HomeMy WebLinkAbout1973-09-19 - Orange Coast Pilot•
I
. .., • ' ..
• rue uns ·1
WEDNESDAY AFTE.RNOON, sEPTEMBER 19, 1973
Bona_b Squad Blows C!p
L4.vyer f]ls Attache Case
voe.. ... ,NO, 161.1 SICTIOMI, ,,. PMll
•
• • ... ''· -~~·~-·· . ..,-
': .... ~ -.
Agnew-
.
--Bind
.
ln H-tfllfJtO!!
-'Businesses it
•
U~rd by "Bandits
. ~.
" . '
-·
·• .L .• d
. T -ai. ''. -.
"
• • • 0 •
N. -
IXOll
liond!11 IVucl: tbree lliintlncton Beach· Plllloe said tbe lolled.o.aUempt · toot 1"~"-,. 'flm!l,y and In oae holdup at-place at about 7:30 p.m. at tbe Photomat
1-11---""°pt,-the-wOdllM>e .......... lled0 emp1J-IH-Ellis Ave: wbep a JIWf'81DW!d
I baMN when Ille -cJert l>mltated lo give with a six-Inch miolver approached clerk llirn tbe money. Cathy' Predldo and demanded tbe
A twrney' s --
Briefcas e
•
Bloivn -J)p
--Ille -rqlsltt. ' "You"Ve got to be tlddinc," the dert
ttplied. ..,,. robber -ber be wian1 but be Oed .. lbe betl-lo
hand Ille C8lb over and a patron drovt up
lo the'sllnd:--~ ~-.
Pllllee· said tbe oilier two holdup · v!o-'
funs weren't u fortunate.
Santiago Gamboa'told police h< loot $34
lo tbree yomg _,. boys who' h<ld
· him at'lmlfo poilit lo.a t:ll a.m:robbery
of tbe Shoemaker Sbop, 15772 Springdale .
SL
'nle most eiploslve -at· Harbor He said .be·wu alone In the ahop when
·•--~udlc1al.-l>illr ~1 u.oe<Xllled by,lhe trlo.wbo.esc:a1poct~ - -. hmldled-!lr NewjlOit --~out-tbe'bllct onee they ·bod-talrelrlhe
W'olter Binnpr and the ollerll!'1 bomb money fri>In the cub register.
lqllad. A lcme -bmllt aot away with
Burister Beranc<r bod ror.iu.n hll Siii from Denny's col!ee ahop, 18177
now attacho ..,. ...,talDlnl niJoiu legal 8-h Bul"1, Jn a mldnllbt atlclrup,
papero llloaday .n.n-,, leoving It In a ~ =... delaibod 11 being Jn her ~ . early 20s, wu armed with a pistol and
.,.,.ty • mmblls -nodeed an escaped Jn a yellow car officers om!Doul black satchel 11 the nlgb\,lrlfllc i'eport<d. '
court ....... up.
,_ IDl1ibaiii wl!p ,.....Uy bod com-•
pleled a ICbool deollnl .with clMtrucUve T ks £.'~Did ,,. ' ' -'"' • dnlceo thouaht It look protty -· me ~ e, ,. -n ... ~ n • ~ ' • 'Ille cue ai.o looked like an auomey!1 • :>?01!1' ~·~p~n Is ·O!llf7~.Jeet long now, beeome .as big.around as •·telephone pole, He ex· bofuewortr: but no atlomeyl had boen In Bik T N ··11at .llbe Osi giowing at-the n!e of !WO feet a ·year. beCts.Candl toaualn 22 feet, but figures he will Ooar1 ~ oner-. eg ()() ear The bigb school" sophomore · fl:om Cosll Mesa ... ys have to get rid of ber when she is 16 feet "or else
· 'lb6 manhalt, iineW ,ff it wu a -' 1191119 pytbopa~ve grown u long as 32 feet and add ~ther room to the jlouse." ,
with a mercurf IW!tch a 1eolle lolid1 Sa CJ . . . v "-.. ,. • . .; ---.,.,,-----',-'------.:...,-.,.----"-..,---
llillbt •t it off. n· emente .. ., · ' · l tfto~~I=~.:= • •' ~~' • .~ I 'f _' • • k • .
Ftheblackleatberiatelielaad ' Two large trucks and •.pair of• • X•Sa eerae er Shows ·How -· halllod It out of Ille -boum·-:-motoreyi:Ies1tanflled In a combination of · , · ~
· down.Ille 'eorridor. coUlslani Tuesday nllht that left ,one of •. 1 ' . . :? .
"' IWlllal l!Ct"FAI l'-1 llld It wu..n the trucks lumbering driverless down the Lead ' c· . . c . c M ~ .-. ~ ~11re1n ~~ 'San~ Freeway for 11111 yan11. . ing itize..ns .r;n on aper in osta esa,
utKlC&le WU ~.,. -· ,_... ... ~· lllftlttp.ton called tt I ' j u. t
a tree OD Ille hunt lawn . • mirlculoUI" that oo1y minor lnjwie1
Sberlfl'i apeclalllto auached a -U -were ~ by the accident near $Ja BJ RUDI Nlll:DZIEL8IU • lile Ip prison rOamlng bis profession and spent two years In tbe can with Al ~ charp kl the ~ SUI ... Clemente. · . . ... ., - - -suffortng for bis mistakes, is sWI In Ille C.pooe. and how be kept bi s hand "in the
--1 llCIC!11"7 and : M. Jn. Tbe miJhapo occumd llhortly after I Guiding a thin wire pick lnlo the loclibustJnc business. business" by serving u Luvenwortb's '• "'Dlt blall .dlfi't burl the papers. p.m. -a lhree-azle Morine Corpo keyhole of a six-tumbler lock, "Red " "EverytbJns I> u It wu before, but locksmltb. , llde. ,!"" It llft dld dama{I the baW· truct -Ill• tank tnller IUddenly blew "lludensl<y'.:Jlnprs were rock-1teady as DOW !l's legal," be asued members ol
Ilg!. Pollel remarked. · Of a -t\1ver Sli1ea J. Phiillpo thre,; lie inllC<d fer !iii Costa Meaa caper. tliO LIOlll Club. lie ioldlhem bi IOI bli" It was 'Ill quite entertalning, but Red ~~==..~...it. •llla-.,tnd-1o30mileaper Thll '!!'aaeasyjob,requiringneilher 11111 job thnJusb Ille SL Paul cblef,of saidhewouldn'tdoltaglln. ""'£E w-11 a __.. · 1-a few 1"'18 fnlm Ille. w .. tem Wblte punch ...-Dltro, and thero was DO dancer pollco. • • "! actually IOI llclt of ll. I "311ted to ':':.)Ir, _..,,. --:i 10 •'iv;;.· bappJ'' llaue. • of ,llelnc an.oted.,&ocoe of Colla lilsa's R'""'-li:y, • -'-'!eGOf!l]tant " to S. be a master crimlnal but I was actually
• ' -..-AlaaPlaJa ' teJ>lall lliln a ,~ IOllthbGuncl leadln1fcltlzena ..... In Ol1 the job. :M Compaey. He -b far tbe security a prolesslonal looer.-"nlat's the .tiile f ~ bll 1"w.S:-l00(• • r11-movtnc at II miles per hour ad . Ills Red was In town lo teach u.n •)'Item! dMsiob: '11ley build Ille locks earned. I was n stupid us," said Red. -
•• ' driver Cir! Gaiicltrmcl bod Juli chan8od how lo burgle. • ' and RodeilitY tears. lhem apart, tbia . Stealing bagels and banaau from
JRS HI• •a Ga. mblen llnet, potrolmtn aold. "I usually lit. to do It as fut as tum-seoda the engineers bock_ lo tbe drawing pushcarts on the lower east side,
• •
.., · --Once Gonder'!"" llOllced tbe llowlng loc i Joey,". aold lbe muter aslecracker, bords. Rudensi<y said he got his start by his
rl1 ahead, It wu loo late lo atop, ofricers "'" 7$ yurs old, who said be had never Tuesday be came to Colla Meoa lo parents. They provided little supervision
-ted .. ..P .. .118.Jrom..&..li:ontana bOen.llopped by.;i.lock -1how-Offnllls--expertlae -tantollse--and never'othowed him the difference·
tnacldn1 ftnn .llammld inlo tbe· rear ol . lt look a llttle·lo'ilger than that and Red the I.Iona with stories fnlm1iia ctjmlnal between right and lirong. ·
the military truck. was upset. But he took revenge OQ a life. . He ran away from home when he was
'n1e impact threl'! Gondermtn rrom his mono oompllc~ted eight-tumbler vml9n · He told them how he became the· top 11 and escaped fror. the New Yqrk Stote
tractor and bis 111 cantlnued on down the and popped It open befooe you COtlld banana .In Leavenworth, how he once JW9rmatory In Elmira at tli!l age ol 14.
freeway without a drl-, finally •topping count to throe. "°"'prison hors wJth cfrtlce and busted !luclensky clalma lie heisted' more tban
• (See ~ ... II lludt!nlky, who spent SS years of his th<m oot after tbey crystallized, bow he !See 'BURGLAR,' Page 11
.. " I I
I '
I ,
•
Staff
Gold C1aims
Aides Began
. . '
'Rmilors'
WASlllNGTON (AP) -Vic Gold,
former press secretary to Vice Pr<sldenl
Spiro T. Agnew, charged today that top
White House aides Melvin R. Laird and
•
A · r Haig are responsible (OUDaDJ.'---""'
of the rumors and reports about Agnew'•
legal troubi<s.
"This is all"calculated by tbe Wblte
llome-lo•keepn~u..... '
Gold said. "I'm blaming the Whife llous&
staff .at the blgbest level, Mr .. llalg and Mr. Laird. .
"They operate tbe llall and lheJ -
wlio 11ys Wtiif. Wbeii an ·-White House source is quoled, lheJ -oo damned Interest at all In llndlnl out
who said it.
"In one case, Mr. Laird was the direct
sciurce, when he called Rep. (John B.)
Ander90n (R-111.), and told hln1 lo go
easy In bis support of tbe vice president.
And there have been reports that Mr.-
. :beenctelllngoBlorletl'llboot"Vl<e
President Agnew's ·tr o u b 1 es to the
diplomatic corpo In very IDlflatierllig
terms." •
Gold also said In an Interview there are
Individuals In the White llou!e """ very much want former Teus Governor John
Col)Jlllly to become vice president If and
when Asnew .reslim. .
"lbe number one member of the a..
naliy claque bas lo be Richard Nbon,"
Gold said. "This talk about CoaoalJ1
keepo goi111 on and on and be doel nol.
ooe damned thln1 to stop It."
Meaawblle, White Houle Deputy Presi
Secretary Gerald L. Warren tOday denied •
(I) there is ... dispoeltlon by the Wbii.'
(See AGNEW, Pap I)
•
Or .... _.
• •
.Weadaer
Mostly SUllllY 1bunday, to11o ... '
Ing some low clouds In tbe momlng
hours. Higha In the IOI at tbe
beocbes, rising to Ille mid-70o m.
land.
INSIDE TODAY . '
Th< Dailv Pilo~ along tDilh
200 otll<r n..,_, In Ill<
Vnil<d 'Stala, II JoifltnQ in .,.
e>p<rlment in co!te11< edtlc:udon
via the printed pagr. s., detaila
on Page 9.
Af l'M ttr.la I L.M. ..,.. 1 ........ a
Clllflnllt • c.,..,. c:.r-,, < ... HI.. t>Jt .-, M
C,_.... M
DMlll MMlfft 11
1:•1tt11M ..... ' •11tttft l11mt111 M-15 'lflNMt Jl..ia ,.,, -·-· u.,. .. _ .
·'--------~~~,J
•
• • •
'
Ni x on's Former Counsel Pleads 'Fifth' President .
.
From Wire Sc!r\·lces
\\' ASJfl NGTON -Charles \\' COison, a
former presidential 4pecial counsel, was
reported today I<> have pleaded the Fifth
Amendment to uvoid aosy.'ering questions
plit to him by 1he Senate \\latergate 1n·
vesligating committee.
Committee chai rnwn Sam J. Ervin Jr.
~Q.N,C.J. said that the questions were
put after the committee v o t e d
unanimously to reject a request by
Col.son's la11o·ycr that the interview be
A11itrak Pia••
postponed until lhe close of grand jury
action in volving Colson .
Ervin and vice chairman }foward 11.
Baker Jr. (R-Teno.J, aa.Jd1 bowevtt, that
C.olson said ht wo uld not only be willing
but also anxious to return and testif y
freely if he is not indicted.
But Baker said the committee received
indications th:lt grand jury action may be
imminent. •
Ervin said that Colson• in'Voked thi!
Fiflh Amendment to all substantive ques-
tions put to him.
San Juan to Get
Tw9 Rail Stops
By JOHN VAL TERZA
01 1M D.ilJ l"!lot Sl•tf
San Juan Capistrano. wfiiCh for years
has been without a passenger rail stop,
appears destined for two or them early
next y e•a r. a leading Amtrak official
promised this morning . But Saf'! Clemente
rail passeogers ~would have to ''donate''
them .
Ward Musick, a western region sta-
tions manager for the nationwide rail
firm. told members of the San Juan
t hat locil interest combined with major
plans to develop San Juan's old rail sta-
tion into a tourist attraction are tbe
reuons for the taking of two stops now
in San Clemente and moving them to San
Juan.
The two "borroWed" stops, he said,
still would leave San Clemente with other
·key stops ttirough the day and it would
not · affect the popular trains for
-beachgoers who travel by the hundreds
each ;week froin inland Orange Coonty
cities.
The northbound 8:20 a.m. train would
stop in San Juan and the southbound
evening train also fuight be stopped to
serve the city, Musick said.
From Pagel
'BURGLAR'. • •
The appearance or the official at this
morning 's meeting f o 11 owed an-
nouncements rrom local businessmen
ttiat pressure from the f\.1ission Com·
munity began the cam paign.
Thus far the idea has ·won th e en·
dorsement of ~fusick 's superiors who ad·
minister the \Ves tern Region of the na-
tional rail passenger corporation which
has heavy federal funding.
"But officials in Washington, D.C ..
i -t to make decisions and
it's now in t_h e i r b30ds. __ use t ey
can't possibly know all the local factors,
they rely heavily on our adviei!," he said.
A strong factor in endorsement of the
rail stop is the development of tbe old
Santa Fe station near the downtown area
into a railway-oriented restaurant where
diners would wait the i r tum in the
.~tission·styll! station room and· then
move to a string of a pld carriages on a
siding where they would patronize ·the
restaurant. . ,
A complex of specialty shops is alj<>
proposed for a nearby lot as well. ~ost
required city approvals for the project ·
have been rendered.
Besides promises of the service and
predictions that San Clemente patrons of
Amtrak would not complain i! the sched·
ule were altered somewhat . Musick ad·
ded a footnote about the success of Am·
trak.
Passenger figures, he said, have risen
at least 30 percent on a morithly basis
this year. and in the San Diego region, of
$50.000 before he was 15. which San Juan and San Clemente are a
He approached his frequent visits to part, the rate is even higher.
the slammer with the· same attitude as a The finn, he said, is ordering new
coJlege freshman. Rudensky was there to locomotives and carriages in an effort to
Ieam and living in the donnitory, ~s improve serviCe and is exploring the
part of il. possibility of using high-speed French-
"1 went into prison to learn safecrack-built trains oo some line.a.
ing. Where else would ytu learn bow to Those vehicles, however, might never
crack a safe? Yo11 don't go out into the make the run from Los Angeles and San
street and say, 'Hey, can you teach me Diego because the 100-year-old Sant.a Fe
how to crack a safe?'" · raiiwa'.y traveled by the san Dlegan has
Out of prison for the last 33 years, far too many curves for a fast, modem
Rudensky now believes that he was sick locomotive.
to single handedly "declare war on a na· And straightening of the curves.
tion ol 100 million people." He is firmly Musick s~id, wou_ld require rf ilr~i~:f
But he nortd : "As a lawyer. I must
note that a man is en titled to plead the
fifth Amendment even if he is not guilty
of ~ny offense ."
fie said the commillet has reason to
believe Colson has 3 good deal of in·
formation relating to the Watergate case.
But Ervin said the committee voted
unanimously noi to grant Colson im-
munity for any testimony he might give
before the committee.
Baker said there ~·as no indication thal
~'bat the committee mi&ht get in the way
of Information would be worth such a
gr an I.
Col9C>n met with the <.'OMmlttee behind
closed doors for nearly two hours.
Ervin said that because of Col.ion's
refusal to answer questions, {he com·
miltee would not call him as a witness
when pubJic hearing1-rt3Ume Monday.
Col!On once had been anxious to testify
before the committee. But his Jaw
parlnt>r, David Shapiro, advised the com-
uPt ,......,,.
AGNEW, WIFE ARRIVE FOR WHITE HOUSE DINNER
Vice President Refuses Commer.* on Rtsigtilition Rumor
Maria Callas Cancels
London Performance
LONOON (UP!) -Tempestuom diva
Maria Callas. whose acbeduled concert
Saturday -:-her first in eight years -
created a cultural furor here, bas cancel-
ed the perfonnance, a spokesman for
Festival Hall said today.
she once was an intimate friend of
Aristotle Onassis and their friendship
faded after J acqueline Kennedy came on
the scene -also played a role.
The spokesman said Miss Callas
canceled the concert on the advice of her LA Zoo Cra1ie eye doctor. · • .
mill.ff last week that Cobon bad become
a "target witness" of 11 federal grand
jury and now preferred not to testily
publicly.
Collon, &rim JD4. un~ •lltt hll
committee appearance. refused t o
answer feporters• quesUoo.s.
The three commercial t e I e v l s i o n
networks wHI-contlDue live coverage of
the Watergate hearings oo a . rotating
basls when the ·neit phase stJrt! Mon-
day.
AGNEW • • •
AsksCmh
For Needy
.
WASHINGTON (AP) -Presldenl Nix·
QO, arguing that prtS(Dt..proer:ama have
made Uncle ~sam "the b(uttt slumlord
tn bta1<>ry1" proposed to °'"""' today experiment.II payments ol cull houalni
allowances to the nffldy.
At the same time, Nlll\I) allllGiriled ad-
mtnistraUve acttona aimid at pOOVlding
up to 111.s bllllon of lddltlorial mortaaae
funds_clurla(Jllo _cumnt~tllll! !!!!1DOJ1
pinch. ·
In a special message, Nixon said pay·
men! of housing allowances -with first
... priorily going to the needy elderly -
House or the people in the \Vhite House eventuall y would get the federal govern-
to force the resignation of the vice ,presi-1nent out of the housing business and of-
denl, (2) the White House is exerting fer the best promise of providing "decent
... pressu~e on the vice president to re~ign" hou sing for all of our families at ilD ac-
and (3) the White House has been the ceptable cost."
source of stories that Agnew was think· Rather th an ask Congress now for a inf about resigning. major new ~using subsidy proeram,
Warren said he would have no rurther Nixon in effect called for a new study ol
comment concerning Agnew Wltil Atty. cash allowances so final declaioos on
Gen. Elliot Richardson has acted with
4
their wisdom .can be made rate next year
respec t to poS$ible + presentation of the or early in 1975.
Agnew matter to a federal grand jury in James T. Lynn, secretary of Houainc:
Baltimore. and Urban Development, 1~d that U the
Warren said it would be inappropriate allowance program were adopted u an
to offer a White House comment on the alternative to present pUblic housing pro-
vice president's situation or to accept grani.s, the annual coot could reach '4
questions oo the subject. billion to $11 billion.
Leaving a luncheon TUes'day where he The aJloy;ance payments, Nllon said.
acted as host to visiting Pakistani Prime "would be carefully scaled to make up
Minister Zullikar Ali Bhutto, the vice the difference between what a family
resident was confronted by newsmen could afford on its own ·for h:wing and
·an as w r e was g _ 0 ~ sere and-llDi _-_ ~ that geographic area."
r .. ~~tlem,en, as you know it is my At the Capltol, sen. William Pronnlre
practice not to comment on stories from (D-Wis.), cbalnnan of an appropriatlam
undisclosed sources;• Agnew replied. subcommittee on houaiog, said Cong:rell
-Smiling. tautly, he Jgnored their shouted and the public wUI be reluctant to "11>-
pleas to say something more and drove port "such a costly · and· potentially in-
away in his limousine. errective pr~am.'.' . . .
Iii another development. a report that ',l'o deal with the· credi~ pinch,· N1100
mcmQers of the House Judiciary Com---5a1d I~. Go~~mment. National Mortga&e .
-mittee discussed the possibility of im4 !'-ssoc1ahon ¥/Ill provide .money for FHA~
peaching Agng__w with the Justice Depart-1n,sured mortgages at µiterest rat I s
ment was denied today by Chainnan somewhat below the market level, a
Peter w. Rodino Jr. (D-N.J.). · n:ioye ~e said would finance up to P
'"It 's absolutely untrue," Rodino said. billion rn ~e loans. .
He said the committee has oonsulted The President also said the Federal
with Justice Department officials on a Home LOan _Bank ' Board W:W make up to
nwriber of subjects as part or a review it $2.5 billion m 1?8n CO!M11lmenta to en-
is conducting of the department, but that cour~ge ~age lending by aa'libgs and
impeachment was not one of them. loan. 1nst1tutioos:
The Washington bureau of Ridder . Nixon also reco~ended that the max-
Publicalions quoted unidentified. sources imum loans penn1tt~d ~er FHA and
as saying the consultations resulted from VA mortages be rai~, and that tn-
the ''actions of prudent men" in the wake tere~t rates on such loans be permitted
of Agnew 's denial of a recent report tha t to nse to ~.ket levels. He also urged
he \\'as about to a!UlOunce his resignation. that state eliminate any existing ceUln&s
Fro•·Pqel
' COLLISIONS • • •
agairut the center divider fc~.
Neither Gondennan nor the driver of
the disabled Marine truck was seriously
hurt.
But moments after the initial impact,
two other Marines riding motorcycles
~ame tangled in the; mess.
on mortgage interut rates.
Airline Calls
BackC1iief
on the side of Jaw and order now. dollars tn replll's and gh Y
, ____ Rudensky ~..rte.ws on crime -purchas_e_s. __________ _
and punishment and believes i• is absurd
to think that reinstatement of the death
penally in California: would deter harden·
ed criminals from killing.
She was to have retume.d to the stage
in a gala performance with Sicilian tenor Flies_the_Con,p~-Giuseppe-di Stefano----SSturday--aHhe
Festival Hall . Thirty thousand persons
Robert Grant Smitt, 21 . and Johnny
Ra~~ ~gbam 27, both of Cam Ten~coUid not see · the wrecltage
until it was too late to stop and both men
ditched their bikes and fell to the pave+
men!.
NEW YORK tuPil -American
a~lines called C. R. Smith out of
retirement a n d renapied h l m
chairman today, hoping that the 74-
year-old Texan who built the airline
into a commercial · t can
restore Its profits pub c Im·
•
"Would you kill them or not?" asked
someone in the audience "'1lile talking on
the subject or the death penalty. "I
would," the man added.
'"lben you're sick, too," Rudensky
snapped back.
But when it comes to dope dealers, the
ex-criminal advocate:s a harder line.
"I say give them the Chinese treat·
ment -shoot them doMt in the street.
They deserve the death penalty for ped·
dling dope," Rudesnky insisted. He is
convinced that dope dealers cannot be
~bill!ilted. -.
Rudensky himself was reha bilitated
wi th the help of Margaret Mitchell,
author of "Gone with The \Vind," after
. doing time for crimes which included a
$2 million robbery and a $300,000 mail
robbery in Illinois.
Today, in addition lo holding down a
respectable job, Rudensky Is a respected
member of the ~fayor 's Advisory Com·
mission on Crime ii St. Paul.
OlAN•I COAST ST
DAILY PILOT
Tne Oranoe Colt! DAILY l'ILOT, Wllfl wllltll
It '°""'INCi !fie Hewt-l'rtu, Ii ~1111'19'1' bl'
ftlt °''"'" c .. ,, P!lbltr.lllfltl (°'"",....· ~
rel• toi!loflo ,,.. pU11!11-, MOnd•'I' ll!rot.191!
Fr ... y, for Cot!• Mtw, Htw!IOrt ... di,
M"""fltllllfl ••iw;lll l'oun111n V11...,. UtlU!lt
... (11. lrvl~•IS.odlf!Ntll •nd hn Cll.....ni1/
h'I J .... 11 C1pl1tr-. A 1Jnol1 r .. \OMI
edllio!I It OV()ll11\td StNrdllY' •flll S11nd1yt,
' '"' priMlptl M llllllnf pMnl II " "° Wnl
11•~ Sl•fft, Col!t Mt'M, Ct!llotnf1, fJ')t,
kolt1rt N. w ,,d
... "Iden! fflllll l"Wlllh«
J •clr It. Culley
Viet l'rttldl!ll •nd ~II """''"'
lh•rn•• Kee•ll ......
Tho111&& A, M111ptlln•
MIMOk'lt f"Hor
C~1 rlt1 H. loot ltick•.rd P. Ni ll
AM!tl'"t M•""Wit £•1t11;1 ......
Cot11 M ... r IJll w"' ••r Strw H....,, •Md!: mt follWll*I twi..-1,_ ~ ~i m """' •-Hlll'ltlflt*''•-111 l1171 .IMfl ttvl"'•r• a.o ci-.. 1 ., lffflfl 11 c.1t11ne ... ,
Tll•••••• «114) MJ-4111
Cl ................. , '41·1111
,_ c:.Mf ........... ~~---4tl"'4H ,_ ...... °""" ~ "~ 1111:1 lftM _,,.
~t Or CMll~ ~. ... -. .., ... , """'"'"""" .. !,.,fl,! ...... t). .. ........ """"" "'""' _, .. ~ •""*" .......... "'"''· ., '"""""' --..,.,... <lttl ,....... .. ,., ,, C:ttl• Mfft,
CAAflnl~ "*'°"'-''-" 9Y c•''*' U.4f °""'IN'l'I " -II 1J It _,,tfl/'O 1!111ller' ~~ QM l'l'itfl..,,.
{
age. applied by mail for the 3,000 available LOS ANGELES (UPI) -Los Angeles
seats and scalpers advertised that they 1.oo officials and a wattled crane missing Judge ~pholds
Murder Suspect's
$100,000 ·Bail
had tickets available for $275. from its open exhibit area both have one
Festival Hall manager S. A. Gorlinsky thing in common - a red face .
said a telegram from the prima donna Animal keepers had clipped the wings
They surfered cuts and bruises and
were treated for ~eportedly minor hurts
at the Camp Pendleton Naval Hospital.
Smith. a pioneer ln the develop-
ment of commercial avtaOon, wu
elected chairman and chief ex-
ecutive officer of the airline at the
monthly meeting of directors. He
succeeds George A. Spater, who
resigned.
today explained that an eYe specialist of the crane - a gray-bodied, white·
ordered her to rest for at least six weeks. necked bird which stands -fi.ve f~t tall
"I am most unhappy to disappoint my and has a seven-loot wingspan in Oighl Peking Visit Ended
public at this time," the telegram said. and is valued at $1,000.
At the s a m e time, American
reported a new loss of $26.3 million
for the first eight months of tld5
year, compared with a net profit of
$12.4 million a year earlier.
An Orange County Superior Court
judge refused late Tuesday to reduce the
$100 000 bail that is holding murder
susPect Robert Carl "Whip" Slatton in
COWlty jail.
"However, my doctor assures me that I But officials said the feathers grew TOKYO (AP) -The Philadelphia
will be able to perform by the end of back quicker than ~xpected and the Orchestra led by 73--year-old Eugene
November." native of South Africa~flew away. Ormandy wound up a seven+day visit to
Judge James Turner delayed Slatton's
filing of-a plea_ to murder_charges until
Friday but he-promptly rejected a bid by
the ranchhand's lawyer to lower bail.
Gorlinsky said a new concert would be , -~~~~~~~~~~===~~P~eiking~· ijt~od~a~yian~d left for Shang,.h:::ai::.· ---'============= scheduled when she was recovered.
The. fuss_ over baLbad ~called__
• Miss Callas' "-comeback concert" after
eight years off the stage was con-
Slatton, 41, of Trabuco Canyon is ac-
cused of slaying Dennis Glahn, 21. of La
Mirada July 11. Glahn was · one of a
number of trespassers in the Ortega Hot
Spt:'ings area w h o were involved in a
fracas that ended with the shooting of
Glahn.
Slatton was arrested on the nearby
Starr Ran ch premi ses after being hurled
from his feet in what sheriff's officers
said was a high speed flight from the
scene ol the shooting. Deputies said they
recovered the murder weapon from a
nearby gully.
'Ellen' Growing
MfAMf (UPI)-Tightly wound tropical
storm Ellen could reach minimal hur·
ricane· strength in the eastern Atlantic
later today, but posed no threat to land.
siderable.
Part or the attraction was her famed
singing voice; but her fabled beauty -
Lawman Arrested
In Orild Molest
. SANTA BARBARA (API -A 28-year-
old Santa Barbara sheriff's officer has
been booked for investigalion of two
counts of child molesting.
Officials identified the officer Tuesday
as Roger Prigmore, who had been on the
force !our years.
An incident allegedly occurred on a
school playground involving la scivious
conduct before an 8-year.old girl and in-
decent exposure before a 7-yi:!ar-old girl.
Hopping Mad
Trustees W 01i't K ick tlie Habit
An attempt to ban smoking at meetings o! thc Laguna Beach schqpl t>odrd
mrs quickly snuffed out Tuesday nighf.
Bruce Hopping, ,chairman of the health-conscious Katos Kaga thos Founda-
tion based in Laguna &ach, had asked tbe trustees to put the dlscusslon item
on tbelr agenda.
I
Btrr mE five-member boa rd, including lour smokers, wasn't interested.
"Does that mean you won't even talk about it?" Hopping asked board
President Norman Browne.
TAKING A-long drag on.Ju. cliJlretle.Jind.Oicking the..ash inlo an ashtray,
Drowne, a dentist, replied, "Sorta looks that way, doesn 't it?" .
\lopping 81id today he'll file complaints with th• county hoalth department
Rnd had already started with the local department representative. He's also
1' Investigating the possi~lllly some state law may breathe fresh life Into hh1
campotgn. ·
I •••
_,
.,
·•
OPIN .... .. '
•
-538 CENTER STREET-COST A MESA CUlllD SUNDAY
Boys P.l Shirts & Shorts
Sweat Sox
All Star Basketball Shoes-9.95
Bob Watte Super Pro Shoes-9.95
Soccer Shoes-10.95 up
Sweat Shirts & Pants
Wannup Suits-2·1.95 to 34.95
Football Facelluanls
Touch FootbaH Flags & Belts
Kneepads-f oreann Pads
' Teeth Protectors
Qpen 9 to 6 Closed Sunday.s
f
!
i.
Hand Balls & Gloves
Racquetball Racquets & Balls
Wllson-Davis-Yoneyanta:-Bancrott
Tennis Rackets
WUson-Penri-Dunlap Te1J1$ BaRs
7.95 per Dozen
Tennis Dresses
Men's & Bays' Tennis Shorts & Shirts
CollYBl'SHdidas-Tretorn Temls Shais
Speedo Shorts & Suits
Bte~arts-Tires-Tulles
Repalrilll
\
•
DAILY PILOT :J j • /
Wtdnrsday, Septe111ber 19, 1Q7J s
A·t Your·
Service· Whiting Zone Action Put Off a MQnth '
A Sunday, Wednesday and Friday
Feature
or Bio llally Pilot
Go& a probl11m? Thtn wrtte
Pat Dun·n. Pat wilt cut red
ta~, get th'e
•
answera and
action ti o u
need co '-l '?tve . inequt-t1ef-1.n gov-
ernment and
busineis. Mail
ti o u f ques·
ffO'nl to e(lf
Dunn / At
Your Service. Orange Coasl
Daily Pilot, P.O. Bo:r: 1580, Costa
&1eta, <:a,, 92626. Include ~ou1
tfl~ephone number.
Sav i119 Rose Petals
DEAR PAT : I've been saving my rose
petals, which have been so nice this year.
and I wonder if you could tell me how to
preserve them to fix in n'et bags to make '
a sweet fragrance for later use .
W.C., Huntington Beach
Begin by prtpo.ring a rose (potpourril
jar. lfoses should be gathered earJy in
the morning and tossed lightly on a table
until all dew bas evaporated. Then put
petals In a large glass jar, sprinkling saU
over half-inch layers or the flowers. Let
flUed jar stand (or 10 days , stirring each
day. Mb: these spll:esf one-quarter-ounce
mace, one-half ounce allspice i nd cloves ,
coarsely ground or pounded In a morter,
half a rated nutme one-half ounce cln·
namon (broken-in -bits), one ounce
po"·dered orris root and one-quarter
pound dried lavender Dowers or other
fragrant flo"·er petal s or leaves. Fill the
rose jar with alternate layers o( petals
and spice mlxture. A (ew drops each of
essential oils, such as rose, geranium ,
bllter almond or orang·e fJgwer, should be
dropped upon the layers as you proceed.
Ont: ounct of cologne may be added to
ibe whole IQixture, if desired. Stir all
lagtedlents well, cover and leave for
several "'eeb 1 stirring occasionally. J'bls
recipe fills t"·o quart jars. U the mtiture
becomes ioo dry, add more salt, and if
too moist. add more orrl• root powder.
To Russia With Clothes
Uy JAN WORTH
01 w.. D•llr Piiot Stall
Arter testimony from JO greenbelt, en·
vironmental and <.'Ounty authorities Tues-
day, a decision to allow ioning for a plan-
ned community on the 2,700-acre WhlUng
Ranch in El Toro was tontlnued by the
Orange County Planning Commission for
·a month.
lt granted, the same change from
agriculture to a planned community (PC)
zone will allow deve lopment of the vast
Scenic ranch, according to a plan by the
firm of J. L. Webb Planning of Newport
Beach.
Webb w<iSbfre<rbY G:-r.wliitiDg;tfie
elderly owner of the land. It has been the
Whiting Ranch since 1884.
CVSD Offers
Night Scliool
For Adults
Adult school classes with dozens of of-
ferings to residents in the Capistrano
Uni(icd School District will begin Sept. 24
with several major changes.
Registra tion this year will take place
at the first evening of each class on a
flrs~-come, first-served basis.
Another major change will be: the new . . . . ~ .
pupils enroll in more than one class.
Last year's format called for $6 per
cl~s.
The classes will be held at the San .
Clemente and Dana Hills hig h schooJ
campuses as well as Marco Forster
Junior High School, Rancho Alipaz
Cubhouse, the San Clemente Beach Club
and St. Edward's Catholic Church.
District spokesmen said that pupils ex;
empt from registration are·those wbo -are
under 21, who are working toward a bigfi
school diploma or who are enrolling in
classes in Engli sh as a second la nguage.
Persons over 65 years ' old also are ex·
empt from the fee.
1 Classes, which generally convene at 7
p.m. early in each week, are as follows:
DEAR PAT: My hWiband and 1 are -Monday offerings are metalcraft, ad-
planning a trip frOm mid-October vanced photography and beg i n n in g
througD _ early November. Following a Spanish.
few days in New .York Cily, we will be -Tuesdays generally have crafts,
)Oining a group of major Russian cities. begiMing guitar, photograp Dy, ceramics,
I've never been to New York and have no · edr d. E 1· h ' idea what the weather might be like in typing. sewing, spe ea ing, ng 15 • , auto repair and. tw;ieup, woodshop and Moscow and Leningrad at that time of basic reading and writing.
year. Could YOU find ®t what type or -WedntsdaY.!classes include cel'.'amics,
'dothing I should plan to-bring? sey,·ing . cooking. U.S. 1iisl0r}', CaUfOrn.ia 1 J.~·.•· .. , Corona del Mar "'~ natural history, welding and intermediate
If you're hlC!ky, you'll be eajoyiag some Sj>anisb.
Whiting sat through the lengthy hear·
ing without conunent. Following the 3-i)
vote to continue, be said, "I wish to hefi
they'd hurry up. We love the land and we
don't want to do anything to spoil it, We
think this is a beautiful plan."
The ranch is bounded by the El Toro
Marine Corps Air Base, Cleveland Na~
Jiona l ForeSt, the Irvine Ranch . and
properties of the V. P. Baker Company.
It meets El Toro Road on its southeast
corner and Santiago Caflyon Road on the
northeast.
Webb's plan calls Cor leaving the upper
1,400 aere~ totalJ,y untouched as !1 preserte 1.0be----U-a:nsretred-tO -the public
domain.
His wie of only 600~es for ho!J$ing ...,_
to a projected papul11tion of abou t S,000
by 1985, has been called ··a milestone"
and "a Rilot model" by envlronmcnla lists
·and developers alike.
"This sets a beautiful precedent !or our
va lley on how well land can be used /'
Nance North of the Saddleback Area
Coordinating Cowicil said.
"If this is not passed, lhen we really
\Vill be asking for pieccme<il, un·
c:oordinated developrncnt. .,
Jn his motion to conti nue, Planner Bart
Spendlove of l\1ission Viejo c i t e d
unresolv ed traffic circulation pro blems,
~omplir;aJ!9p_s_ wllh__ the J\liso Water~·
Management Agency !AWl\1A). aod the
need for a mechanism to guarantee that
t!Je noi:thern acceage will be preserved.
PATIENT HUNTINGTON MAN BUILDS MOoel'1SH;fPS 'i11
Ptoot•
Riehl.rd Limb-Whittles Away-Seven Dayl a Week
Retiree Wliittles Away tlie Time
ol New Y.ork'& brlll<ii!'" late -Thursday& oHer beglmlina P11inUng
autum ••~·''@tllw ~ m-and drawing.-·jnttrtor d e cor•a ti On, By·TERRY-OOVIU.E doesn't hesitate to offer a critical sug-
•peratattl are mlllktly, Jta'd be wise dayti El!e art claues at ttfe beach club, °'""' o.iir , • .., 11'" gestion now and then.
to be prepare4 for rala, Summing up ceramiai, bo okkeep i o g, typing, Richard Lamb sits patiently inside the ''I'm p'roud to see him do it, but he'
: youi' clotMDg needs for Ra:ula at UU. shorthand, masr media, group guidance small, cramped shed in ba. ck of his Hun-d · · 1 " time of year, F.ck~ahl-Dudla "'9vel and counseJing, government and elemen-. oes run me crazy getting mater1a s,
Bureea, ftdvileJ yotl to .dre11 warmly. tary Spanish: ti~n Beach trailer horrie and quietly she laughs.
Alias EJkabetla Lars.soa, ,IJJOktsmaa ~or SN>l"ific details ,o( each class are whi.ttles "!Way the hours. ..I'm just trying to better 1nyself.''
I•-• -• -1e•-n--wh1..1. t"""iaUies In ,.... s ho d da k h Lamb int'eri· ects. "Someday I want to do ~ ~ tu1 -iu u• n,;u ,... available any weekday evening from 6 to 1x urs a ay, seven ys a wee , e
Spendlovt told \Vebb he felt \Vebb and
the adjacent property owners. inc luding
0<..'<!ldcnt<il Petrolt!um Land and Develop-
1nent Corporation who recenlly bought
the V. P. Baker Canada Footbills land.
must meet \Vilh the road department to
decide on the locution or arterial roads to
serve the eventual population,
Commissioner Shirley Grindle noted
that AWMA has prOJ('c·tcd a Population or
26,000 for the Los AHsos \Vatcr Distri ct.
1...ake Forest, part of that 26.000-RC'rt!
area. ls projected to gro1v to 15.000. If thi!
Whiting Runch is allowed 5.000 populA·
lion, the remai ning l\vo large f:.in d
parcels,-Canad a Foothills-and the Glenn
Ranch, cou ld have no moi·c· than 6,000
between then1 , though tentative plans
<!all for a minimum of 9,000.
Fro1n La91in a
"\Vc're coming to rhc point where no
land ownership can be wifairly dealt
w111i:· Mrs. GrlJ1dlc sald.
Commissioner~ also expressed coocern
about lack of IO \V cosl housing in Webb's
1>lan. lltS average home is projected to
cost $53.000.
A 34·acre take. a 155--acre natural park,
a nine-hole golf course, an elementary
school. a five-acre c..-ommercial center
and ;in equestrian center are called for in
!he pl;ul. ·
L>ale Secord or the Environmental
Co;ili!iou or Orange County and Norman
E1\•ers. u county noise abatement
specialist;-said the plan needs more-
~ludy. J ~
The 'next hc:1ring u·ill be Oct. 16at1::10 j
p.m. I .1
•
.Clemente Eyes
Rental-of Bus '
Beach area for a rock and folk concert l
Ocl. 13. ,j
San Clemente city councilmen tonight
wih hear the latest reports op negotia-
tions with the city of Laguna Beach over
the proposed renting of an Art Colony
m1n1-us o
eel.
use 1n a p1 o ra
City .Manager Kenueth Carr was
charged recently with seeking the rental
of the open-air mini bus for perhaps two
months this fall to assess first-hand the
public acceptance or a bus service in San
Clemente.
The ·pilot project is intended as proof to
Orange County TrJJ.nsit Dist rict directors--
that San Cle.menteans would _ suppo rt
public transportation.
City parking commissioners alread y
have drafted a route for the pilot project
following Aveni.da de los Mares through
to Vaquero and down to El Camino Real.
From there the route would travel El
Camino to the city golf course; link up
with Ola Vista and head bat;:k oo El
Camino northward.
At a recen t city study session, carr said
he noted a strong willingness on Laguna's
behalf to rent a bus fOr a short period
now tbat the summer tourist period has
ended.
1'he ·issue of the bus rental beads an
agenda for tonig4t's 7:30 o'c~ session
which -11.ppears to be far less,hectic than
the coUncil's meeting two weeks ago.
At that session tbe agenda was describ-
ed as the largest in city history.
Tonii;ht's agenda items include:
-A bid by Maria del Arte, Inc., for the
'use of sound eq uipment at the North
-Setting of a date for a public hearing ·
to exa1nine rate-increase proposals for ·] ,; .,. -.further consideration of the ap-.
pointment of a parks commissioner to fill
the expiring term of Ivan Robinson.~
Councilmen also will learn tonjght i[
Robin son (who was appointed Garden
Grove Police chief during, his tenure on
the commission) would consider serving ,
·another stint on the advisory panel.
-StJ.tdy of the plans aod specifications .
£or the new ci ty maintenance yards neac '
the sewer plant. Councilmen appear
ready.to put the _major ,project out to bid
so that construction could be complete in
time for the old yards to be closed down.
The latter facility was sold recently to
private in vestors . :
-Proposals for the use of the latest
chunk of revenue -sharing funds
furnished by tbe federa l government.
Councilmen by law must earmark the
1noney for specifi c uses within a certain :
period or face the loss of the cash. !
-Consideration of_ a new ordinapce ;
calling for a special sewer fee on new ,
development to help pay for upgrading of
the near-obsolete ' collector main aDd .
pump stations along the beactill"OnL 4
' -Introduction of an ordinance which l
would ban nude entertainment in the city
-a code calculated io be wttljln llie new
U.S. Supreme Court ruling wbicb'. allows
obscenity to be judged on local stand ..
ards, not a· nationwide criterion. , . •
.. -i
, 811••••• tnvel 1rr~ncements. 1~m__t--p:.m.at---the-adult-scheo1-office---at----492-----whittles..------------~some old Spanish galleons, but they are raay expect some snow In MOICOw, 4165 . . . · iaraefWith~silft\anystepped-up -ilecks-r-----c
deflnlitly rain, slush attd. poulbly, bail. · HlS French wife, Ginette, pokes her and they carry ISO cannons ."
Dellver11 Complah1ts
' GEM TALK
TODAY
by
Sweaters and skirts a warm coat. and nose in the door from time to time, The Lambs live in ~·mobile home in '• ~ boots are neeeuary. Pant suits are G' } 8 G' casting a critical glance at his latest pra-. the Huntington By 'fhe Sea trailer park
popUlar la Russia, Lan ton noted, and 11• ' , · IVeD ject _another early 19th century sailing off Pacific Coast Highway. His small
draay clothes, soeh -u you migbt wear sh· work shack is already becoming too con-
ln the evenlag ln New York City, are not '~· . fined for his whittling.
appropriate In RusslL Casual apparel, 18-monlh Term Smee Chr15tmas, Lam b has hand-carv-He hopes to sell some of the ships for
with an emphasis on warmth, la worn for ed lO___scale model sai~ ships , 1be as much as $200. He-might even-like to
social events, including the theatre. largest about four feet Jong from bow to carve ships for ·commissions. For Stabhin.g stern. But if that fails. it remains apparent
"My first was a clipper ship, the Great that La1nb will 'keep 011 whittling away
DEAR · PAT : This fs my second time GLASGOW, ScoUand (UPI) -The Republic~·· he says. "At-the time I his time.
around with Greenland Studios, Miami . sheriff looked down sternly at Mary thought it was pretty nice, but now I He rubs his fingertips along the_~rnooth
Fla., and I 8.m writing to you again for Cairns in the hushed courtroom and pr1r side of his whaling ship Morgan and help. You'll recall I sent a thank-you let-nounced sentence: 18 months in detention notice it was all out of proportion." beams, ;;I've always liked these old
-ler-for l_'.our~last-assistaoce.,..wJlh this finn_ for stabbing her girlf.rl He launched lhhatdP!<:!~t s~r:!_ly after ships. I've filw~y~JanteQ.~_!'l_!l
1------"on=-;m"°y"benalf:ll s fie saml"oldl-.tor,---111aw 0rimra-i· &-yeai:s-old Clirislmas an a her tnmmed arfcl retired, but it looks Jike I've carveCI
order placed months ago, clleck cashed "I want my mother, J want my ready in two weeks. m>;:s an wa "
with no merchan dise received, an<\ let-mother/' Mary screamed Tuesday as she Now it takes him a Solid month to com-
tcrs of inquh'y .no~ answer~a. It '9eemS was carried by a AOliceman from plete a ship. The better he gets, the
strange that this firm does business in Glasgow Sheriff Court after pleading. longe r it takes.
.such a manner as to require a customer guiUy to stabbing 11-year"ld Morag "I had to learn patience," he said.
to appeal for hclp on a "re~l~r" basis. BrOwn with a knife. Lamb is only 46, but he has a lot of 1~
D.R., f:luptlogton Beach ·Mary's mother, Mrs. Helen C8irnsoif time on. his hands. After 21 years in the '
Your lett~ joins fl ye'. ~rs com-_wept when Glasgow Sherif{ Archibald military, he retired, J:hen began work
plaining abOut non-delivery fr om Bell passed sentence. with the postal service. Btit two years
Greenland. ~II or them are being sent to "l could not believe it when wee Mary ago he had to drop out of that because of i
!\1rs. Nan Anzalone at Greenland for he.r was ·carried from the court," Mrs. Cairns ·a heart condition.
personal atten tion. Other disgruntled said. "I wanted to run to he r. 1 just Since then he has searched for
Greenland customers ha".e rectlved broke down." ·sorpething to fill the void. Last
prompt deli very, or puJllDal con tac& MOrag, who suffered a partially col· Christmas Ginette gave him a 13-inch
regarding further delay, following "At lapsed lung in the stabbing and spertt five ship model to piece together.
Your Servi~" communications with days in a hospital, said after sentencing: '1 looked it over and decided I could do
A •--I will a11 ume lbe current "We used to be rriends and I'm sure we • l I bet•"'~ " h I . nw"""e, IO ld be rr1·ends again I'm sorry she's a o ~· on my own, e exp a1ns.
He'll Keep 'Swi1iger' Image.. ' •
WASHINGTON (UPI) -Secretary of State-designate Henry Kissinger was
in an obvious good mood after the Senate Foreign Relations Committee ~ap
prOve<lllis n6mifilltio1r Tuesday.
'"I am surprised that only 10 persons appeared in opposition to my appoint·
ment." he told reporters. ··1 would have thought that my entire staff would
oppose it..,
Asked whether he would continue to be a_:·swinger'' about town, escortlng
glamor girls to the posh restaurants, he grinned and said, Absolutely, "I have '
to have some prerogati ves."
Kissinger made the rema rks at a \Vhite House dinner honoring Pakistani
_Pr_Lmc J\1illster Zulfikar Ali Bhu tto.
COIN Jl;~ELRY
1UOtto -penaants
~lf,i~ ::,:::::,~OLD
botc h of complaints wlll be straightened ~~e fl.~ r 50 Ion .;. . 0 Some of the bi·g boat kits cost $70. I can FORTY SEVENTH STREET
out , but let me know If any of you wlt b g In · Sro~f~a-;-1lii·'iige -or .. -critffli\al -·'1:tln"t·the same'rnodet•for-1tb;out·f2&."IJ--.. ··-... ~----··-··~NEW-¥0RK-.----.. ·-~-· .......... -. ... -. ............. _ ... _
delayed mail delivery and bas offered rcsponsibillly begins at B. ~ary am>c3.r<t fie copies the models from a small
disc1im+nating ... 11 se!~!io" from 1nese handsnn1e 141(
g')ll:! pe(ldants-the !ine~t
v•lt shc-ll·fc~e1ve tor llflY
~ccu;:;1on. Mounted w1111 your coin Ot ours,
-~7---
aPologies for temporarily out-of·itocl: in an adult court because of the severity booklet on early ships. The booklet shows
Items. No dellbttal~eltempt C,-defr aud of the Cliiirge, court officials said. --a PICtUre3nd1Ust~ scale dimefiSions. the culklmer U t been encountered ln my dea lings wltb Greenland . Readert taay He has expertly fashioned repli cas -of
be tn1erested to learn tha1 an executive the USS Qinstitutlon from the Revolu-
of another. major nrm offering a Matin.e's Wife tion ; the Charles Morgan (his proudest
premium 1okl -me th at It It 1taDdard pl'Qduct), an early whaler; the Essex,
preactlce to casb checks' and weJ& until another U.S. Revolutio'nary warship; and
lhey have cleared bankl before HIUng StabL ,....] to Death-the Elcano, a Spanish training ship .
orders. Thb 11 apparently tbe result of .... ~ The hi.Ills are carved from large. blocks
reeel\i ng an Increasing number of bad of soft redwood, cedar or pine. He
checks from customers. OCEANSIDE (AP) - A housewife has normally sta rt s with a chunk of wood
t.ee.n round stabbed 20 limes in her home, rour-fee t by six-feet.
Traditionally a mecca for dia~
mond buyers. New York's Corty
seventh street has suffered aver
the la.sl two or three years a t tile
hands of "solicitors'1 who stand be-
fore some shop doors, stop shop.-
pers and invite' them into t he store
using n1etho«l,s ranging f r o m ,
HWe'll give you an education in
diamonds-just come in and look,"
to, "We need money desperately
and have some terrific bu ys."
Laguna ExC.hangers
th.. secoild such kiJJlng in Oceanside bamb grabs yarious other materials
within lliree wteKs, poJICe have reported . ror the small detailed . parts of the ship . We should emphasize that such
The body or Vicki Sue Scrivner. 31, was Fish line '°"' into tbe rigging. Tooth soliciting is used by only a rninor-
round Monday on the floor of a cotn--• picks become harpoons with a metal ity, ru1d that steps are being taken To Hear Carpente1· blnatlon dlnin~ and family room. Polle. spearhead cul Irom aluminum beverage · lo stop mlsrepresenla tion which ~ \ said her huSband, Marine Sgt. Kenneth , cans. goes 'vith such sates pitche~.
State Sen: Dennis Carpenter (R· Scrivner, apparently was on duty at The masts are pieces of wood doweUng.
Newport Beach) wi ll address the Laguna Camp Pendleton. lee cream sticks arc transrormed into If you are diamond shopping in
Beach Ex.cha!1g.c Club Jtuitna its luncheon ~Two neighbor women found the body, oBrs for life boats. An old sheet is. sliced large metropolita n centers or
c Pollce Lt. Roy Smith said Tuesday. to cover life boats and provide a clipper abroad, you should be aware 0£1 meeting at noon Thursday at the Bench There were wounds whlch·tndtc&te<I "MI'S. ship with white· sails. BBs serve as cun-and shy away tr6ln , SUCfi opcrat ..
House IQ Laguna S.ach. Scrivner tried lo defend herself, he said. non balls. ors, shopping only a t well-known
Cari>enter ls a member-of the' senate· A knife was -believed -1he murder l takes Lamb 20 -minutes to. carve an·d-esrabllsh1!d oullet • Safest ol
committee on n at u r il 1 rcaourccs and weapon. each tiny, woocten rum barrel placed on all, of course, is to bu y from your
d 11 On Aµg. so, Ihe body ol Helena Dixon, the d~k. own local independent-you know
wildlife, .elections an reappor onn)ent 37, ..was lound lo her bonie aboilt thtee GIMtte.-who thought a r~tired man l'i!'lfti(i hl:re fo mOrrQW "and Values -
J.C.
NCCK CHAI N
H 1nd macte rQpe ner_~llCI
\'.•ti\ 1pr11lQ 11ng,
1813 NEW PORT BLYO,, COSTA MESA
--CONYfNlf:NT ltRMS ~ ' -
11 YEA.RS lN THE SA ME LOCATION
-l•111fA.m11lc~,a-M-fter Clt•rt•
PHONE 541·3401
..
an<:t chaifman ot-lhe 1ubco1nmiltee on miles away . She ·appart.iitly W-•s stabbed would spend more time In 1he. living his reputation in the cotnn1unity.
civlf disorder. to death with a fork, police said. · room. Is proud or her ship cnrver and ---'----=-=====-======-=====-=-=====-==:
' 'i •
• . '
-
,. . ..
1 OAll.Y PILOT Wedntsd11, Stplembtr' 1q, 1q13
Girl Sextuplet
Dies; 2 Others
Get Transfusins
All You Cats DENVER, Colo. (AP) -The smallest reported by Dr. Darrell Miller, a
of the Stanek sextuplets bas died !rom a pediatrician, to be showing hyaline
lung disease common in prematurely symptoms.
! -·f.o Up· l'\.T_O•UT born infants. Three o1 the other babies Steven, who bad shown indications of _flll L LJ ,_ ~"-showed symptoms of the same illness the ailment, was also improving today. -and-twa-ilave-bttn-given-blood---ffts-condition~m fair tci'-
" transfusions, doctors said. (air, but improving.
CATS ai: NAGS DEPT. -Another new 1bo:se two, Catherine and her newly
gimrriick is surfacing here along the named brother Nathan, were listed in
Orange Coast in the never-ending cam-poor, but improving condition today at
pai.gn by local government to gather Colorado General Hospital -a slight im-
some more cash into m u n i c i P a 1 provement from a hospital report last Tuesday night.
treasuries. Th.is one comes from the city Julia Stanek, who weighed 2 pounds IS
of Huntington Beach. OWlces, lived about 44 hours before
The Huntington Clty Council, in its in· severe hyaline membrane disease caused
finite \\isdom, just passed at first ~r death Tuesday night.
JEFFREY, WHO WAS in good con·
dition Tuesday night, dropped slightly to
fair condition today. The fourth brother,
John, was still reported in good condition
today.
A-filler said be talked ·to the mother,
Mrs. Eugene J. Stanek, 34, and reported
"she was moved by Julia's death, but
seemed stoic and very accepting."
reading a new law that would require
license fees for felines and horses within
Mrs. Stl!!ek was reported In good con-
JUUA WAS GIVEN two blood ex· dition today. She was alIOWed tO s·tana .
tfie city confines.
As it is proposed to become effective
Oct 1, anybody owning a cat within the
c1ty 1imits should fod over a $5 annual
licensing fee.
change transfusions Tuesday afternoon Tuesday for the first tiJn,e since the
and a respirator was used to aid her babies were born Sunday night. 'Ihe
breathing in attempting to correct the father, 31, was at the hospital at the time
hyaline condition. of Julia's death but left a short time
Catherine, Julia's only sister, was later.
given a blood exchange transfusion dur-Miller said or Julia's death, "'Ibe blood
ing the night aad her condition \l'as oxygen level had steadily decreased. Her
YOU ARE INVITED TO ATTEND '
COSTA · MESA
M:EMORIAL HOSP·ITAL·'·S
.. .
If Til_· Aft·NIYE RSA RY--·
CELEBRATION
''YOllR HOSPITAL -IN ACTION''
SEPTEMBER 24TH THROt.JG!:t SEPTEMBER 28TH
OUR GIFT TO YOUR CHILDREN • • • AN INTERESTING TWIST to this elevated from poor to poor, but improving blood wouldn't clot due to the low oxygen license dictum ls that the City Cotmcil today. content. One transfusion was performed IN COOPERATION WITH THE ORANGE COUNTY CHAPTER MARCH OF DIMES F.OUNDATION
suggests the feline fee is purely volun· Nathan, who had been unnamed Wltil and It seemed to help. But the problem
t'ry on the part of the owner. You don't today, was given a partial blood ex-redeveloped shortly after the second FREE IMMUNIZATION CLINIC: POLIO -MEASLES -RUBELLA
'
reallybavetopay,yousee. ·'io>l:-fl'--~cb~an~g~e~transf~"'.'."u~si~on~._.'.'.Both~~ba~b~ie~s_".w~ere~__'.'trans~~f~usi~·o~n~.'~'~--------~~---------,;!J!§M,il...l~ttlllll!!~~~--,~!lfl-12.J111._=-!~o,it.llli...,. _________ _jl---l---l:=-----'lit+· .,, -lt<r..,~,:;· trongly iml!lied-t1 . 2 t \
your cat doesn't have the paid license tag · W~nesday, September 26th 10:00 a.m. -12:00 noon
y
'
• •
and get.. picked up by the cat~tcher, 'Assassination Plan' Thursday, September 27th 2:00 p.m. -4:00 p.m .
chances are it will go to kitty heaven
with much more dispatch than would a
licensed animal.
Thus the implication is that if your
feline cames a license, the Huntington
Beach authorities will make a strong ef·
fort to contact the owner who might
retch on dowo to the pound and reclaim
his ·cat.
, As~or hoi:ses within the municip1jlity,
owners must cough up a $10 annual
license without any voluntary options.
Well, you ca'n understand that. It's
probably a lot bultier chore to kill a
horse than it is a cat.
BESID~ THAT, horses are pretty
well regulafed fellows. 1bey stay in
stables, go ptaces mainly wllen a rider
tells them to and don't often wander
around oo their own at night
Horses are also a means of transporta.
Uon. 11ley are aimilar to automobiles ex·
cept they burn hay. In fact, ~ the
gaaoline shortage and soaring fuel prices
cootinue, we may find horses ARE
automobiles.
None of tbi.s can be said for cats. You
can't ride one. They are . not easily
regulated. Cats will not stay in a stable.
Cat.SI usually go where they damned well
please when they please. This "is usually
at night.
Also, there may be a very serious naw
in the Huntington Beach cat licensing
law. rr I read it 001Tectly, the proposed
ordinance says that a cat owner must get
the license.
THIS MAY BE strongly disputed by
cats. Felines do not believe that people
own them. They own the people. Most
cab makelliiijiffiectly clear when they
come to live in your house. IL abruptly
become9 lbeir house.
Anyway, the way things are beaded, it
•Ill"= that people In Huntington Beach
• are going ·ro be getting cat licenses
regardless of whether the cat owns the
people or the other way around.
It just goes to prove that goverrunenl
may tell you that your wages are frozen
or there is a ceiling on how much profit
you can make, but government, will
Swindler Clnims Plot
By Ellio·tt Roosevelt
'UTTER FABRICATION'
Elliott Roosevelt
$4,500 Returned
In Skyjack Hoax
"WAS!llNGTON (AP) -A convicted
stock swindler says EUf~t Roosievelt and
a reputed big-time gambler. offered him
$100,000 to as~ssinate the Bahamian
prime minister.
Roosevelt, son of former President
Franklin D. ROC>Stvelt and once mayor of
Miami Beach, Fla., called the allegation
"an utter and complete fabrication."
Louis P. Mastriana told the Senate
permanent subcommittee o n • in-
vestigations Tuesday that the assassina-
tion ~tract was oU~ because Prime
Minister I,Yndon"O. Pindllng allegedly
laile<j lo irRDI a gai$Jiai )iceiiae, to
Michael -Mc!.oney. Maatriina ·tdeilllfled
McLalley ¥ a ooe-Uine ·e .. Jlloye of U.S.
gambling tlngp1b *yer Lansky.
• MASTRl~A SERVED time In a
fedei-al penitenUary for Ulegal seCurities
dealings in Florida and is serving an
eight-yeai-sentence for mail fraud in
Texas.
Roosevelt, confacted at his Lisbon
Portugal, ranch, said, "It is an utfer and
complete fabricatioo and outright lie
made by a man who is a known con-artist
and has been convicted, \\'ho has been
put in jail. wbo bas been adjudged by the
courts of New Jersey as a mental incom-
petent, and who conned me and my as-
sociates at one time out of $10,000 in
Miami."
DAILY PILOT
DELIVERY SERVICE
\ OUR GIFT TO YOU • • • • • •
LUNG FUNCJION TESTING
By our Cardiopulmonary Department
Septerflber 24th through September 28th. 10:00 a.m. to 4:00 p.m.
· 1N OUR LOBBY • • •
MEDICAL EXHIBITS
PHOTO EXHIBITS
FILM PRESENTATIONS
REFRESHMENTS
10:00 a.m. to 8.:00 p.m.
COSTA MESA MEMORIAL HOSPITAL
301 Yictori• ~tree! • Costa Mesa , California 92627 • (71 4) 642-2734
'
' -·.
SAVE'90~!e
The luxury Touch & Sew*
sewing machine with cabinet
Sew a copy of a Paris original,
827
figure oot new ways lo pump up its own SEA1TLE (AP) _ A Bremerton man
tr.easur_y. ------··ho~pos'ed as--skyjacker "D. B. Cooper..'..'
u AN BE wtiatwill be 18st in line in an attempt to extort $45,000 from a
if the gowrmnent ever gets a to ews1n311 has-paitt-baek--$4;500;-fted.in
putting a freeze on everything. Taxes, to his lawyer·
Dtlivtry of th! Daily Pilol
___ _,,, -9.!lill-_!!_lttd
or make a decorative apron
for a favorite hostess! This .
is the sewer's machine,
professio nal down to the
last stitch-and it has 14
that arebUllt in! A bu'olt· MtllHP.l"r;ii1rt If •"" M ftll 11•1'1 r1ur __,.,...~a.-~ .......... ~...,--·H---t--«H><Jt·t-enflel-er;too;-Pt'·"-f;.,-4'-l!t--J " ......,..., 11 p1. Clll• 1r1 t1k111 vntll J-.;; ,,. •·"'-the exclusive Singt.r• push-
Versatile zig-zag
b~~~-r-~s~e=w=-=•~n m iClii'-n~e-•--
ONL~ '66 that's fhat A hoax Cooper interview reportedly
Oh )Its, there is one other aspect to was being considered for the oover of
s1111rMr atM1 '"'"'''' 11 '" .. "'' rec~tl'I button fr ont drop-in bob-
.,_ ...., '' ' '·'"· s 1111r'111y, er t '·"'·
Huntington's new license Jaw. In addition Newsweek magazine before the
"""'''· u11 ...... co,r wua 11o1 1trw1111 .. bin, easy dial controls. On
""· c1t11 •111•.., 1111111 11 '·"'· sale with a cabinet th at An ea~y operating machine that dors
mending, makes buttonholes srws on
buttons -without attachmcn~s! Hinged
presser root lets you sew over hea\'Y
fabrics.Number~ seam guidelincs,nlQrc!
Jp the fees on horses and single cats, it is autborilies uncovered the s c he m e .
" ._, mandated that cat breeders get a Donald Sylvester A1urphy later was con-
.... license. victed on a federal extortion charge.
:· .1*iw you have to admit that one ad~ A1urphy's attorney, Tooy Savage, says
· lifl1W problems. A1urpby got only $9,000 from Karl Flem-
. I've never known a male cat which ing, fonner Newsweek bureau chief in
1iad $20. Los Angeles.
TtltPllonts
Mli.t Of'•..-c""'' .,.... . ...... t4J-4:a1
Jollftll-.i ..... u •• , .... ltlcJI
•lltl Wttlmift1t1r .. •• •• • ••• Mt-Int
SIR <"-"'•• C1pl5tr1N l11c~.
S111 J1n11 ClplltrtM, 0.M ""-'•
'9wrto L•tvM, L1111111 "''-"' •••• "'1-c.tlt
•
Atlantic Coast Drenched
To·wn -Gets 1.4 Inches of Rain. in. 20 Minute _
Temperat•re•
Alblll'I'
All1nt1 .......
91.fffito
CMrllttorl <""""" c-
CllldtHllH ,,,_ --,~ M -l!/J:_ ~
"'C!.. :!!~ ...... .... ~Cttv
.itr...:lir.' ~ ,,~_,, Ore ~~cow -r1MI-
Hllll Ltw ,.r, n 36 .o
1• II .. .so 1.0l ....
" " M ~
" " .. " .. .. .. " " .. • " .. ti " ll -ti
ll " " r. ~
11
* !! .. ·"
••
-~ ..
l)Ol'lh1m AH111llC co11t1 T111td,,; C1t1wN, S,C •• .,..11 -kid with IA 11· chis or ,...,. ht XI l'l'!lllvltt Tuud1v
lfllrflOOn. Tiii ~OVl'ld Wll COO.Ir.cl with rNrblwt11 II, T1motr•l11r111 d ltPld 11110 tn. 30s I' Olrb of Ntw Y'l llld Plfllll'll'IVlll I ckltlnci !ht fllllhl. hdl11111 Ill 11111 .0.
In lllll'm New Y l~IOUl._,.11 Ntw .,....., common 'J:!OUo t 1111 or .. 1 Lakl11nd "'kid" un llopl V1n1V. FOi.ir t~ I tflltd TllH-
dlY In 111tlrrl N-Yorll •nd toVtMr11
N_., IE"D!•llll S0rM Pl'OOtf'IV Wit 0-
lffd ]11 Nlltr" LOftll hl•lld Incl llHr
0111bury, COl'l!'I. No perlCNI 1111111111
-·~· str-wllld1 whl!MM'd ui> -vt• ol ! to ' t111 on n. u.s. lldl Ill' Lt~ °1:~1hKtl bllo!'e d1W11 rll'lllld ltorn 31 11 er..afonl. ~... 10 a '' f'l'IOlftlK, AriL
Coutal Weather
Mc:9tl'I' 1VMV tod1y. Utl!t Ylrll&M
1o1lrlda nlOfll 1nd morning llovrt becolTl-
lng wt•! " Ml/ll'IWllt 10 111 16 knot• R'm..~ In 11Mmoor!f ~l'f lllf T!lvrtdl'f', Hlafl B••.., &Chif-ow toefjy. ~ '°'·
[fill ... Alt co;,111 temper•lvr" r•nDe from !f
WIOWI" 'low to 6'. tn\llld ttm1Mr1tlll'n r1not ltOITI i.==:.....""""'.==~-_;_"~'o 14. Wiii!' Mmper1111r1 "4.
V S S 1111, Mo~. Tides . • • .... rtf WIONISDAY J..
Sllow«t incl thllndff1!orm1 dim· Stcorici Ill th • ,. .... .(.. i:01 p.m. J.3
Plfttdwldt'IY'j•Jt.r.<11,...,0flhtnt· 6Kond low .-........ 11111 ll-l't\. 0.( • non 'c:;11¥ II I, lltla hlld IWlf '" • THUltJDAY
•
doubles as a desk! 756/692
-C.arrying case -#827 sale-priced at $8.96
carrying use #574 sale-priced at
only $16.95
NOW! 20% QFF ALL SINGER'• SEWING COURSES. Lci!n to sew with expertise in classes for
Fashion Dressmaking. Sewing Knits, Fashion Tailorlna and Tccn·aae Dressmaking. Be&inner and Ad·
vanced lectures, visuals, practice. Sew an outfit in class! ln~tructlon book included, Register now!
·sINGE·R -;
Sewklg Centers and pertlciplting Appioved Dealer. •
For store nearest you, see th e yellow pages under S/:WING MACHINE S •
•
'
Slnstr hu 1 llbl,ral trild•·ln policy. AINI, a Crtdlt Pliln ls 1v1ili1bl1 at Slnse, Se11tln1 Cenl•rJ n many Approwid Dt111r~ ..
• '
_fi ·aM '~ ~:.:'i wtr11 C011lln~ ~ llii firlt high •..," .. '" •• 6:U •.m. tJ,1 Ml 1nd 90llil'lffl' Pl« lllCI Flf111 IOW .......... 1012.S I.I'll. i ,I .A Ti1demark of THE SINGlR coM,ANY . (.opyrllht' 0 1973'1.HE: 'siNCtR COMPA-NY. Ail RIJhlr ReserVt4,Throu.,'OUI I~ "-0~4.
' 5 "' 1~ .ovth1111 Pltln1 vst HI! o S.,ond lllolt , . , .•.. , •!• p.Fft. J.• ... , .. ,, ,, • "'cOfld low .......... 12111 '·"" .. . h•'}~n l:?.J?:~· ltll. ltlllfr• v ICU I Ill So.In ..... i:>f •. m. "" 61M .··.,m1, --:::.. ________________________________ • ________ _
H'11vv ':trn1 w11htd tllt tOVl.,._r" •nd MOOll ltl• 11114 I .I'll. 111....,:Q.I
1 .l \ I • I
•
I ·Selection ' I .
''Of Jury
Stalled
, MARIPOSA (AP) -After
itwo days of jury selection in
the double murder trial of.
IJohn Phillip~· 41 pan-
1elists have been questioned
but not a single one was seat-
ed.
O!!idals originally had call-
ed 80 prospective jlD'OrS but
said they plan to call 6-lllOl'e
f-1 ----pwoos_lo<ia)'. from lj!e ooun-
Despite Protests
Governor Signs
Retirement Bill
SACRAMENT(); -{~ -
Gov. Rooald' ~an Tuesday
signed a controversial bill
aimed at boostiq: retirement
benefits for 8 <f 0 ... m e T
assemblyman wllo owns ~ big
pleee o! Imperial Counfy Jan<I.
The measure lly
Assemblyman Ray Seeley (R-
Blytbe), would allow J, Ward
Casey, a former Republican
assemblyn1a11, t·o~vra
[_.-_B_RI_E_F_S_J, ·~~~ ~=~ ~k-
. .
ty's small popu]ation of 7 ,000.
Mariposa County Superior
Court Judge Dean Lauritzen
had excused se'veral Monday
and Tuesday because they had
known viOOms Helen Cramer,
70, and Nancy Chalberg, 55,
both loogtime Mariposa
fesidenls. Other candidates
were dismissed after ex-
pressing strong p r e j u d i c e
against Bunyard .
'Equality'
I~ Sports
•
Wednesday, September iq, 1973 DAILY PILOT
-Killer of JO •
•
Mulli~n Given 'Lif-e'~
' second-degree murder con-
victions, the max i mum
sentence. But he delayed ex-
ecution of these sentences
pending an appeal of lbe firsi-
degree convictions.
ON THE ST AND, ?\fullin
confessed to slaying not just
the 10 persons as charged , but
also another three l a s t
J anuary and February.
The defendant said his t a t h e r ' s aulhoritarianjsm
•
. ~ ' "drove me kill crazy" a@d
that he killed the victims as
human sacrifices necessary to
avoid a cataclysmic earth-
qual<e. He also said 'lie
sometimes g o t telepatldc
messages from his father and
sometimes from his victims
that it was "healthy to ki0.11• As a hlgb school root1'11
player and honor student,
Mullin was voted "most likely
to succeed." '
' ..
THE PROTEST is by tbe 30
girls PE teachers at jwlior
and senior high scllools in
Glendale . .'l'hey-bave filed a
complaint with state civil
rights authorities.
" . " . • To the .peopl~
Who love 'great cars.
•
e Witt Elttted
SAN DIEGO (AP) -City
Atty. Join Witt bas brulhed
off a chillenge bf :young
lawyer Jim Webb e a s i 1 y
wlmlng a !le<Olil four • year
term.
'Protesting' .
Gas-Stations
Cltf _!_oters also rejected' ,..., "" RP.llllPli Wl~'ll:11m•CIM'P""·',<.I:...,., --r-.r-1 . -. --~~··1-~ -.. , . ,?~ - --' cllf:-S~;Wlf~ISl!O m ) -: ._ '~ .-:....,. · . I nmi11s wldl 'Moot ..mc;e statloM• fu San ~en. Vot.<·tunloulwn Luis ()\llspO.•O>unfy.....,, ex-.r ... iaiBilii!Y• boaV)"~ per-' ,pected.!A recipeii t.iilay follow. • Cllllt.r"-.. J...,.....~-~ ........... mg ~;i,-d>Bunll called to . j •; • • • '" -~~ ,... ' • • fii'otesi PJiUe • po1oe contro!J I974'Pontiac Ll!XW'Y LeMans. . . . .. e Mle~tlletnl on gasoline. The rillme says it all . Comfortable'luxurio~' -
·~ •
. ' . -
· 1974 Pontiac Grand Prix.
Pontiac's latest greatest! New classic styfm1."•
Sporty·handJjng and perform'ance. New ~ f
luxurious int~iors. Obviously, we're , :
'outi.to.make~you dissatisfied with whateYe_r .... _,
YO\i're driving.. ..,,
•
ti: Jt,
.. : i974 Pontiac Formula Firebin:L
'>i _ Part engineering. Part soul. Exciting new
• · ~-front end with blackEid-out grille. Sporty·
· · · h~'scoops. 350 V-8 and floor·shifted ,
• • • • 3-Speed. Dual exhausts. This one's for
PeoPle who take' the fun of driving seriously.:: .sA!f~~~ ... A ~jority ol the IO ·service intert9r'~ N"ew formal ·windqw_(a"!'i~e, : r--.----=;r ' .· -~~+---only-'!ilh-¥inyl..t01>-untll~?J.4•~~-----------------,.,..\:'.:.• __ .,.,----,-'..--,--~;; kmer admbibtrakl' ol. St. Clown ~ay, leaders ci'the Pontiac V-8 performance. s'mooth Wide-...., ; •
Mary's HGaptt8i' in Apple protest sa1d. Track ride. AU the luxury,you want
Valley.to.J,.ll.years-ln.pdsoo.-Meanwhil~ the Int ~!'a I . _"'1h~Jbuyinll !11""'.0::;;=:~iiiiiii~;._ Le t ~ Ml • .. n Revenue ce Siia 1n U>s' th ' d • 5 er "· c .. , '"• was 00 • Angeles that it was dispatch-· a~, .nee ·
victed '?'-_forgery, unlawful ing investigators throughout
sexual mterco\fte and two Southern California to make
_axmta o~ ~ theft. He was ~ retail g~l~ ~~ers
8lTeoted 1811 June I. ,..,.e complying witllPbase 4
LOS ANGBU!:S (AP) -A
Beverly .llJJJs attomey bes.
beerl lelltenoed to one to five
yeon in pd.00 for solidting a
detecti.ve' to. plant ooca;ie oo l!!o ~ o! tbe Los Angelesg.mm,mttr . • eae
In bandi!C down the -teJice '1'ueoda)I; lul>erior Court
Judge Alliorl 'D; Matthews
turned down a request for pro-
1batim:J. for Doooa Y. Gordon, u.
e Wlu Eleetlon
LOS . ANGELES (AP)
Utton o11atrs spedalbt David ~overtook an eatly
lead torgOcl by television actor.
George Takel end -on ·to win .a IJ>Odal electioo to fill
tbei'olty" eouncll ~t vacated by Ma)U' Thomas Bradley.
ceiling price regulations.
Barry Rans,. chief of the
stabilization division in the 12-
counl)' i.s Angeles I R. s
Olstnct, said spot check•
would continue in~efmitely.
Ban Drafted
SANTA BARBARA (AP ) -
County supervisors h ave
ordered tile • dralling o! an
ordinance which would ban
nude bathing at Santa Barbara
public beaches.
The supervisors' a ct t on
Tuesday came in mponse to a
request by Sherill J o b n carpenter to _be giyen, more
powers to halt node bathing
which has triggered numerous
complaints from beach!ront
1974 Pontiac Grand Am.
The great handling of fine imports coms;,,l!d
with great Pontiac innovation. l ike· a squeez.·
able nose. And special bucket seats. That's
foreign in~rigue ..• Am:rican ingenuity:
• •
'
\
1974 Pontiac BonQt!Ville»
'
Unofficial final returns early
·---~-..-.e-.Omnlqgbarn
-nomlllatlon Pelition -.tgned by Bradley, 1,199 votes,
residents. "'
·-Supe0•18ef>IFr.ani.li'roslC&aid ----.,,. will join Cetpenter and the
It's' a little more car. With a diStinctive
w . .c.lltom.~.iltl19~f.WlllliJ&A~~Wll~ilY). __ ,~· ....::_._ ...
or 14.8 JIOl«!l11, compared to 6,51:&~··~· 171& percent, g~-bJTakei, wbo played
the role "' swu in tbe tele'iisicm aieries •tStar Trek."
e s-.11e....._
UJS,ANOBID (AP) -The
State Ai11 --Board 'l'ueadoJ ...,.rred action. on
tlie · pn-1 .tr pollutloo
emergency ooot\ngency plan
after a public hearing.
The ..,.1>000inB plan · 1s
desli!ned Id Bet up criteria for
•111!11 alerts, warninp and
...OOnty counsel in dralting the
proposed ordihance.
"
Funds Set
EorMuseum
LOS ANGELES (AP ) -
County superYisoro say 'the
way 'bas been financially J111V·
cd ·ro liUiJding a Jllll8el1III
beside tbe lamed La Brea tar
pill to display thoulandl of
boo<• from ancient animels
-
-... celled
oonlrol aourees of
trapped there.
8upervl90I' -Debo .. , -~----
nounced ru..d&y that -
1'0Uld ~ded llinll!lib • founda 10 be establlllie'il b)'
George • P.,e, cnafor of
MISllon Pait candled froalt
po and protect tbe
• p!lbllc health.
peclcage•.
1The pits are located In a
pe?k on WiJllhltt Boulevard
Deaf tbe bear! Ill dOwntown
_ Loo Angeleo. The mll$0um's
cost was estimated In the '2
Kids Like To
Ask Andy • • r·
•
;-:. ' ,,..
Handsome new tweed and Morrokide interior ,1
trims. Pontiac's 400 V·13. A great Wide·
Track ride. For people who still enjoy
driving.
FtOm the people -who
build '
•. ·The Wi!le-Tnd< people~ a way with CaJ1\o
. [!]~·
-~------...... i.,.-DiW11lllll '
See them at your Pdntiac dealer today! . . •.. .. " ~ .,-·---~
'
r
J!l!Uion~nge. _ _!,==~--,,,....~·-=,.--,c~----==~-~--,,::====:-=-:::::--------:--------,;------::--c=::-=====o--~--;=~~-~.~~~~~---J
' " -~
•
•
. --
DAILY PILOT EDITORIAL PAGE
Help1-Not Takeover
News the state w ... being prodded by some infiuen·
tial Lagunans toward takeover of the city•s Main ~each
Park was greeted with what mig ht be characterized as
enthusiastic trepidation by city officials.
And for good reason. Because while state acq uisi·
tion would lift a tremendous fin ancial weight from the
city's shoulders, it woukl also spirit away responsi bility
for deciSion-mak.ing fo r not only the park's 5hape,
but for the day-to-day policies, too.
asked resident and non-resident property ownera to help
compile the results.
The 23 go:ils that came out of the effort are inter-
esting. They indicate widespread dls.<aUsfaction with
county government, a desire to eliminate most zoning
variances and preserve a semi-rural atmosphere and a
trend toward more local control.
DMSI planners said they can't ignore the "high" 10
percent-plus return of questionnaires and what they say.
In about a month, the residents will be able to study bow
llieir gOili can become reality. --
•
•
'
•
•
' .
• ' \
Far better than outright state purchase of !he beach
would be an annual stipend granted the city for costs
in~ in maintenance and safeguarding of all city
beaches. Laguna's beachgoers come from all over, as is
borne out by statistics of rescues made by city-paid life-
guards. Of the nearly 2,000 rescues this season, 80 per
cent were out-of-towners.
Girls Deserve Support
Much like a line from that feminist cigar·
ette commercial, the Laguna Beach Girls' Club has
"come a long way baby" to get where it is today.
1fmKEST K'ATEs
Requests for state aid were recently lodged by La·
guna's bigger and richer northern neighbors. Newport
and Huntington Beach. Laguna should join with those
cities In presenting the case for just regional compensa·
tion for regional recreation. / ·
Capo Valley Goals
. A volunteer citizens' planning task force in the
Capistp.no Valley has done an impressive job. Its report
of what residents -want and don't want to happen in
South Orange County is admirable for its brevity, ob-
jectivity and thoroughness.
--------'l"l>O-Cl.tizeM~~ey was first organized by plannjn
consultants DMSI of Corona del Mar as part of the cur-
rent update of the Captstrano Valley general plan. DMSI
Spunky organizers of the club ~rangled a house
-to serve as a meeting ball-tbeD-j;iked the city into
allowing the structure to be~ moved to a spot in Bluebird
Park, and finally recently matched the house with the loL .
The whole job isn't qllite finished yet, although ma·
jor portions are, but the treasury is bare and some big
bills are hanging.
The club needs and deserves community support -
not only monetarily but also in the form of donated
labor.
City Recreation Director George Fowler will be
py tn N>Ordinate activities and suppl ·
about the club. He may be reached at city ball 4941124
Extension 47. ' '
.,... .. _. ' ~
'\ -' ' . \ '
s
Scholarly Theft.: Wheelchair No Politkal Ha%ard
. . .
Baffles Experts
WASHINGTON - A light-fmgered
scholar bas stolen papers of "in· ( J
calculable value" from the coiiection of JACK ANDERSON ,
the late Justice Felix Frankfurter at the _ _
lJbrary of Coogress. The theft ol Ir·
replaceaMe diaries, letters a n d 1
~ -many hundreds of pages blind," a senior library of£icial told my
in .n -bas been kept secret for a year associate IA!s Whitten. "There was a
while FBI agents tremendous amoW1t missing of tn-
and the library's calculable value."
owo scholan-tumed· Ollce the loss was assessed, the library
detectives h a v e called in the FBl which began clllcreetly ~ feverishly interviewing scholars and ~. To
for the papers. block furtbet thefts, strict anttlb!every
The Joa was di• measures, previously dl'OllPOd f!Jr
covered In Septem. budgetary reasons, ...,.. relnit[tuied. All
ber 197%, after an this was dooe without alerttng the
alert lJbrary of Con· general public to thti lntenoe .. arch going
gresa official noticed on for the missing papers. ·
that a Frankfurter folder was empty. But now, the quesl has reached a dead
It bad contained conversations be-end. Return of the documents, most tween Frankfurter and the late library officials recognize, depends on
JU>Uce Louis Brandeis. A private the delicate questions of the ocholar·
~ iliO 1'j)Orteillletter mii!ffig thlel's resjiOCfroru;epnc<iessoen o! lils
that be bad lee!I. among Frankfirter's blstorical beisl Whoever the renegade
papers earlier. researcher is, the olficials concede, be Alamled, library ofllclals turned Joooe !OOtied -wia;-~UOlf l!ld 11F
a husb-bmh team of scholars in the vast telligence, selecting the most blstorlcally
Frankfurter file. Within a few days, valuable documents.
they bad oome up with a missing·items list that borrtfled them. Gooe were five ACCORDING to one theory, the scholar
years of Frankfurter's personal diat'les, ls laboring alone on a project and wants
numerous notes on conversations with to mak~ sure be is the only one a~I~ to
the mighty, memos, letters and penonel pursue 1t. If this l~ the cue, the oUtCJals
jottings about the men in government pray the scholar will 9:0mehow arrange to
Frank1urter had known so intimately. get t~e papers or copies of ~m. back to
•1WE REAUZED we had been robbed
the bbrary so thal lulu.re bistorJalll can
study the remarkable Jife and times of
Dear
Gloomy
Gus
~ time I see a picture of a
Missioo Viejo High School football
player in your paper from now on,
I'm going to wonder what he looks
like with his clothes oft.
-J.L.
Frankfurter, who died in 1965 at age 12
after serving 26 years on the Supreme
Court.
TD ald.~ecovery, we have offered to
act as an• ~ary between the
unknown sdiolar,and the llbcary. We will
guarantee not to reveal his name or
otherwise Identify him il he will contact
us.
WITHOUT BJ;:JNG able to bind lbe
Justice Department, we will try to
persuade Attorney General E 11 i o t
Rlchardson;-hlm:seila-1ega!SChli!iir,lillit
the return of the Frankfurter papers is
more than worth calling off the search
for the mysterious -thief.
. FOO'I'.NOTE: The Only comparable theft
1n the library's 173-year history occurred
in t?e 1940s when the papers or poet Walt
Whitman were sent away for wartime
sarekeepi.ng. After their return, several
volumes of. his notes were discovered
missing. They were never ·recovered.
More recently, the library lost some
valuable books, but a library clerk has
been arrested f0< the alleged theft.
Wallace Back • Ill Action
MONTGOMERY, Ala . -The unolr
trusive arrival bere of a ·ghostwriter
commissioned by Doubleday and Co. to
write the definitive autobiography of
, Gov. George Wallace for pre -1976
publication is the latest sign that
Wallace's confU1ellleDt to a wheelchair
may be no greaterJIOliUcal hazard than
it was to FrlDklin D. Raosevelt.
"This chaJi. mates.=-1t 'more'difficult"
W-.. -~ ' a told us ift r •
his office. "But it
doesn't stop me from
being governor." .
That was late ODe
evenlog 18.st week. 1':
lollowlq a ~ ;
meeting Of the state ·
building commission
presided over by the
governor. As we left
at 7 p.m., Wallace's legislative leaders
arriv~ for another hour'~ conference.
HAVING recovered from his internal
wounds and-suffering~onq-minoryerl-
of light pain, Wallace is beginning to think
like a pttsidential candidate aCain. His
ntind is as aharp aa-it.was-befcn he .was
nearly murdered by an assasmt 16
· moolhs ago. Indeed, the talk tn
Wallaceland of yet another presidential
campaign in 1976, with the ~!JMXJ'atic
party's vice presidential nomination the
real goal, cannot be dismissed as
nonsense.
When we last visited a fatigued and
pain-ridden Wallace a year ago, be could
not stop reminiscing about h i s
phenomenal 1972 primary victories,
( EVANS·NOVAK J
particularly his sWeep In the liberal
Democratic bastion of Michigan.
Alabama that Republican tlate chairman
Richard Bennett Is advising his party not
to field any candidate for governor next
year when Wallace runs for reelecUon.
Thus, with only token Democratic op-'.
position in next spring's primary
election, Wallace could well sweep to bis
thlrd tenn as Alabama's govtmOr with
an astounding 70 to 75 percenl of tbe
vote.
IN CON'l'RAST, \Vallace's five 1972
winning primaries plus the five states be
won in hi s third-party presidential cam·
paign of 1968 are mentioned today only In ONE POSSIBLE contender, former
')>lsslng. Wallace ls now looting ahead. Gov. Albert Brewer, was barely defeated
smacking hi s lips with anticipation and by Wallace in the 1970 primary. But~
plotting a powerful role in what be ~ day Brewer ~:::,: ~dla•t IUl!o\tilltJ
the "rejuvenation" of the ilbl«enicl poll •bic::h 1811 ~ ..,S WM
Democratic party. coodactid for er bi nal l>Ollsteq
He has been holding qw.t • -. Oliver Ql!iyle. JI'~ ahead cl
former aides who long ago left him. BrewerbroVei-j&I ..,. ·sx>lntl.tc--\
While avoiding hard oilers of • polltl<ah. cording to WaUCeites.
employment, Wallace is making it clear Waitace , in abort, wars llroaget .
that he wants and needs serious pro-than ever· after bit .Ma,r..usasainltloo, a '
fessional help from these old presidenUal political fact the naUoe11 Democratic
bands. The goal: to Te build a competent party cannot ignOre .. ii ........ "1t or ·.
staff of Alabamans for 1976. Among lhma the quJcksands of Im.
is the astute Bill Jon .. j Wallace's -Although his did polltk:al powv -
polifiCaiadViser who ell lllCiriJy aner bUilt on • jiliiljiOI !Olir ndal8tireP-
managing Wallace's 19tltl third-party lion, WallocOtodo,y talltl not -nee ·
campaign; his talents were sor.ty misled but about the rt&J>t,i of "Utile palJiJle."
in the inadequately orgaohtd 1m-...... The-~Ui-t-the aqp...,-
paign. tionist .
Jones and other old Wallaceites are KENNEDY'S speech for Wallace at
impressed by lhe miraculous physical Decatur Ala Ju J"'" m· ed tba improvement of .the governor, wtUcb. has • ·• t 1 ""N ustrat t no Northem llemoerll con-affonl to lg-restored his psychological health and nore Wallace'• bpge following in the
ended long periods of deep depressioo. South or '!!; populiatlc 1 p p e 8 t
To them, 1976 looks more promising than everywhere. lllWI, unliktly though it
the governor's passes at the presidency sotmd.s today, Wallace may well find
in 1964, 1968 and 1972. himself powerful enough In 1971 either to
WAu.ACE is dealing today with a exercise a veto over the Democratic
shattered Democratic party whicb, with party's presidential nominee or compel
the sole exception of Sen. Edward M. that nominee to take him on the ticket.
'
st•--i:Henne<ly. has.no..recognlzable..center of Such"a.turu~oLpoUUcal eveala since.his
ltt•e• tona: wer.....Mor.eover, be ·i• dlaJ.11111 w:Uh-i~-1m--woutct-· .... --tt-'-' from a position of complete dominance at astonishing and incongruous. But ovu
home and wearing what his idolators the la.st decade, the astonishlng and ln-
perceive as the mystical mantle of a hero congruous have become the hallmaB of
To the Editor: gain that love is to be as mucb like the very large percentage of the people of
Mn. Brick, in her talk to the Exchange mother as possible. Mrs. Brick has been Irvine.
Club of Newport Beach (Sept. II) un-MAILBOX neglecting ber Freud. •
doub•-•• d bit b t lli I the t In fairness, please print the next THOSE who would suggest th.at apart-K-'WY ma ea Y e ng a rs o ment dwellers are somehow "lesser"
nd t. 'th h · d ht bee speech that extols women and denigrates spe nne ""I t e1r aug ers a use h ~le than t!Qe who live m· 5;n•le fam1•• be 'be • od I tha m~ on t e top column or page one. -o t Y are tter m e s n are CHRISTIN CARNEY y residences should think back to their
frustrated, neurotic women. Her plan for ment the fathers expect of them. · own apartment days or ahead to the
father-daughter communications was ,.,lathers are used as a model to achieve poss.i"bility that they, too, may wish to
· great but unfortunately based on ex-these goals. By spendmg time with lhe 'l'rg Self·dbclpllne live a more low·maintenance style of life
miraculously Immune from death by American pollUca, as Richard Nixon -
assassination. and now George Wallace -are dbcover·
That perception is so slrong in ing.
Why Hitl,er's Germany?
IT JS NOT because women are corporate and the father can realistically I'm . arguments agailJSt building more contributed a great c!eal to Western THE B()()TT'M':.,.,.
"frustrated and inseaire" while men adjust these values to the girl's tern-bi h ~m: m~~!!;'wer to cope with apartments In lrvine are insults to the civilization over the centuries, suddenly · ;a, 'a.J.TlAl,
lremely shaky reasoning. father girls learn the values they will in-To the Editor: at 90ll1e point. .Many ~ ~ present How could the Cennan peoe!!! who bad ( J t
have an "internal stabllity most women perament as he learns to know her bet-ev~Jhing. I ask :0 ~;1 ~=at, but 0~ many fine people !fho presenUy live in succumb to Hitter and to the cultural • '
------·<iu11D•"·1hot·a··good ·1ather<laughtern:I""·-.ter------.. -···-··-····-·---··---·······---"11UT!f6ll1<lllliiinrrrlaW·,;eea'1tr~T-{.";lk~~i~~1;.I.be.~Y of1=', ---wti'l!estrot'llmr"t>t:1'lat1on.r~tru11111----··-··-··--·-----.. --··-··---·-"'""v..-·---
Uooship Is desirable. Rath e r , It Is not a question of which parent can can really do better with a substitute. · How could large numbers of atemlngly been taken Into account and quoted. A 1
psychological studies have shown that provide the best model. Girl children Bnd, perhaps. even ·to tbemselves 1 few normal, orderly, Jaw-abiding people great deal of new source m1terlat. la 1up-differcnt things are learned from each usually turn to the female parent for a 1 don't nm around 8 lot using up ps to years back or 8 few years ahead. In d d plied, and other ma•·r•-• la evaluated. , save 10 cents -on an item either. f read NINA E WEST: engage or con one tortures an mass "' ..... parent. Females learn from fathers their model. reasoning that if tile father loves ads rel.igj®sly. 1 eat slightly less too and , ' · killings on a scale almost unprecedented VJCl'OR do KEYSERLING
goals, values and what kind of achieve-the mother, the best way for the child lo afl'l: doing beautifully holding my proper in the history or the world? How was it
t.opyr19rn 19/J, Toronlo Sun Sv nd •car,
:1
"/ don 't want to get well."
• ..
PUNCH
weight. I suggest others try using sell· ProfJlnru in Me.leo possible? How could it happen?
dlscipline. To the Editor:
OIAIMI COAST
JAMES ROGERS J wish to !hank )'Ot1 very much for run-
'Le••~ People'!
To the Editor:
For several yean prior to moving into
my present home in Irvine, I lived ln an
apartment. I am no more or less
respooslbit, polJUcaiiY concerned, or
moral now that I. am a fee simple own'r
of a single lamiJy residence than I was
as a month-to-month tenant of an apart·
mcnt. It is my guess t6at this ts !rut ol a
Quotes
"! doo't think that . anyone, Including
me, has had that great a track record OD
predicting food priet1." -'n'tu1ry
Betretary Gffrge P. SltaHzr on making a
qualified ptCdlclloo that the -st
incre.ase-in-lood·costs Is over1
ning M •rtlcle concerning the recent rob-
bery of my car in Mexico Md II\)' appeal
for -1e who bave bad similar dlf.
liculUes to relate them to me. I have
r«elved over ~ letf.rs O< ~...,.
tacll COllcembif mUrder, iObbe<T• ol·
ficial corruptitri, etc. In Mellco, ··
' ' I wish .to, thank all f>J'OPle wllo loltl me
of their inCJdents and let them l<ncnr that
I will do all In my powtr 10 !Jilll ~
problems. ,
JOHN J. GABllIELS
Letttr1 from readers are t.Hlootnt.
NormaU~ writer• 1hould convev U..lr
911e•1aae• tn 300 wordt• or-less. The
'right to condeme i<ttera to flt. •PM•
or eUmlnat< libel lt reaen1ed. All
letterr must include Jf(J11'1fUr< l!nd
mailing add.re11, but names mau be
withheld on request if sufficient
reason ii apparent. Pottf'J/ toil( Mt be
.pubU.h<d.
TilE ANSWERS to tbeM questions are
1<arclted out In The ~ ol -·· Oermuy (McGraw-lpll, $12.1161, by
Horst von Maltilz, a member of the New
York Bar who grew up In Germany and
11\Jdled at Ille UnlversiUes of BerliJ! aod !llarburJ, llaDtburg and J<!D8.
DAILY PILOT
Rob<rl N. Wftd, ~
Tllomol KHOil, Editor
Barbcml Kretbich
.Edlrorfal Poge Edltor ' . In the Nltn; the )look is not IO much a n.. <dltorlal ,...,. at ,.. llol!J.
IJl1tor)' II! the events ol tbe period IS a P>lot ·l«k< to lnlonn Ind lllmulatt
·history ~certain ldeni and of what one ntKttn by i*•UG!atq: cia this PtCe
man did "1th them. The vark>Us •COIJ\oo dlvenefempm~·· IOllb: QI ta-
ponents ol the Natlonai Socialist Ideology "'"' b)I 1'YJJdl<attc1 -m are ~ Md attempts are made·11>·-1--bl' tJl"'jdlDc • ........_.,.
' trace theJl back to their or!~ ID mdm' vl<wt and b)I ~ tbla
German history and qvlllzatlon. SiieclaJ -"'1"• oPlnloot IDd ldeot 0.
emphasla u .plar don anti-&!mitbm, llnil -toplct. Tbo edttoolal-
on the former Geiman-Jewish symbioslS. « "" llol~ Piiot ,.,_ °"'>' tn <he •... editorla1 cOlum.n' at the top Cl( thl
THE SECOND part ol · lhe boor Aeilil
with the "moment tn hlatory" when
Hiller arrived ~on the ~ene. lits
psychology, his parents, aex life, ·religion,
and various cbaracfer traits are ill._
cussed in detail. Relevant opinions of
aociopsycholocJats and psychjatdsts ~ve
peat. Oplntonl exp:eiad bf~ cet-
-llld~lndlotte. wrtttrt are Uwtr ~and no e;0a...,..
-· <>I -. vl"9 ti; 1ha l)j1IJ .Piiot _,14 be fnhiind.
.Wednesday, Sep( 19, l973
)
) • I
L.M. Boyd
How the Bridal
Shower. Started
This old boy in Holland long ago refwed In II•• hlo
dauehter a dowry when she told him she Intlttded to morry
a certain lmpoverl.shed miller. However, her frlendJ took
umbrage. They gathered up a collection of coins and &oods
to give to the couple for a housekeeping start. Thus orl1·
lnated the bridal lhower. Intend to report more about the
land of wooden shoes on down uie -lfne. Next spring maybe.
The expectant mother about to have her flnt baby will
average 155 labor pains from start to
flnl.sh . . . Smallest whales are not
much bigger than salmon . . . Just
didn't realize that Arizona has 3.2 mil·
lion acres of timberland . . . Most
widely planted spring flower is the
tulip . . . Laboratory experiments in-
dicate the typical nickel ii apt to
carry more bacteria Ulan any other
coin.
GIRUI
Q. "\Vhat's the difference in Las Vegas between a show
girl and chorus girl?"
A. A show &lrl I& usually fairly !all, maybe ftve-feet-
seven-inchea, weighing 130 pounds and up apd she's called
upon to parade. A chorus girl is generally smaller, and
she's required to dance.
lt has been proved, too, that women are more sensitive
to odors than are n;ien.
Before you bread that fr~b_Jisb for _~JAog, _young
lady, brush on a quarter cup of fresh lime jUice mixed with
. a dash of hot pepper sauce. To keep it firm and white.
;
vale eyes are not all that unrealistic. A third of the li-
censed detectives in New York State, for instance, are
women.
CARS
J ust about 12 out of every 100 cars shipped by rail from
the plant to the dealer are damaged somehow. Swiped
tires. Cut cushions. Even bullet holes. Gets pretty expen-
sive. Understand the Detroit boys nOw. are even. considering
the possibility of encasiiig their cars in big pl~Uc cartons.
for shipment. • · '
••one picture wortQ 1,00() 'NOrds? You give me 1,000
words. and I'll take the LOrd's Prayer, the 23rd Psalm, the
Hippocratic Oath, a IOOllet by Shakespeare, the Preamble
of the Constitut!on, Lincoln's Gettysburg Addreso, and I'd
still have enough words left over for the Scouts oath, and
I wouldn't trade you these words for any picture on earth."
So observed that sage Pb1llp de Beaubien.
One out ol. every five existing marriages nationwide
include!ll either a wife or a husband or both previously
married to somebody else.
Addren mail to L. M. Bol/d, P.O. !joz 1875, New-
vort Beach, Calif. 92660.
21 °lo Dlt.IUIUll
Ill dlSCllll. D~Cll I
NOW THRU SATURDAY ONLYI
LOWER PRICES AkE PASSED ON TO YOU? In linr •·i1h our
INfLllflO"' ti WM£til VOLi MAVf;
MON6V 'fo IUR" AHO C'-N'r AffO«O MAfCKfi ! ••
W~nHday, Seple111ber l1, .. ,. ~
McGovern C:ontrovers11.
Birth certificate Search Blocked
'
INDIANAPOLIS, Ind. (UPI) -The Indiana Supreme
court has block¢ a contempt citation against two state
officials, and In doing so temporarily blocked a news-
paper from searching blrth records to determine whether
Sen. George h1cGovem (l).S.D.), is listed as a father of
an illegiUmate child. •
THE COURT DIVIDED 3-Z on the question which bas
confronted state health commissioner William T. Paynter
and state regis,lrar oC vital statistics Kingston B. Ely with
the possibility of going to jall for contempt. •
Allen County Circuit Court Judge Hermann F. Busse
had issued an order directing the state health officials to
-
produce a copy of a birth certificate.
But t&e high court granted a temporary writ of pro-
hibiUon against Busse.
BUSSE WAS GIVEN Wllil Oct. 17 to show cause why
the writ should not be made permahent and the order re-
moYed from his record.
The Fort Wayne Sentinel sought to determine the ac-
curacy of a published story last month in the Washington
Post that said McGovern, the 1972 Democratic presidential
nominee, was listed on a birth certificate as the father of
a child born out of wCd.Jock. The senator has denied the
story.
t
•
Energy
Sapped
INDIANAPOLIS, Ind.
(AP) -A three<fay l)'lll-
PoSlum Intended to launch
Indiana's efforts to cope
with the energy crisis ran
out or energy before it
ever started.
Robert C. Morris, ex-
ecutive director of the In-
diana Department of Com-
merce, said the con-
ference was canceled "due
to a lack of interest."
Only 25 of the ilOO
per50ILS invited to the con-
f erence indicated t h e y
would attend, Moni5 said.
le! Save$8 en you buy
these color coordinated
blazers and slacks. . I a •
·How's that fOr
getting it all
together?
Sale3395
Reg. 31.ICS. Men's single breasted texturized
blazer. Wtth great styling lea tu res llke a notch
collar, center vent and patch pockets. In all of
today'• handsome colora, sizee-36-46.
-Sale 513-
"91-$15. The kind of slack that's always a
'MiilCome addition to a ma~·s-wardrObe.
Polyester double knit with wide belt loops,
flare leg and western pockets. Assorted
patterns, sizes 30-42.
Aeg •. $.15. Men'.s.texturized pofyester dresS slacks.
Styled with wide belt loops, flare leg and
ahirthuggerwaistbend. Penn Prest In
hand~e patterns. sizes 3Q.....42.
-..--.. thruhturday.
'
es.
·.
.!! ,_,
"'
1. 1/l ••• 1·rh . "' .,1
" ' <1
...
-·· ..
J \.
•:
" ·,,
'" ~
•
Volume BuyiR,I( 1nJ DiK<1Ufll Policy, wr kiivr acquirrJ mo11 nf
-lflrlf0llt-or-t""l'omp·1nttrfn-rtit-Fint-:Jewelry-8u1intt1r-Thr-f<K1l-·~-J_ ____________ ___:=:...:==::..::=
pure llM' rotn co u 1pp 1m1 r Y
S)OO.UOO. TMK ir~lrr i1rm1 wrrr purch1KJ a1 1 lr ... rl much lrs1
1har! 1ht currr"I m1rkr1 ¥11ur.
NOW THROUGH 5ATU1'DAY. 11 lr;u 2~~1 of our 1011I in¥rn·
rorr ... ill br "rrJ.11ggrJ"" a1 !Cit;; LESS 1h1n our 1111111 lo"' di1·
coun1 pricr1?
•
H1drds 11 ldiu' & M11's Jtwtlry lto•s
All ilo•s 11 !hr llK Hlil 1111
I
•
.. ..
•
... m•f "-Al• ur.a.waf ....... ,,.. .... ,,!IC .....
• IOfOG MACH • .i.llJ ~ ....... ...
o lM'lf• ....... MISH, ....
• rOll.....C:f, UOJ _....,...""" >-i.•.u•••·.........,.fo. • MIWl'Olf M.CM, Ho. 1' I•-"'"°' • '°'"""'°· o.i ..... , ....... ._. •
Men's long sleeve polyester/triacetate
shirt. long point ~far with a two--button
• cuff In assorted fancy knl1s. S~ea 14~17.
s7
Polyea1er/cotton shirts with
long sleeves and lo"ng point collar.
Assorted pl olds, Sizes 14~17 • .... .......... _ -·-·5s-o-------------'---------
JCPenney
We know what you're looking for.
•
Men's 1¥•" feather edge dress belt.
A great look foi' fall slacks. In assorted
colors plus a ceverslble assortment in
leather or poromeric materials.
3so
An assortn\ent of polyester knit Un
for men. They're·& wide 414• in aolidl
and prlnt!ll.
Shop Sunday noon to 5 P.M. at tlie followin9 ~:
FASHION ISLAND, Newport Beech (714) 6+1-2313 . • •
,
., _______________ ,...
'9• P•m,,.. :::::,~·~~~(-. --...~~..;.~~~~~...;~~~~~·~...,.~~~~....t~I --~--~
HUNTINGTON .CENTER,.Huntin9ton Beach (71~) 892-7771.
• HARBOR CENTER, Costa Mesa (714) 646-5021. j ·-•
• •
'
\
OAILV PIL01 .., .. .,tembfr . ..; 19/l
... .
•
••
-'
Chile Junta Pl~ns ~xpose of 'C~rruptio
SANTIAGO, Chile (UPI ) -
The new military rulers of
Chile said today they p1an to
issue a "white paper" ex-
posing "incJ:edible" corruption
during the three years Presi-
dent Salvador Allende was in
office.
Allende was ousted by a
bloody military coup on SCpt.
11 and had taken his own life ,
according to some reports.
Adm. Jose Toribio l\.1erino
announced the white paper to-
day during a nev.'s conference.
"We are preparing a wttite
paper on these last three
years in which the most in·
credible things will be told,"
he said. •·This immorality, this
corruption has no measure."
The president of the junt~
said Tuesday the military ~id
in full control of the country,.·
but soldiers in battle gear
patrolled downtown Santiago
overnight Tuesday and today,
arresting 53 persons and con-
fiscating 60 weapons in their
effort to crusb the final op-
position to the junta.
'If h get• too bllt! ••can
•lw•'IS •sc•P• to Germlln'lf"
The t r o o p s occasionally
clashed with armed leftist
workers.
The military junta's new
chief of police investigations,
Army Gen. Ernesto Baeza,
said the junla bad discovered
documents indicating that left-
ists belonging to Allende's
Popular Unity coaliUon bad
planned to use Independence
Day celebrations Tuesday and
today to launch a coup of their
·own and install a "Communist
dictatorship." ·
Earlier the junta a a I d
documents found m· lhe in·
t_erior ministry lndicated a
plot to assassinate the leaders
of Chile's armed forces. So
far, none of the documents
have been made pubUe.
Baeza said that the plans
found in safes in the interior
ministry, located in the wreck-
ed presidential palace, pro-
vided for the assassinations of
armed forces officials, op-
position politi t;ian s and
journalists -during the tradi-
Take 15% off every one of
I llo!>al P1jli!al'Y para!!• which
was scheduled for .today. The
parade wu canceled.
~ 'lllelday, the ruling junta
relaxed IOme restrictions im·
pooed Immedlately after the
coup. tqtercitX bus, tri.\n and
illrpJazie lr11Mportatlor\ -
ed. and radio ataUOlll were
allowed to resume broad·
caating on their own foe the
first time 1lnce the coup.
Previously they were (<>rQed to
adhere to the mllilaey com·
mand network.
.
..
Caught iti Squee%e
• Secretary of Agriculture Earl Butz does thing at
·affair s1>9nsored by his department.~! M~J&an, Va .
Some consumer activists grumbled it was all a pub-
lic relations stunt an_d told him to "stop wasting
taxpayer money on promotion junkets ... "
. I * our me_n s and bO¥S-' j~ac-k_e·ts:;_~_
" .
s
Reopen Highway
PHNOM PENH, Cambodia
(AP) -The ·Cambodian
military · command said today
that Phnom Penh'S'higbway to
the sea has been cleared Of
Khlner Rouge insurgents
again and reopened to traffic
fof the fll'St time in nearly a
mooth.
Col. Am . Rong, the chief
military spokesman, s a 1 d
government troops fell on the
insurgents from-four sides-
Tuesday at Sal& Kruos, on
highway 17 miles west .of
Phnom Penh, and killed a
large number. ·
Convoys between Phnom
Peilh -and-Xompong Som,
cambodia's only deep-water
port, will probably begin mov4
ing along Higliway 4 Tbbrs-
day, Am Rong said. But a
damaged bridge; 33 miles
southwest of the capital near
Moba Saing could delay traf-
fic.
wrm mGHWAY I cleared
and fighting in the town of
Kompong Cham at an ebb, Am
ROng said government troops
might be shifted to help fight
the insurgents b 1 o ck i·n g
Highway 5, Phn9m Penh 's.
supply route to the rice belt in
northwesf Cambodi"a.
That highway was cut by in·
surgents aboilt 40 miles north
of Phnom Penh on Sept. 6, and
the campaign to clear it has
been left mostly to regional
mili4a forces.
At Kompong Cham, the
country's third larg~t city
and the scene. of heavy
fighting last wfek, govern-
...lJl_en_!_trool! continued to bat-
·tle Khmer Rouge forces near
the wtjy~ity on the western
.side of the town, Am Rong
said. The univetSity compound
was reportedly cleared of in·
surgents on Tuesday . .-
A nine;-boat convoy early t~ d~y brougbtfoOd and military
supplies up the Mekong river
to the town,_ which is 47 miles
nprtheast of P~m Penh, the
government said.
men's sweaters· and
s-hirts. That's
what we call
savings-!
•a11 except meri .. s leather jack8t1 r
Right now, save 15% on all men's jackets. except leathers. Save
15% 011 al l boys' jackets, men's sweate"rs and flannel shirts. too. Get
read ~ for fa ll and wi~ter weathel now. Styles for sports. camping or
relaxing a.t home. All are full y fashioned. made to our high
specifit ations. .1
·.Sale prices effectiVe through Sunday.
Use your J CPenney charge card.
-~· Nixou-8ottles_V.p__ ___ ~~
Dairy Talk .Tapes
WASl.llllG'.!'P.!'L Cll!'D. _-:: • 3 .Join V.N.
Citing a "need to maintain the UNITED NATIONS (UPI)
confidentiality of such· con-versations," President Nixon -Israel recalled the "grim
~memories" of the Nazi era,
but in ~ end Ambassador
Joseph Tekoah went along
with the rest of the U.N.
has decided to invoke e:r-
ecutive privilege over a tape
recording of a meeting he had
with dairy leaders in 1971. 'Ille
meeting occurred two days before announcement of a General Assembly and voted
lucrative govemmerlt increase IOf""tliel'mlUtltin.
•-----.. ll!~m""llk"prtce-suppori>. The-.ssembl,,-,.dmltle<I<Eastt---1--\---'-'-.~--+
Disc Io sure that the and West Germany at the
recording was made and that
the President wanted to keep
it secret came Tuesday in con-
nection with a lawsuit filed by
several consumer groups. The
suit alleges that the milk price
increase was made because of
large campaign contributions
by the dairy industry to the
Nixon re-election campaign.
(1N SHORT ... )
·opening of its 2.llth "annual
session Tuesday as well as the
newly independent Bahamas,
raising to 135 the number of
U.N. member na tions.
• Spue Game• e Bh11tto Plea HOUSTON (UPI) -Acting
a little like children in a room W~SH~NG~ON 5A~)
full of new toys, the Skylab 2 Pak!stan1 ~me M 1 n t s t er
astronauts took time from Zulf1kar Ah Bhutto ho!ds a sec-.the.it b~ research schedule ond .and ·final meeting with ·----------Tiiesaaf ., .. ··pn;a1ce··s.iliilf --Ph, .. ,d .. p11•-~"'°"-.too..h. Y-0---·th
paper airplanes through their t e em as1~ ~n 1s
roomy space house and ravaged nation s ...-n~ for
perform a c r o b a t 1 c s in food , general econo~c. sup-
weightlessness. · . port and __ a secure position m
Alan L. Bean , Owen K. Gar· South Asi~.
riott and Jack R. Lousma cul e Educator Out
the games out of their flight · WASHil1GTON (UPI )
plan today to take more Sidney . P. Marland Jr. has
photos of Earth and the suli. resigned as the government's
and to start the last series.of highest ranking edUC{ltion of-
b l om e d 1 c a J tests on ficlal, according t· o ad·
themselves. ministration sources. T h e
White House was expected to
announce it shortly.
Marland, 59, a f o r m e r For AU Pittsburgh .~ch 0 0 I superin· tendent, is leaving as assistant
secretary for education In the
· ..
Buffs Department of Health;-Educ:a-i---~
tlon and Welfare.
HORNSEA, England (UPI) • WUdHfe Bird
. \JePennev
We know what you're loo,lng for.
_ -A J!ornsea municipal com-WASHINGTON -Sen. John
mittee hU reoinrm""1l!ii that v. '.)\lnney (D-Ca!U.) bas
a beach become Britain's first urged O>ngress to pt o t e ct
for nudists. vanishing species of wlldllfe
Shop Sunday noon to 5 P. M. at the foftowln9 ·iior..: .
FASHION ISLAND, Newport Beach (71.4) 644-2313. • .
,_ HUNTINGTON CENTER, Huntington Beach (714) 892-7771. --.. ----...... _.._ ~
. •
,I
' .
"But we wou1d make sure it "as a matter of ecological,
was genuine naturism and not ,economical and e th i c a I --Jus t anybody could strip off," policy." He is floor manager
council· clerk John Job'ly said of the'Eltjlangered ·Species Act
•----Tuoo<loY--;---or-tm1Je1ni·mrct1111~11:s. ----HA'R80R CENTER; Costa-MeM-J7 J 4),646-50.21 • .,..1 _,.. .:.~L!.!!!=-..:J.l!.W.::!e:~IH:l~
Senate.
r '
' '
1/
• . l 1 . I /, .• •
'
" '
.
-; ..
II ~IJ' P~lat w 'Eake Part
• t
.. In l;Qllege Credit Class . .
,,,_ Dilly Pilotton Sepl. llO
'11111 join JOO -!Pipers in the ,.\~~!,s~ 0 1p an 1 ex,
1 ) ,..,.,.,.,. Ii\ coPe1e eauca-
Um. Ulllmlty' of Coli!ornla
lnillt • ' Wiii be' i>ffere4 in
_. lnlereoted"ln aboo•b-
• . Ill( --kly 1...... to be
' ' publllhod in the MW11>11per,
' -.. • llud)' kit ond •t-IODdlat two d .. -tlnp at
.,hloh Jlhey will •be te1ted on
knowledge ol lbe lnlonnatlon
preeenttd~ bolb In t h •
DtWlpaper ond In lbe kit.
credl The ' niversary. ne . America of series in the Sunday papers'
, L JG.week -am 197 wru= fit''" --blan-"You-sectlono" ----
offer1 two unib of credit to·,.t~!!0!!!!0~!!0~,..!!!!·!!0-·!!0 .. ~~~~~~~!!!!!!!!':i~ Ibis latler person through one1, -------ol two UC! Exlension Courses.
LISTED IN lbe UC! Ex-
tension Calalog as XCal 101,
one course offers unlts ·in up-
per division study toward a
degree. Us ted as XCJl;l 427, the
other course ls an "industrial"
course for ~elf-lmprovemci:it.
I~ offers only commi;rclal
mdlL ·
EDrotlment In either course
for credit invQI,... t h e
1tudent '1 paylnt iwo lees:
· --One re< 110, ii to be sent
dlroctlj'-·to lbe publisher of
· •"'J1w·~Future--FUe;''-as-thej
!~ kit f..-lb~ -is ealled. The kit includes a
reocird, a book of essay.si~
learning l\lide, 10 sell-~ ..
rand '"?be Future Game."1'lbe
kit can be ordered from
America and lbe J'uuire ol
Mai.>, P..O. Box F,_~ N.J,
11'/t'la. -~J~~~~
11ment 1e.. u ... be
, penon or by 9all to
'\ OCA.~r~ 1t
Sh'ows Hike
. P.~~.~~~s.~~?.!~
Pa_ys On Ter'~ Deposits
.. •ti,r
TWO YEARS
Or Less
On
$I 00,000 Accounts
Tiie u111•er 11 t•tS. 1cn11ts tht 111
WtPAY caf-1~BT ~ns
Oii All OllD ACCllln
FOURTEEN ()FF ICES TO SERVElU IN
-•tonitll t::.:., • -~ . ... ,_ -C-MoJa i .AltiM!ll .....
~ .... -(21 .... -· ·.fm Milltl111111111n 1111111W1 · 1111111 ,
1 ? PIHSHI 1111 I SH In• . , ....... 111.1-· -
1 fallf City .. lilall YIN SU lllf
I '
-
PEN--NIGH-1=-& DA-V-·1•+---
cenL
Air Cargo ii llllD''l'.-ilh Ill
tons for lbe ,_ a>l'Oflar8d
·lrilb 111% 1..-Iba ...... Ume
last year,
Tower opera-were ap
. II.I percent wllb 3111.Jil tllil
year comporod to 3111~15 In
1972.
•
·and S~turdays ·
Clll (2 i),123-9101 -
or ... 1hewhitmpeg11
for your TI II wt offtee
~ ,k_.
r.:.:. 1r.:;.i.;:.. 41 835 -rst st. (nortll of warner) / 714-962-331 2
I ,':i '•
SCHOOL DESKS FURNISHED :f~I USE IN TH.E HOME
While en rolled 1t·H1wthpm9 Chrt1tlan, oach atudent, on p11·
entt' requut, .. 111 be loaned oachoo! dMk hem_, _at heme.
-ciil cilWrlM lot F"""" ~ ,
WtdntSdiy, Septrmbtr 19, 1973 DAILY Pl~DT
Volunteers Neede·
--
That Ms~ Look ..
CaplesS W19s for
a· new ·treeClom. . '
..
• I
• '
' '
.,
i.
Jus ·:~'171 · tos1
whewyou trade in·-_'-----'. -------""
youf did wig. · .. ·"
Ell en. Fluff-back~rashion · e in man
beautilulsfi8c es. yna modacryllc for
ve rsatile styling ltnd a 'touch me' texture. $19.
s14 with t rade-in.
Vanessa. New natural-hairline fashion
atyle in many beautiful shades. Sottly styled
of Eluratt modacrylic for a 'touch me' texture. $'8.$14 with·ti'ade--ln. . .
• Softl -curled fashion at le with • ·
ew natura airli.ne. In many bMutlfUI
shades and a 'touch me' texture of Elura•
modaCrylic. $23. 518 with trade-in.
Ginger. Natural-hairline shoulder length
style. Softly curled for pageboy or flip. l,n
many shade• and"e 'touch me' texture ot
Elura• modacrylic. $23. $18 with trad ... n.
The h•l I• bt ck In clpehe, ~
an d turban. AcryllC 1nd m~
hair/acrylic in pasltll 11\d
bright$. One 1lz• tit• all.$2
' .
JCPenney
We know what you're looking;for.
.. Shop $unday noo~ to 5 P .M. at the fc;>llowlng stores:_ ••
--
___ ,.. __ ..,
•
::=:...-""--~EASl:UON ISLAND~ r:,Je.wpo J!.eac ' ({14)~~-2~!1. HUNTINGTON CENTER, Huntington Beach (714) 8'17:1n1 .
I --------
j 1 , I • ' . I •
..
--+·
•• --,, , .
. .
\
JO DAILY' PILOT WtdMsdbY, Stptembff lq, 1Q7.)
Budget Basis Park Fund New Techniques Save
Ai1alysis Cente1·
Debated, Ol{ayed
Request
Submitted By TOM BARLEY
OI lbt 01Uy L'Jlol 1111!
hazartis prevalent a decade sandbags -he .stayed lor is of the utmost importance In ~ M ~rmade in tba'
ago. several weeks. a number of eye Conditions field ot "col-neat transpla'Db,
ORANGE _ t.1any elderly "\Ve're doing 3 5 O, O O o ''Age is no barrier to these that are eligible ror remedy by retinal deJachments • n d
SANTA ANA -An ap-patients who ,vould once have cataract operations a year," operations and, in fact, it can surgery. glaucomia,!lhepanelqreed. t
pllcation for a grant has been been condemned to blindness Dr. Joseph Tirico said. "And be a detisive advantage in the ••A ereaC'. many ol these submitted to the state Depart· 'd 0 .. A . CONDmON involvlpg 1· ' • 1....1-.1...: 1
nlent of Parks and Recreation in their declining years are the possibility of success in operating room," sa1 r. both eyes es-'. ally demands e°""d raun· ...,.der'arelOcal--_:!:_,~.~~l·
SAA'T ..\ ANA -Creation or
• .a Forecast and Analysis
:center in the Orange County
t•Administartor's Office was the
·most debatable item o n
·1£'uesday' s Board of
·Supervisors' agenda. '
The new agency w a s
de sc ribed by County
tAdministrative Officer Robert
C'Thomas as the coun t y's f market research center. t "The information '\'e devcl-
~ op oo trends of the future will
' I i Jail Cos ts
l : To Go Up
t SANTA ANA -<;ities using
~the Orange County Jail fo r
'their prisoners can expect to.
pay more per day next year.
t The county Board o r
!Supervisors Tuesday approved
a change in the basis of reim-
'
•bt.Jrsement of the county from
a fee based on actual costs of
: the previous year to current
~.estimated costs.
.,
$368 sei
or $8 a month.
REG. $460
Y2 ct.· marquis cut
bridal set, 5 diamonds
· wedding band.
719.20
or 24.75 a month .
REG. $899
3 ct.· dome cocktail
ring.
•• 151.20
or 5.50 a month.
REG. $180
J.; ct.• diamond
-earrings for pierced
ears ..
be used as a basis for next
year's budget," Thoma s told
supervisors.
being given vision by surgeons those operations is now up lo Jasod Stevens. "Elderly pa-I"'~' -.i-..Wl.O;J for planning the pr i ma . ' 85 t red t 33 l carefUJ timinrr•," nnco said. Oesheclla off-:road vehicle utilizing new operalrng room percen compa 0 per· Jients1do not need the amount ·-o with the pe.tlent Jldl,18d.'*1't!le
park in Orange County. techniques. cent 2S years ago." of sedailoo demanded .by "The second ~eye __ should ~ point.tbat-fw ii~
Three surgeons who are us-....... Tlllted on as soon "'" nn.•si , · ALTHOUGH lrE joined in The county Board of ing those techniques at St. ALL THREE SURGEONS younger patients and it has ... _.-_,.... t---and relu.ed;' Dr. Robert P'or-
unanimous approval of the Supervisors autllorized the ap-Joseph Hospital, 0 r a n g e , agreed that eye surgery now been my experience that they ble after the ftrSt· to ensure a rest said. ·"The 1 u r c eon
project later. Super vi so r plication under terms of a ne1v recently told a "Town Hall (or being perfomted often sees the are mu<;h more relaxed "°d correct balance and coordina-prefers it .thb way, •lnce It
David L. Baker expressed law '>''hich requires fees for Health" audience that vision patient leave the hospital in cooperative." tion between the two eyes." eliminates many fli the poll·
opposition to the size of off· hi g h wa y recreational via the surgeon 's knife has three or four days where once But all three surgeons Catartct surgery comprises surgery problerm that we
the ne\v unit. vehicles such as minl·bikes, become a routine operation -eyes heavily bandaged and stressed that, particularly in the vast majority of eye especially had to loot for in
"The proposal requi res 19 Pirt motorcycles, dune buggies that carries very few of the head wedged betw een the case of the elderly, timing operations but cm:nparable e)'9 C81et." people . Do you really need <'ind four-~·heel drive vehicles. 1 ...::::::::_:~::_.:.::!...-:::::_:~:::__:=::__:=::;:::__::_:_:_:_:..::.__:::.:_::=.:....:.:_.:...: _ _.:.:_;_::____:_ _____ ;___:_ ___ :_ _______ _
that many?" Baker asked, The county plans to use the
suggesting half that many 1.500-acre Prima Desheeha
might be ntorc appropriate. area for bolh recreation and
The new unit will cost refu se disposal. The off-road
$23,225 in" new money plus vehicle pa rk is considered an
-$113.000 transferred from the interim use. The area will
county Pl anning Department. become a county park v.·hen
~·lost of the personnel will the land fill activities are
come from pl<1nning. complett:?d.
· Thomas said a progress re-The property is located
PQrt v.·ould be given the sup-north of ~tl Juan G_apistran'!
crvisors in three months. "\Ve on the Rancho Mission Viejo.
plan to monitor all cowity pro-=-
g.rams and eliminate duplica· Done by DuMn
t1 on." · Cr-eation of the new unlt is Pat DuM gets th rngs done.
parl of a plan Thoma Throw her your challen~e
d . . s and see how she handles It 1n presentc '? supervisors in her "At Your Service" col-
budg~l hearings last June:iAt umn, now appearing every
tl),e time he proposed tak.ng Sunday, \Vedne!day and Fri· ov~r some of t~e planning day in The DAILY PILOT. department functions .
22.00
or $5 a month.
REG. 127.50 .
Men 's 14K. gold
wedding band to match.
135.20
or $7 a month.
REG. $119
lh·cl. ·single row
wedc;ting band .
s200
or $9 a month .
REG. $250
Men's 7-diamo nd
.40 ct.•
519.20
or 18.25 a month.
REG. $649
1 ct.· brilliant cut
solitaire engagement
ring .
s100
or 5.50 a month.
REG. $125 .
• 1 ct. • pendant.
1"4K gold mountjrig. ...
-
-Save s54 to s 1 00 on
bedrooms. And unlike
some s~les, kee~ all of it1
You won't pay us
. _q single _ pel)ny .extra
to deliver furniture ·
or setit_up_in'-you~home.,----
You get lreedelivery within our delivery area. Thars us uaily a 20-30 mile radius.
You get free louch-up ii needed, on any item, before it arrives at your home.
You get free set-up in your home. We'll eYen cart aWay the crates.
Sale 5 335
Sa1ess99
R~-S699. Traditional style 4 pc. suite
ihcludes door dresser, mtrror, armotre
and full siie headboard ooly. ClassK:
oak finish over embossed oak and
classic ivory finish over embossed
Wory. Special mar and scratch resistant
• tops. Pieces also sold seperately.
6161 Headboard reg. $130. S•le S11 0
Hfght 5tand reg. $82-, Sale $70.
'
,. .
· JCPenney · .
We know what you're looking fQr.
' . . '
I ·' '
.,, . '
'
'·
'
•
...
I ' •
" ' ' . " " • • r,
' • ' BUEN4 PARK ORANGE SANTA· ANA --'
Shop ~unday noon tp 5 P .M . at the following stores:
. . &Mcft at 0ran1t1110toe · C1t1 Or at ~ft~ 'rove !hd. 3900 So. Bristo!· Ho, 01 So, Coi!SI Plt11
1----0.U,P,,U,.tJJO tO,JJO ,,.,____ _ !Jft.1.Ul.tll..--__ _,Op.J!lt:! .. • .. hll1 ..... _
S111•••Y 10 •• 7 O•ilr Sv11i•r• 10 tt • .-Swni•y 10 ft 6 · ..., FASHfON ISCAND;'Nowportl!eacfi [7r4J ~4=2313. riUNTINGT ON .<?ENTER, Hantin~n..S.1ch-{7.14}-892.l111·~ ~--
•
. " ) 1 1
l ........
'
>
WtdntJd1j, Septtmbtt 19, 1CJ73 DAILV PILOT JI I
.~he Record Fl,rst ·the Pope~ Now Marijuana t I'
Lawyer Who Sued Pontiff on Pup Ou_t to Topple Pot Law
Dl.,-1 ""'DS """"""· ,_ ... -"'" ~ U IEftll.JudY·O.•fMI ~ '· McWJlll1m1, Jotn \.. w llOl*t w, --.· M""' ade w_, ............. -.. dieted in CUlllOClion with Dr. the type in which a Th eir petition fo r ing a !Ill vacation fora pup u., a e M~=~·j,.n"'~ Anltlonv llld Ttmothr, Leary's o,Jd.. favorable-fUllng:lntheirbebalf declaratory relief enables the of the famedmountalnrcue
.....,, ._,'~': s v~ SCl\loti. "t•nk _. Irma K. SANTA ANA -A Santa Ana Brotherhood of Etem,.1 Love, would apiply to all citizens -dW.lenge without basing the dog&.
By ARTHUR II. VINSEL
Of tM Olllf' Pr111t 1 .. ft
il•rrvib'~" • ""M .r•MM =·~·: ~ild~.,:.u~ C•rroll lawyer who once won a sult an alleged worldwide, Laguna are 21 to 30 years old. actlon oo a prior arTtSt in con-Sheffield claims the 1'riars ~=on;-H,~~-Ind ~~~ M. Af1j:,a. ~!':~~:AIL';.:"' 1',~""k!:,.~ ag_alnBt · His Holiness Pope Beach-based drug-smuggling He does not specify their nectlon. with the law tha t they of St. Bernard never dellvtftd
• etiin. 'l.nkf l4'M 1 •1merd AIMn TMoOore Paul VI for $60 over an un-conspiracy. home clUes because lie ,says seek to change. his dog and declined • rtb'ld ,~~"'· ~~ II Ind JI~ Htl!Ofl, Sltnlt1 J .... and 'lulh ,,_ . """'-Ay all desire lo 11'!< or . they !ear_, .... bar···--•.. ......... ... A .. ·"-"d ... .._.... -.--~---W110tehmldtt oery:..~.~~Jwc. dellv.ered SL .Bernard puppy "-"c ~ ..., """"-"~-on &&..,.... ....... ,,,;, lpenll ..,... • ..,. ... T ... "' 1 L-.rd .r. S.lldro• has filed a new bri. ·er, this one possess mafljuana iii thefr The lawyer who graduated IN tm, SheffleJd caught f,·u.st t~nn ....... ---"'.tt.. to
Hall, lkii L 4lnd •rd J, Tt....,lch, Mtrtllt Jtllt •nd E•rl• ftllllllG£ co•lllTY horn bu th ll Pope p ul VI bet .,.~ ~---, • ~lit', vt\:1\ic. ~1111 . w .. !f¥' ~Mn 'f'"' 1 intended to topple Califwnla's O\\'fl es, t ey a fear from UC Berke1ey'1 Boalt a _ ween cogs md ooe for him.
ti• r.r • .:f\t F. ·:: 14 0':" ~~";\:;:: ~~~.; ',':c. FG=k GI \ marijuana law. CJ\lrn.She, 1!~d ~~malntion:::_A saolys Hall and entered inctioe in and wheels of the legal Sheffield subeequently Went u1:t.0t•m1. c.vtdJ. BuniJ,M1,11ynLucUl••ndJonftl•lll ..._ _________ , The lawsuit, which argues uca, wu.i uw_.,,, ,. 1972 names Thomas Weaver, machinery of the U.S. and to the top, suing Pope .Paul ,..j1,~~1~ ,•~:J::~. for an extensk>n of the so-call.: fices at 817 N. Broadway, San-Leslie Elderedge, D a v I d Swltr.erland. and winning on default_ when
·WM*,.Ylrtl,.. L II•~ wn111rn ed Right to Privacy Act a~ ta~·-.\_ carpenter, .Linda Di etze, 1be lawyer paid a $60 the Pontiff failed t.o show up .:..':'O::-l~-•• • ... ..... •. Other Fullerton proved last year by staie He ...... his arguments Oil Lloyd . Charton, c y D th i '• ~lt to monks at the as ordettd in small tlliirM Yfl'"*. 111'11 Nk:t loMI• 111.., voters, was submitted lut allf!&'l,tknl t.bBt lawmen use Colwell, James May and Hospice ot the Grand Sl. court~ Sheffield never col·
Nld'dltfl. l!lly.t•l'd •nd Kotln "· ~ undercover iim.n_ ts to infiltrate J_ayme Melda as his clients. ..,.A ___ ., in the s~-Alps d"-•··Jed, how-er. Scnnliin• Jolln R, • Jlldln. c. · week in.Los Angeles. -~·· ae.rnacu wi.» .u-~ ~·
.-. ........ JoM -~.... Deaths D Ji A decision wW be made the homes of known or.,,. _________________ ~------------
McKtofl. Chtrln •• NlcklO L. e very .---·-'·• ·-·g"--. II ~ &obbl• Jo • Mktlhl w. within the month to detennlne ~wu w-u -....w"
-~r.--~~ . c111111., .. v1,. 1111 , P1111up G. · whether Oalifoinia Supreme JUS p-oN asks the
v-"'"' "" •• o. BOSTON (AP) -!Ucliard S. C bs H• Collfl jusUces wlll consider "'"" · L•;~~(tllO~~ E "' Ind Jolln Rob! le, 'ZO, phUanthropist and ~ It the suit filed by Attorney ~en~t~ = ~ ~~~~~
Minn. Johtl w .•. Jr, vttm• ormer president of Avis Rent. William Sheffield. de th Ir ur!:,~"''.,, El"' •nd H1rry A-Car, died Tuesday. FULLERTON A un r e command from
Wiiton, J1mH Gon1 lld tMrv L1n111 "FM OPTIMIS11C, because enforcing the existing ha.sic '':.''~·" ~~1111"11 J nn l'nd H•rrv LOS ANGELES (AP) di stributor of adverUsing there is a nationwide move-marijuana possession law. c111~. J1nlc• •nd G11t11r11 c. E d war d Warfttld, 891 a materials in several Orange ment toward liberalizing and Named in the brief filed
,,,,,,., Ron•ld e1r1 P•trlcl• J1nt i 1 Coast communities ls seeking de c riminalizing rnarii·uana with the California Supreme
C•ntlold, Nor~n E 1rd •ncl Mtllndt surv vor: o a company of Court are: Attorney General
.. :. HHtlltr Ann G11btl't A;oy black soldiers accused in the an Orange County superior Ja.ws and thls supreme court Evelle J . Younger: Orange ~..,,., t11rrv c1trk H1u1 EIHllor' infamoua Brownsville Raid, Court order that would pre-has the courage to do it," says c.ounty Diatricf Attorney Cecil ,::'J~~ •..ih ""' '" '""' "'"" died ~y • 'II<. and....!6> ...,1-the Oty...:o1--fullerton Sheffield. . Hi •• Sberili ·""'--" · k s~. Ttlllnv ... J11n1or L. soldlen were dlabonorably , 1be -fonner paying -con--Pfus<=~;:;.11..... ~chief• -rt!,,rwa''nc .: ~1!;!;,. Alldrwt 1.-•net 11:.. dl.scharged'ln 1906 for-rilleged-from iestricilng distli.~ in tractor, 34, slngles out four Sc .,_.... ,.. .r· 11.
Corr••· Rl.ldolfo •nd A•Uno I"' rioting and &boo Ing up that city. Orange Coast' police chiefs, bopen .. ol: t.a~ Beach, Tru111to ' l and I Clifford Murray of S a n a.nr•nc1. s111toe. 1nc1 ooue111 Brownsville, Tex. La!t Apn'l, Filed by Arnericap Postal P us county state awmen Cl h K Ltontl'd the Anny found tb ch thfi in his suit designed to end emente, Josep el1y of
M•M Okh'Q _.. " w. . e argea Corporation and Pa inder criminal "'"""~•tlon f 0 r Tustin ~d Merrill Duncan of "', .• ~.•.',·NL~· ..... ~·.',", *'' F. erroneous and issQed Warfield Publications-the lawsuit notes Y'""""".. ' Orange.
V..... ...... • ..-G•rv W1tn1m an honorable diach_ arge. • simple marijuana posses$n.
GERRY RANSOM
HAlRCUTTER
NOW AT
THE NEWPORTER INN
8£llllY SACON
1107 JAMBOREE ROAD
NEWPORT BEACH
TELE: 644-0340
on•llAI· A;ona111 Ptu1 ROM!!• Ann that a delivery employe has H t 'ght • Li.mdbllr'e· 1.or1nc11 rv 1nc1 .u. e represen s et m-SHEFFIELD SAYS his eight Kl::~~•lllMn Ell Ind Lloyd SAN DIEGO (AP} -Walter been arrested (11 the·order or di vi duals who claim they do, _c:::li:' •:n:'.'.'':_in:.:the::::~· c::lass::__:•:::ction:'::..:•w:'".lt ~~~~~~~~~=====~~~~~~~~==~~~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~!!~~ Rlc111r11 'Scb.lrra _ Sr., f 8 th er' ol tt.. clty and currently faces a not use the illicit weed, but1 .
MMll'lt. Fr1M•t G, 1n Jn111 Torrtt --... Wa] hearing in the North Orange fear e r·l lll i n a l prosecution _.~-) P11mor1. "'"" Jo.r1n Gltnn O•I _ .. .._.ut r ter Sctllrra Jr. ~
J111111, Ju111~ M. 1nc1 1tl•m T. and a veteran of World war 1,. county Judletal District Out.· should they -at some future r -
Cotton, Clllrltt L, •nd Ill• SllStn dale ch J l th An<llt'wi. vtr1 Lonru and Gtrrtt died Tuesday. He is credited 'lba.t act Ion is un--oose 0 samp e e o~:. M•roar11 LH • Htnrv O•vld with downing-11 German contltutional, the suit claims. forbidden foliage. .. ' ..,,.
TrvllUo. Rotttrt Emll Mil"( lo.I planes while an Army Signal It points out that delivery of A RECORDS c H E c K ' t:'.J:0~~:4 ·~~~ Corps pilot. the "News Times" is effected however, reveals at least two , ..... ; .:Llr·
storm. Donl$d L •nd,~ nclnt L. only to those homeowners who ha-had uncoml-•ble U• , • II' lloblft. Oeorvl• .1.. 11111 obert HONG y.., 1""-•· I ~+..,.... . ••r11111, ,-.u11,,. •· 1nd J, KONG (AP) desire the no-cost pubJlcatlon petienoes with n arc o ti c s ". • r .• • 4 ~--'? • ~'::"" 1onn11 JHn Ind Mllttllw Rande Sbaw, 75, oldest of the and that demands fer Mil-detecUves, including one in-p ' th• k 1 1 ' 11·
Wtntwor1tl.ooutlolHw endM1rlo FarEastemmovieindustry's delivery are ·promptly oom-, ennevs 1n "S sma _ . .,...-....,:~ E2?~~Pfn:~ y~L =~:Eftl~~~ ~;i~crtON ~the Heroin Rap w'. ·1··h· ~ 2:~ '01, ·o'~~~;· .. ··: ff., 1·· . \ ~· '·~t ,~. --~
o. o..t•no. JOMpll R~ph •nd publication, described in ·the · · ' ~ -I · · e~?$.~$.;.;,;r"~ .. ~':i~=t.~:c= ~tnew!:.~:.~J -Bn·ng·s Jail'·. ..·· _I. . -, , ·_1 e .. ~O_ .. ' ·. 8 . nursetr-U· w=-.. corot Mn •l'MI St9llrt Ot-nnl• . Shaw of SingapoJ:'.e, a general charactet''.:: be)d . .· , ..., ~l
ll'llrH, Jull• A. •nd R~•f'll L. LOS ANGELES (AP) it to a circulation of 5,500 in . , f u·rn •t r·e>. ' g"' , .
Ft-,Gl.a-tt.l.l'fM•NMk"-tl,.. ..._ Fullerton, the complaint SANTA ANA ·-A hefoiri • ,I u ; . ,· ·
1
·, • ·.ro. ups. .1.1111.1111. Mlllmood M. 1111 Loll e. Clore Warne, 84, named dealer who pi' eked M v· land
Ev-Hv11 v. 1nc1 0t1ib, American Civil Liberti e 5 states. Unrestricted delivery o 1e •.~.':vw, •-1n1m,L.:..!1111 ,011!~ae, Uru'on "'-·•.:._;_,, ":..u1.n-\l .. al-. could boost Iha, t circu1aticm. to Wax Museum in Buena Park ~ f--1----~ --· ·-.-w~ .. ...,............ ..!JO 000.Jbe: suit ~ as the spOt to sell the narcoUc -....: -~ ~~ i 1
' G•rd~:=lr;tr;:':.; Gtrt J".ci( lll'ate1narr<Of1be-ye11rbrl989, ~ · • . · --· to-underrov:er-ageots.lias.l~:"f-----------,,.,.---•·' _ _:""'::·:'.''~.._,....,,-""'"!"_"""_""'""""""'""'='!'O:!!> :..::..~=-·:.~~ has died following a long ill· Bo'?: AfC organ~~ 7354 s_entenced in Orange c-OUnty r· ~ I ..
w1110M. holTlct "· •MCsL ... w H. ness. v e · • er, Superior" Court t.o five years to -[~' •
c;.dcll .. .1.::.r,,.o ~. anc1 K~ e. points out that its products are life in state prison. ~-' ·, :,'·J:,:_ ,...~.~·-a.Ttv J .. :~ LEXINGTON, Ky. (AP) packaged in plastic begs end. Judge Hert>ert Her1ands r·:,~_~ , · · .·
a-. LtwrtllCt Jolln •nl OOronrt :·•if.'Orbey K Rob"·-'mjured m' tied on the door knobs or in-ordered' the pr1'••n term 'for ,.-,....,, Luclllo J, •nd tlr,!111 R. · \~ ' · • ~' -~ Chol•k. Mtrv LOlllM •1'1111 ._), . an· auto accident aDcl · un-dlvidual homes to ensure that Eugene Eagle Wilson, 36, Los i--• ~i:, ~~~ t!.r'..~ .~~· ... Gltts · '?0"5CiOUS mo.re than four the distribution does not Angeles, after studying a
Kllln. "'°"' E. •1111 yeam-.\ied Tuesday at age 59. violate so-called "litter laws." diagnostic report on the defen-#Mc>/. K-1111111 Dt~ ' I ...,,.. vt,.tnlo 11M ;twty WU the only person Coltalncurnd by any _other danl
,.,....,, s11tr1 L. Wiii J..-'" Jnj in a flve-veblcle ac-...,.tem woul_ d be prohibitive Wit.son was arrested last
...... Gtt'•klh• R. e1111 1 cldent t a city intersection and TIOl_ILd affect the employ-April 18 in the parking lot of MltlOr, Ulldl-1, oncl E ..... ~ ,,-.. ... .1 ...
~.~MM-'. ~.., . Aug.t 1 1969, when thrown men& ot'bouaewives used to the wax museum after setling
Detltla Not ~ · the windableld of hlf"'te ,llJe the whalagen(f said 'taa $250,000
e. , rt~lll:i:#I wofffit. of h~ro a6d _pxaine.
, 20%
·· saving
d~-OisJ$sabl~ ... . . -. . · ~ diapers ~I\. ~~ . ' guara
a happier: ,~
~aby. · -Stoclrup-now-
and save!
' •
Sale"1°3 .
Reg. 1,21 ""'"°"' nsad1.it'1mee
'\ quafity. Pin~ss, easy k> .tit.
} New ~ 30's. , ~ Sli•el ~ .. '..
l, . '
' .. '
Sale
. 6Q78
'
Sale 67 18·
.•. fltJll. f3.91.Ear!y American
,. .....a!1awer pine chest.
•;.~ -... _ '
Sale .7518
._,....,._ ..--~ ... ---
R.g. 83.98. 'ea'r!y Amer:ean
3-drawer pine dresser.
• •
• T
_,,,..-
..
'
A.:V.~~oddletime9 favorites
Absot,bent weight. Pinless fit.
Oa)'!lore 30's.
:sa1Ereae Sale15.98 Sale 2478
eem
$Nt PJ::~w Drive
Newport -· C&lllonlla
. -· • • PEEK FAMILY·
COLONIAL FUNEllAL
ROME · 'lltl Bola& Ave. .
Wet1mln11er m.1u1
~ Reg. nc T 9dd18tlme8 extr!: ~~-absorbent aualilV. Pinless., tqo.
(Nernile 12's,
' ' Rtg. 19.H 104 coil vinvl/
loam padded mattress,
With flower, children's
motif. or patchwork
ql.lilted pearli.zed covers.
Reg. 30.te COM mattress ..
"x0 frame for 8Jl[lra
firmness. La~lnaled cover.
Clea r vinyl zippered
protector.
Sale 19.s~
R•g, 24.98 104 coil,Jisal/foam
pa.1ded mattress, wilh !amin.ated
cover and clear vinyl zippered
prote;tor. ln ytJll OW or white.
JCPenney
We know what YO\l'<e l®king for.
• SMITWS MOll'nlABY
Shop -S.nday .iooi. to 5 p.m. at the. ~wi'"I stores:
,, FAS,HlqN )SµND, Newport BNc~ (714) 644-23J3. Shop Sunday noon to 5 P. M. at the tollowlnt stores:
11'1 ll!m SL em:=.-
---
'
'HU Tlf.lSTON eENTER Huntin ~ eeo~(7~) 142,77.71.':_"""
HARBOR CEN ER, Codi M•.!J (714) 646-5021.
---··---
FASHION ISL~ND, Newport Bioch (714) 644-2313.
HUN~TO~ENTER, Huntingto~ Beach (7f·4) 892-7771.·
. --· •
• I
. "
.•
..
.,..
"
' •
\
\
(
.
, . ' •
. '
, J 0 DAILY PILOT
B'"'get Basis Park Fund
Request
Su bmitted
New Tech_niques Save Eyesight _.
Analysis Cente1·
Debated, Ol{ayed
. . .
I d d ···'bags -he 1tayed !or Is or the UlmOi!I importance in ~ /"'f been !llldl !'1, tllo baiarU: preva ent .a eca e i.auu field ol -·'-'·' trans-'" .... a number of eye conditions ctll"l~ .-uwi, ago. several weeks. retinal deti1chmentl a n d
I I "We're do,·ng 3 5 o, o o o "Age ·,, oo barrier to these that are eligible for remedy by 1 ORANG)' -Many e der Y glaucomiaAhe pone! agned. I
SANTA ANA -An ap-patients who would once have. cataract operations a year," operations and, in fact, It can surgery. "A great-~y ol. these I
pllcation 'for a grant has been been condemned to blindness Dr. Joseph .Tirico said. ''And be. a decisive advantage in the 'iA CONDmON involvlng operatiorul are belnl ~-I
submitted to the state Depart-th . d 1.Dln the poss·•blllty o! su-ss m· opcratm· g room" said Ur ds
By TOM BARLEY
01 tPle Dtllr "llot Slltf
. SANTA ANA -Creation or
,.fl Forecast and Analysis . ' •Center in the Orange County
11.A.dminfstartor~s Office was the
•most debatable item on
·:.Tuesday's Board or
·!iupervisors' agenda .
'nle new agency w a s
,.llescri~ed ..,by County
~Administrative Of(icer Robert
Flas as the county's
et research center.
The information vie deve l-
! op on trends ol the future will
I
' ~Jail Cost s
! !ToGo Up ·
t SANTA ANA -l;ities using
\fthe Orange County Jail for
;their prisoners can expect tQ
:pay more per day next year.
: Tbe county Board o r
ISupervisors Tuesday approved
~ a change in the basis of reim·
"bursement of the county from
a fee based on actual costs or
! the previous year to current
' estimated CO$ls.
$368 ••.
or $8 a month.
REG. i450
Y2 cl.· marquis cut
bridal sel, 5 diamonds
· wedding band.
1nent of Parks and Recreation in eir ec 1 g years are ...... ' · both eyes especially deman ed. under local anaesthe_tlcs -
be used as a basis for rn!:"tt !or planning the Pr i ma being given vision by surgeons those operations is now up t<> Jt.asotn dostenvoenst nc. ed"Elhldeerarnly o:t~ careful timing," 1'irico said. with the patient lldtitlld·WJ\'the
year's budget," Thomas told Deshecha orf-road vehicle utilizing new operating room 85 percent compared to 33 per-1en s ond b Id be he '• condartable
supervisors. . 0 Co t techniques. , ceot 25 years ago." of sedaUon demanded . by "The sec eye s OU • point. that ,
park in range un y. Three surgeons who are us-. ha operated on as soon as possi· and relaxed..'' Dr • .Robert For·
ALTHOUGH lJE joined in The county Board of ing those techniques at St. ALL THREE SURGEONS younger patlen.ts and •t th s ble after the first to ensure a rest sa!d.~'The 1 u r I• o n
unanimous approval or the Supervisors authorized the ap-Joseph Hospital, ~an g e. agreed that eye surgery now been my expenence ~~ e~ ect balance and coordina· prefers it 1 way, alnce it
project later, Supervisor plicati~ under t~rms of a new recently told ~ "To Hall for being performed often~ t~ cooarepemrautclbve.1?.°t"e re an ~between the two eyes.•: eliminates any of ~. P01,..I· David L. Baker expressed law which requires fees for Health" audience th t vision patient leave the hospital 1n 5 surgery ~ op~ition to the si:.e of o fr -h igh w a y recreat~onal via the surgeon's knife has three or four days where once But all three surgeons Cataract surgery comprise iall liad to loot for in
the_ new Wlit. vehicles such as mini-bites. , "I>ecome a routine -0perati~otcr• ~-~·eyes-heavily-bandaged-and stressed,_ that..1.. particularly in the vast majority of eye espec y n
I d b l-~~~~~;~~~~_i~dC~~~~~~~·~~~n__i1~he~c~a~e~or~t~hc~·~eie~<aer~er~l~,~1~tm.~l~ngC~°""ll'·":ra~t~to~ns~~bu".'.t~~eom~pa~ra~b~le=~.,,.~~ca~~======-.. Thc proposal requires 19 Pirt motorcyc es, une uggies that carries very few •or the hea w e wee
people. Do you really need and four-wheel drive vehicles.
that many?" Baker asked. The county plans to use the
suggesting half that many 1,500-acre Prima Deshecha
1night be more appropriate. area for both recreation and
The new unit will cost refuse disposal. The off-road
$23,225 in new money plus vehicle park is considered an
$113,000 transferred from the interim use. The area will
county Planning Department. i,lec..'Ome a county park when
l\1ost of the personnel will ihe land fill activities are
c..'Ome from planning. con1pleted.
Thomas said a progress re-The property is located
port v.·ouJd be given th~ sup-north or San Juan Capistrano
crvisors 1n three months. "\Ve on the Rancho J\.1ission .Viejo.
plan to monitor all county pro---.
g_ra~~ and eliminate duplica-Done by Dunn
hon. . . . Pat OuM gets things done.
Creation of the new urut 1s Throw her your challenge
part of a plan . Thon1~s and see ho\v she bandies It in
presented t~ supervisors 1n her "At Your Service" coJ-budg~t heanngs last JWle> At umn, now appearing every
the time he proposed tak~ng Sunday, \Vednesday and Fri-
over some or t~e plaM1ng day in The DAIL y PILOT.
department functions.
$200
or $9 a month.
REG . $250
Men's 7-diamond
i---·•_o_c-:t. • ;;::::----t
Save s64to-s1 ()0 on
bedrooms. And unlike
some sales, keep all of it\
You won't pay us
a single penny extra
to deliver furniture
or_ set it _up_in yo_ur_home~
-
You get free delivery withinoordelivery area. That'susualty a 20-30 mile radius.
You get free louch-upil needed, on any item, befOfe it arrives al your home.
You get lree set-t1p in your home. We'll even cart away the crates.
' Sale s335
Reg. $399. Traditional sfyle 5 pc.
suite consists of triple dresser,
1nirror, nigh! slands. lull size head-
board only. Pecan linish. Case
tops have· special finish for ·
scratch and mar resistance. Pic·ec=e'~--flfft
also sold separately.
5 df"ewer chest Reg. $1 50.
Sa&. 1120
Salessgg
Ret. $699. Tr~lie>NI styhl 4 pc. sufte
iOcludes docM" dresser. mifTOf, armoire
and full sitt" he9dboard only. Classic
oak finish over embossed oak and
classic rvorv finish· over emboued
M>ry. Special mar and scratch r&sistant
..
, . ..
• • •
. , .. -··~··$_t40 ·li~t or~1amon .
• tops. Pieces also sold separately.
6161 Headboard reg. S 130. S•le S 110
Night tiand reg. $82,_ SU. $70 .
719.20
or 24.75 a month.
REG, S899
3 ct.' dome cockta1I
ring.
•• 151.20
ar 5.50 a month.
REG. $180 . 1•1 'h ct.· diamond
earrings for pierced
ears.
BUENA PARL _
&Ndrtl flrtrii~
0,.11 Ottllr f 1JO le t 1JO p.M.
l•-'-t:I 0 .. 7 -
I (
REG . 5175 .
1.1 ct.· brilliant cut
bridal set, 14K. gold
band.
22.00
o r $5 a month.
REG. 127.50 .
Men's 14K. gold
wedding band to match.
135.20
or $7 a month.
REG. $189
'h ct.· single row
wedding band,
.ORANGE
Cif)'Or a,iCMtu"orc8hd. o,. to.•'·"'·
D•ilr s.u., ... 10 •• •
519.20
or 18.25 a monlh.
REG . $649
1 ct.· brH1iant cut
solitaire engagement
ring.
•100
or5.50 a month.
REG. $125
J~ cf." pendant. ' 14K gold mounting. ...
SANIA AHA .
3900 So. Btlltol • !Jo~•t St. Cont Pl1n
Opeti lf.f p • ..-.h llp.
s •• ,., 11 t• •.
r
'• . ,,
'
'
JCPenn~y
We know what· you're looking for.
,
' •
'
.
•
Shop Sunday noon to 5 P.M. at the following-stores·: . . . -_ __....,;.;.;;;..._~-~
--• If ; . . -...
FASHION I SLAND,~twport Beach .(7 14) 644-23 13. HUNTINGTON .CENTER , Hunl ington Booe~ (7 14) 192-n~t~
I fi 1 1 I -
I -
DAILY PILOT Jl j
Dlsl!lola'tlo•s r::i:;:::; :r.~·~-
f;q~, ~~· ftecor~ . I
First the Pope,-Now Marijuana -.,
Law yer Wlio Sued Pontiff on Pup Out w Topple Pot Law
MrW•M••""" JOlft L. Wiii lit...,.. W. '0._, -ftr.ada w-·"'""·.,.·""'"· ByARTHURR.VINSEL dictedln coonectionwitbDr. -lbe typo In whld1 a Their petition for JnC•llllvaeatlonlorapup '4 J.TAi e~ M='j••nMl~ Mttlofrl •rllf ol "" 0•11r 'no1 1'1" T I mo thy Le a r y ' 1 o l d ravorable-('U).IDJ ln their behalf declaratory relief enables the of the famed mounta!n reKUt -· -'=.,. ;._11 •ct111i. "'r•nk enc1 1r"'• ic:. SANTA ANA-A Santa Ana Brotherhood of Eternal Loo.+e, would apply to all cit17.eN -challenge without basing the dop. • 1Had'jl, Otvkl •· etld l!ll~Wt1' Certoll alle ed Id "-• • 21 t 30 Id -~• pri ~In ~-~ Id Jal ·~ ~--l1rry, •-,c1ro1.,11 w ''" J1tn1t 0v11ce11. It•• •M ,,.,.... t." lawyer who once won a suit an g wor WIU'C', .....,guna are o years o . ""'"'on on a or a.,_, con--.:.~••it c ms ....... r.-WMo
.... 1~ lflCI l"ltllltn M. lerl'tl'e. Cfllrlft Alllft •11111 M.lrl1 TIM Be ch-based drug "•• H •-· not pectl •'-.J nect1on with the la t'"'t th of St. Bernard ne\rer de1tvced "'Oltkott, H11t11 111C1 Hvtn111 Mllllf', p11r1c11 Lynn •ritt ROt>lrt aplnst His Hotiness Pope a -smugg .... '6 e U\lail s Y u11:1r w "" ey
• 001m. :J.,.1n U'M •nil IU<hml Alltft Thlodore Paul VI for $60 over an un-consptncy. home cities because he aays seek to change. hls dog and declined • refund
Jucbf11111, lt!Jtll c_.c.&11 Ind J 1tnt1 .... lon,SllffllfVJ"'911ftMIClltutllJ'-........... ll d • 'to tbeyf police'• t -•••• -'-'d pool -0tvic1 .....----j _ • w1ic1.wntdt, o.,y IUV1M aM Ji'I'~ delivered SL Bernard pqppy 'u.:-y a e!lfe use or ' ear lJGrassmen. on ti" .......... ...,,,.,r • ..,...
Rw1..,., ,,, ... '· eroc1 l101111d J. •11111r11 has 1a....i 8 new brief, this ooe posseu marijuana in their '!be lawyer who graduated IN tm, Sheffield caught just tryq uoauccfafully to
H1.U, L.1•11 L and LICN'l1rd· J, T1 ...... 1c11, M•"~ J1111 1nct E1r11 -~ COUNTY "'°" horn b th ll f o........ Paul VI between cogs Ind one for him, • fd'll!',_v1c11tLCL1rc1 ~1,11 wn"" intended to topple California~• own es, ut ey a ear from UC Berkeley's Boa.It "-vi-iji'."'•'1o1°''t~' ... ·,',.."'~· •!'ht1,•0t:r. L1ng1..,, ic:1r.n J. Mil F~rkk G. . marti·uana law. \ criminal prosecution," says Hall and entered }X'8Ctioe tn and wbtiels of the JegaJ Sheff_ield ~tly~w.ent
,. -Huoetlnt, Cllrt•llnt '"° GrtoOrv Sheff' Id ho lntal of 9'12 ~ w n\achln ry r th us and the ~···· 0.... -··· m1~11. 01"1ttt1.1 DIYld'1J. eu11i.M1rUyn Lucn111n0Jo1111a1,11 '11\e lawsuit, which a~es .1e , w ma ns • 1 .names ,1.,mas eaver, . e o e · · to top, .. ,,.....,. ""V"'•T.u.a ~~ic':rlldV~1~nd..=o:r:ot::~. for an extension of the so;.call· fices at 817 N. Broadway, San-Leslie Elderedge, Dav t d SWU:r.erland. and winning on default.Wilen w~. virtll'!I•' Luc1111 1nc1 wuntm ed Right t.o ~rlvacy Act ap-ta Ana. • Carpenter, Linda Di e tze, 'l1le lawyer lr.Jd a $60 the\ Pontiff failed to show up .::-.:. -l~~ i:...I. .... ,..,. •. Other Fullerton proved last ear by stale He bases hls arguments on Lloyd Cbarton, c y n I hi a deposll to moou at the as 'P.ldel'.!'i In small; claim:J
VlfY!Dla, '-rd\rt~<*· IOd tonn1• 1.1ttn .. voters, was ubmlUed last alleg&tkm that lawmen use Colwell, James May aod HOSRlce of thetGrand St. rou~Sheffiekl · never col· ·:!.c:'.::.' J!n ~~ .~,~::11:~n '·, \ week in Loa Angeles. undercover agents to infiltrate Jayme Melds.as hla clients. Bernard in the S _ Alpe dur-Jecte11, however.
:.C7:. ~=;!1~ ::: =~d t" Deaths Deliveq: A decision will be made the Mmes Oo•l...;kn~o".'wn~.'oo:rlr"'""'""'"""'""'""";;;;;;;~.;;;;;;.;;;;;;~.;;;;;;.;;;;;;~~~~~~~~~~~~::::~::::1 IM:G-'obb!• Jo ~hatt W. --witbhl-tlle-montb-to·detennine-suspeded,-drug-i •
.......... 1111111' P•lricll: tiiifl:i wbe"-r Oalifornla supreme lllll P~ON asks the ~=er:,::r~~·:: P~IUp G. BOs'I'ON (AP) -Ric'-~ s. -~ r;nn ~ Curbs H1•t Court julllces will consider . high-~ to stop the ~me L1;::.r.cl111J~ ElilM •nd Jolln Roble, 70, philanthropist and the suit filed by Attorney lawm:Ucited and the ~ffi~rs
M1nt1 . Johll w .• Jr. 1nd v e1m1 former president of Avis Rent· William Sheffield. under their command from Ll~,.!_~111"" E•al11• ind Hirry A-Car, died Tuesday. FULLERTON A
wu .... J1mM Gordon 11111 ~" Lindi "PM OP11MISTIC, because enforcing the existing basic
s1 ..... er1, Kflll'll"11 Jo-An11 1nd H1rrv LOS AN distributor of advertising t•-15. a nati·-·i·de move-marijuana possession law.
""'" " GELES CAP ) ·~~ -·· N ed · the b I f f'led c1.,,..,.;,..,, J1n1c1 e. •nd ou111r1e c. E d w 8 r d Warfield, S9, 8 materials in several ·Orange ment toward liberalizing and am m r e l
''"'"'' 1ton1kl 1!1rl •1111 P1lrlcl1 J1t11 I f Coast communlUes Is seeking de c riminali' 'zi'ng man·i·uana with the califomia Supreme c 1f'lfltld, NOl'ITWln Ectw1rd 111c1 M11111111 surv vor o a company of Co rt Atto Ge 1 "'"' bl k ldl Oran Count SU · laws and thls Supreme COur1 u are: mey nera "'"-, 1te11111r Ann 1· .. Giit.rt It'"' ac so ers accused in the an ge Y pen or Evelle J y'ounger · Orange ~.~1m c11rk i~ ... tt1111 elliMr dlnifedamous Brownsville Raid, Court order that would pre-=d~a~e lo do it," says County nilt.ricf Attoiney Cecil
R ti.~ A~m •1111 John H•nrt ldl Tuesday. He -and 165 vent the Qty of f,uHertOn The former paVing con-Hicks;-§berilf "J~-Musick, ~· , • .,;;, ~1t.lll'l4:'ML. RIX so en were dishi>norabty from restricilng distlibutlpil in tra"'··, 34, singles out four plus pOuce chiefs )" r a n k ,.,,.,. discharged In ll06 lof.,alleged· • ·~ Sc._. · ol i. Beach c'fr:n;.:uc1o11o Mtncloll 1nd "•11n1 ly rlotif!g and &booting up that city. Orange Coast police chiefs.· ciill~n Murra0r" 8 8 ~
11rtr1nd. s.11101 e. 1nd Oouel•• Brownsville, Tex. Last April, Filed by American Postal plus county and state lawmen Clemente, Joseph Kelly of
llOlllrd the Army found the cbargei Co "·-nd Patbllnde in. his suit designed to end Tustin and Merr1·11 Duncan of M1rdl. Oid1W11 11111 llODlf' w. . rpora~ a r criminal nrn.11,,,,.11tlon f 0 r
Mc.Ntll, Lori M. 11111 llloOtrt F. erroneous aod islQed WA..field Publi •-b Ja-" •• -·• Qr • skltl, JHnnt111 A11t11nd G•rv WlHl•m ah hono· -..i.·i -:.a:;;:;:i...--'""!' • • cat11.11a, t e w~t notes simPle marijuana possession. ange.
von1t1. ROnlkl P1u1 1nd R0$91t1 Ann ra.u e \l.lOUlarce, tbat a delivery employe has 'ght In
GERRY RANSOM
l:IAIRCUTTER
NOW AT
THE NEWPORTER INN
B~UTY SALON
1107 J AMBOREE ROAD
NEWPORT BEACH
TELE : 644-4340
LUlldburt, LoM11111 ,,.,.,.., •nd L" He represents ei • SHEFFIELD SAYS his eight
ic:i=:~111~11t111tn eutn i nd LIOV4 SAN DIEGO (APr-Walter been arrest.eel cn the ·order of dividuals who claim they do, ~c~li~e~nt~s~in'.'..,'.lbe~·~cl~as~s~a~cti~·o~n~s~w~·t~==================~=======~~=!!!~=~ llllclllrd Schlrra Sr., f 8 t b BJ' ol the city and currently faces a not use the illicit weed, but1_ J
Mtctlnl, Fr•ric•• G. 11\d ''""' Torr.. bearing in the North Orange' fear c r i Jn i n a I prosecution P11inore .... ., J111nn .nc1 Gl9!!11 Dll astronaut Walter Sch1rra Jr. ~
Rl1••· Ju11en1 M, 1nd w11111m T. and a veteran of World War I, County Judicial District Court. should they -at some future
Colton, ClllrlH L. ind Luclll1 Suu" d te ch to I the Anew_,, ver1 Lonrvrn r.lld 01rr•t died Tuesday. He is credited 'That act 1 on ls un· a -oose samp e l~"" w·th d · 11 G · · 1 the ul 1s· forbidden foliage. 0 ""'"· Merg1r11 LH 1.-H.,,l"'I' o1v1d. 1 owrung erman oont1tub0fl8 , -s t c lfilS. --r· _£ ~
Trulll$o. Roblt"I Emll •nd Miry Lou planes while an Army Signal It poirlts out that delivery of A RF.cORDS CHECK, : .· ~lj .. ~,~.
s-. """· ""11111 •nd Mkllltl, Jr. Corps pilot. the "News Times" ;. effected ' 'J; • ltwlt. Undl J9'nlltt 1nd Jollll von -however, reveals at least two · ~ ~" , ~1:_ =1eL..A~n!'':= L. . only to those homeowners who have had uncom!l)rtable ex.-... 1 :~ ·. . ..
11r11ni,l'1y1tn1e.11111l.0J. HONG KONG (AP) -desire tbe l»COSl _P.W>liclU!:!!L ....,.rw.nces with na'u.g_l-1$! · r • • ·, ~~?' .-r ...,"1•---I
Mlne•lll'O· .-1. -J ... 11 -ll'ld-Ml!Mw Rmiife suw, 'TD,Oldesrormeam-tliit--cleliiiOOSici'OOO--r.'!'!~ ~p-· h • ---r-·., t ~.-=-~. :frE:~:-:::;:-M·"" ~~ .. E~~:'T~~:1.\JS12'J =·z;~ promptly com· der.cuv ... ~luding one Jn, • en .. ~e .. _ .YS.,·.,I 1nks Snl8.JI~ .. ··:~~·.· .. ' .. t ·~,.'
lhlr-. P11r1ce Ann 111111t1Ymolld L. Tuesday night, apparently of· a · ff • D ;_ ' .. "' ........ ""'""M .... JM heait attack. His brothers are CITY ACl!ION against tbe . erom .1wp w· .. h 20-Ol".' . ' . ' .. ~§::!~?1~i~:. a~~~::-=-~~~ :~;~~ Brings Jail ' , . ~t . . ·. ,i~'. off all nursQtY :.· ·~ ~'..
:';..~j11~"°!·.~':'kh'::tOtn111• LOS ANGELES (AP) -it to a circulation of 5,~ in SANTA ANA A. h ·,.' fur· n•1ture' ' g'' ro'up· s· ~.~ < F1-. GFtdn A1.,. .. 1nd Mktia•I '"· Fullerton the comp 1a 1 n t · -erom ; ·~ ~~~l:' .... ~h~lldMOt~~.Loll E. ~ore. w~Jeil ~: bn a~ e d states. Unrestricted delivery dealer who pi~ked Movieland ... . . ,. '' . . I • • • ,,,,,, • ..i-t.Y . onm.. w1101,,, L. illd Mir11'1'n e. ~er1can v 1 er . 1 es ~··hi boost that ctr · 'a"-to Wax Museum m Buena Park • .. ... .#'
r ·-...
Hr111oU1y, ""' J-.nil Bry11t Uruoo 5outhem CilifOl'.Dla af· ~llOO the •t tendscw _.. as the spot to sell the narcotic · .: '--"""-;~~~ ~ !. ' • , _,,;.,:1:1-'
Smith, S'fl'l'lt M. llld Ctllt'1-. A. fJ' ~ .AU~ ]169 ON SW COfl • · ' -~ 'I"': ... ..,,,..-· ---;1rd:JfoWHI Aii11nO'Gery J1e1i-· -118 fntlll'v• ... ., ~"'a' ' -,--' ' -.--..,...,0~lo-undetcover..agents_has De<"f----~ ~ . _ ,, ,w,....... ~. • ..
,...,., OOrolltY' 1nd GuY' has died following a Jong ill· 1be APC organization, ',;)J'I sentenced in Orange County *-
·•
~=: ::"'rb':'. !'::1~"" "'· ness. Bo~ Ave · ~ Westminster, Superior Court to five years to ~1."::t~·1~1111c~.:"'111 e. LEXINGTON K ( pomkts ~t ~tpl1tstprodbaucts ar: life in state -prison. -Homtr. J1mn Dou1•1• e1111 lktt'I' J. ·• , y. AP) J:!8C 8g ..... lD as IC P 8!' Judge Herbert Herlands
.....,.., i..wt.nc• Jonn 1n11 00ro1nr~ ·_t. ·0rbey K. Robbins, injured in tied on the door knobs 9f m-ordered the prison term 'fo't · ll"r1dlf', Lydlll J . 11111 l'IM11n R. ' :r., t dlviduaJ horn t th t Ctlollk. ,,,...... LoulM •nd. J*"'! · an auto actident and un· . e~ o ensure a Eugene Eagle Wilson, 36, Los ~=-/,.!':;' ... ~;,'.,,,~ .~rvlc:'~"•'e• cOnscious more than four ~ distribution ... does ~~ Angeles, after studying a ""'~ .,..,., •· '"' "-'(t.;> ~ed Tuesday at age 59. v.olate sc><:alled litter laws. diagnostic report on the delen-=:v."; -:=._'3'~ ~ · · was the only pttl1)ll costs incun'ed by any other dant. :::;:~.:": ~"':= .... 1n lnj . 1n a flveavebicle ac. system would be prohibitive Wilson was ~ last ~. o.r11di111 1t. en11 1a: cidenl t a clty intersection and ~ affect the employ-April 18 in the parking lot of
Hlbenl. oo.-MM _. ~""' Aq. . , 1969, when thrown menl;· ot·~housewl"'8 used to the wax museum after selllng
. the wlJXlahleld of bl§,~ the wba~ ,lienlf ~Id w;aa .f250,000
Ue. , · ,i~ woflli ol -berOiJ\ ilid!J!ocalne.-{
,,. ,~'R -··( l , •
• • .. _20_%
~~~-..L,. :;--, --c:!-a·vingsc--, ~~~~~on diss:>,osat>:I~
~-dia-pers G.n~: ..
guarantee
a happier
baby.
Stock up now
and save!
•
S 10_3 , , j' ·--ale , ,_ _
, • • .."!, i Reg. 1.21 Famous Tt>ddtetime& '
, 1 •• ~\ qua lily. Pinl~.ss, easy \o flt. t.-W ~ j New ~ 30s.
' ....
Sale 6078
let. 71.t&. E1rfy Atnt1ie111 'pl11,•
crib wifh Jtf1 bili11r b11'1 •
Sale 6.7 18·
.,.Reg.13.98.Early American
4.drawer pine Chest. . ...
Sale 75 11
• . -·
~~.-~e-1~~~·-
Aeg.i'f.•• Toddletlme8 favorites
Ab!ofbent weight. Pin.less fit.
Oayiime 30's .
.. _ ............. -~ .. ------.......---
+ AeQ. 93.98. Early Amer:c.an
3-0rawer pjne dresser.
PA MEM i Cem• ~ ~\ ...
3IGI PiJt'°~. Drive
Newport Beacb, C.Worala ·--. .
. :Sa~~53e
~ R-o.. 19C TOdOletlme-9 exit"
absorbent QuaHrv. Plnktssit~.
~emlle 12's, • ·-1 Sale83,~ !
Reg. 1.04 Toddle11me8 extra
abs0i6ent. larger'size&. Pin'9!S. I
.Toddler 12's.
Sale1598 Sale 2478
• ' I
Reg. 19Jte ~04 coil vinyl/
loam padded mattress.
Witr. flower, children's
motif, 01 patchwor~
quilted pearlized covers. ,_..
Sale 19 9 ~
Reg,. 24.91 104 coil sislll/follm
pa.:ided ma ttress, with lam inated
cover And ciear 11lnyl zippered
protector. In yu!low o r whi!e.
Reg. 30.H CoH mattress ..
"x" frame for extra
fi rm ness. La~i nated cover.
Clear vinyl zippered
protector.
•
PEEK FAMILY
COLONIAL FUNERAL HOME
JCPenneY.
-~imiltY9!)'ri~tor. • 'llOl Balla·Ave. . , w..-a;r _, ~-Shop Stin~ ,llOOll 'IO S' 'p.m. at. 'the fohwl119 stores: We k~~~~~~~~~~-
SMITH'S ¥08'n/ARY _ ,~ FASf-llON ISLAND, Newport ,B~c~ (7 ~4) 644:23p.
,.
"'Mui tt-r1 'HUNrrnG'f~N'° C:ENTElt, ~untington 8'1ch (714) ri2:1111.
---•--
0 =-----. ARBOlf"C.ffifil~ osti Mes• 7i4) 646-50 . ---------
Shop Sunday noon to 5 P.M. at the ~119 stores:
f.ASHION ISLAND, Newport Beoch (714) tM-23 13,
AONTINGTOl'CCEITTER~Riiriling on 'fi1CJ.-(1l4f 8'1f.777T •
-
•· •• • • •
•
I
(
·,
~
I
•
I
•
•
• . . .
J2 DAI LY PILOT Wtdntsd~, Stpttmbtr 19, 1973 0
/
WHITE
21• .111
1"'1 I'll''" lq.ltl-1.H 2•• '
Prli11 EllHUll bmP Sit s.,t 22
yaur~haice
TIER CURTAINS ,I
CURTAIN PANRS .... ..., ..
t. .
FOR .
Terrific opportunity to brighten your home.with c~eery curtains and curtain panels, in a choice of six charming
no·iron carefree styles. Choose from decorator solid colors and pretty prints with novelty ball fringe or
embroidery trims, or deep-5'.'-.bottom hems.Colors and styles to C-Olllplement-evecy.decor.-liurryJor_best
selection! · ·
' . ' '
~
PRINT AND-SOUD CUT
VRVB .TOSS PIUJWS
Our Reg. 2.99
Spruce-up your decor! Quality
details ... Some with fringe
all round, others have welt
edges. 15" & 17" sizes. Ka-
pok filling .. Buy now & save!
s-•lllllltlll •• , .. li•itd.
, ... ,
.ea.
•
SAVE '3 •• ~EtEGANT ---.HXTUBFllERGIJI ®
·ollADERlfS gg
4lx54"
Comp. at 5.99
48x84" Comp. at 6.99 3.49
~
Accent a room with the sumptuous look ·of
wool, yet enjoy the unrivaled easy care of
draP,eries made of Fiberglas.® It's the mir-
acle 'fiber that you can hand 'Wash, let drip-
dry and re-hang in just minutes. Theynever
need ironing and they keep their fresh new
-· _ look for ·years. They .won't rot, fade or burn.
· ·-;-either.,A.colors.to c.booseJrom.
BRIGHT NEW ACRYUC
PIAID SUITING FABRIC · ' .
Our Reg. 2.49 yd.
Glad plaids in super brights for
all your fall fashions. Great for
kids too. Machine washable;
never needs ironing. Get sew'
ing! 54" wide.
Fabrics not atJefferson
88
3 PC. BAKE .. SERVE 11/2 QT; CASSEROLE 21/2 QT. CASSEROLE
Ftiwtrlj 4;95 ' F.-r~l.ll--Coloriul bake, 47 Handsome decor. · serve & store ative casserole set in a vari-in strikiAg color ety of patterns combinations. In--and colors. YOUR eludes decorator
• CHOICE trivet
"'JOASTMAStEll cumM
•IBDIATIVE TOAllER
ilor Low DI scout Price
', 1Enjoy perfect toast every 'time with
· IS-handsome-2,slot-toastir:-fe~
tures Superflell®f timer. Decorative
-black phenolic e1id panels. B-134 .
·~:·;~
r&!CM:J. . .
.. . .. ' .
-UDY 1m·mism1·1E ·
SALDI TYPE HAii llYBI
Our Reg. 19.97
Extra larg1 llood ICCO/nmodates
-jumbo sile "'~"· for boirffant hairdos. 4 ten'fel"ature choice, even one fur wigs. folds compactly. 317
•
8,8
-f.1rurly J,15-
"97 Decorator comple-97 menting tones in as-
sort.i,r.tterns. Raf·
fia a plastic h11g-
gers. YOUR
CHQICf
------'· G.E: MIST HAIRTlti I ER
SJYLO THREEllAYI . .
Our Reg; 21 .17 I
• Sets with mist, coDdi~oner oil
ry-in·minutes--i01ar!Rliiree-i ·
terthangeable rolle" ... iJ iudO. I .
med. 4 small rnllers • 6 oz. ,!lair
conditioner HC04' I•
O•r••• 19.97
Powelflrl.>Jri-speed suct~n deY0111S
dust, dirt, ~os, etc. Phis this v1ewm is Jightwiight. features
a smooth, cotnf~ arip. 30000 •
WHllE FRONT Ol I ER!i ALL THIS PLU!i THE lrlJWE!iT Dl!iCDLftlT PRICE§ 111\i·A' I THE WE!iT · ,L .:
CHARGE II-'USf rou• Clf.PJtCilO . ··-•••••• -·---U..
--
j
. .
-·EDI_· YOUR
---~------------. -. --· .
-·
-.
-------·-----------
f
-•
J
• ' .--•
. ' -• ..
:~
' -,
~
'
" ' -
. :
' . I ,
I • ••
'
BLACK VINY~. l
tHROM~lfAIR
Black" vi nyl , ith shin·
ing chrwne ftam e,
' •• -
On Rt 9.-t8c
C-Omes in regul r
~ . -
CHROME & PECAN
.COCITllf TDlE-
Contemporary table
. measures 29"·x 48'.''
19%"
SAVE OVER 30%'·
·our choice
"66
Reg. 19.88
•
OCCASIONAL
TlllE
Multi-use table mea-
sures 23 %''' x 24" x • 2011
square . ,,
-~
••
--~sc
Available ip Reg· ula<-dry-Of-oily
formulas. Sock up
& save! .mulas. 6 oi: .•
'
' ·~ ;;;; laAGE A. ·;~~t BAG
•••• •••• • :::·· .. 1 l'ti... · B. Attache/Overn ite
HO 'Y9U 04.~own Q~ltY.Jmage ~ta r~asonable price-a~t~er bargaillcfrol\1: •1 !"";:!l" IY~ frllj[. F1111-1t.taniliiil earner big enough .to hold,-3 suits comlortlbfy, t. SHAVING BAG li!CoJ\l!i an attacM t n e ~documents & p31!ers or toi a quick change ol under' . • .~. 11 ~r. lhinl, i CGllNtrsh*i~ l!<fg that'll hOld all you, toilet articles. fourth·, a :;"" ·~·":
· lirge collapsable,'~i11:a.-w1th 3 com~artrhents, ~adloek & key. o. f UGlri BAG
c..,.11u1
•
•
•
•
.SAVE
~4
.Janta~tic low. p ri&~! Easy-care cotton kn it layered
colla[ ;fTIOirel .with sco~ neck opening. Lots of solid
colors-get 'em '811! Sizes 8 to 18. . . ~ .. ~ us. . ·-
. . .
I
• Wedntsday, Stpternber 19, 1973
•
DAILY PI LOT J:j
•• '
WHITE r
-FRONT-
' .
-u ~ . -HAPP1 NEW ... • • HALTER I PANTS _
2fC. SEJS
INCREDIBLE FASHION flNQ, Ol.S! ' . ' -.·. '"'gg
REGULAR
$JS.99 ___ _
' . Hurry on in-_fo r _one of·the best'fashion values
..-'in the store ! Exciting halter top .. ,pJus pal-
azzo pant .setsl-Super-lookin·g! Festive,
prints and happy· solids. JOO~ 'polyester dou--
ble knit so they're :.100 % easr care! j!-16 ..... '• ,
.. • •
"
NEW POLYESTER DOUBtEINII -.···
PANTSL". --·99 . -' ~ COMPARE
AT $7 I
-'
. .
•
11EANR. P4NT~.sns ARE
WORTll:TWICE. THE .·PRICEI . ~ ·gg
'
' SPECIAL
PURCHASE l
How nice your little one will look in of these colorful two-tone
two-somes. ·W1'13t a value! In a whole bunc h of hap(w colors.
lace trim snigck top' tor girls ... Notch collar Potliiled shirt
took f01 bOy_L Great wear polyester kftit Siltl 9'24 mos.
'
Mti
&HOP WITff. CONFIDENCE AT WHITE FROl\IT ... !!iATI!iFACTIDl\I GUAJIAl\ITEED DR \'DUR MJ)l\IEY BMK .-+-...
·-. (
•
'
-"-.
...MOlll llOU1!51
MOIL·SAf.
lOAMtetPM
-··
( _, .
-' .
•
J4 DAILV PILOT Wodnnday, Stp""'°" 19, 1973
They Gave Fish .ing .Party··
And Albacore DUln't Show
Eat Weed
Series
At Coast
Notliing
Course
CAMBRIDGE: England
(UPI) -Uke to study the
art of doing nothing? SAN DIEGO (AP ) -"It's
g~ to be a very Uabt win·
ter,' say! Al 011Unpion. one
ol many fishermen puzzled
'1-l'r
and frustrated bf the disop-
pearance of the albacore tuna.
The annual mig ration to
Southern Callfomia of the
''Well, if you've got hiccupsT<!oli1t"Ski." , .
Nursing ~llt~rs
costly whitt-meat albecore ls
the ·ureblood ol the local
gportns hlng and small co m-
mercial f I s h I n g Industries,
both mulll·million-dollar con-
ce rns.
Btrr THIS year, for the first
lime since 1959, the fish didn't
show .µp. '
"Eat the Weeds " l.!i a unlq~
new four-part lecture series
being offered at Orang_e Coast
College this fan.
A 'course ·1n doing just
lhat Is being held at the
Coleridge Nlj hi School.
Students ciln sit in a
classroom chair and sleep,
read, \\Tlte or just gaze in·
to space.
The course, wtlich costs
$3.75, i.! without a teacher.
Now!., albaoore have 8~
pea1ed off Mono Bay In
Nonhem callfornla and In the
Pacific Northwest, giving the
commercial Deel a chance to
recoup some losses. B u t
there's no reQ>Upin& fo[ many
sport fishermen.
The series, which is free to
the public, meets Friday even-~gs from 7-9 p.m. in OCC
Science Lecture 2. It began
Sept. 14. Persons may register!::::=:;:::======='!
at the lecture.
Series lecturer b Mn . ..---------;
''I've put my charter boat
up for sale," says Jay Faber,
who has made hls living tak-
lnR: groups out to fish for eight
yean.
Charlotte Clarke, w}to has
taught In Los Angeles and at
Oran~e Coast and Golden
West Oolleges. She also lec-
tures for survival courses, at
health fain:, and for interested
civic groups. Last summer she
traveled in Hawai i studying
edible weeds. DESPITE THE continued
presence of yellowtail tuna,
which have been. caught here 'Ille title of the first lecture
in record numben lhis year, was "Sw'Vival 1n the City." It
Faber says his customers / e:1plored many common
have. decreased about 35 per-weecb rouna m the city that
cent s1nce" tKe ncinnal albacore · are cona:idertd dellcacles In
season started lo July. Worse, other parts of . the world.
he can only charge $450 a day Preparation ol the weeds Is
for a group of 15 to 18 described aloog wtth gourmet
fishennen for yellowtail, as recipes.
opposed to SQS·for albacore. The Sept. 21 lecture is titled
·SECURITY
IS
43 e A DAY
ni.t'I •11 ii COlll
PH dly tor -v•ot
!S1&61 10 °"'" ""
lrwlncillle fl-Sol•
• IOmoo•OW°I •Ml'I09<
TO 1odly'1 "°"'"
own¥'r'won•n.
""-11, Yll 1.,.91 •nOl>tf' 10 ~old 11911 tin
•uml<tll, !~• IMinclble floot s.fe off•• pro1eoeuon hom butgl<l<y, flft.nd
"""°"h"" ;" 1ddi1ion to con-iltocol
lhlo"""' 111 pro .. mttY ~ -ol "-
dl int. 1, un l'llln pul money bM:k Jn
YOUf pock II by MY of iM .... Mt preml•
um n ducuon1.
"Albacore to fishermen is "Foraging iD the Forest," and
just like a-fever," he says. will concentrate on edible and ·111iMililll .....
"The company groups and useful plants found in the ... illH
sporls groups, all they want in Chaparral and Pine belts. ~
the summer is albacore. I'm ·"Desert Delicacies" is the tt-»111vi1L"1io ........ ...-.~WMO sure there'll be other boats up tle of the Sept. 28 session, ,,_ ___ ,,,_.,_,_,._,,_,,, __ __,
for sale." while the 'fmal lecture is call-
ed, "Riddles, Rhymes and
I~ "•
·How a ter1nite
can h~11· J0'9 ··
fiX yourtoil_• ..
~-
• Termites have never rally done anything for people. Ex'"!'t undennlne
their homes and generally ause itayi>c.
But now, for a change, tmnites Can help you. Because with every me
termite Inspection Terminix Is giving away a book called H.E.LP.-the
Home Em ergency Ladies' Pal.
It con ta.ins over 150 pages of e3sy-to.understand instructions and draw-
ings to help you hatdle a whole range of household emergencies. Llke a
stopped-up toilet. A buftll-out fuse. Or a clogged drain.
. !lP!h .the book and th_e.fil~jnspection are .
free with no obligation, Jual Terminix.
• But hurry. There are only a lijrtited number of TE...X
books. And an unlimited numl>er of termites.
Call 542·7881 or 533-2960
Try Saturday's News Quiz
We Dare You
. I
AUi.troRE, wmm mm Recipes." from Japan ~ Southern1,-~~~--~~~~-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-~
Executive J~ed Ga.lifomia each 1 um m.e r before t u r n I n g northward, r--":"::"!' ____ ""!" __ ._,
""y have been dlv ... ted north omen's . e~rnu than usual by low
NEW YORK (AP) -Jack 'I'tle pros~hon branded water termperatures caused
_L. Clark, who allegedly made · Cla.rk "a crimlnal, a fraud · by the unusually cool summer, -NeW ·
·$10 mJllion fhile investors in artist of v~d P~. · a leiadlng re.e&,cher says.
the nursilli home chain he pOrtions,"andaskedGriesato "The water just hasn't Exc1"t1"n· g mete severe punishment to wanned up very much without headed lost $200 million, has ~eter othe~ violators and show the SWl," saya Dr. R. Mlchae!L ._ _______ _::_ _ _J
been sentenced to a year in there isn t any special treat-Laurs, who heads the albacore 1
prison. men! .for people like Jack Jnveallgalions project for the ••• where_ thrift is always in style
Clark, 47, former president Clark." National Marl n e Fisheries
Located on the Lower Level .
I •
-·-and-chairman of-Four Seas Service Center at La olla.
• '
Nursing Centers of America, MAXIMUM SEN'l'ENCE un-uwe can assume that the
pleaded guilty Jtme f to ·cc:n. der the law could have been fish are being found up north
apiraey to defraud lnveston in five years in jail and a $10,000 at least partly because of
the Oklahoma Clty-bued cor-fine. favorable ·ocean conditions in-
poratiQn. ~ .... _ · c:.iark was one of eight eluding au.itable temperature
IN DECREEING a jail
term, which Clark w a s
ordered to begin 1erving
Thun;day, U.S. District Court
Judge Thomas P. Griess
bruahed uJde the defendant's
plea Tuesday fur probation.
I
persons indicted by the and food availability."
govtrnment on ch.atJH· 'ti
mampuJating the nuraln'i BE SAYS Pacific Coast
center's ttOct.s dUJ'int r.o:nve-, -fbhennen aren't likely to
year period, during wlifch catch much m>re than ha1f
time lt was transformed into• ~ ~··near-record totlll of
glamor issue on the American 3'.iOOO' tons of albacore in tlii!
exchange. 90-dlx Mison.
/
,,,..
IT ObESN'T TA"IQ 'BIG MONEY
TO MAKE RErtL MONEY!
Only a Passbook Account does all this-
•
Your savings earn more money than evu be.fore..
Your funds are instantly available. No withdrawal pcnlltieL
You earn more interest than at a bank. No idle~·
Noreatrictionsondeposits -the best way Jo build &avlnp.
PLUS: A new service from Laguna Federal Saving.<
for our LEISURE TIME SAVERS.
Ask your branch manager for detailt. lt's gr<aU
For bigheryields, talcc advanta&< of new high rates on $1,000
Jo $10,000 auarantecd inc<>mc Savings Certificates .•
INTERESI' ON AIL ACCOUNTS COMPOUNDED DAILY,
PAID QUARTERLY.
•1a1c:mtpayable only at current r .. book rite one.arty withdmrall
~· -W..M.WV.iateratforfeiture. · ~ . , __ .... ...-~~.:". . .
llOllBOf'l'ICB: 260 °"""A .. _ u111n1 Buell, Callfontla g26.ll, ., .. ,,.! • f,.U1! /IUINORB '" SAN CLBMBNTB LAO UNA NIOUBL
u .. s.ar1
Rnol•i .... c1ia.,,. Sears
Prices
Effective
throap
Saturday~
SoptomWt :z:
, '
Fetching n' Feminine Nightie,
Sean Low Price! 197
'.·
Dainty nylon tricot gowns in assorted sleevele11
styles and all-girl colors. Pick your favorites from thi1
pretty collection. Sizes S, M, L "
Imagine!
