HomeMy WebLinkAbout1973-10-01 - Orange Coast Pilot,
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-aoo-Sign· ~titi~-n •
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To Get Sex Mags"'"
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Off Loeal Shelves .. . ................................................................................
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'Ev~r . Vig~a1,11
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• . ' / Agents IJunt
Don Nixon .
·rap Files
From Wire Servlcts
Federal agents are weeding through
wiretap files to find taped telephone con-:.
versations between-F. Donald Nixon of
Newport Beach, the President's brott>er.
and a .funner Hughes 1'oo1 O>mpany of·
ficial charged with income tax evasion.
Attorneys for Jotm Meler, e:r-Hughes
scientific adviser, say their client and
Nixon were...business associates and may
have talked by phone al the lime tbe
President had his brother's line tapped .
They aay such a tap may taint
'evidence betd by the government.. that
l\feier allegedly evaded taxes on $269.000
in personal income in 1968 and 1969,
earned while buying Nevada mining
claims for Howard Hughes.
'l11e day before Meier was arraigned In
~ 1,1.S. District Coutt in Las Vegas; it was
disdoeed that lbe Presldeot bad tbe
Secret Service top the phone ol bis
linither's home aod ooslness In Jlewport
Beach. • . .
·. ~ ~J-e-kytl!'--Byde!'
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German Shepherds Trai ned f or' Job
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,By CANDACll PEAllSOll
ot .... °"" ~· ... lletf "Yo~ ~ pet theae d<Jt!s, play' 1'lul t \hem, anytliing -wt when I II•• the
command -they11 tat you alive."
• Harlen Lambert prov.d his point. '!be
German shtpllerd frisked about tilt yard,
llDOll!ng treet, elj)lorlnl comers, 'being
petted.
Then. as tamDerl cbalned lbe dol and
eoftly spoke. a foreiir\ wqrd, it became a
canine Jei<yU and Hyde, (l'OW!lng, SOOP'
phlg and l111glng at a visitor.
The doe. al_Oftg with a few dozen others,
pracU~s thls achir.okl chertiltr for a liY..
Ing at Orange Ceunty ~ aJld Seourl·
ty Patrol In san11 Ana.
Thty are guard and attack dogs, lor
rent, le111 or sale to businesses or
private hornet eoocerMd about brelk·
Ins.
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()op,' said~Lambert1 w~ has owned
lb4-bullne~ for about three yean, are
helter guards than people. •
'111ey're c:Jieoper. Reillllll< a dog coots
llJS to '175 a moolh. ht iald.
And their semes of smell, sight and
IOtl'ld ls much greater than 1 penon's.
•1n•1 am.ilrig what a dot-can do,"
Lambert .. thuled.
Human guards tend to !all aaloop, he
said, conceding tbat while doc• ml«Jit
allo dou off -their lharp hearlnc
wakes them up at an1 disturbance.
Lambe.'rt has trained 1 b e p herd 1 1 Labredcn, St. Bernards, 1,..t lllne_<1 dobennans, a commodore poodle -ana
Is worklng on._ chlhauhau.
Goanl dogs -worth $300 to S800 -are
taught to hold or delaln, w1 not bite.
unleu thef're attacked lint. Their
training portod lali1I aJ>o<rt n"'eekl.
(See SIN'n\l!S, hp II
lo revealing the tap, It was alleged lhe
President (,eared _ po s a I b I e em-
barrassment from his J>rother's financial
dealing.s.
In respoose to allegations by Meier's
attorney's the U.S. Justice Department
has agreed to ""1'Ch its records lor
transcripts of any conversations between
Donald Nlll1XI aod Meler.
''We are aifnpl)tagreting wil!i defense
attorneys that we will voluntarily supply
the derendant with informaUon not
whethei: or not such tapes exist," said
U.S. Attorney Devoe Heaton. •
"If ariything turns up, It does not mean
we have agreed.to-give them the tapes,"
ht added. .
The start.of Meier's trial was delayed
from Nov. U to Jan. 7 to allow time for
the tape search.
Donald Nl:a:on wu reportedly out ol
town today and not available for com-ment on lhe latest developments.
Trade Meeting Opens
MOSCOW (UPI) -U.S. Tr.asury
Secretaf)' Geora:e P. Shultz met tor two
hours !<><!'I' with P'llrelgn Trade ~Unlster
Nikolai S. Paiolfchev to open the third
meoling of the U.S . .SOVlel Trade Com·
mlsipon. A primary pol'(IOS< of the
Scln.iltz lrlp l8 to reaMure the Soviets
that Prcsldent Nl:a:on it still p!J.\blng to
grant Rusala trade coiieesslons despite a
Hou!< commlllO:-VOle rejecting it.
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·Are dte~ Airlines
Heaping Profits
·Fro111 Se~nrity?
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Magazine Ban? ·Youth, 17,
Slain ;,it 800 Sign Coast Antismut Petition I
By TERRY COVILLE
Of 11111 IMflY ll'Mtl Sl8fl
A Huntington Beach mother wants to
shove sexy magazines like "Playboy,"
"Oui" and "Penthouse" out of local
markets and drug stores and back 1nto
adult book stores or liquor stores.
Patricia Smith, who lives · in the
southeastern part of. town, has filed a
petition with city hall purported ·to cari:y
800 signatures protesting the "open sale
of so many pornographic rhagazines in
the stores of our commtmlty."
Her J)etition goes-before the City Coun-
cil tonight, during the council's 7 o'clock
meeting. But no action is likely to be
taken~
City Attorney Don Bonfa says his
preliminary react.ion is the city has no
power to regulate where·such magazines
are-sold.
"'The state con trols the que"silon of
obscene matter," Sonia says. "But if
councilmen want me to research it
further for an official opilrlon, I can."
Mrs. Smith, an elementary school
teacher in Santa Ana, said today, "You
·Pe11dleton
can enter almost any drug store and
there's a Playboy ·Magazine. I feel I have Military authorities today COlltinued
a·righ to enter a store and not have to questioning three.men found SwKl.a)' with
see ·them or have my daughters see a bloody shotgun in their car shortly
them. ~.rter the murder of a 17·year-<1ld Marine
"I was just put out to flnd how many ·-·at camp Pendleton.
stores had them. The SP.preme Court said this }s a community affair. Some com-Base authorities have refused to iden-
munJties may be a little more outraged tify the three men being held in the in-
tban others. vesligation because formal charges have
"I do think It's significant I could get not yet ~ filed.
800 signatures in two days. 1 don'.t think They did, however, release a few we'll ever stamp them out but 1 do believe there ought to be restrictions on details of the shooting which occurred in
where such magazines are sold." the morning hours and Jed to the death ot
She said she doesn't want to ban the Pre. Edward Steege of Des Moines, tDWa.
magazines entirely, but Ceels they should The young serviceman's body was
only be sold in adult bookstores or liquor found along the road leading to the rifle
(See PORNO, Page %) range area Jn the southerly portion of the
base.
ls Hijacker Screenin g
~fter discovery of the murder, military
pohce reportedly stopped a suspicious
car on a roadway on the reservation and
during the check of the four ocaipant.s
the officers found the weapon. .
Enriching the Airlines?
BY GEORGE LEIDAL
OI 11111 IMflY PfMt Steff
Tbe ree charged to "!'<" sky jackers
from legitimate air travelers may be
enriching airlines, airport of£ici<qs charg-
ed today. ·
Orange "C'.ounty Airport Administrator
Robert Breshahan said today Z2 cents, of
the 25-cenls each passenger pays as a
security surcharge goes to pay costs of
providing screening otricen.
AD GUARANTEES
FA.ST 'PICKUP'
When you're looking for a ·car buyer
with "pickup" as f~t as your car, try
Daily Pilot want ads £or quickness. 'lllis
advertiser did:
'71 Cootlnental 4 dr. Dk.
green, blk. vinyl top. AMI
tM stereo. Tilt whJ., air,
almost new steel belted trs.
Lealher Int. MUil aell,qulclt
al 13100. Approx. 34M Oil:
May finance. HURRY ! (Ad-
dress, phone no.).
The urgeney message was receivt'd by
readt" and respome was '8st. For fast
resull!, call lhe direct lloe, 642-5678 ·to
tilt Dalzy Pilot Clas!lli<d Advert~g
Dept.
However, a Sacramento airport official
charges that airlines reap as riitich as $1
million excess each month from the
security :iurcharges they ~llect:
Bmnahan explained how the system
works. Airlines, .with approval of the
Civil Aeronautics Board, collect the 25
cents from each passenger who buys a
lkket to Oy.
Airports each month bill the airlines
for the cost or security precautions, in·
eluding the salaries of ofOoers assigned .
"Obviously it takes a certain number
of men regardless of how many people
are enplaned," Bresnahan said.
At smaller airports, the cost per
passenger ~ likely to be higher.
"I'd imaglneihat at the bigger airports
lthere costs arc spread over a greater
number or passengers the 1<.'0St per-
person might be as low as 17 or 18
cents," Bresnahan speculated.
James K. Carr, president of the
Airport Operators COUncll International,
said the alrllnes are pocketing up !O 72.6 '
percent of the ta.J::e from the 25-eent
charge.
CarT also heads the Sacramento
Metropolitan Airport.
carr sold AOC!, • Washington, D.C ..
bated organization representing airports
handling commercial passeogen, had
found in some cases airlines withheld
reimbursement for the cost of anU.sky-
jacklng measures. ·
Carr has ,urged CAB Olllnnan Robert
ISee AIRPORTS, hie II
i;-.
Reports from other sources said lhe
shotgun bore distinct, bloody handprinls
on the muzzle.
Three of the four persons reportedly
were taken into cu.stody and an in-
vestigation launched by the base provost ·
marshal's office and the N a v a l
Investigative Service.
Weather
Considerable cloudiness in the
morning hours along the Orange
Coas1 Tuesda~'· clearing to sunny,
but cooler skies in the afternoon.
Highs in the upper 00s at thC beach-
es rising to the mid-70s ·inland.
INSIDE TODA. Y
"In all hon~sty, I don't TtoUy
see how a teo1nan can say that
she 1oonts tlte n101l she loves to
be m:eside11t, ·• soys Nancy Rea.
0011 . wife of a leadlna conttn<kr
for tilt 1976 Rcp11blicon prtsf..
citntial nomn1otiotl. See 1tory1 Page 26. . ......
L.M. le'il CetUerlll•
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Hunt, 4 Others to . Get Reduced . T-erms r -,
SENTRIES : .• I
Attia clot• -worth from l800 to almoot n.ooo -take tho o1roru1ve on
eommaod Q<lly.
WASHINGTON (UPI) -Judge John J.
Slrica said today he \\'ould reduce sen-
tences of up to 40 years he previously lm·
posed on E. Howard lhmt and four men
who pleaded guilt y to the \\'atergate
burglsry.
Sirlca, chief judge of the U.S. Dlslrict
C'A>urt for the Dlstz;k;t of Columbia, said
that forcing them to Serve loog tenns
"would not ooly be Wlwarranted but un-
just."
At a brief court hearing tbal Sirica
called b&=au5e of "what appears to be a
widespread rnilWlderstanding" about the
temporary, maximum sentence be gave
the five, the judge noted he would be le-
nient in determining finaf punishment.
Sltica pve no indication when the final
aenteoC<a woold be lmpooed, noting that
au five asked to wlthclraw guilty pleas
-they made lut January shorlly aft<r
tbe1r trial began.
Sbica sentenced the men, Hunt,
Bernard L. Barker, Frank A. sturgb,
Virgilio R. Go!wllei and Eugenio R.
Mart.iDezlo~provisional, maximum terms
ol up to <O years In prison last Mardi. He
-lben that tbe1r llnal ~ would depeod oo the eoopenuOn ·they
gave &o Watergate investigators.
He declattd: "It was never my ln-
tenUon -and again J rtptat wilh
emplwl.t -that the mulmwn l8mS or
the prov!Jlonal ·-should "1<0m• the t.nns of the linal-.,..i.-. fn UU.
ca.se, lltlCh a cIUpojtioD would not Ollly be
unwarranted but unjust."
Attorney Daniel Schult: ..,ked for and
received a week's exteMloo of a Wednel-·
day deadline to file "affidavit. ol
fact" supporting the CODleDtion of hla
four client.I that they were hired lnto
ertme bJ hlP , ......... t olflclah and
Ihm --' to plead pllty and re-
malp ollenl ' . .
Hunt't attorney, Sldoey Facbs, was
granted penn.bsion to file a moUon by
Frid•Y asking Sirica to roconslder his
order demaadin( _.... aflldlvtlL
The judge said lI he denleo the mouons
to switch tl!elr pleas from pllty to Jn.
noeeot, final ...-wUI be detennJn.
ed acconlinc to lnfom>aUOn-In pre-
Mllten<e · reporta he rtee!Vos on each
man. ''And It will he perfectly apparent, at
that time -ll that time .....,. -that
ouch dlspoaltlon WU pl'Odicatad, as it
lbould :be upon ~ com,111icn.
Ulldent aoct jUllJoo. • -said. Hld tes 1Nt wee -at the: Senate '
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Watergate bearing•. A CIA 1Jerlt for
more than to years before tt:Lirlna:. he
wall regarded as ooe of the mutermlDdl ol U. hrtak-ln ol the
Democratic headquarters at t h e
wate(Vte complex Ja 17, 1m.
· Hunt' haa also taltllled at lqth in
other lnvesttgatloos o( W'1ter1ate lld
related aeUvtUes, sudi aa the Ellsberg
burglary. . .
He and the four others, all fro!ll the
Miami area, wel'fl broUght to Slrica's
court this morning from a red.era! deten·
lion center just Olllaide W ashingtoo. All
appeared lo he In good spirits,-omtllng
aod waving at rePorten they reCoptzed.
'Ibeir training takts 12 to 14 weeks, Not
only do tiJ9 go through agitation and
obedience/tessoos, but they hav~ to
become mW!Hinguol. ,
The adack command words are 1n German and French. 0 1 don't want any
aU~ps. I don't want any (English) wt:1rd
sounding like an at lack w;ord," said Lam·
bert who put' in 6~ years on tho Santa
Ana police ft;>rce after becoming its tint
black officer.
The most Important thing an atteck
dog ha.s to learn ls ''no."
"II you agitat. a dog and he doesn'I
know when to tarn off,., Lambert ex-
plains, "he'll chew somebody up."
-'Gree1i, Red Liglats'
Lambert stresses this angle in traininc
bec~use the dogs are often family pets.
Jn fact, Labradors and St. Bunards are
known to be fairly docile, friendly
breed!.
st.· Bernards retain wlµlt they're
!aught, said Lambert, and Labradors are
Many· Memphis
Folks See UFOs
· "sh;µ'p and more agress!ve than German
Shepherds ~·hen. trainee["
With the help of two handlers, Lambert
deliveis each rented dog nightly or on
weekends to the businesses when they
close for the evening. The dogs are then
picked up in the ~omlng and sleep dur·
Ing the day.
If.Ii buoioess U"8 a dog ,..ular\y,
Lambert rotat.• It with other clop eo no
ooe person can make friend! with the
canine guards.
ME!r!PHIS, Tenn. (UPI) -An uniden-
tified flying object, alternately shining
brightly and fainUy, was visible over tbe
Memphis area for about four hours Sun.
day night.
''I know it sounds fanta stic. but it'~
true," police man Flanning Glover of
suburban Colliervi lle said of the UFO.
"If I was by myself, I'd say I was nuts,
but there were plenty of Yrilnesses."
At least four other Shelby County law
tnforeement officials saw the UFO as it
·Laguna Barmaid
, Victinl of Rape
After Struggle ..
A 29-year-old Laguna Beach woman
was accosted outside her apartmfi!t
door, choked and forced into her
bednxm where she was raped by a lanky
tlssailarit Saturday.
Following the pre-dawn assault, the
woman ran from her l'Midence and drove
to the i..guna Beach Police Department.
The woman, 'tfbo works as a barmaid,
bad been returning to her apartment
, ' early Saturday morning.
Del. Gene Brooks .said th at as she
unlocked and opened her niid·Laguna
apartment door, a young long haired
man grabbed her from behind with a
" choke' hold around the neelt, and placed
bis hand over her mouth.
In the following wild struggle. the
apartmerit living room was left a
shambles and a panel from the front door
was knocked out.
Det. Brooks said that the woman stop-
ped · fighting aft.er the tall , thin rapist
threatened he r with physical harm.
DeL Brooks said the man was a.bout
six feet tall. weighed about 145 poundS.
lie had long shoulder-length·light brown
hair which he wore pulled back and tied
with a red bandana. Police belleve he is
about 25 years of age.
Buzhardt's Son
Held on Pot Rap
COLUMBIA, S.C. (AP) -George S.
Buzhardt. son of presidential special
counsel J . Fred Buihardt, has been ar-
rested on charges of possession of mari-
juana v.·ith intent to distribute , police
here say.
Buzhardt. 20, a University of South
Carolina student, was arrested Wednes-
day night by narcotics agents while
driving a ca r containing 12 pound$' or
marijuana , police said. Another USC stu·
dent and a lhird you th ln the car were l: aM"eSted, police said.
.~ Young Buzhardt's father' was appointed
1 special counsel to President Nixon last
May with res ponsibllity of handling the
' Watergate investlgalloh at the White
HOU5e level. -r. • OIANH COAST IT
DAILY PILOT
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moved aC1'05S the Mempbia area.
Joey Smith, 13, and htl brother, Barry,
9, were feeding the Chick.ens at their
home in Soi.tthwest Chester r.ounty when
they spotted "something green .wl.th red
lights" in the sky.
'"Ibey ran in the chicken house
because they were scaretl it was going to
get them," said their mother. "They said
it made a whirring mise."
In Obion County, near the Kentucky
border, Sherill Nathan Qmoingham oaid
be saw three different UFO'a Saturday
night, beard one zoom ~er bis house and
talked to at least 1111 pOople who i<pOrted
·similar sightings. Welfare M4nsioa
UPIT_.... -
Lambert has lost ooly two doll lo
throe years to Poisoning. The doga an
trained not to accept food .
To insure that a male doe won't be
dlstraded from the job· by a fenllle dog
in heat, Lambert often leaselll out a male-
female team ..
'"n>e male's going to do his thing· -
yoo can't stop that," he explatned. But
the female stays at her post.
One of his dogs detained a polential
burglar fo11-a day an<ta half in the co~r
of a fenced yard before the police
rescued the suspect.
bl another successful case, a burglar
got so tired of being held captive by a
snarling dog, he called the police far
help. Glover said the moving liglit appeared
orange at time~ lben changed··hact to
whit.. -Airvlew of an 1s.room--1'"'m;;:;;can"'sl"o"n;..-r.-:w=c'"'Mn<=.---;h;;;o:;;u;;se;-,-:,.;;ihi"':i:-IS'-'=y"on""-"'re"pa=fr=-, °"a0s"li"b"te'°'an=an5"0"a"cres"""'
Dorothy-L.. Clerkin, welfare .recipient lives in Ded· of land were asseued at $117,000. Her estranged
-Guard-dogs...!!more..and mor.e..are_wbat
the public needs for protection rather
than a man with a guQ," said Lambert.
Shooting sonieone is rarely justifiable, be
added .
"I wouldn't say It had more than one
light," he said. "The light I saw was kind
of orange and then it would get bright
and :teemed to tum white. Then It would
go out and come back on a different coL-
or.
ham, Mass., with her four children. State auditor husband, William, still lives in one wing of the house
Thaddeus Buczko says the property has a market with a separate telephone. They . owe $30,000 in
value in excess of $200,000. Mrs. Clerkin said the .back taxes on the property. ~~~~~~~~-'-''---'--~~~~~~~-Lambert, who sprinkles his con-
versation with street words like "oool,"
"dude" and "man," is training dogs to
sniff out explosives and heroin. "We put a spotlight on It and It lust
went oul." he said, "then it reappeared
in a different place.
"We called a helicopter out and he
seemed to be right over it, but as far as I
know, be must not have seen Jt."
A Federal AvtaUOn J.imcy opol<sman ,
said a briiht Mtite light seen u It paaoed
near the airport was no_t spotted by FAA
persoooel.
"About 15 years ago, one of the guys
up here said he saw something in tbe sky
be couldn't exP.lain, and the Air Force
·contacted him a'nd sent him aboot 15 leet
ol papers 10 fill C)llt.
'House of Bud'
Sparks Boycott .
By Bart,enders
CLEVELAND, Ohio (AP) -When you
say "Bud" to the owners ot five bars
near qeveland State University, they say
"boycott. tt
The ban are protesting a two-week-Old "You know, I don't tblnk anybody up
here is ·going to see anything ~amiliar area tavern called the House Of Bud,
again," the FAA spokesman saJd. which features tbe Budweiser song,
In Obion Coonty George and Vicki • Budweiser wallpaper, Budweiser lamp!!!,
Rogen said a bright red ligbt swooped Budweiser aouvenirs and, of course,
close enough to the earth to light up an . Budweiser beer. '
acre and a half Saturday night, nearly Under the boycott, the fiye bars have
cau.sJng a seven-ear pileup on State refused to sell Bpdweiser canned or bot~
Highway 78 near Reelfoot Lake. tled beer.
'We were eoming home and I just "Until Anheuser-Busch puts out some
glanced over to my left bl a field and effort to lnfonn Cleveland that they don't
there was a siz: or seven-foot bright red have anything to do with that bar, I'm
'ligh~" Rogers said. going to support the boycott," ooe bar
owner vowed.
Ft'091P .. el
AIRPORTS •••
D. Tinun to act immediately to end
"possible carrier misuse of rtvenues
from the board-approved 2.kent security
surcharge."
He urged the CAB to not approve
further rare hikes until revenues
generated by the secur·ity surcharge Is
channeled into payment of a_irport se<:uri·
ly costs.
From Pagel
PORNO ...
stores where children aren't frequent
visitors.
She admlti.d that she doesnt know ll
the city can do anythicg about the
magazines. She said she filed her petition
to make the council aware of commwiity
feeling.
If no action ts taken, Mn. Smith said
she probably won't do anything else for
the moment.
"I'm too busy right now but 111 retire
at the end of the year, I might try to get
some legislation. or something to t"OOtrol
these magazines."
The owner of the House of Bud, James
F. Geeer, said the boycott was
"cbildlsh."
"Heck, the name do='t mean that
much," be said. "We coo.id call it the
llouse ol Lizards and It wouldn't hurt."
Prostitut,es Get
Lib Unit Backing
LAS1 VEGAS (UPI) -'Ibe National
Organization for Women,' one of the
largest and most influential of women's
liberation groups, favors relaxing laws
again.!t Prostitution. but opposes legaliz-
ed brotbe1s.
Jean Wither! of Seattle, author of a
book on pm1titution, said here the
organiution's teac1ers adopted a policy
under which NOW wiJl support the
"decriminalization" of prostitution, but
oppose licensed bcluRs, such as exist in
... many parts of Nevada.
Licensed prosUtuUon bas concentrated
mainly on checking the women for
\'enereal disease, she said , but "chectihg
only the wt:1man has not stopped the
spread of the disease."
Pants Upheld
Flag Use 'Symbolic Speeelt'
DENVER (UPI) -rt is no more a crime lo wear 1n ~merican.
flag sewn •to the seat or one's pants than to paste a flag decal in a car
window, the Colorado Supremo Court ruled t<>day.
The high court called such action "symbolic speech" and said it
was protected under the Finl AmendrnenL IL overturned the Bouider
District Court convicUon o! David Patten Vaughan, charged with
desecrating the nag. .
"Jwt as some ciUzeM paste flag decals on their ""! windo,.. to
indicate their support o! certaln poUUcal philosophies. de!endant
adorned the BUI o! his Jeans with a nag to Indicate bl.t eentempt !or
those things which the nag symbolizes," lhe eeurt said.
JtL~tice Donald E. KelJey, who wrote tho decision, said: "The
ldeu expre55ed by defendant's eenduet miy seem to some to be
juvenile and inarticulate, and pethaps hi& actjoM are subject to in-
terpretaf,ions other than "" have fiven, but thls doe. no! sll1p his
speech o! consUtutional protection.'
• I
Family Food Bill Up 9%.
For •. ~~nth ~f_ SeR.te~Jler
•
B7 ~ ~ ....... _ . each ,~:z -w-· ) 'ptra 'Ille~.-~ . .,..-~ 1'ecial
. ,.,ac --little u~· .. ~ .... -.. .
cording to lllllilti!t .,.. • •
baaket ourvey refeiletl · toilay ·which Pri""'l\I:~ ;ia-~ ~ il,Y·i!feady
SbOWll the Iainlly grocery bill WU ~lmoit daring Sepcemiia:, ~!:' the and'In the
9 percent higher las! mooth than In freeze on ~·the hill"!ILUoo o! new
March. • . regulations on other fooda. The total
Consumers looting for bargains found marketbUket bin wu up in ·six clliel and
cont.Ptulng decl~. in the .price of pork down In aeven, · with moat ebanges
and eggs. But the decreases were offset av 8 in 1 nt by jumps of several percent in the price er I g ~ or II).
of cookies, milk, sugar and butter. Of the total number of Items checked,
The AP d:f!!:ted the prieea of 15 food 36 percent increased in price from Sept. 1
and nonfood item. in 13 cities March 1 to•Ocl 1; 21 percent went down; 32 per·
and has rechecked at the beglnning of cent were uncban8:ed; and 11 percent
were unavailable on one ol the check
Jane Says War .
Could Resume
DAYTON, Ohio (UPn -AeUvist-ac-
tress Jane Fonda says \he United States
could get reinvolved in the Vietnamese
war U the American people .did not start
to pre55ure Congress.
Miss Fonda an~ her husband Tom
Hayden were guests Saturday on the Phil
DOOahue Show, a syndicated program
taped to be aired beginning today.
"Public opinion and pies.mre on
Congress i.s the only thing that will make
a difference as to whether we get back
into the war," she said.
dates.
'!be plelure for the l!'Ven-morijh I!J!ried
from March 1 to Oct. 1 was gloOmier.
The markelbasket price was up in every
eity """"' DalW where it declioed by one penny -from $9.48 to $9.47 for 13
available iterM. The average .incre.ase
was 8.8 percent
On Sept. l, the AP found that the
rnarketbasket bill in every city wu
higher than it had been March 1, with in-
creases averaglng 7 percent over the six·
month period. ·
The reasons for the Increases were
!amiliar to consumers: higher wholesale
prices, rising operating COits, increased
worldwide demand for commodities.
Boosts in one item pushed up prices of
other good!.
1be employes stay in cages enclosed in
a large yard on SOUth Main Street. It is
surrounded by a bright orange and chain
link fence.
They have .an easy life., Lambert said.
They work eight hours a day, eat ,
sleep. "I work 10, UJ>ours a day.
• "'ibose clOOs.are taken care ol almost belier than 1 am."
.c.;_; '
Agt(!e '(;ii Contract . DETROIT (AP) -Chrysler .and the
United Auto Workers reached tentative
agreement on local contracts before
sfrlke deadllnes tOday at three plants.
The latest ·settlement announced by
Chrysler covers production workers Jn
the finns Indianapolis Electric 1and
foundry plant.. A strike had been set for
11 a.m.
Two Airlines
Tell Threats
BUENOS AIRES CAP) -Ter·
rorist.s have demanded $1 million
each from Pan American World
Airways aod Braniff lotemational
police source:i: saJd today. '
Loca1 directors of the two airlines
reported the threat to police, but
details of the extortion were not
known, SOUl'Ci!s said. The threat ap-
parently came about a week aio.
A Pan Am official said that extra
security measures had been taken
at Ezeiza airport, but flights were
operating normally. Branift could
not be reeehed Immediately. . . -
·See 1>aUda.f> for SPEED OUEEN
Stainless Steel
Fabric Care
Tub e uall . ' . ..,.. .
FULL 2 YEAR ·
PARTS ,and LABOR
WARRANTY
• s-th, Rust·Prool,
Chip-Proof
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AND Hfll POI
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l~isPEED OU~E11Jifal
11 McGrew·!dteon Company Orvlsion
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Linklette1·
• Will Launch
United Way
Fifty-rive member agencies ·of the
Southern Orange County United waY will
benefit from the $1.5 million sought in
!his year's campaign.
Thomas F. Riley, retired Marine Corps
brigadier general, heads the, campaign
effort in the five areas which 'have merg·
ed into the new United Way organization.
Southern Orange County United Way
includes the Har bot, Laguna Beach,
-Orange, Santa Ana al)d Sooth Coast
areas. E"ach area will contribute to the
total goal and will launch its separate
drives with kickoff events.
•
•
'
"
Monday, Octobtr l, 1973 s DAILY PILOT I
Wildlife
Refug es
J dvocated .
Designation of certain areas in Orange
County as wilderness or scenic areas u
part of the open space program has been
proposed by Fifth District Supervisors
Ronald \Y. Caspers of Newport Beach.
Ca!lpers. in a letter to be studied by
supervisors Tuesday. called for a stop or
development in areai which either are or
ha\e been proposed for use as regional
parks.
He listed suCh projects as lhe Starr
Ranch. the Vedanta Socitay property in
Trabuco Canyon· and Upper Newport
Bay.
HARBOR AREA
Television personality Jack Unkletter
\\'ill speak at the Harbor Area k.Jckoff
breakfast, 7:3tl a.m. Tuesday at the
Airporter Inn, Irvine.
'· ~PACIFIC TELEPHON!NiUILDING IN IRV1NE SttOWS s'rAMP OF. LOCAL GOVERNMENT
, First Project Approwd by -City's COUtlCll mon S.1rs No .Sign to Mir Rosldontlll Flovor
Caspers said the area could be
p~veloped at a minimum cost to provide
Wildlife refuges. hiking and equestrian
trails, picnicking and other low activity
uses. ., -. ~~ , • T
Campaigners from Newport Beach,
Costa Mesa and Irvine wlil learn the
Amount they'll be asked to ralse at that
opening program.
LAGUNA BEACH
.Campaigners in Laguna ~ach, Laguna
Hills and South Laguna will seek $4.11411
as their part of the total campaign goal.
SAPDLEBACK . (
Mission Viejo and El Tol'Q. are part of
the Santa Ana area fund drive which
plans a kickoff breakfast at 7:30 a.m.
Oct. tin the Saddletilck Inn, Santa Ana.
SOUTH COAST
Capistrano Beach, Dana Point, Laguna
• Niguel.. San • ....C.lwwile ....@!!d San ·Juan Capistrano~ fundrafsers wm-seek $Sf,897
this year. William H. Walker, president
of Walker Brothers Development Com·
pany heads the South c:oast effort which
began Thursday. . . .
This year's campaign is the first
coordinated dftve for the fiye areas. .
~foney raised sUpports 'the VOlilntary
health, welfare and character building
·services in South Orange County.
Irvine District
Teachers to Get
'Report Cards'
A "report card" giving marks . to
teachers and admini§trators in the }J'Ylne
Uni[jed School District hu been ap-
proved by district U'UStees.
The "Certificated Evaluation System"
is supPosed to "improve instruction and
to increase the effectiveness of certifies·
ted personnel in the classroom and diJ...
trict." ASM>ciated Superintendent Ray
Edman said.
All probationary employes will be
evaluated on their perfonnance annually.
All tenured or permanent personnel will
be assessed annually or every two years.
'
Rings ·the Bell
Irvine Telephone Buildi1i g Opens
The first ~building approved by the days of incorporation in 1971.
fledg1ing Irvine City Q>uneil opened Councilmen, sitting as the city's plan-
Saturday and houset the "phone system ning commission. labored for hours over
of the future," aCeording to Pacific detailed landscaping, parking lot and
Telephone Company spokesmen. building designs. Adjustments made at
Pacific Tel's. electronic switching that January of 1972 meeting resulted in
system, servina: 10,IXXI Irvine area phone landscape buffering between the business
customers, was dedicated Friday. ·The · facility and nearby homes as well as con-.
office ii localed at 4918 Moulton Parkway ditions Vt'hich downplay the buildlng"s
In the Tuesday agenda item, Caspers
asks that the proposal be referred to the
planning commission, Harbors, Beaches
and Parks District and· Regional Park'S
Ad visof'y Board, to report back in 60
days.
Fire Stations
In South County -Will Open Doors
adjacent to the Ranch tract. commercial presence in a residential An open ~ to observe National Fit~
the $5.7. mill!On facility houses high neighborhood. Prevention Week is scheduled for 9 a.m.
sjieed equipment ·ror swltchtng-calls. --'nte--office-~*'1er~wbll .. ,.,.,,_~,to 4. -v.m_;-Oct. 1a.-at fite statioos-lG.-EL ---1
General manager C. R. Johnston said. telephone numbers begi.p with 551 and Toro. Laguna Hills, atid Mission v.iejo.. 1
"Where other switching systems use a ~-On Nov. 5 a new Irvine prefix -~9 Designed to acquaint· the public with <
combinallon of mechanical and electrical -is to be introduced. the specialized services provided by fire
equipment, ESS uses.practically all solid· A unique new ,;test desk " will allow departments, this year's open house will
state electronics and has almost no mov-virtual instanl testing of lines. feature d e m o n s t r a t i o n s by the
iJlg parts."· · An installation and repair facility a\S-O paramedics, aerial firefighting and
The Pacific Tel buildin&-was among ·is housed at the site and' begins service rescue operations by the JOO.foot ladder
the first exceptions to a building freeze for Tustin. ~anta Ana and Irvine truck.
enacted by the Irvine City council within residents today. There also will be simulated fire
Extensive School Survey
Begins for Saddleb~ck
Volunteer workers. tx>pe to survey
every household in the Saddlebact Valley
U'lti/ied ~hooi. otStrict beginning toda1
to help the new district plan its fUt~e.
The massive house-to-house effort is
scheduled to run through Oct. 12, district
coordinator John Cooper said.
"The district will be surveying the
popula\ion and housing almost inch by
inch,'' Cooper said.
The Saddleback Valley Unified District
wa!) formed by a unification election more thaJJ 8 year .aep 1"">i~pt.ssolved the
old San Joaquin Elementary and Tustin
Union High districts .
Irvine District
Seeks to Junk
•
response's. fire prevention movies.
mouth-to-mouth resuscitation and live
fire demonstrations.
Reigning over the open houses will be
Ptiiss Fire Prevention, who will be cr09.-'ll-
ed from the slate of .candldalea at judg-
ing Oct. 3.
Locations of the three open ~ are :
El Toro Fire Station, 13022 El Toro
Roa(!. near the railroad overpass; Laguna
Hills Fire Station, 24001 Pasco de Valen·
cia, near the intersect.ion of El Toro
Road; and Mission Vlejo Flre Station.
2.5862 Marguerite Parkway near Oao
Parkway.
Winners of the annual Fire Pr;evention
Poster Contest will be announced at 2
p.m. Smokey the Bear will make ap-
pearances at the stal lorui during the day .
Fire Prevention \Veek was first pro-
claimed in the United States and Canada
in l!rl2 in recOgnition ol. the veat
Chicago Fire of 1871.
Satiafactory or unsatisfactory marks
"'ill be given in achievement of ob-
jecUves, control, learning environment
and non-classroom duties.
Evaluatioos \.\'ill be by higher-level ad·
ministraton or their representatives, if
aettplable to the teacher being graaed.
TECHNICIANS CHECK PHONE SWITCHING DEVICES
Ken Keirn•n, C•rl Hendrickson in New Irvine Facility
The information will-be used to study
existing housing patterns and enable the
district "to build new schools in the right
localions and have them finished al the
right time," he added.
School Building
An inverse condemnation suit involving
the Irvine School will be filed against the
federal government by Orange County
Counsel.
That fire burned more thaa 30 t»urs.
took the lives of over 200 people and left
11,000 residents homeless. Some 17,SOO
buildings were destroyed.
Conditions that led to that fire are
familiar to Southern Califomla reside.nts :
hot dry winds of gale force, low hwnldi-
ly, and a long dry spell such as during
the fall Santa Ana season. A series of conferences \\'ill be held
\Vith personnel to explain the process and
make progress reparts. Hazards of Fire Cited
Dies of Diptheria
BRADENTON. Fla. (UPI) -The ;!.
year-old daughter of a t r a v e I I n g
evangelist died of diphtheria Saturday
and health officials fear she may have
infected dozens of other children in the
area, including those v.'ho attel"ld6i a tent
revival service.
In Laguna Beach Hills
Burglffr·v.roofi1a9
With the dry. gusty, Santa Ana winds
Sweeping the 'Southland, hills and can-
yons around Laguna Beach are virtual
tinderboxes just waiting fa(. a spark,
lrvlne Police Community Relations O(ficer Tom Lazar and ~oan
Gumina, Irvine substation lnlormation clerk, "demonstrate procedure
whlcfl makes it difficult !or burgla.rs to sell stolen Items. Electronic
pencils are used j..o etch driver's license null}bor of owner onto valu·
•bles. Pencils are available at Ille Zee Street and C.mpu• Drive police
office, in the county fire ~tatloi
Fire Chier Charley Kuhn said today.
"That brush is completely dried out. I
was up in the bills yesterday and it's just
drier than a popcorn." Chief Kuhn said.
I-le urged the public to be especially
careful with all matches and cigarettes
and to promptly report any incidents of
children gathered suspiciously in a
brushy area .
"The largest percentage of our fire s
here .. are set by children playing \\'ith
matches." Chief Kuhn said.
Chief Kuhn listed as special fire hazard
areas viclnilie! ol Arch Beach Heights,
BJuebird canyon. Top of the \Vorld and
LagW\8 Canyon, Park Avenue canyon and
the canyon around Temple lli\18 drive.
"It's just drier than beck. It's ready to
go at anytime. If we've got a strong ~'ind
it's almost impossible to stop a brush fire
before you get to a. fire break," he said.
A series of fuel breaks have been cut
around Laguna Beach and the city has
been spared a major fire for some five
years, Chief Kuhn said. The last major
blaze was in Laguna Canyon about eight
year-s ago.
"We've been lucky,"' the chief said.
He urged r~sidcnts to call 1he depart-
ment and report inc idents of motorcycle
riding In brushy areas, or any unkno,1•n
smoke or haze.
"We want to stop it before it gets
started," he said.
Cltlna Observes
24tl1 Birthday . •
HONG KONG fUP I) -Communist
China celebrated its 24th anniversary to-
day "ith. cans ror persistent vig_ilanct
against "surprise-attac_k'' by the 'Soviet
Union and unity among conlcnding
Chinese political factions.
Op\>id Bruce, chief of tbc U.S. liaison
oUice in Peking. was Invited to the Na-
tiontil oar banriuet, the first ever at-
tcnd<!d by t1n American govern1nerir <>f·
llclal.
-'fhcrc-wcrc"llO major speeches by any
of t1i<' lo&dors. •
District officials emphasized that all
ans\\·ers given by residents will be held
in "strict confidence" and used only for
official purposes of the, district's educa·
tional master plan.
The effort is being guided by the
Educational Master Plan Committee of
parents, residents, district staff and con·
sultants.
The volunteers will work from the
distrlct1s elementary sctx>ols.
The community ·survey, Cooper said,
"\viii help carry out the intention of the
voters who approved the fuading of new
schools by an overwhelming margin last
February.''
Its answers will help "maximize the
concept of the neighborhood school" and
build •·new schools on target," .be added.
A $46 million financial package -$28
million in local bonds and $18 million in
state aid -\\'as approved by about 83
percent of the voters Feb. 6.
Artists Sought
For Capo Beach
Color Carnival ...
The search began this week for artists
and craftsnten in Ufc Capistrano Beach
co1n1nunity to exhibit and sell their .
\Vares at the eighth annual Carnival of
Color Oct. 6 and. 7 al Capistrano Beach
Plaza.
"The donated painting offered this year
by the sponsoring Chamber ol Commerce
will be a scenic work donated by Mrs.
Louise Leyden RooghWn. an acclaimed
Palisades painter and long-time member
of the Chamber.
Artist.s and craftsmen interested in
being exhibitors can register wtth
Chamber officials starting at 8 a.m. the
first mt>rning or the show. A $2.50 fee .will
be charged. Ten percent of the proceeds
of each per~n·1 saleswlll be given Lo the
chamber as well (or pooling into special
fund tor commWltiy projects .
Tickets for the drawing en the donated
nrt work will be avaliable from chan1ber
members before and during the carnival.
The drawing will be at 3 p.m. on the last
day of the weekend event. .
Hour!! for the two-day exhibition and
~ale will be JO n.111. to 5 p.m.
All exhibitors should bring tOOir own
display materials·, chairmen for tbc e\'ent
tlrgcd. this week. ~ .. .
Irvine Unified School District trustees
have given county legal officers the
the go-ahead to prepare the action which
will pa\'e the way for abandonment of.the
Sand Canyon Avenue site.
Portions of Irvine School were built in
19'l6, prior to 1935 earthquake safety
regulations. It lies under flight paths of
El Tart> Marine'Corps Air Statioo and i!i
adjacent to the Santa Ana Freeway.
The board ti?s . been trying to move
students out of the school for ooise and
sa fet y reasons for more than a year.
.~ ... , ... -·
Nixon in Conference
\VASHINGTON (API -PresideDt Nix·
on met today with a leading European
diplomat to discuss ways to patch up
cracks in the Atlantic alliance. A p~
posed declaration of principles between
the United States and its European allies
Was among the items on the agenda for
the Oval Office meeting between Nlsoo
and Francois-Xavier Ortoli, president or
the Commission of the European Com·
munities.
COLOR CARNIVAL SET -, Ca pi strano Beach orrlclals Oen to Tigh t).
f\·trs. ~;n1erson Stanley, Mn. Louise Levdcn Roughton and Chamber
President Georges Narbel man booth to sign up artists for "Carnlv!!
o r rolor'.on Oct. 6 and 7 I
•
• •
• ..
f DAJlV> PILOT Mond.IJ, Ocl0Mr'1, 19'13 ~
Attack Near Sai,gon Biggest Since ,Cease-fi~~
From Wire Servfttt
SAIGON -The South Vietnamese
government today reported more than
300 govemm~t and Communist
casualties in a 2+hour· weekend battle tO
miles north'll'est of Saigon, .
lt wu biggest baUle near the capltai
since the cease-lire last January.
THE soum: Vietnamese military
command said Viet Cong and North VI•>
namese forces attacked two infantry
po3itioos Jess than a mile apart Saturday
m the road between Tay Ninh, a pro-
Iraq Gets
Sovret
Bombers
By FRED S. HOFFMAN
Al" Mllil1'1' #!'1hlr
\VASlllNGTON -~ Soviet Union
bas sent supersonic bombers to Iraq for
the first time in a move Pentagon of·
ficials believe could affect the power
balance in the oi!-ricli Persian Gulf area. •
1 l\fost Pentagon analysts predict the
'ussiaru will tum over a small number
(-J.f~~m.H.r~ -)
I
6f nm blinder b:mbers to the Iraqis,
ilthough there is some opinion that the
Soviets flew there 'Oil an exercise.
i rnE BUNDER. which can fly
at about l,000 miles an hour, is
s fa st and far more advanced
bombers the Russi.am previousJy
save any Arab air force.
l Unt.il now, the Soviets have con-
centrated on fighter planes for the Arabs.
I Israelis probably will be worried about
UWi: J)e'W bomber development, but U.S.
ii.uthorities appear to be focusing their
on the Persian Gulf implications
use of the energy crisis.
'!be !irlt indicatloo !hat the RllSllans 5 made the recent,~ came in a
k by Deputy Sec:ret.ary of Ileferue
liam P. Clsnents Wt Friday, during
ch he stressed the tniportarce Of''-the
l>ersian Gulrs<Vast. oil reeerves. ' . . . ' _., -~ .... ~ .... I CLEM!MS 'ro!.11 a·pr group of
fiViC leaders that the Ru9ifaru: had "2-Jt
IJupenonic bornbm. In Iraq that ~
pever there before."
!Add Iraq Gets .
1 He did not identify the planes, nor
J!laborafe. Other Pentagon offidals sup-
Jllied &tails:
• Some officials suggested the Russians
~ be using the bomber move as a go--
-loi!ow signal to Iran, which is spending
bllions ol dollars on modem amu
b>ught principally from the United States
fend Britain. 1~Iran, a long-time U.S. ally, and Iraq, a
viet client. have been rivals for a long
rime. That rivalry has taken ~ new lm-
1-portance in the broader v.·estem-O>m-
fmunist maneuvering for influence in the
\Persian Gu1f-lndian Ocean region since
fBritain pulled out its forces a few years
fago.
• nns WOULD BE THE FfRST Russian
·action that could be interpreted as a
•warning to lran.
American .intelligence sources have
i reported at least 20 flights by very fa st
t Soviet MlG25 Foxbat reconnaissance
: planes over Iranian territory this year.
l Jt"()l'l;kally, the overflights may have in-
! creased Iran ·s interest in buying even j more sophisticated planes. such as the
'advanced F14 and FIS fighters being
I developed by the U.S. Navy and Air
Force.
And the appearance or supersonic 1 bombers in Iraq may serve to push the 1 Shah of lr2n even closer to buying the
costly fighters, officials say.
vlnctal Clpital near \be Cambodian
bonier. and Klllom Hanh. • dlllrict town.
Lt. Cot. Le Trung llJen, the cotpmand
s~esman. said the two pocll were man-
ned by two ~ battalloos
to<allng about ~ meo. But he aa!d they
beat bad< ropeat<d au.ca 8tturday and
Sunday and coonted l&s North Viet-n.t.,... and Viet Cool( bodleo around
their positions.
Govenmenc cuualtiet were nlPe killed
and ..... thaa 100 woonded O< millilt(,
the command NlcL "One of the -
Viet.nameae battalions Wu Wet to hive
suffered more thla 3S percentWUlltie&.
'
Dra11wtic R~seue
. -IOiitllem defense • perlmetei-bas been
tlowlr, pu!hod bacl< towal)l th& copltil. . '
!llGHT!NG <WAS also reported lo the
we&!, riortll and •ut of P!foom Penh.
At'8ala Lelcpram. aboot ill mB.; up wpway ~ g"""""'1etlt reinl.,.,,.._13
arrived.. inol~l!tg !IJ!l0~--1 . '""*'· and ~telY eopg!d -fol'CCl .on a fter0e fire ftgbt only several
hundi$!s yards out ol the ~-' To the west, a goverriment pincer
operation to clear rebels from two billl -t 11 mlles north-ol the capital . ,... otalled. 'field reporters aald-
Golda ~1'Jeir ·Hits'
...., ,, ' ' '
Terrorist Deal
. STRASBOURG, Fnnce (UPI) -Inell Premier Golda llelrCtoclly de-
nounced Austria'• dedllon. to Withdraw
tnm:lt fadlitiel for Is r a·e ll ·bound
Rmslan Jews aJ an enooungement to
Arab lemlrlJm, but -· aid It would atlct by Its Aleclalon.
"Tem>rism must be wiped out," Mn.
Meir said in an lmpusioned apeocb In
the 17-na!lon COunctl o1 Europe. "No
deaJa wUb taTarbta." Austrians said, the
would fly to VJ«ma probably on Tu<oday
to try to penlllde Auatrta to cbapge the
decision
rnE CHANCJ:;: desci!~ /1i&
de<\i!ion as "long overdue," a~: "U
we had not <lone this soon. tli<e """"d
have been a major battle in ~u in
the near ruture. The "Castle wd en·
~to a high degree."
. "\Vh8t bas happen~ in Vienn'1 \! the
·grtatest encouragemerit to ~~
througtiout the world," ~irs. Meir siaJd Jn
a booming voice. • ·
"l am not bringing to this fonun tbe
questioo ol. the Austrian govemment, but
a higher principle. ·
~~~~;.;: Agnew ·Feel$
-rtUtnlemanclrand qreecl to clooe--·
Jewi!b -... Ur in-. CUtie . H. C !i"".: ~~':"..le: is areer
bootqes -• train -Ruail Jty '
Arab guerrillas. , 'D _ _J' -nierew~·tha---est~oy~~
A crumpled boat, wedged on a rock in the Schuyl·
kill River, is ·left behind and a groaning youth is
brought along with rescuer Dale SWelgart-of the
UPI T....... of Europe session for Austria io -revene lta dedJloos and a can by Italian
Socialist Gluaeppe Vedovato, the
wembly president, for j o i D t In--Reading, Pa .. ftre department SCUBA team in a
one hour rescue Stiti.day with the rapids of the
SChuyUdll River.
ternational action aplmt .......um.
In -· .Uie Dutdt F ... ign Minister said be -id ut tjle Austrian
WAS!UNGTON (UPI) -'l1le Wblto
Hoose said today AUorney Geaenl Ellk>t
L. Rldwlison has denied that B~ E.
Petersen ft. ~ ioarce Gf a .rt &lat
the Jasttce Dopartmial bad ...p
•vidence to convict Vice Presideat Solrn •'
Army Finds 11 _Bodres CeSsna Aircraft .. ..
Stalls, Slams ..
Into Mountain11 -IT"' In JJr.t~ckage of Pla,,e
! ... , .. ; -
MENA, Ark. (OPi) -A military
spokesman sakt ~y all 11 bodies had
been recovered. from the.. wreckage of a
Texas Iniematlolial airliner that slam-
med into the aide of a densely wooded
mountain last Tbursday night.
"Our latest Information Ls that all 11
have been recovered," said B. J. Brewer
of the Red RJver Army Depot. "It's on
Rich Mountain in a very remote area."
lmEWER DENIED that the Anny had
sealed off the crash site in order to
search for a colonel 's briefcase reported-
ly canyiDg secret military documents.
"There are some Army personnel
there," Brewer said. "We have no re&90n
to seal it off. To the be.st of our
knowledge It is absolutel:Y untrue."
Polk County_C.OCOOer's officials sakl the
bodies will not be -moved until the FAA
and airline! offtclalt had thoroughly ex·
amined the crash site. He said the
· wrecltage was scattered over more than
100 yards.
"The only thing left that's identifiable
is the tail section," the spokesman said.
"'This whole thing Ls sort or a mystery. It
doesn't make sense at all unless lightning
struck the plane and killed both pilots
and som ebody not experienced ll'as flying
the plane."
THE PLANE, which drifted more than
100 miles off it.I coune during a violent
thctnd~nn. was found 85 miles north
UTICA, Mont. (UPI) -A''-end
junket turned Into a Bery dealb for eilbt
Jl<"OO' aboard a twiJ>.et1gine c..sn& that slammed Into the rugged Little Belt
Mountains .WCentral M-.a. --
The plane "appartnUy lost power while
circling over the hills about two miles
( IN SHORT ..• )
west of here, stalled out and. era.shed',"
' said Judith Basin County Sheriff Chartes
Loberg.
-~ Killed -were-the-pilot, ..A r l b u?
\.OUlelAN4
Ul'IT.._..19
AIRLINER DISCOVERED
All 11 on Boord O..d ·
d. Te.1ar:ana, Ark. It era.shed during a
2S-minute; 91>-mile flight from El Dorado,
--Ark., to Te..zar.i.ana.
The mlulng plane . was !potted from
the air Sunday night by one of the more
than 3$ private planes crisscrossing
designated areas.' The plane was spotted
by its distinctive tail, which features a
white star on a blue backgmmd.
Anny bellcopten -men., close as they could to the bUmed wreckage.
They puohod through the heavy wi-
derbru$h foe 45 minutes to reach the
crash site.
Myllymaki Jr., 23, Phoenix, Ariz.., and
seven persons from Stanford, Mont.,
Myllymaki's former OOme.
--~ .... Central
GTON (UPI) ~ The
· mmerce Commission said ,,;a,i"11i,,e Penn Central railroad can con-
tinue operating at )east through March
without government subsidies.
The ICC urged rejection by a
Philadelphia bankruptcy ooun ol the
Penn Central trustees' plan to· liquidate
the bankrupt railroad, and safd the line
could be rebuilt into a UAble railroad
with substantial federal and state
assistance.
e Perey Chance•
WASHINGTON (AP) -Sen. Cbarles
H. Percy says he 1ett an hour-long
meeting with President Nlmn with no
"""" of discouragement -.t his own White House prospects.
govemmont for an ~ ol 113
dectaion to cioae the C8llll' but wooJd Mt
ooN1nn r<pOru the NetlJe<landl mifbt ,.p..,. Auotrta u a. relupe reception -·
Nationwide Gas
Shut.down Seen
For Next Friday
By Uttlled Pft11 lnlautloul
lndepeodem oervlce 1ta1lon operatora
from across the COUlltry met In Las
Vegas, Sunday to plan a 008!1-to-
coast shutdown, the ne1t move in their
.._tgn against the Pbue JV llml13 on
the price ol g8'0llne.
"It loob like there will be • nationwide
lockup &tarting ...t l"Jiday," Mid ID ex-
ec:utlve of Ille Cllilornil Retall Alaoda-
tlon. He etthnlted that -:I00,000 ata-ttons would:be cloeocL
T ... _... '·' . ' ,. :.:r----............
PALM SPRINGS (AP) -.Vite Presi-
dent Spiro T. Agnew ha• Wd privately
that be bellefts his political" career bas
been ~; !IOt hi! .lias ""&iOne out
swinplg ~dy at bis ,·-'·' de-. ... -..~ ~ ~ PJ"OV•,,.,..1Jn~1,.;
Aides· ,.NJd. Agnew IA>ld ·"' Jll'lvate
weekend . meeting O(' • ·c a -r1 r 0 r ft i a
Republicao olflda!s. that •veil H 11e·w ex-
-onerated Qf all~gatiorµ.of cofraPtioit; his ·
politicaL!ulure baa beOn destroyed:' : \.
A'GNEW SPOKE to the Republlcaft o/;J
ficials Saturday after dramaUc:all:Y
declaring war on his accusers in a na-
tionally teleyi..ed •PF<ch to a ~lican
women's convention In Les Angetel.
A!ierward, Agnew Is said to bav~ totd
the Califomta p&t!T lea~ thele,_,ld
remain "llngerlng doubts'"-iD tlwt mlnds
of many people even If his name is
cleared. He made. It clear .that be does
expect to be tlellred of '.allegallons ol
wrongdoing.
In another deveJot>rntnt, Maryland
Gov, Marvin ·Mandel announced today
the creation ol an 11-meznber. tut focce
to study lhe state's Johg-slattdlng prac-
tice of aw ardlng eogfneering · and
architectural conlUltant.s' contra c t s
witb>ut competitive bidding:
'!be magazine said the Ni>On team,
headed .by J. Fred Btttbard~ made the
elfort -ln -meetlngs-and telepbon..-con-
versatlons last week. .
Newsweek quott!d· a. Just.lee . Depart-
ment official as saying that the Nixon
team was .seeking a ~l starting from
the department's ,"bcJttc:m.,line re(iuire-
ment" that Agnew reilgn and-plead
guilty to a dwl• fe< wbid1 he....i<I get
at lwt Dine montha in Jill . . . ·-
I
! l
Tornado Injures _Family
The Illinois Republican, -hM set up
a committee to as9eS.! h!a cbanoel for the
1971 GOP pnoiclenUal nomination. said in
an Interview Sunday night, "I woold ,..
no cause to tell the committee to let up
in Its work."
~T )'iYll; proJldent ol Ille l\eyoda Serylce Slatlon 0 p e,.r at o r 1 ~tlol\. l&liltbe lhlrtdown ''wj(l -
time for .. -Jmctb 'o(.iune or until the deolen.obtaln equal jaltlce
under ilw ••• We hope for a dpmlno ef-
fect." ~
Rain Soaks Georgia, Mississippi Valley Regions
MOttOolT
a.o.ci Mfllt .......... ni.-"'"' u kM11 i.. '"'.:.!~~· l :N ~ 1.t ' f\IPUAT
''"' .............. 111•1 1.m. l l !Rlnt -...... ".. 1:4 •• lft. ll
..... """' •••••••••• 11:.'(l.f!I, "' ...... .... _ ........ •111 """ 1.1 Ifft t• •:O LM. S. •1:at l'.lft.
MoM -lltA ........ •:• '"""'
(/
e Tenement.a Bit"'
HOBOKEN, N.J. (AP) -"It was the
kind ol scnam.Ing lb.at makes yo!.I stck •••
A man kept yelling, 'I'm over.here' 'My
babies' 'My babies'", said a woman who
Hves arotmd the comer from a fire that
killed at least nine persons •.
Firemen were to resume seirching to-
day ln the rubble ol four bumeckut
tenements for the body of a 2.-year old
child missing since Saturday's fire.
Police have arrested a Hoboken man on
suspicion of arson.
DAILY PILOT
.DELIVERY SERVICE , -Dtl!Ytry of tht 0.117 Pl~
• h 9UM'Mllffd
,.........,..,,.._.,, 11 "°" .. "" ........ """
...,... ., 11• """' c•M Mtll '"" ..... ... .. ........," "'·<•"'-••-, .• ''"" s..tvnl•' ............. ,. It ,.. .... ....,. ,._ ...., .. t e.-.• .,.....,, _.I I.IL,
ktolfty, ell.,... Clll'f' Woll .......... •
..... ""' .,. ......... It .. ..
~T-Mtlt .,._ c...,. ,.,... ....... ••an
...._.. M;wll>:4• I~ ..... W..""'llllltw .............. ,.
... (.,_I._ c..5 •-II. .......... ,.,. ..... _ ·-...... ~
...,_ i....,. M11991 ·-......
A fouNlly Qitdown ol SL"Looll art&
...-vice ltatioos enda olfldally . today,
with most olleervm colling It 1 !aU.U..
The deaJers began openlq for bualneu
qain oo 51,turday,1!ter !lie Cott ol Liv-
ing COOocil moved Frtdly to pmnlt 1"11•
Ing retail 18*'ilne prices ii)' one In U
cents a galloo. -
IN FRESNO, howevtr, a spokesman
for the Pmlieum Rclal1m ol Central
Ct1Uoml1 said an estimated n1oety !IOl'-
cent ol the~ ..mce IAaU...
..... -S!lnd&y, ... ,., open qaln IDltU Tuelday.
'!be gu dellen want to be able to 11111 ·
on every. lnc:r!ue In w-COit.i to
Iha ......... Wltbout .bavll!I .. "111 1....,,.,,..,t approval F.lllin& IUtlonl ....., Ibo coanily movt<! <iulctiy 1o tal<i edvlntqt or fbe·
..., P!ice celltnp. While the .........
.....eel .to Vlty Jn dillmnt MCtionl or
Ohio, r.r ua111P1e, the norm for ~It
1u w,u about 40 cen~ ~ 'Ibo -' l\ttrqe pmnhnn a:aa appeared to
be about ff conu a gal . • -
, '~T THE CouncU'a Ii~ ua, Iha on Clltll)lllll<t wllf lie ~ -.-llld ' °"" l>o'riy, d-ol the Co!tlhl °"°
Go..il!!e Dnlen ~-Ht llld la
IJ'llUP WIDll a --a ........ ........
.. ,,,_
Rosie CUiton whole name hu
been linked bY romantlc _op_to-
. tilaUon. With that 'of l'J'\nce
Charles, returned lo London
Sllnd1y after spendln2 the
.__end with the·royal'lamlly ' Ill Scotland: ' •
..
\ I
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• . .
Sales Tax Ellsb·erg Braiµled • •
Unstable by Hunt
COASTLINE
ROCKED
•
Monda.y, Octobet'· l , 11173 .DA!lV PILDT I
Pot Party Poofs
Planned Promotion Poorly Attendl!d FERNDALE (UPI) -A
stretch of NQrtli e rn Califomla coastline was SAN FRANCISCO (AP) - A wldespreid ln the crowd. place an I n 1 l i ta t J v e
Reduction
~Today rocked ~ a mild earth-~party held on a Haighl-de c riminallting marijuana,
LOS ANGELES (UPI) - E. contacts ln Vietnam. aum-quake dUring the weekend. Aahbury sldewalk to boost a TWO VNIFORAtED police-before voters ln 197.t. A
Howard Hunt Jr., convicted maritS of hll Writlnp, det.alla 1be temblor, w bl ch new marijuana inUUaUve men kept a friendly eye similar measure won 3S per-SACRAMENT() (AP) -
'Jbat orHlgaln off again aales ~
~iliqeue ii oll again beg!!>-
nlog today .,-a lilt million-
Watergate burglar, told the of bis divorce, of bis penonal reglstertd 3.9 ob the drew about 50 street people on the gathering, but there cent of the vote in 1972.
Los Angeles County Grand Unlvenity of California but not much marljuanq. were no signs of trouble. One
m _that 'DafUel Ellsberg is a. CO n duct ' of his ex-s e Ism o graph , jolted Inttead of tuming -on, the policeman wu presented with LANDBERG SAID the new
"brllUant, unstable man . . . Pe r·I men tat Ion w Ith ttsidents late Saturday youthlul revelers I 0 u n g e d a crayon sketch drawn by a law would be modilied in two.
• tax relief bill takes ertect. who had had evidently a great hallucinogenic drugs, (a) oC night but uused n.o under chilly skies Sunday child whose parents hiid stop-respects from the flrst. Jt
many sexual problems," ac-the rather bizarre life that be d&mage. mostly chatting, pl a y i n g ped to joln in the fun. would make cultivation of 'I1le statewide &-cent sales
tu rate imposed last July 1 It
reduced to 5 cents 'for the
comJng si1 months. Then, neXt
March l, the &-oent rate takes
effect again'permanently.
cording to tesUmony de led in P.falibu . , • " as part of It was centered near chess, and listening to music Ron Landberg, a bearded marijuana plants legal only !t.,
public Sunday. his assignment on the WbJte Cape Mendocino in Hum· provided by a recorder and a organizer of the d ay 's "shielded from public view,
Jn his June 6 testbnony HOuse "plumbers" squad , boldt County and was felt set of bongo drum. Some festi vities, said the party was and would allow local jurisdic--
before the grand jury lJ\.. which allegedly engineered Ple' from Femda1e tQ Eureka. spectators reported seeing pot plaMed as a local kickoff Lo a tiona to enforce $100 fines for·
. vestlgatlng the break1·in al tbe1 _ _'br~eak~~-in'.':·-------'=========='-_:•:ff:::•:red:::_:l:•r...:sal::::•:· _::b":::':..:i:t ::w:aso::.:''......:':":::'•:::w::id:::•:..:pe'::::U:tio:•:.:c::am:::o:pa:::ign!::.l::•......:puc:::bl:::ic:_""'=.:•:f :::the.:.:dru~g=. __ Beverly HUis oC ice o
Jn San Francisco, Alameda
and Contra Costa oounUes,
\ (_: _B_Rl_EF_S __.)
where there is a half-ceiit
rapid transit sales tax, the
rate drops from 6'h cents to
51,-, cents, and it will return in
Marth to 6% cents.
e 'l'lleater Flood·
BOOKED IN ASSAULT
Actor Sl1!-Gll1!'111
..:.!; -• ... • • ' . .
Stu Gilliam
An·ested
Ellsbe rg's psychial.rist, Dr.
Lewis J. Feldini, Hunt said:
"111E PICl'URE t b a t
emerged, to. the •beSt o( my
recollection . . . was that of a
brilliant, unstable man, who
had in effect a blfurcated life:
be bad come from academia,
yet at the same. time, he had
had.marital problems; be had
had evldenUy 'I great many
sexual problems; he COll!Orted
with females of foreign .birth
and extractJon -which was a
danger sign to anybody In the
counter~splonage field." o AK LA N D (APl In lnc1' dent "Our feeling," he said, "w-as 'lbousands of gaUons of. water that thi s was 8 man who wa'
have flooded the $1 million not entirely competent, '
r.novated Panunowrt Theatre LOS ANGELES (AP) -f th a1·1 of the Arts which was reopen-say, in terms o e gencr l y Actor Stu Gilliam, star or a or the AmeriCan public." ed two weeks ago. f be I Def Fire officials said about two new fall teteviskm stiow, is El s rg, a ormer ense
dOZlll men worked all day free on $1,000 bond after his Department researcher, was
Sunda and 1~ftR arrest in COM-lion with an charged with stealing the Pen-y to pump Cft'O.U up ...... in tagon Papers. The judg
after water which gushed into alleged ax-swinging incident ·ordered the charges dropped
the basement from a brokert a Hollywood r~aurant . , 1 1 · f 'Gilliam was booked for in· in mid-tria .. a ler eammg o
pipe. " ·· ve:stigation of aswtlt with a proseeution misconduct. e Plan Rejected deadly wea1xm Saturday night HUNT SAID be familiarized
-B-ERKEL_E_Y_ -(-A p )--after ·the-mcident -at-Alan--hlinsell-"witlf all of_ the· -Hale's Lobster B a r re l . tha had been Resotuuons calling fo,r the lm-Restaurant, police said. They a~ble data t
peachment of Preslde!!.t Nixon ' said Gilliam began arguing ~v1ded by government ag~
and condemning him for with the headwaiter about cies o~ Dr. Ellsberg, hls lif~
''hypocricy" on the issue or reservations ·Went outside to and his -travels a:bl'oad, h1S ~n's rights ~ve betn re-his car and' returned with an
JeCMDy a nar!OWl!tlii'gln" by iii deiiwiding an apology
the NaUonal W o men 1 s When the waller . ref~.
~olltical Caucus of California. Gilliam allegedly threatened
'I'tle vo.tea came Sunday at him with the ax. Hale, a
the end ·of the first annual television actor, wrestled it
meeting of the g r o u p ' s away from Gilliam, police
'California Chapter, attended said.
Actor . Stacv • J
No Longer
by several hundred women. Gilliam, 40, is star of the 'Critical' • ., ... Al•--•--" new series "Roll Qut," which r U"• avcwa.ea is about the World -War lt
FRESNO (AP) -1be staie Army tru1:t tmit ~ as !he
Democratic Party will receive Red Ball Express. LOS ANGELES CAP ) --
Actor James Stacy is in
ser.k>us ~lion at UCLA.
Medical Center following a
traffic accident that cost him
his loft ann aod leg. f l .
bemto 1125.000 llld. 1150.000 •
fn:m the party's national
telttbon for uae in next year's
e!e<ll<n, partj> leaden say .. -111,ijured
:W.lien Ride ~ A meeling of statewide
ne.-'otle Offk!tts wlll '1be
... vtnte1 .... lo del<nnlnt
!tow the money lhould be
distributed but .... 1 is e•· ·Collapses peeled lo be used for register-
ing voters. Chairman "John
Burton told the Democratic
State Central Committee here
Spokesmen"satd Sunday lftal
Stacy's vital signs were-stable
gnd be was off the critical list.
Stacy, former husband !>f
actress Kim Darby and singer
-. -
5unday.
Body Theft
Suspects
Arraigned
POMONA (UPI) -Eleven Connie Stevens, was driving a
persons were injured, two ot them seriously, when a high-motorcycle last Friday when
speed thrill ride af the l.llS it was strµck by a car. A
Angeles ·County Fair broke passenger on the cycle, Clair
down SUnday, throwing the oc-Cox, '2'1, 'was· killed.
cupants of the fast-moving The driver of the car, Carter cars onto the ground. Police .. said -an arm of the B. Gordon, 34, was re-leased on
ride called "The 11urricane" $1,UOO. ball alter beJng booked
snapped while it was spiMing for investigation of felony
81'0;Wld, sending many of the drunk driving. 11te charge was
carscrashingtotheground. ch anged ,to f e lony
·Most seriously injured was manslaughter 'after the girl's
SAN BERNARDINO (UPI) Margareta H~ll. 40, of Los
An el ho suf. f ed f death, said West Los Angeles. -The business manager for g es, w er a rac-
roct iinger Gram Parsons turde skull and a .broken~ , stacy, 36, was the co-star of ·
was ooe of two pel'IOl\S leg and arm. Gerardo Pompa , the "Lancer" televWon series
scheduled to be arraigned to-70, of El . Moote, was treated and had acted in several other
day in the bizarre theft and -·~fo~r~a~pos;;;!';;;'b;;le!!b~ro!!!k!!en;;!;;ha!!cl<~. ,..;;;;'e;;le!!v!!ls!!ion~p!!rodu!!!!!!ct!!lon!!•!!·!!!i:a cremation of the musician's I body two Weeks ago. --·---·-
.PbWp Kaufman, 38, _ and ·p· • fi 8. • Mlchae1MarUn~26~bothonhe · -CfCl f"C: --aVlfigS
Las Angeles area, were ar· . •. • • • • • • • • . ••I llll ,,,1,,,,,.1 rested last week and charged ·
wflh hijacking Parsons' body . Pays On Term Deposits
in a coffin from a loading dock
at ~ Angeles International . For
The coffin was transported · Airport.. . tWO YEARS Iii a vintage hear!e to the -
Joshua Tree Nallonaf Park, in
the desert 12> miles east of Or .Leu
Ia Angeles, where Parat.IDll' 5 remaJns were eremated. ;
'lbt San -tor· oner'• office teviaed. aufopsy
report lilted the cauie of • PoraOoo" death as "multiple •
%
drUg 1bult" due in part lo • On
:.~ey, barbtlurales and'°" $100,000 Accounts
..
Tax Break
'
..Re]ected
SACllAMENTO (AP) -A
property tax br<ak for aged
welfare recipients bu been
vetoed by Gov. Ronald
Reagan.
The me~sure by
A*'1tbl-• Lott!J Papan,
(D-Oaly City), would hlvo ex·
tmtled otnlor 'cfU..O property
tax rtlltf lo welfare i#lplents
who lift in their .... -· Jn bis veto· mm:sa1e1 Rea1u 1114 be ilrtldy lllJltd !tlll!ia·
Uon aranUng these recipients
up lo l$OO a yur for "•pedal
·ntedl" lucll u proper13< tax·
et."
Good Deed
fl1llte the ....
Sls1days 4,
in 1te "l,J"1111it11i"ijl"!•111li11
Tbt 1111~11 11 t~1se acuuts "at we
. . CH ICUJI is limitd
WE PAY COMPmTIVE INTEREST RATES
ON ALL OTHER ACCOONTS
FOURTEEN OFFICES TO SERVE YOU IN
Arc:.411 · •tlfri1" • L• C•l&Ctfltl •o,.•
... GlfffM ·c .. Mn11 l• .......... (ZI •s ... ~·
•c1 .... httl DtwMY CZI Mffttrlf Plllt ' WMnilf
fiH Mjitl111I Olticts 11 llorlltro C1flltr1!1
Pl11111t Mill S11 lr1M
'""'"' St11J ftsltr City lllnlllo Win S11 Jt11
*OPEN NIGHT & DAY I
·and Saturdays
•
Call (213) 923-9601 .•
or -the whitt plfll · ·
for r--office
ASSETS OVER $375 MILLION
•
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REINFORCER DE PANTENE
•
SALON WAVE SPECIAL
2 2 • 5 Q Opening Special. Reg. $40 -. (
For a. truly wonderful ~perience, come visit ou~ exciting new
Beauty Salon. [c is a Theatre of Beauty where you can enjoy television
or stereo music and informal modeling as you relax under the dryer.
Our caienred stylists a.nd Aida Grey make-up anists are anxious
to greet you. We offer many services such as elearolysis, individual
]ashes, skin care facials. manicures and whirl pool pedicures. Whatever
your needs or desires, come j1DJ thrill to our Theaue of Beauty
at Bullock's South Coast Plaza.
Our oPen~ s~ wave includes. a restyle cut and set and involves
. . ''Tri c.20;· the exclusive conditioner from Switzerland.
.And would you believe! We also do men's hairstyling in th e privacy
• of a specis.lly designed room. ·Phone 556-0611 , ex<. 378.
Beauiy s.Ion, Third ~oor
'
..
Bullock's South Coast Plaza, 3333 Bristol St., Gosta Mesa, Telephone: 556·0611
'
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DAILY PILOT EDITORIAL PAGE f
)
. Easing the Tax Bite
An improved financial picture at the state and coun-
ty level, in part attributable to an influx of federal
revenue &hanng funds1 will make hfe a little easier for
Joe Tax payer in Orange County this year.
When 43 7,340 property tax bills go Into the mail
this month, homeowners will be asked to pay up $449
million. down 819 million from last year's tax levy.
-The st.ale's $l,000 lncreao;e in the. homeowner's ex·
emption. up to $1 ,7~0 thi• year, will be the biggest help,
cutting an average of $98 from property tax bills, Also
helping is the county's tax rate cut of 27 cents per $100
of assessed valuation.
Although local tax rates have in.creased in some
areas, notably becau se of higher schoo l taxes, the fin al
bill for property owners throughout the county will be
sllbstantially lower than last year's bite.
Newport Beach shows the lowest tax rate -$9.44.
ror each $100 of assessed valuation, compared with last
year's rate of S9.6~.
Jn La guna Reach. on the other hand. the tax rate
is up to $10, from last year's $9.60, while lrvine, with
new schools to support. tops the list with a whopping
$12.34 tax rate.
ln general, the tax figures show Increasing rates
in the rapidly developing South County cor:nmunities,
while in the older. more settled communities to the
north. rates are down. But, thanks to the exemptions,
even where the rates are up, the· .total tax bill will be
Jower .
This is ihe good new~. But there1s also the bad -
tirst installment due Dec. 10, second i.!lsta1lment due
April JO, 1974.
It Never fails
Sooner or later, it had to happen.
A study committee of the Saddleback Area Coordi·
nating Council has takell' a firm stand against air traffic
over the growi ng residential area. .
The 31-member committee, -which ·has spent 18
---i:---·
months preparing an Interim policy for the valley, for
submission to the Orange County Plannin& Department.
recommends "no air facilities for the Saddfeback Valley"
and, "Wilen fea sible, existing faciUUes shaU ·be phased
out and . emplwls for commercial air tralll~ placed
elsewhere."
Thi& precumably would refer to phage.out ol the
El Toro Marine Corps Air Station, the only existing
fa cility in the valley. The report orhtinaUy recommend·
ed placing emphasis for commercial air traffic in the
Orange County Airport, but this wording wu judiciously
changed.
A spoke,sman also commented that If wasn't the
committee's intention to "kick out the-Marines en-
tirely." The recommendation follows the traditional aJrport-
• community pattern. Sooner or later" when· an airport is
, established -no .matter how remote and how far back
in history -a community begin~ to grow up,ari>und JL
And before long. the new re!idents want to get rid of
the ai~rt. Its happened in LO! Angeles, in the-San Fernando
Valley, in the Newport Harbor area and in countless
other locations.
I'erhaps this could be a clue for land developers.
Sta rt with the airport, and pretty soon you'll have a
thriving community -complaining about il
Unseasonal Hazard
All summer long under lowering clouds. Southern
Californians grumped and, grµmbled and wondered where
the sun had gone. '
So. with fall officially under way, what happened!
The voi ces of doom that broadcast thote traffic bul-
letins for commuters came up wtth a 1peclal warning -a rash or accide nts, attributed to unexpectedly brilfiant
sunshine blinding drivers in the Los Angeles area.
Sometimes .the world' just turna upside· down,
_., _____ _ .. -~-·-·
•
-----~----------~-·
The McGoyern Def e~t: Bluep1 ... int .. for Demo Dis~ster?
WASJIJNGTON-The continuing and poten-
tially lethal threat to the Democratic party
posed by Sen. George McGovern 's unrecoo-
structed followers 10 months after his shattering
r.cvern as the Democratic Goldwa~r. the
column continues: r ( EVANS·NOVAK J cauJd a:ince!Vllbly repeat their past follies ln
11171. '
Dougherty's outrage over the {Mpl~~
quote while ignoring the Miami Beach , con-
vention suggests he is blind to what reaUy hap-
pened in 1972. He scarcely discusses the Issues
that probably hurt McGovern more than triple·
A: defense. welfare, busing. defeat is reflected by one
strange and recent post·
script to 1972.
The postscri pf s t e m s
from "G oodb ye, Mr.
Christian: A Per90llal Ac·
count of McGovern's Rise
and Fall" (Doubleday) by
Richard Dougherty, a vet-
eran journ111ist and nov-
elist who was McCOYern's
campaign press secretary.
"THE REASON IS given by orie liberal
Senator. whose voting record dUfers Jilt le from
McGovern's. He feels McGovern's surging
popularity depends on public Ignorance or his
acknowledged public positions. 'The people don't
ktlbw McGovern is for amnesty, abortion and
legalization of pot,' he told us. 'Once Middle
America-Cathol ic Middle America, In
particular-finds this out, he's dead.'"
Democrat; Indeed-for permUlloD to rtf'tal tu1
Identity. .
His posllloa: while DOt apolecMnc for the
triple-A· quote, he dailed us permluioo. Even
though McGovern wu am!Nlated Jn ttUs
Senator's state, he ezplalned, McGovernlte
forces there rematJt Intact as a potent and vin-
dictive force. Should he admit authorship of the
quote they might destroy him in a future elec-
tion.
AjlUt from the aufhenUclty of the trlple-A
-. n.us11erty .... u1u iu attW'acy by c1e-n.,mc that McGovvn supported abortion and
marljuadi. In tact. McGovtm's f. u b I l c
lllltementa op to April 'll, 1972, wtre c early op-
pmed to state 1ntJ-aborUoo laws and ambiguous
•bout marijutna. While Ol)90ling martjUl.na whenever asked,
McGovern frequently had spoken sympatbeU·
cally about its use and compared the drug, fav-
orably at least one time, with alcohol and to-
bacco. To then perceive McGovern as pro-mari·
Juana would not-be unreamablc.
Instead, Dougherty dwells on the Eagleton af-
fair ali the root cause of McGovern's debacle
and lists Sen, Hubert Humphrey's hardboiled
campaign against him as the second most im·
portant factor.
This has become the rigidly schematic
fe>nnula for apologias" by McGoveruites, in·
eluding McGovern himself. But there is one
more explanation not joined In JJy McGovern:
the candidate's manifest Incompetence (ac-
cur.ately portrayed in Dougherty's book ). Like other McGovemlte memoirlsts, Douiher-
ty is intent oo robbing McGovern's humJIJating
rejection by the people of any meaning and at-
tributing It to a combinaUOO of bad luck end un-
fai~trealment
Jn dealing with unfair treitment, he cites our
column ol April 27, 1972. Reporting that many
Democratt--correctly It turned out-feared Mc·
That quote became the focus of the triple-A
(abortion, amnesty, acid) campaign against
McGovern. So. in "Goodbye, _Mr. ChrisUan,"
'11ougberty writes, "I don't believe for a
mlnute that any Liberal Senator, at least a
Democratic liberal, told them McGovern was
jor abortion an{~he legalization of marijuana."
No more serious charge can be J?lllde against
1 rfporttr than fabrication of quotes (though
Doughtrty has never cootacted us abouc this in
the 18 mqnths since the column was published 1.
C4nlequenUy, we have asked the unnamed
Senator-a real-llfe, fie5h·and-blood , llberal
THE INCIDENT l;EADS to two minor and
one major conclusions. Minor Conclusion No. 1:
An unremitting effort eli!tl to rallonallu the
f\1cGovem debacle by rewrltjng history . Minor
C.Onclusion No. 2: Any attempt to debunk that
effort risks McGovernlte retaliation. Major
Conclusion : Not having absorbed the lessons of
history as thoroughly as the Republicans follow·
ing the 1964 Goldwater debacle, the Democrats
Alter the triple-A quote, McGovern peeled
back on all those luues (amnesty included). But
Jt was too late. Haring uled pro-abortion and
pro-pot formulaUons lo Ingratiate hfmaelf wllh
the women'• lib and shaggy youth subcultures,
McGovern's reversal cJ. field could not reassure
the majority. Rather, he became ineradicably
llnked with those subcultures, whose represen-
tative! were so visible at the Miami Beach con-
vention.
Herein Ues a blueprint for future Democratic
diaasterr. Oblivious of the leuons of 11m.
McGovern's cadres return to battle confldent
th.al Ibey can trlwnph now that Eagleton,
Humphrey and, indeed, McGovern are gone.
Our unnamed Senator's fear of reprisal from
those cadres is, therefore, a thoroughly chilling
omen.
Hughes Contributions
Under Investigation
T..AS VEGAS -Senate sleulhs arc in·
vesllgating t~·o S:J0,000 centributions to
Presidt>nt Nixon from billiona ire lloward
llughes. The money was handed over in
cash to the Presiden t's (r iend, Bebe
llebo7,o. in 1969 and 19i0.
Alth<>ygh Hughes' aides describe UK!
$100,000 as a "campaign contribution,··
the Pre~idcnt wasn't
running for ornce in
1969 or 1970. The
Scnalr Water~atc
COl'nn1itltt in iuvell-l
ligs!ing reports lhiil
lhc ffiOfl('Y may have
brcn diverted lo !hf'
President'~ ·prson31
use.
'rhis i!i: 1 lgorously
drnicd by ~Vhite llousc !-pokc~m:in
(;r r:ii·rl \Y11rren. who said: "The f.'re~i
dnt ncvl'r ret·rivcd Anv sut'h money.''
llcbo?.11 refused lo cOniT]lt•ot on t~
rharl,!r~. Sources close lo hin1 . ho~·rvrr ,
!'it:ited th at nl'ifhl'r he nor thf> Prt·~id1•nt
have r1•rr UM'tl 1.:an1p:ugn 1noncy fi.,r
pcrson<il pur\)().'IC~.
\\'F: f1R ST rC'portNI on Aug. 6. 1971.
th<il llt1~hr~· ald1·~ "S1phonrd off $100.000
lron1 tht> S1l\'t>r Slipper . a llugh1'11 1:11n1hl-
tng cmJ'IOr1u111, for Nlx0t1's r:in1pu1g11
Wirks
'Shhh •.• shhh ,, . I'
The money was drllvered by Richard
Danner. a Hughes exec. to &be Rebozo,
a Nixon conrldiint:""
\V11tergate investi ga tors have now
vr rificd our story from some of the pri n-
cipals. The payments lo Nixon. the pro-
hcr~ h:lve becn told. began in late 1969 et
a time y,•hcn HuRhcs w;is consolidating
his hotel ·cit~ino en1pirc In Nevada. Hi11
private papers, which have been made
ll\'ailable to us. show he was trying to
uvcrromc resistance from the Ju.slice
Department's antitrust division.
TllE FIRST $50,000 WRS slipped lo
lleb01.o in Ja!e 1969 not long after the
President pcrsonr.illy approvl'd l[ughcs'
purchase of lht! nir linc, Air West. 'fhe
llloney wa s delivered by •1 u g h es
hotelman J)ick Danner to Rebozo, 1he
Scna!c ill\'t'Stlgn torii have been told.
The second $50,000 contribulion v.•as
rn11dc in the sumTTK'r of 1970 wht.n
llug~s bt."'(anl() lhe largest casino
ope rator in the world V.'ith the purchase
of ltarrohfs Cl11h In Nc\·11da. Again. it
v.·Rq !)11nner "'ho p:issr<I the money to
Hchozo Uut this timr, :inother Hughts
factotum , ltobert r.lah1:u, witnessed the
1n1ns<1ction. We have ll'arncd that Maheu
spoke r::1ndidly to Lhc co1nmlll ~ obo\11
lhr deal.
\\.'ITNESSF.S hA\'C tokl the "'ate r:gate
ill\'CStigators that lhc $100,000 po_,lt1vrly
was intrndcd for Nl•on. not Rebo20.
\VhRt the Prt·~idcnl did with lhr money,
ii hc recei ved 11. rcn1:iins 8 rnystery.
In 196!1 ond 1970. he wiis conrplellng
lhc purcl1nse of hl11 S11n Clemente c~lal<'.
il<>th J\.cboio and ou1other Ni~on crony.
3erosol klng J{obrrt /\ h p I a n a I p ,
p11rtictpated in the Acquisilioo.
The flnanelnl drt11 il.!1 "·err. handled by
!ht' Prt~irlf>n!'s prrsonal ~f f or n c.y,
ll crbtn K11Jmbach. "'ho h.?ts denied Iha!
11ny .cAmpaign contrlhulinn'I Wf"rt u~l"'d.
fOOTNon;~ ~lore lh:in .'l dt'C'ad4!.
tRrlier, thtn-Ylce President Nixon u•as
· hit by a bla11t of bad pubhclty over 11
~U5.CWXl Joan. which his brolber Donald
reetived from the snmc froward lfughc~.
The Joan wa~ srcurrd by a mor1goge on
1t Whlttlcr. caur .. IOI thnr-cost $13,00J.
The loan was never repnid .
·Courts Defend the Consumer
Dear
Gloomy
Gus
Battle Over Milk Prices
Baek in the long night of the 1930s, the
state moved into the mllk industry with
price control laws. The purpose of those
lf the plan was to take the\e~ho;al!,...j>-'"';:-~ ly, was twofold:
off Nixon by turning the spc To guar tee an adequate supply of
on Agnew, it seems to be working milk at fair prices and to provide the
out Y.'ell. _ milk industry (producers, processors and
F.G.A.
01""'' Gitt tlffl-tt •rt wlMrltttM' n ••-rt ,._. 411t 1111 -Mrll1 r.i1..::1 ti.
'fleWI tf IM -Ptptf', St11411 JOW "' Dtnt It 0191'"J Oon, Dl!ltJ ,1191.
retailcn J with a fair proOt.
If Uiere were indeed a time when such
minimum price control1 had any merit,
that-lime went Jong ago. For yean the
minimum milk price laws have been cost+
Don't Save Book Gift,s
F 01· Intellectual Kids
The OOok-clerk almost kissed me when
I walked into the sto re and asked him to
recommend a hook for a 15-year~ld
"11•ho Is nol terribly bright."
"You're the Or.st_cus_tomer in my eight
yea rs here," he burbled, "who hlls not
wantl'd a book ror a
child 'much brighter
tha n 8\'t'rnge.' Don 't
the dull children
ever get presents or
books?"
I guess thcy don't.
And I thl nk this is a
big ml:itake. Tt is the
precoclou11, tht!: in·
telligenl, the Iller·
11ry-1nlnded cAlld \Yho rcceiv<'s books ns
glfls. And he needs them lenst or all.
Wll EN 1was11. boy. nobody hod to give
me book s. 1 hauntrd the pobllc library,
nnd Mn1etimt!s "'"nt there twice 1t dny,
c:ir!ln,q home annful s or trc11sures on the
"res:Mrch" c11nt I h:id wangled from an
older friend.
It 1.~ the chlld 1vho does not ca'rc to
rf"Ad, whose h o m c is devoid of books,
whoso lntertsts ~re limited to tho
physicA l :ind 1hc tl'f'hnlca l. who should be
trmplrcf lo f"nlr r the reAlm or JilcrlllUre.
Tht'rr RrP many doors opcnin11 into lhi~
rrAlm . hut the child does no! know which
ont> to uolock.
I WO ULD not gjve books to a
precocious and intellectu11I chlld-T would
give h.im .SJXlrts equipment. to try to
drv{'lop his Intent powers in another
field. \Vhat he docs well, he can do by
himself, wllhoul 'l•istllnce. •
Most of u~. how!.ver, cal er to the
~YDNEY J.HARIU~
child's overpowering Interests. We maJi:e
the physical child evt!n more physical-
minded, and the lntelledual child even
more literary-minded. 'Ibis 11 easy and
comfortable, but it Is not sensible ii v;e
v.·ant human beings rather than one-sided
monsters.
I Al\1 NOT suggesting, of course, that
the athletic child be bombarded with
llorner or Shakespeare ; or that the~·
slant reader be l~sed off the pier in a
pair of w11ter-wlngs. This 11 not re-
education, but coett:lon.
The literary boy •ill novtr play foot-
ball, but ho "" be made lnlmlated In
tennis Ol' tr11cJi: or other sport, requiring
les.o; brute !ilrength. The Aho"'PUlter "Ill
never rtad Kcata or translate Vlrgll, but
there Is a vast literature deslped to
appeal to the extroverted type. Both can
be made to ,.., by aklllful guldanct, that
thJ:>ughLand action are tncomplete halves
of rxistencc, each requiring the other.
The world I• already too rulf ol hslt·peo-
ptc.
Quotes
\.... "Writing, llke ROif °' actlnc or
carprnterlng, ~ lcamtd by lmJtaUnt lhe
e:<pcrts.'' (From "It All Started with
Freshman F..ngllsh'' by Richard A.rmoW-,
McGraw·lilll.)
( RUS WALTON )
ing the consumers a great deel of
ll10!ley.
BRIEFLY, the Mate laws work like
thb'
A minimum price fl set for each sale
that occurs from the time the milk
leaves the row until it is sold to the con·
sumer. . •
The large operator, such as Safeway,
buys raw mllk direct from the producer
and processes tt, packages it and sells it
In company~wned retail stores. The
ltate pr1ce cmtrola apply ooly at two
point.!' on the price !"id for the raw milk
and oo the prlj::t charged at the checkout
stand. Wltfl miss volume operations, the
mar,tn of profit on 1 half-gallon Of milk
nm1 between 4 and 9 cents. (The state
.. ta~ mlnlrnum retail price.)
AN INDEPENDENT grocer, with ooe
store w 1 small chain, buys proceued
milk from a whol"'"1er. And, beforo those
milk cartona get to his store the state got
ils paw1 in the milk bucket at several
transaction ROints:
When the procem' bou&ht the raw
milk frnm the producer. when the
dlstr1butor (wholeselerJ boull!t tJlat pr<><-
cssed milk, when he told It to the a:rocer
-and, finally, when the grocer IOla It t.o
tho houoewlle.
Under that set-up, the grocer11 profit
on a hllf1allon or mllk comes to 11bout
three milt (S/loths of a ceat ). Thus, he
must 1ell anywhere from 9 to 27 half·
galloos of milk to make u mud> profit
as the tara:er retailer makes on just one
h•lr"fallon.
AU. OF THIS Inequity come to 1 holld
In the ca,. of Knudlon Corp. va. the state
director of qrlculture.
In 1117, Kmidaon, • Lile ~led
dairy ""1lpai\y, joined with •ariou• tn-
d<p<lldenl gn><'en to lonn Todds, I milk
prooeaaing and distributing finn. Todds
bought the raw milk In bilk, prooeued U,
and sold It to the small arooen who wert.
both Toddl' Mtomen and ltoekholdt.ra.
The "1terpriae pve the Independent.! an
opportunity to CCIDpele apinlll the
•upel'<loret In thO milk busloeos. (The '
ertr• pnilit.! .. milk .,. <llien UHd to
lllbeldl!e redUced p<io8 <11 ocber Items
Md ~t "Jog 1 .. der" prloe •Jtrtc!I
CW'lomtrl .)
A1 the JCnutllen.ToddJ ~ ll"w
and erteoded to the r1di rtlall pullln!I
f
or northern Calirornla. the big retailers
put prMsure on Jerry Fiedler, then the
state director or agriculture, to move
against Knudsen . Finally, in IflO, the
biggies pressured Fiedl er into declaring
the TOOds joint·vcnture illegal. Knudsen
took the state to court, and won.
JUDGE Cllartes Loring, Los Ange:les
Superior Court , recently found ror Todds
and against the state. He also termed the
Knudsefl..Todds operaUon a real public
service.
Said the judge : the bureaucrats ''have
been so absorbed with what they regard
their primary duty to fix the price of
rluid mllk ... they have been oblivious
to the effect such action has •.. In the
market place ... "
TIIAT DECISION soured the cud for
the sacred cows. They are demanding
tltat C. B. Christensen, the incwnbent
director of, food and agriculture, appeal
the rourt's dt'Cision. Competition be damned .
Bru Christensen, a cattleman and
rancher, ref1J.9e!: to appeal.
Now the big mllkmen are going arter
Christensen's job. They would prefer a
more "pliable" director ol food and
agriculture.
Like they say, milk has something tor
everybody. And for Bru Christensen, it's
a meat axe. The betting is Cluistensen
y,•j\I stay rn his job.
011•N•1 Co.t.st
DAILY PILOT
Robttt N. Wted, PMl>IUh<r
Thomu K1ellfl, Ed''°"
Barbara Krtibich
EditQriQ.l Page EdlU>r
•
Tbe editor\&} il>'P ot the' Dtlly
Pilot .-«s to lnlonn ,and AOmull.te
l'8dmi . b)' ""'9mtfna on tht1 Nt
dfvmieiC'O!!'rnentuy'on topics oC In.
tff'tlt by ifndlttitl'cf eolurnnifll anc1
~ b)' pnMdlna; • forum for
l"Ndm' vifws and by~ Oils
new&pe.Ptf'• oplnklnt Md ldMI en ....... ....... ""' ... __
of Che~ Pllot~y In OWi
e4lWri&l column •'f...tiJ top cl tM
Jlllt. Opiniona ex......s ti,. u. oarJ.
~ 9ftd nirtoonllte: and lttttr
<writtn ateihetrOWG and llO'•IO •
mtnt of Mt v1ett ti)' Vie D11q
Pilot lhoukt be tnfft'Nd.
Monday, Oclobe r l, 1973
I.
~
,QUI
-
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all<
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sch<
the
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the
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Colle
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"M ~~ trol/ ",, -· :'t:::
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"'" m lul
"II! ur,lltt ~ ""' .. ,,
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"F ch.0 'I· H• l.
"P. ~:1 f ~ G••I Fil ·ISSI .. ,
In I~ Ht vi ~ • • ""' ''·" .. ,
Ph.C ,, ..
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·~ B•rl ~~ ·~' Vt!f E~t1 "' Etft 161,
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,)
,QUEENIE r Jy Phil lnterlandi
"I'm having a rotten .day. Could you.m•0 '!1&e.to ·allnk·
alluringly each time you·come in'?'' .-__ • _
Extension Program
UCI Annonnces
October Oasses
The fOIJOWing is,. 8 lilt Of NIWMl'f llMC'llJ DIMJt klerln, J.D.,
scheduled a"ctivitles oHS'ed by g1' Jftiic e~:'T'~1 ..... ~
the Universi!)' of California, 1 1111 tr!17m:l•=~r!i .,. "E.ff=
Irv. E te . -rt:...---"'11.....JAJt..elM\,.'!J.JD 11.m .. RiL.m ~rt!UI me, X: ns1on rrogram lO.-kJW1Cn llldll. 11n111• -..:i""•'°"· a;-the first half of October. THU•SDA'I', OCT. 11 -"SP'Cl•I Dl1o11.-"( !Mt~" TODAY Dt l'lltl Pilat, M.O .. tnlstlnt r:tttt-. "P~VC:lolO!l't' for file Lavl'l\tn " ~rftMnl of MtdklM, ol11ltornl1 e."A'l:t~m~·"o•X!:;. Jr.1 "~·D·c~m~i:· f.rl:' ·~sc1=1l~,.~r:i',... .:''W!
Coll ... (If MMticln.ii."'tlrrrv1 ..... ~.rt of L11'1Mn: T~~ Ind Art (If 1 UC 1rvl11e E•-lon ttchi•• -r•i· Mldl(,,.1 I 1, 7.f:JO p.m., 7·:JO.f ·JD p~ Ltcf\n H1I Sool'lclmor1 Hiii, Mtdk:ll :twol Mto1~i11 s1· · ~II ., UC-trnne c1m!---I Slda •. SJnol1 ml..ion.-"-
"""'· l'n: 17 • "UH11r1rict Ttr111!fftcHY11y, tlellon
"l11lc Concf!ll-;-;fJ1:1l111'1.'' AtbDI ._ .. , Hew1nl WllJOn. pretldlnt, I L-IJ, D. o1, tmDll llllil'i. AdmJnl1tr111.,,. 11t ... 1rcll Al.l«/tlt:o1
•19t. P•:!, •, -M0,_1 '!!Jn,.. Inc. A --dl'f' ...,,lf\lr, f :lO 1.fTIA:;ig H'-· ,_,, J ... 1111 D.m.1 Dtf Mir Jtppm. Hollcl•Y Inn ChlYllllllWI :JetY, 7-10 D.m .. Am. 100. HD .. , lrlttol St.I. II the Sin Olivo Soclll Scltoel 1111. Na .... l'""WIY, C<!"I Mftl, l'H: $M1 /ii•
"Mt>dkll •nd Phvll folllc I Con· cllld11 lllllCll 1nd Hrklno.
d1llCN11 Unlwt fCI F1m1f11: g Mlll1• l'll:IOAY AND SATUJIOAY, Pr..,.,1ncv, SU!'OWV, St• &frth Con-OCT. It AND 1a trol," C11'11fl111 ·8reg.1, M.6., Ul!lv1nlty HA Loolt Al Yow Flllur1," ltflblrt
of C1lflo.r.Mldlc1I Cenllf': DIMrl· D1w, Ed.O .. prl'lldlnt, ln.tlMI for tM .....,, al 1 1etrlci and G~.ColoCiv DlwlDPmtnt ol Hum1n ltMQyrclf. A Mlffltt fiQt /•I, 5!" l'r1ncttc0 1rt ol r-.d1y -kefld pragr1n1, Fri., 7-10 1 ltcty,...., n." 111 Worlcl OI °"""' o.m.1 S11., t 1.m.-1 o.m., ltm. 22111,
-OUf' Ult ll'ld HH!th.'' 7·10 p.m., ltm. • SOCt1I kmt, tgw. FH: '$.
17•, Camovl.,. Scllnc1 11clll. FM: Nori· "Tiii l~ ~~-1~ PllMk ~!:Ir~.':/.' cra.:111, W; 11t111l1 Id-f'ollcv:• WflllY Ml••• '"""°"· A ~ 'S cc1nl9'91'.K,, ' •rm'. ' 11.m .. ltm. 1111 ' Soelll ~ ........ : UI. ~ c 11111• llJll(h Md Hr Intl. . '----' ., "tf'l'llll"OYl,...ftEi--. st I''' ... Ho .,1rd 'W on , 11r1t di"'
Mmln11"'111,. """"'" A.NOC It& fnc. A -..oy llM\lner, t :a · ~/Ill. • a:a • 11.m., Gold Ao.n, M1s11 \.-1.
"l-T11< AiPecll/f R11I ~"I,' FM: Mo. Inc\,... ln1lructlon1I lrw.11....ril,~ M1rtl11 S. tol~~ ~., mltttf11; llll!Oj1nd part(lflll. C.P.A .• A!!_or:t!. If LIW I ea ~l~.=--rr.:: ~~:i ~~ =~r~h ~-b~ ee:er: ·1 lfm. IOI. ~~~ .. aid.. 'Jift: • "'!Ilk • Ind D1nce Atwnd ,..
170. Sln<1t1 itciml1llCN1, N. Wvl'ld, f 1.m. • 12 -! Mvl!IOWPOM
"Fr1ncll CIYllllltton." Tillf"l>te:= ~~· lt•ncllo $1n JOICIUlft If:"°"• .. , Ph.D.. 1nlll111t ~. JI' ,,;r,.~MllU Rd., lrYl111. flllfl ef.
IJCI. 7·10 11.m~ ""'' :M6 .Hu..,111 I SA1VltbA-i AND SUNDAY, OCT. '' H1fl. FM: W1111 rw wilhoul credit, NS, AND 14 1VISDAY "Tiii CllllllnOI of &tlncl Slnoltl.'' "e.1m1o1f5" ~-'' ·c. \c'=' ~~r~!11.£T•~D .. ~='. ~=1ftoi,,r, ,.;. 1..r~<1111d...._:w;• Set., 9:1' 1.m. • 6 1t.m.1 5Utl,, t :iD 1.fft.
Part . or 'KllJt• -"kl c • ' 1.111 .. ltl'Pla. U. • Ind 211 AlllrlMm Medklf!I Ff///( T"9 ~m1n· Lincoln Sdlool. 3101 Peclftc Vltw ~si...tn:t.tt'"' d{f.!!=!1 r""°; P111-Drtw. C--rJ.r.'" F41l W. ~t, G11: •I , -t;~ p.m., .,.Onlvt "'=-M. oc;;.. ~ Ind ~;:·-u~:-c,;::lt~~1c~:di7, Womtn'I • H11iffh.'' W1t1rld ·H!11111. 1151 s1,,..111dm7u1on.S6. Pll.O\i::JPhltl'PllCOIOQY, M.O. •--'flff 1tlool~I. 0.1n<1t. P1rt ol IK• "Hew HUmlll Ind Anll'Tlll ~·H• AOI "" ... "Thi World (If w-Yciyr In'"" Tlnw Cu!lirr• or WIW.' L_,,nl Lii• •net Hullfl," 7 · TO o.m .• ltl'll. 17•, H1vflkk. Pll.O.. orof11-. M1<1!e11 c-1.,. Scloncl llclcl. SlnOle od'-Mlc;roblolaov, S!1n!Ol'd Unlwrll!Y. f'1rl ft'lllll<!fl, U. ot 1..:1ur• Nrlts "Whet C•n W·I O. Abc>UI Aging? Agfng .• . Orlgl11, E lecl1 "tnch11lrl11 Pr-rl!l!I," AOCllr A.
& COl\lrol," 7.,,:w. D.m .• Rm. J•1. S.V.l'IOI\, •ll1cutlv1 YICHll'ttldt111, Hu"11nltln H111. 5111111• 1omls on. Dunn Pr<lOlr'll1• CorllOl'•llon, Slflll U.50. Anl. P1rt Of lldur9 -111, "Com-
WlDNIE'SDAY, Oct. J mercl1I Ind ln....,tment P•-11t'll.'' 1 . "Grted USA. 1920," P1ul Frtr•«. • t :JCI o.m .• "'"· IOI , Phvllc•I SclerKH
Ph.O.. ••g•l•nl pro111141r1r Enolll"' Biiio. s1n11r1 admlnlon, u. Ch1pm1n o!I-. P1rl ot eelu,._fl m Hritl •• .., Cl1nlc C1ntMI" r,:30-"lllololilc•I ''"" of Hum1n ,.,... 10:)0 o."1 .• Sclencl LKIUrl H1(I. S nQll Ul!lty, P"rt II.' ltkhltd Wlllltn, ectm!ukin '6 Ph.D .• oroflltor, Blot0Qk:1t kltncft, ' ' Snu1Utv.'' 7-lD o.m.. Am. lOOA,
"lloloqk::1I ''!" or Hum1n S11<-ucr. P1rt of llcll.lf"I -1•1, "Hlll'l'l•n t1a1llv, P1rt I.'' A el11rd wn1i.n, Ph.D., Scltlle9 LllCfun Hiii. FM: W, IOI'
proflnor, &lotog1t1I kltncet, UCI. CA<lll DI' TV"~.-••• 'h, OCT. '' Plrl al IKIUrl Hrlla, "Hum.till Sfll• l uillrv," 7.10 p,m., ltrn. 100A, Sclenc:1 "Mtdk:1r Tr1111,_1 pl G111ro-L..:l1Jr1 H1t1. Fet: SU. for creolt or lnlnllMI T•KI DIMI..,.' An!lllo E.
fl<ln<rtdll. DIQradl., MO, ln·rn~. 0-rt· TUll!IOAY, OCT, t rlWfll ol Aldlot<1111(1I $ e I 1nC11.
"Gtnelle Cloe~! Ind llll H•rodllrict of c1111vrr111 ColllOI (If Notcllc:l111, UCI.
'"
-moO•o• 0, '''' ·~ !hi Cintrll Plrt ol IKIUrl -ltt. "$cltnllflc "" Ml!tle,lrw IOI' N 'L1Y,,,.n: T"9 G11tTo-Ntn>OUI SVtll"1 In All 1111 AnlfftllJ,'0
'"'"""" Trll(11 LIVI!'. P1ncr111. Giii a .. n1rd Strehltr/:.:Ph.DJ llf'Of•1w, Blllk!W.'' 7.f•XI o.m .. 5"'hcln'lcll1i Lie·
Blolocn", Ul'll119rll II o II I h Ir n 0 "''' .. _, __ , •·-' '"' ··-C1tllornl11 Kell\ tbfrl A.a ., .,,. • .......,,., -11 • ~ aoc:lll 1ervlce dlree•or..c P1rk L do Cqn· ldonlnlon. M.
v1l1Klfll Ctnl1r. f'I" ol 1 UC lrvln1 E1<l~11on 1ectur1 11r!11. "Wll•I C111 "TM o.c:nrw •nd F111 of"'-Sr1ln: w. Do Abol.ll A.1111'/11? Awf"lt ••• Or11ln1, C"'"1lcftl Ind <"e!lu!•t <::•!JM" m ""'"' Elf..:tt. &. CCNllrol.'' 7-l:JD o.m .. Al't'I. Clllnoet 11 ftW P1~c1l·Soel1>I
161, H11m1nllln H1U, UC IN\111 am-L1"1(," Jlmff W•lker, Ph.0 •• H1lt'llnl
pus, Slngl1 ldmlll.fClll, SS.50. -,. PS\'Cf'l040oy, lfld c.r.nllllooY _ <:1111er. use. P11rt Of 1te1vr1 llrfft.
"G•1lrO"l11t1ttln1! Tr..:t Slrf'Ol.V In ''W'll.lt C1n W~ 0o About A11lno;if Aaln<1 lnl•nll . c-nll•I onomeltn, l!.lc .. " ••• Orlolnt, EtflCh a. CO!llrtl." 7.f::IO
All" e . G1u1nlpa, M.D., 1ul1t111t -ri.m~ ltm. 1•1, Hum1nl!ln Hill. s1111111 i.1w. Oel)ll'lm111t of S 11r11ry, 1dm1ur~ ... ~1.,.
Cill!ornll Colle<11 of Mtdklnl, UC. TUEtlOA'I'. OCT. 11. U P1rt Df I IK!vrl .. , .... "kl111!lflc lftll a 1 ANO NOV. '
M.dkln• IOI' the tl"""'n' Till 011tr• "P-tttoftlll ........._,: i:duell~ lnlHlln.t Tr1c!i l Ylf', Pl!IC!'ffa, Giii Ind Vec1tllf\fll Ovlcllnco," Shirk¥ J. !11&0der," 7·•:Jll p.m., ~hotllor• L1<:· Schftfllr, Ed.O.. co 11 n ••I j"' 1ur1 Hill, Mtdleel S11t11• ' Biiio. Slr111!1 PSVCholoo!~I •nd llCWl'tr ltl Ecluc11 Ion. ldmlWOn. U. UCI. P11rt al "lndlvtcllllllt.ld Voc:1llon1t
WIEDIOIESOAY, OCT. ,. '"" Educ•lf-1 r .. , .... Mt'ift.'' •~JO "l•1fc1 of S1101rvl11on for 1111! H11llfl l ."1.·11 noon, Pirie HfWOOrf 5111, tOO c1,. lncl\ltlry," How1rd W!I..,.., .,. .. 1. S111 OIOllln Hllll llOld, H'-f cle~t. A6mln1Pr•tlve A 1 •••re h •Heh. ~i>fllDAY,J<jT· " Anoc111n, Inc. A on~-d•r, proar1m. t ::IO 1.m.-t:)) o.m .. Audi'-' 11m1 Or•nae "l'!lm: ti. P1ut011 J01n of Art.'' C-IV MldlCl l A11oc:l1TIOl'I I llO,. JOO fl'r•nc•. tmJ. PIUI FrlJlll'.1. f'h.O •• s F*-t SI., Or•-· Fft: W . lrt-1ul1!1nl Dllll-. Enqltl!'I, \.""""9n ciudts ln1trudlOl\1I me1 ... 111, ltimell tnd C~llQI. ~rt o1 ~Im Mrie. .,.,1.ino. Sc1~'rK . .£-.,,, ··,· ,'!.;.•,, •-D:JO,,o...,."'·· -•• ...... H111. ... , "Fiim: Till Golcl Au,..,," IUSA, 1t1S), -P1ul Frl1llr, PFl.O .• 11111!1"1 ProfftW, £1111ll1h, ClllP'l'lfl Cotllol. P1rt ol lie·
tur•fllm -In, "TM Cl1.,!c Cln1m11" 7::J0.10;)ll p."1., ScllflCI LKlllt"I HI I.
Slngll ldmlMIOl'I, U .
"C1t11¥tl for A~ll'lll ffHCllllO I r.cl Lana\!-Ar~ lntln.ietlon, ' Or. H1rry H111n. prolt'•-· Ecluc111on. 0.kllnd UnlYfnl!y, llochllllr, Mlehla1n. Plrl
llf ltttvr1 Nrln , "Educ1l1CN1 to MHI 5e1111tt Hill. Sh191f MmlnlOfl. U.511. ,
"ltldUCl"lf Inc;;;;;:;. Mklllll C~rhll~nton, LL.I .. 11r1ctlclno 1\tor.,.v w/111 Wllllr, H1root1 1fld Chr1tl11n1D11.
INCOME
FOR YOU
from a Gift-
•You C111.-ivea li11 incomo
and immediate tu benellta by
partidJ!'ltiJ>g In one of Hoof •
Memorial Hoopital Presbyteri&D'1
four dl/ferenl L!fe lncomo
Gift Plans.
llrill •call todaJ tw lllll•tlc
Mr. Thotnn K. Stadllng.r
HOAG MEMORIAL HOSPITAL
PRESBYTERIAN • " ........ -.. NNPDlt lltoch, CA 92660
T•••11E (114j .. llll Ell. I•
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'-. _,.,, Octobtr I, 1973 D41LV PILOT T
Survey Says Pesticides Also Fo~nd in Organic Vegetabl~s , ·
RENO (AP) -There is Ill·
tie dlfferen~ In the amount of
peaUclde residues on
veietable )nducta obtalned In
commercial markets a n d
lbose !OW>d In health food
stores, a Univenity of Nevada·
Reno suney has found . It also checked 47 com-
mercially g r o w n pesticide
treated samples from four
supermarkets in the same
cities.
percenl of the commerdal
veietables sampled contained
pesUclde
ooted.
resJdues, P a y n •
•
I
The survey, conducted by
Ben Payne ot the university's
O>Ue,e of AgricuJture, tested
26 orieinally grown vegetable
.!amples from four health food
at.ores in Reno and Las Vegas.
