \Vas shipped early th is year.
Los Alamitos police have confiscated
the 2.000 cases of magazines plus a
number of photographic plates and
negatives. All 'A'ere found in the Catalina
Street v.•arehouse operated by the ac-
cused group, police said.
By JO:IN vGERZA
01 lh1 C•llY Pilot SllU
Details of an intricate series or secret
purchase agreements involving La Casa
Pacifica and nearly 30 acres of prime
oceanfront laild in San Clen1ente can1e
forth from the \Vhi!e House r-.tonday
along with revelations G.C. "Bebe"
llebozo "'as one of the tv.·o 1ni llionaire
friends of President Nixon involved in
most of the financing.
The disclosure made by Deputy Press
Secretary Gerald \Varren "'as an ad·
nlitted attempt "to put asJertions of i1n-
propriety to rest" by issuing a full
auditing or the transactions since July 15,
1!169 -the C:ate that the President sealed
the deal.
The prime issue has not been the
parcel on which the Presidential Villa
sits -about 5.9 acres -but, instead,
more than 20 acres of fallow land which
lie inunediately inland of the old C.Otton
estate.
That parcel is actually a blend of one
major purchase from the Cotton heirs
and a minor buy from Nixon's neighbor
J. J. Elmore. a millionaire Democrat.
* * * Nixon Departi1ig·
Cle1ne1ite H 01ne
Before Holiday
President Nixon reportedly plans to cut
shc..rt his Labor Day weekend visit to San
Clemente and fl y bac k to the nation's
capital late Wednesday, reliable sources
said earlier today.
The only confirmation to come thus • ·
Crom the White House staff. however. is
that the Chief ExecLtive planned to leave
"later in the week." Early in the visit.
t:,c working vacation was planned to last
well beyond tr~ :i...a OOr Day weekend.
Reports circu\atiut, in San Clemente to-
day said that initially :he departure was
to have been today, but that notice "'as
too short for a pullout.
Deputy Press Secretary Gerald Warren
gave no specific reason for the change in
plans, but did concede that the President
hoped to be with "as much of the famil y
as possible" over the three-day weekend.
Warren added lhat the sojourn prob-
ably would be at the Presidential
retreat at Camp David, Md .
Evangelist Begins Crusade
Billy Graliarn Ope1is Witliout Disse1it iri London
LONDON (AP ) -An1erican evangelist
Billy Graham launched his fifth British
crusade today, undaunted by bomb
scares at his teach·in at London's Earl's
Court Stadium.
Graham's activities were atlacked la st
week by one Anglican weekly as "hit·
and-run" evangelism, and a British
churchman called bis crusnde "wealthy
BOMBS Give BRITAIN
THE JlnERS-Story, P1gt 4
Christians in the West indulging in five
days of spiritual luxury.''
But as the crusade opened. no dissen·
tlog . voiei!.s were heard, and among
Graham 's sponsors were san1e English
churohes.
Nixon Suppo1·t Urged
An estim ated 20,000 persons were in
the London stadium for the star to
"Spre--e 73" -for "Spiritual R~m·
phasis" -: in which the 54--year-old
Graham plans to train evangelists and
Christian crusaders.
The week·long session, described by
Graham's organization as a "Bible teach·
in" will end Saturday with a mass rally
in the huge Wembley Stadium, where
Graham will be backed up by singing
stars Johnny Cash and Cliff Richard.
The bomb warnings came after a week
of terrorist incidents that have left Lon·
don jumpy. Police searched the stadium
but found no explosives.
The 75·minute session Monday, a
"'arm·up rally for the marathon teach-in,
opened with performances trom pop
singers and a Swedish choir clad in blue
jeans and yeJIOw sweatm. The stage
was flanked by two giant screens on
which images of the performers Oashed.
organizations around the world who are
to attend the training sessions from 9
a.nl . to 9 p.m. every day until Friday.
The $550,000 cost of the teach-in has
aroused criticism, too. Church groups
claimed Graham's crusade was siphori.ing
chu,rch funds .
The evangelist's multimillion-dollar
organization. based in the United States,
denied th is and said the teach-in was
financed by money from other sources.
All delegates pay an $8.75 registration fee.
Makeup Ba11clits
Hold Up Hospital
Two men wearing CQveralls and with
their faei!s covered with theatrical
makeup robbed the emergency room of
the Santa Ana Com1nunity llospital, 600
E. Washington Sl. early today.
In all, the one finan cier throughout the
entire series of trans<.clions was
millionaire Ne\v Y or k industrialist
Robert Abplanalp. \\'hose in terest in the
loans to the President amounted to $1.2
million. A partner during one phase of
the transactions was Rebozo, the Florida
millionaire \vho with Abplanalp 'vas an
original partner in a firm set up as the
01\'ner of the fa l10111 land near the Nixon
estate.
The rationale for the in tricate ex·
i:hanges since 1969 holds that the Presi-
dent did not want so much land, but was
forced to-crimmit-"'himself to purchasing
the vacant section in order to obtain
\\·hat was deemed a family goal -the
5.9-acre estate where the residence sits.
Abplanalp is listed now as the owner of
the fallow land , but unlil the White House
d1S\.:losed details of ownership it "'as
known only that the entire matter \vas in
trust administered by Title Insurance
and Trust Company.
The disclosures and full accounting,
Warr.en said,. came at the President's
personal expense (the sum was not
detailed).
\Varren said t he "internationally
res pected" ffrm of Coopers and Lyb rand
of Ne\v York did the probing or Nixon's
records and legal documents related to
the transactions.
The New York Titnes reported today
'
BOSTON (AP) -Romana Acosta
Banuelos, U.S. treasurer and highest
ranking woman in the Nixon ad·
!"'inistrtttion, Monday urged the country
to unile be.hind the President. ''Our na·
lion should not he divided but come
together to suppo1·t our elected represen·
tatlve, the President," Mrs. Banuelos,
who founded a Los Angeles Mexican food
company, told the American Numismatic
Association convention .
Graham strode onto the bare stage to
begin his address with a prayer. Police said the pair entered the room -,o<
''All the world seems lO be caught up
in a very~climactic moment In history/'
he said. "What an hour ror thousands-of
young people to be meeting here not in' a
drug scene but Jn a scene glorified by
Jesus Christ. This generation cannot
escape Christ."
Graham will speak every night on dif·
!~rent -aspects of religion to the
estimated 121000 delegates from Chrl11Uan
at S:4<l a.m. through the ambulance door.·
One .suspect held three em ployes at gun·
point while the other pried open the
narcotics locker.
They escaped with a large quantity of
narcotics including Demerol and Nern·
butal, oflicers said,
The victin1s said the makeup the ban·
dlts wore was very heavy with huge
eyebrows pos_,lbly made of cotton wads.
I
Coope rs and Lybrand used to be called
Lybrand, Ross B r ot h c rs and
h.lontgomery. and three top executives of
the company 1vere co nvicted in 1968 of
mail fraua and filing false slate1nents.
The Titnes said Nixon gave all three n1en
a com plete pardon Dec. 20. 1972.
flowever, \\'bite House press secretary
Ronald Ziegler told the Times that the
men pardoned by President Nixon had
withdra\\'n from the accounting firm .
haVe not been with the firm for years and
that the present partners had nothing lo
do with any presidential pardon.
The firm 's report sho1rs that as of the
end of last "°lay the President O"'ed
$340.000 on hi s share of the costs for La
Casa Pacifica. The property has been
valued at abou t $1.5 n1illion on the
current market.
Under the deaL Abplanalp and Rebozo
pa id $1 ,249,000 for 23 acres of the estate.
enabling Nixon ,to \vrite off $625 .000 in
unsecured loans from Abplanalp and to
purchase the remaining 5.9 acres that in-
cludes his homesite at a cost of $340,000.
The property 'vhich Abp lanalp o"·ns
lies at the do\vncoa,st1 side along the coun·
ty line and farther south lies the Coast
Guard Loran Station \Vhich doubles as
the \\1estern \Vhite House.
On the inland side the border is a fence
rWllling along the access road to the
Loran gate, and on the upcoa st portion
1)astures still 01\·ned by Elmore (a
thoroughbred breeder) serve as the bowi·
dary.
To"'ard the coast lies the driveway
linking the Nixion home \Vifh the \Vestern
\Vhi te ~louse .
lronic<Jlly, \vhile the La Casa Pacifica 's
grounds are in1maculately tended, the
portion owned by Abplanalp is a dry,
1veed·choked section contalning mounds
of dirt and rubble.
Dead trees also dot the landscape and
no improvements have been inade there.
ll is visible from the Cyprus Shore colon y
-the most expensive neighborhood in
San Clcn1ente.
The report showed Nixon had paid out
a tota l of $402,439 in interest. principal
and improvements. The president still
owes $264.44-0 .on an estate which cost
hi m, along \Vith the improvements he
subsequently made, a total of $468.424.
Although Warren detailed the audit
\Vas complete;··nowhere in the documents
is there an indication as to the exact
a1nount or cash which Rebozo kicked in
when he and Abplanalp formed the B and
C Investment Company in December of
1959.
Sometime this past month Rebozo sold
his interest to his partner (the sum again,
1vas not disclosed in the audit report )
and, thus, Abplanalp emerged as the
man holding all lhe notes to the entire
Colton Estate parcels.
THE ' $55
·TELEPHONE
CAii
Each day. Pacific Telephone
Operators receive over one
million calls for numbers
1bat arc already listed in the
telephone book. In a
single year, the operator
expense for J1andlin g all
these calls is fiftv.fivc
m illion dollars. ·so if you're
concerned about the cost
of your telephone service,
please look tip numbers in
the phone book \Vhenever
you can. Of course, \vhen·
ever you can't find tile
number, \ve're here to help.
@PacilicTelephone
-
..
I
,, ........... J . Tuesd11, Auqust 28, 1973
Qualie Rocks Mexico;
Deaths, Damage Told
From Wire Services
MEXICO CITY -A severe earthquake
jolted four states from Mexico City to the
Gull coast today and the Red Cross said
more than 100 persons were kiJJed when
the quake toppled a 12-story apartment
building in Orizaba, 120 miles southeast
of Mexico City.
At least 34 other deaths were reported
and more than 1.000 persons were in-
jured.
"Dozens more are trapped In the
building (in Orizaba) waiting to be cut
out," Jose Garduno, secretary of the
J\Jexican Red Cross, told UPI.
"The situation is extremely grave. We
are preparing to send rescue expeditions
from Mexico City to Orizaba."
lndin, Pakistan Heal
Some Wounds of Battle
NEW DEL!fl (AP) -India and
Pakistan, striving to heal the WOWK1s of a
\Var that ended 20 months ago. today
signed an agreement permitt ing the
rele8$e of about 90,000 P a k i s t a n i
prisoners of war.
The Pakistanis were taken during th e
December 1971 India-Pakistan \va r
fought over the creation of Bangladesh in
what had been the eastern wing of
Pakistan.
Their continued detention by India was
the chief stumbling block to a final set~
ilemeat of the war. The Bangladesh
government of Prime Minister Mujibur
Rahman had threatened to try a small
group of them on war crimes charges for
alleged atrocities during the war and the
Pakistani military occupation that
preceded it.
e Skylab Shootl1111
HOUSTON (UPI) -Tne Skylab
astronauts add photographs of volcanos,
swamps and possible hidden oil deposits
to their scientific treasure chest today.