Run°Reeietant Nylon Panty Hoee
. Only Scoop up these mesh knit strerch
all nude panty hose for leg-flat-49c
tering fit. In top fashion shades. -
One size flu f1J111re19' to 1 '0 lbs. pa1'
'
fOOW•PnllamAvt. ~t NonhEICuililoltal · 3M..-B'7Plua
LAO UNA 1111.1.S, 24031 Calle dt la Plota
imiiiliiiiiliiiiii~liiii:iitH:tittli'i-iiwiouriiMO\'l~OFTHEMOiH~Tli~M~ATii:::NED;:. .... .;liili .-J SeaFst ,.
IWi,IOIWXNbtO:
•
) I '
I
( f;
f iJ ' ' Double ~it Polye1ter Pallh ••• Coa&.u11 tb).a W,ol!J'~· • t • ,. I
Thne easy-care double knit t>otyeatcr pants arc a natural (of Se~ ·
your busy life-they stretch for comfortable fit! Sizes 8 to 18. ~~'"' 1 ••
Pant Toppen In Three Cci-with,all C111ual ~tyle1
. ' ~ r
The tops you need -to ,,, ~rh .u fG'lf 1>"""' Ou>ose I , 2 88
from three peat ttyles in polynter-and-cbt'tOn or tccttJte?' ·~ f
nylon. All ate .washable. A110ned colon. ~ JiHS 32 10 8. ' -"
' ' • 1 ' ' .,
•
' '
.. "
' . .. ,
•
•
•
( ·off.road
•
· Vehicles
'C-lose Park
Anny Drinking Crisis Told
•
Feelhls Fl~ • ~Ill!... c. ,.F"' 57, from FolsODI.' t'lllr18" his mousfaCD -ail few
hours, aflel'-! bavln& a
nucleir ~lilaker lm• ~!Anted !11.hia~~¥l 'at !
ew ""11111 ·~ :idminLttoft!bOspita1;
Doctors teat the-Implant
with censors \ on his chest.
,,
;,
I '
I .
• 11 t
.. '
• !' . ,,
. -
SAN mEGo (AP ) -Tlie
'CJ.S. Forest Service pJans to
cl-«JO acr~ ol land In
Cleveland National Forest f9r
year-. starti.ng-Oct-l t to hilt
what it, catls env~m~tal
damage by.oll-rpad ~icles.~,i,
Supervisor \(enlon. P. Clark
.said sttilies p.re Rlanned to
determirle t wh'at o f f • r o a d
vehicles should be allowed in
the area southeast of Lake
Elsinore.
The region is known as J.1or-
rell Potrero in the Sanla Ana
Mountains.
~ -Clark said a dirt road at the
south end of the area leading
from California 74 wlll remain
Ul"I TtlePllet9 open.
WASHINGTON (AP) -An
Army general bas IOld a
Senate panel 1that 36 percent ol
the service's officers aod 70
percent of its enlisted men are
considered heavy and problem drinken. __ _
J\rjg. Gen. Leslie ,R. Forney
Jr., chief of the Army's
Alcohol and, Drug · p o 1 !_ c y
dlvi!ton\ made the statement
Tuesday in a heating on drug
and alcohol problems rn the
armed forces being held by
the armed services sub-
committee.
FORNEY'DEFINED heavy
or binge drinkers as men who
have five drinks a night in a
four-day period and problem
drinkers as men who have
··problems" with other ser.
.. .
•
, I ~ Q ' ., .. . ' . . ) -than· ~..:. ~\ "~ ",..... When the 'wheel belongs to you, the road goes anywhere you say.
And it's so much better with a '74 Chevrolet.
1 •• • • ~Ga~ Intr~ucing :1Jl ele~ant ~otor cai:, .~t . ·P": io -be ~Joyed, 0~~1de: an up,posmg new . ··--~' gfill~ a:nd on the' Coupe, a diSt,mctive new
'
1 '"!1in' ''d ' . d :1",901 i e. s1 e: peace, qmet an •
oonvenienee. With standiird
--1>0wer-steering-to--Oo-most -c.-' ~------
of the turning,, standard
J>?Wer fr~t:isc bra_kes
.JP_ do m!'st: r 'f!ie sto~p.mg, -
' and a stan . Tur
Hydra·mati9 tr111$nis;.
sion to do the shifting.
H you want the luxip;r an~
comfqrt of a car-that.leaves . ' . little else for you to do but enjoy the
ride, you don't have to look beyond
the '74 Caprice Classic. However, the freedom
of the open road begins with the freedom of choice:
' MonteCUo. You'd think ·its Jooks.
were eve~1!intif you driye It 1t. :".
has steel·~!¥ r11;d!aJ tires and a refined ·, ··~~~===:;::;;:
radial·tull~~on1 Power steering.,.,
and pow r 60iit ilisc brakes. We think
'll ' 1' • h . 11. h di • >---you-· :-ti r-emate-·ow-we . 1k . an es,.-..-
how sm th_ly it rides. For it's as elegant · . . . '·' . . me:cha"hi~tllill:~t: •:::::ion of
.way.
'
Wednesday , September 19. 197'.3
" •' '. ' . ~ ' .) ' I .. ,
'
DAILY PILOT Jif
--
• ;· ~'
1ast Yefj~·Motot Trend Ecanomy Car
of the Ye· (And!Car and Driver
Readers· 'Chfice iw Best Econ·
omy Sedan 1for tlie last three
years.) With a reshaped nose,
Malibu GIJ:1k. A luxury Q1evelle, n~w this -year. With full foam
seats. A fold-down front armrest. Wood· grained vinyl acce s. Elegant inner
bigger bumpers, ·nicer carpet· ·
ing, new strip~ and new ·colors. ' , .
Plus more gqod.thiiJgs to make it 'better. ·s~~ what it's like to driv~ a winner.
. ,door panels. Extremely tasteful upholstery and -
cut-pile nylon carpeting. That's just inside.
The exterior is just as classic, in ' ehai-
acter and in getail, as the interior~ Yet,
ii remains mid-size. And, it remains Camaro. The way it Io.oks is the all Chevelle. With Chevelle han-
way it goes. Quick, sleek and {!_ling and at~ Chevelle price. Now
nimble. With a low, wide that you've looked,' come and see
stance, responsive steering. the new M~u Clas§.ic-.d all the
And coirifort that's rare in 1974 Chevrolets. The ones shown
a cat that handles so well. ' ·here,pluslmpala,Nova,
Plus classic new styling, Corvette, pickups, vans
and Elushness from the ' and all our new cars
Cu.t-pile carpeting up. · · -~~"""" -anatiucks. . ~-
. _.....:.=.~c·-~-~~======~-===-dA~l~r ~~it·~~~. -·~--
1· . I • -•
•
·A-
••
\
l
'
• • ---· . ' ' I
..
•J 6 DAILY PILOT
Lfght up
.13.33-. Reg •. 11.11. · · .
Decorflor fable lamps
8 great styles from Early
American to modern to
mediterranean. Complete
with decorator shades.
% . '
' Tllfilny-style cane lamps 1 hBnging swag or table models~ ·
Natural,rt>d;whlte;yellow.----
A~18.66
e.18.66
c.13.99
Reg. 24.97
Reg. 24.97
•
· Hand-pall'itell
111~~,' ., ·.
Brighten kitchen or .J<ld's·ro0m1:axa• alze,. . .
' ' ' ' -2.97 ..
8x16" size, 3.97
•
\ 11 . · .. -
J
•
. .
t ' • •
)
•
•
. ·•
l • 4
-.;
• r
!
...
I. ..
· 1
. ' ' ..
.. " .
·1 -.
-
I
......
•
.
.•
, ... '
~ XTRA &TReNGTH
.:tdUGH MIX!U~E.
I
3 DAYS ONLY
•
• !
ReliArldE! Def ux~ Steel-BeiteclTires: 2 ply
:' ~p9lyester cord body plus 2.steel co.rd-belts:-
• 36 month guarantee with 14 month 100% allowance
• steel. belted .construction for protection
against cuts, bruises·, and punctures
• Polyester cord body for smooth ride
•modern wide whitewal I·
Size ....
A78x13 27.97
F7Sx14
G78ri4 · 33.97
G78)(15 33.~7
35.97
J7Sx1& ... 37.97
Fod.
IAL! EJ. T1x
.22.37 2.01
'·'
21.11 2.68
27.17 2.85
21.11 2.87
• 21.77 "' 3.01
TREAD LIFE PROT£CTION • We build into effry R.iiArl~ tire ur1 lr1clion lndic1tor•. Ttlty 1ig·
M.1 whetl your lir• 1houtd be r1pl1c1d. II your lire w11r1 out (1ac1pt
lot lnc:orrecl 11iginmeni1 -will m1k1an1Uow1nc1 bl!Md on original jiurcMH prk1, 1aclud ng 1pplle,lbl1 FeCS.ral E•ciM T1.1. lcward lhtr purcf\llM ol 1 new llrl. W1 wU1 1llow 1h during ow Hr1t Mii or \'•
durl119 lhe MCOnd hlllf of lhe 1i.t1d mon!M ol gu11r1nlff., f1der1I
£1clM Tix 1dJu1hMnl allow1nc1 will bt m1d1 on lhe basis ol the
pt:r«nl of IM qrlginal 1111111 r1m1inlng. -
REllARtDEru llRE PROTECTION GUARANTEE . , -~
Yt;H1r R911Ari~ lire protection guiir•nln cow911 all RtliAtlde~ p•t·
Mngitr Ure1. (e.1ctpl tPKlll 1ppllt•llon ·11i11 wilh HP1r1t1 euer•n·
IM:•l •i•lntl aH'.fo.ed heUtd or delicl l1Uur11. You art PfOltcltd !or
lht ealire 1l1 .. d monlflf ol gu•rlnl ... II ro-ut Ur• 11111 during !flt
911•r1nlM pwlod; ...Wm it to iii •nd •• wlJI, 11 out option, Npalr
J'OUI lire, or mike an allOWlltCI bllff: on lht orifinll pUrcl'lut prlc..
1Kllldlrty F•nl Eac:IH T1.1. lowal'd lhl purcheM ol I .... lir~. We
trill •II-·100~ of UM oritin•I purcM11 Pfl". ••eluding 1ppliellibl1
fedll'll E1clll T•.1. duri"fl] tM lhl 100% aliowanc1 period. Thttt•
alter, "" trill lllow 50% or 2S% of h origlMI purclwl .. price, ••·
319 cludlng .PP.lcablt·Fl•r•I E.1cl11 T1•.10w1rd IM purcr.11 of• new II--' 1111. FHer.!l..f.KiHJP.1dj~U---wtll-bl-maot-on·tht~ 30.37
---·-----iiitit ol lht percent ol It• originll trud ,_inlng. Ttlit gu1r1ntee
,, II not lr•n1l1r1bt1. It is onlr tor priv111 pa1Mng11 Cits or p11»1nttr All prius pl1,11 F.E.T. and your old tlr1 In lt_ld8. ll}IO ' 111Uon Wl90f!L •
trade-In ldd $2. Our RtllArldett Oeli.lxe SIHJ-Btilled -..-~ Tim I• OUf'OWft name IJld doe• not ttllect lflY Wjlh tht pilft:MH of llfllAriclrl u;., YOll ~I: .• • .
n•llonwlde alandard ol quality. 1. FREE ln•tll ... Uon of t1111. 2. FREE Utt rot.lion 1w1ry"SOOO mil11.
rf
FO~ UPSET STOW.CH ' I ' ' ' I,' • ,l.NOll~ES!IO,N ... ~ 1 NAUSEA, ,,;..-o~P.l-1£~ -
0
Oo
0
00
0
0 •o o ·. ~Herdent . 0 . ~ DINTUAECUAHSlll ~-.• -~ TA\BLETB
. ,.-_
! f ,.
the
' Beach at orangethorpo • RANGE City Or. at Garden Grove.Blvd .
.,,;... Dolly 9:30 to 9:30 p.m. Sunday 10 to 7 , . . Optn 10-9 p.m. Dolly Sund,t_yoc10 to I
. -SANTA-AN A · 3900 ~o. Br\ltol • No. 9( !lg, Cot•.t.P.Jaza. --" ~ · A; Opt~ 10't p.111.1!11.llJ lundaJ 10 to I . . ·-' . .,
'' ·
I
l
.. ' !
DAI L y PILOT I[
·original equipment quality for
smooth riding . .comfort mile /
~~~~~~l~~~;:U~~:~o~,'P';":
cisely, maintain·wheel align;.
ment and reduce tire Weir.~
Sizes to fit most American
cars. $2.25 installation. "
..
.. "1·1' ; ..•
• .J • • 1
' . •• ' , ... : ..
~-
12~ HO lJ R
Rt LIEF
Vital is
~
.-
..
..
•
\
r
'
•
1:8 DAI\. Y PILOT
Wedntsdiy, Stpttmt>tr 19, 1973
Gardening
Careers
Explored
•
•
..;. Royol r~t•lgMd the climple1 l<t
mob 1h• ban 11.., farth" &.
odded .50'14 mor• tllt r•ll.,onte,
By JOYCE L. KENNEDY
Dear Joyce: ·E\·er since my
grandmother taught me all
she knew about gardening
when I was a little girl, I have
been interested in growing
plants and flowers. Can J turn
th is interest into a career? I
am 17 now. -H. I., Nashville,
Tenn.
Ftwtrl lmplll
7~ Me.111 Mori
~ Dlst11cel I Regular *3411 ·Solld State·
~~i Cassette Recorder You bet your bloomi ng
hibiSCU3 you can. Greenery is
growing as tho plant mania
tages nationwide. For some
jobs sell ing plants, you may
not need college but be able to
learn by wor king in a nursery
or plant shop, plus extensive
reading and night study at
botanical g ard e n s. For
semiprofessional jobs, you'll
often need to bulk up your
knowledge by attending a
horti culture program at a
vocational school or com-
munity co11ege. Pr0fcssional
jobs require at least a four-
year college degree, majoring
in botany, horticulture or
landscape architecture.
SELLING PLANTS. Essen-
tially you'll be in the florist
.business even ir you don't sell
formal arrangements, but onl.v
great green spreads of potted
plants a n d perhaps loose
~:>":
'''* ~:~ .. :-: .. .: •'0:"• ~r.~ ... .;.• :;:;.;: ?,:;::: ~n ~::: .. .....
=· :
bunches of flowers. For in· ~
formation ·on a career in f:~·
'£lorlculture, send a stamped. :;:;~
self-addressed return envelope ::::.~ ~IDZ~. ~~et~. ofwZs~:~~~~ ~tf
SAVE
With Condonsor Miko I.
AC Adoptor
No worm11p woltl With a11~
tnark volum• l.v.I to,,trol,
ejK1or button, T.,rtfic volut.
Reg. 99c to S1.32 Hand Tools
for Every Need
•IU!Pli ns 7· 7 • St.•9 Slttl T1•1 •1lt1. c
• 19c C••i•1 S1ws
•• $1.IJ-$1.11111•11trt
• He Scrmrl'ftr Sets
• lfl•J Mt1t!
St., Alexandria, Va. 22314. f-:~:
LANDSCAPE ARCffiTEC-ffil"-------..;;::;. _________ _
TURE is the design profession m l:'~.;·~k• b ~.tt~:.; --~t -Rag.35tl0-49~a. tst _Quafitu
space more en1oyable and ~~ llJ.
usable for people. It covers ~~~i o 'J"lfy' Hard the • phys_ical a~aptation of =:~~=: ~ I WIPB man s entire environment, and ?;:::· lV.14 .
!':ron~~tal1
h d~l;:n is "f:. ~f· Buy 6 I F 9 9· C creasingly used-to express the ~-:: & Save 0
wide-ranging conCt:!pl. i· 51c·$1.95 R ·
One caution: Site planning ::.... ·
may involve using more gran-:::::: A>Khotb:,iii, Safe1y hook, & eyes, lf.z'" b°""
ite blocks than trees and . ~:;:: rel botR, 12· l::i1a11 wire, 10..so lb. pic•u••
plants, and some landscape ~;:~ hooks, iale1v ha1p1,. 1p•ing toggle bol11,
architecture programS deal :~::; tnanr, many 1T10re in 1hi1 fan1a1JK 01.or1·
very little wilh growing things. ::~;: tnen:.
You'll want to check out a ~:;1
particular program be£ore ~~·
enrolling. ··
.
Reg. 52c to 75c · Bectrical WHOrtt WOULD you work
for ? You might be Se1f-
employed, or work for a
1 a nd s cape architectural,
.enginee ring , or architectural
fjrm. Or you could b e
employed b y govern ment
agencies (such as public hous·
ing, airports. city planning,
urban renewal, hi g hwa ys .
parks and r e c r e at i on a l
facilities), by educational in-
stitutions. or by any hmge in-
dustria l fi rm with sufficient
ground to require y o u r
services.
For more on this profession,
I.here's a marvelous new
booklet you can get for 75
cents. It 's called "Landscape
Architecture -analysii, plan-
'ning and design of man's en·
vironment," and is published
.by the American Society of
Landscape Architects, 1750
'Old l\1eadow Rd., l\1cl..e.an, Va.
22101.
BOTA NISTS st udy plants
professionally. About 75 per-
<.<ent of them work for
educational institutions, 12
percent for government agen-
cies, and 3 percent for in·
dustrial fir fn s (such as
pharmaceutical, petroleum,
and chemical concerns). Other
plant scientists w o r k in
musemns and botanical
gardens. (Botanical gardens
.,also hi re gardeners, often
th ose who have majored in
horticult ure.) For an excellent
'brochure, "Botany As A Pro-
.fcsskln," write to Dr. Barbara
Palse r, Secretary, Botanical
Society of America, Rutge rs
Uni versity, New Brumwick,
N.J. 08903. A single copy Is
free but enclose 16 cents in
stamps and a gummed return
·malling label.
OTHER CAREERS wi th
plants are dicussed in another
free booklet, "Horticulture, a
rewarding career." This is
ava ilable from the American
SOciety for Horticultural
Science, Box 109, St. Joseph,
Mich. 490lll. Pla&e encJoo;e a
$lamped , sell-addr<llS«i long whi t• envolbpe.
You may allo want a copy
of "Plant Joi.'· a ..C.Uonal
r eprint; .end 35 cenfs to
~lademoise.Ue, Box 3 3 8 9 ,
Grand Central Slatioll, II· Y.
-10017. • --
'@ ~ •... ..
·.-.~
·Accessories
Your
Choice 39c
• l5c Nilt Litts • 55c Pus~·"nrr S1ck1ls •
55c Tri•lt C111ect1rs • 5lc Si11t1 Pile
Switc•es • 52c flit liflJ "'''
l op quolil't' everydo'(-•lee1riciol ...... d1 of a
P,rict )'OU <on'I beat -now al Thrift)'i
SAVE
$1.02
tt.r.'t ti heavyd~ty plauic <on that ~'t tpr.t
or c:rock under normol 1.ise, Melo I locking ho,,.
cllH prayent 1pilloge by oflimol1, dom. top
providft extra 1poc... In clotk greeri.
CLEAR PLASTIC
Heo"'t' g011g• wsld.d
•1tel. 25 cry1tol-cl.Or
·drow•rt..
•211-•211 Par 38
150W fllllllMI
8184
Ill. 59c 88. Q"81J
FIWFllll'I
• 14125" • 21121•
• 16125"
• 11120·
3 i 99c
PACK or 20, 33 GALlOlt
'141 C• lien
97c
Duroblt JJxAO"' boo•
in l ·Ol·o.fimt di •
pen1er bott wl1h 1leL
'1 51 .I '1 11 Flalhllght
Ill' Bm lllllrl
• 1 lllp Vtllltt •. t ....
,.ct flu•t11•t1~ l1Utrl11 It 29
IT lrl1•t It•• Lt1tt11 ... ,
wit• 2''D" l1tt1rlt1
RBI. 1241 10125' ,, ....
. 1.,,aas.,.1 .. ~""'.W~q,-r.,'?.':'
Tovgh a.' plloblt, teor
I. p1H1C11,1re te1i110,,t.
kltol drop:Cloth, ror
flomt, cor. Scivt .. ... 81~
... ~~W.<.O: ,,y,~,,...·.·.• .•
11
•
rug & Discount Sto · ~& lag.93~Vl5 ...
.69~
•
· SPECIAL PURCHASE!
~····· lasJ · lnh11 Deo.1 .. 1
Drl-Mlst
··.and much, much more\
Larto 15-0r.
Normol,, • ~ w-
OOy °' l<&c -•••
"
Pricos Good tlr1 T1tsl1J ·
Almost 1/2-0ff Original Prfc1I
••• THE .HIYISllLE
Mako
Deliclou1
• Scr1wdriv1rs
e Martlnl1
e Collins
• Ovtr-th•Rocks
$
Fifth Gallon
49
C1110112
$29.50
• ForMerlJ $18.41 ... JS-C1!111 $5.98 C111 If' $35.11
·• for•erlJ $5.49 .......... Geirt 42.99 C111•f12 $35.11
• FermerlJ $2.11.. ......... Jlet ll,69 C1111(24 $41.H
9!1c 12•0••c• Li411ultl •r 1001altleta . :;;...·.F•_ ... _ .. _,,_si._o_ .. _ ... _ ... _*_"·-1 ____ _. .t149 M llnla·Antaci• ti 19
Giant S le I G TI Formula• • • • ; I , , a 0 am111-.;:_-'-.-.. ~t1oof 100 Palo .. llofwltlloutA1ptrln
8249 T enol ••••••••• ·~1 88 J~
cc-•It c er G ••• httle · ::f::
Visine ·~~:, .• ~ ••••• aac.'
Reg~ •J•' to *21'
•
Reg. $4.03 to $5.19 91aa
• $5.19 .... ,.,.,o,ontl•~a 55 • $4.19 Brdl1y's B1ttl11ki'
• $4:03 Park1rs·M111,11J -·
• $4.14 Parkers Cl11 ...
• $4.51 So!ck..-s Scralkll .
Now's the Tlmt to Maka Way for Music!
Style S'J99 Choict I. Fan•s Arllsll'
-L.P.'s &Jc
.r,..,,..,..111._ ·-• • 11/nr • • 1'• Au1tlltlt1 • .,....., llltl ·••Mnf 11n'
-All fh• .-,,,.,, °' ~· toP talttit .. top tvne• ln plOft!M fw ~ tcuttl lbop
eolf't' fOf' beat Mite.._ -ot a price fOi1
COl'l'ta..crtl .
Snel FG1110•1 Artist's
I-Tnck Stereo Tapn
VCMf'll find tlle 11tMt
p•rfotm•t• kt thow"
.bUllMM ~ thll .. ...,
-IKllon of llfttCltti ""' -Alt flrtt quollty .....
bnsndfl .... -•
D•r Lawost Prle1 EYOrl 111.ucc• .. ..........
,,..., """' -12.01.
PfMh NW IN~
'"•"'· , .. ,, ¥"" P•Clte411 lev• . ....
K , _, _ Li''·-To Th•••'• • Th•'"' i cosr• .... s••TA ••• _ i
«..a ""' ·i-f-·~~•·.·~•-••.•.".',..~'~ .... .-"•"•""•'•'•''~"~·-·~w~'""iiiiiiiiirl'iiiiimwiiii.~IWli'~•;•~•i;,;;•~"'"iiio'..., Ask A.11([\y -cosu •rs• wrsr"'""" rou•r•1• .. , .. ,
Coi ro Meu c.,.,.,. Wnt191lntff-ar G•ld•11 W"t M .... I .. St. st T•NMf't •
HUllTIN•TON llACH ...... ..,.~~.-
n TORO
II t.,. ., a.dAIW· i :!!.":'::.o: =:!
• POUNTAIN YALLIT . H-llwl, ., '"'-
HVNTIN•TON HACH w..., .. .,...., •• ,.
·HUNTIN•TON HA.CH ...............
U..VNA NleUIL
c ....... .., "'· .. "" ......
0IANTA ANA
lrlnl """ • MeArthr
1 • I j/ I -
• • .. t
•
Sears
adults
' • No age lim it
' ,
Make 'Time Stand Stil •..
portraits are for ever!
• children
• l imited to One Portrai t -...
per Subject, Two Portraits
pe r family
•
49*
Each Portrait
With One
Subject
is all you
pay for a
big 8x10"
color
por-trait
babies
•Additional Prints
Available at
Reasonable Pri ces
•
/
_w~·~d~··~ro~a~y.~S~·~''~·m_~_,_19~,_1~9~73._ _____ o_A_ll_V_P_IL_O_T~J~• ....
PUBLIC NOTICE PUBIJC NOTICE PUBUC NOTICE L--~~~':.~~~':_ __ J--~.;i"~'~''f.,~oiiusfief.uf.1m,.~.;i,~,:---"1cT1T1ous au11H•ss
MOTICI Of' SALi 01' lllAL MAM• ITATIMIMT M.\MI STATIMINT ,llOl'llTY AT ,..IVAT• SALi TM followllllil Jlll'IOft It dolrit t1U1!M11 TM foll.,.,..1"11 Pf"'~ I• .,,,. tlull.1'19H
Jto. ,. 11m 011 11: tn tti. Si.iottlor ~rt of 1M Sl1lt of MIAVINLY 10011$, flt) VfflM TOY WOlllL.D No. no, U11 On TM
Calltorf\lt. IOI: thf COVIii'( Of Ul.Ar!D_tl,_itt, 'loot. lr>lino, (a, ,,..,. Moll !t.o '1lmo-Sto11toi1) ,,,,_ 'ork, -,n fist ~II.. of trio E1l1io ol JOM e. Mork'/l'IM 4idwM'dl • .a1» C.il•M --
El.UNOR MASICELl, (Ol'llOl'\lllH. v .. 1no l"lfloo, lrvlnt, Co. '2'44 09111111 Ii. MOflltr, 1216 I r-Ion AW .• frtotf~ 11 horOW ;lvrn 1n11 11111 vn• Thi• Ml""• I• COl'ld\IC'ltd l>'f '" Ill· AJVM. cont. t1102
I dtl'llOMd Wiii Mii 11 ltrlvoto tllo, to lltl dl~ldv.ljohrl f Mlrkvton T/lh bl.!Mntf.I 11 clllld!K19CI IW 011 !fl.. W ldin C /llghot1 11\d llfff bld\Hr, 111.1blK1 to all'!• -' fll"' c dhtk111tl g asses nrmotlfll'I of "Jd Suptflor COl.frt, °" °' 'hi• itoltlMnl wu wl!h 11\o °"""'" ~nit S. H09Qtl' e •nor tl\o 21tt dlY of OCIOMr ltfi, •t t1M IY Cltrk ol Or•llllt Covnty on Jui~ 2'• Thl1 1tottm.-n1 wo1 fll..:1 WI~ ti. Coun-
ortlcia of ll:Obort A. E•1Tm•n. 2790 Hotbor 1913· •D'ttJ ry Clork of Ortl'IOt" ,_ty on lopltmbtr Bl~d .. Suitt ll:I, Cosio .......,,, Orlnot lti.ibf!illtcl Ot"•lllilf Coi it OlllY Piiot, 11, lt7)
Open Lab Cmaeept
OCC Offers Fall
' 1111• Ind lnt1r11t of WICI dK10Md ,, the 1913 :iff0.13 IS»OC
Welding courses for ·-
ning and advan~ecl studti;otJ
are being olfered L ar-Orange
Coast College this fall.
J Coi.iMy, Stolt of Collfornlol •II the right, At.1111.JAI 29, ond SOpttmtior f , 12, , lf, P-tall
'"'"" .. jcal a p ractical in-llmt of dN1h olld 111 11\o rigl'll, tltlo ond '"1.lbllsl!od Orono• Ca.tt Dilly Piiot KVIJU 1 .. 1.,..11 11111 ow 11111, of u.ld dtc:"* BIJC "-CE s~ I•, .U onct OdOMr >. 10, forota'.tlott to prepare students 1111 ocqi.ilrod tir _,,11on of low " PU nv•1 1m JllllN.73
rOr the Los Angeles structural ~11-u~~~t~.i11'111:*'H: !: 111cTn1ou1 1u1'"''' PUBLIC NOTICE
We lding Certification. They dfftl), ht •lld 10 •II tllt c1r11ln pn>ptrty NAMI ITATIMIHT
also-prepare studen•· f good ,1tutled In tllf City of Soni• A.n1, C11Unty Th• 1':10owlng perlOl'I 11.c1o1111 DIJlll\fll STAT•M•HT 01" A•ANDOMMIHT
i.::i Or of Or111941, Sl•ll of C1Utornl1, p1rllcul•rly 11; 01' USI Ofl l'ICTITIOUS
employment in the welding in-(lftcrltltd •• ~I-. t-11: EUlllEKA. ENTERPRISE$, 1'°'2 Sum-•USIHISI HAMI
'Tiit £011 "' '"' ol~otl $ •nd • Ind tnffltlld, Mvnllnglon flHeh, Collt. tt"6 Tiit foHowlno Pl'IDl)t hO'IO l lMlndonK dustry. tl\o Nortn 10 IMI of I Eo1t"' Ifft ot ltlvl I'. Plcord, 19062 Si.imm.rtleld, Tllo uM ot '"' tf(ll11M &1.11!non nom•
Le The occ welding depart-Lot 4 In 81oo:k ..... of ol1111"1 odcllllon Munllnoton 84Kh, C1111. ~· MICltC).MEDICAlllO. S20 • tth $1., Hi.ill· t e to S1n11 Ano. ptr m1p In llooll. 13. ~ Thh bl.llln"' 11 conch.IC:ltd by 1n \11. 11no1on 80.Kh, c1. '264 c ur r ment features the 0 p e h 23 of MIKltlflMOUI RKOfdJ of Lei dl'llCIVfll. Tllf ffdlllWI bulll!Off llllno ,...,,. to
l bo t t Stud •n A.~lft County, Ind 1 ITllP rtc:ordod ln ,.,!It I"". Plc1rd •bo'I• w11 tllod In orono• County 011 a ra ory concep • enl.<3 BOOk '· oaG• n. Mh(tll1n10111 M1P1 o1 Thi• 111tomen1 w11 t11..:1 with the ,.,1191111 1,, lf13.
To Return are allowed to select the or11101 CoYflty, c1111orn11. county c111k of or1no• C011n1y Ol'I Paul Gloroo StOOl'llk.-s20 • 111'1 st .. -~--;;;;~,~~r 1.-.--th·· __ ~~·!'l...!•~•t_1J JZO Ehl s-iit•mt:oer 11, 1913 ---Hllll!ll'IGl°"-li"'1\..J:l._PJ44JI_ nlim~-u uuUrs ey wish to W1thlrigl011;-S•nl1 An1, ColUornlo. •·nMJ D1vld J. T1vJor, 1"2 lerwi(k Ct., spend in the I a b 0 rat 0 r y ~Torm• of Mii Clth In l•wflll rnontY ol Publli~ Oronoe Ca.If 0111Y Piiot, 8o1,11dor. Colo. IO)GI
d ndin th be
• IM United St1t" on conflrmollon of w11, S~lomboi'" 12. It, U and Ociobl!r ~. Tn!s bu1!ne11 w11 concl\ICttld ~ •
17th. Ti.me epe g on e num r of or part c•lh 1nc1 11at11ice evldo!Kld or 1m 2'2t-73 Grne1""1I P1rtl'IOl'thlp. units they are enrolled in nolr MCurtd by MOl't!llOO or Tri.Ill Ot«I l"IVI G. Slopnlk p.--• on th• proe>erlY 10 IOld. Tin P1r(lfll ol PUBUC N<Yl'ICE .. _
"Students can spend as 1m11Unl bid to " d~11tfd with bid. Pvbll1hed Or1t10• Coest OlllY fl'Uot
ch 31 ho k · Bldlo or affort to tit Jn wrltlf19 ond wLll Avo1.11t 2' and SIPfll'l'ltlllr J, IL 1'.
'The courses provi d e
Popular lecturer, Dr. Arthur mu as W'S per wee ID"' re<=elvlll 11the1ta...11!d offlc• '' 1n~ P•~~o~:A:~~':::s 1913 Htl·7J
L. Bietz, returns to Orange welding practice," said James 11m1 111 ... 1ho llr11 publlc•tlon llfrlOf •nd Thi following Plr'°" 11 dOlno bi.illn .. n
Cro OCO w Jdino-inst cto t1ttore dato of wie. i•: . PUBUC N011CE c.oast College this'fall to begin n , e ~-e· ru r . Oa!W 11111 lOth day ol Strltomtlfr .ltn. PLASTIKOS ENTEll:ltRIS ES. '20Jl s.1-------------
his 17th annual lecture series. "·The y can schedule those lab ~;:::,~~~ :· ,~u~1~~usc1-1 Lvon s1., sont• .....,, tt10S "'cT1Tt0u1 •u11,.1:s1
hours aro,,_, Other Classes Or m '' < ' Harold H1ro•t1 McCormick. "5&2 HAMI STAT•MIHT Thi., year's four part ser··-WIU Ml Mle ...... " w ....... ,_,_' '''''· The IOll0'\11111(1 ptrlOll I• 401~ b\lt)MSJ
-'
0
' thei·r work schedule allowina 110•1:11:T .A. IASTMAN v •• ,~ which meets on Wednesday • --o Atftirnl'( •• LAW TM$ ~·1"11' 11 conducled by 111 r~ ei: SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA LEASINCOO
evenings, is ·titled, "Life them complete flexibility." 21t1 H1111or •1'111. • 11111• 111 dl'lkli.iilHarcld M•rGett Mccormltk ot 1617 w .. 1cllff or1v1, N-r>0<1 Botch,
Cl began Se • 11 b l Co.ho Mou.~A fUU filed c Or1nvo Coi.iri1y, C1Utornl1 t2"0 -B e-gins Now." The first lecture asses P1o. • U Att-y tw: CH11rv1tor Ttils •111•mlflt w•• wnh 1111 --E10•l'1 Equlpmtnt co., • c111~nl• registration Will COlltinUe in Pubftllltcl 0!"11190 Coost Dolly Pilot, ~l;lork of Orlll(ltl County °" A.UGI.Ill 20, CO!'PO!'ltlon, 335 H, SutJor Stroot, • will be h e 1 d today in the th ()CC Admfss' d SlltPltmbtr 12, 13, \9, 1fn 2111-73 I' 27,1, Stoc:kton, Colltorn\a tS::I02 occ Auditonum from 7:~ e ions an Pub!llhod Ol'•no• Cotit O•llY Piiot Thi• 1:11111nt1• 11 conc1vc:toc1 bY • cOf•
' 9;30 p .m. There is no tuition Records Office throu~ Sept. PUBLIC NOTICE Soptomller 12, It, 26 Ind OciObfr ]: poroll~ ... 0Al'$ EQUll"MENT co.
and persons m a y register at 21. ReglstraUon is bemg con-1 m•• 1971 B:W-73 •v o.on e. wotte1t, 1tr. PrtC11c1tnt·
I ducted on a ""--in" bas'os su,.111DR cou11tT otr TH& PUBLIC NOTICE This'''''"""'' w11 111ec1 w1111 th• coun-: the ecture. '4.lvy' STATE 0,. CALl,.OINIA l"OR ty C1ork of °'"'"" Conuty °" A.UllUlt 13,
In the initial lecture, entitled from 8h.a.1ltm,ursdto 8 p.m.dMonday TH• co~~z_,rs:u.Hoirr 1t73. men
"Emotiooal Time Bombs," throug ay an 8 a.m. NOTICI 01' HEARING Olt Pl!TIJIOH l"ICTITKIUS •UllNISI JAMIS s or MA•TINI . . , . t 3 Frid POii ltllO•ATE 01' WILL AND FOR NAME STATllMINT MAlllR. llllYOaa A o• MAllTINI D r. BJetz wdl discuss solvmg 0 p.m, 00 ay. L8TTl!ltS 0 I"" ADMIHISTlllATIOH Tho fcllowl no porlOl'I Is Oclng bu1!n111 '
bl
. WITH·THl·Wl\.l AlllHEX•O A ,.,... ....... c...,...ouon
pro ems In the present rather Ell1to of EL.MER N. REYNOLDS, ··= MARflOll: HOUSE. 254 Colton SI., :~.::: *· J!~.!11~ ...... 11•
_,_, ....... th@.nutting..,them..oft.and leb .,-.. S· iiiil, .......... ~.t -C!~;~~,s~He11:£eY-GweN ... tl\1il' NOW110rL..aoam,...c.1 .... nuo-.. -A~·-~-,~ ting them explode Jater u y e E!LMER N. RIEYNOL.OS. JR, 1!11 fLlfd Mr. Clydt Jell Glrntr, 2~ Collon 1"1,1bll111od OtlnQI! Ccost OlllY ,!lot •
, . • ' · norlln 1 po!lllon t« Prot>llt of Wiii 11\d St• NOWPOl1 flffdl, Cit. f'JIWO Augvil 29, Ind StPlotnbotr 5, 12, If,
no ex.tra charge for handling and delivery
99c""~ ex tr ~!or ea.~.'l..~~tl~~~I J!~f~Q!.! • .i.ll.P.llif.a1 t .... -...... ........ ~---····
"OURS : Daily 10,00 a .m . lo 6,00 p.m.
Saturday, 10,00 a.m. lo 5:00 p.m. Sunday 12 noon to 4:00 p.m,
I Sears I
>V.b-, llOllHJCJO;,!.SDlO.
Monday, S eptember 17 through Sunday, September 2~
at the Following Sears Stores
EL MONTE ORANGE LAGUNA HILLS COVINA POMONA
TORRANCE CERRITOS COSlA MESA BUENA PARK
Sali•faclion Guarllnteed or Your Mtiney'Bltck
Try Saturday's News Quiz
We Dare You
His Sept. 26 topic ts "Four tor l1wa!K9 of Lotter• of Admlnlslrallon Thi• Wllneu Is conclucTOCI bV on lndl· l97l 26'4-73
Le ls . ,, wlfh.lhf.Wlll onnexed, rfle~ to whl(h vld1.11I,
ve of Human Function, I M . 11 m&de tor furtllfr partlcul1n;, Ind 111"11 c. Jan Gorn«
While the topic fDr the Qct 3 n usic tht ILIM Ind pllco of llNrlno tlte wme This 1t1temonl Wal f11td with tllt COi.in· • , • • 1'11J tletn ll!t tot OClobl!r 2, 1m. ot 9:00 ry Clork on Sopttmlllr '· \t13. SCSSJOn IS "Examining Your 1.m., rn ttio (ourtroom ot ~rtment Ho. llf11ft2 ••cT1nous •us1Mass
•·· t' W Ids ,, 1lt fi 1 Tw g cl be" 3 ot 111111 c:ourJ• 11 100 Civic C•nt1r Dr lvo Pvbtl•hecl on.no. CCIII o.ny 1ti1ot lllAM• ITAnM•WT tu.iWDp !Ve or . e ma 0 or an asses are Ing West, ln !hi C 1Y of Sonia AN, C1lllornl1. S hlmtllf 5 12 lt 26 l'7J 27sa.1J Tht followlng Pfl'IOll• oro Go1111
lecture on Oct. io has the title, offered at Orange Coast Col-001ec1w~et='E~'5,~'~N. ep ' ' ' ' IMnl:;;~,::,;ENTAL TREE FARM. 1m
"Are People Who Act Crazy, lege this fall. Rou11:Ki°"'&''k~:'.'6oK PUBLIC NOTICE NfWPO'f e1w .• Cotto M., '21627
R eally Crazy?" Organ 1 (Music 143) is a toe H. •l'Mllw•Y• s11111 101 11:on11<1 o . s11'(dor, zw ColloG• or .• ' s ... , Alll, Cltlf. tl191 •ICTITIOUS eus1H•s1 Cosllo MIHI, Co. Dr. Bietz is widely known as one-urut class that meets Mon-T••i 11141 u1..i111 NAME STATIM•HT GOOl'OO E. Llylfflur•. t1t1 Larklplll"
I · d ' f 2 , Stud Al!OrHYI for Ptlill-The .tcllowl119 person Is dolno bu5lr.eu Dr., w .. 1m1n11er. Ci. n6'3. a ecturer, psychological con-ays · rom -. p .m. ents P11t111sh.c1 Ol"anqe eo.st Dolly Piiot 11: Thl1 bulln1ss Ii cond1Kttd bV, 11m11oc1
sultant educafor author and enrolling in the class fuust be Se9'9mbtr 11, If, 25, 1~1J 219t-71 SOUND IDEA. 11110 Brool!.hur11 s1 .• portnol'lhfp · · ' H · ' be f ki"ed · · •n • ble t I Fovnt•ln V1llov, Colli. t7701 • ROl'lo1d Snyder m1ruster. e JS a mem r o s ,. . ptarus~, a o pay PUBLIC NOTICE •.M.A. Electron!es, inc .• • c 1utorn11 Thi• 1111"""'1 flied wlth tho c_...,.
thP American Psychological any church hymn at s ight on c"por•tlon, 1t120 Brookhv1111 s1., c1ork of or1ng1 ca.1111y on s.o1omt1tr 11, r --e 1tlt7 Fovn111n V1Hoy, eont. '2103 lt71
Assn., and the American the piano. suP1a1011 couRT o..-TH• Thi• bullnos1 11 C"Ondi.ict«J tiv .-~·· ,. • ..,,
A'ssociation for the Advan-Organ s· (Music 243) meets 1l:~·c=N~~L~:~;:N:~· ltlO<'I. l.M.A. l!LEOTltONICS. INC. s.:r~ 1::r•;:• o~°"'~",, p~:.
cement of Scie nce, and is a Tuesdays from 1-3 ·p .m . The NOTica ·op N':i:~.'lJ:220,. PlllST AC· Nath•n Apltlwum. 19n ..,.
Professor at the w h ,. t on--•t -.. -. reqni..... COUNT CU•••NT •&PORT OP AO-SK1'9llry TtHI. . . e .... -..... """"'" ....._..... a MINISTRATION AND POITION l"Oa Thi• 1t•t1ment wot fU~ with ti'le c-.. PUBUC NOTICE
'Memonal Hospital and School year of college-level organ in-S'ITTLEMllllT . TH•••D•. ,. o a tv c1mt of Oflflil• C:O...ntv on $eplemblll'1 __ ~======--
PUBIJC NOTICE
of Medicine. struction. ~~:1M'o.Y~ft~3H':.:s!'.f11s .,#:" lf1l. ,.mu •1rnT1out •u11tlll111 --------------------------------------------,----------~------------------! ~:~~1SJ..flAl,~'SeON~~~:-•o::: f'UNfsMd Or!IKI,• ,"','rn' 0111)' ,!Jlot. Tho foll~· STAT~=~ Ml -
• ..OINTMIHT D• TllUSTr•, POii: Stfllemtlfr 5, 1 .. '· •• &• ... • ..
-f'RllotMINARY-otSTRl•UTtON,....ND 8ETTElll 8ARIERS, ).l)J lrlstol, PETITION FOii INSTRUCTIO!(I COlll M .... , C.111, nf»
In !Ill Metter of !hi E1t1t1 of ROBERT PUBUC NOTICE P•"' E•••nl H·'•••d, -· -·· G. RISSE, I bo known 11 ROBERT v "'_, "'-.. GEORGE lll!SSE, 1110 • knoWn 11 11:.G.1-------------Or., Cotti Meli, Coll!. nui6
RISSE. Oec:11Md. PICTITIOUS •USIH•SS Tl\lt bull ..... 11 (ondvc:ltd b't 011 ln-
Come~see tJte~740lds1nobiles. ~ NOTICE IS HERESY G1VEN 111•1 HAML! STATaMENT dlvld1,11I
PAUL. E. RISSE, 11 Admlnl11r1lor Witt>. Tiit follow!~ ptl'IOn 11 doing WllMu Poi.ii E. Hoilltod
"Bpf <Jad,aJJ.. -said was that CutlasiScilorihad w1 ~;;~ ..... sas. ' ~d¥tn~ .. , .· v • ·-·· • -J.~lll.'6 - - -.IOU l~'.SilJitcante!JD-a~coupe,too.: ·
Last ~:1r Cutlass Salon was .• new ( COUP!=-· Like, the~· it has a De.f, lower Contoured scatl that redfnc.~4nd yaa en kind ol Amencan car-a tedao built (or stecnng·r.uo for quicker rcapome. even order a Landau roof.
ill roadebility. Stcd~bchcd radial tires to grip the road. Cuu .. SaJoo. lkailt iA cbc Crud
Thil year there's a Selem two-door Spttial suspension 'for tighlcomcring. Touring Traditioa.
"Look Walter! Nowwe cangetanairconditioner
that filters sinells.'' .
WllJ.Anno.-od af fht Wiii of ROBERT G. ti· Thl1 1t11omet!t _, fflld with t1'll Cwn-
llllSSE, •kl R08ERT GEORGE llllSSE. " GOLDEN WEST A.lltLINES MAGA-ty Clork of 0!"11191 COi.int'( on Slpttmber' i~e1:·~i :i~~E_,:_(~~·~~tn'r.'R= ?INE 2. CALIFORNIA LEISURE 11, Im ·
ot Admlnl•tralkln Ind Petition fl'or SOI· WOlllLD EDITION, 725 8rowntrolt P411M llomtnl Tl\oreof, Fot' P1Mf1t AUowonco of Roed. Llf\lno &Heh, Co. tU.11 ,ubllt.l'ted Ortn0t COllt Olll'( Pilot
Sf1tutory AttorllW•' FI I' 111111 MldlMI Mcflddon, ns arowncrott Stpfwml)Of It, 2' Ind Ocfeibier ,, 10. Admlnltlr1tor'1 Cbinml11I011, Rfduction ot Rotd. LMlllll &Hdt ca. '2'51 1971 •72-73
Bond, tor Al>l>Ofnlmont of Tnnl"' for ...... l ! _ _, ...._.. .... '-------------Prellmln•no b'111rlbi.it\011 Ind PotUlon for Thll ,,,,..,"'" 1 ....., .. v~·-v• .... lnstrucllons, r.r-e~ to whldt la m.ot \ndl'lldull, PUBUC NOTICE
for tvrll\or Ptrllcvlors, ond 1t11t lht tlme MkllMI McF1dd1n
•M PIK• ot bo1r1no ""' HIM hal hffTI Thi• •l•itmenl ..... fll..:1 wtlll tho Coi.in-SUP••IOI: COURT DP TH•
ll!t for' octobor 4, 1•73. ., 9:00 a.m. '" ,.,. Clerk O'f Or1llO• Covnly on $IP!-ITATI OP CALINMINIA ,.. Otparttnont .a of lllf otio-t. ontltltd court bet '-1'7J ,.._.. THll.COVNTY...OP' ........
ICCllfd II 7UD Cl'li( Ctfllor Orlvo Wtsl, U>A~ -4-77• S1nt1 Ano, Callfomlo. Publl111td Oronoo CMtt Dally Piiot, HOTICe (Hr NSAAIMO OP: PITmDfl
D ... TED: 11':""'* 13, 1m. ·$lp!tlmbtr ~ IL 1•. M,. 1m 21.u-n . FOR ,.1108AT• OP WILL AND flOlt ~i!i1t.'fv ~;.: St. JOHN, LITTl'lll TISTAMllCTAltY t .. D
ABRAMS, •ox. • e1110N PUBLIC NOTICE WAIVID> . A Low C_.otton E1l11t ot JEANNE s . lllCE, o.c.ud.
1tMt a-.t Volloy •l'ld.. I •ICTITIOUS 8UllHISS NOTICE IS HElllllY GtVIN lhlt lt.O ... l tst HAMI ITATllMllCT MA.UIUCE M. RICE 1111 fflod Mtoln e e:1 Molllt, Collf. t17M Tllo followlno por110n 11 dolno M lnt1s Hllllon for ,,.,..It or Wiii 11111 for •Y Mortin L. ""'"""'-11; lt11.11nc. of Lftttrl T1tt1rnentary to it.tlo
........ , .• ,, •• ~ lw0A ......... ofor CTA STUDIO 11M. 104 M1ln llrHI, •1lbOI, 11-r <•oncl Wol'IM) r"-"co to Wltl ch ""' ,,..... r'""' Cca11 01t1v ,.!lot eo111orn1e f'JUl t1 mlOI for fllrthor ponkulln. 8l!d fllot
S9111ember 11, 19, ts. tm """73 Timothy Noll MHCf end etytlo "'°"fl tht time ond .placo orhHrklf ,,,. Mmo
PllllLIC NOTICE Mud, 104 Molll SI,...., lolbol ..... l!:.tort Mt for octobot' t, 1m •I 9!0D
calltornl1 '2'61 1.m., 111 tho counroom O'f o.,inment Ne.
Thl1 butlnns II condvct.d ~ an ln-l of wkl cwrt. et 11» Civic c.m.r Olivo
FICTITIDUI •USINE$S dfvfd\IOI. Wal, 111 tho CllY ol S1nt1 Alll, C11lfornl1.
lllAM• STATIM•NT Thi• 1111-1 Wll fllod wtttl tho "toun· Ooltd SOpt9"'lblt 17, 1m
The following persons 1rt1 clolrit ty Cl•rk of Oronoe Coi.if!rY Ol'I AutUSt 30, WILLIAM e . St, JOHN
buSllllU 1s: 1'73. Col.Inly Clork THE CERRITOS INDUSTRIAi. COM-""79 ILOCK, 8RtcKHllt AND LDPllll
PANY, S00 Newport Confer Or/w, Publtsllfd Oroll(ltl Coest DIUY Pilot, 112• Norttt .,...,...,,
Newport Beecll, C1tlfoml1 t2660 Soptombff" S. 12, lt, 2', 1'1:1 2731·71 1Mtl A .... Cllftnt11 ""' Cerritos Distribution A.uocletn. 1 · Tll: fn4) au....
teMrat Plrlllfl'Jhlp, ,500 Nt\lllpOrf Cll'lllr PUBLIC NOTICE A!f9nll'(t fW: P"""-" Drive. Ntwport 8H~h, Ctltfornll t2UO P!Jblllhod 00111111 C0Ht Da\IY P/IM, ·
Mflrcpollt1n Llro In.Wrona Comoany, NOTICI TO CRIDITOllS s.¢tmtllf It, 20. 2S, 1971 1'11·7J
-•-Hew-'t'ork..co.--•tlon,-OM Mldlson -1·u•••1 .. -cou11:....-o---THS-A'lef!UI, NIW York, New York lOOIO ,,. Ctnllflnlel Equlllol CorporotlOl'I, 1 STATa OP CALl•O•NIA 'D!l
New YOfk (Ol'POl'lllon. _. Eost :Ulh THI COUNTY 0, OUN ..
Sll'MI, N ..... York, NIW Yori( 10010 N .. A -nw SUf'l•lu '°""U Thl1 INlllllU 11 conductOCI by I tonorol E1t1t• or LOIS M. SIPULT. DocffM(I, ITATI ,. CAl.1'°4tliill~ Ptrtnorsltlp. NOTICE IS MEll:E8Y GIVEN to tho THI C NTY Ofl
CER•ITOS DISTRlflUTION ct..:111on of ti. tboft nomod dlcodtnl HOTICll 0, =: .t-n•
A.S$0C1A.TES,. tonor"•l ""''•II porWll llavlno cl1lm1 191tn11 tllf •011 Pll0tA%"'"&. D':ti~··...:-
pOr!ntrll\tp, •s o t.11111 doc:odtnt lrt r«1uiACI to tllo thtn'I, CODICIL AND LmTTlllS TISTAMl:lt ;oner1I Ptnntr with ~· ntCOSllrt _ ........ In ll'tt office TAIY
TERENCE W, BRIGHAM ol lho cltl'k of 1111 •lloW Mltlllod court, or E•l•I• or MILOllEO CHASE COOKE Atlomoy·lrt-Ftcl to pi:0$111I tl'tom, wllh tho nocosury Doc:•111d. •
PVBUC NOTICE
1--------Not-only..dou Tcmpmatic-.regul&tc'--~ trcnsive.odOnlrom..cbc..aiuotcringJ,b;..w,__fro.n.t an~.sLupdemeatb-,> __
temperature inSi.de your car to a prect level, It'• available on all full"9ize Okbmobiles. suspension System that's u tough as ever.
Thi• lf•ltmenl WIS fll9d with 11\o Covn-vouch«a. to tho undol'llGMd ., tho otflc• ,...r,n:11=J...~c~.fre1!•Y OIV.!/' tllot' A•·
ty Clort of Orlnlf Coullry on Autuat of RObotrt A.. E11tm1n 2790 Herbor 81Vd .. petition tot~ ,.,.,.19 :r"'wf\. ~~ol • 11;-'I ---C:01trMnlr C1Hfornl1·mtt.-Whlctt-l1-tllf -1114"1of""f~O'f Qtt \!T #Id I
Tltlm11 R. ""'""'"' AlfY, plon of ~1lnos1 ot ttw undff1i9ntd In 111 to lhf ,.ltl!lonlr ,...,.,.:;:. 1:'''" ry
•
it a1io cha«Oal filten the air. The '74 Delta 88 coupe bu a brand ... Olds Delta 88. It's really put together.\
The faller ac:ts 1' Rd.llCC many bCW roofline. Hydi-aulic bumper systtma. More lha.n jwt another pretty car.
'
I
"Hey! I didn't l<OOW'we could get
these new little windows in the Toronado."
Otdtt a Toronado with an opera roof
and' yOu get opera wit1dows and a padded
canopy o( oKen-grain vinyl. You can alllO
ordce: a new interior with rich velour
uphabacry, • high,encrgy ign!tlon. system,
• •
-"
and True-Track breking.
The J9741'oronado has a new
instrumen.t panel with a message center that
lights uP to warn you when certain thiap
such u your ,.., oil pretNre, teat belcs,
etc., require your attention: thcre't even
an exceptionally accurate digit.al clock; with
quartz-c::ryital controlled movcmcnL
Front-wheel drive. Toron&do.
Eagincc:ring can be bc&utif'W.
• Mll'ltt. Dw.IDO & N1n1n111 mottort p1rt1lnl~ to tllf 0111to of Mid rnodf' tor fvnher 'Ptrtltulo111 ond ltlot .:: SU Well 11-* Slrtrtt dKedtnt, wfltll11 t11Ur monlll1 ofttr -tho llrno ll'ld pl,fQf of 11tar1111 ;,;' Mme ....
Lii """'°'' C1Htornt1 Ml• . 11r11 pi.itlllcollon of thl• 110tlce. l>tMI Ill tor OCtaDer t. 1m •t •:oo a.m .• ! 11'21 .. l Dlltd A11t111t 21, lffl l111111tllf ~ of OoNrfnM11I Ho. I Ill , 1-.0C JAMES N, $1PULT, JR., M (OUrt, ot 100 Clllk: Contw DrlV9 I
Plltltl•hod 0!'011111 C°'tt Delly 1"11ot, Adml11l1h'1tor wmr.:r =~· ttn::J"°• C.llfornlo. , At.111U1! 29, 1nd Stpltmtlfr S, 12. lf, OI 1111 E1t1,. ot -WILLIAM I! ST JOHN '
1m 2m-n Ro••11~1tt.,•':,:T:z:" dec111on1 .,,. •• cnr:: if.~,.. •
PUBIJC NOTICE "" "'""" ., ..... , A~ at u.
1-------'-""'-· --1 CMll Mt'°' Clllilfllia 12626 •t lost l)t!'llii . Teh (TI4) MHQt ......... Cl ..... f t1m ,.ICTITlOUS BUSINESS AttOnlly J0r AllllTlllll•h'ti.t A~'l'rJ:..tfW o': ... ,.._.-
Thf to1::t.! ST,.A~~.·"',,, "·I Putllhllocl Or1ngo Ca.11 0111Y ,.llot 5-ombotl' II ,:~ l~:ftt Oo/IY ...... ~~
.. ,. ""!Ill Septombf!r s, l:l. It, 2•, lt71 274'-nl ---;;;;';::~' :=-:::'=:c::=-_::::_:c'" buslne11 11:
•
VISTA DEL I.A.GO, 2715 Mo•• V1rdo PUBIJC NOTICE PUBUC NOTICE Orf'lt Etsl, Cosio Mow, Callfornl1 '2626 1 Conntclicvt Gontr•I Lifl lnti.ironco SUP•Rlrc COURT 0, THI . Compo11y. • Oelaw1ro corp0r1!1on, 900 PICTITIOUS •USIN•SI ITATI "CALl•MNIA l'Oll •
Cottooe Grove Ra.cl, Bloomtlotd, Con-NAM8 ITATIMIWT THa C UHTY OP OllANea
noc:tkvt 06002 Ttlo followlno Ptf'°" I• "°'"' bu•lnts• H .. A-nm Thl1 bus/n111 11 llelng (onclUCIOCI by 1 11! HOTICI 01"" M~RIHe DI" PITITIOM (Ofporotlon. .. VEE Gee COMltANY, P.O. IOk .,I, POii:. PIOIAT OP WILL AHD •Cl:
CONNECTICUT GENER ... L 470 Br!IKW•Y· Cost• Mo ... Cl. nm ~~!t,•11:, T~\1m\HT¢•Y I
LIFE INSUltANCE COIAPANY 0-.. WOiiam ColflY, 00 •rooctwoy, Oec:Hffd. • IKINNla,
&y: R1y 01kln. Mgr. Cosio Mow, ca. "'27 NOTICE IS HEll:.El'f elwn !hit '-OIS 1
This llol9manl llJod with tllf Covnty 1Thl$ Minns II COnd\IC!ed IW on In.. MAE GAll:WICK l\ot llllG htrtln 1 ptt!· Clork of Oronoe C°""'Y on: A~. 21, 1tn. d YklUal, ~ tlOl'I tor ,.,.... .. of WUI •nd tor fllll.llft(f
By Thor.so M. W•rd, 0.puly CWnly George W. Coffey of L.ltt1'1i TffttmlfllltY to 11\o Pttlll-Clork Tllb ttotomont wa1 fllfd with tllf CllUfl.. rtftr.11to lo Which 11 mocto for ~
1"-2nu 1Y Clork or 0!'1ngo CllUftl'( on A1101.111 21, g:r1,.rcu1e,n1, Ind 11111 tho lllM end Ploco
Publlshld Or1rioe Ca.II Dolly PU01, 1973. •r 1'1111 ti. hll'IO 11&1 tlltn alt for AWllSI 2t encl $tpt1mller s, 12, it, 1"47161 OClobor f, lt1l, •I f :OO 1.m.. Ill 1hl
1'73 26"·73 Publl1hed <>nnot CCIII Dilly Piiot. =~~o:r .,t c?:Pc'~= ~r'i .... l w'!s,~l:
PUBLIC NOTICE AUQV$t 29 Ind S•Ptombotr 5, 11, lt, tht City of S1nt1 A111, Cofllornli . 1tn 2'17·n 011«1 s.oiomti« 11, 1tn. l---~'"";:,T:,>T;,.;O"U"•ca,:U,:,,:lN,:E;S;,l---1 ~~~l~f:..f· St, JOHN,
HAMr stAT•M•HT PUBUC NOTICE HA••v a. tA1tLTON
Tho fflllowll'O pttSonl •r• dolno A"-111'( II Low b11'lllOU 11 PICTfTIDUS •Ult .. ISS Ml ,..._..,. C....,. DMvo. Sllltl ...
MElllRY MAID KNEE SKI COM-HAM• ITAT•M•NT ............ -..cA, C1Mten111 m. PANY. IN C., I C11ftoml1 corporollcn, Tiit followlno '*'°". & doing blnl-1 Toh (714) MMUI
ltlO Mon~ll. Cosio MIM, cont. IS: AttlnM'( ... Pet..-..
Merry Mi ld co.. lllO Monl'IWlo, Cotto RED CARPl!T llEALTORS. 217 (111 Pllbllll\tel Df"•no• Coe•I Deity Piiot,
M .... C1lllom11 17th Slrtot, CO.I• Meli, Cotlfornlo '74" Stottmtoor "· lt, Jf, ltn 2'0:2-7J
Thl• Min'" rs COnductld by o SIO'Wfl Cllarlat 0r111n11, .uo Esll\or, COfpol'lllOll, Cool• ..... C1tlfornl1 92626
C.lll. Hv1,1, Prosldlfll 'rhl1 bul1no11 11 conclucttd tly 111 In· TMs 1101emlflt Wtl 111td wllll tho Covn· dl'lldu11
IY Cl1rk of Ol'l~I Coi.i11ty on ... llQllll 24, Shl'ltl'I Chlriff G,111nJ1
Ltn lttS« This ll•ltmtnf W•• Ill.cl with '"' Covn-
• In ty Clork of oro11111. COl,lnfY on $tcltemttor • 41 17. ,.,, -
Publl1flod ~•fill• Coo1t Dolly 1•1101, ,.4*23t
AUOUlt 2' incl St11tomt1tr S, 12, IJ •. _l"IJbH"1ed o,11191 coest 01nv flllot
lt13 Mt~T.1 Seotmmbf!r It, 26 incl OC1obtf );, 10,
PUBLIC NOTICE 197' 2'10.7)
,ICTITK>US IUSIN•SS MAMa STATl'Mltn"
PUBIJC NOTICE
,.ICTITIDUS •utiNllS
MAMa STATIMllNT Tht tollowllllil Pff'IOl'I• •r• dolno
bullntts ••: MlW MAllllNE WOO"""lllAFT 1531 Tllo tolklwlno pttM)fl Is dolno bVll11111 ...... ' ... ~lo A\19., NIWJIOl't lolCh, Col. ' llED CAil PET llfAL TOllS, ,.,.
Rlthord Denn11 Mc<:omb. .us litn Ho•bot 81¥d.. Cosho MIU, Clll,..nlo
PllC:t, Cotti Malo, Clllf. n•27 t16U TOt!Wlll w, WMlttt'r lH7-hM• Alla s1 .... rn ChlJ'IH Qr111n11. GI) Ellllfr,
SI., Coe•• Mt'll, Collf. l'Ut7 Cot!• Mtto, C•1lfo•11l1 ,,,K
Thlt bu11not .. It cronclutlld b't 1 Otlllfll Thll bulllltsl 11 COl'tdutttd by 111 t"' PtrlMrthfp, 1 dl~ld\lol ,
IUc:IMrd O. McComb Slwtn Clltr1U Or1rw>l1
Tlllt tl•ttment WIS lllld With tho Coun· Tnl1 lillfmtM tllfd With 11\o COi.iii!\' ly Cl1t,ll: of Ol'•llfl Covnty on Ai.ioutt 21, c.11rk of 01e"O• Cou-niy or1 SfJllttnbl• o ,
,.,, 1'13 -----~ --nnn -~ ~ -,nm
See the brighter
side of life
along the
Orange Coast ·in
(~:.i;.r:-st)
One tl'-the fullr!s tW
-Sanday ' rD.llE>AY'
DAILY PILOT
Pi.ibll.,,.,. Or~ COltl D•Uy PUol, !"uOlllh~ Or•llOt Cot1t 0.Hy ,r1o1 •• 1~======:;;:::::::~. ----.,.,--,,-------------------------------------------------------"~-!...---~UG•itl 2' •nd lejlttmbor " u . "· Sto•.,,,blr "· .. Incl Octootr ). 10, 1913 Ht1•r.I 1t1l 2'07·1J ._ ...
' \ i
\
•
'
Jt0 DAtLV PILOT W~sdaJ, Stpltrnbw lQ, 1971
In The Service
Army Private Billy D. Tte-
ple, son of J\1r. and Mrs.
Robert L , Teeple ot' 9612
Innsbruck Drive , 1-IWllington
Beach, is serving with the
42nd Engineer Company in.
Berlin, Germany. Pvt. Teeple
is an engineer in the Com-
pany.
Pvt. David R. Betancourt,
son of Mr. and Mrs. Edward
Be-tancourt, 5571 Castle Drive,
Huntington Beach, completed
a medical corpsman course at
the U.S. Anny medical
training center, Ft. Sam
Houston, Tex.
WAC Specialist four , Sandra
L Hughes, daughter of Carol
J . Hughes, 2'n:T S. El Camino
Real, San Clemente. was pro-
moted to her present rank at
Ft. Leavenworth . Kans a s .
Spec . Hughe s is a
photographer and journalist at
the U.S. Anny Garrison.
Airman l\tlcbael R .
Host.oskl, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Michael Hososki Jr. of 15451
Balboa St., \Vestminster . has
been assigned to Kirtland
AFB, N.M .• after completing
Air Force basic training.
•
Navy Seaman John F.
llansen. whose wife Caroline
is Uie daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. Robert D. Mee of
Chlmplain St.. Laguna Hills.
graduated from r e c r u i t
training at the Naval Training
Center at San Diego.
Marine ?i1ajor Edward A.
Grimm, husband of the former
Miss \Vaja Connell of 32256
Stonington Road. Three Arch
Bay, Laguna Beach, has begwi
studies at the Armed Forces
Staff College at Norfolk, Va.
J\1arine Pvt. David L •
Saylor, oC 1856 Tustin Avenue,
Newport Beach, bas reported
for duty at the Marine Bar·
racks. U.S. Naval Base at
SUbic Bay, Philippiz)es.
Marine Pvt. Eduardo J.
Cazares, son of ~1rs. Gloria
Cazares of 211 Cabrillo, San
Clemente_, has reported for du·
ty at the U.S. Marine Corps
Base at Okinawa.
Navy Seaman Recruit Ralph
D. Hatton of Star Roule N, San
Juan, graduated ,from recruit
training at the Naval Training
Center at San Diego.
training at the Naval Training
Center at San Oieg~
Richard A. Captor, son of
?i.1ajor and P..1rs. Robert F.
Captor of 1932 Kron, lrvine,
was commissioned an Ensipn
upon graduation from the
University of Utah, Salt Lake
City. Utah, and has reported
to the Naval SUpply Corps
School in Athens1 Ga., for six
montM training.
lle will be designated a Sup.
ply Corps Officer upon com·
pletion of thls~l and then
assigned to a neet·unit.
He is a 1969 graduate of
Saddleback Higb School, Santa
Ana.
Navy Radio man Second
Class Robert F. Scblevt', 30!l
of Mr. and Mrs. Frank ~L.
Schive of 15442 Hanover Lane,
.Huntington Be a.ch, has
reported for duty aboard the
n u c l e a r submarine USS
Parche ho m ep e.rted in
Pascagoula, Miss.
A 1968 grad15'~ of Maler
!lei High School, Santa An•,
he joined the Navy i n
February 1969.
2 Sewin g
Courses
Offered
·--
"
AldrlcJa Admits Affairs
•
NEW YORK (AP ) Col. mental health to the general
Edwin E. "Buzz'' Aldrin, Jr., publlc."
ooe of the first two men on the
Are you searching rot a job 'IM:>n, says 1syooauts were ALDR.lti SAID that, UJ\oo . -n6t the •istmon-pure guys" •-' J bllcl
skill? pictured in l'{ASI\ publicity, :~=':i 'l:'~~ rJ::iqpai
I ,
t ...,..,.u11 wore lra..UO, wltb •
lell1pCallon -•• "f"(
alw1y1 , toot ,akl:I: o u r l
penooal bloloClcai ~. but n o t aec•mlly our ;
wives.. • _: Orange Coast College offers but "celebraled some ·pretty Aerootiutlel_and Spoco Agency
two five-week courses that can wild nights." jihad us aquare on the ,aide of 0 FO!lAN ~ .. op,~
belp you secure employment Aldrin told a news con· God , country and famlly. To ~ties fir ~ip :
in the sewing trades industry. lerenct Monday he indulged in read these atfOUDts 'Was to Were aln.)'I ~vaillble aod l '
J b t ·u · Jud a series of extramerilal af. believe we were the mo1t guess" temptations arew· in 0 oppor uru es inc e ap-fairs and th.at his marriage simon-pure guys there had pr~ to IUPPlY. Some of~
pare! construction, garment nearly broke up because d a ever been. 1bJs simply war us feidsited tll:we \anptatlcnr.'"'
repair, drapery making, sail Jong relationship of "mutual not so. We all went to church •many ruh:ted. tben pve kL 1.
making alterations and coo-needs and demands'\ with a when we could, but we also fit in the ttuer ~·" .
tract ~. ' beautiful New York divon:ee. relelirated '°me pretty wild Aldrin said that In a mood of
nigbts." guilt he brought hlmlell to Both coums are open ended mE AFFAIR , gave him Aldrin and Nell Armstmlg di>cuos "my 00 • the • road
meaning :students may enter feelings ~! "guilt mtxed with stepped•Clll the moon July 20, romances" with • psychologl!t
al any time during the pleasure, he sa~ hen he 1969. In his book, Aldrin !ells .mo sil>Wecf nellhOr ~I
semester. ~t&d:' w~e~ Joa!. ~bout it, ~~t~oc:on:i.e:t1v~! ~ ~:b!ut this time, ac.
"POWER SEWING" Is a -sbe.relused.him..lhe .lliV<1".te:lo back to earth-. -cordiiig to Aldrin, that th<
which !she bad agreed. A lew He said that on good-will boutl o1 proloag41d dep-one-and-a-half unit course that days later, the woman mar· tours he and other unnamed t>egiil .
. presents factory m e t b o d s ried another man, he said. 'piiiiOiiiOiiiOiiiOiiiOiiiOiiiOiiiOiiiOiiiO;;;;;iiiO;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;T m,;;;;;;1
aw1y from factory pressures. Aldrin, now 43 and retiredll
Students learn to operate the from ~ Alt Force, lives in
'
straight stitch ciSmmercial California's 5an Fer n • n d o Valley with the wife who
· sewing machinery and also agreed to reconciliation 1'-nd a
receive instruction on other new start, and his three
power equipment. children.
''Factory Construction HE WAS IN New York to
\ \
I See by Today's
Want Ads Navy Airman Recruit 1----._M!!rgaret R. Bess.Ga, daughler Navy Fireman Recruit or . Mr and 1ttts'.""C.N~ess>n • Crispin-D.._W torena, whose
of 810 Avi!. Serra. San wire Lee is the daughter of
Clemente, has reported for J\tr. and Mrs. Dudley Q. Boyd
duty at the Naval Air Station of 2527 Andover Place, Cost~
at Kingsville, Texas. Mesa, graduated from _~ruit
Navy Seaman Apprentice
P..Uchael C. l\1organ, son of J\fr.
_and ~trs. CalvinJ;forgan.o{ 7Q2
Center SL , Cost it h1esa,
grad'uated £rom r e c r u i t
training at the Naval Training
Center at San Diego.
Methods"·is for students ·who publiciJe his book "Return to
ha9e completed the power -~which appears iD the . October issue of ' ' G o o d se~~ng course -or-ha\/&-lhe-}t~ping" magazirit ana abil1t~ to o~a~e power will be published in November
rr
For the Reeord
'
machines u.5ed m mdustry. by Random House.
Short-cut factory methods Jn it. Aldrin tells of h i s
UPI Tflfllllle
are __ learned and students bout With extreme mental
reCeive instruction in making depression which set in after
M W l k complete garments and his return from the moon and oneu .. • draperies by straight stitcji. required extended psy.ehlatric
A Rochester, N.Y. mod· sew-overlock, and blind stitch treatment both in ·an Air
th h machines. Force hospital and privately.
el drew more an er Both classes meet ~1onday He said he still takes mood·
normal quota of stares through Thursday from 1-4 changing drugs to prevent
W' ""'""'""'""'""""'' .. ~ V '·L.t .. uu ... 1-~"-"'"""0:1'liiat!:C t·~...r.:...i..1.:~J recently by modeling a, p.m. in the OCC Skill't:enter. recurrences. Aldrin-said his
___...::lll VM Nel~. H.1 rlann1 Regine .1nd Kenneth dress , ma.de of dollar For inf0rmation contact in-maiR motive ·in writing the
e PACK UP 'POUR
TROUBLES in this 1964
Oleo.')' r;lntion \\-agort and
R\\'llY they go! This car is
only $100:
e AU. TlrE TOPPINGS go
1\'ith this 1969 A1atibu
OK>vtll~ 350. It hll.9 radio,
vinyl. air, bucket aeatll
and l!I l'Xlra clMl.ll. A1Wll
sec to appreciate.
Dissolutions Wcrno:-r, Kenneth K.'~nd P1trlcl1 A. Ge,.. l ( A d F " th J book J J lha 'l va1entlne, Marv Ann and Homer Lynn K1rle, L1ur!e Jones •nd ROiier Le• b'll .. ..t f f 11 S l'UC or J.I rey e1S amme \\'aS I 'IC lOpe I I
Dudlev. Jiv 11:. and oe11nna K1v ll:ochlt. s1ndr• R . .1nd Arthur 1 s as PO#" O a 3 .at 834-5841 in the mornings. or would ·•act as a catalyst to \
Chaw>. M.llrllyn Kav and Arthur Boden, 'teriy L. 1nd M!chae1 G. -fashion promotion. 83A "J!"" · h rt ~~~·;,~~~·~~~· 5~~~~~t~~~~~~~~~~i~~~~~~(.~~~~~~~~~ Of Marriage Osbome BHI, s11 .. n M. 1nd Garv P, .... ....,~ 1n t ea . ernoons. ope111ng 1scuss1ons a o u Ea~on, Carol Sue •nd Robert Usher, Jr. Plltll sqil. 1 --;:;;:-:;;:---;;::;::--~:;--::=:--:-:==~--==~~;;::~;::
""" Alff. 21
MOor1, Donni J. •nd Alvin J .
Puller, Ver• D. Ind Wlllff' Monroe
Welcllfl, o.tane Ann and Rotllf'I Oar·
H•rrlgan, James Dennis and Linda Dav tngram, Robert Wendell and eethanv ~
Nelson, James M. i!lnd P~ta Jo .-,"" ~[.1.Jltl'N~ · '.i!11P1<~ INTERLOCUTORY DECRl'ES fl ous, Stndra Je1n arid Oon11d Willi""
En1.,..,i Aug. 21 Fermff, Lise A. and Evgeoe L, Ill
llrOWI\, Oudel!e M. and Fwest D. 61ln, Pllrlcla Ann •nd James Camillo
Testerman, Pamela J. and Danl1J Louis De Arigelo, John C. •r>d Teorrv R.
Nm Clli7V-IC':'"1ind'o-vt '1P -car11!11et . Jamert.~"Judltfl·G.~--COOlL G.!z.JJ..)ovc• and Donald Edward
Lealw. Robltrl w11111m and Marg1rtt Fosc:o, Velma and Mtcl\a•I Lewls.-T.,.ry Aliilii\irrlllr
Ann Jcvce, Lcwralne Adeline and Fr•nk -·· W1rritn R. and Lcwralne TIYlor. G-oe R . .Ind Carolyn A. O..eci COl'l)l1. D•n W1YM and Patrie!• Ann
Rllltr, Mery E. and fr1nd1 O. Liedtke. 51\lrley and Jack DupVy, Carol"" V. anll Richard S.
Lippert, Nikki H. and Dolollcl G. SlndOrl, ltobln D111le and JICll. Kelln Pl\1111. Stllrron LDUl\e Ind Cll.!lrlH
AVrltnet. Gltfda Emltr arid J1Hus, Jr· Tlow•s. .Lw1 J•ne and David Jerome Fox. U Fr1MO. ~rla dll Jl0$.1rkl and Javi11r Seay, ~lttn Jean ind Jamts RObllrl Kruw, Jll\I<• Ann and J~to. All•n
Rios kllPlan. Mell>& R. 1nd Herold J. • John1, Lut\1111 6. and Gecwtli I.
Klllly, Andt'tl M•rle and Harold llotitrl Dinny, (:bllr1es M.. and M•rftone Pal"'-Goris A. •'Id George F,
Hllllet, Chlr\ll LYM Mod ":'Yid Kurt MHle!', OJlitoi>hfr Martyn and Teresa Adto.lns, Judith Ann •rid Robert C. ~111111, Detlrl An11f 1nd"Mli T-1 L" WIU1am1, Maroaret Lynn 1 n d John
e urve. AJ.!W':'ld L. arid Lind& J , POPlnltt. Vielto. Jean •r.d JlmmY. k•foll Dldr1k..,,, Joyelt y , and D•rrell 0. Thoma• Yount1 Betty Jo tnd Ch11rln Robert
lortn. e-11d1 Mut11na 1 n d ~ Min.hill~ Harrr M. ariii pllJ4;1 L. llraont11n, John Kelly •ncl Wenda F.
FtotM'ldO LOPf!I Cole. JudY Wiiiene and Terrance Let Euer_,, Sandra ind Thomft Rl\lmond
Alk"1. Patricia Marlll and Be11l1mln Long, Jo-Ann end Richard Jam'°' Bing, Jarcit Elaine i!lnd Cl\ilrles Russell
Lewrinc• • Glll, Cecell;• DunlOI> and John Henry Shamel. Clloo9 (II• Ind Willl•m K.
La Chine•, Lori G. al!d Jtoberl J. Fr1n~. Karl• L. •nd Timotny R. l h1rk, Ron1ld D. •nd Enid L.
Sh.er'l'll n. Roo.rl Dall end llrendl S\lf! sm1111. Eva and E119ene Flied Aug. ll Hutdleton. YYOMf C. 11!d Qllnn E. Mali. A!lda L-r •nd Ernt1lo M. Schw1r!J, Robe•I Paul ancl Ka!lllttn
CfM'1fl\IMefl, Jefltor'I' Mlltlf".._and C1l1 VJebb, Kay Sharon .1nd Ronald R~rl 1(011l1c .
EUlnoson Rawland, Allan Gordon 1nd JudUh An• Hallmark. ROl'lt11J J. and Patrlcl• E. f rt'llltr. Jerry R. afld Shlr'Ofl A. no Arnulront, Ge-oroe A. and E111e11111 F .
• C -~ ., , Flied S1pt. ~ GtJv. Howar • """' ... era • Bousquet, Michael Reymond end Oorh Franklln, Lind• L. and Robert w. !I•!~ Patric!• L.udll• Ind J O!ln Andr·ew Joann HOiian. Gery P•trltk ,1nd Marlon Rost HOfff'l'\ln. lrtndl Gall and lljchard Gor!flbeln, R)ta and Sherm1tn Cornell. ..[udy Allee and ~rry Euge111
JOMPlt:: Celestlne, M•rY Loo llfld R1vmond Sll•me!, WWiam K. Ind Cllollil Cl\1 ounan. G111w11 Elol"9 1nO Kltf\nitll\ Devis, Orlan Donald 1nd su11ne Marle Ch•mbers. Brigette and Dominick
.r l yiin Crowder, Cheryl Ann Nlchol• •nd Joi!,... Edw••d Mantt19Ulf. Merv Dofor1111. Ind Fred f!Y Ray Sl\erman, Sh1ron L. and Rlllllld L.
Whitt, J amll K. and Kllfl¥ Lynn Spencer, Katherine Anne 1nd Edw1rd Gerdner, John Gl1an and Oet>ra M&rie
L ... s....,..,.... l . and Margeret L.M. Alberl Sll1rm11n.sSll.llrD!l L. Ind Ron1ld L.
IC0¥1kh. Je .-.nn M1rtlll •nd S1ephen Enl•rltd A119. 2f Qdenbaugh. Rlclllrd Logan end J0tn D. J~ Gll1>111, Gcwdon G1ry ilnd Berte Elilyne Klm, HOl"ttn$11 Ind Paul
LudWlg, H1rvey Atl"1 1nd M•roeret Bulle, Betty A. ind Louie L M1rll11, ~ F. and 00r11 L. Ann Pev1on, Marian Jane ltnd Larrv Jack S!mr1k, Lix:lflo H. and Jo~ F .. Jr.
Mlllef", Jean L. 1nd Arthur o . Wll11ims, Elmer M1,1nn •nd Berna Snul!t. Susen M. and "1t>ert E. l.Amllll. Dorll'llrf M. ind Jenlf:S o . Je•n Wells L':rn:'· B1rblr1 AM and John Va!en-
l(omm•. OMnnl Merle end Brvc;e "1•" Rod•lquei. !Cathy M. •nd Vincent P•lrowskt, Ellltl Ind Du•ne "·
Carnes, Cl'ltlerlnt A,nderson 1 n d Br1nner. Ji!lcQueline R. Ind ldl Eden Slrong, Edwin C1r11r end Shirley
Tnom11 P11rkto. • Rould, Carol 1tnd Donald E. Jetnette DIYI-, Sharon Lorrelnt end Tho!NIS #.•rlln, Bonnie and Micn11e1 Perrv Smllh, R-•I Wllllem and Arl-R~ll'I
GeOf9I Eliirs, Mlrgo S. and B•rry H. Hnchk1, WHm1 and Rober1 Cn1nes
Herberef, Enzabelf'I R. lttd E1rl G .• Jr. Fer1111ndv, Mkhelle Irene and Jam" Wesl, Und1 M1rl1t Ind Thomli, Jr.
l"VH<;J, eoiorn el'I: end FrenciWI B. RoY Jone•. Ellen Nldlnt end Cllnffrn Doyle
11.obft'llOn. Waller Allen Ind 6ar1111r1 KOl'n. John E. and Be...,.ly Key SatlG. BNll S . .Ind Mltl\1el D.
Ann HarrlK111, JUdllh A. 1nd Jdln C. Diana, llrenda f . Ind ROdOlle A.
Fl«e9· Edltfl LOl.llH and WJllY R11:vei Pl...-..OlllrYM Ann and O.nl&I Roy Sf'l\1111, Doi~ P. Ind Kenllf'lfl W. Fl_.or. Etl'lll M•• 1nd R.olllld C>.11n Wiiiiams, Un.:i. •nd Robert A., Jr. J"1klit1. WUltlm Pllilfo Ind f\\1ftla
G•ndfu , Kathleen Ann Ind 1 .. ac. . Desaulnlen, Roland Arm1nd Ind Tripp e ooth. Oeborll\, sue 1nd R-ld Lew•s Margaret Arm Not, Robret Eu;ene and Jotn N•oml
H--•, Ronda LH 1nd Ron1ld lttY Kllftllft, S•m. R.. and Pl\tllo T. Walker, Cheryl Lvnn and Ronnie Gtn11 .... ,.,. v•• Cvero, TerlfM Ind Cerio$ scnlmSN. Eric C•rt end MOnl LI.. Gulzlo, Edna Ch•r1ean •nd P•ul ~en Toml!n, Cheri• Ann •ml JoM Lawrence
Thom•t. J1ck Nlci'lol11 lftd Arlene Setwie-ter, Ronald L. end Jotnno o . Midlson, Jim H. and M1rlorle T.
Mar9••el Cl\nrcnes. Susan Lorreln• and Arthur Rankin, Alfred T11ytor and Lenora Key
"""°""'Patrick R. and K1thMtn M. ~ Benny, Loul1 R. and N1n~y L.
L-ls, Ka1herlntt C. and ltonold Jl'f L~. Eteanor Gall and Cllo'lrles BufO!'d Lope1, Diego C. and Slr•I\ earon, M•r and h ter•C. Ell, David P"ul and Anna Lae Roybl1. Carmin L. and Raymond, Jr.
Baker, W!llls E. 1nd Sara D. FJft'ro, L\IPI and Anthony Wl1llnlck. Y.111 Stevtn 1nd Louren K1y Gritg0vlch, Bellnd• Ann Ind Otf1nl1 NOMOn, Dorothy and Thomas Cte1u1 McMl!11n, Donald W. end EJther
Klrig, 01Yld Brvan and uura Lee Lora. Cynthia Gene and Step,_.,, Jr. Vlncenl. Mkhet! P. and Verne LI.
• .
magic momenlj
FLOWER SHOW
presented by the Orange County Di1trict of
California Garden Clubs and
Fqshion Island Merchants Association
Thursday• Ftid.ay • Saturday
---!r -See in-store cllsprGys and mall exhibits
Fashion Island this :rhursday, Friday and
and enjoy the a~ded beauty of its
Visit
Saturday
P1r100$, Glorl1 and OQnelcl Louis WUll11ms. Melba and JOl'ln David Sunn. J•anntt N, •nd Rav E. i:4iifr.P'll"Yl111 NJdlri.1-and W1t~Mll Duf'Mtt Beetrlce afld R•-Jffll• Hurley, Fr.1nk Meredllll end Donna Lee
.....
''
Robert H•rold Wld •atty Jane Mowi!lt, Lnttr M. and Lf""o '· OYOt'!'iltV. Nnrflt"1toy end 'lermt'rl:••oll-
R •-H!'1!lln1. Mlclwlel John and LuUe aovle. C1rolyn Moor• and J1rrv •'f Col111'11n, Frederick D. and ll:u!n P. Adkin•. Lia, 1 minor, and Timothy Etin, J1me1 N. ind NllMY K. Hellaman, Sl\eller M. and 0.rlilopher Hern•nder, Barblrl A. and David O. Torromeo. Ellen A. and Augle P. L. Al~arer, Erollndll end Andres Re~s
YOO«, Virginie Fava •nd Jtllrey J, McwrUJ, Judy C•rol •nd J•c-Conrild Donerty, Oellorl Angell •nd GeorA•
.Al*>. carol Sue end RO¥ Wlndell Uwls, DMise I. •nd Tllomas J. Fran~lln
many-special' flower arrangements in many·cen•co----
ter stores and on the mall. See a special show-•
WtiltfleY, P1•rlcf1 AM end John P. Hedden, Janke Lynn end Rlcn1rc1 Lar. S!ock, O•nlitl R. and Pamela J.
r• f"arkl. Slndrl Mill and R111Hll TnorN1 n' Greeney, PllllUp L. and Kii Chu e rvwn, Elalnt '°'·and Norman J. Zlrijll. Kalhleen Marie 1fld Glen McGr1n11Wtn, Dllbrl A. Ind Patrick T.
Stvcto.1rt, Oilnlel L. end Linda L. l'.>oer9e fllletl Se~I. J Homr: eroolc• end Hllllln J. Thi!lrp, Donni C. 1nd Ronald R. Erlcnon. 1wtw1l1 Lit• and Rev BoYd
f'rendl, e.rty Lou!• and Robert Lloyd Perlin, Donald ;1nd Lee John_,, Cheri L. and Richard IC
HoOge, Dffnnl L .. end Rober'I Jol!n Dori..... C!tart-0. and RaVmond F!!i•rty, Rlclllrd P. and JIM M,
Flied ,t, ... 2' Frink SlmJ, Roberta •nd ArUs
J-sl, Randolllh c. and e1rtMtr• A. Henson, DJ•ne 1nd Leo w . Durn•m, Bonnie Carol end Joe Frank
'
~· M Gorcron. Tl'lomlS M. and Olwr'! Di1ne Elliott, Ooro!lw H. and J1m11 • ca, lrllyn S. 11nc1 Ral,oll C. Mart.II. Elise K•Y anc: Benlamen J.
Lonorn, O.otld P. 1nd Lella M. Ma.ecull~. Judith Diane Ind Walle" Clelkl, Frlkk R. and R11gln1
Stal..,, Mary end °"" Gltf>n Mlnellt . K11l1'tt M. Ind La Vonne AJ,..ret. Abelarrlll and Aclrl-CtrrtPOS Al1•nasro. Evelvn e . Ind Frank Artl>ur C"9!1"1'n. eri.11 Oavld 11'1d Oorotl\y A1111
aranOon. 011111.1 G. and 01vld c;. Chr!SIOl:lh. Edlll\ L. and Mrtbenl E. wn1t1ker, Hiroko •nd ll•rnard O.
steofwns. GeM #o.. 9ftd l"'ltytMs P. Gore, J.,.ry W. elld Gayte Lynn Oeatheraoe. Janice Ann and TommY z-1•. John Theodore ano N1nc:Y Ort~o. V1rottn M. and llert J. Jott Lvcle Mtl1H1n, LlrrY W. •nd BlrtMtra L. Chubb, WIU11 m E. Ind Ell11btll\
Cl'IKOn. Donne s. end MIUrlCI P11 u1 V1nn, Marv l!i!lbltl Incl Rav...-1!1 0.1n Long. Ohl• Sue and G1ry Rutll
St1udt, Lind• •nd Dlvtd Owe!!, l trrv L ... nd DIYOnn• R. Enlitn!d A ... JI Grah.lm. Slndr.1 Jo end ltoYClt Fran~lln M(Clhl\, Ja~I end Laur"1ce R. Evie, Wlllfam J. end Maryann B.
Norris. Ronald EUDIM el!CI Oorolny Robfrt1, Taddr Ellen and W1Yne '"'' L• Fcwct. Walter E. and Hazel G. MeJ1Jrt1 RHd, JUdlll\ Merle llnd Donild Vernon OIL':'rl, L• Vonda Annette •no Robert
McCar1. Jtan<)fll• and Paul ROlllrt FHlcl Sept. ' WOOdlin, Chari•• A. and Miry Jo Elkl'Y. Bllrllilr•-L" and Eef'I Erne~! Hulst1nder, Larrv Relph and Gr1c1 Klnerd, Ll!llen J, and F•tderkk L.
a1eck, Lenore Irene and George An-Marv Ann worittnholine, Be..,.rly J, and H1rrv W. 'dr-Koerner, Patric!• A. and Rkflard D. weshburn, Lind• Ruth and ll:o~ort
Moor•, Vlotl Mi!IY 11111 JOltn Wl"iam WUl1rd, LllSlfr L. Ind Jemie R. Pll111p
T1v1or, Pam.ta D11rt11 Wld Jamt1 Frtneh, J•mes Josepn end Franc11 Bromn1n. Mfcl\Hl W. ind PAtrltla N. Eugene E!•lne Vlv1r1, Paulett•C. and RObtr1 P.
CranbotJrnt, Donlld Bert' end llflfY P,1ugh, M•ry Ellz•Wltl 11nd LIO'l'd Cooper, B1.1lrlce KtHllNn end J•mt1
Merle AlonJo .II.Obert .Ak_., Abla •nd John Alfero. Rosalie •nd Mlnuil Cl\1lh1m, Ruslflt LH •l'ld D!1~n'
Todd, Bryan·O. and Jon1111 Merle Ditton, Berlltll Glen and Dlwn M•rY Hernandt1, Berb1re LH and Edward
Ll'fson, Mery Ann end H•i!i• G. Sll.llrprM1ct, Ge¥1rU'dt W. I nd ~arry N. Pr?i t , Gary M, Ind Nancy L.
Craig, Ka!lll'VI) Annttte~llfid RlcP11nl HQ!llrtl\, Fl'f'Odlt LH Ind Conn!1 Mltl• cnacon. Franc!t.eO C. •nd Mae Jl'reemen, • •. , Jestll. LIUlan W. and Cati O. Gu1d•tupe
lhuralon, P•trlcla Luml-end U rry Llndsfrom. Mary Ann •nlll John 9. SMrrer, Anlla Dlant and W1ynt LM DIM Parli/1$1, Me~ret Alie• end Anthon~ Lov111o, JNn ICeren and Maurice
Gerrlson, Marllyn C. 1nd llanlld LM Jolln Anthony Dlvld P'erldnl. Cllreflc•,;.. eo'lll DerofhY L. Sl!erm1n, Faltn AOcla ltlld Miiin Fran-Rodman, W!tll1m Rav end Suwn Jan
BKll.lf, Loll M. 1nlll Rldllld E. (II , Thotnls. l11r1NtrJ J-•nd Clydlt L~rd. Hltlltf\ .1M1tl11t tllt(f Clewle.nd Hummri, Ells1bel~ Ind Edward 91rrr
Wllllam HUI, David LM and Deldra LH Spec:l\1, Ma'11trtl Sl\eron Ind ftoll Han1
Calfllil. M(lf'rlel1 Ind ltObfrl Josffl! J1c•$00, Krl1tl Jean Ind La-enc:1 C1vlll, Cilrot H. and RobMi J .
Wlclktl, Harold R. end M9rjory H. Ralpll Flannl91n, Thoml1 E. and Yvonne M.
Huotws. MilTY Lovl• end Frencl• Anderson, Rolf Henry Ind Cor• A. Groll. L.'nn end Edw.,.d Vwne Rotlftf Atrtdondo,. John M. Ind H1rtCY J. Molllll, Slllron L" "nd C1vfd Gery
L.od. Kff'rv M. end KltbY a. P•voe, &t'!te Ann alld Wllll1m ll k h1rd HeYffll, Marilyn S. enil Urry H.
terry. winer D. end J--J , Dodd, Palrlcla LouJ"9 and Jon Al•~ Niu. J1""1 Lord end Adellln Jrnne
AhrM. Oorott!Y c. 1nlll llon.11d w. Doheny. Olene •nd J1mes Mlll11r, Jimmy D. llncl SPl•ron F.
Mltt.r. Mar91ret,,... Jnd Hanry e .. Jr. Btnson. Diane L. and ltoblrl Ltsll11 L_, Alblna Jane •nd Nori'li.n Dti. eowt.er. Jade c. erld J-I!.. D'Neal, Garr L. Ind F'rtfd• D. Glbberd, P.1trlck F . .nd R!ICl>et L·
Mc:G.lrrl!y, Viki efld Jamn O. PIUOptne, P1u11nn J. ltnd Ronald G. IWll'llOf't, Irene arid Lerry Rf(llilrd
YOlll>O· l.1111• c. Ind Fay Aml>fote Wet!. J1me$ o. I nd P199Y L. H\lnd, M¥1orte L. Ind J1m1s w.
linlck. um1n D. JM L.1wrenc11 P'. k.trig, Mltlvln I . 1nd Jur! L. Mllltr. lttN J , tr'ld WIJl!em e .
Orll•IYI• JOHilWne A. Ind l!.dwlr<I Fllettl, Clllrl N. •nd Kenneth A. DllflllYiln. Dlbre 111<1 J1m11 Eugent
Olnlel Hindi, Fr111man Herbert, Jr. and Jotn• GrJy, DeJnne Gav end Charll1 D1vld" Morten, CMrlolte Lynn ~ e 111on .,. Marie arvwn. W11U1m 1. and 111 M. ReY Clifty, Dl1n11 Gall lrld Merk $1tYln (.ampiot, l'lll• Ind AnlOlliD RoMndO
Jl.-. l(.,_lfl Wlyf'ltl end JOtrl"f Horn, S1ndr.1 M. tnd David L. Whtte. Cerol t!ld W"lttr Arnold
Clll'llrlnt wrrgnt. Cl•\flon H .. Ill a'ld Kar H•"' J.lt'ldMm, NYt1 •nd Lerrr A • ........,,, JMll Merle · 1111:1 Mlc:lleel Eton, llor1nle Lorlte 11'\d G1ry Cotti. Flor1nee R•c~ol 1nd Eldricl9• J"""' Cort1i. Elr1J~ Jr, and Gllr\' Gent J--. Hff'Olll I(, el'ld l'l!rlcle Cor111a, Etr"ln Jr. •M W1ll1nllne 1111\'', hllVt lt\llPI t»CI RusHlr Phlll].,
K""'''· &tac.., K. end OtllOl'•ll M. Mtlattl. Dolorei Jore• 111\d Jlmtf' ~•Y• ltlch1rd Earl 1no eonnJc•
CM'oill, Mwloleln A. C. 111\d Cr1!0 f'llkol•t t ,Dt rleflt
Cenrtdifl Allen, Rita Mat 11no Gaor9f W. Jr. T"", Mlltlort J. 1M Arlnur II:.
P.tptveY,-Mlllilllh J, 1!11f·0tvld It. Hull, 11,,., Wey,.. lll!d Oorfs o.i111e11 "*"'°-l.J.t Rotltr1 Ind O!•nt Mll~le
I
ing of plants and flower arrangements in Island
House. '
Mall Canopy Pr09ram:
' "
1huroday I ·p.m" "Uulldlnt Hanging Bask.is"
· 2 p.m., ''The Art of Flower Arr•ntlne''
Friday 1 p.m., ''Good And Bad Insects''
2 p.m., ''The lmport•nc• of Conservlnt Qur Water''
Saturday I p.m,, "T-he Thaodore Payne Callhrnla N1tlv•
Plant Foundation''
2 p.m., ''The Arboretum'' •,
Special Exliibit:
Portable Gardens In Blqom
presented by
Rogar's Gordens, Southern California
Costa Mesa • Orange· Mission Viejo
•• . ,_
'
~-
I •
' ~ ..
'
FASHION D · ISLAND
NllWP~T Cll:NTIJB I .
.7 -... -
Pacllic 00111 .Highway -h~ff!! J1mborff and. !'f•cArthur
'
I
•
-
• \
""' ....... JI ,,...,.,,.ll, Je•n A. •nd lllcftM'd L. ktllUnoQ, Lynnelle •rid G1rv WUll•m 1 -------~.,..,e....., ....... ~,,,~--.......ctwth..&Oll~-i!!;nDtl>I'• L. Ind WUH•m ko!I ,, •• ,... P1trkle M•rlf' •nd ll•ndY Peu4 ....... """" It . ...., Jafl'IQ ... -"'Ta• • l lnlll'J--NJ{ll'llJ Jlttfll D. R~,....., .. -WAll~ GO'~
(
t.f'lflfl. UNf .. Ind W1Hlt4'11 L Wright, Dabfo L. -nd Andr-F. 4 and Albfl'I Jay
, ..... ~ L INI llll'#tf(I J ltOOlr'f, _.IUI H. '""' hrotra J. lltltlltYJn, Louis A. and Jonn $, Duk .. l:IUMillftl Merr1U Ind Olrrtlt O.vl1, Ketl\lltltn (lltill:Jllll\ tllCI tr ..... ! l:tll, ltoberl M. Ind M•1<I 0
L!M • Wiie¥ ~ " ~ Oell'IJ. Rin"911 W. lfld °"""' L. lritftl• .,..... \... .... Crlllo D ., l relvllon. AW....,, ['rl'lftll"t erif I .... ...,..... Bern.a•d t Ind Sft•10fl &. °"""'' l'wt Urr-.. ne 111111 E<'1••d llU"9fl WOrtll, Ir. ,-. Lewrettee ,,._ 111~
' ,_ I • 'J J
'
Coronary .,
Warnings
J--Beware .,
' l By DR. STEINCRQHN
! Was tt Nictzcl>!o ~ Mid.
J'·Uve dangerously"? 'nlat was
, ~ong before we recog91zed that
'living: itJelfJ ls ·danjtrous -., -~ -1especlally when the thr<at ls
~number one killer: coronafY
disease. · •
· II we mlght hang a picture
!of this criminal in po.st .offices
-1 lhroughout the United States
; we would see framed replicas
1 of clogged coronary arteries.
} These arc the lifelines we
_: mu.st k'eep open i( we hope tc
. ! thw•rt the farcnl.Qst menace . . . ~ . .
DOCTOR IN
TH!!.~QU!f§'.
DEAR DR. STEINCROHN,
I IUP you rruoy ·thfnlt I'm
begiJmIQi to worry about a
Mart •hack, too early in life.
I'm only :18, ye~ l believe tn
~he; motto, '"!be earlier the
De111:r \., i
' J'Ve)llways trlecfto tole pid
care of myseU. Therefore, l'm ~Ii~ ag(l'feel fine.But I wont t•
".k~p i( that way. Not only !or
; my, Ofn aake, but for a lovely
wife ond lllroe beoutllul kldo. Do.you have any special ad-
vice fou can give me on· how
'· to prevent 1 coronary attack
until I'm an old man'? I hear
aDd'. read of too many sue-
-'"' lamUy IMl1 who are stniClc i.down tn their 40s and
SOS. I'm selfish enough not to
wa·nt to be included in those
'columns of statistics. Thank
Y9tJ. -Mr. B.
~COMMENT: Blanket advire
dpes not covCT evtf)'body
comfortably. Your o"in doctor
ii tile one to glv~ you pel'lonal ~
• and speciOc ""Y5 to forestall •
' ooronary attack. He lmowa
you better than 1 do.
, For example, you say you .
take good care of younetf.
Jtist what does that mean!
• No smoking or drinking?
• Q9ocf. But perhaps you like to
_w_~h~Ar•-YJ!U1--
. overweight?. That's co}lduclve
• to coronary di sease later.
How are y o u on the job
aod 'et home? Tense? Do
Your arteries take an hour-t~
'hour and a day-to-day beating
; bt<:aase you're pouring too t, much adrenalin Into your
blood stream? I consider
''" tension one or the greatest enemies of the coronary
artery system.
Have you checked to make
"", ture .you do not have di.betes? . ff ow .il_your blood cholesterol?
,Have you learned bow to ft1a~?J.. You say you keep fit.
Jloe1 inat mean too much ex·
I' erdle; or tOQ little? Even at
t 21, ~ett:te exertion ii better
\ tlian ovtrexerUon. , ·
•• 1l So you aee, Mr. ~·· your _ "tloctpr has many quesUons to
• '3k ond )'<IU hive many to
.:/lnsW.r -Iv him ud. to
, 1')Unell. u you do '°• 11 will
'be tlit firit Important llep tn
-,1 Common sense coronary care.
:.t... ' FOR MRS. D., We don't
'f exactly what ca uses
pi · Schlatter's disease, ,
• But we do know It Is most
rmnon In teen-ager1 a'hd the " 1:ione necr01is Is due to
~~·ie1·hln1 which inlerlem
1111 n o r ma I clrcUJatlOn.
nllalnrnatlon ol the Iorgo tq
'. near the knee It • com· < ilte. • . I"';,. Important port ol troll·
~ la ttatrtctlon ol octlvtty
blnUI the clr<ulotlon becomes ~ ol)CI the bone itronpr.
!;rntment moy take 1eve•al :-
·~ or y1an. Bracn and
. ~•te Jmplemenl.reco.very. ~
-. .
0
. . .
•
•
• I
You . can help your IOll U-¥-~mr,.~~~.J.1.L.,,;_;."---"~ ........... mlt bl• idlvtty, • 444 N. Eodi' ml~ I I "'w\U_ be hdWlwla&1'WWI healing proc:ds: ,
II =-yz;• \& I'
I
T
•
• •
•
•
Wtdntid.'1, Stpltmbtr 19, }q'73 DAILY PILOT 1J.
SLEEPING SOFTLY
IN VASSARETTE
•
Home bodies. Utterly soft brushed nylon lou ngers
thot cuddle you beautifully. All in sizes S·M·L.
A. Smocked trim robe with no loose lining
to stretch or shrink away from robe, 32.00
B. Matching smocked gown, pink, blue or
yellow, 15.00. C. Embroidered gown' with
elasticized bod, pink or blue, 14.00
D. Shirred yoke gown , cluny loco trim,
pink or yellow, 11-.00.
Sleepwear Lingerie, 24
-
•
•
. • . , :;
\
\
•
___ ,,,~£W,ORT HUNTINGTON I EACH , ORAN~E. MALL or-' ORANGE CERRITOS 4 7 ~ •• ~le'" Ti11lidm.•1 m:1m 11::111qrn.'Vlu111 !41 tt-1 .. 1»•-JOO_N..Ju1tin..Stt••J J.7141'..ll'"'·"""' ,_, _.c_ __ _.,lll!.J,,,.•!.• ,,c,.,,.,,,".,...,,11..,.u,_,,11,._1 .,1eo1,..,:!1J,_ ____ -...Ji
SHOP lo A.M .•• t :i o r .M.0 MONDAY '"1oueH fll:IOA'f. SATURDAY 10 ... A.M .... ,,M. SUNDAY 11 NOON,, s P.M.
r • •
. -
•
'22 DAILY PIUIT Wed..W,, Stott-19, l97J
• FalHllfl Clr•m• bfl Bii Keane-__.---.;.:
. ,....._,.&00---::=J
"'Mommy, rve been tryin' to remember. Whose kid
wos I when you were 0 littie girt?,..
\Vhenzatagain?
TV's Niglit at the Movies
By DICK WEST
WASHINGTON (UPI)
One of the journalistic set
_' pi eces thiS lime o year is afi
. article on the intricate mix-
. ture of strategy , skill and low
cunning that goes. into ·the
preparation of the new rail
television schedule.
The idea, as I widerstand it,
is for a network lo array
strengths and weaknesses in
such <\ way as to take ad-
vantage of the other networks'
strengths and weaknesses.
r!\t NOT SURE I have this
season's schedule entire I y
straight in my mind. It is,
· however, my impression that
an extensive amount of
program reshuffling w a s
brought about ABC's decision
to move its Wednesday Night
Movie to Tuesday.
Last season, you'll recall,
the Wednesday Night Movie
was seen OOThurSday.
The network experimented
for a couple of seasons with
scheduling t h e Wednesday
Night Movie on Wednesday,
but that innovation didn't work
out well at all. The public a~
parently wasn't ready for it.
BY MOVING THE Wed-
nesday Night ~1ovie to Tues-
da}', ABC hopes to gain .a com-
petitive advantage over the
Saturday Night Movie, which
is moving into the Sunday
time slot beging vacated by
... . . •
•
Day Care Cenwr
Granwd Funding
A day care center to be
establiJhed at Lamb School in
Fountain Valley has been
granted $71,000 in state and
federal funds, according to
r.fike Brick, superintendent or
the Fountain Valley School
Dist rict.
The funding will cover the
cos t of a portable classroon\
and staff members \Vho \\'ill
nin the center and care for its
proposed 30 children to be ac-
commodated. one.
.·· .·. ··.· ........ . ~-····. :: .. :.:· · ...... . ...... :.
--
64~ ...
-"~ ----YOUI CH01C1
BEDROOM
COOADl.NATES
A.' la Fote-French Provin-
cial styling.in arltique white
with gold trimming. Full-eia
bed (canopy frame and
cover extra), single dr-r
base (mirror extra), ...,drawer
chest.
Claremont Rites
Filth Husband
For Eva Gabor
LOS ANGELES (AP) -
Actress Eva Gabor ,will marry
aerospace e1ecutive Frank
J ameso.n at a small wedding
in the chapel at the Webb
School in C!aremorft Friday
afternoon, a spokesman says.
The reception will be !held
~tonday evening at t h e
couple's home.
ON SALE
NOW'THRU
SAT., SEPT. 22nd
The groom is a senior vice
president of the North
American Rockwell Crop.
It will be the fifth marriage
for P.!iss Gabor , the youngest
of the Gabor sisters. who was
divorced in June { r o m
director -writer Richard
Brown. It will be Jameson 's
second marriage.
·-
-..
u,.,........
FIFTH'S. A CHARM?
Actr11s Eva Gabor
38~
TABLES AND
· COMMOD'ES WITH
ROOM·Y INTERIORS .
-~ -tbe...CBS.Frlday_Nighl M vie. _
B. Shenandoah -Early
American styled with rich
maple·finished hardwoods.
Choose full·size spindle
bed, slngle dress8r base, 4·
drawer chest, sturdy student
-:_ deslr.All'with a ricfi nutmeg
Massive, deep-carved Spinlsh
style tables add · an extra di·
mans ion of elegance to any .
room. Sta in resistant vinyl ve--.
neers and hardw.oods wi th rich
dark oak finish. Rev; "'Wl•ng . The _reasoning al ABC goes ~ like this: ,
The CBS Friday Night
Stand N t "1ovie, which is being moved 0 to Monday. is expected to re-
Safe--Army
FT. HUACHUCA, Ariz.
(UPI ) -A $25,000 reviewing
. . stand is being built at this
Anny post not because anyone
• has gotten splinters oo the old
· woocfen One but because it has
been declared unsafe, a fort
spokesman says.
Paul Stoll, a civilian public
affairs officer at the fort, said
Rep. Les Aspin (l}.W'ts) was
"misinformed" that 'the new
concrete reviewing stand was
being built because some
generals and their wives com·
plained about splinters.
It was unlikely officers
made such com plaints because
they always sat on steel
folWng _chairs erected. on the
v.·ooden bleache rs, St<lll said.
Laridmarks
Approved
-SAN RAFAEL (APl -A
, mansion and a Gold Rush
. theater in Northern California
have been recognized as state
·. historical landmarks by the
. California Histor1cal Advisory
Commit tee.
The "Gabled '-fansion" in
tain a major portion of the au-
dience that previously watch-
ed it on Sunday.
m E FRIDAY Night Movie
traditionatly bas the highest
rating re'Fdless of which
nigbf it Is .....
This season, 'however, the
Friday Night Movie w i I I
feature a number of two-part
films.
If the first part of the Fri-
day Night Movie is shown on
Monday, as will be the case
this season, many-viewers will
become restive over having to
wait a week to see bow ii
comes out.
Growing imi)atient, they will
tune into whatever movie is
being shown Tuesday night,
which is tbe ABC Wednesday
Night ~iovie. Thus boosting
ABC's ratingin-that particular
time slot.
TRE ABC Wednesday Night
~1ovie seen on Tuesday ob-
viously is not the second part
of the CBS Friday Night
Movie, the first part of which
is seen on Monday.
peo e-wtio Wa l c h
movies on telev=· aren't
terribly discrimina g in that
regard. They'll tty much
watch whatever is &bowing, as
long as there are plenty of
commercials to keep them
distracted.
\Voodland and the Nevada IF, OF COURSE. they had
'Jbealer in Nevada City. both time to become engrossed in
relics of 19th century architec. the fil m they might object to
t~re, . were approved a s not seeing on Tuesday the sec-
bisloncaJ landmarks. ond part of the Friday Night
JamesJ)oy_le.~PQJcesman for _Movie_the;y were watching on
the agency, said each build ing Monday.
"·ilf receivi a comfuerMrative The above schedule is su~
plaque describing Its history. ject to last minute change.
YOUR
NEWSPAPER CARRIER
IS A
CREDIT MANAGER
M.P. tM ""'""'1i"' l11wolve4 4011't &Mitt l"'portnt M yo•
..._ '" ,_, off P9Jl111 -or ..,.. ferwt to ~oy -tlto IMlltft-
fJ WH for Hll•ery •f ro1r -~. l•t DAILY 'ILOT cotrfen
.,. 111 •wllHlt for fNIMelfft. Tilfy tn11t ro• to pay ,.,.... elMI
thy Nwo to IH'J for the IMWlfNlpen rfley ct.II.., to yo11.
Cinlen .,....Hted ,. •NTt co lffttf"f " thol1 ro1tn • Hrfy
• ,.. 1 Sttl of Heh lftollth, er c.rnil11ly by tM JOtll, •• they
..... elhlro4 of .. , .. , ,.111 by tho 011d of tk N11tfl wh ..
...., ...._ .. ,_, ttwlr 11n1t. If y•111f ,., r••r MHf'MJ bnl Mrlf ft .., ....,. wffl •eett , • ., cotrS.r ...,,,,,, Mr It wlll
ASSURE PROMPT
. COURTEOUS SERVICE
, -t -OAU.-Y-l'ILOT CIRCULATJOIUlfPARTb\!!'II
•
glow.
' MANY OTHER PIECES: AVAILABLE
457~. DELUXE-QUILT MATTRESS OR
MATCHING BOX SPRING UNIT
Medium-firm innerspring unit padded with
polyfoam sisal and cotton. Floral stripe tick·
ing quilted to ~,. thick urethane foa m; pre·
bu ilt border. Weight ba lanced foundation for
firm support.
4-PC. SPANISH GROUP
FOR LIVING ROOM OR DEN
ALSO AVAILA•LE IN KINe llZL
BRADFORD BLANK
C-60 CASSffiES
Records up to 60 min. '
Balboa-includes sofa, loveseat, chair,
and ottoman, upholstered in leat~er~
look vinyl. Button·tufted 1·pc. seat and
back; polished wood trim accents.
252·coil innerspring mattress
with floral ticking quilted to
%" urethane foam, cotton,
and sisal for firm support. Pre--
built border helps-prevent
sagging. Matching foundation
for balanced support.
ALSO AVAILABLE IN KING-
SIZE
84~~
COLEMAN FUEL
ro1 GASOUNr SJOVfS,
lANTE•NS ANO
CAfALnlC HEAfllS.
63~ .. -..
WILDCAT .22 CAL -LON& RIFLE SHELLS
High JJpeed, high veloci!Y
.rlm-llr1 cartridges.
294~.Mf
VELVET UPHOLSTERED
SOFA AND_LQ_VE_SEAT
Manhattan -genero~sly proportioned.
pair combining informal charm with·
classic elegance. Tuxedo styled with
rayon vel ve t button·tufted to thick
polyurethane foam filled seats and
backs. Ball casters.
366~ .. ~.
WHISKEY BARREL SET
FOR DINING llR GAMES •
Roll out the barrels for fun and gam8s!
Authentic distillery barrels onc9 Used
to age whiskey. Se t incl udes a 48"
round table with stain-resisting •lamin--
Bt!td plastic to12. plus 4 swivel bar~el
cha irs , tastefully upholster~d with sup-
ported vi nyl over deep polyurethlne
foam cushloni.ng. An 'lntoxic&tlng'
value! ' ...
2!!GMI'
CIGARETTES
ANY SIZf, ANY HANO • .MOIJ
POPUlAl llANOI AVAllAIU.
.. MOST ITEM$ AVAILABLE AT MOST GRAlft,
the more for your m,~neyswort~ store
iNAHEIM HUNTINGToN IEACH UST FULLERTON SAN ClEMENTE u. .............. c.-.. ........ ,.............. , ............................... .., ... c.....••·.,...
MOST mMS •• , AllO AYAIUIO AT IMTA ANA -· 301 r. ""' IT.
. . '
DO YOIJ.ICNOW
GRANT CITY HAI :
; Wall-IO:wall broadl0om '
·~=:*-" ..... • llYlng-. .
., I
' '
F'~ Bolds Tests
' an M~lk Daµger Denied
.\llllNGTO!t (UP!) -
of Food . and . Dru a IDlltt'IUo~ llY• II teated
re than 38,000 can• of
apqraled mllk and con-
clud«I U!'fe wa• no d"'1aer of hlih lead ... tent. ' '
'. The FDA, l8Sued the report
m response to Ii n an.
nouncement by Consumers
Union that Us tests ahowed
dangeroua levels of lead Jn six
brands of caMed milk.
THE SIX BRANDS lesled by
Consuplera UniOn were A&P,
Borden Sliver Cow, CarnaUon
Velvetlzed, Food Fair, Grand
Union Homogenized and Pet.
The FDA said its tesl3 and
those of industry involved both
cans which had been sitting on
the shelf and cana which had
just been removed from ~
duction lines.
' CONSUMERS UNION, which
publlsbes the magazine Con·
sumer Reports, said it tested
two cans of the six ma)or
brands bought from store
6helves ll1d found lead levels
ran~g from 0.58 pert• per
million to 0.84 ppm, with an
average or 0. 70.
The FDA guideline. which
II ti., 1ugge1ted to indust,.Y-
but not ordered It to f011o'v. is
0.5 parts per million.
The lead content I n
evaporated milk comes frorn
the solder used to seal •the
seam of the can. Researchers
believe it tends to be leached
Into the mllk the longer the
can sits on the shelr.
..
Secret
ls Safe •
LONDON (UPll -Mn.
Molrl Crulle'I HCrll II
safe, the government ha3
ruJOd.
Home Secretary Robert
Carr ruled that h1rs.
Cruise needn't diwJge her
age ~she doesn't want to ..
and ordered that the . $12
fine she paid to keep her
secret be refunded.
Two years ago, Mr1.._
Cruise w~ stopped for a
minor · tr~ffic offense and
and was fined In court
because she would only
say she was "~ver 21."
-'Catch Me IGller' -
· Escapes Pi1ison
BELLE GLADE, Fla . !AP)
-Convicted murderer Robert
Erler, who five years ago beg-
ged police 10 stop hJm before
he killed again, has escaped
from jail.
The so-called "Catctl Me
Killer" was found miAsing
from Belle Glade Correctional
Institution's security area late
Monday night.
"We have no idea how he
escaped." said Supt. Phillip
Schu!ord. "I would consider
him potentially dangerous."
Erler, 29, 8 former
policeman, was serving a 99-
y~ar sentence for the August
1.968 shootinf death of MeriJ~·n
Clark, 12, o Fort Lauderdale.
The girl's mother. Dorothy
Clark, survived five head
woun·ds to testify at Erler's
trial.
Shortly before finding the
mother and daughter, police
said they received a call from
the killer lelling them, "I've
just killed. . . .I'm serious.
Please catch tne ."
ON SAU NOW THRU •••
SATURDAY, SEPT. 22nd
-~.~~
~~ ~00~00 ~
16800 ~ '
cdMPLETE STEREO SET
You get a pop-up 8-track cart·
ridge player ; FM f AM stereo
radio; 4-speed record changer;
dual cover; speakers; input /out-
put)acks. --'
MNel "'9 llOl lfl.ilMIM
'366 00
UPRIGHT
snREO CONSOLE
A tpocious ••I In less floor tpacel
FM/AM-FM stereo .radlo1 I track
topei . pl0yer1 .( 1,.ed outomotk
record chang•r. Pecan vt:Mer
Medlte(ranton console,
• . :-44800
25" DIAG. MEAS. CONSQLE TV
WITH SINGLE TOUCH COLOR
Push one button to lock In lifelike
color Instantly, every time. ln1tant
p·lcture and soun·d, too. Pecan ~
fi nis h Mediterranean cabinet.
"'""" w-.., et1 '''""' 11_..t. TV .........
3988
SOUND SAVINO or $22
22800
4-CHANNEL MODULAR STEREO
SurrolJ{\d yourself with soUnd! AM FM
·stereo and 4-channel rad't0: built-ln''B tr ack
tape player for Stereo and<l-channet: 4 air·
suspension speakers and 4 separate slide
volume controls.
19" OIAG. MEAS. SOLID.STATE TV
WITlf SINGLE TOUCH COLOR .
-· .• l . • Transiatocs and dk:>des replacoraJI heah
reducing chas~s,l"be•! $lngl0: Touch
' Co\of f0;r ideal ba18~e of colOr and
· tint. Twin antennas: handle.
•
19-g~
12"'=· BlACK/WHITE TV
BuilHn antenna; handle. It's light·
weight so you can carry it from room
lo rooml A great savings oppor-
lunltyl .
\/ednesd<:i~. S>!pttn1btr l<J, 1973 DAILY PILOT 23
'A (JIU.! '8RIN4S"
AFTlfS • W,leiHl
~~· . ..---..-.
MIJSIQL.:
= ·-ft ••
-"°"' ™r"DA1
..
PUNCH
M/ wish I'd realized at the timl! that ths fiftM ,._..,,.
teresting."
It Cost Arin
Honeymoon l.n Offing
From \Vire Senrlees 1974,'' is aiming at a campaign
_ A •. IL 70-roilli<>ILOll'M<llor. an.~t of fi P,ll!li!"}Jltr."..~ a _
accident that <..'Ost him an arm series Oi"plamung uncl ra.isen1
will allo\v -John Pipper of and solicitations from more
Detroit and his wife to take a than 100,000 voters, spokes..
honeymoOn to Jamaica that men said.
has been delayed 22 years.
A Wayne County (Mich.)
Circuit Court jury made the
award as compensation for the
accident three years ago.
f'I never was able to.go on a
honeymoon before, 1· the 69-
year-<ild_ Pippen said. adding .
* Ten prominent French and
American fashion designers
will take over th& Chateatl de
Versailles in Paris Nov. 2& to
stage a benefit show to r~e
money for restoration work at
the famed castle.
The show will be held,ip the
( PEOPLE )
::i'.'1 ~~~d;e.;ie;i .
$200 per pmon includes di!>< .._ _______ ner.
that he also would , send his
five children through college
with the money.
Pippen bas -been unemployed
since his arm was severed as
.he was removing scrap [rom a
punch press at the Atlantic
Die Casting Co. of Detroit.
* Shella Ryan, former pin-_up
girl, movie comedienne of the
1940s and 1950s and wile_ or
comedian Pat Bultragi, wa!
reported critically ill with
what a fam-
i 1 y spok:!S-
man descri~
ed as a mys-
torious loog
fillmeol.
Mi~ Ryan,
'52 was ad·
mitted to a
Los Anseles
hoa:pital . five I ltYAN
wee~s ago anijoctQrs have
not been ab!~ to diagnose her
ailment.
Butt ram and Miss Ryan met
in 1950 during the filming of
"Mille 1'rain''lilwbich she
played the female lead and he
was Gene Autry's sidekick.
* -Ent.rtainer 5ammy Davh
Jr. will seek preliminary
licensing approval as a di.rec-
tor ol Hotel Conquistador Inc.
at a Gaming Qmtrol Board
meeting today in Carson City.
Baronness Gay de
Roll!scblid heads the French
organJZing commlllee. Jacque.
line Onassis has been asked to
lead the Ameriam committee.
Tl!e_F.i:~m:!L~c.-, !Mor, a1 ... c1iy, St.
Laui"ellt and Ungaro. The
Americans are Bill Blau,
S1ep11emq 111rrowa, Ba 11 o a
Frowlct, Anne Klein and
Oscar de •• Jlenla.
It's ~by k' g,;.go W.:..,1ng
for 0-loot~. ISO.pound Lynda
Blaylock, who has become
Cleveland's first' structural
ironworbr t i IUll on hoilr.
She "!1d ane fouad dincliic I
tough way to mate a living .
The 23-y"l""Old mother of two,
is working on . a suburban
apeJ1menl project. · ' ' *
Frederick Fonylh, Brilisb
author of the best-selling novel
"The Day Qf the Jackal," was
married in the Spanish town of
Jesus Pobre.
The ~ bride is bis Irish
sweetheart, Carr I e Cm-
alngh•m: 26, of Belfast. They
were united in a private
religious ceremony.
Marijuana
DiScounted
In Death
\
'
-l!OWERFUL---•-
UPRIGHT
VACUUM
. If Davis .receives approval
from the board, be wi ll also
have to be approved by the
----1-Nevada-Gaming-Commissi nr., -"H"'O"N""-K"'O"N"'G"'c""r--.;;i=----1 meet~g '~t. 27 ln Las Vegas. amount of. marijuana reslctue
The Hot Conquistador lnc. f---• the ChJn •-ates ' Tronlcana Hotel ~N in body ol ese-r·· ·r AmerlCM film Ital' Bruce Lee
I
I
l
· ZIG-ZAG SlWING ,
MAClllNE & CABINET
I Siwt on bvtton•r do ~
ttoies1 'lots of' fancy slltc~••I Zit ·
Za1· comrot' odjuttl width of
1 swing! l ·
l!P!'llP'-'
WILSON• TENNIS BALl:S
Extra·heavy duty i "'111• P.Ut a
lot ·of lift In ~our game. Wt.Ito
Power-driven vibro-
tor shakes tht Mton•
"t dirt loose1 pow-
erfvl 1uctlon gtt{ up
every blti po~tr·
.. drlvtn j)1VSh combr ~
·and 1flllfft · Carpets..
6"' high t-d1 vf"'!i
b~mper, 6-pc. a!·
tadtmtnt ••t avoll• ~obi.· •. --
..
IMKI .a·TO A.,..
TOP BRANO GOLF ..BALLS
Arnold P,1lm1r, Spalding• 'Birdie'
and ,WlltQn• 'Billy Cu?.r'. Bo·
glnnors and big hitters 11111vel
29 88
~IGHT, COMPACT CANISTER
Cleans everything from· floor to cell-
ing. Lightweight, easy-to-store can-
ister with vinyl bumper; crush-resist-••!· hose: 3-pc. tool·set-. -·
PIC!Ull TIISI SAYlllOI
·~ . COLOR FILM CARTRIDGES
GAF' 129-12 color print fllm. Fill
111 Instant Load camera.
19700
1 O" DIA&.: MiAS.
PORTAB~E COLOR TV
Light enough to carry home and catch
the first inning In color! 1 O" dla'gonally
measufed screeo_ ith twin a~tennC!s
and ca rrying handle. Good·looking wal·
nut grain cabinet.
4aa ~··-.c...
LUB.E, OIL C.HANGE
WITH FIHER
_________ " ____________________ M_o_s_r_1r ... E .. ~-S.;•V .... AILABLE AT MOST GRANT CITY STORES
the more·for your moneysworth store
•
SAltClEMENTI ANAHEIM KUNTIMiTON BEACH EASfFOLlriTON
U.Cel1t An. et S .. tt"""' ........... '""et.,_. ,.,._Li.ff ..... •t .,....,. ,._., ... fwy. •t C•M 4• 11trille . . . . '
I I t •
MMt ltw -~•ta., IAHTA ANA, 201 I. 4tll St •
. '
•
•
DO YOU KNOW GRANT CITY
HAS A COMPLETE SELECTION
OF MAJOR ~ES?~ . w-ond °"l'lrl , Relrigoratcrs ano Ranges • •
• Freezer1 and Dishwashers
and Country Club. wasn't enough to maJre hJm * sick, a 1 government forensic
Film Wrector Vlttorto de chemist bas testified at an in-
Sica returned to Rome from quest into Lee's death.
Geneva where he underwent "'lbe v~·/ small amount I
lung surgery in a Swiss found in Mr. Lee's stomach
hospital. and intestines was far below
"I can eat whatever I want the amount that oould have
-tilts i s produced a fatal effect or even
very import· produced a tOlic effect," Dr.
ant to a 71· K.L. Lam told the coroner'• yol!MI=' de jury 'l'lMclay. Sica said as . The prel<llCe of lbe m&ri-
h e Juana reoldue ...., reveal«l lly
prod u .,..; 'Coroner C.K.E. Tung al the
Carlo Ponti opening of the inquest last
at lbe air-month, but he said nothing
· port. about Lam's cooclusloo as to
01 t1CA . The direc-his possible effect. Instead, be ro; will beglli bis n<w Implied Iba! 11 . mlibt have
lilm, 'The Voyage," Oct. been a fact.or In the death of
ZO. It stars 'PonU's wife, Lee July 20.
Sophia Loren, and. IUdaard Tung also said Lee ap-
Bartoa. , parenlly died of a brain * edema, a ,...Wnc ca-by
Sen. At.. Cranston, (0. an·accumulaUoo of Ouid. The
Calif.) netted $100,000 from a star's JW'O(lucer, R 1 y m o n d
1150-a-plate lund-ralsiiig dinner Chow, "9tlfled Monday that
in Los Angles, spokesmen Lee took several hard blows to
said. the head ~g flght scenes
The senalOr, who said be filmed last February and
\\'as "not at all cocky about March.
1-WANTED-
DL\MoNns ._GEMSTONES
J1w1ll bv lo••ph: is •••Nh1 .. t.r tll1MMCl1 1114
91m1ton11 ro.-i prl.,•t• IMlr"4u1.. •"" · "tttft.
C1r1ful 1x1min1tlon •M ..,,l11etlelt by llH' 1.,.rt..
Hl9h11t prlctt p1id. Call 14'·•~• 10.t dilly,
S1ho1rd1v 10-6.. -$11..d•v c~lff. 1·111 for Mr, O.•••
foll1 or Mt1. Jo1•ph.
iewels by ioseph
...... C_, "°!" e IUJ llii..t; C--..............
-. . T
•
I
'
~ ••
•
j
•
I
%4 DAILY PILOT WodMSclay. Stpttmber 19. 1973 PILOT-AIMRTISER 9
-·----
•
1 LOZ. ~LIQUID
Prell
SHAMPOO
lt"s ""' ,,,~ . . •
'"'" u lr 1111 11• ral lllll!
_ 15 (I~. AEROSOL .
Windex
GLASS CLEANER
Wis• AMMOlllA-D
~~li"I S111s!_ _
Denn of USts!
Helea RlbillSteii Creates ••.
the great _
skin basics
Two essentials for a beautiful
complexion.
ANNOUNCING
DD
GRf AT Place To Shopl -.
"Future" ac•YiK
MEllllEll ·Speed
Stick
DIODOl~fl:
Regular or BBC Dry Ume!
he~
~ Floor ·Finish '-\\ \I Self-polisbing aud I='-~ trat1sparent
i• I 169 ~ 4&u. • ===
TAM.E e 1 "SOMINEX"-a sam
& Body Thi effectivn~1o-natural-like sleop. . a IN~TAllT COflDmON!I iifj 12-Tut.m
• · for iuller, 2 39
, thi_cker 1 29 • ha1r!
~ lltz. • · . .
'
'
"Lawnplay" TElllS
'J SIUTN IElll
Two rocquel~ one
ball, 111T blli:k
-lleL · posts • and
court nw)ing tape.
SOUTH IEllD -Croquet-SH-.
For 6 players! Sil eac~
maoogany stained 6"
malle ts and maple
Epoxy finish 3" balls
plus a rack.
10.98
7.88
AQUA-MASSAGE • • •
Day After Day
UNCDlllmONll.U HWllTUD
FOi ii DAYS
SHEER STRnCH
It's not like any D111er shower head!
WORKMAN'S
, Three concentric rings of
water for full body coverage
380 Pulsating jets of water
per minute strike the
--body-like-nimble fingers
of a masseur. Soothing
••. relaxing for
11 aching muscles and
. \\ -nervous tension.
fir S1,er~ M11ical Re,nncliH •
__...__ 19_._95_
#4351-117
·Lunch Kit 11
"' ZEE llG IOU
•1 THERMOS
•
P-ep_
TOOTJl\
BRUSliE&
12 oz. PURINA . ' Geritol
A FORTIFIED TONIC
OF HIGH POTENCY!
PAPER
TOWELS Tender v·1mES ·
49 oz.
3.88
Punth -
·uUNDRY
DO ERG.ENT
. -
(
Sturdy, rustproof polypropy-
lene with
metal pint ~ttle. 2.66
THERMOS
Vacuum Bottle
Sl'OllSllAll'S · TTllllE '
"field and Simm"
fOf Ille man of
tile roil Ind ginl
DRUG STORES ·
OPEil 9 AM to lt PM
7DAftAWEll .
NIWf"O•T lllACM-10IO ''"""'-• W..kllft l"llD HUNTIJtOTON llACM-.t.clllml &. lrWflurlt
HUNTINGTON llACH-&91-l/19d11lt • !dlnttr ..... IL TO!tO-Um ltDdllltlf 1t9ii1
•
. '
Colorful pre-lo~ notes •• ,
just write,
folf. ... 1 Ind 6 I C ,m11I.
PAI Of 11 •
STUAIJ HALL
Theme Book
--..,ASllllF -Wlr1baild.
coll•f• rolt, 90 sints, 11\x I" size.
~I r •
Tiie Mtl1t CAT JOoD
60Z. WIS
Plumrose . " WMllCllSPIUIS
•lftlldlllll .....
• LIMildl
1
'
,
. '
. .
" • ' . • • •
Wtdnrsday, Septtm~ 19, 197) DAILY PILOT 21}; ,
aron's ~iggest Hap.dicap-Ruth's Memory
Atlan ta Slugger in LA;
Nee ds 3 HRs to Tie Mark
LOS ANGELES (AP) -Bahe Ruth
didn't need as much ti1ne as Henry
Aaron to hit his 714 home runs, baseball
traditionalists will argne.
That's true, the younger fan will admit
-but Ruth didn't have to put up with
some of the travel that Aaron has had to
fa ce in-his-career. like--eoast·to-coast--
travel and night games.
Aaron, with 711 home runs, leads the
Atlanta Braves against the Dodgers
tonight and Thursday night. T h e
Dodgers' Andy Messersmith faces the
Atlanta slugger with Phil Niekro schedul-
ed to pitch for the Braves.
Perhaps the biggest handicap Aaron
•
._.nas.Jiad .to .oY_ercome is the memory and
~ -,•. .
' ,-UNHAPPY-GIA~·-As a oix-minutrrhubarb goes on with San ·
Frandlco's lJ'ito F\lentes arguing with U!np~s that runner Jlm Russell
had •fiiterfeiff witli him on a play, ~ AD~es Dodgers)>itcl!er Tommy ' + ' ' '
John ls helped by first ·base coach Jini Gilliam as he sits on the first
base bag to await the fl!Sults. The umpires.overruled f:tientes and tpe
Dodge.i:s went on to posUa 3-1 victory. •
mystique of Ruth. What it comes down to
is that it's easy to set a record when
nobody's done it before. But to break one,
es:pecialJY._ one set by a legend, is a dif-
ferent matter entirely.
Roger Maris discovered that 12 years
ago en route to breaking the Babe's one-
season record of 60 homers. Aaron is
discovering the same thing now. Threaten
a legend and your whole world is sha~en.
HENRY AARON
proclaiming that-be needed 162 games to
achieve bis niche while Ruth-needed 154 C.Onsider, for a moment, the "records''
Rutb-was--pursuing--"lybe.n--he began to get llis 60. _..._____
busting fences. When his major league There won't be any such asterisk
career was ~ginning as a pitcher with alongside Aaron's name when and if he
the Boston Red Sox, the modef11-era hits that 715th homer. But, to thousands
(post-1900) record for homers in a season or fans, it'll be ttiere jU!t the same -in
was 24, set in 1915 by Gavvy·eravath of their minds. •
the Philadefphla Phillies. Aaron, completing his ,20th season in
Cravath, whose 13-year career witl) the the majors, has rem.ained..Sllent when the
Red Sox, Chicago White Sox, Washington comparisons with RutJI· are flung at him.
Senators and Phils ended in 1920, also And, remarkably:, ht .,,_. shown no visi-
owned the modern-era . lifetime homer ble signs of reactipg\ to the intense ·
record with .1'19. , pressure, the flood of hate mail he has ·
"For purists, the pre-Ruth alJ~time received and the dOwngrading by those
c.areer ho.mer record was Roger Conn<>r's Who, as they 'did with Marls, view him as
131 in an 18-year career· that ended in a threat to the sanctity ot the legend.
1897 and the single-season mark was Ned Ruth played for 22 years befoni retir-·
Wiiiiamson's 27 with the 1884 Chicago , ing in 1935 -but and this is what a lot of
Cubs. hia supporters will loody proclaim-he
I · ' What it all means is that, back then, b~tted only 8,399 times in that span. And I A , ! ' .' € • t h -nobody made a big deal about · records. In 11 of those years, he was a parl·tlm• t. 17
b. -·~~~ ,_ . ,_·1::1•1:-".j~, .. :"r'1•t;l:c~.-"-:f' ·: ... · m~Qp Q°W9,e There was no pressure on Ruth when he pitcher, which conceivably cut downablt -· 1' ft 1, ,. ~. -_ ~ -•----hit~29 .. homer.a-with-ihe-Red...So!''':i~n;:-lt;9~19:'.--"'1~hi~·s~a~~b!',:ai,\!ts~.===
• and none when be hit his 132nd with the Through e y rug r,-AafOD h8ll .158:t-~~m ,'U-o' C):.... •nmi• -' ~ ., . New Yor:k Yankees two years later, when ted 11,264--times. That's 2,865 times more m-a,(11 he finished the season with 59, the record than Ruth, the Bambino's supporters F 'Re Ke N t B ttl he himself broke six years after that in shrug. And, they add pointedly, the Balie
I AhOJIJ Future or 1ggs-1ng e . a ' e ~1~:kW.ol96~eae~~:,;es~~~ ~~i!~i.u~ :::: 0:;~
• ~' ~ K ,., ~ , • tandem along with Mickey Mantle, bore argwnents .of their""" Ruth didn't have
LOS (~ "'I' ' "" ' ' ' ~ <!!I_ Ruth's record, hi! wa&:under °" lo p!a)tll2 g~ a )!1111', not lo menllon
1 . . tepoi'ta ~!'!lave mJde H l\P) -· 's like something There's llillie Jean, 29, ~staugh!erofMarg~ on Mollier's -\Qiiiiilffig pressure. . the increased numoor ~I spjing triliifiiil-
U.· .....U· .areer Oi "wnt ~ out of the Roaring 1\ven1ies -this Bob-grim and aloof, shunning public air Day which read: "Bobby Riggs-BleC;lich." Maris was bounded by · waves of games which further extend the already n~ _,_._,,ial as .• ~ any by '~s-fillie Jean Kiog tennis u-pearances,' purposely avoiding all the The Jatest 0~ worn by women libbers, writers. ~ was boUt ~ by . fans elongated season, they say. ~.~,1~., .... ., ms; travagdnza. \ • r. -, rooting for him to break the mal'k and ADd,theypoinl out,Ruth,didn'tbave;to
•....... ~ •... '-. 1 ·'' • t I fanfare that 01 ...... is absorbing with say "Billie Jead. ls No. 1" and "l<lve · ;,.,..,I b th • bo iligh hi beg all u.lllJ'. -~ 'Ibe next minute you ~ct to see "'we&"" 1eei.~ y . ose ping to see the past play · t games, w cb ap. er
! ADll<IB.~lain saJd.(u-1 t.ve nothing SOlDf colleg~ kid in acoogSkin coat gulp-relish, but training lij(e a fighter enrag-Billie Jean-Zero Bobby." protected. Even 'Yankee fans turned Ruth, reti~. Most pla.yers will ctell you
•IL.. .........l,..~.,.,lll a~~ ~Afty that ina,anJ<I fish.out of Jad11''•s1• SJinni>r or some ed.· .. The telephone rings in Riggs' seventh-against him.. H anyone deserved to break that a baseball is clearly more visible in ·,;~~-~;;:,~tract g_u'y lit.tin:g 1.n a Oag 'pole ~"; group of · Gimmickry 1s everywbere. floor suite and the instrument is passed the Babe's record, they reasoned ... it was SllDlight than under, ar1ificial lights. And
411M. ~tr. -aµ pla r......-d:"; . be San emausted PeoPie going thr0ugh the mo-Bobby wears a · shirt with a life-sized over to Bobby Mantle, their long-time hero, not Maris. playing day games after night games can ~· i' _.J,..u yer~ t tions of a dance marathon. · Altired m· s.bo· rts and a blue shirt which He went into a shell, his hair started we~r· y,-ru down, too. ' ,bieji ,~piltadon of the American It'i so ludfcrous it's almOst in-picture of 8 pig and letters written turning gray 3't an alarming rate, he 'f.he debate really gets esoteric when it
n.+.aa. . ·1 ., ... ,:_ a(ross.the top of ii,: uOlauVi.nist." A first has "Men's Lib" written on the back, felt he had to defend himself against the deJ.enerates to how, many more righl· r:""',_ f ("-.. .wu. describable,, and nobody would believe it .& . 'Ille ~ Lljil ~ti Lakers anyhow. · grade student quickly gels "Chauvinist Bobby answers. . tarnishing Ruth's magnificence -and be haDded pilchera than left·~ ~ ~ Wllllld iuitheriQldinill"nor deny Tlim'• RJw, 55, bespectacled, a Pig." . . "Latest word from Las Vegas?" be angered them by spe-g out. are anff were and how many of each
die ~· · · 1 • 4'JcPiooted Utile man who can out-talk a His disciples are flooding the place says in that high, soprano voice of bis, And be had to face the sudden in-Ruth and Aaron have faced.
I "I'm • . ..._.....,1 .. ., with the Con-gramopboae""bold;.ng court in his suite with buttons. One says "l've been bustled loud eni.uah for all in the room to hear. trodu1ct19n of "the asterisk," a device What it all seems to indicate is that f< •• .a.w: ~:ibj ~:.... ta d -No. 7tX6 at' tbe -Astroworld Hotel, 'by Bobby Riggs." Another says, "Pigs '"""Ct empoyed by baseball Cornmi5$ioner Babe RJJ.th's 714 homers were a momen-' ~-r--Y uo;,u16 a-p yef'an overlooking the Astrodome, where be and for Riggs." AnOther: • • R i g g s -s ex "Jimmy the Greek now says.tt•s 6-S and Ford Frick to satisCy tioth camps~ lt Sits tous feat -and, whether it's this year or rcoach·lluftbat's as far as I can say," the · · . · k bo' Thal' t J t 'd M . ' 1 In th record book --~ 'Ube He ' h ·f-foot·l Qwnl>ertain told the Associated Billie Jean will stage their $100,000 win-Power." ;e:t. .rour c ice. s grea . us aSl e arJS co umn e , m;a.~, so wt nry Aarons 715t .
'Preis at a Hotlywood B o u I e v a r d ~rht-tafe.all Battle of the Sexes Thursday.. . Riggs pins far outnwnber ~buttons, As Bobby talks, te' leviaion cameras .......... Wilt ~--b mg a few carried over from Bobby's ....,,.,,.... was ~ to a~J> · spin, calcbing the scene fOl).iinmortal!ly. copiii'il ldl<lllOk; '(Wll1i" la~a -pr1V.1e .~ --: .. "" -Tbey mm the aging l!a..iieei>_ Shaving. ,ll!fl.... . ....:.." • . S -tli H ~---1, -. wle They film him gulping Pilili Tbey fihil ;:-~Uffe cloes'Dot want publlc11Utogl'lphing mi· • a.s 0 . ·£1~~,., ' • -him chattering away endJeiillf about the ..._ ..... '!J/l'i publiC iela,Uons man · ' · • · r.., cAt match, like a pint·sized MuliQmmad Ali. (...........,. ,'/tS for w!Jat he a going to · - . -• ' • • ........,~ • Bobby is on a ocbedule of '415 assorted ;do.. I don't lliiow and 1 don't th1nk WIU · . . vitamin pills and nutrients a day.
* * * Dough ·sharp In Win.
LA's Knuckleball Ace . .
··~t.~Loktrsoflhe.Nalionrl.-&1 nk" i·n· g ~Ill ... T ,4 ""---..-nnr-b;:~";r~~8;;u~;ti~:"R':s~air~ 1--1--'!· ~ .. ~\i.O!l,.Jik.~f~U aue if ·~ -1..v..i:__fJ~._.,.,.,,,_ --lh.t-Angelee. " l's-equivaleahto-2;0001---
"Wllt leaves the dub b;ecause11t hOlds s · oranges, four pounds of steak, two A Sk • w "lb Wi d.
. '
~~Jo~ Qne JJJOt:e fe8100. gallons of milk and two pounds .or beef znny l u-r . -oo " II'.• 'IP!l<l.)Vllt IO:play, Ibis year an~ · U>S kNGELES (AP ) -Stan Smith Second·seeded Ilie Nastase won his liver a day." . . 3t he Playa:AOJwhere, be ,ll play here, $8YS he normally only tries to really get first round · match Monday, as did Blair, who has had some of show !Did Pete ' '"'ell, Lakers general "up" for major tennis events such as Newport Beach's Roy Emerson. business' most prominent personalities
• '., Forest Hills or Wimblec;lon, but the Ken Rose all or . A tra1·· ded as hill clients, said he considered liver.a
""'l>Flald, "110 ~ played the last Pacific Southwest Open is an eiceplion. fo"'\1!, ,easll; whipped us~~ ... ~... very essential part of the diet and pro.
1e4110a1 'wlthithf .. IAkers; said, "The uThis is my home area," said Smith of. Chamrea g.2 M ceeded to tell a story about 10 rats. ~ii~ "'1 1wtt,1·!~ -nearby Pasadena. Seven~seeded ·Torn Okker of the "Scientists," be related, "picked 10
111 A're Wilt iDi:1 the Lakm·far apart! "You have to ~k. for certain Netherlands beat Steve Tidball or Van rats. they gave three of them liver for a
"' ~~'t ~· to the ~teq," he tournaments,, the really bit ones, but Nuy_., 6-2, 6-l and Roscoe Tanner, the period · of time and the ottier seven1 no ~ · . stirpnsmgty' ·1'Ve1 J;N;aked for this one form:er ·stanford NCAA,cbampion, down-liver then they thoo.v them 1'll lnto a pool lain, most prolific scorer and because tbis~lt·N1 home court," Smith of water. The seven which 'b:ad not had
in NBA history, attended said Tuesday~ opening defense:othis · ed former: UCLA player Jeff Austin o[ livet: drowned immediately. ~ three
Unlverslfy and played, fqr the • championship in ihe $751000 lournamenl. Rolljng HUis, 71• 71• lived for seven minutes and were takm
mn Globelrotterl before joilllng Ille Seeded No. I, Smith stanecl"'1lliA vie-Pancho Gonzalez of Malibu also ad· out"
. IPNa wittloill tn· 1959~ He went to tory over Mike MaChette-, I umvmu.r of . vanced, dowrung Tom .Edlefsen of L<ls "Too batl Bobby isn',t playlng~on. Lake .1'nlllc:i.co Ill Ql2 Nw!'returned to Southern Cali!omla player he's tried to I Anplee 64, &-2.. Erie," <Ollllllented a caust~ guelt. ~ tn'f.the 11SM8 season.'~e 4beJp. · _ ' M.E\·s · stNGLes lf'lrtt R011~1 -P11~11o · '.There are al~ys guest!' in .... Bob~'s -Ut-' in 1961(. ·... • 1Smith eased by Machelte M , 6-4. ~~·~1~ ~~11tfl~tfJ:",Ji~e1rs:1.1t:bk~~lnt~ room. The door stays Open.'Many of the ' · ·· , , Cblmberlaln has The pro has p18yed Macbette several 1st. n: Mo.J, w, 6-ti Art1'11.1r MM !Rrchmoncl, V•.J nation's top pagers are two-platooning
but said' "I can 1· .. •-1 d 1 hi but e1et. 1""" And9n6n· t$wtdenJ, "1• '"21 Tefll'w h d' tall t 11Des .... lR:l p eve op s game says, $~, ~wtde!IJ dri. Robtrt C•rrntctwi•I t e story, sen mg women s ers o sup-
JI· ·J "ve1:to. Then "flease don't say I'm bis coach, I just 1:1~~!nFl1-J. <111.tf.!tt= I:~ri.<~).")J;'°r.r, plement tbe·regulal' sportswriters. Their the on of~r my rhind help him " J R•ul R• ''' CMtx1co1 0e1. Fr..:i MeH•lr 1ci-v assigninent is the women's angle, Billie 'nd ..1;.,. . . CNs-. .)1 f.1 , H i Pili! Dent (AUl!tlllal def, KIM JJiy bod:y could ltl ·~,ma ~e .. •Except for the ·~pset Monday of fifth-wef"iflc f~•tr11111 • .,.,, 6-21, Bob Krtiu 11.M Jean,butBillie·Jeanstaysouto[sight. ~-" • • , 1 • rated Jan Kodea, Pte Wimbledon winner ~1t~\~:~r:;,..J.:,"~'l:11~~· la~i,1~ So evefybody Docks-to Bobby's room .
ance, the Liters ~red 7· tioJtt Czechol19Yakia, the .rest of the top JH~~· c~~/~ :;;':'~:'"f'~-oi::'/ ~~·u~: '11lat's where the action is. Bobby loves eetltef Blmore Smit.,,from 'BUttalo in 1eeds advanced ftom the two days of ctt1. Stwt T1ctw11 1v1n Nuv1i. ,.2, "31 Frew it. The phone rina• almost every two ·~ ..;.~ .. -a.:-... A_.I_ ~-ound la McMlllln (SOUll'I Afrk1) del. Vladimir Zed11lk In -' • ex ... ._. .. WI Ma&uug w;it-t p y.. 1c1tc~1ov1~ , .. , Jiff BorowlT: <L111v11'-l Ill utes. Hi! chatters away. His phrases
Jtm Ullan. Arthuf Ashe.c;>l Miami ~ollowed Smith's ~; :!n'"1to..wio tA~t%'11,~~! •. ;,.. ~~~t -"Billie Jean will crack up,'• 11The • .the trade. wu a lead Tueaday aa the third..seeded Ashe !Fr•l'IOtl.1. ..,, '"4: 111v Moot• 1South Atr1c1> ci.1. pressure is too great," "I'm the No. 1
....... __ • .1..: • .,. .... Bir ,..._ . [ S -•-,1 ~roon 111:1111m CP1kltt1nJ , •7. w. M . Cha lnl , hln bu lb ,
t ~-~ ......... ~;i~ ger ._.,.rsaon O Ww.:,n .,. , (B~~~e~!~. ~~·:~\.i:Tni:ler~~~1,r:ir~":~~ uv st pig' -run t t ey re ~ 11-• • en1v ~trn IPJ los V'""51, u , 4-J. the only game in to"'11.
' . .
! ~ I' "l . "I" ' • ' ' '
.. :-= ... ~!'·,Reynold~ ·I111preves Ea~hWeek
LOS ANGELES (AP) -"There," said
Los Angeles Dodger lefthander Tommy
John, p o I n t I n g to knuckleball relief
pitcher Charlie Hough, "is a skinny
Wilbur Wood."
The physical builds of the two may dif.
fer ·but they both bav& a dazzling
knuckleball:
It was Hough who took over in the
eighth inning of Tue!<la'y nigh.l's ballle
· Dodgers stat~ '"
with Fuentes. But !be Umplres ruled It
and Bill Budmer folfo"led with another
infield single and II sci>red Cey.
San Francisco gO,t one run .in the
eighth. Singles by Chris Arnold and Bob-
by Bonda brought Hough out of the
bullpe!\ to replace Jollll., lfe gave up a
sacrifice Dy but dldn'lalloW a bit.
"I have confidence DttM,'J said Hough
who was Mlled ooly occaStonally early in
' ·the season.
kft l'MCll(to Ill Lei ,. ....... ()) ••rtt"" • •r11nM . All ....... MKfl l 1 ... 1 ~s,rt 4 0 1 o lOPfS,2tt .i o o o
kopt. 19 Al lanlt t t Lot Al!oelll 715.li p."1.' fuentn.2b ) 0 I 1 8uUner, lb 4 O 1 t
Sept. 20 All1nlt at Los AMltlf.I 7:1' p.m. Meddo11., (f ·• 0 1 'O WO.vii, cf 4 O I 0 Stpl, 21 Clnclnllfllf at .Loi jlt,,..ie1-7:5.li p.m. / McCovty, lb 4 8 1 0 .Ffr9Us0r!, c 3 1 O O -.,...,-,-"'."'--~-----Mllfhtws, If Z o O O WC:r1wton1. II ) 1 1 o
with the San Francisco Giants, prot~tlng • ~'1!!.er::;.~ 3b ~ : : : ~:1: ... ,, : ~ : ~
a 3-1 Dodgers victory with his fourth OYRader. c .. o t o -""""'· n t o 1 o save of the season. . M1!'f,M1, P 2 a o o JOI!.,, P 2 o 1 1 • Amold,ph 1 I 1 t HoWl'l,p 0 0 0 .O The win kept the Dodge.rs' dwindling *'· 11 o o e o
hopes in the National l.,a~e's Western ToJ:~s Frinci:O 1 J 1 ~"1". .: .! 11 3
Division alive. They ~ii t first place e~~1~e:r.,gro.n. 0~11 ~Rl'ttl3:~ t ,' 1.•
Cincinnatl ~ by' 5 ~ games. Mee•" 1. LOB-San FranciKO 1, u. MotlK '-While the Dod. '"""rs failed to nick up any 28-AlcC:ov.y, F1.1S111es. s &-Russeu. MlfflMIWI. s-&" rr• John. SF-fuent~. ground on lbe Reds. they all bul finished ' ,,. '" • •lit .... . ' off Iha thtrd·place Giants who now trail
Cincinnati by 91> games and th& Dodgers
by lour.
11 was the final meellng between the
two artl>rivaJs, each team winning nine
and losing n!ne against each other this
$elµ()D.
Marlcl'lll (L, li).141 J' $ J J '°" 10110 Jol'lft (W, 14-1) 1 j 1 I
HOUQll t • • 0 sa~ 4 T-2t32. ~I.
·'
I o • • • •. .
Tapie Plac~ 4th
' WNG'ftAOB (AP)-'-JileklleYnold9 · -1ence:Th11 year McKeever became
It wns a scoreless battle between..John
and the Giants' Juan Marlcbal, each team blowing splendid oppo<t1D1itieo, 1111-
• ' 1 .-til the Dodgers broke the .stafenuite In and probably the all·time greatest at the 111>suth -lion' as who was Injured. tho bOttom of the seventh.-
Ron iloyt tciok"'Mlead•wlth a to'loof
chip shot f4>r a birdie on the !Ith bole
then held on 10 take a one lltrOke victory
1\lesday In the Weetern :roumanient Gell
Assoc1aUon'a $30,000 weekly tournament
at El Niguel Country Club.
· ~"'!!,..~tile ll'°i.oa "r.!'1e1r ~ expendable and' tile m-~r took
~ .... re.. over~ .. · ::r.=:,~,...:;::·~ · tinder: the Knox battle p!aq, ,th e
b!lfi!&lal}.!i~ .... L ' delalve slgnala are mu.a flOm the
pli;til)iii'llolt ~ SOndQ wilen sldelnes but • R")'ll01d9' mllll . make ..._ "'*"" their tegular lfllllonal M<OSl8l'Y adjustments with audible
d Loque c1111pai.n with a :13-18 calla. • Dl"i" l .. or<il J(anau. City. .W.ed at his Tuesday breakfast with rpr•l!lt put lw6 1e1ocm,.fteynolda-new-ll.lloynolda wasn't ralhe<-al>Ort '1-" 'IHlh tllll 'V111Ahil ~ lo bt a·mlddle Jlnebacller, KM> replied, ~ !or the starling Job •nd IOll to Joe !clunidt was ju,&t a little over sis fe<l
I • ..
position. ".You won't ... it In lhi! films, but ij Joe Ferguson raced -.from third
Knot also aald the Rama this year wlll the scout -a ployer wllb b11 ba1M1 bole to BCOre the br&Utna.11111, belllnc
uae 1S1istant coach Jack Faulkner as a 'alli<:k In an Ice bucket you know Tito Fuenles' off-balance lhrvw of Ron
game scout -watching Uie team the, 10metbina: is wrong," Jtnox 858el'ted. Cey's groUnder. '
Rama will play nnt. Ito scou~ Ka1JSas AIJl<ed. about Dlelr Shiner, the former _ ..nie Giants.tho!n pu._iy walked BUI.
CllY and lasl Su""°y watched A\lanta back-11]> qllJl'lerbeck with the New York Russell, loading the bases for John. He
whip Now Orleans, 62-7. · . 1 , ·Olanll lflJO Is now Nq. I with lhe Fal<ons ~t a slow roli1r that trickled between
The new Los Angeles mentor said ••· Knot ·termed him a fine thrower. F1.,.les ~nil first basem•n Wllll J!
vantages of having a man ot the actual "N>Yone who hill 13 of 15 posses Uke • McCovey. scoring WUlle era.wford with
)gamtlfl, In contrast wllb tho movie ex, bo aid Swt~ay Is good .even Is he's only , what proved to be the decislv .. run.
cliaoges, were !bat you can get a quick throwing agalnlt air," the Ramo coach The Giants• argued heatedly thal
start In preparations and can also pick added. Russell , runnjng from first, interfered
I .
I
Hoyt, of Merced, had rounds of '70-70
for a 140 JOtal and Ille 14.500 first prize.
Jte tool< the lead from fir1t round
1eadtr Ste\le Veriato Of Hilo, ·Hawaii who
. led W>lil (i\e l&lh when be bogeyed the
par-4 hot~. '
Verlato, with f1·74r Utd (or second at
fl with Moe·Hyland of Yorba Linda with
each Wiollinll 12,500, Alaa Tllpio of llowo port Beach WU foorth. ' •
I
'
OAJLV PILOT WrdfltSday, Sepl.tfftber 19, 197)
SPORTS
~Ryan Seeks
Whiff Rec °!.d;
AngelrF-urilble
Sports in Brief
•
Five New Faces
In UCLA Lineup
LOS ANGELES (AP) -Coach Pepper
Rodgers said the lopsided loss to
Nebraska would bring no wholesale
changes on the UCLA Bruin faotball
team, but the coach has now named five
new starters. •
Rodgers said Tuesday, however, that
the changes were mainly because of
bothersome injuries that had not mended
quickly.
As a result , Rodgers said the Bruins
v.·ould have fou r new first stringers on
defense and one new face on offense
when UCLA hosl3 Iowa · thi s 5aturday
night.
•·A couple or the players were moved
up beca use they were really pushing the
people in front of them," Rodgers said
about linebacker Rick Braska and
defensive tackle Gerald Peeke.
The other defensive starters will be
Jim Nanoski at cornerback and Mike
Martinez at middle guard.
Bob Reyes will open at right tackle on
offense.
e Lakers Toppled
COack Dick Da\'is, whose learn faoes
the toughest scheduJe in its history, said
he 'll probably start 6-7 sophomore Allen
Bunting at center.
e Ziegenfuss Falb
HOUSTON -,. Wendy Appleby says she
wi ll win some money for a change on the
'A-'Omen's pro tennis tour.
"This is the first lime I've gotten past
the first round," said Mi.s.s Appleby Tues.-
day night after upsetting sevep~seed
ed Valerie Ziegenfuss of Mission Viejo, 7-
6, 6-1, In the $30,000 Hooston tournament.
Second-seeded Kerry Melville o f
Australia deleated Marcie Louis, 6-0, 6-3:
third-seeded Rosemary Casals, beat Jiil
Schwikert, 6-0, 6-1: fourth-seeded Julie
Heldman defeated Penelope Moor, 6-0, 6-
"3.
ARLINGTON, Tex. -Nolan Ryan 8'lCS
out to break Rube Waddell's 69-year--0ld
A m e r i c a n League baseba ll record
for strikeouts in a season when he pitch-
es for the Ca Ii for n i a Angels today against the Texas Rangers here. SANTA BARBARA -Next the Golden
Ryan , 18-16 on the season, is just one State Warriors will have to solve their
Is It a Ploy?
Pacifica Chief
1----~trikeout away from t,ing...,W.adclelrs_349_r~~r season problems with tlfe Los ...
strikeout mark set in the 1904 season. Angeles Lakers, now that they have fhe Fears Oilers With his first strikeout tonight, Ryan exhibition ditfi~lties settled.
will become the greatest right-handed Three years in a row the Lakers beat
Angels Slate
AJI Ch!MI .. ICMP'C 17111
Sept. l9'C1llfornl1 I I Tr~•·
St'Pf. 20 Ctlllornll 11 T1x11 Sept. 20 C11ilorn!1 11 T1x11
5:7.5 P.m. 5:2.5 p.m. 5:25 p.m.
strikeout pitcher of all time. He is cur-
rently tied with rormer Cleveland right-
hander Bob Feller with 348 strikeouts.
·Ryan will pitch the opening game of
tonight's twi-nlght double header against
Texas' Pete Broberg (4-8). Frank Tanana
(1-1) pitches the nightcap ror California.
the Warriors in the National Basketball
Association preseason opener for the two,
but Tuesday night Golden State broke the
string, 121-102.
The Lakers;-without Wilt Chamberlain,
Jerry West and Keith Erick.son, bumbled
for 28 {umoverS while the Warriors com-
mitted only 18. ~
Jim Price's 22 points topped Los
Angeles with Cail Goodrich adding 16 and
Happy Hairston 15.
e DeJardha Fired
Pacifica High Football coach Art
Michalik is a professional wrestler on the
side,
So when he sayS, "l'm scared to death
of Huntington Beach," you have to
wonder. lf The Des.troyer, La Pantera
Negra, Freddie Blassie, 'Ibe Green
Shadow, Suni War Cloud and the Great
Yamamoto can't throw fear i n to
A1ichalik, how can Huntington B e a c h •
Pacifica's opponent Friday night at
Garden Grove High.
"We. don't ,have a starter back on
PHILADELPHIA -Don DeJardin, defense, that's . how," says Michalik.
general manager of the Philadelphia "That, and I have great respect for Roy
76ers for the last three years, was fired Brummett and Jeff Chilcott."
Tuesday night by owner Irv Kosloff. BrummeU, Huntington Beach coach,
• ..-~ • • Pirates Get
Top Cage ' .
.,,. '
'liransfer '.•I•
.. ~·· '.•
Orange Cout Colloie's boskel...:J ·,
team ts elJ)eCted to bo tmprov<ll ~"
seaoon -espectally with the tlddltlGD .'iii
fonner La Habra High ·a1111tlout ll94
Manier, .'\
'!be w forward .... • walk-on ,'61
Orange Q>ast, reports Ptralts cojidl •
.Herb Uvsey, Manker and btl broUier .
Steve (now at Oreson) helped La Halir'
High to the C!F AMA semlfiDall \WO
seasms ago.
He played the !Int semesltr al Drake
last year and then transferred to
Fullerton College where he saw spot duty
under Ezra Van Hom durlni the .....,d
semester.
'l11e addltlon of Manker' elVH IJje
CRAIG
SHEFF ,.
. '
Plrales added deplh and shoottng _..,
All five starters'.-' Torn Crunk. Jim
Worthy, Rod-Snoolt,-Dean-Boldan and
Bruce>llliller -wilt be back alooc wl\11,
letterman Scott Cameron and top
freshmen Todd . Colli/is (Estanclti) and.
Mark Attleoey (C«ona del Illar),
POI earn., tbe u ·Marhla ud Goldlil,
·Wes& studoat, WU accorded AJI..
America -. WI 11U11mer -playfoc for Ille Boalder Coll<lluo .. tk Nolloul Baoeball eoocreu ........,.
at WlcbJtl, .Ku. <{t
· Cunaa, wbo bolds muy GoWep W8"_·.:
b!Utng' reconb, balled, IM durtng !flt<
iammtr seuoa for Boulder. He !Madl:.
out is homers ud had ts rbl. -~2
He allo led Boaldtt to Ille 31• 1ta&e cfwmplerhlp, betac -.med ;\(
state &ouraey11 most va1ullle ..
-placed faarlll "' tbe ~ touraey. . :
Sa n
OU(
kno
gs ..
Meanwhile, Jim "Catfish" Hunter
became a 20-game ·winner for the third
straight year Tuesday by teaming with
Darold Knowles and Rollie Fingers to
pitch the Oakland A's to a 5-4 victory
over the Angels. l----nirv1ct'cory=,o;;H;...un~t~er~'s~16thin his taSt 17
decisions, moved the first-p(ace A's
closer to clinching their third consecutive
American League Western Division title.
DeJardin's National Bask e t b a 11 was the offensive coordinator under
A'"SSOCia"tion Clti15 setT league recori!1Br-Michalik-and-ehilc.mt-directedl-1""'°-
season by losing 73 of 8'l games. In the defense tvro years ago.
,___,.._..-• ..cama_wm.Jlt.. ,
at Cliopman College tbl1 y<W. ~I-
i
Hunter, 2M, was relieved by Knowles
in the eighth before Fingers Snuffed out a
California rally in the ninth.
~omia's Rudy Meoli n'lade a wild
throw ln the first inning to aJlow two
Nw to score-end made a bad throw to
second base trying for a force out in th e
fifth, allowing another run in.
Sal Baodo.accounted for the two earn-
ed Oakland runs on run-scoring singles in
the first and second.
CALll'OltNtA OAKLAND
•Orllbl 1br ll bl
IUvtrs. cl l 0 0 0 Nortll, ct l I l 0
Pinson, rt • 1 1 0 Com11nrl1 .. 1• • 1 1 0
ScMbllft .. Oh • 1 2 ? 81ndo, 3b 3 2 2 2 R. Oliver, 3D • o 2 q T-ce. !b l O o ll
McCr1w, II 3 1 1 I DtJonn11)11 dh ' ll 1 o
Ll-1, ph 1 o· o o ~u1! rl ' o 1 ll
SltnlOf\o rf 0 0 0 Contll1ro If ' C 0 0 EP1tefn, lb J 1 I F01.1~. c 3 I I O
Cll•lk. pr o o a o. GrHn, ?b 2 o o o a. P1rtclf, ?b l o o R. J1c•son. llfl 1 o O o
G1llNl\et", I* 0 0 0 Kublall, ?ti 0 0 0 0
Slnd1, pfi 1 o O Hunter, p O o O O
Bero•~ pr O o o, Knowln, p o O o O snmhJIL, c J o o 'Fl-1. 11 o o o o
F,lt*-,.11111 I 0 M9elf; ... _, • 0
StlPl!Mn., pfi 1 D I
Hist.Ill', • 0 0 0
Tol1I :D I ' Ter11 .!I ! 1 2 C1Ulornl1 101 2GI ll00-4
Olkllnd 310 010 OOll--5
E-MIDll J. LOll-<1lllornl1 S, OMl1nd I. ?8-Pl11Mn, MM!lull, khllnblum. HR-kllelnblum ()),
MCCr1W Ill. EMl1ln (f ). 58--Horlh. S--0. Green.
l~KltElt&&SO
H1111fr l L, o..11 I 1 ~ t. ' •
H"""1r !W, 20-•l 7'i I ' i' 7 3
Knowlei \> o o a a 1
Fl-s l OOO O J Slv-Flnpn 711 HllP-bv H1sslrr, Fctne, by
Knowlfl, Eps111n. 81tk-K-IH. T-1:114. A--3,711.
DEAN LEWIS
TOYOTA
VOLVO
BACK TO
SCHO,OL
SPECIALS!
1M4 VOLVO
122 CPE.
4 cyL, t ,...,, rHlo, 11 .. 1.r IOTJff
New rtlf .. 1111 t.11cll 111111111.
$877
ltll TOYOTA
$1199
1967 VOLVO
4 oa 144
$1177
1970 TOYOTA
COOO~A 4 Dlt
...
t qtl., ..... '""""' ... ........ • ...... 0. lfNortJ lllf ... .., .. .,,
$1277 .
I
'
proct!SS, the 76ers fired Coach Roy Rubin Pacifica, Garden Grove League cham-
and lost his successor, Kevin Loughery, pion a year ago, has its starting
to the ABA's New York Nels. halfback, fullback and split end return-
e A:tecs Lose Height
SAN DIEGO -'lbe San Diego State
basketball team has lost nearly 14 feet oC
players.Jn a few days;
First, 6-foot·ll reserve center Ken
Barstow said he was quitting basketball.
Then, ~11 junior Jotm Service, schedul-
ed to start in the P.ivot, said Tuesday he
is transferring t3 the University of
California at Santa Barbara because he
prefers the academic atmosphere there.
Area Calendar
Tllursd1y ISO•I. 20} Footr..n -Tu1tln VI Vnlv1rt;lty II Mj••lon Vl•IO (11, S1n!1 A/'11 VI M1l•r 0.1 •I SA e-1 I ). Wiler pOio -Htwl'Ott-Mew. ff'Olh.'°"" 1-y 1t
Newport H1rt1ar, E1l1ncl1 •nd UC lr~lne, We:.lmlMll!'I' II Ar11 .... lm J V l0Um11Y, COlll Mftl 11
MPor• L81911e •lourney 1111 11 l ). ' Cros1 counlrr -Etl Toro 11 LI Qulnt1, Cypra1 11 01111 Hiiis, Loi Amloc» II Unf...,.lty, H-port
Hlrtlor I I FuU•rton (1lf •t 3:15).
Frldly (~. Jll
FOOlblll -CorOM dl'I M•• II N~ H1rt)or, Foun111n V1lley VI Norlll Torr•nc• 11 Huntl<19!1)11 BelKh, Edl!IO<I 11 Fu!lrrtl)ll, Sin Clem.en!1 11 MIHlon Cross country -El Toro 11 LI Qlllnt1, Cyorrs1 ol
L1gun1 e ... c11, Marlr11 11 Gl~lfl, L•k9WOOd 11 wesrmrnstt r, Hunlfn;!Ofl Btl cll VI P1elflc1 11
G1rdffi Grove {I ll 11 I), Es!1ncl1 11 Vll!I 17:41).
Cros,s counrrv -Sanll Monie•. Goldln Wtsl 11 ,_P
Hondo, Ml. Si n Anlonlo 11 0r"'ff Cont ~both 11
3:)0).
Weier polo -Ntw90f"l·M9'1 froal»oc>ll 1...,mey, AAIMlm JV tourney, Founia;n v1111y 11 Avl1tl0<1 tournev (all at 3), Goldlf> Wn l 11 s1nt1 81rNr1 Gtucho tourney, Min ion Con11r1nc1 I01Jm•v 11 C!trvs.
AMERICAN LEAG!JE
Easl
ing.
Fullback Mark Mobley (:>ti, 1601 used
primarily es a blocker and still gained
over 200 yards, returns with Bob Marr
quez, wf»1 last y~ .klarted as a
sophomore and gained over 400 yards.
When Marty Mikkelsen was setting the
league on fire in. 1972, one of his favorite
targets was ·sp~I end 'Eric Jones (>II,
175)» "11<> plucked off :O passes,
The Mariners also bad starting guard
Bill Shallmo ready for Huntlngton Beach
but ffi lhe Garden Grove League carnival
last weekend, he suffered a broken leg.
In that brief one• quarter scrimmage
against two 'cltf" foes , Pacifiea held Los
Amigos and. Santiago. scoreless. The
Mariners got TOs from new quarterback
Tab Fibbs (6-2, 165) 'oo a SO-yard
scamper and Mobley on a oiie-yard dive.
'1'11Us is the first .Ume .we've played
Huntington Bea<h;" sa ys Micbalik, "and
when we saw them score three times in
the first 20 plays against Foothill, we
knew we'll have a game on our hands.
"We're at least three weeks behind la st
year. Our defense is made. up mostly of
the .sophomore team which went undefeat·
ed and while they've plaj ed together,
tbey're still quite young.
"[ just hope we can move the ball
because it certainly looks Wee they can."
NATIONAL LEAGUE
East Division
STEVE TEREGIS PACES COSTA MESA AGAINST FOOTHILL.
Foothill l111proved
Prospect.s Bright for '73
Foothill Hi~ football coach Bill Snyder and Costa Mesa High coach John
Sweazy had a fot in common during 1972, despite the fact their teams were not iu
the same league nor did they meet. ~
Snyder's Foothill eleven never trailed at the outset ol the fourth quarter in 1972,
yet finished with only a 4-3-2 record. The Knights finished with a 29-man squad.
Costa Mesa's plig}tt was 'similar, giving its competition all it could handle lhrcugh
two or three periods, then folding Wlder an onslaught of depth.
Foothill's prospects are brighter for 1973 and Snyder has two returning starters
and 16 lettennen to build his unit arOund.
Friday bis Knights entertain ~ Mesa al TuJUn lllib and uppermoot in Foot,
hill's plans are quarterback Paul McGalligan and tackle Bob McGuire, ,_
McGaUisan is a right-banded, 6-1, 175-pounde1\ He runa the Knigbls qGt of their
I-formation and gives Foothill experience at the most vital position.
McGuire anchors the line at &-0, 186 pounds, and he's a good example of all
Foothill players.
"We're not tiny," says Snyder. "but we don't have the real big people either.
I'd say we're similar to Costa Mesa in that respect."
Fullback David SUthertand (!>II, 1871 and latlback Tim Bradley (!Hi, 175) J>I'°'
vide the running game for the Knights and receivers who may poee problems for
Mesa's secondary are seniors Steve Gartz, and Robbie Hackett, junior Mlke Tracy
and tight end Keith Pipes (6-1, 185 sr.). .
..: South Coast and. MetropoUtan ....
rerence football teams have the foP
recordi after the opening we.ek ot. play.
Both circuits "·oo four of six games
last week. The rest ol the Southland oil~
lerences and their overall marb ldt
weef include: Western (~); SOulbern
Cal lH l; Mi>Jion (~); and~ µ-
3), " ~
All tine Coalt ar .. JC fGolllolJ _, .. w ~ flldag teams ~ ~ tllat
bave elven lllem uilki -.. pift. yean.. ~
Saddlehlct bl a tit mart la Iii Hriel
wtlll Chaffey, 'lbe Gudoo1 ave a....,._
ed 30 pqlato a game tn ncldac vp Ibo
lovwtm, '.'
Golden Wetl bu deleated ML 5'11
Alltoalo five ltralgllt yean aad llolda a'S,
I·! edce, Tbe llmllen •vo ,.....,.. JI
pqlato a pme agalalt tbe -•lee
OOC has rolled put LA Harbor four of
the last five years and leads 6-4 in the
series. The Buet have also 9COred at wUI
against Harbor the past five seuoas wJU,
a %7.0 marlc
Rebuilding
For Eagles
" '
•' ,•
Gortz and Steve Katnik (5-7, 145) anchor Foothill's odd front defense at ends.
It's a 5-2 system usually with four deep in the secondary. In the middle of lhlngs '1 _.;d Bi aJ
will be nooe gua~Joe'.Ducey"&-3,-17~) -bLI. V
McGuire·-and either Jlm Haley (&-2, 180) or Marty Healy (5-9, 180) operate at
•' ,•
defensive tackle. . · VISTA O>ach Die , "Costa .!"esa is a much improved foottiaU team, but they have to be with their exactly 11k;; the word ret.i'i!~~ doesll't
experience, says Snyder. it will .have to suffice Wltii~~
IV L Pct.
Baltimore 89 61 ,593
Bostoo 82 69 ,543
Detroit 79 71 .527
GB
1\1,
JO
Pittsburgh
Montreal
St. Lou is
New York
Chicago
Philadelphia
W_ L
75 73
75 75
75 76
74 77
Pct,
,507
,501)
A97
,49()
,473
.437
GB ~.,1 No _ Special Rivalry
2'n
better comes along in descrtbhl& ~A
Vista HlKh football team for 1973. 'l"'
11le Pantllers Mlertatn coocti Jim
Hemsley's E>(anda Eagles Friday nJal>I
(7:Ul tn opentng actloo and Hai-'U concerned. ' . New York 75 77 A93
Milwaukee 71 80 ,470
Cleveland 67 85 .441
West Division
Clakland 89 60 .593
Kansas City 82 69 .543
Minnesota 73 76 ,49()
Chicago 73 78 A83
Angels 69 79 ,466
Texas 53 96 ,356
15
18 1,~
2.1
7•.>
151h:
16112
19
:JSY,
71 79
66 85 west Dtvhlon
CinclMati
Dodgers
San Francisco
Houston
Atlanta
San Diego
93 58
gg 64
83 67
'77 76
73 80
55 95
.616
Sii
,553
,503
.477
,367
DEAN LEWIS ~@
ii~'L4:-J [j ~
1966 HARBOR BLVD, COSTA MESA 646-9301
', • .• ,. ·I' , I f' • 'I 1 ' /. I I ., :' ' 't· rj ( ~ r 1
'·' ,.1,., .. B .,, .1 ,, ! r /,,(a,, ,., .
ll'l't MAl\.t '1"!llf '•'• l'lllllfH•l S
'• . .
5
JO Y.
SY,
9\1
17
21
37 \1
Between Tustin, Uni
,. -I
"We traded llCOUtlng loob tii'1
weekend and I w:u tmpruoe<i wt!~
Eolanda's performance a 1 • l n (t
Bellflower. They are a ...U~
bunch/'
Even though both schools are from tbe
Same district and they've never played
football against each other befor~.
neither coach feels any special rivalry is
brewtng for the Tusltn-Unlventty High
clash Thursday nlgbl1 at Mlosl111 Viejo
HlKh School, It starts at 7,
Both J...i feet U's a chance to notch a
victory, a rare occurance at both acboola
the put couple seasoos.
Tusttn Hlgll School 'a footboll t.am
snopped en 16-geme !ostng streU Ian
oeaeon, but Ibis year Ttllers.EO"ch John
Murlo's team hu Hs 1igbb ,.. higher,
With 18 lettermen returnlna from las!
year's 1'8 unit, tncludlnC 14 starters,
Murlo has high hopes of sedng e change
tn fortunes for the perennial looer tn 1973,
, "This IJ a dellrilttly ltron8er team
than lut year and we've J!l'9Jeded a wt...
nlng seuon," Murto sa~. '"Ibis l1nt
game wUl be very impcrtant, we need a
victory to gel rolltns.' I
'l1>e Ttller1, are experienced In the
backfield and rocelvtn~ and hope to present a balancod of thla -. '
Qoiarterback Jim De1lord, a 170-poulld
1<11lilr rotuma after pW]n1 far l,J&S
nrc1&-anc1 ..,,en.touclldowlia ~; an!I hu his recel vers ol a year ago back
• to throw to. ·
Split end Jim GoklsU>oe, who wu con,
verled lrorn quarterback ••rl/' list
aeason will be al spilt end and senior Loo
Brwey,. a t70i>oimdtr returns al Ulhl
""1.
I '
• Joli Deweese, a 17°'pounder who How aboul his own club!
plsyed Ugh! end las! 1<uon, hu been • "We have eight lelltrmet murnJna :...
switched to slotback to give the Ttllen three linemen and one halftJlct tr.in
an aU.senlor group ot recelveta. defense from our ltartlng untts. r
Paul Moberg, a 190-paunder, and speedy "We really got wlpod out by sra&ia11en
George Gay (170) fill the backfield spots bul I thtnk wti wlll be ·mpectallle, :
tn the Ttllers' pro-typo offenstve set. Both "We, had a big fullback who chewed 6p
are·seniort, who saw considerable action our league last year and We alao hid l)on
Jut year, . ' llelll?,eY at quar<erbadt He'a at U(;LA
·In the line. the 'nllen hllve a pair ol now, "
stlndouto tn cenler Curt Nlchol1, a !>II, 'Ille Panthers finished the 11?2 ....;.
17°'p0Und , Hllior, and guard Greg ,by gotns to the 1tmlltna1s ol the ""
Hammon (~II, l!Ol, both starters last Dtego CIF playoffs, J>Olltnl a '"2 ...,..;t,
--'nils ytar the olfeme II 'built aniund'"'
Gol-and Gay will be the key men >10 senior =iilact, Steve Kl!ol~ 'ltla
tn the dtfenalve backfield, but Murto a sprinter, Rhodes at l1a'*4r "" I
says 'I\JsUn will avol.d two-way starters back. "l< ~
whenever poalble, "We haven't done much pasotng ht l/M(
Defensive ltandoutl OJUld be Jinebeck-put;" Raines aays. "But we mtgM. Mva
m Tom McDonald and Rod Grsham a lo do more thts yeor, We =~'1111 patr ol ~ (110 poundi) but hord•llll-lenoe completely lmn the 110 tine '°"" ' tbe Hormatlon." ' i,.
At 'tfntven(ty,. meanwhlle, coocb Jerry Knott reportOO!y ts a better t1lrciwie
Redman'• 'n'ojamo have rt<:Onled sue> U.n Delaney and wttb the l••I"!' 100.
COJStve Z-7 ,....., ,and the onl)' victory ard dish champion (RllOdeo) ,tit
In the nrst •bf galllff of etlher aeuon nannr baclt, 11 cquld bo an ~
was a forfeit wtn o\'et: Saddlellld< tn comblnttlon. , ' ''
lt'IL Whlle ...... 111llfl.Ua 11 be1ni 1'lltJed
The 'n'oJ.,. ba,. Mib 0'1.otlghlin on the -ma ""'" 11a1aeo a11o ·thllli\
retW'Dlnl al quarterboct and a runn!nlJ a graaf '*1 ol 1111 ~ tlllllocll ~
pme buUt •""""'Ip.pound lullba4*' Jlin ny Gudm•""'-lit pl.,;d def ... ~
Gl'MI and Oeet ballbod< Muny Graham, , year and at 175 "°"""" bu IOOd ~ ~nlor ~ DeLaP!J, a tiotenttal and decepUGIL U•)
111ttinJ (ll&rd will mlu the opener with · ~er iu..e., a iiiu1up1e u-1'~1
• twt~ted a-and pu11e11 ""'° 111111Cle, two runntni -poaltloQo ilons wtlb A"
bu( oUienriM tho Trojana art tn good flanker "*· ........ wltb ..... ~ lllll 'tli'b J>l\Y!lcal abapa for the 1ame. o'• Yl!l>er ~the-• leadbJI l'a<tj~
r
I
• '.I
•,
:
•
•
,,,
,.
"
'
•
' ..
'~
' .
' 'i
•
...
.,
'
O~LY PILOT J7
Tritons Backfield Untested. Edison Foe
Has Depth
Problem
Appeal to Kenneth Fagans:
' '
The way AIDe ~ It fil\ll'td, an lneJ<!l<rlenced backfield mun be
San Clellltnte Illa!> football !ans will !Ind tested.
out just about everything they need to 1be Trltons' biggest starter Js jwiior
be a pretly good running team," Schaff
saya. ''Our problem last yeer was that
we loot both back! rlgbl off the bat, and l
hope that doesn't happen again."
Switch Huntington, Saint,s ·
quarterback Dan Dodd, a H, 225 know a~lA the TrttonJ from Friday's pounder, who saw most of his action on
game with Mission Viejo. -. t~unk>t varllty last year.
"Tbla game could be very indicative as At (\l]Jbeck, Schaff plans to go with
to the·type of. team we'll have this year," either converted line~an Steve Olson a
~8YS Schaff, t;be 'n'ltons heed coach. "We !~pounder or sophomore Tom Arons
jttnt out of our way to play a good Cool· (180). Eitb<r Nick Vlel!ides (170 ) or
W club the fir1t game, because I don't sophomore Brian Wood will be used att
be'Htve ln schedullng any turkeys. running back in the Trit.ons' Mormation. ,.U we hang in with Mission Viejo, we Only Vleisides, who played mostly at
$ould be able to hang In with anybody linebacker last season, IUiJ experience in
f.b.lS season." _ rwming the ball against varsity level .,:San Clemente won three of its first competition.
fpiir games last season, then lost five in Still, Schaff feels the Tritons running
a Tow to finish 3~. Schaff feels this attack may be improved.
Y,C8r's team ls as ready as last year, but "If our backs stay hNlthy, we should
0 Al the receiving spots. Scha!f !eel! the
'l'litons are well set wltlLUgl>! ends ]lob
Bishop or Dennis Engstrom1 wide
r.ecelvet Joe Janton, and slot.backs Lenee
Swigart oi: Mike SbWle. ·
Sw'lgart is a returning starter at tackle,
has left the !<am.
Tim Murphy, (6--0, 200) has all-league
potential .at guard according to the Triton
coaches, and center Mike Chesnut is a
i.ttennan also. Tackle Bill Enqulstl!
another returning letterman and tram!er
Mark Fagan (160) and either Bob
Shepard (170) or Larry Poncino (180)
will fill tba other two positions.
FV Rival
Mean Back
To Handle
TORRANCE -North Tor·
ranee High football coach Jim
O'Brien's idea of the toughest
football schedule in the ClF
Southern Section for 1972 was
Los -Angeles powers Carson
and Bell, along wit h
Hawthorne-and Burroughs of
Burbank.
His team split with Carson
and Bell in '72, and this year
his . Saxons replace carson
with Fountain Valley Hlgh's
Barons.
FUflerton High hea.l! wa~h
Gil Tucker 1s 1ooklng fonvard
to Friday's game between his
Indians and invading Ediso n
with the enthusiasm ot a derr
tal patient about to undergo
root canal work.
The lndians were leveled 33-.
o by Edison last year, and to
hear Tucker tell it, the outlook
isn't any better this time
around.
"J antici pate the sa me sttua·
tion as last yea r," Tucker
says. "We're still looking ror
starters, and hopin g just to
survive.
"We've got a lot of weak
points -mainly team speed
and aggressiveness, and I
know that Edison is going to
As commias;ooer of 450 blgb schools, J.
Kenneth Fagans oJ the CJF Southern SecUon
has done an outstanding Job.
His record, especially under fire, has been
on e of sound thinking and fairness. f{e doesn't
li ke to punish member .scb:>ols but when they
violate a rule, he usually doesn't hesi tate to
punish.
When a crucial decision is needed on playoff
teams, • his decisions are ba,00 oo deep
thou~ and studl. When a snap decision ls
needed, be doesn t hesitate, either.
So, you have to wonder t( the commissioner
has even really studied the proposed res bul·
STEVE
BRAND
-~----------
•
be very strong again." fling of teams and leagues in Orange County
Last year's Fullerton outfit for the 1974-75 season.
was 2-7 on the se ason, and It appears the recommendations of his two-
from that group six starters man committee of Lou Joseph and Vic Sher-
return. Depth is a problem, reitt will be accepted without question.
acording to Tuck,r, and with Regrettably, it appears schools from now on
few exceptions most starters will be classified according to the ir size in·
will be going both ways. stead Of their SPQrts progr~s.
At quarterback, the lndlans Any day now-we can expect to see Verbum will start Bob l.A!doit. a diminutive (5-6, 120 • pound ) Dei dropped to .small schools in basketball.
senior who was a reserve split M!nd you, the Eagles had no trouble destro y-
end last season. ing AA, AAA and AAAA teams, but,
Fullerton's strength should enrollment is low.
be tta running game, where What other reason could there be for put·
Ron Liapis, 8 rugged (6-1, 220 ting Anaheim in the same league with
"" da) · · .... A • afte Orange, Katella, Saddleback and Huntington ''We had our people at ,...,un JWUOI' au:ps tn r spot Starting ... l·gnmen•-last Beach, among 'others? Or for putting Marina Fountain Valley Hi....,'s acrim·· i.o:1· . , Lo 50',, season. Seniol's Ralph Ayala against Westminster, Newport, and Western? mage w1tn .ara, says {M l5S) and Bob Sweeney (6-Anaheim has the most organized football
O'Brien, who doubles as the 1 iro) will fill the halfback program in Orange CoWJty. Just because ex-
baseball coach, ·~a_pd W_!__feel 9Pot,, both -'saw aome--action .coach Clare VanHoorebeke cries over the ad-
they have some pretty good last 'seaso.p but mainly on dition of Western, Katella, Loara ; and
size. defense. ' Magnolla to. the Anaheim school district is no
"Anytime you have a school The Indians will run from an reason to shift that PoWer to a weak football
that big you're boWld to 1have J.formaUon and Tucker hopes league .
some talent. M f II ! ba t "We don't know that much to field a nil-oriented team . arina, o course, wi never get a oot I
about Fountain Valley tnd But a pair of rangy ends , program moving ir it stays in a league with
we're taking the approach to seni« Jim Leicht (6-2, 190) gianl3. ttl g team ready and sophomore Keith Home And then there's the case of Santa Ana ge n our own Umlsi.ic _ (6-3, 195), are good targets for High. --=--. We're-Pff~Y-OP~ •t ~lng .. sttuaUons. A-track-and-field dynamo-and --a-fonner Wl~ a lot ~ti .kids ~ •.t the In the line, the Indiani have football titan, Santa Ana competes Wlder the . = ~:.now V::-.Je. siu: to match with any team. new system against teams such as Estancia, . ..
:. SAN CLEMliNTE DEFENSIVE STARS Bti.L ENQU1p /65), TIM MU!lPHY. ..me good players."
lleadlng the )isl ol talent for
Costa Mesa and Tustin.
lt's always been !ek Tt_~ City, the
sco urge-of the AA, should move up to AAA
OOcause of its program. Low enrollment
didn't slow that school.
The answer is simple. Consider the pro-
gram as well as enrollment.
'nle solution: Switch Huntlng(oo Beach and
Santa Ana. That way two good rival! and
king-standing athletic powel'! (not just foot·
ball ). 5anla Ana and Anaheim, would be in
the same league. HunUngton Beach, with
1,050 students in the upper three grades,
\\'Ould fit nicely with Villa Park (915), El
Modena (9501. Tustin (975), Magnolia (939)
and Estancia (896), among others .
Surely J . Kenneth Fagans can see that. And
a man of standout record will ma.Jr.e lhe only
real decision . , . switch Huntington Beach
an d Santa An a.
TNT to Ignite
GLENDALE -Jn years past the Glendale
Dynamiters were to be reckoned with on the
high school football scene ...
But a split in the school district that evolv·
ed into the birth of Crescents Valley High bas
been' responsible for Jean years at Glendale
and _it's been nine years since the Dynamiters
ha ve had a winning season.
J,a )>Oai:...Gleodale~ hit bottom, gntng 0-9
after a 2·7 mark in 1971.
Coach Paul Passno hopes to rectily that
beginning Friday night against the invading
Marina Vikings.
Quarterback Duncan Kirk returns to guide
the Dynamiters out of their I-formation. He's a M , 215-pound senior rigbthander and baa a
good passing ann.
Running . back Bobby Prested (S-11, 170
soph ) and fullback Garth Rogers (S-10, 180)
gives the Dynamiters the belanctd olfense
they 've been seeking and figure to'be'" the ma~
jor obstacles in Marina's path to an opening
season victory.·
Split end Steve LaRuscbe (6-2, 180)1s Kirk's
No. 1 serial target.
Glendalehas plenty of heft in th< line with
three starters listed at 220, 210 and 200, along
with a guard combination that measures 180
and 190.
Linebackers Kevin Mardoni {175) and Dan
-sveltChl l80J ancoor a aerense tllirlnCJild..-
retuming starter Armando BarTagan (205) at
defensive end.
~Lagunans
::face Big
befenders.
Sailor$ Quarterback
Concerns Sea Kings
the Saxons is the halfback
tandem of Ed Bowen and
Don Mean. ·
-Bowen was an AD-Bay
League ~ lllit year.ahd
retW'ns at 185 pGWldS. His ivn-
ning mate, Mean, is mean ac-
eording to his coach.
Closeout!
·.1 < I
-'Cypress High will rely on a
big, mobile defense when . it
·plays its first-ever varsity
fOotball game Friday night at
i;aguna Beach High.
''We gave the defensive
'. a>aehes Cirst choice at the
' kids," says coach Dick Shelko.
· moving over from Kenned y
JDgh where be assisted for six
yHrs.
Cypress. drawing f r o m
Wcll tem High in Anaheim, Los
Alamitos and Kennedy highs,
will field a scniorless team,
none of whom have earned a
varsity letter elsewhere.
