HomeMy WebLinkAbout1973-09-28 - Orange Coast Pilot• ,
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Cartr .If They Tap·
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y Phone !t•A:lrs"! D._l Nixon
FRIDAY AFTERNOON, SEPTEMBE'R '28, 1973
_...oas
President
Described
As '6-r~at'
' From Wire Strvtces ' .
·President Nixon 's sister·in-law, lifts. F.
Qonald Nixon of Newport Beach, said
Thursday she . didn't mind if her t*1'1-was 'tapped by · the White
~· ' ' :~. Nixon, a guest at a black tie
\V!pte House dinner honoring Prime •
Minister orm8Jl E. Kirk of New
Zealand, also deSbribed the President as ·
"the most fantastic man and the greatest
leader the country has ever known."
She was unaccompanied ~d reported
her husband had to pass up the affair
beCause he was sufering from severe
bi&dacbes and had under gone a
diagnostic spinal tap Thursday.
Reporters approached Mrs. Nixon dur-jne: the dancing after dinner. Asked about
r~ports that Nixon had her husband 's
te!e2bone tapped to ~eep ta~ o~ ~n~d
Ni1on 's associa tion with mult1-m1lliona1re
Howard Hughes, she appeared a bit
fllislered but said: "1 have no comment, We Jove our
-~·-" ~-~r. She added later, when as~ if she
miilded being tapped; "Not at all."
It was the shortest official party
ariyone could remember at the White
House. 'The usual diplomatic toasts were ex-
. changed, and the 9-i guests dined ~n
$yal Squab. But the White House om1t-
tfd the traditional after-dinner en-
tettairunent, and Nixon had escorted
l<irk oot the front door by l.0:3li p.m., a
gOod hour earlier than us~1
DUring the toasts, Prime 'Minister . Kirk e~ an open invitation to .President
and Mrs. Nixon to visit New Zealan~ at a ume ' -convenient to them. lie said he welcomed an opportunity-. to improve
relations with the United States, and ••we
"".ant to develap as an independent coun-
tey!t ~ • ~Instead of the usual rnUslcale in the
Eiut Room, there waa dancini 1n ·the onuxt Hallway. -
Although the Presi~ent never .dances
on such occasions, he broke •his own
te1ditioii, and took his wife Pat oo the
floor to encourage other guests to dance.
Aft€f twirlihg to "the Sound of Music,
the Nixons headed for the private family
ele-vator. • .
Vice President Spiro T. Agnew ~ his
wl{e Judy re<etved a loud' round •of ap-
plause when they entered the East Room
duflng a· recept!On beloi:e the dinner,
_AllerWard.9 Agnew cltatted with guests. .~ -•· •
$AF.ET.I FIRST . .
•LONDON (UPf) -Harvey White, a
consultant 1Ul'geoo at St. Bartholomew'•
119tPital, wrot~ In the British Medical
J'®rnal today that ~ent eierci!e can
tsyse people to awattOti raise teeth and
•dvised couples to remove their dentu~
before making love.
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VOL, 6', MO. JJI, ~SECTIONS, 4' ,.AGE5
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THURSDAY'S LATE AFTERNOON .BLAZE RAGES OUT OJ' CONTROL BEHIND HOMES NEAR WOODLAND SCHOOL
, Fite lnve1tl91tor1 S.y, YoUth Pl•ying With Matches Ignited Fire Which Oestroyed 'Trailers, Storage Shed
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Arabs Seize 3
J ews .in Vienna,
Demand Passage
VfENNA (UPI) -Two Arabs armed
\Vith grenades and submachine guns seiz-
ed the Moscow-to-Vienna "Chopin Ex-
press" as it sped through minefields near
the Czech border today, seized four
hostages -Including three Jews
emigrating to Israel -and drove to
'.IJenna's Jntemational airport.Ylbere..tbeY
demanded safe condu<:t out of the 'coun-
try. -The guenillas also shot a Czech boriler
guard. First...reporlJ &;aid the guatd was
killed, but later police said the man,
Ferdinand Beles, w a"I taken to an
Austrian hospital. 1 •
Lewis Still on C:.se
V e~ue Change Denied
In Sauna Bath Trial
An Orange County Superior Court But acting Presiding J'udge· William C.
judge refUsed Thursday to order a new Speirs later rejected that motion wltil-the
venue for a trial in which an Anaheim comment that no purpose would be serv-
woman will claim that injuries suffered ed by the granting of any delay .
Jn_a.health spa3 sauna.room. led..her~--.Judge_Speirs confirmed the or.igihally,
seek sexual adventures. scheduled Oct. 29 date and ordered both
Judge Walter Charnmza rejected San sides to be ready for trial on that date.
Francisco trial lawyer Marvin. Lewis Lewis argued before JudS,e Chtaramza
Sr.'s bid to have the tri al moved with the rejected his motion that it would be Im-
comment. that lt would be bnposs ible to possible to pick a jury in Orange Counfy
avoid pubU~ity in that type of trial in view of the "widely read Daily Pilot
"anywhere ln caUfornia."' slories."
J.Rwis, representing Mrs. M a r i a "They ran this thlng with headlines
Parson, 46, and FullertiMn attorney that remi nd you of the end of World War
Donald Rusto(I, representing e Holid~y lf," he complained. "And then to rub salt
Hcallh Spa of Orange, al moved to in my wounds they printed a false story
Boy Touches Off ..
Big l\'.lesa Fire,
Officials Say
By RUDI NIEDZIELSKI
Of TU DtilY 1"1'-' S:t•n A 13-year-qld boy pJ?-ying with matches
touched otr a $15,000 inferno in a
neighborhood just outside the Costa Mesa
boundary Thursday. The f I am e s
des'(royed lwo 1\0use trailers, ,a garage
and two .storaltf 'sbeda.
Ji~waa .injured Jn. the. spectaculat.
5:55 p.m. blaze battled by engine com-
panies from the Orange CounlY. fire
De1>111;tment. •
M~r prol):erty losses Were sulferedJ?y
for.mer movie "ctress Dorothy Dare. 2028
Santa Ana Ave., and her .neighbor , 1wtrs.
Eve Dahlgren, 2032 Santa Ana Ave. Bolh
were awal whcn.lbe fir.e.broke out.
--:The lnlense blaze sent black clouds 0£
smoke over Costa Mesa. Witnesses said
the buildings were !Ully involved when the
.first fire trucks arriVed trom their base
Says War
Statements
'1is 'Righ(_
-~~··'*... -~ '' . . ~
~ B~ ;!?~If Z~~ ~ • . SAN FRANCISCO •-Former Marine
POW Edison IV. Miller ol Newport Beach
criticized-his milttary-superiorrioday
"for continuing the ~paign _ o f
character assassination against me"
over allegedly illegal antiwar activities
while he was in captivity in North Viet-
nam.
"There's a small group of ultra-con-
servative former POWs who are ,intent
on making my retluii tO ciVilian life as
difficult as possible," Lt. Col. Miller
J
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charged in an interview. l
"And I'm very disappointed that the ,•
Secretary of Navy is going along with r
them." '*'
Miller, shot down over North Vietnam f
in 1967, had been cha~ed with mutiny ,
and misconduct fof anti-war statements .1
he admittedly signed while a prisoner in !
North Vietnam. ·
Navy Secreatry John A. Warner air l
nounc<d Thursday that o those charges 1
againsfMiller and one other POW will be j
dropped. But Warner said both Miller
and Navy Capt. Walter F. Wilber would l
be publicly censured.
Miller made his remark.Len r.oute_.to
San Francisco where he said he planned
to hold a news conference this afternoon
to refute . remarks made by the Navy
secretary. · i
. "The secretary said he wasn't pros-,
ecuting, but-the tfirust of~ his .remarki
was that l am guilty,'' Miller said.
"That is totally fal se. I hav·e done
nothing wrong and I am not ashamed of
any of my actions while a prisoner. I am
confident that, if a full in vestigation were
made into the charges, I would be,
cleared."
Miller said be is a Joy81 American :
(See BLAST, Page Zl ;
Oraage __ .
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Welldaer
The Los Angeles weather ser:vice
says it'll be cooler Saturday, with
low clouds and patchy fcig along
the coast in the morning hours.
Highs at the beaches in t~ low
, 70s rising to the upper 803;-inJand.-
INSIDE TOD~Y
There's a young pied piper iti
, Ocean· V.iew Scllo~ District who
• has1tra1tsfor.med a group of ~hil-'
drrn:._mto a perJm:mfng h<>ir.
See story by Staff Writer Hila'll
Kaye in today'! Weekendtr.
At Vwr Service J
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At too airport, the guerrillas ~ar~ed a
blue Volkswagen bus near two airliners
-an . Iberian Airlines OC9 and an
Austrian Airlines OC9 -and demanded a
pllljH! to take then\. to an unspecified
• 48efl llOSTAG&S, Page ti
postpone the trial date to mitigate U>e ef· that l had ~n flr~d by Mrs. Parson who
le<:ts pf recent publicity. • (Se0; SAUNA, Page ZI \See FIRE. Pqe IJ i ·~-----+----_.
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_,2 DAILY Pll01 s
Parents Decline Inj-ections Fr•• r .. e I
lfOS'rAGES ..•
By JOHN VAL'l'ERZA
01 ttM Dt11r "''-' "•"
A San CJemente couple wtme small
son was bitten last weekend by a coyote
have decided against o.nllrabln in-
jtctioos fer their son "because we don't
believe tht animal has the disease."
A combination of f~tors j:Q.OVinced Mr.
and Mrs.~ Ed\\·ard Ashbaugh that their
son, Bartley, 3, should not undergo the
seiie:s or daily injediorui which could
total as much as 24. ·
And their decision, sa;d Mrs. Ashbough
today, came alter lengthy consultation
\'.ith family doctors and health depart-
ment officials.
Jet Missing
During Storm
In Arkansas
EL DORADO, Ark. (AP) -A Texas
International airliner wi!h 11 persons
aboard disappeared Thursday night In a
lon'm.tial rainstoml over south"·est
Arkansas. 'Mlree National GuardJmen
"'ere killed in the crash of a helicopter on
its way . to help in the search for the
plane.
Hours passed with no trace of the O>n-
valr turboprop jet which carried e;gt>t
passengers and a crew of three on a
flight from El Dorado to Texarkana.
Fog and low ceilings grounded most
search planes today. Authorities held lit-
tle hope of findins the airliner from the
ground if It went do\vn in the swampy,
\\'ooded, sparsely populated area between
the two cities.
The Texarkana Gaz.ette said )t learned
unofficially that three passengers \\'ere
colonels from the Red River Atmy depot
neal-Texarkana . Texas International did not im-
mediately identify the passengers or the
crew. Tu·o helicopters \\"ere dispatched from
Little Rock. They flew together into a fog
bank near Prescott, about 100 miles fron1
tl!eir base. One never came out.
'Mle second helicopter turned back and
made a safe landing at Ma~vem. State
Police quoted its pilot a~ say1n~ that the
other ship radioed thiJ,t it was m trouble
just before it \\'ent down. . . U Earl Orr of the state police said thr~ bodies \\-ere recovered at the crash scene about two hours later.
The National Guard identified the cre\f
members as Capt. John L8JTY: Bearden,
33 o! North LitUe Rock, the pilot; C.pt.
\Villiam Robert West, 31, of Lit_tle Roc;k,
the copilot, and Spec. 6 .David ~lurle
\Vebb, 32, of North Little Rock, the crew
chief-'ed th The flight plan would have cam e
:.. Con'l* over the Red River bottoms,
some -of the wildest countrY in the "!late.
The flight, Texas I_ntemational's · 655,
originated at Memphis. lt \\'as to have
terminated at Texarkana.
Police knocked on doors along the
flight path hoping to find someone who
had beard a plane in trouble.
f'rot11 Pflfle I
FIRE ...
at Orange County Airport.
Orange County firemen. did not radio
for assistance from the nearby l\1ariners
and Rocftester fire stations in Newport
Beach and Costa Mesa, respectively.
County Battalion Chief Cliff Chapman
said the first units were at the fire seven
minutes after the blaze was reported. but
several witnesses said it took at least 20
minutes be£ore any water was on the
Oameo.
Chapman said the fire broke out when
the boy's match ignited some carpeting
material stored in one of the sheds and
spread after he tried to extinguish It.
Fire officials refused to disclose the
name of the boy because he is a juvenile.
''I haven't taken an inventory but I can
tell you It's up in the thousands,'' said
Miss Dare, 59, in describing the loss.
Miss Dare starred in motion pictures
and theater productions during the 1930s
and 1940s with Dick Powell, Erroll FlyM,
Jimmy Cagney and others.
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OIANCJI COAST IT
DAILY PILOT
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''\Ye've seen this anima l almolt onoe a
day (or a year and we Uon't think ii bas
t.he disease/' she added.
Bartley, who was bitten u1ce by the
animal last Sunday as the youngster
stood on the front la1vn of the lamlly
home, also is prone to allergies and .has
heart problems.
"We understand that the treatment has
unpredictable side effects and we just
weighed the factors and decided that my
son would run a better risk by not t.ilking
the shots," his mother said;
Eight other victims or bites from ap-
parenUy the same coyote during the
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summer mooths \ underwenL the tl'!at-
ment which has been described a.s pain-
ful, buL 1u11 1 ... th•n the ortiJnal aganlt·
ing Pasteur series which eauaed major
side effects.
"llealth depa l'tmeut people told us the
shots are not totally effective in every
case and even if you take them all you
could still contracl the disease," said
l\1rs. Ashbaugh.
The decision by the family, residents of
the Riviera t>istrict near San Clemente
State Park, came at a·time when polioo
stepped up their attempts to shoot the
coyote believed responsible for the un-
provoked att.aclu.
Paul Llnden. the superintendent of San
Clemente GoU Course, managed Clf1e shot
¥.'ith a sholgwt at 'a coyote at tbe links
Thursday morning during a police-
.supervised hunt, but the animal escaped.
Police resumed lhelr attempts this
morning, but no animals were sighled. -.rwe and the nc.1gli001's 1Udn't see' the
coyote today, either. Vl'e figure he musl
have been scared off by the police ," .said
Mrs. Ashbaugh.
The bitten boy's mother said she en·
dor-sed the lateet attempt& at lr)'lng l()i,
shoot the animal.
"This has to be stopped before the
D9itY ,lie! ~•If Pho~
animal bites any other amall d!Udr<n-"
She, Uke her nelihbors, had been
foll owing the biting Incidents at the state
""'~ closely through the 1wnmer, but Mrs. Ashbaugh tbeorbed that the linpact
of the Incidents is much 1tronger now
because a local youngster wu involved.
..In all the other cases people didn't
take it so seriously, I ~· because the people were just visiting the city. Now
it's affecting local, residents and they are
becoming more concerned."
"Nobody should have to endure what
\\'e've beep through this put week. lt's
been a terrible experience for the whole
family and it's stillnot over with."
Lio1i Safari
Exp_losion
Hurts Mesan
A C.Osta ~1esa electrician was treated
'ror second degree bums at .Mission C.Om-
n1unity Hospital Thursday after wires he
was handling at t:ion Country Safari in
Irvine shorted and caught fire .
Robert Raus, 45, of 3113 Monroe
\\'lay, suffered burns on his anns and
face in the 3:30 p.m. explosion, "'hile
working on an addition to the animal
park's main administration building.
An employe of A. R. F.dmans Company
of Santa Ana, he was released affer
being attended in the Mission Viejo
hospital's emergency room .
Raus and a fellow electrician, who was
unharmed, were placing new high
volt3ge breakers in an electrical circui t
¥.·hen the short occurred, Fire Chief
Claude Lewell en of the University Fire
Station in Irvine said.
Firemen from Irvine and El Toro and
paramedics Crom Laguna Hills responded
to the call. An employe of Lion Country
had already taken Raus to the hospital,
3fter the injured man -stumbled into main
office and asked fOr help.
The transfonner Raus had been bend-
ing O\'.er had burst into· flames, sending
the fire up into the main electrical box in
the wall, Chief Lewellen said lQday.
dtstlnatlon, the lntortor mlhlstry Aid.
Pollce at Ont r<poned that the guer·
rlUas toolc cor1trol cl the Spanbh jet, but
the Austrililn Interior minlstry said later
the iuen-lllas were negotiating witb
autborhles from on top ot t h e
Volkswagen bus Jn front of the terminal.
An Interior ministry spokesman said
the guerrillas, Identified as 11Arabs ¥.1th
1-'bonoso_Pil>Sll<>l'.ll.'~ld hand grenades
near their faces and threatened to pull tho
pin,, ii tbelr dem&nm were not met.
Shortly alter the airport negotiations
started. the Arabi -callJng themselves
"Eagles of the Palestinian· Revolution'"
-handed out a 200-word text of-their
d!!mands. As they talked, po I ice
sharpshooters, high-powered rifles at the
ready, moved Into position overlooldnr
the Volk.s\vageg. •
"Jn the name of the Palestinian
martyrs who Y.'ere martyred in the strug-
gle to retWTI, and in the name ol the
Palestinian revolution. we, the Eagles of
the Palestinian Revolution, declare our
responslblily for this operation. Vl1e have
oodertaken this mission, because y,•e feel
that the immigration of the Soviel Union
Jews constitutes a great danger to our
caUSt>," the statement said.
Hundreds of on1ookers, 1nunching
snacks in the airport restaurant. watched
the negotiations going on just a few yards
away .
The windows or th e si x-seater bus
steamed up as-a resuh or the heat inside
the vehicle. . #
A police spokesman sai d the gw1men
¥.'anted to contact the Israeli embassy in
Vienna.
Schwechat airport was closed to a!J
traffic. A dozen Austrian security men
surrounded the bus at the airpqrt and
talked with the guerrillas inside the veJU..
cle. Police carrying pistols and machine
gum stood watch atop the !airport
terminal and along runways, turning
back curiosily see kers.
Police .said the Arabs were anned with
machine guns when they seized the train
at the l\tarchegg border staton, about 2.\
miles east of Vienna.
f'romPqeJ
SAUNA. • •
states that she has never t~ to the
newspaper."
A recent Daily Pilot story quoted Mrs .
THIS IS WHAT HAPPENS WHEN YOU HOTWIRE A TRACTOR THAT HAS BEEN LEFT IN GEAR
City Employ• on Foot Loses Rice With Activ1ted Vehicle on Huntington Be1ch's Vel1rdo Dri ve
Rags left on the floor ~so caught fire.
Damage to the · new administration
wing was estimated by fire-officials at
$2,000.
It was the first fire "of any siie" at the
drive-through preserve, said Lewellen,
who added the explosion could have
taken the entire administration building.
Parson as havinlJ dismissed Lewis
becau~ of the pubhclty given her case.
Lewis denied that he had been dismissed
by ~1rs. Parson and branded lhe story as
raise.
Berserk Tra~tor
U1ima1ined Veliicle S1nashes Garage
' _A brief. race bel\\'een an unmanned
trt.ctor and its operator ended Thursday
aflernoon when lhe earth mover crashed
into lhe garage of a Huntington Beach
home. Police said no one was injured in the
mishap which started when city employe
Jack Orris wanted to dig a hole for a tree
in the median in front of 9382 Velardo
Dri\'e. ' The tractor, \\1hicb had a trench digger
on the back. wouldn't start, so Orris got
off and started it by shorting the ignition
\\i th a screwdriver.
Police said Orris apparently left the
tractor in gear, so that when it started
up, it started off.
With Orris in hot pursuit, the tractor
rolled over the median, across the. street,
up the sidewalk and through the garage
door .
It finally stopped after taking out a
portion Of the garage's side wall, police
said.
Other than the damage to the empty
garage and the tractor, the only other
damage from the accident was to Orris'
pride, police said.
Friendly Brothers Found
Amidst Garbage, Wealth
FORT LAUDERDALE, Fla. (AP) -
Once well-known to neighbors as two
friend ly old men, the bachelor Krueger
brothers rarely were seen outs ide their
house for a year.
Acting on a can from a worried
neighbor, police this week found George
Krueger, 89, and his brother Oscar, 82,
livihg alongside piles o( garbage, swarm-
ing roaches. hu man ~·aste and a drawer
full of S20 bills and bank books showing
savings of more than $90,000.
Under a Florida mental health law, the
Fro111 Page 1
BLA ST .. .-
"who loves mr country.
"l( It \\'ere not for my serious physical
In ju r i cs suffe red during my im·
prisonment, I \.\OtJld have elected to have
remained in the tt·!arine Corps."
Miller, 42, has served in the Marine
Corps since l!H9. Ile "''as the highest
ranki ng ~farine PO\V held by the North
Vietnamese.
"l w1:1s siTM;('rP. in all my antiwar
slatements," he said, "and t felt I was
within my rights of fr~om of speech to
make publ ic statements about my feel·
lngs.''
lifiller denied he got any favorable
treatment from the North Vietnamese
for his tinliwar statements .
"I had tt broken back, badly fractured
ankle, dysentery, and malaria. The only
medical treatment L got was on Injection
an d a little liniment for my swollen leg.
"There wer,i men "'ho were given
favored ticatment for their antiwar
statement.5. But I was not one of them."
Scx:retary Warner, In making the an-
nounbcmcnt Thu rsday, said a lhrce-
month Investigation had shown there
were groWlds for trying i\liller o.nd Capt.
Wilber.
But Warner said It was more fm·
pcrta.nt lo 1pare other POWs "the disrup-
tive efrcct5 or such proceedings.''
. ,
_,.two retired men from Chicago were plac-
ed.' in protective custody and admitted to
a psychiatric hospital.
Broward County Sheriff's Lt. \Villiam
lsmer said of his visit to the Krueger
brothers' home:
"We found the interior of the house in
pretty bad shape. There \Vas 8;a rbage and
unopened mail stacked to the ceiling ...
Pots and pans were all over the kit chen
and hundreds o( roaches covered
everything. The stench was hard to take.
There waa no doubt they couldn't care
for themseJves."
The Rev. Conny Sjostrom. chaplain for
the sheriff's departrnent, rl't urned to the
house Wednesday to inventory any
valuables the elderly meo may have left
behind. He.discovered a cache of 60 crisp
$20 bll1!1 ·and the bank books.
Sheriff Edward Stack said the only
known relative \\'US a cousin In
Califomia.
He said Renate Krat sch. a neighbor
who called police. probabl y ~·ouJd be
named legal guardian for th e two.
"She told us the two old fellows used to
be quite popular around the neighborhood
... very' friendly and outgoing," lsn1er
sa id. "But about a year ago;•lhey chang-
ed. Jfardly ever left the house and
became suspicious of anyone who cume
around ... "
l\1rs. Kratsch said she knew little aboul
the men's backgrowxl. except that they
retlred to Fort Lauderda}c before she
moved into 'the neighborhood eight years
sgo.
She said Oscar had been ;n tbe stock
market in Chicago and George had be.en
a meat cutter.
"They were very frugal and lived
simply, 11 she said.
High Greek Resigns
ATHENS (AP) -Deputy Premier
Nlcholtis MllkareZ08 I resigned today,
'"ytng he dlJagre<d with President
George Pa padopoillos over "l'iuch n
cn1cittl l~sue '' he felt ht had to quit .
Fullerton Pair
Tho11gh~ Suicide
An ailing Ful\ertori couple apparently
decided to end it all Thursday night,
police reported.
John Rommel , 70, used a .45 caliber
pistol to fatally wound his Tl-year-old
wife Anna and then killed himself.
The shooting occurrtd at the couple's
home. 131 W. \Yhiliog St., about 7:30 p.m.
. Both had been patients at a con·
va1escent hospital and Mr. Rommel suf-
fered a stroke Thursday. police said.
Firemen saved the existing building
from any damage.
A Llon Country official said all the
lights were back on today and repairs
y,•ere beginning. .
Oil Slick Spreads
I
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -A 1,500-
gallon oil slick spread over a wide area
of South San Francisco Bay a1 workers
sought to contain it wilb booms. the
Coast Guard reported. The spill of crude
or-...waste oil stretched from Treasure
Is!3nd to the vicinity of Alameda Naval
Air Station.
He told the court that Mr. and ~1rs.
Parson were in the courtroom and lhat
lhey ¥.·ould support his statement that he
was still handling the case. - -
After Lewis, in a letter to the Daily
Pilot, <lenied being dismissed, Daily Pilot
representatives attempted to contact
~frs. ·Parson, but' were unable to reach
her.·
~frs. Parson sued the health spa on 1hc
grounds that trawna created when she
was trapped In the sauna room changed
her personality to the point that she con-
tacted strangers in bars with a view to
sexual relatloMhlps with them.
A psychiatrist has testified in a deposi-~
tlon that she developed m u 1 t i p l e
per900alitles as a result or her iniurles
and her condition was described as a
"lhree faces or Eve'' personality spilt.
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I
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FOR EVERY FABRlC
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DREXE~ERITA6~ENREDON-WOODMARK-MRASl'AN
INTERIORS
WDXDATS a SATURDAYS t:GO te 11"
NIDlT 'TIL t :OO
NEWPORT. BEACH e
l 727 WISTCllFF o-.. 642-1010
IOpt1t S11t4ty 12:11JOI
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141 NORTH COAST HWY
fOI"" Swtt4ty 12·11JOI 4t4-65SI
IORRANCE e
lllAI HAWTHO•NI ILYO,
Jl'l•l27t
Frlday1 Septembfr 28, 1973 s DAILY PILllT ;I
I Nuclear· Plant · to Build on Campsite Land?
By JOHN YALTERZA
Of ""'°-'"' l'll•t 11.tft
The two utilit y firms seeking to bulld
twin nuclear reactors at San Onofre have
begun negotiations on lease of 23 acres of
San Onofre State Park -acreage which
wa5 to be developed into 50 campsites.
News of the quiet negotiations between
, southern California Edison and San
Diego Gas and Electric Companies on
one side and state parks officials on the
other came forth this week and lm-
n1ediately sent local foes of the Onofre
proposals scurrying for information.
The opponents will have the chance to
A ·t Your
Service
A Sunday, Wednesday and Friday
Featare
Of !be Dally Pilot
Got a problem? Tl!:en
Pat Dunn. Pat
Gree1111,,s l11 Spa11isl1
DE . .&iR PAT : For some lime l have
tried to get greeting cards written in
SpJini'sh, but I can't find a source. I'd
a lso like to get some English greeting ·
cards written ln Braille.
E.1\1., Costa Mesa
sptak. on the lease issue Oct. l2 when the
State Parks Commlllion holds public
hearings at the state building In San
Diego. ·
The plan. Edison spok.....,. confirmed
Thursday. calla for the use of the blull·
tops upcoaSl of the existing generating
station as a ·site for equipment and
material storage during the neit eight
years while the billiOo-dollar reactor proJ·
ect would be built.
State Parks Department spokesmen in
Sacramento said although negotiations
have begun, no price has yet been coo·
terrtplated rorlhe23)ct'ell which are part
of a massive "gift" to the state by the 1
u .S. Government on personal anion of
President Nixon.
1be state ii teasing the entire San
Onofre bluffs· sector or e:lx miles as well
as about 2,400 acres of San Mateo Canyon
and ls developing the entire chunk Into a
major park. '-
Edison spokesmen said emergence · of
the lease negotiations was. not a 1urprise
move by the ulllltieS,. ratlier a nonnat se.-
quence of events in the planning for the
twin reactors ..
The issue never was diJcussed at the
hundred• or hours of public bearings held
before local, state and ' federal agencies
iqvolved in the reactor licensing prooess.
UPI Tl ........ O
Rousana Spanish Greetlng Cards are
available at Bristol Drug Co., l30Z W.
Santa Ana Blvd. lcorner of Bristol and
Santa Anal and F. W. Woolworth, !01 W.
4th St .. Santa Ana. Other Santa 'Ana
variety stores also carry a selection of
Spanish greeting oeards. U you bring the
EngUsh greeting card of your cbolce to
Services for tbe Bllnd, lnc., 2815 N.
Tiroad"·ay, Santa Ana. an Identical card
written in Braille will be prepared for
you fru of charge.
SAN FRANCISCO ANNOUNCER JIM DUNBAR DESCRIBES SHOOTING
Protected From Berserk Gunman by Bulletproof Glas,
Gunman Believed Radw
Tried to Control Him
Preserving f'oxloll•
DEAR PAT: I'd like to know-·wbal to
use to tint or dye foxt.ails to preserve
them and keep their natural softness.
C.N .. San Juan Capistrano
Dfe the foxtalls with any vegetable dye
and then coat them with silica gel for
preservation. ·Kath)' Del,ll, o~er of Can·
Do Arts and Craft.,.%7118 Vla ,CaleadJta,
San Clemente, will ,give _yea more in·
furmation U you need It.
That f'lr1t Co11tact .
' DEAR PAT : I believe l have
something worthwhile that would sell but
don't know how to go about selling it to a
brand name canning company, such as
Del Monte. How do you let them know
that you have a recipe or correction
recipe you think could be marketed? I
understand that Ille first contact is im·
portant in a touchy area like this which
involves patenls and copyrights.
R.K., Costa r.tesa
SAN FRANCISCO (API - A young
man who fired-sOOts-at-a local radio
personality had been under psychiatric
care for months and was obseMed. with
the idea that the radio statioo was trying
to control him, police aay. .
Lawrence Kwong, 25, of San Francisco,
fl.red three shots 'lbunday at Jim Dun··
bar of KGO radio~ 'When the shots failed
to penetrate a bulletproof window of a
sidewalk broadcasting booth. Kwong
critically wounded another man and tben
fatally shot himself.
KGO radio advertising executive Ben-
jamin A. Munson, 47, of San Rafael, was
listed in critical but st.able condition at
General Hospital this morning. He was
reported sligbily improved following 61>
hours of surgery for removal of four
-bullets-Kwong fired-into him· in-fut.studio
lobby. Kwong died earlier at !he bospitiil
alter surgecy fur a head wound.
Kwong had been a resident of the
Westside Lodge, a center-operated by the
Presbyterian Hospital here, Dr. Robert
Underwood or the center said.
Psychiatrists at Westside said Kwong
had become obsessed with tfle idea that
~GO radio was trying to control him
through broadcasts be beard 1n his head ,
officers said.
Police said a list of names matching
the first names of KGO personalities was
found in Kwoog's pocket.
KGO talk show boo! Dunbar, 42, plan-
ned to return to the air today.
Yes . it Is a senslUve lnue. Write a
brief letter to Joseph Kremer, director of
new products. Del Moote Corp., %15. Fre--
mont St., .San Francisco, Ca. Mltl. Shft...
pl)' state why you have a new prudact
•bJcb may lnterest the corporation and
l'fllnetl more lnfonnatlon .. Kremer-will
In Second Murder Trial
• send you the ~orporalion's policies and
proceduret for new products and a
release form by return mall. Do n<it
divulge any details of your recipe or pro-
duct Idea, nor give Ute name, tngredle:r1ts
or method of processlng. If you do men·
tlon any detail s In tbls first contact, you
will hurt your chances of working further
with Del Pt1onte because lhit firm and
olher Corporations lnslsl on \bit sei pat·
.... lern ror legal protection.
;=:Send Cople• of C"eck
.:., DEAR PAT: I ordered a blue denim
, ~jumpsuit from Parade FashlOM, Inc. in
•• Chic.ago on June 4. My numerous letters
.:1 or inquiry have been ignored even though
A bid to free Iorrner Marine Mark
-Allen Johnson or San Clemente pending
his second Orange Coun(§uperior Court
trial on f1!uriler chru;ges ended Thursday
with a judge setting the bail figure at
$75.000.
Judge Kenneth Lae's assessment i;Jlay
prove to be too high ror Johnson, 22. ~e
remained lodged in county jail today with
no indication that the required $15,000
bond will be postOO prior to his nelt
court appearance.
Judge Lae set next Friday as the date
be will rule on mot.ions to dismiss and
suppress evidence. Johnson had earlier
been told that he will go to trial Oct. 9 to
face revived charges lhat he fataUy
· ~ my chce~ ror $13.9'1 was cashed June 25. :~ l~~ii\'!~ ! ~e::;e1P 1e ~et either the Fight Over Will
~ D.B., Lapna Beacli _ ~ Parade Fashions lnslati you send .• Ends• 73 Dogs
•• photoo,.llc copy of botb 1ld" of ,.., '
.. ., ca11ied check"berore ll wftl fill your order-·. ~.or Issue a rerund. Your ertglnal order G t $9 M'll-. · · 1 'must have gone astray along with your e i wn .
:: lelten, hetause tbe ftrm'1 record• ln·
:: dlc1te no conta<l from you. II was .... FORT LAUDERDALE, Fla. (AP):-
: • quttled thal you mention At Your Seventy-three dogs with a total adfUdledv ~ .. Service to your lett~r, wblcb 1bould be value of $1 have been awarded $9 inllllon 1~ sent to Parade Fublon1, IDc., Attention: -about $123,7.87 each ·-from a .$14 :i E. Motl, J31S N. Ratclolpll SI., Cblcaco, mlllloo estate. .
;~Ill. _,, When Eleanor Ritchey, the Quake<
' I S o. I State Refining Corp. bet....,, died In 11111 :. Grow llfl tratcuerr e• at the age of i8 she Jell her entire estatt, ~,. DEAR PAT: My 75 strawberry planll then worth $Ui mtlllon, lo ll!O dogs.
:; set out this SJ)r!na have Utera1ljl covered 11te dogS. bolh llray and pedigreed,
=.,the ar~a. I Would like lnlonnation from had been ,cared (0< by Miii Ritchey at
stabbed his pregnant wife, Omnie, 20, on
Jtme16;1970:-
Jobnson \\'as convicted of second
degree murder and sentenced to five
years to life in state prison. He was
returned to Orange County from San Lui s
Obispo Men's Colony earlier this moqth
when the Fourth District Court Of Ap-
peals in San Bernardino overturned that
conviction.
1be appellate court, with Justice
Robert Gardner dissenting, ruled lhat
Superior Court Judge William MUITay
erred when be allowed the prosecution to
play back video tapes depicting Johnson
testifying under !be inDuence o1 a truth
drug.
Johnson did no! confess to the killing.
But be testified under the drug's in·
nueoce that he bad "bazy memories" of
taking a shower "to wash something off"
and tb8t be may have thrown his wife's
wallet oil San Clemente pier on the night
she was murdered. -
';Johnson testified th at he found his
wife's stabbed and nude body sprawled on-the bed when he returned home from
duty at El Toro Marine Corps Air Sta·
tton. ,
He also. admitted under examinaUon
lb'at he and tm wife ha:<l frequehtly quar-
reled over his use of marijuana and that
he tncreasingly resented her attempts to brootlll!fl ollhe dru~ habit.
:~the Cllllomia Agricultural Ellensloo her ranch norlhwesl ol Fort Lauderdale.
;~ Semce. but I don't know lhe address . I Two half.-S and a ball-brother .
••need to find oul the procedure for challenged lhe wtll lo court, saying Ibey
'Prostiture'
Can't Collect
·-:" ttn0vatioo In order to get more lrull and $hould get -of Ille -le. :rr need information abciolt pul1Jrii In JnOrri·• -"". -·During the tntemalnl )'Nl'I, ti..
•':""new Fresno and Lessen bmy plantl. ettate, C001istin1 tnOIUy of Quaker State
:•, • H.B., Soatll Lagana stock, grew in value arid inote than half
. • Tbtae publlc1Uoo1, 1val1"ble from Ille the do8a died.
; California Aarlcwl,.nl E 11e•1 lo n '111uraday, Broward Cowlty Cln:ult
• Service. 1000 s. Harbor Blvd., Anaheim, Judge Leroy Moo ended the live years ol
: Ca. 11115, 1hoald-provt-b e+;+ .. 1 • egal11rgumtnll·by·1lvlng IO million to• -
: SlraWbelTJ Producijon In Soalbem · trust tund lor the dotl• and '1 million to ·
• California (AXT.SO). How to Piek be divided among the half·ilsters, Marton
'.· Slr1wberrle1 (AXT-lll), ood Growing Boyer and Lola Leavy, and hall-l>rolhcr ~ Strawberries· in Volll' llome Garden John Ritchey, a11 from Pennsylvania.~
(0SA·111). 11 you reqaln rur6tr In-'111e J"04t ·or the t!!ltate went for taxes
lonnnlloo. call Ibo 1ervlct II "''*"· , and.iltorney'1 and txeqi!ora• fttl.
..•
MILAN. ·Italy (VP!) -'111e
woman 'Insisted lll>e .wu-1 "'°"" Utute. Lowy.., f0< tho othe party
Insisted silo was a bousewil .
On Thursday tlie woman , Iden-
tified only as R. z., loal. The court
ruled her a housewife and awarded
ll!lt"HlJ!i! damges for a traffic
accident for whlch she spent 29
mooths in hospital . ·
She had asked for 169.000 ba!ed
on what she said was her normal
income as a prostitute. . .,
~ .
(
Mn. Lyn Harri• Hicks, a leader ol lhe
local eUort to halt the reactor con-
strucUon, said that no approach has l)een
detennined as oC ye:t to block the lease,
but local groups on record as opposing
the rencton planned to raise the loss of
pubUc land as a fresh issue in the years.
old debate. rr the Slllte· nllnquishes the land, it
would be the second parcel of recreation
acreage inJhe park affected by the reac·
tor construcUon.
Edison ofilclals have said that the
stretch of beachfront in front of-the 8J..
acre reactor site would be closed to the
.Building
Curbs Loom
In Laguna
The stalf of the South Coast Regional
Coastal Commission is considering park· .
ing space requiremen ts that could place
a lid on further commercial development
or redevelopment in Laguna Beach.
That warning was made to the plan-
ning commission this week by \Vayne
Moody, director of planning and develop-
ment for the city.
Commissioners agreed they, too, were
opposOO to the stiff requirements and
said the city should officia1ly protest any
attem pt to implement the standards.
The proposals have yet to be acted on
by the coastal commission, but it is no
secret the staff believes the re-
quirements should be imposed and
already bas suggested them for some
projects.
Moody said the staff proposals would
mandate "two to two and a half times"
the number of spaces now required under
existing city ordinances.
For example, Laguna now requires one
parking space for every 500 square feet
of space in retail shops. The commission
staH wants to see one space for every 250
square feet of space.
For neighborhood convenience shop-.
ping centers, the staff would like 5.5
spaces per 1,000 square feet of store
area. Laguna currently require! about
three spaces per 1,000 square feet for
grocery and convenience centers.
Moody told commissioners that the
proposals would continue to stimulate the
use of the automobile when both· local
and regional agencies are trying to en·
courage mass transit. ·
The planning director also said tpe
commission staff desires run against
those of the federal Environmental
Protection Agency which is seeking to
limit parking in urban areas as a means
of trimming use of the automobile.
Two Laguna Beach commercial proj-
ects facing review by the coastal com-
mission could be affected by the sug·
gested requirements.
Both the Village Bazaar in tbe south
end of the city and the Lumber Ya.rd in
the downtown area have been planned
with existing city parking requirements.
The Village Bazaar will come before
the commission Monday. The Lumber
Yard bearing is set for later this ye .
City counciJln~ who first learn of
the proposals at a booget meeting atur·
day, also indicated displeasure.
"That's insane," declared Coun·
cilwoman Phyllis Sweeney. "If these
restrictions are allowed to stand it will
cripple development."
Mrs. Sweeney notOO the city already is
on the way to solving its parking prob-
lems.
The council is expected to discuss the
proposed requirements again at fllture
meetings.
public (or at least nve-po.uibly eight
-lears. '"'qbat closure would split the
beach nearly tn half.
Both sections of property have been
deemed crucial to the utiJitles-~ projects.
'The prospect of a battle over the lease
is the latest in a series of hurdles 'o the . . .
ctompletlon or the reactor complex: which
-If built -would turn the quiet stretch
of oceanfront into the world's largest
nuclear generating complex.
Opponents of the reactors battled hard
6efore-the Regional Zone Co<uital
Conservation Commission serving San
"I:'
San
Juan
Capistrano·
Dana
•
"freeway
Diego County and once they 1tamed the
panel bad approved a pennit, the op-
ponents· appealed at the state level.
1'te utiUties have completed the major
pha>e of hearings before the U.S. Atomic
Energy Commission's Nuclear Safety
and 'Licensing Board. and oflicials art
still awaiting word from the AEC on the
fate Ot the all-important pennlt which
would alow constru ction of the two rea c-
tors.
Foes have maintained that the reactors
should be built inland and underground
rather than on valuable coastal land.
I
I
• '
\
\
\_· ~
Pacifrc Ocean
D•llY' Pllllt"MD W .--c"""
CHANGING OWNERSHIP -Two major parcels of land in San Cle-
mente -the Reeves Ranch and the Visbeek Ranch -have changed
hands recently, They Iola! about 3.000 undeveloped acres. Sale of
5,500 acres of the Starr Ranch is also either consummated or pending.
County officials had hoped to purchase the land for a regional park.
Law1ers Tackle Details •
Purchase of Starr Ranch
By WILLIAM SCHREIBER
Of t11e DM,,. Pll.r St.tf
The impending purchase by a private
developer of 5,500 acres of the Starr
Ranch near San Juan Capistrano was
still in limbo today as attorneys for both
sides attempted to work out details of
the sale agreement.
Attorney William Poindexter, whose
Los Angeles firm represents the Starr
Ranch Foundation (a conglomerate of 10
charities-now owning the land) said to--
day no final deal has been consummated.
"As far as I'm concerned , this is still
being discussed," he said. "We have no
signed final agreement or purchase."
But a spokesman for C and E Af·
filiates, an Anaheim company which tlas
reportedly offered $6.6 million for the
land along Ortega Highway, says an
agreement in principle bas been signed.
Sunday's Dally Pilot
"Dick Rimel (attorney for C and E)
1las a signed document on his desk agree.
iog to the sale," said Bill James.
publicist for the company. "All that re-
mains is worklng out some final details.·•
lt has still been impossible to confinn
A L E reports that C and E's ocrer is being earnl.ng xperi"ence backed 'by capital from Japanese br . ' vestors. Japanese firms have bought
large chunks of Orange County real
· ) -estate recently, lDcluding the 1,100-acre
Readi ng this week's Sunday Dally Pilot a room-size garden should be able to Reeves Ranch in San Clemente.
may be a learning elq)erlence. A HUn· serve two-home-grown vegetables 365 The Starr Ranch parcel, southern halt
ting ton Beach woman who teaches days a year. She is teaching families in a of a SP.read once owned by land .and ca\.o
•
families to maintain a vegetable gard~n is community class arranged by · Ule Foun-tie baron William Starr, has long been
proCiled and a 20-we~k educational series taln Valley School Distri,ct how they--can-.---£2Y~!~Y Orange C9un!y off~clala au, __ ~
on "America and the Future of Man" do it. Mrs. Davis Is profiled in a women's major reglonM park. lt ~s d~s1gna.ted as
also begins. Here.'s a glance at what wilt page feature written by Stafi Wrllef1 Jo open space on the COWlty s general plan.
be published: Olson and illustrated by s.t' r r Lasl week, the count y completed an
BEW ARE CARNIY AU> -All of the
games at carnivals can be rigged, though
usually only one or two at any one tlme.
This week's "You" ltad feature, by staff
(Sunday's Best J
Wttter Joonno Reynolds. tells how
operaton of Ulese sames Can separate
you from yo~ money.
NJ;W CAREERS - A trio of lonncr
e.mpJoyes in the aerospace industry is
launching a new furniture reHnisbing
business in-orange county: 1111! reatute,
also In the "YOU" section, takes a look
at how they and other casualties of
aerospace cutbacks are adjusting.
OROW YOUR OWN -Lois Davis of
Huntington Beach believes a family-with
Photographer Richard Koehler. appraisal of lhe land ar.d prepared to of·
rer $4.4 million fOr it unUI they learned ol
SERIES BEGINS -The Sunday Dally the higher orrer by c and E.
Pilot this week begins a 20-week series Since. then. county officials have in·
on "Am~rica and lhe Future of Man,'' an dicated C and E's offer is "highJ,y ID:
experiment to determine tbe. practicality Oated" and claim the C and E figure is
of printing educational courses In closer to $5.S million.
newspapers. The course can be taken for James reiterated the detennlnaUOo or
oredil U the reader enrolls In UC! Ex-his client to '"fight city hall .. to gel the
teruilon. land designation changed so they can
"ADAM'S RIB " -Ken Howard and
Blythe Danoer, playing Speneer Tracy
and Katharine Hepburn, ari cover story
material for the TV WllitK. They're
featured In a new series based on the
.classic Tracy-Hepburn movie.
IDEAS FOR HOME -Family Weekly
has a pullout-and·save section on how to
decorate bedrooms and famil y rooms
without spending a fortune on place$
where we sPenct one--thlrd o[ our Lives.
Barbara Rus.h ls the cover girl and sub-
ject of a Peer J. Oppenheljner lntertiew.
develop a planned commun1ty, coosistlng
~of houses, triller parks and shopping
centers. 1
'"But Ibey aro keeping options open,"
James said. "Including the ibility ol
resale."
Poindexter 'said his flnn Is still talltlng
wllh the county ·about the l&nd and will
get back to them with more details ·~next
week after we clekn up a few Items.••
A county spok"5man said todll)' he also
thinks It wlll be at leul a wed< before
anything is known (or sul'e about the
deal.
•
• 4 DAILY PILOT F'rlday, Sfpttmbtt 28, 1973
I
• !.
! . ;
'
Fou11d l11ta0ee11t.
Dis~ct Attorn ey Jim Garrison ~
was acquitted Thursday of fed·
eral bribery charges, but he
says his running feud with the
government is fa r from over.
He and two others "''ere found
inrocent in connection with
p n ha 11 gambting. Garrison
bfu.med his troubles on "a cor-
rupt U.S. Justice Department"
Goldwater
Says Agnew
Was 'Framed'
BALTIMORE, Md. (UPI) .-For lhe
first time in history, evidence concerning
an incumbent vice president has been
presented to a grand jury. One witness
labeled the inquiry a "lishing ex-
• pedition," and Sen. Barry M. Goldwater
f 1 (RrAriz.), claimed in Washington tl}at
I
1 , Spiro T. Agnew was "fr"!-_Illed."
1 11le 22-member grand jury, meetii1g
1 1 under strict security, was believed to
· I have heard at least four witnesses Thurs-
1 1 day at ~. federal courthouse in
·downtown Baltimore before recessing for
the week. MosY witnesses also were
shielded from the press. . '
l
-I
~ ·•
U.S. Attorney ~rge Beall and his
team of federal prosecutors at the direc-
tion Of Attorney General Elliot L.
Richardson bega n presenting the grand
jury with evidence ga thered in their in-
vestigation. Beall notified Agnew Aug. 1
the iuvestigation concerned ~ible
violations of conspiracy, erlortion. and
bribery.
11le panel bad been nteeting since
January to consider allegations of cash
kickbacks to Maryland political figures
fnm contractors.
Agnew has told friends any hope he
may haye had for the presidency in 1976
"is over noW," the New York Times
reported in today's editions.
"He h§s been destroyed politically and
knows it," TUnes writer James Reston
reported.
"But he will not go quietly, for that
'vould. look like a confession of guilt, and
that, he insists, is a confession be will
never make."
-!['he Times said Agnew ~-no_! intend
to resign even if indicted but "'ill "fight
for exoneration through the courts and
~eep appealing tD the Hoose of Represen-
tatives for a full and open hearing, no
matter how long it takes."
Assistant U.S. Atl<>rney Russell T.
Baker·Jr. declined to say when the jury
would next meet. Jt was expected to con-
·1eoe next week.
Lawyers for Agne\v, a f o rm er
Baltimore County Executive a n d
i\laryland governor, said they still plan to
file suit in U.S. District Court in an at-
tempt to block the invesligaUon on the
constitutional ground that a vice .Presi-
dent _s:anoot be indicted unless he is. first
-impeached by Congress and removed
irom orfice.
While the grand jury was listening to
wit.nesses, Agnew attended meetings at
the White House concerning legislative
tnatlers.
New York, Renae
Explosions Rip
ITT Buildings
NEW YORK (AP) -A powerfUI ex·
plosion early today ripped through offices
of lhe lnlernational ftlephooe and
Tulegrapb Corp. in a mldl<>wn Manhatlall
skyscraper.
Authorities said oo one was injured and
no fire resu1ted from the blast on the
ninth floor ol the 4l~y ITI America
Building at 431 Ma~ A vc.
Meanwhile, in Rome, a small bomb
was thrown early today at the office of
ITT SJ,andard S.A., the Italian subsidiaty
or the American conglomerate. The blast
damaged t"'·o doors slightly. Police said
unidentified per3005 had climbed over an
iron fence surrounding the building 00.
the nonhem edge of Rome.
The building struck in New York is
near the giant telecommunication cor-
poration's world headquarters on Park
Avenue.
Chunks of concrete, wood paneling,
glass shards and shreds of drapery lit-
tered 50th Street near f.1adison A venue
after the explosion.
"It was a tremendous blast ~ause
you got the vibration all the way down
here," said a security guard who was in
the lobby of the building at the time of
the explosion.
The New York PoSt reported receiving '
a telephone call shortly after the blast in
'vhich a yowig male caller said: "We're
going to attack m ...
According to a Post editor, the caller
BOYLE OFF
CRITICAL LIST
WASHINGTON •(UP!) -W. A.
"Tony" Boyle, reported near death
for two days after taking an
overdose of sleeping pills, was
taken off the critical list today.
The fonner United Mine Workers
union president was listed ''in
serious condition" at George
Washington University Hospital.
Officials at the hospital said
Boyle was still in the intensive care
section but "he is awake; alert and
talking, although he has a sore
throat." ..
Skylab Crew
Facing Series
Of Debriefings
HOUSTON (UP!) -Three happy and
healthy Skylab 2 astronauts' spent their
first day at home in three months today
after I'C'\vriting the space record boQk
with 59 days of adventure, hard work and
fun.
Alan G. Bean, Owen K. Garriott and
Jack R. L-Ousma, still a little weak but
feeling fit after two month,, of
weightlessness, were starting a long
series of debriefings about the flight
after a jubilant reunion with their
families Thursday night.
Stepping from the fu ture into the past,
the astronauts were greeted by their
"'ives wearing loog, colorful 19th century
gowns and boonets as the men emerged
from a NASA jet at Ellington .Air Force
Base. They flev• from San Diego w~e
their recovery ship brought them after
their return to earth Tuesday.
A crowd of 500 well-wishers, including
the fliers' children, were kept 100 feet
back to protect the men from common
earth germs while they readapt to living
on their home planet.
"In the last two months ... we 've had
an unforgettable experience," Garriott
told the cheering crowd. '"l'hes:e were
days of adventure, they were days of
hard work -and there was time for a litUe
bit of fun."
The, pioneering astronauts thank~
thei r colleagues on the ground for the
many hours of hard work they put in to
support man's longest space flight.
r
did not identify himstlf but said be was
from the "Weather Undel'gl(lUDd. ''
Pollce gave no immediate assessment
of damage in the blast. ITI' offices oc-
cupy the second through 11th floo.rs of
the modern ccncreh>-and-g!W building.
The seatrity guard said be knew of
only one other person who was in the
building at the time of the explosion, an
employe of a computer Jinn who was
working late on the 21st floor.
Newsmen were not penrutted to view
the damaged area as police boJ!lb squad
detectives scrutinized the offices.
A Police Department official at lhe
scene said: "The explosion, apparenUy
caused by a bomb, caused extensive
damage on the ninth floor. Windows were
blown out, partitions.--and desks were
knoclted over, tiles and parts of lhe ceil-
ing fell to the floor .'' .
The police spokesman said the blast
0 occurred at the end of a general recep.
tion area near some filing cabinets."
He said police were warned about a
bomb by an anonymous caller using an
police emergency telephone number. "An
unknown male said be was a member of
the 'Weathermen Underground' and a
bomb WOOld go of! Inside the l1T
bqi]dlng," lhe police spokesman said.
He said the caller did not specify wbldl
one m the several midtown buildings
where ITT has offices.
Escape Attempt
Thwarted; 12
Hostages Freed
ST. LOUIS, Mo. (AP) . -. Twel ..
women prisoners and a matron were
released unharmed early today, 51fi:
hours after they were seized during an
escape attempt at city jail, authorities
said.
"They threatened me. They threatened
to blow my brains out. TbeY threatened
to cut my head off," sobbed the matron,
Belly Scoll.
OfficialJ said the lnddent started
sh:rily after midnight when seven male
inmates overpowered two guards.
They said the men r°'""""One of the
two, guard capt. Arthur'E. Vogelpohl, 61,
to accompany them on an elevator to the
jaH's sixth floor, where 50 women are
housed.
There, Vogelpohl said, ooe ol the
prlsooers began an escape attempt by
trying I<> descend a ladder, b u I WU
thwarted by a policeman below.
At that point Vogelpobl said he broke
I~ from his captors. The seven in-
mates then barricaded themselves oo the
·sixth floor and took the 13· women
hostage, officials said.
Edward Tripp1 ·city director of adult
services, said he met with the seve.n in-
mates fur about lour hours during Ille In-
cident, after which the men retw'ned to a
llftb-fioor cell in orderly fashion.
Also at the meeting on the facilty's
sixth floor was news director Jim White
of radio station KMOX, whose presence
was demanded for the airing of
grievances.
Tripp said he acceded I<> tnOst of a list
of denands that included heller mlldical
services, mattresses on which to sleep
and more sanitary conditions.
"I assured them that everything they
wanted, everything on their llst of
demands I was already working for," he
said. "l know things are bad here. l coo-
vlnced them I'm trying to make them
better."
He said the inmates' demand for
amnesty in the eborted escape attempt
would he honored.
AutboriUes said two of the prisoners in
the escape try were serving life sen-
tences <Jl murder convictions at the state
penitentiary at Jefferson City. They had
been returned here to stand trial on other
charges.
Monster Storm -Hits-+e-xas-•
-FU>od Waters Force-=BOO-·.Perso1ts Frorrt Their Homes
•
PARKI G LOI
LOOK what ·we found in our WAREHOUSE!!!
I , ,
WHIOl IG 5rAAlllSE-'1MINLI( !!ECAU.>1: \~'!:or.TT £Vfll HAVE:o.W!AAEHOU~~.,.
Al.rHOIJC-f.f WI: 00 flA.VE. A NIC!E S'rOl1AGTO SH!:O •• : ••
REDWOOD FURNITURE
-~ By HANCOCK '
'
&' 119 Tob1e w/b•nchei 16
S•h L•ftl R•g. $-i<t.95.
Youn ON LY •..••• SJf.tS
4' U~bffllo T•ble w/l btn•
ches (3 1et1 only) •
Reg. $59.9s: Now . , $Jt,t5
1!"4 Tables. Codtall T.W..,
Staol.,._knchff Anorted.
Reg. Values to $29 .95 Now
···~· .••••..•••••• $11 .00
Club.Choir !-4 on1vl
Rt9. $39 .95. Now •• $14.00
love S.9t I l only J
Reg. $59.95 , Now ., SJ2.00
Podded CHI• & Chair C111h·
ion1, from ••• , •• , , $3.00
~~?.~ WROUGHT IRON ' FURNITURE
by Fbr?iture South
Elegant Indoor Pieces for Living Room,
Patio, Den or Dining. ;.;,.,.t .. , .. ....-.'~. ~~~: ............ ~ ....... s1000
•lG. S'4t.tl • •.. ~ fOR ~ 91tt Woll urilts, 6/1h-4f. Gold Veil Fini1fi. 2·f' rtg. $79.50 tt.
l tor 5~59.90. 10'.' rtg .. $8 9.95 ••· J for Sl79.90. 10" w/
f11 rt len9th door1, ttg. S I 19.95, Now 599.95. •lt.~ll SPA.DI -·.,... p\111 Lft¢
Sl 49 eO· V"1 • •IG· · ' ooo• ........ . · -lttOOO•·OUT .... · · • · · ' . . . . "'8¢
GPPI l'IY .. ·• · ·'. 1.7 a1c;.si.•• .. .. . .. . "" ........ "··495
GI .. Top Gold R1I .. J.pc. Tott .. Seti. Gold fin i1fi, ·f I
Cockt•il .Ttb!e-2 Lemp Teble1. Seti ONLY ••• , S159.9S
' ~ _..q•or" '... ~ \,OllLIA. •..•.••.. • • · · ·' .•. Plo11tt Stond1, A1lt. Colors. FROM •• , ; •••• ~ •• , •• 5J,95
tlG· ltc . . I 1ueA.L'f1"f\IS ••••••••••••••• ::.·~.~\.~ ............... .
l•r Stooh (Wrought Iron Swi¥e) S1•tl From , ••• 519.95
ICtt" Stooh Wr/lron w/Uph. B•c:• Ir Stilt.
Famous
Brown Jordan
Pario Sale
20°/o Off
ToMloll!l-Llci-kolllHI Gr911ph .... AH
pc's. AY911oble. Re-do your old furn.
Wo,. St.rl99. W• ...,..,. lrcrw•.
Jerdo• Sp'11J Pol• • $2.50 CCIII.
04tl a.tn hM fnMI• IMhn.
YA.LUU TO s11z.• s2200
HOM ONLY ••••••• ~· •••
GI••• Pl11nlert & P•lio Acce11orie1 so •;. OFF ,-
Fllll COLOI
MOD MINDED
J Pc. hr Set. Req . $219.00
NOW ••• , •••••••••••••••• Sl99.00
Avocado Grter1/Whit1 Be11. 5·pc.
I·~· T•le Set. Rtg. $'249.99. I ONLY
$99.95.
A11t. Colors·Stoolt. Reg. $24.95 SIS.GO
ALL DAY
SATURDAY
CREDIT
TERMS
Al1AILABLE
GREEN
·-.
•
R•g. $119.95. NOW ••••.•••.••••••••••••••• $49.91
S·pc. LIYllHJ •-Gr"" By Mt•dow·
cr1lt. from , • , ••••• , • , , • , •. $199.95
5-pc: Dl11l1Hj s.ts NOW •••••• $99.95
NOW ••••• , •••••••••••••• S99.95
C111tom Ord•red DIAllHJ Groups. Your
Choice ... , , • , , •••••••• LISS 25'/e
l .l .9 . Clo1t Out Prict1, lmt"lt~i•t•
Del. on All Floor 51mplt1. Wt Stoc•-
Th e F • mo u 1 C~o""91ow • CHr•Vll -
Chorbroll Ir; W...., kettle. -
lntludinq ell Acct11ori11
DEPT. Fi:ATURE -Wi111rd Ch11rcoel
l ighter. 91111rt Si1e Reg. 69c: Now 39c
Hamilton Fir11 Log1. Sptci•I Priced
Fr om •••••••. , •••••••••• , • 519,95
FIRE SCREEN S -Cu1tom fitted per
order w/Ac:c:e11orie1-AT GREAT SAV·
INGS-STOP IN & ORDER YOURS
TOD>.Y.
TROPITONE
HI Quality OIJfdoor Petio flint. Tft5n
-Aur. Slnt & SM,n. Cltol,._S...
Rockers, Lo11....-Aut, 40"• to 10%
OFF ... r Stools w/ l11ffet a-. S,.clol
..... ,a .. , .... SJ41.00 ,_...,. C...._
oirt Priced NOW , ••••••••• $190.00
the Ointlna Adjustable Chdi~
by Trap/tone
MAVEN .GARDENS
' .
•
'
•
."I
•
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Frida~, SepU:mber 28, 1973 { DAILY PILOT 5
Witads·. Stc bside
'
Brush ·Fire Quelled
. Suspect in Body
Theft Surrenders
_A,. .. ;c•• INDIAN JEWELRY
Our trtder has ju1t returned from
th• ZUNI RESERVATION with .n
••citing collection of 9•nuine
~ The A1socl11~ Prt!!'is
Subsiding SanUI Ana winds
enabled 400 fire fighters 10 stamp oul a brush fire that
burned unconlrOlled ror 24
hours, destroying nearly IJJXXl
acres of wilderness a n d
recreational land south or
Camarill o.
FIRE CRE\YS also fought
nea rly a score of other fires
BIG lARJOE AND -
LOBSTER BAKE SATURDAY
See the big parade at FASH ION ISLAND
10 a.m. Saturday around Circle Drive.
Lobster BJke & Carnival all 3 days
Fri.-Sun . Sponsored by the Balboa Bay
Lions Club.
GI ANA DA HILU 1800 Cllflswartll S!. l'!'ORRANCl ~t~e.ld dnd HIWlhOlnt
WOODlAND HILLS 21~00 Vit1~ry 81~ LAKEWOOD C:ll$G~ St md P'lifaMOll~t Btvd.
llVllSIDE 3520 fy!er Sr. BUEHA PAIK Br.;r~ .~J Oi'MtPl'atpe
SANTA AHA JSOQ Soot~ Bri~!ol St OI ANGE C~rden Gro.e 81\ld. and Mancbi~W
0.M w1tkd111y1 9:30 to ':30 -Sv"d•Y5 10 to 7.
FULL-TIME LAW STUDY PROGRAM
NOW AVAILABLE
• If YOV HA\lf "' J,p, deg•ee.
•In:'~'· o< 3 ~~.,,of !ull.t1m(' 1.w >lud)' 11S 16
,1.,voom hou" P<"• wee\.). '"
• In 3 '/, o• -4 v•••• o! p111 t•me (da)'. evening, or
wee~e!>dl lew .1.,dy 13 tltue' ~1 Wfl'k, J.-4 hou"
~· dt11),
• You <·•" eorn you< J.,,:, Oot•ot. l! O_J .ngree, ..,cl ,__
ELIGIBLE TO TAKE THE
CALIFORNIA BAR EXAMINATION
WllTI 01 ,HONl f01 INFOIMATION 01 U.lAlOGUI
which broke out in llnd cr dry
Southern Qlliforni a Thu1 :;day.
The won t or them charred 75
acres one mile south of Beau-
mont before It was ex-
LOS ANGELES (API -A
second man has been arrested
In the theft and burning of the
body q6...rock singer Gram
Parsons, w~e embalmed ;Y-
mains v.·ere found smoulder1n~
~io a col fin at .a remote desert
site.
~1ichael David Marlin, 26, of
Hollywood, surrendered at lhe
Venice police station Thurs--
day. lie had been sought on .. a
warrant charging grand theft .
'
MARTIN, wno reportedly
bad. a~.cornpanil*d Par~s on
road trips when the singer ap-
peared with "The ByrW" and
"Flying Burrito Brothers"
ZUNI NEEDLEPOINT
And lnl•y
For the best selection of REAL
INDIAN MADE J•welry, Ru9s, K•chines
and B•1ket1 . Do come by
Just To' Browse or Buy
"'llllfuol4e ..,,,,,M,"' JlSS Vi4! lido, Newport It.ch /j ,,._,,._ 675·8700 Jos1 d Sun, & Moll.
miles--from the Los Angeles
County line.
U,ITI..,..._ Pair .Sue rock groups, was released I ~~~~~~~~~~;;;~~~~~~~~~~ later ln the day on $1,000 bail. It
Parsons' road manager.
No structures were damag-
ed but one fire fighter suffered
serious burns when he was
trapped in a canyon by a sud·
den narcup, officials said.
Nine aircraft dropped fire
retardants to put out the
flames. which showered the
area with embers and sent
bJack smoke billowing lnto th e
sky.
Probation
S)'Ivester 'Sly' Stewart,
member of Sly and the
Family Stone . 1-o c k
group , has been placed
on probation in a re-.
habilitation program
for experimental drug
users. He was convicted
Thursday of drug pos-
sess ion.
Atlantis
,Searchers
SANTA MONICA (AP) -A
father and son ha ve tiled a
$1 .55 million fraud suit against
the leaders or an expedition
which last summer searched
for the lost continent or Atlan-tis. ·
Philip Kaufman, 38, Van Nuys,
was arrested \Vednesday on a
similar warrant.
Police have given this ac-
rount of the bizarre incidenl :
Two men in an old black
hearse pic ked up Parsons' re-
mains from a loading dock at
Los Ange I es International
Airport last Thursday. The
men signed a receipt for the
body, telling airline persormel
that the singer's family had
decided to have the young
man's body transported by
private plane from another
airport to Ne'v Orleans for
burial.
TUE FA~flLY later told
.OVERCOME INFLATION!
Reliance on the divine economy, God's laws
of supply, provjdes a bas is for overcoming in-
flation . Come and learn about these laws at
a free Christian Science lecture by: NATilA~
NIEL R WHITE entitled
"THE HUMAN AND THE DIVINE ECONOMY"
at the lrvl11e lowl I Art Festl•al Gre1t11ds I
SUNDAY AFTERNOON : SEPT. 30 AT 5:00 P.M.
$POHSORl!D IY
First Church of Christ, Scientist, Laguna Beach
Child Care 11 11!1 Ctlloln:.,_.U HI ... Driv1
Pipe Bomb Dii11iages
SF Federal Building
JOHN D. Couturie, a Hughes
Aircraft Corp. executive, and
his cinematographer son,
William, said in th(! Superior
Court suit filed Thursday that
they had lost more than
$55,000 inVested in a proposed
film documentary or the
search.
authorities they had expected ' '::==:::-:c::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::=::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::' Parsons to be returned by l--SAN FRANCISCO !UPll '....
A pipe bomb blew up outside a
basement area win·dow in San
Francisco's Old Fede r a I
Building early today, starting
a fire that caused damage
estimated at between $5,000
and $10,000.
FLAMES SOORCllED as
high as 60 feet on • the
building's v.•hite stone wall and
poured in a window to damage
a mainlenanee shop for elec-
trical repairs, allhougb no one
was inj uted.
No Penalty
~gai1ist
Spiritualist
John Sherfatt. '(>istrict · Two.
!ire chief, said the bomb may
have been detonated .by burn-
ing gasoline and ttJat a rive-
gallon container (had been
found.
Two bombs had · b e e n
planted, but only one blew up
and an explosives squad from
the Army 's Presidio of San
Francisco -was called to
dispose of the one that failed
to explode.
11IE BLAST occurred at
·about 1:30 a.m.-.-bul-tbere_was
no immediate informatien
linking it to a similar ex-
plosion at about the same time
on the ninth f1oor of the m
Building in New York City.
Among t h o s e named as
defendants was Dr. Julian
Nava , a member of the Los
Angeles Board of Education.
Also named was Maxine
Asher, who with Nava, is ~·
director cf Ancient Mediter-
ranean Research Association,
sponsors of the expedition.
l\fRS, ASHER h a s said
publicly that the expedition
found traces of Atlantis off the
coast of Spain. However scuba
divers who participated in the
search said renmants of the
legendary sunk en continent
never were found.
commercial plane from the in-
ternational a i r po r t as
originally planned.
A corfln containing Parsons'
·body later was round by
ca1npers near the desert town
of Joshua Tree, 200 miles east
of here.
Scliooli1ig
111 Massage
Licensed?
LOS ANGELES (AP)
County Counsel John H .
1.arson is preparing ordinance
Ri h F th I t amendments intended to c a er nnocen tighten control over massage
schools i n unincorporated
In B I .l !_ Sh • areas. · LOS ANGELES (APJ -A e fl..11• oot1ng Larson's deputy, Frederick 55-year-old "spiritual healer" . _ , R. Bennett, said Thlll'Sday the
whose backers include Presi-, amendments wilI r e q u i r e
dent Nixon's adviser on con-SANTA MONICA (AP) -A Medeiros' attorneys had county licensing for a 11
sumer affairs, won 't have to wealthy Bel Air businessman argued that Medeiros had shot· massage parlors w b 0 s e
pay a fine for his conviction or has been acquitted of murder Nieto on the parch of his home emp1oyes. or students receive
practicing without a license. in self defense. fees or tips from tbe... rmbllc. Municipal Court Judge Mary i.o tbe shooting death of his r.: Dep. Di.st. Atty. Richard J. Bennett said the proposed E. Waters levied no penalty married daughter's Jover. QirytUe cootended Medeiros amendments have the support
Thursday against F' r a n k A Superior Court jury of admitted in police t a p e of legitimate schools o f
Hevesy. noUng that H~vesy~ s~ven men and nVe women recordings that he "lost his massage, whose students are
had won a retrial for a 1971 fouii.d Frank Medeiros, 56, in-head" and fired 'at Nieto. trained without ·any contact
conviction on Lhe same charge nocent of second-degree Medeiros' married daughter, with the public.
after paying 8 $750 fine and murder Thursday in the Jan. Joanne Miranda, 26, had BeMett said the ordinance
serving two years probation. 'l7 slaying of Thomas Nieto, broken up with Nieto just amendments will be proposed
A !\1unicipal Court jury 28. The jury had received the prior to the shooting after liv· to th e county supervisors at
"Avoid .This Fiic : ~:~all iii;'' "":
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found Hevesy guilty ~fay 17 or case earlier in lbe day. ing with him intermittently. their meeting Tuesday. operating without a business 1-;;,_,,_,,_,,_,,_,,_,;;;i,_,,_,,_,,_,;;;,_,,_,,_,,_,,_,,_,;i;;,_,,_,,_,,_,,_,;;;;;;;,_,,_,.;,_,,_,,_,,_,,_,,_,,_,,_,,_,,_,,_,,_,,_,,_,,_,,_,,_,,_,,_,,_,,_,,_,_ license after an undercover in-I•
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~levesy contended he could not
be prosecuted since he was
engaged in a religious prac-
tice.
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You can get
all these services:
Checking Account Deposits
Check Cashing
Savings Deposits
Savings Withdrawals
Savings Bonds (Cashing & Issuance)
Money Maker Deposits
Money Maker Withdrawals
Master C.harge Payments
Federal Tax Deposits
New Savings Accounts
New Checking Accounls ff
Loan Paymenls I
Utility Bills
Money Orders
Traveler's Checks
Master Charge Cash Advance
Consumer Loan Applications
Cashier's Checks
Xmas Club Payments
Southern California
First National Bank
I
Nati.al
At the drive-up window
of these offices.
(If the First National office where you
have your account doesn't stay open
late, just use any of the offices listed be-
low. Because if you have an account
with us, you have an account with all
first National offices.)
Orange County
Cypress
Huntington Beach:
Adams Avenue
Beach Boulevard
Saddleback
Sunny Hills
West cliff
Los Angeles County
Bellflower
Lakewood
Drive.through, Monday Md Frida~
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0-AD,Y PILOT EDITORIAL PAGE_
•
Preserving History ·
The historic anguel Parra adobe sat unnoticed for
generations among the groves along San Juan Capi-
strano's Ortega Highway.
But now the structure, dating back to the early
1800s, bas become a ra!Jying point ror the city's histori-
cal society because it lies on land set aside for yet another ·
major housing develoP;ment. · 1
· Planning commiss\o ners noticed with ' alarm that the
developer's environmental impact reported filed recently
made no mention of the historically significant structure.
They fbtly told Leadership HouSing System staff to
write in the significance.
Developers have claimed "extreme hardship" upon
tlf'em if they were forced to retain the st ru cture, but
devotees of local histo ry have insisted the ·adobe should
ttlllllin ·intact. _ .
The Daily Pilot agrees with the history buffs.
pro't'isions of the act, and the coastal commission would
do well to approve the request.
It bas been silggested that the commission mig ht
use this issue as a lever to demand public access to the-
now private Emerald Bay Beach.
But the community's history of private .ownership
dates back more than 40 years. Its streets are privately . ,
owned and maintained and the geo·graphy -has made
beach access impossible from adjacent areastpresumably
P,.eciuding the usual basis for establishing prescriptive
rights.
Given these facts it is hard to see how the commis·
sioo could find an honest ba&is for demanding access at
this time. Bur it is something to worry about.
Keeping in Touch
,
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The city should accept the recommendation of the
historical society and compel the developer to assure
that the building will not be razed.
Fifth District Supervisor Ronald Caspers has taken
a significant step to keep in better touch with the south·
em end of his sprawling district by opening an office in
tile Laguna Niguel Civic Center five days a week.
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Emerald Bay Exclusion
Emerald Bay, a private commurlity in a county
pocket of north La guna Beach, recently sought and was
granted support of the county board of supervisors for
an excl usion from provisions of the Coastal Conservation
Act set up by Proposition 20.
CasperS, whose district is the largest in the county
both in land area and population, has hired Robert Nel·
son as a full·time aide expressly for the local office.
Even if Nelson can do little more than li sten to com·
plaints ana pass them aloii.g, he may be pble to resolve
local resentment.
Not long ago, Caspers faced wide·ranging discontent
in the far end of his district, including recall threats,
complaints of lack of interest and lengthy gaps between
visits.
· The matter now will be taken by the county to the
Soutb Coast Regional Conservation Commission. In part,
exclusion will exempt Emerald Bay construction from
permit requirements which often .delay homebuilding
there and unnecessarily clutter the commission's already
stuffed calendar.
Emerald Bay appears to qualify for exclusion under
Caspers finally has responded to the dissatisfaction.
\Vhether the fact that an election is just around the
corner is the motivation, or whether it was just a matter
of the slow grinding of county bureaucracy and budget·
ing, the long-needed action is appropriate.
s
The job of vice president may not be much, but the ripoff
fringe benefits are great!'
Tourists Can
See More
Than Natives
~YDNEY J.HARRI~
It has become one of lhe libe ral cliches
that you can-1t know a people, or a coun-
try, until you have lived Lhere a long
time-and therefore the three-week
traveler to Europe is to be despised and
disregarded when he gives us his
dogmatic "opinions" of !he ~tries be
bas brieny toured.
11\ere is S-Ome lruth in that viewpoint,
but also a lot of falsehood. For it is possi·
ble to visit a new country for a few
weeks and see it in
a way that the na·
lives can 110 longer
see it. ·
Habit dull s the
edge of observation.
We Americans, for
instance, a c c e p t
ourselves and our
cw;toms so natural-
ly and easily that
we no longer have a perspective on
ourselves. An educated and intelligent
European can grasp a better idea or
what we are like, precisely because he
is not himseU a part of the social pro-
cess here.
AFTER a \\1hile we do not notice
familiar scenery. \\1e pass it every day
on our way to y:ork or shopping. but \\·e
do not really see it. The same is true of
oor national habits, defects and vices.
The emotional and social scenery is so
close to us that our angle of vision cannot
include it.
Obvious!), a stupid, close-minded
Dear
Gloomy
Gus
President Albert?
-P.O.
Oloomr Ov• c"'"""" ,.. wblllllltM w rNdet• •lld d• Nit llKHUr!lr 1'9flect !'Ill
¥1.,.. flf ti!• -.-1r. S1IMI wnr "'
'""' t• oio.mw Gu1, D•ll'f' Plitt.
traveler is going to return with a stupid
and close-minded view of the country be
has visited-but this "'ould be true if he
spent three years there, as well as three
"'eeks. Travel broadens OD].y_tbe broad;
it narrows the narro'A·-just as mooey
tends to make good men better and bad
men worse.
BUT A tourist with some sense, taste
and background can often capture a
more accurate portrait of a national
spirit than the oldest inhabitant. Wllat.
the nati ve takes for granted (as almost a
part or nature), the tourist views as a
cultural trait. _
Our national obsession \\ith "bigness"
ror its own sake, as an example, is
scarcely noticed by ourselves; but to the
foreigner it provides a useful key for
understanding many of our strange ways.
COUNTRIES cannot see themselves
any more clearly than individuals can.
No one knows what he really looks like
from the outside; the mirror gives us at
best a vague and changing a~
proximation. But a stranger, taking a
fre sh and careful look at us, can often
tell more about our person~ties and
deepest yearnings in a ball-hour than we
can know about ourselves after years of
patient self-examination.
The three·\\·eek tourist is neither to be
de spised nor disrega rded.; he may be
superficial, but he is just as likely to be
right. I
Nixon Plane
Remodeling
Bill Soars
C:o1agress Seeks Trade Agree11ae1at Stri1~9s
U .S.-Russia Pledge Shaken
WASHINGTON-Under the ·s t e a d y
battering of headlines now dra~alizing
\VASHI NGTON -The U.S. Treasury the COU.!'ageous' struggle for civil rights has already subsidized President Nixon's luxurious living at San Clemente and Key by intellectual dissidents in the Soviet
Biscayne. Now it is ponying up $1 ,785,000 Union, President Nixon's pledge to give
· to deck out his jet to suit H. R. the Russi~ equality with other nations
Haldeman's and Pa t Nixon's ideas ot in trading with the
posh air comfort. U.S. is at least tem-
The White House recently ordered a porarily doomed.
new jet from Boeing to replace the well-The root cause of
traveled "Spirit of '76" as the President's the Ir bl f
!di H·1d ·11 ·1 k ouearan-ea pane. a .eman persona r 0 0 tedates the decision
charge of the 1n.terlor deco~ating aod by Rwrs"lan author
before he bad.flnisbell, the bi!Lbad run -and N 0 be I pm..
up to $1.S ~lion. "winner Alexander
WHEN PAT NIXON found ou~ about ~the 8.ppointmentS, she hit an air~f)ocket.
The fonner top White Home aide, with
(JACK ANDERSON)
typical Prussian efficleocy, had put the
staff qliarters between the presidential
suite and the quarters for extra family
and guests.
This would tiave permitted lop staffers
to maintain their 24-hour-a.<fay access to
the President, but the arrangement
would have forced family and guest! to
squirm through the staff quarters to visit
the PreSident and First Lady.
After she. discovered. what Haldeman
had done, Mrs. Nixon, who often has laid
down the law to her strong-willed )1u.s·
band, insisted that the plane be re·
designed to her own lilting. As a result,
the Air Force, which had faithfully
followed the original Haldeman specifica·
tions, is now spending another $28.5,000 to
comform to Pat's request that the guest
lounge be next to the Nixoq quarters.
Solzhenitsyn an d
other Russian in-
tellectuals to p public with their deeply
emotiOOaJ grievance against the Kremlin.
The root cauae is the highly successful
campaign of De{J'IOC!'atic Sen. Henry M.
Jackson or Washington, backed by the
powerful American.Jewish community,
to use the issue of trade equality as a
club to forcc.-14oscow to permit totall y
free emigration of Soviet Jews to Israel.
BUT 111AT campaign by Jackson and
Rep. Wilbur 1'.lills of Arkansas, chairman
of the House Ways and J\teans Com·
mittee, backed by a clear majority in
both the House and Senate, has now been
galvanized by the shrewdly publicized
civil rights struggle or Solzhenitsyn,
nuclear physicist Andrei D. sakharov and
other brave civil libertarians centered in
~foscow.
The net result as of today : something
close to panic In the Nixon White House.
The President's cherished policy of
detente with the Soviet Union, sym-
bolized by his pledge ·to give Moscow
both U.S. credits and most-favored-nation
trade treatment, now confronts a threat
( EVANS·NOVAK )
that no ooe in the \Vhite House thought
possible· u·hen the pledge was made· at
the 1'.toscow summit 16 mOnths ago.
ONE TENTATIVE rescue operation
went down the drain this week when
Secretary of State Henry Kissinger
cancelled a trip to the Ways and Means
Committee intended .to reverse the ·
disastrous tide and convert enough mein· •
bers to defeat the Jackson amendment.
A major reason Kissinger's appf:aran~
was poStponed was that a telephone talk
between Mills, recovering from his back
operation doYIT'I in Arkansas, and l{ep. Al
Ullman of Oregon, acting committee
chainnan. decreed its futility. Mills flatl y
declined to change his position on the
Jackson amendment (which. with liberal
Democrat Rep. Charles A. Vanik of Ohio,
he is sponsoring in the House).
l\UU.S REFUSED to bow to fr enzied
White House requests that be shift to a
less rigid amendment sponsored by Rep.
James C. Corman, a Democrat, and Rep.
Jerry L. Pettis, a Republican , both of
California. That amendment would give
the President much-needed flexibility,
while preserving hia power to use the
moat-favored-nation issue as a continuing
device lo pressure M08COw.
Administration strategists are now
hoping Kissinger will exude enough
persuasiVe charm . on the committee
within the nen two weeks to do one of
two lhing.s: ftn1t , get commlttee approval
ol the most·favored-nation proviso for
Moacow with no strings attached; or, sec·
ond, persuade the committee lo pa" the
Corman·Pettis compromise.
UNDER THIS st rategy, the vote on the
nfost-fa\'ored-nation clause (Tille Five in
the highly important trade bill ) \\'Ould be
postponed until just before the bill is
cleared by the committee and ready for
action in the House.
That way , administration strategists
hold. the momentum of a favorable vote
in committee might carry the l bill
through the HoUse without the Millg.
Vanik amendment. Then, when the
Senate venion of the bill-sure to COO·
lain the original Jacksoo amendment-is
sent to a Senate-House conference early
next year, a comp~mise would emerge
protect ing the President's option to keep
hls pledge to Leonid 'Brezhnev, the Soviet
Communist party leader.
ALL m.A T now look.s like wishful
thinking, in spades. The slrefluous efforts
by Mr. Nixon, by Kissinger, himself
Jewish, and by other high administration
aides to choke off the rabid support for
the Jackson amendment in th e
American· Jew i s·h community-
"wherever there ls a synagogue," as one
Jewish leader told us-bais failed . ·-
Making that failure worse are the
deeply emolional civil rights stories from
Moscow and the sudden attack on liberal
Democratic leaders here by Soviet in·
tellectuals for refusing to face the facts
about civil rights in the Soviet Union.
Deeper impliCalions lie a h e ad ,
particularly on how the Kremlin will
react when il fails to get delivery on the
Nixon pledge. Also deeply involved is
American big bu.sines!:' which likes the
smell or profits from vastly greater trade
\\ith Ru.ssla. But in its present mood .
those consideraUom---end perhaps even
tile full bloom of detente itself-seem
unimportant lo this Congress.
Breast Cancer Debate Reveals Flaws -i-n Ethies -(;ade
~
Differiiig Views on Need for Radical Surgery Create Dilemma for Wonien
~ WASHINGTON -The ethics or
) American medicine which sometimes
... make It preferable to let another doctor
; kill a patient rather than disagree with
, tum also make it im·
passible tot a prac-
ticing physician to
be a publk: contro-
versialist. However,
Dll. George Crile Jr.
d~s not fit that
description. The re-
cently retired head
ol the Cleveland
Cllnk's department
of surgery bas violated the rule of the
brotherhood by publlshlng "\Vhat \Vomen
Sliould Know Abollt the Breast Cancer
O>ntroversy" (]rfacmlllan, 1973 ).
Excerpta from the book appear in this
month'• ls!ue of Ms. And Dr. O'"ile has
appeared on Barbara Walters' TV show
for women to dispute with physicians
who don't agree with tilm about "'hat you
shouJd do Jf you're unlucky enough to be
tile one_ wom an In 17 who gets this
disease.. Interest in the gubject Is intense
not only because or the h·y1terical fear of
cancer that au Am.?ricans bavt, but aJso
beaiu ... this Is tbecommonett cawe of
death of women betwttn the t ges of t1
and 65.
number of u•omen would rather die or
cancer of the breast than let the I
surgeons have at them.
THEIR CHOICE OF death over treat·
ment is understandable after you read
Dr. Crile's description of radical mastec-
tomy;-the moat frequently used""Surgical
pn:>ci!dure. The operation not only takes
off the breast, but the cllest .muscles and
most of what we laymen would call lhe
armpit. The result is a ' ' g r e a t
deformity" to which most women, Dr.
Crile tells ua,_ J11ake a "satisfactory
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( VON HOFFMAN J
physical and emotional adjustment ...
For those who do not. howev~, the pill is
a bitter one." In a culture that puts such
erot.ic emphasis on the female breast it
must be just about as tough on women
who do make Dr. Crile's "satisfactory"
adjustmenL
All of this ' suffering would be bad
enough if there were general agreement
that radical mastectomy . la the best
means of treatment. Dr:"Crile maintaln.a
that all that cutting, backing and
slashing away of hmnan tissue lm't
nece.saary in taking care of a localized
cancer of the breasl A far less radical,
painful and maiming operation can "do
the job, or IO says Dr. Crile.
•lwRY THEN," the doctor ask!, "when
most European 1urgeons tiave abandoned
radical surgery, do the majority of ·
American surgeons persist In perlorrnlng
radical mastectomies? And bow, in the:
face of so many contrary studies con-
ducted In England and Scandinavia, can
American surgeons remain convinced.
that thelrtpatlent.s' survival la improved
by lnOlctlng on them th• dlsablllllea and
deronnllles ol radical mas1<ctomy?"
unnecessarily cruel, what does a woman
do? Dr. Crite has some suggestions:
"REF1JSE TO submit to radical
mastectomy ... there ls no longer any
juslificatKm for its use. Do not sign
penniasion for a radical. Find a doctor
wOO will do a modified radical operation
... Ir you elect to be treated by a portlal
mastectomy, remember it takes more
skill and lcoowledge of breast cancer to
do this operation properly than to
remove all the breast. Pick your surgeon
accordingly."
That sounds like good advice unless
you•Ve met a woman living under the
tentative diagnosis of breast cancer.
She's in no shape to argue wllh the doc-
tor, to refuse to sign legal papers or pick
a surgeon of uncommon sklll and
knowledge. How Is she ever supposed to
ouN•• com
DAILY PILOT
do this last when the medical profess ion
will not permit itself to make any kind of
judgment on the competence of Its
members. Anybody with an M.D. is as
good as anybody else.
So Dr. Crile's advice. as a practical
matter, la worthless. lf we don't know
how to .find a good TV repairman, how
can we know how to hire a good
surgeon!
What's needcct'is a new kind of health
professional, a non-practicing doctor who
goes to separate medical $Cho0ls, who
treats no one, prescribes for no one, but
who ii paid to represent the sick and
dlJtraught In thell' negotiations with our
healera. Such an ~pailon already ex·
lats tn the automobile repair lndll!try.
The lea.al we can do is to treat ourselves
as weU as we do our cars ......
The roltorllJ Pfllt'ot· the Dally
Pilot teeks to lnfonn ;.mt stimulate
reader• by l)rttenl.lnr on thbl pqe
di~ commtntary on toptcJ of In·
terest tw aynd1cated oolwnniata and
, On the aomewhat 6rlgbter side Is that
a woman who contracts the disease ftas
'" exceilent chan~ of Uving long enough to die or oomething ei.... Whether you
wa~call it a cure or not, tbe doctora ,•rt relaUvdY succeuful al cutUri4' Ibis ·
kiJ>t ol cancer OU~ yet .. UJlllmwD
One OllJllanatloo mlcJll be that lhe doc-
tors make more money from the more
radical operations : another mlcht be thal
while We can ace the rashlon , *
superstition and i g a or a n c e in the
medicine ol other natlonl, we c:on't ... 11
In our own. Dr. Crtle'• hypolbel1111 thal
they probably keep cutUng the women
because "It woukl teem to lbesc
surgeons a betrayal of all the women ' on
whom they had performed radical
mastectomies to admil tha L I h e
Robtrt N. lVeed, Publi1hd
Thoma.s Kcevfl, Editor
BJJrbara Kreibich
£ditonoi Pog1 ,Editor
•·<!artooni•ta. by prov~ a forum lOr
roadtrs' views and by prt1entinc this
ne.w..,.ptt't oplnk>ns ~ MieN on
current topk:a, The tdltorli11.lplnlonl
~r 1he DJlly PUat apprir only ln the
edltorlal column Jt the 10p -of the
t--p9p; OfMnkMw .xpr8111d by tha ..col.
umnl1ts ind artoonlatt and totttl'
writer• are ttltir own and no tndorlc·
ment or the.tr vlew1 by Ow Daily
Pilot OhoUld be w.-.
I
PUNCH
"/ thought it would be a nice gesture to include a member of
tM staff."
. .
muUJatlon had been in vain." A ·
Having learned that abe 11111 breaal
cancer and having been told !116 method
or treatment btr doctor wW problbly,
_recommend Is ....U...17 l!lp<lllj_ve and
Friday, September 28, 1973
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Senate
Votes
Pullout
' WASHINGTON (UPI)
The Senate voted Thursday
night lo order th~ withdrawal
of 110,000 American troot>'
from foreign ba1e11, handing
the Nixon admi\llstratlon a
sctfm:cl\hours atter upholding.
its \ Trl~ent submarine pf9-
gr"I". ~ '11le v°*as 4P-36 ht favor\ of the a dmtnt by Sen.
.Hulkrt "H. Humphrey (t>"" u1"1 T•ltt*M
Minn.I, to the ~1.9 billion SOYUZ·12 COMMANDER defense procure .... t bill. It ·
calls for wl~ing ~40,000 Vasily G. Laure':
men by next J 30 and the
rest in the llowpif 18 R S
months . . · USS pace
A rfual vote on ~e e:itir' bill
is expected todaY.1
e Troops hu
PHNOM PENff (UPI) -
Rebel troops mo\futed blister·
ing attacks on Jwo st~tegic
positions only seven miles
south or Phnom 1 Penh toda]',
(1N SH~RT ... )
for cing the r<\ireat of ~
estimated 1 6 O government
soldiers, field reports said.
The reports said the towns
of Dei Kraham and Spean
Bak, each defended 1 by about
80 troops and loCated on
Highway 2, were evacuated in
the early morning hours in the
face of fierce Communist-led
assaults.
e Exec11tio11
SANTIA GO, Chile (AP)
The Chilean junta has ex~
ecuted fhe Allende regime's
. leftist' govef(ll)r of Talca prov-
ince for killing a policeman
and trying to blow up a dam
after:. the military coup.
Pair Wear
New Suit
MOSCOW [UPI) -Two
SoyUZ-~2 ·cosmonauts began
their second working day in
orbit todaf, wearing a new
type of sP.,.cesuit that Westerq
experts ·Said may have been
designed to prevent the kind of
mishap that killed three Soviet
spacemen in 1971.
THE TASS news agency
quoted Lt. Col. V a s i I y
Lazarev, 45, commander of
the crew, as saying before
launch Thursday afternoon;
"\Ve have to test a new
spacesuit which \Ve find very
simple and.comfortable." ' . 'I1lree Soyuz-11 cosmonauts
Hughes
Revamp . .
-Gets OK
LAS VEGAS, Nev. !UP I) -
The state gamlng commission
Thursday approved a com-
plicated corporate reorganiza-
tion of the sev~ri hotel-casinos
that make up Howard Hughes'
Nevada gambling empire.
A similar application was
denied last year when state of-
ficials questioned whether the
move was the personal wish of
Hughes. ~Lil since t h e n ,
Nevada Gov . Mike
O'Callaghan and Gqming Con-
trol Board Chairman Philip
llaMifin ha\le ,Uown to I:-ondon
and met (ace.:to-face with the
mystery billiona,ire.
THREE MEMBERS of . !he
Nevada Gaming 'f,ommission
voted "yes" Thur.sday and two
abstained, ending altnost three
years of delays and denials for
the Hughes group. ,.
They vote'd desl>ite a r'equest
lby H. M. "Hank" Greenspun,
publisher of the Las Vegas
Sun, for a further .delay
because of recent testimony
before the Watergate Com-
mittee that one of the.Hughes'
applicants was involved in e
conspiracy to burglarize the
newspaper o(fice.
He referred to testimony by
E. Howard Jtunt, who told the
Watergate CommiUee he met
in Los Angeles with Hughes
security man Ralph Winte 'and
Gordon Liddy to di.scUss a
bur·glary of Greenspwi's of·
fice. Hunt said Winte supplied
a diagram of the Office. Winte
w'as on the gambling: .a~
plication Thursday to be
licensed as director o f
systems, service audits and
security for t~ new groop, to
be called Summa ~rp ..
TllE ACTION Thursday js
not exJ)ected to change any of
the outward operations of the
numerous Hughes gambling
-resorts, the Sands, Frontier.
'
Friday, Stpltmbtr 28, 1973 DAILY PILOT
••
BY FLORSHEIM ·1
THE SLINGBACK
It's the Picket. Pure softness on o . .
wafer plotform .. Perfect for
Gov . German Castro Rojas,
whose exccUtion was an-
nounced by the military
government-on Thursday;-was
. the fir st high official of· tbe
late President S a I v a d o r
·A 11 e n d e ' s administration
known to go befor.e a firing
squad. Talca, a r i c h
agricultural province, is 140
miles. south ol Santiago, ;ind
foreign newsmen who visited
there last weekend were told
the governor was captured en
route to blow up the dam and
flood the provi';lCial capital:
died June 30, 1971, wben the
hatch on their capsule leaked
and caused it to depressurize
during re-entry. Western ex·
perts said at the time they
might have survived .i( they
had worn spacesuits a s
American astronauts do on
return to-earth.-~ ·
The Western experts said to-
day the Tass report indicated
the Soviets have designed a
new lightweight suit with that
problem _in mind.
Desert Inn , C,a.s-t..a.w.a y..s, ------
Landmark and Silver Slipper
dresses. Adaptoble to o life-in·ponts.
With o very spe_ciol kind of comfort.
In tan coif, a notur~I with
e Civilian P,OW• ~ . WAtrAH, Pak;s!an (UPI) -
Veiled Moslem . women car-
rying babies born behind bar~
cd wire crossed the hot and
dusty border today, beginning
the repatriation Of more than
90,000 Pakistanis nearly two
years after the lndo-Paklstani
war.
Twenty-one months after the
two nations roug~t the 14-0aY
war that gave birth to the i;ia-
tion of Bangladesh, the fll"St of
some IS,000 civilian prisoners
stepped across !t"Six-fool·wide
oo-man's line, 'bringing with
them charges of mistreatment
by their Indian captors.
in Las Vegas and Harold's Club
in Reno.
Jn effect. it altered the
behind-the-scene power struc·
ture by approving the Summa
TA~ SAID Laza.rev and Corp. to be operating eompany
flight engineer Oleg Makarov, for Hughes' gaming interests
40, tested the maneuverability in t~ stafe.
of the revamped Soyuz that is The restructuring of;. the
scheduled to be ~ in a joint ... Hughes g_ambling~r e s ... 12 r.! .!_
docking maneuver with !IR stemmed from the J970 ~l.11ng
American Apollo craft in 1975. of Robe.rt Maheu -~s bead ·of
The Tass news agency .said the 11ughes Nevada opera·
'the Soyuz·12 took off ~rs;<,lay lions. Resignations and:Jl!Ore
on a twQ1iay mission 'ap. firings fo!Iowed uh~. On~Jly
p3renUy aimed at getting the many of the initial ga~bilng
Soviet Union's crippled S1?3:ce l~ccnsees were no longer on
program ready for a Joint the Hughes payroll.
.U.S.-Russlan flight schedl/led
•for July, 1975. AL.SO, HUGllES recently
Tass said the brief flight, sold a portion of the Hug.hes
the Qrst since three cos· Tool Co., gave up the cor·
monauts died June 30, 1971. porale name and now retains
when their cap s u I e his private holdings under the
depressurlzed on ~tty. was name of Summa Corp.
mainly designed to test a --------'--
redesigned spacecraft for the
'joint mission.
THE AGE~CY said the two
Soyuz 1% cosmonaUts, Laza rev,
and flight engineer Makarov .
Kids Like To
Ask And)·
• Curfew were testi n g "structural
modifications" introduced in BEIRUT, Lebanan (AP ) -their craft.
The leftist government of Iraq . ·~;;;;;;;;;;,.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;-.;;;;;;;;;.:.,..;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~· 1 clamped an indefihitt curlew1 -----
on Baghdad today 8.nd launch-
ed a house-t~house search for
suspects in an alleged plot to
overthrow the regime . . .
Baghdad Airport was closed
for all air traffic and all in·
ternational bights to the Iraqi
capital were diverted t o
nei hboring countries.
e Boy Freed
PARIS (UPI) - A leftist
milltant who held the son of a
Mexic;:in ambassador hostage
for 24 hours in the Dominican
Republic released the boy
unharmed and arrived In
Paris today on a safe conduct
flight from Santo Domingo.
French police detained the
su!pected guerrilla for ques-
tioning.
eRedBlut.
WASHI NGTON (AP)
Seismic sign.ala monitored ln
the United States indicate that
.n underground n1.1clear blast
detonated Thursday-by the
~vlet Union was ln the 20 to
... ....., kiloton range; the Atomic
"-nergy Commission said to-
day.
A kiloton is equal to the ex·
plosive force bl a thousand
tons of TNT.
e Romney
WASHINGTON (UPI) -
George Romney, former
governor ol Michigan, said 14>
day he gave serious con-
slderaUon lo becomlng a can.
dldate for th• U.S. Se01te <rem Utah "to render mean·
Jngful service in a critical
period" but had decided not to
run. Romney, who served as
Secretary of the· Department
of Housing and 1J r b an
Development fro111 1169 lo
.1912. aald he,lntends to devo\e
hls tjme-lo prtvate cltlzensh!p
actlvlUCJ.
P~.?.i.~?s.~~~?. .. ~~
Pays On Term Deposits
For
IWO YEA-RS-
Or Leu
• On
$100,000 Accounts
The H1Rbe1 of t~ese 'accnats that we
c111cce,u1 iimitd
WE PAY COMPmnvE INTEREST RATES
ON All OTHER ACCOOllTS
FOURTEEN ()ff ICES TO SERVE YOU fN
Are111U1 •ctnitos Lt Crt1ctnt1 •or1•
... a•••M •ttltt Mt11 Lts A .... 12) ' •s ......... i••
•c11.,i Park D......., (2) Mttt"IY Pn WMttitr
fiwt Afjltli11l lfllct111 N111'lf1 C1lil111i1
rttas111Kill S11 11111
, .... i111S.11)
faster City 11111111 YllW SH Jt11 '
*OPEN NIGHT & DAY
·and· Saturdays
•
"c.11 (213) 923-910, •
• or ,..1"1 whl~ pofll · . ·
10< your -•llt office • •
· ASSETS OVER $375 MILLION .
P al'i f ii'~ a' i ''L!'"' I ··~·
" , ..... ---------==
your wardrobe, 26.00.
THE SPORT PUMP
It's the Cotinni. A neat shoe.
In step with your busy life .
Smort. Comfortoble. Tireless on o
moderote heel. And very versotile in
comel or novy coif, 27.00.
Women's Shoes, 35
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l
IDV
ANAHEIM , HUNTINGTON IEACH NEWPORT ORANGE, MALL OF ORANGE CERRlTO'S
4t4 N .. Euclkl 171 4 1 515~1121 7777 EtJi119er Ave. I 71 '41 192.Jll 1 47 Ft1hio11 hi encl I 7141 644· t 212 2JOO N. Tu1ti11 St. 'I~ 14 J 991 · 1 l 1 I "50d Lu Cerrlto1 Me ll 12 1) l 160.0411
$HOP 10 .A.M. to .. t :JO P.M. ~ONO~Y THROU6,H ,_IOAY. SATURDAY 10 A.M. to 6 P,M. SUNDAY 12 NOON to 5 P 11
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DAILY PILOT
For the
Record
Dissolutions
Of Marriage
"°ntt"11 Stpl, 11
Dick1011. H.,..vene G. •no Wlll l•rn )
Sil~I~. Wiiii•"'! Tl>Ql'nas 111<1 Jiii "'""
Romtr11. Eork J•tl'le.lo aud 0001 Jtt'I
l.oula, Cllwry Wvv..,ne and Wlltrtd
Hl119,ong
A~de•-· Ron.Id J ~nd Ootln.1 R
McelYal", C~ryl D •114 c.,.r1,, t
Mllt hall,Je1" LI Ve" 111<1 WllliftlTI
Marl!" l•wlOll, Rhea R11 and Sltpl\fn HI•• "-Non, S!tllhanla E. and WllM11" G.
l lndnar, Frank G. •NI C.oHe<i M
W!lllall'\I, T1rr1U Emmel! •nd 81rti.1r1
111nchl
Dy L. PETER K!UEG
Of ft.t OMlf Pl~ 11111
L.A llABRA -The newly·
formed Orange County lntcr-
govcmmcntnl Coordinating
council has identified \\'ha t
it bellt"ves are tht: sevetl
major problem areas con-
fron ting local govemmt'nls
and-has se~ out to help solve._
them.
The panel. comprised or
rt'prescntatives of 24 cities
anU Orange CoWlty govern·
ment, said its seven prjorities
include : ,,
Pu~lic protection and safety,
public works and planning,
aviaUon, p hysical en·
vironment. specitll districts,
tabor rela11ons and legislative
liaison.
The panel nlready has Corm·
ed a labor relations committee
becaUSe of a "high sense or
urgency relt by all rcpresen-
tlitives tg. move out very
:imartlf1n this area," ac-
cording to ICC Chairman
1'1ilan Dostal, a Newport
Beach City t'OUncilman .
Dostal indicated the .cities
belie.ve they should try to
t'OOrdinate their negotiations
with public employe unions
and associations,
"The councllmen are con·
cerned thal the cities are
going aL IL piecemeal," DoiStal
said. "This leads to some in·
equ1ties in the wage struc-
tures."
Dostal did oot cite any
8J)ecific examples. lie said,
however, the )CC task force
"will-look at all aspects of
wage structures in Orange
cixinty. ~ Dostal said the guideHnes
fol" the other six romm.iltt.>es,
w!lich have not yet been form-
ed, will be fonnulaled as tJie
committees take shape.
Dostal said the ICX: alOI has
decided to apply to the federal
Department • ol Housing and
Urban Developnnenl (llUD)
ror a "Project Tlt'• grunt to
conduct a detailed study oo
the posslbiUly of fonmfng a
model "mini-cog" -sort of en
JOC subcommittee.
Do.stal said the purpose of
the "mini-cogs" is_ t o
"establish organlt.aUons wbich ""in stem the tide toward nd·
ding other layers ol. govern-
ment."
be a mull al lllal stuey,"
Dostal said, expl aining that It
W<)tl]d deal with subject mat·
ter that transcends normal
munlclpal boundaries.
Dostal s.1id 19 or the ?4 eltics
who are members or the ICC were #present at Wedntsday's
meeting in La Hahra's City
Hall. Orange .. Coast cities
repr~sented. in addition to
Neport Beach, Were tlun·
tlngton Beach, Fount a i n
Valley, Laguna Beach and San
Juan Capistrano.
Irvine, Costa Mesa and San
Clemente, all are members
but were oot represented.
Four of the five Orange. M!llltl"", Warr.,., H. and l>o(Qlll• M.
GDflli1l1s, Glor'!I F . IM J1me1 J.
M<.Pffk, LI Rea and G!lfrY Vaiden
Humol'l;ey, Ollnfl •nd Terrtll
MK-. Ha,...., J. Ind Evelyn A.
Purvl1, Wllllam £. Ind Ell!el;letll k.
Coll!, $yl\'i1 Elliftt and E<k1H1 LM
l 011'1b1rdo, Mkh'"I ond P.nn& Marla
Sprout, Dinah J. and Robert D.
200 Attend Coast Forum·
Dostal said tbe ice propos~I
is that the staff.! of -all
participating cities, and the
county, join forces with "a
major S o u t h e r n California
university" Tor the study to
determine what the ICC could
do in moderate and long~ange
programs.
Coun ty Supe:rv!§ors were
represented of · pr e s e n t
themselves. Only B o a r d
Chairman Ron Caspers of
Newport Beach was n o l
represented.
_______ .. "'!I
Otlier
Deaths
,J On Blood Pressure Facts
EL PASO, Tex . (AP ) -Col.
llarold R. Turner, 75, known
as the "graddaddy of Cape
Canaveral" and lhe first ro1n-
mander of the White Sands
ri.tissile Range, died Thursday.
MIAMI (AP) -Eduardo
Zuleta Angel, 74, a former
Colombian for~ign mini ster
and diplomat who presided at
the first United Nati on s
General Assembly in London,
died 'Thursday.
~E'V YORK I A Pl -.Jules
J>otlcll , 74. founder and owner
of the !tuned Copacabana
night club in midlo1.,:n ~1anhat
tan, died '.J'hursday .
Deaf.la Notices
81CKLElt ~• H. Bickler. l&JI Port M1nl•kih,
Newaorl 9each. Oat1 et del!h, Se111ell'lber 77. 19n. Survi~ bv wile, Matild•: ~"'· G~rcte H. and Cllarles E. 8/(kler; dauctll!t •5I Olo• McMann and Ell11belh Ann Bo 1am; two bf"o11iert: elolll a•1ndclllldren. Rouorv, tanll111!, Frld1v. I PM, BllU·Beroeran C!rana dfl Mar c r.aoel R.aul1tm Mass. 1turd1v, 10 AM, Our LldV Q1.1ttn of Anoels C1lhoHc C"llurch tnlerme<il. P1t ilic VI I w Memorial Park. Ball1·8efQrfDfl Fun1r1I Home. Corooe del M1r, O re<:lors. ORAKE ET11acteth M~e Drake. Aor 7l; lor.,.,trlv cl Caolst•llrlD Beach. Date ot death. SI P• !ember n , 1973. Surrlvl!CI bV son. Ja,....ts l.N Dr.tie. Newaorl Stach; IWO daughl~. Mrs. L.ols !turbllnk, al
C~<>istraoo; B"'11v Haner, Cos1a N.esa; 1lsll'r, Mr1. Carrie Morrl!.Dr"I Arkano-111; eleven 11r•ndChlldrcn: four1een 11re~I· arandchllctren. Servk~• will ne l\f ld S11urd11v, 12:30 PM. We•! Fu!lerton Bon-ti~I Cllurch, with Re~. Letter FlelCl>~r ot-lklal!no. tn1.,.men1 oma v I' ! a 1.1emorl1I Park. Ben Broadwav Mortunr~.
Olrec!Of"li. OUROCHElt
AMr1 Jot.toll Cktrocher. 70751 Barrlrw A~ .• Santa Ane HliQlllS. Date or death, !eotllTlb« :M, 197l. Survived bv '°"· Andr• R. Durocher; daualll1r, Ftlk• Lii· t11· ~ cva.ndellUdren; two ot&&1· Qr111fkldran, Rosarv, tonlallt, Fl'ldlY, 7·.Ja PM fl fQUlltm Miu, Salur!Wv. I AM. bOrh al· 51. Joad'll!I\'I C1tl\Qllc Cnutch. Interment, Hoty apulctotr Cemetery.
B1ltz·Bllfcttran F yneral Home, CD1t1
Mesi . OlrKtors. FISH .
Charles L. Fish. 31066 F!vlnQ Cloud D""'' L.aun1 N!ouel. 0119 al de1t111 S111lemblr 16, lffl. SUl'"Vlwd bY wll1, El llblll\: lwo
d1ualll1t1""1. P1mel1 E. Fish. S 1 n Ck!mlnl1; Mr' Marv Lou Redomskl. Albu<JulltOllfj 11;1er, Mrs. Dolores Sha.w, Ctdl• R1olo1, Jowa; !WO Q••ndclllldr•n. Sltl""rk11. Mondav, 10 AM. Peclflc Vlow C~...r.el. 1n1erment, Pacific View Memorlll P• . Pac uc v1S'A~'F'"i'~arv. 01rec1or•.
HermJr'I R. Griffin. 3Sl·B AYf'nl<'ll V11Hll1, L-ouna HUii. Oate of dNlll,
Slol1tmblt 21, 1971. Survl\1<1 br wUe,
Marrr IWO 4-uahters. Mrs. R. M. t.unerdC Menlo Park; s111r11v Griffin, Menlo Irk; mot.,..r, Sus11n11h Griffin, °"""' !'I four Qrandclll ldren . s.rv>ces 'ut"dav. I PM. Pacil!C Vlf.W
(l'lllllli. lntllfme_nl, Ped tlc Viirw Mrrnor.11 P1rit. PKll'lc Vo""' Morluar~. Directors. OIEGIE N1nCY DenlM OMQ(t. •:Ill Vista Grinde. Newoarl B/ach. Date et death, SepTeml>tr 11, 1r:n. UT"\liwel tlY mo!t'llf, Shadvnt Ol:IKI 11 brDll!er, Jost1>h : sisters, Dlo1111e ~ 1 and Klllllo!i'" Bellrden. Ro•arv,
t(WltDlll. FrldlY. 7 PM. Re<l\JlllTI Mas~, Salllt"dlV 1?:30 PM, DOlll 111 Our L~d~ Queen Of AllGels Caltw:ollc C!lurcll. ln1ff· ....ent Pac:ltlc View M""°"'' P11rk. FamlLv WC!Cle!ts tllow wltllino, 01e1se ,.,,.k.. memor .. 1 C"fllr1hu1f"fls to !!le u.s.c. khool et Music, C/D lloberl Elllse,
1tl25 lonel, LO!. Anct1le1i 9(1(133, e~111. P~ron Funeral Home, CllrDfll del Mar.
Oireclorl. RICHAROSO"
Sarah Hb Richardson. AOI 79, ol 5'10 SI. Aflll't'I r1ve, LaQuna Betcll. 0•11 or c1e1lll, Sf'Qfember 2b. 1973. Survived tlY lwo dauoh!llr!. Evt Maxwell, L1oun1 aeacni A\1"' C!nkul, L• Me1f: son. Tllom•'· R d'lardson, La'>una Beac111· 11• grandcfllklren; one brother; two 11il1r.
~..-vt~t. S.tu•d~v. Seo!fmbtr '9, 11 AM. Srieff« L.1o11n1 &each Chapel. P'rlv1re I,,_
t~ In Reno. N,,..lldl. Sl'ltllter Laouna
ef1c11 Mortuarv5TDJV'l°to[f.
!trel T. Stovall. Aoe lS; rt,ldent ol Co,11 Metl . Survl~lid bY 01ren11. J1n'lf'S and Sendra Stor1tl; 1~•el' sl1ter1. Mlndr Lee, Ti rri Lvn and Lori Ott: brother. J1m11 J. Jr., 111 of Cos!• M.,,,; ma1..-n1I •·rand!T'Dtl!llr. Mrs. Edwtrd Ad1mson, Cotta Mew; mat1m1I 0•1ndfalh1•. Mr, [)arid Adam'°"'' Hu"tlnaton Bt aen: 1>1l•r nal Qrandmothlrs, Mts. M1r!lvn
lS!ar1fl, Mls•lon Vl1110: Mrs. Gwen F, tov•I , $111 L1k1 c tv: w tern11 ore•'· Qr1nOrnoll11r, Mrs. Frank M, Fisller1 maternal ore11..,r1ndmo1lwr, Mrs. Mir w._, bo!ll of Ulan. Senil,rs llfndin<I 11 Bell Broadw1v Morluarv.
ARBUCKLE & SON
WESTCLIFF MORTUARY
4Z7 E. 17lh St., Cost.a J\1esa
64M888 • BALTZ-BERGERON
FUNERAL HOME
Corona del J\far 673·9450
Costa ~fesa 646-%4.24 • BELL BROADWAY
MORTIJARY
JJO Broadway, Costa l'llesa
LI 11-3433 • DD.DAY BROTHERS
MORTUARIES
11911 Buch Bl vd.
HunUn~ton Beach MZ·7771
!44 Redondo Ave.
Long B .. ch Zll-138-1145 • McCORMJCK LAGUNA
BEACH MORTUARY
1706 Laguna Canyon Rd.
49'-9415 • PAClFIC VIEW
MEMORIAL P,\RK
Ctmetery Mortuary
-Oap<I.
Dy FREDERICK
SCHOEMEllL
Valley Man
Jumps Bail;
Search On
SANI' A ANA -A search is
Wlder '"'ay for a Fountain
Valley man v•ho failed lo show
up for sentencing in Orange
County Superior Court after
pleading guilty to participating
in an $11 million stock fra ud.
Ralph Ernstsen, 44, ol 18903
Santa Clara Ave .. is named in
a 550.000 bench warrant issued
after he failed to appea r for a
sentencing session that could
have put him in state prison
for up to 10 years. He had
pleaded guilty to conspiracy.
Ernstsen was one of seven
men indicted by the Grand
Jury in conn eclion with the
d istribution of stock
certificates that initially were
consigned to a Pasadena rom-
pany for destruction. Three of
his co-defendant s were fow1d
or pleaded guilt y to reduced
charges and rece.Jved varying
termi.
Op era Slated
At CdM School
3se1 pacific VJew Drtve
Newport Beach, Calllornla The Gifttd Chi Id re n 's
Sff..%100 Associntion of Orange County
• \viii sponsor a special English
PEEJC FAMJLY arrangement of Mo z a r l · s
CoLONIAL nlNEllAL "Cosl Fan Tuite" Oct . 1-1
HOME at 3 p.m. in the Col'Ula del
JllOl BalA Ave. Mar High school Lilt I e
WestmlUter 8'345U Theater.
' • Reservations. at $1.50 for SMlj ll'S MORTUARY chHdrcn under ll and IL71 for
U1 l\tUa St. . adults can be made by wfiting lluatln~ Btacll ... to toolse Brown, M31 Kenosha
1 ___ • _5iHs:it ____ __,.. Lane. Irvine
TUSTIN
~<t-.
ii' ' 1 OSO S. Edinger
838-9000 '
ANAHEIM
l,\ PAL.M.t.
~ u ,
~
1123 N. Euclid
635-8181
'
"The model 'mini-cog' would
WANTED: ART
YEW PINE
Grows Indoors
or out, In
tubs or
open ground.
Sl .97 Val .. s4 g~Al.
SPRINGTIME
RAPHIOLEPSIS 81 $
•"·
BOTTLE
BRUSH
B1il1iant red flowers adorn
yoor landscape. These x-large
planls gi~e lmmediale elf eel
15 GAL.
I BULBS
NURSl:RYl.AllD'S
"HllN THU•
&UARAllTEE"
I full y11rs 1u111niee·
on all I pl. and l111er
.nursery sta;c:k •••
only I~ cost per I.DO
purchlst ... new you t1n
plant yO<JI' landscape
·with complot' coofldlnct .
IJlCYCU YOUI
l'WT1C _ ...
We've fuat received
,.._
wt 55Lt NCfllECO our flr111nlpmen1
an or your
favorl1es
save now
BULB
PLANTER.
·1-orout
I
• Choice of color•
•11"Wld•-5"c:e..p
Ill . M.H •
$34~.
•
. M""'
fOll IM:llll\ISfAllt
CONU!filR Ill. 11.AfEO
I 0.\1. Oii 1.AllOEA
tl()Q(POSll
lllQSSMY
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QUEENIE By Phil lnterlandi
OICl!ir "-~-. rt1J.
''I'm not lunging toward you-it's these stupid shoes
my wUe bought for me."
L. M. Boyd
Is Fire Hydr~t
Male or Female?
Q. "What's a 'netmater's salesman'?"
A. 'lbat's what the Gulf of Mexico sbrimpers call a
shark. •
Q. "Does the U.S. Secret Service staff an office in
Paris?"
A. Jt does. To track counterfeiters, m06Uy.
Q. Do all women who-become-preg-
nant u:perience nausea and vomit-ing. .
A. About one out of five doesn't,
Q. "Hu there ever been a U.S. pres-
ident with a criminal record?"
A. Not unless you count Andrew
Jackson'• dueling.
. Q. "How many boles at the first per-
manent golf course in this cowitry?"
.: · A. Three. That was the Sl. Andrews
Club in Yonkers, N.Y.
OBSESSED
· To de>crlbe that Dualedorf painter Konrad Klai>heck
as OOeeS-ted with sex dOesn't quite explain the aituaUon. Actua14', be lhtnb just about every ~le object bu a gendel'. Either male or female. Take a typewriter, that's
definitely lilale, 1111 be. A lelepbooe, he avers, la female.
1bae-wblm*'-JUJ-D0t delmre mncb d___your Ume_or __
mine, bul Kmrad bu dewted 11 years· to categorizing lhe
..... "' llUCh objects. Bicycles, 1rooln( -· fire by-draotl, wutepoper bUketl, meal cleavers. Whlcb oe• la
each ol thee?
That car driver IDClll apt to lose eoolrol ol lhe ma·
chine wbeo a tire blows on a freeway ls the girl under age
20. Or oo Northwestern Unlvmlty's Traffic lnslllule re-
ports. Blame inexperience, I suppooe. SUch yow11 ladies
definitely ano not lhe most qerous driven overall.
Thal telephone call IDClll expe&d by lhe pediatrician
around Cbril1mu Ume la from lhe mothers who say her
child bu just eaten a clecoralkln olf lhe tree.
RABBIT'S FOOT
Clleol asks why a rabbit's foot eame to beregarded as
lucky. Explanalkln la pr<lly lhln. Bui It starts like this.
Unlike moot baby anlmall, a )'GUiii rabbit la born 'With
its eye1 open, thus can see evil before it aUiies. How this
early villon led to the notion that the pouesaor ot a rab-
bit's fool might likewise be ,. sifted I don't kn.ow.
Medical r.cords Indicate about 1,000 Amer1canJ have
lost lhe physical sense of lalle. And most of lhele can't
smell anything, either.
About '15 years ago lhe male secretaries outmnnbered
lhe female """"tarie' by nine to one. Now · lhe female
secretaries outnumber the male secretaries 30 to one.
Address mail to L. M. Bo¢, P.O. Box 1875, New-
port Broch, Calif. 92660.
Grizzly Population
In ParlrThreaten-ed-? -
WASlllNGTON (UPI) -consequences fOl' lhe grizzly If
The griDly bear population In It 11 cooUnued."
Yellowstone National Park Dr. Jobn Craighead, an
may be facecj with mlncUon authority. oe ""'-'y bean becaUR of a new government ~-policy to shut down garbage from lhe UnlverSlly ol Mon-
dumpe Inside lhe pork, an lana who helped head up lhe
animal protection group bu study, confirmed to UPI that
charged. It was submllled lo lhe
The Fund for Animals Inc., govermnenl In July and that II
a privately rllllDCed orpnl· projects I "pretty dim" future
zaUon, alleged that the~N-"'a~· --r'for~N~9'th.-~Amert•a'.Llargest
ftona l "Parli service !iii a~ land mammal.
tempted to auppreu a lludy A Park Service spokesman,
wtrlch "refutes entirely the wtrlle not denying the ex·
present Nallonal Park Service l1lence ol lhe report, said he
program and predicts dire bad no direct knowledge of It .
~
.howa.rd~ <
nutrition ~-
END.OF-MONTH
~ SALE, __
::~~:..~~~ ........... $2. 79
n•"'l"O•'• YIMMI• C e, .,._ VlfHthll e ..... e ...... C11•1tla
'
PmTll lllfX TOASIEI
Olli REG. 7.17
Select.-Ronic color control g[ves
you toast the way you like it.
Chrome body. T612·A
511
G.E. PORTABLE PllNO
Olli REG. 17.97 2 Oeluxe Portable plays both 1 50
45 RPM singles and LP's.
Solid state amplifier.
• • '
Friday, Septtmbtr 28, 1973 OAILY PILOT
• warn fllNT II •Bl IABllAY 1UM 11 IPM • SAVI TIUYI
BU PRICE SLAIN• M 11llE MOST WANTBI ITIMI lUT
EVERYONE NEIDI • • • COME IN fAI. Y FOR BEST IRECTIONI.
16 OZ. SPRAY ENAMR
OUR REG. 68c EA.
Spray on most surfaces and
make things l11ok bright and
new again. Many colors. 3FOR'l
W.f. UQUID lllBlfNT
OUR REG. 34c EA. '1
Our own brand of liquid de·
tergent in mild lemon, green 4 FOR
or pink formulas.
SPU._BASIEJBAll ·
1.Q IF MOJ BlOOSll
A slight .discoloration is the
. Qnly blemish. Otherwise per·
feet official size ball.
299
Cat litter leaves kitty's boK IKll I[,, stc El. '1
clean and deodorizes. Stock 4 'tg'1S
up on !hes. 10 lb. bags ·
and save.
mlVE VINYL ure
OUR REG. 1.58
4 yd. rolls of attractive pat-
terned vinyl covering. Many uses
for this easy to clean material. sac
I
I
I .
1 coumuL GU nsH 1 ·
: OUR REG. 19c EA. c I
Colorful and lively fish for your
I aquarium or fis h bowl. Many differ-4 11 I en! types. Limit 10 per couPon. EA. ·---------.----·
SPECIAL PUiCHASE.
A fantastic low price on a top
quality non·detergent motor .oil.
limit 11 please.
STOCK UP PRICE ON ILEllEX
BOmQUE TOWRS All TIS•E
JUMBO TOWEL ROLLS
Strong paper kitchen towels in assorfed
colors and prints. Many uses for these.
7 PACK 8AllfTISSUE•------
Decorator piint or solid co~r bath tissue
in convenient 2·roll packages.
KLEENEX FACIAL TISSUE SALE
OUR REG. PRICE 43c EACH BOX !fi Solt facial tissue in assortment of colors and
wh ile. 180 tissues In each. box. Stock up on this
quality product today and save!
·~--~~ FOR /,~::;· ' /~ llMll17PlEASE
STORE HOURS: MONDAJ.-thru SATURDAY IOAM to 91!M • SUNDAY-IOAM to 7~M e SOME QUANTITIES MAY BE LIMITED
YOUR !iATl§fACTION l!i FULLY liUARANTEm OR YOUR MDl\IEY BACK 10.IH
....... ~..... r"-:.:==-::=c::::--::=:=:,,..,,.=:::---.
COSTA MESA ~ AL. ON SA.Lii
*-1621 M-.AJl:THUR ILYD. ~ I • "-'*"'"' c.... .. ~ J..~.' , .. , ....._ """ 1172 ..,.... Dr. ,;;.,' .~.. c......... .. •• ,.,,..... .•
',. ~-..... ~
' -'
I
..
3088 BRISTOL ST. .
San Dl090 FrHway at lrlstol
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Logger
Wears
Lipstick
GRASS VALLEY (AP) -
The log scaler at t.he Sierra
Mountain-lumber mill north of -
here we{lirs a hard hat, lipstick
and earrings.
l\nd among the 100 employes
at this Northern California
mill, Lois Butz's nearly 20
years on the job rank her
second in seniority.
Her job involves measuring
the ffiameter of an_{nCOffling
log at the small end, then
multiplying a factor of that
times the log's length to figure
out how many board feet of
lumber the log contains .
•-
usHE DOESN'T get in
arguments with a n y b o d y .
She'S fair and cons'istent and
the loggers-knoW that," says
mill manager John T. Casey
Jr.
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Miss Butz, fiftvish. said in
earlier davs the·lo ggers Used
to assume their lo,l?s we"e bit?:·
ger than she indicated, but no
more.
"It's been years since the
last one was going to whi p me
because the scale was wrong,"
· she sa'id in an interview.
WHEN SHE'S OFF lhc job,
Miss Butz wears lipstick and
· pantsuits Or dresses. ·
"I wear earrings all the
•--7• ~~"ti-111e;'~-she-said in an interview ' ' earlier this week.
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Do men make passes at lady
loggers?
"Occasionally, but nothing
to worry about," said ~Tiss
Butz. Ir she wanted to. Miss Butz
could move to an indoor job at
the mill, but she likes the out-
doors better.
That holds true for her off-
the-job interests too .. "I can
hardly wait for deer season to
start,'' she said. "I'd hunt
every day if I could."
Acaden1ies
To Open
To Women?
_ WASHINGTON (UPI -A
federal court here has n
asked.to open the doors of the
Navy and Air Force
academies to make way for
midshipwomen and air,vomen.
The Centers for Women 's
£olic)'. Studies has filed a class
action suit in U.S. D1str1Cf
Court challenging the re-
quirement that applicants for
the e I it e officer-training
academies be men.
The suit was filed on.behalf
or COralie s. Cross of Danville.
Calif., who is seeking ad·
mission to tlie N a v a I
Academy,. and Jolene Ann
Schwab of Fremont, Calif ..
who wou1d like to become an
Air Force officer.
ATTORNEY VIRGINIA
Dondy· said a suit would have
been filed against the U.S.
Military Academf at \\~est
Point, N.Y., had the group
beeo able to find a woman
seeking entrance.
She claimed that the men·
only policy deni·es -women an
equal chance to advance in the
military. The~tw6 women!' nomina·
· lions to the academy are sup·
potted by Oalifornia
Democratic Reps. J e r o m e
Waldie, Fortney Stark, Don
Edwards and Leo Ryan , who
were Usted in ' the suit a's
coplaintlfls._
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OVER 25 YEARSOF-DEPEnDABLE'SERVICE&LOW PRICEST .
FOUNTAIN VALLEY SANTA · AN.% ANAHEIM
16547 BrookhuUl 7554-1333 ~111..E SQUi\it£ ·-. ._
SHP. CTR.
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F 01~ the Pricing
Record Of Drugs.
~r.......;;.. .......... -_...... -Now Law
UTI41N • CW< PL, Ntwporl 8tKll 92460
Hilt" A. l(ponu, 906 Ctrc11
NtwJ>Ort Btacll, C•I, tM60 .
Pl,,
Tl'lls bu1lnt11 11 tOlldUC.19'1 bv 111 I"'
dlvld11tf
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Tiil• S1th!merol 'w•1 '1111:1 \\11111 fl•t Co11n°
ty CNrk ol Or•ote C011ntv on s.pitmbe• 12. lt73 ......
Publlshofd Otatlllt (-o1$1 ..... Pllt>f,
Sit11t. ''· 21, 29, tfld CJ!l!t. J, Im 2121.n
PUBl:IC NOTICE .
PICTITIOUI au11NE!SI
MAMI: ITATl:Ml!NT
The lollowlnQ PfO(ln 11 dOlll\l bu1l11t11 ••: . LA TR18lf-C0MPANY~ 20$1 Newport
l !vd (SUllt 11) Cosll MMI, Ct!llfnlt , .,,,,
Com Grin-"" Cc11n ... .,..,
Coron• 0.1 M ... Ctlll0<,,J1,
Tiiis bu1ln.u It condvcltod b'I' 111 I,,_
Olvldutl. '· CANO GIAHANI
TM1 llt!t mtnfl.,.tl Hi.d with !tit C.U11·
SAN
A 26-
was s
died
to th
being
Pi1os
stab
u·hen
Brigg
Inn
es 1111 Flied
ANOELES (AP) -A
or Court suit has been
to overturn the California
al Commission's denial
oastal permit for an in·
al park near Marina Del
LOS
Superi
rued
Coast
of a c
dustri
~ Clerk ol Or1.119t (Oll(ll't_ on &rol~btr • 1t73 ' 1~ Rey,
... u 0
Publl1~ °''""' """ OaUv • Pllol -Vil lag StPi.mti.r "· n ... Of.:lolier s, n .
1t 73 1t47•73 In t
PUBJ,IC NOTICE that
nlissi
lflCTITIO\IS IUSIMESS -had a MAMf. STATEM•MT by t The tollowlno ''*'°" Is dolnt b1JlllM11 •1: ' Consc CHl!Z &LLI. 1910 Soo•lll Coett H~w.y, L-Vllll• hll'h{ Ctlll. 9'16.Sl Feb. 11.) Elttl\Or :t:t nger, 9f Bh,11
L•r,oon• L•lll"1 a. , c ent. 9'1"51 Th I '"-111 .... 11 I «'lnd!J'1.0 by 0tn ]JI--dlYldVIK. --~--SA £t11n0f' •om~r Thi• lllltment Wtl ltd wlth 11111 COlil'I-Cong ty Clerk ol Otll'IOI Counly on s.pt1M~r e, it1J. ,.mu has r
'"'rilltll«I Otlf'MMI Co.~ Ot1Pr Pl~ so la it1t1Mblr 1. 14 2l· n, It 27tt-gove
PUBLIC NO'r!CE . I a re ' Wal di 'ICTITIOUS •USI~., NAMl STATIMI T The
Tiii totlowlno pwtc1n1 ar1 llolfit butln111 per so ti:
TEL F.-CT$, JOO! R:f Miii ""'·• total ilhtl1<11tllil s, $!Jilt 1111; Cot I Mttt, C1. cam '2,,,
Ttltphont An•werl1151 lhirt•ii· 11221 E pal1111 1J1n 11 •• knl• Ana. c..i11.--i.t2101 ,.... 1--'-Thc GMlr:• Wllb\lrt Smttn. 111'2 OllllOOk Ltnf, tnll Al'll, Ct. tt705 Waldi T~· butln••• I• •Conclll(IM' IW an In-1200, div 1111 • " .. Otortt 'ft. Smfth .• cnmp TM• lltflment Wit in.. wl!ji jllf 'pense CIWlla Cltrll: et Ortllll Ceu~ty °" Sttlttl" .. r , tm. mon -"--· ----"''"' P111111tllld Or1111i "'" OttlY Piiot • S111ltmbtr " ... Ol;'IOetr ,, ,,, "· '"'~ -,.,.n -SA
PUBl,JO NoTJCE Two
by a
ITATIMIMT 'O'i ~IA"fllDOMMIJit Aug. C)fUIO, SerVi PICTITIOUI autlflllSI NAMI
Tiii tollowlnt ~ton l'ltl tbtn<IOl'ltd lhl Nat' 1,111 et "'' Ul'llout 1111&11\flt n•rM Th lllCHAllD •ENNl!.TT. LTO.' ti un lrvlnt ..,,..,,,.., ~ewport 811cn, C11l*°rnl1 name ""' Vero Thi fl<"llM bUllnttt "•mt rlltrrtd to
tllove ••• tlltd Iii ~COVl'll'I' llfl OCIOblr 15, Jr., 2 lt71. I
Wlnt•m ,i.. 1111nc11r,;, 1Mt ''"''' ~~ . Pl,Ct, Co1tt ~fM• Ct', 6M Tll t lrl\tllntlt 'Wtt Cor,ci11¢ltd bV •tn 1n-
cllVldutl, ~ Th WIUIAM ll. HALLIOAY Palrl Tlllt tlltltMl'lt W.1 flied Wl!ll 1111 Coun-
ty Cllf'll of Ortntt COllnlY &fl lttl""~r Aug.
'" lt73. Coun .....
_ .P11tit1tNic1, ~·no• '"·' 0.1"' t'lln· the I SIP•--21 •nd Otttr-r •• n, I ' ever ,,,, . )001-73 ,
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Koscot Ripoff?
Get Rich Quick
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Frld1y, Septembfr 28, 1973 DAILY PILOT II
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OVER THE COUNTER •
HASD Ll11"'9t iw Tiu1nclay, Soptemloor 27. 1m
agw11111m:•m•· -11l1 11
MUTUAL FUNDS
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DAILY PltOT s
Good" Bod Neavs ·
·Gas P1·ices Up-
·But Beef's Down
WASHINGTO~ !Al'l
Gasoline prices arc going up.
probably Friday, bul the cost
ol beef may be hclid!:!d down .
And. say officials of the Cost
or Living Council, H plan by
the Postal Service to r;ii:i;c Its
rates may be cha!Jengcid.
nlE PRICE rise f o r
gasollne, heating oil and diesel
fuel comes In the u•ake of
pressure on the council from
both retailers and the \Vhite
House.
';We have comm i I I e d
ourselves to increasing prices
and we'll do so toward the end
or the week," Council' director
John T. Dunlop told newsmen
Wednesday.
A source said the increase
will be at least one cent a
gallon and possibly two.
Dunlop said the councH may
challenge another pl-ice i11:
crease, the proposed two-cent
Red China
Admi ssion
Suggested
NAIROBI, Kenya (AP), -
Tanzania called Thursday fo r
the admission of C.Ommunist
China to the lnlernational
Monetary Fund and.. \\lorld.
Bank.
l'.tXJNOMIC A F F A I R S
Minister W. K. Chagula said
Peking has "emerged as one
of the b i g aid donors con-
tributing toward the develo~
ment of a number of countries
in Asia, Europe. Africa , and
Latin Am erica,'' and
sometin:es on better tei'ms
than those provided by the
World Bank.
Conference sources at the
joint annual meetiogs of the
IMF and World Bank said it
was the first time the subject
of Peking's admission was of-
£icially brougt.t before 1he two
agencies. T h.e Ni\tionalist
government on Taiwan is
presently included as China on
.the list of member nations.
ON WEDNESDA.Y. U . S .
Treasury Secretary George P.
Shultz said the basic Ameri can
stand on monetary reform has
wm. many friends despite ap-
pearances to the conlrary at
this week's meeting of the
Ir.fF and World Bank.
"I don't sec that we're
isolated," Shultz said in an in-
terview Wednesday. "All -the
basic principles have been ac-
cepted. Everybody agrees that
the system must have sym-
metry and backbone."
Shu1tz said most nations now
back the key American pro-
posal . that countries v:ilh big
balance of payment surpluses
should be under i<ternational
pressure to· revah.1e their cur-
rencies.
-·-Also 51 usd Mercedes
11 jlsp lll -·-
Leadership
C~a ss Fl~p
Jlrings Suit
SAN RAFAEL (AP I -A $2
n1illion suit bas been filed
againstl.he esta te of Willian\
Penn Patrick by a man who
contends that one o( Patrick's
leadership courses failed to
make him "a better human
being with a higher inco,me."
Ronald Zehren. 32. of South
Lake Tahoe, said in the suit
that he took a four-month
Leadership Dynamics course
in Palo Alto beginning June I,
1969.
The Suil contends that
Zehren was "falsely and
fraudulentl y" told the course
would give hilri a "new vj!ion or life" and increase his in-
come.
Instead, the suit claims,
Zehren's income declined,
and he suffered "substantial
body and mental injury" from
instructors who "violen tly
assaulted" and beat him.
PeM. who became a
millionaire as a cosmetics
manufacturer, died this year
. in an airplane crash.
Bentley Tells
Gains in 1973
Bentley Laboratoril's, Inc.,
or Irvine, manufacturer of
blood handling and processing
equipment ·used in cardicr
pulmonary bypass surgery.
has iecorded ·another 1973
quarter wit h a subslantial gain
over 1972 earnings.
D. J. Bentley. president of
the Irvine based firn1. slated
that total revenues increased
36 percent for the nine months
reporte·d as-compared-to a
similar nine month period last
year. He reported also that in-
come per share y.•as up 26 per·
cent for the same nine month
period as compared to 1972 .
!• IA.i"!0 N SOV,t,-f
~,t,NIA AN,t, • !•7-t.l•j
PRESENTS
Polo
CLOTHING
FOR FAll '73
..
Ford Negotiating
Put in 'Neutral'
DETROIT (UP]) -Au to
contract negotiations between
the United Auto Workers and
Ford r-.1otor C.O. were locked in
a holding pattern Wednesday
while bargainers attempted to
clear up unresolved local
issues with Chrysler Corp.
MALCOLM DENISE, Ford
vice pi-esident for labor rela-
tions, said the conclusion or
bargaining al Ford m ay be
delayed because "it could take
a couple more weeks to clear
up the Chrys1er situation."
Chrysler resumed _yrcr
duction Monday following a
nine-day strike but only 30 or
69 bargaining units reported
settlement on national con-
tract issues.
The situation was
Commodity -
Option Now
Reg11lated
Complete New X or.k Stock List
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Thw-sday"s Closing Prices -Complete New Yorli Stock Exchange List
lntei:est Rates
Slow Up Marl{et
NEW YORK (API -Conllictmg opinions about
declining interest rate~ crimped the stock market a
advance Thursday Trading was heavy
The market advanced In early trading based
In part on past market strength and m part on
Treasury Secretary George P Shultz comment"
Wednesdny U1at 'interest rates were over the top •
Predltc1ons of a surplus balance o! payments next
year helped the market abo ~rokers noted
FurtP,er fue!Jng investor interest were rumors
1hat a large bank n1lght lower Its prtrne 1end1n,g rate
in response to lowered sho rt term rates Jn fa ct a
small bank Southwest of St Louis did announce a
1A pomt drop to 9% percenL
September 1973 s
~
-Complete Closing Prices-Aii1erican Stock Exchange List
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14 DAILY PILOT s "' c
Can't Win i
In Fight
Over Mail
From Wire Services
WASH!NC10N -'Josepli
Lnhey of Ne·w York com-
plained lo his congressman I
that the Pest Office kept sen·
ding bac;k mail" properly ad-
dresscd to him, stf'tmped "Ad-
dressee Unknown ."
The -congressman. R e p .
Jonathan Bingham (~N.Y. ),
wrote Joseph A. Matukonis ,
the congressional liaison of-
fice r for government relations.
1t{atukoni s wrote to
Bingham that "the improper
1
'handling of Mr. Lahey's mail
was caused by a mechanical
failure in a n e w I y im-1
plemenled central 1nark-up
system."
Bingham look Matukonis'
letter and enclosed it with a
lett er of his ·cwn to Lahey,
telling him that the problem
was corrected immediately.
Unfortunatefy, Lahey did not
gel the letter. It was returned
to Bingham. stainped "Ad·
dressee Unknown.''
~ WASHINGTON -SJepben
B, King, who served as
!\tarlha Ml1chell's bodyguar:J
during ·part or the 197~
presidential campaiJ!n, has
been rebuffed in his efforts to
obtain a ca reer job with the
Agriculture Department.
Instead. , King "''as give n a
( PEOPLE )i
politicA1 appointo1cnt al the l
saine sa lary -$26.898 a year \
_ i11 the department's con· 1
grcssional relations section.
I~e began work U1ere this
week.
King, 32, was guarding Mrs.
Mttchell during a 1972 i,ncident
in Newport Beach In which she
charged she was manhandled
and injected with a sedative
shortly afte r the \Vatergate
break-in.
LE\VISTON -Hiolngist Tim
Burton says California bro\Yn!
bears prefer a mixture or I
strawberry jam and cat foo.d
to honey. ,,
Burton, 28, has been trap-
ping bears in the ruggt>d Trini·
ty l\fountains of Northern
C',alifomia for two years as
part of a study (or the State
Fish and Game Department.
He experimented w i I h
several tvpes of bait, but set·
tied on the ca t fO()(f and jam
because it seemed 10 be "the
gou rmet.favorite or bears."
One old bear liked it so much
she kept comi ng back for
more. ''\\re caught her seven
times;"' Burton said.
MJMll, Fla. -\Vhen rire
broke out at home. HI-year-old
Hlr1ld a Ago!'to remembered
the advice of Sparky, the fire
doJ?. I She calmlv took her 6--yea r·
old sister, Karrn. aC'ro~'l the !
street to a neiPhbor's hou~c 'I and asked Christian Pierre. 13.
to call the Fire Depar1!'nent 1 and her mother. \\'ho '~·as at
work. '
Sparky, 'a fireman dressed
as the fire dog, had visited
Hiraida's school last week to
give a talk on fire prevention
and what to do in case or fire .
A THENS, Greece -Lady
Arnall• Fleming, widow or the
flritlsh discoverer or penicillin
and _{;eorge Plyla.!, former
n1a}'or or Alhens. have aoplied I
for rE!'!ltoration of their Greek I
cillzenshlp.
.-\ lawver for -the two exi les
said Interior M i n i s I e r
filxllanos PJ1tako1 ~rote him
ftrat boll.\.. applical1ons w~re
before the Council of State,
which is expected to make a
decitlon soon. .-----·T!iir(lrat mUltary regime
stnpped Lady Fleming and
Plytas of U1elr cill2emhlp lo
1971.
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• • F1ld11, SrRt.tmbfr 28, }q73
-Saturday Only Fashion , Island • Newport ·Beach
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So -rry • • • no . phQne er mail orders.
..
come . early · for best selection!
Shoe Department
Orig . NOW
D 300 on ly Pr. Women's Sandals 2.00 .22 · o 1s··on1y· p;;·Ma·t ·sanaa15 ... -...... .-3:00 .· .. *····· ··-.ea
O 75 only Pr: Wome.n's Ankle -B~ot 5.50 · .88
D 100 only Pr. Women's Knit Tenni~ Shoes 4.99 2.88
D 75 only Pr. Women's Italian
Sondoi• 7.99-9.99 3.88
O 75 only Pr. Girls' Servi\:=e O xfords 5.99-8.99
D 100 only Pr. Boys' Dress Oxfords 6.99-10.99
Women's Accessories
0 500 only ladies' Leather Wallets
Orig.
2.50
D -60 only ladies' Straw, Canvas,
Vinyl Handbags 4.00-6.00
D 70.0 only Pierced & Mini C lip earrings .99
2.00
4.00
NOW
1.66
1.88
.66
'D 25 only Ladies' Better,,Leather
Hondbog• 12 .88-22.88 8.88-16.88
.Q_ 60 only Cool Caples' Synthetic ·
Wigs . S.88-9.88
D 20~ only ladigo Handbags 6.00
Sleepwear & Foundations
Orig.
D 60 only Women's Sleepwear 3.88-5.88
D 37 only Voil Floor length Robe 14.25
D 233 only Assorted Bra s & G irdles 3.00-12.00
Women's Dress Department
0 25 only Sh;ft
D
D
D
D
D
D
D
D
40 only Pant Suits
rs-onlY Caftans
7 only Pant Su its
12 only Long After Five
5 only Patio Shift
8 only Halter Top Pant Suit
7 only Junior Pant Suit
6 only Junior Pant Suit
Women's Outerwear
0
D
D
9 only Check Blater
IS only Vinyl Coat
5 only Maxie Coat
Women's Uniform Department
D
D
12 only Asst. Smee~ Tops
8 only Asst. Smock Tops
Bridal Department
0
D
D
D
D
only Gown, site 8
only Gown, site 8
3 9nly Gown, site 10, 12 & 14
only Gown, size I 0
on ly Gown, site 8
Girls' Department
0 70 only Preschool Girls' Dresses,
sizes 4-6x
Orig.
4.88
16.00
21 .00
35.00
38.00
17.00
18.00
17.0D
28.00
Orig.
ll.OQ ..
37.00
50.00
Orig.
5.88
8.00
Orig.
65.00
90.00
85.00
69.00
65.00
Orig.
4.88-9.00
O 60 only School Age G irls' Dresse~
sites 7-14 4.88-12.00
Q--80 only School-Age-Girls' Pant Sets
sites 8-14 9.88-17.00
O I 00 only School Age G irls' Raincoats
sites 7-14
O 24 only Assorted Belts, S-M
Infants' Department
0 39 on!y pi~~~r Panties, 6 per pklJ.
13·17 Tb.. .
O 30 only Diaper Panties, 6 per pkg.
5-12 lb •.
D 18 only O versle epers , sites 1/1 -1
0 20-only I pc. Zip Beck Sl••p•rs-.--
sites 1/1 .1
.92
1.88
Orig.
-6/.88
6/.88
.~.19
J.JJ
D 25 only I pc.Terry Sleep•r•, sit•• l/1 ·I "4.00
0 50 only 2 pc. Slteper, .. w/Gripptrs
,. siz1s 1-l • 4.69
1.88-4.88
2.88
NOW
1.88
9.88
.4'4·8.88
NOW
1.88
12.88
11.88
23.88
~ .. -i5.88
7.88
12.88
11.88
18.88
NOW
16.88
31.88
43.88
NOW
2.88
3.88
NOW
3S.88
59.88
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D 20 only 2 pc. Boxer Style Sleepers,
si11s 4-8 4.98
D 20 only Girls' I 00 ;'. Nylon Gowns,
sizes 1-3 2.98
·· 0 10 only Boys' IOO i'. Polyester 2 pc.
Sleepers, sites 1 .. r 1/i
0 25 only Boys' 2 pc. Mesh Knit
Pajamas, sites 1-3
Women's Sportswear
D 40 only lacy C.rdigans
20 only Pleid Pents
15 only long Sleev1 Print Blouses
9 only Embroidered Cardigans
2.98
2.98
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Junior Shop
D 50 only Junior Bik inis
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D
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15 onty long Sleeve Print Shirts
12 only-..Short Sleeve Cardigans
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Men's furnishings
. D 80 only Men's Swimwear
D 60 Men's Sport Shirts
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15 only Jeen Sh irts
60 only Shortie Pa jama s
30 .. T ercy .shirts
16 .Zip Front Sweaters
47 only long Sleeve Turtlenecks
18 only Leyer-look Sets
12 only Sleeveless Sweaters
Men's Clothing
O 44 only Corduroy Rencher Jacket
D 4 only Split Cowhide Jacket
Orig."
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O 11 only Double Knit Jackets 17.88.24.88
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50 only Casuel Slacks
98 only Better Quelity Suits
30 only Walking Shorts
140 only Double Kn it Dress
Slacks
Garden Shop
D 155 only I Gal. Asst. Plents
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IO" Hanging Baskets
5 Gal. Asst. Plants
5 on ly 5 Gel. Asst. Plants
5 only 2 Gal. Roses
~Yarttage
10.98-14 .98
4.98-9.98
80.00-90.00
8.98
13.00-15.00
Orig.
1.49-1.59
6.99
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4.99
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D I 00 only yds. Cotton Crepe Prints
Orig.
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40 only yds. Poly Crepe Prints 2.98
38 only yds. Jewel Print 4.98
150 only yds. Back to Bee.le-Prints 2.39
70 only yds. Double Knit Coordinate t '.99
~only yds, Cotton/Poly Stretch Terry 3.99
Gift Department
D 70 ·only RO~e;. · A~~angement
0
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6 only Bar lamp•
9 only Do uble Bell Alerm Clock
~ 60 only Novelty Cendles
Bedding & Linen
[J l onlY L1mens Bedspreed, Queen
O 4 onl)' Country F1ir'T1blecloth
_ .. D 36 only Kin9'" Size Sh•ets~~~
0 180 oniy Pillow C.1ts
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10.00
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9.19
1.75
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2.81
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NOW
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6.41
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Housewares
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0 50 only WaJt Disney Slush Mug
Orig.
1.49
4.99-8.99
19.99
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9 only Enamel Clam Steamers
5 only Electric Hibachi
75 only Gless Mugs
Furniture
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3 only Bed Frames " 55.95
I only Sofa, Bleck Vinyl·
·1 only Geme Ii1ble, RoUnd, White
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I only Grendfather Ro.cker, Blick
only Grandfather Rocker, Bleck
only Pine Rocker
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only Arm Chair
only Cocktail Table
only Mettress, Full
2·.75.00
J/9.95
150.00
89.95
94.95
124.95
170.00
170.00
89.00
140.00
49 .95
Home Electronics
0 ~ only Sol;d Stoto AM/FM
Turntable . 129.88
49.95
37.95
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359.95
299.95
199.00
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O · 12 only Solid Stat~ Stereo-Phono
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I only ·E.A. Stereo TV Theetr1
only 3. Pc. Stereo. Console
only Contemp. Stere1o 8 T r~ck
I only Mod. Stereo Phono
4 only 9" B&W TV
I only ~olid State Stereo, .8 Treck I Sf.88 ·
Major Appliances
D · I only Port. Dis hwesher, White.
Orig.
181.00
239.95 0 I
0
only 30" Ges Ran9t1 White • only 19' SBS Refrig.
w/lce Miker, Avo.
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17' TM Refrig.
w/lce Mek•r, Cop. -
419.95
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Floor Covering
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3 only 5'x8'6" Ovel Fringe Rug, Gold 46.00
4 on ly 5x86'" Oval Fringe Rug , Avo. 46.00
I only 6'x9'· Loop Level Rug , Red 18.00
I only 4'x6' OVal Sheg Rug , Pink 21 .00
I only 5'9"x8'6" Ovel Shag Rug,
Blue Green
only ..5.'...9J8~6 " Oval..Sh.ag..Rug,
Blue
only 5'9"x8'6" loop 'level Rug,
Orange
only 8'6"xl 1'6" loop Level Rug ,
Blue
only 6'9"x8'6" loof':I' L!!_tl_Rug,
· Gold
22.00
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2 only Sun Umbrell•, Green & White ]9.99
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4 only Sun Umbrella, Gre111 I Whitt 32.88
I only Sun C1nopy, Orange & White 30.00
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0 7 only Stul Shelving Un;t 14.99 El only-StooHhoMng iii"t ____ f.lf
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0 6 only Air Conditioner Cover l .99
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BEA ANDERSON, Edito•
'rkl•Y. ,..,,_lift H, im , ... IS
Hopi work is characterized by its
overlay technique (above left).
ZtJ,/li work features inlay and delicate
stonework (below left), while-Navajos
use stone to enhance silverwork
.(below).
Bau les, Bea Big
Stories by JO OLSON.
01 ~ o.llY l"llot Sl•ff
Authentic American Indian jewelry is
everywhere.
Teenagers are buying il like mad , col-
lectors are searching the shop1 for
WWSU81 pieces and everyone is stopping
to look. ·
But unless buyers bcwnre -it is the
-xller!s market and there aie..huge prot
Jts to be made -they may be cheated.
Prices range u1> to several thousand
dollars ; nothing for an amateur lo deal
with.
' I
I
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l
When buying Indian jewelry, two basic
guidelines should be followed. One sbou.ld
buy on]y from reputable dealers who will
back up what they sell, and a new col-
lector shoW.d shop extensively to learn to
distiniuish between good and bad work
before buying.
Several Grange Coast traders and
dealers helped answer the most fre.
quently asked questions about 'Indian
jev;elry : 1
Contrary to what n1ost people think,
commented O. F. de Castro (Trader
Oly), American Indians only recently
started making silver and turquoise
jewelry:
TAUGHT BY SPANISH
"The first recorded use of silve r by the
Southwestern'Indians Is in t~ late 1850s
by the Nava1jos," he said. •;The Indians
were-taught silversmithing by the
itinerant Spanish silversmiths t h a t
Sue Dl Maio had no wa y of knowing, 27
years ago, when she opened a shop with
a little Indian jewelry tucked in. the back,
that she wOuld be' cresting a wave of
renewed 1nterest in Indian arts a quarter
century later.
Her business in San Juan Capist rano.
bich features tourist trinkets, was her
bread and butter and the Indian art more
a whim, was a way al keeping in touch
with the Indlans she had known in her
cbildhOOd.
Now, her stock of Indian jewelry is
worth more than all the trinkets she
keeps for the tourists who visit the
mission acrass from her shop, -
Sue, 'a graduate .of the University of
Redlands and a credentialed speech
therapist, was born in Texas and moved
to Phoenix with her parents when she
.wu a child.