Alan L. Bean, Owen K. Garriott and
Jack R. Lousma, in the 33rd day of their
record 59-day flight, also plaMed
medical experiments, sun gazing and a
televised guided tour through their living
quarters in the eight-room space home.
e Gaudet Still Jailed
TAOS, N.M. (AP) -Edwin Gaudet re-
mained in the Taos County Jail today in
lieu of $25,000 bond on a charge of assault
with intent to ki ll a city policeman during
a Secret Service manhWJt last week.
,,·here a contmemorative LBJ stamp was
issued. It went on sale in post offices
across the nation today.
e Ex-11 1111 ci Sl1opllflcr?
GLEN BURNIE, Md. (UPI ) -Of.
fi cials of Sears Roebuck Company refus-
ed to comment Monday on reports that
Eliz.abelh Mc Alister, a defendant in the
Harrisburg, Pa., tria1 on charges in-
volving antiwar activities had been ar-
rested on shoplifting charges.
The fonner nun and wile of antiwar
priest Phillip Berrigan was arrested with
another woman, Judith Lafemina, also a
for mer nun, on charge$ by· a security
guard at the Sears store in Glen Burnie,
Md.
Bombing Jitte1·s .
Sweep Britain
In New Attacks
LONDON (API -Police sealed off the
chamber of the House of Commons today
after a suspected terrorist bomb was
discovered in the building.
London, hit by 30 explosive devices in
the last 10 days, was suffering a bad case
of the jitters and the city was on a tense
bomb alert.
.,,LICE, WHO believe the bombs are
The Red Cross also reported two dead
in Cordoba and two in Puebla. The
governor of Puebla State said 30 persons
probably died in Quecholac village.
There were unconfirmed reports of
deaths in Japala and Tchuacan, in Vera
Cruz State.
"More than hall the buildings of Ori·
zaba have been destroyed," Ricardo
Mejia, the local Red Cross chief said.
"\Ve have more than 1.000 persons fn..
jured. Three hundred of them are in
hospitals."
SGT. RAFAEL Limon ol the Puebla
Fire Department said five homes and
two churches in and around Puebla were
reported destroyed. or badly damaged.
The earthquake, measured in A1exico
City at 7.0 on the open.ended Richter
scale, hit moments before 4 a.m. local
time (3 a.m. POT}, The seismology sta-
tion reported it was centered about 129
miles south of here near the Puebla-
Oaxaca state line.
Quakes reading 4.5 and up are con-
sidered potentially dangerous.
"The Church of Our Lady of Perpetual
H~lp in the center of town collapsed,"
Limon reported. "We have had many
calls."
Limon said another church, in the
village of Tonazintla near Puebla, had
also suffered serious damage.
"The earthquake was strong here. I
don't remember another one as strong."
There were no reports of serious
damage or injuries in Mexico City. But
several hundred tourists, most of them
Americans, fled into the streets and
afterward stood in front of hotels or sat
on the curb at the U.S. Embassy
awaiting word on the safety of their lodg-
ings .
THE QUAKE knocked out power.
however. in parts or the capital and
police reported hundreds of calls from
frightened citizens.
Earthquakes and tremors are not
w1usual in the Mexican capital . In 1957 a
quake measuring 7.0 on the Richter scale
caused widespread damage and several
deaths. Another lighter quake in 1968
caused one death. Seismologists say they
record more than 2,000 tremors a year in
Mexico City.
The December earthquake that ravag-
ed Managua, Nicaragua, was reported
variously from 6.5 to 7.2 on the Richter
scale but damage was severe there
because the quake was centered under
the city.
·•
U~ITel ........
AERIAL RECONNAISSANCE PHOTO SHOWS HUGE COMMUNIST BUILDUP AT 'BASE
Expanded Runw1y Could Hold Jets; lntens ified Supply System Staged from Khe Sanh
Ii.he Sanh Bigger Than Ever
Reds Rebuild Ex-U.S. Base
WASlilNGTON (AP) -The North
Vietnamese have violated peace accords
by transforming the onetime U.S. base at
Khe Sanh in South Vietnam into a major
military complex, say Pentagon officials.
Defense Department analysts say the
Conununists have built new roads
leading south and west, big storage and
repair facilities and restored and enlarg·
ed the old air field.
* * * * * * Cambodia Troops Fight
To Open ,Supply Lines
From Wire Services
PHNOM PENH -Conflicling reports
out of the Cambodian capital today in-
dicated at least one and possibly both
Communist roadblocks on vital Route 4
to the sea may have been smashed by a
lightning thrust of government armored
troops. •
KllE SANH, they said, is now pro·
tected with an air defense shield reminis·
cent of that surrowlding Hanoi.
A new road network along the western
side of South Vietnam as well as the
revitalization of the Khe Sanh previously
have been reported but not in such deta il.
lt was not clear why, with apparently
little or no chance that Ciongress would
approve any return of U.S. airpower to
Indochina, that Pentagon officials chose
now to comment again on the Khe Sanh
buildup.
Officials, who asked not to he quoted by
name, deny they are preparing Congress
for any new request for new autOOrity to
bomb. Such authority disappeared by la\\'
with the Aug. 15 bombing halt in Cam·
bodia.
IN DETAILING THE Communisl build·
ing in northern South Vietnam . one offi·
cial said trucks have been moving large
quantities of supplies into the Kbe Sanh
since the cease-fire.
Gaudet appeared alone b e r o r e
Magistrate Norberto Martinez on Mon-
day. He said he would have to consul t
with an attorney before entering a plea
to the charge, but he told a newsman he
would plead innocent.
e Center Renamed
the \\·ork of the Irish
Republican A rm y
which is fighting to
drive Britain from
Northern freland ,
warned more bombs
were expected. Paid to lJ'atch Democrats?
Associated Press reported t o d a y
government forces drove all the way
down the highway to the seaport town of
Kompong Son, Cambodia's on I y
deepwater Port and a vital link in the
supply chain.
Some 300 tons of material is stockpiled
In the open, protected by hundreds of
37mm and 57mm antiaircraft guM and
su rface-tcrair missiles the size of
telephone pales, he said. HOUSTON (UPI) -The Manned
Spacecraft Center \Vas o f f i c i a 11 y
dedicated the "Lyndon B. Johnson Space
Center" on the 651h anniversary of th e
late president's birthday Monday. His
widow, Lady Bird Johnson, attended
ceremonies renaming the Houston space
complex.
A day of events in Johnson's honor
began in Austin, at the LBJ Library,
Senator Bible
To E11d Career
LAS VEGAS , Nev. (AP) -Sen.
Alan Bible (D-Nev.), today an-
nounced he would not seek re-elec-
tion , ending speculation about his
political plans.
Bible said he was making the an·
nouncement more than a full year
in advance of his retirement
because he believed "it is only fair
to give Nevadans ample op-
portunity to make a determination
as to my successor.
"I bow out of the Senate at a
time when my state has n1any fine
potential Democratic candidates,
who, in my opinion, are extremely
well qualified to represent our
state."
First reports of the
Parliament find in-
~ dicated the sus·
MRS. MUltRAY ~ted cigarette
pack bomb was spotted by a bomb.
detecting device in a lobby near the
chamber. But some experts believed tin
foil lining in the pack could have activa~
ted the detector.
Some of the bombs planted In London
have been hidden in cigarette packs.
These were incendiary devices and few
ignited.
Police took no chances and halted all
tours of the building. Parliament is cur-
rently in recess, and no legislators were
believed to be in the Commons, the lower
house of the British Parliament.
The rash of bombs in Britain spread to
the British Embassy in Paris today after
hitting the Washington embassy Monday,
wounding Nora Murray, an Irish-born
secretary.
INVESTIGATIONS by B rit ish
authorities and the FBI are continuing
today after it was learned the bomb was
mailed from Britain.
Mrs. Murray's left hand was torn off
by the blast and her right hand was
severely injured. She was opening mail
at the time. She was listed in good con-
dition today.
The bombing wave has resulted in
tightened security precautions for the
visit to Ireland today of British Prime
Minister Edward Heath.
01otiner Reveals Second
Agent in 1972 Campaign
WASlilNGTON (AP) - A second
$1,000-a-week Nixon campaign agent was
ide!'ltilied today by Newport Beach's
Murray Chotiner, a long-time Nixon
political associate.
Chotiner said he hired Correspondent
Seymour Freidin to report on the ac-
ti vit ies of Democratic presidential can-
didates in 1971 and 1912.
CH011NER said Freidin. no w
reportedly based in London, sent him
first-hand reports on the activities of all
the leading contenders for t h e
Democratic presidential nomination dur·
ing the period leading up to last year's
party convention.
He said threse included Sens. Edmund
S. Muskie of Maine, Hubert H. Humphrey
of Minnesota and Henry M. Jackson
of Washington, as well as the eventual
nominee, George S. McGovern of South
Dakota.
Chotiner said he also received in-
cidental information about tl_>e campaign
former Los Angeles Mayor Sam Yorty ,
but that Freidin did not join Yorty's en-
tourage.
Freidin followed the McGovern cam-
paign for a time after the Miami Beach
convention, but found other employment
in September and quit the political agent
job, Chotiner said.
IT WAS then that Cbotiner hired Lucy
Goldberg , who also posed as a reporter
while filing daily reports to Oiotiner.
Mrs. Goldberg stayed with the McGovern
campaign until the November electioo.
Columnist Jack Anderson, who disclos-
ed Freldin's job with the Nixon campaign
in a column published today, quoted
Freidin as acknowledging that he worked
as an agent for Cbotiner. (Anderson's col-
umn appears regularly on the editorial
page of the Daily Pilot.)
Anderson identified Freidin as a
former executive foreign editor of the
now-deflmct New York Herald Tribmie,
and said he is now head of the London of-
fice of Hearst newspapers.
Fair Skies Brighten U.S.
"\Vhat I was trying to do was pull a
Joe McGinnis," Freidin was quoted as
saying. McGinnis is author of '1The Sell-
ing of the President," an insider account
of Nixon's 1968 campaign.
Temperatures in the 70s and 80s Over Nation
Te1nperatures
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DAILY PILOT
DELIVERY SERVICE
Delivery of Ille Dai~ Pilot
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ALTHOUGH acknowledging that he fil.
ed reports to Chotiner, Freidin protested
vigorously that "I never spied, • '
Anderson said.
Chotiner also avoided tming the word
"spy."
"I do want to erQPhasize that there was
nothing there that a good reporter
would not have been able to pick up," he
said of Freidin's reports.
He said the reports were faster, longer
and more detailed than what often was
found in newspaper accoo.nts of the cam-
paigns. He said they Included details of
schedules , speeches, crowd reactions and
the like. CbotlMr had prevtowdy char·
actertzed Mrs. Goldberg's work in the
same maMer .
2 Meet Over Chamber
MOSCOW (Ul'I) -Communist Party
General Secretary Leonid r. Brezhnev
met today with Donald M. Kendall,
chairman, of the board or the new U.S.·
Soviet Chamber of Commerce end
chalnnan of Pepsico, Inc., ~ Tass news
agency said. Tass said the two dlscuMed
"!he importance of the actJviUes Of the
chamber in expanding Ccmmercial and
economic co0peratlon between the two
countrit:s."
United Press International, howe'ver,
indicated one stubborn guerrilia position
across the highway was pre~nting Its
complete reopening.