All residues were well within
the limits establlshed by the
..
Here's some realfood for thought. Besi of oil, it's absolutely free.•
•
It's a brond new, money-saving book So just drop by any of our Glendale
chock full of hints to help you cut the Federal offices from now through
•
high cost of food buying. October 12th and pick up your copy.
Find out how to: select the best ' When you do, we hope you'll take
meat values •understand government NOW THRU OCT. 121 1973 a minute to ask about our new higher
grademarks which evaluate .the .quality and price of interest rates and to let us show you how Glendale.Federal
foods •select the freshest fruits and vegetables •make the can,help make you as smart about saving money in a
best poultry buys •translate supermarket language~words savings account as th is invaluable little book can make
like"fancy", "enriched" and "g.ian~economy size" •calculate you about saving money in the supermarket.
actual food yield of packqged products. •Supply limited-one per customer, please.
Ask about our new high•r int•rest rates.
Our Weight Watchers°' cooking demonstrations
can help pare, you down, too.
' This Monday.·Tuesday and Wednesday from 11 :30 lo 1:30,
we 'll have a Weig hi Watchers" heme economisl in cur
Cosio Mesa office to give oul free cookbooks and lo shaw
you how to make a weigh! conscious meal look and lasle
like a feast. Learn how la cul calaries-withoul sacrificing
nulrilion and good laste. Come see, sample and enjoy
the scrumplious delighls we'll be cooking up to help yau
pare dawn. (I
WEIGHTWATCHERS rid a .. 1'9Q!!ir .... trodeimoNof\tiWahfw.d•1 0 111ternotioriol Gt9ot Neck. N. v.•19n.
•
CiLEl\MLE FEDERAL SAVINCiS
More offices lo serve you lhan any olher Federal Savings...ond loan As soci ation
in !he nalion. And over :il .7 billion in ossots. "'""
Costa Mesa Branch : 2300 Harbor Boulevard (Horbor Center)· 642-4711
Fullerton Branch: 320 North Harbor Boulevard · 526-8331
I
Newport Beach Branch : 500 Newport Center Drive (Newport Financial Center)· 644-5300
'Santa Ano Branch: 51 Fa shion Square (in the Santo Ano Fashion Squqre) • 541-3314
,
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I DAILY PILOT
Ja il in County
Has Soft Side
By TOM BARLEY
CJ:' 11M1 o.1~ ,, ... SltK
?I.fulling the harvest of rapes, robberies and assorted
mayhem l had gleaned moments before from Orange
• County sheriff's officers . I didn 't realize the other mom-
,_ ing lhat my path from the sheriff's building in Santa Ana
was blQ.Cked until 1 walked full tilt into a lai'ge picket
sign. .....
Pushing lhe plywood in my face was an also large,
barefoot and buxum belle v.•ho appar· ·
ently knew or guessed t~ 1 was a
newspaper reporter. She was unwilling
to allow me to report any further ne\t.s
until I had answered a question. .........._
EVER THE · courteous and willlni
victim, I deposited my notes oo a aeat
in the nearby rose garden and begged
my hefty interrogator to. detain me no
longer than liO seconds. "Dead · tAlL.IY
you know," I mumbled. .
"Okay,'' my Amazonian ln1em>1ator demanded, "why
in hell don't you write about conditioos in the county jail
over there? Don't you know that what the guys are going
through is worse than the Spanish Inquisition?"
It took more lhan 60 seconds, but I quickly made her
realize just how often my paper had tackled that issue in
a series of stories and how the claims made by those of
the cause she apparently supix>rled had been given a fuU
airing. ·
SHE WAS DEFINITELY mollified by that time but it
"'as now her tum to do a spot of listening. And the more
I thought about the case of Andrew Paul Kazymyriw. the
more I realil.ed that this \Vas the ideal time aod place to
tell his s1ory.
Kazymyriw, 23, held up a Fullerton liquor store for
$350. y,•as arrested and eventually appeared at Superior
Court trial on armed robbery charges. His trial'Jiate wu:
Sept. 5. and the deputy public defender asked on Aug. 31
that his client's fiance be brought here irom Florida as a
Defense wrtneM. --
Judge James Tamer approved the arrangements and
the payment ol about $300 for Leann Atkinsai'a flight here.
The finlt news she got in Orange County waS that her fi-·
ance might not go to trial at all
TRIAL DAY CAl\IE and Kazymyriw ·waived trial,
pleaded guilty-to-reduced-charges of grand-tbeft·and drew-
a state pri!Ort term of·one to 11) years.
Jail deputies then got the word from Jucfu. Turner
that they were to take. Kazym,Yriw to the Orange COunty
Health Department for a blood test and after that to the
marriage license bureau so he and Leana could take out
· such a document.
The blood test routine was dropped eventually, but
they got the couple to the marriage license division and
they also complied with a furlher court order which gave
Kazymyriw a change of clothing for the ceremmy.
AND THEY HAD to be on hand. of course, when
Kazymyriw was taken to join Leann in Judge Turner's
courtroom where the happy couple-pledged their-troth be-
fore a minister brought in for the ceremony.
"Well,;' trly interrogator ~gingly agreed, "that was
all pretty nice. BUt that doesn t change the fact that there 's
still a Jot v.TOng at the jail."
Jt was pretty nice-. A Joi of people bent over back-
v.·ards to do a pruooer the kind of favor that is yery bard
to come by in 99 percent of this nation's jails.
A LOT OF P~OPLE will point to the eost of what was
done and will argue that it might have saved a Jot or
trouble and expense If Kazymyriw bad been told to wait
until he left state prison to get married.
One thing for sure: they aren't carrying picket signs.
Death Notices
ARBUCKLE & SON
\VESTCLIFF 1\tOR11JARY
U7 E. 17th SL, Colla 1\lesa
llMlll • BALTZ-BERGERON
FUNERAL HO~IE
Corona del rirar 17l-9-150
Co!ta l\lesa 6*%4%4 • BELL BROADWAY
l\IORTUARY
110 Broadway, Costa 1\tesa
LI 8-3•33 • DILDAY BROTHERS
1\10RTVARIES
17911 Beach Blvd.
Huntington Reach 141-77'71
• %44 Redondo Ave.
Long Beach %13-4ll-1145 • 1\fcCORl\tJCK LAGUNA
Death Notices
ROSLYN, N.Y, IAPl -
Joseph Barnett, 76, w h o
played an influential role In
developing standards for the
nation·s system or interstate
and defense highways, died
here Sunday.
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Cypress Chi.ef to Enter Race· I
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By O.C. RuSTINGS A 1 1 o c I a t Ion ol School against the gra)n of. tit• entire dependeot fOderal efecllons I, pol1t closed stmulta-'~
ot the o.llf "lltf Stiff
Cyprtss Police Chief George
Savord ha.a announced bis can-
d1dacy for the Orange eo,mty
Sherilf's positk>n to be vacated
next year when Jim ~1usick
retires.
Admlnlstraton. coocept of rupportionment. .,.,....,_,, senenl elect!On natloawlde, eiempttoos I""'
Other officers are John day .as a ~natiooaJ holiday, equal time rules on televbl<DJ
Grae/, vice ~balnnan. and * pnstc!enu.J · priu>aM · no for federal eandlclates and Ill
Mary Refen Taxtor, ·treuurer. CONGR ESSMAN Clair .. r11er than Mfj' J, ltg!Uti~ fimlt on -lllD'IP'ndlnl i>O
'!be group plans to OJ>ell an. Burgener lhlnks every can-elect""" DO eo\llU ,thaq Aug. 25-&tta per eligible voter. "'
ORANGE COUNTY
01:::&:~::~~am .. [?~~~~~~ HarborDENTAL CENTER
\Vhetmore (R-Garden Grove) ~ process would make -• · , • '
Savord already has opened a
campaign command post at
3901 Westerly Place, Newport
Beach. • has been named to the Senate tbe. ?"blic more aware -ol ac-IJENTE • CREDIT • PElfTOTHAL
Select Committee on Children · tlvihes run m support of each w. ........., .. ..;_. ......... .....;.., ·u. .., ._ wfll .. .,. ~
and Youth. candidate, Bt.argeoer claims. -....... ,.,...... .,...... .., ..-" er... & ....... ..,., Mc•
D ' d • h An Oraflie County Division te J' J,C of Californians a g a I n , t
PropositiQO. I has been form-
ed, with Jeanette Turk of New Chief ~:tingtoo Beach ••. cbalr-
Member groups include the
Of LA. FC League of Women Voters of which Mrs. TurtJs president;
the .EdU<lfion Congress of
"-.. Coillornla, the Nallo·n a f
SANTA ANA -Supel"\'ilor'"'" Auociatop. of Social Workers,
Otai~ Mervyn DymaJJy The Rancho Senta Fe ...... 11 ...,_.
(D-Los ,Angeles) said lbe com-Republican al56 backs an fn. . .{pptoftD fOI PPillONlll. UNION '
mitt.et will be investigating ICHOOL DISTllCT DINTAL 'PLANS
four main areas: child.a~ , '
the nmaway child. ~ , s •
children and thea!l<>l'letl cltild. • upervisors llWNM .. IXTIACftOttl • •1DM ~I
X.U.YS " DINTVID .. -Alli .., . .IACllrs PIHTOTHA&. .. IOOT CAMALS , , '* ~. I • 8~~8(~~1rt~ ·= ~Okay Gear '. ~Di:· A •• FREDERICK SALTZM~N
the aui. Supreme Q)art to re-SANTA ANA -Purcha!e ' 1196 HARBOR BL VO-COSTA MESA
CIOWNS .. WISDOM TllTH a MIMO;I OITHODONTIA
quire "at all ~-·-aooatnr.1 "" .. lir-~"St.~ .. Mid,.,.., 1 -~1 _ .t: ..•. •u:1icr.:"" · approval of-a-new ftreboat and Ralph Diedilch.JI! Fullertoo e Ameriean A!aociatioo of
the new chairman'<( Orange University women, Callfomia
County's Local Ate q__c y School s Association,
Formation Commission. .PJ'A I, Orange ~Y
~ ........ I" ~c ~ ',a tiuck tras:tor and trailer by • c '-.Rh. one 556-8013 • present law, OQ].y~ '91!ftatorl ' the Orange County Harbors · from even-numbered districts Beacbei and Parks Oistrtci.\!'.!!~!!li!!!lll!!!..,...,...,..,..,..,...,...,...,...,...,...,..., .... rtl
wtfl be required to run in the has been llt8Dted t>y·the county
He succeels Tustin Coon-"' atic Forum, callfornia
cilrnan Clifton P.1iller who Tea Association and tbe next g~aJ el~ Board of :supervison.
Brjggs' &aya this r u n • . llolird 'members appro""l,lr';;;;;li:..~;
resigned when he took a new
job in Texas.
Louis R. '"Red" ReinhaNtt, a $26.6 i 11ion Fullerton city councilman, ~
was named vice chairman or ~
the five-member bQard which s • ~
includes two supervisors, two uperVISO 0
1:!. I representaUves of the League ~
of Cities and one public mem-
the ·fire boat purchase for
'27 ,000 from the Seaway Boat "---" Co. of Long Beach. The truclt
tractor and trailer for hauling
beach equipment from Seal
Beach to Dana Point will cost
$23,SOO.
ber, plus alternates. S litl W :;;:~~:~ ~ Computer Pact ·');-·. s aste _ ___ . eet__ et Flllllll1&'• Fii ............. , •• °'"" I~~~ •.· -~:&· ' '
SANTA ANA - A contract· on Orange County's move to
authorizing Computer Sciences fann out Its: computer opera-
Corporation to take over tions.
Orange County's data pro-Assistant Data Se r v i c e s
cessing has been signed by the Dfr.dor ll<mlcf PresfM is
Orange Coun_jy $1Jpe~s. -!int ilsiltant to Computer
-.-.....
SANTA ANA ~'!'_h _~ California Solid Was_te· ~
Board will meet in Santa Ana
Oct. 12.
••tcl,C..,AWI" IMC, tt•• LA•'*-' U•TOll eoA• LA•HANACM O ... C ... A.M. ... .a.flWHlll, •. ftln ·IAf.
A·COMPl.UE PAINT, STAIN, AMO ftMfSH
RfMOVAL SUVIC!
l
Residents
Cite Home
l1i Lawsuit
SANTA ANA -Eight
Mission Viejo resideqf,s . and
three members of Uk local
ArchltecturaJl Control cOm-
mittee have. gone to court to
seek action that would force ~
neighboring couple to co.rnply
with allegedly v i o I a t e d
community standards.
The suoerv1sors agreed that-Sci --; · the El Seguitdo firm sOOWd . ence s manager of the local
handle tlMfC®nty's computers operation. . . services for the next seven The contract with CSC is
Supervisor Dovid L. Baker
of Garden Grove Is chalrmait
of the ·state· group which is
study-ini melhods of -con-
verting solid waste into useftil
prod)Jcts.
l l P. !~RE YptJR TREASURES FOR
~ASY R!FfM151\!NG wt TH &IX ST AINI
AND VARt!l,SHEl I~'
It ls aUeged in an Orange
County Superior Court com-
plaint that also seeks $10,000
in damages that a honie own-
ed by Ro.bert Joseph and Janet
Bachtiger Jr. is conspicuous
by the weeds, rubbish and
debris that cover the lot.
years for $26.S million. believed to be the first of its
The final amendment to the kind In the nation with ~ coun-
contract was the lowering of ty. Private _computer firms
the performance bond from $5 have · signed agreements for
million to $1 mlUion. Fina Illy, operatiQRs l'ith states . and
a lettet of bank credit was-federal government agencies.
Bak.er said the group would
see a demonstration of the
pyrolsls system of soild waste
conversion and then ineet in
the board of supervisors hear·
ing room.
WITHOUT LYE, ACIDS OR-H~FUL
. MATERIALS
substituted for the bond.
THE FIR\f took over the
data s er vi c.e.s department
ope-ation Aug. 31, retaining
most o( the coonty employes
including the director Robert
F)lrmer. -
Farmer will be a liaison
man for lhe rirm with o.ther
counties, see~g \0 sell them
lid savings Plans
for Serious ·savers . .
. •
Plaintiffs in the lawsuit are
Identified as ~1mes . Robert'"·
Cook, Monte Eagle, and John
Durand and Ann F. Cowper,
Vicky Dearing, C a r o I e
Richard, Delbert ;Mortensen
and David Hunter. AfsQ ouing Helps Solve S ~
are arcbltectural ·committee FALSE TEETH members Edward W. Joyce, Martin RU880 and Glenn E. Worrin oncll PrDW...1 COlllldlr a...._ ........ PAJ.. 1t1on. -TDTB9~ ... d \$:
at Imperi ·.. ·nus:.
IC is alle&ed lh>t community " ...., '"" -,.. -·--·arc1 -· ..... __ ., -™ • reportedly violated ... --L I) -
by tbe Baclltlgers were i.:--.. ~
establlshed after the couple ..::· l::L~i:L:... 1W t4:
and neighboring homeownert i~.to--. ~,.... ~
bought their Iota from the'J---------1 MWi~ Viejo Company.
Suit Hits
Policemen
;";;.;;.;;_;;;.;"-Mia aws
CLOGGED TOILETS
Eddie Albert
Your future is serious business.
---Save-at-Jmperiel-en4-geLlheltlghestinter.e.stntes R.0~"~' __
on your insured savings. _
Imperial has many helpful free services to assist you
to your savings goal. • Imperial helps you \Vhere it counts.
They're serious about your savings.
A PLAN FOR ALL PEOPLE
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Passbook Accounts 5.25"-Annual )'ield 5.39•
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79c
•• 644-7575
A Plan for
All People .
Downtown Los Angeles• Clartmoot • Eitt Pasadena• Glendon·-
Newport.Btach ·Newport Center • Pasaderui . Redl1ndJ. Siem
M1dr• •To pang• Canyon•~ Covina • WntWood Vill•p •
Whltcir:r •Woodland HiJ!i •plus 16 Other Southern
C.Ufomia officd. ' •
OPEN SATURDAYS
s~ 11ou11 in M~• omctt.
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MOflday, Del°"" 1, lt7l .DAILY PILOT • ,
-Knox1 ~~-Gamtiles· and Rolls·· ·7s ·as Rams Roll -"l~.. ·'
&All FRANCISCO (AP) -Early In lbe added alltr t11e 40-10 >ictory'WhiCI\ ~•Pt
g1ee, LOI Angeles Rams ·coach Qluck ~ Rargs unbeiteil through three Na-KM,I decided on a' fourth down, 1"We llon&J Football League garnes under their
ndiiied "-•· · Uttle wmething to get · .us new oOach." "Things wotked out for us,
going." · and not for them."
i:l'l•l''UUJe IOmething'' ·wt• two hK:heli-After· Hadl's eek; .Los Angeles oom-
f a fint,~~t Rams' 18-ranl IUoe, .. pletod a-ft~ dme that put th~·""°" . 11-10 in I~ S<iC<lllil' l~olioa.UO .a.y~ • -~g~ . 5'o ~,4~/ IOI" RalMrwtiilm to toQlllSI )'lt<b to a,~;,iacti Had!'~ ibillgbt lbe filers' W ID jhe gam•. oa'l·.~baci: suaibd made "¥IN dint~":fault ~ur o1reose1'• San
first'dcrim with about hall In lnCh to FranciSl:l>~11&1>a'~ert °'"" Wiicox said
s rt. · , -, ' after ai8ixth itra'imt Joss to Los Angeles.
'We felt it was the thing to do," Knox "We never got them the ball." . . . . . .. ' ' .
'tbe'-Rama scored the first rour tlmes
they had the ·ball, loeludlng the
touChdown that rookie QJllen Bryant got
on a 93-yard kickoff return.
"Some big plays always seem to be
happening to us, like that return," said
Jim Sniadecki of San Francisco.
Bryant aald, "They -a couple ol shots at me in the middle bl the field but
I saw a little space on the left and went
outside." .
Bryant holmced off tackler Doug CUn·
ningham at about the Rams' SO-yard line
and wasn't iouched the rest of the way
on the touchdOwn run that might bave
broken the 491!rs' spirit.
It put the Rams ba~ ahead. 11>-7. after
tbe 49ers had ~ on a run· by Vic
Washington In the opening period.
"'Ibey beat us 'pretty good," admitted
49ers quarterback John Brodie, who mfcy'
be in danger ol losing his starting job.
Brodie threw three intercept.Ions In lhe
loss, and his replacement Steve Spurrier
completed four ol five passes in takinf
the 49ers for a late toucbdo'Wtl.
Asked if there would be line-up changes
for next Swlday's ~ at Atlanta, Dick
Nolan said, "That's not out of the
question."
"It's no surprise to me \\'e have done
$0 wtU," says Had! of the tu.m which
finished 6-7-1 last season when Roman
Gabriel wa.s quarterback. "'Ibis is the best-coached team I've
ever played on and It has the best atr
titude," Madi ' explained.
OND~IDU~AOl"ltS 11.VSHING -, Md:llfc'-! 1 .. 71. llerffol..,.. lMI, 111 ., "51, Safi l'rw.dKt, Sdlrllliolt
'°1E~!:~~""'~ .. ~ ,.,..... J.ruon J-4S, McCllf~ f.2t, Kl1h1 f.H1 k1i l'r_liw: .. l(~lkA >-44. IMl\blf'911' l-32, Schrtlblr >-!2, -0. W..,...119~ 1-$2. AtW1..-1u 7-31. PASSING -LO. Arlgtltt. Hedi 11·114 1TI ywdt,
ofi.k a :.~is· . YUJ. '
Admit,s Disappointment
-' . osox :Joh '·
· o Johiis6n:. -
1
-jNEW YORl(i (AP) -With the~'
Cljlar In hts hand-bllt an uncbar @.
tear ID hiseye and a lump fn liia !
Ralph Houk shOUlciered the · hllime &in'.
da.Y for the collppie of-the New' York
Yankeeil and .reslided ~ manager-with t~ years left on ·"5 contract.
'With tears streaJNM',do~ld.l .'f•ae.
tlie 54-year .. ld Houli'toi.\ tbo'c)l!ayeri pf
his deds.ion following an ,.,.~loss· •to
DetroU that ended the most ~ting sea.soo tn\ his !1 years as maMgef of the OllCHJliihty ·vw .. d)lnUty. • · :'I'ben. still wearing-hil uniform With 7llle famed pinstripes. Houk madellllls
~ annowicement in an enxtonal ntws conference_ on a day atreaa,. driJ>-
ping ~th nostalgia. as the ~an~
prepared to . leaye historic ~year-qld
Yankee Stadium far two Years wttlle a
$24 J1Ullion modemizatl~ ~ni'Ukes
place. , , . . .
e Ktuko Ollt
. Bos'l'oN -Darrell Johnson, a Me-titl\e ;outneyman <>,a~her· who has spent
th! last. three seasons in the mlnor
leagues awaiting the can, is ihe new
manager of the Boston Red Sox ••
Johnspn was nained the Red Sot's 30th
manager SUnday as Eda.Je Kasko ·was
replaced on the fll18.I day of his fourth
9eason as field boss in a move which
~didn't surprise many team ~~ if!lli~~~:,.\ Ptete:~~~~s .i«f~
manager in 10 years. ...
HanK' Can't Do It;
Settles for 3 Hits
ATLANTA (AP) -Henry .Aaron's
relenUess ptrsuit of Babe Ruth's all-lime
heme run record ~as sidetracked Sunday
when the ·icy-rle~ed 39-year~d slugger
fa1led to connect for the distance in the
final game of the 1973 season.
"I am disappointed . yes, but I feel like
I've got all year and all winter to go N
home and rest up," he said. "The last
month has been really tiresome.
"I'm just happy to 1ook back oo. a good
year.· I hope for the same type year DeXl
year, so it'll be a great winter."
Aaron bad moved to the threshhold ol
the legendary Ruth's mark of 714 when
he drilled his 40th of tbe year and 713th
lifetime over the center field fenCe Satur-
day night off left-hander Jerry Ram of
'the Houston. Astros.
A season-high crowd of 40,517 poured
into Atlanta Stadium despite threatei:iinf
skies Sunday, hoping to see base~
history in the maklng. ·
Instead, they_ saw one of the game's
all-time great hitters rap three con-
secutive singles off Houston southpaw
Dave Roberts before· going ouj .pn a soft
liner to second baseman Tommy Helms
in his final at bat of the year. off reliever
Don Wilson in the eighth inning.
Aaron, "1lo also had three straight hii.
in Saturday ni"ght's game, thus lifted his
~ batting average to .301.
As he trotted .. lelt field fO< the ninth
inning, the crowd rose with thunderous
appla~, triggered -by lhooe in the left
neld bfea(ben who dJdn 't seem to want
to quit-:
The ovatkxt lasted aboot ·t hr e e
minutes, and was Mill 19*nc\when the
• ning to Houston's Greg Gt"OP. ,1
"The greatest thing that happened to
me today was getting that ovation."
Aaron said. "I'm just sorry I wasn't able
to hit a home run."
Aaron said he \\'3S determined to hJt
No. 714, that he had no intentioo of col-
lecting those singles. "But I got only one
good .pitch all day and It fooled me. I WU
looking for a change-up fnxn Roberts in
the first iMing and he threw me a Id
ba11 right &wn the mlddle. ••
Asked about the pressure, the IOft..
spoken Alabama native sal~, '"lbere ~
not as much today as yelterdly (Satu:f.
day). I felt an awful lot tben became I
felt like 1 almost had to blt one to bne
a chance to tie it today." -
Aarca said he hoped to take a loo&'.
fishing trip later tbis week, spend, a few
days with his parents in Mobile, >JI., and.
then go on to the World Series ~ he
is scheduled to throw out the lint.ball. ·
· His winter calendar al10 tncludel wed-
ding plans -the date not yet announced.
He is to marry Billye Williams, a local
television personality. •
Then. he can think of next year and
Babe Ruth.
''I think we open in San Francisco out
year, but I dm't know if that's olftcial
yet," Aaron said. "I'll plan to play all
three games out there Jp...1 haven't }jt a
home run in that park: In Uree yem.
"l 1-I bit _it (714) benJ in Atlanta,
but l'U do the best I can r<gar<lleu of
wbel'e I ptay," be aUi.
00 ~ er ~-_. l
•CHIOCAk~~" bi ~ ~~.OF ~ ~~-, L:PHILLIPS BUT BRQKE AWAY . TO SCORE. · 'uil\pirl!s ontered the fin! pitch <t 11* In-
Aaron's failure· to hit -one. out ol the
park removed the pn!IOOlio Iii, the
Houstgn pitching itaff, e s p e c I a 11 y
Roberts. who yielded No. 712 in J1oustoo
eight days earlier. rallied to ~ 're · ~fn~ ~. . .. ~ r. J•· · .,.t , • · 1~· l..t\
eluding a~ a tp hilt · ana's ~ .1 •" • "' • • •
Jolin Neweomhe aii n tile ~.b(l!Tain NL Eaijt"' oiritdup teQJlis tournament Sunday. , , , _ ·o~er ... the No. 3 seed rrom The ·· ~ .) . ~~~$~7lf~~;~ ·.·~Won't :Be Any. Playoff,
I hr" the 8eq,nd Set. H"OWevtr. Okker ... ' ·
rallied in s~ar fashion from a 5-2 ~~ ~.n the lZ.pDint tle-lnakir and .• V·aws Mets Boss Berra .
Okk:er then fought back to capture the
third and fmaJ set ~ with ease as the
taller Newcombe appeared to grow Ured,
losing the steam out of his Awesome
service.
Okker walked off with the $9,000 first
prize while Newcombe gol $4,600.
e Mesan :?itd ·
LAS VEGAS -Manuel de la: TolTe
jumped into an early lead &lnday and
then barely bung on to win the 17th U.S.
National Senior-Golf Classic for bis first
major victory In a.3-yem: career. • ,
His fOW'-"round scores Of 74, 64, 71 and
69 and a total Of 278; 10 under par, gave
him a one-strok~ f¥fge on.Jive-time .defen-
ding champion Tommy Bolt, driving
(See Briefs Par• 101
SC Loses Davis;
CHICAGO (AP)· -Vowi~g to a man after learning the Pii-ates had beaten
"there woo't be any playoff," the New Montreal to stay in coritenUon . The game
Y«t,Mets ahot for the clincher in the wouJdn't have been played otherwise.
National League East today needing only Pittsburgh had to fiat San Diego and
one victory in a doobleheader makeup hope far lbe Cubs to take botb games
with -~ Chicag? Cubs. from the Mets. That would put
"We . don't want any playoff," said Pittsburgh, New ·York and SL Louis in a
manager Yogi Berra. who then corrected tie for first.
himsell and said "There won't be any JtJ"
playoff)' ST. LOUIS (AP) -"Wt knew what we
The Mets Clihched a share of the title had to do. We had to win every game,"
with a 9-3 victory led by Cleon Jones intense right-hander Rick Wise reflected.
after h;i.ying dropped the first game of a \Vise and the St. Louis Cardinals ac·
doubleheader 1·0. complished that gQBI Sunday, but their
The St. Louis Cardinals kept alive their scason-<!nding spurt may h<ive been too
hopes with a 3-1 victory over late. .
Philadelphia and Pittsburgh stayed in the As the Cards were edging the
running with a 1().2 triumph over Mon· Phµl!de.lphia Phillies 3·1, the New York
treal as th~ Expo! and Cul.Js' were both ~1cts were cllhching at least a. Share of
eliminated from the tight race. the N&.iio'Qiil Le~'s Ea& Division title.
Jf the Mets lose b;oth game' today they "It's a 'waiting game .now," observed ~ will falljnto a lie with St. Louls. ln that the 28-year~ld Wlse while putrmg on a
Sooners' DaVI•S case, PiftsburgH could also claim a share , cigar. "The odds are loitg, but at hlasl
of h ~ . hi b d f . c..... we hl.tUed all the w,ay. • t e :..:llatnpions p y e eating ~ h!1.1r we. were to gel_ mto· 8 .,la ...... ,, 1 Diegoir[a makeUp gai;o.e today. ·• tr 1 ....... . But the Mei. 11Dt '-lhen1'elves Into I D~ our cl>on<es·woold,he pre\ly good Belittles -Troy perfect posillCIO by wi-•·• the seCond 1Mocauae IJf the, way' wo're playing," he ... ...._ added, "but ~tit's alwa~ 20-20." game behind Jerry ~ who -sa\d WiseJ arid ihe ·Cards," wtfo .,,er~ 3'~
• "that took a lot of pressure· off. "'CJYJ w,e g~un,es· ~bind the Mets last Wednesday, LOS ANGELES (AP) -University o( are not raced with havinilto. win twO· '..tilmaxed .a fi.V&Vlotory surge Sunday
Soutbem California tailback ~h<lly games Mooday. One will do14t:" with ri1ore .tlaht pitching 'and Bernie
Davis is nursing a badly bruised left • JtJ" c ""' · · t ankle today whUe the Trojans prepare to Pl~YRGH (AP) ·/..!.;..)lbe locker · arr-s ~ ance. Nl!WPORT BEACH 'S ROY EMERSON $ERqES A WINNER.
play the1.r Paciflc-8 opening fotltball room riid.io ·6Jared ·as· tiSu81 a'ltf:r the i · · '
game without him. game, but .the Pi~81!:-Plra\es ,clidn't E" -':-~. E d v· D h A spokesman for the Trojans-said Sun-seem to be·li~:· \ .'•~. "'· 1 ', t ' t ~r~~!i:q:i:~:~f:~~~;,.~~ ~:~~~:f:~:~~~~!~i~: . 'J.UO. ~ n s . 1c ory roug .
~ State at Corv8.llls. ' for New York is down t0'0ne. . ' ' • '
Manfred Moore will work out in Davis' The report brought no visible 'fe&ci~ 1 · ·' • • r • ~~t~~t-a=i•~t"~i:;a~ ~i:i":i ~::~-.:~ ~·~J~~.~ ·Success Doesn't Change His Playing Pla1is
OSU. National League East race and, eliminate ~ •
Dl\'is was lnjurodAudo&.tbe !lntbaU . the &gos.__ , -.. _ ', :41-AMO,. CaUJ,, {Al\) -Newport
of Satunl•y'· olfltt'• -f.7' (le with Willie Stargell, Jim Rooker -G<ne 'Bt&ch'o'..Roy Enlerslm oaya his first mo-
Oklaboma, bid the ~-tree'-' wUh a ~ 11:!,Ver t lOOked up from their card . ~ jor tennis tournament victory in more
pain kl lier orid plll'O<j:lit, ~ aoelad•hlll. pthe. Other. ~yen strolled to and O'Otn than two years _ healing Swedisn coach Birry .awlittur ti •"'11' o .. t llte -• • .. . , , .
-., llM<I m'c'l·~t ~· 111U , : 'l'be ~ 01_, annooncemeot meant t~ ~~ l!oi:g In · fmals of the
11n•waulflod with tbl 661:' ~ ~ New Yon COWil-cllnch lbe uue by split· ~.000 Fireman's Fund roternallonal -
"No we~ not ~' '.11 ba declared. ,Ung a 'dOablebeader today with the Cubs. "won't drive me back on the circuit
"We sbouJd bavt won.' ' ~ Wm the Pirates reaUy lhat obUv\ous. ptaylni every week." Meanw~J SC coach John .McK~ or were .they just af,oldlng whst they "I play belter when I don·t play so
commented 1rrft1,.hWe'ri Jes\ Dot~ -·~'to ffetr't much," said Emerson after winning S-7,
good •.. I hate \o 111 U. ..,. •lftCtt'1, no Jease worr)'\nl about It. S-1, 6--4 Sunday in a-~nior-junior struggle
Quarterback sttve Oa 'ol. l"he N'o. &! .. EitJttt we'll do it or we won't.'' said that kept 5.800 fans dividing their ap-
'award was $(,600, his first si1.8ble cash
prize. . -"This was my best tournament on a
hard surface." S&id Borg, who prefers
c\11.y. "I'm not disappointed. Next time
J '11 be.at him.'' lb; two had me.l just once
prevloUsly when Emerson won in four .....
Emerson \\'ith only three points in the
last four games or the opening set.
But in the aecond M!t it "'as Emerson·s
tum to run off five gam~s when Borg's
service fa ltered and the Australian's got
stronger. Borg held his servla! for tht
first time In the si xth game., but
Emerson !el"Ved out the scvtnth at lo\'!,
.getting his third ace of the set . .
''He's amazing," .s&d Roberti. "Can
you imagine bim gttting si1 hits in a raw
with all that pressure. It's all in h13
wrists. He may be 39 ye.ars okl, but his
·wrtsts arc ll. His wri!t3 are stlll In their
prime." .
. "It's not a quest~ of him breaking the
record mw," .aid 1A!o D.lrocher, vtteran
manager of the Astros. "It's a matter ot
how many he hit!.'' I'
J)urod)l!I-also marveled at .A:lron's
quid< wrists, loci .,....,;_ the ......
to his home nm ability.
"He beat me "° many ·ti.mes I can't
even remember," Durocher added.
"There were times we had the ball pest
him and he knocked it out of tbe pork
with those v.Tists.
"He's the best right-banded litter I've ·
1ee11 sinoe Rogers Hormby, '' Durochtr
said. "He's some kind at player."
Do Angels Have
A Future Star .
In Tanaha?
~ U the California Angels were looting
for an encouraging sign for the future,
they may have found one.
.Frank Tanaba, a 20-year-old with the
poise of ~ 10 years older, fabion-
ed a two-bitter on the final day of the
season Sunday to blank the Minn.,ota
Twins, 3-0 .
"He looks like he'll be able to wtn 15 or
J7 games for us next year," enthused
Angel Manager Bobby Winkles after
Tanana's nine-strikeout, o-n e-w a I k
performance.
~-linnesota. however, did win
something. Rod Carew, \\ito didn't play
Sunday in the finale. finished with •bat-
ting average of .SSO to "1.in his third AL
batting championship and second In suc-
cession.
"lt has been a disappointlng year In
tome aspects:,'' conctded An.gels general
mana.ger Harry Dalt-On. "We failed to be
at h!ast a .soo hall club and we lolled to .
flnjsh third,"
The Angels finislled with more hilt this
seuon -1,39-4 -than at any Ume in
their 13-year history and scored 17' rnon
rum than they did the previous Mllmtlf.
~(•t c.11i.rMtm .. ,,.,.. .... ,,.,...
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lrwmen.c J t o t ""'°'·'· • • 1 Tl(r9ll. rt S I I I 111111wt, i1 • t : ~~ 711 I O t t MMM, a -a I
•
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ran\ed Soonen declar~. "'nley're not .~~· "''ho pitched a nine-hitter and plause. "I can concentrate and enjoy it
No. 1. 1'M:y're deflnl\lly behlrid ua. I . ~-1n Uiree runs au.inst the Expos. m<n If It isn 't week afttr week."
dol)'t know who's ahead of U., but.they 're ~ .... 'It's out ol our bands, so why worry~" £mcraol1, who wHI be 37 ncit month
not. I thought ~ pushed them all up and : he ·~-"I know I won't have any trou· and has won every major title in tennis,
down the O•ld. ll'hoy-tbond wlla< type of . bll!llo!eping toolghl.'.' . eorned 19,000 by ti'!' victory. For-11,.'17·
EmerBOn had to come back from a S-7
loss in the nrst set to win .hil quarter-
final match ag1inst Ro3coe Tanner and
his stmlflnal with Arthur Aahe. and he
had to do n •pin against Borg, whom he
•praised 11 1 plenty tough right now"
wltb years ahead to Improve.
Leadlni 5-1, Emerson Jtod set.point
twle& In a game that went lo deuce. eight
times before Borg held hll ICrVice for
the first of five straight games that ran
out Iha first set. The blOlld Swede's
topspin forehand and voUeylnc routed.
In the third set EmeQOO aucctafUlty
attacked Borg's two-handed backtui.nd
1uld scored repeate<ny wHh backhand
volleys of his own. "That's my strength
and he kept hlUlng to lt," Emenon Uild.
Afler tach player held tanke twice,
there \tas • at.ring of five atratgbt 11trvlce
br<aks. with Emenon going in ft9o\t M
when Boer doublofaulled the 11m0 polnl
arid then noldlna bit -aer\'O In Ibo
match game.
k'*<tt.111 , • 0 • llOll-.. ' • '1
~·Ill 0 •• 0 ttw1111,.. • i. '=.:.... ., o t t '~Y' : I'"""-, ·~ ......... ..;!~= il1· -··-·"-~ Ollwr. ...._
a team theT ...,..n•t Nallonltl dlanu>ICIOS ' .. jiitt.Jiinln was lo conclude Ila rogui,.r yeor.old ·Borg, who was only 3 when
shoulct \II.Ce advantage of the kinda of l ,..._.today ma make-up ge.me w11h the • Emerson first btcame an Australian
brc•ks they got, and they dldn'L" "'Sil-t>Lego Padres, wh6 new here Sunday Davl1 Cup teem member in 19G9, tho . ~ T · ...
. .. ...
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•
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..
J O DAJLY PILOT
Pro Grill Roundup
Raider s Upended; . •
Browns Edge NY
Yield goals played an in1portant role In
the success or the Cle\'e.land Browns and
the Kansas Cily Chiefs as they posted
imµortant pro football vlclorirs over the
Ney,· York Giants und O<iklanci ltaidcrs
Sunday afternoon.
Don Cockroft kicked field ~oals of 11,
27, 30 and JO ylrds J>eforc 76,000 fans in
Cleveland Stadium to give the BrO\\'llS
a 12-10 victory over the Giants.
Stcncrud's field goals. plus an outstand-
ing defensi ve performancc. highlighted
the victory.
"The dc£ense did a great job in shut·
ting them off in the second half," Browns
C<lach Nick Skorich said.
11\e Giants' defense did its share of
\l.'ork in stopping the Bro\vns, but allowed
them to get close enough for Cockroft's
decisive field goals .
A cro\\'d of 72,631 watched a bruisi ng
struggle In \\'hich Jan Stenerud kicked
field goals .of 47, 41 and 29 yards to lead
lhe hosl Chiefs to a 16-3 \Vin over
Oakland in an American Football
Conference ouling.
The Raide rs. trying des-perately to
---,;core their first offensive touchdown of
the regular season, blew their last
chance or pulling the game out er the fire
wben Willie Lanier intercepted Ken
Stabler's pass with I :52 to play and
lumbered 17 yard.oi to the goal. ~
Two other Stenerud field goal attempts
were blocked by the Oakland front wait
causing coach Hank Stram to comment :
"It's sacrilegious to have a great kjcker
and have him blocked. \\le're going to be
working very, very hard on our blocking
for our kicker this week ."
Elsewhere around the-league:
NE\V YORK JETS 1AT .BUFFALO-0.
J. Simpson failed to score but ran his
season yardage total to 476 yards for
three games as John Leypoldt kicked
three field goals to i;ive the.JU1ffalo Bills
a ~7 win over the New York Jets in an
NFL game Sunday.
Buffalo shot to a three-point "lead on
Lcypoldt's fi rst field goal and added the
others in the final period. It appeared-the
Bills v.·ould get their fii:;st shutout since
19!65 but Al Woodall, in at quarterback
for injured Joe Namath, hit Jerome
Barkum on a 34-yard touchdown pass
y,•ith two seconds \cft .
\\'ooda\l Yi'a.5 hit hard by defensive
tackle Earl Edwards as he released the
ball and it Yi1lS several minutes before he
got lo his feet .
NEW ENGLAND A1' MIA!'t-U-Mercury
Morris scored on runs M 24, 70 and 35
yards to set a Miami club rushing
reco rd, spurTing the Dolphins to a 44.23
Golf Res ults
\vin over the New England Patriots.
Morris gained 197 yards in IS carries.
''\Vhen the guys up front make up their
rnlnds they're going to blow sonlebody
off the fi'ld, nobody can stQP us." Morris
said.
"!\1orrls had OU!slanding efforts."
coach Don Shula added. '·He made the
right cuts and the offensive.people did a
great job or blocking for him."
M'ASHINGTON AT PlULADELPHIA
-Sonny Jurgensen, making his first
sta"rt since suffering an achilles tendon
tear·last October, threw two touchdown
passt.'S to Charley Taylor to lead the
\Vashington Redskins to a 23-7 win over
the Phila..delphia Eagles.
The 39·year-ol.d Jurgensen completed 16
of 29 passes for 195 yards. ·
"l"m S<!tisfied with my first outing," he
said. "f\.1y statistics arc not important.
The big lhing is I moved the ball well
and I threw fairly well."
PITI'SBURGll AT JIOUSTON The
Pittsburgh Steelers lived up to thei r
reputat ion as big play artists to hand the
Houston Oilers a 36-7 defeat.
Terry Bradshaw rammed one yard for
a touchdown and
Steer linebacker Andy Ru ssell returned
an interception 45 yards for a score to set
the rout in motion.
Bradshaw then hit Ron Franklin from
26 Ylµ'ds out and Glen "Edwards in·
tercepted a pass and returned it 86 yards
for another score. ·
ST. LOUIS AT DALLAS -Billy Joe
Dupree. a rookie tight end, i;rabbed ,three
touc.hdown passes and nearly had a
founh as the Dallas Cowboys bolted into
rirst place in the NFC East with a 45--10
victory over St. Louis.
Roger Staubach. the C ow ti o y s
quarterback, hit 17 of 22 passes for 276
yards and a pair ·or touchdowns but it
Wa.5 Dupree's,day as· he caught passes of
eight, t~·o and one yards.
CHICAGO BEARS AT DENVER -
· Bobby Douglass threW a pair or
touchdown passes and Jim llariison
sparked the ground game as the Chicago
Bears crushed a fumbling, penalty·
plagued Denver Broncos team, 33-14.
Denver running back Floyd Lillie
fumbled it away three times and the
Bears converted the turnovers into a
touchdo~n and-two field goals.
Jn all, Denver lost the ball five times
on fum51es and twice on interceptions.
NEW ORLEANS AT BAL 111\lORE -
Ber1 Jones tossed a touchdown pass on
the first Baltimore series, then all but
discarded tfie aerial game after four first
half interceptions as the Colts held off
'New Orleans, 14-10.
"It wasn't a very good win from a
lechnical standpoint,•• noted Baltimore
coach Howard Schnellenberger. "but it
was the best win because it was our
first." ·
GREEN BAY AT rtlINNESOTA -
Fred Cox drilled lhree short-yardage
fie.Id goals and itinnesota defensive
tackle A1an Page destroyed Green Bay's
,offensive strategy kl give the Vikings an
J l·3 NFC win over the Packers.
Page forced two fumbles witb crushing
tackles as the Yikes held the vaunted
Packers running attai:.k outside the 25-
yard line.
•
• •
UC· Irvine's Baker Recalls
Unusual Incidents on Trip
SPORTS
Unitas Passes
40,000 ·Mark
In 20-13 Loss
')ly HOWARD L HANDY
ot -0111\' '11tf Sid
tn La Spez.Ja, Jtaly there were 5,000
basketball £8111 waiting for Dave Baker
of UC Jrvine and the Sports Ambassadors
basketball team he played for during the
summer months.
\Vhat 's so unusual about such a turnout
for a cage game?
Perhaps nothing except for one fact. ,
The game was scheduled. for 8:30 that
evening but Oa"tt and Co. dkln 't arrive
until 11:30 and the !ans were still there.
"We played the game and gave our
halftime program that consisted of our
own dedicatloo to Quist and the people
loved every minute or it.
"Oh, yes, lhey not only: :SJed for the game but they all had to s the entitt
time because there were no bleachers."
This is just one of the many incidents ..
that happened to Dave, Bill Boyd of USC,
Ralph Dro)Jlnger and Gary Franklin of
UCLA, Fred DeVilugbn and Charlie Mehl ·
of :Westmont and BW Ingram of Oregol!,
SAN DIEGO (AP) -Essex. Johnson. among others. .., ,
only 5 feet 9, claims he's somelimes hard The group of 12 basketball players left
to find among the pro football giants. the U.S. in June for an II ~!t-~aj stay in Europe that included visits to
But the San Diego Ch"argers got a good Switzerland, Austria, Italy, Yug06lavia,
look at the Cincinnali flash Sunday. France, Italy, Israel and other countries.
From behind. They played $4 games in 59 of those
Johnson slipPe<i be.hind San Diego days with18 43-11 record.
defenders to .catch two passes from Ken The number of games' would have been
Anderson and raced to touchdowns o,.78 larger except for an epidemic of. OOof·
and 38 yards. He also rushed for 121 and-mouth disease in Poland and
·yards in 21 carries, running his three-Crechoslovakia during a two· week
game total to 342 yards, as the Bengals stretch in which the team was to play 14
beat the Chargers 20-13. games in those countMe~.
"He's our fastest man," ~d Cincinnati "'We speot the time in the Swiss Alps
coach Paul Brown, whose squad also in-instead," Dave recalls.
clude5 (onner national CtJllegiate sprint 'Ibe trip was spomored by Overseas
champion Isaac Curtis. --~des·wi~tJW.~etes sponsored i~-
"He also,has the ability to rise to the d1vidui1Iy b~ v~n°'!s ch~cbes of dii·
occasion" Brown said. ferent denonunations id thtS country. The
JohnSC:0 and rookie fullback Charles halftime personal devotions were also a
"Bobby'' Clark both rose to the occasion
DAVE BAKER
•
big part ot the trip. Mariners Church of
Newport Beach sponsored Dave. -
But everything wasn't exactly or a
Christi!lll"'plature.
"The rt'(erees cheated so badly, you
wouJdn't believe it. We would have a 10-
point halftime lead and during the Ume
while we were giving our testimony,
something would happen. ·
"When we returned to the court we
wopld be 10 points behind."
Another ln<quity of basketball in
Europe (the squad ·wu facing pro-
fessional teams most.of the time) was in
dribbling. A player would stand outside
the court aOd dribble .and as long as the
ball ~·as bouncing 'iruJide the lines, It was
legal:
-In Switzerland Dave couldn't lravel
. fast enough to get across the key without
Sunday after John Unitas. who threw for ,
115 y.,.ds-and _ _.,i the-«>.ooo.y -F o r --1980-0Ly.mpics
mark for his career, brought the - -
Chargers lo within seven .points wiUvan
eighl-yard pass to Bob Thomas.
San Diego still had a chanCe with 6:51
to play, but Clark ground out two first
downs for the Bengals and Johnsorl dash·
ed 29 yards for a third, killing an but 47
seconds. Unit.as' last desperate pass was
then intercepted.
"\Vith Clark i;unning inside as ~'Cll as
he does, it ,really helps me get outside,"
John.son said. ''He's quite a rookie."
Teheran Preparing Bid
To . Challenge Russians
Clark, drafted No. 12 by the Bengals
out ol tiny Bethune-Cookman College,
gained 83 yards in 22 tries.
"The holes \Veren•t always there but
y.·hen you're as hig as J am, ~metimes
you can make your own holes," said the
fi.-foot-2,-24a-pounder. ·· '
The Chargers, 1·2. lost flanker Gary
Garrison for three to {our weeks with a ,
dislocated. shoulder, and lost the game on
two. costly defensive breakdowns.
The Chargers fumbled seven times,
losing two, and Unitas Was sacked six
times and intercepted twice.
VARNA, Bulgaria (AP) -The IOtb
Olympic Coogress opened today with
Teheran -~pating to Challenge Moscow
for the 1980 Olympics and international ~
sports federations bidding for a
simplified rule on amateurism and more
power In Olympic affairs. ' ~
Location of the 1980 Games will not be
discussed on the Congress floor, but Ira·
nian sporls . offJcials arc behind the
scenes testing the air for a J980 Olympic
Games bid.
Bids m'ust be made to the International
Olympic Committee before next March
31. The IOC will decide at a Vienna
meellng next October. So far, only ~);':,"1g;:::, ~ : ~ ,g::r; ~oscow has said it would apply.
would be welcomed by many, particular·
ly in view or the mistreatment of Israeli
athletes and complaints of poor com-
muniCations at the World University
games held in rtloscow In August.
Olympic sources express,¢ rears that
if Moscow were awarded the Games, the
Russians would take over everything,
and the IOC might I~ control and
athletes of some countries could be
refused visas for political reasons.
Rassouli said , "Compared wi th
~1oscow, Teheran is far ahead with
preparations right now -preparations
which would stand for an Olympic
Games."
the three second rule being called.
111-Israel--tbere were two-hour securlt1
ctieclts getllng orf the plane and again
before boerding. ·
One g~me in Yugoslavia was played 011
an out&lde t90rt .during a heavy t~
derstorm.
"At halftime v.·e went inside to give our
testimony and thought the game ~·ould
be cancelled. Instead, they came after us
• and we finished 1n a driving rain."
Dave had a technical foul called
against him, in . Switzerland for sayili&
"ha, ba." l
On another occasion he was on ti*
verge of being tossed out of a game buL
coach Paul Newman Interceded. and P.
the heave.-hO Instead. · •
"The o<tb' time they call charging ~ II
you get low bridg¢,.v Dave ~ys.
, "This time, I was just standing tberi
guarding my man when the player wUh
the ball drove straight toward ..me. put
one foot on my leg.and the other on mJ
chest, then made the shot. I
"They called a foul on me and almost
threw me out of the game. But Pa~I
became so incensed they kicked him o~l
instead."
Newman is the fonn,er pro cager with
the \Varriors w~o turned to missionary
' work in Indonesia. At 34 he sUU can keep
up with the younger players.
"He 's a super guy." Dave says. "But
he's also a great hustler on the court and
a very cocky player. ,
"One Ume he stopped for a shot and
had everybody coming toward him. He
.. took tl>e ball in ' one hand, pushed it
_toward the basket but held the ·batl and
everybody turned toward the bas.ket. He
then made an easy jump shot with
everybody going away froin hipi." ·
t;>ave says the people were great in
every place the team visited. "We were
almost always la te because-oflliellgtif
schedule and the irregular t r a i n
scheduJes but they met us at the station
and insisted on carrying our bags."
They played to crowds of 800 to 12,000
on inside arenas and Ql.llside cement and
even dirt courts during the ·trip.
"It was like running a mere.thon race,''
Dave says. ··"You wonder why you are
doing it at the lime but when you get
back and reflect on the trip, you know it
"'as worth the effort."
Down to 225 pounds and looking fit,
Dave says he will definitely play at UCI
for the next two years while pursuing
either a law or ministerial major.
After that be will make up his mind on
a career. ·
"l'm really glad to be back home but I
v.ooldn't trade the experience for
anything. t saw a lot of stories in the
people the average tourist doesn 't see
and I am getting letters f(Ol'll. many peo-
ple in Europe since 1 returned ."
Basketball practice at UCI doesn't
start !or several days but Dave is on the
court almost e"ferJ dAJ slxiotlng and
staying in shape.
He should be a gre1it assel kl r1in fl t\'•
squad despite bis reasoning that he mlg11t
have been hurt basketball-wise.
nft will take that chance.
BRIEFS FROM SPORTS l1~ -_FYE~~,:.i;:.,39 ,. peu fl'Wli ..,_'°" Hassan Rassouli, secretary general of
!Mu11tm1n11 kldlJ the Iranian National Olympic Con1miltee, ~I~ -_ci·~~ 1 J~k1t.{:1ie:1u 1ram .AnM"on said Iran bas 'spent $200. million.on an
1"l~1~1rG ~e~l"tl!\!I 13 Olympic-scale sports complex [or the
~D...::J~' 11J ~v.from Unlt1i tWttwil l _.,.Asian.Gamei. The Games-will be-held in·
IM11•" c111rt"' Tclleran one month before the IOC Vien-F"!rst clowns l t 11 • Rirsll.-.·r••m. .i.m 12-11 • na meehng.
Piu1119 r••di m Jis "It is likely we will bid for the Games Aet11rn y1rcls •1 $ •
Pnffl ,10.11-4 1s-J1.2 and we lhink we stand chance of suc-
;::.'1ia.1w1 s.~ 51~; ce.ss," Rassouli said. He said the Asian
P1NlllK-r•rdl1Noiv1ouA1. LEADE1ts •.a -~ Games sporLs fa cilities are officially
RUSHING -crncl!l!>ll11. JQl'tn'°" 11.121, c11ri.. 1.1· named the "Olympic Complex " tJ; ~" O~, Yarrell 21·1", T"°"'M 9.Jl. · AECEJVING -ch~inn.i1, T•11mpy 1...t0. c11r~ "MO, }le said he wants to make sure at this i,.~ lJ.1.'; Sin °1•· Ylrr!'°" •·111• 'fllllrn"I$ .... meeting that Iran can get serious support
.,:::,.~s~~~ a~ c~"!1\~i\1_w1~~~ 10-11-4. m in the IOC and will not just·be used as a
show-ca ndidate to rival Moscow.
There have been indications among
(Ctlntlnued From Page 9)
range OYIJ'ICr Willie Barber,, 8l}d Al
Feldman.
lhe nyy.'eights at 112 pounds and undt:r -
are smaller. DuRamel nonetheless struck
another blow for shortness Sunday by
capturing the '87 .375 C h a mp i o n
Sparkplug Motorcycle grand national
race at Ontario Motor Speedway. ,
DEAN LEWIS
0 TOYOTA
VOLVO
Baseball Standings .
JOC members and other sports officials
gathered~Congress that Teheran
Pro Football
De 1a Torre, wh9 came to this country
when civil war broke out in rus native
Spain, had never before won a major
1ourney and his first prize of $7 ,500 was
by far lhc largest he'd ever earned .
Barber, a resident of Costa ~lesa, and
Bolt. each shot 66s on the final round.
Feldman had a 70 and all three won
$3.167.
De la Torre actually held a six-stroke
lead over Barber on the final two holes.
Barber shot an eagle on lhe 17th and a
birdie on the 18th and de la Torre,
needing only a bogey to win, nearly miss-
ed a two-foot Ulp. But the ball trickled in
for the triumph.
Lions, Atlanta
ln_TY _Collision
DETROIT (AP ) -The Detroit Lions
are hoping to have at least one \vounded
regular. sa rety Mike Weger, ready for
duty for tonight's National Football
~ague clash with Atlanta,
EN ERGY
CRISIS
CURE!
lf61 TOYOTA
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Baltimore 91 65
Boston U9 i3
Del roil "' 71
Ney,• York 80 82
!\lilwaukee " 88
Cleveland 71 91
West
Oakland 94 68
Kansas City 88 74
Minnesota 81 81
Angel s 111 83
Chicago 71 &i
Texas .'ti 105
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NATIONAL LEAGUE
East w I'.
New York 81 19
St L:iuis 81 81
Pittsburgh 80 81
i\tontreal 19 83
Chicago 71 83
Philadelphia 11 91
West
Cincinnati " 63
Dodgen 94 68
San Francisco.J 88 74
Houston 82 80
Atlanta 16 8.1
San Diego 59 102
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SAN DIEGO -Mike McAuley returned
an i{llerception 75 yards tor a UUrd-
quaffer touchdown Sunday night and San
Diego State held off a last-ditch rally to
score a 1'1·9 victoif over Kent State
University. •
l\lcAuley, part of a """'1dary that
picked ort five Kent State pa!SeS, moved
the Aztecs to a 17-6 lead and they held on
for their second victory of the season
without a loss. The visiting Golden
Flllshcs are 2-1.
e Cyele U'h111e r
ONTARIO, callf. -The spOrtswriters
~'ere trying to determine if· Yvon
DuHamel w~s the world 's smallest
athlete. The conscnSl.Js was that jockeys,
gymnasts and SOfT'll boxers -especially
l(eller Rap s· Olympics
VARNA. Bulgaria CAP) -Thomas
Keller shocked the opening session of the
Olympic COngress here today d<clartng
that Olympic Games have become ''an
open exhibition of lying ," free prop-:~~11 ror ponuc11ns and a tashkMI
The hu~k)', blond president of the
lntt'mntionnl Roy,·ing federation at-
tack~ the O!ytupic cllglblli1y rule and
Olympic opening ceremony tradition.
Lord Kil111nin, president of the lntertia·
1ional Olympic Committee iIOCI opened
the four-day Congrt'SS with a 30-minutc
speech in which he called for positive and
constructive crttlclsm.
Keller. 11pe.aklng for tht lntemational •
•Ports fcderJU...., responded In a Jone
which ~dcntly surprlled ma n y
members or the amtocr.aUc .1Clt.od."$led
IOC. lie accused the IOC 01 attempting
lo support 11ttie Octkln of amateur
a:ames." "\
Keller spoke scomfuU,-of Rule 26 Jn
the 'Olympic code, which says athletes
may spend only 30 dey!' of fUll.time
training. !Kl days in spttlal cases, In the
year prior lo the Games .
"Evcry(lne lnlere.sted tn sports knows
thnt entries ror the Olympic Games havt:
largely become 11n open exhlblllon of
tying which Js quite lncomptdible with
the ethics oC sport Md splrll cl Baron de
Coubcrtln,'' Keller declared.
<
\Veger, ,W.o_mi ssed the first h\'O games
or the season with a spralned ankle, took
a full turn in the last big defensive
workout in preparation tor the nationally
televised game .
"Tt's getting better," Weger said of Uw:
ankle, which has kept him on crut.ches.
"lllaybe he'll play," said coach Don
On TV To,,lght V
Cha11ne l 7 at. 6
1\lcCalferty. "It's about time. For a long
time it-didn't seem to improve."
But there are others in the hospital
ward: offensive Jefl tackle J i m
Yarbrough. out w\lh an ailing knee
defensive back Rudy Redmond. who ha~
a tom Achilles tendon. defensive back
\\raync Hasmussen, ~ufferlng from· a
broken arm. ·and Miiier Farr, another
1uembcr of the knee injury sqUlld.
''We've still got got>d guy3 back the.rt."
~fcCafferty said or his patched up
defensive unit, which Incl odes former'
FaJcon Willie Germany, Levi John900
Jim 'Ibrower and one.time college run: nlnt! back Dick Jauron.
Atlanta coecb Noon Van Brocklin,
<llCt one of the le:ague's premier
quart.m.cks, Ind the Falcons' Pl"1""'
quarterback Dick Shiner are sure tO try
to take advantage of the Inexperienced
secondary. .
''Tho ta\<ons probably will UH a 101 of
play passes against us,•· McCaUt:rty
said.
Play passes, which begin with taked
nins, put added pressure on linebackers
and defeMive backs.
"Oo dcftnSt, I.he)" got for ll'k>t or tone
coverage," tifcCatre11¥ said. "Arter I heir
last thtte. games ll's: hard lo know whaL
to expert, but llKJ!e arc the tilings they
do:·
•,
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in
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of
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Mondly, odobtf l , l!Jry . DAil V PILOT
Serapis II · Two-time Winner ··in Argo~y
EVEN ST ART -Santana 2ls and 2:!1 bit the start·
ing li!l• In the first race of l three. race cballenge
series to determine which of the two claS6eS are
the fastest. The 22s ptoved fastest In SUndaY'• f1nt
race, taking the fln;t three places.
Santana-22s Take 1Top 3 Places
Wi11s Alamitos Bay,
Newport Pier Races
Bll1 Barry's serapis II or
BJhhl Corinthian YC was the
only double winner In Newport
Ocomi Salllni Asaoc!otloo '1
Alamlla< Bay Ario&Y Salur·
day and SUndey.
Serapb II waa t he
Performance HanClicap Racing
F1eet ci... A wlnoer In the
race from BaJboa Pier to
Alamitos Bay en Saturday,
and the race from Alamitos
. Bay to Newport Pter' on Sun-
day.
On Saturday nighl t h e
yachts were the guests of
Long Beach Yacht Club for a
·. giant rafting party off the
club's guest dock, followed by
a dinner and dance.
BALBOA TO ALAMITOS BAY[ IOR -Drumbeat; 12l
Wings; (3) Tre11d, JI m •
Lindennan. BYC. I PllRF·A -(1) Serapis 11 ;
(1) Flame, Dick Ramage,
LBYC; (3) Ransom, David !
Dilo. VYC
PHRF·B -1tloonshinc. Bill
von KleinSnUd. NHYC; '2)j
Debra. Richard Rauff. SSSC: 1
f3) Sceptre, Don Gilliland , 1
BYC ,
PHRF..C -(l ) Big !\1ag~ie.,
f\1ike Harvey, Pf\1YC: (2) Niklj
11. John Kinkel. VYC: 13~1 Flying Toad Il. Sea Scouts
Ship 306, BC\'; I
TOI ALAMITOS BAY
NEWPORT
JOR -(I) Wings; (2 )
IN' THE OCEAN racing Drumbeat; (3) Trend.
dlvtslon, lhe Ericson·46 · PHRF·A -(I) Serapis II ;
'llnlmbeat, aldppered by (2) Cheerio, Ba!T)' Faber,
owner Don A-yres' three 10ns, BCYC,; (3) Bonita, Goldie
Bruce, Don 8lld Doug, split Joseph. LIYC
honon wtlh the Ranger-37 PHRF·AB -(ll Debra,
Wini~ co..tlppered by Taylor. Richard Raul£, SSSC; (2)
Smyth, •Gluer and Love of Andale, Gray and Graham,
cabrillo Beach Yacht Club. SSSC; (3) Sunrise, Frank and
Drumbeat was the wioner on Dave White, BYC.
Saturday and Wtn.gs won the PHRF-C -II) Con Todo.
raee home SUnday. • A1e.x Hardy, ss.5C : 12) Gracie.
Follo\ving ii the summary of John Howell. BYC: (3) Big
the two races: • 1\faggie. 1
Santana-22.s took the first
three places in the first race
of a challenge ~!es with the
loul Santana·lls SUnday.
Oeet. equally div.ided among
the 22.s and 2Is.
YC, and third was Santana
Wind, skippered by Mark
Paulus. unattached.
series is being sailed in the ,,.--------.._
bay.
Pilot Pigskin
PICKEROO .
Sponsored By
DAILY PILOT
............... ~
$100 A WEEK IN PRIZES !
t s50 TOP WEEKLY PRIZE 1
For Weekly Second
Plac:e Winner
Each for Third, Fourth
and Fifth Plac:e Winners
Here'1 how you can be a pigskin prophet for profit.
Weekly ca1h pri:r.es are offered to winne""'°f the
Pilot Pigskin PickeroO game. Top winner ••ch ~eek
gets $50 in cash. Second pl.ca winner j]et1 $20 .in
ce1h and th ird , fourth ind fifth ·piece winners each
get $1 0 in cash. All "calh" actually is delivered to
~ were 1& boats in the
Winner was Jack Jensen's
Danaka, South Sllor< Salling
"Club. RuonerUp was Bart>ara
Turoer's· Sbldow, Seal Beach
The fln:t Slntana 21 to finish
wu BIU Lathn>p's Li San·
tana, also unaUached. The
The ~tana 21 and 22 are
-Midgei Ocean· Racing Fleet
yachts produced by the W. D.
Scbock Co. of Newport Beach.
Toronado
Raee Won
By Taylor
winn.ers in the fo of checks to be plc.ked up by
winners et one the I 0 participating men1bers of
'·
Aretusa
Nearly
Perfect
Blackbird Wins
Buoy Race ~itle
Solings
Will Vie
Next Week
Tim Taylor of Cabrillo
Beach Yacht Club was the
winner in the district cham-
pionship regatta of t h
Torooado cata~an
Stanley Vogel's A r e t u s a
from the sponsoring California
Yacht Club was the overall
and Class A winner o( the
Norman A. Pab!t Predicted
Log race Saturday with the
remarkably 1oW error of ·.071
percent. '
BOATING
Alim Puckett's ErllDD-4& CYC. nie Olympic Soling Oass
Blackbird from CalifOmia ~ MORF·B-(l) Foxy Lady, will vie for attentioit with the "--------
three race regatta at
Saturday and S!Dlda .
Yacht Club !t• the Class A Bert Lockwood, PMYC; (2)
ocean racing wmner ill the 241> Spool<, Cir! Bergan, WYC; (31
mile Palos Verdes~ race, Juanita. _Jlalpb Dorchester,
the se<Glld future of CYC's WYC.
Fred HarrtsSeriO.. Summary; PHRF·A -(ll La Volpe.
IOR·A -Cl) Bl-(2) )'eter Jlllpuy, SMYC; (2)
JCanalyn,BudSha!lk.CYC; (3) Ge!lesis, Dick Willl•m1,
R•bber Duckey, 'Borill 8lld SBYRC; (3) W ! n d borne ,
Miller Dll\'C. lloinr\I Ryan, CYC; (4)
1011-B -(1) Merim: Kcl: Anltr:i. Froc! Preiss, PMYC.
Iboch, SMYC; (I) llecisioa, PllRF·B -(1) Verac!!y,
Paul Berger, DRYC; Howard WUliaml, SBYRC; (I)
stately It).meters off Newport
Beach nei:t weekend as Bahia
c.orinthian Yacht Cll.lb Jtages
its annuaJ Walter Podolak
.lllemoria! Serie..
The i'odolak Perpetual will
go to the winner in the1Soling
class, wilh the 11>-meten stag-
tnc • .. reunion race." 'Ibe
re1atta starts Friday.
ORIGINALLY THE Poc19lak
Zapatero
Captures
Tri-Port
Rwmerup was y Smyth
of CYC and rd was St.eve
Jlarvey, C.
The pionship regatta
was iled in ainjunction with
C's Falt Series. Sum-
mary;
TORONAOO -(·I) Scream-
Zai*ero. sldooend J3ill _Ing~Yellow Zonker, Tim
Fordor, was "the 1 cap Taylor. CBYC; (2)~ Stolen
winner ot Dana nt Yacht Moments, Randy Smyth,
'Club's 73-mUo ·-port race CBYC: ( 3 ) Resurrection,
RuMenlp wu Jao-TtL skip-
pered by" Jack 1'1<1111 oC; Doi
Rey Yacht Club With an error
of .8.10, and Norman Wein"
Beau Mist, CYC WU ihlrd
with a 1.247 percent o( error.
Vogel Weisz were aiao win-
ners in the flrat year division,
and Vogel WU the Winner 1h
the novice division.
MORF·A -Cl) f're.Luv, Yastanvind, Oli= McCam,
Doo Stoml, SBYR; ( 2 ) • SBYRC; (3) MaC., Joe
Retreat II, Bob Smith, PMYC< Marino, SBYRC; (4) Patois,
(I) Sy Dy Ill, Andy !Acktort, Jerry Johnson. PMYC. Tropily was dedicated to a 11>-Saturday, th !lxth race of Steve Harvey, CBYC.
the club's long ~ries GEARY·18-(II Imp, Min· -meter race called the "LitUe for . ance Handicap ton Peeples, CYC : ( 2)
Tries Yachting
Student Joins
Army Program
Louis Fuertes, the ·son or
Mr. and Mrs. Domingo
F'uert<s ol 16565 ML Todd St.,
Fountain Valley is among the
50 freshmen at the New Mex·
Spit~. Comperes
In Newport Race
ico Military lnsutute wild Mark Spitz, the Qlympic
signed into the school's RCrl'C swimmer Who won seven gold
program . medals in the 1972 Olympics
....:...--=-~~~~~~~~~~
will now try his hand at
pie~ up yachting priies.
Spitz' Ericson-311 &unart 7
is one of the 18 entries listed
in Newport Harbor Y
Club's California Co a s a I
Yacht Race which ge~ldel',
way from San Franci Tues-'
day.
TlflS W be the first
compeUUv yachting event
since he ased the yacht
from cson Yachts about a
ye o.
h third aMual Call£omia
/Coastal· race is the event in-
augurated by NHC and St.
Francis Yacht Club, San Fan-
ci!CO for yachts reWmiJl&
from theBay Area after the
Tinsley Island Stag Qirlse up
the San Joaquin'Riw.r.
A number of the local boats
also raced In ttic St. FYC C!.ty
of San Frand!<O Trophy
Series, the St. Francis Trophy
Series and the. Richard Rhttm
Trophy series sailed earlier
this month.
America's Cup." It w a a
rededicated In 1969 to the then
fledgling Soling Ciaos. S!noe
that time, llUCh well-known
Soulbland ooe<leslp l!ld
aa Lowell North. Doo
and Roger Welsh hav•v!..,,
ou!Standing partici
'Ibis year, in.adJ.litlon to tbo
sailing ol the k Series
for Sollop, C wtD si.ge •
mmJm sailed at the
as the Sollngs, but
u s i different commlttee
boa and racing courses.
TEN·MBTERS expected to
tum out for the event are Dicl<.
Reineman's Branta, South
Shore Sailing Club; J I m
Snldo..q "'"B'ialli, San DiegG
Yacht Club; Emie Kanzl'!r's
Sally._BCYC, and Bob Fisher's
Sirius.
Ten Soling sklppers have
been selected through local
ellminaUons -t w o con·
test.ants from five diUererat
SoutblaM sailing arus. 'The
racing will be on a match-rac-
!ng format similar to the
Congressional Cup.
Sai'Jing's
Smoother
yadits . . Sometlling Else, Bill Roberts,
F y~cbt, to fl:nish was CBYC; 13) Dulcinea, Bill H Momsoo s Eru:son-2-35, Ryder CBYC
inooa but she faUed to save PmiF _ • ( 1) Red wing,
!:r,.~me on Zapatero. Stun· Bruce ?i-1iller, Sl BYC: (2)
CLASS A -(1 1 Zapaiero· Pl,.,.., Fred Poore, CBYC;
(2) Winona; (3) Endless Sum: (3) 'Say Lavee, Hal Covey,
. mer, David Mct.111lan; DPYC; CBYC.
(I) Jeremiah, Rich Ritcheson , MORF -Cll l.ottlei, Steve
.Tost, CBYC; (S) Malabini , Ed
Zimmerman. CBYC; ( 3 )
Grinch, Sean Kelly. CBYC
CH IYC.
CLASS B -(1) Veloz, Jack
Steele, CBYC; (2) Sldrr. Art
Phelps, DPYC: (3) Briny
Deep, Bob PllcA.dams, DPYC.
CLASS C -(I) The Vulgar
Boatman, llugh C u r r a n •
DPYC; (2) Tantivi, Dick
Dickey, DPYC.
~ .
Drag Race
Marks Set
LONG BEACH (AP) -Two
world records were set Satur·
day by wiMers ln the National
Drag Boat Association Grand
iPrix here. ·
Bob Bam>n of Tommce
clocked 121.94 miles an hour in
the noo-t!ll'bo charged jet
eat.e:gory to better the lM.96
room! marlc ' held by Ed
Pl1orenz. ~1ike B r e n d e I ;
Sylmar, batter~ his own
470 -(1) Pandemonium,
Carter Foro, NHYC; (2)
Sbanoh, Mike Zarkey, PMYC.
MERCURY -C 1) Till,
George Patterson, CBYC; (l )
Duet, Lloyd Greeno, CBYC:
(3) DebUtante, A.B. Smit h,
CB-YC. CAL-20 - ( f) Tension JI .
Bill Carmichael, CBYC: (21
Colleen"'; Ed Fox, CBY(: (3)
Ginger II , Dave Johnson,
CBYC.
CORONA00-15 -I 1) Sugar
Plum, Doo Clapp, CBYC; (2)
&. Que Si, Syd Corp. CBYC;
(3) Bertee, Carl ~fullison,
PVYC.
Harris Wins
Dinghy Title
record In the ski compeliUon Gregg Harris of Balboa
by nearly fh•e miles an hour Yacht Club was tht• winner of
PORT ALBERNI, B.C. fAP) ~1th a time of 130.9 m.p.h. lhe ~1etcalf dinghy fleet cham· _ -The tho~and unnatural Dick O'Neill, Long Beach, pionship sailed out of BYC
shocks that local pleasure flipped his boat In Oit ski com· Saturday and Sunday.
boats once were heir to art on petition, and later. Gary Scow. Runneru p in the series \vas
the ~-u driving in the turbocharged ~1ark Hughes : third was John
UI;\; ne, Tuel hydro 'dlvls io· •, was al•• Tho ' nd f h II ., ~ me. a our! was · arry
the Harbor ulevard of Cars a11ociation. Ch1ck1
for this we '1 contest will b"e prepared by:
Cannell Chevrolet
~ 828 Harbor Blvd., Costa Mesa
he 10 p,erticipating auto dealerships along Costa
Mesa's 'Harbor Boulevard of Cars" are: Atlas
Chrysler-Plymouth , Bauer Buick, CoMell Chevrolet,
Costa Me1a Datsun, Dave Ross Pontiac, John1on &
Son Lincoln.Me rcury , Miracle Ma:r:~a. Naber1 C•dillec,
Theodor'e Robin1 Ford and University Oldsmobile.
Watch for this plaver's form each week in the DAILY
PILOT Sports Section. Circle the team you thin!.: will
win in each pa iring in the list of 30 9ame1 and 1end in
the player's form entry blank or a re•s~eble fec-
simil e. Then watch the OA1l Y PILOT sports)Peges for
eech weel.:'i. li1t of five winners.
RULES . -
J. lillll'll! tlM '"lry llMll! INlow ,,,I, -11111 llnlll'lllt tf ft h """" Ille Hlllftl, "Jlttl51N:Mt llUilftRt" I• dtfl,.... ._ 8'I "•XKI dllftlull"
llntrJe1 mun ._ Ufllfl"" bt lire ,.,..-..,..,._ tt llf.1111.._ """'"' TMH
Wflkll "'°"'' «onhrm wlll ... 41MU10Hld. .
l. 111111 If h : PILOT PIGSICIN PICICEJll:OO CONTEST, s,.rh ~rtm.,,I, l",O. hi!; 1Ut, Cnll MIN, CA. tM:l4.
2. 0"1'1' 01\1 1~11'1' per person permlttftl tl(/I lftft. CWllHl.,.ts 1r. llh'lllf
11111 CHlett lflklllJ m•y fnwnt1g1t1 fl!lllll~I• 1nlrl15 11'9m 1 1lntll1 .._,...u IH" ll1111t -ltPI lf!d m..,. 4l5q1,1111il'1' 1ny "lkllHl\ll ..amt"
.,.,,.,.. _fllln...dbco•t ...... D1d 1kttt of IWfH 11'1 tl'll1 ""'' mu1t t;1 1c-c1" .... llMI ,., •II ,..,,,.i1n11. .,
.. E~l1111 '"'" bl 1111t1Nrtred "°' 111u "'.., niori4.,. A.M. 1r .....,., " ' dtllYI,.. fl 1111 DA ILY l"ILOT ottlct ly' PM. Tllunt11y,
S. Plrtkf ... 11111 '"""""' 11111 llltlr _,i.,... Ind DAILY f'ILOT -pl•-1 •M tllllr lm1Md1111 f11nllln •re 1111 tlltlllt " tllllf'. '
&.. Tiil IJltUKllt ILAHIC MUST IE l"IU.EO IN oa •JfT•Y IS VOID.
r' - - - --------I I ENTRY BLANK
Clr<I• tMm1 you think will win thl1 wetk'1 pma
I (hom• tum 11 ncond one ll1ttd)
Rams vs Houston I San Diego vs Pittsburgh
Utah VS UCLA I USC vs Oregon State I Penn State vs Air· Forc:e
Georiga vs Alabi:Ima I Mississippi vs Auburn
I Oregon vs Mic:higan
Mic:higan State vs Notre Dame I Brown .vs Penn
Miami I Fla. J vs Oklahoma I Nebraska vs Minnesota
I Lehigh vs Cornell
Duke vs Purdue . I Tulane vs Pitt
Lakewood vs Mater Dei
I • I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
Mission Viejo vs Katella I
Costa Mesa vs Corona del Mar · •
For San FranciACO yachts-
IM race ~es to get them
from the Bay Area t o
Southern California in time to
tune up for the Long Beach to
La Pu race in Novcmbt:r.
When tacldng their sloops or 1lightly Injured. Bourgeois. all of B\'C.
aulstng In their power boals .• -;::;;::::::;;================·11 local yad!tsmen·enjo)inS thei r
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
SA Valley vs Fountain Valley
Laguna Beac:h vs Brea I
Newport vs Santa Ana I
Huntington Beac:h vs Loara
Magnolia vs .Edison I
El Dorado vs San Clemente
Un iversity vs Valenc:ia I
Westminster vs Western I
Canyon vs El Toro
---.
. FAMIL y EfFORT -The threo SODI Of Don Ayres
Jr. teamed up Saturday and Sunday to sail the lam·
ily's Ericson-46 from l'!•wport Harbor Yacht Club
to a 1·2 victory In Newport Ocea n SaUing Associa·
Uon's Alamilos Bay Argo.')'. AltemaUng at the helm
were Bru~. Don an d Do\lg A~s. They raced In the Ocean Racing division. •
THE TOP ln>phy for the
Winner C. Ille Baldwin M.
Baldwin M""""'1 'l'ropliy •.
Ylcla sclleduled w start
Tuesday are: \Vltchcraft,
Artmr Biehl; Spectra, Skip
.T0<11on; Ruhl>er Duck, Dave
OlCkler; Lucky Pill(. R!dwd
f'olX i Moonday, Oeor1e
Wolfard : Swift, Jack
Malllnckrodt; Unger U::inger,
Ridwd Winn; Tln$ley Ucht.
lhmry Grandin; Tribute., Jack
Holleran; Viva cruz, Toey
Quz; Pcll•1os. Jobn 1.!•rr!U;
Gllante, Ed Woodland;· Sum-
merwtnd, Richard 111 e I n e ;
Panacl>O, Rod Part.; Sumark
7, Mark Spitz; Enchantress n,
4-1 Taylor: Windward
PA~sagc, ~lark Johnson; War-
rior, Al Ca"ell.
ooestal wat.e:rs of this Jogging
capital also kept an eye open
for "deadheads" -ha I f IUbmoried lop that ollen
stray«! from the nearby
aorUng watera of Macfl.Ullan
Bloedel Limlted.
'Ibe company, Can ad a' 1
largest forest products opera·
tlon, rectnUy amounced a M
million program to purchase
and Install new log-g
equipment that wtll more· •f·
ficiently oorral poteoU4Uy er-
rMt lois in the sorting
grounds where they belollg.
COSTA~ DATSUN I .....,_,._,,. K8.m·cha(ka
1141 H.t-""'" C.M. I . 5401410 W.CW ~ TJle AllMlll N~ C......, • to """ ~ 10t'!C, .,.. ~ 111,11t1 . I
Estanci~ vs Los Ala!"itos I
Marina vs :Anaheim
Sonora vs Dana Hills I
• I T11 ••tA1<tlt -Mr '"" o.:i tlit "''" ,..,.,,.... ,, "91Rh ~ I
I "' 111 • ,.""' ituw ...._ h ---------••
N•ma
I A'!l drn• I
I I I Cl!X Ilp
P'h•n• . . • . I ~------.: ....
-. .
~J=i=·=·'="='l:'"=T=======·-=:·::"""::::~:::l,::!::97::.' ,,.ua.,, Clr_"~"-·--~-b-y BU K'l.,iu1e He'd Be· Proud 'to Serve
L ./tf. Boyd
' l\.iss Redheads
Goodnight Early
That remark most irrifaling to the female, I'm told , is :
"Isn't that just like a woman?" Query arises as to ·wliat
remark is most irritating to a male. Afatter of opinion, But
our Love and \Var man names as a candidate comment
any questloo that begins with the three words: ''Why didn 't
you •• ,?"
Wlll you buy this animal expert's serious claim that
turtles are more iatelligent than
horses~ Hard to believe .•• Scientific
surveys purported to be accurate in-
dicate that every eighth wile in West
Germany now is unfaithful .to her bus·
band • ., • PNportiooately, if you ate
as much as a hummingbird eats.
young lady, you'd have to polish off
about 155,000 ca.fories a day. ..
The law in Teruel, Spain, specifically prohibits any-
body there from taking a bath on Sunday in heated wa ter.
Cold water is all right. Explain that, please.
LANGUAGE ~fAN
"Melonie and Buddy cai:n• aver here to play 'cau5e
· their mommy is reodin' a book."
,
Stop Charging
For Funeral,s?
•
·--'~-· .
ancl ha,. no u... I ~. female chaplain. ~ In one In Plftl~
u..iigb SPotane once and I'd The chief ol Air Force which he sald "ln..Zved my
like to live up there," Puk.as-1thaplalm, P.taj. Gen. Roy P.~. daughter."
l'rom Wire Se"'°"'
Spangle, 1 city n e a r
S[X>kan<, doesn't bave lo shop
for a mayor because Ed
Puka1 of G)endale Is more
than willing to lake the job.
"I will be glad to be mayor
or councilman u I am single
Film · Eyed:
'Love Life·
Of Christ'
said in a Jetter to Spokane 'ferry. and Mls.s Potters *
County Auditor Vernon Oland mo:ther plMed on her ~s as Jerome R. Wlkl5e UYI he
aner reading that the com-ia second lieutenant tn a received a tsoo contribution
munity was without can· ceremony at tbe Pentagon. from Howard B.pts f<r hlJ
didites tor either PQSt. * caUfQl'nia gubematoriaJ cafn..
ElectlOM &1pt. George LawreDCe Pojeskl, Jr., . 3 palgn, but doesn't know if lt'i
Brown was told to send Pukas member of the schoOI board in from the famed billionaire In-
a "thanks, but no thanks" rep-} dustrialist.
ly. ( PEOPLE ' "I don't know If It's 'mE . * , Howard Hughes. I'll find out
Gov. Jaek William• of and· let' you ·know," Waldie
Arizona had an unusually ex· Grand Rapids, Mith., contends said.
· ~nsive lunch in Phoenix. it Isn't fair or legal for *
The goveroor's drJver, a teachers to discipline students ..• How do yOU feel about
Department of Public Safety by lowering their grades. newswomen wearing pant,..
I
patrolman, parked the ofnclal School superintendent Philip suits to ~ White House,
COPENHAGEN, Denmark Cadillac in a IOiBding zone at E. Runkel agrees the practice Presidential O>uneelor Aue
(AP.) _ Film maker Jens the Arizona Club, and is illegal and will be stopped. ~troDI was asked.
Joergen Thorsen bas asked the· Williams found a ticket on the Pojeski said he could cite . She replied with a smJie and
Dani.sh Film Institute (9r·two windshield when he returned several cases, but was in-one word: "Envy." 1.
months' grace and strict from lunch. secrecy while he awaits Macon said the governor _______ ..,, ___________ __
replies from nine nations for paid the $3 fee out of h1s own ~ ' I
pennissi.oo. to &boot his film pocket. C · ld , M . r,..:;·c:r Jove life of Beary A. Kl111D1er, OU n t iss
'The film institute put up a QOmlnated to be aecretary of 'muclH:ritlcized $llO,OOO bank .State, will receive the Charles GENOA, Italy (AP) -ta Mucd, 51, a Sicilian op.
guarantee to holp flnanoe the Evans Hughes Award of the erating out of her hilltop home a 0-suburb, prom.
film ..i heel given Thorsen National Confer...,. of ',Cl!Ji.,. lsed to restore Yirglnity t~ girls to men.
until last week to find a new tians and Jews in November. C.U.tomers from as far away as . drawn here
Jllmlng locati<J!l after the . Kissinger will be cited In by the aeU .. tyled "grand prieStesa ol lhe·nmat ancient. -
Frencb.bannedhimtromftlm· New--York for "COUl'lgeOUI ernmql<:_s." , ing In the soUth of France. ·leadership in gOYel'Dlllental Treatment cost $425, and ,... smd to O<lllliJt ol tho ad·
Am asked the origin of that phrase "son or a gun." An-
other maritime expression, that one. Years ago women
were permitted passage aboard warships. Some engaged in
amorous activity, \l's averred, particularly in those )Jidden
places near the ship's cannons. Offspring resulting there-
from were sometimes of uncertain paternity. And in al·
lusion to that reality, the old saHors referred to this un-
fortunate fello\v or that one not as the son of some specific
man, but "the son ot a gun." Or so repons our Language
man.
1'l::nen's projected film of service." * ministration of. a cooked mixture of. asparaglll juice. lemon
Jesus' supposed sex life led to juice, quartz, egg white and oatmeal. ·... '
PHOENIX, Ariz. {AP) -~· with music playtd in march coOOemnaUon by Pope . Paul The Air Force swore in Lor-Miss· 'Mpccl was arrested and charged with fraud. po.
Funeral d i r e c t 0 r s • lradi-cadence and the drum beat and thousands of proteSt 1et-ralDe Kay -Pit&er, 27, or lice sald,-.after a girl seeking to ~ain]!er vifslnity ended
tionally tong [aces drooped a quickened at the end. ters to Danish embas,.,ies. War:wick, R.l., as lts: first up in a hospital in Rome. .1
little more when Dr. John,IJ;:~~~~:iir===============:::::=========================,
Brantner suggested a "V!3Y to
improve their Image. -Q. "Ho\v does your Chief Prognosticator reckon boxer
f.fuhamm~ Ali's chances against World Champion George
Forema'.n? , .
A. Zero. He predicts sport. historians will regard Fore-
manil. ~t not Ali, as one of the three greatest heavyweights
of a time.
STOP CHARGL'iG !Cl' the
service, Brantner sugge!ited to
members of Preferred
Funeral Directors Intema-
RED HAIR . . tional. Brantner, a cllnlcal
Was the·consldered opinion of old Ed Durling that nd-psychologilt at the Ma)IO
haim1 girls definitely should be 'kissed goodnight on the Clinic in Rochester, Minn.,
first date, and said ki.s5 shou1d be of a 30-secood duration; . preraced his ~·~fee" remark
-at-leut. Recbhaim:Lgirls, he said,_tend Jo_need_r_e""""'--1. with the comment, "You will
ance that they really are as desirable as they hope to be. "lfa:tfrln·e for-t .
The 1 ... should be p;ild by I
Tf it weren't for the ape. you Could say the anatomy or government-supported health·
the pig more than any other animal is most like that of care system, Brant'.oer said.
the human. I'm told. It's known the pig comes down with
undulant fever, tuberculosi s, flu, heart diease and even IM a.t ED I ATE LY, oue
ulcers. Poor pig. funeral director turned to his
. Reports a haberdasher of lengthy experiem:e: "When
buying men's ties, women tend to stall because of price,
but men alniost never do."
Insomnia in infants ls unheard of.
Address mail to L. hf. Bo¢, P.O. 80% 1875, N<11>
companioo. and whispered that
the .sUggestion sounded like
oommunlsm.
•
•
The psycho!Oli" alio called
for more communJty in-
volv.emenl in death. H e
espoused a return to the sound·
ing . ol the · knell, end sug·
gested thet fuoeraJs take on
1 ~;;;:;;;:;;;:;;;:;;;:;;;:;;;:;;;;;;:;;;:~;;;:;;;:~;;;~~;!;·~the atrnolpbere ot: a · parade
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•
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3325 Nzwpcrt Bcuevard. (714) 675-~-
HEAD<>n:tCf! One WilShire, Los Angeles, Calif. 90017, Otheroflices throughout the~-
,,
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5.outh .Coast 'Plaza.
... kicks this fall season off with a brand
new store and a brand new mall wing.
'Bullock's joins our other fabulous places
to shop in bringing you the 1973 fall
fashion look. The new mall will not be
completely open with stores 'til spring.
•
•
This fall however, whether the occasion
is the football game, or whatever,
remember we've now got three complete
department stores, and 89 other super
. _stores and restaurants from which to
shop. 'Tis the season! •
' Monda!, Octobtr 1, 1973 DAILY PILOT
..
·';. .
1'41. t1 IA~lll •;£
~~-, .. , ~ ..
South Coast 'Plaza .
BRISTOL AT SAN DIEGO FREEWAY, COSTA MESA ·,
OVER 85 FINE STORES AND SERVICES ... DEPARTMENT STORES ... May Co. • Sears • WOMEN'S APPAREL ••.• Albert's Hosiery • Al roe • Mr. Elliot's • Chris' Fashions .;
• Finn'.s •Gene's~ Greta's • House of Nine• Hubbub• :Judi's• Lane Bryant·• Lillian's• Joseph Magnin •Marlene Fabrique •M iss Hawaii • S a~ri'na •The Wet Seal • Young ·:;
Maternity • Zelig's Casual Fashions • MEN'S APPAREL ... Carat's • Chasin's •Gentry, Ltd._• Harri9& Frank~ Hoelscher's • Prep Shop • Rebel Shop • Tie Rack • CHILDREN'S :;
APpAREL .... Bergstrom's Baby News • FAMIL '!'.SHOES .•. Gudes-Barnett •Innes Shoes • Thom McAn •WOMEN'S SHOES ... C. H . Baker.• Cameo •·Field's• Joyce Shoe
Tree • Leed's •CHILDREN'S SHOES ... Cabot'21 • HOME FURNISHINGS ••. Golden Needle • House of Fabrics • Singer • Udotf's •VARIETY-DRUGS , .. South Coast Drug
• F. W. Woolworth • JEWELRY·GIFTS ... Chi~Accessories •Galleon • Jewels by Joseph • Koven Jewelers oi George Murray • Pace Sette,• Raj of India,.• Raj International •
.. ::
~::· Sunset House • Weisfield's • FOOD·CANDY •.. Hickory Farms .• Lindberg Nutrition • See's • RESTAURANTS ... Coaches Corner • Harvest House • Hungry Tiger • .Kaplan's
• J,.ePetit-Cafe • Riviera •SPECIAL TY SJ:jOPS ... Ab.a Card '• Cline's • Decorator Line • House of Terry • Pickwick Boo kshop • Rooten's Luggage • Sports Plaza • Tinder {
Box·• Toy Center • Wallichs • Westen's Cameras• SERlf,lCES •.. Bak Portrait Studio • Better Barbers • Bun Nichols Optometrist • Crowning Glory Beauty Sa lon • House ::
of Tailoring• Orr the Go T.r.avel •Regis BeeutySelon •FINANCIAL .•. Avco Savings & Loan • Bank of A"merica •Crocker Bank • First Western Bank • Household Finance
•Pacific Savings • U.S. National Bank • THEAT~ES ... South Coast Plaza I and II Theaters • United Artist Cinemas I. II and Ill.
SOUTH COAST VILLAGE SHOPS AND RESTAURANTS NOW OPEN DAil Y • . . . ..
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J 4 DAILY PILOT Monday, Octobtt 1, 1973
Plaza Built for E.xpansioll
Though the majority <1f ex-
pansion and remodeling proj-
,ectJ ar e undenaken in the
shopping center industry to
meet competit ion, this is not
alv.•ays the case. !\·Jany tin1cs
these projecls are part of
loog-range pl\l.lscd develop-
ment ' keyed to anticipated
growth or the n1arket and its
1 demand for impro\'ed rctail-
commercial services.
~~ Thi& latter is the case at
tSouih Coast Plaza wher• an
fexpaniion program consisting
~of a third department store!
~Bullock's, and 72 more retai
shops Is being added to the ex-
isting 1.1 million square feet of
~gross leasable area.
! Under a Comps:ehensive
planning &nd traffic study
completed in 1966 by Gruen
Iii. Associates of Los Angeles,
'New York and Washington
~eventually South Coast Pla:i:a
~will grow to 2,111,000 square
~ teet. It is part of the emerging
~2QO..acre TO\'ffl Center which
~will include 1.7 million square
:\feet of office space, a 400· ~room Western International
-Hote1 (to -be construded ),.
~banks, retail stores, theaters,
shopping center containing 35
bout lque sho p s and
restaurants. An additk>nal 25
shops and other e a t I n g
establishment! are being con·
st ructed an~ are opening dai·
ly.
The addition to the develo~
ment has been advanced one
year. According to Gene
Robens. general manager of
South Coast Plaza and Town
Cen ter, it is about a year
ahead or the original pro-
jection "because of the un·
precedented acceptance of the
mall."
Sales volume last year·was
$90 million ; expectations are
that, with the additional retail
area, including Bullock's, with
186,000 square feet, which
opened this week, saJes within
three years could hit $150
mill ion.
602,CMM> and Is expected to
reach 800,00D by 1980.
To handle the increased
number of cars expected in
the expanded center, a tkll>-
car, multi-deck parking facili-
ty has been constructed Io
connect to the mall, with ad-
ditional on-grade pa r k i n g
bringing total perking capacity
to 8,300 cars.
The new wing places the
retail shops along an ir-
regularly-shaped mall which
strikes off at ~ight angles to
the carouSel Court of terraces
to the entrance of Bullock's al
the west end. The new mall is
also two levels, culminating In
the three-level Jewel Cowl in
front of the new anchor.
Cow1 rises on eight round
columns with strips ol natural
oak. These support a 30-foot
diameter dome of multi~l
ort<I glad In abs1ract designs,
as lhe sun moves throughout
the day, the court will be filled
wilh' changing colored pal·
lcrns.
A third freeway, the Corona
del M.ar which will serve the
devefopment ls to be con·
structed sometime in 19?4
south of the San Diego
Freeway. Aceess to South
Coast Plaza will be provided
by Bear Street, on the western
part ol the complex and
recently widened to ac-
corrumdate additional traffic.
For the Complex to continue
as a strong, viable force,
points out Robens, it must
cootinue to broaden its tenant
mix so as to attract customers
·from a wider area. "'I11e ad-
dition of Bullock's, for In-
stance, provides us with a new I'<
dimension and new penetra-
tion that will help stimulate
increased traffic." -
As a further indication of
bringing in new shoppers, the
Otange County Tran sj t
District is rerouting its bus
'
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" Newly opened in the Town
Cent.er is the 16-acre South
" Coast Villa&e. a specialty-type
The center has a lot going
for it. According to studies
conducted b y consultants,
newspapers and radio, it is the
number one shopping center in
Orange Ulunty, a market that
has grown to LS million
persons for an impressive 100
percent increase since I9GO
and has a median family ID-
come of $14,000. Tbe primary
trade area of South Coast
Town Center is now over
The terraces are richly
landscaped with trees, plants
and flowers and paved with
tile, proceeding ln a series of
broad steps along the length of
the 520-foot mall. A court has
been Introduced as the accent
point In the center, with a 80-
foot fountain which descends
in a series of pools and fall.s.
Overhead, a series of skylights
flood the planted areas with
natural 11 g h t , enoouraging
plant growth and contrasting
with the artificial l;lrilliance o(
lighting fixtures and
storefronts.
At the west end, the Jewel
lines and has installed new bus .... ...,.
stops within South Coast Plaza
to provide additional com-
munity service.
JEWEL COURT TAKES SHAPE IN PHOTO OF EARLY STAGES OF CONSTRUCTION
New Aru is Focal Point of South C011t Pl1u Exp1nsion, Bullock's Addition
~ . '
!Exterior, Interior of · New Bullock's Aim to Please the . Eye
~ Bulloclt's new departmenl
!llore, wttldi ~ Wedncs·
day tn South Coast Plaza, ex·
~ and further develops the
' trepd • setting contemporary -lmil wbl.ch was-initiated
wilh the opening or the
· &pock.'8 Northridge store two
years ago. ~ The Soolh Coasl Plaza
ltore's exterior architectural
, deslgrHloplng wallll ol Cor·
Tt;a steel ''broken" into pro-
jedlng and receding planes
that help maintain a human
""1e --ulate the optic aeme. creating a magnetic
pill lo Its doors.
'Relieving lhe rich darkness
ot tbe weaPiefing steel, light·
For Fall
Available now at May
Co. 's South Coast Plaza
store is this Nipon
shirtdress in wh ite
worsted wool crepe. Its
top stitching and pleats
are a signature of de·
signer Albert Nipon
whose entire fall col-
lection is featured at
May Co.
Bl,ck .
N•vv Bl~•
T ~" P•t•~t
colored brick frames the en-
trances. and covers selected
exterior walls. Ext en Si v e
landscaping will surround the
store and .allow the building to
_e._v:olve :llS_ a massin_sculp_tw:_t;_
thar t..'O.lllpleiDents, yet main-
tains a "bold, distinctive Iden-
tity in the existing South Coast
Plaza shopping center.
' . spolllght.uuspended from lhe TQ achieve warmth and
st1ftoess, the wall coverings,
carpeting, color and fiJ:turing
will sl.lpPOrt rather than con-
flict with the merchandise,
which, by its nature and con-
tent, js becoming more bold
and varied in color. In certain
promotional areas, w h e r e
definite impest is d e s I r e d,
strongly stated graphics will
visually CQilfront customers.
:'in general, the lnteripr
designers have striv:ed for the·
natural feeling and mood of
California country and
residential living. Emphasis is
on the inventive use of warm
and soft colors; new and
weathered woods~ woven and
textured fabrics and wall
coverings in selected areas;
While the store's exterior
design presents a powerful
draw'ing force, it! interior
design is felt rather than seen.
Stroo:g, yet subtJe with logical
patterns and colors, the in-
terior acts as an active en·
vironment. leading custpmen:
thnJoih lhe mer<handJsing
areas. The design will not take
precedence over the merchan-
dise; rather it w'ill frame and
bring it it)to focus.
ceiling -and incandescent
down lights convey a feeling of
wanntb and drama. Accent
colors on the walls and
<;arpeting, as well as the ~
~mpllcated neutral elemepts
thal oeparale . divill\N>• ~ some departments I Wlthih a
divisioo, contrlbuiJ ,•Jo lbe
mood of sm.,liclty, i ¥ . • •
Bullock~ New Management Team.
Features Youth and Experii:nce ·
'lbe unusual combination of :---•
youth and expe'rle nce -t '
characte'izes the management
team for the new Bullock's
store In Sooth Coast Plaza.
Throughout lhe slore, lhe
subtle de!ign concept
t;ansmlts a feeling ol wannth
and softness, a sense of
li8bllless and simpllclty refl<c· tive of its quality restdenlial How a J d Go 1 d f ed er,
surroundings. The emphasis is chal~<ll Bullock's stores,
on content ra~r than st'yle. announced the appointrpent of _
Although a basic unity oJ Jolleph Jncaudo as general
design prevails, the interior · m8nager for Bullock's newest
designers are employing an . ,.......,"ment store . Orang adventuresome "area ~ ""r> • . 1D e
ing" concept that divides lhe Coonly.
JlorUnlo..l.lv< LU e , com· !'!"'uclo bas been associated
plimentary divisions ol related wilh Bullock's !or t5e ji8lt fi v•-
tner<banclile-Each merthan-d" . ,.,, : ~·i ba Y""'· He bas served as is~ ._.,.sion "u ve its gev,erar"tpanager at Bulloct's
0'N!1 1dentitr, yet will relate to La Habra'end prior to that as
ad1acetrt divisions by a cart-assistant geaeral manager of
linuity ol color, design and llullocl:'s Sherman Oaks.
materials. He Is a graduale ~ Harvard • The design's first priority Is Business School and UCLA. He GENERAL MANAGER ASSISTANT MANAGER
to ~ merchandise tnto augments his bacqround in Joseph A. lnc1udo Chlrles S. Troy
focus o! the cu st 0
1
m er' s merchandising with ,the ex· eventually became assistant children reside ~tn La Halra.
perceptions. Bullocks South perience and credentiaJ.&. •of general manager. He is a graduate of lhe
Coast Plaza will accomplish certifted public a~t. Troy and his wife and two University of Georgia.
this by using a dynamic Incaudo is 32 and' has~!;~=~==~~==:=:~~~==== circulation pattern which will moved with his wife and two
draw rustomers into the cen-children to the On!Vefsity '
tral theme area (the escalator Park area of Jrvine.
well ), then disperse them into Assisting him 00 the
the orbiting divisions or m a nage m f n t team at .Jllll'f'
me rchandise by connecting Bullock's South Coast Plaza is ,-
1najor arterial systems. To Chnrles Troy, 30, also a five--
further ai d this design priori-year associate or Bullock's
ty, wall colorings 'and subtle who began his career in the
graphics transmit interest to Santa Ana Store. He has scrv-
the fixluring that m o r e ed as assistant to the director
passively support the co.lor in--of operations at 'the Bullock's
.• nuence of the merchandise. corporate ofrice and as .opera·
Combinahons of t r a ck tions manager at the Bullock's
ligh ting-adjustable theatrical Northridge store where be
Cobbles. -----crepe
sole
SI Ing
tor
cushioned 1 comfort 1
CAM~OES
"n.. F1nhloft Shop t'llol fitt 'fou"'
f1tarv•l"'Q
Red Cro11 · Cobbin · Socialite• s l z ts
I
8
Shower·Power!
A. The perfect shower-24K
gold·chrome showerhead
allows fine, medium or force--
ful spray, $26.50. p, Aus-
trian backscrubber-29"
canvas with brush panel • .$1
ROOTEN'S LUGGAGE
-
F••I t h•t cush ione d c:ro pe
sol•! It's the soft, fun
c•su •I m•d• for• lot
of •••~ 1frollin9.
IAA"" AA I A r-;,~-,~~o
b-11 Sy;.11 ~!O A-11 S-10 S·lO
SOUTH COAST PLAZA
1,1 .,.,., by wot.min
lllSTot. AT U.N 01100 Nf(WAY
COSTA MESA • pt.one S46-S210
•• SOUTH COAST PLAZA
Sen Di990 Frwy. at
Brl1tol
Co1te Met•
S~llO
Mo•.""' M ; 10 e.M.•f 'p.111.; Sat. lD •·'"··' p.lfl.; $1• flt. I . ..
plain mid pallemed carpeling; ' plement lbe meri:bandise and
and decorative plantini. lhe 111e of modular units aid
With the area grouping or 1 Oelibility.
divisk>nal concept the effect is. · 'l')ae. ~ area grouping o.r
flexibility, individualized Jden. divlalGoal ~pt itself ;,·
tity; and unity. FWuring ae-i Ile.Ible ilnce II lead>· !lsell lo
oommodatea various types of ~ tbe-Coatbluation ' ol exposure
merchandise, easily adapling · space !or ·~ when
to. changing seasons and ' cbanglni needs demand lhe ·
styles. Certtm f I :1 t u r i n g ~ or reduction of a
elements will convert quickly spedlic .depoi:tment. Related
from shelving lo binning to ~ lfxt,_ ,ud wall con·
banging, depending upon need, ~ &Ip atab1iih each
Fi:rturing mate r·t a 1 s com-~'• igdlv\dual iden-. . .
WE
WALL ARE
FURNITURE PROUD
OF-• OUR
LAMPS&' FAMILY
TREE ACCESSORIES
People • From All
Walks
SIGNS & Of Life
PLAQUES Shop At
Decorator
• · Line
We Have
OOGLES Something
For
Everybody
•
DEC
,
tity, distinct withlh a larger
division. And, ~ division -:-
and In some iostances, each
d~wrtment -Will be con·
-.ctand W!ified, rltherthan ooe ilJ,vblon Jo the ne<t. ;
While Jbe concept -design
lo be lelt•rather lhan seen -
is the primary \-cbjec( of
Bullock's South 'O>ast ln· teriors~ it1ls not.a .umlting one,
rather It~ a new bond·
ing ol design Jo n'lerchandise
Oexlbility. •
POLY
OPTICALS
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ANTIQUE
BANKS &
WHEEL
TOYS ' •
RUMPH
CREATIONS
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South Coast Pla to
540-7777
Code Mesa
The Moll Of-Orang e
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637 -7777
Orange·
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Dollar Dil e m m a I 1'HE P1cx oF ,~~~h I Fio~ida Hote =i~='·°''==--=~0~·1·~-e_r_h.,__u=0~i-=It--4"!'1 ~
Milita~y Wiv~s ~-'f ........ _I~ PUNCH . ~
ORLANDO, Fla. tAP) -
The .. openlng of Walt OiSflC)'
where the future is." Orlando Is a natural for this \Vhen 2,000 employes share a
with Disney and the other at-hug& birthdtiy cake to be cot
i· Hold Down Jobs · World. lwo years ago triggered
a building boom. Today.
hotelmen are worrying about
filling those extra rooms.
CARL KASE ~1 E J ER, trttctions-planned." on the. steps or Cindf:rella 's
manager of conventions and" Starr ~aid some notels have Castle.
tourism for \he Chamber of been cuttlng rates but descri~ In its first year. the amuse-
Commerct! here, said Orlando ed' It as a ''foolish move'' ment park had 10.7 mlllion
could become a coovention because "they'll never be able visitors, and a spokesman sa.ld • I AN~BACH, Gennany (AP )
;-.Plnched by the devaluation 9t the dolla:r, wives of many
Pis in West Germany are
.working in local factories lQ
give the family a second
payche<k. ' •
I "It was a question of me
koing to work or going back to
. the States," said one wife.
"We just couldn't make it
anymore on GI pay,"
'Ibe d o I 1 a r ' s purchasing
JlO"er has dropped· 2S percent
lhiS year. n was worth 3.22
marks in Jaouary: now It is
~orth 2.41. Hardest bit are the
,1ow--ranling soldiers, w h o
,aren't eligible for army 00..
)ng for their families and often
band over half their pay tQ
German landlords.
• '"WHEN' MY husband was.
assigned to 'Germany, 1 never
thought I would end up work-
ing in a German factory," said
Diane Earwood of New Lex·
ington, Ohio, the wife of a
helicopter crew chief. "The
work is repetitiQUS, but people
are friendly and the pay is
good." .
· The brown-hajred 21-year·
old is ooe o( 100 . American
wives who m<ike-a m.i.nimum
of about $11 a day, after
deductions, on the assembly
line at the Bosch automobile
co.mponents factory in this
north Bavariap1own.
Since the gates were Opened
Oct. l, 1971, the $400-milllon
magic kingdom has attracted
22 million \·isitors. There v.·erc
5,854 hotel rooms In this cen·
Intl Florida area when Disney
World opened. Now there ar e
24 ,000, with 3,000 more com-
mitted.
meeca. to re-est::ibllsh theirJates." attendance increased last year
There are 199 hotels in the Disney World's sc&nd birth· for the estimated total of 12
Forty othec' GI wives 'A'ork
in an AnsbaClrsallS.@ge Plant.
Scores more have rouna work
area and se\'eral niore lavish day _w_il_I _be-:::ce:;lc;b;ra;ted;iiiiitodiiiay · million. •
attractions are planned. such -
as Circus World, Sea \\'orld
and Bible \Vorld. in offices and factories in
Schwelnfurt, Woriburg and /
Nurnberg. ~
THE AMERICAN women f--<~~
have joined 2.5(million South
European n;Ugrints who are
keeping factories operating in
labor·sbort Gennany.
"For us, the dollar devalua-
Uon came' at a favorable time," said Johannes Geibel, _,..,. •• got• toothach.. • ~.,,,,., • bad back. gout,
who manages the Bosch Tac-. inRUMU, a.llrol3n wm and •n ""'--rend he 's just hoping
tory. '.'We were eIP&nding the someonewilri"flhimupllnd11skhimhow~is."
work, force to build relJty ----------------------switehe.! fot seat belts on ex·
port·model Volkswagens and
Fords.
"The Amgi.cans were hired
and traillE"d for the new
assetnbly line. We are very
satis!ied. The Americans work
as well as our other
employ"es."
Drug Mix Danger
Told By Doctor s
"The industry is overbuilt .
there's no question about it,"
says Ed Starr, comptroller of
the 600-unit Sberatoo Olympic
Villas.
"HOTELS ARE averaging
as low as 20 percent oc-
cupancy. 'Ibe break-even point
is 50 percent or better. I don 't
believe ownership will put up
·with these klnds of losses
much longer."
To prevent economic ruin,
large chains are spending even
more money to add convention
facilities, to train salesmen to
promote the area as a con·
vention center and to lure
package vacatklns to stop here
on Miami.Caribbean tours.
"You can't rely on tourism
to stay in business," said
NEW YORK (AP)--careful Letter, which supplies physi· James Merrill, manager or the
about mixing your drinks, clans with independent evalua-300-room Carlton House. "We
some old advice goes. tions of drugs and treatments. realized the direction v;e bad
And be ·especially careful to go -a convention hotel -and opened our business
"Today, ron\'entions are /'
more family o r i en te d ,''
!<asemeier said . '·Years ago,
JU.St a bunch of n1'en went off
by themselves. but 1oday they
take their wives and kids.
TliatClieck
No Bounce r
BENNET, Neb. (AP) -
This check didn't bounce
-it Oe\V.
A tornado leveled the Ed
J\1cClure fannhou sc near
Blue Springs; Neb. The
next morning , a blank
check w i th :0.1cClure's
name impcinted on it was
foond some 40 miles away
by a Bennet fanner.
LeRoy Ringland , the
!armer who • found the
check in a field, said it
looked like it had just been
torn £run a cbeckbook.
Perched on stools beside the
56-yard conveyor belt, the
American women connect and
solder circuitry in fist-size
aluminum switch b o x e s ,
Erhard Ku.me, the factory
persoMel chief, Said · only
v.'Olllen are hired: "Jtls a
question of manual dexterity;
a man's hands are too big and
about mixing your drugs, IT URGES doctors tQ ask facilities in April. !J'hat's
some . newer medical advice patients what drugs they mayq-'.:'.::'.:::::'.._.'.::'._.'.'.".'.'.'.:_'.'.:::.'===========
toO slow."
goes. already be ta~, for any
Different coni>inalions of kinds of condition. The cor-
ordinarlly beneficial drugs can ollary is that wise patients will
inter.act to bring unexpected volunteer to tell doctors what
trouble, higher hospital bills they are taking or confess if •
and even death. By one they are not laking a drug the
estimate, 7,500 Americans die ' doctor prescribed ...
.... 1 .. 1 1.12 c,otol _ ...