J\.tost or the startin g
bacMleld played on t h e
Western sophomore team last
sea900. Including quarterbac~
Mark Johnson, Larry Dauk (5--
~. 169) at fullback and Mike
• Charles at halfback.
But It's on defense that the
• Centurians hope to neutralize
wguna. .
.. '.fackles Jeff C&rl900 (6--0,
· jJp), and Tom Flll.gerald (S-0,
1 240) team with middle guard
·Mark Tonn (5--10. 207 ) to fOrm
i, big interior. Defemi ve end
llOugJohn90fl (6-5, 196) will be . an imposing figure as well ,
· while at the other end Don De
: La Hunt (6-tl 1601, brother of
Western 's A I-League guard,
Tom1 is starling. '•
One of the big keys to
def~ting Newport H a r b o r
High'• football team is •top.
ping its quarterback, Steve
Bukk:h.
That's the analysis of
Corona del Mar lfigb coach
Dave Holland as be prepares
his Sea Kings for Friday
night's 1973 football opener
with the Sailors at Newport.
Corona has contained
Newport very weD the past
two seasons. winning 7-0 and
21-0 -but 1973 is quite a·dlf~
ferent situation, says Holland.
''Bukich looked awfully good
in Nefiport's scrimmage. And
their receivers have improved
quite a bi t. l think that's what
hurt them last year.··
"We're worried a bout
Bukich. He's a super threat,
especially this early in the
11eason."
Holland's worries are com·
pounded SODleWhat by ·the fact
Corona det Mar's pass defense
is a little behind schedule.
"Our pass defense still
needs a lot of work. That's
something we're trying to
mold a little bit this week."
Otherwise, Holland says his
team is physically and men·
tally ready to play its arch·
rival . ,
"We think we'll h av e
everyone ready for Newport
and or course, it doesn't take
much to get the kids ready
·~Montgomery Loses Trio
:'.;For Dana Hills Game
.,.
. 'XJMPEfuAL BEACH
·· Mootgomery High runs the I.me offensive formation aM. ~_soes with the same deCensive
aDgnmcnt .. Its opening game
' football rivals from Dana
¥J11s. . H' h :JJut as Montgomery 1g
t..CoaCh Jay Mack s a y s
.d!Minclly -"It's the players
that win games, not the
.p'lllys." ·~:Montgomery. a school In Its
, tTourth year of Cllstence will
bo short some of Its better
:''p)Oycrs for Saturday ni~ht's
pme with se<ond-year Dana
'.jilts at San Clemente lllgh .. • "Three players, lncludlng a
.. r.m taptaln, an all l~ngue
• pior Uneman, and a fint '••irtns guard, will be out with IPJur!•• and 'anOth<r-atartlng ·?UnntnJ back will be out for
'dl9clp11nary mcasurea.
• • With thoae players out, a lot · ii the pmaure wlll fall on
Mont go m e r y's scnJor
quarterback Steve Karns, a
good ruMcr who saw limited
action last season as a reserve
halfback. Karns (6--0, 165) I!
onJy rated an adequate passer,
but Isn't called'on to throw the
ball that much in the lei.m's
Houston Veer offense.
The running bacb, all In the
tjO.pound range will be chosen
from Mitch Oliver, John Ruiz
and Dante Espana. Oliver Ii
the only varsity lettennan of
the group, all are fast enough
to be considered o u t s l d e
threata. , " · ·
In tho line. Montgomery's
top player Is tackle Jack
Shijlj>, a 6-4, •ts poundtr while
center Tim Skidmore (1851
and guard llalph Johnson
(1801 · are •olhOI" • ·• o 11 d
perfonnus. One important
loss Is Senior tackJe Joe Birch
(200), who broke his hand tn
a 9C'rlmml gc and wi11 be out
of actlon. ~
I
since it is a big riv~lry.
"We're probably a little
ahead ot ourselves in spots
over·Jast year at this time.
We're ahead offensively, but
probably a litUe be h i n d
defensively."
But Corona has Jong been
noted for its defensive prowess
and Holland readily admits
he's not that worried aboutJL
"We've got oome good people
on defense, 10 we're not really
worried tbert. Offensively we
think we'ff .,._eel, although
our pua1n« game ~ a little
behind. Our offensive line 1.1
where we're really ahead.
We've got a lot of guys back
there."
Newport hu failed to score
because of a tough Sea Kings
defense the past two years,
but Corona will certainly get a
much stiffer test FrMla: n ht
says Hol .
"Newport has had good
teams the past two years, but
we had good lield position a
lot in those two games. But
this is one of the best teams
Newport's bad In years. They
look awfully good."
Mean wu fifth in the ClF
low hurdles as a junior and
can break the long gainer if be
gets open.
Quarterback Glenn
Naltitgawa (5-9. 165),. wide
receivers Jim Zamraell1 (5-6,
140) and LruTy Gizzi (6--0, 170)
and tight end Greg Turk (185)
all are retwning starters ror
the Saxons.
"We're still looking for peo-
ple in our liile," says O'Brien .
"We have some depth and
some -eager kids wit~ ~u:i-1
ability. Our defensive line 1s in
about the same situation, but
oor secondary is ok wiUl our
skilled offensive p-1 a y e rs
there."
All-league comerback Ed
Marr is lost to No. Torrance
for Friday's t~ at Huntington
Beach with an-Injury.
Booster s Meet
saddleback Colle g e 's
boosters club will hold its
weekly meeting tonight at 7 in
room 213 of the library.
Films of Saddleback's 24-10
opening football victory over
eypr... will be shown.
Lakewood's New QB
Top R'unner, Passer
•
LA~WOOD -When a
team ~ a quarterback_who
has started for three .1traight
years, it figures to be down.
You'd never guess that by
listening to Lake\\'OOd High
coach John Ford.
"Losing P e t e Tereschuk
hurts, of course, but we think
we've found a replacement
who will give Westnlinster All
it can handle," says Ford of
Friday nigl¢'s opponent in the
INdltlonol ......, _.... at
WeJtm1f\91er High.
Tiie neW signal caller Is
senior Mike ~!artinsl)l1, a Jimlor vanity qUarterback tu! season, who wu lmpresstve tn
the obbnvlated Milk BOwl
games Iii ng Beach last
-kend. .
Lat.wood blanked Millikan,
14-0, and edged Long Beach
Jordan, 7..&. ln the two-quarter
games, Martlnson1 6-1, 1715.
carried the ball 11 tlme9 for
127 yards While passing for 85
yards on six complcttons In 10
attempts.
"I don't think Mike" can pass
like 'Tureoehuf<."'. says . .Ford,
"but he gives us another run-
ning weaPQR, something we
really laeked !Mt year."
Tho Lancm or LUcwood
are ,. dctp tn tallbaekJ, In
'
fact, la.st ')'ear's starter, Bill
Raine, h;is been shifted to
backup quarter~ck. Taking .
bis place and alternating are
speedy Dale Walters, !HO, ISO
ruid junior Don Gorazio, 5-8,
160. who led the sophomores to
an unbeaten .season.
When Martinson throws, he
has All..CIF candidate Ed
Gillies, 6-0 and 175. who has
4.5 speed for the 40 and ex-
cellent hands. .
Lakewood is bigger on the
line, especia11y on defense ,
where WeStminster will have an all-veteran interior line to
try _to crack. Tackles Bob
Kraigbaurn (6-1 , 210) and
l!ruce Schupp (6-3, 2111 te•m
wjth 11llddle guard Mark
LaCrolx (S-11, 200) to form a
tough trio.
•10ur defensive secondary is
untested/' admi~ Ford.
jj l saw Westminster in !ts
scrimmage and that team
looks just like the ones we've
played In the past. They run
exceptionally 1well and they
always hurt you with a pass
when.Y® least ~xpect It.
"They have to replRce n
quarterbAck just like us.
They're big, like us. too. f
suspe<:t It'll be a physical , but
close, game.n ·
25%' belted
radial tires.
Now35.92
Orig, ot7.90. Pkis 2 88 led. lax.. Size FR10-1.C. Whilcwiill I~.
'
' Survivor Radial Tire. 4 befts of rayon Ofl • 2 ply
body. In the k>w, wide moct.m Pf'OfMe.
No tradt--in requ~N.n tub.In&.
Tire size Orig.
49.85 37.31
GR70-15 49.9(). 37.42
HR70-15 53.00 39.75
J R70-15 58.00 43.50
3495
The Oude-4« lte newest iook in mag-
ttyte-wheeb. Honeycomb deMgn cenler
Hlghly poHahttd finish, Complete with
lug nut• and center cap. Rim size 1416.
O lh« SIZH a'Yailable.
Now gas
Premium disc
biake overhaul.
R119. 00.00. We wiM install new front disc
pads and rear linings, resurlace rotors
and drum•, rebuild front calipers and
r•ar whee4 cylinders, repack front wheel
bearif\gl with new •••la..
ptva Md. In:
3.DI
3.DI
3.33
3.55
3.70
A·f/X chronlle ~
tire .........
Chrom•plated, ....,.
in type v•lv•. Fits au
wheels ucept the:
Dude. l
ow4988
Premium
dn1mbrake
overhaul. ·
Includes installitlon of
new linings, resurfacing
drums, repack front
wheel with new grease
seals and more.
as~
Hoti.y htgh performance
lpatk pJligL
Ao.FIX OM p~ m:.g ·wtteel
~ Fill aH mag sty .. whff4L
SOlkl In M t ol tour. Reptac.
6M lug nut on each whett.
-J~e~~~~y
,
w~ kno~ what you're looking for. . .
. ' , Shop Sunday noon to· 5 p.m. ot the folio.wing stores:
FASHION ISLAND, Newport Be•ch (714) 644-i313.
HUNTINGTON CENTER, H~nlin9ton Beath (714) 892-777 \.
•
• •
•
DAIL'Y PILOT WfdntSday, Sft'ttmb<f 19, 1973
Baldwin,
Garr Sing
Sad Tunes
For Ct?ast Area ~ -~a_g~ETHO
Checking Men$~olf ~~SPOJFORB,'.CKS~NOG~E 1
Mike Rachitore i.!i the new
The 1973 football season gets .. president's cup champion at
under way Thursday evening Huntingtoii Seacliff Qruntry
(8 ) at Santa Ana Bowl Club after posting a three-
between arch-rivals Mater Dei under-par second round score
and Santa Ana and coaches of 69 on his way to a net 200.
Gary Carr and Tom Baldwin Racbitere defeated George
predictably agree on few Chelius by one stroke with
points. Randy Karcher third at 209.
"We're small. not fast New assistant pros at
enough, have injuries and ar( Seacliff inc I u de Dave
overrated," says Baldwin. Mc Keating and Eric Pollard.
"Santa Ana iS big, stront;:, They will assist head man
quick and fast," says Carr. Brian Lake, who alSQ serves
"Maler Dei ? I'll tell you the as course manager.
truth," says Baldwin, "[ wish Next big event at Seaclirf
we weren't playing them. will be a pro derby on Oct. 3.
Other than our quarterback, In this competition, each pro
the.. fastest runner we ha,'e is paired with an amateur club
can't break 10.7 in the IOI.I-member in a scotch elimina·
yard dash." tion contest.
iii "I feel we're scrambling for The twosOme with the ~ our lives " says Carr. Santa highest score on each hole
•' · '-~'"""" Ana will"be higher than a kite drops fr0m contention unlll
;.:;.+-.,;.4';;; after watching N e _w p_o r t tb~ winner.s are Jeft. U a tie
Harbor shove us around in our results. a pitch or•chip-oU will
scrimmage." be staged with the player get·
Carr says, "Santa Ana's ting c!Osest to the pln con·
·rwming game is something to tinuing.
contain. They run t h e Included in the group of pros
wishbone with great are the three from Seecliff,
precision." , Skip Whittet from Fountain
Baldwin says, "I'd say Valley Mile Square, Pinky
we've looked the worst in the Stevenson of Virginia OC in
nine Years J 've been her,e. We Long Beach and others f rQm
lost most of our key personnel'" the area to be nmned later.
and we've betome so injured. Bill Ellis, pro shop manager,
If we don't get well in a hurry is recovering from a tonsilec·
we may not win a game an tomy.
year."
And so it goes.
Mater Dei 's injlD"y list con·
sists of fu1lback H e c t o r
Delgadillo. He's not in the
starling lineup, but he may
see · action after stifferitlg a
sligAt bone chip and torn
ligaments in the ankJC.
Santa Ana's list of Injuries is
a .Jittle deeper, however, ac·
cording to' Baldwin.
"We've Jost Tony Paluo for
the season," says Baldv.·in.
"He had surgery Tuesday
Dallt" ,.;-. statt '"Jt01• morning on bis knee. \V-e've
EL TORO'S CHUCK VAN LIEW got five others hurt that
haven't practiced in a week.
But I 'll let Mater Dei guess
who they are."
. . . Hero'• I Uf lhol ":""Id ~P."9>t Y?"' "'(I~ "'"
Big CaK11011 clasaic sponsored by the • l(OJl're 1iJ1iat 1111 ror ·a shot, plc~lol'' 1'.lpOt obou&'ll
. 1 Orall&• C<Mmty Heart Associa-• In.II• belllad lhf ball and co't!Cintn1to oo <!ra'wll'l,lbt
Five !nembers 01 the men's Jioo liking place at IC<;C. A · clubbead'baCk oYfr that point. Thi• wllt&olP'·JIHl·,et'
club at. Big canyon C<Mmtry lull f\e~ of ·144·playen ls •ll< , • tho ·baduiw1., ltutod cohectly, with II\• chlblil!i!f
Club interchanged Pi'!"" on ~ w lace the shotgun low lo lbl aroun~ ·and ·lllo 'cliab{laq ,q,,r. to t!W' three teams to tie for first llllrl at 12 ·30 , , • r place with another foursome · · IWI"' arc. Wh••·yo~·use tbll opot. 11 • remlil\1or.. f0!1
Jn a better ball cf foursome , f:o•t• Mu'a . "IO•'t be lttapted to tum•YO., wnsll to Ibo rishl IM
competition over the weekend ••. Members .oi the men's club · 'open •y,,.r cl•bf~ nor, wW you bt Uilciy lo bnat
Richard BrooJll<, T on y , at ~ Mesa Goll. '9llil Coup-•• • Yf"' wrisla ea~ly atld pock •P the club bead. The
Kow. Clark Booth, B e n try Club are warming up Iii< r .. -prcbkm desttoyo dincUon, lho latter dinltlll•.
Rizzatto and Harry Carllon the club cliamploQShip. Wlaidi ·-•· ' · • • . wer~ the fivesome involved. in will *8ke 'place late ~ ~t.obeil \ JD p~ you could place a b,11ll m3rker. I 8 ina;hes
postmg scores of 59 aloo~ with on a matdl :play basu. · , behind ilie' 'bi.ti, on a line lliahtly insidt tho tariet
a group compos<d of Junmy This Wffktnd there will be a · line. Siabt it before you .Wins. but then look at the
Jones, Harfan Enckson, Cecil •serepdlplty tournamen\ in-boll. You will oubconscioully ,.;,. back Oii thll
Wheat and Wilbur Robertson. volvlng BS to 90 members of · I'
At 60 were two additional the club. It Is a two-day arfair proper ine.
fourso.rnes including Li n n with more than $1JOO in prizes
Hodge, Harry Whitaker, Will bejpg olfered:-
Higgin and John Hooten on
one squad. On the other were
Tom El~son, Ken Bishop, Joe
Danley and John Dillon.
Qualif}dng is. in progr.essJ:or
the men's club cham,pio.nship
at the present time.
1...,111e Coast
President's . cup a ct i.;o n
begins this week at lrVine
Coast Country Club and runs
through Oct. 14 on a match
play bas1s.
There Jre 16 p)ayers in ·the
president's flight with Jim
Brimble serving as ebairmaii.
Tbun!day will l!nd <tho -
cild 'annual charity' I o U
19th Hole
A national putting contest
will be staged at t be,
Di"Jeyiand: OrMng_R a n g_e
practice puttlhg green Sept.
27:.,0 with qualifying now tak·
ing pl~ee a~·are~ courses.
Players may enter the com~ ..
petition at their !aca1 golf
cour:se with the 10 Jbwest
scorers ffom each club,elfgible
to compete In the itaJ!ooil
championships. A 50-cmt en-
1try fee is being charged with
i>i1><eedo going toward ln-
S!alllng pi1tt1ng· greo,ns ''"' lhe bl!nd aceordlrii to chalnnan J.
Fredric Eatcin. • .
I
.: • -a
· E-1 Toro Picks Toughie
For First-ever Grid Tiff
Santa Ana's No. 1 offensive
asset is returning starter Mike
Molina, who opcrales lhc
Saints wishbone al
quarterback.
The subject of Molina Ls the
It USlll,IO lie a kick tO shaw )'Olll'
friends'mw much soap"'°' lleW''
_,Milzda isdiffmnt.~~wtll
and ~:..i.:---f& ,., r ..
The.,..,,. ••ine. h •• it'S
scu1111lhndpowaful,itan,~up
witbm al•lllCtld thamol ..... only thing Baldwin will con---..
CARLSBAD -Considering In the center of the Knights' cede on. "I'll put Mike one-on·
it's El Toro High's first-ever o f fen s iv e arsenal is one against anyorie in Orange
varSity football game you'd quarterback Robert Temtile, County, sa)'.S Baldwin. "But
think the --~-the No. 2 QB from 1972. He's yqu don 't pray1 football that
• '-"141gers could have got three good targets to way. You need about 18 kidslto
fowld someone a little easier throw at in split ends Kurt play this game."
to mess with. Groeniger and S.3 Robert He's lhe key figure !n the
•• But Salurday night's in-Swindle, along with 6-1 tight syslem v.'hich find s halfbacks ,
-; augural into the 1973 season end Bill Maffucci (6-l, 175), Edmond Burks, Jim Gastelo
h ftids Army·Navy's perennial the coach's son. and Rick Jones in the fold .
cbitJnptons awaiting coach Army-Navy's power i s At fullback is Jim Crandall.
;-; Mact Moore's s-e n i or I es s demonstrated in the Knights' ·But all are in the 160-pound :t <llargers at Carlsbad High. two preseason scrimmages. range according to Baldwin .
..Anny-Navy coach John Maf. Againt Carlsbad High and t" "I don 't know where they
fucc:i is entering his 18th San Pasquale. the Knights are getting this "Big" sturf
~ leUUI at the helm of the gave up onl...Y. ..90e scrimmage about us . We've only got one
.Kiilehts and his la.st four touchdown. They were, 200-pounder. That's Randy
, teiml have captw-ed titles in however, held scoreless. Perry, our center and captain.
; : tf:fe, Southern League. Army-Navy has size in its He's 6-3, 230. David Kersch
:; The 1'12 squad split with armor, but the coach is unwill· has good size but he can't play
---?-Oranee-..coast area eams _jng_to dwell on names._ because of a foot injury."
;: Dana Hills and Laguna Beach, "Bert Ford is a 203-pound . Baldwin's.offensive line con·
·' then ~ m to smash tackel, but ""e really don 't sists of guards.~ Ser~. .~ eve-ything m sight en route to have outstanding players " and I.es McKnight, a parr of
.• the c.IF ~San Diego) l·A says the Knighta coach. 11We !SS.pounders. The latter is the
champaonship. try to make it a team effort. son of Bus Mcl{nlght, Sad-
''1'd say v.·e'll be fair this His offensive line is an-dleback High athletic director".
ye,,r,'' says Maffucci, "but in· chored around center Jim Mater Dei cowiters with its
juries could hurt us. We've Donovan, a 6-1, 17~pound returning starting 1---+..Al[""!!ILl@fJ~lik...lb'.cus. our senior quarterback, Steve Martin·
:: ~ halfback." As !<>r El Toro's challelige, dar • ,Martln<!aie, -rsr--
, • XiffUcci appears to llaVe an the -Anny-Navy mentof says, pounder with a -rifle arm, has
;: able replacement. however, in "I've seen El Toro in its an advantage with n:inning
. Vince Jooes, a 142-pound scrimmage and I was quite back Jim Gardea in the fold.
speedster. Too, he has the impressed. Gardea earned A 11 ·CI F
blocking eyident in the "El Toro appean balanced honors as a junior and is
; • backfield wt th fullback. Kim and we're just waiting to see capable of breaking for the
·: Eady (IM). what they go into Saturday." long_gainer.
.. .. ..
•
PARAMOUNT SPORTS
'Guer'Jfhing. • in C7 " Jenni:J
.---------' . "" /" ' , A FABULOUS FREE VACATION ~ . , .FOR TWO IN BEAUTIFUL HAWAII
VIA .CONTINENTAL747 THE PROUO BIRO
OF THE PACIFIC. Help u1 ctlobrato tho Grand Opon-
in9 of our P•r•mount Sports No. 5 in Beverly Hiiis by
corftingi irtto any of oUr tennis centers to resister (no
purdwtM noco11oryl •nd qualify for tho Howollon Vo-
collon ond OTHER FREE TENNIS PRIZES Including
RACQUETS, BALLS, CLOTHING, SHOES, ETC.
Durl"I thl1 ctlobntlon hundred• of ittm1 on Nit:
COME IN AND REGISTER
DUNLOP TIUOW IALU
(Wlttl n4H11 ef l .W fMlhl , , , , , • e11ly $)15 ... c ..
....,_, '"· t Tl I
*"t.. TM.. w-..;,..,.... & Ht, 'Ill 6 _/, ,
.......... , .. c. ---...... C-., ""' --
333 E. 17th St., Costa -Mesa
l1hintf Th• lnt1~•llot1•I Hou•• of P .. ~.~''
PHONE~ ·-'+41 ...... Mfllkt 11\"ll. _,, ..... , ....... tna-.-...
•
-ca-had.
But not my mon!.At leost; °'lt
for DllOJ D£W cars.
For smog aJOlnll ~icrs "'"
Jlllking 'them drive, says one auto-
motive writei; "like they have ·
a permanent cue cl the blabs.'"
-
•
•
...
In fact,it bellsa loulfms'lhlt
cost a lot more.. The Mac:edos
. ! ··-• 4:50SLC, for aaiple,ln a 0 to 60 ' . --acceleraticiri "'1!-0r the Thunderbird, ' in'a 50 to 80 hi~ pMSing test.
What~ Mu.d&'s .
~'
•
' .
•
I
· ·S}Stem to control anissic9
No od>er car hos lhis.W!L
That's why noocher-P.e<'lau
Lb Mazda. The tbriD .....
Ma7da pclhms.
..
:
•r ..... . " '
--------------
'' '
•
., '
• .. ,..,.. •' ' -
1, ' . ' r • -• " ' l
"' • " . ' ' ' •
' ' -•
' • • • ~ .. •
• •
' ' >I
, • l
•
I .. ~
' .
I
" 1
I
·f ;~"' i •. t.A"' Q..i. • .u...~ .......... ,, ..........
-.
Stars
' ·, ' URRY HIRT ·'· •· r TERRY YOUNG JOHN SPRINGMAN
Golden 'We>tc, ..... Of-,··· Golden Wost -Det.nM ' S.ddlobock -Offo nH
1 • Saddleback Foe Fears '
AnQther Annihilation
~
'
In UC Irvine T e lirnameJit
• Area JCs
In Top 10 B ears Poloists Favored '
Saddleback Is ranked seventh
and Golden West eighth In the
first state junior college foot-
ball poll or the seaSon.
Fresno City College, the
defending large school cham-
pion, ~OJ>!J the poU while Mt.
· San Antonio -(;olden West's
opponent tbis ~turday nigh t
-is rated No. 5.
The'University of Callfornia
Bears at Ber:keley will be
ravored to win the annual UC
Irvine invitational water polo
tournament th.is weekend in
action at the Newport-Mesa
district pool beginning Satur·
day and ending Sunday.
Eight teams are involved in
Lll'M: DhiMM I , ,__ Collffl ._. the tollrnament inc ucling the
M host Anteaters and t h e 1. Fl'ftno 2. e1 C•mlno 1.0 powerful UCLA Bruins, dek>nd-
3· Reedley ~~ lng NCAA champions. ~ t ~'f.n Antonio 1.0 Saturday's schedule finds
7~ sR~~ 1
11 UCLA and Cal State (Long
a. Gdden wist 1.. Beac h) meeting at 8 with UCI
1~-. ~~=• ~~ and Cal State (Fullerton)
11. B•ker•tl•ld 1-0 j>laying at 9:30. Winners play
12. San Joaquin o.lt• 1,~ at 2 and losers at 3,30, 13. Collegt ol' Sequol11 ""
1•. Cerr11os 1.0 In the lower bracket, UC
1s. s.n J-1.0 s-~--SC Silnt• B•~•• 1.0 Santa cu U<Ua meets U at
wnt Los Angetn 1.. 11 and Berkeley faces UC
Coach F.d Newland's UCI
Anteaters, second p I a c e
finishers in the NCAA tourna·
ment last year, have lost three
key performers for t h i s
season. Jack Dickmann , Jim
Bradburn and Jay Brower all
graduated.
Returning, however, a r e
three members of 1he World
University Games t e a m
Newland took to Riwia during
the summer.
Jim Kruse, (senior), a high·
scoring bole man, Boyd
Philpott, a sophomore and
Guy Antley, a sophomore
goalie are the veterans of
World Games comp&ition.
• Other lettermen i n c I u d e
Bruce Black (senior ): Brett
Bernard, Lee Graham and
Thomas Boughey (juniors);
and sophomores Philpot, Chip
Rowe, Tim Quinn, Terry Sale,
Nick Baba, Pat West and
Antley.
Newland also has two
outstanding freshman Jll'Oll-
pects on band including Keith
Wall from Newport Harbor
High and Jason Wheaton from
Palos Verdes High.
"I'd have to say right now
that we are about the same
strength as last y e a r , • •
Newland says.
Ju11ior Co l1£ge Grid Menu
sm111 01'11'11or. Davis at 12:30. Winners play
1. coue;e of Redwoods 1,"! at 5 and losers at 6:30. s1t1"ll•Y'' .. "'" Alvw1ld1 11 Alo HOtldo 2. 5haltil -v Ch11fey 111 Seddtebilck E111 LA 11 LA V1ll1t\"
3. Motllltf'e'I Ptnln1ul1 1-0 Sunday 's schedule fllldS four LA Hilrbof" 111 0.-lftlttl C<1111t LA Sou!hwnl 11 Pl~CI
DAILY PILOT
Lions Lose
To Polo Foe
w estminste< 111&11'~ vlnlty
water polo team fell b.Mld in
the first quarter and oouldn't
catch up In droppi,Dg 111 open-
ing game of the ~' 9-1,
Tuesday niglll ID ',Garden
Grove in the wj,nner 's ~I.
Garden Grove ju_.i to a
S-1 first quarter Hvant,age
and the teams plqeQ evenly
the rest o! the way.
Senior Jon HUntJey, the
third-leading ""°"' on last
year's Westrninstm" team, and
junior Mark Hurwitz Jed. the
Lion• wl\ll iwo goals apece.
Dave Ken(. Steve Juedes and
Tom Burrows all scored once
for Westminster. Th< Uons fared liltle better
on the lightweight levels, the
juniOI' vars.ity losing 14-10 and
the lrosh-soph contingent scor-
ing a 9-7 victory for the only
Westminster w1n of the day. ...
COSTA MESA DATSUN ~ 'H1r1Mll 1-0 t be · · t tO Golden Wesl •' Ml . S•n Anl~lo Cerritos 11 Long Bt•ch CC s: c11brlt1o 1-0 games on. ap gmrung a · crpreu 11 sant1 a1ro.r1 B•r&tow ai ·~1 LA
6. Mir• coct1 i-0 The chamP.ionship encounter B•ker1th1ld 11 F1.1ller1on MoorP••k 11 P1$6Clen• cc For 7 Mfftlld 1-0 be h ndef ed S1nt1 An• •I S•nt1 Monie• Mt. S•n Jacinto 11 Glend•11 W.,, S.nlce & Lemf ... ;--a: Men!o 1-0 tween t e tWO U eat · Grossmont al Son B1rn11rdlno Complon 11t LO. Allfltllei CC 2845 HtM"bor lfwt,, C.M.
ALTA LOMA -When Sad-the I.formation with a pro set 9. Gllvllan 14 teams from Saturday will go curu1 •I Palomar Fr11no cc 11 El Cimino S40-"IO 10. Cuesta 1-0 San Dleogo et SouthWest~n Menlo at CosumnM A!v&r -dlebaek~ o 11 e g e entertai ns 1~a"'n.':'d-"sp!'.:l,.,it..'.b~a~ck~s:_. ______ !'""'~------~'·~· _.'.o"'n..'.a'.'.t-"a"'.w"!ro~xi"'ma'.'.'-.':'te'<:ly>:._:2 .':'o'~cl"'oc'."k~·--''~'"'.:0~1.,.~~·-~·~,~·"''""'~~w'.'.:""'"'.":"'--'''."""'~"~''.'.'~"'.::''."""~''.'.'"'._.. ___ _'.!o!~~~~~~e!!:=::=~
Ghaffey College S a t u r d a y
nlgbt oil the Mission Viejo
Hig!> ~I field, It will mark
_opening of Mission Conference
actioo for both schools.
Chaffey ~ Willie
JIM POETTGEN Richardson is hope£ul his team
Saddl9b_tck -Def•nH can cut down on the number of
mistakes they made in a 31-7
-non-conference loss to Cerritos
last weekeDd an4 it the sanie
time contain coach George
Hartman's crew.
'"We defmittly lave to get
aome bteaks end also cut ~
down ooi mistakes or w~ will
be annihilated a g a i·n, •'
'RlChar<bon '"ys.
The mistakes · his squad
made came in bunches of
three. 'Jbere were three pass _
· interceptioris against t h e
··Tiger! and ~ lost fumbles.
Enoug!> "1o cive any coach
gray haln. . .
The Cbefley attack I s
geared aniund "11)1llng backs lllan~..Jl.klt~ Ln1JOYC~ , . Qetlc!w, ~~ !uRbaclc.
Ot11191 ~-OlfenM iallled,3'1 ~on eight'""
--
1 ties while Ferrell bad :rT in K
tries ,;pmst the ~
E';!toons. . . "'Mm 'l'dilllls. a !reshmlllf qilarteri.Ct~ ·r;om ·c h a f r e y
,lllgh ~.,)Jl\11,p rude baP; tlsm Into fuiilbr coDege loot· •
-'' ball. •I • I
, .. i~· f;l'ttdnll:· be'• adequate as .a
• thrower but , he has t o . 'Ir <1miin.1e' t!le Interceptions II r t · I-.;~ ..... w'n . ., we are dgv.-a .. · .. ,
Richardlon,says.
• 'kothil-Jle~ol conceru to "·Ille aiaifey.,~'ls·,lbt '.
number o(, ~a J;!t 1 agamst Ji)t. • , . ..,., .,
opener. t{ '"~ , '"(.. •' .
"We had ... , few m!br
Bos cloLANCELLOTTI situatl..,. 91111.~~ team
had very few, 11·-\it:i~· . Orento c-t -Det.nM Chaffey will • • . ;~t ol .
-' \' \
Harbor Seeks Offe~ ·
---
For Duel With OCC
LOS ANGELES -Orange "We still can't !>Glieve
Cout College involved in a Orange coast lost to Golden
high-scoring, :..ttd game last West," says Rhea. "And w.e
week aratnst Golden West, were ~ to .see it. I think
may be forced into just the op-the lOISs' of ~ quar;terback
·t----11.-situatton-when-iHaees-{lleed-Johnaoill--reaUY urt ~
Los Angeles Harbor COilege but we ~rear-tiliOSe .taill}ltks
Saturday at 7:30 at OCC. more than ·.ani'!hlng."
•
-
While OCC's Pirates were ( •
being stunned by Golden West, i ~g.H::-.i::l'tstI:~ Optimism
last week, eventually ,..,. =bing 3-0 on a 17?ard field At MSAC
Jt was a game marked ~Y
controversy.
· Harbor apparently scored w ALNUT -o p t Im i s nf
the winning touchdown when prevails at Mt. San Antonio
former Gardena High standout College where head coach Mal .
Dovo RoblDIOO, a legitimate Eaton ha put toge!her tfte
9.9 speedster, broke for a 74-stronges\, !oloun~ea., footbOll '
yard TD scamper. It was call· team since 1981, thfl..year Den-I
ed back, however, when it was nis Shaw directed the club·to a
ruled be stepped out ol /"'"nds· 7-2 record.
0 Naturally, ":~ don t thin~ Saturday night in the Moun--
he wtegped out, says Harbor ties Stadium E a t o n ' a coach -~J>l>l' .• Rhea. "II hap-·1 ' I th ~~-~.1r1e;icl)Jit.j.tlwrr .Q;iargers wt 1 enterta n e l:'i •·bench• and iJiere lvas 00 'GOiden West College Rustlers erce Ir 1 If in an annual game -that has reactloq from the P ayers. been a high-scoring af£alr In
he stepped out, they would past years
have been Jwr;t,ping arotmd Off the MounUes' first game
alter he -ed. tat' ti GWC be in I Rhea WIS not pleased with 5 U1 cs, may or
•
his club's perfonnance. troubfe -especially in the
uwe just couldn't move on alrlanes, Mt. SAC intercepted
offense " he aays "We have a there of seven passes t-~Y t:
veteraD tnttrlor tine and 90l'Oe Citrut in a 34-0 Mcunties rrut.
fine bacU but we'll have to "Overall we are · Oi~g
develop a Pmlng'attack.'' tea-~," Eaton says. ~-.Jftut
Offensive tackles ' B t 11 don t know ~t we have be •
· Trulove (i;-1 110) and Cart ter people this year than we
Jones (8-0, m> and guanls did lut but we do have ~be~
Leroy Wilson (5-10, 220) and ter team. We rmally g<*.OUI'
Mike Walsh (5-10, 190) form ~ runnm~, game going a .. lrdt aoll~ Interior.. • Citrus.
· Quarterback Dave Graslc That running game was
retul'M oil the"!l'll team and aparked by 9Qphomore-'l"eddy
a converted QB Steve Bowl Farmer and Tony Rubio.
'mlkes the irwtt~h to fullback Farmer averaged 6.5 for 15
where' he'll be a double thr;eat. carries. -·
Robinoon· I• a 1 w I y. a . Sleve Myer, a 6-2. 190-
touchdoWn 'threlt. p o, u n d e r , is back al
HarbOr has several playen .quarterback w h e r e he
oll Ooroon High'• City cltam· performed as the nation's
pionl but Rhea 11y1 It'll take community college pass leader '°""' time for them to adapt a· yeQI ago with 181 com·
• to the .... . . . plellolil ill aal4 ltem,PIJ-
•
•
e 4LL F'AMILY SHOW FOR FIVE Bl.G DAYS e
e_ CAMPERS e MOTOR .HOMES .• · .. -
e TRAILERS e CAMPING EQUIPMENT .• e ·SPORTING GOODS e
e VAN CONVERSIONS e DAILY ENTERTAINMENT e
, ' '
AT ANAHEIM STADIUM UNDER THE BIG "A" KATELLA & STATE COLLEGE EJLVD.
!
,·~ .. SHOW HOURS: 5-11 p.m . Weekdays
11 a.m. • 11 p.m. Saturdays
11 a.m. • 8 p.m. Sundays •
•
... ADULTS $2.00 ~ JUNIORS $1 ~00
SAVE so·c
•
'
' ON EACH ADULT ADMISSION WITH A DISCOUNT
TICKO, FROM YOUR NEAREST ALPHA-BOA MAR•
KETS. THRIITT DRUG AND SHOW EXHIBITORS.
\
'
. '
. '
-. •.·
l
•
I
30 DAILY PILOT Wrdl!Hdq, S.pUmbtr 19, 1973 -
• . . ·•
Junk!Js Ho111e
Chi1iese Boat in N e·wport
By ALMON LOCKABEY
01 t11t D•llf ll'llel ll~ff ..
No, m~te, you're not in Hong K-0ng, Singapore or
Shanghai.
That colorful Chinese junk you see moored at the
foot of Cypress Street on the Peninsula ; or sailing idly
ar:_ound the bay at times, is a home anoat lor 26-year~ld
Tom Evans, a young spgrtsman who spends his time here
in the sununer and earty fall, and in Aspen, Colo. in the
71er.
THE JUNK, a real, authentic Chinese masterpiece
-0f solid teak, is not new around these waters. It has been
arouv.d for about four years, occupying one mooring or
another and growing a good crop of barnacles and other
sea life.
Evans bought it about a year ago and set about re-
furbishing it from keel to truck. His first project is strip-
ping the varnish from the hull and taking it down to the
beautiful natural teak.
Below decks the craft still ha s some or the original
Chinese paintings that were aboard when the junk was
brought to this country with a shipload of similar craft in
1958 from Hong Kong. She is 33 feet overall, 28 feet on
the waterline with a IO.foot beam.
SO FAR, EVANS has -Only sailed the junk inside the
bay. But even that becomes a little hazardous as lhii!
craft has no daggerboard or lecboards and only a two.
foot keel. In a good breeze it could make almost as much
leeway as headway.
Before coming to Newport the craft was in San Pedro
Harbor for a number of years -including a short stint
on the bottom of the bay there when she was sunk.
" •1•1 ~ .. ~-.,. .. ~...,~,._.,..,.,..,.._,. .. , •.• n~_, ... ,,.~,,..l_,,
HOME AFLOAT -Tom Evans hoisis the sails on his picturesque Chinese junk
on which he makes his home in Newport Harbor during the summe.r. and -~
season. Evans is completely refurbishiI1g the all leak craft, compl~te with leaaea
..
LeVel Racers Bid
Level or ton racing will be featured in the Fall Regatta, co-sponsored by New·
port' Harbor Yacht Club and Balboa Yacht Club Saturday and Sunday. Already
established is a class of Quarter Tons similar to this Santana-25 by W. D. Schock.
' Race officials al-e also hoping for a class of One Toils. Quarter Tons carry a
. maximum rating of 18 feet under the International Offshore Rul~ and the· One
Ton. classification is limited to 27.5 feet.
'.~Drake"s -We-st-Coast Stop
Found-Coos Bay, Oregon ·
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) - A
band of seagoing historians
: beMeve they have solved the
mystery of where Sir Francis
Drake first dropped anchor
along the West Coast on his
h i s t o r l c round-the-world
.,voyage in 1597 : South Cove
•'near Coos Bay, Ore.
What's
N-ew
Alexander-Roberts Co. of
··Irvine, distributor of
Australian marine products,
bas announced a new Barlow-
18 winch capable of handling
heads'ls on boats up to 28 feet
in length and halyards on
larger boats.
The new aluminum winch is
said to be ideal for boats
qualifying under the Quarter·
Ton rule. The winch lists at
'14S.
Signe! Sclenlific Co. of
Burbank, designers a n d
manufacturen of electronic
sailboat equipment, has an-
"" nowxed the new Signet
Windseeker, an Instrument
• that gives precise wind angles
• to Ulbt and Improve sailing
; ability. •
, Dolh close-hauled and 361).
' degree wind inronnaU9n ls
displayed on a •lrcle large I dla~ l!lach reading Ii.available
•l the lip or a 1wl1ch lhal can
been localed anywhere In lhe
,. cockpit area. •
The INlrumcnl Is said lo be r moderaltly prlcod for lhe
lllll·'nm. Quartor-Ton • 1d • ORF marl<m
It biis long beeil known lbat
Drake end bis Golden Hind
crew dropped anchor
somewhere al-0ng the west
coast shortly before they
found a safe haven on the
California coast near Drakes
Bay and made the first
English claim !-0r , the lands
around San Francisco.
But for . years, historians
have been trying to pinpoint
the first anchorage described
at the time as a "snow-laden"
area.
11fE SQ.CALLED snowy
terrairt, however, was actually
the billy, while sand dunes
above Cooa Bay, he said1 a
view given substance by
coastal photographs taken In
1971 from the British royal
yacht Britannia.
"Remember. Drake must
have been in these parts early
in June 1579 and there just
isn't a p1ace aJong the coast
that time of the year where
Film Slated
On ScQtland •
A :ZO.minute color film show-
ing the beauties of ScOttand
will -be the fea1ure of the
Yachtsmen's R o u n d t ab 1 e
Luncheon at the B a h I a
Corlnlhlan Yacht Club Friday
.at noon.
The fJlm will alto depict lhe
history and making of Swtch
whbkey.
Members and guests itre
urged to make reservation* at
lhe club office, 18()1 ~· Drive, Corona del Mar, , 67:1-.34t2. •
snow can~ found," be said.
During this summer 's
voyage, Von der Porten said,
guild m e m b e rs duplicated
Drake's short voyage from the
sand dlDles in search of a safe
anchor "and we met with the
same blustery weather and
ten-foot . waves that · the old
accoWlts say that Drake fac-
ed.
"FINALLY, A few miles
south, we found the spot where
he must have anchored,'' he -
said. "South Cove is sheUered
all right but it's jl.l!t not a
good enough ·spot to stay.
There was no place else but
south to the Northern
California coast tbat he could
Race. Won
By Passage
Mark Johnson's famed 73-
foot ketch Windward Passage
look the first of four scheduled
races lor the St. Francis
Perpetual Trophy Monday in a
match race with her old rival,
Ken DeMeuse's 7S.loot ketch
Blackfin.
Wifmer of the first race in
the Richard Rheem Perpetual
Trophy race between Theo
Stephens' 57-!oot •loop Llahl·
nlng and Al Cassel's SO.loot
sloop. Warrior was Lightning.
Lightning sails under the
burgee of the ho.st St. Francis
Yacht Club and Warrior flies
the colors of Bahia Corlnthlan
Yachl Club of Newport Beach.
In the first race of the City.
of San Francisco Trophy
series for Class B boat's the
wiMer was Natrat,,sklfpereq
by Dick Deaver o Los
Angeles 'l<achl Club. Runner-
up wu Mistress ll, sklpperOO
by Jim DeWitt, St •. FYC, aod
third was Resolute, Warren
Wesltrhool, St. FYC. .
The three aeries of races
contlnue all week with the ICC·
oad 111ce ircheduled today and
~ .lhlrd. and fourth races on
Ifjld•Y and Sunday.
ports. Wales Bowl Regatta
Takes Year to Sail Hobies Due in Harbor
Of all the North American any given year'$ finals starts Hobie Cats are expected lo
yacht Racing Union's five an-·the year before. swann over Newport Harbor
nual championship regattas, For instance, the •:1adder" so. me 100 strOng· Saturday and less is probably known about for the 1974 finals in Area G
the workings of the Prince of (California)· is now under wa y, Sunday as the Co a s t
\Vales Bowl far the match rac-·with 17 Southland _ yacht clubs Catamaran €0rp., builders of
ing champioilship than the in the thick of it. the famed two.hullers, stages
other four. The winner or the Southern its sixth annual :Ancient
Besides the Prince· of Wales Calif0:rnia semi.finals -to be
for .match racing, the other determined later this fa11 -·Mariners Regatta.
NA YRU .events are t h e will meet the wiruler of the There will be something new
Mallory Cup for men , the Northern California elimina-adde_d this year with the com·
Sears CUp for juniors, the tions to determine the Area G petition in the .new Hoble-12
dam.s.Cuplor.Jl'Omen.JlOJ!..lk l~l ln 1974. Balboa Yacht Mono-Olt Class. There will be
O'Oay Trophy for single-hand· Club is now ea ing iirthr-lhe~usual-r-.ae1ng-1n the-Hoble-
ed sailing champion$ips. Southern California Yacht 14 and 16 foot classes.
The Prince of Wales Bowl Associalion semi·finals with-Three races are scheduled
competition is unique in that two more steps to go. -----on Satuftlay atid~two on Sun·
AJS29 •
day in each of the three
classes. Starts will be from
the· dock of the Ancient
Mariner Reslau.rant, .co ·
sponsor of the· event. First
race each day is s~heduled for
an 11 a.m. start.
For the ilobie-14s, this
regatta will be the final tune·
up for the upcoming national
championship regatta at Lake
H!lvasu ,.Cijy, Oct. 3-7. The
Hobie-16 nationals are to be
held in Key Biscayne, F1a.
1ater In October.
.. All TillS
II mart II 4a
"THE WIDE SSK"
4-FULL-PLY
IYLOI CORD ·
\
... .. PLUS F.E.T. EACH
. ' ~ . '
MOUNTED F~EE -NO TRADE-IN REQUIRED
1-TIACl
TA11PUTD
.... , •. ll-4Daf1
34.44
ll'lllUlf
Quality englri••r•d ond
conslruded Most US. Cora.
"C"""" II
SULEI IUI
•Al UIPS
• .,. 1.21-4 Qr!r•
9J'Ea.
1-2-volt, upper or
lower beam.
lftllJll• I '.!".'.!:-C ...
-·· , .. . -,\;,._, ... .
~ .... _ ..... .
""''' n '"'""'
"70" SERIES·RAISED LETTERS
&o.,IOllltl IS loot aa yoo DWI yovr ..
•
---M-.... -----·-l--·--· ·----·
, ..
"'
PEllZllL•
llTN Ill;..,.,._
leg. 52• • 4 Days
41'Qt.
All w..nhet !OW·
30 welQ.bl oil.
llU 1•1.tlK4UI ,
,..,.__. ).tlf' AU ·-'-"' --. .... _ .... ........ -'.":f.11~!,!.•• ... !.~ .. .. ,...... -·-· ---
• _\
. • ANTHONY ICHOOU
HAllOI CINTll
lMt "',..., Ciiltw Cffl• Mne, C• .......
"· (714) t7MJIJ
1'11 I.·~·'· .U•htlnt. C•I,,....
"· (7f41 77M•
Kids Like To
Ask Andy
,., ..
F.f ,T.
2.GI fo,
IUYY-Dm
DELUXE SllGCIS
•
f
• • • ~ • I
. • DAILY PILDT :JJ
'
1 ~Standard'
I ' ' l w
Dogfight Seen .
OVER THE 'COUNTER
1 OnMeats
Tuuncbed
--..,-··--
Western Motil
AU:fuies Battle
Charter Air Bill
I
WASlflNGTON (AP) -The
natlon's scheduled a1rllnes
have launched an all.out at·
lack on a bW ~t lvould bring
to the United Slates the low·
cost air and ground package
vacations so popular i n
Europe.
In a few weeks the Senate
votes on the bill sponsored by
Sen. Howard Cannon, (D-
Nev.), and supported by the
cbDrtered airlines, that the
loaded. Charter operators also can cut oom by gelling reduc·
ed hotel rates.
The Air Transport Assocla·
tJon, whJcb represents the
scheduled airlines, says the
bill would lei the chartered
airlineS' move into the most
Jl'(lfltable air roulel while
avoiding unprofitable routes.
TlltW ..-tetl-Fr....ie ~ "'6 ll'SN C.. 1M 1111' S.... C• .,,.. Dll9
"'*I"' .., lfllt Ml· rl.,... tc: n »• """ c.. '1' '"° ~,ilMl9 N "" '"" 119MI ;.,Mtltlltfl ol ''he." ill 1l\t. 1•\t. OoMr ~ •~ .. !"''"' 0. ~ S-.. Sec.wlt\M. C.••-· ~ro1 . Jl'dE '"' Ni a....,, '""-'°"" f'l!Olll lOI 10t
"' bleh llld ofltr, fl'Ullet' H 1t\'t 1)\.i au.tn o 11" 12¥1 1.11"' '# "" .nlio .......... IW Olltf"·IM• FV!\11; s.. 1cvt 1•\'a •tilw r ' Klft '"' .... t_l.,. .,..,_ 1 G••Wtll 11 11\111 11t1vt m ! I''..,.,. ' ._
•Kii olMr 41 of rllllll 14"'° IU• • :t)ol '11 ltM DC , ft 10 (f-ll•ittm olt l.rJ ,._ 1\'a 'lllov'°'"' 18111 I It Tiii!' 1'4 l"'r
time.I no. Ql.IO(I• "' Co 14\lo n lllllM PK 11\t. ''" 1ow•11 Mt '"' '""' 11-do !IOI IN:lucM 11 .t.U11n Jl'4 )IV. illt<M_ l~ 4\t. •• f"ll Ck... 11~ tt--.
rtllll _,.,"°.::r.' AutoP 21"'1 Wit illff EIK 16 1•~ Trllllfl flt ,,,.. ltl.
down or t \<Gil CrUO. 31 JI_. Aitll V~lt llM IJ\li U11I .tlOt 1\111 t
,IGft; lftd 00 ftOt Gold Med 1'-2\.\ A~ Pl" S"' h'I Un!M Sot IP ,,.,..
ftOl"tltl'll tell.Ill """ flM 12\li 1J ill 11 .I.A •S\l (614 Ul'IArt flt ht ,.. ttan1ec:11-. ••1111 St '"'" '" RI ,, Mf ,, ,,~ ui ... Ht s INOUST•t,.lf r•'f Adv 9111 1~\:o Ro1d £• Jl .... )4 U Trtl L ,J 1)161 ANO UTlllTllS MIC.It Ch 241.'i 26 A61WI ()11 IW. 161 Ul'llll ,.lk ,,,,_ 16_..
Tt,IMdty Mlhft EW 11\l't ltvlo ltoll!l'lt 9 ,, II' Ul'lw, MOltll ~ '' .. _ Ill lfll Mill Fl'llC 16\lo 16'-II:-Co 1~ tM VloM H11 1'41 • 8 d Atii; HMlll 9t 21¥. ~ llllWe Fnt ~ 10; .· Vf!KI ~ "4 llllo AcllWI tt 24"" H1rlY1'1 p S'4 S" llu.c~r Pt!. It It~ y.., 6fil .... W. Alt• Aht H ~ i-1.....-R 6 "°" AIKI Stoll ,21-. tJ\to Vll'I 51'1(.ll · • .-, 1"'l
Alltl L.tld Ullo 15"" H1wlfl A 1.-., 1'4 ~--40\ '"'° 'I Vlctlll'I st lnli IW.. All"t ..... 1'4 1 Htlll9 Ml 1 1Vi ~r .... Co 1 • Vldto s~ 514 • Atll td Ttl 1tut It Ht•C•I C 11 11'1o \(llert'I' ll:i. )4\1 Vl'llloll 5c: IV. • All'tft 1H '"*' S H-d N l 'M SCllDll 11'1 "' ll• Vol ShM 1111) ll Arn All0"1A 7~ M H-r 24 14\'i !.c:.it IM P\oll 1: W.Hll MG II_,. 1JMI
A AftCrtl 1 2 HUftl MIO 11\111 1114 !.c:otHl G 1"o l .. Wl\11 Mt tJ 11
A111E1 ltl 1'11 1111 Hylll C 11~ 111/o SCrlCIO' H II~ It: W1•~ I ~ M
Alfi E•PI" ~V, SI H\"llt• C 24 t t\111 S<rloto I 1-. 11 WtDO At '"° S'4
Work has started on a $3 million shopping. ~nter _at the intersection of La Pa_z ~=:!,d :nU:en :~
Road and Mcintyre in Laguna Hills. The La Paz Wild West Shopping Center and at mayors and state ·officials,
SINCE THE scheduled
airlines are required to
operate tu1profitable as well as
)i'Olitable r o u t e s , this
diversion of traffic on the
mOney-making routes would
mean sdme scheduled airlines
would be placed in an un-
f avvrable profit position, the
A i r Transpart Association
says. This would force them to
cut back or eliminate service
or to raise ticket prices.
Am r ll'l(I IJYJ U ... l'ION Wll 11\.\ 19 S.1 Wl'td 2l\ll '!ill WHdlCI 1111 ,_ Ml F""' IV. t ll'ld\ Nu.cl 21"' 21Vi SY M"clt 1,_ ti Wtlll Wt 11"' 11
Am Gt'M "°""' 41 11'110!'11 114 Ilia 'S....nastr t1"" Wtll'"I M '"" tt'lt .\Mii'( S'f ,,"' 1114 111111 Cro ,, .... 11 '5.eVHI Uo J'S ,~ W11ctf pt ,.... ""
Alll Ttl•ll 'ttl 11 ll'llt•C. !:l'I 1\:1 1'111 Wnr CO 111111 '" W\l~ 11 16 ..... 11 41'1'1 Wtld lll'w'I II 11'111111 ~ U 1•111 Sl>ote"' 1~ 1~ WflW H 11 .. 11'1J
"""'\I\' :M'-'I 1' 11'11 A.111"1 S'-'I •V. ~'"-101.11 11\li Wllllftll I 20\oll 1'0\jo A.Mtfl In •'Al 4V> Ill lkW 4 6'Ao 6YI St\10 Toi' 511h '9\\ Wll\11 H J 16'ti 11"' it.iw .. cit 10\li 11\li 11'11.-SI CO t'°I !Olio 'Sllld p~ 1•111 16,. Wint ,__, 1011 lS\it. mall will cover 90,000 square feet. It is being built by the Ted R. Cooper Co. have claimed would force
T_H E STANDARDIZATION ~d leasing·management is being handle'd by CHC Iifanagement, Inc. of Or· them to eliminate or reduce APS l..CO It 1S lrtlencll R 4V. l \'o SO.ctr1 J,'4 fS , WIK Pl.I It 1'-
''1rlll do t w 0 things:· reduce ange. service to some cities. Ardft M11 1\'o Jt't Jltnt:!.b 11 llYI Slll'lldY I U'llo U'I\ Wood l"' 11¥1 IS\ollo A/'•f/1# Kt 1f"' 1• let AlrFr J\~ 4 Std RHh U\lo '"' Wtllld S.. 1t 16¥1 Arvldl 111'1 t\11 IMIYA Mi 16 16\lo 'Stk N Alt J0v. )~ WrlQllt W t• S'-AHo Col• , • ..., 11\~ 1(1lwr st n •to ll"' SUIN llrw 7'4 I XOll't• Cl> '""' •\!I
All G' LI 1lYI ll'lllo K11v1r C 3i·1 '"' S!tflk N S t t Vtl1o Fri ''""° 41'4 slopping· confusion and )lelp THE CHARTERED airlines
cOnsumers make wiser, more-and Cannon claim the sched-Auto Tr11 11>1'1o 1111to 11Ce11ttt T1l l \lo l'"° 'itrqa Ttc lt'4 I ' l ltqlr Co ,,,. 6V4 S.lrd Ato • •'Ill 11Ce11 COl'ln U 1 SU!Mlr E1 t\lo t ?fon1 Utlt tJ'-'I J.S
B1lrd Wr 11 111'1 llCt'f 011• ''"' ''-Blkl• F1 )41/o lS ic,,,~ Fb 1l ... 111,\ G . & Lo
1!11tlltl'I L 11i. 11:1i1o 1(1., C\l\t ,,.. 1>.\ a&11er1 1er1
11¥ ·M!t »'4 ''""' l(t'f~I 11'11 1llli 11~ 8"11 8!d<I 1}~ UV. l(MS 1...:1 ltf '"" N!W Yori! (UPI) -TM foUOWll'I' ll1t 8tl'lk 11111 J6Vi 27 Kl'llllf' Vt 11 16 \llOw\ 11111 'lockl 11191 lllYI 9111'1..t Ult
B•'"" " J\ 2n.r. l(o,ffr "" JlV. 2•·~ 111011 llld Iott 1111 l'l'IOSI l>aSl'll °" ci-n:lflt
ecooD ""1dmlll~Slt decisud' ions,:d· ·1•idf Aerospaee ""Blues!! uled carriers are using the 1Y • ro 1 presi en o "big lie" technique in hope~ the program 's sponsor, .ihe f def · · ! "'aUonal Live Stock and Meat o eating coosumer-or1en ed ., legislation.
Board. T _ ~ _J l The~issu~ r~vQ_lves ~t in·
It wW also cut from l,OOO to u.Ua-off Executives Learn A bout Se ves elusive tour clmrters -the
300 the number of names, ffor::_ _________ ~-----------------------packaged...vacations-Where-air
Distributor
Buys Site
In Irvine
a11Mlt I" 10V. 11 ICP'Ue9&• I &\t or clllAQt °" thll OVl••llll.c-tlr
111¥111' .... J l(UJ!lfl El •'"" 6~ '1'111"1•'11 I' !lllOltd b'f' Ille NA~~. ' 8ttlll'll fl 4111 • Ladil Pet-0¥0 111-li NO Ind Ml'tlflllQI (l\ll'lr.• 1~ ...
Btkl" Co s-. • L.wte:&ll H l.1o 1!YI dlllere..e• btt-11 Tiie or•w °"' •'I 11111 8 ,1'11!{ l i 16 l1 Llll<t 111/r 11\11 prlc1 Mid Ill* -~urte11! 1111 bl.ii prla. --9;,1 1"nt "'6-JJ l~M----li"' RIN•aSl-----8•1r lab l•'ioi •~ l•rv 80¥ ?S'4 ?6'4 1 Mldl'l"lnOld A 1""+ 1*\ Uo ,.,.,. lllbll Co 1v, 1 i.eQQl'I Pl 14Vi 15 1 Ammt'il Gf'o Illa+ 111\ Uo tt.:J artowi:-m.earcuts;-he-san · and ground .. transportation, A&P and Kroger, two of tbe SEATTLE (AP) -It's been employment, for instance, salesmen. lodging and other extras are
top three national food chains, almost four years since the dropped from 101 ,000 in 1968 to "I found that a man's ability paid in one swn.
aald they will implement the Boeing C.O. told John T. 37 ,200 in 1971. The Boeing to fUJd a job was somewhat There are no restrictions on
program. Officials of Safeway Strickland it no longer could employment figure here now rommensurate with hilll posi-these tours in Europe, _and
81QI Or111 11"' U Ube•l'I N IV. 11111 l Velo llhld ll'IC 16""+ JI.lo Up 2.4,S lllrd SOii\ ?ti/a 15 lit Clll'llll l\IJ I~ 4 Adv.., IN'1 Sy 1tilo+ 1\oll Uo 11,J: Bob E"1'1\ 11 .... U l ine B<kt 6 6'16 S Moral! lll'fl 111 •YI+ I V:I Up 11.S
8<>0111 Np U >Jo Lion CISI l~ '"' 6 Cl'Mlrtfl l'l'O* IJ~+ 1-Uo , ... llrt"tO I 11\lo l JV. t..oclllt 51 5t 7 COl'l'IPlr Ml<lt 7\~+ 1 Up IS.I
l rlflti 1" 11 \11 11 1.-Co 51111 55 I M.,ersll'ld .Otb 11111+ 1 Uo 15,4 8•-Ar 5 S MJd GH 1414 1'"6 • AALS l!ld l!IC 1'-+ ,_. Up tl..O ~edi al d ,llut-111 15"' 1 Mii RUy .,,,. Ulo 10 CIMll'lltlorl 11'1 l + "° Ue 10 Zee l'll• 'c p T 0 u ct s ' 8utkl'f 5"-• Malltkl t5"" 46V. 11 OSI''""" wts I + \.II UP , ... ,
said the company is already use him. is up to 51,000. tion ," :Eastman d e ct a r e d . Europeans sometimes take
labeling cuts by origin and ex· He bas spent the time since Eastman started looking for "The people who bad really two or three long weekend air f ct nd dlstr.b t llun'IJI 51 1"'° l• Mlfi1 Frt 1""" 1~ _lJ Ttltertdll lllC. l"'+ "-UP ll:S manu a taer a 1 u or eutl•r "' ""' •s~ MJry ic., Jloll 1'"' 11 T,,,_ l'OOll\ '''-+ t r. w 'l·' of home, school and. industrial ~,." 20 ?O M.e Cmcllt JNi •0'4 u H•r' .._,.. ,.,., .. \lo UP ., .1 pects to be in compliance with tnen learning much about a job about a month before he gone up the ladder at Boeing trips per year.
the. industrywide. progJ'Jin\. >-himself. was laid off. He found one ad were the ones who were on top In the United S t a t e s , Sow ~ 5 -McOl.11¥ 14 1'\11 15 TfOl)ef'lrt Co Jilli+ -. Uo 11.1
c 0 mp I a int 5 of coo· Joseph B. Eastman, so, a that . "'.practically . w~ a of fmding good jobs where however, the Civil Aeronautics
fusing names to identify meat mechanical engineer,-worked d~lllliOll...J!:U:D.Y-l~H.e_.SODl~~-the....others-took-more Board has ruled that vaca-~ have increased as meat on Boeing's s u p e r s 0 n i c took It, a JOb at Teledyne merual jobs that just happened tjoners on inclusive tour
prices have risen. Minnesota Transport project. w h e n ~ along." ch;arters must spend at least
emergency ~t. akf tits and . VIPS 1~ IS Mlclttn 1)\11 1(\4 16 trl Oltm lllC. 11 + 1\11 Uo ' pt tl'Vll 1'1.C. Med!trri $1 51 U Mtorc\I\ COl"ll tlllh+ 1 Uo 1 5 other medica equipment and nct " ,,..., 1 wrld 1., .-Ai 11 Gtl\Autoflt .u ''""-+ t uo t SU~ues, has pur-•---• a 1_ •. C'lltf'I co s-. ' ~ff' Fr 11 11~-. '' so-c.111b'l •!IC tO'llo+ 1 uo rr UUIX!U r CMm Co 1"t. 15 Mllll-511' St:i. 10 A.I!\ Tkl!llOIO 511'1+ YI U0
acre Sl'te al ····1 n-•-Ave. In Clll Sr Ir .. '° "'°'' GM 21'4 ')" ,, o-•· lllCOl'ft • 1'111+ " v. .&UV'll .IMllC Olrll SK Ml1111 I'• Mii 6 .. t1 1.i Mlt$ Corp ,,.._+ :I Ue
the ·Irvine lnd"•lrial Complex 1u ,,, Mooul co 11:w. 2J\lo tt u111v11 SKlMt 1-.+ • u. . ·
"" Clllr U A lS l Moft• 11'1 42 tJ 1( Su\ltr Ntll Co l + " U. l,t and is constructing a 29,000 c 1evtflk 111N 11 """°'' s. 1lS¥1 l6\lo 2s CatieM C0«.11 1"11+ '"-uo u c1ow Cro • Morris" It'll 2ll \.OSlllS
~dais received 197 meet Congress killed the program in Ho w e v e r , a Boeing one night in three cities. lo ad-
hibeling complaints in the first March 1971, Eastman knew • • • Stri~klattd spokesman said circumstances ditioo, the trip must last at square foot facility to house Coc•C L1 11\lo 11"' Mot°' a · ''"' '"' t istl'lt°'" 0.111 t'4-1111o 011 1
rod t. t• ·1· nd Coml snr tt:wo M'SI Ott• ..... '" t Nobllll'f HDnl'I I -2\ti OH 11. p UC ton ac IVI 1es a cor-C111.,TI p 21"' t•'lll NII CnvSt ,,,.. '"" "]Sr.be Food SY l lfl-"' Off 11.• three months of 1973 com-his career with Boeing would k t telD f t w a s j ust a made finding a job tougher for least one week and the cost
pared to 234 in all of 1971. The soon come to an end. tllctt .ter of t llne he• the top people. must be more than 110 percent po a·-offi-s . Cor111111 p 15 1S N•t Ubl~ S'6 . 6 • Ouol•Ol'I S't'\ln 1lto-\'I Off ,,_, r 1-C '-"' • Cou,11'1\ 2l'oli ll NI Md!Cr 1lVi 14111 S Pll'ldlcll f>rtt' 314-""' Off 16.1 Cro\, Co lSV. 16 "II Pfltitnl 101olo 11 6 Lllldll CltdHl'll • -filo Off I S.I nmh.ly flow of complaints of the regular schedttled air
were up by nearly 70 percent HE, TOO, has learned a few fore h e tvould b e "THE GUYS who were laid fare.
a1 'last .count in Oregon . things since then~ "le-t"g:;,.o;,, • .,,._.,..,,._.._;-i•~ff~fir"'' st P!esumably w.!'!re the Thus, a New York City resi-''I had been with Boeing 22 ~ least d-e SITT D1 e . • • ·th-e dent taking an inclusive tour
. N_EW JERSEY Inspectors years and I didn't. know spokesman· said. "1be mm· charter trip to New Orleans
found dell roa5t selling at $1.89 whether there was :inother job C.A.E in Toledo, Ohio. He pany held back on the really might end up spending one
thll year while the same c,ut. in the United states I could even worked a salary increase good guy--until it couldn't bold night in Freeport, Bahamas,
tap round, was selling fill .. Eastman recalled "I out of the_ switch. Wben off, and when he got laid off and aoother night in Orlando,
ellt!where at the meat counter w~ nervous about t ·b a t Teledyne lost a key bid for an there probably· weren't many Fla.
ZEE'S NEW !IC facil1·ty w1·11 cru1t11 11 av..•~ ~eed11111 10,., 11:\lo ,. •1QICll'111 01t•· t\.\-"" °'' 1s.o curt Noll u 11 ~ewll Co t'.!o 10111 I Nu<leer llltst 11.'i-V. Off 14.l represent a capital investment §'"•· ll'IU l6\lo 31• ~J N•t G 1s1o1o u.,.. • •Aronllt'O'I C1t 1\'o-ai. °'' 11,, 1"l'f M 9 I Nicolet I" 1 ti 10 41'1'1 Blometlltl lW.-Vo Orf 11., of more than $250,000, aC· ,,, 0r9 ''"' 1 Nle11et1 " 31~ 1sv. 11 Sow!.t lh\t•<h 1:11.-v. Off 11.s
COrd'"• g to Thomasw;,Zapara, r,11 Dt' 114 l NletUl'I B lS lSl.'i 11 B•YIJ lnd~trl1 1 -\ft Off 11.1 ti Gen 41\lo 4t Nord"r 10'11 21Wo 11 VIODlll C'-"'tl ,...,_I Off 10,\
Zee id t a I S 0 Cl\ 0. HYI IS NW'I NtG ·~ IOV. 14 ClllllllllM Pr 214-WI Off 10.11 pres en• W o.cor In 4\\ • No11en Cit '614 47'N Jj,Modern Mere l 'lt-1 Off t .I
po '•led out that his !U'lll. 's new D•t•b •A s.11o s1 Nuctr Rt ,,,., 1 16 M1r!M P!'oltn .,,._ ~ Off s.s "' Otllll t"tl S\li 6 01kwd H Jiii IV. U H1mUl11T "'' 1~-\41 Off &.l location includes additional o.1u•• c 31 31 0c~111 0r-St¥o '°""' 11 M1ol1il'rs1 .1> 21o1o-v. Olf 1.1 0111'1'1 ~ 11\lo 11 Oc:11" E• t\11 lDV. 1t Pl"""""l Co 111'1-\.II Oii l .J land !or expansion. Ol•m Hd 10 1 Oc1>9r Ml J11to l to Si11r11 11Mt11 c 1\lo-"" on 1.1
The l•year~ld firm Is now 01c11 A e 21o"" 21 011~11 lq1 1111\ 11v. 21 111rorm1"11 11\C 111i11-1 Ott 1.1
· o-..,,. · Oh•'$ SCI l!I Cr) ()o;LIV'f' AA 2l 14 Jl RtM .. Cll Fuel J -V. 011 '·~··---I Jocated-in-Downey.-7.apara -~~~ n" i• g'd;~~ {-J1'o iHI~~ ~-1:~··~g:-r:1
for $1.49 a pow>d. aspect. But having gone out important contract earlier this good jobs still available." SINCE 11IE E X T RA a i r l---~·"'N""ew...V'/ork-and-other-states-into-industFJ-far-f.rom...lxuoe.~fu· ~astman knew it all was "Financia.lly,-we-were in a travel-runs up-the cost of the
bate required latiellng of meat found 1 was well equipped to go g 0 liippen .to ~g lucky tjtuation," Stickland . trip, the National_ Air ~ier
cuts according to whert:1 they compete. That's the walndy ltryt g~ in~ said. Association, which represents
came from on the anlma . The Strickland, 57, a senior aeros~s:e us · . e . "The children already were the chaftered a Ir 11 n es ,
National Uve Stock and Meat group engineer worked in kept in t'Ontact with h15 out of school, so we didn't estimates this trip might cost
Board program ls the first fn..• Boeing's aerosi>ace division fori:;: e~plofu k 8T1 ~~ have that expense. We had $295.
said the new IIC facility will DonlliH ?!"'-_ Or1110111 ,._., '"" 2s Mlrtc 1VHorN >\lo-v. °'' l'.1 • • · I Dow JOl'll •• <• OYrmyr Q\oll 61t.,l------------more than triple Zee s present Oo\'i• oa 11"11 n °""" NA t •'Ill 1-". •~0,-1 • 'c·1·,·..,· •
fl ~ Ovnlllfl D Jllil J Dlilt Cto :5"' 6111 U JD 0 4 n oor space. Ec°" l•ti ••Yo •6 P11»t er l611to J6"' et Pl!.11 I) ,, P1cc1• l6 J7 . P.,EW "fC)lll( IUPl)-1lll It..-!: Kll'll
DESIGNED By the Newport Et Nutt! St\! P•c. G•m 711/o 21\6-stoc1u ltldtd Ill ~ OTC rtMl'littt T"'*y EfllrO'f C 7111 1 PIC Lurn ]11'1 ll\ti; II '11QCl!lltd 111 pYt.SO.
~de attack on the for 19 years. When Boeing iost up spnng c a mg. decided to sell our old house, If the restrictions were
ialue. its bid in 1970 to build the un-.. ,1 was in supervision at Wlticb. w.as bigger than this removed, the New Yorker
1be Cost of Livi!>( Council mllnn)!d Viking Mars probe, Boeing," Eastman said. "I ooe •. We~-·"'"' inn_ur "••""'al oould Oy -direclly to New
Beach arch·,•--tural and plan Equ st.L 11 11 PaSo &rd 1114 n '4 1tec11 •••••••• ..,.._ IW......,a..
K\O • Elftlll A 1JVI 2J P111 OcOI . 17 11'11 PlllllO'I GlotH t10,60G '"'° 1t--"" ning firm of Ware Malcomb E•Ku · '" 1'4 > P1111 ""' 1~ ''"' ".,,. OrQl'I .1io1t 1ttt.111 11~ 11\o\-\lo • • El Pll"t S'h 1 • P•ultY P J\lo 3 Pl_, 1'1181'911 111.100 :scl\11 ~ lll Garner-Association, the Zee F11r l M '"' 1 P'f'l~i CH ,,..., 11161 "-OrttflG 1ot.Sll0 1 ,.11111-"
I t ill ta. 2 Q Q Q 0 rMlon El J1lill ll P1y N Sv lW. 1Sl>ll SlorMt Ttelt Cit 11,IOD ,,.. ,._+ "" pan w con IR ' ''"" 8r 10\li ,, •G~ -w l M 1111\ stPN c.... , .... *"" IMI--...
I t of bl and ,,.,, °'' ,..., 1\lo Pet H&H 2'1111 25\'i PltNi llt. n.oao ""' • ......_ "' square ee ass.em Y ,1"""'' 1iv. 11 Petro lw 1111 1llo MC• COl'MWllCP .,.im 1111 ,.,... ~ -ned tlie -~~ lii feto" StrlckfiM liiilw ll WU •-t >: -wu Oil< of the m~ -gave , _.,... ~ .,....,--0r-•= Oil the me· lilsive tour r•w&-... •• ,_ e""'y 'horns, IO -to speak, m;id We've ic..u. lerl to the chief executive of matter of time before ~ other people their notices and d _.. "'b of ·t cl)al1er ticket, receive · bis .,;,ry giocery chain with sales would be let go.-' ~ ' -·I bad to COWiael them. I bad to ,:;:., 6 -""
1 ever ·hotel acOOmmodatioas -for ttie
of•inoro than 11111 million a What Strickland IOWid out, do wbat I could to help them Strlckland bas ·been working week anc1· otheiextria,lor a
year. 'lbe COODcil said the ln part, Was that "tbe reel get other jobs and tell them lt for "---", ·more or. less, total cost Of about $165, the ... do 75 to 80 percent or world ls kind d (Wl." wasn't the end o( the world. I WI~ association says. ~
Production space, 4500 square r1\' .fx~l~ g\OI ;:: ::~,,~" 2~ ,: ~b ~..!.,.. ""' tt:: ir-;1::~ ~
feet of corporate offices, and 111 W•tF ,,. i ,.._.. w uw.-1•"'-••so· ·-·----.--• r lsc:i. ll'IC '""-t Piper 1...:1 12111 ll .......,... .,. -·-4500 square feet of storage ,11 T•I• 1•. , Pl'11<1 Mii 21v. 21v. ".,",-, K,!!'
Th Ult flllctor 'WI 1 Pooll ere 5 ~ :f. "" ~ area. e roncrete -:UP '°'"t °' ,,.,.. 16 Pro1 Gou 2"' ~.,. U.;ct1lr1Clltd 1m
structure will feature a "'•'* El •"-ProQrn ''"' ''""' r 11•11"" !tie naUon'1 grocery bUsln.,.. It ceriainly wasn't fun al was prepared to lake some o! since theo. Sitting In Uie base· By comparlsoo, the oufrell
. · 'the time for S t r I c k 1 a n d , my own advice when "it hap-merit office of his comfortably coach air fare from New York Sllndblasled finlsh painled in ••••••••••••••••••• earth iones. Accents will be . TBE COUNCIL'S director, 1Eaatman and about 500,000 ·pened to me. middle-class home in residen· Cjty to New Orleans is $180
JGbn Dunlop, uked the chaim ~otber aerospece workers -a tla1 BelleVue, W a 5 b • • roundbip. provided by panel> of bronze --•uTUAL FUNDS. w•let him kiiow by Nov. 1. ol·, third of th• total Industry "I TIUNK one change . is 'S!rlckland ran off Uie various Charter flights are ~per
tbilr plam; but COWlCil officials: work force _ wbo wen lajd that I've grown a lot closer to 'jobs he's had, investment land because they operate _fully
solar glass, trimmed with a lt.l
mat.chingaluminwn. -.-•• -.-""-'-~~---• .':-·=~-,-,"'",~ •. ~ .. ~.~ •. ~Y~•=•=v=,=, .. :'.:-:.~,----.. -.-.-..,-,~
told oompllance would be oil between 196! and 1111. people by having a problem tn manager, roofing inspector for
purely voluntary. common," he added. a construction c om Pa n Y ,
8lroud lald tho program will l .TllE ~MP ACT• was Eatman said be knows ol airport planning consultant.
be supplemented by charts ~ally severe OD the West several people laid off by
and booklets at n\eal oounters , C<iost, where am-, 38 per-Boeing who found-better Jobs. HE _SAID the experience
to help llhoppera understand C<lll of them worl<oit. He alao knows several people aerved _to remind him "that,
What the names mean. Boeing's ·seat t'l t. are~ who becam e door-to-door really, there isn't anything I can't do if I want to put my
mind to it. ••
2·._vear
Certitieates
$1000 MINIMUM
$5000
Certificates
(No""" -,...1-111!
,.
"
Morris
Plan <?-
California's targest
Loan and Thrill
Service '
3700 N.W.,ort Blvd., N-port l~ai:h
Ca ll Geort•Wadman, Mgr. at 673•3700
r
• ..
'"l bad to take the view that
there has to be an o~
pOrtultlty,'.--Stricidand said.
"But I have to help make the
opportWlity. I can't just sit
and wait for somebody to
come and beat on my door and
say, 'Hey, come on, poor guy,
come and have a job'."
'73 Pontiac
F uel .Line
Recall Toi~
.PONTIAC Mich. (AP ) -
Pontiac announced llcis asking eoo.ooo owners of 1973 models
io ... -lbliir cars to dealers for replacemeill of a fuel line
.acbmiu!ator.
'The accumulator ls a small
mela.Lexpanaion chamber In
the fuel line tbat'reduces noise
in the system.
U~ certain condillons, a
l..,.ly fastened plug In the
aceumulator could leak and
allow fuel to siphon !tom the.
laak wheil the engine i. not
running. A fire hazard could
result, Pontiac said.
A IOOkesman said there
have been no fir.,, bul 28
leaking accumulators have
been reported. T h e ac-
cumulator is to be rtplaced
with a bOle.
PonUac alJo said 75,000 of
the 11me cars are to have a
gnund wire installed· OD the
tnatrument panel air con-
dltlooer control.
f'on>lac said Uie wire Is
being Installed to prevenl the
,,...1bW1y of fire under the in-
strument panel In lbe event of
a short drcalt at the electrical
terminala on Ille air -dllloner controls.
There have been some fires ,
bul no tnJurleo, tn ihe 28
reported cu<t of an fn.
strumenl panel shortoul, the
spokeaman said.
Only Grand Prix and Grand
Am model> without heated
back window ddoggera will
require Uie wire , fyltlac said.
\
\ •
i-IAQI i1 I lt1I · lll(ine 6.00 6.S6 Cini 81 11.ff 19.f' 11'11• lftY ,,.U 11.51 '
Md M:1 nlltd IM"I SOtcU F 1,TJ I.ts Cui& 12 1t.SI 21.4' h O ,. -''°' tH 111'1 Mulu•I Stell Fd U .61 1).IS Cllfl 8t l ,15 1.n Corn llflC 10.M 10: .. ~· "QllOled e:o1e: so n .Dl !].01 Cu" 1(1 7,03 1.10 !ioec•I )OJ6JO.M
the MASO l..e. •R MGMT OllP: Cutt I(! 6.ot .... ·•••o o•P ' · · •II A Ecity GI' Ill hi ~ull SI 11.U U."1 Ad Gw iio 4,60 Mvlur , n '·" EQl'f Pr Ctl 111 . int st· 11.n 1t.~ Ad_lnc: :ua •.01
._1111 r:d 1'.s. -.. .• ... 1-Am t11 ltl C"1t1 ",. •,·" .. •, "•t Ad '"' 1.n 1.M Aelfll In ''"" 1•. ,,, Gt U.5111.60 On . ' c"' Clo t.15 S.11 AIUlloll'9 t0.410. EOUll Trt 16.lS ... Aoolto 4.12 J.11 ll'IC f119 s. .. 6.SS AGE Fd 4,9J 5. EITlll"O ).67 '.DI Poleri 1.11 •.ll Slid l.rt 4 )6 t 11
All\1111 11 ... 11. E""lf'f' tl.'611.M 111.l'llckr i.U 6,12 eCUlllTY Po$;'
AICll\ll fit 1J.tt l&.16 '"•lrfld l.U •.It 1(11kr Giii 7.70 1.4) Equllr l .S5 '·" MICH f 4,tl S.'3 Fiii 8Ul'I •.ti t.6! Lnclf!lrtl 6.n 1.JS ll'IVl1 1.60 7.U Am O'l"S t.tf I0.11 Fed 1111111 t .)2 ••• Lel'llf I'd J.(1 S.O Ul!fl fl 7.ll I.DI
Am Ellt'f '·" S.11 l"IOellTY leX GllOUP: HleCTCD f'DI:
'
AM lllPtllSS OlllOUP: Co lAllr lS.17 t•.lt Am W 1.17 I.ff
Tope 'Itilft m L -o a n Orange· County wtJo·wu1 serve -?.':t~: 1.•• 1. e:,r-;ffi ,;:~ t:.~ft ,ti Il:U tr~· ,t:~ ,;:a
AflOdatloa has_ Opened its ~ ~ boe~, ~in find-1:::. f::l ::c C'f sl.c ;:3 7'.J; tl~"11tt~ tJ:-i:n ~lff itlfll·i:
Nelvport Beach branch office ~g emptoymed ent umlngfor Vt.he :C:'~ ~:3 ::~ .r.',!,; 1;:H ::: ~<if 1.1• 1.-fMLD, g111~·~ at 1617 Westclilf Dr. , disadvantag , rel 1et-""' Grttt s.1• 6.21 Ewtr.lt n.:n 11.11 SAYUJ; 11.JI 11,. -..: 5:,. .:.
Jim Tallmu, Jong Ume nam veterans, youth and ex-:::: l:!i7 tn ~:H ~~in 1:::llttt f:'J'11111 10114:s1 .~,.. t: ~:;;
Newportresidentandactivein offenders. ~ ~N~r ~ll lfl ~~ F ri:~1::~ li>,~&,"''~·'' 1 . .:r.,k ~fl::;;
th -.Jinancial community has N wpo~ Beacb execut1·ves ANCMOA ,INAMQAl ."' 81K '·" '· IMCAltlDN f'OS• e-a e '• ~ OltOUP: . ~llOOAAMI: Bl'ld dtb t.~1G. Aoorc 11 ti 20.l1 been appointed as 1 o cal AJJen E Weidman chalrman c111111 • '·" 5.J5 Fl" oyn t.tt •.i9 lu1111r11 10.6111. t1tt~· ,,·.11 ,, ~-•er and ass••tant Vl·ce f Ille boa. rd ol A • F' la! F"d 1rw 1.51 1.J1 Fl11 1ild 4.11 •.11 lun11, '" •.J• 11. s •iwtt1 • •:St ,0:,1 .. -.._ .., 0 VCO lll811C Gnrrlll 7." 1.76 Fin Inc J,t5 5.65 Mll'llllfl J..S-4. II: Ollf' 11101110 N"Ociident ·----<"-• .: .. ,.., ., .. .i ""----·'I:" •"-· ll'l(oni J.11 7,1t Vtlll •.ll 4.13 "!,ASS CO: :· !t l'IS 1'.01 1:14 ,...-• oJl':'l'.,_,_ ... ..,..._1-.,-.1'""'°' -""""1r---t:,._.,,IO 1'1Fd~V.-tl.Mtl,)9 """'""' •• •1n PUWW * rissey director of industrial WI Niii 11.n 13.06 ~.llllST. ~Ito F .. ,•, .. ,. ,•,., CID Sl'lr 7,61 i.JJ • "''"" ).llfl 4.11 I v• TORS: .... ,, ... . ' Inv • 10,. 11 )6 Da~m Inc manufacturer -'-"-ns w i t h Philco-Ford Audll " 1.os '·'' ~01se Fd s.~ ,,Dl ~.•,• '!'C!,1,'il ,~ t(ll 1:61 1:14 "' ' •r lQftWV , AXE rtl'I Flt. 1.21 1.91 .., . • .._ VMI« 1.r. t " of minicomputer peripheral Corp., aeronutronic dJvisioo ttOUHTON: tock F ,,,, 1.so M1g -u.. 1•. """" e ·10: • 10'0
ed th U ed I tic. ,_ in · Fllfld A 4.66 l.OJ ht "'1,1111 •. 60 l.t.11 Mt 11,tS 14, ia !&Gr 1a·1t 10·" equipment bas announc e were a ow 0 par lJ)ilh.o;: '"'"' • 7.01 J ... l"OAUM OlltOU,~ MFO tJ.S51t.t1 1£0..""' 11"14 1J.]j
a -'.......,t ()( · the .....-wtP8Jn Slocll 5,71 6.U UCI Frid 11.,t 11.lt MCO 1J.l11,.FJ t hw 1:01 1:M .,..,..... ... ~. l"""rr' • A•• Sci •.1S •.SI 101 l'l'ld l.05 1.05 Mtote• 111 a.ot LOI lrrt G ' .. 6 ... H J>enh.I .. • 1be utber executive from lllC Glf\ 11.•' 12.50 coi""" t.u '·" MJIP!tf 11.n 11.1t r 1,. 11 ;i1 11:1, • .....-, •1t11Gn It.JO ,1,JO ts Fund •.Jt 6.U Mid "'" S.tl S,11 if{''' 5.0! l.SQ EWs as nation-Corona del Mar, is A, Keith :a.vroc 7.1' 1.•1 Fdfl Gr t.s1 s.oo Mdrl1 fd to.•' 11.M p tno ••s 6., _, field sales Coo" ·denl of 'larco-Oa"' ,81¥1'11 Qr ,_. •.•o rouNOEllS ;MS& f'd ,l.tt lJ." TAT• ... o· Ollllli : Ill .... pres! J' ... 8H<.n RI t .11 1.71 llOUP: Mii allG •.• 10.tl 8°'" rd • ., ! " -Inc lltlClll 11.0l 11.0J Gnrrltl s.tG s.~ MIP Fd '·" t .W I .,, ,... ·,, manager. . . ..,..., It 1t,J6 11.M lll(Oll't 11.1'111.11 Mii" °"' ilW ... , ~ i 10 ,·51 Ellis fonner-* Bl'l'ilhr t.OI '·"' F Mtual ll.M '·" ~ ... ., 5.:rt \I fr Gr itt i1t
I . 8cll'ldltll 4.l'I S.:tO F Soecll 11'.1511.0I " I.to t.61 SI ,, lllC •11 •11 y was vice Laguna Hills resident Rulh B11St ·~ •.st10.fffovf'lll" '·" '·" M"'41 T 1s.n1'·B stet• str ,,:,1,,:10 .._...~-t of ' 11,_ S.U J,'4 flRANKLIM · Mut rt 1.11 I.•• \TIAOMMI 'OS' .,.~. W.Johllloabasbeenpromoted •uu••LOCC• '•°"•c" ,~ '" N111111N 111.11 10.u •1111na J.11 1.1i Moxoo 1'lc He to ·s1an1 Ith , OS: 0 ... ' ..... , SIC l'DSt Ano fd 1.11 1.11 • • ass1 manager w lull Fd 11.111•.• Gwtlt Sr 1.•• t.n &.lll'lt '-" t.n tnmt 1.11 1.J1 has spent mc.-e Secartly Paclfk: Natl o •a I c-. 1'4 11.•1 ai.w. ,.r ITK;m 1 .~ 1.ot allfllt sr· 4.711 s.rt STllN 1toe. f'OS:
than 16 years Baa.II'• Laguna Beach branch .. ~.~.:'° t.tf 11::1 ~~1?.r, s ~:!t 101::3 ~~11~ ttt 11:: ~'nc f:·i~ f:;;l of (ield sales and field NV""' 11.n1t.2t R•s c.eo '·'' .n 11'1(11111 ew Dl s1~r.11; 14'141t11
man··-1 •-'-'-In .oL. Mrs. Johnson was formerly ."""" 1D.Ol I~.-R\ Eqty •.SS •.11 Slocll !Sr ..:Fi :,. SIS oltOUft:· . _,.,.,..., ,,.;.o, .... 1~ w~ . ff! 'lb th t CG flll'ld 10,11>1j.1• l'•l lfEq 11.StU.•1 G.,.111 •• Jlt Grwtll 61, 6 71
.lectronlcs lndusfry. seruor escrow o cer Wl a t10 Trln 11.111 ·" Fd Mt °' •.» •·• h•w ·~ L 1 ~:;" 1•21 ,.01 branch. ~11'11 Vt$ 1W 1t.tt '-!JNOS IMCP> EQU!ty i., I 17 n , 11 '°' .. ., He and~his ramuy live in * •"•'•"•"•!" o,~~I ,,, ... Grwtll. 111.un'.10 •cl'Wll 6:.~11:31 , . • ..... m · !ildt 16.6111.IK ~l'I' F Ill Crl Irvine. ·~""'•• ",·',',",·",, '•"'"'• ,',·'"',',·,~,ME• Mt cr1 trl 'tft(ro"' •.n '''
* Grubb and Ellis P-perly · · "d"' ' • · N•u C1111 '·4l s.u MR AP '"' •.5t. •v I Siii 1 29 l,U Piiot 7,,.. l .ll Ntu"'tll f.4 "" tlNf G t .t4 t,OJ
Georf:L.WoodfordJr.,has Services, Inc. has named i:c."''" s.lt s ... ~teS';P 3~J~ '·" N•wton ,,,,,,1J.t1 -c '·'' ..
been e ected M,the board of Donald W. A. Smllb as vice . SfM~ t:~ ~::; tr10u·"',,':" •:i' =:. ~9fJ ll:: :t!: l~=· 'l: 1l:1gt .l.~ ~ id d Veflllll' t .$1 10.tt Ill IP, S i Nftlll~ 11.4111.41 T,,.._. H 11. S 11,IS d~ of 8 •• t ... r. pres ent an i""lL Aflllf F ~.SS t .07 Nt!I IYW ''·" , .... lOl!'I ~o 1 "t tD
Calli.-·· Finl N 'a I I 0 D a I southern div:lsP ~ ~ • " '" t::r. 's7: 11 n 1;:; ~t!llJ •. 1,• ,,,. lllltrl I : t '.u rw i ,, Co 5'1• .:11 tll FA iJO ,·,o ·r. , ~ 7.12 UnUltd "~ :!·'' COrp., a one-bank holding on manager. • ""'f, es 1.» • 0t r11t ,i:; n:ss tt1'.ss Nt ~l~ iJ" :::U :r.J~'Ulld 11.Wcli.>t 'lbe Laguna ~· .. ,, t.n 1rd 2),4? 13.41 ftlNMM ,.. OJll I cornpanr.. , a--~ execu-Fd 10.10 11.M AM1LTON 0111P: oo •1tt1 10.n ·u .to •rd 1• 1•1<n Wood ·~ •.• ----•,·ve VI. ~m;ll C*IAL F1,11'1d •.OS •.U 00 FNI '·" I .ls N•IJ llW m4.' .. \UV ~W~ ce tiVe Was prev-' r UMO$: Gf'wtll t-tJ 1.'1 0o T"" 1.1' I,'° U.-er :10 'tt
president or the bank and was looslfc Soolhem r:.~; l:;: 11:U := 15:;t 1l;:; ot~ Sec. to.01 10.• :mi-n ''·" ·P.
Uie fOWiding -SI·denl of ~i· · ~ 111'14 10.os 10. lv •·• '·" '''""' , .. , -. n rJ-J:li 1; r·• ~ l onua re-· : Gr.Ill •.10 •·'' !·" 1.11 Peu• 111.., , 11 1:i• ' '41 f ~·,. Newport National Bink whlcb gional man-•ite-t.n 10.Jt •m: .n ... Ptti• "' l:oi s.J1 1111 r.:, "
merged with Southern ager and con-v-::ro ,f:f~,l:tt :~ 1l:C1l:U ::: ; :"11 .:n =~ j'·tl :&
California First National in sultant w I th lllllTN TN 1:=rtGf-::= 't: :it'&ali .\. ,,., . ·i r:i 1m. Grubb and Ellis m1 estate 1.11 1. 1 '"' •llAm 11.• 1'-" ca,u.1 ,,,, , .... l'!'99(a 1 . 1i t1
II 1. • A.:.i t f .a.~ • .4 1, ,,... '""' 1.1• a.so t~ 1" •· Us-a~ii , 10.04
e ... VJCe pr~en .,.() l.l~ development divirk>n In OU-....... ,•·,, •,•,,•,:;'* ,•, '•' ,•,· .. " . Plltfftl .. 1:11) •.• YALUW UMi ,Ott Uc ·----F;. .. -.i.1t..n and '--.i ' ' . ' Pll'll St '1·0' II. J \Ill t.1'19 "" .. n uywog VWNllKV .. ,"" Z·tl :·1 llWtf"l'I 0 I.It I.It'"'" Trt .tt ,., \ltl IRC I.ft 4,71
cha1rmln of the uet in-He will headquarter In 'Hl:1; u·• ::: 'M 1}3 1tJ: 'M:'I,.• ~J 1.1~ E"'~l" tU tU vestment committee. He is regional oCUces in Newport I·' ',~'in""' ,••,,·;.: PIM H 11 • .011.M ""
al ., ___ to I th Be ~ i . .... t.n -~-II •MlO.M ltS: ., a WJ'a: r o e au1., l· f. •r: • ftltflfld ... !·!1 t.11 ~).L 1.1• '·"'
Wldren'1 Hospital of Orange * 11. 1l:'1 c *'" L l·ci '·'l :i'1c~A~''·" ii.t1 ..... J:lf ti
County and the Natk>naJ Ex-D4¥ s. .. 1911 '" ·"1:1 o"'"' u.6l ,1.•1 ~t '·" '·"
ecullv. ~lllee Of Juntor Do'nald L. Marki has been " t, ••• 1 ... ,~,,. s.1t • ' "" ''• l'·1• 11" VtiwJrd '·ff ,,,. el ._. I -~d f MJ L VI t •1110UP1 N"' 11or . 0.11 tt.Tl v.-111'1 ._ , , • ·~~. t eclal a V te yi ""'' ent () •• . O N~O '•'"ti ,·,·,· itro ,-d I.It i.u v .. 114 I J t.ot '"'-.1,..Yemen , nc. F'---c1a1 Feder•"-•-· ' l!J · , ~0,1111 .,,. • , 11111"' °" "li .,. II and his/"-""' id I --._., nn;., .. •.1410.• I ~ '·" •• ,. ~ .... d Gt ' •• ,, ,, , Wt!ISt .. '·. Ut e .... .o&V res e n Los Angeles·based savings and '" '", '"u"4. ''""'' ,:·r, 11~·;: "'ud s•~ 10.•111. w1,11 Mu !f.!, 'l" Newport BOKh. mn hoJding <.'Ompany. v111 J. SllKI ,;, " ~8£;t:" ••1tt.ts.~' 1"
* lie -linues as ex'eculiV ~Co 1·" . Yll•"'' 1.ll l.o f"' "n"·" i~~r, -• '·ti'I• ''I IS 16 S.U IN!tt f, t.'11 O\OI' tt~'"ll -~ Onnge Co· a s t "I-!dent f Fin I l 1 · · 1 •: e '" ''!·" "ml t '" ·~1d;tshavebcennamedto F~r:::n· ~s, t'nc:. YDS,f 11. =. '·'t!:tt ,~1" '~·U 1 '.1' ,~ 11,111;, 'f >; .11 "' T•• Ut , ... ··1 <M llltlQ ' ""' .11:.,j; the lldvisory board of the Na. which provtdes IOln servicing "' l., ,,,r, 1•.1 T~t S11 1 .t• 1'' v1"1 , 11··1 u, .. w.iu., 'I: 1 :,,
t l 0 n al A 111 a" c e 0 ( for:,associatk>M owned by the re: ,::n 1,:1 l~~ ,,:: t;:t:?JJ: ,•,",.!', • t :i'· 1~·!! Wtll!l'I 11 ~ • ... ":l' J,I j P 0#111 t 11 t" '" · ·""' WlfldW • Busines1111en, Oraftlt County partnt comr,:v· °' ; 1 .:01 ~ '" u:is 1(H i"'" 11· ·! ._., 1• J ·' M , &.. a '"'" ~ , " t.se • r.U •, w11111 °" ·;J etro. • He and h s family reside in ·~o: . JH111 "' 1.•1 '·" ~*,• •'• l· ~!?' 1 1t,, The men are.among ts from El Toro. ~ '"" fld • \110.iJ Jotw\\111 _ 2•.•J ''·" 1t'*' a, ._.,·,.~ ~ ...... . I 1,
3/l DAtLV PILOT s
'
• Complete New York Stock Lis t
HEW VOit!( IU'I) -·~ •re ltttt Jttt $,I.. • • 1 fftf p,r!QM Ofl lfle H.-w YoA: Stiock hdit"Ott "·IE flllbl "Ith~ UN Cl'IO. ,.I! 0Mhl Hkll'I Low .... (M,
"'°'" Htl "'* 1n .10 1l 1u 17!? '"'° IM+ \\ Ftoatl'I i +. UJ IM U ;:~t ~ @,.PtJeJ'°'l · · ~" l 1~ JI ,.If (lld•l H .. h Low U •t(:hQ. :::~'!..·I.~ l t: l{?; 1'?14 1'fC: ~:r~: I· : iI ~ r.., !l + ~ ~ 81-KiJ :. 1 'h ~ ...
tfl IUL 1.6' lO !l 111• I~ l\oli FdHllMI ' 1~ ~ fiv.+ "' ., DfO I . ~
.\tlOOttl.. 1Jt '°~ .... ~ ~'" ~:! }."' 11 Ti i~ \:,. lttt+ V. ~:f.:\"f~ 11 I" rn; lil? nlwDK• • ~~ •14 •·· AC~llld 2.40 IO 11 4411 4J"° ~ l't tnlSW 1it 1! :w lf ~ 20...,_ 'I',-.. SIQI\ ..)II • 1 t~ 11:i p ~ :,.':,°' .J J " ff!! ..,. ~ ~:::c..:ii,·~ ,~ J g~ ~l .. ~?u.-"' =1r.r•.J 11, ~a H14 ll~ r,..:t'~ ~::0~ ~t q ':~ j"~ lre;] ~'~·a~ •r3' 10 tl ~;~ , 1 "+ .. ME•r.1.0. xf6U\'°lfV.ll\li-"' rro :i 112'1iYI U\lo lRll+\\F"'9(0 ,tol011f 19¥JJ7 \Il l 1nrt 11tS1r Hf m-'l•
r' ::.r~· :: ; 111.: 1;~ 11i\ 1~: tr!~~ .~ I i 1'" ~ l~t: ~~or~. 6 ' ~ 4 ;lL ~ , P i, 1lt '6 ' lm::.: ::ztr,,:1 oi: 5 : ~= '=~==~'**"IN: .• 722.:m ,~"' l~~+i4 ~iru:.1., : 4 31"'.''J:"' ft~.-~l=1~ l·~ ~ n oU 11\'J .1~
•,
I' ..,,,..,,.,. .,., 1 ,., 1~ 1"'11 1n11+ "' °"'' co JO • ' 21\\ 20\'i 20....._. "' ~ 111 1 »1 f 20,., 11o fl 1 j ~' ~ U " •• AUHn lllCD 1s 25 ,1, :F.~ ...._.+ 1A CIWtr NY 2 1 M :zatt 21'4 n1i.-w ~ \:tr· 51 10 m 1,,. ll~ 1 " i.\ ForPr " 1 -.. :i.s ·I Air ~roo .10 t1 •1 ~ ~ ~ 11o '*Fnd .n 2A 10 ~ "' F~hl~ 1-'2 11 10J '"' ""° ttv. 1~ ITT Cl p1 • I' ' AlrcolllC .IO f to II.,. 11\lo 11~ YI !~:wt 11\ Ai:, i~ m; ~I~ F11l8kn .IO l'2 61 "1"" 51" SI~ \\ 10 11\tl .IJ It fl 1~ AJ 1nc1u11••' "' ~ 1111 ,.__.,. htl .·JD , u 1y.; 714 7"' """''JUI' 13' 17"' ltV.17Vr ll1u1nuco A . l ~ ~-, Akip,.. 1.1010 J4 U\11 22~ 2l~+ \.'II ....=n .• ~ 21lS\lt ~lS ... 1~ FsNllol ·,,. 11 lt Ott""' •l~~·v 11tlot l\lo -'°. "' ... Al• Gt1 111 1 ) \Sci 1~ 15'to+ \.e 1•r1t¥1HV tM 1• 16' .i.14 ..S14 4o1 f ~ F1tNCIN 12 ~ ... S •7111 4' '7\lo+I... --J J-Albrll111 "° 10 '' IJl<o lJ lJl.lo+ I.ii Clw$ c. lM 11 6 31YI v v. S7\"1 \.'II FllNS enc J • • ""' ""' ""' J•'"" F 3' 11 • ~-IN in.-,,. Alc•t1 All.r l 17 .. , 10111 3n1i ..,,..+ ~ (htsf"d 1.11 st J07 741\ ~ 7•'4 IV. Fii H•l Strt fl 'r" ~ i~l\41; J1pFll_ I 7» tA 1 12"11 ~ ~ Alct Std .36 6 7t t \\ 1 11'11+ \\ Cntul .1S. 6 )4 •Ui '2 41' \\ F1P~D 1.10 1l 111 l "" ll~ 1, + "JtnPllOI ..S 22 1J3.. J!lil t3
AICGll Lb .16 ... :u $.1'4 U \li 33\11-Va hi'!; Ill .M 6 2 10 10 10 ~'iu't.'1J~ 1: ri ,r,,_ HK'• " + "'j C~P'I r 1 ii "i ,. ... :w.•+ l\ ~:r~·n" 2:= 3: ,~ th.. 2~ ,mt~ ~~/rXIS ~ 4
", 1',11r~,~ 1m+ ~ ~~111~ i~ 1~ 2f ~ ll~ ill~~ ~5Y:i~' ,"~ t f~ M ~· H1J;.:!: "i• Al!AmLt ,. 15 1S 1~ 10111 Joi..-"' Cfl. PnNm I 10 " ,.~ ""' 3'1\+ ~ r 3 07b IQ 21 po,;, H"' J7V.-.. JGllM\y I 7 JU "" ltt-' AUl9C'p .!(IF) I ,, • '"' ·~ P'f-"'C::fl.IRI (I UP t 11"' 11 ,, -1'9 :r~M " '5 Miii u -1,1, jollnlJn . Sl IM I I I'"' i· Allglud 1.20 6 79 m\ ~ 23\0+ \Ii Ch Rief NW . 2 12\li 11 12 -'16 Fhhr F .ioa ·; 151 10\lt 0111 10'1!1 Diii! Svc t 45 tt\~ l'I ! •+ Allg Ludpl J , I :Wl'I :UV. )d\IJ , ChockF ,JO. IS JS i\ro SI.lo Jiii-'-Fl r Sc .Ii t t1 ni, 1 1~ \Ii JonLOllfl .J f le 31~ I • -\\ Alig Pw ,..... I it 201Ao ltt1 20 '::'!:n Cr1:.J si ~ 11\IJ I~ 1tv.t~ F1=nn1 :12 ' ,., 10'4 10 ID'.-It J-• L l.lS ' • u ,~, ~ . AllmGrp Sic t 27 IG-\4 I~ 1°""-,,_ S r 11 ' Flltf"ll O 1111 I 322 10 9~ 10 jDr911n I lO!I j j ~ 23'\ 23,. • AlllCI (ti l.;t1 12 ltJ 37\/o 36>,1, 31°"+ ~ Chl'YI r J,."40 A 1<M 26\11 2S'4 :UVo Vo FlexlV•n $Ir 12 n 20'1o lJ.\11 20lli +'• Olilnl .16 ltl4 lih lt«o+ •• AllllMM ... n 10$ 32•.4 )1'16. 3'V.+I~ c~i:!.'f 1 ~ ' n: 1m 1\~ 1~ t: Fllnlkol \,(II 1 .511 llV. It 11"-I• JO¥MIQ 1...0 22_ 51 31~. 31tt )~+ I. AlklProd ... ' " 11 1't• 11 c~ Go.I 1 "14 ' 22 23 ~ 72'16 !'II E (NII I 1 14\o'J ~I'll 2•1-1 -K ·-' AllJ..:tSt lA I "~ 23~ ~ • (l nGpl t'.:it 1:)(1 112\!a 112Va l12\o't-i' Fl10..5 ,,s ' 261 14\lo ll~'oU +-\.'1 1(•1-.-.• jO 1' 110 m. jltll t ,111 Alljj S\opmkt 11 1..s s~ ~ $\ + l'o cl,.<; pt JM z2:r0 91 ~ 91 +Iv. Fl1Pwr 1 IO 10 65 ~ :U :W\l · l(e 1o1 pf 1!' . 1 st\11 ~il'li + •
Big Move to lrvi1ae Allh (l'I ,16b 11 2•1 11~ II~ nt:-4~ c nMll• 1 . .0 ·n 1• ~ :Jsv. lSlot.--llo F11'1h I~ li , tm ~\'• g~:_ Vi ~~.!~. •50 ·; '1 '12• , .. 6 I ' AllrOlllA ~ 1 11 t\.li '"" t\.li+ \IJ CIT Fin 2.2Q 11 1..S 40• 4'14 4'\lt-1,1, ~.I ( 'sk ,, 26J 4~\lo d \.'J dl11 K(t °''I i:i. . ' l J' 'm'i.6 S "th T I dJ•~""' . AI0111 ~• ·'° 1 t 14'1\ 14 11 -"' !'T c'l!)f J>Jr 1 110 uo 110 uor " 1 ,. ,. n _2 l(~I 10 6 "' m 1 «o mi oo , a •l.J)JOD of Smith lnternat1onal Inc:., quarters on a 47·ac:re site. The plant will employ .-.1,oe 1.t4 16 301 ~ n"" nv.+111o 111e.s. 2.-n _. •1'-.. v.. .....,+ 111 ~l~'wio! ii jU 31111 3011o '°"'+"' K.C:PL• i20 10 10 n 11o1i "1• ·" · · •ts C Ja I I th '-· Th Amt..c: .lQ 1 7 1~ 101'1 10\lo-\'I llll.So 2.21b 12 II Ji"° 3'1.'i lSl.lo+ \0 Y or 1 ~ 11 IM-'llt l(CPLPI uo r:it 41' .., -.~1 is moving 1 ompton p nt to a si e n e u v1ne 1.200. e company makes drill bits for petroleum, AtrKor .1Sb 1 u ll• ~ 4'i+ ,,.. ~1.., 1nv ·'° s A11 12'tlo 1"" 1w.-v. ~~ 'f :1 • ~ riYt n v 1tti Kc,u1 •.35 •. 110 Jt"' wl'll ~1\11
Industrial Complex. T he firm will be building a 320,-mining and construction industries. :~:r: 1: 2~ 1~ ~.4 mt ~v.t ~ ~/1~ :;~,,;''\ .: ri ~U J: 2~ ~~=~a '218 ;i 2~ 1{"' 1t~ 1t~ ~~.!':~ 21 • zk 11~1• 2t,~ 2f~ " 000 Square foot Off·ce d { (Ur"ng h d A l-IH pt l \.'I 21 81'ilo 1614 17\.li+ lot. IY ortl 45 ~ <lllllo •"" ' .. "' 6\IJ 6'h-'h ICll'I GE 1.52 8 11 "~ 1~ l .... . I an tnanu ac I ea • AmAlrFI . .ct 21 ]1 ~ m. ~ VI cl~ g,, 1·: 1: I~ 1'11'1 1r' tt"'-' \lo ~=t:Mrn1n:;i, , H'h lt\li 19.,.._1., IC•nN•b 1,12 IQ ' Iii.. IS Ute.+ ... -------------· -------~~~------------------------------1Am AlfllMl ..,, '°" IG\.'11 IOflo+ 'llt c~c ot ,;,,,. i .II .9')li • 5" .. .. FCW'dM UOa 5 3ll SS\t Sl\io 55 -"' IC•nPLI 1 411 10 31 tJ\'I 22 U.17+-\41 r Amll•k .20 , 22 7~ 1" 1'11 Cle Clffb 2 12 2 7"' ~ 1N--\lo FOi' Melt .. 6 111 ltllo IN 12t\-\:I ic.ly lnClwt 1 22 J\ti I ;tc \'
ARCO Up_s
&as Price
LOS ANGELES (UPI)
-Ci~lng higher costs for
crude oll purchases, Atlan·
tic Richfield C.O. has in·
creased its wholes31e price
for gasoline and other
petroleum distillates by
one cerit per gallon.
C.Ompany officials said
Monday the action f9llow·
ed a review of cost
justification data by the
C.Ost of Living Council. -
IBM Stock
Slips Badly
~~~, i..:. 1\ ~ ~ ~ ~ it ~i:~eE~ ~·~ IQ Jl~ ,Li2'111 ,l,1~ 1~ + "" ~~~ta 14 · ~ lm trl~ 1; t ~ ic!t:;fer '~ 11 ,t ~~ ~~ ~ ~ Am Bklo .211 f I II 11 11 -\'o ClevEpt 7•44 m--M"' ft\.'I 9IVl+l\.'I FortHw "::151 21 7t 2.3\i 22\o\ 22\Jlo-1 K•ulllpt 1\~ 1 21~ 21'11o 2'11111-"' Am C•n 2 20 t 4' lO 21''111 lO • cl & p111 1:)(1 lOlti lO\lo O Fos!IOY . 90 11 119 all'I 4.)\~ •lint -~ K ..... tck .l'O 11 t 9"' •V. ,......._ '1 A C•n pl 1"11 6 2'\~ 2J"' 2• + 14 (1~o -S2 IS a In\ U'11o i,:+:; FOlltbllrO 6(1 31 62 Al M>'.t '1 + !Mi IC•'l'llrA .60 S 1 11 ... ll'l M ...... lot A CllM 1 7@ la 1, '1 I~ 16'111+ It Clvett p. 50 1 129 I • ~ .... ,. FrinklM 20 19 39 11 .. 17\li lR• KNflfCo 10 ' lt • :N i ... CllWI 1.20 • 2't ~ 24fio Uh-'-. • • ..-,.. M 1 70 1 n ~ 2•~ 2•"-\l.r ICellt!' In ·'° J ' 10iolo ID'M I ,.
A Cy:1tt 1.MI 10 150 2•'4 2l'lll 14 -'ii ~:xr:~pfcJ l$ n: ill: ~ ~=+ ~ ~::'Ullnd ' Al 6 91 1, Jn:, 11~;,...."' Ktllo!KI .S. II tt I~ It\\ 1 + 1.6 Am 0111111 1 IJ 2 11 18 " • ~.-,pf l !O 47 16\.'ll ll'lo l~ -0 0..-ICtll~-H I.JO 8 " 211'11 21\\ . AOlllTtl oll 2• S ,,,. 41\~ •1 ~+ \!', oc.Col 1 ·90 "2 107 1 .. ,. >< ,.... " G OI >·• O > '2 1,"' 16\t ,,,._ ~· ICtnmll 1.20 t J 17W 2Jtli ~ • W k ' OK f A s l N d d AmOu.i v11 . l 6V. 6V. 614+ ~• I . ..,,. l ...,... . • ' ,Ns \lo 3 2 l(enn«.ot 2 10 m 33~ ll'4 'I or ers 0 uto ett ement ee e ~Ji:!: i~ ' ,,: ~ ~~ ll:--.~ Eoi:::~ ·~ 2\ I~ ,1~ ,l~ ~1 + ~ 0:~ c co_i 1 :: I~ l2'11t 11"'+ 1' ::,.,0111 1:~ ~ 1l; n: N"' 7t't= ~ Am Exwt llt 1 IJ.1111-1•+1·16 c=!n :t ~ JI k~ ~ ii~.:!:.~ ~F re t~ .. 1~2 i;, :~ ~Oh Ktrr~ •'h •· 43 l .. 'l 1411'1 li1" ~1!l.r-1.~~io J~ 1~ 1~ 1~~ it l:lf-.:1k~ ,; M l~ 11~:; l~ft+ ~ G1~SQI 160 · '.!,.~. ~ l:1ro +t :Z ~1~nw ~ : 2I ~ ~~ .~ DETROIT (UPI ) -Despite less money·tha'n they wanted. UAW C3lled the strike In 22 ... F111r iv. .. 1100 21~-211.a 2111t-~ comn-A-4to " 2m 5~ 2~ 11 ~-o!: it t1 ~ 2ffi -23,,, 21~ 1.1. ic:1m c1 1.20 1s 11M ..i•;. 42\r. 1 AGnB lv.b •7 2.S,.. l~IJo U<il . Col Penn 20 41 \26 '6V. ts 651i>-~1 -rCID n · 7 ' I' .... li'n 1~ \\ IClnotOS. ,30 I lJ ''°' 114 ' + ~ tentative agreement Monday Woodcock called the non. statesandCanada. ItwastheAG<is 1.otb . • 1114 1"9 11t1o-'l\)~!O"St 1CM 1 10 1sv. 1s1'1 1SV1 g1"f" 1 -~ 1 11 u"G9 111114•~+lf•K:r1 N .n 11 •7 37"' :16\e +\)
to end its strike against Chrys-money issues in the contrast a fastest settlement in UAW ~ ~ '.:1:: 7 Ji: ~~ ~~1 h"e:!: ~ ~111:r i'.": 7 12: ::~ ll~ l:~:t t o!f, .. v,.c..,c '1" 1~ ;i ~ $VI #lt+ 'h ~~~ 1_: 1 ~ :f~1 ~ ~'t.t ~
ler Corp., the United Auto · "tremendous breakt"-ugh " history AmHo15t All 1 16 12.,. 11" 12 -~• ~ es \·"' t :no 2'\1 21'1> ll'--1~ ~.-. °'" ,. 1 .. ~ 11 111. iv111co i.n n 111 •Sl4 "'" ..,...-. ncv • • Amlnvst ,50 6 10 I~• 1'111 I,. ol G•s .90 I ' ·102 )9,i 25\/t \;-~' ~~1 ~·~ • 13 u'" lJ.U. lll't-i.4 .W:r'"°' .10 :16 Sll Jt\6 » '1i ;"L \' Workers s3id Tuesday assem-espec1"ally them· troduc11·on ol a AM1oc1tc1 .n • lla A<t 7'11 1~ v. ot P'kture1 . s1 •'Iii •VI 41\ ......... , m n -7, .... 17 '' -1~ l(l'Ofll!W .so 6 2 16'• •• l1 '-~ AGREEMENT CAME after ... M..:lkorp s lll •l'I ·~ •11+ .... olS Oh 1.n 9 22 2'\.11 Ill' 26 -,,.. ~ ..... 01 , ... ',! 118 ti'G 50 S1'4+1 Kr•r I.JO 11 ti 1,h ''~ ~fftt \It bly lines probably will not roll system that will a I Io w AMetex 1v. 12 "° 31 36\t. Jn.+.,. ~otwM 2.211:t t 19 2114 ~ 211ro+ \0 .....,, Tr 1.111 ~ 6llti U\9 + "K...-1 • .o. , 3 1~ 1~ ~\ti again until nei:t week. nearly 30 hours oC marathon AMIC pf s11o ' 9•JJo fl,. t•:wi+1,. omi. e l.s1 10 1" 11.1t "" 1''-'+ 14 ~J pt 2n 7 t '" 11.,. 13._ --t. i.--• •
employes to retire on a bargaining, interrupted only ='o~~ ~ Wi ~ ll' /.\~ ~ =~~ 1S 17 2i . l{:!' I~ ln?'-1 GnC•=,~ 17 ~ 1~~ 1~ i~tt::: t::::'Sn 1~ l {: {:t lf: ··1 ThiS, said UAW President pension after 30 years' work f thr ho b Ams"' .3611 11 3 '"' 1v. tVl.t '-cmwEd 2.JO ' io1 2'Vt 21'111 ,...._ "' 1..n l.tff ,.,, i 7"' 1 1 L.,..9,v n 10 , '°"" '°" _ "' Leonard WoodcoCk, is because regardless of age once or ee urs w en Am s11111 .61 1 10. 1914 191'1 1t¥i l'I corned"' 2 . 1 "~" 25'11 """ Gn ~·•11111 ~ j9 Wit 20.,., 20...,_ ~• tirMt 2_05o 1 21 21.., ~1..., ,.
1·1 w1·11 take the rest of this . negotiators said they sho wed A sme11 i.10 • 102 19~ lt~ 19.V. ~~~ l"'f ~ i; .. '~ '~ ~"Eiel"f~ 20 ir.i.1s '°"'.~"' )tvo-"" •trObt s11 13 • ti. 1 +"" , Am SlnCI 50 I 1i U\.'11 l,t .. 1•"4-\.'I ornwOU ~ i2 lll.l RI ~ t\'J .... G<!Food 1·40 12 161 26 2~ 2• + ... Lffl'Sltt .21 1 72 ~ 11' + \~
.we•k lor nat;onal and 1-al of· PENDING RATIFICATION signs of weariness. AmStliPI ·~ 1. sn 1 '~ SN-~ -• 61 11 123 ii"" 50\t. 51 i "'GenGr11 Mb 22 1 1•v. u w i.1;-11 LHrS111 211 . 11 ,,.,., H + 1.1t -f " I I b AmSl•rJI .a 15 •1 11'111 111'1 11\lt-omovtl' Sci 130 l l\o lV. J'hl 111 Gl'IHotl Cp I 1 1~ 1~ l~ LtMCoC .4CI J 1Jt 12 II" ,o,., f'·cers to approve the set-o tue sett emen • a out Besides the 3 0 ·and· out AmTtT 2.IO 10 1211 .u1 .. ,,.., •i111+ ~ onMAl'fr SOb ·1 1 11"' 13"' ll\:r. \:r. a." 1n11r 21< u tis 221'1 2111 n-. Leascpt '·'° s 21v. tn• + "' 113 000 bl II k , AfTIT T pt • , 216 51'\.ll S6?a .~11 ... + ~ 0 > > , -I I I J l :IS'4 llo"" U\-tit LteKOI 2 20 5 27 "'h -'.:0 tlement arid it must then go , ue co ar wor ers re-retiremen t plan, the major ATTllfA 3-" .. s1 5111/J »:i;t 50Yi+ \" :'1o1r 1,4ri, 1~ ~ 11t lt:.::! lf4+ '· ~~ :U 11 11 11• 21v. 20Y1 21 14+ " L•11wy JQQ u a.1 •2'• otit +n, main.awayfromwork ...r.-A • f 1 f h Am'ra,T wi . 4n 51• S\.lo. A.+.•~onrace '° 9 1•1A 16:i.um Gtr.M111 1at 20 11os1°"'s.°"'11'.9-ll LHd1o&H .sl!2• 21ui,,11 1 11 before rank·and-file workers · · non~\.vr1Vm1c ea ure o t e Amw11r ..,. 6 lD 101 .. 10 1011t on Ed 1 ., 10 u• n 11.v. u••+ 1, GMlu 111 1:i:. 2116 t1 97 ,, -1 L"~"' .so 1 1 ''"' '•14 " '"
for ra'",·cat•"on . Still \li'Orking, a I th Ou g h contract concerned the man· Arntron .6.S s 2s 1J~1 121-121-"" onsEd pt" 6 . 1 1s Ji 75' . GnMot 2.t00 1 .QI ... w u.,., 6J~'o-"-Lt11 P• c ·'° 1 •2 "1~ 1~ !,"!:· ... U AmnSI .\Ob 4 72 S\• v,, J + \o (Ot11Ed pf s 2 62'1!1 62'A. 62\.lo GnMOll>t J.\11 6 SI'"' SI'• J4'1 Lt~ V1I Ind 10.S I~ I~-'I negotiations continue On 3 COn· datO...., 0 V er t i m e that Ameltk .10 I 211 llh lJ ll -''! ConE pf 4,65 ' 1100 S1\to 57\(j i11l4t -.:. GenMol r S ' IG 11~1 71~ 12 + 'h Llhmn U~b .. II IS 16'41 • \Ii
UN DE. R TllE. b I · h 'J AMF In I OB t 121' 2~1 2t 21 -lo ConsFd I.XI 11 ljO 2'14 ,.,,. 2'tll> 11 a.n Por .IQ 6 102 10 t •o 10 Ltnn•r (11 • 41 8\4 7\1. 1 -"'-contract, t e trac cove ring t em, were automakers can demand of .a.m111<: " 1 .u 14"' 161t 16>M+ •,1 conFoo1 •v• 2 79 11 79 +no G Put>u 1.&0 , 166 19•, 191'1 1i~ L•rio• 1n .60 1• " 31¥1 l1'\ti !SE •·
UAW b alctk-gh OJn about }5 ()00 h'te COiia AMP lflC: » .U 1•2 '""" <16 •rllo .. Con Frgt 56 10 6$ 11~ 1~ 1~+1 Gtn Rtlr1i;t I 20 6 )\1 • Lev t-d C•P 1 th t\li ~ won a re 111uu .nr • w I r workers. Am11eoP 3' 6 J 7\0 1~• 1.v. .. , .. consNG i03 , • 2, 1v.. ~ 111 GnSlarw.1 .'5 21 39 ri1t 4 '• '!,~-+ :• L.tVI sir' .... n '' "'"" »ft ~ and-ut ret1"remenl plan and workers An\111111 CD n 131 "'-~ .,.. w Consm Pw 1 ' 70 u "* 2Y:il Gn StMt Ind J :»1 l '• .T<S • 1..e-111 F11rn 10 uo 6h w. ~ \t
B-atifi~ation ' Near
obtained relief from man· The announcement. fl.1onday ' Am111r 1.1\l 1 '' 1•'1111 u11o 2'111+ "' onP pt 1 • ..s . r 9,-'' ,.. . TE 111 2"" 4 u•,. ~ 31 .. -Ll1111-ro 2 20 1 '° ll· :aw. 1.o ,.. ' Under the contract workers Amlll11 C«P 6 27 5\lo ~ s1i.-le ~"' Pet/ 4"1 •. llO ™41 \Hi s.M.+ \\ T E l n 10 lll 21~ ?I"-21~+,w Ll'E Coton IS I $ •h r·
can refuse to work more than Ams~d 2.'° 1 s >9\lo 39\lo 39v.+ v. onP pf 1.16 z1000 ''"' n~ t1~+ ~ ~t=l•lll ,.,. 1600 n 11\'t 11•,, •+ --)1 LOI' --~ 11 .. i. "" ~ datory overtime rules. of the three-yea r contract . ho d tha Amtel In .20 10 • 6'Jo 6 61/o+ :i;. ontl Air Ln 1s uJ 7'4 1 :m flFllll 1 lO J100 17\'1 17\.'i ,., -Ll~r. McNI 45 26 ~ w. , -
AJ In turn. WOrkers Will r-i·ve came i·ust 63 hours after the rune urs a ay or more n Macon .31b ' 151 ~ nl't 2l11o-'' ~n c1n 1..60 , 91 2'1'11 :u t "' Tl,.. 1.10 • s 21• 11¥1 it 11 -~ L 11r •CD .lll • .., l""° 1'Yt " te S •t '" 54 ho k tha Ancl\Kc 1.(11 6 7t 1"9 11\llo 11\i.-\.lo. on CODP'f 1• $6 1'9 )% \.e _,... U ~ 11'1 1-"t--Ill \..Ool~Ln 411 1 14 t1t ~ · .. 1-----.. {l·W UfS a Wee Of more n Ander Cl .JO 6 11. IMt 11 11\lo-Ill on!ICo 2 . .tO 1 16 )n'o 31Yt J :;to loenUll'I, .4 31 16.S ~ ~ "U t l"' Llber pt j~ I l:Ma l~ . -•--· •• •-------------------------------\:'w~o!j-,,,co~·~·-~u~U~v~e,...~Sat.,'!turd~~a~s Anci .. nu .1Q '' 1 1a1."i 1011o 1011o cnnsPc_ pt21'1 .. 1 .i •I '' .• ~f>W'Pf /·• . ZZ20ll ,.,.. t1 ... Liou "'I 2'11 11 10 lll . 11• ._ ........... y . :t:.ul_~ -I ".15"' lS 1$ -~\ 1111\i!. 1.H 12 21 ~~~· l'I Gerber .35 11 3 17\ro 17111 P"" . loo LlllY El .lt2 :u JU n 1J ,..,_"'
TIJLSA. Okla. (UPJ) -For
the first time, a smalier com -Ch I E . ~ e ,company n! atnS Cer• A="t I ~ 7 r;ir~m-14l11+ \lo ::nny~{~1t 'tt-!\ji \'I I.~~ 8JHY8~~b..f:-5l·Ul__j2fV.J~ tJrn,~~·--:~ 1i-1ri ·>t~.U: ~~ t ~ ta1n limited rights to impose ~ .1rtt J7 45 Jl'I :Jl.1 llto . . onMIQ .1111 10 .s 11\t 1 11\.11 G[•nt~ .~ 1 li 1~ 1"" 1M11 Lllln ,v ~1 2 6 1~ ""' 1,.._ 111 e V1rO e ngme mandatory overtime. ::J-o1 ',o:.: J ~ ,m .~~ ,m-\lo ::rf.I ~~ 1~ fl' flU ~~ Wt+ ~ 81.ti 1dwi~ J lS 1::
1:~ 1t~-... t!::::OofA 6 ,;t 1}: I~~~ Applltd Mei 11 16' 5,.. SI• S\'e+ ~ ontrt 01~ 10 1141 n'l4 '7 3'\.'t+~ GlffHlll .Me 7 4 U\.'I IS\11 Ill.It-• L-9C I 16 6 so ,,. ~ ...
PAY WJLL increase 3 per AllA SY 1 ll u 3<1119 111\:o lit~+ \4 ::::. ' 2 • a3lj1 2j\.'ll ~ lltt-YI Glllollll 1.JO ?l m mt t~i" ft:'!~· L.orn•,FI .3' 11 ,. 1?"4 lm ~ • A~1l1N .1• 41 1 6't ~. ~1 Ollie Un .57 5 ll , 4 J:\lo 'v. Glnt:I$ Inc« 5 ?• 1 ,,~ u .Z ,. LomM 2 350 13 2A '3\\ • ·;t;,a+ ~
th th UAW ht Wood ~ c 17 25 J\lo i,,_ sv.+ \ -1ne1 .• 1• , 21r. 21'4 11r.± ~ lch 1 6 n ~ 201• 111ii-\lo Lc:n<11u ... • ... ,. :J
puter company has been suc·
ccssful jn an antitrust suit
against 18~1 , and computer
analysts believe the l9ng-term ,;~ effeCts ·or the decision could Reductions Told
cent yearly ln each of the !~~~0E,;"l! ~ 1tt ~ 4lt; 4l~t ~ -1n11 .JO lJ uo u JS\.'J JS~ -A 81:.T ~ U Jlt l~~ 11~ u..._. \to pi~0·s"i~i l 1l~ {i\t l~~ l
three years of the pact, less !~:!';~ 1·~1 : ~ ]~ :,Z J;.:tt ~ :::t~ .kr: 1l t: 1f.: 1~ 1!!:: ~ ~ ·~": t l!~ l~ l!~ ~ L=:-s10 1, ... ,•, u,. a.1! 'a.'" +_:U
an e soug . · ~oS 1 : 7 m l<i~• ,, 1.,,.,_, ~ C1PO J1:1~ " 51 1tw ~ gw+ i. GooOYrflr 1 211 2'1t 2J'oll 26\1+ 11 LIL IJf 1 ~· 1 10 •1.
cock said the cost of lheArmpf2.1Q .. rif12111'to21 211 .,.;, or~r1 1 ep 5• J~23,~ • .~~Gor1:'~·21 z :il~JJ~~ t::'iOocM~;~ 2j ~ 1"· +.~
package was "Very, .very ~:~'(': i is 13' ~~ ~"' .J:YI+ ~ :US 12~3J: 1l 2il 1~ l~ 1,-t, ~ct W ·1w•10 297 2.-it 2•.,.._ v. t:~:~fc"'.J fl ~ ~~ ft +1~
... ..
·-.
.. . . ,....,..,. ...
~ ...
~ .. .. . -
-.
stagger the monolith of the in·
dustry.
"IF IBM doesn't win its ap-
peal , this matter could be
damn serious," Stover Bab-
cock of the Dreyfus Fund said.
The immediate effect of
Monday's $35.2.5 mi 11 ion
decision ·In favor ot Telex
C.Orp., a n Oklahoma-based
computer company, was to
send IBM's stock down $26 a
share to $272 oo the New York
Stock Exchange. Telex shares
nearly doubled, rising $3.38 to
$7.63 a share.
. In order to meet interim
1975 federal exhaust emission
levels, Chevrolet M o t o r
Division said it wiU be reduc-
ing the availability of engines
currentI:,r: released effective
with the ~tart or 1975 1nodel
production.
The announcement \\' a s
made Monday by F. James
McDonald. a General Motors
vice presiderit and Chevrolet'
general manager. to members
of the press during a West
Coast preview of l 9 7 4
Chevrolet passenger cars and
trucks in Newport Beach.
1 cyli nder; 454 cubic-inch VS;
and the 140 cubic·inch, single·
barrel c:arburetOr. fo u r·
cylinder Vega engine.
hlgh"fo tbeUAWbec fArtntti..lMI' 12~~»\l .,, -· 'c-1s 2 .:WO·~ cs:~: .... u .. 1a 'Dl2\lolll'tl2 +l•L1111C..1lto\O l t~n +•1 r ause o Ari> co .fib 1 1•1er l• l' -YI 011 1,,. .lS 1, 21 ~ r.1--'\\Gf"•nlv 1.3' s l 21 n il ~ ·,. 6 3J 16\\ 11 _" the non·money concessions Arv1"1ne1 ..s2 11 16 1""11 11"' 16~ ni PC1n11 1.n 1j 121 211v.+ 111 grlllf~W 12 1{ ll'T 1:~ 1::? I~~ l rv c-1 " 10.,. 1Q + " _..,1 ASA L1d ..SO ,. 67 "2~ .0 .Q..,......"" r1neC ·1 11 I Al 114' . riy · 3-ll'o Jot n :i. LTV COl'P A 2 II~ ii\ \I Ch, .l'"'er made. Mill 011 1.JO • 365 21v. »1't 2ra+ ,,., r..:111 Fl . lJ 1'111 1'11 :wi+ 1.,. o:~~ 'rnD 11 •7 n.v. 11~ 1~ \lo LTV co s Ill' :: 11 "' AsDfYG I.tel lO 193 :W '*5\!o ')SY,.... '>'I rcmo IC . 1 13111 13 l!i:..,.... at G ~ "· lt t~'O-1' Lllbrll06 412 61 iltt -~ nie Uft,W which will take .... Slit' l.10ot I 1 """ 2.f'I\ 2•1--v. l'OUlel-i • IS 10 ii: 2N + \.11 ~,bk,O \·.rw 'iJ f3 1ftt,. m~ IV.+ '" Luctlv ~t :5-1 lj ,,. 12 I \lo i
essentiaUy the same agree-.-.1111-.n • 10 111A 1~ 11 . ........, lf 1.'° 10 161 32"" :nu, .. .!!'",'••' , ,.. 21,. 21 21.Ji+ .,. L'*"'Stf :.a ti " ~ • . AUOC Trtnl .. I 6 6 6 r~ Con. 1' 162 . l4'flo .._ \:. r '# 13 " ~ J2 J2~ tio Ludlow I OI )1 I rm l'
• AS 'FOR T R U C K S Mc-' AtlcMt LSOb • 1 1~ 1111o 111\-Iii l'Wfl pt '·'° 110 " " " + 1'1 ... s · >* Jiiii+ ,,. L v 0 c 13 a ·~ . ... · • ment to Ford and General .-.1KNE 1.a . t 21 21Y.'i 111Ji an )TS CP .40 ·, 1• 11w. '"' 11.,.._ "' &: ~:tin u: · · 1! 1~ 1, 1, LYll• yqf~ 11 14 Sf\ " + ;. Donald explained tha t the fl.f tOr Co f tr ct At1CE111t p,11 . . 1 11 11 11 +1v. ~ulllqen .:w n 20 1m. 1p• 1n.-v. Gt1 w In ·· 1 m ~ ~• Lrt.• p1 3lJoc: 17 1,~ 19" ~ " 350 rubic·inch. two-barrel V8 ° 5 rp. or con a At Rlchfkl 2 21 506 •• ''"".. 3 umln•o·"• 1/ 11 'f:: ·~"!~~Gm~:::,~·, '' lt 11\t it + i.. ~ M--
engine "'ould Oct be available talks with .them, gain~ i~ ~r::: l~ ·:. ~s lr" :1~ £~ti~. ~n" ~ n ,,, jC~ ~ 11 -\'t ttvbcl 1!: ' 100 l~v. i~ 1~"'"+ ~=:~id·'° 1f ,~ 1r-1)'4 ;~ '
creased fringe benefits 1n :~RUI ~ 1 4 J u~'A 151~ i~~+ '.4 ~~~:'~~ li 10~ v. C mt:.1t:: ~~ ·'° ·1 ~ ""' t \.\o ~+ "'Mack• .JO ' 1• '"' '" : .. " for light-duty Chevrolet trucks holidays, insurance and . .-.Tb' lllC ~: 6 3S .1'4 ~ 71::.t' :,·,: vc1,c:s~ \ ,t \ ~ = tr'..,. 4' Ulrdl":nn "' i6 ~ ~~"" r.111'1 ~*+ I• =~1 i1~ : :: ,."' ,~ • +11 in California, and that the six· d" al be f"t and. ed .-.111cm Diii " 7• ~ 6, ... a • l'·'"' • .. ·-" ll .... ,, ,__ -· ···-•••< -me 1c ne 1 s unprov Automt 1nc1s 1 1t 41• • •1 "tlo -o D--1~ 1 1 ~ ,.,. 1 ......, ,;ou ...... .. "" · ·
cylinder 250 cubic·inch engine health and safety checks in ~~Cp c~: ) n r~ r;r. r~ "'ri~t SK 3J 2tt .. ,_ ~" da~+1111o ti oR,J:~ \ 135 ~ .~ ,2 ~ :=rJtUI~; '; ~ m :u J"'"'+ t would be restricted to half-ton 1 ts .-.v,a 111 l 20 ' :w SS'h 35'.-t\ ... co 1.36 1 111 3 JO -b '* 30 1, 1,_ 1 + ,... MlllNv ·'° u 1s2 1att 111' 11.ght-duty trucks nati"onally. P an · ..,_....,,,.. ;:rs .a 20 Ul'I a nvr+ ~ •rt •n .lD!I ' If 2"4 ~ v.-,v. 1u 112 i:i 21 lM'I l"-1,_+ ~ M1f11rteo 1 10 "' 20\ 11.,. t 11 Avll lroc: .411 11 69 2\!fa 21 21;r.+ \!o 1rllnd pf 2 >fl mli 28\li .,.,_ ...:... 6 130 Uh~ :l'! \Ii MlilontH .l6 It 11 21"' 251, • "
O'he d I. · MS AvMtlroc: .30 6 2N 101• t\4 10 1v'o 1.i. 6 '' 16"'1 16.,. 1...._ l't WI n 6.,. 6 1_ \\ Mlftlnct .UQ 5, n 1~ · ,., r re uc 1ons 1n }.,, AliecOll 6k st 111 ~ 1t>i. ~.,., 1~11ntn 1~ • .» 1 ~ 7 i"' ...., ·: ·31at""1Q1 IOYJ v.M•nHn 1.S112 :m ~ J1-..'.M-\t
Chevrolet engine .availability AT&TPlaltS '-•onPr 1..0 •9 J-1t112\4 101'tlo111 -1"'~.~~orr 1·u 111 i~ ~~ W: l~t: 11on 1"311 ls .., 51\ ~ flit \<OMA~o .SI 10 31 m. » '~~-~ -B B-•nWll 411 f 66 ~ I ~-\lo --H Mo--~r•I'-M J II 10 t~ .,,_. ~ may be announced later in tbe a1b&.WU .to 12 110 ll"" ~ 2511o +v. • 1.c.. 1 1IM sr" S6U. +111o HK1rw 2.36 1 • lw. ~ ~ M•r Oii 1.60 11 .st ""' :u ·llS'>-~
f ;.1 B1kt!' In .16 27 J mt 211' a.. . o.1 Mnt 1.20 t JS \Iii 11,_ 11'9 HMIPID '1• 62 \H~ 11"4 \io MerCOI" pf 2 " !01'\ " ••• +1~ IM4 model run. Becht JJO '' 2ll $"" -''• s>.o • Dtlft&L 1.16 1 260 1•v. lS\O st-,,. H.alllbln 1t1 39 "17\h 16'\.'a 1 ~re« .to 10 a11 15"' ,. ... .,,._ i 2
McDONALD SAID that Ive C 0 n c e r n 1. n g the an-le B•lr•rOll .31 » 69 " ,,.,., :n~-~ o.t11.-.1r 60 u 1" 50'I "1'o lOV.+ ,... H•mdCD • 21 ~ ,.. •,,:t'+ ·~ M.,.ltfTI .20rt 1s 6t "°l) •"I ' car enoines now p d W e110'0H .J2 1 u 1J11o 13 131• °''* 1,;1n s u '"' m ~+ :i;. iunc111 ' ft 1 m 'n.+ "'MerMld 1.IQ , 12 ~ Ult> + ~
U.S. DISTRICT J '"'"e A, passenger e-· nouncement, A1c0onald mart.> e1·i ll 8•.I,..~•, I.~ • ~i. 2~ u,,~ lmt1~ Dellon• CP s 2211\'I 111/o 11\.!o-v. ~::CH :00 l 11 l 1~ li"+ ~ M•rlonL ,,. JO .. ~ loll\ + l
""ti available fQJ' sale wquld got be -1 ai.v• P .... -z ... ttYJ o-.1111 to 1 " 2~ 231,1, 23Y.+ " • " ~ """ fS"'-..., M1r1tn 1.11 ii .., .,.,. "'"' Sherman Christensen. in a 217· the fQllowing -statement: ::~: 1.~ J ,; 35\'» r =+ 141 Oennlll'lpi t '·' I 20 _20 20 t Vo tt.~~ri•"~ 2: llt 1Wa llY. tlllf ~ M•••'l' ·'° 21 , ... 4.) ~ ...
d ~ ''W "II t th 197' . s ll • st B1ngor ftn A 20 I 7V1 t + .... 0.nn)'I .N lt 7' 14'A -1.nt "' HMAts :if-·16 l~llW !!"' 141 qn Cmt 11 J M ''°' .. page ecision, granted a $352.5 e Wl mee e ,, in-te te te B•nor 1 1v. 1 1~ 1,v. 1414-\(o OtntiPIY .... 1s " u~ • ~ . . H•tmlO i.J 1 "' 2"ii 2'\o'o v. ,,. M•rr'" 2\.'Jk ., 3u ,.,. ,,.. ..
ml.Ilion award to" Telex and B terim emission standards and a I. i &nk :.?'Hv. 2 '1 21 33 3m 33 + "'0.Sotoln .60 ' 29 ll\4 1~ 1Jllo+ 111 H•rt•h• ·ll ll ., 14l'I 14\'i !ft" M ... .,, .. 1.l• ' 12 ""' 2Nlo ' + It Ut S0Jlle , • ~ elJ-~ B1"k Vt ta 12 2 28'4 2"I 'tl\lo . O.IEdls l.•i 10 M> 1t'4 lt 1~+ \ti Herrll 11. 63 mt. 3G"" ,~+ 'ot MettlnAJ .40 ll 10 ~ ""' ,._ ~ ordered IBM to hall uni·t pri·ce I ff -..r st ill make avaibble as many hflkTri.11i, lO lt S1Vo s.s'!ll 51 o.1e.p1 t.n . t.SO '""" 11,y,114'1! tt.f'Ko 1q " io 11 '•"" -"'Mlrt~ 1.11 1 2' 11"' 11 "'-_ ~ g ne 0 e .--.ng• . . B•tDefOI ft 7t 30\'t 20\li ~ ONE pl ,,,. .. 1110 ,, t7 ,, +1 H1rtSMll ... I 15 1 " s ,,.. Md Cup "° • ltl ltVt "" I~'
claim forces customers to ac-tCifl· hove to flO• possibly can. But some will tionwide domestic satellite ==~~ ~t ;: l~ ; 1r"' 1~ ~ t 8:~1~ gtp J~ 1• 1~ ~ ~iv, n"".!_.;: a:= Alb I 1 ;; U U\i. H¥i:t .,., ~=~' ,i: 1; ~:: = ~ +1;
-cept systems c:nnnrised en· ~ have to go. system to be operated by ::~rt J; J :J: :" = :Ui:::.,... &::~\~,,:~ ~~ 1~ n\lt 32~~ U"'+ tt1 ~·:~"\~ :: :J ~~ ff~ flit~ ~1.r!. 11= ; 1~ k't ~~ + ~
tactics, w h i c h competitors • • • engine offerings as w e One of five stations in a na· a..rMt i.'60 ' 21 me M>YJ ""'-v. DetE Ill' 7.4! . 11ot n fl tJ . H•rte~1 ·l,t 1J 11 ~ 25~ Jn \It Mtsc.Co .m :u •1 SJ1i11 ~VI f •
lirely of IBM compcnents . . "While the recent interim American Telephone and e1x1tr L .is 1.2 "1 SI~ ~ ~ + ~ Ol•m s11m 1 ' 2u 21111 '°"' 21v..+ "" HtcliMll ;..; 11 lt 1n1 1l"" l~ ~ Mellet .m11 . u1 ~ 4.,. . ~ IL_-:_:':_::-:~;jiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~~·: off~red in 1975· · · .two will be standards gave us enough Telegraph Co. will be built on ::rritfii~ ii i: l lSt so1Ai 51)\;o-v. 81:~= P1'.~ • 1! ~~ ~ ~S:-~ n:J~~ 1:: 1t 1 1 :t"' U ..,v.+ 14' :!~ 1:: 1; 1': mt :,_. au.-~
-_e.J.J..m t n.a.le _d__j[Q_m J he_br.eathing space -to sur.viv" _ 8 45-aer-s·ita ea•l o£ "·-n 80!!L!_di 1J ~t 1!7 2j.,. ~ ~11.:t ~ Olcttphn .• lD 2't I~ ti) lotti+ Vt f'IA ~In .st 6 li11M 11\i 12, + \II~· 111 l.lO ll 'U 211,_ 211111 ft-k I I t' all a"d _,..---... - --'-•'u'r ......... "---~~~,,.llil~~.4 0Mbekl-..CV·-2l 10 MV•-M --M -~liel.,... cud • J-"-----•-'-4 ~ A.JnL.R....t 1•..wi.--l4~~-~a~ e ti:r~ ~~110~1 Ybc ~f. chan.ges in EPA certificati~n Pendleton, Pacific Telephone l~~ 1: 2' 121 1~'"' 1J~ ,,v.+ i. g::i1,c:;~q~ ~ 11~ n~ ,;: ,n::1~ ~ll~r~1'.:J1 1' 11Q 1:~~{.j~~ ~·~ ~ 1~ ;~ \1" ·,I~+~--
'
,. . •
I,'
'· . " ' . ••• " ... ..
-_._,. ,, -: .
"" ....... -... , ............. ~I() ... ...... _,,.,,,,,,.,..,,,...._
TlwQ/l<ro•"10d...,,,..~,..,....,.
OWN APART
OF WEST
LOSANGEJ_ES
M<>i• & Co";*'"'ll. th" hi m ... ih
11n '"'~IA>lt' 12.ur .. 1 tu,,.,..,
of ln1t11r1iy. l r .. hilil\I ~ "''""'
New l•Ye•tmcnl
Opport11nlly.
Brand New Apanmen1
Building In
Growth-Orlen led We~t L.A.
°"fectlwu:
1. Cash flow hnm operations
2. Appm:t.tlon
S. <Attain Tax adven1a gu
LOUTED PARTNERSHIP
W1l'H St.750
NINIMUN INVESTMENT
@ lllon&Company
-~_. __
1850\Nntwood Bkid.
Loi Anotln. C•hf, 90025 l213J •?4-M27 12131 fl79-06U C:.UOrWrt1c Toct.y
FOf' ,.,_,Ion C..11
(714) 557-7124
II;,"" ----------
r . . . reqwrements have resulted m officials have annowiced. ::=et 1 20 ; 4{ ~ ~ ~ \6 otur111111 pt 2 13 tt 21v, 21~ ~ Htt,,..Pr M 10 1 ' 1ff• W !uw.t,:; Mr.Otrmot 1 » 221 a.i 12 .:-~1 • fered for sale in California . new certification rules that ""'-" mill· 1 llit com et1c111H .30ci 14 •5 10 m """-\lo omon co 11 1J J :tttti 2"" "'!-"' !:!!'~•P .;a, 11 2~ 142.,. 2 J\\ McDonld c11 .st sit " 6, '""-• P • ''~ ... 100 sa e e ~ & Ul'twl ~ 10 261 mo ~ SJllll+ ~ Dfllnttw ,12" 37• II~ 71\.fi 71ft-2!6 ........ ""' . 17\.'ll 3All ·;,.. Mc:DonD • .ii 6 )45 21111 :IOI-~ . a.ssengcr ~ar n g 1 n ~ s have increased our load to a munications station to be 8!m1seo .so 1 2i 1"" 1~ '""':\: 11o 01111on .ltb 12 112 1m 1sV11 19'111+ "' ~:~~ .. 1.~ I? 1~ ~ lJ 1s =VI McGrEd '"' ' 21s me u~ -: ehm1nated nal!onaJly effective point ·,yher we )US! don't have kno th De Luz rth 8tndlx l.'° t lU 3Ali m~ Ul.loSS t l Vi DlllllS.. .70 21 ' 4' •1 •2 -V. Hnsklfl .21b 13 JS. •IV. li'v. •1 +1 .. ~.l'ltill 1.2';1 2 11 11 + \ · h -rod · · I d wn as e ea elll'ldlx Pl J . ' ss ,.... Olwir51fCI in . . 15' 1\tl 1i• 2 -v. HwtHl!n tt 2' Jl2 ~ 55111 5"tlo+l\lo ..... ,..,. o 10 J J~ s11o "SI\+ , wit 197;:. p uct1on inc u e the re sources to do the com· 'ta1·1on and the other four at ''"CD 1.2S ' 216 ~ J1 JJ\'I +•~ otvM1 t.1.Jt> ' " """ 2M ~+ v. Htwttt P .2a -mrn.5'3 a'li 1''11 '°"'-111 ~IC" MO i' ,. 27~ m. Int th .01\11 b1c inch t o-barrel s • • Btl'ICllCll 2¥1 . . t50 JI 3IM II "" Ot'Pfl)Of .24 .51 J.42 211\ :u~ ~ ... H1911Voll En "JD 45 .... N 1~ "" .... LMn ... I) 1 •""' ., .oft+ '1 e .,.,.... cu . w plete job Thr p ks Cal"f H I e.ne~ S\.'I •. I lSO 150 I" +-la DomtMn I• lt It u~ ln'I IW.-I'll HIUenbr • lS • ~-~ ~ McLlfl.$ IM 7 33 21\lo lOleli .,.__ carburetor VS and the 454 • ee ea • 1 ·• aw ey, atnCpt uo 2 mi n'I' n~ ~ DomF 1.01b ,. 1V1 7-lll N tt111on1-111 ' 1 10 31 n'h 23\'e nv.-111 =• .n 1 , I• 1~ ~-1
cubic-inch ..Y8 Corvette power "OUR ENGINES are Pa., Hanover Pa;k,. Ill. and L~!f ;~ l& fit 1f;'t Jt"' J~Jv. &::;:lit :~ ~J 1J Jv. u"' ~ .!. tr! :rik~Yl 1'/ t .J14 Jh :JV!.+ :wi ~P 218 1~ fl ~"° 1~ 'I 1
Plant cJaccified by displacement Woodbury, Ga., Will hnk three ',r.'"'• •, ...... ,, 1l arI r ~" f'"t 1t, Doric Cp .n 6 If ll'h 1~'4 l:W.-Iii Hownr 1.lt 10 11 ~ U't :lfW.-t-!':'!!!':!! 2.to j ' '31" I 1, · .,..,. • · t" tell"te to II · 1 I»-v. Oorr Ollwir ' ll l l't Sf\ th-~ Hoff Eltc!~ r lt N n~ P>6+ 4' ...._ 1.«I n n" 2 ~ I In addition these three carburetion and other fact.ors commun1ca ions sa 1 s 81~k o 1.0I .. , ~, 11~ 11m 1..._,_ "'aor...,,c .10 1 :n 1w. 1 ''" -t'4 Hot h1n1 .JO lS 3'l n v. '"' n 1ro+2h Me 1 corp ' 33 Ft. " . • lb B II s ' ' k f &i.lr Jn ... ..,. ..... ..,...... OOVrC:D I.CM 10 12 J7'ltl ... ~ Ill Hollll A .&Sb • , ,..~ Uft :Ml'r+J Mii S"'°9 .... 11 ~· 21fi; 2114 tHI.+. engines will not be available in according to EPA certification . ~ e . ys em ne wor ' 0 • ft~~~-~ I~ lJ l;;: 1;"' l~+ 14' eowct.'em I 23 115 ,,~ $6Y, $1\li+ ~ HoHYSll .7Sb • t ·~ 12'!' 11\lo ~vo J .u I\.\ m '""-I Cahfornia-250 cubic·inch six-groupmgs identified as engine f1c1als said Monday, e1u&&e11 .65 6 12' 1w. 16\tl 161'1+ "'o PF 1~ .. • 5 1. s + ~ ~=flkl..J g ~ 1mt 1ff'°' 1ff:t1;': ...... ~k If 1 11 Ji 2J ~ t! ~+ . . . . . Th t f the ti •Obblt Brb 7 I :K\ ~ ,.. Orl'iO 11'1 lt 21 »Ill am zm+ Mo Hoowr •21 7 I 24111 24* 2•1111 "'MlfCk 111 31 2'9 .. ..., u l 'fanuhes'. It IS a b1g job to e COS • 0 • en re BOllfl!I C ''° 10 f3 I~ ·1ri.: l~ ~Or_,. I ... I• 71 .._ 41'11 •\.'lot 11 Horl1on (~ J 56 u: 714 7v,+ '-Mltldllti ,7' r 2 1Nt lll! ii
certify just one family of system, wh1c:h will carry := ~= 1 ~ 1~ ~ ~T =:.:. J.i: ·· .:J :~ ::: ::+1~ Wo:l'" ,,, • 1 1 l~ l:t.-t! ::1111..r 1K 1 '• 1~ 1 + j
Coast Firm
Lo a n OK'd
engines It requires one 50 000-telephone conversations, data =oolr~O :·= ;g ,J = '11~ t!== ~ Df'tRtl 1.'6b . ,, 1••~ lt\.'11. lt\.'1-"' ~~·11: ~i ~ \ft "-ll:iti-a ...... ::: .1~ ~ ~ ·~ ' +
mile e;,nS>k>n test schedule ;nformaUon and other related ;~.:,/I~ ,! 'l 'l~ ,i 1.t ~ g::l.'l'l"! . .l n' J: ,lf: 1~ 11::+ ~ :::::i:'l~:I ;i i1l 1\i'l$ ll":~ :Of.,M .ji ~ ,ll I!" i~ ti
a nd up to six separate 4,000. messages from lhe satelli_t~ 1::1~ J;:: 11 ~ 1= IOlv. lltr+ \'i =: :1 f;S .: ,f: l:f l:f._ llf-11"' =.i~ /! ~! 2ft t'AI la lft:t l" ~~In 1:io st' ... '!~ ;~ . +ii
mile emission data f I e e t to the ground, has l5een ·~ •roe JG ' l•~ 1_.. :::+ "-8:~ p 11~ ~ ·;~ W; "°' =:t'.Jf 1 ~ ,. 1:1 :ow. :"' ~ 'Al ~~'°'; 1 11 lftt 1~ I
schedules for each family. estlmaled at f10 million. =~~1'1·ii :Ji bait ua }I[!: t= ,rc fl 1~1.m16f~1'~ t=W~ i: 1' SJ r~ l::w. UU:t t ~i'=vt .... 111 J1 ,1r ,tt. ·1, -:
Btl• M: pfi ~ 6 •llw'I Al' •11'1+ "" ~flt pf '"' •• 4 66\lo u"' ~-" How1til ·11• ,,, 11~ I™ ~+ .... M Gtoll!TIJ ~ 1 1616 l' l•IA~'
American, Marine Ltd. of ------------------------ill~~."'} :~ Jl L~ ll~ ll"':: ~ is;'iq~ 1~ ~t ~ ~1~ ~'"' fl~ :\\ ~1 .u; ~I ~ ~:V, Ir' J _ ~: Mt r~f;f \ ~ f~ ~ ~, NewpOl't Beach annoonced r eroc:k o/ .75 s 111 t,N fin lJ'A.+ \.'I DuciL Ill' 1" .. z120 24" 2• '!~ "m HTAi 1 11 21~ 1WI Ill+ "':tt:• .IO II Im im :Uh+ 1
tha t In chcape Berhad. a R~~~ c'~ l' 21 fl111 fj; ll~.::: ~~l"~,J 10 '1<: r~ m: Fm+:'6 H ,1'# .J ~. J~ "'Ill' ~I~ "i.: Mlf=-:r ~·11.21 111 4'. J;..111 'Sr:=: publl.cly held company ;n B • T g t arorUD 1 • .a • 1 """ "" 11o-\Ii -• 1-Hu 1 .11 U 1 ~ """" ... MMl.M 111 " ..., l !ti , la..., ar e ..., "='" fl " • I""' ,.,., ,.,., l.t019 Pl _,, I t 1"" '"" 1•-.+ v. Hunon I ... I 11 • \It-~ "'l""~L • s ltV. . I Singapore, through one of its ~ ~ eri=wr1 . 2 lt 1•1 I 1Jt 1il'o 16•.4+" r:!oC .J6e 6 11 '°" 1~ 10.-"' Hwc:kC11 .i. 3.S 6 12 111Mi ,,.._a: M , .. .:1 .ii • 1 JJ\11 ff::, I
SUbsl.dlan·es has agreed to lend k • 12 :iot .-.. l+r11t aite"' Air . 301 alt 7lil ~ -"iii Hrdrom1 .~ 1 . 25 "' • 1 -MlwiEti .24 17 ci ,.... ,,_. Brutl'I w AG t • 211~ ~ , a.IGUF :U II 247 1116 ln-t -1 Mo •• -1 1--M u Jllv ·" t i ,,.. '" I approxJmately $5 million tO BllC• E. 1.20 1• ll fllll fm +Ill EqlUIU JV. 12 1 IM l1Vt ,._ ·JI jCN ,llerm ll ,~ i ~m IOV. ' M~ern 1.i! ,} tm ff.l!' 1
U1e company's Hong Kong ed i:::C~11 ~'\ .~ ~· ~ 4rf Yt ·• l!l~~ 'tl# ': 1~ ':S '¥.~ 1qr~ 1:!.TY.1 ':= 1i 31' i •t~ iffl.t ~ ~l~ JO J 10 !~ ; ·,
subsidiary. Four Big Firms Prob .~-· '~ :~ ~ ~n !ffi ,,1 ei~J"'.f: j; : ,lf : .. ;'J~ i~t:111 1'"l1~1 'l.ao1 ,: ff t,•,,. ~= (;: ~ T:: I
11'' -~ 1
fl eed f h lo ::r,,.;;' 1.20 ' 1 ""' + ckd NC :j• ~ I :» 20 2C1 Ii 9111" I.JO ' 'f II .!!J?-"' MolMWk 'DI . 74' 6 1 'fheproc § roml e an :~l:.!:J4:1J tffl\4 6~l1 +?J GtG .071 J.,>1m1m1r'-l4 1J•aA, ... ···~mi-·-='~b14 1, ... , i ' ~
wHI be used to reduce ac-'"'~"' ·" • " ; " !!It-Ii P.! co"'ll: '' " .I Ill! ~+ l: "·~ ii " r. !!!! r: " "'"""' 'll '•• · counts payable and loans or WASI~INGTON (AP) -Four giant .. companles l~~/ri:i 11.~ 11 li ~~ ~~ ~pf~~ 'ti : , .. :'ii : , 11•
1
;::: :, :: a'j i~· 6v. ~~"'M d _m . 1 +:
the company 's f o rei g n General Motors, Ford, General Electric: and ~~!J'0 ... 1V> lo ,., ,,.. ~t"" 111t1 N111 6 1a111 10 10 -" , ,..Ill' • 11 l... i it Mo11N11te , If m ;;;: \11 1 B~ :ff Jj ~ ,... \\ilr --JIMI ~ I' ·~ ~" •"+ "'111,._ 11 ..,.,... ~ l MoMl!..,ntl , 11\"1 ,
!ubs1diartes .. • ~a;;e ~fg~~~~ c;sea~~e~n:f~~:::~a~1~~;ti~~~~~ =~~rhfJ~~ lJ df~'1t;212tfC 1(r~~1~ J 1 ~1:~ ~tg.,.!~ :t•p ~.,a:,, •li, ~ 7,~ _~~=::I""li lf 'r I empl~.nt Pr.cuc.s. -< __ !l m=· ii :11 . ., ¥.1l \! t • • • ... ~ .. .. rm· • .. MM •• i ,1 ~ .... CtlK.T l.Ja 11 ~ L ... ,,Air ,1• M ,. 70"' "" " + t4 flClQIN IP ~ + \Ii Moor9 ... t 1-.
e Equal Em~Ioyment Opportunity Commls-~::~: ,;:j l .! • ~ • -... !!!1'.!!•,jj l l: ,I~ ,l,..,,'!i!tt-' -l::f'~ ' 4? i n'i!" ,Ill e~ =t 1 11 , 'f1'i1 sion said Tuesday it consolidated numerous. com· Wd I d' m Hr Rt-~ILr' ·* l~ ~ G \I t u 1:::;." ... 'i ' • E :;:: :;; IMPMlr •• '~
plaints against four national corporations and t~e ''1.~ I iA 1'" ·if~+ :1',,1:..2' ~ 1!00
1 1~ 1 ~ llld=•k l:H ; J t. 14 ~ ~ ir,5i1 11 lm w
unions with which they hold contracts into a singJe ~·._'lj n!'! :! ft ~ ll~ ,=~~ ,~1s 1l \,! \lrij 1tit i~~,1:; 1J i't '?.~ ~ ~·r;=.~·1: I! ,j ~I~ w
case. s 1.1•1 tr" ~~ R"' . n1111 '"' 'J , .Pl. " ,. , J"'"'"' .a 6 iOI": 6~ .. Mt fr.• . 111 "
Al I I d . t ti I ,::.J 24
11
•
1~ 11~ .. tr v. :!l::J<~ID "j 'J "'~ = t'~+ ~ ::llg,5·j{t 1 J,: ll='~"' " i J 1
: ~ so nvo ve are a major cons rue on -un on ec. .t•o 11 11 1,li '"' 11 -icwoe• 1,40 1 ~ """ lm;"' '"'re°" 2 11 • 4 +M! M~·'· I 'I i and the contractors and contractors' associations S::if.11i.. c it J1 '°"' ollit #~ 11t11• 1.m " 100 if" ,Mt sr+" I~''°"' /. J~ 1 ~ =u' 1:.. 1 • with WhfCJ\ it bargains. ~'ldl~ 2
t 'fl :-c: M;ti+ 1: I~ lfs l n u1: .c: r -:: nf9rH ~ l~O 1J4 ~ ~ill\~ ... l "4
1
t ~~ 1 . .0 t 1 ..,.,. "1 '1 'E=ln¢ .» I 2 1't 116 f: '' t!lfr.leke , 6 1 1" \\ ;:.,..,.. ~"J: II "f 1l!ll 1 ., The commission refused o name the-companies uri ·" 1 4 '"' 1"" "'--11 .... 1 ... .n J !! '11,., 1 + \4 1aMCD :11tt0.is. • "'"'-" .... ,..
or unions beciuse of a federal law bamng such dig. J ~~ 5 · t ~ '™ tt;i1 ~~ I'"'':.!" . ., 1 ,;j "' I ._ I~~:~ 1 'f .,, 'Iii ~fS .,:._ • N$k. 1·• ll-f! ·~ ~ · •' • ~ 1~ I 121 ~ :zi,_, J:: t~~!flf"f..a 'I a !!.! i.a-.+1._ TnHolo 1,Mii "l 11 + -~ rt; 1 ~ 'ii !i closure until lawsuits are flied . However, all four l .,1, .JO tt 11-H"" C1:+ v_, .tOa u I iJ'l !lt"' \111et'111t Mi i1 "' ~ ll 11i'C'. u lf • Co~rat1·ons ~nflrmed they a-targets of the ""' 1'' 11 1 VI 'lj A!llf: «•11 o .t'! 1' » 17 11 '"+-'Al 1n1 '"""' JI ·1 'f J • ,,•• __ ,, + ""'"'"'" .:iilti ., ti .= ,
prbbe. s. .. c:NOt .n ' ,, l '~ 11 .... l\¥J ,• Wll'O!'I -,, JU 1f« .. ~ ........ lnll' M~llfj ft ) ' ..... ~ !.J!+ IA. Ntl"" nf I , « ·'' O. I
~r---.. u .. ~ , w .~, m .-... ii i ... :,.-. n 1t ... W'I 1\'li.u 1~~~" ~' "m. \Ii .. +1\lo;:i&n1·i 11 • •
Commission Chairman William H. Brown JII ~11~••.Cli i.o ' ~ ,~ 1l"' J~+'... 1-., _, ,__. 1n1Multt"'I~ t m u.\jo J4"' .yM "N111!".:1th • ~ • Try Saturday's Ne'ws Qu:z said the agency would attempt to negotiate vo!Un· E~z: ,ii; '! ,r, 1ll '( i•-!=~ ·= !l ii , ... e'" Jlli 11.::l';N'IJ ll l:I ..:: ~ i:~· "'~1 '.~ :!I ~
. 11 fary setllemeblS with thOSC C.tted. • ~~ {~, 6 :~ w'" 1,5 1f't : ,.::: , Af 1 ·,: ri:-\11 e ,.,:r:.._: ': Ji ~~ ~ 3'l:t1 .. rf.2~11~ 11 1 --;-----------v----------·IL..,_ ________ ~ __________ JI l•nt1• 2: 1 n »M ll"'--. "•"""•'" A: ' 11 hi.+ "" I t&t p1 4 • 11li0i *t1 ,."' t4 if{',,..'/' 1.111 I ~ l111tpl I\\ l U -\t "•rlfl Mfll ~ 6\lo 616~ T&T pf 4 ff M + Ill ,JO n .,
I ·, j . !
I
I I ' '
1973
'
•
s. DAILY ~ILOT • •
•
•
:J.j DAIL\ PILOT
TONIGHT'S
=·Tv IDGIDJGHTS
NBC Cl 8:30 -"Marooned." The three-man crew of a malfunctioning spaceship Is trapped in
o"1er space In this 1969 drama starring Gregory
Peck, David Janssen, Gene Hackman and Richard
CJ'Jmna.
. ABC 0 8:30 -"Satan's School 'tor_Girls ." A
1 young woman, investigativg her sister's suicide I finds herself trapped by tb~ same satanic grip that
. drove her sister to ber·death. Roy Thinnes, Pamela
Franklin, KJlte Jackson, Jamie Smith Jackson.
TV DAILY LOG
•
: Wednesday
' . Evening
SEPTEMBER 19
'
WATrllGATl KEAllJKS
.. )net•~ lrt suiject .. dll111t
....... ... fllr Cl'll,. .. If thl ·--
on 16111 .. outtury t10V1l Ill Cll111P'°fl1hi, Wrtrtliq
'f) Tiie Md1ms ram llJ'
l:IO EJ QJCJJ«i l!.l•IC W-
"'"'' (C) (21\lw) -{dtt) '69 -GrtfQfY Ptck, Dl'lid
J1MM11, G1n1 Hlclurlin, RlchMd
Cr1nn1. Tiit lhrt1·m1n ertw of 1
m1lh111rllonln1 Spte.«rtft is mt·
roaned while Mission Contrtll works
d11per1t~I to rtseu• them. D O a>AIC W•d•••i•' iilftii: ( ) (iO) °'Sltlrl SdMl4 ftr i:Ot9. a ., m GD m..... lhb" (m,i) '73 -R01 Thlnn11,
{Dm@(J)O(I)ft(I) f1ttws P1 m1l1 fnnklin , Kit• JackSon, J1ml• ;e ..._. Smith Jtc:Uon. A. youn1 woman, In· lTi m ti11tin1 her listtr's suicide:, ii ltd ~ ~ " Uilll'i Fltlltf to an uclusiwt Cir1's 1ttd1my wtltrt re"' ..., ...... sh• soon !Inds herstlf tr1ppH by iD n. ,........ the umt wt111ic arlp th1t dtoYt lltr
I a. Trell thttr Ind otlltrs to thtlr dt1t111.
S111llilellefltt Maril I Mm Sriffin Shew Meiili: ~' llr Ult lnl" Dn11t1
ldYl 'SJ...-t\ltn ltdd, ono.111 Kt1r. ~ IAlllllP ,,... . ~-:=-... ~II !:GO
l:ll!<HI(])-·;-ffWM. CONRAD.CANNON
" iii.ii, (10) """ ... ,_ * TV'S TOP PVT, EYE!
• " d. (dra) '64 -Mldletl Callt1t, .11rblr1 Edtn, Dian Jones, Stlftnle 119 ~ Camltt ''Mtmo fium • •p O.-adil111 M11t111. Shatn rutsb II ··~OW· ~ @,· .J!.l ""'*. I )'OIHlf lttorfl'J Who prtMnll Can-tilcfftr--non wtttl Ol'll ol his stnnpst u.s: ~ Merv lriffl• a.. 1 wllt's ·pr6'tlslon t111t Clnnon in••s· f ,,,., lrttfllll tir1t• th• d••lh of the l1wyer's lit•
• flllt ti Ll111M&1 "Henry IV" client. 1 bllSlnw tycoon..
,htt I Slllk1Spur11n plry rt'tllwld I"" "'1 °"" \ 'by lr1nd1!1-En&1iSlr~ AIM -_n. U~•
: Ln'itan. '8p1 Cira:iW ·1='"' ... n1 ..... ~ llelllrt"""' ".lOr. i:rth~ Mii DatroJs ~
t.nat ._. ID MllCbdll lbllffa 1'°'!1.mam-lll>Ec.to~-..,..... *Nm 10:0011 a rn .. ...,..t M 'c •., • MMlt: (C) (Zltt) "flit OutrWtri' Roonq ind Bil If Ott Wlllilms 1111st
;(wts) '50-Jotl Mc:Crtt, Arlene 0.111. In ttie stDfY of 1 robbt11 ind S11rln1
-.., th•I brlnp 1 1ub1mttorlat c1ndi· ~ ~· LMJ UM? t11t1, his family ind his shff under
MM Sil::: su11)1clon ol mur~ , mi ..... o11t-lj!i!..m .. ~~ .
fl111tnlrll1 ifcj) ~OW.. MI r I• 1 I I
(i} Dhlft!I ' 1Uofi' Mll'lhlll bellnQ I i1IMla. Kil•• ...ii ca., eonvlcttd murdtrtr Is Innocent but ~~ ~ thl only 1111J to 11ln 1 MW tri11 is
AtldM= ti• II CHnlllW.. to ~ lnwmpet•~ •&•In.st an --lold:::... 7'.lll II Tiii RN Dllhlr h• Jim Llnat WIN WNt1 West
hosts. *••• ~-··-Walt Tiil YM F ... ltb .... 10'.llll:= ladlz.. rmlsslvt P1p1" Harry r1fum eo.:!:.11y Feld.a tllow his d1uatim to ltltnd 1n •II· let SM.art
nirht roCk concert with a )'Oulh 1nd lntr• b lps ~rr•nres 1 ~c11111·clK' 41ll for htr Mfws/Spoftl
ll'llleld.
::~"l..:!"-II~ ~llB1E::: n. LKJ .. Twlfl(llt l.olll
Tiii P1lce b -"""' ...... lfttkllld Diet Y•n DJ•e m.!• Ttn ~Trudi Tt Ttll tb1 TrMlll
---i'nt":0Hon'::!"ps;frrfo'" ---= Wtr1d Ttdty m Polic. Suri"'! Alfmt Kltt:hc:odl Prllnb · Oihr ,..,.._ otlm ftlCft IS(() Tr1ll1 West
TM Atld1 .. f1111ilr 11:1511'1 CIMM1 14 l.'0089Cl)Son11J nt1 Clllr Dinny _
fhomas and Ttlly Sm111 111111. 11:30 B Qt) ff1 CIS Ull Mm1: (t) :'iitltr bJ""lllcflt" (susp) '71-Robtrt
1.,u,1~ ,.,_
'"~•! or K~oti
121 ... 070 ..........
BLUMI IN LOVI !II ffilJ. ,..,..,,. O'MIM.
-=='A=DY l~C~I ~l'O~I ;;:::;:;;'
5•~ Citgo f'wy
•I S•oo•huflt {Sc.1
N2·2,ll
GIOtGI .NGIJ.
BLUME IN LOVE /IJ !'tut . HHH!ftl O'HllU
LADY, ICE;:'":!::';:::':'
n1'll Kllf<Kl.JU ACTION!
(l.} lADT l(UNO-JU!ll
(2,) CHINUI COHNICTION lll
(:S.) HSTS Of JUIT 1•1
lmP9hli w:.,.•n
, , , , 8f1th Blvd. ' A tJ1rtor Blvd, 111·1112
GtOIGI MGAL
BLUME IN LOVE lltl
'lUI e nHNtflt O'~IU
LADY ICE ('G! .
Untoln Av•. ,. .• 11 o! Knoll
527-Z2~l
OMl T MIVl-IN iltOWINlil
JISUS CHllST
SUlJ.llSTAI ..i
c11~1 1.,,.....-1JOI KIDD !~I
S 1ni1 "'"" r ... ,..Y ow1 r
C~1pm1n Avt,
551·7012
•
A Field Day fbr Fiedler W~!f~ Alk any 10 mualc lovers who
should be brandishing (he
~ton when the fonnat callJ tor fun, fireworU: a nd
festivities from both aides of
Jhe foolllghJ, and nine wt11 yell
the answer at you:
TOM BARLEY
ARTHUR FIEDLER! Who
else?
Boston's effervescent OC·
togcnarian, replete in natly
red dinner
jacket, dld the
lhlng that ooly
he can do so
well yet again
last weekend
at the Holly-
wood Bowl af-
t!iooght we'd;
though we
lost him for a
time in the
smoke that billowed from a
blinding display ol fireworks.
BUT AN OCCASIONAL shift
in the breeze gave us a quick
glimpse of the indomltable
Arthur, bcltlng QUt Handel's
Royal Fireworks Music as if
the score was going out of
style and using said baton to
encourage more than 15,000
onlookers to let down lheir
hair while he let down the
Bowl curtain for this year.
What a grand old sport
Fiedler is; he moved to
Handel from a rocky ar-
rangen}ent of "Day by Day"
from Godspetl that absolutely
delighted the kids around us.
Aod he looked after bis own
generation as he invariably
does with a schmaltzy but
thoroughly effective "Dancing
Around the World," a pot-
•
Music Box
pourri of international airs
that called for no great
m~ical skills but won the
unanimous acclaim of what
many W'lklndly call the Geritol
set.
AFFABLE ARTIIUR, a
clever conserver of h i s
energies , won just as many
cheers for the way he led the
Los -x-n g e I es Phllarmonlc
Orchestra in rousing ren-
ditions of Glinka's "Ruslan
and Luclmllla" overture and
Gliere's "Russian Sa i Io r 's
Dance."
And he showed us all too
clearly that his skills in lialson
are undiminished by linknng
with pianist Gary Graffman
for a pleasing performance of
Rachmaninoff's &cond Piano
Concerto. If this critic wanted
to tie as stuffy as many of his
colleagues on the music beat
seem determined to be, he
could go on Crom now until
next Bowl season picking holes
in the Rachmaninoff.
Pleasing It was and pleasing
will do very nicely, thank you.
We don't look for more than
that at summer concerts and,
since this year's attendance
has been the highest since
1958, it seems that this writer
and a inl1Hon or so music
lovers are of one mind on this
'Godspell' Sets ~ew
. .
Washington Record
topic.
CHORDS AT RANDOM
We didn't have the Harbor
Area Communlly Concerts
program for 1972-73 last v•eek
but here it Is today thanks to
the courtesy of those friendly
HACCA people : Sept. 30. Little
Angels of Korea ; Dec. I. con-
cert pianist Carl l\1althes:
Jan. 26. Jorge Morel Duo and
May 11 , soprano K@ran
Annstrong.
A grand schedule. as you
can see. and all these concerts
are set for 8 p.m. in the
Orange Coast C o J I e g e
auditorium.
-Director John Koshak is
now rehearsing hia Chapman
College Symphony Orchestra
for three 1973-14 eoncerts:
Dec. ll, April 2 and May 15.
Debussy, Ginastera a nd
Brahms, Dec. 11 , Men-
delssohn, Mozart and Ives,
April 2 and the May 15 format
.to be annoWlced later.
-WE l\1UST pass on the
news that the Los Angeles
Debut Or~estra, .one of the
Most Say
Ratings OK
NEW YOmt.\(AP) -Fifty.
live· pero>oi-'!l'~ican5 18
years and older l'ind 'the.,rno-
tion picture industry~s rating
system useful in deciding what
movies children should see.
The approval-rate was up -
from 44 percent in 1972, ac-
WASHINGTON (APl running and jumping an cor<!ing ID the study'ooncllcted
Washington said adieu &mday estimated 132 ooo mi I es by the Opinion Research Corp. '
·-night-to "Godspell'.:_after.._a_ onstage-At the-~nd of the firit.. for the Motion P I c1 u re run of 75 consecuUve weeks at . Association of America. 'Mle
Ford's Theater -by far the act, ~bers of the audience voluntary rating system was
longest for any dramatic ~ are 1nvtted to have a small begun in 1968.
duction in the ca pit al' s ghw of wine on the stage; Only 24 percent of the
history. 1,575 gallons were coosumed. general public regarded the
The rock musical opened at The final performance, like system as not very useful, a
the restored Ford's Theater on more than half a dozen before drop of eight points from 1972,
April 4, 1972, booked originally it, was a benefit at $25 per the survey showed. Knowledge
for four weeks but with an ticket. with the profits going of the ratings among moviego-
open-end ,contract which has to Children's Hospital. ing teenagers was 97 percent.
been extended time after time. -------'----------------!
Approximately 42,000
persons saw "Godspel1" dur-
mg its 600 performances. 'lbe
theater had a gross intake
during the run of $2,293,849.43.
Ford's says the cast wore
out 120 pairs of sneakers while
~
*Surfing Festival*
This WMk
"Pacific Vibrations"
"" ---2 IETIY 1001' CA•TOONS
FlllEE DYNO SUlll:flOAIDS
~olh At TltMtre
COMPLITI l'llfOIMANCU
7:JO & t :JO loch EY9ttlnt
This cop plays dirty!
Tllkeaway
hlsbadse
and he'd
top the
Ten Most
Wanted Hat!
finest student ensembles in the
nation . has a few vacancies in
partion of l~ 1973-74 orches-
Jra .
•le.re thev arc: oboe, English
horn . clafinet-bass clarinet,
vloliru first and second , prln-
..-s; COf;OfllA N~ MAI
HILD OYlll
J ...... ~ ...
"HARRY IN YOUR
POCKET" (PG)
J:Ol l'M A 10116 PM
cipal cello. c-cllo. bass. Tiiis AM
critic in looking forward to w .. dy Alltil ' hearing 1hc group under lhe "EVERYTHING YOU'VE
direction or 23-year-old ALWAYS WANTED TO
Michael Nowak who· will be KNOW ABOUT SEX" (R) •
remem.J>ered for his sterling 1141 PM ~
v.·ork as assistant conductor of MATINll SUNDAY '•
the Dallas Sy mph on Y C•ll 1\Ht,. t.r
Orchestra . Call the Young s • .-, Sc~•
l\1usicians Foundation office at!~~~~~~~~~~~~
21 ~59-3766. 1:
l~
.. HE~·
RUUNGC'ASS
... llDllt --
I I
. •
• • '
• • u A CITY AN OSOUTM co.ur CtH•MAS-TUllDAYI * . '(l..i.OllS ANO GOl.bllMAGl•IJ-oHN Tll. t :ll 11'.M. •:
•w..i. ,..,.ml
'THI SWIM~ 11111• STIW·
•
A•Ol'SSU" ..... .,....,.
"SWIHO IN•
ll"\lllYCA.TS"
••"' 1 .. c .... 1
"THI GETAWAY"
"JUDGE ltOY •SAN" .. Ill I" COIN'! (NI}
Jlll'lff Gtl>um "HAlllltY"
'"
@ (j) ADAM 12 ROLLS fi,fM:,, Di1ne 81k1r, Grt1 Morris.
TONITE-JOINTHEM §Q1 (1)~1!,lloh•".°""' I=== ,~.C111 IOI Hu~Jdr1) _ 11 15) (I)~ mJ Ad,. IZ "Ihm· • -V1ronlt1 like, Al1n l1dd. CONTIN, SAT. & SU
2 l'.M. ~rt Diriilon. Rnd kids MlllOJ I (JJJ (]) m Jld: l'Nr T•ltl
1bout old 11e n 1 preludt to their liiwli: (C) "Sip of t11e l'tpR"
tour of duty amon1 s•nlor citlztns. d>/) '55-Jell Chandler, Rita C1m. 0 Moiril: (C) (21w) "llllnl•rt .. Affrtd Hltdlood tlll bets'" (com) '65-t>of:1n Martin, ,...: "Tiii h dttlor P1rtj"
Dtborth Kerr, Frink Si111tr1. (COlll) ~7-Clralyn Jones, Don Mur· 0 ~ (I> al Lovt Ttly Nelpbtf rv: l G. Manha II.
"The Minstrel Show'' The Wll&ons 12.• ifj °"'..., ,_,. 1nd llM: Bructs enter sl\oW biz as ... ,. ,.
thl)' pvt on 1 mln.strtl shoW and, In -..: (Cl "IMr T'""' Mtfl
the irend tr1dltlon af the snow (com) '54 -Grter G1non, Robert
Pem klses htr 'IO!ct. ' Ry1n, 81rry Sultl'ltn.
l'J M;JJioo I"'"'' J2lwJ "If l:<ll CV EJDCD@Cll •.., \lld9rr" (dra) ·s2-A1Uiur KlnMdJ, · g ..,...., htrot
Pero Dow.
I ._._ t:lOfJD•..,
[!' =. °:n l:ti R Mwit: "Wnttni Uftitn" ('m,
llhrie:: (C) '1111 CoftllMlltm" 'li-Robert You~t. R1ndol9h Scott.
(wnl-:&l -J9hn _W11nt, Stuart Z:JO m M-Nlatlt S.-. """411 ArM," Whltmen. ~. Dht 11 Dnn" aJ I 16C!&L I lltdl Ortpr1 I US.
4tl\Ct Thi 1fn retsll}' ol Htwtll dr•·i 3:10 IJ MM: "Monsttf • tht C.111-
m• d1p1rtm1nl perlo1ms tr1dltlon1I pus" (hor) '59 -T1111 Oon1h111,
QriMM optll Jn W: sttn11 b1std Arthur rr1nt.
Thursday
DArtlME MOVIES
1/z PRICE
SPECIAL MAT, WID. 1 l'.M. ·----··c...... .... °""'· _._.,. GERAl.DW\SON "'...,~
--.. ~LV!4ilfa·•-CClJ..MBI,\~ .
IR I_ .. !!!' .. '.~!!~~~.]
EXECUTIVE WIR·E
Mon. thru FrL 7:15 AM -Sat. and Sun. 8:15 AM .
ON YOUR
DIAL
• KAPX RADIO . ' NEWS AND MUSIC·
CINEMA I Just a person Who
protects children and
other' living things '
Bll.W
JAOt
-Tl* LAUGHLlll · DEU~ES TAYLOR
T(CMlllCOl.OR9 • .:::;, t:,'C;.,, fftiile»
Allo "tL .. 1 -THI llASTS I CHI
CINEMA II
'
• I . \
•
• • • I !
l : j
i l '
..
1 ~
I
•
Wfdntsda)', Stptembtt 19, 1973 DAILY PILOT 31{
.. ,.
Ar~hie Ready for TV Title Defens e I------'------':_
''THI $JONI KILLll" ...
South Coas! Plaza II ....... ~ ........ ~"' S4t·JlJ
81 JERRY BOCK
LOS ANGE LES (AP) -It
"All in the Famlly" about to
topple from its two-Year re(gn
as the No. 1 show Jn
te levision ?
You can stine any talk that
Archie Bunker, the tube 's resi-
dent bigot, Is ready to play the
underdog. But he is going to
be in for a battle this season.
The show has reinforced Its
position with new f a c e s .
Joining ArChle and Edith are
two new neii:hbor11 , played
by Vlncent Gardenia and Bet-
ty Garrett.
• "LADP KUN• FU" <I,
'~ •• easily the best
movie so far this
Year,,-=s .. , .. . '
. • NEW YORK TIMES :'~~
~..f;r,'C. Wt'lw•\AllW•yotJ in ~? ' .at
2nd· at
Canter
•
JACK ~ ~ON
mm
DIO
l'/0%6
••
-t• 00 Plu1 1hl1 ltlt
GIORC.IClm
D'Cll '-''ii1n1';m" o:•
GEORGEt.SCOI I'
FAYE DUNAWAY
JOHN MILLS
JAC~ PALANCE (P0)1_,._ __
~OKL HOMA
CRUDE
Also Ryan O'Neal rn
"WILD
ROVIRS1'
Norman Lear , .,...tor and
executive producer of the
comedy, shrugs at the thought
of malntaini.{lg his top posH.ion.
You don't sit down and say
you're goin( tO bold onto No.
1, he said.
"IF YOU F~CED that
strain you'd have nothing left
over for comedy. It's coun-
terproductive. If l had to faee
a whole season of worrying
about staying No. 1 l'd have
no time for content and feel-
ing. So the new neighbor! are
in a vein of pleasing an au·
dience and ourselves."
While "All in the Family"
seeks to st.iengthen Its posi-
tion, CBS has ' moved to
eliminate the weak s p o t
following tho;! show caused by
"Bridget Loves Bernie" last
year. That series was canceled
and ''M·A-S..H" was moved
Into its place thi s season.
Nevertheless, ABC and NBC
are no longer willing to thrO\v
In tho towel at I p.m. SalUr· ,--------,-....
day. The edge "All In the
Family" gives CBS I 1
reflected throughout the night
"'l.d has hurt ABC and NBC.
ABo shifted one of Ill most
popular shows, "The
Partridge Family," to put it
bead to head with "All in the
Family." For added in-
surance, they 've added an ap-
"pealing new singer, 4-yell?'~ld
Ricky Segall.
NBC BIDED Its time with
Mlss Garrett, as I r en
L«enzo, is a woman who ls
Mn. Flxit around the house.
"EVERYmlNG Irene doee
is in Archie's view a man's
job," Lear said: "And 1 don't
have to tell you what he thinks
of a man who cooks.
"These characters came
right out of. the newspapers.
J 've been reading about the
phepomenon or men learnlng
to cook well. You read about
_ .. -..
Ct!t/DDM/ l/,. ..... -~""
"DOLU.IS" la)
"IOUND Of MUSIC .. ...
"CHAALOnl'S Wll"
"LADY' l\UNCJ fU" ...
'THE CHINESE CONNECTION'
"THE NEW C!NTURION5" ••• "flYE IA$'1' PIECES" Il l
"PAPER MOON" lrGI .,,
"HAROLD & MAUDI"
"Emergency." Despite the
overwhelming ratings of 11All
in the Family," the series is
now drawing a respectable
men doing needlepoint. And •
women doing carpentry and ENTERTAINMENT masonry." "HA•11v 1N vo~,:. 1>ocK1.t" c1to1
Le 0d "Th f "l!V&:llYTH1NG YOU l!VI!•
share of the audience. ar sai , _ e areas o '-~~:::::::::::::w:•:•:':•:•:':•:•:•:•w::•:•:•":''.::":'.':":'.':"'.::~~~ prejudice you can explore are
endless. ln this country there
is prejudice against people What could happen ,
however, is that "All in the
Family" will retain its No. 1
poS!tion and "Emergency"
and "The Partridge Family"
will fight it out for the
children's audience.
"At some point we figuhd
the audience was going to tell
us to do something different,"
Lear said. "That we netded a who don't marry. There's pre-
change 'of pace, new !aces, judice against people who do
new persona1ities. Anticipating marry but don't have chHcJ,ren .
the audience is part of the job. We have a show about the
"Lots of people say don't wicked time the elderly have
mess with success -why because of prejudice. Again,
bother. But the interest and th.is grew out of lhings in the
excitement for us is being dif· newspapers. I've read about
fcrent and being ahead of th e the elderly who've had to
audience so that you can shoplift because of lhe hig~
filM'.Piise ~b~' _ _ yri~~s."
Vincent Gardenia and Betty Don Nicholl, the script con-
Oarrett play q semiretired sultant,.. said, "We'll be
couple·l'(ho _mov~ _next door ~ touching on . the obscenitY.
the Bunkers. Gardenia, as laws. \Ve don't pick a subject
Frank Lorenzo, dabbles in and say, lel's do that. We get
various business schemes and into them becaUS"C a character
is an amateur gourmet cook. leads us into an area ."
Hollywood Bowl Gets
Record Summer Gate
LOS . ANGELES (AP) -
Symphony coocerts by the Uis
Angeles Philharmonic drew
record crowds and revenue to
Hollywood Bowl this .summer,
the outdoor colicert center's·
arUstic director iaid.
Director Ernest Fl~isch
maM said Monday 272,114
persons paid $l,000,200 for
30 concerts this summer.
Probably never before has an
American audience paid more
than $1...million for a summer
symphony se ason ,
as some people say, this
revenue anctattendance seems
to show that it is taking a
helluva long Ume to die -in
fact it's increasing ,''
Fleischmann said in an in-
terview.
Attendance is increasing
"largely because symphony -
orchestras are becoming more
concerned about making their
services available to all kinds
of people," he added.
-"1etsclimann-saido --.
On many nights, discount
tickets priced $1.50 or less for
senicr-citizens and students._
accounted for a'i many as
$2,000 of the 17,300 ~I
capacity.
It was the largest crowd and
revenue recorded since the
bowl began keeping records in
1956. the director said:-1"1972,
223,826 persons paid $8.37 ,995
for the summer symphony
series.
"If classical music is dying
PMIMU1 ilCJUll!.S "'-SUIS
He said concerts by more
traditional composers, such as
Bach or Beethoven, drew the
largest crowds of both old and
yOWJg people.
Ali Mac&raw • Ryan O'Neaj_
-~llllSllY ·IRTllllRtaU!R-
-STAAAING-
Ted Neeley • c.rt Andltlan • Yvonne Elimll'I e Barry Deman
THE '1 0TH FANTASTIC WEEK > .
Paramount Pictures presents the return
of the greatest love story of all time.
PA R.4.MOO/'IT PICTllllf.S ,._ ..
Alt!L>ll.ll . .,,,:
1'11ANco ZEFFIRELU ........... ~
ROMEO
B'jULIEf
Starring Oliva HllSWY LHnitn:I Whiting
• COAST HWY. AT MACAllTHUll .ILYD. •
lllWPOllT HACH • M4·07IO
ohn Ma~ey & Ray Milland
• 1'hc original uncut ''ersion -
•TOGETHER FOR THE FIRST TI~IE*
Two Beautiful Stories
of Love
• -
" ' '
.,
• 1 ~ ., '
"'''•T"o<£>1'•• ......... ,,.
IQUIS .. K.U™PSIIL''S ow~i$~~~t
W..Clll ,.Pti.w ill• k...-.ileJ'l'Jll(ootl~
lllRRl!G
JUllE l!DREWI
CHilllDPHER PLUMM!R
~ ~:ntertulnn1ent for the
~111 ire rnmlly
• G.
•
•
\
"
• • .
:
• •
•
,
• ..
'
:JS DAILY P1LOT • • PILOT 0AOVEJ!TISER I
56 .. YEAR Serving Orang~ County
•i3 FORD SQUIRE STATION WAGON
"'VI,"'°-'"M" .. ;. '"• "'· ;;,,, •Kk, P.$., s4999 P.8. ldll(), P.W., AM-FM tltr.o r-.:tlo, i-tw, r.cllal W$W, tinted 11••11, wlle91 CO\'Wl, 10,231 ml.
M1ttlllc 9r1111 Ilk• new. llrOUQ~m Int. (f92HGFJ .
'68 DODGE -DART
. 2 dr. hardtop, 1mall V-1, auto. trans., fac-s1 499 tory air conditionin9, powar staarin9, low
mi las, 111ir1 cl,aan . fVRAS7 t )
'72 FORD RANCH WAGON -CUST. 500
V-1 , auto. trans., factory a ir conditionin9, s2799 power staorin9, radio, h11 tar, whil1w1U
tires. tinted 9la11, whael co\'1r1. 21 ,712
mil11, Sharp low Miler. (lie. I 15EJNJ , '.
FORD . MOTOR CO.
~ '
SAYS \
•
-----
MOVE ''THEM · OUT!f! --_.. -~-
1·9·1-4' s ARE ON THEIR ' w:AY! '
'
'
DISCOUNTS ON . ALL ·MODELS .. . . . ' . . , . .. .
• . ' OF . '
&MAllE-50Ws-9--l9R~N95-9-f9RD--LTD..-'s~
----
'69 FORD SQUIRE STATION WAGON '70 Javenn SST ·
2 Dr. H•rdtop. VI, tuto. tr1n1 1i r concl.,
power 1teerin9, rodio, he1ter, ¥invl roof,
bucket 1tat1. PRICE IS NO MISTAKE.
#80118 -$899 -v.a, .... _ ~., .. , '"'"" ,.;, ..... m;.,;,.. s1 499 pow•r •t••r1n9, powtr ld11cl br1ke1, AM·
FM 1tereo rtdio, ketftr, whitewtll tirtl, •
tinted 9le11, wh11I covtr1, 1uto. tpted con· , '
trol, 54,b26 mile1. Cle1n . I Lie. 74 6B&Zl
'70 CHEVROLET NOVA
' d .... , ... .-"'--., ...... ,... ..... 51 899 steering, radiO, heater, Yinyl roof, low ·
mile1 , like naw thruout. 1714Blll
'71 MAVERICK
v.1, auto. trans., powar 1fe1rin9, radio, s1999
haatar, low miles, sharp. 11140021
J :
'
'66 FORD RANCHERO -
v.e, "'"· ...... , .. d; ............ ,;..,, s1 099 spacial matallic paint, sharp. !Ulll521 .