THE CAMBODIAN capital's othe r ma-
jor supply road, !Ilghway 5 to the rice
belt in the northwest, still WM blocked by
the insurgents.
Assoc.ia.ted Press reported f r o m
Highway 4 that a dozen annored person-
nel caniers and nne 300 infantrymen
pushed through a road crossing at 'lbnal
Totoeng, 18 miles west of Phnom Penh.
and began patrolling both sides of the
highway.
The general commanding the Cam·
bodlan force said that the Khmer Rouge
insurgents had withdrawn a mile off the
road alter being pounded with artillery
and heavy mortars.
Recent heavy rains have helped. slow
down the fighUng and have widened the
Mekong River to such an extent that su~
ply convoys can usually escape fire from
the banks by staying in the middle of the
stream. A convoy carrying ammunition
and fuel arrived in Phnom Penh during a
90-minute downpour Monday t b a t
dumped so much rain on the city many
of the streets were flooded.
TIIE ARRIVAL of the convoy came
just as residents of refugee jammed
Plmom Peoh were heglzming to feel the
pincll of higher prices brought on by
shortages of rice and fuel.
Food prices have skyrocketed in the
capital because of the cut roads with rice
rising 30 percent and pork doubling in the
past two weeks. ,
In other action, the government sent
fresh troops to the aouth ol Phnom Pooh
today for an apparent new push to reca~
lure the town of Selhbo, whlcll has
changed hand.o twice in !es• than a week.
Field reports said government soldiers
were heading down Highway 30 In U.S.-
made transport trucks and massing at
Prek Tapao, a mile and a half from
Sethbo.
AEC Monitors
Russ Signals
WASHING TON (UPI) -The
Atomic Energy Commission said
today II mooltored seismic algna!a
of an apparent new Soviet un-
derground nuclear tesL
The elgna!s, recorded at •!>'
proximately 8 p.m. (PDT) Mondoy,
originated in the northern Kazakh
desert-lri the Soviet Union, the AEC
said.
An AEC spokesman said the bla&t
signals were ~uivalent to an
anderground nuclear expla.!Dn In
!he range ol 20 to 200 kilotons.
He said troop barracks also are visible,
and that one of the new roads into Khe
Sanh includes a recently constructed 151>-
foot steel bridge. He said another road
runs south to Kontum province, site of
some of the heaviest recent fighting
between South Vietnamese and Com-
muni!t force!.
Most roads are said to be two-lane
while some are paved or covered with
gravtl. Oflicials said they carry all types
ol military supplies.
'111E SAME officials indicated other
smaller North Vietnamese bases are
under construction in other parts of
South Vietnam.
U.S. Air Force photographs ol Khe
Sanh are taken from high-flying un-
mauned drone plane!.
Officials said the runway at Khe Sanh
has been lengthened from 3,400 feet to
nearly a mile long, allowing It to handle
the large.st Soviet MIG jets and other
planes. None have shown up so far.
,
A Pentagon analyst said tho North
Vietnamese have estabU.hed a lorward
base "from v1hich lo stage future air
operations."
Rehl in-Shooting
Carter Camp, president o! the
Amertcan Indian Movement
(AIM) has been arrested and
charged with critically wound-
ing lellow AIM leader Clyde
Bellecourt in a dispute. Belle-
court is in a stable condltlog
following long surgery.
•
Orange Coast
EDITION
Today's Final
N.Y. Stocks
VOL. 66, NO. 240, 2 SECTIONS, 32 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA TUESDAY, AUGUST 28, 1973 N TEN CENTS
Council
Newport Beach councilmer. Monday
night asked planning commissioners to
back off their recommendation to inlcude
oceanfront, Balboa Island and other con·
troverSial trails on the-city's master plan
of bicycle trails.
The unanimous request came after
l\1ayor Donald A. Mcinnis spoke out in
response to a Daily Pilot editorial.
"I'm going to do something I seldom
do, but I feel it's appropriate.' 'l\'1clllJUs
said as he began. "l am referring to the
Hostages
In Danger
By Gunman
STOCKHOLM !U P!) - A psychopalhic
gunman locked into a downtown bank
vault with a convict friend and four
hostages for six days wounded a
policeman and has turned the vault into a
virtual torture chamber, police sources
said today. They said he was extremely
brutal in dealings with the hostages.
Police drilled a series of one-foot holes
in the roof of the vault today to keep an
eye on gunman Jan-Erik Olsson, 32, and
possibly pick him off with a
sharpshooter. But Olsson fired a burst of
submachine gun firt: through one of the
holes and \rounded a policeman.
Olle Abrahamson, a 4-f..year"ld police
technician hit in the face-and in one
hand, was the second police officer shot
since lhe drama began Thursday. with
what appeared to be a normal bank rob-
bery. fie was reported in satisfactory
condition.
Stockholm Police Chief Kurt Lindrolh
canceled all news briefings today while
the police put into motion a new plan to
end the drama, which has lasted for
more than 125 hours .
A-fllitary psycOOlogist.s warned that the
victims ri sked serious mental injuries if the drama continues mu ch longer.
Lindroth in an emotional statement
111onday called Olsson a "beast" and
other police officials described him as "a
completely cold and emotionle ss
psychopath. who might just kill the
hostages if he feels like it."
They said his companion, convicted
murderer Clark Oloffson, 26, was not
much better.
Police Superintendent Aake Aakesson
said the gunman had carried out "ex·
tremely brutal" acts against the three
female hostages but that be could not
(Set TORTURE, Page Z)
Porno Film Czar
Reitano Jailed
In Child Molest -Joseph Reitano was held in Costa "'tesa
City Jail today .in lieu of $50,000 bail on
suspicion or two further cases of felony
child molesting.
The 6G-year-old Costa A1esan, who
already faces an earlier charge of
molesting an ll·year-old girl, was rear·
rested Monday morning by Oct. George
Wilson.
Wilson declined to reveal details of the
new aUegations but said that Reitano of
1845 Anaheim Ave., was taken into
custody because of bis aUeged in·
volvement with a 10-year"ld girl and an
11.year-old girl, both from Costa Mesa.
AU three alleged molestation incidents
were alleged to have occurred since the
first of the year, Wilson said.
Reitano had been free on his own
recognizance while awaiting arraignment
on the Drst molestation charge, but bail
wu placed at $50,000 by Harbor Judicial
Dilitrlct Coort Judge Donald Dungan
after he learned of the additional
charges.
Reitano lists his profession as self·
employed watchmaker.
Earlier this year, Reitano was arrested
in connection with the discovery of 1,000
. .reels of ellcgedly pornographic movies
by Newport Beach police.
SKID ROW LIFE
, VISITED TODAY
Skid Row Is an alfilction of almost
every major American city. The
derelicts and castoffs of society gravitate
the.re and scratch out a life most people
would never call living.
. Associated Preu sent a photographer
.nnd reporter Into one such area to record
e documentary on Ille along Skid Row.
The result is on Page 24 today.
Fights Planners' Trails Plan
editorial pcige of tonight 's paper,
tonight's Daily Pilot ... "
Mclnnls denied that the original Bicy·
cle rails Committee had been disbanded
for political reasons, saying in!ltead it
was reconstituted because councilmen
found member! were appointing their
own members to the panel.
Mcinnis also denied that he Is trying to
keep West Newport beaches as "private"
as possible.
"fl1ay I refer the Daily Pilot back to
some of their recent photographs of the
beach and the other recrealion areas in
town wherein well over 100,000 people,
many, many, a bwxired percentage of
whom do not even belong ... don 't even,
are not even residents of the City of
Newport Beach partake of these recrea·
tional facilities."
Mcinnis also denied th.at the revised
plan -which lists the "controversial"
trails separately and recommends they
ARTIST ASKEW AND HIS 20-FOOT MUSCLE MAN
P1ul Buny1n, Suparm1n and Other Larg•r·than-llfe Heroes
Artist's Folk Heroes
Stand Larger Than Life
By RUDI NIEOZIELSKI
01 IM DlllY l"llet Slaff
Paul Bunyan does exist and you can
see him "topless'• in Costa Mesa.
Anti-nudity ordinance or not, he stands
at 1661 Superior Ave., arms akimbo, with
his enonnous feet planted six feet apart.
Artist Eric Askew left his 20.foot giant
to shiver there in the sea breeze, wearing
nothing but bikini bri efs, until the good
ladies in Lake Forest made him some
clothes.
Then, properly attired, he will preside
over the community's Paul Bunyan Days.
But it will take some doing because this
Paul Bunyan is 20 feet tall.
An even bigger job 'vas building the
fiberglass colossus in the first place, ac-
cording to Askew. It took three months to
get the job done.
The statue, consisting of a fiber glass
sheU over a steel frame , was built in sec·
tions. Hands, feet and head were mad e
separately, the front and back torso in
two large sections, and the whol e thing
cemented toge ther.
"With difficulty," Askew adds.
"Th e job would have been easier if we
could have used more resin but lhe finish·
(Set GIANT, Page !I
'Cheat to Win~
Uncle Advised Derby Race Winner
BOULDER, Colo. (UP!) -Robert
Lange Sr. admitted today he told his
nephew to cheat to win the 1973 National
Soapbox Derby by building a magnetic
device in the nose er his green racer.
"! determined lhat he sbould build and
install a ~gnetlc nose so as to be com·
petitive with the professional cars he
would be racing against," Lange said.
"I knew lhat this was a violation of the
official derby rulff and consider it now
to be a serious mbtake In judgment," he
'said.
James Gronen, 14, was disqualified by
derby officials and forfeited a $7,500
scholarship for winning the race becaUSt!
of an electromagnet found in his car. The
device, discovered by X·ray after t.pe
race, pushed Gronen's car away from the
derby's metal starting gate.
An Elk Grove, C.lllUf., boy was namtd
winner after Croncn was disqualified .
George W. Brittain, pn!stdent of the
All·Amcrfcan Soap Box Derby, Inc., de-
• cllned comment on Lange's Jetter Wlli1
he had a c:bance to study ll
•
...
Lange, young Gronen's legal guardian,
released his statement after talks with
hb att.Orney. ~le said the admission was
his inst word on the incident and that
Gronen still was vacationing i n
Wisconsin.
Lange. president of the Lange Ski Boot
Company, out.side Boulder, said the cars
of the other top 10 finishers should be In-
spected for alterations th at were against
derby rules.
He denied pouring large sums of
money into development of Cronen's
racer and the car in which bl5 son,
Robert Lange Jr •• won the national derby
title In 1972. The 'Boulder district at-
torney had said the 1912 car cost between
•10,000 and $20,000 to build.
Derby rule1 limit spending on develop-
ment of racers to s.t<>.
"It Is foollah to suggest that any
substantlttl eq>ense went into: either of
(See CHEATS, Page !)
. 1 .. ,
be tabled at the present time -is an
"emascu1ated substitute."
"\Vhat have we emasculated? What
have we thrown away?" Mcinnis asked.
The editorial suggested that the con·
troversial trails should be approved by
the councilmen at this time.
Mcinnis also denied he tried to
pressure the reorganized citizens' com-
mittee into deali ng with the controversial
trails separately.
He said he appeared before the panel
al their request, which he said he'd do if
any similar body made a simil ar fequest.
He denied he suggested the committee
strip the master plan of the controversial
trails.
"'Nothing could be further from the
truth," he said.