:~-:-::,· ::::~. ~~~ .~..... $3000
r.t.~ .. ,,. 2.20 .-• -" <ll•"I•· 1 • ...i1 .. 1 cwt, n.. $6 500 • <al<>< .... •l<o•lt)' • • • .. •••• •• .. '
Her Personal Secretary ·
Monogram'd clutch by Rolfs
holds checkbook, pen, cards,
coi ns. Soft.cowhide in fashion
colors.with 1nlt1a! • , ••• $15
ROOTEN'S LUGGAGI
(MEDICINE)
· And tell your doctor what
drugs you are taking whefl he
rwls blood, -urine or other
t. est s. The tranquilizer,
chlorpromazine, has led to, ...,.. CMrt9. '-"-1...-
verdicts of pregnancy in ......,._. • ,. ........ 1-•
SOUTH COAS T PLAZA
San Diego Frwy.4't
Bri$toT
Costa Mesa 11·
women who weren't pr.'.!gnant, SOUTH COAST Pl.AIA
says Dr. Donald Young, chief si:ti 111not.. COSTA MESA 540-3110
of clinical chemistry at the ....., , ...... ~O.... ~ ...,;· M••· tttni Fri. 10 '·"'·"' p.111.; Sert. 10 0.111.·' p.111.; 5•11 11 te s :\-R~ese~ar~c~h~H~o~s~pi~ta~l~o~f~t~h~e~N~a;·~~~~~·~40~ .... ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ PRACTICALL y ANY drug tional Institutes of -He,lth.
~-,the Potential of causing
ane uhdesired or adverse
reactions in some people. U
you take two to five to 10
drugs at a time, the chance of
unwanted effects increases.
each year from d r u g
interactions, but some
authorities say that figure is
much too high.
Creat i ve
And drugs may interact 'l'ilhiD >""" body. One drug
may weaken or strengthen the
effect of another, or together
they may produce unwelcome
surprises. For example:
-Certain nose drops can
counteract pills taken to lower
-your blood pressure. ,.
-Aspirin can boost the ef-
r-.._-. Env i ron men ta I
Portroiture
f~ of anticoagulant drugs,
given after heart attacks to
foresta11 blood clota, so spon-
taneous bleeding r e s u I t s .
Aspirin and other aspirin-like
drugs, known as salicylates,
can also make antigout drugs
less effective.
-A combination of certain
sleeping pills and alcohol can
be' a pusport to eternal sleep.
Marilyn P.fo.nroe reportedly
was one such victim.
by
Bak
Studios
-One particular type of
drug reacts with an ingredient
In aome cheeses to push blood
preaure up.
South c ... , PIH• • 549·2103 ' A new caution about drug
interactions comes from ·a non-
profit publication, The Medical •
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FASHi ONS FOR BIG
BEAUTIFU L WOMEN
POUR ON
THE COLOR
for our stand-out of a clre11 in
liquid jersey. Mostly covered,
barely scooped, a mass of bright
blooros standing out on blaCk in
carefree polyester, $42.
.,.~1.1 ••••• 14'/i •• 26 1/t
SOUTH COAST PLAZA
COSTA MESA
' U,,lt UYIL-
lrh .. I .t S.. Dfet• frwV,
'TOlll ttOUlll1 Mtll. 19 Pr\. IM
hi, lM -lfll, 1H
I
Ti re-treaded tan sQlit suede
' ankle 1,e W!lh fleecy lining, 8.99.
Clea ted hi ker, blue or brown
spl it suede. with padded top. 13.99 .
Great legwork sock~. SI and 1.1 9. )
Live -in leather patchbag, 9.99.
8.99 & 13.99
FASHION ISLAND
NEWl'ORT IEACH
HUNTINGTON CENTER.
HUNTINGTON IEACH
trailblazers ! • I
BankAm&tieard or Master Charge
F.4.SHION SQUARE
S1'NTA ANA
join the
fun at
Leeds
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J8 OAfLY PILOT
· f'awally Clreus by Bii Keane,
r -t -\0 \.
"1'm writin.g o letter to Grandma. How do yoU" spell
lier loSt name?"
Frigate California
New U.S. Vessel
-
To Honor State
t:apltol News Service
SACRAMENTO - A lot 'of
water has gone under the c&J>
tain's bridge since th e
launching of the fU'St Sh!p
bearing the name of the state
of California. Since 1869. when
that l•looden sloop took the
water, four other vessels bore
the name of the Golden State,
the last and best known of
them the USS California. a
-battJeshif?·,.IOOk-in lhe auack
on Peafl liarbor. -
~,,.,. a sixth ''essel, the
.. nuClear frigate California. is
scheduled to be christened in
Newport Nev.·s. Va., thi s
Derember. It will be
homeporteQ in San Diego,.
TJIE STATE Department of
Veteran Affairs is working
with Sacra~nto businessman
West Lasher to I o c a l e
California veterans w ho
fQMTlerly served aboard the
\\'orld \Var II battleship. or
any of the namesake vessels.
The veterans are being
sought to take part in several
ceremonies planned across the
stale to celebrate the return or
a ''California" to the fleet.
The \Vorld War II vessel was
refloated in February 1942 and
saw action in the South Pacific
at the battles of the ?.1arianas,
Lcyelc Gulf. Su r i a go,
Llngaycn Gulf and Okina<A'B. It
"'as decommissioned in 1947.
111£ NE'V USS California
will be refurbished with the
original silver service from
the old battlewagon and be
decorated with 30 original oil
paintings by California artists.
Veterans department of-
ficials are ex pecting several
hundred., response.s fr om
fonner sailors of the old USS
Califorttia. Sixteen from tbe
Sacramento area have already
been identified,
That first California was a
313-foot "screw s toop 1 •
originally named the Min-
netonka. Subsequent beaten
of the state name were an
armored cruiser launched in
1904, a pair of yachts that
patrolled the coast in 1917, and
state to celebrate the return or
Pacific Fleet. the U S S
Californ ia launched in 1921.
College Chief
Quitting Post
ROHNERT PARK (AP) -
Thomas H. McGrath is reslgn-
in!l as president of Sonoina
Slate College effective pnt
Aug. 31.
McGrath , 57, head oC,tht
6.000-student institution since
1971, told his plans to faculty
member.; this week.
.$10.50 gifl ,boxed
l h" J.:.1nr;1nt: !:ells is 1hc third in a no\v-f.i mous
~1'1 1 i-~ 1~,ucd for Christm,1s giving.
This enchanting scul pture by
internatio na lly acclaimed
)c.1n-Ja cques Prolongca u is
fired in softly gleaming por-
ccl.:iin 'Jl Limoges, France, by
1-tav1 la nd.
Lon~ afrcr yo u trike it do\vn
CJ ff the lrC'C, The R111~ing Bells,
:ind ils comp;in1on pieces.
I \·Viii r on!inuc to ch.1rn1 r.1mily
•
;ind friends us lovely collcc·
IO(C. p 1t'C('C., tn the lJOivcrSJI
~pin! of "l'c,1cc on (.irlh."
SOUTH COAST PLAZA
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pantsu,its with extra attractions:
a touch of vinyl, a sweep of suede
Our we ll bred cosuols. Moking the most of fashion . Adding soft
texture s to fine kn its. Buttery smooth vinyl. Supple. suede. Beauti-
fu lly toiloN>d jockets that button end belt. Pents .that glide straight
to th e onklo. The ultima te pantsuits for today's total look. From o
collection of suede and vinyl trim pentsuits, misses sizes 'I 0 to I 6,
available at tho M•y Co exclusively. 66.00 to 98.00.
o. suede front pure wool knit pantsuit in rich cocoa brown, 90.00.
b. v[nyf trim on acrylic end wool lnit, light bluo or camel, 66.00.
town & travel 49
Shop daily lO ·o.m. to 9:30; Saturday, 10 to 6; Sunday, noon to 5
South Coast Plaza, 3333 Bristol St., Costa Mesa • 546-9321
MAVCO
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•<D,,,~;_,,,,_ ,.
"If Vtll'Cf OM VA.tA.TtOM "11:1U'Rf
t.JOT AM .&.MT.'"
In the
Service
Airman Mark S. Lundsren,
~of Mr. and Mrs. Robert D.
Luudgren of 6561 Rome Circle,
Huntington Beach, bas been
assigned to Sheppard AF.B,
Tex., alter completing Air
Force basic training.
At the Air Training Com·
mand's Lackland AFB, Tex.,
he studied the Air Force
mission, organization a n d
customs and. received special
instruction.in ,human relations.
'Ibe airman has bee'n assign·
ed to the Tecbnlcal Training
Center at ShennAM f o r
lpecialized tramlng -In the
transportifion field. -~--~1
Alnnan Robert J. McCann,
IOlJ. of Mr. and Mrs. Jerome L.
McCann of 'M21 Polder Cin:I , -
Huntington B e a c h , has
graduated at Keesler AFB,
Miss., from the Air TraiJ!l!)g
Command's baSiC""'C&frse for
--:ileotronlc spec)allsts.
The airman, who received
instruction in conimunications
and electronics systems prin·
· ciples, is remaining at Keesler
for advanced training.
Army Private First Class
Russell W. Nottingham, son of
Steve D. Nottingham, 2120
Sterlin g, Costa M~a.
participated in the 57th in·
ternatiooa1 four-day marches,
July 17-20, at N i j me gen,
Netherlands.
·\ PFC Nottingham Is regular-
Y stationed in Germany as a
rifleman with Company A, 2nd
Battalion 509th Infantry of the
8th Infantry Division in Mainz.
He is a graduate of Newport
Harbor High.
U.S. Air Foret First
Lieutenant Jeff N. William•,
son of Mr. and Mrs. Clifford
O. Williams, 1213 Belfast Ave.,
Costa Mesa, a n d his team-
mate.s won top honors In the
F-4 Phantom aircraft division
of the Tactical Air Command
(TAC) tactical fighter
weapons meet recently at
Nellis AFB, Nev.
Lieutenant Williams, a
weapon systems officer with
the 7th Tactical F i g h t e r
Squadron at Holloman AFB,
N.M., and his fellow
crewmernbers co m p i I e d
10,410'12 points of a possible
18i800 during the week-long
competition d e s i g n e d RI
evaluate current training in
TAC"S latest weapons systems.
His wife; Judith AM , is the
daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Edward A. Babiuch, 3202
Colorado Place; Costa Mesa.
Airman Joseph c. Reyes,
son of Mr. and Mrs. Nicolas
M. Reyes, 24631 Saturna
Drive, Mission Viejo, has
graduated at Lowry AFB,
Colo., from the U.S. Air Force
weapons mechilnlc course con·
ducted by the Air Training
Command.
nie airman, .who was train·
ed to load and inspect the
weapons used in· Air Force jet
aircraft, Is being assigned to
Alconbury RAF St a t i o n ,
England, for duty with a unit
of the U.S. Air Forces in
Europe.
11molhy L. Greem, son of
Mr. and Mrs : Walter H.
Green, 3079 Fernheath Lane,
Costa Mesa, was promoted to
Anny Specialist Four in Mann-
heim, Gennany. ~
Spec. Green is a truck
driv e r tn the 89th
Transportation Company of
the 3 7 t h Transportation
Group's 28th Transpartatlon
Battalion.
Project
A No-1io
LENSBURG, Swltie,..
land (AP) -Aulhorttleo
took a dim view ol. Len•
.burg Prim lnmaies' I•·
lest gardenlna project -
, a Jiemp petd> supplying
eoough hashish for all lhc
"pr1lonera. \
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tops and pants
save ·on turtlenecks, trousers, and
plain or cuffed proportioned pants
' Basic lop j Three kinds of panls. Slyles 1ha1 walk out of the slore al th e
regular prite. Now al savi ngs. Now in new fall colors. The polyester
lurtlenecks have bac k-zippers. The acrylic knil panls come cuffed ,
flared or trouser-style .. We know you'll find something you 'll love.
6. 99 ·to 9 .99v~lue1.0.00to1.2.00
a. lacy, while, navy, red , black, brown, yellow, S-M-L val: SI 0 6.99
b. trousers wilh waistband and fl y-front in black, navy, hunter green ,
burgu ndy, grey or brown acrylic knil, sizes 10-18 value 13.00 9.99
c. rib, natural, hunler , rust, brown, burg., navy, S-M value $10 6.99
d. proJl\)rtioned cuffed pullon pants, burgundy, hunter green, grey,
black, llrown or navy, short 8-16, medium 10-18 value 13.00 9.99
e. proportioned flare pullon panls in burgun'dy, hunler green, grey,
black, brown or na vy, shorl 8-16, medium 10-18, value 13.00 8.99
boulevard sportswear l6 -a11 21 stores, _including the~ may co eagle rock
0<der by mail or phone MA 6·3535
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Shop-daily 10 a.m. to 9:30; Saturday, 10 to 6; Sunday, noon to 5
San Diego Fwy. at Bristol, Costa Mesa -546-9321
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Dazing Horror Revealed ·
\VASHINGTOX !UPll -A n1onth period .
Fa irfax . Va .. youth has charg-
ed that intensi\'C hazing by up-Il l-: TOLD the Star-News
per classmen rorced him to that because of the vigorous
resign his commission at \\IC'st hazing he endured after being
Point. tbe Washini;ton Star· .. News has reported. released from !he mihtary
Mark Brown. 18, claimed · academy hospital, he suffered
that while recuperating lrom a relapse and was advised to
--acute-.dehydralion-this month. leave the-school for heal.t.h
he was kept awake by hazers reasons.
and allowed QfLly a minimal The Star-News quoted Lt.
amount of food duriitg a three-Col. Thomris Garigan, ·public
Woman Recruiter
Seeking Workers
WASHINGTON tAP)
President N i x o n ' :; new
rec:ruiler for w o m e n ex·
ecutives in govemmeht wants
Lo hear from v;ome.n across
the country v.'bo want federal
joM.
Texan Nola Smith admits
the White House talent bank
could use many more female
names.
After three weeks on the
job, Mrs. Smith pledged in an
interview that she "-ould wage
a "very aggressive'' campaiJ?n
to get women candidates for
every top-level federal job
!hat opens up .
THERE ARE USUALLY
several men proposed for
every presidenlial job ap·
pointment and few women,
she noted, and as a resull "the
percentages work against us .··
Although she has not spoken
to President Nixcri personally,
~Irs. Smith feel s he hlt.ci set an
atmosphere to help overcome
discri mination against women
in high-level, policy-making
jobo.
top v:oman adviser, Anne
Armst rong, a fellow Tex.an,
t.frs. Smith says she's looking
for other women who· cAn
qualify for similar high-payir.g
jobs.
"Write directly to me at the
While House." ~1rs. Smith
urged, "preferably with el·
perience resumes."
She said she'd like. to hear
from women in specialized
fie lds; including do c t o r s ,
lawyers and com put e r
engineers -those in "unusual
fields where men always
trod."
There are \'acancies in the
fields of advertising and public
broadcasting corporation for
which she'd like tr> have good
female candidates, too, she
said.
Hitler's Car
LANCASTER, Pa. (TP)
Adolf Hi tler) car is back oo
the auction block again.
historical cars.
.
September 26 to October 5 ,
1,· :
. '1")
Come Over-Join The Fun
Cl1eck'Our
Special Product Offers
But she noted that men are
making lhe decisions "at the
head olf every department."
She said she intended to talk
to each of them and see that
they have qualified women
candidates to consider.
The black, armored-plated
1941 Mer.cedes will be auc-
tioned off Oct. a as part of a 1
sale ol up to 100 antique and \
The car was S-Old earlier this 1 OPEN DAILY Lower C1r011•tl Melt
Earl Clark. for $15.1.000. lt was ~ 01~0 F•wv. ·r 11 s PM PHONE 140-,Hl
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Postal Chief Fights .. Bae.~ .. '•
·.~ ~r.~
WASffiNGTON (UPll -
The nation'• No. 1 ~llman
says he is determined to avoid
a repclJtlon or the nationwide
n1all crisis which occw·red last
Christmas and brought loud
protests fro1n the public and
Congress.
Postmaster General Elmer
T. K:l&S$ell, a blunt-speaking,
former' president of American
Can Co., told UPI In an in·
terview that if there are any
serious foul ups in mail servic.e .
4uring the Christmas se,ason
this year. "there are a IOt of
us who \\'on't be around in
Januar'y."
yean since the Postal Sery.ice,
a quasipubllo corporation.
came into belng. It replad!d
the 187-year-old Post Ortice
Department , which wa s
operated by the f e de ra I
government.
Klassen, wllo cams $60.000
annually in his non-cabinet
post, has spent the past year
coping with complaints that
long-distance mail delivery is
slower now than five years
ago. cross-town de I iv er y
within most cilles is al.so
slower and service is increas-
ingly erratic.
HE FEELS the si1uation has
improved in the past six
months, largely due to in-
creased mechanization and the
hiring of ncedesl personnel.
Klassen said he is hopeful
KLASSEN SAID he plans to
make unannouncro trips to
post offices around the coun-
try in the next several weeks
to make certain the mail is
moving properly.
The Postal Servii.-e also bas ····:tc..-o
.. begun its annual campaign
urgihg the public to send
packages and cards early to
avoid the Christmas rush,
although the holidays are
more than three months away,
he said.
It has been nearly three
111 the
Service
l\-1arine Major Luth er L.
Paylon Jr:. whose · wife Ruth
Ann is the daughter ofli-1r . and
Mrs. C. A. White 0£ 16309
Shadbush, Fountain Valley ,
has reported for duty at the
~1arine C.Orps Air Station nl
New River, N.C.
~1arine Lance C or p o r a I
Lawrence E. Todd, husband of
Janice P. Todd of 16911
~ataga;-Huntington Beaeh,
has reported for duty at the u.s. Manne Coips Air station
at Okinawa.
Navy · FVeman Recruit Tai
A. Lag&iche, son of Mr. and
Mrs . Joseph F. Lagache of
8322 Grant Drive , Huntington
Beach, graduated from recruit
training at the Nava l Training
O:nter in San Diego.
•
his trips around the country
\1'ill mean 1 lightening .or
di.Jcipline among the 600,000
postD.l em~oyes who handle 90
billfon pieces or mail a year.-
"l don 't think the rank and
file postal workers have any
complaints at all. he said.
'Ibey certainly don't get Lim~
legged. from overwork. But
supenitsory personnel have
big problems keeping help and
as I trave1 around 'it seems
that we need more and better
J>O.'l offices. Some post offices
don't even have restroom
facilities for the help."
A TWO year labor contract
negotiated in July with postal
craft unions brought the
• avercige salafy Jor •clerk ·and .•
carrier t o app(OX!mate?y'
$10,900. .•
M • 'I Klassen SBid he feels the r
posjal o)'!lem has henefltt-
from being removed from,~
politics. Jn the past. t~
department ~as nm )argely on
a congr~1onat ,patronage'""
·system wilh, a PQstmast~ .. 'f.'
genera} trequently a close· a~:~
viser to presidents. · : ~:· ·
"I am one of the few headi···
or departments not hurt by the
Watergate scandal,'' Klawll
said. "I run my department
""ith virtually no interference-~ •
from the White House. The
Post Office should have been
taken out of politics years ago.
'Mle country is better, for it.
.,
END of SUMMER
CLEARANCE
4()0/o to 600/o
SAVINGS!
"you're planning• Pa!lo
• Luau or crulalng on• ---tww come IH th• mo1t ex~ltf~ lllTnlqiii'llii!M go,,,, """ •• ,..,...
•• 1• ; : ;: " .. ... . .. ...
.. .. • ..
.• . .
···t:
c~'{f',=1!s~..\!, ·:t. ... ,. <:·1·
THe~ol'ORJINGe . ·r. •• o Qe ·&37·3990 ,:: . .. ~· :~i:
" ,, . .. •• J;
~~
."COURSES BY NEWSPAPER"
An Experiment in Educational Enrichment
...... _.,._.--.. _ ~ ·,.;1¥~-'"""~ ----"'
. ' I { T-• ,
I • ..
•, •
Now you can 9et
colleqe credits
--
newspaper artides
year to its present o.wner,I COSTA MESA sr1>1o1 a1 11>e S.md•Y• Aile• c11urc.ll
displayed during the summer·I I
RECRUITED FOR h c r at a Lancaster tour~( com· America's Leading Cheese St~res ~$~30~,000-~~a-~ye~a~r=i~·o~b~b~y~N~i•~o~n~·s=p~l~ex~.========~=================~==~I
CREPE •••
SOUTH
COAST
PLAZA
3333 Bristol
Co1t1 Mew
Upper LtVtl
setting Things UP vary SORIY I
Take note . Crepe puts its foot in the fas hion ring, setting things I
COSTA
MESA
: I
up softly, softly. How right
it looks. And, of course,
.the whispery softness is
there to cushion
your step.
$29
phone
546-4791
OPE"N
·SUNDAY
NOON to S PM
MON. thru FRI.
10-9
SAT. 10.6
I
The. Daily Pilot presents "Courses by Newspaper."
Read the lesson text. published each Sunday in the
Daily Pilot "YOU Section" and "11roll in UCI Exten-
sion if you want credit for your studies
·' To Enroll in "Courses by Newspapers"
f9r credit clip•nd mail these coupons, wifh
appropriate Fees, as soon as possible:
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J r1 XGal 101 !For Upper Di~ision credits applicAble l
1 toward degree f I
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improvement. or commercial credits 1 r
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I Learning Kit for I
: "America and the F'"ure of Man" I
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1 For your personal copy of The Future File !includes I
1 introductory record, book of essajs·, learning guid~. 10 I
I sel f tf!sts and .. ,,tc Future Gam~ '' 1 for use in studying 1
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lhr C<Jurse. "America and the Future or Min ... send :
1
.SIOby checkorrnooeyorderlo : t
'\ America 11nd1he Fulureof !\tan I
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Stnd fJ:Sincheckor mont)'<irder to : I
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Another .Pu~lic Service of the Orange Coast_ Daily -Pilot
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AMIUR
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TUMBLEWEEDS
NANCY
WJU. •• HI' ~Jrl HW 60
. WrrH ME 1D 1HE! ~usnce.
OF '!'HI: l'EACI! •••
llMIJ.Yfl Gel CON6flA1lliA110NSI
•
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HIM TOAST-
I·GUESS HE
J)OESN'I LIKE
PLAIN 6REAP
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lDDAT'S CIDSSIDltPVZZLI
ACROSS &I .Proposed S•timf1y'1 Puu'9 Soiv'ld:
pro;tct•
1 GM! tor'll•· 54 •·•· -· 1nd
one -·--limt t1k11 notlc•
51Ancient 151 Conl•ctlon
·Syril 62 ·····VOCI
63 Chlllco11 -··· 1: Re111vr1nt1 M M1d11from f4 Become v1rlou1 dried .OUICll
15 Molttn rock M Troo.,.of
ti' Church c'v1!ry
g1rment A1 Chea1 aot1nd 17.IYy l111gu1 68 Eft :member 89 Thlckh11ded
11:upro;;ir 70 Odd1 i nd
21J!EM:our1gt . evflnl
21•Sohjob1 71 G1rm1n 11 frM of bilt "'3 FH11 23'.Withttt nd ''""" 12 Addlttontl ......... 25 V1ll1ys 13 Notlctt 44 Cro11orCM 21:c1ntrl'I OOWN 18 ·--ChtYb: .. Utt Alrir:tn Union INder 47 T1ught ' ·p.ople 1 Fo1mer coin 22 Acror ··· prlYtltlV j a :Form 1 ol Egypt Wtlllch 49 Foti'•
rhought 2 Unc!.MRM 24 8 uM1r p111nt
; 32 Confinement 3 Or. J.mvtto 27 Yorillhife 52 Atrlcen
-···: Penem1 ••• netl.,. 37 AMi.nt VIP 29 Where 53 M11I CO\ll'M ch1rio1 4 ADA membt-r Mongolia le 55 Smith 31 Showto 1 § Pvbst1ple Inward
IMlll : S Sne1ky JO Low ca1te of 56 Speak rlnlorm1I people: lndi1 57 Robert 39 lmpervlout Sl•no t "E11t of -···" Service end to: Sufll• Jl Pl1nt diH I N Fro11 41 ~--de F11nc1 7 Kelp IWIY 33 Bait .. 58 Wind-drlv11n 42 VM»tnt from 34 Too11 ·---: cloudt 'OUtbUltl 8 Food Rett1ur1n1 69 Dwindle 4!1 -Givt 1 plrly ptovld.d m" eo Sh1mrock 41 St11ndol mif1culoutly :t5 Neg1tive "'' m1teri1I 9 Admit prlfiK 81 Commended
IO Men in 10 Stlrt to Je Lu; • "41ddlt:
t 1nu il ....... 40 Up or P8rklf .....
JUDGE PARKER
St.o.n-iY """' 5AM AARIV!S AT SP!t4CER
FNfN\S,, tte DISCO"f'W
TM,1.1 Me's &fEN
l"OLLO"WEP THERE"
el' 5'.AO! ~!
MISS PEACH
•
·DICK TRACY
I
by T 0111 K. Ryan ..
by Al Smith
by Dale Hale
by Emle lush111iller
!5E AT MY OffllCE AT NIME I~
THE MORNI NG ANO l'l.l
S~f '(OU THEN!
,
DAILY PllOT J9
DOOLEY'S WORLD by Roger Bradfield
,......-----~ ..-.., r------, .----------. rro:=r • M.4.RCHJN6
'JMAoUGH 6EOR6/A•
~WAYS 61VliiS MIO
8U51"'1RS
SALLY BANANAS
GORDO
By Charles Barsotti
Gf!t'.,CoacM,
l~T'ibf.l'O
FoR°cJdf'n!N l"'ie.
by Gus Arriola
MOON MUWNS ----
' l <.10T 'TWO
ilct'ETS TO ,. Sf!OW,
CROl>IT CAAt>S
AllP I-Ni<;lrr
OFF, f SWl'/iL.
ANIMAL CRACKERS , ________ ..,,, ,,,.......,~--..,-.
Mtfi l)ON'l'
•• • • ..
• •
A~• "iol,..(
5PILL.IMG-
.W. -rw• -COl<RllCT\.V?
'IOU S.LA.STED
GNATS./
qoo AU.60
~~MTTO•
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il
"
•
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' I
• !.JHICH klNPOfrot.OCE«EAL
(t.'IOU(jO l(CJu Lll<E ?
by Harold Le Doux
WOULD rt eE Y?S ...
ALL RIGHT IF I PROVICING YOU
t\AVE HIM'C.OM~ LET ME MEET
UP HERE FOR A SLADE ROBERTS,
FEW MINUTES, MY FAVORITE
A08 ? flOOT&A.U. STAA!
by Mell
'\ I J
f ~~ " . ',. ~ .· -
BUT l-IOW WAS
TME STUFF SET
OFF?
. . ..
by Roger Bolen
-~Q\
'IOUR. ~I . Bll6T?!R./
•
.. • . . • . . • . .... . . . .. --..
"I'm so glad \t'e decided oa the zoo instead of lbe 1rt
museum -I'm tbl"Olgll worrying about my hips."
DENNIS THE MENACE
• , . ,! » jl
1f
• . /
•
,20 DAILY PILOT S Mond~y, Octobtr 1~ l';l7l
Myths of Female Wo~ker
Cause "·_of_Discrimination?
•
By SYLVIA PORTER Administration reveals that ,,..--------, . abou t the woman worker, and I
particularl y the older woman
\\'Ork er, persist. If you are a mature woman ,
it doesn't surprise, you that, in
this era of equal job rights,
the go\·crn·
ment has
jusl launch·
ed its .heav-
iest attack
ever on job
d i scrimina-
tlon on the
bas t s' or
race, sex
and national P011tTE11t
despite the laws of our land
and despite all the evidence
proving that mature won1en
arc dependable. conscientious,
con1pctent \VOrkers, the disCri·
n1inalion rc1nain~ blatant .
A sa1n'p!e group or \vomen in
the study, aged 14 to 24. held
the same or higher positions
on the job ladder than \vornen
30 to 4~; nearly a third o! the
older women had not pro-
gressed beyond the jobs of
FINANCE
MYTH: Women S\Vitch jobs
more frequently than men do
and older women s1vitch more
frcquen!iy than y o u n g e r
women.
origin. You kno\v "' h y .
You know it's muc h tougher
for you to get a job than it ~s
for a mature matt ar a young
woma n.
their youth; many of t.he
working mt)r 'ed.. women with
children h ac~l'lally moved
to a lower cupatklnal status.
And a f~er·4o, the discrimina· '----..... -----'
tion intensifies. The Wlem ploy· I
REALITY: Labor Depart-
ment studies show th a t
women's job chanil:in g rates
are just a bit higher than for
men and men are more likely
to ch8nge occupation' than
women. A new Civil Service
study shows that turnover
rates for women in their early
50s are about one-sixth the
turnover rates for women in
their 20s.
fnent rate for women 40 men of the sa\ne ag~.
through 64 In 1972 was more Why .does i~ discrimination
than one-third higher than for pers ist? Because the myths
A new study for the Labor
Departmeh t's Ma npow er
. '
Pick Your Own
~}'TH: Women are absent
from their jobs ·much more
than men are; and thus
women cost the employer
much more money.
REALITY: The absenteeiSJTI
rate for illness or injury
amollg women averages 5.5
days a year as against 4.9
days for men. This is not a
sign1ficant difference a n d ,
since the figures ignore the
fact that relatively rew women
work in hl~h manag'erial oosi·
tions, which always have been
as soci a t e d ·with lowel"
absf:nteei!'lll rates, even thP!te
• percenta~es m:iv be bai!J1•
distorted in favor of men.
MY'MI: Older people (a~
women e.c;oeci,.Uvl arf! harder
to train than young adul.ts.
Pumpkins by the sea lure thousands each year to Half Moon Bay, south of San
Francis~o. where visitors can pic k thei r . own halloween Jack-o-Lantern right
from the field. Growers wnf celebrate the harvest at the Pumpkin Festival in
REALITY: Tests measurin"
conceotual thinking · revJ>al
that people tend to_ do better
as thev age. One studv cited at
the 1971 Whit.e Hou~ Con-
ference on A¢ng-showed that
the averaize particjpan! at age
50 did better on a general in-
telligenc_e test than he or she
did as first-year co 11 e g e
st udents .
. mid·October. • 1
.
Food Prices Bring Wealth
I .
l\1VTH: Irr any period oi
high unemployment. woril en
ta ke jobs awav from men, the
traditional breadwinners.
To Formerly Poor Farmers REALlTV: In 1972 !'Ill
av~rage of 19:2 milli on mar-
ried women 'were in the labor
force against · an average of 2
million unemployecr m e n .
Thu s, if· all these married
women Quit and if all the
unemployed men · moved inf"'
their emotv )obs. thP.re woultf
remain 17.200.000 unfilled jobs
-causing one o[ the most
horrendous eronomic disas:
ters ima~inaQJe. \V h ;:i l • i:
more. fc\\' of t od ay's
uhemnloved tnPn have the'
edurrition. skills or other
Qualific::itions to fill jobs heltf
bv women as secretaries.
nurses, school teachers.
SANGER (AP) -'Vhilc
skyrocketing food prices bring
grief to the urban housewife,
tbe Cali fornia far mer is reap-
ing a prosperity windfall he
hasn't known since \Vorld \Var
IL
ll\'iany growers arou nd this
S3n Joaquin Valley town east
of Fresno are cashing in by
paying 1~ff loans. buyin~ ne\\'
equipment, and even building
modern ranch-stvle homes to
replace the farm.houses Y!'here
their families have Jived for
generations.
"I'VE NEVER seen the day
\Vhen prices were so high,"
said Karl Klein, 53, owner of
20 ac res of grapes in nearby
Del Re y. .
"Some are so imp'ressed
wilh their ne\V·found wealth
they're spending money like-
it's going out or style," said
Berg e Bulbulian, who owns 300
acres or wine and table grapes
here.
A generation of chea p, abun-
dant food for Americans Iha!
GRUBB & ELLIS
REAL TY FUND IV
A Real Estate Investment Opportunity
A Califor.,~a Limited Partnership Offering These
Potential Benefits
e T ax' Savings in '73
• Tax Sh eltered Cash Flow
• Mortage Reduction
e L imit~ Liability
• Potential Appreciation
• Di>Atrsifica t ion of Properties
ONE HOUR INVESTMENT MEETINGS
Wednesday, Oct_pber 3, 1973
Marina Inn Motel
> Dana Point Harbor •
7,30 P.M.
Fredrick Waldron
Space IS Limited
Of(ering Circulars will be distributed at the
seminars.
Call for· Reservations
E. F .. Hutton
Phone Zenith S1S3
Tllil CIMI ·1111 CIMlll!l\111 111 oOtr i. (11!, Tiit ol!tr 11 m.O. lty llt llfttrint'
t11'ttl1r fftly. Tiit Hit t r 1111 llllfl It rtm!led .. ln .... 1tor. Wiit tf't l'fllde!ilt
or c'11ftnil1, Wiii •r\ 11 v••n. tf ... •nd 1tav1 1 net wtrdl, t1c11nl" tf
'~'V Ill l!wlr ,..llllMlt., nernt lvr-111'1111'1•• tr •vi.mftii., 9f 11 ltnt
120,ooe, ""' Wflfst ifNlllVICl!Hf ltffl lll<Ol!lt {Ctmlli'*' wll~ ljlllvl.t, ii
rlllt'fflf)_h 11 lttll ltt1IOOI tr r"tnlltH •I ..... ln(O,,_ whoff fttl
worlll ft 11 lf,ltl llM.Oft, tlClwhlt ti 9"1'Y IR ~t. ~ lvnlitll·
• .....
' . Degan after World War 1 II and
speeded the closure ot millions
of family farms apparently
ended lruit year. Government
figures show faFm income is
up at least 12 percent' for 1973
and should rise even higher by
years end . :
BULBUU AN ~,V~O ilhree
years ago \\'as ulcky ttl 1~1 $3
a ton for his black gratie -is
unloading them now for $15 a_
ton.
"The Tarmer is finally get-
ting what he should ha ve been
getting for year," said t.Ordon
Olesen, pt,;blisher o~ t h e
Sanger Herald . "For a long
time ahead Americaqs are
going to have to pay higher
prices for their f o o it.
Consumers have been on a
gravy train for years."
"I think fovd has been too
cheap for 100·1ong." Bulbulian
sa id. "In terms of \vhat I put
in!O rny business, l'1n poor."
BUT BUl.BULlA N v:arncd
against putting too much fai th
in the new boom. lie said the
U.S. crash food-grO\\'ing pro-
grams to put n1illions of, new
acres into production could
result in overproduction and
force farm prices down again
\l:ithi n a few years.
J\-1VTH: Trainin'l \\•omen j<!
a wast.e of monev stnce thev
ouit when they marry or have
children.
REALITY: The separation"
are onlv temperary. Even ta k·
lnq into account her child-
rearing-. non-working :vears.
!he averat?e woman worker
has :i \\'Ork life exoectancy\if
2.'l ve:irs'. ri1oreover. \\'omen's
ouit rate's have been decreas· in~ rnarkeril y since the nlid·
1960s.
The law requires that all
em ploves be treated without
regard to sex in ever.v phase
of employme nt -hi ring. fir-
ing, job training, promotion,
pensions.
$4 ,000 ,000
AG RI -LINK 1973 FUND .
Agri-l ink 1973 Fun d is 11 Cilifo rnia l imited Pa rtner-
ship of which Art l inkletter and Ag ri.Link Corp., a
subsid ia ry of l inkletter Enterprises, are th e General
Partn ers. The Partnershifi Will ·or.erete in a number of
phases of the commercial cat+ e production busine11 1 •
inclu ding the breeding of cattle and the purchase and
fee ding of cattle for beef production,
Since there will be relatively few sales of c~ttle in
1973, the Pa rtnership e;xpects to incur substantial
losses for federal income tax purposes in 1973. The
min imum investment is $5,000.00.
For a free prospectus a nd addition al information,
please return .the coupon. ·
---~---------------·~-----··-··--
M1il to: MORGAN. OLMSTEAD, ICENNEOY l GA~DNER
500 N•wport Center Ori"•• Suite 6SO
N•wport B••c-h, C". 9lli•O/Phon• 6-«-4!U1 ' . Metn1>ct1: N1w Yorlt sroc.11 lf1t:h•flllt, A...,.rlun sroc• E.:IM"", P•clflc ~toe:-£xelltntf
Ple11 t t111d m• info,,,.,1t•to11 fboul Aqrl·Li11k 197,J Fu11J
NAM C ,,,, .................... _..,.,,,,,,,,,.,,, ••••••••
ADDRESS •••••••••• , ••• ,,.,,r,\ ............. : ......... ,,
C!TY ......................... , s·rAf E •••••••• ZIP •••••••
•
.,
Wall Street • • •
Fift~en ou fOf evEjl'y 100" A111eriC.an s; · c)pqy '. ,own stock. . ,... ...... ·t ~ .
We -couldn't prove >it, of course; but . it s .e.e ms
' • \ • + likely
' . that the percentage is ever:i greater here in the Or-
ange Coast area ... and ir s growing every_ __ day.
•
That's why the DAILY PILOT was proud, yea r:s _ _a_g 9,
" --~-·~------. --r
to be the first newspaper in Orange County ,to bring
its readers "today's final stocks today". v'ia 'super high
speed wire services. We're still doing it in every home-
delivered edition ~rid the service gets better all fhe time.
•
Wall Street's computers "talk to". computers . 1n
DAILY' PILOT plant every trading day at the rate
more thari 1,000 words per minute. It takes only
the
of
12
minutes to move the entire -New York
Stock the Exchange reports from
Street. to the typesetting
and American
cany.ons of Wall
DAILY PILOT machines of the
right here on the Orange Coast.
•
And when
the
technology finds a way . to beat that speed ,
DAILY PILOT, no doubt, wjll. be b mohg the
use it.~to bring ·reeders "today's action today.'.'
record,
·first to
When
. .
it comes to financial news, l~e cine 'that means
business is the
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Look around y4ur house and garage and you'll prob-
·' ably discover you have a mountain of merchandise you
could. sell -all kinds of CJOoclies that you just don't
us.e much any more. Wouldn't you really rather have '
~oney? Okay. To move that mount.a in , just call a
friendly ~d-visor at the DAILY PILOT. Use the direct
line.
r
•
Don't just sit •
,
there on your ~
small fortune ••• ~
SELL IT!
'I
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Thousands of ready-to-buy want ad r e a d e r s are .
"shopping" the ads in the DAILY Pl~OT every day. And
it may surprise you how many of them are eager +o
buy just what you have to sell. Want to give it a
try? Get with the Orange Coast area newspaper .
with "response ability" ... the one that can move
your mountain of ft:ierchandise.
Advertise in the Orange Coast Newspaper with Response Ability
Classified Ad Line
DAILY PILOT
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22 DAIL 'I PILOT
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Cal Expo
Nearly
Falls Flat
Capitol News Service
SACRAMENTO -Millions
of Californians and out-or-s.ta tc
tourists visited Ca lifornia fairs
this year -a booming
business ~·hich gives local
people an opportunity lo ex-
hibit talents and show pride in
their communities.
But, what should ha ve been
the outstanding statewide ex-
hibition of them all, the State
Fair at Cal Expo here, verged
on being a bust.
PRICES WERE high, rx-
hibits were either poor or non--
existent and allendance lag-
ged.
Af06t fair Operators around
the state this year reported in-
creased attendance. and credit
•the ener_Jy crisis, tight money
and restricted vacations as
reasons 1 why people stayed
(NE~S ANALYSIS)
near home and visited the fair
instead of driving to Southern
Cali(Q.!J!ia for an an nu a I
Disneyland visit.
Earlier this year. Cal Expo
managemenL was assumed-by
~the State Department of Parks
and Recreation.
THAT ATfENDANCE lag-
ged and commercial ex-
hibitors were unhappY can be
blamed oi1 the new manage-
ment which ';doesn 't yet have
the feel '' for fair operalions.
Historically, the State Fair
has been the focal point of
agricult ure. homemaking:. arts
and crafts. industry and coun-
ty exhibitions -the premium
snow in the state.
Far less than half the state's
counties sponsored exhibits
this year -and the nl!mber
may drop again in 1974. Local
executives don't believe they
·•can afford the cost of ex-
hibiting" for the good \'till they
receive from the Silo\\'.
PARKS AND Recreill i<'n o[-
ricials. especially \\'ill)atn S.
Briner. the fair's ~~r.eral
manager. should take a good,
hard look at the Los Angel es
County f'air in Pomona . 11 hich
is no\v the premium event i~
the state.
State Fair a t t c n d ,1 n c e
declined this year to 706,6!12
from 876.Hip in 1972.
But, attcii'Hance for !lie first
!hree days of the event \vas
ahead of last year's to1al
which means that fe\\'"Zr pco·
pie wanted to come b.1rk to
see the exhibition a second or
third time.
The food was abomi'lable.
the prices hig h and thrr~ \\"as
little name entertainment ex-1
cepl for the t-.1arine Corps
band and a few thoroughbrrd
horses that paid high prices nt
the trar.k.
IT'S Tl~IE: FOR Briner and
his staff 10 take a look a: the
agrrements Cal Expo has
signed 11nth carnival and t•on-
ttssion opcrators to sci• 11
they can force them to clo ~
beltrr job
''\\le :1r' not s::i11~fi,•d,''
Rrincr ~.1 iC . "\\•ith the ~.,11'1'
tion of foods. The long ll'l'm
l'ontract cperators 0 ; .1 n • : 1
mat ch •he nc"· image'' wf11'"hl
the stale i~ tryinjl to l'r('st!P
for the exhibition. '"\\ ~ do l
have some ability to 1'0111;0!,
and enforc,• the quali!y of <.:O!l· j
cessions .'.Ind lhe carn1v<1J ·· h!·
added .
In addition tn mn n1':lr1:'l•:I
operation of the Los Angflrs
County Fnir. Briner iini l hi.~
sniff wouil.I ht> well advi-;ed lo I
take advice from vete ran fair
executives who pul on small!!r
exhibitions. El Dorado Count y,
Placer County. San Berna r·
dlno Orange ~ow a n d
, the Springtime Fair nt Lo~
Banos are examples nf tiglt\
well·run operations whlth JllVf'
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Free Gifts! Ted Bowers ~ntiqae Show! Ref Jei hments! . . .
II ·-.. ~ ~ I e've been growing with California ever si~ce our first office "' fl was 9·pened in 1887. Today we're 9v!lr $4Y2 Billion strong.
II
And our stataWide-network of -offiGes-is the · largest in the
savings and loan Industry.~ ~in·our cel!lbra!ion oi "~arfy Great Western
Days." Anp op_en a savingf·~unt while ¥DU:re tiere,_Finit out toe-your.·, ·
~elf what the Great Western feef19!1 is all ab6ut. It's the feeling that c0m9$'. '-·~~!if: iod
from knowing you've put your savings in exactly fhe right place.
.to 4 on this day only,
we 're iurn wg our parking lot into
a circu·s oi'f~n. Free pony rides
tor your children. Ff!le,rides tor all
on our own historic "steam train."
Daily Except Sundays, Sept. 29.thru Oct.13-0ur savings lobby
is filled with nostalgia-a special showing of Ted Bowers famou s antiques.
Our hostesses will be· modeling turn-of-the-century fashion s. And serv-
ing refreshments, too. With balloons tor the kiddies and the fabulous
Sunset Barbecue Cook Book, free, for every family. Come with us into
ttie good old days of yesteryear-an extravaganza ,.,,. •
of the romantic 1900's. ,
,
' Mr. Arthur P. Moore, Great Western's Newport Center , ·
Manager, is ringmaster of our big show. His entire
staff looks forward to the pleasure of your company.
BJ\RBEC\..\ E
. COOK \\QC..)K
' . ' ""( 4 ~-.
FREE! The-famous
Su Met
BARBECUE BOOK
. ,·I·-. , .... ~ ~ . . ~
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How to do it! How to tiavor it! How to
. enjoy it! More than 600 special recipes.
All the best from the people who know
barbecuing best-the food edi tors of
Sunset Magazine. Come early and
ask for your tree copy. Supply is ,
' limited. One to a family, please.'
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Dance to the toe-tapping melodies
from our 1910 band organ. While you
sip a real sarsaparilla And munch hot-buttered pop-
corn , popp.ed just tor you in our 1895 steam-powered
popcorn wagon. And, of course,
we 'll . have all of our special gifts pn
hand for the whole family.
PoP'corn
from our
1895 popcorn
w•gon.
Free rides for all on
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Frtt balloom.
Our 1910 Wurlitzer
band o:rg.in.
Dally except Sundey't.hrough October 13
9 to 4:30 weekdays and until 6·6n Friday • 10 to 4 every Saturday
(Remember our Drive-up Teller Window is open· until 7 on weekdays.)
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GREAT W ESTERN SAVINGS
80 Fastilon Island, Newport Center • 640·0333
Open Every Saturday 10 to 4 /Weekdays 9 to 4,30 /Drive-Up Teller Window Open 9 to 7 Weel<days /Free Parking
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"'El WfTH ACCOUNTS OF J1ooo OR MORE": Tr•v•l•r1 Checka. Money Ordera, Not1ry S.rvlce, Trust Detd/Note Cottec:tlon. AtM FfM ~.t Montft Pllna.
MEMBER: FE0£RAL SAVINGS A.NO LOAN INSURANCE CORPORATION, FEDERAL HOME LOAN BANK• A SAVINGSASSOOATION Of GREATWEST,ERN FINANCIAL CORPORATION . _.,...,. __
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the cust~r hi~ · moni·v:.. ~
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Pe
l isco
I igh : ~ All
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kic
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}Ann Wells poses with
.;her ,portr_ait made
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He cited three lines or cases now in the courtS on behalf of these cblldreo -right
.to appropriate pl>cement, light to treat·
'J""l anil rlg!it to edui;aUon \"""-
PLACEMENT
"There is an ove~tjon of
certain • groupo in special education
claues OD a a.uoawidt level," be 11kl.
While 13 per-o1 the California popula·
tloa Is Meodcao-American, they make up
26 pereeot of EMR chlldr<n.
Tile populatioo Is o percent blaclt, bot
in EMR classes the percootage is 27.
And, he adds, there is an ov~
tatim of boys.
Results of ' placement cases have
brought about a halt to group testiog and
schools were directed to test ooly with
instruments standardized to cultural. slJb.
groups 'and not place s~nts in special
education classes without parents' cm-
sent.
The "Iiibt to treatment"· case&
l:-2 ;years a9o ('and
12 ,pounds a9o ;' · she
kids') ~while artist
'Oll!p~ti~er-felli ___ _
ho.,:# she ·does .
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'a in the roclij,,~' .
for 'Newp'ort" fliends
of he Library.
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Suing to /-
originated in Alabama with the Wyatt vs.
Stidaley case, he sald.
Tbe DJW1 held that '11all admitted to Jn.
llitutions 8nd schools bad a right to
trealment." This was to include a
"""""" Pl>Yllcal aod poycbologlcal en-
vironment, ,a gre1t ·bost of rights called
11prlVIC)\" 111 individual program ad·
-to maxllillzing tbe individual's
capo<itles, periodic r.view, and edUC&· uon and tra.ln1na in the least reslrioUve
environment~
TO CAPACITY
'1be, Alabama case was followed by
similar action In Massachusetts, Min-
nesota, New York and several other
slates.
"The right to education" cases
originited in Pennsylvania oo. behalf of
' the QUt-of«hool retarded children.
RuUngs , ln various ways, beld that
eveey chlld 'has the right to he educated
to his capacity, his pareolt have tbe
right to be heard and the student aitl 111>
pirents have a right ol ovenig}W. of bU
education. UtlpUoo ii pendln1 in 20
st.ates in slmilattcases.
Three pending California cases in this
realm, Gllbool said, include 'a San Fran-
claco cue on t.be behalf of two educa·
tionally handicapped cbtldren as1tin( that
dasses not be limited by the 2 percent
celling (EH students pe""'""ge ii based
on school enrollment) and that any chlld Who is eligible be granted access to
classes.
MIIJTARY CUTBACK
1be Calilornla Association of Special
Education Schools is fllinR: a prelhninary
injunction again.st. the federal govern-·
·ment for the cutback· of CHAf.1PUS funds
to dependents of military personnel.
A sUit brought on behalf of 14 children,
including aome ln Orange and Los
I Portrait of a Sculp~s
i She's Fired Up About Clay I I By JO OUIOl'!,v
Of .. Dfllh'-Nlt ... "It's mathematical .. If · yoG combine
math with what' you·.eee, ... )vu'll have a
good li.k$JeSS, II
Ollie Flaber,. Srutb Lai!Uba sculptreu,
WU erplaining ~ "easy" it is to
I sculptun !be likeness ol a lwman figw-e
!tr members ol tbe Newport Beach
Friends ol !be Library.
During' a quesUon-answer session
foUO'llh\g lunch on !be patio of Mrs.
Thurmood Clarke's Cameo. Shores home,
Mrs. Fisher revealed !be . lljw of her
trade.
Htt favorite klM o1 ....ip1ure Is !be
Ulteness ol a human.LJl!l!! "1t -·t stop
till die and the family are sallllie.rw!lh
her jlortnllt of t11e . .W.Ject,
llfJ.. Fisher al• likes to do'111111oonas
became "I had • great ipolher. She
mode a big imprusloo m me. MadooM'
show love."
1be artist, who grew up In Santa
B'albara, fin! makea a Cloy IJlillnltl,
then a mold is made from w h i c h up·
to 100 reproductions can be turned oul
SNOWBIRDS
She alto likes to do hat rdief and
whimsical figures like her tiny European
snowbirds.
To copy a figure, she first makes 1 life.
size sketch and photographs the tn-
dlvldual, which takes abou t an hour. 'lbe
fin! sitUog with clay takes about two
hours ~ five to seven sit~ are re-
q~ "depending on the person,'1 Mrs.
Fisher said. ·
"I like to find. out what's inside the
person and get that. in the work, but
some. peop]e·don't let you see."
The work is done on a redwood base
because redwood doesn't Wlll'p, aod the
clay Is piled carefully to form tbe mus
'dUling a 3$-40 hour procesi. All the tllM
· tt must be kepi damp, Wtth sponge~ and
pl>atic surrounding it.
' During tbe sittings, subjecta ano !rte to
read, talk\ ,Of in the case of children,
play. "You. don't have· to sit still for
sculpture," Mrs. Fisher explained. "I
give children clay and let them make
aomething. If it's good I ftre it and let
them take it home."
Mrs. Fisher studied art in Santa
BarbaTa and remembers tbe first Ume
she bad to draw a nude model. It was a
male, and she couldn't get below the
head until the teacher remimed her the
model was just a form vo'ith light and
shadow.
She eold penaoalized greeting cards
and stationery in her own shop before
her man1,..e, and did not .sj;lrt scuiptlng
i.mtil she moved to Orange County.
Mrs. Fisher exhibited in the Festival of
Arts ?or many years but now prefers to
concentrate oo shorter, smajler shows.
She' likes to do about siI busli' p&'
yeu, though she did 12 one year, and
adds about one new"CODC'ept to her line
each ye&T.
· 1be bustl are accurate, .she noted,
because she uoes callpers to measure
every line on tbe head.
NO WRINKLES
_ Sometimes they are too accurate. like
tbe woman who wanted glllsset because
she'd always worn them, a&:l oc-
casionally t.liey are not accurate enough,
such as when aomeooe demands that she
leave off the wrinkles.
She convinced one wcwnm1 who did not
want wrinkles to at least let.her put on
the laugh lines around her eyes.
Correct firing in the kiln is very im·
port.ant, ?ttrs. Fisher stated. Tb e
hollowed-out figures may have some
damp spots left and inoorrect firing will
shatter them.
They should be set on top of the k.iln
for several flfings before they are ever
put in, and they -should be left to dry in
the studio for several months before they
are fired, .she.explained. •
SculptW'e, to Mrs. Fisher, is "the most
satisfying medium of art."
She doesn't want to teach, she em.
phasi1.ed, and is happy to allow someone
to come and watch her work.
"k-'e-""""~~a.._,. .... tbat,'' she com-
mented about her \\iork.
And, it's a way to leave a mart on the
world. A correctly made and fired bust,
Mrs. Fisher explained, will last1 about
5,000 years, a long time in laday'1 plastic
world . .
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Angeles counties,. ·1s seekJng rights ror
e~I cllildren out or school .
~ &Te due Oct. 4 from the Boards
ot ~lion of LA and Orange counties,
amii/,g others.
"tbls could af(ect as many as 80,000
students In California ," the attorney said,
"The 1970 census found that 80,000
children bet.,,:een 7-13 ""ere not in sd>ool.
My guesa is that a significant nwnber
are exceptional children.
, "Courts h3ve traditlooally been used as
instruments of social change,'' Gilhool
er:plalned. He cited the blacks, poor,
women, elderly and now the handicapped
who Ji.ave taken their cause to court.
C0~1MON EXPERIENCE
"All of these groups have a common ei:perle11~, t;eing On the wr..ong end of a
judgment made widely in our society.
'We' are superior. 'They' are inferior.'
"'The consequences are that one tends
not to he heard, or If heanl not listened
to, or ii listened tQ no action is taken,"
he said.
"And people subject to this judgment
come to· believe the judgment. 1be result
Is shame, guilt and an overbearing sense
of 'acquieacenct· to authority.''
H<iw can the courta be ~?
''Courts can be used to change rulea
and establish substanti ve rights: to
create and enforce rights; to get facts
oUt front ; to express ourselves, and to
redefine our notions or what we are."
He Issued a call for advocacy for
children and parents.
"People are alrald of litigation. l\1any
peaple think of it as a hostlle act lt is
not. It is only another \\'ay of being
heard."
Special education is no longer in tenns
of charity and goodwill, he asserted. "It
is now a ques tion of rights, simple .
justice."
BEA ANDERSON, Edito•
MfM•r. ~ 1, 1r11 "-u
'I like fo find
out what's inside
the person and
get that in the ·
work, but some
people don't let
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·Sense of Humor CaA-Minim·ize Tall Story
DEAR, ANN LANDERS: I em Moot·IQ . !jQ!' ... I eet wt of It without Cl(.
In my atocldog !ee4 "111cb ls pretty 1811 , fending !be balf1>tnlst -MT. SHASTA
foe a girl. During my adoleacfncO I fell . DEAR Sl!AsrA1 !Bore'•,.... ..... of
ltko a glrafle, bul Mom kept at me to .._? U -.--~ tlllat you atanil atraJihl _pnd be prouil ol my height. -. a rtal-doO tbeJ-'i .,.. to
Even though 1-.... talle than most of duce. JI TREY feel -fo<IQle· ·-
the boys tn my claues, 1t oever bothered It, ~ I& 1 nrm. compliment and
me much. ~~ enJty dte fml
I'm oot &oing to ask the obvious quu-•
tton-whot to do about• abort hoylrlend DEAR ANN LANDERS:' Yoa\'e let
(my sweetie is f.foot-4j .and#he hu a waJtrenea sound off, as v.rell as ules
greal build). elem, secretaries, """"· CU!tomen -
My problem ii th• t whenever t go. juat about everybody, Now it's my turn.
when! the.re Is music, every short guy ln Jn many sma11 mes it isn't possible lo
the place rust.cs over and wants to dance hive en automatic dishwasher, to the job
• Ith m.. I feel rldlculous with those 18 done by , .. 1. honest-to-goodness, live
sawed-<>!! runls who ~in to enjoy -'e. MY dlsnwalhcr will tell fOll ttial "''Ung lheliheado on my ""-· (I feel If lie tlll'!I! his hack !or a few minutes
like a nursing motber.) , the dilhes multiply like rohblts.
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Molt dlahwashers get the same salary
as waltresses but no Ups. \realize IL Isn't
practical to suggest !bat people go to tbe
kitohen and Up the dishWIShcr, bol l DO
have a few suggestions -that would mike
our lives a ~t easier.
Use ashlrays. Don't mash your cigar·
ettes or cigars into the left over food. It
makes -a terrible mess.
llon'l put chewing gum on y0ur plate.
It's murth~:r to get OK U enothtr plate is
stacked oo top ot it.
...
Don'f'~mf*?d paper napkins in a
pl ate that has syrup or honey on it. It
sticks like glu~.
·If you ask a \\'ai1rcss lo wash a
• thennos jug or a baby'• bottle . the
dishwasher ls the one who will be doing
It. Give KlM the dime or whatever. -
NEBRASKA
DEAR NEB: ~b for the 1ug-
a:t1tlom. Voa've tc11CA&td a lot of people
today, lnchNlll.c me.,
DEAR ANN LANDERS ' A recent let·
ter from a I ?·year-old girl who had VD
prompted me to write this letter. Illinois
has ha d in opetation for several months
"VD "CheckJiner'' a statewide. toll ·• fret-
telephooe service l!.'hich has helped
lhousands of people. A similar service is
offered In other states.
The phones are manned by high school
and CO!ll!'ge volunteers ,mo are trained to
respond to questions pert aining to VO
treatment centers, etc.
Anyone in Illinois "'ho nct'<ls such help
11hould ca ll 1-300-152-8989 between 8:~
a.m. Ind 9 p.m. MondllY through fridAy
and from 12 noon until ~ p.m. on
Saturdays. (No one "'ill ask your name
or aitc.)
Please urgt: your rend<!rs to call us i(
they want inlcfiT\ation or directions. -
ROBERT C. GRIFFIN, VD PROGRAM,
DEPARTMENT OF PUBLIC llEALTif,
SPRINGFIELD, ILL.
D~AR MR. GRIFFIN, Since goaor-
rbea Ii sttond only to the common cold
In Infectious diseases In lbe Unlltd Stites
I and .a)'Phills Is not far behind 1. t ap.
preclate the . opportunity to publicize this
11ervtce. (P.S, I ecalled the number my11elf
to check the calibt.r of phone petaonMt
and I can report that ft ts superb!)
There is a big difference bct\\•een oold
and cool. Ann Landers shows you how to
play It cool without freezing people out In
her bookltt, "Ttcnagc Sex -Ten Ways
lo Cool It." Send 50 cents in CoTu 3nd 1
long, S<l!-addrcsscd, stamped envelope to
Ann Landers, Box S346, Chicago, m.
60tfS4, ·( •
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DAILY l'IL:OT • 't 'Adam and E11en1 Ribs Prefudice
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Will a "1an' s Job Become Obsol~te?
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By CAROL MOORE
Of 1119 O.rly Pit .. Sitt!
When are we going to take
"a man's job" out of our
vocabulary?
It isn't "a man's job' 'to be
stuck at the office until 8 p.m.,
slaving to afford the extras
and shortening his life with an
ulce r.
\Vhy can't he have time at
home ~ chat with the
children, listen lo reoords.
prepare a meal or run the
washer?
It isn't "a man's job" just
becaU'Se the employment ad
says engineer, doctor ,
meehanic or truck driver.
Why can't ·a woman qualify
if she is properly educated and
encouraged?
These were the thoughts
demanding attention a f t e r
"Adam and Even ," the first of
r 0 u r dramas-with-dialogue
presented Tuesday nights 1 for~
the Golden West College eve.
ning Jectwe series, . Family
Crises. .
The introductory p I a y
featured Harry, a blustery
manager trying to hire a
buyer. He isn't saUsfied with
her ''rleid , _manipulative and
pushy."
Until . .
Pressured 'fllilh business, he
doies off on the couch and
dreams of reversed roles -
friends predjcling a baby boy
will make , it to. the \Vhile
llouse as the President's
seeretar¥ or grow up to be an
airline host.
As the n ig htmare pro-
gresses. the man is given tn
marriage, assumes the wife's
name, gels second er~; reading the newspaper. is
"cute when he's angry,".
his math ability questiooed
and complallu that women at
the office are blocking his p~
motion.
Thus rudely awakened, he is
saved from a gross purchasing
error by his alert secretary
and catches himself Saying
''she kno1vs more than the
men" who were going to Pl'<>:"
cess it without thinking. -
Service ASiOCiation.
One group theoriied 4iat the
problem was • "11.ll ln your
mind" for both ' sexes.
For men, preconceived Ideas
and ingrained expectations
about womeh's stay-at.home
subordir:ation are "all In your
mind." Give them a chance to
express then1selves and use
more talents ; you might
benefit.
For ~·omen. what you have
to offer is "all in your mind."
Don't be trapped by your body
shape, social mores .or cabin
fever.
to male and female pr9·
fessionals to avoid any bias 1n
"'hat they want to be when
they grow up.
Teachers mentioned change\
in textbook "·ording and 1f.
lustratlons, showing women in
more responsibk:'.n~s.
A wife said she and her hu-
sband dovetailed their work
hours, sharing home chores
an d children's time.
Another woman with gro\\11
children said she would prefer
\\'orking now to ease her
mate 's financial \\'Orries and
prolong his life.
The audience also cOn·
sldered the plight ot divorced
mothei's-'1vho are forced , lo
v.:ork to support themselves
and children yet are "stopped
as secretaries" a~ tar as in·
ce ntives and salaries are con· .
cerned.
Topics ror • 01(! remaining
three week3 are parental com-
munication with chi Id re n .
women and alcoholism and ad·
justment to old age.
In the play: Harry had< I -.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;,;; claimed that a woman wouldnt 11
be ·able to take a male client
to dinner because he might
rnake advances and that would
squeJch the deal . The post·
·mortem reaction was lively :
"I( a man made an advance
to a man that wou ld ~quelch a
deal, too, most lflcely. Besides,
maybe. it would be tile woman
who made the advance."
... ~How do we go about equaliz..
lng roles?
'fintoinette ' s
DRAPERIES .& INTER IO~S
WINDOWS, YOUR GREATEST
DECORATING POTENTIAL!
H your hom•-is ~ B•9in"er'1 homr. ... 0 11 • bud91t,
tk1 "iceil lh i119 •bout it ii the ch•lle~9• it P••.!.!t "·
C1ll u1 for f;,, deco(•lin9 ide•1 -Specl1I 1'11 Wffk.
FREE INSTALLATION IN WO'.IEN WOODS •nd DRAPERIES.
103' S'o .. MAIN ST.; SANTA ANA •
'Hear the Thump, Thump'
The Play for Living was
followed by discussion groups
led by representatives of the
co-sponsoring Orange Q>unty
Mental Health Association.
Cominunity Mental Health
Department and F a m i I y
A yoli.ng mother said she is
mentioning all occupational
opportunities lo both-htr boy
and girl and introducing them PHONE 17141 ,7,~9660 men's a ppl ic at ions yet , •
overlooks his own secretary ____ _:_ ________________ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~·' • • v>'ho has 8 years with the com-1·
t-
• • ..
Three.year-old Bryan and Kathy Rizuto know just which pumpkin their moth-
er, l\frs. Jan Rizuto, should choose for decorations at the Harvest Moon dance
planned by the Saddleback f.1others of Twins club. The fund-raising .party starts
at 8 p.m. Saturday. Oct. 6, in Laguna Hills Hilton Inn. . . .
pany and savvy that won't
stop.
He is looking for someone
\\'ho is "determined, clever
and aggressive" but considers
Yoyr Horoscope
Aries : Be Diplomatic
RENT l\RUG DOCTOR
"STEAM" CARPET CLEANER
TUESDAY
OCTOBER 2
By SYDNEY OMARR
ARIES (March 21·April 19l:
,,, Accent is on understandinljl,
~ greater degree of family
.. harmony, more maturity on E your 'part. Be diplomatic.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20):
Avoid rush. Be selective.
Strive for quality.
, GEMINI (ri.1ay 21.June 211):
and perceive what is correct.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan.
19 J: Yoµ find what makes you
secure. You reject what
threatens.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20.Feb.
18): Accent is on · hopes,
wishes. SQme persons express
desire to help
PISCES (Feb. 19-~tarch 20):
Results ve featured. Past ef·
forts pay dividends . YOO see.
perceive. get assignmc~·and
fulfill obligations.
. < FREE DELIVERY & PICKUP
NO CNAllOI l'Oll Tll:AVI L TIMI!
E~ Practical issues do.minate.
. Law, agreements. cooperative
efforts are featured. Saglt· li";;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;-.1 S tartan is in picture.
Ste•m Cleaning your c•r-
pet is safe, effective, ec-
onomical and EASY A1
operating a ·v a c u u m
cleaner, this one man (or
woman) machine 9lves
professional results and
fits in a car seat mi1king
it available to both home
owners and busines11s.
"' CANCER (June 2l·July 221:
.. .. ..
" " ..
~ .. • ~ ~ " '
• ~
I .·
,.
:.:
~ ' 1· ,. .
Fini.sh -complete projects.
See beyond the immediate.
LEO (July 2.l-Aug. 22):
Creativity i s highlighted.
Emotioos tend now t o
dominate.
VmGo (Aug. 23-Sept. 221'
Home, property. ~rity. get-
ting money's worth -these
are emphasized. Refuse lo sell
yourself short .
UBRA (Sept. 23-Pct. 221:
'rifovement. t r a v e I are
featured . Ideas are plentiful.
Key is develoomenl. Deal with 1 c 1 o !I e neighbors. relati\1es.1 SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21 1:
Emphasis on '"'hat mi2ht be a I
money complication. Pay and
collect and bt' pra ctical about
it. AquariuJ, Leo and Scorpio !
mav be in\·oh·ed.
SAGl'ITARll:S (NI)\'. 22·
Dec. 21 l: Lunar cycle is such
tha t your judgment is on
t.arget. You analy"Ze, deduce )
Mrs. Ms.
$ SAVE $ MONEY
LEARN
AUTOMOBILE
DOLLARS & SENSE
LADIES -Y.ou know how
to manage your men -
now learn to manage your
c.ar.
I've developed in form•·
tio n which take, the mys·
lery out of your a ulomo·
bile -expleins it to you
-a nd tells you how to
koep it Hea!thy-C111refree
a nd Less Expe"1iv1 To
Ope rate.
NO N o A 1 en s • -I'll
tell you how to: -Re·
duci Operating Expenses
-Cut M•inten•nce Costs
-Save on Repairs -end
- T elk Ba ck to Se,....ice
talion Attendants.
To Start Thi• ·Velu•bl• In·
formetlon Working For You
_ S•nd Yeur N•m•. Ad·
dre11 ind $Z.OO to;
Auto Dollars & Sense •
't" ,.0. lox •4324
I rvlne, C111. fZ664
Attn: W. lk"-rd1
I
RENTAL RATES -1,, .. 1111•t1 '"-!''' w,,.,
I ~4.00 per llr. IJ hrs. "'hi.I
Sl.00 plr llr. for Z4 llr'1.
6 I'·"'· to 8 O.Jl'I. • ror1 $1 Z.00
t MINUTES 0,-INSTltUCTIOH OH Of:LIVl!llT
RUG DOCTOR RENTS
DAILY l0-4 MON.&. THVltS. ID-t
We!k.M' Plan, t7th and Irvine,
Ne..,port Bach,Califomia92660
(7141 979-7844
12n S. l!RISTOL SANTA ANA
OPEN I·• MON .• SAT.
·1.49 each is all you pay
for professional color
portraits of your child.
Select either large 5x7~
or set of 4 wallet size,
from several poses. ·
'· .I
•
• 2dti!ln~iijl)lld --1.48--• AJ pcrtraits deMnd
to ~ at cu stae
• Age lirrfl : 12 years
And we never charge
for handling or delivery.
Pixy is available only
through JCPenney.
JC Penney
NEWPORT BEACH . . .
Oct. l • 6 HOURS Tues · Fri 10-1 2-6 ; Sit. 10.1 2·5:30
•
• • 2price
~ill\ Mi\0 Ok Ol\\Y
this V1ee
''· . ' • ,.
_,
'·
. ... :·~. •'
·•: ..
'• '
' .
•
'i ' ' ' \
•
•
•
. II
• ' •
' .. • . • -•
. • •
' i • •
l
i
~
•
Monday, Oetob« l , 1CJ7l DAILY PILOT 1$.
'Griff' Debuts Fine D0C111ne~atary
'
Greene Uneasy
As Private Eye
By JAY SllARBUTT
NEW YORK (AP ) -Yet
another detective series Is
upon us this season. It's called
"Griff," appeari on ABC-TV
and stars Lome Greene,
whose "Bonanza" glruck lead
last season after 14 golden
years.
Greene has retired his
Ponderosa duds and donned
coat and tie to portray Wade
Griffin \ a retired police cai>-
tain who owns a private eye
agency. He appears uneasy in
his new role and v.ith .good
teason.
The reason Was the first
show in this Saturday night
series. rt was bad in plot,
word and deed. It concerned a
( TVREVIEW)
\Vatergate bearings may mark
the first time neither · the
networks nor the National
Public Affairs Center (or
Television (NPACTl has
televised the proceedings five.
The three networks took
turns with Jive coverage of
last week 's hearings, but after
Wednesday's seSsion, ABC and
NBC voted to end the rotation
plan, even though CBS wantEid
it continued.
Spokesmen for the three
netv•orks say each now will.
decide on its own whether
each day's Watergate
testimoriy warrants-I i v e
coverage.
-.CBS says it will broadcast a
half-hour's videotaped
highlights of each day's hear-
ings at 11:30 p.m. EDT, but
won't do Utls on 1llf! days it
goes "live" with the Waterga~e
story.
swinging pro football star NPACT, wmCH tsn't broad-
framed for the fatal shooting casting the current hearings
of a cocaine peddler. live, says it still is videotaping
nlE PROGRAM wa!n'l all e;i.ch day's testimony from
bad , though. One· of its st.art to finish for nightly
characters was a nationally replay by the Public Broad·
famous, controversial lawyer-castinj!: Service.
turned-TV sportscaster who Interestingly. ABC and CBS
says : "I've had a very sue-Says they'll oontinue manning
~ful career calling 'em as r the \Vatergate TV pool for at
see 'em." least two weeks, even though
In action. he calls a gridiron . all three networks have ended
miscue "the apotheosis of the rotating coverage system
carelessness." When the foot-they b:egan last June 5.
ball star is arrested, the ' AN NBC spokesman said his
sportcaster informs the coach network hasn't decided yet if
that It "sure.ly will vitiate y~ itll man the pool later this .ndmini game." , month. Tbe current hearings
You'll have to ~chect with are scheduled to end on or
Don Meredith or Frank Glf· before Nov. l
ford on whether the TV If the network--staffed pool is
character-i11~basec:t-on-Howard abandoned, NPAcr says itll
Cosell. ' · conUnue its full coverage with
It cou1dn'l be, l h o·u g h , its own. technical crews and
because the character turns cameras.
out to be a villein at•the end of Al Vecchione, NP ACT' s
the sbow. Cosell would never general manager. estimates
-.be a villain under any this will cost NPACT $3,000 to
circumstances. $5,000 more each day than
But the real villian in wllat it now pays for its
Saturday's "Grlfr' was the participation in the Wate
authOr of the script For tbe TV pool.
What ·ue Said
NOW SHOWING
EXCLUSIVE
ORANGE COAST ! TlllWT :.
llCiHTEN YOUR
5EAT IELT I
I
OFSllll~
IPCil
7:00 & 10:37 r .M. ., ..
· "THE 'THIEF
WHO CAME
TO DINNER;'
f PCil
l :SS P.M.
Motillff S1n1doy
record, the aerie! cmtan Ben . He said he didn't know how m.1:11rrClu.m:• l_Coll n...tTe For Schff11le
Murphy, I! Ryan O'Neal look-much this now is costing ""1!1!'111'!!'!!!1!
aJld..act-alike, as G ~If l 's "because they (I.be networks ) -=-
d"""Di ~~"· ~ ~:~~~.i:':. := .~~1:f! .;~m 'ITill 'O'OOrn ~~m
• .IWlllNG lilllr.'.lo 1~ . dally cost of running !he pool IJ!J,\.!!J\JU,W ~
~ , mOllaL ~~ ' , tw.averag!!I about lt5,000.
• ~-~~:::~·. -.·.,.~~~ > l .. ~ "'i
• •
• .
• •
,.
t ,
r.
I ~ l
• ~
I ' •• • t-
~~:g~~~ Lelf~~y .
' Hank Williams kft Mark
a heart attack, but physicians
said he had taken a. powerful
sedative just hoW'S earlier.
SHOWN AT
1:00 & •~oo P.M.-
DAILY
ADULTS -$2.50
UNDER 12 .75
NASHVILLE. Tenn. (AP) -
Hank Williams, singer of
"Lovesick Blue.'' died 20
years ago iii the back seat of
his Cadillac on a lonely West
Virginia road, leaving COWllry
music a legacy i t is now
fulfilling .
Williams wrote more than
100 songs during his tormented
career which included "Your
Cheating Heart," "Cold, Cold
Heart," and "Jambalaya."
He ,won the Casbbox record
of the year award three years
in a row, became rich. built a
big ranch and his wife gave
birth to a son, Hank Jr., whol~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~I is now a couiit.ry music star. r
Since those days In the late
I!HOs and early l 9 5 Os ,
Nehville tw grown . Into a
major fecording center in the
nation and cotintry*rnusic ls no
longer limited to rural radio
stations.
BUT TROU BL ED by
physical pain, mar it a I
troubles, and alcohol, he was
finally dismissed from the
cast of the Grand Ole Ppry.
He was reportedly trying to
make a comback when he
died.
Williams began his music
career wben he was 8. His
WILLIAMS WAS born In a parents gave him a cheap
cabin in the rugged scrub· pine guitar for Christmas. He
land near Georgia, Ala.t Sept. learned some chords from a
.l7, 1923. He died Jan. 1, 1953 black street musician, won a
while being driven lo 8!1 talent contest at 13 and got a
engagement in West Virginia. job !inging with WSFA in
His death was attributed to 1'.fontgomery, Ala. ..
iiiiiiiiiiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii
HFS A GOOO COP. .. OH A BIG BIKE. .
-ON A BAD ROAD
·-A.w.Eti~GWOO-Fll'ERT~
,... • • ,_•na •
$1AOIU.+f '4 '.:· ....... ~. , .... '"·· .
IHE STONE KIUER" -"DILLINGER" Ill
"SOUND OF MUSIC" ...
··cHAILOnE'S WEI" (Ci)
I
''tHE LAST AMEllCAN ...
"YANl5HIHG POINT"
"YOUR THREE MINUTES ARE UP" ...
"WHERE DOES IT. HURT1"
"DAY OF THE JACKAL" ll'GI ...
"JOE KIDD"
"HARltY IN YOUlt pO(ICliT" ...
"t!YERYTHING JOU EVElt
WANTEO TO KNOW A80UT SEJ(" llU
·-~
War -~eries Slated SURFING FU . .lr4 ,ESTIYAL
THIS WEIK
01.t.NGE COUNTY
EXCLUSIVE!
If lo11 Liked
"Fre1eh Co11119etloa"
Yott'll Llk• .•••
o 01JIO 01 1'"°"'"1 "-"°' ·, .................... 1\1.11
-A11d-
"BADGE 373"
Co11th1. 51i1n. 2 A.M.
Eve1.; from 7 P.M.
S4l-llSO
(
•
' '""' IOI Wl'flt A Ol•lUll--·-H-,.~, .. -GlAllTI•
FAMILY TWIN CINEMA
" • I ' ' " h
' ., '· '"""
l.u " 'L 'I ·'"•'0'°""
0.,.,. •14S Wfflt••vt S1tJS1111. (.enllfl-• 12 Noon
CINEMA I
"PoMidon Adventur•"
"A Fl1tful Of Dollars"
(1'0)
C1NEiAA~,-,~~~~-
"l.iv• And let Die" 4
'" + "Th• MKh11nl<"
0 IOUNIAIN VAlllT .,_1,,-~1 ..,._...,.;.;.;;,-;;-;,;-, -;:;-,;,,;; ....
· "THI LAST
AMt:illCAN HERO" IPGI • '"VANISHINCi POINT' fPGI
2:15-4:50--7:2t-t :55
'! .. easily the best
movie so far this
IOUTH COAST P~ I w1u11,..s:»-J:•t::io
51!/511ft-l:»J~Jt4;)1 " ... ; .
EXCLUSIVE
ORA!IGE COU NTY
ENGAGEMENT
r1·11Hi§I
L:1B'"~"" , . ., .. , ........ -.. ~.~''"
U.A. CITY ANO SOUTH COAST CINEMAS-TUESOAY 5k (LADIES ANO GOLDliN AOIERSJ-OPEN 'TIL 1:00 P,M,
"THE FOLICS AT
ltEO WOLi' INN"
HUtllto>cll't "FltENlY"
loll! In Color I CR)
J1mn C..blltft "HARRY
IN YOUlt POCKET"
"HICl<EY AND SOQOS"
.... ----·---~RA."CJ..l!~llRt:W
INU SridtH
"YOUlt THREli
MINUTES •1tE U,..'
P1i.r S•HHt "WHliltE
DOES IT
HURTT"
111111 In Calort
L. M1,...ln/E. l1r9nlne
•
"EMPEROlt OF THE NORTH"
c. •roni.oft 'RED SUN"
l oth In Color! (f'GJ
"LADY ICUNO l'U" A "CHINE SE CONNEC· V rlON" "FISTS 01' FURY~
AH In Color! !Rl
"Sunshine Seo"
"" S.tty Boop C•rtoons
7:JO & t :JO lach E"11l11t
flEI SUlflOAIDS
GI••• Awsy EK• W ...
Dttolh At Tllfftre
ll,,.;o\ ......
... .,011tl'Oll
Stt-nJt
OKLAHOMA CIUDf IN!
'l.llitm...-JUNIOI IONNEI I"! -.-.-··---•-•ut • ...
• MOVIE fOR
WIYIS AND
GlllflUNDS WHO
llSINT lllNG Ro~tEO ,yjlll~:T \,r__,... ____ .. TAKIN ,01 GIANTtD
~·
,,,_ ....... .
,.'-'t: ir 110"1\itl<ry;
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t.io ~-J, '(t •.11 • .'ii l'lli A \Sll'OI 1.1~ i.1....-u11rJ1 ... ..,. •
i.i11"'11J"Y "rsm:ii
'JM W4L1[~ 1"'Aftt1~U KUS-JAMCS GA.RNl:ll
IN "Piil ,,. '"• _,,.,,,.,,.~,. <:,...,.,,. ~A MAN
H' ,';:,\''" . (CB\ ~:~-·
wunm • .iii-.:i'.O.i'oi:.:..O,... .... _.,
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~Id rtWIO.~IJr..w.ES 'M.UAM a.eco· So...,D!'ROOan BCl'lS
_,. ~ J03[Al 8Cffl -RffRT H'T2IG
"'-*CO!'.-it11<.W.C:S M..LW.4 Cl.(Ja) Un1lell •l't11tt 1 Or\tlnll .............. ~-UfliW AtfiMI; ........ ,.,..1 GEOllCE C. scan FAYE~
IOHllMilLS JACI(~
Now Playing! --.&.-·•••• lKM'luua1wwwr.1
C.Et.E ll4,IJoU.N
1.,1111[~1 l'IO?~'ilNE
·f.<lltEY ~!NTfll$
GEORGE C.SCOTT FAYE DUNAWAY
JOHllMIUS
JACK PAUNCE
. . !TIM ltlt.,.."'T ........ cotuMllM 1tttn. I ~!fGi
CINEMALAND & SOUTH COAST 2
WEEK DAYS 7 & 9 P.M.
SAT. & SUN . 1-3-5:10-7:15-9:20
Hl·WAl-39
mm 11 Dllll-
PlUS !U FElllllE
.l!mllll m•~HI• ..
Ol\llHOMA CRIJO£
ttQllWo Plt1WI.~ ~
tulllllfll •
1nd Ntw HIT · ~Ullf REVNO{OS
IN
"WHITl
UGHTNIN "
For Tht
Whole
F•mily!
'
r
'1 f ll r, ~ l EVl '1'
2"il AT Wl,T&IOOI
"BILLY JACK "
(PG)
OKLiHOMA caUOE
, .... TM ATTIAQ10N
\T £~[' M(QUEEN
llOf\£111 PP£STON
"1UN1011
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•
r
:
H DAILY PILOT MondlJ, Octobtr l , 1 m
l i
j
TV IDGIIliIGHTS
ABC B 6:00 -Monday Nigbl Football. The
AUanta Falcon! meet the Detroit Uons.
KCET llil 8:00 -Juvenile Court. Does justice
really exist for young offenders? This show is a
stark bul revealing portxail of delinquent youth
and the legal system.
NBC D 9:00 -"Doctor&' \Vive s." A physician ts
~gt because of his affair with a promiscuous worn·
an -and several wives fear their husband is the
victim. This 1971 movie features Dyann Cannon.
Richard Crenna. Gene Hackman , Carro]! O'Connor
and Rachel Roberts.
TV . DAIL·Y LOG
Monday
Ev•ning
OCTOIER l
1:45 Q "' ....... ~ ·-.. hosttd by Siu Nthtn.
9:0G 0 Qt (.I} Keft't Ucy [d MtMI·
hOll aums u a b•nk ...ice ptni·
d111t wllO .becam•• tflt w.1,.1 fie·
urt Ill l\ICY't tltl#ltt plot lo 111
I INll for Hany't ltlttrlllf bushlm. ""t1lm•ic"'""-(CJ (1'1) ",Docttn' Wlm'" (dtl)
'71-[)yan C111110n. Rft111rd Cr~111,
Ctlle Htt~rn1n, Carrol!. o·ConllOf,
RKfttl Jl11btrb. Whtn 1 ph)'lkian il
U.01 !>tcttM or ~II 1ff1lr with 1
PfOlfliKllOld \llOmlR, ladl ol ie~llll
dodon.' wim: f11rs tlllt htf hu ..
band is Ille victim.
CI'l Tiit wt Dlu
B ROOKIES·D~ATHWATCH * FOR WILLIE GILLIS
O (j)nt·IMiin •·fmzen~mokl"
Rookias Wth$111 Ind Gillis invutl-
l&ll I CHI lrM>IVinl I filhl·to-IM·
dtllll !Mtween two 16-~Uf.oldl
cwtf the 1U11td th•ll of 1 blcyclt. ®I Ml'lit: "Deslplt1 ... _..
(com) '57-leuren &Kan. ID Metre ._ .. Flltball ll1l rn _, ici ia~ ......,.
(sus~l '67-Stanley 8aklr.
I R•tler C1111u
U en. liln Cf1l41
Mo'tlt: "lint Jim"
t :IS ai) N .... /Spom
1:451) Ml"rif: "Tiit sty'1 ~ U•lr' (mus) '43-Fied Att11r.
l:lO IJ Mo'tit: "TIM lnt ...... (wn) ·~Wllli•m flllott. foout T11tM1.
. -.
..
Allout Pre.sideteqf
ITATl.llllMT 01" AtANOOfllMINT lllCTITIOllS au1u••55
PUBLIC NOl'ICZ l't11IUC NOO'ICZ PUBLIC NOTICE ·-Governor:S Wife
01' Ull OF MAMI tTATIMlltlT
5""'UIM. 'COUIT U 1111 l'ICTITtoU5 tUllMl51 NAMI Tiit fol1owH'lll --''' OOlftll ITATI flf' CA&J"°"llA ,_, Tiie ,.,....,_ fi'l"I"' '-"" •~ ~ N:
ntl COWff'Y otl' NAlfM 1M -el 91111 fldl*"' Diollll'llUi Mnw: WALLCOVlltlHOI UHlloltAITl!O, 711
ltO'N(I °" ~~-NTITtOM WAU.C0\1&111405 UNLIMITED. m w. 1flll St .. CMI• ....... (I . mn
-
........... W•• • MD -W. lfltl It., C.11 Mt.a. C.. fH'1 Rotltf't \.M Ev-. 1201 I!. f1lf!Ywn
'HIS NO. I FAN'
Nancy R••a•n
Reveals
...
SACRA.MENTO (AP) -'Ibo
wife of Gov. Ronald Reagan
says any WOJl'IAD who loyes her
husband woukio't want hJm to
be president -but she hasn't
ruled out the possibility or
being the nation's First Lady
"In all honesty, I don't
reaUy see how a woman can
say that she wants the man
she loves to be president,"
said Nancy Davis • Reagan.
fonner~ debutante, actress and
Woos Feminists
Discriminatory
Laws Stullied
By THOMAS D. ELIAS
A new -and s o-far
unheralded committeee
which could produce major
changes in the lives or more
than half California's popula-
tion quietly has begun opera·
lions.
Dominated by S o u t he r n
California legislators and their
apPointees, the Joint • Com-
mittee on Legal Equality will
have at least a year to ex-
SOUTHERN
CALIFORNIA
FOCUS
amine all Lhe slate's laws and
the policies of 611 state agen-
cies and root out any that
discriminate against women .
THE COMMITIEE, o C
course won't be able t,o throw
out any laws by Itself alone,
but the assemblymen and
state senators who make up
half its membership are
among the most influential in
Sacramento and their reeom-
mendatiom probably will car-
ry great weight.
"I'm convinced that some
things we will find will seem
so obvious1y wrong that the
· Legislature simply won 't be
able to ,ignore them ,''
Democratic Sen. Meryyo N.
Dymally of Ul6 Angeles, the
new group's chairman, iaid in
an interview.
Dymally originally pushed
ror such a committee last year
only .to see it killed in the
Assembly.
Among the ' ' obvious l y
discriminatory" laws he is out
to repeal are one which allows
husbands sole conlrOI over
community property a n d
others which make it easier
for men to inherit community
property when their wives die
than it is ror women in the
same position.
HE'LL BE JOINED on the
committee b y Democratic
Sen. Alfred Song of l.fonterey
Park, a longtime women's
right! champion, and
Republican Sen. Robert S.
Stevens of West Los Angeles,
who became sensitized to
women 's issues last year when
Democrat Catherine O'Neill
came within 3,000 votes of
ousting him and becoming
California's first woman state
senator.
On lhe Assembly side, mem-
b e rs inc lude rormer
Democratic floor 1 e a d e r
\Vetter Karabian of Monterey
Park, who sponsored the
resolution in which California
ratified the federal Equal
Rights Amendment prohibiting
!ex discrimination, a n d
freshman Democrat Howard
Berman of Shennan Oaks,
also a women 's rights sup-
porter.
Giving the committee even
more clout Js that it was
cre~t~ by a resolution
sponsored by Assembly
Speaker Rbbert:--MoretU of
North. Hollywood. •
MORETTI., OF course,
hopes to becoflle t h e
Democratic nommee f o r
governor next year, while
Karabian is believed to be
arter Attorney General EveUe
J. Younger's jOb and Dymally
has said he plans ' to run ror
lieutenant governor.
Are these three Democrat!
planning to use the committee
to further their status . with
women voters?
Chairman Dymally says that
isn't why they got involved,
but it may tum out to be an
anc~ benefit.
'"ltitre is no doubt this will
be helpful," he said. "A lot of
women will bear about it and
that can't hurt. But the
women's groups are very
sensitive and they don't want
this to be a political thing."
THE SIX-MEMBER
citizens' panel set up under
Moretti'! resolution to join the
legislators on the committee
may serve to keep the pollti·
cians fr om grandstanding,
speculates Westwood attorney
Linda J. Morgan, one of the
first two women appointed to
the group.
"It's simply hard for me to
believe that this could become
an opportunity ror that sort of
behavior," she said.
The politicians, too , will take
care to avoid at least the ap-
pearance or using the new
group for their own gain, if on·
ly because they don't want to
alienate feminist organizations
like the National Organization
for Women.
KARABIAN, FOR one, rates
the feminist! as "one of the
two or three most lnnuenlial
interest groups in the state."
adding that he considers their
support ''extreme.Jy Im-
portant." So be will be careful
to stay in their good graces by
avoiding anything that smacks
or using their cause for his
O"-'TI advantage.
Commune Life
...., Tiii Pk:ll'loln ltnl'*6 ,..,,... ~reel K . 5'1111 Ma. (1, tfJ'Ol Llfn'9Jtl TQT.t,MIWTAIY M_~ to 1bov9 w .. tllell !ft OI'•~ c-t'i' on OM Mit,....-llt lfVtM. 11D1 f ,
&1111t °' r•MA 1tL1twl!11 . -r"-J-,,, 1tn. 1111rn._, te. a.ti•• Meo ~·· n111. Th ht ~ 15 HEll.aY O!VIN~· I IONrl lH EllfMo llGI II. lt~lrlltWll Tllit !MIMW 11 COflllucl"' " a f'IMl'•I Oug S ,. · f(, 11nt1 Aftt,, C.. tVll f"lrlllfl'llll" Al.ICI tM.YElt Ml fllW lltftl11 • Jllmll fcl""'l'I Croln :J050 SO. Jrbt°' 0.1 ,_, 1ven1 "' '",... .t WUI •1'111 for ,...,.._ of fT, Sa11l1 Alll. C•. n,Os Tltll t1•t.mfn1 Wll ti'" Wl!ll w:. (OUO• L.ii.rt T .. t_....., ..... "".......... Tllh bulll'llf• w•• COl'ld1,111;ttd tJY • IY Cl•rli: " Or•noe CounlY on ""'""°"' ,..t!IU '° WP!klt .. "*1t9 .... M1l'ltr tlll ~Mlc<Jlln, ...ii tMI t11f "'"' MCI ~ lln'lllW plMMr J. 7, 1'11.
Ill l'lllrl11$ ltw Ml'M IMI•, .... ..,i for Title f/t,11~·-= wel filed with il'!iDlhfle4 Or•not COM! 0.llY '::'1~ wlfe of a leading contender for OCtoMt 14, 1m. or t too 1.m .. ln tflt ""' Courtly Cltrll of or•no-c-•Y on s.pt1m11tt 10, u ?At •1'4 OC'*it 1
the 1978 Republican p(e:!liden· ~ ~ Jr2: ~~1 /-.1~ SfO!tll'IMr 1. 1m. pum 1tn ' ms.Ji
tlal nomination. ~~ ~::"~ ~::""'•· ll'11b11M1Hr 'Or•nee co-et o.uv l"llot. PUBLlC N0'11CE ~:i.~~~ 5T JOHN. ~IM!lllf' ~'0• 11• ,.. •lid ,Oct~;; r•CTITIOUI •11SINi1i "rr SEEMS LIKE lhe Job • •• • NAM• •TAT•••.,. AUL ••JtN · J • PUBI.iC NOTICE TM !Ollowlno ptttfll 11 d0!111 llullt1tu
ii alroott too much tor one :=., ~J,,.,; '"" * , ••: ,. "--'d "H T .. J cn•J ~ P'ICTITIOl.ll •USIN•S5 COAST PLASTICS co .• 1712 Hfwpotl man. Sui:: Sil . owever, A,,._ tll'I .... ~ • NAM• ITAT•.M•NT Clrc••· S1tlt• M~S.n!• ,1,1141, C•llf. ft10J
f'm his M. ,·fan He's 1 .,. ..... ll'1,1ll11Mot 0r.,.. cot1t o.11y ll'l1ot. TM to11ow11111 P4'''°" '' Oo1r11 bu•!llHI ... ·ct1oqt/ ~·, ~1tr. 1~~ .. ": Av• •w. . • ., S.pt. a.,. Mid oi:t. s. 1tn !tlN1 ir: ~ ion . 111 • ,.,.. • • -· kn whal' llEl tDUAL STRESS It E $ e .... c: H Thi• PWtlllHI It COl'llllCl9d tJY "' In· man. AUU who O'A-'S ~ PUBLIC N-CE ASSOCIATI°" uu w MKAr111u .. •1~11111at. going to happen •1th your V•J. c I AW .-'. """ ' CMrl .... Mllltr • " 4re!.e. s:-t"tOov:.i. !IS. llllFll Pl., Thi• tt•tf,,.,.nl WH tllld wllh llW C-· µte? • ,... Coll• MeU Cl. tH27 tr C!Mll ol Or•nOt COlll'llY on S•pl•mbtr
' California's First Lady said fW••toa COVfltT ~ TM• Thi• Ml~ 11 clll'Wlucttd tJY •n 1 .... '~· lt7l • ,.,.,
she never planned on being the 1:::9,:J#'::'C::...~ dlvklllllj_, L. uOOl.lx "u111r111p11 Or•~ c ... 11 o.uy '11°' wire ot the g f ,._ na .... ...,..,, Tiii• '""..,.,.t ...,,~, 111 ttw eovn-Slpten"111tr 11. 2 .. ...., Oc!Wff ,, •· . • overnor 0 UK: • NOTICI °" MllMI .. Of' ,mTIOM IV Cltrk Clf Orll'I09 c ,., on StPllfflflef 1tn :IM).JJ
t1on s largest state and cer-P"Oil out111t ••11t•CT1... COM· 1. 1t11. PUBLIC NOTICE
tainly wasn't making any ~~·,~,.'::c'::::r PublltMct Or"'9t coa11 ~11¥ "=: ' plans to move into the White Est1tt of WIU.IMI lANOC!t' HOf/tTON. a.ottmbtr 10. 11, u. •nll OdOOll' 1 lllCTrTIOUS 8U51Nlll
H 0.CMMO. ltn 21'A·n NAM• STATIM•NT ouse. NOTICE II '11!1111!•)' GIVlN hi JO Thi fl)li(pwlnQ ""'" II dolno tMIMU
"197& ls still a tong ways AHN HO.-TON. •• '•"'m " "" •t•t• _ PUBUC N011CE '" away .. she said in an in of Wlllllm UMo!I Hll'ton. dloNMd. "'' G, w. ,.£RGU50N .. ,Y~IATES. , • "'" !wrlltt 1 p1tlfton for an ~r ,1_1_, OU1l"aSS '10 N1wport CMt.r Dr.. N..,.,.ort terview 1vtt1orfll:tno tlld dll9C:!lfll ""''-' lo .. , ,....... " 111<11. c1111ornl1 t2MD • C'Ofl'I""" t111fll'lln•Of1 tontrld ~ r,. N,-,.• 5TATIMINT Gllbtrl W. 1'11'911tORo ''°' W"t OcMn After seven years in the, ~t In NI ltl9tl1M. tl'ld .. -WM TIMI '°''°""''!'PO Plf'IOll II dollll l:Mlllnt!t t"l'D!lt, NIWPGff l•ICll. ,C1t1fornl1 ""°
political , limelight Mrs 1no1 o.11 ...... • wur&ntY Olltd at Ml fOrltl 11: '"" w " COM,ANY '" ''''' Thi• D1.11l11111 It co!lduclld by 1n In-' ' "Piii Ml Mrtortl'ltftel tiv Jalln M, A. t • • dlilld11al. Reagan said she looks forward 1111111-ss and P11nc11 M. '""""' 1111~no1 llobln.•Sln c11m.1111. c1111ornl•. tifn. 011w1 w. F•fll111011
t th end f h h band' 1nd wlft. lf:fldlnt rtll prOptrlY In 1111 Wlll1111'1 S. • H1nlon, 07 (Illa lloilte"' Ttrli llttitontllt Wit lllH Wllh Illa Coon·
O e O er US S ~Hy-111 Hilo. 51 ... _.., w-11,.,.,.,lllCll 10 llft_Cl•!l'ltfl.1'1-C•llt. ~· 1y a.r1t 11LOr111g1 Countl' Oii 5tp11mbtr term Jn 1974 "and a little more w1ilc1111 ll'llld• tor f!.H'llllr J111rtlc1111r"' 1nd DIN .. DI Mt, 1Jta. lndl•n1 Aw., 1, 1m.
I l. " tf\llt tM Time Ind PIK• ol l!ffrl119 ,... "'~'"""'"'' Cati!. ,ueu pr vale 11Tle together. u!flll rw.1 bMn 111,lor 0c1-r u. itn. •• ltl\'l'l"!Cllld "· Fna•n, 2m1 Piseo p 1111111t1tc1 0rino1 Coatt 0111'1' PUot,
t :OG 1.m .. In Iha ~l'Ollln of Olptlrl· T«fuoa, .Sin Jwn, Cllllt, Sllp!ll"blr 10, 11, 2A, Ind OCfClbtr I,
REAG "' HAS ed ment tto. l of 11kl ~. 11 10D Civic Tiit• WllntU It cond1,111;ttc1 tJY •n In-un 2111·7l
ft.I'( announc Center DrlYI Well, In ltll CllY of >•nt1 dl~I. PUBLIC N~CE
he W·n not f th'rd An•. C1ttloml1. Wllllam s. H•nlOll v 11 I run or a I 01194 s.ap19mr.r u. 1J7l Ttrl1 11tt1m1nt w111 1ueo wllti tM Coun· -=~~ term bu! she said she plans to WlUtAM E ST JOHff ty Cltrll of Or•~ COllnlY on Septtmlltf NOTICI 0" ,U.LI( M•AlllNO TO •• • (lll#lfy ci.ni ' .. 1rn HIL!I •Y· TMI OltANO• CDUNTT travel ,wdh him campaigning MOltTON • '<>OT• ;,,).()(. l'U.NMIMG COMMISSION OM Pl:O-for Republican candidates. , .. Cit! .... ~ 'l•u 11·2152' ,ROPotEO LAND USI OISTit1CT Mlt '#lhN .. •I..... 11'11!)illhtd Or-'011 Cot1I D.lollr Piiot CMAHOIS The daughr ol a stage ac-L• ........ c1111. ""' oc-1 ... u. n. ,,,., :xm.n P\lrw.nt "' ,,,. Pl•llftlnt .na ionrno
tres,, and Chicago brain Att.nlrtl .... """"""' ' L-. •• 11Mf'1111<1. •nd °'*" of 1n. , l"ubllm.o Qr,,.. Co11t Dllh' 1"11111. p BUC NOTICE Or~ County P11nn!1111 Commlnlorl, surgeon, Nancy was president s.pi. 21, ,, ll'CI act. s. 1m ,,..n U ""'1te I• ,..,.,. ""'" , ... 1 • llUWlc ......-.
Of the dr•-·"-tub t G. Is' tno wltl DI tM:kl by 11td Commhtklft on • ...,_w.; C 8 U" a 7JIP p1111 propol/... 111 '"""° 5ECT10ttAL Latin School Chicago and PUBLIC NOTICE 110T.c• To c11t•o1T01:1 01sTR1CT MAii's 11tw1 o1 1n. or.no•
majortd in drama at 'smith ,U.LIC NOTIC• ,:.,-~~~~~C~I =· z;:u:,s.~· •• amtndld. 0r-:-
Coll Northh .M Nolle.• 11 ,_..,.. 91-111 the C"'611or'1 hid ,ien II dlilftlllld CASI NO. ZC ege, amptoq, ass. ,ICTITIOUS •USINlll " JAMl!I GaAUl!f/t ..,. --YA\.Oflll> n.11 ''"CTIONAI. DISTJ:l(T MA ... lltS-1be 49-year~ld Mrs Reagan MAM• STATmM•NT OllAUEll. Tr111......,,... """°" ......... 51) lllO pr°"°'" ID cilll'IOI trom "" Al ' ' The totlowlno """°"" .,. dolno ..,....... 11 Dl\lt ltecllttllr' St., (Olll "Geftfftl AO'le11lt11r1I" Ohlrlct tv cc said her short-lived movie M1nes1 '" Mtu. c-1y or Dr•""-1111• of "C°"""""'"' cll'l\ll'lll"dll" DCttr'let. cir· """""· was "a &tArvrap" in· c A L1,0llMIA AUTOM061LI! 1.1· C•lllOmll, !Ml I IMA..,_ ...... lbllul 10 l1ln "°"""' lllcllted II the tDUtl'llllt COt• v~ QUIDATOAS. INC. 1145 NI W 0 Ir I Ill f'llde to Actat11 ,iNQlon R'"l'I" Inc., lllt' of (ypr111 Strfll 11'od P1lllldn 11.0lld terlude because "I got out of 8111111Y•r•. NIWPOl't ~ C.1lloml• Tr•n1i.ret. ~ MF,_. ~ 11 In 11111 Sant• AM H.i91ttt ., ... college and I ha~t-1owxLa ~· .. -· ~ tallfllnll.a '"'"VI• P1n'I~ Mllthn Vlljo,.CounlY . f/t ..... lllO rw: $tllte Afllt• Dl\-IMlll
-lGUOn-.........,.,_ " • " Or1119'· 5111• or C•IUorflle. (_~1fton. fellow 1 wanted to marry." CCll'W•Non. :s:us NIWPO"t •Olltl'f•rO· TM prOPll'tY i. 111 1r1n1..,,.ed I• -~-Piibll'Cl'ii~ ... tM 1tiow pro. Ntwp:irt eeecll. c.lllornll t'liMO, loc•llCI it llOJ NIW!*i 8oulevtrO. COlll POlotd '"" wrn ri..111tld 11 l:IO o.m .. or 11 T~l1 111."1""' 11 condl.ICltd ~ • COi'· Mt11. c-IV or °''""' 51•1• of iOOf1 in.rulter 11 p1111lbll, on Oc:lotlolf 15. WHEN PRODUCER Mervyn ""'"1°"Cro»on ., o.-1 c111iorn11. · nn. 1n tlN lll•rlno 11141 mt1t1"' room o1 _ . -·" nc. 5ald ·JIHPtrtY 11 ~r1Md In eeMl"t1 thl Or1ntt C-fl' '!111nl1"19 Coinltlllllon. Leroy afT8Jlged a blind dale '"' -'·,£.:. cr,•-,j,.'"~"',,'..,., 11: A.LI •fldt 111 lrldl, t111--. ....i..-nt ff19IAMl'l'PO •1,11141119, 400 Civic '"""" Ith n. N ·d h •lie '""'II! ••• _. 11'!11 .... Wiil Ill tlllt ~I •lflt1L on .... Witt 1toam i.-5-nl• An• w ""agan, ancy sa1 s e 1Y c11rk of Or•nte county °" s.ii1.m111r b\ltint11 known u .., ., o 11.eNTAL$ 1nd C•1lfoml• ;1 wlllch nmt'.,.. p111:e ,ii
knew "right away" that he'• im. -mn 1oc.11111-at··UOt-NIWPOfl a1¥d .. '°'" .,.....,... 1it11tr ••-1111 .,.'""'°''"' 111d
was Mr Right "He didn't -Pll011alllld Or•• cU.1 ~Ur" il'llot MIN. C-ty °' °'"""' s11•• 0' "'~ sUn wn1 DI "-'d. tt lt rr-. · ' C1Utoml•. QVttltd 11>81 1n., wntllll tflOCl"W to have a chance '' she said with seiiitll'lblr lS. 22. 29 and Ocroblr •· Tiit bl.Ilk """"' win • ~IM 1hl1 Pllbflc 11111c1 DI wlwftlltlll to 11111
a soft chuckJe,' ···but we waited im 21
•
11 ;:i °"i.~': ~,,:.1111 ::'" ;',gc:~~oi'.fr ::. '-'MkWI prior tit 1111 ,...,.
a year. · PUBLIC.NOTICE ESCROW sl!fltVICEL um 'r•l11• cOMl"llANCI! WITH THI! CALl,OR· .. _... $1111• e. T""lwt. c_,., of NIA EN\llll:ONMENTl\L QU,ALITY ACT1 . "Now when I look back," , 0r.,.... s11111 of 0111or1111. T111t ~11:1 11111 111en IOlltd 111 111 .. Ml she reminisced, "I can't even Jl'tc1TIOU5 •UllHISS lo , ... H k-.i to ... T~. Ill llVftllk•nl ....... •Ired lft 11'11 -NMll 5TAT•MINT ~ Mm& tnll ...,_ llMO by \'lr-*11 ....0 Ml b11r1 9rantld •
remember my Ille berore The 11111orw!"' w11111 11 doltG ._._, Tr-"'°"' tor 1111 w" "'" *' ,..11, MO•tlw dll:twltlon. A ~ of 11'11
be. ·ec1 I talnl 11: 1n: NONE. ....,.11.,.. 1Md1r.n. ""u M ..,, 1111 111 ,,.. ing marrt . cer y THE •EAO $HQ,, llt so. Qui o.llf: ""'""'*' L ,,,, offl0t of 11'11 (Mlty Cllrt. II S15 Hortll
can't remember my Ii f e Hl9flw•Y· LeDVM BH<ll, c •. ms1. AdObl ""'*"°" 11.1111111. inc. Syc1,,_11 SJr•· ..,._ AM,. C•Ulll'nt .. . . AMIM K. 1111tn11111. nu Dwwllfla ~.. ey: IJ. Mallr. '"""" 11:~ sen .'ofitbou.l being married to him. LllllUNI 9uc11, c ... nui T,,,.,...,.. A#'r¥ .:-tM'f ..-i ""nnoi111 111 •
f\.ty life began when l marrtM s-M11t111. '19 11· AMt. llfllllf aw : MlcflMI ''"*°"· Tr"1· M1Mt1w dlc:l.,•tllrl °"' nM,. 111 •PPM• a1 ,. . 'Tf" , fl:Kh! c.. mn. tre11thrll ""' rime 111'1«. 111 l!to p.m.. Mc.IO•v. him. -VI~. Ml-lU c-...t ••Y !"nftNltMI IMr# s-vla!t, Octobtt' •• 1tl'1. TM c-t.. (~ wll
Mrs. Reagan saifl she has ~~~ lMI-~~ ":'·, ,_,., .f~i .. ~11:,_ ,... ' ~ ~~.:l:'~1"' wt• ~
"very mixed emotions" aboltt ~o. ,.,,.,. -._...., .,,....,. , ... R"~. "°* pr111, 1n 1nttr11ttc:t w-,.,, l!l-
h -Id d hl p t M1._ "'· '" ~.,.. Ortttt1 Cal•' o• ·• ........ "'" to t1!1 '' '"" ot!IOt ot tllf or.,... er .w-year~ aug er, a -Tn11 ""'"""'' ••• "r.1w11111M·CO\ll'" oetQMr 1, 1m 3021-n c-rv ,..~,. c-1..ion .. ...,_,no ti, dropping out of USC to seek. IY Clll'k o1 <>r•noe C011nty on SaplwniMr ' 1111'-'hfll, ._ Civic: c.ri1 ... '~•w w"'· a job as an actress 21• ltn. , mu PUBUC NOTICE 11.oom 151, llln11 A1141, c1111orn11. """'
, Pllf)lltlltd °''"" C•tl Di lly . il'!lol :,'.d ~~1~ on ftle •nO 1v11\111h
• , OctotMr '· 1, u, n. 1m •·n •·nM'••< SAL• ,,.,..,, w •• ,1 .... , FIRST, SHE !&d, she s "c~1:~1:r J~•m mn1 .w111-.t 01,.;\lll' _,. *""rY
"ashamed" of the movie PUBIJC NOTICE TO WHOM 1T MAY coHCl!1tN1 ,~, '"'• 0.,111111_,c'll!~fY
b . hi h h le d Notte:. It htrlb¥ 91Wfl 11111 on Oct~ IM "' °'""" .. ""' . I us1ne!! w c s e con n s 1 im ,110•00 A.No. 1 oubllc .. 11 w111 bl Pvl'illW!ld Or•11111 eo..1 0111'1' 'llol.
has brought "the country P'ICTITIOltl auslNIU ~kl •' I•~ lr1,1lck, ins H•r"OCW; 8lY<1 .• Oc•ot>tr 1, irn llllOJ.n MA.Ml STAIM•NT C 11 A'-11 Cl 11 ..i1 for dal'I IM • down to the lowest common '!"' flllllowll'lt waon I• dlll"' bu~ln1u 1:ow1nt coi111 .. ~1. lit w11: PUBIJC NOTICE
denominator" with a fare of••· JIOMOMA AUTO aoov int .. _1 ,, •wkk """ ... 'Lie: No. UOG 133 • ' lollkl colllltrll 1191nt Mid to ..cl.IA Ill fffH sex and nudity. • ·~::'kl ':!iii. "'2~ .. llbll111tlon 1rt11111 undtl' .. rtt•ll ·~· NOTK:• 011 •NT•NTION TO Second she said ''Uke every Teuil• $1n J~ '""'"~ 011.::: llllmllnl HeurllV 19'""'!'!..~:"°.:r-' Clt•ATI Sl"CUlllTT INTlll•ST ' ' Thi ~ 1 eonOUchlO .... I ' 11111 contr1c!J htld llY _... Ol'1 lfKJ •1t141f7 U c.c) mother, 1 hope she finds the dlvhl~I llftA 1 vr In n-Ae<epl1nct torw•tlOll •I 11C11rtc1 party, NOTICE ,; IM•eby ~lven° lo !tie
right fellow and gets mar· TlllOdore 0 , M11t1r-lllld• ptltllk 1111 111 to ~ ~~:;:'. ·~ Crlfdl•or1 of cv11...,NO.HfWl'OllT, LTD., 'ed ,, Th11 1111tm1n1 ... n1eo wu11 tne c---"' ro Ille '""' ,. 1 11 ... 119'! ~"""•hip, DIO!Qr, ~ r1 . "' Clttk ot Or1noe CtuntY on Septembtr (•Lltorfll.I. 0-.11 Mo!O'I AcctPttrw;e D\ltfl'll$1 lldO•ffl IJ d-0 HIWllOrl c;tnltr A woman of Strong con· 1, 1•n. COt'POI""" ~"°" ~ tM l1fltt 10 bid •1 on ..... NfWPlll"f a.-c11. c°"'""' of Oransie, ,..,. • II.. Sl•tl DI C1Htornl1, ll'lol I MCVrlty In·
victions, ?ttrs. Jl,eagan said she il'lltlllshlcl Ot•not Cot•' Dtlh' ~11o1, TM i:'11hlr•~ ~ ... ~e':"~~.t~~os'T'! """1 Is 111ou1 to bt crNtlO b'I' °""°" believes youiig Pe 0 PI e ""''"'w 10, 11. "" 1M10 OC!Oblf ,, ~ .. SA.~• • ;ciEor?"'i":c '°s.c::Al!TNA· emtMl!ss • un t7J&.1J Ol!NEltAL MOTOll.5 -' " vrtd il'irty, wtwi.e 'desperately want a return to ACCl!PTANC'E CORl"ORATION ~~-~ ~Oil~~..:.,": moral values, a return to PUBUC NOl'ICE il'1111111111c1 Or~ Cot11 o.ny Plllit. lot Anotl.a. sratot DI c.111orn11.
spiritual values and a return Odobtr 1• im '°25-J; Tiie ..,. • .,.,. 1" Wltlcfl ttw 5tc:\1ttl't'
.'-.,-•s OUSIOOU lnllol'tU wlll DI CrNled I .. In ..,., .. , 111 to selr-respect. NAMJ:fVsTAT•.UNT PUBIJC NOTICE tllll\lr" ..i •'-'· 1vm1111te .,.. "Everything has become loo Tht 11111ow1111 flll'llll'I 11 dol"' """"'" flltnhlll"9• or Dlblor ~ ... """'"" " ., , 11: lllC'TrTIOltl •UtlMISI lllW locthlO II .00.D Hftl'llll'f Cll!llr easy, ahe said. Its too easy c. f/tOllltT NATTJ:ESS lll!AL ES. NAM• nATl:M•NT 0!1 .... N= 811Cll. c-rv DI OJ ..... to hop Into bed with someone. TATE c;o.. 279' KlrtMlr lt.d •• CO.I• TM lol1owlno --It dolllO buslntU Sllfll ol C1 ltorl'!ll, •!Id Ml""" t..""'1 II , Ma.I. C.lllOl'Tll1 f2'2lt 11: C'l'ltAH~E'WPOftT, LTD. It s too easy lo get an abor· CIM!rllt ltoblrt N•llrftl *' Vt1t1 CRUISE GUILD 01' ORANGE (OUN· TIMI •111'-ld lletlH'lTy lr•~tfCflon -111 tion It's too ea!y to get a 0rn.o.. N-por1 •HC.11. c.'11tornt1 nuo TY. 2121 C11'T1Q11s 0r1 .... , $1,11!1 "E", bl• i_Ol'IMlll'ltr11'!1 on or 11111' 11'11 12111 ..., • ·""-Th1J t111.inH1 11 condw:IH by an In-lrYlnt, C•. nM-1 .,...tOblr, 1t••• 11 10:00 '·"'· fl AETNA divorce. Lire was not meant to dlviOwl. A1tlilCllllO Tr1vt4 SerYlc•.. Inc., IUSINESS CJ:EDIT, INC., 1'00 Av-of
be. that easy tr Clllrlff ll:otltrt N•ttrn1 Cllllornl1, 21t1 Cll'!IJlllS Ori .... , Swlt. ~ ..... s~'r· $11111 lCIDCI, Lill Al\QllM,
' Tiii• 111t1n..nt WH llled wllfl"" c-"&.", lnrlM. C1. n.... .... '"' to041. IV Cllrlo. °' Otlnet (Wnty on lepltrnl>tir ~,.,,, bllt!MH I• CCll'ld\Kttcl by • (Of• so fir ••• """"' IO !Ill SIClll"tld 1"1rty,
111E REAGANS' h nd U lt73 pcll'lllon ltl bl,n!MH "lrnH •nd ICldt"lt1 llMO llv a some ' "'91N AMOC111ed TrlVll S1rvlte1. Inc. IM Debtor lor Ille lhrM '(Mtl 1111 pill, Georgian-syJe home Of While .Jlubrl1tltcl Or1noe Coatt 0.11¥ PllCll. il'1lrlcl1 Srumn'I ir11 C'l'ltl\NO'S ltl!STAUltANT, ..0 • · f · l • Stlltffl'lbtr f7 U. 1nct OtioOll' l I Corp0r1I• Stc:rtl•r, NtwPOl"t Ctnhlr Drl~•• fll-POrt ... th, brick ih a ash1onab e sechon itn • xU.ri Thti ,11111n1111 ..... 111tc1 wi111 111e COlln· C011n1Y of 0r1noe. c1111om111. or Sacramento i! quiet this ly Clerk of Or•l!Ot COllnlY on Stphlmber DATliO: Stpltmblr U. 1•73. a ltn AETNA •USIN!St CllfDIT INC. year with l!>-year-old Ron oU PUBIJC NOTICE · · ,..mu sEcu11:Eo '"'"T"' · t bo hoo' · '1.1111111'4-d Dr•noe COlll ~11'1' Piiot llmtrll M, •loek. A1tl, Stc::r9'1ry at a pnva e ys SC ~ 1n FICTmout •U"Ml5S Oclllbtr 1. I, n. 22, ltn )01 .. 73 A•TMA •UllNISI Cll•DIT, INC. Los Angeles MAM• SfATIMINT ,..,, OtOc• ... Min
"It killed rT.e -not to have Thi 1111tow1no Pl'r-11 dlll111 11tu11nt11 PUBUC NOTICE ~""T .. owJ11i ""4
him rwuling around l he .. , F•ll'lllY Trtl Glltt. t"Ollllllln ~fllty P'ICTITI0\11 •UtlNltS ~'!° ,J;•l'PO• (Mt! Otll'I' .::'.':i
house" laments hi! mother. """' Sll:lrt Ho ... 11120 ·~-11., NMll ITATaM .. NT • . . ,-_111n v.11.,,. c.111. t270I TM to11ooi11+no ,,..._ ''' 4ol111 PUBLIC NOTICE Despite the !Ohtude, Cah· onbtrl ,. kulthtf, -uKS 51n11 11us1nm. "' i---===~===---fomia's First La .... ha& plenty )119n1M Clr .. FOlll'll1ln VltltY. C1Mf. COUHTllY ll'lloouGE. ls.ti Tlft1ny lllCTITIOUt 8UllN•SI
"'' ,. . t1711 "tct, i.rit11 AM. C.llf. tZ1l5 -NAM• STATIM•NT to keep her busy. She 1ii Thi• lMlllffl ft eondllcltd by In In• Mtrlt Petit """"""" 2.uf N•OOll TM folllwlntl PttMlllS ... Oolnt butllltl a staunch supporter of the cll\l'ldMI w1w. "°''' MtM, c.e111 •. ~ 11• · G. '· lllll<lllf ltottr Cllfflft G•ll• 15"0 Tlflll'l'I' , COSTA MUA CORAL REEi' ~ Foster Grandparent Program, Tt111 tt1111Mn1 wet fl.IH wtltl tM c-"'*-• 1en111 AM. Ctlff. tms H•rDOr 11¥11 '•" ,,.,... c1 .,U.
pends a Jot ol time v1siUna ty Clltk rf Orenot COlll'lf\' on kpflf!'llltr Thl1 bllt!MU 11 ttnNettcl W • e-11 CHr•rO M," H-. s.10 lhNlfl NI s ":! .. 1m ... flMrllllp. It, lot """""· Cl l'CIOt7 • '
·.~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
•1
1 1"'0 ""'"' """'"' .... 1'"1 ·Children Lear11 From Adults Tuesday '5&-soph11 L11rt11. AlltM»IJ Ptr·
hospital! ,and has a~y 1up-h11111111d Of•llOll Clllll 01(1y "=. Thi• .~~·~~.-wllll IM c-. C:~'=· ~n. "Z~~l101 c1n ... ported progra~. for .P"SOl'!en $tptofflblt 2', Ind 0c1o11er '· u, 211, im 1y c111r1r. ot or1"" county on St11ttft'lt11r Tl'lft t11111neu 1; coiM.11eted 11y 1 ,._..,
of war ·and nusstnit m actlOl'I. m1.1J "· ''"· • °'"""""''·
When the first POWs return-,t11>111111d °''"" .(O.l•t 01,11.,.11·:: T111t :t:f::nf-w~:~': 1111111 1111 c1vn-ed home and Mrs. Reagan PUBUC NOTICE OdDbll' 1, 1, u. tt. ttn )Ol•n IY c•n ot °''""' eoun•w on ~,,..,.. ' f • '
IMYTIME MOVIES
:oo ff7 m '1ttn1.I ,, • totd" (111)1) •1 '42....:otto Kru1t1. nn1 lh•ytr,
l"JO fJ {C) "k®1U" (Id~) '61-
Newlllt 8r1nd. Peter 81own.
