HomeMy WebLinkAbout1973-10-16 - Orange Coast Pilot•
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DAILY PILOT Leiihenaia Clainas Ja~~
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* * * 10' * * * Drunanaer Gene Krupa
TUESDAY AFT~RNOON, OCTOBElf.1 6, 1973
vt1Clio-t10, W, 2 laCTtottS. 9' PHal •
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California Rea<J_y to Act on Upper Bay
Sitting Du~k
Bandit Overcome B y 'Victims'
Orange Coonly Sherill's of fleer• drove to the ~ LaltJlla -area at high
speed Monday .night when they aot a repbrt that two motel guests were being
robbed at gunpoint.
They needn't have hurried. n.e reported gunman was in much greater
danger than reported victims Walter Smith, 56, of Sall Lake City and Leslie
Eaby, 54, of Van Nuys.
In fact, deputies said, they were sitting on the head of a man Identified as
Clifford Dale Burkhart, 26, of San Diego. .
Deputies said the two · motel guests told them they were confronted by
Burkhart who simulated possession of a gWl. Within seconds they were simu-
lating two hens sitting on a clutch of eggs with the. reluctant Burkhart play-
ing the role of the nest.
Burkhart was booked into county jail on charges of attempted robbery.
Kissinger, Le Due Tl10
Win Nohel Peace Prize
OSLO (UPI ) -Secretary of State
Henry A. Kisslnger and North Viet·
namese Politburo member Le Due Tho
"'On the 1973 Nobel Peace Prize today
for work in negotiating a cease-fire to
the Vietnam war -the "l'nost
gruesome" and longest conflict since
World War II.
The surprise winners were announced
by the Nobel peace committee here
even as Kissinger -who also played
a key role in the improvement of U.S.
Disease. C'4ims
Jazz Drumrner
Gene Krupa, 64
YONKERS, N.Y. (AP) -Jazz drum~
mer Gene Krupa died today at his
home hete. He was 64.
Krupa had been released from Yonkers
General Hospltal about'a week ago after
undergoing treatment for leukemia.
His last public appearance was Aug.
18 In Saratoga, N.Y., with BeMy G900-
man, '"hose band he joined ln 1934.
Survivors include tv.•o adopted children
and a brother. Jules, of Chicago.
Funeral arrangements w e r e in·
complete.
Krupa suffered a heart attack in 1960,
which kept him inactive for a lime.
He retired in 1967, but came back in
1970, leading a quartet at New "York'a
Plaza Hotel. .
Last summer during the Newport Jazz
FesUval in New York, he played with
the reunited Goodman quartet, includina;
clarinetist Goodman, pianist Te<ldy .wnson and Uonel Hampton on the vibes.
Krupa also appeared. July-4 at the
renaming of the Singer Bowl In New
Yorlt as Ululs Armstrong Stadium. La ter
In the summer, Krupa gave a eulogy
t1 t the funeral of jazz banjoist Eddie
COndon.
After graduation from high school in
relations with China and the Soviet Union
-'"as conferring in the While House
on the war raging in the Middle Easf
. The t"'O peace negotiators won out
over a big fie ld oI 40 nominees that
included President Nixon, Yugoslav
President Ti to, Daniel Ellsbe.rg, of Pen·
tagon Papers fame, Braz ilian Archbishop
Dom Helder Camara, Swedish disarma-
ment minister Alva Myrdal, a nd
France's Jean Monnet, father of the
EW'opean Common Market.
Kissinger said today be was "very
pleased" at winning the prize.
State Department spokesmen indicated
Kissinger might have more to say later
about the award .
In citing the two -who will share
a record pri ze of $1:W,000 -the Nobel
com mittee said :
"The war in Vietnam was the most
gruesome and longest military conOi ct
since the Second World War was brought
to an end with a cease-fi re. The oom·
' mittee has given the peace prize of
· 1973 to the two negotiator§ who with
a joint achievement-brought-about the
(See NOBEL, Page %)
'Col. Bogey'
Goes to War
BRI XHAM. England IUPl l
When the .S;J.lvaUon Army band
played "Onward· C h r I s t I a n
Soldiers" outside his pub, Landlord
Geotge Shepherd went to war. He
\hundred out "Colonel Bogey" full ,
blast on his electric . oraan lh
retallaUon.
Then a policeman knocked on
the. door of the pub, the Rising
Sun, and told Shepherd to slop
because he was "illegally In-
terfering with a propCrly oonducted
re ligious service."
Shephe.rd said he was seeking
legal ad vice.
(See KRUPA, Page l ) ''-------------'
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Edison Clears Hurdle
Dl!ty !"Itel Sl1ll "1!011
AUDIENCE FILLS HUNTINGTON BEACH COUNCIL CHAMBERS FOR EDISON HEARING
Power Company Officials Clear One Hur dle on Road t~ Expansion of Local Plant
Reports of UFO
Sightings Told
In Four States
From \\'ire Ser\•lees
If there really are unidentified Oying
objects (UFOsJ out there. they've been
hovering again over al least four states
-Indiana, Louisiana, \Vest Virginia and
Mississ.ippi.
Sightings during the night or something
touched off a flurry to local calls to
baffled local officials.
Sheriff's deputies chased five orange-
reddlsh flying obfccts 12 miles through
the Uluisiana p"iney woods late !\londay
night and ea rly loday near Pine.
Deputy ~1ichacl ~loorc said the ships
almost attacked a police car.
"One of our deputies was scared pretty
bad," Moore said fro1n the \Vashlngton
Parish she.riH's department. "He turned
on his red lights. and they came do1•"n
at his patrol car. He turned them off
and.they just vanii;hed like in a cloud."
· In another sighting reported near
Slidell, across Lake Pontchartrain from
New-Orlenns, Lloyd Mercier said he
was driving home when he saw . an
object "approximately 15 or ·20 feet
In diameter and it had a streak about
a foot wi de straight through the middle.''
Several per90ns, including a y,·eather
observer and a pilot experienced in night
nytng, reported seeing nn unidcntlfied
flyi ng object over the Raleigh County
Afrp<lrt Mondey night near Beckley, \V .
Va
The object first appeared about 8:45
(See .UFOs, Page ti
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Huntington Beach Ol(s
Expansion for Edison
By TERRY COVILLE mission for anolhcr approval before work
01 "'• 0111, 1>11o1 11111 .,, can begin to enlarge the generating plant
Southern California Edison Company an Pacific Coast Highv.·ay.
won city approval Monday night to ex· Expansion of the plant v.·as opposed
I . by envirollmentalists and llunl ington pand its steam generating Pant in Hun· Beach homeowners who live in the
tington Beach. and doub le the plant's shadow of the big generators.
output of electricity. Only two of the seven councihnC'n,
The expansion approva l came on a however, supported their opposition.
5 to 2 vote of the lluntington Beach Norma Gibbs. a psychology professor.
City Council. and Henry Duke. a stockbrokC'r, opposed
Edison officials must now lake their Edison 's $310 n1illion expansion pr<1posal
rxpansion proposal beforr the South The council majority. in supportin~
Coast p egiona l Zone Conservation Con1-Edison's plan, conceded th(' C'Xp:lndrd
W 01na11 Beaten,
Robbed-of $1
SAN FRANCISCO (A Pl -Police say
Im young boys knocked down a ?~year•
Old woman. viciously kicked. her and
ran off with her purse. It contained
IL Dociors at Letterman General Ho.spital
said !\1onday that l\lary Russell suffered
a broken hip, a serious lnjury for an
elderly persoo.
Officer \Villiam Kidd said i\frs. Russell
was sci upon by l\l'O boys. aboul fl
yt'a rs aid. 'vhllc oul fOf' lln evening
stroll Sunday.
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plant will presenl "a substantial arlv1•rsr
imp:icl on the environnil'nl. prin1:ir!ly
in the for~i (Jf decreased ;iir quall!y
caused by fossil fuel consu1nption ··
But in lhe motion prrscn!rrl by Al
Coen. councilmen nlso s;i1d· "llow~vcr.
the council further finds that anv nd\"cr~
lhlpact will be out\veighed by sUbstantin!
benefits to the community through th<!"
necessity of expansi()O of C'leelrica l
energy source5 to meet the needs of
the oommunity.
"And Ille oounC'il furlhC'r find" the
adverse impact will ht miti~atcd by
impo sition of the conditions as arn('n.led
by 1hc C(luncil.''
A precise list of 51 rondllions -
tlcsign<'d 10 prolC<'I air and n1~PinC' fJU<il·
l!y. !ll(' csthctic rlrsign Of tlfe rJanl.
and prevent obtn.isi\"e no1so levt'ls -
(See EDISON, Page ti ..
Offei.· Made
By Irvine
Firm 01\:'d
By JOUN ZALLER
OI IM DlllY l"lllf Sl1ft
The Ca lifornia Department of Fish
and Game Monday aca!pted The Irvine
Company's offer to take over ownership
"of all the Upper Newport Bay from
Shellmaker lsland to Jaintioree Road.
The state agency "says it ~·ouJd take
tit!e as soon as federa l, Orange Coun1y
anlt Newport Beach officials give their
c·onsent. -
Detans of the purchase -Includi ng
the Irvine Con1 pany's dispu ted ownership
of parts of the bay -would be workid
out la ter.
Any land not pai~r by the S late
at ttie end of 10 years would revert
back to The Irvine Com°Pany.
In a letter hand-delivered lO the
Orange CoWlty Board of Supervisors,
Norman Live rmore, secretary Or
resources. asks immediate Orange Coun-
ty support for the t.akcciver.
He said a similar request would then
be made to Ne"'J)Ort Beach and tht
U.S. Department of Inte rior:. 1 "The state's interest in proceed.in~
\\'ilh negotiation s and development ol
an implementation schedule will depend
to . great extcnl on the altitude and
official slate position of the se
governmental bodies.'' Livermore said .
~lariue Dies in Bunk
SAN DJEr.O I AP) -A 19-ycar-old
~larine from Salinas has been foun d
dead in his bunk ;:r.t the recruit depot .
A spoke sman identified him l\.1onday a"
Pvt. i\lichael 1':. llarden. son of !I.Ir.
and Mrs. Norman Harden. An autopsy
was planned.
Orange
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Coast
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Weather
lla1.y sunshine is on the agenda
lor \\"cdnt·sdny along the Orange
1·oasl. \\ith tt•n1pcratUrC's in the
1nid-60s al the beaches rising 10
8~ inland.
!:\SIDE 'rOD-\ l '
Thrre 111e11 are in C!lStodv 10.
do11 /or the suspected kidnar
011d n1urdrr of a wornon, .lie r
two cl1i/drrn und a fa1nily frie11d
iii S<ln Ber11nrdino See story
Page 5.
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DA!L Y .PILOT s ---
ltlidecut War
Nixon to Meet
Arab Ministers
WASHINGTON (AP) -The Wblte
J-louse announced today that President
Nixon will meet with four Arab foreign
ministers Wednesday to dlscuas the
fighting in the Middle East.
The anDQluwmeot camt amid rtpOrta
that the envoys Wert carTYinl a mt818gfl
l"rom King Fa.ls&! of Saudi Arabia, who
has been under intense pressure from
Arab COUl}lerR<Qrta to deny Mideast oil
to the United states.
But a spokesman foe cne Arab delega·
lion said .oll was not one of the L9sue!
the ministers want to di!Cuss. They
want only to take up "the U.S. in-
volvement ln the war," the Arab
spokesman said.
White House Deputy Pr,.. Se<retary
Gerald L. W&n"ell would say only that
·a.*. * * . ~ .
Sadat Warns
Of Onslau~.ht
Of Missi~ 1
the fordgn mlnb1er> of Saudi Arabia,
Algeria, Kuwtit and Morocco "asked
to •ee the President to dlacuss the
currmt II tuaUon in the Middle EasL"
'!be White "°""' said pred>e time of tbe meeting, to be held In Ni:ron's
Oval Ollice, had not been aet.
In addltloo to Naon and Kissinger,
a spokesman said It would be attended
by Foreign. Ministers Ab d e 1 a z i z
MARINES BOARD IWO JIMA
FOR MIDDLE EAST, Paa. 4
Bouteflik.a of Algeria, Sabah al-Ahmad
al Jabir al-Sabeh of Kuwait, Ahmed
Taibi Benhima of Morocco and Umar
al-Saqqaf ot Saud6 Arabia.
It a unden1<>od that Nixon and King
FIUsal ei:cbanged messages since the
outbtuk cl Anb-lsraell fighting II dal'S
ago.
, Asked about this, Warren aald, "We
do not u a rule discuss diplomatic
ooot.acts from here."
Announcement of Wednesday's meeting
between Nixoo and the. Arab· envoys.
wtm..are in New York for sessions of
the United Nations, came after Secretary
of State Henry A. Kissinger met for
an hour with lbe President. ~
Kissinger· af9o attended an hour-long
meeting of the Washington Specla1 Action
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NOBEL PEACE PRIZE WIN RS HENRY KISSINGJ;R, LE OUC THO
GENE KRUPA (RIGHT) WITH BENNY GOODMAN IN 1938
Jan Drummer Succumbs to Cancer at Age of 64
By· United Pret1 In .\ ational Group, a panel ot top.level diplomatic, tern military and intelligence officials who Egyptian President Anwar Sadat·' said continually · keep track of. Mideast
today Egypt has rrtlssiles oo the laanc& development.!.