I-le went on to say, HJ gave the com-
mittee a suggestion or two and then I
left ."
l\fary Blake, chairman of the citizens'
conunittee, and other comm i t tee
members have said ~1clnnis did suggest
the controversial trails be considered
separately.
Mrs. Blake appeared before cou11-
ciln1en ~londay night and said she agreed
\\'ith that suggestion because the com-
mittee would then be able to push for
development of non-controve rsial trails.
She said trails are needed for safety
reasons and the committee believes that
continued discu ssio n of controversial
(Set TRAILS, Page Z·
K ymla Urges Cuts
l(ill Apartments?
CoW1cilman Carl Kymla ~tonday night
called for the demise of all apartments in
Newport Beach and won a 4 to 3 city
council vote to order the plaMing staff to
reopen studies of the just completed land
use element of the general plan.
Kymla said projections that Newport
Beach's 55,000 population will double
prompted his proposal. It wou1d place a
maximum limit on dwelling units at eight
per acre. effectively eliminating any new
apartments or condominiums.
Girl Scouts
From County
111 Quaike Area
...
No \\'Ord had been received this morn-
ing from eight traveling Orange County
Girl Scouts and t".¥0 adult advisers, who
had been due to travel today from earth·
quake-shaken Mex i co City to
Cuernavaca, also in the damage ZJTie.
1be high school students from the
Harbor Area and five other county cities
were scheduled to attend an annual in·
ternational Girl Scout meeting this week.
Girls who left Aug. 23 on the two-week
MEXICO QUAKE KILLS MORE
THAN 100--Story, P1ge 4
Mexico trip Include Terri Bergman and
Sandra Kleeman, Costa Mesa; Mary Lou
Horner, Tustin ; Barbara L I n d s a y ,
Midway City; Jill Black, Los Alamitos ;
Karen Kalar, Garden Grove, and Susan
Thomas and Judy Leonard, both of
Cypress.
Their adult adVisers are htrs. Atichael
Welt, of Newport Beach and Mrs.
Edward Spurgeon, of Cypress.
The 10.member party is due back Sept.
5.
A spokesman for the Girl Scouts in the
Harbor Area said she did not know what
time the county girls and their leaders
had planned to leave f\1exico City oo their
journey today.
Authorities locally said they did not ex-
pect any immediate word, noting it takes
two hours to get a telephone call through
under normal, non-emergency conditions.
Fears for the girls' safety were
minimized somewhat by disclosure that
severest damage apparently occurred In
smaller towns and native quarters of the
quake-ravaged cities.
A spokesman at Girl Scout head-
(Set SCOUTS, Page Z)
ADMITS DERBY CHEATING
Wlnner'1 Uncle Leng•
•le said the density lid \l;ould not be
economically disastrous to developers.
''When you look at developments and
developers they 've all had a piece of the
action ... their share of apartments in
Newport Beach," Kymla said.
';No developer should come before the
council and say he cahnot attain a profit
on eight dwelling uni!s per acre. It is
being done all over," Kymla said.
Kymla said he wants the citywide
density reduction stud ies even though
planning officials said it w o u I d
significantly "delay completion of the
new master plan of development"
because he has always been in favor of
limiting residential densities to eight per
acre.
''I've been waiting for the proper time
to 6ay this," Kymla said. "Well, there
may never be a proper time, but the city
council has to take this problem headon.
"\Ve sat aroWld the table and talked
(Set DENSITY, Page Z)
'Airport Expansion'
Council Says Hearing
Needed Before Board
Orange County supervisors must con·
duct a public bearing before they can
construct a shelter over outdoor pas--
seng'.er holding areas or move the airport
director's office , Newport Beach coun·
cilmen declared Monday night.
The demand for the bearing came after
Vice Mayor Howard Rogers burled a
series of verbal barbs at airport director
Robert Bresnahan for recommending
what councilmen interpret as "airport
expansion."
"I fly an awful lot and I didn't think
from Bresnahan's report (to supervisors)
that be 's been to very many airports,"
Rogers began.
"He also says his office is in great
public view. \Veil , I think that is a vanity
item for Mr. Bresnahan."
Rogers questioned why Bresnahan
wants to move his office out of the
terminal.
Bresnahan won approval to relocate bls
office to the Mission Beechcraft building
just north of the airport terminal, saying
this will allow· expansion of tenninal
facilities lo accommodate passengers who
now must wait in an open area near
the runway after clearing the security
gates.
''I don't think they need to make more
room for passengers just so he can move
his office cl06er to the Airporter IM so it
can be handier for lunch and cocktails,"
Rogers said.
·"Mr. Bresnahan should look at other
airports -airports that are run more ef.
ficien tly than his airport," Rogers added.
"You're talking about the airport
manager of the·year," chipped in Mayor
Donald A. Mcinnis.
"What year?" Rogers replied.
"It's a diabolical plot to expand the
(See HEARING, Page I)
* * * * * *
Council Throws Support
To Group's Airport Fight
Newport Beach councilmen Monday
night threw the city's official weight
behind a citizens' group battling ex·
pansion of Orange County Airport.
While the city Is already planning to
file its own lawsuit against the airport,
councilmen pledged "every resource" to
tht: battle in an attempt to force county
supervisors to find a new commercial
jetport site.
Councilmen a d o p t e d a resolution
prepared by the citizens' gro11p, the
Airport Action Association (AAA ), which
says, in part:
"The city COWlcil of Newport Beach is
totally oommitteed to containing and
reducing the noise and pollution from
Orange Coonty Airport.
"We will emplcy every resource, in·
eluding legal action, to protect our city
from tbe fate of Playa Del Ray and
similar cities across the country that
have been devastated by noise from jet
aircraft, because they waited toO long to
take action."
The council came after personal pleas
Cabin Cntiser Runs
Aground in Newport
An la.foot c a b i n cruiser that ran
agrotmd on the beach tn West Newport
was finally removed about 2 p.m. Mon·
day, Newport Beach !Ucguards said I<'
d•Y·
The boat, owned by Nelson Caraballo
of Pomona, was stranded late SUndAy
night et ~ Street after a n!ported ti).
gine failure . Weguards sakl there were
no injuries .
by AAA officials, Including Marshall Duf·
field and Richard S. Stevens. Stevens is
also president of the Newport Harbor
Chamber of Commerce.
"Some might say it's a conflict for a
chamber of commerce to oppose an
airport," Stevens said, "because an
(Set AIRPORT, Pqe Z)
Orange Cout
Weather
It'll be wanner aloog the Orange
Coast Wednesday with tempera-
tures at the beaches in the 70s ri_s..
ing to the low 80s Inland. Patchy
low clouds will clear by mid--mom-
ing to £air skies.
INSIDE TODA\'
Their t1a1nes may not be as
toell k11own as Huglle1, Getty m~
flunt, but more tha11 a daze11
men havt risen from relative
ob1curltt1 to fortunes of $100 mu.
!ion or more t·n five uear.s -
despite an uncert.ain .stock mar-
ket. See 'Page 7. ..... ..,. It ............. " ...... • -l>U CIM,.,,.11 ... Mlfllttei .. .,_. • ClfltllOM ..... NtllMal N-• <"""' .. Ort!IM CMMY " c....-.. ....,. , .. 1,
OM!fl lfftl!M .. , ... M.111"9 .... ··'*"" , ... • ·-• ·--..... _.., ..... ,,._, ••n Woo-• .... !flt •e«ni .. • _. ....... ,.,4 --" w--•
..
I '
'
r
'•2 DAILY PILOT N Tutsday, August 28, iq73
Gas Scare From Pagel
Ma yor Def ends GIANT • • •
od model would have been too heavy to
move."
Mobility ts an im~rtant element of the
glant18 makeup. He s not just Paul Bun-
yan but instantly convertible into a ~
fc.ot tall football stllr, Supennan, or
virtually any other bigger than lire hero.
All he needs is the right clothes.
Police Actions
Newport Beach h1ayor l)()nald A,
f\1c1nnis staunchly defended the police
department ti.1onday against published
charges that it over-reacted to the poison
gas scare nine days ago.
Mcinnis said the department's decision
to clear nearly 75,000 persons rrom city
beaches on a sunny Saturday artemoon
was reasonable in vie\Y of fears that a
Cloud of noxious gas might engulf Oie
Const.
"1 "J think the palice acted CQrrectly even
,though the gas never actually showed
, p," Mcinnis asserted at an afternoon
~tudy session of the city council.
"And if an ertor was to be made," the
maror added, "I'm glad that it was made
on the side of safe ty."
Vice mayor Howard Rogers sald he
agreed with Mcinnis' views.
11The action of lhe police was proper,"
Rogers said. "If there was any over-
reaction, it was the pre~ that over-
Fro1n Pa9e 1
HEARI NG ...
airport and to handle 1'-1r. Bresnahan's
vanity," Rogers asserted.
And taking issue with another of
Bresnahan's statements to county
. supervisors. Rogers added, "and the rest
rooms are not inadequate. I've never had
a problcn1 going to the bathroom, that's
a bunch of garbage."
"We have been assured from time to
time they (county supervisors) oppose
any expansion of the airport," Mclnnis
went on. "Well, this is expansion and it
can't do anything but lead to increased
passenger activity at the airport."
Councilman earl Kymla pointed out
that the supervisorial policy on hearings
exists and said it is not too late for them
to conduct a hearing.
Noting that the approvals have already
been given Kymla said, "We can still ask
them to adhere to their own policy."
Councilman John Store noted that
Bresnahan's report says there could be a
50 petcent increase in airport passengers
-from 1.2 to 1.8 million annually -
~·ithout an increase in flights.
"If that's true. they should im-
, mediately cut down the number of flights
today to handle the load today ," Store
suggested.
*'
Fron1Page1
AIRPORT •..
airport means economi c growth and
should get the full support of a cham·
ber."
But Stevens went on to cite his group's
history of airport opposition and pointed
out it has reaffirmed that position
several times.
He cited t. poll or members that show·
eel 60 percent want no increase in jet
traffic, 20 percent ""ant all jet traffic
eliminated and 20 percent want ex-
pansion.
"The situation should not, cannot re-
main static,·• Stevens said.
Representatives of seven homowners'
associations, including former ~1ayor Ed
Hirth a Blurfs resident~ supported the
AAA ~eqJest before councilmen.
1\-fayor Donald A. tl1clnnis spoke in
favor of the proposed resolution.
"The council has been going on since
1968 ... ad nauseaum adopting resolution
after resolution. attending meeting after
meeting f.o request supervis~;s to ~o
something about the problem , t1tclnn1s
said.
"At times we thought we were ac-
con1plishing things" but al! efforts "bore
no fruit ," Mclnnis said. .
He pointed out councilmen ha~e
recently instructed City Attorney Denrus
O'Neil to file legal action against Orange
County. ·
ORANGE COAST N
DAILY PILOT
The .Or1nvo Co.ti! OAIL Y PILOT, wirh ""'lctl
Is comt>lnld the Ne ..... Preu, ;, wOl!.tl..:I Or
Ille Orfn;t (oa1! Pul>!l•hlng Co.,,oany. Sftle,
r1!f edition• 1r1 Pt;bllt"911, Mond1r lhro119tt
Frk11y, for Cosio Mtu, N9Wllfl'I 81Kh,
'iuntlrigton 811cl\IFount1ln V1lley, UQll'lt
e.eacn, lrvlM/51~lfbadr; Ind Stn Clemente/
S•n J'ltln C1piltr11'1111 A 1lnol1 r~ioMI
ediHon is O\OO!i1Mod S.lurd•Y• •!'Id 5VllOIVS.