CJ) °'CurM tf Ult Wtrnoll" (!ICM) ~-tlinOfd [,IM. Oliwtf Rttd. 0 "HIM1w11 Clrt" (mul) '47-
M1rth1 Raye. Robert Cumminp. II "Didi TrK(1 Olt.• .. • (mys)
·Tt-Ror,. '"'· ...., ""' I DJe?"' (d11) '60 -Terry Moort,
Dtk• hret.
kll\1. GI (C) '1.1!111 LMrs" (~IT\) "53
-l1111 Turner , Ricardo Mont1lb111.
J:OO (I) "Wt!\ lillt • Or1io11" (drt) '60
-lack Lo1d. Me! Torm•.
lli (Cj "Tht Qr11t l•P19tet" (d1a) '61-:--Tonr Curlis. Edmo!ld .O'Brltn.
l:JO at CI'l (C) "Jol.lmty ti tM ftt ifii• II tht 51111" hcl·ll) '6t-lto, ThinMS,
4:00 E IC) ..,.., L•" • ...,,-(com)
4:JO S.111 a IDAM htllt1 l !J1J>oual•s. Jrlltrl l'ilfnor.
Cll ""'7 ............
inpf'q.......()rson WtlltS. lltl HIJ·
-~ KOCE TELEVISION LOG
J:fl Ml'*" tt .lJt (CJ L.uon 4 IL.A COHIOltTIUMl A11 edlle:1llt1"41 lrf
IW«:l•tlon C-t4 tor tollt9<1 CtWfl. q TIM s.tll9ll (CJ 11' (il'8l)
<t:OO Id MM ......... (Cl LtUO" ] fli:OCll "lttfM!T'bM1.,. t ~ d
1111',..i'llnt" ~ .6o .... IOI'~"' -
Htw .. -'-"*"' ~JO llitf:trlC c...,.11, ICI ttl !CfW\ A toof _...., vltlll Wllllolt IM
wtem•lo.tr bK.VM M ..,.,..,. l'O Do/Y
-of WHb\11''1 -'rO •lld wl'-' w!o1 -I" • IHMlll on -01 W ln"I"" wffll t"" ltf ...... .,,.. ' S.00 14'U-5trfff jCI JOI (ClW!
' 00 Tiiie 0,.f c-c'°""' fCI •-• !IUl9Cl '»II-Or..,. <iwfl'Y CCI ICOC•I "Alttlfloll1m •""1: lofe Otlvl119''
...,., Jt"' c-"''"'...... ,,,. o•owl"ll PAO!tl'l'I of •lclll'IOI •M drtvr,.._ I.DO T'1tS frt•I c...-C ... hltl f(I
L-i '"' coac1 "~dWrt\ttl'lf: $l>OW ll'cf f.il" S9t 111""' IOO•Y•
'"''"'"' )I. •I •~00 p,m , 11»+-•"" Cllllth' i. W•tl'll~fl"' !Cl lllOCll All tb Con<Jr"'"""n •et1·
r11ff'll"11 Orlnte C-ly 1••1 pa•I in Cf.-dld Olt(ll&l•llf' on ClllllllY pt0bh1m1, w!lfl moclt•fl(llr J tn1
CCIOINf. I.DO T ..... Art!!( Tll•t tC) 2.U !11'15) TM 111•mor. to vie, !191\1 on In. ,,,,,r•dou1 M11n1 ol lwo •rtl!c
••lll0t"'·" ltO "'In.I
OIClr HW Onlutl'I ftflt!t on ""''!Int ""' num""• l, '· lo Oii 1111 lfo-n cttn vnlll o.r-'-111 him '"~'
t1ne1 ~"""""'' l'tfl Pffl'49 wn•• • ~ It'°" tO IN'f' Cl" vhl! •rod W"d fNlll. TOOf'\l't .,_ -f~ Tiit ~ llM"" J .iid H ....0 tllt 11111n0tt 11,t UO ml11),
I JO Al M•11 •n.-11 ICI L•-J
rcocli "lltmtn'lotri"O '"" 'o'" Otflll'ICI" IM ll1ttn9 r~ty. kfll.
?ti!!, •! 1 DO pm. llO min),
EVANSTON. 111. (API -·
\'oungslers can benefit from
living in communes with
aduhs. two pediatri c
resea rchers say.
Their article In the Sep-
tember issue or ttto journal
Pediatrics say!J communes
·"can provide Important ad·
vantages that few nuclear
families are ln a posltlon to
give."
AMONG OO'llER things. the
study says, commune Jiving
gives children a healthy at-
tilutle toward sex. •
The chlktren studied in 20
communes visited by the
researchers "rtlated to sex ss
!l(lmethlng lntuntln« .1Dd en·
joyeble but not of central Im-
portance," the article said.
In two of the four groups
lhat had a numbtr or olc!er
children. It said. 11e.xuallly wias
expressed early and actual in·
tcrr.our.ie: occurred between
mq,st youngsten by the age of
I or 6.
THE AUTIIORS are Charley
ivt. Johtiston , a medical stu,
dent, and Dr. Robert W
Deisher, his faculty director 1
of the UniversltY. of
Washington Oepartmt.llt of
Ptdlatrlcs.
heard Capt. Jeremiah Denton tlwa PUBlJC N011CE u, ttn. l"H'IM
say "God Bless America'' she -il'vtttllt>ttl °''ntt coa11 D•Hr ,.,lot,
said : "I just couldn't stand It. NOTIC~J\::11::':.:i:T:,.••11111 ,ICTITIOUI IUllN•ss ~tmbtr "· ,4. lnol OclCIOtr .!~ ... ,•,· NAMI ITAT•M•NT -l said tD Ronnie lf T can't get J. w1L•u11: a~11M, o•t•AtlD TM toik>wlno "''°"' ,,.. dol119 PUBLIC N-CE
d h I'll Na!ltt It 1'111'.W llllvtn! . Mll'lllt•ll , v.11 my arm1 aroun I em ex· T• '" ,.,_ 1nior111ed. ~thlf •• THI •uFPIT ns21 11•-o. y11u1-,.,,,.,,.., ••••"••
lod .. crtclllort. 1Milr1, 11911-. 0t dtYI'"" Ill ... ' ........ ~ " 5 p e. tM Hllll lf_J, WILIUll llt;ISM, dlc:ll... ~••• U9Vfll HH1t, .,.,If, ••-NAMI ITATmMIMT ed, whot4 litt lddm• •It '•lrlcli J-ll'llltolt, I~ Cll:l•r TIW lint. Thi tollowllll Wt9ll le !IO!nt Mlftltlt
Ganftna. PwQklll Ntw TOl'k '°"" 11111 tnrl""' c..111. nu.rt ••1 THE REAGANS were ™-la ~•u ltll•ITllftli.;. or " tOmlnl••r•tlon CMflOll t . trit1.1011. 1ma C101t T111t TlllJll'llt CAllt TO' CAM1'1!1l', 15112
at four partlts at their home ~ .... """' lawlll II ~AMII w. 111.llH, y,... '""'"" CiHt. tau.rt .... ''""' Mltw1y City, Ctllt ..... Jib by """"""' COllrt W.ltftlldtr Tlllt .. ,.... II C'Olld1,ir;MILDI' I 111111'11 llty M. 'l&n Yjy~. IG'IG HOlborll ~ here tor lhfl 250 POW• return-counrv. • COIM'I °' .,...,.;" J111rtM11ct1ori oartMrtM, HW111"'""' 8..cPI. C1111. '™' ··
ed Calif . and 1.•~ or "" Stitt " Ntw Ytftt, Clllloll •. '"''-• Ttlll Dull"'" It COlld«tld O'I' an ""' to Of"lllll IWll. TJlll 11'11 fo!llWflll ,.,w.11 lttftbllil II Thlt.lltlifMnt·-"IN 'fl'llll IMC-111\llMI,
Reagan said "l did get my • hetd1111 ,.,_.1 flNIPll'fY "."" 11141 "' c1M1 llf 0r.,.. CM11, WI Stotlmbll' " .. H. "'" WYlt summer of 1972. lllCMIM· .. 1t1' Thi• "''""'"' -filed w1111 '""' ~ arms 1roond each and every 1~ """" • L-AMOC * ,..,. " c1111r; ot or..,,. c-tr on s."."""
Johnston vi.sited 20 com-
munes ln Oregon, Washington
and Britlsb Columbia In lbe
Communes have made 1 re-one Tl was one or the most "'• u-. Nf'lllllllll"I hlcll. e.i. .. """'tf'llll ~ coaJt 0111y P11o1 '· 1tn. t · Amert ' TMr !hi ••ttiwi Olllflt ,. l'9Cllw 6i:loblr 1, •· u. tt. ttn JQ0..1J ,_ cell reappee.n.nce m • moving experiences of my "" 11111 ,.;;_.., Pl'OMl'1Y .,. co111ci "" ..,~rilled if'""' C0111 D•Hr ,ooi. can society, he notes. and the Ji(e" c1e1m10 .,.. .. ,.... 1t111t COllll<ttd °" PUBUC NOTtCE 19~1'11'1W • "· u. 11111 Octo111r 1.
advintages vary from one to · f'IClll'lld "°°'" "" 5i.t. " c.it111'11Ml 1D ~11tr•n
another. All. he S8y!J, have -PUBU~ ~O'TICE :"' .. .'.Sn:i~=IMl"'!"'...!'1~=.'·"' '~r~~A~~==r PUBLIC NOTICE • ·-· h d.ff.cult' l'ICTlflOUS aliitNIU All ,,..._ """""' tllll'M 1t11n11 "" ,.,.. flltllMll11111 OlflOlll ,,. CIOl"ll---=='°'""'=-----eOne l1ul)llg I I LCS. NAM• ITAT•MINT d«IOllll ... '" I~! If! 11141 "'''' llftcl ttnlnttt ltl ,,CTTT10US'1UIUtlSI Thi lotllwlno l*Mlll 11 dol.l!t bu$1MU WIJll!nt ID l&lld 111 llldl~ll """'' P'Sf/tltAllD .. Jot-INS ENTl.llWSes. . MAMI ITAT•M•Nlf
BUT HE SAYS 1 un.-"' OI ... woltten lioflct ef Wdl eblfC11on IO U1 Dtf\111 A.,.,, 'Conn& -.I NW, Tl'll foilewlntt --II dlin9 llull11nt • • • nu'Cre 109811! 8Ullfll5 f.NTf"PRISfS, Dll "" ,,.,_ ot ,..,Miit llldebfftd '°" II' c.t1Uoml1 tU2$ . -.. : --mai:jor difficulties have been H••• 11\'d., ~t· .... Cot!• ""'*'· llllNlno ptrMlllll '""'" °'' "" Otc• "'"" o. Jelw. QI D1n11., 'C.rtn. lllNITJlOH COMfOAHY. •10 l'••k Ct. 'UM tint, Sl!'(ll no!IU nwtl 0t •'-It IM del #M, C.llfllfflll t1m Hftllotl, "-!, .ftll tMM1 11'.0. 11111 1M1 overcome and the commune 10bfll1 avm.. "°° Le .-.11""'° .. ""°" 110kl•111 "" wtOnll P'tM•IY or Ttri'T ,.,,..,.. ms •1tc11.1oo1 A..... Ntwo0r1 •ffCll. C• ,_ members have been able to ll'M,111t1!n v1111n. C1. No. 20 .,,,. 101ln11 whom tM cl11m I• '"'°' 1f ttw . J111e~•· c.tlflnlhl m10 . Ollrl" V11Mr111k1, AOtO , , , 11
I Tl'llt IMI-11 (Olldll(f" lry 1n ln. edl:lrftt ., ll tlld Ibo ... wtlllln : tlllt b\lllntll It condl.lctllJ tly I llt"ftal NtwpOrt, Apt. A2ll. C.llF. t7* realir.e some of the potentla dlYrM1. JO 1).1.VS •It.<' flnt fll.lllllc1uon of 1111t ptr1111r1h11. .Tiii• '""'....,' 11 ~\ICIM tJY '" 1 ... '-ta f I ~·Id hObfl •11·~· llOlke. Tfl'rv FtrPll'I dlvlfllll, auvan ges O communo "'u 'ftiti •••i.rnt111 w11 111«1 whn 1111 Colln· DATIO; ltttlmtllt' •· 111:1. TN•'''~ w .. ftltd w1111 IM Ctuft. . 1 ~rl• \ltf!lf,11tk.I rcaMng, the reward has been IY c11r11. o1 Or•nee cowt111 on s..t""btr 5i.ntd: J •int• w. 1r1,n. Jt, "' <;ltrll "'Or.,... caun" on hpltM1llf '"'' 1"111tmen1 n1..:c Wllfl tM c111~••
Chl.ldren •·ho demonstrale ••If '· 1m. A• .t.olnlftlsfr11or of "" 1A. 1tni Cltrk 9f Ortl!Slt Courtly WI '-"'"'*" , .. .,.. l'nn& , E1111t o1 J. w111111r lrl1h ''"'' 1•11 confidence. openntss. w1rmth , .. 1t1otrtt0 °'"''' c .. ,, 0.11, ll'llot, D11:111H '"""'"* OrlMIOI eo.11 0.111 1"1111 ...-»" ind•··-•enc< and maturi ty."'.,.,._...., 1a. u. 11. 1110 OCltll'f 1, Pvll!lll!td Otlllfl coa11 0111, PllDI tepttlftbtr o. ''· 1nc1 Oc10t11t ,, 1 ~1 .... °''"" C•t o.i1y "lot ti"'.. lf1) e -)1tf.J) Sept, I• Intl Oct .... 't». 2t:J0.1J 1m .,...,,..,, Ot.IOOll' I. " u. "· 1t11 )01).U
•
· .
)
• ' •
'
• DAILY PILOT ~
--. ~
The Bluest Marketplace on the"Orance Coast ~fmenh , • , • •• , 500 • .5'24
Automobi~, . . • • • • • • m ~ m
loan & Mo11ne (qi.Ii""""' 900 • 9W
lmploymt." • . . • • • • • 1QCI -m DAILY ·p1101 CLASSIFIED ADS ,_SOl"IOh. , , , , , • • • • Sll • ~
~.chi_~ .... ' .IS0-89f
Real Ettate Gentd. • , , • ISO • t99
flnan<iol . , , . , • • • , 200 • 299
Hou!ln f0r Sole . • • • •• 100 • 124
loit & fo..nd .•. , , •• SSO -S74
/"''""""""· .•. '.' •• IOO ....
You· Can Sell It, Find It,
Trade It With a Want Ad (642~5678] 1 One Cal I Service
Fast Credit Approval
a.nrol . . • .. • • • • ' • • 300 -.,,
Schook ond Wtn.iction' • , • 575 • W9
*•"" and bpojrl • • • .jlOO -699
lfW'llflOI'~ • • • • • •• '9tS • 949
~-------------ERROR~;:.;o;,,dd1:.;~
ad1 dally & repcrt error• lmmtdlately, The
DAILY Pl LOT a11um11 l11blllly for lhl first
lncorr1ct lnsert"eon only. ~Genaral
I~
"'en•r•I Gene".' a I
nflnJa Jj/e
PRESTIGE WATERFRONT HOMES
SHOWN BY APPOINTMENT
Linda Isle Waterfront
Custom 4-bdrm., 41h. bath home on lagoon.
FullY. equipped island kitchen, waterfront ·
family room, billiard room . . . . . . $245,000
A Ui'liff)UI: 1i001:
IN NEWPORT RIVIERA -Condominium
with vaulted ceiling, top location, 3 bed·
rooms, family room and pool privileges. Ex-
cel1ent buy at $35,500. A listing of Janet Leh· than. -
UNIQUE HOM~S Realtors{ 645-6500
1649 Westcllff Drive, Newport Bffch
General General
* *' * * * * * TAYLOR CO. *
BIG CANYON-$129,500
Beautiful 6 Month NEW Palos Verdes stone
& stucco home. Sectirity entrance into love-
ly private Country Club area. Choice _loca-
tion w/view of area & golf course. 4 Bdrms-,
FR & formal DR$Car garage. Hurry!
110ur 21th Yur"
WESLEY N. TAYLOR CO., Realtors
2111 San Joaquin Hlll1 Road
"Overlooklng c Bl9 Can,... Country Club"
NEWPORT CENTER, N.B. 644-4910
General -·
$21,950
Erultsldc Costa ~feaa -R-2
wned - l Bedl'OOll\ -1 Bath
-Cot~e -Dont Y>alt or
you'll be too late--Call
COL\VELL &16-«l55.
LOVE IS · •••••••
For Compl•1e Information .
On All Homes & Lots~ Please Call :
\\bat you'll fl'el \\'hen )'Ou
see this attractive home.
Uke new -3 )T. new.
Professionally landscaped.
Totally upgraded, 3
Bedroom. Family Room,
f'irepl!LCE', BuUt-ins \\ith
self-cleaning (ll!nn.
Beautiful brick planteT'S,
shutters. etc. In high de·
mand section of Huntington
Beach. Don't miss 1ttlng
this one it you're looking fOt"
a home to enjoy. You'll bl' 1;~1!!'.;t:::::~;~::::::'l~G~e;ne;;;re~I~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; General irurprised at what you ~et Gen.rat General ---------1 for $46,500. Call COL\VELL
6f6..-055:>.
BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR •******************le LA CUESTA VILLAS
341 Bay1lde Dr., Suite 1, N.B. 675-6161 UNDER BL\JE SKIES • BEAUTIFUL NEWPORT I d' Oc I~!!!"'!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!• I mm• 1ate cupancy General General Two spacious custom built new 4 BR., 3 BA. On Credit Rejecuo115
homes. -Finest in the area, super clean
YOUR CHOICE
3 BEDROOM TOWNHOUSE -Nice family
location. 2 Baths, built-ins, double garage w/
-storage cabine£s, clubhouse & pools. Easy
Jiving. We have 2 to choose from. Price
$24,500 & $24,850.
OWNER IN FLORIDA
SHARP 3 BEDROOM home with new carpets •
thruout. Assumable FHA loan, no qualifying
or ne·w loan charges. Vacant. $28,950.
--,~,,. HERITAGE
REALTORS'
540-1151
01>9n Eves.
friendly location.
OPEN SAT., SUN :, MON. & TUES 2-6 P.M.
1801' Santiago Dr., NB
1600 Harrow Pt., . NB
"--"" I 64S-n21 VI llU"'211133 WESTCLIFF OR.
~ NEWPORT BEACH
~*****************~
Not A Condominium
Your ne\V home has 3 BR 2
BA, living rm plus llUGE
tamily room. The detached
2 car garage is separated
from )'Our home by a d~ ligbtfully private backyard.
You create your own patio
entrance, but we do all the
n"Sl: ~enc.ing, lanJscaping
and sprinklers.
Choose carpet &. noor tile
HURRY
~'-1 •• l1M Go"•n;;.;•c..•a"l-----1 ~er• VILLAS by AYRES
NEW LISTING EXCEPTIONAL $30.490
l!!!!!.,.;.,.!!l!!!!!!!.,.!!!!!!""'!!!""'!!!!!!!!!!!!~ EicepUonally cute t w o
bedroorn home on the nicest General General lot'.._yoo have-ever ~n!
CONDOMINIUMS M~~" ':,,. °":.~ ~v'H:,,,~'
l"'=='------1 ~=.;;.;.. _____ large trees and shrubs and
KISS YOUR ------paUo. ''"'"" R·2. 1 ......
LARGEST 3BDRM: CON· ington Beach
OOMtNtmt, \VITII LGE.
FMflLY RM . HUGE
CORONA DEL MAR
ltl.'11 I A...,T COA...,T Hl(,HllllA\I
644-7270
INVESTORS' CORNER
In excellent rental area close
to large shopping center.
TWO SEPARATE
B1'1LDJNGS: Eight -- 2
bedroom unfurnished: Eight
- 1 bedroom furnished.
Large heated pool, cover'l!d
lanai, ping-pong and 1huf·
lleboard. Call f o r ap-
pointment. $220,000.
644-7270
General General
CHARMING TOWNHOUSE
ONE STORY END UNIT -featuring 3 Bed·
rooms, 2 baths, oversized.. patio & new car.
pets & paint Spacious grounds with beauti-
ful pool & landscaping. Lots of trees, ocean
breeze in quiet adult ·only community. Per-
fect location near Ne\vport Back Bay. Priced
only $39,000.
MESA VERDE
FIXER·UPPElt
SAVE$$ $-Do your own cleaning, decorating
& minor repairs on tl)is 3 BR., 2 BA. borne. -
Large added family room, perfect for pool
table, teenagers, etc. Vacant; neglected &
ready for your inspection. Call us for fur\her
details.
-·'.#>HERITAGE
. . REALTORS
General ~
SPANISH
2 STORY
MANSION
$35,500
IO!ll.\I I. Ol\O \
Rt -i,·o;.,
546-SNO
Open Eves.
Gtner1I
WATCH THE
SAILBOATS!
Great view -CU1tom built
hon1e. Plenty or bedroom.a
plus workllhop, study, and
huge fartt\ly room . Neu
your bee.ch. y 00~ the
land. Price(!-\\'ithln reuon
6T.l-8Sii().
QPfN TIL g • "'S AJN 10 BE NICE!·
LANDLORD ONLY TWICE """""" '" pa<ha" three uni~. Sec It t<>!lay! cio.. to
GOODBYE A YEAR H•-High. 131'.900-
PATIO HAS SHUF· * 536-1445 *
F L E B 0 A R D COURT, I"!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!"" I LOOATED ON PRETl'YI" ACREAGE ~--=·=··::O::::::::::::::\iU.::::::::;-;i.~~ IN HEMET Sale or Liesi/Option Newport HelC)llts
TIME FOR
QUICK
CASH
""t" about how oflen NEW DUPLEX•. A.pd become one! 2 bedroom a house on Lincoln Lalie
Mme plus an income unit comes on the ·markeL Don't Be!it buy in C.d.M. _South of
above the large double niiss a cll8.11Ce' to see this • Hi~ay, W8.lJc to shops and
garage. 1 block r r o m bedrooms \\ilh formal di.mp& beacD, $9,500 annual lnoome
Newport Bench Yachtin~ room on pool size lot •• NOw _ uklng only $109,000.
Lam. Great huy -ju.0:1 val!ant for qui ck
reduced to $64,500. Call poMe~sion. $79,SOO. FIXER UPPER! ~~'[';.rr.,t1NroBE"""' PETE BARRETT Oruy """"' "T.L.C.".
tR IWa1H'll --.. ~ .. : .. _ .. R .. 1 .. ~.2! .. ! .. ~ .. ~-~-= .. ----1 E~~~~~~-~~
-EVER SToLEN A-NE~.;?TRJ .:'~HTf Call 675-7225
DUPLEX? Cute 3 BR. 2 BA Doll House
Try this: two 2 bedroom \\'ith H&F pool, gas bltna,
units -double garage · in· fplc, fam rm. O\\'ller v.·ants
come of $3750 per year. Ask-fast sale! Open .House Sun
lng $35,95-0 try )'OUr .. n 1·5, SOS San Bernardlno or
price owner st!YI sell! Call call Brk. 645-6046.
Red carpet, R e a 1 I o r s p'I-. 64a.SOSO (open C"Ve'ningsJ CI.ASSlFJED ....... OO~:xi111
General G,neral
LA CUESTA
-SAVE $6,000-
Popular La Cuesta .'.'San l~•!lilliijiijlliilifilil;~I Miguel" model. Snve $6,000 over cost of new model.
Tv.'O stories. H a n d s o m e
-NEW-AWAR1>-WINNING-C:ONDOS
Choice of , models, location. decor. Near
teMis courts, pool. Excellent terms, trade,
lease/option. Prime example : 3 BR. $72,500.
Bob Yorke
CHOICE EMERALD BAY
3 Yr. old Spanish 4 bdrm.; charming lanai/
BBQ . Panoramic view. Use of tennis courts,
pool & private beach. $275,000. Pat Hug/
Ellcen Hudson
INVESTMENT OPPORTUNITY
4-Plex in West Newport Beach. Steps to
ocean & channtil. Compare, then buy!
$122,500. Call Dean Kring
SAILS & SUNSETS
Immaculate S bdrm., family & dining rm.
home. 962 SANDCASTLE. Reduced for quick
sale. $88,500. Marie Bush.
COZY FAMILY HOME •.
Lovely 4 bdrm. & fam. rm. Just decorated,
with a quiet. private garden o(f master BR.
Prestigious liarbor View Hil1s. $86,000. La-
vera Burns.
CORNER LOT WITH PIZIAZZ
Spanish brick exterior .
Formal dining room. 4
spaclou11 bedroo1ns. 3 baths.
Beautiful newer beach area.
Try to match this for
$49,9.:(1. Call 8U-2J3j.
G!l-EE''BELT. nllS HOME 4000 Sq. ft.
15 ELEGANT!! $1"'00 Corona, del Mar ·1.LEVn LINDA ro, tl>ose who .,_,.,,
FIRSI' TIME PFFERFD. fine custom construction and
VERY Jt,\RE 3 BDRM. excellent terms. 5 bedrooms,
BLUFFS, ALL ON ONE family room, fnrmal dining
LEVEL. LOVELY r.oom, lai'i,~ ganle room
SECLUDED PATIO, ON and a ~lo!"ious panoramic
BEAUTIFUL GREEN· ocean view.
BELT. $69,900. PLUS
1 Removal of one non-structur.
.PLEASE CALL · al partition expands ~e 675·3000 gamo room h> • full ~
m 11.n ,\ 111:.\t'll
111:.u:i ,. 1:\1'.
ES' 1,1Q b7S J020 J
* 59'x290' LOT *
C-1 ZONE
$32,500 E-Z TERJ\IS
* Corona de! ?\Iar DUPLEX
-168,500
rumpus room.
AND
80% financing curmttly
available at approx. 8~%.
Tdp value at $155,000.
CALL 644-nll
~NIGEL·.,.
nAILEY f,,
ASSIJCIATES
LEASE •
EXECUTIVE
VIEW HOME
Acreage, Z-P zoning. Approx. Or, O'\vner \\ill lease thi1 OPEN DAILY l·S
12 . acres with .P I~ n 1 ~ely 2-sty. Peninsula Pt. 1584 Redlands, <oH 16th Sl.)
available for 100 unit apart· home. 3 BR. 1 plui family 4 Bdrm, 2 bath hOl'f\e on lrg
nlent building on the goU rm.; vacant, quick possess. R-2 lot,~ close to schools &:
course. $2EG,OOO. $98,500 -$600 mo. Jease or shOps. New~"crpts, fre1h
644 '7270 lease/opUon. paint. Owner will heln fin, • eau, ,_ 6cM086 Ev" e CALL ANYTIME' e
When you list with
u1, YOUR HOME is
advertised in Home
for Llvin9 meg•·
zine in more than
900 areas-and cus=
tomers are sent to
you as referrals
from our over no
afflllatu of NMLS.
2828 E. Coast Hiway
c Orona del Mar
associated
6RO KERS-R EAlTO~S
1C1~ W Balboe 1>7J·l6t}
COTTAGE
BY THE SEA
RUSTIC CAPE COD with
heavy shake roof &: wood
trin1. High vaulted ceilings,
c r a ckling Door-to-ceiling
fireplace. Fonllal dining
room. Loaded \vtth
SE ACOAST CHARri1.
BONUS: gounnt>t g a 11 e y
kitchen & patio dining.
Pri\'ate master suite &
646-3928 or Eve, 646-4543
Lachenmyer
Re,1 ltor ,
Famous S&S quality build
home. Giant parquet rloor
family room. Sunken living
room. Formal d I n i n g .
Bright kitchen. scpara.le
laundry room. 11'8 empty,
so quick move In possible. A
great value at S44.000. Bet·
tcr hurry! Ca11 SU-2535.
Ol'fN nL g • "'S FUN 70 9E /\!ICE/
~
balh. t:ndcr S.W.000 E.Z. I~~~~~~~~~ terms. Bkr, 962-5511. I·
Horse Property!
2 BR house \\1th corrals on
large R·4 lot. Owner \l'iil
carry fin. $38,000. Hurry:!!
Call 6-1;,...&.100.
By Owner /Builder
$250,000
Excellent Terms
May lease optkm
sn.m2 * 673-7784
$C~rttJU~ -~"Btf S"
That Intriguing Word Gam" with a Chuclf.,
------U.te4 liy C\AY I. f'OUAH
THROUGH a;
DAILY
PILOT
WANT AD
WE HONOR
Master Charge
and
BankAmericanl
THE DIRECT LINE
.642-5678
S BR., with lar~e cozy den; many extras.
Lovely landscaping. O.n fee land . Near best
schools. tennis & churches. $72,500. Call
Harriett Davies
Small classified ads 0 Reorrang• lett9n of tl't"
four scrambled wends be·
low to for111 fovr .timpl• woidl.
MACNAB
IRVINE _______ ..... _ ------
NEWPORT HEIGHTS·INCOME PROPERTY
T\vo 2·BR's. on 1{·2 lot. Excellent rentals.
FIRST TIME OFFERED
Artistically decorated~ Architecturally de-
signed! Guest quarters with private en·
trance & kitchenette. Extensive use of tile
flooring . Lovely South patio. $135,000.
Kathryn Raulston
BIG CANYON SPECIAL
Exciting new Bordeaux model in latest
area. Air-conditioned . Owner hos added
many custom features. Large !of, at end of
street. $124 ,500. Eileen HudS<ln. --Coldwall,Banbr ~ 644·1766
2161 Sin Jo1quln Hlll1 Rd., N.B.
doa
bi se~ling
job. •
Try one!
, ..... 642-5678
I HABDEE I
I I I' I I I
l TELAH Ii
. I I I I' . I
I ·M Y S U T I i Moot mo•ket scene: "I • bougilt some meat todoy. Tho . I lit J J _ prke was so high I octuolly
saw the·ccsh register_ ..
I T 0 Gu NA I . /O•I (t.0.bo~
~-4r-"Tlr1 -rl--ilr-'Tl-1 0 Comp1•t. !lie c;tiudde qvoled J by ffllinq In th• millll'IO WOfd
L. --1--..1.-.L. --'·'-~~ yov d...-•109 ffOl'!I it11p No. 3 btilow.
' J • • PlilNf NUY.BlR.ED lftTE~S lN
, lHESE SOUAR£S
! "~%~·~.ts~~· ltnERS I I I I I I
. I
SCRAM·LETS ANS\XERS IN CLASSIRCATIO[I 818
$41,900. Lois Egao 644-6200. (M52)
UPPER BAY RANCH ESTATE
Eles:?ant :J BR. California Ranch Home.
Pool & stables. $245,0QO. Harrtet Perry
642·8235. (Ml6)
HARBOR VIEW MONACO
Spotless 3 BR , 2 bath home w/large back
yard. Spanish tile, plush carpets, decora·
tor drapes. $64,900 ree. Joyce Edlund
642-8235. (M17J
--------"".-~~~ ....... ~
Irvine
IOI Dowr DfM 142•12)1
1 ... M1cAn"'4t "4Juoo
•
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J
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I
I J
I !
I •
t '
I
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i • '
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I"' ' • I
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-'
DAJLY PILDT MOfldir. Oct*' 1, 197) ~· ' • j •. -"' 1~~.:ill~~1 ;;1 _ .. _,,, .. _ .. ~l[Il];.;IJ I _ ..... l~ I _ ..... l~ I --le [ _ ..... ~ r -··-I~! ~, 1~11 -... -le I~ ~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii;;;;;;;;~J ;;;;~;;;·;;;~~a~u;t J'iliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiim:;~~
Hunt"-> --....... -Noopwt -h Newport -ltNl lltoto WOtltod lM HbUMt' Fvrnlthod aao • Bal~ lit.net CotOftl del ,.;
GllOWING ,AMILY LG£ 2 '"' 51!11. 2BA 'mto 7 LOVELY UNm liiiiiii:iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii j -*CLIENT* -General ~ * REDUCED * "OLD WORLD NClW $119,!m
Vacant duplex plu.~ guest CHARM''
room. Super t'tOO'>lated • Rambllna 3 Behm. 2 Bath
boat mMrtna: furn~. tUd~aw111y. OCEAN VIEW!
xlnl purktng. SteJ)8 to Sun deck, dttp 1ha1
bear h Ov.ner tA~ "&ell.. ca.rpe:Ung, Mexlcsn tile,
Open daily 1-.'); 106 Ptarl St. optn beama. 'f'A'O tlreplaee11
A.'1. 67~>--01 14 &1$--1313 Add to the v. .. nn l)ow
$212.00 Per Nt."W DUPLEX. ror sale by ~:~~edb~,:~. ~c= owner. $140,000. I •-t• on -Low Month p....., All 673·691' •• 9'24>16 • m~• a -·-· -1-down i.cceptfd! HURRY!
A greal3 bedroom pride Balboa P""'"'"'• GRUBB & ELLIS ot ownership dollhou~e Rultors
priced at $29,l500. A~ BAYVIEW "'3 E. C.t Hwy., CdM
sumable VA loan at only On the PenlMUltt 67S.70IO
71h %. Located in Santa~ ~.~"'!t =~ CORONA JIJG~ru.NDS
Ana south of Warner St. a~e. buil1·irt!!o. firefl'lace. BY OWNER 3 BEDROOMS,
Call Red Carpet, Real· Owntt nu movl!d MUii be STONE nRF.PLACE POOL tors, 546-8640. sold. evl'TI the rumiture p!. SIZED YARD. PRINCIPALS
from he It . stonalachl1. TOWERS wtahiel to pun:h .. ditttel8ed
2.200 oq. tt. or .-1nr """"· OwN' hat i.., equlti" will + POOL ........,.., "°""' °'"""'"" BAVF!tONT S Bft.. ol1 -\VOW! 5 BR. 214 BA, formal Mlp nnance for total Int: unltt for the purpote ol Pl~. trplc, d1nWllflr. Winter,
d\ntna:. ran1Uy am, MJ)ltlte ntt 6.7'8 w/$1.0M down, NEWPORT TOP nnovatlrc I: ~Jrc. For S!O). sn.~~ .... !::,nct'fu. 1~~,~~~ltulva~~ =~lnnak•r , HEIGHTS ~nt~~:'~ B•lboa l11Md
C~e •trt"el, neat i: Irvine Wanttom.alcelTll'lDeyT ·Uyou One of Newport's be•t 4 BR houee avail.now for I
t.le11n lnaldf! Ir out. Bl':at tl'lit r .. t "U•••e Sam" t•·•··•-.,,,.......,, vlew1. Now!• I Lot I
Ur ,.. uMoo r.,, '""' .,..,.. uia I j' ~ mo. ea&e. I 0 ftJOm, MT.SS can • · · .,.....,, · _. too in..cti ln your• labon. ~led 2 BR. 2 BA STUDENTS WELCOME. ..ss&I. Watch The KWd .. t k»k at !hll ewortunit)'. d@luxe eondomlntum. Va. ,..... Call (213) 239--8388. Ir no
BEAT THE F'tom )'OW' own back)'&td « Sl.4,160 lf'Olill income (and cant A aval!able now. Full 'iiiii answer leave m••••·s••
INTEREST RATES boloonY " """"*"to.,. 1"" "'"'"'tow).""*'"" price:
1
12131 ""6%UI.
Anume this n1~ ntA loan ~ba~ ~.!c..~·~ ~ ~~ S79,5m BwlMM 200 14111, .. P•lnsul• It rTlO'lle Into the sharpest 3 of cloaeta and a tremendous Only JU2,500. Submit down 1-,;;0ppor!V==·""'!Y=o.--...;;.;.;; $1.SO-Nlce J,oeatlon 2 Br
BR, 1% BA~ home In Faun-yard wtth •prink1er• fronl pa~t. &4&-TITI. OPEN HOUSE: 3121 Paetnc duple~ klds I: pet I
lain Valley. Absolutely M lnd rear. The pniect wm,. Ol'fHTll I . n-'S """m If NICtl Coa1t Hwy., N.B. Unit S.B FOR THOSE WHO ;i. mt
rlte.ning Mrt"· Pn)ltssionally ly home $M (.0), ~ I (Fri 10-2• Sat " Sun l·!i) c:iw ~ ~ taJ >..: ~~~·~~"'."""' Vl~~~552•7500 ~ ll~liiJf . ~ OOOY BEING IN ~!":~ ,:.:.:,
DUTCH CLEAN J..,. l5IJ; ~,,&. den, l&e
.,
'
.i
" "
Mesa Verde
4 Bedroom
Cmuider Any trade or 5Ub. ONJ.Y. 672.5970
mi! al $75,000. Goocl tinant·
ifig. ALPINE llUlT'Olmd inp.3 blks
from bcti, bc11.ut llf'W di:<.
<.'Ofldo, 3 HR, 2 BA. S62,500
or lea.• w/opt:ion. 61J.77fi9
Spic l SPM 3 BR. 1% BA 'GRAND OPENING f•lrvlfW ,..,.,, view . ..,_!CUI "'"'" '"""' """"""'' • red hill N-rt Boy T-• , .. ••11 BUSINESS SPACIOUS S.yvlew 3 BR, 2 0 Orange shag Cllrpeting thl'U· 1 A 2 Bet>ROOM ~ BA, $2lb or 3 BR, ~uxe •,.
out&. k1t! of wallpaper. Back REALTY REALTORS CONOOAoflNIUM HOMES (anytime) t apt. $195. 8'fL.Mrl. PACJliC PROPE:RTIES
6Ta-67ll or lt/:>1632
$36,500.
Big trees everywhere, Corona del Mar
very spacious h o me WALK TO A
beautifully kept in•ide PRIVATE BEACH and out. 2 baths built·in
Costa~
k front iaWl'I! att exlrmlely Univ. Park Center, lrvlne Bay~t Homes FOR· Tff£MSD.Y£S BAY View. 5 BR. 3 BA. 2 bellutllul. Nice No. Rim-I.,..,..,,_.,..,. __ ., Boot Slips story hooM. f'rplc, dshwshr.
rto
1
rton Beach locab
1
-tion
1
. Ex TURTI.E Rock Hill•. Ptttl· Full Security Hiahrbe Yearly, 52trl.008.
ce T~t auuma .., o an dent home. 3 Bd rm 1 , St~ • concrete comtructlol'l BLUFFS S:U.~. Call 8t6-3377. Profetsionally landlcaped. Prtvate Balconie• FEE "E'' Opportunltie'll are L .. UM Beech
Many extru. m-34'112·1araiespaceaperunit avaU&ble tor home 3 ARCH B'Y
BACK Bay beauty. Owner Root top II.Indeck Elegance ln the Bluffal I The delivery & 1 t re e t h ~
u.ys move 11 3 BR form Unusual Opponunlty to Pur-profemdona.I touch LI ob-aalet deelenhil* ln Sout leguna
din. rm. A: Pool. sO..t .C: ~~.Pro~ in vioul. A spadoQt 23SO sq. ft. !~~ ~~ Ocunfront
ttn Aat U1--33«l .. -,...,·· . 4 bedroom, family room ara. For leue. $«iO prr mo. to
,
lti\chen, value priced * $56,500 *
fo;.-area see it for sure! TWQ generous lrlze.d bed·
Cal l Red Carpet, Real· rooms, a room)' kitchen, a
tors 54S.S640. Jiving room alldone In Lem· ' on Ye.llow! llnd Llme Greens
L . . 310 FernanOO Rd .. N.B. home on fee 1lmd rtgl'( puiy. &M-1394 ev-.
....... ...... 675:85S1 Only srr.soo 3 BR HOUSE, eom~·ry ·•. CALL 644:7211 ~-,, BUILDER'S BEACH DUPLEX Th"' dcalmru., ~;,.,~'!,....,.....,.an v1ew •• _1nc.,. ·l
Cap• Cod
Charmer
Here It Is •
That Large
!hat'!! llO light and , sunny
1hat it looks llke par! o( the
park·llke Jfarden out1klt.
CALL 644:7211
prov1de a potential ft1f' uc CLOSE·OUTSI ExterlO< """• paloted, 3 BR prof!C gn>Wfh. and 10 refined people only; "''· ~
$59 000 To A 2 BR, tmito, tittpl, dbl net wort!> -to. exclw>aed. &1().616L
Family Home /Jn Nlbll •
!JAIL[Y &
ASSIJCIAT[S
2600 gquare !eel and * * RARE * * only $451000. A charm-Duplex on Ocean Blvd. One
Lng Cape Cod on a cor· <>! " klnd, with ~mi('
ner lot 4 bed.rooms in VJe-.v of. !hi! ocee.n. From house with 4 BR. i bit. & all, 2 of them dorma-1hower room; 2 rrpics., buill·
tory size, 3'h: baths. lmi; rear houBe s BR., 4
Call Red Carpet, Real· ba. 45 .Ft. lot. Nice patk>.
tors 54"8840 Good rln1tOCing ..
' v ' MOl!GAN REAL TY
673-6642 675-4459
, .or.Inproce0soloompJn. ,..u .. -L...,... Ni..,.1
$115,000 lttior ""'°''11"1" Beot buy ~=~~,,,,,== ""'"-man ""° = BEAUTIFUL . 0' "" .. ,~,SOO N•!f'!" Hol9hh :::., ~~.,:: THE SHOR!jS
LAGUNA NIGUEL 1797 "'-'· c.M. 642-1m A KING SIZE ,· ;::,... ..,,.,.,. eo~"!.: ·~°'.""~an .=!::c.'
$27 ,000 4 BR.
2 BA.
Four homC!I on El Nizuel
Championahtp Golf O:>une -
all with lantutic views.
Oiolee of 4 modt\1, all with
family room. and many
Mama'a get-a-way. Sunshine CU1tom d e-1I1 n features. --~===~--
clean & ready for OC· C'hoo9e now I& leled dnt.pn, ft.ESERTE '"P'"''" l"'' rilltl '"' you --,.=*'=-==--J carp<U, ookn, iatxbcaptnr. ., D! :;_:,~ ~· d,:;!, ~=: HOUSE OF Z v~ ~~home.:,~ NEWPORT
HOME. 12 roonui: 4 BR. 2 A&ret'ment.. Beamed cellinp. Self-dean
Ba., huge recreation rm., ..... _, •--·rlty ''' •~ utility & laundry rm&.. I: of. v•" · _......, g · _.... ..
flee or den. Lee. living rm 23682 Sidney Bay, call
w/charming frplc. 1.4'e. Proipe\:.'tlve dealms 4931769
kitchen w/a.11 bltnl. All mu 1 t demomtrate Lido Isle
custom built -.·/many many thetr ljt.!Pne• ability,
extru. Aaking $68,~ or meet a C8lh purchase LIVE ON LIDO
will lease.option. requirement, an d
CALL 'e\i 6f6•14lf mu.t have a history
\;#' ot Onancial stability.
2 BR, 2 BA. brtck frple. d'ol
· gar... wW/dryr. Wtnter
rental. $350. 613-222'1, 213;
'193-0<2!. Huge kltfben with gas GLASS.. 1howtng. Follow our Jllfll BEACH
COZY, RUSTIC I Br, frp1, range. Counlry atnmphert:, Spanith f High from Crown V-...U.a-¥ ------1~--IL&li.LU RecenUy redecorated 3 patio. R-2 lot. $45,000. total p11.ymenu are leis than hol.l1e 0 gia.M. Parkw11.y near Ovtc.~ntel'. 10% DOWN, Immediate OC· N11r K••r•rt Pt1t Offlc• Jt you. are tntereAted Mesa Verd• wtNTER lease, beaut. So. -tiiYfi'titl:t Mme: f BR.. s Ba.
Sandy beach. Pier &: fioat bedroom 2 bath home on Prine. only. Owner ST.Ht69 rent. Walker & Lee REAL cathedral oollln&s, ~na Sell~ can arran&e linancl.na cupancy, 2 BR, newly No rt Sho and penonany qua.IJ.
DUPL
"X ...... . ESTATE, 54.J.-9491 Open i a<Dbe ftreplace, huae fieata at 8 10 painted lnalde and out. Hut· wpo rn tied kJr one ot th.,.
q u le t cul-de-sac. Un· "' corner, ., .. arming, E~•· room, patio ki tchen with us ually large bedrooms by owner. 500 Poinsettia, 80da fountain bar & view ol ry! ! ! $3!1,500. Call 64.S-8400. BLOCK TO OCEAN dl'a.lmhiP!I, plea• e
$1,650 Month
BUI Grundy Ritt. 6"15-6161
Newport llMdl:;:_~~-t
·;
:·
antiqued woodwork, Open t-5 dally. =~1ng sutreoo~~· ~: W lk o l I VllleH.,. _Honnl_ a «Aj 2-~;~in3 ::rt. 21:i: csllLos Ang.Jes .
covered patio and large Any day Is the ersr DAY to Walker& lee bath, 6 blodcl to ~ch on a .. ,,~.~'~' BB new carpeta " dtape1. H ERALD.EXAMINER shade trees, $41,000. run llfl ad! Don 't ~elay. • · quiet cul-Oe·sac among ex· $48900 -WINTER rental, Newport • Call Red Carpet, Real· CAUJ OAil.Y PU.QT llAL '''"'' clu.irive exec: homes. Unbe-PRIVATE -NEWPORT-cAvWooo REALTY Clrcul•tlon Dept. Penh.Wa, !Ji blk from bay. ~·
tors 546-8840. QUICK-CASH MfNI ESTATE :;1~,·=:,~F,;:;'l: ""' ,.. """""' OPPORTUNITY * 541-12'0 * L!!1~1!~,:i15 iJ:'.' :;!;. r;:;t1o".' :
1= 962·55 1. 1ni~lnte 3 bdrm. horn~ Exchalve 4 BR, 1.n \lo'Oodl)' (213} 741-1212 house w/bedrm, % t... 2 ledroom Ony home on R·2 cornet lol. f ;i;iiiiiii.i._..,..,..,.,.;;;; in a grov.1"1' aree.ol Laguna. area. Owner ~111 car?)' E 5 Service room w/wuher &
Nloe ll'eeS .t. llll"lfe, clear CONDOSPECIALISTSI Real family living I& a good paper at nominal n\le. J ..... ""-Ir.;;) -:-~:xt:':":l:'!3~0<::5~2'~~·!Jd~.,.,¥ii'~S48-fl6~=n:....:"':':_,::391::,,:"':
House 1/4 Acre • THROUQH A :~~te lOr another wilt. lfave one to .ell? We can inve1tment, too.·· .$55,ax>. •ti~ 1 ·fOllU . ~ 9 r.ourmet Butcher Shop ~~~i"'~ater ~h. $00. d~~ ;;~~~~.~DAILY PILOT <•LA.~ •• ~,•.:1414 ~'.~:~~'.~ .!Jfs'f!i c.t. au ~~·:.=-125 ii!Jfn:f:.4"" i;i{~J~·~~
u1 h b k
7 "' available. Our aaJetmen ~ ;TATE Hollend Bu -WINTER Rental, Bayfront,
q eUy way at t e aC w NT AD Ntar Ne•,•rt P••• Offlr• bonded -,Ee:st ~ectlon tor 1190 G""'1eyn St. u...a-. H. ESTATE SALi 1
4BHl :zBA; dock, avail Oct. ot a hu ge Jol Located A )'01J Wheb listing or leillna 9473 MMl31S rkllUUI r11 GllllS F'uhJon Manor mobUe home ~70 SALES 5f0..0608 IPt .JunP lrt, c:.a.11 TioMJ35..1350
on the bluffJ view prop-$1950 DOWN "'"' home or tnoome prop-* NEW * ,_, x 45, ' bedroom, 2 bath'. • OCEANFRONT * erty. ?Aned R-4, owner BRAND NEW erty. CALL • CUSTOM DUPL.EXES Carmel model with valley May be ~ at 9850 BARBER Shop, comer toe.. 2 Bdnns. -S290
anxious. Make reason· 642-5678 Eeitslde Location l•rwln rnlty Inc. Real Mexican tile ent.rys, view. 3 Bdrma., dlnlng & Garl.leld Huntington Beach exclusive Corona. del l\tar Properly Hou~ 642-S8SO bl f( d C 9614405 (24 hrs) lavWt wre of Northern f11.mlly room•. Many extra& Space 96. Contact puk area. Top prlcff:, Low lease.
• e o er. Re arpel, 4 BR, 2 BA, 1000 &q. n . Cpt1, Equal lloustna Oppty. Redwood, lqe v 1 e w built Into this adult occupied manager or call Mr. Palae, Good lftlSI. 613-6W WfftmlM .. r
Realtors"645-8080. 1,.~=======,I dl'pll, fence, landsea.J>ed.,l ~~~~~~~~~I balconlei. The!M'l are one 01 home: tt Is better than TrU!Jt Department, ~o. Money to Loan 240 _,;,,,; _ _;;;.,. ____ I
$SAVES
3 Bedroom
+ Pool
Beautiful home Jacated
on Cd'Sta Mesa's East.side
area. Quiet street. house
is fantastic • 3 large bed·
r 0 0 ITI S, 2 baU1s. big
fa mi 1 y room. dining
room separate see this
to believe it all for
$35,950. Red Carpet,
Realtors 845-8080.
Take Over
Existing VA
71/2 °/o • $244.00
Month Pays All
BeautiJul 'ho m e with
GET
A
'CHARGE'
out of your
DAILY
PILOT
1prlnkltn1, a 11 lnclOOed . ~ ki·• bu 1 _,,, Call I -1 to •"-·· C&llf bt Natkmal &nit $12>Sharp! 1 Br'. Jlouse, nr $44,950 A:Ts<'l quallfie1l Harbour View a ""'' custom 1 t " , .. ,.... or .. .,.... · vn:w. &12-iw. Mlotm"m b 1 d, DON'T BORROW ~ shop~'"•· ·· · .,. 'l ,._.~ . ••• de1lgned for tho1e w~ want $72,500 .,...,....,, 77 a .,..,,_i._ Boat action vie-.v from your to be difff'rent .... OC(!an CORBIN-MARTIN s7•500. 'T IL YOU CALL USI r.all ·~ t.rt>e11t Ren'"1 A"ey * BUILD INCOME * Uv rm A din nn deck view avall. Call tor details. Re•ltors 644-7"2 24x65 '72 MOBILE llome Borrow on Your home equity Homeflndtrs 547-9641
Old<• 2 BR. "°""'" , ON.LY $3·3,00' Q , CORBIN-MARTIN NB DUPLEX ""*""' lo "" """°"'" for any'°""...,...., Serv· Hou•u Unfurn, 305 Rultors 644-7662 ,,.. .• M ., __ "-""'-14851 Jellrey Rd. Irvine, 2 Ina: Los An&elea County for large R-2 k>t '-"'' ~ ..... ,. ..... ,.., BR, 2 BA, lam rm w/wet over 20 yean and NOW in "'--I
Good EB.Wide location H_unti_ ·......,n' Penoramlc View 218 · 34th St. bat, sprlnklel'I I: walled in Oranre County! ,,_.,.,.
I $24,500 ., ... _. Extraordinary 3 bedroom on 3 Br, l.2 Br., open be'am ct"il· patlo, call 5!ii..3694 avet or SlGNAL MORTGAGE ex>. ---·-----Harbour a pdol·•ized 1o1. Great ocean lnp, frelhfy painted Inside !ft perk ol1lce. cn4) 5Q6.0106
I RIVI ERA REAL TY & downtown t.q:una view • out. Nu CJllt A drps. SACRIFICE ~.950. Udo. 4500 C&mPIJJ Drive, N.B.
149 BroadwaJ!_t;.M. Realh. Richly detaUed with dtntni S7S,SOO. Sl.5,000 ~.Bal. on Water Front Parle, Fum. 1 t TD L
642°7007 645-5609 EvH. 11214 COA~· ~WY. ""· lomUy "" • n ... p1.... ""'""""' by """""· Dbl Wide I I s oa RS Hou *
IEAS'TSIDE BEAUT'"'·"'I~. nl Patio, 1~ered lawn. DALE WU~ER. ACT. 6...,·,,_.. ' sw p oo ' Ml Aftll. ~ r I"""' ( ,l 846-1384 It 1213) 592-2845 c= 0]81 "2 Im ·~· ck'ep pile carpet~. big lot. Alao ava wable tor lease. iollR'O or U'i • NEW 2 BR, 1 BA ll~rm-UP TO 90% * 141•0111 *
Ck>M' to evet')'thiftl. A ral"\' GI USE $57,000, 494-8003. $17,000 EQUITY Adult part /pr! te ~ 2 d TD L W ollerint" Good rmanclog. By , S TARBELL, R9altora lo p1""' 58 11. C•tamarao. w va "" ft oans .m•c:orTAlll14
appt. only -Ca.II Peg Smith, YOUR LOAN lfOO S. Coul Hwy., L.B. Will trade for local real $1G,500 540-36'72 BACHELOR . Evef)'thlna
No. 1. Sa1eslady wl.t'1 Quin-* * OCEAN VIEW * * estate or sell outright Are loweit r•t•I Orl"I• Co. Smltu.rn._lndl util. $125. C.?t.f.
tl!.NI ReAlty, 1811 llarbor, No down. lowftt Interest. Unique 3-level, nettled in the you ready? I Rael Ettlllt., I~ Sattle M C ~ c.r.1. 642-2001. IMpect 3 &: 4 BRa In the hill.I, Sundeck off llv. -. GEM ~ r ti• 0. 1 BR Nm. Util. $140. Clean best Huntington B e..a c h, .,.. ~iiiiiiiiiiii·tiiii j '42·2171 545-0611 winter rental ln NB. nr $30.'100 w/huJ.!:e POOL 11/r • Fountain Valley location. w/ocellfl vu, frplc. New ll).F ~n 1"" N.B Servlna Harbor area M -. bcti. 5 Bedroona, 3 Dalh1,. carp. le vinyl thruo u t. REALTORS ·r~·,642-4623 Commerclel ' -4
• J ••· 2 BR. HOUie. Unturn. 11-.
rll!lo1TI rrplc,'1\ilet nt>lr&f· luW•ew Brlckppatlo. Pl8.IIS for ex-1........................... ff w nc ''"''· 1003 ""' Road, ___ __ """'~'· PRIME OCEAN vrew Property 151 2ND Trust DHds ,,!;,B~ ~· .,..... *"'
<i[f Babb. fQ.4471 ( :;:,) 10 "A find" nt $49,500 PROPERTIES FOR SALE NEWPORT BEACH PRIVATE FUNDS AVAIL. 3 BR. Unfurn Duplex. $2ll0.
Cotla Mei• R1alty . MISSION REALTY 494-0731 By· Stntc of California Any Amount Only 8 mo:!I old. N.B . * 54&-7711 * •ssu· ME 5J,-., l!MERALD BAY ' W•lcb for our big •d In Prime S.yfl'Ol>l SJ\, * Call 67' "M BKR LANDLORDS FR•Ell
Arter 6 PM, Call 551-.1617 "' 74 1• For boat repnlrs & Niles -• B FHA LOAN 3 Bdrm1. of old Spanlah THURSDAY'S PAPER Bill Grundy Rrtr. 6~61 EACON RENTALS
BY f)\\'NER 4 BR chann & o8k floors. On the tCl11.st lOOGenerall Mortn-.. * 645-0111 *
TO\VNllOUSF. 1 year new, Brcalhtaking &Ultlet l Ca!a· ocean •Ide of tne lhvy., 1213) ~ Condominiums •-•·
•pool, dhl gar, nr Sch, & lina \'lf'!v IU"e youn "''ilh thi1 ahorl walk to beach. $911,500 Ask for Mr. We!lt for sale 160 Trust Deidl 260 VERY CLEA'N
sholltlittg, S:.!9.500 5 JICl't:ent 4 ~iedroom home. Grarlo\1!1 TURNER ASSOC. d~·~· 557~7. ..~i~'~g ri:!'v1:!~ ~to ll~ N. Coa8t Hwy., Lquna NEWPORT RrYJERA PUT YOtiR MONEY 3 BR, 2 BA home, fenced
MESA dcl r-.111.1·. As1unlC food center tn>plcal land-M1177 NEWPORT JSLAND Gracious 3 Br, 2~~ ea, tpl, T6 WORK FOR YOUI yard, covered Pat Io. 6~ % loon. 4 Br, cove~ 19eaplng, ...,.aiJc to beach. See 2 BR, 1 bath home OY'l!rlook-tam rm, 2 car gar. Jmmcd. Eam IO% or l1'Kft on well· carpets, drapes, families
'
. ,
beautiful terms, lake it
over subject lo existing
VA loa n, annual per·
centagc rate of 7 Vz':'~. 4
bedroorn or a ·i-den, 2
sparkling baths, plu11h
shag ca rpet . l6lti9
screened in patio. this
home has something
11pecial for everyone i'iCC
it today. Call Jted Car·
pct, Realt or!', 645-8080.
WANT AD palio. $37,700. ~ n"IO. this excel.lent value toda". Ing OC'f!'O. , ~. llv nn WATIRFRONT Pou. $32,IXXI. Flnancl;, -·~ ~ -. ., ~ OO'd>W · SZO. mo. Oi.11 Coate le !J<l!h'.JXX) J ..._ • avail. To lnllpecl ca I '''''""Tii "nu '1"" ..,.,..,.,. on allace Real E 1 ta t e
· · Cali The Rea1 Em.te Fair, w-bit-ln bookcaaew, trplc. LEASE/OPTloN Orange ODunty real estate. 546-4141 ' > N E E D r I x e r U p per 5.JS.ri51 or 339-$.33. , $59,500 TI4-437-!i890 60-m. SIGNAL MORTGAGE ex>.
Costa Mesa
Duplex $31,950
Unbclievahlc but true.
ne 2 bedroom unit I
one 1 bedrnnm unit.
very clean ·f-nea t. ll11r·1
ry it won't l~st ('all Red
Carpel;, n e :illors ,
845-8080.
Owner M11st Sell!!
3 Beclr0om,
2 Bath Ealtsid•
Vf!f'Y spacious ranch
style home loco!od on
q u I• t cul·de-sac. big
country built-in kitchen
remodeled, massive
b r I ck llreplaoo. this
home need!!: minor re-
pair, buy it & ~ave. Call
lted Carpe t, l!ealtors.
845-8060.
NOW
HONORING
Master Charge
and
BankAmericanl
DIAL
~~';~;'Pl~ .. ~~.~'~; 0 DOWN Lido late BROKER W.07IO DvplexH/Unn1 4500 ~ "'"g;ll6 N B LANDLORDS! i:-:iruL ~te.a Woodi 2~:~ ~th~u!~1:, MOVE,IN COND. BAY VIEW on BLUFF. ~~::Verde 2 &: 3 bd~~ pus ., . . ~~~in der~
home 3 BR, 2 b8. atriwn, llug1! family room. "Oop\'>M' Campi pl~etaiyd' 1Um311Wi~; 3 BR. 'l'rl·level brand new 3 Br, car garage, min. upkeep. I ~ .~Lquna, Our Rental SU.
lount1tin. 979-8.V«J f'v~1. kl!'ltle" kitchen y,1th ULiand ua m •· ..,. L Only den. 2~ Ba. l.rg. mutu Sale by owner $59,400 ...._,...._ ...... vice ll FREE to You! ""-L,m cen!er. Big custom SO ft. lot avail, on Nord at aulte, t:rpl, wet bar, f~ M9-00M . n:::::r Nu-View! •• ,.
Fountain Van.., p&lio &: 8p&J"icJ1ng pocM Own. . the pr?irenl tln1e! Nev.·ly tulle kitchen. Pool. Fee ~~~~~--=--~ .......... ~ .. ~I NU~VIEW RENT'LS er wl.11 nei\J'tlate 1ot rut decor. Pier &: itj\p. $285,IXXl. ••'Id. DUPLEX -Sharp Santa Ana ~ "'
Mk-. You Mme the tmn• ONE OF A KIND , '" SAT 1-4, sun ll-1. Jle!ghtf'I, Prtncl~la only. Houte1 PumlsheCI 300 ~ or 4!»-3248
01· try I'll) nlOOC,Y down VA! Udo'• '"'~~~~r lat, att'l"el :lll.il Quedft.da. 644-4133 Terms. S37,500. i.3Tl9 G I NEW EXECUTIVE ··, Only S-13,,,..,.,. Bk1" 9':iUliU : lo •tree! """'oo, tlct'OliS beach Income Prwrty 1" .ntre HO •
C>w'I """'""""' -.... REPo""ssESSIONS "''"'''cl. l&\,000. *SACRIFICE PRICE* = ME
e FREE LIST
""'' '""' """'" ·""'" 00 VIA LIDO NORD FOR SALE/LEASE 20 NEW UNITS S OWNERS OF S 3 BR ,. l•mlly """" f~l\l'n pymt. v11r10011 llf'l.'oftll For lnform11tlon and location 4 Bdrmll. & 5 81\ths: Direct tron1 OY.'ner, Nf'l\'po!.1 \\illl Comider Contn.ct $ REAL PROPERTY$ landscaped, mt-de-.nlftl
& flYTll111, N(l ohligritl(ln. of tl1e1Je }'llA I: VA h0me1, $i;.f'1~<.'Cnl cvstom home. ~t condo 2 br, in11nedlate Collta Men., Sch!'d. \ncomfl W're here to M'N'f You% O\'en, carpet. & drapes. Crill Eql~~ri~i~,=~tlea t~ntacKtA· SAlllAN l1Do REAL. TY. .:.::.abluiy. Calt MS-'lMB ~~·~ce~·=·t:.~ Try•~f-~?iFiZ":~caD-~~e~~ate Fatr,
ltEALTOltS • m.1600 331'1 Via Lldo, N pt Jkl\Ch · For de'lalb1 c11.ll NEWPORT 11 •cH ""'""'"""""'""'"""""'""I RHI Ellate '62-4644 * '73:7300 * SALES & RENTALS CJS REAL l\ESTATE Doo'l"" J;,,,.,, Ttm" w,.,,.,..,,. ~Ip !or ls' boot '1
Huntington leech VA REPO ~11siion Vteto ~ Bll~~···"··SS2.!i00 548-1168 or eVe ~T-6244 N!,!~1A1 '!!.~J:'&!!m ho~i,~ tt1$:9s. ~ 1 ~~
PARENTS 185" sirnmont, irn A~ 3 nr. F'.n .. rus1 2: 1 Br+ v11.e. ;,;;::·m:: ~ ~ Bkr. 675-722:1 .1
RmEA T 128,,., IT.six> ... c!:;, ~ .. = 4 J.!Wroom ....... llls.ooo v ..... • '""" a BR. 1 blk. etrrn: ret. n«i. ltl«I toe. roR·llEllT oa ...,...,. .,.
A@nt M1~1 k1an PRJN ONLY .-..-... BALBOA BAY PROP. M ~ Dcellent tu lhel· to water I lhoPL S250.00 mo. 3 Bedroom, 2
"BY· THE·SEA" owNF:R-:-3 BR, 2 BA. ~·-....,;,, ' · :---· * 47S.7420 * ... • ~......._ srr.soo oN ChaMel 1 .... 11111 """· .. ,.. 1.,.. lo<. • u ''' ,._., or bnt "-·-' A I n~ .. M Eulllde arta, children + $46,900 f11m. rm. "A.'/m115llW.! frplc., Newport a.ch N~l\()11 Crest Condo ~ ' vwll'l'O'qtnt .....e~."tc .... ' .,108 .. ~ ~utll pets ok, 'Red Carp et, ~led study. Laund nn.. Sl'crlflcel Plan 2. oce&n A • · ·~ .,. Slw pa, nu Realtors, 64$-8080
Thi!! ch11rmlrui: 3 bedroom Ira. klk, dlx cpl1, -.-.Iled TRAD~ Newport De a ch pool ~w. ~st Joc. ~ palnt, lg LR. clole in. '
hon1f' I~ "·tthln !II i hc)r1 !1111"()\I rear )'flnt, OOIT!f'r Jot, nr P,,,p. for ()ul-Ol-Town Nt'w, VllC&nl, lmmed oecup. TRAILER park, 34 ipllCleS. VIEW 2 br $25 PCS, dtctr. S HORSES Ok. 2 ac. $8). 2 +
of nw he-Reh Allfl fl'Alurtt-11 heh. m.rioo. 536-4562. Prop Bkr Tif/$n-~ Sil'"' $GJOO Full· price x1nt cloae in k>c, $10.000 dn to oce~llna:lu. Oen. 2 Ba. Fncd. Kkh/peta.
CO?)' n•tn-11.f ~djotnlflR t~ J BR Townhou.e. Retrl , .. ' . . $62.ctx>. Xlnf Int It lerma. ca.1h n!lurn en SS0.000 dw. n"'S New 3 br 2 ba $3IXl now, r .. nr!ll ll"'ffl RenW A.~ m11~1rr hf>drrom 11.nrl 111rm1tl JlOOl, rhlldnm ok. AAAu~ 3 BR hott~ nf'lll' oc.-11.n, low Q\l.'tll'r/Ntent w,.m:i Price QX),cm ltlnt ti.nano-in N.a xtra nke w/ pr. ~omeflnders 50,"41 rllnln~. ~unny II: 11 rd,. n 7,.;:. fl IA. low d 0 wn. ~ ~~'ii;~-~;. e • Ne-M Cn-st Cl)ndO ln&, princ. only, Coco Brit. LAG1 UNPA 2 br 1~ be. $285 • _ kltrhC'n 11nd Jnmlly room. 96R-t486. ~ .• ,,... 492-1621 ~• 548-6261 yr Y· allo, aar um pd. TIME FOR
$h!\l"fl llrrouJho\IC with huge ON 011.,Y, by ot.•ner, boat ~Jilp, Plan $, new, tmmed. oct. ' W., -
p!ll'k·llkf' y11rd itnd iftvl"\y NEW ~ Br. 3 BA. rarn rm. 4DR tU, o... be1111 . v1ew, Sa~ dltc00nt. ~ br, 3 • DUPLEX • Anume VA BEAOON 8&y 2 br rm yr\)', "UIClt CASH ~Ho, \\'111 MOU qu ickly c/d, $42,000 T1~,... 11.mP/e Jlfl~ (n41 g1M1347 bl.. ram nn. pool, tennis. lomi. $35,900. F'u1l Price. 4 hr-S be $525 hat ll11. T
Pltfl!'." phonf' ~2:'113. • &J-i.J'.\23 • -· Owner &i2-T700. • FOURPLEX · Costa Mes& I.$LAND S br $23$, deck A THROUGH A
·' ••
642.5678 """'"", """',.,/!Ii"''" 4 BR 2 8A !tome LUJ<famURY 4 "'· 711 "'· lg NP'I' c ..... c 3 Br, 2\i Bo, s.;ulO. Many ExtO'lft! "'" 4 br 2 ba $05 -DAILY PILOT ~ I S'Z>OOO 1•9432 M La. nn, huit mutllr 111l1e. $3,000 bek>w markrt. V1ew YEAOER REALTY~ a~a · 1llJJli1~1 U 1l41'tll!J,;,,,BtA<h';~13 """"""""'"~166 · 1111\lnLO-...~' l'OURl'Ltx 1412 BR= MA MORE Lower.t WANT AD t~~~~~~~~ l;liilj :~ Nffd•"Pad'''~ ... _.t '!1':~m.,;:~•IOOdwantld11aaoo<1u. ~~uru1~n!:tc,1f2h~s&f1. ALA R.t,:r ~1 1 642-5678
l-,,..------'_J•.;::· -C.U ""61111. Ad. ---, MM'lll S.• Time:() ... ..,,,.,,.., .. ,·---'-----/
·' .. ~:
,
~ ,_
'Gene1 -$ L
Let u~
' \\'e ..., FRE~
' prlot l
I $Al
,Newpoi
-...Bach i
Prlv.
I 111'.X)f)..~ r....wu I h .. rl
,CdM2
or pri
~ ,CID,
·.r.felll"
' '°"" . 2 ba ~
rnlll. \
• 3 br &
ALA
tiiiiii
1 3 M!
Ver
.Ne@<! :
\ unfur.
with I
1mcdh
weU ! •
IWl!t I
Pl"
Bolbt
iLOVE:
Jba,
I $SOO I
YRLY
home I etc.,
613-5
!~ 6'13-6'
~lbt
PENii
hom•
bo,y,
Ind«
''"° re1tt1 mo.J
B•i•
YEAI
°'" ....
'''" Coro
$150 . ,.....,,
,235 -..,,,.
$300 •
b ...
NU,
673-40
OLDE lhoo>
d"" Wik"
marl .....,
ROO>
tmil
I """ ~ aw
I palo
pati<
4U
644 I
I ll E
BA,
I ~ s
Pano
""" I oted
SPYI ,;
* 2 h ... I lncl1
3mj
i ~
!MM
~.~
i be• I no I
2 Br
, "°I
I 7th,
• 8d
I $l5I ~ Cos
SHA
T°' Ga> Avl or l
•
'. ,Q, 29
~;;u..tvm.;:5~1 ; _ ... _ l~I ~ -iiiiii ... _-:..~l~~e 1--.-... -l~ I J;;a_ ..... _ J(tl ! ._ .. :-I~
~rel 305 1 ,Ho-==;....::U;:;nlu~m.:::.· _,:30::::5 -Unforn. ~ Condcln)lrU....,. 1.Apto.~_P_....,. _____ 360_ Apts. Fum. UOApt. Unlom.
-".'"'.------:..,.,t• M.-. Mes• VtrM Unfum,. J2I Coron• dtl ~r Newport IMch Cod• Mew
$ LANDLORDS $ I ~iiiii~~---L Hlli. ~-;"-c...;;:=7--1::::::_:;=:.._ __ _
H untl'!tOft a.ch
ut us u 1 • 3 BR , 2 u . y .. r ..... •1""" BEA\Tl'. """"' • """" '~c ·1os T o "' rokm I R propertle1. 3 Mature Woridno •~"II -1mo. --, ·-~-3 BR, 2 •-, -•. 2 ••• •••. & prv, baloony no pets $1~ e 0 c.ectft .DELUXE , oo wo• w lh )'OU. Fl;F. '~"' -~~~ ~ ~ ~ -& up. UtiL pd, ?;00 S..vk~. And Bay •a•RTMENTS
Move '" AUow•nce SPACIOUS Nl:."'W 1 UR
otWXE APARTMENT
L&rp pe.tlo Oft balCOtlY
Carpcta; • dnpea. Bullt.
FREE. Mllny Cllen\11. CaU Very Re1pon1lble l I N t D--h sm IM Adulll pret''d c .. u "' l'U""""' ' prlot to va(•tncy. f;l\ve S.1. Net.'tl 2 or 3 Bedroom hOme ewpor ~c 543-11774 « 55'1...Jt19. ' """'' WINTER l..F.&'E .. t ·~~. Alt Cood • Frplc'• -S Swim·
I $ALA RENTALS $ lumi1hed, $%J0 n..o nUt.X'. BAY VJEW on BLUYJ" Newport S..ch CCKt• Met.11 $130. J.·\RGF: 2 R't. m5, mlna Poot. · lie.Ith Sr-·
,Newport&: Bay, Cltt 6U-a38J "·Uh II.tie fenced yard for 2 Tri-level Brand New 2 Bl' .~0w·wE·E·-K-LY·-·R--A-TES C•ll Bkr. 67WIOO TB•tuM1•1!. ~ . G.ym and ins. can f\.lml!ill. SlM per month ROON b' ttnl, ""?-lure
......_each $70-SSS-St!Jdent flne
Prl_y. 1 br $140-rear, Avl
1 llOOlh~ake depoglt. Laaun& lra: studio $175 now,
l htart of city, 1lv/rob'.
1CdM 2 hr hse sti{I pet ok, w
otprk2br2ba$27'.i.
; A don 2 ba $420 )Tit OOW, 'Eutl:ide '2 I den mo now.
L C/0, slv/refr, rml pet ok.
'J\teu.· V. 3 br 1 ba $285,
I tlOOI\. 3 bf, 2 tJa $300, 3&:Jm ,, .. _
Fntr\ V. d br 2 ba $295 3 avl .
13 hr I: tm2 bA S310now.
ALA Ront•I• 6'12-1313
3 Matlin! Worklna Adolts 1 Very RHponslblell
Need 2 or 3 Bt'droom hom~. t untumllhed. $~ roo. max.
·wlth. latae fenced yard for 2
1 mediun\ slzed obedient &
weU trained 'dogs.
Available Nov. 1
l\Wl wee extremel,y a:ood care of home!
Ple~call e.VH 548-7881
' -------
Bolboo lslond
l:LoVELY New 38R, den,
Jba. home, garage, yearly,
1!500mo. m.-
YRLY Vf!r'Y delux executive
home 3 BR, 3 ha, 2 frplc,
I etc .. etc. $600 mo. 673--5174 m.>718. '
WlN'l'ER 3BR, ll!A, ..,...,, I deck, $225 mo, piUI utilities
6'73-5'M4, 673-6nB .
~lboo Penlnsole
PENINSULA Point Exec
honie, 1 block to beach or
be¥, 2 BR & den or 3 BR.
indoor/outdoor patio in-
tercom, frplc, all bltnl tncld
ref'rlJ'/trttmr, no pets. S475
mo. fse. 675-13.11, 962-8449.
Bophoree
YEAl\LY rental, Baylhore
Dr., few doors from pVt
beach. 2 Br, 2 Ba, lge p..Uo,
S4?S. 548-4751.
.Corona del Mar
modium 1\&ed obedif:nt & den, 21'9 Ba, 1nr: mutli; BRAND mw 3 BR, 2'12 Ba, '--- - -An:i nouua11, well trained dogs. suite, frpll wet "bar, fan-deluxe romo. Newport Executive Suit•• Apt. Unfum. 365 l BR. From$~ Z2> 1Tth 9L, H.B. wark'F. man, no dr1nk a:. no
Av11.llable Nov.1 lasllc ktetw;n, pool, Crest, ..,.,.., tennis • 2080 N --'Bl d 1BRADenF'rom$190
Ill •·•·· I I t ~ -,.... ' v ' B•I'--1110·, 2 BR ~ ••10 w """"" extreme y aood n1 a n en an c e. Leue. courtyard aettlrl& • tingles ,. __ 1 ••--1'11111 uv111 ...
(btwn Delaware I Hnt1 'Ave) BmOk C· Conve:n~nt k>c:.
£46.5871 646-«110
care of home! $6501MO. or family $500/mo. Wll. ~ ... 2• .';'"11•• · 2 RR. Twnhlea From $250
Pl,.,. call-~ 548--Opeo SAT l' SUN 111 SGOO/ t "'72ll •~ -·-BOAT DOCK TIE UP "EDITERRAN' •N "~"" •00~ 1l51 Quedada ..... 6'4-il33 Univ:;sltyump;; • ~·· STUDIOS a I BR'S W''l BR. Deluxe Apt. On m VILLAGE""'
* * NEW NEW NEW * * ~.· 1Sl6 Loa Bolu, SC 2 Deluxe 1 A 2 Br. Apla, l'ft\I, SUO, s.1912 Olinda.
trplca. dahlwlh, cloae IO Dana Pt. Open. C~
1hopplnc Ir: Beac:he1, adults ROOM Ul I Up. OwTtooel:·
only, no pell, $175 to $210. tna harbor It oetan. ~ blk
8'J82 Atlanta Avt, 536-264'1 beach. 500 ~aview, CdM.
PRESTIGE HARBOR vtEW .• FREE Linens Grand ear.I. No pets or
Dan• Point HO~ES - 5 ,BR.. Perfect for 3 Br. 2 Ba. car. dshl"'Sh· : ~=• :=. Yrty. $.m/mo. 2«IO ~{Tiil a 817 ~ C.M.. ___ ;.;.:.;;_____ family. Pooltclub prM. elect stove, ft"plc, m pets, .,.., ._..,
CLOSE to Dana Po Int Walk or bike to llChls. $375 mo. Ct.II 552-7084 •• ~l~~~:"°F!•Ui••-2 BORMS., fzl>lc. Priwtt HounOPEN EVEFn RYDAY P.fllrina. New :S-JJr, 2 Ba. $550/mo. water & Le.,. T--L---Unlu -r ,_.., ..... .,. ..... .._...,. I---• AU l ""It•-· ~·-.... 1-, Ideal~for adults or w/ 1 opt. poW~e. Oardf!l'ltt tncl. Y'W~ "'· -•TV 4 maid iterv avail. G......... en~....;"~ Wed·,. -~ ...... -nnne
Vautlon Rent1l1 42.S
hlld e °""ne Service &l1ll:C· °'vou::1 "1-1""' • Thun. 10-7 PALM Sprqla:1, ~R home. c . ase $275/per mo. 644-5441 or 644-6807. H ti__. i.. __ _._ • '"' NEW 1 Br A..t Uni ~ 2 BR, 1 u. WALNUT Square Town. • --Palmai ...._··t rum ,_ l.\·es 714 544-'?678 LOVELY -!Ml lo• un • ..,.on _... $130·1 Bdrm . ,..... uni. "' ...-. cuvte lllory, .. _ .• _ 2 BR 2 BA bl ..._ ' ........... ' ... ""~ • Steps ta tht> beadl1t Yevty. new-lhq CZ'Jl(, drpft:, fncd , ............ , . .• ca e hted pool, .,·ttk or mo. No
H ti _ ......._ leue/sale. 2 BR, den -3 BR, 2 BA, $2ll)/mo. Very UNIQUE BUl'T·IN FURN· Aval.I now. 6'13-3441 patio, bum ceil , ~c, gar. TV, pool, pado, &ll' COil· ~t 1. 6 7 3-7 S 6 l or un ngton eeRit t.lonaco model, avail In \ Pool t t .. .....,. dftlonlrc prdcner $2'ro Nov. t.1My extru. Prof. c ean. , rec re a OJl ITIJRE. CLOSE TO r.tAJOR 3 BR., 2 Ba. i. ftoor .w/p.r. $175. 7>l-i Eiden. 5J7·31Z ·~~~!:_· ____ ' --·1~~~-8384;;-!;;;;;;;;;c;;;;;;;;;;;\
3 Mature Working Adu1ts
Very Re1pon1lblel I
Need 2 or 3 Bedroom home,
unfurnished, $250 mo. max.,
with large fenced yard for
2 rnedlum sized, -obedient &
well tralned dogs,
Ava!IBble Nov. 1
v.ill take extremely good care
of home!
Pleaae call eves 548-7881
lndscpd teMls club & pool room. 2U/~l9l4·• SHOPPING $450 per mo. ~aft='-""~·------..: 00. Palm Springs, Owminx .._privileges. gardener incl. M9sa Verde. I C•ll Bk·r·. 67s..5800 ? S'l>l&M * 2 BR, 1 Ba le 3 Br 1\.ii Ba. Legun1 IMcft O:indo. 2 bl-., '2 b&., p:ds,
$MS mo. 6#-2696 n••!AC. 2 BR, • 1 & $30 WE Ek & U-P •~!boll Penlmu1a bltn raJl&'!, drpl, crpta, Fil 2 BR 1 •-th I t"'91is, pri. party, After 1 .......... , clubnn ca ......... , 2 12 • ""' • oce.n vew. pm fm.7174 or 5%>T.m OC'EA m' Maamiticent To .. -•..... Encl e s dJo • B ' .,....,, · -'k t be•.... -· ' .,... ""'uNWM:, -. gar, tu "'1 R Apts. BAY F'r'ont l Br, Prlv heh le Coll~ Ave., 646-60,32 . w,... 0 '"'"• _., mo. I S .f.30
3 br & d i~ bath, crpta & $2'J5/mo. Adlta, aml pet ok. • TV Ir Ma.Id Servke: Avail. pelr, mo to mo $195. Yearly Utlder new mgment. 494-2339 or Ol--3.183. Renta I to hare
drps, dbl giu:age, frplc, 54()..9523. • Phone Service'-Htd. Pool 2BR APT OCEAN VIEW dshw~hr, dbl eleC;own, has e Chlldn!n le Pet Section $215 311 Edgewater 6Th-8Xl5 SPACIOUS 3 BR., 2 ti.., nr • FEMALE roommate: needed
everything. $ 8 o o I /Ito . Newport 8e1ch 2376 Newport Blvd., Ctrt or 646-5447 NpL Hta. Like ncW cpta, on Sooth Coast Hwy. tn 20 '1, for large 2 Bedroon\
Owner G:i5-285.5. ......_ 548-9'?55 or 645-39G7 CHARMING Duplex. 2 BR, drpe, bltn R&O, diiiWlhr. B-2392 apartment (with same l
DOVER-SHORE'S BRAND NEW (Ad good tor $5 on reno newly deoora~ Adulti on-NM::e & quiet. Mature adltA. M, .. ,_.,,. $125. Pool, sauna, etc. ~ with option to pur-_ Jv ckll9e to ocean/be.Ylshopl no pets. $225. 646-2414. Completely furnllihtd except
BEAUT. View home. 4 chttse! Top quality! BEAUTrFUlLY l'Um: l Br. ~Gi5-tm or 985-5822. ' HERE'S the Apt for You 2 DLX 2 I 3 BR, 2 Ba, encl 2.nd Bedroom. Call 557..al.07 Bdrma., 4 Ba. $1,100 'lllO. • 2 & 3.,J3edrooms Owner's-t!:pt. Prlv. swim'i ' Br encloted / 5to • pr. SITO up. Rental Ofc., lln Costa Mesa) lease e 2 Car Car.q:es pool Avl Oct 1 $200 BACH. apt. unfum. w/aar. · gar w rage 300& Mace Ave. 546.-1034. GIRL wanted to share 3 Br
Bill Grundy Rltr 6/a-0161 $450. &~75. 613-0:& . , ~. blk. tn bd>1165• NY""ri apts., '~,~undr:YNo fapeclltottiea,;,~/mo!a 2 BR 0~ ~·-~ •• pa. apt -·/ ··-Blk to ~-~ NEWPORT CJU.:ST SPACIOUS a-c. 2 BR, ... e pnt. y. ~::"'",.;.,_, . --. ~....., . ..,,,.,,., ., .,,..., --....... IJl;&UI, THE BLUFFS PHONE '4' ,
141
•ua 673-5218 aft 5 _,...,,.., ts<>. pr, pool. Infant O.K. Work M&-6800 ext 333:1 to
Ne""-port Beach smart, new 3 ~ · -.... beam c e 11 In a: s, walk·ln · $2Xl. 546-0281 4:30 or evt1 !: wknlh
Br, pool & ma.int. CU!t. Dupl_exet Fum. 3AS c~, ~· ~~5114pifll Coron• del Mir ~~re~g~ P~~ 2:;: "N~-~po!!!:rl!_!h~oc~h~---1;;'613-1'>95Q~~~M;;<;;;";;;;;Tii;;;I crpt/drp. $525 mo 1st & la.st I ;;.""-="-'".;..:;;.;;e,.._..;.;; ~l.C'I , "" """''" ,_,.. .... crpt all utll pd, quiet adlt -DELUXE living tor baU the
Slmdep. 833-8635, 557-7883. DELUXE FURN 3 BR.~2 -.SUS CASITAS only. Nr Westculf Plaza. PARK NEWPORT p~ with room mate.
NE\V '3 Br, home, fenced BRAND NEW 3 sty oollltand· BA, $275/mo. WINTER. Furn i'br. I: ·bachelors. 7110 re "' -SlEll. ~. APARTMENTS Lad~ only. 541-1419 •
yard dbl gar, f¥!ar bch, ding bay view. 3 Br, 3 ba, 67>5366 or 646-l040 Newport J)1v4, CM:. 'l1 b v NEW 3 Br, 2 Ba. Npt Bachelor l or 2 Bedrooms "836-"=-11>1~~7':---.==--1
never occup., built in.s. nu huge .sundeck, Intercom. 2 SHARP 2 &: 3 Br, 2 Ba. $235 _r..10TEL Apts., ·'in monthly " Ot"ttl Heights, 1Chool1, fr pl c, and Townhouaes SHARE Apt ot Howe
Cllrpe:ts, & drapes. PhOne cai;, gar w/elec dr openr
1
& ~"" mo
1
" 1114..,~· .. .,~=-rates, SUD mo. &'up, 2376 crptt, d:rpl, b!UN:, Prlv. yd. Fr. $19UO ()pen M Dally SAVJ;; $$$S 642-3Zl6. s;:60. 64&7rai. -<>•..........., or -.. ~. Newport Blvd. 548-97$, TOWNHOUSE $290. Avail Nov. 1st. Spa Pools TeJ'lllij; Home.Partner. B 3 6 -119 C •
2 br, Ii'· lam. area, Jg. yd.,
boat accesa. Nu pajnt in &
out. New w/w crpt thro-out.
Immed. occupy. $220 mo.
Open Ilse., Sun 1-5 p.m.
=amuela Dr., HB. Call
Ilt1l\1AOJLATE THROUGH-5 BR, 3 bath, 3 car gar, N"lwport BeaCh * SHADY ELMS.POOL 2 Br. t!repl.a~. pool, private 642-5722 art 5 pm. Acrou trom Fuhlon lJ1and ~1479
Otrr 3 br, lg. fam nn, new deluxe c r pt g. near e Adults Poolside $150 up. patios, continental break· JMi\tAC Triplex, qWe:t 1t. at Jamboree on Sall Joaqum FML. to thare channh11 2 ~. _";P'"mo&. R-ED .... ~ -~~OWMd, N.~rs,;: 3 BR. duplex, lrg aundeck, 2 177 E. 22nd St., Ct.1642-3645. ~~·J~~-~ .. ds, ~ 28R, bltlnl, trplc. Gar. lllll&m:; """''°° ~~ ~~m~·
"" ~ \,,IUW'"£ol ear garage. YKl'ly. Util pd. Lge Fully Furn 2 Br"s-;ooiuPvu>A ""uue ach. ~w-· Lndry $200. 761 Scott Pt ...-·-· REAL1'0RS,_Arlene893-1351. SC.2222. 832--0942 AM. or 494-8456 nished or unfurnished, trom 673-8364. LUXURY-BAYFRONT COO: Garages for Rent 435
VERY plush 2 St, ·2 Ba, tuU 4 BR, lam rm. frpl, brand nu Eves. = w/w, ~'&:~ $250. Corona 'jiel Mar,IA-"TTRAl=~CTIVE==.,..,--,~.~,~B~R", do. 7th Ooor. Spect. view of
appll, club I: pool. Adult Jjy. luxury condo. Nr ocean, 2 BR, 2 Ba., nu cvpeta, 00 pets · ' · 644-2611. w/w earpetitw, drpe bttne;. bay & ocean. 2 Bft, 2 BA. DOUBLE gara1e, Storaae
1ng. Xlnt Joe. 1 mil to beach. w/t,ennis, pool. $ 6 0 0 . garqe Newport Shores. LARGE Bachelor, $125/mo. Adu?t:s, no pen, ~ mo. all elect. w/pool. For rent only. $40 mo. Eut Newport
$225 lease. 536-0)92 or 645-1658 $27'5. mon. ;soearty. 548-4802 Heated Pool. Adults, no LUXURIOUS 1 Br, nr oceaJI, 11p. J.9llYW~. 646-0116 or leue. 844-Q56 Blvd, Cotta Mesa 549-4200
534-3896. * SHARP 4 BR, 3 BA, * 3 BR. 2 BA. * -peta. Call 645-8965 el~ kitchen, frplc, util, e~S-..BR., $2'J5 mo. -Track cozy 2 Br + den, 2 ba. O!flce ·Rent1I 440
tJOO.-Executlve Mansion 4 Townbouae Back Bay. Pool. Steps to beach. $300 Yrly. Huntington ~ch patio, crpta, drpl, $2'15. OOme; on Le. tnd. lot. Gat, Covered pa.Uc, car. 3 blkl ·
Br, 2 Ba. Has all. Kids/pet. Frplc, self clean oven, dbl Property House 642-3850 673-8617 er fi'l3..13(K: patio, ktdt, petaOK. 642-2221 ocean $285/mo. 892-:;842; 1617 WESTCLll"l'-NI
•C'l\llr !I ~t Ren!AI AP-f'V gar. llJ3.8974 er 833-1~. $156-$.lfli 2 BR. Apt. Garage. Carden. or (MJc. 64&.•> 675-4X$8. 2300, UM, 756 I 540 Sq. n .
Homlflndert 54r-9641 SPARKLING new N w pt Ounlex•s Unfurn. 350 BACHELOR &: J. BR., PRtlos: Walk to beach le storu. 2 SPACIOUS 1 Br apt. Gar LARGE 3BR, 2BA, firep\, Ample parking. Ulil. Baum·
SEITING ." •·-alge _ ftl'V Crest 3 BR, 2~~ ha, ocean frpDi·~~~ Pbarivl,h ga& "i""ts ·1 adults or w/chlld ok.-~ Nr. 17th. $150 mO. water pd: blUna, dhawahr. Nr Hoe.a gard.ner. 5'U·51m.
home, dbl aar :-1•150. Al~ ·3 vu, vac. Intercom syslem1. Balboa Penlm.ul• _,:_'::.::" a. .__,1 · 0
1 •, mo. includes utll. 6Tr1J1», Mature ~ woman. Hosp. $250/mo. Adu It•. ~ DELUXE oroce. 18c
BR, $l80. C.?tt. Agt. Fee. Barbque, $475. lse. 642-34!K> ;:ifab~~· ;'~ ii:the. 3 BR, 2 BA house, So. ol Refer req. NG pets. 6G.Ql25 642-C3S7 PLUS «ll' Warehouse space
919-8430. BAYFRONT, pl'iv. bc.h lrg NEW 3 BR, 2 BA, outst.lnd-See for )'OUl"aelf. 17301 H""'Y• fplc, pa.Ho, $.125. 2 SI'ORY deluxe apt, danish NEW CUil be.ytront w/prl. 13'10 D Lop11 Colta Me•
deluxe 2 It 3 Br dupl@X, fum lng view or bay, yrly, $600 Keebon Ln. Cl blk w. of Call Agent~ trplc, Iott, wuher I dryer bch I pier, S br/2 ba, frl>l. 644-2228 ~1252
$150 -1 Br. garq:e apt, stove, 3 "~:pli!. BA~m~=-· or unf., mo. or :yrly, mo. 548-€l61 or 548-2103. Beach, 1 blk N. of Slater). LOVELY 3 Br, 2 Ba. crpts, $320/mo. 834-3635, 67!>-2324. BBQ. M15 yrly. 979-063!, * Ba.yfront office •ce to $~2 g~~~Pll~am cril, $.500 sec dep. All refundable. I ~6""6411~=~·--~---St2-~ drps, bltins S3'7S mo. fD3 WALK to beach I 1toru ~D. share Ba~ Udo B141. Sl!iO
carport, 1 blk beach! 842--3423 3 BR., 2 ba., frptc. 2 Patio6. Coron• del M.r DELUXE Adult Poolside Bqonla. 673-8317. 2 BR, pool. CdM charm r-;::s 2BR l b&. B'lk. 10 ocean,,,c""~· -C.,._C'-'==-=,,-,=I . Yrly. $.175 Mo. c-~ B -· N 3 B ~' Ba. .... ...i. ...... ,.. __ _.. ,. ..... ,. ye.uiy, ~ Month 1DLX. 2 rm. otnce. 8dt deal
it'lM -2 hrs, ....,le, alone on 3 BR 2 BA dupl-~. * * * * * * .... uen """111.J°"" .... r . r., ..-n ""l"'rx. """t .......... _ ....,..... R.E. _._ ~-'-f "'" ...,.,., ,_,., • • ""'' ""'"""'' Ask For Mike ~ .. ;;: .. , __ pono 6 1 .... C"-. dra · lota f "''""'•';'" .....,. ot -e in O.C. Airport uea, 21'12 . huge lot. Beams A Diann! dri>S. fncd yd. els to schls. JONES REALTY 673-QlO VIE\V ocean. ~-._., aaa -• .. ..., .... '"" ... , pes, 0 CLEAN, lrl. 2 BR Upper. JONES REALTY' m.QIO DuPont No. Q ~3223 NU-VIEW RENTALS $260/mo 536-2914 *NEAR BEACH* pools. sauna, tennis . storage:, 607 lrls. 833-2334. Nr shops Adult1 over 35 °' . . PRESTIGE· community 2 br, 84&-0:i59. WALK to beach £: storM ni; * ~2407 . LGE. 2 Br dupltx. Nu crpts, * CMona del Mar, 1m gmcl
I ' ·1
•
673-4)30 or 494-3248 NEW 2 & 3 BR. adlt. condo, 2 ba lg la ---t Deluxe 3 BR, 2\S BA. Huge 1 Bdrm ~ ~.. · ' •-r~tc nl-loca"-* F1oo AJC lll~ *
pool I --•· 1 _ & , . m '"" .y .. y nn, . unlt . _, ... A • rovu• •• . 2 BR, pool, CdM cbann $225 2 BDRM 2 BA .,_, "'""' ·r , .. ,._ uun, r, , u , am e
0 , fiER c•·-•·g 2 BR s, e,.,..,., c e ..... ,... all elect k•'I, W/D. pn·v. owners U\ new ,...,...,m UC-lwte ~ mo _,, -~ 6 pm * ~ ~., * I ~ ,,..._,....,, ' $295. Agent $4&--1290 heh. $450. l&e. 524-3473 duplex, beam c e 11 t n g, 1 BR Fum Luxury AdWt Car. <>range Cout R.E. 644-4848 w/frpk. Ann. oc:i. ht. ;;;:7400 · ........ ao.a. ., ..... •• mo. · '
I ~·1r:::J·r:.v$zto~i:. NEW 5 Br, 3 Bi'~-·· BAYFRONI'' Bann., 2 bath ~~le, nr .shopping, no ~~4o~:SS~12tt1 ~ BACK BAY VIEW 551~ or 548-5212 OCEANfltONT +'Bay Vu. fl
Wlk") dlltance: beach &: drapes, $450 per'lM. $550 Yrly ~tio, 30' dock ~ -536-'1447 atrer 5 &: "~ 2 BR HEATED POOL $2111. 2 BR. blbul, aina;ie car New 2 Br, 2 Ba. trplc. WW CLASSIPllD. ~. Studenal Pre t . , * 644-1323 tit Balboa Cove! -. &M-4340 -*--*-.:.*_,;.*_*c....c*:_ MEN, small beach hotel. 2453 i· ~.M. 543-1: ~~r"° : oJUS: turn. Lee $COO. ·mnn-n'?6, HOURS ROOunlt~~ ~m ~f'P!~ lrtlne ~~Y:ty~ ~e:!. be,:,~ Newport BeKft ~=-~th.~~~~ ~', CJ~ to ~a~~ A~ per "1o. 644-~ or 64iooa;. ,.:l~o;~:cl613-113::W~E°'Se;~-C-L-l-F-F~D-R~.-II Advertisers may =
t nnil .... ,..._ .L.Lv _.'t .,"' $215 mo. Agent 548-1290. BACHELOR-Walk to heft.ch, Oct.GIE4, Callcl 673-43362 • , 3 B Huntlnatan. 8Hch 2 BR, 1 & 2 BA. Bltn. appli· their adt by telep
l e -comer separa e en-3 B~n 2 ba ............ $400 Harbor V\ew Homes VIEW apt. Nearly . new. /ltlil $95 Can 536-3507 LAR ' ean • R. -~ ances. Pool. 642-6274. 8:00 a.m. to 5:30 p.tn. ~-Agt~ $225/mo. ~~:·i~.~e .. ··:vc~~ BeRm'" .... ~ Din' B.R .... !~. ~~~~~~e adult only . .:.u~ B.:'dt . :~~ -~r~r~u :C ULTRA PRIVATE SHARP-! Br.'Ocun. 2 hlkl; ~f~~~~~=
CHA••n"G 3 BR 3 Ba '~ '" ~ I ::::::;..o:=""''-----I-''--------I """" 3687 ' Deluxe 2 br, 2 ba, lnclaed 1hag nu appll. Adu1111, DO I .... i •·-1u.1 .. n , , nu 2 BR. 2 bo.thA, tam rm. S350 BIG CANYON Duplexes, SPECrACULAR pr t vat e 0 '""'wATRFRONT l BR pre.tic Ir pr, OUld & sm. pets. Yrly. $175. tm-2124. COSTA MESA
0
0n'ICE
_.nt, NP &: drps, frplc, 4 BR., 3 ba. ..... •••• •• S425 4 BR, 3 BA lam I"""' f'urn. or Unfum. 3.55 , Bee-.. ! .,._..._Alor apt. avail quiet pet ok. 1 ml. from * * OCEANFRONT 3 · 330 W. Bay patio, 1 gar, 2 blkB bch. Lse. 4 JIB., 2 bllths •••••••••• $4!6 1 A"" ro,...' ,. • ., ~35· '°" 131 ~ Ideal for bachelor, bch $100 817 Geneva St • new, 642-5618 417 Narc ts 1 u L Owr. 3 BR. 2 ba., alr oonct .. $2'?5 se. 'l"'""''u·"'' or~· C 1 now. newly fUm.lshed tncl. 673-Jm .,..., ~ · • BR. 2 BA, fplc, cpts. drps,
644-0924. 4 BR., 2~1 ba, ••••.• $450/4'75 ~Sou"1=~·L~•=9"n~~.:"'"~~-11 ~O!)P!.!,!!ll~r!•!!no!JB~IM~ch:!!___ color TV. Also 1 A 2 BR. MeN ...,.,..,,..... OW, yrly lse. S'ffi.-1.536
1% BlkB to Ocean. 2 BR. 11,1 2 BR, 1% ba. •" ••••••• $285 -----· OCEAN VIEW : 2 Br. 1~ Ba. ~Uat~6t "f1 Q!,;~· "C;;;o;;ll;;•;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;-';;;;;;IVecyllplcl"'uhb &2 Br.I 2ABadw't flull I OCEANFRONT • Spaclow, BA. 2 car ear, New crp't1, 2 BR, l bath .......... $300 1 BR ocean view apt $175. Lrg patio. $2SJ. ~lu.'te · ~~· 11 app • poo · v· unusually nice l Br apf.
paint. Yards. $295 mo. 2 BR, 2 halhs ....•••.• $325 mo incl Utlls. Ask jor Paul 'atudio w/blt·lns. $165. 1st & ~Jj~·! You'll be pleue:d $180 MO.. ~ '°);.=:· 1 ~a~ Yearly. $300/mo. 66-0668.
I ~1549. 5 BR, 3 bll, N'pt Sch . · iS7S Days 496-«i&&, ext 46, eve lut. No children. 673-3222 ,<;:!;--'=-----F=-Neat cl--2 BR lndivldu·' .,..,~ ......., 2 BDRf.I apt, 1 bath, nr · CALL 552 7500 GT.:i-4825 after 6. 2 BR Jov.·er Duplex, tum A _,, .., ...,......._
SPYGLASS HILL ' • ;~;~~~~=~ heat, priv patio, "'cloud unlt with "'"' """"'""· 3 BR, 2 BA $199 beach & bay. $l00. mo. yriy.
Panoramic Ocean V I cw VISION Houses Furn. or gar. Near beach, Vacant, draperies 1: a single at· Cpl, drps, pool, cloerd pr. m Cypress, 673-2145.
( Cbrner10t. 4 BR. prof. decot· Unfurn. 310 =':::94-S6tll:,::::::;o:.· =-----tacbed garage. Neer Harbor Child ok. 17421 Kee:lson (N'r. BAY view, 2 Br. 2 Ba,
ated, 1$0/MO, 614-0!J6, • d h·11 --------[ : . ....;... ...... JI C?I FURN. 1 BR ap!, P'" ..... ,.,. ..... c.m ... Qwoec/ Beach & Slat") 842-3546, ...... ~~!?!:-~,'.!..~,: SPYGLASS HILL • Lease 6 re I General . ...... ..... 8dUIL Cose to Downtown broker 916-51155. 847-7786. yev ~. VI~ or,,..,...
I BR home, tantutlc view. 1 7;::;;:::~==~::~l.~-----~~~ $185. '9t-969'.l. * * * * * *EXTRA nice, brand nu, 2 br. San Cl1menft . ~No pm. &tG-1168. REALTY REALTORS 12 BR 2 ba, oceanfriint $450 BACH apt at Cttscent Bay NEWLY DCX:ORATED 2 Ba adult condo, Bike to
NEWPORT BEACH
3333 Nowpo" Blvd.
642·5678
HUNTINGTON BEACH
178r.i Beach Blvd.
540.1220
LAGUNA BEACH 22l Forest Ave.