U.S. Dlplom•t, North ietnamese Negoti1tOr Brought Truce
Woman Clioked
' And Assaulte<l
In Laguna Park
A ~year-old Hollf"·ood woman was
brought to Laguna Beach's Heisler Park,
choked into submis~ion and raped on
1he beach early today by a n1an v"ho
picked her up in Los Angeles and prom·
ised lo take her to a Newport Beach
party.
The attractlrc dark-haired \\.'oman was
'ound crying as she walked along Cttff
Drive. She \\'as found by a Laguna
Beach police oflicer.
The y,·oman told officers she had been
walking doY•n a street in Hol!yWOQd
v•hen a man in a small foreign car
drove up and offered her a ri~e.
llecounting the ir1cidcnt for Laguna
Bcaeh detecli ves, the woman saki the
motorist ''looked al\ right" and.. she ac-
cepted the ride. He then asked her
if she y,·antcd to go to a party in
Newport Beach.
The cou ple went first lo Newport
Beach, but ) then the rapist told the
woman the party must ha ve been moved
to Lagima Beach.
Police said the \\'Om,an \1'ho recently
came· to Los Angeles from the state
oi \Vashington. \Vas unfam· · • ·ith the
Southern Californi a area.
Arriving in Laguna ach, the man
persuaded. th e woman k.i walk along
!he beach below HeislC'r. park. There
he became aggressive, she told ·detec·
tives.
When she l"l!sistcd his adv ances. he
grappled her and cho ked !?er until she
s1opped_flg~1ing.
Police said the wom an had bru ises
on her throat. chest and arm!>.
The suspect was de.sCribcd as being
wel!-built , ta!J, v.•il h dark blond shoulder·
length hair. Potice believe he is: in
his early 20s and is from the Orange
County area .
-Witnesses ll un tecl
LOS ANGELES fAP l -Rapid Transit
District offiCi;:ils i\londay urged wit nesse s
lo ·1hc \'.eekend shooting of a RTD bus
dnvcr lo cu1n(· forward and nid police
in solvi ng thl' case. Edward Cusiter.
:l'l. ()f South (;:It(' l~';tS l1St1•d in fait
cond 1t1on ;1ftcr being ~h-01 S..1turd:1y hy
;1 group of ;1bout 15 ju1·cnlles causing
disord,'t on lhc bu~, authoriti es said.
' OU.NGi COAST "
I DAILY PILOT
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Fron• Page l ' ing pad ready to strike deep i n to Warren. turned away most questions
Israel if the Israeli Air Force bombs on the Arab-Israeli war, but repeated
Cairo: In J erusalem, Prime Minister . that Nixon instructed Kissinger "to re-KRUP-.&----------OG:Eo~ld~•;cM~•~ir\,-"sa~l7d~IB""1ra~e,,ll_t,._r.,oo~ps'Hc'1roo""sed"'--mmaiain_in__cont.acLwit.Lall_partJes_ ID n. . . the s-..canal ~nd are fighting on the conflict and with the major powers."
Egyptran soil. 'l1ie governmeflt ·released figures ?don·
r..1eanwhile, the first American planes day sbowirig that the United States im-
his nati\'e Chicago in 192S, Krupa got with Israeli war supplies landed in Israel ~ about 1.1 mlllion barrels o( oil
Statjon Employe
Battered in One
Of 3 Robberies :1 summer job as a soda jerk at a as American invo!Yement in the Middle daily direct from Arab countrle8.
WisconS!n beach "dime-a-daut:e " hall. East 'var increased in an effort to This is about si:r percent of total daily A 20-year-old service slation attendant
\Vhen. the drummer In the dance band counter Soviet aid to the Arabs. U.S. consumption. · was beaten..onseious with a pop botUe
fainted across the soda rountain. Krupa U.S. ~ffici~b: said in .W~gton that "' · _, f hi d 1 ., h about 30 Air Force flight& resupplied during one of three Huntington Beach
su tituteu or m an P ayi;u t e rest Israel with -about 500 •---of war F P I robberies Monday. · or the seBson. -.....,. age .
After· the swnmer, his family sent material so · tar, about 10. percent of r Walter Baumgart, 20, of Westminster
him off to . a seminary in Rensselaer, what the Rlls:!lians have gtvenrth&Arabs. UFOs is in intensive care at ·Huntington
Ind., wh<ere he Btud ied £or the priesthood. The officials said the United St.ates bad • • • Intercommunity Hospital.
The folloOA'ing year, after his father's not sujiplied F4 Phantoms and other death, he left the seminary to play planes promised Israel. ;: p.m. and remained in sight for aboUt No other injuries were reported In
drums in Chicago. His first reeords t,J.S. Secretary of State Henry A. Ki_,. 30 to 40 miiiutes, according to Howard the robberies under investigation. Police
\\'ere made· in 1928 with a Chicago group. singer told newsmen In Washington Mon-MoneypeMy, weather service specialist said today they do not have an estimate
In 1929 he went to New York to day night the United States does not for the National Oceanic and Atmosphere of the losses suffered in the stickups.
Play in the orchestra of ·George plan to send troops into the Mideast
bu ·ght ,, " th Sov! t u · admihlstration. • The first robbery in the string of Gershwin's show "Stri1·-Up !he Band.'' t m1 reconsruer u e e n1on hr ~ · Id th "It ·had ~efi · ha and l h t ee occurred early Monday morning The orchestra, said to be the first white sends troops to a e Arab"" C0W1trlea. no irute s pe · ave
The indlcauons •-s · that no idea how far away or how big at the Union 76 gas station at Magnolia swing band on Broadway, included Good· re we.re u·om yrl8 It was," "'· -u. Street and warner Avenue. man, Condon and trombonist Glenn . Russian inillt.ary advlsen already ritay . m: DalU
Millet and was led by Red Nichols. . have been helping \he Syrians. The airport is not equipped with A passerby called police. The station Aft~ stints with buds led by Buddy , With both the Ulllted states and Rmsia radar, but virtually an employes owner later told officers he believes aboot
Rogers and Goodman, Krupa formed actively lnvolv~ ln · resupplying the rtpOr1ed teefnc the ob)ecl ~t was $100 was missing fro mthe till.
his own orchestra in 1938. He remained. Israel~ and Arab lnDed forces, Western described as having red, green and white Investigators sUI today that clue to
a band leader thereafter, ue§Pt for and Eastern dlp)omats ln l.mdon el:· flasbhtg lights. head injuries, Baumgart is $till unable
one year -1943 -when he '1erved a • pressed fears of a brtakdowD ID Sovlet Police and resident. In IOtJlh -central, to give them a detailed account of
six-month prison term for a narcotics and AmericaD efforts ~ improve rela· west central and northern Indlana were the robbery, ·
conviction. After his release, he waJ tiorur -the policy of "detente'' that puz:r.led over strange, muJU..COiored otr At about 11 p.m. the next two robberieB
briefly with Goodman and Tomm;9' Is a key!lone of the Nixon ad· jeets which have been sighted the past OCCtUTed nearly simultaneously in the
Dorsey before re-forming his own band. ministration. two nights. downtown area of the city.
Krupa and his orchestra appeared in BQUi Israel and Egypt alao ~ported "It fol)owed me home,u said Richard In one. two anned men held up the
a series of movies in the 1940s. In naval and aerial batUes and each aide Pape, who Uvea on a farm near Hun· Taco Bell, 818 Pacific Coast Highway,
1941, Life magazine ran a series of claimed victories. Ungton In northern Indiana. -and in the other a lone gunman held
From Pagel
NOBEL ...
cease-fire Jan. 23 this year -Dr. Kis."
singer. USA, and Le Due Tho of the.
Democratic Republic of (North) -Viet·
nam ."
Kissinger, confirmed as 11.S. Secretary
of State in September, was· born in ,.
Fuerth, Gennany, of Jewish origin, in '.
1923. .
He emigrated with his pa re n t s to :
the Unit~ States in 1938 and became 1
a U.S. citizen in 1943. He later became
a professor at Harvard University where
he specialized in foreign policy.
Neither K,issinger nor Tho had been
mentioned publicly as nominees during •
the year's deliberations. ·
Politicians and Nobel Prize experts ·
said the announcement was the greatest
surprise in the history of the award.
It y,·as the first Nobel Peace Prize
awarded since 1971. The committee last
yea r named no winn~r because it said.1
It oould not find: 11 suitable ca.rxfkb:te.
The last -previOUI winner was Wesr
Gennan Chancellor Willy Brandt in 1971. . I
Group Organized .
By Gay Doctor multiple-exposure photos of Krupa in There was more lndec::lalve tank The Huntington County sheriff, who t\vo people at bay while robbing Dene's
action, and said his hands moved so fighting in the Sinai Desert where hraeJ lnvestiaated the report. did not see Licfuor Store, 526 italn St. NEW YORK (UPI) _ Dr. lloward ~
fast the camera had to be speeded up. turned back an EJYPtian effort to bteak anything but said Pape and his family The Taco Bell stickuP occurred when
·Car Yields 538
Poimds of Pot
SAN DlEGO (AP) -A car was stop-
ped by U.S. border patrolmen here ,Yho
said they found 538 ~ or marijuana
inside.
Ed Barnett, assistant Border Patrol
chi<.'f, said Monday the car was Stopped .
by two of his officers near Brov.'ll Field
not far from lhe t\1exican border.
The dril'er, a Tijuana man, was ques-
tioned. In addition to the marijuana
found in the trunk. Bamett said a pound
of white substance believed to be heroin
or cocaine was in the car's glove com·
pa rtrnrnt.
out of its bridgehead, aDlj Israel rtported are "very ttllab1e citizens and were the stand assistant manager, Steven Brown, a former head of 1''e'w York
I\ major counterattack'lly Syrian tank all shook up," about the incident. ~ Beard, 17, was closing for the night. City·s health services who announced :
llllts 4efendlng the ~to Damascus. Town Manhal Roa Stucker at nearby He told officer! he was accosted by two \Veeks ago that he is a homoselliual,"
Israel . said 5(f S tanJm ' were Andrews aaid be aaw one UFO south two men wearing ski masks pulled Over says he Conned a national civil rights
destroyed,. but indica were t bat of Huntington and one south of Andrews. their faces. organl7.ation to be called the National
the main Israeli armortd forces were He said they appeared to be ;Ughts They ordered him to open the safe Gay Task Force.
still bogged down i;z miles from Dazn. ln·tbe 1ky. · and when he told them he couldn't, , The organi:r.ation is expected to act
ascus. ~ In IOI.Ith central Indiana, Morgan Coun-they locked him in a closet while they as a clearing group and coordinatll r· 1
Sadat offered Israel a .tease-fire toaay ty Deputy Sheriff Robert Wllllama said ransacked the office. for some of the 850 homosexual grou ps" ;
if Israel wlthdrew1orces ftom 't.he Sinal he saw an unidentified Dying object He had to walk to the nearby police-in the COWltry and to press for federal
Desert, but did not couple It with tbe that "took off from the ground" Monday station to report the crime, officers legi•lation ou t I a wing discrimination
hiissile threat ~ an ulUmatum. Mn. nJgbt just northeast or Martinsville. noted, because the ~elephone had been against homosexuals. Brown said Mon-• ~teir, in a splech shortly afterwards ln Pascagoula, Mia., reports of ripped off the wall by the bandits. day he will act as chainnan or the ,
tv the Israeli Kn~et (e&rUament) also unidentified nytng object.! cpntintied In the liquor store holdup, clerk Donald board. , .•
spoke of a ,cease-fire and saJd ·Israel around the Mlssluippl Gulf Coast nearly Loomis and a woman customer were In an appeal ror funds, he stressed •
could not accep_t•e unless ll provided a week alter two men said they were surprised by a lone gunman who police that "if you give money it doesn't prov<f ·
for .the complete e:rchange of war taken aboard a nonterrestria1 craft. said was also wearing a ski mask. you're gay."
prisoners. _ 1 -r;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~
She said. Israel 's enemies had not ,, 4 been "hit hard enough" yet to accept
a truce and then disclosed . that IsraeU
unib crossed the Sµei Canal. IULEIDOSCOPE
From Pagel
EDISON BID APPROVED. ••
1-r:i~ attached to tbc Edison approval .
The fi ve "yes" votes came from Mayor
Jerry t.Iatney, a county education
i'Hirninistrator: Ted Bartlett, a gas sta·
tinn 011:ner: Coen, an attorney; Jack
r.rcl'n, director of env ironmental quality
for the City or Los Angeles; and Don
Ship!l'y. a biology professor.
J\1ayor J\·latney warned the council au·
cj iPnce -more than 300 spectators pack·
cd the room, filling all the chairs and
J1n1ng up against the walls -that he
wanted an efficient hearing and hoped
for a decision by 10.30 p.m. He got
bo!h
·n1e public hearing f{'!l into equal U1inb
-one hour cnch for Edison supporters,
Edison opponents ::ind councilmen.
Spo kesmen for Edison took up about
20 n11nutes of their hour. rhen the rest
rif lhc tim e "''as filled by a coalition
of business interests and labor leaders.
In essence, they sa id approve Edison's
expansiAn because it means further in-
dustrial development, comm e r c I a I
wo..-.·1h, more Jobs and a better tax
hl"l<;C .