There. she became acquainted with the
Jlopi , Navajo and Apa~e fndi.ans and
their crafts, and developed a &!-ap,
preciaUon for their jewelry, bas ets, pot-
tery and rugs. all or which she later
to bring to her trading post.
U1'1HLY ADORNED
.. I wu the orlglnal hippie," laughs Sue,
who usually Wears several sliver and tur-
ouobe necklaces, an armful of bracelets
and a selection of rin"~·-_ ~ from her ~nonal collectton ot aDOUt 1 hundre
plttes.
She explained that in the early days of
her Jndlan jewelry Sales, no one wou.td
dare to have worn that many adornmcnl\..
at once. ·
0-the yetrs sh<! has become at\
autborily on Indian <;rafts and la ollen
..
followed the Spanish conquistadors into
New Mexico and Ari1.ona. They traded
silver trinkets to the Indians for horses.
blankets_ and other Indian-made goods."
De Castro pointed out that the Indians
adapted for their own use many of the
items brought in by the Spaniards.
The squash blossom, for example, is
not a traditional Indian design many cen-
turies..old. ll--is_!!.an elongated \~ersion oL
the small silver pomegranate ~'Ot'lt by
Spanish men as a trouser and cape orna-
ment." • ,
The naja1 or Centerpiece or -a necklace ,
"was taken from the centerpiece of the
silver mounted bridle which came to
the Indians from the Spaniards who bor-
rowed it fri>m the lt1oors in the 14th cen-
tury.''
James Machen of Balboa Island added
that Indians started setting turqll'oise In
silver in the late 1880s.
COLORS VARIED
Turquoise comes in a wide range of
color, from light blue to dark green.
It is a "hydrous aluminum phosphate
colored by copper salts \vhich is
deposited by water action and is found lV
veins in other rock. This matrix, or
mOther rock, is responsible for the mark-
ings in turquoise," said Tom Bahti in his
book, "Southv;estern Indian Arts and
Crafts."
Turquoise is mined in four states.
Nevada, __ Arizona. Nc_w ~1exico and
Colorado, and experienced traders can
•
tell the general area of the stone's origin
but not the specific mine, de Castro
stressed.
Turquoise has three imitators. blue
glass or enamel, .artificial compounds
closely resembling turquoise in com-
position and other miperals made to
resemble turquoise by stains or dyes, de
Castro said.
Indians use sterling_silv.et.in their _wfil:k
but this is never indicated on the jewelry.
.. Any item that is stamped 'sterling' or
'hand-made' ls generally the product of too Indian jewelry factories which ·
abound today in Arizona or New Mex-
ico," he cautioned.
WHITE GAIN
"In these factories the work is the prod-
uct ol mod er n machinery, punch
presses, casting ma chines, drop ham-
m'ers and other modern tools operated by
Indians in a production line method for
the gain or their white employer."
Indian jewelry is distinct in its a~
pearance, Machen 'commented. Navajo
\\'Ork is distinguished by its massive
quality and simplicity of design.
" "Turquoise is used primarily to
enhance the silverwork, which is heavy
and intricate," de Castro added. ·
Zuni work emphasized the use of tur-
qu-0ise and shells, with the silver thought
()f as a base or means of holding the
designs together. de Castro said.
Turquoise, jet, shells and coral are all
utilized. .t6Clusters needlepoiilt, channel
Takes Stock •
work and intays are ttie specialty and ·
almost exclusive work done by the Zuni
Indiant • according to de Castro.
EGG CARTON ,
The Newport Beach resident explained
that "clusters and needlepoint are small
pieces of turquoi se set in silver bezels or
rings to hold them in the ornament.
Channel work and inlay is the setting of
!tone-in a-silver (rame constructed like----
an egg carton or beehive."
The Zuni work is colorful, he noted.
and their designs include the sun god,
devil dancer, rain god, wolf r.ian, birds
and animals.
Hopi work was much the same as the
Na:vajo and 1.\mi work until 1938, B.Q..hti
explained. "In 1938 a program instituted
by the A-1useum of Northern Arizoria en-
couraged Hopi smiths to deve!Op a style
of sHverwork based on their distinctive
pottery designs and executed in an
overlay technique.
"The experiment y;as so succes.sful
that most Hopi si lver "·orkers continue to
follow this new trend."
American Indian jewelry is "an art
that people have not appreciated for a
number of years," de Castro said. "In-
dians are finally being recognized for the
artists they arc."
Is American fndian je'!'·eJry a passing
fad or a permanent fancy?
"I believe it's here to stay," de Castro
afffrmed.
Friends ~~"""'--'---'=--=-.::_::__ -----------
called oo to appraise an estate,' colleciion
or a single piece of jewelry. She also
works with insurance companies as ail
appraiser l\nd lectures about <lnce a
month for various grolips.
Each year she has an Indian show and
directs part or the profits to the Navajo
lrfbe. Over the years she hns helped
raise a tolal of $10,000 for the Navaj6
Tribal MUseum in New Mexico, and this
year's November show '!''ill benefit a
Navajo orphanage.
HIPPIE INFLUENCE
The resurgence of interest in Indian
'Crafts, she believes first came from the
hippies. "Th4,!:Y ..wore Indian jewelry as a
protest," she_ said. "This was a whole
generation of Idealists."
Now, there is generally a more caretul
look at the early heritage or the. United
States and a greater appreciation Cor art
forms that are slowly dwindUng ,way.
''Tb~.te s a real back-to nature feel-
ing." she odded. "'Young pcopJ<Fiirc~
wonderful. They put into focus what we
were doing to nature."
Sue believes that "in 10 to 20 years
lliero Wlll1iiili01Mlan crafts belng1111111e
or tt>ey will be higher In price. There Is a
general drying up or all Indian crafts.
For eximple, '1lhcre are no 11V1ng ·
baketmakers, as such. 'l'hose •left are so
o a , 1eir output is virtually icro. This ls
al.so true of rui"weavers." ·
HO\j. ts 11 colleetor sure hi! ls buying
Mthentlc work and not machine.made
lmltatlQllSI -
REP\JTABLB DEALERS ' . Sue adYW. a. lieiJnnlng collecro! to
• \
Sue Di Maib and her
daughter, Victoria
discuss merits of
squash_ blossom
necklace.
fint learn about Indian crafts through
reliable reading information, then buy
only from repUtable dealers.
To Sue, lndlan handwork is more than
a business. It is a part of her life.
She lovingly talks a~ut the Indians
who are her fri ends as well as her sup-
pliers, and she virtually cares.ses the
jewelry and handcr,ll{ts wit h her words
as she describes them.
Mediterranean. It was brought to lhe In-
dians by the Spanish, who also taught
tbe.m th;e arJ ot making silver
''See th1s yeUow in a Zuni inlaid pin?
It's jusl a hint of firelight. Fire Is very
Important to the Indians.
"Women are as floe or finer
silversmiths than men.
'ilndians rarely reproduce the huma1,1
llgure. ·
"Thtre are no ~rguins In Jhdlan
jewelry.''
(See CRAFT, J!ace 111
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I fi DAILY PILOT
From Page 15
• • Craft
Sue. an artist and colleclor
of Alexican art.1 now is \vritlng
~ book about the Indian crafts-
men and the transition of In·
dlan Jewelry .•
··~ longev\ty ol the craft.s-
n1cn ts short," she said. "It Is
important to .record these
people and their style."
She disputes the statement
that Indian crafts are not as
fine as they once were and
shows a collection of old In·
dian jewelry to prove her
point.
The silver of the newer jC\I'·
clry is or better quality and
the l\'Orkmanship is bctt~r.
she points o u I. "Their tools
11·cre primitive and their ap-
proach to silver different,'.' she
s:.1id or the older craftsmen.
That · the quality of Indian
11·ork has become better is in-
dicated by the price t<'l~S.
'1'\mgs:. the least expr.psivc
item. begin in the $6 price
range and necklaces. around
the .tOp of the price range,can. -·
c.:ost thousands of ctollars.
Sue deals with several
thousand serious collectors
throughout the United Stales
and several thousand "occa-
sional" collectors, and she now
is buying from children and
grandchildren of the Indian
a Misans whose work she sold
in the ti-ading post over 2S
years ago.
Time has'proven her hunch
correct that she· should C(J111c
to San Juan Olpistrano to
make pottery and sell souve-
nirs and Tndian jew,elry rather
than become a speech ther-
apist. Indian jewelry's ·time
his ·come an<t. few poopl~ are
more qualified to discuss its
merits than Sue Di Maio.
Shells and bon•
are strung
to form an ..
unu1ual
Santo Domingo
fetish
necklace.
y our Horoscope Tomorrow
'
T~ere Is · a H-itch ;-to Riding
DEAR ANN LANDERS ' Whal I have
to say probably will give yoo the chills. It
did rhe. A grOl.lp of kids tall of us
between 16 and 18 years of age) were sit·
ting around about three monim ago talk-
ing about your column on hitchhiking.
You spoke out against picking up hltcb-
bikirs and you 4lso mentioned the dan·
gers of getting into a car with a stranger.
· I was the only one in the crowd .,..,ho
agreed with you. The girl who was most
vocal ln her disagreerrient said she'd
been hitching rides since she was 13 and
had never had any trouble. According to
her, if a girl doesn't h)vite "trouble"
she doesn't get any. ,
Maybe you read about her in lhe paper
a few days ago. She was hitchhiking in
Indiana and was found in a cornfield by a
paMing motorist.
At this moment that paor kid is in
serious condition in an lndianapolis
hospital. She had been raped and beaten,
all her teeth and part or her gums were
knocked out. The police said the person
\Vho picked her up must have tx.>en a
sadist . .
No RQint in saying ... , told you so." but
I remember how alone (almost foolish ) I
feli in that crowd when I said I thotighl
Ann Landers was right.
Say it again. Maybe this .time more
people will listen. -A HOOSIER WHO
APPRECIATES YOU
DEAR H.: Here's your letter aod my
thanks for writing u. I don't need to say
it again. You did.
DEAR ANN LANDERS : I'm a bit of a
museum piece -sa'me vintage as you.
It's with a ', sense of joy that I see
ballroom dancing is com.iJ')g back. Will
you answer a question. please?
\Vhen doing the fox trot with a refined,
middle-aged woman, how close should I
hold her? This is no joke. I need an
,
answer. -BIG BAND ERA BERT
DEA.R BERT: llold ber rlose enough
so you11 know you•re_danclug with a
woman, but lea\·e e.nollgb-1~.e so
SHE'LL know you think 1be'1 a la~y.
DEAR ANN LANDERS: I've dooe
wme. l'e!,earch and found out that you
are a rake.-nsere·are;-inJact,.dozens of
';Ann Landers" around the country.
Local newspapers answer the letters
'ttiey find Interesting an<ttear up-the rest.
The people v.'ho write to you for-advice
are really getting their answers from a
pseudo Ann Landers who lives ln their
town and works on the local newspaper.
Thooe poor fools are thrilled when they
receive their advice because they think
it's from you. ..
I am an employe of a large newspaper
and can prove that what I have said is
truJ!:. Try lo gtt out of this one. -HIP
FROM !IlCKSVILLE-.._
DEAR WCK: The Ann ~s col-
umn that you re11d in HJcUvllle Is syn-
dicated to nearly 800 new1papers arouDd
the world. There Is only one Ann Laodera
and that's me -here l.n Chicago. .
No newspaper bas the rt1ht to open a
letter addressed to Ann Landers,. much
less send out advice over my signature.
You say )'OU can prove tbat what you
have said ls true. That's a very strong
statement and 1 cbaUenge you to produce
the evidence.
You didn't sign yoW" letter nOr did you
send an address, but I'm printing It, not
unly for your eyes, but the eyes or 54
Keynote
mUlion .readers. Now put up or abut IP.
Try and get out of tbl1 one. -ANN LAN·
DERS.
DEAR ANN LANDERS: I married !hi.!
girl less than a year ago. My wife ls'not
interested In sex. When J say "not in-
terested" I mean like almost never. We
have been going to a counselor but it
hasn't helped.
Last week I decided to talk to my
father-in-law abootJ1.._l..lj'_ -Wi1fl J! a jot
like her mother and I thought niaybe he
had had the same problem \Vilh his wife
and could help me. He said, "She· Is
YOUR headache. Leave me out of it."
Then he told my wUe that I must be
crazy to come to him with something like
that.
Who is wrong here, him or me·~
SMuldn't a father be interested in hi:.
daughter's hap'piness? -pft;NNSYLVA-
NIA PROBLEM
DEAR P.: Sorry, You pulled a prize
boner. 1 know of no iubject ntore dellcatt:
and les1 appropriate to dtsCuss wttb a
glrl'1 father than her sexual in-
adequacies. Continue to get counseling
and keep your moutb 1but.
Are your parents too strict? Hard to
reach? Ann Landers" booklet. "Bugged
by Parent5? How To Get !\fore
Freedom," could help you brldge the
generation gap. Send 50 cents in coin
with your request and a long, stamped.
self-addressed envelape to the Daily
Pilot.
-Meetings
YW Women Open to members. their religion must get out or
cloisters and Into the real
\\'Orld where peop~ live.
of Mr. and Mrs. George J ef·
fries. Mrs. Dee Hate. craft in· -hu.s!Jands arid friehds. t~e din-
structOr will talk a b o u t ne~ lecture will be preceded
quilting. and other crafts dur-by a social hour at 7 p.m.
ing the first fall meeting of the Thursday, Oct. 4, in the
Santa Ana Y\VCA Women's Laguna Hills Hilton Inn.
Club at 9:30 a.m. Thursday. The speaker, who has
Oct. 4. in the Y\VCA. Santa authored the book "Spaceship
Ana. Earth: People and Pollution."
The group n1eets on the first will talk about 'Tis Not Only
and third Thursday of each Love That Makes the World
rnonth. and highlights of the Go Round.
coming year include programs
such as Shower of Flowers,
Christmas ~farket, nower ar-
ranging and a talk by a mar-
riage cotmSelor.
LB AAUW
Trojan Guild
The guild will present a pro-
gressive dinner Saturday, Oct.
6. NeY,.port Beach homes
which will be used for ·the
three cowses will be those of
the Ro ger Blanchards. Ken·
ncth Holl3Ilds nnd J o h n
O'llQqe!ls.
Pi Beta '1lh\
South Coasl Alumnae Club,
Pi Beta Phi will open the 20th
y·ear of the ~lebrity Book
Reviews Friday, Oct. 5. ln the
Newport Harbor Yacht Club.
The shop is open from noon
until 4 p.n1. Tuesdays through
Sundays.
Polka Club
A dinner dance and fashion
, sho\\· \\'ill be presented by the
OrangP. County Pqlka Club
Saturday, Oct. 6, at 6 p.m. in
the Anaheim Elks Club.
Tall Club
• ·Taurus:
'
Beware of Machinery
Dr. Irving s. Bengelsdorf,
known for his current science
news column, Of Atoms and
1\len, will be the featured
speaker for the Laguna Beach
Branch, American Association
of University Women .
Trojan Guild of Orange
County wiU hear a lecture by
the Rev. Alvin S. Rudisill,
chaplain of the University of
Southern California, ~en
members meet at lo a.m.
Thursday. Oct 4. in Mesa
Verde Country Club.
The lecturer.who is in de·
mand across the nation as a
preacher and as a speaker for
teenager grouJ'.>8, believes
Programs will feature Miss
Carlotta Williams, well known
professional literary critic,
who v.ill review current best
sellers and give current
literary trends.
-Her-guest speaker will be
Mona Bruna TilorMs, ac-
complished actress and author
of "By Emily Possessed." a
true love story about actors.
acting, the stage, motion pic-
tures. radio and television .
Celebrating ' the 10th an-
niversary ol its formalicm wHI
be the Orange County Tall
Club. A party Is being planned
for Saturday. oa. 6, ·m the
Fountain Valley home of the
BJ.II Allens \\'ho ~ will be
pl'esented with a plaque in
honor of lheir past scrvice3.
' I • ' -1 ..
Mrs. M1.
$ SAVE $ MONEY
LEARN
AUTOMOBILE
DOLLARS & SENSE
LADIES -You know how
tO manage your men -
~ow learn to manage your
car.
I've developed informa-
tion which takes the mys-
tery out of your automo-
bile -explains it to you
-and tells you how to
keep it Healthy-Carefree
and Leu E.rpenslYe To o,.-•.
NO _N ~ n sen 1 e -I'll
tell you how to: -Re-
duce Operating Expenses
-Cut Maintenance Costs
-Save on Repairs -end
0.... Talk Beck to Service
:Station Attendants.
' ' :r_• Start Thi• Valuable ln-
(Ormation Working For You
~ S9nd Your N•mo, Ad-
frett end $2.00 to:
~uto Dollars & Sense
,,0. lox •4324
lryln•, C•. 92664
Attn: W. Richards
-
'ATURDAY
,"EMBER 29
13y 1>.~EY Ol\lARR AllIE~ 1i\1arch 21-April i'91:
You may be surprised by tide
of affairs. Your desires. once
. seeming far away, come close
with perhaps startling sud-
denness. Money questions con-
tinue an irritation. But you do
get action. And that has not
always been the case in this
area .
TAURUS (April 20-May 20 1:
Stay away from machinery, if
"THE HUMAN
AND THE
DIVINE ECONOMY"
Is there a relationship
betw.een our human ex-
istence, the economics
of our daily life, and
the divine nature of
man in his ·spiritual ex-
istence with God7
For answers to these
questions come and
hear this Christian Sci-
ence lecture by Nathan-
iel R. White, at
IRVINE BOWL
Sunday Ahernoon
September 30-5:00 p.m.
Spon1ored by 1st Church of
Chrl1t, Sclontltt, L•guna
B••ch
Chlld c•r• •t church
635 High Drive .
possible. You tend no\\.' to in·
vile accidents. Kev is to lie
low. Time is on yoi.ir side. You
m:ike mistakes if you rush.
push. insist or command. Plav
..... ailing game. 1-/ome en-
vironment C3n be pleasant.
GEl\fiNI (~1ay 21-June 20):
Perceive. See through sham.
Don't fall for sob story. Some
.,..•ho work with or for you have
tall tales lo tell. Listen and be
amused. But don'l take what
you hear too seriously. Refuse
to give up something for
nothing.
CANCER (June 2\.JUly 221:
You have more responsibility
than might have been an·
ticipaled. Capricorn person
plays impor1'lnt role. Affairs
of heart might be subject to
dramatic change. Love rs ·
quarrel should not be blo.,..•n
out of proporlion.
LEO !July ~Aug. 221 : One
\l'ho E!"ives you legal counsel
could have grandiose plans. Be
sure YQU.....8Cl the-lacts~nd
do scme personal e\'aluation.
Mate. pArtner gets going in
riirht direction. Persons in
authority disagree. You could
be beneficiary.
VTRGO {Aug. 23-Sept. 22\·
Iio1d off on trips, ir practical.
Wait where dealings with
relatives. close neighbors are
concerned. Don't bait, invite
connict. fn stead. enjoy clash
of ideas. You gain now by ex-
amining. be i n g inquisitive
rather than insistent.
LIBRA !Sept. 23-0cl. 22),
Intuition, teaching, unorthodox
persons -these are part of
your pattern. Now you
discover, investigate. spend
and earn. You r Own ways.
style -that become more im-
~rtant than usual. Your own
stamp is what counts. not an
imitation. That now becomes
the lesson you learn.
For A Career ... NOT JUST A]OB
BE A "WOMAN IN WHITE11
•
8tcOtM a Mtdical or 1Jtnt4' A1sistan1 1'n 4 nr 7 ,,1u111/1.1,
~~
NEW CWSIS STARTING
DA TS wid IVININGS, Oct. 1
lifetime Ploc•mant A11i1t0Mt
'AfMtMT l'lANS AVAii.Aili ~·
623 W. 17th, SANTA ANA 541-4461
VlTflAN'S lfHfllrJ AVAii.A.iii
SCORPIO \0cl. 23-i\ov. 21 ):
V!'hat appeared settled is open-
ed again for discussion and ac-
tion. Investigate. Make in-
quiries. .A. n s we r s are
forthcoming -in surprisinl'
fashion. Sagittarius. Gemlni
persons figure prominently.
Travel and messages are on
agenda.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22· )l( '~~"~""'-~"<lob-'¢ ""'-::...-...~ ~ ·
Dec. 21 J: Obstacles now serve \9.-' &> "' ~ ~
as stimulating challenges.
Refuse lo be awed by tradi-
tion. You can do some tearing
down fot the purpose of
reconstruction . Key ~ is to
create your own structures.
To avoid disappointment, prospective
brides are reminded to have their wedding
stories with black and white glossy photo-
graphs to the DAILY PILOT Women's De-
partment one week before the wedding.
CAPRfCORN (Dec. 22 -Jan.
19): Relationships are in-
tensified. Nothing now is apt
to occur in lukeYl'ann fashion.
It is all or nothins;i:. Full con1-
1nitment is necessary. \'ou are
challenged, pressed to bring .
fo~h best efforts. Y o u gain
aU1es through opposilion.
Pictures received after that time will not
be used.
For engagement announcements it is
imperative that the story, also accompanied
by a bll'.r.k and white glossy picture, be sub-
mitted six weeks or more before the wedding
date; otherwise it will not be published.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb.
18 ~ :--Affairs_ begin to go
forward. You settle important
issues. Family situation im-
proves. Self-esteem rises. You
come more to know yourself.
Taurus, L I b r a individuals
Tu lielp fill requirements on bolh wed·
ding._and engagement stQrles, forms are
fvailable in all tbe DAILY Pr!,QT offices.
Fu.rt.her questions will be answered by
Women's Section staff members at 642-4321.
could be in picture. Harmony
is restored. Progress replaces
retrogression. Concert List Set
PISCES (Feb. 19--March 20):
Minor disappointment is just , A cpncerl season of four
that -don't make more out of dates has been announced IJy
it than it ls. You y.·jlJ com-the Harbor Area Community
prehend. y1rgo i~ involved. Concert Association , begiMing
Solneme is 'vork1ng behind wjth a Sunday, Sept. JO, ap-
~enes oo your behalf -know pearance by the Little Angels
1t and be gr at ef u I . of Korea.
IF TODAY IS •. Y ~UR All concerts \Viii take place
BmTHDAY .you are 1ntu1tlvc. in the Orange c.oast College
a teacher 1;11 best sense. a auditorium, according to Dr.
seeker of J~Stlce. one who Wallace Remsen, association rever~ fair play and president.
perceives pulse flf public. You also can be some w ha 1 Completing the schedule arc
autocraUc when you feel cause Carl Matthes, Saturday, Dec.
is right -you have religious I. 8 p.m.; Jorge Morel Duo,
-zeal and this past April was Saturday, Jan. 26. 8 p.n1 .. and
one of most significant months Karan Annstrong, Saturd<iy.
of year for you . Basic change May ll, 8 p.m.
.~l'.'-3 in October lmd traveL Reciprocity_ privileges are
could be involved. -extended to rnembers.-Dr.
llemsen said : with conceMs
scheduled in cities throughout
Southern Calilornia from Sept.
23 to ~1ay 15.
-
chair & ottoman
City of Hope
A wine-tastin2 party will be
sponsored 'by lhe Saddteback
Oiapter. City of Hope at 7:30
p.m. Friday. Oct. 5, in the
Brookside Winery. C o s t a
Mesa.
UYC
At midway point of the an-
nual Fall Regatta of the Lido
Isle Yacht Club will be a din-
ner party which will begln
·with-cocktails at 6:30 p.m.
Saturday. Oct. 6, in the Lido
Jslc Clubhouse .
Council
Closing the doors on the
Sales and Rental Shop so they
may enjoy a dinner party will
WATCHERS
Orange County Association
for Retarded Cltildren will
have an orientation for the
Women's Auxiliary Tralnin~
Course for Home Employed
Respite Service.
Anyone inte r ested In
participating ih the WAT-
CHERS program is invited to
the ""'kshop. scheduled to
take place from 10 a .m. to 3
p.m. Saturday. Oct. 6, in the
associatioo office, Santa Ana.
CM Women
Major fund-raising endeavor
of the Costa MW Junior
Women \\'ill be a flawailan-
themed dinner dance Satur-
day, Sept. 29. in the clubhouse.
Luau festiviti~ 'viii-begin with
a !JOCial hour at 6 p.m. and
authentic dances will b c
perfonned fol101,1•ing the din-
ner.
be Newport Harhor Ar tic;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;_;;;;;;_;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; l\1useum Sales and Rental II
Council members and their
husbands.
The party will take place
Saturday, Oct. 6, in the home
UFFF.lt'.
UPHOLSTERY w....Y .. wm .......
1tH HarMt ltwl.
c..te ..... -141.0259
crnorrs
SPORTSWEAR
DAILY 10-& MON. I. THURS. 10.,
Westclitf Plan, 17th and Irvine.
Nc>o1·por1 Beach,Calilornia9l660
FALL SALE!
Orange County's Largest Selection
of Contemporary Furn iture
open
Sunday l--5 --~-
entire invelltory reduced! BIG PARADE AND
LOBSTER BAKE SATURDAY
covered in genuine leather.
Choose: brown, block, beiQe or red
•
Sec the big parade al FASHION IS LAND
10 a.m. Saturday around Ci,rcle Drive.
Lobster Bake & Carnival all 3 days
Fri.-Sun. Sponsored by the Balboa Bay
Lions Club .
daily 11-9/totvrdoy 11 -6/sundoy 1 .. 5 • pkone .S.48-.S.Sll • ton frff 546·1262
'
•
•
I
•
AMBLER
•
"
I WON'T NEED A AAIRCllT
'TC WORK FOR "' V£TERfWMM, DAO, TME-llNIMAt.5 w:::>M'T CARE
IF MV MARIS l.OHG OR S"6R"r!
'
TUMBLEWEEDS
OH! I Goi Ii! 'IW!IE TRYIN' ltl 50Fi-
':£JAP ME INTO LE1'r1NG-'<OU MARRY
MYUAUGH'fl:R
FOR ~ER
INHERITANCE!
.
MUTI AND-JEFF
FIGMENTS
NANCY
NANCY.
IS YOUR
AUNT
THERE ?
NO, MRS.
ADAMS···
SHE'S
NOT AT
HO"'!~
.Ji·-
BRUNO. GO GET
'MUTT'S PIPE AND
SLIPPERS!
OH, WOULD
YOU COME
OVER AND
RAKE'MY
·i:EA'<fE'S?
. ..•
............ ,, ... ~::--::: ....
PEANUTS
TODAY'S CIDSSWDID PUZZLB
Yestltfd•v'• Pu1de Soiv.d:
'
ACROSS 45 Keei>•
1 Bodity
1nitud•
Ii Cowt>ov
gear: Var.
10 Suiteble
moment
14 Ctlm1x
w1itiog
47 Held1d 1he
bill
48 Wink
~ Chemiclll
prefix
SO Flockof 15 Prohibition 16 A1it;n gllM in flight republic: . 53 TrH
·var. 54 Rldg•of
17 Corrupt .. nd
18 Pr9ClpitolJI 58 The " /\S'' cf
hill: 2. words "WASP"
2() Stor1g11re1 •
22 "limell• 61 Sp1n11hbuH
·-·I" 62 SU\p IWIY
23 Bowling i l1ty 83 M1rtin.i
unit• in1111d11nt
24 Hiving lived &4 H1rmf~I
mor1 y11r1
26 ln11ne
27 Mitlt1ry
1t1tclt:
2 words
30 Family
membe1'3
J.4 W1t1r·
course•
35 P11cM1on's
uesa••
36 Bit
37 R1i11
38 A bl11 •o Mist
41 To11I
earning•:
Abbr.
42 Word on•
re clip!
43 Woolen
fabric
6S Immunizing
191nl1
66 Wimer
for1C8st
67 Hamlet,
fOfone
DOWN
1 C1re11e1
1wlr.w11dly
2 Colorful fish
3 Oryup:V1r
4 Cabot or
C1rtier
S S1r1it1:
Abbr.
6 Abhorrence
7 Hungry 11
I Rhymer
9 S1tur1t1
10 Diatribe
11 Asien
country
12 Designed
13 Supplement•
with ellort
19 Sare engrily
21 Abuu:
lnlorm1l
25 Remote
26 Order
27 Exceedingly
CIUltic
28 Mist Ca1tle
29 Be 11fec11d
byeven11
JO Accepted
1ver1ge
31 01 some
furniture:
Informal
32 Armistice
33 V1tu1ble
violin:
tnfOfmll
' ' ' E I
35 C1ntr1I
39 Pronoun
40 8191n to
g•OW
42 Keyboard
ln11rum1n1
44 Come to
shore
46 Sttd tor
c1ndll-
m11i.lng
•1 ·--···
Tuuday
•9 Feirylill.e
creature
50 Plant fluids
Sl Animal joint
S2 Ge1m1n river
53 Autumn
55 ·-· Scotie
!i6 Ireland
)
57 FHet of ·--
59 Cell !Of help
60 Tennie g11r
Ml , ~UCK!
(M J.lERE!W1tt'S
THE 6<JES1 ROOM?
JUDGE PARKER
MISS PEACH
I
f
!
l •
DICK TRACY
by Doug Wildey
by Tom K. Ryan
by Al Smith
-by Dale Hale
•
by Ernie Bushmiller
,,
F'rlday, ·September 2s: 1973 DAIL v J!ILOT I .
DOOLEY'S WORLD by
-------, .-----_.., .-------. r-::::;r".'-"-"""""l=::'i' ~ • ¢ $/Gt , ..
:I LOVE
COOKIE'S !!
tsf's s1W•
mA,T !
SALLY BANANAS
GORDO
MOON MUL INS
~£i:K ME OUT,
EMMY·· 15 T~IS
OM' PJ>OPer< WAY
""R:> E'AT Pio'>
-.-
/
ANIMA,L CRACKERS
~ING
IS IN"ltlOSE
BOSM&S/
9·18
by Charles M. Schulz
NJNSEN5E! I MfARD \Ill/ HA!> 'i!lU~
A ume 6UE5T aITT"A6E ex AA>'E HAO
SOME"IHIN6 Ollr IN /JACK-THEMMMf
CMON, LfAP M£. 10 IT! IT A LITl'LE
5166a::,
CIWCK.. ~ 'ii
by Harold Le Doux
by Mell
l C:IRTAIWL.'/ WOU~C>!!
l'IAT I~ NOT •ASV "TO
00 TMAT WMl!N
~'11:1! CAll:li:YING Mri
Al'.OIANC> SY 1Hll
~Ll'IAF"F OI' 1'Hf NUIC •••
IN TWO OF TIE CASES,
TMESE GMAARl!t> 9AOOM5
SEEM TO HAVE
PLAYED A PART.
• -
by Chester Gould
15.. TMIS""T~
ONE MRS. e.o..R\..£V --
WAS
U'SING?
5MAR1NO Mli/.ES l'.W5
fl'.'l.. £() NO$.'-
by Gus Arriola
•
by Ferd Johnson
Ji I
by Roger Bollen
'Yo.JR S!l0£SAAEAi J:)EYS .. NOl'JTRYTO
Rf.MEMllCR WllERf lUJ TOOK Off )()UR SlllllT. •
'
. •
•
I
I
• • ' t
•
•
DAILY PILOT F"rtdat, Septemtltf 28, 1973
Ryan'~ Magic Number O; Magic Letter IS K
• .. Give the Nolan Ryan Award to Cy
Youog," said Harry OaJton, general
manager of tlie California Angels.
Dalton had watched hls 26--year-old·
• rtghf-hander strike out I& 1wfjnnesota
Twins in an 11 i.Ming. 5-4 victory 'I11un-
da:t night , breaking by one the 1965 ma-
j<>ir league strikeout reC!)rd of 382 set by
Salldy Koulax.
Ryan, who fanned Rick Ree6e with a ·
high.inside last ball. overcame a cramp
J n hi$ rlght hamstring muscle to cont inue
ifter Koufa1'1 record.
Ryon, v.·hose 7ll strikeout' ln con-
secutive 1easons broke Koufa:r• 1965-66
reccrd of 699 for the Los Angele~
Dodgers, would have pitched in Sunday's
season finale if he hadn't broken the
record.
"ln lhe ninth Jonlng I got a cramp In
my right barn.string," said Ryan.
Between innings the trainer and doctor
worked on lt.
Torborg Was
His Throw
Jeff Torborg, an excellent defensive
catcher, hoped he failed to throw out a
funner at second base.
The Anaheim Stadium crowd of 9,100
booed at the thought or a possible
caiirornia Ange~s double play ..
Such derensive plays wou1d have
prevented. Nolan Ryan from breaking
Sandy Koufax' major leag_ue. strikeout
record or 382 set in 1~. Ry an fanned 16
ri.1.innesota Twin s for 383 in 'Mwrsday
ni'ght's II-inning, 54 Angels' victory.
He struck out Ricll Reese on three fast
balls for the last Minnesota out in the
I I th. On Reese's second strike Rod
Care\v stole second, just beating
Torborg's thro\V.
'"When I went to throw the guy out,"
said Torborg, ··1 hoped it was close -
bUt safe. l was very happy when he was
caned safe."
It \Vas another in the long list of
catching thrills for Torborg, who caught
orie of Ryan's two no-hitters th.is season.
Mlnn•NI• (41 ·C•IHornl• IJ) •b r llrbl Brye, ct 6 l 2 o Ai\•ers, cl
Co-, 2b ' l 0 0 Ollllt, IS
Oll')la, dh 5 l 2 I Aobln$0n, dll
KUlllllrew, lb ' o 2 2 McCr•w. lb
Re~. lb 1 O O O Pint.on, rf Holl, rl $ 0 I D Berry, II
MJrten¥•1d, c s 1 1 O SCllnblm, ph
SoOert>lm, 3tl J o o O GaTI-siher. lb
Ad1rM, If • 0 1 0 8P1rlttr, 2b
Terre11, 11 s o 1 1 Torborv, c
1b r~rDI
5 1 2 0
5 2 2 0
J 1 , 1
• I 2 I
• 0 0 I ~ 0 I 1
1 0 I I
' 0 0 0 • O I O
NOLAN RYAN
As a Los Angeles Dodger, he caught San·
dy Koulax' perlect game in 1961 and Bill
Singer's no-hitter in 1970. In 1968 he was
1'PhysicaUy, my arm felt good. 1 was
&utpriatd It felt as Sood as It did ," said
Ryan, 21·11 with'two J»h1tters and a one-
hltter this season. "We debated coming
out arter the ninth. \Ve didn't want to
take a chance of my not being able to
come back Sunday or risking in}ury wilh
the cramp."
Ryan, who pitched to 11 batters after
striking· out Steve Brye for No. 382 in the
eighth iMlrlg1 said he didn't know if he
Happy
Late
•
behind the plate when the Dodgers' Don ·
Drysda\e,tied. the major league reoord·of
consecutive scoreless innings.
Torborg couldn't remember when he
was catching when Koufax set bis record.
"It was a foregone conclusion that he'd
do it and we were in a tight pcMant
race. I don't know."
Ryan developed a cramp in his right
hamstring muscle in the ninth inning and
both Ryan and Torborg wanted to get the
strikeout record Thursday night.
"What if I throw the guy out, we go in·
to another inning and Nolan can't pitch,
what i! his leg is too sore for him to
come back by Sunday'!" Torborg said.
The season ends SUnday,
"For him to throw. as hard as he did
with that cramp is really something. He
threw with his leg stiff but his fast ball
was just as hard."
Torborg said Koufax and Ryan com·
pare favorably. Nolan has the tools W
possibly accomplish what Sandy did.
"He's the same type of pitcher. When
M's gone five innings witOOut giving up a
hit, you say, 'oh, oh, another no-hitter.'
"I don't think you can·throw ·harder.
You get to a Point where no human can
throw harder. I imagine you can gauge.
throws by machines and one might be a
degree or so faster. But I can't tell," said
Jeff, who wore a sponge on his catching
hand.
GeJt1, p o o O o Aran, p
H_...,s,p 0000
8Cmpbell, p o o o o
Totals .f1 • 10 • To!als
• 0 0 0
0 0 D 0
JISJOJ
"' -. Cy, Yoong Award
0... out wt11n winning "'" scor9d.
Mlnneso11 lOO OGI 000
C11!lornl1 JOI 000 ODO Ol -'
l:-8, P1rtft", Gollr, Sodtrholm, G11U1;~r. T~
rell. OP-MlnMMllll 4, C~lltorni11 3. LOB-MlnnHOt1
11. C.1l!lornr1 6. 2B-IC lllebrew, Sc~!nDlm. $& -
B•re, Rlv1•1, Ad.JIN, C1rew. SF-Pinson .
IP H R ER
Get!• 1 ~·· -H.lnds !I -1 0 D
B. Campti.II (L, J.ll l 113 • I 1
M. •r•n iw. 21-16) 11 io • J 'WP-N. Ryan. T-J:lO. A-t,100,
•• so , ' ' . •· . ' ..
RODGERS PLEASED
WITH PRACTICES
.LOS ANGELES -Summertime
temperatures in the 90s hampered UCLA
~·orkouts the la st couple of days but
coach Pepper Rodgers says he's happy
wjfh his Bruins' preparation for their
game Saturday at 1'ilcbigan State.
"Despite the heat I'm still pleased with
our practice this week," Rodgers said
alter the last Bruins dri~y.
UCLA was to leave for East Lansing,
Mlch., today minus starting middle
guard Mike Martinez, whoee sprained
a.Dkle has created problems for Rodgers.
Palmer, Hunter Chief
Foes of Angels' Ry-an
BALTIMORE (AP) -The Baltimore
Qrioles, who don't have to bat against
Jim Palmer, rate their teammate as a
shoo-in fo r the American League's Cy
Young pitchihg award.
Even Palmer, although less expressive
than he is on most subjects, thinks he
deserves the honor this season.
"If the vote is based on how you pitch·
ed." Palmer said today, "I guess I
should win it."
Palmer, an accomplished after dinner
speaker, would flunk his course on the
power of positive thinking with that com·
ment. But he's willing to let his statistics
do the talking. They speak loudly.
Since JuJy 14, the 27-year-old right-hand-
er has won 14 of 16 decisions to become
a 20-game winner for the fourth con·
secutive season . He takes a 22-8 record
into his final regular season appe._rance
tonight against Cleveland.
In 10 of Palmer's complete game vic·
tories, he allo"'.cd five hits or less. He
hurled his second career one-hitter, and
w h en he pitched .a two.bitter oo
June 16 he retired 25 consecutive Texas
batters before Ken Suarez singled in the
ninth.
Palmer has 19 complete games and six
shutouts in 37 starts, and his earned run
average is 2.40.
Even Elements Conspire
"Jim is a complete pitcher," said
manager Earl Weaver. "He has an ex-
cellent fast ball, a good curve ball and
slider, and a very good change-up:
"He has complete command of all the
pitches, knows the hitters and where they
should be pitched, and has the ability to
throw the ball where he wants."
To F1·ustrate Aaron's Bid
ATLANTA (AP ) -Hank Aaron of the
Atlanta Braves said Thursday night the
raiOOut of the Los · Angeles-Atlanta
bakball game •·makes my chances just
that much slimmer."
The 39-year-otd star was talking about
his ho~ of equalling the legcnday Babe
Ruth 's lire-time home run record of 714
during the 1973 season.
''Anything's possible, bu t it doesn't
oo good," said Aaron , still two
runs away from tbe record with
o games remaining -against the
Astros Salunlay night and Sun-
'!:r ·steady, drizzling ritih fall in Atlanta
gbout the . day, broke at mid.af.
be!ore a downpour Oooded Atlan·
Stadlum about 45 minu es before the
uJed starting time of 7 p.m.
The umpires announced. the game
would be delayed at least one hOur and it
was finally called when it began raining
again just before the ground crew ap-
plied the finishing touches to the field .
"I was disappointed I couldn't play, but
rain is something you just can't fight,"
Aaron said. "The umpires and the team
wanted to play the game if anyway possi·
ble, but you just can't play on a field like
that. Jt looked like a pond out there."
The game will not be rescheduled since
the Dodgers play in San Diego tonight. It
was a make-up game anyway of a tie
between the two teams earlier this year.
Tonight's Dodgers game may be heard
on KFI at 7:30.
Atlanta has an open date today and
Aaron says he plah.s to go fishing and
watch his youngest son play in a football
game.
'
Jim "CaUish" Hunter, with a 21·5
record, is rated as Palmer's chief con-
tender for the Cy Young award. While
Weaver preferred not to offer com-
parisons, Palmer's teammates didn't
back off.
"Overall, you ~an't compare them this
year," said pitcher Dave MeNally.
"Hunter has had a super year, but
<f>almer is noticeably superior."
"When you check the complete games
and e.r.a., there's no q u es-ti on that
Palmer should win it," said designated
• hitter Tommy Davis.
Hunter has eight less complete games
and has allowed more than ooe extra run
.per game with a 3.4-0 e.r.a.
Although he has pitched 37 fewer in·
nings, Hunter has allowed one more hit.
Palmer has given up just one home run
in his last 12 starts and 14 for the season,
compared with Hunter's 39.
"Palmer is better in every category
except walks~" said Baltimore pitching
coach George Bamberger. "As far as
Hunter is concerned, there's nothing
wrong with being second best."
could have pltclwd beyond It Innings.q r
"That's debatable,'' tie saJd. Manager
Bobby \Vinkles said, however, Ryan
Ylould not have continued .
Wlnk.les visited the mound alter Ryan,
missing witb~his curve, walked Rod Ca·
rew, who stole second.
"He said, I've got enough left to strike
out one guy." Winkles said: ''I said,
which.one?" and he"Said, 'I don't know.'"
Ryan was asked i the Cy Young
Award for the "American Ltague'a. top
pitcher would fit in h.IJ trophy case.
"I can ma kc room;" he U . "I lhlnk I
have as good credentials as anybody nm-
nlng for it. The only thing you can bold
against me is my winning peroentage.
Palmer and Hunter definitely had
outstanding years."
Ryan walked seven and gave up 10 hits
as he struck QU.! 10 or m«e batters for
tbe 23r!Sr tinle this season. Koufax baa
held the record at 2t.
He wai touched for three run. and
three hltJ In the llnt innlna when he said
he ··was lrl'tna to overthrow. I &OI tho
baU up. I knew to even get dose to the
record J'd have to get the ball down."
Riehle Scbeinblum's pinchhlt, tW1><1Ut
double in the bottom ol the 11th drave in
the winning run for the ~els, who meet
the 1\vlns again tonight in Anaheim
Stadium. ' ..
Rudyofay .(7-14) pil<hes ror"Cill1ornra
and Dan Fife (2·21 goes for Minnesota.
U~l ·T ........
NOLAN RYAN WALKS AWAY AFTER SETTING STRIKEOUT MARK SHOWN ON THE SCOREBOARD.
Tola11 Refuses
To Practice;
Suspended
CINCINNATI (AP) -Outlielder Bob-
by Totan was suspended t>y the Cin-
cinnati Reds for the rest of the regular
baseball season, the National League
baseball team announced Thursday.
Bob Howsam, president of the NL \\'est
division winners , said in a statement that
Tolan "has been suspended for a con-
tinued refusal to take and partidpate in
regular batting and fielding practice and
for a lack of interest. I feel his altitude
has been divisive."
Tolan, the 197? Comeback Player·of the
Year, defied a locker room ban last
month after a shouting match with a
team official. He left the team for a few
days but returned in late August under
an ultimatum.
"All of us in the Reds organization
hav! tried our very best to be fair with
Bob," said Howsam, "Particularly in the
period since he rejoined the team about a
month ago. Manager Sparky Anderson,
t.he coaches, the .players and our stafr
people have gone out of thetr way . to
make Bobby feel a part of the team but
be has rebuffed all ol us."
Howsam added, "While it is the club
that is making the suspension, it is Bob-
by himself who separated himself from
the team by his act:ions."
Sports in Brief
Injured Rams Return;
Smith. Bows to Moore
LONG BEACH -Running back
Lawrence McCutcbeoo and punter Dav.e Cha~le finally have started returning to
form m Los Angeles Rams practice, just
in time for Sunday's game at San Fran-
cisco.
ri.1cCutcheon suffered a bruised leg and
Chapple a sprained ankle during the 31-0
Rams victory over Atlanta last weekend.
Chapple, hurt when he was clobbered
after a kick, punted for the first lime this
week <luring a two hOur workout Thurs.-
day in temperatures that neared lOO
degrees,
The Rams said McCutcheon made his
best showing of the week during the
drills.
e Emerson Pla11s
ALAMQ -Two of the top_ three singles
seeds in th e $50,000 Firemen's Fund
lnt.erna'.tlonal tennis tournament . wefe
upset in quarterfinal matches here
Thursday.
Top.seeded Stan Smith feU to unseeded
Ray Moore of Great Britain, 7-6, 6-4. It
was lhe second time this year Moore. had
beaten Smith.
back 1'1ona Scha.Jla.us. &-4. M; Lamie
J'leming· beaLLaura Rossouw, 6-Z, 6-3;
and Kathy Kuykendall defeated Jeanne
Evert, 2-6. &-3, 7-5.
e Heart Surgerg
NEW YORK -Angelo S.rtelli o! Clif.
too, N..J., former All ~America
quanerback at Notre Dame, winner of
the Reisman Trophy in 1943 and a
member or college football 's Hall ot
Fame, was reported by a family
spokesman Thunday to be "doing well"
after heart surgery at St. Luke's
hospital.
e llfe1u1 l11j11red
POMONA -Jockey Francisco Mena
suffered a broken collarbone and other
minor injuries in a spill at the Los
Angeles County Fair here. He is expected to~ sidelined about eight weeks.
Mena , 25, fell in the fifth race Tbw's·
day when his tY.1ryear-old mount, Beau's
Brat, owned by cowboy star &y &tiers,
clipped lhe heels o! another horse oo the
backstretch.
e Rain_ Halu Play
E111pire Rapidly Cru111hling
Sweden's 17-year-old star Bjcrn Borg
entered t h e semi-final.'i by defeatin2
third-seeded Tom Gorman of Seattle, bul
needed three sets, going to a lie-breaker
in ·the final one to win. The margin or
victory for the teen-age sensation was G-
4, 5-7, 7.fi.
ln action today. Roy Emerson faces
TURNBERRY, Scotland -A driving
rain and hail storm forced ·another
suspension of play today just as
American stars Tom Weiskopf' and Johnny
Miller Sol off the first tee in the third
round of the weather-plagued John
Player Golf Classic. AN.GEi.ES IAP I W i fl
minbel'.~.lil· Ts KQ!le aod./_erri West-.ajls
:s almo5t certain to quit ~·hich vrouJd
ve the Loo Angeles J..akers with onty
fifths of the ataning team that made
~ of the National Basketball
two year.1 ago.
in jwnptd Wednesday to the
.Diqo Cooqul$tadors of the American
tti$11 Asloclatlon. He will serve a.s
ch, Bnd uni.., the J..aken 1Uceeed In
<'. 1111 a player, too.
or.ward Jim ft1tMJlllan was trad~ to
fa.lo. for ?·loot center Elmore Smith -
move !or I.be fut.W'e, ... Pete Newell,
general mlllllftt, bad aald. Now It's a
deal for the pm<nt.
• •
West, 35-year-old pereMlal all-pro
guard, says he ljantJ his contract
,..,,egotlated for security; not mooey. 1le
said be doesn't want to play for what he
calls a bad team··am it's "99 percent I
won't play."
The Lakm doo't want Cltamberlalp to
play for anyone else, clalmln& the option
clause in his contract binds ·him to the
club for anolher season. Tbf:y threaten
court action if be attempts to play at San
Diego.
Chamberlain, who de!ected for
reportedly $600.000 a year, had un-
compllmootary words ror West in his
recently published book. Wilt said West
was pampered by fans and mvlws or
Chamberlain's accomplishments.
'•
\Vest called "rldlculous" the thought
that he 'd not want to play with Wilt
anymote,Tddifig tl:ie.book wasn'.t:all tha.t ·
uncomplimentary. · -
Only Happy Hairston, a forward, and
guard Gail Goodrich are now playing !or
the Lakers as veteran starters of the
1~1·72 championahip team that won 33·
straight sames and -69 !or tlli regular
seaaon, both records.
We•~ made this comment arter·obstrv· ·
Ing an· lntraiquad game: "Right now tile
Lakert are a Jast--place team."
He lidded, "The main thing is I d-On't
wani...to widd •P~ on a bad team. Rlgh<
Mw that's what the La.ken are."
N..,.11 sa!d he fouiHr'West's remark$.
"unsettling" and added, "I don't see ho"N
•
Id be bad t Ith the person RoScoe Tanner and Ashe goes against
we cou a cam w • John Al --• r A tralla I ha .. ex~~•r o us . ne we ve.
New~ll said "well.accepted, ,proven.''._ e Court Advanee1
players 1111ch ·as Bill B•idgeo, Jlm.l'rlet!, .•• """'L'"~~ -o , T d d' Elmore Srnltb and Mel CountJ have been . ""w•~vo. a. -op-se e e
added since the champi005hlp year, Margaret Court ol Australra advanctd ••u you want to be negative you can Tburaday to the quarterfinals of the
say 'Sure Ooly tW<>-fifths of th. starters $30,000 Columbus womeo'• leMi• ~a-
renialn ' but we've a I s o added"'lhese ment with-an easy w; f.O trilph over
playtts' ... you've got to get younger Lllura DuPont. .
players as you're older playen retire on · · 1n other matches, No. J. Chris
you. Evert defeated Francoise Durr, 6--0, 6-2;
. "Jerry has a lot to do with the .ef. ihlrd-seeded &,.mary casils whipped
fectlveneaa o! tlli& club and he's SIJll rar llelen Gow-lay, 6-2,, H ; fourth-seedad
away physically from retirement status. Judy He1dJrum beat Wendy Palsll, 6-1, ti-
"! reeflle•u play oo( I'm not cmll6enr 2: and fifth....cled Betty Stove deleoted
to the point thatJ'll 11y., 'Yes, he'll play.' Vicki Bemer, M ,.8-0. L
fil worry until he 11 beet." Al90, sixtlHeedcd Leslie Bunt turned ..
•
There was no immediate indication
when -or il -third-round play would
-bo resumed~ln additioo. to thu.aln .and
ball, tllo..Plffllr• were l>Jlleted by IO
mlles an hour ~indl and biting cold.
e Gottfried Win• ' NILES,111. -.Brian Gottfried de fealcd
TeMy Svennsson, 7-&, 6-1 'lbunday In the
second round of men's singles play at IM
Tam Jntbmatfonnl tcnnl.s tournament.
Eddie Dlbb$ betted Richard Russell, 6-
2, 7-5, and Graham StjlweU beat Clift
Rlcbj>y, f-4, 1-7, 6-1. .
ln the final match of tho aftomoon,
Gerald llatbiclc defoated Torben Ulrlcll,
6-1, 7-&.
• '· •
..
..
Mustangs Eye Upset
To ~ight at Newport
It was five years ago when
Costa Mesa High last won two
football games In a row.
The Mustangs get another
chance to pull orf that stunt
tonlght,.t-8, but the obatacl~
might be loo tough-lo handle.
Men, with ohe ol its beLter
.J' teams, clashes with a very
gQOd Newport Harbor outnt at
Newport.
The Mustangs moved the
ball at will In a 23-17 opening
victory over Foothill last
week., but the f.osta Mesa of-
fense faces a much greater
task tonight. •
Whether Mesa can move I.he
ball against a rugged Sailors
delerue is probably the key to
the game.
Newpurt was very stingy
delemlvely In Us 31·3 vlclory
-over Corona del Mar last
week, allowing j u st 86 net
yarda. .
C.Orona was unable to move
the ball thlough lhe air
against lhe Tan: as coach Don
Lent's Newport club picked off
three passes. ,
Thus, if C.OSla M e s a
quarterback Steve Sharp can
generate the Mustangs' pass-mg oUense. it might be a close
game.
Zac hary Goat
Pirates Lose
On Wild Pitch .
Sharp hit 10 ol 14 aerials
last week for 190 yards and
three touchdowns.
/Mesa coach John Sweazy
81so feels hiJ club has balance
with· a pair of good nmning
backs: In Paul Desmet and
Dennis Delany .
Desmet, a 6-1, 178-pound
~lor, has exceptional speed
and Lent figures Newport's
flanks will get a severe lest.
Desmet carried for SS yards
last week while Delany added
51. Delany Is a 182-pc:Mjnd
senk>r fullback .
Meanwhile, N e w P. o r t, the
thlrd.-ranked team hi Orange
County, will counter with an
offense built around senior
quarterback Steve Bukich. He
was the Tars' leading rusher
last week, running for four
touchdowns .
Buklch gets good support In
the running department from
Tom Bazacas ahd Mark Dliffy,
both ol whom locked good a
week ago.
PtllV Piiot St•ff Pftolo
DAILY PILOT J&\ ~
Diahlos,
Trojans
Skllmish ,:· ..
When the Mission Viejo,
~iablos entertain Univeraity
High's Trojans tonight " in •
non-league fool.bill outing, t~
difference could be in the
method d. attack by the t"'O
squads. Kickorr Is at 8.
Coach Bob liivner's Diablos
resorted to a ground game,
passing only when nece~ry
to win a 21~20 squeaker over
San C I e m c n t e . University
relied on the strong ri ght arm
of quarter b ac k
O'Loughlin who completed
of 22 attempts in the opener.
The Diablos suffered an ·
jury loss that could also affeC
the outcome if O'Loughlin
finds a hole up the middle.
Rick Curlis. the ~1V middle
linebacker, left last week's
game with a knee injury and.·
is definitely sidelined fo~
tonight's contest.
;'When he went out, they ,
hurt us by throwing curl
passcfj.up the middle.'' Hivnet-
says. "We have to get more
PITISBURGH CAP) -Chris
Zachary's fatal wild pitch was
reminiscent of the one that
Crushed the Pittsburgh Pirates
in the im National League
playoffs, but it wasn't his only
costly mistake.
from third With the run that
gave Philadelphia a crucial 3-2
victory over the Pirates, who
fe11 a game behind the flrtt-
place Mets in the tense Na-
tional League East.
Bukich is a 1 s o a good
passer and Lent says his team
will Jl'Obably thro1' more
against the Mustangs than it did last week. FOUNTAIN VALLEY IS BOLSTERED BY HENRY HANNA (65 ), DAVE MACKLEY (66), HOM ER HANNA ru sh on their passer if we hope"•
~to slop "them ." . ,
His errant t3th-iMing toss
into the dirt Thursday night
enabled Greg Lu~inski to score
Three Fire
64, Share.
Open Leall
6 ET1"ENDO!tF, low• CAPl -F!rtl-
round $CCII"" Thur..Wv 111 IM IJQl),000
Cvecl Cl!le1 OMn 11<111 1ourn•m1nt on
IN 6.651·Y••"· !Mir lS-:16-71 Crow V•!lev
Goll Club courH:
CwloM Nevil
D•v• Sllld<ton
l,lrrv Wile
llOll Gc»lbv
Jim J•mlMOn
Jim FHtl .. t
Kir...,11 Z1rt•v .,,_
lllllil M11-1le
,..,..... ,,.,,.... ,,.,,_.,
31~$ ,.,, ....
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i::-
DEAN LEWIS
TOYOTA
VOLVO
Newport Hatbor holds an 8-3 -------~--• .. University coach Jerry Red·
n1an is likewise conceme~
over his team's defensive'
secondary.
Yet jmt as critical was
Zachary's earlier bungled at-
tempt at an intentional walk,
the play some basebaD people
think should be automatic.
Luzinski had opened the 13th
with a single and taken second
oo a sacrifice when Pirate
catcher Manny Sanguillen sig-
nal<!d Zachery to walk~ Bob·
Boone on purpose.
Zachary got the signal, but
his first pitch was a high, fat
toss that caught the coriler of
the plate; and Boone promptly
stroked a single lo center that
moved Lu!inski to third.
."I just didn't get it out far
enough," murmured the 2S-
year-old Zachary, who spent
most ol the year in the
minors.
"For the first time In 11
years of pitching, I fouled up
an intentional pass." be added
in the tomb-silent locker room
or the Pirates.
0-After the ~hlf by--Boone,
Zachary struck out Mike
Schmidt before Larry Bowa
stepped to the plate. 1be count
on Bowa was 1·2 when
Zacbary'i low · pitch bounced
between 8anguillen's legs aod
Luzinski raced home with the
decisive run.
P rep Football
FOOlball Scores
St. Paul 7. Csrson O
Saddlebacll: 20, G a r d e n
Grove 17
Se.rvite 21, Loara 6
West Covina 21 , Damien o auno 14, Azusa o
Foothill 22, Kennedy O
edge in the series with the
Sailors winning the last five.
Mesa last beat the Tars in
1967 by a 3--0 count. Cleveland
Shut~ Out
Cub s, 1-0
Patt Seore1
1961 -Double forfeit
1962 -Costa Mesa 18,
Newport 13
19M -Costa Mesa 7,
Newport 6
1984 -Newport 8, Costa
Mesa 0
1965 -Newport 120, Costa
Mesa 13 ST. LOUIS (AP) -St.
l9eS ->Newport 40, Costa
Mesa 14
Louis' Reggie Cleveland faced
only 21 batters -t h e
minimwn numbet. possible. in
a regulation nine iMings -
and shut out the Chicago Cubs
2--0 on -~ on~hitter Thursday
1967 -Costa Mesa 3,
'Newport 0
1968 -Newport 14, Costa
Mesa O
1969 -Newport 9, Costa
Mesa 1 night. . t970 -Newport 17, Costa
Mesa O Ken Rudolph's sixth inning
single was the only hit
Cleveland yielded.
1971 -Newport 40, Costa
Mesa 7
1972 -Newport 21, C.Osta
MesaO The Cardinals right-hander
retired the first 16 Cubs before
Rudolph's clean single to left.
17' Cubs pitcher Burt Hooton l: then attempted a sacrifice
~ bunt but wound up grounding
211 out into a double play. After
~ that Cleveland took care of the
;~ next nine Cubs in order. .
"'-Cleveland, who--struck out-
m three and walked none, was ~'
Newport leads series, 8-3.
M"""'1 Mll111w U-it5 --LE-\llACI MulroY
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RE-4h"111rt R•Y Qll-61-llulllch FL-Tom lltIKt• FB-Tom $11119 T ._.ri111 Tl!«lol
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1!-Pll Ml1tlcffl l!!-1( .... Htwblry
G--Gtorot Norri• l8-elll Motkett
LB--Jollll PhlPlll Ca-G1vln Hldrldl
C&-Tlm llrown Dl-l!loti Ut1Y1rt 011-Erllt EllCMr oa-M1rk Dully C•Jlt MIN U_,s -se--a1n V•ltfttl111
RT--M1rk McOorl'n911 RG-Jerry khfl:iln•
c-«lck MorM l"G--Klm J~Mlll ' LT-Jim Dt¥l1
LE-Keltt! Jo"""'°" Qll-S1'w Sharp
Tll-Ptul l>Hmft F&-Dtnnl• Dtl..-v
Sll-Sl•v• Tertgl• -M LE-Jim 0.-M T-J«ry ScMptM MG-G•ry io-1
T-Ktltll B•t.mlfl · E-Joequln C~ln
La-er1111 McConTllct L~•rk Nlblkw
M-Brvct Sht'll
S-lllod Flaa•ll Hll-Stt"" Tt'-91• Hl-P•ul l>Hmel
20s given all the necessary ~uns :;g on Lou Brock's P.'io-run homer
nn in the sixth innirig. ~~: The victory kept the third-
~ff place Cardinals' hopes alive in
the National League East,
110 moving them 2 ~ g a m e s
f~ behind the first place New lfs York Mets, who were idle.
1n The loS.!1 dropped the fifth
~: ·place Cubs four games back
l~ with four games lefl, all
155 against the Mets in Chicago.
112 The best the Cubs now can do
~~ is lie for first.
1u Brock, who had previously 1~ struck out twice, slammed an l: 0-1 pitch from Hooton. 14-16,
111 over the right-field fence for
"' onl 1• the game's y runs.
Baseball Standings
'
AMERICAN LEAGUE NATIONAL LEAGUE
East East
w L Pct. GB w L Pct. GB
Baltimore 95 63 .601 New York 80 78 ""]00
Barons, Huntington B each
Match Explosive O ff enses
Hwitington Beach School
District rivals Fountain Valley
and Hilntington Beach High
clash tonight with pride a ma-
jor factor in the non-league _ skirmish. _ _ _
Kickoff is set for 8 and
Fountain Valley's Barons arc
four-point favorites to hand
coach Roy Brommett's Hun-
tington Beach Oilers their se-
cond straight defeat in the
four-game series.
Cooch Bruce Pickford's
Barons employ the wishbone
offense , and that me a n s
quarterback Dan Troup ' s
passing is complemented by a
running game that goes in
every direction.
Fullback Steve .... Tmmpson
NL East
t 190) is the inside threat, and
he's also a potent decoy when
Troop fakes to him and goes
outs ide v:ith the option of run-
ning, passing or nipping the
ball oil to_ halfbacks -Bill
Ogden and Ben Dodson ,
dependin g on Which \Vay the
Barons attack is headed.
It 's a difficult offense to
stop. Four fumbles, two in·
terceptions and nine "penalties
kept Fountain Valley from
burying North T o r r a n r. e
deeper than the 20-6 coUnt lost
· week. .
Huntington Beach's defense
is considered a reliable 011e,
but chances are Fountain
Valley will srore three times.
But the Oilers have their of·
fensive arsenal, too. with
halfbacks Loren Micklin and
Harley Hill operating out of
the Houston veer. Returning
~--maner-Greg Nitz k crw s k-i
C old B guides the Oilers· from hi s QB 0 e post and is a definite threat
with the pass or run.
5-Way Tie
'
Huntington Beach hes en ad-
ditional asset in P a u I
Gassman . Gassman kicked
field goals of 27 and 21 yards
* * *
in 11witington's 19-7 win ·over
Pacifica. He's also the Oilers·
punter; kickoff man , split end
and safety .
·An ace in the hole for Foun-
tain. Yallcy _ is Rick _Ha.tfield.
Hatfield c a u g h t three
touchdo1vn passes from Troup
last week and completes the
"total offensive picture for tht:!
Barons. . .
Fountain Valley's running
game piled up 262 yards in the
first outing and' Ogden's 7.0
a11crage for 18 carries Was the
biggest consumer of yardage.
MiCklin was Huntington 's
leader in that departmen t,
rolling fof" a 6.7 average in 17
carries.
Fountain Valley lost Mike
Lear for the season (broken
arm) and Huntington's only
missing player for the game is '
guard Mark tfolden (shoulder
injury).
Previous Scilres
1966 -Oilers 41 , Fowitain
Valley 7
1971 -Oilers 15, FOUCltain
Valley 14
1972 -Fountain Valley 37,
Oilers 28.
*
Aman
"I thought th e kids playeQ
better than we had expected
but there's still room for Im·
prove ment."
With Randy DeLapp. a
starling guard. still sidelined
and Murry Graham hampered
with an ankle injury, the Tro-·
jans haven't escaped the 1D~
jury bug either.
Tonight's . meeting will he,
the first between the two
schools on the football field .
The Mission Viejo backfield
is more experienced than that
of University with Dave·
Schm'idt at quarterback, Guy ,
Reeves at fullback and Ken
Robbins at tailback.
Joining O'Looghlin in the
Trojans backfield are Jim·
Green at fullback and Murry
Graham at tailback. Both are
capable of breaking loose at'
any time. Graham has been
hampered ln practice tJtis
week by an ankle sprain but
will start.
-likes to come home
ENER GY
CRISIS
CURE!
Boston
Detroit
New York
-MilwaUkee
Cleveland
85 73
M 75
78 81
74 M
89 89
.538 10 Pittsburgh
.528 11 1'. St. Louis
.491 171'. Montreal
.488 U-Chlcago
.437 26 Philadelphia
79 79 .500 t
78 8t .491 2v,
77 82 .484 31'.
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$999
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MARI( II
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$3799
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Oakland 92 "67
Kansas City 87 72
Minnesota 80 79
califomia 77 . 82
Chicago 76 83
Texas SS llH
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Cincinnati 98 6t .616
Los Angeles 93 66 . 585
San Francisco 86 73 .Mt
Houston 8t 79 .5116
Atlanta 75 84 .472
San Diego 59 100 .371
Thunda"('I 0.IMI
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PhlldtlPhlt II 51. Louil Houl'-1 •• Alllfll• $9n FrlO'Otftco 11 ClndMIU
LOJ °"'"'" ti left Ot9QO
---
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And~ooman,too. •
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Revenge· Motiva~es . Vik es·
-Dina Hills
Seeks First
·'
' Prep Cross Country
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..
Estancia
Hatmted
·By '72 Rot1t
J~t a year and B day ago
Estancia High was sa'•oring a
42·7 annihilation of ?.1'rina
High in the only rootball
meeting of the schools.
Today Estmtcia coach J i m
Herit.sley ts .hoping everyone,
!t!arina players especi ally,
have .forgotten it.
"'\Ve have a new coach, they
have a "'w coach and there
certain1y aren't many players
on my team \Vho remember
that game," said Hemsley.
"I'm afraid there are a lot of
kids at Marina with good
memories, too, however."
Marina gets its chance for
revenge tonight starting at 8
when it battles Estancia at
Westminster High.
New Marina coach ?!like
Henigan eonfinns Hemsley's
biggest fears.
"Our kids remember that
loss." says Henigan. "They
were embarrassed. It was
played before the biggest
crowd of the year and they
"'ere embarrassed. It's on
their minds this week."
Neither team w a s im·
pressive In its cpener this year
as Marina failed to. score
against Glendale and Estaneia
was blasted by Vista High.
Mistakes were costly for
?\tarina which fell behind early
and was frustrated again and
again despite · Gregg Foster's
passing. The V i k i n g s
quarterback completed 10 of
21 but had three interceptions.
"The big thing we hope to do
against Estancia is to sustain
our attack," says Henigan .
"\Ve feel we can move the ball
but not when yoo make as
many mistakes and have as
many turnovers as we did."
Hemsley w a s impressed
looking al Marina game films.
"It appears Marina's game
fundamentally was q u i ~ e
SQUnd." says Hemsley. "\Vhile
~·e were do~ a lot of hand
taclding. they hi t well against
Glendale. I think they're
ahead of us at this point."
It's something Hemsley has
no control over, last year's
game. that worries him most,
how-ever.
"From their (Marina's)
point of view they want a
reprieve for lut seaso:n," he
says. "The question is, are
they that riercely competitive?
I "·ould guess they are, which
means we'll have to play one
of our best games to overcome
. that."
•
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RT-Jim Oelr R !-Oew Glbbt:
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Sho,vdo,vn
'" Q.u11eu•i !CJ 12:01 ; 5/ -lllQ' Uil Molller o.i (HI CMI LMI 8-11 WlllOll New,..-1 Nrtw U4) U21 N1111tl11tlt11 8(11 varsity football win whefl it 12:11 1 •· Scllmldhevwr pn 11:11), , 0ow1rno cMJ io:1•i 1. JQhl'lson cLI 1. Bent1«1 IHI 11 11111 t. er.c1iwrM
tangles wl" R'im of the World !"di.Min wooP~Dl!i~. H 10\·101· 1...,sr. John !Ml 1o:X1\.· •, +iow•rd tN> 11 :ot1 i. RotltftMlll tN> 11:10 " \ii• ~• CL 0:~1 S. kHlhtQ (M 10:~1 6. Fv-umolo l N) 11:15. J. RolMlrhon (H I
tonight at S at San Clemente VARSITV :hf.•1l:\~j''\"6,L c;~"1:"e!i~ 110=~\L'i 11:111 •· l r•I_. tHl 11:u 1 1. Jort1•~
Hl•h School. C..."""' l!Jl t-a/ r,eu~l•I" V1Hey /o:lf\ io. p 11men \MJ IO:S5i ~Smith cNI 11 1211 1. P•ton IHI 11:261 t. T11· ~ l , l"rln t ~C l 10: .. COV•lf flCOftll ' LI O:Sti n , 1e1rv (Ml 11:ri21 1J. ..,., {H! 11 :2'1 10. 51rtw {Hl 11:31.
Coach Tony Leon's P.:,lphins fa,~:~ s~{1h1,t?\o~.io:°t.11\ri:r I~! ~11~'a~.,, IL> 11 :»1' 1•. Norr• IM • 11ROSH·SOl"H . .
Expected
hope lo parlay a _running game l.i"~!.'.11n~ 1r'1 1\~06; (~~ f'1!~~{ ell 'UNIOR VARSITY Hlf~llntltll •ch 011 Ill) NIWllOrf Mt'4'
h' h pri . I l l 11 :21 1 t. s1r11:k1nd (F) 11:•11 10. Nol11n 1• Ovnloo. (M) 11 :021 J. Ge1t11:10• I. s" .... "' IH ) 11 :);; 1. ·~lier IH t W IC Was SUr S!Og Y po en Fl 11:f1; 1 , Hellm•n (F l U:Oll u . !Ml 11:11; l , Hemm (L) 11 .IJI 4. 111•?1 l. P111lon (Nf 11 rS0: l, Ber"V IHl last week into a Victory which Ptlrce Fl 12:0.1 U. 8o"Hr (Fl 12:121 Reimer !LI 11:1•: 5~ BOl'lend (M) ll:S2; 5, C1lveno (H) 12:!0: I. OV•m• 1', Orcholskl (f') ll:,1. 11 :201 6. Gretn J..l~_ll:1~ (HI U :OCl 1. Conk (NI 12r111 I. Fler
wo.uld snap a l~game , losing._ JUNIOR VARSITY M1t1• Del 1J1Rr~r~ Beith WllMlll iNI lJ:ll; •• J•t .. IOll (NI 12:~1 \0.
11te San Cleme11te and
Laguna Be11ch High fQOtball
teams collide tonight in the
first of two confrontations this
.season at Lagun3 Beach High.
streak since lhe school opened i;;;;'•;;;;";M;-;;;;;:";:";,-"':;;';i~~-~·;••;V;:•;'"i:'i;.;;;;'i;-;"""";;;;';";·i;M;i'';;;ii"i:;"ii';· ;;";;;i'i:"i;i":i:'i;.~";;"~''::i';i';";' ;";;';;";;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;\
last !all. 11
HAL AKINS ALLIE SCHAFF
JIM HEMSLEY MIKE HENIGAN
Orange Chal.lenges
Explosive Chargers
Edison High's Chargers and Coach Vince Deveney and
the Panthers of 0 r a n ge his Orange crew counters with
collide tonight at Orange a similar style of attack -tbe
Coast College in non·league power I-formation w i th
football. etnphasis paid to the ruooing
It's slated to begin at 8 and of the tailba ck. .
clashing are two. teams that Orange's starting tailback is
battled to a 7.7 standot'( in l\.eviil Howell, an all-Crestview
1972. gue defell.5ive back and
Coach Bill Workman's ge's Net. l fullback in '72.
Edison High contingent likes Q rterback M.ike Fox (160 )
to run at people and the chief is co · ered an able passer,
weapon is BUI Rutherford, a but ent to the air only
140-pound package that ex· eight ~imes last week and
pl oded. for 134 yards and an· completed two tries.
11.1 yafds Per carry average Edison can be counted on·to
in leading the Chargers to a go to the air larics a little
28--13 opening season victory more lrequently -usually
o.ver Fullerton. Edison is an about 15 times. per outing.
eighl·J?Oint favorite to remain An ~r of F.disoo's ex·
unbe8 fen. plosive power came .. on the
Joel Peck (170) lead's the first offensive play of the
waY for Rutherford with his game for the Chargers last
devastating blocking from his week.
fullback position and when it Ruthe~ord took a handoff
isn't Rutherford doing the from White and raced 65 yru:ds
damage it's Bert Sherron for. a. touchdown to give
usually carrying"the ball. E~1son all the momentum re-
In addition to this running quired.
power the Chargers have two
able quarterbacks. Starter
Dave Wbite and junior backup
QB Nathan Ching provide
Edison with the balance and
depth required to keep things
going under adverse ron-
Fl -Miki 11..,Mll T -Jeck Clark G -Jol>n Ou<1<11n c -It lck Purnell G -Al OISlen1
T -Tom Ft1nnellv TE -Jim B1kll se -Jot T.--elL QB -01ve While FB -J~ Pe<k TB -8111 Rutherford
'ro m
"' "' m
"' "' "' "' "' "'
Kickoff is 8 o'clock.
The dual nature of this
year's San Clemente-Laguna
Beach ri valry comes about as
the oyesult of San Clemente
bejng switched to the Orange
League last spring, and the
two schools £ailing to work out
previ o u s s cheduling
commitments.
-Tonight's game is billed as a
no n·league affair, w'bile a
similar game Oct. 19 goes on
the Orange Le~~e standings.
Tonight's tif£. figures to pit a
j!:ood passing team ( S a n
Clemente) against a good run-
ninii: team. (Laguna Beach)
and it's anybody's guess which
has the stronger defense.
San Clemente comes into ac-
tion with one loss on its
record. 21·20 to ~1ission Vi ejo·
last 'veek. Ql~rtcrbnck Dan
Dodd leads the Tritons. lie
passed for 158 yards and t\.\'O
touchdowns last we('k. and has
receivers Joe Janton. Bob
Bishop and Mike Shinkle as
targets.
Laguna Beach runs the
wishbone-T formation well and
has speedsters Pete Co.ttam.
John Carlson a n d Mark
Maziarella to count on in the
backfield.
Between them the trio rush-
ed for 247 yards in a 25-6 vie·
torv over Cypress.
The two coach's analysis are
predictable considering ·those
facts.
"We:ve got to shut off
Laguna Beacl)'s speed." San
Clemente coach Allie Schaff
says. "We're not that fast
ourselves. so we can't make
any mistakes."
And from Laguna Beach.
coach Hal Akins praises San
Clemente's passing ~ame .
"Their quarterback (Dodd \
is big and throws well. \Ve'll
nave to get some kind of rush
and play good Dass defense,"
Akins says. "That and our
ability to esta.bllsh some kind
of inside ronning game are
kevs-for us."
Running backs Mark Foster,
Bob Spiers and Steve Miklos
were all t>leasarrt surprises as
Dana Rills rushed Io r 293
yards in its opening game, but
another area Leon has to crow.
about is the Dolphins' of·
fenS'ive line.
"Our line jnst exploded oU
the ball last week and really
moved people out," Leon says.
"\Ve feel we've established our
ability to run with the ball,
Row its a matter of shoring up
the defense and eliminating
mistakes."
The Dolphins. Who paled or
prospered by the passing of
quarterback Bill Sprirtgman
last season, will stlll put the
ball in the air. But junior
quarterback Al Benavidez will
~ doing' the throwing 'while
Springman rests an injured
neck one more week ..
The game figures to· be a
d o wn·t<rthe-basics strue~le
between running teams. Rim
of the World's Scots run out of
an I-formation offense. and
pass only for the sake or
diversion. :.ccording to head
coach Ben Stindt.
The Scots have proto_type !-
offense backs in fullback Tony
Gradillas, a 170-pounder who
does the inside work and shif·
ty 155 • pound senior tail~ck
Erie Tipton. Tipton rushed for
100 ya rds in last week's game
and Gradillas was the leading
0011 carrier against Dana Hills
last season in the ·Sco1s· 46-6
victory.
Dana Hills' oFfensive line
will have spme big people to
pu sh around if it is to· equal
last week's performance. Rim
of the World will start 220-
pound 11-fike Terry and 21 1·
pound Russ Haleen al the
defensive tackles, and 181·
pound Mike Quinn at middle
guard.
~ Clemente has a running
attack of its own keved on hef·
ty seniors Steve Olson ( 185)
arid Nick Vleisides (170) while
the minority part or th e
Laguna Beach attack is the
passing game which revolves ·
around senior ciuart erback
Kelly Akins and split end Eric
On the Dolphins' defense ,
meanwhile. Leon is making a
. few chang~s. Notably!,. he's
moving 241·pound transfer Bob
Grej?ei;_son in at tackle and
starting Rick Sagan and Bob
Vandercook at defensive ends.
Craig Full adosa, who started
at tackle fast week, has been
moved to linebacker for the
game~
Except for Springman. the
Dolphins are in good shape
physically. Spiers has been
nursing a slight hamstring pull
but is expected to be able to
play.
D1n1 Hills DfftM•
SE-Slew Miklos Heard.
L T-Mlke Vl1111!•"rlll LG-Wes Colli.,
C-Ml~e Tenner
"' 1•sJ :~I ·~ "' '~
COSTA MESA DATSU~
Presents
aK>TBALL FORECAST
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Dome-. Tl.-lollorMoltan of Purdue, thoru I•
the .W... of tM fltlltl119 lrllh 1111 post '""°
lftfft tll9 lrldl IR W9't Lofayett.. TM llwet-•~ oro flluch moro of • dortl.9iono ttrh foll,
b11t .,. stlll flt11red to IM a11 ll-pol .. •llder-
dot to Notre Do•. ,
Tiie two powen I• tltl' lltj TeR, Mkkft-•
o•d Olllo Stote, ore roto1 6tll oMI 7th r.. 'fMCl"°'f I• o•r ••tlo .. t roM!.11111)1. Tho l~li·
•Y" wlll cllp r.c.u. by 20 ,.,...., oH tM
WolftrlHS are a .. ...,., JS-pol .. cll•k• o.-
NoYJ.
M0lo111I, th• bl9 upse+Nf 9 wHli 090, ton
11ftat' Florldo Stotw Saturday. Ta. 1Ztll·roted
H_!!rlco11n will wl• by ZS pollltl.
Tllfff ol'ller -~ of the lltj I CH·
hfffU' •• I• tllo 1., ZO ... IR •• O• .....
S,.,, Ii o 11rpriditt 6tti. I•-Stoto II 13"-
otid Missouri Is #14. TM Cowboys _.. le-
"'" • ...,. So•ftlen 1111..-by 4t pohm •• tllo Cyc.Jo.n will M o 1 s.,.i1t wl ..... ....-
Arti:•-· olHI Mlao1t wlll take Nortfl C....
111110 by, dltoff.
Los ARtel•s . • . . . . Z6 ~all Fre11Cl1eo .•••.••• , , • • ZJ
Jllrn1 cre1mtt1 4,." If! e•hlbllloft, 31.10, anll exc"'I tor 1lrt of tc:•re, II c111lt1 ton e """'· HHI he1 R1m1
on m1 move. H-ver, R1m1 al'lo1.lld win tht1 N"C W11t ,...,,.,
Oolilolld •••••••••••• Z7 Ka11101 City • •••••••••• , 20
IR ~•I tlHml, "'• ia.1111 o.i......, !line ,.,,.. ""• 1lwey1 "'" • knock.down dreg-civt AFC w•ST llffdll111r. Se l1r, Cllltl• ere dOWn In '71. Rlldlf1 .i.t1.1ld win by 1,
Cl•cl1111otl •••••••••••• Z4 s .. D'-to , . , .•..•.••. 17
son;111 badl on m1 r.Ad. 11111 11•1 Yll"Y "1111111 ttiey COl,lld "'n irlll • .,.th.,. 1ronc:•tr1p !ft S41n DllllO •• thtW
OIOln Dln .... r. Chll'IWll lt9 undtnllot In 1,i1e ti Urtllll.
W_.l'"JfO• ••••.•.••. , , ZI rtilladol .. ioi •••••• , ••• , .1J
Ulllll 1111 W .... 'I 91mt, lfllt leoltld likl e mll·mllch. IE1t1t CtK~ Mltw McltrmKk 111111 fib lalll clu~ llH Gll~li
tlfflon wnhl U.11 MCtllOll, Sll;ln1 c•n"I 1ttorcl • .,.lllef Ml-ctewn.
Ml.....ta •••••••••••• 17 G,... ioy •••••• :: •••• 16
81Kll I •tH DIYllMn makh-11, INIW-HlitMlll!I d\lrnpiH ltldr •IMI ••<IN"'f'I. Vllatl. Wltll ,_ Uld ,,, .. o • .,._., eHt"•t1119, .iteftt tG9I ,... M Vlk• 11er1nsbler.
Saturday, Sept. 29 -Major Colle1es Oreton State " " " " 20
'lit F~•
Al1beme ~lKl'li•" Arizona Sitt•
C.Uforllle Auburn
S0..1in1G'"11 Centnl Mlel\ip11
Co~Columble~
Cornell OertmCMlth
Or1ke Ouk1
Eest ce/ocll\I
florid• Geor1i1 Tech
Holy CrOSi
Houston 111inoi1
low• Sl•le Ken,.s
n " " ..
20 " 21 " " " 21 " " " " " " " " " " " 21
Nt:w Me•ico 1 ,..nnsylv1ni• VenOelbilt 0 Penn Stitt
Oevldson 7 Pitts.burr.:
Colonck> State 7 Rnode 1l1nd ArrnY 16 Richmond
Tennqsee 21 R11t11n1 Wnt1rl'I Michlp n 13 San o;ero Slate
DettOl'I 20 S.M.U.
Beylor 11 Slllnlotd Te••s 8uckrtell --2617 -T11111~A -6 M COlpte N-He mpshire 0 Toleao Lerner 11 Tultne
Vir1lnle 1 Tut ..
Furmen I ~i~fiL.~
·Ml1tl11ippi St1t1 :ro7 Uteh" Stat'
Cl•m1on w1s/\inrton Temple 2J · s M1mphl1 Stale ll We5h1nrton \Ill
Wesl Vlr&inie 16 W!lll•f'." &. Miry A1ken .. 1 6 Wy0tnin1
Mlnr'ltlOt• 10 Vele
" " " " " " ...
" " " " " " 20
" " ..
" Tempe ll
lnC1i1n1 ll Other Games -Far West
' • ' •
1<en111 Sttte
Kent11<:ky Loni Beecll
L.S.U. "' " " " " " "'' " " " " " ..
North Te•11 IS 8 0ilt St1ie 49
C1l Poly {Pomone) 21
Cel Pot~ tS.l .0 .1 J6 C1nlr11 Wesllinrto" 21 Eeste:m New Me1!co 17
E1st1rn 0"11on 23 Ee$lfn'I W1$h1n rton 21
Port lend 0
Men1h11J Meryllnd M1s11cll11sett1
Miami, Fie
Mllmi lOl'llO)
Mlchi&1n Mississippi
Mls50lln Montan• Stilt:
N•bnsQ New Mexico Stale Nod:ll C1roline Sttte
Nortfllrn lllinolt
Notre 0•11141 Ohio Stet•
Soutl>em Ce• C*lertoml Stile
" " " " " " ..
Rice 1
Jlevl1r U ViU1nove 1 Herv1td :n
Florid• Stele 6 south C.l'Qtin1 :ro
Nevy 1
Soutl'lem Mississippi I
Nortll Ceroline 12 Fresno Stale 1
Wisconsin 10 WlclliU 19
Gt:or1i1 7 west Teus U
Putd11e ll T.C.U. 7
C*l1rtom1 17 SOuthe•l'I lllinoi1 0
LO\ An1•t•s 10 Rfverilde 0
Soutlle•n 0~1on 1 Southern Colo1160 I Whltm1n 6
Weste•!'t W11/\lnrt011 20
Hew1ii ~ Te••s Soulll1rn 11
Mor111rui 24 Northern Anzone 11 Nortl'ltm COloredo 2'CI
Nortllridte 2l
Paclrlc U 1• Pu~t Sound 21 Sacrtmtnto 21
S•n Fnrcisto St1!e 20
fort H1r1 1s
Heywerd lt' Pecilic Luthe•1n 1 Humboldt o 10
St. Mery's 21 • Cel l utll1:r1n 10
S1nte Clere 17 01wis ll
Weber 24 Wl'litlilr 21
Willlrnt:lfe 20
Fullerton 1
c11remont ' l ewis & ··t11rk 17
ditions.
Too, Edison has the kicking
game with Dan McPherson
available and eble to click on
field goals whenever the
Chargers move the ball inside
the 20-yard line.
•111-01re1Ue
RE -Oort Scllrotclt~ l T -Al OISl1n1
MG -Tom Pelle
"' "' "' '"
The teams have dissimilar
defensive philosophies. San
Clemente em plo yi n ~ an
"Arkansas Slant" which is
almost a S.l and Laguna
Beach a more conventional 5-.
3. .
Laguna's key d'e fens iv e
player is 24~pound linebacker
Dave Mart1n . whlle S a n
Clemente relies on line stand·
outs Bi I I Enquist. Mike
Chesnut and Tim Murphy.
RG-Nlck Voce• llT-Mark Redner
TE-Frenk Ce11ld"t'
QB-Al eenavldel
H8-8ob Spit~ FB--Mark Fostll"
Fl-41\erk Ellenholm DeM Hllli DeffftM
DE-Rick Sag1n
"' "' "' '~1 ................................................................. .,.!"'9""1! ....... 1 ,,.
RT -Joel Ptck
RE -1,1ck Ct1rk LB -1ve Miiii
LB -C•1l11 H-1rv Cll -Er c JOl'ln10n Cll -N1lll,ln Clllng
5 -Joe Tro•ell s -M!kt B1nnrt1
m "' '~ "! "
Ground-oriented Lions
Battle Explosive Wj]son
LONG BEACH -B i 11
Boswell and Owen Dixon have
radically differin g opuuons
about tonight's \Vestrni nster·
Long Beach \Vilson football
struggle at \Vilson Hi gh.
"It'll be a u•ide-0pen game:'
says Wilson's Dixon of the 7: 30
coo test.
"It 's never been wide-0pen
before so-wfiy SMUldit-changt!
now? We both have good
defenses and arter a slo\\r
start, we both worked pretty
hard on them this week," says
Boswell.
Both teams allowed 35
points in their openers last
\\'Cek,
Boswell says he's confident
in his club's abilitv to move
the tialr oor also .has great
respect for the Wilsoo offense.
"They have speed to the
outside with a Long Beach Po-
IY. transfer named T o n y
G pson, ' says BOswell. 11And
their quortertack = throw
short or long. Both or their
touchdowns last week were on
bombs.
'""Itrey're a far better team
than they showed against We.st
Torrance but you m u s t
remember. West ls one of tho
CJF's best. You don't tum
over the ball that n1uch
against a team with 23 return·
lng lettennen and slill win."
Wilson was forced Into
numerous miscues and II was
quite "obvious Gipson, Who
runs the 4-0 in 4.5, \.\'as un·
familiar with the system.
Given another week, however.
he could be quite a thorn for
Boswen·s defense.
Tony Accomando is called
one of the top running backs in
lhe CIF by Dixon, who will tty
lo devise a way to prevent the
Lions back from moving into
the No. l .spo.Lon....the.llll·!ime
\Vestminster rushing list. lfc
needs just 52 yards to surpass
Jack Haynes at 1,275.
Boswell m(l.de feL.c.h~!l.&.e~
after the setback to LakeWOOil.
Westminster's loss did not
surprise Dixon.
"We saw Lake\.\'Ood in the
Milk BowJ (Long Beach cities
games) and were very im·
pressed." he says. "Lakewood
has more size than us and
their quarterback can do 8lot
of things."
wntm111111t ~
SE-Ton'!' Meddottl• RT-Mike 8"'1'
RG-RMCN fllltler
C -Oeve SVlff
Lo-Gr .. Hll!'ll'I
LT-o.nl'llt le"'°' Tl!-Dlfl__Sml<!C ' Qa..N11r1l Sttw1rt
TB-TO!W M com•ndo
fl!B-1<..IJI Tew
W•tltll111tw
0 1!'-TOl!'I G1tlagtier
a..T-&coit Kl1rner
MO-llUch1ril s111rt1v
OT-C.tMrltt t.1ftl'llt19
OE-Rlcll,lrd 111'1
L._.lc~r lrOYil'I
Ll-lt;ll'ld\' Ftuer
Ll-llh:f111d ROltn LB-Robert Voritr
U-T~ Rltlllf;d•
WS-Rlc llenf Ole11
"' '" '" '" "' '" ·~ ... ...
IU
"' '" ...
"' "' "' "' ·~ 'u "' "'
Serles Record
1964 -Laguna Beach 13,
Tritons 13 (tie)
1965 -Laguna Beach 31.
Tritons 6
1966 -Laguna Beach 38,
Tritons 13
1967 -S a n Clemente 20,
Artists 13
1968 -Laguna Beach 20,
Tritons 0
1969 -San Clemente 27.
Artists 0
19i0 -San Clemente 26,
Artists 7
OT-Bob Gr~rson
MG-9oxer Torres
DT-Pel Cllle111
DE-Bob \tand1trcook
LB-CralQ Fulledosa LI-Jim J•mlson
CB-Frank Ca11l(fy
CB-Str v1 MIKios
S-Brlan Dallis
5-Jolln Ul1011
'" '" '" "'I ,~
"' "' •ro '" '~
Soccer Ouh
Begins Play
The Coast Rangers soccer
tea m will return to Mariners
Park for the first time in
three years Sunday afternoon
to open the 1973 Pacific soccer
League season against Rick
Van Looey or Huntington
Park. 1971 -Laguna Beach 1 ,
Tritons 0 (forfeit) A preliminar'/ game
171 between the Rangers reserves
1911 and the Polo reserves from ~ Long Beach will get under
16s way at 12:30 with tl},e main at-
L11wne 8e1ch Otlt ftH
TE-Kur! °"ft' ' LT-Brotd Emery
LG-Mark John1on
C-Jonn Wills
RG-Chrlt Whll1
RT-John MCCl!I
SE-Eric Heird
Qll-IC"ly Akln1 AH-Pete COn1m
Lf.1-JOl'ln Ctrlton
FB-Mark M•n 1rell'
'" 1is traction following at 2:30.
lltun• l••c~ OtlHll
DE-Scon Westgeard
OT-Bra~ Emerv
MG-Olv• M1r!l'1 Ol -Jo~n (~per!on
DE-Jl)lin McC~U
LV-Cllrls Wlllle
LB-••t Jolln•on
li8 -Eric H11ro H8-Ml~1 S.rr•llO s-Jlm s1m1
5-Hlnlt Mll~r
Siii C'9fntnl1 OffotnM
TE-l oo Bllhop
ltT-8111 !nqulsl
R(;--M1rk F.icr1~
C-Rll'ldy Groll
LG-Tim Murp11y
L T-&ob Si'MPllerd
WR-Joe> Ja,,ron 08-o.n Oedd l'll~lfve 01-R8-Nld1 V1t ftldet
St-Ltnc1t 5w1 .. rl
1111 Cltrnt11'9 Dt-..
0£-11111 Enqul1t
OT-M!~t C1'111nut MG-Tim MurOhy
DT-R1ndy G•ofl
L8-l ell(I $wl11•I Lll-NJtk \t llll!de1
L9-Mtrk 1J.i111n
LB-Gr111 Vou119
0 11-800 lllshop
DI-Jot J1n1on
09-MI-• &111n~1e
11' 'The nubllc is invited to '~ r-1~5 witness the ,1ames. .
liiO Openings are also sun
"' "' ,.
·~ "' ...
"' "' "' '" >d
'" ...
·~ '" "' "' "' "' '" ,,.
'"
"' "' "' "' '" ,,.
'" ...
Ill
'" ·~
available on both rosters for
players livin g in the area.
JC Grid
Schedule
(
GEO. ZIMMERMAN INVITES YOU TO SEE THE All NEW
DATSUN -:-r
B-210
Eco1iomy Never Looke.d So Good
(PREMIER SHOWING OCTOBER 1l
st
I
ti
h
0
s
I p
'h
Id
,
1
t
l
What's Doing
Outdoors
JIM NIEMIEC
The general deer season got off to a better than nverage
start this past weykend and It looks Uke nimrod.!i might be in .
for one of the most productive seasons to come aloog in some
time . ._
'11le:re were · a lot of forkie.s and lhree-pointers baggtd but
hunters rej)Orted tbiat trophy racks were hard to locate. The big
old ',"'ise de~r are still staying to themselves and won't start
showing up in any numbers until the routing season develops. \
Good water -and feed are---available and as predicted deer
wer~ scattered and ~unters who were patl~nt were able to at
least get a look at a buck or two even if they didn't get that shot • • . With lhe first big storm of the season, hunters who go to the
high counlry will find the bucks starting to move. The normal
Jlllgration routes between Bishop and Colevllle on ~the east side
pr the Sierras will be tracked ovE:,r by mid OctObcr. while on
~he west the Porterville to Oakhur11t area will be good during the
4ast two weeks or the season.
Orange, Riverside and San Bernardino counties had rair
'hunting on public land. A good turnout in the field spooked the
·ldeer for Sunday-on ly hunters and it will take a week or so for
~hings to get back to norma1. Hunters who were fortunate enough
~o get on private property reported good buck Population with r uer than average success.
' Cold Weather 1Uovb1g Dove Out
_ Even though dove art being forced out of the central valleys
nto the Southland, Ole cold, damp weather Is keeping tbe birds
n tlselr southerly mlgratloa route.
1 In the Imperial Valley banten are averaging sil to seven
h.irds an outtog, but they are having to work for shots. Arizona
ijs stUI consistent for llmlts of moliU'lling dove, but very few
bltewlngs are being •Potted. .
1 Unless we ge't our ilsq_al beat wave in October tbe outlook
~or the second half of the seasoa bl December bolds very Uttle
promise. Soutblanden wlU be forced to go lo ft.fexlce where ex-
1cellent shooting ts reported.
' D11ol<s llfove l11to Central Calif<>rtaln
More than 100,000 new ducks moved into the refuges in the
lcentral valleys this past week and field censuses in Northern
1Callfornia, ·Oregon and Idaho Indicate there are a lot of water-
;fowl on the move.
l Waterfowl, mostly sprig, mallards and teal have started
working the pond! in and a.round Orange County. Linc Raa-
hauge's Pheasant Club ln Corona 1 reports 3,000 to 4,000 bircb in
the Prado Basin.
Birds have -not been too ·numerous in the area around the
Sa lton Sea, but officials predict that by opening day the popula-
~ lion will buUd and provide fair &hooting opening day, Oct. 13.
llfarlfn Fishing Spott11
Only a . few hardy anclert are lucky enough to book Into
a marlla whlle f1llatq in area wale.rs. 1b1s season, to date, has ! been slow but there ii 1till ~gb time for the aagllag chart.I
; lo Increase their yearly tames.
Waten remain calm with good te1nperature readings but
•the 1ptkebllll are Ju& plala a.ncooperatlve.
Salt Wetter Fishing Slo11l
Surface fishing for salt water game fish is generally on the
slow side. Limited passengel-loads, fair bait and cooperaUve
currents have combined to brighten the angling picture soqie..
• what.
' Mixed sized yetlowtail, ranging from four to 30 pounds are
on tap for fishermen at lhe-Q:irooado Islands. Two Newporters
who ha ve moved to Tahoe returned last week to sample the
yeUowlail action. Danny Cassel and Babe Niemiec both bagged
yellows and bluefin tWla and then went up to Morro Bay to
'fish for , albacore before returning to Tahoe.
i Consistent Calches 111 North
' Speaking of kngfim, consistent catcbeJ are still being made
' out of tht Nortbern -ports, and fishing will be good for at least
• another three weeks.
• Party boats are 1tar1lng to turn to rock cod fishing: and
• paueagtrt are ftlllng tbetr sacks. Call Art's Landing or the
PavUloa for tcbedules daring the fall moath1.
' San Vincente Prod11ctlve
Fair to a:ciod bass, bluegill and catfish action is on lop for
, fresh water anglers wl:io make the drive to San Diego. San Virr
• cente opened on a good note and provided fishermen with better
t.han average angling. The other San Dj:cgo lakes are also start-
1 in&: to show signs of picking up. ·
' Lflkes Henshaw and Vail are fair for bass and catfish, list
bluegill plenUful and crappie as scarce. Big Bear is fair for
' trout and a few. bass in· the .l·to-2-pound class are starting to hit,
, but temperatures are falling to freezing during the nighl.
_ Lake Irvine will close for the season in early October and
• productive Anahel~Lalte-will open Oct.10.
Area Sports Calendar
. Polo , SJate
~ WHt W1tlr ... -SOOf, 21·12 -G-luc/IM hwfMmftlt et
S•nt• B•rWrl.
Tvn., Sept. u -•I C11W•M•.
"''·· lefll, .. -., """' Mlftla'. T..,,, Oct. t -t.• A"""" ·CC• ,_,
OCC Star .
Closing h1
On Record
• Before the ·start or th e 1973
footl>All season, John Dixon's
chief personal goal was to
break lhe Orange. C o a s t
College a11·tlme r u s h i n g
record.
After two games Dixon is
right on target with that I~
year-<1ld mark of J,248 yards
set by Bob Haynes during the
1962-83 seasons:
Dlxcn, a 195-pound former
Estancia High standout, ran
for 622 yards last Mason in his
freshman year at Orange
Coast, carrying the ball 130
times for Ii 4.8 average.
His achievements earned
him All&uth Coast Con-
ference firs t team honors.
Thus far in 1973, Dixon is
OCC's leading rusher again -
despite the presence of a pair
ol '1eralded freshmen -i>an
Princeotto and Mike Nanko.
Dixon picked up 58 yards in
the Bucs' opening game loss to
Golden West and added 85 in
the 14-7 win over LA Harbor
last week.
'Ibet gives him a total or 765
yards with 483 to go -an
average of about 61 per game.
Dixon is well aware or the
record, but he is quick to point
out that he puts team goals
ahead of his OY.'n personal
goals.
"We think we 're going to
win the South Coast Con·
retence because we 're a much
better balanced team than we
were a year ago. And this
team is more emotional than
last season's team. And I like
too lay that way," says Dixon.
"I would like to break the •
school record and if I have a
season like I did last year
think I'll break it. Since we're
not passing as much as last
year I should get more carries
th.is sea.son."
Di~on did not start playing
football until his sophomore
year at Santa Monica High
School where he was a middle
guard on defense.
\Vhcn he moved to Costa
Mesa before the start of his·
junior year at Estancia, Dixon
shifted to offense. He 's never
regretted it. •
A pre-dental major, Dixon
says be enjoys playing football
more than anything else.
"Football is a lot of fun. I
dopl_km_w what I'd be doing
if I didn't play footba ll. A
person only has a certain
amount of tin:ie for It in one's
life."
Youth PPK
Sign11ps End
'·
.
Dilly l"llot Stiff l"ho+.
Huntin9to11 ~eaclitf Chana11
Jc;wi 'Yeaver (I) won _ the _Huntington Se~cliff Cou!ltry Club women 's golf cham~
p1onsh1p over defending title holder Patti. Schottm1ller. Joan fired a 260 in the
three-day, 54·hole event.
~~~~~~~~~~~-~~~
Prep Polo Results
s11n11y Hlll1 Esl1ntla • t s a 1-J T_.,,..mant H1mlinciton Bdl o o O 1-l
Jv11ior V•tllry Esl•nc:l1 stOrlr:i;: $. Smllh '·Wyett 2:
Scire tty Qlllrft•• Lee 1. Hunl!l'IQIM Beach scor!rtd: ;j{) l1!1 1Jr;:
Neww1 l 2 1 J-1 . Cushm1n 1. .<.(,~,.;~) ~l:l:jc!,f§'
Su""y Hiiis I • I 0-6 Jort:lan I l I 1-s ~':>):!
Fr1d.1y , Stpltinbt'r 28, 1973 DAIL V PILOT ! I
Coatit Area Preps
F oothall Results
sc.-. "' °"'"''" EIToro OOOG-0
L•11une 8(h, O 0 0 6l 6
Area Prep
X-Country
Unl"'""ty t•) (111 Cyprou
VARSITY
I. Murr1't' {CJ 10:14; 1. l r•rwon (U)
lO:lS; l. !11kkll1 (U) 10: .. ; 4. Olgm1n
<C> 11:14 ; S. Hasstlor (Cl 1\:11: 6. G11van (U) 11:31 ; 1. Curtis (C 11:36;
a. 2•creo IVJ 11 :J7; 9. Pe!lrton \Uj 11,.7; 10. Fulltt /UI ll:SO; 11. Colo c ll:SO: 41. Ftro U) ll:SS; 13. Oberlin (UJ 11 :5'1 14. G~11e (U) 11:07.
JUNIOll VARSIT'I'
Ul\l111r11lv woo b't' lorlell.
VARSITY
M•rfn1 ll21 n ::u WH l!l'llt!1l1r lo lll11m1 (Ml 10:191 2. Olc l (W)
10:35; J. Prince tW! 10:31 ; '· OOuhmle !WJ 10:41; 5. W1ll1 (M) 10:12: 6.
Alv•••t /W) 10:Sl; 7. Nash !Mj 10·SJ a. Rffd W) 11:111; t . Citdr• (M 11 :'02: 10. Pl1n !Ml ll :IJ; 11. Shlrtev /WI 11:n; n . 11111no (WJ 11:31; 1J. M•I •'• (Ml 11:41. ·
JUNIOlt VAllSITY
Mlt'I~ (ttl 117j W11lmhHlt1" l. ArloW (M) qJ· i 1. MlllOn IWl 11;:14; l . AndorlOn {w ll:l51 4. Sllol1r IMl l1 ::W1 !. V1ra1 ( J ll:Je; t . Allen M) 11 :42.
FJIDSH·SOPH
M1rln1 CSO) \11) Wnlmlnllll'
1, Breckel! IW 11;)3; j· liemlllM· CWl M:•l1 J. Kathel tW 11 :•1• A.I GaBuo (Ml 11 :52/· s. BrldlO't' {W) ll:U; 6. tfefldr1clc Ml 12:00.
s ...
COSTA MESA DATSUN
-
.. ,
Sol", S..lce & L ... 111.g
1145 Ha,t.or llvd., C.M,
540·6410
• Supe< li&hlwloPI -(US! U
lbs... .
• Super powll'-alls I , ..
lo(ioS-
• WorS4's
li&hfaloltclric-
jull7ll im.•
••1ess cuttins attKhments
liTlil McCUUDCH
TONY'S ILDG.
MATlllAL.. INC.
2075 Newport lt.d.
Co•to MffO
541-1121
REVOLVING LEASE BACK
N9Wpor'I Koring: Whir• ), DeMo" l, Mlrln• 1 I o 1-J ~£..'-% YOU "' R1u 2, Olw1y, LlpPOld I, ;:;,~-~.4\ M1rln1 1corlnci: Rock J, Hormell I. "3~i Gn -•r . % A lrlOUITION'Ut CONC9'f • AUTMOTm UA .... Fnosh Saph WllDl'r 1, -"'"" ~ . Searl hr Qu1rtors ' ' YOU w•UT ' ........... ""-'-,...,.11 ..... -'•tr Moio .. 11\ -·~ ... i,,. .. '""' -SUMYHltll •ll J-lJ MuonVle]o l45S-15 Q -· Q~ .... 11_,. ....... •Uto ~·1o 1114 U
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NewpOrt Kori"!!: Oobnlll l, Grl't' •. MlsJlon Vleto scorlnci: I.vie 1. Miher ~ A ~ • """'• Dtwl ,..,_, • hllt·la M......_. ........
' •. " , .....-~ '73 tr '74 J;:..:;:, • 1-•-s,..i.n .. e IMI ..... ,.. 1 co "" Fro1h·Sooh Ta11"'•menr · ''"' ord 1. R!otQI 1. l'lusn 2. Mur1>hv V?i, (Ii --.. "" -• St-By Qwirt~ J, Ok111•kl l,-SrewarJ L~ ~ 19QM 11$ IMMf:Ol.t.T• CASH __ _ EC · o O 1 1-1 El Toro O c G 0-o --~ --, p.o,,., .... , •. ",,'-· --r CAil..l.Ol.ltU.MOC#"ll'<---"1
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s-By 0Mtrten Wesrml"ll•r tcorlna: Hu11tlov 2. l(ent .... CrTY OJ'. OIANG£ I NrwPOIT llACll '' ~I MtH 1 2 I 1-S 2, JUldls 2. P-2, Mullldy 3, Trln11-G•nert1f C•r C•rp. llM TftlM '"· tlll 1.l. lrw.l· ..... -C111I~~ Kcrino ~ s\,,e°nsJ.,-f~l. ,--~---'·-'-'-"-"~·-·-------------------------------------_'. ____ _ LUlld 11), WUIN (2). Rlt1t ClJ. COl'ona dfl Mir ' s • $-1l Aencho OOIG-\ • _ C0!111'11 Oil Mer Korlna: B•owne 1.1"!"-"::=::""':o>~"<:~=~"::=:'.'."'":=:"-::~"::='::'"::""o:::' ________________________ ""t '"-ln;tun 2. Crimp 3, Shtltrnan I, II Watwi· ~. BOUDhtv %. l:or1nr l. H•ao 2. WllOl"ry 2.
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Edl1en • 1 1 0-6 1er::1 l 0 1 1-J Ill,,:,..~ J.~~~~M~rrll 1, Cun-
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W'ld,, oet. JI -Ir ~' f,_..),
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T..... OCI. M -leftta lll'GllCI'' (lllHJ. '
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Tutt.I NtW. l -•t Cl!'rltoa. w.d,. Nov. 1-I.A HltW" (lloml),
!'rt., HoY. t -~· Hondo-ll'IOmlJ. 'Tt!ws,. Hov. lS -f'lllltmll (,..,,.I, '""~:.=~; ~Af~r· 11111 30-Dtc, I -llite thl~IPI
kll.-M tolloflt ,
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ooto ''""· lwtt t pl llM • OD
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llaw .cars, trucks, Zs and station wagons
New and unique location
' New. and longer guerantee for 11,ll Datsuns
'excopt our gu•flfltHd pri;.owntJd Datfuns
When MlcArthur ond Jomboree m~t. 181 Do•• St., NewpO!I Buch . • Phone 833·1300
COOLANT SA \"tR
KIT 179 t...,f·~-· --~too-"' ........
, I • ,.,
111 EAST 19th STREET, COSTA MESA
JUlt OFF HlWPO•T ILYD: -a.MN ..-... "'"'9t ....:..
•
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O,.IN SUN, f ·6
ALTERNATORS .... '''"' .... .., •"l(IHC.lll
tA~l 16?!
,
•
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J.2 O}ILY PILOT F•ldaJ, S.pt•mb<• 28, 1973
lfeekend 'Yachting Caletular
Ala~itos Bay Argosy~Draws 100 Entries
lamitoa ,Bay Argosy Santa ~tonlca Bay Summet Series, PtdA, 001\Ul, CLUB -Bowen Memorial Trophy, C&J-25, Sunday. CLUB -Ocean lUlce No. I.
s weekend is the KING HARBOR YACHT SW'Kl4y. Serles. Lightning; Skimmer North ·a~' lAlud _ Saturday. an Sa i Ii n g CLUB -Cecil R. King Trophy ch A!JllO<iation's domestic version race, centerboards, Saturday. San Diego Class ampibnship, Saturday, ANA'CAPA-YACHT ctUB _. SANTA BARBARA SAI.Lc
of Its famed Newport to SOUTH COAST COR-SOUTHWESTERN YACHT Sunday. Anacapa Island Race, OR, l~G CLUB -Goleta Picnic,
•
•
WANTED A · BOAT SLIP
t ...... '"' .. e 46'all' CllN er.ft ........ .......
pett H.tMt. I U.. ehi• ~ tile Met. I -ttwffty, •r.t.
eNtfleet, leyel, MM, cllffrftll -4 ,....,..,, I whl Mt ltt-*
,.., ..... --......... ......,, ,.. ... •Jlllll ..... ..,.
11....rlM, Ht wo11ld tettfe ftir, w ........ to_,,,_, •••1••1t,
h ....., c .. ,..., ,. , •••
tf y.• c• c .... te 1tY retc•, I'll fAI Uy yo• 4111..,, (I)
'9 .,,,_,, .... tj 9rot9fllt od tCI ,., Y•• tM ... ., ,. .. hr,.. ,..., ...
CALL FRED MARSH -675-6200
WEEKDAYS -9 • 5:30 Ensenada i-ace -without the INTHIAN YACHT~CLUD -CLUB -San Diego to CORONAOO YACHT CLUB Saturday. Saturday.
problems of the Baj a Ladies race, PHRF. Saturday. Ensenada race, OR, PHRF, -Bissell Series, SDHF, Sun-SAN LUIS YACHT CLUB -SAN FERNANDO VALLEY!~~!"!'!~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
-canfomia hJjlnr and 'getting DEL REY YACHT CLUB -Multihull, predicted Jog, starts day. _ _ Invltationa1 Re1atta, Satur-SAILING C1'UB -Fall Serles S d ' N Q •
the boat borne. Sunday Skippers race. Sunday. today. . SAN DIEGO. YACHT CLUB day ; Fall Serie!, SwX!ay. No". I, Marina de! Rey, Sun· Try a tur ay s e'vs UIZ
Nearly 100 sailboats are ex·l _....:..M:..A.::L.:_IB.:_U:.._;V.::A::C.::H::T.....:.CL::.U:..S..::.::. __ M_:::tSS.:::.IO::N_::.B.::A Y.:__.::V_A_C_H_T ____ N_a_ti.::on:..a.::l _P....:..r .::•::.•:..i ::.d:..e::.n.::t_' :..' __ s_A_NT_A_B::.A::R::.B_AR....:..A_Y_A_C.:_HT....:.._·_d._:..aY:_·-~~--------....:..------------------
pected to answer the starting
signal Saturday for the race
from Balboa Pier to Ala itos
Bay. i On-Saturday night th huge
!Itel will raft up Long each
Yacht Cub's guest dock for a
dlllel'!!ftl\tlrtd of bljin• -din·
lier and dancing.
ON SUNDAY the yachts will
congregate arr the entrance to
Alamitos Bal in Long Beach
Harbor to start lhe race home
-hangovers and all -with
the fulish off the Newport
Pier.
Like all NOSA events. the Argosy is Open to yachts of the
0cean· Racing ( I 0 R I ,
Performance H a n d i c a p
(PllRF), Midget Ocean Rac-
ing (MORFI and Ocean Rac-
ing Catamarans. '
NOSA, formed more than a
quarter of a century ago to
aponsor the Ensenada race.
conducts only three com-
petitive events during the year
-the Ensenada, Argosy aod
the 14-~file Bank race. The
latter l.8 scheduled in early
~ovember.
On Wednesday of ne)'.t week
the final qualifying races for
the Hobie Cat-14 nationals \\'ill
get under way at·Lake Havasu
City, Ariz. on l he Colorado
-River. Final races for the title
will be-held Oct. 6-7.
HERE IS THE Southern
Califonlia Yachtfng Associa-
tion officlal calendar of events
for um weekend: '
Newport-Balboa
DANA POINT YACHT
CLUB -PHRF Series, Satur-
day,,
NEWPORT OCEAN SAIL-
I NG AS SOCIATI ON -
Alamitos Bay Argosy, Satur·
day, Sunday.
Loi Angeles-Long Beach
LONG BEACH YACHT
CLUB -Long Beach and
Return (races 7 and 8 of
Catalina Island Series, Satur-
day, Swlday).
C">J!RllLO.BEACll YACHT -
CLUB -Fa1\ Series, all
classes, Sunday.
CORSAffi YACHT CLUB -
Ashbrtdge Sa 11 Race, 5atur·
day, Sunday.
Fleet Four
Sets Plans
For Winter
With a national sailing
champion u•lthin its folds.
Catalina 27 FJeet Four bastd
at Dana Point Harbor Is about
to embark on a winter racing
-and-'90Cial-program.
The first event on the calen-
.dar is an overnight bivouac in
the west tiiSid" at Dana Point
Harbor. Catalina 27 owners
are invited to the ovemigjlt
"rafting party" Saturday and
Sunday.
"It's probably the S'hortest
.cruise oo record," said fleet
captain Ralph Hart, "but it
should be a lot of fun for
everybody."
Hart also pointed to a suc-
cessful aeMOn of racing and
cruising events climaxed by
the National Catalina 2 7
A 1 sociatlon Championships
hosted by FJeet Four earlier
this month.
'lbose Nationals produced a
local champion, Bill Murray of
Huntington Beach, who guided
his sloop "Nugget" to one first
plaCi! win and a couple of third
places to v.·in the coveted Na-
tionals' cup against a dozen of
the Pacific Coast's most
skillful and experienced
sailors.
Murray, over the summer
series, was the number one
leader in F1eet Four. He's the
fled racing directo< and prom·
t.ses a fW.l 3Chedule ot racing
between now and the start of
1974's racing season. ___ ....
·coastal Weather
}ADdlY (!Mr toiUiy. LiOht verleble
wlftdt nloht 1Md mo!'nlno hours be·
coml111 watltf"ly 12 to 1• knot• In
etttrllOOl'lt ~)' Ind Saturday. Hll>!I
fOClly, lflld 1'0I. • •
C•t lll "'"'*"'"''' ,,,... lrorn at ta 71. lnletMt ltmptrtlvta rM1111• trotn
"' ,. ff. W...,. teffl~tture "'
81111, Moon, l'lllet
PlfDA't'
teconill llfgft , II :M P·'"· •.S ~ -$:11 •• m. 1.1 U.TU•OAY,
First llftlt • ...... 11:112 1.m. 5.1
..,,.. .. ..... ..... •:• ··"" 1,1
SK01W lllttl ....... , 121lt e.m, M IKond law , •:oo p,m, o.•
IUJfOAY
''"' Mfll ......... , II r2' e.rn. J.5 "''" '°""' .......... t :Ot ··"" 2.2 .._.. low . ... .. •. . •151 I>-"'-0.1
,,_ •• ':U •·"" Sett •:42 ,.m,
#lllDlt 1tt19 •iR •..m. .... 114' ,.tn.
-
ALL PBE·FINISHED
MOLDl?fG
1/2 PRICE
·Thia is On• big d•al .h•r•: You know what
molding• cost so you should buy enough.
or ev9n buy for a futur• proi•ct.
GOO SR
PANEL
ADHESIVE
97c
Our own b~and of gulc. Slickl like glue.
Cartridge lits all standard gum. You can
pay more. but you won't 9et anything that
, works any better.
PANEL
.MAGIC
97c
Spray it on. wi)>9 ii off. and oH com•• amoke,
dirt, dust, and the now look ia r•tor•d.
(Your pa:nolinq, not your Buick, Horac•.)
ESPANA
Ahh tho romance of sunny Spain. When you
put this up you can almost hear tho stands
shout "Ole" (If you do. J want some of th•
stuff you're drinking). Fl•xible, buy what
you nood.
SHELVING
3 FT. 4 FT. S FT.
4.49 5.99 7.69
BRACKETS
SINGLE.
2.99
DOUBLE
5.99
Comploto fixture with
6 FT. 8 FT.
8.79 9.99
TRlPLE
,8.79
CORK
POOL
TABLE
LAMP
larg'e cork shades lo j)Ut -2411
the light where you want
ii. Nico Jor th• pool tabl•
(What you plan to buy it •
for a crap table, Sham•!)
·-~
WALNUT ROSEWOOD TEAK I 1•11 you true I paid more
For that real boar,d on board
look. and the fine patina of
real wood, you can't beat thil
panel or this price. (Sounds
like the beginning of a long
commerical folks.)
You can just see Jon Hall
padding acrou, the deck lo
sa•• Maria Moutez with thia
fine paneling. AU pan•la.
Th• rich dar!r and light rich rK
Just makff thia pan•I a winner,
For an exotic room. on• your
·qu•ata will talk about and try
to pull th• paneling off of,
chooae rouwood.
ti•• y.an e190 for pan111ing
that looked like ln1 money.
Th• erou groOY" 9i•• it cm
e•en_mor• aotld look. SH thei
all. ~Buy one of 9ach. and
lat quality. and full 4x8 Ft.
87
4 PAK CORK
--WALL TILES
69c
I did the ceiling with them. but the wall
would be nice too. Deep, thick. rich, chunky
(sounds like peanut butter).
SIMULATED
WALm
SHELVING
97'
ALL SIZES
Walnut tiniah. easy to care for. Seconds, ao
you can turn the side with an imperfection
to tho back or aide down.
WALLPAPER
Som• qr•at
patterns, some
· lo(et1. it'• up lo
your eye. Tru•
p•rcent1 off,
10% to
50% OFF
DECORATOR MIBBOB scms
Put it up lik•
mirror u1 .. and
you ha•• a fin•
looking •lec:tro·
etched piece of,_ ., .. ---
87
CLASSIC
BRICK
5''
Top of tho lino. in Antique Red Brick, Charred
Red Brick. and White Brick, Takes a
bricklayer to t•ll ii from th• roal stuff.
Six 1q, ft. CFIOn.
LUSTBA
BRICK
PANEl.S
247
w.11 give you 12 aqu,ar• f••t of this stuff and
aUil atate it looks protty good. You be the
judqe (but don't ••nt•nc• m•).
PLASTIC
ACCENT
PANELS
Some have such
a lo•ely acc•nt l
cannot understand·
a word they aay.
2x4 1 .97
2x6 2.97
BUG BUNNER -~-c---
Thick .tnyL In
colon. with UHlo ·
1oo1h ,.; bald 111oir
plac:• on th• rug.
Ptolocffon and
'9ood looks.
I
87
1/4" 2••
mak• a crazy d•n.) '
87
LUGE DOOR
MIRRORS
You can haff one in
walnut or whit• &n1ah.
On• look. and you11
recognise th• im.ag•
in Cl HCODd.
2''.
Aas!~tP°'g ~~~
'"Lumbor ii our Mainatay"
(I wioll I had oaid it tiro!).
And good plywood w•
got, by the ton.
4xl Ft
3/8" 1/2" 3i.4"
3" 4" 6"
JUMBO
12 INCR
LEmRS
Uni ... my m•mory fail.a me th ... UIUally
qo for more than a buck. or a dollar ••en..
Now you can haY• aom• fun. do bl9 houte
nwnbera. make up rilque words, or
-whm••er for cheop.-Scmded amooth.
inc:Iuding 1ymboll (but no .. •le''?)
c
,
•
• • • ,
•
' •
I
! •
. •
..
'
•
•
• . -•
•
-• •
• •
•
;
Arts/D_ining Out
Entertainment Friday, Stptt111Der 28, 1973
DAILY PILOT -• •
. . .
The Glon.-i'Y.~"DC'te Theater o~ns its si!'W~ks ·community
arts project ·afbringt eoast College With a free publ1c coW'cert Satur·
day night. The 8:30 p,m. perfonnance will take place in lhe OCC
Auditorium. It will featu·re the company's major works, such · as
'1Magazine" which is being perfonned above. The. project with its
workshops. demonstrations, art and music &eSSions, will be climaxed
with a closing concert Nov. 16.
'Gingerbread' Crumbles
•
On .San Cleme'!te Stage
By TOM TITUS
Of "'' Omilr Pollet staff ,
If, as many actors claim. it Is more
di fficult to play comedy than drama
beca_M.'le of the intricate timing required,
then lt is doubly demanding to mix the
l\\'O styles interchangeably to produce
empathy and believatlility on one hand
and reap high hilarity on the other.
her timing. Miss Donka possesses~ abun·
dant energy, and her slide from the
wagon in the second act is well played,
but her line dllficuJty is all too apparent.
The best per!onnance'OI th< evening Is
delivered by <ltuck Schicker as a
homosexual acto• struggling to ho
"discovered" after 20 years ol pavement
pounding. Schleker resists the' temptation
to overplay tile gay cllaracter, offering
Instead a stroog, highly motivated In·
terpretaUon wblch reaches a blgb peak In
the second act w:bereln he bares his soul
with both natura l ease and comic gusto.
Watch for Signs
Silent Rustlers, a deaf drama club at Golden 'Vest College, is re-
staging its hit production "Arseni~ a_!ld Old Lace" tonight through
Sunday in the Golden \Vest College Theater. Students use sigfi lan-
guage and exaggerated acting along with interpreters for the bene-
fit of the bearing audience. Here Brant Watt as "Dr. Einstein" re-
joices ·Ov,:er the death of "J.1ortirner." The sign language reads "Kill."
. Perfon;nan~es, at $2 admission, ate 8 p.m. Friday and Saturday and
2 p.m •. Sunday. ·
Q
Neil Simon's .. 1be GingerbreaCI Lady"
requlre3 such theatrical extension, and
the San Clemente community The'8ter
productloti comet1 up short In both
departinents. It Is a .sincere ~t shaky ~f
fering which neutralizes its high potentl'.\1
with repeated lapses of timing. which 1n
tum take a heavy toll on the play's
credibility.
Direct.or Tony 'Brandt, who has
mou'nted some memorable comedies1 in
past seasons has allowed his ~nl
production t~ reach the f~Ui~bts too
early. Wbile characterizatKJO m ~
respects ts commendable, the all-im-
portant elements of tim1ng and pace are
sorely deliclent, resulting In a show
which. f-with •poradic 1eal but
w1tich I• ultimately crippled b Y
MICKIE CLAXToN, as the narclssisti~
and ornamentaJ beauty in the twilight of ' CHOIR MEMBERS O~ THE NEW CHILDREN SURROUND DIRECTOR JOHN YEISER, IN CENTER WITH MUSTACHE.
mechanical flawa. -~ -
iler loveliness, appears. oVerJy detacheil -1
a¢ insincere -more so than required F h F ·
by the character -In the.fiz:at act. But res aces
Miss Cluton returns in the second with a ' '
recitation of. ratiohallution that is near • Sounds Abound
perfect, then closes her performance
with a long"'Bwaited glimpse ol the real woman uoderneath. By IULARY KA YE
Of "'' Dtltr l"tltt lttff The key role of the singer's daughter is
played with a natural rnlnuro of-purity --JohnYeiserisjustooeollhekids.
and wnrldline'S,1 hi> Kym WO!ls. Mis• Even thoogh he is taller, has a deeper
Well• gives a most thoughtJul . ·~nd ;'voice, a dfooi>!ng .mustache, ~nd knows
sincere perfonnance, though her Umufg his music backwards and forwards these could be improved in her more emotlona1 . . '
the playground. Love, anger. softness,
cruelty -it's aJl there." ·
This ls why Yeiser chose to mold a
group ol children into a fresh, vibrant
choir.
Mall this spring. It's success was so
great that this ~ be chose 55 kids
to be his "Jumping Beans". · •
\
%3
.,
THE PRIMAllY maUunctlon ts at the
core of the show 1/daere pei:fectlon is
demanded -In the " uue role of Evy
Meara, the alcohollq singer back li'om the
. sanitarium ror a, haky sta'h-at· a new scenes. _ 1 (e:atur_es__jo not.stand in his wtJf.
' George Alig contributes a fin e scene ns, 1 ·Ali 111rector of "The New CWldren",
"A lot of singers nowadays are hung up
ln technique, trying to duplicate this in-
nocent, freSb sound," Yclirer·cominented.
''People like Paul McCartney and Paul
Slmm are teyfng to capture this
childhood innocence.
0 THIS IS PURE, hooesj music,:• said
Yeiser, who e:11:plained the kfds sing rock,:
folk and classical songs, in addition to
original _1£orks by hifllSC!f and the
'When I was a boy I ne-
doubted
that I could fly, M1a Donka's formes: lover, a combination ..aoon to pe.rfonn at Golden West College,
·"TH• G11.0'1,M1Ao 1.'.t.0Yto • of._ cllches made credlble by A.111,'s Y'l!lser, of Fountain Valley, ha,s a rare A .ci -or•m. 11y Ntll r11mon, dlrte.IM 1111c1 d• I -I ~ ce Ettti \I Pu! ,..,. -~~= J Tflfl,{, erifldt, •'• Man•11•f J°ti:: :!: aeon. c ~ onnan · q e . 1:-1 5 relationship with his singers. They range • 1,, '= :-' -='tnM= .. ~~ornnwn•:ri Spanish livery boy is I\ bit stahc but an in age from sis: to 16 and although ~'in"°""" T:=;s.1wd•r•a~1~ tlf~ive opener.. Yeiser says he is "chrono, . i/Ut1caUy 25",)le OJ~···., '"' Qbrlftt ,, '!:?.. ' • • l "&' "' "" c1t1Mt1tt. 11grw• ~y.. RU.LO reiates to-them .on a friendshJp, not pro-
.., _. ........... ,~ •. ~ ........ ool~ •· t~"~•~-.... Plab.J~~" ''!grande 11 lessional1 leveL • , Jlmmy.J l'tfrp ''''''"'""'"f"";., ti.c!I: ti ...... I W"tl\;U~.T ~~ :I Ulru\;tor ...., t b i u _..-,i J TOb'f,..L.,,..i ........ 1.,. ........ , •••. ;i'<~•iln ;: ........... --.-....too at•.-ti......,,st'nce it . l ·guesf never rea y &&'C" ~. [~v.,.=._~ .~:::~:::::::::::;::::::; =--,;;:;~ ~~· gk>on\y'--;;; t/l its re-Yeiser.Aid, grinnihg 11l'ril working ofi It "'""'* .......... "4
''"'"'""'"" "" cu~t. The use ~of a ~~r Dor would 00....."
---reilder the.scene in which t.a are sup-• ll!t• It Is an ind.dlbiy juicy part wi::i po!Od to ho dtnuned farm el(eCUve. "MAGJC;jMAN" IS A tY,plcal Y•lser
Jn \he 'right hands (u was evldf ''The Gingerbread=' Is a ghow song. Yollth, innocence, nat~re. beauty -
earller this year), can become a tour de which ca11> only be tm ed by subse· 1hese are the themes Yeber clloooeJ lo t ,Qiient performances will undoubtedly write about. And this is what' Yelser1s 0~ris Donkais laya IOllle lmp~ve aolldtfy during Its le<Olld and lh!rd choir-wblch he Informally calls John's
theatrical stre In filJ,•nd atarts In weekends. Per!onnancts cont l nu e Jumping Beans -Is all .about.
the '$all ~min ~IJn)(lucl,lbn, but her In, tonll(bt and Saturday and Oct. HI at the "There's an openness kid• have when
ability tOmuter ihelormldablo dialogue playhooae, 202 1.venida Oabr!Uo,' San they a~" explained Yeiser. "Their reeJ.
~Impairs her characteriaaUon as well as Clemente. • lngs come out just •like when they 're on
•
"But I've gol It here myself, in the
palm or ,my hal\ds,'')le said.happily. .. YEISER, WHO JS an .,iuc.11on major
at Cal' Slole. Long Beach, i.s been In·
volved with .music for most.ol his life, An
ei}>erlenctd gultms~ Yeiser began
-111ng music In the Ocoon View School!
aeveral years... ago. Tffil year he 11
teaching classroom music at Crest View
and West~t schools1 In between al·
tending college classes and directing ~ .
choir. ' )
ti was al these schools that Yeiser
realiied the polcnllal or the children. He
recrulted klda among his school• for .•
musical program at HunUngton Center
. .
!
chlldren. .../
The "Afagjc Man" typifitts Yeiser's
song\\'Titing. "My Brother Pinched Mc"
is a typical song by second graders. The
first l\\.'O lines read : 1'My brother pinched
me -.He'.s l ,(lfelt bi( jerk.'' ·
"Everyl/OdY ls 1r;lng to get down to
the ~lnsl!fe tllemselves," saJd Yel3er. ' ,musle transports people f'lck to tltolr youth."
'Yeiser does not pretend he has a choir
lull or Donny Osmond!. 13ut he clairrq lhe
kids, haVe a warmth 1llld strength tha\ Is unh<ato ble.
"1VllEN THE,SE· !<ids snlg "Here
Comts the Sun,"\ a ,Bc~Ues song, they
are.n 't singing about anything poliUcal or
soclnl," Yeller said. "Tboy're singing
(!lee CHOIR, Page Ill
I was never afraid to wonder why.
Then I grew up.
More i"!p2rtanl things filf9d '"'I'
skies.'
sings John Yeiser.
'Some people grow more SJNrl,
""but less wise,' answer
l~e children.
-from 'Magic Man' by Jol.n
Yeiser.
-
• '
_ 4 bAILY PILOT
. •
• • •
. . ,
Sun~ay Pr~gram on Occult
A lot ol IOl!J ida wll bt editor ol l'lycllic: maeazinel
imhaPPJ 10 learn that loac· ml Nat Freedland. BUlboan!
jlme bocbdor J.J. Ji -. 'mapzi,.. llaller. Th< ......r
KLOS-nl'• alien-man t>-hour is •I"" to listenen to call
I p.m,, Moaday •• Friday), in and join the dis<u9slon. A
made the trip lo the marital repeat broadcast wtn be on
altar last week. from 9 to 11 p.m .
lioneymooning-in Puerta KMPC's Kathy Gori is en-
Vallarta, he'll be back on the joying a neow kind of auCces!I. to Monday ni ght's "An Evrn-tert11lnment" was ••readings"
• atr ~fanday. ~ She bas starring ro les in Lwo Ing \Vllh ... " l'Oncert seriL'!I by five p.11ychics · · · mal11·
KLOS 1ister station KA8C new network tv cartoon series, on KNAC, featuring The \Vho R talnlng st<:a tion 's reputation of
-Talkradio bu added fonner '·Inch High Private Eye" and p.m .. midnight. Crosby . Sllll, Vcing "far out !" •
KGBS "~tale Call" boltess, "Bailey's comets." ~ts. Gori 's Nash & Young w!U be on Oct. Cal State's FMer, KCSN. Is
Jill Taggart. to its~ 31 a radio show airs from l -6 a.m. B. lllanning a 10-year celebration
staff anooqncer • .Till llso Will KHJ's Capt. John play!I hosL of Us signal Nov . 2 • 5, with a
act as a re Ii e ·r ~ mosE ATI'ENDING the this Saturday to 1.000 listener· marathon of top J18ITle9 from
municator. She"! currentl* fill-Los ~eles "t:ounty Fair Sun-guests at a screening of showbiz expected to con,trlbute
ing iD for Maureen Reagan's da_y can have a free Polaroid "American Graffiti.'' Th ey're time and money to the facility.
Saturday and Sunday sbiftf.(3-5 color picr:ure ·taken w l th still mopping up from their Of the staff of 100, ooly three
p.m.) Mtl1e Maureen sits in KMPC persooalilies. "Look to the Future',... bash draw salaries. The rest are
for vacatiooiog Mich a e I Memben of KPFK's "Film held at the G r i f r i t h Cal Staters. Mark Alyn, (213)
Jackson. of the Month Club" are able to Observatory where 300 turned 885-3090 is the man to contact ,
SUNDAY 'S ''IN-
VOLVEMENT'' program
series (3-5 p.m.) on KGBS will
fDCUS on "The Occult .''
Modera·t.or Lin Hilburn will
welcome nationally syndicated
newspaper astrolotibt Sydney
Omar (featured in the Daily Pilotl, Alan Vaughan («>-
attend special screenings of out for live entertainment and if you have talent and or fund!
important new films and film -~bu!;!~•;t..;P;a;rt;;•;l;;t;h•;;;";'".-.;;';o ;le;n;d.;;;;;;;;;;;;~ classics, at private showings. -
Nostalgia buffs wiD enjoy
that station's ''The Big Broad·
cast'' Saturday at 12:30 p.m.
It features vintage N 8 C
Symphony Orchestra, while
rock music rans are· expected
to put on the headsets to.listen
BIG PARADE AND
LOBSTER BAKE .SATURDAY
132 ENTRIES, LIKE LIONS CLUB FLOAT, TO PARTICIPATE IN PARADE
fr * See the big parade at FASHION . ISLAND
10 a.m , Saturday around Circle Drive.
Lobster Bake & Carnival all 3 .. days
Fri.-Sun. Sponsored by the Balboa Bay
Lions Club. ·Lions Long on Lobster
Weeke1id Event Offers Food, Parade, Carnival
Ne11o-port Beach's Fashion lsland 11-'ill
awaken Saturday morning to the
sound of music rui 15 marching bands
"-==:J==---~·~i ::'!'. the Lobster Days parade at
I-lhe 24th annual l~ions Club Lobster ' Bake.
The two-hour parade, which also will
feature 20 Ooals, Miss Newport Beach
Debbie Hodgins. and Mayor Donal d A.
Mcinnis, wi ll kick off al JO a.m.
It will be followed by t"'o days and
nights of lobster -ab6tlt a ion of i~
altogethe r -carnival rides, games.
and food.
"TIIE WifOLE. EVENT will be big·
ger and bctte; th.an ever." says Bill
f,31uc, lhis year's tion"s C.:lub f'rl-Si-
cient.
'•It's something you can bring the
!amily to and be sure everyone will
, __ .,· have a___good time." Blue says.
;:--All the money raised at the event . '• wiU go to charity, and this year's goal
is '12,000. Most of the funds will go to
Orange County Services for the Blind.
Blue saya.
afternoon at five o'clock when the
carnival rides and attractions begin
operations in the parking lot of
Fashion Island shopping center, just
north of the Pacitic Coast tilghway
near MacArthur Boulevard in Newport
Beach.
LOBSTER FRIDAY will b-c
available from 6 p.m. until at least 9
p.m ., "and longer if the people still
wanl it," Blue says,
f'ood Saturday will be .avajlable
starting at noon, and Sunday starting
at II a.m. Festivities both days will
continue unt!I at Jeast 9 p.m.
Star of the show. of course, will be
the lobster. The price for lobster tail
11caJs th.is year is .$4. compared to
~.50 last year.
for that price. lobster-lovers can
watch their meal being cooked in
large open baking barrels. They "·ill
al.so get coleslaw, bread and butter.
potato chips, ice cream and a choice
of beverage.
also will be hamburgers, cotton candy
and pop com.
THE PARADE Saturday \\ill mark
the -third time the Lions _club has·
sought to enliven its festivities with a
parade. _,,.._
"Our crowds got bigger each of the
first two years," says Blue, "and J)O\V
that we've got our reputation
established for putting on a fine
parade, we 're hoping to attract 5,000
people for this year's effort."
Grand Marshall of the parade 'ft'ill
De Jack Barnett, manager or the
Newport Harbor Chamber of Com-
n1er-ce. The Corona del Mat High
School marching band will be the host
musical group, and t~ Newpon
Beach Police Department Color Guard
will host the numerous other color
guard wiits.
In all , !here will be 137 entries in the
parade, Blue says.
The carnival will include a ferris
v,.hcel, tumbfer cars. and at least 15
game booths. •
Special
Examines
Inf ant Death
Sudden Infant Death Syn-
drome, the little-heard-of-Jead..
ing killer of children in their
first year ol life, will be ex-
plored in a KMPC news spec;-
ial "Perfl,aps to Dream. Per.-
chance to Die" which 11oi1l air
at 5:45 p.m. Friday, Saturday
and Sunday.
The dramatic story tells not
only of research being done
in the field, but explores the
crises. of parents blaming
themselves (or the death due
to improper care or acciden·
..1al smothering; thousands
who have suffered serious psychological , .. ____ ;
marriages which have brokeo
up; and the many who have
mistakenly bee) jailed by
authorities classing sudden
infant death children as vic-
tims of neglect.
Newsman Mike Botula wilI
interview parents who ha \'e
k>st ·their children to the ~
drome, medical researchers
in the field, emergency medi·
cine personnel and coronor's
office employes.
Theater
Returns
To Radio
A new series of radio drama
starts Mond.:iy on KAPX. (108
nif), a county-wide station
that broadcasts from San
Clemente.
HDllywood Television Thea-
ter is a Monday through Fri-
day half-hour suspe~ pre-
sentation at 7 p.m., right after
SOUTH SEAS
TROPICAL FISH
{{/_ POND GOLDFISH & SUl'l'Ll~S
s? .. ~ Baby Koi Carp 75c
~ WaNI' Utrice e WatW Hyec51ftt
l"a11d SllCllk e Goldfl.it food
Koi Food e P11111p Flltretlo11 U11lt,1
A.II Sllfl & Yorletiff of Goldfl ..
218 W. Wilson, Costa Mesa
the news and ju.st before the ,9015 Atlanta, Hunt. Beach.
prime time television Shows. Ii:::::::::::::::: Subtitled the Zero Hour, _
the nightly plays end in cliff-
hangers· with the final diap-
ter of the_ five-part seri"' con,
eluding Friday night.
It is all new materi3I with
some of the old radio stars:
Howard Du!! (Sam Spade),
Lee Tremayne (Mr. First
Nigbter), Janet Waldo (Corliss
Archer). Karl Swenson <Lor-
enzo Jones}. Nina Foch. Keen-
an Wynn. and Pauy Duke.
Rod Serling is the series
host. The first series is en-
titled , "But I Wouldn't Want
to Die There ." •
-SUPER SALE
Guys & Goh Hang Ten Pa•ts. Req . $11-$15 ........ $8.511
Dress Shirts, Req. $13 .00-SIS.OO .$b.OO
Hawaii an Shirts .. ,$1 0.00
Sa:reenecf T~Shfrts. Req. $6. . .... $4.00
Luv 'N Stuff Gals Pants ......... . .. ........... $S,OO
Actually, Lobster Days begin friday
For yoWJgste rs qnappreciative of
lhe delicacies of lobster tails, there
"We urge everyone to come and to
bring a friend ," says Blue. "It'll be
fun, and all the -proceeds are going to
good causes."
, CSF Shows Horror Film Forum M~nikin Sport Shirts ... ·-··-·--··--· ............. $5.00
Tank Top' .... .. . ... -........................ $2.00
. .
' SfolH'• I.: ~1 ick Jagger and the
. -!tolling St.ones. the
·: v.·orld's top rock nllrat··
>tion1 wlll star on the
.: premiere telecast of
-"Don Kircshnor's Rock
· ~ Concert/' tonight fro1n
8:30 to 10:30 p.m. on Channel 9.
.· :·
J
'lt1iages and Realities'
Four Artists Show Worl\:
''Images and Realities," as
seen by four graduates of Cal
Slate, Fullerton, is the theme
or the first show o! the season
at the universit}''s Ar t
Gallery.
~-show, y,·hich opened last
week, will continue through
Thursday, Oct. 11. It is co-
sponsored by the university 's
Art Alliance, the art dcpart-
menf and the Associated
Students.
The ~how features the works
of Dale Gaynor, Robe r t
Goulart, Don Hendricks and
Hazel Slawson, all holders of
r..fA art degrees from the
uni verstiy. Included are
dimensional works by two
artists along with new super·
realist paintings by Hendricks
and unfired sculptural adobe
forms by Mis.'J Gaynor.
1lle ga llery is open to the
-lee
skati ng ~fun.
• A tkating d&le
. -from lht
fun of your lir1t fall
together. Ice akatlng '' a party -for
l wo or two-hundred.
• Ice skating daily.
• Rent Ice skates
ASI( 4SOUT ''IC.IA\. OltOUI' tlATll
.._., Vtrdt Shopping Ctnttr
IVrtior 11111 ~-Cotlt MKfl
Toi. (714l 11't-lllO '
·.
October 4th
7:30to 9:30 p.m. Adm. $1.00
VISIT •ill! world,_, ••lllhitioft Skien.
SEE 1111 lat•" Ski a-& .. ,•tK-d1llftOI" Fo1h_ioM.
SKI MOVIES ''"' ,i-;..g a1 r..o ....-~ ,,,
filMt. 011• of th• ,,.o •od119 drcwll alld lh• orlter •
penc>1>alt'f ..amited DI<\ ln.-ry111-proctvdloft, flll!IH
d11rl11g lent •ea-·• Ch••rol•t frM1tyle C-,..tltioft
Ci1tult.
ORANGE COAST COLLEGE GYM
2701 Fairview Rood, Costa Mesa
504/fh ol fhe Son Diego Freeway
For . Advertising In
OUT 'N .ABOUT
'
Phone
Norm Stanley
642-4321
'
Mexican Shirts .............. $8.00
~Clothes Crusade
ll2 Morl11e A.we. e lolboo lllo11d 9 671-2560
Read the Daily Pilot
We Dare You
Sincerely
Ernie & Sally Camp I.• ••• •• •• !If ••••••••••••••• •• ....
• OUR FAMOUS • Flower Shop • LAST OF THE YEAR • • CALIF. VALENCIA C~orful
• ORANGE JUICE: MARIGOLDS : Cantaloup~ • • "See It Medel"
59' 91, :-79' ·=~~ : 6 For $1.00 :
• Limit y, Gillon Only • Llmlt-2 • Llmlt-6 •
• •
• With This Coupon a With This Coupon • With This Coupon •
ii ............................ · ••••• . ·~· .......... ·-· .............. .
• 1 tOc SALE. --• 10c SALE • Good! And Goocl ;or Yeul•
• ARSHIURN SALE • ICEBERG • Mid,....... •
• ARROTS or • LmUCE a ZUCCHINI •
• CELERY • • S9UASH •
: IC>e -~ : IC>e Each : I-Ge Lb. :
• . Llrnlt-3 of lach • • Llrnlt-4 of Eich a Limit-of LltL • With Thi• Coupon With Th lt Coupon ... With Thtt Cou,_.. ~-········~··············~···· COUPONS EXPIRE OCT. 3, lf73
• WE WIRE FLOWERS AROUND THE CORNER
OR -AROUND THE WORLD B-Y F.T.D,
"Orange Cottnt111a Mos' Popular Produce and Ptowtr Home"
••
~~~~ .-~~--.
,~ NEWPORT PRODUCE
. FLOWIRS IY DEIRA
Open 7 Day• • WHk 8 a.m, to 8 p.m.
2616. Newpert llo.t.vord Oft the Po•IMUla .
Ph,..
67a-t711
67J4711
67H2'1
"3S Years of Produce '
Know How"
fONOED FRUIT $1..flPPER
'°;()A l& YEARS .. "Where Quo!liv fl h•
Orti.r of th• Hou "
1
' .
-I
\
. .
'
..
Whatwdo
'As You Like It'
Ending LA Run
THROUGR SEPT. H
FREE SJtAKESPEARE -Shakespeare's "As You !Jke It"
is the Free Shakespeare Festival's initial oUering. .Both
parking and seating ls free at the Pilgrimage Theater, on
a first come, first serve basis. Doors open at 1:!0 p.m. 3nd
the performance ls 8 p.m. nightly except Modday through
Sept , 29. 2580 Cahuenga Blvd., Los Angeles. (Across from
Hollywood Bowl). \
SEPT. Zl-30
PETER PAN -Fountain Valley Community Theater r~turnS
.. Peter Pan" to the stage, s\efring Joel Strauss and Sharon
Kennedy. Reservations; 962-5189. Tickets. $1. Matinees, 3
p.m. Sept. 23 and 30; evening performances, 8 p.m. Sept. 21,
22, 28, 29, 3-0.
SEPT. 13-30
FESTIVAL -San Diego's Cabrillo Festival, a weeklong
event, commemor~ting the 'discovery o( San Diego Bay,
lakes place Sept. 23.JO.
OCT. l·Z
CIVILIZATION -John Kenneth Clark's 13-part series "Civil~
ization" is being shown at Southern California College on
Mondays at 7:30 p.m.. and Tuesday at noon ln the college
audilorium. The screening is sponsored by sec and the
Mesa Verde Library. The hour-long color films are open to
the public free. Some of the showings and dates are: The
Hero as Artist," Oct. 1-2. "Protest and Communication,"
Oct. 8-9 and "Grandeur and Obedience," Oct. 15-16.
SEPT.zt-·30 .
FALL FESTIVAL -St.. Andrew's Priorj. in Valyenno, An-
telope Valley has a twCHl.ay festival, staged by the Bent
dictine monks of the prlocy_ on _their sop.a~ ranch and mon-
-astery. An opera. art exhibition, Hopi Indian crafts and
dances, ceramics and pottery displays and demonstrations
and six -eates with international menus are included in the
event. I~ takes place Sept. 29-30.
SEPT. 30
KORE,\N DANCERS -The National Folk Ballet or Korea
will appear at 8 p.m. Sept. 30 in the Orange Coast College
auditorium. The concert, performed by the group of 32
singers and dancers from ages 8 to 15, v.•ill open the season
of the Harbor Area Community Concert Association. Admis-
sion is by mei:nbership only.
OCT. ZI
FALL NOTES -Jolm Mason directs the 70-piece city band
in a program of classical and pop music titled Autumn -
Serenade. The 2 p.m. concert on Oct. 21 is free.
. SEPT. zt
DANCE CONCERT -The Gloria Newman Dance Theater
performs a free public dance concert Saturday at 8:30 p.m.
in the Orange Coast College al!tditorium, 2701 Fairview
Top Qallty-12 01.
NEW . YORK . STEAK . DINNER
IMlllllllet: Frl'Mfl srvt.e. Ill Or9"" , ........ .,,... lflalll.
01rllc TNst, ....... 1M1, Sll'ie.,-Fl'ltll.
5ERVED NIGHTLY $2 95 5 TO 11 P.M. •
COCKTAILS e AMPLE PARKING
2" l"ALM ST. KELLY'S ..0. •••ll•VATIONS
l"HON• •7Wnt NMr ,.1rry t111 I"-
HOWARD'S GOES MEXl<;AN
HOWARD~S HACIENDA
Serving Newport's Finest
MEXICAN FOOD • SEAFOOD
CHARBROILED STEAKS
o ,.. 1 D.ys •• ,
BREAKFAST e LUNCH e DINNER
' A.M. -M1Pf9tlt, 1..-dey tin,......,
4 A.M. -1 :00 A.M., hlHy eH s.t.Tdoy
FOOD TO GO-WINE MARGARITAS
.4001 W. COAST HWY.
NEWPORT BEACH 673-7750
~...uk A .. Ramos fa era~ Ml1'y
~ EGGS BENEDICT
SCRAMBLED EGGS
With"""'· drioD ,,...,,.,.,~.
STEAJ<&EGGS
CREPES SUPREME .-r-JNfldf"-'-·
MONTE CRISTO
A1t u.dt"w 11>t-' le.Ir lptltMlty.
C'~~Jjum l()am-2pm ~~~ATIONS 6?5·!1811
• . .
MERRIE CELEBRATION -Lake Havasu residents /
don Elizabethan costumes and stroll through the
English village replica, the City of London Arm·s on
the north side of London Bridge which spans the
Colorado River at Lake Havasu City, Ariz. One
"Elizabethan gentleman" makes a concessjpn to Ari-
zona sun by wearing his modern sun glasses. Lon-
dori Bridge Days take place Oct. 5--20 when and
· participants wear Elizabethan to Victorian era
clothes.
Road, Costa Mesa. It \viii perform most of its major works.
ocr. 13
FABRIC FAm -An educationaJ program about sewing,
including fabrics. notions, sewing machines. lectures and
demonslrations, will take place from 9:30 a.m. to 3:30 p.m.
Oct. 13 in the OCC Student Center. A rashioo show will
take place at 2: 15 p.m. Free admission.
ocr. 11 PHIUIAR~10NIC -Enjoy the music ol one of the' \Yori~
great orchestras when the Los Angeles Philharmonic Or-
chestra performs in concert in Golden West College Pavilion.
The 8: 15 p.m. concert, cooducted by Sidney Harth, will in-
clude Mozart's Symp~y No. 29 in A, Bach's Concerto in C
minor for Violin. ObOe and Strings and Shostakovich's Sym-
phony No. 5 Admission is $3 for students and $4 general ad-
mission.
~~~~iiiiiiiiiii~~~~1
CHAMPAGNE
SUNDAY BRUNCH
GRAND OPEIVING
CANTONESE CUISINE
LUNCH
DINNER
COCKTAILS
FOOD TO GO
BANQUETS
Entertainment • Dancing
Friday & Saturday Nights
Opet1 7 J)ays A Week
15070 BOLSA (At Edwards)
HUNTINGTON BEACH . 892-8333
• -• ------'------·-# --• -· -. . -··--~ ... ---:---··-THE -_:_:·-· ·-~:_?1 :;-~-WHITE HORSE BAR ·· B-~
· .~ ~ Authenti~ Chuck Wag; iiarB·O ..:..:...:. ~
.-_:;... . RIBS--llEEF--PORK--ffAM -.
··-·-.. __ ..,_ ._ -CHAMPAGNE & RIBS
FOR, TWO PERSONS
MO"OAY
TUESDAY HITES 6.95
Serving Nightly 5·10 P.M. ·-
041LV PILOT %/S
Petite Auberge AddS"--Art~
Design to ·Its Fine Fo·od
llaise the Tricolor. Sing a chorus ol the
~iarseillaise. Let Francophiles prepare
to march.
Petite Auberge, one of Orange County'$
tO(>-reted French restaurants. has reWrD·
ed after a four month absence.
Because of a lease agreement, Petite
Auberge had to viicate its former
quarters on an obscure side street in
Costa 1'.1esa and couldn't move to a new
location when orlginally plaru1ed O\Ving to
construction delays. But now you'll find
the restauranl open dally for lunch and
dinner in its ne\Y home in South Coast
Vilfuge, Sanla Ana, opposite Sooth Coast
Pla:aa .
To those familiar with the old spot,
where the diminutive and cozy premises
made the name -ii means small inn -
appropriate, a first glance at the much
larger new place might prompt thoughts
about the need for a rechristening. No at-
tempt should be made, though, to draw
comparisons in sixe and appearance.
.. JF TI:IE EARLIER restaurant sug-
gested the F'rcnch provincial charm of a
llme-honored wayside inn, the present
facility has to be vicv.'cd as a stunning
example of bringing that past up to date.
Because clcise scrutiny reveals an
architectural tour de for ce the v.•ayside
inn or the past has, been recreated in 20th
Century terms.
It's nlodem throughout. especially in
the handsome furnishings and variety of
surface textures. And the extraordinary
contemporary art decorating the walls
would be a credit tO a gallery.