Tfle prlntlPlll Pl/ob!llMng Pllnl l• II ~)I) Wnl
81)' Slrfft, COS!I Meu, Calllatnll, tl61'.
Robert N. W11cl
P1nklen1 Incl PuOll"'•'
J1dc R. Cutl1y
VIC• fl rnldtnl •"'1 Ctner•I M1,,..;tr
Thai.iii K11vil
Ea1~r
Tho.,,•• /II., Murphi111
Mtn..al11g i!;d!!OI
l: P1t1r Kri19
Nt'"llQrf 8t"lt (11y Editor
Newport ltec.11 Office
]])) Ntwport 8011/1v1nl
M•ili119 Aclclr111: P.O. 8011175, 9266)
~o....,
COlll M1J1: 1a W'*! llf Str"I L.tt-lHCfll: m flll'MI Avtnu.
HU!llif"OIOn ... ell: 17171 SHdl &oul .... 1f'd
$.1111'1 c~"' l05 Nortfl £1 c1 ..... 1no R .. 1
T ......... C1t4J '42 .... 121
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Co0yr191tt. lf7l. 01'111C1t C.\I Publl$11tnt
CO<'nlloltl'IY. N• _. '**· trlu11r1tlllf'lt,
H l!Orlll 11'1111« II' llClvtfflHITltf'l!J 1t1Al11
""'Y lit ~ wl"'Dl.11 lO'telll 1111'•
•ll•IGon ttl CIOO'frlll)f ._'
~ Clltl _, ... Nld to! Cot!I Mtu, c111 ...... re. Su9Kn.t1o11 01 ,...,", n.u
ll'IOll!tltv; "' tnlll u,u mot1!fllt1 f'llll!te!Y
llt<ll!Nlloftt GM INlll'l'lft,
reacted for criticizing what was right
and proper for lhe police to do."
TI1e Daily Pilot Sunday published an
editorial in which it said the evacuation
plans of Newport Beach and •luntington
Beach were confused. It urged lhat more
"orderly" enlcrgency procedures be
devised for future use.
Mcinnis went on to urge that Newport
Beach join with other cities in Orange
County in coordinating en1ergency pro-
cedures.
"This city should lake the initiative to
£ind out how we should handle this kind
of problem In the future," Mcinnis said,
Mcinnis added, "Last Saturday showed
that if we do have a countywide
etnergency procedure, il doesn 't work."
However, most or the time he will
stand outside Zuver's Gym in Costa
Mesa, encouraging men to bulge In the
same places he does.
Later in the year, the 57-year-old artist
will build a taller, 5().foot model. The
hands and feet are already made but
Askew won't say for what purpose the
larger giant is being built.
"It won't be as difficult as it sounds,"
he announces cheerfully. "I learned an
awful lot from the small one."
The "small one" was built on a light
budget, but the lack of financial reward
was more than balanced by lhe satisfac-
tion he derived from the project, Askew
maintains.
.. The 1nodel is expected to interest
many boys in weightlifting and if just a
few youngsters get as much benefit from
training with weights as I have, I'll feel
\veil repaid."
Newport Beach police said last Satur-
day that they made the decision to clear
city beaches aftl.'r they received official
notification that a cloud or "noxious gas"
IYaS drifting in the direction or Orange
County.
However, the gas cloud , rrom a leaking
chemica l plant in Carson, never reached
!he Orange Coast. It drifted inland over
portions of Westminster, L-Os Alamitos,
and Cypress, according to police ac-
counts.
U'I Tlltflttolo POL ICEMAP.. !CENT ER;, AIDED BY OTHERS AFTER BEING SHOT BY SWEDISH GUNMAN
Orama in Stockholm Bank Vault Took Violent Turn in Week-long Confrontation
To Aske\v, now a resident of 20152
Orchard St., Santa Ana Heights. exercis-
ing \Vith \Vcights has always been one of
the keys to good health. When he was -14.
he stood four feet six in sneakers and
"sported muscles like spa r rows '
kneecaps."
From Pagel
TRAILS ...
trails is slowing its 1\·ork.
The original bike trails commil!ee, the
park. beaches and recrcaticJ commission
and the planning Commission had all ap-
proved the master plan, including the
controversial trails.
Planners sent the master plan to coun·
cilmen last May 14.
Councilman CarJ Kymla said he
believes waterfront bicycle trail develcp-
ment "hould be sta1'.wd until the city finds
ou~ if California intends to enact legisla-
tion that would provide subsidies to
beach communities who must maintain
recreational areas for non-residents.
As recommended by councilmen in
re~ui:ning the plan t.o the planning com-
rruss1on, the follo~;ing trails are now con-
sidered ''W>Controversial :''
-West Newport and Peninsula Point
oceanfront.
-BaJboa Island bayfront.
-Lido Isle.
-!\fariners Drive.
-Upper Bay (below bluff!ine).
-Environmental Nature Center at
Newport Harbor High School.
From Page 1
TORT URE ..•
confirm rumors that Olsson repeatedly
raped one of the hostages, a 31-year-old
molher of two.
One police officer, who refused to be
identified by name, said Olsson and his
accomplice "have turned the vault into a
torture chamber. They are extremely
brutal. \Vhat's happening d0\\'11 there
makes me \Yant to thrO\V up."
The three women hostages were iden·
tified as Mrs. Birgitta Lundblad, 31; Miss
Kristin Enmark, 23, Miss Elisabeth
Oldgren, 21, Sven Saefstroem, 25, is the
fourth hostage.
The psychologists said the risks for the
t"·o older women appeared the greatest,
especially Olsson's threat to hang the m.
Police sources said the new plan in·
eluded a combined attack through the
holes in the roof and the double steel
door to the vault.
The holes were covered by bulletproof
glass and Lindroth placed p o I i c e
sharpshooters at each one of them in the
hope that Olsson and Olofsson might
relax for a moment and give the police a
chance to shoot before they could harm
the hostages, the sources said.
Police also brought new cutting torches
into the bank hall this morning. 'Ille
torches are capable of cutting open the
double door to the vault.
He might still be In thal kind of shape
today if he hadn't seen some old
"Strength" magazines while browsing
through a second hand bookstore.
Seized by weightlifting fever, he decid·
ed to put on some muscle but discovered
Y.'eighlifting equipment was not available
in the New Zealand town where he lived.
So he made his own.
Lead fish weights, melted in an old can
and poured into a flat hole in the ground
made clumsy but serviceable weights
y,·hich he fitted to a length or pipe.
Askew's mother, some\vhat less en·
thusiastic, enrolled him in the Auckland
School of Art to distract him from
weightlifting. Instead, he pursued both.
becoming an artist and ultimately the
Junior Australian -New Zealand
Featherweight lifting champ.
Art and weightlifting have crossed
paths many times throughout the years.
On one occasion, v.·hile acting as judge in
the World Weightlifting Championships,
he was besieged by visiting athletes v.·ith
requests for portraits. A few years later.
he was called to York, Pa., to apint a
series of murals for the WeightJifting
Jlall of Fame.
Weightlifting and art combined again
this summer when he was commissioned
lo desigri the giant for gym owner Bob
Zuver. More recently, he has been engag-
ed to illustrate a book on that ancient
strongman, Hercules.
Councilmen did change the wording of
the citizens' committee recommendation
that called for a "moratorium'' on study-
ing the controversial trails.
"I can't support a moratorium," Coun-
cilman Kymla said.
UPI Ttltflltolo HELD IN BAN K -Bank clerks held hostage in Swedish bank vault
are Birgitta Lundblad, 31, top left, Kristin Enmark, 23, top right;
Elisabeth Oldgren, 21 , bottom left and Sven Saefstroem, 25.
Police are monitoring every word said
inside the vault via s e nst t iv e
microphones and other wiretapping
equipment.
Officers working at the monitors said
Olsson "uses a language and behaves in
a way one wouldn't believe it we didn't
know it was true."
At present. Askew is CQmpleting work
on an exhibition of paintings to be given
in Texas. The subject of this showing is
another type of strongman, the American
cowboy.
A CQwboy's life was rough, difficult and
unglamorous, acCQrding to Askew, who
has traveled from Montana to Texas in
search of genuine cowboy folklore. Councilmen approved a suggestion hy
!\fclnnis to "table the controversial
trails until the council suggests they be
studied from time to time."
From Pagel "The old-time cowboy," says Askew,
"was a rugged, hard-working, long-ruf·
fering individual, often belligerent when
drunk. but friendly and peacable when
sober. Vice Mayor Howard Rogers said he is
also concerned about int~r1nixing pedes--
trians and bicyclists and wants that prob·
!em studied.
NEWPORT DE NSITY ••• He Really
He said be, too, is concerned about
careless and speeding bicyclists and criti-
cized PBR Director Cal Stewart for say-
ing enforcement of speeding is a problem
"~ause you can't have a policeman on
a bike with a speedometer chasing some·
one."
.. I'm looking for something besidl's
rrivolous and smart·aleck remarks."
Rogers snapped.
From Page l
SCOUTS ...
quarters in Orange County said anxious
relatives had been calling. but damaged
communications systems in the Mexican
capital city were creating problems.
f{eports trickling out of the quake-rock-
ed region indicated the site of the con-
ference , Our Cabana, an international
Girl Scouts-ope rated hospital, might have
to be used for an emergency medical
center.
about the density \vhen \\'e set a land use
plan for Ne'>"llOrt Beach and in all cases,
I supported a density of eight per acre or
bc\o\v."
Councilmen \\'ere l'•eighing modifica-
tions to the Irvine Company's Big Can-
yon development y,•hen Kymla an-
nounced his proposal.
"I cannot support these changes and be
consistent \Yith my vote on the general
plan," he said.
"I am now calling for the demise of <11!
apartment units in f\e\Yport Beach," he
said.
Kymla '>"'On support from Vice Mayor
Howard Rogers and councilmen Paul
Ryckoff and John Store in his request to
reopen the density isStJe.
Ryckoff moments earlier propo sed
sharp reductions in the number of ad-
ditional housing unlls to be allo'>"·ed in
Big Canon.
He said the community development
department proposal before councllmen
would have permitted J{)(H units. He
wanted that cut back to 384.
"We're dealing with an area that
Ne,vport Coun cil Actio11
Here in brief are major actions taken by Ne,vport Beach councilmen Mon·
day:
APARTMENTS: Told planning commissioners to r~pen general plan
studies dealing with population density and consider establishing a maximum
of eight dwelling units per acre, a move that could stop any new apartments
or condominiums.
AIR NOISE: Pledged "every resource" 10 back up their own and citizens•
lawsuits against Orange County effort in an attempt to force county .su~r
visors to find a new jetport or pay handsomely for damage they claim Jet
noise is causing to the Newport Beach lifestyle.
AIRPORT GROWTll: Demanded that county supervisors conduct a public
hearing before going ahead with planned expansion of terminal facilities.
BIKE TRAILS: Told the planning commission to look at a revised ma ster
plan of bicycle trails that eliminates controversial bikcways along the ocean·
front and around Balboa Island and Lido Isle.
DEFEND POLICE' Heard Mayor Donald A. Mcinnis defend Newport Beach
police handling of the noxious gas scare two weeks ago.