Ont' labor leader, Dave Goldberg of
Carpenter's 1.ocal 14~1. Huntington
Bench. stepped to the microphone
proudly spo nini;: a brl~ht yellow hard hat.
"Wht1t are you going to do for the
working m<u1 U \\'e don't have con·
structlon?" he asked the council . "1\re
you ROin g_to i<'C'<i him, clothe him, give
him ::i-home, If you don't provide ror
the Y.'Orking st iff?
"What are you going lo 00 for the
hard hat? Every SllO"N'bird, Okie. Artie,
whatever }'till want to call 'em -
they stay here. The IXIOOf" working man,
he's the guy who supports everyone."
It seememed the majority of the audl·
ence was pro-Ed.i!!On. Edi30n supporter!
had no trouble filling thei r hour, but the
opposition apparently ran out of steam
after 30 minute$ of s~.
Mayor Matney, however, refU!led to
close the hearing, sticking by his promise
to treat both sides equally. He nearly
had to beg more opposiUon speakers
to come forward, saying, "Come on
now, you've got 30 more minutes. Are
1 thcfe any more speaker$?" •
For the next half-hour, s b y
homeowner!:, most living within a mile
of the power plant, shuffled forward
to give impassioned pleas against elli·
pa.nsion. ~
"I'm not from Rockwell (aerospace
plant), I'm not a union leader, I just
h..ppen to be • plain resident of Hun·
lington Beach who elected all ol you !"
raged FAuardo DaSUv1. "That's 50
mJlllon poundl or pollution • year! What
will it do to the senior cltliens? To
our clJildren in the parka?"
Oiarles Griffin , an environmentalist
from BaJboa Island and one of I.he
original plaintiffs tn ll'te Friends of
Mammoth suit which estabU1hed the
need for envil'OM'ltntal .lm!>'ct report&
on private proJecta, 1ug1ested. Edison
~Id turn its research toward hydrogen
fusion, nut sulphur fuel or even nUde1r po~-er. for t.ntrgy produciion.
'
..
Our showroom is • virtual kaleidoscope of colors. The reasons are
varied-:
We know that -clor coordinating is the primary target when buy.
ing carpet. Quality is usually second in line, and because we have such a
vest selection of qualities1 it is easy to coordinate color and quality \o
each individual's toste •
However, we knew that a volume of samples looking. et you can
seem very confusing -but we feel that showing Just a few sampl"s is riot
e f•ir representa-tion of the carpet business. Our huge selection gives our
salespeople every possible option in working with people, helping them
to find the perfect choice.
So if you ore in th1 man-et to selttet your carpeting -select
Alden's to help you, that's what we're here for!!!!
.ALDEN'S
CARPETS e DRAPES
' 1663 Placentia Ave.
COSTA MESA
646-4838
'
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..
1
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'
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•
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HOUH: !loo: n.r. Tlton., 9 to 5:30 FR!., 9 to 9 -SAT., 9:30 to 5 " ·-------------------.! ..
•
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•
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I ''Jo
•
Pr
"I don'
but 1 r
tom . Ask
1 will
poOr w
earners
Chari
authors
will be
'"Ibey
added
Teache
day."
Tri
Fo
On
A c
tern
has
28 In
Jude
"for Dr
Santa
danl w
follow·
pradic
Poll
21-yea
tempt
he< lo that h.
had I
wasp
Dr.
Deoon
probat
pracU
Cbarg
were
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•
• -
ohnWayne
Actor Jolin Wayne pJkiped to lhe
id of Propooltton I Monday.
Wayne ippeared at a Santa Ana news
nf~nce with Orance County
~isor David L. BaW. '
Propo_,ltion I ii the revenue contr01
Ux reduct.lon lnltlatlve to be v«ed
by .Californians Nov. e.
Wayne called It "the .-lmporiant 'i!ce of busineos the people of Calllomia' • ye ever been called on to decide.
tasue is whether government can-
the people or the people CXllllrol
go,yemment" •
Tbe Academy Awald """""'' -said uevery taxpayer knows our tues
.,. too high and gettlni blcher· If
we don't act a:i Nov. • to put a ntn
on the tu 11~rs. our free eaterprlle
system will l)e·tii'dancer."
Wayne added that "wttlxlul -bit
control! government 1000 will take more
than balf, maybe i.s much 11 two-th! da
income,"
;ZT lDOatiou · we a~ satferiq; Jt-
a dlrect-result or exCflii'Ve ~t
spending. We must put the brakes on
now or our--nant.earned lnCDeY" won't
be worth · the paper It'• printed on,''
the actor continued.
He accused "tu spenden" of ~
all oorts of wild and wttrutblul clalml
about Prop, I. ''The plain .ti'utb Is Jhat
the proposition won't result in state
programs being cut. It will leave them
more than enough m>ney to grow as
needed."
••
• ' Dllll'f' l'lltf Slaff I'll& ..
PILGRAMAGE THAT BEGAN IN CENTRAL MEXICO l!IEARS END IN SAN JUAN CAPISTRANO
Fr. f'.r~nclsco Miracle Poses With Three Mexican Explor~r Scouts at Mission -' -.
··pjlgri1--ns Rea~h-San Juan
Mexican Pr1est,-T1iree ~y outlts Trace Route of Se rra
•
•
Pending Okay •
County Holds Up
Coastal Projects
Orange County has stopped Issuing
bulldlng permits ror projects within the
coastal zone until they have approval
from the regional coa!ltal commission.
The action by tho department or
building and salcty Is designed to
decrease violations of ProposiUon 70,
the 1972 coastline initiath1e.
Sorrie loca1 agencies have continued
to perform final building inspectiOQS on
developments within 1,000 yards of the
coast before required pe rmits are receiv-
ed from the South Coast Regional 1.one
Conservation Commission.
This increases the .chance developens
will bypass the coastal commission or
begin construction without its consent.
"Right now this Is voluntary," County
Building and Safety Director Floyd
McClellan said Monday of lhe nt:w ~[_fort.
Ronald Caspers, chairman of the 'l!oun-
ty board of supervisors and a South
Coast commissioner. has asked the
department to prepare an ordinance
making the procedure mandatory.
-McClellan said the ordinance will prob-
ably go-lo the board in the next month
and added, "it's no~t.bat urgent."
The cowity already foUows similar
steps in areas like Three Arch Bay
and Emerald Bay where projects must
go through architectural control com-
n1ittees, he said.
Developers wfth projects in unin·
corporated county area under the coastal
poople that suffer (without the new pro-
cedure) are those that are build.Ing and
don't know they're breaking tile law."
Violators of the proposition are subject
lo' fines of $10,000 and SSOO a day for
each day or violation. No flnes have
been levied ye t,. although a nwnbcr of
injunctions have been granted.
Tiie South Coast Commission has
authori ty in Orange and Los Angeles
counties, 1.000 yl\rds inland from mean
high tide line . '
Crash Saves
Woman, 73,
Prom Grave
TAMPA, Fla. (AP) -Clara Small
was being driven to her grave when
a traffic accident saved her life, police
say. i •r
nie-pcllCe gave ·this account:
. By JOHN v ALTERZA
Of i.. o.itr """ 11-'t
Father Miracle made a wise con-historic adobes of Los Rios Street. commission's jurisdictk>n now w i 11
sideration. Later, the leader of the religious' r~ive an "appro•al in concept" £rom
Winifred Hilber t, 60, forced his way
into the home of his former wife. Mrs.
Small, 73, on Oct. 5. He handcuffed
her. beat her severely and held her
•captive for fi ve days. He took her 10
a· secluded ceinetery. forced her to dig
a grave and told her he was going
tfle county if they meet county codes. to bury her there.
•
Wayne sought to refute the argwnent
that .the proposition would _1_bllt costs
to local govunment and school di.!trl.cts.
"It Oatly probibll! state government
from pulling such tricks.
Ask any youngster of school age i.n "l don't think thS't any of us could odyssey was to muse about the richness Witt! that conceptual okay, they
--"Ca"l~il~ol'IWI'-"". ,_.,abo~u,,_t ..!F~a~th°'erc,.i~,.,wu~·pe"i'ro'-"Se"'rr-'a'--_hallillY!l:•-llloru:e"se'°ene11__,wba...,l.I _JW"'"'"--"'°Llaw..,awit-.11ws.• _,,,of'Cih'="e_,c,,it,,y':''-'h"~"to.,,ry,,_. -;-.,,----.,----"rle'!'"'''~lll.pei:.._.applies to the coastal com-
and he would probably tell of a man on the trip. 0 There is more of ·the great man mission for a perm.it. lf that is received,
Befort making a second trip to t~
cemetery~removed her jewelry and ------'I
other means Of'TcleilfifiCilioo. En rout•
"As our lnrome grows, llO will the
state's share," ~ stated.
WiYne prefaced' hls remarks by saying
"I don't like to get mixed up in politics
but I feel this issue is important enough
to make a statement:"
Asked about tl)O charge that Prop.
I will help the rlch more thal'I the
poOr Wayne said "You are talking about
earners. Some earn more than others."
Charles "Chuck" Hobbs, one of the
authors of the tai: lnitlaUve said there
will be no ~eel mt public education.
"They said the same thin& ol Reagan,"
added Wayne. "He would ruin education.
Teachers are getting more money ~
day."
Trial Ordered
For Chirop,ract.or ,
()µ Rape Otarge
A chiropractor accused or tbe at·
tempted rape of .a young woman pa.Uent
has betn ordered to fa~ trial Jan.
28 In Orange Coonty Superior Court.
Jude J_ames Turner set the trial date
·ror Dr. Emilio Oleynick Abltia, 51, of
Santa Ana, after noting that the defen-
dant was serving three years probation
following hls conviction on charges of
practicing medicine without a license.
Police arrested Dr. Abitla. after his
21·year-old patient claimed that he at·
tempted to rape her while eumining
her for a Met Jnj'ury. She told officers
that his euminaUons on earlier visits
had led him to advise her that she
WI! pregnant.
Dr. Abitia was ftntd $625 last
Decm1ber and placed on thrtt years
probation after he pleaded guilty to
practicing med1clne without a license.
UJolies ol _....,. dangl!IWS dnlgs
were dropped.
who led &me followers on a heroic "ln all we have walked more than (Serra) here than in Mexico'.\_ the builder. returns to pick"up his county
journey tO establish missions in Mexico / °""" mil thro h f he ''Here you can feel his presence . . • permit. and California. -es ug some 0 t worst see his influence. -· • McClellan suggested builders submit
But then try to convince, a , few of of terrain and in the absolutely worst · "Everywhere we have visited in their projects for plan chec'k arid review
those. YoUDgsters to-put-on a backpack · time of the yecui: l#>e:RritsL~--__ Califo~ people ask the same question at the county level at the same lime
and walk the same route that Serra · 1be first real -hazards and major -why are we doing this? fhiy file them-With the comml.sslon.
tOok. · discomforts of the trip came even before "There is an answer we hope they He said the new plan shouldn't cause
It · woold start in the mountains of it began. understand," he said. any problems for applicants:
central Mexico and end in San Francisco. First, the group bad. to. walk to the "1be great-great grandparents of these "It was rather embarraS&ing a while
Tell them the odyssey would serve American .Embassy· in Mexico City near-boys you see here were convei:ted by ' back," said McClellan, when the county
to honor the memory of a great ly 200 miles away to obtain pennisSion Father Serra himself. He built the had issued a permit and the developer
misSicnary. Call it-a-pilgrimage. ......f1 1m-tr.S. official! to enter the country church where we all worship. started construction before going to the
Then see bow many takers there are. as tourists. · "What better way is there to repay eon1mission.
Father Franciseo I. P. Miracle, parish "To put it bluntly, they thought we the great man than to show him and The county . and the commission are
priest of a church that Serra built in were all insane," Father Miracle said. the rest of the world that there 3re trying to cooperate, he indicated. "The
the rugged mountains of central Mexico, "How can you convince a skeptical still people ·willing and able to face
to the cemetery Thursday, he was in-
volved in a minor tra£fie mishap and
arrested. He was intoxicated and car·
rying a rewlver.
"Mrs. Small was . too f~ightened to
say anything at the ~time, b~ she later
told what had happened to relatives
who phoned us," Police SgL · Don
Newberger said Monday.
He said she.. had bruises all over
her body.
folice c:harg~Hilbert with false im·
prisooment, aggrayated assault and driv-
ing while intoxicated. He was released
on bond.
mdae such a request in the city of American official that all you want to some of the hardships which he en·
Queretaro early this year. do is take a 1,200-mile pilgrimage?" dured."