But even with these touches in a struc-
ture cOnceived on a grand scale, there's
no loss of the warmth and intimacy
associated with the public house of a
bygone era. The latter's vitality and flow
of energy have been incorporated into the
new Petite Auberge. ·although it's an up
to date expression centered in the
architect's ingenious design <ind layout.
Out 'f"I . About
Norman Stanley :,
the foyer. is on an upper level SE;emingly
suspended over and above the ground
floor.
All of this. ho~'ever, in the cro,~11ing
architectural-achievement, has been ex·
ecuted within the framework or an CC"'
tagon-shaped building where h i g h ,
vaulted cathedral-like ceilings tower over
everything beneath. But open space
doesn't overwhelm thanks -to a
strategically placed network of beautiful
'''ooden beams ccisscrossing the rooms
less than half wuy lo the top.
A first dinner visit in this new setting
confirmed that the most note\vorthy
features from the old restaurant had
been carried over. These are the superb
continent<tl cuisine and the mastery or
restaurant operation displayed by owner
Georges Duperroy.
.. CONSIO'ERABL.Y more visible to the
dining public here than he was in the
previous location, Grorges still manages
to keep a watchful eye on the full gamut
of kitchen activities. He's ably backed.
too, by the veteran skills of captain F'red
Guerrero, and bar maOrilger S1nitty
Lowther, formerly of Newport's Sturt
Shirt.
Born in Brussels of a Belgian
restaurateur father and an English
mother, Georges' boyish appearance
belies the years o( .training and ex-
perience in his background. He attended
school in his native city until, at the age
of 15, his father sent him to Wales to
father' se nt him to lfano,·er. Gennany:
Again he was assigned to learn the
language and the art of the country'.t
cooking.
\Vhen the year expired he returned lo.
Brussels once more and e\'entually si~
ed on \Yilh the restaurant in the Argen-
tine Pavilion at the World's Fair. Later.
positions in the Belgian capitol included
two years as maitre d' at the well-lcnown
Canterbury restaurant.
. .GEORGES CA1'.1E to the United States
in 1964 and. heading directly to Sou.them
California, landed the maitre d' post at
Long Beach's Lafayette Hotel. This wa~
followed by employment at the Arche.!
and Stull Shirt in Newport Beach befor(.
joining Gerard Thery in a partnership
operatioo or the Costa Mesa and LagWla
Beach Chez Gerard restaurants.
He later took over full 1ownership ot
1ho Costa Mesa Gerard, clrangin' Ille
name to Petite Auberge. 'I'fle decision to
acquire larger quarters was based on
four years or steady growth.
. . IN ADDmON to a spacious entryway learn English. To obtain f u r t h e r
and semi-enclosed cocktail lounge (where knowledge of the family business. he also
Nearly two dozen entrees, each a little
more tempting than the one preceding.
are 'offered on the evening bill of ~-AU ·
served wi th a choice ofr.up or salad and
appropriate vegetable , these include-
halibut duglcre (poached in wine willt
·veloute sauce), $5.25; crevt!ttes a J"
Provencale (shrimp with garlic aJKt
tomatoes), $5.95; poul'et c ll ass e u ~
(chicken in wine sauce with mushrooms)~
$5.25; veau cordon bleu (veal stuffed
\vith ham and cheese), $5.75. :
And: ris de veau Mascctte (sweet:
breads in v.•ine sauce), $5.75; trout stuf..:.
fed "ith crab meat. $5.50: bollillabaisse a
la !\farseillc $6.25; toumedos of beef with
one wall is fonned by a tall , see-through \\'orked in a restaurant during his one-
rack of wine bins), the resl<1urant is year stay.
divided into three separate dining areas. Reluming to Belgium he worked for
One of these. reached by· a staircase in six months at the family place before his ..
BONED
RAINBOW
TROUT
S.!ut1 Almo ndin•
AMONG 20
SELECT
DINNE• ENTRIES
VINA
HARMER
DUO
Ent1rt•inin9
ftIVIEfU\
RESTAUMNT
Continent1I Cu isine
Cocktails
Serving
Luncheon and Dinner
Monda11 through Satu~.
Closed Sundays
We aro lo c•tt'd ne11t. to
the May Co. in South
Coast Plata
JJJJ S. lrlstol
Co1to Mesa 540-3140
For Unusual,
Oldtfmey
Gifts Visit
MR. RT's RESTAURANT & JICJ(.L£ //}111£< LOUNGE
Presents
BARBARA
PAIGE
AND
HOT
GOODS-
NIGHTLY
I 0 PM & MIDNIGHT
ENTUTAINMENT
IEGl!ts ~T a ,30 PM
11:\.'i('lf\'(j
l 'OCKTATL.S
lll\'r-..-EKS
900 1'.1· IROADWAV • SANTA ANA
PHONE 135-GS.11
• ,
(See ABOUT, Page 261
A rare, medi1im or·
well done offer:
Two steak br-0eootte
dinners for S5.95.
The Jolly Roger makes it too expensive-a stay home .
We'll serve you two of our special teriyaki steak brochette
dinners for just $5.95 when you bring in the coupon below.
, .... To make this special brochette dinner we skewer
, · ~ bell pepper slices, pearl onions, mushroom
"" caps and cherry torriato between
generous pieces of Choice USDA
steak, broil it to your taste and se~•
lt on a bed of rice with an ex:tra :
ortion of our teriyaki Sauce. Dinner
also includes soup du jour or fresh " garden salad, piping hot home-
made bread and a bouomless cup .
of our special blend coffee. •
With an offer like this, don't
stay horn~. You can't afford It
:~~~: .E,NTERTAINMENT &R DANCING _;;;;. TBI
MA K !i:msoN ~if:~ IBNIUL
RUTHIE LEWIS ~ STOii JI MACK
Tues thru Sat.
... -_Sun.,& Mon. . g · .
:-::= -I NOW OPEN FOR LUNCH I_:_:-'.': r-1...:~~~:....::.::.::~ -·
-~~ --·-.. _._ .. : .,-, 3295 NeyU>Ort Blvd., Newport -,-:"~I ~
.. Across from City Hall .. ? . 673-1374 ___ ..
AT THE HISTORIC
MLBllft PMILllll
400 Mal11 Street
Balboa
L:COSTA MESA
H111bot Boul ... •rd
Coll• Mew •
v Specially priced
$5.95 tar both
pon good any eveping
Sorry, no credit cards
ANAHEIM
~E.llncOIT'I
AMhelm
TH!. RIGG EA SANT A ANA 1
16 F'atl'llon l•l•nd XI Fa1t1!ofl €auate
Newporl Be•ch San1.t Ana
OFFER EXPIRES OCTOBER 31. 1973
I
DANA POINT
7;5100 Oe4 Pta~
0•1'111 Point
•
•
•
•
Real
Cantonese Food
e•t her• or
talc• home
STA 6
CHINESE CASINO
111 21st Pl., Newport Beach ORlol• 3-9560
O'"T"' Ar••lld o.n, 11·12-fri ..... s.. 'ril J ....
• I --:;,..-
THE FIASCO'S-INVITING
YOU TO AN EVENING OF
EXCITING MUSIC AND
'SUPER ENTERTAINMENT
TUESDAYS THAU SUNDAYS IN THE LOUNGE mmifillmmfil1! m0 !timm
NEWPORT BEACH
26 OAJ LV PILOT
fta the Galleries
' ,ucI Exhibits Room Environment
.
GOLDEN WEl>'T COLLEGE -Ubrary Gallery, 15744 Gold-
en \Vest St., Huntington Beach. "'Mte Inventions or God," a
photographic exhibit on nature, by Jamestcokas or Newport
Beach. Througb Oct. 16.
LAGUNA BEACH •tuSEUM OF ART -307' CUlf.Jlrive. Burt
Proctor Retrospective opens Saturday with art and memOr·
abilia. Hours: 11 :30·a.f11. 10 4:30 p.m -
WNG BEACH MUSEUM OF ART -2300 E. Ocean Blvd.
Sacramen10 Sampler JI exhibit ruqs through Oct 21,
crOS5-5E!Ction of art from the Sacrame'nto area. ·
AVOO SAVINGS ANO LOAN -3310 8~'5lol St., Costa MJ
Oils by Joe Barnes lhrough October.
BA1\'K OF COSTA ~t.ESA -Harbor at Baker, Costa Mesa
Oils by t.tillie \\/inkier through October.
BRENTWOOD SAVINGS -1&40 Adams Blvd., Costa t.tesa.
\Vatercolors by Soo£y West through Oc1ober.
COSTA ~1ESA LIBRARY -5fi6 Center St., Cos1a l\1esa. Oils
by Lassie Hudson lhrough October.
TEMPLE GARDENS
Q.JINE~ Restu11ra11t
RICKS HA
COCKTAIL ' .
1 LOUNGE
luncheon & Dinner Da ily
1500 ADAMS lat Horborl
COSTA MESA
I . ~,::~::,· 540-1937 540-1923
Tropical Drinks
The Real
G'"""" Dinntrho.u
IN
SANTA
-ANA
RAB ORN'S
BITO'GERMANY
NOW OVER 6 YEARS Open For lunch & Dinner
2032 N, MAIN STREIT
547-2425
AIMf, 111 G_.• Grow
12201 llOOKHUIST
I At Cltctp-1 611°7020
Ask A1ulv i
Kids Like. VT o II
496-5773
CROCKER CITIZENS BANK -:ml Harbor Blvd., Colla
M .... w.,tem Subjects by La Verne Rooco tbrougll October:
CROCKER CITIZENS BANK -South Coas1 Plaza, 3390 Bris-
tol St., C.OSt.a Mesa. Oils, acrylics and watercolors by Mar-
cella Stanley througb Oc!Ober. •
• DAll. Y PDm -330 West Bay Sl, Costa M°'3. Abotract
oils1Jy-.Jane Huffman tbrouaJ>«lctober.-
MESA VERDE LIBRARY --Mesa Venle Drive, Colla
Mesa. Oils by Marie Howes throuCh October.
PARK UDO CONVALESCENT CENTER -4M Flagsbip
Road, Newport Beach. 0111 by Ce< Coburn and Dr. Fred
B. Olds througb October.
TRANSAME RICA TlTLI! CO. -170 E. 17th SI., Costa Mm.
\Yildlife art by Pat Pembro\>k througb October.
·CI. YOE ZIJLCH ORIGJNAU -3800 E. Coul Hwy., Corooa
del Mar. Paintings by Jack Hannah, Warren Woodwird and
Cylde Zulch througll· Sept. ll. Hours : Tueoday.sunday, JI
a.m.-5 pm
w..i.: Dcryt: 11 :JO A.M. to 12 r .M.
Fri. •4 Set. 11 :JO A.M . to 12:JO
S111doys: 4:00·12 MIDNIGHT
COCKTAILS
9093 E. ADAMS. HUNTINGTON BEACH 962-7911
499-2626
BOWERS MUSEUM -2002 ~. Main SI., Santa Ana. Pain!·
lngs by Los Angeles artiJJI IJ Chen Sept. I throuCh Oct 28.
OALERIE LIDO -3375 Via . Lido, Newport Beach. Water·
colors by Bill Hariison ol Kansas City. Sept. Jf-Oct . J.
Hours : .Monday througll Friday II a.m.-5 p.m. and Satur-
day, DOOIH p.m.
MARINERS SA VIN GS AN.D WAN -15[5 JYe~tclifl l1Jjve,
Newport Beacll. "Kid'• Stull," Uttle bronze and clay Oguer-
ines ol. chJJdren by OOttie Erdmam.
GLENDALE FEDERAL SA VIN GS -500 Newport Center
Drive, Nel!J>Orl Center. Olis by Edltb Scolt tbrouah October.
Dally : Moiiday through Thursday, 9 a.m . ..fi p.m. and Friday
9 a.m.-ti p.m.
LAGUNA FEDERAL SAVINGS AND WAN -2!0 Ocean
Ave., Laguna Beach. Chlldrens portraits by Thelma Pad-
dock Hope. Through October.
ORANGE COAST COLLEGE -Art Gallery, 2701 Fairview
Road, Costa Mesa. ''C'.ontemporary Expressions in Ceramics,"
an exhibition by George Guyer, as110C1.ale professor at Cal
. State University, Long Beach, runs through Oct. 19. Hours :
Monday through Friday from 9 a.m. to 2 p.m.
JACK GLENN GALLERY -2831 E. Coast Hwy., Corona del
Mar. Recent paintings by New York artist Robert Natkin
through Oct. 19; Jack Glenn Gallery, South Coast Village,
Santa Ana: paintings and serigraphs by Peter Max.
UC mVINE -Fine Arts Village Art Gallery, UC lrvtne.
Room environment by Maria Nordman. Hours: noon-5 p.m.
Tuesday through Sunday. Through Oct. 28.
.... CHALus .GALLERIES -1390 S. Coast Hwy., Laguna
Beach. Recent neo-reallst paintings by Illene Lussier and
$Ulpture by Lou Rankin, through October. Hours: 11 a.m.-
-5 p.m. daily.
COSTA MESA ART LEAGUE GALLERY -206 W. Wilson
St., Costa Mesa .. Oils by Fern Miller, Dr. Fred Olds and
Charles Dorsa and watercolors by Frances Merrill through
October.
FIRST NATIONAL BANK OF ORANGE -1650 Adams SI.,
Costa Mesa. Acrylics by. Maggie Moore through October.
MUCKENTHALER CULTURAL CENTER -121)1 W. Ma~
vem, Fullerton. "Through One's Eyes," is a photography
exhibition o( 21 or the American contemporary photographic
artists. Hours : Tuesday through Sunday rrom I to 5 p.m.
SUNDAY-BRUNCH
10 A.M. to 2 P.M.
IAN9UET FACILITIES
n1 ... , s.,...;
fra111 5 P.M.
ABOUT ...
!From Page %5)
beamaisc sauce $7.95;-pepper
steak fiambe, $7.95. .
·-······ PlZ-ZA ·HOME -DELIVERIES
HAVE CHANGED A LOT NOW FIATUllN&
"THE BACHELORS"
l.Wlit o.. & hry hnl11
J17 PACIFIC COAST HWY.
OUR DINNER got under
way with two rughly recom·
mended appefuen; cham-
pignons (mushrooms} ProYen·
cale. $1.50 and escargots de
Bourgogne (half dozen), $2.75.
These were follo"'"·ed by two a
la carte orders for the re--
taurant 's e.1ceptional s:a1ade
d'epinard (spinach). with bot
bacon 'llressing, 11.75 ead!.
,
•
• • • • •
~ . I
SINCE THE
. OLD DAYS
Now Me 'n Ed's mobile ovens speed delicious
piping-hot piu.as to your door in· minutes.
For prompt seNice phone 646-7136
(Newport Beach/Costa Mesa-17th and Tuitin) d . I
or 847-1214 (Hun~ngton Beath-Beach and Hiel). 4,
E>< Get the Pizza with Pizzaz · ·;: . 'ltlG•Sis
"Eating out" is not
~ necessarily dining!
Dining at !he Newporter Inn's Marine Restaurant
is a totally pleasurable experience. Excellent
cuisine, ranging from oursupe-~K ofl amb .
to Salmon Steak in Salsa Verde,
painstakingly prepared by our European-
trained chefs. A wine list o( dis!inction to
complement your ru:J.lree. And. in an
atmosphere or continental elegance
unmatched for relaxed enjoyment.
Dining is The Marine Restaurant at
~LWEBBS
1107 Jamboree Road, ~ Newport Beach/ 714·644·1700
ALSO, THE LIOO LOUNGE/THE WINE CELLAR/THE BISTRO/THE CHELSEA BAR
" . ' ·.~ .
. . . ' . ' .. ' . . . . . . ' ..
"·:Reuben·s
10ttnt-2pttt
\
..
~z.L.; 251 E. r:JJN3T HIGHWAY~
~ NEWPORT BEACH ..
RESERVATIONS-CALL 673-1505
•
Food To GO -Special Qlsc:OMh
BANCj)UETS /CATERING
Dining S•tisfa ction Guaranteed
OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK
DANCING & ENTERTAINMENT
Wednesday Thru Sunday
2121 E. Coast Highway
10• II.ck W91t of MacArttl.I
Corona el Mar 673-9919
••••
One entree at our X price ,,...;, ......
second entree
gratis
(Wlltll JOU ,,.ltlll fllll <WDOl'l-V•llll SllftlllJ
lhru T111nu,, 0c1. 111
3901 t Coast Hiallway/C.rona ell! Mor
Phone: 675·0900
NOW OPEN MONDAY
'
flrt• "'''' "'"''"'
•
, ...... ""' Set .
THI
-CHAPTER
II
f or Your Dinlng
And Dancing Pleasurt :,;.
Piayl"9 Nit'tfy
Wed. -Sun.
HUNTIN•TON llACH
,
536-2555
"Finest Mezican Food ln Orange County"
OPEN 7 DAYS e COCKTAILS
547 W. lttli STREET
COSTA MliSA
LUNCHEON SERVED DAILY
From 11 :00 A.M.
DINNER SERVED UNTIL 8:00 P.M \ . Monday and Friday
#1 FASH!QN ISLAND
NEWPORT CENTER -
644-2200
The first entree selection we
tried was grenouilles sautees
a !'ail (frog legs saufeed m
garlic butter), $6.25. This net-
ted a genenxt1 and well"9e89-
oged portton of meat accom-
panied by a nwry rice pilaf
·and a fresh peas and carrots
vegetable mix.
The second entree tested
~·as the ~se specialty rat.
mg any diner's immediate
consideration. Namely: cane-
!on a !'orange (roast duckling
m orange sauce), $6.50.
To gaJn a true appreciatioo
of the painstaking effort that
goes Into the preparation ol
this dish, you should know
that the duck Is routed for
two and one-haU to lhree
hours and re'gulariy basted
with only the natural juices.
When rooked rt is CUI In half, ~as .sherry poured over it. and
1s then returned brielfly to
the oven.
WHEN TAKEN from the
oven again, t.he orange sauce
is added. This consists of a
miX"ture of cannel sugar and
water base, binegar, condl·
ments, sherry, lemon, orange,
consomme and Grand Mariner.
The final act oi tableside
naming turns the duck into
a visual as well as gastrono-
mic spectacular.
Desserts. if yoo can carry
through to that Point. range
from simple Ice cream or
creme caramel to exotic deli-
cacies like cherries jubilee
and crepes Suzette. And a sen-
sational DeW wine list.provides
select vintages from $8 to f75
per bottle.
Soon la come is daytime
outdoor dining on the terrace'. Protected by an overhanging
roof, this garden-like setting
will doubtJes,, become one of
Orange County's favorite
1-spots.
:· • opr,,.s'MfE. ·:
.NATURAL POOD lllTAUIANT•
• Lew Cb11 ............ --. ----• UNUMtTID SALAD ANO • • TIA WrTM DINNU • • fWtltt ... ~) • • lu1ln111111111'1 l:u~.ll • --• OPIN DAILY • • ., .... 11"' ..... • • 2441 w . .,_ ....... • Hr.-Ml-7171. ,. . ........
Ezctllent Sto/ood
lQilll Ocea11 View Dtnino
SHIP AHOY
OPIN D.AIL Y 11 rJO
Jl 72} S. C-Hwy.
(f'lt!llr ~tonarch 81.Y)
s..tll ....... 4ff-lto0
•
•
. -
College Girl,s Boarding
At Ozzie and Harriet's r
;
Brenda Sykes (top), Harriet Nelson
and Susan Senne! provide the
laughs ~ind problems on 'Onie1s Girls.'
GOURMET DINING
ENTERT AINtvtENT
DANCING
Meltdoy tin Soturdoy
froM 5 P.M.
CLOSID SUNDlYS
600-D Newport Center Drive
Fashion lsla~d
-~506!L_ NEWPORT BEACH • Mo)or CtMllt C-41
MEADOWLARK .
COUNTRY CLUB
ORANGE COUNTY'S
TOP . ENTERTAINM~NT
JOE -LIGGINS
The Orlgin1l "Hontydrlpptrs"
BACK AT IHI
LARK ROOM
with
WILLIE JACKSON
Wednesday thru Sunday
B111q11tt F1ciliti11 i.p to 450 People
16712 GRAHAM AYINUI lAt..W...,1 :-r
HUNTIN•TON llACH 17141 146·1116 lJ1JI lt2·1't54
Steak and Ale
in Santa Ana • • • • • 1nv1tes you to JOI" us.
'
DAILY PILOT
Mtw •Ac/ling ""'-"" -le1111rt11g RoY.i P1;m•
l'llD-MfVed 10 1!$f·
ftlcll~ ~ 1u,1y \'l)llng ...-icllet: I'« 1 l1ollc~·
Ing •"""'"9 ol nNtlc. dal>(:!ng and merry
m1~1ng In !lt9 lltie
Old Engllth LrSd~lon.
Aes&fV1llon11cc1p11d. 5'7~7D8. con~•nltn!
1oe.ii011-batWflen 811111
Ant IWld Ntwl!Ol1
f•MWl)'I on flfll Strlll.
THE. HELPFUL . GUIDE
FOR TODAY'S
HOMEMAKERS
·and gets it together , in _ the lounge,
l unch e Dinner e Dancing e Entertainment
for reHrYotlons: 642-8293
closed S1t11day1
optn 'til 2 t .m.
htgrld S.,S: ColM DI• WI" ~··
DINNER . ENTREES
BURGERMEISTER STEAK
_ I Pock1t of Fil•t lilltd with m11tkroom1 )
FILET STEAK I Rib-eye Cul I
SAUER BRA TEN
CHAMPIGNON SCHNITZEL
WIENER SCHNITZEL
CORDON BLEU
ROULADEN
lmp. Wine e B1tr e Wi111 Cockt1i11
Op•n D•ily 5 to 10-CloJ•d Monday
the BE:RLINER RESTAU RANT
i,,'M. lllfllH BLVD Hllr~TIN<_,TON llf f,(_11
TrJWN /'.. Cl)lJN TU • (! NT!::k JI,~ '•Ill!\'
MICllSll
FAMILY MEJqCAN &ESTAURANT
"OUR MEALS ARE
A TRIP TO MEXICO ."
"A MASTERPIECE,
0.. Of t1le ... Mo.,._ Yo•'ll S.. I" Tllh
Or A-r T..-.-" -Joye.• Hab1r, LA.. Tim•'
INGMAR BERGMAN'S
CRIES AND
WHISPERS c;,-
ART. THEATRE
4 .. l ·Cilony A-. ..... -12111 41a.M31 ,,.. , ..... , ............. Offk• o,... 6:41
Nearly Everyone
Listens to Landers
. --.
lln<ted byCIW!L!ll MARQUIS WAAREN • Co.f'nlduced by CHARLES MARQUIS WNlREN
"" EHDl!E BOHEll -S<leenplay by GlllEELDER • llamlia .. mlol by
ClfN!l.IS MARQW W!RREll • -Poomlr All1l!D LANll!U
In Color· ReltllOI by INDEPEHD!NT UNITED ™STRIBUTORS !:ii
PERFORMANCES
WED. ONLY
8 & 10 P.M.
o,.. 6:45 PM: Wkdoys.
CINIM• I .
HELL, UPSIDE DOWN ...... , ...... ONE OF THE GREATEST
ESCAPE AOVENTURES
EVER!
lr.em, .. ,..., • ....,.,__ .... 1
Alto "A PIST•U(L Of DOLLARS" IP•)
CINllltA II
AlBERT R Bmou.., HARRY SAUZMAN ~"'11
RO ER JAMES M O RE-•BOND
·uvEAN~MrholE·
imi~GUYHAMIUON
Also "THI MICHANIC"
\
Un111• A"'''.L
tPOJ
Fr ldq, Stptembtr 28, )1"3 DAILY PILOT J1
TV DAILY LOG
Friday
I
Saturday
Morni119
''
--+
•
•
,2~8~_DA_l_Lv~•-JL_OT~~-*~~~~r·_l~_,~,_s_ •• ~,_·m_M_•_2_8_._1_'17_l_
CHOIR • • •
(Jl'rom Pa~ tlJ
about waking up rn the moi..,.
ing and seeing the bright sun
and fee.Ung warm and good.
You can almost feel 1he sun·
shine "'hen t~y'rc ~inging "
"And \\'hen these kinds sin!-(
songs about tonctinrs!. \'OU
Ciln feel the tears in thL' air,''
Live Theater
'The_ Tav_ern' Opens
At SCR Tonight
. "TI1e Tavern"
Openin~ toni l:hl for five
\\'Ct>keods ls thi.':1 fatnily com· The choir ,.,.ill 1nake it lll!tl l
next weekend. on !let. 6 nntl i,
at Golden West C.:oll<.!Ct'. Satur-
day evcnjng the sho1v brgi11s
a l 8 p.m .• \\•hilc the Sunday
mritinee -nimcd mostly at
kids -\viJI be at 2 p.tn . 13oth
sho"'S are Jn the com1nuni1y
theater, and are free.
1 edv fron1 South Co a s t
munity Theater. 201 Avenida
Cabrillo, San Clemente, with
;in 8:30 cµrtain. ncservations
492-04ii5.
··f;actus f)qwcr"
MOVIE RATINGS
FOR PARENTS AND
YOUNG PEOPI.£
1.111 '*io<IW1 o/11\t' ••l•ltQ'I tf II ;,q,,..
-·· COtWtll /~ OIO-f *I' llNftdfl«f'O.
1
,,.,./ti. -.,.. -N~~ ol I
f"1 All AG!S lOll lfT!O
~ ' 1i1.itr~~11noc:15
--------------------
•••••••••••••••••••••••••••• 111.1.11 M-ooN .. _,,.. ._ .... ca .......
-l'C-l>OQl.J>fHVoC ...... _
Tl1e King
Kids Like To Chuck Berry, often re-
garded as the "King of
H.ock 'N' Roll ," appears
on "90 Tonight" on
Saturd ay at 11 :50 p.nl .
on Channel 4. Host is
Clea von Little.
Ask Aiid:r
OPEN WEEKD
"THE STONE KILLER" ...
"DILLENGER" IRl
"SOUND OF MUSIC" -And·-· -~
"CHAILOTT'E'S WEI"
''THE LA ST AMERICAN ...
"YANl!OHING POINT"
''YOUR THREE MINUTES ARE UP"
'"' "WHERE DOES IT HURT7"
"DAY OF THE JACKAL" t PG) ...
"JOE ltlDD"
"HARRY IN YOUR POCKET" (PG)
'"' "EVEll.YTHING YOU EVElt
WANTl!b TO KNOW ABOUT SEX" (R)
'Ille SIOHEIOllER 1
is a gut-slamming, cops and
robbers flick and the.best
entertainment around!
1
u1·-ci0 OE LAf.JlifN1!1S "'" .. r1
CHARLES BRONSON
,,., " ""11CHAEL WINNER FILM
TiteSTONE
KIL1 FR
'·
DO-SI~ , MARTIN BALSAM
_ ... QER/;l..Oww.,s.o.1. ,_,.,,....,..,.~SU.•"0"'1"· trr.Jolloc.-
, -.-~...,,. t.tCHAEl 'M'N.Jl•C.0.1'.0A'PCT\.KS ·Tee;~•
Iill-~!!~~.~I
,
•
ttCpcrtory. llrl7 New p Qt 1
Blvd .. Costa 1'.lesll . Cu11ain
time is 8 o'clock 'Vcdnesdays
lhrough Saturdays until Oct.
27. Reservations 646·J363.
'"Ah, \Yllderness"
The Laguna l\1 o u 1 t o n
J)hlyhouse (606 Laguna Can·
yon Road, Laguna Beach) is
presenting Eugene O'Neill's
li ghtest play Tuesdays through
Saturdavs until Oct. 13. Cur-
tnin is 8:30, reservations 494·
0743.
"The Gingerbread Lady"
Neil Simon's only serious
play is on stage Thursdays
through Saturdays until Oct. 6
at the San Clemente Com-
Entering its fourth weekend
is thi s Abe Burrows COif\edy,
playinR Fridays and Saturdays
:ii 8:30 at the ttuntington
Beach Playhouse, 2110 Main
St.. Huntington Be a ch .
Reservations :>36-4446.
"Whal the Buf.Jer Saw "
The Irvine Com m u n i I y
Theater will inauguarate its
"premiere season'' next Satur-
day with Joe Orton's British
sex farce. Recommended for
adults, the ICT show will play
Fridays and Saturdays at 8:30
through Oct. 27 in th e
Humanities Hall Playhouse on
the UC Irvi ne ca m pus .
Reservations 557-7297.
Religious Iconoclast
Opens Lecture Series
I con o c l a s t i c writer:
theologian Harvey Cox will
present the first program in
Chapman College's new artist-
lecture series built arotmd the
theme. "The Future."
Dr. Cox will discuss the
thesis of a •;people's religion,"
dealt with in his ·newest book,
"The Seduction of the Spirit."
at 8 p.m. Sunday in the Mem-
orial Hall Auditorium, 333 No.
Glassell SL, Orange.
· _folklwinS_ the lecture there .
will be a reception in the stu-
dent union during wbich Dr.
Cox v.•ill answer questions and
autograph copies or his latest
book .
Season tickets for the Ttine-.
event series. which includes
five speakers and four artist
progran1s. arc flvailable al $20
for adults and $10 for non-
Chap111an students.
Dr. Cox's first two books .
''The Secular City" and "Th e
Feast of Fools." both best
sellers. have established him
as a n1ajor writer on reli gion
in America today.
!·le is a professor of church
and S9Ciety at Harvard Divini-
ty School. and has been named
the Victor S. Thom as
'
A,. PhaloJ
WRITER-THEOLOGIAN
Dr. Harvey Cox
Professor of Divinity. His
other works include "God's
Revolut io n and ~1an 's
Responsibility," and "On Not
Leaving it to the Snake." He
also has edited "The Church
Amid Revolution'' ·and "The
Situation Ethics Debate ...
CINEMALAND & SOUTHCOAST #2
WEEK DAYS 7 & 9:15
SAT.SUN.MON 2:15-4:]5.7:00 & 9:1 5
NO RESERVED SEAtS
rfiWiilrHlllll ui.s.01 .. -11-r.a~5~.,,._,.,s,. .. ,
c--·5'0!1-lM
FIRST RUN !
MATINEES WED .. S•T .. SUH.
EYES. FROM 7:00 P.M.
(PG) , -AND -~
TIGHTEN YOUR SEAT BELT!
•
Fest·ive Foll
,iPORT %.-d~
•• "'''"' '' I''""
THIS WEEK
"Sunshine Sea"
•
NOW SHOWING
Jo1t1•1 Cob11r11
7:00 & 10:]7 P.M.
Alia
Ryo11 O'Heol
tPG J
Pt111
Betty Boop Cartooni
7:30 & 'f:lO Eoc:h Eev11ln9
"THE THIEF
WHO CAME
TO DINNER"
HFSA GOCO COP. .. ON A BIG BIKE ... ON A BAO ROAD
•
A JM.ES WWM4 GL(JOJ · flJP£RT ttlro f'!oci.ctol
'1:tfCTRA Gl.1(1; N Bll.l"!!1.-."'1 RO&Rl' Bl.AKE· B<lLY IGREENI BUSH
PtoQ.ad ""' 0.odl:d u,-JNA(S ·1.UIAM GUEACIO . &-i~vev AOOEA! BORIS
51oy b7' f()B(Ri 00fllS lr<I IV'EAT 1-fTZx:i
"-cCorWMdi-¥..WA:SV.ti.WA GUERCIO Un1led "rllSIS
CINEMALAND & SDUTH COAST 2
WEEK DAYS 1 & 9 P.M.
SAT. & SUN. 1-3·5 :10-7:15-9:20
"llifm
Hl-WAY-39
sum II DUSK
PLUS 2nd FEllURE
GrntE STRllGKT.ll
"MIND·BLOWING SUSPENSE!"
-~ Champlin, l.A Times
"SUPERB! SIMPLY FASCINATING!"
NUlillER ONE BDOK
OF THE YEAR!
NOW-
THE SUSPENSE FILM
OF THE YEAR!
EDWARD FOX ls~Tne Jaek&I'"• ALAN BAOEL . TONY BRITTON ~
CYRIL CUSACK • MICHEL LONSDALE • f~IC PORTER • DELPHINESEYRIG
Mlllkt.rOl!:OAOES DEl ERVE • Scre.,'IQ41y b7' KEM NETH ROSS• ffOl!I tfle best-II~ 800ll byFREOf:RICI( FOASYTH
•-Olftcl.U ti)' fRE(fZINNEMAAN • f'l-OCIUC«I 01 JOHM WOOLF
"'-17' W411WICI! 111.M "'-!--UNIV(~liAl 1'1.:dul,!-,,_t ll '°' l&CtoNICOLOIU-~~.e.'1--..l..-
I
,
LID 0 MIWP0"
BEACH
lMllAMC'I '0 llDtl I\• 1
I' 1 I ]~I)
OlAHGf COUNTY
IXCLUSIVlt
If You llk•d "ff•"'" Co1Htec:tlo11"
Yo11'r• Sur• to
Liko "STONE IULLIA"
A DINO 0£ 1.AU•CHTllS ,,odwctiM
frOlll COLUMBIA ,ICTU•t\
'
-nd-
Robert D11voll
V•t1to llot'"
"BADGE
373"
Co1ttin. S11n 2 P.M.
Wirekdoys fro'" 7 P.M.
t..t.t.c-lf if.tit.t.
DftlY .. ·IN
SUPER SWAP MEETS
HARBOR BLVD.Drlv•Jln
Sit.& Sun.-1!1•"' 10 lpm
ORANG• Drlw•-ln 1 &2
Sii.fi Sun.-1!1•"' to lpm
ft11 ,..k, .. S.HayS 11 AaUli• SuOlli ..
· F•mlli Fun!
Pfofital l•r9alnoO•loro!
~" o .. q., r..,.
C611111•1no
0 11-f•mP ··-GUtf llACllMAN •Al ,to<IMO
SCARECROW flt
r\US t ITTYI McCM8I
IULLm I'll
s,~ Oieoo F.,
•I Bmol-!•11<1! ,,. ' K!-?1•1
Ill Mo 0... I/Mor 11 ~IX}
........................ 1
HEAVY"TRAfFIC I.II
11.) IU\\m
(2.) IADOI 373 (II
Nt•POrt
( retw•y
u ll•~·· 51,
'4~1311
a. r111NO Of 1DOt1 cont,.,
• ' ' .
':i.ds I.ike--Tu~
Ask Attdy • ' '
J
•
I
• " . ,
FrldaJ, Sep ltrnbtt' 28, 1973 DAILY PILOT &
oman Make·s It on News Film Team
., 1fF;W YORK (UPI ) -when
Allda Webor peen through
bu camera, lhe Itel a world
~U,.S wtlh heroes and villains,
.wJnoen and !Olen, clowns
and loola.
: Miu Weber II a new1
.,:::amerawoma~ for the Na·
:jlonal Broadqull•I Co., and
; ihe nrwt on !tie ·~· of a ma-:3'>r network. --
. "l didn't call them." she
·oald In an Interview. "They
·called me."
But • brealdng lnlo t h e
network 1'un't as 'e&,!Y as a
telephone call. Tbae-were
'
' .•• We lwid no plons to hire i won11n, We w.,.
looling for someone c:.poble, -qu•rif..d.
·And she is both." .'
years of • freelancing. and
doubt. And ihe knowledge 1he
waa entering_.unan's world.
'Tl' WAS SORT of hell iool<-
lng IDT work. It w3s llke walk·
Ing on a tightrope. One day
my emotions would be built.
up, an-a. the next-day they
wwld be turned Into fantasy."
An attraotJve brunette, Miss
Weber was lt>orn In cam.
brfdge, England 25 years ago.
When she was 15, her rather
brought his famUy lo the Un-
nivenlty or Illinois, at Ur·
bana, wllere he has been a
prolesscr for the pall 10 years.
Although she 1Ull retains a
Brltlab acconl, BVflrf so often
she f00et bend! in a cowboy
drawl. She occu!Ollllly rolfs
her own ci&""."ltes.
MISS WEBER'S car.er In
film began at Antioch College.
at Yellow Sprtng1, Ohlo, where
she made tetevtslon documen-
taries 4Dc!_so~W!Lsbort 6fm!,
one of whlch, "Pre1ude;l' won
e international prize.
"l started out in film
because I was curious. lt
wasn't as if r wrtchett:movles
for 10 or 15 years and ihat W11s
all I did. At one point I even
* * * * * * .Actress Turns Director
·'.
" NEW YORK (AP) -Mai
: :zetterllng had a good reason
::for becoming a dlrector -she
: :had acted in a lot of bad films
:;where the d"irector's in~
:·structlona wen "just~ your
best. ..
She says she knew ste could
do better.
·'lbe Swedish actress.turned·
dlrector, lntervtewed ln her
bolei suite, wore burgiindy
Jeans and a printed voile shirt
ai she sat curled into a chair.
She ~·ore no makeup and
4ldn't look as though she was
1ll>m in 19%5. She was .
made four feature films 33: a
director, inciudlng "NI g b t
Games" and ···Loving
Coupl~/' She made a segment
of uvlslons of Eight," about
the Munich Olymplco and a
dOC11111'"tary on tenols star
S\an Smith both critically ac-
claimed.
'rRAlNED IN SWEDISH the-
ater acbool , Miss Zetterling
made her first film at 16. The
theater was the job one took
""1ously, she said. She feels
she was forttmate to find a
profession she wanted to
pursue and took seriously. She
says there will be more
women directors in fi]m as
. ·. ~·1 gave up acting becau.se I ,:was not a puslve person," she
·iald. "I liad been inlurlal<d
: '.MIOut direetl«l in films again
:and again. I wanted, for many women become more con-
·reasons, to do my ·own ideu, 1 fident of their abiliU ...
p;>1itive )dras." _
BECOMING A DIRECTOR "It Is a ""'l' toURh 'world
ls hard for acton, she mid. and a lot of women haVen•t\.jiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiij•J mt just for acmses. It may gotten to the stage wllere they I 1 be that acton have too much ·i!go for directing, buf Miss can handle it," she said.
Zetterllng says many of them "Some women are st i 11
·atilrt too big. frightened to bec.ome
·~ "I became a pupil and overbeartng. The new genera-
: started from scratch. It is uon is much more able to cope
-...,;.,. when )'OU do almost with film. Butcally, they have
everything yoqrself1 You learn -IA..1--
1 In more--· more. spent two yean a 0 11 ls -Ible women have cutting room doing all the most boring thlni• 00 I could to do more than a man does to
learn about edllilll. One riiust IUcoeed. A -.U must !mow
f --· ·-hbn""" euctly what she is talking orget ego wN say w ,.. : about hat and cannot be 'I know notblni.' One starts • w can. -from the·IJem••'-" dme lfilh eqwpmtnl and 90 ~"&· <>D.7' ibe--.aaed.
.• For four years, making her Miss Zetterling and her hus-;jlm documentaries, she made lJmic!, writer David Hughes,
no mOney. She says that, in· live-and work on-25 acres-in
:ileed, she lost mooey, changeil OlUlhern Frm;e.
·her lifestyle and tried to "We dOo-!ar too Utile," she
lqueeze by. In the end, she said. "The lll!ll'O ""1 do, the
became successful. She has more energy YCIU get."
• :-· BEGINNING OCTOBER-1st ...
.·
.. .
. ;KAPX PRBENTS AN ORANGE COUNTY · ..
•
..
st.
CLOSE YOUR EYES AND LISTEN TO A
*NEW SERIES OF RADIO DRAMAS
IN FULL SPECTRUM ,
1
STEREO
,•
. .
'
• .
:·: .. :·· . •
Prodttced and performed by the all time Radio Greats.
Rod Serling -.Host Narrator .
Directed by Elliott Lewis with casts including
Howard Duff, Keenan Wynn , Patty D11ke1
Nina Foch , Julie Adams, Richard Crenna,
Richard Deacon, pltts 11iany niore .
EXCLUSIVELY ON I
KAPX RADIO l08 FM
ING.DAY lHRU.JRIDAY,JJJJ.nWING THE 7-O'CLOCK NEWS.
-THESE ARE ~RAND NEW PRODUCTIONS NEVER HEARD BEFORE ON RADIO
dropped it. "
After graduation, she taught
film for two summers and
went on to freelance in San
Francisco and later ln Dayton,
Ohio.
ding music and cigarette
smoke and ''l'll gtve you a call
next week" people.
Miss Weber st r etched
herself out on a couch in her
small East VIilage apartment
in Manhattan an·d said that , at
TllEN SltE CA!\1-"; tO Ne1v one point, she 'was down to
York and began what every $30.
!refilan~r has experienced. "1 had to get a jQb in an in-
The phone calls to a friend . ... sur""'ince compan y for lhr~e
"Hey, did you hear oJ days."
any thing? Well thanks. By the
way are you working this ·
week.'' And the countless
J)3rties, jammed with poun-
TH EN -SHE mel a union
cameraman who was irn--
pressed 1\rith her work and sug·
toemergesinct:
Cecilli.De.Mille
founded
flollywocxt:'
-'IER#Oll IM;OTT,
A LOVE STORY
FOR WIVES AND
GIRLFRIENDS WHO
RESENT BEING TAKEN
FOR GRANTED.
• NOW SHOWING
Wilt Disneyis
Fi'ne1t I
•
-
gtsttd she aPs>Jy for l'nfm·
bershlp in the televi si on
camera union. That was eight.
months ago.
"And at the same time I got
the unlon application, a
woman friend of mine warned
me to do the lighting fot a
conference on rape at Colum-
bia University. l called NBC,
and they told me to...file--an aJ>""
plication. It was a two-mi nu te
Co!lversation. ''
said. "After that, they II.id tt
was 90 percent sure I could
work ," she aald.
She made the staff and
received a title, newsreel
cameraman, and a 30-PQUnd
camera.
"YOU DON'T NEED big
muscles. tt's .. sta nlina. As lon g
as yoU-can stand up and not
shake, you're OK." So far she
has filmed fires, politiclaNI,
tennis matches and anything
el se her male counterparts
have covered.
Then NBC called her. Try
out for a week, they said. Tr y
out for another week, they ---'---~~~~~~~~
EDWARDS
HARBOR,1::..1
HAJllOR llVD. AT WIUON 5T,
·646·0573 146·1261
COSTA M l!SA
(l\l\1\tl\111\
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,.,_.,..._
'Tllo..-1'1'--
EORGE C. sco:rr-: f~lfH~.u:1mv --, -
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OKLlHOMA.CRUDE l!!il .
2nd At Clffflta I
'_'.WHITE LIGHTNING"
~ow AT IOTH'CINEM,AS
2•4 Al c ......... Ylefe
"JUNIOR BONNER"
IN M1S s10N v1•Jo
EDWARD S
CINEMA VIEJO
~~ .. ' ! l ""'. ',. ,..,,,, " .. ,,
.
2nd At Both Cinemas
TILLIE"
• •
1
'
<
lJO DAILY PILOT Friday, Stpttmbtr 28, 1CJ73
NEW ·•73 CHRYSLER
lO.WN & COUNTRY WAGON
Comfort and performance beyoqd com·
pare are yours in thii: luxuriously equip-
,,.ct, top of the line station wagon.
NEW -'.73-l'LYMOUTH Sl'ORT .-:-
SUBURBAN STATION WA~ON
Equipped the way you want It, Including
Air Conditioning
EXCELLENT SELECTION
OF REMAINING 1973
STATION WAGONS AT
TERRIFIC ·SAVINGS .
$
VI, 1!1rldard 1ran1mlulori, ritdlo, Marer,
lOADllUNNll 2 DOOR
"'· autonwo!lc;, radio, l'IM!lt', pgwer 1teer-•"9. ~•nVI IOP. (WVFXIU
~795
'66 DODGE WAGON
9 ll&lllntiltf'. VI, IUlom•tlt, radlcl, }'IN!er, PO-• slttrl"'ll & b!'•kM, 1lr condllton-
lrt11, roof r•ck. (6f2GWZJ
..
low mila. (Ol960Cl
'
CATA.LINA 2 Dl. H.T.
VI, automa rlc, ••dio, hteltr. power sltlr-
ing, whl~ wtlls. alrcondlllonl119. CVVF2211
•
.
jl~
1115
l: .I
L•rs••t di . . ..,..,,,,
'"9io1Jh .....
no . • Y•tr,right Ii' w dur; · "9 tho (/no/ •
day1 of our 1913 •
ol • "'°"' t ,tar~l'ld ·Clo ... ,., ......., .
I 'I
FURY' Ill 4 DR. H.T.
vs, 1u1omatk:, ritdlo, tlttiler, ~· llee•·
ln9, While lld1 tires, a ir cOlldltl0<1lr.o;i.
(9HlC IGl
s1295
C11Stom SUtlurben 2-0r., v-1. -utom1111c trammfsslon, rldlo, neeter, _, s1ttr-
1ng, POW'I• brak1t, WSW llrn, arid air
concllllonh't. (VACJll)
'67 OLDSMOBILE
CUTLASS SUPliMI
VI, •ulcmallc;, power 1IHrl~ __ &..t. b!'akH,
radio, l'IHtf'l'i WSW, •Ir cvnu1llonl119.
(lll07n109722 • $695
IOTICEt:·
, I . '
Atlas Chrysler Plymouth now has f1cilltle1 !¥ service on ALL MOTOR HOMES r-rd-
l'ffs of 1iJ:e,. i>y experie'nced motor home me-
cha'riicsl WARRANTY w·ork on International and Dodge trvck dtes1i1.
· Huge selection of exciting new '73 Scouts right now at Atlas
International. Your Recreational Vehicle 'Headqucirten.
'·
THE GREAT '73 . "00-
ANYWHE.RE" ·SCOUT ·
AT AN UNBEUEVABLE '
LOW PRICE
-
1
•
•
PLUS TAX AND LICENSE
SE R. NO. lSIS6CGD4lll0
•• •
. ' ... .,.. •• (• .• . " ...... . .. . ' .
•
• .
Friday, Stpttmber 28, 1973 DAILY PILOT 31 ,
• '•
....
e-~--------
•
1974
LARGEST SELECTION OF .
CADILLACS IN : ORA NGE COUNT) .
• Coupe De Villes • Broughams • Coupes ' e Sedan De Villes._ • El Dorados • Convertibles
Over 80 Quality Cars to Choose from
.
}968 SEDAN DE VILLE
• • • Vinfl top, leather interior, full po,ver, factory air conditioning, tilt
wheel,-.AMLEM-slereo, exce)lent.condilion.._(YGJ_S:IS ~ •
196:1 ELDORADO
\
Vinyl top, leather interior, full po\ver, factory air conditioning, tilt
wheel, stereo, door lockit.--(Ser;-"287996)
1972 COU'PE DE VILLE
Eriiiine \vhite, white vinyl top, factory· air ·conditioning, full po\ver,
red leather interior, tilt & telescoplc '"heel, Al\1/FM stereo multiplex + 8 track stereo tape, new WSW . (144874)
1969 COUPE DE VILLE •
Factory air conditioning, lull power, tilt & telescopic steering, AM/F~I
stereo, twilight sentinel, white vinyl top & leather interior. (021DSL)
1971 COUPE DE VILLE
Autumn gold/white vinyl top/gold tapestry & leather interior, lull
power, factory all', t!lt-tele \vheel, AM/Fl\I stereo, radio, po\ver door
locks, twilight sentinel. (367PWA)
' 1972 SEDAN DE VILLE
SA LE PRICE
~IL
SALE PRICE
$1777
SALE PRICE
$4555
SALE PRICE _$2.22 2·
SALE PRICE
$388 8
SALE PRICE
•
BUY OR LEASE
P.old wit.h. \V~ite vinyl top. gold tapestry interior. Full po,ver, fac~ory
arr co!ld1t1onmg, AM/FM stereo, door locks, trunk lock, light sentinel,
new tires. (759EL1J)
'
1970 SEDA!\ DE VILLE
$455 5
SALE PRICE
IMMEDIATE DELIVERY
•
-' .~_j ...
"
'
Vinyl top, leather interior, full powe~. factory air conditioning, tilt
wheel, power door locks, AM/FM stereo multiplex. Impeccable.
(234AGB)
1970 ELDORADO "
Less than 35,oo:i miles. Full po\ver 'factory air turquoise black vinyl
top, matching leather interior, tilt 'wheel, Al'vI /FM stereo,' power door
locks, spotless. (904BKF)
$299 9
SALE PRICE
$399 9
1969 ELDORADO • SALE PRICE
Autumn gold exterior, white vinyl top, gold ful-l l-ea_:_tb_e_r_:_in_t_er_io_r._r_u1_:_1 _$_299 9 ____ ,power, factory air cQn_ditioning, tilt steering wheel, AM/FM stereo,
-power-doorloci<s;-·(-Y*Rll07''>---"-------=-
-. -19-12-EbDQR-A.DO:::--i:.__:--7-c-.. -"'SA~ rRLC~m=lt==;::::-
ifuxedo blaclo'.black · vinyl top/black leather interior i'un pow~r $ b. -5 "n
factory air, tilf..tele ~heel, AM/FM storeo w/8 track tape deck:
power door locks, tw1l1ght sentinel power trunk lock low mileage
Excellent condjtion. (872EIA) ' ' ·
J9J0-1BIRD_ LANDAU_ SALE PRICE -
2 Door. Vlliyl tp, full power, fac-s19 9 9 tory air, power .door locks, tilt ·
wheel, power trunk lock, radio
heater, white wall tires. Out.stand: ing. (110616)
1970 BUICK RIVIERA SAL E PRICE·
Olyrnpk bronre, bron•e v;nyl lop. s2444 matching tapestry interior, full
power, factory air conditioning,
\VSW, tilt wheel, A1'1/fo'J\o[ stereo,
(592EXC) '
-1971 OLDSJ ORONADO ' SALE PRICE
Yello\v I white vinyl top I bronze ~3~ tapestry interior, full pov.rer, Jae-"f·
tory air conditionlng, till, stereo, ~ .. q
dual front seat, loaded. AM/FM , ,
stereo muJtipJex. (325CXDJ
1971 CONT. COUPE SALE PRICE
BcauHful gold w/be;gc v;nyl top. s33 33 gold leather, interior, full po~-er,
faclory air, stereo, door )OO'k.<;. 1
tilt 'vhcel, exceptional thl'oughout,
radial tires. {636Ch'W) ' '
' .
' .
1969 CONT SEDAN SALE PRICE 1969 CHRYSLER IMPERIAL SALE PRICE
--aargundy, hla~k-"'.inyl t'op, -blll't'lf919~ ~~t~i~::.~~fJP'po~~~ S:t-8-8-&-l---9--gundy leather ir.it~r1?r, full power, tory alr, dual comfort seats, tilt .
factory al~ cond1tiorung, lilt wheel, whrel, power door locks, radio, ·
stereo, door locks. {XSW541) _ . __ heater. WS\V:,_(YDP557) t _ _ -r
1964 MERCEDES 220SE SALE P R ICE 1972 MAZDA RX3 WAGON SALE PRICE
~~r:iy ~~~nm~~~e 4 e~~~~·f:~: Sf7 7 7 ~~~1·yra~;:nehe~t!~cdw-~~~ $ 299-g-
tory air, po\ver steering, po\vcr "'all tires. Very lo\v mileage
disc brakes, A~1/F11 radio. (891· beauty. You rC'ally must see to
FED) appreciate. (102596)
· ·Libiited Supply Brand New 1973 Cadilla~s
I
ELDORADO
CONVERTIBLE. Fully equipped.
Stock No. 7955.
for • • • •
$'
• •
~edan De Ville $
"
Fully equipped.
Stock No. 7917
for ..... .
' · Wide . Selection of' Colors & Equipme nt While "The y Last!
•
-
COSTA MUA
'
• l l
,
' .
' I
•
,:!_! OAILV PILOT frldliy , Stptcmbtr 28, 197) ,__ ______ ~ '
'• '°°'' ' Mt1111ioc lou!P'"'C'l'll .'KIO · OW
lmployr•~•
finonuul .
The Biggest Marketplace on the Orange Coast
DAILY PILOT CLASSIFIED ADS
Mol!tle Hotr.... '°" SoW-.
,.,$0n0h. ' . . . ' . .
Peo ond ~ .•.
hol t1rore ~cit ..
, t1S • lf9
.5,lS -)49
. ISO · 899
,ISO ·191'1
.X>O · m
1-b.hn tor Scilt
l~t ' found .
~cho1\l:l~.
700 . 7-:,q
100 ·,..
100 . 12•
.S~·S74
'800 . 149
You Can Sel I It, Find It ,
Trade It With a Want Ad [642-5678] One Cal I Service
Fast Credi.t Approval
S<hooh orod tn.••-..ction . ' . )7) . m
Mrwoee\ ond •9POI'' . . . bClO • 111'1
fn:in,pcwtohon. . , 91S • 949 •
E RRORS. A verti1er1 S houfd checlC ffieir --------
-•dt daily & repcrt error1 lmmedi•tely. The i Hou5ei tor SMe JI I@ J [Hou,,, tor $,,1, JI fl!) ( Ho\11•• for Siie
{ Hout11 tor Siie ~( "'°""''for Sale
General Genera l
~ ·""' .. . NEW TRIPLEXF.S & DUPLEXES
IN COSTA MESA 80/0 INTEREST
AVAILABLE
ON CONTRACTS
Open Dilly Pl1centia Ave. 1t Wilson
ORANGE COUNTY APARTMENT
EXCLUSIVE AGENTS, S47-6791
General Gener.ii
** ** ** *TAYLOR CO.*
IRVINE TERRACE-$189,SOO
Exciting view of ba}', oceon & twinkl ing
lights from thls spacious 4 bd rm home (incl
2 mstr suites). F'an1 r1n . de1i w/¥.'et ba r. 4'2
baths & lge pool. 3 Frpls ,!, 3-car garuge.
, 1 ''Our 28th Veer,''
WESLEY N. TAYLOR CO., Realtors
2111 San Joaquin Hills Road
"Qverlooking Big Canyon Cc,untry Club''
NEWPORT CENTER, N.B. 644-4910
Gttneral General
l
OPEN SUN. 2-6 38 LINDA ISLE
Elegant 6 BR. home. Family roon1 . Pier &
slip for large boat. Vie\\' of bay & turning
basin. $295,000 . Cathryn Tennill e
BAYSHORES-OPEN HOUSE
SUi'i. 2-5. You are invited to 2596 CREST·
VIE\V. lo sec a char1ning. garden oriented
home-asking price $59,950. ~1ary Harvey
ONE OF A KIND HOME
OPE:-.1 SAT. 1-5. Beautiful Hnrbor \'ie\v
I Ionics f\·Ionaco. \viU1 unusual enc losed front
yard patio-garden. 2 BR & c.D. -1947
PO RT CARVIFF. $65,900. Rich Wray
BLUFFS COUPLE CHARMER
!\love rlght in this imn1aculate :l BR & den
tio1ne -upgraded & professiona lly decorat-
ed. 426 VISTA SUERTE. $55.927. OPEN
S . .\·r. 1-5, SUN. 2-5. l\1uriel Barr
CAMEO SHORES
Ocean view. Very la rge living rn1 , n1aster
bd rn1 . \V/beautiful parquet floors, bea 1necl
ceili ngs. 4 Bcdrootns. 3 baths. SI 15.000.
Ca rol l'atum
HARBOR VIEW HOMES
fJaJ~rmo 111odcl view lot. \Vith cxtensi,·c
mirrors. paneUng & \\•allpaper. 4 Bdrms ..
(am. rm .. 2~l baths, wet bar & view deck.
$89.900.
SPECTACULAR OCEAN VIEW
~-Plex, high 011 a hill in Dona Point. StW
an infant al I~~ years. 5105,000. Call Dearl
Kring
THIS WON 'T LAST-568,000
OPE:X SAT. & SUN. 1·5. llaycrest. 2021 COM~IODOl!I.':. Love ly 3 hdrm .. ramily
rm ... 2~~ ba·s. IJooJ size yard. co\lered patio.
Sac.:rilict i-<ilc:: l\lary Lou f\'lttrion
I ~~iii•iii"iii"'iii•~'~eiiiii~iiii~G;eiiiniiieiiir•iii•iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii;:,;;;;;; \ Gen. r •I General ----
-
I ****** I Heritage Collection ·
YOUR CHOICE
l BEDROOM TOWNHOUSE -Nice famil y
location. 2 Baths, builtins. double garage \\'I
s torage cabinets. clubhou se & pools. Easy
living. \Ve have 2 to choose fro1n . Price
S24,50Q & $24,850. CALL 540-1151.
MESA VERDE RANCH STYLE BLUFFS CONDO
B-EAUT-:--·R.-AMBttNG 4 BR., 2 BA. one-story CO !\fPLJ:o.'TF.L\' upgr:ulC'd I
home. Heavy Shake roof:-1picturesque atriu1n CONOO.-1:;-·o !ltory .. '
I d k.t I f ·1 '· 1 t ' j,_ Hedt-ooins •. , hath~. bnl'k rg. 1110 . _"t r 1 ... an:i1 y rn1 .. ueau ._ carpe tn g--fireplatt. 1a1l:<' c 0 u 11 t .-~
and paneling. Spacious lot o n quiet cul-de· kitchen. Close 10 <'\'er:.1h1n~ If t 1'l11're nl~nning a 1· sat close to nc!\V regional park. Offered at I . pool . l c>nni~ t·l~ib. sho1ipini;; NewpbiBe~~ i .. ~;;;4~~~A~~. 546-5880. • & "'644:'7210
l\,urry I your ctwice. ~OUNTRY LIVING -La rge 4 bedroom .den I INVEST NOW
Half gone in half a year and the rest wi ll nor and poo l _hon1e on super big lot. Extras Ill· J IN 16 UNITS
last long. Hurry to see this distinctive Newport tlude fruit trees. sha_de trees. dog run & In exciting IT11tal ru-ca l'lo..-.r
Beach development oJ condom.iniuTn homes. shrubs galore. All thi s near Back Bay. at ! 10 lari;t' shopJJin;; CE'n!cr .
built-in clusters around handsome couftyards. , S4 I ,900. CALL 540-l l 51 · 1 ~(\"C1u1xc~~ E ~r~,~ AT 1~
Eight superb models. each a masterpiece of I OLD FARM HOUSE bcdroon1 w1 furnisht'd: Eight
-I l;c(lroon1 furni11hed. ,. luxury. comfort. convenience and qualit y I (N COSTA MESA YET ;-Unusual property. Large hentl.od pool. 00,-e~d
construction. Sundecks. fireplace, wet-bar, j 141" frontage x 107' depth with 3 car garage Jonai, ping pong"'nnd shui-
elegant Master Suite. Sun-Lite '" kitchen. I ·ru10 detached n1 ulti-purpose buildings and tl cboard. Call ro r flJ,.
private enclosed double garage. Recreational old fashioned ra rzn style 3 bedroom. 1700 sq. point1611c4"'4· '_'""72·°"'7·0
fcicilities \nClud~ heated swimming pool. ; ft. hon1c. Don't n1i ss the \Vi~cellar ~ .A steal
General
HARaOR VIEW HOMES
WE'RE STILL
OPEN FOR
BUSINESS!
But ... \\'e're clo \\·11 lo ou r last fe\v Harbor
Vie·w I-fames in the final unit on the hill ...
and so1ne of our beautiful 1nodel homes !
So hurry if you'd like to li ve in on e of these
excit ing 3 to 5 bedroon1 residences p_riced
fron1 ~til .190 !
HARBOR VIEW HOMES
1829 PORT SHEFFIELD PLACE
NEWPORT BEACH ,
OFF FORD RO. & MACARTHUR BLVD.
(7141 833-0780.
DONALD L. BREN COMPANY
BEST BUY-CdM I Gener•I Gener.al
-DUPLEX-iiiiijjiiiiijjiiiiijjiiiiijjiiiiijjiiiiijjiiiiijjiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii:iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiml
lighted tennis courts. sauna, therapy pool. al 535.000--may be only io ·r.-do\vn. CALL
All exterior building and grounds maintenance 546-5880 .
provided. Sati sfy yo ur curiosity-see CAPE COD
Newport Crest today! 4 BEDROOM+ CONVERTIBLE OEN, 3 baths
Two, Three, and Four Bedroom Condominium Home• -on beautiful tree lined street in Ne,~·port
from $62,995 i~... Beach. 'lou'l\ lo,·c the rear yard and pool:
Financing Available at 7 l/4 °/o * Hurry· $68.500. CALL 540-1151.
IT'S BIG
: · IN TURTLE ROCK -Private yard, spacious
cul·de·sac hon1e. -l Bedrooms. 2Y.1 baths, for·
n1al dining and ran1il y rbo1n . ~rassive fire-
place. kitchen is a culinary's delight. Estate
•.Ju.st rt•1110t.ll'led fron1 u11i1 1
1,·i1h lli:it HUSTIC FEEl.r I
li\"G. rnn<'l£'d H'ini: roorn.
hr1c~ ln~plaCf>. 3 Broroon1io.
upgraded car p ets &
"·allpa~r. Nev.· N"nr upJ)('r
unit \\'/lree-top \'ie..,,•, open
beam ceil.lngs 2 bedrooms
including oversized master
~uite. One or Corona del
?>Jar's 1nost charming pro-
1
~11ies loc.-ated nex1 10 thr
1·11y p:irk. S127,500.
644-1210
';J)o11el' St,_o,.ed _Area
SHOWN BY• APP01 1\TMENT
Pool. Nice 3 br, 2 ba Baycrest f-lan1e. ll igh
beam ceilings. 10 -;. dou•n. '76,950. l\1icc en-
tertainment home.
DALE WULLNER
.556,BJ.81 or 642-1771 I size 3 car garage . Offered at S6 1.250. Vacant 1wt ~~dy for your i n s pe c ti on. CALL
ACREAGE
IN HEMET
•
Agent ~
-~-!
OWNER IN FLORIDA General General
From Pec1f1c C<.'a~! Hlgh10.·ny
(Ind Superior Av .. nue 1Ba!bo6
Blvd I. dnve up 'lu?'-'rior 10
T;conderog<1. and directly to
Ne11o1port Cr .. st Information
Center.Tekphooe (714)645-6141
5,,1.-s Ofr-.ce open daily
10 a.m. to sunMl
* Typical C"On\0:1111unal finu11cin;; uf 30 yt'ar loan:
Ca sh !•l'i('r.r ut PIHn 1 Sti:!.99Z>: rlu\l'll payn1enl
SJ'l,ti9.l: ::;Go n1,1n thly pn~nl""'~ uf ~6 1.00 fprin-
"111al & i111en-~11 al 8~ ·. ANJ\'1.JAL PJ'.:RCENT-
1\G!·: !:.\Tl':.
,.~ ...................... ,_ .............. , .. ~ .................. , .... , .... .. .. _ ........ ,.. .... ---·•~•·••M-••~ .. r .•••. ,r.....,1<'-"'-
.._.,., .. ,...,,.~-·-·~-·--· ...... .., ............. .
SHARP 3 BEDROOM hon1e \\1ith new carpets
thruout. Assu1nable FHA loan, po quali-
fying or new loan charges. Vacant. $28,950.
CALL FOR DETAILS 540-1151.
MESA VERDE FIXER-UPPER
SAVE $ S $-Do your ou·n cleaning, decorat-
ing & minor repairs on thi s 3 BR ., 2 BA .
ho1ne. Large added fa mily roon1 . perfect for
pool table. teenagers. etc. Vacant . neglected
& ready for your in spection. CALL US FOR
FURTHER DETAILS . 546-5880.
Acre~. Z-P zoninc. Ap111'0\. I
12 aetts t1•i1h p I H n-s
ft\'B.ilablc for 100 unil aplH1· i
ment bui lding 011 the golf .. course. $265,000.
644-.7270
--I
+ .~.p HERITAGE 1 s~o;:im~0fo~0~1v~~·
., . magazine of Newport
l REALTORS I Beach erH properties
".::::::::::::::::::::::::::=:::=:::=:::=:::"="="="=~ with pictures & prices. 1
Gerwtral Ger1eral 2821 E. Coast Hlway ;;.;;;.;;;,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;.1 -~Coron a del Mar
G-;;;1
";;;
1
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1 ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;G:;•;;;":;"';;•;;;' ;;;;;;;;.;;;;;;;;;;;;~ CORONA DEL MAR • VIEW LEASE/OPTION-- * * OPEN HOUSES * * Fabulous hillside home. overlooking the har-C~!ia i~;!~"3 Ei!i~~; ~ 2 bar entrance. Over 4500 sq. fl .. \\'ith 3 extra Mlh, deep lot _ rruit lr('f.'l!.
2015 DIANA LANE, N1PT. BEACH large bedrooms. a true gour1nel kitchen. a S307_t'()Olllh. lW,9jl).
OP EN SUNDt\ y 1·5 tDover Dr. to Lela Ln.. paneled fa m ily roo1n. pub & \\·inc cellar. 2 llat·bor \'!t•\v 4 bedroom
turn ri ght to Diana Ln .1 Sharp 4 BR .. 2 ha. Large sundecks. Defin itely one of a kind . ran1ily honie. \\'alk 10
('lo!'e to !\1ariners Park lli school. S52.500 OPE~ FOR INSPEC1'10 N, SUND.I\\' 1-5. ~rl'CnbC'!l. s"in1 and r rcrP:'l-
Sce 250 1 Ocean Bl vd . S"l96,500. I lion fn cilili!':<. SJOO month
1740 PLAZA DEL NORTE , PENIN . PT. li>J,"'1.
OPE.\! SUNDAY only 1·5. Spanish 4 BR. plu' BIG CANYON LOT
<lining r111. Across fro111 park. Choice fairway lot. $69,400. Fee Simple
PRICE REDUCED 59.000 TO 388.500 BAYSHORES FAMILY HOME
119 VIA LIDO SOUO, LIDO ISLE-On extra size, corner lot. 3 Large bedrooms
OPEN S.\T. & SUN. 1-5. f'ier & !=li p. Co11tc111· plus recreation room. Beautifully Jand-
porary f-li gson bit. 4 & a den, din . rm.; pool. scaped patio. $83,750. $195,000.
DAVIDSON REALTY HARBOR
5801 W. Coosl Hwy., N 8 6 46 -7767
3116 Newporl Blvd., N.B. 673·9060
\\'a tC'rtronl :: b(•tJroont. hkr
n('I\, ::ii ' boa I llhp -Good
Ne"'l>Ort IOCiillOn -S-19.j nlO.
S77,j00.
Spyglass I> bedroon1 -cul lie
,.ac, bcau1irul \:·iE'\\'. 'Vrll
Lru1flf>C'aped -ST.JO n10.
$129,00J.
Cnll sra-7225
MACNAB
IRVl 'NE
~~-=R~N~E=R~HO~M~ES~
"HARBOR VIEW-SPARKLING JEWEL"
Spacio us & bright 4 BR/FR 1-slory. Beau·
tiful gardens -comrnu_nity park ,'.-pool.
$75.900. Loi s Egan 644-6200. IMll 1
BIG CANYON VERSAILLES MODEL
\"ic\1' of 2 F'air\vays & Lakl'. Space for 4-0'
pool. 4 BR 1 F'R. far ina! DR. J{eady Nov . 10.
SI 75.000. Davt Cook &12-8235. Open Sat. &
Sun. 1-5 p .111 . 35 Rue Grand Ducal. (~112)
"OWN A PIECE OF THE PACIFIC"
Ocean{ront prestige area -professionally
decorated -recently remodeled. 4 BR's,
4 baths. Partially furn. $177.500. Bob O\ve ns
642-8235. tMl3J
COSTA MESA-$45,000
Big pOOJ & liuge }'ard on quiet Street. Near
1'1ariners Park. 3 BR s -shingle roof.
\Viii trade. John Granath 642-8235. (M1 4)
GIVE YOUR LOVE A LITTLE
SOMETHING!
Lux.ury custom 4 BR home on Linda Isle
Lagoon. Beautifully appointed. 60' pier &
slip. 8250 .000. ~1a1tlrn Macnab 642-8''35.
(MIS!
UPPER BAY RANCH ESTATE
Elegant 5 BR California Ranch l fo1ne.
l'ool & stables. $'245 .000. Harriet Perry
&!2-82.15. (Ml6t
ASSUMABLE 7 5/8% LOAN! Cienera l General COMPANY
R-iALTORS
HARBOR VIEW MONACO
S1>0tlcss 3 BR . 2 bath home \V/JArgc back
vaJ"d. Spanish tile. plush carpels . decora-
tor clN11Pe~. $64.900 fee . .Joyce E:dlund
·2-82i5. 1Mt71
j Bdr1n s .. 2 1 ~ ba . home in beautiful UN l-
VERSTT'i' l'ARK. 11ilh i beau tiful. LARGE
lo\v lnl. loan & a bCa uti!ul greenbelt loca:
lion:: 1·on i Escobar
SPACIOUS SPANISH HOME
J \"r. old r:n1c rald Bay -exc1u,sivc. \V /4
Bf-I .. ~auna. den & \\"Ct bar. Beaut. \"ic"' of
ocea n & mountains. 1\ great home for
$275,000. Pal Hug
BALBOA ISLE BAYFRONT
Large home. 2 lols. l'ier & float . 5 BR., den.
bonus playroom, 5 ha. Sand y bcacl\. Ex·
ctllenl flnanc1ng. S3 1i 000 Russ Flynn
OCEANFRONT LOT
Only 40 f~t lot available! Spectacular cor-
ner .locahon. Pcnln . Pt. Plans & good terms
a\'rulabte. $60.000 . Bill Benls
llU700
_._
'44-2•10 Coldwell, Banker f ~
2161 Son Jooquln Hill& Rd., N.B.
~~
~[fl)
a~[;Q]i)
Townhomes from
$25,900 to $29,450
Ch eck !he value you get for yo ur dollar
• Paneled Fireplaces
• Individual Enclosed Garages
• Prfv1 1e P•llo1 or Decks
• Two Bedrooms
• Two B1th1
• Pool, Rtcreatlot) Sulldlng & 81rb.c::u1e
The Mein AttrecUon It 11 ttte comer ot M1ln
Stree1 •nd MacArthur Blvd. In S1n11 Ane, n•at
lhe juncllon ol the Newport 111d S11n Diego
Fr1ewij1.
Cell 551·1580 or t45·121SO
• I
.I
2841 E . Co1st Hwy., Corona del M•r
"Selling Re•I E1t•te in Newport H1rbor
Since 1944"
673-4400
A U~IVUf tl()Mf
IN MESA VERDE-Newer listing-4 bed-NEWPORT BEACH
room, 2 story with pool large llvfng room, Oct1nfront
d()\vnstalrs 1naster bedroo1n-:" Tree lined ~Pi'.lTII ti 111 !'II!'~ ;: Uedr.oo111
street. *56i500. A listing of Ned' Mc Creary. beach co taao '''hh slun1p
I ~1<me lif'<lplllt(', Zoned R-2.
UNIQUE HOME$ RHl!ou, 546-5900 11.:U.:JOO. C•ll '""" for
OUSTANOING VIEW-DOVER SHORES
rspacious s·R's:CXtra rg.-LR. ffil'mal on-;-
3'1: baths. Beautiful grounds. $145,000.
Open Sal. & Sun . 1-5 p.m. 123ll Polaris.
(Ml81
OCEANFRONT 4-PLEXI
OPEN SAT. 1·5 p.m. 1412 \V, Ocea nfront.
lfwo !BR's, One 2-BR & Bach, Deluxe
units ' $t94,000. Jack Howell 644-8200.
(M I91
FAMILY RETREAT
Immaculate 4 BR. FR home nestled in
Huntington Beach's Impressive 'Fashion
Shores. Newly listed. Will sell FAST at
$51 ,500. Lots Miller 642-8235. (M20 )
New 2 BR, 2 bath + FR. Will also lease
at $800/mo. BUiie Mottson 644-8200. (M21)
[Irvine I ~--nw-,--1
IOI Dcmr Dftv. 141•1111
llM Meo.Arthur "'~UOI
Newport IHch, C1llfornl• IJlft 2850 Mesa Verde Drive, Cotta Mt11 dct1tJl~. The Rtal E!ll'tatr , ._ ___ ... ____ ..., ___ .,.,,_...,..,...,,..~ f''AJr y::">.l6·~1 or R.'N-613.l ;.• ....,;~
t 1
..
-
-
"
• -
Friday, Srplrmbtr 28, 1973 DAILV PILOT 33
~[--~ ... s.~. ~l~~[~-~ .. ~.s .. ~l~~~~~l~-~~,,,_ .... ~~l~~[~-~ ... ~ .... ~1~~11!1 ·I ~[ -~.~ ..... ~l~~e I _,,,_"I~[ _._ .. l~I [ -........
!;;;;;;;;;~,;;~j~G~."~"~'~.,~miiiiiim;;,;;;I
Gener•I
WATERFRONT-$220,000
N~w on the market, this spacious custom
famUy home of!er8 the epilome of gracious
livin g. Beautiful vie\v of lhe Bay. Our exclu·
sive. Appl. only. 046-7711
BAYSHORES-$112,000
over 3,000 SQ7 It. or-comfort and luxury
available in tllis 5 bedroom, Sr-bath seaside
mansion with private beach provld~d. One
of lh e favorite residential a reas of screen
" star s and entertainers. You r:night like it
too ! 646-7711.
PANORAMIC VIEW
from this 1800 sq. It .. 3 bedroom, 2 bath cus-
tom home on large Jot with formal dining
room, dooble garage, beautiful carpets &
drapes, hardwood floors, shake roof and less
than 2 yrs. old! $74,950. Appt. only. 646-7711.
Walker &Lee
REAL ESTATE
General General
* BOYD REALTPRS PRESENTS *
HOME SWEET HOME
For sure! Dclightiul 2 bdr1n., family rm.
home with complete guest house. $59,500.
HARBOR VIEW HOMES
Ideal co1n1nunity for a youn g family . Walk
to schoo l, pools & green areas_ Portofino
3 BR., 21h ha .. din. rn1 .. brkfst: area; family
room. $78,000 (owner may consider a lease/
option).
THE BLUFFS .
Vacant & ready to go! Near CdM High
School ; 3 BR .. 1 I> ba .; nr. pools, tennis &
shopping. $50,000.
General
* 675-5930 *
3629 E. Co11t Hwy.
Coron• del Mar
---General
LIDO waterfront. 3 Bdrm. & lge. fai:nily rlTI_;.,
or 5 bdr1ns., \vith 6 baths. Lido Nord. Spec-
tacular view! \Vater;f.ronl living tm. with
step-down wet bar. Pier & float. $275,000.
* * *' * LOVELY custom 5 lxlrm., 3 ba~ i.ido Nord,
on spacious 40 !t. lot. Pier & slip, Adj8cent
lot also avail. for sale. $295,000
General
PRESTIGE WATERFRONT HOMES
SHOWN BY APPOINTMENT•
Linda Isle Waterfront
Custom 4-bdrm., 4¥.. bath home on lagoon.
FullY. equipped, i.sla nd kitchen,· waterfront
fam1ly--room , b1lhard1oom-"'7' ..... -$245,000
Linda lsltt Waterfront
Lovely 4 bdrm., 41,', ba. home \Vith swim~
ming pool, pier & slip, panoramic vie'v o!
main channel. Lge . fa111ily rm . \v/s p ace for
billiards & family dining. Waterfront formal
dining & living rm. . . . . . . . . . . . . $290,000
• For Compl•te Information
On All Homes & Lots, Please Call :
Ganer ii General Geno,.al
Newport Beach I llEWPORT * TWO * Address OPPORTUNITY Colorful Co1t19H THE PAINT . r:l..clulllvr-1 Bit In "ro.\.o;y Jl:i1v orf1·r1fl\t or ocean slt1e2 BUCKET Custom Built I Hl"<'!I. 01\'Jlt'/" 11111 ('111'1) tlf lht•j111·y. pro1w1·ty of Oc houM'~ 1u1 urw• liJI. live ln Immediate cupancy Built by rhv 01111.-•r huilll~·1· 1mix•r 1}! 1101niool 1-.111·. 1 Uri(', IW\C' lncvnie from the Ou Credi! n.('JL'CllOllS be~·8;ll5(' thi~ \o\'Cly hon1es' to his O\\'n h4:,ll standl.u<tls. $66.~.. _ _,
just l11•r-n fl11!!1h<'<I. lt'li all 3 l..:u)tt' l)r'(lmonis & r11mlly
1
EASTSIOE oth<'r. Fll'HI tln1c 0Ue1Y\.I al
Not· A Condominium OC'\\' & bP1.Lrklu1~. N(·w l>l'een roo1 n, far1nal dlnl n·,: iu•r-u. IN-LAW HOMES $79,~TING
I i-lla;.: ··~11 111.>l lni; u1 nl l 1wn1~. Ta ... st>Cu\lv dt'('(H'i.ihd thn•o\U. I I· t 3 Ult lonn.o.I * NEW LI * ' , Bn 21 ~ hu·~~ l><'rh"0<11us v.\lh ll<~n)' ·slutke 1110r l.Mv 01~1i;iacu b"' k! 1 • 1 C11111 nUTI): 3 l11lm1. J b1:uh )'no1· II(>\\ /\Ofll(' 111\11 " . ( 11 I II I ., b ., k . ( lnlfl({, ri;u :'I.Ii tu~·a. II u,,; I • \ IU1 b·1 •helo1· ant
'
ln···F r~111 1 ·1 n~ 1u 1i;..1111<' r t• nu1.hll('nanrt• liuii:.~l'npiu;.~& ,, , , 1 rur t'E'I ii ··~ 1n1n~ 1 '" ,,..
llA, l1vini; rrH Pus .;l. • 1 flt·tvlru ... 't. L.:n·g~· IHH'k yur:L )l)lllUh:lt'~ Jt'l\t.:.i~l _'tfl "\ 10 ! t:'1~tu·~c..~~-_ !l.·Jfl u! ar ·1.1 •• Chvncr _will
fnmil}--roocn. 'rhe ·~1i1N1 .... 1 /\li)Cim' cRf1 (l';~ur'f'U' thl!I; \ .\ l.efllt•il J'XYJI, {TI'"'"" l ll...:.io J RMrn fO'" ta -t<d· n. -.:.r•,j(,(), hl'IP ~ o~ t1n:inMT1r,Best buy
1 1.·n1· J:llrtt61' ~ !iirp;1ra1~1 ~t loan 11hh total 1h'l~n11.-111 of & l.Julll·l i '"lB Dl'iQ l'ril·,,J ON THE WATER iir ~13,:.00. frvn1 ~")Ur honu_• hy u IQ· S!~ll ll<'l'/1nn. :0-:1•\lt'r 111\l fl)· 11 "''i..· $.):'!JOO CORBIN-MARTIN
li:<hlfull;.t 11r i1·rtr1• l1:1ck)<·•1:t h••lp !ln:.inv~'. Jlrll'•'d at 1 1'.' 111"1 It:,, · ~ .. · 'C"h11rrnln?,l Hit:! BA.1u1•r &· R It ' 644-7662
You 1'1'1•a1e >'J'r !"'11 1>.al10 ~:!~.:.on. \.';ill j l,"r-\Jl!!l c. f . Co esworthy floitt Sll,OIKl ~ ors-."7.~=c---;--
('!lll'[lll('<', ll.t•I 11" rln. :-ill rh,• t , 1 R It r 640-002'0 WALK TO A J'L"''; F<•n('t"l::. 1:~ ..... ;c-;.qiln~ 1 __!a o s_
""d '1""""''''''· I 1--.-.-59""•, .. 290""'""• -LO_T_*_I PRIVATE BEACH
c"""'"' "'""'' • "~·'· .n, Walker & Lee c-1 zaN>: * $56,500 * I ~•"'~ 1 •'"''' 1'32,500 .... E·Z 1'ER!\1S (1\ -.~ bed v 1 o gP.n~rous ~11 .. _...,, -HURRY 1~...,1n~. a roon1y kitchen. a
DON'T STEP iN • LA CUESTA VILLAS
• to the SELECT ·vouR * Cfll''OnU del ?.tar DUf'LEX h\'1n~ l\JOlll all d.')l]e Ill Ll'nl· BILL ·GRUNDY, REALTOR YRES -S6S,:i00 1lo uuy your fatnlli)_' fholl 011 \"cllc11>.~and Linu•Greens VILLAS by A O C t• ' b"\'lrt)e<IU! 4 bd1111 b1ggl(' 011 ,. thul's so light nnd su.u,11y
I 341 Bay1ide Or., Suite 1, N.B. 675-6161 $30,490 '' wn ' .a!pe '"~--* Eastl.Jluff-1 Be£lronn1 t \'01J!C'l'IOtwhl1u1K'nC0Ull\l',V 1 1hfll i1 looks!ike,partofthe I~ ... !!!!'\'"'""""""""""""!~""~"""""""""""""--"'-. . . 1 HI~ DA-;\ D\ t \.l::'rf·H.l f> .F hvn1t', 21 ~ bfllhs, _c·ho1ce cor-I l>IJ~1{'<'1<. J\l~o illC' u~lt•s 2 lux-iHrk-Hke artlen outside. General -General ll ;i1oc1c1 111 nnt• b!01:k 11est of . llfli\tE 11.\S I BLJH;<.IS .
1
r·~·r h.11:·at1on Sb~,.,{111. 11r1ous ha lhf'. .. \I, 1111:; 111 I CALE 644-7211 B1.•al'h nff Adan1~ i11 llun!· LC:r:: ~,.\;<.Jll.Y £!\! & TS -! (·o~la i\!c.-su 11.·111.'t'-' llvi11:.;-is
******************* in,i..:ton J3en1.;h I PRJCED 1.0\\'l.:H TIL\N * 4 f;t'rJ1VX>n1 i11'1n1• fllu~,, frre 1111(] easy F JIA .111d \".\ ~~!~II f ANY crrn·~r~ l'.:.\STlll.l 11•~· 111,lSt<'r sn 1 ... f~111 llv 100111 u•r:ns 11\"a1l<1lilr also !'i'' ill
UNDER BL''E SKIES • BEAUTIFUL NEWPORT ' * S3ft.144S * 1 Jl<?:'<JE .• NEi~l.Y J>.\l:'li .rED + 1!1•n, 3 b11llL~. n1:in.v ex-do1\11 p1n"l.".'l'l. ~-1 ()11'1 11:1.~1 t ! ' ,
"" Ji'\SICJ.., .\ND PRIC.E I~-1ras. Q111et ~t1't!l.~t. Sf'l,900 lo11g fut $27,('K}). Cull 1-'·----
T CLllDJ:::.') i'\E\\' CAHPt:r. -~~~:".".'~~~~~ wo spacious custom built ne\v 4 BR., 3 Bl\. Builder's ~ Closeout! ING . vou cuoos.J.: YOUR Roy Mccardle Realtor ----NO-WAITI NG
homes. -Finest in the area super clean O\\X c~.HJJRS. l~ll\tEl.J. 1"10 N•W""' r.ii.rtf .• c.?il.
1
FOR THE BATH [ " di 1 t• ' Looki11i! (Qi· ;i t·u~tot11 ho111e, ., W lk I} l nen l' uca _tOn. . OCCUi'.INC\'. S".'>DO. 548-7729 a er ee 1vilh a vlr1v, in l.'~:clusiv(' The1·e arr' i\, one !or each
('()lllllltlllity. on a '• a<.:l'(' oc' EAN VIEW --lllA l ll tA.JI lxl1-n1 .• in thls at1i!ltic, one OPEN SAT., SUN., MON. & TUES 2-6 P.M. lh:tl allo11s horiws':' Thi>n by • I f>C>--9'191 Of)('n evl.'s. of a kind {luplex, with
l801 Santiago Or., NB all nu•ans siop hy' Only 2 CORONA DEL MAR largest 81llqrd i"AK·E-OVER-71/2•,{ VA r 1ropieal. n1inim~un ca1-e
hom".'s lcfl~ t::u<'h ho1ne of-t::XCEF'TIONAL t· L.O 6 R Room West Of 5244•00 mo PAYS ALL yard. Neur sho~p111g, 3 ~!ks 1600 Harrow Pl., NB fcrs ·I BH, 21 ~ BA, 2aOO PLAN TO OBTJ\!i'\ i\J;\,\"I. . _ ~ 10 IX'al"h. SIO;i,000. Your
sq. ft. of li\'ing are a, i\1l.'.\1 VIE\\'. JUST HE· Minnesota Tal;.: over subject to exisllng present honie considered in Ontu 645-7221 700 S(I. fl. or ,,.ood d('cking J)}<.;COR. JNS IDt:: So. OU'f. . \'A Joan :;.111111al perrenlage o·ade. II/' t•n 1·ic11 sld(' ur hu1ne, :1 tar :3 BDR .. 2 BA.: S89,500. 800 sq. fl. of r1ur-e c.n~)'lllPITL rR1e 1·~·;.:. This hon1e lookf; OPEN SA'r/~UN. t-Ii:30
"'211733 WESTCLIFF DR. gar .. 1000 Ml· ft. 111 s!o1·1u?r OWNER WILL Ph1<o a 3 bedroorn. ! fu'eplact! like 11 rnodt'I honlf', beautiful 406 IRIS
llll<l<'I' )•OU.~t·. 1•ai-;erl 11·011(1 1 l1on1r -only $66,500. °!:akc t1111)llghout. 3 or <I liedroo111, !KEAR BAYSIDI:: OR.I
---..:::......-NEWPORT BEACH lloui·.~. Sp;111i,,J1 .\Jis.~ion \ii(• FINANCE 1he euc and call H46-71 rl. ei.punlled 111aster i;uite + HAL PINCHIN ~ 11 ln 1•n1ry an1l kil('hf'n. Opt·n OPENT1t9 ·1TSFUNTOBE NJCE' hLith, gorgeous plush !>l1ag ~*****************-A bcn111 l'Cil•u:.:~. c~l ra h!t' PLEASE CALL carpet. brick firepli:u .. "l'. dou-REAL TOR 675-4392
G.n.r.I G.neral ,111a.,~t(·1· -;ui:1·. 11·1 r11111;1~1k· 675 3000 ®l lile
1
g•1~1agdo,b hea,v1y ,'"i'',' r--*-PREVfEW_* __
>U1 I, L'Ofl!1PL' [l·l•lli 1111 ..:. !:(":· • _j roo' I c re:i as JU·.
or;1(ot· harth111r1• lhruoul. (.'Onc·1-elc drive1\'tt)'. spacious SUNDAY 1-5 'LET YOUR 4515 TREMONT i-·au11lv n10111 11·i.~1 111•1 h:u·, built-in kilchen. Value Pril.'·. 621 NARCISSUS
Mo OPEN SAT /SUN. 1-S f and r;1n1iy ~u•1Iity 1•:1..1ras. MORE ROOM THAN cd a1 S33,500. C.'lll 1\0\\' fl ed Teenage hidea1vay with NEY WORK Qu111i1~' ~~ J:IR., faniily nn .. 1 ::ire> thl _ 1 :it ~~12. lla:•:i 11 Carpet, Realtors, 645--8080. prlvate en!ry is on:ly one ot FOR YOU forrnul dininf; rn1., Caml'o Lane, N. Tustin Hills. Cb.!1 YOU NEED. . $22 500 the extra&! Suruiy, bright 2
Shores ho1ne. R 11 -I n l:i • I BI\R at propc11y, 8.;2-514..!. For $45,000 you will enjoy • &Inn .. den, 2 bftlh hon'le,
Terrific Enstside Costa !\lcsa 1valk-1n pantry. Pool! Vi1•\v~ or 6~5-66-16. Open Hoi+se this large 4 bcdroon1, ·I ffil.th for this iinn1aculntc, upgratl-l:iUf"?l' nev.• 2 bdrm. unit.
home for le:ase option. $2000 Ov.·ner may carry tst T.I). Thurs. thru, Sun., J-6 f'J\.I. holnc. 2 do1·111ilory size ed 3 bedroon1s, 2 baths, only University Rt•lty
men! -Ext'<'llf'nt condition -\1·ith a substanti<il do\vn! 4000 Sq. ft. bedroo1ns upstairs a 1.1..d 2 n1ilc;; from the beach. 3001 E. Cst. Hv.-y. 673-651!)
\Valk to shopping -Plenty Priv. beaches. /i.sking •NEW DUPLEX 01vrwr is exlren1ely anxious Seller 1vill pay"")Oan iCes ·" -c-,-~-1
of trc<>s and shrubs -Of-1 $12-1,500. Qui<·k Pos..;cs. Corona. del Mar to sell . Can Red Carpet, )1)U can huy FllA 11·ith as * * RARE.**
fl'recl ror $59,500. f'or r!et11ils OPEN SUNDAY 1.5 · CORONA DEL ~·or those \\'ho ;ippreciatr Rca!tol's, 5-'16--86.W. _ little as $1.IXKI down. or you Duplex on Ocean Blvd. One ~·all COL\VELL. 646--0:W. 3314 so. TIMBER MAR SOUTH fine custom C..'On!!ln iclion and 1814 w--:-OceANFRONT rnay \\'ant to assurne U1e ex-of a kind, with panoramic
11 1 -be<! · isling loan nt only 5~.c,.;. view or the ocean! Front S.A., Close to So. Coa:.I ex<:~ enl erms. 3 r0?'!1s, Open 12·5 Sat/Sun 616--77ll, open eves. hou .,h 4 BR 2 ba &::
,J)lal' .. a ,'it. fr1vys. Bt-aul. OF HIGHWAY fa1n1ly ioom, forn1al d1n1ng Oceanfront 'howse-~m·. 2"'P·1,; .• _,bu.Ut-r & an! t r room, large gan1~ roon1 . . . . '" '"" u " pa ios •. · Y su Tounc in::: • \\"£' in1·ite you. Look over aJl and a <>Jo?"ious n"""raniic Pr1n1e location. Tr1.plex plus ins: re-81' ho~tse 5 BR .. 4
LA CUESTA
-SAVE $6,000·
Popular .La~ Cuesta "San
11-llguel " model. Save $6,000
over C'Of;I or ne1" nlOllel.
Tu"O stories. ll ands o ni e Spanish brick e x.. t c_ r-i o r:. ·
1'-onnal dining roqm. 4
spacious bedrooms. 3'. b.'\lhs.
Beautiful nu\vf'r beach IU'Ca.
Try 10 match this for
S.19,950. Call S12-Z'i35.
:ovcly ·1
3 bd,~-{or 2 & gc71 others on market. This is ocean vfeiv. ··~·-guest nn .• ~· parking for 6 ba .. (j Ft. Jot. Nice pa.do.
iom_f' . ·, new. n y !he best in Corona del fllar. PLUS cars! $199.000! ~Is~~ ne,1Y Walker·& lee Good l'irmnc\111. .
S3S,500 -hurry. Near park, beach and Rf'!noval of one non-structur-oceanfront duplex Sla:>,000. 111 ..,l 1,, ... ,,~ MORGAN REAL TY
THE ROOMIEST
HOME IN TOWN
FOR $33,950
A nx>m for every purpose:
schools. You can choose al partil.ion expands the BALBOA BAY PROP. _ -~ ___ 673-6642 675-4459
your O\.\'tl decor. Let us help "•··26 * 675-7060 * you compal'c -call 673--8550. game room to a ful l """"' ---Sale or Lease/Option IRVIN-E TERRACE
OPEN r1t 9 • fT'S ruN TO BE NICE! i1.1mpus rooAi~D ~E·SA VERDE Or, O\vner \\'il l lease this Fl'C!Sh as a daisy, shim-
~ 80';£ financing currently BEST .BUYI I $36,500. lovely 2-sty. Peninsula PL 1nerlng pool, a ttractively
' nvaililhle at_ approx. 8~2%. Beautiful 4 ~droom home L'.!_ ho1ne. 3 BR. plus family landscaped, 4 lge bdrma & THE REAL
ESTATERS . I '. Top value at $155,000. best Costa . Mes~ at'ea, ~.500: vaca~~ quick 1possess. F .R. $9t500 drift CALL 644-7211 n\i;i,ssi,·c brick . f1rcplacc, •=· · .,.,,,., rno. ease or 2COO Sea.
private yMd \\·1th n1any lease/option. Open Sat & Sun 1~ 2 BEDROOMS
2:BA.'1'.EIS
$21,000
L1Lxury tO\\•nhou.sr. c.ICluxe /Jn NIGEL •
BAILEY &
ASSJJCIATES
'h"" carpot. built-;., k;1. --cM'""""'E"S""A=-~v=E"'R"'D"'E=-c1te1;1. v.·ash<'r-dryer +
trt."CS, large ran1ily room. Call: 673-3663 673'-8086 Eves BETTY A GRUBB. RI.TR
EXcelle:iil value. Co.JI Red 8 or 675--826l
C3'rpct, Realtors, &L">-SOSO. NOT too many-goodle'I here.
MESA VERDE Bet\"oen sm.ooo & 18!!,000.
S ECTACULAR MMe an ~ppt. with, •Peir
p Sntlth-Vestn .Redmon-Jack
OPfN rn.' • rrs FUN ro BE IWCEI ChCC'ry immaculte kitchen. refrigerator included. Loi~· $67,900 This home has been com· aark-Bob Dle'rich or Torn
pletelv redecorated, located · --· ----1'-lclntosh. Lo:!t them shoW BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR ! ~ Spadou. lonn'I 1;v;ng l'~""~""""""""""""""~""""!"""""!:s:,.l,.6~""I ,' roon1. 1'~ormaJ dining. Huge 341 Bayside Or., Suite I, N.B. beamed [amiJy room
Largest .maste'r you've sec~
Gener1I General yel. Big den. Two full ba1hs.
dO\Vn payment excellent
terms -HUITY Call Red
carpet, Realtors, 546--8640.
TAKE OVER
on quiet cul-0.e-sac lot, enjoy JMMED. POSSESS. ""U all of them. Quintard TI1e mo~t of the best in this 3 ''CIV roon1y bedrooms, ·2 3 BR, 2 ba. conip. r edccor., ,,_
large hidden 2-l:ltory high on brick ·fireplaces, large trees ,~. carpets. Fireplace. Rea1ty, 642-299l.
a hill oBe,·erlooh ldng HS III\-and prestige area. Priced
00
to Shady yard. HOME &. rNCOl\tEbdrm
\
--------·-.;.;..;;:;_ ______ ,liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii.., I Lovely area. ).'ou must set
ASSUME 7112 °/o DUPLEX * OWNER * this ono -phono ;,...
ASSUM'ABLE. LOAN I Sub-
stantial do1l-'n. Adult occu-
pi•"d & absolulely in1macu-
Jatl.'. Beautiful nlodern 3
BR hon1e -\\"alk to theaters,
n1ajor shopping & restau-
rants. S.15,500. Call MR .
BLACI\ 545-842'1, SouthCo,
Real10111.
lington ac e e sell 00\\'. See it, call R $35,750 _ 101/~ DOWN New 3 bdrm house&. 2
Catalina on a clear day and Carpet, Realtors, 546--8640. BALBOA BAY PROP. rental. 706 Narc i s s us
dazzling lights nt nltc. 4 BUILDER'S Mesa Verne nr. at Harbor $130,000. Open House 1-4. nirdiately for appt. 847--6010 LOAN! VIEW! 90°/o FINANCING WU! '"""' bi U'u'1 rloed on OP<N "' 9 • rrs '""IO"""'"
Evf'n your best [ricnd "'On'l 81/ 0 1 INTEREST this Eastsid{"" home near lend you 7~:i'~ n10n<'y. Here 2 ro \\'estcliff shops. 3 BR. thing
Bedrooms -large family Sat-Sun. Lois Vo g e I ,
room -wot ""'' -la.-g< CLOSE OUT * ~ * Realtor. 548-9346 covered patio and deck. Call 4 BDRr-.t, tam rm, 2 s101')'. CQRONA HI GHLANDS
you eR n obtain lt. The hon1e .An ideal summcr l \"intcr roon1 + lrg kitchen, patio,
If; a hu~~ Spl\nish 1nan.sion t"E.'nl.ril only 6 rloor.. lo a dbl. gar . on a lley w/boat or
on !he Qilf in Corona 1!el super IX'aeh. 01vn for proClt trailer gate.
THE REAL
ESTATERS
546--2Jl3 for appointment. FAIRLANE GARDENS Walk to all schools. Nr . So. BY OWNER 3 BEDROOMS.
OPENTIL 9•rr'SFUHTOBENIC£1 AN ADULT COi\U.1UNITY Cst Plaza. 0{lt'.!n Sat & Sun. STONE FIREPLACE, POOL
l\l11r ~·i!h a Sp<?ctacut11r or occupy for pleasure. e CALL ANYTIME e
viC\\'. l..argC' Jl\·ing roon1 . 5 Onl.y $84.500. . 646-3921or Eve. 548-9416
hl'droonu. F11.n1ily roorn. Ou1· fantastic tcrn1s n1ay nol
.Kitchf'n wilh liullt-ins. Call last long, '1IC> cnll quick.
BEACH Gl~NT
5 BRs & RUMPUS
+ POOL-$43,750
JBEDROOM-DINING
RM, FAMILY RM
AND POOL
(w Child•= mu~ be 16 or over. 144.000. 2922 Sp1~oe. Con· SIZED YARD. PRINCIPALS
. 2 BR, 11~ BA, S21,000. 5'7o trell Rlty, 83.1-2224 ONLY. 673-5970
I r down. 3 BR, 11s BA, $23,SOO. BIG CANYON LOT on golf =~-~~----~
. ' 3% do\\'n. Builder pays all cnurse. Breathtaking vie"'· R2 lot So./hwy, room to "===·~~~~===! costs cxeept !n1po1.1nd ac-Pi'Ominent locnlion. Owner, build unit. C1a1·mlng 3 Br +
for appt. 673--8550. CALL 644-ntl _
OPEN TIL J • 11'S FUN TO BE NICE'
/JD.NIGEL ·
BAILEY f.
ASSOCIATES ~-
• .., tflh holldy directory wM yoe tMs weHMHI •
yo11 90 110 .... ll••tl.,. All t'9 locotlOM lhtM below
ON descrlltff 111 9'""9f ~I .. y och9t1h"'9 eJM.
.We i11 ..-,·, Delly P11ot WANT ADS. Petro•
thowl., •P" lae•Mt lot .... or to Nf9t ore: •fled te
fist 11K:h lllfonnotte11 I• ttil1 col1nH1 e.cll frtdoy, ~
urdcry & $11ftdey.
HOUSES FOR SALE
2 BEDROOMS & FAM. RM. OR DEN
2951 Quedada (The Blulls) Newport Beach
644-4133 (Sal 1-4 ; Sun 11·1)
1947 Pl. Cardiff (HVHomes) NB
644-2430 -$65,000
2596 Crestview (Bayshores) NB
644,2430 $59,500 (S un 2·5)
426 Vista Suerte (The Blufls) NB
644-2430 $55.927 (Sal 1-5: Sun 2-5)
3 BR. & FAMILY RM. OR DEN
2021 Commodore (Baycresl) NB
644-2430 $68,000 (Sal & Sun 1-5)
-4 BR. & FAMILY RM. OR DEN
2922 SprtlCe, Santa Ana
833-2224 $44,000 (Sa l & Sun 1-5)
971 Sandcastle Dr. (HVlfomes) CdM
644-2480 $86.000 (Sun 1·5)
6 BR. I. FAMILY RM. OR DEN * • #28 Linda 1'1e (Linda Isle) NB
644-2480 $295,000 (Sun 2-6)
HOUSE & INCOME
706 Narcl'5us. Corona de! Mar
548·9346 $130,000 (Sal & Sun 1-4) . '"' **· WilMtfr•• **'*· w .... ,. ..... ,...
Lachenmyer
Realt or
GIANT
ECONOMY
SIZE
Wide nliJTOred enlry. Big
h omemaker kitchen.
Spacious dining. L I v I n g
roon1 big enoui;h to live in!
Five supe'r size bedrooms.
Parle like family fun yard,
Priced in low •IO's, It'll go
fl\St. Act now -call 847-6010
OPEN Tll f • IT'S FUN TO 8E NICE/
~
-HAPPY counts. Agt. 8.16-4206. .SiO,OOO 64G-l9.1l. lr~ qtrs. Owner/~ .
Located in quiet Eastside FAMILY HOME SPACIOUS MANSION Back B•y Fnbulous H.B. Giant! Clolie
to bea<'h. Rolling ween 11111.•n
·" parklike grounds surround
R shin1111Prin~ cusloo1 pool.!
5 BRs ill{'lllding H set·!udi.'d
n1asler suite \V\1h l'OllVL'r·
511.tion RJ'l.'3. HUG~: RANCH
l<ll'Cl-lEN. PONOEP.OSA
H.UMPUS ROO;>.L Financ!t1g
to suit 1\"i!h lruyt'r's chOiCC'~
Bkr. 902-3511.
STU~N~N~IN=G-
EXCELLENCE
REDECORATED
Outstanding hon1c \\' r 11
located in b<'st resid{'tltinl
Rrca, features 2 brick
fireplaces. large open buill-
in kitc:hf'n, spacious family
room n1any-ma.ny extras·
Yoo cnn Sll''e 011 !his onl' •
Call Red Carpet, Rcallors
64&-8080.
Co!$!<1 Mesa, lots of trees. $30,500 . $4_5,000 ~=..:;;;... ____ _
brick H1'eplace 14x28 pool H p I
and to top it off -a 20x20 Large added fan1ily room You \\T~J en)Oy the splendor orse roperty.
SE"parale \l.1)rk shop · 0on·1 and bath, J>eautiful _brick of this huge 4 bedroom 3 BR fixe r house on 1h: acre
111iss seeing it. Call Red courtyard. 3 s Paci o u s counlry es\l\le. 4 baths. offer R-4 (6) unit sile. Assumable
Carpel, Renltors. q.15-8080. bedroon\s located in ex-large fan1ily convenie~cc. 6'.-; loan. o .... •ner \ViU can 'Y
c:ellent residential area. Q\vner is extre~1ely anxious 2 d 1 D ~·" """ 11 MESA VERDE This one \\-On 't last. Call to sell. Submtt on your ~~-· '"-'·"'-"'· Ca
5 BR or 4 BR+ den+ Red CarPet. Rea lt ors, terms. Rc:<I Ca rpe t,
fan1ily. Plush 2-slory home 645-8080. Renlton;, G4a-8080. [ Y1Slelf,.,._._Ho.ard_ & Co.]
in idC'al location. Forrnal L" d I I RIPE FOR A _
dining, interior atriun} l\'ith ID a s e QUlC~ SALE!
,,·a!erlal!, huge master be<l-Ch\'T'le r reduced the price on
roon1 v.'1th fireplace, modern By Owner /Builder this lovely 4 bedroom home, Balboa 1.sland
COn'l>"Cnicnt kitchen & 3-1.'ar $250,000 in excellent (1uiet location. ~arAgc. Only $&1.950. For ap-Ex{'el!ent Tcrnls Large master bed r o on\,
fXl!ntmeut. 545-8424 SouthC<'i, l\iay lett'S<' option 1\·aik-in t:losiet + atriuin.
Realtors. 673-7782 * 673-7184 Don't be late Only $44,500.
SOPHISTICATED Call Red Car,>et, Realtors, COUPLE * N'PT HEIGHTS * >IH640.
' Bit. l<>>0ly Igo. liv ""· ~A=~-;5-°'"""""!."L'"'••:-::n-*BALBOA ISLAND* VIl':\V . VJ'E\V -VIE\V i\·ldin. ~a. Blln. kit<'h. 1sume ""T4 •
Ne11· cu~1om hon1e, 19' tall Lgc. b..'ick)m'fl. Dbl. gar. Ve~· nice :: bcd~n1 homf'
· Salisbu ry"
Real!)
s1011e firep!aCl'. 20' x 2.i· 0M.1't·atot"s dn"l\m! $47,.'100. \\'Ith lovely park like ya_rd. Good 2 bdml . home J''ith
"Make Room f,or D<iddy" fan1. roon1 1vith 1\'elbar, BALBOA BAY PROP. 01tthlg roon1. t.\v? pahos. single car garage. pen
... clea11 out the gara~ huit.lth spa Honian bath, ~ 642_7491 * Richly 'panelctl h\'ln_:l: rin & be 11 ... turn 1hat J'unk into cash plui,;, plus. $1 lZi,OOl. Ag{'nt , -,-,,.~'"c-=c----CC"'""'=I kitchen b.'U'. S28.9JO. btic run ce ·· frpl.: uttr.
DUPLEX corner, eharmirnr,
by owner. 500 Polnsetfiii,
Open i -5 dally.
OCEAN View, priced right,
3BR, ~) be., din nn & fiim
rm, by owner, 644-2001
COZY, RUSTIC I Br, frpl ,
patio. R.-2 lot. $4.'i.000.
Prine. only, O\\'ner 673-4169
MINI ESTATE
Cozy home on R-2 comer lot.
Nice tJ'eeS &-'1farge, ck>ar
bldg. site for another unit.
SZ!.250.
$1950 DOWN
-l'V l8 patio; w/w cat·p.; nice Joe. v.-cll ~ call NO\V 642-:J678. ur,)·GGZl ev~. ------' 11nr Pd ,,.,.Ult!\ , , ti42-56 ~ 5-10-1720. 1 f\1ust-lcave area. check !his I ~~;;,~~:=-:=-:=.;-'.,::.:'.::;:~~~==="-=="-===========::. , TARBELL ,,, uea.1• my.
.. .,,, hlll~de homo w;1h -EVE·R-STOL-EN A FUU PRICE
BRANO NEW
E•1t1ide Location
view or bay & ocean. Nil'\? 3
bedroom. lanai"''"'"""''"' $fr',j'{)~.,.· { -,!) 'C ~Q. 9 DUPLEX?
around pool & pa tio. ~ J-' ·£VJ.. '.& J..J<J•V ·rry this: two 2 bedroom $58 500
Elevato1· 10 save steps. h Ch kl 1 units _ ctoub1e garage in-,
4 BR, 2 BA, 1900 sq. ft . Q>ts,
drps. fence, landscaped,
~i:>rinklers. a I I included.
$44,950 Anyone qualities!
66-61n 11nc1 :>43-1444 113.500. That Intriguing Word Game wit a uc e co,., 01 s3750 """'"'·Ask· -PETE-BARRETT~ -"~~-"---·loy-c\AY 11.-PCW.N -;,,. $"·"'"' try-you< own EXCLUSIVE WlTll --• 4 & FAMILY
LTO I price 01\lner s:i~'s se.11! Call -REA R-0 RearronQ8 letters of t+ie 0 !?.('(\Carpet. Rea lt ors $30,900 642·5200 fO\lr xromblecl 'll'Ol'ds b. O 0 &i5-SOSO {onen evenln11:sl Huge tam:ly room with cot)'
WAITING FOR
A BARGAIN?
' -
low 10 form four llrnple wotda. O
0
-E·A-STSIDE-FIXE_R_ fitt>place. dt'..'fp shag eorpcts.
· Q \ 2 BA, 1Mrlen1 builtins & I T 0 N K y T , . 3 t..i~ bl•1lroon1s, 2 hat h s , 315 l\J1\RlNE AVE. OVPrsl..:t:d ll'ef'·.'JhadP..1 yard,
. . separate r00n1y fa m 11 Y BALBOA JSLAND Vacant & rea.1y ror OC"CU· I I Ii Ii I 1~'.IOn1, oui!'t tr•! r -1 l n <' d CALL 67S-6900 pr.1111]'. Cull .\JR. HARRIS,
_ l'llrt'l'I, la~e brlqht rountrv N~ p 5~;).8.J2-I. Sou!hCo H.~altors. · ,,_, b · k r:. .v DU LEX. for !ale by kl!chcn. n1as!ll\'~ I.I•'''" r1c $ •• 000 -et.·.~n)'I "l'I!.• 110'1~ l I i \ fi1'1'.'plo.1.'l', n<'Cd!t n1 In or O\\'l'X'r. l'IV, · o , r:. H U E S 0 .i cleanui>. $39.900. ow 11 (' r Si'J-6918 or 987--1916 On corner lot. C~f Back Bay ~,~.;.I ;_,;,;.I c:;..;.1-,.1-i J t niu~t sell • hrl111t offer call Sal boa PenJniula :1r('a, I BP. k ~ Ba upstairs.,
" ~ Red Cattx"I, Jt ea J L or~• I ~;;;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;; liv rni.. din. 1111., kitt'hcn, I ~ f'11n1. ch·n k Ba tlo\\•nstain. 5 ~ECASTSIDE BAYVIEW Lot" 11f rloSl"I spal.'t', Lrt I G Y W A K I f• On 1he Ptnl11111.1lt1 tllJ!i· i:ilr i.:ni·.. 2 patio ~--~le ~·1th some folks POOL HOME s · 5 ......,.. . l-owr~. C1lru'i I r 1· e g, • I I I I ''"' mNg ..... P8c;iotll'I ........... rootna \\•11h \\ t'lntUan<I S..·hl d ; " t r i c t . who drink too much Is that LQ li. of dC<'klng, nod plenty dlmna room. load11 ot l!itOr-S~ ;)()) OY.ii"r •1 L~lt?2 or
!heyr4'fusetosit-9 ~tt o( pt1vacy. llfmuliful 3 ng1., hulll·lns. firepla«'. \ s.ikM;oo · •·
b£'droon1 lloine \\'ilh hua:c Chviw-r hasi inovt!d, !\lust DC'
1
__
I
N l P P 0 L 1· fluYllly rooni. L ll r g e M>ld, 1."\'tn the fumitu~ :tor'"· * BUI LO INCOME * ' _ _;,.:....;;,....;~--~-I tlrenlncc. Only $35.950 Call Con ! ! """ u ~-" Ol•'"' ' uu I·'~ " I I I I' I O Complete the cl!u,kte qvottd 11 t l'r -v 1'ue or 11uu-u•·t' _ ""· •v.lH on by fllllrtg in the mining word R«I Carpel, ft ea 11 ors • mil at $7~.000. Good tinanc-lu~t· J?.:i lot
L......L. -J.. -"'· -'-· -'---you cfeotelop from st*P No. 3 below. ~'ill.»''-''----,=..,.---ll'ljf. Conti t-:.l.'fc.nlo!• loca!K>n ; --A1sume 7°/, loan P.\C1 ~"1C l'n.C>PERTIF.S "24.:idl
i F~'fc{'l11•nt 1otin a!!!!un1ptkln! 4 1 ,s~;;.~67~11;;"~~·~,~~6~1~>~1~!!~ RIVIERA REAL TY @ P,INT NUMBERED LETTERS IN
THESE SQUARES
•
t) u~~·~~N~~~E lETT!R.I j I I I j
SCRAM·LETS ANSWERS IN CLASSIFICATION 7~0
l)(lrnu1, dlnln~ l'n1 Lovt.ly I. 14<'1 Bro."'" 'Iv, C.~I.
"'"· S•dmm;n, pool & '"'UICK r ... SH 642-7007 645-5609 r.,.._
ro\-crcd pot lo. Built in~. ,,. Mo ~ 'i'\'E E'D r ix~~ Up p r r
Boat 1'11.:re.111. $30,950. btk THKOUGH A an.V)\'here In Costa l\108&.
>IO-Jl'ARBELL, WANT AD ~~ Placo R,'a!ty,
•
•
,
. , . . . "'· • • ,
.f DAILY PILOT FtldA)', S~ptembrr 28, 197:'
I~ I _, .... J~,~I -~---1 ~1 ~1 --1(~'--~1 l~~!l ~I ~---I~
I~ Hou ... Fumlshod 300 HoUMt Untum. :IDS lrvln1 L•nun• Be•ch Newport Beech Newport 8.•acn Income PrOptrty -
I';;;;;;;;;;:::;;::;;::;;;;;;; -'"'-------1 iiiiiii;:;;;;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiij ------·-----------~--Oeneroi' UST IS I• S BR 3 BA (J B<>.Y 0C EAN llR EEZ S ,G ·:.:•::;"":::'~•::.I -----I ·="'-'"-------I J L TEN BUY YOUR ATTENTION 2 BR, I booth h<>nie o»ctlQOk· , 'neor -. , ,. $ LANDtORDS $ Eastalde 3 Br, l & ,._ Ing ocean. Lg. !Iv m1 TOWERS lot iOXliO, Ii;: furn rnt, lVV OUP[EX BACH, male •ludml SSS cl · · ·
garage. Larae R-2 lot. J\t>ar DREAM FOR NEWLYWEDS . • "-bll·ln bookca&CI, lrplc. 1iallo, ninny xtr11:j, (:ood 71/2% FHA LOAN 10 Jl<HrJi. fteserve OO'A'. Lei US rent UR proptr1.lt1.
bu1 & atiop11. 2 drlve"u)'li". 525 950 OiellahUW 2. bedroorn J1tuter SJ9.~ 714-487-MOO fh1U. avs.11 .... klen l for lge ENJOY OCE'AN BREEZI-: & CUTE 1 Br: $ll;, nr bt.>t1ch. We wurk with you. FEE
\Von't lase S. P. S:.!9.500. i hon1~. Spacloui; lvli1g ttrea, BY OY.-ntr. rlf'lux.1• O('C1111 TOP fnn1ily, or 2 ~u1all one11. S1'10G FREE LIVING near-n1ature guy or g~I • qult•t. !o"REE. MWl.,Y Olents. Call
Call CJS R£Aj.. ESTA'l'E It's All toi:rther -l\twlve F'reihly pAlnte1I, new front opt. 2 Br. 2 Bti, open o .... •ncr, ~'8-2695 or see at ly rent h·ce. Tv.'O 2 BR CHANNEL 1 bi' $1~ yrty .. prior to vacancy. Save SS.
, Now! "°ll<I \1'00d door opeM to "''allpaptra nnd <'lU"IX!ling. ho":>" • .. -•• , ... 494-7205 or Opt_•n llou..~ Sundays 1_2..5 unilii. tivt> ln °"' _ ,-.,1 , ... -10 "Pl>-iate'~ $ALA RENTALS$ I:' .. ~. • "'"" .... u" One of Nr11pu11 's b•·~t P!\I Sli(l:J()() '" '"' '"'" .. ,,-,,. ., .. -.o.,o-t ~IJ68 or ~ lush shug cilf'PCI. Cuahlo~ .._..~ c 8 re lat'll.licap-494-U45 f.fusr Sell! """atet·front viev.·s. N<"wly • ' · · ollK>r. TAKE OVER <'xisting I~D 2 br h111.· S240 yrly. Newpon It Bay, CM U"U-o.x>o.>
BY ow NE R <t BR p~Ut'l vinyl i11 kltc:hl"n and ing ... prtvat<' patios ... I ~---------d«'OrRtt"<I 2 BR. 2 li;\ B\'. Owner, liayshorefl. 'G'ev-1--iiA Joa.ns at 1 ~~4> Int. No older huf <.-ute, gals pr"ef.
TO\VNllOUSE 1 ye:ar l'll'W. rtinlng 1iJOm. 3 l)t!(froo1n11 to _oozy fircpl:acc ror v.1utrr _L_•,,,g~u_n_a_N~lg,_u_•_I_,___ dt•lux..-rondonl!nlunl. Va· inK area. 2'n Bil, 2 BA, ~Int quajtfying, No new toan ~'PT Pier 3 br, 2 ba $265 wnfr, DUMP for $110. Uril Pd. kit·
pool, dbl gar, nr Sch.-.-& dreanl in. l IJ x u r Y ap-eJ.'e!!!f!iS _ · • · c·entt'lll nir OPEN 1-2""4 SUN. cunl It. Ji.v».iliilili.! 111:111,_ ~· ll•aSE", by appt on I Y cosls. REST BUY IN TOWN appli kids & lll..--ls _ nvt11l. chen, bdrm, ba. Now.
ahopping, $29,500 5 JX'rl'l'nl pC'1in11nents extend rig hf lil10 Conefitlonlng !<ft y () u r pt•lt·c : · l'\Tl'S/\\'Celtc-ndS 6 4 5 -4 3 4 2 AT $39,!iOO! ! ! Take Iii • O~ONI''4-llr S300 wntl'" ·NhlAT---1 -Br---~. -Ulil -Pd.-
d ~i ....._.7 t the 2 l"1At/lroon111. Bonus summf'r con1fo11. Perfect 29591 Ana Mari.; Ln. 00 $62.500. vantage of thi.s value today! """Lt/fl\fJtu,... Nnw. 8tove. refr. Snll ptt/chUd.
\l.'J\, ;J;J ~0
• \\"ork.shop or p I a y house setting! Surroundrtl by $65.900. ~eiv cust. bit 3 BR $79 5 r~u -..., ~z-ON Bl tr 2 b 1160 e&D MESA del 1'1 & + d<'n homC'. Sn,,nlsh sl"I-!!ARBOR VI~\Y llOl\lES .._.. NlCE & ~ 3 br. 2 88 $300 u s r · ar. sumc .-iestles In bcaullful yard. tree•, park area, s1vlmmlng .,~. " 7 r.1onico, fee land. Upgraded. lrg ga'r appll niaiure. !ncd, child & pet,
6%% IO!tn. 4 Br. rovered Ov.'nE'r says "make someone pools, tennis courts and bike ~~~~clio~i':~ 0~1Il~ss%:~ OPEN.llt)USE: 3121 Pneifit 559.500. Prin<"ipals only, $330 • BBQ. aPpll, 2 patios GOOD a1" 3 .br 2 be. $195.
patio. $37.700. S~ happy for $25,000'J ! CaJI trails. $39,200.' CO>•'I 1111·.•· .. •,N.B. Unit 11-B 64H>-lm. hft.S 2 br, 2 '-·. '-"111•, ,\ t\vi•1 bltnsVltncd, kids/pet, 54()..3()(X) -~·1·J1'1 CALL 552 J500 lruse 1v/opllon lo buy. · -._.. "'' , '-2 , .Qv_..._..,. · • PL.ACE REALTY (1-'d 10-1, :;;it S: Suu \.jJ BLUFFS, 4 BR, 2 BA, ALA Rentals 642-8383 F'T.N ly" ui' ba $295 now. BEAUTIFUL 'Ptfrsa \Voods Ol'f.N nlg • IT"S FUN 10 IENICE.J , TNVESTM'fi.rrs .• R1ve1• brl!'E'ZC, gar, fncd. home .3 SR. 2 ba, atrium, ~ ~VISION 49'-1·97<K .tS-1-97'29 N Garden patio, condo. By <;of BA:Yl"RONT 5 BR, pn bcllch, .r-.r&SA v. l ,br & rn1 2 ba $32a.
fountain. 97S-S380 rvrs. * BY OWNER. Niguel Sea ewpor t 0"'ner. l 1~·e~k on I Y · (714) 171).6500 Pier. Cl'Pll'. dsh"·shr. "'lnter, Ail appll :.! frpt 2 car.
D•na Poirtt • red h ·111 Terrace to1vnhouse. ?riv. •t G-14-8170. 905 S. EUCLID $500. rn9Q.li1673-600.';. BESJ' ye{ -1 hr' 3 bft $300.
area. 2 BR, 1 1;~ BA, tcru11.~. BLUFFS X Pinn, $00,000. 3 -;;;;;;;;:;;;;F;;m+;;:;;;E;;R;;;TO;;N;;;';;;;;;:;;;;~ I 2 decks, frpl, appl & gar.
3 BR1 2 BA, cpts/d[lJS all jacuzzi, hand ball. beal'h, F•irview BR, 2~1 Ba, 1 yr old. 301 ~ Balboa Island ISLAND 4. br, 2 ba $"25. lrplc,
eleclt\cal, lg )'.d J pa 11 OM FRANCISCAN REAhT-'?-REALTORS ~lii..J4. 2,500. 496-7361 or 646-8811 Vis111 T1·ucha. 0 1Y n e r BEACH DUPLEX 9opl!, •lee ge ...
Thund e rbird homC'S, FOUNTAINS Univ. Park Center, Jr.iine I"'""'=~=~=-=-=-640-1090. Young & fanl"'y j BTt I hlk. 4 BR hottse av11\I noiv for 9 ALA Rent1ls
$4.5,30:>., 33211 SC' a k no 11 • I"'"'""'""'""'""'""'""'""'""' I NE\V 3 BR, 21; ,, BA, (•nytime) l!ARBOR \'u Honit' t.lonleb'1l 10 ocean. E.xcelle-n! tax !lht•J. nio. lease. Lots o! rooni.
493-3252. • BY THE SEA GREENTREE J10MES, bu lo\\11h0use ocean vi t' w,
1
l level, 4 br, nice view. t@r & aJw9ys 1'l'ntC'd. $87,m STUDENTS \VELCOME. • "7 ooo Call Cl13l 289-8366. It no Hunll-'on •--ch . , owner. 4 BR ~V i n d so r 1nany xtras, 011'ncr, ~ , · / !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! s11·im pool/tennis J)riv'lgs, or IM'!n ofrl•I'. 011·ner1agent •••• -I II "~ """ h 4= "211 7 ~' I · .,.A ·'°"" """ •·• .,761 ansv.·er leave in es sages --.. A ______ ---A·~ Oil<' o unt1,.,..,on 1-x:nc s 1nodcl, upgraded c pt s "'-'""""' · . ,,,..-,,.. n, nu unit l>"r'l"""'too• ...,,,....:,00, 96S-u . c!l:H 5S2-a2lg,
THE RAMBLING n1ost 1ll·sirabl~ lo.cations. "4 l hr u out. cust drps, Lido Isle GRANO OPENING 3BR house near <X.'l!an, lo1v ~ 7"cc:.;.,.::::::..::=---~.
ROSE J3R. lurgi· fan11ly rot?m 1'1-ith iv a 11 Pa Per, corn P 11----------Newport Bay Towers down payn1ent, Mi I cs E1~'1'SlbE Dupll~X. Neal' $450 Yl'ul'ly. 011~11?1"s lovl'ly 3
. I .t bedroo J>alo!I Vcni..s !>1onc fu-eplace landscaped, redwood deck & MOVEAIN CONO. 1 & 2 BEDROOrit Larson Realtor. 673-8563. nc11•. DcllL'\e 0\1•1ie1·'s unit Br, 2 Ba. Quiet. N"sponslblc : · ,· singe story .. 111' nest It'd • a n1 on g $55,!XXl cement patio, S 4 1, 0 0 O Co I I r -h 1 ., BR 6 UNI s II Be h persons, no groups. 321 1%. hath, f.ormaJ d1nwg, homl'l!. Assume 7•·;, Joan or 5.Sl-l!QS inp Cl<' Y urnLS e< · " · C.'ON001\1INJU1\1 HOlllES TR.A.DE Newport Be a ch T . -wit. uc · Aniethyst. n4J6T:rZl75 or
fanuly room, 1111h ~ sq finanC'lng 10 suit. S·IG,750. • plus maid's. 3'~ Ba's. Only Bayfmnt HomC's Prop. f or Out-Of-Town $74,500 \\'ith a 11 r a c Ii v e 213/799-4856. fu\Cllt:LOR • Ewrythlng·
fl and a .huge pool. Ov.·n£•r {'hvner l~'111f,.rrNI. BACK Bey .beauty· Owner 50 rt . fol a1·ail. on Nord at &:mt Slips Prop. Bkr. TI4/673-2058. financing f . 1 .1 11~ C M very an1uous; l1t installing BRASHEAR REAL TY says niove 11. 3 BR, fl)rm. the present tin1e! Ne\\·ly Full Security J-lighrisc CUSTOM 4 units 11·ith ocean BAYFRONT · Pier 3 Br, ;)' um. 111" un , · ~. · · n<w carpeta 1h--u1. Tl>t'• , 118 din. ran. & pool. Boat ec· deeor. Pier&. slip. S2:i5,000. Sl•<l ,'· ,.,,,,-1, -·n•t'"'"o" NP'r Crest, 3 Br, 2:~ Ba, vie"'; Dana Point. $94.,500. Bil. Winter or yr I y. Sn1! pc.•t. '"" " * :168 l * 0 A KIND " "' • .., .... v " $3,000 below ma1·ket. View. 714/675-11»6/67~ 0 r 1 BR ,.~urn. Util. $140. Clean home "'i!l be in move-J n l."()TI-• i:ess. Agl. 833-3380 ONE F J'rivalu Ball'onics 1 . "A""""" RDt~ COl\lPANY .
d·1· F · V ll lo lo.7a 1n!. Owner, <>'N"'VJIJ<). BROKERS 8'"1""" 213/211-1155. \\•!n1C'r rental in NB. nr 11on: ounta1n a ey awc1 . WE BUY HOMES TURTLE Rock Hills. Presi· Lido's last comer t, street 2g.:arag:c spa('CS per unit. ,,,.,.... ""' b.:h.
$45.995. CALL 846-.U77. 1 ca"sh for yo111' equity dent home. 3 Bdrm s. lo street 35x88, across beach Roof lop sundeck Newport Heights e DUPLE.'< . ,\ssunt<' VA 2 BR. house, irplc, trg pa.tio, 2 LIVE IT UP 2: \VIII pick up back paymts Proressionnlly landscaped. & tennis ct. $63.000. Unusual Opportunity to Pur· 1 -N-~--~H--,-h-Jona. $35,900. Full Price. \\'inter or yearly. H~B~· ~~use~.~~1$1:;
2500 sq ft of living area. T11'0 3. No chart::e for appr. • ~lany extras. 83.1-24TI VIA LIDO NORD t·haS<' Bayfc:int Property In ewport elCJ ts e FOURPLEX -Costa ~tcsa * !2131 761-n96 * family & pets.
5\01-y plus c.x1ra large pool. C.ALL US 4 Bdrms. & 5 Ba1hs: Nc11·port Bench. CU$i'Qil-I BLT 3 BR, 21,; l'JA $54,900. r.tany Exlras~ 3 BR., 2~)1 Ba, \\'lntrr. Good
11
J Bit Unfurn Duplex. $280 ..
5 Be,1room8, 3 bn ''.1~. family 1'"'0R AN ESTli\lATE Laguna Beach magnifi('rnt tuston1 hon1e. 310 1-'(•rnando Rd., N.B. Formal entry to sunken L.R .. YEAGER REALTY 545-81it.J locat ion. $300 includes ut . Only g JllOI> o.ld. N.B.
l"oom, Jonna\ dining and all NO \\'AITING $164,500: 675-8551 Fan1i1y Roon1 + Den v.·/ FOURI>LE..X {4~ 2 BR 11:1wnd _Cal! 675--3335. I LJ\NOtnRDS FRF:E! ! r~e etcchic builtins .. Profcs· CASH NO\Y EMERALD BAY LIDO REAL TY BEACH OUP,LEX boomed ceilings, 3 F'irc-Dr units Hntg Reh. $49,950 Balboa Peninsula BEACON RENTALS
s1onally land&caj)t'(f front & 842.9311 "3---Bdrms:---pitt3· maid's rn1. & 3.177 Via Lido. N'pt Beach places, all clccl1'ic kitr hen easy terms. 8 4 2 A 3 5 <1 li, • * 645-0111 *
rear wl)h sprinkler 11ysten1. billiarrl rm. 1vith den area, * 673-7300 * EXll'rior ne11·ly painted, 3 BR 11· lumin. ceiling & cabnts 847-Ti86 $1SO-Nlec locallon 2 Br --
Prestige area. $47,500. CALL arc combined 1Yilh ll"'eeping * * 1t"-S0 00 * * & 2 BR, uni ls, fir<'pl. ~bl galot·e. Lrg gal'ngc, st>p;.1ratc SALES-1-:XClli\~GF:S-MGl\IT dupltx, kids & fl ct s I TJ·II:: BluUs, Orig. are11, 1· 963·5621. ocean views. $174,000 _ ~ • g;;ir. ln proccss of con1p tn· boat or canipcr ent1·y. Pool wclconic. sty. "Bcinitn", adull hon1e. 3
SPANISH VILLA LARGE FAMILY? Spacious 2 BR .. 2 h:i .. on tu!"ior tlecol'a ling. Bes1 buy sz yrd ,v/outdoor gas BBQ. J{.V.i~~fi5~ CO. Calif's Lrrcsr Hcnt~t A"t'v BR, 2 BA. huge p1tlio, bay
Fi\'c yl!ar old home In beauti-One of Laguna's Jargl'st stn_'f't to street lot • ~ I on 1hL• bench. A.s.ltin~ S63,500, 10',; down . Homefinders 547-9641 vic11·. Vacant & !ipOUess.
tu! beach an>a 1vith a Span-family hon1es. 6 Bdrms., 41: BP.OKEH 673--J200 $76,500 445 Redlands 642-1447 Lots for Sa\e 170 $:-ilXI P<'r mo. to nice fantlly . . h n I 4 Bed I' ... h r ., M v d \\'INTER rt•ntal $400. mo Iii "' '-1133 ""'· is a r. roonis, ,, ..,..t s, arn1 y rm.: o\·er esa tr • li97 Orange, C.!\:J. 6-l'.!-l771 c~C:.:,~~::_:~='---~~-1 ba!h, v.·irh family area off <1,!XXl sq. ft .. archileclurally HILLSIDE w/vu. 3 BR, F.R. BIG CANYON June l~!h. 6 .Br1-.,1"den, lge HOHSF.S Ok . 2 tH'. Si!OO. 2 +
the kitchen. Lovely neighbor. HOUSE OF designed. Wide ocean & DESPERATE! ~--.J,, • $68.500. Open Sun 185. 612 GOT.f COURSE ~OT _ya_l"d. v1c11 . &-l,,... " " Den. 2 Bn. F'ncil. Kids/pets. ~~x~u;~~::Scu:!~! 1:!!!'. GLASS l'ON'>~lk~H'SL.l9~~NA MESA VERDE ~V" uu~21 ~~~:~ct~ ;~-0~110. ;\1 UST SELL! 642-5.s-12 S::,\\.Cls°:i!.,s l~L~'\·i~~.3 (!~~~;. J:~:fir~:;~ Rt>n~1~9'l1
6% V'!-. $195 per mo, "PITI. . f g4: H' h 2 B<inns. plus separate I VIEW' Mountahi, O.esert ap •. $19j, S71-9467. I -----'''-----1
A-Jove in cond. $36,S'!ti. CALL Spanish house .~ ass. ~ studio, in perte-cl conrl.; in a • . . BLOCK TO OCEAN Resort 174 BAY vw11,, 5 BR, 3 BA. 2 Balboa Island
847-3584. ca=~al j'ling:, ~= qui e 1, 1v e 11 1 end e <I The n1ost of the best 1n this -----=====---2-Sty. A·f'Tame. 3 BP.., 2 ba. BIG BEAR VILLAGE :-lory houS('. fl'pl c. dsh11shr. a re~ ace.. uge ·. neighborhood in Nor t h lal'ge hideen 2 story, high on BLUFFS Ne"'ly decor. in & out, incl. y 1 l3ti-l068 room, pa_IJ? kllcflen . ivith Laguna. \Valk to shops, a hill o v c r 1 o o king new carpets & .drapes. 100 yrl cabin f1"01n l;:ikl'(ront. J-'-''"'''-'""-Yc:··:=-"'::·c_ __ _ ""''•i'1nountam bar,~ .. ~ vi,1.;;.,:;~ restnul'ants & beach es. H u hlington Beach ... See FEE ''E'' $48,900. 3 Hr fu1·nishl'd. Rc·ntnl or Corona del Mar ,.,, _
1 ram g _gro ·~· · ~6 $64.500 Catalina on a clear day and CAYWOOD REAL TY lil'C'-in. Insulated. Class A "'"'""'"
1naster .suite 11'lth pnv~t~ SOUJl.iJ.AGUNA dazzling lights at nitc. 4 Elegance in the Bluffs!? The 1ua.d 01><'n yeilI'·row1d. \\'hat 2'12 HELIOTROPE 2 Br. l \: cY~RL~Y~V,-ry=d"•°'IW<"--.. -ocu-tl~ve-1
LOVELY New 3BR, den,
:tba, hon1e, garage, yea.rt)',
$500 lllO.
bath. 6 blocitrto bettch <>n 1 -h'll 1 , So LB. bedrooms _ large family professional touch is ol>-* 548-1290 * 1~veryone "''ant:-just 1vherC' Ra. 1 blk fron1 l>ch. 9 mo. or ho 3 BR 3 be 2 b)lJ.
quie.t cul-de-sac among <'X· ~\\'~~ 1:0,~ 0h"'Y.' noi::,naa room _ 11·ct bar _ large vious. A spacious 2350 sq. ft. -~~----~--it should be. Exchange or I yl'ar leaKe, adul!s, no pets, me • • ..:,trc,
=::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::'1 c;ius1vc exec ~mes. Unbe· charniing 3 bdrni. honle 011 1..'flvet'ed p;-1lio and dl'ck. Call 4 bedroom, family room ~~~~~~~~~~ OYIC. S.P. $2.J.000. Submit. l ~"'=•.:oS.::t:_&::...oS::'.un:.:·c:':.:~::.::;;53::;._ 6~~~1i,· S650 mo. ~ 4,
Take Oyer Payments hevabll'_ 1~1· pnl."C of ~39,750. approx 1:.: acre. Lgr. :~16-2313 to take advantage hon1e on fee land r II j "? l Call
llur;r, uu;pect today. BKR. garrlen~. \\'hilc \\·at<'r & of 51:.:•1;, assumable Joan. Only $87,500 MobR•Homes CJS REAL ESTATE taguna B•ach WINTER 3BR, IBA, g~
962-:iall. , coastal vie"·s. SS.l,500 OPEN TIL 9 . irs fUN ro BE NICE' CALL 644-7211 543-ll68 or 833--05.~ OCEANl-'RONT $SOO rno. 4 i~~77~~~'7fslus utiU
On .this 3 ~R, 2 BA home w/ CONDO SPECIALISTS I ~· ~ "FA.1Vl'ASTIC INVE..."IMEl\'T RR .. -I ha. furnished .::_;_::._:::"-"-"':.;:.:"'----I
pnv pal10, beaulllul park • Mobile Homes OPPORTUNlTY" & vaca. OCf'.AN~~RONT fum. Sl50 8albo11 P1nlnsul• ~~rectly across the street. Have · one to sell? ~'c11, 1;:ui ~U t ?:' For S•I• 125 tio11 spot. cabin & 21,-~ al!'rc.~. nio. l·BR. & loft & drck ---------
I.Liii' Interest gov't loan, 1011· do it! \Vanna buy one. c \'t' ~ -----~----$7995. Easy tc1·n1s, 1011· Agt. ·l!J.l..-970.1 19-1-9729 1 • 335 Llt\'DO ,\VE. *
paymenls, better soo ii gotten1! 2-4 Bah."OOnls in all ,.. '" ____......,,.,. down. Carey Re a I tor s, ·UNUSUAL 3 Bedrm home on N(•"' 2 BR. 212 bn., family
t o d fly ! HERBERT areas. Brar th<' interest R.=lt;;... Mission VietCil * LIDO SANDS-* ?!fOVE in 11ow! 24x60 Le &ur-1414 or·833-0121 cul-de-,,.c, xlnt view. 1..,e nn. (cnn be 3rd BRJ, 2 car .
HA\VKINS RE ALT 0 RS ra>e . ,.._..}. assun1nble loans 1105 N.Coo.,Hwy. Loguna ·Baron, U"°""". dod cp>s & iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii • •ar C•-•--• bl•-· vvu<r ' Be l b ' 3 Bd 2 , • .,... lot.' $400. mo 497-2626 or ., · ·~,., ,,...,.,_ ' uaa.
'/
1
j;· ,...._;;;;;;;;;;;· ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;j available. Our salcsin_en are 494-1177 OPEN House Sun. Loaded. 2 ba'ih uy. . nnF• .. 1 drps, llir t"()nd .. 2 BA, \"'et 40 •1235 Al•" unfum. \'rly lea~. S5<x:wJ mo.
CLASSIFIED
HOURS
bonded. &s1 protection for Br, tandem baU1, Barcclo11a s: new pa1nt. rp c., bar, all adult park. A'!Sume I~ :tt--...... NELSON ROBINSON
-)'Ol.I when listing Qr ~clling; '* !\1YSTIC HTLLS * Home localed close to re c heanied ccil'S., shall'. Carp<"t: ha.lane<', approx. Slt.200. Financial • Sl\lALl. anrai•live houM! ror REALTOR 675-8UD
your home or incon1c prop-Ocean vie1\', 3 BR, 2 Ba. center & sh o PP i n-g. dbl. gn,rngc. 2 Blks. to \VjlJ n1ake ~critice in CQ\.li· I ~mmmmmm;;;;mii s.tl \1rlr1I hQc:bclor. $165. No 2000 rota.in St., Balboa erty. CAlL -home. :fu30 livinir rni., peg· cul-de-sac st, oft Trabuco beach. Com1iiuiiity pool & ty. By o .. vner, 558-2743 or ll pets. 494-8170 QVt>S. I~--==..:::=='--":::::=.._
larwin realty inc. ged oalc firs .. fl'plc: cul'ncr Rd .. 3 ton AIC. Xlnt terms. rel·. ar'<'a. $411,750. 011·ncr 646-9742. • \\'OODS Cove, 11•lnt~ rental PhoENml•N.s,uLAhl-kptooi",',.,,Exh ~ ~·51 VI s· •· a1L'l:ious -lo1v as HY,', down! Business "" ._ Advertisers may place 968-4405 (24 hrs) lot, many lrtts. $69,500. "'1 a in .. a. 2~:-:65 '72 MOBILE llomc ne~·er 2 BR. frple, dshwshr, bay, 2 BR & den <>r 3 BR,
their ads by telephone ll'!"'"'Eq~ua!"""l"'lou"""•i,,.n~g"'Op"""pt"'y"'.""" On ~-il1~~1\I !Or!l~0* add b'92-~st B~~ers. ~;.107 1 JONES Located ln the l\leadO\\'s, I ;;0;p;;:po;;;;;r;t;un;;;ity;;;;;;;;;2;00;;; nr hcach, $295. n+.681Hi853. indoor/ouidoor patio ln-
1 8:00 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. 14851 Jeffrey Rd. Irvine, 2 p 1 BR. l'~ blocks to beach. terroni. rrplc, all bllns Jncld
J\·londay thru Friday another unit. Not1h end. 2 AL.COB/\ 3 Br, F.B., cust REALTY JNC. BR, 2 BA. !am 1'111 iv/wet e Gourmet Butdll'r Shop r\ll util + cable. 494-5512 or refrlg/lrttler, no pet1t. $475
8 to noon Saturday 0 DOWN ~!n000n. & den, 12 frp1 le. dl'J>S, lge kit, green sha~. Estl'J.46 ber, sprinklers & \\'ailed in e Au to Parts Store . 15 yrs 211/2+1--6.186. n10. lse. 675-1331, 962--8-149.
2-story ran1bling 5 Bedroom ~-· '01'·ner 1" carry $36,900. Conv. or assume patio, call 551-369.J eve11 or e Beer Bar . Booming
COSTA l\1ESA OffiCE eslatc ll'ith niaster suite. '* NEAR SCH~LS * loan. PRIN ONLY. 83o-8ll:H, (714) 673·6210 see p1trk office. e R.E. Sulesman needed OCEAN Vu, walk bch. 3 Br, .8ayshores 3324~56~y Huge fan11 ly roon1. "Copper 4hoBR. 3
2 ba.;lio mim~cul:J~ """-·"~"~·-------2001w.1a'*&M1. SACRIFICE $5.950. Lido. INo loan worries) ~~ilor~i3J~~~~le.
• NEWPORT BEACH
3333 Ne"·porl Blvd.
642-5678
kettle" kitchen \\'ith island nie. pa_ s, .C'n~ ' Newport Beach H•wportltach·~orm.a~&IO \Vater front Park, Fum. Holland Business
t.u..ik ('{'n!c;. Big cuslom fabutou.L~-vieivs. $59,500. Dbl. \Yi.de, s w I po o 1. 645-4170 SALES 540-0608 Lido Isle
patio & >t>arkling pool. Ow,. SnlELDS BEAUTIFUL .. • LEASE OPTION 67'-"22ll.
YEARLY rental, Bayahore
Dr., few doors from pvt
l>t'ach. 2 Br, 2 Ba, Ja:e pall<>,
HUNTINGTON BEACH
17875 Beach Blvd.
540-1220
('r \\ill negotiate for fast REAL ESTATE ... deco!': 3 brll'1ns .. lge. OR PURCHASE NEW 2 BR, 1 BA living rn1 . ENGLISHMAN 1Mk1
sall'. You Mme 1he terms !a1nily rm., Spanish 11·e1 Lovely 4 Br Palermo Adult part iv/private beach b · t t or try no money do11•n VA! ffom1erly Englund R.E.l bar. S..lll.OOO 1 1 d _.. $IS,5(X') SIJ6..36i2 us1ne1s par ner O
Only S-13,T.-,O. Bkr 962-5511. 318 Thal.ia 4!!4-8093 BEACH. LIVING nc u es suag C&rlX'ts, v.·E1· match $80,000 to ere-,,,, .• 2 firepla,,..,, rorn1al D fv!OBILE home 2 Br I' B• t T do I b Harbour VieW WOODS COVE 2 Bdnns .. used brick lrplc., R, huge master Br. Near '19251 Brookhurst Spa~ 17 a• u r nn Y sea
LAGUNA BEACH oceanfront. $115.00J =rk & ron1n1Unlty pool. Sub-HB Pr•'v pty ,.,,., .,~,,,· cove 18 m . San Fra~ 222 Forest Ave. Botu action vie11· from your 2200 Squfl1"e feet of con· BUYER'S DELIGHT ~7it your lf"l'Tlls. ;JU;>-£JU cl1co. 722 Montgomery
494_9466 Liv. rm. & din. 1111. deck. temporary living. Here is a 'II I T D $79 800· . St (22) I I 4••2349
S AN CLEl\tENTE ONLY $_3J,OQ ~;~~:Q' 11·ith ~ 0 mp 1e 1 e ~~i:er4 "'~di~~1~ fa~il). ·~~ Harbor Vi~w Homes Rei1£st•te. BARBER ~;, =ner !~ ..
--N;-El-€flmino Rca1-l i--= siding & tinted glass 3 ea 1.r~-+b cluslv~l--
492-4420 Hunti•ngton Largl' bdrn1s. plus-El dl'n 833--0780 area. Top prices. Lo\\' lease.
11'ith outside entrance. Just Good gross. 673--5153 NORTH COU NTY
dial free 54~1220 Harbour c~mpleted & ready for '" JONES ·EASY LIVING Business Property . 154 first proud O\vner. $89.500. REALTY INC Investment
Opportunity 220
LIVE ON LIDO 1425· >18-47;1.
2 BR, 2 BA, brick frplc. dbl L.RG 2 bt'. frplc .• paUo, cpt,
gar., wshr/dryr. \1\1\nter I appl. Gn1dr. S385 yrly, $330
l'Cnlfll. $350. 673-2227. 213: thru June. 6*-5430.
793-0-la(. 1 Corona del Mar
\VIKTER lease, bfoaut. !'<J.
1
ll50 B Myf1·nn1 horne: 4 BR., 5 Ba. , : l r. garage apt, stove,
Sandy beerh. Pier ,t.t floar I 'e-fng; crpls, drps. .
$1,650 fltonth S235 · 1 br, fl"J1k-. beam ceil,
Bill Grundy Rltr, 675-6161 earport , l blk beach? 300 • 2 b..,__1'plc,_aJone_""
. Bl'aut:-4 BR. honl hu,..e 1 ... 1 B~m'> k Ch11.nn'
baylro,t, with p~r & .'11P. NU·VI EW RENTALS . Lease or lease/ophon. .. Yearly or. wlntl':r. $1400 mo 1J-4030 or 494-3248
673-n'.IO Lido Realty Inc Bedroom cutie, fUrnished CLASSIFIED Realty ..Afl ESt54b In this newly decorated 2 T\VO LOTS TOTAL 1Q.4'x299'
17214 COAST IJ\\'Y. I '11 ~ bedroom · 2 bath n"i-level CHOICE LOCATION, ~fun·
DEADLINES !114\ 846-1.llW & !21.ll 5!12-286 0&k;-i6,,I (714) 673-6210 rondo. Ck>st-to J!oa.g llO!l-tington Beach ZONED
Deadline for copy & kl!Ja REAL EST.'A'JE pita! & available immed-PROFESSJQN,\L OR OF·
Newport Buch or unfurnished. Swimmlna
TA."'\ SHELTER· -~------[pool_ 1325.
TOP INC'O~l·E WINTER rental, Nl'\lo'port 3 ~room ·new C&r'(lets and
is 5:30 p.m. the day be· HORSE I"\ Ne~?°~~d.,~=2.1160 iaiely. Possible lease option. FICES. $11.500 ea. TER~fS
fore publication, except 1190 Glcnneyre St. $36,500. Tu see can . 646-7171. v,.·rlte : KANPAK 1003 Kilhei
for Sunday & i\1onday PROPERTY 494--9473 549--0316 CARME( MODEL OPEN nL g. IT'S fUN TO BE NICE/ Rd., Kihei Maui, Ha1vaii. Editions 11•hen deadline -----· --
is Saturday, 12 noon. WITH 22'x32' POOL. . JUST LISTED . VIEW . ~-1 ,.. ~ SALES.EXCHANGES.i\tGl\tT
1., At·i'f' ..-r re1tl c-ountt)' liv· Like _ne1v ho,ine. near bcJ1ch. IOutstand1ng lf:V. Homes, 3 K.V. DIU..S CO.
CLASSIFIED fng Hug:, custom hoinr on ~1inunum upkl'f'p. 2 BR., 2 h<lrms.. fa~1ly rm., lush 776-1652
REGULATIONS ,.01~1<'1' l~L ·Pi-iced unUer b~. l><'nm~, rrplc., neat gold carpeting, . decor~tor Commercial
Unusual oppty gas oil unit. Pe-nlnsu.la. 1,2 blk from hay. pauil · v.·alk to beach $3.5C.
Proven flcld·no risk. $3.:r,000-2 BR, Liv rm. lrg kitchen. 4 Bedroom .· Harbor View -
tax shelter -excess of frplc, nice patio: & guest Creal family area • $480.
$250,000 earnings • 22% house w/bedrm, % ba. Bkr. 61>7225
depletion allow. Must sac Service room w/washer & OLDER chaitning 2 BR.
$50,000' ·tun prire. Pvt Dl''Jlr. dryer. 548--0671 exl 394 or house, refrlg., stve, erpll, A
::2_!3_15'6-_730_!0-:. -.,.---..o. I 213/645-2963. drps, law'<t rm. $240 yrty;
Money to Loin 240 TI-IE Bluffs. Totally furn. 9 \Vlk distance beach It ERRORS: Advertisers anything in the area. kHrhen_. Qu1c! s!rret. Sec to r1.1·11pcs, Vall<'Y v1ew. 1' !_;st Property 158 should check their ads 1, appreciate. $59,500. IJnlc offered. S72,500. Fee ''ISLAND PARADISE'' DON'T BORROW
daily & report errol"!I !you 011'11 tbg landt APPLE Orchard in com-'TIL YOU CALL USI im,mcdlately. T HE CORBIN-MARTIN For fabulous family livlng. mercial Production. High Borrow on your home equity
,mos., adlt. Sgle·story l BR, mark<'!. Student!! pref.
town home, to appreciative 645-3204.