TAX RATE: Adopted $1 .20 per $100 tax rate for fi scal 1973-74. The rate is
the same the ('il y has had the past lwo years. lndlvldual tax bills wJIJ go up.
however, depending on increases in assessed value determined by the Orange
County assessor.
PANEL QUESTIONED: Voted to send Jetter to Orange County riskin~ ex-
actly what powers the county Airport Commission has. ~fayor Mcfnnis ~aid he
doesn't think the panel has any at all.
figures to represent about 10 percent of
the predicted growth in Ne\vport Beach,··
Kyckoff said.
Kymla stressed that R-2 (duplex ) lots
'~'ould be excluded from his proposal. but
this led cotuicilmen to struggle for a
definition of "apartment."
Kymla eventually pinned it dov.n to
mean "any residential development. ex-
cept duplexes. tha t exceeds eight d1Yell·
ing units per acre .. ,
f..1ajor property O\vners that would be
affected by the change are the Irvine
Conipany and Beeco Ltd. 1rvine Con1·
pany general planning administrator
Larry Moore did not comment on
Kymla 's proposal, although he did urge
the.it cityy,•idc studies be undertaken and
individual projects not be singled out.
W .as Satisfi ed
Clinton Hoose, chairman of Saturday's
Newport Harbor Chamber of CQmmerce
Character 80<1t Parade. told the Daily
Pilot Monday he \Vas satisfied with the
conduct of the participants in this year·s
parade.
The story said he "'vas satisfied" when
it was sent to the paper's composing
room Monday morning. But it didn't
come out in type that way. It came out
in the paper Monday night saying he
"was not satisfied ... "
The Daily Pilot is not satisfied when
things like that happen. The Daily Pilot
regrets the error and any misunderstand~
ings it may have created.
"But glamorous he was not. Nor col·
orful . Except in the eyes of an artist."
Fro1n Page 1
CHEATS • • •
them .'' Lange said.
Lange said his nephew was not alone in
tampering with his car and that the
event had become "tainted" with
tampering not discovered "because of
poor inspection and lack of supervision."
He said he wanted Gronen's car to be
"competitive. Rule violations are com-
mon. The most frequently violated rule is
tampering with or altering the axles and
wheels which the derby supplies to each
entrant."
B11yin g A New Tract Home?
<
Many people buying homes are under the imp ression they HA VE
to buy ca rpe ting from th e homo sales center. In tho majority of cas ..
this is not true, although the sales office will try to make you th ink so,
-:i7The minut e the home center t ries to upgrade t he standard carpet,
then yo u are fre e to shop for carpeting. To prevent shopping should
constitute restraint of trade.
In many cases t hey will ten you that the carpet allowance does not
apply if you buy ca rp el outside. If they feel this is legal, HAVE THEM
PUT IT IN W RITI NG.
Ordinarily, we ca n save you a lot of money over what the homo
center offers. W e provide a larger selection -and we usually come up
with less yarda ge, plus a superior installation.
ALDEN'S
CARPETS o DRAPES
1663 Placentia Ave.
COSTA MESA
646-4838
HOURS' Moo. Tllru Thurs., t la 5:30 -FRI., t la 9 -SAT., t :JO la 5
'
•
VOL. 66, NO: 240, 2 SECTIONS, 32 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA TUESDAY, AUGUST 28, 1973
Mesa Artist: A Builder
By RUDI NIEllZIELSKI
01 ttt. 0..llY Piiot Sltfl
Paul Bunyan does exist and you can
see him "topless" in Costa Mesa.
Anti-nudity ordinance or Mt, he stands
at 1661 Superior Ave., arms akimbo, with
his enormous feet planted six feet apart.
Artist Eric Askew left his 20...foot giant
to shiver there in the sea breeze, wearing
nothing but bikini briefs, until the good
ladies in Lake Forest made him some
clothes.
Then, properly attired. he will preside
over the community's Paul Bun yan Days.
But it will take some doing because this
Paul Bunyan is 20 feet tall.
An even bigger job was build ing the
fiberglass colossus in the first place, ac-
cording to Askew. It took three months to
get the job done.
The statue, consisting of a fiber glass
shell over a steel frame , was built in sec-
tions. Hands, feet and head v.·ere made
separately, the front an d back torso in
of
t\\'O large sections, an d the \\'hole thing
cemented together.
"'Vith difficulty." Askew adds.
"The job would have been easier if u·e
cou ld have used more resin but tile finish·
ed model would have been too heavy to
move."
Mobilit y is an important elemen t of the
giant's makeup. He's not just Paul Bun-
yan but instantly convertible into a 20-
fc.ot tall football sta r, Superman, or
virtually any oth er bigger thar. life hero.
" -
Today's Final
N.Y. Stocks
c TEN -CENTS
All he needs is the right clothes.
HO\\'ever. most of the time he will
stand outside Zuvcr's Gym in Costa
r..~esa. encouraging men to bulge in the
same places he does.
Late r in the year, the 57-year-old artist
\rill build a taller, SO.foot model. The
hands and feet are already made but
Askew won't say for \Vhat purpose the
larger giant is being built.
"It \Von't be as dHficult as it sounds,"
(See GIANT, Page !)
Bani{ Vault Drama Ends
As Gunman Surrenders
ARTIST ASKEW AND HIS 20.FOOT MUSCLE MAN
P1ul 8uny1n, Super,,,.n ind Other Lar!l"r·t"!n·lifo Ii•!'!">
Plan11ers Order Mesan
To Clean Up Back Yard
Joseph Francis Kirby's yard was
formally declared a public nuisance by
the Costa Mesa Planning Commission
Monday night.
He was given exactly 30 days to clear
Porno Film Czar
Reitano Jailed
In Child Molest
Joseph Reitano was held in Costa ?-.1esa
City Jail today in lieu of $50.000 bail on
suspicion of two further cases of felony
child molesting.
The 60-year-old Costa Mesan, who
already faces an earlier charge of
niolesting an 11-year-old girl. was rear·
rested Monday morning by Det. George
Wilson.
au1ay two inoperable a u t o m o b i 1 e s ,
several mounds of dirt, lumber, trash,
debris and old furniture or to face pros-
ecution by the city attorney.
Kirby, 970 Victoria St., pleaded for an
extension through the remainder of the
yt:ar, but was turned down after City
Zoning Inspector Jim Weir informed
commissioners he had been after Kirby
tc clean his place up since Dec:. 4, lm.
After promising to comply with
Chairman H. J. "Jimmie" Wood's final
warning, Kirby told the commission he
did not follow the Weir's instructions
because "I figured he was beckling-·me
all the ~·ay. With you I'm more likely to
take action."
one of the major issures during Mon·
day 's public nuisance hearing consisted
of Kirby's outside storage of two in·
operable automobiles ln addition to two
others which do run.
Planning commissioners said they
wouJd have them hauled off at Kirby's
charge if they have either not been
repaired or removed from the property
within 1he. 30 day period. A 'new city
"junker"' o:dinance authorizes the
towaway,of inoperable autos.
BUILETIN
STOCKHOLM (UPI) -Police ended a
five-day nightmare in a Stockholm bank
vault Tuesday where a ")Wycbopatb" held
four persons hostage. Police said nobody
"'as burl.
Tbe gunma n, Jan-Erik Olsson, 3%1 ap-
parently surrendered to a threatened gas
attack by police. Five stretchers were
carried from the bank carrying the four
hostages -three young women and a
Girl Scouts
From County
In Qq~e _Ar~~
...
No word had Deen received this morn-
ing from eight. traveling Orange County
Gir1 Scouts and two adult advisers, who
had been due to travel today from earth·
quake·shaken M e x i c o City to
Cuernavaca, also in the damage zone.
11le high school students fTom the
Harbor Area and five other county cities
were scheduled to attend an annual in·
ternational Girl Scout meeting this week.
Girls who left Aug. 23 on the two-week
MEXICO QUAKE KILLS MORE
THAN 100-Story, Page 4
young man -and a convict friend of
Olsson.
The hostages appeared to be In relative·
ly good condition after their ordeal.
Olsson was led in handcuffs to an am·
bulance and driven to a nearby hospital.
STOCKHOLM (UPI) -A psychopathic
gunman locked into a downtown bank
vault with a convict friend and four
hostages for six days woWJded a
U.S.A.
MEXICO ,, ~ . --
Quake Hits Hard
policeman and has turned the vault into a
virtual torture chamber, police sources
said today. They said he was extremely
brutal in dealings with the hostages.
Police drilled a series of one-foot holes
in the roof of the vault today to keep an
eye on gunman Jan-Erik Olsson. 32, and
possibly pick him off \Vith ' a
sharpshooter. But Olsson fired a burst of
submachine gun ri~ through one of the
holes and wounded a policeman.
Olle Abrahamson, a 44·year-old police
GULF OF MEXICO
,.·~
Mexico trip include Terri Bergman and
Sandra Klee.man, Costa Mesa; Mary Lou
Horner, Tustin ; Barbara L i n d s a y ,
Midway City; Jill Black, Los Alamitos;
Karen Kalar, Garden Grove, and Susan
Thomas and Judy Leonard, both of
Cypress.
Map locates cities in Mexico where severe earthquake struck this
morning causing widespread damage and more than 100 deaths so
far. Many buildings collapsed in the temblor, which registered about
6.0 on the Richter scale. See details Page 4.
Their adult advisers are Mrs. Michael
Welt, of Newport Beach and Mrs.
Edward Spurgeon, of Cypress. Car Dealer Loses Battle
The IO-member party is due back Sept.
5.
A spokesman tor the Girl Scouts in the
Harbor Area said she did not know what
time the cowity gir ls and their leaders
had planned to leave Mexico City on their
journey today.
To Rezone Land for Lot
Authorities Jocally said they did not ex-pect any immediate word, noting it takes Plans by Cadillac dealer Richard Na-
two hours to get 3 telephone call through hers to establish a used car lot on the
und er nonnal, non-emergency conditions. fringes of the C.Ollege Park neighborhood
Fears for the girls' safety were received littJe sympathy from the Costa
minimized somewhat by disclosure that Mesa Planning Commission Monday . night. severest damage apparently occurred in The commissioners voted 5-0 to recom·
smaller towns and native quarters of the mend to the city council that Nabers'
quake-ravaged cities. request for a rezone on the parcel be
A spokesman at Girl Scout head· denied. Members of the council will
1s.. scours, Page 2) ------------
consider their advice Sept. 16 when they
meet on Nabers' expansion plan.
College Park homeowners appeared
before the commission Monday to pro-
test what they fear will be a commercial
intrusion into their residential neighbor·
hood.
The disputed parcel is located at the
comer of Harbor Boulevard and Prince-
ton Drive and previously contained a
home. The home was demolished by
Nabers three years ago.
Wilson declined to reveal details of the
new allegations but said that Reitano or
1845 Anaheim Ave., was taken into
custody because of bis alleged in·
volvement with a JO-year-old girl and an
11-year-old girl, both from Costa.Mesa.
All three alleged molestation incidents
were alleged to have occurred since the
first of the year, Wilson said. 'Cheat to Win!! The plot was planted with grass and
has remained almost a mini-park.
Unsuccessful in obtaining a rezone for
commercial use in 1970, Nabers began
pushing for his project again this month.
He has offered to seal off the small used
car lot with a landscaped block wall and
add other improvements to make it
"much more attractive than it is now."