Nearly every youngster in the entire he added. The next stop for the group is P..lisslon
town wanted to go. He picked three. Somehow, the priest was convincing. San Gabriel • . . then San Fernande
Those four pilgrims were at 1'fission He and his flock got their visas, but and the ether . restored landmarks in
San Juan Capistrano Monday on the 83rd before they could leave the capital central Callforn1a.
day of a jcumey which few per89f15 Zamora suffered acute appendicitis and The four pllgriJns want to see and
could match, or even falbom . ""'OUrld up in a cllnie. i ~vot tbem ~l, Wt there is one. ~hl.c;h
The pilgrims -and they are jusP "'BM! appendis; burst and for .a month 1s · fore.o;wst m. their minds. It is ·tn
that -.are led by a f&.year-old native we dldn't ·knoW if be would live " Father Carmel where lhe remains of Father
Supreme Court to Rnle
On NY Communal-Living
fJ Spain •who wu; sent. 11 yean ago Miracle said. . ' Serra rest. · to a village which didn't even have Zamora reoovered but the illness "We will ·go there with great an-WASIBNGTON (UPI) -The U.S.
a road leading in ••• just a path. shot the time table tUribly. licipation and there we will pray • . • Supreme Court bas agreed to decide
With Fathet Miracle came three ymmg "We left three months too late and at his t-Omb," said Father Miracle. . the constitutionality cf a New York zon...
followers, described by the sofUpoken In the interior we were walking i.n Along the way the group is certain ing crdinance prohibiting communal llv-
prlest as the only three yoong men the rainy season. to draw well wishers and offers of ing by six college students.
in the vlUage who were able tc commit "ln San Blas, the port where Serra ~ides and funds to help pay for the The court will hear arguments later
perhaps six month.<! to such an adventure. set out by ship for Baja California, JOUmey. _ this term and follow with a written
They are Nazario Alvarado 1.amora. we decided to sOly on the mainland. "We have had many offers already, opinion.
20, wbo works as a houseboy in bis · It was raining 50 badly when we left but we are humble peopl~ and even The acti on came Monday in the case
·home town; and students Benefio that we walked in water up to our though we have cnly a httle money of six students lrom the State University
Ledesma Figueroa, II, and Ertil:llO Ponce knees. The floods lasted for days. being sent to us from home, we do of New York at Stony Brook who
Garcia, 17. Both are trying to obtain "And then, after months~ of walking n~~ need the mone¥ they offer. . . rented a home in Belle Terre on Long
a semblance of a college education winoticed along roads and highways _ "But we accept 1t on one cond1hon. . Island. Village officials charged their
through correspondence courses -so camping where we could and eating . We. have asked that people send Jl communal living viol~ the area's one·
remote is their dty from a college. what we could buy or find. we came mst.ead to the church In Queretaro. family dwelling unit zoning ordinance.
All three. are Explorer Scouts. Father to a spot where lhere were no more "I~ will ~ us much more good there, The 2nd Circuit Court of Appeals ruled
P..liracle b Queretaro's scoutmaster as towns, no trees, no clouds, no peOple hetp1ng thOse wonderful people at homf. earlier , that the zoning ordinance was
well as: spiritual leader· ... nothing but desert and a heat that j~!;;;;!!!i;;,i!;;;;!;;;;!;;;;!;;;;!;;;;!;;;;!;;;;~!;;;;!;;;;!;;;;""'
"So many wanted to come, ·but I none or us could cope with. ~ tosaii;1! Spanishout .all. but three," the "For a few days we tried tc walk
r• ''""~ in it. but in the-Sonora desert in the
"Some were indispensable to their middle of September the beat can kill
fathers because of the help they pr:cvide. the strongest of men," the priest said.
Others faced military service or were His concern for the v.-eUare of the
limply too _young and frail to undertake young men forced a heartbreaking
such a voyage," be added. decision; he explained.
Whfl1 it c.ame le assessing stamina, From then on, the pilgrimage which
had begun under the most traditional
discriminatory and did "net appear to
be supported by any rational basis that
ls consistent with permifsible toning
objectives."
The toning ordinance required .that
occupants of a single family dwelling
be related by blood. adoption or mar-
riage. The si x students were unrelated.
''It is conceded that all o£ ·the oc·
cupants have behaved in a responsible
manner, and no immoral conduct on
their part is suggested," the judge .said
In the lower court opinion.
He said the students rented the six·
bedroom house because it was less ex-
pensive than living in a donnitory or
an a partment.
28th
Anniversary
Sale
Legislators Fro1n County
of ronveyanees - a man's feet -had
lo continue on a contrivance which Father
Serra never knew.
The group· grudgingly boared a bus
for the border. .
Rank Tops in Expenses
• F)ve cf Orange County•s seven state
legislators cost taxpayers more than
average to support and one, Republican
Asoemblyman John Briggs of FQIJerton,
ranked third among all Sacramento
lawmakers ln total salary and aperme:s
fot! tht pest legislative year.
'lccori!lng to flgurU .. 1euec1 th11 -it
by State Controller Housten Flcumoy,
UM average legislator cost about $20,.,
per year. His report-also showed
utemblymen and senaton traveled far
an4 1ride at taxpayers' expense.
Briggs' total for .111\ary and expenses
of 122.411 WH IOpped only by fellow
Asaemblymen John Burton (0.San Fran--
ci9Co) and John Knox (D-Rlchmond)
wti> recived $23,221 and $22,706 respec-
tiVtly.
Other county legislators who exceeded
the average include:
J..Assemblyman Kennt:th Cory (D-
Girden Grove) at $21,974.
.!.Assemblymen Robert B"""' (R.H1m-
tl!1gtoo Beach) at 1211,111. ~te Senatcr James Whetmore (l\-
GIU"den Grove) at PQ,U?.
-Asaemblyman Robert Badham CR·
N.,.-port Beach ) at just f7 over the
avtrage cost wt th a total of AOJ07.
State Sen. lltnnll Ca'l""ter (JI.
·. N8'\'P(lrt Beach) WIS the only full·lt:tm
Orenge County lawmaker that mldt: lea
than the average. His total waa S19.980,
one of the lowest fu the Te1tslatUre.
tormer State Sen. Clair Burgtner,
w& now reprraents much of 010Uthem
ortnge County and hall of Newport
Beach In tho U.S. llOU90 of Rep .......
•
•
tatJves, only drew $103 in his foreshcrten-
ed Sacramento term, act0rding to the
latest figures.
Sc far, legislators have collected cnly
$14,400 .of their annual $19,200 salaries.
The mnainder of the money in the
lotall to date comes from a $.»per-day
t.ax-free livtngaDOwanee proviaed wfien
the legialature ls in session and other
expeue accounts for traveling.
To date thls year, la""1akers have
coat the callfomia taxpayers about $2.4
mllUon in salary and expenseS. The
totals 'will increase next year when
salaries will jump by nearly $%,000 to
121,120.
In . addition to salary and txpenses,
legl11lators are provided with a free
autcmobile, gasoline and telephone credit
cards, plus large retirement benefits.
The high cost of running the legislature
bu been criticized by ronner Assembly
Spealter Jess Unruh , who once said,
"For a private ciUzen lo live like a
Californta legislator would require an
annual l.ocomt of at least $150,000."
But Aosembly Speaker Bob Mo,.lll,
a candidate for the Democratic
gubernatorial nod next year, saJd the
ttpense IS worth It ·became California's
legislature Is rath:t number one In the
nation. Moretti ha!I cntt.rtd jlm ever
the average at $20,725 this year.
Accenting to Flourooy's r e p c rt,
leg-talators have treveled extensively at
taxp1yers expense , including numerous
tr1P1 to WMhington, D.C. and one by
Stn. Rtndolph Col!ler (D-Yre~a) to Scan-
dln.tvl& for a study of th:nber taxation.
•
"Ever since we have walked where
we could, and ridden the bus the rest
of the way," Father Miracle said.
ln San Diegc, their first mission' visit,
newsmen found out about tlle group
almost immediately .
Unruffled, the group posed for pic-
tures, then walked as far north as
possible -Oceanside.
There, freeways are the only way
north. so it was back to the buses.
In San Juan, the crew arrived Saturday
nlght -Ur~.hungry_and_worried about
their ability to find either a moderately-
prlced mote1, or a suitable campsite
where there would be no trouble.
"ln Mexico one can sleep where he
chooses. Jn your country that simply
is impossible, as we quickly lea med,"
he said.
In that first night the group found
on unlikciy spot.
A woman with no command of Spanish
invited them to her borne to spend
the night, fed the pilgrims and wished
them C.odspeed. .
"1 never obtained ber nante, but she
li ves along the hJghway here. •
In San Juan, the group toured the
miss.ion, then met the eommunltY'
matriarch, ~trs. Delfina Olivares, a
resl<.4ent cf an etrlY adobe. She
per80Dally led them O]::a.. tour of the •
Casals, 96, Critical
SAN JUAN, P.R. CAP \ -Celllst Pablo
Casals was In crlftcal condition to-
day, a spokesman for Auxilio ~futuo
llopifal said. Casals, 96. Is suffering
from n cardiac oondiUon . His physician,
Dr. Ramon Suarez,~ported Monday
that the cellist also su e d pulmonary
ctimpllcalions. · .
•
•
. . .
•
Sowl!. Coo1t Plo10
Co,+• Mo10
5.(Q.4bl I
'·
/' 100% Polyester
Knit ...
SWITCH GEAR
SUIT S89DD
C~AT $5800
SLACKS s 18°0
641 J E. Sp•i11t
lonq l1tth
421 ·461 I
, .
-...--'
FOR THE MAN
THAT DEMANDS
THE BEST ...
HAND-TAILORED SUITS
by G-111• Sef'tOOQI
•
11.,. UIS '9 l2:2t
•
..
T 1111"141J', Otuofr l" 191) iJ _DAILY PU.Or
'Gerald. FordrHelped Liddy Get Joh' . . . ~
.Just ••
Prom Wlrt Senk:tt ·~ ~ ::'.'ii~ wi tla ·--~·:-. Tom
' ~labae
ST. I.DUIS -Vice -t-deslpate
Gerald R Fon! .... odnowiedg<d a
periphoral role in gelt!n( a govenvnent
job for cmvicttd Wall'rgatr-burglar G.
Gordoo Liddy. the editor ol the North
~ Newspaper AllWlce said
MoodaynlghL
'
Clear,
Sheldon Engttmayer, in an interview
with televislcm stltion KPLR, said Ford
admitted the role duri!JI a previous
interview With NANA's bureau chief in
Detroi.t, J. F. Terhnt. ~
FORD, ACCOR.DING k> Engelmayer,
""' ccotacted by Duchess c.unty
. . . .
=: •
COLUMB US, OhK> I t;PI)
Several viewers of WBNS-TV, a
::SS affiliate here Mooday night
called to find out what happened
to the regul arly scheduled program
when former \ice presktent Spiro
T. Agnew appeared oo national
television.
Station officials said the pre-
empted program was "'I'be Prict
I! Righl"
1llE T AXa-and peoalties could total
more than SlOO,CO'.l.
While refusing to comment specif1caUy
about Agnew, a spolt=n I« the IRS
said it was rommoo for a criminal
charge of tu eva5ioa involving a
relatively small figutt to be followed
by civil proc:eeclings for a much, larger
amount.
Tbe spol<esman said the IRS Is tmder
no statute of limitations in filiog civil
suits to collect back taxes.
Cool • Ill Midwest
Ce ntral, Easter 1i Texas Pounded-by Thu1tderslioive rs
Consfaf ff'eather
C•IJfornla
l
MATM)NM, Wldlllll s.til"nCI llOtf(ASt .. 7Alll 111 JO• "•7)
\If'! W1Allllt lotCllC.ltll.
SClOO 1'.11
l.IDINll----.
..... ~:;'A"'°" ..... r:L23..,.._" ltOW
COl'f'ifll "'"'91' I .. 1' kll0f1 In ,,..,_
-IOdlY ll'ld ~. M19ft fo.. ... .,..~ .. c-m• '-•""'" • .,. ~ u to 1&. ,,,._ ~·-...... ,,,..,,
U ~ 1&. WIW ..,_rl1'11n iJ.
San, Moan. Tides
TUESOAY
5..all'ld Noh U~lt P·'"· S.f ~ -1;ff p.m. O.I WIDNESDAY
F'1ri1 hlflt l :ot ....... ~.s
l"lf'l low 6:'1 1 "' .1.1
StcOl"d 1\11111 1•1t p,.,., S,S
$«'l)llcl' '°"" t :i. p,m, 1,1 S~n 11:1-,,St 11.m, ~II •:11 P."I.
""-ltbet IO:ot p.m. hh 11 :• 11,m.
!tTJl\]~l!tll
DELIVERY SE RVICE
i<flY!fJ ~ ill! il>Jy Pilot
o 1uau111"°
....,,,.,. • ,. .... Ml ,..
•liri:IJA.ul•,_._, ..
khlfllfll,.t.lsntml .. , ..... ~~,,. .......
JW t"I lir I ta. Wftli, •I lL
S.U,, al • • C11t -9 a .... II ,.ta1s-.za..-11a
l'"""J'f' .................... 111.Ull
lllre.sl ...... luc:t " --......... Ml-llll
~ a.tit, c.trw lucl. s.u-... ... ,.
... ._ ........ lll~ll
...,
bJ Ill TJ01ss1 1>qMtmmt. M:id ~,... ___ ,........ ....
l!'cil irz.p -UddJ delplte 'll'lndop
-by _,. lhldenecnWy Clw1a Wo!Ur.
.· .. '· '' -• . . ..
...
'My client wWi. ro p'-d
guHty lo the parlc/ng Offenet1
If you s(/IM$/I. the muffler
charge.•
Bill to Control
President Home
Cosu_· Planned
.
WASJIJNGTON '(UPI) -A House
subcommittee will draft legislatioo to
cootrol spending o(. taxpayers• maoey
oo private homes o( Pft5ideDts.