DAILY PILOT assumes 'fZ-4471 ( :::: ) 546·8103 Realtors 644-7662 Luxurious 6 Bedrooms, 5 above the Sou I her n tor any good purpose. Serv.
liabllit{ J: tthie firstlyln· l'•""'----.,_-..,..,J D 17 A T ~th..'tuj;~~l~~I of ~~~i; California smog in beautiful lng Los Angeles County for 3 BR on peninsula. Winter
correc er on on . ASSUME 5 340;. -l\..C..t'\..L PHIME OCEAN VIE\V courtyard. Prici'd to sell at Mile·Hlgh Oak Glenn. 40 over 20 years and NO\V in rental. Ideal for studenl.fl.
couple. OUered at $600 THE Bluffs. <t BR. 3 Ba.,
(price flexible for right par--new · newr occupied. All
ty). 644-ll33 Broker. elec. kltch., dbc. appt'a.
thruout. Lge. patio, Mt.
vtew. Now 11vall. $575 Ptt mo. 644-ll.33 Broke.r. CANCELLATIONS: FHA LOAN 494 A PROPERTIES FOR SALE ' $1 79,500. ~ere orchlard .!ncl~dedes farm. Orange County! Near the beach. No pets,
When killing an.ad be -u561 By StateofCalifomia GRUBB& ELLIS ing, appe""' Cl r proc. SIGNALMORTGAGECO. 673-4032 lf no nns .
sure to make a record Bre<1tht11kin~ sutl!1(1 & Cata· . °'" QlenfltWre \\'atch for our big ad In Realtors essing c Q"'\I i pm en t. 47 (714) 556-0106 213/446-8310.
of the KILL NUl\tBEf{ !inn vtf'"· al"e youn 11·ith this ~ t>eoon··c SUNDAY'S PAPER 2863 E C H Cdlti developable mountain acres. 4500 Campua Drive, N.B. WALK 10 water Rach, !90, 8Tand New Deluxe 2 Br, 2 <riven you by your. ad 4 hrdrw111 hon1<'. Grarlou~ (Class 100 General/ · st. wy., Pure spring water gravltv n-fh lit 1 1 "·I .,. 1· · · I fl · 675-7080 'flow ,·mgaUon. All or .... ~ 1 t TD L Also 1 Br hse. C.J\.1 ut\I. (XI. °"' sp eve· °"'con)', taker as receipt of your l\:1,·,1~ ru,0.111"'\\"lt I oor to Magnificent View 12131 6~3708 lrom ·~·~ per .~.r.· s oans & Hntg Bch $115. Vccant BBQ, ~le, m.arbll! entry, cancellatlon. This kjJl c·ei ng ire act'. gounnet Wonder f u I unobstructed Ask for Mr. West ~uuv-~ dbl ga ~ -· f-I I I I I I I ·DESERTED! -· Xi"! terms. Wiii consider AgL l"ce. 979-8430. · 0 "r••w. nUmber must be pre-'"'1 C'rn rr. rop ca ant · vil'W! Richly appointed 3 UP TO 90%
sented by the ad\·ertiser ~·~111111.:. 1\·alk to beach. See bdrm with family rm & .ii. trade. Income ,C?i. Xlnl tax * OCEANFRONT * l Bedroom, 2 bath, firtp1-ce.
in case of a dispule. t!l!~ l'\('f'lll'n1 valor t~ay. fireplace. Dining l'll1, chef's NEWrORT benefits. 2nd TD Loans 2 Mnns ... $290 open beams, muter II.lite, Call. _1_:hr Real Eslate Fair, kitchen. Beautiful pool sized NEWPORT ISLAND BEAC·H Cell or "''lite Emerich k Property House 642--385() new kitchen, new pt.Int, Iota CAN'CEU.ATION OR 5.Tu-:,J I S3"M" Company Jnc. PO Box 386, of p&nelin&', new carpttl. CORRECTION or NElV ' .JJ <l r ;rv.w.i. yard. Nev.• patio . .Air con-WATERFRONT n -.. 1a-, Ca!il low11t r•te1 Or•nge Co. WINTER Rental, Bayfront, Yearl , 600 Jumlne Ave, · * DISTRESS 1 dilloning. Luxurious decor. 1°* 00\VN, 1mmi!dl11te oc-•wu uul, .----,.._._ --4BR-2BA dock &val! -co-d i-m --AD BEFORE RU NNING: • Priced lo !w.ll nt $59,500. brk LEASE/OPTION cupaocy, 2 BR. tie\vly n4J793-242S or 714/194-3866 S•tt1er mtg. Co. ht Jwie l ~t <'ai{ 114.£.15.L1fi0 rona e r
I Every effort Is mndc to No drY<1•n tu V1•tct<UlS. 1m· 494-8003 painted Inside end nut. 1-lur· NEWPORT BEACH 642-2171 545-0611 w~ . ROO~tY one bedroom duplex
kjlJ or oorrect a n<'W 11.d med!tttc pc!SS(!Ss1011 otl this TARBELL BRO ER 133-0780 ry!!! $35,500. Call 645-8400. Prime Bayfront Si1r Sen.ring llarbor area 24 )ll'li, istmlnster unit actoM trom park and ~~t!asca':~t 0.~~er~~ 4 BR, 2 BA horne wtth ,,.....,K ___ """""""'"""'l I
1
For hollt repairs & SHIC$ --=s==----WS-Sharp! 1 Br. HoulK', nr te,.:!! ·.co=~paral~/mo°"'.
tee to do so until the ad plu!!h c11rrtMul{; .~ IO('a1ed on Ocean Vlew-$53,500 Ytl•N llcMvd & Co •• Bill Grundy ltltr. b'15·611il 2ND Trust DHdS ahopplnJ!:. .,·~-r·;;., .. -..... _,, has u trer-shndt-<I .'ltrN·I. On!y Spanish styl(' 2 Br & den, * BAYCRE+ST * ... a:-..... Calif's L111:est Rcnt1tl A«cy "~~1-'-'··=~~A"gt"'-----11 8 Pl><"a red In th e S33,9~i0. Subn111 your terms. guest nn. or study: huge 3 Bil. r11111 rni. Benut. pool In Condominiums ·PltlVATE F'tJNDS AVAIL. Hoinefinders 547·9'41 CHARMING 3 BR, 3 ~nu
paper. Call ~ms. HANNA, 5'1a.s.i:u.. oce3n v1cv.· llv, rm., frpl. lushly lndscpd yKrd, 1vfgn11 for sale 160 Any Amount pn.lnt, rup & drpt, b"Dlc, ,
DU1E-A·I.JNE ADS; Southt:o. R .. 11.ltors. Central kit., W/bllns, opens: liBQ & IK~•ter. owner HEIGHTS FIXER r" Rt\'TEH.A * c.n 675-44M BKR. Houses Un~!n. 305 patkl, 1 gar, 2 blkll bch. IM. I
ni .. e eda ace ~·<tly R~i'OSSESSIONS to din. area. Loe. hljjh up on w/oarry 1'1 TD. S7;.IJOO. ( 529,950 J N~WPORT 4J! Narc I 11 u 1. a..,., . ca.<>h in advance b all ~ Lagun11's Ri\>lera coastllllt!. GEM Cl'aclous 3 Br, 212 Bu, ffll, Ge n•r•I 644--0924. '
or nt any ont ot <> of· ·lr !nf<11·n11·tion and locatk>n MISSION REA.LTY 494-0731 ---~II---2 BR on Jl.:J· lot. paint and tam nn. 2 car gar. lmmed. Money W•nted 250
• 1~ E' Tusl•'•• Ave N 8 Po••· "',000. 1·1n"'n .. [nn FREE REN'fA(, -BOOK l!jtlBIJ<j to Ocean. 2 BR. 1\.1 flees. NO f hone <> rs. .,, U.i·~e f'llft & "JA homes, * $42,500 * .w· · '' · ' pn1!1t!! Atlll « unit later. -, ...... "' I.ET YOUR MONEY 2 ' u -• REALTOllS 642-4623 avail. To lnspecl l' a 11 DROP IN It BROWSE , car gar, 1~ew .,...,.1, oen411ne: p.m. Friday, 1·" 1c1 • Sharp 2 uJi. So. Laguna Call &15-S.100. EARN lC•J' J'i J>6inl Yard• S295 mo 1
Costa t-.fe:1a offl~e: 12 KASABIAN home. Walk to bfach 642-0062. · ,. or exam ple: 3 bdrm home, 64&-IMD. · • • i,
noon -oil branch of-• ..-.~ * *SACRIFICE PRICE* I' 11 p porty 166 lnsteadofsltUnalnthchonk 2 baths, COltn Me11A,
Real E state 961-6644 0up1!x ..,.;;C,araaes FOR SALE/LEASE Vtl•.., •. ...!'°"-""1 & Co. ncom• ro •t 5, IOUnd &: aeeuni 2od C0Ue11:e Prk., garage, t<'.n~ OlARMING 2 sty l'UIUc 3 1
ficfl. D' .__ --211 NEW UNITS trust deeds on sngl family yard, bu 11 t ·In•. S2'75 Br, 2 88, brick patio A
THE DAILY PILOT re· ~\VNER -3 BR, 2 BA. hup VpleLAw;..,!llic ~'t;Y.h irert uvm owner, = WUI Consider Contract Orange. O>unty homes. Call per/mo. Walker le Lee, 2790 trpJc.
1
Ytly $ 4 5 O Imo .
serves th(' ri~ht to clu· am. rrn . 1'-'lmasslvP fl'J)lc., ... c. Cl'ett rondo 2 br, im ate BA'i VIEW <>n BLUFF. (n 4J833--1!I09 Harbor Blvd., at Ada1111 ~
_.ity, ·edll, censor or rn-pnnclrd study. Laund nn., 494--9704 494-9129 avaUabUhy. Call $48-7558 Tri·levcl brand tl('w 2 Or, Costa Mc~. Sched. Income REAL EST'ArE -SPY~LASS HILL fu.se any t1d1•crtlsement. lrg. kll ., dlx c111~. walled FOR SAU: BY O\VNER., IM?!I. den, 21~ Bil, trg. mastl':r SM,000. Price $.185,000. 15~ Mortf8191, "'
and tn <'hang!" Its ratts ttar )'ard, t'<>l'nl:'r lot, nr Lovely Ocean vu Jlame Ira iw.ile. trpl, wet bar, fan· down. OVtt 75% rcniro. Trust o..d1 260 LANDLORDS I PanoramJc Oct&n V l 1 w
• ttgulnlil!ns without bch. s39.soo. ~.362, lot, bel()\V ml\rket v~ue, SALES I RENTALS tatUc kitchen. Pool. Fee FM detall.11 Nll We Speclallze tn Newport Comtt'lol. <t BR. prof. deaor·
prfOf' nt1Ucc. l BR T010o·nhouS<', fkh1g plus Slivt! realtors markup, 2 Bachrlora . . ..... $32,!IOO !And. CJS REAL ESTATE PGT YOUR MONEY Bettch • Con>na de!I Mlr e atf!d. $590.llMO. &«-073l.
Q..ASSIFIEO ~I, ".,hildren ok, A!!sume 2 lrg BR 1 ~ ~!!!.deck. 2 + 1~Bedroon1 •••••• $1'1 ,500 Open SAT 1-4. SUn 11.1. SIJS.ll(UI ..,or <'vt ~?·6244 TO WORK FOR YOUI • Lagunfl. Our Renlo.1 Ser.-SPY'CLASS HILL • i.a..& 7..-t F llA , low cl<>~,, . frplc. $42,ooo. if:~1. 2 + 1 Br + Vac. 10t • • $97,500 1951 2951 Quldudll.. M4--4133 TRAILER park. 34 11n111:e\ll, 11 vtco 1, ~,REE to You! Try BR. hOme, !.a11tutlc vteW. MAILING ADDRESS 961:-1486. ci±AN" 2 BR, 1 BA, gamA"t!, 4 l·Bcd1"°nt _ • ~25,000 ONLY $8l,lOO for-thll 20 mos xlnl clOllC tn loc. $lO.OOO Earn 10% o~~ore on we • Nu.View! $695/mo. No Mi'· 6'!0-l"nlll.
.--'Q] Box 156['~ <t BR. 2 BA ll<>me close to bc!och, 8tove & trig. BALBOA BAY p OP. old Palermo, 4 BR, fam rm, ca.sh return on S50.lnl dw. ~ ~ ~°':;',~a NU1VIEW RENTALS 3 BR. 2 tiA, trplc, pafio. ..
Cotta ?.ltsa $25,<d. 1!N32·?ttauna Le. 229 Beverly St. S 2 8 5 . 673-7420 *-2~\ BA, llnrbor View H<>me. Price Ul),(Q) x1n1 tlMnc· SIGNAL MOR3TGAGE CX>. · 67:l-4030 or 494-32.48 414 Fmtleaf.
1 Bl.J( TO BEACH
IM26 I,funtirtgtOn Brach * $48.-3163 <t94-6372. -ON &y, by OWTltt. boat slip, ·9y owner. ..:J.115 Po r f ~ ~· on~ Brk, ... (TI~) $$.01(11 The fa11•1 draw.. In lht We11. C&11 &W..o:m
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=========:!/Like to Trade? Our 'Trftdtr's !lave tomethlng you want to 4UR:. 2~ Ba. beaut. view, Renwick, N.B. 6 4 4·68 7 8 1 eves, 1 4500 Campus Dr., N.11., •• ~Pilot Oaulfted Fut rnu11a ate JU.It ,& plllDe PandlM column II for YoU! sell? CIW!fted arls d<J JI fln1ple p1:1rklni. (714) 6~~147_>_10~V_F.~·-l_N_N_O_W_! ____ ~N~oed="'-··~P~ad~·~·t_Pl~•~CO~•~n ad! Ad. ,• "col=l,c•°'-="-==;:;;..--•
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l~Hou:=;:;:;Ht::....::U:::n:::lu:::m.:::.,• _;l!Jt)~s ,1 ._H:::•.:;U;:;U::;s..;U~n:::lu~m:;:._....:JOS= Houlft UnfUtn. JOS Duplu.H Furn. 34S A•ls. Furn. 360 Aots. Furn. 360 Apt. Unfum. 36SApt. Unfutn. 365 liun tlngton leach
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,_c_o_r_o_n_•_d_1_1_111a_r ___ 1;l;;rv;;i;;n~•;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;jN';: ...... ;;.i::::.:,rl;..:B::;•::•:;<:;;h;_ ___ 1 ~,;:.•:;w:;po::;::• .. '-B::.:•::•<h:::.___c -~o'-st;.;•c.;.Mn.o.:.;.;c;.._____ Newport Be&ch Dana Point D•n• Point S165. 1 BR, Mag cptll, tpJe, •
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. -:::.:...C: -blocki to beach, gas paid.
• ' BR. I Ba, ~lace, 3 BR 2 baJhs 1275 3 Bil., 2 ba .. -2 r •• ,... BAY VIEW Unbollovably Beautiful Close !o Ocean BEACH an"' HARBOR '"15th St., Hunt Bch.
hoge )'il'd·trces, $3(XJ/l1:asc 3 un: 2 b!l f\l . . $300 Yrly. $.115 Mo. 4 BR, i a\, uppe.i• rompl. VA l. JTISERE CDrdt"n J!'/l. A d B ... • • 2 BR. 1 BA. Cpl.$, drpa,
lncludc1 a:a~ncr 833-8974. 3 sn' ~~ ba. $4Z A.Ilk For Mike tum, red(!O)rntcd, 2 blkll h> ;\dults • no Pf'hl. r1 l!nl n ay ... . . • you aet BOTH in DANA POINT R " o. $11.3. Mk for D&lc,
3 BR. 2 bu house. Car ;.,.w;_ 2 BR + •--2 .:~ . -.. JONES REALTY 6'73--6210 the ~an. 44th St., Year's cvi·i')'\l.·here. •Stf'C'ani &. \VINTJo:rt Li!:J\Sl·:, 1 BDll.\1. ~ . 962-1471 · ,..,.. ' "'"'"' + ~1. uoa. ' '' ' •• s~ PRESTIGF' l 2 I 'I . \vatl'rlsll '"' pool Ree , '-c=-:,..:=~=~-~~~ n10 ... ~. Iris, Cilb1, CaJJ 3 nR. 2 bAths ........ $450 • 1~mmun ty br, ease ava1. 1n1med. Days, Hnl, Snu~.°SgJs 1.2 ·Bdnn.: $130. LAT!r.F: Z ~r: ~m. 1 Bedroom Apt. $155.-up 2 Bdrm. $215/mo. 2 blka ~11. 4 Bil 2* bath.\ $460 2 bo., 14. fam rm, aues1 nn, 61S-6969, PVes, 832-9478 1'"urn-Unfurn. froro $l4t. Call Bkr, 67S-5800 2 Bedroo m Apt. $l85.-up rrom l>e:ach. Crpts, dl'f>lt &. ** NE\V 2 BR. CONDO. ~on: 2\.1& ha+ :.:i~·:: $495 all elect kit , \V/D, prlv. 3 BR. duplex, lrg sundeck, 2 SEE IT: 2lm Ptanor1s, OCF.ANFRON1·--l<'caturing Carpets, Drapes, Built-ins. ger4i:I". 8'12--0023.
NEAR Cl l!NA COVE. Ap-bch. $450. lse. ~413 car garage. Yearly. Ulil pct &12-8670. Beautiful 3 Br. & 4 Br. & Bd H l 250 LCE. 2 BR. N1!ar stores
Plllil""'lil r Pl G~ o BAYFRONT 4 n . 2 bath 83" ~·• AM o•· 4"' o•= 2, 3 4 r. omes rOnl $ .-to $475.· ""' u111. t. ,.....,936. uo.1nn., ~ '7't""O'SJU $30 WEEk & UP Frplc. None Bt'tter in $130pcr rno. Nrvo'ly deeor 3\~~·~~'~r~~;.atm5~~~~: ~~&vca paUo,~ Ev~"3 BR .• 2 Ba.* e Stud,o& lBRi\pts. ~.~~~~2'2Bea~h~,50~5~)a:. ,. DA~A H~RiOR REALTY ~e~~~r~:~."·1 ~~~6~
Yl'ly. Avl 1011:1. 640-0M5t. SEVERAL 2 & 3 BR. beach Steps to Beach. $300 Yrly. : ·~'°~ ~~1~_v11~~~~r,~j Set' PM & \Vknds at -1707 24671 La Plaz", next to So . Ca l 1st Nat. Bank now. l\·J\le lron1 beach. $195.
IMMACUl.J\TE, l'IC:trn large homes. Yrly. lease, .from Property tfo\lSC' 642-3850 • Children & Pet Section ~Se~"'-"°-"'-' D_r._____ 496-2790 or 831-0044 i;:i6-9Sl9 a ri 6 P~I & wlmcta.
3 Br, 2 lin, p..i.lio, r,arage. "SINCE JS46" $275 mo. AKent ~1290. 2 BR, 2 Ba., nu carpets, 2376 Ne\vport Blvd .. CM :! BR, blLins, furn or unfw11, Apt. Unfurn. _365 Apt. Unfurn. 365 I & 3 BDRM AVAIL
$425/n10. Phone &14-0011 I.st western Bank Bldg. Harbor View Ho.mes garage Newport Shores. 548-9755 or 645-3961 $225. or $200 n10, 9 mo 2 hlks heach 5."\6-fi663
Costa Me•• UniV(!n;i!v p .. r!<, hvl-,. Beaut. Decor. 4 Bn, Fam $275. mon. yearly. S48-4802 (Ad good for $5 on rent) v .. tnter lfe. Owner \\ill be on Coron• det Mir Cotti Meu -D 552 7000 NI h Rm &: Form Din S44-039ti J: U 50 I"'~~;:;:::,.=::'--'=:.;::~::::;,--premises Sat & Sun. or 1 .::::.;;.;;..;;.:.:~-----3 BR twnhS(", D~. re.[Jig, •v• · g fa • · · Du.,le'<et nrurn. 3 BACHELOR a(>{ -Duplex, Phot\(' S'l'j...Ql3t or 8-J&.5rn. stove, children, po o I , ~~~~1~10n1:. -r:i. ia r8k~ <I BR, ; Ba, breath1aki--~~,!,~rbl~~·~-~"be'!~n~~ B•lboa Ponln:i.Ull immac, cond. pri (ncd yd. ,;12:::4-45:__:":.:lh"-'S"'t.~=~~~ 2chi~:ren g:rni::is. );:.' n::
2c'::;~~~~ u~~:~~lew2 Bui;;hard & ,Adams. 96S-l4&6.
Carage. Yard. l..ow niaint. vicv.•, lease or mo 10 ~~ 6/;S..0852, ~ii?s. occ_up. Sl55 per mo. $35 per \\'k. & UP. 1 BR .. 2 833--0821, 6-1 0 -0 7 6 9 or children ok, no anln1als. 2-BR w/closed gar age.
i\vl\ll 1~1v. $'!65 (I 1 828-4495 $<195~pe~·r"-:m:'o~, ~SIG-4:"-"39"1::.· __ 11 ~ 't•~wpo~~~r::.!_~H~.~19-h~t-s___ NEW 3 BR, 2 BA, outstdnd-BR & Bachelors. Color TV, 96tHi885 $160 mo. 65..')-Zl.91 or ChlldN'n & sn\all pet ok. or 89?-J.'il:i. -ing viev.· of bay, yrly, S600 l BR. bltns, recently redec. maid sen', pool, Thi• :-Olesa, ",~8-R-. _A_p_t._G_•_ra_g,-.-G-a_n_l,-,-1• 546-414i. $150. Ph: 847-8149.
L.gun. B •• ch mo "'8~61 'or "·'8 2103 No kids or pets. $130. Avl 41·.-N. Nc·"~t·t Bl., N.B. CARPE"l'S· & dr;•pcs, gar, · l BR~ 2 be, (am rm, Npl · .,., "' "' .... · Oct. -1..... Eves an 5:30 or 646_9681_ "r-\Valk to beach .II: stores. 2 AITRACTIVE 2 Br, 2 Ba, Irvine
fem'('(f -pa1J\l 2 s a 11 Heights S350 mo Vacunt Corona der Mar wknd "'" ~.. ~~-------11dull1 or v.1/chlld ok. $250 $215. 2 Br. -1{. Ba. $100. . , · .'.!1 $1.6j -I BR. Near beach. Big · · ' 5' .nu-.....,,, 500• FRO'l OC""\N, v•'"•', mo. Includes ut '•I. 67~7"0'. chtld1"tn .. no Pl'l!i, $1;,;:i mo. ft-nl·ed yi.ll'd, Chlldt ...... t \\'t'I-Call 673-5013. REAR S 0 " i:...-... ... JO.J J\:lalure adl111, no pets. 11•1 \\'AL:'nIT Square Tol411· -I" II N 6 C •1 r~ • * * 'Ir * * n1. a.pt. ne older all bltns, sund-k, 3 Br. u1· E 20tl• St C 'I "18 "137 •-.. ·-. 2 BR, 2 BA, cable ~v•' ... a act> • 0 • ·" • cun1e~ San Ju•n C.apistr•no d It l Fu u il pd ~.. ,. 3 BR 2 BA house So of -· • .. .L•· • ... -v • 'IU'U"""" 646-Sm. s~~. '"•·ge lBr.~anvi'cw';.::.:;...o.;:;:c;..::;:.i::o:;c:.;::;.::_ VIEW au ony. rn. t • per Jmmac. \Vinter rental. 11 '11 "' 13i5 6-16-1095. 1'V, pool, patio, air con-"""' ..... ....... ,,. * NEAR BEACH * $125. lnq. Apt. 4 ln...renr. 112 34th St. N.B. &15-3109 wy, ll C, p:l.110, . .;,::::~=-=~~'"""'-~"' mo UPPER Oupll'"\, Nl·u r nt'\\' 3 ap;, huge deck. 3 BR, 2 sly, lrplc. o~ts, 2335 Elden, C.1'1. . • a(ler 5. 6'12-4088 days. Cflil Agf.'.nl 675-6=000"--20-l5C TUSTIN A\'e. LO\'l"ly 2 ditioning, gardefl('r, ·
DR. 2 BA. hllns, sundeck, $400 • 3 BR, 2 Ba, trplc, drp~. 2 car gar, pool ptivl. Deluxe 3 BR, 21h BA . Huge * 1 BR APT * br, cluplC'x. crpls, drps, 552-&563. gnr. Lease $~j/nio. Set• :it t.>eiiullful ocoean view! E.'<-Avail 10/10. $290 n"IO. aft 5. owner's unit in new custom BEAUTIFULLY fum. 1 Br. NEW Luxurious Oc ean 1r_~ bltins, refrig, ga•', \ndry
399 E. l&lh ~t. Cl\1., then i·r·n•\nn:•l hr.~st". , ;.61::e>-::1592,,,,'c. ------duplex, beam c e i Jing, O\vner's apt. Priv. swi1n'g F'ront/View 3 & 4 Br, ft'om nll u paid. S200. 67:r16S1 hookup, paiio, ,\vHil lOl. Laguna BHCh ~l 67'.Wl1C1.J fn1· aµpl. NU~VIEW ,RENTALS tSouth Laguna pa1ios, fplc, nr shopping, no ~~3Avl Oct l. $200. $300 visit 2004 \\'. Ocf.'an 3 Di'., 21,,, Ba. duplt~x. built $195 n1t1. 6-i6-4380/6-1~325.1. 1 Behm apt, quit'l en1 ployed
SINC:Lf.:S1Fan1lllcs -Vacant 67.{-iO:ill or 4:+4-3248 -· .-"'CC-.."----pets, $425670),";..,. -7''-"7.-=~~--~-rront daily or Ctt11 6-t&-3114 ins, c111'1X'fs, dra()C'S, lots of A.n1·active nc11· l .~ 2 BR, gcn!leman, i'IO pets .
2 Br. S)?.0. Also a Bil, $180, PRESTIGE North e_nd luX· 1 Bl~ ocean view apt $175. .1*V7VV BACH EL 0 H. w/utUilies -•~v~"~·--~-~--151orage, 607 It·is. 8:l3-23' . iv1Wcru·peli ng, drps, bit ins No11hend , stove, ref r ig '
klds/pt'1s. i\r::L Ft' c , urious hoine, all bit-ins, 4 1no incl Utl!s-Ask for Paul * * * * * * paid. W/\V c-arpets. Quiet $29.50 per wk & up. Color Iv, \VALl( to beach & st 'C'S Adul1s, 110 pe1s. $135 1110. prkg $L15. 494--2003
979-S.\30. BR .. den & Jami ly rm. 31,~ D~ys 496--6666, ext 4-0, eve 2-2 BR. I Ba, charming adult~ $115. 2195 Miner, Apt. maid scrv & kitchens. The ~ BR, pool, Cdl\1 charm $225 up. J!l70 \Vallace. &16-0176 2 BR. 1 bath, ocean view,
r:XTRA Cli·iui
2
li R B!iths. 2 ~eJ bars. Fal>ulousl,..:.67::>-<-"'825=~ '>---~--duplexes. front hou~. crpts, 2. BaYcliff-Motel, 455 No. Orange Coasr R.E. 644-48•111 l..ARGE 2 BR, Sl6S/nio . \\·alk In bcttch, $260. mo.
Eas!side, no kids, 11 0 vtc\\'S. \\·111 lease at $650 Houses Furn. or drps, no dogs s275 per mo. ADULT BACHELORLETTE Ne\\•porl Bl\·d. NB. 646-3265· LHG. 2 Br, :.! Ba. 111/frpl c. \\later 11aid. 309 Monte 49-t-2339 or 49-t-3383 .
. <>ini.:l<'s. slO\'t' & rrig., y;.1rc1.1 l\lonth Unfurn. 310 Plense call, 644-8034. Pool. Util Pd. $155. ON The Beach -!hru June S300. Close !o beach. Av\ Vista. 2 children OK. IBR APT. OCEAN VIE\V
$200. 645-2.iT.t Shic lrli; R.E. 4M-8093I -..::;;;.;;.;;;_ ___ _:.;.: Dani Point -' * * 64&-6974 * * 31. Roomy8 3 Br, 2 Ba. Oct. l~. Call 673-4336. .5'""8-3963~;:·°""c-c--c-c~..,_ on South Coast Hwy.
$17!)....t-.lodt"rn 2 Br Triplex, 2 F.ME'RALD BA_).', Avail now 1;G;•;n;•;;';";';;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;, SUS CASITAS $3
2l/mo. 3:1'-S 35o or QUIET, secluded, I Br. priv lr.1i\1AC. Trlplex, quiel sL 2 968-2392
Ba. Gar .. yrd. kirt-./1.11 ·ts . th1·1;1 June. $850. mo. 3 ~R NEW, 2BR, 2BA, upper, trg Furn l br & bachelors. 2ll0 ~5'c:S--~l'I0::'.::7·----~--p::i !io, JU'\.\' dl'l.'01". garage, BR, bltins, (rplc. Gnr.
Calil's Lr't'<>t Ren1ul "'"'V pvr1v beach area & fac1ls. 2 BR 2 ba oceanfront 1.~ &living1 undrm & kitche12•·1•0arage .N::•c;:w.!:po:::•::1_:B:::l.::vd:::.,_• .::C::Mo.·---FOR rent or subleasl', 2 Br, 2 $200/nio. Yearly. 640--0851. Lndry $200. 761 Scott Pl., ,'_;•:.;•:.';:'"::•:...:cN:;l"'gc::u;;•:..' ---
71 • ~ 7030 • ......., a area. n10. -Ba, beaut. Iw·n, in Park '· Homeflnders 547-9641 --~-2 BR 2 ba tum winter $215 494-5275 wkcnds. No pets. l\.10TEL Apts., lo monthly Newport overlooking foun-LARGE, clean 2 & 3 BR. I o'6,07:~~0·~--~~-"
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-A-'llLEASF. f\-1odern 2 BR unfurn. Newport Beach' 3 BR 2 ba rates, $l10 mo. & up. 2376 lain. Call 64.5-SOOJ ext. 334_ Patio, garage. Close lo NE\V 2 Br ap1, Ulil pd, · -' · ~ l's:• en t'. vat nr \\'ood's Cove $250/n10. Unfurn y 1 '1325 ' · Newport Beach Nev.•nnrt Blvd. 548-9755. ' store5. 422 L n r ks p u i· . ch ii d r 0 n •. 0 I come , Ott lsl. S3Cl0/rno. Roy ' · r y. ' ,.... OCEAN~RON"" nor ... " ',1,~0,.111,, llc.·ill"'" 51g .... 1729 lH&-276-1 .aftcrS pn1. AD · * ilr ~. A.-1 673-3687 cpt/{lrps, patio. 1960 '""" DELUXE duplex near beach * SH y EL.llAS-POOL I RR, winter renlal, $175 per ""'-"'"'-------\\I JI A J 64&-8836
2 BEDR~:'\1S. :! baths, ~~to~O~ic~ :~eplus den, & Lido shops. 3 BR . 2 B1'] • Adults Poolside $150 u~. _ 1110. Util incld. 1420 \\'. Costa Mesa a ace, PL • ·
he;itt-t.I S1\'ltllt\llllJ; 1)0()!, S:l50 4S4-9i04 4949729 A ... L frplc, bltns, dshwshr, shag 177 E. 22nd St., c ri1 642-36i::i. Oceanfront. 54S-19::0. ----------l\1ESA Verde-2 BR condo,
1110
• Call 6·l"i-Gl:i1U. •-e. crptg. '2'rly/1110. Sa 2 5. 1 BR, Clean & new, downt014,~1 DELUXE D/\V, gold shag, patio, 1 Bil. fw·n. Patio, gar. UHi. A RTMENTS I $210 5-1&-0281
2 RR off·str, qui£>!, patio, Laguna Nlgue• !5'~>-3405~~·~o~r~5'~!>-~l346~·~=~ C.1\1. reflr 1195 Ne-.\,,Ot1 \Vasher & dryer, drplc, Npt PA garage, poo · ·
a
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0
'" " t 8 I"·-I 1 Blvd. Apt 2!-54!H3037 evel'I. Height•. Adults. s22;1 1110, Air Cond • Frplc's -3 S1vim-2 BR, pa!io, crpts, drµs. Blt-f~{:L.i\s-S~l. ~~~l~ffi. pe s. 2 !3Dfll\1._. 2 Bath, dt>n. 1'~rplc,1_•_-__ s_•_n_•____ 1 1~1 Lgo Fully Furn 2 Br's 645-4465. """ 644--0229 ml"g Pools • Health Spa . ;, mnll". Avail Oct. 2nd.
NE\V 4 BR/fain rn1, near P~~~te~1!~~v.~:Ch\~~: . * BAYFRONT * I ApartmentslorRent .... Bltns, w v.·,.rirps, beam cei1 CANAL front studio, V.'/lloat ~~l~i~il~d ~~~ · Gyin ancl SJ
75
. 640-8$23. Nope~'='·--
Soulh Coasl Pla7.a. S-IOO nto. inunity. Rec. club, w/4 ten-Pier, 4 B~. 3 Br\, !run rm. . Ad!ts, no pet!I $180. 642·9520. for 28' power boat, Jrg patio. 1 BR . From Sl50 BACK BAY VIEW
No pets. 6'12-6618. nis crts, pool, jacu:al. Un.furn winter ~91'.X?· Yearly Oana f!Plnl ut!I pd, Adlt, no pets, $2'".JO 1 BR & Den F rom $l90 2 BR HEATED POOL $200.
NE\V :1 br l\1·11hse. 2 car gar. P1·ivRt t" parking above 2~1 ~]JOO Furruslungs Aptt. Furn. 360 yea1· lease, 673-2662 2 BR from $210 ¥453 Irvine, C.!\.t 548-1729
erpls, drps, bliins, patio n1l ol bC'acb. $450 per mo. avail. No pets. 67'5-0'525 LIVE in the all new Dana OCEAN FRONT Jrg rlean 2 HR. T\vnhses From $250 · • 2 BR, 1 Ba Upstairs, !\.1esa
ni'l'a. 5285_.\l79--1635 \'.:nr Jcnse, Call Bob, L•guna Be•ch General Point Harbr.ir al the fui·n. apt, 1-2-3 &droo111s MEDJTERR-ANEAN Verde. $155. Adults -no
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3
Bil T , h . 1.,7~ N. 586-5212 aft 6:30. . beautiful MARINA lNN (n4l 675-4688 or 8:!7-8000 pets. 833-8974. ~ . \\11 SC! ~ ·'· I . THREE A h n-::-v.int • PALM ·s ' De l\1otcl 34902 Del Obisnn SI Lr VILLAGE Si>. Coast Plazn. Children NIGUEL Shores, 33681 \Vind-· re 0«y, ' er <>< prmgs -corator · """ · g. Immac. 2 Br dplx. Dlx ALL elec. 2 BR, 1 BA, l OK Dbl gar 5-l&-3146. jammer, 2400 sq, ft., 4 BR, year around i;ntals avail Fwnished 1 & 2 bedroon1s <496-2353). Kitchen· Ef-kil & ba. frpl. i b!!c hc::h/bay 2400 11 bo Bl d c l\J c-hilri ok, $175 n10. See 120
· · . pri gate, beach, poo,I . now. 2 to 6 BRs from S300 $195 & $250. Po~l. ficiencies & Apartments. $275. 675-3570•534-1429. ar r v ·• ·1
• Albert No . 7. CM646-5996.
3 BR, 2 b.'l house' on Tustin $-130/mo 8.11_1453 to $550. mo. Prlv beach & RL>frigerated Air Con-Heated pool, dh'CCt dial <TI4l 557-8020 A\·e. S250 n10. f>lS-1238 or · ' _ tennis crt, playgmd, seclud-ditionlnEt. Cable Pai d . phones. television, sauna FURNISH ED 2 BR apt, OPEN EVERYDAY 1 & 2 BR $1:15 -$155. Sto\'e.
;,.12-3.179. LEASE -: 3 BR .. 2 ba. \\'Ith cd &. security gUarded area. Adults, No Pets, quiet south bath, I au n d r y facilities, Hvailable Septen1ber Z9Lh. J-lour3: Fri-Tues 10-6 rer., crpt/drps, htd pool.
SEA TERRACE
APARlMENTS
in Califtfnl1'1 11wsst
custton
Laguna Nl8;uers kle1I ocean
locale. Near beach with
ocean or park views. Clrpet,
beam eelUngs, !)inti Hvlni
rooms, patio/balcony. GE
kitchen, self cl1an oven,
dlshw1sher, Ree. ~ldg., pool;
Jacuzzi, firesldl loiinge.
Choice, l & 2 bedrms. 1, 111.l,
2 baths. From $205 to $325
per mo. Phone 493-0501.
OIRECTIONSi Nlguel Rd., 1
ml. south or Crown Valley
Pkwy .. at Pacific Coast Hwy.
Laguna Niguel.
the choice community D P I pool fact!. $330 flfonth LINGO REAL ESTATE side, lease only. The P\J.lni meeting roon1, close to San 675-2656 or 737-1078 Wed. & Thurs. 10-7 Adults, no pets. 64&-8965.
ana 0 nt 494-97W 49+9i29 Agt. 499-45.54 49-1-5533 Royal , 474 Avenue Ortega, Clernente & Laguna Beach. 2 BR, 2 BA. all hit-Ins. Near PRIMA CASA AP-TS -\VALK to beach & stores
CLOSE to Dana Po in t Llnda Isle Condominiums 325-3829 Como pla;· in ° u t bay & Beach. $275. Call 1838 Placentia Avr. Cl\1 2 BR. pool, CdM charrn ~'5 ~=~~------
;\·J'a.J•ina. ;\e\1' 3 Br, 1 Ba. .. • Furn ' 315 \VATERFRONT IBR, pri sportli.shing, shopping & 673--0473.. Open House 1-5 Daify Orange Coast R.E. &l-t-4848 2 BR Condo on golr course.
I l l OR 2 v 1 p · & _,. • restaurants. $60 week & lip. Del ha b It · J!lf.'al f(lr adu t!ll or \\'/ ~r. ease ier ,..1p. patio. Ne\\• 2 BR, furn or Bring th\!> ad !: reCcive $5 DELUXE 2 B1, Super area, ALL U1'lL1TlES PAID CLEAN, lrg. 2 Bit Upper. uxe 5 g, ....
1 n s •
child. IA'nSf' S27:io/pcr mo. ~ BR.. 4\i. ba., air~. L•guna Niguel unlurn, inquire 400 So off on fi rst v.·et"'(s rent. pets ok. Yrly $275. Call Fan1ily Units -tltildren Nr. shops. Adults over 35. l''ashel', dryer. $265. Prefer
t:vcs 714/544-767!1 1
1
000 SQ. rt. S.1
1
.000 ?.~ ,,
1
;. Baytront, no.;; Totn 5-18-3869 or !rul-3443. \Velcome. Large 2 BR, I S12i * 548--2407. lease. 831-1298 or 675"-0038
F t . v II Bi I Grundy R Ir. Ul;r"O UI 3 BR Condominium on the Huntin'gton Be1ch BA. Relrig, dsh\\•hrs, bltns, Mesa v •. -~-oun a1n • •Y Mesa Verde gOlf coo~. beautifull y furn. Balboa Island 1 BLK to ocean & bay. patios, 14.alk-in closets, gar, 2 BDRl\1., 2 BA. deluxe i :..;=;::...::.:;,_•-;::.::. ____ _ •~• 61>-3000 LOW WEEKLY RATES bachelor $150 Yrly, util in-crpts, .drps & POOL . \\'/frplc. Avail. Oct. 1st. J!UGE 3 BR. 2 BA, 2 car INJJ· •Agent. YEARLY. •Older Coup I e clded, garage, 673--0731. $220-$2 5.57-8726 or 548-5212 DLX 2 & 3 BR, 2 Ba, encl
i;cflr., all hltns, :!l\'i111 pool. IMr.rEDIATE Occu_pancy 3 Condomintums Prete!TE.'d. Large Bright 2 Executive Suites LRG. 3 Br, 2 Ba. bit-ins, up-Call ~i~?Real Estate LRG 2 BR, crptS, drps, bltins gar. SI70 up. Rental Ofc.,
kids OK. like ne\\', only~ Br,.2 Ba, $295. Oitt:iQnpossk_ u-1--320 br I bn. Lovt"ly Patio BBQ 721 Yorktown Blvd 2 "lk ba v· 3095 MaCI! Ave. 546-1034. nio.. No fct'. Agl'llt , &12.-1'121. ble. Bn?ker, ~1 eves. n Ur!' ..... _ ..... _ -· · -· · -• per. " s bch, y. \: inter ~,1168 or 833.-0584 $150_ mo. 781 Sballmar, ·Ji"rosrfree refrig. Drapes. Beach Blvd. at Yorktown $275 (7141 846-3073. 1 .. ,.."":~:":"':~~iiii-1Js.s~1~-os~-~3'l~._Jil'!_'1no~ar~S!;.J64~5-45~-~1~2. Newport IMch
3 BR. 2 n,\, ru' schools. Newport Beach East Bluff Shag. Private, Q u i et . 536.0411 WlN OCE 1 · $1 BO MO I :..:.:c;i;:.;.;....:::.;;;;.;:;;.. ___ , hllinll, frplc, h'£ yn-1. c1i1t11. -De I lght1ully Home-Like. TER Rental -Ai\'-• 2 BR, crpts. drps, bltns, 9
dl'pr., ni;kini:t $300 n10. .BAY VIE\\' on BLUFF 3 BR Condo EastbluU, $425. ST:>-8989 STUDIOS & 1 BR's. FRONT 3 Br. apt. 213/ NC"at clean 2 BR individual bean1 ceil, $140. 1 child ok., PARK NEWPOR1
!IGS-2.172/:·.,,n-1.:1,1;19, Tr1--levrl ,Brand New 2 Br, Call for a pp o I n Intent . DELUXE, bf.'auliful .t • Full kitchen 596-1709 or :>96-77i2. unit v.ith new cari}eting, no pels. 646-3786, 545--0760. APARTMENTS
H t
.
1
Beach dc.11, 2 1 ~ Btt, lrg master 6-10-0929. Avail Oct. 15th. spacious apt. 3 BR. 2 BA, •.-1-leatedd pool OCEAN Vu-2 hr. $25ll. n10. 3 drape1ics & a single at· 3 BR 1% BA. Spacious. $180. Un Ing on su1tt', frpl , \\'el bay, Ian· l.aun ry fa cilities br, $295. mo. UtiJ incld. tuched garage. Near Harbor Ocean Br'eeze 22SG Canyon Oft the bay
ta:;t\c . kitchen, po o I , El Toro frplc, close to North Bay. • Free ulllities Winter. 675-0922 SI · ; D 642-2222 S OWNERS OF $ n1 I) l n t f.' nan c e . Lease. NEIV __ _,_ . . lst floor, corner bldg. 300 • Free linens -5~=~~='-----iopping Cen1 c:>r. Ov.'llC'r .::::'.:." ===·-----J.u.xury aparllo.ent living
$ REAL PROPERTY $ $650!1>10 C011uvm1n1um 3BR. Apolena. $330/mo. 673-4702 e T.V. & maid scrv. avail. an Clemente brokf.'r 646-585~. Huntington Be•ch overlooking the water. En·
\\'!"'re hcrt' to IV'I'\'(' you! Open sAT 1-4, SUN 11·1 2~ba. dflls, erpts, 2 car 1 ,..0':w,,":.:'.o,r·~-~-~-· ~ • Bar-B-Que -"'--""""'---'-'-----joy $750,000 health spa, 7
"'llEE OF' C1 1A RGF" 2951 Quidada 644-4133 gar, !rplc, encbd yrd, pool 4 BR, 2 ba. Sleeps 10, furn . • Pho~ service 1 BR, clean $l50 mo. A~ 3 * * * * * * Llntited Income? swimming _poob, 7 lighted
'J'ry Us! Call prior II) v::il·ancy THE Bluffs. Brand new & rec lac. $300. 557-7027 Plenty of parking. Students • l Mile to ocean 240 Ave. Rosa, corn. ic-NE\VLY DECORATED Social Security? tennis courts, plus miles of
Don't losl' SS. S:-1\•e Tin1e. "Tennis Villa" farnUy home Founta1n Valley "-elcome. $350 per mo. SlSO·Sl6S toria, 56-6520. Lrg 2 BR, 2 aA, apt. + Adults Only-No Pets bicycle tr'ails, putting, shuf·
S ALA RENTALS $ 3 BR,-plus tam nn. Plush BRAND ne \\', never li\: w.jnter. STa-2866 or 673-7910. BACHELOR & 1 BR., patios, Apt. Unfurn. 365 patio. New crpts &; drps. Close to Shopping &. bus neboard. croquet. Junior l's
Ne\yport & ~":-'· Cl\1 64~ carpt g., cust dn.pes, spac. v.·/w crptg drnc 4 B mACTIVE new 2BR, trplc's prlv. garages .... Bolboa Island Childedren & small pet ok. lines. Unfurn, stove, relrig from $19·t50 monlhly; also1
XF.\V
3
Br IKlnlC' fenr«t \\'1'8.p-a l'ound patio. S~rt BA fa • r~· U 2 garage apt sundeck, yearly, Divided bath & lots of Imm . oct.'Upancy. $190. Nr. incld. and 2-bedroom plans and
· y~rd. d~I gar, n~flr heh. \\'alk t~. pool & sc~l. ~ .. ~.. ~ ~~c~. o,1 3 5 ar $250 inclding util. 673--0023 closets. Rec. hall, poor & BOAT D~K TIE UP Bak871Cl· & Bristol. l\fgr. All Util's Paid 2-story town houses. ElPC·
.... ,·er OC:'<'t•P· hulllin•. nu n\O. v.1th Immediate oc-,,,A_2862 B•IL..---Peninsula pool lables, sauna baths. 979-9. 2 Br, 2 b8. & den, ground Irie kitchens, private patios ;:;
11
"Jl('I S &:. drflix.·~. Phont' t•upancy. Broker 644-1133, l~~"'-=:.:=...,...~o-""7---'I o.;c;.-=_.;..:.c.;;.;.:;:.o:___ See for yourself. 1730l \V/'2 BR. llL'<e Apt. On * * * * * * noor $164. TI4-842-962'l, Mon -or balt.-onles, carpeting, dra-
612-..1216. LOVELY new HVH for Huntington Be•ch $35 WEEK & UP Ki:elson Ln. 11 blk \V. of Grand Canal. No pets ot' GRANO OPENING ,Sa::ct·---~----perics. Subterranean park-Be 1 blk N f SI ) mioors. Yr\y. $300/nw. -ing wilh elevators. OptionaJ
VERY 1llu!->h 2 1-lr, 2 SH, full !e,11se-/salcmod, 2 !BR, d.e,n ..... VERY plush 2 Br 2 Ba full • Sleeping Rooms ach, S42 '784s ater. 673-0207. BNAEc'H"EBLORER· ~S &APTS. Move In Allowance maid service. Just :iorth of ~ippli._ club & p0n l: Adult Jiv· 'N 01:8~t f.' • tra.ava1 Prof appli, clj.lb & pooi, Aduli. Jiv-• Housekeeping Rooms --2 BDR11S., [rplc. Private · l BR . SPACIOUS NEW 1 BR Fashion Island at Jamboree
ing; Xlnt loc. I n11! lo hcach. 1.-~~~pd an,.!.,,"club'« pooi ing. XlnT loc. 1 mi. to beach. •Ocean Vit."lv Apts DELUXE Adull Poolside lanai. All elec. built-ins. U il p ~160 IFo Sii~ DELUXE APARTMENT and San Joaquin Hills Road. s~.l.l \caSc:>. 5.16-0092 or ":' ..... il c.u<u _ _, .,.. •
1
$225 lease 53&-0092 or B~LBOA INN Garden Bwigalow. N r . t aid. rp cs, beam La.rge patio or balcony Telephone (714 ) 644-l900 ,-,.~-3AA!i. ~ ~~~6-il~ener inc· :;~::,:,,=::· __ · ~-~--105 Main Street ocean. Frplc, lrg palio, 6 Garage. Broker 575-6700 ceil., patio & J>OOI. B!tins & Ca~ts & drapes. Built-tor rental \n!orma.Uon
S.'1K}-f'.xrcuti\·e 1'11°K~~.'"'11 ol PRJ>~STIGE HARBOR VIEW 4 BR, Cfllls/drps, ref/bltns, ----~-=~-'~"----~259.sauna, ten n i
5
' NS~~ ~ ~~· i::cth! ~1:a~~: rer;!,"3 H~~ll:n!"CM i~ C:r =~· LUXURY BAYFRONT eon.
Br. 2 .Bil. lltts a . 1 s pct. i-IO~\IES .... 5 BR Perfect for patio, pool, clubhse, tennis, NICE clean bay front apt, t Bdrm. From $145. Avail 00\\'. 673-3441 645-4411 do. 7th floor . Spect. view of
ratU's l.rire~1 Rcn!nl AN:v ra~ily. Pool/Club privl. etc. $250/mo. • 548-1400. w/prl. beach, 3 blks W!!St of
2523
l7th St., H.B. bay & 2 BR 2 BA
Homeflnders 547·9641 \Valk or bike to schls. Laguna Hills kn')' landing. Suitable fur 2d~~·. S16iic:oo~ er:;~ ~~~~ ~i~:. 2 i~~di:inf:r:~ TIRED OF NOISE? (bf\vn Dela~!~ Hntg Avel all elec~!/i>oi;i1. For relii
SF:ITING on ac11~ai::e -prv. $550/n"IO. "'atcr & Lease couple. $2'25 mo., annuaJ 8117--7786. yrly. Couple. $350. 6Ta-3335. \Vilson Garden t\J>ts. 2 Br, SPA'CIDUS or lease. 644--6806
honie, dbl gar, $150. Also J opt. possible. Cardener incl. 3 BR, 2 ba, POOl, 2 car gar. basis. Boat slip avail. I ~ Ba, crpts, drps. Pool. DELUXE new 3 Br, 2 BR. $180. c .r-.1 . /\gt. fee. 644--5441 or 644-6807. $275 nto. Adulls prcf'd. 1 _6_73-~1983=·------MEN, small beach hotel. '"'·"'lbna Peninsul• ' l\1ature adults. no pets. 3 Bl', 2 Ba, crpts, drps, newly Ba: 4 Br, 2 Ba. Steps to
97!l--8-l:Ul. BLUFFS avail Oct. 1st. 3BR. 54S-8Tl4 or 557-2179. BEACH & pier 1 Br $180 & Roon1s $21.50. per wk. Apts ONLY Sl62.50/l\10. dee. Pool. Child ok. $189. oceanfront. Crpt, d ·r p 11 ,
3 BR'
" BA. l•o•tv•. I ""· c 2BA. Mirron>d ~'·· Nr PClO, I, Newport •--ch $200. 2 Bl' (;?'."..n, UU p:l. $95 per month. 536-7oc.6. CHARMING Duplex. 2 BR. 2'283 Fountain \Vay East 17421 Keelson Ln. nr Beach fflllc, bltns. F'ron1 $325/mo. " " ..... lk CdM h I -Adlts l1)3 ET"Ed<>e\\"ater ne\\·ly decorated. Adults 011• (\V, of Har bo.· on \Vilsonl & Slater. 842--3546 or y J Bio 675--49U w/nption S2TI 1nonthly w to 1g • me · -871 ·2866 · · "' • Huntington Harbour ly, close to ocean/bay/shops. C 847 7786 r Y· ·. · S50CJ SC<' dep. All rerun<.lable'. refrig 14•/ice maker at-BRAND new 3 BR, 2~~ Ba, I ,;1=,,-=::;·-~~--~ 675-8720 or 985-5822. all 646-2S46 -"''---'-""""~=-=~-PARK Lido Twnhse, Exec.
842-3423. !ached., Lse, $425/mo. yrly, deluxe condo. New ~or t PENIN Pt. 1 blk to bc:h, BRAND nu. studio, lavish NE\V ADULT LIVING'.'· * * NEW NE\V NEW * * t '3BR 2"ba •-le C d I M D ype, ' 711 ' '"'I-' '
E\\'
2
&
3
BR di! nd 644-8129. Crest, pool, tenn -furn, co\01· tv, view, beaut. furn , fflll c, prlv patio, orona e ar BACflELOR Units & t BR's cluxe 1 & 2 Br. Apts, pool, 4215 Patrice 646-1231
N · a ' co o, THE Bl ff Pl 3 courtyard setting -singles modern l Br, sundeck, yrly, jacuzzi, laundry, volley ball, 14'fLolls. Frplc's, beam lrplcs. dsh/wsh, close to 645--0930
pools, tennis, rte. SZT.> & BR 11 5'fro a2tt are, Na or family $500/iho unf adults, $190/mo. 673-9169. 1 ~ blk To ocean or bay, $225 ceil., patio & pool bl11·,,,, & shopping & Bellches, aclults $300. Agl. MS-1290 , across m poo. ew ~l:IV'I/ 1 ... 7211· Agt, CONDO -Adults oriented paint, cail>· k \\'allpaper . ...,..,.,, mo urn . ..,.,.. , , BAYFRONT YEARLY mo. (2131 288--1231 -refri.': avail. $160 to Sn'>. only, no pets, $175 to S210. Oose to eve.rythlng. 3 bnn
3 BR, 2 Ba, frplc, carpets, "A jpo,..-el" at '375 per mo. BLUFFS, 3 BR, $490. Some l BR $275. Bachelor $250. 926 (Sb""v Util pd. No pets. ~Atlanta Ave. 5.1&-2647 2~ ~T"lf, ~~.c'cv~ Se hl . rttove-ln ready! 644-1133 furniture avail. E. Balboa. 673-9749. Laguna &each Tl,.. ores 393 Hamilton C.~I. -3-Blocks to haCh-~ah~· pool, $3lO. •~OJ nio. M ' liroker. 644-1150 Owner-agt. BAYFRONT BACHELOR SPECTACULAR Pr iv at~ 645-44Il LARGE 3 BR. 2 car garage. OCEAN Front upper duplex'. ~EA~Y ~1chJ!1B~ !~tb~· D OVER SHORES Uc.nc.i;.;•.;;•.:.rc.sl'-ty'-. Pc,;;•rk;.;.:_ ___ 1$160 \Vinter. Util Paid. 926 E. Bc>nch! Bachelor Bpi. avail .. TOWNHOUSE S F'OU~ SEASONS APTS. New paint, new crpts & 3 Br, 3 Ba, D e n. N~nl If co 'rfW!
847 2111
· BEAUT \Tie~· home. 4 -Balboa. 673--9749. now, nev.•ly furnished lnel. 2 Br, fireplace, pool, private pac. sly, 2 BR, l\~ BA. flrps, bit-ins, dshwshr, 2 BA ni5hwasher. disposal, trplc,
r go !1 · -Bdrnis:. " Ba. $1.100 mo. 3 Br, 2 Ba, gar, dsh/wsh, PENINSULA Point, 1 Br. color TV. Also 1 & 2 BR. patios. continental bl'eak· Bll'.1-", crpts, drps, prlv $255. No pets. 536-1711 . 2 porches, 673-5729.
3 BR, 2 BA . fluplex. ~pts. lease elect stc>ve, frpJc, no pets, rum. Util pd. Yearly. avail soon. turn or unfurn. fast. Spacious grounds, near palio, pool, conv. Joe. No Very plush 2 Bl·, J. Ba, full cozy 2 Br + den, 2 bft.
drps, fncd yd . Cls to schls. Bill Grundy Rltr 675-6161 $375 mo. Call 552.-7084 $200/mo. 673 .... Tl\9, S48-!l695. See at 32161 S. O>ast J1wy, shopping & lint> bt•uch. Fut-pets. $165. 73J Joall!l St ., a ppli, elub & pool. Adult liv-Covt'red pat\o, gar. 3 blks
$260/nio. 5.1&-2914· LARGE; luxury hoine -new Townhou.e Unfum. W Laguna. You'll bf.' pleflsc.'Ct nished or unfurnished, from C.!\1. S46-l<l50. ing. Xlnt loc. 1 ml . to beach. ocean $285/mo. ~~
3 BR , 1% Ila, fa in rn1, h·plc, earf)C't, 3 Br, 2 Ba. l..rg 1;!tR~!c~e ~ B~1 adlts, 2)-:~ ~id! I f\.I FA $250. Corona dt:I l\lar, 3 ;R686-fENBTER ST. * • ~ase. ·536-0092 or 1 -'615-00980::,=::;·'-c=~--~~I
pct ok, sn;, Mnl Venturi rnmlly room, frplc. Adults Costa Men 51t-2079' · owcr Dup ~. rn 644-2611. • 1 I a. F'rplc, lge * EASt'BLUFF' _ Cust. lux 2
Or., 546-2134. only Sol7S 642-m9 avail. heat, priv patio, ,e1ictosed patlo, garage. Newly decOr. BRAND nu 2 Br, 1 Ba, crpt,
l
· fl10NTICEU.0 TownhOuse, BAYF'RONT 1 BR. gar. Near beach, Vacant, S2'l5 month d hltt hi · sty, 2 br, 2~~ ba, frplc,
Irvine n1m. adult section, 3 Br, 2 88, $175 \Vlnter. 926 E. Balboa. 494-00lll 1..GE. 2 BR apt. Big sundeck, NELOON ROBINSON rps, n gar, WM ng patio. closed gar. Adult&
BRAND NEW 3 sty outstand d 673-9749 ..:.::.:.::=----~.-~ patio, 'attge & rel. washing RE L vuc .. 3 blks from ocean & 644-&IOO. ding b view 3 Br 3 ba. buUtln1, carpets, rapes, ,;,;~""·:,....~~-~~-$215. LOVELY new view 1 facillti~s. $250 l\lonlb A l'OR 675-8120 gol! course $185 mo. Avail
3 DR., 2 bu. $400 huge ayndeek' b•te...'...-.m 2 pool, rec fac. $240. Contact $130. 1 BR, util pd, no kids or Bdrm apt nr. beach. UUls NEW 2 BR., 2 bath ·-n-NE\V 2 BR, 2 BA studio, Oct. 1st. 536-3179. LARCE JSR, 28.A, fircpl,
a BR.~2.•L bu.-r-$400/.AOO SU • ~ ...... • Mr. Queen, 549--2133. ts 100 ft t ba 417 E pd R lbl I .-t' 1210 2 BR baJ bltins, dhswMr. Nt Hoag 2BR.'2bo, den, 11/C $275 car-gar w/elec--dr-opent Huntln.._ •--ch ~1:!1'Bilboa M11fss--. . ·-csl'C:!ns _e em~ dominium. All bltns. $100 1pm10,3 BR 2 B w/ cony BRAND nu 6 unit biding, 2 1{0$p. $250/mo. Adult s.
2
Blt.
2
baths, lo.tn rm. $350 $55(). 646-27'J5, •·--· -Bay, ' .... aau.tts, 494=4200. 3 BR, 3--ba. hon1e: all · • A. 2 patios ·sR;-1tOO!i5; ()Cean view, 642-4387
, RR
3
ba •A-
5
BR 3 bath 3 car gar
3
BR
2
BA _1 V YEARLY Lease $225. 4. Br., FURN. 1 BR apt, pref sgle. builtins, r>atlo. $450 Month ~1 ·1 All w/dbl ga r . patio & lrg ba.lt'Ony, plush " " ' · '··" •·" ·' .,...., ' ' ' • • -mo. ecy 2 Ba. Mature Adults. adult. Oose to Downtown Univf!1'"Situ ReaJty 673-6510 ... .,i d 8'l'J\ pet OK, 67$-2749, orange crpt, $220' mo. 116 3 BR. 2 Ba nl" new duplex
4 BR., 2 bath! .......... $400 del\l>le c r Pt i , ' n ear clean. Pool, rec r e at Ion * ,..,.o "732 t 85 94-v 1100 Victoria CM $280 yrly, r-efrig, dshwhr1 3 BR. 2 bn., nlr cond. $275 clubhoui;r. and pool 1860 room. ::13/430-1914. ~ $I · 4 9692· ' · 7th St., 9S2--3289, 536-3S34. s~ Balboa Bl ; no pel'a
4 BR., 2\
11
bR ....... $450/475 Port Cnrlow, N.B. $57S/1no. NeWport 8each LUX . furn ~front Bach, OCEAN bettch f:ronJ, 2 BR, 2 NEW _ Prime location .t blk 2b~R, l Ba & 3 Br l~ft Ba, NEW 2 Br apt. Crpts, drps, &14-040
BR, 11-.. be .•....•.••• S285j.!:84~:1-~2'22~:.· -----~·I~;;;;;.,;."'-'..;;.~=---$2"".JO. per mo. Prlv. beach, Ba, $3."'iO mo. 741 Ocean· to big Cl'lrona beach, 11y !)lk 1°;, ran~. dl'SlS, crpts2. 2poo21 bllns, carport. $167.50. Nr. ... .... •-
, BR
1 ""'' $300 • BD"'t
3
BA U RA NEW Slip avail. 673--2162 front, 494--46C\l, 494-1279. 9tores. Qui{'t t.•ul-d~:-sac. &.-"-c u l'm, earpo115. I Fry & shop'g, 1 child ok, no NE\V cusl. • ....._,uvut w/p , 1 ••• •" ·· · ,.. "'"' .. , execu vc B NO r College Ave., 6" 6-6 O 3 2 , ts 646-3786 54!>--0760 bch & pier, 3 br/2 be, fl"pl.
2 BR,
3
2 b..•Hh" ·.;;_;,:·· S32'1
75
view home.-Gardener ln· Leasr. ~-\th t1pUon to pur-l BDRM apt tum. f!Iature BACli npl al ~k l Ba)' araJ_~ dee3 ~R, 2 BA6.~flrpl85cl, Under new n1gment. peWA. L~ TO• a-•c'H-BBQ. $47$ yrly. 979-0631. 5 BR, . ba. N'pt ..,..,, $5 eluded. S.195 mo. Yr. lee. e:bMe' Top quail!,)'' adults only, No pet&. '$110. $155. up. $50. up .,,,, . Color panv, , garagf.', o;>o • "' ~l"I 644-4510. CALL 552~7500 Gff..0687. .-2 &. 3 Bedroom•· with util. 673--9-131 TV. 1435 N. Coast, 49-1--Z"JM. SPACIOUS 3 BR., 2 bR .. nr Brand· new 1. & 2 BR.
S
'"RP 4 °
0
3 BA 2 OCEAN beach lront ant, $350 PLUSH EXEC APT Npt. Htis. Like new, cpls, 00.....,.IS, drapes &. bt11\rtn~ 2BR. I ha. Blk. to OCf.'
VISION
•-~ _, . e Car Ga<ag"'1 Corona dol Mar '" · · drpo, bltn R&O, dl•hwshr. ·•-Y'"t?Y. $200 Month Townhouse Back Ba)o, Pool. l45Q. &. $4~-mo. Magni.Ucenl vltJW, Ph. For Lease. NE\V VlE\V APT. Nl~ &: qu irt. Mature ndlts, 221 -16th St. 847-3957 Ask for Mike
f'rplc, self clean oven, dbl NEWPORT CRES1' LUXURIOUS 1 ...... nr ocean. '197-2370 or 494..f6(11 4 Br, 3 Ba. lam nn. All t -•~2414 WALK TO BEACH JONES REALTY ~ ~t
• red h"1ll i:ar. S..U-8974-or 833-1653. PHONE 645-6141 elt<:t kllcben, "'trplc, Ulll , elect bltn!I, erpt/drps. $750 nope '" _.. ... .,........ ' 1 u•.rv.o
Sp R ING
Uo 1.!I d $225 Newport 8Mch. per mo. Too many extras to JiERE'S the? Apl for You. 2 & 2 BR. Carpt-1.1. drapes, LGE. 2 Br duplex. Nu crp
A KL new N"' Pt Duplexes Fum. 345 ~17 ~ 6'i3-t3 ' · nlentlon! ! Call 673-6992. Bt. enclosed a:ar w/ storage blti'ls. 308 16lh St. 536-8548 df"Pll, frplc, rrlce loca.Uon
REALTY REALTORS Crest 3 BR, 2~ ba. ocean '-"'--'-'--'-.;..;____ BEA H·...._ •-OCEAN V~w-4 bedroom, 2 & laundry racll1Ues. Adult1 .cor~S4~1=·395~7'°'. ~~=== $?'-Cl MO. C.11 .rtcr 6
UnlV. Park Ctl'll!M', lrvlnt w, vac. intercom_~· DELUXE FURN 3 BR, 2 trr. a.auur "'ocean w bath, only !!:lep1 to lhc NJt:. 1;1~~ :!i~ ~e!: only. No pelt. $165/ntO. * 3 BR, 2 BA -61'UDIO. 61!t-10. Barbque, $475. t~. BA, 1715/mo. WINTER. & prv. beJcony, no pets. UUI ocean. Dlshwat1oor 1 built· 640-0786. $195/MO. MA.lure family. 1700 WESTCLIFF OR.1
GREENTH.EE. Tmmnc. 2 4 BR. tam rm, frpl, brand nu 67!-5366 or 646.1040 pd . 2500 Seti.view, CdM. Ins, sh~ carpcil, 2 porehe1, ~~n!. ~~~its:OOr! ~~: SEPARATE 41: prtvate 2 BR. Avail now. 842..()350. 2 RR. t A 2..DA. Bltn. applh
bdrm., tr
1
ptc, c o u '," ',Y ~ft:Y
11
con00~1 Nl", iTo"O· SHARP 2 A 3 Bi:, 2 &. S235 SMbcL hrurn1 bac,hclor.d1wlknlyl0 lot1 of c oset apace. Parking tl44--08JO. stvc, reJtlg, crpts, drp!I. ~Pl\CIOUS a Br. $14 f', n '€!". Pool. 642-6274.
kltohl'!n, 111ag cnrp, ove y nn , ....-· • &: $265 mo. U4 E. Balboa ne , ma ure n t o • for 2 car.. Wlnler or YCM'-482 MORNlNG Canyon Rd. crpt all utll •pd, quiet •dlt. l"'flRTS. dry. ponl. r,,nt'\
I an dscn»l11g, cornn1unlty ~1658. l-8'19-6991 or 1-213-33.5--4698. nil util, S1~~ 67>0359 Iv. Cnll Erle M11ellt-r, Contl!:mporary 2 Br .. 1 Ba .. I only. Nr Westclltf Pl~a. OK. 842-3546 1r 847-7786. ~!~~Pn~ ~rpp~oeaAdu~la~lk::; ri.;t. lmn1cdlnt1• ot t·urnny. BA YJ.~RONT, rfirtv. bch lrg '-'UICK C 5 Co~ll Mesa 2l.1/724-!>8SO or TI4/G'ffi..M91 pool. $2'25. Ad11lt11, no pol~. $100. &12--0538. CLEAN. uun;1 2 Rr. nti.•rlY ....... ,.,, Yrl)'. s1-,. 613-2124. .
'
~~~o o. C'AIU~~)N ' ~~·hL~fn~.:•·3~ d~g~ex, ~11;. .,.THROUGHA AH $130--1·· Bd-rm··· ·-I ~1~"~UTa~~'1J"""1.Lk~n<~:·m, 2 DR. Open P~f. St-pt 21, 28, 29, :m. NHr~~·htJ Brhoo. ,2 n., , INpt nc\\' hltlt;. \\'tr. ga11 rd. C'l\lld * * OC"'f':AN.FRONT, new, 3
REALTOR
'":\" .~_,1 6~ u•o 2 Bl\, 2 b•. ~pie, p•tlo, no e,. s, st . s. r P e' ok, n('I Jll!IS, Sl@. M2-l6.~. BR 2 BA r I ti ·-·· °' ,....,., ' io.io"'W"O\I· , 2 B.A npt . lncldlng dlM!e!l., " crpl.s drf)8 bltintl p I rt -• • pc, cp • ... ,<oto •
UNTVEJ-tSITY Pitrk 3 n1" ii.fa n"'EL=r.U'i'XE~"'p~,",k"""'Lldo,.,..'°'CO=-udo~.1 DAILY PILOT UNtQ\1£ U! .n.1·-1 FlJftN-Hne111 m11ld se:rvlct & utll ~!IUrl. pes"c' O~o 1"'s'r9 "'oor, $2!'.lO.' Av~u NO .... r 1· it : 2 BR npt, crpts. drp!I, stovt. D\V, yrly ltc1. 6';.,..1536
Ba, tennis courli A pool . 1 3 BR, 2 bu, t'Oml), "refurbish• ITUltE .. CLOSF: TO ~\AJOll Locttl~ at Blllboa Oi\y ~ 64~722 llfl 5 pn1• rctrig. law1d. tac. $160, 1 OCEA.~FRONT • Spa~
yr. l te. $395/mo. 528-0656 or t'<. Frplc .. pool. S355 Mo. WANT AD SHOPPINC:·. Oub, phone Shirley M11lcr, ..i nil. IQ betich. 962-7:-'l-19. unwiua.lly· nice J _ '31-_a.ti t.I ~ Lem. Agrnt. 673--1300. ----------!.-C;;•::l:;.l_;B:::k:::•.:·.:6::.1:.>;;5:.IOO::_ e&l:::<-::2~~1;::.0:... ------··.:W;.:•:::•::.t :::•d:."'='"'::'::'.:·.:;".:"::04:::l-581ll= Nred & "Paa"7 Pl
1.ce nn•adl The futest draw m tne \Yest. Ye&rlY. $.l'.K)Jmo. ~. •
I
• .. ••
••
--
"
1:
,.
''
;,;,J DA.IL, PILOT * F'rlda)' Seottmbtf 28. \q73
.:::::::::::::::::::_,.::--:::~ ·------~ .
PUBLIC N01lCE -• PUllLIC NO'flC~ -1 -----~.7--PUBLIC NOTICE ------ltO'f'ICI O• I.ALI Ofl ,l•SO..AL •1CTtYK>Js •Ul lfU!tl 1<1CTITIOUI IUIO•lll ~1HtTY TO 11111w1t T •1001.• NAMI 1-r•T•MENT I MAMI •T"-''"''"',.
Motle. ,, .......,. .~ lMI ,,,. °'°"""'"" T... loll°"""" "''°"" •.• ool... TM lellOWllll --I• dolnl WtJ.N1• ,,.. ......., ot 1M c.,.,, ,..,.,,..~..,"" 1 ov1 ...... 1 ., Rr I...._
C"lllltilt Olut'lc'f will •tit ..... '"'•··1 IN&TA"IT TENN!), 141 s.,, .. 1co1111 " ~ '(, LANDSCAPE MAIHTl!lrl ... HCI! -ltd Dolf' IOt !!W ••"' WI• If !IW O"v•, \<.ll!f 201, N~l 9t•C'I (0 l'Ol1 (l .. rbrOCllC ~. ANhtl"V
111.,.11 ol4Jdtt ~ I... tollcT"''"11 .,,,.., (•l•I•>"• tb60 t Ul•IOl'fll• t')tOS ~"' •flk ll 11 ,,,. J1•-•ly OI ,,,.I Oon1~ l Hlld•ttfl, 11>) l~tll'IOIDnf AOY C O:tlHI, '°'' ()f.lo•-L•""· (H1t (9f'Plmltlflil• (olif.111' 01s.lt•cl t NI ,..,, Pl, Ai». Moll~. Nf,.i>llf'I irae,., "n•N• C•llt
-O.Cl.l<M 1u•pho11 lo"'" ""°' ol '""I t•ll'O!ttit '76'-0 . Ttto1 bullNH II t-..CIOCI ll't '" 1,.. 0.tlr~t.• r.SICAl INSTllUMENTS. J•i.-8 Ft"liltr 1\)(1 1•'1"• Avl . Oovld""'I
C-I. J Kl ). • P1ul Auovstj1141, Jr )4{I) ' M.lllll T~I• '"'H'>f"I "''' lllifd Wilfl 11'1t Cl>o.I"'
SEVf.N sou flHONES w 1r.-1 CA>E~ iSI "''"""°', 81101. t.\llt~r,.11 onKO 11:~1 c (111<'1 ,.le bl01 Wiii 1M _.,ed Ind P<Jbllrty '5tro,1, $•111• A.1111. (11llor11•1 9'llt1 II (<~.0 vi Otf~Q' (OUoty Cot .$Cp!tl't'lll<tl
r~ 1IOUd fOf'" lltllf9911t0 ltl'.°'\ ~I lll•ed .., l M·t t.v\<"I" I\ 'otl<IUCl..0 11¥ I Q•lllfAI )4, 1911
on '""' ll""ODOHd !or.., II 11:00 f rn MM ll••INOflnlp 1606-0(
lltv. October 1. 117l h1 111• Dl•l••c• P1u1 Auo11111 ... , Jr fll:IOI
Aomlnt1•r1tlon 8ullOlllQ. 1)10 .&J16!Vll rn•1 \l(ll•mffll w•• 1111(1 ... itn 11111 ,...,,.. A:O•••T M KAUFMAN, Atty. Avert~. Co.11 Mt11, C1Hlornl.a. All llidlll'f' Cl•·-QI °'""II' Coun!~ 011 StO!ltflll<tr IMMll E11I •-c•.aM A11..,u1 ..,
"'Uit 11<1 1Mllvt1rli0 !O 1111 o!llct O' !ho-1t.,. 19/J LI Mlr101, C11llon1l1 fOW Pur~tl~ A1ttnt II Ill• lbOlll IG<!•tu ... ,.,,, PuDll1nt<1 0••"11• .COii! Dally Pllol,
prl0< fo I~ llm1 WI IOI' 11\t 0p&nl11Q fo Df J>ublil•~ Ortni11 COii! o~nv P'llot S1a1emoer H , """ Oc.t_, L 12. It. ellg1~1 fCll' con1lo~r1tlaf'I. SltO•f.mll<!r JI, 1& """ OttODel 5. '1 1t7l 1999·11 Pr000$1I 1orm1 allO t o"'l)ltlt •n· ltTl ml·7l __
l!ructlon' may be D11!1lnll0 11 Intl ---------
PurC:l'll•lnv 0.111. of 11\t DU.1tlt1 •' ,,.,. --• -•
1b0v• ld<lre u. For 1iwtltlon11 1111or,...11·on PL1BLIC NOTICI'~ PUBLIC NOTICE
or l11ipecllon 1Pl)Olntm..,1, <Ill Mr. -------------Rot>trl C. ,..._, ln4) U4<J7!-4 a 731>4 Sl.&TEMENT Ofl WtTHOllAWAL flltOM
Tllll nollc:• I' In KC:Ol'O 'l'!ln \Klior ~UPE lltOll COURT Of' THE P ARTNEllSHIP OPERATING UNDER
1...01 ol !tit C1IUorf'111 [Ou(lllQl'I Cooe STATE OF CALJFOllNIA FOii FICTITIOUS I USINESS NAME
Slgftld• NORMA ... E WAf~ON THE COU NTY OF OllAHGE T ~e !ollo .. •no ~''°" tt.l• wllnor1 .. n ~I 1 gener11! ptrlr>er from tn1 plrtl\flr\ll•P S«r1t1~. 8o.1ro ol Tr111!ftt .. NI. A·'1MI ·-•~!lnq und~• !lie llctiliou1 D11tlt1eu .C~1t Comrn11<Wt¥ (elle99 Di,lrici HOTICE OF HEAllNO Of' PliTITION •11,1rn• of MA NOR CARPET & OllAPERY
()oen: Oct. I, 197:1 . 11:00 1 .m FOii l'ROI ATE OF Will ANO FOi.i'' 7145 Wt\t l oncoln, An1llelrn. C1ll!Ornl1.
Publllntcl O••"!le COiltl 01av p11cr. I.ETTER~ TESlAMENTAll:Y Tn• hC:l•lllW• bullMn.nll'l'lt st111in.ent
SIP!embtr 11, 21. lt7l 1931·1l Eit.ll<l of ERNA ICLIEWER PLACH,llor Ille Plrl..eri.hop Wll It~ (In Cle<;<lm~r
Oe<:<l•Sed ::J' 1~11 In lh<l Ccunty of Or11191 NOTICE IS t<ERE8Y GIVEN 11111 Full Nr..,e 11nd Aoore11 of tM Pef"ll«I
PUBLIC NOTICE At1CE MAYC~ Ni• thed n1re1n • 119•11• wi'~ErL"'"l KILLIAN, nw lsl•rn41rt --,,-c-c~-----lo< Prow•e of W!U ind l11r !uulf\ct ol Lin .. , El TO'o. C1lllOO"ni•
SUP'l!IUOI COU ltT Ofl THE lletlt•I Te1;f<lmtf\l•r¥ tc tne l)e!IUcne•. Signed. NE:ll E. KILLIAN ITilT£ Ofl CALIFOllNIA FOii relt•elll'.t To wntcn Is fnl<!e lcr l~rtller F·UUJ
THI! COUNTY OF O•ANGE r arHcutA••· •nO l~I the 11.m lr>el pl1tct Pullll'llle<I Or1r19f Co.t\I Dally P!tol
No. A·'1U•O I°' ,11,.,1"9 l r>t' ,,,,... h11 bttn ,.e1 IOI' se1111moer 1, i., n, )l. 191) 21'o1·7l
HOTICE Ofl" HEAl1NO OFf:TITIO,H Qclober 16. 1~1], •I 9.00 Im , '" !t>e
FOR P•O•ATli Ofl WILL ANO FOii cou•lroom cl Oea1r1menl No. l ol i.tld
LETTl!RS TllSTAMENTA• t cur1, al TOO Clvlc Cen!er 0.-lv• Wnt, In PUBLIC NOTICE
Ell.ale Ill MARIE JEANN PELOUS. trie Citv ot S~nta .&.n.a, Callfornle. l--------------
Oe-c1Mi.e!l. • • 0<11ed ~'''""'" 25. 19/l "'OTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN 11\41 V/ILL IAM E. ST JOHN.
A0'5E PELOVS ~•• lilllO t>e<"ein • 1>t!lllon CcunlY Cli:tk
lor llfOIM;ll cl Wiii <lnll for btuance cl PAUL ICENNEOY, J ll:.
Lttler' T1111me111•ry lo Petitioner 114'1 M•cA•lhur &1vo .• Sul 1e 140
r1!erenc1 tc which I• mltde lor fur1ner lrvlne. C•til, t1TQ7 •
p1r1lc11l11r1. 1n<1 1n.i 11\t Time ""d 1)1/lcf Tel: t/U) ~31-11•16
ol hlarlng lhr. fllmt n11 Ileen se! /or At1or"e~ for: Pet+llcner
October 16, 1,13, H 9.00 1 ,m .. In ·~·1 Puoli•hed 0•~•,'1(' r11~11 Oally P1!t-1.
..:01.1rlroom of Dtp•rlmenl No. 3 O! ~tid Sepf. 29'. ,...,1111 (Xt ~. ltll '."1&'1·11
court, ol 700 Civic Center Ortve We11, in
Iha City of Sanll Ana, Ctllror11l1.
0 111<1 Sep1em11« 16. 1973. PUBLIC "'OTICE
WILLIAM E. SI JOHN,
C.ou11tv (l•rll. 8 7l!JS
LOUii A.. Allllel, SUflE•IOR COURT OF THE
'"' '"
FICTITIOUS 8USINESS NAME STATEMENT
t.:)llowlf19 per.on ts dol11g bu1lnt~1
l~TERIOR DIRECTIONS, 2 0 I l V.'~<!c!ltf Or .. Sulit 10I, N~·..,p0rl Beach.
9261'0 Wiiiiam C. .. azewln~e!, :))) T~
ll!e!lo, N-d &Men, C1Ul9rnl• '16'0 T~•S 11uslne11 11 conducted bY 111 In·
:l1vloua1 ·
Wiiiiam c. Ha1twlnkt l
rn;, •1aTe ....... nl WIS llled wllll 1111! CCUPl-
t' Cl~•~ ol Or•ngf Coon1y an Septtmbet
12. 197]
,.,, WU1lllr'll •oultv1rd, STATE OF CAL.IFOR NIA l'OR 1'21121
Ln AflOlln , C11tftw1l1 tc11110 THE COUNTY OF OltANGE PYbllihftl Drangoe COIO O.lly Piia!,
Tel: 1111) >14-41« No. A·11tl7 s101. u, n,. and Oct. 5 1973 :zll6.n
A"ll'MY far: l'.tlllorltr NOTICE ,OF HEA•ING OF PETITION Pu~lit>ld Or111111 COii! Olily Piiot FOii ORDER DlllECTIN(; CON·l--------------
s.pt, 21. 21 •'1'. 0c1. 3, 1~1J m•·n VE YANC E OF REAL PROPERT Y PUBLIC NOTICE
SOLO ON CONTllAC.T 8Y OECEOENT
PUBLIC NOTICE E1tatt o! WILLIA/ ... LANCON HOR TON. --------------0<-CP<!~ I STATEMENT OF A8ANOONMENT --------,~=~------NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN 1n1t JO OF USE OF
I Tllll AN/\l HORTON. "I €YK 11tri, cl !he t~l<lle FICTITIOUS IUSINESS NAME
IUPl!•IOR COURT 01' THE o1 \'lilllam Lltl<IC<1 H<1r1qf!, GeceeS!ld, ha•1 Tne toOowi"!I ~r!.Cn Nos 111>.Jndoned the
STATe Of' CALIFO•NIA FOii: tiled lle•e<ll a ~tit!ll" fer an Ordt:• Ull ot the !iclilious t>U1lneis 111mt:
THE COUNTY OF ORANGE IU!t>Orlzlng 11'1<1 dlrec11fl9 Pet1tl<111et 10 GALLERY FRAMES, mn.c C1mlt>0
No. A·11Ut complete 1~ tPrm\ or a (<111lr1ct mJdt t>vl C111i.1rano, Sin Juan C1pl5lr1no. Call!.
NOTICE 01' Hl!AIUNG 01" PETITION C!Kl!Oe"! In h•• ti!e!lrm. end lo t){ftute tUJS
FOii PllO•ATE OF WILL ANO FOii: In<! deliuer a W1rra11111 Deed ~s •t1 ·t~rt~ Tnt f'l(1l!lo11• 8usl11ess Name relerred
LETTE•S TESTAMENTARY tll)ll" tutl per!crma11ce bv Johll M. A, lo aboue was tiled In Orange C9Vn ly on
Ellllt Cl LEWIS S. WMITMOllE, <lkl Dutgess ano Piol•iCid M. Burges~. ~usb3nG Ma•cn JO. t913.
LEWIS SELVE WHITMORE, 1ka LEW.i.S and wl!e, ~!!tell~ real pr~rty 111 the Belly Jane Allen· Solt owner, Sp.~
S. WHITMORE, J R., Ott1;111i.eo, tlt'f' ot Hilo, ~lire ol Hawaii. r<:~'"''' tc 260IXI A~tnOd" AerQPuertc, S<'n Juan
NOTICE IS HER E6V GIVEN 1~11! wlli~n ti mad' !or !ur1111r p'°'rllc11lA11, 11\d C1pl,1r1no, C11\I. t'l6T5 H"rlan Oen! Ill s !lied lltr•ln 1 petltic11 lor 1na1 111' rime am! 0111ce ol 11eatin11 1~ Tnls b11slnt11 was cooducted by In IPl-
Ptl>balt ot Wiii '"a IOI'" l11uanc1 ot Lei· 1,.rne ha' bee11 •et for October n. 19'3. 11 dlv!dual.
11•5 Tt111men11rv to "" ~tltioner, t:OO 1.m., in 1~ cour1room ol Dof0ttrl· Tnls sta!emtnl wt 1 11\HI with 1ht Ccu,..
ret,,,-enc;e lo which Is made IOI' l~r111er menl No. J o! s.tld ccurl, al 100 Civic ty Cl~rk cl Orange COUnlY on Septtml>er
~rllcultrs, Ind Iha! lh1 Ume anG pllte Center Drive '.Ve1t. 111 !lie Cil~ ol Sanll 11, 1973.
of ht1rlng lfll u me Ills bftn set tor Ana. C1tlfornla. \ 1"2fJfS
Otlobtr II. 197l. 11 9:00 11.m., In Ille Oate<I Septem~r 15, 973 Publl1hed Orange Co..isi Dallv Piie!,
tOtlrtrcom of Olpartmenl No. J or »10 WI LLIAM E, ST JOttN. S1'1!!em btr 1.a, 21 , 28, 1nd Ociober 5.
court, at 7DO Civic Center Orlue Wesr, In coun1y Clerk 1913 7155-73
the City ol Senta An1, Ctlllcrnl1. HORTON & FOOTE
011ttd Septemll<tr 24, 1913 1"° c111for11lt Feder11 P1111
WI LLIAM E. ST JOHN, WTO Wlhhlre •1vo.
Counly C11111. Les Angtlfl. canr. toCIM
CONRADO. TUOHl!Y, INC. Allom1y1 for: P'.,111ontr
By: WUll1m M. 8.&rton Pullll•he<t Orang• Coa•.t Otlly Pilol,
PUBLIC NOTICE
l'ICTITIOUS 8USINESS
NAMI! STATEMENT
tcllowl1111 ~r)On !i Oolng b~1lnns ms E111 C~P'"811 AYI., Sulit 705 S..·111. 18, 29 and Oct. ~-1?13 (998·73 the
Fulltrton, C.alll. '1lll -------- -as; MILLER llAVENS E NT ERPRISES.
Tel: (Jlf ) •7'·\D IO PUBLIC .•'OTICE """' R1nao!oh Ave11ue No. 1, Co•h AltontlY. I«: fllllll-r "' " l>ubllihld Or.&r>QI Co.tit Dally Piiot, ------------Me•a, CalltOl'nl1 9'1616
s epr. 27. 21 '"° Del. J, 19TJ 1981·73 SUPERIOR COURT OF THE ORINO P. M!LLElt, 326 E•sl 16111 STATi OF CALIFORNIA FOR Slr<lf!I, C~la Mew, C1llfcr11!1 9'1627
PUBLIC NOTICE THE COUNTY 01" o•ANGE This bUsl11e1s ls M lflg conclUClfll by •
NO. A·711t1 Mlle prQPrltlo•
NOTICE OF HEAltlNG OF PETITION Drlno P. Miiier
SLP·l.0 FOR Pll:OIATE OF Will ANO FOlt This stattrntlll lhed w1111 111<!1 Coonty
SUPl!•IO• COU•T OF THE L!OnERt TESTAMEHTARY Clerk ol Ofertge Counlv on Sept, 12, 197)
STATE Ofl CALIFOltNIA FOii Eita!e Ill MARCUS ELTON SICEEN. FUIU
THE COUNTY OF OllAHGE 11110 known as AL SKEEN, al!.O known 11 HICKEY, CAflRETl AND BIUCKNE• H•. A·7161l MARCUS E. 5KEE1'l, al•C ~nown M M.E. AllOl'nl1'1 II Law
NOTICE OF H£AlllNG 0,. P'ETITtON SKEEN, also ~llGWn a1 MARCUS SKEE,.,, A1rp0rt T-•r Ntrth
l'OR P•OIATE OF WILL ANO FOii: Ottea\td. 1•sn MacArthur 8 1¥d.
LETTIR5 TEST.f.ME.NTALY NOTICE IS HEREBV GIVEN lhll A.H. Swill •TS
Esl1t1 Ill SALVATORE It. MONACO, TRESTER l\as !ilell lle.i;eln • Pt1lric11 !er lrvln1, Cll!IQ,,.11 t1TOJ -
M.0 ., 1110 known 11 5. R. MONACO, prol>llte of wlll arid tor isiuarn:• 01 Leller1 Publlsl>e<I OrAn!le C<1111 0 1lly Piiot.
Dec111ied. Tesiam<lnlary lo Pe1i!10t1'" •~terence lo SePltmbt• 14. 21. 21. I nd October S.
NOTICE IS HERESY CIVEN lh11t whlcll 11 maat lor lurl~tr p1rtlcul1'5 • .and 1913 2820·1l
MARIE E". MONACO llil UleO ~o11rein d rh~T tht lime ~nd place or neerlno Thi ---
pelltlon fCf' ProlMlt ol Wiii I nd fat s11me 11a1 befn se! tor Ocl<>ller 16, 197J, II PUBLJC ~O'fl(E
f11u1nct <!I Lell1r1 l 11lomen1Arv lo !he t ,oo e.m., in rhe cour!toom 11/ ~o.11..i., ______ ---------
Pel!llontr. r1f""er.ct to ""hlch b made tor me11t No, 3 of will c:oorl, al 70CI Clu(cl-fufll'ler 1H1fllcul1r1, a nd 1~111 n.e lfmo end (enter Drive Wes!, In the Cl!y ol SantM Fl(T ITIOUS 8USINESS
place of 1>etrl1>Q 1111 wtme 111• bf'<'n se! Ana, Celilornla. NAME STATEMENT
lot Ocl. 16, 197l, at 9;00 t .m .. In The o1rec September 26, 1913 The following l!ef"iOO ls doing
courlrocm ~ Oe111rlmenl No, l or •aid WI LLIAM e. st JOH/\l, .111 ;
cOtlrl, 1! 71Xl Clulc C1111er Orl~t we1!, 1n Ccunly Cler~ DESIGN WISE. (:It Viilll Suer!e,
ll'ie Clly ol s1nt1 Ana, C1Utornl1. THOM.I.$ c. KING NewPl!l'I BtlC:h 92660
01 lll<I S1111. ?S. 19/l I tOldrn.n, King an:I Gree""J 8 arbollra G. HOU11hlon, (:!'J VIJii
WILLIAM E. ST J OHN, ta1 Oover Orht, Suite No. tOCI Suer1e. NeWPC»"I Beech 9~
Counly Clef"k Newp0rl ae1c11, c 1111o,,.li 91'40 This 1>u1l11e11 Is condl.l(ted by an I"'"
JAM•S L. RU9EL. .J•. T.i' {JUI ~S·7DOO d111l<1u1I. .Mn Via 01>1)r10 Allornev lor Pelltlllfter B1r1>,tr11 G. HO\l(l~lon
H"'1'1ff le«fl, c1111. nu.o Publlsht'd O•anoe c11111 Dall~ Pilot, This ~!lteme"r w11 flied WIT!\ 111r coun· 1
T.i: (11f J IJJ-411! Sep!. 11, 1! allCI Oct. J. 19T3 299/t-Tl Iv Clerk al Dr1noe Counrv on A11Q11t1 11,
AllWM\I lor1 l'ftlll-r l9Tl
Pu11U1hed Ora~ C111s1 Oaity Piiot, I F!!'" s~t. 21, :is and Oct. 3, 1913 2916-71 PUBL C NOTICE Publlihed Orat>Qt Co1s1 Dally P1IO' --------------1---------------'S~lemller 11. 21 I m! Dc!llller ~. \2,1
PUBLIC NOTJCE FICTITIOUS BUSINESS l~JJ 2918·11
NAME STAT EMENT rne 1o11pw11111 iierlllf\1 i re oo•rt11 PUBLIC NOTICE
SLP'·l27 bu~(t>eSS ""' 1---cc===~c -----· NOTICE TO Cll:EDITDRS DUANE H. HAUGEN COMPANY, FICTITIOUS BU51N ~ SUPEl:UOR COUllY OF THE llUSO Weslern A~t., St<!nlOn, C.:illfcrnla STATE 01" CAL.lf'O•NIA FOii -~·~ T"• NAME STATEMEN
T ' 'Ou.Ty .' 0 •••• , '""" ,, foUowl119 perfon Is doing bl/1 • H 1. Miio & J ovce t-111n1, 18S2 vuen~ ,.s Est~te al AN~~NA·~~WHAMN ER, JR Gr1111de, LOf\11 Beach. Calif. ( "FEE REALTY", 9151 Elling!lll"'· ·• 1. BPT1 & Judy lmboatll. 'lOHO Vp11-tlunllngton Reech. Calli. 91626
Poc1aseo. dale. L1~e·"'Cllld, Cftlll. tt•rY<lY NOberl Jac·Dbs. '852 ET NOTICE IS HEREBY CIVEN IO Ille 3, Jonn & Be1 Gro1Mhl, 42'. w. A1h, , ...... h ... m, Hu11tinoloo Bek:f', •~•II, 9~~7,
c:redltotl of lhl lbOVI namlMI OecllO~n! Fullerton (al I "" 11111 an oor11«11 111v1., cl1lm1 1oain11 rne ' ' · Tlli1 nutine11 I~ cOft<luc'r<I llv an In •. K1a1s a. Je111 Ba.leer, 2:19 So. Eo111r, or lo 1 w ld decec!enl 1r1 r~ulrlMI to Ille them, Fullt'rton. Calif, v ua H rve II: Jacob~
wllll Ille nletl!Mll'Y YOO<l1trs, In 1111 ottlc1 ·This buslNni !1 (Qn0ucled ~v I LlmlleO This 0141em~111 was 111!<1 •.vit'1 !lie cc~r ol Ille tier-o! !ht l bO•I enUllld courl or Par1m:rshl1> , To 11resenr tlltm wlll'I tlle ne-ctn1ry Mii · H 1 'Y Clerll el Or1noe Counlv on .!oen emO..r
vootl'lerf, 10 11'11 ..,;Oe<1lgntd 11 THE LAW Tiils s11r~me~~ w .. s tiled .. ;111 !ht C0<m· IT 1911
OFFICE OF 11.ALM&ACH, DIMARCO, tv Cler-ol or .. nge Couniv on 5011!1motr F·2•1<11
KNAP P AN O CHILLIN':>INOATH, 550 12, 19n . Pullll•hed O•~n9e Co.,>I Cally Pilot I
N•wpCtr! C111rer or .. Sit. ~. Newpor1 SHA'f', STIRLING & Sep!fmber 2l. JB ~nd Dc1ober 5. u.
11 ... cn, Call! .• which 11 the pl1ee oi JONES. Att~s. 1973 _ _ m 7-73 I
bu1lne11 of 1n1 uno1r1111n1d 111 All m.1n1r1 IOO so. s eich &lvd .• Suite A,
oerlal11l11Q 1c 1ne e1111a ol sala dtced~I, LI Hebra, c111t. to6ll PUBLIC NOTTCF: w11n1n lour mcntn1 11fllr 1111 llr1I pub!•t ll·
TIOl'I cl !hli r>elice. l!Jf·OC ---1 FJlllt 1 --==~~ FICTITIOUS BUSINESS I Dated Seel. •· 191l. PubllsM.i ora11qe Co•~! D~llu Pllet.
THE FIRST NATIONAL ;~p!embtr ,,, 21, 21, 1no October 5,
8ANK OF ORANGE COUNTY 1913 2ff52-1) The
HAME STAT!.AAENT
lcUowl"ll per1on !s dol~g business
E11!'(u!or of !he Wiii ai:
cl fhf 1bo11& "6"'"° r~ctde.11 PUBLIC NOTICE U.S A, tJ.AGl'lETIC SIGN$, 1181
KALM•ACH, OtMARCO, _ New1111rt 81vd C<11la Me11. 9Ut7
IC"IAPP & CHlL.LINGWOllTH A mu Arrhur s Tentl!er. 15l 8tlDOa. 81lboa
SSll NEWPO•T CENTER 011:., STE. 900 NOTICE TO CREDITORS hllnd. Callt. 92662
NEWl'ORT 9Eil.•N, CALIF, t1MO SUPEl.IOR COURT OF THE lh•I bu•lness Is collClucltd bY In !II·
T11.: (1H ) "44--4111 • STATE OF CALIFORNIA FOR diYldual
Attarn1y1 lot E•tcutor THE COUNTY OF 011:.1.NGE Artllut S. Tl'fldl<rr
Pullllille<I Drat>11e Coasl 01llV Pilol, E'ta!I ol FRANCES O. RATHBUN nl\O · Tnls 11attmenl WIS !lied wiTn lht (CUPl-
Sep1ember T. 1•. n. 28, 1~1l )116 Tl ~11c""n as FRANCES s. MOVIUS, Poce•~· Iv Cl<lr-ol Oranot Count~ c11 Septemi>et J ~ - --ed n, 1tn P UBLIC NOTICE No T1CE 1s HER EBV c.1vEN 1a F2111•
crotdllors ct rne ablllle lliml!d deced~t Pt1bli\hed Or111ge Coasl 01llY P!lo1, I
--No TicE o~TENT 10N -1n ... 1 all l'C'•ll«IS having c•a!mi ~u1ln11 lh~ Sfnlembtr le, JI, 21. dlld 0c1c11er S.
TO CREATE SEC Ull lTY t NTE R E~T •liO dtccdent are r<lQUlred lo file them, 1~73 1&1T·73 i~ec,. •1014 107 U.C.C.I wi1n 1ne ntcnsary vcucners In •ne oUlct --
NOTICI.'. 1~ ne•ell• ':•Ytn t '"" o• ine Cl<lr~ ot thf. a~ve "'1itl!d court, P UBLIC ~O"flCE
Cre<iltofi ol ACTION MART SALES. INC., Cf 'D l)resenl r11<1m W,'!h Ille nc-ce~•ar• Oeo!o• w~o~ uu1,n~>1 .-darrss " t11S 11oocner1 •c 111fl u<Ult•~•'.Jned at 1ne otllt cl----------
Ytn••lj,. Aul , Norin H~!•yy,(l<,<I, Co:.un1v ot .,1 J Franc•s ~peJm..in, !Cl~ E. Flor<'nct FICTITIOUS &USINESS
LOI An9tle\, Slt!t <>' c •'"o•nl~. lllJl ~ ,., ••. sre llJ, Oow11ey, CA 902.CD, .. hl<n II NAME STATEMENT
W{urllY lnl~·e•' 1~ ~b<Nt IQ 11e creaieo by 1ne place or l)tls!11e» of !he undersigned 111 The fcltowlng per1ori II ocino bl/1l"4!1s
OtDIOt IM qrfn'~ !y Nl"LL o a•I 1n~T!!f\ P<"rl11l11f~ to lhe es111e QI s~ld .as:
MARSHAL. SecYrlMI Party, ""i o 1 ~ d~<<l~e,,!. wl1n1n tour mDn!hs alter 111e THE HOUSE OF GERALDINE. t!l!
bv•lnen adll•t•, •I •l't "/1" Vl t M1•l""''l ltt11 u~Q!lc1tio11 cf tnts nc!lce. Lessen Cir., llun1lngto11 Beach. C'lll,
,,.,,1n1 D<tl R1y, c.w~11 ol Loi Angel••·! Oatll<I September 1e, 1913. 9;,4<!
STo!t O! (alilornon. R1thllrd H. Rotnbu~ II and Gtr1ldl11e P . HOU11hlon, and Thon:ia• I
Tbt orwulv •n ""11C1) in.a St<~rl1¥1 J•mes A. Rathbun c, HoogMan, COS. t 6J1 L"u•n Cir •.
1niettS1 ,..011 be <11_1..., .•. ·" Ot""''I. ''II r:~~tutc•\ ol tht Wiii ol lfunllngtcn Geach. C1!1f. tl6'1
ht!u•ti. lllYflflO...,, "<IU'll"'-"'· lv,nlture ,~;d d~edlnt T~lt bu1l111•1 11 conducted bv II ~@11fral •
1...i 11 .. 1111n!n~\ ol OtOllt'" ~o~ ... ~~ ~rop·1 J l'RANCIS 'SP EL.MAN pertott~hlo.
f'ty ""'"" lcc'1t'd I' IOJO E . Flare11Ct Avt .. Sit. U1 C9rrl Houghton ,,? 1111 .. Ql'I r;"''· !.6n Glll<'•tl.
1
D-111y, CA to2•0 This s1a11mtnt w11 !11111 with tht Cou11·
CA'lf(lf'ni• Altor111~ tor E•ecu1or1 ty Cltrk c! Orn1191 Coun1v on AllQUll JO, •.J•l Wt•I t"tn •''"'' W111cr.t.\ltr, P uDll•ht<! Or1f'1Qe Co.>st Cally Pilnl 1971.
talllornl' SePTllMDer 21. 211 8nd Octob@r ~. "· f'J717'
'lt1 ~ A~1nt;m Rt~lt•l''d t.naneJftl, lt/J 2912·73 l'ubllthed Otano• COl~I 01i1V F'tlot, '"''"''"' I S•plemlllr 1. u, 21, 21. 1911 111•11 i~ic ,.,, • ., 5,,.,.,,, """""'· ·~i''"'";' . PUBLIC NOT1C1': PUBLIC NOTICE W~ H~•llOr 8(11.o\t•o•ll. Cbl•I lltWI, Mo. A·7l1U-~ -----
ColllOfnloi NOTIC E TO CREOITOllS • 'J1t1
4t:i1 'R" c111r•"l'V-"1 O• •• ~·~ SUPERIOR cou •T OF THE NOTICE TO c11:1101TORS I 0·111~ C.tl IC'n • STAtt OF Cil.Lll'ORNlA FDR SUP1iR10• C:OU•T OF THE
191-1• v .... 1ur• &cu+t ll•" T·•r..·• THI! COUNTY OF ORANGE II STATE OF CALll'O•NIA FOil
C•"'C.-"·1 No A·11l1t TNE COUNTY 01' OllANGE f(,~1 s NC' ... ,. so..···''0 U•'. (d.lti>!LOLAA 1'.0ll'llN,?tc~• ... 11 1 Na.A-17411 c~~· "' .... ~ 1oOT1CE I~ t<EAE8Y GIVEN IQ I"" E•ll!ft Ill HA••Y 615HOFF. Deceesea ~t c-.::.',, ·~:ri':;, n ~:;•a., 'r•..iJ'''' et 1111 1110w• n1mt'd d"CcO<n1 NOTICE IS HE Rl!6 Y GIVEN IO 11'11 j
UM Ytni A~•-~ ') , 1.,, '""' ~II 1>1•Wll, hlY<flO c:lolm • .. 1111n•• rnf crt0lt0<t Of llM •l»Yt "''"" dtceeltlll Holl ......:t c :ir'lo<'nl1 W·~ °"'f-:IH't l'ft rt(iulted 10 hlr !l\M'l, I !l\lt 111 llfr Kl!'ll hlYlnt (l.&l!Vtt 191lntl lhll Sft;, H01h-weo8 8~•~'d Hlo/• .,~~ .,,II\ ""t ne<ttury VOll(lllll'"L In tht Oll/(•11lid Otc:tcltfll lfl <l!ltll•ttd to 1111 lhtm,
51111 ot Ca lltor..r1, ,,., 11\r\•~•lt .~'" ·~ "• •t.•• 01 ,,,. •bO~• enUllfd COii•'· or with '"' necnurv YC111C11t'•· In '"' ofll<,•
a1olht••• l nttrprhtl. A(l'I,.. ~., •"'Cl rit iiv-t lhatl\, wll.h Ille f!Kf"ltl•y o4 lht c:llrll Of !fie •bolll 11\tltltd cwrt. OT
•tlfon ~" s..~ ,.,.,..,,.t,, IP t~• un<ltrti9fl"' 1r '"" olt•Ct to pr~I Jtiem, wllfl IM ri1<1s11rv
Tht •!or-If """'u; •r t nlA(JI°"' •'' D" !"'1r •Uor....,l. MtK1nn•, fltt!lno & voucl'IVI, to !M llt!dtftlgMd ll tlle 01;~:
bl t.,_ltcl on OI 1n., tlW letl'I !Utv r 11w;fl. lllQl:I Iii T!>i'O Rotd, flll!f A, ol hlr ttlOll'llY· All~ ~bl1'9.
D" Ck'I , 1'1) II 1r00 • M al Office •o;,t J•· 1.1,.,.,. HfllL Cllllcrni• '26Sl, wlllcll lt W!hMre IOVltvard, ..... ff'IY H I I I 1 '
r\ llf'foM, ,_..., l.ttlO v111nir• 111111 .. l'lo. I0'4o j>l.at1 ti flvl)Mt,s ~ thl un0tr1!9ntd !n C•lllotl>I• 90212, wtllch b tilt DIK• al
1411 EnclllG Cillt 111 routt.,.1 Mr1•1nl"ll to l"t e1t1lt ol 11ld rruilnttt ol lht under•lllMd In •II ma!l•rt
tio' 11r "' ··-tc IM llcvrH 1t.,1r. O<l(.OJ6eo't1. "'·"" 11 twr "'°"'tit •lier IJ\f 111rt1lnlno 10 the t1t111 cl uld l'IKld:'t
111 butl-n•~n af'ICI 111111ttwt Vltl "' fltll' llUfJll(etlOll c4 '"'' l'IO'l!ct. wtlhlf\ lfltlr month• Iliff' "" 11r11 Plll>I ..
!t!il Dto!OI' '°' 1"' """ .,.,,. 11\1 *'· D•llll lieOI,...._ fl. it74, !Ion ol !hb f\OIH:e. •r·~ l•ttlltl., En!•tPfli.tt.. ,,... 'f'll'iOGt L.l•""'ll'I L J1,,... Otttd S1ptln'IW 11, un
A•• Horth tiOllV9olld c.1111 '.lt'!Ol'I Do<Of!\r L }1•1'4 ifflll Llf!l1n L.llllhlon
1-1+.-;.. ll• VtlllotO• • "'"'· ··Her1!'I !!"fl,.. I 6~!K!'.t•-· A(lm1nlslt11rh.: wlt!l•!n,.wllt
HlltW ... Cl~IOfflla L.-~un 91 1H Ml• e 1nnt•td of lh• 11slat1 ol
OATflO. lot•' "' r. I~ •"" ... ,.,........, _.........., I 1~1 1DOY• n1!'11td ll•ttd•nl.
tecu11110 l'AlllTY -..C.l(l .. NA, 1111n 1110 4 1'!16CH 1ALE.X GOL..o••RO
Ml\.&. O. iu.•.i.tt•L ltl• •1 Tert ....... \<Ill,_ A t45-t Wlltfll,.. llVO,
J•••Y ••flOLD, •so . u, .... HUit. UI" .ust lltwtr" HUit. C•llf. ft'llt
1Jttf V""W' •l••, Tt11 f1141 ... ,.... Ttlt lllJ) tJ .... 4'
S.-!l't Ult .. ,.....,.,, • .., •'~"' Attomtw fw AdmlnlUfllrlr CTA I
l!fldM. Ca lllllnll• UJU P•h"-0 °'... C-t lHl11 "'"' PU!)llthld Or.,. Coli! 0.HY Piiot,
PllUI..,,.. .,. ....... C111t 0,,4, It.,. ll'f'I""""' J , ,., '"" "' o IJ Mll1•~1N!r 21. 21, IMI Ot!Obf' ). 12, ·
.._....., ..... " lffl ~ ,l 1f'P1 1'111\ ,,,l ?t41·7J
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-
Apt. Unfurn. 365
Newport BNch
SPACIOUS nt·>A·ly dN."Dr. I
hr. 1800 \\'eli!cHff f)r . Call
612 .. ~),188,
UNFUR.~. :Z B !-: 0 It 0 0~1
1\PT. YEARJ~Y
Bier. 67H911
2 BORi\1 apt. l bath, Ill"
bench & bky. $230. 1110. yr·ly.
~ Cyprei:!. 6TJ·Zl1Zi.
...... ]~! -.... I~ J[j) ,iliii .. iiiiiiiiiii11 ... _-~I ][S]o;.;;1
Apt1.. Offi ce Rent•' 440 Person•l1 530 L:::•::•oo'--~---"-ss_s,1 _F_,u~,..."-· •• _,_u_n_fu_r_n._3_7ol;;;;;;;;;;P;;;R;;;E=s=T=1o::E;;;;;;;;;;;l--;;o;;;v;;;E;R\wiiiE;,1iiio:MHrrT-i • •GENEROUS•
Lag1Jna Beach \\'l'lnled ao ...,on1en & 50 men
OFFICES nr ll'll.SI 20 lhi, but not ovi•r
lil'tlut. furn, Ol.'C&tl. vil'!\Y, 2
BR, 2 lms, Condo. S:.l60. uvt>r
43 pref. Nr. ill-lsler Prk. . --
Dl..'i'un ,·lcw, 2 nc-.1· gorgeous
2 BR, 1 IJUth unlu111 apts.
$245 & $200.
f"ountaln Valley, Beaut!· 100 lbs, O\'l'r .... :C:•jiht lo
tul new building, &'round )lW1 ieipa!e In a wt.otKly
floor, 3,000 511uare leet, n1edicnlly 11urw.·1'ViS1~ '10 day For ivluni or nny lnlorn•n·
will divkle into smaller c r:u1h 11clght reduction 111-0· 11011 leading \" rPturn o f 8
offlee:s. 50c pe:r equare g r e fll ,..., i t h d a 11 Y gold four ltaf clover pin,
roo:, lncJude1 carpets, !!Uperylslon. Must be ublc lo ,1ppl'(U(. :J lni.·h,·11 In diameter,
drapes, &ll utllitles, Janl· pa,y for n1ed!('atlon11 &: \i•lth jcv•elcrt horsc11hoe In
tor service. Cali Mar!Jyo physlclll ex.nm. 1'11:tltc;1I Jn. <'<'nlrr ;. nlso, Jtnld locket
•REWARD•
Stovall {7J4) 832-5440. sunu~~e \\!filrom~. 646'.--IU:IJ \Wll.J' on cht1ln). np/n'Ox. the
;\11 rnc. lgc 2 HR unfum ap! u.i;k for ?.11!S5 J-0ne1 f3eh1·cen ,,·.,,, or • nk·kcl, hlflt•rlbt'<i S:..'65. Northen(I. 9 & 1 pm. .... 'M
• /'00\V AVAl LABLE • --• OMEGA CLINIC 111 ~rr'.pt. Fl.A. 1esc ere
B ·" " G I .. S1urlin, r-:orthcn<l. unfurn, deeply IJ"<'llSUl'l'<I fan1!iy nu, ... ••l'W an en ,.pr[!; $l•W. Social Clubs 535 n1rn1('fltos & the loss l.! ir· Xlnt San Clcmcn1e llr<'ll l'f'plaei'&hle, p t r.: A $ E,
2 Bit 2 BA, Sl95 Lloyt1'11 Rt•alty 494-G5l7 * INTRADAT A * PLT·:ASJ:: help lf you havl'
:: IJFt, 2 RA, 1vl1h d!>hl1T any infornuillon _ 642.3589
I & fil'l•placc, $!}(} Spa1·ious .!>1udio. crpl~. rlrps, . • QUALITY rnatche!I I:: . ,1., k ls-~\11 a1irs. "havl' private patios, I blk n1a1n bt--arh. $175. Ph • , iv/PllOTO \'(:.W.f l\t't.' en(··
mnny ~hc>r featur1 •s. S<.>t> nt ~~·~Mil( or 494-4791 • "La.l'gest in Calif,'' 1 1~~~~~~~~~~~ t:i86 Can1ino DI.• Los i\IRres. DESK SPACE adj. O.C. (Call NO\V for FREI:: ~m·
just 60\lth of San (1en1ente Newpbrt Beach Airport & Airporter lfolel. pie profil e on 1 prospt>ctivc I I ~
General Hosp. 1 --~--------1 .$60 Per n10, Full sect.'f + n1atch. 24. .b.rs.J !Mtructlon ~
Use Esirolla Off-rnn1p THE BEST phone, copy 11erv., nc11 714) 638·5920 I LA &SS~ I ~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~~!I l>tlonc 49'1-1021, 492·8700 d1•sk, l'IC. available at additl I~ Ii
NE\V 2 BH .. l ;i, B.\, OC<'<tn chu.rgf', if req. 21T1 DuPont l~l[S]
vit'W, Top aroa. 11uper de· BUY If(.. TOWN ••. No. S, Irvine. 833-3223. ' I Lost Ind found
IUXC', artulrs. S?"il'l. 492.:ns-1 . BUSIEST intersection i "l'iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~,;;;;m;
is fhe O.·aut lful fur11istied Nc1vport ![arbor. Sccondjl
Westminster sin~lr armr1n1en1ii at Oak· :.~o in Unique l·lonif'S F d (f d ) 550
\\·nod. r~111·h ap1. rnnies \\·i!h r~u · ~. 800 "fl· fL at oun ree • s
2 \VF:~l\S Fl1E1':: n,.~N1', L':Jl"f)(.'lin.it. rtrt1f)('rirs, all· S. /n10: tiOO sq. ft. nt PERSIAJN k'tt 2 3 I II . . s:•~ln>u. !loll> , .. ,.,,, .. 1.,,.,, l ('11, approx .. Adult 2 Br, podl. qnl<"I, 11· •"l·ln~· a1l11 antl•,;, pa1 10 or C7:>-f.000. ' •.. mo Blue r<1Hur ii•/\\'liit•'
SUfif•r cl~nn. bhins, l'Cfl'i;.t. b:1k~iny and Ptll'S·lhn.iu;;h s~kles _ bl:ick ,\: 11·hi1c•. 'J.
s1.11 89:µ}.119. t'flt111!1•r .. \ 1:1•0·rir huy NEWPORT BEACH solid hlaL·k JipQts Qn f1'nt 2
s•a111ne at Sl55 In Beautiful l:'X-fl . ai1'p!JL"l a rea. 1'~ult pa11'S . hlnck .ear -11h!te
Apts I N1~11·rioi·t. !Ol'rvit"('. Sui!l's Ol'C'rlooklng nosf' iv/black i:;pot -11·hite
Furn. or Unfurn. 370 ru1u1·p :;:olf 1'0urst'. 1'1ullan streak on haok, black tnil.
----------1 Plu.~ SI niiUion 111 re<"reation: n.calty, 5-10·2960, 3 .J 00 11)5 Main St.reel, Balboa Inn,
6alboa Peninsula s11·in1n1ing, biJ!iards. hcal!h Irvine, :-JB. J 1=A"p_t_ .• '°'---·------~ el~h~. saunas, tennis. golf DESK space avatlablc $50 SMALL coarse haired, hlond
dnv1.ng 1-ange, 11 .. ·u-iy _room. mo. \Vi.II provide furniture te?Tier, male. Bald rear~
tennis pro, free !cnn1s Jes. at S.'i mo. AnS'.1·e.rlng service cu1·Iy tail. Found by side ol
sons and Sunday brunch. avait"blc. 17RT:l Beach Blvd. Jamboree Road n ca r
YE,\RLY or 11·inlrr. 2 BR. 2
ba. furn. S225. 2 BR , l·bu,
uni. $22."i. 673-11591.
Costa Mesa Huntington Beach. 642-4321 Bristol, &15-7-187.
Schools &
instructions 575 -------KARATE
:'i1x•cial lt..1rc• 1'o ~·runihl-s
:\u Con1r:n.:t :m Nti. Nt•\1'11fll'I Ul\·d,
Sulh.: 5 N1'\\!lf)l1. B.··a.ch
J)a) s 5:11.;;(i.°''.l -"l·:\'j'l( &12·83.'i'i
Hrs li pr11·\0p111 i\'lon.f 1·1
fAcrn.~ fr<1n1 1!0<11.: llospitaJ/
J>fA.i"'\0 lessons in yout· hon1c.
Al l l(•vch;. JeUn•y Katn,
49<µ)409.
EX"P. Prin1ary !cacher, no'1'
student, \\'ill tutor your
child in N'atling. 833-1078.
N.Y. Compo!i<'r -Pianist -
T1·aetl('f' to open piano
~ruct19. 6Ta--2571.
•
0nf.' berlro.,•,1 & 2·bedroon1s OFf--ICE Spat'f'. Start your FNO: Pl·Husky & p I · I al.so available. furnis:herl pl' 11!1.y 1\·i1h 11 llnr bor View. Shl.'pherd !?) Dark. UIXk•r 1
unfurnisherl. !\lortt'J'> oprn Spa('(' 10 suit, no .... • available }T, \tic &n Dil'gl:I F\1y nr
rlail~· 10 to i. Sony, no p..fs ' at lht' Lido B u i I d i n g. R<>ach Bh·d. o f f r n n1 p • 1 ~~~~~~~~~~~.J ur ehtldren. lo'TS-4156. S·Mi-02.tS . I ...._ 1617 Wi::STCLIFF-NB f"ND paodlt• mi,.. GN".v S: I ~ ~ ...... " 1~
REALLY LIVE
AT 'PINECREEK
OAKWOOD 2100 1200 T.ii & 540 Sq rt ,;ilver ahout l y r old. \\I/red . . . ~ · ~ · . . · · collar f ml. Vie. Garfielrl & GARDEN An1ple parking. Util. Ba unl-Huntin..,.ton St H. Fl. :;.16-1'.""-12 l{llrrlnrr. 541·5002. I=~~"·~~--~--~
APARTMENTS
Nc\1'ptlrf BraC'h . r\orlh
D' " 2 ri· 8 d t IT All1\N Greyhound • male, .•··••· rm.o ice. est ?ea y oun g do g. Vi c
1n O.C. i\lrport rui'.'a, .112 l\.1ag,nolin/Newport A,. c . ,
DuPont No. R, 833-3223 Costa ~lesa. Plense call
Ba~ysltting
lrvinc & lGth * Corona dcl l\1ar, s m gmd &11)...3250 or· ~lm.
f o!101v the gartll'n paths 1hru &l5·1l'j;)() * F~oor, A/C, util, ample*' FND Beaut. b I u / g re y
fabulous trees, pa~1 running * p1 kg. $145 mo. 6~ * Ru.'>sian Blue-type long hn.ir
BABYSITTING -in ruy
hou~. day or night , ~oving
can', lri; fncd yrd &12-5200.
BABYSITTING, n1y home.
Xlnt cond. Loving cw.·e.
Newport Bench, 6-15--06~ s1reams & 11'atci-raHs to a Business Rent•I 445 "'/\\·hite spot or chest \fie.
hcautirul 2 BR, 2 BA apt. NcY.·port Beach • South Costa 1'fesa, 161h S 1 . , DABYSfITJNG in Ill)' ho me,
Enjoy your sau11a . play pool. 16th at Irvine BEAUTY Salon for lease, 3 646-91~,I. day!!, nights. or \\'kncl!I. X1n'r
1·clax your nct"l.'cS & I.Jody ' styling stalions_. 5 dryers, 2 FN-, •0-c,_,,--m-0--G",-,-,-m·n-11 cure. Irvine. ~-7452.
in the jaCUlZi or !<\l"in1 in I &i2·8170 shampoo U11JIS. NI c e s~ .. ~ r I blk. . VI BABYSITTING in my hon1e.
f'ilht:'I' of our 2 pool'>. Ju~! neigti.borhood loc, in E ast '"e. eiv m · . .it \In!. c f<~encc<l yurd
3 of 1hese u111·a choit.:e npts l BR. f'URN. $215. Costa l\Tesa 6-l.J..l11J or ~pr1ngdalc, Echn~cr, H.B. •556-0055 •
nrc available unfurn al S2?.0 BACl lEUlR FURN. $195. 6-10-1526 ' · 8·12-fG60. 1---...0.=-""'--=----I
per n10. or 11·1color l"OOt'din-2 BR .. UN FURN. $235. , . FE:\tALE CiX'kapoo, black,
all'l\ fu111iturc for $270 pel' 0("(.'an VIC\\', Yearly leRS:C. STOR,\GE-SllOP l260 sq fl approx 1 yr old• vie ~fesa
n10. l-ILcAn1Sod BPooR 's· Adults Only. ~V<.'t'il01~r. ~R Po~ o~~-\'en!C', C.~f. 5Wr,t8Zi aflcr 3
C1rpenter
2300 F'air\'ic .... · Rd. Cos1a ~Jcsa I AS APTS. · l rs. c · p "-1 f,.i5-2300 5515 River Ave., NB &l2-!b-W. -·-·-·---------
\VOODWORI{, ca b i n e t s ,
panclini;::, gen repairs, Dtlke
Da Durlca, 646-Ta98, 8·1&-9-19'5 CALL "2 "'r.i.11 CUTE ADOBE HOUSE. llXll f'?l..i"ND young male_ .c~t ,
TilE; BXCf!'lNG -·~ sq. rt., aclj. busy corner. for lt~t orange 9/23. V1cmr.
PALM MESA . APTS. * * i BLJ:; 10 bl'ach 3 Br 2 business or office use. C.M. ~1!'.~hl _n,~_dl.l ~ Ne ,..., Po t
C1rpel Service
1iflNlITES TO NPT. BCH. 2 • • 645-20'10/642 """"" °"ac . ;;. ~• ·" Ba, sundffk, bll·ins. shag, -oJW, ,., -•
JOllN 'S Clt.rpet & Upholstery
Ori Shampoo~ fri-e Scotch·
gard, tSoll Rl·tardantsJ.
~ascrs _ & nil color
brighle.neNI & 10 minute
bleach for whll(' carprls.
Savp your money by saving
n1e extra trirn. \VIII clean
living rin. dinin g rn1 ., &
h~ll $15. Any rm. $7.50,
tmich $10. Chu.ir $5. 15 yrs. esp. Is \1•ha1 t.'Ounts, n01
1nethod. I do 11.'0rk nlySl'lt.
Good ref. 5.11--0101.
FURN. OR Ul"'FURN. j!a.rage. ~. 111 '14th St., "CANNERY VILI..AGE"' CAT. :Slnpt.'<I, \1!11tt' on ta~,
Unbelievably la..~ apts, N.R. li7:,..0i71. Duplex for rent~ possibfc t hroa, t-. &-. ftt!._ Vi c hu,r;:e pool, J acuz-:i f'IC'Ct bJt. b us. 0 1 f ice.re s conib. \\estm1nster 894-t58a ~~~: ~:t~ti~~· i!~~· sauna Sa nta •Ana 673-4m FNO: Irish Setter. n1alc, vie
SINGLES Frnni S150 "THE Faclory" full! a 1111: i\fu rdy Park lf.B. s.l2-£.•iM
I BEOR!\I. From Slfl.'i L\1:\1.\Cl'LATE 2 br $145. shop avail. $185/mo. In utter 6 pm.
:i BEDRi\I. from S1S5 .\ir, ff'tK'C'ii pool. 1 child ok. Cannery Villnge 425 30th St., F=N~D~,~L<g~~b~l~k-d~og-n-,~22=-od"""&
Unfurn 1\JllS A::Lil 1·1,1.ii SJO -:-,·. ~·..;i nl.i ''na. SJ:-1--5177 NB. 673-9600 or 642-85211 Orange, C.!\1.
t lo S1:i LESS. •Rooms 400 BRAND nu slore~/oUices, &IZ.4~"2
t Yt1J 'rc i·icthl, th~:(i' 1:1.i.·r· $12."i. up. Elevator. 173(11 F'OUN D abandoned ver y
! un 1·1:d! 1561 /.fps:. I 1r. J100i\1S S20 \\'K 1111 wt kit $30 lkech, 1-luntina;ton Beach. ta me pigeons vie of Elden
1
1.) blks iron1 Ncwpor! 131\'•!.I wk uP a pts. Children & ""l 842-283'1 Jn Costa i\1esa, 8.13-248'.l. 546 9~ .. -seclion. 2376 Ne11•p..-•rt Blvd., 1600 sq IT INDUST. 11 h o p FND· Grey ma.le kitten Carpet Cle•ning
Floor C•re & Windows
Dutch ~1Rint , Scrv, 537·150R
Cement, Concrete
PREVIEW OPENING-C!\1. 5~8-9755, N.5-3967. SZ'15. Also 31X> sq ft office w/11.:ht collar V ic Broarl11·ay
Award \Vin ning J, t S. 3 hr FUR)';. rm Cosla Meg,"\, $95. C.i\I. 646-2130. & Santa Ana C!\1. 646-6181
apts \\'/fan1IJy 1·n1s. ::'\o En1ployl'd l_!tdy d~y 11·or k«:r , lndustri•) Rent1! 450 FND: Blk Briefcase ln the
lease. Sorry, no P"I~. 1'·rom refs. 6-'6-1919, 64=>-8 7 6:>, niiddle of \\lamer &
j ust $175. OUR TO\\'N 979-7976. 1140-4230 SQ. FT. Fairview 549-.17S8 cusro11.1 ContTC'le \York.
Fanti!)' Apts, 1250 1\da111s FUR~ l'OOITl 1\·/ or "' 'o N('W '.\l·l Remove asphalt drh·e\\)'S.
.\i·<.'. (Adanis at r·llj~,,·ie"'1• kitrh privl. \\lorking lady. 3 Ph11sc \Vi1i ng Lost SSS Replace ,...·/roncrcle 6r. It.
Cnsta i\1£>sa. Phonp a:xi·0166.
1
i\JLssiori \'iejo a1't!a. 586--2918 782 \\'. 201h. Costa '.\fesa. SlOO Reli-anl . for rt>tum of 4 No delny~'I. f l'\'C r st. \\'nlks. * CASA VtCTORJ,\ * 11fl :1". 3 <loors o(f Plae<>nlia mo old German Shorthair slabs, pnllos. No job too
J, 2 •"-' 3 BR. F'urn .t-. Unf: '.'\H21,,.Y furn. inom Pri. J . B. Saunder~ pointer puppy. Solid face, 11mall. 63.il-33:!1.
I Carpels, dl"apc~; D/~\ · T\ pa.110. BA ,v t•n11y. Emply. &12·0'212, Eves. 4562'1i7 brw & 11·hite spots, 2 90lld 1 P"°A~T"1"o"sc. -,,-.• clcks-.-,cl,ci-vo-,-.c,,,o,-,,-._I <~nt Pool, l'IC. :.i25 V1el•)~·w i>dull. O"er 40. Cd ro.1 , 4001 BIRCH, NB bN' spots on side, stubby brea k, remO\"f' & replace
. .;S:'·="='='='="='"°""'"':C='~'-"._'c'2='="'='~11 . t:i::-~~· 3liOO sq. rr. l5c Pt"T sq ft tail. Lost 5 dys ago, \'le concrete'. ;>lS.-S66.ij for est. • Bol SC 2 •·-I · Ha rbor & Bernard, C.1'1. CE 'll'NT t Si.-.-s,-.:;. 1616 Los as. . ...., ow go111f:' rare, It. nil11:. C 11 ,,A~ .,.....,.. ft 5 " .1 \\'orl\, pa t Io s,
TIME FOR
QUICK
CASH
T·HROUGHA
DAILY
PILOT
WANT AD
•
WE HONOR
Master Charge
and
BankAmerica rd
I.
THE DIRECT LINE
642-5678
rn1s. SllO. 33912 Olinda, \\'hsle, strg. llaumg11rdner a ~"'>a · rlri\'c11•ays, sldc11·a.lks, brick
O..u1a P t. Open. <192-4225. 51J-5032. LOST: White Poodle, 3yrs planters. H.cas. :tt:l-29-13.
LARGE room, priv. patio en· L100 SQ. f'T. 1\1·1 space old, 20" fall. N~me. Co-CUS'T'Qf.t Cement \V o r k ,
tr ance & ha. Employed w/fmnt office Jge rear qUettc, or Coca. Vic Crown Drives, \Val kl'l, Patios. Lie. c'c"=•l='c'~"°"':· =54~9-c36'7'127._5.10==.szi=S,.1 rloor, $180 n10. }193 Whittier, ~~~fu Prkwy. Reward• 1 =N=•=·=255A==t.~5._&l=>-=•='c"=·---I \VQ~T \:"II 21 ?-SSO Cl\1. 6.J6-50.'U days; &16--0681 · Contractor ' J · · ' ' -~. per mo. eves. LOST: Ladies '"allcl. Lrg Pool & par k. Private balh, 6~·1-t9a2. Rentals Winted .11"' reward U returned. . No """' questions asked. V 1 c .
R._•_n_t•_l_s_t_o_S_h_•_•• __ 4_3_01 COLLEGE Profcs~r seeking Fashion ls, 673-45n or
-/kl h . ·1 .. _ 64&-3928. • f··Er--lALE roommate needed roon1 w tc pr1v1 , '"'sch ..
in 2!J's, !or Jnrgc 2 Bedroom .lll'('ll; or hsc sitting ar· SILVER rruruature poodle,
apartnicnl r11.•irh same ) ran.ll'l'TTlt.•nl. Contact UC l\tale, Vic: Brookhurst. &
S125. Pool. sai~na. etc. Irvn1c, R.13-6611. EJlis,. FV, ~s medical
Co1npletcly furnished except ROOro.1 11·anll'll in Corona del attenlion. 962-8456.
GE R\VICK & SON
Bldg Contr. Addit & Remod
9:ale Lie. Bl·U4321
673·0041 549-21 70
ROOl\1 addit ions & remodel·
Ing my specialty. Lie. No
81 ·189'101 G.J. S tev e n s,· :HR-4~. 4
2nd BC'droon1. Call 5..)7-8107 i\1ar. Nf'Wpt. Beech, In !\iALAMUTE/Husky, blk & J ACK Taulane, r c P 8 Ir ,
-
ti nLrosta 1'f°C'AA ! pr:ivalr home. 6r.'l"'6517, wht. Fem. l. "Nanoo. k". Ila5' _, dd LI n 1 ~ £: ID V El d C l\1 rem ... ,, a . c D'" .w:111•~. Slf,\HE Apt. or House SUITABLJ.~ l'ipacc for piano · ,ic si c, · · !\Ty \Vay Co. 547...(l(O).
S1\VF. $$S$ sludln. Local ref's. 1'1id· Rev.•arrl. 646-2510.
llomc·Partlll'.'r, R 3 6 -11 9 4, dleton: 6Th-257l, LOST Ladtes Omega \\'alch 1.E_loc_t_r_I<_•_• _____ _
__ MS-1479 LI VTNG·professk>nlll a pt . Rc11.·ard. _ 1•
I \VA!\TF.D: Younger girl to {music studio). Middleton &1&-101:i
sliurc l11r~c apt. near beach. e 6i:r2Sn e LOST . Long hair gray niale t ~o. hani.:·tips, digs life. John \VANT to rent gar. or prklng cat, Vic. 16th St & Senta
El.ECTRJCIAN-Llcense No.
133108. Small ,lohs. malnt &
rt>pairll. 548-5203.
.)36-1408 space. \\'. Npt Sch or C.~I . Ana Ave, Cl\1 645-2933 G1rdenln9
GIRi. wanted 10 share 3 BR Ph: 8.'tl-.112"5. LOST Aprlcot male cockapoa MOW & E DGE
CLEAN UPS \ ap1 \l'/!lttme. Blk to hcach. CoroM del t-far. Re1,·nrd.
\Vnrk 644-5800 ext D'J, (S. 613-2057 or 67'".r-8074. ' • 554-0657 .
-1:'.JO). I I Any day Is the liEST DAY to EXPER. Japatl('sc Gardener.
i\IALE roomn1ate needed, ,.,.ontlt II• run an ad! Don't delay. • • Yard ~rv. Clcunups. Rella.
nu«· 2 BR houJK•, Cd!\t, con· .11 • CAl.L ..DAU.Y P:I.DT & neat. Free est. 642--4389.
A('lli'll 11.t1nosphcre, c aJJI ~;;;;;;;;~~~1-,~:::;:;;;;;;;:::::;;;:;;;;;;;;,!.;:;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;:;;;;;;;;;;~1
Sh1ve, fi7.-r2TI7. II
ffilALE OV('r 21 to share 3 Personals 530
l:ierlro11m a p:i.rt.ment 'vith SILVER 999 + fine 10.25-~
AAT"Of'. Call 646-1649 f'Ye!I. 100 oz. DA.rs for 3.5 days
\\!ANTED I straight n1ale to dclivct·y. Guard )'OW' N.V·
sh<11·e new horn(', in Laguna Ing" Against lnDatlon. Can
Beach 83.3-9627, 499-4290 for literl'tturc & dally prices.
Garages for Rent 435 =·I Silver s a I e !I .
~OT<AGE harage~ tor !lent P ROBLEM Pregnancy. Con-
1959 :\lnpfe Avi>., No. 5. tldcnt, JI y mp flt h e 11 c
co.,.ta !\lcsa. prcgnttr\t.'Y oouMel.lng. Abor-
S1NCLE Garn.J,,'C for Rent. lion & adoptions ref.
S20/l\t0. 117 E. 22nd St., APC\RE 642-4436
~la l\f<>A· 64:h1&t!i. }'1.JLLY LlCENSEO
Traderl9 Paradise
lines
times
dollars
Off' e Rent1t 440 * SPIRIT\JALtST * IC Splrttual l'l!adingJ 10 am-10 HAVE frtt It clear •crcaae 1971) llONDA 750, CU510m·
N£WPORT &ach, approx. pm. Advtee on All matters for tmall ll'Ult dee<b:, ]lit !zed for trnvelln,a, new llrts,
3-t) IQ rt a.c., well decorated 3U l't El Camino Real, San or 2hd1 ot ?? battery 6: che.ln. Trade for
office, Rent $175 mo. No Cl emente. 492-9136 492-9034 Carey Rcsltor1, lend, tra.11 blke or TT
le ase, ~. ARE you 1lnsle &: aJonf!:, 4:;. &t;-1414 or 833-0121 ' 675-0418
4 DELUXE oUlcea 18c 50! \Ya nt I\ Dato!' Want to REFRIGERATOR: New, DLX. turn. ca bin, Lllke
PLUS 400' Warehoule space get ma rrled7 Mw people mall dorm-size, trade tor Arrowhead, equity opprox,
1310 o Lognn Cosla 1.-1.Clil\ !hi• .age group. Free lnlo. AM/FM nmcr{An1p or sot $20,oo:l: <..'llll add o lhM"
644-2228 6'16-12112 Box 1148 Gard<1n Crove. )f aood speakers. See Dte:. equlUCll: 'for Orange County
PRESTIGJ.: NB location. PREGNANT? Th Ink Ing WJ> Fulkrton, •48: C.M. prop, B.13·12001Bkr.
llusl~ll!I iiultc ~1 0 11q. ft $1•!0 abol"llon1 Knt>w 1111 tho fl'ICIJI Like to trade'? 9ur Tradcr'11 MOBILE home Im. In PeJm
per mo, Yrly lse. Nc1"Jl{lrt nrsl! Ct1ll LIFE L~E -24 Paradise cqlumn ls for youl l)('scrt Crcens, loo, on IOU
l"IAtt> Ttenlly GT...-3600 hl'll. 5-11..6522. 5 lines l.'OW'tt", Ind n1~p, 00)'0(1 * Bayftonl (lfflec spl'lct' tn ALCOHOLICS Anonymous.. . ~ da,y1 $8,900. F.q, $7 ,TOO. kn" VCt')' 11 ~luire Bny _Lklo Dld1. $150 r hone M.2-1717 or write P .O. tor 5 bucu; l:(Jod o~to <r ?1 ~1090.
n10. 675-1220 Bo~Xc.!1223~,C.O~"'~ts~M!!O~M!!;. _ _.1 ___________ ............... .,-•••••
'
J
.I
•
Friday, Stptt mber 28, .i.o ' DAIL.~ PILOT 37 1-·-J~I ~( ~L:~, ... ~. ~J[Il]~iJ~! ~ .... ~~, ... ~. ~J[j]~J 1 1 ~1 ~r,,...~.,......~J[jJ]~iJ '----[ _'"""'·--·~ lITT1 l.___-_-_,J[j] [-...... -,.,-... -J[fi]lliliiiJn [ 1m~ ..... ~ ... ~J[(}J~tJ~[ ~,,-~ .. -~j[Il]~l\ 1-------.__iiiliiiiiiiiii Gorden Ing
Mr:YW & EDGE
EXPERT &
!>EPENDABLE
Call For Prompt,
FrH E1tlmat ••
53'-7117
PRO~'l:."SSIONAL gardener,
tree "'Ork, prunl n~,
sprinklers, c leanup jolH!,
la n dsc.ipl 11 g. Gco!'ge,
64fi..M93.
EX P E R J E N CE_D'-'nnd
Knowledgeable GlU'tlncl' has severs! OJ)('nlngs.
• S49-201s * r.eorge
General Service•
AU. types hon1c repal~.
Actual lime & material.
Fast Scrv. No job too 11n1.
f .. &B Jion1e R epair,
642-1403. * * RAIN Gutters Insta lled,
11uallty "'ork, reasonaWe,
Free es!Jn1ates. 008-2208.
Help W anted, M & F 710 Help Wanted, M & F 710 Holp Wanted, M & F 710 Help Wonted, MA F 710 Help W1nted. M & F 710 Help W onted, M & F 710 Help Wonted, M&F 710 Help Wonted, M 1. F 710
CIRCULATION
TRAINEE
MALE OR FEMALE
J
The Daily Pilot has an opening in the circu·
talion de~art_ment for a beginner to manage
a small du;tr1ct of boys and girls, delivering,
collecting and selling newspapers. Full time,
permanent positions with regular raises and
full fringes includjng personal use o{ com·.
pany auto. Apply in person to Mil an Leavitt,
Daily Pilot, 330 Wesi-Bay Street, Costa Mesa. .
An equal 'o pportunity employer
OOl\1ESTlC l lclp Gf!Ot'Ee ll E12 Wanled. Exp Rubuer 1£1\DED Glalilt :soop u1 Sltn-~IOOE:LS -MODELS-REA' ESTATE SALES S AL £ S ftc p r'l'M'ntatlve
Allc;11 Oy4and 1~cncy, lQG.B l\1111 l\tan, al.o Ptt1t11 P.t:u1, lA Anll nt>t'ds peoplr ror llo10DEL.." .. • AutotT.othr v.· 11 rt' ho u 11 e "E~· . .,.tG~lhi.iS~t.~. ~S~.Ai,~:,t~7~..QJS;iii~·~· ii / ~xp d1.•1Jn!(I, howe\·er, will-l\)<llelfl bly. No exp. nt<' $2.25 \\lomtn, a.ten, Chlltiri·n , JOIN',\ \\'l"N"NER' Jt,1;,lrthu!u1 '11111.i t'l'll11h. 11.!rr. • Ing to train 8n1blt00il yng pl.'r hr to 11h1.rt. CnJJ 4M-2G96 ~lOdf>I B v.·a.ntt'd ror rail unr1 \\ e hl\\C ?flt'nln~ ror 2 ll1·1>tl opening in Orllr1$ll' Co. t~-Dr's Assistant n1un. Apply 712 Yorktown, _!_ft 5 pn1. \Vl.nter r ashiollll st.~I It.~. :<i.!lt'!J;ntl·n vr "" i11.•r 1,·-.f d. S8.l1&ry. cxpf'nseic,
Bldil: 1, H.B. LJTI-.: ~ 0 0 k kl' c p 1 n g, .A ~t F.RJCAN H~.AUTI E.S IHf"n .• \\.ell c-s1ttbllll:hl'll vHll"'· bonus &: l'O bl'nt'flll. Phonl' xou~~J~dy (~~ll)I lo
1
anl5l llOSTF.$.'i, EX.PER. st.'Cl"('torinl skills. 'So ll'le ex· ~IOOl:!!LlNG ACAOl-::-.JY Spce1:ilr.:inK 111 t1ht> City ol AllC Dlstrihutlug Co .
U1 yo.' ispa. lttl n, no l\1ohilnJ( Shirt per. nc...'CCSS. }'/lill'le. $450 67~&1·12 * 3700 l\jpt l3lvU., Ir\''."" · (ll\1• O llu: n101ot 213/728-tJU for lllll'l"I'\\'
exp. nee. Apply In ptr11011 e BLUE DOLPHIN e 1110 to !ltar1. 54.G-ll-C. N.B. 1l ... s11~1hli· t: li'HJ¥11t af!!•t' iippt. 0c"0Yas1"H11,~' N"s·e. 2930 \V. :tlj5 Via Llckl, N.B. LOAN OFCR TRNE ~lOTI::L r.11\ID \\'AN'fllJ iu1.'n11,~'.,'_:,111·1~1,1r,:t>,:tJtuit_> ~ .0 ,1SA~'~t~.F.~.s~r~.A~O~~,.~,~,,,,.,.,,~.-,~ic-,~h-,,-,.·.I
·o1 " • • ,,. .._. e.. ,,mnii~:sl 1 p/llrn1'. f.lu~! be ~r·•r. '."'""""""'""""""""'"''"'"I HOUSEI<J::EJ>En to work 111 11 you lu:1ve had al lt>a!lt 1· 1~ill !ruin, apply in l.l(!:l'MlH split & full t,•of11·1·11tk111. scant!ilrf'u 979-4\2-.--
DRAPERY \\'Ork ro o n1. nttractivc oon'v. hospihll. ~ c.'l:pcr. 1v,;:i t!u;1ne<' co. Co11ta l\lesa lnn. ('allJOJI~ PECJ{,\1.\."\ : __ . ' a.
Female tabll'r!I llC'f'dl'd. No 1-~lexlblc hni for full or lhla s,1,11\111.J,1 bn11k will n-ain t.IOTI-JER'S helJ)('r, llv<i lu IOI.lay (01· an app'I, to tli;:ll·u~ SAUCE COOK-N I TES
exper nee. 1618 Obma Way, p/Ume emplo;vJ~, Xln'1 ~·ou 111 11~. hankit!g ril·ld. 1-lst·k~p!ng, l)(ilJy sitling. Y~UR F'UTUl't E ln !his orr s.11 rH tc. c yr a 11 01
c .r.I. working: conds & paid vncs. Good IJCIX"flts. ~ary to own tooJTI. color-'PV. $200 J~me-Att11. lleirctttut'Rnt. tro-D fllt"W[>OM
Employment Counselor Apply at 1445 Superior Avl', $800. Call Ed \Volf, f>.l-0-6005, 100. to sl.8 rt'.. 1ll'fs 1'C· r l•ntt·r Dt'., 1 f 11 ,. hi 0 ri
\V"I ·' lt B. Cou!.1-al Pe-rsonnl'I Agency qu<'!led. La.gun.rt. 494-87G7. Jslundl 1'\l'ii·iJOr{ 1-tt·ach. Ap-
n lrtun sales oriented per· HOUSEKEEPERS 2790 llarbor L'Jvd ~1 ' o.. I 2 °0 wn. !o.lotlvation to Jefl111 w/ ·' '0 ·• '-·' · MOTHER suin;I lute for Jily l):.l\1'11 an1 .~5 pm dnl·
h.igh cmningis. Cu ll Elly Ll\'C in or d\lt. Also day LYN-Challenging posi tion for boy!t 11 & 13 fron1 2:30 to ly. 1:;11is, 556-8505, Control Ct&· l·leanefS. $15 min. t>.tirasher ruU or p/lin1e cn111loyment. 6:30 pm 5 days 1\'k. Cnll s'°E~A17M~S~T~R~J.7;s~s~-,,-"c-,~,c7d-~by-I
tw'r Employment Agt!l'l<:)', Don1E'Stlc Agerll:y. /Bonded, OpCning for llln fllin11• & MS--5219 d1;1ys, eve 962-09;)7 i;oil nlnkl•t', )l'ar 1.,-llJl\d
3.otOO Irvine Blvd,, N,8-.-L,Jc'd, Ei:iwJ9yc,r P.11ys f'cel .r.·ll:r. Top sat & benefits. * r.fUSICii\NS Lookhl~ fur "~INCE t.tJ-JG" en1rli>;l'n1Cn!, 1»1y IH'OOl'dinK
EXP'D MTIST Opei·ator, 646-9172. P~ ..SID! 642-2410. fo1· capable man~rr. RC'f s. llit \\'rsi~·rn I~ank Hlu~ 10 ability. Cn ll 6-l.')....69J:l, 11f1
Orange Counly A I t' po r I J.!OUSEKEEPER, pvt l'OUn· npp . Call John or Bil 557-8151 ~ Unh'1·r~l•v r>a.rl;, l•·vill~ I !'\ pn1~ 5..">7-lliltl 1 7 3 ::
area, 979-4944 try cluh, \V!'d thru Sun, LVN NEED assistanl 10 pU t'ttUli. ]Jays 552·7000 N ights l\lonrov1n Unh. Y. C.j\I. i\n
EXECUTIVES varying hrs. $2 hr. Lunch Conva.JC'S('('nt Horn£' full & Ing 11gent for 11'00d ..... orking r<1ual opportun1t}'_l'm plo.Y('t'
included. For inle:n dcw, pun lin1e, l'nil 6·12-os:is ~-IFG firnl. Costa. i'ill'!lit. -•• --
700 H I W ed M&F 710 $12,000 to $75,000 M>1J6L Cull SJG-2800. Real Estate L icensing Sccrt'tary
e P ant ' Senti rcsun1e or call TODAY r.lA lDS -No c:-..-prr. nc~. Af>" NITE AUDITOR u._,, U!I '"''' half of .voor ll· Tra.inC'e
llANDYr.1AN, 1mh11 & home ' •
1'('1ialrs. Stn joM a Job W1nted, Male
speciulty, 9T9-4G.16, ~r'IG-9723'.
Home Maintenance
S.:-ALTERATIONS 642.fW26
1-IOUSEh.'EEPEll. Profcs· ply in person, The Rodc11•11y
SCRAM LETS
for conUdential NO COST · 1 lld 10 & 1 1400 s F. , t·l·n ... uig r1'C', \\'irh ow· span-jJ.O·:l.5 Coll~l' GJlAI
Body Shop Manager eKeC'utive intervle,v. stona parcn1 s, <'h N>n nn, . .. Rristol, ll~!cl or club l'X~·r. t'l'Q ii. i;cJr~h!p Si5.00 II ill puy 101· P('ri«innel Clerk
• ln1po11s. I:::xP"r & referell('es EXECUTIVE SERVICES, 8· n eldble hn, Mon·Fl'i, car Costa f.·tesn. 5:.i7-S700 ~noii·li'd~e nf NCH '1200. your schoGh14{ th r o 11 g h Di<'!aplJOne Opr
ANSWERS
t'l'l'JUirl'1I, Xln't oppor. Cull INC. nl'C. Refs. 9G.S-OS04. I-/11111('. &•c f'l'r..annC'l ~ff'r. Lun1h!f_,1u !tl'.a! E~ta1 1· !\eypunch Opr
Hauling &16-9300. ~ N ?.fain, &u1ta Ana liOUSEKEEPERS/SITIERS MACHINISTS BALBOA BAY CLUB SC·hool anrl gel you lh·rnsc<l Test Technician
Bookkeeper-Sec'y <714) 547-9625. Ornngc Co. Domestic Agcy 1221 \V. Const ll11·y., N.B. 111 ,\ntC'l'l\'H's ~'1"-'.:l1C'St buit-E!c·rrro·~lech1:1.n icul
RUBB!Slf JlauJing: '{ar<l, Knolly -llousc -GiHvky -N' I f ~-' N EXEC/~-· 1 MC...,.. 1046 N. Tustin, Org. 997--0500 NOTE! Jn,·s~. r{,•n! J·"t;•~l e. Ex!'c. Sc<'rctu1'Y
S 1.1;) hr
10 $700
S I~
I &
e1v y orn1""' C'1v[lu r l . ·~J'1,is , .,.exper. gat•agc>, 11·arl'.\0Use <..'Oil· Poplin-TIGHT Be<1'C h C o ntrn c l o r · & s t r o n g English ~lOUSEKEEPER I Compan· Ree l Estate Sa lesma n VIDEO TRAINING PBX R~eflf. ~111Jr1 i(J~ bl~anup.
1
Itehtot e The trouble 11·lth son1e folks DevcloJX'r. _F'ull \~ha r i: e backgl'Q__uT1d roq'd. we wlll ion, n1ust drive, no sn1ok· Clg•Val Company If you have a license 01, \i·ant \.\lhllr ~·11.1 111·t· 1Hud.v1nK ro.r Di•s!g1,1 E.n.c~ ... t'l'<'S, !I ru ·. u n !~ g Y 1vho drink too n1uch is !hat B 0 0 k kl'cpcr. Secretaria l pay for quaJity. 644-5771 . ing, H.B. 962-5224. p Bo!' . 1 . 1ou1· he(>r.~ >VU c·an 111·a1I ~lk1 n1.: Sci..:i~t,u>
trnsh&.dcbrls or<1lltypcs.7 t.hey rt'fuse tosit TICI IT. kill I SI lh d H EKE !fas in1media!"C O""ning in Oil(>, S('C eg lll!:ll'I UI . ··H '1 ,, r .Gal rriday claysa l'l't'Ck.F'ast.Rcliablc. s -s n inus • 1or an F EMALE. "'"arehouse gi rl, OUS EPER 3 days o •" conridcntittl intcrvk·w. Rl'rl ~.oui S<" .~ow c 'OnUtuou~r,. ··lO fi Rcamnable~ Sou th Const OH.D~IU .. Y. Priv8te duty. optional. PleaS<' se nd goo<I <lriv~ full time. 1-vk, must have car. beach Rrca. Dayshif1 Drill Carpel <197.1761 !1('ld 1rn11)1ng an:J John Lun1· ~·i 11f'1.1 r CC' ,
10 $141..:
Sti50
lll50
5-100
$000
llaulin".
67
3-0036. Exp. in Geriatrics. Nnn· resuml'.'. Sahiry history ~ permanent ·no students, * 846--0106 * Press Operator. S11iogshift · · 1 h\Pa u·Douglas Ed 1v a I'd s SC1'), broNker&P'C' PXp
.. 8111okcr, Hvc·ln. Sta. \Vug. 1-;fcn-nL'CS. P.O. ~x 120:>, non-smoke;, 5 d a )' s , J.IOUSEKEEPER w a 11 t e d TwTct Lathe Operator Sad-No1v taking app icati<u1;; \'\di'() 1)•tt!ning t"Ourses. This EWPORT
GET P!:JD OF UNSIGHTLY avail . 4·7:3tl Pj\1, $·120 111o. Ne11·port Beach, 92660. 6:.JO AM·3:30 PM, $1.75 hr. dletype Tul'rC'I LatltC Op· North Lii gunn ShC'll sapi'rb rnodel'n trai:iins;; is Personnel Agency
TilASH & DEBRIS. $12 GoOd refs. 5-IS-6885 afl 6. Bookkei:,_r Trainee sla.r!.,. lnterv, ieiv 3-5 P, r.1. ~~k~~A-•~a15c~ al'C'a, 1 day crator, Drill P~sOpcrator. 494-1317 ;11·;11!.1b!{' I'! ~ny lir.:ensl'L' cl('-833 Dover Or., N.B. L 0 A r>. C 0 LL EGE r--\ do De 373 B h ...... "" """' <J B<-nctits inciudl' paid vaC' t><URSES ~1r1n:z to 101n our g ru111ng 64"·3870
STUDF.N·r, 1:.•o .,~-: VOCAL TC'aeher. Ch or ft I F'antastir.: siart.ing ~Jary tor Vin IV signs, 7 ire pru'd 8.hse""", -~"p f,'r~ •. N • ,,..,......,"° Dlre,·\or. h!so 40 hr. oU icc sharp indiv. \\' clerical or l ~S~t~ .. ~NBoiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii INSURANCE SALES "'"" o•"" "" LV Supervisor urgan11..1tion. Du~ to our 1•X·1~~~~~"""""""""'~ SKIPLOADER & dun1p truck' s u p l' r" iSQr , consultant. lltl' hkkpn•~ CX""l'. Co. 1-vill nierlic:al ins & employ<'e bcn· 3.11, Slrong ll'<1dC'r 10 n1c"t r;.ii~:-ion \\'c ha\·C' opPn1n{;ts1;SECR~ \ , . , WO~ C t h 11 • ~ FIBERGLASS eflts plan, 4/40 ll'k. 1701 "h<<ll••••C of m<<'<ntoln1"" l!u•iuuho-u Oran<>c Ctllin•y. • "''' R':ll Co n1 h 1 11 e"
'"· OflC'f't! C', nsp A , Sen1i-rPtir<'<f, 11·ant aC'livity. !ra in. AV<"> tvpi"g & 10 kC" • .. ... ., I & I I , I · b k '
8
,.
1 0
·o • o1 Plac<>ntia, Costa l\1 c s a . 1. 1 , 1 1 . "' Colwell p t • I s;1 es 111s u!?pa T1 n1c11 .