. .. -1970 T-BIRD LANDAU . '
Cp•. f,11 p••" & '"'"",;,,FM•'•"'· ··28ft9 A rail cream puff. (5l68EDI ... 7
'71 PINTO . COUPE
•• , .. d, .. d;o, ....... ; •• .., wha•, ,_ s1 5'"'9 mila1, 1rlr1 claan. (l72DTO) ,
-'64-FGRD-1/2-T-ON---:PICKUP-'-----i...:.'7 . ..0-HORNET_SEDAN '68 FORD TORINO $999 6 cyl., radio, haaler, whitewall tir~1. whe1I s1299 2 Dr. Hardtop. VI , automatic trans., fa c·
'68 FORD XL
fastbac coup•, V-1 ,auto. trans., f1 ctory air
conditionin9, pow1r 1t1arin9, a rial cr11m
puff, IWJY5021
'69 FORD FAIRLANE iOC1
tory air conditioni119, power st11rin9, truly 1199
1 malody in m1t1 I. !41 7CPKl
2 dr. hardtop, 1rn1ll V-1, 111to. trans., fie· .,
. .
'71 COUNTRY SQUIRE .
-10PASS.STA TfONWGN. -•2699 VI, automatic trans., factory air, power steer.'
ing, power wlndowS, l~ege rack. (501COJ)
-. -• •
co.,.1 r1, Economy spacial ,axtra sharp. IZXX tory air, poW1r• 1t11rin9, sharp thr11out.
887) !UGH4471
. .
'71 CHEVROLET STAi~-W,,-
v .•• auto. fT1n1., factory air conditioni1t9, ·
powar 1f11 rin9, radio, haatar, a rial bat· ,. 6
9ain. (4510Nll
'
' '
'70 FORD MUST ANG .
Spo<h <00/, 4 •pHd, ,.d;o, ..... ,, ••"• s1 7·99 72 CHEVROLET VEGA WAGON
4 .,.,d, "d;o, h .. tn, l;k• •••· ll12FLWI si 999 sharp. !499HGE) ,
1964 T·BIRD
F•clory •ir condliioning, f111l pow•r, I ciwn-•r. (0)()(044}-
' '70 VW KOMBI . • 799. 7 P111., radio, h1•tar, low mll11, 1xtr1
--1h•rp. l9•9Cl,l .
. '
'199.9
FORD
1 f
I -· . I •
•
' . -I
I t
'
f _ PILOT·All"£RTISER N
l
•
WtdnndaJ, Stptembfr 19, 1973
'In making honey, ~~s prod1lte the most
marvele>uf pdprs,.sweet and eQrthy, perhaps like . '
flowers but indescribable· and mysterious.'
' -'..1. '
"
..
' '
•
•
Flow~ From W:ax ~-t.o _ Ric;h1Je.ss . -' . ~ --' t •
-
Goodne·s~s Ext ·racted
'
.. ,. ->Al''IO'f'DEEl\I( is to keep track of the queen bee.1bere " •;.. ""·'-"' . ·:~1 >· ~-'""'!"'II'.~~ is one queen to each hive and she pnr
Tiiiie U.O:. ·pide!i;:,.@lllbO(: liquid · ex· duces new bees all the time . Tbe life o1
lnded 11111 na11iDg'from the hive alid \he bee, like-all Insects is sb«t. ,..ill .. up,..,.. processed, granulated A -..cmd· taSk is eniuruig eooogb room
mpr. -+•"" • -~ -t for the bees in the upper two ,dlambers
'lbt ~·flmiiJJ .ol ;~ Beach or honey "supers." '!'lie lower supers are
_,.1aney hi. anytblng-where you'd !or the queen.
-7"nona@!IJ 111e arpr.And.il~s)lme~When·spaee-runs'out.-be-aaid,..,...-ex·
Honey' bas always been .a favori~e in-
gredienl \,r giving cookies a natural
sweetneos. It also can be combined with
fruits, vegetables and meats lo supply
intrigue for a day's Dle!W.
~~ teaspoon baking aKla
111 teaspoons salt
3 eggs, beaten until thick
% cup vegetable oil
\2 cup honey
..
1 can (8 ounces) crushed pineapple, un·
drained 2 ~er chickens, halved
l cuP White dinner wine· * cup water
n-IJip-bllle~-'-------""'"!l!LdJQppod_nuts_
Sill dl'y ingredients together. ·stir in their-own ~ve hive. tract tbe ,hooey or add a, super. ¥,cup soy sauce
Da'.fil ·~ .. ~;~ger~ ~~ .. .; Honey is extracted about mce ev~ 2 ~ ·s&lad ~il eggs. oil, honey, pineapple and water.
eoo.,iiiLr, ·l"f~tniluQOCI to. beekeeping six weeks. "The he:il hours to work bees 2 tOaspooM ·drled orangeipeei Fold in nuts. Spoon into greased 9 X 5 X
abou1•30 yeon. ago1",a proles5or in a are midday. In the summerJJlOlltha from % teaspom garlic powder 3 loaf pan. Bakeat350 degrees for !hour
....rl .university lo'iD In -tern New 10 a.m. to 3 p.m." 1 lemon, tblnly sliced and at 325 degrees for 15 minutes. Best if
Yort,sta~. PROTECl'ION ' Combine last 7 Ingredients In large . kept a day ~-me_ llow flavor.
1---~~~8"-wl!!'~~ld!:~-;mc~_'---=-jjiv;~Siiilliia~v~e[,~gffio~ .. e.s;'fOiii'iiir.Cf"iboiiOWLSS~lir~.w~elliiL,AAddcd~cbi~·ctk.eo,;o::-covc;w; __ etet:i·and~~~-uillN!iY;i000iAGTME~:ALcCHEBEWWSS:~~-
famclll)a ~'sdentist,".Qump said. Es-his hands from stings and a .. smoker" maririatefor4,to6bours. ~ cup each 'honey, sugar and
menl<lr In llie apjary .was Dr. !Joyd R. which 'is u..a genUy as a signal to the Grill 'bone side down abOut 6 Inches margarine
· Wat.on, who developed a pmcess for bees tbal the keeper is going to he work· from fire for abiiul 15 minutes. Baste. I egg
artill<la1 a-nlnatlm ·of the queen bee mg in th.·bive, enmip said. · ~ ,cluc1<'*1 skin side .down far 25 to•30 I tesSJ!OOD vanilla
which ·..-men ·lo-breed and ·keep Extraction. is Jlooe wh<:!l -111!> ,honey is minutes. ' • % cup flour
•-!or ''"'-·.c'_~~_:_; He ... ,Wtiiced ·~tlf · · ~ ~ .. ~ as warm as pooslble, so ii flows ...n. 1be Boil down remalnl!Jg marinade. Spoon \2 teaspoon baking soda
Wallm In _,_,,g.f'or,llls' colmles of li!>es. extractor works on centrifugal lorce, over chicken to ~· 4. l2 teaspoon baking powder
"lie -in. my lint hive .and frame whirling the honey oul of the comb. BONEY GLAZl!D CARROTS ¥• teaSpoon salt
of bee.." he said, "and I've been keeping He ,emph~ thal he·se)ls the honey 10-IZ small carrots !. cup quick-a>oklng oatmeal flakes
tbeni..'ever since." ' / · "unprooos,:1ed." 3 ~,'butter .· .. ... l can (3 ounces) coconut
·SOI.II ~ ' . ' · · · "Process«! honey whidt yoo find Ill the l llblespoM brown sugar
Tho. ~~Id tlim, • ~-and: sup-s~ has been heated to make it flow. 2 tablespoons 'honey ' ~ · Cook carrots in small amowit of boil· •''-~when ,i ..... !llOyed to California in Often 'llis cllWIOS ti to l<llle much of Its ....-3 . . .-1 , ing, salt.eel water about 10 minutes or un-
11111,<iiut-began qalJI three years ago. natural llaVO<.'ll ls. USllally In a llqu\d Iii lender. Drain.
Tbol~<~l(_e balll,Os, aboul,llO ~ state while Unprocesaed honey will gel a In okillet, metl bU!!tt, add• 111gar and
o1 bl. iliil llli ,...SUOed•U g<!lldns o1 liltle augary al rocnn teiiiporature. hooey, s1inD1er 2 mimtes. Add carrots,
,,;.,.:.. .... ~ I • .. ' · will boc" to cooklng over low heal: Tum unlil well --,., ..... 1~. • .• , P1acedln .wannwater,it · go a. • .__ .. A.:.-glazed, about 5 minutes. serves 6. 1nQU!ornlli,.-u.e of the a"'"""'""• the liquid state."
of Mc ' .. ,. Ii, · -.~ce year He added t6at hon~ wtil·lo!ep almool • • • OATl\IEAL WITH 'I' ' SPICY. CRANJIERlllF.'i 'round.; • r . . ' . • " ! indellnllely. It ba9 been !Ound In the Tho-~~-""'-~ mllh• Ala P>'ramids atlet many ·c~n.O•l .~s. f ::~~rfro'wl ~-~-
and ~I:'"-~J': lnil 9,, do.~•elO; I~ bul '!<"!1111J~:~•!!'X!"r•, W "'-"~ • , -. ' 'i~):ij
,P.4 *"' .-Ai.. TM: f~ . iJ! ~. ~ nl!dnl . J 'j ~ ~~ -~--. ' ; ,n;A'fOR; Tl!il . .. ; ' ' ~hf
uoes "!' Jlll!I...., ltioll "')" 9'lls fM re-. Wii\i Nlf ~ ... "'!""tness• % ... <l>cbopped""""' ·nuts -· I ~-lliem~ tbeprol• ''honey 1addsJla..,. ind~ ·value as Dolli cinnamon and nutmeg
1 • ~·;~;t;.'~·•• .. · · ~ 1 . • well." 1 ' 4 ~Pl bot cooked aiitmeat
. :.n,......, flh+ '"'..e8l •Jilsr ~; .119;. ~ ...-... "~ed Milk or hall-and-ball
bl 11 • wltb """"-• iristead In a Mucepan, mix honey, cranberries,
l2 cup chopped almonds
Cream together honey, s u g a r ,
margarine, egg and vanilla in Large boWI.*
Sift together flour, baking soda, bllking
powder and salt. Add to creamed mix· ,
ture. Blend in oatmeal, c:oconut and nuts.
Spread In greased 13 X 9 X 2 pan. Bake
at 350 degrees for 25 to 30 minutes. Cool.
Sprinkle 1lllh powdered sugar. eut into Z4 • • to 30 bars. .
llQNI!:¥ SPICE.cooiqD;.
3 ~ -;o·>!.' ==~= • . 110--
6 tablespoons honey, heated'
·s~ Cup. Dour
' l teupoon bHlng soda
•' ' l t.upooil each cinnamon and ground -. thll )'llf. WI -'a gOod, slroni ... ~.ice cream """"' sugar, kn., Wll and spices. ~ over ~ """ ll ''"'7 1Dlrllulnst a iii IUfl"· 1bO family -~ to bake _.,, cloves
ra 1' :!i'X!/ ~ ..,._.._-.!!_ Ore , 1 '~Ind~ sweelm oiiloifeverytbing. · low ~· sllrrlq constantly, , unti! ¥• teaspoon aall --' 'w.. . ....,, .. ,~ You. '1 e-'-I II -;.._,.1i'i -con!.dkiii cranberrlel are .teode< about 5 to Beat eggs pd sugar unlll fi•""•. Add Yer'J I 1-... ,, r. ..... m • r .,.... .1;11111 • ~ • I znln--Cool .... ,,. 1-11--i--~:\ ltl~ ~feed ~..,-f.J,;:";.!i~~er 11\i! ~~ii talle_I!~.,.: -'Spoon 08~ Into -4 boWls and top honey. Slit llJselber Dour, aocla~ spices lben\ ~ tlilJ ~ • ; · · •:n-l 1 'an ~ l . ~.lllle with cnnberry m!Jturo. Serve wttb lti-and aa!t. Combine with other Jncr<dients
PllOllllCnft ~ · l 'boea.r,.llo added. Ill nonoy, i!<hiU-afiil.1lall, 11<lellred. , and roll by lellpiiOnluli Into ballC
He feelo "lbel'e ore few or1anlmla )'OU'. the bees produce the nfOol marvelous , • · . ~ .-i-11 wt!li u ~..,a. tlie odDrl, .-llflll. ~ perllapi Ilk• BONEY l'INEAP~ Bl\EAI> Place !><I-greased baking ~I and
b<e-~l'llil!lt-" ~. bul lq,delcflb'a~le llld'" 3cupoft'F .· bl_ke .~ m ~'..for ll mlouleo.
. One job at Iha beekeeper, he explatiled, . myaterious." • 3 te~ baking powder. Makes I doz<n.
I ' ' I . r , • • +-' -' I
-'"
..
"
A smoker ' gently . signals the bees
that David Crump is• coming
into the hive to col.lee+ honey
combs .that Alex puts
into the whirling extractor.
Samuel -sells-the surplus
after the family has~taken
its . ,hart · to use in baked goods
en~ ice cream. •· ~
I ; I
I.
'
,.
-·
;;;,...
" • j • .. ' ' . •• . ::' . • • ..
..
' .
,.
incely Premiere in Store f~r Guild
Your HorCilscope To.t]lorrow
Cancer: Freedoms Curtailed
THURSDAY
SEPTEMBER JO
By SYDNEY· OMAllR
Add Frtendi o! Astrology:
Burl Ives. He I! a Gemini with
that zodiacal lijn on the
ascendant of hh horoscope,
making him wb8t might be
termed a "double Gemini."
The wife of the popular en·
tertalner also knows her
astrology. Dorothy explains,
"Burl· Ls really a Gemini In
every sense. But although I
am a Capricorn, I am the
most un.Capricom person that
I know!"
-ARIES (Man:h 21·Aprll 19):
What you thought could be
delayed "now commands at·
tention. Emphasis is on com-
pletion, especially where)egal
property matters are con·
cerned. Gemlol, Virgo pel'IODS
may be in P.lcture. SetUe basic
issues. G(!t-to -heart of mat~
ters.
family. By giving, you also_ life.J!e apprec!ailu _instead.• pllcaUon1. Spotlight Is Cl1
will receive. Know tt and re-of being ,.....uul. Some or cooperaUon, publli relat.lonl,'
spond · acoonllngly, Don • t . your desires are ·oubject to loint eUoril .;... and DWTlqe.
neglect medical, denial care. rerilton, malaly due to COii Tab Ume ~aulyze, lleJtct
factors. Young penon doeo the auperlldaL GEMINI (May 21.June 20): care but baa no Idea about ' '
Be dllcrtmlnallng. C b o o • e · money and bow It gel.1 that AQUAllllJS (Ju. . SO.Feb.
quality over qWIDUty. Pllct1, way 18): Home .and domolUdty
Virgo penoos could be In pie-'. . dominate. Mako , fair con-
ture. Accent i. on money ar-LIBRA (Sept. !$-Oct. 22): -Ion to family member.
rangements. One you care for Follow through on plan which Strive for harmony. 'l'nnl,
has tendency to be es-enlists aid of one who taught Llllra are likely to be Involved.
travagant. Know when to draw you Jn paat. ·Aqiwian might Person close to you conl1da
line. You will understand . play key role. Accent ls on seq-el Don't q11t first atone.
CANCE!\ (June 21.July 22): career, speclal project, !Mnd· . Listen and "°mprehend.
You may have l!ODle lreedoma Jng Jn cmutum!ty. Cooperate curtailed -but thl9 will be Jn dvlc project State views to PISCES (Feb. 111-Mlrc:b 20):
I t Y dd·• In th 'rtt Good lunar upecl ..,. coiJ>. vo unary. ou assume a eu person au o y. cidea with unden:tandfna of
responsibility. You direct and bulc emotions. Friend could organize. You build for greeter SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): ·future security. Don't promise Before embarking on long-'make demands. Do what you
more than can be delivered. ranae..Pll>J~t. check..wbat bu can abort ol lending mmey,
CaprlCOl'll could figure prom· occurred behind scenes. There Romance is in picture. ·Your
lnenu may be factors ·which make ego swells. You feel &nod and
y. '"f m···•· .. " compllm"'t ls proposal quite uu erent from -..u.Ll6' ...
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): You surface appearances. Gemini, recdved.
are able to complete project. Sagtttarlm perso111 may be in
Agreement is re•ch~ '.'Jth ptcture • .,..-one behind the scenes. Aries,
ihe stroke of midnight, the setting for the Glass
'pper Gala will turn back into Bullock's newest
re at South COut Plaza. But starting at 6:30 p.m.
tur<lay,_ ~m......29..Jhm .l!ilL be cocktails, dinner, nong 1!14__modelll!g_prese11ted by the Cinderella
Guild to bene!it Chil1Mh1s Hospital of Orange
County. TllO Mmes. Harold Dixon, chairman Qelt)
and Donald'Gustafson make sure glass slippers and
champagne are ready for t,\lis premiere opening.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20l:
Older relative may be in
transit. You could receive
message requesting personal
service. Keep peace in tbe
Libra persons could pJay key SAGrrrAllllJS (Nov. 22·
roles .. Be a self-starter. Stop Dec. ID: -Specifics are
dwelling on "wnat m!itit bave hlgh!lgbted. You get facl.1
Deen..!_" Control your own minus sugarcoaling. This is to
destiny. your advantage. Respond ac-
VIRGO (A 23-Se l 22). cordlngly. Involves mate, u~. -l' · partner and qu .. uon o f
Friend may1 give you facts of money. SUrpr1se is due. It is of
....._unusual natw-e and one
IF TODAY IS YOUR
Bll\THDAY you are-11kely to
be musical, moody a n d
somewhat of a poychol!>alst In
Novem&er, domestic ad-
justment 19 made which could
change your lifeatyle.
Generally you are frank,
direct and capable of bandllng
intricate detalla. You •ttract
to yoirperaona born under
Capricorn and Cancer. You
are loyal to family. You must
stop brooding jllbout the put. , acriage-go-round
icking Up Tempo
Sour Grapes: Aging Whines
ronuihtlcally concerned l s
behind "plot"
CAPRICORN (Dec: 22.Jan. Your future Ii. proinliJng and
19): Refuse to lose by ex· some exciting eventa, up-
pecllng something for nothing. ~coming, will make you reallh
Be aware of I e g a l lm· thiJ ls true.
DEAR ANN LANDERS: Can you
,suggest a cure for an emotional retardo?
My husband is 43. We've been married 21
~ when 'the !Jtv. Two major activities plan· years. He acts like 19. When oor kids
' CriJmp . laundled a ned are Weekend Away and (.""ched tbeJr teens I ,realized what my
, Of group discussions -the Long Night. Both are open husband's problem was. He never grew
t be Marriage-go--to the public. · up. He acts just like the kids. •
It met wi~ so much Weekend Away offers a Last night, in front of company, be 1n-
mcc.ess that it is a continuing chance for adults to be with fonned me-that my IJ.egs needed sba.Ving. · jterles. others in a rustic setting When I told him later lt was a rottert
! 1be outgrowth from the away from everything, to hav~ thing to do, be said, "Well, it's your own
J series has resulted in another a creaUve weekend and to fault for not shaving them."
t---ff4iilcuas:ion-group..and..sevo:ral~l!211.in..a.group . At a-family dinner a few weeu ago, lie
'~tanned activiti':5. For t~ seek~ gro~, told everytxxl.y that our 11-year~Jd son
1n the Mamage-g~round, com~uruty _and change, this still wets the bed. I could have killed ~ pebple meet to talk about experience .is both renewing him. He is always humiliating somebody tn~ge and .its proble~. and rewarding. -saying the most godawful_things. The
The group meets e a c h The event is icheduled from man h_!ls absolutely no judgment.
Wednesday at 8 p.m. in St. Friday, Sept. 21. to SWJday, I don1t divorce him because an my
John the Divine Episcopal Sept. 23, · divorced friends are ment¥1 cases. They
Church, Colla M"°"' and a Long Nll!bt I! planned at 7 didn't · th · 1· "" l'v
I
1fi lerles--Wtn· be fdrmini .. j\.m. 'Fnd8yr Nov. 2, at 2245 told m~~ et[o ~:f iC::~ -h:
Sept. 26. lrvlm! Ave., Newport Bescb. grows up. He says there is nothing wrong
A spln-011 from the original The event, filled with food, with him, that I..,, paranoid, 3Uilcy and
sessions is ~.Growth Group group process and a party, of.. a born comptainer,
j which meel.1 each Thuraday at lers an opportunity to be with Doo1 tell me to see a coonse11r_. They
1 8 p.m. to explore the areas of people who are seeking growth always side with the men. And p1ease
t~ self-discovery, identity, mir-and who place it in a don't suggest that I talk to my minister.
:~ roring from other members, recrealive environment. He still has temper t.antnnns.. What now?
:: development, human contact Reservation.! for both ac--IMPALED IN A MARRIAGE •;and communication. Meetin gs tivlties may be made by call· DEAR IM : You call that a marriage? !$ take place in the office of the ing the Rev. Mr. Crump af It 1oundl more like a pair of moltA pull-
!~ Bev. Mr. Chnnp, counselor. 646-0811 Ing In oppoAte directions.
:1
I enjoyed the planning so much, but the
night before we were to leave I began to
feel uneasy. I talked it over with 'Mcm
and she said it wasn't a matter of right
or wrong -that even though tt was a lit·
Ue lateJo bedt<IUI I sbouldn' boubamed
U I decided not to go. Then oho told me
People wbo ·write' for advice antrteU to pray about 11.
"!!..!'bal_Nor to _tell them don't reolly~ Well, f pryed bard8nd lbenut morn-
want befp. A woman wbo woiilifitiy WUli Ing 1 decided to stay bome. My ·reum
a Jerk like lbal !or ZI years mUll be a was that JI I went, I'd make everybody
glaUoa for punishment. Forget .about a miserable iDcluding myseU.
care·for t11e·4•emodoDaJ retanlo.''""Loolrw----Now-1-am-mad-at-myselLfor: missing
youneH for tbe soludoa. the fun. How can I overcxme this prob-
. lem? -REGRETFUL
DEAR ANN LANDERS: I am 13 years -DEAR REE: No ooe ever overcame
old and have a problem I have never homslckness by staying borne. 1be only
seen in your column. It is homesickness. way to conquer a problem, any problem,
It started when I was IO y· ears old. I Is by looking It stralgbt ID the eye and saying, "Yoa cunot defeat me. I am
went to a slee~way camp fOr' one week b t g g er than ,..,, -UICI dtem· p-·
.and was_so miserableol cried the whole oo to do !fie l!llDll f"' _.,, lhtd of. Y•
time. I couldn't sleep because I tnlssed mlPt .... to do II lllree, !oar oc -more times before yoa adileve J1llll' ...i, my own room and my bed and my family but acldeve it yoa ,pit Tlill 11 i.ow ....
-especially my mother. pie mu&er d1ffiealt +stfMJI and grew.
Way back in May I agreed to go on a
.(ive-d3y, camp-out bip with some
friendS. One set of parents and an older
brother were going as chaperones. I
really was excited about it and spent
nearly a week packing and checking
things off a list I bad made.
There Is a big dlllmnce between cold
and cool. Ann Landen shows you how to
play it cool without freezing people oot In
her booklet, "Teenage Sex -Ten Ways
to Cool It." Send 50 cents bl coin and a
lcmg, sell-addressed, stamped envelope to
the Dally Pilot.
.
Christmas in September
Children to ·Benefit -·
A_Quisljnas party _complete
with gifts 1s belnf planned by
tho Oranae C.UOty Adoptlvo
Pattms A,,,xiauon for Sun·
day, Seu In the Hun-
tingtoo home .
and Mrs. Robert Barnes.
Rtclpl'!!lts of the gi!!s will
be children in Vietnamese
orPbanages, according to l\trs.
Donald Powell, chairman. ·
·T!io<e attending the Z to 5
p.m. party will Iring gilts ol
D!W' dothing, infant ltems•and
toys to wrap for malling
. throu@b the Friends 0 f
aitldren of Vietnam, a n
organization which plam le>
send Ilana to the children
throogboul the year.
Mem))ers also are saving
food coupons and trading
staihps for the friends of
HOLT, an organization work-
ing with children In both Korea and Vietnam. ·
Trimmed -. lllmpa
and olh!r coolribu-may
be anilled to OCAPA, P.O. Boo:
13H, HunUngtoo Beach, -7.
~ew Hiding Place Selected HAIR STYLIST
MARY BLAYLOCK
·~; By JO OLSON at St. Andrew's pointed up her "hatred means murder Jn . L.~ DllRY ...... Steff 1-~ ~ U>rile ten Boom · Jfaa-a -preaching ability as well.------------Oo's eyes:-I a·s k e d
I ~ ~ding place in 1944 in her "We live in a time when forgiveness for my hatred."
;~ native Holland when the there 15: a great darkness over Then she forgave her torturer. :i ne.mwi Gest a po was the world," she said. "Pray "can you forgive that man ~ ~ l{arcbing for Jews, and she that we all get a new vision. or woman who has stolen the :1> bu a hiding place today~ her : f.alth in God _ where she "It's terrible to read the love of your wife or husband?"
: aPends all her days. newspapers. It's going down. she asked the au d i e n c e •
1 She descrlbed both for a Christians are on the front line "Forgiveness makes you so
t--'t-•-"'""""--<ciaa,pacity-audience~St.-or-battle. ee:''~-'l Andrews Pres b Y t er 1 8 n "Ninety-six thousand, women Corrie was released from , Newport Beach, when
k the ti f were killed di d 1 concentration camp on New apo e at invita on o or e 8 con· Year 's Day in 1945 and on her
• ,-Eo!lgns, a young couples' centration camps. Also my return vi'slt to Ravensbruck at the church. sister. I had a hiding place in
'C.orrle and her f 8 mt 1 y Jesus." found that she had escaped
!-•Jtered Jews in their home Miss ten Boom said there only on a clerical error, an er-
10: Holland during World War were six Jews and two ror that took her out of prison
JI · unUJ Feb. 28, 1944 when underground workers in her just a week before all the other f the Gestapo raided the' house. home when the family was ar-women her age were killed.
: There was a secret hiding rested and this work ol saving She knows she has a hiding
' place where the refugees hid, Jewish people was very im· place because her life has f but Corrie, her sister Betsie portant to her. been spared, and her message
': and her other relatives were When she was ln prison she to others is that they can have CORRIE TEN BOOM
': taken to prison. was brought before a judge a hldil'lg place too. 1-'-----------------~--1
, ~ Betsie, seven years her and realized her Jife was in his "Take all the promises from
' senior, died In Ravensbruck hands. "The Lord gave me the Bible. You are kings," she' I Camp in Germany after being concern for that man. The said. "You are a represen -
tortured by the Gennans, but Lord touched the heart of that taUve from heaven in a world
Corrie was to escape and man. He became my friend that is very needy." .
1
become a prolific author and but he had to do his job.''
lecturer il1 more than 61 He showed her some papers:ip;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;I
l ~tries throughout the with names and addresse~11 , world. that had been found Jn her
I !ler books Include "Pri80ner home and she realized "this IT'S ·1 and Yet," ... "Plenty for could be my dealh sentence. ; Everyone,'' ''Defeated But he threw all the papen in
Enemies,'' "Marching Orders the fires."
of the End Battle" and her When she returned to
For AR Of Your
BEAUTY NEEDS : , uewest, "The Hiding Place," Germany to revisit the con .. :$ which soon will be made into a centraUon camp and speak, MIN'S,.. woM•N•s ;# movie by Worldwide Pictures. the guard who bad tortured Wl~S & HAIRPIECliS ~tt Grandmotherly and soft· her and her sister came to ask JO'!. .. 60'1• Off! :~ spoken, she Is known as a good ~~r forgiveness. ~~:=\
: . ~et, and her remarks She hated him but knew thatll ~===-•••==~II
' fo;r Y ••r Owfl H•lf, ;F;'p;:::================= W~Hriit Ou,-·OW,,--
' FOOD FOR FUN B~~~.~l~N
i ' I )
~ . i
I
i I
·t
-
1
COOKING CLASS .
lASY TO fllll"ARI GOUIMIT FOODS
COOKIN• POI TWO -NUTllTIONAL AIDS
Thund•ys -10 AM & 7 PM
,.., l •HHr s.uloitt -$21.00
St•rtin9 Sept. 20tk
PARK NEWPORT SPA
a..rl N_..,, H•-lc..oMhJ, lllmltCMI
,., .......... & ... htntt.11-···~··
' • \
•
w ...... ,...,.,
VIVIAN WOODARD
cMMeHc ....... 9fhnt•
The New r .. 1
·'fflalhe~
WIG & llAUTY SALON
21o:D, I. ltttt St. c .. N M•• sct-S446
I• Hiii.,.. s.t..,.
v
-
..
~~11n.8&
Tiie ltl."1 Of ORJINGe ' 0 Qe•&37·3'90 .
1
I • •
"
•
, ..
T<Y one of Ro~rt O'C::onnor'."newest kit• feaiuri~g Pl,ld
· ·Point. Shown: blue and ~hlte plaid with yellow daisy,
yellow and white with lady bug. Also avallable, groeh and
" ·: 7
1'' ... . '
. ..
while plaid with strawberries . . • ·• :· Ii.so· .iclt
I • ••I :Jt:,f(;•t « /.,.,. ~
learn to accentuate your-needlepoint .art with this' xcltlng ''
new stitch ~ing demonstraled by Mr. O'Cbnn0~· • ' . . . r,~f
-.. ' 'I ;i. ~ __ . _ _ .Jll-,loin u?I · ' '
•' • l '"'U~IJr September 20th e 10 1,m1 fol 3 ~
.\
~
' •
t
• NEWPORT BfACH;-r-• • J ~Vil Lido ..
(
• .
,.
•
'
• •
•
WtdnHday , Srpttmbtr 19, 1973 t;41 LY PILOT
Equal Rights Amendment: Women as , Peopl
By A\,LISON Dl.!El\R
Of ... o.lty Plttt ltaff
l1J18glne L world -where the
future of Woman ia the most
preeolng bsue ol lhe day ,
In this wo.rld, the feminine
pronoun "she" includes men,
all the voices on the radio and ·
television you remember at
Important events are female ,
and ihe leadership. is almost
all female,
The President is a woman,
as is all of Congress except
one man. 11>e women are the
movers and the takers of ac-
tion. '
Men bust be sheltered. pnr
tected and thereto.re, kept in
the home. The reason?
Biological. Because of their
bod y structure. their genitals
are vulnerable and so the
male must be proteeted.
This, of course. ts an ex·
ercise ln role reversal.
In tllls case, it set the mood
for a talk by 1'>s Angeles at-
torney-Riane EISier on tile
Equ~I Rights Amenc!rnent at a
special meeting for attorneys
and their wives at the
California Bar Association
Convention in Anaheim.
AN ISSUE TODAY
"Why is the Equal Rights
Amendment an issue in this
country in 1973?" she asked.
"The reason is that we have
been told by persons in posi~
tions of authority and, by lhe
medla that it ia ·going. to
create a Jot of pntb)ems.
•
Cruisers
Cast Off
Mn. William Thomas uen) .casts oil . for a
pnivlew yacht ,cruise
witb·Mrs. Pau!N;p1 Am-
baygh. Cruise Win'be a
f~ure of tlie wec1n ...
~: Sept.' 26; ~
Juqcbem IJIOlllOnd •tiy
Alphl Phi Alumnae ·of
Or)nge Counl)r' In · tile ·
~Yacht Club. The "
,event to raise 'schol•r-·
~ !unds, will begin
with bridge· at , 10;30.
a.m .. , ' . \L '·
Because of this people are
frlgbttned;t'
She noted lhat lhe_ER,\. had
been Introduced to Congress
for lhe past 50 years. "When it
passed we had to deal with
ratification by 38 states. It is
by no means a sure thing but
most feet that it will be a
matter of law: by 1975."
The ERA sitrlply says that
"the rights of no individual
can be abridged or denied by
tbe United States or any s~ate
o.n account of sex."
It does not deal, she said,
with the private relationsh.lps
of individuals or businesses
and individuals.
IMPLICATIONS "The major issues are : ls acceptable beha vior and en-courses on the Status of \\'Omen
the Equal Rights Amendment forces the society's value and children under the law at
Systems'" UCLA and Immaculate Heart desirable and what are the im-plications? HO\v will it affect These value syste ms are College, discussed three myths
our Jaws and our society? what we are told in a given about women in our society.
'"Il>e infplications will rest society to believe is the truth. They are: woman as prop-
orrwho will interpret the law Or as a sociologist wciuld say _erty, woman as relational
and bow." "the myths.1' _,.,dependent and woman as a
To explain possible < im-LAW AND MYTH lull-fledged human.being.
plications -Of the ERA, she Woman as property can be
defined the re I at ions hi p -"Law and myth begin to evidenced from her example:
between "law" and "myth" as r o r m seJf.fulfilllng -pn; the Tenth Commandment.
the sociologist delines it. phesies," she said. "TilOU shalt not covet thy
"Law, in our urbanized : irl· ' An example · is the slavery neighbors' wife, not his man-
<lustrialized society is the· ma· era myth that people with skin servant, not. his maidservant,
jor instrument of social con· darker than white bad no nor his ox, nor his ass, nor
trol. It is backed up by the potential and were somehow anything that is thy rieigh· bor's." socialization process a n d less than human. When white
ult'imalely by force," Mrs. Southerners began to feel
Eisler said. threatened, many states pass--
"lt defines how we Should ed laws making it illegal. to
relate tQ other people how we . teach a black Slave-to read
should view ohrsel~es and and write.
others, aeta the outer limits of Mrs. Eisler. who teachea
Cl\EATION STORY
"The Creation myth," she.
said, "describes Eve as an
~i::~~s';:~~ed from
She added that history is 11a
" woman must list married or "The Equal RighU A
single, while a man need not, ment,'' she sa1d. "wiU •
I
Social Security is an e:r· much to support the mytli
eellent example. A ·woman women as people. lts gr~at
gets no Socla l Security as a importance is symbolic. So
~roemaker until after her can relate as women." ,
husband dies . Then she get~. A stumbling block: ls t~
82.S percent of what a man men "are afraid to give up t . "
"'ould get. illusion oJ power, althoqjb.
"\Vhv does an old woman none or us really have ~~
need 17.5 percent less to li ve much control over our llvesf , ...
on than an old man?" she ask· "Women are afraid to £!~~
ed, noting that me an incomes up their privileges. until fbeY-:
"for women are 48 percent are assu red of rights. I feel"~·
JoWer than for men . is better to have rights thin
Jn 1968, she added. 40 per· pri vileges someone can give Pf
h · remove at will." .'.'"..I" cent of t e w,omen "'ork1ng ,She feels, "the only thfn"'r! full·time were single. 1vid<nved &~ and divorced. In the past lO certain in our society tQdaf:1~
years the divorce ra1e has change. \Vith the problems·-f_!=
record ot a struggle for power, Court upheld two Texas laws climbed 148 percent .11nd that fa ce. everyone needs l-0 .. Py•
one group taking it from that said a married woman was before the neiv dissolution rea lly human." • .:
another. Sihce we (women) didn 't have the capacity to, laws we~t Jnto effect. \
never got pawer. we're simply handle her own finBnces and Another 30 percef'lt of the .iiiiPiiiiiiiiiiiiiji~ij not there." that the ."crime . of pas.<.:;ion" women in 1968 have husbandsl l
She noted that 120 years ago plea applied only to men. "'ith incomes under $7 ,000.
"marriage was the only oc-Other examples are the rape . POVERTY CITED
cupatJon qpen to women lf Jaws "that won't protect a
they wanted to s u r v 1 v e woman agalq.1:t her own bus. ~ not ed that the. 7.5
ecooomlcally." Or ~here was band,'' statutory rape laws, m1lhon widows and s~ngle
the pity of "spiru:terhood or the denial of birth control and women over 65 a~e the s1n~lt"
shame ol prostitution. abortion rights poorest seipm!nt 1n our socte-
At that time a woman could . "' ty. And Aid to Families \\'ith
not sue or be sued, make bind· · Wo~~ ~efined ~y relational Dependent ytilldren (chief\v
ing contracts, manage be r ~epen. ~ncies on ~Jes !~elude women and children I 2re1v
own money, work outside the l~Ult!es such as. IJ;egmning from 4.4 million to 10.6 mill ion
home without· ber husband's ' life with . her. fat~er s name from 1965 to 1971.
permission and was subject to and tra,din1~ 1t ~n fo.r her
• · d o m estic chastisement" husband s. If she s known as
(beating) iI her husband felt Mrs. John Smith, she's lost
she needed it. both ,,or her names: She's
Not today you think? gone, the attorney said.
' Domicile Jaws state that the
LAWS UPHELD woman must live in the home
As late as 19fJ6 the Supreme her husband chooses. He is the
executive manager of the
community property in
California in which S'he has
only a "present interest" but
no control.
REGISTERS TO V<YrE
When !he registers lo vote a
Even more st<trlling. shP
said. is that 18 perce nt of all
college educated female head11
or household are In poverty.
"There£ore those m y t h s
about women in our society
are just not realistic."
Steps have been madE>
toward a realistic leq:al look at
women . through 1972 Supremf"
Court decision making women
equal as far as state matters:
Title VIJ of the Civil Rig:hts
Act removed discriinination
for jobs in the states.
,SWEATER
· c e.~f~r.ic
. :
.1r
,lJ!
';\!..
·~'\ I ·.•
~ ~-".Ii~
.. ~~~pff~ 1fQ~r 0 . SALE :1
'"'f'i'te.a ~ 4,"'e,,ft-~r:::~~:::3fi~-h ·.':; ' :;.i~~if?" •' :-;.
2 qq . l ~ .r ~ i it\Q g~o~l1\t1\\ .~
0 Pf1~, (1 ~e, " 001;12f!A I ...l'if'J
~1,:;
.Y
.!-• ff f!f2.-o~" 1/11fo<'t ~~t.~ I'
;
' ' .
'
__ ,_
' '
q.~1
aoA
MOD loaders have been Invited to GOP Tuesday Club
J · w t ,_1 Isl d meet her during a Coffee Ga~eries in LagWla Beach wlll / ,
director of the C ha I I is
-1~~~~ . .e4 . '-,,~J"'~' :::"~:\u=e,~?~·l~f ~to=R;~. ·-~~ •• ,.
ane ya t, K:~V on ~ Conference on Birth De~s, The "Rev .. James D. Colbert, R th H ·u rf film· actress who lS the frrst starting at 9 .. 30 a.m, ,·n . . 1 . d be the guest lecturer for C.OSta u \lSSey wi pe orm , 1 · I
mm1st4:l:r,, e ct u re r an G t M ts ~~h~Ji~~!I-.-----~~·~;;~~~· :·~::=-1 r__![_]t Ht----,w,.omr-,an to be elected a trustee G..ce:enllrWr Inn ,G~a ,_r ,.d,.e_.,_-'ci'h!,'lal'irml'!!la!!,n ,,;;ofh,t~b:\'e~C~h~ris~!~ian~-M~e•s~a~A,rt League. rea t~~e~1 .. ! t e. Haa~~ ' i ,,' v•· --' tneNa:t1an-rt1-Foundatton--<;rove ~ =--~~ n -comrnurusm rusa c, wi -emtiers will ·meet-arr::m-'Ulet'-I.....,,= \ -
!darch ol Dimes board, will be Sharing the spotlight with be the speaker at 9:30 a.m. Tuesday tC!ullb ope~Tuthesdae fall ' · f:-'
•
' '
m Orange County Tuesday, her will be Dr. Thomas L. Tuesday, Sept. 25, for lhe p.m, Tuesday, Sept. 25, in season • a.m. y, }-_I, e, -i'PIAf f ((;1' . 1~ '
Presidents of 300 county at UC! Medical School. Mrs. Republican Women In the Club. . 0 \o~• f ~Yt~l ·~ el-, • I ~fl Sept. 25. Nelson, professor of pediatQcs meeting of Saddleback Valley ~::;sMe~~~entary Schoo], Sept. 25• at the Balboa Bay lW'\ ' r \ {e, ' t' ' •
organizationa and community Norman Watson o1 Newport Peoples Federal Savings,' 'El ..,-g.y<,~'t'( •t 1 -;11>tta'Wi ' . p Pff
Beach ts chairman oi the Toro.
event., 7• i 1 NB Friends -,, , : UC i Town-. Gown Mrs . Thurmond Clarke's .. , ,
A coffee reception honoring Corona del Mar home1 wilhl be :;
the 25 UCJ "''omen librarians the setting ror a unc eon p B will be given by ToWn and m~ting of the Ne~rt Beach · ®
Gown at 10 a.m. Monday, Fnends,of~Ltbraryat age oy
·Sept. 24, Jn lhe Newpj>rt Beacti 11 :30 •·IT'· Tuesday, Sept. 25.
l>ome of Cllllll>!llor'llld Mn' .• Ms. ,Ql!Je. Fisher. sculptress
·DinJel G. Aldrich. will pr""'1\t lhe program.
-
..
,.•
' .v "· , During lhe event, chairman MAT' E.RNI·TY of inlerest group. wUJ ouUine. CM AH Lea9ue
plans for the coining year. Richard Challis, tounder and '· -, ·'
HONORED
Jone Wyatt -
Hadauah
Newport Beach CitaJl!er o1J"':'J;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii'-I
Hadassah will ' celebr•Le ,6fl I
years of Hadassab11. "Com·~
munity servic~. CJutipg i '
hmcheon and fur f a 11\ I on
show at noon MO!ld•y, Sept.
24, In the Btilboa honfe of Mrs.
BetU Ross. ·
'Powers Gris-~'
l1iC Look & The Style!
Wt t tlll ..it.vto lit 1l•lrt1 MMtt. We'" Wll•tr yeur . ,...,. '
1.ll'ilUta ·IMO!l,.IMO -M•l."l'UL ,.IM>MMll.
STOP IN TODAY I
• J
.. COAST
SUPER MARKET
W9 OtllYlr V"' l"W'CMM I
Wl'r. • c• •• ,..,, lthti'•
673-3510
3147'1;COA9T HWY.
OllONA-Otl MA~
TRUNK
SHOWI·NG.
COME SEE OUR ANTICIPATION
COL.LECTION ••• AND RECEIVE OU~ ~
CATALOG• WITH·OUR
COMPLIMENTS!
INFORMAL. MODELING• TOOt ' SEPT. 20 1 21, 22. II 1'0 4 PM.
PAGE SOY MATER~ BOUTIQUE•
THIRD LEVEL. •
..... -•
2 YASH ION JS LAND (l 44-2800
•
I ,
' •
•
'
---·. f?<fl~" f~(l ~ ... f~ll" f':?0 ?. f?r'J? ?3(] 7
~iavif~~ti v . v?\iie-1 ! '3. q ~-an~·«(
/(1811'(""'""'"'< ~t'(I~ :;.n4 µ1.,,.. \-o ,Y,oOSL ~o m ...
. -soli J~ ... rl9i.I L .<11ea.~-. r"·"I;,~ · ~;m::::j . ' '
'
71.\e '71~.,,,\~ ¢. -lh11Y'1i,A~--~e.rt~t11~if 20
at . 10:00 ~ f1l .
COSTA MESA
.. · .7o""'th .-;o~;,t fi?.J.1'.
\
j
•
"
;
' '
• '
••
• • •
•
DAILY elLDT
ish Scajes 'Budget-Blues'
Erf.11 though guests may be
ming for dinner on r ather
short notice. vena.Ule fish
Jlets can fill the bill. fbeY
t easily to m~y prepara·
Ion styles ranging from very
lfmple to elegani. ·
I Be flexible -you can have
elegance even though you're
on a budget when you aerve
Crunclty Fish Noodle Bake.
This easy-dO casserole to
serve four persons requires
only one pound of the fish
Yankee
:
!Roast
Potted
Thrifty Yankee ·Pot Roast
cookl vegetal!les -r1glit along
"·1th the meat. Tradittonal-are
potatnes, catrols and onions
and,..sometimes tomatoes and
turnips.
But, the family's favorite
-vegelablea can be used.
Add another modem item
to tho balll 0ingrtdlenta - a
pacUitd gravy mJx. SUr io.
gei!iu rlaht in thii oven c0ok·
in bog the mix, Dour and oea-aonlnc• ·and uae ·thls to coat
the meat surfaces for a nicely
finished look when served. In fact, the entire meal is
mixed, cooked and oerved
rlghl from the bag, along wit!>
the smooE,~:;5 gravy. 'l'here.il · · · from one
pan to , or cl~up in
the end!.
YANKEE POT ROAST
4 pounds chuck roast, 1 ~~2
inches thi ck .
I pacl<'age .(7\S ounce) ·
brown gravy ·rrux
1 'le~ flour ..---"2 spoons salt
v, teaspoon pepper
· I large onion, llliced
1 cup chopped turnip
I cup chopped celery
8 medium potatoes,
quartered
3 carrots, cut in bite-size
piecu
2 cups water or broth ..
Preheat oven to 325 degrees.
Trim all excess fat from
roast.
Roll back opening ot (amily
size (14" x 20") Oven crioking
bag and place in two-iodt deep
roasting pan.
Combine gravy ~ Dour
and oeaeoni"'s In bag. >;dd · rout. Tum bi:g several times
to co at meat well. Add ook>n
slices, chopped · turnip aQd
celery under and on top of
roast. Add potatoes and carrots.
Pour in liquid. Close bag with
twist tie; make six balf·inch
11it.S in top near tie.
Cook 21,.i hours or until
tested tender. Make!i 8 s'erv-
-;ngs .
New Wrinkle
Dessert
Brewing
This brew-ahead dessert has
intriguing flavors and texture.
COFFEE
RAISIN PUDDING
2v. cups full-strength brew ·
ed coffee
1 7-ounce package m..tant
rice
;, cup raisins
'>I cup chopped nuts
1/1 t.easpOon saltt ·
l/1 teaspoon nulmeg
1h cup brown sugar, firmly
packed
l cup cream, whipped, or
I i-ounce package topping
mlx, whipped ' ·
1 l ·JlO'llld can fruit cocktail ,
well-drained -
In a 2-quart sa,uttpah: br ing
coffee to a boll over high heat. ,
AH ,rice and 'ralsim. Cover; :
twu off heat, and allow to
ateam for 5 minlitiii.
Add nuta, salt, Dutmeg, aJ1C11 broWli sugar. Mix ,well and
cool
Adel fruit cccktail. Fold in
whipped c r e aJD , . reserving
smtn amount lor garnish.
Spooo Into 8 aherbet glasses.
Top •ilb ruerved whipped
crtlfn and whole nuts or mac:avhino c h e r t I e s , if
detlred .
. For
Weekender
Adverrii ing
Phone,
-~1-..
..
\
fillets of your choice extended
by mushroom ti0up, sllced
celery, chopped onion, and
mandarin oranges.-
Chopped salted peanuts and
half a can of chow meln
noodles are added for crunch.
CRUNCHY FISH NOODLE
BAKE I' 1 pound fish fillets, fresh or
frozen
l CllJ1 (11 ounce) mandarin
orange segments
mushroom soup
1 cup sliced celery
~'1 cup chopped onion
1; c!'P chopped s a I t e d
peanutJ
'>I $spoon salt
1 cln "(S ounce) chow mein
noodles
Thaw frozen fish, CUt into I·
·1nch pieces. Drain ora nge
segments; save ¥.. cup syrup.
Save abou t v, of the orange
segments for garnishing top.
onion, peanuts, salt, and '2 of
the noodles; mix. Spread mlx·
ture into a shallow 1" quart
cuaerole.
Cover with alumin um foil,
crimpina it to edges of
casserole.Bake Iii 350 degree
F. oven, about SO minutes. Un-
cover. Sprinkle with remain·
ing noodles.
1 can (10~ ounce) con-
d e n se d c ream of
Combine soup, r e 1 e r v e d
orange syrup, remaini11g
orange segments, fish, celery,
Continue cooking abotit 10
minutes or until hot and butr
bly and fish flakes easily when , .
tested with a fork. Garnish
·with orange segments. Makes ~.
4 servings. ' FISH FILLETS FILL THE BILL FOR COMPANY FARE
Lucky has been· the lead'er in true discount pricing since 1963 ••• ~rid Lucky continJJes.tD lead
· in gre'ater so,vings.! Now as always, we are doing everything in our 'power l o hold t~e 1'ine
·on food pric~s . Tod ~y. your. dollars STILL buy more at Lucky.'the" oifginal dts.i:ount sup9rmarkets! 1
' . ;_ _ •. '_,
ROUND STEAK .., . -
FRESH Fl\YERS lllflE4I
t•=.:·· s 1 •s ,.. __ ........ .. USDA. BUDE A ' ·,. 49 :o1· ......., . " '~ -. .. ...
Low Eweryday Priced Deli Items!
AU llUl. FHllKS IJl JllUTIES 51' RAlUllOATLA OOUNTYfAllt . • ,,. l«lMAOEICRI •.• :. ' •. noz. JM
"''"" ••• , .. : ••••1..,·"''· IOl 'S 11£SSING POR" CHOPS ... nus ~""""" ·· , 19' ft '1'' """"'3· I' 1Ll.(ORl •........... l..OZ.Jll t.WMl:ID•I• llGUIM'""'"'"·"j(~OOl.w . IOl'S llQIJ(f011 ". • ,. • .,., .............. .. ril1llllCOOI 57 , ..................... 1..i., .. I SIRl.0111 T!P
~~~·····~:~: · ~~.TAT01SA1AD .. ,:, ""· .75· c 51~.~---······L• SJll '!111!'!t~•!\<•"F'~' '"l" 25' noiJI TWA. ... . -TQP .SIRLOHI • sli(t PEPPEi$. . 59c XlNT SMAll ........... 11~.PU. 37c_ :-.:l:.~t':.v s2u
tll!llNIDl)~D .~\ •.•• ,~.ZMIL JAR , ~ , ,, . ,llOlltHPMll' •.••• Lt .
. · w:r.11,13:t.19.1iij:~
... SANDWICH BAGS. ........ ::;9'
ALUMINUM FOIL.. ........ .:r.': 1.69
·KLEENEX TOWELS ........... , 1~." .. 35'
. SANITA~Y NAPKINS .. .".':'.~.>;: 35'
DISPOSABLE .DIAPERS I:';;";; 1.33
. JERGENS BATH SOAe .......... ~~:; 11 "
CAMA Y BATH SoAP. ...... :.: ... ~.':: 18'
DIAL BATH SOAP. ....•. : ........ ~·,:; 22'
KE Y BU Y FROZEN F ODS
ORANGE JUICE .... , .............. .;, SS'
·,EGGO WAFFLES. ................... ?.:; 46'
VEGETABLES ............ ~~.~42•
_.._.,~ ............ ....
BROCCOLI SPEARS. ........... ::::: 33"
PIZZA ROLLS .................... ::%; 58'
9PINEAPPLE JUICE
.i::~ 28t
"""'"9 ' -.. -. ' -LEMONADE .................... ~'= 1 S'
LEMONADE ... : ................ ~-=29'
PET FOODS
SKIPPY CHUNKY BEEF. ....... :"&~ 28'
PACKAGED GOODS
OREO COOKIES. ................ •= 67' KEY BUY
LADY LEE
... DEL MONTE PW ............ !\:24' FRANKS . ..
..,.\lH<iLE llEA~ ............. ~:"<:29' ARE THE
WHITE CORN ..................... ~:<:29" OFFICIAL
... WHOlEKE~NEL CORN.~•'= 22' _u"'T DOG
' . '' { .
Cl\HNCD FO O DS
SLICED BACON
. . LADY LEE
1·""11D . ......
,-.
. JJOIJID RINSE '~:69t
•
' ' .
i
·,
' '
• ' ~· ---Pl""'"PPlE ~"-,\..., . .,., llll. ... """ ............ -."""-~·,. ' AT THE PEANUT BUTTER. ....... '.'!~.,;:!:$ LOS
... QUI~ COCOA'Mlli. ........ -=:65' '
... PEPSI COLA. .......... ~.-:= 75'. ANGELES
__..FIRESIDE C::OOIUESo ..... ;~.~·1'-
... CASSEROLE ............. ~::-:::; 63'
fl" BREAKFAST ••••... -~~:r,~~ 69 • MARSHMALLOW: .... : ....... ~:.':~' 1
CA N NED ro oos
... SCHILLING MIX ........ '.':'.':'.'";:; 21 ' COFFEE CREAMER ............. /:%': 65'
LEMON let TEA MIX. ......... :::95' COUNTY
SWEEl'. RELISH .................. ':'::: 32' • FAIR GOLD SEAL SCOTCH ... ~.:".:::9 .77
ITALIAN DRESSING ....... :::O:*l', GALLO VIN ROSE WINE. .... ~.::1 .99
OCYERAGC • SPIRITS SPRAY OVEN CLEANER. -1 29 DINNER ROLLS ........... ~~~ 37' ·""'" . BUBBLE BATH ................. l::': 27' COCOA PUFFS CEREAL.. .. '::-;::::; 47' MINUTE.MAID LIMEADE. ..... .';!: lS'
•
WHfTE·MEAT-tUNA~'l!991'+--..;;;"'1--·Pl:Y·MPIA-BEER .......... , ... ,./!-1,620-----•---1 ,Wi~JYPE V.INEilAJt ..... ~~~.30· .. ,._ ... ,..,_""' -..,,
DOWNY LIQUID RINSE ...... ~= 1.45 DREAM WHIP. ............... ::,~ 89: COOL WHIP TOPPING ....... \'::tc S9'
-.,;ir1QO!trCCEANER .......... 'li:": 73·-GELAllN·DESSERl ...... =••...-2~-uREEN"GIANiRlct ............. ?.:;·37
COMET CLEANSER ............... ~;:: 28 ' LIPTON BLACK TEA .......... ~0::1.69 .... ~-
DAIRY PRODUCTS ... WINOEX SPRAJ ....... , .. ':'.:.= 45'
... BOWL CLEANER .............. ~= 41 '
... WOOLITE LIQUID ........ ".'.".1:;;70'
... AEROWAX FLOOR WAX ... ~;:: 75'
PET f'OODS
. .. . SNACKS
~~=1.:sc. ~OLNI. •
'
' TABBY TASTY DINNERS.'.':~~·.:; 39'
CHICKEN CAT FOOD .......... .':I: 18' · · s152 GAIN DETERGENT .. OL IOX,, .................. . .. '
IVORY LIQUID DETERGENT 22 oL atL ..... 57c
s1s2 CHEER DETERGENT ... OL IOX .................. . ·. "' s4as
DASH LOW SUDS DETERGENT,. u. aox .. .
DREFT DETERGENT .. o: aox .................. 92c
.t ..,. [ R
' .
BAYER CHILDREN'S I ASPIRIN 1 '"" '"" 3!c . etpltlo'I • . ' ltottt. ttf--!l • -'
• •
•
MARGARINE .................. ~.:::;: 37'
SOFT MARGARINE .......... ~.':'!:: 53'.
EVAPORATED MILK ........... ;:: 12'
COTIAGE CHEESE.: ........ ~.':~'.:; 85' ;f.,:~1,-s~j. ~~
. , ....
• CAI ... • llDY LEE i CE CREAM .......... ~I::: 73' .,
-
GLASS
COOKIE
JAR
W/tnUt'flt .... ..
"
. -......... "' MWMlllGI ....... ~ ...... ,. ..........
l •
· . ir.:f\fmi~Komp's •
· All.~vutm
'!
Of lllSll IAlllT G0005
-.
t . I
~I
I
•
I'
I
l
' ..
f
.r-. •
.. I
•
'
'
I
•
' .
•
•
t
• '\
.
'f • ... ~ ..
• ........ Hepbt#n, Plut Scofield,
Lee Renrick. ICM1 Reid,
JoMph Cotten, Betsy Blalr
In Edward Alb9e'a
A Dal11ta ....... 1 new film
tliNct9cl by Tony Alch1rd1on.
"
.1 , •. r.f •
f
• ••
• . .
•
•
'
'
p ...
'
•
-
... ' ..
:t 1
Zaro--W'-and ~ BIM:k In
[--·~ ~ .. 1:1-.anewftlm, dlflded -.TornO'HOfltn,
Krilenpt.eybyJulMn Barry. . -. '
' •
. "
• •
•
-
,,. ......... ThMtn Compwiy
ofbclond.Alln ...... • Lew1::~1 OIMM', Joen Ptowrlcht
· In Anton ChH.hov's ,,._.....,.,.,,..fllm
-bf i.-.n<o OIM••· '
, '
• ------!-----·~~~---------
• Cyrlfcu.k."l•n Hohn, MkhHI
.......... VMM Merchant, T-.nce -.1'11 .. ._..lnHarofd
· """"'' The Rellt I ; a minL
I
• '
• ,
l
I
i
I
• --41f'1Ctid by,.., Hei . •
" ' -, -, l , ..
..... ( . ·~· .... ..
·l
' ' r
" ' 11
',
•
•
' i . •
.1.)._·_,_,_
,
•
1 • ,.
'
• •
•. •
1 .
•
. 2 FASHION !SUND
•
.
'
'
.. ...
..
' ••
OAILf "'IL.OT
•
1
• • 1, ,. '· ... . ....:J
. ' ·. . -·
I
.. :·
"' ...
. . ..
' 'i .. .
Robinson's invites everyone " .
to take part in an uncommon enterprise: in-which
world famous actors, playwrights and directors . . . . . . .
have joined to create great new films · ·
. '
inspired by the great plays of Broadway and London.
So people everywhere _can-€njoy them .
We are delighted to welcome to Southern California the American Film Th'!atre,
a subS:cript,ion ·series of eight glittering new motio.n pictures inspired by great works . .
of the theatre. The series begins in October. at' a neighborhood ·theatr11. ne'!<f YOU. ---. - -. ,;' ~ •. . ) .
Each month, October through May, a new production will be presented. Eilch film will be . . '• ..
shown only four t imes: two evening and twomatini!'ii performances, al\Nays On a , . . " j.. '. :
Monday or Tuesday. But there is only one· way you can be sure of taking part: by becoming ' -. ' ..;. .. . .. ' ' . '
'
~ ,.
....,
')J
f
. ...
'l ·1.: .. ...
"
•:i.
••
a 'charter subscriber now. You· can then:be 8'8ured ~fa .,;;eat at the char~~' price: $'30 · " : .d
. "
for eight evening performances and $24 for eight matinees. That's $3.75 an evening,
$3 a matinee; far less than Broadway, just a little more than ordinary movies.
But seating is limited (theatres average only 750 seats) and requests will be honored
in the order we receive them. The sooner we tiear from you, the surer you· are of
,, .. ..
the theatre and performance you prefer . 1 ,
, 1:;
We urge you to become a charter subscriber now. Further information and subscription /
applications are available at all Robinson's sTo_r_e~s-.-~--~,--
l•
.... .,... -·
The Americafil Film Theatre
Family of Particip~t~n·g Theatres·.
•. , Sltlec~your pr~fet~elf theatres and Indicate names
'" ~ ·: -~ • and .code numbers .In coupon •
AF!Ef .'. THEATRE THEATRE CODE#
' ,..NAHEIM "
COSTA MESA
I
BROOKHURST
SOUTH COAST.
001
007
.. .-
.. -
. ,
THE Nl\ERtCAH Alfi!. THEAnE IS A .PftESEHTATIOl'i Of'
1 A---N ... ~-.I
Al"'lt-.RICAl't IJtPRfSS Fll/11\S, INC.
, ANO THE ELY LANDMJ ORGANIZAllON, 11'1C.
IN ASSCJtlATION WITH CINE VISION LTE[. l(NW>AJ.
~--------------------------, I ,i.. YES, I WANT TO BECOME A CHA.RTE" 8U9SCfUB~ TO TH~ AMERICAN FILM T~T"E FOfll TH£ 1t7S-1174 SEASON. . Eahlbklon Dates '
~·:I Please aend me , Charter Subacr!ptions. Mona,,.,_ I
;:.·
:•
D ~ D Octob•{ 29, 1973 ••.• IPNfw( .... _.): ~•E;NINGS .. t30•,...a.P9ffo~eSubacrlPt1on. MAT~at$24•Pf!W~rlor~¥-cnpt1on. NoveMb«l2, 1973 I J
MyTheatrePreference: CH£CKONE: THU.TIE~ -COO£# DeceMber10, 1973 '
"
:;::~:;~ ~:Z::!. ~... •• ...... 8 :,.~;.:: I I I I I ITT I I l I I I I I I I Q]J ~~-.::z-~~-\~~~ I-; · • · · Merch 11. 1974
tMt'tPPff'' with IM thttl,. OJ] April I . 1974 •. I ,,.,,,.,· ......... g~:z.~ I I I I I l I I I I I I I I f I Ii I 'M''""'" ~
I . MyP_PI_: ' -. " \ I .
.. OCl>o<t• ' tomy 'AoOI-·•-· #DDDDDDDO =~~. "-.. I . (PIMffflHtn)'OUf9CCOUl'lt~Mr.) ~==:~::~ I J
1 . 0 A chKk «·m-y ordwlt etic'°"d.,. .._ lfnCMlftt-.of M-. checkl P9Yeblt to Aob!Non'.. JanUery-22. tt14 ......
I ' FebNery 5, 1974 I t, Name . .... t Merch 12, 1974
•• PftlNTCUAAl.Y • Aprl/9, 1974 I
Addrett ~ I Mly7, 1974 ~
I .-. , M1ilto H<., · ~~-•··•1•'11 • :: __ ...,. __________ Zip vr~ o-r.t1y........, ,.,.._. ......:::
I '2 P'AIHION llLAND, NEWPOlltT •CACM 9fte91Wlll Mflnitl,.111,. I SlgMture ~ ~ M•tlfteff • 2 •·'"· hect tl!M• • ete CALll'OlllNlA 92880 ' f050 of ,.,1 .. 11.enc" wrn be l!t'M., L ~Price~) 11911p.: ~te;.N;,s..t.~.;.;'~il:w.:·:.~;-.;.:K::;; .. -==~;.. ~-.
. TO ORDER'IJIY PHONE_· .e«-2eoo •
SHOP WEDN'E!SDAY, THURSDAY 10 :00-St.30 644-2800
• .. l
I
'
..
• ,
DAil V PILOT Wtdntsday, Septtmbft 19, 197'3
••
Skill,
Taste
Pitted
$ere's a new V.Tinkle for
J>e!ple' "'bo don't like pineap-
ple: in sweet and sour Oriental
di~es. Try substituling pit ted
prVnes, ready-to-eat from th e boi:.
i'ou'U see hov.• well the idea
t.·atks . "'hen you t r y
economical Gin-Sun Sweet
fc:fk. It's a stir-fry 0£ pork.
aql succulent vegetables.
.,. sprinkllng of snipped
prf11es and a handful of whole
fruit sweeten ond stretch this
budget meal to serve 6.
Another stir-fried dish,
Chinese Sweet and S o u r
Chicken, relies on dimpled pit·
ted prunes to stretch 21h
po(&nds of frying chicken to
sefve 6. (lt takes double the
chicken to serve 6 if it's
SoLJtbem fried!)
GIN-SUN SWEET PORK
% tablespoons oil
Zcloves garlic, minced
3 slices fresh ginger ·
I pound thin-sliced boneless
pork
'A cup snipped pitted prunes
11h tablespoons cornstarch
l 1h cups water
t bouillon cube
I tablespoon soy sauce
2 tablespoons Sherry
1 green pepper, sliced
2 medJum onions, cut in thiii
wedges
y, cup sliced w a t e r
chestnuts
8 whole pitted prunes
Heat oil in. a wok or skillet
with garlic and ginger. Brown
bitMized pork slices on both
1ides, remove from pan.
Dilcard ginger and garlic.
Toss 1nipPed pnmes with
cornstarch; add w a t e r ,
bouillon cube, IOY .sauce and
Sherry.
Add r, onion arul
water chestnuts to pan; cook
for a minute or two, stirring
·constantly. Add -· s n l p p-e d
pnmet and liquid;-oook, stir-
rlng. until the sauce is
thickened and smooth.
Add whole prunes and meat;
heat briefly. Serve with rice.
Makes 4 to 6 aerving1.
CIDNESE SWEET
AND SOUR CIDCKEN
Frying chicken, about 21>
pounds .
2 tablespoons oil .
1 cup pitted prunes, finely
BDlpped .
Z cup1 water
y, cup brown sugar
llk tablespoonll cornstarch
V. teaspoon each cinnamon,
. cloves, dry musta~
~ teaspoon monosodlwn
glutamate
2 tablespoons vinegar
2 tablespoons soy sauce
Salt, pepper
Cut chicken through the
bone, Chinese styte ( i . e .
separate wings , divide breast
rtlons Into four, thighs and 1---_ja""'nmi.sucuiiito tWo pieces. ·
Remove small rib bones, and
wing tips, if desired.)
Heat oil In a wok or large
skillet, on the range or over
charcoal, and slowly brown
chicken pieces on all sides,
stirring often.
1---Push-browned-chiGken-to -
one side of pan. Toss snipped
prunes with water, sugar.
comstan:h, s p i c e s and
monosodium glutamate. Add
to pan; cook, stirring con-
stanUy, until sauce is clear.
Add vinegar.
Return chicken to the sauce,
cover pan : simmer until
chickeri is tender, about 20
minutes. Taste and adjust
seasoning with salt and pepper
to taste.
Garnish' with whole prunes.
Serve with rice. Makes 6 serv·
ings.
Buyers
Beware
Buyers are getting "bug-
ged"!
According to a survey con-
ducted by the Council of Bet·
ter Business Burea us to which
approximately 70,000 People
responded , poor p r o d u c t
performance, advertising that
misleads or claims too much ,
and poor personal service in
&tore, really bothers shoppers
these dBiys!
Salad Cubed
-p;jt a JltUe pizzazz In your
(avortta cool and creamy
potato 11lad-recipe with •
f1 Jvor lift from nutritious
natural cbeeae.
Chunks or Cheddar or Swiss,
toucd Jnto the salad, add a
mild to aharp Oavor, or a
·-nut lllle·flavor. besld,.
Jn<tU1lng I h e outrltlonal .
value.
STORltNt MON-FRI. 10 A.M. to 9 P.M.
SAT & SUN. 10 AM to 7 P.M.
Our <;;rowin' ls Showing Again! 1 60 DOUBlLDISCO.UNT.S. "n this ad s+ve yo~ $4.28
l hundreds more in effect throl.Ulhout the st-· ' With Our New Oxnard Di1count Matlcet
S. Roae Ave., al Pleaaani Vall•)' Road '
....._ 11 c•• it rd •......, dlrcount pra ot .._unit ructt r11r The tgure ..... be MUOlt .,.._.I wt a ~ ..,. lnduded.
MEATS YOU'LL• PROUD TO SllVI OUAUT't & SATISFACTION cu.wJIT~ • DISCOONT PRICED
YOUR i!°HOICE • lOW, lOW PRICE
~ DEUC100S Blllll ()f
APPROXIMAmY 77% 'CROUf()
BCEF AHO 2J%
TIXTURED VECETW l'tlOTIJlt tlOY noun WITH SUSOfflNCIS
MEDIUM ...,._ -SIZE
@ WILSON'S
~~iAfR[~ SPARERIBS
c
LB.
HORMEL RED LABEL
or IOWA MAID
SLICED BACON
08
·· 1-LB. PACKAGE
BUTCDl'G · PllDB
BUDGET
BURGER ...
c
LI.
§t-~~~~~~~~~~~ .... -:=~~.,. ..... ~~~~~.,,... .... --~~~~~~--~~~--~ '.l. ii U.S.D.A. INSPECTED• [RESH FROZEN ~ FREEBUTCBU'S 1!1DE '""Clll:fl ••1•E ~ NEW ZEALAND GENUINE SPRING ~ RECIPl BBQ.HALIBUT ALPHA BETA••• · '" • SEIT
,, BONELESS LAMB 1 OLB.8 @mw:~~ru -~:::E 2°!
,} SHOULDER ROAST IAlllT 1 a
'° r8 u.su . r"1'1:oTED • mSH rROlDt mm ... ~'i:tl~1N STEAK 2 31
. 'iOlii' =:t~~lll 1 sa ==• -BONELESS 1~. LAM• CHOPS u. IUIT • mE 1~ RIB STEAK
p. .... Uon
8 OUNCE PACKAGE
OSCAR MAYER
BONELESS
HAM
STEAKS
RlODH FOOi$ (1111(1( 1 OS ~ C1'RTl,RESH ROAST IUOE CUT ..
~z•oL 121 BONELESS · 163 -FISlf;STICKS ---CllUCK-ROAST SE\'!JfBM CUT ,._
Bl.UC OIAMOftO " 7.ffl . •mro~11> STANDIH 1'5 "•""'' 79c RJJtROASJ i;:: ..
~NLESL59c-
. SAUSA-.: 2~:PKG
THESE lOt.PRICf:s UF;l:CTIVE scr.r. 2().2' TKURS_,.-WlO. SHRIMP -----
fANTASTIC DISCOUNTS
EVERY DAY
15 Ounce Soul,.
VASELINE INTENSIVE
CARE LOTION
fANTASTIC DISCOUNT ;
EVERY DAY
119 ~Wishbone • 8 Oz. Bottlt-. \.!!::::::'ITALIAN DRESSING
J33
Wl$hbone • 8-0.n:e Bottle
CllUNKY BLUE
CHEISE DRESSING
~Lowry • 16 Oz. Jor
~SEASONING SALT
~ 75 Our>ee Package
'=°'FRENCH'S
BROWN GRAVY MIX
All'ltA ll[lA
""""" '"''
16'
FANTASTIC DISCOUNTS
£VERY DA I
FANTASTIC DISCOUNTS
EVERY DAY
17c
~ 150unc:eCart 18' ~RANCH STYLE BUNS. _
~o..........,·••o..b 3Jc ~PICKLED BEETS·,.... ---
fANTA STIC DISCOUNTS
EVERY DAY
.QUALITY UICERY AT
DISCOllllT PRICES
lltrMll lfTll • 6 Pad< • 9-0L 41 ')ELLY FILLED BUNS ·. c """'!II . . .
16 Oz. Loot • Whit•~~ ROU'ld ~ ,
ilrit'ij' WaFLUFFY BRW ;,c6c
4-Poek
11.rltl Im BEARCUWS 57'
79" . lllrMll 'l{t•· 12 Ounce BLUEBERRY CRUMB CAKE
··~rim CHEESE BREAD 49c -. ~§~~12 o .... CNxolot• c~ Cakos ~-F~~~~::cKs 67c
8 0 >'. Peanut Tondy Toke 67c 9 Oz. Cr-.. PUied Choe. Cups 7Jc
IOV. Oz. Butterscotch Krimpets 67c IO'h oz. Jelly Kri"'IPtl~ 67c 8 Oz. Chocolo1e Tondy Toke 67c 8~ oe. Cr~ fill~ KofTH 'Kake_7J.c:
49'
44c
10 Ou.:.• Fmnn •~Corn ... 1.-tOf Spjnoch • Mediurrl p-
-9 Oz. f t0;1tr1 • Kitctwn·cr
frtl'd!_~ &9M ....
CREI• CIAllT • 37c , VECETULfS .
20~·P~•llC>wu ""Sol ~
STDKElNiDZEN 55c vtCETABLES
.
ll.Ptll l(fl • \o!t Go!lon • Fr~vt
GOURMET IC£ CREAM 95c
\.
l
0 • •
99c
59e----<ijjtliliTlf7JlfAliilii'liNAm1 .... -..S:--l----m
14'
29'
25'
78•
DOWU DISCOUNTS MIAH~
SAVNGS AT A1.1HA m'T'A
O.wbit diJCOUl'IU Ot• l•tre ........... II\ Oddftlof'1fit
-·~ low dlwownl pr\Cff. They •• lllOClt pc.
11bl. Dy t•mporory pwtthctM c:ilfo•-n frOl'l'I r... · ~°'""'.,.' ... 1th lh;t ,,,,.o -no. pos1td °" 10 you!
I
•
'•
10 Do1en Bo11 • Clloc:olo!e Chip • ()Qimeol
PENHDUTCH COOKIES 89•
·~· d MINT TWISTS 54c
4 OUNCE TIN
SCHIWllG
CINNAMON
29c
------------
\
SWEET• RIPE
CASABA
MELONS s~.
VINE IPE ;,,.
ANTALOUPEll' 3 FOR-JOO
GARDEN THICK MEA TED
BANANA OR
HUBBARD
SllUASlt 5 FRESH 19 ~ BROCCOLI ~
RED RlPE
CHERRY 29c
TOMATOES,,_"'
GARDEN FRESH
LARGE SIZE 29"
AR'IJCHOKES ....
.,,..,...-...&.
SWEET & JUICY
BARTLETI PEARS
. DRY FALL FLOWERS
at DISCOUNT PRICES
LARGE
• STRAWFLOWER
BOUQUETS
• CHG.KE : LARGE
PUFFS
87'
67'
• DRY FALL .397 • ARRAllCIEMEllTS " .
OTHER BEAUTIFlA. FALL FLOWERS o
AVAILABI.£ INCtU0£, WHEATJ!AMPAS,
o.0:0K>KEBOUQUET.YARROW,t1 C. ,
..... ,._,,. .... 1&11,. ______ NUITAI .......... tumamm
•
[' "\
••
. '
' •
• W~ntsday, September 19, 1973 DAILY PILOT 41 . "-<!
Bank . . .
Dividend: On .to ) Budgeter's Recipes
• • •
Dy JEANNE LESE" • cover w.U: t o11lon· until golden in 2 tibl... tablespoons ol chopp.d ~ed vlneglll' drosstna, shaken with mixture Is room temperature. Toss lightly. II you have fil!IY 2 cupo J "" '"' •••w ' . )'he next 't!oy, brlna to bcii1 poons ol preheatecUalad oll1n bell pepper '"' pimiento and 1 1teaspoons of curry powder or Add 3 cuP, of cold, cooked. Serve on shredded lettuce poultry, uae 2 or 3 hard·boil-4
NEW YORK (UPI ) _ A and simmer, covered, 30 to 40 a 4-quart pot.. clove of garli_c, minced. • more to taste (optional ). . cubed poultry or the tuna, with tomato slices or wedges eggs, cut in wedgts. as addl·
bank that sponsored a n\QMy-m.lhutes, or until tender. Add Add 3~ cups of water and Cook over medium heat five Let stand, uncovered, unht drain and brtkcn into chunks. for garnish. . -tional garnish .•
saving recipe ~ten 'lere' *"'9re water. if necea'ary. bring to boil; add 2 beef minutes, or uutiJ onion ~ is1r;o;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;o;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~-ii;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;-.;;;ii;;;;;;;;;;i;;;;;;;;;;;;;;o;;;;;;a
learned as ~ b·ou · llrallHbt._ked(bean~ahd bO<llllon cµ~.~l teaspooo .ol .l@der. I E x E c u T I v E w I R E-femlnlne logic aalll.jlid abQUI mlx them·'wtlh one and,one-dry mustard and 6 cµps (an &-Add 1 (lk>unce) can~or 1 · " • ·
econom).zing:·' · ' • 11'8lf cans of condensed tomato 0411ce pac~age) of rnedium tofuato sauc;e, 1 cup of orange 4
Mani contestants w h 0 5 e soup, 1 onion, minced ti.l.i teas-egg noodles. . juice, 1 tablespoon or lemon
recipes.called for lefto"vers did pooM of dry mustard, in: cup Cover and simme~ 5 juice, 3 tablespoons o~ white
not t~ude the C06t of lift-of maple syrup, If.! teast>009 of piinutes~ stirring occasionally. wine or vermouth, 1/-i teaspoon
oven· Iii their planning ,. ' ~llt)'.!li:ed,.oyrup,~.teaspoon of Stir In 3 cups of cubed left-each of salt and dry mustard
Mon. thru Fri. 7:15 AM -Sat. and Sun. 8:15 AM
. . salt and 1(4 teaspoon of freshly over turkey, 1 cup of sliced and lfs -teaspoon of pepper ;
But some recipes submitted ground pepper ' celery and 1 medium green simmer, u n co v e re d , 15
to the Na_tional Bank o~"'North Pour into 8 2.,quart bean pot pepper, stemmed, seeded and minutes. ' I
America m t~t contest ne~rly o.r caMet<>le or an Bxl.2xl-inch diced. Cool to room temperatu~
three and a '.half years ·~. ~tll! . ~king .. dish.· Bake in a Cover and simmer 6 to 8 before serving with chunks of
represent ~good va16t ~;-~Heated, 351).degree oven 45 ,minutes more~orvuin noodles tuqa on shredded lettuce.
especla;IIr fo r !lleaUesS rneals minutes. Serves s. and vegetables are tender. Stir Makes enough to cover 2
planned in anticlRfttion of i;a. occasionally. cans of twia. for 6 servings.
ing prices when the beef j)rlCe TURKEY 'SOUP Stir in 11, cup of chopped If you omit the wine, add a
freeze ,ended. ' • Turkey is a good buy for fresh parsley or 1 tablesPoQn little extra lemon and orange
•
KAPX
,
Here . are a week'.s worth fil. ~ular family meals. :8UY a of dried parsley flakes. Sea.Son jli.ice to taste. ~easy and economlcil meatless -bird large eoough .. f~r) four to taste with silt and pepper. RICE SALAD S d B
main 'Ys1\'fs, twOOJ therri from meaJs. . ~" .... . Makes 4 servings. Rice salad is a good way to ponsore y:
ON YOUR
DIAL
NEWS AND .MUSIC RADIO
• ST ATE "MUTUAi: SA-YltilGS
the bank contest. , Serve 1t stufled l()I' the first CHEESE WAF t I f O · . ; dinner. Use leftoven .'lor a . use up pou try c lovers. r 5661 LA JOLLA BLVD. E
' ...
·,1;
'I•
,•,
''
·1
,•1 .. -.
'.'.'J
" " ..,
FISH ·LOAF casserole and hot Ol" cold Che~sc Joa! IS an unusual you can make the salad with 2 .615 , FIRST ST.
Mrs.. Gladys W e s t o n , sandwiches for two ·· Ynore. ~ variation.' ~ _the _P 0 P u 1 a r cans Of tuna. LA JOLLA TUSTIN D4I Jeri~, N.Y., sumbttted 1 this When the carcass is almost all macaroni and cheese cassc-Boil enough plain raw rice to l&,,,~.,,,,,.~~-~~~--....... ~~~~~~~~=~~~~~!!!'!!!!'!~~~~~~~~!!!'!~=!!!'!~~~!!!'!!!!!!!"f." ' t•·t' I ft ak In di h role make 4 cups, cooked. Place I~ ;"'J filh loaf:l '"' 5 e • m, e a ma ·s L: hll · 1 und f the drained but stilt Wann rice ' .I'(! Mix •t.o,Jettie} .11,S: pounds of ,soup with dumplings. 1~ _Y mix . po 0 ~ ground raw haddock .0;. cod, 1 Recipes for ~he soup and 8 sharp cheddar cheese, _sbred.. in a large mixing bowl.
I , casserole follow. ded! .with I . 4-ounce Jar or Add 1 or 2 large carrots, arge_~on, gr~ted, J.teaspoon Break up the carcass and drained pimientos, chopped peeled and grated or chopped, of salt, ~ teapoon ol pepper, and I cup of soft bread I large bell pepper, stemmed, 1,J cup· of,matzo meal. 3'·eggs, place it in a large saucepan . . . be with any leftover stuffing. ~r~bs. Sprinkle. nux with seeded and chopped, and 1/4
aten, 21CU'p! ~ milk and 1 Cover wilh cold water ; 1u1ce of I lemon.. cup each of coarsely broken ~:i~:g ,teaspoon of butter, bring slowly to boll, ?educe ~at 3 eggs with 1 cup of walnuts and raisins or dried
· . . heat and simmer about 2 mllk and 1 teaspoon of salt currants. J.'
Challenge · the News Quiz ·
• /0 •
• on Saturday's Family Page
ri Place mixture m a greased . hours, or until a rich ·broth and add. to the ~eese mixture. Toss lightly with 1h cup or
ng mold a™:I bake, un-forms. Add water . from time Pour m a well-buttered two homema~ or bottled oil and ~ven:ct, Pt a pan of hQt water to time, as necessary. Strain. and one-hall to three-quart,-----'-------'-'-'--'--'--'-.:..:..:..:...:..:.. _____________ ~-~---------------..'....'.-'--'--'--'--'--'-~
in. a ~egree ~ for 45 Strip any meat from the flameproof casserole.
mmutes, or µn~ a knife blade carcass and return it to the Bake in a preheated, 350-
lnserted in' the. center comes broth. Add any 1eft0 v er degree oven about 30 minutes
out clean. 1. • vegetables or a package of unt~ firm but not too firm .
Makes aboUt W serv11;1gs. frozfn mixed vegetables or While loaf bakes, cook about Cra~er meal can b e both. half of an 8-ounce package of
substituted far ,the matzo-, and Taste and add· salt and pep-spaghetti in boiling salted
margarine for 11ie butter. You per as necesiary. Simmer 30 water. Drain spaghetti well
can cut the cost still nlore by minutes more. and spoon pver the t\Ot cheese ~ Jiqulfied ·powder&! milk _Make dumplings. fro m lc__>~f. Dot g~e:ousty with~ but· mstea.~ of the, ~d \'~ety. bl!Cult mlX, following package ter or_marg~e and.spr~nkle
BE•N ~ROLE directioM, but adding l{, to 1fl! generously with pap~1ka. Ru~
'"t.'. · -;, . · cup of wheat germ to the mil: casserole under broiler until
Wllh, one minor change, before adding liquid. bubbling hot and I i g h t I y
~Man 1casserole \.froP:l .. Bring soup to boil, drop in bro~ed. Makes about six
Mary, ~:J-0onnon, ,,.Fort dum"''··-and cook as nu'x serv•""•. ., Sa!onp N 'I' . ._,_ • .;;..11 ....,.. ·----r,;0;.:;;:t,;. t~~·a~&°~~ =~ ~irects. Makes 4 to 6 PICKLED TUNA
To • supplement t·h e ;n-a en esca c e, or pieli:Y:--
complete prot;n in~ beans. TURKEY CASSEROLE cd tuna, is plain canned twia
serve;.c!_leese wedges with ap-This range-top casserole served with a quick and easy
pies or pears for dessert. -uses left-over cubed turkey. It tomato-based cocktail ·sauce.
For the ca¥,Crole, S>8k 1 can be prepared and ·cooked in In a medium saucepan heat
wUndof ~'Great Northern 3jf minutes'or less. 2 tablespoons of salad oil, in • beW.· overnight in· water to Cook 1/3 cup ol chopped cup of chopped sWeet onion, 2
. . EASY SCALLOPID POTA'TOES WITHOUT LUMPS ,,
Simpfy ~po/' ·' '
• ~ 't '
Sara Lee will give f9U
. $1.20 to sample our entrees. I .
• Use the 20¢ coupon.
Then, lo obtain your $1.00 'refund,
oend the Ingredient 1t1lement1 lrom ,
three Sare Lea Entriea and vour name , . ' address, and zip code to:
Kllchon1 ol Sara Lee, P.O. 8oJC21516
El Paso, TeXll 79998
(On.r•rpl,_ M•reh S1, 1174, Md llmlt Of oM NIUl\d
,,_ ftmlly °' 0191nlut1on,) , •
Anyone can give you a bargain. But only
Sara Lee carfgive you Sara Lee q'uatity. So
eat. Enjoy.
There are so many different entrees
for you to choo se from .
You could serve fancy dishes with
California wine sauces like Beef Burgundy
or Beef Stto_g~noff. •
Serva o_ne.of the sayory Italian entrees.
made with fancy al dente pasta like La-
sagna with Meat Sauce or the M0staccloli
and Beef. ·
Or perhaps the hearly Beef and Pep-
per Stew.
_You know Sara Lee uses only USDA
Choice beef. And in the chicken dishes
like the Chicken and Noodles au Gratin'
only Grade A chicken. '
It's the kind of food you'd be proud to•
have made yourself.
. But all you have to do is serve it, enjoy.
1t and collect your refund .
Satisfaction guaranteed ·and money
baek.
,---------------------------• ~ 20¢ OFF ON ANY SARA LEE-ENTFiee:-----:--OYT\:.,
. •
' • ...
" '.
,1 trJ ,.J,
.·UH
lRota~pes Dressed Up
o.,i•t 1:1
· ~. ~d to ~ 1 Then put t~ Into your l/4 teaspoon thyme, cru_mbled ·j'·' .. "
nounce ,dft#; you from ~st attractive ov~n-to-table 1 cup grated Mont J k,
maldltg .U ~ped .....,.ie· llld. lop ... 1th grated ch~ erey ac. .11 .•
potatoes.' All of';, 11tt -..Mel lllt!llterey Jliok epo. ... 0Heat tn i:.
I Nothing like a little S~ra Lee before dessert. . OJJ"' I
I
I Vlll\11 l/20C, FO!' ~.'" .. IO Kl!(J\cns I ~ LM, lr< .. P.0..&i.J527. CIV'l!Oll. kiM
nutrliinll '" the milk, bUlle•\ ' ',Jrioderale oyen 15 or 20 Mijlced parsley Mont,trey 'Ji!!* . ~. llMl !"flt.. just tq enough to rare potatoe~ "J>d slice v,ry
potatou are relllned 1n ~ melt the ch .... and they're thinly lengthwise, about II,
I new inetltotl. • r...sJ to oetve. Inch thick. Combine with milk,
• Be•del hl,ym, ._.,lg roMm 'nE TERRE butter, salt, pepper, garlic and • = ~h \!l\~c= ~ • . AU LAIT lh;;t ~ ~~~~::~er , __
, ~.~Ile (l'<lll!Otl Cooked.111.Mllk) 1$'"'11inuteilr otltrlng'& en t"
' w~# iili'~ 111 pounds bolling potatoes preveql otlcklng. T r a n s f e r ·
trner •\'!II •r•fh l 11 cups mllk potalocl to I \I.quart bakfng 11.f~_pota!liis d I tab! butt dish. Sprinkle with cheese.
mUk .aove... --:-:--espoonis ~r , Bqe in 3SO de&tM --oven
-It libtl abc)ul • u _ I tea_. iall about' :IO in!nutee rnllh ·~ for the potatoes to Few grlnds pepper with "minced parsley, Makes 4
becom<!• tender. I clove garllc, minced-to 8 1ervlng1. "
I;~ \ l
•
™WC1..AUS£:~o1twr·~ z I -oit.coupon<OflllllUiulrMICl.1,,.....1 ~"9 ~I ~ ol wf8cllnl likJck 10 c.owt ODl>Pf"\lo ~nl•d lo• rMtfllptk>n mu11 i,. m.-:1• I ~liporl ~.
Ofttt ••Plf'91 J1n111,Y 31, 1974 ~ I
t i n c:s I
. '"l ---·~··········t,ty .,, · · · aro ee 'I-
L~ . e A ConSol•d•ltd FoOds Company, ® RespotiStV• lO Consumer Needs. ~ci----------------------------....---·-----------~
~· 'l'T
,.~. . -
• . . I' •
I t
' • ··~· CV
f .
,
•
JJ PILOT-ADVERTISER Wtdotsday, Stpttmbet 19, 1973 Wtdnesday, Stplmbtt IC), 1973 DAILY Pll.DT •
•
•
..
•
,.
iROIP •
. , ; .
Let yourself get earned away to round_-the-world dining adventures this week! Im~gine a
hacienda in old Mexico .... a place in Italy . . • surf beating akaii)st Hawaiian
shores, and the bustle of Hong-Kong! Pick 'the place yoU:d li~e io ·\ie -----~ --) :.! •
C~KE · ·
MIX 35c
Betty Crocker-choice o'f laye.r varieties! I peanut Butter • • • •• nc
~ Peter Pon c~y Gt crunchy•28 oz.
Premium Crackers • 3tc
Nabiaco'a Snowflakes ••. 1 lb. box ,.
·:::··aunt•s-snack·Pack. 55c
~:·-: YoUr Choice -ctn of -4·-5 ounce.cam .,r·, ,,,., _________ _
,.... .,. l!~EX
.. --~:!· ~
TISSUE 29c
~ Fac!al TiuuH in 200 ct. pkr
' ' r:·1nstant Yuban 5139
: : ..... .
~ : Hearty brew in aeconda: ••• 8 oz.
~-:-y.~-"ee si•s • ~ UUClll -W'll • • • • • • I • ; For the eecond cup (3 lb. can , •• 2.99)
!_ Johnson's Pledge •• s1 29
: Rep.tar or lemon ICellt • i.-roz • :.------------. • • • " ' • :
WllTE . -
KllG ''D'' " ' • .... Save on .n•nt aize package! . . ·-. . ' .__ __ _;. _____ __.
• • • r :-··.------------. •
. Dinners ... 59
Dinin1 adventure. dmricned apecially for the small fry -varieties they'll love! .
'Rosarita ..... 49
Ole? These call for romantic mu1icr and oandlt)ight! To stir up memoriee of Me:a:ico!
and In our Delicatessen and In our U91or Dep't
~~ $16''
S~ve 2.00 on the· half-gallon! . .
Riquefort
Dressing 9 8 C
Bob's ••. 16 oz size for family UJe!
.-
BlueCheese'Dressing ,79c Vodka..Y111s ••..••• s3••
Bob's of restaurant fame! 16 ounce Bottled.for El Rancho! Quart
1000 Island Dressing59c Cabin Still ••.•••••• s5••
Bob's ••• 16 ounce economy size! ·Sippin' whiskey reduced 60c! Quart· . . .
i Ciett ft(lllar or mint ••• 5 oz tube. Ch'ck T·..... 49c G'lbe ' ·c· Sgt•
1 L----------' I en or u1aey. I JS 18 ••••••••
1. TOOTH i PAsTE 59c
{ ,. Bud.dig'• .... 1liced ••• 3 ounce package Half·f<l-l now reduced 58c!
1
1
! F'"M""'ODE"'==s=s =1=,~1-~. iceil Alriel'lcan ••• s1 ,,-Hearty. -Burgundy ••• s249
M •1tl•S-' _ C Borden'• ••• ~Pped alien ••• 2 lb. aize! Gallo'• fine wine in the balf.pllon
: "" Cucu........,Chlps ••• &9c-MoutOIFCadet1111. ~ •• s399
• Super or l!A!sular , •. pkg ot 24 llltn:il
I Homade fresh flavor! ••• 48 oz. jar. SuP.!rior borduUz wine from Baron .
Phillipe de Rothechild·rtd. white ' s ;
'
I
I
I • i
' .
'
• ' ' • : ' ' ' • • • ' • •
HAii
STEAKS 99c.
From the North Sea-bak~ or b-b-q!
• 1 Fillet of Sole . • • • s 1 '\.
: English sole for mild flavor! Fresh!
Butcher Shop Specl.tsl
U.S.D.A. Choice bee! ••• !or quality
you can depend upon ••• and
trimmed El .Rancho 1tyle !or
value ·yau can appreciate!
Qlld CUTI •••••••••••••••.•••••••••
Swiss Steak ••••••• si••L Omaha Rout •••••• s1••L
U.S.O.A. Choice beef round of coune! Thick, juicy -U.S.D.A. Choice beef round
lhlnp Roast .••••••• s1••. Ground Beef ••••••• s1 29 •
Su._ to be tender! U.S.D.A. Choice Extra ·leln, extra Oawrful!
--• ~
r~B)Yff ~l sres« . ~ 'J'J
and let the magic carpet of frozen fooiis-carey you, way ftom:-
. I. ' the beaten path! And you beat a path fo El ~~!
'.!. !..< • ~... I
.. -1. ;t1,.> ·~
'' -~--t ~ .....
.msrtE ' '
11 EllATIOllAI.
Vegetables
-Choooe your fiYOriteal 10 .. pk(
Italian
TIOPICM. I
m 1 • 3m ,. ... ...,1. , .. kT
Speara, SUcei Qi·l;h1111b! ll qi
•••••.•• 6CJC
Bella Roma! Brina it to your table with Builtoni'1 Luqna or Manicotta with chene! 14 oz ' . . : •. 59c . I WITH MEAT • • • • • • .. '
Remem'ber"N•~ 11? ••• tbt harbor, the ~un 1Pl.uhin1 th9 billt? Morton'• brin11 it back! 20 oz
Vegetables.r .••.•• 59c
C A W ••• the bir 20 ounce tiie
Monterey -Vegetables59~
Delightful blend lrom C & W -20 oz
Jeno's .pizza Rolls •. 49c
Pepperoni or Sauuse with Cheese • 6 oz
·yogurt hrs ,,. .•.• 69C
John81on'1, Strawberry or Rupberry!
SAIA LEE .APPU
PIE -
All American flavor! 33 os bl&!
·.Cinnamon Loaves ~. · Ste
· Four in a 16 ounce pack • Petite!
' ' . Ri -•n-f r ' 13 s1 ce r~ •• ~..... '*
Or Rice Medley ••• Gnen Giant. 12 01
French Cnnb Cake Ste
S~er'a mak11 thtm IO sood! 10 oa
' Whip T-opping •••• ~. 35°
Re.I Whip for convenience! 9 oz. can
ICE
SI>rinlfield favond flavon! Half.pl!
S1per freslt Proflrtcel
Central America'• finest quality!
·Serve 11icea with cereal ••• bake a
pie • _ • or a cake? When did you
last offer banana frit.ten? Good
bananu an IO aood! .
Baker Russets ..... isc. , BroCcoli. • • • • • .. • • • • • me.
Gerdm freeh , •• tipt, tinder, Wiy1 U.S. No. 1 Premium quality!
ROIRline • • • • • • • • • • • 19c ..
All green ••• cri1P •Cauae it'~ freth!
Cherry Tmtoes 3~11 ·
Ripe little beauti11 , <.. tolid, too! ' ' ,,
:
1 i lurboHillets · : . . 78\.
I
SliC11 oi lean tonder U.S.D.A. Choice top round, ror ·n...,,! 1&.
~ --1
From the shorts of Greenland!
Cocktai Shrimp' . . s2 11~
Fully cooked and tender!
ROCK -· sio• COD .. £" F'neh ftlletl from lmh fiah! -
-
Stew Beef ••••••• :.s1•\.
Lein and bonela. -compue qiiaUIJl
Fryer 'fhilhi ....... W.
From pllllllp Cautarnla c~i....,.l
Ham e.RAllCll01°". . 9gc
F1l,1. Sim llAlF • • • • • .. • .... • •
FJoni pork lep Nlactod by El Rancho, and cured to our apecillcational
Butt Portion·•-· . s1'!
Smaller portlone, •mt ftno quality!
Pricfl in tfftcl
Tlwn. 1,,_,h Wtd."
S.pl. 13 t,,_,h Sflll. 19 ' .. o,,.n daily 9 lo 9 • s~ 10 lo 1
!{o ,.,,. iJ dealm. •
' --• • J .. 1• I{ \ ~· ' I ! --
I
\
•
•
. --·-,..
•
Torte
Tu r ns
Healthy
I
We've tasted a na 'fu1
torte which has eve -
good looks, great taste a
naturaJ wealth of healthy
nutrients. The basic ingredient
which makes this ca k.e
something special is toasted
wheat germ':
It's combined with grated
carrot, a few unblanched
almonds, some orange juice
and grated peel, m i x e d
together in a fluffy·egg batter:-·
It's the kind of cake that is so
delicious in itself that there is
no -need for a frosting.
But, if gild the torte you
must, then we suggest • a
simple golden orange glaze or
a dusting with powdered
sugar.
GOLDEN GLAZED wai:AT
GERM TORTE 1
2 tablespoons butter
21/4. cups toast.ec:I wheat-1~nn
1h cup unblanched almonds,
finely ground
COOK UP HEALTHY DESSERT • .
i> cup grated carrot, packed (about 2 large)
i;, Cup flour ~
6 eggs,.aeparated
I y, cups ougar
,,. teaspoon aalt
1h teaspoon clnnimon
I orange, grated peel and
juice -·
Orange Glaze
Greast 9-inch springform
pan with· bo~ter. Coat with Y•
cup toasted , wheat germ.
Meuure almoods, then grind
finely in electric blender.
Combine carrot and almonds
with toasted wheat germ and
flour. Beat egg whites until
still but not dry. Beat egg yolks witil thick with sugar,
salt, cinnamon ,. 1 tablespoon
grated orange peel and v, cup
orange juice.
Stir in wheat genn,mixture.
Fold in beaten egg whites .
Tum Into prepared pan. Bake
in 350 degree oven ~ to 60
minutes or until cake tests
done. Remove fi:om pan. Cool
on rack.
Serve plain or frost with
Orana:e Glaze. Spread glaze
over top and let drizzle down
sides. Makes 16 to 20 servings.
Orange Glue
Combine o/.t. cup sugar, ~
tablespoons cornstarch; 1;,
teaspoon · salt , 2 teaspoons
grated orange peel illd I tea-
spoon grated lemon peel. Stir
in 1 cup oange ju.ice. c.ook over
low heat, stirring ~tly
witil thick and glossy. Remove
from beat illd otir In 2 table-
spoons butter.
. '
•
ALL OUR STORES. JOIN IN THE .'=1 .... n .. --G ·R-AND OPE'NING .:--=-
.
. •&x1g 9~H.~ and .~ggs . -•
~=~HT·" " .. C,ELE,8RA TION .
1 . A I 2 9--7-5 'HA RB 0 R BLVD., C0$1 A MESA_ ·~· --r1 ~ew MW ....... Y 11P101111D TO llEJIU SUYI YMI MHE YAllETY ..... llCll. • • UPA-•D ~'·: • ·
--·· SIUl.Hll ·PllS MIC'I. MICI MME. . . c1111 sn .. n LOOI(. · ·
' • I .-
All Italian food. isn't garlk:,
.tomato and eregano. " · Our' IUtliorlty b-.w.· ls a ·
~ Little old l!llµan lady whO runs a grocery store in
Grtenwlch Village In New
dominating the di!h. I ·tablespoon cream
Asked where the name , in_ teaspoon aromatic bitters
4'Carbonara" came from our 'Cook spaghetti , in . boiling
llaLian lady said she dic1n1 salted water acoonling to
know for sure, i>ut she thought package directions.
ttE'M ~s:: ttrff~;~:·~~!!!iil.!!lt!!!•~J· !W!!:ltf~_·':::'!"'A~-~-~iiAl~·~W~ri~·:-·.ui:"~·n~· .l!W~E~~:_'·~~::..~::r~,~· iW~£~~;, :=~~!!~!!.~!! .. ,,
'\'tll't.· Stlpptn;f ~be
Dillzlnlla cheeae <whldi oo.
vioull,y ii about u bland a
lute u one can get Jn any
laquege) 8DC( getting right
down to the puta, she maln-
tolns the best spaghe!U dish Is
a .. "8Ucateiy-flavored o n e
-al Spaghetti a 11 a
.cart>onan. ' ' ' -Tlils Ii !loWilie aoes !t.~or
. a trace Of tom.to, nor a taste
olhot-JU!I a simple and beautiful
combination of spaghetti toss-
ed with eggs and baooo and
aa-and 1Ublly flavored
with lnllll8tic bitters. The hall
it had 90mething to do with Mea'nwhile, cook bacon in
the llalim police. . large akillet. and sausages In
And Ille always felt that the separate small skillet. Wben
di!h bad more dignity and bacoo ia of desired crispness,
eulhorlty, therefore, than call-remove from lat and keep
Ing II Spaghetti all.a Ciodara. warm. Drain spagbettl and
"Cloclara" means "peasant add to baron fat in skillet. Add
style" and ts a way with cooked drained sausages, cut
spaghetti where the ''l'nlscii&-Into i.tnch pieces, and 3 of
to" ls combined in a sauce. In bacon slices, crumbled. Stir-
the ~ the bacon and ring constantly, cook together
sausage are jiisfgeiiUfi!iffiir !ii'2-mllillt .
in with eggs. Beat eggs, add cream and
SPAGllETTI ALLA
CARBONARA
I pound spaghetti
l!I slices bacon
Angostura aromatic bitters and
p>Ur mhture over spaghetti in
skillet. stir over low heat for 1
minute.
teupoon II jll!I eoough to give 8 '8usages
Serve immediately in 6 Por-
tions garnished with
remaining bacon slices and a
~rlnkle of Parmesan. --~wr_lllj_w.il!lJ>_u t._~2~wi'---~-
' Beer Drinkers' Delight . '
~ .\l~g~tables Souped Up
' ' • ,. 4t "Beer -~J goOd in the pot 2 teaspooJ1s oregano boil. Simmer 5 minutes. Dip
as,. 'ta tJie ~~·. applies 1f.i teaspoon tJasil eggplant and zuccllini ln egg
esMaD:r: 11 .. ~·r pot· when 1 teaspoon salt . and saute in margarine ap-coinlilned Wiiii: llUdf vegetable I medium onion, diced . . . fa~tes u 'eggplant, zuc-2 teasPQOD.S oregano proxunately 5 minutes on e~~h
~· mulhroonw, onlom and JA ~n basil-side.. PrebeaL. ove.n to 3SO
• giMn jlepper. Thls 'Medley of I teaspoon aalt degree .
Veielablel' ii bow*! to be an !fedley: · Place lliyer of eggplant In
all,dme,,lavorltel L I medium eggplant, peeled casserole top with cream
I ·11'•"•yeiod1 lmll, ·~ , , and cut In,,. .. lllces --. '~ccbinl, and cover
cbeiela, IUCb •-golden cbed-2 ~um zucchini, cut In with sauce. Conllriue layering,
dar, Monterey Jack a n d ~ slices subatttuting Monterey Jack (3
cram .-. whlch when 2 eggs OWl<eS) and cheddar cheeses
melted a p re a d themselves Cream cheese, 1 (3 ounces) (3 ounces) for a cream cbeese1 over layers ol ..Ptables." A package eodlng up with tomato sauce
dtUcloul 1~~lb 1 ad c e Monterey Jack cheese,, 3 on top. -
enliv •dllii Ill.th J1lol ""1 1arge sll"" about 4 ounces Then lay a slice of Monterey rta1I' al~ _ <J?eddar cheese, abQut 4 Jack and a slice of cheddar on . = -of, lhlt .,._, top (_..llrnately 1 CIUll<e ol •P.,. lioilib°'8 ,1!few. _ • , .• Saace each). Place, unco~d, In ·i .~t1a~orln1 eom-oil Ingredients for oven and bake approximately
u "'" II pjqliat a •d uce 1n saucepan. Bring to a 4>IO minutes. Serves 8. ·:F.t~= Brotcoli Bubb ies • mrnmer..lllld, • . bnld """ IC Jlfj0.c'. ... This super dish !"'mes from package dire<ltioos ; d r a In . rr
· GI ~~,; the excellent new 0 Sunset Melt butter in a saucepan and
swrs•-. CANNED
HAM .. i! ll . • • • • CApl
m
SIZE y SALAD 19·;;
TOMATOES •• ~
--1 Ideal !utCooklng Vegetables" , blend In p~ur, -sa1t and pep-
' •(Lane Boob). per; cook until b\Jbbly. lfl '--.;;;;;;.;.;..;;.;;;;.;;.....1
MJ:OUIY or \lllOIT~ 111\00COLI CASSEROLE Gradwilly sUr Iii !iillr, 0'1ll ·-~ _, ..,... • ")' -cook, stirring, uutlt thickened THESE ITEMS ANO PRICES GOOD ONLY AT THE FOLLOWING STORES • · ·
1 package uo ounces) frozen and smooth. Remove from .,...,_,__ ·-~-•• ·rm·--·--·· .. --·~,,...,, ... _ ·-........ ··,.--1 can tomi:to MP ;........._.... brocOOll belt and stir In onjnn mayoo-' :..-;iii=-.... : •,:. :::;.:." } • :-0... ::: ==~== .... · ==:=i:::t:.':... ,:•a;m:·~.:.i:i.·:..,.... =e::"""...._t.:.=-:r.:.-..\.~':':'.;;c:.:...
) .. Iced .......,,,~ v.'t ·----• ,,... - ' M•i-"°';::f."" , ___ ,,.....,_ •. ,... '' _.., ' _ .... ,.... .._II .. __
I ... (I """'* • labl-ns each bu"-··'oe -~•~ ... •eggs • " "1"'""' • ~.-... • .,..__ • ·-·-1--·-'00·--· •::=::r;"•\-• ...... , ... _.., . clralned 4 "'"t"""" ...a IMll .UU 1,11; .._,, , • '"~--._ ,.,._ __ • = ,..,__ -•m•·--·--. ... ,--. ·-•• .llllo •-"' .-. ... --
and all fto ~ •• In '-~ti o -.... o ·---o11 -~ -•sm•~·c::~ ·-llOlt°"'" ,,.,.._ ... llOl·,O,,_ ........ ,=_,,,__ ... ·-•i..101--,nlll~ llUUt ' mu Ulvu.NM ' -~ 0 •l••.-ho ' 1 ,._ ,,... ..,,, __ ·--1·---' .. °''"11--'-''"" --.• ... ) ...... ~ te~.ait I ' lldo' I ~l:reiueci :. •' I 7-· o -·-' M•-• ;M,1,_:--•IOO-,.. __ ,_ .. ,,,,,,.__ ,_..,.1 .. 11--
~~~.;;;._,)'-_;~'!!"'~ ', qtflll\J~ lnd,J~· 11Do I , ~ '
i' :': <• ounces> io:,,.to r ~tiespoon grate.I onion ~1n,,.! ~,...'!:~".'~ -r r .Q. tm'd " ~ l'\.T • S Q • ,,.~peppor,dlced t~.:.:ri::: :;i:,.i:..':":.~.~,:~~ y pa ay s 11 ~ew_ UJZ
I m<dlum onion, diced Cool< broccoli I o II o " I n I lnp. I .. ' , · • . . ' " I
WAlUl,MUlllN.., =:;.':. ":.. ~ _ .. _.. -c.: --·--·:~ .. -.. ___ t;;,T'.;:;: __
.......... --..
' , I
' )'
' I
•
.-
'
•
• ' •
'
~~ DAl\.Y PILOT
Little
'
C?ikes
• •
Healthy
Walcbing yoor cboleswol
Jnlake! 'l't)' special Petite
Qlpcakes.
They're made with egg
whites (the cbolest<nl is in
!!le eu Y<ft), aklm milk <the
'<!iolesle...I Is in the butterfal)
and com oil (low in .aturated
fats and one ol our best
IOUJ"CeS of polyunsaturates).
Tbeoe cupcakes taste best
fresh -from the oven -warm
or cold; IO plan to 8'."e them
shortly alter, bokJni.
~l~t. '
I y, cups ~ cW i!oor
y, cup IU&ll '· ._ ',...
11> teaspobm baking po1lder
01> teaspoon salt 1 •
2 eu whites
I> cup augar
s;, cup com oil ....
~ cup skim milk
1n teaspoon vanilla .
. Grease three lkup intifi'in
-(eoclt cup 11'4 by I Inch) , ..... ,1.cup1--eased,
If WOfllinc I with an\y hro
P.lftS, :Clfvtr • and !:\Old leftover
lialte•.111,sel!iieralor IHltil pan jg''"' lo -. '.Into. 1'rge bowl or electric
J$er. Aift l\le<ther the flour . ~ cup au gar,. baking powder
and salt.
In ·~n 'bowl of electric
mixer. beat egg' whites .Wltil
soft :Pe.u~ 'form. Gradually
beat 'Iii '\be·l> CUP. Sligar until
mixture t.rms still peaks.
Malo!;W.U In cente< of floor
mixtlw, aild lcom oil and I>
cup a('_~.lklm mil~. Beal Im·
tJI ~,lo imocith. Beat in
rmWltln« milk and vanilla. ~ ~= lilin-~ = eu. Ink> Ill!' ~pare! maffln pans. ~lt!t.__i cups (in ..,.;..;. . '!ill be l!O-bot·
ler) irllh'wa'i«.
I.In a pr<healed :iso-T .=1..1111~~~
t clefa-211 ~·
I few 1 inbiites , and
.... ·from ·-,. *" racki;;1f;er\fe WWiri « cooled ~eiy · -. beat served
. .lfth1~ ligtiUy 1fi ~ , s uga r . l!lake! !O. • .
-F~--com.
blne deliciously with cheese
for a sUmile, . 'COlltinental desseft For something a little
·mo"' efalloi-ate~ try this pie,
't'ith Its Interesting blend ol
fla~ tenures: -~~L
s l!liii'!1<H'jjeanr
Ulllli!!!ed pally for 9-inch
Ple'11bell
I taii1-Dour '
I .~ leJl¥JQ juice
l (tcu~· brown 111gar, firml y
ll'8cked '"Ail':-.crushed c or. n
tli cup butter or margarine
1 teupoon·cinoamon
Pare, halve, core, and slice
pe"E'. Line 9-lnch pie plate
witli putry; flute edges.
Sj>ripkle lloor on pie shell. Ar.
ranl~ _,,pears on shell and
1prtn1QeWith lemon juice.
With· pastry blender or 2 lmlm, mix ail remaining In· aroilJ<nts; loread over pear>.
Bake at S?S degrees for 4li I<>
50 minutes, until pears are
fork: tirXler · tlbd top is crisp
and. • IJlll!llY prowned. Serve waftza. Makes 6 servings.
ovv the nnn; white flesh of
tho\! ...... Calllotnia. Bartletia,
11 .. ~.:wlth it's fll!dts of
rich.:~ chutney, g1~es a cmtrut tbars as attractive as
It la llaWJl'ful.
Clllll'Nl!Y PEAR SALAD
i> cup plal!I ,...irt « dairy
..... cr'l!llJi
\>cup~
11 cup chutney, chopped
II teupoon =ry poorder
I> teupoon aealQIOd aalt
2 ta~ lllld oil
1 tablespoon ,...... juice
·'I> teupooo ""*' lemon rind
I fresh BarUett pe.orr
I qlllri itllttdded loeberl -· Combine all Jnsredlenll U ·
cepl peara and lettuce. C<n'.tr · ,..i dllll. When ready t o .
~ pet!, halve. _. r
peara In ellhtbl. J\ITl"I
lettuce Untd salad pilleL
droalng over lrult.
'
' •
•
Wldo!Jdo1. S.ptonbtr 19, 197) PILOT ·ADV1'RTISER T '
\
I FAMILY DISCOUNT TICKETSlT THRIFTIMApt l
........ · ADULTS ·~i•uw ~~·JUNIORS @:rw•"' (Sto ll)
SJIFJIRI CHILDREN
l#r«Nt. WUll.lfl l'MMIM (UNOfrt 'l
AfG.$3.95
NOW $3.00'
REG. $2.95
NOW $2.00"
FREE!
s,oc111 S.lllp c..,..1., ,..rfimlywill &3.08...,... '"dml .
GOOD .ANY DAY NOW TRRU OCT. JI-
(So1.1thern California Stores Only)' I ' I
--r
••CHICKEN & KIDNEY
: • CHICKEN & LIVER
: ,} 6-0Z. 0 a
• • .. c ..... • ....................
D REAL ORANGE .JUICE
•
VITA ~"" CHll.l.UI 75' 41-0 L ' ....... .
D PREU CONCENTRATE •.•• ~'!'~!".11"
'
Stock-Up Price! ...
Ii
.
I . ' The more you'~ ~··· • . .. • ~ ' t . shopping tor;
. the more·You :need·
• ' .
• I . ' • I
.
our beef sale.-~ ~~ ··.
l Happy NewYeorl$[
• • J "\I'
· 1 2701 Harbor I~ .. Costa Mesa A 13922" ._..unf'4t,Gardtn Grow ~;·' 1
•
1308 Wf Edinger, Santa A"la • 5858 Warn,ri Huntington leacrt e 23811 El Toror .EI · Toro
..
' J
•
•
•
.. " . . . nacking
"14~~/s_.
•
•
-a Tfy
'
NIVU
MEATS.
'""""'... ~ ... t.18
UIDA 1:1111111111* lip lltlt .. t.il
lllDA Cllllcl r..lly 8llllc "'=' ..i.18
. .
HIW CllDP,.,RID
• DIUCIOUI APPLU ......._.... 0.
•
To serve; genUy spoon
1ardines and sauce on top of
welHlralned bot spagltettl.
Serves' two, 325 calories each.
SARDINES WITH
WINE AND MUSHROOMS
"""' 27 < "~ .
~ .59
MtrlH Mic. I er.a . ~ .22.
• Kf!:ll ltlnWllll . "=" .31 ~ ., , . ''
. VONS FROZEtol";....:.
()llANGEJUICE""'
""""'"""" I
SllUI• S1111 L111uill ''t];/ .19 ·
V• ill Klll!l'a Fllll I Clllpa ~ • 79
IJii.IA llilll amiiil . · ''=° .39
ollUIUYJIAID ~ IOUll CREAM -.....
• , ....... ""-...
~· 1.15
DAILY PILOT 47 -
TeRderness
•
margarine (optlOnaJ)-may be used in place of the
~·Onion or garlic salt but~r. Gently rinse away all
»-14 po~-mushrooms, sliced -remaining oil.
'ii cup dry white wine · Combine butt er (or
2 ·cans (3314 ounces each) m'argarine · or oil) w i th
sardines in brine or oil mushrooms and half of the
1( the sardines are placed in wine in a nonstick skillet.
oil, ot\e tablespoon of the oil Cover and cook Over hJgh hea.t
until liquid evaporates and
mushrooms bro\vn ln re-
majllipg,2il.
When brown , add remaining
wine and rinse sardines. Cook
only until sardin es are heated
through. Makes two serv~gs,
236 calories each.
•
.,
' '-.,
•
' '
.. t> I· -, . "
G"LA ~TOWEtt
' ·APPLE CITY
APPLESAUCE
FRESH LEG
LAMB
VONS VALUE GROCERIES ·
lllpl Cnn Celt .:k~ .85
• ..... Qlelllfl Qllt ·.r-· .63
In. lltllrnrftl Synp":1E' .75 ....... •• = ·~.Z9
" JclC Pnm Crack~ ~· .39
' I ' • ' ," ' P11111 ClllM l'.nultr \'i"'..,, °'= .49 . . '
GRANULATED
HOLL!Y'SiJGAR ............. •
rtNH.WllillAT.Olll
8191 Spqlllltl SHCI ·~ .75
-tiltlll llallll lrllkllllllrilk~-121=
'IN I m.IA \I-OZ. --:wm Piiilii DlfFlllll=.::::.2r-
{lllf Fnl,lllll'Knil C1r1 ~ .11.
KELLOGG'S .
I ' < I R!ft'~S ' .
~:llHHayM'Jw• -~ .33
bl aiut -·... '=' .25 ' . SkiDll Mfl)c Dinn = .39 ·
Anl a ...... IKlll... '=' .25
VONS PREMIUM
COFFEE
ALL---~CMI
YOISIAUE -BAKERY·
W1101 Trtll "111d "="<='° . Al
ow Fmlllllll Do•llll ~i~, ;47
·~\ ;;: . .,
f' .,.·· "' \l. _;
' • ~ ~-~ ' ..
"
• ' ' •
'
VONS
SttACK·PIES
llEIL1HI 9EAUTY --~;;.;.~~ ... !ii!'!.,,.,,.~
LtMlMIOXtl'ICWA "
STRAIGHT ......
KY.BOURBON
Olli cou»m. T'n.91 l'l'Ttt".""""
. . . ., ..... \ ' • • I '
ORALB •1\,•
TIMTHPASTI ,. 1 I ~ ~ .. Ofl ......
•
· 'lllllllM•lhiili ·"«"'\, r• ., . ~.-...
. _ C11tp U, T~lll .. .::'A'"t. M
BAYER •
· ~£/!!!N T~LET! •
' • .<( L ' • • ~MyS1111p11 .• , -:==.r1.11 ' 5 .•
2.19 . iltM .BldD••111!11. r=--~~71
NEWIBALSAM
SHAMPOO
VON1 M (IUlllCa90mii
..
FANTASTIC SAVlll8S Ol llPll Im
POIEBAHl-CW COOK I BE WARE
-,. _ -• OQlllltllll • .. lhlll ..... f!p. -. ... ~~·----· ......... -r-~a '•L.9 .......... iiMi-70o* jriilt .. ~lll .,_...... .... •• 311·
ltlWIObnnd-"Splol b----~ ··~ --. , . . tnttodUCtOr/OW.rl llllf4t ELI
1-GUMT -1 •• Ul:E 1'111"'="'
llAIW It! 'It ll'lllillr
•
'
' ·.
f. .. Ay. AD . --·-... -.......... =.;; +: ............. ~...... ._
"'AU.lrllllfWMCf•lfOtl#=:-WTA_ .. _ '
011 ____ ., __ ,_c111-•"'-. '
! itoa2 Beach -' ltlltillll ... • . 179'50 ..... ~ fllillll -
• • •
'
• •
•
I
I
i :
t
• -,
J
I
I.
I
L .
&i Ii
as1 .
• ,
.. • ••
'
DAll Y PILOT \Vtdnttday, Stpttmbtr 19, 1CJ73
ITATIR BROI.
MOlllY BACK GUARAllTO
Oii QUALITY MIATI
IVllT 'llCI OF MU T tS
l.ICONDfTIONALl Y GUAIAHTHD TO IUAH YOUX . OI YOUI MONIT WLL•• ot•urw' •UNDID
EVERY-DAY OF THE WEEK
\ -.
\ ' I
\Wedntsda)', Strit.tmbtr 19, 1973 PILOT -ADVERftS!R t
PORK
ROAST
·•
FRESH SHOULDER
.PICNIC STYLE
c
LB.
•
ROUND .
STEAK
STATER BROS. CERTIFIED
BEEF • BONE-IN
$ 45 ·
.POUND.
•
BONELESS ROUND STEIK LI. 11.55 "
SLAB B._ACON
MOR~ll 'S PRIDE
A~ f SIZI PIECE
I • ' 1
i
" '· I
Maffs
•••
•
FRESH
RADE~AA-"------~--.-
-22 FLUID
OUNCU 39'
Salv.o··
•
CHERRY ·
TO.MA TOES
HEAL TH & BEAUTY AIDS
Cll'P
IOMAINI
01 UD UAP
LITTllCI
,YOUI CHOIC.I
2·i 29¢
PLUS WHITE 49' TOOTHPASTE •¥•oz. TUii
--~~.--
Detergent
Jablets.--i t--t--SECRET S-.,. ~ ,ANTl-PERSPIDNT • oz. AllOSOL CAN i~--il
' cake just ~ emugb to set
otheT Bide. • Al_ ...... cooked
~E.GGS~ -
t SPRIN6FIELD
MAYONAISE'
:·59c • FULL QUART
fOtGERS--
~--CiiFEE~~
I .LB •. 89c CAN •
•
!Y.!'!.E,'!~~S ASPIRIN" , IOTTLI OP.it T~. 97'
~ · · PRELL: , . · ~":""$419
-----CONCENTRAJ~ 1SHAMPOO ~':".'~I ' ~ .
')'El· DELUXE s· , /$4 TOOTHBRUSHES ..... _ AT 10111 ITOllS , ' . I
• • •
•l llN •IAHT
NllLm co• IN ~SAUCI
.. UN •IANT
MIDIUM PUS IN IU1Tll. IAUCI
, •RUN •IANT " 1 ,
•RUN llANS IN IUTTll SAUCI
6111H _.ANT
SPINACH IN IUTTll IAUCI
•lll N •IANT
llCI MIMl'f
aUIN •1ANT
l lCI PI LAF
I
10 o&.)
I
-'' n.J I .....
I
11 n.I
I
12 n.)
I
12 ....
ISLAND INN FROZEN MIXES - 6 Oz. Cam
• DAl9UIRI • MAl·TAI • MARGARITA
ERLANDS fSt . . MUSHRQ__OMS
..,} BORDEN.
• ·cREMORA
lllo 4 OZ. CAN
I I• 22 OZ. JAi.
·-·
3./'1
57'f _, I '
' 29'
79' (they Will not be brown) lllack i lllem oa a plate. Makes 10 to f IJ.
f SeafooCJ BARGAIN ; BASKET BETIER BEEF DflrlMNl lAL
SOFT MAl •AllNI
1 ...... J•l/J Lit. , ....
USDA CHOICl, & MANNINGS BUF, IASTIRN . PORK, GRADE-A POULTRY,
BAR M HAMS & BULK LUNCHEON M~TS ..
swttched CUT UP .. I " i It's ..,-... 1o ~bstitu~
. chickei for -food and °"""
euler to prepant this auperl>ly
sauced d1lh Jn an ovm big. FRYERS
_, NEWBURG
' 2 ~1rytng chlcl .. YOUNCi·N·TINDER '1=-.. ~!'.~unc•, BEEF , v, eu.P tloar ' • . .
. IO~can) LIVE ~ ~ ::.:: salt 'inllk • • • • R
'
r
I • •
¥• teaspoon pepper • •
2 (ableopoool 'lberry wine 1 GRADE A WH0U IODl~D _ _ • , ~ 59¢
1~~ ...:~.:i:..: fllYIHG CHICK• ..... ~-.. · .. " ... '... L~ In two-Inch deep roullng pan. ' , ., 69 ..
"-Add.mb:-and Dour. • ,, ·,:r,~fi:°~.~ 3 LEGGED FRYERS .. ~.............. u..
"~·. ---1111111 • ' l ' 98-, ~~ = :~:~ FRYER LEG~ &. THIG~S ..... 1. ... ,. Lio.
c CHUCK . $
lb STEAKS
PROTEIN BLEND MIXED WITH
cGROUND
lb BEEF . c.
Iii ' .
'1'9 Lb.
BAR M BULK
POLISH 1AUSAGE .......... , ........ .
RIB -STEAKS '1~ ···········~·······.'_······'...,'._
IOHI LESS llOLL ED 0 OA '1• SHOULDER Cl D R ST ..... .. .. .. .. LIJ.
'..I::'~, .. = In f I • '1'' :~.:;. i;.~ 111 i:t FRYER BREAST_........................ u.. ·
SMALL END . '1"
RIB ROAST ' .' ... " ' .. . .. .. . . . .. . . . . .. Lb.
Inch 11111 In top. IAR M BULK b illft Bake ·-mlJlutel In 360-.. · •1u
1::.endiJd... io warm SJ.ICED BACON·'.".' ........ : .... :._~.:.... L.._:
platW or , .. te. ~Illy ARMORES MI RA CURI 1 • "'129 ''. · i.? .::":O~ov~ SL1CED BACON 1 L~ Pk9 .....••.. • ... Semo 4 to •.
• •
•
ROUND BONE ROAST '129 ..... ' ......... ' l b.
SEVEN llONE
BEEF 1lOAST T '1''
·····················'•••·· Lb.
• . '
.UAX .
WINDOW CUA.Nil ................
PIPll COLA
16 OL httle
...
-49'
·6/69'
.... ....
Prices Effedlvei
' Tltssday th111 ~ .. Sept. 20, 21, 22, 23
Mc.. ... i .. to --~ •
WI GLADLY ACC8'1'
U.S.D.A. l'OOD COUPONS
COSTA MESA
PLACENTIA
-.
\
19111 11111 Pllceltia
710 w. ·Cll1p11•
• I
I
5ft DAILY PILOT
• ftunke ·r' £ Taste ) .
~I
By JOHNA BUNN "Look, I ~ for pleasure, backtrack sometimes, but I prepare something special, "Before Archie tastes ibe CIDCKEN GARDENIA • 1-10 Small potalot's, juice over potatoe1. Cont.hue 1
not for necessity. A houaewife like to experiment." ' I'm always bringing it over to· vichyssoise, be says, 'What's 1 c 1 ea n e d ~Uer.rryer, parboiled in skins, WlUl baking IA hour longer (or uMil .,
l I HOLLYWOOG -'jA lot or HAS to coo~. but 1 cook when vmce is an affable actor share with Archie and his this?' When I tell him It's chicken. welih1ng abc'.MJt 3 barely tender chicken is tender). I
I : times when cooking, 1 forget [ want to," be aa.ld. -who has been in show biz alnce family. soup, he keeps blowing on l.t. pounds Cut chicken into serving Serve at once! C:reat "1tlt·
wha t I've done, then have to "I'd much rather-eat at debuting at the age of five In ... "I like to alng on the ehow, trying to cool it off! ·What IS Salt, frtshly ground pep-pieces; season well with salt, hot cooked rice or hot garlic
go back and try again. But home tbari go oul·, Md r often his father's New York-based too. To sum it up, J'm a .this? It's cold!' he complains per freshl y ground pepper. bread. .•
when you really enjoy cooking, cook up a dinner back borne theatrical company. nuisance. I'm apolitical and after a while. 4 tablespoon.! margarine (or Heat margarine (or olive Vince's tmprovfsaUOILls 1,,
it lL\118Uy comes out better for my family or neighbors. He will be seen this year in agree with everythinJ Archie, 1 "He doesn't even like my olive oil) • oU) in large skillet (or oven--good starter·tor the crea.Uve ,..
. . ~i:g1' ~:!i~~nd y0f n~~ "One thing I don't like to three new mo\'ies, including says -and drive him right up vegelables a la Gr e q u e. Small onion, peeled, sliced proof casserole). Brown cook: Add fre!h but(er-~.f
_. ... Gardenia. cook ls lasagne, belil}ve it qr P a ram o u n t ' s a l ready a wall." \ FlnaJly he says in disgu.st, Juioe of large lemon chicken and onion lightly. Add ed mushrooms, a r tti ch o k t i
not. It's toO ruling and heavy. unanimously hailed "Bang the In one upcoming episode, 'Look, ir I'm going to eat, l'm % teaspoon oregano le{flon juice, white wine, and hearts (or caMed or frozen
He will be better known to ."And I can't tell you Drum Slowly," which gives Vince shatters Atthie \filh his going to have some good About 1 cup dry white paPsley to chicken. peas) or teft~ver v~getablto1.~
TV viewers this fall when he qllantilies In recipes. I know him a big lift gourmet creations of American food.' And he goes wine Cover, place in preheated to casserole during .last haJ.t.·
asswnes his role as a regular what l want to do, and cook by ''Jn the Frank Lorenz role vichyssoise and vegetables a out to the kitchen and gets a 1 teaspoon chopped Cresh ~degrees F. for 20 minutes; ~r with potatoes !or a mtal·,11 ·
M CSS.TV's "All in the slages. Like I said, J have to 1 cook a Jot. and when J la Greque. can of spaghetti!" parsley oadd peeled potatoes, spooning m-one
Family" as Archie's new1 ------------------------------------------------------'-----'-~-·----~-~·1
Jtalian next door neighbor1 •/.~~
Frank Lorenz. . ~,
He is a guy who loves to
cook both on and off camera.
Package
Rates
An \.A'
No matter how cool the col-
legian -in your family is,
there's still something heart
wanning ah9ut receiving a
package from home.
Especially if lhere'.11 food in-
side!
Mom's cookies taste better
than those from the store. And
fresh fruits, nuts, a jar of
honey or home-made jam is
always welcome at the dorm
or off-campus apartment.
Don't .forget to put in
something delicious to drink
on ~ (rosty afternoons or
evenings after a session at the
library or a cross-campus bike
ride. 1bls time send a
surprise. Pack a selection of
the new flavored instant cof·
fees. 'Jbey're already subtly
-tlawred-io our -rarawa-y·-
scholar's taste with chocolate
or cinnamon, wi th anisette or
~t, apriCQt or orange-and-
sp1ce.
For quiet and easy coffee
making, include in the "we
miss you" box an immersion
heater, pottery coffee mugs
and llttle paper packets of
sugar. Your Jtudent will be
self-sufficleat when s n a ck
time arrives.
And to get away from "Just
plain cookies,'' mix up a batch
of these "wholloers" f o r
hungry undergradS.
Olocolate Chip
''Whoppers"
(Makes 11h dozen 4·inch
cookies)
1 cup butter or margarine
· l cup firmly packed brown
sugar
I teaspoon vanilla
I egg
2 cups unsifted flour
I teaspoon baking soda
i,, teaspoon salt
1-----Lcup_quick:eooking_rolled
.. IS
1ii cup wheat germ
I package (12 ounces
chocolate chips
~ cup chopped walnuls (op-
tional)
In large bowl, c r e a m
together butter, sugar and
Viiiil?a'AOil egg anO I>eal well.
Combine flour. soda and salt;
add to creamed mixture. Stir
in oat.s, wheal germ. chocolate
chips and nuts. Dough will be
very stiff.
Using about 1 ~ cup dough
for each cookie. shape into 3.
inch rounds about 11 inch
thick. Place on greased baking
sheets about 3 inches apart.
Cookies will spread during
bating to become 4 • i n c h
rounds.
Bake cookies in 350 degree
oven about 15 minutes or until
llghUy browned at edges. Let
cookies cool 5 minutes before
removing from baking sheets.
Chiller
A Thriller
Mal<e ahead and chill
Pl)ol!APPLE CARROT
OOCKTAIL
I cup uruweietened canned
pneappl~ ju.ice
1 tab&r:lpOM lemon juke
.12 cup dkzd pared raw car·
rot
I cup rmdy cract..i ice
Tlltll all Ille ~ inlo
oo dedrlc -·Oner.,.,.
-.ad ""' Llllil --J ..P... ldr Ibon>uPl7 belore .mot la mW! ).so.
11 re•
• Sunday is
Pl1DfJAT
in . .,. 1.tpg;1r.11
I .· . ' i '
'
• ...
•
ME/fr DEPARTMENT
U.S.IM.-A--
Choose from a sui>er selection of your favorite name brands,
including over 500 Ralphs-Brands that 8J'e equal in quality to any brand
but cost leas. Super brands from the super markeL
BAKERY PRODUCE
NewCfop,W ........ AM~
Ex1raflnCy
~.79
A SPECIAL COMBINATION OF CAOUND IEEF
AHO HYOftOUZ:EO SO'f l"ROTEIN CONCENTIIAT!.
f"811 Fryers··~ ... · ... 52 Relptls-Old Fa.NoMd
Cinnamon SWirts
..... ... _ .45 ... .55
.79
Apples ':'. .25
vtn.RlpeMd
Large
Tomatoes Rlilphtl-DellCIOUa
Peach Pies
R•lpfl•-Choootate '-' .19 -·-c:ut Chuck
Steaks ... -:-ea
Tea Cakes -.79
frlllll DEUCATESSEll DEPARTMENT
P ~ GoldMM•IWlflnittgOuallty ork Cliops .... uu -c._ ....... c ...
": .19
--:-.11 .. .---
I H f Shouldtr Cut
7 Bone Steaks
"IHI SttouldetCul-Bone'-11
Chuck Roasts
BHI SltkMn Tlp or Top Roi.Ind
BonelesS Steaks
PolftlCut-~
Beef Briskets
IHffl:ibCul
... 1,09
... 1.38
... 1.79
... 1.19
Spencer Steaks ... 2.69
Fresh-U.S.D.A. Choke 1 39 Lamb Shoulder Chops ... •
~~bs.Sl~~· Chops ... 1.59
~00~~-R'~ ... 1.59
~U~k .. sa-; eL 153
Sllc9d-1 lb. pkg.
Iowa Fanns Bacon OL 1,15
hYs rt1•1~Wflole I la. "lo
California Fryers .... 58
SEAFOOD ·DEPARTMEllT
ao..t--lll'lld ftevor
Fresh Sole FD1ets
Norttt.m-Cofd Water
Fresh Perch Fillets
UQUOR
L1hlbh Gin or
... 1.89
... 1.39
Sllidl'I
Vodka ·:::8.99
U..altedTIIM-S1ve.IO
Lauders Scotch .::~ 5.99
Can1c11H Mlat-S1ve 1.oo full 5 69 Imported Whisky """" • Cht11t11n lrothen-NaSNI Roee rtfth 1 99.
Premium califomla Wine •
·cheese .... 43 .. _
Ralphs VJeinels
Rafl*a-1_,.
Cheeaa Piua
t2or. .87
..... 83
,.~_........, Al~ $NISa Cheasa .:. .81
N .. IWrl-lloed ·
Ralphs Ham Ron .:. .58
FrotnotdS.nP"....-..
Gallo Sliced Salame ..... 88
leo'1 CMckM fW
Sliced lllr1cey .:. .62
Mn . Fiiberts 1 'nib 1 48 Soft Margarine ....
i.11p1'11-~
Fruit Jubilee Salad .':. .83 ....... -~ .. 73 Orange .:JUice 0L •
~-St'Yte Yogurt -.84
-.18
-""' Carnations
···~
-.78
·1.17 Mixed Bouquels ......
HOUSEHOLD VALUES
Regularll'
Lagal Sim .... 34 Envelopes
(y;"~ 14c: .II
p;y;;m~~ ,78'
GlalSSloragas.rnt-10t.~. 118 Pyrex Flask Dec&l lier .... •
Prices Effective SepL 20 thru Sept. 26 THIS IS RAL,.PHS SUPER CENTURY 1873·1973
• ces Ral sSuperLow
-Ralphs
Old Fashioned Best Foods
Ice Cream ~~ .85 Mayonnaise
,
HEALTH & BEAUTY AJDS
".......... 70&. 78 Crest Tooth Pasllt .-•
Sct11c11-1...,..11 let. 94 lWin Blade C8rtridgee P'• •
ffftfft-A1lptt1 0-lrlftd 211 et. 1 09
Multi VHamlns -•
..... tedPld• 117 SllH>ex .,, j!; •
~""'k,jector Blades'~ 1.82 ., ..... '"' 119 ComlortubeTampons ..,_ • ,..__._,, 2 29
1Wo Bladed Razors -•
R91ul1r-btr1 Hold-Ultl!M• HoW 1 88 •Adorn Hair Spray Q N.. CM I
. Hi C ·:. Tille
Frutt Drinks .• 28 Detergent".: .79
FROZEN FOOD
... .48 , .. 83 ....
11,: .83
".::: .36 .... 26 .... .
.:.=; .86 ... 86 .....
·~ 55 .....
PANTRY Flu.ERS
,, .. OI .... 01 .... 89 Q' •
.. K 55 -· ".: .24
»K 79 Jw •
..... 41 .... 29 -. !!2.88
HOUSEHOLD NEEDS
WWll•l"tllt ... _ 4£
Dove Bar Soap -,..,...,._,... __ 1."tlV.. ..
LllbICe Crlspei --.... 88 .... . , .. lltl .... •"'11! ::.81
...:. .71 ..... -· ::.81 '
~#&n EVERYDAY /,Q-,,r: PRICES -·· .:: ... ------B1byOQ L•monade •.:; .12 Tomato S•uce ·-~ ~~----Arrld Cr.8m ·~ ... ·-F1ltl Sttek1 ... • 19 T•• B•g• l-.. o·w-.... ~ ... __ ..,_,,._ --Ponds T•lc Powder Ol'll~•Julo9 •.: .57 V1nllla W1fers -..::.79 ~ ....... ......,_,,_,.._
811 Breeze ~.59 Canned Pop -·· .::; A7
......... __
,... U.llO-B•by LoUon G111p.hult Juk e -.55 • C1nctr hrt
•Asteris ked items not available
in the following stores:
............. .,,. __
-.... ll)L_t .... _,.._,"'-• .. -.. ......--.-·-""' ......... -.. .... LM .................. ... ,........,-..,.,.. __ _...,....._&.-......-....
·= .11.
,., .......... N5btetaeom •.: .22
-.: .... ---...::-F1ctllTI -.:~t
'",::: .42 ~--R phi lftKlt -=~7 --•.: .10 lnst•nt Coffff •; 1.12 '"-l _____
-.01 * GtlYJ °'*' ..... 11
,.... ........ ,,.. ... ,,.._ .................. _ .... ....................... ...
..... ~----..... ................ ,. ... ,,,..,._ LM,,..._, .... ....... ........... , ...... _
---Cl!-:::-M ...... c,..,,. ·.: At ... __ "-_
-..~---o.-..._.-. ...... :.. •,:.It Rtt1 Crtck.,. i-.,.,_ ...... --·= i..31 ---•.; .... ln1 .. ntCoffH ........
~Oln. ..
__ ..,._
Light Chunkl\me ".:Al TbmatoPI ... ·.: .t7
~-,. -.:: 1.82
__ ..
• ••' klltlint Mlk 1-111• -a.et
• ............. ...,... .....,.."" ...... ... ._ ................ ..... '-.............. ..... .... ._,._ ___ ....... -. ..........
t
'
• >
•
'
..
'· ..
"
"•
r
,,
'
• .
Good Idea .Mush-roO-ms
Preael .,. ~Ing toward Ing V. cup o1 tho 1yrup. cut ,hoLbl'.oU« IQ! 6 to 8 mll)utes,
completlm of a charming each pineapple slice into brushing frequently with soy
Je!page, full~lor rec Ip e thirds ; set uJde. sauce mixture. U desired,
brochure, '.'Mushrooms Go To reserved syrup add soy serve with rice. Serves 6.
With E ..... .-1U .... 11.. sauce, oil, vinegar, mustard BARBECUED CRICK EN .~,!-.. and ginger. Place ham and LIVERS AND MUSHROOMS
lt'a free ll you send a reserved mushrooms '" a large · f L... ... ~ pound medium·SlZe resh stamped, .,ualness-size, self-bowl. Add soy sauce mixture; mushrooms or 3 cans (3 to
ac(dreSsed .. envelope tq_ The 108.!I well to coat. Cover and 4-ounces each) whole
American Mushroom Iosytute, refrigerate for 30 rnlnues. nwshrooms
P.O. Bos: m, Kennett Sciuare, A It er n ate I y ·arrange 1 can (1 poond) whole
Penna. 193tl. mushrooms, ham, pineapple onions
'Once aummer was "oU and green pepper on 6 f lh pounds chicken livers,
siason" for mushrooms . skewers. Brush with soy sauCe halved
But thanks lo modern know-mixture. 3 large tomatoes quartered
Rinse, pal dry and ~Ive
r resh mushrooms or drain
canned mushrooms; set aside.
Alte rnatel y arran ge
mushropms. onions, chicken
livers and tomatoes on 8 long
skewers.
how we Dow tfaVe all the!e Place on a rack over hot o/.i cup botUed barbecue
lovely mushrooms and the charcoal or under a preheated sauce. booklet will give you recipes --------'------------
Generously brush barl>ecUe
sauce over livers a n d
vegetables. Place on rack over
hot charcoal or under a
preheated hot broiler for 8
J;MQ!.lteS, turning and brushing
l\vice with barbecue sauce un-
til chicken livers are just
cooked. Season with salt, if
necessa ry. Serves 6. MUSHROOMS STAR IN DELICIOUS LINE-UP_~----------
~f p~~p= ~~lgbtlul ways Don't let ' inflation rob you.
Jn your· mushroom booklet
you wlll find recipel such as •
Curried Mushroom Puffs -an
i r resist l bl e appetizer;
, ?tfushroom Fu Young with a
Chinese accent; and excellent
Mushroom Bread and direc-
. ,
• •
..... tions for baklng it in,. a
mushroom shape and Old·
Fashioned 1t1ushroom Spupt ..
rich with vegetables, a dash of
sberry aod a dollop of eour
cream. I Mushroom 11"1 Fanlalla ii
a meal-In-one, goOd enou(I> for ..
cunpany and one whidJ you
can carry out to the porch or
patio with a minimum ofJ fuss.
3 ~ reasons why you really
fight inflation at Mayfair. can
MUSHROOM AND
HAM KEBABS
,, pound medium-siz.e fresh
rnusbrooms-or· 1-can (8-to
I ounce ) whole
mlllbnloma
1 C8ll -~av. ounce) sliced
pineapple
V• cup 4omesUc soy sauce
I tab!-salad oil
I tablespoon wine vinegar
2 teaspoons prepared
mwitard ~~ teaspoon. ground ginger
11> pounds cooked ha\n, cut
II1lo Z.lnch cubes
1 ,..... pepper, cut illto I·
Inch pieces
Rlnae, pat dry and halve
fresh mushrooms or drain
canned mushrooms; set as'4e.
Drain pineapple allees, reserv-
It Could
Be Creole
<Mixed
$Ji'tjer~
r;parts ·
3 HINJOUARTERS WITH BACK
3 FOREQUARTERS WITH BACK
J WINGS, 2 GIBLETS ANO NECKS
INCLUDED
M.,.rair is the only super-
---market--with prices-SG-low-we
regularly compare against com-
petlto_ra' -· then _P.!l!lill_!h-these
price comparisons. Tryirg to be
fai r , Mayfair makes these price
comparisons with the same long
list of items the U.S. Department
of Labor uses lo measure food
costs.
To fight inflation·, you have to
buy where.you g~l lhe best value
for your money •.
Mayfair's price comparisons
show you the facts.
1/481ieed-
cpork Loin
' 11 ·TO 14 CHOPS • CENTER
AND END CHOPS MIXED
CJ'his week:S ~est ~uys in Grocerie~
With some bacon drippings
added and 'perhaps aome
dk>ed ham, this recipe would
be called Shrimp Creole. "Zip-
py Shrimp" lwls been modified
slightly for low-calorie diets.
All of the good crooie Davor is
thett, thouJ!l _!_~.-~basil, -and .~slm· mered in a rich tomato sauce
with garlic and onions.
Then raw shrimp are added 1' •
and simmered jual until cook· 1ello r-ela tin , 19 ed. The whole Qavorful mix· J• ::I° ASSORTED FLAV ORS 6 OZ . e -. ture is sen'e<I on a bed of rice. Tha~ ~~~~:::; {i_tiipeff.~ESW~t.ll!f &~EFRUIT 40 OZ .• 49 82 caloriea per balf..up aerv· <• 1111· And w11en topped wtth the Clover Club C'nacks ~H,~'cfl"'SP· shrimp and tomato sauce, "the C)lORTILLA CHIPS. PLAIN, I OZ. !>n
total caJories_are-DOly_1l7_gr -1-11---. --~l'AGG.-1-1/4-0Z...--POP-llli-Q-.l!OP--CORN, LOz ... az...
serving. g:.:aiddi\1.~~~~.1n~,~ c.Dishwashin,,t~t;.t'!if..i~~1.1£ ..• 79
cate&WY. this recipe ii perfect
for low-fat diets, too. No fat at WI nt's Snack t:pack 53 mocumng ii . used In the U "(;FRUIT AND PUDDINGS 4-P<./5 ~z . o tomato sauce ud both the
L stretch your food budget
-even~further ,-We have expanded
our line or Mayfresh brand prod-
ucts. With Mayfresh, you can save
up to 103 --sometimes more! -~
on caMed goods, frozen foods,
household supplies and other
items of high quality.
Uncle Sam helps us prove that food Rr .. d our ads carerutzy. Each cost iess at Ma)lfair tast week t11an
week. our ads,_and..al•o_,;lgn,Uo_at-lO·other top ehains-
May;fair stores, point out hun-
dreds .or Best BuYs, that provide
-.nn savif!,8S due to special buys
or temporary promotional allow-
ances.
:
CRound
Steak
BEEF • BONE -IN-• PAN FRY Ofl SWISS ---l
8elf GBasting
f:Jbrkeys
MAYfRESH -10 LB. TO 20 LB. SIZE
-GRADE 'A' • FROZEN
.CJiuck
Steak
Mayfair <tJest C/Juys in Meat
~eef 8tew ~~! J.36LB
~eef-SIJg_r-t-CJffbs--cu:_
P.LATE CUTS -BAKE OR BRAISE eOJLB~
11:ETAIL FOOD PR1CE COMPARISONS
BASED ON U.S. DEPT. OF LABOR. BUREAU OF LABOR
STATISTICS ITEM LIST, IN MAYFAIR DISCOUNT At«>
IN OTHER STORES. EFFECTIVE SEPTEMIER 110 t
Los Anaeln 1ru No.of 0 llnit $Total S.V"9At
Competitor lttms M1yf1ir Competitor M.rf•ir
Discount Chain A 82 "·" 59.54 . ...
DiK.OU't Ch1in B 83 51.41 51 .IO •• OilCOUflt Chlin C '75 45.3f 47.05 '·" LO'fl'·price Chlin D 83 51.97 . 54.1' :Z.11
Discount Ch1in E 78 43.89 ... 43 ....
Discowit Ch1in F 82 48.07 49.17 .1.IO
Non-dilCOl.lnl: Chain G 74 47.47 41.11· 2.'2
Non -diseOIJll'l Chain H "' 43.21 47 • ., . 4.11
Non-diseo1.11t Cklin I 13 51.SJ 51.23 7."io
Non ·diM:ount Chain J 12 50.•7 ... ,. '"'' 0.-UI-e! IM ,..,q _,_, _.,.
....................... -· ...... ,1 ... ~ C--,_,,.,,. o.,t., "'9y!•" Mri.t•. 1WO --Pd,;Jein s. ~'"""· L .. """In. Coli!, ICIOll.
CRib ~lend~eef
'Patty Wix Steak§ A DELICIOUS BL END OF
APPROX. 2n GROUND BEEF AND
BEEF -PAN ER_i'__OR BROIL 1/3 TEXTURED VEGETABLE
-GREAT FOR BREAKF~ PROTEIN AND SEASONING • •
'*Red or y9!,,.<f~!J. :IJ.~!!c;ious
l.<?fltt!l!l!DTHWEST $
'Pippin
CALIFORNIA EXTRA FANCY
C}'~r 'Parts DRUMSTICKS OR 9· 8 . ' • J'j~ WITH PELVIC BONE ATTACHED • LB. ~air <tJest CJJuJ)s in Produce
' I
"
~ee,{L.'!.:P.'!.1!.tg,L§.!!!!!l! 1.89cB ~artlett 'L'J?iEeCaOUNts.TsY. 4. ~ .. 1.00 ~~~ulderGJod._:iA.8~114r~~~~~-~:_:=_-=~~~'
BONELESS BEE~ OVEN ROAST · FINE FLAVOR .I, f't1
LB. 1 'M'uShtOg.pJ.~YORY .85LI.
sbrlmp and the' rice are very t d 'Mi htO ms l)n
--·lat,muq.thls.a.g --r. a rg,.. .• .!!Pi.e<s--•o,.,.,,·~-;T-meal for pnacribed low-fat-:!:? !~ ~ed Pa~!f.p~?P{!l~tP.~5c.N .25 =. ~":'!l'~J:.fier ~ ~11.acin,,;Jl!kf.tr~~. J.09 grated. In man,y artas, yoo
:' :V!'"ilni:ttrZ:.t:w= 'M'/IYfresh qTitam~IJ:u lp,,,, 1.19
grate it yoorself. !l's also
available in • jar already 'Ro J Oc . ~ dk 6 99 ~u:iar~d'::-1 with a little ~ARCOAL ,£ft~~~PROOfoHALf ~L. •
ZIPPY SlllllMI' AND RICE
I cup chopped Cllilona
1 clovea prllc, crushed .
I tablespoon butter or
.margarine
I can (II ounces) l<ltnatoes
1 can (I ounces) tomato
sauce
YI cup water
1 tablespoon salt
If• teaspoon pepper
I --each,;weet ba!ll, anpao. llaYel, and
.......... bonend!ob' I pound cleaned and de-
-shrimp I cups bot COGbd rice
Grated ~--cheeae, Oflllonal ,
Saute onloos and garlic In
butter untU t.oder. Add
tomatoes, ·tomato s a u c e ,
water, sea1onlngs and 1
noneradllh. Simmer for 20 .
minutes or imtll 1 il I h t I y '
thickened. 8tlr In shrimp and
cool< 10 mlilute• lonaer.'Serve
ovtr bedl ol flully rice.
Sprinkle wtth P a r n> e • a n
cheele, If desired. Mak.. I
aervings.
More Munc~
LIQUOR .
BERWICK'S Gin · Edrt Stnooth -IO·P'roof Fifth ....•..••••. 3.19
"OYAL OCCASION Scotch
lrnpocted "Rare" Scotch • Full
M·P'rMf Hill Gal. , •. , ..•.. t . 71
~athroom
q'issue
MAYFRESH
IOFT TWINS
J•ROL.L
PAat ~-•LY
•
ft{jne ~ives·
Cat ·'Pood
·ALL ,
VA.-IETIE.$
11/2 FtAT
CAN
• •
ROYAL OCCASeON C•Mipn
Whiaiy-4 Ye'" Old · IO·,roof
Fifth •••• , .••.••••..••••• 3.11
GAL,LO Tyrol i• Wine -Spicy
Whit1 Win. Half Gal .•..••• , • 1.11
Carnation :
Chunk 'Tuna
LIGHT
#1 /2 FLAT
CAN
(;_old 'Power
cnetergent
Ce'!!.'l.1:c'!:i'l!.fo1f!J.'!PS 1.7lB 'Prune 'Plums 4 J 00
C]J, '1i CJJ, f ~ t 1 38 . llORTHWEST ITALIAN LBS. •. 011.~~§§cHuc•~E~rE•curPWI!., • LB . Casaba 'M'elons 06 8moked 'Picnics on. SWEET. MELLOW • LO.
-.. WHOLE HOFFMAN BRAND . DRY CUllE .07La. '*Romaine-.Lettur.e . ''8
C ~ ~ CTIT.• .~ /7ft GARDEN FRESH .J~ EA. eu:ar -.rarms -"'1ene.1s I ;,, OED LE•• LHTUCE HONEYDEW MELONS •
FRYE" llREAST Aibl Att.ct.d .,, ••••. lb. 1.QI
PORK CHOPS RibEndChop1 ·Fl1vor1ul lb. 1.19
FILLET OF SOLE Mild in Flevor ••. , •. , . lb. 1.41
PEllCH FILLETS .• Slr.inOn -StricOy Frelh .. lb. 1.08
SLICED IA.CON • Mayfresh • I lb. Pkg .
Rtp.ll•r or Thidl: •..... lb. 1 .19
JIMMY DEAN SAUSAGE
Hot or Mild • 12 01. Rolls ea. 1.0I
•
12 OZ. P<G. • EA. Soled O.li ... t, ........ oo,, 11 -.1, Mellow ......... lb .. 12
LUE TO LAKE CHEESE ~rey Jack· 9 Of· •••• e1 .• 15 Mild Cl'ltddar -9 01. , ••• e1 .• IS
LUNCHEON MEATS 01' Virginia · S 01. Plr.g,
Olive & Piment11 SlicM
Sandwich Loaf , t'tckle • Pimento, Dlltch Loaf, #Id AllMaat B<ilogn. •..•.•. 11 .• 53
BtJOOIG CHIPPED MEATS Sliced BH IJ. Turke.,, Chick.n. P1slrami, 1.-om Bfff
3 Ol. P\g .... , ....•• , l'I .• 49
PILL•URY 01,.ER ROt.LS
Cr.scent • 4 or ...•..•. ••· .25
Creacent • I or ...••... ••· .31
BOSTON ~ETTUCE VALENCIA OlllAHGES
S.lad 0.hfrt .•••• , , •• e• .• 11 SW..t, Juicy .•..•.. _5 lbs. 1.00
Ru.ET POTATOES ILAC91: EYE P'EAS
tJ:S. No.-1'.. •, •• J •• ,. lb .• 15 Gourmet Delight
WHITE ROii POTATOIS 11 01· B119 · • · · · · · -· · .e• .• 39
U.S. No. 1 •••••• , ••.• •· .16 OftAHGE .JUtCE T~icana -100% Pw•
IANANA SCllJASlt OI 1n 911. eott1, ...... _ . •• .. 19 Thick Meat..:!. , ....... lb .•
HOUSE PLANTS CELERY As~ Varieti•s
Crisp, R..:I Band •••••.. ••· • 17 :Z 1/4" Pots ....... _ 3 fof" 1.00
a COLORFUL COOKWARE ~BY WEAR·EYER
Genuine Porcelain outside -
Tough Teflon 1I inside. -• AVOCADO • HARVEST GOLD • POPPY " ·-
.
U.S.D.A. ,_. ltafftlll9 'Wiik•••
' 175 IAST
17111 STREET COSTA MESA• OPEN ·24. HOURS
I ' r ' "
-
' I '
'
,
•
'
DAILY PILOT
TUMBLEWEEDS
FIGt,ilENTS
loUET ZONE
11 Durone:
Italian
12 Jacob's son
13 Communists
19 Period
24 Rush forth
suddenty
· '26 Consume
t s·.tecl'9Cken entirety:-2
2 BIOCkhl•d words
3 Acts bldly 28 Airport cod9
•. -4 App,1rel forTcMedo
5 Dress 30 Taboo
6 US utellite 31 Bibic:81 pW:
7 lltMlry 3 WOfda
. pi9c:e: 2 32 Binding
words • &grMmenl
8 Time period 33 Emmett
9 Color. Var. 34 Over .;ain
10 Prophet 35 Hokl by llw
' x-LcisT . MY
BEST :DOLL
IN JM DREAM
LAST
NIGHT··.·
PEANUTS
/
by Doug Wiidey
by Tom K. Ryan
NONSi:NSEJ \liW EVER
HEARP OF AN EDllVRIAL
ON 'THE SOCIE"TY PAGE!
-by Al Smith
by Dale Hale
' '
by Emie auShmlu.r
-AND '! HAVE To
GET TO SLEEP
EARLY-'l'O' SEE IF t ·
CAN FIND>IT lONIGHT
-JUDGE-PARKER
37 Ottewa Of
Ohio
38 W.cling bird .a Collector
41 Ovllf the ·-
. 46 Nelgnbtir of
Ont.
48 8eker'1 unita
49 ·Ice muses
!iO Craters
.~ Gerfl'!•n.river
53 E111blish
54 Ananempt
55· Pallid ·
56 Woodwind
57 Rockwell··-·:
U.S. artilt
59 Tidy
&2 likfff
I
MOM,lHI! --
Pl'INl:IPlll-
.WA~ 'TO
~·V~AT
3 O'CL.0<:1<
'1'0MOll:JWW1
DOOLEY'S WORLD
DOVOU
-.i
1l> IOkJW '
HOWMUCll
111'9 IS?
SALLY BANANAS
ok', t>ales!\'e, ar ™e
5Niii1P oF T~ Ball I
t..,JaNT Yau Ti0,c°""'e
OUT 5#Dll;(IJG/
GORDO
MOON MULLINS
-,.
-ANIMAL CRACKERS
I
·=
,.
· Hlf~H'
IMV VflC'f Wl1.i.
~aL.4tf• TOff'oV
A£APllMIC.
~AN1'1N6-.
•
•·
'
'
ot.4.,, Al!O<JNP
~oR
56Vl'N1'1-fl\/ii
' .
Id Le Douil ·
y Chester Got11d
•
•
' .
• • •
•
Jt
•
I I · .
I .
By Chaltes Banoffi
... &uT I DON'T ... f.4o(J ,,..& GO,,_ ,_
Ull£.P fNY.
by Ferd Jollnson
-nllS 81<:7
-'HANt> 15<301N'i
,_~-.-,"IO POff'IT TO
'Tlll! l>ooR!
by Roger Balen
_,
. o -
-
' '
1'
I
I
r
I
I
1'
1
T
I
I
•
l '
! I .
•
UsDA Cliolet . o..clo-·
' ·-· -·-
..., . . .
2·8·
SAFEWAY WINE BUYS '
....... s;.i..
COlonY Calfoi•
tM11 : SUt)
LA MESA.Wl•S
·~· .... •a... • Viii·-,9:V. ._
9 5'1lo1ti1 Tl,
•TOP,~D
Your ctfolc9
FuRy : ..
Cooked .
Shank { 1
~··· -·· ·~··:
o.9i• ~It; ..
.
'
IN OUR DAIRY CASE. ..
' . .
Oscar Majer 119' .. a ...... ::; 79•
lat"'s Meat F....iis ''""''"" ,,_ 89' ., . • ......,~ ft-. .sa .. rPlaiallnlt ·'~,-~•4n
I • , •
HEALTH & BEAUTY AIDS
' NANAS
FAICI QUAUTI .
FllM • GOLDEI
Ideal for Sllcln1
J nto BNalcfast c.-11. ·
Topi For Snacktlme.
•
' . .
DAILY PILOT
' EVERY CUT
OF ·
SAFEWAY BEEF
IS USDA CHOICE
.Safeway lxciuslw•
MeJhocl of '"
EXPERT Ml.AT
TRIMMING · .
WI.I 011,Y
UIDA8ADl''A''
. . · POULTRY!
sTIWllG • na$1UK ........ , ...
1 ClllCIEIS • TUIDll• CBSE ·
.· •'COlllSl~lllllS · .
'
• "
' ' !
! .. .
··IOMATOll ,-·1
I : ==:.~"' .... 29•: ~:
·-YOCADOI.
· ..... ~"-'"""' 39' , .. _,..,_.,_w_.,.._,.....,.;....._.., __ _., l
. :AP.PLEI " ' . . '
•
\
••
--
'
..
•
• • • . . . . . .
•
'§4 DAILY PILOJ J ' • • .. . J. ,.... :;::; s
-Hew '73 Impala •
..... rt Coupe!
Vl._poww ·~••ring .M br.kes, auto. tran'1.1 vinyl
,..,.,,.,,fHtes, rad io, ate. ·~ ·~~,~.'; $3395 '
•
4tt ~ ' -' -i1 ' .
. "1 .~ • Ne'w '73 Camattt Spbli Coupa,!
. • No. 192901/26,67
New '73 Vega Wagon!
' ,
· V8,·'auto: tra·ns.; pdwar 'stee·rit19 end brakes, .i1ir
cond.1 COflSOle, .sport mirrors, rally sport, decor
group, etc.
' ' .
. Onl; $3795.
MONTE CARLO!
I '. '"':~.
Auto. tr•n1., radio, whit•i, "I • S•O•O•O P""pul_ar! tiot•d 91111, und1r11al, 1te. ~ V
• •
•
Only , .. · Only , s2995 , ' ··A • ' ~; • ~ ,
l•posal of entire i ·g,-3 Inventory of new Chevys ancl
exe.cutlve can now. In , 111fl~ ·~jn9, at HOWARD Che~l'.'o1~t $2'5?5 :-' . :~. · , :;.t~i·"· .fot·i;f~.~~~wt!(~i~:c:~~.,;1~0. trtn1., .,.lnyl top, PWr.
I · ... ;._~ ·,: .. ..,.~-:..< '*t1.1ring.._i"I~~···· wh1t11, et.c.~No. ll7ETY. • .. >-· ' ; • ,t
, • No •. 2 ;1,47/2536 .-t~~··•, 'l;·~~f.· tr.r ~·~· •.f'l •_· • ' ,.. .. ~-. ;_~. ' . :.•' . :••····················· ~· ---....o. • -1--'--~ (. •
·• The S.101 MOnM!er spaks io · ,l 1,;; •·•• 1 ... , _-.. ' ;;,: ' 1 ,;f~tt • C ~MR;: c_AR~4aµYER.: . ·· •
• • Yo~ re on .the .best s~t ~ver!, You know ~he e.
• 74s are going up. You "know 731 are being e
,•· clearecl'ourat:fantastlc'."satings. You are aWii'e.'.,. !~ that there isJittle change in cars from one year :
.: 1.o the next. -·~---·-. -.:
•• With that knowledg~ you should act now · • .• ' . . • on a no., '73 Chevy whil .. selection is still goo<!! •
: Howard R. Litcas C • • 1
• Ne~· Gar and Truck •
: . . ~ "' ·S,ales Ma~a9er · . : .• . . . ' ' . ' ·• ·~·~!rt~~,·~····•·,~·······
New '73 Vega 2.·o~~r!
Only
•
'71 Pinto Runabout!
' :.LlijUlf~¥Hardtop Coup•
•. No. 42,1537/!704
. '
E~ch ·· with ·]SQ -CID ·vs ~ n;9 in e ,_ p.ower steer.in'; ~and 'brek.s', ~-P!lt:ial
instrunientetion1 radio, heater/defroster, mirrors, BU lights, door edge guards,
~ ,. ' ' .
Ch•v•ll-. M•libu C.Oup•
No. 446~16/22,6.2
-1:_ I ' __ ,,._ • Oi11y-·
For · lliher
140 engin•, •four·•pe•W tr•t11.,
whlt•w•fl1, ; r•dlo, und•r•e•I, ~ ""lin11.--,rii~fiiit~M-c1.......
fro•+.r, filhir\i mirron, •fc,.No •
1 454112/251] ;.,: • f
' . " Fou...,spftd trans.,.r"dio,:~'"ter/d .. froster, P~'em. tires,:
etc. 171800 miles!· No. 8800FE. · ''(17 tpugar H. Top Coupe!
.
.. NEW '73 IMPAtA
SPORT SEDAN!
Loaded With
Extras! ·
$-
. DERAL PilCE ·~EL
No. 121475/2!)1,4 . ,. •
'71
Autom•tic:, •if c:ond., power di1c:
... ,., 'powoi ,,,.,;~, . .,..:.. ·fJ-n-ly-. -. 4~1._2,~ ) ,. .
s;.,,. Pkg., •ir c:oncf., •ufo. tr•ru.,
pwr, 1t••rin9 •ncf br•k•1, •fc:, Sh•rp.
No. 15617K, ~ ·\
of f .' Only : ,, .
.•. . ' .,, . "
. tl••.rt .. Beach -,
' "
• ~ ' l Lie:. _o.:...FB.llOI~ i
·-. ; .....
. '
"
..
'.
· ~1 V.ega Hate:fiifci.clt!
' . . .
.. ..
• ·If
•
.. . -
\ '
• .
I " I • •
'<
•
•
i
1
I
' •
!
j
i
JI PILOTWNERTJSU
• • •
4
' • Wed"'5dq, Sep-l•, 1973
••
•
,
•
• :.:.~-:~~TH~ HOltij .WltL ,,G-~W ,O" .YOU! , .
• • • ~ -:· '(>'.;~open up their doors •nd.let you.walk through to enjoy •••• their
, • , · ~lousness •... their comfort ••• ,. their convenience. Your next home
' ..---'--"' ·'-· ..,,.., .. -;the .. ,. " ... "THE REAL EST A TERS." We have many l11clusive homes ~ . .., ~ , lwwble and hundreds of others to choose from. Lei'• get"togither soon!
• ·±. ' .
• .
' l ,;
~ v ' •
.• , , : ~mber;w• are the la~9est !Ocally!~':'n•d Real Estate firm with over
. , .. , . 1'00 professionals to help you ev"!'f step of the way. Please drop by, we
· -· ' " ~.l:le·hoppy-to·answer any of your que.tloM. -
:, ·: -~~~ 6: "' ·.\. ~"' ~~ .
' '
I
• I "' • • • ,, ...
DAILY PILOT 5"i
·:.· woitK::oUt.-OF-YOUR-_ "CMl!T~~:r.~ ~NG~--~. ,;1DW,.<&,0cA.tQN" --GREAT,Assi,M.t111-.l.OAN
UYE .fN 1• 'J '· • I "". ' , . · " " ". "' . . " .. " .. i. W.Jty? Near bea1h. Cornet" locatiOn f~,room for Close to ~ch, Sch"&ls, sboppirig-yeti only min· Ta.Jee over e~y~to-take pljln)!P~l .,A~old today's ·
-IAL&OA--COWAGE-
"SPOILED BABY"
lei cleitrJlllmf()trc;z-zonDlCJfti' l?tllStre'e , ~boat.-~ler-.-~r.-2-:-minUt4'.'~to-elem~ntary.-uteil-~rom"T"'treeW:aY-1-P-t.ivate_;corn~tj-~U?~....:lntel'.e&t.~te.-~o-tl_~~~~cozy-cott&ie._
7 • • school. New; •carpets and .palnl 4 spacious bed· Separate ,family J."Ol?ffi ,with· huge ftreplad!.· Mas-:.. FUII price just $30,500. It's a steal. Act quickly. ._ Costa Mesa. Large corner lot. $33. 750. For a th 1 bedrooms. 'qui··~·.-.· k,~.'r6<•'7,71 _ .• , , -,·'· ~· . ~ms .. ~er wants to go-quick. ~n slvi;,lb:8-8-t':1 ~~tekplu.s3? q,spacous. " ..,Ce.11847-6010
'Pampered; petted;-stroked; Quality--draped--..
painted·-carpeted -tiled -fireplaced· -food
pantried -y,'ftl"drobed -patio· Carpeted -ga.
rage door automated -lovingly placed wheref
her family cawwhlk to beach or bay'. For adop-
tion calI·546-2313. '
' I
• ~
I
i • • '
)
" ,;--~ t.-iu ,.... -..,-... PGJMihli. V&lue packed at $35,950. To see, call Manicured lawns and s'firubs. Try to match this -
'\, ' .f' , , 1 ~ • ~ ' at ~ .. 950. CaJ)..nQw 842~"2535. '
• '· ,'11,i,_ -.~ • • .. . :: ....... .., . ===================::;::::::::::;1 :. ~ f ..... /' b. ~;,".;I { i~ ·~,~~ ~ .. :.
;!. .. :":''lssuME 71/;0/o-LOAN ASS.U~!$.Y,~o;~ '!A;J.OAN FANTASTIC PQOL HOME • POOL ..
· 'CORONA, DEL 'MAR .VIEW Owne• ~carcy :in,i. Neat' new eondition. ·$38,,$00
.. ~~h 5-bedrofmi.;deR..tormaKdiftinr 4 bedroOinS. ''hinlly• room. Living room. · Big new pool·k surrounded.'by super dance
; .. ..,family.. room on over .. l.zed Jot .j).ist fireplace.. P,(IO)•and hear:tll equlpmen_t. can't pavilion and'· easy-inaJntenilrice land,.cap-~·
· ~ ... irom the beach with a fabulous oeean hut. Rulh. Dial 963-67«1'. Ing .. The home, too, is designed for enti!r-;; :=~~ 0:ir ofpa~0~:0~~~:ru:~ EA5rs1Di . 'COsT~-MESA =:!k:ef~~~e~~h~~ =~~ i0~~
'.·
Mar. ta.u .~ for tPi>ol.ntmenL 67J.8550. 525,000 , room, and large bedrooms. Located in
' -111rc--lll---~.:..:.-..111l'HrV beautiful large-tree shaded area close to , , _.-n·o,nunNo~ ESA YER Th , """"' me "'f••na<ie a11-echools ''l'hi.-1s-a--l>rand-new--11.t1ng-
·.N""'"'·' '~~~.'ITWON~' .. A ST -c;;. 4•PLEX·-·$62,500 , '' tree• and a'"'•• Jot. It's to4aY's buy and and won'\ last the weell.·CBll now to '"'· Vn:_A 'J -~ ... 1 -will be tom'orrow's steal. Take a quick 847-6010. • '°"' tON&-.... Mis& Verde's best buyf All new'4irPets all look! 646-7171. ; ...
' ' ,. ~r -] .,. '"'·~i':· Xll~~~-~t ... 01.: EVERYTHING YOU ·uu. PARK', OCEAN Biidr ·i... •• ,.ian.. -rt ha.ch C'll!llom b'or:n. •• • Walk 't 1.-....1 ..... n~t•• H ' $62500. -ES _, ·-~ ~-ioo8 . ...--, .:~: -~• um. · . ALWAYS WANTED ' ""'D ' _,.... J. '°""EEZ " ·
3100 ... , •• _., ..... ft~pla~ and W'ge pool . i .... :c!'"' ' UN ....... $34 ooo' • _.. You,&e\.oll'3 hf this well cared to• home.
room. '66,900. H"'P"~"YY'l· ... ' . TRl·~-6-PA no.s· ' " . ' . . ' , . ~ . . Just,. 1.W blocks to .,... 400 acre ;park"''
" Fixer 1units. All 2 "W111ro~~lt:~'flll1i:. 21.-~~toO 1 SCI: ft.~: master suite !(Ith with filh_11bc~ed ~e. 11tree .•pae!o~becf. .
l ~~ 6e!;, Cen~~:'~~o~off°* to ti~~ .. ;·~~~~~~ ~~J!?g: 1*':rui;bar=ed ~\ • t
more · Take~vantage ·~1.;r. ~':"+pI&ce-:..... 'bW.l~1N -:-soft water and muc;b $33,!5@. ll:•ee call 842-2535. ..
•
Just Hated! Giant 2 sto~ charmer. Huge family
roQm. 4 IPflaio;is ~p ... ~ )?e.tha. Peco.._!or
drapes-A-carpeting. Park-like rgrounth. ·In beach
atta'a moat exclusive location. Something spe-.
dal at $53,950. Call now! 842-253:5. '! •l•
WE · ARE TRULY' PROUD
·To .p~.1
·. DUri.u i~•,.' · ·:r .more. Doq~t·de!iY. Call 963-676't~· \ :,. 1.
Hop.SKIP:·n•MP ASSUMABLE ·6°/o YA LOAN ; '!INCOME -OR-IN-LAW"
-..u $187 PER MONTH ·Collect 'on rental unit or have separate
To, p' A,.IRC oc' EAN · ouarteis tor •your mother-tn-iaw. Live in
l
'ii> Anyone can assume these· low paymenfJ!I. · J=Qzy 3 bedroom home. Room for 3rd uhit
-i Buil~ ·an equity ;n "Beach'' property, $31,950 ls total, prlce. It's a super ~Uy on V't.cant land•on~~perty. Beat news ti!t
'Sparkling. owners lflllJ plus a6arp rental1 · ~ 1oriented: horner With lovely ,new ~ting -. owper will hel~ JiJiance! Try to n;aatcb
wi th fireplace. New pa.Int, caii>ettn&, water and draperies. Pretty cul de sac slrei!t this at $31,750. A.Ct now! 842-2535. : L • >~ ...
heater. 2600 IQ· ft. txcenent rental acbed! -close to .schools. can now for. mort.J.Cl{ett· , , ' I , ·•• -; , .. :.., , 1 .. ' ~
u1e. s12.soo. c.ll' ~2313· to• aetalli; • mat1on. M1-so10. , "SUPER. s & S" iuY YOUR DREAM-· .. ~ TRl-PLEX ""."' S55,5~
$ , · Bring p61nt a: tools. All two. 6edroom, units.· • FOR 25;95~ . 6 pattocr G,.at locattori. Mlnlft\am d6wn. !~', aII together'.....: MassiV@ 1soUd wood Bargain·tnw.tment. caJl:QOW.~lSOQ.
_aoot..opens.to '"'" shag carpal CU•hloned E'" .-'DE 4.PLEX parquet vlnyl ln kitchen and dining room. M~I~ · -:--,.
3 bedrooms to dream in, luxury appoint•' : 5571500 : 1-' '
Famous S Ir: s. quillty built home. Huge'
pµ"QUet floor famlly .room. Sunken ll~i
room. ,F,onnal dining. Sunshiny kitc6en. sepU&'~· laundry room. It's empty,, so quicit_,_m~in _possible, Won't las't • at
$44,900. Take .adv&ntf:l:e! .. C&ll now. 842· 2535. . • .
ments extend right into the 2 bathrooms. · . . 1 I .. '
' Bonus wo•kshop °" play-.. nestles In Bread and Butte• units. 'EU-llf~·lo-'SQP.nf•'OF "HWY:·. CONDO ' '-~~"•"'u~uplpy~&:~!~~u"™~--=h~~~~~:o~=~fiwe10~.._+~· ..;.l.•2 tiith~towu-__:___
' ' ' -~t}-. Ca11 today. 54~1600. -' ··, 1 hciull~~· ~~;..:;.,2 'bl'oeks BLUFFS. ·CONDO .. 1, 7 Lovn'y UNITS' +· ... oL' to beach -li>ts Of --an<l,wardl'Obe8
J. usr· • r.R1111t~ -. l "" .. -·bright and -alry "°""'' -·· -deluxe . . . . ' ~.. " ' • . ' ***Nt:\lllH'\RT: HEIGHTS*** bulll'ln -kltChen· with pa'n"\' -only
Tastefully ~itedi .~riclpnV}\~ ~ .. ''W' ti ~· -.;-...It ·t 1 ''U cie $61,750. Call 673-8550 for appomtment. ati1e Joca.tlo'i:t in p0pular Blliftli ~ 811£-:P,att. ' ~en.. o . e money. you ee • i;. --, • , :. • -, .. tennis club, shopping cerit'er in4;sChOols. ~ ts sharlnz. tOo much In your.hibOra. , .-...OL . ~a bedrooms, 2~ baths.· call for appOint-look •t t:hil opJ)ortunlty. $14,160 gross in-rv
, , "'!"t 673-81>11<l. . ~J. i\~it~~cy~~~~••'; GAME ROOM . _ ·-l08NT1C=-C_OU~D .;..-.-area. '0n"lY$132;li!l(F.'s~ . .,, · .. SllVE"'$.f6VO'--'! . &d~ one bJOck from ocean. b.tsh J'.iOOl S46-1r11l.-. --.. t---~.. . if yotl'~·pe:J.nt, panel and nx-uP. ~
·, size lot. Most desirable 4 ~-'f)ian; BEA.CH COTIAGE of calitornla.."l.J.fe Style extras. Slate 'e~~
Hands,.orne fireplace. Extras. OnIY $39;5t)(), try to cheery living room warmed b)'
· Phon.,963-6767. 1 BLOCK '1;9 "-'.q~N · crackll~ 1'io0dbum!ng flrePl8ce. All pul'-• 'A. TOUCH "'F ·,;..o·u· NTR' .; C<>zy dollhouse 'li stone's thi;ill\' to the blue f'O'e fM>lly l'OO/>i adjacent to eat-ln kltch·
:WATCH THE SAILBOATS
From the living room, while you dlne or from ·tht
j!JW'l'l}et,«J.tchen.' Near beach, . fee 'land, study, ·1 , •' ' ~ ' ~ ampypoom, ~'1 bedroorris. $98,5()0..,.Call .--now. 6""'°"'""' . . . . . ·~ .... ' .
• ·:::t'.1
'
' ' .... . .... ' 't
PA.RK HUNT1NGTON
POOL' \
.)lagnlflcmt.pool. Tailored yard and ·deck. Most
pµIat p:lBru-Suee:r-slze lot on a cul·de-sac. Ex.. · ..11<1>i.1.;n;;.;-:iit11'P06SJti1~'61s1.
"'
! ' ' l
11t11 brand NEW l.JSTJNG. A spotless one owner
home. ~rely the moat ~culate "M,QQ•.C<!:"
Model ln till of Harbor View Hqmes. Oversized
lot c~· i iM'l b8ul!MJ.y lanmcaped with luge
~ Jj\lo. ~ dtiljiOs and Wiilpaper•all
top~!:; ~!t 1"1"" loYe lllfCall now.•Only
\,I .~ , , 1~ · ~ Pacific: Oider •home is 1ri in\rritcula.'te ·con-en and gan\e'rit patlp. 4 ,'bedrooms, large
6°/o YA ·
NEAR BEACH Yet very close in-N~'{JOrt,B~~ I~ jition. Comf,letely carp;eted and moder.n-master bedroom suite~ Cornpe.re .this New-, ~ Y&rih. Loads of room in this. 2"'f>edr00m \zM/Yard has alley ~sdor boat gate, ·port RiVl~.for'tea~rea. s.tyte '11d value Be&uUfully manicured l\9me• Ideal· floor plan. 'hom~l,~ ~6-'n:?.1·, • ~ ,., Yoµ .. won't -find nicer ahd the price is right ~,9{!0.•Call .546:2313. ~O:::::;.J Uvtng room opens to covered patlb and lovely ; ~, .i . ! _1, t/ _ .-.t.._ $.tl,500'.·Beact< Pl"OPl!t.f.y goes .fast -act . • .~All appliances. built-~ •. ~ 'ot'i.owner-_
. , , ' ; '· qulckfy. 001 841'60101.now to see. shin aun..,..AA 'with the loan. Don't delay Call ... ·' • ,o~ ,,..-----.. r,.<.\ ,1~'!11 •I , '.l ·• .. ~ ~ .~-·11' I• 1" t ...,.~ . • • -today.-IJllde. $30,000. 963-67~7, . ... ~ . ' • -~t·~~ )f .. ..
. .!.~ .-i. t,.. ... ••• I. ·-., ... ,,.. ·-J-, .... '. " ... . •• j
' . ~ ~ !II.,. ""' ' " 'l'l.°!>' '
'
.NEWl'OllT BEACH 11ao -.... ,_, aw.
\ .... 111r · •
·r
' ' '
coS'tA m:t . • 2790 J ...... lh'tl. ..
141 m1•· i
• • ..
l I • . • f. ..
•
. thJNTING'ri»N BMCB
17'31 ._. IW. 6014 w ....... .
MZ-2111 147-6010
'·
'
CORON/\ DEL MU
. JaJ: M•1••tfe ln-IJIO
,HARBoR YIEW HIW VIEW
'
r
'
•
•
• •
I
•' ~lNVESTMENTS
2790 -....... 5ulto 201 c:-...... 546-1~
J 1
"
'
•
I
.. . -
• •
-i.s11~;;;;i;O•A~IL·Y·P·IL~O-T ........... w.~~n~·~~,·,,··St~p-ttm ....... 1.·.·.1•·7·J .......................... ""l~ ............................................. iiiiii .... ..;;w~~iM~!daiiiil'~·~S~·~~·~m~btriioil~9~,~19~73i;;;;.-.-.-·'~L-Ot.-.·.oviEiRtiliSiERiii~J~4::1-"'-:
The Blue.i ~arketplace on the· Oninp Coast
I
-...... "" Solo ••• 125 -149 ~' •••••• SOO ·S24 • '......,.,, IObi&et • • • • • • • • 9SO -990
("'41k>rt1...,,11 • • • • •••• 700 -1'19 'DAILY. Pl' 01 CL~SSIFIED ~DS ' Ptu.onah. • •••••• , , S15 • 549 •
""' ond _-... • ' • • • l!O • 199
Rtol 11101• G.rwol. • • • • 1$0 • 199 . ... f'll'10l"Wiol • • • • • •••• 200 . m
~ for Sok . . , , , , 100 • 124
L~1 & Found • , , , •• , 5SO -574
fli'erchond~. . . ... 800. 849
You Can Sell It; Find It,
Trade It With a Want Ad [642-5678)
; Rtritol • • • • • • • • • • • 300 • -499
Schook and lflJINtlion I •• S1S • m
Servke1 ond Repoirt • • • • 600 • 699
Tron'f)OfJotion. • • , • '. • , 915 -949
General General
BAYSHORES-$112,000
o,·er 3.000 sq. fl. of comfort and luxury
a vailable in this 5 bedroom, 5 bath sea·
side. mansion with private beach provided.
One· of the favorite residential areas of
screen -stars and entertainers. You might
like it Joo! 646-7711.
PANORAMIC VIEW
from this 1800 sq. It., 3 bedroom, 2 bath
custom home on large'fot witlf formal dining
room, double garage, beautiful carpets &
drapes, hardwood floors, shake roof and less
than 2 yrs. old ! $74,950. Appt. only. 646-7711
WA-TERFROHT-$220,000
Ne'v on the market, this spacious custom
family home·offe-rs the-epitome of gracious
Jivin$. Beautiful view of the Bay. Our ex-
clusive. Appl. only. 646-7711. ·
Walker &Lee
RtAL ESTATE
(Ntwporf lleach-lrvine Olfict Optn 'Tll 9 PM)
Gener el General
•
Hyouie~nga ~fol~
Half gone in half a year and lhe rest will not
last.long. Huny to see this distinctive.Newport
Beach development of condominium homes,
built-in clusters around handsome courtyards.
Eight superb models, each a masterpiece of
l~ur~ comfort. conveni~nce and quality
construction. Sundecks, fireplace, wet-bar,
elegant Master Suite. Sun,Litec kitchen,
private enclosed double garage. Recreational
facilities include heated swimming pool,
. lighted.tennis courts, sauna, therapy pool.
All exterior building and grOunds maintenance
provided. Satisfy your curiosity-see
Newport Crest today!
MESA V.ERDE HORSES OKI
Be au t if u I execu·. Choicely located 3 bed·
tive-bome-wiUi 3 .. spa-room w.ith ~ing room.
cious. bedrooms, 3 baths. Family room &. fire-
Formal dining room. place. Patio. Lots of
Homemaker's kitchen trees & greenery. En-
with everything. Big joy the privacy ! Full
family room. Two fire-price. tJH,500. 546-1720
places. Fully landscap-1----------
ed. $56,000. 540-172o. ASSUME 7V<% LOAN
On this deluxe 4 bed-
ASSUME 5o/4'Yo LOAN room: 3-batii beauty.
Wonderfully landscaped Has a fine list of extras
3 bedroom home \Vith
dining room . Picture i~cluding formal -dining
windo,vs . Two pa tios. room. Family room &
Richly paneled Jiving fireplace. EfficieQcy
r_oom & kitchen bar. kitchen 'vith built ins &
·surrounded by colorful dishw:isher. Full price, I
flowers. $28,950. 546-1720 $43,000. 54-0-1720. ,
2955 HA'RBOR BLVD.
COSTA MESA 540-1720
General Generel
* * * *
' INVEST NoW ''Our 28th Ye1r'' IN 16 UNITS
rn exe<ll•nt rental an.a c1... WESLEY .N;-TA YtOR-CO., Realtors
to largC shopping center. ' 2111 S•n Joaquin Hiiis Road
TWO SE~ARATE BUILD-''Overlookl!IY Bi C•nion r ... ~ Club'' INGS: Eight I 2 bedroom _.,, r r
unlurnimotl' Elgbt _ 1 bed-NEWPORT CE TE , N: , -644-4910. ·
room furnished. Large heat-Generel Geiterfl ·
ed JXIOl, covered la.ooi, ping-""-=·'-'-"-------1
pong and shuffleboard. Call EASTSIDE for appointment. ~.ooo. 1 M4~7270 • RU~=~=~IN. A~l~!!-~.E!!.,.
CHARMING
CdM DUPLEX
Just remodeled front unit
with !hat RUSTIC FEEL-
ING. Parieled living room,
b1·ick fireplace. 3 Bedrooms,
upgraded carpe t s &
V.'allpaper. New re!11' upper
unit w/trec-top view, open
bl>an1 Cf.'ilin}?s 2 bedrooms
including oversized master
suite. One· of CQrona d~
l\far's most charming prop-
erties located next to the
city park. $127,500.
644-7270
loan. 3 BedrootM, 1 Bath,
·1>"'anrity·· Room. Ottered for
$29.IM. This home Loi: new
on the market. HURRY.'
Call COLWELL. 6.J6.llili6.
HA HOR
HIGH SCHOOL
Lovely custom buUt family
home near Bay~st Area.
Close to all schools. 4
Bedrooms with ·I a r g e
_,. cloaet11, 3 · Baths, Master
' Suite has built-In aewtnc
center and a4Jolnin& den.
Living Room -nu rorner ·
fireplace, Iarse t~ room
l-IEilUTAGE .. eo~• 'TORS with dining area p I u 1 ~ break'faat bar. Or~ tree• J;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;i;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;..;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;. I Two, Three, and Four Bedroom Condominium Homes
-$62 .995 ~~·~ l;!~~~~~~~g~~~;;~~~~I ; WAL TO~_HOOL ~
: AND THE MARKET -4 Bedroom with lam·
ily room and bird aviary. Gate for trtiiler Or
.dog run. See this today. $33,500.
··~ Financing Available at 7·l'f40/o--r General enei;oL__
r/ewpo1·f Beach
is proud to amounce that and fruit trees thrive jn the
RUTif VAtfl'RlN has joined · patlo and y&.l"\i. OU~ for
---OUl~ has been actiVe in a. Call -0'.>LWEU.. -
the Harbor Art-a for We lasl
fiV'f' ycani, receiving n\any
MESA VERDE ,
DOLLHOUSE -3 Bedroom, 2 bath, fireplace,,
~· b ig country kitchen. A real pleasure to show.
Only 3~ years young. Asking $39,900.
EXTRA· NICE
4 BEDROOM AND DINING, 2 bath, block
wall fence, shingle roof. Bif"Sssum'able 6% %,
loan. Asking $29,650. CALL to see.
Open House Fri, Sat & S'uft
-21l-34th St.,
3 br & 2 br, open beam ceilings freshly
painted inside & out. New Crpt ' & .drps.
S76,500. $111.000 dwn. Balance on agreement
by owner.
DALE WULLNER
556-8181
Agent
or 642-1771
listing and ~Jling awards _,..-::;;,.
inC!udifl'J member3hip in the
'
0 ?.fillion Club."
Experience maktt the
dlff Pr't'OC(' • 1'"'or N'al j)l'C>-
fessionll.I help, RUTl-1 inv\tes
all her clk-nts and friends
to ream her at .. ·.
HERITAGE
REA~TORS
1500 Adams Avt.
Cost• Mesa, Celif. * 546-5880 *
Newpart ttelghts
OPEN DAILY 1,5
1584'-. (oil 16th St)
4 Bdnn 2 bath h:lme oo
R-2 Jot, clotie to ~s &: .,.~ ... HERITAGE • 540-llSI
Open Eve1s.
From Pacific Coast Highway
and Superior Avenue (Balboa.
Blvd.), drive up Superior to
Ticonderoga. and directly to
Newport Crest Information
General General
When you list with
.us, 'YOUR HOME io
iliclvertrMd in'Home
for Living · mag•·
zi"9 In more th•n
900 eree..-.nd cu•·
tomers ere sent to
yo u as· referraJs
from our over 770
•lflllotes of NMLS. I.,,..., .... ..,,;;;;;.,..,....,..., I shops. New crptB, fresh I" paint. Own.r will help nn. . . REALTORS
Generiil General
BEACH TRIPLEX Assume 7'/o Loan
$53,950 On this sharp 4 bdrm, 2 bath
Centet Telephone: (714) 645-6141
Sales Office open dally
10 a.m to SUOSl.lt
Lowest priced triplex in home · with famil y rm,
Ne,vport Beach only ~2 ti.replace. Built-ins and , * Typical conventional financing of 30 year loan :
block to beach, this dishwruiher. Covered patio. Cash price of Plan 1 $62,995; down payment
peninsula triplex has 3-1 Forced-air ht Custom 60 bedroom units. Great for Jn-cabinetry. Full Price ' $12,695; 3 monthly payments of $361.00 (prin-
vestment, appreciation, lll1d $34,950. brk 54().!.1720 cipal & interest) at 8% % ANNUAL PERCENT-
owner use too. By ap-TARBELL AGE RATE.
pointment only Red Carpet, 4 BEDROOM BARGAIN R.e~l~or~ 645-8080 (open _ ,._,..o.tl.•'"'9d:.t'hd!k:K~k •
l."Vl"nlllgs) ~ ,$30,000 -@~lt*"-H;Gnoitc.i ... 1 a...c.nc.-..=
TWO.ON A LOT Localed Lil excellent Costa ,,1co~...,od ,...,.._...,. __ .. .,...,..._~""'"'""""'_"'_..,~i..°""'~""v • • i\lesa ;11-ea. 2 sp'1cious -""""-""""_ ... .......,.._ .. ......,."'.._n.k!l.t,P..:o0tKc:,io... VA terms. $32.000. H.cnt $170 baths. cozy brick tirc'pla'cc, _..,....,. .. .....,.,,_ ........... _."°'...,.,._""'"""""_""',__,_
each. Call 546-0022. forcl'd air heat, large G 1 l'Overed patio, deep shag enera General
carpet. built-in kitchen.
Walk er &lee Evcry1hin,i:: looks like lle\V -
lfu rry on 1his Olli'! Call Red
Carpet, Realtors 54&-8640 ll l AL llTATI'
·Ge neral
BEAUTIFUL VIEW • CAMEO SHOl\ES
~ceanside , private beach -huge lot • spa·
. c1ous home, v.•/beamed ceilings & parquet
floors. 4 Bdrms., 3 baths. $115,000. Carol
Tatum •
1601 CASTL E COVE, SPYGLASS #I
View of hills & ocean in privacy. Outstand·
ing Lusk 2-story 4 BR. home. Fam. rm. &
bonus ·· rm. Quick occupancy. $129,500.
Cathryn Tennille
BIG CANYON C.C. VIEW
5 Bdrm., 3 bath Rarbor View Home with
view of 3 greens & Big Canyon Country
Club. Land included at $93,500. Howard
Wells
LIDO ISLE
Sharp l ·bdrm .. street lo street. Tu>om !or
expansion. Immediate occupancy. Full price
$57,500. Gene Vreeland
SPACI OU S SPANISH HOME
3 Yr. old, Emerald Bay exclusive, w/4 BR .,
sauna, den & \ve t bur. Beaut. vjew of ocean
& mountains. A great home for $275,000.
Call Pat-Rug.
THE BL UFFS BEST BUY
'?[" ~ tb.18 super floor plan. One yr. old
conde ls being offered fo r $69,500 INCL.
LAND! a BR's., 2'h ha. Fam. r m. 1800 Sq.
Ft. Call Toni Escobar . --Coldwell,Ballker
LlDO waterfront. 3 Bdrm. & lge. family rm.,
or 5 bdrms., with 6 baths. Lido Nord. Spec-
tacular view! \Vaterfront living rm. with
step-down wet bar. Pier & float. $275,000.