Rep. Jae!< Broob (0.TeusJ, chainnan
or a House government activities
subcommittee •·hich lw omcluded
bearings oo public e%)W:ndltures for
President Nf:loo's San <lemeott and Key
Birayne, FJa., homes, said Monday
Jegi51aUon will be dratted to ensure
"that it doesn't b.awen again."
'"111E PUBU C bu been asked lo
!peltd hundmls or lbousands cl doUan
on private homes .• of the president,.
althoup be Is already "'PJ>lled with
the While House and Camp David,"
Brooks Wd.
Brook.s said 1141,llllO ID government
funds was spent on ronner Vice lftlident
Spiro T. Agnew's private home in
delhe.sda , Md., and added: "l th1nk
we ought to build a home for our
vice pre.sidents IO that the tupayers
tan pay for all of lhese oosta at one
Ume."
Government witneuet said most of
the money spent on Nllon's homes was
lor commwtlcaUOfls oqulJXll"'I, 91nc..
and aec:urtly. Membtn cl the
subcommittee have challenpd t b t
Je<Urlly justilkalion lcJ< -lleml,
such as ICtrnaters _and lanchcapin1. ·
MEANWHILE, tho Pe1tqan told the
subcomm/U.ee Monday U\at lbe cost ot
ma.lntalnlnl Camp O a v id , the
government-owned pretidenttal llMIUlllaln
retn!!at Jn Maryland, bu gone up from
1111,llllO In lllM, when Pmkkol lqndon
Jobnoon \lied 1', to "40,000 for filcaJ
,,,,, It •llributed the -..
lnllauOo, mort -1y oecuri'1 oquipmeol
and l'n!sidenl Main'• I.... ~t
UR of the Nltreal '
I
' --L •
.. WDIBER. TKB lel:D Cll!W: from
Ille U.S. "-'• ol!l<o ar -..-. . ..a. ,,.,.... u.. ,.. ,.. ., 111• Grand
Ju,,, tt .., atremetJ ualaJr,'" said
Fonl: Tbo llMe GOP _. d«llned
tO d&t.m .._ ponomDy .. bil ....
-· Jilea ...... -cbatg<, llul be "'"" ll1""llY cl die •• .., .. prior .. ,.,,_,,, resignatkla.
"&me!<>clY In gov-. -
Marines Board
Navy · Carrier
For ·Mideast
Military Cargo
Plane ~shes;
7 Aboard Perish
FORT SMml. Art. -A f......ogine
prope11el'<lrtvm military C"'1!0 plane
harried by thick fug and bea'Y rain
cra9hed Uto Sugar Loaf lDOUIJtain in
( IN SHORT ..• )
a heavily wooded arta near tht western
Arkansas -Monday night, Seven crewmm oo a trainillg miak>n
frun Little Rock Air Force Bue died
;,, the crash o{ the Cl30 transport'
Capt. Hal Lac ol the baoe lnlonnalloo
olficto said Ute names would be wilbbeld
until oat ot kin was notified.
eTblCle_..p
BANGKOK (UPI) -'lbailand"s new
prime minister aonounced formation of
a civilian-oria:ited govemment today
while -wbo llrot¢t clown Ute military regime in two days d bloody
violence formed deanup squads and tile
began lo retum lo normal.
Student organhatioos, clieerod by the
flight of former military strongman
ThanmJ Kittikachom and hls deputy
' fn:m tbt coontry.. mobilized, their
members to remove burned rut vehicles
and debris from ....... where they
fought battles with polioe and tn>ops
Sunday and Mooclay.
e Supert UeW
P!Tl'SBURGH (UPI! -A security
guard ;,, the Koppen Building, where
Mary Lee Walter was stabbed 72 times
and strangled Saturday nlgbl. ....
am!5led • his borne Monday nlgbt and
charged with the •toying.
Melvin -18, of lftrlJy Rankin,
a guard on mty """" tho tilling
occurred, was azn1gned OD charges ol
mttrda' befor. doprty _, G<orge
Phillipe; who ordered him remanded to
Ute Allecbeny Cowtly Jail without bood.
eR09er1Umeoretl
WASHINGTON (AP) -Former
Secretary ol Slate Wllllam P, !toge"
got a White HWM farewell dinner party
and "'rirlse award cl Ute Medal or
~ from President Ni.on Monday nl~. . '
Rog ... aid tt was "like 'Ibis Is Your
We in the grand manner" and be was
"9'· a loll r... wwdt" at llnt, omld
the may cl friellds, -· and ronner c.a>.iDet members and atrtdAJs.
ecueo.t
DETROIT ilJPI) -A ledetol Judi'
has ctismigHI conspiracy c b a r a e. s
apinsl I~ New Left ndlcals because
lhe government ~ w reveal tbt
methods k \lied "' goln Its evidence
1plnst them .
It Wll -....... -·cl cues prepam aplnot rodlcalt ol the
tMOt by the !ntmlal 5ecurlly Dlvlalon
cl lbe Jlltllco Depar1m<ftl lhol havo
either bem -or lool by . the -·
(
he wu in high or low office. violated
his oath of offK:C.. That ls ooe thl.na
!bat ha not beta adequately ~."
said Fon!. " Ford ·made whar af>l>W'ed to be
relerences to the AgDeW and Watergate
affa.in In speeches to a Republican
gatherina: and also to 1he convention
ol. tbe "N'aliooal Retail Dru r g l s l a
A!3odation in POr11and, Ore., Mooday.
1'1'HEBE HAS been bad cewa: OUl
ot W-ashlngtoo in the last two months
and no one ia sadder about k than
I. But we _, let -sad days
hamper or hinder what we have ahead
ol us," Ford told lbt dtugglsls.
l,HllT ........
Eft>l1 nl
Rock and roll singer Elvis Pre!"'
ley has pneumonia and will be
in the hospital for a wtek. His
doctors admitted the 38-year-
old star into Baptist Hospital
in. Memphis for 'recurrent
pneume~.·
Drama in Skies:
Pilot in Plane
Talks Dow1i Boys
LAS VEGAS (UPJI -"Las Vegas
tower. this is 4120 Tango, we have
an emerg~·'J• .I don't know , how
to fly this plant;" . .I need help."
TBOSE WERE the frantic words Of
a 17·year-old boy .spoken from a stolen
twin-en~ ligbt plane 1'fonday night
before a drilmatic "talk down" in the
air.
Officials al Mt'Carran lnlernaU<1nal aifl'Ol'I said the boy and another 11;.year.
<1ld had stolen the Cessna 320 from
North Las Vegas Airport, about 35 miles
away, shortly after dark Monday.
The youtM were in the air for more
than two hours and running out of fuel
•'hen they radioed the McCarran tower
for help.
''THE 17-YEAR-OLD boy Indicated to
us that be bad onl y 20 hours ot flying
experience and didn't know bow to bring
the plane down," a tower spokesman
said.
"We notified the Clark County Fire
Department to bring in emergency
~ulpment." he. said. "Then we managed
to locate a pilot who was flying an
identical plane in the vicinity."
The airJxirt spokesman said the pilot
homed in on the wayward craft, made
radio contact with the youths, and began
to talk them down.
Tbe pilot, flying within a mile of
the other plane and leading, told\ the
youths v;hal speed to fly at and whnt
altitude to ut ilize la mnk lng their
approach lo ~fcC1rran whllc ground
crews stood ready on the runway.
• A 10WER spakcsmt1n said the boys
made a smooth landing, crediting the
pilot of the rescue piano for bringing
them in.
The youths , who were not ldcntlflcd
because of their age , wtre arrt91td
and booked on charges of grand larceny •
Nixon Always
Short of Caslt
ST. LOUIS, Mo. (UPI) -
Whene\·er President Nixon wtnt
to churcll with lhe Rev. Diiiy
Grahanl, he borrowed money h'om
Ule evaogellst to put ln lha
collection plate, Oraham .. Jd
Monday .
Graham bu orf\clated at two
or the 41 reUatoos aervlcer al the
White House, and has accompanied
the President to other chltl'<h
...;ervices.
While di1CW$lng the effect. of
scandals on the adminlstt,atlon at
a news confertnce, Graham u ld,
"He (NU.on) is a private man
who. for im:tanet. has lert his
financial affairs 10 somoone else.
"Whenever Wl: wcnl to church
together, be··always had to borrow
money from. !me lo put 111 the
collection plate."
•
•
I
s
Gov.
j~r
has
Spes
telev
gove
Si
argu
area
-the
elec •
ru1
mur
was
he
him
mur
o_nly
reac
sanl
Sent
26. •
• s
me
tent
Oil
Ed
cha
-Tl!Hday, Ottobtt 16, 1CJ73 DAILY PILO;' lJ
•
·Reagan
To Debate
Initiative
--......... ,.,_, 'Playgirl'
To l.imit
Newsracks
$7 ,000 Ransom Paid \.
3 Held in-Kidnap, Murder
S~CRAMENTO IUPll -
C"JOv. Ronald Reagan, In a ma·
i{lr campaign Strategy switch,
has agreed to meet Assembly
Speaker Bob ?i1orettl in a
televised debate over the
governor's tax llmlt Jnltlatlve.
Since othe rs also will be
arguing the Issue, neither
( __ n_RI_EF_s ___ )
'Reagan nor Moretti regard
this as the big debate Morelli
has been vigorously seeking
for months.
Reagan , a skilled television
performer who earned his liv-
ing before Hollywood ca,meras
for piree decades, announced
Monday he wooJQ. appear with
Moretti on th.e ·~r-long pubUc br,q•.d.i;!li~)'!'!o-"'run . "The Advocates." ~
. The i)rogram will be taped
. . 2Ftif"U:>s Angeles-anit
shown in every major viewing
area in California just before
the Nov. 6 ~pedal statewide
election-on Reagan's proposa1.
e Bunyard Sane
FILES SUIT
Nell Dlomond
Musician
SACRAMENTO (AP I -The
November Wue of. "Playglrl"
with a male nude centerfold
bl being wlthheld from certain
Sacramento newstands t o
avoid possible conntct with -a
Jaw . cqncernJfli "harmful" matter and · mlnon:, a
CALIORlllA
ma1utne distributor reported ----------
Monday.
The centerfold show• actor Don Stroud in full view, nude JURY MULLS
" .. ~~ u.t Burt DEEP THROAT
!Uynolds °""? Well, this guy
-·t h>ve hi> hand In front BEVERLY HILU; iUPll -
of anythl.ng," said George A jury wbk:h 11w the ta
Renfro, ~ger of Mid-Cal film "Deep Throat" twice dur-
Periodical Distributors, lhc. ing an oblcmlty trial co.
' • timled deliberations today. Sues to Halt
'Seagull'
llENFllO DECIDED to hold ' Vincent Miranda, 39, owner
the maguine away from tbe of the HOllywood 'l'beatre
unincorporated areas o f where "Deep 'nroat" Is being
Sacramento County, where shown, and theater mana~
Sheriff Duane Lowe started Steven fwt.....Huen, are each
LOS ANGELES (A P) a campaign two weeks ago charged ~'\"misdemeanor
to keep "dirty" magazines out violation of obscenity laws. Aw:ard-winnlnf musician Neil of the hands of children; Tbe .. case went to the jury
Diamond has fl.led suit to But It will be distributed Monday. -
' bl9(1c u;e-showing of the today In the rost of the flhn's --------~
SAN BERNARDINO (API
-AulhorlUea were searching
today for a woman, her two
teenage children aod a family
friend who were rtporttd1y
kldnaped from a homo In
nearby Grand Terrace.
Sherifl's depuUes lllld lhe
wom8,!)'!I es.-buaband and two
other men were arrested Mon-
day folllJWing delivery of a
$1,000 ranJOm.
' THE 5U8PECl'S were MS~
tilled u F.dwanl Jooeph M ...
toya. 33, <l FrecJO; Pbilllp
Elwon Walt.era. U, of Fontana,
and . Norbert ''Tony" Meier,
31, the kldnaped woman's ex·
husband. AU were booked for
tnvesttg1Uon of kld.aaping and
murder. A sheriff's
spokesman said the murder
cha11e wu· filed because the
victims had not been found .
The vi.cums wel'i! Identified
as Dorothy Sanchez, 34; her
daughter, Ton!, 15, and h<r
""1, David, 14, an4 Jolm E.
McGrall, 19.
Sllertfl'a dap.1Ues said the
movie, "Jonathan Seagull,'' territory which includes the
accusing lts makers of breach. city of Sacra.mento and
of contract. · · several other counties, Renfro
In a Superior Court suit ftled said. Pollutwn Control
four were abducted from tt1e
Sane.be% ·home early ri.tonday
and 1"1rs. Sanchez' mother,
Betty Ponce of San
Bernardino, received a call
severpl hours later ·from a
man who demanded f7 ,000 for
their safe return.
INSl'RUCTIONS on delivery
North Denver
Reunion · Set
Southern California
graduates of North Denver,
Colo., }figh School will hold
their annual reunion dinner
Oct. 28 at, 5 p.m. at the Sad-
dleback Inn in Norwalk. The
event will mark the 36th time
the graduates have met.
Reservations can be made
by calling Mildred Sanders at
(213) 359-3715 .