. 494.9466
SAN CLE~IENTE
3<l5 N. El Camino Real
4924120 * 2 BR. l Ba, fireplace, I !U~nl:i!v!::, !::Pui<=="""="='· Zltvlne!::!::!::!:::
1
2 BR 2 ha lum, winter $2'15 Apts. Fum. 360 $155. up. $50. up wk. Co\OZ' Lrg 2 BR. 2 BA, apt + Bch., tennit;, pools, jacuzzi, * NOW AVAILABLE *
I
h11~ .. ~~.--$,;'!l~I", Ii Newport Beach, 3 BR, 2 ba, Gene.a( TV. 1435 N. Coan, 494-2Slll. tio N crpts &: drpe sauna carpe:ta, dra p e 1, Brand New Garden Apt1 NORTH COUNTY
nclllucB a ..... ·~· ~· 3 BR 2 baths $275 Unfum. Yrly. $325. 1.;;=:;;.;;;....______ OCEANl'RONT -$300 MO. 2 ~ilcb-e:n e: small pet ok: security gate $775 64&-4569. Xlnt San 0.emente area dial free 540.1220
0
1
3 BR, ? ... ba houae:.CdMGar, $32SC
1
. 3 Bi 2 be..~:·:::::: PlO PALM Springs _ Decorator Bdrm.~ Bath. Brand new & Immed. occupancy. $190. Nr. NEW 2 Br apt Qilt1. drps, 3 B~,8:a!.~ttis:iwr ~ lria, . al 3 BR + booot, 2'li bR.. $f.5 Fumi&hed l I: 2 bedrooms modem. Wmter. 494--0615. Baker &: Bristol. M&T bltns, carport. Sl~.50. Nr. It. tire-place, $250 CLASSIFIED I 2 BR + den, 2 ba .••• -••• SO> $195 & $250. Pool, Lld<'I Isle 9'/1.-8719, ' Fry & shop'g, l child ok, no All apta:. have private patk>!I. DEADLINES
IMMACULATE. extra large 3 BR. 2 baltts •••••••• S450 Retrlir-rated Al r Con-. * * * * * ·* pets. 646-3186, ~==·--many other fee.lures. See at Deadline for copy A kills \ 3 Br, 2 ea, patio, garage. 4 BR. 2\i baths ••.•.•.. S460 diUonmg, Cable ~a I d . TERRIFIC Bay View. 2 Br, GRAND OPENING WALK TO BEACH 686 Camino 0e Los Mares, Is 5:30 g.m. the day be-~ $425/mo. Phone 644-0611 4 BR, 21Ai be. + \.iew •. $495 BalbM lsl•ncl Adults. No Pets. qwet 90lllh 1 ba fum apt, Lido Isle. NE\V BREED APTS. Brand new 1 &: 2 BR, jua:t muth of San Oemente fore pu Jleatlon, except ·* CHARMING l Br. unturn, ~e~ le~74 ~nly. The0~lm $350/mo. 548-7834. 646-4T:;iO BAQ-IELOR'S & I BR. carpet!, drapes & bulltins General Hosp. · Edfo~ti~~~da.!~e~ :!~~.:
I beaut. garden. $225. Adults, * BAY FRONT * .,'71:.Y .,.,;,... venue cga, Newp0rt leach • 1160 -1185 · , Z21 • 16th St. 847..J!l57 Use E:.trella 'Off.ramp -A•"" ~" "' .,____ 4~1-~8700 11 Saturday, 12 noon. no pet or child. v1Jo"'l.w;r. Pier, 4 BR, 3 BA, tam rm. UtU Paid. Frplc's, -beam WALK TO BEACH ,---,...,,"!' " ... v.o•, 4"""
2 Br, 1 Ba, frplc, carpeting, Unfum winter $900. Ye:e.rly BlilbH l1l1nd B&EAUTIFUt I LL! "S;~ 2
11ncBr. 2 ceil., patio I: pool. Bltlns & 1 & 2 BR. Carpeta, drapes, NEW 2 BR, l~ BA, ocean CLASSIFIED
no child, m pets, avail Oct. ni.oo Furnishings ap • nc · U1>W..:S, ns. I'l'frll{. avail. No Pl"fs. blln.s. 308 16th St. a36-3548 viev.', Top atta, mper de-REGULATIONS
7th -..:: 675--0657 n N ~ 6_ ,,,,.,,. 4 BR, 2 ba. Sleeps 10, tum. maid service: & U ti I . -.3 Hamilton CM "' ~7 , ... ,, adul'-, 1~. 492.-·, I ' ~ "SINCE
1946
.. ava · 0 ""'5· 1~ Plenty of parking. Students $1000/mo. 1 )T. lease. Boat .. ., ' 1.::°':..:::.:.:·~~"'· ~~~--...,.. •• 4oJ1J UO'I ERRORS: Advertben
4 Bdr., 3 Ba. Adulm, no pets. Laguna Beach l\-elcome. ~ per mo. liip avail. Located at 645-4411 DOG RUN Wntmlnster should check their adl l ~~Leest-or.~~Poinaettia. ~!,.e:~~l~~ Winter. ~2866or673-7910. Balboa Bay Club. Ph: TIRED OF NOISE? 2 BR. Sl.59. Poot. Gar. OUld ~td~tei';~t \,~ . D•y1 552-7000 Nights THREE Arch ~. wlnt~r Ir INTERIOR l)egigners 2 Br., Shirley Miller at Cold~-ell \Vllaon Carden Apt&. 2 Br. ok. 842-3:>46, 847-7786. 2 WEEKS FREE RENT, DAILY PD.OT uaumet
1Cott• Melli = 28fose'B::t~m a~ ll\ing/dining area, kitchen. Banker. ~:u.10. 1% Ba, erpts, drpi:. Pool. * 3 BR, 2 BA STUDIO. :?: crea~~· bl=: =: liability fO'f' the ftnt ~
l 2 UNIVERSITY Parle~ Br. 1\i to $550. mo. Pr\v beach A ~ winter, S2TS yrly. OCEANFRONT Mature adu1b, no pets. $195/MO. _r..tature: famlly. Sl47 893--0419. corrttt inlertion only.
T
-'-· Br,I p Ba &, tennis couru a: pool. 1 tennis crt, pl··~. sec.ltd-67S-3412 or 673-0110 Beautiful 3 Br. & 4 Br. ONLY $162.SO/MO. Avail now. 842--0350 . .,....,.,...,~. Poo. ark · """ n=r •A-·-' ~~'.:ied B j•·-p F"!'plc. None Better In 2283 tountain Way East Aptt CANCELLATIONS: Garqe. Yard. Low malnt. yr. IU'. $395/mo. ~.or ed A ~..,.,ty 5 """'" Al'M. • -enlntula Newport Beach! p h : (W. Of Harbo.· on WU.On) 2 BR, 1 BA, b!t-lns, crpts, Fum. or Unfum. 370 When killlnir &n. ad be
Avail now. ~ Ill 828-44$ 528-9626 LINGO REAL ES!ATE 71416t5-00:22 714/552-8503. Call 6t6-2S46 drps, l blk to beach. $1'r.I. I---------sure to mlke a record
or 897-1005. L n. ch '99-4!>54 4!M-5M3 $S5 WEEK I. UP "-PM & WkndJ at 4107 mo. 645-3053. 536-1336. n-1•--p ot the Kll.L NUMBER
s &: drapes, pr I ;;.•;,;f,.•;.•_•..;;-..;.;;•=----Condominiums • Siee:plfl&' Rooms ;"ashore Dr NEW ADULT LIVING!! 2 BR ~·/closed pr!\gt '1141 -eninsula given you by your ad
fenced •pat», 2 1 ma I I $165 . 1 BR. Near beeeh. Big Furn. 315 • H01114!keeplil.a Rooma ' BACHELOR Units 6 1 BR's Children &: small pet o~ \'EARLY or winier. 2 BR, 2 taker as ~eipt of )-'OUr
:hDdren _.. .-u:c r-~ ·-~ Child/ I • ---'-"------"'"' e Ocean View AptB S35 per \Yk. & UP. 1 BR., 2 "'flotts. Frplc's, beam $150 Pti· M7.st49 225 Uatl 'nW1 kill r. ' no I"'"'• ,,...., mo. .... ..... -.. .... .,....... pet we • i. BALBOA INN BR I: Bachelors. Color TV, cell., patio & pool. bltim, le . . . ba, tum. S . 2 BR., l·ba, canee on. 20Tl \Vallace: No 6, C.M. t.'Onle! • LaguM Nlauet maid sen.o, pool, The Mesa, refrlg avail. Sl6D to $22.S. $165. 1 BR. &haa: cptg, tplc, 4 unf.·SZ?i. 673--9591 . number must be pre--646-5223. $'250. Large 2 Br, ocean vlew I "-==c-.=•=----100 Main Stttoet "l blocks to be ch g .... 1d sented by the adwrtlae:r
h 3 BR ~~ lnl I'----•" ID N. Newport BL, N.B. Uu pd. No petL a , 11 _.. · Costa MeM . f a ••· •· SINGLF.S/f'amlllt'I • Vacant apt, uge dt'Ck. ....,, ... om um on "'' v•il"Oo't\I 646-9681. 3!IJ Hamilton C.f.1. 415 15th St. Hunt Bch. 1;:.:;;;.;;_;;;;;.;;::.. ____ .11 1n case 0 uupuoc.
2 Br. $130. AllO 3 BR, $180, $400 • 3 BR, 2 Ba, f't'J>le, ~ ~be~ltu:ly fum. NICE cleBn boy front apt, ON The Be ch thru J 6454411 2 BR apt CT'J>IA d?'pfl flOVt' THE EXCITING CANCELLATION 0 R
klds/pct,s. Aft. Fee~. bell.utlru1 ocean view! Ex· 1.,;=·""'o.;.=·="c"""'--w/prl. bt-t1ch, 3-blks west or 31 •--·~ 3 •8 2 ';;: -refrlg iaund 'fae fioo i PALM MESA APTS CORRF.Cl'ION or NE\V m-&UO ~nal hou!IC. Conclomlntum1 ferry landing. Suitable for ' ,...,.,.,.., r, • •e'e""n ..... n• mi . be h ·,_, 'J5.-9 . lNUTES 1".l • AD BEFORE RUNNING·,
BR. 2BA, med yd. Dbl. gar. NU ·VIEW RENTALS 320 couple. $2'!.i n~ .. annual $321/mo. 8 31-8350 or Z.u.... 6111 . to ac . .,...,...,,.,. M' N?T. BCll.
M• ·-· '""48 Unfurn. bAsi1. Boat slip avall.1c543-1~_75_7_. ____ ~~ 2 BR, 114 BA, unturn. $185 *'* 2 BR. 1 BA, cpts, drpa, Bach, dlul& 2 BR. from $1.50 kElvtl'"'o· 'cotf~ 11, amn~~ adto
Pfivate, eleal!!_ quiet, nkely 111 ............... , or · u 1!11 E. 21st St.1, CM R A: O, $145. Ask for Dale, A ts, No P.ta.. • ''"'" ..... JILndacaped. l.-'lllfdl pet o.K. EMERALD BAY, Avail now-_e_ .. _,_._,_uft ______ ~6"'7:1-"""1983=· -----I BR. furn. Patio. gar. Ntll, * 646 .~ * 962-44n 1581 Mell!. Or lh&t ha. been ordered. $250 ~00 wknd PENlN Pt, 1 blk to heh, wuhcr A tlz:re'r, drplc, pt m (5 blkl lrvm Newpori Blvd.l but "'e cannot ru&ra""
· eve · thru June. $850. mo. 3 BR 3 BR Condo Ea.stbluff, $425. f 1 vi be Hf!\ghts, Adults. S22S mo. LARGE 2 BR S16S/mo 2 Bdnn. n15fmo. 2 blks 546-9860 tee to do so untlf the &d 175-Modern 2 Br Triplex, 2 pvriv btacti area .l tacilt. Call for alp 01 ntmen 1 . urn, 00 or tv, ew, aul; 645-f465 evn $44-(1228 • · from bl!nch Crpts, dl'ps .l .... • ....... Ba Cu )'l"d kidl:/petJ TI4-682-7030 ITIOdetTI t Br, sundeck, yrty, ""'""'=·=:..::c:.:.:'="~ Water paid. 309 Monte . PREVIEW OPENING ,,... a.ppe..,. .. ..., !A t he eaiu· ~·· 'Re !al A · 6«).0929. vaJI Oct. 15th. adults. $'190/mo. li'73-!169. fl).50 ptr wic I up. Color Iv, Vlltl.l. 2 dilldren OK. garage. 842-5023. paper. 1 st nl rcy CLEAN 2 BR, 1 BA. Pre.at. El Toro ma1d !erv A kltd\e'n&. The 548-396.1. LGE. 2 BR. Near slorft Award wlnntna: 1, j & 3 bt H~ rs 547-9641 close to bench, ,;tM I trta. ""--"""'~-----PENINSULA Point, 1 Br. Ba.yclitf Motel, 455 No. NEW 2 B Util pd. $l30 per mo. N~·ly deror 1pt1 w/famlly rms. No DL\lE·A-UNE ADS:
NEW. B-ROO'I' ~ ,,~rly St. s.285. N~" -~-'•"·-3BR, F'um. Utll pd, Yearly. N•·-Bl .. NB 1!!,U, ~ r apt, Da lono 1-B'---lease. Sorry, no pets. t"'rom 'Mlnt': •ds are strictly tBa.Co.IJ~ h!need ..._,.... r..•• IWDUUllU llUu $200/mo. 673-tl!J, ~ · ,_..._..,_ chlldrea welcome,JV<"a m ..... IUJI· ui..-•vv just $1~ OUR TOWN cashin•dvancebym•il
:l'Tl'I.., , 2~bai-.i drpl. crpta, 2 car $tl'.>. 1 BR, util JMI, no kldl or Lrg. Immt1c. 2 Br dpt:c:. Dlx cpt/dri>s, ?kUo. l 9 6 O 2 BR, fplc, 1 '' BA. ~early Family Aiu 1250 Adams or at any om-or our of·
)'d, Sleops to S. o:iut P\ua.. L•gUM .Nlrue' l*J', .. t"'c, encl9d ynl, pool 1 100 h bay 417 E kll A bl., fr'pl. l bik heh/bay \V81lace, Apt. 1, 646-8836. Arw. lt!Ue from beach. S19!1. Aw. !Adams' at Fal.Mew), ri~. NO phone ordtn. =· =~ :a:."1; 2 BORl\!·t 2 &di, Ctet!. frp!c, : m:I f&c. $300. 5S1-1U27 ::: Balboa,~-~ . I :$275"''2':675-'='='°="'~J?.34"""·°"!42!!:-'-.--, * 2 BR. l Ba Upstairs, Mtaa SJ&.9819 aft 6 PM I-wkndL Costa MHL Phone 556-01"6. OeacJllne: 3 p.m. Frld&y,
...
~. bit• ..... ~.'.-mod. kilchew w / 111tn11 , unt ftgton BNeh LUX. f\lrn BA.ytront Baell, FURNJSHEO 2 BR apt, Verde. $155. Adults • no I &. 3 BDRM AVAIL * CASA VlL'"T'ORIA * Cm ta 1'tesa oftlce 12
"'-· ..... UMl...-•, Private ruarded be.ch --""""' Pri be available September 29th. peta. 833-8974. 2 bl"-.__..., ~~r ..._.._.... l, 2 l 3 BR, Fum & Unf, noon -•ll branch of·
pr, I~ hootc·l.'P I pa· munity'. ltec. club wt,""fe:.;: VER.Y pluatl 2 ~ 2 Ba, Ml _..,. per mo. v. ach, rn,...l656 or 131~1D'l'S "" ........ ...:,. ~ ncu. tio1, $350. 64.f.OOX> nts c:rtl~ • ja__;, appU, club A. Adult llv· ·"Sll:;t:P.;•:::""'1::;;,·.:673-lll;::;;:::6'=-,_~-ALL elec. 2 BR. 1 BA. 1 3 BR l'Nnh9' Oll(:I re:trii:: Carpets. dtapet. DI\\', TV B~ROOMS,
2
•·t•·, Priva!t • ng ·,~~~,,\ Ing. Xlnl loc, l ml. tn beach. YEARLY tee 2 BR. adlts, 2 BR. 2 BA, all bll·lm. Near child ok, Sl'TS mo. Stt 120 stO\'e chlldttn 'po 0 1' Rnl, ~ ~c. ~ Victoria THE DAILY PILOT re-c.u -1111 INV\I $22S Jtuc. 536-0092 bead\ bA,y $Z3S bay & Beach. sm. c.u Albert No. 1. CM~. Bu.sh&rd. Adami. 96!-1436: St. It H&Jbr, Ot 6.\U:970 ~n·es the-rhi:ht to dat-
beattd .IWlmmlnl' poal, S250/ mi ot beacb. $450 Jlel' mo: 534-3.!96 or near ~'Xf19· ' 673--0473. 3 BR l'l BA, ~cioul.. S180. um1·~ ,..-....... ~. Newnnrl g; ... h sl f)'. ·tdlt, «-ntar or r.-mo. Ce.JI 645-8616. \'ear !Git', Call Bob. ~=""·~---~-' vir ..,.. ~ '"'v""" -,--· -f d
2 BR 0«·1tr, qu~I. patt'I, ~ru •ft 6:30. 4F•~~· Jd~lf Cole~~ 3 BR. =: 2 BR. $250; \~~ ~~~ ·a~ ~:,~ 2286 Canyon Adu1~1Cin1y~y~ts ,.u;: ::~h~n~.,ri:::~!
gar. adult cpl onb' ilO pets. NIGUEi~ Shorn, l36SI Wind· pool Ir ~ribelt view $32;1 Al12 ~~>'· :i;_i~'ll. ~ .:'!ilt>:::,,:l.:,:llll::.::°':..:::56!>:::.:.7772:,:.::.·-~ $175 1.arge 3 br, 2 be. OMn. CIOle 10 Shopping l bus 1 BR. FU~'\, stl.S. A reaul•tlon5 without
$17'. Mt-C251. 5'3-1405. JAmmer, 2400 ICJ. n., 4'BR, Mo , Coron• dol L'.:r -f\'EW Luxurloui Ocean View. O'pt/dpn, 8-dUlll, .no pelt. llnel. Unlurn, 110\"e, rcb1a BACHF.l.OR FtJRN. St~. prior MUN.
NEW s 8rt Twntmo sm. Nr. f!'10J~~e.831~~· P 0 0 1 · Agt.' m.-3000 64().-016.11 ~;.;.;;co.,;;;;:;...;;_c:;;.___ 214 BR. From $300. \vtnler. 963 Sh&Umar 547-1156 lncld. CX:anBR.vi~fy '1!te. CLASSll'llO
So. 0..t Pla1.a. Chlldttn 4 BR. C"11>'•/dl'Jlll tt!/bltn• I DR. near beach. pool, 2004 \V. OcetnftiMt 646-3114. 1 .t 2 BR $~ . SIM. Stove, All Utll11 PakS Heated Pool, A.dull• OnJy. MAILING ADDRI SS
OK. Dbl ar. 54&-3146. Linda ltl• paW, ecol, ctutib11e, Jennts: no 1~uc. $18a. NiCE 1 bdrm apt, "'inter or ref., rrpt/drps. htd pool. 2 Br, 2 bl A dftl..J.....ground LAS BRISA$ APTS. P. O. Box 1560,
1 OR 2 Yr. leue ?ter 6 tlip. etc. $250/mo. 548-ttm. Man-J"rf t-5 ~ yearly. o\du1t1, no pets. ~. noor $164-11UC.:IWI, Mon-Ml$ Rtwr />.~ .• NB co.ta hft1a
6 llR.., c~ ~ .. alr--cond. BF..i\UT. 3 BR, Pool, dbl p'r. Ull:e w trade? OUr 'l'rAW• ~ 2 BR, crptA. drps, at im.1.,.s...,t.,_' -.,....,,--,---:,.-::-, CALL 'M'J-~ t21l6
7 ,000 SQ·, ft. $3,000 Mo. WuheT/dry. Oub privl. Pandl!le ~lwnn 11 for )'UUJ For that htrn Und-1' $&), a, beam cell, $1 40. 1 child l'lk., ii lino, $ d&11 for ~ Call I•_..,..,.,. .. ;. ••
sin
1
CNndf' Rltr. -e'J!t..6l6t rm 53IS-31l'1 or ~ s Lines. 5 dll.Y'I for 5 bocks. the Penny Pt~ no pets. 64H7!6. 54."Hli60. ~ ••• 6G-W ~W:!!111~t:Jad!J..!re!!•!!!ut~tsl;.:;.:;.3oo!!!•~it!•~, .I=====::::=:~
•
;
•
-·--,...
M Giiday, Ottobtr l l 'i7}
I . . ·1~!!!'!!!!!!"!!!!~~~~· ~~~~~~~-~~~ . (~ _""'_"" _1~;·~1 "'-,..,.-, ..... -1~ (~-·-I~ ( ---J~ll.___8611_1-,~• l[ll]I 'e': 1 l[ll]I ·';I; 11 l[Il] ~[ ~L·,.iiiiiii•"'"~" ~][Ill~•,\:;! ;;'"";;'''"'";;" ;::·J(Il];i;;IJ
!:i • UIJLV PILOT
Office Rent.11 440 Found (free •ds) l=====:==I sso ,c-''•'P':-;..•,.;,S.;.oc_.1-'••"e'-----
Co(:'::t CIHnl;:J
P1lnil119 & "'ipW-.M & po 711 ...... Wanlod,ll\& P71tHolpWlft!N,M& P710 HolpWonJod, M&F 710 HeipWantod, M & F 710 P1p•rh1nglng ;.;.:z;.
PRESTIGE
OFFICES Fl & I PAJNTING -int 4 n:t. · "' 9 \rEEK OLD IRlSJI .SET-oor •r• W ow5 v.•Mt-hav~you. N~ job too
LOST! Attention,
Mechanics
and
Repairmen.
Immediate
·openings
3 Openings
l-'ourirau1 \'ulli•v. n .. 11ut1·
lul nt•1v h1ul1llni:::. i;rounU
floor, 3.000 .•tlUlU'i:! fl-el,
111!1 dlvl•li• JnlO sn111U1•r
t•Uu.:1•11. fl().· 1xr :;quan:
fu111, 1ur·Judt•j l"W'PC!s,
drnp~h1. all J.il tllllC's, janJ.
I• 1• !!<'!"\" •'· Call 111arUyn
Stu\1t1tl (71 41 832-M4ll.
Tf:R PUPJ'Y Dutt h lo1alnt. Serv. a37-l50S "'hat-ha~, No job too ·
$100 REWARD CARPET CLEANING ~!.,.°' ,..,.; 20 .. ~exi: for
Medical
Personnel.
Sht• Ullll. lo the name of Cnn-STEM-1 OR SHA1\1POO 642-5079 aft S.
non, Ln~a 9/27 in the \'lcinl -* &16-7811 * ' ' ' 1y ol 19th St on lhc N£'"·port ---~~~~---Patios .
l'°'nn $100 re\"a~ please Cement, Concrete I "~C:::-'-------,1 in the
phone, 6Th-S089. PATIO Co\'Crs, Spaced Lat·
YOUNG yellow .~ gr~n CUS'l'Ol\t Corx:rcte \\'ork. tlce. Unique "'ell plan~.
Pa_rakeet. l\lesa dcl t.tRr Remove asphalt drlvewys. Block walls, retaining walls,
•
San Pedro,
an.•a. 2729 Dt11ke, Cl\1 Replnce w/concrele 6.lc. ft . concrete etc. Quality only. ~.-.1--014;, No delays. Free est. \Valks, Res. 642-rno, Ken. Y-loco! """'" l•1erN 1111i1 L B h M•n orttl ·-·" .,. nud<HI lo nff4o yo11.'ll ye11 hDvt DllD DI tl1D ong ea c Olltnd An11y lt lDrvD ,,. •• 1!1191. .. l\ITTEN. fluffy Ca I i e o. slabs. patios. No job too
ti · v small. 6311-3325. Pla•fer, P•td'I, R.,.lr I iv/CtJ ar, '°1.~· • alln Rd & PATIOS, 11,.alkl!I. drives. Sa""
1•Ul1 lh,.d Hlow,.,.., fDll Mrfl Tht fDtlowlnt "'ffltDI 1ki111 DfD
tood poy. YOOI CDll Mff• tlli1 D•· and ll'f""lly nffd•d rlghl now, II
I San Juan t:1l!<'k Rd S.J.C. TCH p• ,-·-·c 193-7210 Ureak, N!mo\'1." & replace • PA ~'~~ * concrC!le. 548-8668 ror est. All types. Free estimate.a FOU:'-1!) vn r-;r1vporl Island, Call ~
tro •M•Y 011d '"'Yo\'• f•llllfllt .,.... clon'I ho" on• ol 111•1•
I.ti, too. If )'Oii dool't ti.ft -1kill1 wt 11 lro!n 1°"·
""~;;;:~·t~1;;;;·· ... Orange County 2'11h St yng. fcn1. to11oise CE?-.1ENT \Vot11;, pa 11 o s , •• 3 . '•• ; . :.he'll en t. Very fl'icndly rlrh·e"·ays, !ldc"•a.lkll, brick
111.,s1, SPi\lJ: ,.,1,:-o.r. ·'·-·1._""°'_._,_______ planters. Rens. 543-2943. Plumbing
.\•\'()1•11 .t .\1q,..1r11·1· !lnl"I I ~"\\'D l11tlr orange ,f.t white L.R. OTIS PLUMBING
Median Its 1
Power Generation Equipment
Median ks Areas.
Medical Corpsmen
Medical Specialists
Operatina Room Specialists
T11lned LVNs SI I !"·1· 1"" t"ull ~f·(·1·~. :<lri(X"{I 417 010 old cat. Contractor Remodels & Repairs. Water
Ph"l'l'-'-,,,I'} "I 1'1 , 11t•11 ~THlC'. Vii· ~tnrgaritc in Gf.:R\\IICK & SON heaters, disposals. furnaces, locol ArMy h1•m11 unlit MH
th• 1klll1 ol ,...,.. ond _,.
will! or witllout pt9riol.!1 allt. d :.;k. '!1•. 1.11 1ll .. hlt• al :1d•l1tl I Cd~!. 61;r8260. <lsh\\'a.shn. &IU263 MIC &. " 1 ,,. , I> p I Bldg Contr. Addlt & Remod
Wheel/Trick Vehicle
Moc:llanlcs "'"'t'<;•'. ! !'\'ti :. .:. II onl, ·-uND 2-3 Id D h . St·•· Li•. 81·1143'" B/A. Complete Plumbing \., 11 Ir\ 111 , ~~:h12'.'I ·v 1 mo. o a<" s-.. .... "' Se . L' ~· · · · 1 · • ... -· hund Beagle' n\LX. Fcn1ale. 673-0041 a.19-2170 rvice. IC. "'""''· lory ••rvltt fDf' 10 11-. • EEG Specialists
NEWPORT BEACH Rt'<I rollat· .,..·/'!. bc>lls. Vic. PLUMBING REPAIR ROO!'l-1 addition~ &: remod<'l-"'°"'" two wD'D4 II IU••er.
• • ~,,.., ••1•"'i111 ""' ,, ... s2..u EK"BMR S I 1· t \,"· fl. 11!q1ort a1"'"· 1-'ull Anal1C'in1. Cn ll 63.i-2088 Ing my specialty. Uc. No No job, too small
-;t•rvio.·1· •. -:u111·~ (1\/l'l'luokln.I{ ~"'Ol"ND -l\la.leirU;hS<.'t1C'r. Bl-189201 G.J. Stevens. * * 642-3!28 * * Atr Defense Radar Repairmen Ill $4.50 on h1111r lo 11Drt. Plv1 •• u-pee a IS s
Data Processing Repairmen pro ... olian ond •Diir•••nt IMn•-1u1un• r.;otr •~•tir~L'. :\lul!n11 \·k. No. Costa l\tcsa: <Grt.'<'n-5-18-ISjS. Rototilllng
H1'!llly. ~i-10 :ti(~). ' 3 I 0 0 h1~10k ti·ack) tall 979-2431 :..::c,.=::...------1---·--''-----1
, Ah. II )'Dll don't hDVD ..... of,~.
Field Radio Repairmen .~1111 ..... o. wt'H !Nth )'CHI °"'' and poy you whilD you IDDr11,
X·Ray Spec~lists
I "ll JACK Taulane, r erair, SolP I •-r\ 1""· ·• • I rep•r .. on -rv -l(ITTI::N -Tan colored malt• re111od, add. Lie B-1 269072, .....,,1 _ ·-Med<.11 EquipmentRepai1mon El t . P rt Sp . 1. Dental Specialists lJtSI-\ !'>p:1e<' :,1·a1Jr,ble $:,o JI II v· G I 'I 11' C 0 ·'1 -,• ~ ~· .,.. t'il co ar. IC. a axy, l .:".:Y<..:..:'~Y..:::'~·~·":.:...~=~·--1110. \\'Ill pro\•ic!c funii!urf' Nf>l1·pot1 Beach. 548-070!.! Sewlnn/Alter•tionl . • ec ron1c a s ec12 1sts
al $~1 1110. Ans11e1·tng &·rvit'C El I "• :1v11.Unlilc. J7.~7:"i Rl:lach Rli·d. FNO: Tropic:11l Bini vir \V. ectr ca!
Telelypewnter Repa11111en Rad' 0 1 • t0 pera ors Topograph~ lnslrumenl .
Physical/Occupational
Therapists l!unllnt:ton H1..•uch. fi.12~:l21 \\'1l:<t)ll & PlaC<'nti.a, C.l\1. IE---L-E_CT_R_JC_J_A_N--1-,-"'-""'--N-o. Alter•tlons-642..$145
• ---1:.11,j. '"58 C'ves Neat, accurate. 20 yean e"J>. Repairmen Auto Repair Parts Specialists Medical Records Specialists c •r-FlCr SplK'>.:. Stur! you1· r -·· • 23310.~. Sn1all jobs, nlaint &
rl:.-J 11uh ;1 l lt1rl~Jr \'lri\'. DOG, Ulayk & tan, yng niale, repairs. 548-5203. Dressn1aklng & AlteraUons
..;p;,i•, "10 ili!l. 111111 Hl't1il:i!ilc 1"C.L)' frlCn<lly • fnd l'\lonle Fonnal, Bridal & Uniforms
Coll 21l·4l0-62\0 or 714-121-6990, 9 AM ID 9 PM ...... ..,.. Cryptanalytic Speeialists Pl>ofl• 21J-4J0.0210 or 714-121 -
6990, 9 AM lo 9 PM. "'•1koloy1. . 11 lhf' Li® li u i 1 ding". Visla School, C.J\.I. 64()..2013 Gardening \Vork Gwfranfced. S:SS-2669
1 60:1-ll.'ili. FND Presc. reading glasS<>s MOW & EDGE Television Rep•ir ---------1Si1n1l lntellia:ence Operators 1---------
Business Rental 445 I ~~°fan Blvd & Orchid EXPERT &
1:J::.\t..:'I '' S:itnn tor ll'a~. 3 rND puppy blk 11·/"•hilc. DEPENDABLE .;.1~l1n~ ,,\alions. 5 llr~Pl'S. 2 l\lale. Vil'. ?i1csa del,lilar, Call For. Prompt,
.>han1pr.oo uhlts. N i c c Cl\!. 5.17~909 F ree Estimate.
"' 1t::hlJ<11'000il loc-. in r.:.::is1 --------~=
COLOR TV Repair, expert,
reasonable, most in home.
F'ree estimate, H.B. N.B. k
C.ltl. Ben Gallemore, ""-Zlll3.
Put Your
Military Experience
to Work at Home,
Personnol SpeciOlists
Aircraft & Helicopter
Maintenance Apprentices
Truck Drivers
Women :
c11~ta '.\ll•:..1, cH 1-1::= or L ._._,, ________ ss_s 534-7187
I) \()..1 j:!tj_
KEY TV Service, $5.95· incl
PROFESSIONAL gardener, labor & .trip. Calif lie fDr
llW \rork, prun i ng, your protection. 549-1980. •
sprinklers, cleanup )ob.<!, T Op Soll
~==~=-~ ~T!)f?..\(iE·SllOP 1260 Sf! ft
JO' eC'il. 1\r. Nl3 Poo;;t Ok. I
?2{1\'. OJI d~r.;. Uc It. f
"•GENEROUS•
•REWARD• l a n rl s c a p i n g . George, I --"'--------
Join yow ioc.1 """'Y •••.,.... 11ni1
We 'lf Treat
You to a
Career,
ond y111111 1lclrt al yooir pnviou1 S pply Cl ks 1011k. TI!t11 yov'q llart builtli11g U er -Your kK11t /VMy ID1tr.,. unit ol-
pn>111olion 01111 rttir1110111 N ne-Clerk/Typists f111 yo11 ... a.ny difl•r•r1t jo0-
A11. All tor !vii 16 ho11n o ,.011th lroinb•t ,,..,..,,.,_• Jobi ..,it" •
Q.!:l-!t",'20. • 6~6-589.l -... * QUALITY * anol two WHkl •• .., ..... ,. .... 'lepl Clerks lut11r1. Jobi ... ith th1ll1119t. Jobi
ler1i.t<HI? h•n ff TOii' 1Ull 1111'1 with n 1p.i:t. find 0111 II w• hov• t'FTF: AIJOUE HOUSE, 1000 t-:XPER I ENCED and * ~IULCH&:TOPSOIL* liolDd, (°oll 21)-430·6210 Of 71"· lnltl'lllDCI? Coll 213-430-6210 or o lob· )'Oii Wanl. Coll 21J-43()..
121~990, 9 AM to 9 PM we••· 714-121"'990, 9 AM lo 9 ,M 6210 or 71"·111 -6990, 9 AM to !-![. ft .. 1ulj. busy cornet'. for For relum or any inforn'a-
husinrss rw omcc Ost>. c .r.t. tion J('<lding to return of a
fil.j....:l02U/!~124riGO. gold four ]('af clovl!r pin,
"C,\NNE1~Y \•IJ.LAGJ::" .i.pprox. 2 inches in diameler,
Kncnvledgeable Gartlncr has 1 ~~~~-~~·~~~~I several openings. * 549-201J * Goorgc
EXP. Knowlcd&eab l c I· En...,nlMt 1[11)
doy1. wt1kdo)'I. 9 PM WDDkdo'f1:
11·i1h i'c11·clrtl hon;esl\OC' in [Juptr'x for 1"l'nl as pos~ihlc I.I u s_ 0 ff i cc . 1. l's cninb.
1
ccntl'r; also, gold locket (1\·as on chainl. approx. thP 60.~· J_E<i size of a nickel inscribed
·Tl/Ii: Fal:~ory" h.us a lt·i<
1
in seript, FLA. 'These are
Jhop ,1\'~l!. $1!~;;!~10. ,tn 1 deeply treasured family
f":1 nn1>ry \ 1JJ:igc 42.5 .. Oth :Sl., 1nen1cntos &: the loss is ir-
I Job Wonied, Mole 700 I
Gan:leners. Tree & Yard 1 ,~-miimmmmm~-~~t~I St>rvi<:"'. Free Est. 54&--2889,
5'16-99-1 l .
'Tho ••ad n"""ber of Job-training pro,ro .. d1ptnd1 llf'Dl'I fho P:lll rtqUlrtMenh of !tit b:ol It..,.,• 111111.
If yov'v• hool no pt•vlol.. Military 1ap1rltnc:• yOv 9tl to1111 ln\tlul oclivt olllly lralnln g.
~-------------------------------~
EXPER. Japanese Gardener.
Yard 5('rv. Cleanups. Relia.
& n<'at. Free est. 642-4389.
, NB. G7:i-!161M> or G4'.!~j2(). replaceable. p L :EASE,
j HHAND nu slp~s/oflit-CS. Pl.EASE help if you ha\•f'
J'liOW &: EDGE
CLEAN UPS
• 554-il657 • $1 25. up. l::levn1u1-. 17301 any in fonnation • 642·3589
1 r,,.;,rh. lluntlngton Beach. Ews. ,If,. 11·rekends. General Services
' ~-12·2>!.~I SIOO RC'\vard -for relurn or 4
I llil.IO sq ft !:'\DUST. sh op mo old German Shorthair AU~ lypc1 home repairs.
~ 1,',1;_'c·.1,11.,_ "!~~21!;!.I_ ft office pointer puppy. Solid fa('(', Actual time & material. . ., " .,. .., brv.· & \\'hi1 e spots, 2 solid Fast Serv. No job too sm. I Industrial Rental 450 lll'.\lo' spots on skle, slubby F&B Home R c pa Ir, 1----------1 tail. Lost 5 dys ago, Vic 642-1403.
I 1140--4230 SQ. FT. I l\arbor & Bc>mard, C.l\1. l •=•c,R:,:Al=N~G-ul-to-,,-,,..-ta~ll-ro,
t :--;1 1 :--1-1 Cnll &l5-S9'.?3 aft 5. quality ·""·ora, reasonable,
j ·: Pt::t~c \\11 11~ LOST: \\'hite Poodle, 3yrs Free l'Slims.tcs. 968-2208.
i ~ \\ · 201h, CVl<H• :»r"~11 I old, 20" ta!J, Namf' °' Home Maintenance
•• •'·lfl:"> "t' Piar1•111i;1 qurllc. or Coca. Vic Cr'O\vn ~ .J. B ,..:;i1,mtll•rs:1111 V:il!ey Pl'kwy. Reward, & ALTERATIONS 642-GUJ I i; !J.r.1\:.1, F:\···~. 40ib:!277 o'~'~1--0~78~1_. --,---~ Hauling
-4001-B IRCH-:-N'a-s rLVEn ..min~tur~ poodle,
::001 ~q, f!. Jj(· prr sq ri l\l::ilc, V:ic: Brookhursl & SKTPLOADER & dump truck
Elli.<:, FV, ""'''" 1n·"1'•nl '"ock ~.--1· asphalt j llC'll111' ~1!11:!; i-;11(', )I. 111f;::, .·• '-" ,_ ., . '-'" '"''"' ~, '
t ll'lisk•, ~lrg. Buurn;,:urtill('I" ;ittcntlon. 962-8456. sawing, breaking. 846-71JO
~1-71~2. 32 F1'. FURNITURE Van for
1 -- -----·---Ir-------local furn hauls & gf'n'l
l';O<I :-.Q t"T i\1·1 ~II.I<"(' I ]~ J 1111.nnt nff1<<'. J-.:1· 1,•,11 j ~n•lruclion ~ hauling. 548-11162, 557-2736.
• d•••I, t.1~n .. 1,1 11!1?; \l'h1tt11•r, :;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~iiii LOCAL moving & hauling by l'\1 t 1f,-~1:J 11.'l.~~. 6~1;....ool\1 l student. Large !ruck. Reas.
1 r1." [ Bllny. 53-1-iMG or 673--0647. -Schools & ~ Rentals Wanted 46!), instructions 575 Housecle•ning
: ''" maiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil -HOUSE OF CLEAN .' I •l!JI , i• "1 l\1n" .uluhs PIA;'>;fJI l<'sro1isJu1l(yout· home. e DOES F.VERYTlllNG e
•i Very Ruponslble! 1 ,\It f'l'<'ls. c rey Katn. l'l+-Olfl!l. llomcs. Or!il.'l's. 642-&!2-I
, .\1 • J ~ • :: Bt•1h•111111 ll<"llll('. ~~~~"'lii"'lii"'lii"'lii~~ ! I • .,.ill IV 11 \ C0'.\1Pl.ETF: Cl.EANTh'G J 111""1 ""' ,., · _,_ r '· 1 a .. ll5! \VINDO\\'S. fLOORS. RUGS
1 11.11t1 l"lr~1· l•·un·d i1t1nl l•w 21 F"REE F.STIMA1ES &13-3716 : 1u "'\i11,•1 1'11.•·11 •Jh1,•dh•11t S: ! Services ~nd Re.,.irs
"' 111,,,.n .. 1111 .. ~~-,.iiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiii Ironing \ .. ! \"•I I I ---''-------
''•I.! .r· ,.,•~,."" l.1 1;,1ut! ('O\J\'
.. 111(11\l•''.
I JI I'\•'~. ;,tq._011'\J
, '\ T J.• fl · P.rforl' ;..,,\•.
'•I !',.l1r•·'l l·HIV <\/2 !;chno)
• ' · r11•1d1·h1J .. in'n !ll'l"tl~ ;,
h ' ro·nl : b1· hnll'l' i11
II ''P' · :-.r·:o. dl,1ric1. C;1ll
t I "' ...... ••I' Ill \,JI!<;
\ \f11 LJd1orl" .. \I ... . '·
Per~o11als ]~
Pe!rion;ils
'
SJO
fl~" 11i.;.:·,. -~)
1 Jr ' ' !Iii~·~
'' I I \•'Ill ~··\'•
I ,Jl;) ;,,,,tl ( .111
.ul• ;irlc1 ·• ..
.: .L J I'~
Baby •illin!!_ .. ____ * PROFESSIONAL * ... * IRONING * R,\BYS IITING -in niv 64:l--88'5
hou.«.'. rlay or nigh!. l0\•1ni,:-I----------care, lrs fn('(f yrd 612-:>299. 1 _L_a_n_d_•_c_•~p-in~g,_ ___ _
BABYS ITIJ:\G. niy ho111c. LANDSCAPJNG, sprinklers,
Xlnt ro11d. Lo1·in(! care. l\alcrf111ls & fis h ponds,
.. '-"'-'1 .. ~_r~·acll, li·\;o-()(;6.t Reas. ralC's. Arc LHndscape
Business Service & Sprinkler Co. Lie. No.
271;}16, &12·971W.
TYPING ~S·88SO Paintlng··a
!:•·<ls. IL1tl's ~re;-pick Dt•I · PaperhanginCJ
Carpet Service
JOHN 'S Carpet & Upholstcry
l)rl Sluin11)1'1 f1'<'c Scol{'ll·
g-nrtl. 1!'cn1 Hl•tarda111s•.
DM?Tf'"IS<'rs & 11\1 color
b1"11thtr111•rs ,t· 10 minute
l•lr111h lur \<hire rarpel~.
~\.•' )o'OUf Olflll('Y hy S/\Ving
Ill•' l'\1ra l rip~. \\"ill rlean
Jivinr: rn1 dinlni: rm., & h11ll Sl.l. ,\ny r111. $7.50,
1~1ut·h SIO. Chair $5. 15 Yl"ll·
f''i:)l i<t 1\hllt ('11un1.~. nnt
n11•1hl'I(!. [ •In 11·ork lllY~IC.
C•~~I rl'f. j;ll...()\01
PROF'. 1\'ltll('!11•crlng slat<'
lic-, no. Zi9j\-I. insur .. nlt
types or paper. 7 1 4 :
SJ2 ..... 13S6.
PROF. p.iintcr, honest \\'Ork,
l'l'llS. tnt/cxt, free est.
Rr rs. :.1R-2TI9, &12-3913.
-----------
* P,\fNTING & STAINING
INT E).I, TRl~l, ACCOUS
rnF:E EST. .nn1, 979-8186
Cl'ST0~1 p.<1pC'rhanging 21
yrs. in Harbor llJ'Ca. Stale
J.1,._ No. 183281. 6-12-2l:i6.
INTERIOR Painting and
Cfr t"JK'I Clcanin~. rrre Es!.
til2-7<1:19 or :-,.t8-ll74. • '" '' TIME FOR I J ' I, I ft
.1 "
'
'11 Ii'
ill 11 .1tl!·1·
q nn !:•·"I '-"
' •1 :;, !'l'.1 .•'Y.\.
1 ·1 1 • 1 · .n 11,,.1 c.111
rt i+·' , I • _,. l p , I I 1 t" I I <
nl •~II.II,., < • ''101 ,\1;11
tl .. 11 ,, 'J'I'"'' I I
~ \I ( ·11:1 • _ t t.! 1 r;i;
~ I \I '" ,. '"'' ~' I
j > I j I'"' . \\ " I !H
1
11(,_• Pl I !•~I~ .\ll•fl\' !•"111111
ii· nmn t< ,..... h•l•l,
I ~'°' 1 ;, !··~!,"_:;in~,_
J>l l·L:\.\'I T 11IHl..l11
11i. n• .. ,~ h.1"" ·111 c!" tnl''"
f1111 I ill I L~1~ 1.1\I~ ~:!I I
h· 'I > ·.1 1
\J' _,, t \ •I h"'I\' ~.;.,, ~f' ·\\rJI" DQ~
I I I 1 ... ~l'J __ ,
I I 11 ,\1y1n)11'""~
QUI CK CASK
THrrti>UGH A
DAILY PILOT
CLA'SSIFIED AD
Ill-QUALITY, J,()\V $
S1a1e LI('. No. 2SOOll
. ' . ~142-1701 ..
T'.\INTER 1tr.i'!l1'C~ 11' or k.
l!n\lf' f'f]t1ip1n!'nl, al~ sprny
PU! [it. 6-12· 12."1~1.
Trader's Paradise
lines
times
dollars
\It
I "'
1
;:; II ' If • ..... __________________ _,
.
ORDERLY. Private duty I
Exp. in Geriatrics. NOO: I
smoke", fiw-in. sta. Wag. I
avail. 4 P.M. to 7:30 A.M. I
S4ID mo. Good refs ~ I
aft. s. I * MUSICIANS • Duo des:ltts I
club "'Orlt. Call John or Bill I
THE ARMY RESERVE.
ITPAYSTOGOTO MEETINGS.
Army ReKrve Opportunilin
Lm Al1mira1 USAR Center
Buildint: 17
Loo Alamitm, Ci\ 90720
557-81:>,. '
Job W•nted, P.em•I• 702 I I
I
I ·1
I
I
I
I
I
I
Tdl mi: 111 the rUJOOJ "'hy it pa'I• top lo mcctin11, and l ife ll)C more informatioa oo the
Jl.peru ullil 11.car my comrnllll111-
NEED help at home? We:
have aides, nur~e1,
h o u a ckpn. companions.
Homemakers U p j o h n ,
f>.17~1.
"''''~------------------------Cify·-----------""U".._ _______ Zip·-----
FULL dn-g bkkeepet' desires
lull/pt-time pos. Mature,
relibl. persnbl. Vailed exper
incl contrc. 673-3886.
Currut Occupaf~----------H-1,oo,,._ _____ _
Pb®.~------·-~ •ru ol lnt~ra'~------------
. t.lllilary Back1rourtd {If any): Rank•------P~IOS·--------
Help Wonted, M&F 710 SMOS __________ .,U ... ale ol Separatio·~---------
' Accepting AppiiC'atlons
For Many Types of
Restaurant Work
L-------------------------------~ Help Wonted, M&F 710 Help Woniod, M & F 710 Help W1ntod, M & F 710
Aeply In Person ASSEMBLER TRAINEE
ANCIENT MARINER Some kooY.'ledie ot "'Orldng
301 No. Tustin, s~A. with plexi&la.1 needed here. ..... i;i;i;;ii;&iOiiiiiiiooml Co. will train you to Install
ACCOUNTANT windshields. ~ . ,_,,,.. ECHO JOB AG ENCY xpcr. in cons .. ..,_,KJn. _or 315 3rd St., Suite 203 ~al estate helpful. Position Huntington Beach 53fr.lt39 u1 beach area. X I n ' tll~'-'~~-"='-'~~~
benetlts. Great g rO 11· th Assist•nt BookkMper
potcntinl. }~ce Paid/Also SUbstantial Newport Beach
t'C'C' Jobs. invetrtment !inn nttds com-
Call f'Ql' Aorointmcnt petcnt indivlduaJ to assist
NIGUEL bookkeeper in posting I:~
Personnel Agency ing. Some reception duties.
27635 Forbes Rd. Exp in typing &. USC! of 10
Laoi.1na Ni-rue! key_ adder ~tured. Com·
831·1477 pleti<>n college level a~untlng course helpful. Non-
--· ·-~ Smoker, References re-
Acou"ting Cleric•I quired. Call weekdays bet
FEE PAID 10 & U onty. 64Z-1trai.
Sec'y sh 100 to $630 -.ssemblers·Technlci•ns
Recept. S476 To learn assembly o f
Sec'y, dictaph to $650 precision switches. Some
FEE elcctro-mC!Ch. exp. req'd.
CIRCULATION
TRAINEE
MALE OR FEMALE .
The Daily Pilot has an opening in the circu·
lation department for a beginner to manage
a small district of boys and girls, delivering,
collecting and selling newspapers. Full time,
permanent positions .with regular raises and
full fringes including personal use of com·
pany auto. Apply in person to lllilan Leavitt,
Daily Pilot, 330 West Bay Street, Costa Mesa.
An equal opportunity employer
Bkkpr F" IC S600 Costa ?itesa, 642-8080. !~~~ Dcnt~l Rscrpt .. to S600 ASSISTANT Cook. Day shill.
Free & ~ee Pos1t10ns Prefer young trainee. Guy
RUTH R'iAN AGENCY Fawkes lTITI: Brookhurst Help W•nted, M & F 110 Help W•nted, M & F 710
1!13 Nr11·port, C~l 646-4854 F.V. ' '
11931 Beach, HB 847·9617 AUTOMOTIVE BABYSIITER Exper. l blby Bookkeeper $675 up 6 mo. old. Must hA\.-e
A • Cl 1,...,,. ~ M 0 n_F r 1. Free to Applicant. A great ccount1ng erk Experienced lube man. Oki potential here! New petSiUon
Good nu.th aptitude & established Buick Agency. 548-6940. tn plush ofcs of ultra posh
familiarity \v/aC'OOunt y,•lll Good . hours, com P a n Y BABYSmER 2 n\te1 wk. buildtn. Handle lots ol
I a n d t h i s po 11 i t i on benc~~· PleasRnt working \\'ill aCC'fpt hlgh sch lltUl.?Mll dttail, poat ledge.rs, journal
11•/dynamic firm in Irv1ne ~1tion1. Apply In pe.reon * 646--2732 • tntrys etc. Paid paralng &
Complex. Stan $500. Call only. See Tip Of' Bob BAR matd-p&rt time, e:xper xlnt bmtfits. Also Fee Jobi.
i\larilyn Light, ~. TERRY BUICK ne«"tury, Clll John at Abipll Abbot Pcnonnel
Conslal Personnel Agency, Sfh &: \Valnut, Hwitington 6'16-9!n8 Agency, 230 \V. \Vamc.r,
2790 Harbor Blvd., C.?it.. Beat'h ;;ii ... ;;;;iiiiiiii•••-_Su::;Su;_:::oll•.;::; ~::.•"&::.A::. . .::";;7'"122,.::::;::..· _
Adverti1lng S•les Atrro BOAT CARPENTER BookkHptr Tr•inte
f'orrner yello"' page or Pickup and Fantutlc 518.rting salai;r for
magn:i:ine space c x per. Delivecy man Do finishing v.'Orlc on 37' shari> lndiv. w/clcrlcal or
Con1n1ission only. Call for ~·or Service Dept. Trawler type yachts. r..tust lite bkkpng !Xl)Cr. Co. will
nppt. 646--0536. Prrn1anent, interesting, tull have expertence to do high· train. Avg typing & 10 key
A,\fBtTIOUS oonple wanted tint~ Jl()lllllon. Juat tight for est. quality \\'00dwo11dng. helpful.
to earn SIOO. 10 SlOOO. per rctlree ly~. See Gen. lttgr. Pacific Tra\\'ier Colll. Jason Best Agency
mo. port time, O\Jl of your HOWARD a1evrolct 547.()908 17400 Brookbu~t, F. Vly
home. 6:1'9-Gl2J. !'.fa.cArthur and Jamboree, ,,..,..,..,..,..,..,..,.._ Suite 213 96.1-6775 Ne1\1K1rt Bea.ch
ANS\\'l!:ltING sctvicc-some-""~"Oc==--.,.--BOAT Boy, Over 18 yrs. to BOYS OR GIRLS
on" fo1· wttkt'nds & gra\'e AtrrO Body metal nian take CD.re of !iRilboat &. 2 1•13 Id ~ DAILY
Y''·d. 11,,.11 -,· •. '·'"lln. n!N!ded. .Co.nlact Dick or .,.. yeart o "" "" ~ Don, M~. C. l\1esa. pov.·er boalll. A!ttt school PILOT pape.r routes In Sooth
/I.PT fl lgr'. Couple over 40 for AVON MAKES l/or Sall. e.9061 Santa Ana, bet\1.-een ltfo.!n &
40 Units, Costa Mesa. Call }'airvie1\', Warner & San
&l2-ll21. ClfRISTJl.1:AS TifE SEAOON $25 BONUS Diego F\vy. , TO BE JOLLY 642-4321 A/P & A/R-CLERK Earn extra money" for gi!t11
Mllllt type 50 wpm & know 10 u an A VON Rl!preaentaUVe •• l't..N..I ~ 0....,.. key by touch. Sal~ry open. In YoUr ~ time. C&JJ: "l;l IWI Dl.Mni;I ?i-tana~r
847-1229 for lntef'Vle:w.-540-'iCMl. F,qua1 Opportunity Emptoytt
APPLICATIONS for Night BABYSITTER wanted from • Industrial BROILER Oxlk, Apply Cap-
CUstodlan are being ac-. . C M Own taln J'adcl Rell. SUnset ('t"pted Big C&nyon Coun1ry 8.30 to 5.30 pm, . , Betlch alter -4pm Oally.
aub, 1 Bia Canyon fit. tram. fl.fature woman. Ntwport Beach atooday-1~64~>_486=! _______ 1 Rl'glster Toda,,y v.1th Qn\ngt CHEF -SIDOOeafjr mo. Thi!
Friday 9am-Spm. BABYSITTER, need occas. Countn fastest grol'·irig Blue ~ll I bd. 10:3:> ....................... -.! for 4 ,yr !Pr\ whto:n &he's temporary help grvitt. a ,m. · •
CLERICAL
ALL POSITIONS
AT
CHILD C3re Ir l'louse.k(!('p!ng
ro1· :? wka. btoai1m{ng _Nav.
Slh 10.4prn M"on--f'rl, Hr¥.
slightly flexible. Ca 11
548~4.
Cla'i'm"•--.Ad"'!,-T..-r•lnee
AAMES
Bureeu of Employment
"""""" 100%
FREE
Fee Paid. Nationally kno1vri
insurance tlrm wlll trsln
you 10 tJe an 11djur;1er If you
have a college d<'~fi
business. Al!IO Fee--·Job11.
Salary !o S7~ ..... Call Ed
\Volr, a-1()...6005; Co as I a I
P.co;onnel Agency, ~ 7 9 O
Harbor Blvd., C?.1.
CLERK
TYPIST
11 AAMES EM MYS'' Varian the big company In
sn1all 0comput rrs. has an im·
,, ,, mediate opening for a typls1
Bonanza $850 in our n1e.rke1Jng depart·
You hit it lv/this .fantastit• nienL U you type at least 60
career spot. Top S:$1 for 1vpn1 and 9.1'1." took in!( to~ a
super gal to V.'011' in fan. position "'Ith a ~l'OWlfV t~ beach area location. Orange County l'On1ooqy
Adm. asst. to sr. partner. that orfers:
&!crotariaJ & bookkC'C'p!ng
function.s. * Modern Facilities * Ba1ic and M ajor
''St•r Trek'' $700 Medical + Life
wora w/tap peoplr in ad· * Stock Purcha1e
vertistng depL ofJ. large-l* Profit Sh•rlng
n1anuf. concern. W!·ill' p~ * 12 d ays a yeer paid
releases & be crcatJ\>e. Sec Y vacation
& 8S9t to fast par-ed & in-·d lerestlng con1n1unil"ations * 6 days a xear pal
manager. sick leave • * 10'1-lnd shift
"Young Lawyers'' $650 differential
Gorgeowi new olc~ at the You 1nay ~ lhe one 11•c are
beach. \\'ork tor 2 l'lell' ih looking for.
house councils tor prestige
ronstnJction & real ei;latc
dcvriopment co. Secretarial
skills needed
''Concentr•tion" $600
Be able to kCl'p yoUr eye on
the ticker tape, ansv.•er
phonP from brokpn; & stock
00!.den. Act as Liason !or
bUying & selling ol stocks &
bonds.
Please Apply In Person
Or Contact B. Kratka
.YDM
2722 Michelson Or.
Irvine, California
833-2400, ext. 336
"Price 11 Right'• $550 Equal Oppor. Emplo)'er
Xln't spot kJr g11l \\·/payroll · -. -.--;---e:ocpct·. Beautiful Fashion Clerk Typist TraJP-•
Island location. \Viii take No exper, nccess. t\\'g typing
light f.:Xper. 'if on computer & v.·illingness _lo ]C'!lm 1vi1J
svstems. slart you w1lll this fast
· i:i·o\ving eo. Xln'l starling
"Th GI I" $SOO sa\ & ro. benefit$. et r Jason Best Agency
Pert & pre1ty for busy front 17-IOO BrookhUl'S1, .F. VJy
desk. Type, take cal.ls tor Suite 213 963-67Ta
busy salesman. _Jl.f~ of all COO..'TAIL waiU'CliSC!i, no ~le I< ~ Vl\/aCIOUS \V/ cxpt>r nee. Coll between 4 &
VISlting VIP s. 6 PJl,f ?iton.F'ri. Ask Jor Ter-
ry Huntington L a n e 1
"SPECIALS" 963-15.."7 -
"Sec'y I Bkkpr''
''St•ff Accnt''
"G•i Frrd•y"
"Sec'y, no-sh"
"Legal"
"BookkHper''
$800 COOKS i.. Ile! \VC'bb s
Ne'"JIOrter" lnn. Breakfast &:
$800 Dinner. ~Both W/hC!'Rvy CX·
' ... $175 per. in In:: relined food
operation. Call Che( Fred, $600 644-1700 .
$600 COOK , MATURE
'' A/Pey•ble,,,
"Purchas. Clrk''
$600 Experienced & Dcp<'ndable $57.5 ApPll_ _in flC'l'SOn, Su.rt &
Sirloin, 5930 \\'. Coast Hwy, $550 N.B. ' * COOK · Female * ''CHOICE'' \ %'' If days a week ay ** 492-6211
"Payroll" $5501 loii0iiiiillll&ii""'iiii""'iiiiiiiio
"Acctng Clrk'' $560
''Gal Friday'' $450
"Steno" $475
"Receptionis t'' $475
"Sr. File Clrk" $500
"Administrative"
''Adm TrainM'' $550
Growing co.. moving 10
Orange Co. needs arnculatr,
aggressive pcnon to learn
thei.r bu.!linC'Sll.
CREDIT
CHECKER
E.'lfperience. Preferred
. -UNITEO -
CALIFORNIA BANK
Dealf'r Finance Center
Conlacl 1'1r. McNabb
3029 Harbor Blvd
Costa Mesa •
Equal Oppor. Employer
''Civil Engr'' to $12K DELfVER'i' man for early
. morning Tin1es hon1e Ueliv-[)egree or C<):Ul\'. exper, _lo cry roult'. r.tust h.1.Ve t'CO·
join Pl'Ol.TeSSlVe_ firm. Du_ties tKlm1cal rar. 211 hr. dnily.
to lnel~dr drafting, Dc1a1l & Over 23 yr. Good suppl!men-
fi<'ld work. lary income. No ro!lccling,
• no soliciting. \~f'sllnlnstcr,
"Electronics T•ch" $875 H.B. arf'n. 638·292~
Any electronic &/or median-DELIVERY Roule In llB, rv.
lcal cxper. Good ch1111Cc for de\. l.A Tin1l's !o home~ .
advancemenl lnl\'resting & Prefer adult W/cconomy
challenging \\'Orit. car, 21':1 hrs per n1orn -:1
lo 5: 30 Ai\1, $200+ ))('I" 1nu.
"Jr. Elec. Tech'' to $600 847~~..:....-,..,~==-
Vet1 w/90me e I e ctr on I c DELIVERY MAN trainln&: can quallt)r tor lhls For furniture store. E~p'd,
entry level training position. bondable, ~ood d r Iv 1·n i::
Caij todtly to start your record, call ~722 bet 10
1.'8l'ef!r. ~ 11. AM __
DENTAL ASSISTANT
"S•les Tr•inee'' to $IOO Local young den~lst ll?eks In· div. w/perso1111.hly plus & 2·
Tirl'd ot competilion? Wan! to 3 ~Ts exPl2J'. s 0 rn e
11mkc fl change ror the knowledge of d i ~ c a 11 e
ben~.r'\' Desir.-ncce58, but preventipn. Sll!.rt $.JOO. Ctll
exper. not req'd. Miki \Vhltc, 5 4 n -GO 5 3,
CoostBl Per!!OOll<'I l\l:;ency,
"S•les Mgr" to $1SK ~ Habor nlvd., c.~1 . '
~Pl'r. in any industrial snlt·~ DENTAL Reccpt. l'ront df'Sk
field de!'lired. .Should be & ch11\rsldc. l'Xper. Sal
n1anage1ucn1. Jntcrl•s!ing & ~flC'!·. Good bcncllts. Call
challenging Jltlc. Lo-'"~8~"=''88-;;-·-,,--.,.,.-7.'--~
' DENTAL thalr i;lde 11~1d~·
"Diamond S•les'' $850 rfc~t54~.r· exp'd,' X-r11.y
OulA"IAndlng 01~r. fur shl:'rp DE NT AL A ssl st an I .
lndlv. ""~xper. ln all facela Chairsl<lf'. flt least 6 mo ex·
of dlaniond aa.IC'!t. Sall\1')' per. H.B. 11rea . 846-,\\40. + comm.
All Positions Listed
At Both Office•
DmECTOR Of J'ITO!fra·m
Girls Club of SanlA An11 ,
mine expt"r. w/a:lrls 8-13
n~ .. youthful ty(JI!
p~fered. Mall rcirume PO
Bo'.'!: 5252 $a.ntll Ann. IN COSTA MESA DlSHWASHE=R~
Ful\ & pltime wknd1 In·
2706 Harbar Blvd. <tud«I. """' Ll<1o """"" Car, f66 Fl::iR!lhiP Rd., N.B; Sult. 207 Crtll lilr. l\liller, 00-*H.J or
968-3483. '""'l '1'"'1· jr.rrTI IGER.\TOlt· ;\~11'
So ei;rl ,., ,,,. 535 ~10 111 r!rirm ~1~,.. ll•1d1• tor
f' I I, l\10811..E hr'lme kit In Palm
[)('~·rt C~'n'. loc. on ROif
MUl'!lt"; Incl n11J8h1p. l'lft)'()f!
~ttino. f:']. $7.7()11. for v~ry
lt'lilff au!o or '1 6411-1000,
!,1ke tu tratll"? Our TrArlf'r'll
J>.nrndlse ('(llunifl Is !or you!
ASSEMBLERS hOme skk, N.B. Own WOl'k •1ton l"" ~" CHEMICAL
tranap. ~3 home . your hOm~ng or Ahart OPERATORS ... ~' t tonn o•ri--•-CaH 55011 DO OTSHWASHF.R. full ' ""rl Sin811 llltctronltii par 1a '"'.-.-... o c. dcc'do _ .......... .., -YoU For expanding metal rennery U"' 11111(1. 8ma11 cllnn<!r ~'*·
'
\\I F\I IUl!f"r ,\mJ' or 111"1
* l •IT AD A TA * ·r i:no11 ~-nt1'1"< ~· DC"e. " "211 >.,)lo ,-1,,n •I>, C.M.
"
Ol'.\IJ:\· ·'· 1
l\ ll'lll)T 1
I o I
\rl\'
tV~J 1 Hl,.\f"K JALJE
~ l'fliU1·11 111 $2(} !•ll('h,
It .t'lf l•r1 1111 rff>h-cfl'. lin-•
• 111·• 1111•"""· 1P•\+•Jry. rurnl11u"t! 1Jr
StJD,\Jli' (i~-~~
5 lint!(
!S dl\YS
for 5 bucK1.
assembl.Y. EXp<":r. pref'd., BABYSlTT'ER nctdcd for 2 · _, In Sant~ Fe $pl1np. Chem-Newport f\f!!W'h. St r. 11. d 1 ~1t will lrAln. ochool..., gl'11. Mondsy· NEYER A FEE 1~1~ b•<itlJl'OU"' In "'""°1 IN ANAHEIM m<n-oldM· ""'" ok. 613-11'l.I, l!Qurs 7:30tun-4:J'.)pm F"rld~, l'l·S p.m. 6·~198. or pit•t 88JM":r. l\t". <"•ood co. 2--!ipin
F'ull or pjtlme • bcr11:1flt1. 2131921·7464.
STACO SWITCH INC BABYSITTER, mol u ". 600 N-.... Euc:l'1d DOAl.lo!En ""n,'1c ••• 1!~ .. • ..,""°. ,.!'In' • nt'cdf'd, 4"-6 cl11ys 1veckly. p If' p 1 WAUT AD Ufm "" '.'6 \IV" ..1119 Btlkt.'r, <"-Olllo /\frK111 Approx noon-9pm 5 18-1~93 •C IC ll'ffnnt .., E JC h S S ' "1 .~,
510-3041 , • S.rvl~'' FOR ACTION . I I.. ·"· ~ ~""
An Eq11al C)'ppn11unlty It's • btteztt ••• /!!ell your !?iOO Nr.wport C"tnter Or • • • Caft 7.76-8120 Any d111 ti! the REST DAY In r' ~·'•! ' I!
1n1t•• II. :U i•~ 1
; 1, r :~. " '
,EmPloY<I' lt•m• wllh "'"· "" Dal\y Nowpo<t Beoch &llHlllO CALL M2·S678 run '" ad! Oon'I d•lay, ,
----------------• "'""""'""'--""""'I !1'1~1ot~Cl'1_!•~"!!!11!!1od!:.·!IW~~:!"'.!!:_,j ,,,,;...,...,...,...,...,...,.,I ---~------i l!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!ll!!fll!!!ll!~~ oo.11 "'""' 64M$1S.
"
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Mona1r. Oct~ l, lq13 DAILY PILOT ~J i • ii
l[Il]I[ ~[{)] I \ .0 IS! mJ I r...,.., .... 1rm l1 ~ )(IlJ ' I l[il] 4 £ 9'-0 ~)iwrwl ti .... , ......
'-
'
I ][fl] ~' _L •_;w•_l[Il] L 1 ;I I~ l[ll] ( _J ;c: I H~le W•nttd, M & f' 710 H.lp W~tecl, M & F 710 I '14<=1p=-w•,•-••. jiMjjj&;;;F~7~10il~.iil;;piiWiilllliiiieoliiiii, Miiiii•~Fi7~1~0 1 Helo Wanttd, M & l' 710 Help Won!td, M&F 710 Help Wtnled, M l ,F 710
'•1hs:z11
1 ~;;;;~~1
D , A • l'ULL !Im• aardc>ncr •• JHOUSEl<EEPEnS1s m>:r1s 1 LYN , NO EXPEIUENCE REAL ESTATE SALES f SALES
rs SSIStant tM.lnt, man •tB &ffll, Call 1 Orange Co . Oome11l1l' Attl')' ConValtteellt.Honw, lull Ji NECESSARY JOIN A \\'IN~FK'. ln~lljpblt'll, 1'1\1\Cll
Help Wanted, M& F710 t Help 'W•nted, M&F 710
* * *
I l"NllSUAI. I) 11 11 or . Con-
1·al..sci•111 ho~11. h11'1 Mt
nnu11unl gruwlh 1011pnr In "
l~••kk1'1'11lrl): p"' It I 11 n .
l [r11llh 1·1111• r •· I 11 Ir d
l1:u•kt.:t\IU110l h1•lplul, bul not
Youni laity {lS-28) 10 aulsl alt 4:30 536-~19. , 1&16 N. Tu1ill11, Or"K;. 997--0:JOO pa1'l 1im<' call 642~ I · 1 • • • !SU1.'t-.,.i1.11 A f.lu:n
in health apa. \VIII tra in, no GAL FRIDAY llOUSEl{EEPER I Conipan. ' TRAI NEE POSITION \\'~ ha\•1· upt-nlng• IOr 'l li~<t-.1· ·
exp nee \pply In · ACHINE ·1 NOW OPEN ~l-tl H.t:. Utl~ni"n (lr 11•1)> FREE FREE FREE SHIPPING • ft . ' l __ pel'IOn Employe1· Puys f'ct•. rr you ~on, n1ust driyl', 00 Junok· M I . any a or eve 29311 \V 1.k . '"' H 8 962 22~ GB 1, .. ,,,,.1"••. ,11 ,_ ..•. , .•. ,111 1111·11. \\1•ll 1•.;111bl idied off1t·1·. Coast H N 0 · · 1 c VIU"lt•!y, aftivity & un-• · · · ~~ · . "'" ''' '"' ~pi-t•i(lh~iui: in tht" C~'Y ul ~.\1. H1•1n1i4'1'~ A*1•n1·y
\\')'., ' • limited oppor. this is the joh HOUSEIIBEPElt :i d;1ys 11 has hn1nf!dia~ opcnil\I~ ror h'l'lll(' . 111wi of thl! inollt I 41 21 \\'1•~lt'1'l)' l'lai·•· A~ 1n;1udt1).!>r}' Tu11 11al k
DRAPERY ll'Ork r 00 111 . tor you. r11.ntaJUc future ror v.·k, nu.isl have rnr. OPERATORS lrainellll In ti I• 11 I a~.-. <li:·~ll'llhli· Ii.· 91ur.tit aflf'r ~ul!<' 11a. NI.I ,'1'1:µcuo r I shn11i 1ntllv, w/avg typing * 84&-0100 • n1:11it1•1\ng ill~ll'lhul!C'lf1 $, iH,·tul u1 Orttt"'t> Count y! i<:~tublisht'd l!J6:",
ema e (11blr.n1 needed. NQ & litr. expel'. Sh hC'lptuL Al so i:rctlJI inef't'h1nldWng.. 6 rn•w ~ I ·• I . -----------RECEI ING
IM.•orltt ~. Pl1•1t*' <'fl 11 •
h·l:t-:1-110 for 11ppt
r.xper nee. l61R Ohms \Vay, r~ Jobi. Sli\lt'I' '1:: Cuuter 'i\ltu:huw. locations 10 OPf'n In in1-F •. \t•C'l t•nt ron.~n1 s~1on S.\l,t:s P.Fl' :\I f ~· URGENTLY C.l\f. J .B t A INSPEC'l'OR nicdiatl' fUIUn.'. t.1nl\)' l/O'{I. ~pl!I &, full "IOJk'f<.11."-!n. . G11111I ojipn11l11HI) 101 :un-"
• DRlVER _ Si\LF.S Ison II gency \Vill tra.in on uur n1achl111.•s, tians ·odw nf)l'n 101. full i\iff•' I all JOllN l ~fA.K ~l,\J\ • hit i•lll. 1"'1~111 1u ~·ti ~111 CLERK , [ •
$3.65 hi', Industrial supplic.r 17•IOO Brookhur••. r . Viv Alert, aggre11sive pi'rlKln with IJUI lllL'ChttniCl\I apl itudc Pt"rm(1nt•nt J\NIPli'. ·~··Y for ~n,npp'1: •u.~Ji!l('U~-~ lll!tlt'I") ~li[lpl11·~ 111 :->1•11 11111·1 '~EEDE D
h . . _. Suilr 21.l !'6.1-6775 """"rlenre in ehe e kin " rieceilAr)I. Paid insur1u1c._"e, • ,.LNT TH Al ~I NC. l'Hll-'OllH t u r unt 111 lh1s B1•111·h 11n·.1 · t'ull h1111• \\"ill
ll! •mm.,u. ~lnr for ··-'" 1·x~Jtc111 llcnefil10. A1111ly Pr \ 't'' "'"I v 1 clean cut &alcllnian. Some GAL 1'~riday required ror t 1n11;tttii\I to slandArds il l In C P.A~I 111n· •' a. 10 1111. • ..... ouy ... 1,1n1n1 • ;,11•1,111 lll•t .. :-.1 a1·1u111.·~ 1:•~, coll~e OK. Publi<l relation~ 111an onicc in attractivl" Via 11rocei;i; (21 packnge i;oodfii 9-ll J\.;\l. or 2-4 P.J\1. '* SU~I J\IER ,(: 1'/Tll\IE l-k·.u·~111n1•1"'! I~ 0 I ;ill 1n11)\•·tlt11t" u111·rur1~ for·' Q TRAINEE
r.xp. p1-elerred. fl usl have Lido artn, typing, s/h, ru-en Cui!.tOml"r shiJIJTI<'lllfii. AVER·Y \\'Oltl': ALSO /\\'All. t"UR N1•11 por1 . e-~1-><hllljlll\J.: .ul/I r+:'t:l"l\l/IJ.: 'l•·1•k
Cl••o do'··o·oog -~. i11<>, k~<'asant phone voit·e £Xct'llrn1 bcoolit p11(·kR~f'. 111 G u -~ C II 0 0 L &: 1., \I ,.-S 1~ ---111111 " 111111111111111 ,,1 1\,,, I :£ ,.. ·~ ''""""'." .. ,,,, .• ~11 1111\(', l'\P•l ASS ·M11LERS EOlO JOB t\CJ::N CY nN', $-pl'.l' mo. 673-4156 COLLEGE STUDESTS s:ik·~i1on1:an. 11:,:,. ,;a 1u ~l fur .1•·.11'" \'\l.o.:tll'tll-e In th•·
3lj 3rd St., SUite 203 * GARDENER * AVERY PRODUCTS II • CO~IPA,'<;\' BENErlTS I Coolt•nipor:1r~ t· 11 ~ h Inn 1~-..·1•1111i;.: ul 1• It',. tr .. 1,1.i"
Huntington Beach a3&-t~39 PRODUCTS • S!'.>l\IE P/\HT T I J\I F: ~1ori>, !'Q. ("sl 1'1:11.a, ('all 1u111•'!1al" 111•·lrrr"'1 •1U, Be yaur own Boss I p 0 s TT I a N s A I. s n J\t.1:1'. .-~·""'j()i;j(I 1 IJIU~I I·· 11!l<•nll\"1' ho rli•l;;d ~-uu or p/li1ne In yo ur Consumer Division AVAILABl.F: "~INCE 1~" and "tll11i:.: 1" "o 1 k
VOLT ,
lnst•nt Personnel
E1ectronics 011 11 area. lligh inconie. 7620 S. SuAAn FOR: PERSONAL 1~1 \l't·~1t·rn Bank lilu.:. S.\Lt:S:\IA.'I .1: l\1:1 n111:,.r. ,.1.,.1.1tt11;. ,11\t'n 1~~11.11r,.i1 . 11
Gu•ranteld Customers Nca~!~r~:n~~:fa~r Santaw~i:~· ~~1\t.n9?1G-l INTERVIEW CALL: D~;~vers~·J.~O:· 1Ni;f'..ts ~::i~hlt 1:~a~:11. f;~~u .. fi11,'.:/'. ~;::~."1111:.:~t niw't 1~'1'.1~ ;;M,k11;~i:
No Cash Dawn Ave.. Equal Oppor. E1npkiyer n1/t 53'-2591 I 1\o l':>.Pl'r 111•1-rss. ~Ir. 1 .. .,., f•w :• :.:•~•"Lili.: Onini:•· (_'111111. CAREER
Tf'111p1 u;ir~ ·"'rl'U'r
;'J!.\11 l"rtnlflll"' I 11·, Su1rr 1~
[>;("1• 1~1rt Bl•ut•lo :~16--i71 !
~:11uat <J11pur ~.niploY<:r
1'.:am ~J4:,~iJ l.lltcr ITI•I) S40-4020 -MACHi NIST Monday Only 9-5 Rt•nl F.slate Sith·:-1• t2l:l• 77(1..'{".4:1. 1~ 111111pa11)' 1h111 offt·r~:
..---.,~ --cqunl oppor. tn1ployer 1111! Jlardingc Sel Up & 0P<"rators NOTE! Huntinnton Harbour SALESLAD Y for rah1·i1• shop, • Modern
General Ofc·Trne -·-Cridan Sct Up & Ope.rat!' Real Estate Salesman "D' p/tln11•. ~l us1 111· t'>:fX'r.
OPPORTUNITIES WAITRESSES
VARIAN DATA
MACHINES File Cltrk ta $450 INSURANCE SALES Th •• '.!','.',•, •. ':°1rer1. &t up & If you have a licen~,. or ll'nn1 Realty ,_ .. "'E·Au,Mn!<.:r"11',:_·,_ •. :~,,1~1·,.,, ._,, Facilities fl'l!e to Applicant. Excillnu ,... ,._ I ont', M'r P£>g Boling1•r fo1' '" -" ,., '' e B • d
& grO\\'ing firn1 has th is en-Cenlerlcs1 Grind('r confidC'ntiBl inl<'rvil-11'. Rl'<I " ~•ii 1nak1·1·, Y•'IH' ruund as1c an FIDDLERS Ill
RESTAURANT l{a.s immedi11;te need ror out -
irtandlng fM'll'!l()nnel lo fill
the following pos!Hons:
try level position for you. No exp,nei: .• cam ivhile you I1nn1£'diate Openings iti 1st & Carpel, -19"i·17fil. Expands Off-Shore : eniptny1n<'nt . pa~· ac~"Or<llni: Ma1"or Medical It 's busy, It's fun & an xln't learn, part time, eves & jnd shiflJ. • 10 ability. Call &l:rti'91.'"i, all
advancement i;pot. Top .k-·· run r h r 10 I !.la 4 llY \\'Olk NURSES T11·n n·~alc off11;1•s upcnlni;: .l pm. :~··7-1611\ 17:::•. + L1.fe
b<'tl('fits. J\I~ I?tt JQ_bs. J.~·ed.s, imew enqua i· 11.~frxlnty"c:orn~y pa;~~ LVN Suf>!r~isor no11·~ GJ1>u111l nnor uppo1·1u11-I r.1ont'(1via U1111 Y, f'.1\1. 1\11 • S k p h No-.i Hirtni.: \l'aurr~l'!I
*Co111p11ter Abigail Abbott PersOnncl Fann<'rs Insurance Group beneflls,. gooc1 v.·orking con-1 "·ll, Strong lrull<'! .to ~11~1'1 i!y, tor a1nbitioo1 salt:i> J.M<tl· f equ.:il oppnr1u11t1y 1•n1plny1::._ toe UrC ase Dn;.i1 & ~i ll·~
Sy$t-Aaency, 230 \\'.\Varner, EdLaoo·.•••oio~.• ditiono. 1 ('~1111ll·n~e of nu1_1nt11n~u.1~ rh•. Jn1ml'flia t£> Moo!' tin1&iSF.C"i't F.1'.\H\' i·ni1i hin r ol • 1
S · -<A ··7 •122 ~ ~ 1 1 1 1 ··• r 1 '' -Prof•1t Shar'1n" ''1111 Y 111 fl('n•on . u1te _,,, ~· . ;);) ..., . I Hosnn lncorporatt'd ug 1 s anliuu~ .11.1 P11 l1;t :i v;,ill:'.1.IJI<'. ln1nll'1ll:all' rat·n-~'Ill·.~ & 1111~1 1!1·11:1rt1111•111 ., '..'-12!11 l..11guni1 1/111!1 ;\111111
Technicians I GENERAL oUIC<! work. -[ 5'8-5533 j r.<1re & i;:uperv1s1ng yuu_r 111.l!s pnssihlr. \re h:ivl' solul J\lust tw :;ood iypl"'1. J\11n. tt-, • 12 days a year i---w·A-ITR-ES-S -...... ting AIR tK?a ..i... Equal Opportwilty Employee I !l~llrt. 7.:l & 3-ll_ sr~iff JIOSI· 1'1'frr rals lron1 111•1r honu· 1vpn1. Usf' JB:\1 1rans1·1·1IX't', Minimum 2 yeaN experience ,...... . · vy ,,, ..... oc. J 'I · I t1ons also. Bi•nrl1ts 1n1•lu~lc i h _.. · · I I (1 · •d t' F ""r St 1\1' tun> \\'Rlll"l'!Oi
I·-··d ·-·blo~--uog ol radi? d~~tch. 0 I'd tr an1 0113 MAI OS . . .~u •u l\'ISIOllS 0 I 1t' . 1r1su-J\1usl lluv .. previous businrss pa• vaca ion ' .:-.:,~ . -" .
d"':"':tal"'' 'f "''"':: writing, billmg. !!Orne typ.. I ll:flld ~llda~s; 2 ~k v;~ca-uni• Co1np:•n1t~s. . t•-.:pcr. Dt•p;trlnit•nlal fun•·· I wanlt'<I. ,, tluy!I a ,,·k. No
ig1 compu er sy,,,ems re· Ing. Musl like & br able to !Jon. sick pa) "1 'croup i!~~; (',\LI. BILL C."0~1 S't'OCJ.: lion~. Jn,·lds !>ales dr 1>t i11-[ • 6 days a year spill shlfls. !'\u Slit nlte or
quired. handle details. D t \\' t y • g I f A 20..25 ~laturl", niusl be CX'"'r. ~arkl ·h~doRHI "N'"o 1:.a.~,<'"..t..i:' 1 it~1 1'4G-l:\Soi & 121:11 Y.12-?'«·15 1111 irirs. Trust ilf'llt . riot·\•· •d • k I .'un "'wk. linifonn lurn.
R bb.A,_ "'A . 2113 c I Pr• er g• ,,,.. t ags Ip (., .. UU-oo.rt"1. p . f . I pal SIC eave, Plca_~nl "'"rk1n" l-ond.~.
*El·-ro· u 1"" .:xrvict. an-6 D A Week F ltime. See Pcrsoonel h-lgr, ni-:At . Jo:!'-IA J'l-. .s.-\1.ES nil'nl~. t'Ojtr~s1v1· 1nHnr1a Eo ,..., .~-on Dr .. Costa-~tesa. •Y1 i•--B Cl b [ Nul'llt'~ ""''C 1 SC ••. R c N B localion '1mllrno .\lc·d11.·al -~ l•is11 brr14!fitJ. B• uu. ay u · ,,., ·c :s:· Aiu:.E 0· ' · · · ,.· You 1ni,~ llt' tht> nnt" 11·i.-11 1't' Appl) 1.i11dh1•/'g Nu1rllinn. ln U--han·1cal [ Gl:Nit_llA_L o. rt_ ice Gir_I, <>-[ A"pl.v in" -n;on l22l m "--fl N 8 RN-L-VN-AIDE l'\1"111 or "v?"r°M!nced. J ni n 1he 111g-01iporlun 11;.o, ..:lnl bl>nc-l-•k•.••" 10,. 1 ~ ,. .,... 'r'l'....,..51 Y•ty., . . ll -&, 1 h'f T 1 -r f' Jr k' mt •r ., rt"a1· "' llu• Tu~ \\'or d Storr A bl 1 per. 111 tnl'oicing. typing, &r ) E -1 · ot 1cr _s 1 ts. 011 pv \\'orld'l'I large::;l and fastest 1ts "·or 1ng (_'O 1non~ un l<illt'f lt·i't>I ~-CnftJ1t '"'uem en 1 billing. Sal open: Call FAR WEST MAID WANT D I •,u1y pay. cl1nn11xl. pay_ ~or KtQWing resul(' organizalkin J\[llJly ~u1 1t· 1;00, j(X1 N°f'll'll011 Pl1•a:<I' 1111111~ In Pt•rl'<Ofl Pla1 .• 1 .•ho11111ni:: Cf'nlrr. in ~"''"" -n on r,·,.1 ,-• "'"1184. . Don Quixote ~1otel . 2100 ·f por duly. o u n t Y ¥:I " f' v.·11h a no•l\1·nrk or Ol'<'r 300 Cl'ntl!r Dr .. N.R ' Or C1111laJ'I H. Kratka .-uoiuu v,... ;, "" ,....... · 9 · Cus111 :\!1•J<11. 1\sk !or Al f bl NCV.'port Blvd., er.it 642-2670 Jn t!V\l"'S. l\.1on--~l"L . -,) • olfic._'f"s and becorne .II --S-E CRETARY __ _ ~ n~ o:x,:ICCe~ l GIRLS OR !OY~ J • •· ..:-S£RVtC£S a!AINTENANCE ' ~scoulie _ Nll,l'Sl'S Registry, inc1nhcr of . 0111: :\lillionairt' Gt'Pa! PR spo! for top '~•h·h v D M I Cast~'i'.,'· ----;,
one or .more of Uit folJo11,r~ng: I l~:{.J;~l'!!-~!u~~~ it~;!;,~ \Valer District is ll0\1' ae-·1 "b 1 H~sp~lal L~· N:l ~ U.1~ ct,ub .. ~1ult1-nulhon dollar SC'l'l'<"1ary. As.~lsl n1anflll!,<'I' ' . I WAITRESS, E""PER.
So_ lder1ng. ca~lll\£', IY 1,,.e I Santa A~~~ betwtttf Main <'eptin~ app!icalions r or J2~r SAi}-~ g ~t \ll"rt1~1 n~ 1progr;-.tnl. ~ of l0t·o l hn:inf·h. t\ 1n1 or I ~l usl lw drpt>ndah le. ~~~',"",·
"rap, mectmn1cal aw;nibly &. ~·airviC\\', \\'arner & San J672 Reynalds Ave ~1alntenancc personne~ Ex-' · · ~·nr~t''7 1<fnsu17 ~. · \'il l'lt.•ty on this roslrinn. I 722 . h I D Aµ1>ly in 111·n10n, ....... r "component preparation of S•nla AnJ · celleni starting salary It.. NURSF.S .xcl' ~n ~u l's rauiini-);.ilary 10 so.;o. Call Sally 2 Mic e son r. Sil·J.1l11 5.'J:~1 \\'. Coe.st lf"·y.,
· [ Diego fwy, bencflts. Please apply at: I Aides-& Orderlies \\hat is your llcensc wot·ta l 11· ·1 ~c c t 1 Irvine, Ciiliforni• N'.It '
printed circuit boards. 6~2-4321 Equal Oppor. Einploy.<'r Moulton Niguel Water Oi!lt. 11'.:)(per. rttin1e, all shills. 1
00° yo~? (~~«k 0,'h11.' ·hnlonthly l P::.~n~•l '~~ll('Y~ a ; 7 g 0 I 833-2400, ext. 336 --.-WANTED * * COMPETITIVE I .'41:1° Coogon ?7281 Aliso Creek H.d , I PIHme, 9-1 pn1 & 5-9 pn1 & nus progra~ 1\ 11 me~ns Harbor Blvd .. C.!'ol. SALARIES D1stnct ~lanag('r -~· . B·ox Laguna Niguel ' relief, Xlnt b<'nefitl . Park ~$~ lo you. I ~i:_ase l llU • .___ L·n I 0 E lo ·Hostri;;~ ()\'(•!' :!\ ,(: hu~ hoy.
Equal Opportunity Employer JACt(. ~~THE . . &\AGER TRAINEE t:ido Health Cart>. <166 V1r~lnl11 Jo""-~ !!:~1-4.ill. l Secy to V. Pre~. I '-'1°11 ppor. inp yl'r 1 t'ull l>hilrs. ~IC'lli!I lr bcnl'· * GROUP N Now Hon•• cleancut ln· MAl'll .. °"'4 l I fits. Only hUt•r.v. rvvwJlt ,~· ..... I HANDY1'.tA . . •oe ·-,·-• rtuo·ol 1 Flagship Rd ., N.B. 64_,.,.. . RECEPTIOf'!ISl' ·, T11pist Nt'11' youn).( 1nindt•d cor11. . ·--• ... ,,, INSURANCE lo SJ. hr. Local boat mfgr d1v1duals to work gra~.,y ~u Ou1.!:1andlng oppo . Y o . 1 7 \" .11 Pvt. l-Ountry ('lub. ~lusl bl' need~ lop nn1r r1 Sl't·ri•tary I apply .. ,\pply in person nmrn·
* 12 DAYS A YEAR I . or luncheR. Full o r advance to manage.rial posl· NURSES J\1dc-l -. ..e Wl . · , I * * * I in:!s or n1akt' aprmt. . • 1rants genera matntenance p/tinle. Apply IB462 Beech Oon in ~.G-60 days. Our train new personnel. Xln'l pc:•opl (' .or.tl'tlil'<I. ~2-!-J hi; 11•ftop likills. ~Ut';I bf' w~ll.. , WOODY'S WHARF.
VACATION I n1an 11·ho can work both in· 1 d H 8 Th sci , & fri 1 , !I ... 11. r b('nefil!I ivhich include ln· Lunch 111< ludl.'d . ~ ft1n1r &: groomed. Cro1\ 1vflhls Ill \1 [
* C HR·ISTMAS WEEK 1 11id. c &. outside. Good_ hour!i BY ·• • •. ur a) <'UM'<'n nu-inage~ n 1 -1 ·& 2 wk." wknd ll'nrk. For i11lf'1°\'"' 1'111·11. C:.'IH•rlt'f' lo g"t in on St • h 23\ll \V , N1..,11J01'1 Blvd .. NB
I I f ,__ { ts bet~·n 3 & 5 pnl Sl!XXl-$1500 nlO. r-.1ust have conll' l"t'Jl aCt'nlr.n I "-1" I IGI h I n °· I en 0 g rap er I VACATION i1J1 l ots o C'O, ""'ne I • A • door to door Canvassi ni;,1•-.:-v11c aftrr 1 yr. Apply J445 p '°~:>-. ! ~ grou.rn: ~ir. ""' :u-y_ 111 \\'1.\REllOUSF. 1ofen Ir Ship-
EOIO J OB AGENCY JUNIOR. SAlESM N. prrirni·r . Suprrior Ave, N.B. It E (' r p T 1 o N f s T for • ~7:i0. __ Call ~all~· II_ a 1 1 . 1 ~U1!!:. 1·ler,ks nttded for
PleaM' Apply in penion
or c.all
::ta 3rd St., Suite 203 ~am $20·$40 per "'<'ek \\'Ork-Call ,.1r. Neivinan 91~5tn --2 OFflCI:. GIRLS Sout hr rn Californi~ Opli~<1l, ' ~~. Con..;tnl _Pr~ ,,nn1~1·I IJ~e .· tn o~r. n1~1~l gro" 1_h. 1 l1i;huni.: , hx1url' l.'Of!lf>A!IY, lluntington Beach 536-1439 1ng a.((tor school and Sat1;1r-. . · also Lo learn dlspl'nsin:;. I A~l"rlt). 2790 lhu bo1 Blltl. \at 1~11 Ua_t_a ~1 .. (h!u~!I h:.1~ ~'?11ta1•\ rt.1c \Vood L1&ht1nJ:'
HELP \Yantcd. Exp Rubbl'r days stiling ne1v ~ub~r1p-MANUFACTURING NEEDED Call !'olr. IA""'is. 8.:IG--7400. Cl\! an 11nn1l'(\1alr nfll'n1ni.: in ! ~1:..1 urt' Ctnnpanr for ap-
J . Fuller
(71Cl 13J.2COO
~fill ~fan, also Press Man. tion!'i for thro DAJLY PILOT. Alt'\isl in Shipping, Packag-Radio 1tleplione dlspa_teh RECEPTIONIST , k nd SECRETARIES & oul' t:n~incenng art11 lur a I pointn1enr , 5-t6-Nl\.
exp desired, ho\.\·ever, Wtll-This i~ not a (l<lfl('I" route in~ le rotary nress depts. ~lust be.{25, able lo drive 1 k . ,1 . "" 1°1. s :-1 .. 11<1. \"nu 1nust lit' t1\1l<' 1 .. \\"l::LlJ~'U-<J'KcAcNoM=F.N=ToAclcl . I • I 'I '·-l L'~ I ·-· I A I I P n "·or in "arnia o K"e. BOOKKEEPERS ...... I , ., I . . , . Ing lo train ambitious yng and does not 1nc ~ul' ~c-,.usl ....,.nea . 1~ra ul~ge PP Y n t!rsGn T · • . 644-0126 1YllC ""~ll11'·. 1111~ .~ · lltO~ ~~XP l..AGU NA
man. Apply 712 YorklO\l'TI, liveMcs or cotla:ting. Open-bt•fl('fit~. Apply In_ perllOn. YELLOW :CA~ CO. ~ping ~L'Cssary . ' J)C'rl('lll't.' ~n ty111n~ 1(•(·hn11·al 1 4s,1-6376 VDM Bid& 1, H.B. ings in Costa Mesa. foun1ain !'olon, \Vert, Thlll'll, ~ 11 .. 8:30-1:16 E 16th p.istn r-,1,.sa RE.CF.PTIONrsT, p;!rl 11n1v, FREE FREE FREE llla."{:1f1c-at1011~ and ~ h \ -. ---.-~~~==~I
Valley and South Jluntinxlon 10:30 Al''· Un1\·ilco Lit bs. , • ·• ' .. Ma1Urt'. J\1on-Thur~. 2-9 pn1 . . , , , should he al lt"asl llO. 11 )VU\ \\I HJ \i.;A..~~S TO \VORK?
llOSTESS.vEXPER. .Beach. Apply now by cttllin( 21461 Newporl .Slvd, C.M. . .OF f ICE cl!a!U~ p/thne 612--0098 L17. Rr 1111!l'1"!!. /\1.:en1 ~ mCf'l thcsr . iiuali!il:atlon~ !'>~IVt. A CAB!
2722 Michel~ Dr.
Irvine. C1llfornl1
Mom~ !illft· . 548-JOU .,. d .J e11l'S. Top pay. Strady. fre-k.ECEPTIDNUIT / . f I 4121 \Vrslerly Place <lllCI Bl~ lookini:: for 11 t\Jlll· 'CHOO:-;~. ~'Our hours, work
• BLUE DO~~.,,~. . --M'·A-TUR_.. .a -¥ .or fM" exper. CO!Jpll'!r. Costa '.>'i p 1: ·'. Su ite 115. NB 1t1:1.Sl!!O I 'II t 0H ·1·~· for vnurseir. lfe your 0~"1 I 3.\5t1 Via t 'i'JO, N.B. ' Equal Qppor. Employer house~l"Cplng: . I ?racttcal ~le.!>a_ & Npr areas. C a 11 lcmou1i;.. C~ll ~l :l ft)I' Esrabli.~h!"d. 1~:, pan~ u1 t • boss: t.Tl"n 11r i1umen, C11n "~~='EPC:,_to =~~{'~ KEYPU.NCH· c:· Ila~~-~~TI6~wyer l p2~~~~!1!5~crcta1y 13 hrs app;te~~lisEc·Y I F"· ~El~R~T~R~~ ! • Mod~~ ;:e 3~:!~:~~;n ~:~~:
Equal Oppor. Employef" ni/f J-'lesible hMl for ful l or _ • MAII?S : No e)(per. !\CC-Ap-a day1 Above a.vcr~e l ~p-Tt1~1i11 t11·rn f.irn1 desh·t·s !n-1~~•int'.a 'xlnl r~:itll ~. 0\vnr~, Facil1t1es 1 ~l,r;, reilr('(I. Agf' ~ to 70.
'""""'""'"'"'""""""'""''"·) p/tim£> employmcn1. Xln't OPERATOR ply in person, The RA:xk-ivay ing & short hand skills Cal! div 1i /glo1v1ng Pl'l'SOnahty . ·r $6.)0 [ e B • d :-iupf.1fl'n1l'nl your ltl(.'t>ml!'. El.~-lc T-h---· working condl lc-paki-vacs. _ ... Inn. 1400 S.E .. Sritotol, Costa I 644•8i.;o · & ;ood iyplni.;: skills to h:in-'1'f!l't:h~ mirat~:. ~ · as1c an Drive a 1·:1h G h~s or mor" a _........ -Mesa 557~00• _ . _ g . . . . Also fl'<' Po~1t 1on~. C11ll I M • -M d ' I cluy, Apply 111 ~"'°n lml'llediate opening ror an' Apply at· 1445 Superior Avt, · ' ~ PART...time l)aby!l11\cr /hou,;e-·di~ -h~~Y' ttm~t -de9k In ;new • ~·11y J•:!li~. ~J5tl-8.105. Control a1or e ICQ ,.,.lk:lit· Cub 1 ·0 i86 f' 16th
C)(pet. tech wla backaround H.B. keeper I kindergartner. otftet. Lite sh a plus. Starl I Cnrcf'r F.1nployn1ent Agl'n· L'f SI C ~1 · 1\.1 .'" , •.
of electronlc lhCOIJ' In -HOUSEKEEPERS Pertee otrers p erm Mn I' fl l ·Ma"ntenance Hrs .1'1:?.0 to ;1 ;30 :1 \l:'.1.Y s:mo. Cull S:llly H HI' 1 . I <:y, 3400 l1'\11ne Blvcl., N.R. I + I e ;_·-·-0·,_a_, c'c"'c. c· --~~·
c-luding solid atate. Oocit not Liv<' in or ollt. Also_ d•y .•mft!r'°!1"1mo'"n'1«!". ,'•,,,'""', •• ~,"" I . "'c<'V. St5"215S tth :\:311. ."140--GO:n; Coa11r111 P('rsonnr l --SEC. RETARY--, • Stock Purchase I \VO~t,AN uvrr .!l >.'" olri In " 0 '"' ~..... t\~1·ncy. Z190 Harht1r Hlvd. , \\11r · lun"li ~h1ft only.
in"-olve production 11 n f' cleaners. Sl5 min. ~!trasher. \paid IJ.tnf off a tChriBlmDJI. Jr. ·Me·c'-"'Ot"C PO\\'ER M11eh1ne operator. Ci\1 I Tu11 not1·h Gal F'rlJ11y nt•edf'll e Profit Sharinn 1\1~1-F"ri. 11-3prn. Pizz11
testing. Domeatil; Agency. <Bonded, ConTpit.ny paid life, tdpit11l. llG iingle & double needle. Ex· t= O ST lu h11ndlt: all u r I i t' l" "':' Uu1-gf'r lll"~tauran•, 171t'1
Duncan Electronics t.Jc·d, Em~r Pays Fef'' surgical, medical. and den-·per!'!de5ired. 545-5859. Rl:t:EPTI NI rcsponsibilitir11 fur i::mwi111: e 12 days a .year Hrooklrun;r, 1-·. V11ll r)'.
646-!H7"2. Int benetits ~ al'so muca· . p • • I t !1a11d lf" busy rrunt de~ frw Cl\I J\Ug . Co. 642-llO.'IO. • • -, . ,
Call 54:>-lll&l HOUSEKEEPER, pvt COUil• tional ud!taiict. Exccllrnt Oty Shift r1c1stan n1pec or )'O\JllK n1anuf. tu·n1 . Dulil'll --------paid vacation \\Of\1A."'J to '11'1111 offlcl'I I
t::qual Oppor. Employer mlf try club, \Ycd lhru Sun, \.\'Orking diridilions · a itd • . . Mechanlcfll 11111 inrludi• si·rrrning nr\'\ SECRETARY slON" t: 11pt. :\ D11)'ll, npprox.
ELECTRON IC a.ssen1blers, varying hr1. $'2 hr. Luoch growth polentinl. !\lust havt espen~·nrt" 111 the lmn1ed. oprnlng !Or 11n in-1•n1plnyt•<"s & at't:urah• 1y1>-Sh 1·t~l'(t ht•a vy 1)pirii.: • 6 days a year ' 15 hn; Pl'.': ~.'k: $2.75 P!'r hr. :
cxpcr or ivill trnln, :\bovc . 1 ried r or · l rvl . n1ainlt'OO oce of produclion dh·rrlual i11::. \\'ill truin tu do p:1yrol1. s11l11ry •"11n1111<·n~ura1 ~· 11· I "d , k I .-.1u!!~ hR\I (·11 -fi42-17S.:l. ask
Al'Cl"ll.gf' Slnrting W8il'I, :;:,...~161.. In{' C'?ll., Opcnlnl:' available ~n1 ;, 'me.chin<'.'! end planl equip-1 _, -WHO: ~tart $52(). l'all Sally llllrl.' t•\jJ. f ur ltlJJll. 1·:111 !'olt\: pa• SIC eave, Ill!' s"'o'.c''-"c· -c--c--0-.,-~-1 C~1. NB art:ll, ConlRcl ,;;ii;;;iiiii.OiiOiiOiiOiiOiiOii;o;; I p.n\. to 1 11 .111: 1 \V111 111 e.n I : i\1 w.s ! ha 1· "I • ... 1\.;slrt's thr rrlognltion :,1ll-f:IJ5.i, (_'o;1.~111I Pt'rsoonrl 111i"ltu·1s. 171 11 :)1;,.1121!1, \\"OJ\IEN inll'rf'l!iled in in-::~~:~ ~:~.y~~:~·,... INSPECTORS ~~\.~~ .. :~rd~~~:he~~\~1 n1r1·han1c11;I Al\IR11uclt•, .al~i~~n~n~i\:· :\~~)~:::.!. ~~~'Ill'}' 2700 Harbor Blvd. SI~~~~~~~~~·~. Shop11ln:: ·\::i<:!::yr~~ !he Ont'~(· a)'(" ~:;-ti~('.dt~~:.o; sh:~: ••
, cx_Jl('r1rnce no! requ1rccl. A •VE y • \\.'11;nt~ lo mAk<" 11 ron· -! C1•ntrr [lf'"vrlopmcn1 Cun1-Plca~1· l\p!Jl~· 111 Prrll()n I Drapt'ry Sl111p, 35.'t> I'.:. Co11itt
Hert is your chance to begin l\'~ll lrain'l. Rl!Clu!rc~ ll 1rib111ion. RECEPTIONIST P<lll} lookin,1t for !la'rl'tar~·. Or Cnnh1c.! B. Kr nfka lhl'y, Cdl\I .
a ra.~inating 114!W career. 1st & 2nd sh·1tts nunhnum of I yf'ar ROJIUCTS IS: 11ith '~ ''"''"' & Siii \\'OM'~,~:N--,-.-.-,-.-,~-,or-Co. 1vill train sha11> indiv. k"-u""h ---n·coc• "''' p " ' y D M "",. ,... .,,.,,... ... *' Cotn""lcnt iu mcch11nical Day or night. no r-.:11. llt'l",. I ~kills. ~~l30 [ housei:lr:uun<>. Call Robbi!!'!! v.·/lite exper &. avg typing be exeepUoMlly fast and ,... · ,.
for .II phooes or excrov.·. Varian Data l-tachines, a A I [ inspection of niarhincd & <'a~~·. fun _joh. \\'ill train .• ,•~. SEC.-fur:"Ar·c hitt'C"!ura l hrni. llag 1· .\1011. !>"-\.0757;
In' accurate. pp y c D. • • ,. d l ly prng Ol sho11hand ' ' I ,-,-. i:.~':"•. Good starting ulary A: ad· leader in them -computer an1um1r 1v111on 1110 "~ ~rs. . . . ' ·. · 1 Typing i.· Siii, 11'ilh r-:111•r. ..-.,...,.~--------
v an ce men I oppor . Industry has immediate PERTEC 2620 S. Susan I * Fam1l1ar 1v/blucpn nJs, Aopl) in f>Cr5?ll ant af1 or 1 in aCl'f!<, rN:. & pavnhl<"s. :\V0~1EN : Laguna Rl'arh
unlimited. openings on 1st&: 2od shifts • S."lnta Ane., Ca. 9'n 0-I i n !!peetion s,rrr ifir.aliuns, ev('. at 29?.0 \\r~t Csl Hwy., Nl'\\'IXll'I aN.'a . Cali Sur, 2722 M ichelson Or. [ n'snrl n1o tC't rnaid v.·ork or
Jason Best Agency lor individuals having a Equu.l Oppor. Employer n1/f 1 verbal 1n.stn u·!mns. N.B. :~i7-24-12·or ~hl'i-"i'.l.:16. I Irvine, California ln<lr~ ~-u!I r1r par• rin1f'.
VI minimum of lour yeflrs ex-1 • Profoc1ent 1n 1hl' Ul'I' or I ~ . ) --.-133--2400, ext. 336 ' l~HAll!l\i. 17400 Brookhurst, r. Y ""rience in 8 receiving in· Business Syst<'m~ "IARINE 1\1 h -:----:: precision ·n1ea11 u r \ n R In-Receptianist $550 SECRET Art\ .. I ll'IMI-. ----------Sui te Zl3 96.1-6775 ... ~ 17112 Atmstrong Avenue " cc ~ n l c ' e)( ' . ·1 r . . . . l\lu$1 hO l'l' l\'fllll!'.: exper. I \'OUNf; lad,\" Ut--:lO UOltl· spection ectivity. You muiit Soolo Aoo. Cnli f. pcrienC<'d, estahlt!lhcd ho1111strul'!1enls !n( 11<ing r-on1· Lil <' lyp1ng. tcr P:11d Call ror api>l 6~2A·)1i:i:, ~'.qual llJ!J)(ir. E111plo~er luchr~I .t 110 han<>--up< EXECUl IVES have a knowlt?dgf' of yard. Goocl pay, <' o , rar1 tors & itai::rs. ,\I.SO FEE .10RS ' · ·-:::·::::::__ "
$12,000 to $75,000 resistors, e o Jl a cit 0 rs· lrl'ine Industrial Coniplcx hcnl·fits. s1Pa1l;.o r n1plo1·· Duncan Electron1·cs -WESTCLIFF SECURITY , Ho~tr·s:oi ~"irk r \'r!I. (;(Jl')ll · I I 0 r1;J~ -~· 11wo• Jlfll. Alllll vf>ll . In
Send resume or call TODAY trnns1slors, s 1ect ~I l" 1 a an equal ol?l>Or en1ployrr ni~M.:,J,!71 Back ;&y Dr., Call fur Jntf'r-<il'w ,o\pp1 l'<·r.•onru·l Ag1•1u·~· OFFICERS TEMP 'S I fo1 ·r•1.:n 1n11·o·L . i\lail l'l'Plif's
lo'. conlidentlal NO COST pnrts arnJ job r(\.lalt'u ,equi1>-i'¥f!\l•por\ hl·uc.h, (In Newport 1:.10.", "1 u;:,1 1-:. f:rt111'.!C"I', S .. \. I tr 1 !h """'''~" -" tu; ::1~1 \\'. C"o11~• ll"'Y no-: cxeculive interview. inent. you mff' cse Dt,lnes~. 1il4' 644-4545. 1 Eriunl ()p!)Or. 1-:niplnyt'1' 111/I 1;\l11rk !! C1•nlrf1 Full S. 1-1ft1111l". r\n up I fill N1·11"p••r1 1:..•11c-h !l:!f.tiO
EXECUTIVl: SER\ITCES. 11uallfica1ion~ and fll'e ill· KITCH"N HELPER 'IE" & r cl z;;----'i42-.'l.'f~6 111.w1unit.v 1\J 1ul1'tll h'\' l•ffl o· I A J bl lrrrs1ed in i·oining a '""'IY· r:. " .,, . i1on1f"n or _1111]X'l' rnE~S'.\!.\N u n I <111 •· IJP· ___ :....._ _·. -----1a • • Q • INC. e•Y b! , Ex ... ,1, nc-~ RE.,TAL AGE''T * lu1'\!•' & fH'oi:1·1·~-~1vr i<t'1·u1•11.~· 1 ••••••••••••I ~., N. ''''"· o .. 1• Aooo in~ Oran"" Coun!y oom· \ . aJ.S('lll _ini.:.. ,._. '" c ""'r\uni1y or tl.1r rl~hl n1un .I* ,. ,. "<> """'.. ~ ,. M I I I /-ko '" "" P"-1 o" \\ 1'1h SI Co I 'r' <> r g 11 11 i t n tion. l 'ot1t:11·1
11141 "''-!16"~. putcr con1pany th11l olfrni: aure II(;.' 11·, .. ,., I.,.~ • .-.~ . ...,,, · • " !<a V:.ri1•1l N1u1p1. sl1<1)1, "'11("1'. Fi.~! ~n111it11( !'l'11I l'~lut•• ~ ~ ~ -•· >luo• bo clean• nt'a1 tllc~" · 1 · \ I '' 1 "· 1 l<l't'lll'll~ ?o\llM'riiS(lr, Tu<'~ ['···(,\\' 11,.,,, •. ,. !'uooih'• 111,.~1 1 1 l ~ r-·' . ..,... 11)111\t'< n!>('n1ni;:. J l•PY 1 ") 1'<!111[.11111)' 111 .;11.:una uo.'>11·1. () 1 I 1 1> 1 .~ '" MerchantN• ·. FE~tALE. warcnouse glrl, e Modern Dependable . ~lODEl..." _ r.10 DEl-'i -1\nn.al Sy~H·nis t'•11·v. l:'.Gl ni•i•tls l'l'1111,1 ""l'n1 h11· its u1· i·L · llt • ' 1tni-~ "11 y, 1•n•i.:n·~<11 I' "' 11i11•1\:111\ •'
i..'00'1 driver. full li1ne, Ae?l.v I/\ ll"'T'l!IJ!1 J.IODELS !iiJ'(·lt St .. Nt'"'jlOJ1 lka•·h. l'l"l'll.SUlgly husy rt•nt;1] df'llt. l;E\\!l'O, l i11.l9 Bn~>khui ~1 · 1"1·1111•11111 ' i l1·l11 Si.'1 1 I• •' 'iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~iii~
permancnl, 1111 11udenl!. facilities SURF & SIRLOIN \Yomcn. Alen , Qlildren . Purchasing-Agent -~hr.~t hl\1'•' ~:ill" s 111 an·~ fount:u!.1.~allr)_· - -'do.·~ •! ;+~.1111' l"E~IJ'(• "' I
non-smoker, ~' d a Y s , • Ba l d .)930 \V. Coos! il11'y, !\lndels w11;nlNI for Fall 11nd I lii't"nso"'. SEl!VICt-: 1111111. lXA;:;, ~ r~ fp.-,,. 11 11 ul) un1•1t11· .t· 1u11c [Antiques 800
6:30 Ml-3:30 P:\I, SJ.i:i hr. s c an Ne .... ·,port Beach \Vinler Fashkins ~nllci::f' ~rad 11•/lO yrs !':-tl?C'r. l..111!\lrlll BCIH'h rt•si1k·11l F:xp1..·1· 11(11 t\('{'. j)11l1t \it(":! ~:I I I n.? "Jl1~111un11,, trw ---"--------=
start. Interview ~5 P~f. Ma• Med" I 111\tERICAN BEAllTIF.!' l .I Yl'~ 1n curr1•11t 1>0stt1on. Nalan Real Estate
1
111111, h!'•· Ull'•h1al ~-d1•n11,1. skill<'ol ,.1\:-.T IQ U t. refl't:lnry
Window l)esigns. 3737 Birch IOf ICG LITE 8 0 0 k k e e P i n g. l\tODELTNG AC.t\DE1'1Y J l:rt. 1nventnry . Sl~rt ~~· * 494-9-tll * apply in ~·r~11!· \"uun.i: A: TYPISTS 11ibrnry• tr1IJl1• r.· lnng v.·ith
St., NB + Ufe secretarial skills. Sonic e'7· 675-84-12 • 3700 lllpl 81\•d., t. 1"f' Ngo. Also ~ l'f' I osi-__ __ __ I I ~irM· I 11"1' < o. 1.191, N•'" 1..,.u 1 BOOK KEE p E RS ! 111•11\'lly 1·11rv1'(t 11 " 11 l" io; 1 11 1
FEMALE BEER. TENDER per. ll('W;ll. Fllimt'. S430 N.B. t~uw RYAN AGENCY RESTAURANT Ri vel, Cl> __ '-------KEYPUNCH l h·R~. tlnrk rinish $150. or
Dana Point • Stock Purchase ltlO Id start. ~114.1. _ r-.tOTEL J\Ia.id-5 hrs. vrork in 1793 N 1 C~1 646-48.'W P.1a11n"I' 11·u1unn 1v11.nh•cl 1n 1SERVICf. SraHun ,\11r111t11n1 SECRETARIES 1rad1• rur Eni::Hsti an1iqut"~
496--9023 • • • D&vf! • p ofit Sh I LOAN OFCR TRNE exchnnge for apt. or salary. ewpor ' • 841_!)61~ 11·ork nt lun1 ·h Mu1lt('r 1 t: Luhricntion ~l:i11. full 4!'16-411.1 I l" II ll i ~ t r R n " l•'"'""""""i;;;iiiio~~-1 r I ar ng l\111.ture out ..... ing pC'r fiiU n E.xp'd. 2376 Newport Blvd., 17931 Be.a.ch. UBST TE . l prf'pari nio: ~1u1rhl'i<.'hC~ " linlC' rinphl)'lll!'n1, ap11I.\ -:,\\ho ,11aiH , •lll.:!111!<'•1, ',· !.A·H1·h1 FIBERGLASS • 12 days a year r\eOOed wl~-is capable of 0.f. 54&-97"'.l5 REAL E A ~nlad~. -1() 111' wk. N<• ~:11 ltlll • 12 tll•1n, :•1 2 1n~1 t:I ~!l111u 11tu1.: u1u: HI ~ 1••1 A 1··· ------802
h. n ,111 "g , .• ,_lblll"•. MOTEL ,, IAID , N • SA'LESMEN 11ir1• or Su11 11·r1rk. N" ~rlil Tnro lht, Rill Hash C'li.•\ 1'•111 l•·n11 :·~~1~11111••tHf f••t1 i ·"P"P-"-"-'-'-'-----'-
MANAGER Id Cation " ., ..,. " \\A TLD. , --------I· ~ '" ir I• "' ·k' '" !o·\I • pa va 4 P.lust hnw finance or 1-ol-will 1raln, aµpl) in [Jl't'<l()ll \\'h)I no t \\''Ork in lh1• liolte!i1 i-hifl~ ! 1,<"":l:!l1l ':i·urk ll'.~: 2 81".!tV lt"I< :-:1a . ,\!11•1t•t:i111~ :1;'.;11!11~ I ~:.II I o1.~, ... 1,,: ;\<1\\ Fl:l'~ll:llT 1!1\~l.\t;t: !'.\LE e 6 days ·a ·year lcction btu•kgrounJ. CnU Co~l:i !\1£>sn Inn. :i1·rn ll un tlT11:1nn Rc':u·h · t'\/ti•!1t. <.:k 1111 •01011!111 1111H h , 1 1· ul t ,\• I 111111111· l.110 • ,,~1 ··an . 'N<·1v l ln1 poln1 I',, r r 1 i.: · i;;, Take full chlirgf' F.G. Dept
for larg<' sailboal co. Salary
ha1'Crl on <'xpcr. Top frln11l'~. coo~tlll n•c. 11rrm. li~h.
hunc, snil, gaU. CnU Coll
1919) 6.'18-2137.