Reitano had been free on his own
recognizance while awaiting arra ignment
on the first molestation charge, but bail
was placed at $50,000 by Harbor Judicial
District Court Judge Donald Dungan
after he learned of the additional
charges.
•Reitano lists his profession as self·
employed watchmaker.
Earlier this year, Reitano was arrested
in connection with the discovery of 1,000
reeJs of ellegedly pornographic movies
by Newport Beach police.
SKID ROW LIFE
VISITED TODA.¥
Skid Row is an a£fllction of almost
every major American city. T h e
derelicts and castoffs of society gravitate
there and scratch out a life most people
would never call living.
Associated Press SCflt a photographer
and reporter into one such area to"·record
a documentary on life along Skid Row.
The result is M Page 24 IAlday.
I
U11cle Advised Derby Race Wi1111er
BOULDER, Colo. (UPI) -Robert
Lange Sr. admitted today he told his
nephew to cheat to wln the 1973 National
Soapbox Derby by buildlng a magneijc
device tn the nose of his green racer.
"I determined that he should build and
install a ~eUc nose ·so as to be com-
petitive wlih the profe.ssiOnal cars he
would be racing against," Lange said.
"I knew that this was a violation of the
official derby rules and consider It now
to be '"8 serious mistake in judgment," he
said.
James Gronen, 14, was disquallfied by
derby o!ficials and I or felted a 17 ,500
scholarship for winning the race because
of an electromagnet found tn his car. The
device, discovered by X-ray after the
race, pushed Gronen'a car away fl"om the
derby's metal starting gate.
An Elk Grove, catif., boy was named
winner alttr Gronen was disqualified.
George W. Brittain, president ol the
All-American Soap Boi: Derby, lnc., de-
cllned commenl . on Lange's letter witil
he had a dllmct to study it.
'
. ...
Lange, young Gronen's legal guardian,
released his statement after talks with
his attorney. He said the admission was
his last word on the incident and that
Cronen still was vacationing I n
Wisconsin .
Lange, president of the Lange Sid Boot
Company, outside Boulder, said the cars
of the other top 10 finishers shoold be in·
spected for alterations that were against
derby rules.
He denied pouring large sums ol
ntonoy into dcvelopn1ent or Gronen's
racer and the car in which his son,
Robert Lange Jr., won tbe national derby
title in 1972. The Boulder district at·
tomey had said the 1972 car cost between
110,000 and $20,000 to build.
Derby rules limit spending on develol"
ment of racers to $40.
"It is loolish to suggest that any
substantial expeftse went Into either ol
them/' Lange aald.
UPI Ttl_,....
ADMITS D&RBY CHEATING
Winner'• Unclo Lango
1
Fuel Cm·bs Not
Affecting Edison
A spokesman for Southern California
Edison Company said today presidential
restrictions on the burning of fuel oil will
not affect the operaUoo of the Huntington
Beach power plan.
Because of a potential winter shortage
of home heating oil, President Nixon
>ifonday barred power plants and other
coal·bumer facilities from switching to
petroleum.
The Edison Company spokesman said
the Huntington Beach plant does not uae
coal and it already burns oil, therefore it
won't be affected.
The order may affect some or the
Edison firm's· desert power plants, he
said.
technician hit in the face and In one
hand, was the second police officer shot
since the drama began Thursday with
what appeared to be a normal bank rob-
bery. He was reported in satisfactory
condition.
Stockholm Police Chief Kurt Lindroth
canceled all ne\VS briefings today whi le
the police put into motion a new plan to
end the drama, which ha s lasted for
(See TORTURE, Page Z)
Newport Cites
Hearing Need
For Airport
Orange County supervisors must COD·
duct a public bearing before they can
construct a shelter over outdoor pas.-
senger holding areas or move the airport
director's office, Newport Beach coun-
cilmen declared Monday night.
The demand for the hearing came after
Vice Mayor Howard Rogers hurled a
series of verbal barbs af airport director
Robert Bresnahan for recommending
what councilmen interpret as "airport
expansion."
"I fly an awful lot and I didn't think
from Bresnahan's report (to supervisors)
that he's been to very maoy airports,"
Rogers began.
"He also says his office is in great
public view. Well, I think that is a vanity
item for Mr. Bresnahan.''
Rogers questioned why Bresnahan
wants to move his office out of the
terminal.
Bresnahan won approval to relocate his
office to the Mission Beeehcraft building
just north of the airport tenninal, saying
this will allow expansion of tenninal
facilities to accommodate passengers who
now must wait in an open area near
the runway after clearing the security
gates.
"I don't think they need to make more
room for passengers just so he can move
his office closer to lhe Airporter IM so it
can be handier for lunch and cocktails,"
Rogers said.
"Mr. Bresnahan should look at other
airports -airports that are run more ef·
ficienUy th an his airport," Rogers added.
"You're talking about the airport
manager of the year," chipped in Mayor
Donald A. Mcinnis.
"What year?" Rogers replied.
(See HEARING, Page 2)
Orange Coast
Weather
It'll be warmer along the Orange
Coast Wednesday with tempera·
lures at the beaches in the 70s ris-
ing to the low 80s inland. Patchy
low clouds will clear by mid-morn·
ing to fair skies.
.INSIDE T ODAY
Their names mdy not be as
well known 0$ Hug~s, Getty mtd
Hunt, but more tllan a dozen
me-ia have risen from rtlative
obscurity to fortunt1 of $100 mil·
lion or fnore: in five years -
despite an u1icertai·n stock tnar-
ket. See Page 1.
L.M. •• ,.. 11 AM Lttlcl.., " loetllll • Mt ..... "'n C•Hf'Mllt L"U Mutu•I P""'4'1 • ci.tt1f!H ..... Nat~,._.. • ,_ .. " OtHN Ctulll'I' .. <-" ...... ... ..
DMlll Nt1• .. StoU Mllrttls •t1 ''""rkl '"' • ,....,1 ...... " llllerl•l11MtM -_ ... ....
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2 bAILY PILOT c
Fron• Page l
• • •
Newport Backs
Airport Fight
GIANT
r II "I lcurnt:-d an he announces cheer u Y • ,.
awrul lot from the .. sma1.1 ~~fit Oil 11 light
The "small one wn~ . ancial reward
budget, but the lt1ck ~1t the satlsfac·
was more than balan · 1 A~kew tion he derived fron1 the proJtC · ·
malntalns. I 1 interest "The rnodcl is 1•x pi;tec ;JU~ if just ;l
1nany boys in \\'t't~ht~lftui~ bt•nefit fro111
few youngsters i.:et 11~ niut.:h \', I 'II frel training with weights a:, 1 h,i l
Newport Bench l'O Uncitmen r.tondny
night threw the city's official Y.'eii;tht
behind a citizens' group battUng ex·
pansion of Orange Cow1ty Airport.
\Vhile the city is already planning to
* * ~ f'rom Page 1
HEARI NG • • •
"It's a diabolical plot to expand the
a[rport and to handle i\tr. Bresnahan's
vanity," Rogers asserted.
And taking issue \\'ith another of
Bresnahan's statemenls to co u nty
supervisors, Rogers added . "and !he rest
rooms are not inadequate, I've OC\'e r had
a problem going to the bathroom. that·s
a bunch of garbage."
"We have been assured from time to
time they (county supervisors) oppose
any expansion of the airport," ~iclnnis
went on. "Well, this is expansion and it
can't do anything but lead to increased
passenger activity at the airport."
Councilman Carl Kymla pointed out
that the supervisorial JXllicy on hearings
exists and said it is not loo late for them
to conduct a hearing.
Noting that the 3pprovals have already
been given Kym.la said, "We can still ask
·them to adhere to their own policy."
CounCiJman John Store noted that
Bresnahan's report says there could be a
50 percent increase in airport passengers
,-from 1.2 to 1.8 million aMually -
without an increase in flights.
"If that's true, they should im-
mediately cut down the number of fli ghts
today to handle the load today," Store
suggested.
Police Probing
HoUI.up Mixup
By Two W 01nen.
A pair of Claremont women who al-
legedly threw the night traffic calendar
lnto turmoil may be back in Harbor
Judicial District Court on criminal
charges soon, fo\Jowin g a bizarre l\1onday
night incident.
They were initially taken into custody
on charges of armed robbery, when
Newport Beach police arri ved at the
courthouse at 4201 Jamboree Road .
Investigators quest ioned the suspects,
aged 18 and 19, at headquarters, then
ordeied them released ror lack of evi-
dence, but today are seeking complaints
charging the pair with disturbing tbe
peace.
Detective Sam Amburgey ls handling
the case, which authorities suspect may
have been a girlish prank that backfired.
Court cashier Ion ia Wright, 36, told
police she was confronted about 8 p.m.
by the gi rls, who sought directions to a
specific courtroom .
"Go ahead, do it," one of the girls
reportedly told the other as the stood
there.
The cashier claimed one suspect reach-
ed into her cubicle, tore off a desk calen-
dar page, scribbled on it and handed it
back.
"This is a holdup," it allegedly said,
with an additional reference to 3 gun,
which one of the women assertedly
simulated by sticking a fi nge r under her
blou5"!.
Investigators said this touched off a
great commotion involving the two young
women, cashier Wright, and a second
witness.
The alleged lady bandits apparently
panicked, fled upstairs on the run and
barricaded themselves in the \\'omen's
rest room, police said.
Braving the feminine facility, Sgt.
'fhomas Gleason of the Orange County
Marshal's Office burst into the ladie s'
room and took th e pair captive while the
cashier called pol ice.
OIANGE COAST CM
DAILY PILOT
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fil e-Its 0\111 h1"·suit against the airport ,
councilmen plt•rlged ''every resou rce" to
tht battle in an :lttempt t-0 force county
supervisors to find a new commcrci11l
jetport silt".
Councilmen a d o p t e d a resolu tion
prepared by the tilizens' group, the
Airport Action Associatil)n (AAA), which
says. in part :
"The city council of Ne\.\·port Beach is
totally committet>d la containing and
reducing the noise and pollution fro1n
Orange County Airport.
''\\le \l.'ill employ every re.source, in-
cluding legal action. to protec t our city
from the fate of Playa Del Ray and
similar cities across the country that
ha\'e been devastated by noise from jet
aircraft. because they waited too long to
take action."
Taking " Breaf,
well repaid." , 1r ''O \j~ ·ro Askc•w. no11 a r1·~1d1111 , . : ...
Orcha rd St.. S11111u A11:i lh:1ghts., i•'\t 1~1~f
in with "-'eights has always l>\ll 011'. ~ k to good l1ealth. \Vhen !11· "r•~ 14,
he steoodys four f~t six in sn1•ah(•rs ;ii~d.
\.,, Jl'll'l'OWS "sported niusclcs 111r ~ • ·
kneecaps." .
He rnight still br in that kind or sh"'r1
today if he hadn 't S1:C1! sonic , o \
''Strength" ntagazint'S \Vlllll' brow~i ug
throu h a second hand bouksiort' · . Sei~e<i by \Veighthft lll!! f('V('f. hl' t!f'eHI
ed to put on sorne n1ust.:l(' but disco~erf'd
wcighlifting equipnicnt l\'3S not uv:11l:lbl1
in the New Zcultlnd town ~hert• he hvcd
So he mnde his own. Lead fish y,•eights. n1elted in an old can
and poured into a fltit hole in the gr~und
made clumsy l>ut serviceabl~~ v•eights
which he fitted 10 11 length of pipe.