Monday, Diamond said his Sheriff's spokesman William
contract with ParainOUDt Pie-Miller sald Lowe IStl't trytn1
MARIPOSA ·(UPI) -A jury t.ures Corp. and producer Hall to tell anyone what they can To Curb Vehicular Traffic
of the ransom money were rested. TilC ransom money
given In a seriM of su~uent was recovered from Walters,
telephone calls to Mrs . Ponce, they added.
deputies said. 'Ille first payoff They said a car containing fl.1ontoya Md Meier w a s attempt , at an a .!l s i g n--e d followed from the service sta-
tclephone booth , Vt'as th~'arted tion to Mootclair, 25 miles
when a '11-ycar-old man, to the west, and the two were
Lawrence Wonack of San ,.•;;;';;;";;;'t;;;e;;;d;;;t;;;h';;;';;;';;;· ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;
Bernardino, found the money II
and took It. Deputies said lhey
trailed Wonack to a bus and
took the money away from
him.
Following f u r t h e r in-
11 ruct ions from the kldnapers.
the money was put in a paper
bg and pl.aced in a shopping
cart behind a San Bernardino
service slalion,
Deputit>S said the money
was picked up by Walters,
who was trailed IO a nearby
apartment complex and ar-
AUCTION
PIB~~
•. PHARMACY
W l'•lr Or,
ti Ht,_ ,
C••I• M-. w.Dt
e l'lleSCltll"TIONS
• SICKllOOM 1t•HTALI e HOLLltTEll OtTOMY • HUOSOH VITAMINS
• JOltT STOC:JCIHGS
• CAMI' tUl'l'OllTS
Del!YitrY S.rvlce e M•oler Clwo•f"
I DIAN JIWILRY
FRl., OCT.-19-7 P.M.
Jake's Auction, 2722 No. Main,
Santa-Ana---
4n41 WofM1 -I~ FASHION UJta
ruled Monday that con.vlcted Bartlett calied for him to l)e print He only wants to keep
murderer John P. Bunyard pa id $100,000 .to compose the such ma1ai.i.nes "out of the
was Jegaily sane at the time background music f~ the reach of cbildren lD groceries
he killed two women during film. -and othei places wb.e.re they
a crime spree across northern Diamond said five minutes look at them while their By 'l'1le Auodited Prtu pools to battle air pollution. Bradley's office said the
Calffornia last spring. of his background music Md mothf:rs are shopping. '1 r--a...,..,rd, Z'i, 8mo-suspeeted-been-dalet.ed ;;iod substituted Btnfro earljer decided to The federal Enviroomental However, EPA administra-parking surcharje Wo u Id or being the "Nob Hill Rapist" with a n o th er composition, withhold the m a g a z I n e Protection Agency fii!Jssued torttmRt-E:-TratirsaJd'"ihe ampunr-to--10-cent:s. -'!'he-·
of San_ Francisco, showed no . making Jt no longer _r.f:p-@ell-generally, but said he relented an a1r pollution control plan restrictims were "unreason-also was O? _order_. td se_t up
emotion When he heard 'the tative of his work. after .a few Pfof.esti, ·JnoStly-ffiat-Wruftfi.ffininitiflfy"'1977-able" and -aald be' woofd ask · e:lclusive rieeWay bl.is and car
decision. Diamond also asked that the !rom women. He l.5 al!O au~e ·uae in-the Los Coogress foir authority to ex-pool lanes.
-The same jury which found producers be O{dered to 1mure · continuing di*fbuUon ol Angeles area, vi rt u a 11 Y tend deadliDes 10 to 15 yean'
him guilty of . second-degree that his credit titles a.re in "PI a Y boy," "Penthouse," eliminate "It-lil tM ·san · or· indefinitely Antls;mog inspection and
murder last ·week deliberated letters "75 percent as big '1 'Swank '' and other Francisco mu IDd forte · · nlaintenance fo.r private cars
only 15 minutes be ( 0 re as the letters of credit for publications whlcb dtal in severe cutbacks in vehicular THE EPA had originally -including a new smog
ri?aching its decision in lhe Hall Bartlett." total feminine nudity, he said. traffic in three other lectiona ordered that gas rationing device costing about $15l -
sanity phase of the tr ial. of Callfomla. begin ln California in May,
o-t u· g w t f r Oct •----~ M·-•· I 1!175, but ,._ new guldetm· es will tic:: required as 11f Aug'ljst ~6."'"' 1 as se 0 . 3 um·de-nt1"f1·ed ·B.:..-1!es w;;;&~~ the "";i:n I~ extends ~~deadline by two 1976 ·'" Los ~geles, San tKll d 1........1 ,... -fedt 1 years p1Franc1sco, Ssn Diego and the
.,Cllollco o!l•IM .......
!IQ! !Ml -.,....,, --·
$lltM Ir• 11 .... 2 Pl e ~~ !.16'Pit4.
,_ -baillllle 11 lkle ,111lci,atilt ltclUlas:
Hi.:W:>CR7 ll ~f CM, J110 NEWPORT llVD.
HUM'flNGTON CIACH, 9791 ADAMS
FOU NT.-.!N \'A'.LEY, 1&155 HARBOR ILYD. • Pl'.'Oject Ofca11ed ' • ~;Du~ ::r;{~~nca::s ttte" federal alt standard Is Sacramento and San Joaquin
LOS ANGELES (UPI) -F d • N rth Ar mandated by Coogms, It .08 parts of oxidants pei-~v'.'.''1J:11':!Y~'· _____ ___:_____!!':::=:=:==:=::=:=:=:::::;:::::;:=:=:=:=:=:=:=::i.
Despite oojections 1rom some OUD ID O ea w®Jd a11ec1 12 me1n1pou1an mDllon. 1n Los Angetes, air
residents in the area. the areas lnelgbt states, lncluding ·pollut.kft exceeds that level
Sooth Coast Reslona.I Coast-San Diego, the San Joaquin on more than 200 days in
line Corilmission has approved CHICO (U PI) -Three assaulted. It appeared she and Stcramento valleya, as the year. But ofOclala said
construction of a 153-unit unidentified bodies, at least died within the past three well u the Loi Angelta and measures short of rationing
condominiwn project. on the two of them. thougbt to 'be days. San Ftancllco area&-· could cut the number of days
beach at P1aya Del Rey. te:enage girls, have been found The nude body of another above the federal standard to
'Ibe project would be at dif~erent loca~ons within. glrl wa., found ln Butte Creek STRICI' GASOLINE 20 per year.
constructed on beachfront land 20 nules of this northern ntioniDC lmpoeed under the 1bt -cantroll b'dude a now occupied by the Westport California c om m u n i t y , canyon &outbeut of pik:o plUl wauJd tltmlalte Los parking aurcharge beginnl111
Beach CI u b. A club _officials aay. ,. -&mda1-SMrlft's deputiel Mid Angeles area tratftc 10 0 next July, to d Is courage
representative t o 1 d the n..e two girta were OOtb the badly decompoled body percent and reduce auto use driving into the central areas.
comml53ion b efo r e the found .by hunters. The third had lain undilcovered for hro in the Bay Area, the
decision Monday that It is person was fouDd in a car mootm. ,Sacramento Valley, the San
in financial trouble. by the California Highway The Hl&hnY Patrol said the JOIQUln Valley and San Diego
Patrol. third , body, which w a 1 by ti percent, 59 percent, 39 e.1ur11Seated One of the girts was apparently burned, was petcent· and S3 percent,
discovered In the northeastern sighted inside-a.car on Milsap mpectively.
SANTA CRUZ (UPI) -'l'\Yo portion of Yuba C ounty Bar Road twot miles east of Tbe mtrlctlons · alao call men and two women were ._,_
t t t. 1 t ,1 d ooonday. Sheriff Gary Miller Brush Creek In northeast for, &mc¥ll other things, en a 1ve Y sea e 1• on ay said she had~ been stabbed Butte County. No details were mandatory auto inspections,
on the qu ry th at will tray in the head and sexually released. """"'""'lot ... -a..-es and car
Edmund l<emper III 0 n --''r:=:.:====:~=:;;::=:::;:;:::;::z;:::;;~~;;;;v;;iiiii~~=-~ .. ~·-a w~-~ ·~~:CC II charges h(! murdered his
mother and seven o l h e r "' ~
women.
Kemper, 24, a 6-foot-9. 280-
pound road worker, has
pleaded in~nt by reason
or insanity to charges he
committed the eight slqyings
in the Santa Cruz area during
a year-long period.
e Pact Approtled
OAKLAND I U P I I
Agreement by the board of
education and Oakland's
teachers on · a new contract
apparent1Y will avert a strike.
Tentative accord w a s
reached during a lengthy
bargaining session through the
night. Both the 0 a k I a' n d
Education Association and the
Oakland AFT cancelled strike
votes set for afternoon.
111.e pact, approved by the
board, called for a 9 percent
pay boost and raised the city's
allocation for supplies from
$6 to $8 per child.
Jail Term
For Doctor
LOS ANGELES IUPI) -
A doctor convicted o f
suppl ying drugs to massaf.le
parlor employes was
sentenced Monday to six
months in jail an~ ordered
to serve his five years '
probation work_ing on an
Jndian reservation.
Dr. J1arry F. Larson. 51,
of \Voodland 1111ls, w a s
convicted of giving dangerous
drugs to femate employcs at
Crazy Don's, a Sunset Strip
massage parlor.
In sentencing Larson to the
unique probalion, U.S. Disfr\ct
Court Judge Manuel L. Real
said, "lt wlAJld ~ a shame
to throw you on lhe. duQg
heap when people c 0 u rd
benefit from your servlcelll."
Kids Like T n
Ask And)·
ROLEX WATCHES
• i
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Aolex watches: A. Man's "'Datejust" with blue dial,
stainless steel case and bond, 8365. In 18 karat gold: 8 . Lady's
"Datejust" with matching hldden-clasp bracelet. $1 ,625.
C, Man's "Day·Dlte'' diamond watch with florentined case and
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•
LOS ANGELES Mayor Tom
Prof•llOf M•rtin, founder
•"' Oirettor of th• Chrl1ti•n
Re1•1rch ln1titutt, 11 wld•-
ly tcl111owltd9od •1 th• out•
1t111dln9 0¥1119t lic1I •uthor•
lly 011 p11udo-Chrhll1n culh
•nd th o 1tudy of cornp•••-
tl"• roli9lon1 In Am•ric1. He
h•1 deh1i1d 1omo of the
mo1t co11tro .. •r1i1I int•ll•ct1
In thi1 country tl1rou9h hi1
popultr r10lo •nd +•l••i1ion
111lnhtry, ond ;, t+io •ud1or
of numorou1 •rlid•• In 11 1•
tlo11•I m•911ine1. Hh b.1t
11tlh19 book """9d-tf tM
c.ftl" "•• b•com• th• pri-
111•ry r•far•nct work in ih
fl~ht
Proltuor Martin will be
1pea~ing on Mormon·
ism, Herbert W. Arm-
strong, Astn>logy and
the Tools of !he Occult
Tuesday !hru F~iday !hi•
wHk at the Newporl·
Mesa Chirsti1n Center,
148 • 22nd Street, Costa
Mesa. For information
as to time and topic,
please can 645-6620 •
•
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... ' DAILY PILOT EDITORIAL PAGE
Airport Land Control
'
For 1 he Lhird year Orange County supervisors con-after intcniiewing two JBS leaders, he lea"ves jhe im·
linue to play games with the state-n1an.dated Airport pression that Robert \Velch's nationwide organization
k all · f ma.Y have some punch left here. .. Land Use Comn11ss1on. handing it a to en ocat1on o We doubt it. It is difficult to maintain a high level of
$500 in lie u of all, or tit least a more substantial por· h)'steria over a prolonged period, a.nd Welch's dire pre-
tion, or ils requested $62.500 budget. . dictions of a Communist takeover tomorrow-then to-
Basic purpose or the agency, established following morrow, then the next day, have lost their p1o1IJ. ,
adoption of legislation authored by Assemblyman Rob-For instance. the society's tired old assault over
crt Badha111 'R-Newport Beach) is to protect airports the Uniled Nations Children 's Fund Halloween drive is
fro1n encroat!hrnent and protect land surrounding air· • about to come up again. This time, almost 00 one is pay·
ports from noise and other environmental problems. ing attention; a few years back the. poor UNICEF peo·
The Airport Land Use Commission is supposed to pie would be mustering forces to answer Welch's absurd
prepare comprehensive land use plans for ter~itory SLIT· con1munisl-link accusations against the trick-o r·treat col·
rounding each airporl. Orange Countr's etghl_ com-ltttiOns for underprivileged childfen.
1nissioners maintain their hands are virtually tied by Harvey quotes Orange County's ex-Congwessman
lack of ftmding for their work. and ex-Presideqtial candidate John Schmitz, a Birch
1'he supervisors argue that the state-mandated body inember, as saying the society h<Ui been taking this area
tlup lLcates the functions of the county Planning Com· too much for granted. He believes it needs reorganizing,
1nis:.io n and Airport·Co1nmission. since Robert \Velch won't live forever.