FiddleriJ Ill Re1lllUl"llnl ln
Lagu111t HUis Moll now
h.irirut:
WAITRESSES, COOKS,
BUSBOYS,
HOSTESSES -
& DISHWASHERS
1''\lll or p/tJmir. Appl)> In
periOn. Next to Scan, In-
side mAll.
FIELD REP_
to $14,000 yr. Company v.·antg
aelf·motivaltd pe!'IC)n to
R rvlce tht.ir exlstlna c1.
1-blished accounts. No f'-"P·
netdtd for thl1 forkltn sup-
pl)' firm. NOi\' In ~·· or e~ndtna. Sonte tr&,'Cllrlll: i
lnvolvt!d with all cxpcn!C'• 1
raid. XJnl nr.rounlt ' 1£11'·
ritory. \VAnl ~ aomeonr 1n
lf"OW \Vllh comp11.ny k !
bcc:on1e u lt• n11ir A~ Mnn I
.. po11ib\f'
1:;om JOB AGENCY
313 3f'l'I ~t.. SUltf' ~ I
Hunllnaton Bf'Ac-k-536--14:~
~ Helen Mnson, ~1 4 o .. 6 O :i 5. • '!USIC IANS , --ki n" 1,.~ t'o1.1n111in V:lllr). 1 .. -1 us 1"•111111•1·· .\ll•iht·i;I .l·. hv~~1· rn1·1·h. !''l"'I' .\ppl ~ 1 ~1;.:.o,r..11:+ APPL y BY PHONE 01 1.~11"11~ht·r~ .<: r n n i:,. ~ •
Pal•d Sl'Cli leave, C t I p I A 111.. " • '"""' " "' 1r11ln, >'fl\I, (."all l'h1I j\h·· hi•n"1 1!·•· .\p1•ly l.intll1o,·i,g l'hr\11111. liOI :-; ('o:i~! lh,1. \\':t~h~·1·~ & 1!1•.1•1•1·~. f;u·!•lrv. • , oas 11 t'.r!SIJnni· , i:i• ·y. <·••P"· bl<· o••n•. ~·r. Rct·,. ' ' ' I 01 f APPLY BY PHONE 27!Xl H bo 81 r1 (:\1 " " .. ;.;.: i\(ltll<'<' Vll.L,\l;I•: ltl•::\l. ••ll n l<•ll. 1'1 r<·ar v 1'' u.~ L:ll{UtlJ !~1·.11'11 '\1 ;1r1·;11 1l\ e 100/0 • 2nd · er 1 "'· ' · Co ll ,John or BUI 5.2_7-8151. FST\i;r-• !lfJ.4"i67 \\'01·ld· S111r<' •111 lu""r lt•1·«I. -. -. -, , . . APPLY BY PHONE 11t·r\l'1I .l'ITY i\1'1'1.li\NCF: l.VN ~.1t•n,i1•" IJO~itlon for ~· 1 "· ~-~ _ ~.· .. '· 1·,, .• ,, 1•1,., •. , ,_.,,,,1,1,,,,, ;.;J-,!{\ Il l'. :0-la. A111·111!,111t '. l
h ... dlff -......... ,_ ... ---' -I ' {',1!! 'l'I· \11'\) ·"" 1111111• I :t.~·.: \\ \\ult!!'!'.·"' ;,.r...o7lill s '" eren.. full ·or p/IJnie em11loynl<'OI. NCR OPERATOR REAL ESTATE t'1•11t1•t', 111 ("11 .. 1:1 ~h·,;1 ,\,fl (nl l:llJ Jllll. Ip illlh' ,,... l.t·I II• k11.::, :.11•:1 ,'\l, ru~!lll. tJrane•1 • Opcnlnit for p1n f/ri1111• & i.w .\l t",1.,1.faiu .\ "kt1d, N1•:11 A11ph .• lu ll.~I ~
t1al ~llf'f. Top iml ,t, lll"n••rlt ~. BROKERS 111ur11~. r.~111 ;<.1·1•1~·1 1 1111·11. 1.h.,1 .\ .. 11r .1:111~ ,11,. ;-.:.,
1~is..'it>:J(\ ___ i Plct1~1· t·11 ll 641-2410. fr)r OR SALESMEN l{Ot tll'l-:~·1111\ ('~I. 1,..,,., 101 • ••1 •1t· 111 I-"'' .... 111111~ 1.:1-;N;'lu 11 ~1· \\ 11.~h.·1· '7:..,
\•ou Ill;\)' bt thf nn( we l fT • ppt. Newport Ot"!!.i:\1 llrin l11·t't.I~ Our ('\J)tl!l~ion i,1i~1M1'zlll\ 1,. l1n111t•d v1~·11 111~. :' :i l 1t r ~ , 8().vi1:i· S\utiun Sah•~.\lnn unH I "'' h"' ~ 11i .. 'IU<l 11~111· l\rn111••11• t :u~ llr~"r Wi.
lnoklng lor. f')(pl't11".n("cd !'CR j9;, , 1 , , 1 hl•ot•hht., 1n11n1n;:. Al:!'!!' ~It) '-)oil '"'" ''"''"''"'" ._,,1 ,,,.,1 fo1 \uu· l\i•ruih>lt' f-:l«t'" Ot')«I' s5,·1• It &, .. '1 qutn""I ~.'Ve1'1l ntt 1 t' • ",.1'' tn ;ll), >\ppl~ ~t ltayn..• Sofl r " ' "' .<., y · ' I 11 l'lo • 1 " ~tACHlN.16TS 01>Cl'ato1· fOL' J\J · .-1 . I""Pll" iil!h al IMl•t-fv nr N~•i\'"''1 BliiJ .• l \;s!a ;\lt·i..i "ur l1111r I!-\t11111•r-: •111 -~,,\ t:.1~ !11·,,.r 5.-.0 r 1'1"f' Plt"1'~Apply 1nPef'JOn Min. typlnl': rNJU irf'mtnl jO • • , \\'111»r . 7d22 PJJr\: A1·r . 1i 11·. 1.,1~ .. ::;;., I 11:1~1..-.11. ln11·~1 11 "'~"!~·! d1•!1;1·1~.1.l1u11; :,4G -ll b7'J
Or COntacl B. Krsfk" RECISION f rf'nl l'!llut" 1"'1X'""'nt'r . ''1' \\'1·~1i·1·n &: P11rk ulf l;:1nl1•11 ·~"""""" · T 1 P ~1,m1..;,, •• so~~ "~1~\!~ ho1·1· !hi• bl.'!lt C'oi"On11 d<'I Gnl\r. Hll·ot .. (i.li ~t:rtv1r~; ~1a1 ~111 lli·lp l·'11tl "11l• '"111111' :•1 11 holnl."' 1 ~Ii ~ll.·_·~~-.,~---·I
VDM
2722 Mtch•I~ D r.
I rvlne, C11iforni•
1u:2coo. ut. 336
Equal Oppor. Emp10)'1"!1'
QUICK, CASH
THROUGH A
• DAILY PILOT
\VANT AD
~---------
SHEET METAL . ,.., .... ltJ '"" Mar loc., l:Mlt'tt bf"n" 1111M·r --0• 1, • ~ ,. 1., 1, ~~t.('!C JS to.~:\'i<.lt .\ ~·i-:i.. .\T 1111Tl>tJ1:-.;T 1:(•f11f:("r11t.1r,
MECHANIC i1·oold hf> dto•lr11hlf'. Xn't 191~ lr 111't a 1:ood (;niup ltblrrt: s.•1"\•it'l'mcn, fin· i·x ' .P .1~1 "''"' .. i),•~ 11' .. '1f~l .i1111r~'' 11 •"li fl kood n1n ·
t.Tu&t be abh! to "1l uf ""' opc-nlc 1'11 1httt n~111 ihop
niachlncry arxl n111kc f)llrt1
to pr\ot dlmen1ions without
pcrmanont type 100Un11.
Prtrf'r heAvy pt111rh J>E'C'U
1111.Mcground.
BABCOCK
ELECTRONICS
Unil Of l':Slrrl\nr Corp.
?.:iOl ll1r"'-11· IJh•tl. rn~1,a Ml."AA. Cnl)t. MG26
brncfl ts. "'lth ivhnrn 10 \.\'Ork ~laylx' linJ1111sl1t.•r. 01'1.ngr County ,~~·~~ port_l1><'h Tempo Temporary Help tun\: ,.1111,11111111 Jl~i. 6"'l--~l
Pltlll Call \'OU'd like to join I.lit. No nr1•11 Tllp µ.'ly \\'f' trn1n. ,SERVTCf<: s111 t·1n11u· •l.n• I I uft .-, P:\! nr afl 10 i\tll
Mr •• F l.Id.'
Q""ftM'·bl"okrr l'OfllJ!elilinh 1:174.. B Lnw,111 /\11'., l"1~!:1 tt.tu~• hi· ""~r fl1l'fl, 11hh .< 1 THE MAGIC RAN "k"d'
BAY & BEACH •111··•t1,_!l:!l-.'£'6 -. 1 .~"~'Wri,r-}l 1 RESTAURANT ,, 1\,11Ens:-~r.
9 ;30am-11 noon SJ\ I.~. S f"{ r JI 11•!'f'nl11!1v!' !'I f,NO 1>111
0
1 nl )tH1r d.11 I I"' IYl\I ,\i't"l.•~linio: Ajiplli .I il1~h\\1J~/l('r llchlt. {:Uar .
644-3389 REAL TY 675-~ t\ulOt1\flllvf', ~·A fl" h •I u ~" >1Hh u• ~'\'('1'111 or-•n1n1:"' 11.,11~ ~,11 l'l••k•. 1-.J(lk~ h•·li• lll'\l\'f'r,..i ll:\9-lti10 n r
THE IRVINE CO. - -·tt;:;;1 t:~11111• s.~'""' •l1<11 ~1tutl'1r h.1-< i·.-.1111! l··1:r '" i· i11111 u' , .. ~ii l 1· 'I ··1·•. •t1<h1111 .. 111·1<. "111111;:111111 ~,w;...·,2111 1'19 "flt'!Ull~ 111
0
l)rang1• ( tl. t,\· -• 11•1 k~/1·11•h1r1:~ 1111h rh ui,: ,111:1.r ll"'P 11.,,.1 h,,'{1,.,,.,., :\I \ T (' 1."1c.~.--~,-". -.-1 l.l('l'nli~n~ S..:l11.~ll •r Jl'<I rl. !'ul:1t) . ."'l!lf!U!I•".\, 1>1t11'r l'"ll ~\nrk 111onu1~~11 1 ,1 .i l!••!"I; ,1:11!n·~~··~ hu< hi·I ·, '1 rtnl (, prA~ ti"tl'1Alfl.'
:-.o l'O~I to )l'lu If )'OU i1u.11\f~ 1~·.nu~ .f, r~1 ho.·rn:r11~ 1'1'!111" ',l•u, 1t11'\l trl J\pt)I) 111 .. &r hn rto·nd"J• ,\p11i\ 111 I"'/ I l~l"': , rl,<'C". \\1111h1T le
1\AI" 111,trlhul!nl! f" <.u1l1l [)ru~ lfiHl ;-.,.,1 • r~1 1. <.0111h C(IOcl . Bc.lt nt-
NITE AUDITOR I i.i\ll }iln •1 T:u·h!•ll ufrltt• ".l1:\J72S-i:HI lt1r 11i1t~l"\11 ,\hu·Ar11111r 1-:i1'1I N.H <(\•ti Hi ·1"~'11 .! '\' inu,I J•.•r. Gl2--S119.
• nf!•'I' pn~~\111( lh1• ~!l'nt' \1n11 1ht11 !'11 l•I ~ ro.1<t . ~rvvw7"',.:,-:-:-;;-:,---,,-ol
11111111 111' i·luh t.',\fl\'I', '">q'11. ""an1 :\11111y i11111111i:1•1no>nt ll ppl S'tY..OEritTS l'ln1.n. 3.t:: liot1~1ol SL, st .... .._~) \\11tet Sor1~ner. Good
KnO\\'lrdl(I.' n! NC'lt 1~100. "Pflf11'1Unlli<'' 1\\1{• '"' lhr> ,., l'\UICK CASH ~·,. .. 1 lOIT•lHwi Sol np..•n1n~< f•ll (\1~111 ~lf'<t.11 lt'nrlt'r lh<' s.1 t'Onrl!tton. '~· t133,921h nr ~· tin1r . Sre P<'r'll'lnnf'I l\l·~r. j)flJt~ifln 11! nur HI .ru"' 11r ,,. AA1C'~ 'Ill It-II.I. r).t ln•'l I Coo..:1 Pinta Sllo!n. to.'n ~jd1· ~~3•
BALBOA BAY CLUB [h1'!<. r:1111 J\I Sloan, lUl--!"dlll THROJJGH A R1'l'tll'I'~ ()l•l't 17, r~ ('\ Of n('\1 Uulfl'.·k~ ,,\nJ;l n.,. Rent W11her1/0ry."
Llkr l(I Tnut,.1 Our1'r1itif-r'• ttJI \\'. C911~1 lh\l·. ~.U j TARBELL, R1•ltort WANT AD \11'1 -11cc .St h1 .. J 11 hrs ll"'r MA.gl,· Pu . An F..cllUll,Op. Jl ,\\1\,J:. rna\iu. Pll Nldl~ rvlum 111 for )'flu! nn"l•llir1t Ail-. , ~rt..-~ttx 1 ~7 lllfl··"~ .tr !i!"l111ni.: t • .,11; 'P1•h -~r ~'1'll 1 ~ P-mttlt'.ly,.,.._ ..:. "* 6.1't-l202 '* ~
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I
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=:;==:...--...::::! Jewelry 115 ====:.--...:..:.; _ 970
A-. ln:tfl•!'!!! 970 A-. ~
WASHER ' ''"'' ....,,..,._,_______ he.--.... SAAB N...r• "''"" .. ,..... $10. ' ---~ ...... CADILLAC
foO '
C>IIGG-1156 GENEROUS Cblh"'b""'-,,.,. Poodl... oe•-1 ....... _ l-:-~=~--1--=::.:=:::.:::...-1
Bulldtne M ........ 806 • • Amee. E.•k tSpitt), Doi>e<--• SERVICE • ........Ot.DI!~"". 50 UllD o,....Couitcy'aNeweot ·n CADIU.AC . Coup" , ANSWERS n1an, Pit Bulls, Bull Terrier, • • • SUB DeVllle, Xlnl cood. all
e Surplus .Building • REWARD• Chow, Cock•poo. Kee•llond • REJ(TQ e G ' OMNE:lll!CE.SJD,LAESY P'""" ace<•., air '°'"'" M,\TERIAL . IOOO's Of NE\V Sch~ -l\fC'tal -Musty_ ;:ind English Bull Dogs. 100 111ereo tope, I ea l her ITEMS• I Nougat -BLUSll 1'1lXED PUPS!! S t U d "'-I-up ho Is tery, beautUUlly
wood atun
1
shecllns: mold-For retum or 11ny In-Meat mark<'t ll('t'nc; "l -r CLEARANCE SALE ma. nlllincd V/P car. \V.D. • , DootB, umber, ply. , • &ivice 1'1ost Breeda. ' Sha-~~ ~ ~ I
lnir; Windows etc • formation leading to return bought son1e n1r..at today. Thl' Opcnro E
0
wR"'SA: ·53LE1-50Z7 Excellent iefte .. .:;.. ol . ~--. 1 Tr•lns •f.l SAABS STARTING AT Adan111 Co. MG--62U. BU'ILDERS SURPLUS or a gold four leaf clover price wu m high I actually ,. u..... ..---(amine ln-&v• D•Y ·-. 5 ·'°13"°'cAD""°°"soo~a"n'-d'l'e"v°'1-1i.-.-,-tk-, 1
~ So •al • . pin, appro:ic. 2 inches In lb b 1 IRISH SE'ITER "rice re-eval\laUon inod4!1s. .rt.··---'-·-.. ,, -. i n St., :, . .\. dianu!ltt, with j cw e I e d ~a~SH~' CRli l" e g st c r S ~tONTHS $9S r DEMO SALE ~ : ....._. up to 24 miles per gallon nu, 4500 mi, fully equip,
Moo ~ Sat 10-5 hor.ieshoe in · c:ente-r; a!IO, I :c==~------842-6829 SALES.SERVICE J..EAStNG Used Me~ LNt• Dick Miiier Motors Pvt. pty, $6950, &14·7Jll eve,
n•. "'6·l032 gold Iockot (was on chain), * AUCTION * AKC d 1 . •. FOR RENT '. OVERSEAS DELlvER'i' p•-~-m w. Wam&, $.A. 673-lOIO, l-0 -C he f n1ckcl re1i:.. a nl8tian pup-' • _.. ~7-2132 '66 CAD Sed. De Ville, wry
•mM'•t & app~. I . size 0. a • Ffne lurnhure & appli&ncetl pies, 7 11!eks, pet or show. l!n3 EL DORADO 'Motor-ROY CARvat Inc ' ·HOUY of 1..wvtc ---=~;;;~c-:---1 clean, xlnt niech. cond.
Eaulpm.nt 808 lnsr:rthed in scnpt, FLA. CASH lot· latt> nlOd<"l Front $50. Aft 6 p.m. home, 18-f't., tape deck, T.V., ... ~ E 1! ....... St. • -.. -... __ _.._1 .:.'.!:-p"-•_._• TOYOTA
.;i,;;;. The~ are deeply treasured appli!UU.."t'$ & furnltu~ €'tc. 5.i7-Z1!li gelf-contalned, al1::epa 4. Olli _. . n.n -.. .,.tbo_San et,~• ar• --:;;;;;;;:;;--;;;--l.J66~,~00l~mt~, (;!ai~•-'ll)":__:gang;,..,,;;,,".'1
fa"!ilY ntementos & the loss Auctklns Friday 7.30 · m after 5. 956-2764. (Ana.helm) Costa Mesa 5ts=4444 \)fl la.Ana Fnry · ,1200 546-3684 ~Lm~a::;1c11 ~~~ MAS~ERS AuCT1'0N ,H.;.o:;,;•..;;••;;;•:..,._ ____ .;:•;;;56:1R.EC~TJON Rental & CREVIER BMW 5Z-7ZO sml.95 '89 GOLD Coupe DeVille, KOWA 6.' ,c amer A.
w/teleph':lto & wide anglf'
lenses. Make o!ter. Call
673-8151.
8t.tM J\.fowi.e Can1era. pro·
jector, Via\~r $3.';. \\'Ill sell
separately. 548-5429.
Furnltur• 810
TWIN beds $1 25, II' Gold
v~lv. 90fa $150. torig. S7!G.J,
5' gold dl'l'. rhest $75 ..
Efhan Alle.n din nn table &
chairs, S1'7k!47-l!m.
SPANlSH·Med. King BR set.
Trp. dresse.r, dbl mirr. 2
co!'nmodes, hdbd .t: bed, no-
ITUU' top. Ex. cond, $295.
615-25<1.
9' GOLD & White Sofa. Orig.
$1200. Sell $450. Brand new.
Gold & Green lamp $350.
Now $100. 64()...0026.
BEDROOM set, stereo, truck
lire1 .t: wheels, mlsc. 1022
\\I. \Vil90n, C.t.1. Sat & Sun
SOFA &. Loveseut only 4 mos
Old, less than 1::1 of original
rost. 673-5478 * OlUCH & LOVESEAT * never ll!led, $155.
~1agnavo)( TV S20. 968-7910
any lnfonnation _ 642-~ 2075~ Newport, CM 646-86$ 1 • SrNlCE!, 8081 Garden Grovt . 'n MB 280 SE !.5, Tabacco ' 53,00lo ml, air, M.f/FM,
E\'fl!. & "·eekends. Bohlnd Tony'1 Bldg. t.iaf'I. * REG. Quarter Gelding, 5 Blvd Garden G r ove Sal~ • Service • Leu1ng JIM SLEMONS plus tax &-lie. $%JOO. &45-~. -Y'l· ~1nt aMw, many. rib-89l-7ssG ' DI \V, Lat., 'S.A.. 853-31TI ~Vet'S A CAMARO
~!UST Sn1·rHice, Engage·
meat ring nnd wedding band
Tlf'\'C'r \\'Orn S150. Call
lx'h1·een 3-8, M7-20R4.
WATER SOFTENER ~::"io;::.,. b~e.1'$!~::!' •'?"'•'•"'?"'""me Rental4 USED' BMW'S llAAORTS '73 TOYOTA
Never Been Usodl IIOOJ. 61:H16:l. 13 23-26 M.H. • Mlnb '73 BAVARIA (DEMO) MERCEDES BENZ
LiJet\me !attbry guarani ff'. REG Thorough-bred Mare Free miles 9 til 9· &38-0900 '71 BAVARIA AllI'llORIZED 'COROLLA ·
'61 Cnmaro 2 dr hardtop,
4spd, 350 cu in ena:, wt~
HP, xlnl eng, 5 new tires.
SlJOO or belt ofr. 54Cr5420 Regulnrly sells for $69,;. oauRhter of Social Climber: RrnT 'Tl LUXURY 25' 'n Tll SALES.A SERVICE
Miscellaneous 818 \Viii sell c~llp! 642--09711. Good brood mare or show EXECt!l'IVE_aH extra,s, Pri. 72 2002 Jim· SlemoM --------~-..:-~-.. -~-.. ..:-~-.. -~-,,,..:-~-,,.-~-!!I ~;;:;,"~;,, :l?·..."~21i'."'' Party.'""""'· 5-8 p.m. '.'' 20022002 Imports 9"••M l•11.:1 c'66HEMAYRLOIBLUET
0 ILLNESS forces Mic. New Tr•iler1 Tr• I 945 61 lU"4N'-'411W CARPET BR KER 100 anip st<'reo $350. 15 cu. REG '.\ Mustang, S200 or best ' YI · _I--'-'-:....~----(We're top ·~ for WlY TOYOTA
Rect>ntly purchased several It. freezer $15 down. & lo offer, tack included'. Call BOLES.Aero •72 xi.·-Non CAPRI wted Mercedel Benz.) Blue 2·0oor ~bUc. interior.
1000 yds plush & s:hag car· ~>~ay~m~c~n~~:·EPv~t.Jp~lY=· ;008--61~~6~1 1 -~5.1&-~~267~6;·~1~9I~5'1~1~<b~S!; .. ~H~-B;·1 Pare!!. 32' Yf_/every !wet ___ ...::....::....::.;;...__ 1301 Quail V-8 (327 cu. Jn.)., auto , Pl'I'. All colors. Below whOle-Eves. .. feature. Brand new (travel-'. . •'Newport Beach 1966 Harbor, C.M. 646-9303 trans., radio, power steer-
sale. Jns1allatitm avail. Con-APPROX. 1200 Sq. ft of 6 • ed only 300 mil. Llat'$12,000, -~ "33-~ · '69 o:>RONA Great cond 4 inx, air cond., new tires,
tact Dick Lester, 586-8752. mo. old plush yeUow carpet. I Boot .,, · 11• X' I mu" .,n 191JOO, Pri pty. ~-PRO!l,MocAlmlllll d., •uto, R/11$1015/best ~"-new MOCk>, .$661), Cail
AtITOlwtATIC GAR AGE S7fl0 or besl ofr. 548-9525. Mlrinl~ le. • TI4: 846-8228. • NftW "'P:EN 962-1Tll/536.3339. ask for 646-3612 alter 5 p.m.
DOOR OPENER. Finest 'iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii:.i~I SHASTA 16' ' ' ~'!if• ·~ ' · Sonla. '65 CHEVY Mll:llbu SS known brand. Reg. $200. Miscellaneous ~ TOP CONDITION $650 NOW OWN THE Mlsiln ;~~:~ Imports '71 CORONA Mark n Sedan lia'rdtop ~-V§, auto, ~3ci~~r S~~: i ggillri 1 ~~ W•l'lted 820 Bo•ts/M•rln• i\;~~~~641H043~~~-~~~I FABU,LOU,S 1973 MERCEpE1f BENZ air, auto, vinyl toP. v ery ~ts P~ s~·~t
530-1415. e WANTED. t.1oncy Safe, Equip. 904 •CAPRI · & clean, by owner, tel: 962-WU. 4-13 Bay St., . ' -'=""''------':...::.; Sport coupe decor, body side ·n T t Co Ila
ORI!J'JTAL rug, Chinese applrolx 24"dofk-SoRny Reelbllo AIRCRAFT Fuel Drop Ta""' I l§J mouldings, reclin; .. ~ front FIAT $1200 °!° ~ o"'lfe• '66 CHev. Impala. R!H, blue, $100. IB~1 executive ree ape ce · easona e W -""& "' ""''" P/S P/B Good t•-_,, o.o "'~ ,,.
9469
20' long. Used for Auto1fot5* seats, con"'"" tear seat .. 4. ComplJe Sales a.""-"' * """' ........ * • · ""''; ,.., .. ("""Writer, $Ta. Bookcase ...........,.,,;, or .-..r ~-... ''" '"" ...,,·vice -N<r""""" brake to 283 V-8 'I < J,... Catamarans, Houseboats, speed ~ power Visit U Soon At s, au ·• · •• us type headboard & misc ORIENTAL RUGS etc. Sl25 each. Marine frontdiscbrakes,styleiteel I ·n TOYOTA Corolla Sta. sell, leaving Atate. S<'JO Or
l_tems. D'"''" 673-3334 ot eves Prival• pany n-', ••vct••t s 1 .. ~ '! · ... •-"'··~k t 28701 Marguarl.te ·Parkv.'ay Wgn. GOod condition. SUXlll. best oiler.. CAii : ~193 ~~ ......... .... " urp ll!I •• ~· So,. am, Santa Antlquea/Cl•sslct 953 \\uee~, .,...,. e seats, radial 1~--5'6--0990.
1
u!led rugs. 644-5326, 61"'":>-8773. Ana, 54j....0051. . ply tires. 2000cc eng. {U~ ""A"VEX~jo ~1~1 can 833-l.020 bef. 2:30 p.m. '72 KlNGS\VOOD E 1 t a t 'e
ELECTRIC _ Goll Carts, $250 CHILDRENS pl•y b 0 u, e BONZER RA~AR '57 T-BLRD Xlnt cond best lGAECNB428011.' TRIUMPH \Vgoo. Auto, full pWr, tilt
b M 0 ---t ... 1 wMlLLE':R olle•. ·.-' OVERSTOCKED! LATE '12 •-• 4" Il•-eae .. ~me ~ ... us. ,,.,... wnnted, please p h 0 n c, •= 1 ~ •I "'"· whl, lo mi. Xlnt cond. $3T:i0.
So. Mam," Santa An a, 544-8874 S~lAfiiN~~ 646-43.5l 5.>4---0333 IMMEDIATE full J>'AT, lo mileage, ReyaI .67 TRIUJ.1PH GT-6, new or best oiler. 557-T:>56.
GARAGE Se' Book
'
~l . T uck DELIVERY bill(', like new, no,750. '65 w I ·ai _,. t, case,
906
r I 962 714-637-9141 days , radials mags ·AM/F?tf agon, p s, r, ,...,io,
drawer che'4.-... f!C"...!.. Uble, ?tlODEL'S Sale, ·Fashion Office furn1ture/ .Boats, Power GUSTAFSON TI4-!l98--01!)6 ~ve. radlo, 47,ixi> ml. dooo. cond. auto, 327 V8, carpeted, xlnt
s.,_tereo, old pump Qrgan, Designer Oothes, Like'ncw, "Et.~~uip-: -824 71 SPTS Ct!JSTOM $1395 (:213) 867-9230 aft s. throughoUt $795 &16-1355
G•r•ge S•1• 812
M~more. C•II •It 6, o< from Apropo•. s'' & 10· -'62 HATTERAS ·If.I-TON, MINT COND. Uncoln·Mercurv $s{,-,500~:.~"~!':''!'!:.."'pm!,· YOU<SWAGEN CHRYSLER ,
Sat n, 556-IJ17 ~S'l5-646-1136 WALNUT De•k, 30•60 , ;w. .. ft sport fisher loaded B ST F ·r ~.,. ~ '' " ·~ -' E 0 FER 892-1132 1:i800 Beach at Warner 673-«161 RATTAI~\, bar w/2 stools. ?tJEMBERSHlP; Newport swivel leather arm chair, no radar. Sell or trade torl-==i--,~='-'=~;,= H ·
tape r(C,'-tnlnl bikes, v:all Beach Tennis Club. Call good cond. $100 for both. Laguna Beach Real Estate, LEASE A ?olk.'W TRUCK 14i.aMtTt21:rsJts '64 300 SEL, loaded, 6\Ulrf frms, 3030 Cexlon Rd .. CM. 494,0309, JlH~91 or 493-5025. Owner, Bkr. 4 9 4 • 6 5 2 ~, AU makea. types -sizes ''H ~ ~-lng544 pwr, am/ftn; ale, 80,000
EC
Purch/option 645-7030. -om.-..-,mw ·Vlk '' miles $2400 641)...2928
Jewelry, ~ r 115 2 Norman Roc kwell EX l!W\'I chrs S15/25"Scc .. . . 1::::..::.;:::JC....----"'""'<;.t, _::;.: Lithographs, u n fr a med chrs $8124 Desks $2{)/90 18' PARKSMlTII Hull w/8' \VANT ED : LADDER MG COUGAR PRIVATE ESTA~ Artist Proof. Jerry 557-3975 P!eree867 W. 18 CM 642<'1408 beam, glass over '<''ood, 4 RACKS TO Ftr '&.$~TOI'( DATSUN 1-----'-' ...;.'---1 '72 SUPER Beetle, AMIFM.1---------·I
DIAMOND. \Vcdding & KNITTING machine Swiss 0 p · /0 826 cyl inbd n1arine eng., great11,<;CH:!!!EVC!:_-!64~H238'::"!~-_ _:·--1·-:-:===-~==-1972 MGB Roadster, only 8. track stereo, sunroof, new '68 COUGAR xR.7, full pwr.
Engagement Set, Perl P.1allc, double bed, $12.5. call ianos rg1ns boat for family w/smant: WE'RE HERE ¥i11XXl mliles Xlnt' c:Qnd. prt tires. $1,850. 833-3904. air, gauges, Sharp. $1315.
f1 awle&A. Coit $575, sacritlce' ,afl. 3pm 962-8574 Free Organ Lessons childn-n. s750• 6 7 5-416 6' V•n•
963
pty, must sell, 673-7403 aft '68 vw. $150. or trade for 645-8614 $195 cash. ~NE\V COUCH 531-1ZJ2. '69 DODGE A108 Window M See us at . 6:00 am! sailboat FOllD .
DIAMOND 3 Row \Vcdding . . 18~ ' SO. Coast Lapstreak. Van, 8 door, r/h. clean: acARTIIUR I: JAMBOREE * 346-WSO * '
Ring. Cost $225(), sacrif.ice M'. into a bed. $25 A L A Y Llk I 100 hp, Gray Manne, lXl ... ~. ••7 -o. BIG '73SAVDeIN~~ ON OPEL XI Call SSS.2-Mii s ong s OU e b ........... ...,, -..>•• ........ '61 vw. nt cond, radio, & 1972 T-BIRD Looded Full
$875 cash. N 1 & 1 1 rs, xjnt cond. Nu painl, .72 DODGE V1I _ 5 0, •·•t··-•~. · • · on-payer• p "ucrs \\'C · 1 k b'l custon pnt l s .., .,.. .....,., ........, ( -'·"ndow ~-J DIAP.fONO Stud Earrings, CARPET layer has access to -v e eel bait tan , & 1 ge, S/S ' • ' · '72 OPEL R.allye. Alr oond., * 496-8669 * •-~er !IE!e ... , .. , •, ""'"" cost $11XXl Sell $450. Perfect, full & part roll'> or shag come to attend 'I).icsday radio~$2200. 6-12-8931. + button tuck Int., mags, PickuPI stereo, top cond. Take over A~/fM stereo, Select-Aire,
flawless. 637-5805 from $2.85 sq. yd. 642-TIOl night nt 7:30 PM. \Ve \\"ant 1972 l25 hours in water) stereo, xtras. 846-4246. 610's payments. 646-68«2. 166 V.W. '6G VAN, cptd., good white vinyl top, dark: brown .-.. __ • _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ everyone 10 lea111 to play Saber-Craft, l&-ft hardtop, Autos Wanted 961 Broedway, Cloflta Mesa shape. $850. Laguna met. exL Perfect. $3900. Call
wursr MLVV.LW> ~-UV ~! All materials 140 hp. In & out. OJe\ly 4-TOP ~ta••~r PANTERA .:-::m <;,',.back ori 69 • "6-IN'.3361 *
Tom Dieterich. in charge. cyl. Take over payments. 'Vk'V""V~ ~. • g ' CORT A. Auto, Phone 642·2151 956-27&1. -Call atrer s pm. p•'TSUN owner, 47,ooo miles, $875. IX"OnomlcaJ. dependable. See DOLLAR .. --.,, P.unElt\ Good coriil."9=4241 "' '"""'""· 31,600 orig
, COAST MUSIC . * 35' 0\VENS Sedan, im· 888 Dove Air cond, 363l mile. '69 vw Bus, MW cog, good nli, 536-6476.
Newport Blvd. at llarbor mac., live aboard. GaJley, PAID "'-"·-&:h • ; • -cond'llon -" -= :1"==c-'-'7~~~~-I Costa Mesa salon, head \\'/shower. Slpg IMME(Ji"TEL'Y 833-1300·~ .... ~n Sunday ·best~fr;~7s5~ orroR sale, "64 f ord Station 6. Lots of mahogany U ~ Wagon, in good cond. Want
PIANOS -ORGANS .....,,13 . FOR ALL 1973 DA1$UNS YOt.YO 1"'1. -A COHVfNllHT SHOPPING .AN
SEWING CUI~ fOR THE
GAL ON THE CO. Nr\v & Used. Gre•ts•l•ction. 18' GLASSPAR ~ hp AL' "ODE'S '62 Ford, xln't cond. Rcblt. Compoteli'~ p•icc'-Open Evin=, ~I ~.;,;. FOREIGN ~ "'oC ~ --WHll;I -THEY -~Qlll aft<; -
0
Pm' £,.,_ & Sund•Y•-The "'" =-""'~~~~"---~ CARS• IN ST . K 3100 W. Coul nw,-., N.B. .--ASTI,
deals are ahvays at : 11· rIBERGLASS boat, 80 BARWICK IMPORTS ~-~ ~ MERCURY For •n •d In Woman's World
Coll Muy Beth 642-5678, oxt. 330
le A Designer Newest Twosome!
Wallich s Music City H.P, Mee. !nil•" 11,100 °' WE ARE IN 33315 ~ea-_,.,.,_, ,•73 VOLVOS
South Coast Plaza 540-2830 c0"'='0-'-=o'::c'-c;9'8-~1\l"-"13"-. ~~=I DESP.ERATE NEED San Juan CapiltnulO PORSCHE • 164's . e 1"5's . 14-fs 1970, MONTEGO MX. Air,
16' GLASSPAR, SOliP OF GOOD, CLEAN 48l-3375-or831-U15 e 142's e 11m•s P/B, PIS, new tires &
FISHER haby .,.and. Wutnut Evtnrude Good trailer. bait FOREIGN CARS '12 D'TSUN ---. •----.. 1008 911 YElLOW Porsche, Now 11 The Time To l-'pa"l:::n.::t.~1~11;;00:::.,:•;::1>-861~;~;,,_--I lank etc $795 646-2932 ~ ....,.. ""JUl&l; like,. new, l owner. 58,000 ~;~;~ e~:n~d~ll ~9p~ Boat~, Rent/Chart'r .908 TO~~~'ftA~~flD =~'~iFM mari·e r ! ~ ~ ~mn=""'='=$36~15.=-"":l--390""'::,7
0-· -SAYE! MUSTANG
or \\'eekCnds. •A-"A~ 1968 PORSCHE 912, Oran1e, '.'.:~~'?ii''i-..===-· I LUXURY 103• Salim' g Yacht, Call or come In to aee ut. .......,.., .....,.._.,,,• · new tt-33-ml 1---•-MUSTANG '69 Convertible.
-PIANO WANTED fully equipped, winter rates. FOR uJe 13 240Z, obly nm by ~"'?. 6~lJl4is4'5--Th56 -9"' .. M L··..:.. p/s, p/b, radio. 60,000 ml.
(n 4i !1j2-0259 213: 4n.6465. ml, air *co~7300 .* IJENAULT IUWf'. WIUI ~~test,~kcal1(0 b~
StoB•·· Rostau<anl, Boah, s.;1 909 '72 DATSUN~-~-. -•10 , r---""=.!',_.:..:.::.:..--1 YOLYD ,_833-8246""';;:;;;,· ==-=--..,,
ar 832 '!""" ,>= • REN-AULT " --'=------'= 32' KE'ITENBURG racing speed, mag wheels. HUSBAND passed away, will
RE t, RT G ERATED Deli sloop, fas!~ Appraised at 31()(1 W • .c.out Hwy., N.B, 646-2992.1966 7~°'1IM~bo""r"-'--'C"-.M"'-. ---'646-~9.103~1 ffierilice '69 !.fustang, PIS, Ca~: Stainless steel steant S5000. You make oUer, . 642-9405 NEW Autos. Uted 990 • tac. air, vinyl top,
table "'ith inserts. 673-5478 ic:6:,:T>-63.,:::::I:::3,::•:.r .:,646-='55.'!:o-·::...,__ O JAGUAR • Jt·ll"C 000_ -'--'-'--"'-""'----~I mags. Delore 3 pm 89'2--Q)57
TV R d . 'F VENTURE 2-24 --" boat T P CASH ~ BUICK '"" ' pm
119
l-1
212
, a 10, Hi i, ,,..,.. Autom•tlc ""'---1~-w..... ----------1··0 MUSTAN Stereo 836 '<''/trailer. P.lany extras. for dean late model can J A G1J A: R '7 2 XJ 6, SA"L~E-• ..,....,..
1
G gd, oond., ---'-'------:.;.:: $31;,0. or best offer. 968-5406 and truck.I! · Black/Red, fully. loaded + '68 RIVIERA:· Full power, J<l!1ial tires, auto, trans, lo
RCA. zenith. s _y: van 1 a: KITE, full ~cing geu. Sand Howard CheYl'Olet :J' i:.~n~~~~st ofr. $2499 C' 0~~f495. or ~i:m Call aft
4
PM
Largesl srlec11on co ! or, dolly. Xln t cond. $600. MacArthur and Jambotte Dick Miiier Motor1 ~ifaek & "·hi_te TV .& stcrt'M\ 644-53-16, aft 6. Newport Beach : MAZDA 1lJ W. Warner, S.A. CADILLAC '67 P.1USJ'ANG. Loaded w/nu
111 So. Ca_hr. Priced less CAL 39-A 1-·•,,IJy -uipt .,.,., ""'"" G.1.~,2 ----~-----1 top $595. 557--6898 3222 S.
II lb d /'
cJ" ~... °'~ "" .. .., Towner, Santa Ana.
!"n e 1scou11\l'rs w · yr bargain tor the serious * Mtizcl• 73 Rot•ry * EL DORADOS p1ch~rc tube. l yr parts & raCC'r. Prine. only. 6·14~5. \VE PAY TOP DOIJ.AR •u MONTH ** 'T.I RENAULT, 4 dr OLDSMOBILE scrvu!C'. ~1ost '74 mod els in FOR TOP USED CARS .,_ selan, Sl69a. n56 Rutger$, 14 Tb' CHOOSE 1----....:..::..;~:::.-1
stock. ·73 models priced to CAL 20, sell or partner, all If yaur car is extra clean, 36 MONTHS OPEN LEASE Ccslfl ·Mesa, 545-25n. COUPE'S-cO?'l'VERTIBLES
clear. Cash !XI plan or ter ms :iclras-xlnl slip New po r I see us first, Will acctpt trade-ins SAAB e
lo 36 n10. ABC Color TV, Be<1ch. Pr'! ply. 5.52-S488. BAUER BUICK CALL MR. FRY S42-6666
0021 At1on1n .• ,. "o" a .... snps;1>ock ... 9lo ""Harbor stvd. Hunt Beach * SAAB DE YILLES Bro o khu~I. Hunting1on it Cotta Mesa. 919-2500 • 38 TO CHOOSE
Beach, 968-3329 or 962-5559. \\'ANTED, Dock for 41' WE HUY Best deal alw~s. Complete! COUPES
LATJ-:: niodl'l RCA Color Krtch ll' beam, 7' draft, IMPORTED AUTOS MAZDA • !Je'iection now. Buy or lease SEDANS
Consol<", pecan "·ood cal1. aflel'noons & C\'£'S, ~1310. BEST PRICES PAIDI 1rom. CONVERTIBLES
Xlnt Still in 1\•ouT. $28j. Boats, Speed & Ski 911 De•n Lew1i Imports · Jim Parkinson'• Many excellent colors OO.'l-2963. Ox>ice of interiors
,, ~· . !NFONICS CasS<'l\e Copier, 15' SKI or fi'sh 60 HIP l966 Harbor, C.M. 646-9303 173.'ll Beach Bl. 842-66ll (Cloth & leather}
, f\lodcl-102 1 yr old. $975. or Johnson. llll trB.iler, conv IMPORTS W.U..'TED BOB LONGPRE ractoryaircondillonlng 7 3 5 2 makr otfl'r. 556-8597. top, n1ooring cover, much Orange County's MAZDA Full power -Choice of: -'jii;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii · more Sl!XJO 540-3961 TOP S BUYER Stereo AM/FM radio 4 SIU. MAXEY TOYOTA 645-6400 , or 64S-6406 Cl'wse control ~A&.13~ I c f90 ltltltlI Beach mv: -SERVICE -FIRST-==--;;:_--==:o: Trunk.,,.....&-.
. •~•to v~ I~ I T_..,.., llrlf I ~~D Aus:·-::: ~~~~iDSE 9UICK CASH Ail ="!~~=d~tlon ·
Nev.• fashion \11·osomc ~ 3 Lines, 2 Times, S2.00 Sprite or MG ~tldget. llUU.Ufl THROUGH A ar,nge County itli•al tor campus, country. O{l:AP! 962-7689. Naben Cadillac
Croc:llt't cuddl~· Ca!'X' and Cycles, Bikes Auto1, Imported 970 Demonstrator Sale DAILY PILOT Atn'HORJZEO DEALER
Salt!S i\ Sl>:"Vtce
OLDSMOBILE
GMC TRUCKS
HONDA CARS
UNIVERSITY OLDS
2850 Harbor Blvd.
Costa Mesa 540-9640
1911 OLDS Vista Crui!Je'r
Wgn. 3 t.eots, air AM/flt
stereo, lug rack. Ex mnd
$2650/olr. 673-0557 alt 6:30
p.m.
'68 Olds Toronado. Stereo
tape, p/windows, a i r ,
ndials, nu bn.kc11, xlnl
oond. $1100. or besl oiler.
83.H078 all 5
'61 TOR~~O~NA=DO~-I
Make oHer 557-23.17
In, 1Tf. ....rr • nialching cap in cas)' slippl'r TO good home Lovt·a1 c !} Scooters 925 Now In Progress \ ~iMt 1114't'"f"""4 sti!ch 11·i!h sh c 1 l -s 1 i t c h mo rcmalfl prirt Shl'ph V,, ALFA ROMEO •-St at th SA ~--' WANT AD ~ }"JARBOR BL., • 5'14-129:i • .Ul • e ........ ,. cosrA M'ESA PINTO
. stripes. use }<nilling l\"Orl'INI BICYCLE SPECIALS ~~~~~~O!~~ll;>XIO~~E.::!hl~~Sl~.,~s~.A~'511-~11171~~~~~=======~540-~9;100~;~0i>egj'~iSo~~d~1 Be a ill'sign<'r -thoo~r in t11'0 color~. Pattel'n 73:)2 LOVABLF 1 vr hlk ,ft. 1~h1 , n n 81 _____ ..;,;:..;: ___ )
•
rro1n :; ncc:khnl's fo1 i11.-f1'\"ln1 i\fis~s' io7.es 10...20 incl. fe111, .. ~pJC" · t'fll Shot~ I NCI\' lo~ from ...... S.~.95 * ALFA ROMEO PINTO '72 SQUIRE, 11.u!o,
__, , ""' .. ,, • " ' s11<1yC'c, ll< t nc .,..~....,"'~ · B'k -1 -g .. 50 Beal dr11.I Al "" 1 0 -r S T:A.R. G i< ' prince~~ dl"<'l'l' or 1uruc _plus I SL"\'t" .. 'T\"-t1\'t': C"f:'.'1."T!" . 1 1 , 1 "·'·•'M'om ' Usc1l bLkl'S fron1 •····· Sla.00 alr cond., ••traa. lmmac. pant~ Sew one \'C'.,·non no1\·, for each pattPrn -atld 2:i . . I i c c .cantn :·····•· ...,, ~ w.vs. uc• inas A.'71.E""D"''f<¥i thruout. ~1410
r1nother pcxt ~t'fl:oVl!l S<"n<I' , cents ror cnch pattern ror Conipl lub, adJUSt, clean _ ~n S3J9~ {Ser. •02881. 1-:~~~r::..::::.:~ . :.l"S.~ ~ ~
Prlnrrd r 11trrrn rnf!.~: l lt•lf 1 Air ~fnll nnd !'iJl(!clal 1-l;tndl· ·1 11~1 ·' '""'"''' ''""· 145 v" $29.9> 12s • 13s. Complete,._ r Clo\YJLPOLLA.N---....----'--1 PLYMOUTH .'>11.l'~ )01 ~-121 :. l I'~. lfi 11 'inF:· olhel'\\'1~ lhird·clns~ Ptts and Supplies \\IANTf.D USED BJC)!CLES lrction t'IO\V. Buy 01· lease • M Y•OolltAcfMlrGuld. M ll~U.~ 1 s1~.20,~.i\l1s~··s'Sllrs8,10, delivery will lake lhirl" B('ll\'h RicyclesSOS E.Balboa lron1 , V A.ft,Ofdl1tff•t~•S'°'" "V"" Sfl'f.J '* '72 C1111tom Spoi1. f•ul')' 12. \4, 16. 18. \\ttks or 1norr. Send lo Hlv<I, Balboa. 6Ta-7'l!it2 J im P•rklnson I TockmlopMH1ogeforTuesdoy., ocr.u ,,. \Vagon, low mileage, good
st:V!:NT\ -t I\(. Cl:i"!.'TII, Allee Brook_s, lhe DAILY T\\10 '72 Honda l2:"l S.L. Dirt. JtOC1wOnfSco11esp:111dlf'fatotmlbers ::::H~--55 oood .. $2600. 540-3368
lnr each pallem _ add 2.'i 1~1LOT, 105. Needlecr11rt Pets, General 850 Equip!. street lcg11!, Only of)'QIJrZodldcbhth• PONTI C
cents for t'Bl'k pattern for Dept., Box 163, Old Chelsea SAVE A HOMELESS I 700 mi. each $350 e11. Priv. l t>oy 31ep.. 61A. A
Air t.fall and Special llandl· Statton, New York, N.Y. pty, 64 2-.">.J.IO aft 6 pm. Sat· 2Doft't ijT-. 62Uf• '6.q PONTIAC Cu1tom S, 1
owner, ~~cond, auto ~nuno. iW•. See at 2450 VJtta_Jfcpr, Newport
Bch, Sot 9-2, sun 9-2
wkdays, ~8 pm. Best orre;
lt'Ct"Pted. &41-2160.
~: olherw18C thlrd-cllUIS lOOU. Print N•me, AddrM11, PET Sun anytime.
3 ~ 3'~ 63 ~
d lwt'Y wlll take three Zlp, Pattttn Numtw!r. 5.1 ' ·~or <"' '""'l ·n Jl nd 350 1 &Lj.G400 _or ~ AWtrirt••=•., Send N E E o L ECRATI "1'2! ..-.a.oo ~~ o a , very c ean 1,n.79.a1 '~ »O-. 6' Procrlc:ol wee~s oMr rti~: .. _ DAIL"'Y ~"-t •-1• eto ~ Dogs as4 X'lnt running oolld. $-iOO um RED Mia~. It 1s
6 ~ !!:::. 611,~~ r.tanan a n, ui<: "-.""'"'"'" · '50c" · '"'""' 646-8591 wtill brand new &: beautltul ~St" 31 Mitt -!. M;; ~es~42•1:~u~. DeJe';; d:~~;~.Ma~arM Book. PULi Pupp!M, minialurc '74 VAL,IAHA 350, 54 mi's. ~ ~-c;mmust riive It up; 1t= :r:T.-, ~~~
York. N.V. 10011. Print Basic, fancy !mot!. pat· Sheep dogs, $25 ~t & J•, 6 Under "''arr, ~1000. Calll-":;o.=-=;~;:-:-,..----1 li l.ook Alo. 7tWlth
NAl\0:, ADDRESS with l<"n lll. St.00. 11·ks. 61!=89.17. 646-9152. BMW 12M Al'Nllr nThrt
UP. 8J7,t~ and ST\'LE l.lll'l&nl Crot.het Book -AKC Bl11ck Great Dnnc pup-1'~10:;:N"D"A7';-50,..-m7to"'t~.,,,-,,ll-, ye~,,-.,.-._11 ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;1 l~~a, ~= ;!g:
:N'UMBf:R. l~arn · b&, picturf5! Pal· r\e~. lqwk.$, S 7 5-SI 2 5. $100. Girls Sch\\'inn blkt, I• 150pportunlly "5~ 75 lltnflff1
SEE 'MORE Q u I c k '=rif~te instant Olft Anok 56-nilll aft 8 C'\'f'~. n-d, $15. 646-1136. Bob McL•r1n, BMW I~~ ~~ ~'~
F111ah\oM 11ntl ch0o8e one _more than 100 gt rt5 S1\i\10YED mnlt' flu fly ZJO OSSA s11i110. S400 Inc. . 11eo.... ""hi 71All•U pallel'n fr«' from 011r Sl no v.h1tc, 8 "f'Ck~. $5(}. sale or trAde. Call Sal!!!! -Sc:rvke • Leasing lfY-"~ 7'0f
SpMna.Summt.'I' Cata.Jot;. All Cc,.,;ptete Afib•n Hook -9f>&-4il20 .\(16-2717 850 North ·Beach Blvd., ~~ r.i~ :'?~~
1h:e1l Only fJOc. 11 00 * CRf.AT Darw PupJllt'i'i. ·n SUZUKI 2 cyl. Runs La !Cahra Zl:""°'i-1 MT•lk.,., a2 Good
INSTANT SE\VlNG BOOK . ,·din,· """' Rook' • !"iOc. AKC l"'gi~le-1. ,,~,, •. , •. , I b . 1n4l S'ffi.5624 2JV-~$DIN tlV-
..
'1# tod'"' w.ar tomorrow ~ • .. ,, ''' ~· "' .... 1:ocx, 11!1 minor dAmage,/!~~~"!'!'!!!!l!!!l!"!"""''"'I 24"-5"T• ,,,._
"V• • Hook nl IJ Prlae .... r1ban1o nunlfly. M!)-(1\26 '"'""' ,.,,. ....,...... ...... ...l'J.I" ~· • S1 SOc " ~"~'-""iv-<>~"' oi· '"""" ,)'!. '6.C! 2002 \Vhlle, ttmff1n, new ·1'Moorl -,,,.,.. l5h'd
JNsTANT f AS 11I0 N q,;JU 8ool' t. lli palletnll. ENGLISH Spnn1o1:1·r Sp11nlrl '73 HONDA T!)(I. Vf'ry clfll\n n(lln!R, kl mll!!Rll:<'. $1700. 1 !""~~~ ~~ ~e:: • r,g:lcol PISCO
BOOK -Tlt1ndrl!d1 o ! """ llUlll)iM, AKC l'h11n1p. blood & tlr~ndRlllt'. Pr!Cf'd to M!ll .... ,..,.r "~"""" 29Wtl'·.....__ 51~ II~
f h"' I I 11 ~ II 71 41 ~· 1-, I ""'" -r••~ ,,•~-= ., t" M -~"' •5 n ,,,. 11· • ~f11Rttm Qolll Book I -l'k'. t ;>I}<".~' · (JUlt·k Y-$t.t45. 646-85l5. vacancle11 Miit 1 Re'nt _.._ '" ..,. All
TbC flllll r~t 11r11 .v in thlt \Ve111. SOc. IRISll St'~f<'l"ll .~ 11ks up, '1l KA\Vl\SAKI 75 your house. ~ store ~~ A~ ~N':iJ,llli...,. ~ 6.11.19
•• a Daily Pllol Clllulfted Qullt. fM" TllCUJ'• Lh1nr • !\educed priCt"s B<ith MC'\•·~. Xln1 c:nl'ld. Jl2J. bldg .. otc. tbni a o.Il,y PUot ~\!j}Gtlt14 \Al,,,.....,._ '-J \i n
xlnt qunlll.). illl7~11. ( * 675·621~ * "CI::8'=~::fi::;ed:...:!Ad::·-----I·-----------''-----------------
• ~ ~ ·'
1961 f'IREBIRD low mile~ on nrw e.,_: P/s,
PfB, auto trans, air, .-.w
bi'ekes &: Utts. vley} top
$1400. aft Spm or '<'Ukcnda' ~ .
CORP. v.ee. vehlcle a . c~ trom <21. ·11 Exec.
Pont. "'agon or -'69 CTO .
Qoth air cond., xlnt cond.
919-'l29o dyo, MS-91!111 """·
'1'3 GRAND Sftft11ri 9 Pft1&
win. AC. fuU pwr, xtru
kl ml , 673-9734, Pvt. pty. '
'71 GRAND Pt1x, f\1ny equip-
ped, exccllcnt cqndlllOn. low mne,, &t5--7,tOG. •
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· ·San ~lem~nie ' . ' Today's Fl~al
~apisiranD . .. • ED ITION N.Y. Stocks
!' ,
XOL 66, NO. 274, 3 SECTIONS, 32 · PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA MONDAY, OCTOBER I, 1973 TEN c~s
U.S.-Market Bask~t Costs Continue to Climb
By the Amalled Preu
' 1be squeeze on the pocketbook got .i
!!tUe tighter during September, ac-
oonling to an Associated Presa marke\
buket . -survey----released today Which
lbows the Camily grocery bill waa almost
9+ percent higher last month than in
Mardi.
·Conswners looking for bargains found
continuing declines In the i:irice of pork
and eggs. But the decreues were offset bi jumps of several pefcent in the price
~cookies, milk, sugar and butter. ·
•
The AP 'checked the prt..., of !S food
and nop(ood Items In 13 cities March 1
and has rechecked at the begi.miliig'ot
eaCh succeeding month, with extra
surveys to , gauge tbe effect of special
government <:ODtrols.
Prices in general stayed fairly s'teady
during September, desplte lhe end to the
freeze on.beef and the impo1ition of new
regulations on other foods. The total
mu~t bNket bill was up In slI cities and
down• in seven, with most changes
averaging l percent ·o'r so.
ar1nes
~Hot Jewelry
In Poor Box? "Clemente's •
.. The folks at OUr Lady of ·Fatima
Catholic Church !n· San Clemente
would like to beli~ that the two
.pl-of jewelry loond depooited In
' a St. VincentdePaul coD~lon boz
were a gracious gift by an
' anOnymous donor.
But the-cultured pearl -neetJace
.and solid gold pendant found among
'the donatiooa over_ the weekend
seem a bit too valuable.
_ Msgr. Harry Trower phoned
police early in the weekend alter be
·had the two items ap,Praised by a
local jeweler and learned that lhe
items were worth at least $150. ·
111e clenc f~~!WO pr~
were stolen. Detectives are cbeck·
ing to see if'Uie~gnor'1 bundl. ii c:orred. ·,
Wily Coyote
StiJl ·Free
' \
San tlemente police for a lime betlev-
ed that a car maY have encted their
dilenia with a c6yote responsible for at-
tacking nine persons •.
One-off-dUty detect:lve.sWore he saw a
coYote-lying d on' t roadside near
Son> ~ aap i!~ bul "'*'
petromen lolloweil up .the .. port they -·-~.;......... . " 'Ullll-....._• -___:_..;.-___,."'-l......,..,.,._,,.~-.::i~~Jftt~lul~'"'°'·"'.-11 ) I 111 6lt' iO 11iiiot the animal S;ric· a Sa· ys ~ alli!r1edly rUponsl~ for tbe attacks "'
" · · YoiiQpten •t the• !ilate Part and nearby
' ·ne!Cl\borhoodt. one shot !as fired, but ft
1le'll Reduce ·;:o~,;.i.rly ..... 1. with a
" Hunt's Term
,wASlllNGTON (UPI) -Judge Jolla J.
~ca said today be would reduoe sen-knces of up tO 4o years be previQUsly im-
lioeed ·ODE. Howard HIDll and four men
who pleaded guilty to the Watergate
liurglary.'
: Sirles, chief Judge of the t:J.S. District eourt for the District of Columbia, ·said
that forcing them to serve long terms
•1woUlcl not only be lmwarranted but un-"ust .. l .
mate and they ate µsually seen at about
7 a.rn. in tbe area of the city golf course.
~ two croSs a highway and then use
a freeway ·OYerpaS:S to reach the state
.park area as 'well as the i:tivi~a District
wbire residents for ttie past year ba\'.e
been leaving .food •.
-TbaL bas stopped, however, since the
handouts WJre -deemed~responsible for
tbs ·animal's un~edictable behavior. ~rts believe tbe animal baa lost its
teal-of man due to the free food and
wbe&-bungey, attacks without warning.
Council to Get At a brlel court beaJilfC that Strlca Called because of "what appears to be.a
• !despread iulsuilderatandlng" about the p p t "t • ~mporary, niaXlmum aentence he ,gave orno e i ion
Ille nu, lbe judge noted he would be le--
,.ieu11ndetermlnlng!iaaJpual-enL In Huntington " smca gave no indlcatkm when the final . .
'i!"tences would be Imposed, noting that
all five aslred to withdraw guilty pleas
Ibey made last January shortly after
their UW began.
Sirica seoteocm the men, H~t, Bernard L. Barker, Frank >.. Stur~s.
Virgilio R. Gonzales and Eugenio R. Martinei to provlslDilal, maximum terma·
of up to IO ywa la prison last Mareh. He
tttresaed then thal their final sentences 'tiouJd depelid on the cooperation they
g8ve to Watergate investigators.
, He declared: .. IL was never ·my ln-
"'11lon -and again . I repeat with
.emphasis -that 1he maximum t<rm• of
Iha provillonal sentences sllould become
Ille tenns of the final sentences. In this
;..,.L such a dllposltlon woul4 not only be '.Unwirnnted bul unjust. u ...__.._
I Anorney Daniel Sdw1ts uked for and
.received a Week's eTienslon o( I WedJ'aetoo
' See SIBICA, Page II . '
lAD GUARANTEES ...
FAST 'PICKUP'
... When you're looking tor a car buyer with "blckup". as fa! as your car, ti'y
l>aUy f'itot ""'' a<1a 1or quietness. This
tdverli&tr.dtd:
I
~ • • •
"11 • conttnenw 4 dt. Die. ~. bit; vinyl top. AW '
F"M ste~. Tilt wbl., a.ir,
atmo,t new 11«1 belted tra.
Leather int Must tell qulck
at !SIOO. Approx. MM lill, -
May linance. HUll&YI (Mo •
drus, ~no.).
' The urgency message was recefved by
'readers and response wa1 fast. For fast
lffllli•. can tlM> direct line, -. to
the Daily Pllol CIMlified Advertl1in1
Dept
• By TERRY COvn.tE
Of Ille Dlff'l! Pllflt 1'911
A Huntington Beach mother wants to
shove 1e1y magazines like "Playboy,"
"Oui" and "Penthouae" out of local m8rke'ts and drug· !(ores and back Into
adult boOt stores or liqoor stores.·
Patricia Smith, who lives .in tbe
southeastern part of town, has filed a
pet!tioO 'Wiiii city.hall J>lllPO<ted to carry 800 llgnOtureS protesUng ttie ."open sale
of 10 ._ _.pblc ~a.zines la
the *'r:'8 of oor .cammmlltY."
• Her pedtlon goes before the City Coun-
cil tonight, during the council1a 7 .o'clock
meeting .. But no a<tion ts likely to be
taken. . .
City Attorney Don Bonfa says bis
pr<llmlnary reaction b the city has no
power to regulate where such magazines are IOld. '
· ~1"11\e stale controls the question of
oblcene matter," Bonfa says. "But if
councilmen want me to research it
f\Jrther tor an official opinion, I can."
l
Mrs. Smith, an elementary' school
teacher in Santa Ana, said .today, "You
can enter-almost •MY drug store ·and
tbere's.a..Playboy Magazine. 1 feel I have
a_rlght to enter a store and .. not have to
see them or have my daughters see
them.
0 1 w11 ,Jut put out to find.how many
stom bod them. The Supreme Court sold
this ts a -mualty aU41t'. Some c:om-
munltiea may be a Utile more oulrogtd tban others.
"I do think It's slsn~t I COWd get
800• 1tsnat-In two days. l ..,, tbtilk
we'll ever stame them out but I do
· beUeve there ought to be restrictlons on
where 1t1Ch magaz.IMS are sold."
She sald she dooan't want to ban the
magt:dnts entirely, but feels they should
only be eold, tn adult bookstores or liquor
stores wttere children aren't frequent
vislton.
•
' 01 the total number of Items checked,
36 percent increased in price from Sept. t
to Oct. 1; 21 percent went down; 32 per--
cent were Wlchanged; and 11 ·percent
were unavailable on orie of the check
date..
The)>icture for the seven-monlh period
from Mlrcb 1 to Oct. 1 was gloomier.
The mari:~ket price was up in every
city except Dallas where it declined · by
one penny -fi'mt,t $9.48 to $9.47_for 13
available items. ~ average increase
WU 8.8 pereent "
On Sept. I, the AP lound that Ille
market basket bill in eyery city was
higher than it had been llfarch ·1, with in-
creas~s averaging 7 percent over the six-
month period:
The reasons for the increases were
familiar to consumers: higher wholesale
prices, rising operating costs, increased
worldwide demand for commocUties.
Boosts in one item pushed up prices of
• other goods ..
On the brighter side there were
bargains In pork chop< and eggs, whlch
skyrocketed in mid-August, then ·started and was down in three'citles. The pric;e
to drop as consumers balked at high was unchanged in three· cities and
prices. cboPPed chuck waa unavailSble in ooe.
.Pork chop P.Jices.declined in nine cities 'Ibe AP survey covered Albuquerque,
between Sept. 1 and Oct. 1 and egg prices N.M.; Atlanta, Boston, Chicago, Dallas,
dropped in six cities: • Detroit, Los Angeles, Miami, New York.
Beef prices -which stayed frozen Philadelphia, Providence, R.I., Salt Lake
from the end of Mareb until Sept. 10, City and Seattle.
prompting shortages and warnings of The cheek list included: pork chops',
future leaps -went u·p in a few areas. eggs, butter, cookies, chopped chuck,
but the increases were'nt nearly so bad frozen orange juice, cofiee, paper towels,
as predicted. peanut buUer, detergent, fabric softener.
The price of Chopped chuck went up in tomato sauce, milk, all-beef franks and
·six cities, generally less than 10 percent, sugar.
• Ill
Just a Memory
' This. is an ~authentic photo. of summer 1973 along
the Orange Coast. You may want to clip it out and
sen.d it to Aunt Hattie in Iowa just to prove there
really was a summer , along the Orange Coast this
year. You will re1:all, of course, that summer arrived
last. week on the wln~ds_of a Santa Ana condition.
It staggered through Sunday before the cool marine
air dominated once again, brining back the drippy
gloom observed in these parts since Memorial Day.
Ugh.
CUSD Educational Goals
Slated for Board Session •
tong-range e d.u cat i o n,a 1 goals
determined after a swnmer or public
workshop sessions jly residents in the
CaQisp-ano Uniiied School District will be
unveiled befOre'district trustees tonight.
School officials will deliver the final
report drafted after meetings at several
schools. Citizens ~ a "game" format
to develop priorities in the · Jong list of
suggested goals.
The program was devised to conform •
to state new requirements calling for
school systems to sample the L"OnSensus
in the community.
Participants in the workshop operated
with charts setting out goat statements
at random. Through a series of "game"
procedures, each volunteer placed small
red dots after eacb goal statement, ad-
ding dots to those he.deemed of highest
importance and .withholding dots from
the statements of lesser importance.
College students using data processing
(See GOALS, Page I)
Panis ··Upheld
Us~ of Flag 'Symbolic Speech'
DENVEk(U.Pl) -It is no more a crinie to wear in American
flag sewn to the seat of one's pants than to paste a flag decal in a car
window, the Colorado Supreme Court ruled today.
~ The high Coui:;t called such action usymbolic speech" and said it
was protected under the First Amendment. It overturned the Boulder
DJstrlct Court conviction or David Patten Vaughan, charged wilh
desecrating the flag. ·
~ "Just as some citizens paste flag decals ori their car windows to
lifdlcate their support or certain pollt~l plillo1opbles, defendant
adorn.a the .. at ofchls jeans with a flag to Indicate his contempllor
those things which the flag symbolizes," !he court said. •
Justlte Donaldc E. Kelley. who ·wrote the decision, said: "The
. ideas expressed by de£endant's conduct may seem to some to be
luvenlle and inarticulate. and perhaps his actions are subject to In-
, etpretations other than we have given. but this does not strip his
speech or constitutional protection."
'
N uc'lear Waste
Leak Termed
'No Big Deal'·
OKLAHOMA Cl'l'y (AP) -A minor
leak of nuclear waste material at a Kerr-
McGee Corp. plan near here was "no big
deel,11 an Atomic Energy Commission
spokesman says ..
James Donaghue of the AEC's en-
vironinental protection branch in Chicago
Chicago said that Kerr~McGee's Cimarron
facility at Crescent, Okla., has been given
a clean bill of health following an AEC
probe.
The1 facility i:nixes enrichul uranium
dioxide and ammonia to form a powder
that is compressed into pellets used
in fuel rods for nuclear reactors used
in gt!Verating electricity.
The operation produces plutonium ni-
trate. a nuclear waste material v.ith a
low level of radioactivity.
A small amount of plutonium nitrate
·laked from a disposal dnim onto the floor
cf a truck on Aug. 18, Donaghue said
Friday. But the material was contained
and there was no oontaminatton of plant
workers or the environment, he sa1d.
Charges Pending
Against Soldier
Pl'l'I'SBURGll (UPI J -Authorities in
Virginia and Ohio ar~ expected to file
murder charges against Army Spec. 5
_l!!ck &ale, 23.-who allegedly..totd Police.
here he . kllkd six persons ill the two
s(ates. pollet ..aid today. neale, of
Lowellville., Ohio, was rcparted absent
\\'lt~t leave a week ago from· Ft.
Monroe, Va., whert he had been sta·
t!ol'ICd sin'ce Occcmbcr, 1970.
'
ea
Youth, 17,
Pendleton
Military authorities today continued
quesUoning three men found Sunday with
a bloody shotgun in their car shortly
after the murder of a 17·ye_ar.old Mari!ie
-at Camp Pendleton.
Base authorities .have refused to Ide~
tify the three men being held in the in-
vestigatiOn because formal charges have
not yet -filed.
They dld. however, release a few
details ol the lhootla{ whlch occurred la
the mmtlng hours a;,.i i.d to the death of
Pfc. EdWard Steege ol. Des Moines, Iowa.
'I1le young senriceman's body was
found aIOJtg the road leading to the rifle
range area in the southerly portion of the
base.
After discovery of the murder, military
police reportedly stopped a suspicious
car on a roadway on the reservation and
during the check of the four occupants
the officers round the weapon.
Reports from other sources said the
shotgun bore distinct, bloody handprints
on the muzzle.
11tree of the four persons reportedly
were taken into custody and an, ~
vestigatlon launched by tbe'base provost
marshal's oUice and the N a v a l
Investigative Service.
Chile Death Toll
High-Newsweek
NEW YORK (AP) -Newsweek
magazine reports that the number of
persons killed since a military jWlta took
over Chile is much higher than
acknowledged by the new military
regime.
The junta that overthrew President
Salvador Allende's elected government on
Se#.. l 1 has said 284 persons were killed
aid 10 have been executed.
"But that simply is not true," wrote
Newsweek correspondent ,John Barnes in
the Oct. 8 issue.
He said he saw about" 200 bodies lying
around Santiago city morgue and moSt
had been shot at close range under the
Chin,
Orange
• •
Weather·
Considerable cloudiness in the
morning hours along the Orange
Coast Tuesday, clearing to sunny.
but cooler skies in the afternoon.
Highs in the upper 60s at the beach-
es rising to the mid-70s inland.
· INSIDE TODi\ Y
"In all honesty. I don't really
see how a woma1t can say that
site wanti the n1an slle loves to
be preside1it," says Nancy .Rea-
gan, wife of a leodi11g. contender
for the 1976' Rtpublitan presi--•
denMl nomi71otion. See storv.
Page 26. . .. , .. ,,
l.,M. ...,. c.11._..1. C'lll~H c-•t• c,..._,
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lftltf'l•f-t
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~ DAILY PILOT SC
N.AfolED TO NEW POST
Councilman C1rl Kyml1
KymlaNamed
To County
Water Post
Roosevelt
Has , Faith
In Brother ·
By L. PETER KRIEG
Of .. .,..,, ..... ,,..,
Former eongressman Jame1
~elt, a Ne\JPOrt Beach resident,
sald •tod>Y ht bu Ml faith thaL his
brother, Elliot, will be cleared or-.cbarges
lhil he tried to arring~ the ......tnatlon
of Bahamas Pt.mler Lyiiden Pindllni.
"I really have nothing else to say other
than I hop! the commiltee will give him
a fair hearing," Roooevtlt said.
Roosevelt's brother, a former Mlaml
Beach mayor, met privately with his at-
torneys SUnday ln Miami to prepare for a
Senate subcommittee hearing Wednes-day. .
The subcommittee hear~ testimony
early in September from Louis "the ))oc..
tor" Mastriana that Elliot RooseveJt of-
fered Him $100,000 to assassinate Pend-
ling. He said a second man, Patsy
LeP.ara, also was involved.
"My reason for coming to Miami is to
meet with my attorneys here and at-
tempt to reconstruct all that I did during
the time when these charges were leveled
against me," Roosevelt said.
He said he would "completely refute
all tbe fantastic {abricaUons · that have
been made by this ex-<:0nvict _MDtriana
and other ex-convicts as to my dealings
Newport Beach City Councilman Carl with them." . .
Kymla has been appointed as the fifth " Roosevelt dechned to detail charges
l l. r th 0 "--·ty made secretly to the committee later by represen a 1vc o ~ range \AfU-1• Lepara.
Municipal Water District on the Subcommittee Chairman Henry M.
_ ~fetropolitan Water District Board of Jackson (D-Wasbington) also has declln-
Directors. ed to discuss tht? charges. .
Kymla, who is aJSo manager of the Roosevelt Sf117ulated that Lepara may . . . have made his charges be c a u s e ?tfou1lfl!l Niguel Water Distnct, was Roosevelt lmd backed out of a business
chosen from a field of several candidates deal because of Lepara's criminal
for t be fdWD pGSt. He will be the background.
)'<lungest directo!' on the board at 39. Roosevelt arrived In ~mi Saturday
The Municipal Water Dlstrlct was with bis wue Patricia from his home in
granted a-fifth dlrector~_mon!fi ~ p~·
when its ~ valuation hit $3.5
billion, or' 12.5 percent of the total MWD
valuation.
. Kymla Is also i:balnnan of th< Orange
County Water Management Agency, a
member of the board of the SOutheaSt
Regional Reclamation Authority and
chairman of tbe Aliso Water Manage-
ment Authority.
Kymla's background for the MWD job
was termed "ide:al" by Municipal Board
Chairman Clem McCulloch.
Ii-1cCuUoch said the addition of a fifth
municipal representative on the MWD
board will "give municipal a much
greater voice in the formation o{ future
1-.twD policies."
~luch of M\VD policy for its water
users is shaped ln -special board com·
• ntittees aOO Kymla is expected to take Oil
duUes • with several of . th em ,
McQillougb add«!.
New 4-H G.roup
Plans Organizing
Meet This Week
Leaders of a neWly organized 4-H
district serving the Capistrano Bay area
will hold an initial meeting for pro-
spective ne\v members Wednesday to ex· ..
plain the program for the coming school
year.
Parents and their children between 9
and 19 years old are welcome to the first
session at 7:30 p.m. In San Juan Elemen·
tary School. .
Among the diverse projects being pro-
posed for the program this year will be
activities ranging from tr ad i t Ion a I
livestock and poultry projects to organic
gardening, crafts. sewing, food prepara-
tion and wildlife studies.
The popular youth organization is
sponsored by the University of California
and is open to -:lIIY boy or girl of qualified
age.
Fairs, judging days, demonstratiop
J days and horse and dog shows are con-
templated through the year.
Parents of prospective members with
t any questions are welcome to ca ll 492-
6393 for specific information on the pro-
gr.1111.
' •
OU.Mat COAST
DAILY PILOT
Tht 0••"" CMll DAILY PILOT, ••1111 -"!Cl!
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ldhoetn h pYbll•MO s..,,,....,. ..,. ""'d•n.
T~t Pt111Cl .. I llUl>llf~hof p ... 111 It •• UI Wttl
lly S!rM!, Cof!I MHI, C..lllomM. f'JIUll.
Rob1rt N. 'W1..J
'"'"""' '"" l'ul>ll""'• Je(k It Cutl1y
V~ Pr .. i<l.,,I .,.., "-tll Mlftltlf'
Thom11 K11vil
IEOl!ttr
7ho"''' A. Murplii"' _ Mt,...91"9 E~I-_
Ch1rl11 H, Looi Rl-'i1td P, Nill
A'fl'11"' Mtft~lllf l:d1t11!'1
S.C ....... Offk.
105 North £1 C1flli11to. A11 I, tl67Z
. °"""" °""'" Collt MtM: l.111 Wnl 9•Y l~M ft""""' 9ta(ll: l));) MfWOOl1 hl1J¥1n HwtltlnolO!> ... di, 11'1j ... di ... , ..... l.ttlll'IS llffd'lr m F•HI ... _
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,.~ 492-4421
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"'"'"9ot " AlfYf'lt!ll -··· • s..w..:t <I•• l'h •• PIHi ti Colt1 Mt .. , t.n"'"'1•, ~ •• ,..,, &-.. u .. i.. n u .....,....,.,., Ill' ""'-" IJ IJ ,.,.,,Ill!" t11IHl1r~ , , O.tttl)ltle!IJ C .tJ "'Of\1111~. •
UCI Sets Record
As Enrollment
Climbs to 8,318
Preliminary ligur.s auggesl UC Irvine
has set another enrollment record as an
estimated 8,318 students began classes
today. Nearly 1,000 more were enrolled
this year compared to 7,384: attending
classes this time last year.
The increased enrollment includes 92 new students perticlpatfn( llt-tlle· Ex•
ended University (ExU) programs fn
social ecolOl!Y, teaching of Spani!h and
school adrnfnistraUM. •
nie.. sludenti will attend classes part
lime fn their flnt degree-granting pro-
grams to he offered by the ExU.
The total entollmeot figure includes in·
terns and residents of the California
College of Medicine who reported to
hospital locations · in Orange and Los
Angeles C.ounties. ,...,...
The Irvine campus ~pulation
tally thus was som~ffower than total
preliminary enrollment figures with 7,592 repor~ fOt'Classes on C&l;npus.
La!t year, the campus OOUDt was 6,720.
~ Meeting classes today were a total of
494 faculty members, of whom 124 are
part of the college of medicine.
Total faculty positions authorized for
the UCI campus increased by 4.5 posi·
tions for the general campus and by 3.5
positions for the medical school, a cam·
pus spokesman said.
While enrollments declined on cam-
puses elsewhere in California and the
U.S .. UC Irvine continues its growth as it
ha s each year since classes began in ..,
1964.
Growth this year will be absorbed
v.·ithin classroom buildings already com·
pleted. No new classrooms are to open
this year. Ap administration building due
to be completed in the spring of 1974 wiU,
however, free additional library space.
Along with the extended university pro-
grams, the only other major cliange in
campus Ure is the addition of fraternities
and sororities.
Fraternities establishing chapters at
UCI are Beta Theta Pi, Chi Psi , Sigma
Chi and Phi Delta Theta. Sororities are
Delta Gamma, Gamnia Phi Beta and Pi
Beta Phi.
Until this year, fraternal societies bad
been banned from the UC! ""'1l]lllS. A
shift in faculty senate policy allowed the
groups to fonn at UCI only with the
guarantee that they will be open to any
student desiring to participate.
l'retn Pqe I
GOALS . • •
equlPment conated the raw data and
form\ilated the report to be released
tonight.
Among._lhe..ahorter-ra.nge issues .con-
front ing trustees 1;t tonight's 7:30 session
et Serra School will be an agretment to
acquire the castille site in ~1ission Viejo
as a permanent site for an elementary
school in the southerly portion of Mission
Viejo.
Trustees abo plan to conduct. a review
of-other posalbt& school alles which the
district may purchase ln Mission Viejo.
Other' lttma on the large agenda for
toolght's OCISloil Include:
-Consideration of new bood sales lo
pay for new achoo! construction. The
dlstrlct j fttady hBs ~rvm·e churtk of S25
million in bond! aulhoriied ln an election
last year.
-C.onsldtration of a plan calling for
lighllng at tbe new ltnnis and hand ball
courts at Dana Hills High School.
:. Dl6b' ................
HARLAN LAMBERT PREPARES FRIEND FOR , GUARD DUTY
' Human Sentries Have.• Tendency to Fall AtlHp'
•'
•Jekyll!' Dy.de·~
--Agents Hunt
Doh Nixon~ -"
..
Tap Files~·
FromWinl!enloeo
Federal agenls are wee4lll( lhrough
wiretap fil,e_s to fmd _taped telePbone con·
yerut.ionl between· F. 'Donald Nixon of
Newporl Beacb, tilt Prelldent's brother,
and a f~er Hugl)es Tool °"!'P')l1Y of·
ficlal-charJed.wlth fnOOlne tax evaalon.
AttOro~ for John Meier, ex·Hugbes
sclentif~. a~viser, ~1 their clliDt ~
Nixon WJre.busfneos ~ and may
ha"' tali.ea by ~ a\ Jhe , time the
Pr<iidem bad his brother's line tapped.
'lliey "-Y ~ a tap· milY 'taint
~vidence held by the government that
Meier aUegedly evaded. taxes on $269,000
in personal income in 1968 and. 1989,
earned' while buying Nevada 1b)lning
claims ror Howard ·Hugbes.
The clay lie!~Meier .... arraigned in
U.S. District Court in Las Vegas, it ·was
disclosed that . the 'Prtsident bad the
Secret Service tap th< ~ of his
brother's home and business in NeWport Beach. 1 · ·
In revealfng ·the tap,,lt W!" alleged the
President ,feared p o~s s i ti I J em-
harral!lnenl from.his hnilher's llnanctaJ
dealings. . ' .
In respome to allegaUcm. by Meier's
attorney's the U.S. Jus~ee. bepirtmeat
bas agreed to search its reoOrds for
transcripts or any conversations between
Donald Nixon and Meier. •
"We are simply agreeing with de('ense
• attorneys·that we will vq!untafUy supply
the defendant with informatiOn• not
whether or not such tapes ei;\st," said
U.S. Attorney Devoe Heaton....~ "·~
"If;anytbing tunls.pp, ii doet.not,inean
we have agreed to ;tvo tliiin the litP,s,"
lie added. · /
Tile start ol Meier's bial---a.Iayed
from Jiov. 12 to JllIL 7 to·.UO,W time for
-Jhe tape~ • ' ' Dooald Nixon was· repirledly out of
town today ind not available-for com-
ment on !lie latest ~e!•Pl\l"llla. .,. . ~ ' . . ...... p.,,,, 1 '
SIRl_CA •••
. ' . '
day deedline to file "affidavita or
d , d" f . } "b . ·fact" suppijrtlng · tbe .OJntentloo 'of his German Shepher s Trm~e_ · or o ., ~:;~; .. ~ ~::
. r
'
Two -Airlines
Tell Threais , . .
' • ••
BUENOS AIRES (API -Ter-
""11!1 ---fl llillllon each from Pan Amtrl.can World
Altwoys and Br'6ifl International,
polle< llOU'l'*' aald·tOday.
Local-directon of the two airlines
reported the threat lo police, but
details of the extortlon were .not known, sources said: The threat ap-
parenUy came about a week ago.
A Pan Am official said that extra
·security measures bad been taken
'at Eleiia airport, but. flights lferfl
operating normally. BranUf could
not ,be reached immediately.
. Kalmbach Silent
On Charges He
Pai.d Ulasewicz
Newport Beach attorney Heihert W.
Kalmbach continued his silence today on
affairs of t.be CommUtee to·Re-f:l~t the
Presiden~
President Nixon'& _personal attorney
was wiavallable for CQmiiieiit on an
allegatioo by CRP sources Jllat be paid a
former New York policeman to conduct
aec~t investigations pn behalf of the
While-
The officer, Anthony' J. Ulaaewicz,
received $51,918 ln 1971 tor his)>rtvate in·
vestigations, the CRRP said Friday.
tnascewicz testified before the Senate
Watergate C'.ommlttee he was placed on
the White House staftto~iilvesttgate the
private lives of President Nixon's op-
ponents and other political figures.
The CRP,. in a report flied with the
House ~ Representattives fOr finances
up to April 7, 1972, said Ulasewicz receiv•
ed. the money from a trust fund kept by
Kalmbaeh, who was N"u:oo's number two ·
--Finance Committee Chalnnan Maurice Slam.
The CRP aald the money was paid out
under the beadings ' ' G e n e r a I
lnvt9tl.gative Services'' and ''Expenses.''
1l>e reparl · abo riivealed that Seymour
Fr~. a reporter, was paid •13'1780 for
"survey services and expenses." .
Frl«t,m tra,veled with Sen. (;forge S.
McGovern, the Democratic Presidential
nominee, and was paid by Murray
ChotiDer, former Newport Beach tts:ldent
and Joilg-time Nixon political operative. ·
---~ -
$25,000 Blaze
By CANDACE PEARSON Lambert • .JL.wti/IAl>er~~1fr ~; ~"rt l!J'~·~i ~ re-
ot .. o.11r Plitt'"" one-person ~ ~e ftlebdi With' 1J1e 1 .i~in. ~ · , ~ -· ~ ~~.~· R Thr h
"You C8\l pet these dogs, play with canfne.guards.. Hunt attqmey, Si~,!'~ wu ages OUg
them anyihlng --hllrwhen 1 1l•e !lie ·-Lambert-iMi loll~t~~1;tlan . ~ · -w "'~ ', · ';''°'"""'"··-'" • ~. -' ll all n three years'"-lo~. Thi ,...... • • • ' N.,.. .. ;,· l 'R 'd command -th<y' eat you ve. !rallied not'!<>~~ . .::::· Ftldq ,, . -·, • -his f J.o:,ue es1 ence
Harlen Lambert proved his polJ>l The To Insure that ._ male dor ;wtlO't J>e order • . _ . ta. ~ •
German shepherd frisked about the yard, distracted from the job by alemale dog , Tho judle '414 ltllo' 4lllliit !lit motions Fire hulned through the upper st«y of
smelling tree., exoloring oomers, hefng in heat, Lambert often leases out a male-to mt<b lheiic '.pieU .,_ .&\1iil1 :to fn. a two-Ievtl Laguna Niguel residence Sun-. ,.....~ female team. · ' · · ~" , · · · day causing more than $25 000 in pelted. , . "The male's gi>lng to do his thing -nocen; flJlal ,..~'"~ ·bO detiinnfn. da ' · ' Then' as Lambert chained _the dog and ,_you can't stop that," .ho ~-"But ed ac<otdlllg~ to •. ~. •In pre-~··Carl W"mn of the Laguna N"JSUel
softly spoke a foreign word, 1t became 8 fbe female stays at her poSt. sentence repoits tie ieCt1ves on each fire station said a hot light bulb in coo-.
canine Jekyll and Hyde, growling, snap-· One of his dogs detained a potential man. tact with a pillow in an up1tairs bedroom
ping and bmglng at a visitor. burglar for a day and a llalf in the eo~r "And it will be perfectly apparent, at apparently ignited the blaze at about 9:15
The dog along with 8 few dozen others, of a fenced yard ~fore the police that time _ if that time comes -= that a.m. at. the home of Thomas Sweeney,
Jbi' .... "d -•·· f 1. rescued the suspect. 24452 Los Serranos. · · ' practlc.es s 11\,:.WT.01 Ul<Uacer or a i~-In anqther succesSfuI case, a burglar such disposition was predicated, as .it Fltemen battled the bla7.e for a half·
lng at Orange Cotmty Kennel and Secur1-got so tired of being held capUve by a should be, up:m fairness, cornpuaioo, hour before cmtrolllng it. The Sweeitys
ty Patrol in Santa Ana. • snarling dog, be called the police for 111lderstandfng and justice," Slrica-aald. came home from an errand to San
They are guard and attack dogs, for help. • h t Hunt testified Jast week at the Senate Clemente to find the upper story in
l 1 ale lo businesses or Guard dogs "more and more are w a W te te ~-~-A CIA t f flames, Wirm said. ren • ease ar s the public needs for protection rather a rga """'uags, aa:en or Winn said other than minor burns to a
private homes concerned about break-than a man with a gun," said Lambert. more than 20 years before retiring, he few~ no injuries were reported.
ins. ' ShoQUng someone is rar:ely justifiable, he waa: tt.88fded as iioe of the
Dogs said Lambert who has owned added. mastenniOO'& of 1he break-in Of the ' ' lbr Lambert, who sprinkles bis con· the business for about ee years, are versatlon with street words like "cool," Democratic beadQuarters at the
better guards than people. "dude" and "man,, is training dogs to Watergate complex lune 17, 1972.
They're cheaper. Renting a dog C06ts sniff out explosive~ and heroin. · Hunt has also "testified at length in
$125 to $175 a month, he said. The employes stay iii ~ea encloted In other lnvtstigations of Watergate and
And their senses of smell, sight and a large yard on ~ Maan Sb'Ml ll ls rel1ted activities, llUCb as the E&berg
d Is h CfTeater than a person's. s.urrounded by a bright oraoce and dVJn burglary. soun muc e· bnk fence. lie and the four others. all from the
"It's amazing what a dog can do," They have an easy nre, Lambert a .d. )flami area, were brought to Slrlca's
Lambert enthused. They work eight houn 1 .,, ut, cawt thll morning trom a federal deten--
Human guards tend to fall asleep, he sleep. "I work 10, 12Jioun a di)'. Uon cen,ter just ou~de Washington. AR
said, conceding that while dogs might "Those doJts az;, t&ken care of .dallCllt appeared to be in &ood spirits, smiling
also doze off -their sharp hearing better than ram. and wavlna: at r:t~ they recogn~.
Cardinal Welcomed
NEW BRUNSWICK. N.J. '(UPI)
More than 10,000 persons welcomed
Cardine! Jinsef Mindszenty Sunday at
dedication cererrx:,iles for a refurbished
fi8.yeafl<lld church. 'Ibe 8 1 ·ye.a r -o I d
prelate was imprisoned by both the Nazi
and Communist regfrneS rn Hungary and
then , fled . to lllo U.S, emboosy in .
B~~t durll\& · the ,}966 ff"!'~arian
up1&;1.111g. • • .
wakes them up at-any disturbance .
Lambert has trained s h e p h e r d s ,
Labradors, St. Bernards, great Danes,
dobermans. a commodore poodle -and
is working on chihauhau.
See~ for SPEED OUEEN ' . I
Guard dop -wortb $300 to $800 -are
taught to hold or detain, but not bite,
unless they're attacked first. 1beir
training period lasts about six weeks.
Attack dogs -worth from $800 to
almost $2,000 -take the offensive on
command only.
Their training takes 12 to 14 weeks. Not
only do they go through agitation and
Obedience lessons, but they have to
become multi-lingual.
The attack command words are Jn
German and French. "l don't want any
slip-ups. I dori't want any (English) word
sounding like an attack word." said Lam·
be.rt who put in 6~) years on the Santa
Ana police force after becoming its first
black ofricer.
The most important thing an attack
Mg ha.rto learn is "no."
"If you agitate a dog and he doesn't
know when to turn off," Lambert ex·
plains, "he'll chew somebody up."
Lambert stresses thla angle In training
because the dogs •re often famlly peta.
Irt fact, Labradors and St. Bernards are
known to 1>e falrJY dOClle,-rii.en<lly
breeds.
St. Bernards retain what they're
taught, said Lambert, and Labradors are
"sharp and more agressive than German
Shepherds when trained."
With the help of two handlers, Lambert
delivers each 11.!ntM dog nightly or on
weektnd,, to the businesses when they
close for the evening. The dogs are then
picked up In the morning arid sleep dur·
lnR th<.day.
If • buslnen URI I dog regularly'
Stainless Steel
Fabric Care
Tub
FULL 2 YEAR
PARTS and LA'80R
WARRANTY
• Smooth, Rust·Proof,
Chip-Proof
e ldttl for 111 WHh-
1IilOFobrlc1
• LHll tht Llftllmt
oftha. Walhtr
PW$ •••
a washable
. -lmlts .c:~
..
u . '
l~ISPEED OUEt:N.IMI
a McGrew-Edison Compc 1 iy Division
'
90 DAY CASH WITH A~~:r:0 -• ·c a
1815 NEWPORT BLVD. Downtown Costa Mm-Phone 548·7788
' •
1
I
•
~~-~~.----..... . -
SC ~. Octobtr l, ltJ7l
Myths 'of Female Worker
'
Cause of Discrimination?
By SYLVIA P()RTER Administration rev .. 11 \ that r-------,
U you are a mature wGman,
it doesn't &urp.ri.se you \hat, io
this era of equal Job rights,
the govern-·
ment has
just launch·
ed its hea'1-
iest attack
ever on job
d I scrimlna·
lion on the
basis of
race, s e i:
and national
origin. You lcnow why.
-You kno.w it's much tougher
for you to get a job than it Is
for a mature man or a young
woman.
A new study for the Labor
Department's M 1 n power
Piek Your Omn
despite the laws Of· our land ana &!spite all the evldenco
proVing Jhat . mDture wpmen
are dependable, consc:ientioua,
compf!tent 'NOfkers. the discrl-
mlnation remalns blatant.
A sample group Qf wonlen in
the study. aged 14. lo 24, held
the same or lilgher poSiliOns
on the jQ_b ladder than women
30 to 44 ; nearly a tbird ol. the
older women bad not , pro-
gre..00 beyond the jobs oJ
their youth; many or ,the
working married WQ.men '#Ith
children had actually moved
to a lower oceupational 'status.
And after 40,"the discrimina-
tioo1htensilies. The unempby-
ment rate for women 40
through 64 in 19'12 w~ qig,re
Uian onc-lhird higher than ror
'
FINANCE
men of the same age.
Why does the discrimination
persist? Because the. myths
Uf'I T~
Pumpkins by the 'sea lure thousands each year to fialt Moon Bay, south of S~n
Francisco, where visitors can pick their own hall~·n Jack-o::Lante·rn right
from the field. Growers will celebrate the harvest at ~the Pumpkin Festival in
mid-October.
Food Prices Bring Wealth
i '
';/:o fQrmerly -Poo.~far.me~s ..
SANGER CAP) -While generations. . ~began alter \Vorld War i i ·and ·
skyrocketin;: food prices bring u1'VE NEVER seen the day speeded the closure of milliOns
grief ~ the. urban ho1:15ewlfe, • when prices were so high,." . of family farms apparently ~he California .rarme.r 1s rea~ said Kart· KJeln, 53'. owner ef ended last year. Goverhment
mg ~ prospen.ty windfall he 20 acres of grapes m oearb,Y figure& show farm Income is
hasn t kl)own sipce World War Del Rey. . . up at least 12 percent (or 1973
II. "Some are so impressed and lbould rise even higher by P.fany growers around this with their new-found wealth years end
San Joaquin Valley town east they're spending money like ·
or FresDG are cashing in by it's going out of style," said BULB.ULlAN -WHO three
paying uff loans, buying new Berge Buibulian. ·who owns~· years ago was ulcky lo gel S3
equipment, and.._even building acres of wine and table gra~ a Ion for his black grapes -is
modem ranch-style homes to here. · unloading them now for $15 a
replace the rann houses where A generation of cheap, abun-ton.
their families have lived ror dant food 1or .l.mericans thai "The farmer is finally get-
ting what he should have been
GRUBB & ELLIS
REAL TY FUND IV
~ Real Estate Investment Opportunity
A Celrfornf1. Llm itR Partnership Offering These
Potential 8tntfits
a Tex Savings In '73
e Tox Shtlt•red Cuh Flow
• Mort19• Reduction
e Limited Lftblllty
e Potential A,p;;ciation
' e Dlverslfic1tion of Rropertles
getting for year," said Gordon
Olesen, pt.blisber of t h e
Sanger Herald. "For a long
time ahead Americans are
going to have to pay higher
prices for their f o o d .
Conswners have been on a
gravy train for years."
"I think !ood has been too
cheap for too long," Bulbulian
said. "In terms of what I put
into my business, I'm pJOr."
ONE HOUR INVESTMENT MEETINGS $4 ,000,000
'
WedM1d1y, Octobe r 3, 1973
Marin• Inn Motel
Dane Point Harbor
7:30 P.M .
Fredrick Waldron
Space is Limited
Offering Circulars will be distributed at the
seminars.
Ciill for Reservations
E. F. Hutton
• Phont Z.nlth 51S3
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. '
A GR I-LINK 1973 FUND
Agri-link I 973 Fund is a California Limited Pa rtner-
1hip of which Art linkletter and A9ri-l ink Corp., a
subsidiary of Linkletter Enterpri1e1, ere the General
Partners. The Partnership wi ll opereta in a number of
phases of the commercial cattle production business
including the breeding of c:a.ttle end the purch a'e a nd
feeding of cattle for beef production.
Since there will be relatively few sali1 of cattle in
1¥973, fli9 Pa rtnership expects to incur substantial
losses for federal income t1x purpos11 in 197 3. The
1 , minim um investm ent is $5,000.00.
For a free pro1pec,tu1 •nd
plee se return the coupon. ..
.Mtll to: MORGAN , OLMSTEAD, KENNEDY I: GARONER
500 N•wport C•nt•r Dtiv•, 511itt •so
Naw,.•rf le1clt, CA. •2660/,hene 644·4620
t'AME •·•········•••••·•·•····•·••······•·••·•·····••·
ADDRESS ······•••···••·•·••••·••······•·•••••·········•
CITY, •••••••• ,,,,.,,., ••••.••• STAll ••• ,,,,. Zil" •••••••
.... .. ..... , ~ ......... • ••
--
Complete Ne\v York Stock List
j
•
A MILER
TUMBLEWEEDS
HAVING ANY l.llCll
IN '/OUR CAMPAIGN TO
MAAAV 11JM~ewefe&
AlHf HIUlf:GARV?
MUTI AND JEFF
RGMENTS
. • .,.ANCY
"
~u.. .. He SAll7 He'l7 60
Wr!ll ME 1D 1\ie JUSTICe
Of 1He PeACe ... il jl
3f
J
j
J
'
by Do119 Wildey
by Tom K. ~yan
10 61Ve
1He 11111111:
AWAY
by Al Smith
by Dale Hale
by Emle Bushmiller
TGDAY'S CIOSSWDRD PUZZLE PEANUTS
wwcr I NEED ,. A
ROOSIN' 5RE>\KFA~ ... ;ACROSS 51 ProPOHd
• proflc••
t;Giv1 aom1· 64 ······and
one ···· lim1 t1k11 no1it 1
5 Ancient S3 Conl1c1ion
Syr~ 62 ·····VOCI
63 Chili con ·••·· 9 Rett1vr1nt1 54 M1dt l1om 1" 81com1 v11iou1 dried IOUICll
1S Molten rock 66 Troop1 ol
16 Church c1v11fy
g1rm1n1 67 Chest tound 17 Ivy L11gu1 68 Ell member 6S Thickhtldld
19 Up101r 70 Odd11nd
20 Encot1r1ge IYflnl
21 Solt jobs 71 Germen
23 Withstand 1rticl11
25 V1ll1y1
26 Ctl'ltral DOWN
Afr1c~n
people 1 Former coon
128 Form a ot Egy111
t11ought 2 Uncle M•ltie
32 Conl1n1m1nl J Dr. Arnulfo
37 Ancient .. ·· P"11m1
'chlrlQ! VIP
38 Show to• <I ADA memb1r
seat: 5 Pub 5\IPll
lnlprm1I 6 Snt11ky
39. lmptrv!OOI ptoplt:
to: Sulfiil Sling
<11 ···de F11nct 7 K1t10-1y
•2 Violent t1om
outbu"t 8 Food
46 Gi\11 1 party J)fO\lided I 48 St••nd ol mir1culo111ly
materl•I 9 Admit
60 Min In TO St!r1 10
I Gene•it acuon
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i .... +-+~r-t-;,.
S1turd1y'1 Pu1ile Solved :
"'-"'"'' °'E S l ,
11 Free of bi11
12 Additional
13 No11ces
18 ····• Ch1v1z:
Union l110•r
22 Actor ...
W1ll1ch
2<1 Bunker
27 Yo1k1tli11
riv1r
29 Wtlt1r1
Mongol;. is
JO low c11t1 ol
lndi1
31 "Ea11 of·-·"
32 Plent di111w
33 8111
J4 Tools ·····:
R111aur1nt
moo
35 N1gativ1
01111~
36 lu1;1
•O Up or Ptrker
"
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43 Fet!s
remor1e « Cro11 or Cit
'6 Lift
<17 Taught
pri\ll lely
49 Foal's
p11ent
52 Atric1n
nati\11
5J Mtll COU r1t
55 Smash
inw1rd
56 Soe1k
57 Roben
Servic11nd
Fro11
58 Wind·driv1n
clouds
59 Owindl1
60 St11mrock
l1nd
61 Comm1nd1d
66 Middle:
Pr1li~
l '
JUDGE PARKER
5HOR.TL'f AFTEQ: SAM
.._RR!VE5 AT SPENCER
FAAM5,· ME DISCOVERS
fHA11 HE'S 6~EN
"0LLOWED THERE
BY SLADE R06ERT5!
MISS PEACH
ee AT MY OfflC.E AT NlNE IN
THE MOR.Nlt-IG AND I 'LL
SEE YOU 'THEN! .
AlrTMUlr 'TH• c"osswocl> Pu:r. :r.~•
YOU Cll:aA'TMP
~LL. 'f DO .. CN'T WDfr.I( OUT
•
AT Al-&. JI i ~lHOOL-·l---..,----
1(1.-A~ ION
•
DICK TRACY
(
DOOLEY'$ WORLD
;J111
'
SALLY BANANAS
GORDO
•
MOON MUWN$
ANIMAL CRACKERS
•• • • ••
-· Oc..W l , 1'173
·~CH
QOUR ~/. • BU6Tl:R/ 'p----r"".~ . .. .... -...
DAILY PILOT 18
by 11 .... llradflelcl I
by ~UI Arriola
by R09er Bollen
• i~ ii 'I • b 1 ~
by. Charles M. Schulz l
HOU AeooT A STACK Of HOT U)HICH KIND Of COLD CU<AI.
C4.KES WITH 111.\0 F~IED E66G, ti.)OiOLO '1"00 l.li(f ?
5'll\E SAllS'GE. OAAN6E JI/ICE
AND A ~IC:E OF MEI.ON?
Arl& ~
Sl'IL.L.INc;.
AL&.. TM&
~OS
co""aGTLY ?
..
by Harold Le Doux
WOULD rr 6E YES .••
ALL RIGMT If l PROVIDING YOU
HAVE HIM COME LET ME MEET
\J P MERE FOR A. SL1'0E R:08ERT5,
Ff.W MINu:l'ES, MY FAVORITE
A.eSEY? FOOT6AL.L STAR!
by Mell
'\I I_,
L':°~ •. , _,
~ . -
L
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10-1
"I'm it pad we dedded OI tbe zoo laltead of the art
mmeam -l'm lla..,.p WWl')'bos lbool my bl po."
DENNIS THE MENACE
'Now 'IH4T ~'RE Al4Vi, I Gar A -
LITTLE P.S. TO ADD 11> WHAT I SAID tlffORE .. .'
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Mondq, Oetobrr l , t•n
Monday'~ Oosing Prices-Complete New York Stock Excbange ,List
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SC
• ST.
liAJLY PILOT 21
I
I
Finance
. Briefs
Douglas Pa11
(AP) LOUIS
~fachinist.s Union District 837
at f\1cDon nell Douglas Corp. is
see.kin g immediate payment of
back salaries amountiog t,o
4 2 millior1 to some 12,000
union members.
Union president Cas Ttol:i.
stild that a panel or Cost or
l,1\•ing ofricials will f'"('("()Ol ·
mend 1he b.ick pay "be p;1ld
in small wc.-ekly in!itallm('nts.
" pl'(lpcsttlon that Troia called
"unacceptable.'•
e S ue: P i11elinr
c.uno (UPI) -1'h< ~""
Francisco based B ct' ht t' I
Engtn..-:crlng C4'lmpany has \1on
a contract to build lhf lonR -
projectcd Suel·Alexnndria <l 1l
plpelinr. the government oin-
nouoctd ~1onday.
Covernm~nt .&OUrces 1nid
Bcchtrl came through with
mort ravor•ble terms than a
E\lropean consonJum htadrd
b)' the French c o m p a n \'
S.P.1.E. Balignolle1. Prcsldcri t
Anwar Sadat of "£' g y p t
recenll)' exprc.s.std dlwlis!1":·
lion lVilh lhC F.uropea~n·
'M'rttum's propos."ll co g'l'Ollncls
or lncreastng costs.
'
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22 DAIL V PILOT
Cal Expo
Nearly
Falls Flett
Capitol Ne"'S Ser,·ire • SACRAMENTO -~lillions
of Cal ifornians and out-of-stale
tourists visited Ca lifornia fa irs
this year -a booming
business 1vhlch gh•es local
people an opportwtity to ex·
hibit talents 'and show pride in
their ('(Immunities.
But. \vhat should have been
the outstanding state1~·ide el·
hibitipn of them all. the State
Fair at c.at Expo here. verged
on being a bust .
., PRJCES WERE high, r.1·
hibits were either poor or non·
existent and attendance lag-
ged.
Most fair operators arotmd
the state tbis year reported in·
--creased attendance; and-credi.t
t.he energy crisis. tight money
and restricted vacations as
reasons why people stayed
near hof(le and vi sited the fair
instead of driving to So uthern
Califotnia for an an nu a I
Disneyland visit.
Earlier this year, Cal Expo
management 1vas assW11ed by
the State Department of Parks
and Recreation .
THAT AITENDANCE Jag.
ged and commercia l ex-
hibiton were unhappy can be
blamed on the new manage-
ment which "doesn't yet have
the feel" for fair operations.
Historically. the State Fair
has been the focal poir.t of
agriculture, 110memaking. arts
and crafts, industry and coun-
ty exhibitions -the premium
show in the slate.
Far less than half the s::i re's
counties sponsored exhibit~
this year -and the nt!r.1ber
may drop again in 197t Local
exec1Jlives don't belie\'c ~hev
"can afford the rost -0f ex·
hibitlng" for the good \·1i\I they
receive from the sho\\'.
PARKS AND Recreation of·
ficials, especially \Villiam S.
Briner. the fair's gt."r,('rr:l
manager. should take a good,
hard look at the Los Angeles I
Coun ty Fair in Pomona, \1 hic h
is oow the premium event in ,
the state. 1
State Fair atten d a r cc
declined this year to 706,692
from 876.160 in t9n.
But, attenda nce for 1!tc first
three days of the event 11 a~
ahead of last yellr'~ luta!
whiclt means that fcw~r pt'O-
p!e wanted to come h1ek to
sec the exhibition a second or
third time.
The food 11•as 11ho1ni 1able.
the pric·:s high and ther · 11as
hole name cntcr tainn1~·nr 1·x·1
ce pt fur the ~1ari n<' Corps
band and a fc1v thoroughbrt·d·
horses !bat paid high prif'l'S ;it
the trar.k. I
IT 'S Tl:\JE FOR Bnnt1' :111d
his staff 10 lake a loo~ ;1'. thr
agrcemcn:s C<il EXil'l h;is
signed 1"1t h carnival :ind tnn·
crssion opt ra tors · 10 ~C'f' d
they r 11n forcr 1hrn1 to do :1
better job
"\Vr :ir ~ not s,111s~i;->ri,"I
Briner :<:.1 r!. ··111th the :c:rlrl'·
tion of :n,-,cJs. Tl~r long 1!1 m
contrarl r.pcrators rl 1 .Jn ':
match 1h~ ne1v in1agr" \"h1rh
lhe sta le i<; trying to 1·ri'ntf"
ror the exhibi11(\n. "\\"'! tlo
have some atiil1ty to rontrol
and enforr" 1hc quality of con·
cessions Bnd the carnival. .. he
added. ' . ' . 1.n • addilion lo inonit'lr1nn
. . . .
Monday, Octobtt l, l 97J
Free Gifts! Ted Bowers . Antiq~e Show! -efle~hments!
· ~ I e've been growing with California ever since our first pffi,ee '·,., "' ;J was ppened in 1887. Today we're over $41/2 Bi.Ilion strong.
And our statewide network of offices is the largest.in the
savings~d loan industry.So j<?ill.Ji>!'lrcelebrationof ·~e~y Gr~atWestern-. :.
. Days." Aqd open a saving~.accounf while.yo~'r.e here. Find o'ut tot Y-9ufr ·. -·
self what the Great-Western feeling:is-all.aboub It's the·feeling that comes · •
from knqwing you've put your savings in exactly the right place. . .. -
Dai!Y Exc ept.Sundays, Sept. 29 thru Oct. 13-0ur savings lobby
is filled ~i\h nostalgia..:. a special showing of Ted Bowers famous antiques.
Our host~~ses will be modeling turn-of-the-century fashions . And serv-
ing refre~liments, too. With balloons for the kiddies and the fabulous ' . Sunset Barbecue Cook Book, free, for every family. Come with us into
Jhe good ol<;l days of yesteryear-an extravaganza
of the romantic 1900's.