Sfi\\'lllJ;, rca ing . ..,..... 11 R46-fl244. helpful. MANAGER No e-xp nee., earn \Vhile you Equal Oppor. Employer n1l f. i~~~ s~ln~~lrl~~i~r p.111~11~ i r_ope~ iers , nc. ;\lust IJe good 1yplst. li·lin. 6j
32 IT. 1-~URN ITURE Van for CARPEN1'1l Y, Ul')' \Vall , Jason Btst Agency learn, part time, e\'e! & c. '., 1~ic )' 1.1. ~i·i'\iniz.· ," 11p111. U§C 113J\I 1ransc1·1hl'r.
local furn ha,uli; k ~en'I r ai111ing, Clean t.'p, ~o jolJ 17·IOO Bl'oc>khu1-sl, r . VI~· Take fWI cha rge F .G. Oepl w1,.~dnd, s, full time "''hen qua li.:" MACHINIST s~llfl, 7-... ,t· 1
•
11
. st.iff posi·
01
•
111
i.:r ( nun.,v! ;\Just hav(" p1"tvious husinc<;s
hnuling. ~1~. 5.i7-2736. tm smaJI. 49'l-U7S:, ask for Suilr. 21 3 9G:i·6n 5 fol' large sailboat C'O. Salary " tK>!l S 01~· &·ncfi l.ii inclut!I.' 7 C.\LL 1'3.l·l!JJI l'Xfll'L' l)(>Pf1r:n1entnl rune·
LOCAL n1ov1n{! & hnulln~ by John. BOYS OR GIRLS haSf'l'I on cxper. Tnp fringes. Far iners Insurance Group Hardinge Sc.'1 Up & 0J)l•rntors p_aul h.ohdnys, 2 11 k \·~ca · it<'al i-:~1a11• Sul1~ tions.· ln<'lds salt"S riept 111.
'
t d l ' • ., I k n Cuasral rec. area, fish, Ed Lani * 540-1834 Cridan St'l Up & 0J>{'rnte !Inn, sick pay & group tns. H t' gt H b . Tru 1 d I kx
. \J en ....... ~(' rur ·. ,,('il.S. * i\IUSICIANS . Duo desin>s 10.1:{ yc-:n~ olr'\ for DAILY i;;;;=:~~:;:::;;ii)i;;:;;:;;: ITIU't'ad Rollers. 5"1 "P & P11rk Lido 1-lea lth Ca\'C , 466 un '" on ar our 1 111 11'11'~. s .e.p : ( ,:u· un~ .... , ~.,A !MG 6-~11
1
hunt, sail. golf. Call Coll n1l'1Hs Pt~l\e f1na11i.:1aJ uou •o1· a;, .. -or ,,........., . c ub \\'Ol'k. Call John Ol' 8111, r'ILOT p;ipcr routos in South (g!\JJ 6.18-2l57. ia.-~ _......, .4• -A Of)Cr&!c, F'lngshi p Rd., N.B. &12-8CM4. · ., " Housecle1ning 5:i1-Sl51. Santa An<.1, bet1\·cen ?.lain & ,,...,..,..,,....,..,..,..,..,., vP.tf -vF-o11 Centl!r/ess Grin<lr r N ses R Jty Co. N.E. location. '..1iallcng-._ • .,,; .... ,·,w \Vo•,c• & •·u, 1: lmn1 ... liulc o-ru·ngs ·n It & "'RN-LVN-AIDE ea ing opportuni1y, xlnt l}l>ne-Job Wanted, tem1le 702 r ...,.. · ... • "' Flddll'rs J ll Restaurant in .... .,.... 1 s · fits & 11-·orking conditions.
DON'T lake chanl.'es 1\li th -~;:;_~:;.:;.;::,,.;c.;:::;:.;:..:.;:;: .Bi...,.... Fwy. ?nd shif1-5. ·
1
"' ~ .. ~ Laguna Hills Mall now 11-7 & other shifts. Top pvt Apply SuHe 600. 500 Nc\vporl
your carpet, ct pro-NEED help at hOme? We 642·4321 hirinsi:: lO hour day, 4 day 1"01·k duty ·pay. Imml'd. pay for Expands Off·Shore Center Dr .. N.B. ~sionals dwh
1
o knoh 7 what have aides, nurse s , Lynn OlOgon WAITRESSES, COOKS, ~~k1 .. Xlnt company paid floor duty. C 0 u n.t y 1v i d c T W rr· . SECRETARY I Y are ong e p you. h o us ekprs, C'Onlpanions. Disuict Mwmlo{er ..... ·ueJts, good v.'Orh.ing con· Jntrvws. l\1on-Fri 9 -5 . \\'ll 1rcs· e 0 icc-s o~ning orexecu-~6~sE OF O.EAN Homemakers Up j o hn, Equal Op~t·tunity En1 ployer B
0
USSBOSYSS,S ditions. Lescoulie Nurses Registry, ~ioiv. Grouni_l _Ooor opportun-five office of Real Es-~7-6681. CH EF' -S1£m per mo. The H TE E Rosan Incorporated 351 Hospllal Rd., NB fl.ob tty for ar.ibi_ tolls sa lc-s pco. tale Firm T in 60
HOUSE OF CLEAN DAY ivork. ,.._n'I cleaning. Blue Beet. Ca ll bef. JO:JO & DISHWASHERS 54$-5533 by Park t:.ido BI d g l pie ..
1
,m,mediate floo r tlnie WPM h' I yhp dg 70
• DOES Ev RYTl''N
~ 642 =1 ,. u •1· A 1 · Equal Oppo1tunity Emplnver "·t2-=• 54" =·i ava1la r . JmmC'dlnte C'al'n· , s or an
E G • all kinds. Reliable trans. a.m. -w 1. u or P nnc. PP Y in -., V"' :J:J.AJ, v-;;o";)' • ings possible. \\'e havC' solid WPM. Minimum of 5
Homes. OfliC<'!f. 642·6824 a.Jl-9330 or 55&-7512. CHEMICAL ['t't'SOn. Nf'Xt to S<.·a.1-s, in· MACHINIST NURSES ' f I f h off' side mall. 1_-e e11:a.~. ron1 nc\v o __ ni_e Y, ears ice exper·
E.XPERIE NCED Ii 0 USE Jobs WJJnted, M & F 704 OPERATORS ~"NE PERSONNEL WANTED Aides & Orderlies sub·d1v1s1ons of the Ch11sll· oence. E•cellent Co WORK FULL tin1e gardener & •r\.VI E"~r f/l<.n>" <<II ·hltls C • Fol' ('XIJUfl<ling tneruJ rcfil1l'l'Y CCD\11 .~,_.. . "• s . IUlU Olll!ll.i nlt!S. b f' . ~. hr. Need House Sitter? in &lntii f {' siuings. Chl·m · maint. n1a11 HB area. C<1ll JLl'\YICES•Arc_~v--y Top co. Top pay & Top bene-P/lin1e, 9-1 pn1 & 5--9 pn1 & c,\LL BILL COi'l-ISTOCI..: en• its. Call Sally, • 6'15-6(.~.1 * arr 4:30 5.16·Z579: ' ~"C\... 1·1 In ,, 1· I XI I "· f'I P k 83'1931 I ' t Rel. nilddl(• &l,>e <..'l)upl(' avail. \srry har-k~round in school 1 s. lmL ..... en1p!oymcni. re ie. · n ., ... nc 1 s. a1· 171.JI 846·1384 & 12131 592-28 15 ~ or appo1n •
coro.tPL ETE CJ.J-;ANING 11'15 for indef. lune. Vir. or past cxf1!,'r. n('('. Cood C'O. l-' U P. N 1 T u R F: SEE OUR C'lll l\lr. S!evl'ns, Gl2·7391. Lido 1-leaUh Care, 466 REAL EST ment.
WINOO\\'S, FLOORS. RUGS c .j\t 1·11p l't'f. \\'rirc c 1assi· 1x-nf'fi1s 21:1 ,!l'l1.1.w.1 o J{ 1 v E R/\VARE11ous£. SUNDAY LISTING --lllftilAJbs'""=-1 .~·~·1""~"~'~"'~•.!'~"!:.'""''~N :!.B~. _!;6~4'-""':"':~"· -ATE l• ........................... 1
F'REE ES'l'lr>.tAlF.S 51:,...3116 lied nd #!Yl7, Daily Pilot. Cl l f.IAN l':xp. Sp..1.nish 1>(>C'ak· CALL 1'1t!Sl l llOPKINS NURSES Aidc-11-7. \Ve 1vill BROKERS SECRETARIES
L.nd.cap'
.ng P . lLO care & housekeC!ping ,·,... P••n; ".·· 1-tl"". •Jr . J,-rtRJ ll'fl lIT"''tO -. I I .0 JJox )56{) Costa l'-1C"S3 lo• 2 ,,·ko i-....:,., .... No .. ... ,,... ,,., " ~ r ... RE tru1n .1'CW .... "o.n1M'. xn.'t OR SALESMEN I &
C ·,......,.,.;.. ' ' ' "· .,. .. "'' "' v. 1\tiller,. 400 E 11 h S I I · C '' I f h h I d a . ;"':v.w. 5111 J().4pnl f.lon-r·n. Hrs. ,..., . 1 t. at rv1nej M ' :Utll'C', n1ust be expl'r . li!ne 1111 11• 1c inc u e in· Oul' expans ion pt'OJ..'1'/U\1 re· KEYPUNCH OPRS
Help Wanted, M&F 710 sl ii,:htly flcxibll'. Ca 11 GAL FRIDAY F'1tinll'. Sec PersoollC'l l\tgr, come replnccml'nt & 2 i1-·ks 11uin>s several n1ore sales I . :riS·0&-14. Empk>)'('r Pa"" f'('('. If vntl Suite 224 642·1470 Balboa Bay Club vac a.Her 1 yr. Apply 144.5 people 11':i1h at ]CllSt 1 ~ ar1 !"Vine ~ '" ,--tm '" c Superior Ave N.B. ye 1780'1 Sky Park
ACCOU?>.'TA.'\'T . Office t\1gr CLEANING woman Thurs, like ,·aricly, actlvily & un · ~ "· oast H11')'., N.B. ' real estate experience \\le NEVER A FEE AT TEMPO
Required for N.B . office or or f'ri., d C'penr'\n bl c, limited oppor.thisis tbejob MAID WANTED 2 OFFICE:. GIRLS have the best Coro~ del Tempo Temporary Help
?ttarinc EI c e t r on i c & UJOl'Qugh, reL $2.50 hr. tor yoo. Fanta.~lic future for Don Quixote i\lote\ ZIOO NEEDED Mar Joe., been he-re since/'!!"l.'~~~~~~~!!! .. /
Painting & Enginecring-€o. Exper; in sr~ sh~rp...lndi\'. w1avg tyJilng Janitori4J Nc11.'J)Ol1 Blvd .. at 6.ii.~10 Radio telephone dispatch 1949 & are a good group SECRETARIES&.
Pinarhinninn this or ttlated industry pref. & lite l'X()('I'. Sb helpful. Also HI fl.ll:lll be 25, nble tO dftvc-11.ith wtiom-;-lo-work. Meybe -OO · ,... . .. ., •• .., Plea.se SC!nd resume to Box Clerk Typist Trainee FIX' Jobs. f.1AINTENANCE Apply In Pl'rson you'd like .to joio us. No B KKEEPERS
LANDSCAPING, sprinkleNJ ..
11•a1erfn \Is & fish ponds,
Re&..<!. ratl'11, Ace La ndscape
& Sprinkler Co. Lie. No. ms-16, s.12-mo.
PROI-', \\'ailcul'er1ng shite l119 NC'\VJJOrt Beach. No cxritt. nL"ttSS. i\vg typing Jason Best Agency \Valer Distric l is now ac· YELLOW CAB CO. owncr·broker compctHion. FREE
lie. 110. '279514, insur .. nll AMBITIOUS couple wanh'fl &, \\'11!1ngness. '," 1e,11:rn \I ll! 17400 Brookhurst, F. Vly Prefer Ag• 20.25 ~,p.tin,g applicatio11s I fEo r 186 E 16th Costa Mesa BA y & BEACH FREE FREE
""""" t 714 1 SlOO 1 S!OOO s ur t. you \Vil. 1 t is fa. st Sulto :!'" 9G3 oi=, 6 Days A Wetk •• a1n enancc personne , X· • · • ~.,...s 0 paper, : 0 earn · 0 · per gt'0\11ng co. Xln 't startuir, I =::o...=•w~~--~=~~=lJ cellent .starting salary & OFFfCE 1vo1·k, inventory REAL TY 67S.3000 Li:i Reinders Agency
842-43.%. 1110. part tlmC', out of your ~"I & "O. 1~,, .. 1,.,_.. * GARDENER * 1 . "-11 •• Pl 1 1 nlrol sate· '"aly · M 1 4.121, Westerly Pia<.'<' t G:m-6123 .,.. " = " .~ hl'P Y 111 person uo:ne .... ease a.pp Y a : co ' s . .&LS. us REAL ESI'A l'I:; SAL.ES Sti'l US NB ••
PROF. palnler, honest work, iome. · Jason Best Agency Be your own 9 051 Moulton Niguel \Vater Dist., use 10 key adding mnch. &
1
c • OJ3·8190
reas. Int/ext, free est. .APT Mgr. Couple ovC'r 40 for 17400 Brookhurs!, f'. Vly l>'ull 01, p/tilne in )!Oar FAR WEST 27281 Aliso Creek Rd, like figures. F/lime. Perm. SUCCES~ CAREE~ Establlshed 1965
Rf'fs. 548-2759. 642'-391.l. 40 Units. Costa ~fesa. Call Suilc 213 96J-67i-5 own area. High inconle. Laguna Niguel Mon·FrL 8:30-5:30. Mr. N~r~si~~J~t~~ SECRETARY/For 2 girl * PAINTING &: STAINING 642-ll21. COCKTAIL \\':l.it:resscl'i, no Guarantetd Customers MANAGER TRAINEE Shaw. 642--9262. growing resale organliallon sales otfl~. computer type
INT!E.X"r, TJ-tJJ\t, ACCOUS A/J> & AIR CLERK exper nc<:. Call between 4 & No·Cash Down SERVICES Outstandin~ opportunity to OFFICE cleaning p/timc wlt.h a network of over 300 J?roducts. Major Co. want
FREE F:SI". Jln1 , 979-81R6 ~fust tyJX" 50 \vp!Tl & kTIO'lv 10 S' Phl Alon-Fri. As k for T<'r· Earn r-;"ov.', P~v Later advance JO managerlaJ post-cws. Top pay, Steady. Pre-oUlces and become a ni.ature .b;fi[l &looking) for ~?,~ 11=m:re~Stare 1-'~~f"'-~~=~'~=·~~c~~~~"'~~:.:.:'•~w~--·_""_"_· ~-4:i~untington Lan cs 534.7187 1672 Reynolds Ave ~~ in~ :~:·r ~ur c~ ~:saex,r~pt coo~: ~~s:~ 0~~beM~1~:u:~~~~~ ~;f~~~~~h:~:~:
Lir. No. l.'i3~1 . 647·2356. Astistant Bookkeeper COC GARDENER: Need slAff Senta Ana $1(00.$1500 mo. ?11'ust have 21.J/f}27--0115. a.dvertisi.ng program. Free 1.o=-=:~~;:;'""'c:---
llt-QUALITY, L0\\7 $ Subsf1mtfal Nf'Wpof't Beach t i~'TA~~i;;~~~i.tre~ill:n! gardener for lge hospital. door to door canvassing ex:-P/time Service StaUon Al· gUatanteed licensing school. SECRETARY
State Lie. No. 2SOOJ4 in,·estn1cnt fi1TI1 needs 00111• Rest, SOI E. BoJboa Blvd., also other dulies. Please Equal Oppor. Employer perience. tl'ndant. Niies & wknds. Exccllent sales training. Sh rcq'd • h"avy typing .
, .. fi.12-1701 , . . pcl'e nt indl\1dual to assist Balboa. ~allosp,.Bc,.1vC';t~ .... ~;~norH .C1o1nv. Cali l\lr. Newman 97'9-5222 1.tust be exper. Hrly wage Whlo at ~ Ch)!Oarecklicense wolhrt1n salaryF commensuralc w/ bookkec-J)('r in posting & typ-• ~...... 1 s • J h NITORS/Pensloners & J\fANAGER Trainee _ 21 + comm. Don 's G u If you. our mon )' exp. or appt, call, MK
Patios ing. Some rec~ption du!iM. OOi\JPA NION DnrvER FOR 837-8000 Social Security recipients in & over. ~ ask fur Service, 590 s. Coast Hwy, bonus program which means Products. f714 l 56-8219
Exp in t,yplnt: & w;c of lO RETIRED GENTLEl\IAN. GENERAL olfice w 0 r k, Orange Co. F.arn $100 per !\tanager. Lag Bch. SU to you! Please call Dale Fuller. '
PATIO Col''Pl'S, Spaced Lat-Prcsentnblc lady 40-5(), !iVC' ""'""1 AIR h ho I · ffi Virginia Jones 835-4811 lice. Unique \\'ell planned. key adder required. Com-in. A good light cook. Xlnt .,..,.. ... ng ' ea\'y P ne.. mo. c caning 0 ces near MATURE 1 ad y for PART time seeretary (;) hn1 • SECRE"I'ARY • Shopping Blockw&lls,relainlng walls, pl.cUoncoll<>g<'lcvelaccount· driver. Good salru-y. Send radio dispatch. o r de r your home ev enin gs . hous'l?keeping I practicaJ a day> Above average typ-REAL ESTATE Center Deve.lopme1't Com-con~te clc. Quality only. 1~ COUl'SC helpful. Non· resume 10 514 Poinsettin, ~~~!';tb\~g& ~"1:1ii!'io =ho~rl &. Cltranspo. ~ nurse, 7.3 .shift Sawyer ing & short hand skills. Call SALESMEN pany looking for secretary
Rel>. 642-1770, Ken. Sm
1
okf'I', C
1
RC'Ir1't."flces rt"· Cdf.1 or cnll 673-2938 bc't. handle delail,, 0 c ... c Y. ,· SI · At e eaCry 7640 · Guest Home. 646-6n6. 644-8150 \\rtly not 1-\'0lic in the hottes1 v.•i~ good t.Yping & SIH qu red. n 1 1\·{'('kctays he! .. -8 Pi\I 1 ~ a uson vc., ommerce H · skills. &16-8330 Plar.ter, Patch, R•piilr ID & 11 only. 642·l6ai. ' ' on Y· Rubbish Sen.Tice, 2113 ea.n. 90040. MAIDS· No exper. nee. Ap-PART time babyliitter/house· 11.reR -• untington Beach · Co o KS , De 1 'V c b b s yon Or., Costa t.Iesa. ply in person, The Rodeway keeper, 1 kindergartner. Fountain Valley. Let us SF..C. for Architectural firm. * PATCll PLASTERlNG * ASSISTAt'\'T Cook. D:ly shift. Nc wportc r ton. Bt't'nkf:l~I & GIRLS OR BOYS JUNIOR SALESMAN: Inn, 1400 S..E.--Bristol, Costa 1_Hrs. ll:30 to 3:30 5 day train you. Call PhU ?>.le· '.fYplng & S/1-l, with expm:,
All types. Free e~ti malC'i!i Prl'f('r young trainee. Guy Dinner. Both ,v/hea1-'Y C'X-Earn $20-$40 per week work· Mesa. 557-8700. 11.-eek. 54i>-215!l aft 3:30. Namee, VILI..AGE REAL in a ccts. rte. & payables.
Cnll 54()-6825 Fawkes, lnn Brookhuri;t , JX"r. In lrg refined rood 10.13 years old for DAI LY ing after school and Satu.r. ~lARINE l\I e c 11 a n i c . , .... P n rME ,·oh. ideal for ESTATE, 963-4667. Ne\VilO.rt area. CaJl Sue, F.V. 11 c II Ch r F I PILOT pa1>er routes in Soulh days 'cit ing "''v subsc~n... " 557-2"2 or 5,·7 ~·• Plumninn opera on. a e rec. · · •• ,.. pcricnced. established boat students, C'VCS & Sat. Gootl • ..., ' -•.>.>1:1. • AUTOMOTIVE 644-1700. Santa Ana, betwl't'l1 l\ilain lions for the DAILY PILOT. yard. Good pay, c 0 . \1-"0rklng conds. $1 .G5 + 2 RE, CEPTIONIST SECRETARY, P/Tlt.lf.
E · ccd 1 Od & Fair.rie1v, \Vanier & Si1n This is not a pape r route "! t I In · L.R. OTIS PLUf\IBlNG >..l)l'r1en ul>c maJi. I CUSTODI Ai\I, r o l' co n· Di--o F\\')'. and docs not include de· benefit<i, +steady emp!oy· 1 ,~0~f~CS~'.~8~3'-~·~2~195~:~o~<iii;8!14-3ii;;~l~32~.ii/D · hi ,. us Ul.l'C typ g exPl'r Remodels & Repai~. \Va.tC'r cstabli11hl'd Buick Agency. valescent hmplrnl full tin1c. ~.. ment. un Back Bay Dr., ay or, nig: ' no. exp.· nee., Call lor appl 642-578.i.
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Good hours. c
0
ni p
0
,, )' B 642--1321 liveries or collcctin~. Open-N Be ca11y, un JOb. 'V1U .tram, no --~""'-'""~·:...;;;:;:'.!.e'--heaters, disposals, urnaces, II u.rc;1, 842-:i551. Lynn Coogen ings in Costa Mesa, Fountain ewport ach, (in Newport PATTERN SHOP typing or shorthand etc, SERVICE man. 18-35 )TS.
,1-"'vn•h" M" ~3 'l/C & benefits, ple11sant ll'Orklng Dunes" 17141 "" ,.,. I · • "'· t P·'" "'' · ~. " ' Day Maintenance Man District Mru1agcr Va ll"" and South Huntington ,. .,.........,..':1. App Y m -person any e:ft or c.....:per no nee. ........ vaca ·
BIA. Complete Plu111bing ~conditions. h pply In person -o1 29 f f Nil I & d at only. Sre Tio or Bob 5 Da)s a \\'L>ck. llooni for ad· Equal Oppor1unlty Employer Beach. Apply now by calling ?llEN & \\"Omen for camper CLERK eve. at JO West Cst Jlwy., IOO, rec ni · ca ent •
Service. Lie. 772694. TERRY BUICK \'Mcem\·nr. lnquh't' at 2735 GlRL Friday, lyping re· 54.~3013. ~mbling. Experienced N.B. npply In person, You11g Si.
PLtThfBlNG RF.:PAIR Sth & \Valnut, Hwitin,gton W. Coast Iii\)'., N.B. 111t• t1uimf. Rob't Graham i\s-/;iii;Equili~ali;;;iO~p~po~<~-~E~1~n~pf~o~yeiio' .. pref. 858 \V, 18th St., Costa ~n~ ~';!Co. 1596 Newport
No job too smAll Bench lo0R=u"<t~v=""'=:;."'::••e;·,-~-~ · ~ ~11 4,.,, .,,.,,,.. l.1csa. RECEPTIONIST I """'ist<7,;i;;"';;;,· ""'' '-.;:-:-;c,--,.,.-.,-, I ~ * * 642-3123 * * oocia • ..,s. '-'" ""''7WU· Pvt I b 'J'l"
1SF.RVICE
Roi.
tilling AUTO Body me!nl n1an DELIVER).' 1.1cn for early HELP \\'Snt ec{ mall' or KITCHEN HELPER r.:~~ rca~~1f~~1· ~~so, ncedKon Cla·Yal Company peo[,1~0::~1~ . sr~t ::. & Lubrle~1'~~,0ll)t~~nd~~1
needed. Contact Dick or n .. n1. deli\•('ry of LA Times lo female, f!lst t\ocI service. ?.1alurc Indy w/cook:i e Lunch lnclude<l Fi r I N.B. hon1es. Pcm1 . p/Ume. Exper. Must be ovrr lS. ' ng x-Allan-fi.1cns Hair Design . t llal opening • dulies · ~inic & unc emp nymC'nt, :i.pply 8 Soil Preparation S.rv Don. 642-5058. C. r.t('~a. S200 per. r.Just be clean & neat. New shop in Nev.ix>rt mmc< c . . wknd \\i>rk. For 1nl clV\.lo• am • 12 ?K"nn. nt 24081 EJ ....,.., .,...,.., AVON MAKES--}X'r nw + bonus. Must Also part time day hastes.'\ Dcpendablt'. Center. Call G-!4-880() for in-Involve ma111taln1ng ~~s hone, ~ll61. Toro Rd, Rill Rash Chevron
Call "'"'"""""" bt> 18 & hnvc dependable in· opening. Apply in person. DISH SHER & tooling. Wodshop tra1n1ng · Sewing/ Alter at Ions CHRJSTMAS THE SE1\SON' sured cnr. 642--4800 Rigger RC'slaurant, 1 G WA tervlew. &. son1c clerical abll:l ty will REC E PT IP N IS T for 2 SERVICE Sia. All<'ndants.
TO BE JOLLY DELIVERY Houte In f!B, F"V, F ashion Is .. NB, a fter 2 Clean neat, dependable help. )..1n't L'O. benefits. 4./40 Southern C'lliforni~ Optical, 1 Full & 1 p/tinlc. Ute
Alteritlons-64
2
•
58
45 Earn extra n10ney fo r gifl s ck>l. Lt\ l'lnl('S to honles. p.m. Apoly In ~t'llOO You don't Ile(~ a !;°.:."l to 11<1c. 1701 Placentia, C'ob1a also to lear n d 1~pensinll:. mcch. exncr. Apply Laguna
Nent, 1'ccurnte. 20 ycnn exp. As an AVON Rcp1-e«1•nrath'l' Pl"C'~er a<l ult w/cconomv SURF & SIRLOIN "Draw Fast" 11•hen you Mesa, Equal Oppor. Employ. C311 l\.1r. Lc1\is, 830-7400. Cl\@vron, 00-I S. Const Hwy,
In your spare 1in1l!. Call; ~'&!': 2,~ h•'S (l('r morn . 3 ~n'!t,,givc up !~ shiJ?!
1
5930 \V. Coast I.fwy. plaec an ad in the Daily f'I.' m i l. RECEPTIONIST ivttkends Uiguna Beach. ~:~'r'~;~nt &Al~e:i~~~~: {WO-i041. ro :1::1() i\:\1, t lOO + per nio. LI.s t It In class1fted. Ship Newport Bl•nch ~i~~kJl~~t Ads! Call now E£ _&fil _ &!2 lo work in Marina oC!icc. SF.RVICE Stl\. AltcndantJ. l
BABYSITTER EX-""r. l bah" _M~·lm_ 711. \ to Shore Resull s! 642-5Ci78. PAYROLL CLERK Typing nttessnry 644-0126 full 12-9 f:"• 1 p/time evr1
\Vork GunrantcW. 638-2669 6 .. ~ o1 ·-~ nio. old, Must hnvc DELIVERY MAN ~IaJ1Uiuctu1'e1' of reinforced RECEPTIONIST: part timl'. ,,,. 1''knt !\:, Nt'11t. Apply
SEWING: 'Von1l•n's & Child. fl'an.<ip. 8-:i t.1 o n .}"" l' I , plastics srek11 ex.per: pa)'· ?l>fatul'\!, 1"11'1n·'thllrA, 2-9 pnl mon1s. 2500 Ncl\·port Blvd,
Clothing, Bridal, & i\ltcnd. 54H940. r ... or fu i·nltUl'e store. E xp'd. ~~ ~ IVll t•lerk to handle all tUi· 642-0098 C~t .. =~~-----
Gowns Cathy 842...f.1829 bon<luh\c, gt'IO(I <Ir Iv I n g ,., ST; ,,.R G.A:"E-.>~M ¥ SE
7
· · ' BABYSmER wanted from l'Cf;'Ord. call S4G-6m bet 10 ,1 .J:'S. . .IU ~" '-\( peels of .. payroll for m.cd RECEPTIONIST It al· ·RVICE Stg. Attendant
Tel•vi1ion R•palr 8:30 to &.~ pm, C.M. Own '& 11 J\M B CLAY Jl.PQLLAN sloicd far.:t.111y. l.IK:!udcs da;ily tel'flOOns, Call . ~li for 1)/tinie nlle!I &. \Vknd~. 1"1ust
_,..trons. 111aluro w o 111 o 11. ""c"--'.'C:.,~------1i ·111n M 1 _, M u1u. co1nputaU011 ol time & Job nppnt 54:>-8393 be rxper. 1-lourly \\'a~ +
COLOR TV Repl'.lr, exp<!rt, 642-4861 OEN1'AL n cccpt. Front desk HA~. 11 -V-Yo11r Dailt Adi¥JlyGuia• "Y" urt.11 .l:"'h. cards, ll'CE'kly routinl'~ for -' -.....: • -<'Offim. Don'!! Gulf Service,
1'C'a10nt1.ble, most In home. BABYStTrER needed for 2 &: chal~ldc, expcr. Sal -~,,,,~.It .Aecordlng lo lhe Slorr. oc~ 22Q)t@ sending T\VX lll:l.t('rial to * RENTAL AGENT* aoo s. Coast li\l'Y, Lag. Bch.
Fren eltlmate , H.B. N.B. & girl&,
6
lr:
9
yrs. From Z.Spm open. Good benefits. Call 9·27-32-4 To develop ml!ssoge for Saturday, ,c. 6.16.2.C ~.. lhe con1pute1· Cl.'1l1 t·r , Check· f°flflt g't.'01~\ng l'C'n.l l'Sltttc Sf.:RVICE St:itlon Attendant
C.M. Uert Ga 1 I e m ore , In Corona del. 1'1ar t1tea. 548-MSS. S.C.63-73 rrw~~°'rti-~ingta~ 1.77.71 ~ Ing cotnpuh::rlzed puyl'hecks eon1pilll)' 111 l.agunt1 Brt1~'h, F/tlnle da.y ahltt . Must do
968-2783. Good pQy. 675-$)76 D I~ N T AL A ss Is Ill n t , ~V~ 'c;; T1: 5 gn. 61 ~ scou10 11gnln1St Input matcrlah1, vl"r-nced!l rcntl\I agent {or l\11 111· lilt' ni<'ch. \\'Ork. Preft.r
Tile Chn lralde, al les.sl 6 mos :z Molntoin J l SciN•• 62Thon OCT. ll~ !tying 1-4 romputt'I' tah runs, crt'aslngly bully l\'ritnl ile~L llmfll{ lie. ~<1\ + comm.
BABYSl'M'ER, need occa11. expcr. Jt.B. arel\, 846-3510. 3 Ntw Jl Mimi' 01 e. Nor.1, n1aking n111.nun1 t1<Uutst1nc111i1 ~tu.!lt hn1':l' 11 a I <' s n1 :t n 11 Onn 's Gull Seivh:e, 500 s.
CERAt>.tJC TILE NE\V It tor 4 _yr ~I, \\·hen hon1e A PteoiClfOt 3.t Ard 64 h "·h1•re nt>C~")I dlstrlbut· IK'('lls<'. ('0<ist l lwv LsR: Sch s!Ck. Eil.•d6ltiff; Prefer own DE~AL Chelr A11slite.nl. sa. 3SSpd. t.~Of 1 .... <..1u!Cks ell' Vanoia lit" Lllpuna Beach. f""si•lrnt ;:-:--· · , ·
remodeJ. f'l'eC! l'51. Sm. jobs lrnn!lp. 644-3335. \\'kdayl experienced. Ne 'v p o r t 6 t.t;1-r 36 P~ 66 Mttyo ;.;:·ntin•• 11·11110 · "' -~ d Nolan--RNI Estato ;-.J..RVICT. S1a. Nttds Scholl\ welcome. 5.~243i. 536--8589 Bench. 6'16-1801 7 PolM 37 Ocn'1 • 01 ff'IAt...mlon \.VU " !l '"" .... -.--..~ 4..... ho;s II) help r lrtme. Boyd11
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BAll Y:SI'M'ER needed for 2 8CCll'f'K t ll(;,gup.1 69No.iw ro 1-ound mil 40 hr \\'k. \\HI * ~9473 * \rOO ~fill F' 1-11 s t Cf.t
Top Sol schoolliae girls. r.1onday· DENTAi. chair side nssh;· 9Wi\kri .39 In ~9 Ale train on T\VX, bul nn1st bt• --• --, ---• ' •· '
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'"' ·• • • Frlday.-U.5 p,m. 64G-8198. 1ant. 1"lnh1rc, cxp'd, X-ray ~?~k:ot. ~~ 7?~11ful t'>:Jl('r, In payroll. Uynani lc Retired F1!'ance Ofer . SF.P.VICI:: Starkin ll~lp. Full * ~U&~~IL * BAR maid-part time, exper lie. 548-£84.1. 'llOoto A20f n t~ div"l•lon or na.t'I corp· E.'>· l~'ant1._'(!~ P..'1·n:-d rorp. fl. or p/tltnc. 900 I::. Coost
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liiiiiiiiiil-iiiiiiiiiiiiiiii l nl'CeM&l"Yo Call John Ill DISHWASHER, full It part lili~CA>t(~f .. ~"l 11Mlttoka AJ Clrt\n ·n,-,lendl, ..... cellent OOncflt11. C-11 Dt-ncsl! :'(' oniti't' or L~nlrollrr. Hwy. Nuwporl Bcb . 646-99'28 time, lm&ll dinntr hoUse, l}}~ ~~ s;.c l7l41 548-ll·l4. I • good mctntlve. SEnVICE Sia. 1-'/tlme da)'1;.
BROILtR man ap..i .. in ....... Newport Beach. S t e a d y (.M.)J/J~tll 6Poltiblt A4Rtl*'f'• 76H-Eqlnll Oppoc. Employer s44-0m. ~ ?.lust ~ cxpt>r. At'l'O, 19th &
N' ,..... m1tn-olderm1.nok,6~T722. "JULYJl 17Colm 47Wrlttet1 7'1HotN POR~ Sales Trne ~•M+ Ne1-vport, C.M.
80n, befOft 3 PM. Frand• U pm .:.10.1 11 1... AI Of ''""'"' ''°'"' ..-v .......... t can n~ura.nt, 31781 ea. .'4Sf 190on't A9Wtlh 79 Md for auto shop. Con1pany n~ ~ s F. \V 1 N' G !\! t\ c 1-11 NE
miD> CaptlltlM, San JuM DIRECTOR of pro g rnm '°Moy ~Oro IO The want!! mature, exp. pcnon. WESTCLIFF OPER.\TORS, single nee-
Cltplstnno. Glrls Club of Santa Anp, n!I L~ilr 11 :21 Dor.'t ~1 Advil:• 11 YrNf OverUmc llVM.11., Ideal woi·k· Personnel Agcn~· die, O\'crloclc, top ~tes, exp
some t!Xpt:':r. wlatrl!I 8-11 ~~ ,1,ul:21 ~~tf, il ~:m l}~fYloul Ing conds. Halscs & oon1· 163~ E. EdhlJ,:l'r. S.A. only ~ Productron Pl,
BOAT CARPENTER nc-c., y o.Uthful ll·t>C ~.:;4'-17 :Z•On !t"Cot11oc:11 ll'AbMll11ttly pany btnef11s. lmmed. hlrc. ' lMD.rk II Ct•11lcr ) N.B. 6"6-00ffi'-"":;;::,·==--
PL'Cfert'<I. l\tn.Jl re!lumc PO ~-M.a5 25 Ctftoin 55 1'~rc...ntnll 8SR·oht EC!I~ .JOB ACF.NCY , ~rt2..a836 -STUDENTS ~~ r1m:,n:r~~~~'~? ~ra~:~~~~~ °';'~118:11 M~~~ Box 5252 Sltntn Ann,, . .,---' .a5 ~J.!('N" ~ie.1 r, ~riorl 315 3rd St.. Suite ;o3 , 1 RALJ-:S: Pn1·t 111111\ r;(p'd Yeur..aruund. Sa_topcnllliS fQ.r
64U933 e hnvc cxpcricncu IO do high. DISHWASHER 28~tol :ill1' lll l>•t\1•11<1 ~nl(~Bcnch 53&-1439 Aalcs\1'0n1f111,a}f<'30 h)40 Cor iu1.IC'J1 i.:lrl• 11t ().C. lnl'J
est. quo.IJty v,'()l)(lll'Orkilig. P/Ume. \\'knda. J>flrk Lido 29 1°"" 59 ~ 119 Kry1 PO\VF.ll l\111chlnc O(Jetnlor. Conlt•tnpo111r~ F' u s h I o n Rnctwny. ()l'C'I' 17, no t ic:·
HOUSE.,..SITTER PaciUc Triwl~r Corp. ftenlth Care., 4G6 1-il\s;!!l:\1P JO Oir @tJJMar ~tt;'ii~• !'!Ingle & Ooubli: ucedlc. Ex· Stot't'. ~. Cl'l Pltlt11, <.'alt prr. nC'C, $2 ht·. 3-1.2 hrs per
UCJ coU ttu vie Bal; OJM; 547~ Rd., N.B. Ci.II Mr. P.1111er, • 0ooa. ~vcnc uN~tu.1, pe r. de1tttt.I. 5'15-5859. ~tgl'. 557..00SO. 11·k. hppl.Y 11t race~·ay. l
• NewPOrt. &31-U. '""""""""""""""""""'' -'~"'-='-or.=~===---'-----= You'll find It In CtU11nect CLASSlF'IED ...... ,sn..sti11 °"5\fittl Adll ...... lt.2-.5678.
700 Jolt Wanted, Mole
l j
•
I
-I
'
• • -DAILY PILOT
llllJ '--[ _ ..... _, ... ,.__,][f [ l JI S ml ! . ' --lf§l I -][§] .:..! ---· .;;I[§];;· I I -lf§l ~( iiiiiiiiiiillfd•;;;• ~)~~· ~-~.;;]~~;I
Help Wonhld, M & ~n~. H•lp Wonted, M&F 7J0 Htlf Wonted, M & F no Aeell•ncts I02 Furniture 110 Gor.,. s... 112 G1r•r S.11 812 1 :M~l~sc~•;ll~·~-~·~·--~·~1~9Miiiii1"'iiiii'1ii10ii-iiii.,.iiiiiiiiiiiiiiliillmj
TAKING r OOl\l 1 . WAITRESS, EXPER. I rnEJGHT ?AMACE SAL£ Sile F ri/Sit/Sun CJIEST oLdn&1A't!:l'I $12. '-up, PATIO Sale~ Ladles clothes. I I • * * UP ~u Ii ~~pr~• c u ttc~~· Mil&t ~ ck:ptMable. l'.1atlll'f', Ndowl I Ho~int ,,_r e r r I e , •, Sl'OCK TO TlfE CEILING d~aen w/min'on $l5. .t. ~:C1't~elrypl~ye~~ rl~ Sea st Uphol . · Apply In pel"IOn Sw·f & aiwa•,..,n.,. ranrea, WIBETTER FURNfJ'UR.E! up.St-v.•ingmachlntt:.tlcc& Odtt ou1:111.~r::'N~v.· plant. ~:~~~ S}rk>in, ~30 \\'. c0.U1 Jlwy., :;a.=:i,.• di')'cr•.' factory Full or twin box "Pr&.is & t:!1~. ta:~. ci:n & S~ ~ee~~:~'N:> t~~~if:~~· Cash~
* FANTASTIC *
PUBLIC AUCTION TRAINEES
MACHINE
SHOP _
\lie havt' 1n1n1Miate openings
tor u-alnet."$ on our 2nd shlf1
(3·111.
"-I " \ J •··~ ~ h NB mattJ-etil both $30. Sofaa ,... ., ,,. ..... , cc-. NB •· -10 ,..._..JH.> 1 · / PP Y 31 W4N .:11.ut · · · BEACI! CITY APPLIANCE UJ. Clain $29. Bdrm. tell!, 1 kh'ldi of used usabl~•· 2560 .l'fU 6"uv ~·· · · <>Ut "'"'·
Eut ~a.In St.. Irvine. WAITERS 3623 \V. \\'arner, SA 56-0?M oomplet ""ith box~ Ii Newport Blvd., Costa Jdesa ~t"'o-'•o..,.------.r. Mo~Fri 8:~p.ni. S 8 t Only \\·ell ex~r. OE"ed apply. 2002 N. Tustin, Orange mattres!' $79. Sofa & ~ 11:30 to 5 TUes thN Sat. Jewelrv 8)5 7am-l2 noon. 61Jtture. See Penonriel t..fKJ', 99S-5656 Seat $139. King dze bdrm. lillSC. House~ld Items, :.;;.;;..:;~;J.J..------'--
TEACHER PreSchooL B•lbo• Bay Club Genera! Electrl.: Waatier JTa set $139. Dinette table & 4 furniture, sewm& mAclilne, e GENEROUS ' e
Newport Beach. E."1' nee. 12'11 W. Coast ""'Y·. N.B. Kenmore Gas Drytt , .... $65 1..ita.in $39. Sofa, chair, 3 vacuum, bai£ rtryer. lamps,
$2.25 hr. Ph: &U>-8820. * WANTED *· ~nn'lore El~_c Dryer , ..•. ~ tablOll, 2 la)®J, ~Jlit dreqer w/ mlJTOI', plm THE MAGIC N lf Z1 & bu bo Easy Gas Dryer ......... ~ Sofa and 1c.iveseat, 3 table11, more! Sat &: sun 1~. 29M RESTAURANT ostL't!ll ?'oer s Y· Guaranteed&. free delJ\1e1')' 2 lamps, $199. Special i;av. ti111bro St., Costa Mesa.
>UJJ. sturt1. Meals & blme-* ... 8672 * 8<1·8"" * . ...... ,.._..._ .. 557-6619 Is no"· Accepting Appliea· fits. Only happy people need O>"/Q"' ......, ings on houst'lws! ! ! ~· "" 1 ~~~~· ~~~~~~-
lions F'or: Cooks, cOOks help-apply. Apply in person morn-8uildlng Mater1al1 I06 Financing, BofA avai\abli<>. ?<.IAG wheels for ~taverick. 4
FRIDAY 7:30 * SEPT. 28th
Auctlonetr Own.rs
Rudy Larkin & Bob Brown
C'r'l!, dish"·lll)hers, sanitation, ifle.'ll or make appnt. -REPOSSESSION CENTER lugs complete. 9' blk leather
Applican1a mw.I ha,·e !he salad prep, host/hoslcsses, WOODY'S WHARF e Surplus . Bulldiftt 619 E. 4th SL., Santa Ana &Ola, 2 mo. old & m1U1y
lollo\\rJng: \\·aUers./l'.·ailn'5$es, bus help 231.8 \\'. N~'port Blvd., l'\B MATERIAL . lOOO'i of NE\\l Daily JO to 7 * Stmday 1.1·5 more household goods &
For return or RnY Jn-
tormaUpn leading to return
of a gold tour !ear clover
pin, approx. 2 inches In
diameter, \vith j l' "'' e I e d
hon;eshoe in center; alao,
gold locket l \VOS on chain l,
approx. the size of a nickel,
inscribed in script, FLA.
These are deeply treasured
family memen1os & the loS!I
is lrrepla.ceable. PLEASE,
PLEASE help lf you have
any lnforn\alion -612--3589
Eves. & \\'Ct!kends.
Don't Miss This Furniture & App,liance Saltl
BANKRl:IPTCY-top quality, Eastern nam_e
brand furnitur'e : Kling Cherry .bedrm set.
Cherry chest on chest, Cambndge map!~
dining room set with hutch, Maple mml·
hutch, Gigantic maple trestle table, Maple
knee hole desk, Maple coffee tables, TV,
and lots of terrific m isc, all style s, Herculon,
Kroehler. Marfex, sofas and loveseats.
STORAGE -Exqui s.it~ distress.ed I?ecan,
Eastern Basic-Witz dming set with lighted
China Cabinet, high back chairs, 2 Captain's
chairs, leather table cover, custom living
room set. lo-boy bedrm set, LOTS, t.OTS
MORE!!!!
• 1·2 Yrs machine
shop, metal shop
In high school, col-
lege or mllit1ry
strvice.
• -Must be ablt to
re•d micromtter.
& bartt'flders Apply in per--,--, ITEMS! Doon, lum ber, ply. JONG size bed & frame $35. things, Sat-Sun, 9-5. 963 Oak
11"0n -Bel\,·eCn 2 & 7 pn1 \\ANTED: ?<.loUter 5 helper, ""'OOd alum .aheelini mold· Bar stools S4 ea. Green St., 548-9802. ' ~Jon thru Sat at S. Coasi Z, 3 _o r -I days a \V~k, hou i'li Ing, ~lndows, elc. ' feather overstuffed chai r·&: GARAGE sale Sat. only 9 to
Plaza, 3333 Bristol St., flex:ible. Housekeeping, laun. BUILDERS SURPLUS ottoman $35. llatch cover 5. New Caravelle ski boat,
Costa l\tesa. /Under lhe S. ~·,."",1~!,slt4~~g·J30Refercnces U)6 So. Main St., S.~ coffee & end tables $50. 6501 Mderck, s11ds, &'a5& C8Mh,
Coast Plaza Sign, No. sid(' • ~,., ~ =· '""' Mon thru Sat lO.S Z--piece blue naugahyde sec-ape ec , apes muc
o111C\v Bullocks "''ingJ. The \VAREHOUSE l\fen & Ship-n4: 546.IQ.12 tional n1a.kes twin beds $.l5. n10tt. 1960 Wallace, APt No.
t..tagic Pan . An Equal Op. plng clerks needed for
1
7 ft. Chinese red couch $50. I, C. hf. 645-1289
por. Employer. lighting !L"ttU.re COf!!P~Y. C•meris & Upright treezer $45. 673-6466 ESTATE Antq. collectables
UNUSUAL 0 Co contact The \Vood Lighting E I 1 BOB SOFA bed corner group, dishes, silver, dolls, fruit · PP 0 r · n· Eixturo Company for ap-qu pmen walnut table, $85. \\1alnut jars. misc. Fri & Sat 9-7 · valcscent hosp. has an pointn1cnt ~2901 bdr m ~nt, lnple dresser, 7792 Ronald Rd. HB in rear. In• unusual growth oppor. in a · · ZEISS Ikon w/35mm It. -'
• Also rtad simple
blueprints.
• Mechanically
clined.
TOP quality Turquoise
Bracelels, n.ings, Pendants.
wholesale prices to the
public. 551-2509
ANTIQUE LOVERS ALERT -Many old
antique furniture pi"eces availa~le o~ re-
quest!! Including: oak chests, wtth mirror,
wardrobe with mirror, sideboards with bev-
eled mirrors, inlaid pearl, brass handles,
beveled leaded glass. 1877 Bible, Smoke box. Rate Range
$2.97-$3.5'
Depending Upon Exper.
Plus IOC Shift Bonus
, Company Paid
Benefits
Well Established
Non-Union
Company
Apply In Person
J\1on-F1i 8 i:un·4:30 pm
Saturday lnler\·iMrs •
Sept. 29th, 8 a1n·l1 noon
BERTEA
CORPORATION
18001 Von Karman
Irvine, Calif.
833-1424, IX.I .294
or 833-1425
Equal Opp. Employer
TIME FOR
DAILY PILOT
CLASSIFIED ADS
642-5678
bookkeeping position. \\TAREHOUSEMEN noexper 85mm Jen.ses, tripod. Kodak cdrner unit , 3 drawers & OffBeach Southo!Warner.
llealth care r e I a te d nee. Apply Sir Speedy Inc. Carousel slide projector. desk S90. 8' green sofa, NEfGHBORHOOD ga r 11. g e
background helpful, but not Toni 892-W. 16th St., NB. AntiqUI! cameras. 4 6 1 1 loose pillows $45. Green occ. sale-Sept 29th, 1 0-4 p n1 .
mnndatory. Top sal & \\'C.LDER ORAN'l\fENTAL Seashore. N.B. 673-9SOO. chair $25. 6 blk vinyl s\\·ivel Something of everything.
t..1UST Sacrl!ic!!, er.gagen1ent
ring and wedding band
never , \\'Orn $150. Call
bet1\•een 3-8, 847-20S<I.
benelils. Please ca 11 , IRON E.XP. LAGUNA KO\VA G. camera . ~~9 $60. 557-2155 or Come pick & save. 1140
642-2'µ0 for appt. 494--6376 .,.,,/lelepholo & 'Ai de angle Salinas Ave, Costa t..lesa ITEMS SUBJECT TO PRE-SALE
URGENTLY
NEEDED
50 TRAINEE
ASSEMBLERS
VOLT
Instant Personnel
\VHO WANTS 'fO \\!ORK? lenses. Make offer. Call HEADBOARD~ s l orage GARAGE sale Sat. 01\ly,
DRIVE A CAB! 6J3-8151. co mp<1.rt1nents, niatching r..tet. coffee tbl, la.~, ·Machinery
n;ght stand Fleiit""e rubbed d>'n•tl• sw>'ng• 1-,·· d ----~-----CHOOSE ""ut houn, work PETRI Can'"ra 35mn,·, ,.,,,0 ....., .. • • IV """ • ~~ "" \\'alnut. Cocktail table con· ba" furn 17091 Vo•Oike SEARS po\\'l'l"'lant 2 4 0 0 for yourself, be your own & manual, meter vivifilter, temporary, Pecan finish, uy ., .... ,vatts perfect f~r camper or Come Br owse Around-2075112 Newport Blvd.
boss. Men or women. Can sunshade, 4 n10:s. Xlnt cond . 493-2131. l.Ji HB. industrial use. Call '8-t2-2225 Behind Tony's Bldn. Materials be sJlghUy handicapped. 846-9.>13. ROID.'D Oak Table. Press • Nea t-Clean Appearance. _ LIKE brand IK'W, 2 daven-back chairs, carpet, silver. Miscell•neous 818 Costa Mesa * 646-8686
Vts, retired. Age 25 to 70. Furniture 810 ports, chairs, cu st o n1 ~olf clubs, ?<.1uch J\1isc & I !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!i!!!!!!!l!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~1 Supplement your income. , . furniture, pal n ting s . furniture. Sat/Sun, 4 5 3 J\1UST sacrifice 19" console I'
Drive a cab 6 hrs or more a 10 ~LUE quilted sofa, 2 Twn 64;;-3143: 2M Kings Place, Lermood Circle, Costa l\1es:a color TV SJ.25. J\ledit. sec. Miscellaneous 818 MiscellaneoUs day. Apply Jn Person, quilted bed s.pread s N.B. (Fri/Sa!.l , "WN Sal, 2968 R·" ood sofa 1250. 4 rlra1rer chest
Yellow Cab Co., 186 E. 16th w/match hanging lamps, ...,.. e. cu\\. $15. 3-8 pm . 847-2084.. S BOOKS St. Costa ~tesa. dbl pl'!lk bedsprd,_ assorted THE Bluffs, l\faplc dresser. C.1\1. Sun. 11·5. 9' green ~--~------1 DUMCAN Phyfe dining rn1 BOOKS-BOOK "'
_ • sofa piJJo,vs. 557-3530 550, 111ap!e lfutch SlOO, King sofa, $35. ODDS & Ei~DS PCX>L TABLE. lull size, cost set -A•/4 chairs $135.,Chest Bo\J\l'hl & Sold
\VOl\IAi'J over 21 yrs old to headboard S25. \\'a.Sher/dry-you Yi'on't Beileve! ! $250, sell $100. Includes 11.ll dra"'"rs \\'/n1irror $20.; lUOO's Use1t hardbncks/ma!U>
Bil MASTERS AUCTION
Ill ----------
"'Ol'k lunch-shift only. 2 FOAJ\I matl.resses $10 ea. er $150, xln1 cond. 400 Vista accessories. Xlnl cond. 945 rocking chair, bed franics, * Sl'\acial Feature * Temporary Serv1.ce M Fri 11 3 Pi Twn sz mattress &. sprngs JOO 4 l BIR C 1-1 \\' 0 0 D. v· . S C l\f -18-4903 & . 96--7611 r-:i&MI Campus Dr, Suite 106 on-, -pnt. n85 $15 Kng sz mattress & Quinta. NB 6-H-0398. l\feoredith Gantens Fri. & 1ctor1a t., .•. ;)' . lan1ps . misc. 4 . PAPl--:RBAO\.S
Ne,vport Beach 54!H74l Burger Restaurant, 1 sprligs .$30 675-ll23 T\VIN beds $125. 8' Gold Sat. Sept. 28-29. Furn, toys, J\fEl\IBERSHlP; New p ort TENT "\\lt'1lZ£"l.. :b."9, Ne v.· Sell 1.~ pti<."l'
Equal Oppor. Employer Brookhurst, F. Valley. PLE .bl 4 h '-· & uelv. l!Ofa Slj(). {orig."1785.),1 ·•='='~o~l~m=;='=c·'-~---~ Beach Tennis Club. CaJI Lavatory 1v /auc1~1s, 3 Trade 2 for1
-WAITRESSES
FIDDLERS Ill
RESTAURANT
Now lliring \VailresSes
Days & Niles
WOl\tAN to clean office, MA ta e, ... c a .. ~ 5' gold dee. chest $75., ::c 494--0309. fishing tackle & rt't'ls, Afco TllC Book Treasury
store & apt. 3 Days, approx. lazy susan. $7:>. Tho~as EU1an Allen din nn table & OLDIES but goodies, several 2 Nornian R 0 ck we J l Cfl.n1t>ra ~& slo.nd 5:17-%.10 !Ki7 \V. 17th SI., C?<.I 548-4085
15 h-~· wk. $2.1S pe• h•. commod_ e S45. Dryer, hke h . Sll5 841 ..,.._ hanging lamps, lols of ..,,on N-·~rt Bh•d Cl\I. iiusi~ha; car. 642-l7S3: ~k new S!O. 641'.r8823. c airs, :i. -=""'· n1isc ., Sat 9-6. 2"73 Fairway Lilhogrl'l.phs, u n I r 11. med -~,---··-~~--,--~-i HOBART scales & Door tor St.eve. WALNUT 11 n i 5 h crib SPANISl-1-Mcd. King BR set. Or., Otf .. 548-1862. Artist Proof. Jerry 557-.1915 Ju.NESS forces AAle. Ne"' scales. Electra food pro· 1.-:0=-=='--~~_,-·-,-1 Trp. dresser. dbl 1nin'. 2 . . 1 h KNITTING machine Swiss o 100 an1p stef'C'O $350. 15 cu. cessor, rolling pie table,
\\'01.fEN interested in in-w/Kantwel matt~ S 2 5 · commodt>s, hdbd &: bed. no-\VHITE dmtng M!t & iutc .. r..tatic, double bed, Sl25. call ft. freezer Sl5 dol'o'Tl, .& lo commercial 4 dra, ... -er pl.u.a
terior decor & sa le s. C~~e-atS3 b1644ue, "'AS:· baby mill' top. Ex. cond, $295. ml.sc. turn, odds & e~, aft 3pm 962--8574 P11.Yn1ents. Pvt. ply. 968-6767 o\·en, stainless stCel kettle,
F/time. Custom Shade & v;....,.cr · · .........,, ~2543. :!c~.nita Lane, Hwitington 1 \VANT TO BUY A 10 Eves. nictal racks. 2949 Randolph
Drapery Shop, 3535 E. Coast 9' GOLD & \\'hile SOfa. Orig. ~Ul~V-E=L-Y~N-E-W~~SO=F-A-SPEED BICYCLE. l\10DEL'S Sale, F n s h io n St., C. J\~le~"'~====:-I
H\\'Y, Cd M. Sl200. Sell $450. Brand ne\\'. AND LOVESEAT $l50. GARAGE Sale, Sept. 29. 9891 * !l62-?057 .• Designer Clothes. Like new, CARPET BROKER
WOMEN neede d for Gold&: Green lamp $350. • 645-6547 e Spinnaker. H.B .• couch,,~==~~~~ from A'P1"0po~. Sz 8 & 10, R-nU" m-h··-~ ••v•ral
I bb Now $100 &ID-0926 chair, queen bed. baby CAl\IPER Jacks for s· to 10' •"-$2'. ••01136 ~ .. ~ J ,.M ..... """""' -. Apply Jn person housecleaning. Ca I P.o ie's · · DINING bl · h 4 ~ • ~ 1000 .~ •. pi···" & -•1ag --.
I & ,1 «o o--Ex c E p TfONALLY H 1 1 room ta e wit things, clothe;;. Cabover ramper. $65. or 1u., i=-1 "' ,_..., 24291 Laguna Hills l\la!l Rag 1 op. .no-u1:i1: 1 ne cha;-& extra 1,,1. Xlnt. ak ff 492 19 OLD linie school desk, $7.50. ""'·All roloni. Bek>"'' Y.'hole-6-6553 Armoire $450 99" Herculon ""' GARAGE Sale, Bdrm furn. m e o er. -36 · ,... . 1a-· ·· cond. $50. 675-0101 . • 5 Dra'''er chest $15. Child's sale. lnslall11.1ton avail. Con-"i\fake Roon1 Fur Daddy" \VOl\fE."N: Laguna Beach sol~ $250~ G_uUd & Lyle tape deck, bikes, aquar1wn, COMPTON's encyclopedia. \\'onder horse $10. s.17-1643 !al'! Dick l..Rsll'r. 58&3T:i2.
... clean out the garage resoi1 motel maid \\'Ork or Guitars, 5.36--1~77. Giroge Sol• Bl 2 KneUlecreak Bedspread. 787 Complete 2-1 set. 1968 Edi· oft 12. Ch' t that j k I t h \\'endt. Laguna. 494-1284 lion 673-9109. Priv. Ptv. ORIENTAL rug, 111ese · · · urn un n o cas lndry F'ull or part time 2 DROP lid maple desJc-~ PLAYER piano & rolls. hlut', $100. lBhl r.xecutive
\\ith a Daily Pilot ClasslUed 494-ri.96. ' chests & chairs, matching sE~ 29th & 30th 2a7 E. 19th 3 0 9· 1"6 t h PI, C . P.'1 • MUC!i niisc. books couches brn••d ""''' '. ,-~ n•an'• d c n 642-5678 c ~ • I Sa Is , ..... d k " ·' ~ typewriter, $15. Bookcase a· a · YOUNG lady l8-30 un at· bo~'!..._case headboards St., C.M. 9-5 Lots or Fn · I un ..... !; es• tables mO\\'er tires doors bike, antiques. :r.1ake ofJer. f)""' !lC'adboard & misc lijjjiijjjjiijjjijjjjiijjjjiiiiiiiijill han "'' ""'i"' Goodie''· \\'8.terbed frame, Jots of ,,..,,.,. ,._ n·'·". ~·'"'--3015 •oi_=,, ,9 ..-.,. tached & no g-ups.,_~~~-"-·-------' '"' .,.., .... ..-" .,., "'" ilC'ms. Days 6iJ-"""'1oreves
Hostess \\·ork eves. Good * COUCH & LOVESEAT * SAT only. 1712 Highland Dr.. others! 646--36'70. 70 YARDS used shag carpet. * J\1UST SEU~! 6 · 11 '' 5-16--0900.
pay & nice apt. AllD opd. to never used. $155. Ne""'PQrl. Bargains galore GROUP garage sale, Sat & Beige tones, good cond. $95 Surfboard; 10 Spe('d Bikt>; BR.AND fll'"'' Astra 10 speed
foreign travel. l\1ail replies l\lagnavox 1V S20. 968-7910 incl. furniture. Sun 9--4. rugs, house,,TS, 646--4522 pr hangi~ glass lamps: bicycle, Cost $130. Sacrifice
to; ~121 \V. Coast H"'Y Box LRG din set must sell this RATTAN bar \V/2 stools, ~i~es. clothing, 1712 Paloma PcA-M~Sh~,-ll~Sl_JO_o_c_'_a_l_so \\'ooden dinette se1 : &15-5341 $90, Also Dalsun Pickup
5D Ne\\•pon. Beach 92660 wet!k, best. oUer. tape rec, mini bikes, w11.ll 300 PAIR la ks 'hol 1 l\1ag l\'hN!ls & \\·heels. Make BO AT I N G equip!., elect Tonneau CO\'er Nc\v $35,
831-2330 frms, 3030 Ceylon Rd., C.M. . s c . "" e~ e offe1·. 645-30.W stove, silvern'are, je\\•elry, Coco n1ats $10. 5.~129.
~~!ENT SHOPPING AND
SEWING GUIDE fOR THE
-· Sl'"!ONS •~r,--n.•, Sal-•-S F'unnture, appliall('('l!. \\ed-.. A, "OST" . .,...., t-'J dishes Sat &. Sun 19342 ET BLE & I I .. ..... J.J °"' ne\V, GARA.GE ~t & un. Fri. 17291 Siln1 Luis F .V. -~YI antique ·.""-tu . ·-·-• VEG A . -l'll l JUICCr-
1
(""') bumt orange leather, must Furn, cloth!.ng & misc. -9122 -------~·--13' "'Ide cash re~ster. St Jerrilyn Ln HB 968-2705 near 11e1v-h11lr price-1\'/instr GAL ON THE GO. . V see! $175. 61>M99. Regatta Dr, H.B. ~IFIED will &e1! lt! thru $90 rlng up. 968-ll.19. Sell Idle itl·1n:. . 0~2·567!1 & J't"CCipe books. ~Z--97-17.
For an 1d In Woman's World
Ctll M1ry Both 642-567B, dt. 330
l~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~iiii~j Motor Homes Motor Homes Mo.tor Homn Motor Homes Motor Homes Motor liome~
/I Salo/Rtnl 940 Solt/Roni 940 SOie/Roni 940 Salo/Rent 940 Solt/Roni 940 Sale/Rtnl 940 A~nt_i~q"'~'~~~~~aoo-11,.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;;;:;;:;;:;;;;:;;:;;:;;;;;;:;;:;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;~~
To Size 50! Brighten A Room JUST OPENED
l"reeland Pre An Antiqul'."I
~lisc. Antiques, Turquoise
Jewelry & So 1'~orth. Hours •
U:J0..5 daily except Sun. &
?\ton. ~ \\'est 19th St., Costa
i\'fesa. 642-7331.
No. 1 ROADLINER DEALER IN THE WEST!
I
.7379
£,A6.& B.J.
Put • color urw:lerloot
crochet oval rug Jn 4 colors!
Look at This
Selling fine quality tumiture,
0 i I paintings, decorator
picc~. including many Or-
iental pie..:es. Private llome
Q\\'1\ers: Sa.le. Please call for
appt:-714·557-42i9.
SALE antiques, couch tudor
style, old beautiful tall hand
car•ecl phonograph cabinet,
CU F't.. Refrigerator
Freezer, 5 yrs old, pd $899
Sacrifice i\1ake: otfr. Cash
only. 9871 Flamingo Ave.,
F.V.
11 O TPOJNT Refrigerator,
appl'ox .. ll 'cu. tt.. good run-
ning condition $15. 642-3963
aft 5 Pl\t or art. 10 Ml
11'knds.
\\'A SHE RS , d rye-f,
dish\\"Rsher. Reblt, &uar.
_ Delivered. m.7620 or
546-SZIB.
11·s all single crochet so ~I AT C II · G pr-Frigidaire
even a beginner can niake Imperial elec. Washer &:
this rainbow rug that's sure Dryer. Good cond. Best of·
10 "·In co111plimcnts Patte111 fer. 642-8119.
Neat shirt1\·aist lines, IM\' 7379; dil~'lkln.s for rugl ,NE\=~v~c=E~d7•7h7t•-·~sh,-,K~,-n-m_o_ce_
Hip-out pleats _ "·hat a nice JOx:.36' 0: _30x50" included: . ,,·asher dryer 'r. om b o .
\\·ay to look on bu~y 1\inter ~EVt.NTY·t'l.Vt; C.:t:dr-1~ f.67-9;}30 2680 Ne1vport Blvd., for each pattern -1td .w G M
••
AulOrM'"C· ,..,, llffflft9, POW•r OiK "''""' 441 CV. In. eri<;rln•.
c•l'Pl'I lllr.ut, lr1flt llunll •1141 1Ml!rtt1, 011T11ncl w1ttt ''*'""· Ml ••1111' IMCll.,., ".Jll. lr1m. mo11nl, L.P. link, 4 1tum1r r•111• wJlll Ha. ' n . ti. ,.....,.,..,.,, ,.;..., ...... 1..i•r11199 l!Ood, 21,ooe
9TU hlnlK•, '""-rMll •itll IMdw, '"' •Ir conotlioft.1111. •1111 l.111'1 -1,, IJ.Mlf l .T.U, ~r pl1nl 4.1 KW, Exteriw llNr
litlll, .........., CM,.,.,, .. ,,. ••!er ••nll, l'Klr• , ... hllll. PO•••
....., 'fW, ,..., 1r1T1 l'l'Stl. AM/FM r.OM Wllh lll'fN hlll' !lack, -""''*"· Wllldu.td c11rt .. R, IMlnll IMttl"n& ,..r, ""'* W.dW. K,_ Mir, pH.., wllldow, c1111trol paMI. Tln!M 1~u lh,_,,
-VIMn. 0.0.K. r.tr. #510300ML '
1972 WILLIAMS 21 FOOT
MOTORHOME
Qays! !rave this all o-ne or cenls for each pattern for ~·-·~~~-~~--·II combine prinl, solid. Air rt1ail and Special llandl· Rent W11her1/Dryer1 Autom•tlc, power sfeerin9, 360 V-8 •n9ine, Onen
Printed P11Uern 9437 : ing: otherwise lhlrd·clas!I $2 .\Vk. Fu1J maint. 9eneretor, 4.0 KW, roof e ir, sleeps .6, fully self con-
Women's Si1.es 36, :nl, 40, 42• delivery will take three • 639-1202 * t•ined, 1fereo system. 1947ELWl
44, 46, 48, 50. Size 36 !bust weeks or more. Send to l.RG 11 Po' Re'~· 40) takes 3 7/R yards 4~inch. All 8 ks the DAILY ot, int ... ~erator
SEVT.N'n ·t 1\'~ CENTI! p rfln. "t05 ' Needlecraft for sale, gold \V/lop freezer,
for each pattem -add 25 Dept., Box 16J, Old Chelsea good cond. $125. 962-9493
cents f r each pattern for Station New York, N.Y. \VASliER & elect dryer.
Air Mnil and Specla.l Han<il-l(l(lll . .Print Nanlt!, A~. Needs minor repair . $70.
lng; othenvise third-class Zip, Pattern Nnm.,.,r. Call 645-7156
delivery ~111 take lhl'ff' NEEDLECRAFT '72! RE~rn=.1"c'°E=RA~TO=R~.~.~~--.7ld",11 weeka or more. Send to "-..S..at knit tc Fret J•"' ,._...a.-P.fartin, the DAILY ""'""'.,. • • e • 2 dOOr, auto <lefro8t. ,.IU.llUI diteetJoll!I, 50c:. 8':)3..9060
PILOT. 447, Pattern Dept., hutanl Macramt1 Book. ==~~, -~~--~~11
232 West 18th St., New BIUltc fancy knots. pat· SECCO \\al er Softener. Good
York. N.Y. lOOU. Print tems.: $1.00. condition. S'ii. 633-S:f&t or
N&Nfl. ADDRF.88 with la.tut QGtbf!1t Boo1r: 633-6563.
ZIP, SIZ!J o.nd STYLE Learn by plct~I Pat·l-~M"A°"YT=A"G"'°"W"'ASHERS==-::--ll ~RM, ORE Q 1 l k Jernt. fl .OO. • Good Cond. $50. oi;:,o;. l C Compl&te lnrrlant Olft lklc)k Call 342-6257 Fuhtons and choose one than 100 eifi.
Eem tree from our n &j're . -F'RJClDAIRE Slove, deluxe
ng-Summt.'r Catalor. All Co.~pkkl Af.llwl llOol _ niod;el, double ovrn, 41"
! OnlY !IOc. $1.00. widt, $175, fi4.f-6383.
INSTANT SEWlNC B<X>K 11 tllfl1 RuJ Book1 · S0c J\f.A YT AG Porta·\\'Bl!lhtr
14!W today, wear tomorTOW. Book of Lt PrlM A.11hans. perftct rond use anywhere
·SJ INSTANT f" As 11toN 1 50c. avocado $115. 67~71.53.
BOOK H•Jndl't'l'lt: o f , QHlll Oook 1 -16 patltirns. DELUXE :Avocado Wuber & "'· . s-f.ashiOn tacit. Sl . J l'lt1~i1t QuUI Book 1 ~ ~as 8l)'f!r. Xlnl cond. •"'· The tUlelt dntN Jn·11~ West. 50c. Uke new. 8:)0...0061 for Info .
. ~,.a Dally PUol Cluslfled QalH1 for Todts'• IJYl q · S lines, 5 days tor $.!. Call
loday •.. &cMm .
'
$
Brand New
28' Motorhome
Roadllntr by Rtdmon
IMMEDIATE
DEL~VERY
LOADED!
$129 ...
MO.
SJru 11 .. Ill ..... pymt. S12t It: ftl1t
mt. ll'l'nlf, ktc:l l.IK, lie-I. Ill c•rryt"' <Ml"ll'I 111 •Mlf't. cr~I fff t• 1110$. o.ttrTM ll'f'mt, "1<.I' Sit.HS
lnt;I, I•• & Nttf!M. ANNUAL l"Elr·
CINTAGE l'ATE IU"'-C•ll'I prlQ
SU ... tl,
BRAND
NEW 24' MOTORHOME by
REDMAN
LOADED!
4 1] cu. On. Ood9• VI , •utomatic,
pow•r 1teerin9 & di1c bt•k•1, di•.
comfort qrp., hot w•l•t pko;i., d1-
m•nd w•lel'ty1t1m, 61 lb. L.P. t•nk,
-4 burn1r r•n91 l ov•n, pow1r v1nl·
1d r•no;i• hood, 21,000 !TU furn•ce,
e•I••· door li9ht, b11tl. cher9•r, e•·
It• 9•1 & w•l•r tank, wir1 & 1up-
porl for air, AM.FM ra dio, 1l1reo
l•pa deck, room divid11, w1hld CUI•
l•in, Iron! & r••• bunk m•Hr•11.
1crt11n door, 9•ll1y wiftdow, 0.0.H.
l•o;i. •l•ctronic iqriitio".
1 ~29000421
$
IMMEDIATE
DEUVERY
-
8~::D 20' FLING MOTORHOME :~DMAN
IMMEDIATE DELIVERY • SELF-CONTAINED
V-8, automatic, sleeps 6,
power steerin91 pow• r
brake1, loaded with 197'4
acce11ories! #20520818.
55988
CAMPER SPECIAL
l (
•
,_
[ •d••• I~ l.___,,..,,_v .. -...JJ[i[ ~~ ... l~I y_.,,._ )i!j
1
I.__ ~----··~l=[i] \-·~ .. ~ .. J§J I ~-,., .. · 1§: \ ':"""' ..
t,ll1<ell1 n"U1 _....;..11..;.I 3 Linet, 2 Tlmfl, $1.00 Boots. Power 906 Cyclos, BikH I =:or HomH Auto SJ!!ico, P1rl! 9# Trucks 962 fruJ,
EXOTIC AFRICAN CARLOs • c la ra be l I ,, ''2 HATTERAS Scooters 925 1....;S;;•;:;l•::.f:.;R.:;en::,:l __ _:,9.o.;:: <n CMC Blower $50, Ulx16 ;.;.;;=,-7~-FO--R-D-"-" '64 CHEVROLET
Apparel. Ololen from cle-kri°rabl& 8 wk okt hlk &: wht 3i n. spon tiMher . loaded, * BICYCLE Sf'c.'Cl.Al...$ • • S~LkS • ;~r ~~rori;·~rd vv'"'an ~ 'Pickup
..,. llO>•m."' Kaltaruo. topc sJli,39 •bolt, bx \tmd. oo n1dQr. Sell..-"'""' '°'New 10 •P from •••••.. $599' 5 VICE e ~ l/4 TON PICKUP ri I ~::~~e.~cte!i~:! · Laguna Beach Re11.1 £scat~. Uaed. 10 •P rrom ..•••.. sz'.oo • ER $15. Box Trailer S 3 5 ' Air. radio, heater, low 111Uc1. All
0 8 nal. LIM ne-.·~ iCVO
of a klnd OR Glaele'• own FREE
1
German Shepherd, Qv.1JC'I', Bice. 4 9 4 · 6 5 2 5, Bike clew.ni.na ....•..•.. $4 50 • RENTALS • 968-9271. t99&>1N) 07SJ. $795 .
·rio l'~RD Conv. Run11 well.
Orlg. own. f!tin, Rfttor.
881 ofl~r. ~U69.
em, 4 yrs old, love1 494:32'l3. Beach Bicycle 806 E Balboa G t $~195 ~ft~ tioo~s!ll us~ ~~~ru'· well trained· 18' PARKS~11TH Hull w/8' Blvd., Balboa. 6T.,.-72s2 enera
950 ~ DOT DATSUN
'72 FORD Van
cu.tom.
EXPLORER . 18.'lli Beach • Btvd., Hunt.
lElS Beach Blvd., Hunt. Beach, S(l-7781, 540--0142. Peppcl'l'rff 1'"alre, 1514 w. evei. beam, &"lass over "'OOd· 4 ~ Bult.oeo Pul"$8.ng, nu reblt '50 OIEV Coupe, riins $119, DOT DATSUN
Bi'Olld\vay, Anaheim, Thurs/ 8 MOS old, Boxer puppy, cyl lnbd marine eng., great eng & trana. Plastic tank & '67 Cortina engine GTX
t'd/Sat 12·8, Sun l2-6. Santa white, d1an1p breed i n g, !boat tor famllftr. w/11mall tenders, Akronu: Mikunt clutch trans diff, $99-$426
Ca.U 816-6258 alt 4.
'69 DODGF. ltios \Vlndo\i.I
\'an, 8 door. rib. clean.
$1950. 557-3715. HUNT ING fU N BEACH
"'I ! . " ! t.11!
"" '• , ' , 1 I ,. fl
Antlques/Cl•s1ics
Ana Frv.'Y to MIUM.il(>St<.'r, ~l09S~endly, hsebrkn, 5~1~: $750, 6 7 5 -4 1 6 6 , ~ 5carb. , $550 firm, 642-2569 aft Buck.neU Rd ., C.M.
torµ, Ott wtlh this coupon • •
Ghleie!ti onlyl-K.EESHQ.MJLdoa-J )IJ' <ilif, 1.972 (25 houn In waler) BRAND riu Triumph I~
* AUCTION * Male. O>mp. 06 •die n c e Silier-CiiJr,"lB·ft h•nltop, Tiger;-only-'JOO ml:-chang.
~·inc furniture & 1:1r1>1iU.lll..'eS
c.;ASH fot l~e model
appUam"CS & furniture, e ll'.
Auctions fo'riday, 7:30 p.n1.
MASTERS AUCTION
1075~ Newport, C1i1 fi4&.8686
Behind Tony's Bldg. t.fat'I.
HEAVY duty 1-lercules r.totor,
14' open inboard 11\Glo1·. 4
cyl, Trailer &: 4 ti."es, $325.
Old pla.yer plano w I Man-
dolin, approx. 7S yrs old,
artists drafting table $25,
Jew"lers bench, all tom1lca
$500. 644-1998.
Miscell•neous
Wonted 820
ORIENTAL RUGS
Private party ni!t!ds scvcral
used rugs. 644-5.126, 675-8773.
CHILDRENS pla_y ho u a e
wanted, pleW1e · phone,
I.mg. Nds 11 t t e n t i o n ! 140 hp. In It out. Chevy 4 of plans, opportunity to
640-1278. cyl. Take over payments. capltallte on my ml.stake, [
COCKAPOO, male, l~~ )T'S., 956-2'i64 • Call after 5 pm. Sl.n'.l. 645--7014.
all shots, rabies cert., llARCO 40, Chry•Hemls. ·n KAWASAKI 125, dirt miiiiiiiiii
housebrkm, very loving, Mint oond. Documen!ed. tires, chamber, quick rev
968.-7445. Salon, forward state rm, lrg mag. ~lust &t'll, $32)/o!c.
Lrrrt.E stray kitten needs eJec. galley, equ1p roe 963-2963.
good home. LA>ng haired 3 fishlng. 673-5.lJl.ci '°"°1 '"e"°1'-'cr'=c'"1 .E=s,..~. =Ten-~S-t>«d~ = female, 5 wb, • 35' OWENS Sedan, im-g\r.l's, man's, good con-
. mac., live aboard. Galley, dltion. call alter 10 a .m.,
6 TON, clean, fill sand. Come salon, head w/ll'X'Nler. Sips &12-5094. get it! 227·22nd Fl.. C.M. 6. Lots of m a hog a n y .::;:,7:..0 =Y:::All::....W!A--360-E_nd_uro_
642--0445 or 968-7135 846-8173 __ ~tany extras. Xlilt cond. $5.50.
LOVABLE 1 yr, blk & wh.tl6' GLASSi:AR. 50HP 646-(H,:ll
fem. "people" cat. Shots, Evinrude GoOd trailer, bait ·n Honda 350, very clean
spayed, bx trnd. 64-l-013!t. tank, etc. $795. 646-1.m. Xlnt running cond. $400
Bo1t1, Ront/Chlrt'r 908 _ &16-8591 ~~~~~~~~~~!LUXURY 1~ Sailing Yacht, '74 YAMAHA 350, 5'4o mi's.
Tr1lltrs, Trtv•I
·~ APACHE tent trailer, stove heater, ice box,
cabana, sleeps 6, $550. -· TRAJLER 16', &Jeeps 6, ex·
celle nt condition. Best offer.
Alter 5 PM, Call 962-658.3
16' Al.JO Vacation Trailer.
Self-contained. Ex. «:'Qnd.
$1300. 963-2194 aft 4:30 Pr.I
SHASTA IS'
TOP CONDITION $650
. 646-404l
'57 T·BffiD. XIM coOO, belt
oUer.
SM--0333
Recreatlon•I
Vehicles 956
TURBO-charged Co r v a i r
dune buggy, all or pans.
$350. 968-S'Z71.
Soorts, Race, ftod1 959
AMPHICAT
All terrain \'ehicle with lilt·
trailer. Just rompletely tun·
ed and serviced. $550 value
sell or trade for good ba)!
Doat. Call 55Z-8046 after 7
p.m.
Trucks 962
Auto Strvlc•, IP•rts 949 I PttsMd ....... 11~1 ~l .. y ·;!!.u!£~ .• wlnterrates. ~fils2.WarT. $100>. Call . . " .,,.:J-V'IW "73 CHEVY %.. 4 whl drive, ';;i;i;i;i;i;i;;;~~l36' LUA'URY cnuser. Fully 1~~v!:ON~~.A ::~L !: 5000 mi, has all 4 Star can1: •p· t ~-l equip. $75. a day. ·Call .,11.:;n/Best off-~·"' 1369 110 Vol{ air compreAOr; 427 per. Sips 6, Sell separate. • 1, ~nerl 850 645-2898. ~ "''· v-t.r C1levy and small block Bargains! 645--0T:>5 0 r
544-8874.
· Mo Ho parts, heads, block, crank, 6T~
BE:AUT. Scarlet Macaw, 2~i Bffts, S•il 909 tor mes nti1>c parts; 2 Narrowed ·
Mu1ic•l ln1trument1122 yrs, completely tamed r.• Sale/Rent. 940 Old11 rear end11 & misc '72 WRD Currier, mags, talks good with house pets 15 CAT & Trailer, extra g\b, . gears; Olrys Hemi eng., tonneau cover, step Oun1~r.
BUNDY Trumpet, 2 yrs old Must' sell, lving country: n1ain sail, tran1p & rig, • FOR RENT e blown &: injected, compl; 2 ~!~'-~_,, c26o n d. , .$2000/offer.
Better then renting. $89. Lrg bird cage stand & $800. CA.II after 6,• ~ 1973 EL OORA001 l\1otor· Otevy 15" Carger wheels; .>.J<.J"""W 644-554t other equJp. in iop cond in· or 675-5113. home, 18-ft., tape deck, T.V., Chevy/Otryl high gear '56 OIEV StepVan, comm lie
JORDAN Base Amp, 1 E" clded in price. BI r cl RHODES 33-Classic racing self-contained, sleeps 4, Call alum housing; Jeep ftont It 15' cargo, camper con-
speaker, Perleet cond. Sl20. estintated $800, will sell champion "HANAHULI." after 5. 95&-Zl64. {Anaheim) rear end, ftont w/posi trac-version? $900/reas. offer.
846-4226 $500. 644-4824 Top condition. $6500. Ph: ·73 MOBILE Traveler, 1 T. tion; Go Carl 650 CC Tcium· 5~-
0ff
. F l / Dogs a·54 673-l:l32. Dodge. P\.\T. air , xtras, sips ph eng;-'58 F 0 rd LEASE A NE\V TRUCK ice urn ture VENTURE 2-24 sail boat 6. A1'f/F~I 9000 mi. $7850. Crui.somatlc engine: '72 C All makes . types. sizes
Eaulp. 824 • PUPPY WORLD e w/lrnller. 1'1any extras. 833--0467. Velvt'l drive boat gear box: Purch/optlon 645-7000 . ...2 •3r:: be 1,;..c~='--~-~--{41 900 by 16-10 ply !~===~-~'-"=-
WALNUT ,) Desk 3 ox 6 o ChihuahuaS, Tiny Poodles .. 50· or st oiler. 9684106 e oale's i\loLor Home Rentals Goodyear tires. 548-3553. '68 CHEVY JA Ton Tnick.
1.,\'Jvel ICat~r 'arm chair' Anterican Eskimo (Spitz)' 19' LIGHTNING, w/1railer 'i'3 2.l-26' l\f.I ... & ~finis 1968 289 REBLT engiile full Gem Shell &: Cabinets, Good
.-...1 concL $100 for both: Pit Bulls, Bull Terrter'. 2 mains, 2 jibs, 1 spinnaker. Frt>e miles 9 til 9, 838-0900 cond. SUOO. 673--S-Gl •-Cho Cock 847 ""70 b 6-8 race cam, ovenize pistons, .. 494-9-191 or 493-5025. "" apoo, Keeshond . --.JU twn. p.m. '72 EXPLORER 20' fully Borg & \Varner trans., T· \V-A NT E 0 : LADDER
EXEC swvl chrs Sl ~/25 Sec and English. Bui!, Dogs· 100 26' NAVY WHALER self cont. 7000 mi: Xlnt Io;O:B,, . .;96S.at;c:~42."--c--,--,--,-~ RACKS TO FIT ·ro % TON
cltcs $8124 Desks $20/90 ~~~ 1'-f!~~. Stud For Sale 542--3011 cond. $6500. 645-1395. 4 V\V MAGS, chains & locks. Cl;IEV. &12--0238.
Beach, 842-'nRI, 540-().142. Don't give up the ship!
You'll find it In Cl~OC CLASSIFIED will ttell it!
970 Autos, lm~rlod 970 Autos, Imported
CAPRr
N•w p11 int, vin_yl lop, <u1tom wh•el1,
4 1pe•d, ••dio, •nd h••f•r. (844BMZI
--$2295
'67 TOYOTA
.. 4 Door, r•dio, h•1ter, •utom 1li< h1nl·
minion, end 1ir <onditionin9. ! OSSJDll
$795
'71 VW BUS
FOREIGN CARS
Sales • ~entice • Parts
168 DATSUN P.U.
R•dio, he•f1r, n•w p1int,
1p••d. IUTF708 1
$1 195
'72 TOYOTA
2 Door coup•, redio, h••l•r, 4 1p•1d,
ond tinted 91111 . ! 142CEJI
$1995
'68 JEEP
970
4 Speed, r1dio, ht1t•r. low mil11, ond
••tr1 ,1 •• n. (661iEAll
4 Wheel dr ive, redio, k1•ter, •nd r•·
mow1ble h•rdtop. IVGZl701
$2495 $1895
"Excellent Financing Available"
28402 MARGUERITE PARKWAY
MISSION VIEJO
831-2040 495.4949
}
Pierce 867 \V. 18 C~I &l2·3408 Open Eves: 531.flll27 1n 14' Hobie C•t . Llke to. Trade? ~ Tre.der's $80. for .all. 842-m19 Call '61 FORD PICK UP
Plano1/0rg•n1 826 BEAGLE female 3•2 yrs., w;trailer $800 645-3467 Paradise column tS for you! after 6 pm. $250. 64$-0309
'f 0 l ~--~-=~-=-~Aiu~t~·~·~·~l~m~~~r~-~~~9~ro~A~~~·~·~·~l~m~~~rt~~~~~9~7~0~A~u~t~o~•~~~~~rl~~~~~~~~~~~~~~i~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ { ree rgan eSSOIJ$ bred, by · R •• 11 er" dolly. Xlo'l <~nd. S6<)0. 1 Samantha &: Sam _ th e 644-5346, alt 6.
?As Long As You Llkel Bugler, Excellent peL After 25' SCJ-tOONER Dac-S lnbrd
-.fNon-players & players "·el· 6 PM, call 962-6583 &lps 4 ·head. 1'-1ust sell. '
come 10 attend Tuesday TINY mix Chihuahua &\Tea 892-1333 art 4, $2500
nlght at 7:30 PA1. \\le want ~p Poodle. ~Doberman HOBIE 16-Racing equlpt.
f'Vel')'O!\e to learn to J>lay Ptn~cher. AKC Toy Poodle. -~ils • red, white, blue.
the organ! All material! Bob .!I Pet Sho~. 11! N. Trailer inc. $1550. 6T';;l-1259.
tumishe<I 'S~y,~··~mo~re!:·c..S~.A~. ~>1:!'7f:·385~l!:·~loi~~i'Tu;;f=;;~;;;;';;;; ~ T · . · Poo LE OlflNESE J Wlk yee.r round om D1etench . In C'harge. D puppies, reg. AKC, sailing call 552-7976 aft
Phone 642-2851 sassafras •. show dogs. Al9o 6 Pi\1. COAST MUSIC niynah bird w/voca'bulirYl.;...o..::::._~~----
N (If SO words & phrases LIDO 14 e\.\·port Blvd. al llarbor 531_7446. ' Late Atodel. Good condition.
• .,. Costa l\lesa FOR SALE 714-525--'lti02.
TRISH SE 11 ER MUSI' Sacrifice our lovely PIANOS -ORGANS
New Ir Used. Gre11.t aelecUon.
Competetive prices, Open
Eves. & Sunday.t, The best
deals ruT al\l'a)'S at:
·W•llicns· Music City
South Coast Plaza 540-2830
PIANO WANTED
17141 992-0259
5 l\10NTHS $95 40' sloop, ready to cruise.
842-6829 caJ.I aft 5, fi73...012).
Al\C reg., dabnatian pu~ CAL 39-A Fully equipt
pies, 7 \\-eeks, pet or show. bargain for the serious
.F.rom $50. AftJ_p ~~~· onlf. 144-eK.5.
557-2'7(lj CAL 3:1, sell or partner, all
DOG Training C I a s s e 1 xtraa-xlut slip N e w p o r t
Harbor Area. Far reserva.· Beach. Pri Pb'· 552-M88.
tiwls 546-9723, 979-4636. JIOBIE 16-E.x. cond. 1 year
AKC Black Great Dane pup. old. Full .racing equlpt.
BABY grand piano. Xlnt pies. 1<twks, s·7 5-S 12 5 , Private party, 548-8551.
cond. $55(1. 545-Cb,8 aft! eves. BcNit1, S,llpt/l>ockl· 910
;;;;=;-;;9;:;79-0163.::..:=:::::-,-...,,,_,,.,-I PULJ Puf)Ples, miniature SPlNET Plano must sell this Sheep dogs, S25 1\-1 & F i R ESPONSlBLE Executive
"'·eek. Be.!lt offer. "·ks. call alt 6, 673-8937. ' des.lres Newpoct·Ba.lboa slip * 831-.ttll * S;\INT Bernard 1 mo ld. or side Ue for 30· Sailboat.
Sporting Good• 830 Short hair, love• kida, 0$00 ,cn;c<-<:.,:::""':....::8::17:..... ___ _
I ~--.=...------642-0727 aft 5. POWER -i'o 28' SfA}/MO.
B'F.AGLE . t male. t female, AlSJ 3 BR APT AVAIL.
10 \\'k.'11;. old . Champ bred, .c61>-<c:,,,:;397:;,:;·-~-~-AKC, After 6 Pi\1 , 962-6583 \VAt'ffED, Dock for 41'
i\PRIOOT toy. poodle pup. Ketch 11' beam, ~· draft,
R.C. Airi>lane kits, all ne"·:
trainers . scak-1, ml<4:cts,
Nl'W engines . O 9 • . 8 O .
Unpacked O.S. Olglll'On,
Blue ~fax . 5 chann<'I for
Foel"'\'O radio':i;, closing out
hobby, supcr values. Call
Sat & Sun, 49&-1537.
pies. l mo. old, AKC. ahernoons & eves, a-14-1310.
557·1~ DOCK FOR RENT
SA...\IOYEO male f I u f I y PO\~w. 28'. 6T:>-2470
TY .... hdio, Hifi, while, 8 "~· Boats, Speed & Ski 911
'1 __ s_to.;....roo'------'8"36" 1 -G-o_ld_e_n_R=-"e~tr'"le_YO_r_1_ '73 Cheetah. Deep v ski boat,
RCA, Zenith, Sylvania; 979-1'i99 1\•tU5 H.P .. Evinrude, & La~t selection c 0 I 0 r, ===~i-'-=--,-~~-1 trailer. ltfovmg, must sell.
black & \\'hite TV & itereos ENGUSH Springer Spaniel 963-2963 ·
in So. Calif. Priced leS.!1 ~pples. AKC champ. blood 15' SKI or fish 60 J.l /P
than the discounfurs w/3 yr hnc. cn4) 968-.JB.76. -Johnson, tilt tr8.uec, conv
picture tube. 1 '/'I' parts & IRISH Setters 8 \\its up, top mooring rover much
service. ~lost '74 models in Reduced prices. Botlt aexes, n10fe $1000 540-3961 '
stock. '73 .models priced to x.lnt quality. 897-8841. OIRIS.CRAFT RUNABOUT
clear. C8sh 90 plan or terflll'I Horses 856 w/trlr, Xlnt cond. $1850. lo 36 mo. ABC Color TV, Ca 9021 Atlanta, or 1 9 o 4 6 II B. Mueller 673-8120
B kh H · REG. Thorough-bred Mare. ·n 17 -K S
0
kl Boa -r o o unt, unhngton Daughter of Social Oimber. r • · (11\8 t. 135
Beach, gsg!.JJ29 or !IS-65.59. Good brood mare or ahow HP Me!c. By ()Wiler. $2{XX),
UP Rt G HT Home en-prospect. $1250.' or best ~-~"';:o:7'::·~~-----1
terta.lnment center, 8 track oller, must sell, ~1211. TAHITI 16', :P.lercury 100 HP
tape deck, AM/FM radio. REG. T.B. mare. stockings OB, ~lier, xtras. Uke
Stereo, 18" port color TV. & blaze. 7 yrs. 16.2 H. Soundl :~ne~•;".~$~1350~~-~968-~7~44~4~. ~~ $900. m-5458. & jumps. Sac. at $$0.
COLOR TV, h o m e en-838-2646
t er ta In men t center.8 ~=AD=o"'LE"--t~o-r-pony--0-,-sm-Rl-l I l(ctt)
AMJF"l\1 radK>. turntable, ho --' nd T-~totoro\a , Fantastic cond. l'31!, 6""""' 00 ·• $55.
$300. 847-9593. I ,~84~7~-1005~~~~~~~~1~:::;;:::::: INFONJCS cassette Copier, c
Modt:l·102 t yr old. $975. or \[· ll' I import, S.lo/Ront no
make otter. 556-8597. I ~~ .. ;~=~~-~.,~~~·;·~~· ;1'.~·~1·70 FORD Camper Special PORTABLE TV blk & white, Low 11600 ml.) Fact. Warr.
18"' 567-9630 2680 Newport HD equip., Arr. PIS.
mvd., C.M. Boats, General 900 'P/B, AJC, w/70 SIC 11 Ft.
GE Stereo portable about 7 Camper, 962-1562.
yrs old . Good cond!Uon, $35. Bolts/Marin. 8 FT Cabovei' cempet'. Sleeps After 5 pm. 833-3849. Equip. 904 4, $700. Arte'r' S Pr.1,
830-7481 BORG Wo.rncr nic Velvetl=~-...,;:""":..::::..... __ _
1
1 S' dri" boat -uansnitaslon, £ycle1,. Bikes, ''"to You new, stul in box wJcooler, Scooters 925
!'------'"-' -'· $3l)O. >l&-:!553. '73 YAMAHA-.;oo TX 5600
1.'-Llllktoi111ri'•2•Tilllmollljitri'ii$2•.•°' llONZER RADAR miles, taring, 2 1><ime1a, 1• ) $~495. romplcte, MIU.ER $!10!). Moving. &l&-OU4
FREE blk 2 moo old Ftm ARINE SALES 646--435! * BRAND new Clubman 10
puppy w/bouse. Sh<>ll., * NEED ENGINE * opeed. Barpln at $65. Call * 557-f.356 * Unlvenal Uni.mite 6f5.51J5 aller S PM, 54l>-M68
OARDNO llttle blaclc--,,oo; "BJUTISJ1'"'"Seaguu-3 HP HONDA 50 mini tnLll, yelk>w,.
dle, wanu: home. Bathed It long shaft, used only 4 $100. Girls Schwliul btke,'
clipped. ~ aft 6. hollrl, 6'13-0'Jl9, red, S15. 646-1136.
· TO Good home. Lovab°' 9 llNll, -906 200 OSSA Stiletto. S400 mo. female .Pfll'l Shepherd. We or ttlide. Call
• 544-1295 • • NEW caravelle Ta r p o n , 585-2741
LOVABLE SheDherd pupe:. 6 1$'2'' trl-bUD, Mm: 660. '73 SUZUKI 2 cyl RWU1
wb, bl( A bealthy need UK<l 4 ti.-Mutl "'· all good hu minor d.,....
I pod lo>met. .... 2$40. ..,.,.._ &l>t289. · $500.' 64H921 or-· '
Krn'ENS, 2 male, 1 Fem, I 21' CHRIS Craft 16' "13 HONDA 150. Very dean wb. trained Runabout Md 14' Run.tx>ut. tt dependable. Prtecd to 1ell
.. iHo-11119 * Wholeule. -1459. quick]¥. $14e. H&-8!5ls.
U'VELY 5 "'°" fQmAl e pul)S))' Zi' Fibergi.a• Lyman m. RALEIGH 10 Spd Biltf!
Need& a famUy. Bnlnd new loaded w/equlp, C:lrl'~ uMd ~ l time1:
675-4595 ..... -· Call -1'15, 4S!j!82 Tino. •
FftEE to aood home • Bea1le lB' Gt.As.SPAR 15 h P '70 HONOA 1SL 90. xtnt
• ! Jnlx, darling 6 wk1 old Evinnlde,, tUt trailer condltkm. Uke neW.
-· 546-5316. $1300 .. -Call 98UI08 FEMALE German ShorlhRit. IT FIBtl\GLASS boal. 811 '72 YAMAl!A 2'.>11 MX
XI mol old, pd w/kidl. H.P. Mee, tralltt', $1.100 or UK new, m&ny utru can &12-4W!I. '""" otr. 968-7973. $li00. 5.1&-m>
, I
1972 CHEVY
MONTE CAILO
V..S, Tinte.d Glass, Heater, Auto Tran.!!, Fac-
tory Air, Power Steering, Power Brakes,
\Vhite Walls. Gold Finish, with beige lnte1ior
Vi nyl Top, 28,000 miles. (311FOW) '
•
$ 495
1973 'DATSUN 610
2 Dr llardtop, Tinted Glass, Heater, AM/Fl\I
Stereo Radio. Heater, Auto 'I'ram, Factory
Air Cond, \Vhlte Walls, bucket seat.I, COl\1-
PANY DEl\tO, VERY LOW MILES. £•PL610-
M7380)
594
IRAND NEW
1973 DATSUN 240%
Alil/FM Rado, Yellow finish Y.'ilh black in-
terior. (~0169638)
1973 PINTO
s9u1u WAGON
nnted Glass. Heater, 4 Spd. wh ite walls,
Bucket Seats, THJS CAR ONLY HAS 2000
MILES, 10,000 hllLES OF \V ARRANTY LEFT
(393HS\V)
95
SALES HOUU •
1~72 'DATSUN 240% -... ,
6 cyl, Tinted GlasJ!, Heatel', Al\I/Fl\1 Radio. 4
Spd, Factory Air, bucket seats, .only 13,000
miles, one of th(' n.iccst 240Z in the country.
(505GXTI
,
'
HUGE SELECTION
OF QUALITY
USED CARS
AT SALE PRICES!
, POI "°"' • U ... C• Sales
-l~ hlly lttll•ll
s.mc .......
Mon.0Sot. t 1.m. to t p.M.
S.n*P ' "·"'· to ' p.m, •
SEIVICI HOUU
Mon.-Fri. 7:-JO o.rw. lo 5 p.m.
Saturday 7:JO lo Noon
CALL 493-3375
OR 831-1375
I I
• !'
'
•
I
1
. . , • -.
I
4 DAILY PILOT r,Jd», S•pl!mW 28, 19)3 l•-------•I -~~~~~~~~·~~~~~~~~~~~~~~,~~~~~~~~~~~;! ~~~~~~~~!!!!!!!!!!l!~~~~~u~to~•·2'~m~po~rl~ed~_!97~0 !~~~~~~~ ~ •
1
r,::;-i l[C1l .,, .. , .. -!§] ! _,,, .. l~J ~~ .• M.~~;,0~ ~.~~r lo· .,, ........ 11~1 I .......... 11'41] l .,, .. ,,. ... 1 1 ~1 r ,_,,, .. 1§1 I .......... ---~'l!!J~'4l~~L ... ~ .... _ .. __ ~~I
I ~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~-~ I tc1ior. _
I I '71 AUDI TOOLS • t 1 970 _:A~u~t!os~._:N~e~w~---9~8:;:0~"::."!::':!"!!'•c.;N:;•::;w::..,_ __ _;;98::;0:.:A:::u::l:;••::·~N;;ew::;.. ___ 980_[ 963 Autos W•nt~ 961 "'u os, mponeo Autos, Import.a 970 Auto,, lmportff 970 V1n1 ~ '.i Dr., kll'. 11u1001a1i('. Al\!/ 1"·n;..;....llod-'-g-,-v-... -. -.,-"-•• -d-,,",x", TOP ,.,, "'.<~'ivw"l's'i"i'""'". ALFA ROMEO AUSTIN HEALEY JAGUAR
Interior, xlnt cond. Must DOLLA. R r •• ,,.-1 •. "--,111ful 1na11na Al I s · 11 Ill .....,., •< " ix... 1973 Rt.:D p1a pydc1·, tt is. · ,. "" COUP
M' • w accept fl. 11 Y PAID ..; blue v.·' ilk 111p, rully NjW~ still br-dnd llC\I & beautiful li9 Sprile. Original ownt 1. ~"" 1971 E !
reuonablc offer. ~Ll32 prd and }ook.; "'""\'! ~ milt's, inusJ gl\'t' H up: ~lp&, Good t..'()ndltlon. S7JO. YeJIO\\', 6 cylinder, 4 speed, I
'65 CllEVY \-·an. ~leg s, IMMEDIATELY '71 VW 2211 c"ll .i:.t7-22:ll fi'73--52lil. ail· t'Onditioning l lo\v mile·
J}fU\l'd .. M~ti perf. Make i pa~lK'ngf'I' bus, 'o.\J,000 01\t'-AUDI BMW age. Not mMy left.
orr('I·. 126 llrd St .. N.B. FOR ALL ll\l'Tl('r mil~ •1 radio. Ulul' 1 $4567
SAC. 1968 Dodge van. Panl'd. FOREIGN \j,'1\vh itc top, . ORANGE COUNTY'S (262CQT)
Run< _.II, "'"'' "11(. 1972 AUDI 1 OOLS OLDEST
675--0907 CARS 445 E. COAST H19HWAY ·I doul', auto1nalic lran!I., 1111· G
'67 DODGE van. 50,000 nii. (11rB11y1it»Dr1Yt1} -l'Or\ditioning, Al\! radio. f3i:l-
inter carpclc<I . .$1525. Call WE: ARE IN ft. NEWPORT Bf!'ACH FPI I. ..---• ::~~'Hsing 964 DJ'i~~~~i'."EEAEND ~b 673.0900 50 $3799 , 's~a~,Y~.~ ,,;,; '1,.:.,;i 6+
1;.;;;;..:;...;o;==---'-FOREIGN CARS ~, -d; 'f\ l • Excellent selection of pz-e. ta~ set, Musi sell. Best ofr. '
~111;11 11 111" 111111!11'•
au• 11oa11i11 l.li11 • "~ .. . .
Monthlu Car Rentals TOP DOLLAR-PAID I o~ -' ,. -Ult f.Wl4 p•·loe """''""'on "1odel,. P" ply. 71<. £73-<m
,, FOR OR NOT! I' VOLVO DEMO" $ALE ATIENTION COLLEOTORS
$5• PER DAY Call or romr in 'to 11c:e us. SALES-SERVICE-LU\SING '63 Jaguar fo.1ark X.
OVERSEAS DELIVERY reasonable! Call 673-;>S26.
lst HXKl n11 l<'s no t·hru·;:;c
Late n1odcls \\ ith air.
South Coast Car Lea.sing
300} West Cst. llwy .. N.B.
645-2182, aft 5, 673-.f.m
Autos Wanted 961
NEWPORT
IMPORTS
31cr w. eou1 Jiwy,, N.a. I
642-9405
\\'E HUY
IMPORTED AUTOS
BEST PRICES PAID!
Dean Lewis Imports
------
Joe ,!~~.,~!!~ oa..l _A_L_F_A _R_O_M_E_C_·_
and trucks:
I96fi llru-hor. C.i\1. 64&-9:@ Howard Chevrolet * ALFA ROMEO
JJ\J POR'fS '.1.'.\NTE!l
Orange County's
TOPS BlTYER
i\fncArthur and Jan1burcc
Ne1vport Beach
833-0555
BILL MAXF.:Y TOYOTA \VE PAY TOP OOLLAR
18881 Beach Blv " FOR TOP USEL"I CAns
H . Beach Ph. M'i.!i:'i."i' If your car is extra clCan.
· !VAN-TED· A 1· H ,-s£>e us first. • · . us in .e1;1 cy BAUER BtTICK Sp1·1le or ~IG Midget. :?92S H 00 Sl •cl
CHEAP! !Ki2-768!1. C .M ar ' '97·9 '°'~ osl a esa · o.JVU A good want ad. b. & good ll·
\~lment.
Best deal ah1·ays! Bcrlinas
. fl'oni SJ195 !Ser. #!r288l.
·12·~ & '73's. Comptelr se-
lection OO\\', Buy or lease
lrom
Jim Parkinson's
T!ll'arh JJ111µ111t!i
fit l.Nl., w ( '""" ..,..,,..., n .... ,.,, ·~ • r 1,1•, \A(>.. . -. .. -
t966 11.,.bor. c.M. 6"'·9303 ROY CARVER, Inc. MAZDA
AUSTIN AMERICA "' E. tnh s1. 1---~· ---
---------1.eostn t.1esa ~444 *Mazda '73 Rotary*
'69 AUSTIN An1crice, 27,000 W $66 MONTH
mi, .,10. good con<l. $""1 CREVIER BM 30 MONTHS O?EN LEASE
firrn, &\2-51:l2. &tics e Sen1ce e LeMlng \Vill accept trade-Ins AUSTIN HEALEY 208 w. ls!., S.A. 853-Jl7l CALL MR. >'RY 642.6£66
·13 ~~~~R1~~:·!01 Hunt. Beach '68 SPRITE
·l '"'°""· rntho. 1XXB590J ::~ ~~VARIA MAZDA $1Z95 '72 2002
Dick Miller Motors '69 2002
120 \V.~~~~~~r, S.A. ''8 2002 17331 Beach.Bl. 842·66:-.S ---"'='----l~~iiii. ................ -.1 BOB ~O~GPRE
QUICK CASH
THROUGH A
DAILY PILOT
WANrAD
Bob Mclar•n, BMW
Inc.
Sales • Service . Leasing
s;,o North Beach Blvd.,
La Habra
lTI4J 879-5624
CAPRI
MAZDA
-SERVICE FIRST-
EXCLUSIVE
MAZDA LEASE
Demonstrator Sale
NO\v In Progress
lst St. at the S.A. Fnvy.
2000 E . 1st SI., S.A 5iS-7871
DAVE ROSS PONTIAC •
• '72 t.lnzda Station \VaJ.,'On,
Very lo miles, like ne1v. $200
equily, Take over pymnts. NOW OWN THE . c11.11 646-2717 aft 5.
'7 4 PONTIACS !~
THEY'RE SELLING FAST
FABULOUS 1973 '72 MAZDA RX3, xlnt
CAPRI !2600. 67>-2611!
Spo'1 """"" dococ. body •ido MERCEDES BENZ 1nouldings, reclining front 1..:.;.;.::...:.;_..:.;__~-
seats, contour rear seats, 4 , ~ .
speed transmission ~pj'.)\Yer 67 DlESEL 200D, F ac/rur,
front dis'"c brakes stYle steel new moror, Xlnt cond,
wheels, bucket seats, radial * 836-5467 •
ply tiies. 2000cc eng. 19TI MB 220 Gas Sedan, lux·
(GAECNB42801). ury, economy, safety, $4T::i0.
· OVERSTOCKED! 833·87"'8. pvt pty.
IMMEDIATE '69 MB 280 SE. ELEGANT,
DELIVERY s uhroof. If\.1r.IACULATE,
"THf SIXY
IMPO•T F•OM GE•MANY"
fut ckio• •-.f tlwM .,.h1M41if>tl ......... flll ..... '-•lef.tl CAHll.,. ,..1c ... 1 i.w ••· . !GAICNU~l 14) $31 89NO DOWN PAYMINT$8 YOU CAN LIASf
<>NI fOI AS unLI AS
74 MODELS COM,AIAILE OR EVEN LESS WHEN AVAIL.
'74 COMET COMPARABLE $8. 7 PH
LEASE . MO
PlR MO •
Ill.SID ON
l6 MOMlH
O'IN IND
llASf. ...
llfDIM•TIO•
(jll IOW
842-8844
OPEi -
llM.t&llP M.
' 1 DArs
GUSTAFSON low miloage, $-1950. 552-9319.
LI I M A~u~to~s,~lm~poii;iiir~te~di;;;;iiiij9~70iii;jiiiijAji••~lo~s~,~lm~p~o~r~tediii;iiiim9m70mAm•m•t·o~s,mlmmmomomrtmediiiii.iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiirj nco n-ercury
16800 Beach Rt Warner ~~~~~~--!~~~~~~~~
WE NOW HAVE THE FINEST
SELECTION OF FRESH TRADE-INS
IN OUR HISTORY!
REDUCED FOR QUICK SALE
" '71 ~.~~' ~~~~~; .. '°""• "'' 10'50JOI
'71
'68
'69
'71
MALIBU STATION WAGON
350 V-8, automatie l•an1mi11lon, pow•r il1erin9, radio, heeter, air con-
ditioning, roof re.;k. 1074CJ0)
CADILLAC SEDAN DE VILLE
Full power I factory air conditioning, tilt 1l•trin9, AM/FM radio. (Y ~V-
0161
CATALINA STATION WAGON
V-8, air conditioning, •11tom•lie tr•1umi11ion, radio, h••l•r, pow11r 111••·
ing. f610GDEJ
LTD 2·DOOR H.T.
V.B, aulomelic lran1mi11;011, air con ditionin9, redio, li••ter, pow•r 1t•e•·
in9, po.,,er brek11, vinyl lop & brown •11.lerior, !33,900 mil11l. 172SOM8)
s303a ·
Used Car Dept. Phone 546-8017
Dave Ross PONTIAC
2480 Harbor Blvd. at Fair Dr., Costa. Mesa
'
Phone 546-8017
1 '
1-luntington Beacil
142-8144 * (213) 592-5544
"Hom• of th• Viking''
DATSUN
WE'RE HERE
See U!I at
MacARTHUR & JA?i,fBOREE
BIG SAVINGS ON
'73 Demos
510's
Pickups
610's
NE\'JRJf(f DATSUN
888 Dove
Newport Bch
833-1300 Open Sunday
'68 DATSUN
WAGON
White, Auto Trans. (VZU991)
$999
BILL MAXEY
TOYOTA
18881 BEACH BL. 847-85.55
HUl\'TINGTON BEACH
240-Z
1971, nuton1af1.c transmission.
alr cnodi!ioning, AM/F'J\1
radio, n1ng 1\•hcels. {521EJEJ
$3995
Dick Miller Motors
120 \V. \Vi'l!T!E'r, S.A.
!:>.i7-Zl32
1973 DATSUNS
ALL MODELS
IN STOCK
BARWICK IMPORTS
:i3375 C&mino Capistrano
San Juan Capistrano
493-3375 or 831-1375
"ll-24()....Z, ll'ilver, mint cond.
Al\:l/FJ\1. l\lni: "'·his, 14,000
n1i. J\.Tust Sell .$4300/offer.
675-8703. Pvt. Pty
DATSUN 240 Z. 1971, lo
mileage, good con<l. $3,600
or best offer. 842-1002 aft 5,
privale party.
'72 DATSUN 240Z, imma~ .•
silver/grey, mags, a Ir
cond., Al\.1/t'i\I s I ere o,
$4300. &lo--0383.
'71 DATSUN PU w/carnper.
New clutch, recent eng
,\'Ork. 41,000 mi'K. $1500.
Call aft G pm. 213/596-475!1;
'71 240Z. Silver-gray, 33,000
ml. 4 spd, xlnt condition.
Call 644-7300
DODGE
'71 DODGE
Colt
$1695
DOT DATSUN
18835 Beach Blvd., Hunt.
Beach, 812-7781, -
FIAT
'02 FIAT 1200 Roadster, t11n1
• good body -r!Ccil11 to~
niec.h 1·cpalrs $350, 645-1879.
JAGUAR -.;;__ * '68 XKE '* Convrr11ble snw. ~.
.•
-, '
OW to U}'
rreconomy-ca
1. See how it holds
the road.
2. Test its steering
response. .
3.See how it
comers.
4. Try the brakes.
5. Drive it on a
windy day.
6. Notice if it's fun
to drive.
lntroduci~ the New
Honda Civic'.."
•
.
~
30 MIL·ES PER GALLON!
BIG SELECTION-IMM DIATE DELIVERY!
\ •
•
r
'
• AAnosbSM ]§]
990
IL-----__ .. u._. I§] I ...... ,.... l§J 1 ......... ]~ I '"*"'.. I~ I _ ..... _If '"!I [ ~~uto~~';·~~l::;m;po~~rt~od~~~~9~7~0:!~A-~u~t_o~•.~~1:m~po~~rt~odt:~~!_~7~011A~jjjujjjt°';•;1;m;pon.d;;jjjjjj~~9;70!1 ~A;utoo,mml~---:;9;7~0l l '~A;uto.,m;l;mpon;;;;od;;!~9~70 Autos, UHd
MERCEDES BENZ RENAULT CADILLAC VOLKSWAGEN JIMl~PL~R~~NS RENAULT '71 vw •UG
MERCEDES BENZ R-l2 N4E~OOR ~~U~~s::·~ new rndlal
AU1'i'IORIZEO J\u1un11i.t1c fr"'l!llH...ston $ 1795
SALES & SERVICE SALE DOT DATS" UN Jim Slemons $2499 Im......., t.«i; Bead> Blvd., ""nr. ,..-. .... Dick Miller Motort B<-ach, 842-T781, 540--0442.
f'\'r'N' -top buytt for nny 121) W;-\Yamer, &A. 70 VW ·snG us1~I l\1f'r1·t..-des Ben1..) 557-2'132 "' 1301 Qul\il ---'=='----1~11.'U\Uic brown&. 85 nice as
Newpnrt &ooh SAAB ""' "'' (•49101.
8.'l.1·9'00 1---------' $1444
ESTER 1',ROl\1 Ml\CARTTtUR
-.-72 Mercedes SAAB
280 SEL ''·.s=~vw=, ~ .... =1"',"",.-"'b1~t "'-.=.,.
'.
•, SN"lan. Radio. hN1tl!r, Dea1€.'r New tires & brkl. Great CLEARANCE $,\LE autoinatci 1rnns., p o "" r r shape inside &: out. $'130.
stl'\'rrtlg, fa clOI')' air. po11·er ·73 SAABS STARTl~G AT IC::53&-0l::..,:::3:_~-~--
windo1,111, ('!C'. 452 ~~U?il . $2995 vw Transaxle & belly pan
$8600 Ufl 10 24 nlil~ ~r gallon I -hi ._ __ .,.,_ •-lo
Dick Miller Motors ba~ks. :a'~' $33 '&\;A izi Ii Jim Slemons 120 \\'. \\'amer,·S.A. Assorted ena paru. 642-4826
5.17-7132 Imports 1----,-ecc ·n vw SQBK, tug. ri<., * SAAB sunr1., new radials, AM . 1301 Qiuul radio, clean, $1850 eves, ~l"\\T(lrt ~·al·h Bt.,.;t deal ah\'a)'s. Complete 673""'955
S:U-9300 scl~t ion OO\I.'. Buy or leasel.,O:::C::=:_----~
E!'.'TEB. FRO.\! ~!a(•ARTllUR fron1 '69 \Ir 7 pasS('ngcr, sunroof, JI P k. Z bed 5 xlnt Mlcheliru;, 50 USED m ., •nson's moo. &18--0rn '""
Orang-f' County's ~{'\\"est 0111ll1.1~ru~~ 1.1
•••• 111111111~1 .. ·~ ' .
MERCEDEt:: '72 SUPER Beetle, AM/Fl.1,
J 8 track "'"'" •unroo!, new ON DISPLA y ""''· $1 ,sso. ,,,_,001.
Sh N C '68 \'\V Bus, many extras.
arp ew ar 64 --c.'·c.6400~=-'o'O-r_....::~=:::i cheap. mow_n engine. $830. Trade-ins -642-4713 or &15-1536. Coming In Every Day '70 SAAB v N d ood V.\V. '66 A , cpl , g
Ask About Our Unique 99E shape. $850. La g una
Used M e rcedes Lease B1ue 2-door, 4 speed (593-494--6027.
Plans CC:\11. '67 VOLKS\VAGEN Bus $1300
House of Imports $1695 or "'" 0i!fl'""'5
lb'ifi2 l.1anchcstt'r, But-no Park Dick Miller Motors
VOLKSWAGEN VOLVO
1970 VW 1'65 VOLVO l22S 2 dr oe<lan, Sova $$ on Domestic
· "-" · t Tr1tde Ins new Un!'&, ......... es. patn , FASTBACK 1750. 60.>-5309. '71 cad Sdn c1e VIiie
R>d.,, healer, automatic Fu.II power w/Mlr, aold w/ Aul.. U-~ 990 radial lire!!. transmission, air condition· '-"="-' =-=-~-'"'-' $4499
ing. (l07DLH) .-'71 Continental Mark 111 $1799 AMC Ewry 1,~.~ a.iUl•ble.
$4599
'1\8.,. l••.:• •n JAVE.LIN SST. •n Ckrysler
-
'4111o Ulf'9 Full power, atr l'Orld ... v~nyl N1w Yorker Brougham Yolyo top, ll'$ll than 18,001 ot'l)o,'1.nal Sed ;.. trot ·
il b I ~ • I an • lTU..,., con a.tr, ~ es, ~ ance v• 3 Yi;at' . all pov.'E'r P'c. · I
1966 Harbor, C.l\f. 646-93G.1
'69 VW BUG
-4 spd, blue <631AFZl
$1299
ilLL MAXEY
TOYOTA
18881 BEACH~ BL. Mf-8555
HUNTINGTON BEACH
'68 VW, ST:iO-or trade for
aml sailboat
• 846-80 *
VOLVO
WHILE THEY
LAST!
73 VOLVOS
• 164.'s • e 145's • 14--1'~
e 142'!1 e lSOO's
Now Is The Time To
SAYE!
~Wtlfl.UiA W VOLVO
50,IXXl mtle sel"\~ policy 1 $3699
&\·ail. l S H159;j87). 1
. $3195 1 445 .E. COA'ST HIGHWAY
(•t S.,,sk* DrW.J
WardS.Lee
American Motors '1
54 7-582 6
122 1 So. M d 1ri St
Santa An .:i . -
6 l'YI. auto trans, real gas
saver t203DDX).
$1895
WardS.Lee
American Motors '1
547 -5826
1234 So Ma in St .
S.1nta An.:i
BUICK
ftbEWPOAT BEA~H ~ "1 673-0900
''r' -
@
EL DORADOS
14 TO CHOOS&
COUPES·COK\7ERTIBLES . , ..
'"DE VILLES
38 TO CHOOSE
COUPES
SEDAN'S
CONVERTIBLES ~!any excellenl colors
Ox>ice of interiors
!Cloth & leather)
Factory air condiHoni:ig .in the Santa Ana Fn\·y 12{1 \\". \1 ar.K'r, S.A. '67 \VlllTE Sqback, orig 52.l-:;"25{1 557-2'132 OOA1K•r, 47.000 n1 iles, ~-1966 Harbor, C.J\f . 646-9.lll •-=~~----1---=='----l _~Goorl~-""""""nd':._. ,.~....,~21'!..1 --'69 VOLVO 1912 BUICK Ele<.:tra OJstom
Coupe. Full J>™'e'T'. lmmac
thru-OUI Sacrifice nl S3t95.
552~155 call aft 6 pm. ,
Full power. Choice of:
Stereo AM/F~I rad.lo
Crwse C'Ontrol '71 Mercedes TOYOTA '69 V\r """ new en<. •""t
280 SL condition overall. Sl.JOO ur 142 4-DOOR
('pi-. H.attio. hf>a•1·r. autv-
n1al1•· trai\S., po1\'f•r S!t'('r.
lrlfl, laC'tory atr. l.i1· .• ll~lBNN
best ofr. 2~755. A u t o m a t i c transmission. $2021.95 -,70 WESTPHILIA •~di<>, "''"'" <Zl<m!;;i.
SIOOO. m.tOR4 $1795
plus t:Lx St lie,
Delivers A
'73 TOYOTA
~ V\V Bus, runs great, l500
mi, nu eng, will take ~ ol-
lr, 545-8105,
. Dick Miller Motors
12:1 v.·. Warnet", S.A.
557-2132
'68 RIVIEJL.\. Full po"·er,
good condition. Sl-195. or
best offer. 968~
·71 SKYLARK Custom. ~.000
mi. full po\\'Cr, air, nu tires,
$257J, 842-9&15.
Trunk open<'r & more
All in immaculate 1.'0ndition
l.Argest selection in
Orange County
Nabers CadDlac
At.ITHORIZED DEALER
2600 HARBOR BL.,
COSTA MESA
Jim Slemons
Imports
1:\01 Quail
N('\\·port Bc!ach
il33-9lll
Autos, New 980 Autos,-New __ 980 Autos, New 980 540-9100 Open Sunday
I
DAILY Pit.or 41
GIGANTIC DISCOUNTS
ALL '73 BUICKS -
We Are Overstocked With 1973's
Nothin9 Held Back. All Are Down To
ROCK BOTTOM
JUST A FEW EXAM~LES
STICKER. PRICE TERRY'S PllC(.
NEW '7~RliGAL
(2130118) '4971 45 $4075
NEW '73 LE SABRE
Cpc-. iC1153241 '5570°' $4392
NEW 73 ELECTRA 22.S
Umlted Sedan (C0H5871801 '7214'0 $5658
NEW '73 RIVIERA
(H455958)
$5570
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DEMO'S & EXEC. CARS PRICED
EVEN LOWER
We Have A Large Selection From Which To Choose
Centurys, ReCJGIS, Lesabres, Centurions,
Electra 225's, & Riviera's
SH~~~G '74 BUICKS
IMMEDIATE DELIVERY MOST MODELS
TERRY BUICK
5th & Walnut, Huntin9ton Beach. 536-6588
Daily Pilot Classified
Telephone 642-5678
Autos, New 1 980Autos, New . 980Autos, New . -980
ESTER ~~1~0:\1 .\1acARTI ll!R
NOW OPEN
Mlssin yiejo Imports
" -r ""'.
COROLLA
~toJtleW
W TOYOTA ohnson and Son Presents • • • MERCEDES BENZ & 19GG liarhor, C.'.\f. 646-9303
cr.r1n1r-1t.· ~!;& 5'-1"'·1cc '71 Toyota Vis it Us Soon At 1200 Coupe
Z.-701 :'lta11t.1an!e Park\\'ay 4 i;pd
\l 1s..-1un \"it'JO 495-1700 $1349
<C'f' A\"EHY PW)'. E"Tl
'69 280 SL BILL MA-XEY
'"r'.c096PE,_/1~D~!.R· 1""'1 .,!~Y~TA .,,,...,
I. •·. I C' """·· wil (;I't'Cn JIUJ'l.'TrNGTON BEACH ,•x11"nor, ,\uto Tran-;.
$5999 '1972 TOYOTA ·
CREVIER BMW CEUCA
S.ok-s e &>t"\'lt"'(' e U>a!"ini:: 4 spe<'fl, radio, mags, vi nyl
2os \':. T-;1 ~-s.A ss:i.:n n top. t80.1Et.UL «o;;osrrn $2699
1%!l ~l!<H<.1-:Dl·:S
H.OADSTl::R ~ S.L. P ll\\"Cr Sll'C'rin,1:, -1\a· .. l··.:· hrokl'S, auto trans. S-J9j(). lU~ UllUI
SN• at 4-1'.t \V . Hay SI.. TOYOTA
C.'1. 61:>-;>IO oo· 61<i-7527.
O"·ner, D. Sha\,.. 1966 Harbor, C.1'-f 64&-9300
'69 '1B "" SL, pis. plb, '70 TOY.O auto. I nim~r-!'J'rious In-TA
'!~Zm only "d / b" · LAND CRUISER
4-'A'h('('I drive. etc. Nice car, MG !97!! ASQl.
1------1 $2755
'72 MGB DOT DATSUN
GT COUPE 1~-rr, Bc-ach Blvd., 1runt.
1$3295 B l'llCh , ~142, 842-7781.
Dick Miller Motors 1970 TOYOTA MARK II I~ \\'. \\'urncr, S.A.
557-:tlJ:l 4 ctoor, racflO, heater. (796-
1972 ~1CB R<>adstf'r, only BQC).
15.000 miles Xlnl c:ond. pri $1499
pty, must sf'!!, 673-7403 al!
6:00 f\ l
J:OQC't run n In~ rondiUon. TOYOTA
Reo>0omble. ''"""'°"·
WANTED! '59 l\IG tnotor, --lUeDJl bDiA
·~1 1 l\1G-T1'-ClaAAic. Xln1 l""" H bo, C ~J 646-9303 <'f)nd Appra1st>d al s:r..,oo JU<) ar 1 · ·-
Sell !or 119:;0, '39-&1'4. 1968 TOYOTA
MGB 4 <foor, nu!omatic, radio,
hmtcr ( \\'lf"'QH ).
'65 i\iGB Nltt car. ncctli;
body \\lflrk. S<l7:i fi1,n .
96S-7009
PANTERA
$999
~toJtleW W TOYOTA.
'72 PANTERA
/\Ir c.'Cind. 3620 miles
NEWPORT ,
IMPORTS ':
1963 Harbor, C.?<.'f. _ 646-9303
1!i68 TO'l'OT A Corona 4
i'IJ>t.'f!tl ll'af!S. air cond.,
am/fn1 Good con d .
545-0938.
'69 CORONA Great oond. 4
3 Cn II NB dr, auto, .Rill S1075/best otr. 100 \V. nsf · wy., · · 962-n71/536-3.UCJ. a.s1t for
642-9405 Sonia.
PO RSC H=E~-1 '·°"n""co~R~07.N7A~M'"a"'rk~l1-, ~Sed-,-an 1---------air, auto, vinyl top. Very
'73 PORSOIE 914, gold. Ap-
pe11.r. group. Amffm 11ereo.
elc_.an, by ov.'ller, tel 962-0083.
• $-50,000 WRIT. ~fust SR{'.
An..v JtOOd otr. 5.1&-0430 All
6:30p1n.
'10 TOYOTA 2 Dr. Sedan,
4 spreed, good condition.
n~ lil'i'I, SiJTa, 572-7211
TRIUMPH PORSCHE '62 Ctlnv. 0
Roarbitcr AM/lo"'l\1 , t'hocd ---------
brown. rJ500 or """ offc~. '70 SPITFIRE
G73--J70t. Yellow with 4 spc«I, radio,
1968 J>9RSCllE 912, OrAnge, and ht'a·rer, 1623BIC}.
oow lores, a1.000 ml, •• , ... i. $1595
bf owner. GT:>-11141645-7556 rnn ..,. 1900 Ponc~e Dick Miller Moton
Now yellow pajnt job, 120 W. Wamer, S.A.
492-1013, 496-0649 alt 5 5.57-2132
'71 914 '67 TRlUl\.t:Pl-1 GT-6, new
Rfh, air c.'Ond. Xlnt $3500 rad I a I a, mags, AMi'F'M
675-JS53 rad lo, 47 ,IXXl ml. Good cond.
'70 911T Poi·scl:K!. \-Vhl ll, n.1r, $1395 (2131 867-9230 a.ft 5. •
Sunroof, lo mileage, $6.')95. '69 TR6. Xlnt .cond., nu I W:-008.1 or 645--0315. radlnl~. rehlt eng, nu top
1968 911 YEU.OW Porsche, * 962-.1125 *
llko oow, 1 owner. 56,(kX) VOLKSWAGEN milc1. S3G75. S.t2-8007.
'70 PORSCllE 911 T. Yellow, '66 VW Bug, 1500 cng, dirt
mn.gA, x1rn11, lmmo.c.. Call tlrM, $59'J. "'400. 4l>l-10'!7. 008"'271
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··coUGAR~~
XB-7
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SEE ONE -TRY ONE
BUY ONE
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hnson and son
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Home Of The New Car .. ,
"Golden Touch "
262Q_ HARBO,R BLVD. OF CARS
llNCOlN MFRCURY
COUG/l.R CAf'PI
COSTA MESA
I
Home or The New Car ...
"Golden Touch ..
540-5630
l
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, 2 DAIL V PILOT
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Friday, S'ptember 28, 1()73
DAILY
PILOT
ORANGE
COAST'S •
YOUR FACTORY AUTHORIZED CHEVROLET DEALER SERVING THE ENTIRE HARBOR AREA FOR 13 YEARS
TRY THE NEWEST AT CONNELL ,CHEVROLET
Lea,se the ''CONNELEASE'~ WAY~ See Jerry Perkins
Leasitig Manager
HELP US CLOSE-OUT THE LARGEST MONTH IN OUR
HISTORY! SAVINGS . LIKE NEVER BEFORE .
BRAND NEW 1973 CHEVROLET BRAND NEW 1973 BRAND NEW 1973 CHEVRO
EL CAMINO
LOADED:
DISCOUNTED
(217074)
CARICE 4 DOOR •aoo l \229032 !
9 PASS. OFF FACT. WINDOW STICKER PRICE CAPRICE E$T ATE
WAGON. LOADED! LOADED!
DISCOUNTED
51-25-0 --
OFF FACT. WINDOW STICKER PRICE
(472405)
FINAL 1973 DEMONSTRATOR SALE!
CAPRICE 4 DR . $469347 (1248) 1200473 )
IMPALA WAGON s379ooo (1252) 1459379)
NOVA s35247a (398) 1127257)
'71 FORD LTD
Brougham ·I Dr. Only 25,900 nlilrs. Like ne1v.
Air, Vill)'l roof, P.S., P.B., \'8. automatic. Tre-
mendous buy. 1534BSYI
$2299
'72 IMPALA 4 DR. H.T.
22,000 one o\\;ncr miles. Air. reg. gas VB. P.S.,
P.B., autuina tic. I\cllcy ,,·holcs<ilc book S240tl
(-133£,\F f
$2399
'70 FORD MAVERICK
Coupe·. Automatic, radio, 47,000 n1ilcs, 6 cyl-
inder. (755AKT )
$1699
'69 FORD WAGON
CAPRICE 4 DR. s433499 (249) (114358)
CHEVELLE s3574oa (291) (408708)
LAGUNA s3701 26 (409) (408191)
'71 PINTO COUPE
4 SIK't'd. radio, 38,000 miles, Nice. (203CPV)
$1999
'73 PINTO WAGON
Squirl•. 6,400 miles. Automatic, roof rack,
nasty nice. (545HSE)
$2899
'70 JAVEUNE COUPE
V8, P.S .. radio, automatic, nice car. Private
plates. (3625)
$1599
'73 VEGA WAGON
DISCOUNTED
OFF FACT. WINDOW STICKER PRICE
SEE THE ''NEWEST'' OF THE '74's
CHE .RO.LET
MOVES OUT FRONT & WE'VE GOT
THEM ALL FOR DELIVERY TODAY!
'72 CORVETTE
350 cu. in. V8, air cond., P.S .. P.B .. P. \vin-
do\vS. tilt whel, just lik!! new thru-out. 1487-
EB\VI
WILL TRADE
'72 VEGA PANEL
23,000 miles. Turbohydramatic ti·ansmission,
nice. (072FNI)
$1799
'72 IMPALA 4 DR. H.T.
VS, P.S,, P.B., air cond., cheap-cheap-cheap.
(306E!El
$1699
'71 CHEVROLET WAGON
'70 CHEVROLET CUSTOM
Cpc. 41,136 miles. I owner, P.S .. P.B., reg.
gas VB, radio, air, sure a good buy. (061ASIJ
$1799
'73 CAPRICE COUPE
2,183 milC!S. Fresh 1maroon car, beige vinyl
roof, maroon vinyl intenor. Gorgeous car.
Real buy. {451HST)
$3499
'69 CHEVY 112 TON
Pickup. VS, stick, radio. (78922E)
$1899
'72 CHEVELLE WAGON
10 pass. cnn·y squire'. 49.000 milrs. Air. P.S.,
P.B .. VH. a uto., luggage rack. (344AGV)
2.800 miles. Automatic, radio, factory trf?sh.
119341
Kinb'S\vood 6 pass. One O\vner miles. Air, P.S.,
P.B., automatlc, reg. gas. V8. (087DFA)
Concours. VS, automatic, air cond. Got to be
1·ight, (857EMK)
$1999 ) $2899 $2499 $2399
•• ' . I I (
,
_ ..... I§][ !§]
CHEVROLET
9oO Autos, UMd
LINCOLN
990
'66 MUSTANG, -auto, n e \\'
lil'cs/brakes, good rw1ning
cond. Not pretty. S%10. ·
49-J...6360.
'67 MUSTANG 1'"'astback, 2 + 2, ale, aulo trans, p/1,
p/b, $995. 552-8L'i5.
'f,6 Mustang, very good l'un-
ning cond. $375. or best of-
fer. Call 5.16-7851
'67 MUS1'1\NG. Loa.dcd \\'/nu
'66 CH'EV. Impaln. R/H, top $595. 557-6898 3222 S.
PIS, P/8. Good tires: new Towner, Santa Ana. brnkes, auto., 283 \!'-8. l\tust .
sell, Ioaving stole. $450 Or OLDSMOBILE
best offer. Call: 892-6193
CHRYSLER '73 Delta Royal
---------Cpc. Radio, hca1cr, automatic
_'66 Npt, ps+pb, AC, AT, bet· trans., J>O".\'CI' st(!('ring, fac-
tcr tl1an avg cond., $3.'JO. Also tory air, IC'ss 1Jurn 8.000
'66 Olds 442, Mwisie, Hui-st, mileii, taclory W1tJ'n1n!y sill!
Posl. Cragai's, 3 Duces, in eff('{'t, Lie 816HDC.
$450. 51!>7183 541·1817 $4495
'67 NEWPORT Custom. Air
& everylhing. $595. Call Jim Slemons
548--044'. Imports
COMET 1301 Qoau
Newport '&ach ·n Come>!. Air/cond., auto SJ:l-9.100
trans, vinyl top. Great ENTER FORJ\1 Mac,.\RTI~UR
cond! Pvt pty. 592-2621 evt>s
COUGAR Sales & SP:vice
OLDSMOBILE
GMC TRUCKS '68. COUGAR XR7. full p\\T. HONDA CARS air, gauges, Sharp. $1375. -~"=-~ao""1•,__ __ 1UNIVERSITY OLDS DODGE 285o Harbor Blvd.
Costa 1.tesa 540-9640
'67 DODGE Van. V8. r\uto. '6'1 Olds Toronado, Stereo
Ne\\' paint. Cpt"d thn1oul. tape, p/\\·ini:kl\vs, air,
Insulated $1500. 646-652;,, radials, nu brakes, xl nt
s.1n~<12 corn:I. $1100. or IJE'sl otrer.
'67 DQDGE D~rt GT. Very1,,,~~·-li078""°"ol"1~5=-~~~
good c.-ond. Nu engine, air, t9n 01..DS Visla Cruiser
radio, $1100. 97~2807 \\lgn. -3 SC"ats. air Al\1fFl\1
'68 DODGE Dart conv. Ne\\• SIC':_'f!'O, lug l'flCk. Ex t.'Ond .
..!!!_ks, trs, shocks etc. \Viii $2750 lofr. 673-0557 aft 6:30
sell lo,\" Blue Bk, ST'a-629-1-:--p.m. --
FOl\.D ·~~~s Cutlas~~pren:;
- ----· ~ -• -N>n!i~?i?'~.~am~ tape,
'71 MUSTANG MACH I f,uckcts, lq ml, Stooo.
F'ull Power; Low ~tiJes 562-0231. $AVE 1'1~9n=-'~o=Lo"s~T~,-ro-,,-,d~o-.~llk-,
Ile\\', 10,000 rni"s. Belmv
BILI<' Bk. Pvt. pty. 54650.
546-7226.
1964 OLDS Cutlass OOflV. 4
spd, nc\\• brakes, exhaust,
bj>arings. $550., 4!>3-JSS5 alt
7 ?ri1,
'59 OLDS V·8, sta "'ag. auto,
radio, new b111tcry, tires.
xl nt trans car. S 2 O O.
5'6-5087.
-,68 TORONADO
Make oiler 557-2337 Radio, healer. power &le<>r-<---~-~---
ing, aulomntic trans., like PINTO
new. 15,SOO 01,..rginal miles. --------872GIK '73 PINTO WAGON $2999 Squire, air. 4 speed, Jo1\'
"Ult. l··..:· miles. smo. "'"''"' ... UllMt 4~3977.
'72 PJ~1"0,, 8Y' eond, ~ YQLYO eng, 4 speOO trans, 1fAJOO nti.
dclu.'te inter, radio, $2,250,
1966 Harbor, C.M. 646-931'3 1 ,8:>1=.<"='152=·~=---
'71 LTD, 9 pass wagon, fully PI_NTQ '72 SQUIRE. auto,
equipped incld heavy duty ._1r com!.,_ extras, Jmmac.
receiver & head, elec plug-Om.rout. 64::>--1410
i~ for trlr hauling, ne1v '71 RUNABOl:1T, 200l <:c, nu
tires. 1 owner, xlnt, cond. til'es, xlnt cond. ti1ake o!r,
Will sacrif far below lot Cail 979-4670.
prioe ,, 12696. Coll wkdys ~-P'°L°'Y""'Mc.o=ur=H-bef 5 pm._~1321.
1972 T-BIRO. Loaded. Fulll---------1
power (seats, windows, etc.) 196! Ba.tTe.~a. 51,000 actual
AM/FM stereo Sel.ect·Aire m1. Radio, heater, new
\\ilite vinyl top; dark m-own paint. $595. ~954.
met. ext. Perfecl. $3900. Call PONTIAC
• 546-3367 *
FORD '70 Galaxie 500. 4 Dr. CORP. exec. v eh i c I es ,
V-8. Mr/cond. P/S, auto. Choose from {2). '71 Exec.
Pvt pty. $1200. 968-2590 aft Pont. Wagon or 'fill GTO.
6. Both air cond., -.xln1 cond.
'69 CORTINA. Au t 0 , 979-2290 dys, 548-9801 eves.
econom1ca.I, dependable. See '61 PONT. Sta Wgn., Xlnt
to appreciate. 31.~ orig running cond., pct·f body, re-
m!. 53&6476, cent repairs, $250/of(er,
'68 FAIRLANE 500. 2 dr.1,833-33~iCi:92°''=~~-~vinyl lop, VS, auto, nu paint, '69 PONTIAC Grand Prix.
nu tires, nu brakes. Xlnt Must sell. Best oner takes.
cond .. $750. 586-4012. call 644-7933 ask' for Vic or
.'.65--BEA.UTIFUL ~...all Don
power xtras, 2 dr, many nu 1···'ss"·-c"A"T"'AUN,.,.,,"A",...,,tu"II_po_we_r~.i
parts,$600 or bsl oilr, R/H, air, l owner. VERY
646-6623. clean. $575 or o f f e r ,
FOR aale, '64 Ford StaUon1.,.;,rn.646.1~=·==-~-
W8.g(ln, In good cond. Want '68 FIREJBIR'D, air cond,
$200. 833-0552. auto trans, 350 eng, new ~66 FORD Faitlane 500 XL, tires, brks~, Super clean,
Jactory aJr. Xlnt cond. pri make offer,~ oc.GiS.
-pilrly. 567·-9&13 altet!-5 pn-1:,._ .:n.. GRAND ari 9 paq
'66 LTD, air, auto, all power wgn •. AC, full pwr, xtras, opdons. $500. lo nu, 673-97M, PVt. pty.
caJI ~16-:mi T·B(RD *"* '67 FORD Gal~. good ----,-~----I
oond., PfJ, $450. Private par-'68 T·Bmb. l:."lcc. cond. 1
ty. 96UJ332. Leather lnt. Loaded. $1350.
. JEEP 549-4132 '"""SSM434 days.
---------I ~ T BIRD.J:.ike new needs JEEP '6.1-MS84, 4 .wbl drlvt, an owner. After· 6, 646-5313.
427 Cubic inch Chevy, front Price will consider
& rear posl trocllon, W8'll '63 T·BIRD. $100
front hubs &: o'drlve, extra 67J..8079
rear IQllk, Gates Urea, pwr GA
lake o(t-wlnch, S.1500. Also VE
Jc.!:P t.andcn:i trlr w/tool bOx
$75(1. or both for $4000. '72 VEGA 2300 l{a.tchbeck
548-355.1. 4.spd, air, new Urlls
• GMC Jimmy, (BI""')' $2100. *I"' ' 400-3'69
automatic 4 whee.I drive, Don't giW up the ship!
1285(), , ' "List" ll tn c:Ius1fted, Ship
&19-3612 to Shore RcsuluI 642-56711.
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OAIL V PILOT ~
Why. are · we ·one of the Leading Automobile facilities
.HERES WHY: 170 g~~READ .
in the West?
fM·MEDIATE--+--+
DELIVERY
'74 CUTLASS
2 DOOR .
ORDER TODAY
1 ~
$3477 G.M.C~ TR0~~~u~ENTERe
· 8~:~D74 .1/2 .TON PICKUP 54877
'
'74 OLDS 88
2 DOOR
· ORDER ·TODAY f.
Visit. Our Honda Civic
Center WE'RE NUMBER 1 IN
ORANGE COUNTY.
EXCELLENT SELECTION
'74 OLDS 98
4 DOOR .
ORDER -TODAY -~--$-Z. SERVICE-PARTs.:eoDY SHOP
- -QPEN EVERY SA-lU-RDA¥
··--.7-4_T_o-ro_n_a_d_o ___________ ---. ~-.-~--7:30 'TIL 5:30 ..
2 DOOR -~ $5577
ORDER TODAY -
ALL REt.tAINING. '73' s DRASTICALLY REDUCED
TAKE YOUR '72 PLYMOUTH '70 LTD ;71 OLDS 98 $
. FURY WAGON LUXURY SED.
CH 0 ICE LOADED: AIR LOADED : AIR LOADED: AIR
~ .l 471f001 !170F~F I i lt7EQA)
S/I i1 IOl•I -ll'J'ml 51111 !1 lol•I ,._,lhl'J' pyrn!, Ind. I•~· l~1e. •M •II c•rr'J''"'I C1••1'9H 00\ •P9r<lwed
, ..... , lor J6 """'"'" o.terrl!a· pymt. p;lc;• h 5211•.n lr!CI. ,._ & llc ... H .t.NNU""l PEllC£NT.liGE li!Ar,TE
'lO 'DATSUN
4 speed, radio, healer. IJOICID)
'69 FORD
Automatic, air, radio , heater.
(817FTA)
'69 CHRYSLER . --
Power end air conditioning. (770-
ADZ)
IS olO'o. TOIAI <••~ Pl'lc• Is $2208.
'68 DODGE
Wagon. Automatic, air condition-
ing. (XXA002) .
'
'70 OPEL
4 1peed, radio, healer. (BOOAPT) I .
'68 NOVA
Automatic, radio, heater. [WJX.
CS2) ·.
)
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Many Ways To Finance Your Car
Let us tailor your financing
. ·to best fit your needs•
$
DOWN
'69 CHEVROLET
Impala . Automatic, dir condition-
ing. (ZAD895)
'68 COUGAR
Power and air conditioning. (VYU -
244) •
I
77
MONTH
TOO NICE
TO PRICE
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CAIL Y PILOT Friday, Stpttrnber 28, 1q73
, ·'-•
•••••• 0. 0 .•..• . . . . .
-·~ ·-•
ALL MODELS READY .FOR ·IMMEDIATE' "DELIVER,Y·
~
.
'73 MODEL ,·,74 -TRU.CKS -
L!;!E=TO V ERS
NOW .
0 R VOLUME SALES
DISCOUNTED AND SERVICE TRUCK
TO THE BONE! CEN'llR IS TOTALLY
MANNED BY EXPERTS
FROM LIGHT PICKUPS,
STILL A BIG CHOICE( JIO CAMPER SPECIALS,
TO VANS, TO CUSTOM OF BODY STYLES HEAVY DUTY RIGS -
AND EQUIPMENT WE ARE SAVE EQUI PPED TO WHILE THEY
LAS'I'! SERVE YOU BEST!
NEW CAR SALES HAVE OVERSTOCKED OUR USED CAR DEPT.! OUR FINANCE EXPERTS
ARE HERE TO HELP YOU! SAVE NOW ON OUR 2 1/2 ACRES OF FINE TRADE INS!
NO EASIER TERMS
ANYWHERE
. .
'7 2 MU ST ANG '69 FORD LTD
Automatic, radio, heater, power steering, 4 DOor. VS, automatic, radio, heater, pow-
br•kes & windows, •ir conditioning. {3 86-er steering & br•kes, air conditionin g,
DTB l vinyl roof. IXXZ8691
$ s 30
PER PER
MONTH MONTH
NI 11 lol•I dn, PYrMI. 111.12 Is !Olli 1111. 'yrMt. IMI, I••• IHO II l'fl•I dn. pymt, SJ2.30 Is lal1I mo. pyml, 111<1. t1x,
lkenM & •II c1rrylng d1•rre1 on •PIH". uMlt ,.r 41 '"''· HcmM & . 111 <•rrvinf ch•rtn on •PPr. credit for 24 mos.
Oeltrrld pyrMI, QIJ7.7' lncl. 111 & lie, ANNUAL l'Ell:· Dtltf'.Od PYrMI. 110J.2t Ind, 111 & Ii<. ANNUAL PEit·
CENTAOli ll:ATE lL~ Ttl•I tli.11 prltt '1"5.71, CENTAGE ll:AT& U.U"'-TOlll c•1h prlc1 IUU.70.
'71 CHEVROLET '72 TORINO
Mal ibu 2 r:>r. H.T: Automatic, radio, heat-·
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OTA I in9, a ir conditioning, Yinyl roof. l 105843 1
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San Cle111enie
·Capistrano EDITION
VOL. 66, NO. 271, 4 SECTIONS, 44 PAGES • ORANGE COUNTY,-CALIFORNIA
/
...
'
Today's Final
N.Y• Stocks
FRIDAY, SEPTEM8ER~28; 1973 TEN CENTS
Coast POW . Bla·sts His Military _Superiors
By JOHN ZALLER on making my return to civilian life as against Miller and one other POW Will be ''That is totaJly false. I have done
~t11e-o.11r Plltt--61.,, difficult -as-posslble~ .. l.t. Cot. Miller ---·-th-Miller-nothiof:wCOJll~bam:::noka.Sbamed..oI
-ormer c arg 10 an 10 erv1ew. and Navy Capt. Walter F. Wilber would any of-my actit;ms whil~ a pr!son~r. l am
POW Edison W. Miller of Newport Bea~ *'And I'm very disappointed lhat the . confident that, 1( a full 1nvest1gat1on \vcre
Secretary of Navy is going afong with be publicly censured. made into the charge~, I would be criticized his military superiors today them.,, Miller made his remarks en route 'to cleared ...
"for continuing the campaign ° f Miller, shot· down over North Vietnam San Francisco where he said be planned Miller said he is a loyal American
character assa ssination against me" . in 1967, had been chaJJed with mutiny to hold a news conference this afternoon "who loves my country. ,
over allegedly Ulegal antiwar activities and misconduct for anti-war statements to refute remarks made by the Navy "If it were not for my serious physical
while he was ii\, captivity in North Viet· he admittedJy signCd while a prisoner in secretary. injur ies suffered during my im-
nam. North Vietnam. "The secretary said he wasn't pros-priso~ent, I would have elected to have
"There's a small group of ultra-con-Navy Secretary Johlf A. Wahler an-ecut;mg, but. the .thrum ?f his .remarks remained in the ~arine C?rps." .
-se·rvaUve-fonner-POWs-who--are--.intenL--nounced.-.l'hursdaY.-that~tbose--charges-was--that-I-anrguilty1~t..Miller-said. Miller, 42, bas-ser.ved lll-the Marine
•
In San €le1ne1ate
Prisoner Hangs
llimself in Jail
A 26-year-old musician r r o m
Woodstock, N. Y., committed suicide in
his San Clemente jail cell Thursday as he
awaited court action on a stolen car case.
Police said it was the first time ln local
Je~ MiSsing
·During Storm
In Arkansas
EL DORADO. Ark. (AP) -·A Texas
Jntematiooal airliner with 11 persons
aboard disappeared Thursday night in a
torrential rainstonn over southWest
Arkansas: Three National Guardsmen
were killed in the crash of a helicopter on
its way to help in t~ search foi' the
plane.
. history that such a dea th had occurred ;1t
the local facility.
NafCotics detective Craig Steckler was
first to come upon the body of George
Phillip Eagan at lbe noon hour.
Eagan, police said, had shredded a
cJoOi mattreSS cover-m-liiscen;liSlilOi:i·
ed a liOOse 8nd attadi<d the eild to th<
"top rail of his bunk.
After a.PJ>arently pJa~ ffie noose on
his Mek the prisoner Jell " hlJ knees and attaJ!geled hinisell. ·
Police said no slglls of life were evident
after the body was found and officers
notified the coroner.
Police checked Eagan's recor d
thoroughly after the incident and this
morning discovered that the musician, a
frequenter of the upstate New York area,
had been arrested recently in Kingston,
N.Y., and had tried to hang himself in
the jail there but police found h1m in
time.
or.
Corps since 1949. He was the highest
-1'.a:~_Matine e:OJLh.eld_Qy-n1c~orfh
Vietnamese.
"l was sincere in all nlv <lnti\\'ar
sta tements," he said, "and I ·felt I v.•as
within my rights of freedom of speech to
make public statements about my fee l-
ings."
Miller denied he got any favo rable
treatment from the North Vietnamese
for his antiwar statements.
..I had a broken back, badly .fractured
ankle, ,dysentery, and malaria,· The only-
Hours passed with no trace of the Con·
vair turboprop jet which carried eight
passengers and a crew of three on a
flight from El Dorado to Texarkana.
The man was described by arresting
officers as behavirig .strangely through
his detention. Eagan reportedly told one
officer be had been fasting for eight days
prlor to his arrest, but gave no reason
for the self-imposed starvation. · DIU1 f'llet St.ti Ptior.
THIS IS WHAT HAPPENS WHEN YOU HOTWJRE A TRACTOR THAT HAS BEEN LEFT IN GEAR
City Employe on Foot Loses Race With Activated Vehicle on Huntington Beach'• Velardo Drive
Fog and low ceilings grounded most
search planes today. Authorities held lit-
tle hope of findin1: the airliner from the
ground if It went down in the swampy,
wooded. sparsely populated area between
the two cities.
The Texarkana Gazette said it learned
unofficially that three passengers were
colonels from the Red River Army depot
near Texarkana .
Texas International did not Im·
mediately identify the passengers or the
crew. Two helicopters were dispatched from
Uttle Rock. They new together into a fog
bank near Prescott, about 100 ntiles from
their base. One never came out.
The second helicopter turned back and
made a safe landing at Malvern. State
Police quoted its pilot as saying that the
other ship radJoed that It was in trouble
just before it went down.
His death was but one of a series of
unexplainable suicide incidents plaguing
1ocal police Thursday.
Shortly after the prisoner was found
dead. police were summoned to a quiet
neighborhood where a distraught hus-
band told them his wife bad locked
herself in the bathroom and would not
come out.
Police kicked in the door and found the
62-year-old woman.
The woman had swallowed a large
amount of disinfectant, cut herself and
. then tried to drown herself in the
bathtub. She was t.aken to San Clemente
General Hospital and was reported in
"extremely serious condition" at the in·
tensive care ward.