* * * * LOVELY custom 5 bdrm., 3 ba., Lido Nord,
on spacious 40 It. lot. P ier & slip. Adjacent
lot also avail. for sale. $295,000
BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR
:Ml Bayside Dr., Suite I, N.B. 675-6161
Gene ra l
UYE IN IRYINE
$32,500
Sharp 1 yr. old home & prlc·
ed right! The kids go to
TUrtlerock Grammar &
Rancho Jr Hi, aru'i the ne\Y
U ni versity Hi -nea r
University of California nt
Irvine. Calt 546--0072.
Walker &Lee lll AL l'ITAl l
lease-Lease/Option
Vacant Penin, P1. 2-sty. 3 BR.
plus fainily. $600 Mo., or
itell $98,500.
Call: 673-3663 GT.1-8086 Ewt.
associated
BR Ok£ R!. -R£ Al TO 'l,S
1t 1~ W Dalbo<'! 111 J&t J
N~ TRll"LEXES
and DUPLEXES
In COSTA MESA
General
Why Not
a ''New'' Home?
NE\V range & oven • NEW
hot \\18.ter heater • NE \V
catpeting, NEW clean paint,
NEW dishwasher, 3 NEW
bedrooms, family room. Jlv.
ing room and 2 baths. With
a NE\V detached 2 car gar-
age. NEW Jandsco.plng and
Nptin kle rs, NE\V fences and
all for . .
$30,490.
You own home and l•nd
Ste Lo Cuest• Villa
~foclt'I 1 block wesl of Bcl\Ch
on Adnms in !Iuntingfon
Beach.
Quick occupancy bt.>cau11t: of
credit 1'tJeertons! !
Conventional Financing *' 536-1445 *
EASTSIDE FIXER
Corono del Mar
Unusually nice brand n e w.
duplex. \\'ell located, sooth
of high'o\o·ay. 'Three bedlootn
•tmits. Grosses $9,500. a year.
A,;king $100,995 ..
Shori!drtts finest r esale !
l.oV'el,y five bedroom home
with white water view'. Old
brick fireplaces in bed·
rooms. Asking $250,IXXl.
Choice cul de sac location in.
Harbor View. Four bedroom,
pool home • great location
for sucoessCul active famicy.
Asking S98,500.
Call GTa-72'25
-iifESA VER-DE-
4 BEDROOM $36,500
''THE BLUFFS"
BAY VIEW
REDUCED
$16,550
ON THE PARK. Over~ng
·Back Bay. IRON GA to
giant 2 story. Secluded mal·
ter suite with bo.Icony and b&Y vil!W. Family den. Guegt
facility 1\ith 3rd bath. Gour-
met kitchen. Formal dining
.aJ:Ca, .Entertainer's_ patto
vie\ving greeobclt and bl.ue
lVaters. TAKE ADVAN·
TAGE. Can'64.').0300 ••
I Oll i\ I L Ol \0 \
-· " t ...
2299 HARBOR BLVD. tove-1s:
to buy your family this
gorgeous 4 bc1rm biggie on a
corner lot with open country
spa('('s. Also includes 2 lux-
urious baths. AU this in
Costa ~lesa wbmt livink is
free and easy. FHA and VA
terms available also 5'7~
down program .. Won't lMt
long for $27,000. Call
Big trees everywhere, very
spA cious. home beautifully
kept Inside and out. 2 balhl'I,
built-in kitchen, value pric-
ed for area see it for sure. .,
Call Red Carpet, Realtors ,.---~-... ---. .......... Walker & lee
~l ~L CIT ATI '
ASSUME 545-9'9! Ope_nc,c..eve-"•~· ~-
YA LOAN SKINNY-DIPPIN
Vacant • Quldt i>o.-l<nlt s ANYON.E:?
Bedroom, 3 bath hOme just Here Is a beautiful 3 Ne!·
like new All carpeting room home with sparkling
painttng • and wa11papef ~I -. quiet . East side Joca·
brand new just move ·in tiOn \v1th privacy. Lou ot
6% VA Assumable loan: decking nlcel_y landscaped,
One or the greatest listings comfy b~ick fireplace all for \~-e·ve had this year. $45.900. an unbelievable $35.950. Call
Our exclusive. ~~~arpeti R.-e ,, J t o r !I co: Ts EASTSIDE
WALLACE CHARMER
REAL TOIU In Immaculate condition.
--5'$41&6-'4141_ with 3 bedroom&, big double garage, and access for boat 'Op~n Evenings) or trailer. Lota of trees & .,.,_ __ .,.. ___ ..,. j flowers. Beautiful location
-CHOICE-4-P LEX -S29.900 -646-1711. Open
AVAILABLE NOW eves, 2043 We11tcliJJ Dr.
A!I_ new 4--plex In prhn~"'-
1111 area.. 1-lcTd vacant for
., • NILEL
Ar¥\ [)AILEY &
, 'l~ASSIJCIATES
-EVER-STOLEN A
DUPLEX?
Try thiJt: two 2 bedroon1
units -double garage in-come of $3750 per year. Ask-
ing $35,950 try your own
price owner says sell! Call
Red Carpet, Rea ltor1
645-8080 (open evenings)
Priceless .
· Peninsula
2 BR house, + 3 BR, 2 BA
rental. be-dms, fplc, super
Sharp! Xhl t location, 2
blocks to. beach. Priced Toi .
quick sa1e, taken In trade r .oo:i. Call 645:8400. I Vl~-n:::. c.. J
DUPLEX
OPEN HOUSE
471» _......, • 14 PM • S<pt.
20. (hear lh(! beach).
546-2313
REDUCED $5,000 TO
SELL
, POOL lo JACUZZI ""1 • .....,,. '"' benefit•. , W lk o L Yours for only $80,000. Call 8 er U' 88 A.ed Carpet R ea ltor3 •rALtllAtt
G.J!l-8080 <upon evonln&il -MESA Vl!RDE-
STSIDE.$2$,250 . SPICTACULAR
. MotiVll.tN!. owner 19.)'1 aeJI
'W.-bea\ltiful 3 bedroom, 2 halt~ pool homo. Load• of
extrat. A ideoontors dream 't only 75,000. Call Im· rMdll•l)' on thlt one. Red
Carpel, Ruf.,... -GOO!,f 1uu1er bome tor the Thi;, ho1ne has boon com·
newlyweda or p le• • • n t pletcty ~ated, k>ealed rtttrement home for the on quiet cUf..d~ Jqt, en-olderwed.I. Walk to lhOPPlnl joy 3 very roomy btdro0m1,
ew1, 2043 Wettcll!t Dr. ~ ' 2 bric~ ~ • -
<-evenUW.> , ·
NO CASH DOWN ',
VA • trul.Y love!~ .Orne, $27~500. Call 546-0022.
~
551 ..... po<! Ctnlor Dr., N.B.
OPEN DAILY
Pl1centl• at Wiison
<mnae County Apartment
Exclusive Aitcnl !'>47~791
IiF.llJNO J~ HOME
PAY?i.IEN'f'S?
We \Y111 ~ your horne for
cn!lh in1mcd lAtcly. 776-9ro2
3 bill bedrooms, 2 .balluJ,
1epara.te roomy f a m I t y
room, qu ict tree Uned
11ree1. lttrge bright 1..-ounlcy
kitchen. 1na.<tSlvc u~ brick
fireplace, nred1 1n In or
cll'ltll-UP $40,000 ar e n . Walker 0 Lee
Owne r nlu&t scll-brln:r u!rcr _::::=:=:::•::•:;":;•;:•::•!':;:'::':::::~ Cali Hoo Carpe<, ll<•ltotf
ri46-:SG!IO Need a "Pad"! l~~ an Ad!
trees and· prtttiJte area.
Prlced to selr now. See ii,
Ca ll R~ Carp<t, Rtnllors
54~
Dot'\'f jtve UP the lhlPt • "Li.St;' It In cl•qlfle:d, Sh1p
to Shore Reaulttl 6~:Hi678.
·walker I lee
lllAL 111 ATt
'
•
e ANYTIME e
646-3921 Ot' E Vt 646 4,143
Lachenmyer
Rl,11101
MACNAB
IRVINE
BAYADERE-VIEW SUPREME
Elegant 4BR, 4 batb,'FR, gourmet ldtchen.
$190,000. Dona Chichester 642-8235. (J43)
HARBOR VIEW MONACO
3BR's, 2 baths, professional landscaping.
Formal DR. $64,900 lee. Immediate occu·
pancy. Joyce Edlund 642-8235. (J44)
SOPHISTICATED BUYERS
recog'nize the value in this most gracious
4BR, DR, FR Big Canyon view honie.
$152,500. Lois Miller 642-8235. (J45)
QUIST SHORECLIFFS
Superb 3BR, FR, !orma.I dining area. Im·
maculate condiUon. $117,500. LeClalre
Farruiworth 644-6200. (Jff)
CAMIO SHORES
Magnificent panoramic QCean view: Cus·•
tom 4BR, 3 bath + den. Immediate occu·
pan~y. $119,500. Jack Custer 64U235. ~J47)
BALBOA OCEANFRONT
Luxurious 4BR, 4 bath. Re¢entiy remodel·
ed & redecorated. Fantastic view! Partly
furnished: $177,500. Bob Owens 642-8235.
(J48) •
BIG CANYON CONDOMINIUM
2BR'• 2 baths + FR. Cpu , drps, ~·s
aionally 1$ndscaped. $85S:S:, leue @
"100/mo. Billie Mattson . (Jll)
[ lfVlne 1-b·IMnt "'°"W_,.., I
. , ' Hi--'41•1111
11"4 MtoArthw 1"4-1200
N.,,porl lnefl. Clllt1ride 12111
\
"'
•
". .... ... •• -i:". .. ,
• la PILOT-ADVERTISER Wtdntsday, Stpttmb!r 19, 1'173. Wo!Mtdly, S.,tembt< 19, 1973 DAILY PILOT 57
I~
Gonor11G __ •;;."°;..'"'l'-1 -----· ICH-11 Coat1 N\Mo 1,;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;I HOMEAND. i;:.::.::::.::.:..~~~-i=~o=..~~-Hunllntton -h Hunllntfot1 hoch MoblloHomn
For Solo 12l . ur111111NT "IF YOU'RE OPDI DAIL y 2-4:30 INCOME PLUS IUllnV BLESSED"
THE RAMBLING GLENMAR ROSE THE TRAVEi. Sea""' 0..r? 11·1
, . , islnale a1ory 4 be(lroon1, -BEAUTY -BIG STEAL Exterior ncv.•ly pajnte<I, 3 BR Ju&l sliu1cd for lhe older
BEACH DUPLEX
2912 ALTA VISTA Te':i'?i.~,s..;:,~,w:,•·~;;.~ FARM HOUSE
Costa Mm. Wal~ to 1hop-
with It large family, bere'1 1~ bath, fonnal din.Ina:. ttamblina: ranch slyle home · I: 2 BR, unit.~. flrP.pl, dbl citlU!n who love• to travel.
lhe home with enough elbow f&.mllf room, w!lb :KJOO sq located on quiet atreet. 4 V.A. No Down Pymt. car. In i>f0<*85 ot comp in· J-1t>re's a maintenance me,
1wm for e v e r Yb o d y. It and a huKe pool. Owner tam bedrooms, 2 baths, Nestled in the hills. 0 "-3 terior det,<0tating. Bc llt buy completely contained 21'
SELECT
YOUR OWN CARPETS
TH rs REAL t~INE H01.1E
llAS BEEi'!.: REl)\<x:o.
nA1'ED. EXCE:P1' FOR
1i1E CARPE'T'ING. YOU
,\IA y SELECT voun OWN
OOLORS. BE.ST BUY lN
F'.t\'Sl'BLU1"1'" .t\T $59,500
F'OR 4 LCE. BDRMS.. 2
UA'f l:LS & F'Ar.11LY R,,.I.
EXCEPTIONAL
TERMS .. . L1'."'T US SUR.PRISE YOU
WITI I tl:lE E..'\fH.E~lELY
FAVORABLE \V1\'( YOU
i\fAY PU11CflA'Sf; A nEAu-
TJFUL BROAOMOOR 4
HORl\1. .JlOt.1 1-..: IN llAR·
BOR VIE\V HIU.S. 801'11
'P'fiE FORJl.1AL DINING
H,l\1. &. FA.'\IIJLY R!\1. ARE
LGE. \VITI-I MAN'{ E.Xi'R.A
i'""EATURES. $89,500.
PLEASE CALL
6J5·30QO
~II\\ ,\ 111:.\rlf
llL\1.1'\' 1\1'.
f<,T l l l~ b_~s JODO !
. NE.WL Y LISTED
BEAUTY
plu~. Heated and fUtered JI. ACRE REDUCED Pool, pleO!ly Of fr<e• nnd 14 • Loctttcd on East slde or vr:ry urudou1: is irultalllng ti.replace. Great a.ree. close LOTS o v ERLOOKING on the beach. mobile home in tlp..tap cond.
Cot1ta l\Iesa. 3 quttn·sized new co.rpct1 thruout. Thia to schoohi and shopping and THE OCEAN BEL o \V . $76,500 Price redu<.~d to '2850. Just 1hrub&. f<'()I' Hw Plo1US.
S£EING ii 11 must! OUcred $29 950 fo1• 159,!l(IO. C•ll COLWEW.. . J
bedrooms wilh d a z z 11 n g home w1ll be In move-In con· onl v 2 ndlea to the ocean. Detailed l'ustic architt'ctUre, 1-o c •1 61'1771 hook up and you're on your
ba h "'-·· J '"' range, .1• . .,. .......,9 Thw1 1 11 .... 1 t ...... uunlry style kitchen rlltlon. F'o11ntaln VoJ.tcy n.rea. See ii today! NO 'OOWN TO w/exlerlor ot wood, stucco, way. -· n o . ~
overlooking this huge bttt* $45,995. CALI. 846·3'77. VETS. m,cm. w~athered cedar 11hingle Ontu C~ta l\1esa 6·16--055.5
THE BEST OF
Hunti11J?:to11 Bcl\ch: 3 Year!!
new. S Bedroom!!,' 2 · Bnlh1.
Cozy brick fi r cpln c e .
Cel'atn lc tile p11t\o bar.
sp1·inkll.'1· ityi;lc111. You ml\y
1>.<;u111e existing loan. Offered
for $<.lli,500. Ct1J I COL\VEU.
64&--0;;.lS.
EASTSIDE
COSTA MESA
Nlsumable Fl-IA Lo\V Ln·
terest lonn. J Bedroom1, t
B.."ll\l, Fanilly Roon1. Of-.
fered for $29,850. This home
is nC\\' on tJ1e inark<'I. HUR-
RY . can COLWELL.
646--0J:l.')
Rolling MTl.'t!ll Jawni; tllW yal'd. Submit your O\\'ll rooflines. LGE. SUN DECK Ill 10 x GO FLEET\\'OOD-A-1
stately trees sut'l'ound 11ic· te1·n1!i. Sellt>r is tlexJble. LIVE IT UP • COATS ENCl.OSED WlTH ~"'21 cond. $4800. Mft.ny Extru.
I u r c s 11 u l' V c r 111 u n Priced at $29,900. !JO() sq n of living area, 'J\\'O & \VOODEN RAIL.<;, THA'f J>o1)0Ut LR. Shtti carpet,
ta1·mhouiie. .. Old \Y orlµI / sto1·y plu.s ex iru l~I' pool. WALLACE AFFORDS A SCENIC refrlg., shed, etc. t.fusl be
ch11rm nnd architecfUl'J' 5 Bedrooms. 3 bQ'.:ui, fan1 ily OCEAN VIEW; mo\~ for freeway. 540-4879
Fo11nttl entry. Step down w lk & [ 1oon1, fo1m al dining and all REAL TORS \Veil designed 3 BDRM. & BLUFFS eves.
nuu;li.!1'· suilP \Yllh 5th bath. a _er ee the clcctrlc bulltini>. Profl'S· 962-4454 DEN & DINING AREA 1900 10' « ndo.
M · · I l ..,~~!'!'~ ... ~~!:!!!!•I lloor plan, scrvl--' bo 2 FEE "E'' .x> x w' expa an size den \\•Ith \'unat'd lllAL ••r•rr sionully an<lsca.........i front & 1.~ J 1..-·1 $4500 Ad It _, '"'"' baths. Specious formal !iv. ,,..... room, -· u ' no bcun1~. Mair!:; quarters. 23' 545-M9l Open eves rear "'ith sprinkler systc1n. WE BUY HOMES rni. w•·lh pltc"~ -tllng •-Elegance in the Bluffs!! The pet park. Call m-5266
TAVERN KITCHEN with . Prestige area. $4i.500. CALL 1~ ""' "" cathedr..-11 beants. Banquet $209 PER MONTH 963-5621. l. Cash for your equity cxlensive wre .,{ glass. The professional touch Is ob· Like to Trade? Our Trader's
forntRI dining. E 1cgan 1 V CA 2. 'Viii pick up back paymts den la a COZY RETREAT, v4io~': .. A spacio1us 235111 sq. fl. P1t1'adisc oolurnn is for you!
Jo""'rertl.'h doors to se,·ludt!d A NT SPANISH VILLA 3. No chin-ge for appr. HAS ALL WOOD PANEL. h ~"'°,~· 1 ndami Y roont !'ii lines, 5 days for $5. Cali
I di 'v II , o1·v, ~a· old horn•. ,·0 "·autl-CALL US ED WALLS, VAULTED ome on ee a lodav 64" =13 gnt'< eu . para se. . a e,, Rant'bling 4 bedroom, 2 bath, ~ J~ ' " "" FOR AN ESTThfATE OPEN BEAM 'CEILINGS, Only $17.500 ~.=~'-·-·~·~~~="-----!
patio \v1lh outdoor hrcplnce t\o:o story hoine with loads fu1 beach arPa \\'ith a Span-NO \VAITTNC J\1ASSIVE & 1.11..rnns!NG CALL 644-7211 [ ) a04 B.~.Q. RED BARN 2nd o1 square foorage roaring ish Dair 4 Bt>droon1s 1 ~ CASH NO\V •rv
story in.Jaw apart1ne111 . 2 stone tirl'place, • gow-met t>att1, 1viih tt1mi1y areii. ort 842-~~71 ~:~ !ii~LACE. troni M!ftln. t
1
' • =t':t.I~ .
guest co1tnges and <:ovel'ed country kllch<'n formal din-the kitchen. Lovbly t1Cighbor-Stepsaver kitchen has ALL , -··:ii .
dance p.avill lon ove1·looking Ing room. Big ~Gk yard and hood, cul·de-sac street with BUILT IN RANGE a:
n1agnlf1c..-cnt free forn1 pool. boat gate. Just assume this nn excellent a.ssun1ableloan. OVEN, OJSH\VASH£n G.
1
~
ENTERTAINERS PARA-51A ~C VA loan balance and 6 ~~ VA, $195 per mo; PITJ. OISP ETC ·v I DISE CALL <!•o:n303 · Move in<.'Ond. $36.995. CALL ·• " all blended GRAND OPENl.NG RealEsi.teforSalli ...-. • V'W'V • $209. P!Jl' month pays every-847•3584. toget11er in matching color . _ n::J
thing! Needs some love and tones. Spacious, level rear Newport B•y Towers
care • yo u doll ti up and grounds, IDEAL F 0 R l & 2 BEDROOM
reai:i the profits! 0 n J y SWIJ\™1NG POOL. The CONDOMINIUM }I0>\1ES
136.iloo. BKR .962-5511 . ~R~E~P~0-5~-5E~5-S-IO_N_S~' "'~oe•1y ;, VACANT & JN Bayfront Homos '* * * . A-1 CONDIT ION, \\'/w Boat Sl ips ..:or~lnfor111ation-and location _carpetl.ng__&....custonL.drapcs. F.ull-Sccurity-Highl'itU!
2299 HARBOR BLVD. MESA VERDE of these FHA & VA homes, lhruout. Offered for only, S\eel & conc1-cte construction
IORt\I L OISO\
REAL TORS
tt111111 11r Sill .......... , . .. 100
MOd111trl ,r•llllilf H•m•• , ... 12' M•ltlM Homn ,..,, S•I• •.. ' .• lU
Ac,...11 fir 1119 ..•....•..• 1st
..... ~h ,., .............. 113:
8u1ln4is• PttPtftY • , •••• , •.. , . lJ.4 C1mlllll'.Y-.LtfslC,,.,p11 •• ~ •••. , IU
C1mmart111 PrtiMrty ..•..••. 1st C10Mllmlnl111M .. , .. 11 .....•.. 160
Dup11x .. 1U11lll w h:. .•.•.•... 1'2 contact -$52,500 FULL PRICE Private Balconies
DON
'T STEP IN Back Bay 5'/BR. KASABIAN NO DOWN PYMT. 2 gocog"'"'"' P'' un;l. OR Four Bedrm + den + iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiO TO ELIGIBLE VETERANS. Roor top sundeck
THE PAINT
Horse Property! fan1iiy rn1• Plush two story PACIFIC SANDS Real Estate 962..6644 Entire Joan balance payable Unusual Opportunity, to Pur-
Heu ... II .. _... ........ , ..... 1M
lncom1 Proplf1y ........ , •••.• 1U
11141Wllflll l',.lllt'IY ,.,.. •••••• 1611 Lots lor 5•i. ................. 17G
Mtbl11 Hl<tle/Trllllf P•m .. 1n 3 Bil tis £'r house on 1 ~ acre home Jn prime loc. Forn1al $406 per mo., incl. int. at' chase Bayfront Property in !IUCKET R-4 (!I I unit silc. Assun1able dining, interior al r u i m DEANE HOME Irvine 8%% annual 'le rate for Ne1\•port Beach.
_ 69'1) Jonn. 01,·rlt'r 1vill carry w/waterfall, huge Master , .......... 4 ;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;.[ 291,~ yrs. 310 f'ernando Rd., N.B.
bccaui;e this lovely 'hon1es' 2n·' TD. "~1.900. c n 11 beclnn w/firepl, modern ....... l!e BR, single .rtory, MISSION REALTY 675 8551 u .,... 1vifh added on famlly room. Four And A Fl -;;;;;;;;;.;;;-;;;;;;;;;;;;;;o
Moun111n, Dnert, • ...,, .... 17(
Or•noe Ct. ,.,.,.r1Y .......... 17•
Ovl of Sllll P,..,,.,iy •.•..... 1111
tt1nchn. F•rm1.o 0 ,...,., •..•• 110
ltHI 611•1• 11<111119' ....• , •• 112 R .. I £tt•lt W•lllW , ...•••.. , . lM just lx'cn finished. It's all fl45.&l00. convenient kltch, and a 3 car Beam ceilings, tirepJ, and ! ~r 985 So. Coast Hwy., Laguna •
new & sparkling_,_ New green ~[-.,,.-~~~---~! garage, Only $64.950. For lllUCh more. OVer 1700 . .,. ft: ·thats new in the kitehE;n. Ph.one (714) 49~731 ••BE AC 11 LOVER 'S ------~ ;ha~1~=~~t,~~ roow1t~ Y15~if,_ffo._wd & Co.I ~':J·to~:11 ~24 SouthCo 'Only $3l,950. ~~=...~·s~ ~~~~~ BEAUTl.f:IJii. Y • ." • Imagine! Vo~~~~1.~suine an
1
F'mnct.r 11--1
n1atchln1 baths. white bl'lck _ ,_ * * * ' delight. Covered patio and l :=::==~~=::===='.1 .... .:;....,,:;....;!..., • remod~J-' ll<-b"'"'ot existing 7o/o VA loan on this fire place, ,._,... back ya<"". D"l"<><>f'l'bC'lt location 1nake this · · · ~. "' ;>U" • • ' o --,.. ...... ·" ··~~ nb1c ocean v1ewa & com enormous 4 bedroom, 3 bath "'' nn• ,,. .................. . Anyone can assume .thi• VA 962 4471 ( ... 4 bdrm., 2~~ ba. t\\•1thse-. · ,. · . surf ba 1111111 ... W•ntM ..•.•..••••••• 211 loan \Vith total payntent of Balboa Island $36.950. t lESA DEL MAR • •••~.} 546.alOl \veli worth Uic asking or p!~te p~1vacy can be yours -JUst steps to or Y· 111vn1martt OplflWt111111Y ...... ttt ~" 3 BR 2 BA ti pt red 1~ 900 1\>1rh tins 2 bdrm beauty OV11J.1~r must liquidate at lnv"1men1 W•n!M ............ 2M $~ per/mo. Seller will N'!:'i • , re , cove <N, • 8 ... · • · $79,!li'>o. Submit yo' ur otfer or Mtn•v ts LN11 ............... 2•
help l'.n', nt•c. p-,··.cd at ... v DUPLF:X , for snle by pat'•o, brand·ne•v ·-nd. ·~;oo. H nt'ngt H rbo . v· . rahu ne\V appliaJ1(·es are M•rt•Y W.atM . 2H $28,500. C;ll j4j...949l' owner. $140,000. cash do\vn, ass~~ne 7'i,irm u I on a ur ISIOR irk.:luded in sefling pri~. Sc-c tl'nGdeR! USuBrBr. &up!E' LLIS M•rtt••"· Tr11•f 'Cft,jj'·.::·::.: 2H
673-6918 or 9824~6 loan at ~2-per mo. O.vncr one of 1hcse oul$tandlng re-~-~ ..... a;;:-~ !';~;:~;l'~:~;f~~~ ~:;;:~7.:·~:~::' . Realty red hill ~".:~~ .. ~.;;~ m Laguna 2863 E :~i~ii; .. CdM IJHL...-... -.-_·_m .. -, .... -··-~-.-.. ~ .. -.-' .. 11~
* 54a-77ll * Expands Off-Shore ~Ian I ""c'!!'A~Rt"l'M~Et"l'l~·'M~O~D~Et"l'L""' I ·~ ....... ~ ................ "'1
TillS.Slll'ER SHARP M?J;A
VERDE HOME is our
newest anrl ~st! Hu gP,
spacious roonts, high cell·
ings and rustic open beams
produce a feeling or \'ast
open space, Big kitchen,
famil y roon1 \Vltb
'·'ISLAND" eating bar. An
emnnous master bedroom
looks out to a g(lnlen atrium
and is complete w i I h
v.•alk-ln closet nnd 1he big·
••"bathroom you·11 '"'' •n· Walker & Lee eluding 'a sunken tub: .Ex·
Aller 6 PJl.t, Call 557·4617 T\vo resale offices openirg ., "'AL~ REA $ HouMt "'"'· .,. """'""· · · · · · · 111
G fl = "' L E TA'JE VIEW c,--"'~1•"'~ tvn. ___ · ... ·.·.·.·.·.·.·. ',,."
BEST Buy IN WALK To A no\\'! round oor opportun· A Company With Vision tft m ..... '"
t<'d.Qr _specials arc too _'.::::=:::''':''':"::'::'::"':'•::•::•::·::-:::'.. numerous to mention.' Price
$44,900. You'll be glad you
called.
•
co:Ts
WALLACE
REALTORS
_ .. 5~46>'14141-
,i. $23,500 ity for antbitioUs sales pro. Univ. Park Cent('r, Irvine 1190 Glenneyre St. Outstanding H.V. Hon1cs; 3 ConOo. ,,,.,.., If' um11111 ......... :as
HARBOR VIEW PRIVATE .EACH ,,. pie. lmmo<fate lloor time Call An~ie, 550 7500 494-!>l73 5'"11316 bdrm•., lamily mt., lush T--.............. "' Cozy home on R-2 corner lot. J~" "° ""'id cat'"""tlng, decorator T•wMouM •""'· ............ m
* $56 500 *
I Nice trees I&: large, clear available. Immediate earn· Office houl'S 8 Ai'VI to 8 PM : NORrn END BEAUTY. You .,~ ... -T•~ '""'-., ~'"'"" .. :Mt HOMES bid . fot' h . ings possible. We have solid 1:11.tild a 2nd unit off alley. drapes. Valley view. First g:-u" ~ ................ JU , . • ' g. site aoot er unit. referrals from nC\v home Good . time offered. $72,500. Fee o-'r•" 1 ""'· ··-..;······"· =:
A ::;~lless -one owner 2 Two g-enerus _sized bedr.oonts, CALL __ '=" _ .tJ.6 • ;4_i_4_ &1J°'9ivi&ians_oL tht!_Chrisli.:.. ~ BR. +. c:_UEsr APT., . 800 ocesn View thru de· (you o\\·n the Jandl. 4,r .. u:n.. ~. ~~ .... -~ .: ::: ,.. bedr00n1 and convtrtible a· ropmy kitchen, a living 9~ ~ ana Conlpanies. Manzmnta. Very-~armm , tf:u.Lbay...M.·.lndo"·s. 3-BR., CORBIN-MARTIN .t.,i. ""'""'· ................... xs
rleu honi€'. Sincere ly the ronm all done in Len10n ......... CALL BILL COJ\'lSI'OCK ti:;e. woOOsy lot. Whtie water 2 Iba.; priv. terraced gar-Realtors 644-76'2 ""'1·• 111m, ., llfll1irn, ..... ·•· :Pt
nios1: imn1aculate "Monaco" Yell~ an~ Lime Grce~11 ' ;EAL TY (7141 846-l36l &: (2ll) 5S2-l36l view. $69,900. Open Sun. 1-5. dens, trees. Tastefully dee· ::::• a·surtt":::::::::::::::::::
!n 1-larbor View Hon1es plu!I that~ so hg~t and sunay Nt•r Ntwporc Pe it Office· · orared. Ju~ hsted. $69,j(J(). N.ewport Heinhts Hot111, Mot•ll .•••.•.••••••.•••• ''' an oversizl"d lot 11 ~ acrel that ll looks hkc ptU'l of t.fte!---~~~=-=-=cc. YANKEE V~RANS -$48,500 LOAN 4!-M-'f5j ' ':Ill Ollft.I H•.,.. .................... '1'
* ~ * * * *
lx'aulirully landscaped "'ilh park-like icarden outside. Fountoo·n Valley FARMHOUSE 8".18~· Gracious 2-_sty .. 3 BR. 1(0) N. Coll.SL lhvy Laguna 2 BR, n(!WJy dccotat'l:od inskle Su"'-• ..,..,. •.. -... .-..--. ...... -•·
CALL "'7211 <c;.·;..;;.::..:;:.:;....:.;::;;;!..___ -R1v1era -0 ,tllne v iew. t XI V•c•i~ •••11 ..............
415
EXE • DRE
•"HOME a if1rge <.'OVl'rt'd pnl.io. -1-lle!ltled am 11 """ t ...._ '-""' an( out. , nt corner Joca· Rt11t11s ts $11•r• ............... <tM "'""' Carpets, drapes, and OLD WORLD CHARM · . 0 g .s•an u..,es Good buy for $.'13,000. 1158 lion! Creal starter twmc. G•r""..,. ••t .............. 4M FIVE aC"nRtv"IMS 4 BA'n'IS fl!ld _<vy "°. ve1'l'd. '"'""1"ds. · ~1,·ramar. Open Swi. 2-4. •15,=•. Call o.o ••~. otlk• aW1t•I ·················· 4't
(Qpon lvoni•t•I·
Su ..
.,.....7,·;:r.:..._
1
ctJ B~ \\'aJIPltper n.11 top quality. . and architecture starts F'amily size tivi .. ::·v~tn ~· · .,.,7551 "' ~ .,....,..O'tW llldw1lr1•l l.,..•I ............... "41t -~-... ~.., "''""''--'' '-'" · Only $65,gj() and you own --" ·'b -t....-Stw... .., ert"Sl settii1Jt:huge l{ & the. land. See it, vou'll love with the · European style \\ri.lh log bun1ing fireplac-e, 1000 N, Coast.Hwy., Laguna ,VI.._.. "-=A a.eo.11tW1l•1$ Wi.i.·.-.·::::::::::::;::~ 4tt ~
poot, sharp dm &: dining m1 . Call 6J3.5c~.... ~urtyard. 4 Large bedrms country trtyle eat·in kitcJ:ien, , Laguna Hills ,----~a. MlKlflllllftt •••• ......... ., ...
"''/wt"t h8i" for entertaining. 11' 00\\·. ...wu. u>e majestic masteT suite 4 large bednns, spact0us -W ........
. ~?~~;~~ ri'i~~-iM ~~~~rt~t:!'2 ~~¥f.E. ~~~~~:. ·~:; 1 cALIFDRNIA nome w, 1i€:~~~~:~~~: B~~~~~:.:i~~~r~ ~;,;:;,:·;:J~
Ontu ~ ::::i:: _ house5 on one lot:· live In near Alile Squ·-.· 3, Car COUNTRY CLUB Br, 3 ba, pool, $53,500. By ' • ·-·~ assume 10 . Llaat Hllkn ....... :. .......... "' Ill one. havC' Income fron1 the .... " ' Appointment only. 551·3834 By Owner. 586-1607 xtra lrg master BR. 2 "'21 DUPLEX other. First time offered nt =-.~~11$4iii~·R~aJln~ta~ LIVING Can assume VA. 1 .. L.;.i;.;d;.;o;...;.l•;;;I.:;~------~1!1~· e~::~ive 1~~~~ ~------,,.) ~ 90°/o FINANCING $89,~RBIN·MARTIN Fair 839-6t'3. ' E~~;:"'gofi"'.:;>',. Cl~~~~'. . ONE OF A KIND ~~ $84,500. C n 11 ~-----~·
6«>-T'lll -Sl/20/o INTEREST REALTORS 644-7662 IMMED. POSSESS. house. wa.lk lO bCach. La~~~~.~=c~ustom ~~~~~~~;~~~~~ -OC.EANFRONT ;:::O!~~~~~.:::::::;:::: g:
li33 \\'ES'J'CLIFF' DR. An ideal summer/winter * NEW LISTING * 3 BR, 2 ba.. Comp. 1-00eCOr., $64~.9Cal62I •2456 , e One of a kind contemporary & tennis ct. $65,000. DUPLEX Soci•I Chlln .................. ·· m NEWP.ORT BEACH rental only 6 dOors to a Charming 3 bdrm., 2 ba. new .carpets. Fireplace. 3 bedroom, 3 bath home with 'VIA LIDO NORD Brand new, huge 4 Bdrm. l:r•v•I .......................... ,... • * • * * * super beach: Own for prof.It I home \Vilh bacttt"lor apt. Shll£1¥ yard, ,,. I' 180 degree view from every 4 Bdrms. &-5 Baths; up. 3 Bdrm. down. Xlnt' Ii·
HOME ON or occupy for pleasure. J3egt_ or fll'Ca. <hvncr \\111 S35,750 -1010 DOWN room. Underground utilities. magnificent custom home. nandng. 1st user tax ad.
INVESTMENT LAND Only $84.500. help on financing. Best buy BALBOA ~AV PROP. Massive living&: family nns $164,500. vantafe. s1&1,500.
Our fantastic terms may not at $Td,500. t 5561800 * 8843 Adams, RB each with Imported ro c k LIDO REALTY HORVATH REALTY
1 ACRE WITH VIEW 111Sf. long, so call quiC'k, CORBIN-MARTIN -1 Cat Magnolial fireplace. Just $30,000 dQwn 3377 Via Udo, N'pt Beach 494-0615 Dave 675-1972
Charming 2 bedroom. 1 bath CALL 644-7211 Realtors 644-7662 ASSUME 7%% loan $2900 !Z:::ilC====== I &: ~,r ~11 carry first '!'D * 673-7~ * :~ag!::d ofur n;parer~~:~i:. NEAR CHINA COVE-down~~ +2~S BA + din TROUT STREAM! a1120""000"' lnterest. Fuif pnce * $f98-500 * WATERFRONT .,_.uction . ~
N 2 •·--' rm, <J<J'O""CU'" eves. Bkr. E . b . , . bric. 494-8003. , 6.....--0ii\y. $61,500 buys-both. ~ """"room 2 ba1h Wt')1tnJ!8 ut m these pop--'-TARBE-L-L -4..BDKMS.-P.1ua-maid!a'1-Ba· REOUGED-$5000-·
Phone now -Red Carpet; -condmn1n.1urn npf. Elec. Garden Grove -ular "satboas(-'"IOCiiJeil-in • E-l e-ganc-e--personitie(t!-_k_~t.-~11Pel10n• ........ J7J
Rea ltors _64;)-8080 (o pen bltn!, d1shwa.ftr. F'rplc. Tiburon's choicest park-like Emerald B1y Lot Brand new. Call today! LOAN AVAIL • BROKER TllPlrlc•I •· •· ·• •· ·· ••••• seo
evenings) Carpeted & draped. Ready 9lll TIMOHTY, vacant. 3 surroundings. Both "apple O~an views & easy building GEM 833-0780 I •-~ ~ -1~ Newport Beach to OCt'Upy. $59,500. Br. 1% Ba, nar. crpt ll pie" condition & both fea· site & all the recttational , ___... -
$29 5IO
·Add-s Ul')iversity Realty paint. $22,750. l)y,;ner (213) ture 3 BR, 21h BA, private facll. of Emerald Bay, are 120-F Tustin Ave., N.B.
••• 3001 E. Cst. Hwy. sr~O 431-3505 . patio, tota1 extt't'ior main· yours for $55,000 REALTORS 642-4623 Charminf Cape Cod-' . • . Custom Built *SOUTH OF HWY.* Huntln....,n Beach tcnance. electric butnins and TURNER ASSOC. Mesa Verde Balboa Penin, steps trom ~:.''::.:~~ .. ··:::::::::::: 1; 4 Bedroom + family room + •·-air cond. Both }O\V 1% as. ll05 N. coast H~.: .. Laguna _ beach & bay, 'pan<'ied & J111 W••• .,_ ............ 112
~ .... _ ... _____ lfS]
Found II,.. .,.., . . . . . • •. . .• ..,.
Loll ..•. : .•....••.•..•.•..••. .SSS
. -
1 • •
16, , Doi IF Built by the owner/builder Here's one of the better ~ T DY p suma"ble 1oans. No yard-494-1 ln ASSUME 7%% GI Joan on 3 beamed llv rm. 2BR, ha, '°" w...,.,, M&ll< .......... * H---<~!;a~~~o.C:~~~ io1~i!;~~ .. ~~. ~la~:_'~· in~.~~~ 3k8 If aymentS wo'nt, go &h~ Instead. BEAUTIFUL IO(:atton • BR, 1~ BA. Mesa Verde :~~ho~~rur~.o~7!'::" ,_"_'_w_._"_"'_M&_•_·_·_,··~,I~ .. "i -
on quiet dt'ad erii:r s!Wfet. room· fotmal dining are8 ~at~lde· nqw · I • (ty 1-SOUI'Il-LAGUN'"~~blOCk-Eool Home.-----By-owner. 2"10'0 Se'Vllle A-V-e, Mwdall'111 -~
Submi1 )'.OW' ternls · 51.4 % Taatcfuuy decorated Utrubut: carpets in front unit. Frp!ds. °';.ithis 3 ?R. 2 BA . home ·1o:/ .,win ,... nc. to beach. Newly remodeled $36,900. 54&-3866 n4-6'13-7608
Joan n.vn11. on cash to loan Heavy shake roof Low in each Immed pos.<;esi; P. v patJO, hf.autiful paiit ~ual hous:ing_oooty, 2 Bdrm, family rm, large Newport hach I ;;;ii!;;iii;iii ... iiiiijiiiiiiiiiiiii l basis. CALL· maintenaoc-e Janlbc~ping & MORGAN REAL TV directly across the stre-et. 968-4405 (t4 hrs) deck w/ocean view. Guest HARooR VIEW ·MONACO . ""'C..··· .................. • ~
compleie'l.v !enced 20 x 40 673-6642 675"'459 :;::~~~;estbe~t ;:nit': SELL TH-E apt. $62,500 fjrm. By O\vlH.>r. SALES & RENTALS ~=•on .. ,::::::::::::::::::::: = i . heated pool: Covered patio day! HERBERT HAWKL."iS Ca.II 2J-3.721-5ll5 days, 2 Bachelon .......... $52,500 ' For sale or rent 1.111\dl,. Melll'llll ............ IN
& buHt·in gas BBQ. Priced BY cg~~~ H3I~~DROOD'\.is REALTORS 963_5681 LAWNMOWER 213-464-46.96 eves. Summer 22 + 1-Bedroom ....... $TI,500 HARBOR VIEW ~~~.::.·.~.~.~.:::::·.~::· r,: tor the market. $.">2,900. ' • • .•• and enjoy your ·hobbies. rentals considered. + 1 BR + vac. lot .. $97,500 G•r••• hM .................. '''
Fairview C ., Col-wo"""-y SI'ONE FIREPLACE, POOL 3 BR, crpts. & drps., fan11Jy forget garden chores! T\\'o ARTISTS or \Yrlters haven. 2 4 !·Bedroom . $125,000 HOMES REAL TY HIYM!lthl .._., .............. 114
1
• r. •• nn SIZED YARD. PRINCIPALS room. Many extras. Close to to 3 ~-Lev•I --sq. lt. ---'ud-' BALBOA BAY PROP. 833-0780 Broker Jtwt!ry ......................... tu . 646-111 R I ONLY 673 59 hool -•-I 8 ry UGl'""'"' Townhouse ~ ~ """ Mtelll-r ...................... '1' ;. ea tors 640-0020 · · 70 sc s, a.r11.1PP ng & beach. ,close 10 pool & clubhouse. Pri. st. ~-eeping view of * 673·7420 * M11c:•11111-• .................. •1•
Newport
••
BACK BAY spapous trildltlonal home
with view o(
Back Bay
t Bedrooms + famtly room
with wet bar
and separate den
OWNER WlLL FINANCE $611,500
HAftllOR
A PAIR OF AC-Esr-BY owner · 3 Br. house $39,500. 536-4562 Hom~·n1aker kitchen, built-city&occan. Divorce makes Doll H·ou·---•·-7-.500-N 1 H 1 ht :::.~.'t"~=.::..'1." .. :::::::::;
(on a 1,t acre Backbay, w/baC'helor apt in back. 3 BR Townhouse. Refrig, ins, gracious living room fast sale at $76,500. Or less. . ._....... ewpor e 9 s Offkt .,""'._., • .,,,, ........ tM •
N B Jot)
R-2. room to build, wi ll car· pool, children ok. Assume with formal dining area. Drive by 658 M""tic View. 3 BR., lovely lge. llv _nn. '""""°"""' ................ "' " ' I $69 7ri. F1JA I G J• w/dln are Bii kit h WANT to Lease or Buy 3 or 4 SIWlllf MHll"'" .............. m •l • Beauti ttdty refurbtshro ry cont. ,500. 673-4821 ·m , ow down. reat va1ue for $26,500. Call Call vour realtor or · a . n. c · B ~ 1 N t H h p l.n Spon~ °""' ... , ............ ..
3 BR + huge den_ 2 BA. OCEAN view 3 BR, 2~~ Ba, 968-l486 today, The Real Estate Fail· Q\1lntird Realty 642--2991 ~~r~~~~8~bl. gar, o~ly. ImTe(I~ pos~. ~'h.~'. :::;. .~~~-':. ~~-:::::::: :
2300 iq ft home. Jam 1m, din rm, 2 patios, 4 Br, 2 ba hom~ 839-6133 or $36-~t. $00.00> •. 3 BR, tam rm, tttoes, BALBOA BAY PROP. N Sh TV, ....... ""'" ,,.,,. ······IM
#2 • Sharp 1300 SI ft', 3 BR. i;oom pfor tJt>ol, By owner. $25,CMXI. 19432 Mauna Ln. The "Yelt1l\v Pages" or 11CClut1on. Alao adj. white * 642 7491 * ewpart ores
2 BA home \v/lots ot_ 64+-2951. 548--3163 cln~111noo. . .642-5678. water Vu lots. Ownr 494-7284 • WALK TO BEACH
cement wotic and loads ,DUPLEX corner; charming', Oceaniront"oupl.X-1.story 3 BR., 2 ba. Frplc.
ol room. Family orchard by O\vner. 500 Poln.setlla, lA ~ tr SeltBox Landmark Atrium. In spotless cond.
and vcg.'.!table garden. ~n 1-5 daily. dl'IQ-0 ~ -"'f, Q. • 2 BR, 1 ba, lower un11, lrplc, Cose 10 poob & terutls. ~~re dlvldedll • Buyer~ 'Co1f1 MeN \:)~ J.,.'-Qt.l p bltins, dishwasher. ~ $43,250 "'~' or "' ,.pero,.~. -T" / • • W _JG • 1t Cit ~L• I BR. I ba, frplc, upper CAYWOOD REAL TY >'UJI pd.oe $85.000! Oc may BROKER or ASSOCIATES naf nfrlgUtng· OT<l Omit Wlf a U<:l<llt unll, Co-Joi. SJ;o,ooo * 548-1290 *
lrade. EVES: 545-7".iOO. $outhCo Real Ettatc is in· ------..... r.y ClAY L Pa:IAlrl {ll'inc. only. 645-3159. \ ,,-,--?-.,..:..:.:...:.:.:.:_...!'--
I -~-.-1~ ·
Pelt, Gtftttll , , • ,, .. ., • , , •. , • .. .. C111 ., ......................... iA -........................... ... "Ith .,., ....................... ,hi'
HltffS ........................ , IN
l.l\ltl!O<lt ••.. ' •• ' .............. ..
400£.17·· 1 FOi ALL . tcrestod m addlrig on• ex· 1.-')io.c;':'"'"".''./'-~ PORTAFl.NO W11tmlnst1r c. .. __ Ad perlenped, successful 9 iw11onve $etttn r:A the COM,.ANY ,_. Realtor to Us staff. Ex· four scrombled WOfdt bt-F'f'a1UJT.d ~n Hetn1e Tour VA TE.RMS-$32,500
REALTORS ...... 1mL c e 11 en t comm is 11 I on '°:"to forin four llrnple wotde. .J BR., 31,~ BA. 20 x 40 Pool Stratford 3 BR, 2 BA, Ir,;:.
1-~1~:
Ot!\11'11 ... , ••• , • . • ........... "'
SINCE 1••4 --== achcdule, private office. Professionally Decorated 11 r 1 ~ -I O I MANY EXTRAS v. r1n., am. rn1., c <'C. 673-4400 1-;;;;;;-;;;;;;;;;;o;;;;;o;;;;;;;ii;..-;;;;;;;;, I' secretary nnd proressionai ·V A J I l flKl 950 ,,.AA •A•" bl~.. D/\V, frplc, encl.
1"'P!!!R!!!l'"V'"A'"T!!!l!E'","'1s'"t.i'"A'"•N'"D"" 1 ~ :.\n"i~.~r, h ~\i • ·J•;;,~ ~"· PrindP61• OnlY ~ ~\::'· gq~~ );',,.:'.'1~~ .. " MH424 &>uthCo Realtors.
1
, I l. 12
J J HARBOR. VIEW HOMES FHA loan ot $12.~ at 5" %
•NI,, Mlllftt,ts.nlt• , ....... ~ ... 11/MlfiM 1..,,.1,, ••• , •.•• ., ti(
IMh, l"eww .................. tM "'411. tt•tt C111n1r ••••.••••• Mt ..... Jiff •.••. , ................ ..
11~1 .. Sllll&fl>Mh •.••.••. l •• , t1•
..... SHIC • Ski •••••••.•••• rn
•~h. ........................ "'
NEWPORT Bl!ACH V~ ~ ... ~it:!,~~~ f'i!i: EASTSIDE I I '• ';'~,~~· l~W.d1. u1Pl"•dcd. P.J.T. $145 mo. 531-5244 or ny OWNER •~ I h " S U F C 0 ~"·~· , .. nc pas oaly. 531"1071. I [i] " room '"'"'• " 1 pool. ,,,.. .. COSTA-MESA-1 '44--04-08. · • I Leaving area. ln1n1ediatc oc-vator opcratr.w lron1 Uv1ng 2 Bra-• "cw Cullom Rom-.. II I I I ' 1 TrtnspOrtation fthti -·pa 4 BR 5 BA l"•ttry m •• ~ 173 ~ · ·~ •• .. , I .UXllRY • 4 BR, 21' ba con· ..
2uye:;y0id h()~1e. 'ManY' de· ........ P .. E'"r"E· e·~A.RRETT {BK, 2 BA. dOtlc to Back do I.rg nmstei; suite r Mabltttom. l~ . . . IWCt, cuS"tonl realurcs have 11o.y. Cpts, cll"P8. IA.ildJ:cap. I "• D 0 w n iilalrt. Ownr/Asi 1 fiillllil Alrcr1n ........................ t1i ·"-
"--b 1111 t I·' d REALTOR Ing •pnnklcrs, ''""'all I ,HI FT A • ~166. .. '~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii·:.~1 <>m""" •••t•M• .......... "' u.:.::r1 u n o I MS outstan • --Included! •A4,950. Drlve 'by • . Cvc:lls, I lk"" ._..,.. •••••••• m Ing_ watt ttront hOnte -cus· 6.•2 5200 ""'" .,.. C I I I I <>wtbaardr-i found a w...v Bl.UFFS X Plan. $60.000. 3 1:1tc1r1c C•r1 .................. •• lOJll rurnlturo & 1967 Cruiser -• _, ls,,2·18 E. 22nd St. 645·6177 . .. ..... , Sil, 2~~ Sa.. 1 yr old. 301 Mobile Homes ,,.,,,., .. "-················ "'
in<".hldcd. Excellent ttm111. ~ 1 YEAR old Townhouse, 4 ~==::==:::'..-. r make our '"°'!tage:k. Vista Tnlcha. Own e r For 5111 125 =~=ei':::::::::::::::::: f~·1i:~~1~or"vfu1l!b~c c~1i 2 Bl!DR~':,2 BATHS ~Pr>fn':1& ~~111~8$29.~ I• W E E R A B , . got my-
0 ~ 3:~1:',e near ocean. law NIWPORT BAY I~i.~!11:',;;;;·:·:;·::::.::
_6c73-;;..;.7'182:;:::,. =~~ "·-'"-1 , ,.,,~.,.::;-,.,do~wn~.c'C'°'alc,I "66"-~~=''---I I' I I I' 0 ~~ ~ ~-.;--~ tlowft -~•nt M 11 es New 2 BR 1 BA Uvlnf,.rm · ~ • 6 ---WUAUI')' townnu\,U!q, de WC r. ----· ~-,,..., .. , ' •· 1 ' I I ~ .':. SPACIOUS MANSION shag-CtlllXtt. built-in kll· MES~ de! Mar. A!sulnt 1--1-.a......i......J.-L.....J by I 111 .. bl 1flo -_., Lanton Reallor. 613-8'63. Adon Piil'• J'/prlva1e ach . -IWW. $45 000 Chtn WUhtt•tl:ryef + 6%% Joon •• Br, covered "°"' d~ I fftlM-No. Ii btlow. TlV\DE Newport Be. a ch $16.500 M~3672 .,,. =-c--'------'
You ~lJl en»~ Uie splendor rtrr1iterator included. Low patto. s:n.100. Own~r . ·Prop, for Out-Of-Town SACRiflCE ~950. Lido . .._.. ....................... •
of this hutt 4 bc"'~m down J)A¥ment -exctllent --,,,,:':::O:·=,.,,=-~~~ PRINT NUMaEREO lETTf.lS Prop Bkr n4/67)..20$8 Water Front Park 'Furn "111'-'a.ttiu .............. 91:1
country etct.ate. 4 batll~o'Ucr t9rm1 ... Hurry Call Ttcd BEi\UTll'UL Neu WoOda IN lHfS! SQ ARES NPI" ·ere.;, l Br, 2"". Ba. Obl1 \Vlde, IW~I. ·m.m ~ 'T.!: ·;,"ifs ·:·::::::::: =
la .... ramUv con;.-1-c>l. Carpet, Rtaltont 546-8640 Jwtne 3 DR, 2 btl, atrium, UNSC°'""'E LEITE"' "000 •-Jow k v•-MOBILE H l Mitt ····· ··· .............. M2 # • ., .. .,., i I 1 979-8380 ~ ...., A ..,, '-"' mar et...: ...,w. ' oinel.rec vehic t v1111 ........................ IQ ~ cnm Is e11:trtmc:Jy '8.1\XloW Fttt Profit ls attalned when oun 9 11• nveii. · FOR ANSWtR 7~% Int. Owner,~· lnwrtlnce. the pest, c•ll Ed """' '-• ...................... *
10 tell. Submit on your you sell U1rouw,h re1ult~· 3 BDRM hon1e, EuUide B '.-..h 979-1422 """' '-"k~ • ''"' ...... ,. "' tf! nA.l f'tA~tR I 11 Oil, ~1 · Cl ··-·~-· • owm-n Anyda.yistbe ESTt>AYto ....,...... A.-.Wll'l!M , ................ ,.. '· •w• ~""' ea ton ll3' 3 ' r 01 au! -•· ,.... PX .... .,... SCRAM-LETS ·ANSWERS IN. 'CLASSIFICATION 818 run an ad! Don't d.i.,. • A good wont ad IS• aood b\. . .,..., •-.............. "' 546-8640 · Adtt. ~ Call 64~ CfllJ toda.v 64>-56'11. veatment. ......_ ...................... • ---------'=-~--...:.;------=-=-------=.~.:..:.=..:..:...-=..:..:.-..L.~~~:!..!~~!:...-~ ........ u ........ '"'".' ....... ,..
I
"
•• •
•
t-
•
OAILV PILOT Wtdniisdl}', Sc ttml>tt 19, 197~ --
,__":!....._-____,!.~ I l~I hi .. lliJI ~;;-;;-;;;;I::;~~· ·1·~~1;;--;;-~---;;-'.::;;; 1 :...·--·--~~I.
flvslMD P"-'JY 1$4
SALES-E.XCHANGES MGMT
K.V. DILLS CO.
TI'6--7652
Cemetery
· Lota/Crypt• 156
$AC1UFICE • Lca\ing tO\\'Tl.
3 Joa Cor $600. H.al:bor Rest
_Mcrn. Pk. 642--0834.
PACJl'IC Vh.•.w l\Iemorlal
Park. Ox>ice plotlil in ocean
view section; $265. 8.18-5149
Commerclel
Property
* S9'x29' LOT * C-l ZONE
151
S32,500. E-Z TER~tS
* ·I BEDROOJ\l, 2 bath~.
doubl e garage. Best of
ternu;. $29,500. * 2 BR, h\'O story older
hon1e, corner lot. $21,500. .
Roy Mccardle Realtor
1810 Nc111J0rl Blvd., C.i\J.
548-7719
,__,.. Property 116 Mort-H-Unfum. 3115 -Unfum. 305 -u-. • Trust o-lt 260 ""-'--""-'==:....._;::;:; 1==;....;==:;.._....::;:;: ·
BUILDl!R WITH 1;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; Gonerel Costa -j !N~11~w!p11~· rl:!,_!•~u:!!:_h __
IMAGINATION WELL SECURED $ LANDLORDS $ · Eeatbluff, 58R, 3BA
Swim Poot & 2 RentAI Until\. ss4oo, 2nd Trust Dffil 9't0 Let us rent IJR properties PRIVATE Execu1lve home. New paint
Room for 2 more. UnUS\rnl interest due 3~. Will d1'-We work with )'OU. FEE E."'1TERTA1NM£NT POOL in & out. \Valk to 001 Hia:b, in~t opporhmity for cowit $840. lO eld l3$C. PREE .. Many Clenl•. ~·1 HO.ME. Upper 8a.)' •• newt" Elem achJ ,. shppng. Yr lse tast eapllal appreciation. "'" ed ' ' ~ Owner nexlhle Ii will SIGNAL l\!ORTGAGE CO. prior to vac~. ·Save $S. pe.urt • 3 BR/FR • $350 w,opt. lO renew. $575 mo. ,
finance at 8%. Askin¥: 1714J 556--0106 $ ALA RENTALS $ Mo. Lol& ~fUltr ~ Jl8J tnCI ,. watt•r &: gardener.
$f,0,500 • rw1akt• OUer. 1', !!!!!4500!!-!!!!!Ca!!!!!m!!p!!1" ... Dr!!,!!N!!!!!.B!!.,.. N<..'W])Ort & Bp.y, CM 642-8383 ··.,:~;;;,1:::060=:.,. ,,--=,---~-I : Ol · S1nall Pad, S..'!S. Mature BAY + riiountah' vu. Prime mll.I~. Util pd. Furn. Patio. Really Com G~belt location. Immed
CctM • N!Ce yrd gar 2 Br · ' PQ..n..v occpy. Brand nu lg. tfi..levtl
1
1 ie I onlY S250 Per ,.; chud. • 642.8235 644-6200 "R" plan. Blu!t. C<>nOO. S NL'WPORT • Ot-eanview 3 br bt'. 2~~ ba, trple, wet bar, 'mmmmmm~-~ j 1295 ·patio, dee!<. sngls. VERY CLEAN pool. .Loaae • l650 ·m 0 •
1 HB • 4 Br 2 ho $293. grdnr AND SHARP 644~t33/64!J.lltl00.
Houns Fumished 300 frpl, appl, child &. pet. 3 BR. home with lovely car-THE BLUFFS Sparling lnvestrrMnt B, !sland • Unbelievable ? pets. beaut. paneled \\•alls, Newporr-Be8.eh smart lle\V, 3 Corp 833-3544 General 4 br 2 ba $425 V.'ntl', a goodle covered patio ll't'es and .a BR. pool &. maint. CUst d . p Laguna . 2 bi· & alcove sm huge fenced )'8.l'd. Jo&nilies crpts & drpa. $525 mo. 1st &
In ustr1al roperty 168 S J R frpl, appl, pet & ~hild ok. only. S250./mo. C.nll Co.a.ta last. $200 dep. 83J..S635 or * 11 ACRES * ~ 210s Mir~~':r FOR l\IANY, MANY MORE & \\'al'lo.ce, Realtors S.16-4141. 5.\7-7883. CALI.. · .. .. •r c~ all d i ,=.:;;:=:;;=--===~~ Newport Heights 811.boe Island AL~ R•nt•ll 642.a383 # a • .. ,s a, sn1 pa • NO\v NE\VPORT SNORES, t~ii
Bluff Area You are the v,rlnoor of ;,c;;,;_;,_;,,;,===-~=-=::1 cook, eat, Sleep, util pd. hlks 1o .Ocean, 2 & den, 2
(Best Buy In TWO FREE TICKETS $150 • 2 br dplx separated. BA, \v/w cpts, bttns, aew to the Appl, cpt/drp, garage. D\1{ & drpsr adlts, no pets
Coste Mesa) RECREATION RENTALS. Fixer 4 Br, 2 Ba, $225 yr!y. $325. Ye{tl'ly. 213: ~1383
RIVI ERA REAL TY frplc, fncd, w1patio. PE"t. I ,0:69&-001~'°"':..· .,-.,.,---:--,.---
Jot9 Brnadway, C.M. VEHICLE SHOW -·*Apia. ALA Rentels 642-8383 5 BR, 3 balh, 3 ctiJ' gar,
_,.,._
642·7007 675-4747 Eves. SEPT. 19TH .. 23RD * D p I 1 deluxe crptg, near 87116 SUNSET, L.A. ~!reel to At the 145 .. 01tt * ane ~ n clubhouse and pool.-1800 ~~j~=~leaft:~i . .:;:~~lf~: ~k!°~~2 t~~~~~~"0 ~1: ANAHEIM STADIUM £;~11 . .w.1t1hCOITAMISA CLOSE TO DANA Port Carlow, N.B. $.575/mo.
Sell or trade . for incon1e. 8tl-0091; eves. 536-1558 Bkr. 2000 State Coll~ Blvd., FURN Bftahelor Apt, New-· POINT MARINA 6-12-222'2.
(7131 37&-2814 or \\rile 308 Lots for Sale 170 Anaheim port Beach, $115/mo. 1 child, New 3 Br 2 Ba. Ideal for t.ARGE luxury home -new P lease call 642-5678 ext 339 sngls ok. _ ..... 1 ' / carpet, 3 Br, 2 Ba. Lrg Strand, Jl,1anhattan Beach, to claim your ·tickets. BEAUJ' Stud" pt QU\I ts or w 1 child. Lease. f .1 frpl 'Aul 90266 OCEANFRONT R·l, $120,0CO. (North County Toll free $l70 cdM .10 a . Furn $275 per mo. Eves. 7141 am1 Y room, c. d ts
NEWPORT BE'c·A~C~H~·I Approx. 78'X444'XSI.' on Ap-number is 54(}..1220). uNFi.JRN ·, BR. Apt $160.'"°544-~761>17'-.C'--.-~-~~ ,j~~. $475. 642-&89 avail.
I
prox a> degree slope. Have · '·F t I I c::::,;:,=,-,-=°"'"'-~'-P1in1e bayfront site building clearance for 2 Cute for couple. oun I n V1Hey * SHARP 4 BR, 3 BA,
for boat repairs & sales story from coastal com-Balboa Island BRA'ND New 2 BR. Unfum Townhouse Back Bay. Pool. 'Bill Grw'Kly. Rltr. GT.'l-61611 inissinn. 213/376-2814 or ----------i Apt. lZlO. 2 children ok. NEWLY decorated • lmmac Frplc, self clean oven, dbl ,.,.. SOUTH Bayfront h o u s e. 3 br, 2 ba, fan1 rm. bltns.
Condominiums \Vrite 308 Strand, t\1anhattan 3BR, 2BA, fanta.'>tic view. FREE RENTAL BOOK frplc. lncd yrd. Crpts & gar. 833·8974 or 833-16.5.1.
for sale 160 Beach, 90266 · si~e tie for small boat, DROP IN & BROWSE drps. Conv. loe, ~~ mi. s .D. BEACON Bay Winter-pvt
$390 DOWN
2 Bedim., 11-2 Bath, new car·
pets & pail'l"t. $21,000. Fair-
Jp.~ Gardens. an adult com-
BORREGO SPRlNGS lol, winter lease, $400 per mo. F2or exbaahmpleC'. 3 bdrm home'. Frwy. Ph: 673--0062. beach & tennis. 2 Br, 2 Ba,
90x200. Must s e 11 ini· Yearly lease, $583 per mo. t s, osta l\l es a 3 BR. 2 frplc, bltns, patio. Avail
mediately! $1500. &1~268 MG Elliott Real Estllte, 301 College Prk., gai:age, fenced . ~. 2 ear~·· a!I 1\01v .. $350. 541-9534. yard, b u i I t -i n-s . $275 ~ltns, sw1n1 pool, kids OK; eves. Marine Ave, No. 7, Balboa per/mo. Walker & Lee, 2790 like new, only $249 mo. No BRAND NEW 3 story Bay
Island, 613-6454 Harbor Blvd., at Adams tee. Agent 842-4421 Vie'v on Peninsula. 2 car
4 BR. house .avail-.now...for 9-REA,L··ESTATE1 Huntington Beach ~ar~ $550. munity. Agent 83&4206. -
NEWPORT RIVIERA .. ......., II• I
; • S'BR., 21~ BA., f'pl. .• ram . nn .• ';mmmmmmm:.:.~
mo. lea.e. Lot. of room. --· ~646-2725.
STUDENTS WELCOME. LANDLORDS! I Br furn S125; Neat oondo
Call (213) 289-S366. If no \\'e Specialize in Ne\•w.nrt $1!5: 3 hr l~' Ba twnhse
answer leave me s s a g e s Beach • Corona de! J\I~~ • .$250; 3 br l:fo~e. F /R, $295;
BACH 2 huge rnlS Jr pl bath
porch, gar $175 available,
64~.
2 car gar. ln1med. poss. To 'j I J in ... pect call 642-9062 Business (213) 582-5219. & Laguna. Our Rental Ser-4 br 2 ba, $295.
4 BR, 3 BA, 2 frplcs, sep din vice is FREE to You? Try LANDLORDS
1-larbor Vie-.,· Homes
Beaut. Decor. 4 BR, Fam
Rm, &; Form Din. 644·0396 .
4 BR. Year round rental. l~~
blks to heh, Avail immd-
·£~.
rm, $475. or 3 BR. 2 BA. Nu-View? FREE RENTAL SERVICE .
. charm in g home & NU~VIEW RENTALS FEE FREE!!
fwnishings. $385. Y r l y 673_4030 or ,,94_3,,~., ALA R.ittals 642-8383
lease. Call 673-3924 aft 6. ., ......,
Income Property 166 1 Opportunity . 200
20 NEW UNITS A CANDY SUPPLY
'eosta ~'fesa. · Accelerated · ROUTE
depreciation opportunity. ''teaturing''
S<hed ineom• $54,000. Priee CERTS PRODUCTS
hlboa lslai'td L0;7ELY-family l\O~m~: 4BR 2 -.BR, winter, n e 1v I y $.B,\, t1vo story, enclosed
dceo1·~1ed, 4 houses to CUSTOM, deluxe 4 BR. home patio,. close to schools & 4 BR, Fam. rm, frplc, brand
nu luxury cond. nr ocean
w/tennis, pool, 645-;16.58. ·$385,000 1~4 down. Over.
5d9;, rented. For details call
. CJS REAL ESI'ATE
543-1168 or eve 5.57-6244
Balboa Peninsula
6 Units, 5, l br & 2 br
owners. Best area. $152,000.
Agent. 645-4203.
ll UNITS. Room for 3 moN'.
F./side , C.M. 1 & 2 Br. 1 Gros.'> $1875/nto. C a 11 i
O\Vner, 642-8520. ·
SALES.EXCl-IA."iGES·MGl\lT
K. V. DILLS CO.
776-7652
Foe thal item unacr s;,o, try
the Pt?nny Pincher.
' CLASSIFIED
beach. $230 .inc1. , u itls. in immac. cond. So. bay-shoppmg. $325. Ask for
, 6~2445 front on --· lot. Good Dale. 962-4471 (No S.lli1111 . Involved) w .. _ RUSTIC 2 br cottage. Nr. beach. "1.000 per month on VERY plush 2 Br, 2 Ba, full Newport 5•---i\fafe or ff"ma.Je, age-no bar· N ba p · t' Yr! • -rier. can be "·orkl'd full or S~. Ji.oo~v. pa 10· y. yearJY, lease, to reliable appli, club & pool. Adult liv· ;,;;~!:,;;;.;..=;~.=;;... __
part tin1c. Qualified person ..!:::'.'...:C"-'0:::'-----family. . Si~ Xlnt loc. 1 mil tobeae}l. CUSTOM 3 Br, Fam rm,
ivilt become distributor for CHARMING cherry Cape Ask tor Chet Salisbury '-.t#<J lease. 5.16-«192 or patio, all built It!$. nu
th is nalionaJJy advertised Cod Nicely furn, 2 BR frplc, Broker -673-6900 534-3896. -ca"rpets .& drapes, 2% hlks
product. You n1a y keep your \\'inter. 215 Amethyst. LI'ITLE iSLAND _ Steps to CO~fFY 2 BR, + guest room to heh, $360 mo Call aft 6 p~nt pooition. All Joca-3 BR. 2 Ba, frplc, built ins, water. Near new, e.x-& ha, crpts, drps, yro; 'vlk PM'.-548-fil46-or-·(·2-1-3
tion.c; · are co n1 p I e t e J v gar. \Vinter or· yearly. Call eeptiona11y attractive for to beach & town. No pets. 700-5942
furnished by our contpa.nY. 6T.--,..7673 aft 6 executive family. 4 BR, 3 $275 mo. 53&-3507 4 BR,.'. 2 BA; poolltei'fnl'if,
Very high income potentjal. BA:. Avail now thn1 _J_une LEASE/BUY, assume n li<JQ. '"alk to beach, redecorated,
You must have 3·8 his. per Balboa Peninsula $4!;>· Yrly lease S :i :i 0 . Near beach, patio, upgrad-S425 yearly, 646-3439.
Wf!ek spare time. Can be , _ 67J-439-1. 1ed. 3 B~. fanl/din, owner
worked days or eves. "If CHAR.\fING Peninsula Point Baycrest 968-7150 Tustjn
shf" klsses you once, wiU she ' home. Yrly. renta1. 3 Bdrm., . SETI1NG on acreage .: prv.
kiss you again. Be Certain 1 bath. $375 month. 673-4786/ 4BR, 1%. ha., form!, din rm, home, dbl gar, $150. Also 3 4 BR. pool, 2 fpls, 2 Ba, WW
\vith CERTS:' 673-6624. dbl . garage. 9-12 mo 1.se, BR. $1.F" CM Agt Fee carpets, drapes, builtins, " $1750 REQUIREDc ""'o-ro~n_a_d~el~Ma~-,--1375· 548-8440 or646'l'54 m;siro-. . . . i':fs":~O::~ obopplna:.
Bayahor•s 4 BR, 2 ha, fam nn, crpt,
-Invesllnent secured. interest CHINA COVE CUTIE. 2 · '' · drps, patio. fenced yd. $350., Mn f
free financing available for bedrooms on the beach. $215 COR??ER ~ot, lrg 2 BR, gardener incld 968-m2 \·--;UUMln'furnur. n. or 310
Advertisers 1nay place e>.'J)anskm. pr. month. frplc, patio, cpts, appl., -"'::.::;::;:::....::;:::::...:::::...:::::..._ 1-...:.;;.;.;;;.;.;;.. ____ .;:.:.:;
their ads by telephone I For mot't' inforn1a.!ion \\Tile : SPARKLING POOL and 2 gnrd~r $385 yrly lsc. Irvine n....--rel
HOURS
· bedrooms. Charmer. Close ~64""54;;';;'.;"';';· ;;;;-;;o;;----1;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~ --8 :00 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. Nationwide , 1 ~ -th C I ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~ 1\1 da th Friday M k S 0 °''"•''" ~· pr. man · orone del M•r I•
8 otn Y 'suaturday 1 ar eting ystem Bkr. 6Ta-7225 3 BR., 2 ba ...••.••..•• '$400 0 noon Dcpartmc>nt 93 OCEAN VIEW 3 BR 2" ba s· 50 222 HELICYI'ROPE 2 Br. l~i ·· 1: · • ··" •• ••• 4~ COSTA MESA. "omCE P. O. Box a512. Ba. 1 blk from bch. 9 mo. or lmmac 3 BR, 2 BA, fam. rm. 2 BR, 2 ba. den. A/C ··• S275
330 W. Bay San l\1atco, Ca. 94402 l year lease, adults. no pets, in Cameo Highlands fncd 2 BR. 2 baths, lam nn. $350
642-5678 Please include ni.one num'"A-Fri 6 PM Sa & yrd-pect ul ' ' 4 BR 3 ba $425 ""' ..,.,.. see or t sun. , s ac ar ocean ·• · ........... -
N. M. S. is independent of 673-8453 vie\\•s, cpts, drps, like new. 4 BR. 2 batl1s •••••••••• $475
NE\VPORT BEACH \\"a1·n£'1'-Lan1'bert Co, o-.vners Lo~ f 3 BR 2 ha · nd $27-
3333 N Bl d HARBOR V'·ew llill•, 3 BR, 2 ~ o storage. Access to 3 _. .. 8.11' co . •• :i ey,.·port v , of "Ct>r1s" 11•adf>n1ark. pvt ~ h A ·1 Oc 4 BR 2'' ba "75 642 5678 BA, fa,m rm, children's · ..,.,ac es. vai · I. · ~ · "· • • · · · • • "'" :i
-James Law yard & eqtiip. Beau't l.5":'$650/nto. leaseorlcasc/ CALL 552-7500
HUNTINGTON BEACH 1005 Summ1't Dr. d led -~ incld option. 673-3l77. .::::!.~ .. :..ii~"•ner -· HARBOR VfE\V 4 """room, VISION 17875 Beach Blvd. Laguna Beach .........., ~ .,.,. ..
540..1220 You are the winner of 1 BEDROOM walk to green belts & pool.
LAGUNA BEACH TWO FREE TICKETS 309 Goldenrod, CdJ.'4 CS460LOSE. per ~2_nlh * 557-2674 * 1 v SHOPS 3 222 Forest Ave. to the bedroom cutie, $~
_____._..'----1ll-_,RECREATION 2 BR deluxe cottage, firepl. ntonth. Bkt. 6T;r1225
• Red Hill
2 BR 2 ba, oceanfront S450
2 BR 2 ba turn, winter $215
Newport. Beach, 3 BR, 2 ha.
Unfwn. Yrly. $32.5 ••
associated
BROKER S-REA LTO RS
102<; W llalbcu:i 1>11 ll>t.l
"Make ROom For Daddy"
• • . clean out the garage
... tum that junk into ca.ah
\\ith a D.Uy P~ CLusWed
ad. Call 642-5678.
6
4
2 .. .
5
6
7
8
·(.
L
A
s
s
I
f
••
6
4
2 -
5 SAN CLE>IENTE . EHU~t;E-SHOW--.'.tiLlune..l:illl~ mo ... ~32J~O \ii~RM~IN~G~2~B~R~.-::jr;:::'.iisiAAI~=
305 N. El camino Real SEPT. 19TH·23RD Seaview, CdM. 64~ · house, good location. nr lii
4924420 ANAHEI~ ~TADIUM Lagun• Buer. f~· pf:~o~aI~G:ri..so~~I. YE~ WE HheAVE ~ALS
NORTH COUfl.'TY 2000 State College Blvd., 2 BR 3 BR 21' ay u'e or "''" v•ce dial free 540-1220 Anaheim , upstairs, !um. lge , ,:: BA. Partially rurn. in solving TIME FOR 6
sundeck, Nr. Pottery Shack, Patio. Gas BBQ. Gar. Your hou sing needs"?
CLASSIFIED Please call 642-5678 ext 339 \Valk to beach, prkg for 6 \Vasher, dryer. Published in ll"'!'Dllt $3li>·S450
DEADLINES to claim your tickets. cars., Lease at $ 3 5 O. Home l\fagazine. Ca 11 \North County Toll free 497-l{f)9 or 213-475-6004 6-i0-8694 or 644-640-I.
Deadline for copy & kills nun1bt?r is 540-12'lJ). IS--3":30~the -day-bc. fj .iiiiiiiiii.iii;;ii~iiiio;. ...... , !UNUSUAL 3 Behm hon1e on CHARl\1ING bon1e c:oinpl.
fore publication, except e Parking l..Gt ~1aintPnanee cul-de--sac, xlnl view, lge redecorated, 3 br. 3 ba, frp l,
for Sunday & l\fonday e Boa.ts, $150~1 \Vil! handle lot. $400. mo 497-2626 or patio, gar, 2 blks from
Editions when deadline e l\f!gr • Must like wood. 49-l-1235 Also unrurn. beach, ~! blk lo stores.
is Saturday. 12 noon. e R.E. Salesn1an needed OCEANFRONT $300/lno. Lca.<ie S325. 644-0924.
CLASSIFIED tNo loan \VOITiesl Brand new, glass, v.'OOCI, 2 3 BDRi\l • 2 full BA · builtins Holland Business bdrm, 2 bath. Winter. • lirepl -open beams • crpts REGULATIONS 64;;.4t70 SALES 540.0608 ~'-94-06~-1_5~, _675_~_1~9_72_.___ .fL drps. Cardf"ncr included.
ERRORS: Advertisers South L Like new! $400 mo. on yrl.y
11 11 l1'-l 1!'!1t!
----1 : 1•1ill 111'
"SINCE 1946"
1st \Vcstern Bank Bldg.
University Pa.i·k, Irvine
Days 552-7000 Nights
should check their ads aguna I ""8567 LA N D s c A p E I ~{ II i nt ----=------ease. U'N" • daily & report errors , 2 BEDROO'I , De Ocea OPEN HOUSE • • PM BEST location. Lovely 3 BR, immediately. THE bUSincss, a.II equip. and ac-,. "' n. n . -2 BA Condo. \V/\V crpfg, DAILY Pll..OT assumes counts. Call 548--0-tO:l fo1· in-View. Large deck. 1 block to 414 Fernleaf Ave. drps, alr/eond., dshwshr.
liability for the first in-fo. bcaCh. All remodeled and 3' BR. 2 Ba. & 2 BR. 1 BA 1.-Jany extras! Garage. Pool redecorated. Delu.""<e. $350 c u 644-0130 correct insertion only. Money to Lo•n 240 per nlonth Sept. l5th thru a privl. No pets. $775/mo.
CANCELLATIONS : June 15th, South Laguna. 3 BR, 2 BA. 1u·. bch, :iJ2-9549 aft 3.
When killing an. ad be 1st TD . Loans 213: 464-14686 eves. 213: cpt/drp, nr. sehls & shp'g. u NJ v ER s IT y p n r k sure to make a record 721-5115 days. $425. Bef. lOAM or btwn 2 & to\vnhouse. a BR, 1~~ Ba,
of the laLL NUMBER UP TO 90% Lid!) Isl• 5 PM 675-4034 . bdltns, Dtyl, .!:E~· cfropts,
given you by your ad 3'BR, 3BA, 1 blk from beach, rps, patiO. ,.....,.,..s m
taker as receipt of you'r 2nd TD Loans \VINTER leaM, beflut. So. frplc, patio, less then 1yr ltsc,nn~s'Xl::courts 5~~ hel tyr9.
cancellation. This kill bayfront home: 4 BR., 5 ba. old, WI bltins, $400 pei· nto. AM. l~P~Mino. __..;IWov ·
number must be pre· Sandy beach. Pier & float 675-7481 • •
sented by the advertiser lowest rates Orarige Co. $1,6.'jQ Monlh HARBOR , View ll i 11 s. Laguna Bea.-.:;ch;;_ __ _
in cti.se of a dispute. Settler Mtg. Co. Bill Grundy R.ltr. 6'i5-616l Spacio\l s 5 Br/den/fan1 · -
642-2171 545-0611 LIVE ON LIDO--rin, pool, spectacular vicw.OCEltNFRONT g ra cious gAft~~01JO~F N~ Serving Harbor area 24 yrs. 2 BR, 2 BA, brick frplc. dbl $8:j()/l\1o. 614-2?.59. "'./fabulous views. &?cks,
AD BEFORE RUNNING: ----00N'T BOR-RO-W--gar., \\'sht/<tryr. \\'inter 610 LARKSPUR. 2 BR. & din rm~fJ'Pl~~/mo.
Every effort js made to 1TIL YOU CALL US! rental. $350. 61;1.22 2 7 htd. pool. Lease $350 i\1o. Yrly. 4 .,, ..,,.,.... ·'
kill or correct a new ad BoJ'l'O\Y oh youl' honie equity 213: 793-0427. BOYD Realtors 675-5930 ~R ~ise, lovedly 3 B:, ~
th.at has been. ordered, for a ny good pw·pose. Serv-SA' "' • LEASE •·aut. l10me " BDRM I t • y cpl~ & rps. but we cannot guaran-ui:. ....,. -• w w carpe • Ocean view, $400. Avail Oct. tee to do so until the ad ing Los Angeles County for 5 Br, 37' lv. rm, patio & draf'.oes, bullt·tns, garage. No l!it. 497_1359 ·
h .~ In h over 20 years and NO'V in pool, 70' lot $1200 n10. pets. Gardener. GT;,-4952. ~~:.ppea.~ t e Ora nge County! 675-6359 Costa Mesi L•guna Nl9uel
SrC;NAL l\10RTCAGE co. COMFORTABLE 3 Br 2 Ba 3 BR :!: B $285 M
Dll.f&.A·UNE ADS: f714 I s.16-0106 bou~ open Sun 10-5, fo1 Via LARGE 2 BR, 2 BA dupJcx, f.im. iru,f & .eteimh~
Thetc. ads are ~strictly 4500 C&inpl.UI Drive, N.B. YoUa Lido Ol' call (213) eptS, .<!tJ>s. D\Vil ideal Joe; fee.'*** 495-0552
qt.Rh in adVAnce by rhaJI $ii00 to $l00,000.. !or 195-5886 F"..asts1de, gar 0 alley, prkgd~~. '""~;;.,-';,,;:,-"':..;.o"'--
Or at any One of our of· Business or ....... Sbnai netds. N for trlr/camper, adults on-, .L~1~nd;;;;•:...;l~•~I•:_ ____ _
ll No d ,...... ewport Beach.·---.~ ,. · oes. phOne or ers. No colln1crnl l'el;jUll'Cl'I ·-ly, no pets. _..... mo. 1st A OR 2 y 1 p· 4 11 .Dea4Jine: 3 p.m. Friday, Upon prooJ of ability to Pl'l.Y \V"LK 10 ivnter Bach, $OO. 1,..st +-$75 clng. 329 6 BR rA1Leaseba. ierir ''"P· Costa 1.fca& oltlce 12 '" Rochester, 642-1264. ·• "?'I •• a COl.ld. nq0n all branch of Al9o 'l Br h!'ot, C.M. utll pd. 7,000 Sq. tt. $3,IXIO ~ t!Cei. --&. Hntg Sch $115. Vacant SINGL~/FQmilic& -Va~ BiU.Grundy rutr. $151161 t · ~ The Action Broker Art. FCf!. 979-8430 cant 2 Br. Sl30. AIM> 3 BR, u... V ~-
TUE DAILY PILOT re-I 'iiijCiioUiOcctiioi(;iil);,·i;2Ji!i3/386-;iiii;i7<33iiii. .. J3 BR house, nr. the beach !f80, kids/~!&. Af>l· ··~··1;-..;.;.a;.;•;...;...:.e;.;'-"'-'----
serves the right to cJu• I • $300 Per mo. No peta.· 9'19-8Qf 3 -SR, i Sa, 2 trplcs cul-de·
•l(y. ·edit, censor or ,.._ 2NP Trust Dffds * 673-4032 * 2 BR hoe in court. New erpi. aac. No pelt avall. Oct. llL
(UM? an.y advertlHmtnt, PltlVA'fE F'1.1NOS AVAIL. CHARMING 2 BR. Wint~r A paint. S170 •. 1 child ok. No $290. 543-2748. •
e.nd t.o chan,e Jtt raw Any ... ___ __.. Rental. 1% blkt l>e3ch! can pets. 64fr3786 •. -· N.....--ell tr ~lttlons wtthout ~ 6 " ~ -· _,.,. 2 -~ ...... • pl'ior noUce. * Call 675-44M BKR. 11/t. ptn, •fo/.,-,., · LRG. Br homo; ept, stovo , . 3 BR. 2 Ba, li'I corner tot. frig,, filed yrd., JrUr. Adul BAYFRONT 4 B<lnn., 2 bi:\th
CLASSll'llD • Clooed gar, walff patd, 1400 llB5. 6~1821. 67~. ~'56(! Yrty patio, :10' dodo
MAILING ADDRESS 9UICK CASH per mo. 6G-4S32 JBR 2BA, Me,. Verde. Ava!I Balboa °'""' -644-4~10
P. 0. Box 1560, THROUGH A "Make ,_. J'or Daddy" o~ lit. $300/"'34s-ri!2' SEVERA). 2 ' 3 BR. bOach
Costa Meta DAILY PILOT ... clttin out lhe iarage M mile Realtor. '1~e!f ~· ~=i'J!KJ from 92626 ..• turn !hot junk Into cash 2 BEDROOMS, 2 hathl. .,. " o. gent = , •
QUICK 7
U--PAs,·-H -·,~a-
THROUGH A
DAILY
PILOT
WANT AD
WE HONOR
Master Charge
anCI
BanUm~
• •
THE DIRECT LINE
642-5678
D
A .,
L
y
~
I
l .,
0
1
• WANT AD wlt)t • ~ally Pilot c1 ... 111ec1 heated swlmmbtf< pool, $ZiO Llk<l to trade! Our Trader'•
Ad. ~5678. ••'<k. Call M5-IN10 Parod!M column II for >Olll 'J.-------.i ' •
l , t ..
•
'·
..
P\JBIJC l'iOTICE PIJBUC "idnCE
MOTtc• TO c:owraACTOltJ L•1WK1JM G:'rUMr -: •~ CAlLIHe fOlt llOS •ncl N\lf'MfYll'lln .................... 0&5
-..l'laal l)\atrlct: C:Ollf ComrtWnlt'f' hndblM.,.r -t-.laMaltJ ........... ~ t"' C~l1ct• Olttrld Slllllbllsfll" {P0t ltl'ld9rl ...... • ...... ~ llS cf ONdll'MI! ,\pe lla.,..-. .. ..................... W s For Elecfrletl Work: HN!ing, v-!'lpe •nn 1-C:kllP ,,,.,, ........... ..m
tll•tlnt Mid Afr Coftdl"anl"' Work1 Wlnci-~ci.1nirr· .................... S.MS
Lend.IC:IJlllll •rid sprlnkl•r lrrl01tlan watellmafl ...• , .................... : 1.m
S'l'at•rm; Vld tot l'llllllblrll ININ'k • 2:00 Fc1AtM1t 50c: pef" hour mar. !Mn llfSint P.M .• TFllJf.O•r. Odabitr II, I.fr.I. cl1ulrlct!IOA tuMrvlMd.
For 0.,,.91 Cont.rm Wont • 3:00 OP•UTIM• .... ,.u.. .
l'.M .• Mottd•r. 0.:IDl>tr 1$. 1'13. Gre.up ' ............................. 7.r.1
l"fM:•. a1 lld ll:tal'Dt: omce ar tM Grouo 1 ··········~·1 ............... 1.:o ,lll'dwlsfrio "'9MI, U10 /l.dllms AV9nue, Group 1 ........................... f S'I
Cost1 Mn1, CallflOtnl•, '2636. lift wffl i,.. GrOl.IP ., ............. , ... , ........... 1:tt
OJ'lftid In ""' lo.rd ltoom. · GrouD S .. ., ......................... :1.11 .~ lcM!lltflcetto1r N11n9: Grouo • • , ................ , .......... 1.fl
l'aOJECTS ''e"', ''0", ANO "£••-Group 1 .................... : ...... ''" OltANGE ClM!T COLLEGE Far~11t .SOC P9<" haul' mart lftln hip,1
Plac• Pt.ins ,,.. an fll9: Office of !he d•ulflc1tlcln IW*YIMll.. •
Ottlrld Oltectat fll l"l!Yllc1' l"•cllltl.s l'AtNT••l '
end m•Y bt abt•fnecl •' ""' Otflct at lht F-n 14 "*" or •Ms) • '*' •bow ArchltKt, Wlllf•m llurock & 1'1ttners, JavrM'(mlll ,..,., ·
15.50 81nlde Orlv., Coran1 d1I /'Mr, F~ if ""'" or ,..,..., • 15c 1bov1
C•llf«nl•. Jau•fltrll'IMI file.. ,.._ -F NOTICE 15 HElllEl'I' GIVEN th•I 1h4 ... ..,.., bn.lth l)91n!W .............. 7,c
IDaVH•med SCNol Olitr\cl of Of-1t111• 8rlllh JWlftO llQt .......... ·•···· J.11&
C°""'Y· C1Ufor.,I•, Kll"f br •nd lht~ll S•fld~r ...••• ·,. ·•.:. ':' ......... f·" lh GOYwnlllll Ila.rd, hlf'elMtttr reftrril6 Sal'ICllll•si.r
lo ff "t>l STRICT", 111111 riteelV. \/fl la, but swl"9 ttl'(lt ... , .•. ·• ... , .......... I.II
not l.llotr ltMll llW ~twd lllMI. Jour1tWm...Spr1r , •.••......•.•.•.• 1 ...
-led ti/els tor tlW •l!'tflan end ••Ill!"-Jollr~ 5Pr•Y 1 ment" Haw .,.m.o ~ti"•::!..,.. •wino "• ....................... 1.n
...-1!.-..... ----• O....~-Ir ,. ......................... ,.., _ _.~~ . ~ r.,... ................... 1.93
llld1 1#1-11 M nc;l'!Wd lfl lht pl-~ Shltt 111:,0tk titled •~ •ltd lfMll M ~ •l'ld tu ..... .....-) .......... , ....... '3
IM/blldr f9a4 alaucl •t IM ebaYHt•IM SPiett ltOtk
""'• •nd PIM:•• (U .. N S,Clfll loll ........... , •.... •Al Ti.. wlll I». UGO.Oii clepaell "'®fr.O Slvlt ........ {llld'INlll ...... : ...•. 'l.01
In •Kt! m of bid clot"""'"'-t... tu•r•ntM Sllft l'•lnlotr '
"" t9tunt tn oaad condition wl"'1n fl"' (J--Vt1'll11'1} ....... .' ............ '·'" Mrs .,, ... ""' Md apenl1111 Nie. One (l) ,,,.I! TUD••
"' ta tie luu.cl to •bow ..-1111'<1 $Ub-l'lvmbws •rW C011trac1or1 onlr •ncl two (2) tefs to " •l<Hr'nf'IHer• ........... , ... , ..... , • I «l
Issued to "-r•I Contr1etar1.. 6-tl FOf"9fl!l'it • :»ll ~ ,,Ws
EIClt bid must conform •ncl be J_,...,""n r1t•, r11•ot1tM~arntrK1•-.eum1n.,.,-~ lt'llr•"°"" • .._~J---ft E•cl'I bid Wll I» KCOfnPMll.0 by the rite, ~rllY rrifrl't:d to In fl'lt canh'•d Irr.Ill•""" Ind oacuments Md br tM lld ,,, JrOlllOHCf Ll'll'fl SPrlftkltl'• ...................... '•.l'S
1u1>eantrldors. , S-•ncl $tonn r T'lf OISTIUCT , __ Ille rlollt .. ,.. 1)1'1ln Plpfi1y« ................... ~
led env tw •H bids or to wtl~ •rrv Jr. PL.UTl'1tl•S ,...111.rltles or lnfOMMllt1-In •ny llllh or Pl""' Fortm1n • 50t •baW .. J_....,..,... In 11'1• OlddlftO, ••II. TM D!Sl'llllCT lltl clettml,lfted tlW Plftt.,... . . , .....•..• , .•. , •• , ., •. )At$ 11-••I pr .... •rnne , ... of I*: dltm WIS!ff PU.STW• bWOllt
ln the !oc:•lllV l'n wtlldl 11111 ~ Is to l>e Pl•lltl' T Mlcltf" ... , ............ , .• , •. '7 .111 perlormed lor IKh cr•tt fW ,.,.,.. af •oo,1as
workmen ftl.oed fo execvl• the c,ontred, For-'. , , .••.....•.... , • , . , ...... , 11.u to bot •s tollowl: suir FOj'.tlNn-....................... ,9.M c:rwtt. Jourl'leVm•n ........ , • ., ·., ......... p.Ot
Cltulfk:...... w ... SM•IT MITAi. ...... I Dr TYM .... Shfft ~II Workw ••J•;;,,,.,.; ... t .$!
llltlCkU'l'llt Far..-n1n •• ll'Mo •boVt """'""''""" ni..
F-m•n 11 " 7 rntl'I) !lot less ll'ltl'I '5t G9ft'"'I 1'orM1•11 -~ 1 •'•., • ""' llour •baYir Joumerm1t1 r•I•. JavmevmH ,..._ I · Foremfll (I to 'I _, nqt ... ~ 1Si: nAMSTlltS ~ ,, ,..r liour 11101tt• J-iwrm•n ,.,,,. florMM11 ·5k (tor mor. T"'""t..., .,_.
FClr9mlft {twr 11. rMll} "" ,.,, thin ltirltclldlofl of 'T~ Union.I "ti(.
•1,00 II"'"'-° IDO'l9 JOWMyiN'll r•I•· dvdlnt1 'flt'-""""' Mn tt\.111 i!feM lf'lc~r I. .nd m11iitirNnct .ciufJllMlltl. I !tone M•son ...................... 1.10 A•flr-lor !.......,. .c,..,., tr '•l!!:!ll•r'
•1ttc1Cft"D•R • tVM .eollulpmtl'lf ···••••· ••...•••.• ,J.OS ertclttirnft!' -········ .............. •.OO Orlwr af V.n!cle .,. Combln.tt 9' CAaPelfTIRS Vtfllclff of: c.,"""r ,,,.,,,,. •..•••.•.••••••.• •:13 t ...... • V•tllc ...
T111ii ~ Saw QHQIOt ......... l23 1W fl'l'n ' lont ............. •<"' ''"
MUIWl'IOM_ .. :'.!~{::•••• .. ,. ........... L'3 3 lldet ....... ,. •••••••• ~····•·•• _,. Heft.r (P~_K=.1 ... 1 .... , ........ 1.31 ,~ L.lfl Drivtr ................. 115 F~~ 60C Plf' 11aur mort lt'I.,, l'l!ollttt ~ Trvet .. ,. .. ,, .................. •
dlSllflc•"on ~ t x c •JI I Truck M~
11n1111mflt1t N119f. '-t .OCim ... , ........ ,,. .... ~' ..... 1 CAltf'ltT A Wlllf' Tf'\IC:k \ .~ , . LINOLll.tM LAYllt • 2 lllCM i-,.,, .. , .. 1, .... ~ •••••• • .,_
CtrP.tf, LlnoituM & \ l ,w,.,,.,. '"* .................. ,.... c::'1.W'w~i -............... ~At = T~·D;t.J;1:·m;c·p;.;::"· ~=·
C-' ""*" ftMllnt '..w lrD'M!'l1111 clltlon•r 'fll'n ~ POWtr WI 1r
JNCtli• ..,..iw ............... 1• '"'' ~\Ir ~Ill,.~ l c~:i:.:.=_ ........... , .......... •·•• tr'::.1~·'-·········· •·• ~ "' ~Mldll111 • on~ If r~.:J~ . O!Mt11W l..-Olllrl' •.••.••••.. 1&.t• ki a rd• tr ~,. ........... 11"" '"°""""" .0C "' llWf' •beW J"""*'IMl'I T"-LAYia NO. 1t ,.... Tit. Lt~er: .. ~ ................. 1A
•1.ICTlllCtNilt • ,Of't!Y'I • (4-IMf\ Tl. rntnl IUt ,_., ~ Fw.nen ,;,. ................ 10.tl We-. )O*tloW~ ~I ' F~ ..,,. •• v .................. t,tl Tll-9•MllPI* tlO. It • ~ JoVint'fmH' , ........................ '·'° T1At Mtl"r ........ ~ .......... , ... , S.N FOt'ifl'l'left Clbll spflttr ............ ft0.16 CtrtlnM ...... .' ........... , .......... ..
c.tllt Jplletr, ........... ,. ........ :-i't.31· Tiie ~..;: at!Mdvl• °' ~ CerT!.tt.d .,......., ...... ·" •••••••••. : .... ' ... ,, \lflOl:.I ; ~ ill
·el.Allll t!tl'lf !ll '*'"" 'fti. r•lt' for tiollclff •flf Gl1llW ........ ,.1 •• ,.,.,.,~~· •. 21 -"IM·-a"if141M .... et llMt ttn-• '"°" WOii~ ' • -~· .. h . . . ' °""""'".., '"'" Wort"tr ............. 1..se 11 111111 D9 ,...._., VMll' tM lCOfto lt~lfw Inn ...,..., .......... ,., ~ TfllAC'.TO... i. ~ tllll Clfttf«t I• ~I lnlll Worll.tr .. , ........ " IM •WtHM, end Upon 111'1 Meol..,.tdW
l'"'9r ... ~ ....................... \llliNir l!Ml<'t....,. ~ ..... --=· ~Ot'll'Mfl ,_"' Mlw,l'nOI'• ,..,. '""' ... ,.,.. te .... 111"'11'"'" . dlalfkAi"-•~IM. • I 111 ....... In lri9 u..Mf.,. Of t11t ( t, Uftl!i!l M• ~ """' ..,.....,...., l'lf1 llN,.il"° • ';'.!;"'~'NlitM'-·~·pe;·t.O;i;~ =-:t.ti?J;ili!.~~ = '·r "' """'~ ,.,., .. ..ind'-Md • \lerflnnlfttl
• LA._..I , , loncl wlll • ,_..,.,... .,... ti :.J' • ._...,.., ....,., !M contrttt. *•111 bondt ll'ltll llt n ttlt
or ~llM . :".' ... ... . . •. HS fOrtlU sit .fwtll In 11111 ltll(i °""""' Ind ,........ If ~!JlltfC end l>o<~fl!I. I ~ tlktflC ieaf.. vlbr•llOfl m•tlll ..... Ind OO'ftNIJlll l o.rd' . 1 ;" = ltlKlilflltal tools not MHt•ltlV ly ~t.¥.N •J WATSOH j c td lilrelf! ./ • ., ..... -'• H $Km1i htfd of TM ....
..... " fll(tr .... ''"' ••• ., ...... 6.tw o.tn:'t11 °''· ~.191~. ~:00 f .l'l'I. A.Nlfltff ~iw ..................... 1.ou tu 0c1. ts, 1m .~.oo , .... . ~ c:-• , ,..,...._ °'""" CMtl O•ltf ........ I~ IMIT!br•M lllCI • ttplttmfl!' 1i, "' J11J t.lt
torl9! ""' " • • • •• • .... • .. • • •• • • • • • '· 1'J
. . 1
-. . . . -• -
117 PILOT·ADVEATISER Wrcl-, Stpu.nbtr 19, 1973 Wtd11tsday, Sfpttmber 19,..1973 041LY PILOT 59
~--1~ I .,.._ .. -lrtl I _ ...... I~ I _ .. _ lltl I ..... w ..... _ .lrtl I ~-... --lftl I
< -Apts. '"""" U0 Apt>. Furn. ·• U0 ~----;;;~;: ~-----~~ I~ I -1~1 1-· -I~ ~~~I
• ijo,_ Furn. .,. . Corona., Mar ~t. llnlurn. 365 Apt. Unf11rn. 365 Rooms 400 bfflco Rental
• • Unfum. 310 llalboo lol1ntl Huntintf9n 0-h -'-'-""'--'-'-"-_---'-'~I-="'-----"" 440 P•rson•ls , 530
.. Costa Mn.I Newport BNch Jeck Andrews
;" lollNNI ltlMd ~ 2 !!_ UJ1t>Or, l Ba, Nr 11Gi18!1 ' ~ -PARK NEWPORT 24S91 La HormoH • -· "'~" er,oo, llean>o, BACl!ELOR ~ I BR., palloo. ~ l A t BR $US • SIM. St°'~-Lo•uno NI uol • P,ELUX Spadous, !BR. ~$: Prp\c, Pvt Pat, Bbq, Car. trplc'1 prlv. prage1 -il,.. ore~ rer., e711t/=r:, htd pool. APARTMENTS You ifrr 1i,e w•?ne.r of ~ crptt, wUc In ~J~A ~ Oulet Older Adlta Only. Divided bulb A Iota ot • Adul ti, no pe • 64l)..896.j, Bachl'.lor I oc 2 Bethwm1 TWO FREE TICK ETS
4> • mo. 180 Pftrl, bl>O~ $32YYrly. 6'1S-8989. ckileta:. Rec. twill, pool It 0 1n1 Point • a nd Townhouses ~·. ifttuml LITrLE ISLAND .. near new pool table1, 'nuna bathe. TOWNHOUSE , Fr. $194.50 Open 9-6 Dully RECR,oEIAbeTION ·,? 1 Unfu ,._ very attractive light A Seo for )'OUJ'telf. 17301 2 Br, fireplace, J)OOI, pdvate 2 BR, ocean vu, $18.J. \\'t ier Spa Pools Tennis
• 1 rn. """ cheery 2 BR aundeclc. pr Keelaon Ln. (1 blk W. ot patkn, continental break· &. x:u filrn.lihed. Adults, Acrou from Fashion Island VEHICLE SHOW
East Bluff washeT/dr)ttt a.vaU. Avail Bea.eh, 1 blk N. of Slater). fast. Spucioua gt'.OUnds, nett 49~. • &t Jtunbot'l'e on San Jooqu1n SEPT. 19TH-23R0
. lhru June, $235. 673--4394. 842-7848 shoppliu: & rfne_ beacb. J•'ur-Huntlngton Beech l-ll1h1 Roa.ri. At Ille
3 BR Condo,Eutblutf, $473. INTERIOR Dea.ignera 2 BR, MEN. amall beach hotel. nilhed or wtfurnltihed, from _(714) 644-1900 ANAHEIM STADIUM
C.U·tor a P'P o In l m.e n t . llvln.g/dlnlng are&, ~It., Rooms $21.50 P.!!. wk. Apls l:iG11.Corona del ?.-tar, fcl~1l!ed1 .. ~i:_~m,·1y'!, New CU1tom Ba yfront 21'.m Stale College Blvd.,
640-0929. Av!llt Qet . ~5th. ~ winter, $275 yrly. S95 per monlb> 536-7056 .........-.... ..,.-w '4'/PRIV BCll & P1£R. 3 . A11ahe~11
Huntlngt°" l;\elich 675-3412 or ~10 L-uno •-och Adultt Only~o Pets BR, 2 BA. 1''1·plc BBQ. Please call 612-5678 ext 339
4BR, 2BA. frpl c, patio, 9 mo. -• ue * * * * * * $485/mo. Yearly :~ cla!Coo your T l~lck1•f5,
e TENNIS crt1 Ir pool f. leese a1 S350 monthly. Year-. OCEAN bench,1">nt, 2 BR, 2 * NEARVIEWBEACH * Cloee lo Shopping & bus 979-0631 or '44-4510 nu~~r Is f>.~220)~ fl-ee total MCW1ty ·in new 2 BR 2 Jy lease at $400 mo. 61:>-0797 Ba $350 m& • .741 lines. Unlu.rn, stove, rcltig , )!A 1 lllf w/pr1v paUo It 602 S Baytront t BR tro' 49-t-160 ,. ~· Deluxe 3 BR, 2% BA. Huge incld. LUXURY Baylront t.'Ondo. SLEEPING twom f o r
gar. Adulb. \\1alk to beach. Wlnt~r. Fabulous Bay View: nt, I, 494-' owner's unit In new custom All Utll's P aid 7th aoor. Spect. vu of bay & employed olde r ma n ,
PRESTIGE
OF~ICES
Fountain Valley, Beautl·
ful new bulltllng, rrow>d
floor, 3,000 square feet,
\Viii divide Into amaller
offices. 50c per 9Q1f&re
foot, inelude11 carpets,
drupes, a.U uJilltles. junJ, .
tor service. Call A-la.rll,yn
Stovall (114) 832.5440.
• • '280 mo + 1st & last 'ii! Cnll 673-8325 838-32l0 BAOI apt at 0-escent Bay duplex, beam c et 1 t n g ot.-ean. 2 ~R. 2 BA, all elect. Prlvale bath. $18 wttk,
security ftt. 536-2376 • · $155. up. $50. up wk. Color patios, !pie, nr shopping, nO 2 Br, I ba, 2nd [loor, $144. 2 ""'poo!. for rent or lease. 968-00W after 4 pm, ~lun-Ot-YICE n ·-y •lush 2 -2 Ba full YEARLY S275. mo. 2 Br, 2 TV. 1435 N. Cotilit, 494-250!. pets, $425 mo. Br, 2 ba & de~, und floor &W-Q56. tington Beach. / space -900top 00
1' ,..,,.. ,. a.-, ' Ba bt•--~ -· 67 $164. 71' ••• 'lo Sa 11· OC<'fUl vie"'· sq. t. appll, club & pool. Adult !Iv· 61i.476G ....... "'1.,....1""' or STUDIO Apt, ck>te In. Adu1ts 3-0960 ~ • • " n-L BAYFRONT yrly lease 2 PENINSULA fun1 rm, bath. 444 Ne"·po1t Blvd. 3 blks N.
ing. >ant Joe. 1 nii~ to beach. only, no pell, $150. Utlls pd.. * * * * * * SPACIOUS BR. 2 BA, frp lc, 2 yrs old. "'Qrking gal/student. Priv of Coast H\1•y. Close to l loa&
• · $225 lease. 536-00n or YEARLY 494-7413 LG~. 2 BR apt. Big sundeck, B Br 2 Ba t drps 1 Pvt bch. $450 mo.· Days entmc, share patio. One hospital. Bit-in n1 o d u I e • M4-3896. 2 Br, furn, or unfum, bay w, patio range • -r hi ,., __ , n..-11 ecpCh~·ld _.: n;.,w.,,r SZf>-1153, Eves 6'97-1336. blck beach bus $80 mo desk:;. 3 production rm, "!8~~",;;;::-;;Jw;;;;;;&llcS250~!:.._!<ll'!,..~-~---:_ Lido l•I• ' "' •<:; ' was ng ......:: . .-vu . I ..,.., •.LOJ· LARGE 3B ;....... • ...;... . 1,.uNOO. 3 Br., at Adams I: · + fac:il. $250 Mo. 174n Ke<!lson Ln, nr Beach R, 2BA, lirepl,1 ~67.l-O>I"'--='=--°'=-"'=~-==---recept. & conference r1ns.
Bushard. All rec $240 1 BR. Apt. Newly remodeled. NEW 2 BR, 2 ha. con-& Sla ter. 842-3546 0 r bltins, dhswshr, Nr Hoag F1JRN. Rm, Costa Mesa. Util pd. 33c SQ. rt. 548-5300
C&ll aft 5 ., · Dishwasher. Yearly. $195 + T1E~~ ~ 1'21:·rs1a:'. dominlum apt. All bltns. 847-Tl86 J:fosp. S250/mo. Adu Its . Employed lady day "urker, aft 5 pm. * . $-i:!1962 1t lllilities. Call 6'5-7tl16· Summer rental or leaae. $400. Very plush 2 Br, 2 Ba, full 642-4387 ref'll. ~llt79, 645-8765, * COSTA MESA *
Newport Bol,ch Balboa Peninsula Ph: 548.7834 or 646-4750. 3 BR, 3 ba. home; all bullt· appll, club & pool. Adult liv· 2 BR, crpts, drps, bltns, ~7976. New office building • Three • ins. $450 .hfonth -~ Xlnt Loe. 1 mi. to beach. patio, steps to beach .. Yrly,l·s"tN;:::;.G:::LE.:::._roo_m_, -$60~-mo-. roon1 suite available, 700 sq.
' .... EXQUISITE brand new con. $35 WEEK & UP 7~ullt BnoR, petn~d ~ gmoar., UnivP•L"'u'slyHREltxy 6'13-65lO lease. 536-0092 or ,A,~a\1)084lO/l. 6 7 3 -0 2 9 3 . Single adult only. Call Bill ft. ALSO 2.000 sq. ft .• all
.,do near beach with view, e Sleeping Room:s _ yearly, •67J...-083j' •-'' EC. APT. 534-3896 .r-• Stanley Between !}.9, or part. All utilities, jani·
a{Ija.cent to pool, tennis. e Housekeeping Rooma For Lease. NU VIEW APT. 4 DELUXE_ Extra Lrg 2 Br. 2 2 BDRM apt w Ip at i o , 548-3710. I.or serviee. 2706 Harhor
sauna, jacU2:d. 2 Bdrm .. 2 •Ocean View Apts Apt&. Furn. br, 3 Ba, fam rm. All elect. Ba. Poolside apt. $180. Nr. ga.rage, 1 blk to oceftll.'-B'°E'°o"R'°OO~M~,-,~lth~k~;~t-c_h_c_n Blvd. RoJxort Nuttress, Rltr.
, .~th. 8-Unkel) f.lt\8.ll(C'r bC'd. & BALBOA 1,NN • 360 ,bllns, crpt/drps. $750 per beach. New shag Cl'PI, \Vinter o1· yrly $250. mo. prlvl nr. Brookhurst & 979·6571
llv
1
1ni
11
rmlp ..
1
dln rm
1
'i:~besc""Ed l<X> Main Street Newport~ :~~t~~! ~~s to bltlns, etc. 2320 Ftorlda. 673-2l45. Adams, H.B. 962 -7 5 20 NEW OFFICES
ce ngs, · , v.-e uur, . . 115-8740 536-5582. San Clement• weekdays aft 7. AIRPORT ~~~.w~~7~~;!~'. ~:u PEN~~St.111 Point .
1
1 BpdR. ~~ 0~1i;w~te~dr:m.1h; ~r~:~l:~~.e~2 :K~ 2 WALK TO BEACH * NOW AVAILABLE * LIVE at the beach, $2:> week. No lease req'd, full SC'rvice,
Oct 5th. Lease. 644-2117. parn Y um., Uti · ·• ocesn. Dishwasher, buil1· BA 1 1 baI bl Brand new l & 2 BR, Brand new Garden Apt&. Pine Knot 1'-totel 6302 \Vest drps, cpts. music, air cond .,
BRAND NEW yearly $210. mo. 673-7219 ins, shag carPct, 2 porche•. ,Adi'.iits rp~y. S~~o. :~~j carpets, drapes & bulltins Xlnt San Clemente area Coast Hwy, 673-0440. all util. Single offices fron1
• • -l h · eves. loll of closet..s_ k'...cc. Parking util. 675-5587. 221 • 16th St,.847.3957 2 BR, 2 Ba. 1195 ROOM_: Worki.·ng lady only, $!25. mo. ~ase w 1 opt:ion to pur-OCEANrnDNT·Sharp 2 Br, va WALK TO BEAC oooking rl I 545-6107 PALISADES CENTER chase! Top qunlily! completely tum. S275 mo. f~~ 2 t:fi8· \~~~er ~u!ll~ ro. of Hwy 3 br, 2 ha, D/W, 1 & H ~r,..~~·s~. BA, \V/dshwr & after 3:.J P~r!i~es. · ~ S. E. Bristol e 2 & 3 BedroOms Call 64~ aft 7 pm. 2131.,..~_::........ bltns, 9ervice porch, frplc, 2 BR. Carpets, drapes, Newport Beach 557-7010 e 2 Car Garages •..-r-.JOQV or 114/675-M91 crpts, drp&, deck & patio. bltns. 308 16th Sl. 536-8548 All apts. have priv patios ROOM for girl student. kil (Campus-Irvine Intersection)
$450. & $415. Ne"' furn bayfront bachelor. t"Ves or weekends. No pets. $395/mo, 3l1 ot' 8"7·3957. many other features. prlv, share bath S'7 0. SlJB.LET New UM Sq. Fl.
NE\VPORT CREST $250 per mo. Slip avail. Sh,rp-R"'11Corated Jasmine 6fr1957. NEW building 2 br a pt, 1 blk See at 686 Camino De IAS Laguna, ~87Si, eves. Office Suite, tenant im·
673-2162 4 BR, 2 BA. Frplc, front PRI, quiet lBR, w/sml from heh. $235 mo. Call Mares, just south San provements. Koll Business
PHONE '45-6141 I LUX. 3 Br, 2 Ba, fum, porch&: 1 .... rear terrace. Nr ~··--'eek -I N r 536-Ql13. Clemenre General Hosp. Room &. Board 405 Complex, Birch St. \Valk to
OVER WEIGHT
Wanted 50 WOrMn Ir 50 mMi
at l~ut. 20 lb.a, bu1 nut ovi>r
JOO lb., OVl'l' "'Cii;hl lo par·
ticlpatt In u wttkly medl<:a l.
ly supervi!led 40 day era.sh ,
\\1lleht n:.'Cluctlon pt"OKrITTn
with dally 1upe1·vi11lon. tilu11t
be able to puy for n11!'dica·
tlorui & physical cxa1n. ~led·
l<'a.l h1irurnnC'c 1vclcon1e.
&ili·1633 aak for Miss Joricli
Betwt""en 9 & 7 pn~.
OMEGA CLINIC
All E you single & 1:1lone, 45-
55? \Vant a Date? \\'ant to
get married ? ltlany people
this age group. Free info.
Box 1148, Garde n Grove.
~lAN, 55, in "'heel chair
wants to ni e cl un·
derstandlng gal, any age,
&16-3.160.
PREGNANT? T hinkin g
abortion? KrKJ\V all the fach;
Jlrst! Call LIJ'E LINE -24
hrs, 541-5522.
ALCOHOLICS Anonymous.
Phone 542.7217 or 1vrltc P.O.
Box 1223, Cos{a l¥1csa.
Social Clubs 535 *' INTRADATA * QUALITY n1atches
"'IPHCYI'O "Largest in Calif."
(Call NO\V ror FREE sam·
pie profil e on .1 prospective
1nalch .. 14 h~.)
714 . 638·5920 I LA 658-62&1
-sundeck ·o ,....,..., ' ,, .. ar y, o. o CU E treU OU ) Townhouse Unfum. 135 ' . carport, ex} r a ocean & bay, beaches. Hwy, $190 per mo. Avail im-1 BR nr beach, shag crpt, P~ :92-1021. 4~~ FEMALE c o I I e g e airgort. Attractive I e a se l:-:-':-:-.;;;....:........;..;.;._.:;;;ll~cl!'ean!'!:_._!1:!0330~yrl!!l'.y.~&n-~,:2285~-:... Adults only. Rent $350/mo. med, 644-40&1 frplc, gas &: water pd. $165. mident-Uve w/family in arrangementl $615/Mo. Cail
1
al
Costa MtN BAYFRONT, l BR. apt ~Annually s3 so . BLUFFScust.luxury2Br,2 ~lfi6.lor53tHi831 . NEW 2 BR, 1%. BA, ocean CdMarea.Room&boardin 833-ll7l. !-ost lltdFound I
CX>NOO 3 B 2 Ba d It overkloking bay, patio, gar, car encl. gu. $325 Mo. LG. 3 br duplex. Gar, Nr ~iew, ~~t area.1,.=i, ~!;....~e· exchange for child care • BUSIEST intersection l n ~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~~~I • · r., a u uUI pd. $225/mo. ~790. NEW Luxurious 0 c e a n 2 BR, pool, CdM charm $2'l5 Elementary, $200. c a 11 uxe, a s, ~ ... "' .... ~ girl 14, boy 12 from Ne\\1Xlr1 Harbor. Second
• aectlon. Bullt·lns, carpctlfut, BAYFRONT 1 B til · I'd Front/View 3 &: 4 Br, from '0'!:~C"!'"~·c~Coas~;_t !!R:!-E~-~64!_44::'.4&~411'."1 675-6456 (Beach at Slater! Apts 3:30-6PM Mon-Fri. Some story in Unique J-lomes drapea, rec rm lac k nt)(ll . r. ·" me · l.100 visit 200f \\'. Oc ...... ~ --... B 'Id' 800 r F d (I d I 550 •• ...... ,..... M1 0 Sii• Avail -Ca 11 "'"'" 3 BR 2 BA .... So r 2 BR. 1 ,, Ba r Furn or Unfurn 370 flexible household he Ip . u1 mg. sq. t. at o"'n rff a I ·.~nt1132act_ Mr. Q u e e: rr, 646-5.w·i or 67$-7923. -Front dally or call 64&-3ll4 • •>VUSC, · 0 71 • nr rceway. ' ' Wknds. &: eves. free. Own $3.30/mo; 600 sq. fl. at -~------'--..;..;-"! • ....:r-eves H w Y, .f P l c, patio, Otildrel) welcome. $185 mo. rrv N $300/mo. Bo-th with vo··w•. FND: Bllc Im! poodle W/pu,. 2 & 3 BR \Vin $245 & · washer/dryer area, $3425. 16101 Malaga, S.12-7339. 8alboa Peninsula room w · on-smoker . ,. ::: CAPE Cot:l.qulet aqlts, 2 br, $295/MO 'n4 ~r. Balboa , OCEANFRONT + bay w. can Agent, 6T;)-:6ro(I Must have car. 64o--0255 alt ;;.'7><00tl:o:;=::.·-,=-"...,..-=--= 11lc collar & flea <.'Ollar Ion~ · · ?~ ~garden. Lndry. $178. 879-5991 ~r 879-l'n6. . New 2 BR, 2· B~ C.Ondo. 2 BR, bltin RIO, crpts, drps, FURN. 1 BR $165; 2 BR. 2 6PM Business R9nta1 4~5· tail Vic. 1-lcll & Golhard
• .....ru1v. BAYFRONT CHEL0 Frplc, fu)l S9Cllnty. Lae 2 BR, clean, trplc, gar, South good Joe. $145. Ask for Dale. ba. $225. Unf~. i BR. 2 Guest Home • 415 J-1.B. 847-1525
.. -l2SO 1 1:1 Id R926 $450. (213) m.11'16, I714l or H'r'(i\':1
1!31_1195 * 9624471· Ba. $360. Call' 873-9001. , • NEWPORT SHORES Hunt1~ Beech EastYB:f~ m,_~9 • 673-4131 LRG 2 BR, 1% BA, STUDIO, GOOD, clean, care at 700 Sq. tt., $175; 1500 sq. fl. Ff'm:iD 8f~~. 1 monh. th ago · $'J5 per wk & UP 1 BR 2 Costa Meu encl gar, infant o\t, no pets. Costa Mesa Eastwood Convales-$400; spaces avail. Oct. ht. ~ edogs.-i:'kw.,;:e daisy
.. 3 BR. 2 BA. S2XI mo. V~ BAYFRONT 1 Br, apt BR a: ~ ·cmor Tv $157.50/mo. 842--0350. cent Hospital. 4029 E. 61st St. & Pacific.Coast Hwy ... ,... • c Y area.
clean! Pooltrec center. 213: overlooking bay, patio, _gar, maid 9et"\<' pool The Mesa; OE LUXE $165, 1: BR, shag crptg, fplc, THE EXCITING Anaheim St., Long Beach, Ca ~· Please call & iden~ m.i914 util pd. $.Ztmo. ~-415 N. N;,..,,.rt st., N.B. APARTMENTS 4 block! to beach, gas paid. PALM MESA APTS. i:!llli04=::.·------, , 675-'050~ '"5-2502
• ~ Duplex11 Furn. 345 BAYFRONT BACHELOR 646-9681. Air Cond . Frplc'a . 3 S\vifll,_ Call 539-9591. MINtrrES TO NPT. SCH. PRJV. & Semi, Ava nelll' -•llU-.t w-_fOtlNQ; am.all male_~: •*•L--...._ S160 winter, utll pd, 9'M East OCEANFROJIM''\Jpper 3 hr ming Poole • Health Spa • * 3 BR, 2 BA STUDIO. FURN. OR UNFURN. park, Libr&I')' & Shpgn TLC _,,_ ., Australian sheep dog. One
. IN-r.ntmula Balboa, fi73.-9749 2 ba, $350. per mo. Ocean'. TeMis Courts • Gym and S195/MO. Mature family. Unbelievably l~e apts' & Balance diets. 540-2562. 601 Dover Dr., SUite 3 blue & one brown eye, Vic. ::1 Billiard o-.-huge pool, Jacuz:1 elect bll· Hotel Lagwta &: Coast Hwy
NEW 2 Br, Jrg deluxe. Corona clel ,,..,,· front lo"-er, 3 tilf. 1 ha. $300. 1 BR~~m ..,~ Avail now. 842-0350. ins, shag crpts, drps, sauna Rentals to Sh•re 430 NEWPORT BEACH Laguna. 497-2525, 494-7061
winter or yeflrly, steps to 213~1700 or 596-7772. 1 BR & Den Fro:Uftro 2 BR, neat·new. Water, gas etc. Adults, no pets. WORKING girl need f ma1 SPACE available for lease In SM. Blk fem. Cock·li.·poo.
8'Y or Bch, (713) 691-7219 BEAtrl'. harbor a: ocean vu l DOOR to beaeh. lge 2 BR. 2 BR fro · $210 paid. Child ok. no pets. $160. SINGLES From $150 s c e Boardwalk Shopping Center Wht on chest. Vic. In.
-wk days 675-2381 SUMayl &: pry, balcony. no ·pelll. fl8S new cpU, r~ated, tum 2 BR'. Twnhsesm From •'XII 842-1652. 1 BEDRM. From $165 roommate in 20'1 for huge, at Huntington Harbour. Call dlanapolis a: Magmlia, :fl.B.
OCEANFJWNT, ex Ice 3 Be & up. Util pd. :l500 Stxvlew, or W1lllni:. l'!'lriY 0 r "EDITERRANEA,...,N 2 BR & 1 liR -1215 & $165. 2 2 BEDRM. From $185 beaut 2 bdrm. apt. In Como M&-IJfil. Mon AM Yellow ~'--
1
~•M mo/mo Parldnc 673-410. M Unfurn Apia A;raJJ From $10 Mesa, fumtahed except for CUTE ADO I""" , • ...,.....,.-le den, 2 Ba, h'p e, &M', ....., • · • bllai from beach. Cpts, drps, to $15 LESS. 2nd. bdnn., includes poot &: BE HOUSE, uuv 968-elQ!I
• ~1 Util · pd S 4 0 0 · SO. ot Hwy. ~!Y 2 ~ .• BAL PENIN. 2 Br. nr. ocean. VILLAGE · & gar. 842-5023. You're right they're under· sauna. Wrl!e, Oassltled ad aq, .ft., adj. busy corner, for 1 'r=-N~O~,-.,-Whl-te_Ki_tte_n_w_/grey-t
·• fpl, 2 patios. $275 Mo. Nu t crpts., ~~ &: drps. 2400-Harbo mvd C M SPACIOUS 2 Br. S 14 9 . priced! 1561 'Mesa 'llr. No. 9U Oiilly-Pilot, P.O. ~or office~. C.M. beige A apot on back. Vic.
• OCEANFRONT Upper 2 Br. 615-6497 or m...to95 wtnter raiU.
1288
mo. (nt) r557.ari0 .' . CPRTS, drp!i, pool. Child (5 blks frOm NeWpoit Blvd.) Box 1560, Costa Mesa, Ca. ~2020/~. Slatter I: Los Gardinaa F.V .
.. Owner's Unit. Furn •. W\M~. BAOJELOR apt, a\iif JYiw, OPEN EVERYDAY OK. 842-3546 or 847-7786. Sf6..9Fl60 1..,:::926:::26::::_· -------"THE Factory" I.ma a. lrg 968-7239
$250/mo. Call fi7S..6366. near ocean, privacy. $150. OCEANFRONT, W. Hours~ Fri·Tuesl0-4i 2 BR FENCED YARD Bch. FE!l.IALE roommate to lhr' shop a~. Sl85/mo. In G"°"RA~Y~.~-w-,,hl~te-,,liger~-.---~ ~ DELUXE FURN 3 BR, 2 mo:~ Newport Win~ Rental. 2 Wed .• Thlll'S. 10.7 & Talbert $165. PREVl.E\_V OP~NING beaut. 4BR, 1BA. apt, w/2 cannery Village 425 30th St., kitten wea.rq Dc4l cOll
BA, S27'5/mo: Wf'NTER. Costa Me.a Lrg & 2 s'1liU BDRMS., PRIMA c••• APTS 538-85t8 Award wmrun,~1, 2 lc -3 hr g1rls. Newport oceanfront. l"{B ._ 67J...960i or 642..8520. Vic: Main &: Ada:i -~ -.,. .~1-.. • -laundry $300'. 642-3837. "'°"" apts w/famlly rms. No View fcpM>lee own ha BRAND nu stores/offices, "-.,.. "..,.,.
'Cl'•<rW'UV 'Cl"N" ll"IU -• 1838 Placentia Ave. CM lease. Sorry no pets. From 1..'.. .,.,_ .... ' y I II,,;, ~ .. Newporl e .. cn LOWWEEKLY RATES OCEANFRONT 9mo winier OpenHowiel-5Daily Laguna Beach . st $17~. OUR TOWN wasn.:r, ..... .,. .. r. eary <JU $125. up. Elevator. 11301 2;-""'SILKY""'=-..,T=-e-r.,r;-.,.,--=v·"'
Execvtiv• SultH rental, 2BR; lba, furn, ALL UTILITIES PAID ~~Uy XPts. 1250 Adams ~~r mo. Non smoker ~~Huntington Beach. Fail'Vle.,.. & San Die~
1 l BR. 2 Ba. lrg yaid on 20IO Newport Blvd. futlfc;,...,h!.!!~\·$300 lncldlng Family Units -Children VERY deluxe. Very new & Ave. (Adams at Fairview), ;,:,;:;::"".,,....,,;==-.,--F'tee'l'o:'&y 9-15. Call 714: '.! channel 2 blk from surf, C t u-....-~ Welcome. Large 2 BR. 1 beautiful. 2·story, 2 BR. 2 Costa Mesa. Phone SS&-Ol6S. GIRL to share 2 BR, 2 BA 1600 aq ft INDUST. shop 586-M4 aft 7 PM
, ,.. $215 Winter 64&f.282 °!~26-1 IN BEACH Rental -2 BR, 2 Ba, BA. 'ltetrtgJ dsbwhn:, bltns, BA. Lge. decks. Fe\Y steps . apt, (26 yn +) with same. $225. Also 300 sq !t office =ro=UND=-,pec-k~l-cd-d-ae_hs_hund_
I ,_ nd-..1. -~ trplc, SU1111eCk w/ocean patios,· walk~floilets, gar, from Laguna's ftnest beach. Dana Point View, jacuzzt, recreation. $95 .. C.M. 646-2130. 0 1, . S
3 BR dup ex:, .. '". su tJw!: STUDIOS & I BR's. view. Yearly.,$400 per m6. ~ drps P ·O O L . Adults t>nly. No pets. $425 N.B. $147 lnd util. Toni ~ HARBOR, C.M. ,,,/,.in tater Bros. parking · ·:rd.em~~~· e FREE Linens 644-1517 Call c /MO. 81e~. 497-1617. ~ n:;1~'.ux:Er:.ch:. ::~: eves aft 8:30, 1440 sq. ft. each bay. ~~sa~~~;.mona, Costa
'. 15un lewe1 tlnturn. lSO : ~~~;!!i~es· ~~ ~Cl'Vw~ & J1~~1or ~ 548-~· ~te ~~~.neO:"i:~ :':~ good_ 1oc. 675-1849. SHR 2 br, SA Hgta, pri ha, ~ J:ve eaU: ~9:~e FND Perlectly tr al n e d
·• •Heated Pool Bayt:lirf P.1otd, 455 No. TIRED OF NOISE? ha, & 3 br, 2 ba.. Many. ex· Huntington 8Mcft all prvles, w/congenlal Joe, 657 sq', cptd/llir rood. gentleman DacMhund vie
' l lla;:;;;l;;boo~~P~on~i-~~1·::::~;;;1 ~=~~~bone~undry~"""""~-iF~w~H~ti .. :___ Ne">port Blvd. NB . &16-.1265. Wildt Ganien Apts; 2 Bl', ~4884~ ~mss D r. DELUXE Adult Poolside ~;-~ $95 + 1iS Elec. Pool. Lease 493-5155, 10-6pm ~~~:~~~ call, " 1' NFR--LRG . delux 2 BR, bltins, 11Ai Ba, crpts, dl'ps. Pool. Garden Bungalm\•. N r . . Industrial Rental 450 TINY grey female shaggy •· OCEA vn1 $30 WEEk & UP frplc, t blk 'beach or bey. Mature adults, no pets. SPACIOUS.I BR, panoramic ocean. Frplc, lrg patio, 6 ROOMMATE wllnted to dog Found by Ca:
LIJll:UI')' 3 Br. 2· Ba, patio, e Studio It J BR --$275. mo. 6•3570/5.14-1429. ONLY $162.50/?.10. ocean VIN'. cpl, drps, pools, sauna, tenn is, share 2 BR, oceanfront apt. , 10,500 SQ. FT.-ae01 .. __ Laguna B~~ b ~
_: tittplace, built-iml. e TV&: 1.lakl Senrice Avail. OCEANFRONT' 2 Br 1 Ba. ~-nnmtam-way-EHst-__Adulls.:-1J.!JlL .~ S 200 .. 8JG-0259 . __ Winter rental. Bal Pen(1~ NEW M-t 494-W r-'1--~1-~-~zONL'i-$425.--•Phone SeMce • lltd: PooI·frl'Plc l pa HO. Wi~er 9/Z (~Y;-Of"Har.mt'lNJ:MI.§Oil) --2l~/92H295-1 Bdrm. From $135. =cA!r640=lll6l"Allrfnr~I · _ Good for bQcat riifgr, or ¥tY! .7''="~==-----i
• PA.CITIC PROPERTIES e Children I: Pet Sect'->n to 6/15. $225. M5-0068. , . Call ~2846 l a RUna N~guel Lavuna Beach MACE 2 Bf,---,'""138, film COOi W. stde c.M. L@e i\-ar MARMADUKE. smart.-oom.
·• ,_~"'!!!!!!"~"!"'!or~~l!m.!!!1!!!632~1 2376 Newport Blvd., CM DELUXE 2 Bl', Super area, NEW ADULT UVING! ! . house. Penin. Quiel at. $125. fenced yard. Carpeted of-~~~ej ~~;wte, '· !: 54S-S75Sor~3967 pets ok. Yiiy $285. Call BACHELOR Units & 1 BR's YEARLY lease s;D>, 3 BR, Pref. degree, 833-3030 ; fices. will divide. Lease or
NEW 3 BR, 2 BA, outstand-(Ad Rood for SS on rent) Mike 548-3868 or !m-1070. "'/Lofts. Frplc's, beam SEA TrBe•CE 1-14 ha, ne"' lower duplex, 673--6841. sale. ED RIDDLE REALTY Mm. wl'llte P ood I e •
tng view of bay, ><IY. $600 $145•LGE. 1 BR. ccH., paUo & pool bll\"8. & IU\IV\ blk \o be h. 675-8839 att 4 ROOMMATE, Jeml, to •hr 3 646-S8ll MaeArtlwr & Br 1 s to l .
mo. 548-<'I6I or 546--2103. 2 BR, 2 BA, all blHM, near relrig ·~· Jl&O to $225. APARTMENTS BR 2 BA condo 1ll La 556--0421
C
~ ...
1
.... _ FULLY FURNISHED. NEAR bay & beach. Avait Sept 15. Util pd. 0 pets. 1 1 BR, l 'h BA condo, ocean • I guna ~~'-'--------1 .,. orona _. ,_, ~ .,..., ""7l "',......._y.1· -side, pool. crpts, d11>•. Hills $85 mo, plus util. NOW LEASING SeaJpolnt Siamese Cat
1 :;;;.;;.;;;;...:;.;..;...;=---I SJ.JOPPING. ADULTS. NO _,.,.,. vi.;rvo · 393 Hamilton C.M.. • 1 .. Mil'"'!... 586-8378 1rvi T
.,. 1; + Den i $125 lease, new & PETS. HEATED POOL. WINTER rental. 2BR apt, on &45-44:µ Ol' 642-85~ Cllfttln. , .. ~ billcony. S225 mo. 494-4062 Huntington Beach ~ace
So. of ffwy;-i700-trq.;t; ot ·CAl-L-BK-R-.-67S-5881 -tM-ooea6~ ;,:;P!'I patk>, $225 WANTTRANQUlllTY1 ,,,_ •• ~ .... ~. SPACIOUS studio, 1 blk to FEMALE ovcr 21 to share 3 NEW M-1
.. elegance, 673-4760 e:ves. or 1 BR crpt d11>s stove mo. ,......,.-:. i H , tl pt ~ o BR ~·' ~,. cp&n ~ on;•,'",, ~79alch. $173:1444478 :Yw:, ~ m:.·-S49.an'l.. --M(}-Sq;-Ft.-.l-HPP--11Yi~;tTJC= ';:i~~!.
see at 510\.ii Avocndo. ref.rig', baJ'cony. • S l 4. O '. 1 ROOM apt, $90 yearly·, util e:i.11ga1:. ~/:.:.:;,,~u •. •!au .. ' loeift. e •nh. ' ,,..... Hamilton & Newland 2TJ3 ' ~rn view 2 BR 2 BA · inclded on be h .,...,.-... ... octM CtfPtt, Newport Boler Garages for Rent 435 646-0697. or aD;OS1t ~831-=~~-~~~---1 '-"'""''·n • • 962-8936, 717 \V. 18th St., • ac • lh'y facilities. Adhs only. No bum ct lrWt. panel llvln& h FOUND: Turtle Rock, blacle ~ pdrlpavare Yarf~.:.n.v.amorage, cptll, Apt D, C.lt1. 673-1241 peu. $$ "'9· 646--0977 or rooms.Plthifbtlcony.GE STORAGE only, !btZ>' $2;;. MISSION VIEJO male dog Lab-shc'p type, ~ r • utils. S:... · 6'!4-$30 ATTRAC. FUrn. 2 Br. $180. DUPLEX, 3 BR I 2 ba, all 646-1809. . k~cho~Sllf --I BR. FURN. 1215. Central Co"• McM, Call lrleodly, young. 83:h'l2'11
Dine Po1nt Bltns, w/w pool.\Adult.s, no bltlns Blk lo beach. nice "THE VICJURIAN" cfishwnhlt, ltae. Blcfl,. pool, BACHELOR FURN. $195. 64l-5013 or 49-t-1763. 1600 & 240CI SQ. FT. FOUND sh<:M> type Collie inl
pe ts. 64Z-8520. yrd, year l'QUnd; 1-827-2382 2 br klrar . lldults. Crpts, Jaemf. tnald9 louna:e. 2 BR .. UNFURN. $235. STORAGE only, 15·x 3 5 · AVAILABLE NOW Back &.Y area.
:. 2 BR, 2 Ba. frplc., • f4!11Ced * STUNNING l BR garden BACHELOR, yearly 5150 drps, btlM. tncd yrd w/ ChOict l l2 btdrms. l, l\\ Ocean View. Yearly lease. Near Newport Fnvy Call ' ON SAN DIEGO FR\VY. 545-250'J
. yd., pr, no pets. Mulls. apt. pool, .rec. area, Sl85. 1818 W. Ocean Front, adults pa.fio. Wtt Pd. Call btv.'11 2bllhs.FR11$205to $325 Heated Pool. Adults Only. * 645-5714 *' 27992 Camino Capisln.no $215 • .ff9..056, n o w. l8rh St., Colla Ml!la, only 494-4029 1 &: 5' ~· ,. .. ,..,9J.0501. LAS BRISAS APTS. &n-1600 FOUND Brown & white Plli>'ll
•• Huntl.,.... -h SUS CASITAS • PENINSULA. i!PINT. 2 Br. I 667.Vkinrla Ct. 'm .... 1160 Dl=clllcutlv~~I 551c'A1rl'~"'6NB Office Rental 440 4001 BIRCH, NB ~ak-~. School, Hunt.
' NEW 2 BR dUplex sundeclc. Furn 1 bl' Ir Ncheion. 2110 ~&,i~ ~ 64.?--02IKI or r.ARGE 2 Br. 1 Ba Studio + ;'....,, tthcit:"eoat ttwy NEWPORT BEACH 2lXX>, 21JOO, 3000 sq. ft. or com. SMALL ORANGE c AT,
prvt vd b u'l J t ·I"• Nel\"""11' Blvd CM' Patib. N'ew ' ... CI'Jlts, drps, " ·
1
OCEAN vie 3 BR 45c ft. atl'J)Ort aree. Fun bo. ihereol. Avail. 10/1/73. BALBOA ISL.AND. 1 .. ~. • ,. '' ·~ ..,.. ., • OCEANFRONT paint, 2 chlklren & sml pet I•-• N1--.1• w, new • 2 9el'Vice Suites overk>oki.rll Mr. Baumgardner, 541·5032. 673-7133 I ·• crpts/dl'PIJ, etc. 1 child OK, a.EAN 2 BR APT, furn., Winter ot Yearly ok. 1\nmed. occupancy. $190. -...g••-ig-. ~·· uni. Balboa. $390. future "go1r course. Mullan
-... · $175. 817l11 MMt~1 OT'., adul". no pell inquire 179% Mod l BR, a.BA. 642-6793 1036 Mission, Mgr 979-8719 the choice community Winier, fun; .. oceanfronts, 2 Realty, 54().2960, 3 4 0 0 Rentals Wanted 460 FND: Huntina: dog V\c . • '. lt.B., CA r, ,.-., er;son, Rochester. . & 3 BR $250 mo ea Edward & Ellis, H.B. dayt, 847~~1 or ~ 28 .. HOUSE for 2. 'Steps to ~an )'lEW 2 Br apt. 'Cr'pts, drps, Agt. 5r;_1972 . .675-4073 ~1""~·"-'~· _NB_. -----DESPERATE I 842-2778
•• , eves. st:;.y, ~~~ c!i~~. g:::: $160 mo + util. 673-2671.' ~ bltns. carpcrt. $167.50. Nr. M ission Viejo ~ B bea DESK rpace available S50 'Student '25 yrs. old needs Lost 555
. * DELUXE 2 Bt. -.Den. 14 ...... _ f. 646-9'l43, ,64&-3882 _ (Winter Rent8'l Fry & shop'g. l child ok, no sundLl< ~o bl~r· 3 Br,h2 Ba. mo. WIU provide turnltutt bachelor or 1 BR 11.pt In i----------
Bai w/d, carpet., dmpeti, N.E .. AT .... baM
1
-FURNISJIED 2 BR apt pcts • .646-3786, 54S-C760. NEW lBR Townhouse, with -ec ' "ns, 11 a g' at $5 mo. Answering aervtce Costa Mesa, preftrably nr. ~,' fenced yard w/J)(ltlo, 2 car • .spaCiV\18 .. ,,e or, 1t.vallable Sep~mbcr 29th. ' NEW 2 lir, 2 ba, $215. inclds air cond. $250 mo. days garage. $300. 127 44th St., available. 17875 Beach Blvd. DCC. $100-$115. per mo + ~~~~~n:~e, cot.1~· •
... , C1t.f'PO?t w/stomge, M&-2G5l furn. util b>eld, ·nr OCC, $150 675-~ or 737~1018~ 1 gu & water. MB~ adults, M7·9300, nllcs 586-8529. N.B. 6T:Mml. Huntington Beach. 642-4321 utll. Please can 963-3705 or vie. Orange and Camella
,. • aft 5. • , per mo. 968-0707 ' Apt. Unfurn. 365' ~~1·.,A~l~IV\.~· ~th St. Newport Beech D:,Y~ bc~'ir Br Of 1-&· PRES'tllGE N.B. location -962-42G8. La., 01. Reward. 548-1'197
Newport Bffc" TRAILER for rent, Adlts on--vw-ttlW $330 yriy. 271 191h St. lnq: Business suite 310 S.F. $140 LAGUNA Beach -2 Br, 2 RE\YARD Boston Bull Tel'-• • ly, no pels or Children, Jlalboa Isl~ New 28R apt, "'util pd. WALK lo Wcstcllff -1 & 2 br, 211 191h St 675-0236 per mo. Yearly lcai;e. 811.. Oceanfront pref'd . Up rl coH t_; LARGE 2BR,: IBA duplex, ~2383 -cil'ildren "~Jcome. Crpt~. pool, adults. J'urn & unrurn. " . Nc'<''J)Ort Pince R 11 y : to S300 n10. Perm. Middle G~8e~J°& rorkto1~' p~~~ !•, trplc, new ~ A drpl. $250 * 2 Bft apt, no children, ·no UNF1JRN deluxe 2 BR ape, dtpa, patio,· 196o Wallace, Call Dorothy for appt to aee. SEPARATE GUEST HOUSE 675-3600 age couple. Send lnfo, Call 968-465S
Yearly, 615-J409 aft~. ',ptts. Sl&'i. ~. mi boat dock on Crand Canal, Apt 1, 6'5-1289 &1&-nn, 646-6075. include!J dishes. silver, etc. 1617 WESTCLIFF-NB Classified ad no. 935 c/o li~~~~~~~~:~li:M~'ap~t;e~S~l.~, C~-~M~-~~~-~;, no pets or mtnon, yrly $300 3 BR, 2 ha, like new. Shag P EN lN. Water Front, Spac, 3 SJ.40. mo. 645-3366 Daily Pilot, P.O. Box. 1560 4 MO. old blk puppy Germ " • ("l 1 BR -·J •M 1 .. _, per mo. ca.II fll-q.!07 1 .i-Br. 28' boat sHp avaJ L •tJ-.c; San Clemente 2300, 1200, 756 & ~ Sq. Ft. Coat& Mesa, Calif. 92626. S h e p I B ca g le. v I c ,
• ~-tofMlt ulil & ~ind uUI. No ch.U, 2 BDRMS.f frplc. Prlvale edits. no pets. $22$ mo. m w nter. $350 rr. lse. (n4) ONE . 1Jirl'7le fun..· util pd gardner, 541-5032. 842-7011 1 I lr•l • "-en, -•~· cp • -~· bllns. Matun: l ...., Ampl• packing. UUI. Baum· Golde""~'°' & Ed Io g c r.
r . _ no pets. 641)..11)9. , d~ All '~~ul~ioo l&th Place, 646--24.14 ~· MS-4395/6"2.J559. $165. ni; Unlurn 3 BR, 2 4 DELUXE offices 18c
0
YORKSHIRE Terrier Vic of 1
"1 ' ~ '·BACHELOR Apt. tuk:able' . $160. J a~ .. l~ Ba. Pt1,llo. 2 BR duplex. $3'.IO + utn. BA. $210. mo. Close to sho~ PLUS 400' Warehou!e space I -11...-1 Hell & Buscbard F.V. f1 e1
_.-.
360
~or 1 man. $100/mcinfh, 131 l'\8lbo1 '9n1Mula '~fer to.pie, im11U child Call 979--7659 alt 3 or Days ping, 8Chools & beach. 1370 D Logan Costa l\,feu. I '~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii;i:iiiii~ collu, &. w/beil. Jtet.\.·ani. ::~ Af'!'= Furn. S.nta: tsahel, Cofilta P.feq LtvE ~~ block fl"Om the ~o pets 726 Joan (213) 338-Mt.a. ..,,93-383.i 644-2228 &16-US2 ! I PlraiJC call 531-<llS9.
-,.·•, "'oner•\· 1 Oana Point ' ocean In -w 3 BR, 2 BA, 2 BR, 1 ba. ~rk. to ocean. Santa An • 340 SQ •}"!, of aJr/cond ortice Announce--ts 500 -S~M-~=d~a~rk~Call~-co~-ca-t-1•-,,-,, ,. "' -Eotlt..,_ ..._ 2 BR' Yearly; 1220 Mo. • ,,_,, """' • _ LtvE In the all Dana laundry; duplex, Oe11s;rntd .... ···• s \Ask For l\tlke space, a t t r a c t Iv c PftWW • 11tomach, ha.JI nea >-• Mo7fiAtrn Newh•rt Polnl Harbor n<wat b tor tamfly llvtng $375 to $400 Bltn!, Wtw, •ttfria, Jl8l io. JONESl,REA LTY 6~0 lMMACUt.ATE 2 Br, Sl45. decorating. Furn or unfum, John Aenn coll~. vtc Narcb$US. Cd~I. -• ~r. #~L .t e mo Call 979-3165 kd-Sl~ Adlthto -642-9620 . Air , fenced pool, l child ()k.,, .::"':=--::'e:::a:::se::.·.::•.::1""4;._:_:100=.----3752 He ndrix 67>-l&O!. •• · •u 1, -beoutllul MARIN~ INN ' w ,.. ' ~··· 1700 WESTCLIFF DR. N Sant A P h • ;.j;. Sen Ju aplt trano Motel. 34902 Dcl Obtspo 51, OCEANFRONT new 3 BR, 2 $215. -2 hr. l~ ba, 3 car ~ a . na. : N~WPORT Cenlet", Deaign Irv ine REWARD: Irish 11 e t t er .
•i... You are the wlnhtr of (49&-23$3). KI t c h tin , Et· BA, ttplc, crplJI, drPe.i p.r,1 ;C1:Jl1, drps, dshM hr, 2 BR, 1 .l 2 BA. B\tn. appli. Tl. Plaza, priv ofHt.>e &: tt«p-You are the wl~r of male, Laguna Beach, 1'"rl.
... TWO ""'' TICKITS fklo-A Apartmenll. YfOl'ly Jeuo. 675-1~. J!lfo;-.,_, Pool. 642-G774. lion nn, f\711/mo. 54;..1150 TWO FREE TICKETS nlf(hL 4!1!l-1'82. j
• '1:, #0 the llcaled pool, dtnct dial Corona .. IMr ~ROE 2 Br, bttm, dshwhr, OCEANFRONT • Sp1.ck>u1, I I' & t Baytront olr)ce 11>8-ce to to the LO~ male Englbh Puc. .~ Rl!tREATIQN J>bonttl, televblon, aauna , tdlllCi!, no pet&. $160. 707 unusually nice l Br apt. -II-share 8a>' Udo Bldg. $150 RECREATION C.M. Santn °""' Cl>. dos.
• ••• VI HICLli SHOW >-both, i au n dry lacllllltt, 111R.~ llt.frj.)'d, $230. per Shalimar. 64Ulll8 Yeu·Jy. l.100/mo. ~-mo. m-1220 VEHICLE SHOW tic. Call 567-11112. -1
1 •• SEPT l~'••RD meeUng room~#clote 10 San mo .• no ti~ or pets. 2 BR. Crpt1, drpg, bltnl!, SllARPI J Br, ocean 2 blks, OLX. 2 rm. orfJce. Be1t deal SEPT 19TH 23RO REWARD! Loll Ptk'eapoc
... : {.. ··At7 :.;':' &~&ente pf$.l~gu{: ~~ht 001~ Ma df 83.1-<.1821 belll'fl eetl, $140. L child ok. girls, shag, nu appll. no Rooms 400 bi O.C. Almort tu-ea. 2172 • ,\t fht?" drnr. maJe oc1 E. Bay Av..
ANAHl lM STADIUM •pol'lflsblng •hopplog A ''°'* I I APT * No peta. !J-46-'l186. ~. pet1. Yrly 11'15. 6~2124. DuPont No. I , 833-3223 ANAHEIM STADIUM &loo. Penln. 675-8438
200J State C<llJ"JCC Blvd "'1tau.ranll: $60 \\ttk.& VP .. l,11 uttl pald.J!t ~ LRC .. 1 BJt dupl~x. ~IUna. 3 Bii, 2 Ba nr new duplt-~ ! ROOM, prlv entr, $7Wl00. * Corona del 1'11ar, sm 1trnd 2000 State Coflege Bl\ld., LOST' Fllp!M':r Sallborl!t, lliM
-~~helm ·• Brl"-this Ad It rec.ivt SS f;Whlt.o El~t•" over-no Children ot l)C(~. nr bua 'l $275 \ .. riy,· Rt?f\'lg; -no pelt. · No long hairs, R e f 1 .• * f1oor. A/C, utll, 11-mple• Artabclrn 7 aqua lop, dm fl<fUl bottom,.
Pll'l•k' call ~8 ,tXt !U9 off on fin\ """tf"t's rent.. ninnlna: your houlK!l Tum lflpt?lf1R, $145. 642-4014. 320& Balboa Bl. 6'W~340 Laguna, 494-1921. '* prkg. $145 mo. 675-69CK> "* Ph~fll!e call &12-6678 ex:i l.19 Balboa. t1IMCI. ~2 '
, 1"1 to cit.Im your llckef1. I-lave aomethlng )'O\l .Want to thtm" lnto "Cash'' ••• ttll 2 SD. 1 Bth. Priv. gar. Adlt YEARLY .. 2 + dtn, 2 bA. l I BR. in n<'\\' home, cupot'I, Coll•! Hwy. k Nf!\Vf)Orto Blvd. to claim your tlck('IS. AU./Oniy 4 mo old caL
"'.:' (North County Toll trta telJT OUl\fted ads do tt them thru a Dally Pilot no. -~~ Nr trwy It 1111'· blks to ~nn. $.100. mo. Ir.dry flr, pool, ck>se lo 1160 Sq. ti., 30c Ser. ft. (North County Toll free wtwhitr fl«'a collar. ins 111'1
number 11 MG-1221>. ~1 ·. can ~OW~ elullfled adJ .. M4W, .841M387. 892--5842167!>-0098 fwy A shop.cl. 496-33E rves. Ret.Jonomtcs. Bkrs. ST»-6700 i ..::":::"""''"bt~•..:'':....:.-:::...:1=220:::'..;;· __ ,_K_lt~ly~ll•_•_·•_rd~~~-'--
• . • i
.
• •
• ' . -
' •
• •
.,
' -
•
'
'
-
I
i
•
r
1
i
.I
-.
.,
•
-
•
-
OAILY PILOr w .. ...u •. S.pttmbtr 19, 197J 1 ~:~~~=~iintt!'!r::~~~wri"r"""'~~1~· ~~~~~1~9~·~197~';;rr~~~~~~~~ , ...... ;;; ... ;;;-~[SJ;;1' --~I~, __ ;. ,~1 1= =lt .... =, ~,[iJJ=-11 : ,~.~,,,~.~,(11]=1• 11 ·-'.Ifft] I OI ) 11
I.flt sss c ,.,... s.rv;.. Pelntlnt" Holp -.M & F 711 Help w ..,ted, IMP 710 Hei,Wam.1,M& P710 Wented,M & I' 711 Holp -W.M&1'710 1 ~HoiiiiilpiiWii......_iiiiiiiiiMiiiii&~l'-I
Peperhontlns D !SH WASH ER-Kltchen 1--------I-~---'---....;
om£ROUSe Carpet Cloanl119 ----------------B,~~'; ~orw~: :~i~ ~n:.°';·.: I XICUTIVl5 HAI~,~~~ Floor Care .. Windows PnO». wall<uvert<>& llaie ACCOUNTING · ASSEMBLY llhllts. Ovtr ll only. Clean t.1< .. Vttde O>nv. Hoop.. $12,000 lo $75;CIOO 644-nal
•REWARD• Du~N':n~.:; c~~:s ~~Fi.!~'.""'i'1t:. FINANCIAL BECOME drlvinge~s=· Mon. U"'" SI .. C.M. 8:1' =.:i""#o~ '=~iii."::r 12 .... to·e
Fot return or any lnfom'a· * 646-1811 * No Wuttl".\(_ Exper. l.8 or over, Bi&: Can· oo~rc iwp Gtorse ~~VICES hour. Call 9'1'&-4755.
tlon leading to return ol a Cem4ht, Concrete * WALLPAPER * ANALYST ·1NVOLVED yon Country Club!< •t Bl& Allen Byland Ai'Jlcy, !OfrB INC. • HOMEMAKER. "'li2 time &Old four lcat clovl't' pin, \IJben you call "Mac" , ~ Or., NB. 0 phoOo E. lBt.h St .. S.A. !ICT-«195. 888 N 11.aJn. Santa Ana house keeplni + Siter
approx. 2 lnchc!l IQ diameter, CUSTOM Concrete \Vork. MS-144-4 eves. · wllb callii pleue. Apply Mr. Hot~ tn4> 5f7.e623. -llChool cant of 2 ~
'vhh jeweled horseshoe. ln il<:nlo¥.c uphalt drlve-...'Ys.. PAINTING It repalr. 35 yrs Will •s1l1t In prep. B"u'stt;: 9-:.aPeaM. oA. ~Mil Dr's Assistant FACTORY woR.KERS chlldrtn. App1'0x l._ M
C<nter; ai.o, gold locket neplace w/concretc 65c. It. workmanship auM. Take 11 & I 'I VARIAN DATA Y. ""·~• .. wN y~ 1'1iy 118-28) to awt to 12_25 hr. needed at...,., wk. M2-70!5 ,
("'as on chalnl, approx, the No del(cyf. Free eat. Waiki, advantage ol my exp. •r• on •M YI I -MACHINES ~· ~sta Mesa. Apply In health 100: Will traln, no Chance to learn the plaatic H 0 USE K El: p ER. tor size of & nickcl, lnscrlbed slabs, J)lltioa. No job too 536-7056, of budgets, for• W'tl. pm. exp. ~. Appb' 1n penon industry &: be a machine teacher, t ~hool qe child.
in 9Cr'!PI, FLA. These arc , ,csma'="l"l.='638-"'°'"'3325=. ~-~-cast, m•npower Jn Buyer-.Electr to._ any aft or eve. 2930 W. o-rator. Able to work ..... Uve ln, room, board • deeply treasured "family 1 ;p Tl,._,. PAINTING: lnl, ext. Res; I • • lou ELECTRO -Coa H N ~ -v • mementos le the loss ts Ir-A u,,, walks, drives. Saw, Comm. Clean & Rel. Ref'c. stat 1t1c1, .. va r s • · • E:xpeT1enced st wy., .B. ahltt open. monlhly wqe. Req\drei.
repla,..ble. PLEASE, break, remove A replace Lie. & Insured. Poul; 1213) financial report\. 'MECHANICAL WESTCLIFF IDIO JOB .AGENQY menta' Refettncs, mun concrete. 548-8668 kw nt. 392-2578 SUnset Bch. Math or Account.. · Penonnd· Agmey DRAFTING 'n'ainee for map 3JS 3rd St., Jlun~ Beach drive. Call 6 PM-I P.M'i ~EA;~'f;O:/ ?"'100~~ PATIOS. wallca, drivewfl)'a. INT. Painting & CarpM ing ma i'or with • ASSEMBLY 1£61 E. Edinger, S.A. drafting ti.rm/I •' M~'!.1 have 53&-!<139 ,.,IE-iiUi'1237ift.ilV<il-iiiiiiiO~il
Eves. & "-eekend1. =~1184Call J;_=· Cleaning. Free Est. M8--3574 minimum of 3 <~t~()euter) :=. i7. &Hord;..: Fiddlers Ill Restaurant ln Houtewlvet Stud1fttt
I.DST block cat. Vic ol "•M or • or 642--7059 ,_ • Due to rapid growth ""e ha.Vt'! It Auoclate• 54()....4481. Laguna Hllll Ma!l now Counter P4• wanted Mon-~ C t -~--...--c~'...--,-,--:--,-years exper .. nc n1any openln11 for ""-R WASH J""S ·• hirinit: """"',11-2,12-hr.'"-hlgh school. Flea collar, ap. on r-1'" P las.ter, Pateh, R.-lr I nt' "'""' VD EARLY OOKS '" ~ ......__, pears to be balding btw. ea. n •ccou 1"1· as,,emblen on 1st and 2nd ALL KINDS * FULL TIME ckl.lwry. ~:t ::'""3. WAITRESSES, C -, Farao ~ Co. A* tot
eye & ea. ear. Please call L.B.J . Assoc., room addition, shills. We are looking for 2950 Harl:ior. Costa Mesa Over 2L o.. .. 1_...,., ~ BUSBOYS, ~'"'""""='=·==~-~-
64-1--1776. Patio & remodeling, con-* PATCH PLASTERING * Apply In Person people with expemnce tn • ~ .,.,........ .-HOSTESSES ;":Hou~rn ~~-• c r e t • w or k . All ,_ ~-tl t lhe lolt-·"ng .,..,. Cab! CASHIER/STOCKMAN mo. Hunt. Bch a re a • ~ • u..,.,,. .. a.i MATURE cat, b I a c k 642-8638/847-5051. .,,. ..... s. ""'..,..,es ma cs ing, wi::' wrap, ~Ide~ $2.25 hr. to start. Pleasant J!!±_'J:WJ be:t 10 am. . & DISHWASHERS ter, ll~ln, 5 <IQt. Dad 4 I
w/while al throat, spayed Call 540-6825. 3333 Harbor Blvd. and assembly of PC Boards. 'WOrk & surroundinga. Muat t:AJiLy momlng d4i!ivery Full or 'p/thne. Apply in Boys -5 & S. San Juan
fem, nolch mi.!lsing nr. JACK Taulane, re Pair• Plumb109 Costa Mff•. C•Uf. be bondable & clean cut in open. Truck needed. Week penon. Next to ~8.I'IJ, in-Capo, aft. 6, 49&-UM.
"''hite flea collar, J-1.B. area. ~nlOd, add. Lie B-1 ~. DON1' WArT appearance.. \Vork 1n c1aya: lt-~nds. 557-2710 aide mall. JIOUSEKEEPER. 536-9780 My Way Co. 547-0036. 1---------Ganlen Grove area. Raise FOOD ,...n~ arteodant· •-·0..11 •. 1-T ..... D i COt.1PLETE HOl\1E FOR THESE . l)'day ·T--"'" ..., .....
3\> MO. •otdbtkkitlen, ""'"' te _r_._.,,_•Y._•_____ _REPAJR SERVICCE. Plumb-OUTSTANDING '"roio 'ioB AGENCY EARN MORE =• ~= 0:-pi~ ~ !, ~ w/tan mar nga Asphalt·Rcm---i & -pla-d ing. Electrical -arpentry. 3'" 3rd St H, .. ,,.;--o-Ah .~ "'earing red collar w/tlea ilth .,_ •• 65c'"n Appliances . Rctrlgeration . w ., .... ..,..._., DC-.: · • roon thru Fri. Pa J d HOUSEKEEPER . live-In. i
med. Vic: Harbor Green~ ~omconcret~m3 Air Conditioning. Used ap-BENEFn"S: 536-lCS WITH US · holidays. 639-4214 chi l dre n . Mutt~ ;;;~. P~:1:;11;,!!,";:,rn:·~ _E_1 ... _r_1._._, _____ , __ ~l_:·_~'"~P-~-·F~or~s._''-·=-=1~'-" • Competitive CENSUS · SECRET•n1ES '.i t G~~::,E: .. ~ :•:;i;,"~ ·
old, 20" lall, Name Co-ELECTRICIAN·Licen.se No. L.R. OTIS PLUMBING Equal 6ppor. Employer m/t 11!-I ri M HOUSEKEE~/SlTI'ERS
quelle, or Coca. Vic Crown 233108 s all . ·-Int & Remodels & Repairs. Waler ~ a es EHUMERATDRS .~uU or p/thneoln your Orqe-eo. I>Omertl~ Ac«
Valley Prkwy." Rew a rd. · m JO.,,,, ma · heaters, disposal•, furnaces, ACCOUNTING fntlrim own area. High lncome, 1046 N. Tustin, Ori. 997-0500
83HJ'fll7. G"'P""" 54&-0"13. d•hw"•"'· &12-6263 MIC • • Basic, Major GuaranlHd Coi1tom1rs HOUSEKEEPER / Com-
REWARD. i..o.t tong haired _er_d_en_Jnt..._____ BIA. Complete Plumbing ' CLERK Medical CITY OF Penonnel Service No Ce1h Down ton. mUlt -· no smolc·
all black fem cal, Vic: MOW & EDGE Service. Lie. 272694. Experienced cost & inventory • 1 QO'o 2nd IRVINE 17581 Irvine 81Ycl. Earn Now, Pay Later Ing, H.B.~.
Brookhunt & Hamilton HB, EXPERT & Tll\1'S PLUMBING derlc. Adding machine ti ,115 Tustin 534-7117 HYBRID microcir c ui t
21:;.rniµ;101 114-968-4812. SERVICE AND REPAlR touch -em,· "'"'-& apti-shift d"rffere-$2.10 Pe• Hour ••• ,.,. GARDENERS ~-~· 713-576-283'9 DEPENDABLE LO\VEST RATES 673-6.57B tude ;J~;,.,,,_ "'.!:::i......i. No •r-' --Maint. .,,~----II e,~:;:,:n~ ou., ,.e.
C II F P I ·~·"· ·~--ti"al Equal o po Em •-·er ~~ ca "-•· • · "~ LOST male fl.led. Bk>nde a or romp , PLUMBING ·REPAIR Sat. calls please. 35-60 Numl'l'ators are needed P r. p .... ,. 5'8--0«6 tor lntormatlon. &-this film . Hons offer
Cocker/I-er mix. loldl. FrH E1tlm•t1. No job too small GULTON • 12 days a IO t'OOduct a """''" """"'' -xlnt growth opportunities vtc F1nley, NB. An.! to 5:14-n11 * * 642-3128 * * helween 0ct, 3 ·& Oct. is. ELECTRONIC DEVEL GENERAL CLERK 100 "1arles A 1r 1 n e.
Feathers. m--1015 PROF~IONAL gardener, Sewing/Alter•tl~• INDUSTRIES year vacation ~~.~=Y~vail. Desi.!~.~~.'~!t~ build ~rd·.-~~~~u tralnans~~~! ~:'!eta.toA!~~"edlnAd ~ * LOST: Gray neutered cat. tree \\'Ork, pr u n t n g, ISM Whittiet' Ave., CM ( ..--...,.. -~~ .-~ .,... "'' ........ ., Vic Newland & Adams, sprinklers, cleanup jobs, 642-2400 p US solid state tect equip fOI" person w/good typing A 90t Dally Pilot, P .O. Box
HB. 1 notched ear, I ands ca Ping. George, EXPERIENCED Restyling An Equal Oppor. Employer • One week\ Apply voice warning aytcm1. Re-ability to grow in knowledge iiei, Cotta Me9., Ca. 9'J6'J6.
5.'.f6..fm8, 646-5893. It Alte;~i:nable. Aceounttng Oerk City of Irvine ~~ :1J~e4 >:c=~~ & l'@SJlOl1SibWty. Call 842-TI51 IMMEDIATE CASH
I.DST· CAT Wearing BELL '°'GAR=D"EN=ERo:--o71°"23'"ye-ars-.e-.. Alteratlono-442-5145 Lite Typing 642-9470 Christmas 420J. Campus Drlv<t desirable. !or •PP" COMMISSIONS
Blue flea collar, loving, perience seeks 4-5 additional Sant Lovegren shutdown 133-3840 M•ster Spec:l•lltlea UNIGARD INSURANCE Stt!: ~-famous Kn11JP
trµltillg, talkative, Gray &: 1r1aint. jobs. Ge 0 r g e Neat, accurate. 20 years exp. ADVERTISING Co. Needs ~part or M time. Very Black ~emate •~ -· H 1 0 CHEF _ $1000 _,. --. The 1640 Monrovia, Costa rttesa lo!..., ,__,_ • · · ~u amp on C U S T M Dressmaking: male or female sales people Pie••• Apply ..--""' • ....,, caati comm ...... pl.UI * 54• ~" * H Ind .,.. Blue Beet. Call bef. 10:30 An F.qusl Oppty Employer ..__ __ be~ y LOST Golden Retriever, hall .,...._. ave ow n ependent for Orange Co. w/xln't op-In Person 6£HERAL LABORERS uurou""'11, ~.... our own I tags, Vic: Logan Ave.~ C.M. MOW & EDGE wa?'drobe. Call 979-4172. por. for advancement. Ex· or Contact. J. Fuller a.m. 642-5511~ ELECTRONIC Test Tech. business. No tnvewtut:ent I Ans "Josh", Rewa r d, CLEAN UPS Television Rep•lr per. helpful. WUI train will· CHILD care, moving to N.B. growin~~': Co. ~~ Free aeillne and traimna:
COl.DR TV n-pa1r ~ -rsonol 'lnle-'ew w/-lc--e• to c--lor 18 a c g es res iv. 9U • wu ........,.. 2 u --pp ~ ~· SJ0..3119 • 554--0657 e ing person. Call 536-2100 for v D M Need reliable f em a I e rm/ bid d 1 new Ind' , Skill-' • Uniklll-...1 . kft. Ralph P, Kelley, Dept. LOST in Me!a Verde area EXPER. Japanese ,..A-"encr. .n.c , exl""~., r -••• · .... ........ ..... I t tronl t I In .......,,.. • nn• ~ ...... _ . .._.u bl 1n ho n10 old boy. Min. 32 hrs w e ec CS ra n &: Temporary Employment ton Ma. (OiOI
I ~ale~~'r! m ~ ~ r~a~~c:~~i-s1i:J~a. reCFrc<M ... '!"Bert.u~Gt1:.CJ&,~l.B •. N.B.~ ~. PM B A . trn I . ~~~ gv~i:n: ~i:f~ :.f1°:ry exrr·bc~~;~, OPfu:c; App\y 6:30 am . Mon-Fri. IN. SPEC. TOR'S
',, "Reube:n" 540-1666 l'!---r•I •--lcu . . a em ore, er Y ppmn en 1~·ment• lO'l E n-"e• MANPOWER INC VfiR' -· .. 968-2783. Civil Engineer $18K c/o Daily Pilot, P .0. Box .. ,, ... " • · ~ '• 1
LOST mal~ l•b puppy, 12 Methods & Procedures 2722 Michelson Dr. 1560, Costa Mesa, Callf.,"CM'"""979-5300'""'""". ,..,..,..,..;; 1 •
:' wks old vicinity Santa Ana AIL types home repairs. Tiie Analyst, S&.L exp S12K lrvlne. C•lffomiiil•;__1 ;;i•;i;26i;i;26~~il"!==:~~~1~-~~~ • ~~ .. be.!:""n ~.~_!9thSL, Actual time & material.I ---------DlgltalTottTedl _to.1866 133-2AOO, ..... . ENGINEER _c~"'•-".w_. --~-· 1st & 2nd shifts ..-_......,. -.,..ea • .....,........, Fast Setv. No ~job-too -Mn;. CERAMIC TILE NEW -• "Memory Test Tech .. to $866 CLERK JYPISJ .,..--_. n.... -"""" j 1.0ST~ Old black Labrador In F&B Home Re Pa Ir, !:e~~~. ~~: ~ Exec. Sec'y $800 Equal Opper. Employer · J A I 723 N. Anahrim Hllvd. Mn Data M;.t..,,.... a
I the Bluffs area. Reward. 642-1403. Programmer 1SiJO Anaheim 774-IOOO J"ader in the mi.nkDmputer
Pleaae call: 640-1933 PORTABLE Top Soil Tech "Med Secy to $700 BABYSI'ITER -;s days n1y SYSTEMS industry h a I immfdlalie \VELDING SERVICE ~-. 1700 ho IM FJ Edi • Order Control Dept. O"""''"-on ht .. 2nd lhlltl * QUALITY * ~retancs to me · nger GENE8 •L OFFICI ~·-~· ; ~..,....-~ {5J
!l'iiiiSiueiiMoi11ileiirialliiii
\VU! came to you evenings, * lflULCll & TOP SOIL * Knitting llofach Opr $606 Beach. Children 8 & 5., ""'\. for tndlviduals bavina: a
\\'eekcnds. No job too Sniall. "°"' ......,,, Payroll Clerks to $600 H s k pg. 'Ihmsportation. ~d. ~=!!f ine:C~ ENGINEER Small manufaclwing finn mlnimUJI\ of four )'pn ex-
548-8212; 646-1824 ~~~~~~~~~=~ A/P Bkpr, Constr $650 _,Ro~r:,c'·=842-~:,c266<=-,,•-----~, ·~.. needs neat, dependable pe~_ ,' ln a recetvtnc Ln· = order Pl~ A: lnw~ .. -. .. 1... t I ---·~ Y ·-HANDYMAN ... fti-t &: OOme Sales Sec'y to$650 BABYSITTER M ........ thru · ,..,~ rece........,....,. o per orm ~ m;u..-,.,,.. ou m .... ---•-. Sm~,.. •-a
1
PBX/R~lst to •=<""' ' o • .......,. Ing .... ..,,,Wiim!* contact re-general office duties. HeaV)' have a knowl~ o I --~· ~ llill <.~o..yuv•u ~ Fl'kla.Y. 2:45 to 6 PM. n. hr. qllired 'PJeasant ,__,,_ .. ,;,..., BSME I EE with ..a.-.................. lnvolcl -I specialty. 97'--4636, 546-9723. ' 9, J :J I Mkt Sec'y, no tih to $550+ Care 7 & 11 yr old. Call Type · ll5 w.p.~.cl~~ N.,. .... .T~ • -, fl&'· ~-... .!'..!... c ~c ,0•1
1
1• •
.
!
544 0.Anu
Co"""1 del Mor
• You-are the winner of
TWO FREE TICKETS
to the ·
RECREATION
VEHICLE SHOW
SEPT. 19TH-2:1RD
At Uw
ANAHEIM STADIUM
2000 State College Blvd.,
Anaheim
Please call 642--0C78 ext 339
lo claim yoor tickets.
(North County Toll free
number Is 544)..1220).
Beby1lttlnt
. f' Acclng Cll"rk to $550 Mrs. Hauser 969-3942 office; typewriter. S.S -,..rs exper-o '"'' call For. ~wu, m a
*qua11* RA!Nty \\~~t.~=:.• ';;;;;;;;;;;;::~~!Gen'! Ole, lite sh to $540 6t2-5290 aft 6. ,lenc:e •nd training oa~.....!Eor CA~-partaent.andU J!,ft= 9llOI> ~ Oerk Typist $474 'Call For Appt. ih gonmment or --~ 1 ' m ~v... tbele:
Frc< estlmotes. 96<-220&. Job Wented, Molo 700 PBX/Recept/File $4()1) BABYSl'ITER lor worldn• Industrial RoliUlonii lnduttry -pon PLASTICS quallftcatlons and .,. hi·
H•ulftw1 CALL TRISH HOPKINS mother. C.M. area. Woman 850 W. 18th St, O.t terested in jolnlrc a· arow· ··• Ethel Bu111ll JERRI WHITfEMORE w/car daily Mon-Fri, 3:30-tn4) ..,....,.... systems, let_ •Ir-~ Ing Oranre OMmb' com-
LOCAL moving & hauling by
student. Large truck. Reas .
Barry. 534--1846 or 673---0647.
SKIPLOADER & dump truck
"'ork. Concrete, asphalt,
sawing, breaklng. ~71l0
32 IT. FURNITURE Van tor
local furn hauls & gen'!
hauling. 548-1862, 557-2736.
HoUMCIHning
'°' m.rr DCDc."~11\.fCI 6:30 pm. Olher hrs if avail. craft •ncl I Or ta,.. "'!!!'!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!""'!l!!!!!!!!!!!!!I puter company tbat often:
l0043 Sl•ter 1r..v11~c r i..r..>Vl~1'CL Good P'Y· 12Jl) 437--0637. 'Tn-ONIC get 1y1tem1. Must · GENEIV\C omce -s Dl!Y ._._,., __
Fountain V•lley SERVICES"'Arc~lr\/ BABYSI'ITER needed !or 2 INDUSTRIES be eble to work In-week. No e~r nee. ••ply 0 ,.,.._.n You arc the winner of '""-'U""'-1 girls, 6& 9yrs. FromUpm ~..-"ti facllt&l-TWO FREE TICKETS 488 E. 17th St.(at lrvine)CM in Corona del Mar area. ct.pendently with In penon, Keenan Pipe & 111nwa
10 the Suite 224 642-1470 Good pay. 675-8076 L•run. S.•ch engineering • nd ~~r~Yl\:;o.a.1099 Baker' st., • Basic and
v~~~~tt~W~ """'"'" ""'. v-" B~~s~+u.:'.";. ~~~:I '!'!Equal~ ... °""'"'!!!!!! ..... "Em""ployer!!!"'""'I .i.'.h'b':."i!';~::! •• ~ GIRL PART TIME Major Me-.i
SEPT. 19TH .. 23RD Mmmous people wanted noon to 6; SaL all day. Own COOK tor Parkhurst Retire-ambly~ aM ,.,t of Ys':n~· sai~ioce•:'= + Life
At the to earn $100. to Sl<XXI. per trans nee. 545--1335. ment Residence, Fri, Sat, w.epona / te.r .. I mo -tlme out ol your &m & Mon ll-8· 30 '-"-lndust, Pari<, M!Pt have 0 b.. ... ,. a'-'aM ANAHEIM STADIUM horn. e ,,... .... ,,.._. BABYSITI'ER, my home, ' · ' -..,....... 1ystem1. .-....1 typing """-& phone 'f'•vwit. "'
' ~u.J. Thurs. &: Fri. 1·10 pm, Hun-9925 La Alameda, Fountain 5........., DON'T take chances with 2000 State College Blvd., ANIMAL CONTROL . Valley vuice, 12:30 to 5:00 Mon • Profit Sh_I ... ' t Anahel tinglon Beach. Coll 846-4879 ---="~· =~==--1 • __ , R-·-To hru ~ Call • -· Bl bal C "-·· your carpet, et pro-m ~ ~ .. _,,.., : t -"••· • .......... s O 12 .._ • .._,.care, m.v ~ home. fessionaJ1 who know what : Please call 642-5678 ext 3.19 OFFICER ~be-' ~noo-n.______ COOK, EXPER. Professional m-2333 , . -r• a yearj :r~ ~tt.!i!i::~. ~:!'. they are doing help )'OU. to claim your tickets. Days for animal shelter. BABYSITl'ER -from 8-G Mature, depm:lable, neat Employment . GIRL FRIDAY pal"' lrat:allfalll Coll 546-5745 (North County Toll frtt Good oppor, for mature pm, Mon.-Sat. 3 yr old girl. Apply Immediah!l;y! SUrf & •
... ~.54-0 ,_,,,_ege Prk I.Chi llOUSE OF CLEAN number is 54G-12'l0). man. Perm pos. l\fu.st have 549--0n7 days, ~ aft Sirk>in, 5930 W. Coast Hwy., 2333 H•rbor Blvd. Secretary _ typine, sbrthnd, e 6 ..._ a --~~ ......,,"" H 0 USEC LE AN ING, Job-Wanted.,..l=.emale-202.. good driving record & valid 6 pm. NB. Colta-M.M-,-C•lff -~pos!~tioq~:ireqwre,;;:"·'i:..,~--~'iottico°"'·..-t--....t-OI-~J·~-,t~-"1
BABYSl'ITING, my home. Japanese Lid y. ----n: -~~:~~1ri~~~ BABYSITI'ERln l .. -"-· -M
6
ature, ~1ive.,-COO~'°'K~,=u~ttme-.""'W~U~l~li'ain~. -_I-' sldllr,-xlnt iilUy---:-fririii a5ll ,.....
• Xlnt cond. Loving care, perienced. $20 a day, OCX: student needs part-time 1 0 ,. Bch , uav,., mos • ., u Convalescent Hospital. Call benefits le worki'* oondl· •• 10010 , 2nd
: Newport Beach, 64.>-0668. 64l-Sl.96 job to help meel ex-nse1. '""""6· • have ...... Locol reJer re-642-0098 ..:..._:........ tioas:. Send retUme i: salary /4
BABYSITIING -In my DEPENDABLE lady to do Avallabl• allemoons:--even· ANSWERING qulred:MHMO . c:,u"'°s='TOM=·=E~R"'""S~E~R~V~l~C"'EI I CikF~' m"""'. Write, Claallled Ad shift cftfferell.
house, day OI' night, loving house\\--ork. 4 hrs per day. inp or weekends for work SERVICE BABYSlTI'ER-housekeeper, Do you enjoy working wUh • -~· ·~ ~~~ .. Pilot;!.J·~ rial care, lrg. fncd yd, 642-6299 One d•v wk. Own --· In stores, shops, restaunurta Gra·--....1 ......_,_ -""""'r 11 · ~ ba. • 6 ..-, """""" 918, "--"· ,,_ ~ u~-... In Cnsta M ·Y"J'<'.1\1 ..... ~ ....... <, ... "'"' Ve In, ..... nn >#or ............ and •'O!Jld Wiii like -Y-•G M ho "'•2314 or Ol.Uces esa or t Will tr·'-d • ~~ ··-.,..., "~ . Y me. ~ South Coast Plaza areas. ma ure person. cw• a,ys. $12 day. CD M ' the opportunity to earn a
l Day or night. CM, nr. Baker EXPERIENCED qualified man or woman 644-4150 bltantial incom while
. & Fairview, !rJ9...1946. HOUSE WORK 545-4240. wfiling to gt_art immediately. "s""A-,R"°"M"A"t"Do-, -nl°"t-es-""'& ~ IO? U the ~awer i• F.qual Oppor. EmpJoyer m/f HELP.I
1 D •DY~·G BAL Isle resident seek pt.· Call Phyllis f14S.8000 tor •-if col -i.. ~\..•~-· my IN_11_1e, $4. hr. _ tl I enl V led A . • • "'eekend '.S,,__ Top . ·~ 1 il ry. Yi.'S "' you JI06llt'9ll a •
f °"'·Full ttme. Girl 1·1'/,. * &15-6997 * me empoym . " --.. ~·-n see. -156rN~rt-~-bod<groutX!Oillil-r or ....... E...-.. 'ECRET"~Rv ----~----CM b~, clerical, retai l , '"'""" .. ~,,... business s:A '-'• ~ "" . 543-7048. HOUSE OF CLEAN • v er t 1 s Ing• -ot1've API' Mgr. Couple over 40 for Blvd., CM 646-9935 exper,, plettse ca.ll ' Yoft Instant ...... 40 Units, Costa Mesa. Call Mr. Grenkow at 640-lOtl to Hunti...,.:,,.,,. Beach Un Ion CarJ!!!1fer e DOES EVERYTHING 9 writing. 28 yrs. Attractive, BARTErjDER, exp. Mature, • ..., ......
Homes, Ortices. 642-6824 reliable. Salary open. 642-.ll2L wishes steady emplyrn't. •'""""''""iiii'""an'"""""""'""iiiiew,... ;o;;;;;I High School District the
ALTERATIONS -REPAIRS ~-'' 1_, C'-1 67>-6385. ASSISTANT Mansger Home owner this orea, 12 DEBUHR ANISHER laatHtd """"ng .!...'1!.?0
1
1 Personnel Pil!o covers, decks, all ....utca n11 f9•n nt Trainees, Counter Girls, ~s w~t Cl ••-• •• N istrict 1n Orange vvu.•v• & types of carpentry. Draw· * WE DO EVERYTHING * NEED help at home? We Fry Cooks D N't J' • " e a.sawcu .nu o. Jooldrw for an "xecudve
---------~
You may be lht ,one we an
~ fof, :-
Pleue Apply In Ptt.on -·-or·contl:ct B~1tn:tka
VDM
in.,,.., available. phone·, Rees. Free est. 646-2839 have aides, nurse•' G --~· _ .. aylftss -l esF/. ~;. ~~~Y Pllot, CaP.O~ ~ Starting Wary ._.... ho u 1 ekprs, companJons. rav.::,.. ...... ..,, open. wuu, vn;ta Mesa, .,...,..,, ""-'-'-an plostl • Imo · ._____.....__ 2m Mlc:hehon Dr. ~:6,JRK. cabinets, 0~1~~~~tfs. ~i:_~n Upjohn, !::~ P=it~t 1c::; BARTENDER needed ~~Be ca~~ ~ io.~~ 'rvlne, C.lffomle
NEEDS
panel!-. gen re--•-, Duk• * 541 -* ~===-=-~~ "'1ool. App"·, Jack· In-The. !!~~·s C Newport~" Beall17ch. uQng hariil-tDots;-Good eye-terested applJCMts report •• ~ IJS.~, ext. U6 ' .... ~,, -.. ,,,... BACHELOR's -Career Gal! Y 6Jo>V W. st Hwy, _.. ~ required tor th lkinl test Sat Sept Typists
0a OurXa, 646-7598. 114Hl95 L•nd•••Pint • Your ...... ,..,_ Expertly Box, :sEE~:L~RcM. BENCH ASSruntERS STACO swiTCH. INC ""11. 'a1 • AM, ~ m: Equal OpJtor. ~
types ._'Ork. New, LANDSCAPING, s .. ..i .. i.ien, maintained. Refs. 51&-7197 tlllDL . 1139 &k!i', Q>«ta Mesa Edi90n HJgb School, 21400 • l(eyp•cll ~~·-~i!... a.lr1:.,~819:i v.·aterfalli & tisif0~8,1 DAYWORK, week or day. y.!!.~ elecu:omc, tirml ~s :rt9-300 ~~!L,_F.qu&I Op. ·-PIX Opn ·=1:'-,~~~f ~ ~",_...... Reas. rates, Ace Landaca.... General clesnlng. Reliable. IS,.,'" _ .. _ ... mopenmgbl-. Xlnorl ~::,.'""ny'. Small preciskm e I e ctr o ~ ~· Empklytt .,...., .... ,.,. '"'"'.,"""-· ....__ "~!'w;;;. __ .... ' • • MU WOODWORK. cab l net s, ,... 541 1933 or 568-7512 ..._... "' .. .,,.,..,.. -" "'""" i.uw ......,.. paneling, gen repairs. Duke &: Spl'inkler Co. Llc. No. -a . beneftts & gt'OYlth potential mechanical dev\cel. Exper. DENTAL RECEPT. EXPER. chef-nights. Apply Temporary Se1v1ce thelA. thl,'U a D&l1y PIJot ~7598• Jack 84EHM9;; 271546, 642-9780. PVT. duty nwne exp . ror right person, ..a. prerd. In small pQrtc as· Desirable c.oasbll l..ot'ation. aft. 3 pm. Cyrano Rest. a»-N~~-•-hl.lr., ~'! ~4l cl•-;'¥ adl •
l.IC;.--:--';,.-7"----Palntln11 • geriatric cases ln home or LARK ENGIN&EK'mG sem'bly, Trainees consid· ,..___. a.... .......... D Newport Center l>r, .... ....,., ~ .._..1 LJke lb tndef Our_ Tnder's •rpat SerYlce ··• bmpltal, days. 961>-1955 ered. ............. oppor. """ ··-r• 1111 nd Equal Oppor. Employer u...-.-i.... ...,,.,_
Peperhentlnt Help Wanted, M .. F 710 866 w. ~;,lir· Bch. STACO SWITCH, INC. ~. n~mtbilin,:l m1•· ~ 1 1 Newport sfu::S~i.ir~~
JOHN'S Carpet & Upholstery = 1.139 Boker, Co!J1a Mea -~ ·-·~-· · ~ '"I ·""':;;=~;::;;:;;;;;;~==== ~=~;;~'if,~;===:;#;;:=1 Dri Shampoo tree Scotch· PROF. painter, honest v.m'k, ASSEMBLY worlcers f or 540 .,...., elude: Supetvis1_ng ofc per--1 •
I -~ (Soll •--~ I ) relis. Int/ext, free est. .,.......... -t ~-tt!arl • .,~. n.~uuuan 5 . A Belter Temp. Position pla.stics firm to learn plastic Equal n........... Employer IKlfUle . llUll ty W/ com_. ,Dcan?asers & all color Refs. 548-27a9, 642-3913. finishing operatioru1. Good ...,.,.,..., puter biltlng & Ins. Appoln't· I 6rietitcners & 10 minute *PAINTING & STAINING URGENTLY opportunity for ad· i""' patienr.s & making b· ( bleach fOr white carpets. INT/EXT, TRIM, ACCOUS vancemenl. Apply 630 \V, BOAT CARPENTER ~-n c I a I ~U.
Save yaur money by saving FREE ES!'. Jim, 979-8186 17th St., Ott Do finishing work on 37• 6'5-ti656.
me extra trtps. Will clean NEEDED =::==-o-:-7"-,-,--,-dlning CUSTOM paperhanging 21 AVON MAKES Trawler type yachla. Must 0 "E' NT AL A! s I 1 tan t . ::::re~·...n!, rm.nnit.oo': i.k: ~.~~&;:~~ate Cl-IRJSTMAS THE SEASON have cxrence lo do high-Chain~Bat least~•
couch $10. OWr $5. 15 yn. ELECTRONIC TO BE JOU.Y mp qctunal t!_ v.oodv.'Orkin&". exper. . • area. exp. ·111 what counta, not INTER/Exter, accous. ceil· Earn extra money for gifts a c .,-av/lcr Corp. DELIVERY men .. f'1r' e«rly
method. I do work my1eU. lnp sprayed. Lie, iM, loc. u an A.VON Representative 547-6'908 AM delivery of LA TI.me• tO
Good rot 531--0101. ...r .. Free •st &t>-0809. ASSEMBLERS In ;uur ...,.. ttme. Call' ~~~~"""!!!!!!""'~I N..._ B<:h ho m", 540-7041. BOOKKEE~ ..:,Exp er. Pmnanent put Ume, SDI
BABYSI'ITER wanted for 3 needed In retail Min per mo + boaul. M...t be 18
girls agei ll, 10 A 7 from 2 Under 30. Refer. required. :U. ~~ridablt:--lftlurtd Trader's Paradise
lines
times
dollars
Interim to '' 30 pm Mon' thnl J'rt. 612-1!35 Own traM. Willing to pay BOOKKEEPER, -ttme, 0.1'-Grophlc1 P•nonnel Service good wary tor m•rure. al-exp In rctall •tore. malul'e Est.ab. Inter "'*" 11nn In
17 .. 1 I I Blvd ,115 fectlonate J)et'80n with aeru;c lady w/ref. 646-50l'?, Coast N'.B. area .eeb detlgner
;ie rv ne '' of humor. Plea.fie write Gtncral '1'1re, Cotta Mesa exper. In di mentlo·nal
Tutlln 138-~ •1Atlng qualifications & BOOKKEEPER araphtca rtnderln& A
Saddleback Plam. Bldg. l&1ary requiftme}tt1 to part tinll!I &46-t910 atthllectunl tnter. ,... •• Equal Oppor. Employer CluaWCd Ad No. 937, Dail)I 250 Fiachtt, CM.
-Pilot. p .o. l3olC l.560, Coittli BUFFUMS I
ACCOUNTING CLERK Mt,. 92628 Dlctap.. Tri""""'°"
\\.'\th bhllng exper. deliJ'ed, BABYS11TER -part tim~
M"'1 be an accurate typltt l1 yr. old boy, 9 yr. rtrl. Chino " Fine Glftt 60 w,p.m. cyptng • rood
and have Interest In varied Mon-Fri, 2:30-6PM, no FuU dme PQtllion now . 1pe!Ung rtq'd.•Exprei-i:ttf'd •
T
..._ ________________ _., 1 accountlna: t'Unctk>nl. Salary boutiework, CdM ate a. AvaUable In thiJI ch.allengl11J Uberal co, bencfttL (!all
commen..rrate w I exper. ~ aft. 6 &!pt. Mature ecper., penon ~m11~r. ap~ ., ~ MOBILE -lot In Palm f Greens, ~· °"pl Ind m111111p payoff
A.MPl{TCAT -.H terrain veh·
lcle w(dl1·trlr. Just comp.
luncd • 11Crvlced. A S550
value for a rooct bay bo..t.
M2-8CH6 after 7 PM .
Plca11e 11pply STANDARD I-.-..=---'-"----prefe~. -UN!GARD "'·m.~ •M CE
MEMORIES INC. fan At> "Make Room For D,addy" A t Pt t 01 -m.w~•
plied Maanoti<.'I Co.), 2'121 ••• clean out the garap N~~ f Fi::nisla~ "WMd It A Jteap" r ..,.,:f!'4. s1.1U0. to< _,.
... -840-l!lllO.
9>1.tth Anne St .. Santa Ana. .•. tarn that Junk Into cub Newport Beach From treuUl'll to trub
C&ljf, with a· Dally Pilot Clwlned Equal Oppor. Employer Tum them Into -AA Eqlllll ()ppo<-. Ernployor ad. Call ~ CAu. !lol!z Pilot
•
•
l
I
'
'
.;I
• --,
...
l'llOT-AIM~TlSO
l ... , 1
IWpW ....... ,M& F 710
lllSUWICE SALES
• No exp nee., earn while )'(>U
l jeam, ~rt time, evet a
I ~· full dti)e when quail-
' hnnen Insurance Group
Ed Lui • r.41).1134
. -------
1672 Roynold1 Ave
S.nto Ano
EqUll ()ppor. Emp .....
JUNIOR SALESMAN:
Eam -per -worl<-... &!tor ICbool and S.tur· days •lllns. new aubscri~
tb)s for tbe DAILY Pnm. nu. la not a paper route
and doet not include de--
llverlet or coUecttna:. Open.
hip In~ 14 .... Fountain
Valley and South HUJl\llll!!On ~AllPll' --by Callin•
Equal ()ppor. Employer
VDM
2722 Mlchel-Dr.
c 1;.1 ... , ·c.-.
" p).2400, .... ,.
, F.qual Oppor. Emplo)'er
\
•
We have Immediate openinp
for A &: B Machinista wtdl experience in.
ENGlllE LATHE
I
'
..
ILDJ I • oles • 1 ILDJ I
•
•
' ..
•
' I I -r. St~ 19, 197) § OAILV PILOT !I
SECRETARIES
VDM URG~NtLY .
'
•
NEEDED
50 TRAINEE
.ASSEMBWs
\
•
--
..
' I
,
DAILY PILOT
FREE PASSES
-.J
You Could Be One of Today's Winners
10 Pairs of $2 Tickets Given Daily
FOR THE BIG RECREATION VEHICLE SHOW
'
I[§] I -I~ .___[ _ ............ _. __JI[§]
' ' '
812 l ntlque1 800 Furniture
1 -~~~~~~~
810 Garage Si le
LOADED! TERRIFIC!
NEW LOAD !NI!
American & Ef'ltllstl oak
tables. chain, sideboards.
F'ren('h lovcscats, com-
modN, 1ablc9, chairs, cre-
denzM. Oriental art. Rare
R.osCY.·ood Burl piano, a l The
Sizar"' Antiques, 2500 New.
port Blvd., ~f.
BEAUTYREST spru~ and
ma llt'CS!<, fu ll size>. Chairs,
l a m p s , c h i na.w a re,
s itver ~·arc , kingsize
bcdspN'ad, B i c y c I e F.x·
ercisor, r.link slole jNatural
J)<IStell. !l.tany o I he r
householrl items. 302 Jl.iorn-
i n g Canyo n R d,
fShol'C'chfls l CdM. 9-6Pt.1
EARLY An1cr. Joveseat, S3.1.
Nau~h. ca!iy chair w/ot-
toman, $6.). Cust Span
breakfast set \\'I up h o l
IX'flChCS S300. &-H eli;an gas
!ilO\'C ST..,O. 963-2601.