Badhant said this should not be a problem. Any The last \Vetch interview we read quoted him as:
('OUnty which already has an airport authority; as. ror .,.....Opposing "the ecology and energy scares" because
example, Los Angeles. can apply to have this· body sub-they are government plots "to create shortages and scar-
stitutc ror the Airport Land Use Commission-provi~ed city in order to have us merge comrortably with the
the exi sting agency is given all the powers and duties ..Communist nations."
set forth by the state. -Placing the credit !or Watergate on Nelson Rocke·
This appears to be the stumbling block. Orange fel1er as a plan to get r~d o! Nixon.
County supervisor s seem unwilling to yield any control -Assertin~ that "Nixon plans to become "president
, ...
; .
•
• •
o[ the county airport. . ,--....ul lhe...Wotl ' ill...l~ug)i.Jhe.!l~~ji~ ·;...:::=b:=:=:=:s If the game continues. Badham indicates, more J.11 the_eatJ.Y, _1960s lVefCJi:.-U>!tnd_~oll!e eJget:t~~·
pressure may well be exerted by the state to compel lieve followers in the u'f'tra conservative belt of Ofange ._,::!.,.,f:Z -~-
financial as well as theoretical complicance with the law. Co.unty. But the sky didn't fall in on Chicken Little and
most Birchers just got tired of waiting. ·
Remen1ber the Birchers?
\Vhatever1 became of the John Birch Society?
\Vriter Harry Harvey reaches a mixed conclusion
in the current edition of Orange County Ill ustrated.
Based on JBS activities loca!Jy, Harvey says the right·
wing organization must have l~s~ its attractiveness. But
No, the Birch Society's American Opinion Book-
stores are pretty empty these days and we .. don't hear
much about committees such as TACT, TRAIN. MOTOR·
ED and Supnort Your Local PoLice and, of course, 1111·
peach Earl \Varren.
The societv Wis \Vele.h's creation and his product.
It can hardly be reor~anized without him. Better the
handful left just settle the bills and fold !he tent. BLOWN BLITZ
-co11ld Solve Israe li Bo1•de1·"" P1·ob le111s
Vice Presidency
\VASHINGTON -Spiro T. Angew's
agony Jed to serious discussion, even
before his resignation. of the l:irger
question of the vice presidency as a
suPerffuous and disposable office..
Attention centers im med iately on his
successor but the longer range problem
remains as an im-
portant spinoff of
Agne,v's travail.
President Nixon's
lawyers rated the
vice presidency pret·
ty far do"''" the scale
from the. legal
standpoint. He ·\vas
, • considered a mere
... civil ofricr.r like a
1o-federa l jud.;1e in Sheboygan and not in
a class with the· Pre!ident . when it ~ comes to constitutional prerogatives
., abo~·c lhc J;1w,
TO BE Hl.U~T about it. Agnew, before
his 1roublcs became known. had ~n
p!;:iccd 1n l h c supcrfhwus calf'·
gory by President N~xon on 01 her
than lega! l!rnunds. Nixon had not gotten
:iround !o fintli ng much fur Agnl"11• to
rid ;.ind 1hc \'ICC president 1vas feeling
i !.
Lasl :-.ummer in an interview, Agnev.·
to ld 1nr: ''The vice prcsidencv is a
humbling pClsilion of its 011•n definition.
ThL•rC! lsn"1 any 1vay to 1nake it
"()lher\\'isc. And you just ha ve to develop
;1 liltlc skin when you arc depicted
as being: lhe riflh wheel .. it takes
11nic. hu! finally you get a liltle tougher
:1l that g;.irni', ··
lie 11 ent on 1u d1~cuss his frustralions
1n !he 1r.:1ns1r1on fron1 being an executive
office r of go\'crnn1c nt to the powerless
:-.tatu~ "' 1·irc-prf'sidcnt. noting tha t Nix·
011 h:.itl not go11en :irnund lo telling
hun 11hr11 11•:is cxpeclcd of hi1n in the
111•\:J four ~c;in;. excrp1 that dornestic
:iffnirs n1•1'rll'd :1llcn11on ~nd he ought
to he ··rit>xihlf' "
110\\' \I UCll i\1.'\01'1 niii;ht ha1c
.(RICHARD WILSO~
known at that stage or Agnew's
forthcoming disaster is not on the record.
But cigl'lt months since the election had
J!ready passed and Agnew was still
puu.led about whal he was supposed
lo be doing.
lf vice presidents were 3elected ror
the primary. reason the founders of the
republic had in mind, the present
discussion might be on a different basis.
In th<' beginning the man receiving th~
1nost electoral vote&: was elected presi-
dent and the runnerup was elected
yice president. Jt~th.us~ ~Id be pr"._~ed
that the vice president was cons10ercd
the seco nd best man to be President
Adams !o Jc[fcrson, wh3t could be bet·
fer~
THE ORIGINAL concept broke dO\\'Tl
in various stages until now, and a long
lime before now, the vi ce presidential
candidate is picked by the presidential
candidate to run on the same ticket
,1·ith him. narely. if ever, is the vice
presidential candidate cbosen ror the
primary reason that he eminently is
the bc~t rnan in the party to succeed
the President . Ye t 1hat is the vice
presidenfs mo~t significant function .
A vice president's· qualifications to
bt:come presiden! are rated so low that
men are sometimes selected for the
job who are barely known to the presi·
dent.
Dwiglit V. EisenlKl\Yer scracel}' knew
Hichard ~1. Nixon. Nixon in turn knc1v
little more than he had heard ~l
Agnew which was not enough. and
George S. fl.fcGovern obviously did not
know enough about Tom caglelon.
THE COUNTRY didn 't know much
;ibout lhrsi~ people either and had lo
take il on blind r3ith that the president ial
Dear
Gloomy
Gus
\Vhere were all "the kindhearted
people with money and sympathy
for the Israelis when OUR boys
and men were fig~ting in Vietnam?
N. C.
Gloomy GMI comrnen~ ... wbmlll.cl· lY
rNfeB 11111 do llltl "KtnarUy rtl!KI !hi
YilWI of llot -l•IHf. ~ YMlt Pt!
PHYI lo Gloomy li\ll, Dlih' 1'11111,
nominee knew what he was doing.
Agnew's disaster aside, the syster\1
of s~ssion is highly suspect as it
has developed over the years and needs
to be reexamioed With great care. SOme
argue that the vice presidency is not
needed at all and lhe succession can
proceed as pro vided by la1v to the
speaker of the House, the president
pt'o tempore of the Senate, lhe secretary
·of state and on down the Cabinet li st.
.. This leaves a good deal to be desired ·
!ince thefe is nothing inherent in holding
any of the foregoing of£ices which
qualifies: ils occupant to be president.
In the present instance the first l'A-'O
men in line for the presidency would
he or the opposite political party, which
1nakes that kind of succession plainly
un1vorkable.
NIXON'S PROCESS of choosing il sur.·
cessor to Agnew clearly qualifttd lor
the presidency does not alth the ulxlerly·
ing problem. In the heat and p~ of
political conventioos tbe man will be
chose n \vho is least likely to .harm
the president or most likely to help
hi m 11•ith heavy emphasis on "balancing"
the ticket and attracting tangential sup-
port. Often he will be Yirtually unknown
as were Agnew and Eagleton, whose
invisi ble rlaws did not show 3t the
ti1ne of their selection.
Alt ernatives to continuing "the most
insignificant office lhat ever he in·
vention of man contrived" '\'ill be hart!
to find.•Thc off ice of president cannot
be left a \'aeuum. But lhcre are surely
11·ays to insure that ii will not be filled
by the unqualified when it becomes
1·acant.
Does Video Crime Influence Youth?
Bugs Runny gives Elmer Fudd a hot·
hM>t Eln1{'r set even ~y nnpalming Bugs'
(";irro t·pntch hidca'A·:iv. .'.firaculously.
both h\1• to b.'.11 111' ;inolht>r d<ly, and
:inother . on 1hc le)e\·islon ~creen. Good,
1•lrnn fun~ .'.l11ylx.•
The old {jUC'stion or 11h<·thcr violent{'
1111r1 r<IYl!d 111 the 111.1.'~ media incites
;111u:il \JOlr.ne1? h:1s ill;illl\ rllOVrd rront
,111cl r1•t!lt'r Thi· r-11y of Boston and
llo· l'llT 1r1• !l11!io11 11·crc i;h Ot'k('(I <1H(l
•11·kr·nl'd h\· 1IK· sror1· of :i yQnng 1von1on
11 ho 11·:1 ~ rorC('d by ~ix y0<.u1g men to
dOJUS.· l1t"rM"l f 11•1!h ~."saline and who
11:1' th•·n ~1 :ilr1·1· by her as.~11llan1 s
Bus1nn ' police comn1l:i~io11Pr, Hobert J
d1Grazia. noted th:u a tnovle shown
011 lo,·al 1.rlcv1111on ~· few nii;hts e:irlier
ronl;iincd a scene in which teenag('rs
t1urned a derelict lo dc111h strictly for
kicks
Chance~ an.• that 110 one will be nhle
~ lu c:.tdbl1sh :1 C'/lU!!C•t'ff('Ct rPl;1tionship
l.M•tW('f'n "haL 1vas S('r.n on Bo!Ston TV
.1nrt \\ha t l;1 !l'T O('C'urrd In :l Boston
.i r .. v ~·rt·VtOU'i ntlcmpts to link· rirlion;i l
"'Id :lrtu.11 \tn¥!ncC have vieldcd decided·
IT nlJXCd l'OOt!USM'}nli. .
\ 1!1'~1 'fJH'f' i~suctl four ycors ago
111· tll" \".itionul Co1nmisslon on lhe
1 aus....•.. .11ul l'rcvc1nlit)f1 ol Violenet
.• ~; r1t1 Thi> preponctcrnnct or lht'
,1\1!;1t1lc r•·~1'.1t"l'h strongly suggeS1 ..
EDITORIAL
RESEARCH
-
1h,11 violence in tC"levis ion programs can
and does have adverse effects upon
audi<'nces -"par!icular!y child audiences.
Television enter~ 1m11·e.rfully int o \he
learning prOC<'SS of children and leaches
them l'I set or ... values 1vhich Arc
inconsistent lV ilh the stoindards of civlliz·
eel socie1y."
Then. in 1972. the Surg~n Grner<il's·
Scientific Advisory Committee o fJ
Television ond Social Behavior Issued
a re.port that t llnt· to virtually the op-
posite conclusion. ~ committee stated:
"We have noled in the studies at hand
a nlOdest aS!IOCiation between viewing
of viol~e <Ind aggression among Al
lea~t 50me children and •.. some data
which arc consonant with the in·
lerprelRtlon lhat v!olence·vlr.wing pro-
duces aggression: this ~cncc ls not
concl u11ive, however. and 80me of the
data arc also ctlnmant "A'ith other Int·
crpreli\lions . . . . The evidence (or
more f!ccurat l:'ly, !he difficulty of finding
('vidcnerl SUIU{CSL'J rh:it the effect . (of
'f'Y viewing on violcnct In soclety I is
sm.11JI compartd with olhcr possible
causes "
0 1'1E 1-·A.cr is bt!yond dispule: Despite
l>t!riodic ca1npaigns against violence in
1he 111ovies and on TV. An1cricans arc
exposed to mass.Ive doses of it in both
media. Sludlt.~ of nehvork drama on
prime evening hour.s and of programs
on Saturday n1ornings ovci-lhe period
1967~9 showed the rate or violent
episodes rc1nained conslant at ahout
t ight per hour. The most violent or
all prog rarns were children's cartOOll'.j
-th e net1111rks canceled the "'orst of.
fenders.
The cuniulut lve exposure o( a chlkl
lo viol<'nct in the televis ion age can be
immense . "Ry the time lhc overege
Amerlcan child rt-Acht'll the i1ge of JS,"
Rep, John i\1. &lurphy ! D.·N. Y. l said
lesl year. "He has 1vi1nessccl 18,000 in-
dividual murders on the tclevlsioo sel
... ·!not including) beatings, stabbing&,
muggings. rapet and other forms or
mayhem ."
But !he beat -nnd the besting -
goes on, for lhe simple rea~ that
movi egoers and TV wntchcr:1 llkc their
:-iction rough. Tilt' currtnl ral(e in movie
houses across !he land is lhe made·in·
!long.Kong quickie cramrncd "'II h ~monstratlons or kung fu . :ind other
ml'lrtia/ arts or the Orient. Now' kung
fu and karate schools arc doing a boom·
Ing business But this, al least, Is
violence for rhc sake of self-defense.
.
Effect of an Arab Failure
WASHINGTON -Failure of the
mightiest Arab attack against Israel
in the whole, tragic 25·year history o!
the Arab-Israeli war could virtuflly as-
sure the hjstorical event it \vas supposed
to make impossible: Israeli occupation
for years. perhaps decades, of !he Arab
lands captured in •
the six-day 1967 war.
Israel could argue
-and surely would
insist -that a bor-
der along the Suez
Canal. a g a inst
Egypt, and another
on lbe heights of Go-
lan, against ·Syria,
are absolutely-es,,en-~ •
ti al if Israel 1$1lo live in Tela the saurity,fl
As one sCudent. ..... of· the Middle·: East
put it to us~· '"JjMi soll'd.ities as .Dolbin.I(
else could the Jsrae)I intentiOn tn bold
the Arab territories~ 'in 1967 ...