Late Thursday night yet anoUter bl·
zarre suicide attempt took place. Marines
ran to the San Clemente Boat Club and
told a membei-that a serviceman was
. (See SUICIDE, Page l)
Arabs Kidnap Three Jews
On Moscow-Vienna r:prain
VIENNA (UPf ) J-. Two Arabs anned
with irenades and submachine guns seiz-
ed the Moscow.to-Vienna "Chopin Ex·
preu:" as it sped through minefield'-near
the Czech border today; •Seized four
hostages -Including 'three Jews
emlgratlng to Israel -and drove lo
Vienna's international airport where. they
deniancled sale cooduct out of the coun-
'1;,. ruerrlllas alJo shot a Czech border
guard. 111 .. 1 reports said the guard was
killed, but later police oald the man,
Ferdinand Belu, ,w a 1 taken to an
Austrian bospi~I. · .
. At the airport; the guerrillas parked a
blue Vd'lkswa~ bus near two airliners
;:-an Iberian( Airlines DC9 and · an
Austrian Airlines DC9 -and demanded a
plane to "take them to an unspecilied
desUnaUon, the Interior mlnlslry said.
Police al !Jrst reported that the gucr·
rlllas took control of the Spanish jct, but
' ihe Austrian Interior ministry said laier
the guerrillas were negollatlng with
authorttlcs from on top ol t ht
Volkswagen bus in front of the terminal.
An interior. ministry spokesman said
the guerrillas, identified as ''Arabs with
Lebanese passports," held hand. grenades
near their faces and threatened to pull the
pins if their demands were not met.
Shortly after the airport negotiations
started, the Arabs -calling themselves ·
"'Eqles QI the Pal,.Unlan Revolutlon"
-handed out a 2()1).word text of their
dcmanda. As they talked, p o 11 c •
sharpshooters, hlgh-power<cl riOes at the
ready, moved into ~itlon overlooking
the Volkswagen. •·
"In the name of the Palestlnlan
martyrs who were martyred in the aillii·
gle lo re\um, and ln the q)lm~ ,~. the
Palestinian revolution we.' Ille~ o!
the Pales!lnlan Rewiuilon. declare 0ur
responsibllty ror this operation. We have
undertaken this mlsslon, btcau.se we feel
that the immigration of the Sovlej Onion
Jews constitutes a great danger to our
cause," the statement said.
Hlllldredl' of Olllooketa, munclllnJ
(See. HOSTAGES, Pop SI
Boy Touches Off
Big Mesa Fire,
Officials Say
• By RUDI NIEDZIELSKI I
OI "" Datty Plltl Stiff A 13-year-old boy playing wilb matches
touched off a $15,000 inferno in a
neighborhood just outside the Costa Mesa
boundary Thursday. Tht f I a m e s
destroyed two house trailers, a garage
and two storage sheds: ·
No one 'was' injured in the spectacular
,&:55 p.m. blaze battled by engine com·
panies frqm the Orange County fire
Department.
Major property losses were suffered by
fonner movie actress Dorothy Dare, 2028
Santa Ana Ave., and her neighbor, Mrs .
Eve Dahlgren, 2032 Santa Ana Ave. Both
were away when the fire broke out.
The intense blaze sent black cloods of
smoke over Costa Mesa~ Witnesses said
the buildings were fully involved when the
first fire trucks arrived from their base
at Orange County Airport.
Orange County firemen did not radio
for· assistance from the nearby ~1hriners
and Rochester fire stations in Newport
'Beach, and Costa Mesa, respectively.
County 9atJalion. Chief Cli!! Chapman
said the first units were at the fire seven
minutes after the blaze was reported , but
several witnesses said it took at least 20
rninytes before any water was on the namea.
Chapman said th< fire broke out when
the boy's matdl Ignited some carpeting
(See FIRE, Paga l)
SA.FETY"FIRST . ;• ~
\ >. r LOHOON (UPj) -Harvey White. a
.consultant surgeon 41,t St. Bartholomew's
HosPttal, wrot.t iii the British ~tedical
Jourrial loday ~ll\tlt violent exercise Cllin
caus6 poople i.-111allow false teeth and
advised coupJea·to remove !heir dt\nlures
berore makln( ''°"'· . . ., '• '
... . .. -"
Berserk Tra~tor
Unma1ined Vehicle Smashes Garage
A brief race between an unmanned
tr:..ctor ·and its operator ended Thursday
afternoon when the earth mover crashed
into the garage of a Huntiilgton Beach
home.
Police said no one was injured in the
mishap which started when city employe
Jack Orris wanted to dig a hole for a tree
in the median ·in front of 9382 Velardo
Drive.
The tractor, which had a trench digger
on the back, wouldn't st&rt, so Orris got
off and started it by shorting the ignition
with a screwdriver.
Police said Orris apparently· ieft the
tractor in gear, so that when it started
up, it started off.
With Orris in hot pursuit, the tr.actor
rolled over the median, across the street.
up the sidewalk and through the garage
door.
It finally stopped after taking out a
portion of the garage's side walf, police
said.
Other · than the damage to the empty
garage and the tractor, the. only other
damage trom the accident was to Orris'
pride, police said.
Lewis Still on Case
Venue Change Denied
In Sauna Bath Trial •
An Orange County Superior Court
judge refu.led 'Thursday to order a new
venue for a trial in which an AMheim
woman will claim that Jnjurl<!s suffered
in a health spa'a sauna room led her to
seek ae.xual adventures. .
Jud~e Walter Ch,aramza rejected San
Francisco trial lawyer fl\,arvin Lewis
Sr.'s bid to haye the trial moved with the
comment that tt would be impossible to
8\'0ld publicity in that type oC trial
"anywhere ~ California."
Lewis, repiresenUng Mrs. A-1 a r i a
Parson. 46, and Fullerton attorney
Donold Ruston, representing the HoUdoy
l:lcnlth Spa of Orange, also· moved to
post~e the trial date to mitigate the eC-
fects or recent publicity.
But ac!i'll Pr•"4iOJ Judge William C. SP.In la...-rejael'!'I 11111 motioo with the ·I
' "../
con1ment that no purpose would be serv-
ed by the granting of any delay.
Judge Speirs confirmed the originally
scheduled OCt. 29 date and ordered both
sides to be ready for trial on that date.
Lewis argued before Judge Charamza
rejected his motion that it would be im-
possible to pick a jury in Orange County
In view or the "wtdely read Daily Pilot
stor)es."
"They ran this thing with headlines
that remind you of the end or World War
11," he complained. "And then to rub salt
In my wounds they printed a false story
that I had bee n fired by "-1rs. Parson who
states that she has never talked tu the
.newspaJ?er. ·~
A reoent Dlllily Pilot story 4uotcd ~1rs.
P.arson as having dismissed Lewis
(S...SAUllA, Page ti
medical treatmen t I got 1vas on injection
anlfi JitlJeiinifutnt for my S\\'Ol\eil leg. -::mere weremCn WhO\YCrc -givH1 ·-
favored treatment for their an1i1yar
statements. But I was not one of them.··
Secretary Warner. in making the an-
nouncement Thursday, said a thrcl'-
month investigation had shown there
were grounds for trying ~tillCr and Capt.
\Vilber.
But Warner said it was more im-
portant to spare other PO\Vs ·'the disru p-
tive ef.fec_t.s_of_~ p_roce.edings."
Parents
Say Animal
'Not Rabid'
By JOII~4'14 1 TERZA
Of "'* DlllY f'llot '51.tf
A San Clemente couple whOse small
son was bitten last weekend by a coyote
have decided against ii.ntirabies in-
jections for their son "t>ecause we don't
believe the animal has the disease."
A combin ation of factors Convinced Mr.
and Mrs. Edward Ashbaugh. that their
9tll'I, rtley;-3;IOOUliiDOlUffilergo-tfii'----"
series of daily injections whlc:h could
total as much as 24. -
. And their decision, said Mrs. Ashbaugh
·today, came after lengthy consultation
with family doctors and health depart-
ment officials.
"We've seen this animal almost once a
darfor a year and we don't think it has
the disease," she added.
Bartley, who was bitten once by the
animal last Sunday as the youngster
stood on the front lawn of the family
home, also is prone to allergies and bas
heart problems.
"We understand that the treatment has
unpredictable side effects and we just •
weighed the factors and decided that my
son would run a better risk by not taking
the shots," his mother said.
Eight other victims of bites from ap-
parently the same coyote during the
summer months underwent the treat~
ment which' has been described as pain-
ful, but still· less than the original agoniz-
ing Pasteur series which caused major
side effects.
"Health department people told us the
shots are not totally effective in every
case and even if you take them all you
could still contract the disease,'' said
Mrs. Ashbaugh.
The decision i,y the family, residents of
the Riviera District near San Clemente
State Park, came at a· lime when police
stepped up their atte mpts to shoot the
coyote believed responsible for the un-
provoked attacks.
Paul Llqden, the superintendent of San
Clemente Golf Course, managed one shot
\Vith a shotgun at a coyote at the links
Thursday morning during a police-
superviscd hunt, but the animal escaped ..
Police resumed their attempts this
morning, but no animals were sighted.
"We and the neighbors didn't sec the
coyote today, ei~er. We figqre he musl
(See COYOTE, Page ZI
Orange
•
Weati,er
Coast
The Los Angeles weather ser\'l cc
sa)'S it'll be cooler Saturday. "'hh
low clouds and patchy fog along
the coast in the morning hours.
~Ilghs at the beaches in the low
70S ri sing to the upper 80s Inland.
INSIDE TOUi\ Y
There 't a you1ig pittd piper iii
Ocean View School District who
has trcuiafonned a group of cl1if.
dre-n into a perforrning choir.
See story by Stoff \Vriter Hilary
Kaye in today's \Vceke11der.
At Yfvr Stnlce 1 MO•it\ 11·1'
l .M. •••• t Mvtv•• ""'"°' 11 8Mlhtt 11 Nttltntl Ntwi 4, I
CllHt n'lll s, 11 Ortl!M Ctt.111t~ •
Cl•"•llltd ll~ 1ttt11vr•111'J t'l-J1 Ctlflltl 11 5~ottt , .. ,.
C11111Wonl 11 Sloe.~ Mtr1lt11 lt•ll Ot1lll Nolltft I Tt lWl•lon ~ 1'
Edli.rl•I Plff I Tl! ... lt"' 11·2'
'l11111e• 11·11 Wu'Mr t
Fot ttlt ltctrd t WtlMn'• """ 11-1'
KlrMcOll'f '' Wt rlf Po!Mt .. 1 AMI l""" H Wttlt.... ~
MIUbu' '
"
I
'
• • • • • • •
;? DAIL V PILOT
•
;
•
~
P~ones Tapped?
/Jlrs. Don Ni~: '·
'I Don't Care'
t~rom Wlre .suvtu1
Presidenl Nixon's sjster-in-law, Mrs. Jo'.
Donald Nlxcin of Newport Beach, said
111ursday she dJdn't mj.nd U her
telephone was tapped by the White
Hotlse.
"I have no comment, Wt; love
brother."
oor
She added later, when asked if ahe
minded being tapped, "Not ai all."
It \Vas the shortest official party
anyone could remember at the White Pw1rs. Nixon, a guest at a black tie llouse.
W~i~e llou~ di1mer ho~ring Prin1e The usual diplomLtic toasts "'ere ex·
1'11n1sler Norman . E. Kirk O:f New changed, and the 94 guests dined on ~ealand. also de~r1bed the President as Royal Squab. But the White House omit·
UM!. most fantastic man IID4 the _g~atest ... ted the traditional. af_te.r:dinn~_r en-
She \\'as unaccompanied and reported
her husband had to pass up the affair
bcC'ause he \\'as sufering from severe
headaches and had undergone a
diagnostic spinal tap Thursday.
Reporters approached Mrs . Nixon dur·
ing the danclflg after dinner. Asked about
re)lOrls that Nixon had her husband's
telephone tapped to keep tabs on Donald
Nixon's association with multi-millionaire
Howard .llughes. she appeared a bit
fh..sterl'd but said:
* Wiretapping
Quiz 'Opens
lnimediately'
• Kirk out the front door by 10:35 p.m., a
good hour earlier than usual. .
During the toasts, Prime hfinister Kirk
extended an open invitation to President
and 1'1rs. Nixon to visit New Zealand at a
time convenient to them. He said he
'"'elcomed an opportunity to improve
relations with the United States, and "we
want to develop as an indepetldent coun-
try."
Instead of the usual musicale in the
East Room, there was dancing in the
Grand Hallway.
Although the President never dances
on such occasions, he broke his own
tradition, and took hll wife Pat on the
noor to encourage other guests to dance.·
After twirling to "Uie Sound <If Music."
the Nlxons headed for the private fa n1lly
elevator.
Vice President Spiro T. Agnew and his
·wife Judy rec~lved a loud round 'of ap-
plause when they entered the East Room
during a reception before the dinner .
After\Yards Agne'"' chatted with guestl .
THURSDAY'S LATE AFTERNOON BLAZE RAGES OUT OF CONTROL BEHIND HOMES NEAR WOODLAND SCHOOL
Fire Investigators Say Youth Playing With Matches Ignited Fire Which Destroyed Trailers, Storage Shed
A probe into the possible wiretapping
of phone conversations between a former
aide to billionaire Howard Hughes and F.
Donald Nixon of Newport Beach, the
President's brother, will begin im-
mediately, An Asst. U.S. Attorney said
Thursday.
Agnew l\'aS showing none of the strain
. of the past few days and wore a
perpetual smile on his face. Asked how
he felt about Speaker Carl Albert's re·
jeclion of a House inquiry Into allegations
the Vice Presldept participated in a
kickback scheme, Agnew said, "I don't
regard the decision as being permanent." From Page 1
i FIRE ... .
: material stored in one 0£ the sheds and
: spread after he tried to extinguish it.
Fire officials refused to disclose the
name of the boy because he is a juvenile.
"I haven't taken an inVentory but I can
tell you it's up in the thousands," said
1'1iss Dare, 59. in describing the JoSs.
, Miss Dare starred in motion pictures
; and theater produclions during tbe 1930s
and 1940s with Dick Powell, Erroll FlyM,
James Cagney and others.
From Pagel
HOSTAGES. • •
snacks in the airport restaurant, '!''atched
the negoliations going on just a few yards
away.
'The windo\1's of the six-seater bus
steamed up as a result of the heat inside
the vehicle.
A police spokesman said the gunmen
wanted to contact the Israeli embassy in
Vienna.
Schwechat airport was closed to all
traffic. A dozen Au strian security men
surrounded the bus at the airport and
talked with the guerrillas inside the vehi·
cle. Police carrying pistols and machine
guns stood watch atop the airport
tenninal and along runways, turning
back curiosity seekers.
Police said the Arabs \l'ere anned with
macltine guns when lhcy seized the train
at the Marche:gg border staton, about 2.l
miles east of Vienna.
Free World 'Duty'
ASPEN , Colo. <UPI) -\Vest German
Chancellor \Villy' Brandt said here today
free world peoples have a right and a du-
ty to speak oul "'hen they see repression
and unfairness.
The leader of \\'est Gennany's Socia l
Democratic Party spoke during a
ceremony presenting him \l:ilh the
statesman-hu ist award or the Aspen
Institute for anistic studies.
OIAN&I COAST
DAILY PILOT
Tiii 0!'•"'19 CN1t OAILY PILOT, WI"' 'lfll>1:ll
11 cemblMO 1111 "ltwt.·Ptln, !1 Pllbllohtcl by '
ll'>e Or•not Cot1t l"11blltlt!ftv ~ ... S-
r1t. 11111ion. ••• ""'""''*'· MOtM11r IM01111h
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'
Adobe Ca1npaign Boost John R. Lusk said the Justice Depart·
ment investigation was requested after
. the Washington P06t reported Sept. 6
that the President had his brother's
phone tapped because he' feared em·
barrassment Crom the latter's financial
activities.
From Pagel
Capo Society Seeks Volunteers For Fu1ul Raising SAUNA • • •
-Members of the San Juan Capistrano
Historical Society continued their cam·
paign to 'save and restore the threatened
Miguel Parra Adobe this week, schedul-
ing a meeting for volunteers willing to
help in fund-raising walking tours of the
Mission area landmarks.
An the proceeds from the weekend
events contemplated later thi~ fall will go
toward restoration costs of the adobe
threatened by a housing tract along
Ortega Highway.
The initial session to determine how-
Genera.I Plaits
·much interest exists in the fund-raising
effort is set for Oct. 11 at the Coffee
Garden in San Juan, starting at 10 a.m.
Spokesmen for the society urged all
persons willing to serve as tour guides
lO attend the session which will include a
"sample" of the tour being planned of
tile city's nearby historic adobes.
"Anyone, whether a member or not. is
welcome to the meeting. All they must
have is an interest in preserving San
JUan's historical sites,'' said society
member Mary Jane Forster.'!' ·
State Cou1·t Hands Down
Private Property Ruling
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -The State
Supreme (',ourt ruled Thursday that
adoption of a ·general plan for city or
county development docs not result in a
taking of private property for public use.
The government is not required to pay
a lando1vner merely because a general
plan shows that his property ultimately
might be required for a street or other
public use, the unanimous decision said.
'fhe Selby Realty Co. of Ventura ap-
pealed the cily of Ventura's 1970 denial o[
a building permit for a 54-unit apart·
1nent .
The cHy refused the pennit unless the
Selby Co. dedicatct.I and improved 1hc
street 111arked on the general plan
Frot1• Page 1
COYOTE • • •
have been scored off by the police," said
J\;Jrs. Ashbaugh.
The bitten lxly's mother said she en-
doq;cd the lates t attempts at trying to
shoot the animal
"This has lo be stopped before the
animal bites any other small children." ·she. like hct neighbors. had been
following the biting incidents at the state
park closely through the su1nn1er, but
i\·lrs. Ashbaugh theorized that the impact
or the incidents is much stronger llO\V
bc<:»use a local youngster \Vas in\'olvcd.
"In all the other cases prople didn't
tnkl! il so seriously, J guess. because the
people \vere just visiting the cif.y. Now
it's affecting local residents and they nrc
beco1ning n1ore concerned.''
"Nobcxly should have to endure .,.,·hat
\re\·e been through this past week. It's
befn a terrible experience for the '"'h<lic
family and it 's still not over with."
Sanuuy Davis Ji·.
Now Casino Owne1·
LAS Vl'NAS (Ul'l J -Sammy Davi<>
Jr. has become lhc first black man to
hold o gambling license as part owner or
a 1najor hotel on the Uis Vegas "strip."
The Nevada Gaming: C.Ommlssion
Thursday unanimously <i p p r o v e d
Issuance of a ll censc to Davis, qualifying
him to become a director or the
Tropicona tlotcl. Davis OYlflS eight per-
cent or the hotel, an lntcrcst ..... ·orih about
adopted in 1968. The properly previously
had been zoned for 1nultiplc dwellings.
If cities and counties were subject to
claims merely because the p 1 an
designated a land parcel for potential
public use, "the proces.<> of connnunily
planning would either grind to a halt. or
deteriorate to ... vacuous generaliza-
tions regarding f u t u r e use of land,"
Justice Stanley Mosk \\·rote.
Planning is in1portant in avoiding
haphazard comn1unity growth, he said.
The mere adoption of a general plan
does not indicate a fina l intention or
public use, nor preclude a planning
change, Mosk said.
The court said, howel'er, that \Vhen the
rompany's permit \Vas defiied, Ventura
did not ha ve an ordinance explicitly
authorizing denial if a landowner failed
to dedicate a street on his properly.
Such an ordinance was later passed.
The court directed that the city n<1w
should decide whether it wants to require
dedication under the new ordinance.
Clen1e11tean Hurt
111 Surf Misl1ap
A young San Clemente surfer "'as
\Viped out on a wave off Riviera Beach
late Thursday and sufrcrcd a deep wound
In the groin. police reported.
J)an Locey, 22, was found bleeding bad-
ly from the injury on the beach shortly
before 6 p.1n. by residents who called for
an arnbulance.
Firemen arrived, applied first aid to
the bleeding surfer and took him to San
Clemente General 1-lospltal where
Locey'11 injury was stitched up.
From Pagel
SUICIDE • • •
standing on a piling at the end of the city
pier. The man was preparing to jump.
Police, lifeguards ond harbor
patrolmen were called and they found the
distraught ~farine standing •top a piling
at the tip or the pier. He held a knlrc and
had placed a note at bLs feet.
OHlcers talked the man back and look
him to Camp Pendleton for transrer tb
The object of the fund-raiser is a
remarkably intact adobe which dates
back to the early 1800s and originally
served as a storage house for tools and
crops. The mission's Indians built the
structure and used it as they tilled the
Mission.lieJds_located_along San Juan.
Creek.
'l'be structure 'now lies on a spot
selected by a developer as the access
route to a large housing I.tact being pro-
, ·~ and cu1TenUy before the-city ·plan-
ning commission.
The society raised the first objections
to the possible razing of the adobe early
last week when commissioners evaluated
an environmental impact report on the
project.
After lenglhy debate on th c
significance of the structure com-
missioners agreed to seek a rewriting or
the report and will consider the matter
once again Tuesday evening.
The request came from attorneys ror
former Hughes aide John H. 1'1cier, cur·
rently under indictment in· Las Vegas on
federal income tax evasion charges.
Meier's attorneys asked for transcript.!!
of any conversations between Meier and
Donald Nixon if any were, in fact,
recorded.
?\1eier was fired as a scientific adviser
to the Hughes Tool Co. in Nevada. sup-
posedly because he ignored White House
orders to disassociate himself from the
President's brother.
1'1eier's trial ..... ·as scheduled lo begin
Oct. 12, but has been delayed until Jan. 7
to permit an investigation or Possible
electronic surveillance.
l\feier. who claim.!! the indictment
against him was "politicaDy motivated,"
is also being sued by the Hughes
ors;anization in ' Salt Lake City for
allegedly conspiring to cheat it out of $9
million by purchasing unproductive
mining claims at high prices.
because of the publicity given her case.
Lewis denied that he had been dismissed
by Mrs. Parson and branded the story as
false. ·
lie told ' the court that Mr. and I\.frs.
Parson were in the courtroom and that
they would support his statement that he
was still handling the case.
After Lewis. In B letter· to the Daily
Pilot, denied being dismi.ss:ed, Daily Pilot
representatives attempted to contact
J\frs. ParJOO, but were unable to reach
her.
Mn. ParlOll sued the health spa on the
grounds that trauma created when she
"·as trapped in the sauna room changed
her personality to the point that she con-
tacted strangers In bar.!I with a view lo
sexual relationships with them.
A psychiatrist has testified in a deposi·
lion that she developed m u I t i p I e
personalities as a result of her injuries
and her condition was described as a
"three faces of Eve" personality split
WOODMARK CHAIRS
,
A Lot Of Comfort At A Reasonable Price
WOODMARK FEATURES
* LUXURIOUS 25 '/. DOWN
& 75 ~. FEATHER BACK * PRICE INCLUDES SKIRTS
& ARM COVERS
* EXCELLENT SELECTION
OF 'FABRICS, ALL ,
SCOTCHGUARDED
* CLEANING INSTRUCTIONS
FOR EVERY FABRLC
* EIGHT WAY HAND
TIED CHAIR BASES
* ALL DOUBLE DOWLED
HARDWOOD FRAMES
AND MUCH, MUCH, MORE
*· A TED von HEMERT
EXCLUSIVE ••• ON
DISPLAY "NOW .
LOUNGE CHAIR PRICES StART AT $215.
DREXEl..-HERITAGe-HENREDON-WOODMARK-l<ARASTAN '---------
INTERIORS
. WEIKDA YS & SA TUlDAYS t :OO to l:JO
HIDAY 'T1L t :OO
NEWPORT BEACH e
1727 WfSTCllFF OR.. '41·2050
10,." SuM•v 12·11l OI ·
LAGUNA BEACH e
J'4J NORTH COASl HWY.
(Op•~ Suiwi•v 12.J1JO} 4t'4455t
TORRANCE e
21M• HAW1HOlkE ILVD.
J71·127t
~2 n1illio11. j the U.S. NaviJI Jfospit.al for observation. -----------------~,.-------------___ __:. __
' ' I i
l
" '
J% DAILY PILOT
Lending
Rate Cut
SC
By I Bank
NEW YORK {AP! -A
small St. Louis bank has
lowcr.ed its prime lending rate rrom 10 to ~ percent, but
spokesmen for some • New
, York banks said the ntove was
premature ·and indicated It
would not imme di a tcly
become industrywide.
Southwest Bank o~1St. Louis
announced Thursda)! it was
culling by one-lourlh of a
percentage pojnt the minimum
borrowing fee il charges its
fllO!l't creditworthy corporate
•
• •
Complete New York Stock List
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h · I 'II f' d '( Alld Supmkl 11 Sii i\l Sh 51~+ ~•City Slortt ' S S S Geble lndtt I B 17 16'< 11 KrOritler .IO 1 I l7l1 11~1 irn+ '• us1ncss aceouns~·1 in 1 fl AUlsC ll• _2212 S9 l2~ 121, 17~.,_ Cl•rkE 1.5, rs ~ s.11 s.t s.t':.-•.:.GAC corp 11 J" J•• l.., Krootr 1.lO it 6111\11 1111111.-•. little cheal"ll'r to borrow. But All•'1hlA .so 8 16 IO'll 911 101_ '• Cltrk 011 .Ill 1 "" 201,1, 20 20'6-'l'I GAF 'I .•4 a .,., 11•4 IJ\, 14 -'· KylOf t .60• 1 • 1lh 1* 1J1i--h ,.~ A!pl\1Pl .60 8 16 16 15':0 16 +~;CLC ol Atn S •S 6':.' 6 GAFp L'HI 1 20','J 'HI'• :Ml':t-~ -t.L.----the ·cut qhould have Jillie im· Alcw 1 91 16 l'HI ,, •• ,~.._._ >lt'>-"c1ev Cillis 2 12 s n1~ nv. n v,+ ~ G1m Sk 1.'1.I W> »t~ 32~• 32~.-~. L•~1eae 1~, 1 A 19V. '"" 19V.+ '"' ~ ,m,-.••• • .,. CleYEI 7 37 ll 60 33'; 3l 33a-V.GllMSQI 1.60 '32'Jo 32.\lo 32\.4 J,L1m111Sn 1 a 1~ ll\lt 13 13h+w edl I · t t ~ "' 16 1"" SV. S'l<I+ ~-· ''' •• Go·-oo ." " " "Vt l~ 38°'> L•n•B•y .n 10 11 lt~ 19 19\\ m a e 1n1pac on ra es on Amtr•c-1.'HI 1 1 '°'" lO\IJ 20\.'>-1,. qClev & p111 .. ?100 •Vo y,. on.-. ... + , , M , ... , 'J2t ., .
loans to c••sun1ers and small A, , , ,1,_11 P ,. 1 '" ,. .., 1... ,41 c;.r1ock .a• 1 ,1 11 ,,,., 1~-"" Lo•r-ot. s11 '' • ""'· ·-• AmHe1 ·~ 1.s ll6 •S 12o,r. ll.\lotl Clcoroxco .S2 11 m :n 21~ ?11~+ 1" GardOen .10 11 l'3 2s+e 14'\~ li" .,.. .. er I •OU<> I 11 l -.. + ~
.,,_, Am:~FI .• l ll :: l~~ tt¥: ;'J; l~ cMj lny (:p lS 65 33\; ml. :m't: ''i G.l Svc 1 12 I '1 11 !JI\ 14 Le1rSl1t9 .21 I 71 7+o 7'11 ~ l.'t businesses. /Im Alrunes lOs n:ii. 11v, 11 _"' i<NA Fl11 .58 6 112 1:w. in~ 1JV.+ \'o G1tew•~ ·1n s • 611 6\l< 6\'+ I• Leor5 pf l \< .. •1 ?7'lil ~ ~"' The pri'me rote theoretically 1'mB•k .20 .. 8 7'11 1~. ~ "'CN•p1 1.10 . 67 1•11t 11~ 11'llt.-"" GCA Corp n l2 ''"' ,•,,. -,•,,1a.. ·~ t::~:,c~.«1 s 1~~ Jl11~1 llf l.m.+·;.:_ " /\Brand 2.:111 I 58 37•,. l7'111 31~1 COil! SI Gs 6 S2U 12 1~1 ll'llt.+?\ .. Gemini C11> . ' 11 ll'I• • • n l pf • ·• .....,. -• moves inderw>ndentl" of these '"' AmBrc,i .~• 14 lOJ ;u14 l7,,.. 33"1+ l'I CstSGp1 1.19 .. se 11 i~·1 i1:i11+1:u. Gtm11111rK 1 s 13~• 131• 13~ v. '''' · ·· 2 •Vt 2$\'J x v. ··· ,.~ J> Am Bldg ,16 9 .ct 12;1 U V, 12,,._ \ro CstSGp! 1.B3 5'1 191M 11* 19\;+ •:,Gin Am Inv n IS 11'111 11\lo-V. t81~';"'l"N· 16 $ '1\lo 13Y. .UV. -
rates, although a sustained Uf't Tel""°'-Am Cen ?.<>0 u1 31•., ~ 30>-'lit cocaco1 1.90 1.1 ,',','~,."i '',','t.. l~~t :-: g~fro,11 ~ 10 1; !~! ~"' r,:t,12 i..!:'°"1 :so ~ "J ~!tt \~l't l1t?:: '-
change in the rate will even-~ l~P'1J;b 1o 3~ i~ l1h 1~ ~ l:C:!~~ 3: ~ 11 1;;:; 11tio 11,,.. ... ~ G•nB•llC .16 1 12 l• 13'111 1• + "'Lt11 Pl c .60 1 6 11v. 11 1Ni+ ~ l'• t• f St "k A Chain 1."° 8 16 ~ rno m'r--'h COlec:ofn .1:16 16 60 12 n•. i111-.-'• GnC•lllt .50 9 2l6 11»9 10 10\lt-\,\ Lell Vil Ind 10 1~ r--1'111+ Vt tually spill over to other loan IC '1111 0 ' rt· e A Cy .. , l.IO 11 ltS U\4 2• l • 2«1-\~ Coloete .5-1 :It Ul llV. :It'~ 32..,__1 ,~ Gn Cgr l.20 I IA I~• IS\.\ lSV.-"'t'"m 1.Sf!1 • '° .:t~ lftli l~'t+ V1 r Am Dlslill ' 16 I 19~ 19 ... 19._ ''• Col;e1e WI 1 ~ ~ :nltro-~ Gn OIVtlop I 11 ·~· 11'1 i i,,,-,. ~ L ,,,,,,..) '8 » l\lo llilo A -~, ees. AO ls!TeJ ... 28 I 11•1 ~1\• ·~+~~co11Pcl 3\'r . llO Sl SlU SI* ~n OV1111m 9 17' 26V. 2'"''' +~•L.on~tln(. It ~ l~ 36-li ~ .... The prime rate has been Th1's driver may have a long walk before she's able to fill up her gas can. Near-Am011n1 vsi 1 "" 612 t i.,-,,.. cot 11.A•k .56 • S6 10.,., 1ov. 1~1 +"v. Gn e1ec 1.60 11 'H11 u"" 62~ &J -1~ i..:~ inc ,;: ·· 1 I~ J~~ J2~+ ~ . A.0111 Pf .l•t l 1' 11 U CclUns Food 12 31 13 12\!o 17"-~1 GnFoocl 1.40 IJ 192 28Uo 27~ 28 -'r1 Levi Slri 4 jj :).t 21'\4 11 '~ .. boosted 16 times this year, to ly b•lf of the service stations in the St. Louis area closed at midnight Thursday AmEloc Ll'O 111 J11 21"1 211'1 21"' ... cornn R4<1ro . 216 2SI'> u~ 1s:\\ Gl'l'IG•o Mb 26 2u 19\Q 19 19•,1+ ~-. Levni F1/rn 11 363 ,.~ 7\'J 7'lll .. Am Expart .. •62 1'h 1 21/:1 Col Penn .20 SO '°' 61\.'• 6S"• 67!1+ "• Gn HOSI Cp I V 11W& IOV• 10'.'<-'" LFE COtlln IS 2• .J • s s -·it. a historic peak or 10 percent, for six days to protest Phase 4 price rollbacks on the cost of gas. ,\/'fl E•Pr 111 12810 1 si.. &'h--111o co1ons1 1.00 • i• 11 17" n + v. Gen 1n,1r 2k 1. s1 21v.. 20\~ '' -1• LlbbVO 2.'HI 1 13 31 34"" 35 _\to
and .s 0 u th we s I ' s an---------''----''---------=----------------'-----------IA Fln~y 1.10 10 I 11 16'• 16',-•• CPll Ind .1C • •3 l)'\jj 1711> llh+ h· GenlnU pl l I ll 36-lo ]1 + 41 LOF pf ~"' 5 XI V.. 6Hli 10~+1 ~. . A Fin Pl I'"> l:lllO 71'. 21\.o 21\lo-•11 C 8 S 1.46 11 u l4 Jl'-. 1" + 'J. Gen"¥<! .12 19 4 23 la'• 231 , Llfllly Mc:Nf Al 20 • ''"' 6"-6\lo+ ~ nounccnlent marked the rirst AGnBd l'hll •3 26-11 26 26~+ 1• c o sprt1 1 . 12 27'°1 :nt1 ni1-1 1~GenM1n 1.0& '2 103 66V. 6t,,.. 61 .'o-lt. Llbl1VCP 30 , 30 iii;, 1~ 11~+..,
A GnS 1.:1011 I 11 ... 11••• 18llo+ '• (al Gii 1.90 ' n 11'!· 27~ 211 + •1 G11Mof 2.llOI> I soo 68'1& '6\0 61 -1 ~. Llbttvln ··o I 211 t\lt t~• ,.,.,
d'·p o'n the key lendo'ng rate A Gn 111 1.80 10 21v, 26>J. 21'h+ ,.~ c04wM 2.210 ' 1' lD 29~1 :it>.:1o+v. GnMo•Pf 3\• -a SlV. s~ ss~ i.. u M •"-,, ,, ,.. • ... ,-+"' · f. AmHol1t .60 9 B2 Ht. 11'1< 1•~•+ 14 Combe I.JI 21 121 12v, 1111, ~ii-i\ Gl'l'IMol F' .s s JJ\lo 1S\• JS'"+ "" .1111 I ,. ...,,-. ~! """ • L b C , AmHa.m .tM l1 ,S,16 17-\io 17.'J.. •2\lo . ComSolv .llO 20 29 ~ )()•4 20,h+ 1• Gt:n Por .IO a ?10 llYI U \-U:\,,+ 'ii l!llY EJ .12 ll 201 IO 71~ to ... a Or ease Ire AmHosp .:It ~1 ltM •• •l Illa+ 'li CmwE"d 2,30 10 lQ 30"4 lO'l-'o 3C'l1-'It G P.1.11>1J 1.60 9 119 20\\ 1''' 2011 L111CNU 1.0I 12 19S ~ :tl'-14 "°""'+ ~1 SOUTllWEST president LA. • Atnlnvs1 .so 6 ~ 9\-'t ' 9'/1 . ewe pr .,,14 . 1 93 tj 93 +VI Gen R.tritt 9 _s ...,1 6i-. ,,._ ,., L!ncN11 ~I 3 .. 4 _12 11 1'1 1t2 ...
, -ng sao'd the "·n nk was 1,,·m-~ ~~1~o:J ~ 162 •~ l 't 9 -'' comEd Pl' 2 · J 26\1• 26\\ 11•.:.-1\ Gns1ono1 .65 n 20 !>l s21:. s1'1<--1, tlfe'~~ ,e,T 1i ~ 1~l'< ~ n;_·~
LA.I lk A Mote~ 1V. ll l10 ~ sv, SVt-~ CwEdpf 1.11 ., 1 ~ ~ ~· .. Gn Stell Ind 21 J~ 3-h 3~ .,. Li11n CV pt l 3 37 ~ ~+ I• ming the prime rate to renect r AMtc pf 511o • • 11~ 1:r" 1:r-1~*-++ ~· ,c!!.~,'.·", . . s 24"4 '""'i 2•'h • . GGnT•,•¢ '•"' ·, noo 11,~ ',',:! ',!..~+ ",·•Linn cv l1f 2 12 191'11 191,1o tMM-S<"J Amer Mo/or 6 ,., '" -.. -..c J 10 10 10 ··· n r1· .IO m 1 ill .--. '"'!'+ 1 Lln11111n plA 16 12W lift. ll -i,..,
3 recent dip in rates in open Cl•avez U1· ;on , Teamster s Se ttle ~mm~!'.·, ' . ..:~ ,,s !! ~r: 3'~ ::i.. .,. l::~1sr; ~ 2J ,1g,,. ig :~"' ::: =~p ~ .. ,. ~~1 .7'19 .:: 4~~ (:;-~~ ...... ,. " ... !!! r.'l! fflt! ......... 'no Dey market Where banks " ... .., .... ..... .. "' 8''0 liil+ v. C....011 t I 11 'n """ 23\~ nv. . GI Pac .IOa 14 Slt 39 JI 3' + v. .. -.... ,,. ....... ~:! ,, •• • AM Sll)p .61 t 12 llV. 21 ' 11 -\lo C pt '68 20 117 SSV. S.CY. S•'M--y, G.Pwf>f 7.l(i llJO 99'h 9'V. 991'1+1"'1 UJ<Nt ,36 13 l'9 15V. 5,, " obtain lendable runds. : 5"$9~ 1·20 • 202 21 i-. 21v. 2n··-v. c:ri::.ir Set 44 ~ 3v. 1v.. •.. Gertier. 1."J5 10 36 1U11 1.t,'4 16v.-wt=. lMlf>, 1' ~ :fl'~ ~ tt:'.:!:1~ ,
h he • ' • . cl . AmSl~f ·50 ~' Ill IS\~ 14'11115~+~cor>A11r SOii 1 1413 13 .13 ... Getty 1.111)•21 S7 ll6 l32A1l6 +l ·~s o-· • ,,, " ,. .• ~ ... , "It is ln keeping wit t re--\VASHINGTON (AP) -The jurisdiction over workers in In announcing the con us1on ~sieru •.~ ,, 12 ss"" 53'4 se:i..+ ,,.. coneMt i m 1 16 uv. 11 u GF B11• .:n 11 1 ,.,., t i .. ,,,.,+ v. ~-~ '"' ' .," 90• ,, ... 100 ''"" 1' 1' -~ c l'IMI 1.Mti 14 ll n"" nv.. 2~+ v. Gl•"IPC .80 I 1 12'h 12\'o 12'1<+ I'll I.Dile Spl .~.. . . I 90 + cent lower trend of rates on AFl.rCIO was to announce a related operations of{ the of the peace talks, an AFL-~ttt P~·'S 11 ·~; ~ ?!~ H.. . . c::...r&ec ·'° 11 2, xr.1o 19.,., 2~v.+ :u Glt>r Flnt 1k , 25 11t. 1111 1~1+ h 1.an s1G 1.16 10 10 ?B'MI 2n. :nv._:t "'
Short·tenn government and tod · th b'tte f 1·k king ho C!O s kesman p' o t e d ATTpfA J.tM 15 ,,..,• ,-, ,,",,+ ,A con Ed 1..ao 10 1sa n~ nv. 221'i-1~ Gldd Lew11 .st. n. 1"° n-. L.OO!l•Lr 1·16 11 " 21"" 21i. 21"" "': truce ay 1n e 1 r arm, 1 e pac uses. · po re r AmT&T 752 6 .• 6 6 _ ;z consEa p1 6 .. 1 16y, 1,.,., 76111o+ GIHHHI .36b ·1 s ,, 16 16 -v.t;71DocOrS6, ~ 2i ~~ ~v. ift:!lt!
pr'·me ,-.. ,·,,·es and the Calif ·a farm worker "progress towards resolut1'on •mwo<' .~ .. ·, , c11111Ed '' s 3 tM t.JV, 6'I + v. GUL<flte i.so n m t.J 62 62v.--1 . • . .."""' ' Ornl · (th . ., AWlrpr 1V. z2~ ig~ l~~ 1g;:±:_~c11111Fd 1.30 f1' 111 30•.lo tt<A ~\'iGlnos lncar11 61 tt•/, 21,._ 21~~uLuMIEx 1 2~ 2" .mil 42tlt •:zt-~ ~ change "'ill bring the prime d i s p u t e between the BUT IT WAS not known o e issues. Amtltk .10 10 11 ,~ isv. 15,,..__ ~ conFd¢ ,,,. . . , 1t1 1~ " +2 G1eolOl'I .11 16 15 20'1· 19111 19'4-'h uP1tuc .20 11 11• 42:ito 411111 ~ .,.
h AMF In 1.0ll lJ 109 ll/'I 32,,.. 32'i't+ ~Con Frql .56 11 90 ,,.. 1rn 19"'1-v. Glob41 M1r ,, 208 17111 11 ,,,,_ >n UIUGll 1.aa II I 11\lo 21 1 .. ·~ ' into line with ot er money Teamsters Union 3nd Cesar whether the Teamsters agreed Am11c .tM 1 31 1~ 16 16~ "-consNG 2.co 1 31 11,,.. 21'"' 21v.+ v. G1ooeu .aoa 10 n 21 20•1 21 + v. t~"''cor9! ~ 1it J~tt, ~{~ lf:+ "'~
market rates." he said. Chavez' United Fann to give up contracts they THE SPOKESMAN1 said •'mM!:,0",' .·l! ~, ~ •,•,··· •9~ s,1v.+ ""c~s,•,1••, .? 10 57, ,2:~ ?~ ;:.... k ~~~th Fe: 1~ ~ J~ ~~ ~~tt:: !Z L.•V Corp A .. 19 1•v. 14 u + 111 Rates on some short-term details would be disclosed in •m;,x CP n 1; s • :~ l'i:i:-Iii on11Ar (';; 1• 112 9~ YI,,.. J\tt" V! GooclYrT!r 1 9 211 2•!'i l-1'11 24'i+ v. LTVCP Spt ·· 15 "2"" ~ .u y,+ 1•' Workers. already won which cover some .a.nu-~ corp 6 31 61.,, s:w 6• _ '• n c1n l.llD ' ~ 2111o u ... 2~+ v. Gor<lonJ .21 , 6 ii"" 12"' n\i.+ ''"' L.u~•~, ·fi ~~ 1~. ~VJ 14~ ~t?-'~ methods or borrowing. such as Labor sources indicated that farm workers. an announcement after the Am11ar 11.0 a 11 211.;. 21i, 2 • .__ •1 on CDPPtf 16 ! alto ·~ Gould inc 1 10 2u m~ 2•u 2714-+. 1.uc Y · 1 -Amllr pl 68 s I' 1 tl't 1,,_ 14 };,PD00,o0< >'.'.! . zl 1 \lo 12 ~ ll\~t ·~ Grice W ll') 11 190 26"7. 261'• 16'"'-~. 1.l.ldl~ 1,09 I :ti' 11 , I~ V!t • ·; U.S. Treasury bills, have been a cease-f•'re agreement.-reach, (The Los Angeles T•'mes nc"oliators conferred "with •msred 1:-, " , "' -· -1 a. 39V. 391'1 39¥> ~-Gr•lld u .111 10 A1 1J1M 1J1-. 1Jv.-v. 1.11kens11 .10 11 21 2'\• 1' 19\lo.+ ~\ b "" ""' IO J9-h 9-..-r \'I nUCa P'21't 10 44 '11" 13\.'J V. Gr1nlv 1.10 S 42 22-'tll 2Ht 2Hll-~I. V 0 Corp 12 l2 Sft 5}1!' 5\lo-• ensing tb.e last few weeks and ed Thursday after three days said today the agreement call-their principals." This a~ !:~~n .,.M,, 109 u '~' 61• 6'4 11111co 1 96 11 6• '°"" 59411 60 -\'i G1AM1 2 7111 11 n 361ro 36 36''1 + v. l-Yk• Y111tn 11 111 6tt s.. S'J-• • I 71 22~• n~i 22.,,__,,. 1111" 1•11113 73 l~ 1st;, l6V.--Y.GIA &P Tee 47 12v. ll >ll 11h Lvbpl 3'11.c .. 29 221'> 2114 21v.-1~. dropped fa irly sharp Y this of intensive bargaining, called ed !or the Teamsters Union to parcntly referred to AFL-CIO A11ellHc 1.c. 7 91 1s,,. ie•. 1ar1 .. 111; :300 10 24 1J:1M 111/t 11"'+ ~ GtLkO 121 2 20 20 20 ·:· Lvncr.sv .oo 2' 19 12Yo 111'1 i21.~+""'
week. rescind most of the contracts President George Met1ny and Zi::f1:=.' :~8 l~ 1ll ~~.~ 1?~ 1~ + ~! g::~~v''.~ 1{ 12T 1i 11!? 1f'4--·14 GtN •r 1·10d ;,; 20 11v. 11~' 12'1+ ~ MlcAnF .60 ~ '1;;-13in lJt'+ ~. " k for the Teamsters to leave • ., Ans111 co •k 10 .ct 0 ,, lMto 11 _ ·~ ,,..11 011 n~ 10 sa §'' ~ ~ ~ ~·,:O~'lj l:28 11 6,1 ~~ i!" !~1·-t ~ MacOonlO 11 :w 11, 3v. J\/0-r, BUT SOME New ,or· representalion of field hands it signed covering fie Id Teamsters leader Frank E. Apec:lle .l6'1 s 69 16\1 1s:i. is¥<-1• 11111 011111 2 l :ito s2:iio i -. ·,· ~ .--. M-~ e -, " ,.. .,, ,,,_ ,
F ' . APCO Oii •k 1 10 LS'• , ..... 1511+ ~. 11111 Ttl .92 ll Ill 'Jo 2)1.~ 2l G Ws !n .AO .. , 21 1\ 21 211\ "' -K ..... .. bankers felt the decline was to Chavez' UFW and to retain worke-.) 1ti.s1mmons. -oe .1211 18 ... ,.,, , .... ~ h 11111r1 oa1a 11 e11 1i "31'.-11 _, .. GtW•tt un ' •~• ,,,. •v.-,,. MKMu .15D • 68 •Vt '"" 1"' ·· '" -" DO''"" -s.. .... +l GtW$1Vl'I pf n 1'11 1•1-'l , • .,._ .,,Mlcv 1.10 ' St 2'\lo ti\•,,,, .... +~ still too brjef. and of too The labor chieftains met ,',~' c ',~ . .!! 6 '3 101• io\o 1~•+ 11o 1111 P ., ·, ·~ 26'\oa 26"' Uv. Grt w!Jll tn .. 1 J'!-i J\t J>t+ "'M¥J Fa .ssb .. IOI 111\ IO'll 1o.u-I• .. !>'I "" 1 I• 11 14 ·· ~ S2 6 ll 1 1 't.I +a._ Grn Gtnl 1 10 6 224" :n•. n~ Mad Squ1r• 11 l6 SJi """ y.,. limited scope, to warrant a cut privately on a number of oc-"'"PPPPt 1.lll 1'° tJ'h tJ\'J 93•.1:t+n. 1 n "to 13 1J 3511 :Ii\~ 3.w,+ \\ ~nivM 1.o.1 , 99 1sft 1s'l9 '!~ o.:. M.tOn•v "° 16 ll<I 11:ii. nVr 11\'J •. • Appllld. •Mu 13 lJ S'l< S\:z_ ~ + 'h 000 lnd i s 98\1\ """· ,,,,.,_l\,ll fl)'hl"ld WI . U1 3\i ]Vt Vt -Mei11ryCo 1 11 I ~ 22'M ZIV.-'tl in the prime. Income F -"llS casions during the summer in ARA sv 1.J2 21 3811'1,.. 12a~·· 179~+ ~. :,n 't.11 11 , ·uv.1 lo~-. 1~+ "" ro11er .9 o 1 so io\i 10\.'J 1oVt-3t M•IDMH _,. 21 1 1'.,.. -.. 29141-+ \• .. ff t to I U .l.l"cl\lrO .50 11 121 « 42'• 42.,._ ~· tr .8111 7 I IS~ lS lS""-"° r11mm1n. . U IHI llltlo 1"°-\'I Minlnd .SM 5 14 1* llWI jOtM!f 'h an e or orge a set ement Ardlc En•p 2• 51 S'.~ SI'> i'-'• -'lld A ,, 1 n 21Vr l'Jj v, 0111rc111n In 1t 31 2•~• 2-1v. 2114+ "'"""'°"" .ao 1 JI 11...., 1111t 1141! Ii
Milk P1ice
Hike Nixed
By Panel
WASH INGTON IUP!l
The Cost of Living C.Ouncil has
turned down a government
proposal to allow dairymen to
hike the minimum price of
milk they sell by about one
cent a quart in October, it was
disclosed Thursday.
No public announcement of
the action was made, but an
Agriculture Department of-
ficial said in response to a
query that the council decision
was made on Pw1onday. As a
result, the official s a i d •
October minimum prices in all
milk sheds regulated b Y
federal milk m.arketing orders
will remain unchanged at the
September level.
1111 50 Htd Mercdu
11 diS!l •J -·-
f th " isd' I .1.r1111r n 1 10 12 11!, 12 + ~ DDO RlllCle 61 33 111'1 11 I ., •. G11Mtg 1.ctll ' n 3m 31111 37'11o--Vii ,,.,.n Hn 1.u 13 f6S 40\4 411 411111 II<
G ll. 0 d 0 e }ur 1ctional ighl Arll P$ 1.16 9 123 ll'io 21'1• 21:v.+ .ft PDWld 1 . .0 ' 23 261,(, tw. " Gutf Life I 1 5.3 4\lo l9Vt l9tt--... MAPCO ,5' 2l 91 ~ 3' 3'* i. ranate i Uste between Chavez' AF'CIO af-',',~~es,•,,0-"e 9• n nv. i~ 11 ... «~" '! • 111 ~ •:WO !"+ ""'Gu11011 ii.. • 1tu »1" 24'• ~ wri1tton M 1 162 1~ f' lt + n . l ..,.. ..,, • n I'll. I V. '~ \\ or Is 1.1 :n •71161'1 llM11 ~\Ir Gulf Rel.Ch f II I~ 1'14 9),0-~~Mir Oii J '° 12 29f 39"' ~ ... v filiatcd union and the in-Armcos 1.20 a 1168 m. 21n ~+Vt n-~:nb 11 » ~ ~v. if-"' ou-1-stu 1.11 11 2'-201' 20 -20\l'i'-"'MllnM -:toro m 21t11 -m+ ,, Arm pf 2.10 13 291/o :zt>Jo :ni.+ v. -" 1.om lj 1 1\\ 1v. I GS~ ""' .. r10 S6 u sa Mlrcwpt 2 6 '41'1 V:t derw>ndent Teamsters. A.rm11rpf A>J. zlo 561~ S6,,.,, S6'h+ Vt oic. Brd .35 1 10 l! 211':1 ~~ i"• 1 .641 • IO 27"' 271'>-21...._ v. Mlrem 2tb ·· 11 130 56 ss l't55-i.
Nr 'th t A.rml Ck .14 IS 16 ~ 301/:1 JO'h--Vt PClnll 1.77 11 71 ti\!' 31\4 Li';,-\.\, ulf& 1 ws .• 122 n• 6h 7 -\lo ""rMld fa 7 2Sf ~ 24!ir. fit'. ' e1 er man was presen Arm11A 1.60 ' s 21o,r. 29v, -21v. .. ri~c i'8'.lo ' is ••1 ,,,.. il: .. · rtw1 01 j11> . 1 11s:w; ll5:W. lj5"'-~ M•rl11<1L · ,, 22 ~ loSl'I
d · this , b Ara Cp 90Q 1 11 1s1<. ,..., is•.+\'• ~~k'e~ 1·11 ii il J~ !~ 2~ ·•· ,,!~P',...," ,,: .J. 7]tt 1,•12 ,1~++ V.Mllrlen 1: U ~s »l'.,,.. l'I ::: unng weeks argaining,Arvrn1n11'.52 13 1111 1111 111-1' rMIPK ·80 I ~a 1~ ""' 14~.,_,._.....,,"'" 1 "'"'"" •• .,,, "'M•rll'f • 20 i1..,. Glfi c\.'J .. ,,
the fint since. Chavez broke ~~~0L11f 1·.~ 16 '2 '1 '1 -n1 rO\lllH :60 i •J g"" 22Yi :n~~HKkW z.u 1-16 iii'l21'1 n>,\.-J\' •rot' .0111 11 11 "' •Yi •......._" As STP Chairman
NE\V YORK (AP}-Racing
expert Andy Granatelli has
been replaced as chairman
a nd chief executive officer of
the STP Corp.. a manufac-
turer of automotive products.
The company announced
Thursday that Granatelli,
widely known through STP's
r adio and television com-
mercials. will remain as vice
chairman while a Nashville,
Tenn.. businessman assumes
control.
THE TOP POST at STP
\Ycnt to John Jay Hooker Jr ..
who was chairman o f
Performance Systems Inc., a
fast-foOO firm. In 1970, he was
the Democratic candidate for
governor of Tennessee.
A company statement said
that STP's operating income
for the three-month ·period
ending Sept. 30 w o u I d be
"substantially lower than the
comparable 1972 quarter."
Sales for the first six months
of 1973 were also below the
last year's level.
"I have great confidence in
the fulure of this company,"
said Hooker Jn a statement
reJeased in Nashville.
1• IASHIOM ~UA•f
iANTA ANA • S41·6.US
PRESENTS
CLOTHING
FOR'fALl '73
spcmsor of competitive racing
teams, is 55 percent owned by
Studebaker-Worthington.
Under Granatelli's nine-year
chairmanship, an STP official
said, sales Increased from $9
million to almost $100 million.
A wide range of engine pro-
ducls were also marketed
along with the original fuel ad-
ditive.
THE STP racing team won
the Indianapolis 500 in 1969
and 1973. It alSQ won the
Daytona 500 and the Formula
II championship htis year.
GranateUi, who did·not com-
ment, was said to have gone to
the company headquarters in
Fort Lauderdale, Fla.
..... ..., l~ ~ !th ~~ =:,'lit. ~nz1'r.A ~t :S:1 14 ~ ~t ~; H•llPrf .10.. 7 2 11 lt li + \; ~~ 21~ n :J *':m· ~ m.= ~ off negotiations in Burlingame ::~~G.~ a IC 14 m. 2--1 + .... s CP .IO 7 :u l 11~ 1fi.+ \~ H11Utltrl l.l1 l9 26' 1'6'111161\lo 16'~-1\, llUrflnAI .• a 12 ' 9~ v. . Aug. 10 upon I.earning that the ,",~o~Tr•.m,, iJ a•• 6'n 6Y,.+ \'t 111uo~n .l6 12 16 1 l'I im 1w.-\i Him PaP ·' 12 '1#1 ~ IPk Itta--~ MlrfMr 11s 1 " , ~ 1m 174'+ r. nv·-"s 1 ll~ \'WI U:V.-\'I umlns .88• 16 JO '\', ~ 0"\4 t "O H1mdCP AD I t lD\\ 10 10\\-V. Md C\IP :50 10 .q izv. 20\4-2\Jh--1 \lo . Teamsters signed contracts AtlcM1 1.SO!I e 1• 1 ~. 11w 11•,:, urtl11 w11 lj 1" '1VJ ~ 2) + v. Hinc11em "" 1 " a~ &Vt 1:wo+ "'MllCOC• xi " .u SS'M 5'\lt $4\lt--~. AllCtl'E 1 J 9 28 20'11! 20' 2G'llt +' urlltiWr A 2 21 27 J -! ~y H .72 10 7 11\'t llllo 11\\--V. ' S6 31 J11 36\.'r-to the previous day with Delano-A•ICElpt .s~. 1 79 19"' .,., +1~1 ~1111trH l • .o 1 n1 39VJ 3~ ~n-_,v. H11111Cp .6 6 32 13.,,. 1 13 -1 ::::~ ... 305: l~ 1i »v. 23111 -iiv--\'t
area growers, ' A,',~!c~I0 •• 2 2~ •29 96\'< 9• 9iV..-'\Ii l~=~ l I~ t u\.O r~ /11 '· ~=~.:..nk3\ ~ ~ ~\' ~t\, ~"' + Vi M'4:PI 1.07b 40 1~1 19~ 1"'9+ ~'
1 AtlA°d,"j,,1 3 .. llSO 501-1 JOV. JO\?--11> --0 0--... Hlrdles 16 If 21 I~ IJ~ 13~ M• llllY : ·; 36 lA\'t II 11\111
IN AN' EFFORT to reach a ••••• c-. •• 'iuu. 159 161 + .,., ~"'°" co l6 68 '*9\I AN •11o--"" H1"'"to i.2 1 JJ ~ 30111o ~+ \" M....,11 1. 211 ,..,., 1:rv. ,..1111o+1 --112 H'I I\.\ 1~-\1 nlflvr .50 I 11 9\lo tllo t'4-V. H1r•rtt1 ,J2 1, 1 lA'i 17\'J 17\'I .. o'MTSUI .)Ob I ai.2 21V. IA
t" t F'!zs' b ATO l11e .16 7 12 BY. l\>t l \f ., "°\" 1.36 1 29 3•V. ~ :MV.l V. H1rrt1 11.12 U 36 :M~k :u~ ~l Mattel .nr. , t5 "'° '""4 1\lo se uemen , 1 1mmoos as A11tam oa11 52 51 7J 71"9 n + "" •rt n ,JOa 11 124 ll!iil 2n. ~ ~ Hll"ICO la 7 7 1111o ,, 1"' ... M1y os 1..0 io 103 3'~ ~ 3'Alo+111o
ud, •~ he ileJ A\llarrtl llldt 1 )9 4\1, A\'o I\\ ... 01rflnd pf ~ XI 3' 32'-lll'I l\ Hlft5Ml( .II 9 121 17Vo 164'1 JP.' Mt"fllr0s ,fS 14 1 'J U 25 + 141 rep 1ai.cu t ano pacts A...::o CCll'P • '9 11~ 1iw.. nv.-'II 01vcP i.11 6 22 11v. int 111'1 . H•rteH .100 I 1 n.. t l'l 'IE: v. Mlvs.JW ·"° ' io v. •r. 7lli ••• • and indicated a willingness to AYCl>CP wit •. 21 l'llo 1V. ~ ... Oayflnlf! .21 5 11 l ft l'l'I ·~ v. HtW•EI 1.S. 1 9 26l'I 261" u \4 MIYlllP 1.311 1,s 12 32"1 12~ lllh-" ' AY'l:O Pl 3.20 . -14 )9\~ 38\,\ :WVJ+l 01yl11<1H .,S.j I 16 l•l'l lA\11 111" , HIY91 Alb I 1 1 I lilt 11'1'1 14 1A MC.A 1111; .6'1 6 25\/o-2M 25 -\lo ,, give up other contracts signed ,'~••"•~ ."'., ,~, 11 soi,. ~ sov..+ ""o.vPLt 1.66 11 st 21i.. ""' 21~ \1 Hec-MMn :J11 37 11 1 1f'4 ,....,+ 'A Mccon:1 .n 1 11 11V1 11 11 -lit. .. • .... 71 l~ 26\lo 26'Ao . 0..nW!t . .IQ 11 n lot~ l!Mlo lDV.-~ HIJl)tmn .4' • I flr. t.),I, Md:.rrw 1,20 J 9 1'111 llN'e 11'!\+ ,,. this year with table-graN> AYnt!ll\C JD 7 69 101-'i lOV. lOV.-"" Del•• l.ADI! 11 S:zt SI'>~ st\lo+ 'h Hel111H l.OI 16 13 SO\.lo 49\(o ~ ~McDermot 1,, to .. v. •n~ 13'4o ... -r-AvonPr 1 . .IQ 14 14110111 99Vo 100 -111 DelP&L l.16 I Ill lfl~ 16 ,, -1'1 H.ien. Curl l 'I' I 4\li , McOonkl C11 51 Z17 ~ .,._ 701/o--1 growers. Allt<:Oll "" SS 40 '""' 11\1 1~+ ,,. 0.!Mnt 1.20 9 J6 11 ~ 21 + ~ Helllflnl ... it *AO ~. -V.Mc;DoftD .• 6 11S 19 11141 11\lt--~
Th . -e 8---Otlt1Alr .60 15 1261 Slit. » 50\\--11 lielmePr AO 10 '5 1~ 16 --1~ ._.,McGrEd \Y,, 11 36 29\'J _.., 7"'--l ., e growers signed con-B1D&w11 .110 13 11 21""° ~ 2M11L1v. o.1•1e 1n1n 4 s 7111 J\'J TYt ~"l'' .20 n ~l lfft ~ :i.w. ·~ M.:Gr HI A ' 126 9\41 "' ~_:.
tracts two years ago Wider a ::~In ·1.tt ~~ ~ ~ '*"" '*""= ~ g:~~~ ~a : rs ~~~ ~~v. ~~~ ~ ~ ~~ ~g 1 ,.... J11+' ~~H)!:r 1"8 ii s: 1I141 11m 1ftt . truce agreement that the BNerou .11 33 139 l5~. 351" JWo .. 0enn1.,, pf 1 .. 2 ,,,,, 21 1n• _,,. !:l!~~'",·"I' •,•, ',", ",.~ "",, ... ~~+ y, Melnlvr9 p .. 1210 53\lt s2\4 uv,._" 8akl OH .32 1 7 1•'111 11 I• -Otnny, .06 21 1"1 191. 1$ 15;\+ ~ ..,.,.,,y · • 7"' .. 15--.o Vt McKee ,15b 17 3J ])>;\ S:Mi ~ ~ AFL-CIO contended. gave th e..11G11 1.9' io 11• 21 21v. 11 + ~ o..nt*Plv ,,,. 16 22 "" 22 n -11o HtUton .111 13 '' ..,:;i, S9Vo l!M, MclMll .JiO l4 11 5211 s2 siv.+ v. e Bl!Gs flf ,,,, . 1100 61V. 61 61\'1+111 O.Sotol11 .60 t 11 lll• 1:11• 13"0+ Vo Htvbtel" ,92 26 :m 6011< S7'Hi MclllhS 160 I .o9 2'1' 2:)\11 24\lo + .. • UF\V jurisdiction over field BenC.I 1.:M 9 I• 22\11 nv. :nv.-,_ Ot1Edls 1.-tS 10 tl lt\llo llWI ll'llo-~~VJ: r r. I~ ~ IU! I~ •• ~ ,, Mcfol911 )$ I 2 ·~ ,,... 13'1> ·.u ll•ncloQ I~ A9 25 31 36'\li ~\lo Ot-tE lit 9.32 tlO "' ll• 114 -'h H~I n 1,1, "" I.,..+ ,.. Meld CP '° 11 119 111'1: 11 'II""+ .... workers. But last April as the B•noor Pn 5 1t 911 '"' ,,.,_ ""' o..ir C11 .21 ,, 12 i1 17111 11 + -H uar. ~n 4 'f, fi 2bl'I. 21.~ 2?-..., MtoedPf 2.• . . t 39"'-Jt 3'Yt+ 'h •
UFW ' 81* of l\IY 2 ' 2' ~ :UV. 34'1'1+ u. 0111 Fin .S4 ll 10 2m 22t't 72'\'t+ .... HH>w' I ... -Mlepf8 2.IO I .a :>9V. 40 + "". pacts expired, the B•r11ero1 21r. u ""' 3114 JJ'i'l--1 111 01emd'1nt1 2 10 lD ~• ~ 11.,._ 11; HcGwtMnc1~ l) ,} ~ .... ~~ J \l:.__._1 MtdtlMI 1...0 'i ~s 2M1o ,,,. Wfl+ ""-;.
T t · d · BrdClf .11,, 3S 45 ll 1~ 2~v.011mSl>m 110 41' 21V. 23 2•\\+~Hoel" f l J 36\1, "'"•• ME I CCll'O 9 4 2"9 2'9 n1i .•• earns ers s1gne w 1 t h s1rr-..t 1.m 10 n 21,_ Viii 21"'+ 'l'I o 1S1>mp t 2 , . s n 31~ 11 +1 !"'ei.Cin 21} Ii "'" 3'"-3tlt--lt Mii s'-·-" 20 n 264tl 25'h 211 + •1 growers who previously held s111c Jn ·'° a l 1"" 1 a1t.+ :i. or1SllPI 1.20 ll 16\'f 16 1•v.+ l'I Inn• JO 11 302 ™ii 2~" :zs¥t+l M-KO ._ 1 12 '" ""° m .. ,..1 81115Mf .20 !l 111\lo 11 ll,,.__v.O!efM!lln.412 3712\11ll'oi12 +v. 1'1$11 IMI. ) 13 ,, 13 "',..,.,..:s1r.ao:n l" 69 "-W contracts With Chavez' union B•1" Ind .JO 1 561 21:14 20\t 2214+~ 811>1~ld ·«?! 737 ~ ~ ... !ti n,~ f~ -. ~ Hotries11k 1 16 •5 ·~ 1 * 41~ ~ Mettk 1.11 37 41 '"' 11 l.,___1\14,' ' B•11scllL ,'-2 27 3'3 »-. ~ 31 +\lo Of'90 -••Honvwf j..O n 217113hl11\.lr 112V.--1-'lofMf'edllh 70 6 12 12'4112 12""-V. 8IJ1!er L .IS &l '5 5$\to Sii'> s.tft-VI lq!l1I EQPI 16 4'° 11Wl4 91"" M~ Hoowr ::it 1 1 211ii 21\t 2t'lt--v, Mtrrll'il :U " 545 19\4 11-. II~ Vi"' 8•YllllC91 " 9 • n~ 11'111 11~ ... Ollllnall . .a 13 $1 ~ 7 1 -v. lilll'IJOfl Cp ' 60 fli ~ ..._ Vo MtllP 10 :n 31 ~ 1' 791'1--l!Oo INrlna1 .60 14 I "8Vt Al\.\ 4\'t-i,:, o°'oi!!...~, ¢0> '' 1> ~. !!._._ ll.. +1,, Ha.oltlAf •k t lf 12· 11'14; 11 -'h t<Mwbl .1sfl t 101 tv. M 9141-,11 Br•I Fd1 .• ?11 1n ?fu 1.C'lto 2.1..,__ v. "'" " JI .... ........ ...... + ... HOICICP .1211 '' 137 2(R1i l~ 20 Mnll 10b 2$ 6 lf ,, lf + w 8NFd Pl 4 1 122"" 1221'1122'h+ \It Of1111YW .12 '9 206 IQ 1l:ffo ,,.,._ V. HOii t11tl ,36 10 23 12"-12 !'No '' M G M inc. 11 19 1M 11 17 -Vil. Beckmn .SO liJ S lJ¥o XI~ 33"9-v-.Oltslon .12b 13 75 21~ ~ 21~'11Houdelle ,to 6 '6 12'14 12V. 12\lo-'h"""'ro .50a 6 260 11~ 111' ll'oi , •• •~ Becrono .ll 29 17 11 ~ II + v. 011111511 .10 21 ' UV. "'"' 41'.4+ v. HQUOll M ... 11 20 IAt 1.rll< 111'1-Vo MetEpf 7.6' t20 tl ,, n +1 , lleechA .IOQ 1 121 U't.. 11~'° 15 -Vi O!vertlfd In 11 2\\ 2 2 -Vo M-ou9i F1t>rl 21 202 121'1 Hill 12Vt+ 14 Me!E"Pf l'.90 •• 110 lllh. 4\'J Al\.'>-·;
Trade Bill Would Give
oBeedl Crit dO 1•~ 2'h 2\'t-'"' O!vMI :t.Mb t '1'21 ,..,,.. 2~ 211'1 ·· H~Fn .llO 12 ;m :!I""' 27>N r= V. MGIC ir. ,10 35 211 5' 561h. S6~1Vt., BelcoPel 2k 'o lSO 1"11 13V. 1'Vr+l14 ~~_IW" .24 56 519 :M\'J 29.\ u -'"1 H.OUM ol t.\9 29 M\ti '3 -nto MlChGI 104 10 $ U'4 15 15\11 8elde!I 110 8 2 '°"' 201h 2011> """"""'n 1• 1• Jl II 17\/o 11\t-ll't ~ovsFof !Yt I 4 Al -\lo c Odot ',44 l ~ IS lM 1wo-'~I BeldoH .:ioci 1• 2 10'4 , • ..,, 10,__ .... ~ l.Olb It 7W 1VI ""~\\Howl.I' 1.«l 1s { !2 ~ •I ,l.._ ~ 5if.~-I.... I 1 2U• 211,i, 21~ w;0 Seti Hwl .M 11 156 36\lw l51/J JS...,_"' g::: u-IJ ,12 13 6 11'1. lllo 1"'-V.. HauNtGI .la 16 It 27'11 210.. !7'141+ ~ M on!TI 1 11 19 17 1"'°' 11 + ~ 8emlsCo .ao B 11 21\lo 20~ 21 -'h llfll¥ ... 11 '° '~ 26 26V.+ "' HoNG pf 2\'J 12 S4"' 5-l'h .~ "" M dSoU 1.fO 11 Ul 24 2l'll UV-~ Ben CP 1 2$ 9 lli 3A~, 33"°' lllto-\4 g:r1c: Co .32 6 1 11\.'J 111.4 1'14-~ How1rdJ .20 2010 190 20'-< lfl'I 1"'-.. MklMt I :nt1 ll ll 16\'t IJ:l'o. 16V.+ ~, Nixon Broader· Powers
WASHINGTON (AP) - A
massive trade blll tentatively
approved by a House com-
mittee would give President
Mor e Labor
Woes for
Chry s'ler?
DETROIT (AP) -Chrysler
officials are bracing for a sec-
ood b o It of labor lightning
which could hit as many as 10
of its facilifies sometime next
week.
The United Auto Workers
Union announced on Thur.iday
it had authorlz«I workers at
six more Chrysler facilities to
wallc off the job next Wed-
nesday If local c ontr act agreemen~ haven't been
reached by strike deadlines ..
One -or the plants is in
Fullerton.
'lbe a<Uon brought to 10 the
number of Clltysfer lactllties
targeted for strikes next week.
The first (our walkouts were
authorized !or Monday.
Mean"hlle, Henry Ford II
laid be doesn't think the UAW
will have to strike Ford, even
lhouRb he expressed surprise
•t what he tenned the "high"
cost of last week's Chrysler
scttlemenL
The UAW signed a naliooal
pattern C.'Ontract with Chrysler
on Sept. 17, three days after
117,000 worker! staged an In-
ternational walkout.
BenC pt 4'.:io . . 1 76Vo 7~ J•U\lt '\jo ao::r Ollvt:r t 6 fV. fll< tv.+ \~ Howm.t .10 jl 111!1. l•:it; 1~-Vt Mid ROSI· JO f :M l~ 1,._, llt'I+ \.-. 81111111e1 Inc 10 82 S\'1; l 5 -\'t H'I'( .10 ~~ 3' Jv. 1V. w.+ ~'t Hutltld l.5'11 12 6 JV,. Ji .. 1Ht ... MHffLfl l:ll lS I 4$'1't AW, '111>-\Ir Nixon broad powers to make serk1r .os11 11 1 16 1J1• ljV-~ ~~:°t 21 1~ ~~• U ;i,,.,::'~ ~=1-1'::2 1I 1~ 2'~ ttv. . Mllionsr;,. 12 3s l4f'll '""" i....+ 1'ri
trade deals with Japan a~ Rr£l:1~·1~ ~ '11,~!~ I~~ I~~: .... ~ 1~ ,1: ?? !:l'I ~,,., ~~1 ~ ~l"c~ ·'.~ ~! m.. ~ r ~::-·"' ~~L l:~ n ~ ~ r.t? r.t ~: Europe but slap 3 sh ff li.1r Jn .4 6 26 7'0 1~ 1l,I,+ "' Orn l>'I 2.20 . . 10 ~~ .., ~+ 1~ Hlllton e .«1 ii 51' 11i.. 1010 11 -14 M~ Al ·" 1 19 15 1s 15 -t\•
restraint on trade 1Yith the R~k~~· ~, I~ 26: 1r· :~ liftt ~ 8~:!:' ~~ :: 1: ·=11 ~ =Vt:; i: r,'/1"~~~ ~; .:, i:"' 311.t fr +1 · :1::".:1: :t 11~ 3: i~ rut .. l:~ .....
So · ( 8111e81ll 6S 1 15-1 11"-ll'to 11~ \'I Or1Y1111Cf 1 • 3' 10\'J t~ 9f'I--4'11 14111o P 1.16 11 32 ~ :it;, ~ '14 MPC~ l.liO 1 7 14 ~ 23'll . • VIC S. &Obll!e 6,:Ks I •~ 4•~ ~ 4 -It Oukt P .<IO 11 94 191"1 19\.'J 19"9+ ,._ ldNIBos .80 10 lal 16~• 16V. 16h ,. M~ul)S .II 9 3f IN! 14 14 -14
The bill would tive the :&-~ll!lc~K~ 1i 111~1/ 11::; i1!~ 11114-1 .. g~~~i;:r 1t~ :: z~ :: X: :: .:!:1"' l=::8/~l 4\lt•11a .! 7!~ 7~~ 7i~+~. ~011111~1H1:: :o :. ~t ~ ~~1v.~ Bond lndut I 6~:. 6"' '\.'II-YI OvnBrtd .SA 79 19 o~~ 11 •l -11, 10$ RI .tob ll l3 2'9\\ 21~ 29 + ~ Mol>~O l,10 t J3 2H!J '21.,.,, 2J~ \\~ Prescient extensive wer to ooo1<Ma 1.:111 "Ii , "'• 1t it"-+ i.. OvP11n "' r. ' •-m ~ "" 1ueen1n l.30 • 1u 20\'t u1, 20 -11t Mo!Mwli; Ot st -""' sv. . ~ .. i 1 . Bordl'I 1.20 11 179 2JV. U1't 21v.+ .... OUPlllll J'ltrob I 2'91 .. 141U?VJ 113"'-1 IHCt<n pJA ' .. 1 •.I'll< 91111. tl1'-~ .llOhWI( llll l s ,, l6'1o 16tlo 1611o+ ,.~ r~1se or lower U.S. trade bar-11~wni 1r:,s 111 '! 23~ 2;~ ~"' ~1 (; 8=i." ,~~ ·1o ~ 'lm ~'Im+ ""l:f~' l~ i2 J: ;;u fil: ;;l't:; \'I ~l>Pf'm" 12 ~ ~"' ~ ~+ ."".: nen for the trade deals to be Bou Ed 2.11 11 11S llh J1:ito 31._ "'DuqLtrr n1 2 .. ll30 21 2"l'I m~ 1u..-w 1>t 4.n .• 1100 "· " " + \'I ""-rct1 .-21 21 iM 1~ 1~ ~ • · ed . los!E"pf I.II .. r260Ill~1111* 111'16 1111 l>llcJLpl 2.07 i.U 21\'t 21\'t 27\'0+1\\ UIPwof J.71 zlO ~ 50V. ~\'J+ Y, ,lo\DnOQftll'n • 63 not M 1'"I+ ~, negot1at next year, altbough llaurns inc 10 9 11~. ntto lll • ,,.. ovmo 1n ·.20 n 11 20'4 ''rll 20 + "'1morrl11 co ., 2ll 1~ IJilll; 121,. -~-. MOlll'OtA .M 16 t3f ;m i *-1-'
not th I · ed 8r1nllAlr 31 ll 600 lj 12'111 IW-.... _. a-INACJt 1.tlb 9 1st :WV. :llV. l9"'tt1 Monwr._lo t 13 RI \.\ \lo n -~' e near Y unrestr1ct er1a11is 1.eo u 19 s t1i s2 52 -'!lo Eeole Pl 91 1 6 2'\4 :m ma-~ LNA1n$ .no tt 20ftl mto ~+ "'Mcn1o1 Nit . 11 1 v. , _, ~
power he asked Brl1 MW l.:H. 21 361 6 SWI S9V.+2 E1M:oC .M 1 23 llV. 12~ IJ -, lnc<ll'M C•p 20 1\Ai I I -'4 MOlll Dtk 2 10 12 ~\~ ll 1'4+ a• ' 'e'l'opMo'°>'>o' 1•. Jl 01•i, ,,':-! '°'-3.__ "'E.11IG•tF 31 13 323 19'11 lt 19'.I>+ l!ICCll!C .90!> 3 10\'I 10\lt 10141+ YI $ll!sf 1,IO 12 71 3' 33\11 »Vt--, r I · I -.,. ,.. 1 -"' E•1IUIU 11'1 12 II 1~ lN 17'1o nd H11<1 I
01 '9 tw ~ ~\lo .ISCI •1 2M Dito 231io+ &rao H•I .ao 11 ll 3' " 3'C + 'Ill Ell Ko 1 n. )4 521 tll 1291111.1016-lV. 11111 Gu 1.u 1 12 :U'-:Ullt ~ w .7.cti 11 .a lo.Ii 1r.1i lfMli "" BUT rr WOULD prohibit BdwyHI pl 2 " 1 6\lo ,,,, 6\4--VI E•lnCn ·,.ao I 10J 36v. 3WI ~I • \ndPwL 1.12 ' S4 2™' 27Vt V'h Moor• McC ' d 1,\ .. 1.W. 16!rlo+ 'M.
US d ' eroclt GI .75 s 31 15"" UV. 15* l!tt>UnM .3' 11 111 ""'"' .av. «IV. ~ llllM•ll 1.20 1J 15 ~ 3'\'J :UV.-lV. Mol"tJ~ I ... tt 179 61~ .. ~ ..,_ \It. .. Ira e concessions for the srvne, 1.12 10 32 21 ~) 21w 211'1.+ 11< Eckd Jk .20 12 " .4tl ""' lt'-'!'I lnuco ou :ts ,. 11~ 1114 Jl'!lt+ 14 Mor11 El Pr , 61 '* ~ 13 \ii
Soviets unless Nixon~~~~~P'fT ; ~~~:,..l1o,r.i~~+v.Ec11>SNc.2420 1ttV.21v.21"" v.1119Rnc12.1•1• 111n.,..n1• -1 ~s~J~ ~ 41 •~ IY) ""f°'-
determines annually that they R~~:,~J: ·"n_ l! }} l~ 1;. lf~ lT.r-""~~"'a.1G 1:tt ri i1! 11~ ltl! l:r:+·~ :~~~ H& 11 ~ :~~ nn ~"'! U tr~~r 1.," 10 ~,, ~ ~ 12'1"-r+1~
d d • · t eru"1wk ·2~ 12 '°' 2'1'o 261.1 2~~ ~ Eloct Auoc 11 n 5~ nil :Rio+ 'M lnl•nd Stt I I et 31\t :: "1!m--1\ -ln \lo 2)\4 • , o not cny em1grat1on •Or Orlilh w ·-«1 10 t ,, ... :zt'IO 28,._ ~ eos Cp .,s11 n ~o .ct~ «>'.r. ~ nmont .:Ml 1 ioe , ~ u.+ ,,_. ~1~r,:i1• ,·!2 U •10012 !:!~ 6 w11r + 'i Jews nd ot~ .,. d 8ucyE 1'20 15 TC\ 36\o\ 36 36' "'Elt(t MemO 13 ll '"' , .... 4~ ,, l111llc11C .10 1 '° 1~ 1 10'.' MSITl'I t'.51 . T•n 91 tl -2 e 11t:r c1 1zens an euoa co :-«1 5 70 l•\i I•'• 1,,,::: \i e101n N•H 4 '~ 10 1~+ "1,,.1tcvP1 ,._ 1 'f iw. 1f + i.i M' tord 1. J · 10 21ltl 21"6 2j\li+ 11 that thAv do not impose ex BUlklCo P s 110 6:1\.'J '31" 6lV. Etblr Ind 6 JO s 4~ s -. ll'l•r COOP 12 11 • ~ ~ 11'-'t-~) Mun i".OI 7 11 ftt J~ IA-~
b. :·z_ " 1 ' ·~ Ind , n.. 1-. 1"'+ "'EIP•soNG 1 1 n 16~ 15'11< 16 + ~I"' IY '·°"' 1 1 1• 12tt ttlfl;· .• M:i'cic": 1~ 9 ~ iR"t ~ 1,_ + ~ or 1tanf.iex1~ ees. elokl ·'° l '"' 6 o,,_ "' e:11r1 CP n-. • 1s :u•" ~ ~-111 "'fOOl'I .i• 11 • 11 1o:it t~ Murpl>OI ;!! 11 • 12111 7! + •.
The White House s 3 Id g~~.~2-~~ a 17 i21: 21ti! Rr=+ l'I ~~r1 ~ :~ ~~ :16.sJ :~ :l\ :~t ~ :~:, i:: ': f~ = = ~;--~ =1¢,. 01.~ ID ~ fS\I l q .. = ~. · . P11lov1W .IO 11 20I "'° 1\0' tt 'f'l \~EmryAlt 1' 56 1'1'4 nll'll 12 + ~18..,Cp 1,41 :It «tl261 li7 UI -) Mw1r1L 10 12 11I~11:: l..--• Thursday the President hopes Bvnk1rR ,• 1 94 11v. 11:v.. lH\-""em1rv1n .ll 12 60 11 1~ 10~ ~ 1nF11vr .41• 6t 59 n J7 ,, _, · _,. ,.__ 13.,..+ ~
\h b'I! ,_, be "b h '"'f OI lt._ 1 I ;~ 11 .... le >toi· It E"mhlrl 1.20 6 131 21 20~ 2014-~:. lr\tHarv 1..AO • $23 ~ 1\'o J2'b--~ N~btK~2 lO 13 11 ...i ~ ~ e t cao ~ ... -.. roug t 111r 1n 1 • .0 ll s2 30 2'~• JO EMI Lt ·°"' 1s 1• 116 ' 4 -v. 1n~old 1.•11> 2 13'111 13-. 13~• N•• h · . .ci 32 I "" f:i !! closer to,· if not brought to" .~"!'.re ·li 11,lO"' JO ~rt 1 Empos 1.21 11 1.i 16--ll 1•"' 1~ 1n1tt11t1 Ind .. 57 .,2.,.. 11• '"' -~• H•rco .60 is 1 201-, ..,._ 4:: urr..,.i ..--"" t )6\111 2.JI~ .,..."-~ Emp Fll'r Sit S 12 AL ~ 1\11-~ 1r.1 Jnd!A Pl 3 '~ ~ ~ h 1\1.-tAll"I ,JOtt 1 130 1m , +J his request for lhe Sovt~ Busl! nlvr 711' .. 1"1 1V1 ,,,.,_ h EtnptA G11 s 11 11.,.. 1111o l ~ }t ll'IMlllCll .s2 ii '" 3'~• ;t"t )I'll-•• N1tAv 1.1$11 ii lH• 1 >,\ -4ft,...o .,. ' LT 2 ....--fn()llhcl ,"3 " sos nv. 21 ~ti -\I I"" m1111no 11 ,. U\ IHI ~ \\o ... , (,ff! ,6S ' 3t 11\'l 11'4 ~· • trade COf1CeSSl0nS With no tll?S. :g,,1 CD·~ 11 1 ~ ~\It :i:\>o -\'J i's• l\IS F t If 6f'I 6'i'I W+ \4o nt"'vll 1'4 ,•, 17 27ft 274' 2"'9--... NI S!' "1 1\'J .. I :U 2) -a ,
ICltnC hid 4 20 1t% ,, Env ro111:1'1 28 16 41* 131,lo UV.-\jr. ntl l\lkkll 1 42• l6 :Mli JS1'+ _. N1, .. a1h -' , . 1-~ , But the demand for soviet .. r'wa' 6l Al-: ~ ~ -.:E11Lltl .llllll f.J ts\~ u :ts11t+\liJllllP1p 1V. l6 t93 •114 ·~" 17 _,,,,~' ... "•m ,~· 91\'J t\.!J+ •• . .ut",1 s " • -...= "'~~!_•nc 1.«1 10 ~ """ 2' ~ "' Rtctlflfr' l• •2 "' n. ""'+.,, .. ?.tJrt ·-1 •sv • ., 1 emigration rclonn is hellvUy 11r.u11 n:~"~ 1 1 1~ 1:~ ;m~,,.,+ 1.1o ~ill .1s 1 s 2,m 7'\11 '6~,,.. lntt•T l.IO ' 1st lm 31v. m1o-v. ~~7'~"1 ~-to 101 " • 1 • •f
co-sponsored in both the House 1~~·112.l li 16 'll '"' \It-"' EIHJI: :~ t ri:'1.t I~ 1~ " I ttt~flfJ 4r' ,& ttv. !!(,, H~.,= ~ N··= ,· ~ w.: am l1 ~ u '1
nd Sena' d Se H M 1mllL !(I ~ !~ !ti + "'1!:1tlrlll .JO 1' 14 M I •.. ,l .. PllC. 3t 6'1~ a .... 6t\lt-.\i ~-YO .. I 7 1'-16 ~ ~ 'I a e an n. cnry. · -s ·1.11 i' G ~ u1~+ ~. e1~vK0111 1 1 _,, W4 :M.,. ~+ •4 l& D'°J ' "\~ 11 u -1. ' ·' .,. '"' •"'-f' Jackson (D-Wash ) origmal an llr-2• '" 4.,.. •\.\! Elt'IYllll 2.«I JO fr1 ni. 471'1+"" nttrMc;t ' SI 11~ jj',• II ::1~ ... '°?! 11 'I '" I mt . ' ' 1nPi1 7~ 11 ~ 1~ 16~ 1+~ v. 1"8111P «la 10 !' j 1~ 11'6-\Q llt'lllllQr_ ' I , + 14 ,,...,, ili: · ,... ~ v
author of It, predicted it will :~1:1i1.!'11! 11 li In 1:1V1 1.:. +. ~:11!,o .i!: ' 1~ J~ !! ........ v. ~tm!.11f~ 11 tt 1~ ,r~ 1~:+ \, S'r:'~ ,i.. $ 'l ~ ~+ .'4 """ "~~ " q ~ I" .,, l' -ll '"""~ 1 " •• ·~ ·1.+ tt 'l'11fi" '1i U I:: ~· ~· •" '"""'Ill " ] t!• ;;;.. l · :~Mt0•·t~1 s 1t~M~l: ~·°" >bl __ ,.,mi.nv.tn-1.-i:t.;, ..tfi l a'-U''1l1-.=:~Nf's~r,:;:1s~ '-"~· .. 5:!-~ ..Rt.: 11~ ~ a~•1!F1111nM '°. '° 1o._ ,..,. ~l'll OWi 1·1. 1 .. ".t 1? Nl&t•rt." ·" ,, ,,,,., ,. , -rt!AJOR PROVISIONS of the ,, · d u 6:1VI 11r+-,1,,l'IC 1st ,4 603 '"' 7n~ m-.t"' ow1110 1. 1 f v. a i•l 't N•l1'r.' 2~ • 1 ,,.. ~
bill besides the Soviet trade :io ~ 1.-lf ~ j 1 ff~ ~·r: riltt: a ;:1;::ii11 '.IJ: 1 f! i~ ·~ l~t ~: :::£f l:i 11 ~! f ~~ If,, 1 ~=rv,.i1 ·\i J l~ ,;: I .
conces.slons restraint would : =~r~ 1;1! 1
' ] 4vt ·~ :x;t ~~::,-:~.'A; ·1 ~1 12n 1:"' 1;:_: ~ 1!1r;~ ! 11 ~ t ~ ~~~1 11' 'i si1 !S I ~ '
-Authorite the President to 1~~~ ·~ 12 ~l! ~ 1~ ,4 ~1rw1lf' • 1 • N m 1\• ~ 1n11 ·'1 J,i ~ •• 11, ~·¥~ ''I: l•'o 11• , tower U.S. tariffs on a sliding :nr. : · ·U ,,, 3 l U i' ~ 1" "~ M"-tt ,g 1ltt 1f(.! ,,~ u l~i101P1,, :· v. ,, .,._+1:~ N~ • l,1, f 4 i:1~ t: '• + ~
scale for trade de11ls. :;:e,,.;. 1~~ 1i , 1 \ ,~~t1~ ~;:,~: l'.! C : = ~~ ~~--·"" .,..... F .n 1'-J'l'iffi 1 I !" ~~!i.r T'.l!·,. 1 1:/ 1l!n "-~ \!.,, + "-
-Authoriie the President to Cl :.orp » 2 i VI l'dMUMt ·50 ' _,, ~ ~ 2Nt 1" "'~.,, .to it! ·• N1-..it1t1 • 1J 1n• 11 11~·
increase tariffs 20 percent !f:EP1 : IJ 5 \') l~t!n =:Jf:.f ,j ~t F ~~ r~~ ~"1~~ ~, J
1
\ ?,;l::~1t-;~ ,~~1lL~1'\~
above present nteJ or to 50 flii,...,1 4\1 J ~ mo+ •1 ~td or..co \f :fT 10" 10\lo r.;+ \\ m.wn1 ·!f l ~'aof I_, al I 1QM 1£-~-ent above 1 he p--tll(.o 1n ·'° ',J · 1wi ,o • .~ ~ • ~ u mW• pl, o :+ 1? N1ff.J.10 1.14 ro 'Ti! 1 14 J4ft 1, -+ o1. _... '"" ll'l•ll "a 1 'I -VI E bretir,o 0 ... • ll iti• • + "' j m!1\ 1.60 .. v. \.,_ ~ NllMpf t"° I Dl't "'"' .. tectlonl.t 1934 Smoot R.wl Y 1nHl.ld i'i 2 • r Pllic1~ j 4"" "'° ~ 1't n Mii . \'I "1 1, N IMP' 40 ll ,;141 4S q -.,. • C tn Ill 1-'Hi P dMo 2 41 ~ tlllo ,.,,_ \'f "nv \\, \'I .._ 1~ · Mof .f O tllO •M •"' •+'k level, whlchcvtr ls hghett. "1 " · I) " · .,,,__ ·~" lclM 1. 9 ' ''" ""' tNo+ l• """ 1 \\ ~ • H • 410 ,10 s1" s1 l,; "'
•
I
•
/
Fo1~ tl1e
Reco1·d
Jfla~ge
Lieenses
''Ill IS. "1) LE'l'ICO, Jlt . .CH,.ISllE -Mlchffl,
7-. lMIS D1ir,t A'O't., l'IM'll1l" Vllltr
1"4 C1dltld1 AMI, XI, 2»01 O.Slllt, L"11111 llt.ch JACOSS·FltY -H1told LotO .... ttm
Ortt0• Hltl'IW•'I'· Sin Ju1n C10111r1n11 Ind Wlndl Je.... ,,, 21XH Orle<QI Hf911w1w. Sin Ju1n C1Pl•l•1no. llV5CH·MURQ.OCM -Srvct Edw1rd, lt, 11)1 Miner SI .. Coill MIMI •NI 111lr1ty Lu, If, 27)1 Mlntr ~I., r o1!1
M<u . EASON·PAYNE -Ch1'111 EC1w1ro. 1l,
I
I
Prici1ig
Of Drugs
Now Laiv
~ACRAMENTO (AP) :=· ;~r~· a~~!u,~~~~e~~
a price list for the 100 most
commonly prescribed drugs
ll'hen they walk into their local
pharmo.cy.
Gov. Ronald Reagan signed
legislation Thusrday requiring
the state's 5,000 pharmacies lo
post such a list compiled by
6tft Sttltl Avt., Wtllmltll11r Ind ( J
La611 S111, :W, 6.W1 H1rv1rd Clrcll, BRJ.EES "'""'""'-'""'' . .· .. 81/Ck. Jll.-DUIUO--H1r1tr snerm1n,
11. 5611 Aoci..-111. W1•trntt11l•r 1nd •-----------ICl!hr~n Nehl, 15. 6111 Com1rn;ll1 -Drlw, Wtslmlnilrr AICIJTA(;AWA-GUSTAFSDN -Jon LHo,
10. 1"9'1 Florld1, Hunllno l011 811c11 ind G-ndolyn Chrl•llne, 19, f1261 9urllngt0ll L•lll. Hunllnglon 8e1ch. TH GMAS·SCHOONOVER Jo 11 n Wtttt1rn, lt, tS61 Lido Av r . , Wnlmln1T&r Ind C1rol Su1, IS, 1111 Lido Avf., Wt1!ml111t1r TEPLITZ·LIESTNER -IUcll1rd Allin,
21, lN6.W1ll1c1 Av1., Apl. A, C111o11
Miii 1nd P1-l1 Annt. "' 1'66 Wtl11ct Ave., Apt. A. C0$11 M111. KAPPE·STOOPS -T ... rv Lvnn. 71, 1717 1Ctl14'V ,.111;1. Rlvt rs!de 1"11 AllYlll Joln(ll, 21, ld.il Jtl!rtY ROid, swc• t\4. INIM. COTTON•TWOMllLY -Llsllt Shlrold,
41, 10)0 Aull11'd Ro-6. NeWPOl'I 9ncll 1nd M1rg1rtl Ann, 51, Int W11tctttl Drlvt, Nl'Nporl S111c11. HAUGE·MOUSTON -Al!rf'd JOJtPh, 6f, tll02 111dl111 Wtlt• Circle, Hun· tlnoton llHth end ll ubv Morrison, 6J, ll01 S. ll0$S SI., Apt. C, S&nll An1. EATDN·HVCME -01·1!d EcfW&rd. It,
.5815 N. :Wlh Ave., Pl\otft;w, J.rl1on1
i nd O<iltr1 Dl1111. 11. 11161 Yellow· •'-Court. FOU<lll•ll V1tt1r. CARTER-GREEN -Don1ld LM, ~I.
S8<ll W1111lngron AY1 .. Whinier Ind
Ellr1~111 M1clnn1t. 39. 20102 Spin-drift L1"1. Nunllll!l!()ft BNch. PURVIS·JONES -R0<>~!e Evqene. 11,
llM Monrovl1, Apl. 14, Cost1 Met•
•rid D.rior1h Ann, 10. 10112 lmperlll cow, Huntln;ton 811cl'I. ERNY·OEL OUCA -RDDert Fr1ncl1, 11, '401 W1rntr A,,.., Huntington such 1nd IC11TM1rl,.,. •~. 11, 9131 s-.rk Slvd., G•rden Grove. CLARl<E·NORtON -w1m1m Lee. 2J.
"352 l1rldotw1y 51,. 1 ..... 1,,. 1nd J11111,
20. 12092 eurn1 D•IYI, G1rC1en Grovt. ltOSE<LAAIC -TlrN NtU, ?O. ltll
~ri,,,n. Ctri.on cnv tl'd C1rol Je111, 21, wn E1rh11'l, L"UM H111t. MASON·WERlEY -tcennecty Lee. n, 2220 A11t 1/1111 OrlVt, H1wport B11ch Ind Cri.rlot11 J1n1, 31, 2220 Alla Vl•l• Orlv1, NtWPOrl leaeh. "' RESEN·FALER -D1n1 Sreven, 21, • '11t M1c1rCI St.. Apl. a. Houston, Tta11 tnCI Oeborth Ann. 17, 19411
Newhl~en Lant, Hunllnglon 8e1dl. HAAOIGltEE·DOYLE -Tllom•i.Gltn. 21, 1'611 Golden Wt1!, Wt1!mln1t1r •nCI Ltsllt C1llltrln1 YyonM, ,,, 3041 S11rnon Drtvt, LOl Al1mi!'111, TAUrHAS·WE LLS -Tl\Qm11 "N," 26, 1711 Pt1ctnll1, Apt. A. Costa Mt!I ~nCI O.bOl'ih Ciirl\llne. ~. 2271 PIK1n!11, Apt, A, C1111i. Met1. SOROEN-$,tiNOEltS -Sr;tdf~rd Rosi.
'XI, 14'3 Collete Drl.,., CO$tl Miit Ind Olin<! k1v. n, ~" Ntor•tkl Line, C0tt1 Mn•. LATI MER·8ERGST RO"JI -tl lchol11 Wy1tt. 27, 6'1 N. Gr11i(I, Oringa tnCI A11111 Wlse))earf, 37, ~ C1llt Chueca. Sin JY1n C1plltr1no. RECl<·AICICETTS -T.a ROW'1, n. un w. Amtrlgt, Fuli.rton 1nd •C11try1 cnn1sa, :io. .ill H!;n1tne1. Fulltl'ton. ICUTSCH..MYERS -L1rry Jlmf'I, 16. 2422 S. !"tr-Drlvt. 511111 A1141 tnCI cnr1111,,. E m 11 y , 2il. 1771 Wt1trnln$11r, Goti. Min. ilttC HARDSON-HAVIKE N.:.i._.-Stu« Winter, :is; ISS'I lftllll!ICll ' St,. Wf'1tmln1ter-, 1nCI M•rl]Yn Iona, ~ 16701 Tun1t1111 \.t~ HUF1t1no1on Stach. GEEltLllllG<OMBS -Hffmln JotlPI\, 4(1, 1Jll2 Huntlni11on 811ck tnd D11n1 G1y1, :ro, 1"666 MO!l!ego Way, Tu1!1n.
FO~tER·GREENflLATT P 1 u I Andrtw. 26, t11 Norl1 St .. Laoun• lltltl'I tnCI llen1 Sue.. 23. IS4U Vanow•n. Alli. 18, Van Nur1. HAY!S·P1TTMAN -J1111t1 Barry, n, 12311 Arrowr,e1C1. S!tn'~n .'VICI J.;dl111 Lorr1lne, 11, 5172 L1nca1nlrt Av1., Wesrrnln•ltr.
PUBLIC NOTICE
"ICTITIOUS •VSINESI
NAME ST,lTl,MINT , .. lollowln; ~r'°" i. dOl'!ll b!Jlln.u
•1:
FURNITURE SLEUTHlt.iG, 906 Ctrclt
Pl., Newport B••th tu.10
H1l1n •• l(oofi!r, "" C1n:r1 Pl., NtwllOrf BeKh, C1I, ""611
Tlll1 fl.ll1lntt1 11 conduci.d b't' 1n In-
dlY!Clu•I
Htttn A. 1Coont1
Thll 1t1!tm1nl Wll llltd Wiii! !ht CCU!'· tv ci.rk of Ori~ County on Stp11mb9r n, i•n
P'tl1U
P ubl!ll\fd Ora119t Co11I 01!1y Pll'll,
s.p1. u, 11. n . ind 0c1. s, 1111 2111.73
l'Usuc NOTICE
"1CTITIOUS auSINESS
NAME STATfMINT
'"' !ollowil'lg p1r1on 11 dol1111 DuslneH
ti:
LA TRIBU COMPANY, 2D52 Nt wport
Blvd (Suitt 11) (0111 Ma1. C1lllornl1,
,2617
"~ Grtllam, ""' CCt tl'I A\lt.,
Co•Mt Otl Mtr, Ctllklrt\11,
Tiils bu1!11t•• 11 tonductld ~ 1n In·
Clluldu•I.
CANO GR,lHAM
TllT1 Sltltmtnl wt1 Ulrd wl!h the C111m·
ty Clerk of Orlllllt Covnry on Sep!emtitr 111. 1973
'""' P11t1l111!9<:1 OrtllQt CoeH Dilly PllOl Sep•..-nbtr '" ~ '"' CklObet" ,, "· 1913 29,7.73
PUBIJC NOTICE
l"ICTITIOUS . •Us1NES$ NAME STATI MINT T111 toUow'lno "'..,.., 11 lklll'lf bu•lrw11 ••: CM El ELLE, '"' Sou111 c,,.11 H~y, L"OUl'lt at.ell( C1llf. 92'51 r1.1 Elt,.•or e I r, 96 •lue LI , LIOUlll lle.c~. :?.111. tltJl Tl!• bu1ln111 b coruSuclld by 1n In· CUYICluel. El11nor llolll~tr Tiii• 1111~1 w11 llld wltll 111, Coun.
ty C!1rk 1 ngt CCIUl!1y on Stoltmblr •• lt7l-
F·tnlJ r Publllh9d Or1n111 COi,1 D1l1Y Pfl s..,111T1blr 1, u. 21. 28. itTJ 1110.73
PUBLIC NOTICE
l"fCTITIOUI •llSINl!:ll NAM• ITATIMINT TIM lollowlno "'~ ••• •olno ~u•llMH 11:
'" FACTS . ... . .. Miii Avt .. l ulktlllQ S, Sunt IOI. Cosl1 Mtlt, Cl.
~.,. Ttltlllont ,.n5w1rJ119 Sur11u, 17221 e 171h It., Stnrt Ant, C1lll. t1101 G_fSlfOt Wiiburt 5tnl111. 1 lftt -OU\looll UM, 61nl1 AM, (1, t'l'OS Thl1 11V111'1ftl 11 C'O!l~ll.1~1.cf by tn In·
O'lYklVll Ctofll W. Smllll
nit .tt!tl'ftofM . Wit lllttl wltll !ht (Mnty CJttl tf ....... (tUlllY Ill S.,i,i111.
.., •• 1t n.
' Pt•411 l"ublllllld Or.... CHI! Diii~ l"llot .......... 21 M'MI Ocloti.r J, lf, lt .
"" ' .... "
• J'UBlllC iimCE
STATIMINT'OP AIANpONMINT Of us• olf · PICTITIOUS 8UllNIU NAMI
t I'll t.lltwlnt --tit• lblnfOn'M "" 11M If ti. fltlfl"""' llutlntK ft.I~ ltlCHAltD IEHNlTT, I.TD." 11 lll2 1r..i111 A~, ~ SHCfl, C•t!tornl1 .... Tiit fl<t!llcvt _,,...., nt-rlfl'lt<I lo ...,.,. w•• 111.d kt C~tr on Oct*1' U, "''· W11n1'" •· .tf1tl.,..r, ,.., s.m1r !"i.e.. CMll ....... Cl. f't•at Tllb~Wttt~..il oY 1n l11o °""""ti. WILl.IA.M •• HAl.LIDAY Tfll' .i1ttlfltl'll ~Id wllft IM C-'t Cltrtt ., Or11911 IY .n 1..i1rnow 2 ,,, ..
'"'" 11""4 OrMtl Cet.11 0611'1' l'/IOf, ~ ,. .... or:"°" • 11, 1 ':· ''"
the Stale BoarCJ of Pharm acy.
TilC Republican governor's
action follo11.'cd months of
negotiations before a com-
promise bi ll by Assembly
Speaker Bob Moretti ()).Van
Nuys) •• \Yon final legislative
approval.
The key tuniing point for the
bill caine several \\•eeks ago in
the Senate Financ~ Qnn.mi tlee
w here l\foretli agreed. to
scratch en advertising provi·
sion from his bill in order to
pic:k up the votes he needed.
e Back Prop. 1
SACRAMENTO (AP 1
Four e conom i s t s in
California's academic com·
munity have issued a state-
ment sayin g they Hke the
Prop. 1 tax limitation in-
itiative placed on the Nov. 6
ballot by Gov. Ronald Rea gan.
'The four economis ts, in their
statement Thursday, also at-
tacked an unfavorable report
on Prop. 1 issued "''ith ttie help
ol Harvard colleague John
Kenneth Galbraith.
The four are J. Clayburn La·
Force. chairman of I he
Department of Economists at
the Unive rsity of California at
Los Angeles; \V. Craig Stu~
blebine. pr o f esso r of
economics at the Claremont
Graduate School : !\I a r t in
Anderson. Senior fe-llo'\' at
Stanford Universitv's Hoover
Institu te. and \\'illiam A.
Niskanen, professor at the
Universit y o f California's
Graduate SchoOI of Public
Policy at Berkeley.
e Prlso11ers Sl1ol
LOti1POC (AP) -Tower
guards shot and killed one in-
mate and wounded · another
during a ~icylight escape at-
tempt at ;'.the Federal Cor·
rectional lnstitutioo her c ,
authorities said.
The dead man waS ldentifled
as Richard Joseph Demmerle.
26. of Berkeley. }{e 'vas serv·
ing a six-year sentence for
post office robbery.
His companion , Denn Is
James Ray, 19, of fl.1anhatta"i
Beach, was shot in the leg
during the escape attempt
from the medium security
facility Thursday. e JHalO Slabbed
SAN FRANCISCO (UPI\
A 26-year"ld good samaritan
"''as stabbed in the heart and
died Thursday ll'hen be \\'ent-
to the aid of a ca b driver
being attacked.
l\foses Thonl.<is, 26. was
stabbed \\ith a hunt ing knife
\\'hen he tried to help Terry
Briggs, 34. outside the Dublin
Inn bar on l\·Tarket Street.
e Sult Flied
LOS ANGELES (AP ) -A
Superior Court suit has been
filed to overturn the California
C.Oastal Commission's denial
of a coastal permjl for an ln-
dusttial park near l\farina Del
Rey.
Owners of the f\I a r i n e
ViUage development cootcnd
in their suit filed Thund:By
that they do not need com·
nlission approval, since they
had already spent $11.2 million
by the time the Coastal ·
Conservation Act took errect
Feb. I. e Waldle's F11nds
SACRAMENTO (AP)
C.Ongressman J erome 'Yaldie
has raised a total of Sl92,f>87
so far for ~Is campaign for
gove rnor ln 1974, according to
a report released Thursday by
\Valdie.
The 28-page report said 1,291
persons had contributed a
total of $108,122.90 to Waldle's
campaign since his first cam-
paign disc16sure in April.
The statement added that
Waldie-had spent just O\.'er
$200.000 so far, and th3t his
campaip is running up ei;.
penses at a rate of ttS,000 a
month. e Two l11dlcted
SAN FRANCISCO (AP)
Two men have bec!n indicted
by a federal grand jury in the
Aug. ~ murd er of a U.S. Pork
Service ranger at Pt. Reyes
National Seashore.
The indlctmenl Thursday
named Alllr. \\f. Beale, 24, and
Veronza l..e<>n Curtis Bowf!rs
Jr .. 27, both or San Francisco.
Bov•cr.1 also lg kno"'Jl as
Daoud Bey.
Th• body or K•nneth C.
Palrlck "'as discovered early
Aug. 5 at Pt. fulycs In Marin
County. Official~ say he was
the first Park Service rt'lngc.r
t.''t'r n1urdrred on duty.
Frtdly, Stpltmbtt 28. 1973
Koscot Ripotn
DAILY PILOT J l "~ ..
Get flich Quick
Scheme a Dr~
~l'!t•t1•11 ~d•&(• ~"'~ ••1"11u_.._Espert.a .suggest that oftep a WASHINGTON -Any plan few minutes of s 0 b e r t~at o~fers a quick way to ~! mathematics calculation can
ri ch is very· very risky• contribute much to a balanced
"·arns ;in Alexandria, Va., peispectlve on the prospects
man who ought to know . for a well·padded Income.
OVER THE COUNTER
NASO U ...... It< """""°Y· Stptombo< 17, 1'7J •
11~ 1tl4 Ol,i.t•r Cl\ fl '• 7jY t•ll~ Cr~ ~t., I'• l'U >j\$ Outen Cl 11V• I ,.lt1!11t~ ttl.l t ~ ilt1tnr "' J\4 II' 1D61~ !Of'• 1,..-,,~ 11t1ycm -l1y1w w ••14 ~ t¥l 10 tH Jff T1lec:m r-. I'•, llMi tW. ll1ymd 1• 10 Tlt1111r t ''• Jt1' 40\i iltl\M PK Ulo U Tlmt DC t\, 10 tMti t~ llt<O!I Eq 4-. U Tll.lll 11<1 ,-., 1!111 :t611i llaq Elec: IP. tM· T9Wll Ml • t \.l 10 Meo lf'I t .. lttll Ut>lv UI:. 12~ Trn OC:en 1!" li ""' ... '! . I~ Rt1 Pll' SI'• TtllGll Fn( t \l 10"• 1 k Ito ~ "!¥" •R •TOM. 41\ Uni C10 10'-lllfo r Ad\I~ l 141 If R ~ti Ml 36\lo Jl_ Ul)I~ $0! lt~ 10'.l
(Ii,_ ,_!IYo Ao.. E• "" i9 OnArl 'Th 1\Q I
Miii IW '"" IJo¥1 lilobtt 011 Hiio u u1 ek HI 1l:o )\f• Ill 1111111 1~ 1~ liloll!M e ti 19 u Tr!I L 13~• ,.,, fflllf •r lYI IJl't llou .. Co UW. 1S\ Unlw Fok 141.\ lS r1yn p I~\ 110 ... l'nl •~ IO\~ IJnv MoOI S"o .,, •l'MI' It • t ioo'f llll(•r Pll It\'> II Vf9fol ~ .\\ , .... 1110 A 1Wtll ,I 11\ ti\ ~u,1 Stov 2j 2' V1nc:t 5orl jVi Slo • ·~, 2t~ ts lilt Ml ~ 1'1o s.o. Ad• " .......... ,. Ov• ~.. ' Altll ... 1._ ,, 2 •Ctl ,C: 11~ ttl' SIMlm Cp 1 I Vtn $"'-~ 1lroi l 'h Allee WIO • 14 14 wd 1 I Schlrtr 11 ~ 3J Vlclorl SI 17 11 Alllo In I" l oovtr ''" t7¥ 5c:110ll 1n 9~ 30\lo Vldto sn •'h "" AHIM f•I t lo\ 1 11111· Ml9 14 1•~ kott Iron l'/1 t Vl1111I Sc tu tit Attrn Bl .,. rl I c: '°" ""' SCOUtL G "' • Vol s-11"' 11"" Am Aonl 7~ Wl&lr C tt ~ IS'°' Serl* H 11\~ It W1•n ~G 1 W 1)._
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•
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.Intrigued by promises of
ea<;y earnings of thousands of
dollars in a few weeks time,
he borroll•ed $2,300 in cash a
few years ago and used it for a
hefty supply of cosmetics and
ciimn1i&slan___r~s-f r o m
Kosco! h1terplanetary, lnc.
The firm is a ,pyramid selling
operation owned by Florida
millionaire Glenn W. Turner
and ~currently the focus or
numerous lawsuits around the
country.
IN NEW YORK state. for in-
stance, where Koscot officials
told dlltrtbu1ors they were
sure to earn at least $100,00) a
year1 the state At torn ey
A Arltrft 2¥1 1 nda "W1t "~ ~ Sf:tlplo ' H t 1 W•,t• Mt 15 ,. MIU Lb IU J ' ,..., H\1(1 :IQ iWMrl Stl Wrld 24 1( 'w1.m11 I , .. '"' 'Alft E1pr Q 6.) !l'l'IO't' S~ I~ Sw Mtrd1 11\.'I lt bD ltt S\.\ Jl't -C: Alft l'IMI 1•'11 U tntfl C•P 1S T•'h Svt111•lt 27l0 JP ' W.otdell t•, 10 'Am F"'n , ... 1 1n1trt en '" 10'.li s..~111 \JP 3' 1"' Wtlat WI 10•1 11"' Alft GrM 11 41 lntml Gt IS ,,_ Shtltr Cp Ht 2 Wtlfr>Q M U~O 1•'"'
IT 'VASN'T long before the
Alexandria resident l u 11 y
realized that to reroup to any
degree on hi s investment, ·he
~·ould have to recruit other
salesmen and distributors,
"and I "''asn't sure I kn ew
anybody thal would be suc-
cessful ."
In the end , he fared better
than many other Kosco! in-
vestors. losing only about half
of the money he had put in.
However. in the cool light of
retrospect. he VO\\IS: "A lesson
like that never leaves ypu."
The Virginian is one of an
estimated 500,000 Americans
"'ho have poured millions of
dollars into mu l t il evel
pyramid s a 1 e s operations
\l.'hich specialize in hon1e
sales, largely of soap and cos-
metlcs.
SOME INVESTORS,
particularly those who moved
in speedily when some of 200
to 250 existng companies were
first forming, have rared well.
l\'fany more, hO\\'ever. have
lost lifetime sa vings and
plunged deeply into debt as a
direct result of this particular
brand of moonlighting.
Typically. the pyramid sales
plan is open to increasing
particij>ation by a chain proc-
ess. \Vith your initial in·
Gener~~Ui<~.~pdl~~ figure and promptly conclu
there would have lo be 150
milllon distributorships -or
eight pef resident -in t\\'O
years titne tor that kind of
money to be made.
Indeed, state officials, zer~
ing in for study during one
particular )'ear, found that o{
1,604 Koscot distributors in the
state, only 79 were making
more than $5,000.
vARIATioNs oF pyramid Overstocked selhng have existed for
A.Mite Sr ''"" l'" Int Alum • t\lo Sl>o•IW l"o • Wtlt•I Pt SI.(. ti'• '-f'i!Hllfif-ii!ll':ll'"11~•"w r·'~ 1 SlmPSOll 11'• n W"Pub n 16 ... 11\<o 1-.11 It.re: JTK'tl-Sn..-rcM-Anhtlnr 31,lr)f lrtoland •V. •\ll $Ind P1p 11 11 111111'1 I ''"'° ISl, AnQn In '"' , llflftb II tWt Sufi.If• 27l, 21 Wll"' H J n :ro APIJl(I ,~ 1• i Alrlllr s )lro Sl•nllf'/' ' 11V, ..... w Ill Pkf ltl -u•. \ .I.PS lnr;" '!"" 17 1rn M 11 !•:Mo-Std R19l1 16 11 .c ,Jilt I~ :IO'• Ndll M'ff l'I 2 1C1l .. r " IS''-U~ Slk N All 'JI 1' OOd Ljfl 1Sh 1'1• Arr-Hr 171'1 11 1C1lvlf' C 41'1 '\;, $tkf\I 8rw 6'.• 1\~ ortcl v 11 11'• ·.1.....io. t •fl tci1rn~ Tk St:, ,,. St11k Ill S 11 llh rl9lll W SIO S'• Asso c.11 's' 2• tc111woct ti•~ II~ s1roe tee i0 \'< 10\•l'lomK co ••· t All 01 LI 14~ 1' Ken COM U\it v. S~~r El 10 1G•,~ eno Frt 4/1l 4'1'. Au~ Trn 11 11 1C1y 1Dlll • •on Syner Cp ll'~ U'"' l1Ql r Go s~. •'· 81!rd Alo S tTll Fb lJl~ 11'° S<dOO Fcl ''' J lon• Ulh ti 1•'. S1trcl Wt ut• 1t ICtY Cllll 6~1 1\lo
Ill.If Ft• ,.,,.. ~1V. l<IYt\ 1111 U"' ""' -------------llt!Own L lDY, 1 MS Ind '~ •" ~'a::a' ~~ t° ::r, 't: ;~u f,.,. f;t1i11 er• t1111I Lo•er• ..,.. Atl 11 ll -r119111r !" ' 81.,,,..1 H )I Kuttm El \'I S-"' Ntw Yori!, !UPI) -Thi IOllOWlfl(I 11114 ·e1sMt1 Ill tl\'t ' Ltcld ~I 11\'o 12\!t •110w1 1111 stoc•1 11111 ,....,, 11lntd "" Btyl•U 11 11 Llfl(l•I 13.\lo U'h moll I ntl lost '"-..-1 bltld qn "'tt ... h •llnl F 4•) J'+L•m• 21V. 78'1> 01 c111ngt Ofl 1111 Ovtr·lht·COIHllK &.kin Cp IV. l LIW\tr C lllo\11 31 mlrktl It -~ed by IM NASO. Btnlly Ls Jl~~ t~ L11y Boy JS 16 l\ltl 1fWI Dtrctnt,,,_ ~t 1rt Ull Biii Ptd >9 Ltlloet Pt l6'llo 1t'41 dllltrtnc• betwe1n Tht 11<1vrou. 1111 bid 'Beu L•b ~• •1 Llbtf1y H l \'< 2~ price .. ..., lllt c"'rtnl 1111 old price. Bll>b Co t I\' Lii Cllmp I"' t\\ GAIHEAS
decades. and no one has any Ending football television blackouts may be great
dou~t that so~e forms wllJ. for the fans, but it's tough on TV shops that stock·
conunue to: thrive for years to ed up on Jong distance antennas and amplifiers.
819 Orm 11\'> 13\'o Linc Belt! 6~1 l'w 1 WtUsF1090 wt 1\, ~ " Bl1d Son• 24'~ 1S Lion CISI 3\' 4\\ 2 F-Town .U 711> .. J:i..
I Bob Evn• J4~)'JS Lo<tllt S7 st J I.lit Sc:lenctt l~• .. •• 8Q-O\ll Np 20 20'1(, MWS Co SI SS'// • Mlg At tO< .10 1•'h • 2' • BrtMO I J4l'll 211 Mid Gii u • .. 14ll s Mt! Pttro!m ~··'. ,,
>Jp 1S.O
Vp \10.0 Up 'JO.O Up 11.• uo 11. UP 11,J uo 0.0 UP 1'.0 UP 1l,I UP ll.t
VP •. J UP 12.J
VP 11 J UP 11 ~ uo 11,J Up 11.1 UP 10.t Up 10.1 Up 10,0 UP 10,0 VP lf ,Q
VP t ,I VO t l Up t I Up t ,J
come., Lou Berger 's l'iliami electronics firm has several
In recent months and years, thousand dollars worth of the high p9wered equip·
Brlnkt In ll~l 14 M.11 lltlly 4\0 j 6 CA Ot,lgnA) I I'>• 1'·• Brown l,r 41\ s Ml lclll 4)Vt 4•'' I Ll...,COll\t .U 13 • ) • Buc:kbe 11"• H M1rll Fri 1tJ\ 10\\o I !"VO lntorn1U 111.•• l\1
I euc:~ey Sl'• 61 M1rJ I(~ )I\\ lt'Jt t c..,1y M•ctiirit 10 ... I'•
though. there has been an un-ment
precedented legal crackdown ·
811•np SI 1~'7 lO Mc Cmc::l ni~ '°'" 10 H0\911•1 Fini;! ...... .
BUiit< M ~J''! ''\' McDulJ 1.\, 11 11 Calbloclltm 11 -1 cam TiQ :tO l't)-1' Medcm "'" u n h t P1Mta wt11 1' • · '•
on this form of whitecollar
crime. Nationally. both · the
Federal Trade C.OmmiMion
and the Securities and Ex-
change commission have been
active.
An estimated 30 states have
legal prohibitions a g a i n s t
pyramid selling, and almost
all state attorneys general
have begun some kind of legal
proceedings agaif\st one or
another of Turner's sever a I
enterprises.
BY 1\1 o S T assessments.
there has been more noise
than results. The various
charges are broad, ranging
from antitrust violations arid
failing to register securities to
n1isrepresentation of e8rnings
and violation of state lottery
laws.
However, legal lvheels move
slowl.v, and many or the ac-
----'---------------c'C•PI s.o .. l'' • MMllm ~ st uweco 0ev1op 1•,, '• 1 C1fl VIPS I '\ 1! Mtrlcl In SI'! _\, 1' Lt•lt•Qn Corp 12 • 1r, Cllmp P1 u~~ 14 M•r•r F• 10•• 10\'o u Am ou11r P•l 14•,, .. •~• ClllnCI A l~o H Mii I pot !!41\11 51117 16 01n~~•W/' wt 1'' • '• Cllllll Co 71\ I Mph G•t 2J\\ 2Jh 11 (hlnMI Ccrnp l'l • 1• Cri.m Cp l4o '' Minn F11 ,.._ 1\'o II Pie N Slve Cp I'•• '• CM Br Ir tt t i Mogul C ?IV. 11\Jt I' Df(or Ind .:ro S''J '-\1
1 Cllrl~ S..c MOiex 111 •r•' 41~ 10 Hlhdy O~nHo 11 -I
1711\ 110 Moot• SI 4t"1 •JV, ll Oct'"" F1.rt•lt ,.,. ... •:, Cilil U A J5\to l4o Morrl•n It''• 10 11 TymUW1r1 lrK !1'1·• !lo CltYepk 12 13 Motor Cl 11<\ 11'• 1J MOfl.lle Am (p fl'I .. 1• Clow Crp tt~ 10 MSI D'11 9 tV. 1' N1tn! CSS Inc 'lll'I • ,...,
Japa11ese Dollars
CottC LI 11•l 11 NII CnvSI 1~4 t1'o li "91v1y Co .JD II(~.,. 1\Jt
(;oml Shr Jlh ,.. NII Llbty s~ ,.. LOllll:S ·cmwTI P 2211 tJ NI MlllC• 1•1~ IS.... I Lonolltmpf t -'J) Off 10 ~ Coutln• f' 2t NI Ptttnl 10"'1 11Y."o t 01111l1\J IM:OrP I ~ -~\ 011 1 .. r Crost Co 21111 tt\ f\IHCll\m JI It l (;r1phlc Sc:tn •·•-o OU lS.t C111tch 11 71• I Newu Co 10 t.i ~ Enwlron ~'fl\ II'>-c, D11 1•.J Curl Holl 11'~ l HJ NII G U'1o i.l~ 5 GCL GflQh 111. I'•-'• ~ 11.S Neecled iii State
SAN FRA NCISCO I AP l
Lt. Gov. Ed Reinecke urged
California bus in ess rp en
\Vednesday to take advantage
of the Japanese i mp o r t
0 ... 1 lflll :Jtt\ Hlcoltt l In ~ 1~ 4 Deni~ IMI J'«-·I• "'' 10.0 O.n•r M lO'o 10C NltlMn A ' Vlclrto S111tmt •' ·-• I Oii 10.0 01rt OrQ J~ ... x37V. ''"' I Ctr C1rlbMlfl l'•-\t Off I.I mark.et whil e the opportunity 0111 °'' 31~ J' NltlMn 11 • Hallm1rk Grp 1·~-~· 0t1 •.1 0111 Gtn •3 •3~' •37\\ol"• 10T1•lontl"c !k ,,,_ • 011 '·' exists. DKI• 01 14~ n Hord1lr 21 v. 21v, 11 Pl<A PrOCI . Ob 1'•-~. °".,, U n "· k ''' t O.cor In !''> S NW\ NtG ·~ '" 12 EOS N11(lt1r 10'•-1 t.S '""mec e, spea.ung a 3 o.•tb AA ''\' '°" No••tt ep 5, sil? u C.•bln1 co .. 11 "•-'• °'' I l California -Japanese Business o.:1ro.1 inn '~ 6" 11111C1r R• 1•, 1>-. u Mttr ldl1n .NO ''•-•1 Ott 1J O.luxe c .01:. n Ol•wd H ••1 I'• !J U!d Coif! Se•v !lo-~ D!t l.J Seminar, noted that J3™'" has Ol1m Cr1 11'~ 1Jl' Oc11n Or '3\o "'°" 16 Jel Alr Frtl<;Jhl l -'• Oii 1 T r--• 01•"' Hd •ro 1 OC:t•n E• t\~ 10 11 Gr.....,~ Jk lJ -1 . Otl '1
changed its trade laws to en· Die~ A e ?tv. 1t • oc:nor Mt 1 3'" ,1 Ht•\ APP••e1 l'•-'• Ott '·'
Courage Amerl'can •'mports. Dl•r• Sci 111 c11 oni.1> 1.111 ,, 11~. 19 v.,. O[k R~(" 1•.,_ ~· .,°", •. , Oocuttl 3214 .U\I C>Qll•y M 1t"'1 2S~' 10 AVM orp .IS )\•-• -· ' "Th need rod t Oo11r Grn J"t I Oli Ftr<O 7~ I'" ~I Oonb•r O•~lp ,.,. '• Ofl t.1 ey our .p uc s Do1111ds 31"1o1l Opll(Olt 2t '' nltVnQ•ln Shop II'· •t DH 6.l and we need their dollars to 0o-.. Jon• ?t ,,,. Ol'l"ont •·~ ••• 11 M•lnllne ~•ts J<.-'• on •l
Oo-yle OB 11 U~ Ovrmyr J\t. '"" ?I Ml9lnvWt.11 wt 1:1-'• 011 6.J reduce the u n f avor a b I e ounkln o 1•• J~ Over• 111A • .,. •I~ ts Pie Am" 1nc1 J-..-1• on t.1
l r r h Ec0<1 Lib tt•; t' · 111• Crp J>I ''·' ba ances o p3yments or I e E1 P•1-0 121, u•\ P1b., Br n•. 1114
U 't d St t "h 'd Er lllox~I ''" 11 P•cc1r l~'~ 40'>\ n1e aes. esa1 . !En•rg! c ,., 11,,.,, Gam 21•,u .• "Now w'1th Japao's new Equ ~L 1s 1S'' P•c Lum -" ~t.
~ cused have hastened to
3 Airli1ies
Get Rate
Hike Okay I Etlltn A ?S'. 26~· P1S.O 1)1d 111~ 1214 NEW YORK 4UP11 -TM 10 11'\fll outlook on imports "''e must E•tu• 1n ''• •\ p111 0co1 """ iii.. •ct•v• ~1ock1 trad~d on 1n. orc 1111••11 . ' El Pa!nl S', 1 Piul lltw Ut\ 1~1 lhurl<!ly 1S tvpp!llld l!r NASO. 1nove qwckly to get our pro-"'" Ln. ••·, ••1 P1111tv ,. "' , •• , °'' G ,,•,.-,., 1 ,,l,",',U,--, f1'1',
'J • a 1va11 it'• a . reorganize, the better to avoi!f
I . j ltl being hit: Spokesmen for Holl· fee Or exp O, llfl dax Magic, for instance,
.•0•11eone else. target or legal action in at
~~ least a half-dozen states,
vestment, you usually get an
inventory of the product for
direct sale to the consumer.
Gradually. you're encouraged
to work your way up from
retail to wholesale di slributor.
investing more at each level
and picking up the right to -a
con1mission from the in·
vestments and sales of others
you introduce into the system.
IT SOON becomes apparent,
if it was not in the beginning,
that the real money to be
made is not in the direct S{lles
of the product but in the ad-
dilional investors )'OU add to
the pyramid.
"In a "'ay, it's a fee for ex·
ploiting someone else." says
Richard C. Foster, assistant
director for marketing and
practices at the Federal Trade
Commission. in describing the
referral fee process.
"The motivation all along
beconics that of recruiting ne~v bodies to join the chain,"
observes Sen. \Valter Mondale
<D-Minn), who is sponsoring
federal legislation to prohobit
such fraudulent pyramid sales
operations. "The essential
problem is . . . !her~ are
simply not enough bod ies to
keep the chain in motion ."
* * * Famed Trial
Attorney
Accused
J ACK S 0 NVlLLE, Fla.
IUPI ) -A Miami departn1ent
slore salesman T h u r s d a Y
testified about lhe role at·
torney F. Lee Balley had in
promotion of various bwliness
vent ur es of Orlando
supersa lesman Glenn Turner.
Willlam C. Sant. who was a
district director for southeast
Florida for Turner's J5:oscot
Interplanetary C o 1 m e t l c I
Firm, was expected to con-
tinue lo de&trlbc today how
the ramed trial attorney dld
more than just offer le1al ad·
vice for Turner.
Turner, Bailey, and seven
other• ore being tried for
violation of rederal man O'aud
laws In the promotions of
Koscot. "Dare to be Great.''
and Glenn Turner Enterpriaes •
D11iley has contendea he was
only corporation counsel, but
the government sald he helped
promote t h e motivational
courses and distributorshl~
sale& firms.
Sent was the first govern·
ment witness to Implicate
Bailey dlreclly in any pro-
motional v..'Ork.
recently announced plans to
eliminate the firm's multilevel
distribution system and con·
centrate wholly on door to
door and neighborhood sales.
Koscot Interplanetary has fil·
ed for reorganization under
the Bankruptcy Act.
States, particularly, have
had a difficult time since the
company or companies in
question may pack up and
move on to a neighboring state
where laws differ or even
form an additional corporation
in the same state which
authorities have to attack with
entirely new I e g a I pr~
ceedings.
THE SITUATION, is such
that Sen. !\fondale considers
the time and climate
particularly ripe for a federal
law to prohibit fraudulent
pyramid s al es or,rations
altogether, slapping a stiff fine
Gf $10,000 and a possible prison
sentence of up to five years (or
both) on those who perpetrate
such schemes. Sens. Warren
Magnuson (!>-Wash ) Philip
Hart ([).Mich.), and Frank
!\loss ( D-Utah I are ~ o •
sponsors.
Sen. l\tondale is careful to
point out that he Is only on the
prowl for the fr audul e nt
operators and not the "many"
legitimate corporation,, which
sell products or sendcts on
commission, with door-to-door
selling techniques, or through
leglthnate franchise ar-
rangements.
•
S AN FRANCISCO (APl -
Three airlines have received
permission to increase thei r
rates to the same intrastate
level granted P a c i f i c -
Southwest Airlines earlier this
month.
The Public Utilities Com-
mission set lhe San Francisco-
Los Angell's rate for \Vestern
Airlines and Air Cali fornia at
$16.20. Those a i r I in e s ·
Sacramento-San Diego fare
was set at $23.97, while the
new San Diego-San Jose rate
increased to $23.50.
Uniled's San D iego-San
Francsico fare will increase to
$23.61.
The new rates
effec tive Oct. ~.
will becon1e
Mission Bank
Office to Open
Mission Bank will open its
third office on Oct. 15 at
the intersection of A very and
?\1arguerite Park"'•ays i n
southern Mission Viejo. •
John ?\iaes of Mission Viejo.
a veteran of eight years in the
banking business, will be the
manager of the new office.
d · th · · F1rl0<1 Cl :It'' ll'~ P,lu C11 u ,,,, enn '' { , • uets mto eir economy or Firm ti• 10 1iw. P1r N sv t1"' 1,,, 11.,,, tnd .... tOll 10L, 21 -· • -• 'the the st t -Ft" 0r9 1.L:o • PIGt~ w 1114 no.;. llilllll °'I 1A}.100 1u. nvo ... ~vnillce ~!!a~. our 0 tr rad ianegs ·~~'?'ii'::stn ~l., ~~~ :!lroHt~ i:~ 2:!-1 ~~utrit~!:ti 'n::= ~ ~: ;-: ,.....-ht T•Fln 24>) lJ"" kN Si'1 J~ l'l Pt-tr tllO<d lt,000 31 ' J'l •-'• possibilitu " the lieutenant 111 wstF 1ft, tv. Plnkrtll 'l'' 21•1 F1 .. r Mils 1u,t00 u>., •1•, • "
.1• FIH.1 Inc ti~ t~Pl-r W •1 >111 ~, Lldd "91'1 Cp 10,loOO 11'• 12'\-'• governor added. Ftt r11ep 1•'' 10 F'l11t• 1.,. 111; t•1 Frink LI 111i M,100 ?t ... •:•-,
R . k said J Flttk9• 111) ntt. lft ,,_.. , •. ,., 11·~ N•hon WIOt •S,000 u•. IS·\-• emec e apan now For''' 01 \6\1 '"" ,..., ••• 4·-, J',
h a 118 bill;,,0 surplus or . Fr1n~ El 10 tO\.: ol Golf J>o J~1 f\IASD Vlll~"1f lOCS.Y, 6,IOi,IOO as n "' F11nr11 311, l2VI p,09,,, 1••, n A'1v•"''' American dollars Fri.nc1 '' 1•11o 2J sK cir lt'• 11i. ~1'"'' . Frloc n A 11''1 ll'h tn C1p j S'-1 U"l.fl81\9fd Fro: FdE IO'o '°"' f Cp • ,,, l•l•I
Lockheed's
' .
Jet Order
Increased
LOS ANGELES (AP) -!
Lockheed-California Co. sai d
reported that All Nlppon
Airways has increased its finn
orders for the LtOll TriStar
jetliner from six to 14.
The overall transaction has
a va lue of $300 million.
The airline also has a
sccond-buv order, similar lo
an option: for seven additional
TriStars. The 21-plane order
would have an eventual value
of $500 million.
All Nippon's first TriStar is
scheduled for delivery in
December. .
Lockheed said it has finn
orders for 126 of the planes
and second-buy order• for 73.
MUTUAL FUNDS
New York -Fol· I-Ing Ii I lo" ot bk! 1ncl llklcl ptl·
Cl l on M\Ol\011 Flllldl II iuottcl by tri. l'f450 nc.
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frld11 Srptrmbrr 28 1'173
Friday's Closing Prices Complete ·New York Stock Exchange LiSt
Dow Index Loses
Af te1· 7 Gaine1·s
-NEW YORK (AP) -lnvestoq took a breather
Friday alter Iha hectic upward pace of lhe past
seven sessions, as stock prices slumped Jn slow
tnding
Brokers generally aUnbuled lh e decline to
profit laklng, with investors seekjng to caah m on recent gains
''The recent advance was too large to be sus-
stamable," satd Alan Shaw of Harns, Upham & Co
Try Saturday's News Quii
We Dare You
I
SC D~lt Y PILOT J :J
Financ_,e
Briefs
e Broker Sued
SALT LAKE CITY (UP!l -
A Provo, Utsb man ltlld Mer
rill, L)lftch Pierce Fthn4!.
and Smith for nearly $3IO GOO
Victor I Cartwrtgbt clllm<J
the brokerage: rum cau,,~
him and his children lo m
$131 015 in the stock markel
He want. lite mooey back
plus 1100 llOll damages
e BART Orfler
OAKLllND (!iP) -The Jl'I:
Area llapld Transl(~<!'
board of directors has voted t.t
order JOO addlllonal can hit
Rohr rn<11atr1e1
The 3-2 vote 1n favor cl thi
$40 6 million cootract ca""
alter Rly Ra11<1ber1or, Roh!
vice president. •uureid the
board the n~w CU'S woQI ex
coed the 1pcc!llcalloos cmUln-
ad by BART,
• BeMIJlel,.
Special Jo Ille DaJ11 Hot
f ARMINGTON, Conn -
Heublein Inc and llfewcn
Unhm•tcd Inc reported jolnUJ
Thursday Iha! !hey haY&1lgn-
ed a letter of lnttnl pro\fl:dlog
for the sale ol ihe prtndpol
RSSf:t! of lhe Theodutt Ham1r
Co a Htubleln 1ubsldlary, to
Brewtn Unllm1ttd for an un
d1sclO&td amount of caM.
1
1
•
•
.. . .
I J DAILY PILOT s t. c.
ANIMAlogic~.,.._
Ccin't Win
111 Fight
Ove ,. Mail
From '''ire Ser,•ices
\VASHINGTON -Joseph
Lahey of New York com·
plained to his congressman
that the Post Offi~ kept sen-
ding back n:ta-11 properly ad-
dressed to him, stamped "Ad·
dressee Unknown."
The congr~ssman. R e p .
Jonathan Bingham (O.N.Y.l,
wrote Joseph A. Matukools.
!he congressiona l liaison of-
ficer for government relations.
'-fat ukonis wrote to
Bingha m th;it ."the improper l
handling of fl.1-r. Lahey's mail
was caused by a mechanical
fail ure in a n ew l y im·
p\emented central mark-up
system." '
Bingham took ),fatukonis'
letter and enclosed it with a
Jettei:: of his own to Lahey,
telling him that the problem
\\'BS corrected immediately.
Unfortunately, Lahey did not
get the letter. It was retyrned
lo Bingham. stantped "Ad-
dressee Unkno"'fl."
\\'ASflJNGTON -Stephen
B. Kin J,!. \vho ser,·ed as
l\1artba ~Utchell's bi>d:vguard
durin g part of the 197:?
presidenti al campaign, has
been rebuffed in his efforts to
obtain a career job with the
Agriculture Depa rtmenl.
Instead. King was given a
( PEOPLE ),
political appointment at the !
san1e salary -$26.898 a year\
-in the denar1ment's con-
J,?.rcssionnl relations section. I
He began work there this
\reek.
King. 32. \Vas guarding f\trs .
Mttchell during a 1972 incidenl
in Newport Beach in which she
charged she was manhandled
and injected with a sedative
shortly after the \Vatcrgate
break-in.
LE\VISTO N -Biologist Tim
Burton says California brown
bears prefer a mixture of
stra~·berry jam and cat foo.d
to honey.
Burton. 28. has been trap-I
ping bears in the rugged Trini-
ty Mowttains of Northem
Califomia for two years as
part of a stud y for the Slate
Fish and Game Depa rtme nt.
He experi mented w i t h
several tvpcs of bait. but set·
tied on the cat food and jam
bec;iuse it seemed to be ''!he
gou rmet favorite of bears." I
One old bear liked it so much ,
s.hC' kept con1in~ bo:ick for I
n1ore. "\Ve caug ht her seven
times." Burton said.
.\llA\ll. Fl a. -\\'hen fire ~
broke out at home. 10-\'ear-old
lliralda Agoslo remen1bered
the advice or Sparky. the lire
doe. I She ca lmlv took her 6-year-
old sister, Karen. across the
st reet to a nei~hbor's house
and asked Christian Pierre, 13.
to ca ll the Fire Department
and her mother, "'ho \\'SS al
\\'Ork.
Sparky, a fireman dressed
a<.; the fir,e dog. llad \·isiterl
ll iraida 's school last \\'CCk to
j!irc ;i talk on fire ure ve11tion
and \\•hat to do in case of fire.
ATiiENS, Greece -T.:11ty !
Amalia Flemin~. y.•V-1011 rif the
Rri tish discoverer of penicillin I
and Georl?t Plytas. former
nutyor of Athens. have applied
for restoration of their Greek
citizenship.
A lawyer ror the two exiles
said Interior A1 i n I s t e r
St)'llanos Palakos wrote him
that both ft'PpUcaUons were
before the council of State,
which Is expected to make a
decl51on soon.
The Greek military regime
' stripped Lady Fleming and
Plytas of their citizenship Jn
1971.
~tf>tes)
FDDBAY
in the l1tUijijl!1ll
-.. ..,, ---...-
•
F'ridar, September 28, 1~73
Saturday Only Fashion Island e Newport Beq~h
' l • j
'
'
Sorry ... no phone or mail orders. • I
Shoe Department
0 300 only Pr. Women's Sandals
D 75 only Pr. Met Sandals
Orig.
2.00
3.00
D
D
D
75 only Pr. Women's Ankle Boot 5.50
100 only Pr. Women's Knit Tennis Shoes 4.99
75 only Pr. Women's Italian
Sandals 7.99.9.99
NOW
.22
.BB
.88
2.88
3.88
O 75 only Pr. G irls' Service 0 1tfords 5.99-8.99 2.00
D 100 only Pr. Boys' Dress Oxfords 6.99-10,99 4.0~
Women's Accessories
Orig.
2,50 0 500 only Lad ies' Leather w.llets
D 60 only Led ies' Straw, Canvas,
Vinyl Handbag1 4.00-6.00
D 700 only Pierced~ & Mini Clip earrings .99
NOW
1.66
1,88
.66
D 25 only Led ies' Better Leathe~
H•ndb19• 12 .88-22.88 8.88·16.88
D 60 only Cool Capless Synthetic w;9, · 5.aa.9.88 1,&8-4,88
D ~?O only Ledigo Handbags_ b.00
Sleepwear & Foundations
Orig.
D 60 only Women's Sleepwear J.88-5.88
D 37 only Voil Floor length Robe 14.25
O 233 onl Y Assorted Br•s & G irdles 3.00-12.00
Women's Dress Department
D 25 only sh;ft
D
D
D
D
D
D
D
D
40 only Pent Suif.s
I 8 only Caftans
7 only Pant Suits
12 only long After Fiv•
5 only Pa tio S~ift
8 only Halter Top Pant Suit
7 only Junior Pant Suit
6 on ly Junior Pa nt Suit
Women's Outerwear
D 9 only Check Blazer
D 15 only Vinyl c;at
0 5 only Maxie Coat
Women's Uniform Department
O 12 only Asst. SmoclV'T ops
D 8 only Asst. Smock Tops
Bridal Department
D only Gown, size 8
0 I only Gown, size 8
•
0 ) only Gown, sixe 10, 12 & 14
0 only Gown , sixe 10
0 onJy Gown, sixe 8
•
Girls' Department
Orig.
4.88
16.00
21.00
35.00
38.00
17.00
18.00
17.00
28.00
23.00
37.00
50.00
Orig.
5.88
8.00
Orig.
65,00
90.00
85.00
69.00
65.00
0 70 on ly Preschool Girls' Dr•sses,
sizes '4-·6x 4.88-9.00
O 60 only School Age Girls' Dresses
sizes 7-14 4 .88.12.00
D 80 only School Age Girls' Pant Sets
sizes 8-14 9.88.f7.00
O 100 only School Age Girls' Ra incoats
sizes ~14 .92
D 24 only Assorted Belts, S-M 1.88
Infants' Department ..
0 30 only Diaper Pa nties, b per pkg.
11.11 lb.. 6/.88
D 30 only Diaper Pa nties, b per pkg.
5.12 lb•. 6/.88
0 18 only Oversleepers, sizes 1/1 -1 4.19
D 20 on ly I pc. Zip Back Sle•pers,
1iz•s 1/1 ·I 3.33
D 25 only I pc. Terry Sleepers, sites VJ-I 4.00
D 50 only 2 pc. Sleepers w/6rippers
sizes 1·3 4.69
Saturday Only
2.88
NOW
1.88
9,88
.44·8,BB
NOW
1,88
12.B8
11.88
23.88
25,88
7.88
12.88
11.88
18,88
16,88
31.8B
43,88
HOW
2.88
3.88
NOW
35.88
59,88
59.88
39,88
32,88
NOW
1.88-7,88
1,88-8.81
6.11-14,88
'· .
.4"4
.88
NOW
6/.44
6/,44
Z.11
1,11
2~18
2,11
D 20 only 2 pc. Boxer. Sty\• Sl•epers,
sixes 4-8
D 20 only Girls' I 00 'Y. Nylon Gowns,
siz•s J .J
4.98
2.98
D I 0 only Boys' I 00 'Y. Polyester 2 pc.
Sleepe.rs , sixes 1. f l/2
D 25 only Boys' 2 pc. Mesh Knit
Paj•mas, sizes f .J
Women's Sportswear
D 40 only Lacy Card igans
D
D
D
D
20 only Plaid Pants
I 5 only Long -Sleeve Print Blo uses
9 only Embroidered Cardigans
20 only I 00 "!. Polyester Jamaic•s
Junior Shop
D 50 only Junior Bikinis
0 25/ only Acrylic Halters
D
D
D
D
15 only Long Sleeve Print Shirts
12 only Short Sleeve Cardigans
15 only ~hort Embroidered Tops
15 only Hi.Rise Cuffed P•nts
Men's Furnishings
D 80 onl). Men's Swimwear
0 60 Men's Sport Shirts
D
D
D
D
D
D
D
D
21 o nly Men's Dress Sh irts
15 only Jean Shirts
·60 only Shortie Pajam•s
JO Terry Shirts
16 Zip Front Sweaters
. 47 only long Sleeve Turtlenecks
18 only layer-look Sets
12 only Sleeveless Sweaters
Men's Clothing
O 44 only Corduroy Rancher Jacket
D 4 only Split Cowhide J,c.ket
2.9B
2.9B
Orig.
8.00
ll.00
ll.00
14.00
5.00
Orig.
5.99
6.00
9.00
11.00
8.00
14.00
Orig.
5.98
5.oo.5.98
5. 99)'
7.98
l.98
2.69
15,98
6,00
15.98
7.98
Orig.
t 6.98
40.00
D
D
D
D
D
D
11 only Double ' Knit Jeclc:ets
29 only l ight Weight Jackets
l 7 .88-24.88
10.98-14.98
50 only Casual Slacks 4.98·9.98
98 only Better Quality Suits 80.00-90.00
JO only Walking Shorts 8.98
140 only Double Knit Dress
Slacks I l.00-15.00
Ganfen Shop
D I 55 only I Gal. Asst. Plants
D
D
D
D
34 only I 0" Hanging Baskets
-43 Only 5 Gal. Asst. Plants
5 only 5 Gal. Asst. Pla nt s
S only 2 Gal. Roses
Yardage
O I 00 only yds. Cotton Crepe Print s
40 only yds. Poly CrePe Prints
38 only yds. Jewel Pr int
150 only yds. Baclc to Back Prints
Orig.
1.49.J.59
6.99
6,49.6.99
4.99
l .49
Orig.
2.29
2.98
4.98
2,J9
D
D
D
D
D
70 only yds. Double Knit Coordin•f• 4.99
90' only yds. Cotton/Poly Stretch Terry 3.99
Gift Department
D 20 only Flower Arrangement
D 20 only Decorator Ships
=1 6 only Bar Lamps
0 9 only Double Bell Alarm Clock
D 60 only Novelty Candles
0 · ;·5 only Crystal Ted-Bet Server
Bedding & Linen
O 3 only Lemans Bedspread, Quten
O 4 only Country Fair Tablecloth
0 36 only King Siz• Sheets
D I ao only Pillow Cases
Orig.
10.00
J.95
9,00
9.19
1.75
8.50
Ori9.
34.00
5,00
. 8.49
2,62
3.88
1,88
1,88
1,88
NOW
5.BB
10.88
10.BB
10.88
1,88
NOW
1.88
2.81
6.BB
8.88
5.88
11.8B
NOW
2.88
2,11
1.88
4.88
2.88
1,81
7.88
3.88
9.88
4,B8
NOW
12,tt
29,'9
14.'9
8,tt
2,88
59.81
1,88
7,99
NOW
.75
3,50
3.50
2.75
2,75
NOW
1.68
1.tt
' 3.33
1.77
3,33
2.99
NOW
4.88 ...
2.81
7.18
.88
1,88.
NOW
21M
3.81
6.41
1.44
We k~£~~!}~!¥ng for .
Fashion Island •
Housewares
D 50 only Walt Disn•y Slush Mug
O 9 only En•mel Clam Steam•rs
D
D
5 only El•ctric Hib•chi
75 only Glass Mugs
Furniture
•
J only Bed Frames
only Soft, Bl•ck Vinyl
Orig.
1.49
4,99.9,99
19.99
, ,JS
\
Orig.
55.95
2.75.00
D
D
D
D
D
D
o ·
D
D
D
D
D
only Game Tabl•, Round , Whit• 99.95
only Da rk Oak Dining Tabl•
only Grandfather Rocker, Black
only Grandf11ther Rocker, Black
only Pine Roeker
only Pedestal Dining Table
I, only Pedesta l Dining Table
I only Arm Chair
I only COcktail Table
I only Mattress, Full Size
Home Electronics
D 2 only Sol;d Sl•le AM/FM
Turntable
12 only Solid State Stereo-Phone
I 0 only Solid State Stereo·Phono
only E.A. Ster•o TV Theatre
only 3 Pc. Stereo Console
only Contemp. Stereo 8 Track
I only Moct Stereo Phono
4 only 9" 8&W TV
' I only 2J" Color Console TV
150.00
89.95
94.95
124.95
170.00
170.00
19.00
140.00
49.95
Orig.
129.88
49.95
37.95
995.00
' 359.95
299,95
199,00
109.95
519.95
D
D
D
Cl
D
D
D
D
D I only Solid Stat• St•r•o, I Track 159.18
Major Appliances
D
D
D
D
D
only Port. Dishw•sher, White
only JO" Gas Range, White
only 19' SBS Refrig.
w/lce Mek•r, Avo.
only 17' TM Refrig, Avo.
only 17' TM Refrig.
w/lce Maker, Cop.
Floor Covering
Orig.
188,00
239,95
489.95
349,95
389.95
Orig.
D J only 5'x8'0" Oval Fr inge Rug, Gold 40.00
D 4 only 5x86"' Oval Fringe Rug, Avo. 46.00
D I only 6'x9' loop Lev•I Rug , R•d 18.00
0 only 4'x6' O val Shag Rug, Pink 21 .00
0 on ly 5'9"x8'6" Oval Shag Rug,
Blue Green 22.00
0 only 5'9"x8'6" Oval Shag Rug,
Blue 22.00
D 2 only 5'9"1t8'6" Loop l•vel Rug,
Orange 18.00
D I only 8'6"xl 1'6" Loop Lev•I Rug,
Blue l l..99
D only 0'9"x8'6" Loop Level Ru9,
Gold 18.00
Sewing Machines & Floor Care •
D l
D 2
D
Orig.
only Zig.Zeg S•w Machine. Sp•c. Buy
only Rug & Aoor Conditioner 64.95
only Sewing Hessock 19.88
Patio Furniture
Orig.
D
D
D
0
D
D
D
48 only Sun. Umbrella, Asst. Colors 9.29
2 only Sun Umbrella, Gr•en & White 39.99
I only Sun Umbr•lla, Black I Whiff 79.00
-, only Sun Umbrella, Gr•en White 59.88
I only Sun Umbrell•. Green & Yellow 46.00
4 only Sun Umbrella, Green & Whitt l2.88
I only Sun Canopy, Orange & White 30.00
Hardware Department
D 7 only Kitchen Faucet
0 14 only Extension Cord •
D 7 only StHI Sh'elvln9 Una
D 2 only Stul Sholvin9 Unit
D 10 only Woll 5holvOI
D 6 only Alr Condit ioner Covtr
0 15 only 001l9nor Bricks
0 30 only Silicon• Sealant
Orlt.
19,11
7,99
14,99
9.99
t..99
3.99
7.59
.99
·" 1,11-3.81
16.11
.13
NOW
23,00
133.00
64,00
44,00
44,00
78.00
18.00
II.DO
133.DO
33.00
H .00
35.00
NOW
II.DO
34,11
19,11
7'5.00
244.DO
166.DO
ff.DO
II.DO
311.00
uz.oo
NOW
166.00
111,00
43'.DO
ZH.DO
339.00
NOW
36.00
36,00
14.00
16.00
17.00
17.DO
14,lJO
28.DO
14,00
NOW
5'.81
49.11
14.81
NOW s;aa
2'.H
5'.11
49.11
34.88
29,11
1',18
NOW
1.18
3.81 .... .. ,,
J.tt
1.44
4.81 .so
'
Newport B,each
. •
l
17
• I , -'
LaguDa «Bea~h
• -EDITION
To•loy's Final •
N.Y. Stocks
• -.