Appliancet 802
FREIGHT Damage Sa.le,
washers. dryers, r cfrigs,
new \\'arranty. Re b I 1
}Ya sher s /dryers fron1
$39.95, Beach City Ap· n rvrERA sofa bed, llk grn,
pliancc, 3623 \V. · \Varner, Scotch-guard. Ma ple ~n~I
S.A. (1 Bick E. of Hllrborl bed.~ matt. End tbl. mar1h"
~MORE \\'811her, GE \Vrou;.:ht iron dlnetl set.
washer, Whirlpool e I e c ~64~Wl""":C"~~~~-~
dryer, all 1&.le models, xlnt DUNCAN Phyfe dining suite>,
1 • cond. $75. F'rC!t"! delivery, 4 chalrs. \Vestinghouse eye
'
guar. 546--8672 !W7-8115 level oven rangt>, t>leetric,
WESTINGHOUSE Jrosl-lree ot he r items. 5::,6-n 99. a>301
refrig., avocado green, only SW Birch, S.A. Hghts.
3 mos. old. Reas. 557-5930
ft. 6 Pl\1
'ASHERS. dry e r ,
shwftllhcr. Reblt, guar.
Ii~ 839-76al o.r
f:l&-5218. ft•nt W•lhers/Dryers
$2. Wk .. Full ma int . * 639-12.02 *
. WASHER * DRYER
Pm.able Dlshwa!ther
.$50 each * 646-5M8
.SMAU. good CIK?fit free'"lCr,
$50. ..,-=
•meras &
EqulpRJent 808
KI NG size Beau 1 y r e s t
Suprt>mt> mattrt-5$. 1 1non
old S250. nr,v. P.1ust sell.
l\fake offc>r. 552--0736
FRONT WHEEL DRIVE s -
ORDE R YOURS TODAY
VIBRATION FREE QUADRIZONTAL 4 CYL . .ENGINE
"The extras aren't added on, they're built right in"
•
'67 Toyota
Wagon. 4 speed transmission, radio, heater.
IVTW9221
5399
'69 Chev. Wagon
Kin91wood. VS , a utomatic, power $feering, ra.
dio, h••t•r. IZLHb70 1
5 799
•
'70 Plymouth Fury
4 door H.T. Air cond .. power steering,
brakes, radio. 1482AOL !
pqwer
5999
'66 Volvo Sedan
Autom•tic, radio, h1ater. IWCL754J
5599
'
9483 10Y,.20Y,
,,,, 11f ...,; ,_ 11T .... "T' ...
•
7289
.. -.. . . . . ~· .. . ' ~ ,_ '' •
•
Wiontid.1, StpJ<n!b<r 19, 1973. PU.OT-ADVE~TISE~.
Find Your Name
If your n1me Is listed In a special ad -it could appear unchr any .
cla11lflcatlon, 10 look at them 1111-phone 642-5678, Extension 314, bt-
twffn 9 a.m. and 1 p.m. to make 1rrangem1nt1 to pick up your 2
frt9 show tick1t1 11t any convenient DAILY PILOT office.
Be The Guest of the DAILY PILOT
.___ .. _ ... ·-· lf§l I -I[§]['--rm_tovou_l[I
•
820
3 Lines, 2 Tlm11, $2.00
FREE ta i:ood homt 1~ Lab,
~!, Germ. pup all Mots 8
nlO. need& lots of love.
968:76511.
LOVABLE l yr. old bJk/wht
female, "people" cat. Sholl
box lrnd., will spay '.
644--0139 * PUPPIES, Dane a Dober-
nian-Shepherd mix. 8 wks.
old. Ca.it 642-3627.
f'REE Puppies, 2 male 1
lenil, Black & wht. -PoOdtc
mix. 4 wks old.
~w;.ooa;.
3 KITTENS· J u.st left mother
Gllt. lo good hoole,
Call 673-6403.
SAJ\10 \'D. Female. 14 "'ks
old. Needs a good family.
$.j(). Call ~7".07
SABI:E-COUJE PtJl>S.
6 wkl old, U)-$40,
Call 545-6723
lRISH Setter , F, AKC 34
Champa J ',S )'n $50. to honw
w/yard ~18 aftrr 4 pm
TIME FOR
QUICK CASH
THROUGH A
DAILY PILOT
WANT AD
642-5678
SEP.T. 20
I ·. "' .
•EE THE FABULOUS
•
' " PRICES ARE ALWAYS LOWIR
AT
TERRY BOICK"
'
'' . WE STILL~ HAYE A. LARH SELECTION OP '.
' '
... BRAND'" :NEW '73 BUICKS~
• ' I'
Al HUGE DISCOUNTS
I '
5th & Walnut, Huntington 8Hc:h. 536-•s•a
.,
•'. ,, . .. . , . . ' •
Wtdntsday, Sl'ptrmbtr 19, 1~73 Wtdt1tsday, Stptrnlbtr l<J 1973 DAil Y PILOT 83 PILOT ·ADVERTISER . '
. 7 i' ~-~---~!EJ~l~[ -~-~E~;'~,..·~I~~ I ~~-I~ I Toaqo~ l!i11 T.._..lm l [i]1 ~1 T-~lloo;;:;][i]~rli ti, 1""~""" l[iJ 11 Autot"'S. l§J1 I •~,.,,.~
854 Bo.ts, General 900 Boats, Power 906 c.m, I Fl, S.t./Rent no Cycl•s~ BlkH Motor Home• I Auto S.rvtc•, Parts 949 V•nt 963 lutos, W.n,J
I~ • • PUPPY WORLD • 16' POWER botll w i I h 151,i' SPORn..INE, 1lJb ... r CAMPER. wa.ter. icto, Scooten 925 _S;.;•.;.l•;;:l.;.R;.;en.;..;.1 ____ 9_40 '6:? HMIRLER s I " ' I 0-11 I~ CHEVY Van rebuilt l'flt', WE IAIY
Chlhuahuu, Jlny Poodlea:, lt11.ller. needs inside paint 75 Johrwon. eovtt, COOY lop, ~ft:,~~. otyr'.B.· 548-:iW * BICYCLE Sfo'£ClALS * e 5AL1:5 e \\'agon for scrap, p&ris can Nt'W trans. "t~ti'<.I, u ·pr, BEISMTPOPRRTEICDEAStmlPASIDI
Anler:lcan Elklmo (Spitz), Sl20. 3'1. hp motor, $35. trlr, xlnt, many xtru, rec. • -'"'" New 10 IP front ..••.•• $59.9'a e SERYl"E e he salva.icl'<I. CH.JI bf'!orc S pnoelcd. ?.lake olft'r, J.!6
Pit BuJla, Bull Terrier. ~l.341. overhaul,~ 645-784G alt 5 C~ Blil.. Used 10 &p front ....... $2.i.OO ,... 11 n1 or· all 5 pn1, 49oh'l827. 33nt N.B. Dean Lewis Imports
'Chow, Cockapoo, K~hond Boats/Marin• Boats Rent/CMrt'r 908 Sc:oofet 1 925 Bike cleanlne .......... s~.50 • RENTALS • 1973 G?.IC Van, \'-S, :.tick, 1966 l;!!,"~.1. C.!\"1 .
and En&llJll Bull Doas. JOO E • ""'.. ' Beach Bicycle· soo E. &JboH long "'tux•! hu . .;e, rndio, Q'IV'"~
J.UXED PUPSJf Stud quip. ~ LUXURY 103' Sa.Wnu y-~1• "T.1 CB 350 Honda; iow'mllea. Blvd., Balboa. 6i:r7282 I [~.] 13,000 mi. $3,1%. 49N~?7 Service Most B~"' . ..,. .._..,, • ....1 t.....i.... ' --•1 A1.1tos !or Sll!e Open Evt'I: '5J1-:"5:lzr BONZER RADAR fully equ.lppcd, winter ratet.. runa ... "' "'t"""'" exl%l ent, JDEOR Track Bike, 21:\, '' Autos Wanted 968 l=;=""":-=".7""-,--',-,-~ $1,495. complete. MILLER 213; 4731465. l.mm&culate on1. $600. h1att frame, Campy equip., silks, EXPLORER O,
HUNTINGTON BE ACH OOBIE, 2 male, 1 red, 1 blk. MARINE SAL"ES G46-435( Boats, Sall 909 lll-3136 \\'OOI &weal suil, gloves,
Gr. P)'s:euee•, 2 lbow, 2 pet. 12 VOL (2) 1.973 SUZUKI 'J'S.125, ahoc1, all as nN'. $250. for
Love Priced. Murtll1cre11 T Bait & Bilge * * 14' 1'"' J B }!! R G LA s s under 600 mi. ea Xlnt cond. all. 642-.2909 eves,
Keanel1. 54&-0989 Pumpa* C=, !14·95 ea. aallboat. Good condition. $9'/S both, er $500 ca. 26" "ROUJo'AST" standard B~E1' J-loqnd pup p I e K, W/trallcr. $275. !33--8209 673-l'n7 bJue womans bicycle rarely
AKC Registered Champion SMALL 4 cyl Gray Marine evenings. 1971 HONDA 450 CL, $450. used ~cellent condition,
Itne, beautiful, ( 7 l •I) 00inboard engine. G.reat for RHODES 33-0usle n.dng with 2 helmets. Ca I I call after 6 pm, 64&-344-1.
551-0070 Y or aux satt. 548-356l. l'hampion "lfANAHULI." 6U-2S61 evenings Mobile Homes 935
SAVE A HOMELESS PET BUDA 4 C)il. dsl eng. $475 Top condition. $6500. Ph: •70 YAMAHA 360 Enduro
Black Lab, Dal mat i 11 n, G~fC 6-TI Blocks & parts 673-1232. Many extras. Xlnt cond. $550. !972 EXPI..ORER. Comple1r-
Spanie, Af~han, Pit Bull. bargains, f,48-2592 '73 }JOBIE CAT, 16'' w-new 646--0430 ly self-contained. To11 air
494-4853 -Small Boat Trailer lrallrr. $1685. Call 494-3307, '68 XLCH SUT;i or oUer. Xlnl ~itioning. Excellent co_n-
1 SilJ(Y Terriers.~ tc~ules. No $00. 5-18-0-laj l..agWl&. running cood. 541r-1312 days, dltiOn, under 10,000 ml. S111I
ttas. oHer re(used. ··Call CATAIJNA 22, Pop-top, out· 213-943-(1587 nites. under w11.rrant.y. $300, take
ll16Qlf\ff"H'1.' ~l.lld()J
HUNI" ior. ~;· .. ~~
GMC
Motorhomes
Z!' &. 26'
L\1:'ofED1ATE DELfVERY
Orange Co.'s
E.'<clusive Ocaler
Bill Barry Pontiac
Gti.IC ltEC. CEN1C:ft
2000 E. lst SI., Santa Ana
558-1000
General 950
WANTED USED
BRICKS -CALL
870-4564
Recreat19n•I
Vehicles 956
STE P Van, slo\e, ho! 1111!er,
n1nnoma1ic, hl'a!cr. 11{'\I
paint , l'OOf l"ll.l"k. JU)l bull•,
1nust sell: ;\Jal.:c u!fel'!
s.1;-,...1336 01' 557-W17 over payments. 963-5421. 832-94.2'1 or 644-6178. Boats, Power 9o6 brd, 1 yr old, extras, trlr. 1969 360 HUSKY ?.1X Runs . •Dale's hfotor Home Ren1als 962 Horlff 856 --''--"'-'-.:.;...--...c.::.: Excel cond. 837-2830. strong &. reliable. Only $4.50. Motor Home• '73 23-26' 1\1.H. & i\linis 1,T_r_u_ck_s ______ _
24' SEA Ray '71. Cuddy 5m SA ILBOAT. Xlnt cond. 496-1422. Sale/Rent 940 f'n>.c miles 9 til 9, 838-0900 '66 CHEVY -% T pickup, 327
cabin. I/O, 235hp, O~lC, Built In 1971. Brand new CHOPPER, '53, Harley 74 T 'lers Tri el 945 slick, good cond. $90J flrn1.
TOP
DOLLAR
PAID
IMMEDIATELY
FOR ALL
FOREIGN
CARS
WE ARE IN
DESPERATE NEED
OF GOOD, CLEAN
FOREIGN CARS
TOP DOLLAR-PAID
FOR OR NOT I
Call or con1e in 10 sec us.
1~1PORTS \VAl\'l'ED
Ornnge Coun1 y's
TOP $ Bll\'1-:R
BIU... Pi.1AXF.Y TOYOTA
18S8l Beach Blv.;,
H. Beach Ph. 8'7-855:1
TOP CASH
ror ('}1!'11.n lat e model C'an
and O'Ut.irs !
Howard Chevrolet
llfacAnhur and Jarnb.Jrtle
Ne\\.'port Beach
SlJ.ffi.')j
! Autos, Imported 970
Walter Johnson
8081 Yorktown
Huntington Beach
\"ou are the \\.'inner or BEAUTIFUL Dapple Gray, 7
yr old mare. Rejtil. 1,1 Arab,
¥.. Morgan. $575. Incl tac.
SJ&."'19 .
Cov-ers, trailer, CG equip-sallii. 2 rudders. 673-0139. reblt. needs little v."Ork, '73 CLEARANCE rai ' v 6-12-6634
ped. VHF radio. $6600. Days SOUNG $700. 979--0449 aJt 5 pm. PACE ARROW TR A IL ER -Cl ea n 22' ·-="""'-'-=-=-'-~~ to the 586-1610, eves & "'kcnds 2500 11 ''i'O, l ton Chevy Tt·ufk. 01b a41.3574. all sails &: trailer. $ . '72 HONDA CB 450, less than or Kenski , ashwood int. S.C. & chassis, duals, !l/b, p/s. RECREATION
TWO FREE TICKETS
OLDER Gentle G e I cl In g
1'1' c r g an /ClydC11dalc in-
temited in good home in 1·ounlry call 846-3569.
Call 544-TITh 900J ml. New engine. ~lust TIQGA ~~·ass in Newport Pk. $1550. 176 E. 17th St .. C.l\!. VEHICLE SHOW
l4' Hobie Cat $515 sell! $775, 8!»--0817. ll\li\1F:DIATF. DELIVF.RY LF:ASE A NE\V TRUCI'\ SEPT. 19TH-23R0
847·Ul22 or f2131 592·5133 250 OSSA STILLETO, in CREVIER BMW 1 'II 947 1\ll 1nokl•s. typrs -sizC"s Al 1he
•-i Se · • -· Trai ars, Utt ty 31~ 11' c t 11 N R NAHEIM STADIUM
BACK Bay horses. stabled,
boerded. Ex,rclse aren.
_ nsut S.\V. Birch, S.A. Hg\!.
55&-n99
26' CliRIS..CRAFI' in n1int
condition. Full canvas top,
co1nplcte galley, heRd. Mul'!t
~re to appreciate. $4995
firm. \Viii arrange ensy
financing, Private party.
673-2313 or 871-4224.
* 35' C?WENS Sedan, Un-
mac., hve aboard. Galley,
88.lon, head w/shower. Sips
6 .. Lots ol ma ho gany
84&-8113
26' NAVY WHALER perfect condition. $385. Ph.: .,., es· lVlt'C • i..cas•ni:: Purch/01>tio11 H45-'i'030. 111 • oas 11•y., 1 • . A
Llve aboard 542-8012 54&-1328. 208 \V. 1st Si., Santa Ana 1-IEAVY du1y 2 wh<!CI utility •59 DODGE 1,!l Ton wilh 642-9405 2000 Slu1e College Blvd.,
-'70 PENTON MX 835-3171 trailer,-$65. &hell, V-8, 4 spd, $350. \VE PAY TOP DOLLA!l . ;\nnhclm Boats. Sllps/lJockl 910 MA.NY EXTRAS $425. HOU SE on "'heels, converted 548--04£6 548-0·105 FOR TOP 1j 5£fl Ci\rts Please t•nll 6'12-56~ ext 339
or Best Offer! ~5 '56 Chevy School Bus, rug· Auto Service, Pirts 949 Vans 963 II your car is ex lra"" clean, to clain1 your tickets.
Boats, G.neral 900
-FrA1"k Wright
1700 Peterson Pl Apt 53D
Costa Mesa ·
\'ou ere th" winner of
TWO FREE TICKETS
to the REC~EATION .
VEHICLE SHOW
SEPT. 19TH-23RD
At the
ANAHEIM STADIUM
ax>Cl State Coll~gc Blvd., Anaheim Please call 6'12-5678 ext 339
lo claim your tlckels.
/North County Toll fre<" number ls a.ID-1220).
14' BOAT • Fish & Ski, nav.
litrs, 30 hp. Johnson, remote
conlrol, elcc starter. Incl.
lrlr & aceess, $390, 220 Vic--
toria, C.l\1'.
'73 SEA Camper OMC motor,
out drive, save
$20CXl-Phone 968-2673 Flying
Bridge
21' CHRJS Craft Bay Boat
E.'Cccllent condition * &U-7459 *
25' F'IBERGLASS Lyman '73.
F\\'C, V-8, loaded. SU.500.
Cost -l\1ake oiler. 646-6344.
so· ~lAHOGANY displace;
n1rnt hull , S4,950.
646->.;&<I
"l\fake Roon1 For D11ddy"
• • • clean out the garage
1, •• turn that junk lrito cash
with a Daily Pilot Classified
ad. Ca.U 642-5678.
WANTED: Slip or Side Tie BOY'S IO speed bike$50. Ex-ged, beaut equipped, sips 6, I---------sec us first. (North County Toll !rec ~%f~d'.16~~t. Peninsula cellent condition. Ca 11 $lll00. 642--0034 a.ft 6· 1961 FALCON transmission, '68 Chevy Van 108, n1ags, BAUER Bt::CJ\ nunibcr Is :,.~1220 1.
979-8340 after 4 pm. Like to Trade? Our Trader's 3 speed slick $25. 1962 custom paint & inlerior. 2925 Harbor Blvd. A ~ood 1\•ant ad Is a good i:1-
Bo1ts, Speed & Ski 911 SUZUKI 80 CC, 4 sPcJ, street Paradise column 11 for YoU! Falcon radio $7. 968-4971 $1750 * 84&-90'17 Costa l\Il'sa 979 2500 vestment.
14 IT Boat w-traller. 2S HP legal, dirt sprocket, runs Motor. Home5 / Motor HomesM c~.-.. -,~H~.-m-.-,----Motor Homes Mot or Ho1net
outboard, new paint S285. good! 546-5057 Sale/Rent 940 Sale/Rent 940 Sale/Rent 940 Sale/Rent 94(1 Sale/R11nt
Call 586-16.12 2SOCC Y AMARA End. Rebll 1;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;..;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;:;;;;:;;;;:;;;;:;;;;:;;;;:;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;1
NE\V 13, English Dory, 40 hp Will trade_ fot 175 Honda
Evinrude, new lrlr, $1300. call aft 7, 551~
SU-6002; 642=3324 eVei. ~ ~--yAMAHA-·n
125 Enduro, $325.
Call 968--8179 11•1 '70 m:~i'lwePPER
--.~.=n~Y~AM1~~1r,=,-.,.--
New eng, xlnt conditiOn. Call
644-5740
h!OVJNG, n\USt sell '70 .;,;;,'-"·10~11"'o"'ND=A"'.C!A50""':o::-. -
Wet>.k-Ender ll~i' fully Xlnt cone!'. $550.
self-f.-ontained camper, inc * 962-3827 *
jacks, die downs etc. Im-===""c-="""=-::-::-:-mac. $1700. 549-1547 '72 YAMAHA 360 MX. never
14 IT. Field & Stream 1$9 raced, ~~~ oUr.
camp trailer, good condilion 1 -~=~=~~=~
$375. 9022 Gettysburg Hunt. YAMAHA 125 ATl
Bch .. OOS-9739 s:m. 673-4537
DICK WILSON'S SEA &. SUN R.V.
OD
' SERI.AL 32.505 IMM EDIATE DELIVERY
Autos, lmport9d 970 Autos, lmpot'led 970 Autos, lmponld 970 •-s. lmponecl 970 BRAND NEW 1973
ESCAPADE 20' $ 00
comers.
4. Try the bralces.
5. Drive it on a
windy day.
6. Notice-if it's fun
to drive.
lntrodVc:ipg the New
. -·. Honda Cavic:'
BIG SEL~CTIO"-IMMEDIATE DlllVERY!
•
•
COMPLETELY SELF CONTAINED
MOTOR
HOME
SEllt.AL. IWAll).t.SO
BRAND NEW 1973
EL DORADO 18'
COMPLETEL.Y SELF CONTAJNED
MOTOR
HOME
SERIAL. 3251'1
BRAND NEW 1974
PERRiS VALLEY 19'
MOTOR
HOME
SERIAL IPl5BUOl25J
BRAND NEW 1974 8'
CABOYER CAMPER
BRAND NEW 1974
. .
CAMPER SHELL
8 FOOT ·$49 CABOVER
IMMEDIATE DELIVERY
•
$
$
' IMMEDIATE DEllYIRY ..
00
' IMMEDIATE DILIVIRY
IMMEDIATE DELIVERY
S--
IMMEDIATE DELIVERY
BE SURE TO VISIT OUR
R. V. ACCESSORY DEPT.
-THIS WEEK'S SPECIALS -
14'' Roof Vent $11.95
Fire Ext, Mod. ltOB $5.95
'
. '
Pom Tissue .2'
Cannisters (4) $2.95
• J
"
I
•
' -
\
•
. •
I ~
I
' . ' ..
DAllY PllOT ~. S.pt ....... 19, 1913 _..,_ ......., .. I~ § !: •• t....... l§J I ~ .. t ....
;;mmmmiiiii~ii-~0 ~utos, Imported 970 Autot, Imported ., Imported
ALFA ROMEO
rn Autos, lmporlod 970
_IMW BMW
ALP''A ROMEO CREVIER BMW SAAB Bob Mci,aron, BMW ~,1., e Serv!cr e Leasing Buy~ or Lease Jnc. 20§ \V. Ist., S.A. 853-lln
~... 850 North ach Blvd., Rentals La bra '73 BAVARIA (DEMO)
BMW
ORANGE COUNTY'S
OLDEST
& es. Service. Le"''"". &des • ~ce • Lea•ing USED BMW'S .
el lnJectlon, S SJ>d. All mo 5624 '71 BAVARIA
riginal, like new C690Af1\) '!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! •n Tll Excellent selection of pre. ,72 200Z price n.>-eva\uation models. DEMO $ALE
'69 200? $ALES-SERVICE-LEASING
'68 200Z 0V·E~ DELIVERY
' '73 BMW Bovarlo $8100
714: rJS.7326 Corona
ROY CARVER, Inc.
2'J4 E. 17lh St.
Costa Mesa 546-4#1
980
. ' • • • •
Wolnndll', Sf~ 19, 197l PILDT·~
~ ~ ............ ~;;;~I§]~ ~----... _::.§J~1 ~1--...... iiii~.-.1 -l .-.. ..
Autos, lmporled 970 Autos, lmponed 970 .,utos, trnponeo 970 A-. Imported
=:.;.:..:.::=:.:;:..._.:.:.; DATSUN RAT SAAi Sport roupe dl'<.'Or, body sldo DATSUN __ .:::::.:.:.::..:.. __ , ___ :..;;.;.;_ ___ 1--------1
mouldlng•, reclining front WE'RE HERE '71 FIAT· 124 SPIDER !Mi'
NOW OWN TljE
FABUCOUS 1973
CAPRI
uat" contour"'" seats, 4 1973 DATSUNS ..... 1 convert., r.ct w/blJs Interior, s~-transmission, power ~tu"'R'l'l!~UR ~JaAMBOREE . 5 spd, Excellent ~· (839· front d~c brakes, style steel ALL MODELS ,. ~ ~ ·DF'l ,vheels, bucket seats, radial BJG SAVl.NGS ON i~ • ~er
p1y """· 2000<" eng. IN STOCK' ·13 Demos $2249
tGAECNB42801). BARWICK IMPORTS 5lO's CLEAJW!CE SALE T
OVERSTOCKED I Pi<kups '13 SAABS STARTING A ll375 Camino Capistrano 610' $2995 IMMEDIATE Ji s . San U$ Capistrano up 'tO )t miles per pUon
DELIVERY 493-33~ or 831-1375 ~'JPfJf(T * ,69 FIAT * Dick ttllllor Moton GUSTAFSON '73 DATSU>l p/.,, .met! camp. . Runs Xlnt. MUil Sell. m w. Warner, 5.A. , er, a,n/'fm, mags, m8JlY ex-$850 * ~1555 567-213'J
Lincoln-Mercury iras. c.u alter 4 p.m. Pr!. DATSUN JAGUAR TOYOTA ~ny, 847-00Tl. I • 888 Dove --.
16800 Beach s t W&rner. It's a breeJ:e .• , .sell your Newport Bch
"-Huntington Beech itenis witti ease, use aily 833-13QO Open Sunday '69 _fCKE (Dupe, $30,000 mJw'' $2021.95 842-8144 * (213) 592-5544 Pilot Classified. W-, • >.1nt cond., maroon. r. ''H.ome of the Viking'' · 980 w~. $3400, Ask 1or Alt, 642--0037.
MAZDA * Mud• '73 Rot•ry * $66 MONTH
36 MONTHS OPEN LEASE
WLU accept trade-Int
CALL MR. FRY 842-66611
Hu~t. Beach
. MAZDA
pl.us tax le Uc.
is the
Delivered Price
for a
'73 TOYOTA
COROLLA
at
~tultmia
•·TOYOTA '
11331--BeMlh ~-----.c14!:!!! i9t!6 i!arl.or,lc":'M. 616'.9303
BOB LONGPRE ·Order Your Color Today! .. MAZDA · -:1t)ll"OY!1J'A'a>rona. 41dr .. . . . , auto. A cream puff!
-SERVICE FIRST-
EXCLUSIVE ·MAZDAWSE .
Demonstralor Sale
NOON In Progress
1st St. at the S.A. Frwy.
2000 E. 1st St., S;'A 558-78T1
$150049W>92<
-lllUMPH
·n · TR-6-Haa been pain~
by owner. Evenlnp call
491-1912.
VOLKSWAGEN
'73 MAZDA RX-2, Auto, alr, '70 I VW 9 pautl bwoAMJ, FM-Angel Blue ............ mi· ir'Ju.n pa nt, new rea, , ' uvv ' .......,.,, Xlnt mechanical co n d . :'Elcii>ITTENz """-=--="'°"IMJ"". ,.-~-=-1 vw Duoe buggy. 1'>ne body,
5.0 USED top, moo•. Indy$, s.e to ltP' prec. Must .ell. Sac. b'
$95tl. -• MERCEDES ON DISP~Y ·~.i':,'[ ~· .::', ~i :=
S $1300 or bHt oft, 1'15-6381 .
harp New Car "12 vw BUS Like ..... U.000
C I Tr1ade-ins ml. SUnroot, radials, -.
om ng n Evory Doy * Call: 837-9622 *
Alie About Our Unique '64 vw Sedan
Usod Morcodoa LNso Good Condlllon
Pl•n• 511;-11156
House of lm-rts '66 vw SQUAREBACK. relllt _ M --'T".... -eQC, -dean -anchester, Buena Park 673-7908 att 6
i>D the Santa Ana Frw'y "·6S"°"VW"'°'Bugc-,~,'cutoc-,-new--p1-;l"'a~
52l-72SO new battery, good tires,. JIM SLEMONS good c:ond. 18311. 615-1332.
IMPORTS · '61 vw bwo oee<1s work Inside
MERCEDES BENZ ~':,'!\: ~~· c:arb anc1
. AUTHORIZED 19'11 VW Super."' Beetle,
SALES & SERVICE fa.c/air, am/rm radio,· best Jim Slemins otter o= 11650. 551-3EI
. "91poil1 Ji1n~n~UJ_.f':: w
(We're .,.. W.., tor ..,. '70-VW CAMPER '
used Mercedes Dem.) , .. • '""" l30l Quail Good cond. moo .......
Newport Beach '6'9 BUS _ Abeol~tely perfect
833-9300 in all respects. Must tee!
ENTER FROM MacARTHUR. $2300/oUer. 645-3498.
ROADSTER '70 VAN, low rnlleaae
MERCEDE S New tires, '2))'.I.
ROADSTER ~7-5039 after 6 pm
280brakS.L. Ptoower st~~~· •64 vw, runs &004. $300, ea, au trans. ~· Please call Tom 646-63)1 or
See at 17th A Tustin ~t.. 642-1464
C.M. 645-5940 or ~r:m. -"''-"'~===--!
Owner, D. Shaw. VOLV9
1972 350 SL Coupe Road'1.er •
SIJcnal Red, lmmac, 12,700 WHILE THEY mf Dunlap Radial•, 2 to.,, ·
stereo, p/wind, $1 O • 9 O 0. • I.AST!
6.,,_7481 '73 VOLVOS
'72 M.B. 280 SE, 4.5, Sedan, e !&l's
-~tooo l!l;l!_~--1LM:Jcbel1n e.JJ5~s-liri!a, $8650. 675-5620;-rve e 144'•
673--0728. • 142'•
See The 197 4 Chevrolets Now
At Connell Chevrolet-?-
MGI
19G4 MGB Rdstr, '69 eng, ovr
dr. · Wire whla, rad, R&:H,
xlnt eond. fm..9525.
• 1800'•
Now Is Tho Time Te
SAYE!
Something Else That's New For You •
LEASE THE ': '"'"C.onnellease!!!! WAY
~'-
• •
.
t; "-
' t ! -Get the facts today about Leasing any make or model 1974 Automobile
· Ask for Jerry Perkins. Our Leasing Manager
'
'
' . -PILOT-AOVERTISER · Wtdl!Hday, Srpttmbff 19, 1973
•
,,
' !9Z'IJ
,,
' DICK JOHNSON
t;LOSE-o~uT
I •ALL 1973's •
FANTASTIC
DISCOUNTS
' •
SAVE HUNDREDS
TREMENDOUS
SELECTION;-
. ,
. .
OF DO~LABS ...
EVERY CAR IN--STOCK
NEW & DDIONSTRATORS
. '
TAKE YOUR CHOICE FROM . ~ -. . . . ,_•
. .
40 Lincoln Continentals & Marks
75Mercurys, Montegos & Capr·~
,
•
,_ . . . . .
SPECTACULAR USED CAR SPECIALS ..__
'71 MARK Ill -• Fult power, •uto. temp. air COlllll~, 6 Wll,Y
· ~al, leather Interior, landau , stereo
• Sold & Serviced by Johnson & Son.
( )
$4975
'
'71 CADILLAC
• BEAUTIFUL .
·SEDAN de Ville, Luxury equl.fped thruout, full
tower if.UIQ. temp., air con ., 6 way power
seat. AM-FM stereo radio, lilt & tele steering
wheel, landau roof. (610CXV)
$4375
T
l!ome Of The New CH , , ,
"Golde1' l'o•dl"
·-
'71 M:ONTEGO MX 2 DR •
' ·Sold by.Johnson, servle<!d by Johnson, air co~d ..
auto. trans., power steering & brakes. (2lllDFC)
, $2175
.
'73 MONTE CARLO
EXQ~ISITE-14,000 MILES -
V8, air cond., pwr. steer. & brataa, slareo ra·
dio, heater, landau top. (868GNJ)
$3975
-
'69 MARQUIS _C<;)UPE
Auto. Trans., power steedtig and brat:or,w·
e~ windo~s, air conditioDlng, landau , ra ..
dio, heater. (XK\'707) .
$1975
•
' . . '6~ :PONTIAC .
BONNEVILLE 2 DOOR HARDTOP
Automatic transmission, factory air, radio,
healar, pow~r steering & brakes, vinyl roof.
(417AGH)
$1475
-
'70 CONTINENTAL
4 DOOR SEDAN -
Full power, factory air, landau roof, leather
lnterli>r. Always serviced at Johmon & Son.
(288ASH)
$3275 •
. •
';::========·=====·:
'70 MAVERICK
EXCEPTIONAL
. •
,. .·
' Automatic, ra~1-heater, power steering. air
conditioning, 34,uuu miles. (626EYZ) ,;<
Sale Priced
Rome Of The 1ifw Car , , •
"Goldea l'e11c:W',
990 Autos, UMd 990 Autos, U.... 9oO Autos, UMd 990 Autos. U.... i~~iiiiiiu....iiiiiiiiii_ -~;990;:j,A~u;t;os;,;j;0~-~-;;:;~990~ IA ~· ..... -.~u~---.:~990~ I ;A;u;to;s,;U;Mdiiiimm:;990; Autos,.UMd
'. CADIUAC CH~VROUT CHEVROLET CONTINENTAL CONTINENTAL FORD MERCURY OLDSMOBILE PONTIAC t
.' "" ...... .-n El .ii--:--. Prlva .. '69 OfEVROLET Impala 1964 CHEVY Station Wa....., . ,73 'TI CONTINENTAL , dr k 'S8 RANOIERO, Ch err y '71 MERC Colony Parle, Sta Sales • Sr.'¥1ce '66 PONTIAC Tern.pell, • ~ ~nh;/Wl)it _top. ~350, powttateerlng, $100 _¥.. -J green, blk vinyi'· tO~. cond. Good ena:, tires I: Wagon. Xlnt c:md. Rack, OLDSMOBILE ~.pis. auto trans.~
aweo, tape. All extru. factory atr, tin~ 11an, . 842-8157 AM/FM stereo. Tilt whl, trans. New fmt shocks, hi· air, pwr locks, S 2 6 5 o . GMC TRUCKS good, S300. 819 Centtt A.Iii:
lficheUd'' tltts. 14,ID ml. complete, automatic trans. '69 OIEVY VAN MARK IV , alr, almost new steel belted jack. See to app~. $600. Goodrich Ufe Saver HONDA CARS 10, CM -1T -~CAD~-d Vlll Ilk ~.~~ .:!'t~d\!.i'411~ 18!'fJGood •"").""-New~ ~~~oobl~P= c~ m-~REMUN -= ~~ Monte,.y !INIVERSITY OLDS '69 GRAND PRl~J
'" ;:xuan e e, e u.ver tires, radio, heater, SU I M fl HURR W cult • •-•-air ~ Xlnt cond. w/ur ' nu, 4500 ml, fully equip, good condition. Best o~. ver Moon-dust metallic m . ay nance. YI om .,.,,..,, auw, ...,.,... Harbor Blvd. p/~.,, $1800. 642~
Pvt. pt'" l6lliO 6'+-7311 eve -CHRYSLER with vinyl roof and n!al ~.! !'! Baylront Bal. Is. 1970 Gn!mlln, new tires, good :i. i!J:Jll•, AM/FM fll95. Oista Mesa 540.9640 '70 GRAND Prix, toade., m-imo.' t4\' · phone • ' i..-1-· Tull power =·~-==-------· s ~1 "~on-··-. Pl ·~oo ~-11 •72 CAD liOvui. -. 'SS CHEVY Malibu s s 55 CHRYSLIR lncludlnr a1r c:ondltlonlng, $1350. P117' ~ ·-MUST•.,G NTO _ 640-iuf -· 0 er. Ctjl
-trim, w.; -hardlop ...... VI, ..... '150. FIRM ' Hit --. AM/FM DODGE ..... ...l
-"' 10 .... aft 3pm: ~;..''b, .:::..W~· sim': • 543-3691 • :.~~.'.'!_ti~'".:!"',~ -67 ___ 0_N____ JEEP MUSTANG .. Conwrtll>le. P=.,INTO .,.'!-Imm~-A. ~~~-. • ·M·lll El 'j,
-~·-• 4f.1D··St.,CM CHRYSLER 300. 1970, 1 _,.,......,.,, wm u ·~' STATI Wagoo, Ml I lb-~ -ooo -""-' "" -·--•-;o..;:T=--,=-,==11 ~-~~,~~--~~~!.._ loaded """1'ol reot~~ .... and ~• ~-air--• xlnt ·--n nn v.n .. b•~ po, P • ·-· wli'k ml, . Mn. Andre1on , ~ '"" n•n .• CDV, ••-•~, ·-u .. ~u ~-lie~. owntr, w/xtra1, ' ...... .. r-··-· ~ !o.Vlal. '"' "'~ _.,. nc.u.T .. .,.,. white w~• lop lthr ~-,. ~ ---~~ -aooct oond ~ lllWr luxury l""'P· Less cond. $7001belt otr. -""1 •tow bar pog1-. •-• -m' 645--1410 •ve& 1972 MATADOR -. -AM/nl, all xtru. Radio, .in,i, air, bucketa. • . . than 6,000 miles and loaded ·-CHALLENGER < ...,, -lop • tlro A hlL $1.JOO. call D Crowell '72 PINTO lttck I -'•• AM/FM --sharp, 45.000 ml, '3115 Extra clean! Must -to COUl!.Alt with mudt more! Ask ~ •• • ..,.. ez::' cu ll33-G46 llate 23, • • ..... 3nl oe&L PIS.' P/B, p 872-1113 ..-133-UlS. appndatet $1600. SC0.29:18 W Mr. Wallh at-· a!Mond. 8 track Ip elk. ~ ' XlnL $2llllO. '72 MUSTANG, mint oond. ' ~~$ml. 8lOO mil ... Xlnt «>Gd.
·-VETl'E 427!, 4 speed ·•-'68 COUGAR XR! XI A radlalt. 11800. ll30-sm UNCOLN . Lo mlleqe, air, plb, p/o. PLYMO H under Blue Book. MT CAMAIO -• ;...,,,,., • =· • nt Ute blue w/darlt blue vin UT '65 RAMBLER a..ic =.12,:. m4>~ :"'..;... t..s.~~·~. ·,1r1 Sacrifice FALCON ~blue 1nter • .,_ wan XlnL oono1. Nu
'70 C.UWW. 1111 !IO, air, aft 7 P)I ww~hl 11-_1116. 49H3TI aft 7 !965 roRD Falcon W~ '73 KAllK IV. Lo ml, vlnyl 11167 PLYM. Fury. Ex. oond. lranl, .,,..i ....._
mi Midi. ndlalo. Lib new •68 EL n--lno SS. AJC. I ~. -•1o -lop, mint oood -aft 'SS MUSTANG, 1ooU .,...t AM/FM radio. Air cond. ISOO. Alter 6, 1137·1'11 31,GDO mt. 1 owner l25eO ~ 090 ~" •t :a¥..4m"'' •= · -· lllom or Write ctusUled Ad .-mec:baa!cal wwtc'. New U.... $660. Priv. Ply •61 D•=• ~ Pn!m ..... 11111. -oft 1,..: ii' EL Cimino SS. ~ Ex-'67plb,COUGAR,. auil>, Pl•. .. No. 907. Dally Piiot. P.O. 1375. 645--0135 -7 1100-;-.;tt~.. Gd
C LET r111. a1r. 1o nu. X1n1 tMU FORD -1leo 0osta ,. • .., ea. 1971 RDad 11w1ne HIVIO tru, 13,llllO. Ph: 145-1311 oono1. 11311. -· fU£ON -· OLDSMOllLI . r ~ -t 1 u •• u •
t · '17 amvY IOftVtl't, Needs 1967 OOUOAR XR7, white ·-CORTINA IS'73 KA11K IV ~--11~ w~ '""i;'';;'i~· ;-;;;---,""":-( .• au:v~ air oond.. ---$100. Call wlblk. vill>L top, PIO. plb, ( •0067> -auto, v•-· top mtni .;...i .. ~ 1971 OLDS Vista °"*' -'·a RAMBLER. g eyl., dean • oond. Twml K<vtn. 1137-MOI. 23281 ltttt'. UJlhOl.-,ut!O M>-11512. ,.13 ~•Du IV ,_ :""'=~~pelt,'~•·!1: e«Har:i 1\1 day • Wan. 3 , .. ,.,air, AM/FM PONTIAC Good _.., •
noll. ' .. 8112 Gu'-, El Toro CONTINENTAL ~ • -m• ~ue ml. n;. stereo, luc. rack. Ex oond. 645-6297 1 ~ EL CAMINO. VI, auto. '62 IMPALA, auto, 4 dr. $22S. , 1195 fnO.,o:i. =· t: .64 J'ORD XL. 3IO. Pl!'. MAVIRICK ~/otr. 11Mla7 aft l :IO '8! PONTIAC Catalina $700, VEGA
lrlllll., P/S, P/B. -$7911. Call 646-i16115, 'st CONT all pwr stm>o ~r. Smith. 541-iii6 P/B Auto Xlnt condition p . = nwiJnr condition. --------..i.1.1 \" * llll:M834 * aft 5 IWU'OOf, • trallcr httch. lO da/'o: 41&-7\i811 ..... 646-GiM, 7 ·AM·S PM. • 1970 l\IAVERIO(, .Go Id '62 OLDS SW1tro. N.,, -. LEAVING -llfdot SeQ :
'
Claatfl~ .... -5 u~ $ ..... tor 5 ~. k I I M-... cond. Good pa m1i..... cl•an. aood colld. PIO-Sell Idle 1101111 ...... 642-5611 v-$300 ' T O.P "Oiiu;iil -. . • • ·~ ~ ..... c 1. m ., nu pant, ~· 11'ft""1755 Need a ''Pad"? Pli..ce an ad! Want ad,re1u1ta ••••• &t2-5678 SUOO or belt otter. 6'J3...T370 646-4925. . .. &1:Hl611. . Karen m.,m ·~"'
'..~ , -~ • .
I ......
• • -. . ... ~ .. " .. ' . .
~1
I
•
-•
,,
'
\
..
I
b"d. V PILOT Wtdntsday, Septrmbtr 19 1973
THE. ·ALL
NEW '74
. ...
. . .
:-::.:__-: :..-.·----. -,. . . ·-
• ..
.SEE
THEM ALL
PJLOT·ADVERTISER _ J 4
OLDSMOBILE
Thursday, Sept.
·20th .
LINE-UP IS
HERE. NOW
'68 DODGE WAGON
Pol11r•. Fully f••dory equipped, •ir
conditioning. IXXA002 )
'69 CHRYSLER
New York1r. Full pow1r, •ir con·
dilioning. IZVEOISJ
'69 CHRYS~ER
PULLY EOUIPPEO
!770AD?J
'69 FORD
l DOOR
o\111 CONDITIONING H•RDTOP
UCSWMfl (1171"TA )
TA KE YOUR
CHOICE
s33 DN. s33!~.
mt h1et 111, llcin11 & 111 c•rryhtt clMI..,. .,. 1pPro~ed crKll for .M mo1, DtttrAlll ""''· ~ SU 11 111111 dn. P¥0mO. ,'",·~~:.lol:~~A,~y PtiRCENTAGE RATE IS ll,6"" II IUlt.~ Incl. .Ill .,, •
'66 OLDS 88
Fully foclorv 1quOpp1d, air condi·
tionin9. ITGK2041 \
$433
'70 MERCURY
'68 OLDS 98
S1d1n. Full power. ftclory air con·
difionin9. ISSOETYI
$1133
'69 PONTIAC
Bo nn1vill1. lo1d1d. !ZEN°2Sll
$1233
TAKE
YOUR
1 M1rquls. Fully ftc:torv
eq.ulpped, 1lr cllfldf.
llonlng. (S4.JE1G)
'70 OLDS Cpe.
Fuflv l1c!ory equlll9'd
!•7l0ZV I
'70 LTD Wagon '72 PLYMOUTH $7l $77.1·1
$977 $1777 CHOICE :.,.::.."'."1,3..:."" r:r.~0:!> , ..... ~ ... L __ ....;;_ ____ -L--------:-d' f lb thi Def1rr1d pymf. pric1 i1 $2876.72 incl. 1111 l lic1n11, . licinit •nd 11 11 c•rryin9 ch•r9• 1 on 1pprov1d er• ot or mon · , , $77 ii tofil down pymt. $77,77 i1 tot•l monthly pvmt. +nc:I: t•;NNUAL 'PERCENTAGE RATE 15,'40 ~. Tot1I cesh pric:• i1 $2200 .
DN. MO.
'
•
/' •
'
" I
PILOT ·ADVERTISER
\
•
I Wednesday, Stptembt:r lq, 1973
•
W&dnesdar. Septeruber 19, 1973
~---
1974
BUY . OR LEASE
I .'
IMMEDIATE . DELIVERY
' .
WE-STILL HAVE-A~E-W--REl\-fAINING --------
•
... ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ....... ~~~~~~ ... e SPECIAL OF WEEK e ,. 1972 SEDAN DE VILLE . .
Full po"·cr, factor)' ah', tilt !llCt'ring \.\'hcrl, po\\'.
er door locks, vinyl top, cloth or lc>athcr inter·
ior. Excellent condition. 2 to choose from. (672·
ELT) fIOG593)
1971 OLDS TORllNADD
Yell<>l'·/,.,,hitc \'inyl top/ gold interior, full po"-er,
fA.ctory air, tilt, stereo, dual front scat, loaded.
C325CXDl
1971 CONTINENTAL CPE.
Beautiful gold '"/beige \'lnyl top, gold leather
lnlerior,-lulLpow«.Jact~ry-air, stereo, door
locks, tilt wheel, exceptional throughout. (636-
CKW)
1970 CADILLAC EL-DORADO
Turquoise/white: vinyl top/turquoise leather in-
terior, fY!_l~_.££. factory air, tilt "'heel, etc.
Loaded, IOWmnes. CZQW967r --
'1971 RMERA
Full poy.·er factory air conditioning, vinyl top,
tapestry interior, tilt wheel, Mt-FM stereo,
strato &eats, chrome sport v.·heels. Blue with
blue interior and black top. Beautiful automo-
bile. C770DSZ)
1968 £DUPE DE VILLE
Gold ,,1th white vinyl top and gold cloth and
ll"flther Interior. Full power, factory air condi·
tionlng, power door lock!, AM·FM ste~ tilt
steering wheel. (\VXN~l)
1910 CADILLAC SEDAN llE VILLE
1i 'Green/black vinyl top/bladk leather, factol'Y air,
full power, tilt, stereo, loaded. (234AGB)
•
•
SALE PRICE
SALE PRICE
s3444
SALE PRICE
$3666
SALE PRICE
$3888
SALE .PRICE
SALE PRICE
$).LE PRICE
' s3222
' '
1973 ELDORADO CABROILET
Dynasty red exterior \Vith white vinyl top and \Vhite fu ll leather interior.
Full power, factory air ~nditioning, tilt steering wheel, AM/FM stereo
with tape player, po\ver dbor locks, radial tires, Ian;ip monitors, even an
·illuminated vanity mirror. Factory executive automobile with lesS than
3400 miles. Absolute mint <ondition. (440393)
A SOLID SHIELD OF
SERVICE
. With Every Sale
Largest Selection
of Late · Model
CADILLACS
Orange County • 10
. .
J 972 U DORADO
CON VERTIBLE. Executive black, black vi nyl top,
black full leather, full J>O\\"er, factory air, s tereo.
door lock!>, scnlinel, every deluxe extra, new
tires, etc. (348FVY)
1964 MERCEDES 220SE
4 Dool' Sl'da-0. Fuel inJected engine, 4 speed
1ran11mlssion, alr c0Qdit1oning, power steering,
p<ho,·er dsc hrakes, extremely low mileage. Must
st•e. (891FEDI
1973 BUICK REGAL
DELUXE CcnJury Hardtop Coupe with only
13.900 milf's. (tmlne •Nhitc with black vinyl top
.~ black vinyl interior. Power steering, brakes.
-~ct.~r-cOnd . .-auto. trans.,_mdlo. beatci:.....:
u·si,v. iporl wheels & sho\l.<TOOm"fresh. C280GAN)
1969 CADILLAC SEDAN DE VILLE
r;uJd \\'hitr "inyl top/gold lealhl'r, dual front
st•111, fa<:tory air. run pov.·er, tilt, cruise, etc.
()'VA235i
~
1967 COUPE DE VILLE
Ermine white ext.erl01'-with b!Ue leather inl~
ior. Full pov.•er, factory air conditioning, tilt
11·hecl, AAI-FM i-adlo, pOwer door locks. An out-
standing "alue. <SUF.857J •
'69 ELDORADO
Turquoise exterior with black vinyl top and
black interior. Fttll poi,"'er, factory air condi·
tioning. tilt steering 1,\•heel, AM-FM s tereo,
power door locks. (YXR8071
1973 CADILLAC SEDAN DE VILLE
Elecirlc Sun Roof. Feclory ••Kllllve cir. Full powwr, f1C1ory
•Ir CO!ldlllonlng, tllf·l91• s1ff!'lng whffl, du•I comfort u.us, -r door lod:s, crube control, twlllDlll senllnel, AM·FM
sterto wlfll 11ereo l•pe pt&yer, 1r11e11: m111ler br11k11, rtdl•I lints. h'i!ry OPUon CtdlUtc millcet. lnc;ludln(I ii llgl'ilifd Ylnlty rnlrr,,,..
ExlrflfTlllY low milH. R.,...lnln(I ll(lllry werr. !1S7111J
COSTA
MUA
.....
DAILY PILOT
SALE PRICE
SALE PRICE
s1999 ·
SALE PRICE
'3999 '
SALE PRICE
SALE PRICE
~s1333
SALE PRICE
~2999
SALE PRICE
. •
-: ~ .· . .
f
•
I
'
. . • I
•
.DAI LY PILOT
" ,,
IS
l arges~ d " • ISCotlnt '"9s ol th sa".
e Yea,. • now d . ' ''9ht ur1ng the final
days f 1• o our 1973
el Yea~ l'hoe/. nd cl sale! 0 1•""0uf
NEW '73 SATELLITE SEBRING PLUS 2 DOOR
Automobile An Exciting, Beautifully Equipped
NEW '73 CHRYSLER
TOWN & COUNTRY WAGON
Comfort and performance beyond com-
pare are yours in this luxuriously equip. .
ped, top of the line station wagon.
$
· NEW '73 PLYMOUTH SPORT
,.SUBURBAN STATION WAGON ,·$
;:.
Equipped the way you want It, including
Ai r Conditioning
EXCELLENT SELECTION ·
OF REMAINING 1973
STATION WAGONS AT
TERRIFIC SAVINGS.
SCIO e-Or. V-1. •utom11Hc !ransmiulon, recllo, h••ltr, p0..,., ,,_.lr>g, po-r
brllkn, WSW Urn, a .. , and vinyl rop,
f6MFON)
s795
Low mites. Have to see le> bttleve
( C9"4SOl61.55)
s595
'66 CHRYSLER
S@dan. VI, aulom1111c, radio, healer, POW·
., sleeting & or•~t'S, wl'lil• '°"111, .ilr
cMditlonlng. (TSN1"5J
New York•r 4 Or. H.T. VI, 11utom1llt,
radio, heat.,-, power ••-lno & brak1s,
WSW, PDWet' SfMlf, •Ir conc:HllOl'llllil. (UZJ-
•2A)
NEWPO RT 2 DR. H.T.
V8, avtoma!ic, radio, healer, pow~ strrr-
lng & brakes, WSW, 11r cond., vinyl top.
lZSY62ll s1295
C11•1om Suburban 1-0r., v~. automatic
rransmlsslon, r.>dro. hl."'ter, POWtr steer-
1n9, power brakes, WSW tires, and .tlr
condiliool119. (VRCSll)
'67 OLDSMOBILE
CUTLASS SUPREME
VI, auton....llc, power sleerino & brake~.
radio, h!Nller, WSW, air conditioning,
I lJll077Z1097?2) $695
. '
.. , • • •
I PBILOT .ADVERTISER !8
.. ew '13 lr a'4~\~~~d•
"built to tow d.. ,.ir The wagon . me"t inclu in9
ot deluxe equip .
cond.
NOTICE! Atlas Chrysler Plymouth now f\as fac!lities
for service on ALL MOTOR HOMES regard-
less of size, by expe rienced motor home me-
chanics! WARRANTY work on lntern•ttonal
a nd ·Dodge truck chassis.
Huge selection of exciting new '73 Scouts right now at Atlas
International. Your Recreational Vehicle Headquarters.
THE GREAT '73 "GO-
ANYWHERE" SCOUT
-
AT AN UNBELIEVABLE
LOW PRICE
PLUS TAX AND LICENSE
SER. NO. 3Sl5t.CG04JllD
• .
.... vttllc ... Mltct .. .......
Nit, l"f'kt ..... ·~ .... ~•lkl 'tH 11 """ .......,, , U. '"'·
. -
,
. ... ..
21 PILOT-AOVERTISER Wtdnesday, SeptemI>er 19, 1913 DAILY PILOT 61)
"
,
"
'
"
•
• •• • ••• • • ., •
'/ -,, I
·.~ . ' r, • .. ALL ·MODELS READY FOR IMMEDIATE DELIVERY
Sneak Preview Showing Thursd~y, Sept.· 20th
..
/
/
•
'"
1974'
' STAN
THE MOST
EXCITING ALL·
NEW CAR OF
THE DECADE!
•
• ~ .LAST CALL .. FOR 1913's ~----r --. --StiU A Good Selection of New and
Demonstrator Models to be cleared
AT FANTASTIC DISCOUNTS!
'
' •
NEW CAR SALES HAVE OVERSTOCKED OUR USED CAR DE PT .!
,
NO EASIER TERMS
ANYWHERE SAVE NOW ON OUR 2 1/2 ACRES OF FINE TRADE INS!
OUR FINANCE nPERTS
ARE HERE TO HELP YOU!
'6' LTD 4 DOOR
s5230PER
'71 PIN $6106~ ' VI, 111lo"1 1lic, r1dio, h1•f1r, pow1r 1t1eri119 FORD PINTO·MA YERICK·MUSTANG·TORINO • I peed, r1dio, he1!1r, 1ir conditioning,
A br1•e11 •,ir co11d.: vinyl roof, IXXZS691 MO. • whil1 1jd1 w1ll lir11. l5J9CJ8 )
' -h ..... Cll. JIYT!lf, ISt.30 II tllll "" ll'fll'll Incl 11•, NCllllM & Ill Cltryl"' ' GALAXll·LTD·WAGONS P1$ II "'II ._ py ... I, Ul.N 11 ttl1/ 11'11, ll'fnll, Intl. tu, lk-a 111 Cll'fTfftll == • ~· crwdlt-tor.24 11'111. Dtl11'ncl..11yml. prke llUl.to lrtcl. l11t & Ile. SALE! MANY TO CMOOSE FROM '65-THRU '73 cl11.,11 911 IW, crtdll fir :U .mtl, .,.,...,.... ll'fllll, ,nee fUU,1S IKI, hi &
A L Pl CINTAO• •AT• lS.U"-MODELS llc ..... ·AMMutL-PE,CENTAG& RATE 14.S4"--
s.,.1r.., 2 D-I. 4 Door Setlaos I. Hardtops. Wlllt & Wl .... t Air ~11 .. lot-4+1 <ylh1don. WARRANTYS AYAILAILE. • .
'67 IMPALA WA.ON .'99 EXAMPLE EXAMPLE EXAMPLE '6' FORD XL ·HARDTOP '1395 . I
A.t•i.•tic, ,.~uo, h••t•r, pow•r de•r· • R.c.dJo, ~•1t•r, 1ufom•tic, pow1r 1t11r· • --i--,73 FORD LTD H.T • '72 GRAN TORIHO WAGON •72 CUSTOM 4 DOOR int, •Ir c.orulitlo11lng. ITYT2 t I ) i119, vinyl roof, •ir co11d., (7'47EIAI
• full power. fatlory olr <ond ilio11in9, AM/ lodio, heo~r, 011lo1110lk tt~111..,iu io11, power lie .. •~t. Au10,..01ic, ,.,..K 1le1rin9, 9004 fM, vinyl real, powt• door lo<-1. ond 011ly 1l11ti11g. foctory oir condtilo11ing, roof ""'· ..,,!~•'. 1 lo c~oo1t fro"', (l JSAOZI (I.SOI.St) ' '
lto.lilOJTHGtcT:--t.000 .. ile1, (872GIUI ond 23,000 ..,ue1. {19.SCGFI I • -$3984 -$; -421-----$168~ -'7Tl'Oal G.T:-HARDTOP
6 cylfncl1PI Ec.onOJtlY 1p1ci1I. Radio, 81 Month R1dio, he~+.r. 111torn•tic, pow1r 1t11r· hect•r. {77JIFCI $1595 llU 11 tolll lln. PYll'll. 111.44 11 tol•I mo. pyrnt. inc:I. Ill, lictn!I & Ill CIM')'ln1 dl•Ufes 911 .,,. crecl+I for 411 ,,_, Delerrld jlymf, $4075.U Intl. 1111 & llCH!I. ANNUi.i. PERCENTAGE RAT& ll.U'!I. l11g, 1ir cory:litio11in9. (306D IM) $1995
71 ·AMC JAYRIN '68 CHRYSLER NEW YORKER 5995 $2395 4·DR. HAltD TOP, full pow1r, 1ir·con·
rRIH. •ute., pow1r 1t11ri n9, vinyl roof, cl)tio11in9. IYCN51 I J ' . 'AIR CONDITIONING, lo mil1,J !136
CQTI '70 BUICK. ELECTRA H.T.
225. R&H, .111!0., pwr. 1lrg., wi11ds. &$2 795 i . 111!1, tilt wh11I, vlnyl lop, AIR CONO. ~71 CHIV. MALIBU 2 DR. H.T.
$6858::.
I 796.BEUI
A.lt.t'll1ffc, r1cllo , h11t1r, pow1t it11~l119, air
tltfllclltionll19, (59J0fA) '
'71 COUCOAR _ $ ·
.. 11 ,_..I 1111. pymt, Ml.JI 11 ....i 1111, """'' Intl, II•• lk-& 111 ell~ Y.I, •ulol'lltbc, r1d10, he11ter, ·pow1r 2 99 5 ..,,.. M,I..,,, er.di! fir :N nwt. Dlfwr9ll p'fMf, pricl Ut11.-Intl. lu .._ ANflUAL PSRCINTAGa RATI 101'9 lt11rln9 A br1k•1, air c.ond. !J7SJETI
I
l •
'69 FALCON STATION WAGON -.
"v8, au+omfttic, r'1clio . h11ler, air co11·
ditioning, roof rac.k,~ ( 5") EEK)
'69 MUSTANG MACH I ve, 1utom1tic, pow1r sle1ri119, power
br1k11, 1te;ao r1dio & t1p1 p l1y1r .
1289ASJ l
'
'68 BUICK SPEC. WAGON
Rtdio. hn1!1tr, 1ulom1tic, pow•r 1!1tr·
in9, 1ir, roof rick. l l80EXXl
\ ••
51595 .
'1895
'1195
" .
'71 ·PLYMOUTH DUSTER
A11torn1tie, r1d io, h11!1r, power 1t.1r-$2195 i11g, •ir condltionin9. (106DLKI
" '71 i-ltRD LANDAU
F11ll ~ pow1r, foe.tor 1ir cond ., 1o•d1d, low 598''.:~ ·,,,a,,. Many 1atr11. !9l<4DCHI
MM 11 tll•I ·~. 11'/'ml. Sfl.ff 11 l'llM ""· ""'"'· Intl. , ••• ._ a .. c"'Yflll Clltflll Oii lllllf, Cl"IClt fir J6 ,,..., Defl"'IC nmt. M4ft.M illd, Ill & lk-. ANNUAi. ... ll:CENTAOI ll:A:tl 1UJ'IJI.
@:51 ----·---tt ____ ,. -l.tffAlllMWI ....
l~ALES DEPT. HOUIS: I'"'"'"" Mon .• Frl.; I 11'H pm S.t.; 111m4 pm Sun.
PARTS SIR~ICE HOURS: 7 am-t pm Mon.; 7'•"'"" pm T""9.-frt,
PARTS DEPT,ONLY: lam--1 pm Sit'.
)
• I
.. . •
,_ -. -
. -
. ' ' ..
• \ •10 DAILY PILOT
I BRAND NEW 1973
. FORD PICK-UPS· · I f · 1 OO's • F250's • F-350's . I 43 IN STOCK
UPTO
, . BRAND NEW 1973
··ELDORADO
, ... ' •
" ' ' '
CAMPERS .
#C915
35 IN STOCK
UPTO
$
..... --· ..... I .. ..,.
•
Wedntld1y, Septtmber iq, }q73 P!LOT·ADV<NTISER 28
BRAND NEW 1973 BRAND NEW 1973 . )0~~'5!!~~f5 vt!!9,!.~~:~ ~~
39. IN STOCK · .
27 INu!~O~~ r• ,, LTD•. SQUlllS . TOllNOS . .,,
r ,. ·UP'TO '· I ' r· s140fJ·~t . S).408 .t .
B~ND.,NIW 1973
THUNDERBIRDS
I $1000
1----IOOl'.----+-----DISC4tUJ ~.:...· --1~-.JD~l~SC~O:U~N~T~.,.,c ~_;/
-
, .
DISCOUNT
'68 DATSUN Pickup. I A speed, radio, heater. Licen.~t ~o. XCl-061
-· -.. '
'69 DODGE V2 :r~ 'P.U.· ...
I Economical ~orkhorse. Hurry! L!cen-se $1 o·e 8 , No. 14J51D ·
'68 FORD V2 T.
F.' M F~go•,!i.1sr PRICE FROM FACTO~y LIST PRIC( FROM FACTOR "·
' ' IMMEDfAT£DILIVERY IMMIDIATrDrtlVIRY ' IMMEDIATE DILi¥ Yi
. .
ADDJTlONAL
$AVING$
Present this coupon AFTER completion of your purchase of a new
, 1973. LTD, Galaxie sqo ot rJ"~r;i~o, from Wilson Ford and you'll
receive a , ~ ,/'1, , -1 .. •
• 1CASH 'REFUND OF $10000
Offer good on purchases made •from Sept. 13th, 1973 t·o close of
business Sept. 20tt'l,-l:,9¥11;nit-QAe·EOUpon per car. Coupon must.be
presented on 'dcite 9f ~\Jfc~a)e. Dealer and Fleet Purchasers not
eligible. '"' • • •'
-R·
'67 ,ORD Cortina G.T.. .. , s4ea Radio, heater, bucket seats. L_icense
No. BCK-316
'68 FORD Wa9011
CUSTOM 500, VS, auto. tram,, factory
air, power steering, radio, heater.
(75JC/V)
:~~ !~~.~ -!~~!' oir <*i"•$4· a·' a· ing, power sleering, power brok1s, radio, h1011r.
{TEE987) · ~ •• " '
'6710YQTA Crown
' speed, radio, heater. License No.
TZZ-0<
'68 BUICK E ectra -225 < .
V-8; stick shift, radio, heater. License No. $ 7 8 v~e, ~ul11:_~ns,, factor'( air conditioning, t'at·I · poWer steering, ~wer (Clise) brak·1r.po\fer If· •
7JJ.HEO -v1indows, poWer seats. rfdio heater., LkenS.1:-" '
~ No, wsf-965
'67 _MUSTANG
'68 V.W. Fastback -.~ '69 FORD Wagon '69 DODGE Super~-,.~
'speed, AM/FM radio, heater. Ucense No. $8 8 8 , 10 Passengtr Ranch Wagon, y-a. $8 8 V-B, qvto. trans., foctory oir conditioning. power$1
691CEA , auto. trans., po~r steering, Slfffirig, rociio, heo,rer, vinyl roof (ZV0429) •
. ~,6-9~Fo_r_d_V:~2-T-.~~.....1..::i;,1Ut.1-,-69-=--v~.w~.~,~u~G~·~~~~~~~~6~7~P~·o~N~2T~:-F~ir-,~b-ir-d~...!!.. :....:iih~::':'!::-~:-.ri·~·~·~~~~:.=:=..::::
I ~t~~~pctc:-:~;·;,;:~~· heater; dlx $1611 . ~~~:g; radi_o, heater. License No. s 1. D 8 8
I Pickup. V-8, auto. trans., air condition. $
.ing, power steering. License No. 281 SOC
V-8 , auto. trans,, power steering,.
License·No. 642-HOM
1 '68,c ~o~.GE: .·· .~~ ' . '70 MAVERICK $1·1·a· "&'
. WINP~~ )'AN• aµlor1rans. 'powet;.. )1.'~7 9 -'~;.~~ish.lk.(995GRn ·.
steering'. YitG156 ~.-:.;>·, f ;f r 1 , 1
'69' DODGE
· Polal'a Hafdfap~, V-8, auto. trans ..
factory air conditioning, power steering.
radio. heater, vinyl roof, License No.
922AKS
I :,~~:rans , rad,,, healer. Lice;,. No. $ 2 48 8
'70 CHEV. 3MTon r. ' ' , •t I .Pickup & corwer. V-8, outo. tfJJl)S .. PGM'"
steering, (71,312J)
'7•l ,PQDGE ·colt "
· sPftd~:tlr ! ~i 100i~. radio, heat,r,
ileat, new appearance. License No.
193DJE
· .. ; GRAN P IX .'.·' ? . t1· ·:~ '·, -. '71 MERC. f!\fl(~f ~.auto. tr.ans., f.actory air condition,, $ • 3B 8 V-8, auto. trans., fiClO~-.:u• mJd •
1ng, po~er steer1n~, power b~akes, ing, power steering, PoWtr brakes, :,~';u~~ows, radio heater. License . radlo, heater. License No. 128-0SM
· '69 IMPERIAL · .$.14 .. 8.8._ ,v.s;1\J1.,,., ......... pow .. steeri\")f-·SJ BJ I . i r • •ncto <..-:.. ._ f f ., 'ti' Ii poijtlf WI WS. ~r' ~!111,, ,~ 'AMt/~M 'ttert6, rad io, healtr,W:h t•11 ~ .. .,. ' ,
· ·, tires, inyl roof, tinted gt ass. License No.XHSm' •
•
I • '
'71' LTD WAGON . ' ' '
·~28 V-8, auto. trans., factpr.y air.~IJJ~
ihg, power $tetririr powtr-~••tii / . radio, healer. LicenstlNo. 661-tl(O"ol-~~
•
•
•
.. ,-.. • •
•
• ·oei11ente· ·
:--::-~api•t.-anp EDITION
' . .
\
VOL. 66, NO. 262, 7 SECTIONS,110 PAGES · I . ' .
•
•
. .
•
Today's Final •
N.Y. Stoeks
ORANGE COUNTY, CALn:bRNIA WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER, 19, 1973 TEN CENTS
)
San -Onof-re .Nuclear 'Decision Appealed :
By CANDACE · PllARSON
Of .. Dllllr...J'Stlt ...
An •Pl'tal was filed today 'with the
stale coastal comihJsslon against !be ap.
~al of two nuclear reactora at the San
Onofre. power plant. ·
The Stale Coastal Zone Conservation
Commluton met thiJ morning In
Inglewood to hear appeals of actions of
the alx f'!gional coastal commiJslon!.
The ·addition of two: 1,400 megawatt
Truck RutU Wild
reactors at the plant three miles llOUlh of
San Clemente wu IJ'&llled last mootb by
the San J)iego l!e&lonal 1.one Conserva-
tion ~on. The Atomic Energy
Commission has yet to act on the matter.
"11le key environmental concern is the
~ aafety, hea1th aod welfare," Dale
Seci>ril of the Environmental ,CoaliUoo •f
Orange County said In hb written appeal.
The P!"Jecl In quesUon If plBDDed by
V~hi.cles _'f.ang~e
Near Clemente
Two large , trucks and a pair of
JnOlol'Cl'eles laDlied In • combinalim of
collislopa ~ Jllib! that left one of
the trucb lumberlq drlVeri<u down the
San Diep Freeway for ZOO yards.
Investtptors cllled • u "l us 1
nilraculoua" that ooly minor Injuries ..e~ J>nlduced by the accideDt near 'San
Clemente. ~ ·
'lbe mJolloP.I OCClll1l'I """'°1 . lfter • p.Jll; ....... , ... • ....... --()nrps
trudt towm; •. l..t lrallo< .....,...,._
• datcll. Driftf -J :·Pldlllpo-threw
Clll hll llaDn and Uowod IO• lllllM pei'
hour a law yardl -Ille ........ Wlllte H-. 'Beblnd him' • two-liol>lll!I( ..........i
rla WU movinC al 16 mOi6 1111: llolii-ond
driwr cart--bid )1111 cllanpd
lanea, patrolmen" Aid.
Once -notlt'ed the alowln& rig ahaad, It was IOo lale IO llAlp, ofllcon
reporled, and the rig from a Footana
trucking f1r111,Jlammed Into !lie rear of
the mllitan' truck.
The Impact thre.w Gooderman from his
tractor and bis rig conUnued OD down the
freeway without a driver, llnally atopplng
against the center divider fence.
Neither ~ l!Or the driver of
the-.!isablecl ~ trudt .... aerioully
lallt. Bil ._, .1 • llit lidllil lmflel.
two otller -rldlnc -\\1dll -tancled la 'tile -. -Grant 8mltt, II, ond ~ Ray Mqbam, J'I, bolll Cl( Clll'I!
fWletm, ...... 11111 -.. -... -It -too late IO ...... llollt mill
dlt6d • -ad 1111 te llio ---. Tboy oullered cull and -and were· !ruled !fr npQnedly minor lartl
at the camp Peadleton Naval llaopltal.
Ex-Agnew Press Official
Criticizes Haig, Laird
'
Soull>em cauronua Edison Company and
San Dtqo Gas and Electric. ·
~ bad. delive~ his four page re-. quefl:l for a rehearing to state com-
mWion planner Joe Putrillo; Secord said
he wi)I sed another COPY to the com·
mluloilos San Fran.olsco d f fl c e by
registered" mail after the coaUUon's
steering copnnittee ·approves It Thw.
day.
An appeal.of !lie decision has reported· . "
ly also been filed by Rulli Payton of the
San Di1310 Coast Watchers.
l;ocord said he expects the San
Clemente-based Groups United Against
Radlatloo Dangers (GUARD) to join !lie
effort. · · .
'!be $1 billion expansion project lies
within the 1,000 yard permit zone created
by PnJiloS!lim ZO, the coaslllne ln!U.Uve
J)assed-tiy voters last Noverilber. ·
· One of the objectives of Prop. ZO iJ to
... 'I. -
promote public safety and protect
"property, wildlife, marine fiSherles.
other ocean resources and the natural
enviromnent," Secord said today.
The utility compani~ h a v e n ' t
demonstrated "t h a t adequate safety
systems and measures could be im-
plemented in the event of a reactor ac--
cident," aa.ld Secord. He added that there
~.·t been a successful test of the
plant's emergency core cooling system '
~~~ Catid~.· ~ ··
~NidioJtJietp~on is cm,ly 71' tee! iol!I now; ~ as 'tiig around' as a telephone pole. He a ·
tiut Sheli jlriSWfilg at tho rate of !WO'feet"'a year. i>e<IS-<:anill to attiin 22 feet, 'but figures be-will
WASIDNGTON (AP) _ Vic Gold, 'Aleundrr Haig art mponslble for many The. h\gh.~ sopho"11ore from Costa .Mesa uys have to get rid of bet wMit she is 19 feet "or else
fabner prm -.ry ta Vice -t of the rmnan· and ._u about Agnew's some pythons have grown as long as a2 feet and add another room to tile house." -
St>iro T. ,._, chm10d todoy the! top legll -lei. . ---'--------.'-'~ "'-'.:...=:..::.:=------
Wblte --.id!I Melvla R. Laird-and-'-'111ls-11-all calcalated by the Wblle -""'~ •.-. ~.,. • _ . -CrestllteJtem.--~-..i-.i .... ~rd.~bep-.. i:_g:..,,.bla_.r-_!i._the_~_-11a1a~all-~-·· .. _...,," -..,."~'°"--+:l_r1...:..·, .. ""::.~"" ..... ~_,_i~e~e,~ ··~• ~fiwn to· _Bits
• -" '"llley operate the stall and they -
Not .on Ag~nda ~.=:=rr.;:i.5
San aen.te' Cly Oerk Max. Berg
said tllll moming that a ICbedullng error
In, ell)' boll pftYelllell • city council
revl'"'' of the er.otllle 4-ale
Products firm operations from apptarlna 111>,IOP!fl'• city council .. -...
,And " Mid be hoped that reSldent. particularly In -.;cllfla Narth, woold
take note' d lhe ameac., of the llem IO
avoid problems at tonlPt'• -
llelldonta In , the oru of Ille plant at
the end of camtao ile 'lal--llam, lier(
said, •PPlftlltlY bod believed Ille item
wWld I>'! oet lbr an airing tonllht and
....,. p1ann1o; IO •Uen\I, la larie DUJno.
bera. + • 'The ·1asue, liialead, will' appear OD lhe
coundl'J a1encta for o.t. i.
'lflO ald.iL ·
"Iii one cue, Mr. Laird wu the direct
llCIUl'ce, -be called ~(Joblt B.) Andel""' (ll-DI.), and ' blm IO go
euy In 1111 suppott <I. the pr-.
And there have been reports that Mr.
Lalnl liu been..ielllnc lllorlel about VICe
~ Agnew's troubles to the
dlplomaUc corps In very unflattering
terms." .
Gold also said la an Interview there are
·lndlriduala In the White Houoe who very
mucb want lormlr Tuaf <memor Joblt
Connally to become -president 'If and when Agnew nslp. .
'"llle,number one member of the eon.
lllllly claque hu ta be llldlird NIJ<On,"
Gold said. "1bls talk about Conn8lly
(See AGNE'tl', .... I) '
Bopping Mad _
; .
(
Trusr.ees · Won.'t_K!c1' the _Hqbit
• , . .
An atlempl to ball _,.at -lnp of the~ Beadl ocbool board
was .,iokl~ GUI ~ nllbt-• ~ , · ., __ ' er-, -ci the 'bea~ -·Kap,_ Fauoda-
tio!I bpd In -... bad -tho -to ~ Ille ctllcu-item ........... -. • 11V1' THE ii-boerd,. lncludln& lour llDObn, wuni lntereltocl.
"Dou tbat meaa )'OU _,•t ...., talk lbaul It!" HapplnjJ ·iabd board
Pmtdent Notmm Bmme. . -.
TAXINCI A kiic ""8 on hll clpnlla" ond fUddlC Ille alb lnlo .an ubtray,
Bimte a'4enu.t, replltil, "Sorta Joob tllat itay, -'\'111" ' ' • H-i!!ldJodaY he'll Ole complaints wltll the -~ ~ deillrtment and bod alioac1Y ltarMd with the local department nqll'lliiDlaU...' lie'• alao ~ the poa(b!UtJ ,.... ".818 law may breathe -lift Into .• II!'
•
-La~er :~ses Papers ro Overanxious Bomb Sq~
The • most exptoalve· case at Harbor
Judlcl/11 District 1 Court 'f¥8Y was handlOd by Newport Bqch attorney
W.olter Baranger and'tl1< sheriff's bomb -d. Banister Baranger had fi>rgotten his
'
C8"hle· TV Pleas
f Qr ·~ttt ~es " ~ ' ' 4. ~~rd ;I>y· Pan~I( "
• Ofllcl(lls of 'the capte television aervice
semng Jtl!liiy portions of the ~aplstrano.
v.lley attempted to convince San
Cleml!nle city councilmen Tue!day that a
role Ihcreue Is needed ta offset
pndl&d rlllai,cosll. . '
Dotld Marteaa, the mnnager for san
a-ie cablevision, said that the con-
lliaal convm!!Jil. of utility lines un-
~ .as well as major Jle'f In-~ 11 :new developmeot fakes
place m c:mtmr·more than anUclpaled ,,_ ··eJllM!llM!I, combin<d with new
ftdefal ~ fQrclng cable BerV!ces to o'zpan'd io 'Jll.dwmel capaClty .In
fUture ;rean,'lll&rlied the need tor •an ln-creue, be ailcf. '
,The Orm, which wUI have to 1Ubject Ill
pr<lllGlllll to a public bearing before tho
eounctl, propo8es_ to Increase the Initial
hookup fee from 11.110 to 115.
Tbe fllOl'thly chorg~ to patrons would
Increase from is.so to 11.
,COuncJlmen meet!ng Tuaday In an
unolllclal stu'd)' oetiion llOllght by the
able service, remained 110lnewhat rel,.,.
tant to openly endonlt the lncireaae and
(See CABLE, .... I)
••
new attacbe case contalnhig various legal
pipers Mooday afternoon, leaving it.In a
courtroom.
Deputy marshalJ then noUt'ed an
omloous black satchel as the night traffic
court broke up.
Four marshall who recently'had com-ple~ a ·school dealing. wltb destructive
devices thWght II look pretty lllnlster.
The caae alto looted like an attorney's
homework., but ... •ttomeY> had been In
court .lli)ce, '!!--· ~~knew If.ti "l!S. bomb
· 'fl.ui; a mercury switch a genUe touch
mlgut IOI It: off.
They called the Orange . COOnty Sher-• . .
lff's bomb·dlsposaI •sqwid·and its person-
nel I~ the b@ck leather aatchel and
gingerly hauled. It out of tJie, courtroom
and dowti the ·'oOtridor.
Marahal Sit-Ed POatel Aid It 11'11 well after nikhilght ·When· the thriatemng
briefcase ,..., tenderly set In place under
a tree on the front lawn.
Sheriff'• llpOClallata atlached a small
explosive .charge to.the ~t, $1Zi·ex·
eculive'1 acceaory ... -and BOOM. "The blast _, ~ .l!le l"'jlerl In-
side, but-It aure did' ........ ,ilie brlel·
C18'!," Sgt. Postei 'reinaind., . ·
JlepuUes blew out one whole comer of
(See BLOWtJP, Pap Z)
Skinny~dipping. Ga~ 16
'T. 0'14 O_n' by Officers
Inventive Irvine clly police ~ed to
an ag ... ld aid of law and order early to-
day after caplllrlng an unrecalcltrant l&-
yeor'Old girl )II a nude llwimmlng party
and beer bUsL •
They told her motber•!ID her.
Ofllcer Dave Borg wu dispatched to a
trailer park at 14151 Jeffrey Road abOOt
I a.m., In ~ to· lnother among
many ....nt ~ports of sklm\Ydlpplng
youths In the faclllty'1 pool.
, He made a. routine traffic stop of a
IUSplcloua cir nearby• and conlronled
five youna people with. ,,.t hair and beer \
bre1tll.
Since the girl was only IS and In the
company of aduliJ, ahe was detained for
t
tfurfew violation and lack of parental
control.
Officer Berg lndlcatecl. l\oWever, tbal
the girl fold«! her arms, stomped her
fool and In unlailyllle terms refuoed to
get Into the Pl>lke <er.
The standoff conUnued until Ofllcer
Be(I ndloed his ....... ~ who In tum
telephoned the girl'• motlier In Orange
snd persuaded Mom to drive out and pick
up her errant teen ..
lnvestlcaton ukl the others' namet
and addresiea were taken and tbey were
releued wltll a warnlnc that nude IWlm-
mln& Is forbidden and they have rteelved
too many compli!nla already.
1,
and an evacuation plan hasn't been·
developed.
Other grounds fo'r Secord's appeal m.-
cluded possible danger from t h e=
transportation and long term storage o(:
radioactive wastes, adverse ef!ect.s oo:-
marine organisms from t be r m a J.
discharges and possible leaks oC low level
rad.laUon. .
No hearing Ume has been set for !lie:
appeal. ·
een
Plan Aired
By Aintrak
·Officials
By JOHN V ALTEllZA
Of .. Deltr """ ..... San Jwm Clplstrano, which for yea?J
has been wltbout a passenger rail stop,
appears destined for two of them early
next y e a r, a leading Amtrak olftda1
promised this morning. But San Clemente
rail passengers .would have to "donate.,
them •.
Ward Musick, a wester& region Sta.
lions manager for the na~ n!I
firm, told memhenJ of the San Jlllli
. '
capiStrano Chamber of· °"""*"' IOdat that local lnlerest mmblned -majoi" ~ -
plam to dewlop !Ii'.> Jwm'• old rail 111eo
Uoo Into' a IOIDil\I' atllaelbl· are' !hi'
---the talllnc of two !!osfa .... in San Clemente and mov•·· thi!n ta Sin Juan. . -
'lbe two · ''borrowed" """' ha said,
•till ..W4 leaft San Clemenle wltb -key llopa thnlulb the day and it would
not affect the popular tralnl for ~ who travel by Ille ·hundioclo·
each nek from Inland Oralige Counly
c!Ues.
'lbe northbound l :ZO a.m. train would
stop In ~uan and the IOlllhl>olmd evening also mlcbt he -~ to
""""' tho • -said. 'lbe ._ of Ille official at lhll
morning's meeting followed ~
'-Ila from local liaslnesma
that prOasure &om the -Com-munity began the campaign.
_Thua far the Idea bu -the ....
-of Muslc:lt'1 ouperlon wfiO 8.i.
mlnllter the Wealern R!lloo of the -tlooal .rail passenger corporalim wlddl
has heavy federal funding. ' "~
"But oWclala In Wuhlnglon, D.C.,
covet their rt!lht lo maie decisions and
it's now In t b e I r hands. Because the1
. can't posslb17 know all the local f~
they reQ> heavily on our advice " be said:·
:A atrong factor hr enc1ot..Meat of 11!*·-
rall atop ts tllO cte.efoiiment of the old
Santa 'Fe irtatim near t&e downtown lr'N
Into • rallway«lented restaurant wbera .
dlnen woulcl wait t h ~ I r tum In the
Mi.-.s1y1e station room . and then
move to • string of a Old cai-riages on a·
siding where they would palnlo!Je the
restaurant. . .
A. comples of l]l<!clalty shops Is also
proposed for a nearby lot as well.. Moot
noqulr<d city . approvals for the project
have been rendered.
Besides _,_ of Ille aervice and
P«dl<li<lnl .llil!t San Clel!Mllle peU-.C·
Amtrak W..ld not complain ii the ICbed.
(See RAIL STOPS, Pip J)
... ....
• •
1t'eli(ller
Mostly llUDllY Tlllnday, follow-
ing !Orne low cloucll In the """1ling •
hours. lllgba' In the Illa at the •
beacbeo, rising to the ilsfd.'191 m.
laocl.
INSmE TODAY
Th< Dailf Pilo~ along u>ilA 200 othn ,,.,,.,,,.,,.,., In ll>t
Vnikd Stotc1, ia ·jotning m on
t~t in college education
via tll< printtd pogr. Sr• detaill
on Pogr 9 .
•
DAIL~ PILOl SC Wtdnndu, Srpttmbfr lit 1973 ' _,,_ _____________ ,_
·:New Policy
For Ene1·gy
Requested
LOS ANGELES tAP) -Californ ia,
raced "'Ith mou nting e n e r g y re·
quirements. should fonnu late an energy
policy that includes extensive offshore oil
drilling and the construction of more -
nuclear power plants, says the director
of the slate Department or Conservation.
Ray B. Hunter also recommends that
lhe policy contain less severe en·
\'ironmental controls on industry and that
industry be offered financia l incentives to
· develop more efficient methods of pnr
ducing and using energy.
California's energy needs will double in
the next IS years, Hunter said in a
speech here Tuesday.
EstabliJhing a state policy woulwi't
solve all the problems of figuring out how
those needs will be ml!I , he said, but "at
least we wouldn't all be scurrying around
in a thousand different directions as we
seem to be doing now."
Hunter said California's energy crisis
isn't in the lack or energy resources but
in rinding energy "that Is both in·
expensive a n d environmentally ac·
ceptable." 1
Offshore oil drilling and nuclear power
plants meet those standards as far as
be's coilcerned, Hunter said.
ScJaool Se11tinel .
"Our California energy policy must de-
mand that we again begin extensive
offshore drilling for oil, that we tap that
enormous reserve that lies just offshore,
those billions of barrels of oil Califor-
nians will need not too long from now ,"
he said.
In recommending further construction
of nuclear power plants, Hunter disputed
the criti~m that they could be
d,angerous to the people and environment
around them.
Thor, a German shepherd guard dog, weaves bis way through a stack
of schoolroom chairs in a Los Angeles school -one of five man-dog
teams leased by the schools. The nation's second largest school dfs.
lrict is turning to guard dogs-to help fight an increase in vandalism,
arson and burglaries plaguing schools throughout the city.
"A majority in science say that
nuclear power plants can be built to
.9perate safely. I believe them," he said.
"I believe too, that nuclear energy
must play a key role Jn the future
generation of electrical power."
• The energy California does have now is
, being used inefficiently, 11unter said,
which ls why he thinks financial in·
centives must be offered to companies
; and lndus~es which use some of their
. capl~ to find more efficient methods of
using Bnd producing ll
Summer Beacli
·Totals Sent
:To Council
. S8n Clemente's bummer summer will
. become aHidal tonight ~ city coun-
cilmen recelV'a beach attendance totals
for the season -figures which show· a
~ severe dip in use along the South County.
' City lifeguards complied the summer
total which shows a loss of about 530.,000
.. beach goers at city and South County
. beaches over the months of summer.
Businessmen and lifeguards through
·the summer bemoaned the unseasonal
·cool weather and concesslonaries relying
on beach tourism reported dips to
revenue of up to 50 percent.
In all, this past summer showed that
1.21 million persons went to the beaches
: guarded by the San Clemente force. Th e
figure for 'the same period lastyear was
1.8 million.
The weat~r. say guard spokesmen.
may be only part of the problem of
dwindling beach attendance.
Frem Page I ,
·AGNEW ...
k~ePs going oh and on and he does' not
one .damned thing to stop it." ~eanwbJle, White House Deputy Press
'Secretary Gerald L. Warren today denied
(1) there is "a disposition by the White
House or the ·people in the White House
to force the resignation of the vice pres!·
dent, (2) the White House is exerting
pressure on the vice president to resign"
and (3) the White House has been the
source of stories that Agnew was think·
ing about resigning.
Wmen said be would have no further
comment concemlng Agnew until Atty.
Gen. Elliot Ricbarlbon ha> acted wllh
respect to possible presentation of the
Agnew matter to a federal grand jury in
Baltimore. ~
Warren said it would be inappropriate
to offer a White House COIM)ent on lhe
vice president's situation or to accept
questions on the subject.
Leaving a luncheon Tuesday where be
acted as host to visiting Pakistani Prime
Minister Zulflkar Ali Bhutto, the vice
president was confronted by newsmen
and asked whether he was going to
resign.
"Gentlemen, as you know it is my
practice not to comment on stories from
undisclosed soorces," Agnew replied.
Smiling tautly, he iiflored their shouted
pleas to say something more and drove
av.'ay in his limousine.
In another development. a report that
members of the House Judi ciary Co m·
mittee discussed the possibility of im·
peaching Agnew with the Justice Depart·
ment was denied today by Cbalnnan
Peter \V. Rodino Jr. (O.N.J.).
Judge Upholds .
Murder Suspect's
$100,000 Bail
An Orange County Superior Court
judge refused late Tuesday to reduc.e the
$100,000 bail that is holding murder
suspect Robert Carl "Whip" Slatton In
• county jail.
Judge James Turrier delayed Slatton''
filing of a plea to murder charges until
Friday but he promptly rejected a bid by
lhe nncbbanll's lawy¥ to lower ball.
Slatton, 41, of TrabUco Canyon ls a~
cused of slaying l.lellnls Glahn, 21, of. La
Mirada July 11. GJabn was one of a
number of trespassers in the Ortep Hot
S,..ings area w h o Were Involved tn a
fracas that ended Mth the shooting of
Glahn.
Slatton wls "arrested on the nearby
Starr Ranch. premises after being hurled
frotn his feet In "1lat sheriff's ollicers
said was a hiH)! speed light from lhe
scene of the shooting. Deputies said they
rr.covered the murder weapon from a
nearby gully.
From Pagel
BLOWUP. • •
the briefcase Attorney Baranger's wlfe
had just given him as a·present.
"Mr. Baranger isn 't very happy,"
observed his law partner, Alan Plaia. · Public preference for the Colorado
River area as well as Mexican beach
resorts is drawing much of the tourism
away from the South Coli!t.
1----0rrsome of the worst days not only did
conceulonaries close up shop, but
lifeguards as well cut down the number
; of towers open.
'fit's absolutely untrue." Rodino said.
H~ said the commitlee has consulted
\\•ith Justice Department officials on a
number of subjects a& part of a review it
is conducting of the department, but that
impeachment was not one of. them.
The Wastiington bureau or 'Ridder
Publications quoted unidentified so urces
as saying the consultations resulted from
the "actions of prudent men" In the wake
of Agnew's denial of a recent report that
he was about lo announce his resi gn ation.
Contacted later today, Attorney
B:.ranger said his Jaw partner is indeed
right.
"It was my onij aecent briefcase -
with my initials in gold on the side -and
frankly, l'm ticked off," he declared.
"It's not r,epairable. They blew the
whole end out of it. I am going to make a
claim against the county,'' Bara·nger em·
phaslzed .
"
Both measures marked the first lime
'. closures have ~effected during th e
. usually busy summer months. Some
. tov;ers even were closed on Labor Day
and several guards got the...day off.
OIAN•I COAST SC
DAILY PILOT
TII• Ot' ...... c:-1 OAILY ,ILOT, wm. w111cll
Is ~lned IM N"""·'°'"'-II llUblllfttill bJ
,,.. Ot'•"'" C .. llf ll'Wl11fllrit COnlPl"Y. St1lf ••le lldl!lorw; .,. JIUlll"'*I, ~·· !Mqll
Frip.y, for Coll• Mna, H..,_1 8Ndl,
l'lunllf'll,_. llt.c:ll.IP-t1ln V•!lfy, UfUM
8eedl, lniW../S..SClttNck Mii SN! C...._,le/
t.f'i J.,." C.ploltr•-A l ll!llle r191oMI
.. ll!on II f!\11111...., a.tw91y1 tfllf Sundi"I"·
TM prlncl .. I Jllllllltfllnt "'"' 11 11 llD W..! ••v s.....,., , .. , • ._; C.1fflrfl ... tMl!I.
R•tl1rt H. W1.J
'°'"""""' •1'111 ,-WM,....,
J11k R. Cwrlt! vie.. .,, .. ld...t .,... G.Mr• ""---
Th1m11 K••"'I ElllltM
Tll•t1111 A. Mwr11hl111 ~"" l!•ilor
0 1rl11 H. L.01 Ridt1t4 '· Hell AMIMMI M1Mti111 h tllln ... Cl•••· OMee JOii Ntrth ll C•111l"1 l•1I, 92671 ...... -..
c.11 ~~ 1• w..1 14\1 s1r"1
........ '-di; #SJ """"" .., ..... ,. tllMI ........ tetdl: 11DJ t..o. ._......,., ..,... ltldli m ,_ ,._
1111111111 f714t MMJ2t
Cl•lftM A4h•tl1l11 '42-U71
S.Qr r11A1Dlrp.,1:1111
, ........ 491-4421
~. t,,a. °'..... """' ........... ~. Hi -•"1• l1MW11-., ...... --.,. ......,,_....,.. """" ""' .. • ........ .....,. lftl:ltl ..... ........ ~....,..
..... "-....... ,... It C:.11 ,.., ~ ......... "" "" Cltritr .,, .. "'IMMrJ ..,. 1!'1111 N,lJ mtllllll~1 ltlll1'9PY ............ ~.
I •
•
From Page l
RAIL STOPS •••
ule were altered somewhat, Musick ad-
ded a footnote about the succes! of Am·
trak.
Passenger figure&, he said, have risen
at least 30 percent on a monthly basis
this year. and In the San Diego region, of
which San Juan and San Clemente are a
part, the rate i! even higher.
The firm, he said, is ordering ne \v
locomotives and ca rriages in an effort to
improve service and is exploring !he
possibilit y or using high·speed French·
built-trains on son1e lines.
Those vehicles, however, might never
make th e run from Los Angeles and San
Diego, ~cause the 100-year-<>ld Santa Fe
railway traveled by the San Dlegan has
far too many curves for a f::isl , modern
locomotive.
And straig htening of the curves,
Musick said, would requite millions of
dollars in repairs end right-of·...fa y
purchases .
Sentenced to 'Life'
NAHA, Jap•n (AP) -A 22-year-old
Quam man was tentenctd Tuesday to
life imprisonment by a Japanese court
for the murder of a U.S. Marlne last
JanUJ!ry. Naha District Procurator
NorJmoto Matsuda had demanded a
,dellth sentence for Roy Anthony A.meta
In the !hooting or Marine Cpl. Dlman
Gor<la , 20, or Wb!itler, canr .• durtna •
robbery Jan. 20.
"Surely," he said, ''they have in-
surance covering acts of their employes
committed in the line of duty."
Board Omits
Dana Harbor
Dana Point Harbor will not be included
In Street Lighting Maintenance Di!trict
No. I , the Board of Supervisors decreed
Tuesday.
The Harbors, Beaches and Parks
District staff had advised that in-
corporation of the harbor into the
llghtlng district would place an economic
burden on the lessees at the harbor
which was not anticipated by them in
their original bids for harbor leases as
business ventures.
The di•trlct !!all e&timaled lhe coat of
11,hllng at $10,000 a year. The district
~·111 pay the cost as "landlord" of the
area .
QUAKE REPORTED
EAST ,OF FRESNO
FRESNO (AP) -A minor earth
tremor was re!)Orted by rooldenta of. the
tiny community Of Piedra, about IO milea
northeast of here, authorities llld.
The · Tues~1y quake rattled windows
•nd shook bulldlngs, but no damaae or
Injuries were reported.
--
'.
Detection CanceF ~· . . ' -'
Eai-ly Still Top-·HOpe
By TOM BARLEY
Of IM~ ...... •tiff
Many forms of cancer are ylt!ldlng
their secrets to relentless researchers
but early de'. ·'.ion is still the ;hyslclan's
major ally in controlling and killing the
disease, Uie American Cancer Society's
CalUomla president sald Tuesday night
In Newport Beach.
Or. Robert McKenna of San Marino
told the annual meeting of the organiza.
tiOn's Orange County chapter that fewer
than 50 percent of America's women are
taking advantage of early detection tests
that are providing thousands of cures in
c1:1ses where the disease ls spotted in its
early stages.
"Many fonns of cancer are 100 percent
curable U we can catch them at this
paint," be said. "Worn~ are par:ti~y
favored in terms of early detection and
they should never miss an annual
c~kup." , ·
Calling for a "bill ot rights" for the
' cancer patient, McKenna said cancer
Victims must be guaranteed top quality
\medical care from the moment the
dliiease Is $pc>lted to the time ol curt and
throughout rehabilitation.
"No Illness produces a greater
trauma." he said. "We mu:t work to pro-
vide the medical .and psfchological
cushion that cancer vlctbm need if they
are to take on their affUcallon and wln."
McKenna attacked recent p1,1bliclty
given lo the theory that Jmmunization
migbt prove to be the greatest cancer
killer with the warning that lhe lnr
munology theory la "still only ex·
perimenta1.
"It's only on the horizon," be said. "We
need lo know a lot more about thi5
theory and the body processes before we
can even begin to hope that immwiology
couid be a ne_w tool in the war on can-
cer."
McKenna urged his audience and
particularly cancer victims to "firmly
reject" w h a t he c a 11 e d "quack
substances" and "the devious approaches
ol lhe J><OPle who peddle illem."
He singled oul Laetllle/' a rompound
derived from crushed apricot pits as
"typical of the worthfess junk of(ered to
many cancer victlftll ~y.
"It's completely...si\9' ijid It Lt In·
human to peddle this Junk , lo cancer pa-
tlenls who should be -concenb'atlng their
eoergies and hope on established forms
of treatment," he said.
McKenna lold tho Orange County group
that the war on~~ i& golng to be con·
siderably advanced ii all cancer fighting
organizations push for the creation of
community cllnJcs, "parUcular!y In lbe '
poverty areas of our nation!.
"These centers would piovtde prompt
Initial. diagnosis and tests that so often
spot ~cer and save lives," be said.
''Research is vital and must p on but we
can do a lot for ourselves in this field of
early detection ."
From P .. e l
CABLE • • •
thus reverse a denlal which they handed
down on similar requests several mootbs
ago. ·
Councilman Thomas O'Keere asserted
that financial record1 submitted by the
firm indicated to him that the operation
was not experiencing any"' "cuh-flo'w"
problems and added that with in-
novations in the tn4ustry tbe cable
aentce faced strong succe11es in GQJng
Victoria-Doheny Signals
P~omised (or February
yean. ~
Fodera! regulaUom '1IN1 ~ •forclng
cable aerviC<S lo plan even!Wly lbr two-
way transml.uioaa and estra cbiooel• so
tilot subocriben GDUlcl lnatall new aeciui·
\y ilme<S, ~ bills or e ... lhop , , , all
vta Jhelr ~al fable. ·
o~ Jl!edicted lhe profita lrom "In·
novallol>i tliat mm! people don't even mow about yet" would make the picture
rosy. : ;'.
MUtena argued, .bow~ver; that the ma-
jority of. lhe lnCr...e. IOUgbl tb1a time
around mark Ifie .. first Ume since lhe
service fint began tbat'rates would rise. ".tbe cable firm affects subacribers not
ooly In San Clemente but In Clpiatrano
Beach, Dana Point and parts of San Juan
Capistrano.
Public hearings before the San
Clemente council will be set tonight on
the !l)•tter.
At the last rowid ol such bearlnp -
when the first rate-hike wu rejected by
the ...met -*'1eral ra!Omta .,.,_ed
to camplaln about lhe lack of. a sbarJ> Im-
age on some channels through the cable.
Mar!enJ Tuesday said that • bull•in
problem ln his firm's lerritory la lhat
more than -uurd of. lhe .,.. can ob-
tain a clear signal via a convioUooal
rooftop antenna, tbua, c e r t a I n
neighborhoods have a poor aubsaiptlon
rate.
He 1&ld that a somewhat constant
figure of subscrlption.s has held for years
and sho)l'J about 56 percent of local
residents buying the antenna service.
'!be bulk ol lhe new business, be added,
comes from newcomers who settle in
new realdenUal developments.
But those subscriptions come with
greater expenses because when a new
development goes in, the firm must in-
stall new underground cables.
'Ellen' Grolfµig
MIAMI (UPl)-T!H)!tly wound tropical
storm Ellen could reach minimal bur·
ricane strength in the; eastern Atlantic
later today, but -posed no threat to land.
°"" . .. '
County road department spokesmen
this week promised that traffic signals
for a problem intersection in Capistrano
Beach would be completed by February.
If the installation indeed comes about
early next year It will mark the end of a
four-year battle by the Capistrano Beach
Chamber of Commerce which bu cam·
paigned for the equipment at Victoria
Boulevard and Doheny Park Road. ·
The crossroads is the major in·
tersection In the community's com·
me~ia.I village and !or years has been a
problem for motorists and pedestrlana:
alike. ·
Road department official Murray
Storm said that right~f-way purchase
problems were the prime cause for the
delay in the signal installation and that
the final purchase.! would be con·
summated in months to come.
Originally lhe plam caned for a project .
blending lhe 11gnab with a wideoed Vlo-
toria Boulevard, plus the extension of
that roadway with a bridge llnkln8 It to
Diii Obispo Road .
But the bridge project is not con-
templated for at leut two more years as
engineers compile sq environmental lm·
pact report.
Indicatlons now are that the bridge
Land Detachment
Action Revealed ·
The Board of Supervl.sors took action
Tuesday toward .the detaching or 27 acres
lrom the Clpiatrano Bay Park and
Recreation District.
A public hearing will be held on the
issue within siJ: weeks. The acrea~ has
recently been annexed to San Clemente.
Detachment from the Capistrano ·Bay
District was requested by the clty and by
the property ownen to avoid duplicate
taxation for the same services.
The district, follotvlng previous prac·
tlce, refused to agree to the detachment
so the Local Agency Fonnatlon COm·
mis81on referred the matter to the board.
would span San Juan Creek at a spot
farther inland of the Victoria alignmenL
At present the only link for tnttlc from
Capistrano Beach and Dana Point is via
Pacific Coast Highway and that route
often is congested during weekends and
summer months.
The , chamber bas spearheaded the
drive .for the stwials for at leut. four
years . and has won repeated promises
that the project Is a top-priority Item in
the count)' budgets.
The cost of the project his been aet at
about $30,000.
Avco Witlidraws
Lagun.a Niguel
Project Permit
Avco Community Developers bu
withdrawn its request for a permit from
the sta..te Coastal 1.one Conaerntlon
ConuiUlitn for a· 11,218 unit Laguna
Niguel project at lhe lut minute.
The ttate.commisston meeting
t o d a y In, Inglewood wu 1chechllecj lo
vote ?"·A~co's 7Hcro ~anal~ ,cleo(elop-ment; .
Th<" Condo{lllnium ~feet aj P,eclfic
Coaat Hlfbway and Crown Valley
Parkway was denied a permit by the
South Cioast Regional ?.one Q:mservatJon
Commission.
Avco appealed that decision to the
state commission established by Proposi·
lion 20 last November.
Avco officials askea for the con-
tinuance late Tuesday · for at least two
weeks. The commission's ne1t meeting ls
Oct. 3 in Eureka. ·
Commission officials said it is likely
that action will be delayed tDlUI a Loa
Angeles area meeting Ckt. 17.
Withdrawn.. lndefmile!y tod>y WU •
permit request by Robert Grant Corpora·
tion for 213 townhouse units ln Saa
Clemente.
The development is planned on Camino
Capblrano between Camino Estrella Bnd
Camino Mita Cosfa.
•
=·
Bays P.L Shirts & Sllorts
' Sweat Sax
All Star BasketbaR Shoes-9.95
Bob Wolfe Sa1!81' Pro Sboes-:-9.95
Soccer Sboas--10.95 up
Sweat Shirts & Pants
Wumup SUits-21.95 ta 34.95
Hand Ball~ & .Gmes
Racquetball Racquets &. Balls
Faotllal Face Ganis
Taucll Fldal Fiiis & Belts
lnlepads-fonn Pads
Teetll Pratectss
Open 9 to 6 Closed Sundays
• I
.
WilsO&-DaYls-Yoneym-Bancraft .,
Te111ls Rackets
' . Wllson-Penll;-Dunlop Teruis Bals
7.95 per Dozen
Tennis Dresses
I
Men's & Bays' Tennis Shorts & Sitts
Convarse-Adidas-Tretorn Tellis Shies
•
Speelll Slllrts &. Suits • • . ., .
•es-Parts-Tlrls-Tabes
Repaid•
, ~ -.. --'
•
(
I
I I
J
•
l I
I.
I
r
•
I
I
I
I
1
'J
I
I
,/
•
..
;l/l DAILY PILOT SC WtdntsdaJ, Septtmber 19, 197·3
Complete New York Stock List Housing Industry • !llllW YO~tc IUl'O -'°'loWltlo w. aat.t Nil S.... Htt ""'"' Jll tN .... y" Stlcti; "£'~: ... e llldtl M1fJI Low Ll U Chi. ,..E (hill Hloh t.-Utl Cha.
Gets Nixon Boost t1ll PS 1 I' 141 s w; IS + i. ""'*" fu 20llit »re+ • ~::;.f.'1".,C ~~ -.\A-flftld: 1 16 j • f' 20!'1 !I t 11 .. 9lCfl¥Jr 1j \ti liKe 11W rho J011lDOll • 1 t '-
... r.:n ""' LM ..... c::. " ,\·Ji" 1! ll jl" !!.!! ~· ~~::!:'I'.: "°; , mM ll" il" Im+. t!M~r. I~ ·1 1'1 ! 1ftlt 1~t1e.
mi~" l~ '! li "'° .... .,.+I. oMPw "' 'I ... 11• ~-'""''" 1.U 1 ..... .._ i-L 1 1" "' Jm '"+ '•
WASHINGTON (UPI)
Pre11Ident Nixon said We<!JWs-
day he would try to pump
• 15.5 blllion Into the nation's
sagging houi lng , industry Jn
the near future whUe Congress
considers h.11 proposed long-
~~ range aoluUons in'housing.
• < ·'''
In a message to Congress ,
the President 1ald the govern-
ment would move shortly to
allow savings and loan in-
stitutions to provide an ad-
ditional 12.1 billion In loan
commitments. 8avjngs 1and
loan associations have
virtually shut off mortgage
lendlng since June.
~ -.; NIXON SAID lhe Federal
I
1 . Bruiks Up 1 ~ ~; ... ,., Prime Rate
'
•
•
..
'
..
'
•
• •
SAN FRANCJSCO (AP)
-Bank of America, the
world's largest com-
, mercial bank, led the list
of California banks Tues-
day that raised their
prime interest I e n d j n g
. rate to a reeord 10 per-
cent.
United California Bank
and Security Pacific bank,
both headquartered in Los
Angeles; 'Ille Bank or
CaJifornia and the Crocker
National Bank, bolh with
headquarters . here. joined
' " in the juinp from ffi per-
cent.
This latest increase, the
16th this year, was in-,
itiated last weell:_ by San
Francisco-based W e 11 s
'Fargo Bank.
Auto Lease
Agreement
Concluded
Special to the 11811j"" PDot
BEVERl,.Y ~lf I L L S -
Soulh11..,r Leasing Corp. of
8-'ei-ly Rills and R a I p h
Williams Enterprises Inc. 0£'
Encino have announCed an
agreement which calls for the
pun:hase by Southwest Leu-
ing of certain of t h e
automobiles and related leases
of Williams Enterprises.
C.Onsummatlon of t h e
purchase Is 11.lbject lo the ap-
proval of the executive com-
mittee of Southwest Leasing
and the board of ~directon of
William11 Enterprises. loc., the
statement said Tuesday.
Ralph Williams. pres!dent of
Williams Enterprises, and Jer-
; rold M. Axelrod, president ol
Southwest Leasing, said the
purchase price is in excess of
$2.4 million and covers ap-
• \ proxlmate1y SSO vehicles and
related JeaSes.
Southwest Leasing is one. of
ll<>mo Loan Bank Boord would
provide ''forward com-
mitments" to ' t h r l f t 1 n·
stltution ' tmt would
guarantee money for them et
sonie future date to cover loan
commitments that c o u I d
otherwise not be made.
A shortage of funds for
thrill insUtutioos could occur
If ~vers continue to witl)draw
funds for investment I n
Treasury bills and olher In·
vestments returning interest
rates of 8.2 percent and
higher.
AC ... I r. tt .u,..:·~~ .. + ~ entSW l.OI 'l "" ~ 20~ Ito-"" .. .,11:1•(1 IC n IN "'"' $1'4o )l>Jo+ \'I ,.or-. I, ~ " t ,,.. l:Nlt-\lo tnll Sor• I I 2lM ~ a~ ~ .. + ft flt! Ml t 1,.._ 11'1t 11..,, l»Nl!I 20. + -"i, kl 1 S 2 l't 11'-21 +lo ..Wfl ,OJI \J 14 u 11" ™-, "'""°' I l l 4"\.'J •1 ... 411,i; 1\1 O'IMfll 1· :tJ "-a ... +lh
,. 111 I ''' ertMd ,jO 4 I' ,, ''"' 4 + ,, .. 11NS 8nc•2 • 1 'lt1to 11~ 1H\+ "" "'"'' '11 ., " tJ~ · s flt 111; 1'~ u~11~gr:o'='11~ .~ 1 ,,.1.~i:t? '"'+ 1~~~~,"~ 'i 'l! ?r~ n .. ~'4+.t~ :t.~t, 4 .. " 1• .. : Aavln~ i ':f j~ 10~ ~ Cl\adt>llfll 5 . f -'ti :ttil ~! \lo Ft!Vlttl! .tt 1$ 11 11')) 11 nit+ ~ it_ll~rr. t I ..... ff" U"'-+ I. .. ffil Ii. Ii 11f 7S\~ 14V. 15Yl ~C:hm»lllt 1, • 216 It .... 1"4 IN 11.F1IV8!1 AJb II I• Ill, 11\4 lH,.t.V. CID!' .: I! I.SI.to Mo+•!
A• L 1 5714 5114 ~ ~ (.11111 at . 21 211\ 21 21 ~ F1W118 1 n ' 2 :µi .. :J.R, 3~, ,,..M 1 1 I " ff" ff" ~ " 'E rr• c:o IJ , , , , -C:tl ltt .,, fVi 1100 •1 •1 '' -~• FtWl1 s.oni 10 16 ltl'l 371-. xv.1 •~~ .Cf>L\rt ~ ~ A min 110o l'l ••:it. U\\ 1•"'+1 • (;tlmr>.fP ,n 11 n 1 lt'h It 1• .. + :i. FIKll"NI .9' 1• .S1 5~• S7 I -.. S9 j • • f · + ~. ~ M~IJ 1 4\i , ''"" i;thfrlco._,30 ' 20204lt20 10 -~Fl1lw'F .20Q 7 9'6.1~101 1 1~ 1oKM <1e: j I I ~ '°' •~~~ '"locl . 21 U6 '8 1llj ~+2 · -.Mirr HT 2 I 33 21~ n 14 ~'-+ 'Ill "e\"'Sc .1• 10 lot m 1~. 1~l \1 <•nN.O I I I J 1si., U\-1 ~ \. • ~',"'1M:"'i · ' Jtlll 1 H\li+•~CIWl1Flld .n . 1l tfe • •Vt f ll>-"i F lfnl .1? 10 4'f II~ l0\1 "~' 1ai.K•nf>LI 1 I IN~ 2t \1 ._, •"' Jfl 6 2• .. l + ~. -.i'IAMMln 'l ll :193 J7~ 5' 57 t \"l"•t,,_ 0.0 • tt 101\ Vl1 lO~ 19 Kt!, llldusf 1 JI JU J t 1•• A~iorit f 10 51 2la t3~1 ,,....._ \\ ChlMt J,JQ; 11 110 Jl\~ J2..,, 531~ i~ P: .. •IV1 J~ 13 U. tl''o :10\4 1121.\+l"" 1(1 ..... pf 1.4' 6 11~ ll\1 ll 'h ~ ~:~J .,'·•" > ,."•r,U 15~ IS\i-\4 Cti.ln • ..)II J ) 7t\ 110 ''• "'-Fllnl!'.OI lot 1 16' It"• ll\'I II~·+ •1 1(e\lf.l.8r .U It l» 2'11 '' 2v,a J\1 . f 100h 100\lr °""""'" .IO 1 61 I~ U\~ lSfil+ .... F . E co.,r • J 2-•~1 1• 2• -11 l(•llf8 pf '"' I 11'~ 72\~ n••+ ~. !!~l'llf: 2! ~ ~\.ltt ';~l 2'"'-1 C1*Cll 1.60 10 1 j11'o 311t jrlt-+.fl• G11 '5 6 1•..,. U lA1 1' It ICl .. Kk .10 1~ ' 'h ~1 HI>-'• lli'.rtwi '56 I l I , '" 'I~+ V. CllnPd 112 J2 l:W 5 1.N •lito+ ~ F •Pwr I.to II 1'9 3'fl JI~• 3'Z1+ 't IC•Vtffll ,60 J 2J 12 llU 12 + ~. Akin Alu' I l ?012,rl'h lLtili -\llCtle,,1 .7SI> 6 l1 C av. .q.i.o+ v.Fl1PwL 1.22 11 ti JS'Mi »,,,_ »'-• l("bl•r .10 a 11 11'1 I"'-11'4lo Ako $Id J6 6 l lt n, ~ :M t lito Chi E Ill .H 6 I 10 10 10 Flot $11 l,XI J 3 12 22 2' -l1 l(ftf!e(;11 10 S 61 • l.14 • + '41
., U. ·16 44 &3 ,I~ ·~ .. ~ Cral Mllw Cit S •l Hl '" 10 t F,!~ ... ~5-10 236 ~ ... ,, •9~•+ !1 K•ll•tln .<Ill S 20 100\ !Ot/o lll"lo+ .. A M fob :M ll fil' tto )2,..,. .:hlMllCp pf ) 16\IJ '"" 1~ l'I """''°""' l · · J 19\IJ 11~ 19 !1 1(1l1000 .5'1 10 to IJ\i I Y o 1l"" A -2:m t 1 ,l;, ,!..:!:: ~Cl! f>l'lflln_'! 2 10 127 JJ 3.IV. :M~+ ., Flyl tr ·* 11 ns Jl'lt lOh JI \I K•itv·k I.JO • Ml 21 2~ V-M+ ;~ Al AmLI ..2, lS 1 1 1°" 10.ll Chlltl cl UP 23 12 .... 12 11Vio+ \It ;.w;M 0 1!,:5 9 4450 »"• ,".~ ,,1v,~ '!\ l(lfflmll l 10 0 6 ?ra 27 27 -t4
A ICICD lOb I 20 9 1'111 I '• Ch llk t NW l) 12\o'I 12 lWa+ \ MCI/ "' •• "' Kenntcot 2 10 19'J :W 41 :sll4o 3.IV.+1 ~ ·~~~ 10 6 a 1• ''" i.' + .,. c,hoctF .10. 16 10 JI) J\fl J.,.,+ 1ro ~::'.la ·~ 12 ': 1f1, it'~ 1 ~,,+ t .. Kv uru I 7• 1 11 23'~ 2>1i 231,1, .. 3 . • 36\o\ ,.I'll ~ N II Cr•ft SI 36 • )';1 4 F 1· ., + • K•rr Mc .to l2 fl n" 11 "• n\io+ ~ ~I II .44 ~ lr 10~ 20 • -.~ .10 6 •I IHI! llV. Ill\+ 4t, F=~r nrl 2T 'tOn_. ,r• ~\• + ~. l(lm Cl l,l'(I 1$ 215 ._.1, o(j\\ ._. + \0 :11~~~~A 1 ·~ 11mt 1'" 1 ~tit?~,'":;, \1 : )t: ff~ f~'1 t:tt+" ~:~"' ;~ ,f 1tt ~ t \: ri~ t: ~:~~! ~ l g 1r1 .~ ,n::: ~
AJldPtod ·'!\ 21 ,~ iJ fl •t "' kl<>•• 1 ... ' .. n 22 ,.. n ...... F01fllf'W . to If 50'I ... ""' ... +2~ I( L M Alrl 11 lS :w ..... ~ h ~l&;is' 1:2 I '° 2•l• ~ irJ v. ~\'t~i= l ;s 'ft 1} !f' !:1:o ~"'++"-F,oKbol°o ·.60 n 120 '2'• .a l~ •2~1+1 "' ::r,:,: f 1' 1:: ii:~ 1,1i. •,,"++111o • ,_, / 3» 5YJ ' s•n+ ~• IT yp1 jll) 1 112 1 '"' r•klM .20 20 35? '"' lt:h u"'+1'lt Koeti .... • ' "I CIWI ,)2 1 119 II" II~ I "1+ Ch c .. 12 111 +1 FrtplNI IO 2• <I.Sot 30'4 79 30 +I r .,, 1\o I ll lJ 33 -IU. :1i::~.-. :'~ f I~ ,!Q 1::Z 1i::i+ * ~:~A!"2~1: \~ fi~ ~~ ;:~ ~'"'~1tt ~~~~ i ~7? I 1r, if• ~~: 1;1:+ I•~=~ 111~ 1 l~ t~ Pitt ~i;~~I~ WITll CONGRESS not ex• AlcN I'' 16 $71 11'!1 73 .... 7Sl4 2 " Inv .Ml s 3ll n~ 12111 12'A+ "' -G G--l(r•llco 111 12 '° d-11 •S 1" ,_..led to act before next year Am11su '·'° 1 6 n i, 22"' zi:v. .,.. cov Inv wtJ · 1S l'lli 1"' 111o G•bl• 1nc1u 1 11 ,~~ 1~ lS'lo-~• 1trn11• .20 J7 '" •oo.. lt'4 1~. r vv Ambtc: .50 1 162 10\ll \Olio ID"'+ "2 CITY lnv Pl 2 . ~ 24\IJ 23*-2t\4+ GAC Coro t l J\'t J ) l(roetll1r .IO ' I• 1'"" l•J.e 1 ·~ On neW housing proposals, Amcor ,lJb I ~ •'t, •:V. •:ti-Ill City Slorn 24 •h •~1 4~ GAF CCI .+I I ....c> 14 121,t 1• +1111 Krti0er 1 :JO 11 10 17'11 lt•l 1 + ._
Nl·xon outlined sleps the 1'-K1 1 20 1 '20 1ti1 ,,,,0_1,~1rr:~111.~1~ il'o •,,~. ",,.~ •1,r;.•,'"'GAF111 1 xi 13 11-':o 11~. 1111o+1.l(vior 1-* 6_,•,121.111• 11ri+•.i "mfl'P 2 60 1 36\lo 361"' 361/o+ V. C · "" ,. V. Gem Sk 1 lO I • 10 29'111 21l1 29\~+ U ~ -•
Ad · 1~ t" Id t k AmHn .»:i n 326 60\lr. 39111 olOl.O+l..., .L °' Am l » 6\\ ff. I I \lo G.mblpf 1-. 6 30 29V. J;;t 'h LK~ 1"2 1 12 IA in .. 19'_. nun a.1.ra ion cou a e 11 Hu pf 3~ . •l ""' 1114 IN+W. c'•'~ c,•11H1 2 12 13 73 1211o 73 11o ~1ms111 1 '° 10 7Hi 21~ ~ ,L•m1n Sn 1 1 u 12'4 12v. •1v.-· \\ Ith t · I AmAJrFI .n 21 u r.iv, 13 ~ .,, 1.32 10 lt 32\lo JIV. :a"' 14 .,.~, .u 21 11 ~ ~• »'II.-v, _e,., .12 10 2 20 :10 29 _ 14 W o,u congress100a ap. Am 111r11nn . mi 11~1 lR l1"'4+ ~ 'c:M:::i'"•o S2 t s ,.. i11o11 11-11i.a v. •rde>e11 .10 1' 201 2• 2:»11 2, + "',L•rN11 2.os11 1 29 21~~ 21\• 21.\..\+ 411
Pmval to ease the housing AmB•k .20 ,, 1"" 1"' 7~ . ' . .so 1 11 114 n.. ·~ ,_., G•rlock .•• 1 ' 1~;, 1sv. 1v.•+ ,., •lrobl Jrt 13 1 1 -, 1 _ ~ J4 ABrend 2.JI I 76 36 ~S\fi 35~+V.~~1 1Ppl I 6 llh ll'lt 11-.-'h <lll Svc l.12 I 11 It 13 1.-.Jt -11i L••rJI ... 21 1 516 ._ ,u, ~'> cre<Ilt squeeze. AmB•C•I .M 13 lUO 32'11o lO'M ?2:\11 t 2\lo CNA '~r ~ 11 ,,, ~ J2 3Sll+Jl11 G•l•w•v In s 3 114 ~ 6\lo t1•rS pl 21.!o 25 26 2W. I\
H "d the Int ded Am Bldg 29 j 33' llV. lJ \I " 6 IJJ 12~ 12 121/o+ ''o 8!A Corp ll 'l ''• ~ "i+ "°' ••sea C .«I .I lit 11 lH• i~+ 119 • e saJ y were en Am Ctn 2'20 ... :ie 2~¥1 :JO ~~NAP!, ~·;s 21S 16* 16•,1, liffi+ ..... ffl'lltl\ Cap 1• l l'h 11 ~. 11:i..+ \;o LNICPI 2.60 . ll 21 \~ 21~ ~Iii "f'•ttohoJ llevttelh I AC•npthl; • 111o11,1,2• 24 oc1(.B"I ' 4 9•142~1•11-.1•1 \l'J-1 mlnlncl . 2 JP.\\3"1~, LNl<Pl 220 IU\12,'h2 >i-:-'io uS ; ·~'t'p <\ a em-ACnM114b16 1•17 IW.1•~·+'". <>r .Jt21 M9~~2:V,._\i G.nAmlnv 12 1 ]'-\ll>.lill~~ LHIWV .116 12.fl~'otl ·~:tfl ed' t hOu • edit rob-A Ch•ln 1 70 I $ 25\.'i 25•4 2sC: (.oldWBk .21 ' 114 13\.'i u~ 12,,._ ... <In AOI .60g 11 IOI JJ',1 31\\ 13 +I LNd"-N . 2• l5 ., 11~ 1 )'f't"IV. m 1ae smg er P A Cv•n 1·o10 11 J4J 204 21+• '"""+""~ortcotn .• 1s 16 11Yo 1~ ,,.,.+.,..,oenATr 1.aa u •DI 513' ~t J1~•+1 '1l~"'on•. , t ,..,. uu 1 ,,.,
!em: and second, to improve Am 0111111' 1 IS J 18'11o 18 11'\lo+: ~ 0."."'1k -•,.4 21 14'• J2lito 31~ 32\'t-""GnAT pf 21,>f 1, u -. 43~ 6Jtil+1~ L•h PI C .Ml ] 1$ 11\.\ UV! 1 ,,., ADIJIT•I .. 25 13 4l' O 'lll ~ +l Ii A • f 42 11Yt 11"" 11"'6 GlnB•nc 16 7 I 13¥1 lW. l:t\I Lt!\ Vel Ind t l\11 I~ ~ 1' for the longer term the supply AmDu•I v11 , 6..,, 6v. 6"'+ ;t c:l\11n• ,roar 13 " 1:w. 1n. IJ + ~ GnC•t11e .so a i.u '"' ..... •~+ v. Llflmn i v.b · ~ 1••11 tttlt 1 •+ v. Cho In red't dtbe bl!' AOUlpt .a.. t 11\11 11\1111\11 COi~ •d~. ,10 '~ 2~ 2~ Gncig. 120 1 21 ll~ l:W. 1n.i1a LM1Mr Cp. '"I"' JV. io!t: '• o us g c 1 an a 1-Ul"I T•...,. AmE1ec 1.PO ' 1a 2"" 11Yo 2~+,.. co1~~n1:0. ': ~i t1~ t'J! t~l:tl'! &;,, o::!~ ~ J 2~;11 ~"' 2{"' ~ t~J" '!: 20 *: •,.., 37VJo I" tyof'ourpeopletouseit." s· ' G ~E~":r 'i1110"31IV.~ 11~·16 ~olllnd .10 7 t1 ig11o lSV. IJ'llo-v.GnE~ IMl2ll ll.S9 6CAa !& ... ~ ll'I L•v lnc S,.. '12~ 11"' t:
The long-r~e Mxon hous-1nn s a as A FlnSy 110 10 11 11.A 171Jo 1lv.-~ c:llrn~ ~~ .. ! 41\.'i :l'I ~v,:!: i: ~~!..~ ~ g I~ ~~ i1" ft'l6 ,.. t::•,~tr~in.': 1, ~ ,,~ ] . ing plan included 8 proposal :7 :~n,.\o 11~ · fd, •,,~ 1•"',. '"' c ,• ,s __J,•.6 lo 419 »l'I 29 :iov.l1~ ~~1 c11 ' ' in. 1~• 11~tni LF i ''!"" ls 12 s t+ l!
J h H
. .,. 1 19 +-., c ,..,., 1 . 2 n 21y, n 1 Gen 1,..1r tt< 1s 211 23 n v. n v.-"'Ll1>1>\'0 .20 1 .so :D 22 • b eventually to replace the o n arstad, manager of a Springfield, Mass. serv-A~!!:' '° 1 93 uJto 1•\11 14~ "'co1 G•1 190 • •1 26 2Jv. "~• "'Gen1ns1 of J J 3" ,. M~ "LoF pf •'!'; .• to "Ill W4 ~ A....-.,., I.Ill • 36 tw. 25 15'111+ "\Col l'lctvr.. .• 10& '~ 4~t ~ V. Gen M«I .12 lt 16 23 21 \IJ 2l 1'16 LIOOV Nlc:NI G J6 ~ SV. ~ system " of federal housing ice ~Station, continues business as usual. AmKo111 ·"° • •1 12~ 12 12 .. + ~ co1s 0ti 1 H • ltt l m. :u~ 2~ ~ G1nM1u 1.01 20 •n st\11 ~ .s1"' • ..., L111r1vc" .JO • J1 11 1•"' 1 ~ AmHom " 36 1•1 •214 (1 n •.r.+ Vo ColwM 2.27b ' 15 ~ 21~ 21io.+ .. GnMol 2.POb • m """' 6Wo' M\11 .. LibrtYLll A • 11 ,.-'"" ;..tt.;. .. subsidie!i! for the poor with A Home pt 2 'iN 1w1,1, 111 Combe LJI 21 11• a1v. niw 11"'t'~ GlnMot pf s . J n l>'t n Vi n lli Ll111r of '"' 1 1• i• I•·.+
h AmHotp .21 •I 117 4l"i ~Vo .av. CmE pf 1.70 .. 1 n 12 n 1.\1 Gfl! Port ,IO 1 62 101/J ff. 101/J ""Lillll ,,,,.l\'J 11 21 " lffi ' •• CQS ~y_ments. Amlnonl .50 • 20 ·~· '"" llli+ ft ComSolv 6 17 .u 17¥. 111.(i 11"-+ \ .. c; PubU IAO ' lOO 19 ~ lf\'J .,..__I\ L'99M_y 1 I! l200 ICM l l v.
Gas S tatw. ns Close A Mtdlc:I .u ' ''° At , .. ~ 'QITIJl pf,,!!l •• 2 lJV. 11·~ 131.4 GiJn RelrKI I 21 6 y,, I LIU¥ Ell .12 2'9 i' ~ ' A Mldk O«I S 113 51'1 •U 5'1-+ v. CmwEd ...., 20I tt\la 211'1. 21la G11Sion.I ,'5 11 -45 f9V,-4~ ~+~Ii L1nc:frllll 1,0I I .. 1 '3\'J Ii mEPRESIDENT said lh1"s A MetC.1 IV. 12 5'7 lf'l;i 3J1!a ll'hl+ >,lo ~om Ed l>f l . . ls 2J\lo 25~ ,,~ ... ~ Gn $le.I lnd 13 1'1 :r.. 3~ Linc Nil DI ' • m 'l ' ' AMIC pf Slil " 12 96 9J 96 +114 wEdpl 1.A " lt~i lflA ··~t '~GT e 1.n 11 2lil tt\\ 21lto tt\i + .. L-' Corp 10 11 ~ ... would attack the basic prob-Arner Mo1or s ..ii 1v. "" , _ ,,. ~w0111 111 •1•2 2• 211 lt:Mlt tt'I Jra ~• Gf! Tlr• 1.10 s 137 lf!ii 11 ll'ltl +lit Loekheed • 116 lilt filt t .. AmfrllG11 2 '8 I 196 36 :),j 3!'16.+-H'i wv II · • 22'4 21~ 1"' 'h ~ .l4h ti 1'1ti M TY>-L--C 1.16 7 Jl1 tJ -lem in Jlou,,ing, 8ddinR .lhat j t • Am~ .:i6ti M 20 IV. 11/o lllJ+ Iii omMt .61 If 211 51'16 51 \1.o V.+1\o't G• P~ Hi 14 S36 ~ 31\1.o ltV.+l Lom••FL .'6 12 22 11\lf: W.
uld · the "f eed I p f N • Am Ship 68 I 11 20 lffi 1"'9+ "" om1K1lr Scl . 52 l l'l 3llo ~ v. G41PW'PI 1 . ISO 99 " " +1 LomM 2.JJb \3 17 Ul'l ff Ii WO give poor r om n -arts 0 at"'On ~~/~1.~ •• ISJ. ~ 1r;e. ~ti~ ~=.aj f.: 11 ~ 1»3~ lll't ll4i-~ ~ r·35 10 ~ ~. n n :: ~ t::r,:1~ ~· il' l~~ ,;: And responsibility lb make 11 Arnsiop1 • "' 11 sa"Ar. 5,.,.. sa tU "" CllllNlt 1.ab 1 • ~ j' 11 -~ c.nv l.21b 21 1111.S 1~ 1~'16+•'111 LOI'\ J1G I°" ~111 2•v. their own chot"ces .~-t hous-11ms1 ... 11 21 15 199 11 "" 11(,, lHli v. conr•cC ·' • SI w. 6~ 1'111+1:\o\ G•ttvof 1.20 2 1914 1914 ''"" Lona•L1 .... 1 v. 20 :;a
U\1\1 Aml .. T 2·1D II 13611 '9\IJ "" ., 1•· c~ i'• J·•, 10 117 22\lo 1'111 22 + \i GF l!.us ..J2 16 1 ,l.. '"' '"'1 ~ Long_DQ ,5' ~ -·~ Ing and would eventually t A T.a. T ~· 1 ... eons "' • . s 75 7•'1'1 75 il41'1•PC .1 1 • 11y,. 12v. 121'1 \• Lor•I Coro ~ l'AI 'Al w
ge By Untied P<esa lnternatlonal in San Luis Obispo. (story .r,j'A •; .! I: ll:I lJil Iii:+ "l~ ' 01 ' ' Ill! !l~ ""+ "~I""" " ' " "'' "" "" 1" "''~"' 1 1 "~ " t"""4 lhe federal government ~tor Page') • Am &T · .. , ·: 137 J~ Stt' ~+ '.'• ~::~~~ 14~ M 11; JI~•"" ,21v.-!.:l 01ff!'J~ ·~ J ,~1 lli~ ll ll\\+i"" l!~i~:c1:: ~ .a\t!m' ... the housing businese." , A number of service stations " ~':~~[ i':J ' zJi 11~"" \0114 10 -v. on Frgl " 10 311 19 1111o Pit \i'J G nos 1ncor 16 73 u;;. ltVt 19_.+ Vi Low..,11 .to I 11 t t .. "'A-l_ A 18'.!o °"ING 203 I 21 2SMI """ 2S'lo .... Gl••aon ,, 12 71 1, ... 1•'4 1•~ LTV CorJ ' "' . ~. ..-x;<,;1etary J ames T . Lynoof aroundthe countryeitherc\os-meron 6S 6 • 13V. 12'1i llv.+lt. 001mPw 2' ' 26\\i mi. 15:14-V.Globlll Mer IJ 29111;-. 1.,.1< 11~'11 LTV Cor11 .. --, 13 I j•
H.u'l·ng and Urban Develo-ed or sa1"d !hey would clo·· to" ME MB E Rs OF the ~~ •• '.' 111!?, s, II s v. '"" Siii+ •,~ COii p pf ,.,., .. 1'220 $61/1 5m S6111+ ~. GloblU .IO• 9 81 1i .,... 18"'-1•~ Ill LTV (p 5 ii J! n"' JM~ Ii r -Oki •· I d • '" SO 13~ 13 llll•+ V. COllP Pl 7.76 11050 98 91\fo t7'1oo-~ GoldW1I Fcl 10 18 15'\loo lt~• 15.,.., 1\.11 ubrllol A 1 l'l <ft ~ t .d NJ Id ed t t th t' au•.1ma n e pendent rr In 1.1:9 10 367 30\lt 21 ~2'1• COl'llt Air Ln 16 :111• ~ J ~+ ~' GOOdrlctl 1 I 276 21 1/o mi. i'"'i '-1 L::::5k~ SI .5' l 1J~ , "" men sa1 xon cons er pro es e governmen s Petroleum Retailers threaten-A~·~nc 1' .~ m ~: .... 1:~ ~m+~ ~~ce2od~ 1! \~ ~1, ~~ 2~ n ~~Jlr.2l ' •71 t~rt ~~ l;r: t tuk~~tt 1;: 10' ~· ~v.'"zltt' 2'r h the casb payment program Phase IV freeze on gasoline ed ' to stage · another shutdown AmpeOP .:w 6 n P.-1 '"" ,,.,..+ ,,.. ,on11co 2.• 1 1s1 31 37~ 37"" • Got.old inc: 1 1 SI 23,,11 """' nr11 \\ L v, o '"' l'._J ~ •'4 v. "the most promising a-prices Hardest hit w a s Af!llllx Co 12 297 sv. ~ .s +"" cn11c p Dl2\IJ l ''"" '1 '1V.I ~ Grtc• w 111t 10 111 i.~ 2, 2~+ v. Lv • Yo1111 ~ S4'I .. . Y • iftheCostOfLivingCounciJAmreoCor11 • 1 sv. 51/1 sv. c:111nc111N11 63J7 55 51 1ioGri1ndU .llO lO 2612 12 12 Lvk•Df:».loc •. ltt119V.1 .. .
proach" of several discussed. Mas sachusetts where hun-,.,..,,., 1.10 1 ,. u"' 2•14 2•~+ ~ c111uR 1.3111) 10 " 1m. 1111. 11111 \'I c;ren1v 1 20 s 14 21 20"1i 21 M--• ·
dreds Of Stat ... ns shut down doesn't change its policy. The Mt1rp1 2.65 . 1 » 36 36 + .,.. ... 01111nn1 21 • u •V. 4\'o .,.. \lo Gr1n1 w iv. 1 su 1tl4 11 ~ IP\o'I! \'I ~~~.~·-1! 11 11~ 11~ lM"+ V.
anlza . , Am11r pt M • 1 l \o'I 1"'1 l llt+ Yo (.OflMlll .11b 10 119 IV. 11~ 11V. \\ i••vDr11 ,, 11 13 t S\~ t \li ..,..,....,,.., :i.t:..;.~
BUT' HE SAID Ni·xon felt Tuesday. org t1on s members stag-11rm1..:1 2.611 1 11 3'1111 :it n"" conn,"I •• 1• n• v. ll 33111 v. 111M1 2.nb 11 :io :µ"" )(\4 l~ .r,;, ~~~11 -"If I ff ~ •v. t ,
ed f • t I t Amt91 In .20 10 73 ~ ''-' '"" Conl • .'2 2 .m 'Ill 'Ml 22 'Ill tA.l.P TH •. '! 11._ 11111 11~ ....., t'" "" ~
additi·onal ~·dy and ex· An automobile club In a our.,,.ay pro est as Ankofl .»11 ' 210 zw. n 111 mt <z"""' D•j " im "~ !"" TLkD 1.20e i•141 ''"' it11o .. MKV .... i ~ "" f " "" k. AnctiHc 1 • ' n 1"1> 11'4 1 ""LonOIDI 4 "" 1 .... J2Y, IN Ir l.10d 13 ( 11 14 11\11 ijllo+ .... Mid FCI ....... . 1oi. "' · tat' needed M ch tts ·d Its wee Al'IClff c1 111 1 ts ltl'l 1R 1 1v. '°"""°°" ' ' ~ ~ 2~ l'AI GtNN1k 1 60 13 2• ~ s1'1'1 ~ v. ~ Sql;I,;! 1o .s'l.I ~ penmen ion were , assa use sa1 survey . . . A1111t1ic. io 14 121 lll'lli 1014 10..,_ ~nL~b 1s 1~ '-\oli 7t: ti;; ~ Gtw1F1n ·.., 1 m 211111 ~+'""'"' ~.!'AO 1l J: 1= •= : since the program could cost showed about 50 percent of the Sixty ti-1obile 011 dealers said 11111111 co •k ' u 1s14 ltt\ 15\lo +14 ZDOPTr 111;1 1 22 Utt j'"' 1~ 14 c;~t W•11 ~ · · ;,l ""' · ':!: .. ...,co 1 ID 52 22 21"' 21 ~i
betweel S8 billion and $11 4.000 stations in the state were in Syracuse, N.Y., they would ~~11~ ~ fi \~ \!U; \~~ ~ ~=11~r.i ll ~ fJ i~ ij~t1~ ~w~!i'~~1 1 9 '' ~~ li l:~+ ~ ~ :l:a ~ "t ~~ ft~ 26\Ll ~
billion each vear when im-closed. But it found no area close Monday to protest a re-~t'L~ er: $ 1f 1;~ .;~ ,;tr ~ ~~: .. 1,,, ~ ri ~~ ' 2!1,)T ~ ~~ I~ .' I~ 1! 1~i~ 11\lr.-"' ~~w .ID • 1 11\a 1m m "'
plemented . ~ where all the stations were. cent one-cent-a-gallon whole-11Plll'r Mo 1i 21 51'1 Sft ~t 14 cor~!11 J.12 u 2•1 120v, n• i20Vi+4 8~~.n.to 1 1U \~1~ 1~ 1f~ ~ :1-:.C~ 1.tt ~ :w~ ~l!-=:-1tt
sale price hike. :~,.:i 11.15 a 1•11\~ 111~.!_20'/o..,+2 ~:'~"s ~ .n\J H i!t"'" "r.'4 026'4--""1• Gu•rdl•n 111 i6 36 21~1 20'.oi 21\'t v. ,,....r1111011 . M • u '°"' '* •1 For the near future. in ad· Arc•t ofC 2 1 231'1 n ,;'"23w cox Brd .35 , 109 111 !' GuMt'l 'otti • 1-45 3 1 :ma 31 1 Mir Oii 1..0 11 n w.i. ,,.,. 'II dilion to $2.S billion for sav-NORFOLK DISTRICT Court •rdtllt b JD It " C \IJ 41 .... 4l~J~ PC Intl I n 10 II Ui ¥. ~n 01/''1J. 1' .~°'l r mt ~~ ~ =:= ,.~ ~ 'fi 1\111 I"' 1::
ings a.'tl Joan institutions, the Justice Vincent J. Brogna SIXTY INDEPf:NDENT t"f:I~. En~ ~ ~ 1~ 1~ ~ • · ~~"l'fF1~ t ., f17 1
1"' '"' i 2~' 11.u.c11 1 A = Mi t.'I ,,,,.,.,,, .20b 16 2'1 ti:·~ J~
J>residentsaid.thegovemment issued· a temporary dealen in the Washingt.on,~P\11~.· ~·'*~12 :·. ~~ic 1Jl,J ~;11-.•r· nGsU~J:Ji~21m~"}, r U::r!iit'.t:,r ::w" 1t:
would try to attract S3 bHJlon restraining order prohlbfUng D.C:, area agreed to' cloSe for """cos 1.» 1 01 1~ 1R1 1,.._ · ~4: .,.ll 1i "" ~ ~W~ ~ .~ ill ~-.im ~ = 1:13 B ff tf~ S: • l:-
in private fund,, hlto the owners front taking collective ' a week starting Monday if a :=, 2 IO •. 123 211/o 21 2tY,+ ~"f.20 266 \o't I :I m .. 21fm '= 1Jm :ro:: ~ II 9 ,::: .... "'
mort rkot t action to shut. down their sta-federaj court does not dempt Art am ~ ·1 : , "'m ~v, ~ .... : W1 t'o •;: 1 Jh' tt i''"' ":i '~ i.s ~ '"' ' ' i: :::!rJ,'; 1.24 '°r ",,\ r.a = "' ~a:,~a::lion. or new-tlons . stations froril Phase IV con-:~=~k ~ l~ 1~ ~~ 29""4 ~"' ~r:.n ii: ll 4 lf: 1! ~ 1"' H.ocw 1x H 1{m' :n :n -~ ~W.=i1;a·"° 11 Ji '\~ ~,... 1 ·,tt
· •0 f trels. · :~f1r'13:.·,11-ntt ~t:u+1 ~1,..D<vfrf!'!'419 21 2ttt1 ·~n:l\~f"Ji~ lJ1n:1ltU1ltffi~ ~.1..u_e : ,.•" .. I'*"", ... ~ State Attorney en er a Aro Cpi.fOD 7 1 141' 14tlt 1414+ v;, Ufllu.W\ 1 d r M1' ~ !Vt H""'Pfp 15 '6 Into I~ I 'Ao m..:ot;;p .:io 11 310 ' Ill:" ·1,. HE SAID those funds would Robert H. Quinn sOught tile in~ In Kansas City Mo. an of-,,,...1n1N1 .52 11 l2 16 1~ 1m-"" 1.111erH . 10 H 1"' H•m«P • 21 10 ,~. 10 ~ ··~:~.1.i•,.. t u1 11 ..1:: . ' ' • ASA lid -'° . $9 nMo •1~ ~ ~ vclOIKCo • ' '16 •• H-.id!Mf! .6f 6 .. I "'° Ai \Ii •• • --.-~ be attracted through a so-call-junction, s:iying "Af1 emergen-fica.aJ of the Mld·Amencan 111111 on 130 , 129 2ni. v ,,.,. +Vt v11ru• AU 1 10 14 :is v. + 411 H.ndV'H .n • 4 1~ 1~ '''" M.'IP\111.t: • • 2J. 'fr 11~, ~
ed "tandem plan" under which cy situation exists and 1 can -Gasoline Dealers Association ~~ ~: Ii J ~ r~ ~t~~ 1•nlUlll' .50 4;,°t;; i I.._ Ill H~:::P,"f ti 1¥ 1\t. ~3: .s\~ +.*~!"',~I ,:...., ·,,· .. '" J!llt. ,,'• -..
the Id II h bl, , h Ith ••• , ted ta · As Sp'f 1 20u 1 • 24 u 2• .,.. •mon Co ~ '5"" " lil\.'J erc....,..u1 j I 5' f II"' \' -\.lo ..... ti.le .30I> .,. _,. government wou provide not a ow t e pu 1c s ea p1~c mores trons across Auoc: Tr•"' 3 $'\Ii N Pi.-,4 -n•T" 1~ g !fil ~ v. 14 •'= .1 1 •" 1~ 13\lo ~+ * ...... 11•0· '.11~n · iw ;u , •~ -~
money· for FHA Insured and safety to be endangered." the nation would close if the ~Vi'~ l ~ ~ 4 13 91~'lll17~,u~+ :~ • ..;{if ' II m 4 ~ ·)-H~:"' 1:1 1~ _fg ~ rJ? r.~ 'y. ~~ J l~ ·' 22r 2Wi = t: mortgages at interest rates Elsewhere. more than 50 government doesn 't relieve the AtlCIYE i-'' ' 16 2IMA 20"11 20>.4 +1.4 •vu 1·~ ' .a.'Wo « ~ Hur11 11•11 lJ 13\ Wit fl"" ~+1111 ~r..o. A JJ 2 2•\\ ~ w.
1 k I I . led I ed I . .. At llk tlllcl 2 23 111• '"~ 9$ nMt-1 .... &:~n~n ~ 4 zl~ 1f111 m ~ tt =~~ .~ : 117 1$14 1f' ·,~ ' '"'::,uw .jg l~ ia :a .~ ~ be: ow the mar et eve . stations· were repor c os cos .price squeez.. Allcti Pl )\(r •• Oii .»"" .s1Yo SM . ~~MH J l j' ll" l '" ! ,.., H•"-H .!Ob ! 2f 10"' 10 ov.-t-IA ,..,...... ~ .w ' 67 J.4" ~·~ +' Atflc Ill 2.IO 12 62 '1:t\ •1'111-\4 •vPLI I l s llo .,. "'H•W•EI I.JI I lfl 25711 25'16 Z5>,lo Mc.Cfl/t 1 » • 2J 11~ 11~ tt1 A11Jldt prl J ' • 15'\.') 1~ 191h+41Ji 1nw I • 112 l\.'J • 119 ~ H•vn Alb I 1 11 ,. 13"" 1'1 ,,., . ..c&J«moi I = w bt,o, QI-\ JV. ' Alla• CorD • 11 1~ I"' '!% •• l' .. L 1.16 I JU 1~ 1~ jSI+-'111 H•r1ltl11t 12 SI 7 fill ml ... MCDolllcf c, .0 .... w,\ .,_ *
T ATO Inc .16 1 51 1'h n4t no.+ ,_ Oii Mn! 1.20 t tO If lb.. t t 'Yo HCA Mtrtln I~ ~ ti ~ I ..cuonO 41o1 6 111 ~ IN 2v•·~ !.:.
I t ~...Jl-f•t':111om 0111 JI 155 n v. MV. n~+3'11 bel1..-.1r AO 16 ,.. Jnll .so~ '2'11t2~ Heck lne .12 t 11 lN J 1 "-~Grl2d iy, , st 2S\lt JS ».•L-Mo -tomt Inell 1 19 •Yt ' A -Yt Dell« lnt11 ~ 12 1"1i 1~ 7...,._;. I.It HecleMn 2k 31 :tS I~ ljlo'I 1~ I~ MC...,. t11 t11 9 JUI 11'11 .._ ' 9f,-mp rove men' ren 11«1 Coro ' 1~6 10 t 10 +~Pelt-Cp $ '' llflo 11 111'1+ .... tt.it.-mn ,44 6 3 IOYt 1 10 -Ill MCG"'fl' ·D lO l ~i J'-" ~ •·• 11'1(.g CCI wta • 55 2 1~ 2 + "' Deflnbll .JO I 10. is... 24 2S'l6+JIA 8-lru: H 1,(11 15 sa • '6\6 " +I .oc•n , •• p 12..0 $1 1'1 SI\.\ .Jl~i ~ :::.,~ 3.R .u st ~ = !fitlJ"' 8:;:4sn pl,,i :io i : n fO.,., ~ =n~~~ ia 2't, ~14' sf~ ~14+ ~Mc.IC;. ..SJb 14 tt • .,., 27th ·1"
Avis Inc. M 11 4J 21YI 21~ 21---f. Yt Qtol:ir M 1• 1~ 21'111 ~ /i:iv.+1't H .. ITllPf Ml It 7 ISVI 1~ I~ 'Jo :::ti:! 1·: lj rl 1'?'"" ~ 2 ' 1: AVMltl'IC .Jt 6 fl• 10\.'I f' 10 De5olol11 .6C1 f 16 13\lo 12 Ill+-Yt tt.!IM.P .30 If 221 361'1 ~16 3~+Ulo •JS I 3 3911 l>!l AvonPr l.«I~ 340110t'i 1•~110-I O.IEdlS IUlG .11219 11"-'lMI HemlapC.p •• 32 2\4 m 11.!t ··='to:.0)0 2417\le .... I ·::
A.llec OU 6k 9 St 20\'J 21'-" ~ 1.4 o.tE pf t.32 . n.5C1 11•111 114V. ll•YJ±flll H.m In .50b 2 ~ 6'-ll'I 11'1 ... lMll 2M I' llW JI I "
Bala Cl • ·b• 0 f Rd B• wn.11 122fJ'ii"'i:ts1•2SVJ+l4 '*'1rc.,..21i• /16111 w '"""+'-'~:!l:vres11'Al~ ~P"fr'f~~MldYNlA .7 JJAM DWI ·~ Pa-y men•~ r•ce •m •ng ut 0 e e~ .1sb I• ., ~ J\'o 5""!" ~:'m.t't"~ 11 ~ y~ ~~ M"' ,. HffllOfl .21b 1, ,. 4M... ~~"" ~si:o.eor..: a: ~r ~ ~ 1 ... ~ .. fl It a.k1rln .I• 2' 36 ~ 21 30~ lfi ~$Nit I ~ 42f 23 2\r. U +IYJ HllUbl•ln .'2 21 SIO .'9 SI W.C.+2\.11 -71 m 1VI
··.' the largest Independent con-
t •' •'sumer leasing companies in WASIUNG'roN (AP) -'Ille ·~ the. United States with a []eet nation 's balance of payments
of more than 13,IXM> vehicles. was in the red by only $800
Southwest Leasing -operates million in the second quarter
nine facilities Jn Callfornla, or lhi.s year, the smallest
Colorado· and Arizona, and as quarterly deficit in 2~ years,
. l:1:'if~ ~ 2J 1~ tl\11 mt ttv.-1~ 8/:lf;: P/ 2 . . ~ \'k n: \'% +I~ ~='1:. ~: lf! l~i: 1r: ~i :: :erc11sco0_ 1.1! ~ •,l ",~ n1, #
ed . h J 1 bigh ho 1 · a..r1c;.1 1.N ' 31 2~ 2~ ,... -v. B!fi~11 ~ 11 17 11:w. 1"' 11~ ~ HlnMlbr A 1s .u :rrn. 21 21111 "' «M"' "" 1 12 ... 121/'1 Ii from a r UChOn In t e COUD· Uy 3S er ur Yearnings 81!Gs C11 '"" , J120 5'V. S7V1 11Vt-2 .. it 52 ~ 5' !S\o\+1\oli Hiiton Htl 1 10 303 2• 231'1 m'i tilo MtrrllLY -" g r ,...,._ '
try., lrade dclici·t from ~ nlore than compensated tor 8•,..rP "' ' 1 ~ ~ H4'1+ ~CH 1or110 .'6 1 u o,,.. ,.. ·~~+ ""HMW •MW 14 2 3Yt 31"' 11'1-"' =•' r: Ill ~1
"""" &'* o1 NY 2 6 12 33\.li lf""' :mt.-v. Dlelt•I &.QOI "' 161 ,,... 11Y1 '""'+w. HoblrtM .n 16 21 :JO " • f' ;. J · I "' !! million Jn the first quarter to declines in employment and &•Ilk V• • 12 1 211-" 'm'I 21v.-v. 01;-i011 ct la! 1s 4' »'Ill :rn .. 3M\+ "'1-Mrnr 1.12 10 '" 36'4 mi. 36111 "';:'~~ inc it 0 ; I ;i:
d h lllnll:Truil l 10 223 51 5™' S7Vi+ \'J DlMtVW 1 ~ "' 1f 1•'Jo ~ 14 HoH Eltcln I 20 l\.'I 1>,Q SV. "'Mt r -* I lit! ~ '. ••
of Marth 31 was writing an the Commerce Department
annualliea volume.of leases of-reported-Wednesday.
$230 milJ lon in the secon working hours, t e department =~~.lie )3 1!: = = ~~l ~ Ol11klll .i211 12 144 20 191'1 n + .... ~~I~~ .i: 1: ~ W' ff~ n: I~ McJ12 In 10 M • quarter. said. a.,,,., L-b ' 16 26'16 2~ 2~+ "' 8~~~% ·~ 21 ,J •fAi 'f"' •~+ "" Ham111•k 1 16 '6 .n..., a v. .,._. v. =' 14 t 1 :..,. 6 •• •
De t Th A t · . I Basic 111 . .o 1 s Ni W. 114+ \II otvMt 2 na. t 149 ~ 23~ ~ lionywl 1 • .0 n :JOO llS n:m HJ +21141 T• I .... "' The Commerce parlmen e ugus mcrease n B•tn Mt 20 13 1 n 1~~ 11 + "'DorMMn. le 1, 33 07"' ~ u v.-1 Hoov•• 1.21 1 .u 2'\'l :uv. 24'111 ~rodlll' M 1 : lm li~ 1 Jl:
also reported that personal 1n-personal ' income m e ant :::~~nc1p1~ , ~ ~~ ~;u ~Wot~~~ ·?~ t; 3~ 2f4 2m 2~ ~ ~:~~r.1 ,.CJ 1s 1\
2 16: 1g:: 1~t ~ M~~;f 1 11 Ii m:; 11"' 1 +'AJ
1 ';approximately $.10 million. The latest report on the
country's int e r n·a tonal
payments position indicated
that a trend of improvement
which started earlier this year
is conllnuing. The payments
deficit last year totaled $9.8
billion.
of Am . . -·· A ' ' . BtuKllL .42 is '33 ~ 3'1W. lJ11tl'1 ~ J o'11t ,. ' ~ ' -+ HosDCp llb lJ 2Sl I~ 1""' 16*+1in Mld5oU 1.a 11 ma 221'1 ... come er1can:!I mcreaxu mer1ea.ns-we-re-rece1v1ng B•x!••L: :u ,2 21r sr-s:JUo -sru¥-v. 1 • .a4 1 1, 2 t? 25 .... r" v. Host-1ntt'::M-10 u -1 11,. ll'lt Ii l.Jllr. 't-1 ISlt. 15\/oi: ~"' by $106 billion in August a personal income at an annual &•l'llkC11 .so • 1 10\11 1014 10\o'tt '"'Dor c e; ::n , ! 1i111 1:R11 l1lll +141 Houct•ll• "° 6 er 11411 11•4 11,.. •. "":Mn::j:'M;D 1, .~ .,1"'r,1'~ !.. .. ~ • • . Be1rlna• 60 1• ,, $1 .50 '°'41 1'1 Dorr onwr ' 6 "-~ ll,/i l1'o HOU'ffl M . .ct 10 • llY,. l:Rll 13\.lio+ ~ Lb • -·~ -substantial rise. The Increase rate of $1,04S..7 billion a rate &Ht Fiii ·'' 1• s.. ~ 2:N nv.+ 14 00nevc .1o 1 1• 7\.. 71'1 M+ v. HouM F•bfl l' m 1ni. 11in 12~t "M 1 to 1'11 .,," 1j5'" -F.I 1 ~
" . .. r-a ·" .1 • .c
'• /tJ~
.~.,.: w.,,, .,,
'. ' ... 1.(
.._rs..·
!l' "' ' ,..,,.
''""'" .,., .. '•
rli·~ . "' .,
ill·-.,~
~· ·i1\
~· .. ~:
OWN APART
OF~T
LOS ANGELES
MM1 & Cotrll)M:y, lh" Ihm with
4111 f'IWl•b'-i l2'Vf•' hl\IOty
of lfill!I~ M1bUll\I & 1K111nd
-·"""'· PftW.111\ •! Newlw11ald 1wt
-0 ............
Brend New Apirtmtnl _.,,,.
~-LA °")l:eMtWI
I. C.... eo.t &om optrltfOnl
L ""'""""""" l.Cm.mTPl!dwln._
UIUIED PAllTN!lltltlP
""11 94.7110
-UlllN\IU11UNT
@111-•eo-1111 .... _ _. __
ll50 Wnrwood BIYd .
Los Anotltl. C•itf. 90025 i2l3) .,.15521 (213187'-0626 Clll OT Wrtt1 lodlly
' ForhMmlbCall
(714) 517·7124
~··-
THE COMMERCE Depart·
ment said the second quarter
improvement resulted largely
ul
· ·u· lh h been · ' . &tc-mn .so 21 11 is~ 3"Vt 3Wo-v. Dovrep 1 CM 11 l&J "° j' '9<Yt+2" HouMF11 ,fl 1 '°5 211Ai 271" 21 11o • -... ln J y was $8.S b1 ion. at as increasing BKIWID .lJ " i.a 3914 31 lf\fi+ IA OowCMm. 1 23 »1 Jl'/o 7111. .ss + .y, Houti.P 1.«1 14 in ..o. * .,.,. ,,., ~fiii'·,." 1,,' 111 l"' ... 11 l!.
The big jump was in in-steadily throughout the year. :=A11 ·1;' ~ ~ {~:Z ~ ~r:-:_:z 2~11'1C\J 16 J: ~ J ~+l\$='&~~1.5 7\ ill: U'" =+1~M/'~ ~· 1J 11 ,.,,_ 7J'l6 •. ~
d try II bich ;.._ al+dtfl 1 70 1 2 ~ """ ~ IS n 10 • 32'ito :nw. 32"'-,,.., HowtrdJ .2011 » 20v. 1~ ~+1 ... Mo ' t llt'I t~ 1 •• US payro S, W .._.-• jtldaH .3oa \.. t f 9'16 N-Yo D~pt 2 1 19 44 ul,/i •S!.4+ ~ ~ .10 I 111 lS i~ lS +lVi MotllMI H f 100 11~ 10 'It 11Va+ \Ii creasf(d $1.5 biJUon compared ell H"" .M 11 ol07 ""' ~ ~ +N Dre1 Pl' 2 70' .\. 150 51111 .w,1t so~+ ,,. Hvltbd 1.5'b 12 tt 1~ ' 19 Mallllot M mW !,~ f' ... " .,•i2t':t
lh
' f $800 G Fe B&ml9Co • 1 'al '°"" 1"' ~ '-omei 1 S6b '' 1'Vt It'-' 1~ ~ HudBer 1.611 12 15 ,.,,. 21111 21~+1~ ~ ... , • _.,,.• , ,,.._-~
WI an lncrea•• 0 B•f'Jll 1.60 f JIS M* ~ Mia o--r· > ·5 13 A •-N H~ AO 6 I I ' 6 -'-"......... ,. .,.. ,. -rove irm "" ,, 12.J ' M U V. l4"11 l5 +111t ····--r H• ..... .• H1191'11T '°' )0 ..,, .,... 61 ""'i -=~1 I 1 l~ I~ '~·-million in the previous month. be DJlf ,,,.. i10 31 11 31 •• C>uM0,,, ~ 1 ~ 11 ~'Tl..., 1Tl:: 'T12!'+ y. HUllt c11 • .11 » 2 2D"i '°" 20" ·YI v• • 1 "I 161'1 it l · • ' a..r.ou.t I"'< 10 111 l'A ~ J -~ •• ... Huttoo Iii At t 27 Pfl ~ ~ 1 MolVbuf I SI 31* JI ·'i 1 Btf~tYP .o:I" 10 546 lSV., 14'111 I:! '19 == ':: " = ~ 1~111 l;t ·\'I t-twckCP .24 U 16 ~·n J2\lo .... NooMrct'I .. Ji ' ~ 13Vi ~ •••
a.1 AN u FA c Tu RING T Us Pla' lfo~W·~ ~' 21
\ n = ~ llh OV!\&rMI .u :ii JI ,, »'Ill 3f +·"" Hydroml •1' 1 ~ ....!:! ,._ ,,...._ ~ =:-: .4( '~ I~ ~ ,:t I ~
Is bill• in e ns Blii!=kD 1,Cll .SO l.c:l l211'-11' ... l21 ) C>\lllLMI ... ~g ?! 22Nl,t""ll~IJ~+•u.LCN p~ l' .-S I~ ..... ,.._.,._ MQflS4lt1ft 2 11 tm '2\IJ $n'I 2'it payrol rose $1 · ion a1111r Jn .• s 1• ~ "" • °""" .... ·· .... 1o.no '" 1.M 11 21 '™ 21Yo 2ni+ \'I ~,,, N . . . JO 10 6'1" t
Air lnduetrtes Corp.· of t=:118~ ~ ·~ 1~ 1m 1~ 3~ ~ff p11 ~ :.
1
,
1
: 22:v. 'I: f: + v. lctN11tT°T ' 4' ~i '# ~ J~ ~ ·y, =:J i: M ~ U~ W: ~ l llML1hl '' 1 ' I'·· 11!!! 111 I v. ~of 1•nYll ·, J ~"" t1t ff:_ 111: 111M1s ... to 10 "' 1Ma 1s14 1~+ 14 MOl'lt Dek t '° 11 31\.\ • \II August, about the same as in iockHtt .n 1• "1 ,,. ... >n ,. t>lollll'lfl. · U 1~apf ~ 1 101{1 10¥ll 10v.-Vt MOntPr 1.• 11 22 »t'I i2 I'
Garden Grove has announcl'd a:r~""tn:J ,, WI l?n "\M l~ t 8::t:; J·;: .. ~:~ ~ .... ~ ~Vi +I :ff~:,~.A 6 ~ = ~ ~! 14 =p ~~ 1J ,: = 111=. '~ · Hik. N 0 d 60fld lllclut 1 ji" M -w.+ 'Al e>ymo ln .30 10 '2 IMto 111/t 11"11.fi "' ,.. •• \2 1... .., ~ ll'IOl'riK .Ott , 21 lf\4 -,._ • -.
P . . a proposed plan t~me " IE-11 • 3 1 11:\4. lltili -· ·-111 Ml" 3"-•• G • .... ..... MofM l!I' Pr • 115 ·m ll'ill .. r Ce . e IXe ""' . L d m !2llo 211' 'U'A+ ~ EHie l"I ,,, • 1• 2514 U\.'r.. ll'AI+ -Ill Pwr ... ., 11 n ml! 26'16 ""f }'). ISfl ,, I 5 • • IV. Ml I Privately owned CO ration W I lClt ,.,,.. ~ .... l'\'I+ ""E.SCOC .SM I :as 11 10\o'I' 1~ IMI 1=:; C;p , l01 f:v. = m: I~ :.tr 1,ia 1 /$5 1 13~ 1••-1'i't
• orm~ Ill I ~ ].,.. ~ a EMlel'l'I Air 179 Mo f mi " KACI , '4 .-!Nor IJ4 t 21 II r 11'Ct"
The announcement stated :::;~ i:~ 1 iJr\ *"" 1= 1111.,., + ~:l~ti,._1~ 11i 1?: l~ 11:: ~+ ~ 11~1.:S 2~ .~~ I !... m: ;mw39
"' : ~L 1" .iOll t4 1 fl= !!a l
For '7 4 Chrysler
WASHJNGTON (AP) -Tho
Cost of Living ·c.uncll said It
would "reruse to consider" a
new proposal from Cbryaler
Corp. to increase prices on its
1974 model can.
CHRYSLER TUESDAY
notfled the council or Its plan
to Increase prlCtll per model
by about m.
'!be proposed new Increase
followed by Only a wt>ek an in-
itial Increase in prlcei, by
Chrysler averaging about $135
on small models.
It was the first time the
council has completely_ re-.
jected a proposed price bt·
crease by a major company
under the !nontb-old Phase 4
anti·lnllaUon program.
Council Director John T.
Dunlop aakl Chrysler'& action
resembled a "series of bite!
... that It' not in accordance
with our policy and we're
stopping It."
' BUT RE STRONGLY Mnted
that tlt• automaken will be
allowed to rncrease· el:r
prie<s later If they can ·Justify
them on the b"818 ol higher
costs. "We envision a_ further
round af auto price increall'.!s
when labof negoUationJ are
ended and other coat.I tre
determined." Dunl;>p said,
•
lh t I uld be L Bourn1 Ii 9 lf lA 1~ 1.n.--E1t Ko 1.211 35 Tll IJ.1'11 1:J01A 137'#l3'A ~ Qi 't "'R; -"' \It Ml ~ 1-t9, U am fl~ !m a a pan WO SUr.r .~~1'' ll ffJ 11~ l!lt ug\li+ '\t i:: l IO I l:JO J4r. ~ .... :u~ "'Incl HMllll l n,,., 20\lt 22\11 Ml$1-¥:1 1:i2 10 ,, 22 h'ft t .......
mitted to stockholders at the 'i!ir'i{.:.inl \. ~ \~l U.:.. m; U ~ ~di~ Jk ~ fi l~~ ~ 1™' ~-2 iii l~ i J ~ li"" ~+ ~ ~:::::~"' ·21..a 7 • •·1 M'14 ·~ ~ ~ annual meeting in November ar11 .2111 14 .f:I ~ ll'4 1 ""E~dNC :2, If 21 21 r 21 1 1li ,, 251 ~ 21'11 ;ig+l \.\M\11'19 pll·°' ... ~·lpl 1•~ 11\'rt , I tt•1 .Ill 17 197 :)4 D\4 l4 . , EdlnBr I 20 t I 21\la 211'<1 21'-" ~ nnt'9 011 21 76 10\'t 9ftl ~ I.ii M r~ tO l l I 16\/e W. ' wllich if imptemented woµld aroc-G .75 g 33 1'\4 1'~ lJ\4 • eo .a. o '10 2• 1'-' 1m: 1'"' IWit i '•l\1 l·!at 1' ,,,, ~ ~ 111 ..... :r~ '" l 1 -10 Ill.+-.
resuit' in the reureme~t or au 1~~.~ii 1
11 j ll~ Im ~ ~ ~~'co~m. a n •VJo 2~ .,1~ 11~~,.~.:1 i} 11 il~ iiE #~+ : ~~ ,:m ~ .. ,i .. r~ f1 l+ u outstanding shares of common 1r11st1rt .» 1 1 ni. tt0o -~1: v. e11c1 MMIW 12 121 •'i'I 4"" ~ ~ .)Cl , 1, 714 1 '"' NIY•r• L .11 11 to 11.-111"' 11•+ i,,. SlOCk (other than Shares OWft· 1~~·,!~I f_.'l l1'" m Jl:\lo. ~:v. ~:+2¥l i\i,:i1~offJ~ t ll~ l~l't 1:1,lo 1~ !.~1:.'(!.;.'71 I~ ~ 1'~ .;:!~\'I 111 Nt1>1K~2.:JO 111."i;;' 4 i!,; N"(.'"° 5'9'1f121'11t~V.lillrt CP1VJ I '233 31"iJ2Yt .. \ lfltll •"-1..o9b !1IV.lj~l1\--~HllCOtl .otJ3l '6,.. ~g • .. ed by Sam ffiggln3 the com· lolCV t'.20 I•' )Q »'Ill :MYt l5V.+1 El!Wr Et .6S 31 .W 41\lt ~ '5~ i 111-2A 10 21 10'1'1 1 I ~i ~Nerco ,6Q IJ 32 11¥1 lf" 1• • • • ~ o ~ • 1•' '13Vi 1n-13111+ ~ EmrvAlr .7• Sol •l 10 9"t'I 69fi+ 1 i°Jt 1 :17 !: .,., Meliw.<: .SJ 21 •• JI._ \ii I lfl pany's president and prmclpal I ""' : . 1 ,.., ~ ~"'-"'" Ell'Mlrr111 .21 10 " 1"' 1'h '"+ l~:t::. l.to J 10 ~ ru: 2~ \• N•1A!r1 .:io. 1 :m 1si'i fi' "'$'
Stockholder Who 0-an-\II ro l . , l 3 ~ '20\'J t ~ EmlWln 1.70 6 J7 111'1 111.'1 Ir+ ~\SHI c, IA 2' l2H~ 2'6 mv.+ll ~ N•tAv 1.lSb •• 43 Uitt, 1•.. ft, , "'.., ,. 1v ·t. \ 111 31\rl j1~ 3 EMI Lt .QM 11 1• ~ ,.. . r*le'll' _....,. ~ Pl . 90 to '16 N¥CM Al I 3l I°" 1~ \t
pro:tlmatcly 76 percent) for "=:,"' · 6 11~ \\,,._ 1t~ \:" +1"" t,~~1111·~ 1\ ' 11s 1'M 1~ 1 '! \: tntH•rw IA • •21 ~ ,,_,, :m\+ "'~~fe~:;t 'lo ·. '1'1 ~ ~ i~
sh the t f •• 50 1~· :r 11',!' 1 "" .,. /!~+ • ..... GM > 3 11• 11• 11• 1-~-· '12'> ;i:· m H • """"' ~ 'I !I !!iji' ca at ra e 0 .,.. per urt I 1 J 11 157 "" " nw IMlll!d .. ~ 11 °' tll'tl lM 21 .... +114 "'""~I ' 11 1" .. ~~ I# Cli.L • • .... $"' ~ lt share ur1 No i¥1. 10 m am ,.1o11 •+1~ nnn a .... " ' s !l' s-. s-+ ~ ~ 1 16 "" ~ """±l "'~ i. • uu. w .,. ,. The~ are currently ap-:::t' .l/ 1, • t1 ~ 4 i.~1~ E:~Y~r"'.ao n1 tS1 "!'~ t'.,. 11~+'v. I:" • 11 J ~ S:~ If;:+ =.~.,:: j•
11 11 f I :~; B11rrghl IO,, 291223\.'I 221\lttPii EllUGM 2.AO 1 1 31111 ... JIN +"' ~-' U' 2 1'+ rr,-_. l~A I . ' proximately 390,000 shares of aWi uMw ~'c.!!'! n• "'E11Llte 1.a:i. 12 1• 21,,.., uu. 21"'+ \":~:rm., 1 1I 12* ll• ~+ ,,,.,,~~ :ft nl "
common stock owned by lhe CtbLT 1.m 'I t ma. f7'4 PM \.'J r.a~'·~ l l~ tt'i! n\la ~,,,. 11111 P~\oi IS 10olt ·-.... .u!\+1'1'1 ~~~ ~Uh ' ·... ...
12
;. I ~ 0publ"1c. I~ .'2 M 3"' iol i4"-"' EM!1111'1C .'2 6 l 1* 7\.. 'J "" 11~1 ·~-,.! 11 "ft ,(1 ~ 60\to -ij N.t Ind .tit ' I N N "-Ind ' 1 m 4 41"1+ \\ Eu.tdnl .72 0 n 1~ 1~ l T ..,-•IO ~ J\* I H.tlndDf .IO 1 m 1\to !t41 *''' Wd / !.Of l 1'4 ~~ Esltflln .lO 1j 15 S'-" 5 v.+ \ti 111:._T pf~·~ J 1~"' lot WI • NII h1tB 1.,. •1 • Ii'-11 14 I ~ ifll f lntflC ~ ~ 41'1-t "f~oro 1 '27 )alt Im I~ I tn Jl!H 4 ·· 11 .. ~ 67 2 NPtts 1.1o.a ,. JI """' 30>· 'Ill
S • Ends eii:,e~.l= t: lj "'~ J~ r-'\lt+·iiti ~~ ~Iii lri 1*t; I .'I 1 ~~I JI1"'Ju·~ :. 71 6S 'r" ~ 2~~:1~ 'I l:f ~ t~ ft~ ervice mltL .G :n 1 rnz ~ 1,Q-\ii .c.11 o ·'° , .. 1R11 1 \\ -. , Ta.T pi:w. , •• 1m :1 .... u ""HI ... ,.,. .1, 11 :as 2'Jit 11-~ '"' •me s • 12 221 " 2l'lti + \\ llC•ler .340 • n 2•'-2~ 2~ l'I I 1'Tf• "' 13 .... Q 44\'I Nl$1~tl 1 .. tt • »" "YJ .. •n~ ',O, lj "'Jl f~lf· f~ 31 -¥t •f~re 1 1~ 7lt 7\.'J 1•+ \0 I T• DIC f 1 '-t\~ aJ• ~""I N11p~ 1:\o'I I " ~ ~ :>c '"i'i:'il !!\3 1~ lr.:-: °" 3b ll S411h N!'tmto+J ,~"*-6 14 •1•Wi m±~H''U"~·· g •\.\ ~ .... ,..."
• SAN FRANCISC<? {AP) -·==~ Ill"·~ ·l, 1'9 "' !L5!+1t\ FlbtrC!• ••• -:.1'-l"' I~ Im 2 ftG01,J $ ~ Ha" ~ !. ~:~! :,J ti 514 11 .. l:'.11t;+A nie American Pree1dent Unes oio .M f1 " " 1'1 . ,,_+ \4 F•rcllC .1.Jb 2J u.o l\1· • \\ 1 '~ ,.,.,.,1 'f"° j... · "" NtDfvne ·"° I ' If: ~ . • t 1,ttb , 11 241\ Ra 34\t F•ltllllf ,JO 1 S \fl !nl,ll"w ,tt "" I 1 1 !,\ NW l"w 1~ " ..
has suspended Its around-the-'"" '" I "I ""' " ffi!-• ''""' •• -1 ~ '' "' "lnlf,~ ~-" ,.__ • ~·~· >. • • "
world freighter service, the :~'~'"°":'; 7 nil lm 1 ~ :m ::~~~l~·i: t 1n
1~ 1l" 1J~ 1=: 1"rr.: ... t l1 ,t~ µ,~ ft-!~ ~IU"t\ ~· 1l ~ ~ ' ·,..
hipptnr-company-annouilced :~lt!i¥,-'-= rn·~i-J¥t-~{·"' p~:n-r.:l .u ,:,.. ,t~ 1'" a ,::::nr 1:11 ~ 11'1 ru:+ ~ .!1!!!!,T , '°" '4 1
, •.31:
Tu-·•·ay ... ,., \. ' • '"' "~ "~ .. '"''" \· 'I 'll ,,~ ll• ll I '""'E 1'" 1 t~ .. lj;J di .. ,jl ml mt II t:lal • • •rrl1rC 2 17 M :tS.it 14 l:Slii 1 ittd Mo , I •1 12',_ 21 ~ 'It. ,.....,. ·1 · Lo. ~ .. f\IWli"' M · 6 Md 1'Cllll!ii l William .McGowan a vice ,,,c; 1.10t1 • " ,. 1 . u \' ,.,,,."""'' . tt!' 11" '°" u' 1v. :;.'!' 1...,ot0'°° 1 1 1 1Jil 1 .... -... _ ""'s j·ff , • t1 111 in. 2 "" • • ,tl!1ttCk ,IO 1J1 J? 14ft IN l•'h .. F .. P~W 1 I ttl4 llV. 11h ,,. •to-ii ,..,,.0,t'l \! , .--U , a20 •j\'J lol"' 6S Ii
president, said the curlallment i:, I~ 'c~ 14 rs~ ~ 'i"' '!ttt ~ ~::Jli.~-~·~ 11
1 .,J dtt ""' J tJ' 1'' '"''t .1J. I fi':' It'[" N i.l 10 11~ 1 '°' ~,f:ll( l _" or lhe service which has been ~ cor11 • ,,. ~ ~ -1"'-"" ~"' ~ 1 31 11 ~ ~+2"' u 1"" 0 ,_ 111 ~ Hi.1.': 1 i"' .,. r. 11 .. .,tt"'
offered for M yeari was due to tc0
1 ~;" "f , ] 1m ,:~ 1:t: U 11f~g :'° 1l f. r,~ t•~ 1n~+1 ~=~" :U 1} 11m ltl~ ltl.."' ~ti"r.:' .>f 1
1
4 \l,, ~' W--~
the Sharply increased costs Of :::= 4~ 1 lS~ 3"11 nu t +I I~ =k'M111"f5: : '!' i:"" trn tt«t +ii; j:f1~T1J~'l\b 22 :i2 u,.,, ~ 1?"+1~ :~r1 ':'' ,M ~ r, ~ t i. "'
t 8ch vnv.1111 .nee In .70 12 1!)o4 I 1'1t 11T\+ I f!dUllB 2.to • 'II JI ,._ ... 'J CnPof •• 160 ffl'l ,.,, "'i'I "!1''c!Mt 60 \2 1' DV.11\.\ tr.l+ Ct. --~~ ttr11.1 ~~l21t-l7~ 14_ 11.) IL"L.l!.li±_'VJt~I 1.Jll.' ...!_ 1''• 11_'• 11•1, .-··(,.Loi t ~ KV! fS1) t5•~-t ~ ~! 1,J,., ll-J!.." it>) !!_t_
•
•
' ...
. 'Standard'
: 0 11Meats •
JJoglfg•t Seen •
.Aii·lines Battle
Launched Charter Air Bill
WASllJNGTON (API -The
modify fanciful labels for '.! meat industry has. moved to ~
meat by. standardizing the ~
names for various cuts. :·~~~~!'!!
WASIDNGTON (AP) -The
nation's scheduled airlines
have launched an alJ.out at.
tack on a bill that would bring
to the Unlted States the low.
cost air and ground package
vacations S() popular i o Under the voluntary labeling _ · --program launched 'fi.fonday ------
witb the government's bless------------------EutOJM:. ,
in g. cuts could still carry
nrunes such as ''London
broil," "His and ber steak" or
·~Yankee pot roast.to But the
labels would also have to iden·
tify the cut by a general name
\\1hich tells where the cut
came from on the steer, pig or
l•mh.
THE STANDARDIZATION
''will do two things: reduce
sbopping confusion and help
consumers make wiser, mote--
economical decisions," said
David H. Stroud, president of
the program's sponsor, the
National Live Stock and Meat
Board.
' It will also cut from 1,000 to
300 the number of names for
varlous meat cuts, he said.
A&P and Kroger, two of the
top three national food chains,
said they will implement the
program. Officials of Safeway
said the company is already
labeling cuts by origin and ex-
pects to be in compliance with
the ,industrywide program .
coIDptaint s ·or con-
fusing names to identify meat
cuts bave increased as meat
-prices have risen. Minnesota
officials "received -197 meat
labeling cooiplaints in the first
three months of 1973 com-
pared to 234 in all of 1971. The
moothly flow of coinplaints
'¥ere up by nearly 70 percent
at last cOwit in Oregon.
NEW JERSEY ,inspectors
found deli roast selling at $1.89
this year while the same cut,
top r o u n d, · was selling
e)sewhere at the meat counter
for $1.49 a pound.
New York and other states
have required labeling of meat
cuts according to where they
came from on the animal. The
National Live Stock and Meat
Board program is the first in-
·dlllltrywide attack on the
issue.
The Cost of Living CoWlcil
endorsed the program in let·
ters to the chief executive of
every grocery chain with sales
<Ji. JDOCe than $.50 million a
year. The council said the
stores do 75 to 80 percent of
the nation's grocery business.
THE COUNCn;s director,
John Dunlop, •asked the chains
to let him know by Nov. 1 of
their plans, but council officials
said compliance would be
purely voluntary.
Stroud said the program will
be supplemented by charts
and booklets at meat counters
to help shoppers understand
what the names mean.
Western Motif
Work has started on a $3 million shopping center at the intersection of La Paz
Road and Mcintyre in Laguna Hill s. The La Paz Wild West Shopping Center and
mall will coy.er 90,000 square feet. It is be\ng built by the Ted R. Cooper Co.
and leasing-management is being handled by CHC Management, Inc. of 0r·
ange.
Aerospa~e •otues~
Laid-off E xecutives Learn A bout Selves
In a lew weeks the Senate
votes on the bill sponsored by
Sen, Howard Cannon, ([).
Nev.), and supported by the
chartered airlines, that the
scheduled airlines, 1n a
widespread campaign aimed
at mayors and state officials,
have claimed would force
them to eliminate or reduce
service to130me cities.
THE CHARTERED airlines
and cannon claim the sched-
uled carriers are using the
"big lie" technique in hopes
of defeating consumer-oriented
legislation.
SEA'M'LE (AP) -It's been
almost four years since the
Boeing -CO. 'told John T.
Strickland it no longer could
use him.
The issue revolves about in-
clusive tour <.%arters -· the
packaged vacations where air
and growKl transportatioq.
employment, f o r instance, salesmen. lodging and other extras ar'I
dropped from 101,000 in 1968 to "I found that a man's ability paid in one swn .
37,200 in 1971. The Boeing to. find a job was somewhat There are no restrictions on
em ployment figure here now commensurate with his posi-these tours , in Europe, and
is up to 51 ,000. tion," Eastman de c 1 are d. Europeans sometimes take
Eastman started looking for "The people who had really two or three long weekend air
a job about a month before he · gone up the ladder at Boeing trips per year. He has spent the time since
then learning much about
himself.
Joseph B. Eastman, 50.' a
mechanical engineer, \Vorked
on Boeing's Supersonic
Transport project. W h e n
'Congress killed t)Je program in
March 1971, Eastman knew
his career with Boeing would
soon come to an end .
was laid off. He found orie ad were the ones who were On top In the United S t a t e s ,
that "practically was a of finding good jobs where however, the Civil Aeronauti~s
description of my job. '1 He some of the others took more · Board bas rul~ that vac8·
took It, a job at Teledyne menial jobs that just happened tioners on inclusive tour
along." charters must spend at least
HE, TOO, has learned a few
things since then.
" > • , • • • Strickland
k new i t tea s just a
11wtter o f time he•
fo,.e h e '"ould be
let go.
"I had been with Boeing 22
, years and I didri't know whether there was 1lnother job C.A.E in Toledo, Ohio. He
in the United States I could , even worked a salary increase
fill," Eastman recalled, "I out or the switch . When
was nervous about t h a t Teledyne losJ a k~y bid for an
aspect. But having gone out important contract earlier this
into industry far from home, I year, Eastman knew it all was
found I was well equipped to going to happen to him again. compete. That's the way it goes in the
Strickland, 57, a senior aerospace indllStry. He had
group e'ngineer, worked in kept in contact with his
Boeing's aerospace divi~ion former em ployer and wowld
for 19 years. Wll~ _Boeing lost up this spring back at Boeing.
its bid in 1970 to bui1d the un-"I was iJL supervision at
manned Viking Mars probe , Boeing," Eastman said. "I
Strickland knew it was PJst-a ... -was orie -of~the guys "'.ho ~av!
matter of ti!n,e beipt:Ri·,,. ~' other people thd.r rDOUces SIM! 1
would be let''go. · · J.had to counsel them. I had to··
What Strickland found out, do what I could to help them
in part, Was {hat "the real get other jobs and tell them jt
world is klnd ·of fun." wasn't the end of the wofld. I
It certainly wasn't fun at was -prepared to take some of
the time for s t r i e·k I a n d , my own advice when it hap-
Eastman and about 500,000 pened to me.
other aerospace workers -a
third of the total industry
work force -who were laid
off between 1968 and 1971.
THE IMPACT was
especially severe on the West
Coast, where almost 38 per-
cent of them worked.
Boeing's Seattl e-area
'11 THINK one change is
that I've grown a lot closer to
people by having a problem in
common," he added.
Eastman said be knows of
several peoj:ile laid off by
Boeing who found better jobs.
He also knows several people
who b e c a m e door-to-door
$1 000 MINIMUM
Howev e r , a Boeing one night in three cities. In ad-
spokesman said circumstances dition, the trip must last at
made finding a job tougher for least one week and the cost
the top J)eople. • must be more than 110 percent
of the regular scheduled air
fare. "THE GUYS who were laid
off first presumably were th e
least d esira ble ,'' the
spokesman said. "The com-
pany held back on the really
good guy until it couldn't hold
off, and when he got laid off
there probably weren't many
good jobs still available."
"Financially, we were in ·a
lucky situation," Stickland
said.
"The children already were
out of school, so we didn't
have that expense. We had
decided to sell our old -house,
which was bigger· than this
:one. we;ulted in 0':11" financial tiofris~-'° to speak; and-we've
done • ·good job of "lt ever
since."
Strickland has been working
.for himself, more or less,
since th~. Sitting in the base-
ment office of his comfortably
middJe-class home in residen-
tiat Bellevue. W a sh • ,
Strickland ran off the various
jobs he's had, investment land
manager; ?QOfing inspettor for
a construction c o m p a n y ,
, airport planning consultant.
'73 Pontiac
Fuel Une
Recall Told
PONTIAC Mich. (AP) -
Pontiac announced it is asking
600,000 owners· of 1973 models
to return their cars tO dealers
for replacement of a (uel line
aceumulator.
The accumulator is a small
metal expansion chamlJer in
the fuel line that reduces noise
in the system.
Thus, a New York City resi· ·
dent taking an inclusive tOur
charter t rip to New Orleans
might end up spending .cne
night in Freeport, Bahamas,
and another night in Orlando,
Fla.
SINCEmE EXT R A air
travel runs up the cost of the
trip,. the National Air Carrier
Association, which represents
the chartered ai rl ine s,
estimates this trip might cost
$295.
If the restrictions wer_e
removed, tbe New Yorker
<"Ould fly direcUy to New
~~,psr the incl~ve tbur
tbarttt 'tfcket,' receive his
bbtel aoc.i)mmndationi: for the
week and other e·xtras fer a
total cost Of about $165, '1be
association says. t
By compari>on, the oorient
coach airiare fromNewYork
aty to New Orleans is $180
round trip. ~
Charter flights are cheaper
beca~ they operate fully
$5000
Certificates
Under certain conditions, >
loosely fastened plug 1ri life
accumulator could leak and
allow fuel to siphon from1 the
tank when the engine it not
running. A fire hazard could
result, Pontiac said. "'-
A sookesman said there
have been no flr~~·but> 28
leaking accumulators have
been reported. Th e a~
cumulator is to be replaced
with a bOse.
Morris
Plan <>
California's Largest
'I,,oan and Thrift
Service
3700 NllWport Blvd., Newpod Beocli_
I
Call George Wadman, Mgr. at 673•3700
•
Pontiac also said 75,000 of
the same cars are to have a
, ground wire lnstal)ed on the
iDltrument panel &J\~ f:Qn:
dltloncr control. ·
Pontiac said the wire is
belng installed to prevent the
po&lblllty of fire under the in·
strumtmt panel In the event of
a short circuit at the electrical
terminals on ·the air corr
ditloner controls. '
There have been ~me .tires ,
but no injuries, in the 28
reported cases of an hr•
strument panel shortoul, the
spokesman ·said.
Only Grand Prix and Grand ,
Am models without ·heated
back wflldow defoggers will
require the wire, Pontiac sa Id. ,,.
---~ '
Distributor
Buys Site
In Irvine
DAil Y PILOT 31
.
OVER THE COUNT ER
NASO U1tillp lor T....t.y, Soplomllor 1', Jm
.
I
l
"
j
\
r •
·'
,.
: ' ~ • " ·' " " •' • • "
.
"
" .. ,. ,,
•' t' ~:
r ,•
' •'
•
• .. ,. r
'
. . ----... ·---.
Wtdntsdl.1, St,ottmbtr 19, 197.J SC DAILY PILOT 13
" • '
• • •
' ' ' ..
, f
•
•
• :ff DAili PlLOT
•
:= TONIGHT'S
;:Tv 'mGln,IGHTS
•• •. NBC O 8:30 -"Marooned." The three-man
Cl9W of a malfunctioning spaceship is trapped m
o.qer space In this 1969 drama atarl'lng Gregt>ry
Peek, David Janssen, Gene Hackman and Richard
q!nna.
ABC O 8:30 -"Satan's School for Girls." A
y~ng woman, rlnvesligaUng her sister's suicide
fibds herself trapped by the same •atanic g_rip that
dr\>Ve her sis ter to her death. Roy Thinnes, Pamela
Ftanklin, Kate Jackson, Jamie Smith Jackson. •,
rv DAILY LOG
•
•
• • .
'-
Wednesday
Evening
SEPTE:MIElt 19
.. WATEllUTE HUllfilh
NI Qncl'1•1 Ill IU~ Iii dt11p
...... .... "' Cltlflll .. llM
W*ple Mttrinp, .,
on 16th ~ntvry llO'ltl.
IE) Cllt11 ..... 1blp Wrtdllq
al TM Addi•• F111llJ
l:!OO~@ ®Hll lllC .,.,.,..,
Movie: (C) (21/rlw) "1111'1MM'"
(dr.) '69 -Gr11orr Ptc«, Oavld
Jtnssto, -'-Jit HRkm1n, Rkh•rd
Crann1. Th• ttu"ff·m•n crtw ot •
m11functlonln1 JP1C9Craft is m1-
roon1d whll1 Mltslot Control works
dU41fra~e .to rucu1 tlltm. 0 1'.Hl Ei)AICW1tl1t1d1r ifowli:" ( ) (to) "Sabi!'• ka.t ht.
1:ale G D llJ ID EE CD""" t1r11" <mrs> '7l -ROJ Thlnrtts.
' ~IHJ{])9(1)9((} Jlnl P'1flltl1 Funklin, Kat• Jackson, Jaflllll '"e Smitti JKUon. A )'OUfll womtn, In-;.. a.mi mti11tin1 Mr sisttr's sulcld .. ls ltd @ c..rtllll' tf EMM'1 FltMf ta 111 uduslwe (irl's acadtl!'IY whtrt
~TM liq Shtw sh• soon finds htrstlf tripped ~ =Gt Tiii fllllbtlt!U tbl ume utanlc frip that drow htr
I b Trtll .sisttt ltld otlltr:s to their dUths.
ltMple1t111k Mlrit .... ,. lrtfti• Skw ..... "TkMlf .... tasr .,...
v) ·~1n lldd, o.bmll Ktrr. JtptMll U111up p,._ ,5==..""' t:OO • ~ ...r· IJ WM. CONRAD-CANN
l :flf.l ~ ;r'~ "::' 1 . * lV'S TOP l!VT ~EYE!, '
• !t°llCI. (dr1) 'M -MkNtl Cllll11, e ~m .,_....:.__ "M-' ':\.: 'l l 1rbtrt U.il, Dt11t Jona. Stlftnie ~ -Ponr:s. , Id an' Mattin Shnn psts dl9 Cll.IB Ill-'""''°""'•ho •-'II C.•· l tiM:iilrif!M ion with one of his stnnpst ces1s:
M•rv li1fftA Sh• 1 wlll'S provision th1t Cannon lllWIS· t heir •~ t111t1 the death of tht 11wy.r's 1111 t · feut tf LlllJlllCI "Henry IV'' client, a business tycoon:
; Plrt I Sll1k1sp1ar1an play 1wltwtd I~ ~.::•bits •'by lr1ndels En&lisll prol•~r Al1n P.,,.•c.nio. i1·~e·vit::f. [aq S-111'11 DflM
1, -....___._ t:JO m .... ~ •• Dt1eJ1p "Onlr 1-·· on. [art11" : a.,.. ...... II> ..... Haldi
1: mom•-moc... .. ......
iiirt(q I« W.rs lHO 1J QI (j) Da Aqast M I e 11 1 r
Mewtt: (C} (2'1) -JM ROOM)' and BilJr Dee WllllMllS auat
•) '50-*I McCru, Arltl'lt Dehl. in tht story of 1 robbtry and sl1rJn1
illNHy tllat brinp 1 ru~orial candi·
W'Nt's Mr Uttt? d1t1, his ltmiJr alld his stiff undff E· .. ,,_ IJsusplati:~ Ql!;l mo... N1r111111
(j) Dnptt alkin" M1rsh1ll beliWIS t WfMlle. lllu IM ci., convicted murdlrtr is innactnt but
i iJ'P= ~ -tttt onJr way to 11111 1 MW tr11I is
AlkliH• dt II C...Wlf =d =d. incompettnct •&1lnst 111
s,nd\ltlCll , .........
7:30 IJ n. Rn Dtt1111 c1 .. Jim Ltnae Wiid Wiid Wut
hosls. llllMWIM
~H-• """' l~!O,T•• lhd< Waft Till flllf father ltb Helle ' Tri\-~
1rmlsslw: Pipe" Htrry nlUSIS to CM:;;.lty f"61ct:
1Uow his dauaht1r to 1tt1nd in 111· Sit Sln•rt
nirtrt rock concert with 1 JOUth •ltd hlr• A.lps 1rr1np1 1 ~c111n..cur d1tt for tier . , Nns/s,.rts
Instead . . =."L:e'-ll:OO ~ll!S!ll=:!
'hit lay sa.. Twlllpt Z011e
TIM Prke .b ltiPt Pttly 11111911
INMtlllilll Did ¥111 Dr't
t1) T1 Tel .. Trdl Te Ttl the l id oo--....... Sllmrtnt ''MorlotT1pscottlrlo" (1) Tiie WMW T9'1Y
{l) hllct Sur..-iifrM Hltdlttct ,,....