Mr. Arthur P. Moore, Great Western's Newport Center
Manager, is ringmaster of our big show. His entire
staff looks forward to the pleasure of your company.
FREE! The famo us
S°MMe't
BARBECUE BOOK
How to do it! How to fiavor it! How to
enjoy it! More than 600 special recipes.
All the best from !hp people who know
barbecuing best .\.the food editors of
Sunset Magazine. Come early and
ask for your free copy. Supply is
limited. One to a family, please.
' . . . '
. ,: .. Spec~.!'~~,~~ay for the
. ' .. , .. "'' "~ ~ ~.~Wholj :f,ljUy, '., relay, Oct. 6
. J. .).'".'· f' ..... ~. ''•04io . ... ~ .... Vo • .. .... -'""' . r ... oony rides'"'··,., . . 'I"---• ru -~ .' ...., .. ""' ... t"'"' ' ·~~~ · · '. ___ J' .a~ ·From· o to 4 on th is day only,
of tomorrow! we're turning our parking lot into
a circus· qi fun. F.ree pony rides
for your children. Fre e rides for all
on our ow~ historic "steam train.''
Dance to ,IP& toe-tappirig melpdies
from our 191 !f.band,orga.n~Wl'!ll~YL0\L
sip a real sarsaparilla. And munch hot-butter.ad pop-
corn, popped just for you iri ou r 1895 steam-powered
popcorn wagon. And, of course, •
we'll have all of our special gifts on
hand for the whole familY.
Popcorn
from our
1895 popcorn
wagon.
Free balloons.
Our 1910 Wurlitzer
band organ.
Dally except Sunday through October 13
9 to 4:30 weekdays and until 6 on Friday • 10 to 4 every Saturday
(Remember our Drive-up Teller Window is open untH 7 on weekdays.)
,
GREAT .WESTERN SAVINGS . 't
80 Fashion Island, Newport Center• 640·0333
Open Every Saturday 10 to 4 /Weekdays 9 to 4:30 / Driv .. up Teller Window Open 9 to 7 Weekdays I Free Parking.if
FREE WITH ACCOUNTS OF $1000 OR MORE: Travelefl Chtck .. Mon1y Ordera. Nol1ry Servtce, Tru1t Dted/,.ote CollectlOn. Alto Frff Check*Month Pline.
MEMBER: FEDERAL SAVINGS ANO LO.\N INSURANCE CORPOR~TION. FEOERAI. HOMt LOAN BANK• A SAVINGS ASSOCIATION OF GREATWESTERN EINANCIAL CORPORAllON ' l ____ ...,.._
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little
oordiJ
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aOOWI
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Marc
Cor
Cl!ntb
and •
by ju
of CO<
j
La.
dorm ciu.
~
and.•
dfec
force
"N
talnl:
Chiel
"0
does
and
prob;
than
Sehr
Lt."
offiCi
has
orgm
Th
,Beac
pain
.Uve -· He awai .._
worll
Pu
dlve
!he I ,,.
Time
1.§D
and • lflck fesa<
Pu
erac'
Brot <on1
"'"' J;i!Sft
;-• [
' E
A
was
door
~[ assa
Fe
"'°" to u
Tl
bad
tfl'I:
·Do
bnlo
ii pal
man
cl\OI liJs I : In
•
operation of the Los Angrlcs
County F:iir, Briner ::inrl hl~
slaff \1\1u>J be well odvL~<'cl lo
ta ke advice from V<'leran f11ir
execut.ives who put on S1n:1llcr
exhibitions. El Dorado County, · Pi acer County, San De.rnar-
dino Orange ~0"' a r\ d
the Springtime Fai r 1v Lo~
Banos are example~ of llithl
well-run opera!ions whlctl g1vc
1
.
lhe customer his money':i
11·orth. L---------------------------------------------....;;...,-------":"""----""""'.----!'
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Lag1111a Beaeh
EDI T IO N
'l'oday's F l•al
.N• Y. Stoeks
VOL. 66, NO. 214, 3 SECTIONS, 32 PAGES .. ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNI A MONDAY, OCTOBER 'I, . TEN CENTS
U.S. Market Basket Costs Continue· to Climb . .
•
By tbe AJ1oe;ated Pre11 'lbe-:AP checked the prices of 15 food
The sqiteeze on the pocketbook got a and ooofood item!· 1n 13 cities March 1
little Ughter during ~tember, a.. and bas redlecked at the 'beginning ol
cording to an._ As90clated-'Presa market ea~ .suq:eedlD.g month, with e:rti-a
basket survey releasecl today ·which ltlr.V8)"1 to' gauge the ..effect-ol~special
shows the family~grocery bill was almost .gov~ent oontJ;'ols.
9 percent blgbet last month than in Prices in general stayed fairly steady
March. _ during September, despite the end to the
Consumefs looking for bargains found freeze on beef and the imposition of new
continuing declines in the price of pork regulations on: other foods. 'Ille total
and eggs. But the' decreuei were offset market basket-bill was up In slz cities apd
by jumps of several percent in the price down in seven, with most" changes
of cookies, milk, sugar andJ> _averaglDg one pei:ctntor.to. ,
or the total nwnber of items checked,
36 percent in,creased in price from Sept. 1
to Oct. 1: 21 percent went down; 32 per-
cent were-unchanged; ·aiic:t 11 per~t
were unavailable on one of the check
dates.
'Ille picture for the seven-month period
from March 1 to Oct.. 1"was gloomier.
The malket basket price, was up in every
city "«Pl Dallas where it declined by
one penny -from '9.48 to $9.47 for 13
available Jterns. 'Ibe ave1;1age increase
was 8.8 percent.
On Sept. I, the AP found. !hat the
market basket bill in every city was ·
higher than it had been March 1, with in-
creases averaging 1 percent over the six·
month period.
The reasons for the increases were
familiar to consumers: higher wholesale
prices, rising operating costs, increased
worldwide demand for commodities.
Boosts in one item pushed up prices of
other goods.
On the brighter side there were
bargains in pork·cbops and ~ggs, which
• skyrocketed tn mid-August.. then sta~d .
to drop a.s consumers balked at high '
prices.
Pork chop priCes declined in nine cities
between Sept. 1 and Oct. 1 and egg prices
dropped in six cities.
Beef prices -which stayed frozen
from the end of March until Sept. IO.
prompUng shortages and wamlngs of
future leaps -went up in a few areas,
but the increases were'nt nearly so bad
as t>tOOicted. The price of chopped chuck went up in
six cities, generally less than 10 percent,
and \\'as down in three cities. The price
was unchanged in three cities and
chopped chuck was unavailable in one. The AP survey rovered Albuquerque,
N.M.; Atlanta, Boston, Chicago, Dallas,
Detroit, Los Angeles, Miami,· New York,
Philadelphia, Providence, RJ ., Salt Lake
City and Seattle.
The check list included: pork chops,
eggs', butter, cookies, chopped chuck,
frozen orange juice, coffee,.paper towels,
peanut butter, detergent, fabric softener.
tomato sauce, milk, all-beef franks and
sugar.
f;op Pro11loted
.. Laguna's Purcell No w Lieutenant .
Laguna Beach police Sgt. Ncil l'l!rt<ll
donned the gold bars ol a lieutenant to-cliy.
~ a narootics detective sergeant, ~U waged a highly succesSful war
apinst the Brotherhood ol Eternal Love
and other drug dealen. He wiS promoted
dlectlve today and assigned to tbe
Br·own . to
'Payment'
Investigate
to l(almhach
force's patr¢ division. ·
0 Neil Ls an outstandHl.g officer and cer-
tainly merits ·ttie appointment," Police
Chief Frank Schopen said .
. "One thing about Nell .ls that when be does something, ·11e does it completely
and enthusiasticaUy, As a detective, be
p'robably spent more hours on the job
than anybody in Laguna realizes, .. Chief
SChopen said.
Lt. Purcell was selected as one of five Officers nationally as a "Super Cop" and
has won numerous awards from civic
organizations.
The new lieutenant joined the Laguna
,Beach department in 1968-as a
paU'olm.&Jl. He was assigned to the detec-
, tive division in 1969 and promoted to.
aergeant In 1970.
1 He waa the first city employe to be
awarded a "floatinl r..-11.~Y·ift..
c:reaR,-''because . of bis "'oi:rb&ndlni
work"ebief~llllcl ' i>Wc.ll· iJ II<>• » ,...i'old and has ·
·. _.eloped.a "tremendouS-becliamlllil·lrt-
Ufe poUCt field," the chief aitdfa. · ~ _ µ a patrolman, Purcell. Rrrelted Dr.
Timothy Leary, tben !Ile bighi>riest ol
IS> and as advocate of "tune in, tum on aOcl drop out." The arrest was the first to
*k againSI the former Harvard pro-
fesmr. ,
Purcell then went on to investigate and
crack the Laguna Beach -l:tased
jlrotlwbood of Eternal Love which a<·
eoroing to local and federal officers Im· ;¢ed mlllloo.t ol dollars · ol baJhtsh,
· ll>Sbish II and """"1actuf0i! and .
7
. . . distributed. LSD.
Chief Schopen said that be wasn't hesi~
tani to n'IOY\ Purcell from detective
duties to patrJ>l administration.
"I wasn't reluctant to take him out of
there to give ,him ill all·round ex-
perience. He needs ·the experience of the
patrol diviSlon, too," the chief said.
Ve€eran Police Lt. John Zelko was
transferred from patrol to bead the
detectives. -.....
Campaign
Fu11ds' Fate
Due Study
SACRAMENT!> (AP) . -Secretary of
State Edmund G. Brown Jr. said today
lie will investigate a '2$0,000 payment of
NiDifi.. ..... to ''ilili<l!I ~ Pr~llo ..
lormef per>ooa!,~t,tomey~ .
'lbe·po~1.~~w; KahpMch
-.of •. N~~em--lncloded -!n...a
report ~~W~t Nixon's re--
election coritmfttee Jn 'Washington and
Sacramento Friday.
Brown, ·a Democrat, said the report
does not show what happened to the
money.
lJrown said he has been in cont.act with
Kalmbach for several months regan:ljng
"another Nixon campaign matt.er'• and
will extend that investigation to include the $250.000. · ·
An aide to Brown said the other matter
· waS e Cii.SJiOiliion o surp us fimdS-from
the ~ Nil.on.election campaign.
. .
Laguna Barmaid Raped Tbe aide , Deputy·Secretary ·or-state
Thomas Quinn, said Brown's office
already has turned some information it
gathered to Archibald Cox, the special
Watergate prosecutor. ' . . By Predawn Assailan_t The report ·also showed that Roge'r
Greaves of Glendale received $4,000 from
the Nixon committee to "gather in-
formation on Sen. Muskie," Brown
A 29-year-old La.tuna Beach woman
was accosted outs'Tde her apartment
door, choked and forced into her
bedroom where she was raped by a lanky
•Ssailal!t Saturday.
followipg the pre-dawn assault, the
woman ran from her residence and drove
~o the Laguna Beach Police Department.
The woman, who works as a barmaid,
had been reiuming to her apartment
oarly saturday morning.
· Det. Gene Brooks said that as she
tmlocked and opened her mid-Laguna
apartment door, a young long haired man grabbed her from behind . with a
choke hold around the neck, and placed
liis hand over her mouth.
· In the following wild struggle, the
Oraage Cout
• •
w,at11er
! Considerable cloudiness in lhe
.. • morning hours aloog the Orange
COaSI Tuesday, clearing to sunny,
but--cooler skies in the after:noon.
Highs In the upper 80s at the beach-
" rising to the mld·'IOs inland.
INSmE TI)DAY
"In all hontttuj I don't rcallfi see how a womcan can 1ay ihat
1ht wantt the: man she lot.let to
be presidC'tit/' says Nancu Rea.
gon, wife of a lt<u:Ung contender
for tht 1916 Republican pre1i:-
dentiol nomination. Ste 1torv,
Pagt 26. ...... " ... .._ :~ t.,M. ...,. " =. ..... C1ll,.,,.I• • • , CllMlfltf ..... t~MI'""" .. <-,, ,__ ...
<~-" 1'9dl Mll1tth .... °""' Mtll(tt I ·--" llflfef'tll ,_ I -u
llflltrllllll!ltllf .. ... _ • ,,_ ... w-·• Htw1 o,,. ·--M Wtrlt Htwa •
'
disclosed tOOay. . .Just a ltlemo:ry
apartment · living room was left a
shambles and a panel from the front door .
was ·knQ:cked out.
Det. BTOOks said that the woman stop-
ped fighting after the ta11, thin rapist
threatened ·her wJth physical hann.
Brown said "Greaves has informed my
staff that bis activity actually consisted
of haiassment ao'd picketing!L of ap-
pearances by Sen. Ermund Muskie {D-
Maine ), in California, New Hampshi re
and Florida.
The Nixon committee released the
report in response lo a suit by Common
Cause. The report showtd: the campaign
raised more than $60 million over-all. It
accounts for cdtnpaign fund raising back
to Jan. 1, lm.
This is an authentic photo ol summer 1973\ along
the Orange Coast. You may want to clip .. jt out and
send it to Aunt Hattie in Iowa just to prov~ there
really w~s a summer along the Orange Coast this
year. You will recall, of course, t~at summer arrived
last week on the winds of a Santa Ana condi tion .
It staggered through Sunday before t'e cool marine
air dominated once again, bringing back the drippy
gloorrtobserved in these parts since Memorial Day.
Ugh.
Det. Brooks sald the man was about
six feet tall, weighed about 14.5 pounds·.
He had long shoulder-length-light brown
liair Which he .wore pulled back and tied
with a red bandana. Police believe he is
about ~ years of qe. Quinn said the committee previously
agreed, Jn negotiations with Brown, to
proVide information on fund raising
Laguna Cotmcil Studies
County Approves
L~d Exchange
before 1971. ,
NQw, Quinn said, the committee's at-
torney's have told him they do·not agree
with a state attorney general's opinion
that they must provide such infonnalion
to Califol'Tila.
Newsletter Publication
A 'land exchange between Orange
County and Oaklawn Homes, lnc., a
subsidiaty of Laguna Hills Leisure
World, has been approved by the Board
of Supervisors to allow fo'r a school site
and a small park adjoining the site.
In order for the land development nrm
to sell 10 acres to the Saddleback Valley.
Unified School District through relocation
of a $-acre countyi>ark, it was determin-
ed that the land the finn offered...lhe
county in exchange for the previous park
site was of·the same value.and utility for
a park.
SUpervtsors gave prellmfnary approval
to the trlde Tuesllay and set Oct. 23 as
Iha date !or final conslderaUon ol the
transactioo.
"
Negotiations will continue, Quinn said,
and Brown may file a lawsuit if the ad-
ditional fund-raising information is .not
(See KALMBACH, Page Ii
The Laguna Beach City Council
Wednesday night will con.sider a proposal
to publish its own newsletter, perhaps in
conjunction with the school district and
water district.
The newsletter plan appears on the
Pants Upheld
Vse of Flag 'Symbolic Speecli'
DENYER {UPI) -It is no more a crime lo wear m American
flag sewn to the seat of one's pants than to paste a Oag decal in a car '
window, the Colorado Supreme Court ruled today. •
The high court called such a.ction "symbolic speech" and said it
was protected under the Firi;t Amendment. ll overturned the Boulder Trade Meeting Opens Distrtct .Court conviction of David Patten Vaughan, charged with
aesecrating the Qag.
MO.SCOW UPI) 1) s. Tr "Just as. some citizens paste flag decals on their c:ir windows to
.-.Secretary G~rgep Sfiiilti'met f~'i: __..,-indicate-their support ot ertain political philosophies, defendant
hours today With Fofetgn Trade Minister adorned.the sc~t of his jeans with, a n.~g to indicat~ his contempt for
Nikolai s. Patolichcv to open the third-thooe thl~gs which the flag symbohies, the court said.. . ..
moellng ol th....U.6.-Soviet Trade . _Justice..Jlonald Kclltll!. W)t (L\!'l'Jllll the ~ecISton satd : The
mission. A primary purpose or the Idea& expressed by defendant's conduct may seem o ~ome tObe
SChultz trip is to reassure the Soviets juvenile and inarticulate, and perhaps his actions arc subjc,.ct to in·
: that Pr<sident Nixon is still Pllsbing to terpretations other than we have given. but thi s doe. not strip bis
·grant Ruuia trade concessiOM despite· a speecl1 or consUtutional protection." •
Rouse commlttee vote rejecting it. •
•
council's 7:30 p.m. meeting agenda and
was initiated at the suggestion of C.oun-
cil man Charlton Boyd.
Boyd aa.id today tbe newsletter idea
has been made to him "dozens of times"
fro m members or the community,
';It was the feeling lhat this could
possibly fill a current gap in our com-
munications. The press is keeping the
people informed rrom day·to-day and the
city never could do this .
"There Is a need for communicolions1 scftletiffleS lff aeptll, lo explain even the
definition of a tenn," he added.
The councilman said no consideration
has been given yet as to the costs · in·
volved nor has he checked wilh the
school and water district to determine if
(See LE'M'ER, Page %)•
Ice Machine Stolen
From Laguna Motel
A $600 Ice-making tna Chine hB.3 been
repqrlcd stolen from tbe Ocean flouse ~foter,-;.15 Lower Cllff Drive. Lagw1a
Jle~lice sal~ today. .
The ma chine , Weighing about ~
pounds: was taken from a hallway area
sometime late last week. Pollet theorized
a dolly or hand truck was used lo move 'It. _
Planner SpeakS
To Association
Roger Lanphear, chainnan of the
Laguna Beach Planning Commission, will .
be guest speaker 8 p.m. Thursday at a
meeting of the Top of the World
Neighborhood Association. .
The meeting will be held at Top of the
World Elementary School, 21601 Treetop
Lane.
The association a?so has launched a
n1embership drive under the direetion of
Jerry lmmcl. Persons interested in
joining the group are urged to attend the
meeting.
AD GUARANTEES
FAST 'PICKUP'
\Vhen you're looking ror a car buyer
with "pickup" as fast as your car, l.ry
Daily Pilot want ads for quickness. This
advertiser ~id :
'71 Continental 4 dr. Dk.
green . blk. \'inyl top. Al\1/
FA·t stereo. Tilt whl., air,
almost new steel belted ti'!! .
Leather int. ~lust sell quic k
at $3100. Appro,., MM mi.
a.1ay finance. JIURRY·! (Ad~
dress, phone no.>. :
Tha urgen cy mess11ge was recel~ed by
readers: and response was fast. For fast
rtsuhs, ca ll the direct Un~. 642·5678 te
the Daily Pilot Classified AdvertiSm,
Dept.
' '
•
2 l>~L Y PILOT l8
Rooseve lt
Has Faith
In Brothe r
By L PETER KRIEG
Of !fie Dfil~ "lt•t Si.ff
Former co-ngre ssman James
Roosevelt. a Newport Beach resident,
said today he has full faith that hls
brother. Elliot, will be cleared of charges
that he tried to arrange !he assassination
of Batiamas Premier Lynden Pindling.
"I rea lly have not hing else to say other
than I hope*'lhe committee will give him
a fair hearing," Roosevelt said.
Roosevelt's brother. a former ?iiiami
Beach mayor, met privately with his at-
torneys Sunday in Miami to prepare for a
Scoate subcommittee hearing Wednes-
daic The subcommittee heard testimony
early In September from Louis "the Doc-
tor" Mastriana that Elliot Roosevelt of-
fered hlm $100,000 to assassinate Pend-
ling •. He said a second man, Patsy
Lepar8, also was involved.
"My reason for coming to Miami is to
meet with my attorneys here and at·
tempt to reconstruct all that I did during
the lime when these charges were leveled
against me." Roosevelt said.
He said he wouJd "completely refute
all the fant astic fabrications that have
been made by this ex-conVict MasUiana
and other ex-convicts as to my dealings
with them."
Roosevelt declined to detail charges
made secretly to the committee later by
Lepara.
Subcommittee Chairman Henry M.
Jackson ([).Washington) also bas declin-
ed to d1scuu the charges.
Roosevelt speculated that Lepara may
have made his charges b ecause
Roosevelt bad backed out of a business
deal -beca4se of Lepara's criminal
background. .
Roosevelt arrived in ~fiami Saturday With bis wile, Pad'tcia,-from ms-llbme In
LisboD, Portugal.
3 Men Quizzed
In Murder Case
At Pendleton
Military authorities today continued
questioning three men found Sunday with
a bloody shotgun in their car shortly
after lhe murder of a 17-year~ld Marine
Rt Camp Pendleton.
Base authorities have refu.sed to iden-
ti1V11\eilir.e m..1·JieiJig·iie1d iii' the' in-~auOD because tOmiif cha:iges have
not yet been filed. .
Tbey "'did,•bowever, release a few
details of the shooting which occurred in ·
the morning hours and led to the death of
Pfc. Edward Steege of Des Moines, Iowa.
The young serviceman's body Was
found along the road leading to tht rifle
range area in the southerly portion of the
hue.
After discovery of the murder, military
police reportedly stopped a suspicious
car on er roadway on the reservation and
during the check of the four occupants
the officers found the weapon.
Reports from other sources said the
shotgun bore distinct, bloody handprints
on the muzzle.
Three of the four persons reportedly
were taken into custody and an in-
vestigation laun ched by the base provost
marshal's office and the Nava I
l nvestigative Service.
From Page 1
LEITER ...
they would be inlerested.
"This is just an idea thrown out as of
yet. and it n1ay very \veil be thrown out ,''
Boyd said.
··tf there is no interest. or il's too cost·
ly, fine. Instead of just talking about it,
'A'e should inquire in depth," he said.
OU.NOi C~AST L.I
DAILY PILOT •
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I
NAMED TO NEW POST
Counci lman Carl Kymla
Kymla Named
To Co._un (y
W ater Post
Newport Beach City CounciJman Carl
Kymla has been appointed as the fifth
representative or the Orang!? County
Municipal Waler District o..i t h e
M"etropolitan Water District Board !:If
Directors.
Kymla, who is also manager or the
Moulton Niguel Water District, was
chosen from a field of several candidates
for t h e MWD post. He will be the
youngest director on the board at 39.
The Municipal Water Ols_trict was
grantod a filth dlnetorshlp last month
when its assessed valuation hit $3.5
billion, or 12.5 percent .ol I.be total MWD
valuation,
Kymla is alsO 'chairman ol the Orange
County Water Management Agency, a
member of the board of tht? Southeest
Regional Reclamation Authority and
chainnan of lhe Aliso Water ~anage
meilt Authority.
Kymla's baclqp:ound for the MWD io!>
was termed "ideal" by Municipal Board
Chairman Clem McCulloch.
McCulloch said the addiUon Of a fifth
·municipal representative ' on the MWD
board will "give municipal a much
greater volee in the formatioo of future MWD policies." -·...,. · -~ ,..: · -
Much of MWD policy for its water
users is shaped in special board com-
mittees and K,ymla is expected to take on
duties With several of th e m ,
McCullough added.
•
Frottt P"fle 1
KALMBACH. ••
disclosed.
Quinn said Kalmbach took custody of
$1 million to $2 milli0:n after the end of
the . 1~ campajgn and deposlted it in
banks in Newport Beach and Los
Angeles.
"What happened to that is a mystery,"
Quinn said.
Mrs. Shickley
Rites Tuesd ay
Graveside funeral services for .Mar-
jorie lllC'Z Shickley of Laguna Niguel, an
18-year Orange Coast resident, will be
held at JJ a.m. Tuesda y at Slmnyside
Cemetery In Long Beach . Mrs. Shickl ey
died Saturday at her home. She was 62.
Survivors include her motber1 J. S. Bell
of Nebraska: daughter, Linda Copson of
San Diego, and one grandchild.
The family has suggested donations to
the American Cancer Society.
Agents Bunt
-Dorl. Nixon
Tap Files
FIOm Wire Senlcff
Federal agerits are Weeding through
wiretap-flies toofmd taped telephone con·
versalions between. F. Ponald Nizoo of
Newport Beadl, the Pres!Aeat•s brother,
and .a form., Hughes Tool Cl?tppany ol-
ficial charged with income tax evu;on.
Attomeya for John Meier, ex·Hughes
~entilic adviser, say their client and
NI1on were business associates and may
have talked by phone at the time the
President had his brother's line tapped.
•
-
Dlilr l'lltl SMll ,,_
Laguna Scholars
They say such a tap . may talot
evidence held by the government that
Meier allegedly evaded taxes on $359,000
in persol\81 income in 1968 and 1969,
earned Wfllle buying Nevada mining
claims for Howard Hughes.
1be day before Meier ,vas ·arraigned In
U.S. District Court in Las Vegas, it was
disclosed that the President had the
Sec~t Service tap the phone ol his
brother's home and business in Newport
Beach.
Laguna Beath l!Jgh School Principal Donald Haught
chats with National Merit Scholarship semi-finalists
.Karen Clark Qeftj and Jon RYlln and Mrs. Elaine
Barnard, mother of ·Byrn Barnard, the high school's
third se~i·finalist this year. Young Barnard current·
ly is an exchange student in Malaysia. Designation
·as a semi-fihaust in merit competition places the
st~dents among the top high school scholars in the
nation. FiMI scholarships are awarded on the basis
of.need'as well as ability.
In revealing the tap, it was alleged the
President feared poss i b I e-em-
barrassment from bis brother's financial
dealings.
In response to allegations by Meier's
attorney's the U.S. Justice Department
has agreed to search its records for
transcripts of any conversatibm between
Donald Nixon and Meier.
"We are simply agreeing with defense
attorneys that we will voluntarily supp(y
the tle!endant with Jnformatioo not
whether or not sllch tapes exist," said
U.S. Attorney Devoe Heaton.
"U anything turns up, it does not mean
we have agreed to give lhem lhe tapes,"
he added.
The start ol Meitr's trial was delayed
from Nov. 12 to Jari. 7 to allow time !or
the tape search.
Dooald Nixon was reportedly out of.
town today and not available for com-
ment on the latest developments.
$25,000 Blaze
. Rages Through
Kalmbach Not Available
For Co:'11111ent on Payment
Newport Beach attorney Herbert W.
Kalmbach continued his silence lodaY en
affajrs of the committee to Re-<lect the
President.
President Nixoo's person8' attorney
was unavaµabte !or commettt on an
allegation by CRP -that he paid a
fonner New York policeman to conduct
secret investigations on behalf of the
White House. \
._.., •· . -. -<:-"'--·---·
Lagiina Planners
Approve Annex
Of Big B~nd The officer, >-'1thony J. tnasewicz,
received $51,918 in 1971 for his private in· -
vestlgalions, the CRRP said Friday.
Ulascewicz testified before the Senate The city ol Laguna Beach hu started
Watergate Committee be-"'.as plaCed on to climb the Jong ladder that ·may even-
the White House staff to investigate the . tually brine t .&, acres of lanct,..~r Big
private liVes · ef President Nixon's o~ Bend In Lapaa' Canym under city con-
ponents and .other politic;al figures. trol. -· . . _ ,
N• l R 'd The CRP, tn ·a rej>Ol't llled with the ·p1am11na:· ~--given JgUe esJ ence Howie ol. Repr09ell~!Uv~ fo~ fmlllice> ~rovait;_""'"m."'"' iii the por<el~, bubutt ·UP to April7 Im aaid Ulaoew1cu•c01v• l will Iii lliliabefon the~ ed tbe--mone' • · · uod • • a.e dtf;lt . .:.:;.. r t • • ~ .~
,i.;tre burned throogh the llJJlll!r story .of Ka!riibach, ~~{~~ ' ~ ~-jWiijliill
a tWi>level .Laguna Niguel residence Sun-f .. -•-•--·-•-"'" · Co .,,_ ~a pt the dty council, day, causing more than $25,000 m w~iu;.cr utu.n:r ~,-·~ num""l"C lAC8I . .
damqe. , " Chairman -. • ,. • . . • ~ Capt·Catl-W'UU!''aHhe"i;quna NigUel -Ulld'l'he ci:::. .~~-who-. . . ~~f--
fire ~tion.. ~d a hot light J:iulb In cm--Inv-Uv; SiViCel, and 1.~~:, Annenti • . 1l:tlinnlj!g.:Q.'m·
tact with a pillow In.an upstairs bedroom The rt ali> 'le.ealed tha( Sejmour missfoo in a; 4 to J vote.~ witl'r P,m·
apparently ignited the blaze ~t about 9:15 Fri~~ r a~ was .d $l3 780 fot misslonerSaVyBeOerue ~-·
a.m. at the home of 1bomas Sweeney, ,. ' ~ anc1' pal " • In a separate action, the pll1'ners
24452 Loo Semmos l survey servi<es expenses. · 'I d hen the land jol1ll tliO · t
Firemen batUed . the blaze for a hall-Frieden traveled ·wtth Sen. George s. i~I~ ~ .;.cod under. M·!A '~
bour before controlling IL The Sweenys manufacturing) r.onlng.' ': , • '
came home from an errand to San Vote on the s<>-CaUed 1.'prezonlng'' was
Clemente .to rmd the """" story in Betty Chilvers a to 2. Chairman Roger Lanphear and names, w~ S8ld. . Mrs. Bellerue indicated they wanted to
Winn S&ld otbe! ~ mmor bums to a see less intensJve development on the
few firemen, no mjuries were reported. Services Slated rear hillside portions of the armemUon.
Property owners· in the canyon re-
County Traf fie
Crashes Kill 3
Three persons died as a result of
Orange County traffic aceidents over the
weekend.
An Anaheim couple Jost their live! in a
Mission Viejo crash &mday and a Stan-
ton man was killed Saturday in Anaheim.
Robert M. Blanks, 56, of 3374 Ke ys
Lane and his wife Dorothy, 52, were kill-
ed on the San Diego Freeway one-half
mile south ol El Toro Road when their
truck collided with a car driven by
&man J , Cuellar, 24, of Pomona. Both
victims were thrown from the vehicle,
California lfighway Patrol of f I c e r s
reported.
Memorlal services will be conducted at quested the annexation as a means of
10 :30 a.m. Wednesday a1 St.. Catherine'• • ~g t~r _properties fr~J!! .II~ plaITT
Church in South Laguna for Betty J.. !:OOJ!lg .• enacted"b)' tM county BOard of
Chilvers of LagWla Niguel who died Sun-Supervisol'!I earl!Cf' thi! year •.
d t her borne · The zone requll"eS construction of any
ai\o:ary will be ~t 7:30 p.m. Tuesday at ·new structures above c!he theoretical
the church. level flood waten oould be-expec~ect to
A naUve of Delta. Colo., Mi'S. €hilvers reach. For that,.reatOO, ~ 7.0lling ·has
had lived in California 47 years, including been called the sUlt law.
16 years in the Laguna area.
She is survived by her widower,
James, and !our sons, Robert of
Massachusetts, William of I d a h o,
Thomas of Texas, and Edward of Laguna
Beach.
Also surv lvin g;s a daughter, Mrs. Joel
Camey, a Laguna Niguel resident.
Other survivors include her mother,
Celia Blackbum of Laguna Niguel ; a
brother, and three grandchildren.
Elephant Destroyed
CINCINNATI (UPI) -l')'ler, a 6,QOO.
po1111d Ringling Brothen Barnum and
Bailey Cirws elephant, was killed Sun-
day night when her trainer said she had
become dangerous. ·The trainer said
Tyler lost her fear or man and lunged at
him several times Sunc!•l'.' afternoon.
UCI Set s Record
As Enrollment
Cli1nbs, to 8,318 ! I
Prelimlnary figures suggest UC Irvine
has set another enrOIIment re.cord as an
estimated 8,318 students began classes
today. Nearly J,000 more were enrolled
this year ·compared to 7,384 attending
classes this time last year.
The increased enrolhnent includes 92
new students ·participating in the Ei-
ended University (ExU) programs in
social_ ecology, teaching of Spanish and
school administration.
These students will altend. classes part
time in their first degree-granting pro-
grams to be offered by the ExU.
-The total enroJlment figure includes in·
terns and residents of the California
College of Medicine woo reported t6
hospital locations in Orange and Los
Angeles Counties.
The Irvine campus student populqtion
tally thus was somewhat lower tfian total
preliminary enrollment figlD'es with 7,592
repor,tiltg':fqc:. classes on campus,
. M"t y~ar; tlle Cimpus"coWlt' was 6,720.
·-· l.feefulg-classes· iodaf were a total of
494 faculty mernbel'!I, of whom 124 are
~ oI Uie college of medictile~
Total "?acuity positions authorized for
t~ ucr campus lncreased by 4.5 posi-
tions for the ·general campus and by 3.5
PoSitions for the medical school, a cam-
pus spckesman said.
While enrollments declined on cam-
puses elsewhere in California and the
U.S., UC Irvine continues its growth as it
has each year since classes began in 1964. •
Growtfi (his year will be absorbed
within classroom bu.ild.ings already com·
pleted. No · new classrooms"' are to open
this year. An administration building due
to be completed in the spring of 1974 will,
however, free additional library space.
Along with the extended university pro-
grams, the only other major change in
campus Ufe is the addition of fi'aternities
and sororities.
Fratemit.ies establishing chapters at
UCI are Beta Theta Pl. Chi Psi, Sigma
Chl and Phi Delta Theta. Sororities are
Delta Gamma, Gamma Ph1 Beta and Pi
Beta Phi.
Until this year, fraternal societies had
been banned from the UCI campus. A
shift in faculty senate pcllcy allowed the
groups to form at-UC! only with the
guarantee lhat they· will be open to any
,student desiring.to partici~te.
Steven L. Kelly, 25, of 111)72 Beach
Blvd., Stanton, was killed when his car
plummeted oft the Santa Ana Freeway
and crashed onto Manchester Boulevard. See~ for SPEED OUEEN
Magazine Ban? Stainless Steel
Fabric Care
Tub 800 Sig n ·Coast Antismut Petition
By TERRY COVILLE
01 ,,.. o.icr 1'1111 SI•"
A •luntingtoo Beach mother wants to
shove sexy magazines like "Playboy ,'1
'·Our' arid "Penthouse" out of local
markets and drug stores and back into
adult book stores or liquor stores.
Patricia Smith, who lives in lhe
southeastern part of town, hM filed a
petition with city hall purported to carry
800 signattires protesting the "open sale
of so many pornographic magazines In
the stores of ou r commtu1ity."
J{er petition goes before the City COun·
cil tonight, during the council 's 7 o'clock
n1ceting, But no action is likely to be
taken.
City Attorney ·0oo Bonfa says his
preli1ninary reaction is lhe city 1133 no
J>OWtt to regulate_ v.·here such maaaiines
are ltOld. •
"The state con trols ';) que.stion of
obscene matter," J)onia a.ya. "But U
councilmen want me rese11rch It
furthe:r for an official opfnion, I can."
Mrs . Smith, an tlcmentary !!Choo\
teacher in Santa Ana, &Bkt today, "You
can enter almost any drug store and
there's a Playboy Magazine. I Ceel I ha ve
d • a right to e:JMer a store and not have to
i:1tt them or have my daughters see
them.
"l was just put out to find bow many
stores had them. The Supreme c.ourt said
this is a community affair. Some c.om-
munities may be a little more outraged
than others.
"l do think it's slgn!Ocant l coold get
800 signatures ln two days. I don't think
we'll ever stamp them oot but I do
believe there ought to be restrictlons on
where such magaziot.s are to1d."
She said she doesn't W811t to ban the
magazines enUrely, but feels lhey should
only be sold In adult bookatorea or liquor
stores where childn!n aren1t frequent
visitors.
She admlttod that sb<. doesn't.know if
the city can do anythin1 aboul the
magazines. ·She said ahe 6led htr petition
to mafe the council aware Of community
feeling.
If no action is taken, Ml'll. 5mith aald
she probably wolt't do any\lllng e"lae for
the moment. -.,
"I'm too bol)' right """ bot 111 retire
at·the end of the year, J might try~ get
some legialaUon, or aomet.bln1 io control
lheae magazines."
~ . -
,
FULL 2 YEAR
PARTS and LABOR
_WARRANTY
• Smooth, Rutt·Proof,
Chip-Proof
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•bl• Fabrlct
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knits cycle ....... __ _
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SHIP .t UllN •WAll'fl• A!'D H Yll IO. u tliwU
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90. DAY USH wmt "~~~~Y+'0
1815 NEWPORT BLVD. Downtown Costa Mesa-Phone 548-7788
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. . • . Saddlebaek·
!f'OL 66, NO. 274, 3 SECTIONS, 32 PAGES ..
•
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'
Today's Final
N.Y. Stoeks
ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA MQNDAY, OCTOBER I, 1973 TEN CENTS
U.S. arket Basket Costs Co·ntinue to Climb . I
..
.. ' ,.,
By 'IM Aueciatod Prtu The AP checked the prices of 13 food
''!be -tbe pocketbook got a and im!ood !toms in 13 clUes Marcil t
tittle tllhter durlng--.:cS.~ber, ac-and bas rechecked at the begino!Dg of
""1ling to an Anoclatod ~et eaclt SU«eedlng mooth, with extra
basket survey releasea: today w~ surveys to gauge the effect of special
abows the family grocery bill wu almoSt~government coolrols.
9 percent higher last month than in· '-Erjces ln general stayed fairly steady
Mareh. dlJrln&',~tember, despite the end to the
Consumers looking f9r bargains found freeze on ~and the imposition of new
continuing decllnes in the price of pork regulations on ~ foods. The total
and eggs. But the decreases were offset market basket bill was-~ in six cities' and
by jumps of several ~nt in lhe price down in seven, with 11\Q§t changes
o( cookies, milk, sugar and butter. -~veraging one percent or so.~
ac
•
SaddlefJaek BosjJital
Administrator
Still Lacking_.
_ The $15 million Saddleback Community He said a Leisure World resident with
Hospital in Laguna Rills , still unopened 30 years of experience in hospital
a.(ter months of c:Onstruction delays and ~ation bas volunteered to be in-
financ:lal and administrative problems, is terim administrator. Wineman would not
wit.bout an administrator today. saY wOO ·tbe man.is.
·Former adminlatrator Len LaBeDa left Originally scheduled to open in June,
Tb.-y, the day tbe hospital's conlnict tbe ' '""-' ......_.t facility wu
with the ~ 1lolpltal ,~ dttl ;.-.-i;ii¥;;"1w• eonl1i<W
(LllS) of 5outhem California !llded· bet"""'-.t!i< board ol trustees and tbe
LaBetla will continuO with LllS, a fi:"l1: LHS retUl!eil iq C4)1C1!llatlon o! hoaptti1 ll]Xll<esman ml. tbe ...-•
l!Oopital treasurer GleM lV'ineme llld '\Ylnemm nld llnanclnc bas been
·the exeeuUve committee Is ~"'°" --.......t-llMeploce-that-lee;..in-the UIS
day to determine when to intervieW "two cancellation, but he would not disclose
or three candidates" for the _post. tbe ....., of the fundl.
· UIS officials clalmed the hospital
Agents Seek
Donald Nixon
·pJwne Tapes
Fnm Wire S.rvlca
Federal agents are weeding through
wlret.ap files to find taped telephone con·
versations between F. Donald Nixon of
'Newport Beach, the President's brother,
.and a former Hughes Tool Company of-
licial charged with lncoine tax evasion.
Attorneys for John Meier, ex-Hughes
sCienU!ic adviser, say their client and
'Nixon were business associates and may
have talked by phone at the lime the
President had lrls brother's line tapped.
' 'Ibey say such a tap may taint
. ·evidence held by the government that
Meier allegedly evaded ta][es on $269,IXKt
·lh penonal income in 19611 and 1969,
earned white buying Nevada mining .
claims for Howard Hughes.
1be day before Meler was arraigned in
'U.S. District Court in Las Vegas, it was
disdooed that tbe President had tbe
Secret S.rvlce tap tbe phone of his
: (S<e DON NIXON, Pqe I) -
or .. 1~ Ceast
• •
Weatller
Considerable cloudiness in the
morning hours along the Orange
Coast Tuesday, clearing to sunny,
INt cooler·sties i n-the afternoon.
Highs in the upper 60s at the beach-
es risin( to tbe mld-70s inland~ . ~.. . .
' INSmE TOD-' Y
"In all hDM•ll/. I don't •eallv
1ee hotD a woman can '°~ that
she 1DG"U tM man 1hc lovtt to
tu preridC'n~., '°~ Nancy Rea-
gan, wife of a leading contender
f01" th< 1976 Republican prtll-
dentlal \omination. See 1torw.
Page~. ...... " ~ L811Hn .. ........... " -• ...,_ • ............. •
boaid bad not kept l!Ngreement to pro-
vide $S 'million in funds to supplement
ctooe lo 110 million bo(rowed from the
management firin.
The hospital board, on the other hand,
said the contract cancellation resulted
because tbe Los Angeles-based firm
wanted a controlling interest on the
board.
School District
Set to Review •
Drug Policies
Saddleback V8ltey l!nified School
District trustees will be asked tonight to
give confinuing revie'!V to board or educa·
tion policies, including one on use of
drugs an4 narcotics in schools.
The board is facing a relatively light
agenda at its 7:30 p.tn. meeting at
Mission Viejo's Los Alisos Intennedlate
School with much of the meeting time set
aaide for ~ of the policies and
several pi:esentations.
PoUcles ocheduled for a tint reading
by t:ustees tonight lndu<le those govern-
ing employe leaves, salary advancement,
ItMU> of scboot day, student behavior
aDd home toacblng.
Diatriet officials say the review was
called for an.r the district was fonD<d
by lllll/icatiocl 1llis year.
1be drug policy, whieh Is due for a sec-
ond reading and adoption tonight,
generally outlines what is considered
drug abuse on campus and what
guidelines must be ·adhered to for use of
prescribed medicines.
In addipoo to the policies1 trustees \viii
hear a presentation on Santiago School's
innovative science program and will be
asked to st:JPP&'t a resolution opposing
-Gov. Reagan's tax reform inillatlve on
the November ballot.
New Pineapple'
Drug Surfacmg·
BERKELEY (UPI) -Narcotics ...,.
have been warned to be wary of "pineap-
ple," a new drug being »Id on the UUclt
marl< et.
. -. .CIM~lflM ,,..,
"
..,~. ,., ... --M ...
The Berl<etey Free Clinic nld Saturday
the dn!i was bell~ to be a com-
bination of htroin Ind ·Ritalin, a
st.lmulant sometimes uted by "speed
f~aks." -u ,_
" Otllll NtotkM • ·-~.i ..... • •.tlrtel-1 u
~-· ..... -M
·--.... ,_ .. -n ·-• ._ ........... ·w..-....,, •
I
0 We don't know wbat it Is for sure and
· would t1A to analyze I> lo !ind oot what
It ia belor. It kills 1Ml111ebocly," ,.Id Joann
Let, the clinic's dn!& coordinator.
I,
Of the total .number of items checked,
36 percent increased in price from Sept. 1
to Oct.. 1; 11 percent went down; 32 per-
cent were unchanged; and 11 percent
"'ere unavailable on one Ol the check
dates.
The picture for the seven-month period
from March 1 to Oct. l was gloomier.
The market basket price was up in every
city except Dallas wbere _ .U declined by
one penny -from $9.43 TO 19.47 fnr 13
available items. The average Increase
was 8.8 percent.
VCI Sets •
Enrollment
Record ·
Preliminary liguru !UgySI UC1!1iine
has set another enrollment record as an
estimated 8,318 stU&!nts began classes
today. Nearly 1,000 more were enrolled
thiS year compared to 7,384 attending
classes this time last year.
11111Dcreol!4~· ~· new students pliUdjiillnti in Uie Ex·
ended'" uruv.Rify J~) ·programs Jn ·
social ocoiaO, -"lni ol Sponisb and --~ ·-~~wrn=-~.tlelld--c1a-... -s-part
time in their first degree.granting pro-
granis to be offered by the ExU. '
11:Je total enrollment figure includes in·
terns and residents of the California
College ol Medicine wbo reported to
hospital locations in Orange and Los
Angeles Counties.
The Irvine campus student population
tally thus was somewhat lower than total
preliminary enrollment figures with 7 ,592
reporting for classes on campus.
Last year, the campt.13 count was 8,720.
Meeting classes today were a total of
494 faculty members, of. whom 124 are
part of the college of medicine.
Total faculty positions authorized for
the UCI campus increased by 4.5 posi-
tions for the gineral campus and by 3.5
positions for the medical school, a cam-
pus spokesman said.
While enrollments declined on cam-
puses elsewhere in California and the
U.S., UC Irvirie continues its growth as it
has each year since classes began in
1964.
Growth I.bis year will be absOrbed.
within classroom buildings already com-
pleted. No new classrooms are to open
this year. An administration building due
to be completed in the spring of 1974 will,
.however, free adtiUooal library space.
Along with the extended university pro-
grams, the only other major change in
campus life is the addition of fraternities
and IOl'Qritles.
Fraternities establishing chapters at
UCI are Beta Theta Pl, OU Psi, Sigma
Oli and Phi Delta Theta. Sororities are
Delta Gamma, Gamma Phi Beta and Pi
Beta Phi.
Until this year, fraternal societies had
been banned from the UCI campus. A
shift in faculty senate policy allowed the
groups to form at UCI only with the
&W!:ranlee that they will be open to any
stui!ent desiring to participete.
On S.pl I, tbe AP found that the
market basket bill in every city was
higher than it had been Marcil I, with in-
creuet averaging sewn per"Cl!Dt owr
tbe six-month period. .
The reasons for the increases were
familiar to .oonsumers : higher wholesale
prirea, •risirig operating costs, increased
worldwide dtmaod for commodities.
Boosts In -0ne item pushed up prices of
other goodl.
On the brighter side · there were
bargains in pork chops and ,eggs, which
0
skyrocketed in mid-August, ~ ~tarted
to drop aa consumers · balked '8\ high
prices,
Pork chop prices declined in nine cities
between Sepl I and Oct. I and •ii prices
dropped in six cities.
Beer prices -which stayed frozen
from the end ol Marcil until S.pt. 10,
prompting shortages and wamlngs of
·future leaps -went, up in a few areas,
but the increases were'nt nearly IO bad
as predicted.
The price of chopped chuck went up'in
six cities, generally less than 10 percent,
'
HARLAN LAMBERT PREPARES FRIEND FOR GUARD DUTY
Hum•n Sentries Have 1 Tendency to Fall Asleep
•Jekyll~ --Hyde~
Germa1i Slieplierds Trained for Job
By CANDAC_E PEARSON
01 1tte 0.111' Piii! Sllff
They're cheaper. Renting s dog costs
$125 to $175 a month, he said.
"You can pet these dogs, play \Vith And their senses of smell, sight and
them, anything -but \VhOO l give the sound is much greater than a person's.
command ·-'tbey'll eat you alive." "ft's amazing what a dog can do," AD GUARANTEES
FAST 'PICKUP'
--Harlen Lambert proved his point. The Lambert enthused.
When you're looking for a car buyer
with "pickup" as fast as your car, try
118.iJy Pilot want ads for quietness; nus
advertiser did:
71 Cootineotal 4 cir. Dk.
green, blk. vinyl ~. AMI
FM stereo. nft whl:., air,
almost n<'f steel betted tn.
Leather 1nt. Must 1<U qu~k
at $3100. ApproK. S4.M mi.
May finance. RURRVI (Ad-
dress, phont no.).
'lbe urgency m6Sage wu received by
readers and response WM fast. For fast
l'tlUlt.1, can the direct line, 642-si78, to
lhe Daily Pilot Classified Advertising
Dopt.
'
German shepherd frisked about the yard, Human guards tend to rail asleep, he
smelling trees, eiploring comers, being said, cooceding th1t while dogs might
petted. t abo doze off -Jheir sharp hearing
Then, as Lambert chained the dog and wakes them up at any disturbant"t.
sofUy spoke a foreign word, it became a Lambert has trained s heph e rd s,
canine Jekyll and llyde, growling, snap-Labradors, St. Bernards, great Danes,
plng and 1unging al a visitor. dobe.rmans, a commodore poodle -and
The dog, along with a few doz.en others, is working on chlhauhau.
practices this &chiwid characer for a liv-Giard dogs -"1.'0rih S3Ql to $000 -are
tng 1t Orange County kennel and Securi· Ulught to hold or detain, but not bite,
ty Patrol in Santa Ana. unless they're attacked fint. Their
Tbey are guard and attack dogs, for training period lasts about si1 wttks.
re nt. lease or &ale to busi~s or Attack OOgs -worth from $800 to
private homes conee.rned about break-almost $1,000 -take the olfcnslvc on l • command co1)i. 113
Dogs. said Lambert, who has owned Thctr tratnlng take! 12 to 14 weeks. Not only do they go through agitation aod
the bosin&M for about three yean, art obedience leuons, bu\ they have to
better guards than pcoplt . (Stt SENTRIES, P11ge 21
,. •
;
and was down in three cities. The price
was unchanged in three cities and
chopped chuci: was unavailable in one.
The AP survey covered Albuquerque,
N.J\f.: Atlanta. Bo6ton, Chicago, Dallas,
Detroit, IAs Angeles, J\1iami, New York,
Philadelphia, Providence, R.I ., Salt Lake
City and Seattle.
The cheek list included: pork chopa,
eggs, butter, cookies, chopped chuck,
frozen orange juice, oof!ee, paper towels,
peanut butter, detergent , fabric &oftener.
tomato sauce, milk, all·be~f !ranks and
sugar.
e
Camp_aigil
Funds' Fate
Due Study
•
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SACRAMENTO (AR) S.cretary OL.--.l-f
at~und G. Brown Jr .. said today
he v.ill lnv,estigate a $250,000 payment of
Nllon ~~gn_.{uods to tbe President's
for:mer personal a~.
The paytneflt to Herbeft-W~ Kalmbach
of Newport Beach was incliiaed ln a
report released by President Nixon's re.
election committee in W a.slUn&too and
Sacramento Friday.
Brown, a Democrat, said the report
does not show what happened to the
-m<lley.
_Brown said be: bas~ln contact w!lh
--KahnbadJ-for Rveral-months regarding
"another Nixoo campaign matter'' and
will extend lhat investigation to include ..
the $2SO,W>.
An aide-10 Brown said ttie other matter
was the disposition of surplus funds f;om
the 1968 NiJ:on election campaign.
The aide, Deputy Secretary Of State
Thomas QuiM, said Brown's office
already bas turned some information it
gathered lo Archibald Cox, ·the special
Watergate prosecutor.
The report also showed that Roger
Greaves of Glendale received $4.000 from
the Nixon committee to "gather in-
formation on Sen. Muskie," Brown
disclosed today.
Brown said "Greaves has infonned my
staff that bis activity actually consisted
of harassment aod picketing" of ap.-
pearances by Sen. Ermund Muskie (D-
Maine ), in California, New Hampshire
and Florida. -
The Nixon committee released the
repoi:t in responSe to a suit by Common
Cause. The report shov.·ed the campaign
(See KALMBACH, Page %)
* * * Kalmbacli Silent
On Cliarges He
Paid Ulasewicz
Newport Beach attorney Herbert W.
Kalmbach continued bis silence today on
affairs of the Committee to Re-elect the
President.
President Nixon's personal attorney
"'as unavailable for comment on an
allega tion by CRP sources that he paid a
forme r New York policeman to conduct
secret investigations on behalf of the
White House.
The officer, >.nthony J. Ulasewicz,
received $51,918 in 1971 {or his private in -
vestigatio~s, the CRRP said Friday.
Ulasct"'ICZ testified. before the Senate
\\1atergate Committee he was placed on
I~ White: House staff to investigate the
private hves of President Nixon's op-
ponents and other political figures.
The CRP, in a report filed W'ith the
House of Repfesentattives for finances
· up to April 7, 1972. said Ulase"'iC'2 rcceiv ..
ed the mone)· from a trust fund kept by
·Kalmbach, who was Nixon's number two
fundraiser under Finance Committee
Chainnan Maurice smns.
The CRP said the money was paid out
ur:der the headings ' ' G e n e r a 1
Investigative Services" and "ExpenM!'I."
The report also revealed tha t Sevmour
Frieden, a reporter, was id $1,,780 for
"Survey-services and expenses."
Fritden tritvt'ied with Sen. George S.
J\1cGovern, the Democratic PresldenUal
nominee, and was paid by ~turray
· ChoOner, for mer N.cwport Beach resident
and long-lime Nixon political operatlYe. •
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2 DAI L'!' PILOT IS Mon~y. October 1. 1973
I
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End Possibly in Sight
For Bacli Bay Control
By JOHN ZAUJiR
Of IM Olily Pllol •ttll
SAN FRANCISCO -There "-'as cautious optimi.mt here Friday among
members of the Upper Newport Bay Field CommiUee that the end may at
last be in sight to the struggle for public ownership of Back Bay.
"I feel we accomplished more here today than we· [.
have in the 13 months we have ~ t~etht11' as a com·
nUttee:," said Ed Smith, a member of the field commi t-.
tee aod supervisor of the pivision of Refuges, Bureau of
Sports Fisheries and Wildlife. "At last we really seem to
be getting some place," .U:te fed~! official said.
·>--Most officials probably wouldn't have expressed them·
selves as enthusiastically as Smith did but there did seem
to be groun~ for optimism :
-FIELD COJ\IMJTTEE members said what land they tALL•Jt
want to acquire and ho)!' it wants to use that land with greater precision
than ever before. -........._
A slate department of F'isb and Game official says he has unofficial
coosensus among the dozen agencies ~~sented on Field Committee on a plan
for acquiring and managing the Back Ba~. ~
-ORANGE COUNTY supervisors Robert Battin. Ralph Clark, and Ronald
Caspers. who constitute a majority on the five-man Board of Supervisors, said
Friday they are willing to cooperate with the efforts of the Department of Fish
and Game.
"What was needed for some time was a lead agency that was4Villing to
be the quarterbaCk M the whole effort," said Caspers. a Newport Beach su-
pervisor who attends Field Committee meetings although he is not officially a.
member. .
"Jim McConnick from Fish and Game .seems like be will be that quarter-
back," Caspers continued. "So the best we in Orange County can do it punt the
ball up to the state level and let McCormick run with it."
Caspers surprised 90me members O:f the field committee Friday when he
. said, "We in local government like to try to handle all local.issues.
"But sometimes we are,a little too close to the situation to do the job
right."
THE APPEARANCE that all agencies are now pulling in the sapie dir~
tlon does not mean, however, that the efforts to achieve public ownership to
Back Bay is over. .
-suirervlsor BatUn, of Santa-Ana, wbo bas a reputation in some clrtles as
a foe of the Irvine Company, says he still plans to ask I.he Board of Super-
visors to fi le ,suit against the Irvine Company to try to prove that the county
really owns three undeveloped Back Bay isJands that are now claimed by the
Irvine Company.
In a dispute over those islands and other properties in Upper Bay, the
Irvine Company also allegedly owes the county several million dollars in Wk
paid property ·taxes. ·
In addition, Orange County government has filed a prescrlptlve rights
suit agail1$t The Irvine Company, claiming public right over virtuually all un..
developed parts of Back Bay.
ANY OF THESE ISSUES has the potential to stall indefinii.ly the eUort
to aquire for the public Back Bay properties owned by the company.
But Jim McCormick, chief planning officer for the Department of Fish and
Gai;ne, observed, "At least now everyone seems to be working ~ether. That's
the most important thing."
The apparent agreement of Orange County representatives to go along with
McCormick's etforfS-was viewed as the most lignlficant development.
Supervisor Clark said he .~ acting because, "l believe, that the fUPe for
JCtiOD is now. l propo1e th4t we seperate the talkers from the doers.'
---·A JP)>t_.n -t1r;1:1arl(made a point Friday -that-Clark's-posido1F bad
nothing to do with charges from the Orange County Grand Jury earlier that
tbe Board of Supervisors was foot-dragging' on the Back Bay.
"This position has bee.n in the works for weeks," the spok~ .said. -
stfi.ERVISOR CASPERS -who was ~ved from the Field Colillnlttee
at tbe instigation of Clark and Battin, who then replaced him on the commit·
tee -nevertheles!! maintained that the Grand Jury criticism had an import-
ant effect on Clark and Battin.
"They are acting in direct response to Grand Jury criticism that they
ought to get moving. Now I hope we can keep moving," Caspers said.
Beach Mother Protests
Sale of Sex Magazines
By TERRY COVILLE
Of Ill• D•llY Pllol Iliff
A Huntington Beach mother wants to
shcve sexy magazines like "Playboy,"
"Oui" and "Penthouse" out of local
markets and drug stores and back into
adult book stores or liquor stores.
Patricia Smith, who lives in the
southeastern part of town, has filed a
peUtion with city hall purported to.carry
800 signatures protesting the "open sale
of so many pornographic magazines in
lhe stores of our community."
Her petition goes before the City Coun·
OU.NOi COAST ..
DAILY PILOT
ell tonJght, during the council's 7 o'clock
meeting. But . no action is likely to be
taken.
City Attorney Don Bonra says his
preliminary reaction Is the city has no
power to regulate where such magazines
are sold
"The state controls the question of
obscene matter,'' Bonfa says. "But if
councilmen want me lo -research it
further for an official opinion, I can."
Mf'i Smith, an elementary school
teacher in Santa Ana, said today, ''You
can enter almost any drug store and
there's a Playboy Magazine. J feel I have
a right to enter a store and not have lo
sec them or have my daughters see
them.
"I was just put out to find how manv
stores had them. The Supreme· Court said
this is a community affair. Some com-
munities may be a little more outraged
than others.
RtJosevelt
Has Faith
In Brother
" By L. PETER KRIEG
Of 1111 Dfiltt Plltl l"'ff
Fonner congressman James
Roosevelt, a Newport Beach resident,
said today he has full faJth that his
~tber •• Eillot, will be cleared o! charget,
that he tried to arrange the assassination
ol Bahamas Premier Lynden. Pindling.
"1 really have nothing else to say other
than I hope the committee wllt give him
a fair be..aring," Roosevelt said. .
Roosevelt's brother, a former Mlaml·
Beach mayor, met privately with bis at·
torneys Suncfay in Miami to prepare for a
Senate subcoinmfttee bearing Wednes-
day,
The subcommittee beard testimony
early in September from Louis "the Doc-
tor" Mastriana that Elliot Roosevelt of-
fered him '100,000 to assassinate Pend-
ling. He said a second inan, Patsy
Lepara, also was involved.
11My reason for coming to Miami is to
meet with my attorneys here and at-
tempt to reconstruct all that I did during
the time when these charges were leveled
against me,'' Roosevelt said.
He said Ire would "completely refute
all the fantastic fabrications that have
been made by this ex-convict Mastriana
and"other ex-convicls as to my dealings
with them ."
Roosevelt declined to detail charges
made secretly to the committee later by
Le para.
Suboommittee Chairman Henry M.
Jackson CD-Washington) also has declin-
ed to discuss the charges.
Roosevelt speculated that Lepara may
have made his charges be c au s e
Roo&evelt bad backed out of a business
dea1 because of Lepara's criminal
background.
Roosevelt arrived iD Miami Saturday
with.hls wife,_Patricia, from his home in
Lisbon,. Portugal.
l'roaoPagel
KALMBACH. ••
raised more than $60
1
million over-all. It
accounts for campaign fund raising back
to Jan. 1,. 1971.
Quinn said-the committee previously
agreed, in negotiations with Brown, to
provide i,nformation. on fund raising
before 1971. .
Now, Quinn said, the committee's at-
torney's have told him they do·not agree
with a st.ate attorney general's opinion
Uiai--theY must provtde-·wuU-lnfotmatiOn
to cailforni8? · ·
NegotiatiorfS will C9Qtinue, Quinn said,
and Brown may file a lawsuit if the ad-
-ditiooaJ fund-raising information ls not
disclooed.
Quinn said Kabnbach look custody of
$1 million to $2 million after the end-of
the 1968 campaign and depo6ited it in
banks In Newport Beach and Los
Angeles.
"Wbat happened to that Is a lllY8lerl',"
Quinn said-
l'l'OtllPagel
DON NIXON •••
brother's home and business ln Newport
Beach.
In revealing tbe tap, It was alleged the
President f~ed poss l b 1 e en1-
barrassment from his brother's financial
dealings.
In response to allegations by Meier's
attorney's the U.S. Justice OepJrt,ment
has agreed to search its records for
transcripts of any conversations between
Donald Nixon abd Meler.
"We are simply agreeing with defense
attorneys that we will voluntarily supply
the de!endant witP information not
whether or not suctt tapes exist," said
U.S . Attorney Devoe Jieaton.
"If anything turns up, it does not mean
\\'e have agreed tO give them the tapes,''
he added.
The start oI Meier's trial was delayt'd
from Nov. 12 to Jan. 7 to allow time for
the I.ape search .
Donald Nixon was reportedly out of
to\\11 today and not available for com-
n1ent on I.he latest developments.
Ti. Or....,. C..11 0...tLV Pll..Ol , wlllo ...,ICll
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a.ell. l""'iMl~lttlad ""' S..n (~/
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tdlllon 11 _,,....., S..1urd1vt llld s-1.,..
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11•1.t d N. W11d
PralOfftl tlld P""'!llf\ ...
J1c~ It, C11rl1y
Pants Upheld
'ikf '""'"'°' '"°" Oer.1111 Mt...,...
Tho'"'' Kttwil
1:·111i.•
The1•111 A. M11rphi~•
Mtfllfl"I !d!IOf"
Clt1rf11 "4. loot •lcht rd ·,., Ntll
A•"!..,I M-Jlfll IEdll•• .......
ci'.1t M .. t: lJO Wnt •t'f $1t"HI
Ht-1 a .. dt: ~ N-! llou1<1¥•tll L...,.._ ll•d•1 m ,~I A"""ur. H""!lnt'°" llt.Cll; 17')1 llt.C. ll<lult¥.,d
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.. d!Mtleflt·U_M INl'll!I~.
Use of Flag 'Symbolic Speecli'
DENVER (UPI) -It is no more a crime to wtar rp American
!lag sewn to the seat of one's pants than to paste a flag decal in a car
window, the Colorado Supreme Court ruled todat · ·
The high court called such action "symbolic speech" and said it
wasi>rotected under the First Amendment It overturned the Boulder
District Court conviction ol David Patten Vaughan, charged with
desecrating the flag .
"Just as some citizens paste nag decals on their car windows to
Indicate their support ol certai n political phllosophles, defendant
adorned the s@at of his jeans with a flag to indicate hi s contempt for
those things which the flag symbolizes," !he court said.
Justice Donald E. Kelley, who wrote the decision, said: 11The
ideas expressed by defendant's Conduct may seein to some to be
juvehlle and lnartocultte, ind perhaps his actions are subject to ln-
1erpretaUons other than we have given, but Ibis does not strip bis
speech of constitutional protection."
I •
Hot Jewelry
In Poor Box?
The folks al Oir t.iilY ol l'illaii
Catbotlc .tllurdl ..... ~
-.Id nu, lo -that the l"9
'pl-ol jewelry -depooltod In a st. Vlncenl dePu con..iton bor were a gradous gilt by on --·--· Bo\t the Cultured pe~ ne<klace
and soJJd gold pendant found among
the -donations over the .weekend
seem a bit too valuable.
Msgr. Harry Trower pilon<d
·PQlice early Jn the weekend ·~er he
-had. '!}e .two Items appraJled1 by a
local Jeweler and learoed. UW the
Items were worth at least $150.
The cleric"'!£aied the two pieces
were stolen. Det~ll'vcs are check·
iilg to see if the monaigoor's bunch
ls oorrect.
. ' So Far, Just 1
Girl Competing
In Fire Contest
I
Is· Securitv . ~ 7;
En·riel..i-n« ' ;'~1
' -<
Airliites?
I·"' ..
BY GEORGE Ll!ll!>-4L
'
Of ... °""' '"" ..... . The f .. cllarged lo ...... atcy jackers
from JqlUmato air travelers may be
enrlchl'IC alrltnea, airport olllcllla charg· td todl)'. I. •
Orana• County Airport Administrator
Robert. Bi'eshahan eaid today 22 cenb of
the 2S cents each passenger pays as a
securtty suroharge goes to pay costs of
providing screening 0-l'I. •
However, a S.~ento ~ official ch~es &hit airllneli reap ai mticb u $1
n'lilUOn excess eaCb month •from the
securit)l 1111tchorg .. ,tl)ey <0llecl. ·
Bresilallan tJplalnOd hmr the ll)'Slein
work!. Airlines, with approval of the
Civil Aeronautics Board, collect the 25
~Ls from each passenger who buys a
ilCk~tofly_ · each month bill lhe airlines
foe the t of ae:curJty _.u..,, Jn.
eluding the 5.tar:t~ of otncen-assigned.
"Obviously i~es 8 certain' twmber
of men regard!~ how many · people
If no more applicants submit names are enplaned," Bresn$an said.
loi the "Miss Fire Prevention" contest At smaller airpor1:5~ the coSt per
sponsored by the Exchange Club of the .. passenger is likely to be Jllgher.
Saddleback Valley, the winner will be a "I'd imagine that at the biuer airports where costs are spread ovif, a'-~ter
shoo-in. number of passengers the cost "Rer-
Capt. Bruce Turbeville of the Laguna person might he -as low as 17 or 1 8
'Hills Fire Station said only one girl .has c~hts," Bresnahan speculated. '
applied for the' contest, which WiD be James K. Carr, president o( the
judged at 7 p.m. Wednesday at Mission Airporl Operators C.ouncil International
Viejo High SchOol. said the .airlines are pocketing up to n.6
"These girls don't know what they1re percent of the take from the 25-cent
missing," Capt. Turbeville said.· "Last charge.
year our ruitner-up married one of our Carr also heads the Sacramento
firemen." Sandy Beonig8dorf is now Metropolitan Airport. ,
Mrs. Gary Fola c4 Mi!sion Viejo. Carr said ACM;I, a WashJngj<ia,, D.C.·
· Appll~UI mult~·$gle; between 16 based organization. repfesenUJll airp)rts
and 21 years old,· and live in El Toro, handling conunercia1 pameQgen, .had
Laguna Hi)b, or Mission Viejo. found in some cases aJ.rUnes wiibheld
nie Queen will receive a trophy and.a reimbursement for tbe1cosf Gf1anu-ety-
niinimum $51;! Avings bond. J;acb run-jacking measures. .. . • ·
neruP will be given a trophy, and the Carr has urged CAB Olalnhan Robert ~een and her court will reign at all ac-D. Timm to act immectlately to end
hvities of Fir? Rrevention..Week Ocl .a to "possible earner misuse Of revenues
13. ' -....... from the boa.id-approved 25-cent aecuri~
' Anyone intei:este<f 1-s-....~ to -mail surcharge." ·~. J
handwritten apPllcation.s sta_ti.ng age, He urged the-.cA'B to not a e
home address, phone . nt,µnber1 ~ and further fare Nkes unUl .enues
reasons they ate qualified to 'The Ex· generate<! ?Y the security s is
change Club, care . oC ,Ed Pells&ier, 23361-....... channeled mto payment of rt lieuri-
. El Toro Road, No. 203, El" Toro, 928.10. _ ty coatlJ.
Late. applicants may "bring their ap-~
plicants in persoo. to the Laguna llllls • ~
Fire Station, Tur~~~ saict Le1$nre " Ofld
-. ' .. (~-~,~; ... ..........._ ·--
. FmsP.· ,_ -' · · >. 'Gr • ._· , to,. H•-·~·-. -. .,, .. I ,... . , TtUi§! • I·" ' ~' SE~ 'I ~ ·.1 • • i . ~ • . . . , ,
. y ~-· becorne~mul ~~ • --· "" .. · .. • •
The etta '·-"""*' ift 'tn A ' --' ».• <-.::· ..
Gel'Jnan·ea· • · 'don'tmt'llny w111:r:;::J=.o~~
slip-ul"· 1.don't wam any (~lb) " ·Wedoeoda,y In Ltlmre Wcrld's aidll!,,~ ~din-~ an: a~ w~,.' said ·3 auditorium, Uauna·.HllJ&. .. · ~ -
bi!rt .wlio put lh-~W Y""'l oo· IJ>l . ta . Navy Captain E~Jlle!Vln MOOR Jr! will
·Ana JlOll<Oe. force after becoming . l"l't speak, ·spml!i'ed by. llJe. Lagmia , Hills
black officer, · ~ Chapter ol the MiJitar1 Order of World
The most imJl:O~nt ,,thing ·ah attack Wars, an · offtcers' jroup.
do.~ has to learn 1s 'no. / , Ti4ets may be ~ without
If you agitate a dog,.,~ he doesD t charge by calling Lawrecce Parks,.141·A
know when to tum 9tt, Lambert ex· AVenida Majorca Laguna HUI•
plains, "he'll chew ruebody ~P·" . · The ewJt is ~ as a saI~te to all
Lambert stresses this angle in .train1ng prisoners of war. Vice Admiral David
because tbe dogs are often family pets. Richardson, former commander Of. the
In fact, Labradors .and St. Be_rnar~ are sixth fleet, will introduce Moore.
known to be fmly doclle, frtend.ly Assisting in the program wUI ·be John
breeds. , Ehrle, a former show business penooali-St. Be:nards retain what they re ty, Dorothea Elcbenlaub, a soprano, and
taught, satd Lambert, aJ!d Labradors are Father Ladislaw Parker formerly of "sharp and more agreSS1ve than German Hwigary '
Shepherds when trained." For di;ectl<m to the clubhouse stop al "Ylth the help ot two handl~rs, Lambert Gate 3 off ?i.1oolton Parkway. ' dehver.s each rented dog mghtly or on
weekends to the businesses when they
close for the evening. The dogs are then
picked up in the morning and sleep dur·
ing the day.
If a business uses a dog regularly,
Lambert rotates it with other dogs so no
one person can make friends With the
canine guards. -
Lambert has lost only two dogs in
three years to poisoning. The dogs are
trained not to aCCi!pt food. __,
Blacks Renounce U.S.
· TEL AVIV (UPI) -Seventy.five Btll-
styled "Bla<ik Hebrews," laced with
possible deportation from Israel, went to
the . Anlmean .JlmbOuy. today to ,..
ooince their U.& clltzenahlp. Embassy
officials said they could handle cnly' lour
or the blacks a day.
•
NAMED TO NEW . POST
Councllnwin C1rl Kymlfi
K ymla Na!JWd
To County
·' .
Water Post
Newport Beach City Councilman Carl
Kymla has been appointed as th'.e fifth
representative of the Orange . County
Municipal Water Dislrict oil\. t n e
MetropoUtan Water District Boo'?a or
Directors. .(
Kymla, who is , also manager of: the
Moul"'1 lfiguel Waler District, was
d>Qoen from a .field o!JW!er.lalndidales
for t h·e MWD post. He',will .be the
youngest director ott tbe board a(39.
'l1ie MuniciRSl Water Dlstrf'ct..._ was
granted a fifth dlrector~p last mon~
when ·113 assessed valuation bit $3.5
billion, or 12.5 percent of the tot.al MWD
valuation.
Kym1a is also chairman. of the Orange
County Water Management Agency, a
member of the board of the Southeast
Regional Reelamation Authority and
cllainnan of the Aliso Water Manage-
ment Author~tf. . ~
• Kymla 's background !or the MWD job_
was termed "Jdeal" by Municipal Board
Chairman Clem McCulloch_
McCuUoch said the addition of •a fifth
munlclP31 representative on tliO MWD
board · will "give murucipat a 'much
-~. Vmce~1iJLtbe 1 ' Uon Or future ·~;;.,';?',,,"! " "I.'"" • -·~~ poll~ fOr ttS water
users is ~ped in speCial . board oom-
mlttees and Kym!a is expected iO take on
duUes with several or the m ,
McCullough addpl.
"'-. Curtis to· Heatl
Viejo Boosters.
John · Curtis was elected president or
tbe MJS!lon Vleio Athletic Booster Club
at the first meeting or the year.
He will be assisted by Elmer Benson,.
first vice-president; Fred Ridge, &eeond
vice-president; Mrs. Art Haus u er,
treasurer; and Mrs. George White,
secretary.
The club, which aids and supports all
high sChool athletic programs, meet s
weekly at 7:30 p.m. Wednesdays.
~ore infonnation may be obtained by
calling Doug Wheat at 830-3413.
One of the year's activities will be
"Dad's Night1' for. fathers of football
players. :Oads of . freshmen will-be the
first to be honored at the,.game against
Irvine's Uolveialty~High School. -
See~ for SRfED OUEEtl . ,.
Stainless Steel
.'.\ Fabric Care
Tub
FULL 2 YEAR
PARTS ancl LABOR
WARRANn
e Smoolh, Rutt·Proof,
Chip-Proof
e ldul for •II Wash-
-1bfe P11brlu ·
e L11t1 the Llf•tlm•
of theV('11Mr
PWS •••
a washable
knits cycle __ .,. __
,., ,_.,. fflf w ...... bltt.. ... .. ,;. ., ..... .......... ....,. ~ --... "!" '"' ....... , YOU CAN m A "''• ,u .......... :
AND -l'Ol Al LOW AS-
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•
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•
Honii~gion Beaeh
Fountain ·Valley
VOL. 66. NO. 274, 3 SECTIONS, 32 PAGES
.
I .·
Today~s .Final
N~Y. Stocks
ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA MONDAY, OCTOBER I, 1973 TEN CENTS
..
·auntington May Blaze Ne~ ·Trails Tonight
' . . I
• i
l
ICAll IN Mtu:S
w))
• ••
,
•• •
Htmlington Beach City Councilmen will
be asked tonight to pave the way tor 28
miles of. new recreational trails. .
M"'t of the proposed trails, 23 miles
worth, involve bicycle lanes and paths
which will cost ~ctty $129,000 and could
be l>ulll by "March.
1be other. five miles will be 1'\IMing
paths !or Jocg ..... Two trails are planned
in the new central park and one in
Ediscin Park.
The nmning trails will cost $5,000 and
••
should be ready wben hoth parb open ta
the public, perhaps ne1:t swnmer. The
running trails will follow aiphalt paths
and lawn areas alrtady in the parb.
Trail markers will tell runners the
di.sLaoce each· quarter mile.
No specific equeotrian trails will be
present.ed tonight, but COUDCilmen will be
asked to reserve $1,000 for future recom-
mendations. Staff planners are asking for
a 90-day study .f.cr determine ttie future of
equestrian usea in Hwi:Ungton Beach.
Beach Mom on March
If -coundlmen agree with tonight's
trails recommendations, they will ask the
city attorney to write an ordinance
outllning rules and regulations for the
bicycle lanes -·wbich will becOme ·an of·
• ficial pan· of. the city street system.
Counctlmen will a1ao authorize a total
e>p<nditure .., trails of $136.000, if they
approve the proposals. Half the $138,000
comes fr.pm the city treasury and the
other .half is a federal Land and Water
Conservation grant.
Sex BoOk crusade
By TERRY COVIl.LE
Of .. oalb' '"°' Sltff
A Huntington Beach mother wants to
-. shcve sexy ~agazines like "Playboy,"
"OUl" and "Penthouse" out of l~al
markets and drug stores and back into •
adult book stores or liquor "Stores.
munities may be a little more outraged
than others.. .
"I do think It's significant I coold get
800 signa tum in two days I don"! think
we'll ever s.tamp them out but· I do
believe there ought to be restrictions on
where such magazines are sold. ..
Sile admltt.d that she c1oesni know U
the city ~can do anything about the
magazines. Sbe sald she filed her.petition
. to make the council aware of community
feeling. ' _
If no action is takm, Mrs. Smith said
she probably won't do anything else for
the moment
The ti-ails proposed tonight repretent
the first significant ' phase of the com~
prehensive " I32·mile recn!ational tra1is
system authorized by the city council in
June 197%. The overall plan calls for an
ultimate 60 miles of bicycle. trails, 80
l}liles of jogging trails and 12 miles of
equestrian trails. . ~ far, the city has built five milet of
bicycle lanes, primarily connecting the
Santa Ana River trail ra county project)
(See NEW TRAILS, Page!.
•
flMASI t UNDll Lt.NO 6
WATUCONS.OlANT. -,
-O.C.•l.000 CONT1lOl Dllllta
.'JIAtl COMPl.tt'IO t/n. •
J"iltricia Smith, who lives in the
Southeastern part of town, has filed a
petition with city hall purported ·to carry
800 signatures protesting the '!open sale
of so many pornographic magazines in
the stores of our community."
She said she doesn't want to ban the
magazines entirely, but feels they should
only be S<Jld 1n adUJt bOOkstOres~or liquor
stores where children aren't frequent
visiton. .f ,,
"I'm too busy right now but if I retn
-atthe end-of"the-year;-1 migb\-try-.to-get-
sonle legislation, or something to control
these magaUnes."
•••' '"'411 II WITMORANGI COUNTY
ltCY'CU TIAH:OUNT. (CCTY WILL IUllDI.
...-•• 11uno r10M COUNTY GIANT.
0000 "'9CtflC COMT MtONWAT1 ilAc:M UNK
UNOll ITUD'f Joa .... SI JI.
Her petition goes before the City Coun·
cil tonight, during the council's 7 o'clock
meeting. But no action is likely to be
take~.
3,800 to Be qatzzed
-Do J:ou -Like-KOCE?, ,OMrr Plttt ~ MAP INDICATES STATUS OF BIKE TRAIL PLANS
Huntington 8-ch Workint on Recrutlon1I Network
Ci ty Attorney Don Bonla says his
preliminary reaction is--the city has no -
power to regulate where such magazines
a re sold. ·
"The state controls ,the question of
obscene .matter,•• Bon.fa says. "But if
l'\"md~' wQl"" ill-~ •Ii, fiirther tor an offl'Clll ~. I cail." ~ui;12e~ :1£illE~ Out ~ • ~art of A.,,.ls . . .-':' .. _. Mrs. .Smtih; ... -tary school
teacher.Jn Sama ADI, aa~ today, "You
can .enter almost 'lf!t dnig store and
there's~ "laYl!OI Magazine I feel I-have
a right -to enter-a store and Dot have to
see them or have my daughters see
them.
' . ....
KO\:E:TV ~--~ ciunty•o fl" I ·v\1*1: i .-.... lhl .._:iop.. ...,. educa~ tele#slOn staUon, If,~. sli!end' J>x tile smaller j>llleb and tO its-llrst-~rant:.::_:_~ --_ _:_ -~~ w';lt.! ~J!li!YJeril~~ -·rGreen .V alky Rousing More than 3,000 Oi'ange County .ei:RI_~ .U:tt w t1!eir _popylatwn
residents are being contacted b y segment..
~ Tract Awaits Ruling _"I!'~ just put out to tmd how many
stores had lhem. The Supreme Coutt said
thiS is a community affair. Some com-
telephooe Ibis montli for their evaluation Finally, studenls of the Coos! c.m.
of Channel 50, Owned and operated by the munity College District will get their say.
Coast Community O>Uege District. Selected students will be interviewed and
Th!,_ratingS, conducted by Channel SO wiU maintain a diary of televi!iioo
in cooperation with the· Corporation for course Viewing during the aeinester.
!Fountain VaJI~ city officials are still
'ffaiting for a IOurt order which rouJd
}tip them temporarily delay a proposed
· alldition-George Holstein!a--Green
Y.alley housing traci.
:11 the Fourth [);strict Court of Appeals
d>es not stay a previous order from the
Orange County Superior Court, coun.
cllmen-will have to approve Holstein'•
ttact map for 49 homes during their
SOUion Tuesday night.
:aty Attorney Tom Woodruff said today
~ expects Q) get the ruling before
'l)leaday's council meeting.
"Woodruff said he is seeking a
Sllperseding order.on behaH of the city so
tbat councUm:en will not have to approve
tl)e controversial addition to Green
"(.alley WlUl an appeal of the case can be
heard. :nie city is appealing the ruling last
;\~gust by Superior Court Judge Ray·
qmnd Thompson in which be ordered the
clty to approve the finaJ tract map
without the $39,000 tn sJ)ecial fees coun-
cilmen levied on it.
:intese fees were levied because ffol·
slein is seeking a plamied development
(PD) zone for the tract with an average·
lot size of 6,200 square feet. Minimum re-
quirement for an R-11.0ne is 7,200 square
f~t. but PD zones are allo.wed when
~velopers provide extra open space or
P,Prk land. '
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Coast
·' •
Weather . . • Considerabl~ cloudiness in the
morning hours along the Oraqge
C.oast Tuesday, clearing to SUMy,
¥ but cooler aides in -the-afternoon.
' Highs in the upper 60s at the beach-
• .. rising lo the mJil.70s Inland. . . • • INSlltE ToD/\ Y
"In all hone1t11, 1 do1i't reaUu see how a woman ccn soy that
she wants t~e man she loves to
be president~ 11 80t/I Nancy Rea--
aan, wife of a leadhtg contender
for the 1976 RtpubUcan prts~
de1ttiGJ nomination. See storv,
POiie .26. .
IMff"' II L.M. •tff It Ca~fttlt!I I
t , Cl•nlflH 21•tt CtllllCt It CNU~ I, ·011llt MlflClt I •••tan .. ,..,. ·• I "terlll!Wl'lttll ts ,Ill-tt..11 Mol'tK-M
• '
Public Broaacasting, comes exactly one KOCE currently broadC3Sls courses
Holstein 's plan does not call for either Car Theft Ends year after the station began beaming out which permit students.to take up to nine 110 councilmen levied the special fees'. from · f -•'-red' which they had used once belore 00 a di!-programs its.-studios at Golden uruts o ~e c 1t by watching West College. television at ,bolile. ferent·clevtlcpmeoi~ -1"=-H ,!--.b--..JI----Froject-Directo!'-Rich Briptman ol1ho ·Dl'-:-Mgtilinan eijiedS_lo_ make tliO
But Holstein took them lo .court over .tn rngn-speeu Coast Community College District ex· results of the four-phase study public hy ~dg~: wrch ~'d11%~ ~ Ch Sh . ~=~~ed the motivation 1or tlbe survey I.his June 30, 1974. . ci~y to approve tt.e developer's plans 88e, OOting "KOCE is a new station, having gone
without the extra fees. on the air in November 1m. It serves an
Meanwhile, the planning commission Huntington Beach police today are in· area part· M which-previously was not
has initiated legislation to repeal all PDs vestigating a car theft over the weekend served. by public television, and part of
and to rezone Holstein's 10-aCre site to R·· that included a h.igh speed chase and which was in the fringe signal area of
l. shooting. KC_ET in l..()s Angeles. . _
Those propGsals will also be brought to As ~as officers know, no one was in· ''The signal area ol KOCE, primarily
the coµncll Tuesday night. jiJred in either the chase or the shooting, Orange County, is one of the fastest
In addiUon, Holstein will ask that the but the owner of the car suffered some growing areas in the nation and contains
city waive its regul_ar park fee of $400 minor cuts and bruises in a fight over many communities served by cable
per lot . That fee is assessed each her car. operations. It thus provides a fertile field
developer in the city unless the developer Police said Joyce Ann Alexander, 32, of laboratory for studying the building of an
provides recreaUonal•or park facilities 17282 Avalon .Lane, had gone to Hun-audience for public television."
himself.~ tington Center Saturday night and left as The research project contains four
Holstein's attorney, Tom Thompson the center-closed a~ about 9 p.m. basic parts.
has previously said his client will file ~ She told officers that as she was about First, the survey will as.ieSS the size
suit to seek the overthrow of the stand-to pull out of her parking space, a man and composition of the KOCE audience.
ard park fees. fo~ his way into her car, telling her be It is estimated that of the 3,000 persons
Held in Dmg Sale
SAN BERNARDINO (AP) -Two
Oregon men were arrested Sunday after
1hey· allegedJy atttmpted lo aell 6,000.000
amphetamine tablets valued ;it an
estimated '60,000, authorities s a i d .
M~ L .. Paul8001 26, of Salem and
Michael Kelly. 27, Lin<oln City, were
being held in San Bernardino County Jail
in lieu of $7,500 bail, a spokesman said.
Electio1i Day
Signup Nears
Saturday is the deadline tor Hun-
tington Beach residents to register
to vote Jn the Nov. 6 city charter
change eJectlon.
City cleri< Alicia Wentwonh says
~ypne who ·.bu moved, changed
names, or cllil nof Wte tn:"the ta:it
general election, must register.
Residents · wbo are eligible can
reglster at the Huntington Beach
city clerk's office through 5 p.m.
Friday, or at ~ county ~egtstrJr
of Voters office, 1119 Ea 1 t
ChestniJt, Santa Ana, lhrough 5.
p.m. Saturday.
A state election is scb.eduled Nov,
6 on Governor Reagat1'1 tax reform
plan. Voters in Huntington leach
will also decide whether they want
their city C1erk;-rcity atb!f'lley-aod
treasurer elected by the people, or -41
•PJl?lntcd by the city oouncil.
,.
•
had a knife and was going to kill her. contacted, 300 will qualify as rqutar
Miss Al~der (ought off her attacker, KOCE viewers.
screaming for help until she attracted Panel discussions involving Orange
the attention of five passersby. County communfty leaders will then be
She said she managed to get out of the scheduled to consider the educational
car and, as she did so, the thief started it needs of specific J>OtMation groups that
and drove toward one d. the men coming could be fulfilled by television. 'Ibese
to her aid. Jimmie Frost of H.Yntington groups include white collar, and blue col·
Beach said he was able to jump out of Jar, and professional groups, women,
the way of the speeding car. senior citizens and others.
Another man, James Price of Garden Following that, lay discussion groups
Grove, jumped into rus sports car and consisting of 20 to 30 persons will be in-
roared after the thief in Miss Alexander's
white station wagon .
They were both followed by an uniden·
tified ma.n in a small green impcrt car .
Price told officers he pursued the
~tolen car in~o Westminster and had cor·
nered the suspect on a cul de sac near
Vermont Street when the driver of the
green car pulled up and fired shots into
the station wagon.
Price said the stolen car sped off and
he followed it onto the San Diego
Freeway, but be g2ve up the chase when
he discovered he was traveling 110 mph
iri' heavy traffic. .
No Edison Hearing
. At Council Meeting ..
For t:hc»e 4Vho may have missed the
previous o.Mouncement, the HunUngton
Beach City CounclJ will not hold a public
hearing tonight on Southtm CellhM'ni11
Ediaon's proposed $.100 million expansion
of i~ local power plnnt.
A beating on the cxp~nsion was
originally set for tonight, but Ms been
reschesjuled for the coundPs regular Oct.
15 meeting.
Ill ets Capture
Eastern . Title
ClllCAGO (AP) -The New York
?i.1ets won the National League East
title today. , beating the Chicago
Cubs 64 in the first a:ame . of a
doubleheader behind the hitting of
Jerry Grot. and Rusty Staub and
the relief pild!lng « 1\fg McGraw.
The victory clindled ·the Mets'
first divisional title since 19119 when
they .went on to win the World
series.
The Mets' victory in the fint
game, whose tir11t four iilnings
""·ere played in a light drizzle, made
,,. the nightcap nie&ningless. 'Ibey had
to lose both games in order for the
l'f.l!:ular stason to end in a Ue.
St. tows. which" ended tts regul:ir
,.,.., Stmdoy, and Pittsburgh.
playing Son J)iego today, .<'Ollld
have gained a tie with a double 1055
by the Mets.
.\
Bui'glars Ro:uted
By Businessman;
Tw&-Shots Fired
A Fountain Valley man fired two rifle
shots at the fleeing car or two burglary
suspects that he surprised inside his
business SwMtay afternOOn.
Polite said today they are still seeking
the suspects and they do not know
whether or not lhe Oeeing pair was hit.
Bernard Carroll, owner of Bernard
Drywall& 111384 Brutdolier St., told of·
ficers be went to his business with
another ~ploye to do some extra work.
When be walked in he said be round his
safe pried open and $180 in cash and a
.38-callber revolver missing.
Carroll said he heard sounds coming
from the back ol the warehouse, so he
sent the employe to the front of the
business while he went lo investigate,
armed with a rifle .
Detectives said the two thieves were
malting their getaway just as Carroll
emerged from the back of the building
and he fired two shots at the speeding,
car .
Prostitutes Get
Lib U11,it Backing
LAS VEGAS !UPI) -The National
OrgauizaUon for Women, one of the
h1rgest and most lnOuenURI of women 's
liberatlon groups, favors relaxing laws
against prostitutJop, but apposes legaliz-
ed brothels.
Jean Withers of Seattle. author of a
book on prostltuUon. said here the
organization's leaders adopted a policy
under which NOW wW support the
"decrtmlnalization" of prostHuUon: but
OP1)o8e licensed houses, such t1s e'.dst In
many parts ot Nt1v8da.
Licensed prostitution bas concentrated
mainly oo cheeking t~e women for
venereal dl~ase, she 1ald. but "checking
only the womRn bas not stopped .the
spttad of the disease." -·
01llY P'llat lho" ......
TO KNOW AMERICA
J1pin's S..s1ki
'Wide.Open
Spll!es' New
T<i/Jiipanes=e=
When Ken Sasaki came to Huntington
Beach two months ago, everything seem-
ed huge. Tbe cars, the roads, the houses
-he could not believe lhat everything
was spread out and uncrowded.
"ln Japan, the hollSes and rOads art
small, and everyone is c-r·o-w d e d
together," Sasaki said. .. Hete, exen the
school is big."
Sasaki, an American Field Service stq..
dent at F.disoo High in HWllington Beach,
has had less trouble adapting to English
than to his surrounding!.
Sasaki read and wrote English before
be came to the United States, but had
never spoken it After two months ·of
practice, however, Sasaki is easily
understood.
During ttie year Sasaki is spending
here, he is staying with Mr. and Mrs.
John P. Jackson and their two daughters
and son. Rick Jackson, Sasaki's new
brother, also goes to Edison High.
Sasaki is surprised that many students
drive cars to school. ''ln Japan, students
go to school by buses, trains, or bicycles.
You aren't allowed to drive until y~u are
18," he explained. '
"I came to this country because t
wanted to know America, and how the
students Jived," Sasaki said. "In the
newspapers, at home, you can only tell
the politics of the co.untry, not how the
people really are and how they live."
Before be came. Sasaki knew little
about this country, or California, and had
few expectations.
"People in Japan know California Is
the new part of the country. with \118ny
people moving here," he said. "And, we
know this is where our ·grapefruits come
from."
So far . Sasaki is enjoying school at
Edison. 'ln my village at home, Tokay,
the school is not coed. and we have lo
·wear uniforms. J like it here much bet·
ter:' he said.
AD GUARANTEES
FAST 'PICKUP'
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with "pickup" as fast as your car,·try
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green, blk. vinyl toP. AM/
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The urgency message was receivod br
readers and r~'?Onse was fast. f'or fa·st
results, call the direct line, 642-54178, to
t11c Dally Pilot Classified Advcrt~ln& ' Oept.7' .
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~ l.l~IL'f PILOl H Monday, Octobtr 1, 1973
~
Panis ~pheld . Judge: H11nt
Won't F-ace Use of Flag 'Symbolic Speech'
DENVER (UPI) -It Is no more a crime to wear in American
flag sewn to the seat of one's pants than to paste 2 flag decal In a car
.window, the Colorado Supreme Court ruled today.
The hJgb court called such action "symbolic speech" and said tt
was protected under the First Amendment. It overturned the Boulder
District Court conviction of David Patten Vaughan, charged with
.Long Term
WASffiNCTON (UPf) -Ju<lge John J.
desecrating the flag. . ,
"Just as some citizens paste flag decals on their car windows to
indicate their support of certain political philo~pbies, defendant
adorned the seat of his jeans with a Oag to indicate bis contempt for
Sirica said today he would reduce sen-·
tences of up to 40 years he previously im·
posed on E. Howard Hunt and four men
who pleaded guilty to the Watergate
burglary. those things which the flag symbolizes," tbe court said. .
Justice Donald E. Kelley, who wrote the deeision1 said: "The
ideas expressed by clefendanl's conduct may seem to some to be
juvenile' and inarticulate, and perhaps his actions are subject to in·
terpretations other than we have ¥iven, but this does not strip his
speech of constitutional protection.'
Sirica, chief judge of the U.S. District
Court for the District of Columbiii, said
that.-.-forcing them to serve lpng lenns
''would not only be unwarraqted but un-
ii.gents Seek
Donald Nixon
Phone Tapes .
FrontP18fJel
NEW TRAILS •••
just."
At a brief court bearing that Sirlca
called because of "what appears to be a
widespread misunderstanding" about the
. temporary, maximum sentence he gave
the five, the judge noted he would be le-
ruent in det.erminlng final punishment.
Sirica gave no tndicatJon when lhe final
to the beach. sentences would be Imposed, noting that
Staff plaMeni say fhe emphasis bas all five asked to withdraw guilty 'pleas
been placed on bike trails beciwe that's ~y m~dc last January shortly after
where the need apepars to be with , their trial began. . thousands of youngsters riding their Sirica sentenced the men, Hunt ,
bikes to local schools. Bicycling also has Bernard L. Barker, Frank A. 'Sturgis, From Wtre Service• I d E · R caught on a popular pastime for older Virgilio R. Gonza ez an ugen10 .
Federal agent!: are weeding through riders. ·...... • Martinez to provisional, maximum terms
wiretap files to fmd taped telephone con· f I ed 3 .1 be! of up to 40 years in prison last March. He Six o t le propos 2 mi es ore stressed then that th·'• final sentences versalions betweeh F. Donald Nixon of ...... councilmen tonight will actually be off· wOUJd de~d on the cooperation they
Newport Beach, the President's brother, Street paths, ·with asphalt pavipg. Most of gave to Waiergate.investigators. .
and a former Hughes Tool Company of· the cost of the system stems from the He declared: "It was never my 111-
ficial charged' with income tax evasion. asphalt paving. tenfion ....; and again I repeat with
Attorneys for John Meier, ex-Hughes The rest of the bicycle mileage will in-emphas.is -that the-maximum terms of sciiiitific adviser, uy their client ,and the provisional sentences should beco.me volve bicYcle lanes, eight-feet wide, run-the terms of the fmal sentences. In this
Nixco. were business. associates and may rung along eaC:h side of .a street, and case, such a disposition would not only be
have talked by phone at lhe time the sep8rated from the traffic lanes by a unwarranted but tmjust."
Pr<sident bad his brother's line tapped. aiid wblte slripe · Attorney Daniel Schultz asked for and
They aay such a tap ·may taint green • received a week's extension of a Wednes-
evidence --held b)' the 'government that .Bicycle ~ will even~ly ~-day 1fead1ioe to 41~-"affidavits of
·Meler alleg~y evaded'taxes on $269,000 with moot major parks, ma1or trails ~cb--fact" supporting the contention of his
in personal income ln 1968 and i969, as ~ Santa Ana River, schools, crvic four clients that they were lured into
ea.med while buying Nevada mlning facilities and lnafor shopping centers. crime by high governmen t officials and
claims for Howard Hughes. \ then pressured to plead guilty and re-
'lbe day before Meier was arraigned in Buzhordt's Son main silent.. ' U.S. District, Court in Las Vegas, it was '" Hunt's tittomey, Sidney Fachs, was
~d that the Preaident bad the granted permission to file a motion by
Secret Service tap the phone ol his Held on pot Rap . Friday asking Sirica to reconsider his
brother's home and business in Newport order demanding supporting affidavits.
Beach. · ' COLUMBIA, S.C. (AP)· -George S. The judge said If he denies the motions
In revealing the tap, it was alleged the Buzhardt, 'son of presidential apecial ·to switch their pleas from guilty to in·
President reared Po's .,bfe cm counsel J. Fred Buzhardt, ha.$ been ar4 --nt,· final •••tences will be determin· · rested fin c!l1"'W of possess~!)._of.mari, .......... -...... barrassment from his brother's financial juana with intent to distribute, police ed according to information in pre·
dealings. here say. sentence reports he receives On each
ln resPonse to allegations by 11eier's Buzhardt, 20, a University of SOuth. man.
attorney's the U.S. Justice Department Carolina student, "'3-S .arrested W~., ~ i"And it will be perfectly apparent, at
has ~ to search its . records for da;Y~ night by n~cs ag~ts ~ . · t time -if that time comes -that transcripts of any conversat1ons between dnvlng a car contammg 12 pound! of · . . . . _ . .
Donald Nixon and Meier. marijuana, police said. Another USC ~u-such dispos1t1on wa7 p~1cated, a~ it
"We are simply agreeing wi~ defense d~~ ~ a third,,y~th in the car WF..1l m;iould ht; •. upon f~, ~~-~1~0,
attorneys that we will vofuntarily supply ~ alTflted, police ~d. ..,.~ ~Jl~tng;and ~~·1amca;fa1d.
the defendant with inlormaUon not ·Yoan~g ~~nit's f~-~ was appoin!!4_r_ "Ttf?ii?tte;u~~ }.ah,,.. ~-the._~te whettH?.r Qf _not sucb tapes exist;" -saJd s~al -~ fo~dent...._f1100-iast 1 Waur1ate lleanngs ..... :tlA; ag~£ for
U.S. Attorney Devoe Heaton. ·May With responsibility of liB,Tidiing the . rflore than· 20 years t>et'ore-reUribg, he
"If anything turns up, It does not mean Watergate investigation at the White ' was n;garded . ·.as cine . of the
we have agreed to give them the tapes " House level. masterminds of the bfeak·m of the
he added. ' Democratic headquartert 8t l h e
The start of Meier-'s trial was delayed lya~rgate complex June lt. !972. .
from Nov. 12 to Jan. 1 to allow time for Jane Says ,War Hunt . bas also '"tilled at length m the tape search. other lnves~~tions of Watergate and
Dorlald Ni.ion was reportedly out of related acUnt1es, such as the Ellsberg
town today and not available for com· r -uld R burglary. ~ ment on the latest developments \A) esume He and the four others. all from the
• Miami area, were brought to Sirica 's
C.Ounty Traf fie
Crashes Kill 3
Three persons died as a result or
Orange County traffic accidents over the
weekend.
An Anaheim couple lost their lives in a
Mission Viejo crash Sunday-and a Stan·
Ion man was killed Saturday in Anaheim.
Robert ~f. Blanks, 56, of 3374 Keys
Lane and his wife Dorothy, S2, were kill·
ed on the San Diego Freeway one-half
mile south of El Toro Road \\'hen their
truck collided with a car driven by
Roman J . Cuellar, 24, of Pomona. Both
victims were thro"n from the vehicle,
California Highway Patrol o t f i c e r s
reported.
Steven L. Kelly, 25. of 11672 Beach
Blvd., Stanton , was killed when his car
plummeted -0ff the Santa Ana Freeway
and crashed onto t.lanchester Boulevard.
OllAN&I COAST "'
DAILY PILOT
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DAYTON, OhiO(iiPJ) -Activist-ic-court this mofl!ing from a-federal deten·
tress Jane Fonda says the United States tion center just outside Washington. All
could get reinvolved in the Vietnamese appeared to be in good spirits. smiling
war jf the American people did not start and waving at reporters they recognized.
to pressure Congres.s.
. Miss Fonda and' her hwiband Tom
Hayden were guests Saturday on the Phil
Donahue Show, a syndicated pfogram
tapeli to be aired beginning today.
"Public opinion and p?es~urc on
Congress is the only thing that will make
a difference as to whether we get back
into the war," she said.
Agree on Contract
DETROIT (AP) -Chrysler and lhe
United Auto Workers reached tentative
agreement on local contracts before
stri ke deadlines today at three plan ts.
The latest setUement announced by
Chrysler covers production workers in
the firms Indianapolis Electric and
Foundry plants. A strike had been &et for II a.m. o
'Divorce Party'
Ends in Melec
Rocks and bottles greeted police who
were called to break up a "divorce party"
late Saturday night at the home of Leon-
ard Nestel, 6558 Sequoia Drive, Buena
Park.
Three ~sons were arrested on drunk
charges-;-"a -bottle crashed through th
windshield of a police car and -Officers
from Buena Park, Anaheim, Cypress and
La Palma were assaulted with rocks, bot-
tle! and bricks while dispersing a crowd
of 300 to 500 youths.
Nestel told police the party was to
celebrate his daughter's divorce and
about 150 were invited.
ls Hijacker Screening
Enriching the Airlines?
BY GEORGE LEIDAL
Of !lot Dilly ,llOI Slt tf
The fee charged to screen sky jackers
from legitimate alr travele rs may be
enriching airlines, airport officials charg·
ed today.
Orange C.Ounty Airport Administrator
Robert Breshahan said today 22 cents of
the 25 cents each passenger pays as a
~security surcharge goes to pay costs of
providing scr.eening oft'icus.
1rowever, a Sacramento alf'Port oCficlal
charges that airlines reap as much as $1
million excess each month fro1n the
security surcharges they C(l!lect.
Bresnahan explained how the ~stem
works. Airlines, with approval of the
Civil Aeronautics Board. collect the 25
cent! lrom each passenger who buys a
ticket to fly.
Airports each month bill the airlines
tor lhe cost of security precautions, i~
eluding the salar1ts of officers usigned .
"Obviously It takes a certain number
of men regardles,, of how many people
are enplaned," Bresnal'wl said.
At smaller airporta, the cos t per
· )Mi!ISCngcr Is likely to be higher.
•
"l'rt imagine that at U1e bigger airports
where costs are spread over a greater
number of passengers the cost per-
person might be as low as 17 or 18
cents," Bresnahan speculated.
James K. Carr. president of the
Airport Operators Council Intematlonal.
said lhe airlines are pocketing up to 72.6
percent of the take from the 25-eent
charge.
Carr also heads tlm Sacramento
Metropolitan Airport.
Carr said AOCJ, a Washington, D.C.·
based organization representing airports
handling commercial passengers, hed
• found In some cases airlines \vlthheld
reimbursement for the cost of anti-sky·
jacking rpeasurts.
Carr has: urged CAB Chalnnan Robert
D. nmm to Bet ·Immediately to end
"possible carrier misuse of revenues
from the board·approved 2S-ctnt securlty
b'Urcharge." ...
lfe urged the CAB to not appro,·e
furlher farr hike!! uhtil revenuP.s
generated by the stCUrity surcharge is
cllanneled Into payment o< .airport lli:llrl·
ty costs.
Just " Meuior.y .... ""' '"" -.f
This· is an authentic photo of summer 1973·along last week on the winds of a Santa Ana condiUon t
the Orange Coast. You may want to clip it out and lt stlggered through Sunday before the cool marin~·· ·
send it to Aunt Iiattie in Iowa just to prove there air dominated once again, bringing back the drippy . -~re-all_y_w_•_s_a_s_um_m~•-r_ai_o_n_g_th_•_O_ra_n_g_•_CJ_o_•_•_t _th_i_• __ g;:loo_m_o_bs_•_rv_•_d_i_n_th_•s_•_P_•_r_1s_s_in_c_e_M_e_m_o_n_a1--'-D-•Y_·_~ year. You will recall, of course, that summer arrived Ugh. '
Officials Witness Flig1f:t
. ,
Of UFO Over Tennessee
MEMPffiS, Tenn. (UPI) -An uniden-
tified flying object, alternately ·shining
brightly and faintly, was visible over the
Memphis area for about .four hours Suo-day night. _,_
"l know it sounds fantastic. but It's
true,'' policeman Flanning Glover of
suburban Collierville said of the UFQ.
"If I was by myself, I'd say I was nuts,
but there were plenty. of \dtnesses."
At least four other Shelby C.Ounty law
. enforcement offitials saw the UFO as it
moved across the MemptiiS area. · ·
Joey Smith, 13, and his brother, Barry,
' , ~ f i'
'H OUSJ!,lti~!Jf4'i
Sparks Boy cott
By Bartenders ·
CLEVELAND, Ohio (AP) -When you
say "Bud" to the owners of five· bars
near CJeveland Si.ate University, they say
''boycott."
The bars are protesting a two-wcek..old-
arca tavern. called the House of Bud.
\vhich features tlle Budweiser song,
Budweiser wallpaper, Budweiser lamps,
Budweiser souvenirs and, or course,
Budweiser beer.
Under the boycott, the five bars have
refused to sell Bpdweiser canned or bot·
tied beer.
"Until Anheuser-Busch puts out some
effort to inform Cleveland that they don't
have anything to do with that bar, l1m
going to support the boycott," one bar
owner vowed.
The owner of the House of Bud, James
F. Geeer, said the boycott was
"childish."
"Heck, the name doesn't mean that
much," he said. "We could call It the
House of Lizards and it wouldn't hurt."
9, were feeding the chlckeos at their
home in Southwest Chester County wbt!n
they spotted ·~something green with red
lights'' in' the "sky.
!'They ran in the chicken house
because they were scared it was going to
get them," said their mother: ''They said
it made a whirring noise." ·
In Obion County, nea r the Kentucky
border. Sberiff •Na~ Cunningham said
he Saw ,th~ diUertnt UFO'.s Saturday
night. heard one zoom over his house and
talked to at least 20 people who reported
similar sightings·. ·
Glover said lhe moving light a~ared
orang_; a! ~I· th.., changod ~c~ to ' white ~ ' ' · · " · ·"
"l ~uldJi't.say it llad-mofe-'th&h' one
light,'' be said. "'111e light I saw w1as kind or orange and then it would get bright
and seemed to turn white. Then it would
go out and come back on a different col-
or. ,
··we put a spotlight on it and ll jiist
'vent out," he said, "then it reappeared
in a differe nt place.
"We called a helicopter out and he
seemed to be right over it, but as 'far as 1
know, he must not have seen it."
·A .federal Av:iatjo_n_Agency !P,Okesman
said a bright white light seen as it paMed
near the airport was not spotted by FAA
personnel.
"About 15 years ago, one of the guys
up here said he saw something in the sky
he couldn't explain, and the Air Force
·contacted fiiril aild sent him abOut 15 leet
of papers to fill out. .
"You know, I don't think anybody up
here is going to see anything unfamiliar
again," the FAA spokesman said.
In Obion County· George and Vicki
Rogers said a bright red light swooped
cl-0se enough to the earth to light up an
acre and a half Saturday night, nearly
causing a scven-cp pileup ·on State
Hi ghway 78 near R&lfoot Lake.
'We were coming home and I just
glanced over to my left in a field and
there was a six or seven-foot bright red
light," Rogers said.
Trustees Weigh
Lease of Three
School Vehicles
A iease with the Bellflower Unified
School District. for three school buses,
will be presented for approval at
tonight's meeting .of the Ocean View
school board ip. Huntington Beach.
Trl!5;tees, who meet at 7:30 in district
offices at 7'72 Warner Ave .. are expecttd
to lake action to ease the shortage of the
district's own bueMJ
The charge will be . $15 per day for
each leased bm. The shortage is ex-
pected 1-0 continue until Janufy 1974; ac·
cording to d~trict officfals'. . '
In oulet ac~ !.?night, t6e ooarcl'is ex·
~ t~ a~nl ~ new personnel com-
nUsaiooer. rFour-applicatir:es 'i!&ve"·been
received by the board;. in. addition to.
notification that the current com·
missioner, Alvin Schmidt, wishes to
serve another three-year term.
All five candidates will be interviewed
by school trustees during an executive
session tonight.
Plumbing Gear
Stolen ,at Site ..
More than $6,500 worth ol plwnbing
fixtures have been stolen from a Foun.
lain Valley · cOnstruction site, Police
reported today.
The fixtures were locked in a Jbed on
the housing project site at Brookhurst
Street and Edinger Avenue.
Police said workmen for Safety Plumb-
ing diSC-Overed the loss when they came
to work Fritlay morning. _
Listed as missing are 36 sinks, 36
kitchen fauctt sets, five water heaters
and some pieces of trim.
The housing tract Is being built by the
Warmington Construction c:ompany.
See 1>ttlda.f' for SPEED OUE.EN
Stainless Steel
Fabric ·care
Tub
uan -
~ULL 2 YEAR
PARTS and LABOR
W ARRANTY
• S~th, Ru1t-Proof,
Chip-P roof
• ld .. I for 11! Wu h-
•bl1 F•brles
• L11t1 the lifetime
of the Washer
•
PWS •••
a washable
knits cycle
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41robl• ,,..., •r Ult ...
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SPllD qUllM WASHl l
• ANO nm POI
AS 1.GW AS
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,
l~ISPEEDOUEfN,jalJj
•
e M oGr-ew-E?leon Company D1vleion
90 DAY CASH WITH ~:~~:o
1815 NEWPORT BLVD. Downtown Costa Mesa-Phone 548-7788
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' Mond.,, Octobtr l, l~7J H DAILY PILOl 'if/
lU .S. Market Bltskei-{:osts Continue to Climb
•
• . BJ tbe Auodat..i .......
1be aquttze on the pocketbook go( a
l11•'!"-1llahler dwjJlll . Soplemlltr, /l<-
lc:ordlni lo an Asootjlled P-'l"'kg tbPk~t survey rele• ·~y which
: Shows the family grocery bOI wai almost
•9 percent higher last month than lfl,
March.
Con~umers looking for bargains foamd
continuing declines In the price ol pork
and eggs. But the de<!reases were offset
by jumps of several perecnt In the price
of cookies, milk, sugar and butter.
Tbe AP checked !he prle8 <i 15 food
and DOblood ilemJ In IS dtleo March I
and has rechocked at !he beK)nolng of
each s~g monlh, wwa extra
surve)'I to gauge the e/lec:I Of speclol
governmeµt contro~ Prices In general stared fairly sleady
during September, despite the end to the
freeze on beef and Uu1 Unpogition of new
regulations on other foods. The tot.al
m"°ltel basket bill was up in sl1: cities and
down in .seven. wHh most changes
averaging one percent or so.
Of the tole! nwn.berOf items dlecked .