VOL. 06, NO. 271, 4 SECTIONS, 44 PAGES I ORANGE COUNTY, CA(IFORNIA FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 28, 1973 TEN CENTS
•
r
Laguna !)s Beauty Hides Her Treachery
By JACK CHAPl1ELL
ot IM Diiiy f'll9t ll•H
The majestic ocean cliffs, rocky coves
and golden. sands that make Laguna
-:..----e.,.ett-o-bebutiful~lso -make h e-r
treacherous.
To the men of the Laguna Beach
Lifeguard Department,-majestic cliffs
mean rescues of stranded adventurers.
or broken limbs from falls.
Rocky coves mean rip tides and jagged
hazards for sw immers. Coves also mean
isolation from help if it 's needed. ,,. _ on a guarded beach for the last lour
Golden sands mean toddlers walking years. ~ .
duck-footed into !he surf or an eKJ>anse .. One of the reasons ls a procedure m-. . ' . 1t1ated by the department called' preven-of ocean where _!nexper_!_enced-s.w~mmers· _ :e::actlonL sal~head·of·tbe
come for a day -not reahzmg the Department of Marine Environment-:-
Pacific's might until 1hey reel it The procedure involves guards either
This summer season the department warning individuals of hazards before
rescued nearl y 2,000 persons. Eighty per· they get into the water, or swimming out
cent of those were per;.sons from out or and warning persons who may be
town. ~ unaware of surf or rip tide hazards. So
No deaths by jnlwning have occurred far, it's been a quiet season, largely
because of lhe crummy summer.
Conner pointed out that while life sav-
ing ii the guards' primary duty, it SC·
tually involves only about 13 percent of
-btriime. Ordinance-enforcement.and ad~
Vlsemenrll!V61ver-t;---percent--whl
checking out divers takes ~ percent.
Laguna's rocks and coves are a mecca
for divers. The city has 22 coves. They
and the divers who frequent them pose
problems for Laguna guards tbat most
(See TREACHERY, Page%)
High Court Clears Way
For Regional Planning
Ci>astPOW
Lambastes
Superiors
By JOHN ZALLER
Of llM !WW l'lllt Stefl
SAN FRANCl.SCO -Fonner Marine.
POW Edison W. Mill~ of NeW1>1111 Beach
crlUclzed his military superiors today
"for cmtinuing the campaign o f
character assassination against me"
over allegedly illegal anti'!Var activities
while he was in captivity In North Viet·
nam.
"There's a small group of ultra-con-
servative former POWs who are intent
on making my 1rcturn to civilian life as
difficult as possible." Lt. Col. Miller
cltarged in an interview.
"And I'm very disappointed that the
Secretary of Navy is going along with
them."
Miller, shot down over North Vietnam
In J.961, had betn charged with mutiny
and misconduct for anti-war statements
he admittedly signed while a prisoner in
Nbrlh Vietnam.
Navy Secretary John A. Warner an-
nounced Thursday that lhose c~~ges
agairisl Miller and one other POW will be
dropped. But Warner sai d both Miller
and Navy Capt Walter F. Wilber would
be publicly censured.
Miller made his remarks en route to
San Francisco where he said be planned
to bold a news conference this afternoon
to refute remarks made by the Navy
secretary.
"The secretary said he wasn't pros·
ecuUng,. but the thrust of his remarks
wa.s that I am guilty," Miller said.
"That is totally false. I have done
nothing wrong and I am not ashamed or
any of my actions while a prisoner. I am
confident that, if a full investig.ation were
made Into the charges, I woU.ld be
cleared." .
Miller said he is a loyal American
"who loves my country.
"If it were not (or my serious physical
i n j u r i e s suffered during my im·
prisonment , I would1bave elected to have
remained in the Marine Corps." . '
Orange
• •
Weather
The Los Angeles weather sCrvice
says it'll be cooler Saturday, with
low clouds and patchy fog along
the coast in the morning hours.
Highs at the beaches In the low
70s rising to the upper 80s inland.
INSIDE TODA \I
Thtrt's a voung pied piper in
Ocean View Schoo' Dtatrict who h4i transformed a group of chil-
drma into o performing choir •.
S•• ato'l( by Slaff Wri«r Hila711
Kaut in toda11'a Wtektnder. if
At T•r Stnkt J Mt-rift 114' 1...M. hr4 t MtMlll ,-~ It
... l/llt tt 'f•I~ ,..._. 41
ttllftt11I• S. l1 OrlllM C-IY I (l•ttlllM '1-44 ft"llllrtflb Holl e-1c:• 11 ._,. 11o11
C,."..,.. 17 Steel! M•l'ltttt 1).11
OHlll .. tllc" I T11rt11... n lfltori.I 11'111 I Tll.,ltrt »·2'
JlllWl<f ll•IJ WM!flff" •4 •w ni. ll:tttNI I Wtn1111't Htwt lt-11 H~ II Wtrtf flltwt 4.J
AMI LIMln II '#Hltlflftr !WI
Mflllllf• • '
New Ruling
Assessed
By Planner
A California Supreme Court decision
issued Thursday '"may opep up the whole
ballgame of long term regional plann ing"
Laguna Beach Planning Commission
Chainnan Roger Lanphear said today.
In the tmanimous decisK>n, the high
.. ~urt said a city or county does not Mve
. . 111 lnnDedlald.Y·P'!Y a· Jan~ for hi• ~ pilllBlt,'·tf ~ Wmarked. 'IW eventual '
·.
. ..
··~•'"\-"
Cycle l's. Car
Dennis Claman, 21, or 17472 Wayne St., Irvine, is in good condition at
Orange County Medical Center today with a broken right leg and
other minor injuries suffered when the motorcycle he was riding was
struck by a car at Jeffrey and Trabuco Roads Thursday. The driver
of the car. Max Pedraza, 39, of Santa Ana, was on Trabuco when
Claman tried to cross in front of him, California Highway Patrol of·
ficers said. The case is under investigation.
Lewis Still on Case
Venue Change Deni~d
In Sauna Bath Trial
An Orange County Superior Court
judge refused Thursday to order a new
venue for-a trial in which an' Anaheim
-woman will claim that injuries suffered
in a heallh spa 's sauna room led her to
seek sexual adventures ..
Jud'go Walter Charamza rejected San
Francisco trial lawyer Marvin Lewis
Sr. 's bid to have the tria1 moved with the
comment that It would be lmpos..tble to
avoid publicity In that type ol trial
0 anywhere In catlfomia."
Lewis, represe.nUng Mrs. P..1 a r I a
Parson, 4e, and Fullerton attorney
Donald Ruston , representing the HoWlay
Health Spa or Oraap, oleo ~ to
postpone the trial d1t• to ml.dll ef-
rects or recent publicity. '""
But acting Presiding Judge William C.
Speirs later rejected thit moUon with the
comment that no purpose would be serv·
ed by the ·sr•ntiQg of ahy delay .
Judg• Speirs confirmed tho orllinally
I
scheduled Oct. 29 dat e and ordered both
sides to be ready for lrial on that date.
Lewis argued before Judge Charamza
rejected his motion that it would be im~
possible to pick a juf'y in Orange C.Ounty
in view of the "widely read Daily Pilot
stories."
"They ran this thing with headlinei
that remind you of the end of World War tr," he complained. "And then to rob salt
in my wounds lhey printed a false story
that I had been fired by Mrs. Parsoo who
states that she bas never talked to the
newspaper." , .• ~
A recent Dal\y Pilot story 9uoted· Mrs.
..P.ar-IQD"'t. u having d1smilsed Lewis
lioolu1e ol '1tle pu)lllclty given her case.
Lewis denied that lie had been dismissed
by A-1rs. Person ~'¥! bran~d the story as
fa!BC1.
lie 'told the court that Mr. llld Mrs.
Parson were in the t:ourfroom and &bat
!See 'l'IWL; 1'1lfe Ii
,.
'
•
'
public -in a 1"""1 plan.
Clly At1-f Tully Seymour said the
dectsion woGlil allow a lleveloper "to suf-
fer at the ezpeme: of 1ong·tenn plan-
ning."
1Jut, he added, the decision falls far
short of· answering the quest.ion or
whether the public can actually take
private . property t.hroUgh the general
plan process.
The decision grew from a legal battle
between the city and county of Ventura
and the Selby Really Company.
Selby bad requested a building permit
for a $HµUt" apartment building, but the
city denied the pennit because the
general plan showed a street extension
through the property.
1be realty firm charged "inverse coo.
demnatlon" -that is, taking of property
by government without payment.
Planner! throughout the state have
been watching the case, particularly in
light of recent open space legislation.
State Jaw now requires cities and ooun.
ties to designate open space areas by the
first of the year and hold up building
permits In those areas.
Some planners feared a judgment in
(See COVRT, Page %)
* * * State High Court
-General Plan
Not Land Grab
SAN FRANCISCO (AP ) -The Stale
Supreme Court ruled Thursday that
adoption of a general plan for city or
county development does not result in a
taking of private property for public use.
The government ts not required to pay
a landowner merely because a general
plan shows that his property ultimately
might be required for a street or other
public U9e, the unanimous decision said.
The Selby Realty Co. of Ventura ap-
pealed the city of'Ventura 's 1970 denial of
a building permit for a S4-unit apart-
ment.
The city refused the pennit unless the
Selby Co. dedicated and improved the
street marked on the general plan
adopted tn 1968. The property previously
had been-zoned for multiple dwellings.
If cities and counties were subject to
claims merely because the p I a n
deslgpated a land parcel for potential
public uae, 11the, wocess of community planniJIC would either grind to a ball, or
(Boo PIU>PERTY, Pqe I)
SAFETY FIRST
LONDON (UPI) -llorvey Whlte, a
cmsultant sur1eon at St. Bartholomew's
Hospital , wrote ln the British Medical
Uourilal today that violent exercise· can
cause people to swallow false teeth and
advised couples to remove thelr dentures
before making' love.
" DllilY Pll91 Sllll Pllot9
BEAUTY OF LAGUNA'S COAST MAKES LIFEGUARDING TOUGH
Chris Srow.n Works Switchboard During &usy Season
Coyote 1'icti111
Clen1ente Pair Decfu1e
Rabies Shots for Boy, 3
~-·-·~
• '' By ii\11N VAL~ •t.
Qf Ille D.tW f>llet """
A San Clemente couple whose· small
son was bitten lest weekend by a coyote
have decided again.st anUrabies in·
jections for their son "because we dpn't
believe the animal has the disease."
· A combination of factors convinced Mr.
and Mrs. Edward Ashbaugh that their
son, BartJey, 3, should not undergo the
series of daily injections which could
total as much as 24.
And their decis ion, said l\.1rs. Ashbaugh
today. came after lengthy consultation
with family doctors and health depart·
ment officials.
"We've seen this animal almost once a
day for a year and we don't think it has
the disease," she added.
Bartley, who was bitten once by the
animal last Sunday as the youngster
stood on the front lawn of the family
home, also is prone to allergies and has
heart problems.
"We understand that the treatment has
unpredictable side effects and ~·e just
weighed the factors and decided that my
son would run a better risk by not taking
the shots," his mother said.
DOU!J-LA.S T A.LKS
A.BOUT JUSTICE
MIDDLETOWN, Ohio (UP I I
Supreme Court Justice William 0.
Douglas has banned news photographers
and newsmen with tape recorders from
his speech at Miami University's branch
campus here tonight.
The 7f.year~ld ju~lice's speech topic is
"Participatory Democracy."
Eight other victims pl bit~ !rOm ap-
parently the same coyote during the
SIJ1llmer months underwent the treat·
ment whlch has been described as "Paitr-
ful, but still less than the original agoniz·
ing Pasteur series wh.ich caused major
side effects.
"Health department people told us the
shots are not totally effecti ve in every
case and even if you take them all you
could still contract the disease," said
Mrs. Ashba ugh."
The decision by the family. res'idcnls or
{See COYcrrE, Page 2)
Boy Touches Off
Big Mesa Fire,.
Officials Say
By RUDI NIEOZIELSKI
Of IM DlllY l'ltfll Stiff
A 13-year-old boy playing with matches
touched off a $15,000 inferno in a
neighborhood just outside the Costa Mesa
boundary Thursday. Tht r I a m e s
destroyed two house trai lers, a garag e
and two storage sheds.
No one was injured in the spectacular
5:55 p.m. Waze. battled hy engine com·
panies from the Orange County fire
Department.
~1ajor property losses "·ere suffered by
former movie actress Dorothy DRre, 2028 ,
Santa Ana Ave .. and her neighbor, f\.irs.
Eve Dahlgren, 2032 Santa Ana Ave. Both
wet:e away when the fire broke out.
The intense blaze sent black clouds of
smoke over Costa Mesa. Witnes,ses said
the buildings were fully involved \Vhen the
(See FIRE, Page %)
Laguna Pa1·kin g Meter
'
Flap Reaches Compromise
By FREDERICK SCHOEMEllL
0-f ""'-D.it'I Pllo! Sl•n
A compromise agreement in lhc.
Laguna Beach parking meter revenue
hassle cropped up Thursday night during
!he first meeting of the newly formed
Parking RevenLte Referendum Com;
mittee.
Committee member William Leak pro--
posed the hourly meter rate be Increased
from 10 to 15 cents per hour. wlth all
revenues placed tin a special fund to be
used solely ·for construc.tlon ol par~lng
structures.
Most members sakl construction ot a
pnrklng structure on the city-owned
Glenneyre Str~t parking lot should be
.. given top priority as a means of solving
parking problems in the downtown area.
The commlttc<' reserved l ny ot{lciat
action on the proposal. but agre(!(f it
should be given fur ther study at a .
meeting Oct. 10
I
The parkinsr con1mit1ee "'as e.'ltablish-
ed by the city council la!t .week ih the
wake of a re[erendum drive to roll back
a dime an hour increase in parkin'g
meter rates.
Petitions protesting doubling or the
mctt:?r rates gidned 1.784 signalU(es -
nearly double the number needed ta; force
the city council lo roll back the increase
or put it to o. put>lic vote. .
Leak's suggestion followt.-d more tht1n
two hours of discussion on wbat might be
an acceptable middle ground bel\\'ecn
desires ol the city council and s1nall
businessmen.
Bill l\1arrincr . president of I h,e
Downtown BuslnC$limcn's Association,
said busincss1nen and rcsldcnr~ ;:11ike
must see positive solutions 10 parking
problems U the meter rates are hiked. ~1arrincrj stre$scd that parkloa: 'meter
revenues must go to parking~ no\ to the
(See PARKING , !'qt ll
•
•
I I
'l
' •
2 OAILY PILOT" ---LB
Sltoot Guard
I .
Two Arabs Seize
Train~_ Hpstages ·
VIENNA (UPI) -Two Arabs armed the guerrillas, identified as "Arabs with
\Vlth grenades and submachine guns seiz· Lebanese passports,'' held hand grenades
cd the Moscow-to-Vienna "Chopin Ex· near their faces and threatened to pull the
press" as it sped throuib minefields near pins if their del'flands were not met.
the Czech border today, seized . four Shortly after the airport negotiations
hostage• -including three Jews started, the Arabs -calling the1nselvcs
emigralfng to Israel -and drove to "Eagles of the Palestinian Revolution"
Vierma'I international-airport where they -handed out a 200-\\'0rd text of their
demanded safe conduct out of the ooun-demands. As they talked, po I r"c e
try. ... sharpshooters, ~lgh-pow~~ed rifles at !he
~~~i±:t::r::;;:~~::Z±±~-~;nie~·;1gu~em:!'.·~11~as~al~"'l= .. ~bot-1 ·Czech·border__ready moved_mto_posttion.. over.looking ~ guar First reports said the guard was the Volkswagen:-
killed,' but later pollce said the man, "In the name of the . Palestinian
Ferdinand Beles, was taken to an martyrs who were ~artyred 1n the strug·
Austrian hospital. gle to. r.eturn , and 1n the name of the
At the airport, the guerrillas parked a Palestm1a~ '.'evolution, ~e, the Eagl~ of
hlue Volksw"agen bus near, two airliners the Pal.es~1n1an Re_volutlon .. declare our
-an lbetian Airlines DC9 and an respons1bhty for this operation. We have
Austrian Airlines DC9 -and demanded a undertaken this mission, because we feel
plane to take them to an oospecified that the im!Uigration of the Soviet Union
destination, the interior ministry said. Jews ~.onshtutes a great. danger to our
Police at first reported that the guer· cause, the statement said. , .
rillas took control 0£ the SpaniSfi jlt, but Hund~ds of onlookers, munching
the Austrian interior ministry said later snacks 111 the alr~t rest~urant . watched
the guerrillas were negotiaUng with the negotiations gomg on JUst a few yards
authorities from on top . of the a~'ay. .
Volkswagen bus in front of the term41al. The windows of the s11•seatei: ~~
An interior ministry spokesman said steam~ up as a result of the heat nis1de
the vehicle.
A police spokesman · sald the ipmmcn
Frona pnne I wanted to contact the Israeli embassy in
-ir Vienna.
PARKING ... Fro1n Page I
general fund portion of the city budget. TREACHERY ••• 01Uy.PUol Pl!Oto b¥ Rldllrd KDtlller
THURSDAY 'S LATE AFTERNOON BLAZE RAGES OUT OF
f ire Investigators Say Youth Playing With Matches
CONTROL BEHIND HOMES NEAR WOODLAND SCHOOL
lgni•ed Fire Which D8stroyed Trailers, Storage S_hed
The association president maintained
that easing Laguna's downtown parking
problems would result in "revitalization ..
of local businesses, higher retail sales
and more sales tax income to city cof·
agencies don't have. -
The Laguna force has met the problem
by an aggressive rock-training program.
The · d"J!"rtment has, including · Conner,
three permanent lifeguards, Capt. Bruce
Baird, and guard Jim Stauffer. (Newport
Beach has 10; San Clemente, four). Front Page I
FIRE ...
first fire trucks arrived from their base
at Orange County Airport.
Orange County firemen did not radio
for assistance from the nearby ~1ariners
-and Rochester fire stations in Newport
Beach and Costa Mesa , respectively.
County Battalion Chief Cliff Chapman
said lhe first units were at lhe fire seven
niinutes after the blaze WflS reported, but
several witnesses said it took at least 2t}
minutes before any water was on the
flames.
Chapman said the fire broke out \'1hen
. the bo y's n1atch ignited some carpeting
: material stored in one of the sheds and
' spread after he tried to extinguish lt.
Fire officials refused to disc1ose the
name of the boy because he is a juvenile.
"I haven 't taken an inventory but l can
tell you it's up in the thousands." said
J\liss Oare, 59, in describing the loss.
.i\-1iss Oare starred in motion pictures
and theater productions during the 1930s
and 1940s with Dick PO\\-'ell, Erroll Flyru1,
JClmes Cagney and others.
Fro111 Page 1
PROPERTY. • •
deteriorate to . . , vacuou s generaliza-
tions regarding f u t u r e use of land,"
Ji.:stice Stanley Mosk wrote.
Planning is important in avoi~ng
haphazard community growth, he said.
The mere adoption or a general plan
does not indicate a final intention of
public use, nor preclude a planning
change, Mosk said.
The court said. however, that \Vhen the
company's permit was denied, Ventura
did not have an ordinance explicitly
authorizing denial if a landowner failed
to dedicate a street on his properly.
Such an ordinance "'as later passed.
The court direeted that lhe city now
should decide whether it wants to require
dedication under the new ordinance.
OIANGI COAST "
DAILY PILOT
lh• Or1~ C<Mlll OAILV PILOT, wllh wft!(I!
ll comb!ntd !ht Nt""l·PrH1, Is pUll!llllfd bY
tht Orll!Of Co.11 Pt1~ll\hl1>9 Com1>1<1Y. St1>1·
r•1• tdl!lont ••• pub!IJl>M, Morld1y 111"'1,IQll
Frld1y, l'W COSll Mtse, Newport llffdl,
Hu<1IH>g!on · llea<hll'o•mt•ln V1llty. Ugun•
llffcft, INlne/S:lddltb.lc• Ind S..n C:le....nl•I
s.!" JUI<! r111litre<10. A 1lngle regOcnel
e<11!'0" ls WOlltl'ICd S.!utdl¥• trod Sv'lde¥•·
Tiie prlncil).tt publlt~lf!Q pltnl 11 11 J)O Wt••
llit Sltff!, Cotff Mtll, C1llfonlie, fU2'.
ltobetf N. WeH
Prnlcl1n1 11..:I PuO!llri.t /
, J1d1 R, Curl1v
Vf<w PrH>Cllnl Ind Gfntltl MfNIO«
Tholf'l•1 k1evil
fdlW
Thom1i A. Mutphi111
MtMglllg ElfllO<
Ch1rle1 H. Loot Rich•"* r. Nall
A.Hlll1nt M1fll011\g Edllorl
Ut•M leetJI Office
222 F1rt1t Av1nu•
M1/li1111 Aclclr111i r.o. 101 666, 92652
Oth«OHk•
• Cott• Mn•: »I) Wt1i .... ,.,,,.....
H...,.,,1 flfltfl: llU """'*' toultWl'll H1i1111"'910'1 fl"'h' 1711J fllldl .......... ~ kl'! Cl.,,,..,tt: 30$ """" El CtmW. ... ,
......... f714l 141 ... lJI
C1llMfftt4 A~ MJ·l,71 a...--...... o.,.. • .. ,
,, .. , •••• 494-'466
~. 1m. Or•• <:Mel l"Wl!•lllM °"""""'' Ho ,,.... 11or•, lth111tre!lon1,
.......... -""' '<" •-1'"'-''' Mrtt.i ...... • ~· •• ....,. 6**1•1 (lltf'. .............. Ith! .....
..... dMlt ~llfl Mid 1t Cotll Mew, ~ lu&lroo"i.111'1 bf Clffltf u.u
-"""' ., !Nit p ,11 -ltllfi mlllt•n-.., .... ..,.. .,M~.
fers._ -· . ·-.
Berserk Tra~tor
• • •
F~Pagel
COURT .
V1unanued Veliicle S11iashes Garage favor of the r e a I t y firm would have
allo\Ved a number of inverse coo·
demnation suits against local govern-
ment by landowners.
Th.e second purpose of Thursday's
meeting was to study ways of replacing
revenue lost since parking fees wUI not
be doubled. The rate increase and ln-
stallaUon of new parking meters in other
areas of the city was anticipated to bring
in $168,000 this year.
Leak noted. city councilmen Saturday
trimmed $150,000 out of the budget and
that the document still is $18,000 in the
red. He described the budget trim·
mingsession as "torturous."
A big part of the permanent staff's job
is to provide for the training of tbe
seasonal guards. moat of whom are col·
lege student s or teachers. The force
swells to 50 during summer.
Conner said a low turnover of ~ards
on the department means the trainmg of-
fered can be more extensive and
personally suited to each student.
A brief race between an Unmanned
trLctor and its operator ended Thursday
afternoon Yihen the earth mover crashed
into the garage of a Huntington Beach
home. ·
Police said no one \\'as injured in the
mishap \vhich started V.'hen city emplo~·e
Jack Orris wanted to dig a hole for a tree
in the median iri front of 9382 Velardo
Drive .
The tractor, \vhich had a trench digg1•r
on lhe back. wouldn't star't. so Orris got
off and started it by shorting the ignition
with a screwdriver.
Police said Orris apparently left the
ti actor in gear, so that \vhcn it started
up. it started o(f.
With Orris in hot pursuit, the tractor
rolled over the median, across the street.
up the sidewalk and through the garage
door.
It finally stopped after taking out a
portion of the garage 's side wall , police
said.' ·
Other than !he damage to the en1p!y
garage and the tractor, the only other
dan1agc from the accident ~rris'
pride, police said.
"l'm surprised the court went that
far," commented Lanphear, a longtime
advocate of reCreational 8.nd agricultural
zoning as a means of preserving open
space.
'"Those zones, give a developer some ·
use. Of course, ·it may not be the use he
\\•ants," said Lanphear.
Prior to the dec ision, Seymour said,
many local governments fell if they
showed public use or private11property on
a generaJ plan map they had committed
government to the land's purchase.
Richard Willetts, do w n to w n
businessman who led. the referendum
fight against the meter increase, urged.
the council to trim recreation department
expenses as a means of finding more
money.
Ris 'idea was supported by committee
member Vernon Spitaleri.
· Mayor Roy Holm, who serves on the
committee, said he felt council review of
the reCreation department budget might
be in order.
·· The Laguna department also has in-
itiated the marine life lecture progran1
now ge ttlng into swing among children of
the school dlstrtct.
Through the effor ts of Stauffer. thr
department .has also begun caring for
marine. animals washed up on the sands.
Largely seals and sea lions. the creaturei
are nursed back to health if possible and
then turned loose.
Helico11te1· Seelcirtg Lost
Plane Crasl)es; 3 l{illed
The city attorney said the.decision prob-
ably will not affect a s p 11 t planning
decision last week granting approval to
2.016 units on Sycamore Hills in Laguna
Canyon.
Supporters of the Laguna Greenbelt.
Joe. had rallied for a recreational or
agricultural designation on the land .
As the hour approached mJdnigbt, coril·
1t1itt~-l!lel}l.~(S __ agr~-:c ~~ -~ _s~nd rrieeting on both the par.ling structure
proposal and revenue sources.
At the same time, they instructed
Finance Director Tom Meade and City
~tanager Al Thea.I to prepare a five year
financial statement showing how much a
parking struc"ture program would cost.
And.'when all that's done, thC guards
try afld cope with the une~~ted.
Several years ago a youth took drugs,
tbougbLhtLCDuldJly, al~PtodJo_da..•o
from the Victor Hugo cliffs and broke his
neck when he landed.
Or. treating· squirrel bites, or black
widow bites or even the other day when
Conner came to work, started to unlock
the headquarters door and noticed a rat~
tlesnake curled up by the mat.
EL DORADO. Ark. (AP) -A Texas
Jnternalional airliner \l"ith 11 persons
aboard disa ppeared Thursday night in a
torrential rainstorm over south\vest
Arkansas. Three National Guardsmen
\Vere killed in the crash of a helicopter on
its way to help in the sea rch for· the
plane.
flours passed "'ith no trace of the Con-
vair turboprop jet \Vhich carried eight
passengers and a crew of three on a
Fro111 Page 1
COYOTE • • •
!he Riviera Dislrict near San Clemente
Stale Pnrk, came at a titnc 'lvhen police
stepped up their attempts to shoot 1hc
coyote believed responsible for the un-
provoked allacks. ·
Paul Linden, the supcrin1cndent of San
Clemente Golf Course, managed one shot
\\'ith a shotgun-at a coyote at the Hnks
Thursday motning during a police-
supervised hunt. liut the animal escaped.
Police rcsurned their attempts this
morning. but no animals "·ere sighted.
.. \\'e ;ind th e neighbors didn't see the
coyote today, either. \Ve figure he must
have been scared off by the police," said
i\'lrs. 1\shbaugh.
The bitten boy's mother said she en·
dorsecl the latest attempts at trying to
shoot the animal.
"This ha s to be stopped hcforc the
anirna l bites any other small children."
She. like her neighbors, IHld been
following the biting incidents al the sta te
park closely through lhe sumr'ner, bu~
J\·lrs. Ashbaugh theorized that the impact
of the incidents is much stronger 1101v
becaUse a local youngster was involved.
"In all the nthcr crises people didn 't
take it so seriously, I guess, because the
people were just visiting the city. Now
it's affecting local residcnb1 and th ey arc
becoming more concerned."
"Nobody should h:ive to endure what
v•c've been through thls past wP.tk. It's
been a terrible experience for the whole
family and it's still not over with.''
Free Wo1·I<l 'D~ty'
ASPEN, Colo. ! UP fl -West German
Chancellor \Villy Brand t s:dd here todny
free world pcopl1t.h~iah.t Bnd a.!IY·
ty to speak out when they sec repression
and unfairness. • ·
Th1! leader of Wes t Gcnnany's Socia l
Drn1ocrHlic Party spake during a
ceremony presenting him with the
slnt~n111n·humanist av:ard·of the Aspen
Insti tut e for llumanis tic studies .
night from El Dora~o to Texarkana.
Fog and lo1v ceilings grounded most
search planes today. Authorities held lit·
tle hope of !indini.; the airliner from the
ground if it 1vent down in the swampy,
\\'OOded, sparsely populated area between
the t\\"O cities.
The Texarkana Gazette said it learned
lJnofficially that three passengers \Vere
colonels from the Red River Army depot
near Texarkana.
Texas Intemational did not im·
mediately identify the passengers or the
crew.
T1,·o helicopters 1vcre dispatched from
Little Rock. They fie,.,, together into a fog:
bunk near Prescott, about 100 miles from
tbclr base. One never caine out.
The second J1elicopter turned back and
n1adc a sn fc landing al ~1a\veJT1 . State
r olicc quoted its pilot "as saying that the
other ship radioed !hat it \\'as in trouble
just before it \Vent do\vn.
Lt. Earl Orr of the state )Xllicc said
three bodies t1•cre reco"Vered at the crash
scene about two hours later.
The National Guard identified the crew
members as Capt. John Larry Bearden,
33, of North Little Rock, the pilot; Capt.
\Villiam Robert West. 31, of Little Rock,
the copilot, and spCc. 6 David Murie
Webb, 32, of North Little Rock, the crew
chief.
The flight plan would Qave carried the
Convair over the Red River bottoms,
some of the wildest country in the state.
The flight, Texas lnlernational's 655,
originated at Memphis. lt '"as to have
t~r1ninated at Texarkana.
Police knocked on doors along the
flight path hoping to find someone who
had heard a plane in trouble. 1
FrtHtt Page I
TRIAL ...
they would support his statement that he
was still handling the case.
WOODMARK CHAIRS
•
A Lot Of Comfort At A Reasonable Price
WOODMARK FEATURES
* LUXURIOUS 25 '/. DOWN
& 75 '/. FEATHER BACK * PRICE INCLUDES SKIRTS
& ARM COVERS
* EXCELLENT SELECTION
OF FABRICS, ALL
SCOTCHGUARDED * CLEANING INSTRUCTIONS
FOR EVERY FABRIC
* EIGHT WAY HAND
TIED CHAIR BASES
* ALL DOUBLE DOWLED
HARDWOOD FRAMES
AND MUCH, MUCH, MORE * A TED vo.n HEMERT
EXCLUSIVE , •• ON
DISPLAY NOW ~ --
LOUNGE CHAIR PRICES START AT $215. •
DREXfi...4ifRITA6£>.4ifNREOON-WOODMARK-KARASl~
NEWPORT BEACH e
After Lewis, In a letter to the Daily
Pilot, denied being dismissed, Dally Pilot
representatives atterilt>te<I to contai.et
111rs. Jirson, but were unable to reach.
her. 7eJ T\trs. Parson sued the heallh spa on the
grounds thnt trauma created when she 11111
was t.rnpped in the s:auna room changed
her ~rJiO_[lality to theJ>QinLtha.U~~·-.1-,•r--
tocted strangers in bars with a view to
1727 WtSTCtlFF DR.. 6•2·2010
10,.n SuM!ty l)·f..slOI
LAGUNA BEACH e
J•S NORTH COAST HWY.
(Optt' Sunif•v 12·5rlOI 4t4°l5$1
sexual relalionshlpe with them. ·
A psyehiatrl!it has tcstiried In a dtposi·
tion that she developed m u I t i p I e
personalities 1:1~ a result of· her injuries
and her condition was described aa a
''lhtcc. faces of Eve'' persopallty spUt.
INTERIORS
wmDAYS • SATUIDAYS t :OO ,. l1JO
FllDAY 'TIL t 100
• '
TORRANCE e
21'49 HAWTHOANE ILYD.
111-1279
.• ~.
•
-· .. ·..-_.. r ""
•
Saddlebaek
~DITION
Today's Final
N.Y. Stocks
VOL bb, NO. 27 I, 4 SECTIONS, 44 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA FRIOAY, SEPTEMBER 28, 1973 TEN CENTS
-
Coast POW His Military Superiors
•
B~ JOHN ZAU.ER · .~21!,_!!!!lk1n8 . ..!!11..~.~~ to civilian life as no~ced ~ursday that those du!-rges "1'.hat ts totally false. 1 have done Corps since 1949. He was the highest medica.1 trc~l'!lent J got was on injection ~tMDiliYr1-.TUiU -==::..::;.difflcult~as po&&lble Tf ,_CQL-wtter_ -aga1nst-Mil~·and one ot~r--POW-w11.1 be-nothing-wroog:-and-J-~m...not.-.ashamcd ol -ranking. Matine....PO.\Y-.held .by J.!le.._N9.I!tl__aQ.d a !1tt~e hn1ment for my swollen le.g.
SAN FRANCISCO -Former Marine char ed in 8 interview droppea:-But-Wamer sa1d~both-M1lleF--any-of-my..act)OflS-While-a...pdsnner I am Vietnamese '"'TliCrc were · el1Who-..ivere-g1ven
POW Edi&on w. Miller of Ne)¥p0rt Beach "Angd 1, n • d' · . ted th t the and Navy Capt. Walter F. Wilber would coofident that, if a ft.VJ. investigation were "I was sincere in all my antiwar favored treatment for ttlelr anuw
m very ~sawc;>m a . be publicly censured. made into ' the charges, I would be statemenls," he said, "and I felt I was statements. But I was not one of them." criticized his milltary super)Ors today Secretary ,of Navy is gomg along with Miller made his remarks en route to cleared.". within my rights of freedom of speech to Secretary Warner, in making the an-
"for continuing the campaign ° f Ulem." San Francisco where he said be planned Miller said he is a loyal American make public statements about my feel-nouncement Thursday, said a three-
character as.sassinailon against me" ?.tiller, shot down over North Vietnam to hold a news conference this afternoon "who loves my c&mt:ry. in gs." · month investigation had shown there
over allegedly illegal antiwar activities in 1967t ruid been chaf~ed with mutiny to refute remarks made by the Navy "If it were not for my serious physical ¥iller denied he got any favorable were grounds for trying Miller and Capt.
whlle ~was in captivity in North Viet-and misconduct for anti-war statements secretary. injuries suffered during my im-treatment from the North Vietnamese Wilber.
nam. he admittedly signed while a prisoner in "The secretary said he wasn't pros-pri.sonment, I would have elected to have for his antiwar staterpenfs. But \Varner said it was more im-
''Tbere's a small group or ultra-coo-. North Vietnam. ecuting, but · the thrust of his remarks remained in the Marine Corps." "I had a broken back, badly fractured portant to spare other POWs "the disrup-
servatlve former POWs who are intent Navy Secretary John A. Warner an-was that I am guilty,'' Miller said. Miller, 42, has served ill the Marine ankle, dysentery, and malpria. The only Uve effects of such proceedings."
'
City of 7 00,000?
Irvine Growth Potential Revealed
The city or Irvine might grow to a
popula1ion o{ frotn 300,000 tn 700,000,
lrvlne .pl;µming commissioners learned
Thursday, night. .
Wilsey and Ham general plan con-
sultants explained their plan roncepts
"refined" from three earlier alternate
plans. Those earlier, less detailed land
use suggestions projected a city of
500,000 people on 63,000 acres of the
Jrvine Ranch.
The refined version provides more
detail and employs many featµres of the
Irvine Company general plan for a city
of a half-million. Jt gives city Policy
makers guidelines for determining future
population size of the city, Planning
Commission Chairman Harry Shuptrine
said today.
"The plan seemed to be well received
by everybody," Shuptrine said.
It retains the Irvine Company's
horsesOOe shaped activity corridors and
adds a north-south open space corridor.
The intersection of that environmental
backbone along Jeffrey Road With. the
San Diego Creek "activity" corridor pr~
vides a natural Jocation for a civic
center, Slruptrine said.
"The location appears to be the exact
geographic center of the future city and
offers more space ·for development of
government buildings than the Town
Center location would," be noted.
Mike Harris. acting city _planner, listed
(See GROwrH, Page Zl
Transit Route
~ -1D Mission
Cycle Vs. Car
Dennis Claman, 21, of 17472 Wayne St., Irvine, is in.good condition al
Orange County Medical Center today with a broken right leg and
other minor injuries suf(ered when the motorc)l(le bet;was..riding was
struck by a car at Jeffrey and Trabuco Ro~ds Thursday. The driver
·of the car, Max Pedraza, 39, of Santa Ana, was on Trabuco when
Claman tried to cross in front of llim,"Calllornia Highway Patrol of·
ficers said. The case is under investigation.
Be:riserk~ Traetor
U1iman,1ied Vehicle S1n,':'-Slies Garage
A brief race between an. unmaM<!d l'iill<:e said Orris apparently Jell lhe
tr.ciOr and Its operator ended Thur8day tractor ln par, ao that when It started
aftemoon when the earth mover crashed up, ll stai;ted ol.f.
lnlo the garace of a Huntlngton 'Beach With Orris In ho! pursuit, the tractor
home, rolled °"' Iha median. across the otmt,
Police said no one wa1 Injured In the up the tldtwalk and through the gal'11&e
Viejo elann~
Bus !ifvice -to JI.fission Viejo may
materialize by April or May, a represen·
tative of. the Orange County Transit
District said today.
· Tom Albert said 63 new buses have
been purchased by the district and new
routes planned for them wHI include
Mission Viejo, probably on an hourly
schedule.
"Right now we are working out routing
and we hope for approval for the ex-
pansion by our board in November,"
Albert said,
The decision to expand service to
Mission Viejo is a r e s u 1 t in part of
volwninous communications f r o m
resideflts or the area asking-for better
service, Albert said.
"The ?.fission Viejo Company for one-
has taken a great interest in this," he
said, "and many other citizens and
citizens groups have been in regular con-
tact with us.••
One of those was attorney John Parker
of ·Pickell and Parker Law Office, who
represents the 750 families of St. Kilian's
Church in Mission Viejo.
"Many children in the parish go to
JI.tater Dei High School in Santa Ana,"
Parker saia, "and getting back and forth
is a real problem."
He said transportation for commuters
is another problem. "If a guy's car
breaka down, it's a long walk to Santa
Ana,'' he said.
Locations of hospital facilities such as
the Children's Hospital ol Orange County
and central offices of COWlty government
in Santa AJ:ia are further reasons why
bus service is needed, Parker said.
"We want resulls, not promises." he
sald. "Everybody has to go to Santa Ana
some time or another."
Fire Da1iger
Underscored
Soaring tempera tu re a and
humidity below 15 pel'C<flt prompt-
ed the Laguna Hills Fire Deparl-
ment to call for "extreme caution"
today and over the weekend 1n the
Saddleback Valley.
Jn the wake of two bnLSh fires
Wednesday In Mission Viejo, C&pt.
Bruce 'l'urbevlUe urged parents to
keep their children away from
outlying wildllfe al'UI, •
"Children are our biggest prof>..
mishap which atarted when city employe dOor,
Jack Orris wanted to dig a hole !o• •·tree-II !lnailY~ altor=Uklna OQt-1=
in llie median Jn front ol 11332 Velardo portion ol the garage's side wall', police
1em du r i n g this fire seu:>n,"
'l'url!eylUe.alcl. A-h.flre whldl-~ ~tline •"'! a hall acr<.
Drive. said" • '
The tractor, which had a trl!nch digger 1 Oiiier than the damage to the empty
on the back, WllUldn't llart, 10 Orris got garage and the tractor, the only ether
oU and started It by shorting the Ignition dambge from the accident wu to Orris'
with a screwdriver, pride, pollct said, '
' ·1 •
, behind the Seville Homes at Loo
Alloos JlOulevanl and Trabuco Road
bas been traced lo a 13-yw .. ld
arson suspect, he aakt.
., ( \. ' .
~
• . ..
County firemen from the Irvine Industrial Complex
station use water fogger to disperse gas fumes from
four-inch line wliich was cut Thursday by workmen
trenching along Skypark Circle. The distribution
~ne, carrying 40 pounds of pressure, sent fumes
skyrocketing for 30 minutes until Southern Cali-
fornia Gas Company repairmen clamped the line.
Irvine Councilman Henry Quigley, Qeft), was told
electric, telephone and gas lines frequently are bur-
ied in same trench. No one was injured in the 2:30
p.m. incident.
Coyote Victitta
Clen1ente Pair Decline
Rabies Shots £01· Boy, 3
By JOHN VALTERZA
01 ""' a.tty Pllol ....
J san Clemente couple whoSe small
was bitten l:Zst weekend by a coyote
have decided against antirabies in-
jections for their son "because we don't
believe the animaJ has the disease."
A combination of factors convinced Mr.
and Mrs. Edward Ashbaugh that their
soo, Bartley, 3, sbouJd not undergo the
series of daily injections which could
total 8.!I much as 24.
And their decision, said Mrs. Ashbaugh
today, came after lengthy consultation
with family doctors and health depart-
ment officials.
"We've seen this animal almost once a
day for a year and we don't think it has
the disease," she added.
Bartley, who was bitten once by the
animal last Sunday as the youngster
stood on the front lawn of the. Camily
•
home, also is prone to allergies and has
heart problems.
"We understand that the treatment.Jtas
unpredictable side effects and we just
weighed the lacton and decided that my
son would run a better risk by not taking
the shots," bis mother said.
Eight .other victims of bites from ap-
parently the same coyote during the
summer months Wlderwent the treat-
ment which has been described as pain-
rul, but still less than the original agoniz-
ing Pasteur series which caused major
side effects.
"Health department people told us !he
shots are not totally effective in every
case and even if you take them all you I
could still contract the disease;• said
Mrs. Ashbaugh.
The decision by the family, residents of
the Riviera District near San Clemente
(See COYOTE, Pqe Z)
Lewis Still on Case
Venue Change ·Denied
' .
, In Sauna Bath Trial
An Orange County Superior Court
judge refused Thursday to order a new
venue Cor a trial in which · an Anaheim
woman will claim that lnjurJes suffered
in a health spa's sauna room led her to
seek sei:ual adventures.
Judge Walter Cbaramt.a rejected San
Franclsco trial lawyer Marvin Lewis
Sr.'a bid to have the trial moved with the
commut that It would be lmposaible lo
aYOld pubilcll)I Jn that type of trial
"anywhere in catilornla.''
~11: f'@relaitlng Mrs:-M l. f' i I"
Par1on, .fe, and Fullerton altorney
Donald Rtllton, representing the Holiday
Health Spa o! Orange, also mooed to
poetpone the trial date lo mitigate the ef·
fects ol receot publlclty, · ·
But actlnf Prealding Judge William C.
Speirs later rejected that motion with the
comment that no purpose would be serv·
ed by the granling of any delay.
Judge . Speirs confirm~ the originally
scheduled Oct 29 date and ordered both
sides lo be ready !or trial on that date. ·
Lewis argued before Judge Charamzl'l
rejected his motlon tha t it would be im-
possible lO pick • jury In Orange County
In view or tho. 11w dely read DaUy Pilot
stories."
ey ra lhi1lhh1g WI.th hctfdllr.ICs
that remind you of the end of World War
JC," he complained . .iAnd then to Nb salt
In my wounds they prlnted a false story
that I had been fired by Mn. Parson who
atates ·that she hat never talked to the
!See TRIAL, Paro 1)
School District
Growth Could
Triple By 1980
By JAN woam·
OJ .. o.ftr' ,. .... ,, ...
The Saddleback Valley Unified School
District, which opened this year with
12,800 students, may swell to 37 ,000
students in the next seven years.
That was the pfediction of William
Zogg, superint~dent of the district, to
the Saddleback Chamber af Commerce
at their monthly breakfast meeting to-
day.
To prepare for 1hat potential growth.
the school district is continually in the
conmruction business. 7.ogg said .
Two elementary schools are now under
construction, w i t h ground-breakings
scheduled to begin on two more in
several months.
FaciliUes for El Toro High School, now
meeting at Mission Viejo High School on
double sessions, are expected to open
next fall.
'
And a third intennediate school is the
(See ZOGG, Page 11
Orange
•
Cout
•
Weather
The Los Angeles weather service
says It'll be cooler Saturday, with
low clouds and patchy fog aloog
the coast in tbe morning hours.
Highs at the beaches in the low
'Ills rising to the upper llOs Inland.
INSU)E TODA'\'
There's a young pied piper l1i
Ocean View Schoo! District wllo
has transformed a 17ro1'p of chll-
drrn into o performina choir.
Set •torv by Staff Writer llit.ry
Kaye in today's \Veektttder.
At YWf' SenW't J '-·"" ...... ' •Ntl"' tt
C•Ul9ml• J, n Cl•tlln.. tl•U
· Con'llct 11
CrOUwtff 17
O..ltl MttlC.. I 11111or1.i ,.... •
,IMllH ll•lJ
l'tf' "" llltffnl • Horttc•" 16 A1111 L..-..n 11
~,.,.. '
Mntft ''"' Muhtl.i ,... 11
N.t'"'91 "-4t 1 ~!!\ff C-ty I
1lt111-tl !f.11
::: tMra•~ ::n
T•lh'lllM 17
TPlultn t1'lt
WMIMI' 4
Wlfttl"''t Hews IS.II
Wtrtt N-1 t ,f ........ .,..
(
I ,
,
• .
o.11r "'"'' Pllol• 11r lllcMrt KMhl•r
ThreeIGlled
On Missing
Plrute Hunt
•.
F ro111P8f1e l
GROWTH ...
features of the plan that are roughl y con--
s.latent with plans: for development
a~ •tdy IUed wllb the city oc develaped
by other 0001ultint1. The general plan
doe& not dra•tlcally lmpoet the following
protects:
-Woodbridge Village, the Cf!11f81 Irvine
lakeside community with ~es for
27 ,000 people. The aeneral plaq adds a
1 1C1Utherly natural swale, retains the plan·
EL DORADO. Ark. (API - A Texos ned lak" and reslde~llal ""'" projected
International airliner with tl persons by the Irvine Compa~f.
abQard disappeared Thursday night ln 8 -The North Irvine Precise Land Use
totTenlial ralnstonn over southwest Plan covering approxlmntely 2,400 acres
Arkansas. Three National Guardsmen of presently wiplllUled Janda ls preserved
were killed in the crash rJ a helicopter on in the general plan refinements, ln-
lts way to help In the search for the eluding the traltle drcle north of the
plane. Santa Ana J<"ree"·ay.
Hours passed with no trace of the Con· -Irvlne Center, the recently an-
vair turboprop jet "'hich carried eight nounced 480 acre comniercial dcvelop-
_P.MS:fil!i nd 11.~f'e!Jf _gfJbrtt-on A ment, ls consistent with the Wilsey and
-ftlght-lrom-El-Doro®-lo'l'ex8rbn . ---elf --•
Fog and low ceilings arounded most -Irvine Industrial · Complex·East is
search planes today. Aulhoritle1 held llt· ,.shown on the refined draft plan.
tie hope or flndlnj,: the airliner from the -'J\lrlle Rock Village, with Its enclave
ground ll it \\'ent do\\11 ln the swampy, devetoinent land preserved hilltops and
wooded, sparsely populated area between ridges, is consistent with the hillside con·
the two cities. cepts sho..m In the city plan.
The Texarkana Gazette said it learned One major difference between the
unofficially that three: passengers \Vere company and city pl81111 at this point,
colonels fro m the Red River Army depot l1arris noted, is the city's detcnnlnatlon
near Texarkana . to pursue "multl·modal" transportation
Texas Tntematlonal did ·not lm-systems. The gene ral P.lan will refl~t
1nedintc!y idenli!y the passengers or lhe \\'ayS of getting around ranging fro m foot
cre\v. 1 ·and bicycle paths to a ye t to be invented
1\\'0 helicopters were dispatched from personal rapid transi t system.
l~lttle Rock. They flew together into a fog
bank near Prescott, about 100 miles from
tl1e\r base. One never came out.·
The second helicopter turned back and
made a safe landing at f\falvem. State
l"olice quoted its pilot as saying that the
other ship radioed that it "·as in trouble
just before it i,•:ent doY.11.
Lt. Earl Orr of the state police said
lhree bodies were recovered at the crash
scene about two hours later. .
ZOGG ...
next project. Zogg said.
''We are already a $25 million a year
business." 1.ogg said. "\\'e are operating
Jri a 110.square-mile area that is largely a
bedroom community."
THURSDAY'S. LATE AFTERNOON BLAZE RAGES OUT .OF CONTROL BEHINO HOMES NEAR WOODLAND SCHOOL .
Fire lnve1tlptor1 Say Youth Playing With Match•• Ignited Fire Which Destroyed Tr1llers, Storage Shed
The National Guard Identified the crew
members as Capt. Jotm Larry Bearden,
33, of NortJi-Lltt1e R·ock, the pilot; Capt.
\Vllllam Robert West, 31, of LltUe Rock,
the copilot, and Spec. I David Murie
Webb,32, oC North LltUe Rock,.~ crew
chief.
Though !his results in a liinitcd lax
base for the mlL,hrooming school popula-
tion, 1.ogg aald several factors mny af·
feot the future.
He polnte4 to the reopening of the Bur·
roughs plant on Jcr:onlrnq Road, schedul·
ed for next summer, and possible
transfer and occ upation or the Rockwell
IntemaUonal "zlgeurat" ln J..aauna
Niguel to the federal General Servicts ·
Administration. This "-"Ould bring an in·
fiux ol goverrunent employes to the areL
. ..
Boy Touches Off
. .
Big Mesa Fire,
Officials Say
By RUDI NIEDZIEU>Kl
Of t111 DtllY l"li.t Slit!
A 13-year~ld boy playing with matches_
touched off a $15,000 inferno in a
•--~ neighborhood juit-.ouWde..ihe Costa.Mesa
boundary Thursday. Tht. f lames
de.stroyed two house trailers, a garage
and two storage sheds.
,
'
...
No one was injured in the spectacular
5:55 p.m. blaze battled by engine com·
pani.es from 1he Orange County fire
Department.
Ma}or properly losses were suffered by
former movie actress Dorothy Dare, 2028
Santa Ana Ave .. and her neighbor, Mrs.
Eve Dahlgren. 2032 Santa Ana Ave. Both
\\'ere away when the fire broke ou t.
The intense blaze sent black clouds of
smoke over Costa ~1esa. \\fitnesses said
the..buildings werclully_ inyolvcd__yrhen the
first fire trucks arrived from theii ba!e -
at Orange County Airport.
Orange County firemen did not radio
for assistance from the nearby l\tariners
and Rochester fire stations in Newport
!leach and Costa ?.1esa, respectively.
Cowity Battalion Chief Cliff Chapman
said the first unita were at lbe fire seven
minutes after the blaze was reported , but
several witnesses said It took at least 20
minutes before any water was on the
fl ames.
Clapman said the fire broke out when
the boy's match Ignited some carpeting
material stored in one of the sheds and
sprepd after he tried to extinguish it.
Fire of!icials refused to disclose the
name of the boy because he is a juvenile.
"I haven't taken an inventory but I can
tell you it's up ln the thousands," said
l\1iss Dare, 59, in descrlblng the loss.
l\liss Dare starred in motion pictures
and theater productions during the 1930s
and 1940s v•ith Dick Po~·ell, Erroll flynn,
James Cagney and others.
The flames threatened but did not ig·
nite the Dare and Dahlgren homes.
OIAN61 COAST IS
DAILY PILOT
The Or•-CNl1 DAILY PtlOl, wllh •llldl
!1 comlll..-1 tn1 N•Wl·P r .. i. 11 pybllafO«j by
~ O.•~ c .. .i Putoui.111,. c ..... Pt~r. ~·
r•I• tdf!I0111 O•• Ol.lblllll8'1, MOnclJ'f lhtO!lqll
,,ld•Y· +or Cotti M11•, N•"'P011 le1ch,
Hlll'lll""!on l•Kll/l'-111" V•ll1y. l~unt
8HCll, lrvlM/&11t111•eti 1tlCI $1" C~t/
'-" J111n C.p.lllf1111. A tl100l1 rt91oNI
.Ol!IOfl It pullU111«1 Stlurl••I 1tlCI $undt~1.
ffll jll'lntlpel PVll!b.hlflll PLIM II ., »II Weu ••r &1.-..t, Cftll MIW. C•llfornll, '~
Roh1rt N. W11d
l'retldtft'I 1"11 l'\;1111~r
J1clr R. C11.t1y
Vic• l'l'ftld ... I Ind Gf.Mr11 M•n .....
Tt.o'"'' IC11•il l:dlltlr
1J.01111t A. M11r11hi111
""'"""" £dolor Cho~o1 H. L .. , ~ich1rJ I". Ni ll
Alll"l nl M1111tl"1 l:.t111111
°""" Cotti M1101 bl Wot! 11~ Strotl N'..,._,, fff(tl1 UJJ H-rt !lou11Y1r1 l.,_ 8Ndl! m P'et' .. I A_,111 .._....,.., IM<ll1 1"11 IM<ll lovltw••d
IMI (M!Nflli': lOf /olOtlll l!I C..,.,I,. 11111
,.,., •••• 1n41 '42-4121
Cl flW .u..nw*t '41·1171
.... C" m 11" All hpett....,.1
,.,.,~ ••• 492-4421
co..,..'ltflt, tfta. ~.... eo.11 PWlltllffll ( ............ ""' ,....... •!eor'"-tll111tr1tt..,
.. ffW'9f• ,.,.,.., O!' --"-"' ~ fNY .. ,.,...11(# wi""'1! ..-<Lil ....
~ II C011rf1111 -··
..... 0-... IOtt IJllM ll C..I• Mn11 ,,,,.,...., Mtcri"'lcln ~ (l l'ltr "·" ~I 11¥ l'llOll U,lf IMllfl'lhtl mlllt.,-., ........... '2M lflll!INt',
Blnst at Lion Country
Injures M.esa Workman
A Costa-titesa electrician was treated
for second degree bums at Mission Com-
munity Hospital Thursday arter wires he
was handling at Lion Country Safari in
Irvine shorted and caugl)t fire.
Robert Raus, 45, of :ll 13· Mon roe
Way, suffered _burns on his arms and
face in the 3:30 p.1n. explosion. vrhilc
working on an ::lddition to the animal
park's. main administration building.
Y outl1 Confesses
Role i11 Sla ying
DE!.z.\N[); r~la. fAP) -One -of II
youths charged in the torture-slaying of ,1
California teenager has agreed to turn
state's v.i lness and plead guilt y to a
lesser charge.
~Ioward E. Waellus. 19, of Detroit
pleaded guUty In Volusia Countv Circuit
Court Thursday to a charge· of ng·
gravated battery in the death last Aµrd
of Ross P.tichae( Cochran. 17. of f'.resno .
Police said Cochra n v.·as killed by a
blow from a club after being tied to a
table, !logged \vith chains and stashed
with broken glass.
/
An employe of A. R. Edmans Companv
of Santa Ana, he was released afte'r
being attended In the Misslon Viejo
hospital's emergency room.
Raus.and-a--fello.W-electrician, who was
unharmed, were placing new high
voltage breakers In an electrical circuit
\\'hen the short occurred, Fire Chief
Claude Lewellen of lhe University Fire
Station in Irvine said.
fircn1en from lrvine and El Toro and
paramedics from Laguna Hills responded
to the caJI. An employe of Lion Country
had already taken Raus to the hospital.
after the ifljured man stumbled into main
office and asked for help.
The lransfonner Raus had been bend·
ing over had burst into flames, sending
the fire up into the main electrical box in
the ""all. Chief Lewellen said today.
Rags left on the floor also caught fire.
O;image to the new administration
\\'ing \\'as estimated by fire officials at
$2,000.
It was the first lire "o! any size" at !he
drive-through preserve, said Lewellen.
\1·ho added the explosion could have
taken the entire administration building.
r~iremen saved the ·existing building
from any damage.
1\ Lion Country official said all the
lights were back on today and repairs
\\ICre begi1U1ing.
ELECTR
. OtlfJ' l"Utt St•ll l'lttft
ICI AN BURNED IN FIRE AT LION COUNTRY SAFARI
An Orange County Fifeman Check s the Short-clrc\Jlted Panel
\
From Pqe l Fro111 Pqe l
Z6gg mentioned four I e g is 1 a t i v e TRIAL ... COYOTE • • •
State Park, came at a time when police newspaper." posllibilltits tha t he said local business
stepped up their attempts lo shoot the A recent Daily Pilot story quoted ~1rs. executives "should be concerned about,"
coyote believed responsible for the un-Parson as having dismissed Lewis collecti\'e bargaining for Pub 1 l c
provoked attacks. because of lhe publicity giveJ) her case. employes, forced busing for ractal
p u1 Lind the . d t f c .. n Lewis denied lhat he had been di&missed balance, ending the local property tax, a en, supennten en ° __., P.1 and the tu: 1 1m Itat1 o o lniU&•'ve
Clemente GoU Course, managed one shot' ~:lse.rs. Parson and br~ed ~story as (ProposlUon l), ""'
"·ith a sholgun at a coyote at the links He told the court that Mr. and Mrs. Regarding collective baraalning. Zoea
Thursday morning during a police-Parson were in the courtroom and that pointed out thlt most atrl..kes which have su~rvised hunt, but the animal esca;>ed. they woaj__d suppart bLs atatement that be occurred nat1oowlde this fall were in
Police resumed their altempJs tHIS was stfllllandling-tlie case. placa-where-collectlYe-bar1alnlng ·for-
morning, but no animals \\'ere sighted. After Lewis, in 1 letter to the Dally public employes ls legalized.
"\Ve and the neighbors didn't see the Pilot, denied betng dismlued, D,ity Pilot "With the pending merger of the
coyote today, either. \Ve figure he must representatives attempted to contact American Federation or Teachers and
ha\'e been scared orr by the police." said l\i rs. P,arson, but were wiable to reach the NatlonaJ Education Auoclation, this
Mrs. Ashbaugh. he r. issue becomes slgnlflcantly timed," Zogg
The bitten boy's mother said she en· Mrs. Parson sued the health spa on the laid. "The merger would ~ate a union
dorsed the latest attetnpts at tryiJJg to grounds that trauma created w~ she aecond In a1ze only to tht Teamsters."
shoot the animal. was trapped In the sauna room ch&nged Though Zogg did not take a speclfi c
"This has to be stoPped before the her personality to the point that she con-position on the tax limitation lnltl atlve,
animal bites any other small children." tacted strangers in bars with a view to he aald the California School Board
She, like her neighbors, had been seX11al relationships with them. ·Association and the League of Women
following the biting incidents at the state A J>IYChlatrl!t h11 testlfled in a deposl· Voten have both opposed it.
park closely through the summer, but lion that she developed mu 1t 1 p I e ''To UJ 11 achool adminlstr1tor1, the
Mrs. Ashbaugh theorized that the impact personalities as a result of her lnjwies cruelfft tax of "i.11 ts inflation," Zogg
of the incidents is much strooger now and her condition was ducribed u a said. '1'hal Is what gives us the Image ot
because a local youngster v.·as in\'olved. "three faces of Eve" personality split. reachlni Into all your pockeU."
'
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,
•
• DAD,Y PILOT EDITORIAL PAGE
Nothing's Impossible
During their election campaigns and at their first
post.victory meeting -even before they were sworn In,
Irvine Unified School District trustees ~1':.f.cd to abandon
noise-plagued Irvine School. State of!i · said the task
was "all but impossible." They were wrong.
cities haven't looked at their parks code since the turn
of the century. ,
The tone o! the proposed list struck commissioners
as bOtng negative. They asked the ci_ty staff to find ways
After dedicsted work by Supt. Stan Corey: Assist
Supt. John Rajcic, Facilities Planner Dave Klug· and
,other district personnel, the Irvine 'ite will be the first
school ever to be abandoned undeftho·state school build-
ing program because of adverse environmental condi-
tions. .
t set rules In a "positive" fashion. That's a challenge.
Still better would have been a clear authority or dl-
ectlve, if one is necessary, for the city staff to come
back with a unique set of guidelines geared to Irvine's
unique opportunities. . ·
Many city laws already govern citizen conduct and
responsible citizens obe~ them. U Irvine parks al"G to be
people's ~arks how much better it would be if the city
were to find things people can do within a park.
I It took almost 16 months, but the district managed
to flght-throl!gh the state's red tape. wlth facts. Sound
attenuating and repairtnl the old school to make It safe'
or children.__would,..coall.4 f.'!Mion about the same as
uiIOing an entire· new schqo , 4Jle sta e was to ,
The district now is working out the state's condi-
tions on the deil and plans to move the students out and
into the new College Park School next January. Other
state and local agencies helped with the massive noise
and safety studies used to prove the case.
~ptngm=-T&ueh==--=---1:=-=
But it was the perseverance of trustees -and admin·
istntors that made it happen-for the good of the chil-
dren.
Fifth District Supervisor Ronald Caspers has taken
a significant ·step to keep In better touch with the south-
ern end of his sprawling district by opening an office in
the Laguna Niguel Civic Center five days a week.
Caspers, whose district is the largest in the county
both In land area and population, has hired Robert Ne!·
son as a full-time aide expressly for the local office.
Accentuate the P,0~itive
Even if Nelson can· do litUe more than listen to com-
plaints and pass them along, he may be able to· resolve
local resentment.
Not long ago, Caspers faced wide-ranging discontent
in· the far end of his district, including recall threats,
complaints of lack of interest and lengthy gaps between
visits, ·
City of Irvine comm.unity services commissioners
wisely have asked for a revision of the lengthy list of
proposed regulations concerning citizen conduct in city
parks.
The drafted rules and regulations, the city staff
admits, were cOmpiled~from ordinances of other cities.
caspers finally has resjionded to the dissatisfaction.
Judging from the antique language, such as the ban
on employing a Hdray" within a city park, some of those
Whether the fact that an election is just around the
corner is the motivation, or whether it was just a matter
of the slow grinding of county bureaucracy and budget-
ing, the long-needed action is appropriate. · 'The job of vice president may not be much, but the ripoff
fringe benefits are great!'
Tourists Can
See More-
Than Natives
~YDNEY J.HARlU~
It bas become one of the liberal cllcbes
that you can't know a people, or a coun-
try, until you have lived there a long
t-ime-and thererore the three-week
traveler-to-Europe-is to be despised.and
disregarded when be gives us ~
dogmatic "oplruo111" of the countries be
bas briefly tou red.
'lbere ls some truth in that viewpoint,
but also a lot of fals<hood. For It Is possi-
ble to visit a new ('OUDtry ror a rew
weeka and see It in
a way that the na-
tives can no }onger
lee il
H a b it dulls the
edge of observaUoo.
We Americans, for
instance, accep t
ourtelves aqd our
customs 10 natural-
ly and easily that
we no longer have a perspective on
ourselves. An educated and intellige_nt
European can grasp a better idea ol
what we are like, precisely because be
is not hirnseH a part of the !Oclal pro-
cess here.
AFTER a while we \ do not notice
familiar scenery. We pass it every day
on our way to work or shopping, but we
do not really see it. The same is true or
our national habits, de!ects and vices.
1be emotional and social scenery is so
close to us that our angle of vision cannOt
include It.
Obviously 1 a stupid, close-minded
Dear
Gloon;iy
Gus
President Albert?
-P.O.
Ot-r Ottt <....-tt 1r1 ~ .., ....... Niii .. IM>f MC ....... , NfltCI ltle
~ .................. )"Wt .... ,_. ... ......, .,,.. E»ltr f'llet.
traveler ls going to return with a stupid
and close-minded view or the country he
11y visll«}=but thi• would be true i! he
-spent three years there, as well as thf'te
weeks. Travel broadens only the broad ;
it narrows tbe narrow-just u money
tend! to make· good men better and bad
men worse.
BUT A tourist with some sense, taste
and background can often capture a
more accurate Portrait of -a naUonal
spirrt Ulan the oldest lnhabitanl What
the naUve takes for granted (as almost a
part' Of na.ture), the tourist views aa a
cultural trait.
Our national obsession with "bipss"
ror ill own sake, as an example, is
scarcely noticed by ourselves: but to·the
foreigner it provides a useful key for
understanding many of our strange ways.
,
Nixon Plane
Remodeling
Bill Soars
W ASIIlNGTON -T h e U.S. Treasury
has already subsidized PresidenJ Ni~on·s
luxurious living at San Clemente and Key
Biscayne. Now it iS ponying up $1,785,000
to dec k out hJs jet to suit H.R.
Haldeman's and Pat Nixon's ideas of
posh air comfort. ~
The White House recently ordered a
new jet from Boeing to replace the well-
traveled "Spirit of '76" as the President's
lead Plane. JJaldeman pel'SO!lally to o k
Cfiarg"eor theliltei'lOr deo>ratmg aOO
before he had finished , the bill had run
up ti> $1.5 million.
WHEN PAT NIXON ·round out about
the.appointments, she hit 8n ait.pocket.
1be former top WhUe House 8.ide, with
typical Prussian .efficiency. had put the
staff quarters between the presidenifal
suite and tlle quarters for extra family
and guesta.
. This would have permitted top staffers
COUNTRIF.S cannot see themselves to maintain their 24-hour-a-day access to
any more clearly than individuals can. the Pres-t. but the arrangement
No ooe knows what be really loots like would have forced family and ·)ue:sts to
from the outside· the mirror gives us at ·wqWrm through the staff quartefa to visit
best a v-llld chaqjng ap. the President and First Lady.
prorlmaUoo. But a stranger taking a. -.i\fter .... she discovered what Haldeman •
fresh and careful look at ua,' c8.n oft.eii had done, Mrs. Ni.Jpn, who often has laid
tell more about our J)el'90D8].ities and down the law to her strong-willed hus-
deepest yearnings in a half-hour than we band, insisted that the plane be re-
can know about ourselves after years of designed to he.r own liking. As a result,
patient. self-examination. the Air Force, whlch had faithfully
The thlle-week tourist is neither to be followed the orlginal·Haldeman specifica-
desplsed nor disregarded ; he may be tions, is now spending another $2.85,000 to
superficial, but he is just as likely to be comform to Pat's requ~st that the guest
right. lounge be next to the Nixon quarters.
SB
I
Cotigress Seeks Trade Agree11aent Stri1a9s
U.S.-Russia Pledge Shaken
w ASHINGTON-Under the s t e a d y J ood . persuade the committee to .pass the
battering or headlines now dramatizing ( Corman-Pettis compromise.
the courageous struggle for civil rights EV ANS 'NOV AK UNDER THIS strategy, the vote on the
by intellectual dissidents in the Soviet most-favored·natlon clause (Title Five in · ~ the highly important trade ·bill) we;uld be Union, President Nixon's pledge to give postponed until ji'hlt before the bill is
the Russians equality with other nations that no one in the White House thought cleared by the committee and ready for
in trading with the possible when the pledge was made at action in the House.
U.S. is at least tern-the Moscow summit 16 months ago. That way, administraUon strategists
porarlly doomed. hold , the momentum of a favorable vote
The root cause of ONE TENTATIVE rescue operation in committee might carry the bill
the trouble far an-went down the drain th.is week when through the House without the Mills--
! tedaf.es theJl.ed..s' Secretaey-of-State-Henr.y-Kissinger---.Y. a dment. Theil , when the
· by Russian author lled . the w and M Senate version· of the bill-sure to ocm-and N ob e I prize.. cance 8 t:ip to ays eans 1 tain the ociginal Jackson amendment-is
winDer Alexander ~mmlttee intended to reverse the sent to a Senate-House conference eerly
Solzbenit.sylf a n d disastrous tide and convert enough mem· next year . a compromise would emefge
ot.htr Russian . in-bers to de[eat the Jackson amendment , protecting° the President's option to tieep
4illectuaJs to .go public with their dee~!Y A major reason Kissinger's appearance > hls pledge to Leonid BrezhneV, the Soviet
emqtional grievance against the Kremlin. was J>06tponed was that a telephone talk , Communist party lea;der.
I the highly sful between Mills, :recovering from his back The·roqt caUBe • succes ·---·· ·f·-·-d·.: •• ..J>.-Jn ·1.·~Iraii.sa d R Al AU. THAT now looks like Wishful campe.ign of Democratic Sen. Henry M. opera ion uw11 .ru s, an e~. h nki d The efl •-
Ja-•·---of Washington backed by the Ullman of Oregon, acting committee t i ·ng, in spa es. strenuous or~ ~ ' h · decreed ·ts f 1u·1 MiliB fially by Mr. Nixon, bf Kissinger, hllmelf Powerful American-Jewish community, c ai:man. 1 .u 1 Y: · Jewish, and by other high administration to use the issue of trade equality as a declmed to change his .pos1ti~ o~ the
club 1o force Moscow to permit totally Jackson amendment (which, w_1th hbei:a-1 :.!edes }~c=e o~~~:~ su~ '~
free emigration or Soviet Jews to Israel. Democrat Rep .. C~les A. Vanik. of Ohio, American -J ew Is h community-• be ls sponsormg m the House).
BUT TBAT campaign by Jackson and -• ''wherever1here is a synagogue~'·as one
MllLS REFUSED to bow to frenzied Jewish leader told us-bJ.s failed. Rep. Wilbur Mills of Arkansas, chairman White HouSe requests that he shift to a Making that failure worse are the
of the House Ways and Means Com· less rigid amendment sponsored by Rep. deeply emotional civil rights stories from
mittee, backed by a clear majority in James C. Corman, a Democrat, and Rep. ho1oscow and the sudden attack on liberal
both· the House and Senate, bas now been. Jerry L. Pettis, a· Republican, both . of Democralic leaders here by Soviet in-
galvanized by the shrewdly publicized California. That amendment would give tellectuals for refusing to face the facts
.civil rights atruggle ol. Solzhenitsyn, the President much-needed flexibility, about civil rights in the Soviet Union.
nuclear physicist Andrei D. Sakharov and while preserving hia power to use the ""'Deeper implicatiom ... ije a h e a d ,
other brave civil libertarians centered in most-favored-nation iSsue as a continuing particularly on bow the Kremlin "1Jl
Moscow. device to pressure Moscow. react when it fails to get delivery OD' the
The net result as of today: something Administration strategists are now ~ixon pledge. Also deeply in~ved Is
clo to panic in the Nixon Whlte House. hoping Kissinger will exude enough American big business, wb!ch likes the
Th President's cherished policy of persuasive charm on the committee smell of profits from vastly greater trade
det te with the Soviet Uni.on, sym-within the next two weeks to do one of I with RU!Sia. But in Its preaent mood,
zed by his pledge to give Moscow two things: first, get committee approval those considerau~ perhaps even
lb U.S. credits and most-favored-nation of the most-favored-nation proviso for f the full bloom of de{ente itseU-seetn
ade treatment, now confronts a threat Moscow wttb no strings attached; or, sec-unimportant to this Congress.
Breast Cancer Debate Reveals Flaws • Ill Eth~cs Code
II I'
DAILY PILOT
Robert N. Wtcd, Pt.ibliJhd
Tltoma.f Kcetni, Editor
Barbara Krtiblth
Editorfcl Page Editor
Friday, Sept mber 28, 1973
\
The editorial l*Ce or the n.nr
Pilot seeks 10 1nform 1l.nd alimulale
rcackora by presenllna an this pa~e
diverse commentary en topica ol in-i · term 'by ayniHc1ted eolumnlsta a.nd
cartoonists. by prvykflnc a fonun for
l"f:adf:ra' views arid ey prtl(!n!Jna this
newstJftper'a oplnlon1 and ldMS on
current topics. The tdllorial opimons
ol the Daily Pilot appear only in the
editorial column 11 ttle top of the
'I page. Opmiona .. ,,,.,.. by th• .,,,_
I umnim and ca.n.oonlata ll1td letter
I v.·rl!~n are thelr own and no mdortt-
ment of tbrir v"°wa by 1he Daily
Piiot lhould. be lnlel:Ted.
"
Wi11ds S11bside
Brush Fire' Quelled
By The As10<!lated Press
Subsiding Santa Ana ~·inds
enabled 400 fire righters to
stamp out a brush fire that
burned uncontrolled for 24
hours, destroying nearly 13,000
acres or wilderness and
recreational., land south or
Camarillo.
FIRE CREWS also fought
ne~rly a score of other fires
BIG PARAD-E AND
LOBSTER -BAKE SATURDAY
~·hich broke out in tinder dry
Southern Catlfornia Thursday.
The (yorst of lhem charred 75
acres one mile sou.th of Beau-
mont before it was ex·
tinguished.
'Ille Camarillo blaze
UPI Ttlwh;t1
ProbatioH
\
-'
Friday, Stpltn1ber 28, 1973 DAILY PILOT S
StJ.spect in Body
Theft Surrende1·s
_A.,.,,i,~" IN~IAN JEWELRY
LOS ANGELES (AP) -A
seeond man has been arrested
in, the tN!ft and burning or the
body ·of rock singer Gram
Parsons, whose embalmed re-
main! were found sni:>uldering
in a coffin at a remote desert
site:
Pair Sue
11ichael David Martin, 26, of
Hollywood, surrendered at the
Venice police station 'lburs.-
day. He had been sought on a
warrant charging grand theft.
Our tr•der h•s juat returned from
tt.o ZUNI RESERVATION with on
e11cltin9 collection of 9enuine
ZUNI NEEDLEPOINT
And lnl•y
For the best 1election of REAL
INDIAN MADE Jewelry, Rugs, Kachines
•nd Ba1ket1. Do come by
Just To Browse or Buy
3355 Vii lido, Ntwport l11th
675·1100 Clo1td Su"' & Moft.
• MARTIN , WOO reportedly
had accompanied Parsons on
road trips when the singer ap-
peared with "The Byrds" and
"Flying J!urrito ~rs"
rock groups, was released f ~~;;~~;;;'.~'.;~~;;;~~;;~~;;~~t~ later in the day on $1,000 bail. I;:
See the big parade at FASHION ISLAND l===~=lf«F-1'-;,. l'f.~-ay--.iround Circl Sylvester 'Sly' Stewart,
memSE:'Rf-Sly=t
Family Stone rock
group, has been placed
on probation in a re-
habilitation program
for experimental drug
users. He was cOnvicted
'l'hursday of drug pos·
session.
Parsons' road manager,
Philip Kaufman, 38, Vab Nuys,
was arrested Wednesday on a
sio1Har w~aant. OVERCOME INFLATION!
•
I
Lobster Bake & Carnival all 3 days
Fri.-Sun. SPonsored by the Balboa Bay
Lions Club.
the reasury
DRY CLEANING
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l lVtlSIDl 3520 Tyler St. IUENA P'Alk e,~!h dnd Ol.'WlgethOIPf
S.lNf.l ANA 3900 Siluth Bn~toi SL 01.llfGE Gir6'~ Gro.~ Blvd. and MancheAlf
01t11 wttk4ay1 9:30 to !1:30 -S•114ays 10 to 7.
WESTERN STATE UNIVERSITY
COLLEGE OF LAW
OF ORANGE COUNTY
FULL -TIME LAW STUDY PROGRAM
NOW AVAILABLE
• IF YOU HAVE •n AA degree.
• In '!~', er J ye1rt el lull -lune l•w 1tvdy Jl5·16
rll1~r1l'~ ~"mrrp!rweet!.~
• In 3 '/, or 4 yed" of p••l·t•me ld•y. •V!nong. 01
w•e~endt l•w 11udy 13 d•U!• ptr wtek, 3.4 houn
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OW FOR DAY, EVENING, OR
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IN SEPTEMBER OR FEBRUARY SEMESTERS
ITUOIHfl IUOllll IOI llDlaAUr INWllD STUOIHT LOANS
AmOVfD FOi VITllANS
serious burn! when he was
frapped in a canyon by a sud-
den flareup, officials said.
Nine aircraft dropped fire
retardants to put out the
flames, which showered the
area with embers and sent
black smoke billowing into the
sky.
Searchers
SANTA MONrCA (AP) - A
faU1er and son have filed a
$1.55 million fraud suit against
the leaders of an e'xpedition
which last summer searched
for the lost continent of Allan·
tis.
o tee ave given s ac-
count of the bizarre Incident:
Two men in an old black
hearse plcked up Parsons' re-
mains from a loading dock at
Los A n g e I e s International
Airport last Thursday. The
men signed a receipt for the
body, telling airline personnel
that the singer's family had
decided to have the young
man's body transported by
private plane from another
airport lo New Orleak for
burial.
THE FAMILY later told
Reliance on the divine economy, ""'"-'sT.aw:::-;-s--f--t
of supply, provides a basis for overcoming in-
flation. Come and learn about these Jaws at
a free Christian Science lecture by: NATHA-
NIEL R. WHITE entitled
"THE HUMAN AND THE DIVINE ECONOMY"
ot the ln-111• lowl (Art fe1tJ,ol Gro1111dsl
SUNDAY AFTERNOON : SEPT. 30 AT S:l!O P.M.
5POHSOltll0 aY
First Church of Christ, Scientist, Laguna Beach
Child Ctr• II m1 Ch11!'d1-UI Hlfll Driw•
Pipe Bomb Damages
SF Federal Building
JOllN D. Couturie, a Hughes
Aircraft Corp. executive, and
his cinematographer so n ,
William, said in the Superior
Court suit filed Thursday that
they had lost more than
$55,00() invested in a propo5ed
film documentary of the
search.
authorities they had expected11===================:::::::' Parsons to be retUn1ed byl· SAN FRANCISCO (UPI\ -
A pipe bomb blew up outside a
basement area window in San
Francisco's Old Feder a I
Building early today, starting
a fire thaf caused damage
estimated at belween $5,000
and $10,000.
FLAMES SCORCHED as
high as 60 • feet on the
building's white stone wall and
poured in a window to damage
a maintenance shop for elec-
trical repairs, although no one
~·as injured.
No Pe1ialty
Agairist
Spiritualist
John Sherratt. District Two
fire chief. said the bomb may
have been detonated by burn·
lng gasoline and that a five.
g-allon container had been
found.
Two bombs had b e e n
planted, but only one bl ew up
and an explosives squad from
the Army's Presidio of San
Francisco was called t o
dispose of the one that failed
to explode.
.. THE BLAST occurred at
about 1:30 a.m., but there was
n o immediate information
linking it to a similar ex·
plosion at about the same time
on the ninth floor of the ITT
Building in New" York City.
Among th ose n'amed as
defendants was Dr. Julian
Nava, a member of the Los
Angeles Board of Education.
Also named was Maxine
Asher, v.•ho with Nava. is co-
director of Ancient Mediter-
ranean Research Association,
sponsors of the expedition.
MRS. ASHER h a s said
publicly that the expedition
found traces of Atlantis off the
coast of Spain. However scuba
divers who participated in the
search said remn ants ol the
legendary sunken continent
never were found.
commercial plane from the in-
ternational a i r p o r t as
originally planned.
A coffin containing Parsons'
~body later was found by
campers near the desert tov.'11
of JOIShua Tree,200 miles east
of here.
Schobli1ig
111 Massage
Licensed?
LOS ANGELES (AP)
County Counsel John H .
l.JJrson is preparing ordinance
Ri h F th Inn ·1 amendments intended to c a er oeen tighten control over massage
schools i n unincorporated
I B I .& !_ Sh • areas. LOS ANGELES .(AP) - A Il e fl.II• oot1ng Larson's deputy. Frederick
55-year-old ''spiritual healer" ~ _ R. Bennett, said Thursday the
Wtiose !Jackei'Sln'Clude Pr'est-amendments wUI' r e q u Ire
dent Nixon's adviser on con-SANTA MONICA (AP ) - A Medeiros' attorneys had' county licensing for a 11
sumer affairs, won't have to v.-calthy Bel Air businessman argued that lifedeiros had shot massage parlors whose
pay a fine for his conviction of h ,__ . tcd r .. ....i Nieto on the porch of his home employcs or students receive Practl·c1·ng w1·1•-ut a J1'cense. as l.llXO acquit o mw uer . If d r •ru -h h . d h 1 in sc e ense. fees or tips from the public. Municipal Court Judge Mary 1n t e s oot1ng eat o hls
E W I 'ed 1 -ed d hter' 1 Dep. Dist. Ally. Richard J. Bennett said the proposed . aters evi no pena ty marr1 aug s over. Chrystie contended Aledeiros amendments have the support
ThUrsday ~gainst F r a n k A Superior Court jury o! admitted in police t a p e of legitimate schools o f
Hevesy, noting . that-Hevesy-s even-men and-five· women recordings-that he .... •Jost· ·his massage, whose students are
had .w~n a retrial for a 197l found Frank Medeiros. 56, in· head" and fired at Nieto. trained without any contact
conviction_ on the same_ charge nocent of second~egree lt1edeiros' married daughter, with the public. afte~ paying a $750 fin~ and murder Thursday in the Jan. Joanne Plotiranda, 26, had Bennett said the ordinance
serving tw~ ~ears probatio.n. 27 slaying of Thomas Nieto, broken up with Nieto just amenchnents will be proposed
A Municipal . Court JUry 28. The jury had received the prior to the shooting after !iv· lo the county supervisors at
111¥KICOMH.lllY llK.
JJOt 1.AGUN.f, CANYON90 ....
LAOUHAllAot
>.COMPLETE P>.IHT, ST>.IH, >.HD FIHllH
REMOV>.L SERVICE
WE PREPARE YOUR TREASURE$ FOR
EAIY REFIHllHIHG
WITHOUT LYE, >.CIDI OR HARMFUL
M>.TERl>.LS
Nearly Everyone
Listens to Landers
found ~levesr guilty lt1ay _17 of case earlier.Jn.the day. ing with him intermittently. their meeting Tuesday.
operatmg without a business 1-;;~;,;;~~~~~---~;;;;;;~~~i;i;;-;i;;;;;;;;..---;;;;i;--;;;;i;----=;;;;;;;;;;;; __________ ;;;; ____ ;;;;;; license after an undercover in-I•
vestigator said llevesy charg-
ed her four years ago for hyp-
nosis treatments for ulcers.
Hevesy contended he could not
be prosecuted since he was
engaged in a religious prac-
tice. e'll wait on you.
Till 7:JO.
At the drive-up window
OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK HOURS: 10-6
You can get
all these services: of these offices. •
(If the First National office where you
have your account doesn't s~ay open
late jusl use any of lhe offices llsted be-l~w. Because if you have.an account
with us, you have an account with all
LARGE AA
RANCH
EGGS
69fz
Spec:i•I Egg Price5
Good Thru Wed., Oct. 3
SEEDLESS
CANTALOUPE
ALWAYS
TOP
QUALITY
6
FOR
Coming Soon
OUR FAMOUS
25~
PUMPKIN
Pll.E
Over 40,000
Pounds Of Pumpkins
Wholesale To Restaurants Daily
2016 NEWPORT BLVD. COSTA MESA
(NEAR BAY ) PHONE 646-5718
Checking Account Deposils
Check Cashing
Savings Deposits
Savings Withdrawals _
Savings Bonds (Cashing & Issuance)
Money Maker Deposits
Money Maker Withdrawals
Master Charge Payments
Federal Tax Deposits
New Sav in gs Accounts -
New Checking Accounts K
Loan Payments ·
Utility Bills
Money Orders
Traveler's Checks
Master Charge Cash Advance
Consumer Loan Applications
Cashier's Checks
Xmas Club Payments
Southern California
First National Bank
I
First National offices.)
Orange County
Cypress
Huntington Beach:
Adams Avenue
Beach Boulevard
Saddleback
Sunny Hills
Westdiff
Los Angeles County
Bellflower
Lakewood
Drive through, Monday and Frkl~
•lomber PD.LC.
I
I
l
-
Huntington Beaeh
Fountain ·Valley
* *
• • , l ' ,... -~ ...
Today's F inal
N.Y. Stoc k s
VOL. 66, NO. 271, 4 SECTIONS, 44 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORN IA FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 28, 1973 TEN CENTS
•
. '11fenice-style l(fanals in Huntington~·
By TERRY COVILLE
Of ttte Dlilr Plitt Slaff
which. because or their length and depth, southeastern part of tov.•n along the sidering the use of boats on any of the
resemble canals. Talbert Channel and building boat slip.:; city's flood channels. Other recreation
VenJce -the American version -for sma ll craft uses, hov.•ever, arc more than just a It is perhaps a· little far-fetched to en-
isioo gondolas. skimming a!on:g.Jhe_
waters or the flood control chaMel in
lront of Marina }figh School.
features only two miles of canals_. which_ The slips ,vould have been located near dream. ::===:I sometimes serve as spontanoous llMcl-wharrs-now-Banninr ven . ms -~pect ol-=horses-g81lopmg-a g
Huntington Beach is not Venice , either
the Americ·an variety or the Italian
archetype.
It does, however, have 24 miles of flood
control channels criss-crossing the city
control channels. Why not lheveverse? boats would have entered the ocean near the banks of the biggest channels is quite
The prospect of boats noating along a the mouth of the Santa Ana River. real. nood channel has been explored in Hun-Sand drifts which often block the river Norm \Vorthy, director of parks and
t.ington Beach. mouth would have to be cut a"•ay, says recreation. says the recreational trails
Bill Hartge,.acting public works direc-Hartge, and the cost of that forced the conimittce already has considered the
tor, says about 10 years ago a developer developer to abandon his plans. placement of an equestrian trail along
thought about racing some homes in the No one currently is seriously con· (See CANALS, Page 2)
Suit Filed 011 Probe
Agnew Clai_ms Immunity
BALTIMORE (UPI) -Sp~o T.
Agnew's lawyers filed suit today to block
a grand jury investigation against him on
grounds he is immune from indictment
while still vice president.
The action was filed in federal District
Court here this aftet'noon and the speCial
judge presiding over· a grand jury m~
vestiga tion of Maryland political · cor~
ruption arranged. a meeting later in the
day in his Norfolk, Va. office with
/
3 Die in Hunt
lawyers for Agnew and the Justice
Department.
The conference in the chambers or U.S.
District Judge Walter E. Hoffman was
AGNEW 'FRAMED'-GOLD·
WATER.--50<! Story, Page 4
set up to arra11ge ·"a schedule tor the fil·
ing of briers and argwnents of counsel,"
his office said prior to formal filing of
the Agnew motion.
Basically, Agnew contends that the
Constitution shields him Crom any
criminal legal actions while he is serving
as vice president. His lawyers say he can
be subjected to such investigation only by
Congress, which has the power· of im-
peachnient.
. Court proceedings against a sitting vice
president, Agnew's lawyers contend, can
only follow his removal from office after
impeachrrltnt.
The 24·page motion for Agnew said:
"The nation must not be deprived or his
services while he defends himseU against
an indictment voted by perhaps 12 of 23
jurors or an informa~ion filed at the
whim of a prosecutor."
Actually, the grand jury consists of 22
persons. One was excused ..
In their argument, the vice president's .
lawyers cite'1 the 25th ·Amendment,
\vhich provides for succession to1 the
tSee AGNEW, Page Z)
THIS IS 'THE MOAT' NEAR HUNTINGTON'S MARINA HIGH SCHOOL
Can City Make Silk Pur1es Out of Flood Control Channel,? For Missing
-V-al,le-v-P-la1iners -Shalv&-_P_l_an_e_i_n _R_ain __
.J EL DORADO, Arlt. .(AP) ~ A-'fuu. -t
J
Medical Group Building
International .airliner wiOt l t persons
aboard disappeared Thursday night in a
torrentjal rainstorm ov~ southwest
Arkansas. Three Naliooa1 Guardsmen
\vere killed in the crash of a heli copter on
1ts-wa y lo -help iii the search' for tbe
plane.
By JOANNE REYNOLDS-°' tile DalfY "ll•t IU1ft _ What do you de> when two highly com-
petitive, obviously hostile, m e d i ~· I
groups want to build medical offices n t
to each other? ,
JI you're a Fountain Valley plarming
commissioner, you listen to about four
hours . of testimony from each group on
why they should be allowed to build their
building and why their neighbors should
not be allowed to build theirs.
Then you continue the matter.
That's what happened at Wednesday's
meeting of the Fountllin Valley Planning
Commission.
The commission was raced with re-
quests for variances for two medical or.
lice buildings near the Fountain Valley
Ccimmunity Hospital on Warner Avenue.
Zoo Co11ditio1is • .
Ordered Checked
toS ANGELES (AP) -An in·
vis.ligation into conditions at the Los
Arigeles Zoo has been ordered by the city
Board of Recreation and Park com-
mJssiooors.
The report on zoo conditions is due Oct.
11, the board said Thursday.
Controversy concerning the deaths of
tWo giraffes till! swruner brought the re-
·quest for an lnvealigalion. Zoo critics
said the giraffes died from injuries
sutfered in falls on the slick floors.
' I , . or,-11e Coast
• •
.
The bos Angeles weather service
s::iys It'll be cooler1Salurday. with
1ow clouds and patchy fog along
the coast in the morning .,.hours.
mgha al the beacl)cs in lhe low
.~-70s rising to the upper 80s inland.
" •
INS\DE TODAY . Tl!ue's a young pied piper in
Ocean Vtew Sch.ool District who
:11os tTOftlformod a group of chU.
4dTen inio a performing choir.
• s .. StOTlf by Staff Writer Hitarv
• Ka11e i'J today's Wttkender.
Al YMr ftl'Vkt l
L.M. ltrf '
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T""'ltn t1·7t Wllflltr t
WO!Mfl'I H .. t 1J•1'
WIM'W H.-n 4, 1 w••llfff' t,_.
-one J! Planned as paft of the hosi)ital
complex by the Fountain Va lley Medical
Group. The other is planned on the ad-
joining property by Dr. Maxwell Roston .
Both proposals involve three-story
buildings of nearly identical size separate
from the existing medical building and
hospital.
But the hospital's proposal is short of
parking spaces requ ired by city Jaw -
400 parking spaces short.
And Roston claims the lack of spaces
will constitute a major problelJl, so he
wants the commission to deny the
hospital's plan and approve his instead.
U the hospital's plan Is approved. he
said, he will not go ahead with his plan.
So the argument raged back and forth
between the two groups. The hospital's
attorney, chief of starr and head nurse all
shoY.'Cd up to tell the commission about
all the programs conducted !or com·
munity benefit by the hospital.
Hours passed with no trace of the Con-
vair turboprop jet which carried eight
passengers and a crew of three on a
flight from El Dorado to Texarkana.
Fog and low ceilings grounded most
search planes today. Authorities' held lit-
tle Mp; of findinc the airliner from the
ground if it went down in the swampy,
\Vooded, sparsely populated area between
the two cities.
The Texarkana Gazette said it learned
unofficially that three passenge"rs were
cOlonels from the Rid River Army depot
near Texarkana.
Texas International did not im-
mediately identify the passengers or the
crew.
, Ofily flillf Sl•tf ..,....
They even brought along a cancer
specialist who will open a clinic in the
new building if it's approved.
Roston also was there, telling com·
missioner! that he had been up all night
with a sick patient, who is improving,
and reminding the1n that he was missing
Rosh Hashana se rvices at temple.
Tu·o helicopters were dispatched from
Little Rock. They flew together into a fog
bank near Prescott, about 100 miles from
tt!eir base. One never came out.
THIS IS WHAT HAPPENS WHEN YOU HOTWIRE A TRACTOI! THAT HAS BEEN LEFT IN GEAR
City Employe on Foot Loses Race With Activated Vehicle on Huntington Beach's Velardo Drive
City staff members. including the plan-
ning director and the traffic engineer,
recommended approval ot the hospital's
plan saying the traffic flow pattern for
(See HOSPITAL, Page Z)
The second helicopter turned back and
niade a -safe landing at Malvern. State
Police quoted its pilot as saying that the
other ship radioed that it was in trouble
just before jt went down:
Lt. Earl Orr of the state police said
three bodies were recovered at the crash
scene about two hours later.
Huntington Man
Held in Coast
Lewis Still on Ca-se Ticket Caper
Venue Change Denied
In .Sauna Bath Trial
A man who authorities allege Oed
forgery charges in New York to Hun-
tington Beach today faces criminal
" charges along with bis girlfriend, follow-
ing a cut-rate airline ticket caper in
Newport Beach.
Thom8.s J. Ahdino. 31, of 6700 W&fllltCr
Ave ., was arresled and booked on suspi-
cion of possession of stolen properly in
additloo to being held on a New York
fugitive warrant in lieu of $10,000 bail. An Orange County Superior Court
judge refused Thursday lo order a new
venue for a trial in which an Anaheim
Woman wHI claim that \pJurlcs suffered
in a health spa's sauna room led her to
seek sexual adventures.
Juijge WBlter Charamia rejected San
Francisco trial lawyer Marvin Lewis
Sr.'1 bid lo have the lrial moved with the
comment that II would be lmposolbk! lo
a\OO!d publicity In that type of trial
. "anywhere In California."
Lewis, representing Mrs. M a r I a
Parson, 46, and Fullerton attornty
Donald Ruston, repre~ntlng the }lollday
Health Spa of Orange, also moved to
pos\pone tbe trial dale lo mi\igate the cl-
rec:ts of recent publicity.
Out octlng Presiding Judge William C.
Speirs later rejected that motlotrwith the'
comment Uwt no purpose would be serv·
ed by the granUng ol any dcl~y. .
Judge Spclrs confinned the originally
scheduled Oct 29 dale and ordered both
sides to be ready for !rial on that dale.
Lewis argued before Judge Charamza
rejected his motion that il would be Im.
possible to pick a jury in Orange County
in view o( the "widely read Dailr Pilot
stories."
HThey ran this thing with headlinet
that remind you of the end of World War
II," be complained. "And then to rub salt
in my wounds they printed a raise story
that I had been fired by Mrs. Parson who
states that she has never talked to the
newspaper."
A recent Daily Pilot olory quoted Mro.
Parson as having di9mlssed Lewi!I
because -0r I.he publicity given her case.
Ll)wl$ denied that he Md been dismissed
by Mrs. Parson and branded the story as
false.
He told the court tha\ ~1r. and Mrs.
Parson were In the courtrootn and that
the)' would support bis .statement lhat he
(See TRIAL, P11e I)
His companion. Mrs. Dixie L. Dayhoff
11.M>n, 27, of 7661 Garfield Ave., •lun-
tington Beach. was booked only on the
stolen property charge and released on
her own recognizance.
Detective Todd Wilkinson said Andino
and Mrs. ltson were arrested at 1036 W.
Balboa Blvd. based on a Up claiming
they had llx Ucltets on four different
alrllncs they were offering to sell at half·
price.
It• said circumstances indicate the
tickets may OQt have been legitimately
obtained, because they _!'ere purcha5ed
with credit card! lssocd tiy the alrUncs.
Detective: Wilkinson 8\so notod anyone
wishing to N!:·Scll airline tickets can
simply turn them , back In to the eJr car·
rlcr for a full refund.
,
Berserk Tra~tor
Unma1i1 1ed Vehicle Smashes Garage
A brief race between an unmanned
trLctor and its operator ended Thursday
afternoon when the earth mover crashed
into the garage of a Huntington Beach
home.
Police said no one was injured In the
mishap which sU:trted when city employe
Jack Orris \vanted to dig a bole for a tree
in the median in rront of 9382 Velardo
Drive.
The tractor, which had a trench digger
on the back, wou.Jdn't start, so Orris got
off ahd started it by shorting the ignlt.lorr
with a screwdriver.
Police saJd Orris appi"rently left the
tractor in gear, so that when ·it started
up. it started off.
\Vith Orris in hot pursuit, the tractor
rolled over the median, across the street,
up the sidewalk and through the garage
door.
Bomb ll oax Jails-Man
LOS ANGELES I AP) -An cmploye ol
Lockheed Aircraft Corp.~Jn Palmdale 'Was
arrested Thursd,ay on ch.arges or fa1111ely
saying • bomb had been placed alioard
· an nlrcralt being assembled at the plant,
an FBI SPokesman said. Domingo De
Ouiman. 41. of North Hollywood was
jailed in lieu of '5,000 bcind: the
spokesman said.
•
It finally stopped after taking out a
portion or the garage's side wall, police
said.
-Other than the damage to the empty
garage and the tractor, the only other
damage from the accident was to Orris'
pride , police said.
Cellmate Tells·
Buny ard Crimes
MARIPOSA (AP) -"You're a liar,
punk," John Pl>illip Bunyard yelled 1l a
jail mate who was testiCying that
Bunyard odmllted killing t•~ women .
Earl Feely Mahler told the Mariposa
Coonty S~perlor Court Tl>.irsday that
Bunyard recounted to him a number of
crimes while they were in jaJI toaetber.
Bunyard, 27. Is ace~ In the fatal
shootings last Easter o-,.llelen Cran1er,
70, and Nancy Ohalberg, 55, during a
tbree-d::i y crime spree throu'gh Northero
and Central California.
Superior Court Judge. Dean C.
Laurit zen admonished the 6-foot·9, .,..
pound defendant for his outburst durlnf
Mahler's testimony
I
•
•
• "
% DAILY PILDl "
Two Ar(lbs
' Seize Train,
4Hostages
·FromPqel
TRIAL ...
was still handling the case.
After Lewis, in a letter to the Dally
Pilot, denied being dismissed, Daily Pilot
representatives attempted to contact
Mrs. Parson, but were unable to reach
her.
Mrs. Parson &ued the health spa on the
grounds that trauma created when 1he
was trapped in the sauna room changed
her personality to the point that 1be con·
tacted strangers in bars with a view to
sexual rtlat.ionsbips with them.
A psychlatrist has testified in a deposi-
tion that she developed mu I t i p I e
personalities as a result of her injuries
and her condition v.·as described as a
"three !aces of Eve" personality split.
High Greek Resigns ,
ATHENS (AP ) -Deputy Premier
Nicholas ~Jakarezos resigned today,
saying he disagreed with President
George Papadopoulos over "such a
crucial issue" he felt he had to qu it.
OIANel COAST ••
DAILY PILOT
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•
Council to Eye
Fireworks Bari
FORT LAUDERDALE, Fla. (AP) -
Seventy-three dogs with a total adjudged
value of $1 have been awarded $9 million
-about $123,287 each -from a $14
million estate. ·
When Eleanor Ritchey, the Quaker
State Refining Corp. heiress, died In 1968
at the age .of 58 she left her en Ure estate,
then worth $4.5 million, to 150 dogs.
The dogs, both stray and pedigreed,
had been cared for by Mlss Ritchey at
her ranch northwest of Fort Lauderdale.
1\1.•o half-sisters and a hall-brother
challenged the will in coun, saying they
should get some of the estate.
During the intervening years, the
estate;conslsting mostly of Quaker State
stock, grew in value and more than half
the dogs died. .
Thursday, Broward County Circuit
Judge Leroy Moe ended the five years of
legal arguments by giving $9 million to a
trust fund for the dogs and $2 million to
be divided among the half-sisters, Marion
Boyer and Lois Leavy. and half-brother
John Ritchey, all from Pennsylvania.
The rest of the estate went for taxes
and attorney's and executors' fees.
! /From Pflfle '1
AGNEW •••
presidency.
"In adopting the ~th Amendment, the
Congress and the states gave new proof
that a functioning vice pre8ident Is far
too impc>rtant to the nation to permit his
disablement by criminal prose<..'Utlon,"
the brief said.
The lawyers said 11 vice president is
elected and charged with a va riety of
~ntlal duties and "may not, we sub-
mit, be llindered or prevented from
perlorming his ofli<e by the in•titutlon of
a criminal proceeding against him."
While he is vice president, he "must be
free to function as vice praident, u the
brief said.
They said this does not mean "that the
man holding the ofCice of vice presldl"nt
is above the law or beyond lts reach.
"It means rather. that he must bold
the office and be Ire< to perform Its dutltt until his removal comes about in
accordance with the constitutional plan -by impeachment, resignation, or ex-
plratloo al bis term."
Agnew, who Dew to California lhls
morning for the weekend, has made clear
he Views the grand Jury inquiry as un-
conslltuUonal. lie ~tends thst he caJ>-
not be Indicted while sltHna u vice PMf·
dent, tnd has sa id ht has no intention of
reiigning.
FCC Cites
103Radio
Ope1·ators
1
'
Y outl1 1Sets ·
'fuferno'
111 County
I ~y RUDI NIEDZIELsKl
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WOODMARK FEATURES
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* EIGHT WAY HANO
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HARDWOOD FRAMES
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DREXEL-HERITAGf-HENREDON-WOOOMARK-KARASl AN •
·" INTERIORS
WUKDAYS • SATURDAYS 9:00 19 l:SO
FllDA Y 'TIL 9:00
N.EWPORT BEACH e
1727 WESTCtlFP DR.. 642·2010
IOp111 511n41y 12.1:JOI
lAGUNA UACH e
J41 NORTH COo\ST t-fwv ' ,.
(OP.Ill S11~•Y 12.11JOI . 4f4·6S51 .
TORRANCE e
2Jt4f HAWlHOll.NE ILVD.
a11.127f
1
I
I
(
•
•
At Your
S ervice
A Sunday, Wndaeaday lllld Friday
F"'llure
01 tk Dally Pllol
·'
f'riday, Seple1nber 28, 1973 H DAILY PILOT :J
Censure
Firm,s Bid
ForOrwfre
Camp Land
Says War
Statements . .
His 'Right'
By JOHN ZALLER
Of ltle 0.llY ,llOt Stltr
SAN FRANCISCO -Former h1arine
PO\V Edison W. Miller of Newport Beach By JOHN VAL TERZA
Of ... DellY Pltot It ... :::=::=~~J='!;:==-~ct1ctit"tkirDiz~edcLol~llisL-m-m'ilitaey~peticon.-"'1!>!!:•'-=-i""'
"for continuing the campaign of
character assassination a'gainst me "
over allegedly illegal antiwar activities
while he was in captivity in North Viet·
'l'M DISA PPOINTED'
Lt. C~I. Edison Miller
Inmate, 26 ,
Han g s S elf
In Cl emente
'
Sunday's Daily Pilot
A Learning Experience
Coupie Turn Down 111.jection s, Say Co yote Not Ill Readingthisweek'sSundayoanyPuot
•No Anti-rabies Shots!'
"" · . · ~ may be a learning experienQe. A Hun-A San Clemente couple wbofe _sinall parenUy the same coyote during . the Clemente Golf Course, managed one shot tington Beach woman whO teaches
son was bitten last weekend by a coyote . summer months underwe~t the tre~t-with a shotgun at a coyote at the li!lks ) families to maintain a vegetab~e g~en, is
h decided · t tirab" · ment which ·has been described as pain-Thursday morning durln,g a pohce-profiled and a 20-week educational senes
. ave agam& an • ies ~ fut bUt stULle:ss than the o(iginal agoniz-supervised hunt. but the animaJ escaped. on "America and the Future of Man"
Jections for their son "beCauae we don t · mi Pasteur Mes which caused major Police resumed their attempts this . also begins. Here's a glance at what wlll
believe the an imal has the dlleue." side effectS. morning, but no animals were sighted. be published:
A combination ot factors: convinced Mr. "Heallh department people tol.d us the "We and the . neighbors di&'t see the BEWARE CARNIVALS _ All of the
and Mrs. EdWard Ashbaugh that their s~ .. are ,not totally erfectlve in every coyote today, either. We figure. he,,mu~l games at carnivals can be rigged, though
IOG, Bartley, 31 .should not undergo the case and ~vcn lf you take .them ~.n you have been scared off by the police,, said usually only one or two at ~any one time.
-ly 'nj Ions bl~ -·'d could still contract the disease, said Mrs ... Asbbaugh. This week's "You" lead feature by staf( serlea of dal J ect w o.;ii ""'w Mrs. Ashbaugh. The bitten boy's mother said she en· •
total as much as 24. The decision by the family, residents of dorsed the latest attempts at trying to
And tbeir dedsioo sald Mrs. Ashbaugh the Ri~iera District near San Clemente shoot the animal.
today came alltr 'lengthy C<llllultatlon State Park, came at a Ume when police "Tills h~• to be stopped before lilt!
with i.mn, cloclon and bealth cl<t>art. stepped up their att<mpls Jo shoot the animal bites any other small children."
mebt at:lk:iall~ • , coyote believtd ~ble !or the un-She, likq. her neigbbors, had been , , · lmOll provoked attacks. ' following the biting lncidenls at thc state • .'!'ror• ~ _. ~ anm:."' ~ think o;;c" ~ l'lul Linden, tbe superintendent or San .,.rk closely. through tbe swnmer, but ..., • '?' -"" 00 Mrs. Ashbaugh theorized that the Impact
the dileue,, lbe added. •"~\ of the incidents ls much stronger now
Bartley, who waa bitten °"'",by ""' S ~FETY FIRST because a local youngsrer was involve<!.
.aniniil lost SUndly u the )'llimglter .ti. "In all the o\her cases people didn't
stcod on tbe lnlot lawn ol tbe lalnily take It so seriously, J guess, because the
home, allo la prone to allergies and has LONDON (tJPi ) .:. Harvey Whit•, a people were lust visiting the tity. Now
heart problems. .consultant surgeon at St. Bartholome,v's 1 'd ts d the are "W llndentand •••t tbe treatmtnt bu u-11a1 wrote in the British Medical It's aUecling oca rest en ,,•n Y e ... nd J • ....,,.. 1 • • becomlng more eonoorned. unoredictable Bide effects a we ust Jouma1 today that violent exerCise can "Nobody should have to endure what
welgbed Ibo racton and ,decided Utat my cause people to swallow false teeth and we've been through this past week. It's
son wout~.nm a better r~k bY not taking _advised coueles t0: remove thei r dentures boon 8 terriblo experience. for .th~."''hole
the-tbotlt hil mother uid.. · .... __.before 11\aktng love. ramlly and it's still not ov er with. Eight Olhtt vlct1mt ol bites rrom.....,..
( Sunday's Best)
Writer Joanne Reynolds, tells how
operators of these games can separate
you from your money.
NEW CAREERS - A trio of rormer
employte in the aerospace indusU'y ls
launching a new furniture refinlshlng
busl.µMf tn Orange County. This feature,
also ih the "YOU" section, takes a look
at how they and other caswilties of
attospa~ cutbacks are adjusting.
GROW YOUR Olj'N -Lois Davis or
Huntington ·'Beach believes a family With
. '
a room-size garden shoUJd be able to
serve two-home-grown vegetables 365
days a year. She •is teachln.g families in a
community cla'ss arranged by the Foun·
taln Valley School Distr~ how they can
do it. Mrs. Davis is profiled in a women's
page feature written by Slaff Writer Jo
Olson and illustrated by S t a f f
Photographer Richard Kochler.
SERIES BEGINS -The Sund•y Doily
-Pllot-thls-week-begins a 20-week· series
on "America and the Future of Man," an
experiment to determine the pracUcallty
of printihg educational courses in
new1Jpapen.. The course can be taken for
eredit if tlie .... c1cr enroll! In UC! Ex-
tension. ·
"ADAM'S RIB" -Ken Howard and
Blythe Donner, playing Spencer Tracy
and Katharine Hepburn, arc cover story
material !or the TV WEEK. They 're
katured in a new series b<$ed on the
classic Tracy·Repburn movie.
IDEAS FOR BOMf; -Famlly Weekly
has a puJlout-and-save sectiOn on how to
decorate bedrooms and family rooms
without spendin8: a fortune on places
where we spend one-third of our lives.
Barbara Rush is the cover girl l\nd sub-
joci of a Peer "J. Opj>i!\llelmer Interview.
r
1
~.
l'
4 DAIL V PI LOT Friday, S!!plrmbtt 28, 1973
New l' ork, Ront.e
~xplosions ·Rip
ITT Buildings
Ul"I T•'-Pllolo Found Innocent
District Attorney Jim Garrison
was acquitted Thursday of fed·
eral bribery charges, but he
says his running feud with the
government is far from over.
He ;ind two others were found
innocent in con nection ·with
p i n b a 11 gambling. Garrison
blamed his troubles on "a cor-
rupt U.S. Justice Department."
Goldwater
Says Agnew
Was 'Framed' BOYLE OFF Escape Attempt
BALTIMORE, Md. rUP11 -For 1he ,, Thwarted; ·12
fi rst time in history,evidence concerning CRITIC AL LIST
an incumbent vice , president bas been H ' ' Freed
presented lo a grand jury. One witness WASHINGTON (U PI) - W. A. OStages
labeled the inquiry a "fishing ex-"Tony" Boyle, reported near death •
pedition," and Sen. Barry M. Goldwater for two days after taking an ST. LOillS, Mo. (AP) -Twel ve
(R-Ariz.), claimed in \Vashington that overdose of sleeping pills, was women ·prisoners and a m~tron were
Spiro T. Agnew was "framed." taken off the critical list today. rel~ Wlharmed early today, 51,z
Tiie 22.membcr grand J·ury, meet1·ng The former United Mine Workers hours after they Were seized during an union president was listed "in
under strict security, was believed to serious condition" at George escape attempt at city jail, authorities
have heard at least four witnesses Thurs-\Vashington University Hospital. said. ·
Officials at the hospital said "They threatened-me. They threatened day at the federal courthouse in Bo 1 1·11 · th m· tens· a
downtown Bal''-re before recess1·ng for ye was s I in e ive c re to blow my brains out. They threatened """ section but "he is !Wake, alert and
the week. Jifost witnesses also \Vere talking, alth ough he bas a sore to cut my head off,'' sobbed lhe rnatroo.
shielded from the press. throat." Betty Scott. '" --=======-=========--Officials said the incident started __ QS_Altorney_GeorgeJiealLand-'1i. SliOrtly after midriight Wlieri seven iiiiile
team of federal pr'osecutors at the direc-
inmates overpowered two guards. tion of Attorney General EUiot L. Sk } b Cr
Richardson began presenting the grand y a , . eW They said the men forced one of the
jury with evide~ce 'gathered in their in· two, guard.Capt. Arthur E. Vogelpohl, 61,
vestigation. Beall notified Agnew Aug. 1 F • • S • to accompany them on an elevator to the
the investigation coocerned possible . acmg enes jail's sixth floor, where 50 women are
violations of conspiracy, extortion and ~.
ln'lDery · --'There, Vogelpohl said, one of the The panel had been meeting since Of Debriefings January to coosider allegations of cash prisoners began a,n escape attempt by
kickbacks to Maryland political figures HOUSTON <UPI ) _ Three happy and trying to descend a ladder, but was
frcmt contractors. healthy Skylab 2 astronauts spent their thwarted by a policeman below.
Agnew has told friends any liope he first day at home in three months today At that point Vogelpohl said he broke
may have l:\ad for theyresidency in 1976 after._re:wrtting~P.!ce record book Joose_fmm_his_captors._ 'The seven _in·
niS OVer -now-:"-tfie-NCw YOrK Tl.riles with 59 days of adventure, hard work anG mates then barricaded themselves oo the .
reported in today 's editions. fwi. sixth floor and took the 13 women
"He has been destroyed politicall y and Alan G. Bean, Owen K. Garriott and hostage, officials said.
knows it,'' Times writer James Reston Jack R. Lousma, still a little weak but Edward Tripp, city director ol adult
reported. feeling fit after two months of services, said he met with the seven in·
"But he will not go quietly, for that weightlessness, were starting a long _mates for about four hours during the in·
"'Ould look like a confession or guilt, and series of debriefrngs about the flight ciden t, after which the men returned to a
that, he insists, is a confession he \\'ill after a jubilant reunion \Vith their fift.h-Ooor cell in orderly fashion.
Uever make." families Thursday night. Also at the meeting on the facilty's
'The Times said Agnew does not intend Stepping from the future into the pas:t, sixth floor was news director Jim White
to resign even If indictec( bu t Y.il\ "fight the astronauts were greeted by thetr of radio station KMOX, whose presence
for exoneration through the courts and \1'ives 'vcaring long, colorful 19th century \Vas demanded for the airing of
keep appealing to the House of Represen· go\1'Ils and bonnets as the men emerged grievances.
tatives for a full and open hearing, no from a NASA jet at Ellington Air Force Tripp said he acceded to lll05t of a list
matter how long it takes." Base. They flew from San Diego where of demands that included better medical
Assistant U.S. Attorney Russell T. their recovery ship brought them after services, mattresses on which t.o sleep
Baker Jr. declined to say when the jury their return to earth Tuesday. and more sanitary conditions.
would next meet. It was expected to con· A crowd of 500 well-wishers, including "I assured them that everything they
vene next week. the fliers' children, were kept 100 feet \\·anted, everything on their list of
Lawyers for Agnew, a form er back to protect the men from common demands I was already working for,'' he
Baltimore CoWlly Executive and earth germs while they readapt to living said. "I know things are bad here. I con-
Maryland gove rnor, said they still plan to on their hom e planet. vinced them I'm trying to make them
file suit in U.S. District Court in an at· "In the last two months ... we've had better."
~empt to block the investigation on the an unforgettable experience," Ganiott He said the inmates' demand for
constitutional ground that a vice pres!· told the cheering crowd. "These were amnesty in the aOOrted escape attempt
dent cannot be indicted unless he is first days of adventure. they "·ere days or would be honored.
jn1peached by Congress and removed hard \\'ork ·and there was time for a little Authorities said two of the prisoners in
:rom office. -· bit of fun." · the escape try were serving life sen-
\Vhile the grand jury was listening to The pioneering astronauts thanked tenccs on murder convictions at the state
\Yilnesses, Agnew attended meetings at their colleagues on· the ground for the penitentiary at Jefferson City. They had
the \Vhitc House concerning legislative many hours of hard \\'Ork they put in to been ret urned here to stand trial on other
n1atters. support man's longest space flight. charges.
Monster Storm Hits Texas
Flood Wc1ters Force 800 Persons From Tlieir Homes
Temperatures
Hllll Low Pr. A!lanf• 79 ft .XI B•kll!f"11ield " . 1~~ 7~ .SS .~ ll " " i:rceoo " ~ ·" nch1n•tl .. " ·Vi w l•nd " M
,_
" " ·" Mo-'l " ·" ''" 1. ~ •• H M " ono!Ul\I
* ~ ·" "~""' rbonVlllt ~ 1.n .tl!MI Clfv " ~ .•
11 Vrr.• .. tt ~1:, I':" " " !I Mr,m !l .. . n r~ ~ l'l ... :r:~ cuv II !! "' ~ ... r :I ' . i=. H ll r.L'"'-"'' 1.frt'e City u
i!~~ ff n . ' M"" fJ.S. S••-r11
Cl~h~~ .. • W'toll r •n~ ~ _ 11 too wt~r -Inn••
'il'I I T -"'1 Wed-~1.' '"M w••~:i."I' n toufl'ltNI i::=• • l lld an'*' lflf ell •n
..... ,,OtlAI Wf Al "I~ ~1•v 1c 1 IO•ICJ.SI •• ,,,_,. ·~' , .2.f· 7)
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C!BWIOWlll l lOW
•
PARKI
found=in=eur -WARE:ffOUW.tl:--•-_____..._
~~~
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atG· 549.tS · • · 3 fOl ff .. ,ttt-
sPADl p\111 ~
"'"
1
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6' 119 Table w/boneh11 16
Soll loft) Ro9. $44,95.
YollTI ONLY ••• ' •• szt.95
4' Umbrella Tllble w/l bon•
cho1 () 1eh only !
Rog. $59.95. How •. SJt.tl
W Toblff. Cocktail ToW ...
Stoolt-leMhes A11orhod.
Req. Y1luet to $29.95 Now
•.••••••••.•••.••• $11.00
Ch1b Chair [ 4 only)
Ro9. $19.~S. Now , , $24.00
loft S.. ! J only)
Rog. $59.95. Now , , SJJ.OG
PoddN CM.IN & Ch1lr Cuih·
ioni. from , •••.••• $J.OG
WROUGHT IRON·
FURNITUR E
by FurnitUre South
Elegant Indoor Pieces for Living
Patio, Oen or Dining .
Room,
Woll ullffl, 6/1Hlf, Gold V•il Fini1h. 2 .. " re9. $79.50 ••·
J fof 5159.fO . 30" reg. SB9.95 ••· J for SlJt.90. ]0" w/
fulLl1n9th do o'l, 119. S t 19.95, Now 599.95 . 11.1G. s . ooo• ....
. ..... _,Hoooa..oUT ...•... ' .••• ' •. '.. ..... Glo11 Top Gold Fl11idi l-pc. Tobi. s.ts. Gold fi~i1lt, (I
GIA.Pl 1"' ·······•··•·•·• •... £7 Coc•t•il Teb!.-2 l•mp Ttbl•1. Seti ONLY .••• Slit.ts ll<i'· Sl .SD . . . , •••. , •., .• , 95
. ll'IA_q•artS , , .•.• · · $4 Pla11tt Shntds, A11t. Colori. FROM , ..• , , , .• , , , .. SJ .ts LO " •.•••••.
atG. •tc '' •• ~· tUCALypTUS , , •••••• , • • • • '-Sf9oh !Wrought Iron Swivtf Stttl from . , •• 519.tS
-Sil ... •~ts--.-• .. ·' .. •' _ -too•-r/lto1'-w/Upk.-8.ck·&.-Stett.---------\~: .. :·:;::·O:LU.:::~·~·~"=·~·;"~·~·;; ____ .... ~~~~ .. S •· W Reg. $69.95. NOW ....• , , • , ••..•••••.••• , , $49.tl
Famous
Brown J ordan
Patfo Sale
20°/o Off
'Tamlo11t~Lld.-Kall" •roa1tl..., All
pc.'1. Aw•lloW.. ING .,. .. , old fvr11.
before s..n... w. hohffe .......
Jerda11 SPNY Pelllt • SI.SO C-.
044 CHln ,,_ t-• ..-.,.._
YA.LUU -1'0 -l-112.11 --·snoo FROM O~LY ••• ~ •• ,, •• . • • .
Gl11i Pl1nter1 l P1tio Aec•t•ori11 so,.-, Off
Pllli COLOR
MOD MINDID
J Pc. a. s.t. Reg. $219.00
NOW ••••• , • , • , •••••••••• Sl!f.00
Avoe1do Gre•n/White 811•. S·pe. 5.~. Toba. Set. R•g. $249.99, 1 ONLY
Stt.tS.
A11t. Color•-Stooh. Reg. $24.95 515.00
ALL DAY
SATURDAY
CREDIT
TERMS
GREEt4
S·pc. LIYlftCJ Room Gnups By Me1dow·
c••ft. from •••••••••••••••• Sitt.ti
5-pc Dh1l11, s.ts NOW , ••••• Stt.tS
NOW •••••••••••••• , •• ,, • Stt.tS
Custom O....Jered Dlitl119 Cif .. pt. Your
Choic• •• , ••••• , ; ..• •.•, LISS .259/•
l .1.9. Clos• Out Pric••· lmm•d i1te
D•L on All Floor S1mple1. We Stoek-
The F" mo u • CltemttJtow • ChM·Y111 •
Chortiroll & Wttber K.na..
Including •II Aece11oriea
DEPT. _FEATURE -Wiu~d Ch1rc.o•I
l igtit .... Quirt. Si1e Re9. 69c Now Jtc
Hamilton Fire logt. Speci1I Priced
From •••••••.•••••••••••• Sit.ts
FIRE SCREENS -Custom fitted p•r
ord1r w/Ac.c1s1orie1-AT GREAT SAV-
INGS-STOP IN l ORDER YOURS
TODAY.
TROPITONE ,
Hl 9ffllty 011hlffr Ptttto F11n1. Tabkls
-Aut. SI .. & SMpn, Clioln-SoMO
• Rodton, Lout1991-A•t. 40% to 50%
OFF ... r Stool• w/ l1ffet I«. S,..clol
Gfaapl_,. ht· SJ41 .00 Faohiro cs.a.
owt Priced NOW •••••••••• SltO.IO
•
the Con/Ina Adjustablt Chdlse
hy Tropltont
WIN~I~ TIP.S: .. ~ ·
"1EILALL. l(CXJ~ F/21E!Mb)
nu~ OllAlitlAK3 IS A
FAl'E • Tf!EN 1?A6 1 '1H€1J2'CCUPONS £?
1YOU FILL lllt;M our A~O ~q/.\11/ftL./.\lO/lE
Tf'{Alll UltELY BET!IE
\XI I EN Ell .I
•
I GARDENS
2123 NEWPORT BLVD. ' \ .
COS_TA ~ MESA ,~
PATIO 642-4103 NURSERY 646-3925 '
..
r
.
• DAU .Y PILOT EDITORIAL PAGE
'
ReaChing T oo
Jme Huntington Beach councilmen seem to be
stret<hlng a point in their desire to establlsh a scenic
corridor between the tjvic center complex on Maln Street
and Manston Avenue up to the new central Park at '
Far ?
Golden West Street and Talbert Avenue.
They· have added a 1.7 mile "civic eenter suffix/'
which gives the ~ity much tighter--architectural and
esthetic control over anything built in the long corridor.
The general purpose of such a suffix is to prevent the
construction of anything which could 'SerioU&ly conflict
or contrul with the ci\iic lac\Jity. . ·
A control zone. near cMc center iaclllties ls a fine
idea, put stretching It.over 1.7 miles seems arbitrary and
over-ambitious i! not whinislcal.
Valley leaders told county planners they opposed. the
project because of its densfty. .
Despite a previous assurance by county supervisors
that county planning would recognize a ~lty's •ll!.>ere of
lnfiuence, the project was approved over the very strong
protest of the city. Apparently the developer overlook·
ed checking Fountain Valley's'feeUng about the_proJect
before assuming he could get city water.
The council's action probably won't stop tpe ~part
ment.s -water can be brought in from another city -
but the angry rebuttal by Fountain Valley is not sur-
priSing ·considering the way their . desires were totally
ignored by county officials,
11 councilmen really believe the central park and C d Co •
city hall should be one sphere of influence, imagine them am us an mmumtv
--.;i16Wlng -a-grey;-t1ve-.tory-cement-Mtice-next-to_T_al_be ____ :::_~;:.~~:';~~~~~~~;~===• :;:~=,_;·~·:,._ ___ _j::==
o agencies ave com 1ne errort:S o u an ou -
,
The corridor proposal was argued more than a year door, grass-covered amphitheater on the campus of
ago and the council turned it down. Three councilmen, Golden West College in Huntington Beach.
Jerry Matney, Al Coen and Ted Bartlett -opposed it The Coallt community College District first agreed
this ti!"•· too. It's too bad the others 'didn;t follow. .io the proJ.ect two weeks ago, and last w~ek th~ city of
Apar tment Dilemma
It -aeems a drastic action, but Fpuntaln Valley
councilmen have refused to sypply water from city water
lines to a 256-unit apartmenl'!omplex planned on county
territory along Harbor Boulevard. -
Their frustration with the project ls understandable.
Huntington Beach added its formal approval.
'fhe coUe~e will provide one acre on the east side
of its campus for the amphitheater. College students will
also provide the desiin for it and much of the labor to
build it. The city will chip in nearly $12,000 for land·
scapine ancj nrovide ~ome eouinment for land1<caoine.
Once completed in the spring or summer of 1974,
the' amnhitheater will seat 2 .. 500 to 3.000 peoole for out-
door C{'lncetts, soeeches. meetinl!'.s and dramatic presenta-
tions. It will. serve both the needs of the campus and
interP.c:t.~ of t.he community.
The proposed apartments adjoin the city and are with·
In Fountain Valley's sphere_ of influence as apl!J'Oved by
county supervisors. Some day the apartments are deS6
tined to become a part of Fountain Valley.
But these apartments ha>e nearly twice the density
that would be allowed in Fountain Valley. 'Fountain
The Golden West amnhitheater is the tyne of coo~
erative effort to make nublic funds and facilities i:;erve
mult.inle public uses alI cities and schools should at-
tempt. • H
'The job of vice president may not be much, but the ripoff
fringe benefits are great!'
Tour~sts Can
See More
Than Natives
~YDNEY J.HAR.RI~
Dear
Gloomy
Gus
President Albert?
-P.O.
Nixon Plane
Remodeling
Bill Soars
WASIDNGTON -The U.S. Treasury
has already subsidized President Nixon's
luxurious living at San Clemente and Key
01M1n,. o ... c1mm111t1 '" Ml'lllttMI "' Biscayne. Now it is ponying up $1,785,000 :::;" " ... ..,. • ~~S:, r:' :': to deck out his jet to suit H.R .. ,.... ,. o.._, CM, DllllY P'lltL Haldeman's and Pat Nixon's ideas of
• It has become one or the liberal cliches posh air comfort. .
that you can 't know a people, or .a couo-The White House recently ordered a
try, until you ha\•e lived there a long traveler Is going to. return with a stupid new jet from Boeing to replace the well-
time-and therefore the tbr~week and c!~minded ~ew of the country he traveled "SPirit of '76" as the President's
Cottgress Seeks Trade Agree111e t1 t Stt•itags
'
U.S.-Russia Pledge Shak~n
WASHINGTON-Under the s t e a d y
battering· or heaillines now dramatizing
the courageous struggle for civil rights
by intellectual dissidents in the Soviet
Union, President Nis:on's pledge to give
the Russians equality with othe{ nations
in trading with the
U.S. is at least tem-
porarily doomed.
The root cause of
the trouble far an-
( EVANS ·NOVAK )
ond, persuade the committee to pass the
Corman-Pettis compromise. ,
UNDER THIS stral~e vc'te on the
most-favored-nation clause (Title Five in
the highly important trade bill ) would be
postponed until just before the bill is
that no one in the White House thought clea red by the commiltee~and ready t.or
possible when the pledge v.•as made at action in the lfouse. '
the Moscow summit 16 months ago. That way, administration strategists
hold. !he momentum of a favorabl.e vote
ONE TENTATIVE rescue operation in committee might carry the biU
went down the drain this week when through lhe House without tbe Mills-traveler to Europe is to be despited and _ baa v1s1ted-but thia would be ~ if be lead plane. Haldeman personl\lly too k ._,__ __ . di!regardecL.wbenJ.~ us bis ~t three yew there, as well as three charge of )he interior decoratil}I and
"91mltki-"oplnlons" ol the countries he weeks. Travel tiiiiiileJJa--oiilytlli! tii08d; btlor~ he bliifliillShe<l;-llletilllDiid run
tedates the decision
by~Russiao-au1lh<?\"~C'
and No.be 1 p~
Secretary .of State Henry Kissinger Vanik amendment. Then, when the <--~----"ca'°'n'°ce;U;;:e'i-ac:;:triI·p~to::t:;,he.,-.;:W;;:a:::y"-s ccanO-d;:=.-:Mi:e'!ans::---SenaWVerstMr-rilthe-bill=wre10~C01F, __ _,
has brieOy tOW"ed. it narrows the narrow-Just M moo.-, · W, to-.$1.5 million.
'I'bere i$ some truth in that viewpoint, tends to make g~ men better and bad _.:_ "8EN B'AT NIXON foun<l out about
Winner Alennder
Solzhenitsyn a n d
but also a lot of false.hoOd. For it, ii poal· men worse. 1? -Jbi appointments, she rut aa'<'alr pocitt.
ble to visit a new country _for a few . Bl.Tl' A tourist''wtth some sense, taste 'lbe fonner top White, 'H°'* aide, with
other Russian in-
teilectua1s to go public with their deeply
emotional grleyance against the Kremlin . weeks and see it ln and background can oflen ·capture a
a way that the na-mor.e_ac.Cur~te RQrtrtiLQI _a na_tiQnBl
lives can no longer spirit than ·the oldestli\habilant. What
see it. the native takes for granted (u almost a
Habit dulls the , part of nature), lhe touriat views as a
edge of observation. cultural tra!t.
We Americans, for t_ Our natJonaJ obsession wilh "bigness"
inStance, a c c e p t for i1a own sake, u an example, is
ourselves and our scarcely notl~ by ourselves: but to the
custom! 90 natural---foreiper-it-provides a-usefuJ-key-for--
ly and easily that understanding many of our strange ways.
we no longer have a perspective on COUNTJUF.S cannot see themselves
ourselves. An educated and intelligent any more 'clearly than indJviduala can.
European can ll'UP a better idea of • No one la\O•• what he really loolia like
what we are like, precisely becaue be from the outside; the mirror ,gives us at
is DOt himself a part Of the soclaJ pro-best a vague I and changing 8P.
cess here. proxtmation. But a stran.ger, taking a
AFl'ER a while we do not notice fresh and careful look at us, can often
famlUar scenery. We pass it every day tell more a boot our penonalities and
on our way to work or shopping, but v.·e deepest yearnings ln a half-hour than we
do not really see It. The same is tru~ of can know about ourselves after years of
our national habits, defects and vices. patient self-examination. ~
The emotional and social scenery is so 'lbe three-week tourist Is neither to be
close to us that our angle of vision cannot despised nor disregarded; he may be
include it. superficial, but he is just as likely to be
Obviously, a stupid, close-minded right.
The root cause is the highly successful
campaign or--uemocrauc sen. Henry M.
Jackson of Washington, backed by the
powerful American-Jewish community,
to use the issue of trade equality as a
typical Prussian efficiency, had put' the club to . for~ Moscow. to permit totally
staff uarters between the presidential free emigration of SoVlet Jews to ,Israel.
q 'I suite and the quarten for extra fam1 Y_ -BUT-THA1'-campaign-by-Jackson and ~~u=~d have permitted top staffers Rep. Wilbur Mills or Arkansas, chairman
to maintain their 24-hour-a-day access to of the Ho~ Ways and Means Com-
the President, but the arrangement mittee, backed by a clear majority in
would have forced family aod iuests to both the House and Senate, has now been
squirm through the staff quarters to visit galvanized by the shrewdly publicized
the President and First Lady. civil rights struggle of Solzhenitsyn,
After she discovered what Haldeman nuclear physicist Andrei D. Sakharov and
had done, Mrs. Nixon, wM.often has laid other brave civil libertarians centered in
down the Jaw to her strong-willed bus-~1oscow.
band, insisted that the pl!f,ne be re-The net result as of today: something
de.signed to her own liking. As a result, close to panic in the Nixpn White House.
the Air Force, which had faithfully The President's cherished policy of
followed the original Haldeman specifica-detente with the Soviet Union , sym-
tions. is now spending another ,285,000 to bollzed by his pledge to give Moscow
comform to Pat's request that the guest both U.S. credits and most-favoredCDation
lounge be next to the Nixon quarters. trade treatment, now confronts a threat
tain the original Jack.soil amenctmeni--is "Committee intended to reverse the sent to a Senate-House conference early
disastrous tide and convert enough 'mem-nex t year,..-& compromise woWd. emerge
hers to defeat the Jackson amendment. protecting'the Presidem's opU.Orlto~p
A major reason Kissinger 's appearance his pledge to Leonid 1Brezhnev, tlle Soviet
was postponed was that a telephone talk Conlmwlist party leader. !.;-
between Mills, recovering from his back _ ALL TllAT now-looks li'·-·~ -·"~hful operation down in Arkansas, and Rep. Al 11.a w~
Ullman of Oregon, acting committee thinking, in spades. The strenuoU~ efforts
chairman, decreed its futility. Mills flatly by J\tr. Nixon, by Kissinger, himself
declined to change his position on the Jewish. and by other high adminLstration
Jackson amendment (which, with liberal aides to choke off the rabid suPPort for
Democrat Rep. Charles A. Van+k or Ohio, ..-!he Jackson amendment In t be
he is sponsoring in the HoU.se). A mer i can· Jewish community-
''wherev~~as.mec__<I 1'~ REFUSED to bOw-to [ref;'"zied Jewish leader told us-has failed.
Whlte House requests that be shift to a J\'laking that failure worse are the
less rigid amendment sponsored by Rep. deeply emotional civil rights stories from
James C. Corman, a Democrat, and Rep. Moscow and the sudden attack On liberal
JeCry L. Pettis, a Republican, both of Democratic leaders here by Soviet in-
Califomia. That amendment would give tellectuals for relu.sing to face \be facts
the President much-needed flexibility, about ci vil rights In the Soviet Union.
while preserving hia power to use the Deeper lmpllcatlons lie a he a d ,
most-favored-nation issue as a continuing particularly on bow lhe KnlpJ.in Will
device to pressure Moscow. react when it falls to get deli•atY on the
Administration strategists are no1v Nixon pledge. Also deeply, iltolved is
hoping Kissinger will exude enough American big business, whl~ •likes t.he
persuasive charm · on the commi ttee smell of profits from vastl.Y. trade
within the next two weeks to do one of with RuSsla: But In Its pre t• rg.ood,
two things: first, get committee approval those conslderaUons-and pe even
of the most.favored-nation ,proviso . for the full bloom of detente · · U-seem
Moscow With no strings attached; or, sec-wilmportant to this eoi;ress.
•
Breast Cancer Debate Reveals Flaws • Ill Ethics Co 1 e .
' . • • • l Differing Views 011 Need for R adical Surgery Create Dilenima for Won1e 11
' ' : WA SID Nu ;ON -The elhlcs of
! Amert.can mediclne which sometimes
: make It preferable to let another doctor
kill a poUenl rather: lhan disagree with
rum a110 make lt lni-
poalble for a prac-
Uclnl pll.vslclan to
be a publki contn>
verslalist. Howevet,
Dr. George Crile Jr.
does not flt that
desctlptloo. The re-
cently relfred head
tJ the Cleveland
Qlnlc's department
ol surgery has violated the rule of the'
brotherhood by pubUlhln1 "What Women
Should Know About the Br ... t Cancer
Cootroveroy" (Macmillan, 19'73).
Excerpts from thl book appear in this
mooth'o laue of Ms. And Dr. Crile has
appeared oo Barbara Wallen' TV show
for women to dispute with physicians .mo don't •G"' with him about what you should do I( you're imluc:ky ·enough to be
the one womon In 17 who gets this
disease. Interest In the subject ls intense
no1 only becaUle of the hy1tutcal'fe1r ot
cancer that all Am~rlcarw have, but also
because this 11 the commonelt C8Ule or
dealh of women betweeo the ages ol 17
and 65.
On the SOlllewh~t btighttr side Is \hat
a woman who contract! the dllease bu
an excellent chance of living tong enough
Io die of oomelhlnl else. Whether you
want to ·call It 1 eure or not, the doctora
are relatively 1uecellful at culling thlt
, tlod of cancer out, yet ao unknoWlt
nwnber of women would rather die of
cancer of the breast than let the
surgeons have at them.
THEIR CHOICE OF death over treat-
ment is undentandable after you read
Or. Crile's description of radlcal mastec-
tomy, Ihe moel frequenUy used surgical
procedure. The operaUon not only takes
off the breast, but the chest muscles and
m~ of what we laymen would call the
armpit. The reault ls a ' • g r e a t
deformity" to whlcll mo,,t women, Dr.,
Crlle t'ells m, make a "satisfactory
' ....,;• !.
I'
( VON H OFFMAN )
physical and emotional adjustment ...
For those who do not, bow ever, tbe pill is
a bitter one." ln a Culture that puts su~h
eroUc emphasjs on the female breast it
must be just about as tough: 4i1R women
who do make Dr. Crlle's "satisfactory"
adjwitment.
PUNCH
"/ thou.ght it would be•. nice gesture to include a m•"!b" of
tho staff." -
.AlJ of this suffering would be bad
enough if there were general agreement
that radical mastectomy is the best
means of treatment. Dr. Crile maintairul
that all that culling, hacldJ\g and
slashing away of hwnah tissue. isn't
necessary in taking care of a localized
cancer of the breast. A far less radical,
painful and maiming operaUon can do
th~ job, or so says Dr. Crile.1
"WHY mEN," the doctor asks, "When
most European surgeons have abandoned
radi~I surgery, do the majority of
American surgeons persist ln performing
radical mastectomies? And bow, in the
face of so many contrary studies tOD-
ducted in England and Scandinavia, can
American surgeons remain c:oavinced
that their patients' survival is improved
by lnfllctlng on them the dlsablllUes and
deformities of radical mastectomy ?"
One explanation might he that the doc-
tors make more money from the more
radical operations; another might be that
while w~ can see lhe fashion ,
superstltlOn and I g n o r a n c e ln lhe
medicine or other nations, we~can't see It
ln our own. Dr. Crile's hypothesis is that
they probably keep cuttlng the women
because ''.it would seem to these
1urgeons a betrayal pf all the women on
whom they had performed radical
ma stectomies to admit that t h e
mutilation had been in vain."
ltavlng learned that she has breast
cancer and having been told the method ,
of treatment her doctor will probably
recommend ls needlessly e1penslve and
'
' . . .
unnecessarily cruel, what does a woman
do? Dr. Crile he some suggestions:
uREFUSE TO submit to radical
mas tectomy ..... there is no longer any
justification for ita use. Do not sign
permission for a radical. Find a doctor
who will do a modified radJcal operation
•.. If you elect to be treated by a partial
mastectomy, remember it takes more
skill and knowledge of breast cancer to
do this operation properly than to
remove all lhe breast. Pick your surgeon
accordingly."
That sounds like good advice unless
you 've met a woman living under the
tentative di agnosi.!I of breast cancer.
She's in no shape to argue with the doc--
tor, to refuse to sign legaJ papers or pick
a surgeon of uncommon skill and
knowledge. IJow is she ever suppcm!d to
DAILY PILOT
Robert N. Wetd, Publi&het
Thomas Kcevil, Editor
Barbara K rei(>ich
Edftoriat Page Ed itor
Friday, September 28, 1973
J t
do this la11t when lhe1 medical profession
will not pennlt itseU *ke 'any kind of
judgment on the ~ce of Its
members. ~body witQ M.D. is as
good as anybody else.
So Dr. Crile's advice , as a practical
matter, Is worthli!:38. lf we don't know
hOw to find a goocM 'l'V repainhan, how
can we know . heW to ·hire a good
surgeon? J
What's rieedcd js,a new1klnd of health
professional, a non-practicing doctor who
goes to separate rnedical schools, who
treat& no one, pretcrlbes for no one, but
who is paid to represent lhe sick and
distraught in their negotiations with our
healers."°Such an occupation already ex-
lsbi in lhe auto..obile repair industry.
The least \Ve can do Is to treat ourWves
as w'll as we do our cars.
.J
1ltt': ftiitoria! P'I• of the Daily
Pilot .eeks to inlonn ud tlimulate
readers by p~U.ns on this pag@
dlwl"le co1nmentary·on top!~ ot In-
ter.st by l)'ndlca1ed eolwnnilts and
~•rloonlats, by providinc a forum tor
ttadcn ' views and by PrttenUq this
new•l*Ptt's opinions and ldeu on
current topict. 'f1'e .editorial opin\oN
of the D1111y Pilot ap~ar onl.y In the
edltorlal coluntn at lhe top of lhe.
J!olJt. Opin ion. itpm;1Gd by the rot.
umnlsts, 1nd ~artoonlrlt Md Jetl.t:r
wrltera are their own and ,., erdlnf.
mt.nt or lhelr "riew• ~ \hi D&lb'
Piiot ~Id be lnferTfd.
, •
•
Friday, Stpttmbtr 28, 1973 DAll,_Y PILOT S .
Winds ~tabside
Brush Fire Quelled
Suspect in Body
Theft Surrenders
_A,...,i'~· INDIAN JEWELRY
By 'The Associated Prtss
Subsiding Santa Ana wind!
enabled 400 fire fighters to
stamp out .a brush fire that
burned uncontrolled for 2~
houn, destroyin&!'1"'1rly 13,
acres or wilderness a n d
recreational land south of'
Camarillo.
FIR£ CREWS also fought
nearly a score or other !ires
BIG PA~ADE AND
LOBSTER BAKE SATURDAY
GRANADA HIU.S !&OD Chatsworth St. l !ORllANCE Sepulveda and Kriri1hotJlf
WOODLAND HlllS 2l500 YrcJory Blvd lAKlWOOD Carson Si. aOO P~ramount 81\"d,
RIVllSID( 3520 Tyler St. IUfNA PAll8fath and flr""gethorpe
SANTA ANA 3900 South 8rislol SL ORANG( Garl!!n Giove 81vd. 111d M~nchf:a
•
011n w11kd.,1 9:30 to 9:30 -SuHays 10 to 7.
WESTERN STATE UNIVERSITY
COLLEGE OF LAW
OF ORANGE COUNTY
FULL-TIME LAW STUDY PROGRAM
• NOW AVAILABLE
• If YOU HAVE •n AA d•9•H,
• In :'", Of 3 ye.1n of full-rime l-w •ludv P!i-16
clo•uecrn houri pc< ""'"'lj, or
liL.1:4.-or._4 yur.L..lli rwt:lime [d•y, ..L~!Ji...ng,~ _
wMl•ndl l•W ~'...tr ll cl.aue1 pet week, 3-A hout1
?'' (l•>if, •
• You <•n etfn ycur Juri, Oocrcr IJ.0.1 degrtt, ind
~com•
ELIGIBLE TO TAKE THE
CALIFORNIA BAR EXAMINATION
WllTE 01 PHONI FOi INfOIMATION 01 CATAl.OGUf..
800 South Brook~urst
An•heim 92804
1714) 635-3453
SAN FRANCISCO I UPI\ -
A pipe bomb blew up outside a
basement area window in San-
Francisco's Old Feder a I
Building early today, starting
a fire that caused damage
estimated at between $5,000
and $10,000.
FLAMES SCORCHED as
high as 60 feet on the
building's while stone wall and
poured in a window to damage
a maintenance shop for elec-
trical repairs, although no one
was injured.
No Penalty
Against
Spiritualist
THE 'BLAST occurred at
about 1:30 a.m .. but there was
n o immediate information
linking , it to a similar ex-
plosion at about the same tin1e
on the ninth floor of th e 111'
Building in New York Cily.
l\1RS. ASHER b a s said
pi..tblicly that the expedition
found traces of Atlantis off the
coast of Spain. However scuba
divers who participated in the
search said remnants of the
legendary sunken continent
never were found.
Schooling
l1i Massage
Licensed?
WS ANGELES (AP)
Cowtty Cowtsel John H .
Larson is preparing ordinance
Ri h F th I t amendments intended to c a er nnocen tighten conlrol over massage
schools i n unincorporated
LOS ANGELES (AP ) -A In Bel Ait· Shooting ar~n's deputy, Frederick
S>-year-old "spiritual healer" R. Bennelt, said Thursday the
y,·hose backers include Presi-amendments will r e q u i r e
.dent Nixon 's ad;;,vi~sec:ir-T.on~co"in~--~SA"'..fNT'--'J'A'::~"'l"O"'N"'ICA~_cAP~t.--=:__;A"__~~~led~eiros' attorneys bad county licensing for a I I
sumer affairs, y,•on't have lo wealthy Bel Air bu!inessman argue<l.-tharMedeiros had shot massage parlors w h o s e
pay a fine for his conviction of has been acquitted of murder Nieto on the porch of his home emp1oyes or students receive
practicing without a license. in self defense. fees or tips'from the public. Munl-,,-~1 '"urt Judge Mary in th. e shooting death of his
E \" 1 ~ 1~.ed It Dep. Dist. Atty. Richard J . Bennett said the proposed . , a ers ev1 no pena y married daughter's lover. Chrystie contended Medeiros amendments have the support
Thursday against Frank A Superior Court jury of admitted in police tape of legitimate schools of
Hevesy, noting that Hevesy seven men and five women recordings that he "lost his massage, whose students are
had won a retrial for a 1971 found Frank Medeiros, 56, in-head'' and fired at Nielo. trained without any contact
conviction on the same charge nocent 0 f second-degree Medeiros' married daughter, with the public.
after paying a $750 fine and murder Thursday in the Jan. Joanne Miranda, 26, had Bennett said the ordinance
serving \wo years probation. 27 slaying of Thomas Nieto, broken up with Nieto just amendments will be proposed
A h1unicipa1 Court jury 28. The jury had received th e prior to the shooting after liv-to the county supervisors at
Our tr1der h•• if''t rttumed from
the ZUNI RESERVATION with en
exciting colltction of 9•nuln•
ZUNI NEEDLEPOINT
And lnley
For the be•t selection of REAL
INOIAN MADE J1welry, Rl.191, K1chin11
and 81skot1. Do comt by
Ju1t To Browse or Buy ' I
_,""f"di4e "'"'"'~''-3355 Via Lido, Newport l••ch I• ,..._,,._.... 675-1700 Clostd Su":& Mon.
OVERCOME INFLATION!
-' the tm ... lowl tArt Fettlvtil Gro11t1chl
SUNDAY AFTERNOON : SEPT. 30 AT 5:00 P.M.
S'°HSOllO t Y
First Church of Christ, Scientist, L•gun•
Chllill Cl,_ 11 ltle Cho~ Hl9h Drlv•
"Avoid Thi1 Fix .,. Call lix"
•~x · •••Yta<owiMY INC.
:1101 LAO.UNA <AM1'0Na0&9
LAGUNA •IACH
A COMPLETE PAINT, STAIN, AND FINISH
REMOVAL SERVICE
WE PREPARE YOUR TREASURES FOR
EASY REFINISHING
WITHOUT LYE, ACIOS OR HARMFUL
MATERIALS
Nearly Everyone
Listens to Landers
_APl'._LY __QW FOR DA)'., EVENIN ~OR
WEEKEND CLASSES,
found Hevesy guilty May 17 of case earlier in the day. ing with him intermittently. their meeting ~y.
operating without a business1-.~;,;:;;;;;..~;;;;~;i;.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~~~~~i;io;;;;;;;;;;;;ii;;;;;;;;;;;;..,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;i;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;,..,..,..;;;;;;;;;;,..;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;,..;;;;;;;;;;,..,..,..;;;;
1iceose after an undercover in-I•
IN SEPTEMBER OR FEBRUARY SEMESTERS
vesligator said Hevesy charg-
ed her four years ago for hyp-
nosis treatments for ul cers.
Hevesy contended he could not
be prosecuted since h~ was
engaged in a religious prac·
t ic~.
STUOIHTS lllll&ll fOI NDllAllT JHSUUO m.»INT lo.utl
• A»IOVIO FO• YllllAHS
OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK HOURS: 10·6
LARGE AA
RANCH
EGGS
69~
Special E9g Pric1s
Good Thru Wed., Oct. 3
'SEEDLESS
CANTALOUPE
ALWAYS
TOP
QUALITY
6
FOR
Coming Soon
GRAPES OUR FAMOUS
PUMPKIN
PILE 25~ Over 40,000
Pounds Of Pumpkins
Wholesale To Restaurants Dally
2016 NIWPORT BLVD.-COSTA MESA
INEAR BAY ) ' PHONE 646-5718
\,
•
e'll . wait on you.
Till 7:10.
You can get
all these services:
Checking Account Deposits
Check Cashing
Savings Deposits
Savings Withdrawals
Savings Bonds (Cashing & issuance)
Money Maker Depqsits
Money Maker Withdrawals
Master Charge Payments
Federal Tax Deposits
'
New Savings Accounts
New Checking Accounts \ ·~\~"-11h""'i;:'.;'l"J~~·
Loan Payments l · f ,
Utility Bills ';__ , ,• <.;)
Money Orders ~..;,..
Traveler's Checks
Master Charge Cash Advance
Consumer Loa1' Applications
Cashier's Checks
Xmas Club Payments
Southern California First National Bank
I
•
At the drive-up window
of these offices.
(If the First National office where you
have your account doesn't stay open
late, just use any of the offices listed be-
low. Because if you have an account
with us, you have an account with all
First National offices.)
Orange County
Cypress
Huntin$ton Beach:
Adams Avenue
Beach Boulevard
Saddle back
1 Sunny Hills
Westcliff
Los Angeles County
Bellflower
Lakewood
<I'
D1 1ive through, Monclaf-and Frida}'
Member f ,DJ.C.
.. -
•
f • •
,
\
l
\
•
J_
I,
•
\
)
\
-
• ..
" • -• ANIMALogk¥.,..,... '
• • .
HUNTINGTON BEACH
E.O.M.
Can't Win
In Fight __
Over Mail Women's Fashions Girls Dept. ·
From Wire Services
WASHINGTON -Joiepb
La.bey or New York com·
plained to his coDgressman
that the Post Ol'Iice kept sen-
ding back mail properly ad·
dreS9ed to him, stamped "Ad·
dressee Unknown."
The cOngressffian, Rep .
Jonathu Bingham (D-N.Y .),
wrote Jo1tpb A. Matukoal1,
the congressional liaison of·
ficer for government relations~
Matukoni s wrote to
Bingham t'liat "the improper
ha!)dling or Mr. Labey's mail
was caused by a mechanical
failure in a n e w 1 y im-
plemented central mark-up
system."
Bingham took Matukonis'
letter and enclosed it with a
letter of hls own to Lahey,
telling .him that the problem
was corrected lmmedlate1y.
Unfortunately, Lahey did not
get the letter. lt was returned
to Bingham, stamped "Ad·
dressee Unknown."
WASHINGTON -Stephen
B. King, who served as
l\1artba Mitchell's bodyguard
during part of the 197'.!
presidential campaign. has
been rebuffed in his effrirts to
obtain a career job wirh the
Agriculture Department.
Instead, King was given a
PEQ~E-
0 69 ONLY WEDDING GOWNS
Samples White Only 8-12
REDUCED
0 25 ONLY GROUP I DRESSES
Cotton-Polyester. Sleeveless. S/S 9.
12 ............. : .................. 0rig. 10.00 How
0 20 O~LY GROUP h DRESSES .
CotfonJp()jyestdr, asst 'colors 8-12
'orig. 10.00 Now
. 0 25 ONLY GROUP Ill DRESSES
Polyester-COtton Asst.· Colors 141h-
22V2 ................. Orig. 15.00-20.00 Now
0 5 Dress&l.lacket Ensmbles 12-16
AO%
. Ofig.'43.00 Now21.88
El 15 Dress Floral Print 8-18 ....... Orig. 15.00 Now 7.88
:! 12 Dresses Poty·Cotton.Prinl.