.• r.pll, OtMr ""'" 9 (I) lflib West TM MU .. Flltll7 11:15 IE) CIM• 3'
1.10 II a (I) $Ollllf aM Clllr DlnllJ'
fiM>mas and TrllJ Savtl•s 1uat ll:JOIJa([)ca Litt>~"", ,',.Cc.? "llller ~ -irfltM"" (susp ' -o " 0 (I) ADAM 12 ROLLS Wimer. Di1n1 Baker, Grq Morris. * TONITE-JOIN THEM g f..f!:l~ 'i',~l';i!!'(::o>
B ~ (i'J ~ m Ad1111 lZ "Rim· fz'-veronlai Lake, Alan ltdd.
part oiVTiion' Reed kids Milloy ! l1YJ (I) aJ Jad: P'11r T"'lta
1b01JI old 111 11 1 prelude to thtl1 ilWii: (C) "'Sip of 1t11 Plflll"
tour of dutJ 1mon1 senior c.itil•llS. dyl ~ ... ~ ~\r11c~n111,r, Rita G1m. a llkim: (C) cnr> ''Mwri•c• .. m .vrn1ir11
tlMI lltb" (com) '65--Detn Mtrtin, 0) ...... : "Tiie ledtllor Ptrtf'
Otbor1h Kerr, Fr1n~ Sinllra. (oocn). '57-.C.~lyll .lonts, Don Mur· fJ (f! (I) Ci!) l.O'll 1lrJ lhilhMI' r17, E: G. M1l'll11ll.
''fh• Minstrel Show" Th• Wll'°"1
•nd ttte Bruces . 1nttr sllaw biz 11 1!:00 i =-~~ TwtM Mlt"
tl'ley put on 1 mm1t11I sti°" 1nd, in (com) •54 _ Grftf 61!10ft, Robert
tile ar1nd trad~n of lht show. R •·r11 SuUh'tn Pem lost• Mr \IOIU, 11n, 0ti •
0•1111to 1_,1,..,......,. 1:00moom0Cll-Vlderr" (dr1) '52-Arthur Ktf!Mdy, D ~...,.., Tatii , . .., ....
111-""' 1,30 IDB • .., ::!°,::. ":,. 1'45 ID"""' -_. <-l Merie: (C) "JIM CHlllCIM '41-Robtrt Younr, R1l'Hlolph Scott.
(wts) '61 -John W91nt, SU.rt 2::JO m All·Nlaflt Sllow: "'1111111 Anw,"
Whilmtn. "Wt Dive it Dewit"
flill "•'IAl ""' .,_ • lilt~ The liillwrsJtJ of Htwail d1•·1 .S:lD B Mwlt: "lilMrttr • 0. Cltlto
mt dtparlmtnl ptrlomi1 t11dillon1I pu" (hor) '59 -Tror DoMhlH,
Ctllnest optra In 1Jx sctnn btltd Artll~r Fr1nz. .
Thursday
DAYTIME MOVIES
'
Lincoln A•• w••' ol K11c•!
121 .... 010
GfOIGI UGM
ILUMl IN LOVl !_,
'lUI I ... ,n O'N.W.
LADY ICI! !NJ
'1n0,100 rwy
, I Ce1>l•l•1no
' 1 "lll·lllftP -
Son Otego fwy
11 Br<l<lkh~rlt (Sc;,)
Hl·:Mll
GfOIOI MGIJ.
ILUMI IN LOVl It)
,WI I JUIHlfll O'NllU
LADY ICE ll'GJ
Lincoln A¥1. '"'It cf Knott
117·2213
ONll' HIVl~H NG!
JllU5 CHRIST
SUPll5TAI Iii
c1i.11 l•11w...i1JOI KIDD ll>Ol
S.nt1 "'"" F,.1w1y ntu
Ch1prn1n AYt.
151·7tlt2
S1nl1 An1 F111w1y n11r Ch1pm111 AYI . ·•»-
Nt .. POfl
FtttWty
•t.tl•~•rSI. ~S-3J1S
CNAIUS UONIOH
THI STONI KILLll Ill
l'tUI t IOtllJ MlfCllUM
FRIENDS Of IDOIE COTLl ll!
A Field Day for Fiedler
Ask any 10 music lovers who
should be brandlahlng lhe
batoo when the ronnat callJ
ror fun, flreworkl a n d
lestivttles from bolh sides of
ohe lootllghl, anc,l nloe wiU yell
the answer at yqu : .
ARTHUR FIEDLER! Who
else? ·
TOM BARLEY
Music Box
I lnh ...... Ct .. finest student ensemb es t e ~ C011•4 NL ~ ,
naUon. has a few vacancies ln HILD OYlll
poruon of the 1973-74 orches-J•-. e....,. .
t":iere they are: oboe, English "HA~KI~,~~~)
horn . clarinet-bass clarinet, J:OO PM &: 10116 PM
violi ns first and second, prln·
cipal cello. cello, bass. 1l'lis AIM
critic in looking forward to w"4y Ala..'·
hearin g the group under the 11EVERYTHING YOU'VE Boston1s effervescent oc--
togenarian, replete In natty
red d inner1
pourri of international airs
that called for · no great
musical !kills but won the
unanimous acclaim of what
many unkltld.ly can the Geritol
!et.
topic. direction of 23-ye ar-old ALWAYS WANTED TO
q!ORDS AT RANDOM -Michael Nowak who will be KNOW ABOUT SEXN (RI
We didn't have the Harbor re111cn1bcred for his ·sterling 1:41 PM jacket, did the
thing lhat ortly Area Community Concerts '>''ork us assistant conductpr of
Program for 1972-73 last week the Dallas Sym phon y MATINll SUNDAY
he can do so
well yet again
Call ni..tre fer but here it is today thanks to Orchestra. Call the Young S•IHll.Y Sc....._
the courtesy of those friendlyl;;o~~1~u.~i~ci~n~ns~F:•und:~•~tio:n~o:l~fi:°"~al~~~~~~~~~~~; last weekend AFFABLE ARTHUR, a
clever conserver of h i s
energies, won just as many
cheers for the way he led the
Loi A n g e I e s Philarmonic
Orchestra in rousing ren-
ditions of Glinka's "Ruslan
and UJdmUla'' overture and
Gliere'! "Russian Sailor's
HACCA people: Sept. 30. Little 21U59-3766.
Angels of Korea; Dec . I. con-~ at the Holly-
wood Bowl al-
thought we'd
though we
lost him for a
time in the
smoke that billowed from a
blinding displ.ay of fireworks.
BUT AN OCCASIONAL shift
in the breeze gave us a quick
glimpse of the indomltabl«;,
Arthur, belting out Handel's
Royal Fireworks Music as if
the score was going out of
style and using !aid baton to
encourage more than 15,000
onlookers to let down their
hair while he let down the
Bowl curtain for this year.
What a grand old sport
Fiedler i!; be moved .to
Handel from a rocky ar-
rangement of "Day by Day"
from Godspell that absolutely
delighted the kids aroWld us.
And be looked after his own
generation as he invariably
does with a schmaltzy but
thoroughly effective "Dancing
Around the World ," a pot-
Dance." .
And he !bowed us all too
clearly that his skills in liaison
are undiminished by linknng
with pianist Gary Graffman
for a pleasing performance of
Rachmaninoff's Seoond Piano
Concerto. If this critic wanted
to be as stuffy as many of his
colleagues on the music beat
seem determined to be, he
could go on from now until
ni:rt Bowl season picking holes
in the Rachmaninoff.
Pleasing it was and pleasing
will do very nicely, 'thank you.
We don't look for more than
that at summer concerts and.
since thi.$ year's attendance
has been the highest since
1958, it seems that this~ writer
and a million or so music
lovers are of one mind on this
cert pianist Carl "1atthes ;
Jan. 26. Jorge Morel Doo and
May ll". soprano Kar a n
Armstrong. •
A grand sc hedule. as you
can see, and all these conc~rts
are set for 8 p.m. in the
Orange Coast Col I e g e
auditorium.
-Director John Kosh ak is
now rehearsing his Chapman
College Symphony Orchestra,
for three 1973-74 concerts:
Dec. 11 , April 2 and r-.tay 15.
Debussy, Ginastera a n d
Brahms, Dec. I J • Men-
delssohn, t\1ozart and Ives,
April 2 and the May 15 format
to be announced later.
-WE f\1UST pass on the
news that the Los An geles
Debut Orchestra, One of the
Most Say
Ratings OK
'Gods pell' Sets New
Washington Record
NEW YORK (AP) -Fi[ly.
five percent of Americans 18
years and older find the mo-
tion picture industry's rating
systei n useful in deciding what
movies children should sec.
The approval rate was up
from 44 percent In 1m, ac-
WASHINGTON (AP) nnming and jumping an cording lo the study con(lucted
Washington said adie u SUnday estimated 132.000 mi Je s by the Opinion Research Corp.
night to "Godspell" after a l lh fir for the MoUon Picture onstage. At the end o e st The run of 75 consecutive weeks at Association of America.
Ford's Theater -by far the act, members of the audience voluntary rating system was
longest for any dramatic ~ are invited to have a small begun in 1968.
duction in the capi ta J 's · glass of wine on the stage; Only 2• percent of the
hi.story. 1,575 gallons were consumed. general public regarded the
The rock musical opened at 1lJe final performance, like system as not very useful, a
the restored Ford's Theater on more than half a dozen before drop of eight points from 1972,
April 4. 1972, booked originally it, was a benefit at $25 per the survey showed. Koowledge
for four weeks but with an ticket, with the profits going or the ratings among movlego-
open-end contract which has to Children's Hospital. ing teenagers was 97 percent.
been extended time after time. -------'---------------1
Approximately. G,000
persons· saw "Godspell" dur·
ing its 600 performanco. 'Ibe
theater had a gross intake
during lhe run of $2,293,849.43.
Ford's says the cast wore
out 1.20 pairs of sneakers while
This cop plays dirty!
• I .... -~ ...
UA
souttt ·
C:O..t
"OTOOLE IS FUNNY, OISTURBING, OEVASTATINGI" : -a, CNN, 11""" INl•f"°' '~ • :
··~~:w~'"f":"'~ :f
RUUNGC'ASS .,. __ ____ ...
U. A, CITY AN DSOUTH COAST CIH•MAS-TU•IDAYI lk { • CLADIES AND G0LD•MAG••S>-4P•N TIL !rtt P.M.
ClrJ~J;" "A TOUCH c.:~ St;lll. • 0 .. CLASS"
& Miii.i -111-11·4.I It 1>11rlc11 N .. I . . kettJICO~
l'IY 'Miii Tll•'"' 'THE SWING.
IN' STIW·
•
AICllSil" . -tt111-
·•sw1NGIN'
l"USSYCATS"
·-....... lt~Wttdl I "LAST Of'
SHllLA"
It ... 0 ..... 1 t "'T~lll" WHO
CINNllt" 2·" '·"'" "IAXT<" t l .00 19tll 111 Co6orl .. flllllC .... I • ' CAMI TO
11"0) tPG )
"JUDGE •ov ........
1•111 In C•l•rl 11"01
J•rMI Cotlul'll "HAlllY"
IN YOUlt POCklT"
•· •1Polcl1/lt, WM.II "l"UU" C.lor (1"0)
'"
Liv Ullma1111
•
"40 CAltATS,.
... UTT•ltl"LllS Aill ............. ~,,.,
0.,. "'°"""
•
"ICAll:IC•OW"' "lltlWSTa•~D" ... ,.c.1i1rc• ~
'Dlke1w1y
his bids•
lllidhe'd
tos!the
Ten Most
KAPX
,
*Surfing Festilal*
This WHk
' "Pacific YHmrtions" ....
2 llTTT IOOP CARTOONS
PREE DYNO SUIFIOARDS
Detalh At n-tn
COMPll:TI PIR'°RMANCU
7:10 & ,:)0 (.ell '""'""
CONTIN. SAT. & SUN.
2 P'.M.
1;, PRICE
5P.l:CIAL-MAT. WED. 1 P.M.
ON YOUR
W.nted Hat!
L If G CINIMA5 O' CALIF., INC.
FAM.~~r .... rw.•.N_ ~-~t,1.EMA f NIXT TO THI oaMCO .ITHe
DtUCTLY •t•oss ,.OM WH9•00IC MAllDW••• ---':op.. wffwop 7 Pr•·-S..~1h•.-!I ·""-=----
CINEMA 'I . Just a pereon wno
protects c~lldren and
'other living things 1
i , I -TOM UUGHUN · OEl()R[S TAYLOR
I T(ClllCOl.Ol91.::.:.-=...fiftlitt:11t Ai.. "ILISS THI HAST' & CHI
~ I CINEMA II • , '
t
All lh• lov• ond o/I lh9 lo11ghl•r of th• e~oetdway hit/
7
7
-• , . '
•
. . .
Lag11•1a Bea~h
EDITION
Today's Final
N.Y. -Steeks
•
VOL 66, NO. 262, 7 S6CTIONS, I.I 0 PAGES ORAN&E';.COUNTY, CALIFORNIA . . WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER, f9, 1913 TEN CENTS
-. ' --· -
Emerald ._Bay ·Beach Privacy Threatened?
By JACK CHAPPELL
Of ... o.111 "'"' $t ...
./ .
tie block-busting on this one. to get the It Is something that is dropped out of the .tentloo with Mr. Caspers or anything be people here and our board have nothing
furth er to act on at this time," he said.
!!lJnet11ld Biiy won SUPl!Pri from th e Orange Coiu.ty Boerd of Supervllors
TueSday 'fol the area's exclusion from
~.of the Coostsl conservation Act (Propoaltioo 211), but was warned
Iha~ the mst could be loss of ,private
expibsive beach. . 1
area from the acts permit• requirements.
The county 'will now carry the request to
the coastal cornmlsaion.
Board'Cbalrman'Rooald Caspers warn·
ed Emera!~ Bay olllcials that the ex--
clusion request could prove to have some
un .... ul.forta.ble strings for the private
l'OlllJl!unityy Jn the midst of Laguna
Beach.
public onto that beach aa Lbe price for blue)Uld 1 Would have to think that It wat may have come up with/' Dake 'saJd.
the exCJusion." ' H c • tlie ~~1 input of Mr. Cas;ie.rs," Dale ' Dake said he did not know at this point
Tbat . angle to llie ~cluslon J!i!tter sa~ today. . if Emerald Bay could , stop-the county
came as a ,s~. ,to Emerald Bay. pjite said that as an employe of the from negotiating ,public accoss to the
Directors of the sei:vtce. district bod ff.I 8'rrice !ll,ltrict, he would not comment beach. · .
i;onsldered !hat a ""1'ter" -W·be .fl>. oo~wbetl>er. the Emerald B;ay would However, he said tha~·wlth the ap-
volved when 'they i:!Jnsldered lbe requo!ll » bargain away its private beach in reiurn proval of the Board of-SUpervlsors Tues-
fur exclusioll.'sald Merlin' Dake, dJslrict for the exclusion. day, it appeared. the matter was out of
Dake, who is also manager and
se"Cretary of the Emerald Bay Associa-
tion1 said he was not qualified to Say
what legal resow:ce the community
would have if the county were tp barter
public access for fl:clusion.
Majorie Mize LeGaye, attorney for the
service district, was not available for
comment tOO.ay and would be away from
(See PRIVACY, Page Z)
'!lie board approved a request by the ·Eniorald· &y Service Dtstrlct that the ~ty se~exclusion of the m.identlal
~ M. •
Casperi aald, "Knowing the com-
mlsllon ine..nl..., s as I do, It may be that
they will take the opportunity to do a-ll~
secretary and .....,.,.. ' He said .!qrther, he did not want to ad· the bands of Emerild Bay' now.
0 Since' .u w8s not discussed at ..&be dreu remarks made by Caspers. ... "I'm saying that this was merelY a re.
board meeting, I would have Jo tblnt UW:~... "~. ce~inly d~'t w~ to go .Jnto coo--,quest to the board of tuperVisors. Our
. • • .
~ -· -.. -·-
.oar
... ~. ----' • enn1s
"• ,_
Hopping Mall
Tiusrees Won't Kick t,,,e Habit
' --An·altempt.to.ban.lt110ldQg-at.meetings.ol the.Laguna.BeaJ:b_tcijOOI board
wu qWckly snuffed out Tuesdi;y1 night. . -
Bruce Hopping, chairman of the healtMonsclous Kalos Kagathos Founda·
Uoo based in Laguna Beach, bad asked the trustees to put the discussioo item
on tlielr qenda.' · .
Btri' THE five-member .board, Locludlng four smokers, wasn't interested.
· '~Does that mean you , won't even talk abou_t it?" Hopping asked board
Preafdent Korman Browne. .
. ' .
, . . TAXING A loag drag on lifs cigarelle and llicltlng lhe ash Into an Ubtray,
Browne, a dmtlst, replied; "Sorta looks that way, doesn't it?"
Hopping said today bO'll me complalnls with the coonty bealth department
and llad ~y started with the local depar!ment repmentattve. He's also ~ pie..-1'1!11,ff: ..... stat. ..... :~ 1rtalbe tre.11 \ife,!Dto bla -.-4.. •. ' I ..... . . .. ... IJ .1 . • .., i\ ..... .. • ·-· . ~ \= • • • _.__ • A ..... .. .. !
...
City Shares
.
In School .
" Agreement_.
An agreement with the city for ~
strudion and maintenance of nve· .or-siJ:
new tennis courts at Laguna llelldl ·High
School was approved bY the school board
Tuesday, nigbl
~ asked fur Clllly.nne dimlae ID
the propooed ordinance written by, Oly
Attorney Tully ~.
'!bey lald their _...;t lo fund ~t·~~-~.:!!. , -
' Tbe city should ~ in colll hlcamll
i?J1 vandalluu . .,. .. ra"'ii~~"ll. dioa-mclui .• -Jane....., 181c1. Tbe • 'Will b;'ainded, bJ '.Sffl! ilv.~p.r·"" '
·-f-aguna :Trustees '1 ..... -:;-
Cl'. arify·"'---~15. 'r1llt ........ ~~ -.
ledbyhfahi ..... .:.:~== Tbe City Comidl Is scheduled to
dlscusl· the ~ at lolllgbt'1 .
Policy Over Attendance retuJ.ar meeting,
U. the total oout. Is leso, the .,....
tributlom.ol the lour --will be -........ a•·O..-~~.--~ r~ !"""-.. __ • _, ~ ·1·· ~' ~ •.
_ • u tbecaetexceec111111.ooo;the llUIDbet c~ng-Sigftt; : ·. ~ --"" -· ~tsc!::a:!ich.::i= =t!i.wl!fy~als given on ~an~ma":ta=~Ultbe._-l4n1t , , . ,. ' . ' ; .,
was Initiated by the Lquna Beach U scboolll are overcrowded, approval A completion ute of· Feb. 1, 1974 has Li~ Beach Hllh·' &!bool · .cbeer)ea4ers ;8hould ,~ row .are·Lisa:IW!ock, lef~ and Lorilee Goodall u~ SChool District Boin! of Trustees will not be granted before the second day been 1et fur. tbe..pnject. ~l.a h.!~ ~e&J>!)?se )i.;ptey live~alliletic: e••~ls . · In center ·are Corliss Kean, left, and Diana ·Johnson.
Tuelday nighl . of school without· the Pr In c I P a I ' s To bu J f ~ ·111e courts, t w 0 wOode. •'a!l<\•JieP, <ll!ll~ tbfYuBh,lhe' C1!1nllt· &qiool ~· Jn Jil rear are 'Teri Huston; left, and Crysty Hanson.
students may attend schQolll other than permlsaioo. · bulldipp • .., the. l'ark. Avenue site will " , lhe ..,. in their r..Idence area oo "a Ecluc:atlOaal n •• d determined by I be ba ... to. o.. ,,.......,!....., or ---·.-~........ . . , . ·1 " • , ' . '.. · space ,nallable basis Ciiiiilderlflg tiOth piill<iiliilalslaff~d tue~ _..., --~ "-~ -~ ---·~ -'-• ~::d;::~:;li: ~:~=:~:::.::: ~~;;::~ -~;-,.r~~f~a~ ~111om1 to ·: Bias
dlstrlc:t receives f'9 to IO iequests per including babylittibg probleDS or the statewide ·= to Read" · 1 \ ."' l.T-t·, '· • , . .-:\ . · :-:~ta a~~:: tr~~-died would be main-toa~:=ia ~1i.. d0ft5 "."taw:t.er .L6:Ses Papers :·to Overan:xious Bom~ ~qu'-.:i -
their area. lahling an atteodance balance on the Time Christian ~ Program, ' .;_-: ' . ' ' ·P, ~ ua
Tbe policy requires all requesta to be basis of available fadlities and personnel wbiCh has offered 1111·1iour a week in . ' . • • " , ...-in wrltlng-to-the-~~llcfe;-:regard-ln-=g '=tra=~,=.--"'11giou-educa~to--li0....iementory--Tbe-~-;-<...,_•ITHarbor , 'l'lier~the·Qfanf...eaanty-Sbet-e-brlelcase~A~-wile
tranafera .never ba4 any teeth befoce," -ta. Jo 'lburston lntenne!!late Judicial District .coart Tnesday-'wu lfl's•bomb ·djsp..ai-,..\uad.'and Its~ ha~ jusl-given-blm ata.,present.
OrCritt Named Chief
Of l.Bgw.ta s Paraae
La~ Cl! Orcutt. ba,.been selected
diaJrman of the Laguna Beach Eighth
AnlllliI Patriots' DoYParade.
Other officers are Myrih Malaby, vice chlJriiwi·-EmJJy ·Ross, secretary and-
M8liry ~. treasurer. Tbe parade .)Viii
be held Feb. 18 with the tberhe "Tbe
Splr!t,of 1178," in recoplUon of the U.S.
BiceDteMial. l· 1,
• or..,.
• • •
•' ~ ·-~ ~w:eladler ' ~ . ' , MOltly ~'\rbunday, lolioW·
; ~ --lqw clouds In lhe morning • bou!L lllcba in the llll at the , ~. rlsini to' the mlcl-'IOI in.
I ~
--msmE TODA ... -
AtY-. ...... J a..M...... J -. c.1111... • t .fi!-7i
-.,:. 'I --~ ... "*'--~"·· _.,.
' .
,
Z.'t:.. : -. =~~ .............. cir...~,.,,, -.... Dt.lllllefllll II , ......... .e.u ·-. -... ---.............. •
~ ....... ..._ stated. Scbool. · handled by Newport. · ''Be-~ tlo n.el lassoed .. , the •Iaek ,leather satchel and "Mr. ~railger i•s n 'l very ba-," ~.._.,.. -Received a roPori slating that · ' -"· a rney r obsei:v~ hls law. partner, ~ PlaJiT'
-)heAn ~.'"""'!, ~::'!,,:1!!': ,::,i;:i~ Laguna Beach Higb Scbool graduates at-Walter Baranger ~ltlie\sberifrs bomb gin!!erly bauled ,_it O!JI of the •cOOriroom Contacted'-1.ater today, A.t 10 r n ey
--z tending college generally Sustain a one-. squ~d. . and'do~ the 'corridor. Bu-anger said hiS,Jaw partner is indeed ~J:;, ~time, without point drop In grade average:.. "over-all ,Barrister-Bar!IJller. ~d. lorgoUen hJS Mar>bal Sgt. Ed ·Postel said It W3S well right. ·
In related actioo, the board appn!ved within oor expectations" B«O!dJng to new atla!'hecase con=i,varloos legal alter •midnight . when the threatening "It was my ooly decent briefcase -
(See J'(Jl4CY, Pap !) Robert Reeves, usiltaat. superintendent. papers Monday afternoon,· eaving it in a briefcase was tenderly.set in place Wider wltl:t my initials in gold on, the side -and
-Approved a letter advising parSts courtroom. , a tree on ~ front lawn. frankly, I'm ticked off," be declared.
that tl>e!r children will be offered c1_. Dl!puty • ~ "~ J10ti~ an Sherlll's specialists attached a small "It's not repairable. They blew the n ·e.ag.an 'Qui"et' ' containing inlonnatioo on ham an ominous blaclt oatcbel as the nlght tralf1c explosive charge 'to the •legal)~ f125 e•-wbole end oot <>fit. I am going to make a
...11. reJR"Oductlon and sex education, and court brolte uf). ecutive:s ,~acCeseory and -BOOM. ' claim against the comlty/' Baranger em--
SACRAMENTO. CAP> -Gov. Ronald ::'1:"L~~1~=-=:to pi!':'~~d:.'lr111~tht1y~': si~:1'"burrt1s!®d\~1!11~m'!';e~~: ~~ ... he said, "they have in.
lleapn refused Tuesday to join in any · ~ppr0ved Harley '"Wlcl:'' Lobe as de~thou:!itloot ·~-· case," Sgt.~.remarbd". \. SllrllllCe ,covering acts·of their emplo)'el ~'games •bout· whether Vice pril\clpal of the adult ICbool iln a ball·. · .11\e cue looked· •an attoni,ey's Deputies blew out'ooe wbolO.cornet•l committed in the line of duty." Pniddenl Sp!ro.T. Agnew might resign lbnebuls,withblsother50peroentuaed· -~wort.~no~badbeeiiin . ',,, '. 1 .,.
and, If oo, ,Wtio 1l1lgbt he named to ,... to .1 i:ontfnue as the district computer ""'1't since ·allemoon. . • , "
ceed .blm. Tht Republican governor, ap;ciallat. '!be marsbals knew If it ·WIS a bomb p· kih. . ' M,.,., n'
mentioned ao a potential 19'16 presidential '-Approved extra stipends to live with -mercury switch a genUe touch ar g ·eter 1" scuss1•on ~te, said he bad given no thought. ~ chosen . to coonllnate the "'"11" might set It of!·
to being tabbed as an Agnew SUl!<ossor. ','(Seo TI!NNlll, Page Z) ~------------.
Skinny-dippiljg: Ga~ 16,
'Told On' ~y ~lfic_ers-
Inventive Intne illy poll<ie.r.oorted to ~ lllolalliln and laclt of parental :y~=-.. ~=~ ..m11o1. . .
year-old lilt! In a Dll(fe swimming parly the°':' r:'l ~. bonv~ '::! • and beer liu'ot. , , '.her arms. stom . ,
'Tbey told her -.. her. loot' ind In 1illad1llb«te~ reluaed to
Officer D8'e Berg was dlapatched to a get Into the pollae. car.
!railer pa~k at 148111 Jelfray Road about Tbe standoff cooillllled Wltll Ofllcer
I a.m., In responae to ai1other among Be11 r*'1oed bill sergtant, who In turn
many recent reports .of alnnydlpping telephoned the glrl'I mother · In Orange
'}Olllbe In the facillty's pool. ....,..·_..,and~:tm to clrlve.!JUI and pick
He made a roultne traffic stop ~ a uiiller-errani ,
suoplciou• car nearby and conlronled lnvestfptors oald the olhon' llllllel ·
five )'OOJll people with wet hair and beer and acldmaee were taken and Ibey ..,.
breath. · . relauod with a w...,_ lbel.mlde lwlm-
Slnce the girl ... only,tl and in the ming'liforbldclenlocltheybaftrecelwd
coml!IJl1 ol ldults, ~ was detained for . too ,...y comtilalnta alreody.
(
Set for Laguna Coun~il Crash Douses
bzg~na Lights Laguna Beach'•·troub~ plons for
Increasing .revenues tbrwP Portillg An ~ driver of an unidm-meter .cllarges will likely ~ tonlgbt
lilied car smlclted Into the l1r/ at the city council -ung,
wire of 'the Southern Calffornla . Allhaugb the mattar la not ICheduled EilllaD 'Oolnpony Ullllty pole ln on the agenda, fur the 7:!0 meeting, .=... ~ ,~00:1 ~ Mayor Roy Holm said Tuesday the coun-. __ .,,......_.. cil would want to dllcusl the matter r·--a publicly tonight. -t ~":...t~•n-~ccomlrcu\'""1t"we'!i Friday, Richard Willetta, '!bo had ·-Id iho "....--orpnlzed a rel•rendum -qalnst a oatll'S:!Op.m. ~when-· mt!tet'rtvenue plani\lol pWod Into law
-. no.d u a result of the • by tile councll, turned, l'I sufficient alp¢ . Jln:fnl. peUtiona to hair Imposition of tee ln-
Tbo ri inWllvad '"8s from the creuoa, and inllallatlon of '10W meters ~1111'11 near the . Feotlval of in Laguna Beach.
AJ1I Ji'illd' to_~ City llmlts ~ _ Hit witlj the ~tiona. the COlllldl now '1::., C.::· iO pe_,i of the llas two oiiilOns. It ~ ihe lair or -rt Nd power 1*k In 30 ~ f>eloce Ille .-. ln • lpecial
,mlllates wttb UiO bllonce getlin& u uie' law 11 oVer111med, by .wbatever
eiectrldlY lour boul;l later. -*"similar -·ace may not be enacted for . a yur.
·. •
\
I
Interpretation of "similar" is open to
some quesUon, however, and the council
may be allowed some latitude with which
it may bargain with meter foes to
formulate a politically acceptable plan •
Mayor Holm 90tneWbat softened
previous statements that a sPectaI elec:--
tion was virtually usured as the council
would not bock down. '
Tbe mayor said Tueaday he felt thal by
worRing with the peiltloners, a special
election may not prOve neceaary.
There are areas of apparent elSJ
agreement. The ordinance nacted in
mid-August called for lnmaslng the rate
of .1'9_!klng from 10 conts Jo 20 .-an
hour ana puttillj{ In -1111) .... molars
along Coast Hlgb'lray aommercial -
and 1n i.ac-c..,.., during the -tner. ·
Main tar11tt ol lbe petlilon le-. -l~ PARlllNG, Pip l) '
'
LI
Airline Calls
Back .Chief
NEW YORK (UPll -American
airlines called C. R. Smith oul of
reliremenl a n d renamed h l m
' chalnnan today, hoping that the 74-
ycar-old Texan who bbilt the airline
into a commercial giant can
restore its prorits and public im·
age.
Sroith, a pioneer in the develop-
ment or commercial aviation, was
elected chairrrytn and chief ex·
ecutive officer of the airline at the
monthly meeting of directors. He
succeedl George A. Spaler, wbo
resigned.
At the s ame time, American
reported a new loss of $26.3 million
for the first eight months of thfs
year, compared with a net profit of
$12.4 million a year earlier.
Avco Withdraws
Laguna Niguel
Project Permit
Avco Community Developers has
withdrawn its request for a permit from
the state Coastal Zone Conservation
Commission for a 1,218 unit Laguna
Niguel project at the last minute.
The state commission meeting
t o d a y in Inglewood was scheduled to
vote on Avco's 74-acre oceanside develotr
mept.
The condominium project at Pacific
Coast Highway and ·crown Valley
Parkway was denied a permit by the
South Coast Regional Zone Conservatioo
Commission. Avco appealed that decision to the
State commlulon e1tabll1hed by Proposi-
tiOn 20 last November.
A'foo offlcial1 asked for the con-
tinuance late Tuesday for at least two
.•Neekl. The commi18lon'1 next meeting Is
Oct. 3 In Eureka.
Commluion offlClals said It Is likely
that action will be delayed unUI a Los
Angelu area meeting Oct. 17.
Withdrawn Indefinitely today was a .
permit request by Robert Grant Corpora-
tion for 213 townhouse tmlls In San
Clemente.
The development is planned on Camino
Capistrano between Camino Estrella and
camino Mira Colla. . State planner Sill Boyd said a number
of developers In that undeveloped South
orange County area are working
lolethtr on plannln1 before having a
rehearing.
Festival Awards
3 Scholarships
The Laguna E~h F~'Uv1ro1 ·Art1 has
awarded conUnulng scholmhlp1 to
three fonner Laguna Beach High School
~tuden~ .. • Glenn Vedder, scholarship committee
chairman, announced the grant of $1,000
to Andy Chambers, an art student It Cal
State, San Franruco; of 11,000 to Kathy
Jo Kahn, a d80Cf: student at United
States Unl\'erslty In San Diego : and $7SO.
.1o ~tarie McCarty, a dance student at
Cal State, Fullerton .
The Festival of Arts Awarded $8,000 to
f1ine other degree candidates last month
•for the 1973-74 school year. The total
:scholarship budget Is '41 ,700 this year.
Kidney Patient
Survives Sm·gery
FRESNO (UPI) -A kidney dialysis
:tmtient has successrully withstood open
·heart surgery, an apparent first in the
medical world.
Doctors et Valley Children's Hospital
: performed the complicated operation on
:,Donald Hiiiman, 33, who has relied on a
:dialysis machine for two years, it ·was
. reported Tuesday.
. ''We'd never encountered anything like
·this before," said the head surgeon, who
. asked to remain anonymous.
OU .... COAST ~•
DAILY PILOT
0 111)' Pilot PhDIO by Pllrkll O'Do111Mll
•
Override Fail• -Minim~um ·wage ."
Veto to Stand.
WASHINGTON (AP) -The House '°'
day upheld President Nixon's veto of a
bill that would have increased the
1ninilnu1n wage to $2.20 an hour July l.
The vote was 259 to 184, or 23 votes
short of the two-thirds majority needed
lo override a veto.
ll was the sixth time this session that
Congress failed to muster the two-thirds
majority required to over ride a veto.
Nixon said the bill would have in·
creased unemployment and added to in-
flationary pressures.
He has asked Congress to provide for a
more moderate lncre&se in the minimum
wiige, which is $1.60 an hour.
House Democratic lel}ders failed in
four previous efforts to muster the t\\'O-
thirds majority needed to JVerride a veto
~=-ti a fifth effort failed in the Senale.
George Meany, AFl.rCfO president,
had sent every House member a letter
urging the veto t:e overridden and. qlled
on all union local leaders to carry the
message to their representatives In
Congress.
day saying "lhls week c~ for courage ,
in Congress." ' 1
·
Although It finally passed 281 to 130
last June. Republican and conservative
Democralic opponents came wit.bin 20
votes of scrapp,Lbg . 1\ • fc;>r an
Adminlstratlcn-backed ·substitute.
The bill also would "have e.xptndld
coverage of the mlnlmtJm wage law by
bringing fi\le .million state and local .
government employes and one mUUon
domestics under its protection.
Nixon has proposed a slower Increase
in the minimum -to $1 .90 this. year,
S2.10 next year, $2 .2() In 1975 and $2.30 in
1976, with no Increase in coverage, 8!Kf a
lower rate for teen-age workers.
The House Republican Polley Com-
mittee. chief policy arm of the GOP
leadership, overwhelmingly supported
Nixon's posllloP 'Tuesday and issued a
statement urging the veto be 1ustalned.
Watcl1in11 Candi Graw
Meany also sent the members a 12-
page analyals·of Nixon's veto rnessag~,
rebutt ing it point by point and calling 1t
·•a collection of myth and distortion of
fact ."
Enrollment
In Sclwols"
.
Tony Nichols' pet python· is only 7Y.r: feet long now, become as big around as a telephone pole. He ex-
but she is growing at the rate of two feet a year. pects Candi to attain 22 feet, but figures. be will
Arnold J\1iller. president of the Unlted
f\-line \Vorkers. issued a statemenl Tues· Takes Dip
The high school sophomore from Costa Mesa says have to get rid of her when she is 16 feet "or else
some pythons have grown as lon g as 32 feet and add another room to the house."
~~~~·~~~~-
Early Cancer Detection
Still Best Ally-Doctor.
Three Cha1·ged
'
In Heroin· Rap
CALEXICO (AP) -Three women
·heve-been arrested and charged with
trying to smuggle he roin worth $750,000
iQ str.eet sales into the United States, Of-
tiCers say.
Lagu1ia ]Jeach
NOW Chapter
Sets Lecture
First week enrollment figures in the
Laguna Beach Unified School District
show a total of 2,996 pupils ln the
district's five schools, down 35 from what
administrators projected.
Robert Reeves, assistant !uperin--
tendent, said Aliso Elementary has '409
student!; EI Morro, 459; Top of the
World, 548 ; Thurston lntennedlate, W ;
h 1 N r 1 and the high school, 1123. The Laguna Beach c apter o a 1ona The figures show a two percent in-
Organization for Women (NOW} w i 11 crease over the first month lilst year,
By TOM BARLEY
Of 1111 DlllY l"Utt lllff
Many forms of cancer are yh:ldlng
their secrets to relentless researchers
but early de: .ion is stllJ the ,>hy1lclan 's
major ally in controlling and kllllng the
disease, the American Cancer Society's
cau!ornla president said Tuesday nigl;lt
In Newport Beach.
Dr. Robert McKenna of San Marino
told the aMual meeting of the organiza-
tion's Orange C.ounty chapter that fewer
than SO percent of America's women are !B!<Jnl "4.v .. ta~ of early detection test>
thil~are provtdini ~ds. ol cures In
cues where the disease is spotted ln its
early stages.
Laguoo U.>un~
To Face Varied
Agenda Tonight
Nude \\'aiters and v:aitresses. fire
prevention \\'eek. consideration of Arch
Beach Heights design review and library
parking probl.:ms are among 44 items on
the agenda of the Laguna Beach City
Council meeting at 7:30 tonight at City
Hall.
The council "'iii also discuss the impact 1 of the relocation of Coast Highway on
Irvine Ranch land between Corona de!
Mar and the Art Colony.
It will discuss recommendations for
undergroundi.ng utilities in the Victoria
Beach and Dumood Drive area, action
u•hich requires imposition of a special
assessment district.
A progress report o' the task force on
dog control will also be given, as will be
reports on moving the old lifeguard
tower on Main Beach and llre dust.
The council will also consider re-
questi.Qe the City Manager Al Thea! to
\\'Ork with Newport Beach and Hun·
tington Beach toward obtaining state
monies to de(ray costs ol beach opera·
lions .
Laguna Men's
Club to l\leet
The Laguna ~!en's Club will meet for
music and a travelogue a1 7:30 p.m.
Tuesday at Bridge Hall at Glenneyre
Street and St. Ann 's Drive, Laguna
Beach.
Gordon Brown or Good Ti1nc to Travel,
\\·ill open the program with films on Mex·
ico. Musical entertainmenl will be
presented by Larry Collins and Frank
Konyi. ,
Dr. M. E. Jacovson. will announce
'" plans for the annual Christmas party al
the Alrporter Inn on Dec. 11. Party com-
mittee.men are Frederick Sloan, John
Ashe, Charlie Branham, Jame• cavttt,
• Dean Clanton and E. M. Franz. Clu~
president is Ed Jacobi.
Jail Eseapee Guilty
I
Of Rape, Perversion
OAKLAND CAP) -An escaped
Michigan Sta.le Prison Inmate has been
convicted ror the second time on 18
counta of rape., robbery, auault and SU·
uaJ perversion stemml111 from attackt on
three women tn the Lake Merritt art.a .
A jury of eight men 11nd four women
deliberated for less than two houri Mon-
day nl1M befort nitumln1 the (IUllty
verdlcta aplott Jame1 Paul, 11, of Poft.. uac. Midi.
'
"Many forms of cancer are 100 percent
cura ble ,U we c:an catch them at thla
point," J\e said. "Women are.partJcularly
favored in tenns of early de~tJon and
they should · never miss an annual
checkup."
Calling for a "bill of rights" for the
cancer patient, McKenna said cancer
victlms must be guaranteed. top quality
medical care from the moment the
diM!ase is spotted to the time of cure and
throughout rthabllitaUon.
"No · Illness °pro4DCts • :greater
trauma," he said. "We mu:t work to pro-
vide the medical and psychological
cushion that cancer victims need U they
are to take on their affllcaUon and win."
McKenna attacked recent publicity
The women , all Mexican citizens, were
arraigned Tuesday before a U.S.
magistrile in El Centro. They are Maria
Francesca Reveles, 45, livlnli·ln Yuma,
Ariz., f\-1argarita Angula Rodriguez. 20, of
J\1exicali, Mexico, and a lf>-year-old Mex·
ican girl. ...
A drug enforcement administration
agent said officers stopped the women as
they crossed the bo~r ~foot Monday.
""°"' Pqe 1
TENNIS • • •
present a lecture on sexist put downs Reeves said.
directed toward women at a meeting at 8 Reeves said an enrollment at El Morro
o'clock tonight at the community room of SJ students below what was projected has created a staffing problem, while at Aliso Laguna Federal, 260 Ocean Ave., Laguna an unexpected 83 first graders for oruy
Beach . two teachers has presented the opposite
Guest speake r is Shirley Bel'J)ard, predicament.
former western regional director of Gains in attendance totals are erpected through the first six months o( school, NOW. The speaker is a teacher of Reeves said, followed by gradual .losses.
courses on women's studies in the Los Last year, enrollment figures In Jwie
Angeles area. indicated a ne t loss for the yur of one
''From the Bobby Riggs statement that student at Top of the World, 20 at Aliso
he is going to put women back lnto the and 76 at the high school; and net 1ains
bedroom where they belong . . . to of five at El Morro and four at Thurston.
Nixon's veto of child . oare' centers as The hlgb school total is affected by
destructive of the family and thehome.---mid-year 1rad~tlon and high liCbool
Ms. Bernard will point out the massive dropouts, he said.
mtile put down syndrome prevalant iq the •·we ·also ~e studying how many kids
given to the theory that ltrununlzatlon 11 ti ed I might prove to be the '""Stesf cancer ta Y g t m nors program: Virginia U.S. today," said chapter Preal~ent ac;lua!/¥ .. ~~.,tn eac;b school'•,"""' Iii
Delores FerTell. . d(t~~e''Wpete t~ krowtb 1s1 ' Re,ves .... . Snyder and Barbara M~ge at Aliso: killer with the warnjng that the Im; Rusty Barr.at El Morro; ind Joni Nelson The lecture will follow ' buslnm said. . • j4•· ••
munoloa theory-is-~still -onlY-el-and Heidi Lemon at-Top-of--the.. World.
perimental. 1 H. d 14 b " "It's only on the horizon," he said. "We -ire su sw.tute teachers and air
need to know a lot more about this proved Jim Herdman ai a full-time J d R I counselor at Thurston. or an e eases theory and the body processes before we -Received a report on the summer
can even. begin to bope that immunology school program. "
meeting at 7:30 o'clock for members. • -----'-'* *-
Fl'Olltf'.qeJ
POLICY ...
could be a new tool in the war on can· M p •
cer." any nsoilers McKenna urged his audience and · F p _ 1 14 requests for transfer to the Laguna
Particularly cancer victims to ''finnly Ntlt .. e district· from surrounding areas, -m-A~1h-tAN (UPI) -Jordan released eluding one from Saddleback Valley,
reject" what he c·a 11 e d "quack PARKING three top Palestinian guerrilla leaders three from Q>rona det ·Mar and 10 from
substances" and ''the devious approaches • , • and hundreds of other political prisoners Capistrano Valley.
of the people who peddle them." today under a sweeping amnesty order Two Laguna Beach students were
He singled out Laetrile, a compound the rate increase, not installation of ad-by King Hussein. given permission to transfer to other
derived from crushed apricot pits as dilional meters. Friends and relatives of the reJeased districts.
"typical of the \\'Orthless junk offered to The revenue measure enacted by the prisoners danced and sang in the stn!et All these approvals were granted IUl>-
many cancer victims today. council, now held ii18bejance until in front of the prison gates, some of them jeCt -10 agreemenr with the adjoining
"It's completely useless and it is in-repeal or the election, W-Ould have raised chanting pro-government slogans. districts on how much money per
human to peddle this junk to cancer pa-an estimated $168,000 in additional money Mohammed El-Nasser, undersecretary transferring student each dlstrict would
lients who should be concentrating thei r this fiscal year and $300,000 each full of the Jordanian justice ministry, told receive.
ene rgies and ,,hope o~ established fonns year. ThoSe figures indicate funds receiv· newsmen he expected 400 of the 753 The amount r«elved now varies
of treatment. he said. ed above costs of meters and -en· prisoners to be released today and the depending on the per.pupil cost expended
McKenna told th.: Orange County group forcement. rest to be freed by the end of the week. by the home district.
that the war on cancer Is going to be con-·-;;;;;:::;::;;;;;:;;;:;;;;;;;;;;-;;;;;; -;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;jj siderably ad\'anced if au cancer fighting I r -..... --... ..
organizations push for the creation of .
community clinics, "particularly in the
poverty areas of our nations.
"These centers would provide prompt
initial diagnosjs and tests that so often
spot cancer and save lives," he said. I
"Research is vital and must ~ on but we •
can do a lot for ourselves in this field of !
early detection." ~
From P .. e 1
PRIVACY ..•
her ofHce until Friday or Monday, an
associate said.
Dake said the district sought the ex-
clusion in the first place because pro-I
visions of th e conservation act were I
holding up residential construction In the
communi ty for about two months per
house. He said that to his knowledge a
permit for an Emerald Bay project had
never been denJed. i
Proposition 20 provided that areas con-
strucl.e\f to 80 percent or greater of their
zoned use could apply fot e1clmion from
requirement! that development within
1,000 yards of the coa&tline receive a
permit. 1 Emerald Bay currently encompaase!I
155 acres aifd bas about 450 residences.
There are 600 building parcels.
Dake IBld the delay caused by pennlt
requlremenla means more when cQsnblng
finance ratea are considered.
"This Is a time<onsumlng process and
with the trend of interest ratcll today,
some people are finding out th•t building
a houae Ls costing them quite a bit more
than they thought lt would.
"lt "" hoped that this could shorten and eliminate that one step, especially
since we are more lh•n SO 1)tttent
developod, actually about 81 percent
develoD<d," he gald.
If Emerald Bay ls cranted an eit·
cluslon, It wlU be the flrat community In
the stat• to lie declared free of the
Propoa!Uon 20 lies.
O"N . ...
Bays P.l Shirts & Shorts
Sweat Sox
All Star Basketball Shoes-9.95
Bob Wolfe Super Pro Shoes-9.95
Soccer Shoes-10.95 up
Sweat Shirts & Pants
Wannup Suits-21.95 to 34.95 -·------Football Face Guards
Touch Football Flags & Betts
Kneepads-Fqreann Pads
Teeth Protectors
'
Open ·9 to 6 Closed Sundays
Hand Balls & GloYes
• -SUNDAY
Racquetball Racquets &. BaHs
•
WllsolHlavls-Yoneyama-Bancroft
Tamis Rackets
Wilson-Penn-Dunlop Tennis Balls
7.95 per Dazen
• Tennis Drass8S
Men1s r. Boys' Tennis_ Sliorts' & Shits
• &anma Adidas-Tretwn Temis SlltlS
SpeBdo Shorts & Suits •
llkes'._parts-Tlies-Tubes
' Repalrinl
'
•
I
\
I
I
I
•
t
I
I
7
)
)
.
Saddlehaek -~ •
•
VOL, 66, NO. 262, 7 SECTIONS,110 PAGES '
EDITION
'· . ~
ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA
,. . .... . •
WEDNE$0AY, SEPTEMB, 19, 1973
.~
Today's Final
N.Y. Stoeks
• .. TEN CENTS
t Can You Do • ID "" Irvine Parlai>
lnine community s er v l c.e s com..
missioners tonight will consider rules and
reeuJations propoae<.'. to govern tjUzen
conduct In parks rangin& from )ji~ul
auemblles to dreas c o' d e 1 • Com·
mluloners meet at ·7,30 tn city haHi 4201
Campui Drive.
Community Services Director Paul
Brady said today the draft rule! ore a
coriipilation of many of the ordinances
wblch already are In force. "U:s merely
n coH.ection 1n one-place-ot pertinent laws • ---. -
wtlch make It easier for us and reside.i .. s
to kPow what i.f allowed and what is not
aUqwoct In city parks;" he said.
Not all of the prohibitions U..ted In the
dralt have yet been adopted aod Brady .
noted the city attorney is weighing the
consUtuUonality of some of the laws such
as the prohibitlon O;, loitering or the sug·
·geslion a Jl$noD ,might he arrested for
.disorderly cooduct for being found in a
city patk " ... indecently cl£d".
Among the ''rules and policies of the
community services department to be
obeyed" If commluli>ners and the city
council adopl the draft regulations are
the following: . • .
-No horses, can, scooters or~ other
motor powered vehicles will be driven
(or washed) in city perks·. ... .
-Excepl ·.1~ designated by·t)>e city,
"No person shall Oy a kite,, aeroplane
(motor driven) or . propel a rocket or
missile of any type or parllclpote In any
organized games iucb as baseball, fool·
ball, xocce!, hockey and the like In aey
park, square, avenue. g re en be I t 1 ,
grounds or recreation center ••. "
-No JOI!, peddling, camping, fighting
of .campfires or bathing tn public ·1...,.
taloa or P•h ponds would be allowed.
-"No penon sball let locise or permit
to nm at large any horse, mule, ass., cat-
Ue, goat, swine or other animal. or fowl
of any kind • • •II 'l1Je Bame list of
animals, and sheep, may not be led,
driven enticed, COhclucted er otllorwlae
brqllt Jnto a port. • -Docs may be brought to·parb only If
leall>ed and they woulcf be banned· from
chlldren's playground>.
-i;>llonlerly cooduct Includes preseD-
tat\<!11. of prize flgbts ·tn public Jll'D
staged without city council pennlssioo.
..,.Jndlvldual dborderly conduct banned
by the proposed. law covers use of pro-
fanity; oblcene or Indecent llcll; flrtng
guns, f~ckers w fireworks ; games
of chance, begging, fence climbing, land-
ing airplanes or balloons, loffering or
being drunk.
-Parades, picnics or other'hssembllea
require a city permit obtained seven
days prior to the event..
-Pollllcal speeches are prohibited ex·
cepl by permission of the city council.
Accompanying the proposed rules and
regulations Is a policy draft selttng forth
requirements for the use of racillllea by
groups and organizations.
Schools Eye Swap
Irvine Makes Bid to End DMpute
By WILLIAM 8CHREIB~ Of .. .,..,,........,
The Irvine Unllled School Boud Tues-
day nigbt offertd to "resolve" a kiai·
atanding, sometimes bitter, boundary
dispute with the Newport.Mesa Unllled
Sdiool lll8tricl.
'l1le lrvlDe J>o'1'1 ·voted ll!llDimol(sly to
give up new homes lying within tbelr
district In Spyglass Hill and Hirbor View
_,In esd>•~ tor tlie entire North
Ford-and Phila> ord Aeronutioalc In-
Two Irvine
~
Land Issues
Face Action \
..
' dustrial<iommerclal par«! In Ne'IJ>Ol'I
Beach.
Newport-Mesa district officials bad lit·
Ue comment on the propoul today,
xaylng only they will "take It under
atudy."
A .spokesman for the lrvlDe district
xald the -pareela ire nearly equal In ilze -'about ·zoo acres -but that the as..-i vaiualtOlll are quite different.
The Ford property, whim la bounded
by ·Ford Road, Jambore•r Road and
·Irvine' Center
Plans Filed
MacArthur Boule\'l\rd, has ID Useued
value ·of about $10 ml1llan lncludJnc the
Aerociutruuc plan( the lrvlDe ~
said.
The porlloos of Harbor View JbDes
and Spyglass Hill now within the Irvine
· dlstiict will have a value of .up to l20
mUUon when they are built to capacity -·
about 250 houses 8nd an undetermined
nwnber of to.,.. \houses and apartments.
Tbe boundary dispute ,stems In part
(See BOVNDAIUEs', P ... I)
High School
Development
Has W.-aheJtd
lrvlDe Unified School IllJtrlct -Tueoday nlPt Pl'" the ~ ...
Tllo majGr ·land mo J!umlnt ·-
• faoe ~ l,;nntng .f'T'Mlmerl
...... ~_·_:]>t11acOs.o.'i'.t'n~p1!. !rt9iiie~ detallad pl•""!!l(fl .. -Hartl -lllP Jl!ll!>ol:tii It Iii ~ -11'1$ 1ni cost of IU ""'""ir'
Wa.tcfJlng e-..1 ·GroW ~~-~--=--"~-~-=-:..~=-= J"'IOO:::
Tony·Nlc!!Oll' Pat_~ II 1" !Mt long now, b8coiDe u llig around as·a111fepbone wie: He ex· ~" S1'.f"t'" · -·-·~ i·• the but she II gnSiiiii at Illa nte Of two feet a year. pecta Candi to attain. 22 feet; liut' fi be will ·~-
Board memben -oved Ibo coucOpl
of a fuNrlatlc, mod-caJlllllll which .
planners feel will give the Dew schlol
•• ,. ......... 11 '-
The hlgb school~ from, ~.Mesa~. , 1iavecto get rid of ber'llhen slM,111e~ "or ellit ..,..._ · .lO , r.~dld the
some pythons haft ...,.,. as. long. u_s_2_1ee_t _UM1~--•dd_IDO!b_. _er room to the~" • ::;'t:"'J.8.:-. "''if.l'i::8.:!?
-~ !'I by.dlolrmon _,. lliuplrtne.
Qunml•....., wtll'IWI at 1,30 In city
hall for the ·-....... wllll the c:i.
ty attorney lo dlic:a# pending 1ecal .mat-
ters. At 7:30 the. pl111mlng tm1ml•kn
meets publlcly In Ulilwnlty lllgb Scllool,
CUlver. Drtvei:at Cmpplli AvenUe; Tart1e
Rock.
Hel~ Best .Hope
Private meeUnp by pabllc, 6odles,.1re
-allowed under. ~. ··tJ ?JrflCJ
law the Rllph M:Brown Act. l'b-
and legal matters may be dtawled
By TOM BARLEY Inventive Irvine dty pollce reoorted to Officer Dave ,._ wu dlapatchod to a pcivlllelJ u long as declaloos are llllde
• Of .. ~" ...... ...., U<;ll§ In -·'" Ion an agHld aid of law and order early to-trailer park at lt851 Jeffrey Road about .....-.c aeu · ... Many forms d. cancer ore Yielding The p•bllc l>mri!!I a\_7:30 la '~ third their secrets to relentless researehers day after-capturing an·unrecaJcitrant 16-1 a.m.:-m respome to aqother-among commission aession on the Turtle Rock
bqt early de: :ion Is still the ;>hyslclan's yeor<>ld girl In • nude swtmmlng party many receot reports of oklnnydippJne Vllllile plan.
nlajor ally. in control!ing and l<llllng the and beer bull. youths ln'"the ladlliy'f pool. City 11a1t members ~ At> ~011111iii. the~rnt~-~.:;'•-,,..~·1.-Wi~oo·~· M•~~,lr~ .. ol-A--{Ul':f.1nt. ~~~-llie
tn Newport Boach. ' • , .... ·-... ~· car ~•Y and -~ projected popllation by 1,300· penaos to
Dr. Rober! McKenna ot°San Marlno j . fi"' young people•wlth1weJ .baJr aod beer 15,156. Laod Included in the plan wu In-
told the annua1 meeting of the oraan1xa· _Samoan Governor breath. created 1ro"' 1,090 to 1.~:...-.. .• At the
ti Or tha f Stnoe the girl was only 11 and In the city's ~ tbe future Lutheran on:s ange Oouoty chapter t nor company of adults; Ibo was detalnecf.lor College site was Incorporated In the xoo-
lhan SO ~t of. Amerlca's women~ T F T '-a} curfew violation and lack of parental Ing plan area. • taking advantage of early detection ~ o. Qce . n tbat are P10vlc!lng thouilndl d. Cl'!"' In control. To preserve hilltops and rldgu, the
c.,.. wbeie the <llsease 11 spolted In Its OOlcer Berg indicated, 'however, that Irvine °'"P""Y piOpoaal.wqUld .Jelva 116-
early sto~es. . • HONOLULU (AP) ~ Gov. John M. the g1r· I .folded her arms, stomped 11er· devi!loped abciut 300 acres of the vlllqe.
H don• f •--·•---•----arri ed •---· Instead .of bulldJni estate llie, private "Id~ orn1s~r cancer are 111\) percent •Y ·0 ~~-· -~· v 0 =0 loot and In unladylike terms muaect·to horn Jots ••-•·-• of ·~ curalile it ~ can ~ch them at tbil today, "very optimlstic" at•tbe outcome e 1 u11:: na-.. ·contours ~
point,'; he said. "Women are potti~ly 41 1 trial In which he la accuaed of ge.J:to ,l!'~1~~ued unUl Officer hill~~:"'1abe .. ~:i:;.ty of
favored tn terms of •early detection and violating the U.S. Hatch Ad. Berg radioed his sergeaot, who In ·tum the "8idential ._.from 3.4 an1ta per
they should never miss an annual don d lined further telephoned the "'•l's mother In "--acre bi the--' plan to f ,I units per cbeclcup." , Hay ec to comment .--·..... r-·
. "'"'"" 1or :a '"'m d. ..... la" tor. the ' on .the. lix-da, y trial in Paio Pago, and penuaded Mom to drive out and plclt acre In the.~ zoning. Ooallderlng ....-. '"" ..... up ~ errant teen. a1J .the 1creqe In the plan, however, cancer pollen!, McKenna said cancer • American Samoa, which ended Tuesday. Jnvostlptcirs Aid· the others' ll8IDOs onrall demlty la. wd>aapd 11 J.2 unill
victims must be paranteed top quality Bui he cut off a question on tbe and addresael were tlken'anci they were per 1cre.
lhedlcal care m.a> t!Je moment the pooslblllty be m;iit resign, saying "I'm released with a w•rning ·thiit nude swim-The Doulllai.Crow . ma!ler lnvolvei ~se la spoiled to the time of cure and planning to be governor of Samoa for a , ming· II forbidden and'the'J:bave recelftd develoPmlllflllf Diani~• about ball of. the
thniugliout .rehahllitatton. long tline to come." too many complaints already. . (..... ""-.·ll UNo lJJ.neas pfOduceJ 8 .. greater 4, • • • ., ~ .a ....
trauma," be said. "We mu:t work to pro-
vide the lllldlc1l. ind psycholot!lcal
cualilon that cancer v1c11mo neod 11 they .
are to tate on their ,af!ttc1Uon and win."
li!cKama altacll.i recent publicity
given to ihe tbecJrt that bnin-tfon
ml1bt Prov• to bo) tho llftlleal cancer
killer wlth the wlnllng thet the Im·
m1m0toa theory 11 ••ltlll oaly ex·
perlmeatal. .
'1lt'1 only OD the ho;rllon," be aaid. 11We ~ lo lmOw a 'lot monl ahloit , this
theory and the "°"' Pr-halon! .... ... .... becln to l1ollO that bllrmmolOI)'
could bt I -tool In the flr ·.a can-cer."
McKeona urpd his IUdlmco and
portlcularty cancer \'lcllmo to "llrmb' reject" w b a t be c a I I e d 1•quack-
1ubst.aru:es" and "the devious approaches
of the people who peddl~ them."
He stn11ed oul l.eelrlle, 1 collllJOUll()
derived from crushed apriool pill as
"typical of the --junk alfered to
many cancer victims today.
"It's completely uae1m anci ft Is fn.
human to peddle Ibis Junk to cancer po-
(llee CANCER. Pal' I)
'
B'rief~ase -·Biown .10 Riis
Lawyer LOses Paper,s to Overa~ious BomiiSquad
The moat ,nplodve caae .a~ Harbor
Judicial 'Dlatrlel Court Tuesday w11
bandied br Newport Beach 1ltorney
Wafter Ba~ and the oberlll'a bomb
squad.
Barrln« Baranger bad fOl'JOUen hll new lltadle ..,. oontllolna varlolll lojal
popera Monday all.,,_, leaving It Ill a
courtroom.
Deputy marshals then noticed an
omlllOUI black oatchel as the nJcllt traffic
courl broke up. • · .
Fout marabal1 wbo recently had com-
pleted a ocbool deaU'!C with dutrucllve
devices tbouglit II Iool pretty lfnllter.
The cue also lOoted llke on attorney's
bomowort, bUt no atlomeys had been In
court since Ille,._,.
I
' ' •
The maraballknew If It was a bonib
wlth a meroury swtlch • gentle touch
mlgbt aet II off .
'Ibey ..iled the' Orln(e County Shel'
111'1 bomb '"-"1 squad and Ill -nel 1-.s Ibo blacli leother lllcbel and
g1-ly ~ II out of the courtroom
and down the corridor. •
Mmllal 1111· Ed Postel Jald It ..., well
after mldnlgbt when tlie threatenin8
brlefcaae "" tenderly set In place under
a tree on the !ronl lawn.
Sberlll's opeclallatl attached · a llDall
esplosive chars• to the alepnt, $12$ ex·
ecutive's ·~ and BOOM. "The bi..t d1dD i burl the popen fn.
lfde, but It sure did damale the brief.
case," Sgt. Postel ttm1rke<f.
I •
Depidles bleW oot one whole comer or
the brlelc-Attorney BarQier•1 wife
bad Jual FV91 him U I preaenL
"Kr.~ Isn't TerY ~,"' ~his Id partner, Alan Plala. • OOntac:ted laler lllllay, .At to r-n e y
~ llld hll law' partner la Indeed
rlgbt.
"It WIS 1111 oal1 decent brlalCUI -
with mr lnltiali In &old on the aldJ -and
ltankl)', I'm tlcllod off,'' be Clacland. , "It'• not repllnble. 'Ibey blo:tl' the
whole ml out of It. I am f."!111 to m1lre 1 ~ ~~· 'BaraDpr ....
11SUrely," he llkf, '1they h I Ve Jn..
l1lfll1CO coven.,. ICll ol their .......,..
convnllle!l In the line of duty."
f
• • N M.\ •' ixon JDl1'11Ull -Pa,yVeto Up~eld
.In Hou8e Vote _
.._,.----
Dr. Raymond F.dmin, deputy
auperlntendelll lold the boord the plan la
to .. Otlde the ·l50 -at the DeW
ochool with llllenlladpllna • -
tocoducatloo':w..l1aUilllty-Jn.l!lrCllM
ollertnp and pbysical plant. t .
Ron Young, the district's arcmtect.
.-trustees Tuesday a conceptilll
dulpl of the new ochoo~ located at
Walnut and Yale • Avenues,· which
rwmbles a bule, angular molecule.
Trapeooklal.Jiodo, Uc)> of whldl .,,,,.
lain I gmeral subject llrl!I mch U
lmnslmitiet, allied arts, . math :. ICitnee_
lllllllc and phy>lcal datloo. are Unbd
together In chain form by long corridarL
Young said the design Idea leaves .., court ID ttieceoter -~-tor Ill open • ·.1 •
"acquatlc center" near me pnmaafam W ~TO!j (AP) -'!lie H..,.. to-and "many_, and craon1e11 to~
day ujibeld· Pretldenl' Nina's veto of, a . privacy when It la~." lilll-:-Uiit Wilillr·~bl~ve-tiiCiiiieCI=--·~· ~u;el-"~·m entlll if<ili!! ceateti~o~n ~ii!i=o0,....1---I
m1n1m M -• ~ •• Jul generally triangular geometric 1111pe. um wage w .. -an~ Y 1• which Young told lrllltees la the beofuae The vote ...,. 11111 to · lM, ..-23 vot.. of the xpoce. ,
short of the hnHhlrda· majority. needed But board member Norman G-.r..
to omrlde a .veto. . said be thinks It II too angular. He Uked°
It WU the sUtb .time this -that an analog drawing Young first showed to
eoqm. failed to .muster the -the'liie~~g design represented -majority required to override 1 veto. rather than architectural realltlel. It
Nixon said the bill would bave In-showed grouplnp of lai'ge and IDlall
creased unemplo)'ment· and added io m. clrclea.represenUog each learning area.
fl1U00ary ~. "I ·tblnk the ~ lilea bu I pod
deal morelwannth,-tbe architectural He bas' uked Coqress to provide for I plan,'' Ginobiiri Xlld. "It Is I ICJOd deol
more moderate' .incftue ln1 the ·minlmam softer In ·1ppe1ranee."
wage, Wlllch Ii $1.ll,.m bour. -Young ancl Edman told Ille boord Iha
-Democ:rlllc leadera lilied Jn (See 8CllOOL, Pop IJ . . ' . ' '
lour ~. e11or11· to lllUl!er ~ -
thirds majority needed to >-1 veto
and a rdih ef!Ort failed tn the Seal ...
Geor(e Meany, An,()IO pruldent,
bad aent every llouae. m<mber 1 •letter
urging the veto h ovm'tdden and <Ille<!
on all unlGa local leadera to carry the
message to tbelr r<preaentau.... In
Concre9s.
Meany .• aent the members'. a U.
pq:e aDilYaiJ of Nlxon's veto message,
rebutlin& JI point by point and calltng It
"• collection Of myth and distortion or
fact."
Arnold Millar, ...-.i ot Iha United
Mine Worllen, Issued 1 ota-t 'l'Ue$-
da7 oa1lng!'thla week calla for· courage
in Coqnu.'' AllhouP It· llnallY pasoed 187 to 1111
last June, Ilepl~ IOd Clllllel'Vldve
Demoaratic ~,.... came 1 wttbln 20
-ti l<flpplltc It for a n ---lll•le. Tllo blll also would hive uJllllded
COVtrllO'Clf tho --low by ~ flH million ltale' anG local
··-· employes and -mllllon domeotlcsapcle~ .. ·. 111-.llaa .:-m-tn tho mtalmam -to •1.10 thla ,....,
11.10nextyear,II.JO1n 1m anc1II.JO1n
1171, wlth no~ la ....... and I
lower rate for teeo-ap Wllaro. . .
' ' I
•
Or ....
•
Al J ... .....,.. I .._.._ ' -. c-. ._ ..._ " . c....... ..,. -.. ( ......... --" ·=-. I lfl .. -.... ,. ........ "-.
.... I a
•
·-. -~. ~ -. --=.-• =-=ii ii: .. :..: =-=-•
•
\
•
DAllY PllOT IS
•
San Juan
Rail Stops
Envisioned
By JOHN VALTERZA
Of tlit DlllW 1"1111 SI.if
San Juan Capistrano, which for years
has been without a passenger rall stop,
appears desUned for two of them early
nett ye a r, a leading Amtrak omctal
promised thll mornin1. But San Clemente
rail passenger! would have to "donate"
them.
\'lard ?.1usick, a western region sta-
tions manager for the naUonwide raJl
finn, told members of the San Juan
Capistrano Chamber of Commerce today
that k>cal interest combined. with major
plans to develop San Juan's old rail ata·
tion into a tourist attraction are the
rtasona for the taklng of two stopa now
in San Clemente and movlng them to San
Juan.
'Ibe two "borrowed" 1topa, he said,
still would leave San Clemente with olher
key stops through the day and It would
not affect the popular trains for
beachgoers who travel by the hundreds
each week from inland Orange COunty
cities.
The northbound 8:20 a.rt,. train would
stop in San Juan ind the aouthbound
evening traln also mtaht be stopped to
serve the city, Musick l!lald.
The appearance of the official at this
morning's meeting f o 11 owe d an-
nouncements from local businessmen
that pressure from the Mission Com-
munity began ,the campaJgn.
Thus far ·the' Idea haa won t h e en-
dorsement of Pl1uslck's wperlors who ad-
minister the Western Region of the na-
tional rail passenger corporation which
has heavy federal funding.
"But officials In Washlngton, D.C .•
Covet their right to make decisions and
"1t'11 now In th e I r hands. Because they
can 't JX>lllbly know all the local factors,
1hey rely heavily on our advice," he said.
A strong factor in endorsement of the
-rail atop ls . the development of the old
·Santa Fe staUan near the downtown area
into a railway-oriented restaurant where
diners would wait th e l r tum ln the
'Mission-style station room and then
move to a string of a old carriages on a
_siding where they would patronize the
restaurant.
A complex of specialty shops is aliO
proposed for a· nearby lot as well. Most
required city approvals for the project
have been rendered.
Be$ides proml1e1 d the service and
predictions that San Clemente patrons of
_Amlrlk would not complain if the scbed·
ule were alttteCI somewhat, 1t1uslck ad-
ded a footnote about the succen of Am-
trak.
ISSUES ...
SO acres the nnn owns at MacArthur
Boulevard at CampU!,Drive in the Irvine
Industrial Complex.
The land is zoned commercial .but re-
quirtl approval _ of 1 conditional use
--permit-prior to development That was"J
condltlon set by COWlty government when
: county supervisors in 1971 changed the
. zoning from reaearch and light industry
to commercial.
A city revision of the total ·11c zoning
would. have eased that requ1reme~,
allowing Douglas to submit site plans for
dty review. That zoning revision -the
loth -has not received final City c.oun-
1 ell approval and may not, since yet
another JIC zoning revision -the 11th -
recently was completed by the plann ing
comm1sslon. The 10th and 11th are ex-
pected to be merged into one package -
• the 12f.b _revl~ zoni!!_g -:---and sent to city
council for adoption as law.
Meanwhile, Douglas has proceeded
with plaMing for the development of
hotels, offices, restaurant and banking
facllliles in a "campus " setting across
MacArthur Boulevard from Ora~e
County Airport. Commissioners \\'Ill
revle\\' first stages of that development
Thunday.
OlAMel COAST 11
DAILY PILOT
TM OttPl!lf.l:tatl DAILY ,IL.OT, wf!l'l ..-lctl
II ~ .... l'i_,,...., .. Jll,lbl ..... .., .... o.....-CMll ,111111 .. '"' CtmMrir. S.,.•
,..,,. lfltlMI .,. "'*"""""• MtnO•r !lll'lvfl'I
r:rld1y, ftr CM11 MHI, Hirwport affdl,
" ... , .... ,.,, aHCh/F-ltln VllllPr, LlfUNI
ltedl, lntllll/Sldcllftldl 1M Siii Cie-tW
Slri J...,, c.p111r1110. A 1lno11P , ,...1a11t1
..,uio.. 11 Pllbll•hllll ta11.1t11tr1 •"'1 hNl•'l'l-
rM ,.-IMlpel lllllllililllnt flllM 1• .II UI Wnl
11'1' 1-1, CMI• M .... C•lllOl'"nll, t»Jll,
ReMrt H. WtM ,,......_ tM l'.-ilMlilr
Jtck R. C111rl.1v
Yiu ""''""' W 0-11 Mt111 ....
Th.1J11t l IC11•ll
l•ltw
Th.1J11•1 "A. M11r,hl~•
Ml ........ !clltot
Chtrtfl H. L.1ot llich.1rd '· Ni ll ........... Mtftt•'"' ••!ten -C..lt ......... : SJt Wilt tty 1tNtt Mewotrl e..tdl: Q H.....t--ir.ot,.
LA1NM l•d'11 n1 it""'' A-. """'_.... k«JI: 1117S hK'll ._,.,,_
.... ~ Jlf ....,,. II C."*"' ....
tll Jt 11 fn41 '4MJJ1
Clo .... M :1:M I I '4J.f'n
S.. C.._.. Al fifUI ala:
' ' 5 t 11 •f'2..44•
'-'tr.,., Hn. ~ c...ttr ~ ~. ,.. -•"""'-...,,.....
"""""' Wf1W ., ... .,. •• , • " """""" _,. .. •••1• ..... ~ ...... .-.... ............. . ...... "*' _,... ...... c-. .., ... ~~ .......... .. ~ "" ""'" tut _. .. , lftllfwY --.... --..
.Dtltr 'Ill! t lttt """"
THEIR MA N IN WASHIN GTON
City Lobbyl1t Morgan
Four Cities
V ote to Hire
Lobbyist
Orange County's four largest cities \\'iii
hire William H. 1tlorgan, 3'2, of Kailua,
Hawaii, to serve as their \Vashington lob-
byist.
1t1organ will earn an aruiual salary of
$28,000 and the cities -Huntington
Beach, Santa Ana, Anaheim and Garden
Grove -will spend an additional $23,00>
for an office, secretary and business ex-
penses.
The ·decision was announced TUesday
after the mayors and cl.ty managen of
the four cities had finished Interviewing
candidates for the job.
Final approyal for the contract must
still be given by each city council, but all
four cities had previously agreed to the
Idea of hiring a joint Washington lolr
bylst. .
Anaheim Councilmen did tie 2-2 when
the contract was presented to them Tues-
day night , but the absent councl.lman,
?i.lark Stephenson, Is expected to cast his
vote in favor of the lobbyist. 1
Morgan is currently employed by
Marshall Kaplan, Gans. and Kahn of
Honolulu. Hawaii, an urban develcpment
consulting firm . He is presently project
manager for a $1 .9 million housing
mana¥,ement study authorized by the
Hawati Houalna Authority and paid for
by the Federaf Department of HOUJing
and Urben Development (HUD).
In Washington, Morgan will be ex-
pected lo win federal grants for the four
Orange County cities, part}cuJarly in
such areas a1 Oood cmtrol, beach
maintenance, youth employment pro-
grams, houllng and urban renewal.
From Pqe l
SCHOOL ..•
• • concept 'being explored at!the school is
~one-ID Wtilch Ufdlvtdual classroom space
will open out into Jab areas or media
centers. Edman said the Idea is to avoid,
"the classroom box."
"This can best be called a cross--
disciplinary approach to education,"
Edman said. "lt gives tbe student a
chance to be exposed to other disciplines
than the one he is interested in because
he can not help but notice them."
Ginsburg and Trust .. Sharon Slrcello
as ked that the interior layout of the
school, which also includes an open
counselfng arta for students to wander' In
and out of, be left nexlble until the )&st
minute.
''I am hopeJul ame of the areas can be
moved irolihd to glvet1·~--facU1ty as
much Integrity as possible,'' Ginsburg
said.
Other board action included :
-Hearing a report from Superin-
tendent Stanley Corey that school opened
';very smoothly" with 7,500 students in
attendance.
-Formally naming Co 11 e g e Park
School and resolving debate over a
pennanent name for that faclllty.
-Approval of a new teacher evaluation
system, essentially the same as one used
last year.
-Approval of a three-year lease on
12.<XX> square feet of space from the Don
Koll Oxnpany in the Irvine Industrial
complex for centrtl district office
facilities. The cost Will be about ~.ooo
per year with an eye toward pennanent
facilities more centrally located.
-A review and endorsement of ac-
")UviUes by the dlslrlct's needs assessment
panel,
-A~val ol the school lunch pro-
' tr_ini; which will Involve transporting hot
•f!!lehts ln hot carts to most district
schools. until central kitchens can be In-
stalled.
f'rolft P .,e J
CANCER ...
tlenta who lhould be concentratln1 their
enorsla and hope oo e11ablltbtd !onnJ
ol trt:atmem," bt sa..ld.
Mel<'""" told th. CiraJll' County ""up
!.ba1 t.ht war cin caocer la eolng to be c:on-
lidtt>l>IY advuoed ll all cancer fighUn1
orpni:raliool push !or the creation of
CO<T.mUnlty cllnkt. "parllcularly In the
pnvtrty Uta.I ot our n1Uont.. •
"Theoe cet1"'1 would -Ide prompt
Wtlal dL\iJlo'Ail and ldll that IO o!ltn
ipOt catlCtt' and nve livtJ," hi al.id.
"Rueard! II vl131 and miat I" on but .. e
can do a lol lor ounelvu In thil field of
early detection."
,
R utt.tor• Cited
Laird, l:laig Hit
By Agnew-'s .Aide
Hopping Mad
Trust,ees Won't Kick the Habit
An attempt lO ban smoking at meetings of the Lagwla Beach school board
wa1 qulckl~ed oul Tuesday night. llruoo I• chalnnan of the healtl><omcloua Kai .. Ka~:iFoundl·
Uon based In guna Bea<:h, ltod asked the truoleee to put the on Item
on their agenda.
WASHIN GTON (AP) -Vic Gold,
former press secretary to Vice President
Spiro T. Agnew , charged today that top
White House e.ides 1'1elvin R. Laird and
Alexander Haig are responsible for many
of the rumors and reports about A111ew's
legal troubles.
Ing about resigning . BUT THE five-member board, includina four amokers, wasn't interested.
"Does lhat mean you won't even talk about U?" Hopplng.aDed board
President Norman BJ;-owne. Warren said he would have no f\lrther
comment concerning Agnew until Atty.
Gen. Elliot Richardson has acted with
respect to pculble presentation -0f the
Agnew> matter to a federal grand jury In
BalUmore.
TAKING A long drag on his cigarette and Oicldng the ash into fin uhtray,
Browne, a dentist, replied, "Sorta loOk! that way, doesn't it?~) ,..._,
Hopping llald today he'll file complalnls with the coonty .h(O)th deportment
and had already •tarted with the local department rtpr0son,laijve: lie'• tlJo
investigating the possibility some state law may breathe fresh life Into his
campaign .
"This ii all calculated by the White
House to keep the Agnew story alive,"
Gold said. "I'm blaming the White House
staff at the highest level, ?i.ir. Haig and
Mr. Laird.
"They operate the 11all and they know
v.·ho says what. When an anonymous
White House source la quoted, they lhow
no damned interest at all in findin& out
who said It
''In one case, Mr. Laird wu the direct
source, when he called Rep . .(John B.)
Anderaon (R-lll.), and told him to go
ealy In his support of the · vice pruident.
And there have been reJ)Ol'tl lhat Mr.
Laird has been telling stories about Vice
President Agnew's t r o u b l e s to the
diplomatic corps in very unflattering
terms."
Gold also said in an Interview there are
individuals in the White. HouH who very
much want fonner Texas Go\'emot John
CoMally to become vice president II anlL
when Apew resigns.
"The number one member of the Con-
nally claque has to be Richard Nixon "
Gold said. "This talk about Connaliy
keeps going on and on and he does not
one damned thing to stop lt."
Meanwhile, White Houte Deputy Press
Secretary Gerald L. Warren today denied
(I) there is "a dispasition by the White
House or the people in the White House
to £oree the reslinaUon of the vloe'presi·
dent, (2) the White llmlle ii exel'llng
preuure on the vice president to hllllPI"
and (3) the White Houae bu been the
sow-ee of storlea that Agnew was think·
Frot1tP.,el
BOUNDARIES ••
from the fact that the Irvine llchool boun-
dary, which was established before the
district unified, separates the new, !»-
house addition to Harbor View Homes
from the rest .of the tract_ '
The boundary also cuta through' the
Spyglass Hill development, putlln( about
a fourth ol the 8"'a In the Irvine dillrlct·
and the reamainder in Newport-Mesa
The Irvine diltrlct already includu
part of, the North Fon! land becaUIO the
boondary Cl!IS di agonally acrou It from
Jamboree Road to 1.facArthur Boulevard.
The swap, U approved, would give Irvine
the rest ol that land.
l!oundarl .. In that RCtion ol Newport
Beach have been a mre lpOI ll!nce the
early 1980s.
A series of Jarid trades put large J,o,..
tlona o! the Irvine district <then san Joa.
quln Elementary and Tustin Hlah School
Dislrlcls) Into the Harbor Area school
system.
Before trades with the old Newport
elementary and Newport Harbor .High
School districts, Sin Joaquin and Tu1Un
-boundaries ln<:Iuded m<>st of _the liiid
north of Pactftc Coast Highway and ealt
of Upper Newport Bay -Including what
was to become Newport Center .
Newport Beach residents Uvlng in the
hl.ll:!f above Coroni del Mar wanted thm
children to attend Newport Beach schools
since the nearest San Joaquin 1Chools
were mile, ~nd.
San Joaquin generally acceded to the
demands since growth In tho9e areas .UU
liad no significant effect on their IChools .
They were content to keep the land when
It was vacant but gave It away wheii it
became apparent new 9Chool1 were need·
ed .
Since then devel(lpment In the area
givenupl:iy ·sen JOiijulD---now Irvine
schools _, ha.I grown and 90 has the
area '1 tax base.
That raet has made any further boun-
dary adjustmenll t matter for heated
argument and little re!Olutlon for nearly
a decade.
Thus far, according to Irvine school
f~llltles planning director Dive Klna1
the district has not fall the bllrden of
bll•inr · children !n>m the ilolated
Spyglass lllll and Harbor View Homes
area a.
But possibly by November lrvlne wtU
have to bus children £rom thole l:rtU to
schools as far as aeveft mllea from homti.
There are Newport-?i.t~sa aehoola within
walkine di1taoce.
'!be ls1111e raised by the new Irvine of·
fer has many aid~. accordln1 to ot'ficla11
in both distri<::tr:--....,
It IJ queotlonablewhelher the .,,.lled
V11luaUon1 in Harbor View Homes and
Spyglass Hill are hlg~ enourh to make
schooling of those youngsters a brealc:-
even proposiUon for whlchever district
ultimately gets the retponsibllity.
But the Irvine opoltHman iald his
district can't simply give up the housing
tracts with nothing in return because,
"That Is ten percent ot our auessed.
valuation and lt would 1*lly trode <Kg"
lax base.''
The Ford property, on the other hand,
offer• pure profit for llCbooil i.c&use no
chlldrtn live on that land. .
Newport.Mesa School SUperlntendtnt
John -1'41coU 11y1 ht"hn 11no commment"
on whether or not the ol!er lJ a good deol
for the dlltrtct, even lhoucJI It would
mean up to 200 chlldten would set to
school qulcker and easier. "ni!J <10Uld not be reJOlved at an .ad·
mlnlltl'ltlve levtl becau1e the law dou
not provtda uo with the power to •bani•
boundarlu," he 11id. "II 11 up to the
board." ~coordlna to Irvine 1ehool of!lcl1l1, the
hllrd<n II now on N!\l1>0!'l·Mera trull4!t•
to make the next mon toward raolving
the problem.
•
Wamn raid It would be Inappropriate
to offer a White House comment on the
vice preaide.nt11 situation or to accept
quesUons on the subjec~
Ex-safeera~ker Shows How
Leadi1ig Citi ze1is • in on Caper in Costa Mes a
By RUDI NIEDZIEl.!IKI'
Of ftlt DtllY ...........
Guiding a thin wire pick Into the
keyhole.. of a alx·tu_mbler lock...1 "Red"
''Rudensky'J flngen.were roci:-stea(ly as
he prepared for hla Co5*a Mesa caper.
':bl• was an easy job, requiring neither
punch nor nltro, and there was no danger
of being arrested. SOme of Costa Mesa's
leadinc clthens were In on the job.
Bia Red w11s In town to teach them
how to burgle. --:
"I usually llke to do It Is !alt u IUl'll-
ln& a key," said the muter aafecracker,
..,,. 71 )'ears old, wbo 'llald be had never
betn itopped by a loCk. -
It took a Uttle longer than that and Red
was upset. But be . took revenge on a
more complicated eight-tumbler version
and popped It open before you could
OOWlt to three.
Ruden1ky, who spent SS years of his
Ille In prison learnln( his profeulon and
suffering ror his mistakes, ls 1Ull ln the
lockbustlnJ _ buslneu.
'1Everything Is as lt wu befoH:, but
now It's legal ," he uaured members of
the Lion• Club. He told them he got his
last job through the SL Paul chief o!
police. .
Rudensky, Is now a 11consultant " to 3-
M Conipany. He works !or the security
systems dlvislon: '11ley build the locks_
and Rudenslc:y tears them apart, theri
sends the engineers back to the drawing
bords.
Tuesday be came to Colla Men to
show off hi• expert!,. and to tantalile
the Lions with' stories from hla criminal
!Ue. .
He told them bow he became the top
banana · 1n Li1vt.Dworth, how be once
!ro:e prilon ban wltb dry IC< fu1d bulled
them out alter they· cryolalllzod, bow be
•11!!'1 two ~...., In the can with Al Capone~ and bow he kept hi• hand "Jn the
buslne•" by aervinl u Leavenworth's
kvine-~mmission Sets loclwnlth. '
IHm all qulte-enlertainin1, but Red
said he wouldn't do It again. . -• "I aclually got 1ick of' It. I wan led to
be a muter criminal but r ..... actually
a pro!~al loser. 'J'llat'• the 'uue 1
earned. I was n stupid us," 11.ld Red. Teen· Center Discussion· Stealing bagels and bananU trom
pushcarts on the lower t ast aide,
participate In the program bu not been R1ldensky said ~ got his tlarl by his Irvtne'• wwnmer teen ·center attracted
an anrage o! 19 youtht eacll ol thHe nl&bta 'per week !or a total ol 1,800 vislls
at ·a total 'coot ol 14,3111. ·
Paul Brady, city commwtlty aervtces
dltector, will dllcun the summer teen
center proeram with community eervtce.s
cocmntutooers tonlfht. The-commlatlon
this year set up the lrv1ne SchOol pro-sram to evaluate need for teen activity.
Coonctlmen budfeted nearly 14,800 !<><
the three Umet •week "drop in" center.
The Iaratsl expen.. WU Jl,'100 _!or
salaries for a dlteetor, teen center leader
and !or police protection.
'l'rllllportaUon to and ln>m the Sand
Canyon Avenue achoo! totaJed-$1,300,, ac-
countlng !0< the nest lqest COii.
A survey which wu to have included
re9po111e1 from youths who did not -·--...... -(Piirwff'7!1}Jf
LA Zoo Crane
'
Flies tlie Coop
LOS ANGELES (UPI) -Los Angeles
Zoo officials and a wattled crane mlising
from its open exbiblt area both hav.e ooe
thing in common -a red face .
Animal keepers had clipped the wing•
of the crane - a gray-bodied. white-
necked bird which •lands Ove feet tall
and has a seven-foot winaspan in fllgbl
and ls valued al ii ,00).
But officials said the feathers grew
back quicker than expected and the
native of South Africa flew away.
-....
rompleted, Brady tald today. parents. They provided little 111~illon
Comml.salonen h"ad hoPti<t to learn and never showed him the dlfference
from teens who attended the procnun, between rtglll and wron(.
and tho9e who didn't, bow It ml&bt be.~ He ran away from home when be was
-ed, Chairman Sally Miller said to-12 and eacaped fro• the New Yori< State d Re!llrmatory In Elmira at the are ol 14.
ay. Rudemky cLaJai• be lleilted more than
Brady tald Froome Gayle, clty-reaea·-·1511-oooliO!ore be was 11.
Uoo cocrdlnat«, had been "unab:le" to He approached h1I frequent vtsitl to
undertake 1 llUl'VeY o1 teen opinion. the slammer with the tame attitude u a
An all-year teen center, « a repeated coJlep frt>bman. Rlidenaty .wu lllert to
IUllUller ceolllr, are at ilale. Irvine learn and llvlnl In the dormitory was school ii not avallable during the ochool= port Cl It _ _
year !or l center In whloh 1amet and "I ,...,j Into pr11on to learn safeerock·
equipment might be left aet up, Brady Ing. Wiim eloe ....id you learn bow to
noted. _ _ -craclt 1 salel You don't IO out Into the
Dependinc on avallablllty of !aclllU.. air.et and aay, 'Hey, con you lftCh me
for use for specific teen pnlll'amt, Brady how to crack a safe''"
said city ata11 will not plan another teen OUt of pr11on for die !all SI Jtll'I,
center prior to the summer of 74. Rudenaky now believes that be wu sick
Santa Anan H'ilrt
In $16,000 Fire
A Santa Ana man was seriously burned
in a fire 1\le.sday which did an estimated
$18,000 damage to hll home and lls oOfi.
tent.. the fire department reported.
Oscar Pena, 44, of 1238 Mohawk St., is
in Orange County Medical Center::_ std·
fering from first and'" second degrje
burns and 111110ke Inhalation. Other
members of hls family esctiped without
injury .
Firemen said the blaze started in the
living room apparently from defecUve
wiring. Four enalne companies respond-
ed to the fire.
to 1lnile handedly "declare war on ••~
lion o1 JOO million people." He Is ftrmJy
~ .~e 1lde of Ja.w,. and order now. . ,
Riidepaliy Ms ltl!, own .iew1 °"'crime
and pun!lhment '""' beJjevea It Is abourd
to think that r<inalatement of the death
penalty In Calllornla would deter bardan·
ed criminals frotn killing. .
.!.'Would you kill them or not?" ~
someone in the audienct while t.altigg on
the iUb']tct Or the death peti&Jtf. "I
would," the man added.
"Then you're sick, too," Rudeoaty ,.
snapped back. .. - _
But v.·hen U comes to dope dealers, the
ex~rlminal advocate:i1 a harder .llne-
"1 say glve them the Chinese treat-
ment -shoot them down in the atreet..
They deserve , the death penalty for ped-
dling dope," Rudesnky .lnsl1ted. He is
convinced that dope dealer• carmot be
rehabllltated.
· CLOIU IUN9AT
Boys P.l Shirts & Shorts
Sweat Sox
Hand BaUs & . Gloves
RaCquetbaR ~ts &. Bans
Wllsaft-llavis-Yoneyama-lancraft Al Star Basketbaft Shoes-9.95
Bob WoHe Super Pru Shoes-9.95
Soccer Slloes-10.95 up
Sweat Shirts & Pants
Warmup Suits-21 .95 to 34.95
FootbaU Face Guards
•
Yauch Football flals & lllts
K-.ds--f arearm Piiis . ..
Tntll ProtlCWs
.
Open 9 to 6 Closed Surxlays
'
.' . ' '
T1111ls Rackets ,
· WllSon-l'eM-Durilop -tlnnis · Balls
. .· ~
; 7 .95 per .Dozen
T enlisJnsses
Mea~s &-Boys' -Tns Shorts & SlltrtS
Cimt-Adldas-Tretom Tenills Sll8es
·-
'
Spe8!ID Sltarts & Suits
BieHarts-Tlres-TubaS
lepalrlnr
•
DARY PROT EDITORIAL PAGE ·
Medical Center P lans
Early last summer chances seemed poor that the
new city o! Irvine would be someday served by a uni·
verslty teaching hospitai. And, it appeared for at least
live years development of a community bospiW would
not be allowed by county and state licensing agencies.
In mid-summer, legislators approved and Gov. Rea·
gan signed a state budget bill including $900,000 to plan
the UC Irvine campus teaching hospital o! 200 beds. It
will be built with $15 million of UC Regents bond funds
. and as much as $5 million in resources of the formerly
private California College of Medicine, now affiliated
with UC!.
Last week, the Irvine Company and Western World
Medical Foundation completed terms of an agreement
providing 18 aeres of land for a 11seed" hospital for what
may be a 150-acre medical complex of 11international
stature."
Western World can buy the land near UC! from tbe
Irvine Company' at bargain prices and use the profits
from development to endow ti!• communitY. hospiW.
With $2 million committed to the project aion~ with
the land, Western World promises to commence building
soon, projecting a mid-1975 opening date.
That means residents of Irvine will have two hos·
pitals serving them, presumably by 1976. None operates
m the new city now.
Further, the 75,000 residents of the new city and
portions of Newport Beach east of Newport Bay will for
the first time be within minutes of complete emergency
health care facilities.
While a total of 350 beds may seem to be a rather
modest beglnnlng for a medical complex of "intema·
tional stature" it should be recognized there a.re poliUcal
realllies miUgaUng against a larger inlUal development
In lime, Irvine may well be a recognized center for
innovative medical care, based within a medical complex
on a total of 300 acres of UC! and adjoining land.
Increased cooperation between the medical school
faculty and the Western World Foundation will be highly
desirable, though not Imperative, for such a center to
evolve .
Strange Priorities
Anyone aware, of the vast amount of city business
awa!Ung a city council decision and who attendOd the
most recent meeting of the Irvine City Council must
surely have believed Fram K.tfka scripted the dialog.
Councilmen wrangled for three hours over such
trivial matters as selecting a sister city, spending $8,000
for a study of government alternatives and backing a
La Habra woman for League of Cities post.
It is a strange kind of political fever that puts is-
sues such as these on the front burner when for1 the past
three months the city bas nm. without • planning dir-
ector and public safety is run out of·the hip pocket of
the community services department.
Further, city building codes adopted from county
statutes more than 20 months ago contain no recent
changes and no improvements rellecUng higher city
standards of safety. A noise ordinance moulders un·
touched Irvine citizens and Irvine business deserve a
better sense of priorities from the council.
'
' -. ' • I
'DREAM Hou:.e
4•
• ' • •
I
Scholarly Theft
Baffles Experts
Wheelchair No Political Ha%ard
WASlllNGTON -A light-fingered
scholar bas stoleo popers ol "In·
calculable value:' .fnxp the_ collec~oi: of
the late JU!llce Felix ~ at the
Library of C<ocr<ss. 1be the!l ol Ir·
replaceable dlarles, letters a n d
memoranda -many hundreds of pages
in all -blS been kepi aecret !0< a yur
whl1--FBI agents
and the library's .... -detectives h a v e
searcbed feverishly , ............. "
The' lllil'·WU'' dit-
covered ID~
ber 1m.---1D-alert Lillrary ol Con-
gnaa Clfllclal noticed ••
that .• Fnnkfurter lo~ was e#IY!
It bad eontalned ... venatlonl' be-
tween Frankfurter · and Ille lite
Justice Louis· Brandeil. A prltaul
reaearcller alao repoited a Jetter miatog ·
thatiJlld _, ._ Frallkftrler's
papers earlier.
A~ llbnry olllclalJ·tumed--
a ~ teamol ""°lan·ln the vast
Frankfurter file. Wltllln a few days,
they bad come up with I milling·item.s
list that bon1lled them. Gone ...,. ilve
years of Frankfurter's personal diaries,
ntllTlettiUI notes on conversations-with
the mighty, memoo, letters and_,
jottings about the men in government
Frankfurter bad known so lntimatdy.
"WE BEAUZED we hod been~
n ear
Gloomy Wallace Back • Ill Action
Gus
Why Im~ the Daily Pilot worried
about low income housing in the
Village of. Turtle Rock like· it Wlll
In the Village of Valley View?
--0.tr.
MONTGOMERY, Ala. -The unoJ>.
trusive arrival he.re of _,a ghostwriter
commisslOlled by Doobleday and Co. to
write the definlUve autobiography of
Gov. George Wallace· for pre • 1976
publlcatloo ii the latest sign that
Wallace'.1_ confinem~nt. to a w~Jcbair _
may be no greater pollll¢ll baiard than GIMMW 0.. QA : •fl .,. ......... 1W , blind." a aeniGr library official told my . ,...,..... _. • • ....,py ,...... ,... It w11 to FrankUn D.•Roaln'elt. um.ate Lea Whitten. "There was a ::C: : .::...,. •::..• i.i.tr "::111~ "' '"lb.ll chair makel' it · moft difficult ''
tremendous amount missing of In-WaUace told us in '
calculable--value." --_•_ his~ ~-"But it
. Once the loa was assessed, the library Frlllkfllrter who died in 11115 at age a doesn't stop me liiiiD
called in the FBI which beglll dlscn!ttly after ..n;Dg :IS years oo the SUpreme being .-."
interviewing ar.bolus and r!J!Brdwn. To Court. 1 ~ ~t _wu late one -
bloc~ further lbelll, -·~' Tv ..... ;.;..,., ... baYeolfereclto ['emrJff last ·-. '= Pl••-: •.• ·il·~ ""' .. ~=11117 bet•-the ::;::,; :::::, W. Waa ':.,.~ alrinl Ibo •""!"-Ille lllnry. We will .. ..., ...,.....,..,
1encil ptllO li>tlle Int_._......,~,_ 11111 lo. ~ bll name or pnltded over by the
'"''for 'tlie'-'-'•• ~-s. ,. ·. ,. ~~ .... If-be, will cmtect gOfttlilr. Al we le!t
--, • ...,....,.~ I& , •I y;, • t7 Walla' le 'laU '-·• But now, Ille quest bas -a dead -· . · -a . p.m., ce s IP' ve -"1'5
end. Return ol the d-il. moo&: Wl'J110VT _BEING 'abie to bind the amved !tr another-· coolmnce .•
library oll1clals """'°ize., depends on Justtee Deplirtlaeot,J we will try to HAVING recovered fiom bis in~ the delicate questions o1 1be ochol"" penuade Attorney General E 11 i o t · .
tbief.'s resjie<tl0< the prlceJesaness of bis RI~, himself s legal scholar, that w~ and suffering ooly minor eeriods
blstorioal.. belst. W!Joover the ~de the rellll'n ol the F)"nkllD'ler papers is of light pom, Wallace ts iJelinninl to think
resean:ber Js. the olflclall Conciile, he men-than ...nh -calling off the search like a presidential ~te aialn. Ilia
-rolJl>ed with -and In-for tl!e m~ thief. mind ts as sharp as it waa before be was telll_., ee1ec1fn1 the moot bislGrtcally nearly murdered by an aawsin 16
vallllble documenll. • FOOTNOTE: Tile only comparable theft mootha ago. Indeed, the talk in in the library 's 173-year history occurred Wallaceland ol yet another presidential
ACCORDING to one llloory, the ocholar in the 19408 when the poper1 of poet Walt campaign In 1176; with the Democratic
ts laboring alone.., a pn1jlct and wants Wblbnan . ...,.. sent awey 1or wartime party's vice presidenilal noininatloo the
to malt~ sure be 1! the aalY one able_to safekeeping. Alter their return, several real goal, ClllllOl be ctismlMed aa
pursue it. If this Ii theeiiO;'Uie Olfieliil.-VO!umol ot-bis ·-were dbcoveted nooaell40· pray the scholar will somellow arrange to missing. They were never recovered. When we last visited a fatigued and
ge t the papers or copies of them ...,i: to More receotly, the llbnry i<fl llODle pain-ridden Wallace a year ago be could
the library so that lulure bistorians can valuable boob, bui a library clerk bas not stop reminiscing a~ b t 1
study the remarkable llle and tJmes ol ~ ureoted !tr the ~ theft. phenomenal 1m primary vlctoriea, ..
( EVAN S ·NOVAK)
particularly his sweep in the libersl
Democratic bastion of Michigan.
' ' Alabama that Republican state chairman ~
Richard Bennett lJ advising his party not i
to field any candidate for governor ne1t l
year w~ Wallace runs for reelection.
Thus, wi~ only ~ Democratic op-
position in next spring's primary
election, Wallace could well sweep to his
third term as Alabama's governor wilh
IN CONTRAST, Wallace's five 1972 an astoWlding 70 to 75 percent of the
winning primaries plus the five states he vote. I
won In his third-party presidential cam-j PJllgn of 1968 are mentioned today only in ONE POSSIBLE contender, former:
pualng. Wallace is now lookjpg ahead, Gov. Albert Brewer, wu ban!Jy defeated
smacking his lips with anUcipation ·and i by Wallace in the 19'/0 prlmary.,llllt l"l·
plolting a powerlul role in what he cells d4Y Brewer confrootl.a d\IJllla) statewl
the "rejuvenation" of IM"'-lbattered poll whldl Ille .W~-Jlllf'C.W
Democratic party. conducted for .B ....... bynau;iW~ ttlS
He has been holding quiet tallts with '.Oliver Quayle. lt•iboiU Wa\llct ai · ·
fonner aides who Joni qo Jelt hli:n. ( Brewer by-over 40 percmtege·]JOllU,-
Wblle avoiding bani #lhiti, .OI jiollttbol J cording to WaUaltet, , , , , employment, Wallace fl D1.1'1D&' Jt cJtar ~ Wallace, · ~w::~.,~r.:•;•;r•~=~Jthat he wants and .. -'*"'. lliiiii e .. rllter,lilf)--.. ~
fesslonai help from thele'old preilldeotlal · poljtlcal la~~ aaUonal ' ·
hands. 1be goal: to reboild a COID.;.&..J poity Camot U it 'I ...... · .r;:rr-Iba m•........, of 1172. · ' sWf of Alabamans for·lS'll. Amonl t1'in 1 ,.....,,_,...., • • "1 " '' ii the astute Bill J"-, Wallace's ~ Although hlo . old pollilca! ._...
political adviser who left sbortly. alter built on a~ ol lotal;aclalia. ' ·
·managing Wallace's 1968 third-pOrty lion .. Wallq liidat talktl DOI aI>wt
_carnpoigg; his talents were sorely riibOed but 1hoilt U..-r\lilti of '"Utile '" ·
10 the inadequately ~ 1m cam-Tile populist has eaipjid fhe .._1 palgn. Uonist. .. .
Jones and other old Wallaceites are DNNED ' ·-impressed ~y the minculous physical . J1'8 speOch for. 'Wallace a
improvement of the governor, whJcb bas Decatur, Ala., la.st Julr l.Didrated ~a
restored his psychological health &nd no Northern ~t can ffford to tg
ended Joog periods ol deep depression. nore Wallace~.~ folo!'fng in ~
To them-1976 looks mon promising than South or his pOpullitic a P p e • l
the gov~r's passes at the presidency everywhere. -nm., -unlikely though i~
1n 1!164, 1968 and 1m. =1 ~w= ~~ ":i!\,..~
'f ALLA CE is dealing today with a e1ereise a veto over the Democratio
shattered Democr1Uc party which, with party's presldeoUal nominee or compet
-Father-daugh-ter--+he--ory Question~d the sole eiception of Sen. Edward M. that nominee to take, him pn -the ticket:. i
Kennedy, has no recognizable center of Such a turn of political events since ~
power. Moreover, he is dealing with it attempted murder in 1972 woUid ~
from !l posltion _of_complete dominance at astonishing and incongruous. But ov.e~
home and wearing what his idOlators the last aec8<1e, the astoolshliig and ~ perceive as the mystical ma.nUe of a hero congruous have become the ballmart
To the Editor:
Mrs. Brick, In her talk to the Exchange
Club of Newport Beach (Sept. 14) un-
do!Wledly made a hit by telling fathers to
spend time with their daughters becawte
they are 'better' models than are
frustrated, neW'otic .women. Her plan for
fatbeNlaughter communications was
great ~t Unfortunately based on ex-
tremely shaky reasoning.
rr JS NOT because women are
"frustrated and insecure" while men
have an "internal slability most women
du not" that a &ood father-daughter rela·
lionsblp is desirable. R a t h e r ,
psycbologicaJ studies have shown that
dHferent things are learned from each
parent. Females team from fathers their
goals, values and what kind of achieve-
ment the fathers eipect of them.
Mothers are used as a model to achieve
t1-goa!J. By speniling 11me~w1u.. the
father girls team the ve:lues they will br
wrporate aod the father'i!an realistically_
adjust theae values to the girl's tern·
perament as he Ic&m1 to know her bet-
ter.
Jt 11 not a quesUon of which parent can
provide the be!t model. Girl children
usu&lly tum to the female parent for a
model , realOlllng that if th• rather loves
the mother, the bell way for the cblld to
gain that love ii to be as much like the
ftlOtber as poislble. Mn. Brick has been
neglecUnl her Freud.
In fairness, please print the ncit
speech that extols women •nd denigrates
men on the top column of i>J&t oae.
CllR!STIN CARNEY
.
'1'e11er' People?
t..111e Editor:
.... For several yean prior to moving Into
my preaent home Jn lrvtne, I lived In an
apartment. I am no more or less
•
'
( __ MAIL __ B_ox--.._).
Letter1 troin readers are welcome.
NormaU11 writers should conveu thtir
messages in 300 wora. or ~ss. Thi
right to cond<N• letter• to fit apocl
or eliminate libel ii ,.mwd. All
fetters must incl..U lignoturt mid
mailing address, but Mmt'I ma11 be
withheld O!I tfqll<ll if tuttid<nl
re01on ts appart1'lt. Poetrrl 1DUlftot bt
publilhtd.
responal~le, politically t"Cncemed, or
moral now that I am a fee simple owner
of a slngle family residence than I was
as_a_montb:to-montb tenant of an apart-
ment. It ii niy guesa that Uils Is true of a
very large percentage of the people ol1 Irvine.
THOSE wbo would suggest that aper!·
ment dwellers are !iomehow 11lesser"
people than -who Uve In 1ingle f•mi· . ly resldencet should think beck to their
own apartment days or ahead to the
posslblllty t11at·they, too;-may -to
live a more low·me:intenance 1tyle of life
ai oome point. Many of their P."""'1t
arguments against building mo r e
apartmenta in lrvine are Insults to the
many !ine people who prescnlly Jive In
Park West, to many of the home lessees
and owners all over the city of Irvine,
and, perhapt, even to themselves a few
years back or a fbw years ahead.
NINA E. WEST . .
The Petltlolter1
·To the Editor:
Your edilorial of Aug. 31, IOOk to task
~ wbo dared to circulate peUUoos
requesting that the matter ol apartment
-being )luilt In University Park
-to the . proposed library be recon-atdered by the city council. 'Ibe im·
plicatloo was that thooe ·wtio were .,..
gaged in thil activity were aelllsb and
elitist, and that -the process ol petitioo itself ..... 1trlctly WI-American
.., 1rv1ne tu<(. r
~ Let me call eome matters to your at.
tontloa and to u. attention ol )'<)Ur
-lbould your ~ltmeot lo the = ~ allow 10ll to pr1nt Ibis·
' AS I UCAU Y"1I' lland on tlie ln-
carpocatloo ol lrvllll, 70U. were.tor 11, ..
llial the oeeda and wants ol Its cltlaem
could be beard on a local level. This ii
i*<cisely what the handful ol us who
handled petitions were attempting to do:
lo make our op:inlon.s heard through cur
diilYetected bOdy -electea to l'l!present
tlllH of us who voted for them. If,
becl\lle 0( the strength and pressure of
the lrv)ne Oompo111, tho requem o1
almost 1000 ruldeftts of the University
Park ~ are to be Ignored, then the In·
corporation or the area was a needless
..,.,tery.
1be .-iber of 1hooo s1CJ!iric peUUons
WU a far &realer perUotage of the
-1•Uon ol Untvenity Park tban )'Ollr
edltorlal!ndicated, but perhapo more lm-
porten~ Ill percent ol tho6e who were •J>
proocbed lligned the petitions. The only
bar to obteiDJng more signatures was
time, Ml the rtibctance of people to .i;n. • YOOll so11c1-... for "lharhW"
our Wl'f ol Ille In Unlvtrslty Part wfth
aportmenl d we ll er s Is toochlna.
AparUneots 1re going beggln1 in P•il<
west right acrOll tba street from
University Park. More apartments are
:icheduled near the gun .club. Based on a
•
percentage ol esisting populatioo there
will be a greater ratio Of apartments in
thi1 area than In most "unplanned com~
mwlitles." U the concern is for lower ~
come groups, then why the high rental
rates for the apartments? 'Perhaps con-
dominium or single housel could he
made available at no down payment by
the Irvine Company oo we can share our
way of llle.
We bave oO objocttoo to the Irvine
Company mating' a fair profit OD their
land,. and we have no doubt tliat that ;,
the esaeatial' --Let diem build 00 that land u tbeJ1bave In the rest ol Unlversi·
tr Part: ~or single dwell·
lnp. 'J1ieY. have not lost -on that ·land.
)Ve call for CO!JSideraUon by the plan-
ning commissiOil and the city council. If
peUUons have DD bearing on their con·
1lderallons then they must face the con-
aequenceJ at the ~t ]m.J>]ltJ1y tbm
the lpll'tmeatl 'will bave been built, the
streets oveh:rowdecf, tbe alt!!•dy over· bufdened. ~ more nverburdeoed,
and 011r envltOmiieot ~ed. Tile time
to prevent all this It"°".'
IRVING MARKS, Resident ol University Park, lrvl!ie
PreWe.s 111 Jlfedeo
To the Editor.: ,
I wish to thlllk )'OU very much for nm-
ning an article eo11<ernlng the recent rob-
bery or my car in Mexico and my 1pp01J
for people who have bad similar dil·
ficultlea to relate them Jo me. I bave
nceived over 250 letters or portMal con-
tacta concemlng murder, robbery, of.
flclal corruption, etc. In Melloo.
I wish to thank all people who told me
of their Incidents and let them know that
I will do all In my power to fight these
problema.
JOHN J. GABRIELS
\
miraculously immWle from death by American politics, u Richafd Nixon
assassination. and now George .Wallace -are discover .. ~
That perception . is 50 strong In ing.
l
I
Why Hitler's Germany? !
I
How could the GenDflll people, who had
contributed a great deal to Western '
tjvlllzatloo over the centuries, suddenly
succumb to Hitler and to the cultural
self-destruction of NiUonal Socialism?
How could large numbers of ~aeemingly
normal, orderly, law·abldiDg j,eople
engage in or condone tortures and mass
killings on a scale almost unprecedented
in the history of the world? How was it
possible? How could it ha~!
' THE ANS_'!\'.El!S to.these queslJons are
searched out ln 'l1ae EvohRIOa of lllutf'1
Genn1111, (McGraw-Hill, $Ll.95), by
'Mont YOO Maltitz, a member ot the New
York B&: who grew up In Germany and
studied at the Universities of Bezlin and Marburf; llimburg and Jena.
In tho main, the book Is DOI ao much a
history ol the events of the petlod as a
history of certain ideas and ol what one
man did with them. 1be vulous com-
ponents ol the National Socialist Ideology
are examined. and attempts are made to
trace them hack to their origins In
Gennan hlltory and <ivllilatloo. Special
emphasis Is plac:d on anU-lleni!Usm, and
· on the fonner ~ewisb symbioslJ.
THE SECOND par\ of the book deals
with the "moment In history" wheo
IUtler arrived on tho acene; blJ
psychology, his parents, sex life, relll!on,
and various character lralta are db:·
cussed in detail: Relevant oplnion1 of
soclopsychcloglsts and psychiatrists have
' I
(THE BOO~ l
been Jaken Into accoint and quoted.
great deal of new source material is su
plied, and other material Is evaluated.
VICl'OR de KEYSi!:RLJN
OU .... COAIJ
DAILY PILOT " -
Robert N. W•<d, PubU.lltr
Thoma.i 1C<'1!il, Editor
Barboro Krcibich
.Editorial Page Ed,tor
,.,,. -, .... ol .... n.u,,
Pilot ,Weeks to inform ud .umw..t. ............ ..-..... ............
d:lverM •commentuy"on topjcs ot in.
ttr'ffl by ryndicated columl\lslt and
cartoonbtt, by JllOYidin!J t. Jonnn tw
rtadf!n' V'"'S and b)' ~ tbili
_..,., ........ .00 -...
.......... -·Tho <d""'lal .... lono
o( the Dail,y Pik>t appear Obly fJ'I (he
tdltorW. column at Uit top or h
pq-e, Oplnklina tlQllt«d by the cd.-
urnnisbi and cattoonbta and letttr
wrlttn are their own and ..,~ .....
mcnt o( thrtr W... by -.. ~
l'ilot -Id "' -
Wednesday, Sept 19, 1973
• '
I
A
•
Selection
Of Jury
Stalled
' MARIPOSA (AP) -Alter
tv.'O days ol. jury selection in
the double rilurder trial of
;JolUl Philip Bunyard, 41 pan-
elists have been questi~ed
but not a single one wa.S seat-
ed.
Officials originally ha~ call·
ed 80 prospective jurors but
said they pl.an to call II more
persons today from lhe coun-
( __ B_RI_EF_s _)
ty's small !fpulation ol 7,000.
1.lariposa County Superior
Court Judge Dean Laurillen
bad excused several Monday
and Tuesday because they had
known victims Helen Cramer.
70, and Nancy Chalberg, SS,
both longtime 1\1 a r i po s a
residents. Other candidates
Were dismissed after ex-
pressing strong p r e j u d i c e
agairui:t Bunyard.
... e Officials Ousted
CORTE MADERA (l\P) -
'Ille mayer and two city coun-
cilmen have been ousted from
their )obs here by forces seek-
ing to cootrol growth in this
small l\larin County com-
munity.
Mayor Holmes S. Norville
and Councilmen H a r o l d
Wagstaff 8lld ·Edward W.
Coltburst were recalled, Tues-
day. Holmes and Wagstaff had
been on the oouncil foe seven
years. Colthurst bad served
for 15 years, including 10
years as mayor.
Leaders of the recall cam-
paign contended the three
were unresponsive to public
demands for limitations on
new construction. The three
had supported a $00" million
Smpping center and a 528-unit "POrfmell\ compleL
e WfU Elected
SAN DIEGO (AP) -City
Atty. Jom Witt has brushed
olf a challenge by y0W1g
lawyer Jim Webb e a s i I y
winning<& ~ four -year
term.
City voters also rejected
$47.5 million bl park and open-
space' bondr TDesday and sent
tht!e· incumbent city COWl-
cilmen JJHO N<W. 6 runoffs wUh
dlallengers. Voter turnout was
~Jy-heo~ per· ,,.. ;
•,M~fe ·Contllet'etl '
SAK BERNARDINO (AP)
-·->. jodge haa sentenced the
former administrator o£ St.
Mary's Hospital in Apple
VaTiey to 1-14 years in prison.
Lester J. Mick, 44, was con-
victed of forgery, unlawful
sexual intercourse and two
counts of grand theft. He was
arrested last June 8.
e Law11er .Jailed
LOS ANGELES (AP) -A
Beverly Hills attorney has
been sentenced to one to five
years in prison for soliciting a
detective to plant cocaine on
Despite Protests
Goveriwr Signs
Retirement Bill
SACRAMENID. (AP) -Ing a mo-lime deposit of IJ,700
In the legislator's retiremeftt
fund.
Casey, 76, served in the
Assembly in 1952-56.
Gov. Ronald Reagan Tuesday
signed a oontroversJal bill
aimed at boosting retirement
benefits for a form er
assemblyman vmo owns a big
piece ol lmperial County land. WHEN THE .BILL was lllJlk·
The measure by ing its way through the
Assemblyman Ray Seeley ( R-legislature last A p r i I ,
Blythe), would illlow J. Ward Assemblyman Bob Wilson ([).
Casey, a former Republican San Diego), said Casey h:ad
aMemblyman. to ~lve a told him he o~ a 64.aae
$1 896-a-year pension by mat-&ectJon of Impenal Co!.mty
' _ land and 40 additional acres
Girls Seek
'Equality'
lit Sports
elsewhere. Wilson, an op-
ponent of Seeley's bill. . said
Casey had told him the 64
acres had water and alfalfa on
it. so "l would imagine it
would be worth $1,lm an
acre."
Wilson's April campaign
against the measure provoked ·
~ley, who told reporters, "I
GLENDALE (AP) _ Girls told Wilson off ·in no uncertain
physical education teachers terms I wouldn't carry this
here say they have stopped bill if it weren't right."
coaching after-school athletics When Casey served in the
until "sex discrimination" is Assembly, legislators had to
ended. serve for at least1 six years to
The teachers asserted Tues--be eligible for ll!elong reti!e-
day that the girls have athletic ~nt benefits. A Seeley aide
facilities inferior to the boys., . said ~ stat~ forced Casey to
that less money is spent 00 pull his oontrID~ted m~y out
g'rl • g nd that the of the legislative retirement
1 s pro rams a fund six months before the after·sc~I volunteer coaches minimum service time was
are paid less than male dropped to four years in 1960. volunteers.
KILLER OF 10 SENTENCED TO LIFE IN PRISON
Herbert W. Mullin, 26, Luves S.nt• Crut Court
' Wfdntsday, S~tmbtr 19, 1973
.
DAILY PILOT 11 j
Killer of 10
Mullin Given 'Life':
' ...
SANTA CRUZ iAPI -
Herbert MulJln, a former
-honor Jtltdent sentenced to life
in prilon in the slayings ol 10
persorui, may have "half a
shot'" at getting two first-
degree murder convictions
reduced on the basis of his
, "crazy motives," Mullin's at-
torney la)'S. :James Jack800, who ~
tended throughout the -week trial that Mullin was
"start raving mad," said
there are ca1e1 where an ap-
pellate court reduces a sen-
tence W'hen '8. defendant has
"'crazy motives and if he's
act1ng for humaJdtarian rea,
sons in his own mind.''
UNDER CALIFORNIA law,
a first-degree murder con-
viction carries automatic a~
peal, and Jackson appealed
Tuesday morning b e f o r e
Mullin was sentenced. He said
he' wants the convictions
reduced to second-degree.
The 26-yeai'--0ld o n e t 1 m e
mental patient was pale and
red -eyed· es he listened to
,. Santa Cruz O>unty Superioc
Court Judge Cllarles S .
Franich sentence him Tuesday
to two concurrent 1ife sen-
tences on two c:ounts of first·
degree nmder.
The judge also sentenced
him to eight consecutive five-
year-to-ll!e senter!Ci!s on eight
second-degree murder . con-
victions, the m a x l m u m
aentence. But he delayed ex-
ecution of these. ~tences
pending .. appeal of the fin!!·
degree cmvictions.
ON THE STAND, Mullin
confessed to slaying not just
the 10 persons as charged, but
also another three l a s t
January and February.
The defendant said his
f a t her • s authoritarianism
'San Diego
Gets Project
Capitol News Service
SAN DIEGO -The county of
San Diego has been selected
as the first ~ject area in the
country to operate the new
>-pedal suwlemental food pro-
gram fOC Women, Infants, ~d
Children (WIC).
Pregnant or lactating
women and cbidlren up to 4
will be eligible for the pilot pro-
gram it they (1) live in the ap..
proved project area; (2) are
eligible for medical treatment
at free or reduced cost from
the county health clinic, and
< 3) are determined by m<dical
personnel ol the heelth depart-
ment to be in need o! su~
plemental food.
"drove me kill crazy" am
that he killed the victims as
human sacrifices necesMry to
avoid a cataclysmic earth-
quake. He also aald ihe
sometimes g o t tcleprtbk
messages from his father and
sometimes from his victims
that it Was "healthy to kill."
As a· high school fi>ot1-U
pl8yer and honor studeht,
Mullin was voted "most likely
to succeed.''
HE LATER dropped out ol
college engineering studies
and experimented with drugs.
particularly LSD. During the
past five years, be commlttefi
himself five times to mentaJ
ho.spltals and each time doc·
tors diagnosed him as ~
paranoki scbl1.opbrenic.
He was CQnVicted of first·
degree murder in the Jan. 25
shooting deaths of James
Gianera, 24, a fonner high
school friend. and housewif1!
Kathy Francis, 29, both -of
Santa Cruz. He was convicted.
of second-degree murder in
'the deaths of c;lianera's wife;
Joan, 21, and Mrs. Francis!
sons, David, 9, and Daemon, 41
-vmo were possible witness-
es.
Mullin also was convicted of
second-degree murder in the
deaths of. a 72-year--0ld former
prize fighter and four leen-ag>-
ed campers.
I AT TWO schools, the women
teachers complain, the boys
even take over the girls' gyms
to run their basketball pro-
grams.
'
"A lot of people think this is
just a women's lib thing to get
even with the boys' program,"
said a teacher spokesman, Jan
McCreery. "But that's not
true. We just want fqual ~
portunity."
THE PROTEST is by the 30
girls PE teachers at junior
and senior high schools in
Glendale. They have filed a
complaint with state civil
rights authorities.
'Protesting'
• Gas Stations
l
To Reopen
' '
SAN !LUIS OBISPO (AP) -
Most Jervice stations in San
Lim ~sPo COuntJ>'.: were ex-
pOaed lo reopen t03iiY follow·
ing..,..01,4SS closures called to
prote1tlPhas.e 4 price "'1t"\1J ..
on gaso~. ·
A majOnty of the 80 service
stations iO t b e county shut
down Tuesday, leaden ·ot the
protest said.
Meanwhile, the I n t e r n a 1
Revenue Service said in Los
Angeles that it was dispatch·
ing investigators throughout
Southern caiifornia to make
sure retail g3.90line dealers
were complying with Phase 4
ceiling price regulations.
BariY -Rans, cliierot the
stabilization division in the J2..
county Los Angeles I R S
District, said spot checks
would continue indefinitely.
'
To the people
who lOve great cars.
..
'!. 1974 ,_. • \.~ LeMans. . .;... ..
The neim SIY.S it all. Comfot:tabte._h..axurtpus: • .. ,
Interior. fiw fom\al ~in9ow (av.ai~ble .
only with vinyl top until.eftty-1974). "
Pontiac V-8 performance.'Smoolh Wide~
Track ride. All the luxury you want
wtthout buying more car
, than you need.
' ~:
~ I ' " . .. " . '
1974 Pontiac Grand Prix.
Pontiac's latest greatest! New dassic styline-\
Sporty handling and performance. New
luxurious interiors. Obviously, we're
out to make"you dissatisfied with whatever
youtre driving.
.• m4 Pootiac foa:mula Fird>in:I..
• .. Pirt ensineerlna. Part soul. Excitin'1 new
. tront-end with b&ecked,.out erillLSpor:ty~ ~ ;.; ·~scoops. 350 V-8 and floor-shifted
,,., . ~ --;:! ~~d. Ou~l exhausts. This one's for "'·"'-~.r-,~who t1lle'the fun of dr¥n1 serioUlly. , ·' . . .. .
the president of the Los
Angele• Community eonege _Nude Swim Board of Trustees.
Jn handing down the sen-
i.nce Tuesday, superior Court B TL fted Judge Albert D. Matthews an 1.1 ra
turned down a request for pro-
bation far Donna Y. Gordon,
42.
e Wfns Election
LOS ANGELES (AP )
Urban Qffain specialist David
Qmningham overtook an early
lead forged by television actor
George Takei and went on to
win a special election to fill
the cify council seat vacated
by Mayor Thotnas Bradley.
Unofficial final returns early
today gave Cunningham ,
whose nomination petition was
signed by Bradley, 8.199 votes,
or 34.8 percent, colnpared to
6,*' or ,27.8 percent ,
genured byTakel, who played
the role of Sulu in the
television series "Star Trek."
e Smog Hearing
LOS ANGELEs (AP) -The
St.ate Air Resources Board
Tuesday deferred action on
'the pl\4)09ed air pollution
emergency contingency plan
after a pubUc bearing.
The long.pending plan is
designed to set up criteria for
smog alerts, warnings and
emt:tgedcies -90 -called
·~epleodes." control 80UT'CeS of
pollution and protect the
pul>llc health.
Kids Like To
.Ask Andy
SANTA BARBARA (AP) -
County supervisors h a v e
ordered the drafting or an
ordinance which wou1d ban
nude bathing at Santa Barbara
public beaches.
The supervisors' action
Tuesday came in response to a
request by Sheriff J o h n
Carpenter to be given more
powers to halt nude bathing
which has triggered numerous
complaints from beachfront
residents.
Supervisor Frank Frost said
he will join Carpenter and the
county counsel in drafting the
proposed ordinance.
Funds Set
For Museum
LOS ANGELES (AP) -
County supervisor.; say the
way has been financially pav-
ed to building a museum
beside the famed La Brea tar
pits to display thousands ol
bones from ancient animals
trapped there.
Supervisor Ernest Debs an-
nounced Tuesday that fUQds
would be provided through a
foundation to be establl-by
George c. Page, c>"eator of
Mission Pak candied fruit
packages.
The pits are located ln a
park on WilsbiJ'e Boulevard
near the heart o( downtown
Loo Angeles: The musewn's ·
cost was estimated in the S2
1974 Pontiac Grand Am.
The great handling of fine imports com6iMO
with great P-ontiac innovation . Like a squee.z-
able nose. And special bucket seats. That's
foreign intrigue ..• Amertcan Nlgenuity.
'
1974 Pontiac Bonileville> I
It's a little more car. With a distinctive
new chrome grille. Fantastic new visibilifY.
Handsome new tweed and Morroktde interkw'
trims. Pontiac's 400 V-8. A great Wide·
Track ride. for ~ople who-still ~njoY
driving.
From the .. people ·who
buiJdthem.
•
The W•'.fia:k people bMea-wilbmn.
[I]~
.................... j
;See them at )10U1" Pontiac~ tOOl!Y!
million ranae. •-.,-------------------....l,----------'------..:..----=-'-------,--.,-..c..----------' ...
J •
• • . •
I
•
Buntingion Beaeh
Founiain ·Valley
EDITION
VOi:. 66, fl!P. 262, 7 SECTIONS,110 PAGES
• . -. · -· ,
WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER, 19, 1973
•
•
Today's Final
N.Y. Stoeks
TEN CENTS
MWD Negotiates .for Bolsa Island Plant Tie
By TERRY COVILLE
Of IM CMllY ,. ... II..,
Di~ors of the ·Metropolitan Water
Dislrid (MWD)_have 1gr_eed to spend up
to 12.1 mlllian to buy 81 aores 'of Boba
Chlca-marihland In H1mtington Be.ach.
The marsh site would serve as a
malnlarid cormection to a mmHP8de
!Jland propOIOd olJibore _ from Bolu
Chica State Be.ach. T!>e 1sland would
boaao a nuoielf ~ J>lant and a water
dOlalJ!iig'foc!lltY,11.MWD plinl.are"car·
rled 1!11!. • . • ' .. -'
MUie MWD directors a U t h o r i z e d
negotiations Tuesday with Signal Gas and
Oil, owner of the property, P,(WD
spoteamen denied the proposed purchase
means construction of the bland wW be
soutbt in' the near future.
''We don't know if the island will ever
be iium ," an MWD spokesman said to-
day. "But we are trying to pin down the
Jan,! at ~y's prices if the facility is
needed In the future." ·
!'We feel we hav e adequate water sup-
pllea . from the Colorado River and
Northern C.lifornia to last us ui1Ul the
year 2020, '' be said. "But the island pro}-
ect COUld be bllilt as a back-up to our
current system."
Five years ago, the MWD, along with
public and private power agencies,
established the idea of building an
offshore i$land for the pro(tuction ol. elec-
trical energy and fresh water from salt
water.
Other agencies dropped out of the prof·
ect when the .estimated cost of it soared
to nearly $700 million. MWD, however,
has never backed away from the
poosibWty.
Last year, MWD submitted an en-
vironmental Impact report (Effi) to the
City of Huntington Beach for the pro-
po&ed la,nd purchase from Signal.
City planning commissioners and coun-
cilmen rejected the EIR because they
said the proposed construction of a
switch yard (to shift produced power
from the island to several transmission
lines) would have a negative impact on
the area.
· '111e switch yard is proposed in an area
master-planned for homes. It would also
be close to the 400-acre salt water marsh
preserve plaMed by the state Depart·
ment of Fish and Game.
City officials also said they wanted to
see an Em on the proposed island as
well. MWD replied that the island isn't
yet planned so Its impact can't be known.
The proposed 81-acre purchase includes
a mile-long, 400-root wide right--0f-way
leading from Bolsa Clilca State Beach to
the switch ya rd. Underground power
cables and water lines would be buried In
the right--0f-way.
The $2.8 million approved Tuesday by
MWD directors is a higher price than the
$2.5 million for 88 acres talked about last
year.
Part of the negotiations involves a.n
agreement that , if MWD does not build
the island, Signal has the first chance to
buy back the property.
•
Valley Council Angry
Officials Vote to Hold Up Water Complex
By JOAJ:iNE REYNOLDS
Of-.. Delfr ...........
A 258-unit apartment complex to be
built just outside the Fountain Valley city
limits drew the wrath of city councilmen
Tuesday night. They -voted not. to supply
the complex with water.
"I'd lili:e to stop 'em from even car-
rying water in there in a Thennos jug,"
said Councilman A1 Hollinden who led the
at~ck against the complex on Harbor
Boulevard at ~er Avenue.
* * * Development
' 'lbe 10.acre site Is in county territory.
The project has been approved by county
authorities. Grading work has been
started .. by California Pacific Develop-
ment corp.
ln addition to refusing to s,upply the
site with water· service, councilmen
ordered city staff memberS to pursue all
administrative and judicial avenues
possible to bait construction of the com-
plex.
Two years ago FolDltain Valley did
away with all apartment zoning in the...-ci-
ty.
Hollinden pointed out five problems the
complex poses.
First, he said, the zoning for the prop-
erty is R-2, but the compJ~x will have 29
units per acre, "which is an atrocious
amount of apartments."
"One of the conditions of approval was
tha·t there would be no left turns into or
out of the complex, yet in the Em, these
left turns are shown," Hollindcn said.
.Explosive Case
At .~er _ Lawyer's Briefcase Detonated
T. urn,,.. -~ :r n· 0 ;;,:,..,. ~'It<;·~ i<pfosive cue at Harbor alter mlanig)l when the threatening e«J n I.I Judj!:ial !>!strict Court -'l'ueoday was briefcase ,.., tenderly set in plaoe Wlder
.. handled by NfWP!Orl_ Beach attorney a tree on the front Jawn.
~~·t ...:"" alitit~i=-Ill!!-.., & ..... Jd.,:111: .... ~·:-=.-~ A /;'!!1···. , :'' ~ by ~ Walter· Barupr aad tlio ~bomb s6erflr•sz.;llli,.. ,att.dle4 ;,;:
pro-' by • Holitebl thal has new .aliacbe case contalnlnl various legal i"llle rlasl didn't btirt tlie papOfl in·
·Ships Ca ... ved
•
Retiree Whittles Away the Time
By TERRY COVILLE another U.S. RovoluUonary wlll'lhip; and
or .. Dlll'f' ~... ..... the FJcano, a Spanish training ship. ·
Richard Lamb lits patiently Inside the The 'bulls are carved from large blocks
small, cramped shed In baclt of his Hun-of sofl redwood, cedar or pine. He
tlngton.Beacb trailer-home wl.qutetl)'_normally starts with a cbunlc of wood
whltUes away the hours. lour feet by six feel
SlJ:: OOurs a day, seven days a week,.he Lam!> grabs v~lous other materials irilltt!a -' . . fO<-thi ~ ·illtalled ports of the ship.
Illa Frencb wlle. Glnetle, ]llittfs.'lt!!r . -Fiali, /j~•l!!ts in!<> ~ rlaln&1 ~th
• •ftl the "lloor ,,,.,,.,'tlme',,ID ''--~'~ ba1-~.,,jl, metal .......... a crltlCal-""""e a('bb'i.s.111=· . ijle'li'lleod cut from allllliinam beverage ...-0~ •L -L ~ ~ ) ' < (:ans ' ' Jlo:I ~ ano....-.eerty•18111 ~' ·• • ..;_ • . , , I~· • , · · > r., • . •PO,._.,. PJeoos of wqocl.di>wOl!ng. -m ·td'lln ~· rclt'cnoim7'1ii:krare-tranatormed
eil q o '-'" ,nodei U1Hlli ';;i;;;.;ile oori fW life boats. An old ljleet Is sliced
tirgest lboui tour-feet 111118 --~to 'w ~ _llle·boots "".d provide a, clipper
stem -• -' -ddp.Wltfi -aalla.'.-BBa -.. cao-"M1 rtrat WU • ell~ ship, the Gmt Diil baHs.
Republic," he aays. "At the time l ... It ~ Lamb 20 minutes to carve
thought it was P!<UY nice, but nilw I eldl lfi!y, 'IJOOCieo rum barn! placed on
notice It WU all oul of pn>portlon." ~::-, who tboUgb1 a ttr.d
" l!o launcbea that proJect shorllJ alter -1d opend DICft Ume inre Ille u=: ~ ~ had her trimmed and niom, Is proud o1 her ahlp carver and
ready lwt,1!!0' ....-.. --·t hesitate to offer a critical aug-
No'lt' It talei him ·a-oolld moeth to com-gutioa now and then.
p!ete a alllp, 1be better be gets, the ""I'm proud to see, him do It, but be
limier it tak~. • ·ao, ,run me o:uy geUing materiall,t'
"I had to I~ potllolce," be aaid. ..... lallfllll. _ •· '
IA\Jlb !J only 411, bu\ .be !IQ, a lol-ol -"1'111 jllll' tryin1 to~be.lter myaeU,"
Ume oli his )lllndi. Al!Of :U',~ Ill, tbe , Llimb jnterjects. "Someday I ·""'11 to do.
nl!Utary, he reUred, •tbea llOCU' "!'fk' _._Ille! Spanish galleons, but they are
with, tbe pootal servke. But jWo .~ears--(!lee llllll'S, Pqe I)
aio-he had'to drOp out of .that beC8use ot
embroiled tbe c:tty of. 'Fountain VaDey in papers Monday afternoon, leaving it in a Bide~ bu It sure dld damage the brlef-
a series of tawlui~. courtroom. __ case," Sgt. Postel remarked.
tn a f..1 vole, with Councilman Ed Just Deputy marshals then noticed an Deputies blew out one whole comer of
the lone dissenter, council members ominous black satchel as the night traffic the brlefc:ise ~~torney Baranger's wife
refused to approve a It-lot planned court broke up. had just given him as a pment.
deveJopment (PD) that Pluley wants to Four marshals wh> recently bad ~m-"Mr. Baranger Isn't very b~ppy,"
build at Edinger Avenue and Euolld pleted a school dealing with destructive observed hla law partner, AlanJ'laia.
Street devices thought it~ook pretty sinister. Contacted later today; Attorney
1be · actkm came minutes after coun-The case also looked like an attorney's B...ranger said 'his Jaw partner is indeed
cllmen were served with a Superior homework, but no attorneys had been in right. .
Court rder ~ th to v court since afternoCll. "It was my only decent briefcase -
the Hofstetn rlanDed d J~:ppro e The marshats knew If it was a bomb with my initials in gold on the sld.! -and
No action ~u tak ev 0 ° the Hotite·n with a mercury switch a gentle touch frankly, I'm ticked off,11 be declared.
. en n . 1 might set it off. "It's not repairable. They b&ew the tract, pending planoln!! commllsion •P-TheY. callee! the Or"l!l!e CountI Sher-wbole end out of it. I am going to make a
proval of IODlt routine architectural m•1 1&Jmb disposal squjd 8DQlti Person-Ctaliifagalnst the county," Barafigetem-
work. . . nel lassoed the black leather satchel and phasized.
Th.e HoJ:item lawswts, and the subse-gingerly hauled it out of the courtroom "Surely," he said, "they have ln-
queot denial of Presley s Edl~r tract and down the corridor. surance cofering acts of their employes
art hued on a precedent e~ablisbed by Marshal Sgt. Ed Postel said it was well committed in the line of duty." the Ciuslc Homes and the city lmt year .
In that action, the company agreed to
pay the city special park fees for Its ap. Fo ca 0 s
proval o1 a planned development near U-.. Ill'°S uppo-.ot Slatl!rAVC!n!ld'not'lnclude·npen space -r--· 'l:>" • -:t:----
· or park land, two PD requirements set
by City ordinance.
The special fees were assessed so that
the city could purchase park · land
elsewhere to maintain its ralio of park
'Janda to population.
Early this spring, Holstein suhmltted •
slmllar PD proposal which lacked open
space, contending that the open space
was availabJe lo the nearby 21-acre park
that serves the rest of his Green Valley
tract. But councilmen disagreed, noting that
the trlde-off for smaller PD Jots is usual-
ly ID opm 9!JOCO within the tracl, and
levlad "9,000 in apeclal fees again.rt Ho!· --~. Tboae fees are -the subject of the
(Set PRESLEY, Page II
Mutual Aid Plru1ning
The communities of Huntil2gton Beach,
Fowitain Valley, :Westininster and SeaJ
Beach soon will drop their city bQun-
daries to offer mutual fire protection. •
All four fire departments will work
under a single network with one simple
rule -the cl09est fire deparbnent
answers the call, no matter what city it
Is in.
"We had hoped to have our network in
operatiop by Oct. 15, but now it looks
m.ore like Nov. 15," reports Huntington
Beach Fire Chief Ray Picard. "It
depends on how soon we get our new
communication equipment working."
_a/heart condition. • •
' 1 Sjnce then• be baa IOlll\'hed for
"'J!letltlng to rut -the void: ,Last ~11 Gtnette gave ,him a lS.:tncb.
aiy~ lllodel !O< piece lot!•ther.
·:Ex-safe~raeker Shows How
'Mle lack of city borders for fire service
will not affect residents in need of help.
A resident in any community will still
call the same p~ number for fire
service. The elimination ofCity boun-
daries will have a significant effect on
the cities In tenns of fire protection and
money saved, says Picard.
He esUmates the combined cities will
save an annual $1 million in terms of
firemen they won't have to hire.
As four individual cities, they had plan-
ned for a total of 375 men. As a four-city
network, only 300 men will be needed. '' • '.llloolre(!l~overahddect'\edl-'d,do•
a lot bellef·IJll my own.'' be esp!alns. 'f&ome of thelbtg boat klll cost S'IQ.'J can
<litve· the same inqdel f0t aboal 1111." ,
'HO ciiples the modeli-fr..il i• 11!1111
boi>fllet on aarty ships. The -let shows
a picture and l1ltl sale dlm-•k>Da: ' JI• baa ~Y fasblcmecl replicas of tl)e USS ~~lotion from Iha Revolu-
tloa; the aiirWo \tamn (hie ~
ptiJi!uct), ilf etr1y wlialer; t11e -.,
'
Valley Schedules
Cub Scout Roundup
Boyt I year• old wbo Uva lit FounUln_
Vllley are Invited to a Cllb $cwt llound·
up sept. 25 at the Fountain Valley Ele-
lllllllaey. School. '
The program, _,ored by CUb, !Jcoort
Pldt 2'11, will co v er a!L ohaies ol
llCOUtlnl and wlll be~ at T:io' p.m. In
·Iha mulll-JIWllOle room.
'
I
Leading Citizens • in on Caper in Cost,µ Mesa
By l\UDI NIEDZIEUKI
Of .. D9ltr ..........
. Gllidlng a thin wire pick Into the
keyhole al a lix-tumbler loci, 11Rec1,"
"~.; flngera were rock.,teady 11
-he ~pind for his Coota Mesa caper.
':bla -an ...,. job, requtr1n1 neither
punch nor nltro, and tbere w11 no danger
of belDa art'lllOd. Soma of Coota -·· lead!nl d-...... Ill Oii "the job.
Big Red WIS ID -to teach them boW to burgle. ·
"I usually Ute to do It as l11t as tum·
lng a key,)• said the master llfecracker~ now 21 :l"lfl old, who said he had never
been llOpped by • Jo\*.
ft took a Utile Joncer Iha!\ !hat and llcd
was uptet. But he took mqe on a
more complicated eJahMumblet version
and popped ft open before J1M1 could
-to three. . JludenUy, who spent JI )'Uri 'Of his
'
• lire in p;i... Juming his profeaaion and spent two years in the can with Al
suffering for his mistakes, Is sllll In the capoile, and how he kept his hand "in. the J~~ it wis~ before, but business" by serving as Leavenworth's
now lt'1 111111," be assured members of locksmith.
the -u..., Club. He told them ha got his It wu all quite entertaining, but Red
laal Joi> throuCh the Sl Paul cl1iel of sald be wouldn't do It again.
pollco. "I actually got sick of il I wanted to
Rudmaky, ii now a ••conmJllant " to 3--be a muter crJmJnal but I was actually
M Company. He -kl ror the aecurlty • prolesalollal looer. That's the title I
systems dlYlllotJ : 1'1iey build the Jock! earned. l W83 ~stupid ass." said Red.
and Ruclenaky tears them apsrt, then Stealing bagels and bananas from
sends the eqlneers back to the drawing pushc>rts on the lower ea!t side,
bords. 'n-Rudensky said he got hi• start by his
Tuesday he came to "Costa Mesa to parenta. They provided little SUJ!Ol'.Vlslon
show· off his upeiUst and to tantalize and never showed hlm the d!Uerence
the Uons with stories from his criminal between rlgh( and wrong.
life. . He ran away from home when he was
He told them how he became the top t2 and eocaped lror. the New York State
banana in Ltavenworth, liow be once !Wormatory In Elmira at the age of 14.
fro:e prison bars with dry Ice -.d busted Rudcnsky claims he heisted more than
them out alter they crystalllled, bow he (See 'BURGLAll,' Page ll
..
Picard also says the cities will save a
combined $9001000 tn one year because
Huntington Beach, Fountain Valley and
Westminster will save the construction of
ooe lire station each.
By dropping boundaries, the ciUes can
strategically place stations lo serve both
sides of the border, ellminating a com-
mon sltuaUon in other towns where there
Is a 8"" station on .. ch side of the boun-
dary, evm though one could handle all
the !Im.
ho other areas tn Orange County
ha,.. already dropped their city boun-•
dariea, for fire pro1ectlon purposes.
Santa Ana and TUstJn freely cross
borders and use the same communication
system. Anaheim and Fullerton cros..
boundariea, but don't 111* the.same com-
munication system. •
ln the proposed four-city west Orange
C6unty network, the fire dcpartmenta
wt!I croa city tines1 they'll use the same
communlcaUon equ pment 8hd they will
also train together at the new fire
(Ste MtlTIJAL AID, Page I)
'
He said traffic studies estimate the
rush hour traffic from the complex will ' amount to 500 ca rs a day.
Hollinden also said the builders assured
the coun\y they could get their water
from Fountain Valley, "but at 'that time
they haden't even approached llS."
He noted that the fire service for the
apartments will. have to come from lbe
county and the nearest fire station is the
(See COMPLEX, Page I)
* * * Green Valley
Issue Not
Acted Upon
The antidpoted _. belftea
-~K.--iftlle -~-'\lllti.;~CHy~eo.mel('-Mr 1lMt.
list addition to Green Valley never-cams
to pass Tuesday night as councilmen
declined to act cm the i!lsue.
But Holstein's attorney, Tom
Tbompoon said thal failure to act, will
lead the council -already ·embroiled
with Holstein in two pending law suits
over the IO-acre perceJ -Into fUrtlier'
II ligation.
"We are left with only one aJtematlve
and that is to try and find the dty coun-
cil in contempt of court," the attorney
told COUDcll members.
He further staled that the council's
failure to act in what be described as itr
ministerial duty ol passing the tract map
may resuJt in finding the councilmen in-
dividually liable for dam·ages incurred by
the developer.
Thompson's statements: were disputed
by City Attorney Tom Woodruff who told
councilmen that the tract map could not
be approved until certain "routine coo-
ditions" had been acted upon by the plan-
-ning-eommissloo
Those conditions Include approval ol
site plans, elevations and co1or nm-
derings ·or the houses and location of the
mOOel homes and sales office. 1be mat..
ter is set for tonight's planning com-
mission meeting.
Woodruff advised the council that the
processing of those matten meets wttb
the spirit of the court order served on the
city Tuesday.
That order from Superior CoW't Judge
Raymond Thompson requires the city to
immediately approve the tract · plans
without the 139,000 in special rees th<y
had assessed against the development.
Earlier this month councilmen defer-
(See HOlSl'EJN, Pqe I)
Orpge C.ut
• •
Welli.tlller
Mostly sunny Thursday, follow·
ing some low clouds in the morning
hours. lill!hs In the 60s at the
beaches, nsing to the mid-70:s .in-
land.
INSIDE TODA\'
Tht D<rilv Pilot, along lllifh
200 other Mtespapers irt the
Untttd Statt;, ts ;otning fn an
e.iptrimen& fn college education
via tilt prlnttd ~e. Set dttall1 on Page 9.
"' ... ..,. lft'Ylc• ' '" ....... • L.M. "" 1 ..... &Mll9en • ....... • M#llMlt ' Clllfenllt I M41Yln )WI c.,.... Ctf'Mf 11 M1i11M1t ...... JI
C."-1... $>" N.i-.. ..... it.I
Celllla M ~ ~ •n (,...,....., .. ,_,. ....
DMll,...._ U Dr.t ........ tl ........ , ........ ~ »» ...... tllllfll•1I ,,.,.. ,.......... M
fllAMct • Jl.U ,..... ,...
~-.a.-.11,,. _., ..._..,. .•
"-1 1$4 .............. .
I
I
I
" Wtdt1t~. Septeml>tr Jq, 1973 -
Valley Com1cil Actio11
. Here 10 c:aPltule form are the major actlons taken TUesdn'y nJgh l b ttle ~ounta\n \'alley Cttv Council · · Y
. \\'ATEJ\: ?cruccl v.·_atcr service to the 256-unlt apartment complex to be
built _Just ou1s1de the city bouDdary and instrucled the city staff to do what·
ever 1& neceuary to block construction of the complex .
. . Gllt:E~ VALLE~': Took no action on the final tract map for lbe Jast ad·
d1t1.on pending ~la11n1ng commission action on some routine parts of the appli·
cauon such as site plans and sales office location.
' . D~VELOPMENT: Denied a request by the Presley Development Corp to
build a 63-lot housing tract at Edinger Avenue and Euclid Street using a
planned development (PD) zone.
TRAILE~: Amended .a proposed law banning trailers from parking on the
~treets O\'em1ght. The ordinance will be brought back to council for final hear-
ing Oct. 2.
FIRE~ORKS: Gave final approval to a law prohibiting !he sale, purchase
or use of firework! by residents under 18 years of age.
l\1EO~ANS : Ap~roved a p~opa;;al to beauti[y the medians along ~tagnolia
Street this year_uSJng a comb1nauon of decorative paving and plants.
Ex-Ag11ew Press Official
Criticizes Haig, Laird
WASHI NGTON (AP) -v;c Gold,
former press secretary lo Vice President
Spi:o T. Agnew, charged today that top
~1h1te House aides Melvin R. Laird and
~lexandcr Haig are responsible for many
~f the rumors and reports about Agnew 's
'.:legal troubles.
'" "This is all calculated by the \Vhite
House to keep the Agnew story alive,"
Gold said. "I'm blaming the \Vhite House
stare at the highest level , Mr. Haig and
From Pnge 1
~HIPS ... ..
.~arder v.•ith so many stepped up decks_
)ind they carry 150 cannons."
·: The Lambs live in a mobile home in
'j'ihe Huntington By The Sea trailer park
·:orf Pacific Coast Highway. His small
work shack is already becoming too con-
fined for his whittling.
. Jie hopes to sell some· of the sh.ips for
ns much_ as $200. He might even like to
carve ships for commissions.
But if that . rails, it remains apparent
!hat Lamb will keep on whittling away
his time.
' :le rubs his fingertips along the smooth
~d_c of his whaling ship Morgan and
.,ams, "!'{le always liked these old
':;[lips. l'\'c al'l\·ays · v.•anted one. I'm
. ii!tircd . but it looks like I've carved
lTiyse\f an eight-hour job anyway."
From Page .I.
MUTUAL AID: ..
training center built by all four cities on
Gothard Street in lluntington Beach .
Picard says the lack of city boundaries
will give all four cities better fire
righting depth -the ability to have back
up units ready for additional emcrgen·
CICS.
· That may hnprove the fire insurance
i·aling some, but because the cities
al~eady have good fire ratings, says the
chief. it won't hve a significant effect on
the dollars paid ror fire insurance.
"The biggest significance, not counting
the city cost savings, is this grea.Uy
enhances our fire protection," Picard
says .
Fonda Leads Protest
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -Antiwar ac·
&ivists Jane Fonda and her husband Tom
1----Hayden Tucsd!l:y night blamed the war in
Vietnam for inflation, Watergate and the
crisis or the American dollar at a rally to
protest continued U.S. support for the
Thieu regime in South Vietnam. More
,than 900 people gathered at Glide
~Iethodist Church lo hear the two ask [or
8upport of the Provi sional Revolutionary
Government of South Victnan1, known as
tlJe Viet Qing .
-
OIAN91 COAIT "
DAILY PILOT
TM Ori~ Coll! DAILY l"ILOT wl1" Wlll<;fl
ts c°""-1'*' "1e Nlwt·Prtu, !1 lPllOllthtod bv
Ill• OrMlot Co.II Pu1>!11llk<19 C-ny, StPll·
tlll ldlllonl lrt l)Utlllll'llCI, MondlY lf\<'futll
Frld1y. IOr COiii Mnf, N1Wporl llt1cll,
H.,..11noton llt1c111~oun1•1n V1tlty, L1911M
a.Kt\, lrwlnt15Addltblc~ 1"4 Sin Cltmt<1t1/
Sin Jv.tn C1pl•lr1no A •lnot• f1'9 IONI
ldllltn 11 P11l>l11llld Sl1Uf01YI llld lund1y1.
Tiit ptlnci ... I P\lllll1l!!n1 pl1nr 11 II "° Well
Illy $1rttl, (1>111 MMI, C1 tu1rnl1, '206.
Robert N. W11d ,.ttt1tl.Mt 11111 P.-!l!.lltr
J1ck R. Curl1y
Vk1 ~rt1ktllll 11111 Gttw111I M111&9er
Th'""'' K11vil &dlto<
Tlto11111 A. Mwq1hin1
M-Vlft1 fd•lllf
C111,l11 H. l101 Rich••.t '· Nill JiH!llMll MIMVf"9 Et111!1>r1
T1rry C11..-ill1
WMI (lrl .... (ll•HU~ fdllaf
" ........ '"'' Oftk1 17175 l11ch loMlt¥1t4
M1111At°' M1•1111 ,.0 . I•• 1tCI, tl641 --1.., ....... •M<fl• t:n l'ornt Aw..,.ut
Ctt!I Mftll 1Jll Wttl •tf StrHI NfWlllll'I •IKll; »)I Nl'Wpll'I llovftwtN Sitt Clfon'Wfl,.: iOS Nlll'lll II Ct"'lfMI ltt1I
T .. .,.... 1714J 64:1..CJ:ll
c .......... ....,"""' 641-1671 ,.,_ ...... Of•• a-t• c-11 .. ..... 1m
Cepwtlltll, '''" 6'-I• C:Ntl ' Pllbllt~fl\f 'i""'"""· "9 ftfWt 11WJw. Olvttrlll-., •1Niri.r 1'1'14111'11" Ill' H1>11t'Tl1-ll Mrtlfl _., .. '"""'°"".,. wl"*ll -111 ..,.
""" .. Of ""'1'11111 -· ~ cloM ... ,... Plfllll 11 Clllt Ml .. ,
(lltfwl\lt. ~-"' c.tffttr ""' ~I "' Wllll U ,11 "'°"1Mf! 1'111111'1,.,
IHllMlllOM U,6f """"'"·
•
Mr. Laird.
"They operale the sta ff and they know
who saYs v.·hat. When an anonymous
\Vhite ~louse source is quoted, they show
no damned inte rest at all in finding out
who said it.
"ln one case, ti.Ir. Laird was the direct
source, y,•hen he called Rep. (John B.)
Anderson (R-Ill.), and told him to go
easy in his support of the vice president.
And there have been reparts that ~tr.
Laird has been telling stories about Vice
President Agne1v's tr o u b I es to the
diplomatic corps in very unflattering
terms."
Gold also said in an interview there arc
individuals in the Whlle House who very
much want former Texas Governor John
Connally to become vice president if and
when Agnew resigns.
"The number one member of the Con-
nally claque has to be Richard Nixon "
Gold said. "This talk about Connaliy
keeps going on and on and he does not
one damned thing to stop it."
Meanwhile, While House Deputy Press
Secretary Gerald L. Warren today denied
(I) there is "a disposition by the \Vhite
House or the people in the \Vhite House
to force the resignation of the vice prtsi·
dent, (2) the White House is exerting
pressure on the vice president to resign"
and (3) the White House has been the
source of stories that Agnew was think-
ing about resigning. •
Warren said he would have no funher
comment concerning Agnew until Atty.
Gen. Elliot Richardson has acted with
respect to passible presentation of the
Agnew matter to a federal grand jury in
Baltimcre. l'
~Wlll'll!ll s,tld JLwould. be lnappropdate
to offer a White House comment on the
vice president's situation or to accept
questions on the subject.
Nixon Minimum
Pay Veto Upheld
In House Vote
WASHJNGTON (AP) -The House to-
day upheld President Nixon's veto of a
bill that v.·ould have increased the
minimum y,•age to $2.20 an hoW' July 1.
The vote was 25!1 to 154. or 23 votes
short or the two-thirds majority needed
to override a veto.
ft was the sixth time this session that
Congress failed to muster the two-thirds
majority required to override a veto.
Nixon_ said Lbc. bill w.ould_ha'le in-
creased unemployment and added to in-
flationary pressures.
He ha~ asked Congress to provide for a
111ore moderate incre:..sc in !he minimum
\\'age, 1\•hich is $1.60 an hour .
House Democratic leaders failed in
four previous efforts to muster the two-
thirds majority needed to Jvcrride a veto
: --' a fifth effort failed in the Sena:c.
George Meany, AFL-CIO president,
had sent every House member a letter
urging the veto t ! overridden and called
on all union Jocal leaders to carry the
message to their representatives in
Congress.
~1eany also sent the members a 12·
page analyais or Nixon's veto message,
rebutting it paint by point and calling it
"a collection of myth and distortion of
fact."
Arnold Miller, president of the United
~1ine Workers. issued a statement Tues·
<lay saying "thls week calls for courage
in Congress."
Although It finally passed 287 to 130
last June . Republican and conservati\•e
TJcmocratlc opponents came within 20
votes of scrapping it for a n
Administraticn-backed substitute .
The bill also would have expanded
co\•era ge of the minJmum wage law by
bringing five miUlon state and local
government employes end one million
domestics under its protect ion.
Nixon ha~ propased a slower incrtasc
i11 the , minimum -to St.90 thls year,
$2.10 next year, $2.20 In 197S and $2.30 In
197&. 1vnh no Increase In coverage, and a
lo"·er rate for teen-age workers.
Derail111ent Hurts :i
SOUTH GATE (AP ) -Three Southern
Pacific Railroad workers suffered In-
juries "'hen an engine and a nat car of a
51-car train derailed TUesdey night in
ihis Los Angeles suburb, officials said. A
railroad spokesman said vandal s were
believed to hnve tampered with a switch
causlng the derail ment.
'
Bandits Hit
Thi~ee Beach
Businesses
Bandi ts struck three flwitington Beach
businesses Tuesday and in one holdup at·
tempi. the would-be robber ned empty-
handed 1\·hen the clerk hesi tated lo gi ve
him the money.
Police said the foiled attempt took
place at about 7:30 p.m. at the Photomat
at 18.S50 Ellis Ave. when a man armed
with a six-inch revolver approached clerk
Cathy Preciado and' demanded the
money 'from the cash register.
"You 've got to be kidding," the clerk
repl ied. The robber assured her he
\\'asn't but he fled as she hesitated to
hand the cash over and a patron drove up
to the stand.
. Police said the other two holdup vie·
t1ms \\'eren't as fortunate .
Santiago Gamboa told paUce he lost '34
to three young teenage boys who held
him at knife paint in a 9: 15 a.m. robbery
of the Shoemaker Shop, 15772 Springdale
St.
He said he was alone in the shop when
he was accosted by the trio who escaped
out the back once they had taken the
money from the cash register.
A lone woman bandit got away with
$141 from Denny's coffee shop. 18477
Beach Bulvd.. in a midnight stickup,
police said.
The woman, described as being in her
early 20s, was armed with a pistol and
escaped in a yellow car. officers
reported.
From Page 1
HOLSTEIN ...
red action on the tract pending an appeaJ
or Thompson's order, but Holstein's al·
torney argued successfully in court last
"'eek that the stay of execution for the
appeal was causing his client Irreparable
damage.
The fight over the fina l addition to
Green Valley stems from the · praposed
lot size.
Holstein is seeking approval of a plan-
ned development (PD) zoning which will
permit an average lot size of 6,500 square
feet. The minimum lot size in a standard
R·l zone is 7,200.
PDs were created to encourage
unusual design concepts and have been
granted in the past to developers who are
willing to trade off smaller lot sizes for
such amenities as developer-created
~arks, accordmg to citj Plinnlng 00.C-
tQr Clintoo Sherrod,
Woodruff pointed out that the biggest
problem with the Holstein addJtlon is that
there is no trade oU for the smaller lot
si and '° flu; CllUD£i.j ·~ l!!!n .!!"' e ra park?ees.
stein's ·attorney has also filed a
amage suit iotaling about $64 .000. It is
scheduled to be heard be£ore Judge
Thompson Friday. There Is also a suit
pending over the city's denial of a plan
for cluster housing that Holstein pro-
posed for th~ property about two years
ago.
From PG!Je J
PRESLEY ...
lawsuits between the city and Holstein.
THEIR MAN IN WASHINGTON
City Lobbyist Morgon
Four Cities
Vote to Hire
Lobbyist
Orange County's four largest cities \\'ill
hire \Vllliam H. Morgan, S2. of Kailua,
Hawaii, to serve as their Washington lob-
byist.
Morgan will earn an annual salal'y of
S28,000 and the cities -Huntington
Beach, Santa Ana, Anaheim and Garden
Grove -will spend an additional $23 000
for an office, secretary and business ' ex-
penses.
Th~ decision was .announ~ !'Ille!day af~r the uiayors ana city managers of
the four cllies had finished intervtewfug
candidates for the job.
'Fifth' Plea ,
Invoked
By Colson
From Wlre Services
WASHINGTON -Charles W. Colson, a
.former presidential apecial counsel, was
reported today to have pleaded the Fifth
Amendment lo avoid answering qu~lons
put to him by the Senate Watergate in-
vestiaaling committee.
Committee chairman Sam J. Ervin Jr.
(0-N.C.), Mid that the questions were
put after the committee voted
unanimously to reject a request by
Colson's lawye r that the interview be
postpaned until the close of grand jury
action involving Colson.
Ervin and vice chairman Howard H.
Baker Jr. (ft.Tenn.), said, however, that
C.Olson said he would not only be willing
but also anxious to return and testify
freely if he is not indicted.
But Baker said the committee received
indications that grand jury action may be
imminent.
Ervin said that Colaon Invoked the
Fifth Amendment to all substantive ques-
tions put to him. ' ·
But he noted : "As a lawyer, I must
note that a man Is entitled to plead the
Fifth Amendment even If he is not guilty
of any offense."
He said the committee bas reason to
believe Colson has 11 good deal of in·
fonnaUon relating to the Watergate ca1e.
But Ervin said the committee v_oted
unanimously not to grant Colson im-
munity for any testimony-be mlght give
before the committee.
--Baker said there was no indicationJbat
what the committee rnlglit get in the way
of information would be worth such a
grant.
Col!llllnnet with Ihe commltlee behind
clooed doors for nearly two bounl.
Ervin said that because of eotson•s
Tefusal to answer questiOos. the com-
mlttee would not call him as a witness
when public hearings resume Monday.
Final approval for the contract must
stilt be given by each city council but all "{:( "'-k 1:f
four cities had previously agreed to the
;dea or Mdng a jomt Wash;ngton lob-Nix on Appears
byist.
Anaheim Councilmen did tie 2-2 when
the contract was presented to them Tues-To 'Bar Ac·"'ord
day night. but the absent councilman. "-'
~1ark Stephenson. is expected to cast his
vol, "' ravor or the lobby;,,. On Tapes Issue ~1organ is currently employed by
h-tarshall Kaplan, Gans, and Kahn of
Honolulu, Hawaii, an urban development WASHINGTON (AP) -President Nb:·
consulting firm. He is presently project on today filed a bard-line response in the
manager for a $1.9 million housing Watergate tapes case that hinted broadly
management study authorized by the that he will not accept a compromise.
Hawaii Housing Authority 8nd paid for P~ b)t, the U.S. Court of Appeals.
by the ~ederal De~nf or Houslrijj !!'\le! COU!J .,of a~ ·m a ~-
and Urban Development (HUD). memorandum issued i;J week, sug·
In Washington, Morgan will be ex· gested that the President, his attomtys
pected lo win federal grants for the four and special Watergate prosecutor
Orange County-dlies,_,_, ~cularly in Archibald C<>x Usten IO the' White House
such !'lffll ·~ l!O:i/4. cool!'!>! lv•ch r ... , an<! determJJle ·.,..on. ~ mailit~l\'11" YoUtb.l.~njpi6:tmetir"'Pfo-ilbat poi'lforii'Werii ~ i\iomiil!'lijl
granui,1ffbli.Sing and urbM reriewat. !he grand jury probing the W'aiergate
•
O.Uy '1i.t Iliff ,._..
SHOWS MESANS HOW
S.fec:racker Rudentky
From Pagel
'BURGLAR'. • •
$50,000 before he was 15. ~
He approached his frequent visits to
the slammer with the same attitude as a
college freshnlan. Rudensky was there to
learn and living in the dormitory was
part of it.
"I went into prison to learn safecrack· '
ing. Where elSe would ·you learn bow to
crack a safe'! You don't go Out lnto the
street and 9ay, 'Hey, can you teach me
how to crack · a safe?'"
(\11.L<>f l'!!'2" for the last 3a years , '
Rudensky now believes that he was !lck
to single handedly "declare war On a·na·
lion of 100 million people." He is firmly
on the side of law and order now.
Rudensky has his own views on crime
and punishment an<: believes it Is absurd
to think that r.Jrulatement of Ihe death
penally In California would deler harden-
ed criminal! from killing. .
"Would you kill them or not?" asked
someone in the audience while talking on
the subject ·of the <leath penalty. "I
would," the man added.
'"lben you're sick, too," Rudenaky
mapped back.
But when it comes to dope dealers the ex~iminal advocate.11 a harder line. '
"I say give them the Chinese t~at
ment -shoot them down in the street.
They deserve the death penalty for ped-
dling d<!Pe," Jludesnky inslated. He la
<envinc<d that' dope dealers cannol be rebabilltaie.I. ' · '
· Ruclensi.y' hJm90ll was rehabilltated
with Ihe belp ol Margarel MJtdlell,
.author of "Gone -with The Wind," ltter
doln& """ for crimes which Incl~ a n m111ion ·~ anc1 • pio,ooo man
robbery In Dlinols.
Today, In adclltlon to holding down a
respectable' ji>b, Rudensky i. a ~
Jrlember'lol the' Mayor's Advlaory Com-
mWloDWotme:b. St. P•ul• .: "n 1
_...,.. -V-lrrf -;... """-'
The' four cities decided to band cover-up.
together because they believe their com-. The court said that.because Cox is an LA Zoo Crane
bined population of 650,000 will carry official of the executive branch,' the sug·
more political clout than an individual gested compromise could avoid the con·
community, according to Dav Id stitutional issue of separation of powers Fl• h C
Rowlands , city administrator of Hun-that has emerged in the legal dispute r,e·s t C 00p
tington Beach. over the tapes.
Rowlands said each city"Will pay at>out Thetoutt fave C61 and the President LOS~ANGEL""ES (UPI) _ w ....... eles
Sl5,000 a year for the lobbyist. The until Thursday to respond. ....,.
$23,000 expense listed for this year only Jn its final WTilten argument to the Zoo officials and a wattled crane mWing
covers about three-quarters of the fiscal court of appeals today, Wb.ite House from its open exhibit area.both have one
budget since three months have already lawyers said that the pres Iden t thing in commoo - a red face.
passed. recognizjng the unique character 0 f Animal keepers had clipped the wings
Morgan will establish an office in Watergate, appointed the special pros-of the crane - a gray-bodied white.
Washington and 'ft'Ork through the Na-ecutor and gave him broad pawers_ necked bird which stands five feet till
Ilona! League of Cities' "Man in "But he has not delegated to the and has a seven-foot wingspan in Dlaht
Washington" program. special prosecutor, and will not abrogate and is valued at $1,000.
Rowlands said about 16 lobbyists, his cons t I tut Ion a 1 duties and But officials said the feathers grew
representing various cities throughout prerogatives," the brief said. "That back quicker than expected and the
the country, already work in the National would move beyond accommodation to native of South A!rica flew away.
Tuesday, councilmen noted that the
Presley proposal for Edinger is in the
same condition as the Holstein pi'oposal.
'l'he planning department recom·
mended special fees or $52,000. Presley
agreed to pay half of that.
!\1ayor George Scott declared that the
~nding lawsuit.a-had-nothing-to-do-with
his stance in oppasition to the Presley
lract. "I just don't think there's suf·
fi cient rationale for use of a planned
development on this piece of land " he
1 League of Cities Program. ;;lrr=es~po~ns~l~bl~ll~ty~.~";;::=iiiiii~i~iiii~;;;;;;;;~= 1··-;;; ~;;;;;;;:;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;.~
said. '
·:)
From Pflfle 1
COMPLEX ...
Midway City volunteer company.
The apartment complex is also in vtola-
tlon of the Santa Ana Rlver Greenbelt
plan, he charged, because the complex I
buildings are built right up to the river
levee with no open space or landscaping. l
The refusal of wate r and the ord er for
staff action were approved on a 4-0 vote
with C.Ouncilrflan .Bernie Svalstpd ab-
staining becal18e he works for the finn
that O\\'ns t~e shopping center across
tlarbor Boulevard from the site.
Tl1ree Cl1arged
In Heroin Rap
CALEXICO (APl -Three women
h~v·e been arrested and charged with
trying to smuggle heroin worth $750,000
in street sales: Into the United States, of-
ficers say.
The women, all Mexican citizens, were
arraigned Tuesday before a U.S.
maglstrat.e in El Centro. They are Marla
Francesca Reveles, 45, living in Yuma,
Arlt., Margarita Angula llodrlguoz, 20. ol
Melie&li, Mexico, and a 15-year-old Mex-
ican girl.
A drug enrorcement administration
agent said offictrs stopped lhe women as
they croosed_ the border on foot Monday .
•
Boys P.E. Shirts. & Shorts
Sweat Sox
All Star Basketball Shoes-9.95 •
Bob Wo~e Super Pro Shoes-9.95
Soccer Shoes-10:95 up
Sweat Shirts & Pants
Warmup Suits-21.95 to 34.95
Football Face Guards
Touch Football Flats -& Belts
Kneepads-forearm· Pads
Teeth Prltectors
, ...... ~ ......................... ..
Open 9 to 6 C)osed Sundays
•
Hand Bans & Glove's
RacquetbaU Ra~uets & ·Balls
CLOIU
·IUNIAY
Wilson-Davis-Yoneyama-Bancroft
Temis Rackets
Wilsoo-Penn-Dunlop Tennis Balls
7.95 per Dozen
Tennis Dresses
Men's & Boys' Tennis Shorts & Shits
'
Canverse-Adidas-Tretorn Tennis Shoes
Speedo Shorts & SQHs
-Bl&Harts=Jires-Tubes
'
Repaiilt·
I
.·
OAJtV PILOT
' .
At Your
Service Onofre Plant Fi·led . • Appeal
A Sooday, Wednesday and Friday
1-'eature
Of the Dally Pilot
Got a problem1 Then
~t Dunn. Pat
Savi11g Rose PetHls
DEAR PAT: I've been sav,ing my rose
petals, \l'hich have been so nice this year,
anl:l I ,yonder if you could teH me how to
preserve them ~o fix in net bags to make
a sweet fragranc..-e for later use.
W.C .• Hunting:lon Beach
Begin by preparing Jl rose (potpourri)
jar. J\Oses sb0'1ld be gaib.ered.....e;1cly_ in
the morning and tossed ligbt1y on a table
untU all dew bas evaporated. Theo put
petals in a large glass jar, sprinkling salt
over balf.fncb layers of the Dowers. Let
filled jar stand for 10 daysJ stirring each
day. Mix these splices: one-quarter-olince
mace, one-half ounce allspice and clovest
coarsely ground. or pounded In ·a morter ,
half a grated nutmeg, one-ball oUJJce cl~
namon (broken in bits), one ounce
powdettd !>tris root and one.quarter
pound 1dried. favcnder liowers or oTuer
fragrant Dower petals or leaves. Fill the
rose jar 1'-itb alternate layers of petals
and spice mixture. A few drops each of
essenUal 0111. such as rose, geranium,
bitter almond or orange flower, should be
dropped uPon the lay~rs as you proceed.
One ounce of cologne may be added to
the whole mixture, if desired. Stir all
ln~dients well, cover and leave for
-several weeks, stirring occasion.ally. This
rer:lpe fills two quart jars. U the miJ:.ture
becomes too dry, add more salt, and if
too moist, add more orris root powder.
To Russia Witlt Clotl1e•
DEAR PAT: My husband and ·1 are
planning a trip from mid-October
through early November. Following a
few days in New York City, we will be
joining a group ,on a tour of major Rus·
sian cities. I've never been to New York
and have no idea what lhe weather
might f>e: like in Moscow and Leningrad
at that tlme ol year. -eou1d you find out
"'hat type of clothing I should plan to
bring?
J.C.L, corona del Mar
UJll Ttie.Mfo
Selaool Senti:tael
.Thor, a German s~ep~erd guard dog, weaves his way through a stack
of schoolroom chairs 1n a Los Angeles school -one of five man-dog
te~m~ lease~ by the schools. The nation's second largest school dis-
trict 1s turrung to guard dogs to help fight an increase in va ndalism
arson and burglaries plaguing schools throu~hout the city. '
. • Trucks, Cycles Involved .,
In San Clemente Crash
U yoa're 11.lCky, yoa'b be mjtyta1 some ' J • ~ °'J:: ._Y•k'• ~-k Mt•,_, ... •-~·11-'0 large true~, an~,·• 1~ of p.m. wMn a ,·ih-.:.YJe Marine Corps .. -....... ,,cles°*~··m, ... 14 f!a·l ""'"' .. ~.~~,.,,,., ..... _. bl aa ~. ,,..,..!,frJiadlcv•\ent-T:_r.:. , r -· ..., , , ~ r su~~y ~w
...,.-. are allkely, bot ,_,d be wise ~; ' ~ drlv~ ~,' • ...'°'.1'ihli oo~s ' . w;, ~ i:•~l!!f"~
to-be ........... ~ --up S8il · -Fi<eiaY~f'or-l!OO·iioiiti , -l!Our a lew-yai'dli-from-the-W:kfui~t:°te
yoat cleWng needs for Ravia aJ W. Inve~tjljator$ called it 1 ' j u s t' House.
lime · of ye"""· EckdaJal..J)Qnd\li Traver! · cu] " lb t onI · · · · -Bureau, ~dvl:Hs yoa to ifrtsa: warmly. ~ra ous a Y ':"lflDr IDJutle~ Behind him a two-hopper southbound ~1iss Elizlbetb Lanson, spokt11man for were produced by .the accident near San, g:_ig was moving at 55 miles per1hour and
the Lot Aqtles flan wbi•. spes&ali&es 111 Clement~. , ~ driver Carl Goodennan bad just changed
Russian ' t'vel 1UTang'elne11ts, r sald 'yoa The mishaps occurred shOrUy after 8 lanes, patrolmen said.· '
may expect some snow ln ~1oscow, Once Gohdennan noticed the slowing
_d_eJlDJtely ram.._slusb ~,_possibly,_ baU. c e l -J rig ahead, it was too late to stop1 officers
Sweaters end skirts, a warm coal and OltCert AJUC({ ~U reporteif,anijtne rig from a Fontana
boota are necessary. Pant suits are trucking firm slammed into the rear or
popular in Russia, Larasoa noted, and the military truck.
dressy clOtbes, aucb as you might wear By Maria Callas The imp~ct threw Gonderman from his
In tbe evening In New York City, are not ·tractor and his rig continued on down tbe
appropriate in Russia. casual apparel, LONDON <UeJ> _ Tem~tuous diva freeway without a driver, finally stopping
with an emphasis on warmth, Is worn tor ~1aria callas, whose scheduled concert against the center divider fence.
social events, fncloding Ute tlteatre. Saturday _ her first in eight yeij-s _ Neither Gondennan Mr the driver -or
D Ii C I ' ~ated a cultural furor here, has cancel· the disabled Marine truck was seriously e _ ver11 omp a.nts h t · . . . . the performance, a spakesman for ur · DEAR ~AT . ('flus 1s my ~ond .t1m.e Festival Hall said today. But moments after the initial impact,
around with Greenland Studios, M1am1, . . two other Marines riding motorcycles
Ria., and I am writing~ to you..againJor_ Th.e sJ?Okesman said M.1~ Callas became tangled in the mess.
help. You'll recall I sent a thank·you let· canceled ::be concert on the advice of her Robert Grant Smitt, 21. and Johnny
ter for your last assis t_?Jlce with this.firm eye doctor. Ray Moi:igham, 27, both of Camp
·State Coast
Panel Gets
Denial Bid
By CANDACE PEARSON
Ot ~ Dallv Pllof 11111
An appeal was filed today with the
state coastal commission against the ap-
proval or two nuclear reactors at the San ·
Onofre power plant. ·
The State CoastaJ Zone Conservation
Commission met this morning in
Inglewood to hear appeals of actions of
tHe 'six regional coastal commissions.
Girl~
' ' ' c;a;....,,.""il
H~Id ·l11· .:; t1l: ..
Play1nate , 11, Stabbed With Knife~l . ( t
\ ·\' G~ASGOW, Scotland (UPI) -The "I could not believe it when wee Marv·~
s~rif{ . looked down sternly at Mary was carried from the court." Mrs. Cairris ·
Cairns m the hushed courtroom a·nd pro-$&id . "I wanted to run to her. l just
nouncM ~entencc: .18 n:ionths in detention broke down." ti
for stabb1n~ he~ g1rlfr1end. Morag who suffered a parttall 1· '' Mary Ca1rns 1s 8 years old. · . Y co i "I want my mother, 1 want my la~ lung in the stabbing and spent five I
mother/' ~ary screamed Tuesday as she days in a hos pital , sa.id after sentencing: I
was carried . by a policeman fro1n "\Ve used to be friends and rm sure we ;
Gl~sgow Sheriff. Court after ~leading could be friends again. rn1 sorry she's l
gwlty t~ stabb!ng 11-year~Jd Morag gone away for so long." .
Bt<!wn ~Ith a knife. . In Scotland. the agf> of criminal · ~ary s mother, Mrs. Helen Cairns, responsibility begins at 8. Mary appeareq !
\11ept when Ctasgow Sheriff Archibald in an adult court because of the severity·•.
Bell passed sentence. of the charge, court offi('ials said. ~ !
The addition of two 1,400 megawatt " '\b" .t~'.A&..•:at
reactors at the plant three miles south of
San Clemente was granted last month by
the San Diego Regional Zone Conserva-
tion COmmission. The Atomic Energy
Commission has yet to act on the matter.
"The key environmental concern is the
public safety, health and welfare." Dale
Secord of the Environmental Coalition of
Orange County said in his written appeal.
The project in question is plaQDed by
Southern California Edison Company and
San Diego Gas and El~lric.
Early Cance~ Detection
Still Best Ally~Docto1~ :
By TOM BARLEY
QI IN O.llV Piiot SI.if
Many forms of cancer are yitlding Secord had delivered his four page re-their secrets to re lentless researchers
!hat the war on cancer is going to he con·' s1der~blY'. advanced if all c:a ncer fighting~
org~n1za~1ons .P~Sh for the creation of '1
commuruty c11n1cs, "particularly in the 'i
poverty areas of our nations. 1·
. '.'!hes~ centers would provide prGmpt
m1t1al diagnosis and tests that so ·often
~.pot cancer and saVe lives," he said.
quest for a rehearing . to state com-but.ea rl y de : .ioq is still the ..1hysician's
mission planner Joe Put rillo. Secord said ma1or ally in controlling and killing the
he will sed another copy to the com· disease, the American Cancer Society's
mission's San Francisco office by California presiden t said Tuesday night
registered mail after the CC¥llition's in Newport Beach.
steering committee approves it Thurs· Or. Robert J\.fcKenna or San Marino
Research is vital and must go on but we
ca n do a lot for ourselves in this field a[~
early detection." " day. told the annual meeting of the organiza-
An appeal of the· decision has reparted· tion's Orange County chapter that fewer
ly also been filed by R~th Payton of the than 50 percent of America's women are #" ..
San Di ego Coast Watchers. taking advantage of early detection tests Ski1iny•d;pp;ltg
Secord said he expects the San that are providing thousands of cures in " " ./
Clemente-based Groups United Against cases where the disease is spatted in its ''
Radiation Dangers (GUARD) to join the early stages. c:rz 16 T d effort. -. "ManY' forms of cancer are 100 percent " ' ' Ur ne · :
The $1 billion expansion project lies curable if we can catch them at this · ~
\vilhiri the 1,000 yard permit zone created point," he said. "Women are particuJarly O M h · i
by Proposition 20, the coastline initiative favored In terms of early d~tection and Ver tO Ot er .. ~
passed by voters last November. they should ·never miss an annual -ii
One or the objectives of Prop. 20 is lo checkup." Inventive Irvine city Police resorted 10-i
promote public safety and protect Calling for a ''bill of rlght.s"' for the an age-old aid of law and order early t~ I
"property, wildlife, marine fisheries. cancer patient, McKenn3 said cancer ""' J
other ocean resources and the natural victims must be guaranteed top quality day after capturing an unrecalCitrant 16. ·
environment," Secord said today. medical care from the moment the year--0ld girl in a nude swimming party~~
The utility companies h av e n ' t di1.ease is spatted to the time of cure and and beer bust. . '-
demonstrate4 ".t h a t ad~te safety thtouglfoijt rehabilitation. They told ·her mother on her .... ,') §Yt~~·~p:ieasures ... ,.~l!}d.~;, '.'No ilbiess 'p_rod~s a :gfe!!ier Qlficer DaYe-Berg \Y2I dispatched-to a " plemented tn the eveil of a reactor ac-trawna,'1 lie said. "We mu.:£ work to PrD-·1 cident," said Secord. He added that there v,ide the medical and psychological trai er ~k at 14851 Jeffrey Road abotlt
hasn't .,been a .su~ssf';ll ~st 91 µie ciJSbion that cancer victims need if theY: 1 a.m., m res~ to another ainong , !t'lf'1i:li ~~1.t1f.'ft._8Y,:: •;: late ";'a:J:i'·•~tioo ,Biid '!ij.>j.•• ;:' ~!'<"•! reporla <ii. ~ 1
developed' · , , ·, • l'°rj " gmir~ ~i.6a~m' u!"'m~;ft.lC:r;' ""°'· 't J ~ • other groilnds tor secw;~'s appeal in~-rrllgbt-prove-to be-the~~~'= . _ u __ e traffic ~-of a I
eluded possible danger from t h e killer with the w·arriing that the 1m-~lcious car-----nearby and cohffiintea tra~spoi:tation and long term storage of munology theory is "still only ex· five young people with wet hair and beer
radioactive wastes, adverse effects on perimental. breath.. , .. ~arine organisms. from __ therm a 1 "lt'S only on the horizon," he said. "We Since the girl was only 16 and in the ...
d1s~ha.rges and possible leaks of low level need tci tnow a lot more .about this company of adults, she was detained for
radiation. . . theory and the body proces ses before we curfew violation and lack of parental
No hearing time has been set for the can even begin to hope that immunology control. appeal~ =~-be--"a-hew-tool-in-the-war-on--ean--01ri~er Berg-fifd1cated, however, that ,
-:1 t McKenna urged his audience and the girl folded her arms, stomped her j'
QUAKE REP()RTED particular!Yt cancer victims to "finnly foot and in unladylike terms refused to reject" what he ca I.I e d "quack get into the police car. ' ~
EAST OF FRESN
'O substances" and "the devious approaches The standoff continued until Officer ·
of the ~pie who peddl~ them." Berg radioed his serg t ho • tum He singled out...Laetrtle, a compound _ . , ean • w m
FRESNO (AP) -A minor earth
tremor was reported by residents of the
tiny community of Piedra, about 50 miles
northeast of here, authorities said .
The Tuesday quake rattled windows
and shook buildings, but no damage or
injuries were reported. It measured 4.0
on the Richter scale.
derived from crushed apricot pits as telephoned the~ gll'l s mother in Orang~
"typical of the worthless junk offered to and persuaded Mom to drive out and piCJc
many cancer victims today. up her errant teen. ·{
"It's completely ~s~less and it is in-Investigators said the others' nam :
human to ~ddle this 1unk to cancel:' pa-d ~ ; tients who should be concentrating their an addres:ses were 1:8ken and they were 1
energies and hope on established fonns released with a wammg that nude swim-
of treatment." he said . ming is forbidden and they have received
on my behalf. It's the_sa:me 'bid story -Sile w.as to. have returned to the stage ·:Pendleton; could not see the wretkage
oi·der-pJaced-iponth& ago,-c.heck.-cashed ~gala ~_Qrm~_wJ!b.ticilian tenor until it was too late to stop and both men liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii
with no merchandise rece1v~ and -let-Giuseppe di . Stefano Saturday at lh~i ch~,~ir bikeS and ten to tfie pave-1! ~~
ters of inquit)' oot anpered: It seems FesUval1iaJ1. Thirty thous"and persons · ment: GEM TALK
McKenna told ti' -Orange County group too many complaints already. "~
-e
strange that ttiis firm' does busiiieS! in applied by--mail for the 3,000 available -They suffered cuts and bruises and
such a manner as to require a customer · sea ts and scatpers advertised that they y.·ere ·treated for reportedly minor hurt s
to appeal IOr~help on a "regular" basis. had tickets available for ,$275. ·~·a,t the Camp Pendleton Naval Hospital .
\ H.R., ~luadngton Beach ... -;-
Vo11r Je1tft.' joins five others cem-
plalnlng aboot non-dellvery fr. o m
Greenland. All of them are being sent to
l\lrs. Naa Anialooe at Greenland, for her
personal attention. Other d11gnmlled
Greenland castomers have received
prompt delivery, or persoul centact
regardleg,-further delay, followtug "At
Your Servlceu commuaicatioas with
Anzalone, llO I will assume the current
b_atcb of complafnt11 will be slralgbtenfd
out, but let me know if any of you with
delayed mall delivery and has offered
Q,POlogles for' temporarily oul•f·slock
Items. No ·deliberate attempt to defraud
tbe customer baa been encountered In my
dealings wllb Greenland. Readers may
be Interested to learn that an executive
of another major firm offering a
premium told me that It Is 1tabdard
preactlce C.O ca1b checks and wait untU
they have cleared banks before fllllng
orden. Tbls Is appareatly the' reault of
receiving an increasing oumber of bad
..
checks from customers. '
·San Juan t0 ~Receive
Passenger Ra~l Stops
By JORN VALTERZA
Of 1t11 OtllY f'llot Stoll
TODAY
by
FORTY SEVENTH STREET
'NEW YORK that pressure from the Mission Com-
-~1 nlunitr began the campaign._..
San 'Juan -Capistrano, which ror years Thus far the idea haS won the en-Traditionally a mecca for dia-
has been without a passenger fail Stop, dofs'ement of Musick's superiors who ad· mond buyers, New York's forty
appears destined for two or them early seventh street has suffered over next ye a r, a leading Amtrak official mipister the Western Region of lhe na· the last two or thtee years at the
promised this moming. But San Clemente. tiontil rail passenger corporation which hands of "solicitors" who stand be-
rail passengers would have to ·'donute'' ,has heavy federa l funding. fore some shop doors, stop shop·
then\.'. ''But officials in Washi ngton. O.C., pers and invite them into the store
W8rd Musick, a western region sta· .C?Vet lh~ir right. to make decisions and using methods ranging f r 0 m ,
Uons manager for the natloowide rllil 1t s ,now ID the 1 r hands. Because they i·we'll J,ive you Sn education in firm, told members of the San Juan can t possibly know all the local factors, . . . ·,, Capistrano Cham ber of Commerce tOday th<'y rely heavi'ty on our advice" he 'said. d1amon s-1ust come in and look ,
thtlt k)cal interest combined with major A . nd ' to, "We need money desperately
Plans to develop san Juan"s old roll sta· · strong factor in e orsement of~ the • and have some terrific bu ys " rail stop is the development ol the old ·
tion into a tourist attraction are the Santa Fe station near the downtown area
Mar.;ne's Wife reasons far the taking of two stops now Into • rallwa'y .. riented restaurant where
. & In San Clemente and moving them to San diners would wait t h e i r tum in the
~ Juan. Mission-style station room aqd Ulen
We s hould emphasize that such
soliciting is used by only a minor-
ity, and that stops are being taken
to stop misrepresentation \Vhic h
goes with such sales pitches •. S b-k-A .J n--~ _ h 'nle two "borrowed" stops , he said, mQVe ~ a atrtng' ola.__old_carriagcs on a fauuet.11:0 vt:al -•fill would leeve'San Clemente with oUier sidi ng where they would patronize -the . key stops through the day and it would restaurant. . . not. affect the Popular trains ror lf you are diamond shopping in
OCEA{lfSJDE ,(AP) -A housewife has beachgoers who travel t!Y the hundred!i A complex ol specialty shops is t1lso large metropolitan centers or
been round stabbed 20 Umes in her 'home, each week from Inland Orange County proposed for a nearby Jot as well. Most abroad, you should be aware of,
th... sceond such killing In Oceanside cities. . • requ,ired city approvals ror the project and shy aWay from. such operat·
within three wee.ks, police have reported. The northbowld 8:20 a.m. train would have been ~cndered. ors, shopping onJy at we11·kno\vn
The body of Vicki SUe Scrivner, 31, was stop in San .J.uan '.and the-southbound Beaidci; promises of the service and and established outlets. Safest of
J.C.
~~~' Jewelry for lhe most (liscriminating ... a .seleciion
from tnese handsome 14K.
gold pel'ldants-Jhe fines\ ._,C\...:n t11f1 she II receive lot anv
cccasion. Mounted with
your coin ot our$.
NECK CHAIN
Hand made rope necWllaf
w1111 ~~1110 ring.
1823 NEWPORT BLVD" COSTA MESA
" -,,
Cound Monday on t~e floor of a com~ evenlng •. train also might be stopped tQ predlctlons that San Clemente. patrons ff all, o( course, is to buy from your
blnation dining and family room. Police ter\ie the cjty, Mu1.1ick' said. Ariitr~k wou! not complnin if the schett· own local lndependent-yott know
said her husband, Marine Sgt: Kenneth The appearance of lhe oUi.ciaJ at this ule were a ~somewhat, Musick ad-he'll be hefe tomorrow and values CONVENIENT TERMS l•t<1kAm•rlc•rd -M•ts•r Cii•r ..
Scrivner, apparently was on duly at morning's meeting f o 11 owed an· dcd a foo te about the success of Am-his reputation in the community. 27 YEARS 1111 tHE SAME: LOCATION PHONE s••·l 40t
Camp -Pendleton: nouncements from l~I busine~mcn 1rak. 1::::.:.:::.:::::;~:::..:::..:::..=:.:=~.:__~========================,_==:::!
)· '
• ._
'
• l
I
4. DAIL V PILOT
Girl Sextu p let . -
All You Cats
Ante Up Now
CATS & NAGS DEPT. -Another new,
gbnmi.ck is surfacing here along the
Orange Coast in the never-ending cam·
1 paign by IOcal govfrnm.ent to gather
.some more cash into m u p I c i p a I
1 treasuries. 'Ibis one comes from the city
of Huntinglon Beach.
The Huntington City Council, In its in-
finite wisdom, just passed at first
reading a new law that would require
license fees for felines and horses within
the city confines.
·As it is proposed to become effective
Oct. 1, anybody owning a cat withJn the
city limits should fork over a $5 armual
licensing fee .
AN INTERESTING TWIST lo ' Jhjs
Ucense · dictum is tbilt the City Council
suggests the feline fee is purely volwi-
tary on the part of the owner. You don't
really have to pay, yoU see.
It is, however, strongly implied that i£ sour cat"'doesn.1t have the paid license tag
and gets picked up by the cat-catcher,
chances are it will go to kitty heaven
with much more dis~tch than would a
licensed animal. -
,1 Tb.us the implication is that if your
feline carries a Ucense, the Huntington
BeaCh authorities will make a strong ef-
fort to contact the owner who might
fetch on down lo the· pound and reclaim
hls cat.
As for horses within the municipality,
owners must cough up a $10 aimual
license without any voluntary options.
Well, you can understand that. It 's
probably a . tot bulkier chore to kill a
horse than it is a cat.
B~ES THAT, horses are pretty
well regulated fellows. 'I1ley stay in
stables, go ptaces mainly when ? rider
tells them to and don't often wander
around on their own at nlghl
Horses are also a means ci. transporta·
tion. ™1 are similar to automobiles ex·
cept Ibey burn hay. In fact, ii Uie
gasoline shortage and soaring fuel prices
continue, we may find horses ARE
autcinobil~. .
None of this can be said for cats-: You
can't ride one. They are not , easily
regulated. Cats will not stay in a stable.
Qit. .....Uy go wber.,.Uiey damned well
please when Ibey pleue. 'l!ils Is uiilally f
al nigh!. Also, there may be a very ser·lOUs Daw
in the Huntington Beach cat li<:ensing
law.
If I read it correctly, the proposed
ordinance says that a cat owner must gel
the license. ·
. .
Dies; 2 Others
Get Transf us ins
DENVER, Colo. (AP) -The smallest
of the Stanek sextuplets has died rrOm a
lung disease common in prematurely
born infants. Three of the other babies
showed symptoms of the same illness
and two have been given blood
trans£uslons, doctors said.
'lbose two, catherine a n d her newly
named brother Nathan, were listed in
poor, but improving condition today at
Colorado General Hospital -a slight im·
provement from a hospital report last
Tuesday night.
Julia ,Stanek, 'vho weighed 2 pounds 15
OWlCes, lived 3bout f4 hours before
severe hyaline men1brane disease caused
her death Tuesi;lay night.
JULIA WAS GIVEN two blood ex·
change transfusions Tuesday afternoon
and a respirator was used to aid her
breathing in attempting to correct the
hyaline condition.
Catherine, Julia's only sister, was
given a blood exchange transfusion dur·
ing the night and ·her condition was
elevated from poor to poor, but improving
t<Jday.