31 per<ent Increased Jn prtco from Sept. t
to OCl 1; 21 peftent went down; 31 per·
cent were W1dlaaged; and 11 pcrctnl
were unavailable on one· of the cbcck
dates.
The pJcture for the seven·month period
from March 1 to Oct. 1 was gloomier.
'Ille market basket price was up in every
dcy except Dallas where It declined by
Ol)e penny -from $9.48 lo $9.47 for 13
available items. The average increase
was 8.8 perctnt.
On Sept. 1. the AP foOnd that the
mari<.et buket. blll ln every city was
higher than It had bttn f.tarch I, with In·
creases averaging seven pereent over
the six-month· period.
The reasons for lhe increases were
familiar to consumers: hi£her whoJesale
ptj~es, rising operating costs, increased
\\'orldwlde demand for etimmodltlcs.
Boostl!I In one Item pushed up prices of
ol~ti:r goods.
On the brighter side there v.·ere
bargains in pork chops and eggs, which -
skytpeketed in mid-August, then Nrt.td
to drop u consumers balked at higll
prices.
Pork chop pritts declined In nine cillu
between Sept. l and OcL 1 and eg& prices
dropped in sll ciues.
Beef prices -which stayed frozen
from the end of ~larch until Sept. 10.
prompting shortages and wa{Tlings of
future Jeap.'1 -went up In a few areas,
but the increases were 'nt nearly 50 bad
as predicted. The price of chopped chuck went up in
Six ci ties. generally less than 10 percent,'
and was down in three cities. Tbe pnce
was unchanged in thrte _fllies and
cho~ chuck \\'JS unavailahi e in one.
~ AP s\IM't"}' covered Albuque rque,
N.fl.t.: Atlanta. Boston . Chicago, Dnllas.
Detroit, Lo.5 Angeles, ~1iami, New Yor\,
Philadelphia. Providence, R.I.. Salt l.akt'
City and Seatllc.
The check list included : pork chops.
eggs. butter, cookies. chopped chuck,
frozen orange juice, coffee, paper towels.
peanut butter. detergent. fabric soft ener,
tomato sa uce, rnilk, :tll·OO~f franks and
~uga r.
Kalmbach "Payoff' by Nixon Probed
~
Linkletter
Will Launch
United Way
Fifty-fi•e member agencies of the
Southern Orange County United Way will
benefit from the $1 .S million sougbt•in
this year's campaign.
Thomas F. Riley, retired Marine Corps
brigadier general, heads the campaign
. effort-in the five areas which have merg-
ed into the new United Way organization .
Southern Orange County United Way
includes the·· Harbor, Laguna Beach,
Orange. Santa Ana and South C.Oast
afeas. Each area will contribute to the
total goal and will launch its separate
drives with kickoff events.
HAl\801\ AREA .
Televiajon personality Jack Linkletter
will speak af the Har'bor Area kickoff
breakfast, 7:30 a.m. Tuesday at the
A,irporter lnn, Irvinet
Campaigners from Newport Beach.
Costa Mesa and Irvine will learn the
• Amount they'll be asked to raise al that
opening program .
LAGUNA BEACH
Campaigners in Laguna Beach, Laguna
Hills and ·South Laguna will seek MJ,411
as their part of the total cam~gn goal.
SADDLEBACK
NAMED TO NEW POST
'Councilman Carl Kymla
KymlaNamed
-To County
Water Post
Wildlife
Refuges'
. Advocated
Designation of certain area! in Orange
County as wilderness or scenic areas as
part of .the open space program has been
proposed by Fifth District Supervisors
Ronald W. Caspers of Newport Beach.
Caspers, In a letter to be studied by
supervisors Tuesday, called for a stop of
development in areas which either are or
h•ve been proposed for use as regional
parks. .
He. li&ted such projects as the. Starr
R,imcb, the Vedanta Socitay property in
Trabuco Canyon and Upper Newport
Bay.
Caspers said the area could be
developed at a minimum cost to provide
wildlife refuges, hiking and equestrian
trails, picnicking and other low activity
uses.
In the Tuesday agenda item, Caspers
asks that the proposal be referred to the
planning commission, Harbors, Beaches
and Parks District and Regional Parks
Advisory Board, to report back in 60
days. ·
Ca1npaigi1
Fu11ds' Fate
Due Study
SACRAMENTO (APJ -Secretary of
State Edmund G. Brown Jr. said today
he will iavest.igate a $250,000 payment or
Nixon campaign funds to lhe President's
fonner personal attorney.
'Ille payment to Herbert \\'. Kalmbach
of Newport Beach V.'as included in a
report released by Pres\dent Nixon's rt'·
election committee in Washington and
Sacramento Friday. · 1.
Brown. a Democrat. -said the repcrt
does not shQw what happened to the(
money.
Brown said he has been in contact wµ
K3.liil00ch-ror severat mon1hs regarding
"another Nixon campaign malt~~ and
will extend that investigation ilinclude
the $250,000. . /
An aide to Brown said !~·Other matter
was lhe disposition of suryfus funds from
the 1968 Nixon election ,(8.mpaign.
The aide, Deputy Secretary or State
Thomas Quinn, sai.d Brown's office
already has turned some infonnation it
gathered to Arplibald Cox. the speeial
Watergate prosecutor.
Mission Viejo and' El Toro are part of
the Santa Ana area flthd drive which ·,.; ~1 plan! a· klt!ktlft"brukfast atl 7:30 a.m.
_Oct. t In the ~ddlebock ln!):Santa ·Ana.
Newport Beach Cit;: Councilman Carl
Kf.IDla has been awOinted as the fifth
reO:cesent.ative or lbe Orang~ County
MfililCipal Water Dlstrid. on the
M'tropolitan Water Diatricl Board of
Directors.. -
3 Men Quizzed
In Murder' Case
At' £endleton
The repQ,{· also shoY:ed that Roger Greav~s Gr' Glendale received $4,000 fro n1 the=6n committee lo "gather in-
!ar oo on Sen. Muskie," Brown
di today .
Brown said "Grea\·es has informed my
,,..staff that his activity actually coosisteC
SOUTH COAST Capistrano Beach, Dana Point, Laguna
Niguel, San Clemente and San Juan
Capistrano furidraisers will seek $33,697
this year. William H. Walker, president
of Walker Brothers Development eo·m-
pany heads the South Coast effort which
began Thursday. ,
.This year's ca mpaign is the first
coordinated drive for the five areas.
Money raisCd supports the voluntary
health, weHa~ and. character building
services in South Orange County.
Nuclear W ast,e
Leak Termed
'_No Big Deal'
OKLAHOl\.lA CITY (AP ) -A minor
leak of nuclear waste material at a Kerr-
McGee Corp. plan near here was "no big
deal," an Atomic Energy Commission
spokesman says
James Donaghue of the AEC's en-
vironmental protection branch in Chicago
Chicago said that Kerr-Ml'Gee's Cimarron
facility at Crescent, Okla., has been given
a clean bill of health following an AEC
probe.
; The facility mites enriched aranhnn
~ dioxide and cqnmonta to form a powder
• that is compressed into pellets used
' in fuel rods for nuclear reactors used in generating electricity. , •
j A small amount of plutonium nitrate
laked from aidisposal drum omo the"floor
of a tiuck on ~ug. 18, Dooagtwe.,.:said
Friday, But the material was contained
and there was no conlBmination of plant
workers or lhe environment, he said.
•
I ' • • •
Kymla ; who is alio manager of the
Moul.ton Niguel Watu District~ was
chosen from a field of seve ral candidates
!Or t h e MWD post. He will be the
youngest director on the board at 39.
The Municipal Water District was
granted a fifth directorship last montb
when its assessed valuation hit $3.5
billion, or 12.s percent or the total MWD
valuation.
Kymla is also chairman of the Orange
f:ounty Water-Management Agency, a
member of the board of the· Southeast
Regicml Reclamation Authority and
chairman of the Aliso Water Manage-
merlt Authority.
IJ.ot Jewelry
In Poor Box?
The folks at Our Lady of Fatima
catholic Church in San Clemente
would like to believe that the two
pieces of jewelry rouhd deposited in
a St. Vincent dePaul coi\ection box
were a gracious gift by an
anonymous donor.
But the. cultured pearl necklace
and solid gold pendant fouod among
the donations over the weekend
seem a bit too valuable.
Msgr. Harry Trower phooed
police early in the weekend after be
had the two items appraised by a
local jew;ler and learned that the
items were worth at least •tso.
'Ibe cleric Jeared the two pieces
were stolen .. Detectives are check·
ing to see if the monsJgnor's bunch I
is correct. _J
Military authorities today continued
questioning three men found Sunday with
a bloody shotgWl in their car shortly
af.ter the murder of a 17-year-old Marine
at Camp Pendleton.
Base authorities have refused to iden-
tify the three men being held in !he in-
vestigation because formal charges· have
not yet been filed.
They did, hOwever, release a few
details of the :shooting which occurred 1n
the moining hours and led to the death of
Pfc. Edward Steege of Des Moines, Iowa.
The young serviceman's body was
found along the road leading to the rifle
range area in lbe southerly portion of the
base.
After discovery of the murder, military
police reportedly stopped a suspicious
car on a roadway on the reservation and
during the check of the four occupants
the officers found the weapon. •
Reports from other sources said the
shotgun bore distinct, bloody handprints
oo the muzzle.
Three. of the four persons reportedly
were taken into custody and an in-
vestigation launched by the base provosl
marshal's office and the N a v a I
Investigative Service .
Nixon in Conference
WASHINGTON (AP) -President Nix·
M met today with a leading European
diplomat to discuss ways . to patch up
cracks in the Atlantic alliance. A pro-
posed declaration of principles between
the United Stales and its European allie s
was among the items on the agenda for
the Oval Office meeting bet"'een Nixon
and Francois-Xavier Ortoli . presidenl of
lhe Commission of the European Com·
munilies. l fJittfo~ltta~t Figures
~ UCI Sets Another Record
;i , ,
" , Prtlimlnary flgurm 1ug1ut UC Jrvlne ' :-bas set mother enr9Hment record u an
;. estlma ed"l~l8 iliJdin[j bqsn clwes ,
: 'today. Nearly J ,000 more wtre enrolled
:: this year compared to 7,3M attending
classes this, Umc last year.
:. The Increased anrollmenl lncludcs 92
; n<!Wi students participating in the Ex-
ended University (ExU ) programs in
:• ~al ecology, teaching of Spanis h and
~ school fldtnlnlstrallon.
These students· wlll 111tend classes part
i time in £heir firt:t degree.granting pro-
' grams to be offertd by the EsU.
• The total enrollmeot llg)lreJncludos In·
:-.0 terns and resident.a ol the Clllfomia
• College or Medldnc who reported to
: .hospllal loptJOns In Ora11Jt and Los
Angeles Counties.
r '
The Irvine campus &tudent population
tally thus W8! somewhat lower than total
preliminary enrollment ngures with 7,592
reporting for classes on campus.
Le.st year, the campu! count was 6.720.
Meetirig classe3 today ·wtm a total of
494 faoulty members, of "'hem 124 are
p.Brt of the college of medicine.
Total faculty pol!Jitions authortr.ed for
the uor campus incrtued by 4.5 posi-
tions for the g<':ne.ral campus and by 3.5
positloos for the medk!Af school, a cam·
pus spokesman said .
\Vh\le enrollments -declined on cam·
puses el!lewhere In C.llfornla Md the"
U.S.,-UC Jrvlnc contlnuer Its gr_ov.1h as_Jj
has each year since classes be.gan In
1961.
Growth this ye11r will be absorbed
wtthin cla5Sn!0m buildings 11lref:ldy com·
i .
pleted. No ne\11 classrooms are to open
this year. An administration building due
to be completed in the spring of 1974 will,
however, free additional library space.
Along with the ext~nded university pro-
grams, the only other major change in
campus life is the addition o( fraternities
and sororities.
F'raternttles establishing chapters •l
UC! are Bei. Theta Pi. Oli Psi, Sigma
Chi and Phi Delta Theta. Sororities are
Della Gamma, Gamma Phi Beta and 'Pi
Be:ta Pht.
Until this year. fraternal societies had
bttn bart~ from the UC1 campus. A
shift io faculty senate policy allowed the
groups • to form at UCI only with the
guarantee .that ,they will be open to any
Student desiring to partlclPAte.
1-of harassment and picketing" of· ap-
pearances 6y Sen. Ermund Muskie ( /).
Maine), in California, New Hampshire
and Florida.
The Nixon com mittee released lhe
report in response to a suit by Commoll
Cause. The report showed the campaign
raised more than $60 million over-al l. It
accounts for campaign fund raising bac k
to Jan. 1. 1971.
Quinn said the committee previously
3.greed, in negotiations with Brown, to
provide information· on fund raising
before 1971.
HARLAN LAMBERT PREPARES FRIEND FOR GUARD DUTY
Humain Sentries Haive a Tendency to'F1ll AslHp Now. Quinn said, the comntittee's at-
torney's have told him they do not agree
v;ith a state attorney generars opinion
that they must provide such information
10 California. •Jekyll~ Hyde~
German Sliepherds Trai1ied for Job
By CANDACE PEARSO~
Of 1M Dally .Pllef 11•11 ,
"You can pct these dogsr'play with
them, anything, -but when I give the
command -they'll eat yob aliVe."
Harlen Lambert proved his point. The
German shepherd fris'led about the yard,
smelling trees. exploring comers, being
petted. /
Then, as Lambert chained the dog and
softly spoke a .foreign word. it became a
c.a.nine Jekyll and Hyde, growling, snap-
ping and lunging at a visitor.
The dog , along with a few doien others.
practices this schizoid choracer for a Ii\'·
ing at Orange County Kennel and Secur1·
ly Patrol in Santa Ana.
They are guard and auack dogs. for
rent. lease or sale to businesses or
private homes concerned about break-
Ins. ,
Dogs. said Lambert who has owned
the business for about lhrec years, .arc
better guards than people.
They're cheaper. Renting a dog costs
$125 to $175 a month, he said,
And their senses of smell, sight and
sound Is much grtater than a person's.
"ll's amazing what a dog can do,''
Lambert enthused.
Human guards tend to fall asleep, he
.said, conceding that while dogs might
also doze off -tht!ir sharp bearing
wake! them up at any disturbance.
Lambert has trained s h e p h e. r d s •
Labradors. St. Bernards, gN!at De~.
dobermans. a rommodore poodle -and
is v.·crking on chlhauhau.
Goard dog• -worth $300 to $800 -are
taught to hold or detain. but not bite.
unleh thcy·re attacked first. The ir
traiajP.g pertod lasts about six v.·eekli.
Attack do~• -v.·orlh l,rom $800 to
aliOO!it $2.~ -take lhe orrensl\'e on
commend only.
Their training takes 12 to 14 weeks. Not
only do thtoy go through agitalton and
obedience les30n!'I, but they hav e to
become mulli·li.Jlguol . • ·
The alfack cnmn1and words are in
I
German and French. "I don 't want any
slip-ups. I don't want any (English) word
soundlng like an attack word ," said Lam·
be.rt who put in f)l,~ years on the Santa
Ana police force after becoming its first
black officer.
The most important thing an attack
dog has to learn is "no.''
"If you agitate a dog and he doesn't
know when to turn off," Lambert ex·
plains. "he'll chew somebody up."
Lambert stresses !his angle in training
because the dogs are often famil y pets.
In fact. Labradors and SI. Bernards arc
1tno~n to be fairl y docile. friendly
breeds.
St. Bernards retain what they're
laugh!. sa id La1nbert. and Labradors arc
"sharp and more agresslve than German
Shepherds whf.'.n trained.''
With the help of two handlers. Lambert
delivers each rented dog nightly or on
\veckends to the businesse.., when they
close for the evening. The dogs are then
picked up in the morning and sleep dur·
ing the day.
If a business uses a dog regul11rly,
Lambert rotates it with other dog!i so no
.. one person can make fr iends with the
canine guarm.
Lambert has lost only two dogs in
three years to po1soning. ~ dogs are
trained not to accept food .
To insure that a male dog won't be
distracted from the job by a female dog
in heat. Lambert oflen lea!les out 8 m11le·
female team.
"The male's going to do his thing -
you CR n't stop that;' he explained. Bui
th<' fr1nale st~ys 111 hrr po~!.
One of his dogs detained a potenLi al
burglar ror a doy and a half In the comer
of 11 fenced ya rd before the police
re!tul'd the suspect.
... In 11notller s~ssful c:,11e, a bural11r
got so tired of being held capllve by a
snarling dog. he called the police for
help, ·
I
Negotiations v.·ill continue, QuiM said.
and Brov.-n may file a lawsuit if the ad-
ditional fund-raising information is not
disclosed.
u * * Kalmbach Silent
Ou Charges He
Paid Ulase·wicz
Newport Beach attorney fl er be rt W.
Kalmbach oontinued his silence today on
affairs of the Committee to Re-elect the
President.
President Nixon's personal allorncy
\las unavailable for comment on an
allegation by CHP sources tha t he paid a
fonner Ne11' York policeman lo ccnduct
secret invcsligations on behalf of the
\.\'hi te House.
The officer. 1'.!lthony J. Uhutcv.·icz.
recei ved $51 ,918 in 1971 for his privnte in-
vestigations. the CllRP said Friday.
Ulasce\ricz testified be.fore the Scna11•
\Va tergale .Commiltee he 11·as placed on
t~ White liouse staff to investigate the
private lives of President Nixon's op-
ponents and other politicnl figures.
The CRP , in a report filed v.·11h the
}{ou~ of Reprcscntali\'<'S for fi nances
up to April 7. 19i2. said Ulasc"·ici ret'('tv-
ed I.he moll"y from ;i 1rust fund ke pt by
Kalmbach. \l'ho \Vas i'\1xon's number l"'"O
fundraiscr wider F1nancr Comn1itlee
Chairn11tn Maurice S1 :1118
The CRP said !he n1onty v.·:is paid out
Ur.tier the hcad1n11~ ' · Gen r r ,., I
Investigative ~rvires" anrl "F.xpcnses."
The re por1 also rcvM1lcd that Seyn1our
Fried<':n. a r~portrr. \\;'IS 1ml d Sl3.i80 for
"survey SE'l"\'l«s and l'xpcn~s."
Frieden tra\'tled \\!th Sen. Grorgo S.
l\.tcCovcrn. the. l)('moora tlc Pres1dcnlla"'
nominee. and \1'8! paid by Murray
Chotl oor. formrr Newport Beach resident
and lon(:·time Nlson poliUcal operatlvt'.
•
..
OAllY PILOT Monday, OclObet' J, }q73
Attack Near s -aigon Biggesl Since Cease-fire
From Wire Sttvtttt
' SAIGON -The South Vlelname$e
goVtmment today reported more than
300 govenmient and Comm u n I s t
casualties in a 24-hour weekend battle 40
miles northwest or Saigon.
• It was biggest battle near the capital
.since the cease-fire last Ja.nuary.
'
TUE SOUTll Vietnamese military
comn1and said Viet Cong and North Viet·
namese forces attacked t"-o infantry
positions Jess than 1:1 mile apart Saturday
on the road ~tween Tay Nffih, a pro-
Ir aq_ Gets
Soviet
:Bombe rs
By FRED S. ll01'"FJ\1AN
.t.I' Ml!il•rr Nrl'•r
\\'ASHJNGTON -The Soviet Union
has sent supersonic bombers to Iraq for
1he first time in a move Pentagon of·
licials believe could affect the power
balance in the oil·rich Persian Gulf area.
' ~fost Pentagon analysts predict the ~ussians will turn over a small number
;(.__NEW,_s_m_n._l'._SI_s _ _,)
'of n!22 blinder bombers to the Iraqis.
·. 'although there is some opinion that the
;Soviets flew !here on an exercise.
, TIIE BLINDER, v:hich can fly
missions at about 1.000 miles an hour, is ~wice as fast and far more advanced
~~v~ ::~~~ ~~~ f:r~lans previously
; Until nDw, the Soviets have con·
icentrated on lighter planes for the Arabs.
I Israelis probably will be worried aOOut
!this new bomber development, but U.S.
j authorities appear to' be fCICUSing their
1 concern on the Persian Gulf implications
!because of the energy crisis. ~ The first indication that the Russians
'had made the recent move came in a
'1alk by Deputy Secretary of Defense I \Villiam P. Clements last Friday, during
I '~1hich he stressed tbe bnportance of the
Persian Gulf's vast oil reserves.
• , CLE~1ENTS TOl:.D a,.small ifOUP cf
1civic leaders that-the JblllJans had "put
1 supersortic bombers in ltaq that were
f never there belOf'e." -
I Add Iraq Gets
1 He did not identify the planes, nor
I elaborate. Other Pentagon offidals SUJ>
t plied details.
: Some officials suggested the Russians
f might be using the bomber move as a go-
t slow signal to Iran, which is spending
' billions of dollars on modern anns t bought principally from the United States
and Britain. I Iran, a long·time U.S. ally, and Iraq, a l Soviet client, have been··rivals for a long
1 time. That rivalry has taken on new im-
' porlance in the broader western-Com· ~ munist maneuvering for influence-in the
: Persian Gulf·Indian Ocean region since ~ Britain pulled out its forces a few years ! ago.
• j THIS 't!QULD BE THE FIRST Russian
1 action that could be interpreted as a i warning to Iran.
• American intelligence sources have
; reported at least 20 nights by very fa st
> Soviet f.l!G25 Foxbat reconnaissance
; p!anes over Iranian territory lhls year.
t Ironically. the overfli ghts may have in·
! creased Iran's interest in buying even.
more sophisticated planes, such as the
.l advanced Fl4 and FIS fighters being
t developed by the U.S. Navy and Air
; Force.
l And the appearanee or supersonic
bombers in Iraq may serve to push the
Shah of Iran even closer to buying the
costly fighters, officials say.
vlndal capital near the Cambodian
border, and .Khlem Hanh. a district town.
u . Col. Le Trung Wen, the command
spokesman, said the hw posts were maJI·
oed by ,.,, under-StreoP battalions
totaling about 500 men. Bui he said they
beat baek repeated attacks Saturday and
Sunday and counted 183 North Viet·
namese and Viet Coog bodies around
their po5llions. •
Government casualties Y.'Cre nine killed
and more than 100 wounded or mlss.tng.
the command satd. One of the Sou1h
Vietnamese battalions was said to have
suffered more than 35 percent casualties.
HIEN SAID the Communist pmers conceutraled a heavy baJTll<' ol tnor1ar .
aod n>Ckel fire apJnst ... ol 111e· posi-
tions wblle launching -•led Infantry
assaults against the other.
'!be lighting reportedly began with a
mortar a1tack at 3 p.m. Saturday and
luted until S p.m. Sunday.
The attacking force, estl~ated lo total
about 1,200 men, was identified as the
JOlst Independent Viet Cong Regiment
plus a regional Viet Cong baftalion, Hien
said.
Hien said the Communists appeared to
limit their objective tO cutting the road
behreen Kliem HAnY and Tay Nlnb. Bui
Int~ upeN aald llley ..... trylnl
to dolermlne -the -mlPt ~gnal • major ,olf...ive around s.ip.
Proslcleot ,Jll'\Y'll Van nu.., ~
repeated the government's cla1m. that tlie
capture of a ~er camp In the central
highlands nine days ago heralded a new
C.OmmunJst military pffenslve .
MEA1'1VIDLE, CA:MBODlAN In:
surgents forced the evacuation of two
more government positions on Phnom
Penh's shrinking southenl defense
perimeter today and sent government
~ lleolDC !or tlltlr n-117 -mint -tho PrU ,_ Rlvw·ll
mlleo ll<lcn 1lle capital. •
At leoot nine .....W ~
sol&tn w... lell belllDd -Ille
del<aJdon -tho to-ol Kom-poog Kool ... and Kompoog Tllol, Juv1n{I
the entitt ...,th b8nk ol lllO riv« In robot •
.hands. Flekl rept>NIS 1&id -of tho
JOO govemmenl delenden drowned. · The-,..,., ,,.,.. abandooed ~Ille
iovemnent Jn July but later recowied.
In the past foW' d4y1, boweVtt, the
rebelJ have mounted a. new offensive
around PMom Penh, and the capital's
.-
llOUlbem def..,. per1meter bu been
~ Plllhed -towanl tho capital.
nmmNG-11'A8 allD -to the -. nor1lt and eut ol P-Pem.
~ Sala Lekptam. about ., -up
Hlgmroy $, -t rein-..nls lrrived, including anriored ·-I
carriers, and Immediately enga&'<d nobel
ro..,.. ori a·lieO:e llre light only oeveral
hundr<ds yards OUlol the town. _
• To the we!t, a· government pincer
operation to clear·rebete h'om two hUls
about 12 miles northftst rJ the capital
was stalled, field reporters said.
Golda · Meir Hits •
Terrorist Deal
Dratnatic Rescue
STRASBOURG, Fral)!le (UPI) -
Israeli Premier Golda Moir toda,y de-
nounced Austria's decision 1o withdraw
transit faclllUes for Israel l ·b ound Ru:aalaD Jews -u: an encouragement to
Arab'tmoriJm, tiut Austria llld It ....Wd
slid< by Ila cled>loo. .
"~ muat ~ wiped out," Mrs.
Moir aid In an lmpaulooed 1peoch to
the 17 ... Uoo . Council ol Europe. "No deals--·" Auitrilm aid Ille would 0y to vi-probobly on nieaday
to try to penuode Alllllla to dlange Ille -AUSTRIAN QIANCEllA)R Bruno
KrelRy .. Salurday bowed to Arab '""~
ril]a ......... and' a&reed to close the
Jewbb -·..,.1a-1n Scl>oenau Castle
in n1urn· 1or 1ilo nleue ol -Jews
and .... ,.._ . official" ~ ••
hostages -a train lmn Russia by Arab guenillu.
A crumpled boat, wedged on a rock in the &huyl-
kill River, is lei\ behind and a groaning youth is
brought along with rescuer Dale Sweigart of the
Reading, Pa. iire department SCUBA team in a
one hour rescue Sunday with the rapids of the
Schuylkill River.
'lllere WU a growdswdl al the OounciJ
of Europe session for Austria to reverse
its decisions and a call by Italian
Socialist Giuseppe Vedovato, t he
assembly president, ror j o i n t in·
temalional action against terrorism.
In Amltenlam, !he Dutdi Foreign
Minister said he would ask the Austrian
government .for an explanation. of ita
decision to close the camp but would not
confirm ftpoM5 the Netberland.. mlgbl
replace Austria as a refugee reception
center. Army Fi"fllh 11 _Bodies
In f reckage·of Plane
MENA, !rf. (UPI) -A miUtary
spokesman.said toifay all 11 bodies had
been recovered from the wreckage of a
Texas IntematiOnal airliner that slam•
mecLlnto the-aide of-a densely wooded
mountain last Thursday night.
"Our latest information i.! that all 11
have been recovered," said B. J. Brewer
of the Red Rlvtr Army Depot. "'ft's 00
Rich Mountain in a very remote area."
BREWER DENIED that the Army had
sealed off the crash site in order to
aearch'for a colonel's briefcase reported·
ly carrying 9eeret military documents.
"There are some Army personnel
there, .. Brewer said. "We have no reason
to seal it off. To the best of our
knowledge it is absolutely uiitrue."
Polk Counly Coroner's officials said the
bodies will not be moved until the FAA
and airlines officials had thoroughl y ex·
amined the crash site. He said the
wreckage was scattered over more than
100 yards.
"The only thing left that's identifiable
is the tail section." the spokesman said.
"This whole thing is sort of a mystery. It
doesn't make sense at a\I unless lightning
struck the plane and killed both pilots
and somebody not e1perienced was Oying
the plane."
THE PLANE, y.•bich drifted more than
100 rfliles off its course during a violent
thwiderstorm, was found 85 miles north
I -
OK'-'"OMAr l
I
·~ A .. KAHllA9
l
I --... I ... , "···~+.-........
Tt:)(Aa 1 ... 1-----------l LOUISIANA
AIRLINER DISCOVERED
All 11 on Bo.rd Dead
of Te xarkana. Ark. It crashl!d during a
25-minute. 9().mile flight from El Dorado.
Ark., to Texarkana .
The missing plane was spotted from •
t}¥? air Sunday night by one of the more
than 35 private planes crisscrossing
designated areas. The plane was spotted
by its distinctive tail, which features a
white star on a blue background.
Anny belloopters -men es close as they could to the bUmed wreckage.
They pushed tbroogh the Jteavy un-
derbrush for 45 minutes to reach the
crash site.
Cessna Aircraft
Stalls, Sla ms
Into Mountains I . .
UTICA, Mont. (UPI ) -.t A--weekend·
junket turned into a fiery deal~ for e!gbt
persons aboaola twin-en~ <&ssoa J~t
slammed into the rugged Little Belt
Mountains of Central Montana. __ .
The j>lane "apparently lost power while
circfing over the hills about tWo miles
I N SHORT ...
IN VlENNA, Otto Roeoch, minister ol
interior, reiterated ln In interview that
the government lnslsts the Jewish \ransit
.,.,,,, <>peraled.in -· Cutle by the Jewish agency !or about. ~bt yWJ.
cease hmctiooing in iti pre9'.llt> fonn.~ J t
~· He"ttlU8eil-to'go into detail.
Both Chancellor Krelsky !!I'd ~
-admitted-that the governmeat . tadli a
problem bi that .the Jewlah A#;eocy, a
semiofficial grOup handling immigratioo
to Israel, leases Schoenau CUUe from its
· owner, COOntets Alezandrlne Mappock.
"I cannot d<clde What ls to happ"1 to
Sdio8!au ~use only tho owner ol lhe
castle can do that," Kreisky Wld a l/ieo.·
nose newspaper. )
Krelsky, Roeoch and Justioe MJnlller
west of here, stalled out and crashed," Christian Broda all ~ted 1n separate
said Judith Basin County Sherill.Charles slatemeols tho transit camp moat be
Loberg. clooed.
(
Kiiied were the pilot, A rt b u rC
Myllymakl Jr., 23, Phoenix, Ariz., and N , ! .1 _ G
seven persons lrom Stanlonl, Mont., atWUW«re US ~fyllymakl's former home.
e P enn Ce11 tral
WASIUNGTON (UPI) T h e
Interstate Commerte Commission said
today the Penn Central railroad can con·
tinue operating at least through March
without government subsidies. _
The ICC urged rejection by a
Philadelphia bankruptcy court of the
Penn Central trustees' plan to liquidate
the bankrupt railroad, and said the line
could be rebuilt into a Wlable railroad
with substantial federaJ and state
assistance.
• Perc11 ChanC!C!L
WASHINGTON (AP) -Sen. Charles
H. Percy says he lelt an hour-long
meeting with President Nixon with no
sense of discouragement about bis own.
While House proopecls.
Shut.down Seen
For Next FrUJ,a;y
By United Press tnternatfonal
Independent service !tation operators
from across the country met in Las
Vegas, SWlday to plan a coest·to-
coast shutdown, the next move ln their
campaign qalnst the Phase IV limit> on
the price ol gasoline.
"It looks like there will be a nationwide
lockup Startine nut Friday,'' lllid 911 ex-
ec111lve ol 1be Calllomla Retail Aaaocla-
tion. He estimated that llOIDC 2001000 Sla·
tiOM would be clooed.
111E CHANCELLOR described"" his
decision as "long overdue," adding: "U
we had nl)t done this .,.,.,, thl!ce would
have been a major batUe In Scboenall in
the near futt1l"e. The casile was en·
dangered to a high degree."
"What bas happened in Vienna \a the
greatest · encouraaement to terrorism
throughout the world," Mrs. Meir said in
a booming voice. ·
"I am not bringing to this forum the
questioo ol the Austrian government, but
a higbeT principle.
Agnew Fee"ls
His Career,.
'De~troyed'
.. •
' .-
WASHINGTON (UPI) -Tiie Wbtta
HOUie aid today Attorney General l!Ulot
L. ltJcliaMtoD bas denied lhal lleory E.
Petersen WU Ute IOlll'Ce of a ,,,on U.t
lbe Justice lJeputmeal had _.p
evtdellce to convict Vice Prosldeot Spiro
T. Apew.
PALM SPRINGS (AP) -Vice Presi-
dent Spiro T. Agnew has nld pcivately
that he believes 1lls political .,.,..,. has
been cleiiCroted. But be lW oomi out
swinging p¢>1.idy :af bls actuiers,' de-
~ to """'e his w.-.ceoc.. ,. ·c1es· ··'• ·-" . ,,. ,.~ , 't\I :ir--A..~'ll¥ toJQ a ~1vate
weekeqdz meetiJlg ··~of> Ca I:'. f <1.r n J a
Republican officials that eVen UJ1e ii ex·
onerated or.anefauons-or -~ his
politiCal luture has been destroyed.
AGNEW SPOKE to the Republican ol-
ficla1s Saturday after dramatically
declaring war on his accl1Sera in a na·
tiona!ly televised speech to a Repd:>Ucan
women's convention in Los AiigeJes.
Afterward, Agnew ls aald to have told
the Califomia.porty leaden there would
remain "lingering doubts" in the m1Dds
ol ll)BllY people even ii his name ls
cleared. He made it clear that be does
expect lo be cleared of allegatlom of
wrongdoing.
In anetber developmen4 Maryland
Gov. Marvin Mandel announced today
the creaLlon of an II.member task foree
to study the state's long-standing prac--
tice of awarding engineering and
architectural consultants' c on t r a c t s
without competitive bidd.lng.
The magazine said the Nixon team,
headed by J. Fred Buzhardt, made the
effort in meetings and telephone COil·
versations last week.
Newsweek quoted a Justice Depart·
menl official .as saying that the Nixon
team was seeking a dea1 startirig from
the .department's "bottcm·llne require.
meal" thal Agnew mlgn and plead guilty-to-a.~• for which be oiiOlil gel
aL I~ nlnl! months in Jail.
To_rnado Injures Family
The Illin9ts Republican, who has set up
a committee to assess his chances for the
1976 GOP presidential nomination, said ln
an interview Sunday night, "l would see
no cause to tell lbe committee to let up
in its work."
llERBERT NYE, president ol, tbe Nevada.~ce Statlcin Operltora
Aaaocla"""' said the shutdown ''Will QOll•
tlnue !or "" uhdetennlned length ol llme or until· the deoietji ot>latn equal Juilce
under law ... We "hope for a dom1no ef.
feet ."
• !
-~ain Soaks Georgia, Mississippi Valley R egions
Te111pernt11res
tl1•k LOW Jtt. . "
Calltof'ltla
• •
Co astal Weather
,,.,,,., t!ovoN TOdfY. \.!tl'll ¥111•111•
... ,... llltl'lt .,,., l"'Orllll~ ~ --Int Wtlt.-tly 10 ~ 16 k!Wllt In 1•11r•
-...,,,. •nd ~. Hllft lod•Y
ll'l""'lik
c-111 ~·""" r•nge "'""' Y ro 79. l11l•l'ld '""'"'"vr" •""99 "'°""' J7 to '" W•"1" ~•tur1 M.
Sun, Hoon, Thie•
Ml>HDAY SKOl'ld 11191'1 ......... 12:01 p.m, J.1
i«ond low ...... 71k 1t.m. 1.0 TUllCIAY
''"'' 11101'1 • .. .. J:or •·""· ,,, l"lttt IOw • • • , • Sl(l •.m. i.o ~ 1119'1 • ".' ". 11:!0 '·""· ~.• StcOO'lll Ww , ..... t 117 p.m. 1.1
5111'1 Ill ... 1147 '·"'· ktt 1:17 p.191.
MOClll ••• lhst '·"'· hit l t52 1.m.
I
e r~11e111e11ts B urn
f!OBOKEN. N.J. (AP) -"It was the
kind of screaming that makes YoU sick ...
A man kept yelling, 'I'm over here' 'My
babies' 'My babies'", said a woman who
lives around the comer from a rll'e that
killed at least nine persons.
Firemen were to resume searching to-
day in the rubble or four ~ed-out
tf!flementa for the body o! a Z.year old
child missing sloce Saturday's lire .
Police have arrested a lioboken man on
suspicion of arson.
.
DAILY l'tLOT
DELIVERY SERVICE
Dtllmy of tht D.ill1 Piiot
ts vuar.intttd
• T tltphont1
Mitt Of'""" (•If .,... . .......... ,
·~erlilflt\ llVll!llotltll ••••• ... W..1.,,....,, •• .• •• • ....... ..
flR (~, (lr::tr-t9Kti,
'" ,, •• c..i. ,_, °"',..... ~ \. ...... \.t .. ite flltwl .,., ...._,
A four-diy shutdown of St. Louts area
service stations ends officially tod1y,
with most observers calling It a !allure.
The dealers began opening for business
again on Saturday, alter the Cost of Llv·
ing Council moved Friday to permit rail-
ing retail gy>llne prices by one to 2.5
cents a gallon.
IN FRESNO, however, a' spokesman
,,... the P<!iroloWn -... , ol Centnl CAllfomla said an esttmated ninety per-.
eent'"ol the group's 350 aerviee stations
were closed SUnday,-not to open again
tmtil-y.
'Ille 111 cleolert wanl to be able to pon on every lncraM In wbolelale COila to
the -without havlnc to win govemmeot •pPn>VIL
Filling italiOnl ...-the country
moved quickly ta lau advanlqe ol the
new price oeilinp. While tbe incl'tlae
seemed -to vary In dlUereoL ~ ol
Ohio, for examDle, the nonn for recuJar
gas wu about to ctntl a 1aJion. 'l'be new
1vera1e premium 111 price appeared to
be about 44 centt a pllon. ·
' "WHAT TRB C.Uncll'I llvinf ua, the_
oU oompanlel wUI be ieltllle. beck," aald
Ono Pefty, dlrtetor ol the Cenlral OhJo
Oaoollno Dealers AlloclaUOn. n. aald Is
lrotlP wants a ._ Cdlll t pllGo ln-
creUe. . -
I •
•
•
•
l'VeM> Fl ame:>
Rosie Clifton, whose nanre hu
been linked by romanUc speC-
ula\1011. with that 0£ Prince
Charles, returned to London
• su~day alter spending • the
weekend with the royal .family
in ScoUand.
•
r
L.
~
nu
Ne
I
by
CIJ
De an,
I •h•
J.
I
In
t'I 4
Ro
lb
;e
pt
cl
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W•
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Wi ol ...
pl .,
" c(
ill
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~
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~ra~e_ ct.!!!t
• •
_Today's Final
N.Y. Stocks
• -VOL. 66, NO. 274, 3 SECTIONS, 32 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA MONDAY, OCTOBER I, 1973 N TEN CENTS
beCis ion On. Upper ·~ay Preserve Seen Soon
Newport Bead1 tity MIMger ii.bert
L. Wynn aays be aees an early· decision
by state and federal olDclals oo wbelher
they will spend the money necessary to
make a wildlife preserve ouL of Upper
Newport Bay. (llelated colUllUI, .!'lie I)
Wyoo said today be lhinD a statement
by Fourth District Superv~ Ralph
Clark of Anabelm will ''force the U.S.
Departmeot of Interior and State Fish
and Game~people to fish or cut ,bait."
Clark Friday bild said the county
should be willing to-"pool resources"
lust a ltfemor.B
with state and fed<ral agt!lcies, but be
made it plain be doeso, think the OOllDIY
sliould pay any major 1eqilisitloo C0615.
.Md ~ that Newport 0..ch las·
payen sbouldn' IP"'d any clfy lax
""!I"!' on acqulaltlaal. !Y"". pointed out
tbe ~ity will. be -lo serve a ~need'llld.sholll4 be paid for with
reglollal .... dollars.
"ll lt's ping lo be• regiooaI facility, I
think the state or federal goveoment
should·P8Y for it/' Wynn saia. He pointed
out that a recent city study showed
Newport Beach ii losinC aboul-ll million
eaeb year In maintenaoce coats of its
beaches, wblch are aervlng· regiooaI
need& ' "Whatever the dty would put Into oc-
qulring the Bade Bay woold just add lo
that delidt," Wymueld.
Wynn dlacloaed that be and -City At·
lomey lleanls O'Neil ba ve dtllerinf
views on the positioQ taken by the county
at a meeting Friday in San Francisco of
1he Upper Newport Bay FieJd C.om-
mlttee. I
• . .
Tliis Is an authentic-photo of summer 1973 along
the Orange Coasl ·vou may want to clip it out and
send it to Aunt Hattie in Iowa just to prove there
really was a swmuer along the Orange Coas~ this
year. You will recall, of course, that summer arrived
last week-on the winds of a Santa Ana condition.
It staggered through Sunday before the cool marine
air dominated once again, bringing back the drippy
gloom observed in these parts since Memorial Day.
Ugh.
Airline$ Re~pi,ng Profits?.
Official ~ays Skyjacker Security Fees Ex.cessive
"
BY GEORGE IEIDAL -
11le fee charged to screen skyjackers
from ·legitimate ait travelers may be
rnrlching airlines, airport officials charg·
ed today.
Orange County Airport Admlnistrator
Robert 8resbahan seld today 22 cents cl
the 25 cents e_ac:h. paasenger pays as a
iecurity surcharge goes to pay costs of
providlng screening officers.
However, a Sacramento airport officlal
charges that airlioea reap u DlUdl' u fl
million e1:cess eaCh month from the
aecurlty surcbargeM!iey collect.
' B"5Jl8ban ezpleloed how the system
workl. AirliDes, with approval of the '
ptvit Aer<Jnautics Board, collect the ~
cents from each passenger who buys a
Uckel lo fly.
Airports each month bill the airlines
for the cost of security precauUons, .IJl.
Newport Sets
Sand Castk
Competition
• Saying they're "forging. aheo<I in the
face. m. multltudinoul permU. now re-<julrea for waterfront COllllnlctlon," of·
fidels of the Newp0rt II.I-Chamber
of ~-today announced the 12th •. ~.uat 5ond CUtio contest will take
place Oct. H at c.rooa del Mar State-0·
ty Beach. ·
eluding the salaries of orncen assigned.
"Obviously it takes a certaln number
of mt.ii regardless or bow many people
are enplaned," Bresnahan said.
. At smaller airports, the cost per
passenger is likely to be higher.
... 'I'd imagine that at the bigger airports
where costa are spread over a greater-
numtic:r of passengers the cost per·
.
person might be as low as 17 or 18
cents," Bresnahan speculated.
James K. Carr, president of the
Airport Operators Council International,
said the airlines are pocketing up to 'l'l.6
percent of the take from the 25-cent
charge.
Carr also heads the Sacramento
Metropolitan Airport
DirS~rict Nixes Library
' ' -
Prob"lem -Responsibility
' Newport·Mesa Unified SCbooJ District In th~ district office.
orficials said today they have no direct Referring to Mrs. Price's charges, Dr.
responsibility for security at any of the Sanborn sald •• "I'm sure she has a prob--
libraries in the fOur district high schools. fem, but it has nothing to do with my of·
The response came after 'a charge fice."
made Friday by Costa Mesa High School Mrs. Price Friday said. "The truth of
Llbr.!!:ri&n Mrs . .()pal Price that cfistrict the matter is that .district officials do not
o£ficlals were ignoring the probtem of like to think of students stealing books.
student book thefts. , 1'1ey close their minds to the problem .
Mrs. Price. and ~he three o~her high ~ .,.'And th~y look askance at ~nyone who
schoql llbrar1aM disclosed Friday that tries to raise the subject. They feel there
books wot.th a~t $100,000 have ~ is supposl'd to be an atmosphere of·
stolen or otherwise not returned to their freedom on Iha-campuses ao--if someone
Ubrarles over the past three years. pusheS for security they are dubbed as
"lt is the responsibility of the respec-old·fashloned custodiaM of books."
tive scboola to in terms of admlnlstering "She might feel that way " Dr San·
the affairi of Uieit .programs,•• Dr. born said "but wt JiaVe fiothmi that WlllJa0!..~1)9m, media serYioes director deals witb security at the schoob in the
for the ·d11tr1ct, ezplalned. dlsirtct offices."
'"lbefta are something they have to BQ,4k thefts at Newport Harbor Hlgb
. live with and I sueu they are baring Scb6ol, which numbered 1,300 each of the
troublt," be said. • last three )'WI, have prompted of!1clals
Sanborn ezplalned that his om... b there lo install • 1111gnetlzed book check res~ble f., only elementar9 school .,.tom that will 'eet off an alarm If 1 llu·
libraries -which appuently are bavinS dent trlel to leave the library without
troubles of their own. • checking out a booi.
He aald that the dlltrict's eltmtntary The electronic monitoring device ls
lchoolo reported ...,e 1,eoe boob mm. ad!eduted t0 ~ lll!talle<! Jft ""'weetts.
O'Neil is the city's representative on
that panel of federal, state, county and
city officials working to resolve the ques-
tion of the ulUmat.e fate of the bay and
the sum111nding uplands owned by the
Irvine Com , .
1oo•Nell =it's a copout on the part
ol the County,'' Wynn aa.kl. "He 111;ys: the
county bas been the one questioning tfie
Irvine Company's ownershlp and the one
who backed out of the property tnde o(
Irvine Company boklings for county
holdings.
.. He JAYS now the county is coming
aJooa and saying It's the federal and
itate govem.l]lenls who ought to pay for
public 1<quWtioo.
"Well," Wynn said, "l suspect that
the federal government is now realizing
that acquisition Is tbe right thing to do
and that the county has been the bot-
tleneck.
"They're admitting , that it fits the
criteria for a regional facility and have
given the county its chance lo do
Balboa Fun Zone
something about it.
"Well, the county. basn·i done
anything," he said, "so DOW it ?ti.11 be up
to the federal and state agencies to fish
(){ cut bait."
He said be. thinks Clark's statement
lli ll trigger that decision.
"I think they've been reluctant In the
past because they didn't want to step on
anybody's toes,'' Wynn said.
''The way has been cleared and now 1
think they'll step out sharply," be said.
Commission Nixes
33 Condomiufils
By CANDACE PEARSON
Of JN Deity l"llor Sl•ff
The removal of the Balboa Fun Zone to
construct 33 condominium units was
turned down today by the South Coast
Regional Zone Conservation Commission
in Long Beach.
Only five ol the 12 commissioners
voted in favor ol tbe project proposed at
Edgewater and Palm Streets by John
Konweiser of JAK. Consttuction Company
in O:ista Mesa.
.,,. ....... ~ .. ....
4g~nt,s S~"lf
Donald Nixon
Phone Tapes
From Wire Services
Federal agents are weeding through
wiretap flies to fmd taped telephone ~
versations between F. Donald N1xon of
Ne"Wpart Beach, the President's brother,
and a former Hughes Tool OJmpany of~
ficial charged with income tax evuion.
Attorneys: for !rohn Meiet, tx:·flugbes
scientific adviser, say their client and
Nixon were business associates and may
· have talked by phone at the Ume the
President bad his brother's line tapped.
They say such a tap may taint
evidence held by the govenunent that
Meier allegedly evaded taxes on $269,000
in personal income in 1968 and 19119,
earned while buying Nevada mining
claims for Howard Hughes.
The day before Meier was arraigned in
U.S. District C.Ourl in Las Vegas, it was
disclosed that the President had the
Secret Service tap the phone of his
brother's home and business in Newport
Beach.
In revealing the tap, it WM alleged the
President feared poss I bl e em-
barrassment from his brother's financial
dealings.
In response to allegations-by Meier's
attorney's the U.S. Justice Department
has agreed lo search its records for
transcripts of any conversations between
Donald Nixon and Meier.
Mace On~ Up
On Karate
A crooked karate exponent got a
practical lesson in the use of the
chemical compound Mace in sub-
duing lawbreakers over th e
weekend, when a verbal ex·
planatlon failed to get W: message
across.
The karate man. !6, or Costa
~!esa, allegedly squared off with
Newport Beadl Police Officer Jon
Costelow in the emergency room at
Hoag Memorial llospital.
Police said Officer Costelow was ·
sent to the ho<pltal Saturday to
check out a man creating a
disturbance and found the ~
who was later booked on suspicion
of being drunk In pabUe.
"Now, I'm going to get YoU . • . "
he atlecedly warned the officer,
It required eight votes for approval.
Komweiser indicated after the vote he
will appeal the decision to the state
coastal commissioo.
Not all Qf the cmun.issioners who voted
against the condominiums_ w.ere in·
terested in saving the half-century-old
lmusemenfpertt. •
Commissiooer Robert Rooney of l-fllll--
tingtoo Beach questioned whether the
Fun 1.cDe should be there ·if it isn't
economically feasible. Koowe\ser said he
~· '"' ·\. Mets Capture
F;~tern Titk
' CIDCAGO (AP) -'n1e New York
Mets woo the NaUooel League East
title today, beating the Chicago
Cubs M in the first game of a
dooblelieader· behind the hitting of
Jerry Grote and Rusty Staub and
the relief pitching cl Tug McGraw.
The 'Victory cUnched the Mets'
first divisional t!Ue since l!MS9 when
they went on to win the World -The P.fets' victory ln the first
game, .whose first four innings
were played in a light drizzle, made
the nightcap meanlngless. They bad
to lo•! both games in order for the
regular aeason to '!Dd in a tie.
St. Louis, which ended Its regular
season Sunday, and Pittsburgh,
playing San Diego today, a:>uld
have gained a tie with a double loss
by the Mets.
Fashion Island
Lobster Bake
'Best Evet'
Mn. John Connally of 309 Walnul St.,
Newport Beach, Sunday wu' the winner
of a Ford Pinto, given away as the
Balboa Bay Lions Club capped what
Lions officials are calling "the best
lobster bake ever."
The three-Oaf event a.I Fashion Island
drew the largest attendance ever, about
2.5,000 persoos.
Officials estimated between 5.000 and
10.000 persons watched t'"11Lobster Bake
Parade Saturday morning.
Lions Club spokesmen said they don't
know yet how much money they raised.
bu~ figure it was more lhan the $6.000
profit accumulated last year.
"l know we sold 3,!iOO lobsters.'' said
club official Mario Pacini.
AD GUARANTEES
FAST 'PICKUP'
When you're -looking for a car buyer
with "pickup" as fast as your car, try
Daily f>ilol want ads for qutcknm. Thia
advertiser did :
'71 Cootlnenlel 4 dr. Dk.
gre<n, blk, \1nyl lop, AM/
FM stereo. Tilt •ill., air,
almost new st.eel belted trs.
Leather int. Must sell quick
at $3100. Approx. S4M ml.
May finance. HURRY! (Ad.
dte5!1, phone DO.),
cJoS&i it down last week because it
wasn't making money.
Rooney said he liked the design of the
condominium project, but wanted to wait
six months to a year to act <11
developments in that commercial z.one.
"The area is undergoing change,"
Rooney said. "We should retain our plan·
ning options."
~tore outstpoken was Commi.s&ioner
Rooald Caspers of Newport Beach, wbo
(See FUN ZONE, Pqe Z)
Roosevelt
•
Supported
By Brotller
By L. PETER KRIEG
Of 11M o.llY P'll°' Si.fl
Former congressman James
Roosevelt, a Newport Beach mldent,
said today be bas full faith that his
brother, Elliot, will be cleared of charges
that be tried to arrange the as.sasslnaUon
of Bahamas Premier Lynden Ptnclling.
.,,I really have nothing else to say other
than I hope the committee wW give him
a fair heartbg,'' Roosevelt said.
Roosevelt's brother, a former Miami
Beach maror. met privatily with bis al·
tomeYs Sunday ih Miami lo prepare for a
Senate subcommittee hearing Wednes-
day.
The subcommittee heard testimony
early.in September from Loui3' "the noc..
tor" Mastriana that Elliot Roosevelt of-
fered him $100,000 to assassinate .Pend·
ling. He said a second man, Patsy
Lepara, also was involved.
"My reason for coming to Miami is to
meet with my attorneys here and at·
tempt to reeonstruct all that I did during
the time when these charges were leveled
against me," Roosevelt said.
He said he would "completely refute
all the fantastic fabrications that have
been made by this ex-convict · lttastrlana
and other ex-convicts as to my dealings
with them.·•
Roosevelt declined to detail charges
made secretly to the committee later by
Lepa ra .
Orange
•
Weather
Cout
•
Considerable cloudiness in the
morning hours ahmg the Orange
Coast Tuesda y, clearing to sunny,
but cooler skies in the afternoon.
Highs in the upper 60S at the beacl).
es rising to the mid·70s inland.
INSIDE TODi\ Y
"I n oil hont$ly. 1 don'£ rttJl.l lJ
see how a 1oomntr can say tha t
she wa nts the man she love.t to
be pre1ide-11r,·• $al/I Nanc11 Rea·
pan. wife of 11 lf'adino con tende r
for the 19iG Republican pre.ti·
d111tiol nomination.. Se e story,
Page 26.
aNfl"' It AM ........ U L,M. .. .,. II ,,,,..... tf
C•Hhr111• l N•IFWoll Nt WI •
C .. HiflH JJ•tt S•lvl1 1".n1r •
Ten awards will be glvtn, offlclalt
aaid. including most artistic castle, best
contemporary castle, best leese-hold cas-
1Je, molt cliscombooberat.ed castle, belt
drip castle. most grandioae a Ue, best
hlgb-liff cutle, best environment castle,
most. humorous castle and mos~ \D'l<astle
wt!•.
ing 11 the end of 1.,t year. ~placement Scllool oCfldals at <:orone d<I Mar Hig)l
C06ts of tbose 'books wnl t>ei· more than School expressed lht. moct concern over ·
"I took out my Mace canister
and. explelned to the Mpect Its
use, u Offittr Qmelo• said in his
reWf1. adding that theQnan then
tried to rush hlm.
The Ul'lgency "'6'81' was received' by
readen and response w•• fast. For fast
resu1t11, call tfle direct line, M2-5678, to
lhe Daily Piiot Clwlfled Advenlslng
Dept.
CMftk1 It I-'-••It
C-_. · It '*" M11f111'1 •n 0.•111 Nttk.,. t Ttlftflltto 1'I. • Entrants wlll begin work ot noon and
will have. two houre to finish.
~P!'licatlons for cn~lea should be nted
al lhe chamber ofnce In Novr"por', Ceilter.
I •
$20,000. the problem. There, even £nglish
But he! 'literated bt dbes not have any Department Chairman Dan Gillis Issued
authority or responsibility over tOO high a plea to parents to took ror unreturned
!Chool llbrorlea -nor docs anyono-.1•• llb"ry'boob In their hom.,. •
> .
"Then 1 Maced him.'' \e con· l!fltwl .. ll'IN ' TM.i'" 11
l:1't1rtalMlffll IJ WNftltr •
eluded. .._ l'I•-• :lt·ll ~'t NtWI U•JI ..__ H WwM Ntwl t -
I . l • j
2 ~~LY~LO_T ____ N ~----M-'-"'-'.c.'c.' _o_ct_ob_•_• _le_, _19_7_3
E11d Possibly in Sight
Fo1· Back Bay Control
•
By JOHN ZALLER
Of tlll DlllY Pit.I llllt
SAN FRANCISCO -There \Vas cauUous optimism here Friday among
members of the Uppt>r Ncv.-port Bay Field Committee that the end may at
last be in sight to the struggle for public ownerShip of Back Bay.
"I f~I v.·e accomplished more bere today than we
have in 'be 13 months we have been tagether as a c:om-
millee," said Ed Smith, a member of the field conunit-
lee and supervisor of the Division of Refuges, Bureau of
Sp:irts Fisheries and Wildlife ... At last we really seem to
be getting some place." tbe federal official said.
Most offlcia!S probably wouldn't have u:pr~ them-
selves as enthusiastically as Smith did but there did aeem
to be grounds for optimism :
,~
' _,._, .
iL · . I
-FIELD COJ\fMITl'EE members said what land they u.u.111:
want to acquire and bGw it "'ants to use that land with greater p;recis.loo
than ever before. ,
A state department of Fish and Game official says he has unoffi~al
consensus a1nong the dozen agencies represented on Field Committee on a plan
for acquiring and managing the Back Bay.
-ORANGE COUNTY supervisors RQbert Battin, Ralph Clark, and Ronald ;-
Caspers. u•ho constitute a majority on the five-man Board or Supervisors, ~d
1''riday they are "'iliing to cooperate V.'ilh the effort~ of the Departmen~ of. Fish
and Game.
•·What 1vas needed for some lime was a lead agency that was willillf. to
be the quarterback on the whole effort," said Caspers, a Newport ~h su-
perYisor who aUenda Field Committee meetings although be ls not officially a
member. ,__ _ ·
"Jim McCormick from Fish and Game seems like he will be that quarter·
back," Gaspers continued. "So the best we in Orange County can do it punt the
ball up to the state level and let McCormick run with it."
Gaspers wurprised some members of the field committee Friday when he
said, ··we in local government like to try to hand!~ all locill issues. .
· "But sometimes we are a little too close to the sib.ladoo~to do the JOb.. right..,. ' ' ~
THE APPEARANCE that all agencies are now pUlling in the same direc-
tion does not mean, however, that the efforts to achleve-publlc oW11!f'Ship ta:
Baclr-BaY is over. -~~ _
Supervisor·Battin, of Santa Ana, who has a reputation in some circles as
a foe of the Irvine Company, says he still plans to ask the Board of Super~
viSQrs to file suit against the Irvine Company to try to prove that tbe county
really owns three undeveloped Back Bay islands that are now claimed by..ibe
Irvine Company. -:i ~
In a dispute over those islands and other properties in Upper Bay, the
lrvin.e Company also allegedly owes the county several million dollan iD un-
paid property taxes. -
In addiUon, Orange County government has filed a presqiplive righll
suit against The Irvine Company, claiming public right over virtuuall)' all un-
developed parts of Back Bay.
ANY OF THESE ISSUES has the potenUal to stall indefinitely the effort
to aquire for the public Back Bay properties owned by the company.
But Jim McCormick. chief planning officer for the Department of Fish and
Game, observed, "At least now everyone ~ms to be working together. 'l'ha1's
the most important thing." t
The apparent agreement of Orange County representatives ill go aloog with
McCormick 's efforts was viewed as the most si1nificant developtQent I'
Supervisor Clark said be was acting ~use, ·"J ~e' that lhe time tor .
action is now. I propo$ that we seperate t~ ·talterl liOm the doers." A...
A spokesman for CJark made a pbiot._Friday that Clark's position had -
nothing ill do with charges from the Orange County G.rand Jury ea,rijer ~t
the Board of Supervisors wrui foot-dragging on the Back Sly. •
"This position has been in tbe worts for weeks,'' the spokesman said.
' ' SUPERVISOR CASPERS~-who was removed from the Field Colnmlttee
at the instigation of Clark and Battin, who lbea replaced him on the commit·
tee -nevertheless maintained that the Grand J ury criticism had an import-
ant effect on Clark and Battin. · 1 "They are acting in. direct response to Grand JW'Y criticism tbat they
ought to get moving. Now I hope we caJJ keep moving," Caspers said.
3 ,000 to Be quizzed
-
Do Y ou Like KOCE?
...
Survey Will Find Out
KOCE-TV, Orange County's first
educational tele\lislon station, is getting
its tirst report card.
?.tore than 3,000 Orange County
resident! are being contacted by
telephone this month for their evaluation
of Olannel 50. owned and operated by the
Coast Community College District.
The ratings, conducte<i by Channel SO
1n cooperation with the Corporation for
Public Broaacasting, comes exactly one
OU.NGI COAST
DAILY PILOT
year after the station began beaming out
programs from its studios at Ci<llden
\Vest College.
Project Director Rich Brightman of the
Coast C.Ommunily C.Ollege District ex-
plained tbeJnOlivatlon for the survey this
\\'ay:
"KOCE is a new station, having gone
on the air in November Jm. It serves an
area part of which previously was not
served by public television, and part of
\\tllcil was in the fringe signal area of
KCE T in Los Angeles.
"The signal area of KOCE. primarily
Orange County, Is one of the fastest
gro~ing areas in the nation and contains
many communities served by cable
operations. It thus provides a fertile field
laboratory for studying the building of an
audience for public television. 1'
The researcb project cohtalm four
basic parts,
Judge: Hunt
Won't Face
Lo~g Term
WASHINGTON (UPI) -Judge John J.
Sirlca said today he would reduce sen~
tences of up to 40 years he prtvlously im·
posed on E. Howard HWlt and four men
who pleaded guilty to the Watergate
burglary. .
Sirica, chief judge of the U.S. District
, Court for the District of Columbia, said
that forcing them to serve long terms
•1~d not only be unwarranted but un-
just."
At a brief court beariog that Slrlca
caned because of "what appears to be a
widelpread misunderstanding" about the
temporary, maximum sentence he gave
the five, the judge noted he '""'1d be !&-
nlent in determ!nlng final punlalunenL
Sirica gave no indication when the final
sentences would be t'mposed •. noting that
all five asked to withdraw gvilty pleas
they made last January shortly after
their trial began.
Sirica sentenced the men, Hunt,
Bernard L. Barker, Frank A. Sturgis,
Virgilio R. Gonzalez and ~ugenio R.
Mart.inez to provisional, maximum terms
of up to 40 years in prison last March. He
stressed then that their final sentences
,vould depend on the cooperailon they
gave 'to Watergate investJgaton. .
He declared: "It WU never '1111 In-
tention -and "'8in 1· repeat with
emphasis -that ibe maximum terms of
the provisional sentences should becaif!e
Ute tenns of the final sentenoes. In this
case, such a disposition would not only be
T unwarranted bUt unjust."
·Attorney Dal}iel SCbultz asked for and
received a week's extensi.On of a Wednes--
day deadline to file "affidavit& J of
fact" BUpporting ,the contention Of • his
. four clients that they were lured mto
crime -by high goVernfuent officials and
then pressured to plead guilt~ and re-
main silent.
Hunt's attorney, Sidney Fachs, was
granted permission to file a motl.on ~Y
Friday asking Sirica to reconsWeJ:' his
o~er d<mandlng supporting a{Jldavits.
Frot11 P .. e I
FUN ZONE .••
referred to the FWl Zone as, "a:mununity
blight."
Caspers, who is also chairman O! the
Orange County Board of Supervisors,
strongly objected that Ill)' a<tioo by tile
iqional commisskm. Is,, '".o futlle. l'll bet
W odds wha~ve_r.' we .. do will ,be ap-
"'·'"" It' =·•~'-"·=•-•··" ~· i.nuucl -~~· .
The regional COlllllllMloil hal pmrut
authority within 1,000 yards of the mean
high tide line in 1.(18 Angeles and Orange
Counties under Propositioo 20, the
coasUlne Jniliative passed J a 1 t
November. , Commiaiooers Rooney and Rhnmon
Fay o1 Marina de! Rey said they cooldn't
approve 8JU1hing that reduced public ac-
ce1S to the Moreline or a public walkway
as the condominiums would. Fay supported tbe Fun Zone as
"fulfilling a recreationll function in an
environmeDtal setting." He did add,) .. ad-
mittedly it might be upgraded ."
"l am more elated than ever that op..
posed Proposltim 20.'' Commls!ioner
Louis Nowell commented. The Loo
Angeles City Councilffi&n said "it frigh~" him that Ule commission
would tell owners exactly what to do with
their property.
C.Ommlssioner Nowell aJso said that the
property i5 in a commercial zone, not a
"'fun zone.'' He said approval should re--
quire only seven votes.
Jeffrey Freedman, deputy 11tate air
tomey general, ruled eight votes ~
required because tbe property bad been
used as a recreatiooal public beachfront
are.a. In doing so, he took a broad v1ew of
a section of the proposition covering
preservation of recreational uses. .
The Fun Zooe could come under this
sectioo, Freedman said, "even though it
is a man·made. humanly operated facili-
ty and the owners and operators could
stop it at any time.''
In the audience this morning was Allan
Beek, wbo conducted a postcard survey
or residents which reportedly showed
strong opposition to the condominium
plan. Beek didn't speak because comT
missibn chairman Donald Bright didn't
reopen the full public hearing.
Konwelser's l~acre project would
have a densily of 2LI dwelling units an
Acre and a height of 34 feet. 'l'be property
is adjacent to the Balboa Ferry dock at
Palm Street.
•
"'' 0•1>19e ,.,.,, O~ll'I' PILOT ."'''~ ,..~,f~
II ~O"""i-Th• N-• P•fJ .. •J pU~l\Md ~'I'
"'9 0•1"'9• (0111 Py&h•~•"9 C-N~V. $1t1>11-
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Panis Upheld
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\
Vse of Flag 'Symbolic_Speec.h'
DENVER (UPI) -It is no more a crime to wear in American
fla g sewn to the seat or one's pants than to paste a flag decal in a car
window, the C-Olorado Supreme Court nt!ed todar-
The lilgh court called such action "symbolic speech" and said it
was protected under the f'irst Amendment. It overturned the Boulder
District C-Ourt conviction or David Patten Vaughan, charged with
desecrating the nag.
"Just as some citizens paste flag decals on their car windows to
indicate their . support or certain political philos6phles, defendant
adorned the seat of his jeans with a flag to indicate his contempt for
tho se things which the flag syll)bolizes," the court said. ,
Justice Donald E. Kelley, who wrote the decision, said: ••TIJe
ideas expre~!ed by defendant's conduct may seem to some to be
Juvenile and Inarticulate, and perhaps hlJ actions are •ubject to In·
terprnt>tlons other than ~ have flven, but this does not strip his
speech ol constltu_Uonal protection,'
0 1111 ,, ... lttft ......
Plenty to Sing About
With an unbeaten football team to back, these New-
port Harbor High School song leaders have good
reason to smile. From left are Kathie White Ann
Cates, Holly Montgomery, Lynn Wolle, Lori Miller
and Lynn Weddington. The Sailor song leaders won
first place award at recent Sou~ern-California song·
leading camp a?d perfoi:med during pregame show
at recent San Diego Chargers football game.
Auto Stolen
10 Minutes
Big Trouble
Juvenile court action Is scbeduled in
weeks ahead for a pair ol Santa Ana boys ,.,
wbo stole a 1971 Lincoln c.orittnental ln-:
Newport Beach and found it was nothing
but trouble. .
They had the car Im: only aboot 10
minutes.
Investigators said Robert McKJnnoo, ol
Newport Beach, had just parked his
sedan near 'a local liquor store about 11
a.m. Thursday when it happeoed.
Common Trash
Not ,Allowed
NeWporl Bead! ...-Sid
Soifer, n prtdil -on tbe qualii, "' bit food Ud drink. has
-plalned tO poilce -thot --u tamtlliing his lmlP· . .
The ~a•eJ;', , ~)'I 8ofler,
-Ofmer cl the.Blue Beel. 107 II.SI
· Place, lad~. trub 1J9DY in
the ~· bl!> 1$ the ...-of. his ld<:Fa<lden Square cale.
Specifically, they aze dlspoolng ol
low-quality llquor boltl... far
below the standard he oerves, Sol· fer complained to invelllplon.
Ri~ C.Onducted
800 Petition
To End 'Smut'
Jn Area Shops
By TE!lllY COVllLE °' .. a.llY ,.,., llaft
A HWltington Beach mother wanll to
above say magazines like "Playboy,"
.. Oui" and "Penthouse" out of local
market. and drug stores and back Jnlo
adult book stores or liquor Stores.
Patricia Smith., who ' lives in the
southeastern part of illwn, has filed a
peUtioo witll city hall purported to carry
800 signatures protesting the "open sale
of so ·many pornographic magazintl!I in Suddenly, the liquor store manager
l~te.:l·out· and saw two young boy1 roar·.
ing oil in the Car just parked by McKin-
non and figured the worst. For Newport
Crash Victim .
-the stores of·our comiiiunitj:"
•1• t. Her petition goes before the City Coun·
ell tonight, during the council's 1 o'clock :\
meeting: Bill no action is likely to be I
laked.
He called tile P>lioe, ~ to Lt.
Wayne Connolly( watch oommander, and
tbe informaUoo was relayed to the poUce ·
helicopter crew auislna: over Corona del Mar. ,., I f , Reqqiel!l Mail WIS beld Saturday In
Pilot Officer Jim GoUos and his
partner spotted the stolen car al Jam-
boree Road and Bristol Street \Yi.thin five
minutes, reporting its position to patrol cars. -TJie Vehicle was then stopped, but one
suspect made a break for freedom but
was stopped because N"ewport Beach
Detective Ken Smith just happened to be
driving by oo his way back from oourt.
He spotted the yruth fleeing and leaped
out to chase him down and capture him.
Investigators said Ute two Santa Ana
teenagers were released to their parents
pending court appearances. ·
Newpor t Burglar
Gets $3, 700 in Loot
A wlndow-smaShing burglar broke into
the Newpor.t Beach home of a man
visiting Palm Desert over the weekend
and stole more than ·'3.000 worth of
jewelry and coins, the victim discovered
Sunday.
Harold A. Green, of 1415 Outrigger
Drive, returned from the desert to find a
shatteraj.bedroom window and the l!llee~
ing "'quarters ransacked. Investigators
said the loss included four aMOrted
women's rings, plus $.14 in silver coin.!,
mostly half dollars.
' Stainless Steel
Fabric Care
Tub
" . Newport ,Beach .fl:!r. Un1•'1i!/Y of
Southern Ca!li...U.: fmllmaJI Nancy
Obegi, who loot her fiibt for ·rue due to '
auto accident injuries.
Mis.s Obeg~ 18, of 438 Vl!la Grande,
Newport Beach, suffered major bead in-
juries Sept 23 when thrown fJ'QOl a ca.r
on the Glemlale Freeway.
She dted Thursday at Verdugo Htlll
Community Hoe:pital, where ibe wu
taken aJocg wttll her companion, a Los
Angeles youth who was alao UfrOwn Out
and critically Injured.
Requiem M~ was at Oµr Lady Queen
of Anaell Chllrch for the 1m·c.rooa de!
Mar High School graduate.
Rosary was recited Friday night for
Miss Obegi, who eMolled at USC as a
pr~law major and was a member or
· Alpha Phi sorority .
Survivors Include her mother, Mrs.
Cbarlyne Obegt, a 15totber, Ne~rl
Beach attorney J.,.pb Qbegl, plus
sisters Diane Obegi, of Huntington Beach
and Kathleen Bearden, of Escondido.
The family auggests memorial con·
tilbutlons In llllss Qbegl's name to the
use School of Medicine. ·
Funeral arrangementl were under
direction of Ballz·Bergeron Funeral
Home, Corona del Mar.
FULL 2 YEAR
PAlllTS and LABOR
WARRANH
e S,,_,h, Rutt·Proof,
Chip-Proof
e ldHl for all Wu h-
able Fabrics
• L11t1 the Lifetime
of the Wither
PWS •••
a washable
knits cycle ----,., ............. ... ... ,.... """ ... ~ htwtca. AN _. ...,., ....................... YOU CAN tuT A snn t URM· WAINl l
AllD DlYll fOl ........
'36176
City Attorney Don Bonfa says his
pre1bqinary reaction is the city has no
pow.u Jo r.epda~ where suc:h.mapzines are IOI<!. .
•0 111e state-controts· the-qumion of
obscene matter," Bonfa says . "But if
councilmen wru1t me to research it
further for an officlal opinion, I can."
Mn. Smith, an elementary. school
teaCher In Santa Ana, said today, "Yott
can enter almoat any drug store and
there's a Playboy Magazine. J feel I have
a right' to enter a store and not have to
see them or have my daughters see
tllem.
"I Was J!.lSt put out to find h_9'! many
stores had them. The Supreme Court said
this is a community affair. Some com-
munlUes may be a liUle more outraged
than others.
"I do think It's significant ·l could get
800 signatures in two days. J dontt think
we'll ever stamp them out but I do
beliete there ought to be restrictions on
where such magazines are sold."
She gaid she doem't want to ban the
magazines entirely, but feels they should
only be sold in adult bookstores or liq uor
stores where childrt:n aren't frequent
vi!ltort.
She admitted that she doean't know if
the city can do anything about the
magazines. Sbe said she filed her petition
to make thtreouncil aware of community
feeling.
If no action is taken, Mrs. Smith said
she probably won't do anything else for
the moment.
l~I SPEED OUEEN,IClll
e M c Gr-ew-Edlson Compmny C lvfelon
• 90 DAY CASH. WITH ~~~~~~{0
1815 "EWPORT BLVD. Dawntawn COsta Mesa-Pbane 548·7788
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.Orande .~Coast
8 . EbJTION
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N.Y. Stocks
YPL ~6, !«>. 274, 3 SECTIONS, 32 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY. CALIFORNIA MONDAY, OCTOBER I, 1973 c lEN CENTS
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Survey to Find What You Think of KOCE-TV
}'W' alter the litatlon began beaming out
P"IJ'8l1IS from Its studlol at Golden
Wes,t CQDece.
Project ~ Rieb Bnptman ol the .
co.t: ()mmtmlty Coilece Dlstrict ex-
plilned ~ motlnttca ror the """"Y' this way: . -
''ICOCE ls a new. ataUon, bavtng: gone
on.(be air In NOYember lfl2. It serves an .
area · part of which ·pm!ously was oot
served by Public television, and part of ,
which ...., In the lrlnp algnal area of
KCET In Loa Angeleo. •
"Tbe slpal area of KOCE, primarily
Orange County, ts Ono. ol the rm.st
grvwiog areaa ·1n the nattca and oootalm
many comnnmiUes aerved by cable
openotloos. It thus provides a fertile field
laboratory for atudyjng. the building of an
audience f0< public ~vision."
'lbe researeh project contains four
basic part~
First, the survey will usess the sl7.e
and eomposlllon of the KOCE audience.
It Is estimated that ol the S,000 peraooa
contacted, SOO will qualify a.s regular
KOCE viewers.
Panel discussions involving Orange
O>unty community leaders will tben be
scheduled to consider the edU:Cational
neecls of specific population groups that
could be fulfilled by television. These
Three Counts
groups include white collar, and blue col·
lar, and ·professional groups, women:
senior citizens and othen.
FollowlnC' Iha~ lay dlsc'Uasioo groups
awtJtlng of 211 to so penoos wlll be in.
vtted to d19CUSI the same tolMCS COG-
1\denod by the mnaller panels and to
dlacuss bow well the community leaders
expressed· the needs of their population
segment.
Finally, students of the Coast C.om·
munity College District will get their say.
Selected students will be interviewed and
will maintain a diary ot televtslon course. viewing during the semester.
KOCE currently broadcasts counes
v.ilich permit students to take up to nl.nt
units of college credit by 'A'atchiol:
television at home.
Dr. Brightman expects to make the
results of the four-phase study public by
June 30, lfl4.
Segretti 'Guilty'
Fnm Wire Servica Cox. A~ said Cox bellertd the
WASlllNGTON -Donald H. Segretll, mazimlDD peaalty of three yean and
3t, former Treasury ileporttnenl ·lawyer, $3,000 for hll guilty plea waa sulllcrent.
pleaded guilty today to three """'" ol Tbe count tbat was dnlpped rdated to
conspiracy a n d dlstrtbuJloa ol Illegal 1n umpeClfled letter about Sen. Edmund
political Uteiature during the 1972 S. Mmlde (!).Maine).
tify the organizations or 1nd1viduals
resipoMlble for ii.
Florida presid<ntial primary. · Segrettl bad been recruited by former ,;:;:s'i,~,;;i---u:s:-Dtstrict-COurt Judge Gerhardt A. presidential ippointments secretary
At the request of Segretti's attorney,
Vietor Sbennan of Los Angeles, and or
·federal prosecutors. a letter outlinln1 the .
cooperation Segretti agreed to give the
piOseeutors in exchange f« immunity
from additional charges was aealed by
lhe court.
_lust a Itfelnor'y ,
This is an authentic photo of summer 1973 along
)he Orange .Coast You may want to clip it out and
; . seJ)d it to Aunt Hattie in Iowa just to .prove there
~ really was a SUDllJJer along the Oran1e Coast this
{year. You will recaJl, of.course, that summer arrived
last week on the winds of ,. Santa Ana condition.
It >taggered throueb Sunday before lbe cool marine
air domirulted once·again, bringing back the drippy
gloom obaerved in these parts since Memorial Day.
Ugb.
I I' u
l
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'Jfouse -of'-Bud'--
,... . '
Spa:r-ks-Boy.coU-
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By ·Bat~n;d~rs -
CLEVELAND. OlliiHAP) -Wben you say· "Bud" \o the owners of five bars ~ CJe•e~Stata uniVmlty, they say
"·'boYcott." ··The. bars are protesting a, t-.-o-week-old
i.rea tavern called the House of. Bud, t..bl'ch features the Budweiser song,
Budweiser wallpaper, Budweiser lamps,
Budweiser souvenirs and, of course,
~udwelser beer.
• Under the.boycott, the five bafs have rel~ to aell Bpdwelser canned or bot-
lled beer.
"Until Anheuser·Buscb pltts out ODiiie
ilforfl4> tnfonn Cleveland that they-don't
'have aiiyth(ng ·to do with that baf, I'm
1oing. to support the boyco\I," ·Goe bar owner vowed! ~
The owner ol the H-of Bud, Janie.
'F. Geeer, said· the boycott was
"childish." : ·
. "Heck,. tl)Q name doesn't mean ~t
riiuch," he said. "We .could call· it -tbe ~House of Lliards and it Wouldn't lwrt:'' •
Orlullfe '
Weli.dler I Considerable cloudiness in the ---r\i.ornlh& . .hourl l!lo!!I_ th!! Qi'a!!ie
' "' Coast Tueaday, cleiring to..,...sunay,
bot cooler lkiea in the altemOoo. Hlchi In the upper IOs at the beoeJ>.·
es, rising to the mid·?Oo Inland.
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INSpJE TODA l'
"In ell hbM1tr. r don.'& Ttoliu
' tte MIO a womo-n con .au that
ahe ioanti the moo 1h.t loot• to
be pre&ident,..,, SCJI• Nanct1 Rta.-
gon, wife of a leading conUnder fi>r the 1978 Republjcon pres~
deritiol nomlno.tiott Sec •tofl.
Pao• 26. ...... II All!I L1"'9n " L.M. ..... " ..,,n " , ......... • ft•H-1 Ntwt • Cl••MI .. ,,_., .,,, ... ,.,,., H "-.. -· •• ,_ .. lledi '¥rf1t~ •11 --H • ·-H llf!Morltl .... • .,..., .... • EMotl'ttlfWMlll " 'WMlll« 4 • ,,_ .... w ....... llt'wt ,,_,,_ -" w.,.. 1flttWI •
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SChooI-,Of ficials Disavow -
Il0.le in Lihr.m-y Security-
Newport-Mesa Unified School District
officials said today they have no direct
respoll$lbility for security at any or the
librilries in the fouridi,strlct high schools.
1be response came after a charge
made Friday by Costa Mesa High School
Librarian l\lrs. Opal Pri<e tbat <!lstn'd
offttia1:s were ignoring the problem of
student book thefts.
l>jrs. Price and the three otber high
school ' llbrarlanl disclosod Frida tbat . ' . y boolls -0. abOut $100,000 hove been
-... -.... not ... tumoc1 to their libraries over the past three yean.
·:11\JS;tlie ~iblllty of the -IM ldiools to<lt>, l«mt of·admlJllsterlng
the ·affalfs of their P~1" Dr. W~·Sanbom, media ser:vtcea director ·r~ the ·diltrlct, e~plained. .
•''lbeftp. are-~•thing, tlley have to
Uve wlth abd I guess .they are hav~g
trouble," he said. r -
Sanborn explained that hi.a office· is
responsible for only elementary school
libraries , which. ap~ntly are having
troubles or their own.
He said that the district's elementary
schools-reported some 3,000 books miss-
ing at .. th& end of last year. Replacement
coets of those book! will be more lhan
1211;000. . -"-.But be.reiterated be does not have any
. Thrifty Baitdit .
Robs R~taurant
A ,..... .. who.<fldnlt nnt to poy more
than ff for a chlcl<en dimer fled with
more than 1100 after holding up al\en!'
tucky Colonel restaurant Jn Colt& Mtsa
ovtt the weekend.
Cotmter workec Joyce J o_h n so o
roportcd to polloe ihat the n<1\ly dressed
man strolled Into the '24 E. 17lb...St.
eater.y S"aturday night and asked what he
could buy ror a dollar.
Af't!r ·she counseled him on an ~t
meal, the JUMlaii apparenlly dcdded he
wlnted more· and pulled oot en
automatic.
Police said He escapCd wtth a bundle nf
five.a, tens, ones and 1 twenty.
•
authority or responsibility ove r the high
school libraries -nor does anyone else
in tbe-district office.
Referring to Mn. Price's charges, Dr.
Sanborn said, "I'm sure she has a pro~
lem, but It has nothing to do with my of·
fice."
.. Mrs. Price Friday said, "The truth 'Of
the wtter is that cliAtrict oUiclals do not
like to think of s~ts stealing bOoks.
'Ibey clOlse their minds to the problem.
"And. they look aallance al anycae who
tQet to raise the 1t1bjeot. They feel there
Is · "1IJll)Oled to bO an atmoopbere of
freedom."' on, tfte campuses so U someone
pushes for security lhey are dubbe9 as
okt.fasbiooed custodians of books."
\'She might feel that way," Dr. San·
bom .. aaid, "but ·wt! have nothing that
deals. with security at the schools in the
district offices."
Book thefts at Newport Harbor High
School, which numbered 1,300 each of the
last three years, have "prompted officials
there to install a magnetlied book check
system that will set off an alann if a stu-
dent Irie!. to leave the library without
checldQg out a book.
The electronic monitoring deyice is
scheduled to be installed in two weeks.
AD-GVll.KA.NTEES-
FAST 'PICKUP'
When you 're looking for i car buyer
with "pickup" a1· fut as your car, try
Deily Pilot want ads for qu1ckness. This
adverli!<r did:
'll-Con\\ne!ltal 4 dr. Dk.
~. bllt vinyl top. AM/
,.·FM stereo. Tllt whl.. air,
=almost oew steel belled tn.
Leather Int. Must ICJI quiet ..
at '3lllO'. Appoil. 3tM mi.
May finance. HURRY I (Ad· dress, phooe no.) .
1'he urgency mwagF wn received ~Y
readers and response wa~ rast. For fast
results, call the direct line, 6-12-5678, to
the Dally Pilot Cliustricd Advertising
O.pt ..
Gesell postponed sentencing until after a· Dwight L. Chapin in 1971 and paid
probation Interview that he said would through President Nixon's · personal
No reason W8.s given ror keeping the
letler s~t. Similar letters involved in
the cases of two other Watergate figures
who bave pleaded guilty in recent months
had been made public.
take 45 to 60 days. lawyer, Herbert W. Kalmbach of
A fourth count against Segretti was Newport.Beach. (Related stories, Pa~e 3)
dropped by Spec~ Prosecutor Archibald · 'J!>e campaign litenture did not 1den-
800 Petition
To End 'Smut'
~· ' ........... ~ .. Ar~.Sho.ps ·
By TEllRY; VOVII.LE
Of -. o.irr ,.11., ,..., ---A Huntington Beach mother wants to
1 shove sexy magazines like "Playboy,"
"Oui" and "Penthouse" out of local
mar~ts and drug stores and back into
adult book stores or liquor stores.
Patricia Smith, who lives in the
southeastern-part of town, bu filed a
petition with city ball pwJ>Ot1ed to carry
!00 atgnatures proteating·the "open-aale
or-so-many-protn61ftiP c magi.iiiieS -
the stores of our community."
Her petiUon Joel before the City Coun-
cil tonight, during the council's 7 o'clock
J!!ee~g'"-IJ~_no _a~ is 1~__!9 be taken. . -
City Attorney Don Bonfa says his
preliminary reaction is the city has no
power to regulate where such magazines
are sold.
"The state controls the question of
obscene matter," Bonfa says. "But if
councilmen want me to research it
further for an official opinion, I can."
Airs. Smith, an elementary school
teacher in Santa Ana,. said today, !!.You
can enter almost any drug store and
there's a Playboy Magazine. 1 feel I have
a right to enter a store and not have to
see them or have my daughters see
them.
"I was just put out to fmd ~ many
stores had them. The Supreme Court aald
this Is a community affair. Some com·,
munlties may be a little more outraged
than others.
"l do think ll'1 significant I could get
800 signatures ln two days. I don'l think
we'll ever stamp them out but I do
believe there ought to be restrictions on
where such magazines are IOld."
She said she doesn't want ~ ban the
magazines entirely, but feels lhey should
only be sold in adult bookstores or liquor
stores where children aren't frequent
visitors.
She admitted that she doesn't know if
the city can do anything about the
magazines. She said she filed her petition
to make the council aware of community feeling . ·
JI no action ls taken , Mrs. Smith said
5he probably won't do anything else for
lhe moment.
Moratorium Gets
C.Ouncil Stud y
r.osta Mesa city eouhcilmen tonight
will consider imPoSlng a on&-year
moratoriwn on development In a 5(l0.am
area surroundlng the civic center.
'lbe meeting Is ldteduled for I: 30 in
council chambers. 77 Fair Drive.
Pl•nning Director William Dunn has
asked ror tht moratorium to allow time
for comprchcMlve P.!JMlng of a civic
center district.
Jn\.-olved in the study area ;\re the
Orange County Fa irgrounds. National
Guard AmliOry, Orange O>ast Colleae
and Southern California College 1s well
as privete property.
Mets Capture
Eastern Title
'hiJCAGO (AP) -Tbe New York ·l!'-tbe NaliouJ'ap &ut ti today, bealillg the Qiicago
Oil>< M In the first pme-of a
header behind tbt bitU'1f( of
Grote and ilu>tY Slaub and
!Oliel pit¢1ing ol '!'111 MsGraw.
_yictory di~ the Mets'
fint divisiooal tiile since 11169 wllen
they went on to win ·the World
Seriei.
•The Mets' victory In the first
pme, whose flrtt four innings
Were played in a u;i,t driizle, made
the nightcap meanmglesa 'Ibey bad
to lose both games in order for the
regular season to end in a fie.
St. Loula, wbjcb ended lls regular
-....on-SUnday;-an<t-Pitlsburgh,
playing San Diego today, could
have gained a tie with a double loss
by the Mets. •
.
Policemen Spot
Blinki ng UFO
Ov~r Tennessee
MEMPIUS, TOIVL (UPI) -An unlden·
tified flying object, alternately shining
brightly and falntly, was visible over the
Memphls area for about four hours Sun· day night.
"I know It somKls fantastic. but it's
true," policeman Flanning Glover of
suburban Collierville said or the UFO.
"U I was by myseU, I'd say I was nuts,
but there .were plenty of witnesses."
At least four other Sbelby County law
enforee!nent officials saw the UFO as it
moved across the Memphis area.
Joey Smith, 13, and his brother. Barry,
9, were feeding the chickens at their
home in Southwest Chester County when
they spotted "something green "A'itb red
lights" in the sky.
"They ran in lbe chicken house
becall!e they were scared it 'A'as going to
get them," said their mother. "They said
(See UFOs, Page :2) •
* * * Judge Sirica
Will Reduce
Hunt Sentence
WASHINGTON (UPI) -Judge John J. . . . Sirica said today be would reduce sen-
tences of up to 40 years he previously im--
posed on E. Howarcl .. Hunt and four mea
who pleaded guilty to the Watergate
burglary.
Slrica, chief judge of the U.S. District
Court for the District of Columbia, said
that forcing them to serve long ttnns
"wou1d oot only be unwarranted but un-
just."
·At a brief court bearing that Sirica
called because of "what appears to be a
widespread misunderstanding" about the
tem porary, maximum aenteoce be gave
the fi ve, lhe judge noted he wou1d be le-
nient in determining final punishment.
Sirica gave no indication When tbe fmal
sentP.nces would be imposed, noting that
all five asked to withdraw guilty pleas
they . made last January shortly afte•
their trial began.
Slrica sentenced the men, Hunt,
Bernard L. ~arker, Frank A. Sturgis,
Virgilio R. Gonzalez and Eugenio R.
1fartinez to provisional, maximum terms
of up to 40 years in prison last March. He
stressed then that their flnal sentences
would depend on the cooperation they
gave to Watergate lnvestigaton. .
He declared: "It was never my in-
tention -and again l repeat with
emphasis -that the mamnum tenns of
the provisional sentences should become
the terms of the final sentences. In this
case, such a disposition would not only be
unwarranted· but unjust."
Attorney Daniel Schultz asked for and
received a week1s extension of a Wednes-
dav deadline to file "affidavits of
raCt" -supporting the contention of his
four clients that they were lured into
crime by high government officials and
then pressured to plead gullty and re·
main silent.
Hunt's attorney, Sidney Fachs, was
ISee WATERGATE, P11e Z)
Pants Upheld
Use of Fl:ag 'Symbolic Speec li'
DENVER (UPI) -lt is no more a crime to wear )D American
flag sewn to the seal or one's pant_, than to paste a nag decal in a car
window, the Colorado Supreme Co urt ruled today.
The high court called such action "symbolic speecbn and said It
wl.s protected under the F1rst Amendment. It overturned. the Boulder
District Court conviction of David Patten \1augha.n, charged with
desecrating the flag.
"Just as some citir.ens paste fla g decals on 1helr car windows to
lndiCate their support or certain political philosophies, defendant
adorned the seat of hl11 jeans with a flag to-indicate bis contempt ror
those things which the flag symbolites." the court said.
Justice Donald E. Kelley, who wrote· the decision. said : 11The
ide3s expressed b)' defendant's conduct may seem to some to be
juvenile and inarticulate, a.nd perhaps his Act1ons are subject to In-
terpretations other than we have ¥\ven . but this does not strip His
speech of constitutional protection.' -·
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Z OAll Y Ph.OT C
.Rooseve lt
....
Has .Faith
In Bro ther
By L PETER KRIEG
Of lflt O•JI., 'Hot Si.ff
1''"onner congressman James
Roosevelt, a Newport Beach resident,
said toda y he has full faith that his
brother, Elliot, will be cleared or charges
that he tried lo arrange the 8.!isassination
of Bahamas Premier Lynden Pindling.
"I really have nothing else to say other
'than I hope the committee will give lilm
a fair hearing," Roo&evelt said.
' Roosevelt's "brother, a former Miami
· Beach mayor, met privately with his at·
torneys Swlday in Miami to prepare for a
Senate subcommittee hearing Wednes-
day.
The subcommittee beard testimony
early in September from Louis "the ·Doc-
tor" Mastrlana that Ell iot Roosevelt of-
fered him $100,000 to assasslriate ,Pend-
, Hng. He siid a second man, Patsy
Lepara, also was involved.
"~y"reason for coming to Miami is to
meet with my attorneys here and at·
tempt to recoustroct all tha t' I did during
the time when these charges were leveled
against me," Roosevelt snld.
He said he would "completely refute
all the fantastic fabrications that have
been made by this ex-convict Mastriana
and other ex.ronvicts as to my dealings
with them."
Monday, Octobtr 1, 1973
'IONIGRT
COOTA MESA CITY COUNCIL
Regular meeting, City Hall, 6:3(fp.m.
OCC LECTURE -Face, FasbJon,
Figure, Estancia High Forum, 7:30-9:30
p.m.
UCJ LECTURES -"Income Tait
Aspects or Real Estate Inveslm~nt."
part of series on Commerdal and Invest·
ment Properties. 1toom·101, P~y. Science
Bldg, 7-9:30 p.m . Admission $6. "Teen
Time: 'J\trmoil and Transition," part of
series on World of Wcwen, Room 174,
Computer ~ience Bldg. 7·~0 p.m1 Adml!sionl6.
TUESDAY, OCT. I
HARBOR AREA UNITED WA Y
BREAKFAST -Jack Unkletter, guest
speaker, Airporter IM, 7:30 a.m. 13.50.
SENIOR CITIZENS CLUB -Com·
munity Recreation Center, ·11 a.m. • 3
p.m.
NEWPORT MESA SCHOOL BOARD -
Regular meeting, Coata Meaa eouncil
chambers, 7:30 p.m.
From Page l
UFO s ...
I ' Ag~nts Hunt
Don Nixon
Tap Files
From Wire Servbs
Federal agtnls are weeding lhrough
wirelap files-to_.flnd taped telephone cori·
versation~~n F. Donald Nixao of
Ne~ach, the President's brother,
and a fonntr Hughes Tool Company of-
ficial charged with Income tax evasion.
Attorneys for John Meier, ex-Hughes
scienti fic adviser. say their client and
Ni;ton '-''ere business associates and may
haVi! talked by phone a! the Un)e the
President bad his brotber's line tapped.
They say such a tap may taint
evideooe held by the government that
Meier allegedly evaded taxes on '368.000
in personal income in 1968 and ·tees,
earned while buying Nevada mining
claims for Howard· Hughes.
The day before Meler was a?Taigned In
U.S. District Court in Las Vegas, it was
disclosed !ha! !he President bad !he
Secret Service tap ·the phone of his
brother's home and business in Newport
Beach.
ln reveafulg the tap, it was alleged the
President feared po s s i b I e em-
ba:rrassfuent from his brother's financial
dealings.
In response to allegations by ri.teier's
it made a whirring noise." allomey's the U.S. Justice Departmenl has agreed to search its reconb for
In Obion County, near~ the Kentticky transcripts of any conversatm between
border, Sheriff Nathan Omntngbam said Donald Nixlll and Meier.
he saw three differept UFO'I ~tmday "We are simply agreeing with defense
night, beard one zoom over his boU8e and attorneys' that .ft wilt voluntarily SU.Pply
Pletitg to Sitag About
\Vith an unbeaten football team to back, these New·
port Harbor High School song leaders have good
reason to smile. From left are Ka!hte White, Ann
Cates, Holly Montgol)l~ry. Lynn W~lfe. Lori Miller
;
............. , ..... I
and Lynn Weddington. The Sailor song leaders won
first place award at recent Southern California soiig-
leading camp and performed during pregame show
at recerit San Diego Charger~ football game. ·
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Airlines Reaping Profits?
'
Roosevelt declined to detail charges
made secretly to the commIUee later by
Lepara.
Subcommittee Chairman Henry M.
Jack>on (0.Washingtoit) also bas declin-
ed lo di"'1SS the charges.
talk~ to at least 20 people who reported the defendant with information not
similar sightings. whether or Dot such tapes exist," said ···~. ~',:'it'!,.,~ :=""~'l:f~ u.s. Auorney Devoe Heatoo. Official ~ays Skyjacker Security Fees Excessive
·Roosevelt speculated that Lepara may
have made hit charges b e c a u s e
Rooaevelt had backed out of a bu!iness
deal ·because of Lepara's c:riminal
background.
. "I woaldn'I say It bad more than one F. e G G BY GEORGE LEIDA!; nwnber of -the oost pe ... light,''besald."Tbelightl_saww.,kind orm r O· 0 Oflfle D•H.,,llll l taft person m1cbt ~ u low as l?~or 11
ol orange and then U woold get br!ght tile fee dlarged to screep skyjackers cents,"~ opeca1ated.
and seemed to tum white. Then u would n· ancer Back from legltima!e air traveler• may be ~aroes K; CarT, pmldent of the
go out and come back on a different col· enriching airlines, airpbrt officials charg-Airpor:t ~raton Counell lntemlUonal,
0,---said the aullnea are pockellng up to 72.6
..
found in some-cases airlines withheld
reimbursement for ·tbe cost of anti·sky-
jacklng measures.
Ca!T haa urged CAB Chalnnan Robert
D. 11mm to act immediately to end
"posaible-carrle.r misuse of revenues
from the board-approved 25-cent security Female Inmates
Raped by Seven
Male P1isoners?
;,We put a Spotlight oa it and it just 0 C • ed today. percent of· the take from the 25-cent
wen! out," he s;µd, "then it reappeattd U QnStructwn Orange County Ai.rport Admlnistra!or ' charge.
in a diHerent place. Robert Bresbahan said today 22 cents o{ · Carr also heads the Sacramento
. surcharge."
"We called a helicopter out and he CLEVELAND (UPI) _ Former .go-go the 25 cents each passenger pays as .a Metropollta!l Airport.
seemed to be right aver it, but as far as I dancer IJnda Blaylock, 23, goes back to security surcharge goes to pay costs of carr said AOCJ, a Washington. D.C.-
tnow. be must not have seen it." work as the city's fll'St female based organization rtpresenting airports
A Federal Aviation Agency Spokflman ironworker today vowing that if need be providing screening officers. handling commercial passengers, had
&aid a briiht white light seen as it ptWed she will walk girders on the upper stores However, a Sacramento airport off'tcial
He urged the CAB to not approye
furtber fare hikes until revenues
generated by lhe security sure.harp is
channeled into payment of airport secwi·
!y cos!s.
. near the alr'poft w~ not spo~t.ed by r AA or construction.projects to keep her job. charges that airlines reap as much aa $1
ST. LOUIS, Mo. (UPI ) -The head of personnel. ~ "It doesn't matter to me bow high the million excess each month frolll the
the city jail says he has "strong "About 15 years ago, one of tbe<>guys girders are,'' sbe said. "I like my job and curl( har th II
evidence" that most of the women in· up here said be saw something in~ sky if climbing high girders is part of the job se Y sure ges ey co ect.
mates held host.age by seven male in--he couldn't explain, and the. Air Force I guess I'll have to do it." Bresnahan explained how th~ syStem
Upper 8ay Decision Dq.e ··;
mates for six hours in an escape attempt contacted him and sent him about 1$ feet · Officials of Irooworkcrs Unloo Local 17 works. Airlines, with approval of the
were sexually assaulted. or papers lo fill oUt. --i have said that members of the wlion Civil Aeronautics Board, collect the 25
Edward Tripp, c.ity welfare director. "~CN know, 1 don't thiak any~·~p ... want her fired because she is a woman cents from each passenger'wbo buys a
said Sat.urday the men had been prom--here is golng to see anything unfaliilliar and they conaider ironwork "a man's ' ticket to fly
ised amnesty if t he hostages., 13 in-again," the FAA spokesman said. wofession.'' . "" · ..
mat.a and a matron, were ~eased -, ~ , ']Two -ks ago, Ml:s. l!l~_wbo ·ls <Alrl>o~ e&fh;'1'9'11h .~u the; !_1£lmes _ unharmed. However, Tripp said charges ' • ·t1.vor~~with ~wo ail.I~ wia·dancifig ro·r t&E cost of secwity pre<:aul'lons, ln-
now may be lUed. for attempted escape Froat P.,e 1 in. a west iride'bar tot"Jeu 'iban half of • cludlng the salaries of officers as.signed.
and rape. _ the $5.68 hOurty wage-ft.fl ·now earning. "Obviously it takes a ctrtain number
"We made a physical investigation of WATERGATE "I bad no idea I could become an of men regardless of how many people
the women as a routine matter and did • • • ironworker until l'JOIDe men came into the are enplaned ," Bresnahan said.
find a.uaults, possible rapes," Trtpp said. bar where t worked and aSked if I At smaller airpqrts, the cost per
"We have strong evidence that the granted permission to file a motion by wanted a better job," she said. "They p<assenger is likely a. be higher.
1iOrnen were moJ:sted. The women didn't Friday asking Sirica to reconsider hia came back the next day and gave me a "I'd imagine that at the bigger airports
make any statement, but tbe matron who order demanding supportlng affidavits. union application to fill oot and here I where costs are spread over a greater
aim was held hostage said lhe did see The judge said if he denies the motions am."
• cuea of assault." to twitch their· pleas from guilty to in--Union Steel and Erectors Co. hired her
Newsmen were present when the nocent, final,. sentences will be determln-and when she went to. work at a con-
women were released and each was ask-ed. according to information in pre-structio1l project in suburban Broadview
--ecr.-''Have any oryou tieerrhanned?"--utttent:e 1epurb be receives-on-each-Heigbts-sbe-became-GleY!land1s-first-
Each woman gave her name, adding "I man. female ironworker.
was not banned,'' or "1 was not harmed "And-it will be perfectly appan11t, at She is a good worker and knows what
· or raped." · that time -if that time comes -that she is doing, according to her employer
However, Tripp-said there was "no sueh disposillon was predicaeM, as it Richard S, Krasnicti.
doubt" tbat .tbe vmmen may have been should be, upon fairness, compwlon, "She has a·certain limitation in the lif·
afraid to report tbe assaults. understandin$ and justice," Sirica said. ting of heavy objects but when she
Jane Says War
Could Res ume
DAYTON, Ohio (UPI) -Aetivisl·ac.
tress Jane Fonda says the United States
could get relnvolved ln the Vietnamese
war if the American people did not start
to pressure Congress.
Misa Fonda and her husband Tom
Hayden were guests Saturday on the Phil
Donahue Show, a syndicated program
toped lo be aired beginning today.
Htmt testified last week at the Senate becomes accustomed to the work that
Watergate hearings. A CIA agent fOr shouldn't be a problem," Krasnicki said.
more than 20 years before retiring, he "All new apprentices have to learn."
was regarded as ooe of the The hopes of some coworkers that
masterminds of , the break-in of the walking the high girders will ighten her
Democratic headquarters at t h e 1nt0 quitting made her angry,
\Vatergate complex June 17, 1972. She called her six mooths of go-go danc-
Hunt has also testified at length In ing "harder work" than the job she has
other investigations of Watergate and now, and said she also preferred
related activities, such as the Ellsberg ironwork to the four years she spent
burglary. "slaving" in a factory at $2.50 per hour
He and the four Others. all from the lo support her children.
Miami. area, were brought to Sirica's "I've never been a women's lib ad·
court this rnornlng from a £edetal deten-vacate before, but I'm sure changing my
tion center jusl outside Washington. All attitude,'' she said. "I think lt is· totally
appeared to be in good spirits, smllini unfair dermvtng me of m.)1' livelihood just
and waving at reporters they recognized. becaU&e i'm a woman."
County Traf fie
Crashes Kill -3
Three persons died as a result of
Orange County traffi c accidents over the
weekend.
An Anaheim couple lost their lives in a
fl.fission Viejo crash Sunday and a Stan-
ton man was killed Saturday in Anahe im.
Robert ~f. Blanks, 56, of 3374 Key:s
Lane and his wife Dorothy, $2, were kill·
ed on the San Diego Freeway one-half
mile south o{ El Toro Road when their
truck collided with a car driven by
Roman J. Cuellar, 24, of Pomona. Botb
victims were thrown from the vehicle,
California Highway Patrol o f f i c e r s
reported.
Steven L. Kelly, 25, of 11672 Bt.ach
Blvd., Stanton, was killed when his car
plummeted off the Santa Ana Freeway
and crashed onto Manchester Boulevard.
Soon, Coast Aide Oaims '.:
Newport BMCb ctb"'Milnaie11·,Robert _ llieft.on,the pooittoi\ taken by ul.,nounty _
L.-Wynn says he ~ an early decision at a meeting Friday fn San FJ:andaco or
by state and federal officials on whether t~ Upper Newport Bay Field Com-
thcy will ~~d the money ~ to m~~~ is the city's representative on
make a wildlife pre!:erve out of Upper that panel of federal , state, county and
Newport Bay. city officials working to resolve the ques·
WYM said today he Udnks a statement tion of the ultimate fate of the bay and
by Fourth Diatrid Supervlaor Ralph the ...... uncling uplands owned by the
Clark of Anaheim will "force the U.~. Imne Company.
Department of Interior and Slate Fish
and Game people to fish or cut biall."
Clark Friday bad said the county
should-lle-Willing-to--"pool-reaou "
with state and lederal agen<tes. but he
made It plabt be doeSlt~ think the county
should pay any major acquisition COl!!lts.
And stressing that Newport Beach tax-
payers shouldn't spend any city tax
money on acquisition, Wynn pointed ou t
lhe facillty will be designed to serve a
regional need and should be paid for with
regional ta" dollars. 1 "If it's going to be a regional facility , I
think the ·state or !ederal goveninent
should pay for it," Wynn said. He wtn~
·out that a recent city study showed
Newport Beach is losing about fl million
• each year in roaintenaiice costs of its
be.aches, which are serving regional
needs.
"Whatever ihe city would put .btto ac-
quiring the Back Bay would just add to
that deficit,'' Wynn said.
Wynn disclosed that he and Cl!y At·
tomey Dennis O'Neil have differing
'Diy_o,r.ce___Earty'
Ends in Melee
Rocks and bottles greeted Police who
were called to break up a "divorce party"
late Saturday night at the home of Leon-
ard Nestel, 6558 Sequoia Dri ve, Buena
Park.
Three persons were arrested on drunk
charges, a boil le crashed through_)
windshield of a police car and offiCers
from Buena Park. Anaheim, Cypress and
La Palma were assaulted with rocks, bot·
ties and bricks while dispersing a crowd
of 300 to 500 youths,
Nestel told police the party was to
celebrate his daughter's divorce and
about 150 were invited.
"Public opinion and preMUre on
Qmgress ls the only thing that will make
a difference as to whether we get back
into the war," she said. Condominiums Refused See 1>ul1(a,f> for SPEED OUEEN
OIAN•I COAn ,.
DAILY PILOT
TIM Or ...... (Mii DAILY r1LOT, W!lll WllllCJrt .. _.._ ,... ......... , ... , " ~ ...
"'' Or•"ll• C.0.11 P\11111111"'9 C-llY. $1.,..
r•M ldlllOll• •r• MlltMd, M ..... , "'f9llllll
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l4\lnfl""°" ltKll/l'-i.111 V•!lt .,, l.-
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SM Juon C.t11l11r-. A •lfttM •'91GNI
•11111n " po,tbl1$1ttf S.tunl•)'1 ..... S-ri.
t,,_ jt<lnCip.I Pl!Mllfllnt fllelll II II bl W..t
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Vkt '"'"'""' ....i ~·1.~ Tk111a• K•• .. 11 """ ThoM•• A. Mur1thi11•
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c;llari .. H. l~ ,,. R1th•r4 P. Nill
A111t!t;;r" "'-""''"' l tl!Jarl
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JlO W••I ••Y 5'ti-1•t
~alflftt A4<il••tu'P.0 . lo• 1$MI, '1ll6 -. ..... ..
M........,t ... (II; Ull .... _.. l°"'it'Mt4
In Balboa Fun Zone
By CANDACE PEARSoN
Of"" 0 .. 1-, 'Ii.I '''"
The removal of the Balboa FWl 7.one lo
construct ~ condominium units was
turned down today by the South Coast
Regional Zone Conservation Commtsston
in Long Beach .
Only five of the 12 commissioners
voted In-faVor of the project praposed at
Edgewater and Palm Streeb by John
Konwelser of JAK Construction Company
In O»ta Mesa.
JI required eight votes for approval.
Komweiser indicated after the \"Ote be
"'ill appeal the decision ·to lhe state
C..'OAStal commission.
Not all of the commissioners who \'Oted
;iaainst the condominiuma "·ere In·
ttrtsted in saving the ball-century-old
nmusemtnt psrk. it Comml!!~ioner Robert Rooney of
tlngton Beach qucttioned whether
~!ore outstpoken was Commissioner
Ronald Caspers of Newport Beach, \\'bo
referred to the Fun .zone as, "community
blight."
Caspers, who is also cbainnan Of lbe
Orange County lfoard of Supervl.!ors,
stroogly objected that any action by the
regioruil OOmmission-is, "so tuttJe.~t·n·bet
any odds whatever we do will be ap-
pealed. It's rather disheartening."
The regional comnUssion has permit
authority within 1,000 yards of the mean
hlgh tide line In Los Angeles and Orange
Counties under Proposition 20, the
p>astllnt inlilative plWtd 1 as t
November.
Commissioners Rooney and Rirnmoo
Foy of Marbto del Rey said they couldn 't
approve anything that reductd public ac--
ce.'s to the sborcllne or a public -.-·alkway
as the condominiums v•ould.
Stainless Steel
Fabric Care
Tub uall
FULL 2 YEAR
PARTS and LABOR
WARRANTY
• Smooth, Ru1t0Proof,
Ch ip-Proof
e ld••I for all Wath-
ablt F•bric1
• ush th• Llfoti.,.
of the Wa•htr
PWS •••
a washable
knits cycle .,., .. ""'"' ..,...... ~ , per C«'e f9f' w ...... t .....
41teMe ,,.. ., ........
feMk1. A•lf t119N......,
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t ,UD 'UllN W~H-AMD Dl'fU POI
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...,.,..., 1m °'""' c... ""*'.,."" ~· No -........ lllytW....,._ ~ _,,_. . ~·""""" ...... ,,., ... ,...,.....,,.... ~ ..... , ,..
Fun Zone should be thtre if It Isn't
economJcally ltaslble. KMwtlstr aaJd he
clostd It down last wtek hecau~ it
y,·asn't making money .
t'ay supported the Fun ?.one as
"fulfUling a recreational function ln an
envtronmentat selling." Jfe did add, .i1d·
mltledly It mlght be upgraded.''
l~l sPEED OUEEN.i[tJf ---.. .,,,,. '-· ....,.. ~· ..... Niii • ( .... ,,__, ~· """"'""'""' ... CWTlw .... ~I .... !Mii U.11 ~' 11"!1"""' ,..,..,._ Q.6' ,..,.,...,.
Roon•Y sald•he liked the dfflgn of the
condominium project, but wanted to \\'&it
six mooth.s to a year lo act on
developments tn lhat commerda1 ione.
"tile arta I.! undergobtg change,"
Rooney said. "We should retaln oor plan-
ning options."
"l am more elated Ulan 'tve:r tbal I ~
posed Proposition 20," Commlssion~r
Loul• Nowell commented. '!be Los
Angelel City Councilm&> .said "i!
frtghtena" him that the commission
"'ould tell owners txactJ,y what to de with
their property.
.. )
e McGraw-Edisor;i Compeny Ofvlelon
90 DAY c~sH WITH A~~~~r:·,
181 5 NEWPORT BLVD. Downtown C~ MeHhone 548-7788
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