Orig. 12.~20.00 Now 6.88
CJ 10 Pantsuits P°'}'-Col!on Plaid 10-16 ·
. Orig. 18.00 Now 5.88
~ 6 Pantsuits Solid ~10-14
Orig. 21.00Now12.88 ~ 1 O Long Dresses 8-16 Orig. 21.()().4().00 Now 14.88
LJ5 Long Dresses w/Jackets 12-16
. Orisr-40.00-20.88
051'.!SlzeLong Dresses 14'h-18'12
Orig.15.00-12.88
015V..S£ze llfess&Jaclcet Enaembles ·
Qr1g, 23.00 Now 9.88
0 5 PantsuilS 12-16 ...,_Orig. 80.00.84.00 Now 45.88
!J 5 Pantsufls·10·16 ..... Orig. 52.00-flQ.OO-30.88
' '
Sportswear •
Women's & Jrs.-
0 12 O_NL Y FINAL CLOSE. OUT GIRLS
DRESSES .88 Brol(en sizes ..•.•••... 01ig. 2.50 Now
0 40 ONLY L/S SWEATERS
Pullover Style, Red, white 7-14
Orig. 5.50 Now
0 20 ONLY LARGE BEAD BRACELETS
In assorted pastel colors!Orig •. 66 Now
288
.55
LJ iJ 40 Girls Shons ......................... Orig. .88 Now .25
'.'"] 25 Tank Tops S-M-L ...... --···-····-· Orig_ ,66 Now .25 f~ 10 Polyester Oressl!is4-5-6 ...... Orig. 3.99 Now2.88
'.::::.! 10 Polyester & COtton Dresses. Orig. 4.99 Now 2.88
Infants Dept.
lJ 24 ONLY ROSEBUD COM.FORTER
Dacron Filled, PinR. Yellow
Orig. 5.15 Now '
3ss
C 20 ONLY THERMAL BABY Shawls
BJue Only, Warm & Washable
· Orig.4.00Now 288
O 146 Infant Jumpes 12 M0;-2T. Orig. 6.00 Now 4.88 ::! 15 Infant Dresses (Close oul) •.• Orig. 2.88 Now 1.88
C 1 Carriage & Convertlble Stroller AS IS
Orig. 32.88 Now 24.88
D 10 Light Wt. Jackets ................. Orig. 2.88 Now1.88
~ 19 Sundress w/matching hals .. Orlg. 3.88Now1.88
0 1 lnfants Dressing TableAs Js
. Orl!j.1B.88Now12.88
C 1 Wooden Play Pen Damaged
Orig.17.00Now12.88
Boy's Dept.
L] 10 ONLY MISSES BLOUSE QulanaNytonAsst.Prints_ lll-lG
688
0 ·37 ONLY BOYS SLACKS
Orlg.13.ooNOW . Cuffed & Unculted Poly & Cotton
Q.l -ONL'l'.-Wc,e......_... 12-1ss1;mon1y . 4 88 • --_____ _,Qd!k5Jl8-8,98Now ' •
ain1ly Shoes
[!250 Women's Knit Kicker .......... Orig.4.99 Now1.44
'.:1 35 Women 's Rats & Heels
Ong. 10.00-16.99 Now 8.88
·:·_: 5 Wom.en's Flats & Heels .......... Orig. 9.99 Now 6.88
l]35 Men·s Harness & Cowboy Boots
Ong. 30.00 Now 24.88
lJ 25 Men's Dress Boot .... _, ..... Orig. 17.99Now12.88
:::__: 40 Boy's School & Dress Shoe
· · Orig. 8.99-10.99 Now4.88
~1 1 75 Girls School Shoes .... Orig. 6.99-8.99 Now3.99
O 60 Women's Canvas Shoe ....... Orig. 5.99 Now1 .88
'.:J80 Women's Fur Trim Sculf ........ Orig. 3.00 Now .88
0 40 Men's Dress Shoe ... -.... -Orig. 18.99 Now 12.88
825 Men's Canvas Shoe ..• ~ .. -.... Orig. 5.99 Now 2.88
Fashion Fabrics
I.] 10 ONLY ELECTRIC SCISSORS
Press Or Side Control Blunt End
Orig. 12.99 Now
LJ 45 Yds. ONLY KASMU CREPE
1 00~0 Acrylic Crepe 44"-45'' Asst.
Prints ...................... Orig. 2.69 yd. Now
iJ 40 Yds. ONLY SATEEN QUILTED
888
1 00~0 Cotton Asst. Colors. 45"''
Sportswear Fabric ......... Orig.3.98 Now 244 fff.
;:] 50 Yds. ONLY ARNEL NYLON PRONTS
65~a Arne/ 35% Nylon Asst. Colors 122 Orig.2.49yd.N9w Yd.
~·-1 sosk · , '-· eJns Yarn4 PJy .............. Orig.1.29 Now.77
: :SOYds.Asst. Aemnan1s .......................... : sew.OFF
L_.20 Yds. Ribbon ........ : ................................ .s()o,r. OFF
:;e-;
Housewares Dept.
0 5 Strawberry Canister Sels Orig. 3.99 Now 2.88
~ 3:i Creamer Glassc1Jl..-................ Orig .• 18 Now .10
[1 1 Salt & Pepper Set ........ _ ........ p rig. 3.99 Now 2.88
•""'1 414"F n o· ~ a . ·····-·····.................. rig. 39.88 Now 24.88 D 212" Fan .............................. Orig. 29.88 Now 24.88
~l 9 Dinette Seat & Back .............. : Orig. 5.34 Now 3.88
1::!26Cookie Cutter ........................... Orig.29 . Now .15 :.=! 72 Cake Decorating Nail Asst. ••• _. Orig. 12 Now .05
0 6Wood8read8oards ••• Orig. 8.88 Now6.88
Ll80Bikini Cake Pans ··---......... Orig. 2.99 Now 1.88
i_l 10 Chop & Serve Set ................ Orig. 6.88 Now4.81
,-~s2 w d . _; oo en Mug Racks .............. Orig. 1.98 Now .99 --2o w · Li OOdenWareMugs .• -........ Orig. 3.99 Now2.99
'._] 12 Scoop Wooden Candle Holders
0fig. 3.99 Now 2.81
'.:.! 1 O Pitcher Wooden Candle Holders
Orig. 3.99 Now 2.81 r.., 15 Kittle Candi o · -I e .. -............... -... ng.1.88Now1.22
O 5 Resin Coasters .............. -•.. Orig. 1.88 Now .99
r-i 4 Alarm Clocks o · B 19 ••-··& •• ~ Be c -·•••"•-•.,• r1g. • AUW .uv 0 4 II locks o · -·····-····..... rig. 9.99 Now 6.88 ~ 37 Fondue Forks ....... ·---·-Orig. 4.00 Now 2.88
0 11 Stemp Liquid Fuel ............ --Orig. 1.50 Now .99
~ 12 Soda King Super Charger ...... Orig. 1.49 Now .99
0 8 Table Lamps ...... -.... , Orig 31.98-46.98 Now18.18
~ s Pictures 24"x30" ...................... Orig. 1.68 Now .50 ,
0 7 Norman Rockwell Pictures. Orig. 24.88Now15.81
8 2 Ve!Vet Pictures ................... Orig. 80.00 Now 60.00
06Articho~e Pictures ................. Ori~. 3.00 Nowt9c
Home Electronics &
Major Appliances
J 04-4Pc.Multiplex stereo .Orig.199.95Now14l•
~ 6 s Track P1ayer wt Radio .... Orig, 159.95 Nowll.oo '"
O 1 Stereo w/Cqsette ........ Orig. 3.99.95 Now 244.00
Acrytic,M<.liti-OolorwdS*t . , 688 012 ONlY'BOY'S DijESS SLACKS
. ..Qr1g.'14.00 NOW 100% F'olyeSlar, Bro\vn & Black 12·14
Curtains
Dr-aperies~~~
& Domestics
0 13~c..Cooaol&.w~.359,95Jlc>w.2<1!,llO._ __
political appointment at the
same ulary -~-a year
-in the department's con-
gressional relaUoos secti on.
He began work there this
week.
King, 32, was g~rding Mrs.
Mitchell during a 1972 incident
in Newport Beacb tn which she
charged she was manhandled
and Injected with a sedative
shortly alter tbe Watergate
break-in.
LEWISTON -=Biologist Tim
Bw1oa says Califo rnia brown
bears prefer a mixture of
slrawberry jam and cat fOQd
to honey.
Burton, 28, has been trap-
ping bears in the rugged TttnJ.
ty Mountains ot Northern
callfornia for two years as
part of a study for the State
Fish and Game Department.
He experimented w I t h
several types of bai~ but 5'1·
tJed on the cat food and jam
because it seemed to be "the
gourmet favorite of bears."
One old bear liked It so much
she kept comlng back for
mor~ "We caught her seven
times," BW'ton said.
~UAMI, Fla. -\Vhen fire
broke out at home. 10-year--0ld
Hiraki• Ago1to remembered
the advice of Sparky, the fire
dog. She calmly tQOk her &-year·
old 1ilter, Karen. across the
street to a neighbor '• house
and asked Chrlltlan Pierre, 13,
to call the ,F.lre Departmenl
and her mother, who wa~ at
work.
Sparky, a fireman dttssed
as the fire dog, had visited
ruralda's achoo! tasl week to
give a talk on fire preventlon
and what to dQ in case of Ore.
ATHENS. Greece -Lady
Amalla Fleming, widow Or the
RrltlJh discoverer of penlclllln
and George Plytas, former
mayor of Athens. have aJ)lllied
for restoration or their Greek
citizenship. I ,._ lawyu for the two exiles
ssfd lnlertor M I n I s I e r
Stylfuol Polakoo wrote him
that both lq>pllcallons wero
berore the Council al Slate,
which Ii erpectod to make o
decision ....,, .
The Gree~ military regime
stdpped Lady Fltmlng_ and
Plytaa of their clllunJ!i!p In
1971.
~J!ttff)
Pllll&AY
in the l·Liiijijll1ll
'
I
0 ~ Y SHIRT JAC a MATCHING SHljlT Slim .............................. Ofig. 7.98 Now 5. 88
Med. On~~~~~~~1~~ ~ • 988 0 ~!J~LY PENNEY PETS SHIRTS ~ ~0~!,~~~~Nt~OMS 4-7~ .... ~.~.~~-~:?.:.~.:..~:~~~~-~~a= .99
Bro1<en Sizes ... Orig. 1!3.00.14.00 NOW 688 0 100 ONLY KNIT POLO SHIRTS 50~~ Cotton ·w,~ -Polyester ASsf. g
:::J 6'USBrownTurtltneck."-· Orig.6.00Now4.8a Colors2 30NLY O · 21' ~N 9 , -...... ng.~ow.
O PlaidPoiye>tar!lkirt .Orig.10.00 Now4.88 ·
0 4 Blaze,., Polyester, Navy or Red ·
!:J.coJr. Bikinis Polyfcotton Orig.17.00 Now11.81
SJr . Orig.10.00.12.00-1.88
.0 .Baggies ----·---Otig.J0.00Now4.88 D 10 Hi-Walst.rrouser ..... Orig. 15.00-19.00 Now9.B8 ·
8 10Riblmi1Cooniinatff Orig'.10.00-13.llONows.88
0 20 Stripe Hiprider & High Rise Pants
. ' ' Orig.11.QO.t2.00Now4.88
0\2~900!1edJr.Sl<irls Orig.10.13-1.81
Q24 ShortSho!ts&Jamalcas.o<tg.3.~.99 Now88c
030ShortSteeve~Tops .• Or1g. 2.88 Now1.88
t -• •
' '
WO~en's Lingerie .
Accessories
0 2S ONLY NYLON GOWNS \5
Sleeveless, Shift length, Yellow S·M ·
Orig.4.00 Now 188
0 11 ONLY TUNIC P.J.'1
100'?1. Nylon, Black, red, brown Small
Orig. 6.00 Now 288
0 36 ONLY SLEEVELESS SHIFTS t ~:. Cotton. Asst. Cofors 38-42
Orig. 5.00 Now 288
0 11 ONLY ROBE & GOWN SET
1 OOo/. Nylon, AsSt. Colors Dress
Lenglh,S-L ............... QrV.lr.00-688
0 50 ONLY BRA & llKlll SET
• 100% Nylon, \'<lll1o, oronge, purple one 1 81 size fits an .......... ~ ......... Of'lg. 2.50 Now'
0 B floct< Qot Volle Aot.e.10.16 ,
Or1g, 12.25-.88 D 30 Under Wire Tricot Bra 380 •• Orig. 5.00-3.88
020U.-Wire ~· Bro ••• Ofig.4.50 -3.88
0 180 ONLY ALL SHEER PANTY.HOSE
'°°'4 Nylon, 'Burgundy, ~m. Vol-• , 77 ~S-A-L ................. Orig-1.29Now •
·0 15 ONLY SHOULDER STRAP•HANDB4G .. 88 . Leather, Natural Color ... Orig. 6.00 Now ·I
D 1 O Suede Shoulder Bags Blee)<
-(. Orig, 8.00 Now 3.88
D 30 Shoulder Strap Handbag, leather
• ' Orig.12.00-·7.88
0 60, Jewefty,RopeS, E6rrings ........ Orig .99 Now .2S
0 8 Wl>ftil Shawl8 0ne size__;, Orig. 8.18 -1.88 0 10 KnltledCopesOneSi,te...-Orlg.8.$0-8.88 JJ~ Capita Wigs lllaokOnry_Otig.19.00-11.81
Men's Dept.
~ 50 ONLY DOUBLE KNIT SUITS
1cmo Polyester, Center Vent Two
Bottom ····--·-··Orig. B0.00 Now
4400
0 90 ONLY DOUBLE KNIT SUITS
1~~ polyester Center Vent Two 4988
CJ ~~o;:'~~-~~~~·;:;;·~~~~=T~~S
100% Polyester Center Vent Two Bottom ........... ___ •• Qrig. 57.95 Now
.39as
0 20 ONLY DOUBLE KNIT SPORT COATS
1001J.O Po/yeSter, Center Vent Two
Bottom-................. -.Orig. 47.95 Now
-2988
0 250 ONLY DOUBLE KNIT SLACKS
1 ~d Polyester Belt Loops Flare Leg 588 Orig. 13.l)Q Now
O ;sb Double Knit Fancies ...... Orig. 15.00 Now 6.88
~30Baggies1W.~otton ........... Orig. 9.9aNow 3.88
0 35 Baggies 50':1. Poly so~:. Collon
Orig. 9.98 Now 6.88"'4.88
030Coi'duroy Flares •. -.............. Orig. 7.98 Now 2.88
~85 Stf-e!ch Jeans ............ _ ••.. Orig.5.98 Now3.88
0 51 ONLY US DRESS SHIRTS Pofye~Jer Knit, Long Point Collar 399
. 15--1.S1h-161h ......... Orig.11.98 Now
029 QNLY MEN'S SCREEN PRINT TANKE/IS
100°/..:Cotton.Asst Colors SizeS-M 199 Orig. 5.00 Now
0 43 ONLY S/S SPORT SHIRT
P.blyester-Nylon, Asst. Color Size
S.M,t.:. .. : ............... Orig. 3.99·5.98 Now 1 !l9
0 81 ONtY FLANNEL P.J.'s
Button Front, Penn-PresfPrints S-~-L-
, XL .•.. : ... ~ ....................... Orig. 5.00 Now 299-
(t30 Prinl Acrylic.Swimsuits S-M
, Orig.2.99-3.98 Now2/.99
02d°1~1.Conon Tankers . RED. Sm ONLY
Orig.2.99 Now 2/.99
0 15 Mid-Ca.If Stretch Hose 10-13
' Orig. 1.00 Now2/.99
021 Assorted Toes .............. Orig.2.50-3.50 Now 2/.99
0121,H!tlOrBellsSm.OnlyOfig.3.50-6.50Now2/.99
0 45 ONLY PILLOW CASES
Muslin, Std. Queen, King Floral Solid
o,;g.2.49·3.19 Now 144
0 35 ONLY WASH CLOTHS
· 100~'0 Cotton, Blue Floral Orig .. 38 Now .25
0 60 ONLY KITCHEN HALF APRONS
100% Terrycloth, Yellow, orange 144 Orig. 2.00 Now u 100 ONl:Y APRONS & KITCHEN TOWELS
100%Cotton,Snoop~Des~n 88 144 Ong. 1.25-2.00 Now •
0 30 ONLY CHAIR CUSHIONS
Cotton Velveteen, Red Dinette Style 2/'700
Orig. 4.~ Now l -~
:J 50 ONLY DECORATOR THROW PILLOWS ~~·'·~~~-~'.~ .. ~~'.~'..~~.j~~j):.~.~~~ 2/700
0 25 ONLY MEADOW TIER CURTAINS
Flock Polyester, Red, orchid 24"-36''
Orig. 3.4!K.49 Now ,
0 15 ONLY ELAINE TIER CURTAINS
Polyester, Daisy Trim, Pink 24"-36"
Orig. 3.49'3.89 Now 188
O so Floral Vinyl Place Mats ····~······Orig. 1.00 Now .44
0 4 Pink Floral Bedspreads Full.Orig. 21.00Now16.88
0 3 1 ow,:. Acetate Blue Bedspreads Queen
Orig. 24.00 Now115.88
Q 2 Pr, Custom Drapes Club Weave Nat ..
Orig. 120.00 Now 62.40
C I Pr. Custom Drape Antique Satin Gold 163"x95"
Ortg.148.00 Now96.00
l~ 1 Panel Custom Drape Antique Satin Off White
67''x94Vi'' ............................ Orig. 75.46Now44.20
:::J 1 Panel Custom Drape AntiQue Velvet Green·
115"x88" ......................... Orig.166.00 Now127dSQ
Fashion Furniture
O 1 Trest!e DiningTaf?le ........ Orig.179.00Now122.00
C 2 King Si2e Head Board ........ Orig. 149.95 Now68.00
D 1 Chest With Doors .................... 264.00 Now 188.00
fJ 1 Triple Oresser. ................. Orlg. 255.00 Now188.00
;-1 1 Night Stand ......................... Orig. 82.00 Now66.00
·2 Bro~n Vinyl Ottoman ........... Orig. 59.95 Now36.88
i__! 1 Brown Vinyl Sleigh Ouoman Ong. 75.00 Now 25.00
; 1 1 GreenDinetteCha1r ............... Ong .27.00 Now8.88
. . 1 Black and Chrome Bar Stool Orig. 50.00 Now 25.00
C 1 Orange /Beige Love Seat.Orij:I . 299.00 Now188.00
0 1 Square ~amp Table ............. Orlg. 99,.95 Now SS..00
0 1 Sleigh LampTable ............... Orig. 71.00Now35.°oo
01SpanishSo£a Ofig.419.00 Now199.00
_ , JCPeriney
.O 1 Console Phonograph ...... Orig. 239.95 Now 99.00
D 10 Compact )Vasher ........ Orig. 149.95 _,09,00
0 1 Trash Compactor ........... Orig. 199.95Now179.te.
~ B Zig-Zag Sewing Machine .... Orig. 96.95 N-:00
D 8 Deluxe Stretch Sewing Machine
Orig. 1.99.9SN0'#1n.oo
0 4 Stretch Stitch Sewing Machine -
Orlg,139.95-119.00
Hardware Qept
D 4 Blad< & Dedier cordless Lawnmower
Orig. 139,99 Now 55.00
::)8 Oriental Hulch w/Metal Const
ShelvJng Unit 5 Shelves Orig. 29.99 Now18.88
~ 12 Single Control Kitchen Faucet
Ong.15.88Now10.88
0 2 cast Aluminum B-B-0 GriR Orig. 29.99 Now 18.88
O 6 Red Brick Fiberglass Fireplace
. Orig. 14(.95 N-99.91
012VariouaWalll.lghtFlldUfes ,
Orig.11.98-7.99-3.88
.
Sporting Goods & Toys
LJJ§ Fash1on &liouffifs .............. &Jg.f.\j Now ·.k
;J 12 Battle Board Game .............. Orig. 4.88 "'°"' S.44
!.J 15 Cascade Game .................... Orig. 6.99 Now ,.88
;.] 14 Big Jim Winter Clothes ......... Orig. 3l99 Now 2.44
0 6 Pedat Pak ............................ Orig.14.98 Nowl.88
:J 9 Aide On Locomotive······-···· .. Orig. 3. 19 Now 2.44
0 12 Banana Seats ...................... Orig. 2.99 N0w 1.81
tJ 15 Worn.en's Tennis Dress ...... Orig. 25.00 Now1.aa·
0 25 Tennis Racket lnitials ... --.. H•• Orig. 2.49 Now .44 !J 10 Lami/'18.ted Snow Ski Step in Bindings •"'
Orig. 31.99 -24.0& !J 4 Folding Pocl<et Knife acd Shea1h
Orig. 12.99-2.11
Auto Center
D 2 Alt&mator Genera1or
.Reg. Tesler ...•.... :............. Orig. 34.95 Now 12.la D 1 J.C. Penney DeJuxe8Tape0eck
Orig, 79.95 Now 69.95 iJ 3 Deluxe 6x9 Rear Speaker w/grill
Orig. 12.95 Now 6.aa 0 4 Sets. Seal Covet"s Fits Mosl GM Cani
. Orig.16.98-9.81 iJ 3 Steering Wheel Covers ............ Orig. 1.49 Now .81
!J 13 Pr. Smal Gar Ii.lats Bug Slyle
Orig. 6.98 Now 3.88 •
C)3 NytonSlipSeatCove!s-•• Orig.10.88-5.111
. . Y:fe ·know what you'relooking for.
Shop.·Penneys Hu~tlngton ~each • Mon. Thru Sat. 10 to 9:00 -Sunday Noon Till 5:00 P.M.
• • ~ J
1i
t
l F'tldly, ~1pttmbtr 28, 1973
Friday's 9osing Prices-Complete New York Stock Exchange List
Mte1~ 7 Gainers
NEW YORK (AP) -Im esters look a breather
Friday after the hectic upward pace of the past
:seven sessions, as stock prices slumped in slow
tradmg
Broker< generally attnbuted the decline to
profit taking, with investors seeking to ca.sh in on
recent gains
"The recent advance was too large to be sus.-
slainable," said Alan Shaw of Hams, Upham &: to.
--Nevertheless. most brokers continued to s~
basic long en rend 10 the-mar
•
SC DAILY l'ILOT JJ
'
Finance
Briefs
$ALT LAKE CITY (UPI) -
A Provo, Utah n>aD toed Mcr-
rllt, ~ch, Pierce , Fenner
and Smith for nearly $250,GOO.
Vidor I Cartwri,hl daimed
the brokerage firm UUltd
him and hi• ch1tdl'en lo l<>oe
$131,015 ln the stock marlcet
He wants the money back,
pl"' 1100,000 dama1.,.
e BARTOrller
OAKLAND (AP) -The Bav
Are111t1pld Tramil .Dtttr1ct'~
board.of dlRCtOl'I bu wted to
order too acldltl(llll);cm-nm
Rohr Indllsll'I..,. ,
The &-2 vole in favor or the
l40 I mlllloo conttact came
after !lay ~· Rohr
vice i>rtskllntr -~-the bosrd lhe MW ..,. ·-..S ex-
ceed lho l)itcllk>alkM euUin-
ed by BART. •. •
1
, • • •
• . .
•'
Today.'s Final
~ N.Y. ,Stoeks
VOL 66, NO. 271, 4 SECTIONS, 44 PAGES .. ORANGE COUNTY. CALIFORNIA FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 21, 1973 N TEN CENTS
Harbor School Library Thefts 'Unbelievable'
By L. PETER KRIEG
01 ''" ~"' '''°' .,.,, l?ft'3111!r 01:-U11!Newpo1 ~
ritesa Unified School District are experi-
encing what one English department
chainnan today called "an unbelievable
amount" of thievery by students.
All four high schools each reported
book losses in the neighborhoOCIOf $25,000
over the past three years for a 101al
loss amounting to roughly $100,000, li-
brarians said.
One high school library is installing a
$15,000 electronic book check system to
guard against theft.
A librarian at another school cri ticized
ttte:district administration for turning its ,
back on the problem.
Newport Harbor High School Librarian
Mn.Jm.L ~ said losses there have
averag~ 1,300 volumes each of the past
three years. Replacement costs, about
• $7.50 per book, are more than $14,000 a
year there.
She's getting the book magnetizing
system-similiar to security systems now
installed at airports -that will sound
, an alann if a book that has not been de-
seiuitlzed is carried through an exit g8te.
Mrs. Opel Price, librarian at Costa
Mesa High Schooj, said book thefts have
been lowest at her school. She only lost
about 500 books last year.
But Mrs. Price sard secu rity would be
better if §Choo! district off.icials would
ad1ni~ lhere is a ..e_roblem.
"'t know r should be ca1 efiiFWfiit f
say to the newspapers," Mrs, Price said,
"but the truth of the matter is that di s-
trict officia ls do not like to think or stu-
dents stealing books. They close their
minds to the problem," she said.
"And the)' look askance at anyone
who tries to raise the subject. They feel
there is supposed to be an atmosphere
of freedom on the campuses SQ if some-
one pushes for security they are dubbed
an old-fashioned custodian of books."
Corona de! Mar High School's English
Department Chainnan Dan Gillis directed
hiS' wrath at ille students themselves.
u OI~ e year," 1e .
~1~. Zatha Tallman, ·his school's li-
brarian, said losses have total 900 bool(s
each of the last three years.
"l think it's tifne the public is made
aware of the problem," Gillis said.
"Mrs. Tallman wrote a letter to the
school newspaper last year," Gillis said.
"But we have to hit the parents not just
the kids. The kids are doing the stealing
and they don't care," he asserted.
Gillis sa;d the impact of OOok thefts
goes far beyond that of dollar losses to
taxpayers .
"It hits the classroom teacher and the
•
kids," be said:j'Tbey are assigned pro-
jects'and can't get books .
-,. --!M~ng "'iCd
at home. That's the sad pert. They're on
a shelf while others are being deprived ,"
Gillis. said.
He encouraged parents to look through
books at home and tum them in if they
find any.
And he and the other librarians said
they didn't care where they were turned in. •.
"If they're given to a public libraty or
even juS't put in a book drop they'U get
to us," Giilis said.
"One major problem is that so many
•
or these books are out of ptjnl and hard
Lo replace,'' he said. Mrs; Jane Whale Estaocia-!-ligh-$chool.
librarl~n, said she has lost 4,000 book.°'
over the past four ye·ars, She said her
library is espc<:ially vulnerable lo thefts.
"\1le are situated in the mi~t ot the
quad and v;e are a circular library," she
said. "There is no way to keep the slu-
dents out."
J\.1rs. Tallman of Corona del Mar High
School echoed Gillis' criticism al student.
thells.
She said she was especially distressed
at the fact that she has to spend half
her budget allocation each year to re-
place books that have been stolen .
Bay Accord Near?
Newp_ort Plan Due i~ .'Few We~ks' ·
By JOHN ZALLER
Of IM DlllF l"lltf St.rt
SAN FRANCISCO -The top planning
official for the Califcmia Department of
Fish and Game disclosed here today that
he is nearing unofficial consensus agree-
ment on a plan for public acquisition of'
Upper Newport Bay .
"The reactions l have from various
government officials are all unofficial at
this point." said Jim McConnick, chief
planner of the Fish and Game Depart-
representatives on the field commiitff:,
a joint Cederal, st.ate, Irvine Company,
county, and city of Newport Beach com-
mittee charged with coming up with a
package {or eublic acquisition of the bay.
Supervisor "Ronald Caspers of Newport
Beach, who is not a regular member ol
the commltt.ee, then commented:
"What Supervisor Clari is saying is
that the county has been unable for · some
'
reason to get moving on this project so
we're passing the buck to the state and
federal government to take over for ut."
"That's oot true," said Tom Klein,
Clark's administrative assistant who at-
tended the meeting on behalf of the super~
visor.
"What we are doing is announcing that
we're willing ~o-cooperate fully with any
(See UPPER BAY, Pa1e ll
m~~~t I r .. 1 we are making good prog-'n Newport
ress toward a workable plan of public ,....~=: ... ~~:;::,~_ .. ;:'"'~=~A...,.,"*o:;za~r_· .t~m'"'1i=~n..,. ,_t~D __ e~n~s,...1_._t_.._, .... ·_Zo __ n_e_,_. ____ 1
\• -,
PASSERSBY ANO NEIGHBORS WITH GARDEN HOSES TAKE COVER FROM HEAT, SPARKS
They Kept Plamn From Sp,-..dlng to Nearby Home During Early Moments of Blaza
"still a bundle of. legal techni'calities
that need to"be deolt with. Blit we ... m
to be movinl·~d."
McCormlcl; ~ the di>closure that
he has been -kfni for about one month
on the project in an interview following
a meeting of the Upper Newport Bay
Fieti:I committee in 8alrFrancisco:--
Revoked"1oP -011'e Parcel
Wife of Nixon's
Brother 'Doesn't
Mind Wiretaps' .
' . ' From Wire Services
President Nixon's sister·in-Jaw. Mrs. F.
oGnald Nixon of Newport Beach. said
1tnrrsday she didn't mind if her
telepbOne was tapped by the White-
lli>use.
:Mrs. Nixon, .a guest at a black tic
W)iite House dinner honoring Prime
Mlpiiter Norman E. Kirk of New ·
~. also described the -President as HllJe most fantastic man and the greatest
ld:ader the counlr')' has: ever known."
~ was unaccompanied and rePor:ted
her husband bad to 'pass up the affair
~use he was sufering from severe
hiadaches and hai:t undergone a
dJagnostic spinal tap Thursday.
Reporters approached ~. Nixon dur-
ing the dancing after dinner. Asked about
reports tha t Nixon . bad her husband's
telephone tapped to keep tabs on Donald
Nixon's association with multi-millionaire
J:J:q,ward Hughes. she appeared a bit
ffustered but said:
"I have no comment, We Jove our
brother."
• Sbe· added later, when asked il 'she nllnded being tapped,."Not at all."
It was the sbor1!1st official _party
ahyooe could remenll>er at the White
!louse, The usual diplomatic toasts were ex~
changed, and the 91 gue•ta dined on
Royal SqUab. But the White House omit-
ted· the tradiU_onal after-dinner en-
tertainment, and rfixon bad escorted
Kirk out the front door by 10:35 p.m., a
good hour' earlier than usual .
Duri.ng the toasts, Prime Minister kirk
extended an open Invitation to President
(See DON NIXONS, Page Zl
Nixori Corifers
~ Witli Gromyko
' WASHING TON (UP!) ~ Presl-
d•nl Nixon and Soviet Foreign Ml~lster Andrei A. Gromyko coo-
• Jerrtd for two hours today in Nix·
on'o'Oval Office.
• Th< White llouse deecrlb<d the
~convcrsntlons as "extensive and
· wlde-ranglng."
" Arter the meeting, Nixon walked
'Gt'Olnyko to his wa!Ung llmo\1$.lnE:.
-•fie drove away, wit6 1 U.S. Secret
S.rllce •acort. ror a luncn meeUng
' wltn ~tary of State Henry A.
. • Kissinger Ill Uie ~tate 0ew1mcn1. . -
'
Mesa Bla~e Touched Off He said he could not yet make -an
official announcement about the plan be-
cause it has not. been approved by his
supervisor, Norman B. Livennore, state
secretary fl. natural resources.
B-y Youth With Mat-ches-However, McCormitk did say that he
.has..been..authorized to.proceed with IM>-
h!nd-the-scenes negotiatioos on the as-
sumption that if a concensua were reach-
ed, it would be approved .
• .1 -
MAPPED OUT -Maltese cross
lndlcates locatlon of Thursday's
lire ln county corridor between
Costa Mesa and Newport
Beach. Numbered dot> are fire
stations, Number 1 is county
fire statio n· al airport; 2 ls
Mariners station ~Newport; 3
,i9 119chester Street station in
Costa Mesa.
By RUDI ~1EDZIELSKI
A JJ.year-old boy playing with matches
touched off a $15,000 inferno in a
neighborhood just outside the Costa Mesa
boundary Thursday. ThL f I a m e s
destroyed two house trailers, a garage
and two storage sheds.
No one was injured in the spectacular
5:55 p.m. blaze battled by engine com-
panies from the Orange County fire
Department.
Major property losses were stµfered by
former movle actress Dorothy Dare, 2028
Santa Ana Ave., and her neighbor, ~frs.
Eve Dahlgren. 2032 Santa Ana Ave. Both
were a~ay when the fire broke out.
The intense blaze sent black clouds of
smoke over Costa Mesa. Witoesses .said
Jhe buildings we re fuUy involved when the.
first fire trucks arrived from their base
at Orange County Airport. .
Orange County firemen did not radio '
for as,,istance from the nearby Mariners
(See FIR£, Page l)
During the meeting itself, a spokes-
man !0< Fourth District Supervisor Ralph
Clark of Anaheim said as far as Clark
was coocemed, the county would be will-
ing "to pool its resources with any state
or federal agency Interested Jn acquiring
the bay."
Clark is one of Orange County's two
Sammy Davis Jr.
Now Casino Owner
LAS VEQAS (UPI) -Sammy Davis
Jr. has become the first black. man to
ho ld a gambling license as part oWner of
a major hotel on the Las Vegu "strip."
1be Nevada Gaming Commission
Thursday unariimously a p p r o v e d
issuance of a lice~ to Davis, qualifying
him to become a director o£ the
Tropicana Hotel. Davis owns eight per·
cent of the hotel, an interest worth about
12 millioo.
Lewis Still on Case
Venue Chang,e Denied
In Sauna Bath Trial
An Orange County Superior Courl
'judge refused Thursday to order a new
venue for a trial in which an Anahein1
w'oman will claim 1hal injuries suffered
in a health spa's sauna room led her to
seek sexual adventures.
Judge Walter Charamza rejected Sao
Francisco trial lawyer Marvin Lewis
Sr.'s bid to have the trial moved with the
comment that It would be impossible to
avoid publicity tn ttiat type of trial
•·anywhere in ca1uomla.''
l.A:lwis, representing Mrs. M a r i a .
Parson, ,431 and Fullerton ettm:ney
Donald Ruston , repreoentlhg lho Holiday
14ealth Spa or Orange, also moved to
postpone tbe lrlal date to mltJgate the ef-fects ot reoc-nt publicity. .. ·
Bui acting Presiding Judge Wlllltim C.
Speirs later rejectt'd tMt motion wllh the
lf:Omment that no purpose would be sorv·
ed by the granllng of any delay.
, Judgt Speirs confirmed tho originally
l'tChe(IUled Ott. 29 date and ordered both
• ~
sides to be ready for triaJ oo that date.
Lewis argued beCore Judge Charamia
rejected his motion that it would·be im-
possible to pick a jury iii Orange County
in vJew ,of the "widely read Daily Pilot
stories."
"They ran this thlna: with beadlinea
that remlnd you or tho end of World War
II ,". he complained. "And then to nib :lait
lh •my wounds they prinl<d a fal!e 1tory
that J had been fired by Mrs. Puson who
state.a that she haJ ntver ta.lked 1 to the.
newspaper."
A recent DaUy Pilot story quoted Mrs.
Parson a.s havlng dismissed Lewi!
because of. the publlcity given her case.
Lewis denied that he had been diamlssed
by Mrs. Parson and branded the story as
false.
He 1old tile court, thal Mr. and Mrs.
Parson wtre in .. tht .courtroorn and th.a~ oo would aupport his otlloment that h<
!See 1'1!t\L, Pqe II
• ' ,.
Ne\\jlOrl Beach pl an J\ I n g com-
mi.!iiOOeft revoked apOrtnienr -ty
zoning Tbursday M one fl&.acre parcel ol
Pacific Coast lllghwoy land after a
marathon foor-hour . debate a.n d
discussion.
But they spent ao muc,h time on the
first part of a four·part agenda that they
>djoumed ju.st alter midnlgh~ without
coosidering the bulk of land Jn the ctty
that still has high density zoning.
A3 a·result, the question ol. revoking aJI
apartment density zmin( in Newport
Beach was continued for further public
hearings until Oct. 11.
The 66 acres given the 1.0Ging cutback
is located al the intersection ot West
Agnew's Lawyers
File to Block
Gra11.d Jury Quiz
BALTIMORE (UPI) -Spiro T.
Agnew's 1awyers filed :ruit today to block:
a grand jury investigation against him on
grounds he is immune from indictment
t while stiU vice president.
The action was flied in federal District
Court bore this afternoon and the special
judge presiding ovet a grand Jury in-
vestigation .of Maryland political· cor--
ruption arranged a meeUng later in the
day in his Norfolk, Va. ofnce with
lawyers for Agnew and the Justice Department. .
~ canference in the chambers of U.S.
D~tii~ Judge Waller E. Hoffman was
AGNEW 'FRAMED'-GOLD-
WATER~S.. Story, Pago 4
set up to arrange "a schedule for the fil·
ing of briefs and arguments of counsel,"
his office said prior to formal filing or
the Agntw ·motion.
Basically, Agnew contends that the
Constitution shields him from any
criminal legal actions while be is serving
as vice president. His lawyUH-.y-he-can
be subjected to 1uch lnve1ttgaUon only by
Congres.a, which has the power of im-
peachment.
Court procoedlnr• agalnot a 1itllng vice
president, Agnew•a lawyers contend, can
~ly follow hla removal ln>m office alter
lmpeaclwent,
The 24-pege mot.I~ fO( Agne'" said:
"Tho nation must not be deprived of his
services wblle he defends himself against
an lndlctmeol voted by perbal"I 12 ol 23
juron or an lnformaUon filed at tne
~·tum of a prosecutor."
Actually, the grand jury conolsta of 22
persona. OM was excwied.
Jn t.be1r lf1llJDel1t, the vice presidtnt'a
1,w;oers ctted the %$th Amendment,
wbich' prooilde• for 1ue<eSSlon to the
(S.e AG~. P•c• Zl
•
.1
•
Coost lfighway and .rambofe. Road. II
had provlslonally-lleen zoned for 15
dwelling unJt.s per: acre.
But QJIDmisslonen wted 4 to 2 to roll hack d....ity c<i thaflllid, which la owned
by the Irvin~ OJmpany, to just six dwel~
ing unit! per acre, a density plarmera feel
ia appropriate for single family detadt-
· ed-homeo.---· The commi!SioD action went be,000
!he City Council recommendation that
apartment land be rolled back to just
eight unita per aer.. Tho City Council
must •till ratify the commission action '
beloce It becomes law.
Commissioners indicated, however.
. that they are not going ,to favor a
tJJUform reduction ol. all apartment densi-ty zoning.
On a aecon4 •ilbl-acre. pan:ei, located
on Coast Highway at MacArthur
Boolevard, commisalooers QJIDprl)miaed
with the City !;ounci1 rtcommeridaUm.
They voted to bold density to aix-\lllt.s
per acre, but alto agreed that denslty
could. go as higb as 15 units per acre if
if Ibo city agreed that it was getting
C<llllpensation for that higher demity in
terms ol greater open space and other
amenities.
Commisaioner Joseph Rosener sum:
med up the different actim the t'OIJ)-
missioo took ort the 66 and the eight acre
parcels:
•10n the 66-acre parcel, the deVeJoper is
iimlted strictly to sit: uni.ts per acre," be
satd. "The ooly way to change that llmil
would be to amend the genoraJ plan,
which is hard to do.
·"But M tbe • elohWlcre pon:el, tho
(See DENtii'rY, hp II
Oruf e
• •
Weatller
The Los Angeltt weather service
says it'll be cooler Saturday, wltb
low clouds and patchy roe •!ma
the coast in the morning hour$.
Highs at the beaches in the low
70s risiJli to the upper Ills inlaJld,
INSIDE TODAl!
Thtrt'1 a J/Otl"9 pi<d ¢1"'t in
Oc•on Vino School l>Utrict tDho
lw INlmfamcd a grotJJ> of chi~
dren into a , _performing choiT.
S<e •W.V by Staff Writ<r Hi!ort1
Ko~e · In tadoy'I Weekelldtr~
At 'l'.-r ltrritt ) Mni.. 9'1'
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. . •
;l D<!LY PILOl H rrida7, SepttmtM!r Z8, Jq?J
Firm Going Ahead · With Plans MesaSnspeet
Charge of Rape
Irvine. Files Map for Condominiums at Newpprt Center ~
Asked by · Police Irvine Company spokesmen said tod,'ly
tiTtY will go ahead wllb plaru to build
·t.hfee 16-st.ory condomlniwns bcltind the
Pacific Mutual Ufe Insurance Company
buildlnc: at Nev.·port C.enter in Newport
Bell<h.
-Cornpany . olCicil'llS have filed a . s~I>
·•division tract. m'p for the $36 million
,. complex plamed Ol'I 1even acres of land
on an' ut.ensioo d. Santa Barbara Drive,
.. just north of the city's new (ire head·
quarter•. . Irvine officials said today they are gomg
ahead with the project because they do
oot feel new dov.nzonlng proposal! wxler
study by piaMlng commissioners apply
to the project.
'Ille density of tJ1e project Y;ould be
about $ tUllts per acre, with about 250
wUt.s planned, and this, was o;1pproved in
lhe rectntly-adopted residential growth
element of the genera l plan.
Planning a:imnlissioners are tat.Ing
their seoond took at dWitles approved in
that plan at ~ request of city coun-
cilmen.
And Councilman Carl Kyntla, \vho sug-
gested the new study, just this week
"clarified" his suggestion, saying certain
=
Roofing Truck . DE;'siii~~ ~
Sinks Slowly
In the Street
How much does It cost to (!ll a hole the
size of a 15,000-pound roofiJ{g truck that
plunged through the p3vement of a
Newport Beach street?
A Costa Mesa plumbing.. contractor Is
getting an estimate on that today.
His men dug the hole, undermining a
S«tion of Rive r Ave nue's pavement for a
sewer connection, called it a day and left
Wednesd•Y without placing proper street
barricades, police said today.
Before they returned to finish the job,
Adair Roofing Company e m p Io y e
Richard Seeley rolled up in a truck total-
ing 7.5 tons fully laden \Vith. tarpaper and
all the rot of the gear. ·
Police .said Seeley started to park. but
suddenly had a sinking feeling, especially
aroOnd the rear axle.
He tried to pull ahead, but the hole
only widened:
The truck .was finally towed away,
leaving a hole in the street six feet Wide,
six ·feet Tong and fi.ve feet deep.
The plumbers who forgot the bar-
ricades probably felt like jwnping into it.
UPPER BAY • • •
developer can get his density raised back
to lS wtits per acre simply by getting the
approval of the planning commission to
do it. There's no need to change the
geoeraJ plan, because It vtoold still allow
up to 15 units per acre."
Commissioners William Agee, \Vi\liam
Hazcwinkel , James Parker, and Hall See-
ly favored the requ irements imposed on
the 66-acre p a r c e I . , Commissioners
Rosener and Jackie Heather opposed
them. ,
The vote was also 4 to 2 on the
requirements for the eight-acre parcel.
but the line-up or commissioners was dif-
ferent Agee, Hazewinkel, R<lfiener, and
Seely were in favor. Heather and Parker
were op~.
A majority of citizens speaking at the
public hearing favored roll backs on
apartment density zoning.
"If the apartment density issue \.\'ere
put to a vote," contended Elaine Linhoff.
cha.lnnan of Ne\vport Residents United.
"the outcome \\-oul.d be the same as it
was on the freewa y vote.
"The people don't want h.igh den sity in
their city," she said.
Larry Moote, asslstant director or
planning and administraUon · for the
Irvine· c.ompany, was the primary
speaker against the zoning rollback.
"A density of e.ight units per acre
would force us to stop building rental
units. I submit that in the long term, lhis
would be a mistake for Newport Beach.
"It's a sad thing that Newport Beach is
becoming a community y,•hose children,
~,hen they grow up, cannot even afford to
live here," Moore said.
other government agencies willing to help Commission ~lnnan Agee ·said he ~ith this matter.·• '\'BS symp~thehc to that ,?rgument, but
First· District Supervisor Robert Battin, suspected,,1t was only a smoke screen
1---j')r· ange-{louni,'N>!her-repreoentatlve-on-axgument"loul<Y.elopen ,
the committee, did not comment on • "I'm no.t sure it is practi~I !or
Clark's proposal during the meeting. Newport ~ch to take .on lhe obhgall~n
However after the meeting he said "If of providing for all social and economic
SUpervisor' Clark wants the state 'and ranges," A~ee said. .
federal government to move ahead on this "If you did that , you \rould end up y,·1\h
·projtct alone, that's.fine with me.'"· the ktnd cf sameness you get fro1n
"But it should be pointed out that if tollO'IVing a strict statistical average for
the county doesn't participate in the all lypes of peOple."
. process for appraising the bay, It's not The maJn iten1 delayed by the com·
going to be providing money for bµying mission involved the Irvine Company's
it either .'' request to build three apartment com-
Reactloo of Field Committee mem-pJexes in the Big Canyon area.
bers to Clark's proposal was cautious Commiss:loners asked f()r further in·
but optimistic. formation from the ·company t o
"We'll have to wal~ and .see ti the determine whether the developer has ~ty ~I~ adopt& Uus posilion official· vested rights in the apartment compl<'X
ly, mud Dick Shuck.I~. of the federal as a result or cilq' approval given to the ~ment of the lnte~or. . overall Big Canyon plailned community But~ ~ sur;,ace it looks hke a very in February of 1971.
constructive idea. The conunission also delayed action on
.Robtrt Shelton, who "'.P"esents th.e Ir-Ccmmiss ioner Rosener's proposal tAat
vme O:mpany on the Field Comnuttee, ll 1 nd · the ·1 · cludin N rt said the company continues in its hope a a in . Cly, tn g ewpo
that the federal, state and county gcv-Balboa Pen~sula a~d Coror:ia del .Mar, be
emments can agree on how much Irvine scr~ned.. v.~th a. ''1ew to unposmg new
Company land around the bay they want density hmits.
to purchase.
'"It seems to me that Supervisor Clark's
proposal is a step in the rlgbt direc-
tion," Shelton said.
'
Oil Slick Spreads
SAN FRANCISCO tAPJ - A 1.500-
gallon oil slick spread ever a wide area
of Sooth San Francisco Bay as ~·orkers
. sought to cootain it l\ith booms, the
Coast Guard reported. The spill of crude
or "'aste oil stretched from Treasure
Island to the vicinity of Alameda Naval
Air Station.
OU.Niii COA.11 •
DAILY PILOT
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5uth, lrvlnt1S..6dl"°'tlo •"" itn Cltmtf\11/
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Fro1n Page 1
AGNEW ...
presidency. ,
"In adgpting the 25th Amendment, th e
Qlngress and the states gave new proof
that a functioning vice president is far
too important to the nation to permit his
disablement by criminal proscculion,"
the brief said.
The lawyers said a vice president is
elected and charged wit h a variety of
essential duties and ''may not, we sub-
mit, be hindered or prevented from
performing his office by the institution ol
a criminal proceeding against him."
\Vhile he is vice president, he "must be
free to function as vice president," th.e
brief said.
'Ibey said this does not mean "that the
man holding the office or vice president
is above the law or beyond its reach.
"It means rat)1er, that he mu st hold
the office and be free to perform llS
duties until his removal comes about in
accordance with the const.itutlonal plan
-by impeachment, reSignotion, or ex·
piration of his term."
Liglitless Yule
May Face LA
LOS ANGELES (AP) -A power
shortage may doot.e outdoor Christmas
lights throughout the city this yesr If 1!11
far-reaching city plan l,t-Mcepted.
The lightless Christ.Alas was proposed
Thursday by the city Department of
\Vat er and Power, which said It has been
having difl'iculty loc1Ung enough oi l to
keep generators running.
"It's , not our purpose to frustrate
Christmas cheer or squeeze the hist
nickel .out of Christmas lights ." suld
department manager Rob<rl V. Phil lips.
"But it did not ~1n credible to continue
business as usu.al and provide free
energy when schools, hospitals and other
organliatlons may be geltllig less power
through curtallmenl," Phlllll"' told the BoarO of W•lt r and Power Com·
mlssloatts.
load ,,... should be excluded !mn the
review.
Newport Center. the Irvine Q:lmpany
feels, is one of them.
"Based on Councilman Kymla's state-
ment or clarification, the Irvine Com·
pany feels the condominium site does not
fall wit hin the areas or ooocem,'' an
l~ine spokesman saJd.
"Kymla and other councilmen stated '
the review should be confined to Wl-
developed areas and areas w i t h
un cla ssified zones, along with planned
communities which can be considered un-
vestcd," the spokesman said.
"'lbe-coodominium site....is. ln a com-
mercial zone and ts norwtumra-ptannld
comn1unity. 'nlerefore, the tract map fil·
ed is consistent with all zoning regula·
ti<:'ns ," the spokesman sa id.
He added that the COH i.oning on the
property would allow buJldings to go as
high as 370 feet, but the condominiums
will be only 160 feet ta\1 .1
C(>uocilman Kymla could not be reach-
ed £or comment today tO ex plain the ap-
parent relationship to h Is claMfication
and the Newport Center zoning situatlon.
Wiretapping
Quiz 'Opens
l1nniediately'
A probe into the possible wiretapping
of phone conversations be\\\'een a former
aide to bill ionaire Howard Hughes and F.
Donald Nixon of Newport Beac~. the
President's brother. will begin im··
~ediately, an ' Assistant U-.S. Attorney
said Thursday. ·
John R. Lusk said · the Justice Depart-·
ment inves tigation was requested after
th e Washington Post reported Sept. 6
that the President had his brother's
phone tapped because he feared em·
barrassment Crom the latter's financial
activities.
The request came from attorneys for
forme r Hughes aide John H. Meier, cur·
renlly under indictment in Las Vegas on
federal income tax evasion charges.
~teier's attorneys asked for tramcripts
of any conversations between Meier and
Donald Nixon if any were, in fact,
recorded. _
Jt.feier_wasJired...as_a_s.cienlif.i~a.aY!ttr
to the Hughes Tool Co. in Nev4da. sup-
posedly because he ignored White 1House
orders to disassociate himsell from the
President's brother. ~ieier·s trial ""·as schedu1ed to begin
Oct. 12, but has been delayed unlil Jan. 7
to permit an Investigation of possible
electronic surveillance.
~teier, who claims the indictment
ag8 inst him was "politically motivated',"
is also being sued by the Hughes
organization in Salt Lake City for
allegedly conspiring to cheat .it out of $9
million by purchasiDg unproductive
inining claims at hiP.,prices.
Huntington Man
· Held in Coast
Ticket Caper
A man · \'>'ho authorities allege fled
forgery charges in New York to l!un·
tington Beach today faces criminal
charges along with his girlrriend, follow-
ing: a cut-rate airline ticket caper in
Newport Beach.
Thomas J . Andino, 31, of 6700 \Varner
Ave .. was arrested. and booked on suspi·
cion of possession er stolen property in
addition to being held on a New York
fugili\'e warrant in lieu or $10,00'.I bail .
His companion, Mrs. Dixie L. Dayhoff
Itson , 27. of 7661 G,arfteld Ave., Hun·
tington Beach, was booked cnly on the
stolen property charge and released on
her o~·n recognizance.
Delective Todd \Vilkinson said Andino
and P.lrs. Itson \\'ere arrested at 1036 W.
Balboa Blvd . based on a tip claiming
they bad six tickets on four different
airli nes they were offering to sell at half.
price.
He said circumstances indi cate the
tickets nlay not have been legitimately
obtained1 because they were purchased
1vith credit cards issued by the airlines.
Detective \Vilkinson also noted anyone
IYishing to re-sell airline tickets can
i;implf turn them b ack in to the air car·
ricr for a full refund.
Y 011tl1 Confesses
Role in Slaying
DELAND, Fla. (AP) -Cine of ti
youths charged In the torturHlaylng of a
CalJfomla tetnager bas agreed to tum
state's , witness and plead guilty to a
lesser charge.
·Howard E. Waellus, rt9, or Detroit
pleoded.. guilty In Volusia County Cll'clllt
Court '111urSday to a charge of ag·
gravaled battery In the death laot Aprll
of no.. Michoel Cochran, t7, ol Fresno.
Pollce saJd Cochran was l<Jlled by •
blow from a club after being tied to •
Jable, flogged with chains and •lashed
"'ith broken glMs.
A city planner uld be just "isn't sure"
how tho project stenda. but 11< askea not
to be Identified.
Irvine offlc.lals feet strongly tha t the
urban seulng of Newport Center is a Newport Beach police indicated today
logical pll\ce for Musing units. they will ask formal charges accusing a
"This type of use adds vitality lo suspected cat burglar arrested in a
Newport Center by concentrating people stakeout Thursdny as the Monday ~lorn·
near facilities to whlch they relate ing Rapist of Balboa Boulevard.
strongly," an Irvine spokesman said. Ron J Elizalde 26 of 134 W. Wilson "Thia also adds a-..upport base to the · • ' center for cultural and recreatlonal uses SI., Costa ~tesa. was initlally·booked only
which would not be possible without the on a bur.glary c~a rge.
particular type of people 'A'ho are seeking .Detectives ~Id loday, however.' ,tjley
the life style which these condominiwns \Viii ~k !he. Otang~ CoWlty District At-
y.•Ul provide," he said._ -· ~ome~ s ~f1cc to ~ale _cor:nplalnts charg-
--nie-condominium -pro]ea is-mm--:lJJ& him !1th multiple 8eX offenses, plus
plimentary to the concept of efficiency of assault with a deadly weapon.
use of the public and private investment
already made in the area in that if will
essentially extend the lime of use of such
elements as the traffic system, open
space areas and the Hke, already con·
talned in lhe center," the spokesman
said .
''It will also n1ean that fewer people
will drive· lo Newport Center, since they
will be ltving there," he said.
From Page 1
DONNIXONS • • •
and J\.trs. Nixon to visit New Zea.land at a
time convenient to them. He said be
\\·eloomed an opportunity to improve
relations with the United Slates. and "vt'e
\1·ant to develop as an independent coun·
try."
lnslead of the usual musicale in the
From Page 1
FIRE ...
and Rochester fire stations in Newport
Beach and Costa Mesa, respectively.
County Battalion Chief Cliff Chapman
said the firs't units were at the fire seven
minutes arter the blaie was reported, but
several witnesses said it' took at least 20
nllnutes before any water w~s on the
flames .
Chapman said the fire broKe out when
the boy·s match ignited some carpeting
material stored in one of the sheds and
spread after he tried to extinguish it.
Fire officials refused to disclose the
name cf the boy because he Is a juvenile.
"'l haven'l taken an inventory but I can
tell yo u ifs up in th.e \housands," said
East Room, there was dancing in the l\1iss Dare, 59, in describing the lo.u.
Grand Hally.•ay. J\1iss Dare starred in motion pictures
Although the President ~ev_er dances and theater productions during the 1930s
on such occasions, he broke bis . own , · tradition, and to6lt hiS wife..Pat ori the a!ld 1940s with Dick Powell, Erroll Fl)'M.
floor to encourage other guests to dance. James Cagney;and othtrs.--
After twirling to "the Sound of Music," The Dames threatened but-did not lg-
the Nlxons headedJor...-the;ipriva.te family nite the Dare and Dahlgren bomea.
elevator. · ''I want to thank all those people who
Vice President Spiro T. Agnew and his jumped in and kei>t my house wet with garden hoses. I don't even know who wife· Judy received a loud round of ap-some of them were," Mrs. Dahlstrom plause when they entered the East Room
during a reception before the dinner. sa~~~ added that a fort-like structure en
Afterwards Agnew chatted with guests. her property had been used by
Agnew was showing none of the strain neighborhood chlldr.en as a playhouse but
of the past few days and wore 8 that her son was with her when the fire
perpetual smile on bis face. Asked bow broke out.
he felt about Speaker Carl Albert's re-The blaze was seen by a throng of
jection Qf a. House inquiry into allegations spectators who did their watching from
The student halrdt&ser who ca rried a
lucky rabbit's foot and wears a tattoo on
his lower abdomen rending: Party Time.
is a state priSQn parolee, police claim.:
Detective Ken Smith and fellow of·
ficers charged that Ellz•lde w1111 proy.·I·
ing through bAckyards in the 1100
block of Sast Balboa Boulevard v.·hcn
captured and carried two knives.
'nle so-called Monday " nJOf?ling r~pjst
struck in the JOOO block cf 1he Balboa
Ptnjmula·resor.Larea.aboutJ..:30...a.m. pn
Labor Day. a Monday. ,
He struck again the fonowing Mond1y.
same time and same place -except it
y,·as a few doors down -and virtually
played a tepeat per formance.
During each incident. the cat burgL1r
described as of Latin descent, threatened
his vicUms with a knife and engaged i n
lengthY, conversation before forcing s~x·
ual relations.
The first incident among a. total ot
three Specifically reported involving .
young women in th.elr ea rly 20s included
a IO.page account , much ol it dealing
with their lengthy conversation.
Investigators say the Afonda y. l\lorning
Rapi st passed up his scheduled rounds
this week, but hit Wednesday in the same
block ·of Balboa Bou1cvard again.
This time he criminally assaulted a 2l·
year-old girl at knifepclnt . while her
mother and father slept in·· the next
bedroom.
The intruder in each caie wore a dark
Navy watcli caP pulled down over his
eyes in sinister fashion trying to prev~t
bis victims' obtaining a good description.
Investigators keeping an eye on the
neighborhood Thursday alleged that they
watched the suspect identified as
Elizalde prowling ~rough ba~kyardr.
-He-was · booked-on suspicion. ·Ol only
burglary, but Newport Beach police pro-
cedure is to book on cnly one charge and
ask the Orange County District At-
torney's Office to ftle additional counts.
Detective Smith said today tbat
Elizalde Is auspected of a string ·of
Balboa Peninsula cat burglaries over the
put few weeks.
From Pagel
TRIAL ... the Vice President participated in a city streets and from behind a fence
kickback scheme. Agnew said, "I don't 5eparating the properties from nearby was still handling the case.
regard the deciJion as being permanent." Woodland School. -After.....Lewi.!l.,..Jn...a-leUer-to..the...I>aUy_
secretary oflifitellenry~gor-=====-------Pilot, dtnled"t!ting dismissed, Dally Pilot
'vas al.so present. representatives attempted to contact
"When did you first feel like you were Bomb Hoax Jails Man Mrs. Parson, but were unable to reach Secretary· of State?" he was asked. b
"Four years ago," he shot back with. a LOS ANGELES (AP) _An employe or ~Mrs. Parson sued the health spa on tlit
wide grin. grounds: that trauma created whtn she Lockheed Aircraft Corp. in Palmdale was was trapped in the sauna'f'Oom changed
arrested Thursday on charges of fa._lsely her personality to the point thl'll she con· High Greek Resigns saying a bomb had been ploced aboaro tacted strangers in bars with .a view.\•
;in aircraft being assembled at the plant. sexual relationships wilh the1n.
ATHENS <AP ) -Deputy Premier an FBI spokesman said. Domingo De A psychiatrist has te!t\fied in a de posl-
Nicholas Makarezos resigned today, • tion that she developed n1 u I t i P I e
eed . h p .d Guzman. 41. of North llollywood , \1'85 per50!lall"es as a result of her t·ni"urle• saying he disagr wit res1 ent "' George Papadopoulos over "such a jailed in lieu of $5,000 bond, the and her condition ~·as described as a
crucial issue'' he felt .be had tg_ qui t. spokesm an said. "three races ot Eve" personality split. / ·----'-----------"'---~-------------
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'
• DAD .Y P ILOT EDITORIAL PAGE
Parking Solution·s
•• ..
'
A citizens' committee charged with draUlng red"' ,
velopment standard! for older portlom 9f ~ewport
Beach has now finished its work. At first blush, the
proposed new standards look pretty good.
Several-problems are dealt with. The most cniclal
is parking. Under the prqpQ_sed new rules, all new du·
pl~es would need at least three parking spaces, The
larger duplexes now being built probably would require
at least four spaces per strilcture.
Most single family •homes and tri_·plex units .also
would need two garage spaces· per dwellln.g. unit, which
19 double Ibo current standard.
(Balboa 1.iand, which is already subject to R·l.5
zoning to reduce the size of buildings, would not come
under the new stand~).
Since few people now deny the need for stronger
parking requirements, the committee's work should find
+-'--~ptane«=B1•tit:facerobl'iom bam.ers,
The .South Coast Regional Zone Conservation Com-
mission, for in$tance, consistently requires four spaces
per duplex.
MThether the commission will be willing to make
any exception for Newport Beach remains to be seen.
Margot Skilling, chiirman oJ the citizens' group, be·
lieves it might.
The coast' zone commission now deals with parking
rather •implisticaliy. A. single family unit n~ds two
spaces, a duplex four spaces, a tri-plex six, and so on.
But what about a single famliy home with nine
bedrooms? The commission approach would dictate only
two parking spaces. And this is not enough.
The proposed Newport Beach standards get around
this flaw by tying parking requirements to building
5ize. In most cases, the proposed~ fOnn ula would still
mean two spaces per unit, as the commission suggests.
open space ....:. gets a break, he would be let off with
providing just three parking "Paces. This, in effect,
would give the developer an incentive to build smaller
duplexes, an approach that has definite advantages.
Clearly, though, the whole parking issue. needs
furtfier study. Additionally, the citizens' committee also
uises important suggestions about open space and
height limitations. But on the question of parking, the
city now seems bar+=•. ~n a promising new path.
Stretching the La'v
Newport Beach Planning Commissioners }\ave
opened themselves to serious criticism with their han-
dling of a request to build ,_,, 18-unit condominium proj·
ect on Carnation Avenue in Corona del Mar.
· • : 'l'be de•~ed'fef"m&nlln;:"'lth:dl!"Offldat:s=---i==
to meet existing city codes, and commissionen them-
selves stated he did an excellent job. His density was
about half of what was allowable, he met more than
double the city parking standards, and his design was
attractive. 'Ibis was acknowledged by commissioners.
The only reason the case came before the Planning
Commission this month was for routine approval of a
request to market the condominium units individually.
But a group of homeowners in the audience were
demanding that the project be denied, largely, it seemed,
because they just didn't want any · more multi·unit de-
velopments in the neighborhood.
After some searching, commissioners found a way
to oblige them. They rejected an environmental impact
statement for the project.
But to anyone at the meeting, it was clear that com-
missioners were reaching for an excuse to deny the proj·
ec~ even though un.der the law, it was perfectly legal.
•
-But in the case of an oversized single family or du-
plex unit, the standards would require more than two
spaces per unil
At the same time, a develope• who built an under·
sized .duplex on' a large lot -t hereby leaving more
U the commission doesn't believe it has sound laws,
it ought to revise them. But in the meantime, projects
that conform to the law deserve fair treatment under
the law. N
'The job of vice president may not be much, bu t the ripoff
fringe benefits are great!'
Tourists Can
See More
Than Natives
Jt has become one of the liberal clicbes
that you can't know a people, or a coun-
try, until you have lived there a long
time-and therefore the t~week
• traveler to Europe is to be--despised and
---:---disregarded-wbeo-be-givea-\ll-biJ
doimlUc "opinions" of the counlriel he
' bas briefly toured.
There i.s some truth in that vle~t, .
but ai!o ~ ~ of falsehood. For It iii i>oi!jl·
hie to Vialt a new country for' a flw
weeks and see It in
a way that the na·
lives can no longer
see It.
•
Nixon Plane
Re_mo~eling
Bill Soars
Congress Seeks Trade Agree••tent St rittgs
Dear
Gloomy
' Gus
U.S.~Rnssia Pledge Shwken
President Albert?
~P.O.
OltMl.r 9" c9MIWtl .,, .,._'"""' W nMtn -..... _ _,,tr ...... ,,..
Yl.wr. " .... _ .. ,. .... ,_ ...
_. I• OMMJ hi, O.ltr Plltf.
WASIUNGTON-Under the s t e a d y
battering or heaCUines now dramatizing
WASHINGTON -The U.S. Treasury the courageous struggle for tj_vi1 rights has already subsidized President Nixon's , luxurious living at San Clemente and Key by intellectual dissidents in the Soviet
Biscayne. Now it is ponying up $1,785,000 Union, President Nixon's pledge to give
to deck out his jet to suit H.R. the Russlarus equality with other nations
Haldeman'• and Pat Nlxon's ideas ol in trading with the
posh air comfort. U.S. is at least tern·
The White House recently ordered a porarily doomed.
iraveler is going to return with a stupid new jet from Boeing to replace the well·
and close-minded view of the eowttry be traveled "Spirit of,.'7§" as the President's theTbetr!uO:e ca::
• haa visi~t this would he true il be lead plane. Haldelll8ll per•o1111!ly took led t ,. •.• •-•·· ...,.t tbale.)'OIIl..tbere,_as.w~~oL tbe inlerior decorating-aocl-'jj a es "!" ~•on .
-U. Travel _bl)>ad<os onl1 the !>road; before be bad flrrisbed, the bill bad nm · ~ill;au. •t narro)fs the narrow-Just aa .mooey up to $15 mlDion · aod N °be1 prue-
1 ood be and bad · : winner Alemnder teodstoma.~g men tter 'WREN PAT NIXON founci\out aboal Solzheoitsyn and men Worse. , I the ctm '· .... "" -~' . _,_, ·••-u •• ~.. . I • • ;.. • en..,, e ~I' -llll' ~ V WICl ~ lR•
BUT A tourist with some sense, taste The onner top White House aide, with tellectuals to .gb ·public with their deeply
and background can often capture a · emotional gr,levance against the Kremlin.
more accurate portrait of a natlonal ( ) The root ca~is the higtily successful
spirit than4be oldest inhabitant. ·Wbat JACK , i.rnERSON campilign-olllemoeraiic sen. lienry M. the native takes for granted (as almost a AJ.'1.U Jackson bf Washington, backed by the
part -or ~ture), the tdurlst views as a p<>'ferful American.Jewish community,
c:ultural trait. to use the issue of trade equality as a
Our national obsession wltb '"blgness" typical Prussian ,efficiency, had iput the club to <force Mosoow to permit totally
for its own aate, as an es.ample, is staff quarters between the presidential tree emigration of Soviet Jews to Israel.
( EVANS · NOVAK J
that no one in the White House· thought
possib_le when the pledge was made at
the hfoscow summit 16 months ago.
ond, persuade the commitle:e to pass the
Corman-Pettis compromise.
UNDER TIUS strategy, the vote oo the
most-favored-nation clause {Title Five in
the highly important trade bill ) would be
postponed Wltil just before lt\.e bill is
cleared by the committee and ready for
action in the I-louse. · ·
That way, administration strategists
hold,· the momentum of a favorable vote
ONE TENTATIVE rescue operation in committee might carry the . bill
\\'ent down the drain this week when th.roy.gb the House without the Mills.
Secretary · of State_Hency_Kissinger~k amendment. ~en. when . the
cancelled a trip to the Ways and Means ~nate vei:sl~ of the bili-.sure to coi:1· . . lain the ongmal Jackson amendment-is ~mrruttee . mtended to reverse the sent to a Senate-Heme conference early
disastrous tide aod convert enoogh mem-next year, a compromise would emerge
hers to defeat the .hackson amendment. protecting the Presideht's opllon to keep
A major reason Kissinger's appearance his pledge to +-eonid Brezhnev, the Soviet
was postponed was that a telephone talk Communist party leader.
between Mills, recovering from his back
operation down in Arkansas , and Rep. Al ALL THA'JI. now ~ooks like wishful
Ullman of Oregon, acting committee thinking, in spades. Ttie strenuous efforts
chairman; decreed its futility. Mills flatly by Mr. Ni~on, by .·Kissinger, httnself
declined to change bis pooition on the Jewish, and by other hlgh administration
Jackson amendment (lvhich , with liberal aides ·to choke o!f the rabid support for
Democrat Rep. Charles A. Yanik of Ohio, the Jackson amendment in th e
Ha b it dulls the
edge of observation.
We Americans, !or
instance, a c c e p t
oUrselves and o.pr
customa so natural-
ly and easily that
scarcely noU~ by ourselves; but to the s.uile and the quarters for extra family --roteJtn<r u-[iroVldes a 1Isefill key !Or aod guest...
underalanding many of our strange ways. This would have permitted top staffers
he is sponsoring in the House). ~w~~;vie~ ~h~eJi:: ~:n~g=~·U:t~
BUT THAT campaign by Jackson and ~nus REFUSED 4 to bow to freru.ied Jewish leader told us-has failed. Rep. Wilbur Mills of Arkansas, chairman h he hif
'we no lcmger have a perspective on
ourselves. An educated and intelligent
European can grasp a better idea of
JVhat we are like. precisely becaUle be
is not himsell a part of the socW pn>
cess here.
AFTER a while we do not notice
, familiar scenery. We pass it every day
on our way to "'Ork or shopping, but we
do not really: see it. The same is true of
• our national habits, defects and vices.
COUN'l'llla cannot see themselves to maintain their 24-bour·aGy access to
any more-~ly than lndividaaJs can. the President, but the arrangement
No ooe knows what be really looks Uke would have fon:ed family and guest.. to ·
from the oulllde; the mirror gives us at squirm throUgb the staff quartera to vblt
best a vque and cbangtni aP" the President and First Lady.
proximatioo. But · a stranger:iailng a After she discovered what Haldeman
fresh and careful look at us, can olten had done, Mrs. Ni.Ion, who often has laid
tell more about · our penonallUes and down the law to her strong-willed bus·
deepest yearnings in a haU·bour than we band, insisted that the plane be re-
can know about ourselves after years of designed to her own liking. As a result,
patient seH~xaminatlon. the Air Force, which had faithfully
The three-week tourist is neither lo be followed the original Haldeman speci!ica·
White House requests .t at s t to a hfaking that failure worSe are the
of the House Ways and Means Com-Jess rigid amendment sponsored by Rep. deeply emotional ciVif rights stories from
mittee, bicked by a clear majOrity in James C. Corman, a Democrat, and Rep. ' ?i.foscow aQd the sudden attack on liberal
both the House and Senate, has now been Jerry L. Pettis, a Republican, both of , ·Democratic leaders here by Soviet in-
galvaolzed by the shrewdly publicized California: That amendment wouJd give tellectuals for refusing to face the facts
civil rights struggle of Solzhenitsyn, the President much-needed flexibility, about civil rights in the Soviet Union.
nuclear physicist Andrei D. 8akbarov and while preserving his power to use the Deeper implications lie ah e a d ,
other brave civil libertarians centered in most·favored-naUon issue as a continuing particularly on how the leremlin will
Mosoow. device to pressure P..1oscow. react when it fails to get delivery on the
The net result as of today·: something Administration strategists are now Nixon pledge. Also deeply involved is
close to panic In the Nixon White House. hoping Kissinger will exude enough American big business, which-like' the
The President's cherished policy or persuasive charm· on the committee smell or prolits from .vastly greater trade
'
' '
The emotional and social scenery is so
close to us that our angle of otision cannot
include It. '
despised nor disregarded; he may be lions, is now spending another $285,000 to
superficial, but he is just as likely to be comform to Pat's request that the guest
detente with the Soviet Union, sym. within the next two weeks lo do one of with Russia. But 1in. Its present mood,
bolized by his pledge tC!.._g!ve Mi'OQOO':l'is:!l~W~~•-:w~•;:.tbID~,gs: first. get committee approval those confilderaU~perhapa-e~n~~ci
both U.S. credits and most-favored-nation of the most-favored.nation proviso for the full bloom of detente Itself-seem
Obvioosiy, a stupid, c:Io§tmlnded right. lolUlge be next to the Nixon quarters. trade treatment, now confr90ts a threat Moscow with no strings attached; or, sec-unimPortanl to this Congress .
. 'Breast Cancer Debate Reveals Flaws in · Ethics Code ..
Differin,g Views 01i Need for R ad_ica l Sur gery Create Dile mma fo r W onie1i
'
WASIUNGTON -The ethics of
American medicine which someUmes
make It preferable to let another doctor
kill a patient rather than disagree with
him alao make It Im·
I possible for a prac·
11 tlcing physician to
11 be a public contro-
versialist. However,
Dr. George Criie Jr.
does not flt that
description. The re-
cently retired hee.d
cl the CJeveland
Clinic's department
or surgery has violated the rule of the
brotherhood by publishing "What Women
Should Know Abollt the Breast Cancer
Controversy" (Macmillan, 19731.
Excerpts from the book appear ln this
month's Issue of Ms. And Dr. Crlle has
appeared on Barbara Walters' TV show
for women to dispute with physicians
who don't ag,.. with him about what you
should do U you're unluci<)I enough to be
lhe one wom11n in 17 who gets thls
dis•.,•· Interest lri the subject ls Intense
not ooly because of the hysterfoal fear of
canctr lhat all Am.?ricans bav•, but also
because this ls the col1llDOl1esl ciuae of
death of women between the ags of. 87
and 55.
On the somewhat brighter side •!• that
a woman who contracts the dlseue bas
an excellent chance of Jiving long enough
no die ol somethln& else. Whether you
want to can It a cure or not, the doctors
are relatively succeuful at cutting this
kind of cancer out, yet an unknown
,
number of Women would rather die of
cancer of the breast than let the
surgeons have at them.
THEIR CHOICE OF death over treat-
ment is understandable after you read
Dr. Crile's description of radical mastec-
tomy, the most frequently uoed surgical
procedure. The operation not only take~
0££ the breast, bu& the chest muscles and
most of wh11t we ·laymen would call the
annplt. The result ls a ' ' g r ·e a t
deformity" to 'Which most women, Dr.
Crlle tells WI, make a "saUslactory
_!/'
I
" I !
.
( VON HOFFMAN J
physical and emotional adjustment ...
For those who do not, however, the pill ls
a bitter one." ia a culture that puts su.:!h
erotic empbasit on the female breast il
must' be just 11bout as tough on women
who do · make Dr. Crile's "satisfactory"
adjustment.
PUNCH
"'/ tho.ught it would In •.nice guturt1 to (nclude a member of
the staff."
All of this suffering would be bad
enough lf there were general agreement
that radical mastectomy is the best
means of treatment. Dr. Ctile maintains
that all that cutting, backing and
slashing away of human tissue isn't
necessary in utking care of a localized
cancer of the breast. A far less radical,
painful and maiming operation can do
the job, or so says Dr. Crile.
"WHY 111EN," the doctor asks, 11when
tnost European surgeons have abandoned
radical surgery, do the majority or
American surgeons persist in performing
radical mastectomies? And how, in the
~ of so many oontrary studies con-
ducted In England and Scandinavia, can
American surgeoaa remain convinced
that their paUents' survivar1Slmproved
by Inflicting on them the disabilities and
derormities of radical mastectomy?" ' One erplanatloo might be that the doo-
ton make more money (rom the more
radical operations; another might be that
while we can see the fashion ,
superstlUon and l g n o r a n c e lo the
medicine of other nations, we can't tee It
ld'-our1own. Dr. Crlle's hypothesis ls that
they probably keep cu!Ung th• women
because "It wouJCI seem-to-these
surgeons a betrayal of all the women on
wbom they bad performed radical
rnute<:tomles to admit that t h e
mutllatlon had been in vain."
Having learned that she ba. breast
cancer and having hem ic>hj the method
0£ treatment her docto~ will probably
recommend ls needlessly expensive and
•
unnecessarily cruel, what does a woman
do? Dr. Crile has some suggestions:
"REFUSE TO submit to radical
mastectomy ... there is no longer any
justification for Its use . Do not sign
permisslo!l tor a radical. Find a doctor
who will do a modified radical operation
... If you elect to be treated by a partial
mas'tectomy, remember it takes more
skill and knowledge of breast cancer to
do this operation properly than to
remove all the breast. Pick your surgeon
accordingly."
That sounds like good advice unless
you've met a woml'in living under the
tenta~ive diagnosis of breast cancer.
She's in no shape to argue with the doc-
tor, to refuse to sign legal p11pen or pick
a surgeon of WlCOmmon skill and
knowledge. How is she ever supposed to
DAILY PILOT ..
Rober£ N. l\f.etd, Publisher
' Thoma.s Keevi1, Editor
Barbara Kre ibic1'
Editorial Page Editor
Friday, September 28, 1973
do lhis last when the medical profession
will not per.mil itself to make any kind of
judgment on the competence of its
memben. Anybody with an M.D. is as
good as 11nybody el!fe. .
SO Dr. Crile's 11dt:lce. as a practical
matter, is worthlesa·. lf we don't know
how to [ind a good ll'V repairman, how
can we know how to hire a good
surgeon?
What's needed is a new kind of health.
professional , a non·practlcing doctor who
goes to separate medical schools, who
Lreats no one, prescribes for -00 one, but
who is paid to reprtsent the sick and
distraught in their negotiations with our
healer,. Such an occupation already ex-
ists In the automobUe repair industry.
The leasl we can ®ti to treat ourselves ·
as well as we do our cars.
The cditorill ptge" !of• the Daily
Pilot aceks to Inform nnd 1llmWa1e
rtadets by prneoUna on thl.a pqc
diverae commentary on toPics of ln-
ttrest by l)'nCHCM·· 1 C'OlumrtlSU &nd
urtoonLILI, by provkling a foram for
readers' views and by preaie.nUn&: this
nCl''lpapfr'a OJ>\~ anc;I ktf'M on
current IOpQ, The editorial oplnklns
o( ~ O.ll)r PIJot •PJX•i!r only In the
e:Jltorlal column , :1t thf' top of lh~
page, Opl!'lk>nl t~i·rttst'd by the c<ll-·
umnlst1 and cafulOftl!it~ and lettn-
wrllers are their Own und no~
ment i>f thc!lr ti•Jwsi by the D&l\y
Pliot lhOWd be tnkn'f'd.
•
. '
,
Witads Subside
Brush Fire Quelled
•
•
Suspect in Body
Theft Surrenders
Frida)', Stpltmbtr-28,.1973 DAILY PILOT jl .
.
_A., .. ,,.~ INDIAN JeyY'ELRY
Our tr1dtr hes Just ')ltumed from
tht'ZUNI RESERVATION with •n
eicitin9 collection of 9enuine
By The AssoclatedtJ>ress .
Subsiding Santa ~a wind!
enabled ~ fire fi&hters to
stamp OllJ a brush 1!1re Chat
burned l.Ulcontrolled for 24
hours, des1.roying nearly 13,000
acres of wilderness a n d
recreational land .south o(
Camarlllo.
FIRE CREWS also fought
nearly a score or other fires
whic~ broke out In Under dry
Sou them Callfomla Thursday.
The worst or them charred 75
acres one mile south or Beau:
mont before it was ex·
tlnguished.
LOS ANGELES (AP) -A
11eCOnd man has been arrested
In the theft aiid oorning of the
body ot rock singer Gram
Parson.sJ whose embalmed re·
mains were found smouldering
in a co!fin at a remote desert
site.
lojlchad David Martin , 26, o!
Hollywood, surrendettd at the
Venice poHce station Thurs--
day. He had been sought on a
~arrant charging grand theft.
ZUNI NEEDLEPOINT
And lnl•y
For the best 1electton of REAL
INDIAti. MADE Jewelry, Ru91 , Kechints
and Ba1ket1. Do come by
•
BIG ; PA~DE AND
LOBSTER BAKE SATURDAY
'nle camarillo blaze was
stopped 'Thursday afternoon
aklng a sauthwestem front ~
. flanking Deer Canyon, west of . ..·, """-
the Malibu area and four
mllea from the lD8 Angeles u""' T•lePltol•
MARTIN. -WHO reportedly
had accompanied Parton! on
road trips when the singer ap.
peared with "Tho Byrds" and
"Flying Burrito Brothers"
Just To Browse or Buy
3l5S Vi1 lldt, Htw,ort t11ch
675-4700 Cl1111d Sun. & Mon.
rock groups, was released I ~~;;~~;~~~~~~~;;~~;~~~~ later in the day on $1,000 bail. I;
County line. Probation
See the big parade at FASHION ISLAND No structures were damag-Sylvester 'Sly' s1ewart,
JO a.m. Saturda around Circle Drive. -11+-.ed~bOiut one fire figbtersulfered member of Sly and the
Pair Sue
Atlantis
Parsons' r o a d manager,
Philip Kaufman, 38, Van Nuy!,
was arrested Wednesday on a
simUar warrant. OVERCOME INFLATION!
o s er a e Carnmr-a1ri-Jayc " us ti1lms when-he-wa..--Fatnffy =sfolie r-o ck-
Frl.-Sun. Sponsored by the Balboa Bay trapped in a canyon by a sud- group, has been placed
Police ha\(e given-this ac-
CiuntOr the "tiluirre ificldenr: Reliance on the divine economy, God's Jaws
of supply, provides a basis for overcominfiil-
flatlon. Come and learn about these laws at
a free Christian Science lecture by: NATHA-
NIEL R. WHITE entitled
Lions Club. d~ fla.reup, officials sa_id. on probation in a re-
N1ne aircraft dropped fir e habilitation program
r:etardants , to put out the for experimental drug
flames,. which showered the users. lie was convicted
area with embers and sent 'l'hursday of drug pos·
black smoke billowing into the session.
Searchers 'l\l;o men in an old black
hearse picked up Parsons' re-
mains from a loading dock at
Los Ang e I e s International
Airport last Thursday. The
men signed a receipt for the
body, telling airline persoMel
that the singer's £aq\.lly had
decided to have the ,YOW'lg
man's body transported-by
prlv~te plane from another
airport to New Orleans for
burial. MOST
PANTS,
SKIRTS~
SWEATERS 49c
GIA NADA HILLS 1800 Chats~b S!. l'!OllAMCI Sep11l'leda an~ Hawtl'«M
WOODLAND HILU Zl~OO Victor/ BIYd LAICIWOOD Carsoo St. and P•aioount Blvd.
llYflSIDE 35ro Tyltt St IUENA-PAllC &aciun!l lltM&~thorpe
SANT~ Alf.A 3900 SQll!h Boilol St. OIANGE G!rden GroYe 81~. Md Mint~
•
~ o,,. w•tkll•Y• 9:30 to ':30 ""'\ S11n4ey1 IO te 7,
WESTERN STATE UNIVERSITY
COLLEGE OF LAW
OF ORANGE COUNTY
-FULL-TIME LAW STUDY PROGRAM
NOW AVAILABLE
• JF YOU HAVf '"AA degree,
• l<1 2'/, o• J )'llrl of lu1t-t•m• l1w 1!11dy 11 5.16
'••u•DOm hou,. per week), or
•
• J.n 3 '/, or ..i y11'1 of ptrt•ti~-ld1y,----e,,..~,-o•-_
w11•el'ld) J1w 1111dy IJ cl111<n per wee•, 3·<1 "'"""
per clt u ).
• 'l'ou co<1 •••n your Ju1i1 Doc-lor U.D.) U19•e1, •nd .. ,_
ELIGIBLE TO TAKE THE
CALIFORNIA BAR EXAMINATION
want Oft ,HONl •o• INFOIMATION 01 CATAlOOIJf
800 Soulh Brookhunt
An•htim 92804
1714) 635-3453
OW FOR DAY, EVENING, OR
WEEKEND CLASSES,
IN SEPnMBER OR FEBRUARY SEMESTERS
IMllNrl ILIOlll.I fOt fllllUU'f JHIUllD JTUOINT LOANS
sky. -"----------
SANTA MONICA (APl -A
father and son have tiled a
$1~~mi1Uon fraud suit against
tMieaders of an expedition
which last summer searched
for the lost continent of Allan·
tis.
THE F AJllIL V later told
"THE HUMAN AND THE DIVINE ECONOMY"
91 the lfYfff hwl IA.rt httlfll h• .. I
SUNDAY AFTERNOON: SEPT. 30 AT 5:00 P.M.
ll>ONIOltlD eY
First Church of Chrl1t, Scltntl1t, Loguna
c111id ,.,. It "" ClllH"Crt-UI M1911 Drtv1
Beach
Pipe Bomb Dan1ages
SF Federal Building·
" SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) -John Sherratt. District ~·o
JORN D. COuturie, a Hughes
Aircraft Corp. executive, and
his cinen1atographer son ,
\Villiam. said in the Superior
Court !Uit filed Thursday that
they had lost more than
S55.000 invested in a proposed
film documentary of the
search.
authoriUes they had expectedll::===================:;:=:::' Parsons to be returned by l-
commerclal plane from the In·
ternatlonal a i r p o r t · as
originally planned.
A pipe bomb blew HP outside a fire chief, said the bomb may
basement area window in San ·-have been detonated by burn-
Francisco's Old Feder a I ing gasoline and that a five-
Building early today, starting gallon container had been
a lire that caused damage found.
estimated at between $5,000 Two boinbs had been
and $10,000. planted. but only one blc\v up
FLAMES SCORCHED as
high as 60 feet on the
. building's "'hite sl.onC wall and
poured in a window to i1amage a maintenance shop for elec·
trical repairs, although no one
"·as injured.
and an explosives squad from
lbe Army 's Presidio of San
Francisco was called t o
dispose of the one that !ailed
to e~lode.
TIIE ·BLAST occurred at
about 1 :30 a.m ., but there was
.no immediate infQrmation
linking it to a similar ex·
plo!ion at about the same tin1e
on the ninth floor of the IIT
Building in N~w YorK City.
Among t h o s e named as
defendants was Dr. Julian
Nava, a member of the Los
Angeles Board of Education.
Also named "'as Maxine
Ashec, who with Nava, is co--
director of Ancient Mediter-
ranean Research·1Assoclatlon,
sponsors of the expedition.
MRS. ASHER h a s said
publicly that the expedltlon
found traces of Atlantis o(f the
coast of Spain. However scuba
divers who participated In the
search said remnants ol the
legendary sunken continent
never were found.
A coffin containing Parsons'
body later was found by
campers ne8.r the desert tovm
of Joshua Tree, 200 mile6 east
of here. \
Scliooli1ig
. -. . .
lrt Massage
Licerised? No Penalty
Agai1ist
S piritucilist'
LOS ANGELES (AP\
County Counsel John H .
Larson is preparing ordinance
R• h F th I t amendments intended t.o IC a er nnocen tighten control over massage
schools In unincorporated
NGE I B I All Sh t • areas.
LOS A LES (AP) -A fi e • 00 1ng Larson's deputy, Frederllk SS.year-old "spiritual healer" R. Bennett, sald J'huraday the
"""hose backers include Presi-amendments will re q u i r e
-dent Nixon's adviser on con· SANTA MOJJICA (AP) -_A Medeiros' at~ey!_______h_!._cL_county----11c_enaing _JOJ" a I J
sumer affairs, won't have to wealthy Bel Air businessman a~gued that Medeiros ~ad shot musage parlors wh q 8 e
· pay a fine for his conviction of h ~Aft • r N. 1eto on the porch of his borne emptoyes or students receive
"A¥oid This Fi• .•. Coll 8/X'
B:lllC"
lllYICIC .... M'f INC.
1itlUIOVNACll.N'f'ONtNe
lAOUHA llACH
Jo. COMPLEH .~lo.INT, STlo.IN, lo.HD FIHllH
REMOVAL SERVICE
WE PREPARE YOUR TREASUREs FOR
EUY REFINlllllHC
WITHOUT LYE, ACIDS DR HARMFUL
' Mlo.TIRIUS
Practicing without a ltc-•e. as '-'='n acquitted o murder If def
...... 1n se ense. fees or tips from the public. !------"'---------------Municipal Court Judge Mary in the shooting death of his Dep. Dist. Atty. Richard J. Bennett said the proposed
E . \Vatcrs levied no penalty married daughter's lover. ChrysUe contended Medeiros amendments have the support
Thursday against Fran k A Superior Court jury or admitted Jn police tape of legitimate schools of
Hevesy, noting that Hevesy seven men and five women recordings that he ''lost hil massage, whose students are
had won a retrial for a 1971 fo und Frank Medeiros, 56, in· head" and fired at Nieto. trained without any contact
conviction on the same charge noccnt 0 f second.degree Medeiros ' married daughter, with the publlc.
alter paying a $750 fine and murder Thursday in the Jan. Joanne Miranda, 28. had Bennett said the ordinance
serving two years probation. "tl slaying of Thomas Nieto, broken up with Nieto just amendments will be proposed
A ~1unlclpal . Court jury 28. The jury had received the prior to the shooting arter Uv-to the county supervisors at
Nearly Everyone
Listens to Landers
fol!Jlli ~Ievesy gwlty ~tay .17 of case ear1ler in the day. Ing with him intermittently. thelr meeUng Tuesday.
operating withou t a busmess,_i-;,:::~~~;,;:;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;ii;;:;ii;;;;i,;iiii;;;;;;~_,,.;;iii;;i;iii;;i;;;;;;i;;i;iii;;i;;;;;i;;;;;;;;;;;.;.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; license after an underwve.r in· I•
vestigator said Hevesy charg·
cd her four years ago for hyp-
nosi!i treatmenJ.s for ulcers.
Hevesy contended he could not
be P[OSCcuted since he was
engaged in a religious prac-
tice. e'll wait on you.
Till 7:10.
OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK HOURS: 10·6
You can get
all these services:
At the drive-up window
of these offices.
(If the First.National office where yo11
have your account doesn't stay open
ldte,. just use any of the offices listed be-
low. Because if you have an account
with us, you have an account wifh all
LARGE AA
RANCH
EGGS
69~
CANTALOUPE
6
FOR
Checking Account Deposits
Check Cashing
Savings Deposits
Savings Withdrawals
Savings Bond s (Cashing & Issuance)
Money Maker Deposits
Money Maker Withdrawals
Master Charge Payments
Federal Tax Deposits
New Savings Accounts
New Checking Accounts
Loan Payments
Utility Bills
First National offices.)
Orange County
. Cypress
Huntington Beach:
Special Egg Prices
Good Thru Wed., Oct . 3 ALWAYS
TOP
QUALITY
Money Orders
Traveler's Checks
Master Charge Cash Advance
Consumer Loan Applications
C.shier's Checks
Adams Avenue
Beach Boulevard
Saddleback
Sunny Hill•
Westcliff
Los Angeles County
'Bellflower
Lakewood
' ,,
•
SEE!)LESS
Coming Soon
25~
OUR FAMOUS
PUMPKIN
PILE
Over 40,000
Pounds Of Pumpkins
Wholesale To Restaurants Dolly
2016 NIWPORT BLVD-COSTA MESA
(NEAR B4Y) PHONE 646-5718
Xmas Club Payments
Southern California
First National Bank
I
National "
Drive through, Monday and Frida)' -Member P.OJ.C.
.\ ,,
,
•
•
•
t
~YOL. 66, NO. 271, 4 SECTIONS, 44 PAG ES
::·:· . " -·
. •
Libraries
..
Tell Losses
·Jn Books
•
lly L. PETER KRIEG
Of ... Diiiy l"t'91 .....
High school libraries 1n the Newport.
Mesa Unified School Df!trict are experi-
encing \\jlat one Encll!h department
chatrman today cahed "an unbelievable
antount" of thievery by students. Ail four hlgll schools each reported
book losses In tlie neighborhood of $25.000
o~· the-past three years for a total
klR amounting to roughly $1001000, li-
bnuians said.
-one-hla'tl-sctrool library is installing a
ft5,000 efecironic book check system to
guard against theft. ·
A librarian at aoother school criticized
the district administration for turning its
back on the problem.
ljewport Harbor High School Librarian
?t{Jw. Jnei Walker sata tosses there have
a'feraged 1,300 volumes each of the past thrM years. Replacement costs, about
f/.50 per book, are more tit.an $14,000 a
year there.
she's getting the book magnetizing
syjem-similiar to security systems now
insjalied at airports -that will sound
an alann if a boot that has not been de-
RDSitized is carried through an exit gate.
¥n . Opel Price, lilririan at co.ta
Mola High School, said book thefts have
----at beJL ochool. She Ol1i1 loot
•bout 500 books lut ,.... . -
But Mra. Price said leCltrity -Id he
better ii school dittrict oUiciaJ. would.
admit there la a problem.
•
'
ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA
•
Today's F inal
N.Y. St ock
" FRIDAY, ,$£~EMBER 28, I ~73 • c T~N CENTS
ear esa
5 Structures
Destroyed;
Boy Blamed
A 13-year-old boy playing with matcbea
touched off a $15,000 inferno in a
neighborhood just outside the Costa Mesa
boundary Thursday. The f I am e a
destroyed two bou.se trailers, a garaie
and two storage sheds.
No one was injured in the spectacular
5:55 p.m. blaze battled by engine com-
panies Crom the Orange County fire
•
Department. .
Major property losses-were su.ffer.ed tiy_ ·
former mQ.vie j;ctress Dorothy Dare, 2028 •
-s.nta·Ma-Ave., and lier-neliJ>oor;T6s •. •-
Eve Dah1gren, 2032 SMta Ana Ave. BOth--; .
were away when the fire broke out. •
The intense blaze sent black cloUda or ·
smoke over Costa Mesa. WJtnesses a id
the buildings we re fully invol ved when the
first fire trucks arrived from their base
al Orange County Airport.
Orange County firemen dJd not radio
for assistance from the nearby Mariners
and Rochester fire stations in Newport
Beach and Costa Afesa, respectively.
County Battalion Chief Clllf Cbapman
said the first units were at the fire aeven
mfuutes after the blaze was reported, but
several witnesses said it took at Jeut » i
"--~~minute.a before any water was ca th!__, __ _, names. ' ' Chapman aaid the lire broke out ...., •
the l»y'1 match Ignited some CM'pllllaf 1
material-1lored in one of the 1beda Olld
!See FIRE, Port I) ") know I abould he careful whit 1
J.!11)! to the ~papers,'' Mrs. Prtc. 111d, "bo/l the-truth ol -the matter ll. \!16t clis-
triCt oflicial1 do not like to thlnl: ofi!u-
cieiits stealing boots. 'llley close their milds to the problem,•• she said.
".And they look askance at anyone wfN tries to relse &he subject. 1bey feel
therti ls supposed to be an atmosphere
ot freedom on the campuses ao it 10111e-
THURSDAY'S LATE AFTERNOON BLAZE RAGE S OUT OF-CONTROL'IJEFllNO-HOMES NEAR WOODL-AllO SCHOOL -
Fire lnv~stlgators S1y Youth Pl•ying With Matches Ignited Fire Which Destroyed Trailers, Stor1ge Shed ~~~-~~----~
Wife of Nixon's-
Brother 'Doesn't
Mind Wirefap_s' . -llUlhes for aecurity they are dubbed
--OiiOla-1iShlOoed custodian of -.·-Conina del Mar High School'• English
Department OWnnan Dan Gillll directed
]pi·wrath at the students themselves. ~'t'a a pathetic thing. 1blevery is un-
Wlevable. \\'e lose hundreds and bun-diicls of books each year," he said.
Mrs. Zatha Tallman, his school's li-
bNrian. saJd losses have total 900 books
. (See TIUEVERY, Page 21
"M on.ey Taken
• l.,
!=:J t 'Superstar'
·"
1 The central figure in the main
feature might be Inclined to fargive
Mm, but the theater management
'.'Wori•t.
-A young man walked up to the
! box offic:e at the Edwards Cinema,
'"!'3f Adams Ave., CoMa Mesa, at
...,40·18 pm. Thursday, flashed a
! ... r.~olver. and asked lot everybody's
' •looney back.
· ·Police said the casbler handed
'''bver more than $100 and the ban<lit
~apperentl,y melted into crowds
leaving after seeing "Jesus Christ,
:""~rstar." ., '
3 Oie in Search --
Of Lost Plane
With 11 Aboard
EL OORAPO, Ark. (AP) -A Texas
International airliner v.1th U P:'rsons
aJJoard disappeared Thursday night in a
torrential rainstorm over southwest
Arkansas. Three National Guardsmen
were killed in the crash of a helicopter on
its way tO help in the search for the
plane.
Hours passed with no trace of the Con·
vair turboprOp jet which carried eight
passengers and a crew of three on a
flight from El Dorado to Texarkana.
Fog and low ceili!>gs growided most
search planes today. Authorities held lit·
tie hdpe of findlnt; the airliner from the
ground iC it went down In the swampy.
wooded, sparsely ·populated area between
the two cities.
The Tel:arkana Gazette said it learned
unofficially that three passengers were
colonel,, trom the Red River Army depot
near Texarkana.
Texas International did not im·
medi8t;ety identify the passengers or the
crew.
~wls Still on Case
:::Venue Change Denied
•• . ·-I -~fn Sauna Bath Trial ,_
k. Orange County Superior ·eourt
~e refused '11luraday to order • new
~Y' for a trial In which an Anaheim
~ wm claini thst lnjurjea suffered
in 1 health spa'• sauna room Jed her to
~ sexual adventurts.
_ ~ Walttt "'Cbartmu rejected San
~ trial laWJ'er Marvin Lewis ir.'i bid to have tbe trial movell with the
.....,,1 that tt would he 1111-'ble to
.. ,...-p\lbllclty 1n lllot type of trial •..,.here In Clllfomla.11
.o~lo, "'JlH-n& Mrt. M ar I a
POl'IOll, 46, and FUiierton , atlorney Patlild Ruston, reprt1tnilnc llie llollday
11eollh Spa of OrlDje, 1190 moved to
l"'!!lponO the trial dole to mlll(lle lbe cl•
Mlf.of recent publicity.
cBJI acting Pr•ldlng Jud&e William C.
S :Ira later rejected tJiat motion with the • !· ~,
' . ~
' I
comment that no purpose would be serv-
ed by the granting of any delay.
Judge Speirs confirmed the originally
scheduled Oct. 29 date and ordered both
sides to be ready ror lrial on that date.
Lewis &rgued before.,Vudge Charamu ~jected his motion that it would. he Im-
possible to pick a jury In Orange Coun ty
in 'View of the 11wldely read Dally Pilot
atoriea."
"tbey r4tl tblJ thin& with headlines
that remind 1'l" of the end OJ-World War
Jt," he complalaed. "And then lo rub salt ..
'In my wounds tbey printed a falae story
that I had been ftrt'd by Ml'!. Parson who
staiea that she Ma never talked to the
newspal)t;!r. ''
A recent Daily Pilot story quoted ~1 rs.
Parson as having -dismiued Lewis
ISet TRfAL, hat II
'" • •
. "
... ~ ..
MAPPED OUT -Maltese cross
indj~tes location of Thursday's
fire in county corridor between
Costa Mesa and Newport
Beach.. Numbered dots are lire
stations, Number l ls-county
fire · station at •airport; Z-is
Mariners station in Newport: 3
is Rochester Street 1;tation in
Costa Mesa.
•
•
Cla£er Eire Stations
Couldn't Lend a Hand
By RUDI ll'IEDZIELSKJ
Of "'-DlllY ~It.I Iliff
Flames belched blaclc clouds of smoke
over Costa Mesa Thursday as an anxious
crowd of spectators waited for the fire
trucks to arrive .
The engines screamed to 2028 Santa
Ana Ave. a fuU seven minutes after the
fire was reported. They came all the way
, from Orange County Airport and not
from the Mariners staUon in Newport
Beach, or the Rochester Station in Costa
Mesa.
Trucks from those two stations could
have reached the blaze in half the time,
fire officials estima1e. But they remained
parked in their station houses because of
a jurisdictional problem.
The area .surrowxling ThW'sday's fire
is Orange County territory and is
therefore served by the Orange County
Fire Department and the nearest station
with jUrisdiction is Orange County
A.irpcrt.
Officials from both Costa Mesa and
Newport Beach saio today that they have
no jurisdiction over the county, unless
help Js formaJJy requested.
There was no request tor assistance
Thursday.
Acting Costa Mesa Fire Cbief Robert
McClelland said if there had been, men
from the Rochester Street.station could
have reached the blaze in three to four
tnlnutes, under ideal ~ndilions.
"A seven-minute response time from
Orange County Airport isti't-bad when
you coosider the distance those units had
to travel," he aOded. "But in a fire, the
first five minutes are really Critical."
Newport Beach City Manager . Roberl
Wynn explained that Newport Beach
firemen did not speed to the county
pocket Cor the same reason.
"We have a.mutual aid pact With other
pubUo 1gencles but the aia must be r ..
· que!led by the home or mother agency
where the emergency Is," he aald.
"It might sound callous and hard, but
t1-trucks we"' bought by the people of
Newport Beach and lhose men trained by
NeW))Q.rt Beach and they· are used to
right Newport Beach fires," he added .
Had Newport Beach responded without
A request for assistance, state c;om·
pcnsatlon Insurance for Uremcn would
nQf J;ave bter. In effect tn--1the case or-An
accident. according to the dty manager.
He said that firemen from Newport
Beach 'A-"OU!d not go to a county fire even
if it were across the road from ' the sta·
tion, unless there is.a formal request for
assistance .
"We would only go there on our own if
the fire threaten.ed to spread to the city
of Newport Beach and endanrer property
in the city of Newport Beach," he ex-
plained.
County Battalion Chief Cliff Chapman
said that the three alarm fire brought 12
engines to the blaze which was believed
sufficient to contain the fire. But Chap-
man, a fire prevention officer, baa-no-ex-
planation for why the battalion chief
directing the fire did not request
assistance.
"lC there are any complaints we cer·
tainly want to know about them so we ·
can check things out," said Chapman,
suggesting that any comments be
direrted to County Division Chief Bill
Tighe.
Newport Fire Chief Leo Love said he is
exploring the possibility of entering into
an automatic response agreement with
the count:v to cover areas which could be
reached more speedjty by trucks from
the other department.
Meanwhile, he said, under I.he existing
agreement a fire commander can have
virtually anytbing at bis diposal "but he
has to ask.''
Love said in many cases hia men will
actually head for the fire before the re-
quest for assistance is made. On Thurs-
day they did not, thinking the firt. was
'vi thin the ~ta Mesa boundary.
.
Sammy Davis Jr.
Now ·Casino Owner •
·LAS VEGAS (UPI ) -Sammy Davis
Jr. has become the first black man to
hold a gambling ll<:ense as part owner of
a l\'l&Jor hotel on the Las Vegas "!trip."
The Nevada Gaming Commission
Thursday unanlmously a ppr Ov e d
Issuance of a license to Davis, qualifying
him to become a director of the
TroplcanA 11olcl. Davis owns elgh\f r-
cent or the hotel, an intMOSt worth a ul
$2-:mllUon. --·,
..,.m Wire Servicel .
President Nlx:on's sister--in-law, Mn. F.
Donald Nizon of Newport Beach, said
TI1ursday she didn't mind if her
telephone was tapped by the White
House. ... .. .. . . .
Mrs. Ni.Jon, a guest at a black tie
White House dinner lk>noring Prime
Afinister Nonnaa E. Kirt of New
Zealand, also described the President as
"the most fantastic man and the greatest
leader the country haa ever known."
She was unaccompanJed and riported
her husband had to pass up the affair
because he was sufering from severe
headaches and had undergone a
diagnostic spinal tap Thursday.
Reporters ·approached Mrs. Nixon dur-
ing the dancing alter dinner. Asked about
reports that Nixon had her husband 's
telephone tapped lo keep tabs on Donald
Nixon's association with multi-millionaire
Howard ·Hughes, she appeared _. bit
fh .. stered but said:
"I have no comment, We love our
brother."
She added later, when asked if she
minded being tapped, "Not at all."
It was the shortest oHlcial part)'
(See DON NIXONS, P1fe I)
Oraage ..
Weather
The Los Angeles weather service
says It'll he cooler Saturday, with
low clou~ and patchy log aloog
the coast 1n the morning hours.
Highs at the beaches In the low
70s: rising to Ule upper IOs Inland.
lNSJDt; TOIJA l'
Tliert'i a i,ioung pied piptr 111
Ocea1a View School DtltNct who
ha.s t-nuufonned a. group of chil-
dren iflto a ptrfoTming choir.
See •tcT'JI by Sm/I Writer HllaT'Ji
·Kai,ie in todau'• \Veeketwin.
Al Ywr htvk• J
L.M. ~ 1
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PASSERSBY AND NEIGHBORS WITH GARDEN HOSES TAKE COVER FROM HEAT; SPARKS
They Kept Flames From Spruding to Nearby Home During Early Moments of Bl ate
F ro1n Pqe 1
FIRE .. '.
,
spread after he tried to extinguish it.
Fire officials refused to disc1ose the
name of the boy because he is a juvenile.
"I haven't taken an inventory but I can
tell you it's up in the thousands," said
Afiss Dare, 59, in describing the loss.
-~liss Dare starred in motion pictures
and theater productions during the 1930s
and 1940s with Dick Powell, Erroll Flynn,
Jarpes Cagney and others.
The flames threatened but did not ig-
nite the Dare and Dahlgren homes.
•
TONIGIIT
-COSTA MESA CIVIC PLAYHOUSE -
','Her Fatal Beauty" -or "A Shop Girl's
Honor." .fri. and Sat. 8:30 p.m. Reserva-
tions 834-5300. ·Admi ssion $2.
1'1 v.-ant to thank all those people who
jumped in 'and kept niy house wet with
garden hoses. I don't ·even know who
some of them were," Mrs. Dahlstrom
said.
She added lh;il a fort.like structure on
her property had been used by
neighborhood children as a playhouse but
that her son was with her wben t':: fire
broke out.
DCC FRIDAY NIGHT FILMS -"Fan·
fiY Hill," Forum. 7 p.m, Admission $1 .. •
. OCC PLANETARIUM -"())mets 1n
the -HeaVerls, Fan an·d-'Winter Skies ,"
Joel Levine, Science Building No. 16.
s ,303,30 p.m .
"WONDERFUL WORLD OF ORGAN
J\.1USIC" -Musical Comedy Favorites,
Orville Foster lecturer, OCC Science
Hall. 7:30-9:30 p.m.
"EAT THE WEEDS -EDIBLE WILD
PLANTS" -' 'Deser t f)ellcacies,''
Charlotte Clarke lecturer, OCC Science
Stovall Family ~~~~c~~msPEEDWAY RACING
-Fairgrounds, 8: 15 p.m.
H • b T d FOOfBALL -Costa ~1esa at NewpOrt it y rage y Harbor, 8 p.m. Estancia vs. Marina at
\Vestminster High. 8 p.m.
A • s f)• "THE TAVERN" -South Coast 15ai·n·;-Olt ie, s:--Repert<>ry Theater, thru Suri. 8~p.m.
· SATURDAY, SEPT. 19
Tragedy struck the Stovall family of
Costa Mesa for the second time in two
montrus: Tuesday with the death of a teen-
age boy .who broke his ileck diving into a ~
Texas lake six weeks ago.
Funeral services ere "scheduled Mon·
day at 11 a.m. tor Bret T. Stovall, 15, son
of U.S. Army Capt. and Mrs. James
SlOvall 0£ 3138 Kerry Lane.
Rites will be in the Church of Jesus
Christ of Latter-day Saints on Dover
Drive in Newport Beach. Interment to
follow in El Toro cemetery.
Friends may call all day Sunday for
visitation at Bell-Broadway ~tortuary,
Costa 1t1esa , \\'hich is handling ar·
rangements.
The Slova11 boy died Tuesday at
Brooke Anny ~tedical Center in San
Antonio, Tex., as a result of ~juries suf·
fered in the Canyon Lake accident.
His father. a fl yer. was on a temporary
assignmen t to Randolph AFB, but while
in the Southland will seek reauignment
to Fort l\1acArthur in San Pedro so the
family can be closer.
On1y about two months ago -near ~e
time when Bret was first injured -hts
infant CQUSin, Tan ya Stovall of Cosla
l\1esa, succumbed due to the ~alled
crib death syndrome.
LIBRARY STORY HOUR -Films for
all ages, "Nikko, Boy of Greece," and
i·~ty Friend the Fish," 10 :30 a.m.
GLORIA NEWMAN DANCE CON·
CERT -OCC Auditorlwn, 1:30 p.m. No
admission. ·
FOOTBALL -OCC vs. Long Beach Ci-
ty, LeBard Stadium , 7:30 p.m.
'Prostitute'
Ca1 t't Collec t
MILAN, Italy (UP!l -The
11i·oman insisted she was a pros-
titute. LawYers for the other party
insisted she 1vas a house\vife.
On Thursday the woman, iden-
tified only as R. Z .. lost. The court
ruled her a housewife and awarded
her $47.700 damages for a traffic
accident for which she spent 29
months in hospital. .
She had aSked ror $69,000 based
on what she said was her normal
income as a prostitute.
' -From Page 1
THIEVERY • • •
each or the last three years.
"I think it's time the public is made
a\\•are of the problem," Gillis said.
""-frs. Tallman wrote a Jetter"' to the
school newspaper last year," Gillis said.
"But we· have to hit the parents not just
~he kids. The kids are doing the stealing
and they don't care," he asserted.
Gillis said the impact of book thefts
goes far beyond that of dollar losses to
taxpayers.
"ll hits U)e: clasSroom teacher and !he·
kidS~" he said; ··"t hey are as!jfgned·-pro-
jects and can't-get books. -
"And you know they aren't being used
at home. That's the sad part. They're on
a shelf while.others are being deprived,"
Gillis said.
He eoCQuraged parents to look through
books at home and tum them in il they
find any.
And he and the 0otber librarians said
they didn't care where they were turned
in.
"If they're given to a public library or
even just put in a book drop they'll get
to us,"·GilJis said. .
"One major problem is that so many
of these books are out of print and hard fo replace, .. -he s~-. -
Mrs. Jane Whale, Estancia High School
librarian, said she has lost 4,000 books
over the past four years. She said her
library is especially vulnerable to thefts.
"We are situated in the midst of. the
quad and we are a circular library," she
said. "There is no \vay to keep lhe stu-
dents out." -
Mrs. Tallman of Corona det ~far High
School echoed Gillis' criticism of student
thefts.
She said she was especially distressed
at the fact that she has to spend hair
her budget. allocation each_year to re·
place books that have been stolen.
· Fro1n Page 1
DONNIXONS • ••
anyone could remember at the \\'hite
House.
The usual diplomatic toasts \\'ere ex-
changed, and the 94 guests dined on
Royal Squab. But the White House omit-
ffill the--traltill'&nal after-diMer en-
terlainment, and Nixon had escorted
Kirk out the front door by 10:35 p.nl., a
good hour earlier than usual.
The Stovall youth's survivors in ad-
dition lo his parents include a brother.
James Jr., plus slslers Aiindy Lee; Lori
Dee and Terry Lyn.
A d d i t i o n a 1 relatives include
grandparents ~frs. Edward Adamson, of
Costa Mesa. David Adamson, of Hun-
tington Beach : ~lrs. 1'farilyn Stovall . of
~fission Viejo, l\1rs. Gwe n Stovall . of Salt
Lake City and maternal great -
grandmothers l\trs. frank Fisher and
~l rs. ~lay \Vaagen, also both of Utah.
Top State Official Hints
Uppe1~ Bay Accord Near
OU.NII COAST CM
DAILY PILOT
TM Of.,,._ Cot•! DAILY PILOT, wllt1 wt.1d1
It comtln.t *"• lffft.flr.n, It 11¥111 ..... "°
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•,
"
By JOHN ZALLER
Of th• 0•11, fllll't Jllff
SAN FRANCISCO -T'ne top planning
official for the Califomia Department or
};ish and Game disclos~ here today that
he is nearing unofficia l consensus agree--
men! on a plan for public acquisition of
Upper Newport Bay.
"The reaction~ I have from various
government officials are all unofficial al
thi s point.·• said Jim McConnlck, chief
planner of the fish and Game Depart-
ment.
"But I feel v.·e are makin g good prog·
ress IO\\'ard a "·orkable plan of public
ownership. l! everything goes well I.here
could be an announcemenl in the next
few 11,1eeks," be said.
lttcConnick stressed lhal there are
"stil l a bundle of legal technicaliUes
that need to be deall with. Bul \\'C seem
to be n1oving forward."
l\fcO>rmick made the di sclOliure that
he has been working (or about one month
on the proj ect in an inl ervlew follo\\'ing
a meeting of the Upper Newport Bay
field Committee In San Francisco.
He ·said he could not yet make an
official announcement about the plan be· cause it has no.L_betn approved by ''h is
supervis<lr, Norman B. Livcnnorc. state
secretary or natural rCiOUrcC$.
However, 1"1cCo1mlck did 11ay that 'be
has been authoriied to proceed with b&
bind·the-srencs negotiations on lhe aJ·
sumpt.ion 'that U a coni.-ensus were reach-
ed , it would ht'! approved.
Durlne lhc m .. tlng IU!clf, • IJlOkes-
man for Fourth District Supe.rvhtor Ro lph
Clark of AnnheiqtJald as far as Clark
was concerned. the county would be will·
'ing "to pool its resources with any state
or federal agency interested in acquiring
the bay."
Clark is one of Ordllge County's two
rcp rescnta1ives on the field committee,
a joint federal, state, lrvine Company,
county. and city of Newport Beach com-
nlitt.ee charged with coming up with a
package for public acquisition of the bay.
Supervisor Ronald Caspers of Newport
Beach. who is not a regular member of
!he committee, then commented :
"What Supervisor Clark ls saying is
that the county has been unable for some
reason to get moving on this project so
we 're passing t.fle buck to the state and
federal ~o\'emment to take 01,1er for us.''
"That s not true," said Tom Klein,
Clark's administrative assisl< who at-
tended the meeting on behalf of the super-
visor.
"\Vhat we are doing is announcing that
\1,1e're willing to cooperate fully with any
other government agencies willing to help
with this ma1ter .. ,
first District Supervisor Robert Battin,
Orange County's other representative on
the committee. did not comment on
Cla rk 's proposaft during the meeting.
However, after fhe meeting he said, "lf
S\Jpervisor Clark wants the state and
federal government to move ahead on this
project alone. that's fine with me.''
"But it should be pointed oot that If
the coun1y doesn't participate In the
procesa for appraising the bay, it's not
~olng to be providing money for bUying
11. elfher .11 -
Reaction or Field Committee mem·
hers lo Clark 's propo5al was cautious
but optimistic.
FIREMAN ADVANCES ON BLAz'E IN COUNTY CORRIDOR THURSDAY AFTERNOON
Neighbon and Passersby Earlier Ke~t Fl1mes From Ne1rby Homes With Garden Hoses
Agnew's La,wyers Suing
To Block Jury's Probe
-~--~
From Pagel
TRIAL ... •
because of the pUblicity given her case.
Lewis den iecNhat ~e had been dismissed
by Mrs. Parson and branded the s.tory as
JaJse ... _ ~-_ _ __ ._
'
BALTlMORE (l:.!Pll ---Spi~o 1·. .-only follow rus removal· from office-aH8'-.. !:!e told_th~ _c?urt _that_ ~r. a_n~ M_r~: __
Parson \\'ere in the courtroom and tha t Agnew's lawyers filed suit today to block impeac;hmenl.
a grand jury investigation against him on The 24-page ,ntotion for Agnew said: they would support his statement that he was still handling the case. grounds he is immune from indictment "The nation must not be deprived of his ~After Lewi s, in a letter to the Daily
while still vice president. ~services while he defends himself against Pilot, denied being dismissed, Dally Pilot
The action was filed in federal District an indictment voted by perhaps 12 or 23 representil.tives attempted to con~ct
Court here this afternoon and the spec_ial jurors or an information filed at ti:te l\trs. Parson, but were Unable lo re~cb
judge presiding over a grand jury in-whim of a prosecutor." he~rs. Parson sued the health spa on the
vestigation of 1t1aryland political cor-Actually, the grand jury e-0nsists of 22 grounds that trauma created when. she
ruplion arranged a meeting later in the persons. One was excused. \\'as trapped in the sauna room changed
day .in his Norfolk, Va. office with In their argument, the vice president's her personality to the point that she con-
lawycrs for Agnew and the Justice la,vyers cited the 25th Amendmen t, tacted stranters in bars \\'ith a view to
Department. \\'hich provides for succession fo the sexual relationships '''ith them. .
The conference in the chambers of U.S. presidency. A psychiatrist has testified in a depos i·
District Judge 'Valter E. Hoffman was "In adopting the 25th Amendment. the tion that she developed mu 1 ti p I e
, ___ .Congress_and the sta.!§_g'Cav'c'eccneo;w~pr=-oo;oof_~P"":;;;SOO-;_'"•~l,.iti~e~s as a. resull of her injuries
AGNEW 'FRAMED'=GOt:D-that a functioning Vice president is far an<I her e-0ndition was described -..~,~--11
WATER.-S.e Story, Page 4 too important to the nation to permit his "three faces of Eve" personality split
disablement by crimif1'l pr~llon."
se t up to arrange "a sc~ule for the fil· ttie'·brief said. , •
ing of briefs-and argwnents of cout}fel," The lawyers said a v1ce president is
his office said prior to fonnal filing of elected land charged.' with a WiietY of
the Agnew motion. esscnlla I duties and \'may not1 Y.'e sub-
Basically, Agnew contends that the mil. be hindered or prevented fro1n
Constitution shields hint from any performing his office by the institution of
crimina l legal actions while he is.serving a criminal proceeding agaiJ1st him."
as vice president. His lawyers say he can While he is vlce president. he "must be
be subj ected to such invesligation only by free lo function as vice president ," the
Congress, "'1'hich has the po1vcr of in1-brief said. '
peachmenl. They said this does not mean ''that the
Court proceedings against a sitting vice 1nan holding the office of vice president
Oil Slick Spreads
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -A l ,IOO-
gallon oil slick spread over a wid~ area
of South San Francisco Bay as workers
sought to contain it \vlth booms, the
Coast Guard reported. The spill of crude
or Y.'aste oil stretched from Treasure
Island to ~he vicini1y of Alameda Nava l
Air Station. president, Agnew's lawyers contend, can is above the law or bcyol'ld-itl"'rtach.
!-~~~;;::;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;::::;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~
I
•
,
WOODMARK CHAIRS
A Lot Of Comfo rt At A Reasonable Price
WOODMARK FEATURES
. * LUXURIOUS 25 % DOWN
& 75 % FEATHER BACK * PRICE ,INCLUDES SKIRTS
& ARM COVERS
* EXCELLENT SELECTION
OF FABRICS, ALL
SCOTCH GUARDED
* CLEANING INSTRUCTIONS
FOR EVERY FABRIC
* EIGHT WAY HANO
TIED CHAIR BASES
*ALL DOUBLE OOWLEO
HARDWOOD FRAMES
ANO MUCH, MUCH, MORE
* A TEO von HEME'RT
EXCLUSIVE , •• ON
DISPLAY NOW
LOUNGE CHAIR PRICES START AT $215.
,{
OREXEL-HERJTAGb-HENREDON-WOOOMARK-KARASlAN
"~ 1,NTERIORS ·
WUllDATS & SATURDAYS 9100 to l 1JO
FRIDAY 'TIL 9:00
•
t
0
• ' '
a
• e
e
e
I
• DAU,y PILOT EDITORIAL PAGE _,_.,, •
Too Late for Doubts . ,,
Concern has been ••pressed by many Costa Mesans
over the sudden cauUousness with wh!Cb Newport·Mesa
Unified School District tiustees are approaching the sale
of four. vacant school sites which the people. ot Costa
Mesa have voted to turn into parks.
The sites, totalling 45 acres, were inclu4ed in the
park bond ~ackage which Costa Mesa voters recenUy
approved with . .an overwhelming 71 percent majority.
Voters cast their ballots for the measure with the I!·
proved is puzzling. Tb• same school board already had
accepteJl a ruling on . Ill• lisue. " Instead of delaying the sale with dl5cussions, in·
vestigations , declarations, resolutions and time-con.sum·
ing l>•perwork, the Newport.Mesa Unified School Dis·
trict should cut the red ta.I"' and get 011:with the busi·
ness of negotiating the gale ot the land to the people of
COsta Mesa who have voted to spend the money to
acquire it for parks and open space.
sumpUon that these sites were· no longer· needed for Be f
schools and that they would be sold at surplus. • weigh the ne its
Now the people of Costa Mesa, with money in hand, ,
are being told that the sites are not yet "officially" A trade of territory now being pondered by the Ir·
lus and that it may actually take some time before vine Unified School District and the Newport Mesa Uni·
•
are a owe II e . -fied-&hooJ....District..in.cth~above C-Orona de! Mar
Further,. some school boardlmrneemmiibeeirrss~areittssuudilid!ie!iinfl!y/=--i{imnn'PPm=tCriiim;::;;;:;rii· nifiean · ~
exhibiting concern about the sale because Costa Mesa Mesa residents other. t~an a slight one in the pocketbook.
taxpayers had already bought the land as school sites, Irvine trustees have offered to give up sections of
and were about to buy them again as parks. Nelrport Beach's Harbor View Homes and Spyglass Hill developments and in return have requested to take over The reservations expressed by the school district's the balance of North Ford and Philco-Ford Aeronutronic
board of trustees are both late and disturbing to the industtlal property now in Newport Mesa.
people of Costa Mesa who want more P,arks. For the 200 to 300 students in those tracts, this
Campaign literature, as well as statements made by trade would be benefici>I since they would be able to high-rankin~ school officials and city !Jall admlnistra· walk to school in their neighborhoods if they are brought
tors clearly identified the school sites as .. surplus months 'into the Newport Mesa district. As it stands now, they
before the-election, If tl)ere was any doubt about the face daily bus trips of 15-20 miles to inland Irvine dis-
status of the land, the tnistees should have •!"'ken up trict schools.
before, n.ot after, election day. .. . Though the assessed valuation of the housin g tracts
Further the argument that it is somehow unfaJr is projected twice as high as the Ford properties. the
to Costa Me~ans to ask them to buy the land twice, was Ford properties have no children to support and there-
clearly brought out during the campaign by the bond fore repre .. nt a-fiscal plum. .
opponents and apparenUy did not sway 1he voters from , For C-Osta Mesans this trade could result in slightly
their desire to assume the tax burden. · -higher taxes. DeSnite that, 'the idea appears worth a care-
For the school board to suffer sudden conscience ful look by school trustees. The human benefits may out·
pangs over double taxation the voters themselves ap-weigh the financial concerns.
c
' '
•
'The jo~ofvice president may.not be much, but the ripoff
fringe benefits are great!'
I
Tour_ists Can Nixon Plane , f:ongress Seeks Trade Agree1rae1at Striftgs
---" See-M;ote, _
Than Natives
(SYDNEY J. H-A:RRI~._
Deitr
--Gloom..y
Gus
-=._RemQde.Yng_:.:_--~u~&~ussia~-)>IeJlge~Sh_aken
Bill Soars
President Albert?
-P.O.
WASHING TON - T h e U.S. Treasury
has already-subsidized President Nu:on's
luxurious living at San Clemente and Key
O!Mmr Oft ___,. •• W .... '"'911 •r .Jjfscayn~-if ii ponyii'lg Up ft;785,000
nN9n ... " • -""' '9fllcf "" d • I bis . . H. .,..... "' 111e _,...,.. ,... ,..,.. "' to ec.. ou ,et to swt R .
..... -. • ....,.,. ..., De11Y •11tt. HaJdeman's and Pat Nixon's ideas of
It has become one or the liberal cliches. posh air comfort. • kno le or a coun· 1be White House recently ordered a
that youUJ can t haw 8u=P there a long traveler is going to return with a stupid new jet from Boeing to replace the well~
WASHINGTON-Under the s t e a d y J flnd, per.;uade the committee to pass the
battering of headlines nc:JW·dramatiiing ( Corman-Pettis COmP,romise.
the courageous struggle fot civil rights EV ANS• NOVAK UNDER· TIUS strategy, the vote on Ibo
by inte llectual dissidents in the Soviet . _ most-favored-nation clause-(Title Flve in
Union, President Nixon's pledge to give the iii~ important trade bill) vtould ~ ~tponed until jfJst before the blll 1s the Russians equality with other nations that ·no one in the White House thoughl cleared by the committee and ready for
in trading with the possible when the pledge was ma~e at action in the House.
U.S. is at least tern· the Moscow summit 16 months ago. That way, administration strategists
porarily doomed. hold, the momentum of a favorable vote
The root cause of ONE TENTATIVE rescue operation in commJtt&e might carry the bill ~~ Y~herJ~ the three-week and close-minded view of the country be traveled "Spirit of '76" as the President's r traveler to Europe 'is to be despised and ha.I Yisited-but this would · be true if he lead plane. HaJde~_ personlilly took .J-111 ~ed when-he-gives-111-llis-.JpellLtbr<uean !here. ::w•ll as three chari!_ of the interior decorating and . ! c1o';m.t1c "opin!0111" of the countr1e1 be W\lW. Travel -.0 iht liOid; ·liefOii; lie hiCj: lliiillied, !Iii bllnuiCt nil
the trouble far an-~ went down the drain this week when through the HouSe without the MW,..
tedale1 the decision "f!!ff'·{J-Secretary of State Henry KiMinger Vanik amendinent: Then, when tbe
by , B111aian ·a"thor--"\:''d l-11.....(;-•cancelled a-trip-lo-the-Wa)'>-and-Means Senate version of the bill-sure lo coo· lil\l•N ob el prize. taln the original Jactson ameoomen
winner -Alexander Committee intended to reverse the sent to a Senate-11&.e conference Wly SOlzbtni•---a n d disastrous tide and convert enough mem· · t ~.. ... ml would emerg··e
• ell -···-• it narrows the namw-)ul! u !"O""Y up lo $1.5 million. , has brl Y I~=· . eodi •~-·•• ood beffer aDd.""" .~ . •
!' 'Iller< Is some lnlth In that vieppoint, 1 ~ g Qlell .,..,... . WHEN PAT, NIXON fOUlKI out ,about -.,~ bers'to defeat the Jackson amendment. nex ye..,'iia..co..i~ se otlier • RuUiaO in~ protecting the Pr~klent's opUon to \eep
telleetuals tO go public with thelr deeply A major reason Kimllnget's appearance his ple<!ge to Leonid Brezlmev, the Soviet but also a lot of falsehood. For il·ls ~ D'1lfl -• the appointmaills, 'llhe lift an .air pOcfiL
ble to· visit a new country for a few BUT A ·tomist with 10JDe aense , taste 'lbe former top WJiite liOU$e aide,~ with
: ween arid -it in and background can often cspture a
I,. a Way~Uiat the na-mOre ··acairate portrait of a naUonal .
tives can no longer apirit than the oldest inhabitant. What
see it. the native ·takes for granted (as almost a ~ Habit dulls the part of nature), the tourilt views as a I edge of observaUoo. cultural traJL
• we Americans, for l OUr national obsession with "bigness"
•
1. instance, a c C e p t for lta own llke, 81 ID example, is ~ ourselves 'and our scarcely noticed by ourselves; but to the
' euMlliSii>-iiafural· -fore\illtr ti-provides a U>eful-key for
, 1.y and easily that understanding many of our strange ways.
' : we no longer have a ~tlve on COUNTIUF.8 cannot see themselves
! OW'selves. An educated and 1nteW1ent any more ele1r1y than lndivlduab can.
• European can . grasp a better Idea . of No 000 bow• what be really loob Uke · ! ~hat we are lilre, precisely becauae be from the oulslde; the m1m1r glyes us at
: 1s not himsell a part of the social pro-best a vtPe aod chanc:tn ··~
• cess here. pro:dmation. But a sitranger, 11g a
J AFTER a while we do not noUce fresh and cartM loot at us, can often
familiar scenery. We pass it every day tell more about our penonalltles and
on our way to wWk or sboppin,, but we deepest yearn.ings in a half-hour than we
do not really see it. The same tS true of can know about1ounelves after years of
our national habits, defects and vices. patient self-examJ.natlon.
'l1le emotional and social scenery is so The three-week tourist is neither to be
close to us that our angle of vision cannot despised nor dlsregarded ; he may be
include it. superficial, but be is just as Ukely to be
Obviously, a stupid, close-minded right.
em00.Cll81 grievance against the Kremlin. was postponed was that a telephone talk Communist party' (eader:
The root cause J.s the highly successful between Mills, recovering from his back {-; -campaign ot'"Oemocratic ·Sen:·-Henry M;-operation.down..in Arkansas,J1na.w. ~1 AU. TIIAT nq,r look!-like wishfUl
Jackaon of Wasbingtoo., backed by the Ullman of Oregon, acting committee -{hlnlCing, iifspaaes .. The strenuous efforts
Powerful American.Jewish commW1ily, chairman, decretd ita futilily. Mi)ls flaUy by ~. Nixon, 1tiY Kissinger, bimseU
declined to change his pasition on the Jewish , and by ot?ter high administration to use the issue of trade equality as a Jackson amendment (which, with liberal aides to choke offttbe rabid support for
typical Prussian efficiency, 1iad put the dub to force Moscow to permit totally Democrat Rep. CharJes A. Yanik of Ohio, the Jackson amendment in th e
staff quarters between the presidential free emigraUon of Soviet Jews to Israel. he is ~ing in the House). Am e r i er a n -J _e w Is h comnumity-
~~ m8!1•-th. e quarters for eitra ~Uy __ m.rr 'l'UAT ca. mR@l_gn,_by_Ja~n. and ••w)lerevei' there i~ a synagogue," as one
ClU\,l e ...... ~ MIU3-REFUSED to -bow to fr enzied Jewish-leader tokHls--has failed:-
This would have permitted top staffers Rep. Wilbur Mills of Arkansas, chauman White House requests that he shift_ to a Making that fai!Ure worse are the
to maintain their·24-hour·a-day access to of the House Ways and Means Com-less rigid amendment sponsored· by Rep. •deeply emoti onal civil ri ghts slOties from
the President, but the arrangement mittee, backed by a clear majority in James C. Corman, a Democrat, and Rep. M~w and the sudden attack on liberal
would have forced family and guests tp both the House and Senate, has now been Jerry L. Pettis, a Republican, both of Democr-alic leaders here by ~et in-
squlrm through the staff quarters to visit galvanized by the shrewdly publicized California. 1bat ameridment would give tellectuals for refusing to face the facts
the President and First Lady. civil rights struggle of Solzhenitsyn, the President much-needed flexibility, abou t civil rights in the Soviet Union.
After the discovered what Haldeman nuclear physicist Andrei D. Sakharov and while preeerving hia .power to use the Deep;er implications lie ab ea d ,
bad done , Mrs. Nixon, who often bas laid other brave civil libertarians centered in most-favored-nation issue as a continuing particularly on llow the Kremlin WiU
down the law to her strong-willed bus-Moscow. device to pressure M06COw. reac t when it faib to gef delivery on the
'band, lDSisled that the plane be re--The net result as of today: something Admlnlstration strategists are no'' Nixon pJedge. ~ deeply involved is
designed to her own liking. As a . result , close to panic in tbe Nixon White }iouse. ~ping KWinger will exude enough . .lAmetlcan big busineu,' which -dJkes 1he
the Air Force, .pich had faithfully Tbe President's cherished policy of persuasive charm on the commi tteev 11111ell of profits tr?n.....tly gr<11t..-trade
followed the original Haldeman specilica· detente with the Soviet Union, sym· within the next two weeks to do one of with Russia. But in lls present mood ,
tions, is now spending another $2851000 to bolized by his ptedge to give Moscow two things: first, get ~fe!mittee ~proval those coosideraU~ perhaps even
comform to Pat's request that the guest both U.S. credits ,a\d most-favored-nation of the most-favored-nation proviso for the full bloom Of dete.nte it.self-seem
loWlge be next to the Nixon quarters. trade treatment, now confronts a threat Moscow with no strings attached; or, sec-unimpo rtant to this congress.
Breast Cancer Debate Reveals Flaws • Ill Ethics Code
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• Differing Views on Need for Radical Surgery Create Dilemma for W onien
WASID)iGTON -Tile ethics of
American medicine which sometimes
make it preferable to let another doctor
kJ11 a patient rather than dlsiagree with
number of women would rather die of
cancer of the breut than let the
surgeons have at tliem. ( VON HOFFMAN J All of this sul/ering. would be bad
enough U there were general._agreement
that radlcaJ mastectomy is the best
meam of treatment. Dr .. Crile maintalm
that all that cutting, hacking and
stashing away of human tissue isn't
necesQ.ry in taking care of a localiled
cancer of the breut. A far less radical,
painful and maiming operailoo can do
the job, or so says Dr. Crile.
unnecessarily cruel, what does a~ woman
do? Dr. C,,ti1i; has some suggestions:
do this last when the medical profession
will not permit itself to make any kind of
judgment on the competence of its
members. Anytxxly with an M.D. is as
good as anybody else.
So Dr. Crlle's advice, as a practical
matter, is wo·rll\less. tf we 9on't know
how to find a gdod TV repairman, bow
can we know · ~how lo bite a good
surgeon?
\ '
him also make it Im·
poalble for a prac·
Ucinl physician lo
be a publlc contro-,
venlallst. ~owever,
Dr. George Crile Jr.
does not flt that
description. The re--
cenily retired head
of tbe Clevetalll1
Clinic's department
ol surgery ha1 Violated the rule of tbe
brotherhood by publishing "What Women
Should Know Aboul the Breast Csncer.
eonir.ver1y" (Mocmillan, 1973).
Excerpts from the book appear In this
month's 1"'1• ol Ms. And Dr. CrUe has
appeared on Barbara Walters' TV show
for women lo dispute with pbyalclana
wllo don't 1groe w!lftim about what )'OU
allolJld do lf you 're unlucky enough lo be
THEIR CHOICE OF deiM over treat·
ment ls understandable after you read
Dr. Crlle's description of radical msslec-
lomy, the most frequently .ui,ed aurglcal
procedure. Tile op_eratlon not only takes
of! the breast, but tbe cbelt musc!J!l lllll
most of what we laymen ~ 9" tbe
annp!t, The result Is 1 ' '"'"" t deformJty'' to which mo1t women, Dr:.
Crile lellt us, mal<e 1 "aaUsfactory
., I
physical and emotional adjustment . . .
For those who do not, bow ever, the pill ls
a bitter one." In a culture that puts su.:h
eroUc emphasis on the female breast lt
must be just· about as tough on women
who do make Or. Ctile's "saUsfactory" adjustment
"WHY THEN," the doctor asks, "when
most European surgeoM have abanc:loned
radical surgery, dO the majority of
American surgeons persist in performing
radical mastectomies? And how, in the
face of So many contrary studies con-
ducted in England and Scandinavia, can
American SW"geom remain convinced
that their patients' survival la improved
by inflicting on them the disabilities and
deformities of radical mastectomy?" .
"REFUSE TO submit to radical
mastectomy ... there Is no longer any
justification fo r Us use. Do not sign
permission for a radical . Find a doctor
who wW do a modified radical operation
•.• If you elect to be treated by a partial
mastectomy, remember it takesi more
skill and knowledge of breast cancer to
do this operation properly than to
remove all the breast. Pick your surgeon
accordingly."
That sounds like good S:dvlce uwress
you've met a· woman living under the
tentative diagnosis of breast cancer.
·She's in no shape to argue with the doc-
tor, to refuse to sign 1egal,papcrs or pick•
a surgeon of uncommon skill and
knowledge. How is she ever ..1upposed to
Whal's needed is a new kind of he11fth professional, a non-pracllcing"iloctor who
got$ to separate medica) schools, who
treats no one, p~ribes fl:>r no one, bot
who is paid to represent lt..-: sick and
distraught in thetr nego tiations with our '
healers. Such an occuM1ion already el·
ists in the automobllc repair industry.
The least we can do ls to treat ourselves
as well as we do our cars.
the one woman In 17 who gels this ,~· , disease. Inter.It In th• subject Ia. Intense
not 111ly beCluse of the hysterical leor of ·
cancer that 1U Am.rlCllll blVe, but al,-}
beclbse thl1 is the ~ cause of eath of-women belw ... "the ,, .... o1 rr --
and 50.
• PUNCH
On tbe 101111•what brighter 1lde Is that
a woman wbo contr1ct11 the dlaease bu
an eiceaent cbapoe ol llvlne lo11I enou&h
lo die of somelblna elae. Whether )'OU
want to caU It • cu.re or not, the docton
are rel1Uvely sucoesstul 1t cutUnc this
kind 61 cancer out, yet an UDknoWD·
·•1 thought it would be •,nice gestute to include a member of
the staff."
_,
'
One elJ)lanatioa might be tb•I the doc-
tors make more money from the more
radical operallom; another might be that
while we can see the ftahton ,
superstltkln Md 1 g n o r a n c e in the
medicine of other nauons, we can't see It ·in our own. Dr. Crile's bypolhesis Is that
they probably k,.p cutting tbe women
bec1u.se '1it would seem to these
Silrjeonr 1rbelnyal ohlll µ.. women on
whom Ibey had performed radlcal
maateclomles lo admit that t b e
mutilation had bel!n ln vain,11
Having liamed that abe has IMUst
cancer aod havinl betn told the method
or treatment her doctor ·wiu probably
recom mend Is ne<dlealy apeasive and
•
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OU.N•I COAST
DAILY PILOT
Robert N. w .. d, Publishet
Th...., Keevil, Editor
Barbara Kreiblch
Ed itorial Page Editor
Friday, September 28, 1973
•
The <t?dltarial pa,cei of· the Daily
Pilot uek:s 'lo tntortn Uc! stlmu.la1e
readers by ;preeentlni on 1llis ~
dlvt!T'Se commentart on io,icJI of In-
",.,, by _. ... "' col"'""""' and cartoonlals, by provklln& • tonun ror
re&dcrrs' views •nd ,by pre.Mnl\nc <his
ne~·spaper'1 oPinlona and 'ideu on
tW'rent topb. Tho edlrorltl opinioo.r or the n.:1171ri1ora-ppear only 1n Ute
editorial colunl.ll at lhe ll'lp ot the.
page. Op.lnkw ttXPteued by th1t l'OI·
umni111 and ~artoonlsts and t~tc-r
\\•rlletl ·~ thetr own aqd no cndortt-
ml'nt of tMlr views by UM! Daily
Pilot lhould. be lnftrrtd..
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Wittds ·subside
Brush Fire Qµel·led
By The Associated Prtss acres of wilderness a n d
Subsiding Santa Af¥1 winds recreational land south of
enabled 400 fire fighte.NFfto Camarillo.
stamp out a brush f_ire I.ha~
burned uncootrolled ~ F1RE CRE\YS also fought
hours, destroytiig nearly 13,00!> -nearly a. score of otber fires
BIG PARADE AND . . LOBSTER BAKE SATURDAY
which broke out in tinder dry
Southern caJi!ornia Thursday.
The worst of lhem charred 75
acres one mile south of' Btau-
mont before it . was ex·
tingulshed ....
The cimarillo blaze was
stopped Thursday afternoon
along a southwestern front ~
flanking Deer Canyon, west of
the Malibu area and four
miles from the Lo,,, Angeles ul'1 T•..._
Cowtty line. Probation
•
• \
Suspect in Body
Theft Surrenders
LOS ANGELES (AP ) ..,. A
second man ~ been arrested
in the thert and tiumlng or the
body or rock singer Gram
Panona, whose embalmed re--
maw· Wei< folind smouldering
ln a coffin at 1 remote desert
site.
Michael David Martin, 26, of
Hollywood, surrendered at the
Venice police station Thurs--
day: He had been sought on a
warrant charging grand theft.
J
Friday, Srptrmbtr 28, 1971 DAILY PILOT $
_A,..,,,~~ INDIAN JEW.ELRY
Our treder he• jutt retum•d from
the ZUNI RESERVATION with••
•xcitin9 collection of 9tnuln•
ZUNI NEEDLEPOINT
And lnl•y
For the bttt ttlect1on of REAL
INOIAN MADE Jew•lry1 Rug•, Kechines
•nd a.sktft. Do come by
Ju.+ To Browse or Buy "
3)S$ Vl1 ltdo, NIWJOrt lt•ch
67S.a700 Clo11d Jvn. & Mon.
MARTIN, WHO reportedly
had accompanied Parsons on
road trips when the singer ap-
peared with "The Byrds" and
"Flying Burrito Brothers"
roe~ groups, was released !~~;;~~~~~~~;;~~;;~~;~~~~ later in the day on $1 ,000 bail. ];
See the big parade at FASHION ISLAND No slructures were damag-
i==----llc:JJI~~ . Saturcla around Circle Drive~. __ -9-1.Jd..bllt one fire lighter sulrered
-carnival all 3-----clays-"Serious oorns when be was
Sylvester-'Sly' Stewart.
member _llLfilY. and the
Family Stoner o C k· -
group , has been placed
on probation in a re-
habil itation program
for experimental drug
users. He was convicted
Thursday of drug pos-
session.
P~Sue
Atlantis
Parsons' road manager,
Philip Kaufman, 38, Van Nuys,
was arrested Wednesday on a
similar warrant.
Police -have-given--thls--ac-
count of lhe bizarre Incident:
OVERCOME. INFLATION!
---Reliance-on lh&--divine economy, God's laws_
of supply, provides a basis for overcoming in-
flation. Come and learn about these laws at
'
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by the Balboa Bay trapped in a canyon by a sud· Searchers
MOST
den flareup, officials said.
Nine aircraft . dropped fire
retardants to put out the
flames, which showered the
area with embers and sent
black smoke blllowing into th e
sky .
SANTA MONICA (API -A
father and soo have filed a
SI.SS mllllon fraud suit against
the leaders or an expedition
which last sutnn)er' searched
for the Jost continent of Atlan-
Pi pe Bomb Damages ti•;o11No.eou1urie,a 11ughes
Aircraft Corp. executive, and SF F d l B · zd • his cinematographer son .
Tv.·o me'n in an old black
hearse picked up Parsons' re-
'mains from a loading dock at
Los Ange I es International
Airport last Thursday. The
men signed a receipt for the
body, telling airline personnel
that the singer's family had
decided to have the young
man's body transported by
private plane from another
airport to New Orleans for
burial.
THE FAAfll..V later told
a free Christian Science lecture by: NATIIA·
NIEL R. WHITE entitled
"THE HUMAN AND THE DIVINE ECONOMY"
.t th ll'YiM hwl I.I.rt ,_,, .... ,....,
SUNDAY AFTERNOON : SEPT. 30 AT 5:00 P.M. ..
Sl'OpolSOlllO t Y
First Church of Christ, Scientist, Laguna Beach
C1'tll<d Ctre ti Hit Clt'llrclt-US Hltfl Dr!Yt PANTS.
SKIRTS,
SWEATERS
e era Ul ing William, said in the Superior
Court suit filed Thursday that
John Sherratt, District Tu·o they had lost more ihan
fire chie f. said the bomb may $55,000 invested in a propcsed
have been detonated by burn-film documeqiiU'Y of the
SAN FRANCISCO (UPI\ -
A pipe bomb blew up outside a
basement "lirea window in San
Franclsro's Old Fed e r a I
Building early today , starting
a fire that caused damage
estimated at between $5,000
and $10,000.
authorities they had expected I I::==================::;:===' Parsoqs to be returned byl-
oommercial plane from the in-
ternational a i r po r t as
originally planned.
I
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49~
"""' the reasury
DRY CLEANING
WESTERN STATE UNIVERSITY
COLLEGE OF LAW
OF ORANGE COUNT'(
WLl-TIME LAW STUDY PROGRAM
NOW AVAILABLE
•.IF YOU HAV( •n AA d~•ft.
• In :' '/1 o< J yt•" of !1111.1"n" l•w '111dy 115.16
c1ti~•oom houn P"' Wt t\), or
I
• In 3-'/, -OJ-.i yuu of p1<l·time ld•r.---Xtt!l!..l'!SI._!!!__ _
WHkP...01 l1w •t..dy ll cl1uf1 P"' wu•, 3·A ho11ri
p.r clt11),
search. · ing gasoline and that a five--Among t h 0 s-e named as
gallon container bad been defendants was Dr. Julian
found. Nava , a member of the Los
Two bombs had b e e n Angeles Board of Education.
planted, but o~ly one blew up Also named was Maxine
and an explos ives squad from Asher who with Nava is co-
th e J\rmy 's Presidio of San di~r ef AndeQt Mec:liter-
A coffin containing Parsons'
body later / was found by
campers near the desert town
ol Joshua Tree, 200 miles east
or here.
Francisco _ was called I o ranean Research Assoc.iajM:io. . ~-L...n,. l • dbpose:s>H~t""l;:i~L~JlJl-1-<lle-!!Jleoiti,;;.:: iJC«vO ttt:·~ ~:;~~";/.\;i~ to explode. · ----· · ~·-----·--· -----...· "'.€.
TR~ msroo:~r~ -at ~~y~~~peo;~USsa~g·:e: ~-?"~-!=
No Penalty
,4gain,st
.Spiritualist
about 1:30 a.m., but there was found traces of Atlantis off the
-n o immediate information roast of Spain. However scuba
linking it to a similar ex-divers who participated in the
plosion at about the same time search said remnants of the
on the ninth floor of the I'IT legendary sunken continent
Building in New York City. never were found .
Licensed?.
LOS ANGELES CAP )
County· CoWlSel John H .
Larson is-preparing ordinance
Ri h F th I t amendments intended to c a er nnocen tighlen control over massage
schools i n uninrorporated
In B I Air Sh • areas.
LOS ANGELES (AP) -A e oot1ng Larson's . deputy, Frederick 55-year-old "spirilual healer" R. Bennelt, said Thursday Jhe
whose backers include Presi-amendments will r e q u i r e
dent NIB!U a,dyiser on Qfil:__---5ANTA__MQNlCA.CAfi-A Medeiros' attorneys bad _county licensing_for Ji_ll
sumer affairs. won't have to wealthy Bel Air bu.sines"'srnan argued U;tat Medeiros bad-1lot massage parlors whose
pay a fine for his conviction or ·. Nieto on the porch or his home , lud ts ·
"Avoid This Fix ... Call llx" :a:1z·
lllVK1CO•AlllY IMC,
tJOt U.OUMA CAWTOlllMM
1.AOUNAllACH
A COMPLETE PAIHT , ST.AIM, MID FIHISH
REMOVAL SERVICE
WE PREPARE YOUR TREASURES FOR
EASY REFIHISHIHG
WITHOUT LYE, ACIDS OR HARMFUL
MATERIALS
• Vov c.m flm your Juri1 Ooclor U.D.) *g•ft, t nd
bttomt ·
ELIGIBLE TO TAKE THE
CALIFORNIA BAR EXAMINATION
practl-clng-without a license:-~ bas .been acqwtted of murder in self tlefense.-• emp1oyes or s en receive
Municipal Court Judge Mary in the shooting death of his fees or tips from the public. 1----,,~----------------
E W t I 'ed 11 'ed d ghter" 1 Dep. Dist. Atty. Richard J. Bennett said the proposed · a ers ev1 no pena Y marri au s over. Chrystie contended Medeiros amendments have the support
Thursday aga inst Frank A Superior Court jury of admitted in police tape of legitimate schools of
Hevesy, noting that Hevesy seven men and five women recordings that he "lost his massage, whose students are
had won a retrial for a 1971 found Frank Medeiros. 56, in-head" and fired at Nieto. trained without any contact
conviction on the same charge nocent 0 f seeond-Oegree Medeiros' married daughter, with the public.
after paying a $750 fine and murder Thursday in the Jan. Joanne Mifanda, 26, bad BeMett said the ordinance
serving two years probation. Tl Slaying of Thomas Nieto, broken up with Nieto just amendments will be proposed
A f\<1unici pa1 COurt jury 28. The jury had received the prior to the shooting after !iv-to the county supervisors at
Nearly Everyone
Listens to Landers 800 South Brookhurst
An•haim 92804
1714) 635-3453
OW FOR DAY, EVENING, OR
WEEKEND CLASSES,
found Hevesy guilty May l7 of case earlier in the day. ing with him intermittently. their meeting Tuesday.
operating without a business 1-;i~~;;;;;;;.;~~i;;;;;;;;;;;;;~:..i~iiii;~~iii;iii;,;;;;;;;;;;iii;;;;;;;;;;;;;;i;;;;;;;;;.;;;;;;;;iii;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; license after an underrover in-!•
IN SEPTEMBER OR FEBRUARY SEMESTERS
\'estigator said Hevesy charg·
ed her four years ago for hyp-
nosis treatments for ulcers. ·
Hevesy contended he could not
be prosecuted since be was
engaged in a religious prac-
tice.
ITUDIHll IUtltlt fOll JIOltAlLY IHSUllO STUDIMT 101.HS
~~~~~""''2:0~YHl""-~H>~l~vnt'-""IA""'NI,__~~-~·
OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK HOURS: 10·6
LARGE AA
RANCH
·EGGS
69~
Special Egg Prices
Good Thru Wod., Oct. 3
!SEED USS
.
-€ANTALOUPE
ALWAYS
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QUALITY
6
FOR
Coming Soon
'OUR FAMOUS
25~
PUMPKIN
PILE
Over 40,00P
Pounds Of Pumpkins
Wholesale To Restaurants Dally
2016 NEWPORT BLVD. COSTA MESA
INEAR BAY) PHONE 646-5718
e'll wait ·on you.
Till 7:10. ·
You can get
all these services:
Checking Account Deposits
Check Cashing
Sa vings Deposits
Savings Withdrawals
Savings Bonds (Cashing & Issuance)
Money Maker Peposits
Money Maker Withdrawals
Master Charge Payments
Federal Tax Deposits
New Savings Accounts
New Checking Accounts
Loan Paymenls "?
Utility Bills
Money Orders
Traveler's Checks
Master Charge Cash Advance
Consumer Loan Applications
Cashier's Checks
Xmas Oub Payments
Southern California First National Bank
I
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At the drive-up window
of these offices.
(If the First National office where you
have your account doesn't stay open
late, just use any of the offi,es listed be-
low. Because if you have an account
with us, yoti have an accou nt with all
First National offices.)
Orange County
Cypress
Huntington Beach;
Adams Avenue
Beach Boulevard
Saddle back
Su~ny Hills
Westcliff
Los Angeles County
Bellflower
Lakewood
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