The council came after personal pleas
by AAA officials. including ~1arshall Duf4
fi eld and Richard S. Stevens. Stevens is
also presid~nt of the Nev.'}lOrl Harbor
Chamber of Commerce.
"Some might say it's a conflict for a
chamber of commerce to oppose an
airport," Stevens said. "because an
airport means economic growth and
~hould get the full support of a cham·
her."
Orange Coast visitor Kim 1t1artin, 11. of Midland,
Mich., pauses for what seems to be chat with elderly
couple and their do g taking break on bench at South
Coast Plaza. Papier-mache fi gures fashioned by stu-
dents at Davis Middle School, Costa Mesa, are ac·
tuall y part of summer Fine t.rts Workshop for SIU·
dents in Newport-~1esa Unified Scliool District and
Orange Coast College. Mall show ends Friday.
Askew's mother, somewhat Jess en·
thusiastic enrolled him in the Aucklund
School · 0{ Ari to dis tract him from
weightlifting. Instead. he pu.rsued both:
becoming an artist and ult1mately the
Junior Australian -New Zealatld
Featherweight lifting champ.
Art and weight!Uting have crossed
paths n1any limes throughout th~ year~.
On one occasion, \rhile acting as _JUdg~ in
the World \Veightlifting Cham p1onsh1~s.
he was besi eged by visiting athletes wnh
requests for portraits. A few years 1.ater.
he was called to York. Pa., to aptnt a
series of murals for the Weightlifting
Hall of Fame.
But Stevens \1•ent on to cite his group's
history of airport opposition and JXlinted
out it has reaffirmed that position
several times.
He cited £ poll of members that shoy,•.
ed 60 percent \Vant no in crease in jet
traffic, 20 percent want a!! jet traffic
eliminated and 20 percent want ex-
pansion.
"The situation should not, cannot re-
main static," Stevens said.
Representatives of seven homowners'
associations, including former ~layor Ed
Hirth, a Bluffs resident, supported the
AAA req..iest before councilmen.
Mayor Donald A. Mcinnis spoke in
favor of the proposed resolution.
"The council has been going on since
1968 ... ad nauseaum adopting resolution
after resolution , attending meeti ng after
meeting to request supervisors to do
something about the problem.'' 1.1clnnis
said.
"At times we thought we were ac-
co mplishing things'' but all efforts ''bore
no fruit." l\1c lnnis said.
He pointed out councilmen have
recently instructed City Attorney Dennis
O'Neil to file legal action against Orange
County.
From Page 1
TORTURE ...
more than 125 hours.
Military psychologists warned that the
victims ri sked serious mental injuries if
the drama continues much longer.
Lindroth in an emotional statement
Monday called Olsson a "beast" and
other police officials described him as "a
completely cold and e m o t i o n I e s s
psychopath, \\'ho migbt just kill the
hostages if he feels like it."
They said his companion. convicted
murderer Clark OlofJson, 26, was not
much helter.
Police Superintendent Aake Aak esson
said the gunman had carried out "ex-
tremely brutal'' acts against the three
female hostages but that he could not
confirm nunors that Olsson repeatedly
raped one of the hostages, a 31 ·year-o!d
mother of two.
One police officer, \l.·ho refused to be
identified by name. said Olsson and his
accomplice "have turned the vault into a
torture chamber. They are extremely
brutal. \\"hat's happeit ing down there
makes me want to throw up."
The three \vomen hostages were iden-
tified as Mrs. Birgitta Lundblad, 31; Mi~o;;
Kristin Entnark. 23. Miss Elisabeth
Oldgren, 21, Sven Saefstroem, 25, is the
fourth hostage.
Police Chopper
Brings Blood
To Hoag Patient
A t.1·oman patient at Hoag 1\-femorial
Hos pital was surviving today, after a
predawn race against time by the
Newport Beach police helicopter, fer-
rying a rare blood shipment from Los
Angeles, as surgeons fought to save the
victim's life.
The three vital pints of B-negative
blood "-'ere delivered to the hospital
helipad shortly befo re 2:30 a.m. into the
waiting hands or medical personnel.
flclicopter Officer Don Anderson and
his observer. Patrolman Harry William s,
n1ade the return trip on the 44-mile run
at 120 miles per hour, landing only 22
minutes after takeoff.
llospital officials said today the patient
was in regularly scheduled surgery when
the crisis arose, and so policy did not
allow ide nt ification of the victim or the
nature of her operation.
She was listed in serious condition, but
improving. '
Hospital officer John Taylor issued a
plea for help to police at 12:58 a.m.,
\\'hen the B-Negative blood could not im·
mediately be found In Orange County.
Limited supplies were avallable at the
Los Angeles C-Ounty Blood Bank and St.
Vincent's Hospital, where they were
picked up by Los Angeles policemen in
cars racing with red lights and sirens.
Officer Anderson landed the Newport
Beach chopper at LA.PD headquarters in
downtown Los Angeles and took off
v;ithin seconds for the return flight.
Fran Fordyce. a SJXlkesman for the
American Red Cross Blood Bank in Los
Angeles said f\l.'O factors led to the
decision to fly the blood the 44 miles to
Newport Beach.
"It is very rare and there was an ex-
treme emergency situation involved,"
she explaiaed.
If time had not been so critical, she
said it might have been JXlSSible to locate
some B-negalive blood somewhere in
Orange County.
She added that B-negalive blood Is such
a rare type it turns up statistically only
11h times among each 100 blood donors
who give to tbe Red Cross supply.
4 Americans Killed
BOGOTA, Colombia (AP) -Four
1\mericans are believed to be among the
41 persons killed r..londay when a Colom-
bian airliner smashed in to a moun-
tainside near Bogota and caUght fire.
U'f Titl#M1•
HELD IN BANK -Bank clerks held hostage In Swedish bank vault
arc Birgi tta Lundblad , 31 , top left, Kristin Enmark, 23, lop right;
Elisabeth Oldgren , 21, bo ttom left and Sven Sae!stroem, 25.
Newport's Mayor Backs
Police in Big Gas Scare
Weightlifting and art combine~ ~gain
this summer v.·hen he v.•as comnuss1oned
to design the giant for gym O\l.'Jler Bob
Zuver. More recently . he has been engag4
ed to illustrate a boo k on that ancient
strongman, Hercules.
Newport Beach ~iayor Donald A.
Mclnni! staunchly defended the police
department Monday against published
charges that it over-reacted to the poison
gas scare nine days ago.
Mcinnis said the department's decision
to clear nearly 75,000 persons from city
beaches on a sunny Saturday afternoon
was reasonable in view of fears tha t a
cloud of noxious gas might engulf the
const.
"I think the police acted correctly even
though the gas never actually showed
up," Mcinnis asserted at an afternoon
study session of the city council.
"Andi£ an error was to be made," the
NY Stnte Power
Cut 5 Percent
In Heat Wave'
NEW YORK (AP) -Voltage was cut 5
percent across New York state today as
the State Power Pool acted to protect the
generating system against a massive
blowout in the second day of a heat
wave.
Consolidated Edison Co. complied im-
mediately with the cutback requested by
the power pool, representing seven
private utilities and the New York State
Power Authority, by reducing voltage in-
New York City and Westchester County.
The temperature at 10 a.m. PDT was
92 degrees. Humidity was 57 percent.
The voltage cut - designed to stretch
available power without disconnecting
any customers -could be increased to 8
percent be!ore load-shedding would be
necessary to keep from overloading elec-
trical generators.
Con Ed said it might be forced to
disconnect some outlying sections of the
city in rotation !or brief periods if it is
unable to meet the load demand, created
mainly by air conditioners.
mayor added, 11l'm glad that it was made
on the side of safety."
Vice mayor Howard Rogers said be
agreed with Mcinnis' views.
"The action of the police was proper,"
Rogers said. "If there was any over·
reaction, it was the press that over·
reacted for criticizing what was right
and proper for the police to do."
The Daily Pilot Sunday published an
editorial in which it said the evacuation
plans of Newport Beach and Huntington
Beach were confused. It urged that more
"orderly'' emergency procedures be
devised for future use.
McJMis went on to urge that Newport
Beach join with other cities in Orange
County in coordinating emergency p~
cedures.
"This city should take the initiative to
find out how vre should handle this kind
of problem 1n the fu ture," Mcinnis said .
l\1c1Mis added, "Last 5aturday showed
that i! we do have a countywide
emergency procedure, it doesn't work."
Newport Beach police said last Satur4
day that they made the decision to clear
city beaches alter they recei ved official
notification lhat a cloud of "noxious gas"
was drifting in the direction of Orange
County.
llowever. the gas cloud, from a leaking
chemical plant in Carson, never reached
the Orange Coast. It drilted inland over
portions of Westminster, Los Alamitos,
and Cypress, according to police ac-
counts.
From Page 1
SCOUTS ...
quarters In Oraoge County said antjous
relatives had been calling, but damaged
communications systems in the Mexican
capital city were creating problems.
Reports trickling out of the quake-rock-
ed region indicated the site of the con-
ference, Our Cabana, an international
Girl Scouts.operated hospital, might have
to be used ror an emergency medical
center.
At present, Askew is completing work
on an exhibition of paintings to be given
in Texas. The subject of this showing is
another type of strongman , the American
cowboy.
A cow boy's life was rou gh. di!ficult and
unglamorous, according to Askew, who
has traveled from Montana 10 Texas in
search of genuine cowboy folklore.
"The old-time cowboy." says Askew .
"was a rugged, hard-working, long-suf-
fering individual, often belligerent when
drunk, but frie ndly and peacable v;hen
sober.
"But glamorous he was not. Nor col-
orful. Except in the eyes of an artist."
Violent Storm
Ki11s 3 People,
Injures 40 More
WEST STOCKBRIDGE, Mass. (UPI\
-At least three persons were killed and
as many as 4-0 v;ere injured today \\'hen a
violent thunderstorm accompanied by an
apparent tornado struck this western
Massachusetts community and flattened
a one-story truck stop near the
l\tassachusetts Turnpike.
The National Weathe r Service said
reports indicated a t'A·ister dipped from
the clouds to fl atten the Berkshire Ttuck
Plaza and Stateline Diner near the junc-
tion of the P.tassachusetts Turnpike and
Rt. 102.
Vera Field ing. public ttlations officer
at the Berkshire l\'lediral Center in
Pittsfield, said 21 persons were brought
to l\\'O facilities at the center.
Mrs. Fielding said many of the Injured
"looked pretty serious. some going to x-
ray and others immediately to surgery."
She said it was the worst mass disaster
the hospital has encountered "in a couple
of decades."
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this is not true, although the sales office wiH try to make you think so.
_, The minute the home center tries lo upgrade the standard carpet,
then you are free to shop for carpeting. To prevent shopping should
constitute restraint of trade.
In many cases they will toll you that tho carpet allowance does not
apply ii you buy carpet ou tside. If they feel this is legal, HAVE THEM
PUT IT IN WRITING.
Ordinarily , we can save you a lot of money over what the homo
center offers, We provide a larger selection -and we usu ally come up
with loss yardage, plus a superior installation.
ALDEN'S
CARPETS e DRAPES
1663 Placentia Ave.
COSTA MESA
646-4838
HOURS: Moo, 'l1lnr Tllon., 9 lo 5:30 -FRI. 9 lo 9 -SAT., 9:30 lo S