Nathan, who had been unnamed until
today, was given a partial blood ex-
change transfusion. Both babies were
reported by Dr. Darrell Miller, a
pediatrician, to be showing' hyallne·
syn1ptoms. _,
Steven, who bad shown indications of
the ailment. was also improving today.
llis condition was chan'ged from fair to
fa ir, but improving: ]
JEFFREY, WHO WAS in"' good con·
d;uon Tuesday night, dropped slightly to
fair condition today. ~ fourth brother,
John, was still reported in gOod condition
today.
Miller said he talked to the moilier,
Mrs. Eugene J. Stanek, M, anc1· reported
"she was moved by Julla's,fdeath, but
seemed stoic and very acceptiDg.",
Mrs. Stanek was reported ill good con-
dition today. She was alloWed. to stand
Tuesday if or the first tline • sirice the
babies were born Sunday' night. 'J'he
father, 31, was et the hospital at·the time
of Julia's death but left · a short time
later.
Miller said of Julia's death, '"I11e blood
oxygen level had steadily decreased. Her
blood wouldn't clot due to the low oxygen
content. One transfusion was performed
and it seemed to help. But t~ problem
redeveloped shortly after the second
lransfusio(l." -
'Assassination Plan'
Swindler Claim,s Pint
By Elliott Roosevelt
WASHING TON (AP) - A convicled
stock swindlezo says Elliott Roosevelt and
a reputed big-time gambler offered him
$100,000 to assassinate the Bahamian
prime minister.
Roosevelt, son of former President
Franklin D. Roosevelt and .once ~ayor of
Miami Beach, Fla., called.the· allegatiol\;'
''31'!.utter and complete fabrication:".
Loois P. Mastriana told the Senate
' ~·'.sub.Committee ..... ~ on in·
" i~W'*8rJhat 1~,~~a-:
-(-tloo • .wu·61fe;;J<i ,1>eC&U...Prinlo.
Mlnister·,i;yndoil ·o: Pu.rung allegedly
l!"lf!d ' · · · .. licq)se, lo
,_ --,-
.....
MA!~ltif :pVED : time ill a·
federal penitenlfa'fY for lllegal~ties
dealings in Florida and is serving an
eight-year sentence for mail fraud in
Texas.
-----'"'WlS~__!;.lrOngl)'_ dis1lUted by
cats. Felines do not believeth--atpeopt-e -
own them. They own the people. Most
cats make this perfectly clear when they
come to live in your house. It abruptly
becomes their house.
'UTTE R FABR ICATION'
Elliott Roosevelt
Roosevelt, contacted at his Lisbon
Portugal, ranch, said1 ''It is an utter and
complete fabrication and outright lie
made by a man who is a known con-artist
and has been convicted, who has been
put in jail, who has been adjudged by the
courts of New Jersey as a mental Incom-
petent, and who conned me and my as·
sociates al one time. out of $10,000 in
Miami.''
Anyway, the way things are headed. it
appears that people in Huntington Beach
are going to be getting cat licenses
regardless of whether the cat owns the
people or the other way arowid.
It just goes to prove that government
may tell you that your wages are frozen
or there is a ceiling on how much profit
you can make, but government will
figure out new ways to pump up its own
treasury.
YOU CAN BET wliat will be last In line
if the government ever gets around to
putting a freeze on everything. Taxes,
that's ,·hat. -
Oh ~. there is one other aspect to
Huntington's new license law. In addition
to the fees on horses and single cats, it ls
also mandated that cat breeders get a
$20 license.
Now you have to admit that one adds
new problems.
I've never known a male cat Ylhich
had $20,
$4,500\Returned
In Skyjack Hoax
SEATn.E (AP) - A Bremerton man
who posed as skyjacker "D. B. Cooper'1
m-w -attempt-to-txtort-$4!);000-from-a-
newsman has paid back S4,SOO, according
to hls lawyer.
A hoax Cooper interview reportedly
was being considered for the cover of
Newsweek magazine before \the
authorities uncovered the s c he m e .
Donald Sylvester Murphy later was con·
victed on a federal extortion charge.
Murphy's attorney, Tony Savage, says
Murphy got only $9.000 fro1n Karl Flem·
ing, former Newsweek bureau chief in
Los Angeles.
DAILY PILOT
DEllYERY SERVICE • ' . •' Dfllri'rY, of the ()ally Pilot
is guarantttd
MeriiliY-l'l'liliY: ''"°" di 11erli..,. Ttlli' -'--,..,... •r S1:M ....... <•II •ltd JOVr an w111 ... ....... .. y... c;,1111 .... llktll 11'11111
11• .:""
S.turN:y .... SU11111yi It 1" ~' Ml receive ._ ,_,. .Ir f I.Ill, Slhttrd1y, tf' I 1.111. ""'!'' CIM 1n11 1 copy will lie ,....,..,, I• y._. • ... ,1re tlk"' vntH ID 1.m.
Telephones
MHI Orl11te c;..,n1r i'I•••• ....... "'2-•n1
Hfftft'1,,.1t H11ntlfttlt11 ltldl
llMI W11lrnin1l1r . . .. .. •••• ..._Ult
$111 Cl1nit11lt, C1~l1lr1• 1e,1c~,
5111 J1tUI C1plltr1M, DflM ... lllt,
S11tlll L1t1tn1, Lltll!WI Nftlltl .... ~
Atlantic Coast Drenclied -' . . ' .
Town Gets 1.4 lnclies of Rairi in 20 Minrt.te s
Temper •t11re1
Hl<lh Ltw l"r. " ~ ·" 1• 51
6l 50 1.03 .. " " » .. .
" " .. ,. .. " ,, •1 " .. .. " ff ~ 64 •• n n
N
ii
n " n
11 Sl ~ fl "' u tf .... 102 61
ff Sf .11
IS '' I #
1 I! "
N•l.llONA.L WIATMll $llV1(l fOtt(A'I •• 711M 1$1 •-to•1)
29.0l G.00
....
WVOttol
northern ' All1nllC ' CQ.llll• T~!dlV. C1t1wba. s.c .. Wll_SO(lked Wiii! 1.• In· cllff o! r•ln ln 'lO minutes Tueld1v ,1f!ernoon. TM arpi,ond w11 ca~rell wltll l'l'i1rbt1.1lz• lla!t. T1m1>tr1tures d!llOtd lnla tlM 30t I" N'f' of New Yor~ In<! Per,n1'1'tv1n 1 dur na tlMI . nh1llt. 11111na1 n the o In eutMn New Yor ind IOUll!trn N..,.. rn:. ~:f'li.?:ld1!11Mml:m.,1 '.tran:.••1
Fwr totMdotl wtfl llgl'ltff T"'"°
day In Mlllrl'I Ntw York end tOlllWll ~ l!fl91•rld. S-Pl"OP'l1Y w•s dim-'* In MSltm "'°"' lt>l•rld •nd Mir 0111burf, Conn. No penonel lnh,1r1n
WI"' npul1ed. !Stl'Ol'IO wind• wtilppect w wh'll of s
to ' '"' on thl u,s. "" of Lake "N::,ii•rlo. r1tu,.t ~'°''~ '11.wr1 renMd friirn · 1f lrtdford. f•·• la 13 •t f'flotn Ariz.
·,. .. 4.1_ We•tfier
Motlly wnny today, LIOht v1rl1bl1
wind\ !'llflhl tlld morning h!xlfl blCOM> tno _, to IOUTllWHI 10 to ,, kl!Oll
In llllrnooM tod1y tf'l<t ll'luttdty. Hlott
tod(ly, ~ ~. Co.1111 t1mptr1turu r•no• from St
to .._ lnl•ncl temp1t1tw11 r•l'IO' from
SI ft ''· W1ttr ltt1191r1h1tl "·
San, Mean. Tides
~ WID"IJOA'f . S.COncl titftl ........ ~~ ,:01 p.M. Sl
keond low .. "'"" 11111 ,.,,,. 0.4 • • THUlllDA'f 1
Flr1t h!Oll .......... f:U '·"" a.7 Finl low .•... , . . . • 1Dr2S ,,,,,_ J.·1
llCIOfld 111fll " ....... : •:3' p.m. j,, IKoncl low' .......... 12rlS 1.1'!'1. 0.0
• ? • •••
YOU ARE INV ITED TO ATTEND
-CUSTA M:ESA
·MEMORIAL HOSPITAL'S
I Flf TH ANNIVERSARY
CELEBRATION
''YOUR HOSPITAL IN ACTION''
SEPTEMBER 24TH THROUGH SEPTEM BER 28T H
OUR GIFT TO YOUR CHILDREN ...
• I IN COOPERATION WITH THE ORANG~ COUNTY CH
1
APTER MAR CH OF DIMES FOUNDATION
FREE IMMUNI ZATION CLINIC : POLIO -MEi\SLE S -RU BEL LA
Tuesd•y, September 25th
Wednesdiy, Septe mber 26th
Thunday, September 2ith
OUR GIFT TO YOU
6:00 p.m. -8:00 p.m .
1 0~00 •.m. -1 2:00 noon
-2:00 p.m . .:... 4:00 p.m.
• • • •• • •
LU NG FUNCTION TESTING
By our Cai:.diopulmo!Wy Depart ment
•
September 24th through September 28th. 10:00 a.m. to 4:00 p.m.
IN OUR · .LOBBY • • •
ME DICAL EX HIBI TS ·
PHOTO EX HIBITS
FILM PR ES ENTATIONS
REF RESHMENTS
10:00 a.m. to 8:00 p.m. ·r
COSTA MESA MEM ORIA L HOSPITAL
301 Victoria.Street • Costa Mesa, Californi• 92627 •' (714) 642·2734
"
. -.
·SAVE '90~!e
The luxury Touch & Sew*
sewing machine with cabitlet.
Sew a copy of a Paris original,
or.make a decorative apron
~.for a_ favori te hostess! This
is the sewer's machine, -
Versatile zig-zag
•
-....
professional down to the
last stitch-and it has 14
that are_builLi.Q!-A-built·-
in buttonholer, too. Plus
the exclusive Singtr• push·
button front drop-in bob·
bin, easy dial controls. On
sale with a cabinet that
· sewlng.machln1e-+--
doubles as a desk! 756/?92
. SPE.Cl~.iil,
~~!$135
Stylist• stretch-stitch
sewing m•chine
Save almost $25 because we're introducing
new models. Tliis favorite has built-in stretch,
straight) zig·zag and blind-hem stitches. Ex·
elusive front dr.op-in bobbin, otlieffeitture~I
Carrying case #574 sale-priced at
only $16.95
. ONLY'66
An easy operilling mac.hinc,tliat does
mending,· makes buttonholes, sews hn
buttons -without attac:liments! Hinged
presser foot lets you sew ov~ heavy
fabrics. Num6ered seam guidelines, more!
·~Carrying case 1•827 sale-priced at-$8.~
t•lhlon Mitt* zlg.ug
sewing-chine
'•
-Mooe! 2Si, wiWthe"excMlve-79 front drO'p-in l)ot)bin, stitch •
variety, many conviniences:
Carrying case #5JS.0nlv.S16.95 Re&. _89.95
F•lhlon Mate zig.ag
rnechlne wltll c•blnet
Witli exclusive front ~roP:·in '129 bobbin, all·around ta.st. Model
252/242/708 R I 0
S.veonthe
Cir 4;io.9S
~~~GOLDEN GLIDE*
canl1ter v•cuum cle•ner ,
This is the compact filoae.!· •ea•• \llCUUm witli exclusive fea·
tures. Youc.an ad.just the pow· Reg. 109.95
tr for different cleanin1 jobs! Model C-10
. SINGER-~C..-.and pst~Appioved DMlerl
For 110re neeretl you, eee lhe yello~ peg" undtr S!Y(!Ntl MACH INES. ,--
Slnt1r h111 llbtr.lil lr<11dM1l poll,y. Also, '11 Crtdlt fttltl ft ...i11bl1·1t 51,,..r hwl"I Clntm 1nd .many ApprO\'ld 01111r1. I•
.A Tradtmirk of THE SJNCElil COMP A NV C:O,Vrl I c 1973 THE SINGER COMPANV. All Rlal'lll A.tterved•ThrGIJat\OUt lite Warta.
lun "''" 6:" '·'"· s.ts •:54 P·'"l----------------------''-----------------------Moon 1t1 ... 1211• '·"" tttt a:04 '·""·
•
' . /.
I
• DAR,Y .PILOT EDITORIAL PAGE
P eople a ri d Freewa ys
In days past, the state l)ivlaion of Hlghwaya would
tell Its engineers "draw a freeway through Orange Coun·
ty. Make It direct and economical as possible and easy w
bulld.11 Months late'r a plan would evolve and in due time
a ~way would be built.
Traf!ic numbers and dollars spoke a lot louder than
homeowners, e,nvironmental concerns and emol!oqs.
Times, however, have chanJed, as was brought
clearly home with the overwhelming destruction of the
the transportation department. Any thoughts on the
route change should be sent-to hlm at the Department
ot TransportaUon, District 7, P.O. Box 2304, Los Angeles
(90054). For speaklng engagements phone Stevens at
(213) 620.3935.
Local residents have their chance to make their
feelings known. U Ibey don't the state can't be blamed
later for not asking.
slate's plan for a Pacifi c Coast Freeway.
Now the highway planners ask first before stepping <::oping With a Crowd
into a neighborhood.
The more public-oriented process of requesting On the first day of school last week, 18,948 students
opinions from the people about a freeway is now in showed up for classes bf the Huntington Beach· Union
progress in Huntington Beach. State transportation of· High School District.
flcials, at the request of the cities of-Huntington Beach, Even for a-district as large as Huntington Beach,
Fountain Valley. and Westminster, are looklng at a route that's a lot of klds, particularly when they have to be
shl!t of the proposed Huntington Beach Freeway. crammed Into five high schools designed for a combined
As now planned, it would stretch from the San Diego capacity of 14,798. . •
Frffway to Yorktown A venue, west -of Newl"l!d Street. In. spite of the bardshl~ created by th~;~early over·
The cities would like that route moved further wes~ next whelnung problems of what to do with 4,uuu extra stu·
to Gothard Street. . dents, oi>ening day went fairly well.
Fountain Valley residents had complained that the One of the _reasons is a new registration system
current ali~ment wotild surround the city with free-d lb h t th distri t l hi b lb t d ts " ways, choklng them in the smog net. A Gothard align· use · ro~Jj ou e c n w c • s u en run
ment might spur'constructiOn on some of the industrial ~ for classes. i It's considerablf'more 'organized than its
land in Huntington Beach. name implies and it provides a means of registering a large number of students with a minimum of difficulty.
But before state officials take action, they are seek-Distric;t and school staff members can take great
~Wlllr
... I ' l
-....._ l
\
\ •
1fmKdsr !?ATES
""""'' ·~ ' '
ing genuine citizen input on the proposed route switch. credit for devising and putting into, effect the registra-''"'
They have wisely decided not to waste money and ef-tion system and other plans, such as the extended day ~::-...' ... ~ ~ ~ ... ' \
fort on a ~Ian which co.uld suddenly meet strong popu· class scheduling. that allow the district to get maximum ' ' i
lar opposi on. use of its facilities so that the students get the best edu· I
~~~~~Tlie-·~m-an~w~c-o_n_ta_c_t_is_G_ary~-S-te_v_e_ns_._a_p_l_an_n_e_r_wi_·_lh~~~-c-a-ti-on~p-o-ss-ib_l_e -jn~th-e~ci-rc_u_m_s_tan~c-es_·~~~~~~·~~-H~...L~~~~~~~~~~~-'P~R_e_A_M~H-01.J~~~e~~~~~-~~~~~~--'I
Scholarly Theft
Baffles Experts
Wheelchair N o Political Ha%ard I I
WASHINGTON -A light-lingered
scholir has .stolen papers of ''in-
calculable value" from the collection o!
the !Jlte Juatlce Feil< Frankfurter at \he
Library ol Qiogress. Tile the!t <O Ir·
replaceoble 41aries, ietten a n d
memannda -many hUndreds r< pokes
in all -bas been llep\ secret !or a year
while FBI ogents
and · tho library's own-· detectives b a v e
oearcbod feverlsbly •
!or tho papen.
Tbelti!I ·-~ covere! ta• lleptem·
ber lt'li,' after an
alert LibrarJ' of Coo·
grea afllclal nodced ·I
lhal •·-folder waa enlply. It had coatained converaallons be-
tween. Frankfurter and the Jat"e
Justice Louis Bnndeil. A private
researcher allo·Hp61:ted a let!er mlaaing
thal ·be-hid ----• Fran-'• papers earlier.
Alarmed, library olficlal• turned l-
a h-. tea111 ol scholars In lbe vut
~ Ille. \Vltbin a r.., dsys,
they had come up with a niliifnl·items
list that barrifled them. Gooe were five
years of Frankfurter's personal diaries,
nurnerous-liStes -01roonversatlons with'
the mlgbly, memos, letters and personcl
jottings about the rqen in government
Frankfurter had knovhl so intimately.
"WB REALIZED we bad been robbed
I I I
Dear
. Gloomy Wallace Back • Ill Action
(JACK ANDERSON)
Gus
I know JX>lit-emen work under haz-
ardous condiUons but somehow it's
scary seeing how many innocent
people they accidentally kill or
woond these days.
-U.N.)l.Z
MONTGOMERY, Ala. -The uoob-
trosive arrival here of a ghostwriter
commissioned by D®bleday and Co. to
write the definitive autobiography of
Gov. George Wallace for pre -1976
publication is the · latest sign that
Wallace's confmement to a wheelchair
mJIY be no greater polltial hazard than ·..._ o._,. Gws <-" .,.. ....,.,,,,.. w · blind," a !eD.ior library official told my l"Mden • ..... --11v ,,...._. 111t It was to ~anltlln D. ~It. . I ' -Wbi "Th ,,._ 91 ,,.. ... ,,,,,,, s.... ,,_ "' ' ~a e ~ tten. ere wu a .....,. -. .....,.., ow. D911r Pli.t. • "'Ibis. chair ~ it more difficult " ~ amount missing of · ln-wanace' told us , in ~ '
calcWahle value." . . 1 ._ . .-'°:'• . his office. 11But it
Ooce the ~Was_asse~ ~' viii died in 1965 at age 82 d~sn't stop me ~m called In the l"Bf'whlch beilil'dlla'eeliT. -8 ner o<rvtng-'28 years·on -the-Supreme-beini(·110Vemor.,-
lnterviewlng scbolan and --.. To Court. ' Tb8t was !Jlte one . =~ ~.ltrld., To l!Je-y, we have.offered to ;,~_..luf' week.I.>
,..,._y . -· • ary between the ~--· .,,......, ,,_., ~ i...:. · the library We will ~liJ\i. ~ ~te
: thla , ,,... -.,,-1 ,~ . _,..... , 1 ••-· wudlng mJsSlon _.j~to the illlenle ....... ~ ,PT'~ , to ~ea =. "i""" or pfelJ!~ over by the
on for ibe~g papers. ;-. , • • ~~ bim if he will conl!lct; go\ternor. As we left
Bat now the qbf,::lt his rea6d a dead us. .. at 7 p.m., Wallace's legislative leaders
end. Rehirn ot ihe dOCUIJl"'1ti, most \VITBOUT B]!ING able to bind the arrived 10< another hour's coolerence.
library, olfic!Jlls recognize, depends .op JusUce lleparbl)en~ we will try to HAVING recovered from h~ lntemel the delicate questions o! the -scholai· pemiade Attorney G<oeral E I I i o t thief a relpect !or the prtcelesmess of his Rlchanl9on, bimsel! a legal scholar, that wouiids and suffering only minor pei:lods
hlsto<icol hel>l.-Whoever tlle-renegade the return..olltbe..Frank!urter papers is ol ligbt pain, Wallace is.beg~to think
researcher ti, the officlals 'coneede, be more than wOrµi ~ailing off the se arch · like a presidential candidate again. His
robbed with disaiminatialt 'Ind In-for the mysterioUSi thief. mind is as sharp as it was before he was,
telllgence1 selecting tbe moat bls\oricaDy . ,. • nearly murdered by an assassin 16
al ble documents. FOOTNOTE: The ooly comparable theft months ago. Indeed, the talk in ':' ua -in the library 's 173-year history occurred Wallaceland of yet -another Presidential
AOCOl\DING In oae !beery. the scholar In the 1940s when the papers of poet Walt campaign In 1979, with the Dem6craU c
is laboring a1ooe on a project and wants Whitman were sent away for wartime party's vice presidential nomfhltkln the
to make sure be is the onl1\dle able to safekeepmg. After their. retum1 several real goal, cannot be dismissed as
pursue it. If this is the case, the officials volumes of his notes 1 were discovered nonsense.
pray the scholar will !IOJllelxiw ar~e to mlsslng. 'Ibey were ·never recovered. When we last visited a faUgued and
get the papers or copies of them back to More recen.Uy, the library lost 50me pain-ridden Wallace a year ago, he could
the library so that future historians can valueble boou, but a Ubrary clerk has not stOp 'reminiscing about his
lludy the remarkable life and times <O been arreated l~the alJeaed_,.,_ phenomenal 1972 primary victories,
( EVANS ·NOVAK J Alabama that Republican state chainnan !
Richard Bermett is advising his party not l
to field any candidate for governor next
year when Wallace runs for reelection.
Thus, vo'ith only token Democratic cp-1
particularly his sweep in the liberal position in next spring's primary
Democratic bastion of Michigan. elec tion, Wallace could well sweep to his third tenn as 'Alabama's governor with .
lN CONTRAST, Wallace's five 1972 an astounding 70 to 75 percent of the !
winning primaries plus the five states be vote. 1
won ln his third-party presidential cam-1 :
. paign of 1968 are mentioned today only in ONE POSSmLE contender, former J
_passing. Wallace is now looking .ahead, Gov. Albert ~rewer, was barely defeated
smacking his lips with antic.tPation and by W8t!8~m~.the~1970. =~ plotting a PQWerful rol<I bi ·m t he iMlls day B . .. . . the 1'reji.ivenati0n" of the shi.Uere<t-p01l -whi~ ~e-:W I~-... ..,.
llemocraUc party._ •• • . conducted 1,r )Ir !IJ-)llllicloa_l
He has ~· holding qlllft ta1"" .. Wlli/ p Oliver ~JJ.il~*~=~= former aides who lo!lf "• Jed> llbiL Brewer by o~. i, . f:l>o,
While avoiding bani ~ o! ,polltical'• oonllnf to ~'"'"! / , ,
employment, Wallace ii~ It .dear , Wallace, ~-!~··appears -~
that he wants and needs · lea. pro. than ever amm.. hll near-aasas!lDatbi; ~
fessional help from U-olil ~derillal political fact the national' Dem ,If
·hands. The goal: to rebullcl a compet..,l party cannot •Ignore Bl ii staggers ~
staff o! Alabamans !or >"'· Among them the q111cksands <O J.m. . • ·
is the astute Bill Jo-. \Vallace'a oldeat Althoul!l Iii!' old political PJ!pei'lw
political advi!er who loll ~ after, ' built on ·a .P~ ol to\al racu!' aegreg~~
managing Wallace's_.1911 tblr~il1.'.c: lion Wallace tod!Y talks DOI abolil raelf
campaign; his talents ..-oorely mllMd 1• ,\ltl'i"'"aJ>Oo\l"'"!he~.li"ol• "Uttl~.1,:••
In the Inadequately organized 1m cim· The ·popUll.it ·fias eclipsed lhe ·segnoga '
paign. tlonist. I
. Jones and other o1d Wallaceites are KENNEDY'S speech for Wallace at'
impressed by the miraculous physical Decatur, Ala., last July illustrated tha~ unproveme~t of the gov~m<lr, which has: no Northern Democrat can afford to ig-
restor'j1 his ~ychological health and nore Wallace's huge · following in th}-
ended oog_penods '" deep deiiresslDao . ·South or~~puliltic~a·pp·e a·
To them, 1976 looks moce prom111DJ than everywhere. Thus, unlikely though i ~he -governcr's passes at the presulency sounds today, Wallace may well fin..t!
m 1964, 1968 and 1972. htmsel! powerful enooth In 1979 either ~
W All.ACE is dealing today with a exercise a veto over the Democratic'.
shattered Democratic party which, +With party's president.Jal nominee or compe
the sole exception of Sen. Edward M. that nominee to take him on the ticket
I
•
F-ather-da-ught-er-the6ry -Q-uestioned Kermedy, has no recognizable center of Such a tum of political events since his I
~wer. Moreovet_"1_h~_ls dea~ with it attempted murder in 1972 would be
from a posffion o complete dom.inahce at aStonl.Shing and -lna:mgruou:s:-But-ove'"·· ---1
To the Editor:
Mrs. Brick, in her talk to the Exchange
Club or Newport Beach (sept. Ill un-
doubtedly made a hit by telling fathers to
spend Ume with their daughter.i becauae
they are 'better' models than are
frustrated , neurotic women. Her plan for
fatbeNiaughter communications was
great but unfortun ate ly based on ex-
tremely shaky reasoning.
IT IS NOT because women are
;'frustrated and insecure" while men
have an "internal stability most women
du not" that a good father-daughter rela-
Uomhi.p ls desirable. R a t h e r ,
psychological studies have shown that
( MAILBOX )
Letters from readers are welcome.
Normallt1 writers should convey their
messages in 300 words or Less. The
right to condense letter• to fit tpOCe
or eliminate Ubel is re1erwd. AU1
\Letter• must include .rlgnoture .and
mailing addreaa, but name1 mav be
withheld • on requeat If ••ffid<nl reason ts apparent PottT11 will noe be
published.
i different things are learned from each
I parent. Females learn from fathers their expert to support almost any point of
goals, values and what' kind of achieve-view.
ment the fathers expect <lf them. Those in favor of -year-round school
Mothers are u.sed as a model to achieve (45-15) presented argument! and
these goals. By spending ' time with the staUsUcs indicating an educational ad-fatber gtrl! learn the values they will in· vantage for the studeot. 'lboee oppolltd
corporate and the father can realistically brought forth lnlormiUon lndicatlrig very
adjust these values to the girl's lem-Utile Jf any actdemlc idvantage and
perament as he learns to kfl9w he.r bet-pointing out many eonmcts for the stu~
ter. dent and inconveniences for the family. lt is not a question of which parent can
provide the best model. Girt cblldren AFl'tl\ AIL the conversaUon and
uwally tum to the female pattnt for a even when all tbe studies are made, l
I model, reasoning that 11 the letber loves don't think It really matters II .the
tho mother, the hes\ way lor 'the child to everage child et Plavan Elementary
pin that love I• to be ... much llke'~'-leamo hll mathclecla 1.2 months before'
mother as possible. Mrs. Brick has been the average chlld ln a tr•dlUona1 10::
· negiectlna her Freud. · month schClOl. The abovo Ii used only as
\ In falrneu, please print the ntxt an example. There Is no proof that there I speech that extols women and denigrate. will be any dilference. Jn the long run
men on the top column ol page one. (K4) It Ls doubt!ul that Plavan will pie>
CHRISTIN CARNEY duce any more auper Inte llects than tho
-y.,.,..,..."11 Seflool
TolheEdi1or!
Al the recent Fountain Valley boilnl o1 t-meeting It was once ogaln ob-
-tlial ,.,... can find a slaUsUc or an
other eleJMDtary scbooLs In Fountain
Valley. -: .
By ·the samo token, the schools on \he'
traditional schedule may not produce eny
more ethleltJI, musicians or poet.s.
However, they will produce oom•
children who have eaperlenced long r
more relax«! vacaUons. Children who
have had time to sample a variety of
out.side activities, like swirning lessons
witl) the Parks and Recreation Depart-
ment, or the Fountain Valley Llttle
Theater Workshop, .,.church camp, 0<
the Scout Jamboree, or Bible School, etc.
AT A TIME Wben all upert.s ape
that the b<ellkdown In lamlly and com-
munll,f tiOs •re a Dialor ll'Qblem, this
-like a le&1ttm1le emcem.
F0< thiJ -110 !amllles l'irned 'peUUoos uklng for a Vote to determine U
tbe [llI<!Dle In the •~ uea want'to
continue on lhil j6.1$ lfllem. The board r< ti:ustees denied permission !or thiJ
vote. Wt.I do we do now! Wait !or more
studies, more conflicting statistics or will
we be allowed the right of the ballot ?
CARLENE FURGERSON
VRfalr B ike Latc•
To tbo Editor:
I am appalled. at the lnconsistency>ol
the bicycle laws In Huntington Beach, or
I should say the enforcing or them.
MY SON was given a ticket for failu re ·
to stop at a botlleVtlnl stop on bis bike,
along ,wtµi three others. This was his
!Int 9!f.,,.. and It "161 him 115, hall his
wagu lot a week. He ls ti and works
paftllmo, This m<Jrnlng t"11Desoed 20 (I
courited them ) htcytle riders cross Allan·
ta riding on Magnolia on their way to
Edison lilgb School. They were on the
WTODg aide ol the street, did nol use the
· paved lane for bikers and watken, rode
acroas the croeawalk, and all lhil look
place In !font ol an officer waliffii !or the
signet lo change! Where Is the justl~ In
this and how are our children supposed to
respect law' W order when it· is so ob-
vious that tlckela are handed out at the
whim ol an occasional officer? I realize
•
you cail't ticket everyone ror a violation
-but when a mass or ~ people comm it
a vjolation directly in front or an ofUcer,
it is pretty disgusting to someone that
has jllit paid dearly to see them go
without correction of any kind .
THE BIKERS l saw this mo·ming were
flagrantly ~ the bike law -in
~t of a police car, aDd not one move
was made to ·even reprimand them.
U we ate going to'U:ve in an area where
breaking bicjclo rules ls so costly, then
lei's 1!0 mori conslS!ent and· really get
the majority. I feel the officer would
have earned ~ ~ from my son
wllh a nmlng-for Illa first offense than
_COft,tng hlm hill hls earnings for a week.
CAROL FRY
Prohl.,.... i n Jtl exlco
To the Editor:
l wish to thank You very much for run--
nJng an article concerning the recent rob-
bery of my car In Mexico and my appeal
loi people Wlio 'have had similar di!·
flcullies to relate them to me. I have
received over 250 letten or personal con-
tacts concernlng murder, robbery, o!· ·
ficial corruption, etc. in Mexico.
I wish to thank ~I pebple who told me
of their incidents and let them know that
I win do all In my' power!O fight 111ese
problems. -
JOHN J. GABRIELS
Quotes
hi don't think that anyone, ·including
me, has had that .great a track record on
predicting food prices." -Trtasary
Stctttary Geor1e P. Sbultz, on maklng a
qualified prediction that the worst
increase in food COits la over.
home and wearing what his idolators the last decade, the astonishing and in,
perceive as the mystical mantle of a hero congruous have become the hallmark o!
miraculously immune from death by American politics, as Richard Nixon -
assassination. and now George Wallace -are discover·
That perception ls so .strong in ing.
I •
Wh y Hitler's Germany?!
How could the G<rman people, wi1o had
contributed a great deal to Western
civilization over the centuries, suddenly
succumb to Hitler and to the cultural
seU-destruction of. National Socialism?
How could large numbers of seemingly
normal, orderly, Iaw•abiding people
engage in or condone tortures and mass
kiUings on a scale almost unprecedented
in the history of the world? How was it
possible? How could it happen?
THE ANSWERS to these questions are
searched out in Tbe Evola.lion of Hitler's
Germany (McGraw·Hlll, $12.95 ). by
Horst von Maltitz, a member of the New
York Bar who grew up In Gennany and
studied at the Vniverslties of Berlin and
Marburg, Hamburg and Jena.
In the main, the book is oot so much a
history of. the events of the period as a
history of certain ideas and or what one
man did with them. The vartous com·
ponenls 'O!. the-NaOiinal Socialist Ideology
-are uamined, and attempts are made to
trace them back to their origins in
Gtrman lli!tory and clvlllzaUoo. Special
emphasis lJ plar ·d on anti-Semitism, and
on the ronncr GcrmaJ>Jewlsh symbiosis.
THE SECOND part <O \he book deals
with the "moment tn history" when
Wtler arrived on the icene: his
psychology, his parent.s, 1ex Ille, religion,
and various character traltll are dis-
cussed In detail. Relevanl oplnl°"' ol
IOCiopaychoJocists and psycbialrist.s bave
THE BOOKMAN
been taken into account and quoted . r
great deal or new source materlal Is suJ>i
plied, and other material ii evaluated. (
VICTOR de J;EYSERLIN
OlANM COAST
DAILY PILOT
Robert N. Weed, PubU.h<r
Thoma1 Kttvil, Editor
Barbara Krti!rit-"'
.Editorial Page Editor
The ediklr1al ,page of tl'lt' Daily
Pilot -ittkt to lnfonn t.l>d 1Umulate
r'C'Mltni by prnentlnc on thil pqt divt~tCommtntl.1)'' on topics Of tn.\
·te-rett by t)mcflcated rorl\llTlnltts and
cartoonists, by providing a. forum fQt"
readtn" views aod by pmcn1i118"thl•
newspaper"• opltdonl and ide-u en
current topica. The tditorial oplnlonl
... of lhe Dally Piiot appear only in the
tdltorl&l column at ~ top o< tM
pqt. OpWona exp"tlM'd by the cot-
umnlsts N"td cll'toonb1s and letter
.wrlttt.t an thelr oY.'11 and no t'Tldorff..
ment ot thttt view. by lhe Dall;y
PUot thOU.kl be Wft"l'td.
Wednesdoy, Sept. '19, 1973
•
Wtdnesdiy, Septtmbfr 1( 197' Ii>
Selection Despite Protest s .Killer of JO
DAILY PILOT ij ~
' . •
• •
Of Jury
Stalled
Go vernor S ig ns Mullin Given -'Life':.
Retirement Bill • SANTA CRUZ (AP) -
Herbert Mullin, a fonner
liiiiior slucteiil ~Jenced lo life
In priaon In the slaylngs ol 10
persons. may have ''half a shot\'• at 'gettilig two !ll'l!t·
degree murder oonvictlons
reduced on the basis ol h;s
"crazy motives," Mullln's at-
torney !lays.
!lecood.<fegree murder con-
victions, the m a x i m u m
sentence. But be delay-ea ex·
ecuilon of these sen~
pendtlg .., appea1 o1 the nrst-
"drove me kill crazy" aftd
t hat he killed the victims ~
human aacrinces n~ Jb
avoid .a eataclysDl.lc_ eaft6.
quake. • He also said Iii
sometimes go I telpthlt
messaa:es frotn bls fattie.r,aiitt
sometimes from his vlcUm s
that it was "healthy to kill." .
MARIPOSA (AP) -After
t"·o days ol jury select ion in
the double murder trial of
John Phi llip Bunyard, 41 pan·
elists have been questioned
but not a single one was seat-
ed.
Officials originally had can-
ed 80 proopectlve jurors but
said the y plan to call 6 more
persons today from the coun·
( ·BRIEFS )
ty's small popu]atlon of 7,000.
,.1ariposa County Superior
Court Judge Dean Lauritzen
had excused several Monday
and 'I\iesday because they had
known victims Helen Cramer,
70, and Nancy Chalberg, 55,
both longtime Mar Ip o s a
residents. Other candidates
were dismissed after ex·
pressing strong p r e j u d i c e
against Bunyard.
.. e otticlal• o,.sted
a>RTE MADERA I AP) -.
'Ibe mayor and two city coun-
cilmen have been ousted from
their jobs here by forces seek-
ing to control growth in this
small Marin County com-
munity.
Mayor Holmes S .. Norville
and Councilmen Haro Id
Wagstaff and Edward W.
Coltburst were recalled Tues·
day. Holmes and Wagstaff had
been on the council for seven
years. Colthurst had served
for 15 years, inclu ding 10
years as mayor.
Leaders of the recall cam·
paign contended the three
were unresponsjve to public
demands for limitations on
new construction. The three
had supported a $S0 million
shopping center and a 528-unit
opartment complex.
e Witt Elected
SAN DIEGO (AP) -City
Atty. Jolm Witt has brushed
elf a rhallenge by young
lawyer .rim Webb e a s i I y
winning a second four • year
SACRAMENTO (AP)
Gov. Ronald Reagan Tuesday
signed a eontroverslal bill
aimed at boosting retirement
benefits for a f o r me r
assemblyman who owns a big
piece oC Imperial County land.
The measur e by
Assemblyman Ray Seeley (R-
Blythe ), would allow J. Ward
Casey, a former Republican
asSemblyman, to r~ive a
$1,896-S·year pension by mak-
Girls .Seek
'Equality'
In Sports
GLENDALE (AP) -Girls
physical education teachers
here say they have stopped
coaching after-school athletics
until "sex discrimination" is
ended.
· The teachers asserted Tues-
day that the girls have athJetic
facilities inferior to the boys,
that Jess money is spent on
girls' programs and that the
after·school volunteer coaches
are paid Jess than m3Je
volunteers.
AT TWO schools, the women
teachers complain, the boys
even take over the girls' gyms
to run their basketball pro-
grams.
"A lot of people think this is·
just a women's lib thing to get
even wiih the boys' -program,"
sai~ a teacher <6pokesman, Jan
McCreery. "But that's not
true. We just want equal op-
portun ity."
THE PROTEST is by the 30
girls PE teachers at junior
and senior high schools in
Glendale. They have filed a
complaint 1with state civil
rights authorities.
'Protesting'
Gas Stations
term. . .
City voters also rejected T R · ws millipn in park~!'.!""'· .. o : eopen
sptic;ie tiOoda: ~ Ind senl . 'II" fl. -4 '"""'" ~ cily: cOOn:;, ~SAN'l,'tlis OJ!JSPO (AP) -
clltnell iiiil> Nov.,8 runatts ,\Y.llll , Most Serilce' llatiowl hr~
choill"1ters. Voter turnout w.., Luis Obi:IJ'l> cuunw"""re 'Ix-·
a 811l'pl'1Singly heavy 36 per-pected:1t?'reoj>en 11iclaf!oTiow-
Cfft. ing mass clOs\.t~ called to
e Mlek ~ontilrted
SAN. BERNARDINO (AP)
-A j\ldge has aentenced tbe
former edrnlnlstntor cl St.
Mary's Hospital in Apple
Valley to 1·14 years in prison.
Lester J. Mick , 44, was con·
victed ol forgery , unlawful
sexual intercourse and two
counts of grand theft. He was
arrested last June 8.
e Law11er Jailed
LOS ANGELES (AP) -A
Beverly Hj)ls attorney has
been sentenced· to one to five
years in prison for soliciting a
. detective to plant cocaine on
I the Jn!ident of Ute Los
_I _.Angeles-Community College
Board or Trustees.
In handing down the sen·
tence Tuesda._y, ~perior Court
Judge Albort D. Matthews
turned ck>Y.'n a reque!lt for pro-
lbation for Donna Y. Gordon,
42.
e Whu Ele ction
LOS ANGELES (AP )" -
Urban affairs specialist David
Qmningham overtook an early
lead forged by television actor
Gecrge Takei and went on to
win a special election to fill
the J;ity council seat vacated
by Mayor Thomas Bradley.
Unofficial final returns early
today gave Cunningham.
whose oomination petition was
!ligned by Bradley, 8,199 votes.
or 34.8 percent, compared to
6,552, or 27.8 percent .
garnered by Take!, who played
the role Of Sulu in the
television series "Star Trek."
e S"'69 De arit19
LOS ANGELES (AP ) -The
state Air Resourcel! Board
Tuesday deferred action on
the pioposed air pollution
emergency contingency plan
after a public bearing.
ThO Joq.,,.,.ting plan is
deliped to sel up criteria 10<
smog alerts, wantings and
emezpndes -!IO • called
"epioodlll .. -"""""" of pollution ' .. and protect the
public health.
KUls Like To
Ask Andy
protest 'Mia.Se\ i:rice controls
on gasoline.
A majority of t!JE_ 80 service
stations .in the county shu(
down Tuesday, leaden cl 'the '
protest said.
Meanwhile, the I n t e r n a I
Revenue Service said in Los
Angeles that it was dispatch·
ing investigators throughout
Southern California to make
sure retail gasoline dealers
were complying with Phase 4
ceiling price regulations.
Barry Rans, chief of the
stabilization division in the 12-
county Los Angeles 1 R S
District, said SQOt checks
would continue indefinitely .
-Nude Swim
Ba11 Drafted
SANTA BARBARA (AP) -
County supervisors h a v e
ordered the drafting of an
ordinance which would ban
nude bathing at Santa Barbara
public beaches.
The supervisOrs' a cl ion
Tuesday came in response to a
req uest by Sheriff J o h n
Carpenter to be given more
po"'ers to halt nude bathing
which has triggered numerous
compl aints rrom beachfront
residents.
Supervisor Frank Frost said
he will join Carpenter and the
county counsel in drafting the
proposed Ol'dinance.
Funds Set
For Museum
LOS ANGELES (AP ) -
County supel'Viaon say lhe
way has been fmancially pav·
ed to building a museum
beside lhe famed La Brea tar
pits to display thousands or
bones from ancient animals
trapped there.
SUpervisor Ernest Debs an-
nounced Tuesday that funds
would be proYlded through a
foundation to ,bj? established by
George C. Page, creatQr of
Mission Pak candied fnlJt
packages,
Ina a one-time deposit of $1,700
in the legislators retirement
fund.
Casey, 76, served in the
Assembly in 1952-56.
.
WHEN TllE BILL was mak·
ing its way through the
legislature last A p r i I ,
Assemblyman Bob Wilson ([)..
San Diego), said Casey had
told him he owned a 64-acre
section of Impe11ial County
land and 40 additional acres
elsewhere. Wilson, an op..
ponent or Seeley's bill. said
Casey had told him the 64
acres had water and aUalfa on
it , so "I would imagine it
would be worth $1,000 an
acre."
Wilson's April campaign
against lhc measure provoked
~y. who told reporters. "[
told Wilson off in no uncertain
terms I wouldn't carry this
bill if it weren't right."
When Casey sen1ed in the
Assembly, legislators had to
serve for at lea st six years to
be eligjble for lifelong retire-·
ment benefits. A Seeley aide
said the state forced Casey to
puH his contributed money out
of the legislative retirement
fund six months before the
minimum service time was
dropped to four years in 1960.
KILLER OF 10 SE NT~NCED TO LIFE IN PR ISON
Herbert W. Mullin, 26, Leav•s Santa Cru1 Court
James J·ackson, who con--
tended throughout the \hl'ee-
week trial that Mullin was
"stark raving mad," said
there are cases where an ap-
pellite court reduces a sen-
tence when • defendant ha!I
"crazy motives and if he's
acting for humanitarian · rea·
sons in his own mind.''
UNDER CALIFORNIA law,
a first-degree murder con-
viction carries automatic ap-
peal, and Jackson appealed
Tuesday morning b e f o r e
Mullin wa!I sentenced. He said
he wants the convtcUons
reduced to second-degree.
The 26-year-old o n e t l m e
mental patient was pale and
red -eyed as he listened to
Santa Cruz County Superior
'Court Judge Charles S _
Franich sentence him Tuesday
to two concurrent life sen·
tences on two counts of first·
degree murder.
The judge also sentenced
him to eight consecutive five-
year·to-life sentences on eight
degree ·..,.viq11ono. '
ON THE STAND, Mullln
oonfessed to slaying not just
the 10 peJ"S9llS as cbarged, but
also another three l a st
January and February.
The defendant said his
f a t he r ' s authoritarianism
San Diego
Gets Project
Capitol News Service
SAN DIEGO -The county or
San Diego has been !tlected
as the first project area in the
cowitry to operate the new
special supplemental food pro-
gram for Women, Inf.ants , and
Children (WIC). . ·
Pregnant or l actating
women and Chidlten up to 4
will be ellgible for the pilot pro-
gram if they (1} Jive in the a~
proved project area: (2).1are
eligible for medical treatment
at free or reduced cost from
'the county health clinic, and
(3) are determined by medical
personnel of the health depart-
ment to be in need of su~
plemental food .
As a high school football
player and honor stude-nt. ·
Mullin was voted "most likel y
to succeed."
HE LATER dropped out ol
college engineering studies
and experimented with drugs.
particularly UD. During th<-.
past five years, he committed,
himself five times · to mental
hospitals and each time doc"
tors ' diagnosed him a!I a
pa'ranoid !Chl7.ophrenic.
He wa!I convicted of first··
degree murder 1n the Jan. 2..5
shooting deaths of James
Gianera, 24, a fonner high
school friend, and housewife·
Kathy Francis, 29, hoth of
Santa Cruz. He was convicted '
of !lecond-degree" murder -·in
the deaths of . Gianera's wife:
Joan, 21, and Mn. Francis'.
sons, David, 9, and Daemon. 41'
-who were 1F'5'ible witness-
es.
Mu1lin also was convicted of
second-degree murder in I.he:
death.! of a 72-year-old former
prize fighter and four teewag:
ed campers.
• To the people
who love great cars. ' . '
...('. -~-i:
~ • ! -... -. "I' . . "
' 1974 PiiOt:ir Luxury.l:eMans.
The namt says it all. Comfortable luxurious
interio;. New formal window (availatwe
only with,vLnyl top until earty 1974). ·
Pontiac'V-8 performance. Smooth·Wi.d&-
Track rtde. All the luxury you wan t
without buying more car
~than you, need. '
1974 Pontiac Grand Am.
The g'reat handling of fine imports com6il'Ttel
with great Pontiac innovation. Like a squeez·
a ble nose. And special bucket seats. That's
foreign intrigue ... Amerbn ingenuity.
"
1974 Pontiac Grand Pm.
Pontiac's latest.g,9ate~! New classic styrmc. •
Sporty handling 'end pi'tformance. New
luxurious interiors. Obviously, we're
out to make~ dissatisfied with whatever
you're driving.;··
. "
' • L .
1914 Pontiac Fonnula FirebiuL ... P9f't engineerin&. P.art soul. Eiteitl,;g new ~foftt: end with blacked-out grille. Sporty
;"°''l:K>Od,&coops. 350 V·8 and floor-shtfted 1 ,.. 3"'peed. Dual exhausts. This one's for
pe~ who take· the fu~ of driYma seriously.
1974 Pontil\C BonneY.ilJe.'
It's a little ~~e car. With~ dl~t:i~\~• .. 7'
new chrome grihe. Fantastic new v1s1b1hfy.
Handsome new tweed and Morrokide interior1
trims. Pontip:c •s 400 V·8. A great Wide·
Track ride. tor peOple who stUI enjoy
d riving.
From the people vvho _.
build them. •
The Wii»Tra::k people hlioea-., widl can, . .
[!l[i] ' ..
-""""'".............. \ .See them ·at )'()Ut-Pc,.Jtiac dealer to;dav··''~ -
.-
" '
•
The pits 3j'e located In a
park on Wilsh;re Boulevard
near the heart of. downtown
Los Angeles. Tiie museum 's
oost was eslimated in tho '2
mlltkJn range. · •---------------------------------..:...--',~'---"""'=-::,,..,;....:--"--:--::::=::-=-"":'0
..:'--:---..,.-----:
,
-/ -• • ,.
•
VOL 66, N0;:;262, 8 SECTIONS, 126 PAGES . ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA· WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER, 19, 1973
Today's Final
.N.Y. Stoeks
N TEN,~ENTS
-.
lrvi*e S~hool Board Offers Boundary Trade
By• WILLIAM SCHREIBER Of llit Deltr ,,... ,...,
'l11e Irvine Unllled Scbool BOatd Tues-
day night offered to "re90lve11 ·a Jong·
standing, som.\imes biller, bolindary
dispu.te with · the Newport· Mesa Untiled
Scb..<Jf· District.
The lrvllie board voted unanimously to
glve up .,..,, homes lying wlthto their
dlstiicl In Sl>/~ Hill aiid HarbOr View
Home. in Omanae for the eotJre North
Fon("aild Phllco-l'onl Aeraoutronlc iJr
dustrial-eommercial parcel In Newport
Beach. . Newport-Mesa district officials had lit-
tle comment · on the propo51l1 today,
saying only they will "take it under
study.;-,
A spokesman • 10< the Irvine district
,said the two percel9 are nurly equal In '
slt.e -about 200 acres -but that the
assessed· valua\IOOS are quite different. , 'l11e Fonl property, which la bounded
by '!'_on! lload, Jamboree lload .. d
MacArthur Boulevard, h85 an assessed
value of about ltO million Including the
Aeronutronic p1ant, l.be Irvine spokesman
said. ~
· The portions of, Harbor ' yrew Homes
and Spygl~s Hill now witlibi the Irvine
· district will have a value of up to $20
mllllon when they are buUt to Capacity -
aboUI ,250 l1ouse ... arid an uhdeterrnined
DUtnber of'~, lbouses ~ apartments.
'l11e boundari dispule ~ In part
from the facl that the Ii:vln1"~l boun-
•
dary, which was established before the
district unified, se parates the new, 120-
house addition to Harbor View Homes
Crom the rest of the tract.
The boundary also cuts through the
Spyglass Hill development, putting about
a fourth of the area in the Irvine district
and the reamainder in Newport-Mesa .
The Irvine district already includes
part of the North Ford land be(ause the
boundary cuts diagonally across it .from
Jamboree Road to MacArthur Boulevard.
Collective Bargainin g
The swa p, if approved, would give Irvine
the rest of that land.
Boundaries in that section of Newport
Beach have been a sore spot since the
earl y 1960s.
A series of land \rades put large por·
lions of the Irvine distri ct (then San Joa-
quin Elementary and.,. Tustin High School
Districts) into the Harbor Area school
syste m.
Before trades with the old Newport
elementary and Newport Harbor High
School districts, San Joaquin and Tustin
boundaries included most or the land
north of Pacific Coast Jli ghway and east
of Upper Newport Bay -including what
was to become Newport Center.
Newpo rt Beach residents living In the
hills above Corona del Mar wanted their
children to attend Newport Beach schools
since the nearest San Joaquin schools
were miles inland .
San Joaquin gener8.Jly acceded to the
(See BOUNDARIES, Pag• %)
Teachers Asking Powers.
9-...............
Teachers in the Newport·Mesa Unified
School District made a plea Tuesday for
legislation that wou1d give them th e right
to bargain collectively with the school
board.
"We feet teachers ought to have the
same rights to negotiate with their
employers that other workers do," said
Jerry Shannon, president of the Newport·
Mesa Education Association.,
"09terwise the school board ,has die·
tatoria.I powers to do whatever they want
Two Hostage
Victim s Show
hi:tproveme,.m
·"A!'~""t:f&-:!,LLDL~..J;f'" I
NUl"leS at <Alta Mesa Memorial
lloopllal ..... todoJ· thlt two -kid; ~boll-.-.ny -bY gunfire have now recovered
•
.Ships Carved
enough to be renioved from the intensive
care ward.
Marco DeSilva, 20, of 3505 Newport
Blvd., Newport ' Beach, and Denine
Baeseman, 17, or Pasadena, both remain
in serious condition in private rooms, but
.,.. lteodily 1•tllng helter. Retiree Whittles Away the Time
•
'l11e victims -each hit by .38 caliber
slup -WKlerwent surgery last Thurs-
day following the dramatic confrontation By TERl\Y COVILLE of .... D.itr ...... , ....
Richard Lamb •its paUenUy· lm!de the ' small, cramped shed In bock of bis Hun-
lingtAJn Beach trailer botiie and quietly
whittles away lhe hours.
' Sj:r hours a day, aeven daya 1 ·week;b~
·~· ·r HiJ: FNfnOh ~e, Gftletle, J!(i)tes lie~
nose in. the. door from Ume 1o time,
~g a critical glance at his late<! .pro._
j~-.:. another early 19th.century &lillJJI'
-oblP,.-. -. •
. Sinee-cbtistmlis. Wnb bas ~ i<!' IP IClli:;'iriodel salllq "'1ilpi, ·iile ~ill ilioul !oar ·feen~'lrutn -~ stem.• ,\.. ,.
''MY lint waa a clipi)er ship, the Glut
!\<Public," lie 11y1, "Al the dine I
thoug!it II "'I'• pretty nice, but ..,., I notitO ll was all out of. proportion." ·
He )lunched that project shortly afttr
Christmas and had her IJ1mmod• Jllld
red;Jl~in two weeks.
!i'ow It takes him a so11d month to,com-
plete a ship. The better be gets, ~
longer it takes. -
... ,,t:had to'i earii M-tience.'' he said.1
•Lamb is only 46, but he bu a lot ol time on his hands. Alter 11 y .. n in the
millllley, ~ Tetired,' then beg8JI\ wori
with the pOltal 'se'rvice. But two years
IC!> 'iie'.ha4 'to drop•out of that beeause of
a heart condition~. Since ·then he bas · ,..rched for
t!Olllelhing • I!) fill . the void. Lui aiftatmu Glnelle gave him .a· 1&-iocb
al1lp model lo pi«e together.
the Elcuo, a Spanish tralnfiig ship. Wednesday nigbt in a home at %322
The bulls .,. carv•d from large blocks Orchid Hill! Drive, Santa Ana Heights.
of sort redwood, cedar or pine. He Newport Beach Police have wrapped up
normally starts with a chunk of wood much of their case against Roland D.
four feet by lix feel Ctawfo~at. who is held at Orange
Lamb grabs varlO:UJ other materials County Jail in Ueu of $100,000 bail set for
for the sma1j. ~ parts of the ship. 14 felony counts filed against him.
-Fiab !ihe-_"•llllod lle rigging. Tooth He allegedly commandeered their car
pleb • ~ harpoona _with , a metal and then switched to a second, kidnaping ~cat <.from aluminum beverage a third female hostage in Corona de! Mar cans:' . . while babbling about being sought by
The mu!s are pieces of wood doweling. police. tee cream sticks are transformed into Investigators tracking his true Identity
oars for life boats. An 9ld sheet is sliced through fingerprints learned from the
fl) cover lif~tlr'll1a-pro'1de-a-cllp>tpez•.r·-FBL2l>.day• later.tlm Ctow!grd il!!!!!Jlld bail 3J months ago in El Paso1 Tex., on a "'!P '!"II> white sails..BBs serve as cat>-marijuana smuggling charge.
nqnrballs. .. ~ He is wanted by federal authorities ~.11 :tateS Lamb 20 minutes to carve there to face renewed prosecution, but
each ,litly, wooden rum barrel placed on they apparenUy had no leads on his
the deck. whereabouts at the time. Wednesday's
'Glnet~, who thought a retired man bizarre Dil!ht began.
would spend more time In the living Crawford, who had been living with
room, la pr.ad of lier sblp carver and friends at 75% Main St., Huntlngton Beach
doeln't. heslt.te to ofter a criUcal ~ .and using an alias, escaped injury when
gestion now and then. police ha¢ to open fire Inside the house .
''l'sh proud lo see him do !t, but he The patromen present and OeMarco
does run me crazy getting materials," have .told police Crawford tried several
she 1leµabs . tirr.es to shoot his misfiring .357 Magnum
•1rm ,Just , trying to better ,myself,'' ~pistol as the male hostage fought ror it.
Larnfi:iilterjects. "SOmeday I want to do He bad aimed, they claimed, at both
IODJe Qld. Spanish gaUeons, but they are officers who had their own guns drawn
taarder with so many stepped up decks and earlier misfired the pistol at
~d·they carry 150 caMons." DeMarco's stomach.
The Limbs live in a mobile home in Officer Joo C.OStelow ,had been wounded
.(See SIIlPS, Page Z) sllghUy when shot at earlier.
' .
Attorae1's Angry
and teachers have DO power at all."
A bill guaranteeing the right of col·
lective bargaining for teachers pas.sed
the Legislature this session and is
·awaiting action by Gov. Ronald Reagan.
The bill by Senator George Moscone
(D-San Francisco) has . been opposed by
the Newport-Mesa Unified School Board
on the grounds that forced collective
bargaining would drastically reduce its
ability to run the school district.
ShaMon, a special education teacher
for the district, admits collective
bargaining would erode the power of
school boards, but he says a reduction of
their power is "long overdue.''
"No group of human beings should
have the power to be judge, jury, and
prosecutor over other human beings, as
school boards now do," says a 9tatement
released. Tuesday by Shannon and Chuck
Gordon , presldent-elect of the education
association and 4 teacher at McNally
Continuation High School.
•Nothing Safe!'>
Ex~.convict Demonstr.ates_Pro.we ss:.
By RUDI NIEDZIEl3Ja
Of ... Ollfy ......... -
Guiding a thin w!il fl<*' llilo !be ke= of a ais--i,ler ....,_, "Red"
'l aty'.; tm,«s nte roct-eludy u
lie _prepared for his 6>sta Mesa caper.
7his was an easy Job, requiring neither
punch nor nitro, and there was no danger
of being arrested. Some of Costa Mesa's
leading citizens, were in on the job.
Big Red was in town to te.acb them
how to burgle.
"I usually like to do it as fast as turn-
ing a key," said the muter safecracter,
now 75 years old, who said he had never
been stopped by a lock.
It took a little longer than that and Red
was. upset. But he took revenge on a
more complicated eight-tumbler version
and popped it open before you could
count to lhree.
Rudensky, who spent 35 years of his
life in prison learning his profession and
suffering for his mistakes, is still in the
lockbustlng business.
"Everything is as it was before, but
now it's legal," he assured m~mbers of
the Llons Club. He told them he got his
last job through the St. Paul chief of
police.
Rudensky, is now a "consultant " to 3-
-M""COmpany. He ~ror the secunty
systems division: They build the locks
and Rudensky tears them apart, then
serids the engineers back· to the drawing
bords.
Tuesday be came to Costa Mesa to
show off his expertise and to tantallu
the Lions with stories from his criminal
life.
He told them how be became the top
banana in Leavenworth, how he once
fro·:? prison bars with dry ice ..... d busted
them out after they crystallized, how he
spent two years in the can with Al
Capone, and how he kept his hand "in the
business" by serving-as-Leavenworth's
locksmith. · .
It was all quite entertaining, but Red
said he wouldn't do it again.
"I actually got sick or It. I wanted to
(See 'BURGLAR,' Page Z)
0.111 P'l .. t s1.n ,...,...
SHOWS MESANS HOW
Safecracker Rudentky
Corona del Mar
Theater Manager
Dies; Probe Set
A Corona del Mar theater's elderly
night manager died at Hoog Memorial
Hospital Tuesday night, apparently or
natural or accidental causes, alt.hough at
first if was feared he may have been a
strongarm robbery victim.
-''I lookecHI over,and d~Clded I could do
a Joi -bei\M' on mt own," lie ·esplllna ..
''lioqle of the bla boot klta coot !70. I can
c~tlie"~ model !or a~t !30."
lie coptel, Ille. mocWI from ~· small
booldet on early ohlpa. The booklet shows
1 picture and llata scale dlmenslona.
Attache (3~se Blown Up
Budd Beaman, TT, 'or 1220 Park
Newport , was found wandering in·
coherently inside the Port Theater, 2905
E. Coast High way, during ·pre-dawn
hours'"Tuesday.
His worried wife telephoned Newport
Beach police when Beaman became an
hour overdue at home from hls
customary arrival time after closing the
show at midnight. He bu expertly fashlcmed rtpll<11 ol
the ,uiS ConltltuUon frvm the Revolu-
tlao: •tlit-Cborleo *"'" (bis Jll!Udiest Jl!iiilucl), Ill" early -: Ille -. u.tber U.8., Re'°lutlulary wanhlp; and
~
Released From Jail ,
SAN BERNARDINO (AP) -lltllle
Waldo Nichols, so, a v ... tura •lectric
company lfnenlln, n1 rel•...._ 1\Mllday
from the codnty Jill here ofter belar held
IOI' tnvaotlpUon of • ,ft .. Y•II'<!ld
murder cue. Nichols w1m·1 d!orPd in
the murder of Mary Juata Cirt,.rlght,
21, • P.-.a art aludent who dlaap-
ptared. In J.,. 1•.
• -,
The most e:rploslve case at Harbor
Judicial District Cow1 Tuesday wa!t
handled by Newport Beach attorney
Walter~ and the sheriff's bomb ' . -oguad.
Barrlater Bannger had forgotten bis
DOW ltllcbe CUO CO!ltalnlng varlOlil legal
papers Monday aner,ioon, leaving II In a courtroom.
Depaty manhalt then noUced an
ominoua black_salcbel u the night traffic
court llroM up.
Four morsbalo who rectntly bad com-
pleted a school dealing with d .. truc11ve
devices thoulhl It look preUy alnilter.
11te caa 11lo 19C>ked llke an attorney'•
homework, but· oo altomers bad lietn in
court llnct afternoon , • J.
'
The marshals knew if it was a bomb
with a mercury switch a gentle touch
might ,.t l\ olf.
'lliey called the 01'11Dge County Sber-
lff'I bomb ~l squad anct·its pers<>n-
nel laseoed !!10 black leather satchel and
gingerly bouted It out of the courtroom
and down the corridor.
Marshal Sgt. Ed Postel sald It was well
alter mldnight when the threatening
briefcase w1s tenderly set In place under
a tree on, the front lawn:-
Sberlff's l)>fClallsts attached a small
e.xplosive charge to the elegant, $125 ex·
ecutlve'a 1ccet10ry Ind BOOM.
"The blast didn't hu rt the papers in-
side, but It sure did damage the brief-
case," Sgt. Postel remarked.
•
Deputies blew out one whole comer of
the briefcase Attorney Baranger's wife
had Just given him as a present.
0 Mt. Baranger J 1 n ' t verf happy, 11
obOOtve<l his Jaw partner, Alan Plai1.
Contacted later today, A Ito r n e y
11..ranger said his law partner ls indeed
right.
11Tt was my only decent briefcase -
with my lnltlals Jn gold on the sic!J -and
frankly, 1'm licked off," he dl'Clared.
"It's not repairablt. They blew the
whole end out ""Of It. t am going to make a
cli im against the county," Baranger em·
phaslzcd. • •
11SUrety," he said, "they have ln·
surance cove.ring acts of their emptoye.s
convnltted In the line or dut7.11
DetecUve Ken Smith said investigators
arriving to' check could obtain no
coherent lnlormaUon from the vlcUm.
who had a sma ll cut on the back of hb
head.
Th i loogUme theater e m p I o y e
reportedly resisted efforts to take him to
the hospital but Mri. Beaman was called
to the scene and drove him.
. Examination of lhfl theater yielded no
cvktence of a robbery or beating to AC·
counl fot J3eaman.'s coodition, which by
tht'.!n had raptdly begun to worsen. -
He lapsed Into critical, comatoee coi'I·
ditlon at the hospital~ where it was
determined that he probably suffered a
slight stroke, then fell, causiog a null
fracture,
. ~
'r. t The statement argues that teachers
should have broader powers in the opera ..
tion of school districts than they now do,
and that collecti.ve bargaining laws would
help them get that power. .
'Ille statement was made in res~
to Newport-Mesa school board mem~
Marion Bergeson's call earlier this week
for Governor Reagan to veto ,the
Moscone bill. Mrs. Bergeson said she was
speaking as vice president of the
(See TEACllEJ\S, Page Z)
Ex-Agnew Aide
Slams · I .aird,
--~
Haig on News
WASIDNGTON (Ai'f =-vie Gold, r-i preu _,,11r7 ... VJco l'nlldt\I!
.... T. "-• dmpd....,. ta.I ... Wbfte House aldH MelVln R. Laird onCI
Alemnder Haig are responsible for many
or the rumors and reports about Agnew's
legal troubles.
'"Ibis is all calculated by the -WbJi.,
Houae to keep the Agnew story alive.•
Gold said. "I'm blaming the White Houso
stall at the bigbesl level, Mr. Haig ... Mr. Laird. . .
"'Ibey operate the staff and they knoW
who says what. When an anonymOUI
White House source is quoted, they sho9
no damned interest at all in finding out
who said it. ~
"In one case, Mr. Laird was the dired
source, when he called Rep. (John 8.)
Anderson (R-Dl), and told him to go
easy In bis support of the vice preald<nt.-
And there have been reports-that -Mr,
Laird has been telling lllorles about Vp
President Agnew's t r o u b I e 1 to tbi
diplomatic corps In very unflattering term.s." •
Gold also said in an interview there are
individuals in the White House who very
much want former Texas Governor John
Connally to.J>ecome vlce-president-il-and
when Agnew resigns.
"The number one member of the C.On-
nally claque has to he Richard Nixon,"
C:Old said. "This talk about Connally
keeps going on and on and he does not
one damned thing to stop it."
Meanwhile, White House Deputy Press
Secretary Gerald"L Warren today denied
(1) there is "a .disposition by the White
House or the people in the White House
to force the resignation of the vice presi·
den t, (2) the White House is exerting ·
pressure on the vice president to resign"
and (3) the White House has been tba
source of stories that Agnew was-think ..
(See· AGNEW, Page Z)
Oruge
•
Weadter
•
Mostly sunny Thursday, folio\\>'•
ing some low clouda in lhe morning
hours. High! in the 60s at the
beaches, rising to the mld-70! in.
land.
INSIDE TOD/\ Y
The Dailu Pilo~ along 1Dith
200 ot/U'r newspaptr1 fn the
!/Ttited Stal••· la Joining in cm ·
erperitnent fn e0Ue9e education ,
vio the prlnud pag•. Se• detaUt •
on Page 9.
At Ytlll' Sfnlee i
L.M. hYti r
INHMI M c.i1ton11t s Ce'"" Ctrlltl' 11
Clllt1lfl.. U·1' "'""" ~ CfOSl-.I ..
Ont• Nollet• , 11
l•llerl•I P'Ht •
lllfffttlllfl'l"'I """
''""" Jl.U , ............. 11.tt --.
•
'
2 DAIL V PILOT N WtGritsday, Stpttmbtr 1q, 1973
• ------
Scl1ool Site
·-Sm·pluses
.
Po11de1·ed
By JOH N ZALLER
or "'' Dt!lt l'llOI Siii! The Newport-h1esa Unified School
Board mo\'cd cautiously Tuesday toward
3 declaration that four \'acant school
sites arc surplus and can be sold to Cost.a
~lesa for use as city parks.
Although the board indicated that it
probably will <'Venlually sell !he 45 acres
or vacant school land . several tn1stecs
expressed reservations about the sale.
Trustees said they "'ere disturbed
because Costa Mesa taxpayers had
~lready paid ror the land once to use as
school sites and were now about to pay
for them again for use as parks.
"It's a thorny question.'' said Board
President Donald E. Smallwood. "But y,·e
have to assume that Costa Mesa voters
unders tood thi s when they agreed in their
bond election to assume the tax burden
for doing it."~
~Costa Mesa voters last week gave 71
percent approva l to a $2.2 million bond
proposal to buy an estimated 70 acres of
parks and open space land .
Newport-f\.1e sa trustees d e c i d e d
unanimo usly Tuesday to :
-Order a new appraisal of their four
school Sites to determ ine their fair
n1arket value. A six-month old appraisal
by !he dist rict sets the value at about $2
fnillion, v.•hich is about $1.2 million more
:than \\'as originally paid for lhe sites.
· -Asked Superintendent John Niooll
for (urther rep>rts to assure that the four
sCfuol sites r~lly arc surplus.
-Directed Busi ness Manager Ray-
mond Schnierer to provide a detailed
breakdown on the rinancial status of the
school sites.
-Scheduled a public discussion for
Oct. 2, at which time trustees can, if they
wish, make the formal declaratio n that
.:the school sites arc surplus.
8 • -Cal1ed for an investigation oC the
"1listrict's title to the land to see if it owns
::fnineral rights to any oil that might be ~scovered underground.
~ Three of the school sites are located in
.'.'tile iminediate area o.f . the .future
;Fairview State Park. Off1c1als said the
J;ites \\'ere originally purchased on the
"".assumption that the p:irk would be
Jleveloped as a residential area.
• The fourth site is located north of the &ti Diego Freeway and east of Fairview
Road. Officials said that site is not need-
ed becaUse the land near it has been re-
zoned from residential to industria l use.
Th~ moral problem r aised by trustees
jnvolves the fact that the four school
sites were bought and arc still being paid
·for by taxpayers residing within the old
Costa Mesa Union School DistMct.
1 :-However when the Costa ~1esa and
Newport Beach school systems merged
in 1966, ownership of lhe land went to the
newly created Newport-Mesa Uni f I e d
"School Dlstrfcr.
Fro11• Page l
'BURGLAR'. • •
be a master criminal but I was actually
a professional loser. Tha t's the Litle 1
earned. I v.·as ;i. stupid ass," said Red .
Stealing bagels and bananas from
pushcarts on the lower east side,
Rudensky said he got his start by his
parents. They provided little supervision
And never shGwed him the difference
bet\\·een right and wrong.
-He ran a\\·ay from home \Yhen he y,•as
l'l and escaped fro1 the New York Slate
Re[ormatory in Elmira at the age of 14.
-Rudensky claims he heisted more than
$50.000 before he \Vas 15.
He approached his frequent visits to
the slammer \\'ilh the same attitude as a
coll ege freshman. Rude nsky \Va s there to
learn and living in th e dormitory was
part of it.
"I \\'ent into prison to learn sa fecrack·
ing. Where else \vould you learn how to
~ack a safe? You don't go out into the
street and say, 'Hey, can you teach me
how to crack a safe ?' "
Out of prison for the last 33 years.
Rudensky now believes that he was sick
to single handedly "declare "'ar on a na-
tion of 100 mi llion people." He is firmly
on the side of law and order novr .
' OU.NG-I COAST N
DAILY PILOT
Tn1 or1noe eo.11 OAIL'I' P!LOT. wllh ,.,,;,;11
it comDIMd tn1 N1w1.Prtn, It PUbllMled bV
IPll Or111ge CO.ti P11blltlllnO (OITIJ>tnt . Sti>•·
,~le ..tUlont 1r1 l>\lbll1!'1td, MOftd•Y 1~'0119~
fifldtt, fOI'" Coll• M1 .. , NtwPl'•I ll11cft,
HunHnolOll 8tK !'lf,oun11in 11.i1-v, Ugun1
BNd'I, trvlnt/Stddlltll'k 1nd St n Cllfntnl1f
sin Juen Ctpl11rtno A ••llOI! •1tlomot
Ml!IOn 11 PUbll\111111 lllllf'dlVI Mnd S11N11y1.
fh• pr!nc:INI pUbn1fllllf Pl•nl +. f l ,,, Wtll
l•t Strtt l, Cnl1 Ma.., Ct!lfornl1, fll1t.
11.obert N. Wttll
Pre11dtrll lt>CI Pucu,,,.er
J•ck R. Cu1 lty
Viet PrnlOM! ..-rd Grntrt l M•ntget
Tho"''' Ktt•il
Ellltor
Tho..,11 A, M u•p~i111
M1Ng!rop Eanor
l . Ptltr Krie9
N-pert ltK!I Clry l!allor
N""IM'f '9«11 Offld
JJ)J Newport lo11lt ••tll
M1 ili119 ....,,,..,,1 P.O. l ox 1175, •266J
OtMf OHie•
C:.Slt MfM,1 UI WIHI .. , Sf>"ttl
~ IM<l'll m ,..,,,, Av'"~
""'°llftltrllll IHdl; 11111 IHcll .......... ,.
S.11 C~lfl J0$ Nllf'tn El (1n11,.. llHI
Tll.,._. C7t41 '41-4)21
Cl-"W A.4"rtttlttt 642·1671
Cte>yilt~t, 1'7L~ 0'111111 Cot11 P\11111_,,ll'lt
COfl'llllm' Nt -'""*· IHw lrt•leM, M IW lll 'mtl)tr Of' <lfv.rll1tm1~11 Mrtln
'""' bt r~llll wltlltll1 1-111 fltf·
mitt• Of' tor/'fllftl -·
1fK*1111 dfM _. ... M i. 11 Ct1l1 Mtu,
C.11"'1\lt, l*<f"•tlOn Irr urr!tr U.61
-91111 I ., -II IJ U "'°"''""'I "'lf"l'l'
Otlt!NilW!I ...... "*""''-'•
(
I rvi1ie Ceriter
Plans Filed
The Jrvine C'.ompany said today
an appllcatlon for prezoni111 of the
90-('alltd lrvlne Regional Center,
400-acre plus commercial center
would be filed today at Irvine City
Hall.
The development simUar in scope
to Newpo rt Center In Newport
Beach, is to be bullt in the "Golden
triangle" between the Santa Ana,
San Diego a nd Laguna Freeways.
The land is not within the cit y of
Irvine, but is within lhe city's
sphere or influence, reserving ii for
future an nexations.
Ultimately the development wlll
•nclude a greater total number o(
squa re feet of offices, shops,
department stores and highrisc
residences. than is planned for
Newport Center.
Frot11Pagel
BO UN DARI ES • •
demands since growth in those areas sti ll
!lad no significant effect on their sc hools.
They \Vere content to keep the land \Vhen
it was vacant but gave il away \vhen it
becam e appa rent new schools \vere need-
ed.
Since then, development in the are:i
given up by San Joaquin -now Irv ine
schools -has grown and so has the
a rea's tax base.
That fa ct has made any further boun-
dary adjustn1ents a matter for heated
argument and little resolution for nearly
a decade.
Thus far. according to Irvine school
facilitieS planning director Dave Ki ng,
the district ha's not felt the burden of
busing children from the isolated
Spyglass Hill and Harbor View Homes
" areas.
' But possibl y by November Irvine will
have to bus children from those areas to
schools as far as seven miles from home.
There are Newport-Mesa schools within
walking dist;ince.
The issue raised by the new Irvine of-
fer has many sides, atcording to officials
in both districts.
It is questionable whether the assessed
valuations in Harbor View Homes and
Spyglass Hill are high enough to make
schooling of those youngsters a break-
even proposition for whichever district
~ltim~tely gets the responsibility.
But the Irvine spokesman said his
district can't simpl y give up the hous ing
tracts with nothing in return because.
"That is ten percent of our assessed
valuation and it would badly erode our
tax base."
The Ford property, on the other hand,
offers pure profit f~ schools because no
cruldren live on that land.
N~Mesa School SUJ!!>rlnlendeil!
John N~U'iays he hu "no ~m~JJ¥Dt"
Gn whether or not the offer is a goOd deAI
for the district, even t~ugh Jt would
mean up to 200 children Y.'Ould get to
school quicker and easier.
"This could not be resolved at an ad-
ministrative level because the law does
not provide us with the power to change
boundaries," he said. ''It is up to the
board."
According to Irvine schoo l officials, the
burden is now on Newport-Mesa trustees
to make the next move toward resolving
the problem.
Fonda Leads P 1·otes t
SAN FRAN :ISCO (AP ) -Antiv.•ar ac-
ti vists Jane Fonda and her husband Tom
Hayden Tuesday night blamed the war in
Vietnam for inflation, Watergate and the
crisis of the American dollar at a rally to
protest continued U.S. su pport ror the
'fhieu regime in South Vietnam. More
than 900 ptfiple gathered at Glide
Methodist· Church to hea r the two ask for
support of the Provisional Revolutionary
Government of South Vietnam, known as
the Viet Cong.
Bail Down
F 0 1· Suspe ct
In Smuggle
From Wirt Service•
LAS VEGAS -A Newport Beach
boalvard hand allegedly involved in The
Ams"terdam Connection, \\'hich resulted
in seizure of perhaps the largest hashish
haul in U.S. history, has won reduced
bail.
Gary L. Lickert. Ui, a Long Beach resi-
dl'nt . \\·as arrested here last Friday after
all egedly picking up a truckload of 817
pounds of the high-grade marijuana
derivative.
Federal authorities claim the $5.5
million shi pment they say originated in
Amsterdam. the Netherlands could be
the greatest ever in terms of volume.
lnveStigators began working the case
after U.S. Customs agents uncovered M
pounds concealed in a piece of freight
which arrived in New York.
They did not elaborate what type of
freight it might have been, but large
quantities of narcotics are . frequently
delivered hidden in secret compartments
in imported ca rs or trucks.
Lickert was taken into custody by
agl.'nts of the f ederal Drug Enforcement
Administration , a new force from several
combined agencies, plus Las 'Vegas
police.
He allegedly took delivery or the entire
shipment of freight in \Vhieh the hashish
had been hidden. loading it aboard a
rented truck at l\1cCarran Airport.
Bail for the suspect was originally set
at .11.00,000, but U_,_S. Magistrate Joe Ward
reduced it to $40,000 Tuesday on a
defense motton.
He stipulated that at such time as
Li ckert can .. post bail that his travel must
be restricted only to Clark County, Nev ..
and the state of California.
The federal judge also ordered that
Lickert surrender his passport in return
for the reduced bail figure .
Newport Beach police said today that
they had received wo rd of the suspect's
arrest in Nevada, but did not even know
which local boatyard employs him.
From Page l
SHIPS '. ••
the Huntu\gton By The Sea trailer park
off Pacific Coast Highway. His small
work shack is already becoming too con-
fined for his \li'hittling.
He hopes to sell some or the ships for
as much as $200. He might even like to
carve ships for commission$.
But if that tails, it remains apparent
that Lamb will keep on whittling away
his time.
He rubs his fingertips along the smooth
side of his whaling ship MOl'gan and
beam.I, "I've always liked ,these old ships. I've always wanted one. I'm
retired, but it looks like I've carved
myself an eight·hour job anyway."
Football Signups
Still Contin1tlng
!'\lost teams in the Newport Beach flag
football league still have openings and
signups are continuing through this
Saturday, city officials said today.
The program, for boys between third
and eighth grade, will allow each youth
to compete at his own grade level and
guarantee that everyone plays at least
one qua rte r per football game, officials
said .
Slgnups are conducted from 8 a.m. to 5
p.n1 . at the city recreation department
office, 1714 \Vest Balboa Boulevard. On
Saturday, signups will be from 9 a.m. to
noon at the Community Youth Center,
Firth and !:is a·1cnues. Corona ~el Mar.
A $4 fee is charged to cover ·the cost of
unifOITTI S.
4 Bigge st Cou11ty Cities
Hi1·e W asl1into11 Lobbyi st
Orange County's four largest cities will
hlre William H. Morgan, 32, of Kallua,
lfay,·aii, to serve as their \\'ashington lolr
byist.
Morgan will earn an annual salary of
$28,000 and the cities -Hu ntington
Beach. Santa Ana , Anaheim and Garden
Grove -will spend an addi!iona\ $23,000
for an office ,' secretary and business ex-
penses.
The decision was announced Tuesday
after the 1nayor6 nnd city managers of
the four cities had rinlshed interviewing
candidates for the job.
Final approval for the contract must
still be given by each city council. but all
four cities had previously agreed to the
idea of hiring a joint Washington lob-
b}•ist.
Anaheim Councilmen di d lie 2-2, when
the contract wns presented to them Tues·
day night. but the absent councilman.
Mark Stephenson, is expected to ca sl his
vot:! in fa vor of th e lobbyist.
MOi'gail s currcn ly employe<I by
~tarshall Kaplan, Gans, and Kahn or
Honolulu, Hawaii, an urban development
consulting licm. He is presently project
manager for a $1.9 million hou~ing
management study authorized by the
•tawail Housi ng Authorlty .... and pnid for
by !he Federal Depa rtment of IIouslng
and Urban Df!velopment (HUD ).
In \Yashlngton, Morgan will be o.x-
pected to win federa l grantr for the foul'
Orange County cities, particularly in
such areas ns Oood control, beach
'
maintenance. youth employment pro-
grams, housing and urban renewal.
The rour cities decided to band
together because they believe their com-
bined population of 650,000 will carry
more political clout than an Individual
community, according to Dav Id
Rowlands, city administrator of Hun-
lington Beach.
Ro\.11land s said each city will pay about
Sl5,000 a year for the lobbylsl. The
$23,000 expense listed for this year only
covers about three-quarters of the fiscal
budget since three months have already
pa ssed.
r-.1organ will establish an office in
\\lashington and \\'Ork through the Na-
tional League of Cities' "Man in
Washington" program.
Rowlands said about 16 lobbyisU,
representing various cities throughout
the country. already work in the National
League of Cities Program.
Morgan can work with them and share
Mme of their contacts In Waahington and
their cx-pertise on specific programs.
The new lobbyist has also worked on
federal housing projects in Dallas and
San AntonJo, Texas. Rowlands !aid
~torgan was selected from seve n can·
dl<lates 85 !he man ... with the "bes!
qualiflcations 11od the right personality."
The lluntington Beach admlttlstrator
·also said he believes this Is the flrat time
four ciUcs from the same geographical
location have Joined hand.t I<> hire a
singll! lobbyllt
I
Watching Condi Grow
Tony Nichols' pe,t python is only 7\l·feet long now.
but she is gtowihg at the rate of two f~et a year.
The high sc hool sophomore from Coata Mesa &ays
some pyt hons have grown as lon g as 32 feet and
become as big arQund as a telephone pole. He ex·
peels Candi to attai n 22 feet, but figures he will
have to get tld of her when she is 16 feet 0 or el~e
add anot.&~ room to the house."
Fron• Page l Woman Has Tests
After Frenzied
Calls for Help
From Page 1 J
AG NEW ...
ing about resigning.
Warren said l)e wou ld have no further
comment concerning Agnew until Atty.
Gen. Elliot Rlchar(ison has acted with
respec t to possible presentation of the
Agnew matter to a (ederal grand jury in
Baltimore.
Warren said it would be inappropriate
to offer a White House comment on the ' vice president's situation or to accept
questions on lhe subject.
Deraihnent Hurts :1
SOUTH GATE (AP) -Three Southern
Pacific Railroad workers suffered in·
juries wh an enCU!e '1"!d a"flat carol a
Sl-car train derallf<l Tuesday ntgl1t ' in
this Los Angeles suburb, officials said. A
railroad spokesman said vandals were
beliqved I<>, have ~jlend wl!)l a swU"/'
causing the derailment.
LA Zoo Crane
Flies t1i.e Coop
LOS ANGELES (UPI) -l<>s Angeles
Zoo officials and a wattled crane missing
rrom its open exhibit area botb have one
thing In commoo -a red race.
Animal keepers had clipped the wings
of the crane -a gray-bodied, while-
necked bird whJch stands five reet ta11
and has a seven-root wingspan in flight
and is valued at $1,000.
But officials said the feathers grew
back quicker than expected. and the
native of South Africa flew away.
~
A distraught woman who checke4 into
a Newport Beach motel and then made a
constant stream of nearly 100 fr~ed
phone calls for help is under psychiatric
care today.
During the tragic telethon , authorities
claim she called local police, the county
sheriff's office: marshal's office, the
board of directors of a private hospital
and several individuals, i n c I u d i n g
Newpo rt Mayor Donald Mcllnnil.
Managers of the motel in the 6200 block
of West Coast Highway said they had
earlier threatened to call poll~ and
finally did when the womAn's aetiviUes
became intol.era~le. ~
'sloel wu olso ma~ ioiicide tbr18li.
leading local police to run a background
check on lhe woman who had totally tied
up lbe motel's switchboard telephones.
The manager" said be kepl telling her
no more cliRi but tberi'felented .men· she
~gged. claiming It was a nlcitter Of life
and death while babbling ab o u t
medicines and Hollywood celebrities.
Infor mation was then supplied by
another Orange Coast Jaw enforcement
agency in dicating the pathetic center of
police attention had twice tried suicide .
A shotgun blast in the head has left her
nose and eye pennanently disfigured,
\l•hile another time, they said, she slash-
ed her ankles.
Investigators placed her under arrest
under Section 5150 of the Welfare and
Institutions Code as a potential danger to
herself and others. sending her to Orangt
County Medical Center.
Once.. n.t the station. they said. she
began shouting and kicking doors and
\\'alls -threatening to hang herself -
and fina lly grabbed Officer Al Fischer's
holstered .38 caliber revolver.
Her clutching fingers had lo be pried
(rom the gun butt , one by one, before she
was taken away.
TEACHERS. • •
California School Boards Association.
The teachers' statement ends with the
predlctlon that Governor Reagan prob-
ably will sign the coJlective bargaining
biH, "because he considers hlmseU a na-
tional poliUcal candidate. No such cao-,
didate· would fail to sign a labor bill for
rear of being labeled 'anti-labor'."
Roy W. Grund
Memo1ial Rites
Scheduled Today
Memorial funeral rites were ..Wiled
today In -Arcadia !or reUred ·pharmacist
Roy W, Gnma1 75, of Newport Bead!.
wM hid devoted interest In aiding the
nientallf1 rMtirded .
His 1a1mlly suggests , memorial con-
tributions lo the Horn e or Guiding Hand!,
a center for the handicapped at 10025 Los
Rancbitos Road, Lakeside.
Services were to be held today at
Arcadia Presbyterian, Church, with ifloo
terment to (ollo\v in Mountain View
Cemetery, Altadena.
Following retirement in 1971 as a
pharmacist at Pasadena Comml.llity
Hospital, Mr. Grund moved to 11, 38th
St.. with his wile Lucille.
SUrvivors additionally include a IOO.
John, daughters ~1rs. Linda Whitesides
and ~1rs. Carol Brenner : sisters Mrs.
Signe Tuverson and ~trs. Esther Hen-
ni ng; brothers Charles and William
Grund, plus 10 grandchildren.
Arrangements were under direction of
Glasser-Miller-Lamb Mortuary, Arcadia.
•
• • ' ,. • "
..., • ..,53 .... 8,..;C~E~N~T~E~R~S~T~R~EE:!T~-""'c'!."'!'O~ST~A~M~E~S~A-:~":'::'~-t~J~:':!::,-:-I, I-' i• OPIN .... ...
" ~ I
•
Boys-P.E. Shirts & Shorts
Sweat Sox
All Star Basketball Shoes-9.95
Bob WoHe Super Pro · Shoes-9.95
Soccer Shoes-10.95 up
Sweat Shirts & Pants
Warmup-Suits-21.95 to 34.95 ·
Footllall Face Guns
Taach Faatball Flags & Belts
Kneepads-forearm Pads
Teeth Pratector~
Open 9 to 6 Closed Sundays
i Hand Balls & Gloves
Racquetball Racquets & Balls
Wilsoll-Davis-Yoneyama-Bancraft
Temis Rackets
Wil~oll-Penll-Dunlop Tennis Bans
7 .95 per Dozen
Tennis Dresses
Men's & Bays' Tennis Sllorts & Shifts
Converse-Adidas-Tretorn Tepnis ShQes
Speedo Shorts & SuHs
Bikes...:.Parb:-Tlres-T ubes
·~
\ •
--
"
•' DAILY PROT 'EDITOBL\L PAGE
Accent
The Newport-Mesa Unified School District ls m\k· Ing the public commitment that every child leaving the
third grade this spring will have the ability to read
adequately. The cmnmltment, it seems, amounts to a promise
that reading failure will be eliminated In this group of
children, and for all other children who .follow them
into the third graqe.
This is certainly a sweeping pledge for a school
system to make, but officials at Newport-Mesa Indicate
that they are completely serious in making it.
Firs~ district officials point out they are pouring
an additional $250,000 this year Into the third grade
reading programs at its 26 elementary schools. These
funds can be spent only on projects to improve instruc-.
" tion for third graders.
Although different schbols may use their money
for different purposes, officials say the main thrust of
the new program will be to individualize the teaching
of reading to a degree not previously ach ieved Jn the
district.
In announcing the new reading program, officials
have made clear that the onus of the program will not
be on children to learn to read or.else, but on the school
system itself. ' "
That is, the district is determined that Its upgraded
reading program will be so successful ttiat the 15 lo ·20 .
percent of children who now read at a level tar below
their ability will be able to overcome their problems
and read at nonnal capacity.
The decision to concentrate on third grade reading
was made because third grade is the last time children
are given intensive instruction in reading. After that:
the emphasis changes from ulearning to read" to "read·
ing to learn other subjects."
Thus it is not surprising that if a child has not
learned to read adequately by the end of the third
grade, be ~ay_ nf!!_er do so. '
The new emphasis on readtftg already is making it·
self felt in the schools. Students with the most serious
...
on
•
reading difflculfles have been identifled, and as Ute year
progresses, their teacben will give them the special at-
tention they need to catch up with their classmates by
June.
How well the Newport-Mesa district's Intense com-
mitment to reading works out wil~ be a subject of great
interest to the community. Certainly everyone will want
to wish the district the best of luck In carrying through
on its promises. But final jtidgment ·must be reserved
until late spring when year-end test results in reading
for this year's third gnders are announced. Until then,
the distnct will have plenty ol work to do.
Plans for the Dunes
The Orange County Harbor Commission again last
week inade clear that it is not going to support any
kind of major commercial or recreational development
on the shores of Upper Newport Bay in the Newport
Dunes copcession.
Rather than making this point in a negative way -
by turning down a detailed set of plans -.the commis·
sion expressed itself in positive terms of what it does
want for the Dunes area. ,
That is, the commission wants a faJJ,lily-oriented
recreatio:Q. area that has due regard for the trafiic con·
gestion ~roblems of the Pacific Coast Highway, the wa·
ter quality problems of the bay and the development
density standsrds of Newport Beach. ·
'. This positive statement of goals is welcome news
for Newport Beach, anC! it ought to be valuable to New·
port Dunes Inc., which holds the lease to the county.
owned land . No longer will the company need to waste
p1¥nning efforts on projects that have no chance of get·
, ting Harl)or Commission approval. . · ·
o-1. • Newport Dtioes Inc. should be receptive to the Har·
bor CommJssion's suggest.ions so planning for the Dunes
-in the future can be more harmoniOus and productive
than it has been in the past.
'
•
N ' • •
\
\
•
•
-..._
'lmi<Esr R'ArEs
~·· "• "\ ' "t ,·,,
'. ,
\ ~ .
" • I '
1'REAM HOU~E
Scholarly Theft
B.affles Experts
Wheekhair No Political 'Ba:a:rd
Dear
Gloomy
Gus
Wallace Back • Ill
W A$GTQN -A Ught·fingerod
scholar bas stolen papers of "lo.
calculable value" from the collection of
the late Justice Felix Frankfurter at the
Library of Coogress. Tbe tlieft ol Ir·
replaC..ble diaries; . letten an d
--ilaay hundndo ol -· in all -tiM been-kepi -.t 10< a 1ear
MONTGOMERY, Ala. -The unob-
trusive arrival here of a ghostwriter
commissioned by Doubleday and Co. to
write t&e definitive autobiogra~hy of
Gov. George Wallace for P"\ -1976
pqblicatlon is the · la_test sigrl that
Wallace's confinement to a wheelchair
stnce when do honest citizens ad·
dressing the Newport Beach City
Council have to be humiliated by
the lrowbeating tactics of the
mayor, for no other apparent re&-
son than he doesn't agree with whet
they're saying? -N.C.E.
0.....,, 0.,. an-" _ ........, w • may be no greater rP>litlcal hazard than
bllod," a tenkr library official told my .......,. ..., • .., _,.,,. """' "" .. ·lt wa!"to Frankl1'{D.-B001evelt.
l. ' --..... ., "" ............ ,.... ,.., .,.. , ~ _assocla,e i.a Whitten. '"There w~, a b...::.;"':;;~~h~•-:::;:;~'~-~;;°"::::~:;;;::•:'"':;:L;;..;;:;,.;-:...J "~4*1r.. Jlllk•!t _ difficult," &emeiiiloulpmount mlaslng' of -m. -Willld>'!Old ~ .-1 > -
caJculable YalUe." · .. his office. "But it t · ..
Once the-JOA wu .........i,4iie·Ulnry ~.·who di~ in 1985 at age llZ doem't stop me from
called .\n\bt·FBlwhidtbol!ll!-tly •after Jl.vean on the supreme being governor."
while JBI ~
and tbt Ubrary'L..
own scbolars-tumed-
de\edlves b a v e
searthed Jeverilhly for tho......._ ,
,,,. ~""""" illi0"
jntervliwJnl ~ and • To 'eourt: '' , 1bat waa !fie ne
: blacjl; ~,llllltl, strlcl · .,., ' · , we have offered to ·~ last' week '
q_iedur'>i; (liiifloaily . fli' ";'~it ·ary between the loDol!J!ig a; -covmci"'.'ti;"~.::.
ber tm, atter an
alert Ubrary ol C-Oil-
gross olficial notlc<d
that a Frlnk!urter folder was empty.
It had contained conversations be-
tweeo Frankfurter and lbe late
JusUce Louis Brandel.s. A private
researcher abo re~ a letter mining
that be had ........... Fl'ankfla'ter'•
papen earljer.
Alarined, Ubrar)' olliclals turned loooe
a husll-baab. team of acbolars In the vast
Fran-file. Within a few days,
they bad come up With a mism>g-ltems
list that llorrlfttd them. Gone were five
years ol Fr1111durter't penooal diaries,
numerous notes on conversations with
the mllhty, memos, Ietten and -I
jottings about the men In govenunent
Frankfurter bad known so intimately.
''WE REALIZED we had been r<>bbed '
~ ,._. wae 18 • the library. We will meetiD( Ot t6e state•.,..
. thlf-vw.1· dine, .wijbout ,. lie Waru.tee not '~ reveal bis name or bu.UdiDg. commission (en~ pulllc to the lnlenli! ~ Iden~ lilm jf he will contact presided over by the on '9f the mlasing papers. ,, . ui. .\ ~ governor. As we left
But now, tti't quest bas rea<ied a.dead .... • • .; ... at 7 p.m., Wallace's legislative Jeaden
end.· Return ol the ,documimlJ,, most' WITHOUT. B!ING able to bind tbt arrived for another hour 's conference.
llbracy olliclalll r<cognlze, i!ePeOd9 on Justice Department, we will try to HAVING -• 1 the delicate questions or ule scl»tar-persuade Attomey, General E 11 i o t recove,~ rom his internal
tbl<l'1 respect for the ·pricelesineas of Ills Rlchardlon, himself ·• legal scholar, that wounds and sullerlng only lntnor periods
b.1ltoricel heist. WboeVer tli renegade the return of the Frlnkfurter papers Is of light pain, Wallace is beginning to think'
ruearcher is the offlciall concede he more ttfan worth calling off the search like a presidential candidate again. His
robbed wtth' d1scrimln1Uoo · and' tn-for the mysterious thief. mind is as sharp as i~ was before be was
telllgellC<!, oeleclln( the most blStoricaUy nearly murdered by an assassin 16
valuable documenta. FOOI'NOTE: The only comparable theft months ago. Indeed, the· talk in
in the library's 173-year histcry occurred Wallaceland of yet another presidential
ACCORDJNG'to one theory, the scholar in the 1940s when the papers of poet Walt campaign in 1976, wftb the Democratic
is laboring alone on a projec& and wants Whitman were sent away for wartime party's vice presidential nomination the
to iiille slll'e bt b tbt oply oae11ble to ·safekeeping. Alter their return, several reol-goal, cannot-be dismia8ed-as
pursue it. U UliJ' ls ~·c:Ue, the officials volumes ol biJ notes were discovered nonsense.
pray the scholar wW somehciw arnnge to missing. 1bey were never recovered. When we last visited a fatigued and
get the papers or copies of \ijem back to More recently, the librU-y lost some pain-ridden Wallace a year ago, he could
the library so that future historians can valuable .flooks, but a libraey t!rerk bas not stop reminiscing about b 1 8 study the remarb6le life and ~finles o1 "been atre!ted·f<lr the alleged theft phenomenal 1972 primary vtctories,
F~tlier-claughter Theory Questioned
To the Editor: pin that love b to be as much like the
mother as po1sible. Mrs. Brick has been
negl~g her Freud.
( EVANS·NOVAK)
particularly his sweep in the
Democratic bastion of Michigan.
liberal
JN CONTRASI', Wallace's five 1972
winning primaries plus the five states he
wog in his third-party presidential cam-~p of 1968 are meDtioned today only 'in
paUing. Wallace is now iooklng ahead.
smacking his lips with anticipation and
plotting a powerful role..,.ln. wbat~-
the "rejuvenation" :tbei · .
Democratic party. >" • , • .
He has been holdina_cjdl;jl ~Wlllr ;
former aides who kiDf-' • .., • JettB.laim.
While avoiding hard offeri j()f pOIUca1
employment, Wallace ta roiling it clear
that be wants and needl ~ pro-
fessional help from these old-~
hands. The goal: to rebuild a co~tent
staff of Alabamans for 19'11~ ·Amorll' them
is the astute Bill Jonet:, ·Wallace,'.s •cleat
political adviser who left abortly after
man.aging Wallace's 1961 thfrd..p;&rty.
campaign ; his talents were sorely ilJ.#led
in the inadequately organir.ed 1972. cam-
paign.
Jones and other old Wallaceltes are
impressed by the miraculous physical
improvement of the governor, which bas
restored his psychological health and
ended long-periods ol deej>-~.
To them, 1976 looks more promising thpn
the governor's passes at the presldericy
In ISM, 1968 and 1972.
WAU.ACE is dealing today with a
shattered Democratic party which, with
the sole excepticn of Sen. Edward M.
Kennedy, has no recognizable ceriter of
power. Moreover, he ia dealing with-it
from a position of complete dominance at
heme and wearing what his idolaters
perceive as the mystlcal manUe of a hero
miraculously immune from death by
assassination.
That perception is so strong in
Action
I
I Alabama that Republic.an stale chairman J
Ric.hard Bennett is advising his party not ,
to field any candidate for governor r-.;L
year when Wallace runs for reelection.
Thus, with OQly token Democratic op-
position in next spring's primary I
· election, Wallace could well sweep to his
third term as Alabama's·-govemor .. with ; ..... .
an astoWlding 70 to 7~ percent of the I
vote.
ONE POSSmLE contender, former I
'Gov. Albert Brewer, was barely defeated
by Wallace In the 1970 primary. But to-· i,!""""-'~. -ouv:!.~ . " I 11rewe.-... • " ., ' .
cording to. W .. ,; "·
Wallace. ia , ·~ s • thim evef af..tlM&•:nelMsiasilnatlod, ii:
political 11<$J'.'~ national Demoontl~
party Cannot ili>ore as it staggmi out Gt
the quicksands of 1972. -
Althoug~ his ol,d pOutical. p0we< '"'f
built on •· pledge of total racial -• tioo, wa11ace t<iifay. talkl no1 aliout'race·
but about the rt.m. of "little piople."·
The Po~I JW:.,.-iocllpsed 'the eecnP)
tionist. •
KENNEDY'S speech for Wallace at.
Decatur, Ala. last July i!IUltrated that
no Northern Democrat can :afford to igi
nore Wallace's huge following in the~
SOllth or Ills•_ •popuilld~ a Pp e • I
everywhere. '!bus, lD111kelY though IC
sounds today, Wallace may well find
him.self powerful enough in 19?9 eltbtr to,
exercise a veto over tbe1 Democrati<;.
party's presidential nominee or compel
that nomlnee to take him on the ticket.
Such a turn of political events sbice h.Lt
auempted murder.Jn 1111LlYould bo.
astonishing and incongruous. But ove~
the last decade, the aslonlahlng !I'd -~l
congruous have become the bailJDark o
American politics, ·as Richard Nixon ~
and oow George Wallace -are discover~
ing.
I
Mrs. Brick, in her talk to the Exchange
Club of Newport Beach (Sept. II) un·
doubtedly made a hlt by telling fathers to
spend time with their daughters because
lhey are 'better' models than are
frustrated, neurotic y,·omen. Her plan for
father-daughter communications was
great but unfortunately based on ex·
tremely shaky reasoning.
( __ MAIL __ n_o_x _ _.J
ment the fathers " expect of them.
Mothers are used as a model to achieve
these goals. By •pending tidle with tho
father girls learn the values they Will Ul·
corporate and the father can realistically
Bdjust these values to tho girl's tern· -
perament as he leant5 to know her bet-
ter.
In fairness, please· print the next
speech that extols women and denigrates
men on the top column of page one.
CHRISTIN CARNEV
total real estate taxes, isn't this going a
little too far? Parents who send their
children out to a drive-in for dinner can
now relax and not even have to worry
about their breakfasts.
Many educators firmly believe that
many ol the problems that develop With
yowigsters are the result of lack of family
togetherness, P.llff,icularly at meal times.
No~ several ekpooents wish to go a step
fanner by-ertendlna this gap. And, let·
ttng the mother sleep In! Get it at
scbooll '
Why Hitl.er's Germany? l
rr IS NOT because women are
"frustrated and insecure" while men
have an "internal stability most women
du not" that a good father-daughter reta·
tiODlhip ls desirable. R a t h e r ,
psychological studies have shown that
different things are learned from each
parent. Females learn from fathers lheir
goals, values and what kind of achieve-
\.opyr1gru l'llJ, loronlo Sun Syndicate
It Ill not a question of which parent can
provide the best model. Girl chlldren
usually turn to the female parent for a
model, rea10ning that if the tat.her loves
the rnother, the besl way for the chlld to
'
PUNCH
"/ don't want to get well."
I
Bikes anti BNelles
To the Editor:
It It clifficul( to take R. H .. Oucas
(Mailbox, Sept. 12) terlously. Onrwlll
certainly be able io iilaY, surf, throw
Frilbeea and even wliiper 10 his girl
• friend "alone. in tbe crowd" "1.tbout belnc Interfered with. ~y1 cyclists on tho
ve'iy 'narrow ma wmcnt would be-set
aside for ei:tenaloo ol the bicycle path on
the beach.
OONGESTION in local beach areas is
due to . automoblles, not people. There
will still be plent1 of sand left, R. H,, and
podlops, just perllaps, fewer automobllea.
'lllose responsible should get on with
,the bike path project without further
delay.
R. W. CURTIS
Sellool Breqlcfats
' To th, lclitor : .
• In 'ngard1o ""-r.r· Breakfast,"
(Dally Pllol, Sept. U): The proposal of MrvtJii breakfast at tehools appalls me.
'I1>e ..,.rifer quotes,· 11tt also serves to re·
mind parenll that their chlldten are
beneflttlng from a school system that I•
mucb better...off than most. and as a
result, haa the capacity to explore ways
to do a better job of educatl(ll."
WHY, In "on..of the wtalthlcr clislrlcts
in the county" mu.st ~·e •~t that
rumlshlng breakfast is .a part of the
educational system? With school . taxee
amoonllng to 1bout 66 percent of the
I AM tor a good, sound educational
aystem 11n the lcbools, but please, don't
you think tba.I. parentl should have a few
responsibilities? "Bacon and eggs" cereal
and ·paocakes." At, toda:y's pr1ces?
PlUL W!Ll.'l
Proftleiits '" 1'1~.rieo
How could the Gennan people, who had
contributed a great deal to Westem
civilization over the centuries, suddenly
succumb to Hitler and to the cultural
self~estructlon of National Socialism?
How could large numbers of aetmingly
normal, orderly, law.abiding people
e'ngage In or condone tortures and mass
killings on a scale almost unprecedented
in the history of the world? How was it
possible? How could it happen?
-
. To the Edi tot! THE ANSWERS to these questions are
I wtah to thank.you very much for nm· searched out Jn Tbe Evohitloa of Bltler's
ning an artlcU toncernlng the retfllt rob-'Germany (McGraw-HUI, 11%.95), hy
betf'.of my caT in ~lco and my appe'al ,. Horst von Maltitz, a member ol the New
lot people ,·M have .bad stml\ari, dlf~" Y'ork· Bar \tho grew up in Germany and
ficultles to relate 1therD. to me. I have studied al lhe Universities of Berlin and
received ove~ i50" Itl~ 'or -1 con-' Marburg, Hamburg and J<na.
tacts concellliiig 111Urder, · robbe!Y; ot· . In the main, the book Is not so much a
flqal CO<l'IJPtloo, etc. In Mexico. •· • history" of the events of the period as a
I wls~ jo thank all people who told me hlstcry of certain !<leas and of what one
of their Incidents IUld let them know that man did .;vilh them! )'be various com-
! wilt do all In rnY power Ill fight Utae pooenlll of the National SociaUst Ideology
problem!. r-1 ate exfttlJMCI, and attempts are made to
JOHN J. GABRIEL$ trace them back to their origins in
Letter• from readers are wlcome.
Norm•llu wrlte" 1hould co1U1•U th.Jr
me•1age1 tn 300 worcb or Jess. The
right to condense ,Lejter1 to fit apace
or eUminate Ubel s reserved. All
letter! must 1nclude signature and
mailing addre.ss, but names ma11 be
wllhhtld on reqm11 if sufficient
reason ts apparent. Poei111 Mll not be
publfshcd.
Gennan history and civilization. Special
cmpllaala ls p\a('·d on antl-5emltism, and
on the former German-Jewish symbiosis.
-
THE SECOND part of the booX deals
with the "niom ent in hi!tory" when
Hiller arrived on the Scene: his
ps)chology, his parent.s, sex life, religion,
and various character I.rails a.re dis·
cussed In dctAil. Relevant opinions O{
socloJlS)'chologists and poycblatristl have
•
. . '
(THE BOO~ J
• been taken into account and quoted . A
great deal of new source material is sup-
plied, and other material is evaluated.
VICTOR de KEYSEllLIN
OIAM61 COAST
DAILY PILOT
Robert N. W«d, Pub~
Thom01 Kfft>il, Edito;
Barbara Kreibich
Editorial Page Editor
'l"he editorial ,pap ot the DaUy
Pilot !ittka to inlonn and 1timWale
readen by presentlnc en thla pqe
divtnie•Commentar>' oo topics Of in..
tenst by iYildlcated cOlumniitt and
cut"OOni.st1, b)I providi111 a rorwn f.or'
read era' vltws •nd by prnen{ir< this
newspap@'r'a opinioN a.nd Sdc'N on
current topica. The edllotiai opink)ns
of tM Dally Pilot appev <lOl)' \n the
editorW cotumn •t the top ol th!! Pt&'. opirtkms expreaitd b)' the coJ.
1.1mnl1ta and cartoonlsts -and 'kUU-
wrlttn 1.tt: thttr own and no eftdone-
mcnt of ttwlr vi~ l:ftt the l)aib'
PitoC -Id "" -
Wednesday, Sept. 19, 1973
•
..
Wedne~. Stpten1ber lCJ, 1m
Selection Despite Protests Killer ef JO
DAILY PILOT j~
l '
•
Of Jury Goveroor Signs Mullin G-iven 'Life'1. -.
' '
• ,
' , Stalled Retirement Bill ...
SANTA CRUZ (AP) -
llerilert Mullln, • a lormel'
honor student senlenced-to Ille
in ~ 1n the slaylngs ol 10 per-., may have "half a
shot" at aetUng two fil'lt·
degree murder convictions
reduced oo the basis ol his
'1crazy motives," Mullln's at-
torney; says.
second-degree rou.r8er COO· .. dro~e-me kill crazy" ~
vicUons, the m a x I m u m that he kllled the vlcUm.< ills
sentence. But-be delayed e¥--lwmao aacrilices1 MCe!S@rfcJ> ecutlon of these sentences •">id a cataclymnlc ~
peidlng en •weal o1 the first· quake. He alao said ,1!F
degree <l<JIV~iotl!!. , . t....• sometllliee go< tj!~
MARIPOSA (AP) -After
two days of jury selection in
the dooble murder trial of
J•hn Phillip Bunyijl'(i, 41 pan-
elists have been questioned
but not a single one was ~t·
ed.
Officials originhlly bad call-
ed 80 prospective jurors but
said they plan to call 6 more
persons today from the coun-
[ ____ B_Rl_EF_S ___,)
ty's small population of 7,000.
Mariposa Cowlty Superior
Court Judge Dean Lauritzen
had excused several Monday
and Tuesday because they had
known victims Helen Cramer,
70, end Nancy Chalberg, 55,
both longtime M a r i p o s a
residents. Other candidates
were dismi!sed after ex-
pressing strong p r e j u d i c e
against Bunyard.
e otflrial• 011sted
<X>RTE MADERA (API -
'lbe mayor and two city coun-
cilmen have been ousted from
their jobs here by forces seek-
ing to coo.trot growth in this
small Marin County com-
munity.
Mayor Holmes S. Norville
and Councl.lmeri Harold
Wagstaff and Edward W.
Coltburst were recalled Tues-
day. Holmes and Wagstaff had
been OD the comcil for seven
years. Colthurst had served
for 15 years, including 10
years as mayor.
Leaders of the recall cam-
paign conl""'1ed the three
were unresponsiv~ to public
demand> Jo< llmHaUoos on
newconstructioo.Thethr'ee
had ~ a 1511 million
shopping ceflter and a 528-unit
opartment complex.
e Witt Erected
SAN DIEGO (AP) -City
Atty. Join Witt has brushed
oll a dlallenge by young
lawyer Jim Webb ea s i I y
winning a secood four -·year
term.
SACRAMENTO (AP)
Gov. Ronald Reagan Tuesday
signed a controversial bill
aimed at boosting retirement
benefits for a f o r m er
assemblyman who owns a big
piece bf Imperial County land.
The me asve by
Assemhlyman Ray Seeley (R·
Blythe), would allow J. Ward
~sey, a former Republican
assemblyman, to receive a
$1,896-a-year pension by ma k·
Girls Seek
'Equality'
Jn, Sports
GLENDALE (AP) -Girls
physical education teachers
here say they have stopped
coaching after-school athletics
until "sex discrimination" is
ended.
The teachers asserted Tue s-
day that the girls have elhletlc
facilities inferior to the boys,
that less money is spent on
girls' programs and that the
after-school volunteer coaches
are paid less than male
volimteers.
AT TWO 9Chools, the women
teachers complain, the boys
even take over the girls' gyms
to run thei r baske~ll pro-
grams.
"A lot of people think this is
just a women's lib thing to get
even with the boys' program."
said a teacher spokesman. Jan
McCreery. "But that's not
true. We just want equal op-
portunity."
THE PROTEST is by the 30
girls PE teachers at junior
and senior high schools in
Glendale. '111ey have filed a
complaint with state civil
rights authorities.
'Protestinu' t:'l
Gas Stations
ing a one-time depo&it of $1,700
In the legislator's retirement
fwid.
Casey, 76, served in the
Assembly in 1952-56.
WHEN THE BILL was mak~
ing its wa y tlwough the
legislature last A p r i 1 ,
Assemblyman 'Bob Wilson (().
San Diego), said Casey had
told him he owned a 64-aere
section or Imperial County
land and 40 additional acres
elsewhere. Wilson, an op-
ponent of Seeley's bill, said
Casey had told him the 64
ac res had water and alfalfa on
it. so "I would imagine it
would be worth $1 ,000 an
acre.''
Wilson's April campaign
against the measure provoked
Seeley, who told reporters, 0 1
told Wilson off in no uncertain
terms I wouldn't can')' this
bill if it weren't right."
When Casey served in the
Assembly, legislators had to
serve for at least six years to
be eligible tor Jifeloog retire-
ment benefits. A Seeley aide
said the state forced Casey to
pu11 his contributed money out
of the legislative retirement
fund six months before the
minimum service time was
dropped to four years in 1960.:
KILLER OF 10 SENTENCED TO LIFE IN PRISON
Herbert W. Mullin, 26, Le1ves Sant~ Cruz Court
James J·ackson , who con-
tended throughout the three-
week trial that ?.fullin was
"stark raving mad, 11 said
there are cases where an &J>-
pellate court reduces a sen-
teJp when a defendant bas
"crazy motives and if he's actinf for humanitarian rea-
sons m bis own mind."
UNDER CALIFORNIA law,
a first-degree murder con-
viction carries automatic ap-
peal, and Jackson 'appealed
Tuesday morning b e r o r e
Mullin was sentenced. He said
he wants the· convictions
reduced to second-degree.
'111e 26-year~ld on e t 1 m e
mental patient was pale and
red -eyed as he listened to.
Santa· Cruz County Superior
Court Judge Otarles S .
Franich sentence him Tuesday
to two concurrent life sen-
tences on two counts of first-
degr'ee murder.
The judge also sentenced
him to eight consecutive five-
year-to-li!e sentences on eight
ON THE STAND Mtilllri' meaaagei lr<im his 1ather ond
--• •• ~ t I •··' j 90metlmes from his victims ~·•-o say .. ..,. oot ust !hat It '(as "healthyto Jdll "•
. the 10 persons as charged, but Al a ''"h -'"'"I rootb<'"
also another three l a st 1 • · and • .,. ho-""' ~ January and February P ayer nor student,
'Ibe defendant said bis Mullin was 1yoted "most likely
f a t be r ' s autliorilarianism to ,succeed. • . , -
San Diego
Gets Project
Capitel News Service
SAN DIEGO-'!be county ol
San Diego has been selected
as the first iroject area in the
country to operate' the new
special supplemental lood pro-
gram for Women, Infants, and
Children (WlC).
llE LATER dropped out ol
college qineering studi.e!I
and experimenled with drugs,
particularly LSD. During the
past five years, he commlUed
himself five ~ to ment11:
hospitals and each time doc-
tors dia~ him as a
paranoid schi7.opbrenic. ·
He was convicted of first~
degree murder in the Jan. 2S
shooting deatha of Jame.t
Gianera, 24, a fonner hlglJ
school friend, and housewife
Kathy Francl~, 29, both !!l
Santa Cruz. He was convicted
of second-degree murder ii:i
the deaths of Gianera's wif'e(
Joan; 21, and Mrs. FranctS'
sons, David. 9, and Daemon, -4~
-who were possible witnegs. ...
Pregnant or lactating
'women and chidlren up to t
will be eligible tor the pilot pro-
gram if they (1 ) live in the ap-
P,rOVed project' area; (2) are
eligible for medical treatment
at free or reduced cost from
the county health clinic, and
( 3) ere detennined by medical
penoonel of the heallh depart-
ment to be in need of sup-
plemental food.
Mullin also was convicted ot
second-degree murder in tbl!i
deaths of a 72-year~ld former
prize fighter and four teen-ag~
ed campers. J
·I ' '
To the people
who love great cars.
I
·'
,. ~
•
1974 Pontiac Grand Pri,",
Pontiac's latest greatest! New classic styfina.}
Sporty handling and performance. New
luxurious inl!riors. Obviously, we're
out to make you dissatisfied with whatever
you're driving.
• City .~_s· also rejected T ..... n...-pen ., .5 million "'part<""'*""" . v.,:;.J.~ . ~ _ ...... 1'llodol: 1nc1....,1 . t,: • ~ I :1 ' , ,
ttno ilcumbent "It ....,. SAJfLUIS OBISPO (AP)--cllmen'1nto Nov. 6 nmof(9 t¥jtb hlost service ~tatiolis in San
dllllengen;. Voter turnout-was Luis OtiispO Gounty Were ex-
a •surprisittgly heavy 36 per-pected to reopen todiy follow-
cent. ing mass closures ~al\ed to
protest Phase 4 price controls
on gasoline.
· SAN BERNARDINO (APl
-A judg<> bas sentenced the
former administrator of St.
Mary's Hoopital in Apple
Valley to 1-14 years in prison.
Lester J. Mick, 44, was con-
victed of forgery, unJawful
sexual intercourse and two
counts of grand theft.. He was
arrested last June L ·
A maiority of the 80 service
statioos in th e county shut
down Tuesday' leaders or the
protest said.
hfeanwhile, tbe l n tern al
Revenue Service said in Los
Angeles that it was dispatch·
ing investigators throughout
Southern California to make
sure retail gasoline dealers
were complying with Phase ·4
ceiling price regulations.
Barry Rans, chief ol' the
LOS ANGELES (AP) _ A stabilization division in the 12-
Beveriy Hills attorney bas CC!unt_Y Los . Angeles I R S
been sentenced to one to five District, said . spot . checks
years in prison for soliciting a • would continu e indefinitely.
detective to plant cocaine on
the iresident of the Los
Angeles Community COUege
Board of Trustees.
In handing down the sen-
tence Tuesday, Superior Coort
Judge Albert D. 'Matthe"'s
turned down a request for pro-
bation for Donna Y. Gordon,
42.
e Wins Electio11
LOS ANGELES (AP)
Urban affairs specialist David
Cunningham overtook an early
lead forged by television actor
Ge:>rge Take! and went on 10
win a special election to fill
the city oouncil seat vacated
by Ma yor Thomas Bradley.
Unofficial final returns early
today gave Cunningham .
whose nomination petition was
signed by Bradley, 8.19!} votes,
or 34.8 percent, compared lo
· 6,552, or 27.8 per c en \ .
garnered by Takci, who played
the role or Sulu in the
·television series "Star Trek.''
e Sniog Hearh19
LOS AJi!GE LES (AP) -The
State Air ltesources Board
Tuesday dererred action on
the proposed air pollu!ion
emergency conlingcnc~' plan
after a public hearing.
The Tong-pending .,, .. ., 1 •
designed to set up cril!•ri~ fnr
smog alerts. wu rnin .. .,r1
emergencies
=C5,''ll~'"!•·~I
Jllll>llc he'lfl
Kids
A~k '
Nude Swim
Ban Drafted
SANTA BARBARA (AP) -
County supervisors h a v e
ordered the drafting of an
ordinance which would ban
nude bathing at Santa Barbara
public beaches.
The supervisors' action
Tuesday came in response to a
request by Sheriff J o h n
Carpenter to be gi\'en more
powers to bait nude bathing
which has triggered numerous
complaints from beachfront
residents. Supervisor Frank Frost said
he will join Carpenter and the
county coun!lel in drafting the
proposed ordinance:
Fu11ds Set
For Museum
LOS ANGELES (AP l -
County supervisors say the
11'ar has been financially pa v-
ed to building a museum
t-c,.ide !he ramed La Brea tar
oils lO clisolay thousands of
·,, ~c: frr ..., ancient animals
(' k .,. '~rncst Debs an·
tho! runds .
·.,.., th"Ough a
· 'l blished b~
"r-•nto .. of
11111icd fruit
"tc"' In a
'<11ulcverd
t1Jwntown
• ·11~11m''I
ir, lhc $2
!
1974 Pontiac Liixury LeMans. :
The name says it all. Comfortable luxurioos
interior. New formal window (aVailable
onry with vinyt top until earty 1974).
Pontiac·v.s Performance. Smooth Wtde-
Track ride. All the luxury you want
without buying more car
, thaD )'OU need.
1974 Pontiac Grand Am.
The great handling ot fine imports comf:iirted
with great Pontiac innovation. like a squeez-
able nose. And special bucket seats. That's
foreign intrigue ... American ingei:iutty.
. .
m4 Pontiac Fonnula Firebinl.1
t' Part engineering. Part soul. Excttln1 new
front end with blacked-out grille. Sporty
.• hood scoops. 350 V-8 and floor-shifted
,
3-s~ed . Oua1 exhausts. This one's for
~.pepple...wbo tak~• the·tun of dri'i~I strioully.
•
1974 Pontiac BonneWle.'
It; a little mbre car. With • distinctive~
new chrome grille. Fantasttc new vlsibili~
·Handsome new tweed and Morrokkte Interior)
trims. Pontiac's 400 V-8. A great Wide~
Track ride.·For peaple whO stU1 •Oior ·
driving.
From the peop~ who
-build .them .. • " '
• ' \ •
,
"
•
.I
-. -
. . . '
--
Today's Final
N.Y. Stocks
VOi:: 66, NO. 262, 9 SECTIONS, 130 PA6ES ORANGE ~OUNTY,' CALIFORNIA WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER, 19, 1973 c TEN CENTS . . J ~
'
Ex-salecraclaer 'Shotvs Stull • in Mesa
Br RUDI NIEDZIEl8JU Of .. IMll1 ,..., .....
Guiding a thin wire plclt· Into the
keyhole . of a 11<-lwnbler lo\:k, "Red"
"Rudensky'' !lngera were rock-steady as
be prepared f,.. his Colla Mesa caper.
':'his wu an euy job, requiring neUher
puntjl nor nilro, and there wu no·danaer
of beio, an .. ted. Some of Cool& Mesa's
leadhlg citizens were In on the job.
Big Red was In town to teach them
bow, to !M-g!e. .
J -
Teachers' .-
JJargaining
'1[ usually like to do It as fast as turn-ing a key~" lild the master safecracker,
oow. 75 ~ old, who said be had never
beeii iif9pPecl by a lock. ll toot a little longer than that and Red
was • UJ>Set. · But be took rev~ge on a
more complicated· eight-tumbler venlon
llJld..:pcipped it open before you could
Count lo three.
Rudem:ky, who spent 35 years ol bis
lll!r~ learning hla profe&!lon and
~~·bl1.mbtakes, is ~till In lhe
lockbusllng buslnes.!. • · .
.. "Everything is as~ it .was before, but
now It's legal," he assured members of
tile Lions Cluli.-He told tbem be got his
las! job through the St. Paul chief of
,.police. ·
RUdensky, is now a "consultant " to 3-
M Company. He worb !or the. aecurity
systems divillm: Tiiey build the loco
• and .Rudensty tears them apart, then
aeodl:ctbe """'""'" back to tblulrawing · ·bol'lll, • -
~ Tuesday he came ~ Costa Me~ to
show off bis expertise and to tantalize
tbe Lioos with stories from bis cfunlnal
life.
He told them how be becam8 tbe top
barlana in Leavenworth, bow ~be once
fro:~ prison bars with dry Jee .._d busted
tbem ou~ after Ibey cryatalllaed. how he
spent two ~ears in the can with Al
Capooe, and how be kept his band "In the
bualne,ss" by servmg as Leavenworth's
locbmltb. .
' . . .
Park
It was all quite entertaining, but Red
said he wouldn't do it again.
"[ actually got s!ck of It. I wanted to
be a master criminal but I was actually
a professional loser. That's the title I
earned. I w8:3 :.: stupid ass," said Red.
Stealing bagels and bananas from
pushcarts on the lower east side,
Rudensky said he got his start by his
parents. They provided little supervision
and never showed him the difference
between right and wrong.
He ran away from home \vhen he was
12 and escaped frot the New·York State
Reformatory in EJmira at the age of 14.
Rudensky claims he heisted more than
$50.000 before he was 15.
He approached his frequent visits to
tfi'e slammer witl.1 the same attitude· as a
college freshman. Rudensky was there to
learn and living in the dormitory was
part of it.
"I \\'enl into prison to learn safecrack-·
l&ee 'BURGLAR,' Page 21 .
Use Studie·d
• Ptea.Made-Mesa Could Buy Four School Sites
. T~ In the Nowport,Mesa Unified
School D!str!ct mode a plet! Tue>day for
leg!al8tion that would, llv•. them the ricb,t
to ba!pln oollect!vely with the , school
board,
."We feel teacbera oogbt io have the
same rigbtl to · -liate with • their
employm that other worftn do,'' said
Jerry Shannon, president of the Newport·
Mesa EducaUon Allodatian.
"Otbenri!e the school board bas die,
tatorial powen to do wbatevet they want
and teacben-bave DO power at all.''
! A bill guaranteeln( the right of col·
lectivo barp!nlng for teacbera puaed
lbe ,l.egllllture lbll -111111 b ~W'a1tbic1Actim by Gov. Ronald Reagan.
The bill by Senator 0-S• -
(l).llan Franc!Jco) baa.---by !"·~11· barialnlnf would , . ill
ability. to run the llCbool · ct.
f ... .,,·r;:· ~:n ........ E.-...
bull: 7 • : --........ _ ... ,,
tbelr po"-II ""1:~" • "No -"' . ' ....... llloWd have the power to 1le ladle. )ary, 111111
prosecutor -oilier -bolnp, .. ICbool boards DOW do1" llJI I atataent
roleued 1'ueoda1 by -..i qa,ck
Gonloll, presWeat..ieet "' Ille education
uooclatloo and a -at llcNally
COlltlnoation lligb ScllooL
The statement &fP* that teacbera
abOuld have broader· powers In Ibo opera-
tion of llCbool dlltricll,thall Ibey now do,
and that ooll«l!ve borpldlog Ian would
help them get that -· The-llatemenl ..... made· In ~
to Newport·Meaa llCbool board member
Marion Berg-.'1 call earlier lbll week
for Governor ReapD to veto. the
Moscone bill. Mrs. Bet am LO llld abe was
speaking aa vice proolde!Jt ol the
(Seo TBAClllllll, PoP I) '
M~~Wa:y
~!h!:Pr'ug:::.9.!Y
By JOHN ZALLER
Of .. .,..., Pl ... ''•"
The Newport-Mesa Unified School
Board moved cautiously Tuesday toward
a dec~ation that four vacant school
sitea are surplua and can be sold to Costa
Mesa for use as city parts.
Although the board Indicated that it.
probahly will eventually sell the 45 acres
of vacant school land, several trustees
erpressed reservation's about the ,sale.
Trustees said they were disturbed
Two Hostage
Victims Show
Improvement
• ~ ' I •
"'-F' Costa llelf' lfenlt!!laJ
HiJlpltal said !CMlay tlial• two )'OIDll kid-
nap ~~ ~ woUnded by
-potice-pidiil: Uve · now reeoMnd
....... to 1Je 1-*-i &onplli JllJ he
cue 1'ard.
Marco DeSllva,, 20, ol 35115 Newport
Blvd., Newport Beach, and Denlno
Baeseman, 17, of Pasadena, both remain
in serious condition in ll"ivate rooms, but
. ......----.are.....,11eaanrottillf15i!Ue .
THIS IS POX~APTURjD TODAY IN COSTA MESA The viclims -each hit by .38 caliber • • • . -wm H9 Be O.Omod a 1'9t,"" a Wild Animal? slup -underwent sutgery last Tbur&-day following the dramaUc ~taUon
' . Net Thai Qn·i~k
··P~t Red Fox Captured i!f, Mesa
'I . •
Wedneaday night In a home at 232Z .
Orchid Hills Drive, Santa Ana Heights. ..r Newport Beach police bave wnpped up
much ol their cue against Roland D.
Ccawlord, 29, who Is held 4t Orange
County Jall In lieu ol $100,000 i.u set !or
14 felony counts file<!Tgainst hlln:
N"q1'ict<red foi wasn't ctulck enough fox a-rrud·~ dog food brunch, but
fodi.J"r ~~ • ~ be sniffed 'f~ turned• away with a "°' bU'!le,<I 11J in a cage trap set by the ~ ,Joolc • "
He allegedly commandeered their car
and then switched to a second, kidnaping
a third female hostage in C:Orona del Mar
wltjle babbling about being sought by
police. .
Investigators tracking his true identit)'
~ Allimal •Conlrol men after 'He' gol• tho •chleteii ,•!"14wich In
' m RiiiiOiii-ay repanecr-Hiilflalit!"'Oll!cer1'CU!l Floren<!!'1r"·hmcb
"1P'lng a uFo (lfnidonti!ied "Foxy Ob-bq lnsteall. '
Jed) bounding around In a red blur. And .no matter wi!etber be's ,dedared a
through fingerprints learned from the
FBI 21> days later that Ccawford jumped
bail 32._months ago..iaEl Paso, Tel,.Jm a
marijuana smuggling charge.
Ir Ccilfar tq arnh 'ruelday night Daily pet or a wild animal, a !ox·!n a c;ige with
F ' · C' -hie TV Pilot" ~ ad for ooe loot red> foz a chicken aandwich Is l\etter tl)On a lox
• ~. ~ ~ . • conflimed that the beady-eyed captive In a d!ict<nhouse.
He is wanted by federal authorities
there to .face renewed prosecution, but
they appareoUy bad no leads on his
whereabouts at the time Wednesday's
bizarre !1iobt began •
Crawford, who bad been living wlih
friends at 752 Main St., Huntington Beach
and using an alias, escaped Injury when
police had to open fire inside the house .
• • -~ -beloilp' to La""""8 w. llmser, 11192
Costa Meaa wants to anpluf"ltlell from Ol'chard.Drtve, Santa Ana Heights. ·
cable TV · .• _ · · · 'l'be.Dnaaer borne is In Santa Ana
Unles ·bids (or • lliit O~lty 11.igtits which Is county territory. 'Ille Released From Jail
teloYJslon link aro ncelved by next fo~,was captured In Costa Mtaa, where it ~ BERNARDINO (AP) -Billie
Februaey •1be will reoommeodCI'" ~~:O Costalm J.s Illegal to keep wild animals. . Waldo • NicbQ)5, 511, a Ventura electric
The patromen present and DeMa:rco
have told police Crawford tried several
tirr.es to shoot hJs misfiring .357 Magnum
pistol as the male hostage fought for It. Mesa pul out, aays ., ~~ an IDs captors decided they 1Yould book company lineman, waJ released Tue.day
Alvin Pinkley, also a d!recto!: of the , the rtmaway Into the Orange Q>unty from tbe county jail here after being held
Public Cable Televlskla (PCl'A). Ahln\ai Shelter, pending a dotermlnaUon !or lnveat!ption of a five-year-old
The PCTA wu fGrmed two~ qo . II( .ftltber the county considen a lo:t murder caa Nlabola wasn't ~barged In
He bad aimed, Ibey claimed, at both
officers Who had their own guns drawn
and earlier misfired the pistol at
DeMarco's stomach. to Unk Costa M-, FCU!talil. Valley, tb!\l lives With a human famlli a j>et or a ' )lie ll)Wder ol Va~. Justa Cirtwrlght,
Weatm!Nler, Himllngton Beach ana • wtlci'tielat. • 11. a·f'Mda'lilt~1J11~pw1!o disap-Newport,Booch with a oetllOdt of up to J'l!t "Arihiiat control men-~·the·· peattd!nJtinolM8;' . 1 .
Officer Jon Costelow bad been woonded
slightly when shot at earlier. ,~~mu::!h~~~=---"'--. -· .. ; ', •'
aa well u providing better, recept1m ror A~g's Ang'11
VHF channels u well u Ibo future
capability of te!Hho.,., _,
of ut!Uty ~. and CJ!hor poo;ibll!U ..
aUorded. by a two-way cable installation
l!i each IUbscriber's ho!l\O. .
But since no firm bu ~ forward
lo bid on Ibo fiv~ty network franchise,
Plnldey baa concluded the cable TV iJ>.
• cluat'l' ......... down Ibo tube.
.. ,,,. hiddlnC doadli ...... last -.... u.. -·t _oig bldl," &&YI
Plnkley. ''1llll woalol ~ lo ... that
the cabla talevlsioD Ind.airy la JJOl In 100 ~.. (IOOll.a ~.. __ ...:;:..,_
• ll'or Ila -Ceata
M-bu ·~ to .-... Ibo ---lion the ..-itr-'Illa -waa~well · oPeo>t lo 1'~ the · ola-Uvo-in
I ,opinion, ,but lo COlltlnue would
be aw.... . r-
"l think.the PCTA baa a IQI. to offer et
10me point in the fulure, ~ lla uy1. ".U
five or JO yoar1 down the Ible It -Ute
It would be~· 111&1be we -
,ptdr h up apln. But wby-n be
the e1perllllental -,..11l" •
· Attache C_ase Blown Up
The · moat exploalve case at Harbor ... The marshals kneW If it was a bomb Deputies blew out one whole comer or
Judk:fal Diltrict Court Tuesday was with a· ,nercury switch a gentle touch the briefcase Attorney Batanger•a wife
~Od by Newport Beach attorney · miCht set it off. bad Just atven him as a preaent.
:~':. illruger and the sberl!l's bom~ 1 . lfl'~:I~~ ::·.~type: 0~~ed ~~;r~.; ~ :.' ~~y,"
Barrllter Baronger bad fo110tten his ne11.-d 11\0 btack leather satchel and Contacted later today, Attorney
..,. attacbe case oontalnillg variou1 ltpl iloittly hauled it out ol the courtroom B.ranger said his law partner Is Indeed
popets Monday a!temoon, leaving It In a and down ~ COfl'ldor. right. -
...rtroom. Marshal Sg~ Ed Postel .aid It was well "It was my only decent briefease -
DepUty marshals then noUced an after midnight when the ttlreatenlng wlth my initials in gold on the sit!~ -and
ominous,black satchel u the night ira!fic briefcase was t<ilderly-aet in pla<e under frankly, 1'1]) ticked off," be declared.
dim'l-brokeup_ __ tree on the front lawn. "It's not .repalrabh:. They blew the
Four marshtls who recently had com--Sherllf's spec~lists attachea a small-whole end out of It. I am going to make a
pleted a tchool dealing with destructive explosive charge to the elcg·ant, '125 ex· claim against the county," Bar anger em·
device.a thought it look pretty sinister. ecutlve's ""'"*'Y and BOOM. • phaslzed.
Thi cate allo looked like an attorney's "The· blast didn't hurt the pa~ ln-"Surely," he said, "they have ln-
bomework, but no attorneys had been ln side, but It aura .did damage the brief· surance covering act:t of their employes
court 11nca afternoon . case," Sgt. Postel remarked. committed In the line o! dub ."
because Costa Me,sa taxpayers had
already paid for the land once to use as
school sites and were now about to pay
for them again for u:;e as parU.
''It's a ·thorny question," said Board
President Donald E. Smallwood. "But we
have to assume that Costa Mesa voters
understood this when they agreed in the.Ir
bond· election to assume the tax burden
for doilfg it." ·
Cos\& ¥esa voters last week gave 71
percent approval to a $2.2 million bond
Sixth Time
proposal to buy an estimated 70 acres of
parks and open space land. I
Newport-Mesa trustees d e c I d e d
unanimously Tuesday to :
-Order a new appraisal of their four
s~I sites to determine their fair
market value. A six-month oJ4l.appraiSAl
by the district sets the value at_about '2
million, which ls about $1.2 million more
than was originally paid for the sites.
-Asked Superintendent John NicoD
· (See PARKS, Page Z)
House Upholds Nixon's 1 . i
VetoonMinimum Wage' ..,,, . .
WASHINGTON (AP) -TbeHouse lo-Congress . .
da1 .upbeld President NbOn's vetf fll a . Meany also sent the members a ti.
bill tliae wooid -:: 1--the -analysis of N!J_gn's veto message.
. --to -..... -J. rebtlffinll lt )Ollfbl "' point-and ~allq It The '8te waa ~.to ~ • 11 ""°' "a collection o! myth and distortioo of
sllorl of the -two-tblrda nlajarity ~ fact." . ,
to override a veto. . Arncild Miller, president of tbe United
It Was the sixth time tbll lelllkm. that Mine Workers, issued a statement 'Ibe&o
Congress !ailed to muster the tWo-lhirds day saying "thi! week caJ1s !or,couragt
majority required to override a veto. in c.ongress."
Nixon sald"'"tbe-!Jill-..ould-bave ,,In,..---Although-Jt-linslly passed 287 to-1!8
creased unemployment aqd added to ln· last June, Republican and conservative
Oatlonary pressures. Democratic opponents came wJtbin 20
He has asked C.ongress to provide for a votes of scrapping . it for a n '
more moderate incre&R in the minimum AdministraUcn·backed sumtitute.
w&ge, WhiCh is $1.80 an hour. The bill also would have expanded
House Democratic leaden failed in coverage or ~ minimum wage law by
four previous efforts to muster· the two-bringing five million state and local
thirds majority needed to "'enide a veto government emptoyes and one million
anil a fifth effort failed in ttie Sena~. domestics under its protection.
George Meany, ~O president, Nixon bas proposed a slower incre..,.
had sent every House member a letter in the minimum -to $1:99 this )'e-ar,
urging the veto b overridden and called $2.10 next year, $2.20 In 1970 a!!d $2:30. In
on all unkm local leaders to carry the 1976, with no increase in .coverage, and a
message to their representatives in Jower rate for teen-age worken.
Ex-Agnew Press Official_
Criticizes· Haig, Laird
•
WASIIlNGTON (AP) -Vic Gold,
fonner press secretary to Vlce President
Spiro T. Agnew, charged today that top
White House aides Melvin R. Laird and
Alexander Haig are responsible for many
of the rumors and reports about Agnew 's
legal troubles.
"This 1s all calculated by the White
House to keep the Agnew story alive,"
Gold said. "I'm blaming the White House
stall at the highest level, Mr. Haig and
Mr. Laird.
"They operate the stall and they know
who says what. When an anonymous
White House source ls quoted, they show
no darnJied interest at all in finding out
who said It.
"Jn one case·, Mr. Laird was the direct
source, when he called Rep. (John B.)
Ander>0n (ft,Ill.J, and told him lo go
easy In his support of the vice president.
And there have been reports that h-1r.
Laird has been telling stories about Vice
President Agnew's t r o u b I e s to the
diplomaUc corps in very unflattering
terms."
Gold alJO said in an interview there are
Individuals in the White House wbo very
much want former Teus Governor John
Connally to become vice president If and
when Agnew resigns.
"The number one member of the O:>n-
nally claque has to be Richard Nl•on,"
Gold said. "This talk about Connally
keeps going on and on and he does not
one damned thlng to stop It." -
Meanwhile, While Houoe Deputy p...._,
Secratary Gerald l.. Warren toda,r donJl'll
(l·) there Is '4a disposition by th& White
Rouse or the' people ln the WhJte House
to force the resignaUon o! the &. pres!·
dent, (2) the While House Is exerting
pressure on the vice president to resign"
\
and (3) the White House has been the
souiCe of stories that Agnew was think·
ing about resigning.
Warren said he would have no further
conllilent concerning Agnew until Atty.
Gen. Elliot Richardson has acted with
respect to possible presentation ot t)\.e
Agnew matter to a federal grand jury in
Baltimore.
..
•
Weatlter
Mostly swmy Tbur!day, follow.
ing some low clouds in the morning
hours. Highs in the fiOs at the
beaches, rising to the mid-70s in-
land.
INSIDE TODAY
The Daily Pilot, o!ong wlth •
200 othe1" newspapers in the
Uni ted States, ts joining in an
e%periment in college education
vMJ the printed page. See details
on Page 9.
Al Y-ktvk t 1 r11 .JINlq •
L.M,. Ifft 1 AIUt LMll'" •
tHll111 at Mallbt• I C1Htonit1 S ,,q.,;tt :MoU
C__, t.fntr 11 Mlllll .. l'llllldil •
ti..MMM U·1' N1IMIHt ...... 4. I
Ctfl\IH M OrlltM C..., 1•11 er~ tt S-'t •.tt ~"' Molli: lt Dr. ,.,.,...............,.
t:1'1lorl1I l'eM I Sl9et' IMA"tb H..1t
l1tltt1ll-I IWJ Ttt.\'ttM · ·~
l'lllJllC• 11411 n..i-..... flw IM ....... n, 1' , W_.1 ........ SJ' .. ....._.. . ....... ......... .. .
t
'
•
-
•
-
TON!CllT
ORA NCE COUNTY ~'Allt BOARD
'Regular 1neet\ng. 88 Fair Orlv~. 8 p.tn.
1'CATCl1 22" -South Coas t Hepertory
Theater. thru Sun . 8 p.111.
L:CI L.ECTUil ES -"Intolerance,"
rjrst of series on !he Classic Cinema,
Science Lecture Hall. 7:30.10;30 p.m.
Adm. $6. First of series on Education to
l\leet the Future. Room 100 Social
Science Hall . 7·10 p.m. Adm. $5.50.
THURSDAY, SEPT. !O
C}fART -Regu lar meeling, tilesa
Verde Country Club. 7:30 a.m.
• LIBRARY STORY HO UR -Stories
·and film "Time of the Horn:" 10:30 and
11:30 a.m.
• SENIOR CITIZENS CLUB -Com-
.rnunity Rccrealiou Center. 12..J p.m.
COSTA MESA CHAMBER OF COM·
'MERCE -Joint meeting Y.'ith Newport
Harbor C of C aboard Pavilion Queen .
.Balboa Pavilion. 12 noon.
COLLEGE PAHK HOMEOWNERS
ASSOCIATION -General meeting.
College Park School. 7: 15 p.m. ----
SHOWS MESANS HOW
Safecracker Rudtnsky
From Page 1
'BURGLAR''· • •
ing . Where else would you learn how to
crack a safe? You don't go out into th e
street and say, 'Hey, can you teach me
how to crack 11 safe?' "
Out of prison for the last 33 years,
Rud ensky now believes tha~ he was sick
to single handedly "declare war on a na ·
Lion of 100 million people." He is firmly
on the side of Jaw and order now.
Rudensky has hi.s ov.11 views on crime
and punishment ant.i believes it is absurd
tD think that reinstatement of the death
penalty in California \\'OUld deter harden-
ed criminals from killing.
"\Vould you kill them or not? .. asked
someone in the audience while talking on
the subject of the death penalty. "I
would." the man added.
"'lben you're sick. too." Rudensk y
snapped back .
But v.·hen it comes to dope dealers. the
ex-criminal advocate .. a harder line.
"I say give them the Chinese treat-
ment -shoot them down in the street.
They deserve the death penalty for ped·
dllng dopc,1' Rudesnky insisted . He is
convinced that dope dealers cannot be
rehabilitated.
Rudensky himself \Vas rehabilitated
\\'ith the help of Margarel Mitchell,
.author of ··cone with The Wind ," after
doing time for cri mes \vhich included a
$2 nlillion. robber~· an d a $300,000 mail
robbery in Il linois.
Today. in addil lon to holding down a
respectable job. Rudensky is a respected
111c1nbcr of the ~l<J}'or's Advisory Com-
mission on Crir.1c i• SL Paul.
OU.NG-I COAST CM
DAILY PILOT
Tiit 0••.,._ CMll Oi't-ILY PILOT,"''"'""~"
11 ~if14111 llle rq.,..p, .. ,, •• Pllbllllled ..,,
lh• O•l<>Ot C0.11 P..ill1tM"' C-n¥. St!Mo·
r1!t ldlllon1 •rt l'\IDll·-· M-ty t1l•ovoh
f'r14l1,, IOr COiii MHt, N...-;iorl &tlCft,
t-1\lll!l1'010tl a11Cf1/F011nlllfl Y111...,. L•v-
llM<h, lrvlflt/SNlll~~ ...., ~•fl Ci.tnenlt/
51n J~n C1pll!rll'IO A 1ln9lt rt0lontl
ldllkln 11 llllbll1llld S1turd1v1 end Sunct•v•.
Tiit jW'itKip.I ~11~!119 .i.n1 01 It U3 W11!
ll1y Slfn!. C01t1 Mftl, C1 hffrn11, ~•M.
Rob11t N. w,,111
•••-• 1f'ld •uoll""•
Jtck R. Cur!1y
'YICt Pt .. lllMll -Gt"l'll M1n1ttr
Tho11111 K11•ll
IEOllO<
Tho"''' A. Mw•phi"' MIMl;I~ Edi!O<
Ch1rlt1 H. Looi Rlth11 .. '· Ni ll .. 1111/•nl M1"'111"9 l!Clllttl
c .... w ... ~
JJO W11t l1v Strttt
flit1ili1tt A4 .. reu:',,O, lot 15.0, '2•2•
""'..., ·~; ~ ,._,.,, ""'~" l.ffllNI attdl. m ,, ..... , ... _
Hllllflflf'°" ltttll'I 1117J IMdl .... ltvl•CI ~ ("'"""!ti )OJ "°°'"' II Ct"'IM llMI
Tll•••111 17141 64lo4JJ1
C ................. Ml·l671
C..,.,.11111, nn. Or11191 CMtt ''*'ltlolllt
("""""'· ... -llwlel, lllWir•tltns. ••lfl'lol1 • ..,.ttwf' tr ..,¥911111~ lltrtltl -V-----~ WlllllWt .-.tltl ,..
1'1'1+1.i.. tf """'""' -·
o 1tCONi1 tllM -llOf N ill ti COiii Mfotl,
eeu..,..11, ""'""'°!"'* 1w t•l'l'!w n . .i -1111.,.1 ~ !NII D.11 "*'"'Wt 111Hlfll1Y efttll'lft ........ """""'4¥.
Fo1· Suspect
In Sn1uggle
from Wire Services
LAS VEGAS . -A Newport Beach
boatyard hand allegedly involved in The
Amsterdam Connection ,· which resulted
in seizure of perhaps the largest hashish
haul in U.S. nistQry, has won reduced
bail.
Gary L. Lickert , 26, a Long Beach resi-
dent. \vas arres ted here last Friday after
aUegedly picking up a truckload of 817
pounds of the high-grade marijuana
derivative.
Federal authorities claim the $5.5
million shipment they say originated in
Amsterdam, the Netherlands could be
. the greatest ever in terms of volume.
Investigators began working (he case
after U.S. Customs agents uncovered 54
pounds con~aled in a piece of freight
which arrived in New York .
They did not elabora te what type of
freight it might have been, but large
quantities of narc<Jtics are frequently
delivered hidden in secret compartments
in imported cars or trucks.
Lickert was taken into custody by
agents of the Federal Drug Enforcement
Administration, a new force from several
combined agencies, plus Las Vegas
police. ,
•le allegedly took delivery of the entire
shipment of freight in which the hashish
had been hidden , loading ii aboard a
rented truck at McCarran Airport.
Bail for the suspect was originally set
at $100,000, but U.S. Magistrate Joe Ward
reduced il to $40,000 Tuesd3y on a
defense motion.
He stipulated that at such time as
Lickert can post ball that his travel must
be restricted only to Clark County, Nev.,
and the stale of California.
The -ft;ierar judge also ordered that
Lickert surrender his passport in return
for the reduced bail figure .
Newport Beach police said today lhat
they had received word of the suspect1s
arrest in Nevada, but did not even kno\v
which local boatyard employs him.
Fron• Page l
PARK S ...
for further reports to assure that the four
school sites really are surplus.
-Directed Business Manager Ray-
mond Schnierer to provide a detailed
breakdoWn on the financial status of the
school sites.
-Scheduled a public discussion for
Oct. 2, at which time trustees can, if they
wish, make the formal declaration that
the school sites are surplus.
-Called for an investigation oJ the
district's title to the land to see if it owns
mineral rights to any oil that might be
discovered underground.
Three of lhe school sites are located in
the immediate area of• the future
Fairview State Park. Officials said lhe
sites wexe..original_ly__P.urch~sed on ~l:_e
assumption that the parK would De
developed as a residential area.
The fourth site is located north of the
San Diego Freeway and east of Fairview
Road. Officials said that site is not need-
ed because the land near it has been re-
zoned from residential to industrial use.
Th:? moral problem raised by trustees
involves the fact that the four school
siles were bought and are still being .paid
for by taxpayers residing within the old
CosKt Mesa Union School District.
However when the C'.-Osta Mesa and
Newport Beach school systems merged
in J966, ownership of the land went to the
newly created Newport-Mesa Un i fie d
School District.
Th us if the land is sold, reve_nue from
the sale will go to the Newport-Mesa
district and can theoretically be spent to
benefit Newport Bedch taxpayers who
had nothing to do with purchasing the
si tes in the first place.
School officials proposed to solve this
problem by promising to spend all
revenue from sale of the school sites on a
sc heduled $2.5 million improvement p~
gram at Costa !\1esa High School.
However, offiCials also concede that
the improvements to Costa Mesa High
\\'ould have been made whether the
surplus school sites were sold as
parkland or not.
Fr o m P a 11e l
TEACHE RS . ••
Ca lifornia School Boards Associalion.
The teachers' statement ends with the
pred iction that Governor Reagan prob-
llbly ~'ill sign the collective bargaining
bill, "because he considers himself a na-
tional political candidate. No such can·
didate u•ould fail to sign a labor bill for
fear of being labeled 'anti-labor'."
Calculator Go ne
At Mesa P lant
Detectirrs loday wtre probing a $2,360
theft at a Costa Mesa industrial plant.
Gerald L. s.auer, of the NARMCO
Division of Whittaker Industries, 600 Vic-
toria St., said TO,esday someone stole a
costly calculator and card reader ac·
cessory device from the plant's proc-
essing laboratory.
The fin n 111anufactures u variety or
chemicals Involving highly volatile com-
pounds and 'the calculator Is u!Cd In
determlng the ratio or chemica ls ln a
mixture.
•
•
Pick of tlae Pets
Estancia High School student Tony Nichols, 1.4, will
bring his seven-and-a-half foot python "Candi" to
the Costa tl1esa library Saturday for a lecture on
snakeS. Also in hi s snake basket for the 1 p.m. talk
-
•
at 566 Center St. will be two boa constrictors and
several local types -all perfectly harmless, _Of
colll'Se. The lecture ;., open to children of all ages
without charge.
Boundary Swap .· Offered
•
'Fifth' Plea
t
hivokea •
By Col son
From Wire Strvlct1
WASHINGTON -Challu w. Coloon, •
former presidential special counsel, was
reported today to have plead~ the Filth
Amendment to avoid answering ~sUons
put to him by the Senate Waterpte in-vestjg•Ung committee.• , , •
Committee chairman 5-m J. Ervin Jr.
(0-N.C. ), said that the questions were
· put after the committee v o t e d
unanimously to reject a request by
Col.son's lawyer that the interview be
postponed until the close of grand jury
action involving Colson.
Ervin and vice chainnan Howard H.
Baker Jr. <R-Tenq,.), said. b>wever, that
Colsoo said he would not only be willing
but also anxious to return and telllfy
freely if he is not indicted .
But Baker said the committee received
indications tha t grand jury action may be
imminent.
Ervin said 'that Colson invoked the
Fifth Amendment to all substantive ques-·
tions put to him.
But he .noted : "As a lawyer, I must
note that a man is entitled to plead the
Fifth Alp~ndment even if he ls not guilty
of any offense."
He said the committee has reason to
beUeve Colson has a good deal of J.n..
formation relating to the Watergate cue.
But Ervin saJd the committee voted
unanimously not to grant C:Ol.son im-
munity for any testimony he might give
before the committee.
Baker said there was no indicatk>n that
what the committee might get in tbe way
of information would be worth such a
grant. .
Colson met with the committee behind
closed doors for nearly two houri.
Ervin said that because of Col10n's
refusal to answer questions, the oom~ -R mittee would not call him u a wltneu New port-Mesa eceives Biil tO ·Resolve 1Jispute·--~wlien1>Ubllc bearing• -Monday.
By , WILLIAM SCHREIBER a rourth of the area in the Irvine district facilities planning director Dave Kini.
ot "" 0•11r Puot s••ff and the reamalnder in Newport-Mesa. the district has not felt the burden of Rookie Mesa
'The lrvine -Unified School Board Tues· The Irvine district already Includes busing children from the isolated
day night offered to "resolve" a long-part of the North Ford land because the Spyglass Jfill , and Harbor View Homes
standing. sometimes bitter, boundary boundary cuts diagonally across ii fnun areas.
dispute with the Newport-Mesa Unified Jamboree Road to MacArthur &ulevard. But poslibly by November Irvine will
Sch..ol District. The swap, ii approved, would give Irvine have to bus children from those areas to
The Irvine board voled unanimously to the rest of that land. schools as far as seven miles from home .
give up new homes lying within their Boundaries in that section ol Newport There are Newport-Mesa schools within
Clislrict in Spyglass Hill and Harbor View Beach have been a sore spot since the , walking distance.
Officer Gets
Hit-run Arrest
Homes in exchange for the entire North early 1960s. nie issue raised by the new Irvine of-Ford and Phill'l>Ford Aeronutronic in-A series of land trades put large por· lficial Rookie Costa Mesa Pollet Officer fer has many sides, according to o . s dustrial-commercial parcel in Newport lions or the Irvine district (then San Joa-in both districts. Shadrick Canington bagged hls fint hit·
Beach. quin Elementary and Tustin lltgb School and-run accldent suspect early today,
Ne wport-Mesa district officials had Ht-Districts) into the -Harbor~Area ICbpol It is questiona_ble whether lhe astessed after 8 colliakm occurred near a comer
tie . comment on t~ p:Opo~ today, system. valuations in Harbor View Homes aqd
saying only they will • take it under ... Before trades with the old Newport Spya:lass Ri_ll are high enough to mate where be was already ltopped-writfna
study." elementary and. NewpOrt Harbor High schooling of those youngsters a break· a ticket.
A spokesman for the Irvine district School districts San Joaquin and Tuatln even proposition for whichever district He assertea: that the suspect seemed to
sa id the two parcels are nearly equal in boundaries inciuded most of the land ultimately gets the responaibU.ity. be already in t~ bag be.fore be balled
size -about 200 acres -" but that the north of Pacific Coast Highway and east But the Irvine s~esman said his him. ,
assessed valuations are quite dilf~t. of Upper Newport BiaY _in~ whet dlstr:ict can't simply rlve up the hOUatbg otncJ Cl.Dint" 1fiUs'ed about 1 l .ni.
The Ford property, which is bbdnded was tn beCOme NewPort Ceftter., , fractl' wltb nOthlng 1lli return tiieCiuae, !llW""-..... ' .. 1 1 t N..,;,1..,..,.
by Ford &ad, Jamboree Road and Newrpo'rl Bea '" residents l!vlng In the "That is 1ten ·percent11of b6r alllued in ~WlUll, t '"ltaton 1 ~ .. ...,.. co di rod Boulevard and Del Mar Avenue when hl1 MacArthur Boulevard, has an assessed hills above Corona del Mar wanted their v:aluatlon and it would ba y e e OW'
I of · ba .. T -attention was captured by ICl'eeclllng va ue about $10 million including the children to attend Newport Beach schools tax se. brakes and 8 relOWldlng crash.
Ae.ronutronic plant, the Irvine spokesman since the nearest San Joaquin schools The Ford.property, on the olh~ hand, "Follow that car," yelled a man in the
said. . . were miles inland... oUer~ru>.rofit ror scbools because no ebtcl hi h had J 1 .._ ---~
The porttons .or Harbo; yiew Ho~es San Joaquin generatly accOO:iCflO-Ifie-Cbll(fren llve :OO-th3CTiffit. ;~om~. A cr\un~l~!!~-a~d ~pygJ~ss Hill now within the Irvine demands si nce growth iii those areas still Newport-Mesa School Superintendent zoomed off down Del Mar Avenue. d1~t~1ct will have a val?e of up ~ $20 had no significant eUect on their schools. John Nicoll ays be has "no commment" The patrolman jumped into his car and
rrulhon when they are btult to capacity -They were content to keep the land w~ 00 whether or not the offer is a good deal ed hot the sed • ii UinC tan
about 250 houses and an undetermrned it was vacant but gave it away when 1t ror the district, even though it would !~aro miles~ hour ':t~ n~hl. naahlng
number of to\· ihou~s ~nd apartn:ients. beca me apparent new schools were need-mean up to 200 children wollld get to and siren wailing, until the vehicle ~
The boundary dispute stems 1n part ed. school quicker and easier. ped
from the fact that tile Irvine school boun-I · h " · dary, which was established before the Since then, deve opment m t e area . Thls c:;ould not be resolved at an ad-He said the driver lurched out o( his
district unified, separafes the new, 120-given ·up by San Joaqltin -now Irvine m1rustra~ve leve~ because the law does demolished car and fell Oat on bl1 face .
house addition to Ha rbor View Homes schools -has grown and so has the not prov.1de,,us w1th .the1 pa~er to change "I'm too 'ripped' to talk about It," he
from the res t of the tract. area's tax base. bound~;1es, he said. It 1s up to the allegedly mumbled after beln1 dragged
The boundary also cuts through the That fact has made any further boun-board. . . . to his feet and questioned about the
Spyglass Hill development putting about dary adjustments a matter for heated According to Irvine school o(f1c1als. the mishap.
' argument and little resolution for nearly burden is now on Newport-Mesa trustees He was booked on suspicion of hH and
Nixon Appears
To Bar Accord
On Tapes Iss ue
\\IASHINGTON (API -President Nix-
on today filed a hard-line response in the
\Valergate tapes case that hinted broadly
that he will not accept a compromise
proposed by the U.S. Court of Appeals.
The court of appeals, io a unique
memorandum issued last week, sug-
gested that the President, his attorneys
and special Watergate prose c u tor
Archibald Cox listen to the White House
ta~s and .!etermine among themselves
what .portfons were evidence required by
the grand. jury probing the Watergate
cover-up.
The court said that because Cox is an
official or the executive branch, the sug·
gested compromise could avoid the con·
slit utional issue of separation of powers
tha t has emerged in the legal dispute
over the tapes.
The co urt gave Cox and the President
until Thursday to respand.
Jn its fmal written argument to the
court of appeals today, White Hou se
lawyers said that the Pr e s i d e n t ,
recognizing the unique character of
Watergate, appointed the special. pros-
ecutor and gave him broad powers.
"But he has not delegated to the
special prosecutor, and "':II not abrogdtc.
his constitutio nal duties and
prerogatives," the brier said. "Thnt
v.·ould move beyond accommodation to
Irresponsibility."
That determined wording Indicated
strongly that Nixon would turn down the
11ppeals court's compromlseproposal.
Shortly after the court advanced the
compromise last week. Cox expressed
willingness to follow ill suggestion. The
\Vhlte House has yet to make any formal
recsponsc.
a decade . to make the next move toward resolvin& n;n, drunken driving and drtvln& wltb a
Thus far, Irvine school the probl em. suspended license. FFF~~
OPIN
' t• ' •
Buys P .E. Shirts & SborJs
sweat Sox
All Star BasketbaH .Shoes-9.95
Bob Wott.e Super Pro Sboes-9.95
'
Soccer Shoes-10.95 up
Sweat Shirts & Pants
Wannup Suits-21 .95 to 34.95
· FootbaO Face Guards
Touch FoatbaU flats & Belts
Kneepads-Foreann Pads
Teeth Protectors
Ope n 9 to 6 Closed Sundays
' Hand Balls & Gloves
CLOSD SUNDAY
Racquetball Racquets & Balls
WllsolHlavis-Yoneyama-Bancroft
· Temis Rackets
Wilson-Penn-Dunlop Tennis Bans
7.95 per Dozen
Tennis Dresses
Men's & Buys'. Tennis Sllarts & Sllirts . .
Canverst-Adidas--Tretarn TanniS Simes
SpeedO ShGrts & Su'its .
BierParts-fns-Tubes
Repalrf 111
" •
• DAil,Y PU..OT EDITORIAL PAGE
Questioriahle Fund Use
The negative respondenta-would be left alone so they
would stir up the least possible trouble:
~r71e-:Tr
"" .
. ,
I
I •
I
Costa Mesa's $3.9. millloli bond election foe parks
and ' open space ls history. The Sept. 11 measure cal'
ried by substantially more than the required two-thirds
majority and Mesans can look forward to a bright~r and
more pleasing city as a result.
There's really nothing wrong with such tactics IF
private funds are used. But private funds weren't used.
City funds were. While the city does have an obligation
to inform voters, the 'l"mple "'ballot already bad done
that. The postcard ploy 'was simply a means of obtaining
information to help pass the isSue.
I
The Daily Pilot supported the bond measure and
we believe the city was wise to pla.ce It before the city's
voters. In our view, it is one of the most progressive
s~ps taken since incorporation 20 years ago.
That established, we would like to call attention
to one aspect of the election campaign that.-!Jowever
well intended -could be viewed as a dangerous and
improper use of city funds.
Not much mone y was Involved. It's said to be
•~.500. but ·it could have run up to $5,000 or $6,000.
The propriety ls.a bigger question.
In the early days of the bond campaign, every one
of Costa Mesa's 33,000 registered voters got a return·
postage postcard asking how he felt about the park bonds
and if he intended to vo~ yes or no'. The _p8rds were·
to be mailed back to the city hall. .. .
Asst. City Manager Robert Duggan said he saw
nothing wro ng with the survey. It would, he maintained,
inform ~pie.about the .election, prompt questions about
the measure and pinpoint areas for and against the
bonds so "proper efforts" could be applied.
Each card carried a coded number to identify ei·
ther the '&!'ea or the voter queried (we've never been cer-
tain which). But the cards didn't.ex~lain that. Nor did
they explain why the survey was bemg taken.
We figure the survey was taken· to identify sup-
porters so they· could be urged lo work for the bonds.
Airer some pointed questions from voters, City
Manager Fred Sorsabal •ays he locked up the returned
cards and did not ~ve any tabulated fmdings to the
bond election comnuttee. It was a wise move, but the
money already had been spent, of course.
· It is difficult to believe the survey was instigated
without the knowledge of the city council. And tnat's
another bothersome aspect: we can find no record of
• public action or discussion of the survey by city coun·
cilmen.
A bond attorney specialist employecj bf the city
said it was not improper to. "dispense information" about
such an election. We agree and we concede that the
mailing piece was,not slanted in favor of a yes vote.
The bigger question is what Uie city-intended to
do with results of the survey. It_ would seem apparent
the injentlon was to channel them to the Citizens For
Open Space to help the bond election.
That may not be IUelfa! uiie'QfllUbllc !Unds;butit
comes too close for comfort. It m"ost certafnly was im-
proper and only fuzzy reasbning could have concluded
otherwise.
The bonds passed. we·~ glad they did. They un-
doubtedly will prove a wise investment for Mesa prop-
. erty owners and residents. J
• ·The issue didn't need, nor did it deserve, question~
able use of city money to lay it before the voters.
..
\ ,,
~. 1Nrtilesr K"ATEs
····• ' '
' -. ... ' • I
'PRe AM Hou~e
c
·Wheelchair N o Political Ba%ard
Wallace Back • Ill Action •
' ' ' i • I
Sc~olarly Theft
Baffles Experts
Dear
Gloomy
Gus . I
MONTGOMERY, Ala. -The unob-( J Alabama that Republlcan state chalnnan ?
W ASl!INGTON -A light-fingered
.scholar bu stolen papers of "in·
calculable value" from the colleCtion of
the late Justice Fellr Frankft11:ter at the
Ubrary ol Congress. The theft ol ir-
replaceable <ijaries, letters ·a n d
memoranda -ipany hundreds of pages
in all -bU been kept secret for a year
"While FBI agents
and lbe. libl:arY~•
own-....blmed-
detectiffl b a v e
searcbed fe¥eriahl)'
foe the~. The-----m.
covered In Sepf<m-
ber 1fl2, after an
aien illlDry ol Con-
gresa ofllcial -
;
that a Fralllllurter' folder was •
It had COl!talned . COllVttladOlll ...
tween Frankfurter and the • late
Justice Louis Brandeis. A private
meardw_ilao nported,a letter mlw!"'
that he bod --~·i pa.=,,:,";:'~ oll!ct81a turned JOo.e
a huabJwwh team of ,.tebolart ln the vast
-llle. Within a few days,
they bad cmie up with a mlulnfitems
list that bonilled them. Gooe """ fi•e
years ol Franlllur1er's personal diaries,
numerous notes on oonvenaUont with
the ml&btY, memoo, letters and perlOllOI
jottiop about the men In government
Frankfurter had known so Intimately.
'1WE REAI.IZED we had been robbed
(JACK ANDERSON)
blind," a senior library official told my
aUoclate Les Whitten. "There was a
tremendous amount missing of ~
calculable value."
I know policemen work under haz-
ardous conditions but somehow it's
scary seeing bow many innocent
people they accidenta11y kill or
wound these days.
-U.N.E .. Z
,IJnce the loa was Ji!SOssed, !lie li""'7 ~ who died iD 1965 at age a
called ln•the FBI whlch begu..aa.n,tly ' aftet ..,.,,..., lll .)'i!ars on the SUpreme
ln-lfwilll ililliOlois and,.., I~"' To • <Coliq. '-,-,,1;
block further thefta, strld illiilfdevecy To ald-lhJ.nooveiy we have.offered to
measures, previously • ~opped · for act as an mtennediary between the
buc!ptary. reuOlll, were reuisUtuted, All ; ·-'!Sholar ad the librmy. We will
thil ,.. ... -wi::._ ~ .. ;, ~·nalqlil.>reveal his name or ~:it ~..;!irpapm. , . , ~~.him U be will cootact But-. !Jla,ijUeot liU re-a deadr ' ~ eni!: • ~ ol 'the docull!Ollls. m'li\ 1'1IT110UT B 0 able to bind the library officials recOplze, ile~ ori Justice Depambent, we will try to
the delicate quesUona ol tile "acbo!ar: perswide Ati.,..y General E 11 i o t
thlel'1 reipeCt for the price-of bis Richardsoo, himiell a legal scholar, that
•hlltorfcll heist ~er tlie· renegade the return of the Frankfurter papers is
retearober ,JI the o(ficlall ~. he more thaD worth calling off tbe search
nblJed wltK dlscrimlnat1ot1· and • ·In-for the mysterious thief.
teillgence, selectiog the most ~
valuable docw:Dents. ,
ACCORDING to one theory, the oCbolar
ls labotina alone on a projecl and waols
to make sure be is the orily ,One able to
puraue It. U this ls the case, the officials
pray the !!Cboliir Will someliowarrange to
get the papeni or cop!es of tbem back to
the library so that future historians can
lludy the remarkable life and times of
FOOTNOTE: Tbe only comparable theft
in the library's 113-year history occurred
in the 1940s when the papers of poet Walt
Whitman were sent away for wartime
safekeeping. After their return, several
vol!'ffiOS ol bis no~ere discov"'ed
miM.IQ;:-'niey were never reooverta.
More recently, the libr.,-y Jost some
valuable books; but a llljfary clerk bas
been arrested for the alle,..i theft.
trusive arrival here of a ghostwriter Richard BeMett Is advising his party not ,
commiSsioned by Doubleday and Co. to EV ANS• NOV AK to field any candldate for governor next 1
write the definitive autobiography of _ year when Wallace runs for reelection. !
Gov. George Wallace for pre • l!r16 Thus, with only token Democratic Oir J
pUblicaUoo is 'the . Jatest sign thal particularly his sweep in the liberal position in next spring's primary ,
Wallace's confinement to a wteelchair Democratic bastion of Michigan. election, Wallace could well sweep to his 1 third term as Alabama's governor With 'I may be no greater political hazard than JN CONTRAST, Wallace's five 1912 an astounding 70 to 75 percent of the j
jt was t.o Frankuj, D. RooeeYelt. wiMing primaries plus the five states he , vote.
11Tbls .~ir mAkei it _,,e ilfficult," woo in his third-party presidential cam-
Wallace tOld us ill • pa1gn of 1968 are mentioned today only in ONE POSSIBLE contender, formerj
his -aifice. "Btit ~it ,. passing. Wallace is now lookJng abepd, Gov. Albert Brewer, was barely defeated
doesn't stop me from smacking his lips with anticipation and by Wallace In the 1970 primary. ·But 'to'.
bemg' governor." plotting a powerful role In what he caHo day Brewer ~ a dismal staleWide ~gwaslate,one the "rejuvenation" llf'~I -~ -~~,!"e', ·• 'M '.li18.1' e lUt' week.... Democrallc party. "i' • • ......
following a-lwt>bout _,,,,___ He has been""1\0lififig quiet taltrwith Oliver Quay •. t . i!lace. .
builmeeJl!':""commithe slaSS1_
0
te.
0
former ald'C" who Jong qo lell!ihim-. B"'!5by ov<l'lel . !*"~
While avoiding hard 9'ferat .of ~. ~to . , '· ~!¥ elver by the employment, Wallace lo 111t1k1ni it c1e1r Wallacer J :r.= governor. As We left . that be wants and needl~ .no. Pro-· thall ..ever , .,.....,,,,..,,
at 7 p.m., Wallace's legislative leaders fessional help from theee old ~Ual po tJ.cal fact J1bl national "
arrived for another hour's conference. hands: The goa.1 : to rebuild.a competent party carmot llinori as it staggers oat
HAVING red staff of Alabamans for 11m. Amoofl'them the quicksands of 1972. 1
recove from his Internal ls the astute Bill Jones, Wallace's oldeat Althqugb f!i• .oi:f pollti~1 ~
wounds and suffering only minor periods political advisei;, who Jell lbortly'-alter · bullt on a pl_edge of total · · 11pei!o'-
of light pain, Wallace ls beglnolng to think mMagtng Wallace's 111111 ~ Uoo, Wallace l9da)' talb not about~
like a presidential candidate again. His campaign; his Wen ts ,..... ..,..iy milled· but about ~ ttchls of ''lltlle -le.•
mind is as sharp as it vlas before he was in the inadequa'1ely org~ 1972 cam-'lbe -piopiilllt-[U· •eclipsed the
nearly murdered by an assassin 16 paign. tJoniat. · ' -._ • , ·
months ago. In~, th.e· ·talk in Jones and other old Wallaceites are ' Wallaceland of yet ' another Pre&dential impressed by the miraculous physical KENNEDY'S speech for Wallace a
campaign in 1978, with the DemocraUc bnproveD)ent of the governor, which has Decatur, ~' last July illustrated that l
party's vice presidential nomination the ed hi cbol 'cal health no Northern Democrat can afford to ig real cmAJ, canoot be dis-'··~ as restor 5 psy ogi and nore Wallace's huge following in -the! ·--"~ ended long periods of deep depression. South his • nonsense. To them, 1976 looks JDOle p~ than or · . > ~' a PP e a G When we Jast Visited a fatigued anc1· he everywhere. 111&8, unlikely though itf, pain-ridden Wallace a year ago, he could tm· 1!~ve1m968or'ans dpals.!!s at the presidency SOWlds today, WAil.ate m8.y well fintli;
~menal 1972 primary victories, WAu.ACE is dealing today with a exercise a vetd •over the Democnli
shattered Democratic party which, with party's presidential nominee of compe
the sole exception of Sen. Edward-M. that nominee_to..take him_on~tbe ticket.
oot stop reminlsclng about h 1 s ~. .... himaell powerful enough In 1976 either ~
Q t • d Kennedy, has DO recognizable center of Such a tum of political events since hi '
U. es Ione power. Moreover, he is dealing,wlth it attempted murder ln 1972 would be • · from a position of complete dominance at a.!ltonishing and incongruous. But ove~
--· ---home and wearing what his idolators the·last decade, the astonishing and Ur:
perceive as the D)ystical mantle of a hero congruous have become the hallmark of~
Eathe~-daughter_:Th_e_ory
To the Editor:
Mra. Brick, ln,jler._tallc In the Erchange
Club of Newport Beach (Sept. 14) WJo
doubtedly made a hit by telling fathe~ to
spend time with their daughters because
they are 1better' models than are
frustrated , neurotic women. Her plan for
fatbeNlaughter communications was
great but unfortunately based on ex·
tremely shaky reasoning.
IT IS NOT because women are
"frustrated and insecUre" while men
have an "loternal stability moat women
do not" that a good fatber4aughter rela-
liOlllbip is desirable. R a t h e r ,
Jl')'cbological stucUes have shown that
different things pre Jearned from . each
( MAILBOX ) provide tbe--best model. Girl children
usually turn ~o the female parent for a
model, teasQning that if the father loves
the mother, lhe best way for the child to
pin that love is to be as much like the
mother as possible. Mr.!1. Brick has been
neglecting her Freud. .
In fairness. please print the nut
speech that ellols women aod denigrates
men Oil the top' column of page one.
CHRISTIN CARNEY
parent. Females learn from fathers their
goals, values and what kind of achieve-
ment the fathers expect of them.
Mothers are used as a model to achieve
theae goals. By i!pe!t(ling time with the
father g1r1s learn lhO values they will 1n-Trv Self..u.d-'ltee corporate and the father CM reallstlcally • ,..
adjust theae valueo to the girl's tem-• To the Editor: '
perament Bl he learns to know her bet· I'm using my willpower to cope with
ter. hlch· prices -not ja&t on meat but on
It Is oot a question of which parent cao everything. I ask myle!f every time I
------------------------buy 80lllOtbing If I really need It or II I can reolly do better with a sub8titute.
t..opyrion1 1,13, Toronlo Sun Syndicate
iWIJUKL.
"/ don't want to get well."
I doo'I nm around a lol uslog up gas to
save 10 cents on an item either. I read
ads religiously. I eat slightly less too and
am dolrig beautlltllly holding mr proper
weliht. I suggest others try using self.
dlsclplloe.
JAMES ROGERS
School Brea kluts
To the Editor:
· In regard to ''Anyone for Breakfast,"
(Dally Pilot, Sepl !J): '!'he proposal,-of
serving breakfast at schools appalls me.
The writer quotes, "It also serves to ~
mlrld parents that tbeir cblldren are '
beneflttlng trom a school system that Is
much better off than most, and as a
result , ha1 the capacity to explore ways
to do a better Joi> of education."
PUNCu WRY, In "one of the wealthier diotrtcts
· n.:....... ln the-cowtty" mu1~ we feel that
I
fumlshlog breakfast ls a part of the
educational system ? With school ta1es
amounting to about M percent or the
total real estate tu.,, lso't this going a
•
little too far? Parents who send their
children out to a drive-in for dinner can
now relax: and not even have to Y+'orry
about their breakfasts.
Many educators firmly believe that
many of the probl~ms that develop with
YOUllllllers are the result ol lack of family
tO@:ethemess, particularly at meal times.
Now, aeveraJ ezpooeots wish to go a step
farther by,.utending this gap. And, let·
tiog tbe mother sleep In! Get It at school! .
I AM· for a good, sound educational system tn the schools, but please, don't
you think that parents lhould have a few
respoD'lhllllies? "Bacoo and eggs, cereal
and pancatea.11 At today's prices? .
PHIL WILLS
P ro•tenu {n Me:rlco
To the Editor :
I wish to thank YVOQU~.~v'2~~ n1n1 an article c:ori~ g the
bery of my car exico and my a
for people w ha,. had slmllar di!·
llcultles to I.late them to me. I have
received over 250 Jetten or pertemal con-
tacts ~ murder, robbery, ot~
llclal corruption, etc. ii> Meli"I·
I wiSh to thank all people who told me
of their lnclden~ and let them know lhat
1 will do all In !!IJ' power to fight tlMile probJOIDI.
JOHN J. GABRIELS
miracu1ously immune from death by American politics, as Richard Nixon -·
assassination. and now George Wallace -are discover.;
That perception is so strong in lng. ~
Wh y Hitler's German y?;
, I
How could the GermM people, wbo bad ( ' )~
contributed a great deal to Western ~
clvlllzation over the centuries, suddenly THE BOOKl\IAN ;
succumb to Hitler and to the cultural _ • '
self-destruction of National Socialism? t
l!ow could large numbers or ... mingly been token into accotmt and quoted . Aj
normal, orderly, law-abiding ' people great deal of new source material is sup-'
engage ln or condone tortum and mass plied, and other material is evaluated. I
killings on a scale almost Wlprecedented VICTOR de KEYSERLING
in the history of the world? How was it
possible? How could it happen?
THE ANSWERS to these questions are
searched out In Tbe Evolatlot. of 8Wtr11
Germany (McGraw-Hi!~ IU.95), by
Hont von Maltltz, a member of the New
Vork Bar who grew up in Germany and
studied at the Universities of Berlin and
Marburg, Hamburg and J"!Jla.
In the main, the book ls not so much a
history oC the evenu of the period as a
history or certain Ideas and of what one
man did with them. The various com~
ponents of the National Socialist Ideology
a~ examined, and attempts ate made to
trace them" back to their orlalns In
Cerman hlitory and clvUlzatlon. Special
em,Pha1l1 ls plar d oo anU-Sem!Usm, and
on '\he former Gennan-Jewtsh symb'°8is.
OIAN•I COAU
DAILY PILOT
Robffl N. Weed, POOtlshtt
Thopios KttvU, Editor
Barbara Kreibich
.Editorial Page Editor
Letters from readers art ~loom:t.
Normallv writers should convey t#Wir
.meisages in 300 worda or less. The
right to corn!•.,._ letten' to /lt spact TH~ SECOND part ol the book deail
or eUminote Ubel i.!I reser11ed. All with the "moment In b!Jtory" when
The editorial 1Pl8e of the' De.Uy
Pilot ~ to lnfonn and stimulate
readtNI . by pftle!ntlna: on thla 11qe
dlvtrwicommtntary' cm topics Of tn-
tft'tst by sYndleattd <.'Olwnnisl.a Md
e&rtoonbtl, by PfOVidinc • forum tw
readfl'I' •kW• .nit by preamtlnr th.ii newspaper's oplrdont t.nd fdtu on
current topk:s. ~ edttorlll oPitdOhl
of the Dally PUot 1ppe1.t1 only in <h•
editorial column 1t tiie 10p ol 1he .....-.... ..-.........
umnlstJ and clt'tOOl\llQ ud lttttr
wrltrrs att thelr own and no~
mmt or .....,. vi... by--111<-Dall>
'
Pilot shot.lkl' be inltr'nd. .
Wednesday, Sepl 19, 1978
letter!• mwt includt !igraatur« and-Hitler arrived on the tcene; bi•
mailing addrt.!l.t, but names ma11 be psychology, hl.!1 parents, sex life, reUgion,
withheld on 1tQut.!lt i/ su/Jicient and various character tratta are dli· '
reoson ii apparent PotCtJI tofU not be cussed ln detail. Relevant oplnioos of
pubtlslltd. llOC!op$)'thologlsts and psychialrisis have
••
Selection
~Of Jury
Stalled
Despite Protests
Governor_ S_!g_ns
Retirement Bill
MARIPOSA (AP) -After
two days ol jury select.ion in
the dooble murder trial ol
Jolln Phillip B<Jnyard, 41 pan-
ehsts h;:ive been questioned
but not a single (Ile was seat..
ed.
Officials originally had call-
ed I> prospective jurors but
said they plan to call 6 more
per~s today from the coun-
( _BRIEFS . J
ty's small population of 7 ,000.
Mariposa County Superior
Court Judge Dean Lauritzen
had excUsed several Monday
and Tuesday because they had
known victims Relea Cramer,
SACRAMENTO (AP}
Gov. Bonald Reagan Tuesday
signed a controversial bill
.aimed at boosting retirement
benefits for a f o r m e r
assemblyman Who owns a big
piece ol Imperial County land.
The measure by
Assemblyman Ray Seeley (R·
Blythe), would allow J. Ward
Casey, a former Republican
assemblyman, to receive a
$1,896-a-year pension by mak-
Girls Seek
' 'Equality'
Iii Sports
70, and Nancy Chalberg, 55, GLENDALE (AP ) -Girla
both longtime M a r i p o s a physical education teachers
usidenu. Other candidates here say they have stopped
-were -dismissed after ex-_cpaching aft~r-~~I a~eti~s until "sex d1scnmmation" IS iressing strong prejudice ended .
against Btmyard. The teachers asserted Tues·
day that the girls have 8.thletic ,. e Ollfelals Otuted facilities inferior to the boys,
CORTE MADERA (AP) -
The mayor and two city coun-
cilmen have been ousted from
their jobs here by forces seek-
ing to control growth in this
---small Marin -CoWlty com-
munity.
that less money is spent on
girls' programs and that the
after-school volunteer coaches
are paid less than male
volunteers.
lng a one-time depoSit of $1,700
in the legislator's retir~ment
!Wld.
Casey, 76, served in the
~mbly in 11152-56.
WHEN 111E Bll.L WU mak·
ing its way · through the
legislature last A p r i l ,
Assemblyman Bob Wilsoo (0.
San Diego), said Casey had
told him he owned a 64-acre
section of Imperial Oxmty
land and 40 additional acres
elsewhere. Wilson, an op.
ponent of Seeley's bill , said eas.,y had told him the 64
acres bad water and alfalfa on
it, so "1 would imagine it
would be \Wrth $1 ,000 an
acre."
Wilson's April campaign
against the measure provoked
Seeley, who told reporters, "I
told W"tlson off in no uncertain
terms I wouldn't carry tbi1
bill if it weren't right."
When Casey served In the
Assembly, legislators had to
serve for at least six years to
be eligible for lifelong retire-
ment benefits. A Seeley aide
said the state forced Casey to
pull his contributed money out or the legislative retirement
fund •six months before the
minimum service time was
dropped to four years in 1960.
KILLER OF 10 SENTENCED TO LIFE IN PRISON
Herbert W. Mullin, 26, Leaves Santa Cruz Court
Wedntsday, Septtmbt'r 19, lCJl.J
"
DAILY PILOT ~
Killer of Jfr
Mullin Given-'Life~~-
.... SANTA CRh (AP)
Herbert Mullin, a former
honor ~lllellt~•e!! lo l!I•
tn priJon In the slaying• <I 10 Jienons. may have "half a
shot" at ptti"ll two fltll·
~ murder COll\'fctiolls
reduced on the basis of his
"crazy motives," Multin's at-
torney says. James Jacboo. who ooo-
tended tbroug)lout the °"'*' week trial that Mullin was
"stark raving mad," said
there are cases where an ap-
pellate court reduces a sen-
tence when a defeDdant bas
"crazy motives and if he's actinS· for bmnanitarian rea-
sons in his own mind."
UNDER CALIFORNIA law,
a first-degree murder con-
viction carries aµtomatic ap-
peal, and Jack!JOn appealed
Tuesday morning b e f o re
Mullin was sentenced. He saJd
be... wants the convictions
reduced to second-degree.
'lbe 2&-year-old o n e t t m e
. mental patient was pale and
-red --eyed. as he listened to
Santa Cruz County Superi0<
Court Judge Charles S .
Franich sentence him Tuesday
to two concurrent life sen-
tences on two counts of first-
degree murder.
The judge also sentenced
him to eight consecutive five-
year-to-Jife sentences oo eight
second-degree OlU!der con•
victions, the m a x l m u m
senten~ .. But he del!~ed ex·
ecuUon of dtese: senten<fe$
pendlag .. appeal of the llnlt·
degroe ~111.
ON THE STAND, tMullin
oonlel8ed to slaying oot just
the JO peraons as charged, but
alao ano!her three I a s t
January and February. 1lie delendant "'Id bis
fat be r's authoritarianism
San Diego
Gets Project
Capitol News Service
SAN DIEGO -The c:oonty or
San Diego has been selected
as the first project area in the
C0W1t.ry to operate the new
special supplemeatal food pro-
gram ftr Women, Infants, and
Otildren (WIC).
Pregnant or la ctating
women and chid1ren up to 4
will bee\Jgible.for the pilot pro.
gram il they (I) live tn the ap.
proved project area; (2) are
eligible for medical treatment
at free or reduced cost from
the COW1ty health clinic, and
(3) are determined by medical
persoonel of the health depart·
ment to be in need of sup--
plementa1 food.
"drove me kill cr<lzli" a
that he killed the vie 'ms v
human sacrifices necessat')'~
avoiCI a Cit8clflnllc ~
quake. Re alJo said 1'
sometimes got ~
messages from bis lather ajfil
sometimes from his victims
that it was 11healthy to kill."
Aa a high school foothill
player and honor studeit,
Mullin was voted "roost likely to succeed .••
HE LATER dropped out ol
college engineering stucti.es
and experimented ·with drugs.
particularly LSD. During. th<.
past five years, he committed'
himself five times to mentaf·
hospitals and each time doc··
tors diagnosed him as a
paranoid scbi~c.
He was convicted of first;
degree murder in the Jan. 25
shooting deaths of James
Glanera, 24, a former high scbooi friend, and housewife
Kathy Francis, 29, both ol
Santa Cruz. He was convicte4
of second-degree murder in
the deaths of Gianera's 'vife.
J0an, 21, QDd Mrs. Francis' sons, David, 9, 8.nODaemon. 4,
-who were ~ible witness"·
es. _
Mullin also was convicted ol
second-degree murder in the
deaths of a 72-year-old form~
prize fighter and four teen-ag-
ed campers.
· Mayor Holmes S. Norville
and Councilmen H a r o I d
Waptaff and Edward W.
Coklmrst -were recalled Tues-
day. Holmes and Wagstaff had
been on the council for seven
ye.,.. Colthurst had served
for 15 years, including IO
years as mayor.
Leaders of the recall cam-
paign contended the three
w«e unresponsive to public
demands tor limitations on
new coostructicn. The three
had supported a $50 million
shopping center and a 523-unit
rapartment complex.
AT TWO schools/the women
teachers complain, the boys
even take over the girls' gyms
to run their basketball , pro-
grams.
"A lot of:people think this is
just a women's lib thing to get
even with the boys' program,"
said ·a teacher spokesman, Jan
McCreery. "But that's not
true. We just want equal op-
portunity."
THE PROTEST is by the 30
girls PE teachers at junior
and senior high schools in
Glendale. Titey have filed a
complaint with state civil
rights authorities.
To.the ,people
whO love great cars.
., e Wftt-Eleeted
SAN DIEGO (AP) -City
Atly. John Witt has brushed
off • challenge by young
lawyer Jim Webb e a s i I y
winning a second four -year
term.
CJty voters also rejected
$47.5 mlllioo in park and open-. ·-bonds 'liieoday and -tine incumbent city ooun-clbiien .him Nov. 6 runOfls with•
~.Voter turnout.,....
a ~singly heavy :16 per-
cent<
• ltl&ek «:on"leteol
SAN BERNARDINO (AP)
-A judge has sentenced the
former administrator of St.
Mary's Hospital in Apple
Valley to 1-14 years in prison.
Lester J . Mick, 44, was con-
victed cl forgery, wllawfuJ
sema1 · intercourse and two
oounts of grand theft. He was
a~ed last June a.
'Protesting'
Gas Stations
To }l~pen
SAN LUIS OBISPO (AP) -
Most ~ceftltations in San
Luis Obispo O>unty were ex·
peoted lo ""'"''' today ·fellow· ing m~ clomres ~ to
protesl·Pbaae 4 ~-<Oittro\s
on gasoline.
A majcirity of the 80 service
stations ·m the county mm
dowl'I Tuesday, leaden of. the
protest said~ ·
Meanwhile, the I n t e r n a 1
Revenue ~ice said in Los
Angeles that it was dispatch-
ing investigators throughout
Southern California to make
sure retail gasoline dealers
were complying with Phase 4
ceiling price regulations.
Barry Rant, thief of the
stabilization division in the 12·
cowtty Los Angeles 1 R S
District, said spot c:hecks
would continue indefinitely.
' Nude Swim
LOS ANGELES (AP) -A
Beverly Hills attorney }\as
been sentenced to one to five
years in prison for soliciting a
det.ecfive to plan{ cocaine on
the president of the r...
Angeles Conununity College
Board.~ ....
In handing doWiitlie sen· tence Tuesday, SuperiorCoorl -
Judge Albert D. Matt!iews
turned down a request for pro-
bation for Donna Y. Gordon.
42.
Ban Drafted
SANTA BARBARA (AP) -
County supervi sors h a v e
ordered the drafting of an
or4i nance which would ban
nude bathing at Santa Barbara
public beaches.
e Wbu Eleetio11
LOS ANGELES (AP)
Urban affairs speciallst David
Omningham overtook an early
lead forged .-by television actor
Gi!ocge Takei and went on to
win a special election to fill
the city council seat vacated
by Ma)W 'Mlomas Bradley.
Unofficial final returns early
today gave Cunningham,
whose nomjnation petition was
signed by Bradley, B,199 votes, or 34.1 percent. compared to
11552, or 27.8 percent,
garnered byTakci, wboplayed
the role' ol Sulu in the
televisioo series ''Star Trek."
e Smog Hearl119
LOO ANGELES (AP) -The
Slate Air Resources Board
Tuesday deferred action
the prq>osed air v.;r· ·
emergency contin~r· plan
alter a public I»" .
The long~ plan Is
designed t-' up criteria f0r
smog ,.... warnings and
eir es -so -caUed
'' ," cootrol mrces of
uUon and protect the
publlc health.
Kids Like To
Aak Andy
The supervisors• a c t i o n
Tuesday came in response to a
request by Sheriff John
carpenter to be given more
powers to halt nude bathing
which has triggered nwnerous
complaint-5 from beachfron t
residents.
Supervisor Frank Frost sald
he will join Carpenter and the
county counsel in drafting the
proposed ordinance.
Funds Set
For Museum
LOS ANGELES (AP) -
County supervisors say the
way has been financially pav·
ed to building a museum
beside the famed La Brea tar
pits to display thousands of
bones from ancient animals
trapp<il 1here.
Supervisor Ernest Debs an·
nounced Tuesday that funds
would be provided l6rough a
foundation to.be estab!ialied by
George C. Page, cn!Ofo< o(
?t1ission Pak candled fndt
packagl!s.
The pits are located In a
park on Wilshire Boulevard
near the heart of dowritown
Los Angeles. The museum'•
cost wu estimated In the '2
, -: • -~I ·.
'1974 Ibttiac Luxury LeMans.: .,
The name gyS it all. Comfortabie•luxuriouS
interior. New formal window (available
only with Vinyl top until early 1974).
'Pontiac V.8 performance. Smooth 'fflde·
Track ride. All the luxury you want ·
without buying more car
. than you need.
1974 Ponrfuc Gr.ind Arn.
•
The great handling of fine imports com&'ftld
with great Pontiac innovation. Like a squeez.
ab'e nose. And special bucket seats. That's
foreign intrigue •• , . American ~genuity.
•
j
1974 Pontiac Grand Prix.
Pontiac's latest greatest! New classic stylins..l
Sporty handliog and performance. New
luxurious interiors. Obviously, we're
out to make you dissatisfied with whatever
you're drivi11&4
' .
1974 Pontiac Formula Firebird.
f'9rt engineerin1. Part soul. Exciting new
.~ ...,."' ; franfend wtth bl•cked-out griUe. Spot1y
\ tlOad scoop5. ·350 V~ and floor-shifted 1 3,speed. Dual exhausts. This one•s for
, people who take the fun of drivina seriouMy.
1974 Pontiac Bonneville;
It's a little more car. With a distinctive '
new chrome grille. Fantastic new viSibillty) I
Handsome new tweed and Morrokk:le interior
trims. Pontiac's 400 V-8. A great Wide·.
Track ride. For ~ople who still enjoy
driving.
•
•
'
'
1
•
T
•
•
million rang _ .-. --'---::::--==:=::--::---=~---===:==::::-~~~========~=:::;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:::::::==========~-+=~
h