A.'ITEl\1PTING to unravel hard facts
from the sticky ball of twine whii.:11
tra~es event.s in !he days just befo1·e.
the Egyptian-Syrian attack on ,Oct. G
is difficult, bul one fact appears iu·
escapable: the Israeli government of
"'Golda fl.1eir passed on volwninous private
intelligence to the Nixon administration
that Egypt and Syria were, In fact,
building their attack forces to un·
precedented size for the expected move·
menl across tb~ Suez Canal and on
the Syrian Golan J1eigbt s.
Indeed, such intelligence most surely
have been at hand here l\'ithout any
help from the Israelis. But !he U.S.
faCf'd IY..O unanS\verabl~ queslions : first,
ctluld Egyp t or Syria, particularly Egyp·
tian Prt•:-.1<1cnt Anwa.r Sadat with his
kno1\11 pro-U.S. \)(llitical posture. be blind
enough 10 risk suic idal attack: and sec·
ond. even if tbe White House had
kno"·n for sure that. such an attack
was coming, what cnuld President Nixon
do to· st op it'! -
IN H.INOSIGlIT, the ans we!' to the
first is that lhc. Westen1 democracies
have never been able to w1derstand
Arab psychology and the risk of suicide
1 he Arabs are ready to accept when .._
Arab honor is at stake.
As for the seconct; ?t.t:r. Nixon v.•as
helpless. Sadat played the American
gan1e in U1e crucial autumn of the
1972 presidential ele;ction campaign by
dismissing thousands o! .Soviet advisers,
and got absolutely nothing for it from
the Nixon a(bn inis!ration. Thus, despite
the delicate bt'ginnings several weeks
ai;o of a fresh U.S. effort to solve
the T\liddle East criSiS:-U.S. iiifiqence
in Cairo has been paper thin. In Syria,
it is non-existent.
CONSEQUENTLY, tM warnings from
Tel Aviv aet.'01nplished nothing in
Woishing1on. The Israelis r~solved tbeh·
Ol'i11 111\('rn;1I deba te by dceiding not
IO rl'peal the SUCCe"S or 1967 :t nrl Stage
• 111 asslvc 11rccmplivc aunck. ltcsull : ~rave f!ir:il'll C1'Sualties (hu1 not ap-
pruai·hin~ the eventual klll nr l\r:tbsl
coupled 1,i!h ironclad new evidcnre sup· ...
'
/
( EVANS-NOVAK J
porting the Israeli position thut distant
borders -U1e Suei Ca nal and the Golau
I loights -are proh ably c:isential for
hl'r sec uri ty. Neither ls1·acl nor <1ny
olhcr state can 1naintciin perpe1unl
1nobilization.
Sonic close·in ~lideast 11·aLchcrs 1.telleyr
tl\at the Arab game was not \1'hat .it
seems to have bceii -a genuine , al\-uut
military effort to recapture Sinai and
lhe ,Golan. Rather. lhry pcrcch~e the
reel 'Arab goal as n1ore ?t.tacbiavelllan:
crCating\ a _volatile ,,antl·\Vestern fury
thri>ughoOLtbc...._ Arab world in the ar ·'
terma1h of the Ar<1b defea t. Thal fury,
they predict, would be used to persuade
pro-U.S. Saudi Ara bia and stnne other
big oil producing states lo cut orf · oil
antl threatP.n R f:Jr gr.ivt.T Western
energy crisis.
PERllAPS the latest trage<ly wllJ r11r1 ...
"
in Uiat dire clion. but recmt history
J>Oints to a far less tllachiavellian, far
uu11·c emotional, rationale. On our last
I l~J( lu !he Middle East ro months
H~o. sonic Egyptian offiei.als were
11u."hin~ fur just such a military venture
as has no\\' occurred. \Ve reportt'd then
1he '-xistcn,·e of secret studies indicanng:
1hal "a eross1ng or the Suez Canal"
\rould cost 10.000 F.gyptian casualties,
both n1ililai'y and civilian, but that that
price would he \\"Orth paying if Israel
it self coold be ''damaged."
The price now promises to be far ,
fa r hi~cr. "P.ioscow. stfll~hard in pursui t
uf det.ente with Washington, is no\Y
"'·atching hundreds of millions of dollars
worlh of made·in-Moscow n1 i 11 ta r y
tlardware bum up in the desert. Thi s
time. rep!acemenl may be far in the
future, The S-Ovicts apparently had
nothing to do with the Arab atlack.
In short , the tragic role of the Arabs
may have been 10 solve the border and
IPrritor inl questions for the foreseeable
future -in exactly the w:iy Israel
wnnted.
Oil Sliut-off Threats
\YASHINGTON -Ill-private messages
to President Nixon , Saudi Arabia 's King
F'aisal has \'i"arncd that he is under
tremendous pressure to shut off !he
oil spigol ir the U.S. apricars tn ht~
siding with Israel in tl1c Middle Ea~t
conflict.
Sources who havf!
had access to lhe
messages tell us the
King's language is
careful but lhc
1neaning is unmis-
takable. F'aisal tells
of past Arab pres·
sure on him to hold
back • oil from the
U.S .. which has asked him to increase
production to meet the anticipated short·
age here.
AllAB PASSION over lhc \1 [Ir, he
suggests, bas intensified the pressure on
Saudi 1\rabhi to hull all oil ship1nl'l11 s
to the \Vest. Ile ln1plies cautioUSly lhut
he won't" be 11blc lo 1vilhsta nd the
press w-c if lhe U.S. see111s to ravo r
Israel. '
Berorc the Syl'iun-8gypt ian ;1\tatk
ltpon Israel, alleges one intcllit:;ence
reporl. Faisal agreed tu provide ijic
n1oney to replace ~gypt's 1nilitary losses.
Anolher lntclligc11cc rt'port clai nis faisal
also promiscd to relocate Egypl"s cil•ll
nir tit-c t in Siiutli 1\rabla during thl'
rcnc\ved hostilities. At lht!I wrlt in~.
however. \\'e l1:11·c been unable to !corn
\fhethcr E.t:Yl)il;a n planes ha1·c [1Ctu<1lly
been moved to S.1udl soil.
FOOTNOTE: The br!dging cquipn1('11t
that !he 1·:i.;~·ptiN 11s ·u~d lu cro.i.s lhl'
SucY. canal. UfJparcntly, c~uni.: fron1 tht·
$o\•ict Un lon. ttontl)s 1:1go. n ~crret In
tcilif,cnce rcporl a&~tod~ "The t;SSR
hois :!SU!>Vllec.! f;u.Y11t. wifh Chough brldg111g:
l'Quipmcnt lo lay un ·lo nfne bridi;;cs
260 mcte~s Tong, with a carrying cap:ici1y
of GO tons (·tich. aJJ \veil as L1vo bridges
1vf1h n carrvinA ca1mcllv of 12 ll"Jn~
e8ch. • The USSR ai..o · h8s provided
ft~ypt with" !lO ll(lts or n1inef!elri hre<1chin1£
equipment to optn pnswges" on the
Israeli aid• or lhc Suez.
KISSINOl::ll VS. SISCX> -lkfor11w1he
t-.1iddle. EAsl outbre1t k, say 4..'0lnJ)(:lf'nt
St11te llt.·11artnu·n1 sources. Sce reta 1·v or
Soue Henry Ki11~in1•r.r wa• pr1•ri:lrlnq
lo en.o;c out hls top Middle i<;!lsl C!Cpcr~.
A!r.-!i~UHlt Srfrrtary Jn~ph J. SlSt.'<>.
The able Si~ has •Ustlnjjuished
hfn1:.clf by h1~ lu1ndling or !he tJe.licate
lsracli·Ar11h problc1n Bot the Mkltlle
(
E:isl, according to our sources, is an
;11 t .1 \11;1! h1:..i.1ngcr intends to n1t1nagc
µt.'l"SOU:llJ~·.
Furthf'i') Si ~l.'O l1as IX'Cn one or the
liW ~1;.1tr llrpnr1rnt'nt officials 1vith the
cu11•·:igc l•J huc!t Kissinger. During th e
J.1di.1.J'a~1~l:ln \var. for example, ~'hen
f\ic;s inger 11·as l'xhorllnc the State
J Jf'n;1rlnH•nl In ahanrlon the avowed U.S.
pohcy of neutrality and "lilt" for
I ';11<.1sl<ln. Si;;c11 quietly dug i11 his bt..>els .
.\II-:AN\\11111.E, Kissin ger has been
~4Tt'1 1y l"l'hu1ld1ng his Nalionn l Security
:iff:i i1·s sT:llf. Al his bidding, Winston
Lord, <L prolt'J.:C \vhn l11:1s been on lea ~·e,
ha.'4 llP"" rPl11r11Pll 10 \Vashi ngton and
is back :-tL wo1·k in the White Hou:<c
li:-t~(·1ncn1 .
The racl lhHI Kissinger had Lord's
l"l<')lhonc tnp1l\.'CI h:isn·t seen1ed to trou·
hll' Lord 1vho l1;1s frequently travelC'd
with Ki!<si ngrr. At tilt' Paris peace talks.
l .(Jrd 1vAs photographed carrying Kis·
singtr'5 bag.
"N"o1v that Kissi nger is \\·earing two
.~uit.~:· 011..: furl'ign service officer told
us. "I .nrcl 1vill hare to Carry l\\'O suit·
e;;iscs."
OIAN~l COAST
DAILY PILOT
Robert N. 1Veed, PubUshel'
Th.01nGS Ktevil , Ed.itor
Barbara Kreibich
t:dirorfaJ Paoe Editor
~ f!l!il(>rtal .f>8tt of 1~ O.lly
Pilol setkll to lnJonn lllld r.U mulate
readera by pre~lli on thl1 paac
diverso•comml'ntlu7'on lqlica o( ln-
tn-nt by l)'ndlcaled eotomni11a •nd
ctt·toonitts, by pmvldina " fonim for
rtadt'f'I' vll'Ws and b)' pre1t!nli"1 jhbl
ncWlpal>flt'f oplnlnns and tdl'u cm
current toplra. The edilorlll opinions
of the lla.lly Pilot apptar only In lhc
tdltorlal lUumn at the tnp ol the
PllAfl, Opinions cxpre8fl(1j b)' t~.~
umnlStJ 11n<1 nnoontsts aM letttt
1vrlterw an: ttwtl.r own •nd no ~l"
ment ol their vle'<tlll by 1hC QilJIY
Piiot ihOuld be \n(fMd.
'lileM!ay, October 16, 19?3
•
1:00
II>
*
l :lO
7;00
7:l0
...
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1:30
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<;
TV DAILY LOG
.~
Tuesday (dr1) '13-Klln Novik, Toi)' Cuttll,
Mlcllltl Br•odOA.· Kim Novik 1ta11
11 • d1nc11 who Jinds lltrself !1lij111 Evening tn love with • fQllni tolltt. c&rQPM ind r;ut ~ btlwttfl "h!rn 111i
OCTOBER 11 the m•n she ti'1s lo'lld for 13-rurt.
''" ! ~ IJJ ~Ill:::: ; ~...;·· ~ . ' '
0 l!l WORLD SERIES IS ON t:OO~·,.,,_s;.,;.. * NOW ON KERO· TV . Tho""""
a om llil m "'"' "''" _, tC> • '"" ""' ,., l1•ball'W.niii Stria Cont'd from lrttd" (adv) '6&-Jlllltt Sltwart, 5PM. M1u1een O'H1r1. ,
IN111:11 ;~J~aMn Ctwrtsfllp tf Eddie's Fltlln
l'llllllcy... ~-4~ .. -..z •• Tiie FU11btellt1 ""!"'J • ••1 Stat Trek "' ( >. A ,fKD!illtlll imp/o-
Sl•pltmtale Mub ¥iSltion1t sali11 with ComtdWI Bill
llltrit: (llf) "'Oupertll Kouit-~ 1uumin1 tlHI rote Of M!ptf·
( fl) '55-Humphfl)' 8of11t, frtd· b•tot · ! • 1ic Much. ml NltM l1patiff m Ht11cepod1e L1Ct11 0 KIM NOVAK. STARS in
l!lThru '"'"' *"THIRD GIRL Fr0m The. ''"illllrn """'' "ff"' LEFT" Aec JUHdor .• Movie: <Cl (90) "toqan'• Movie of the Week
luff' {dr1J '6&-alnt Eulwood t:JO 8 9 ()) CIS lllltld•r MM: (C)
Ltt J'. Cobb. ' (90) "Ylv1 1111" (com) ·~t•
I 19 ([J Nen _.,. Ustinov, Jonith•n Winterl. Jolin A$.
tiftC111tr111t1 tin; P11111l1' Tiffin. A modem.cl.,
Andy CriHltll M111cln 1eltf1I, fl1nked br his
.Hum111 R•l1tl011s 1lll ScMtl Dito ~trust1d serae•nt ind his band or
~.!J'j!.l ifl.J.h) ~llti•! W1shln1· -11111 'warriors,' CIOSses "th• U.S. border
Desert Thtabl tons 1rthdiJ par1iie 1n l1redo. 1Jtt1e R1:sc1l1 · ' l ex11. This nti&hborlJ Yi'Sit '1ums 7:001 (11 Nm , ~ ioto 1 Jllil)Or__l!!mion when th•
iOW!llla fw Dolli rs lt011'111'.,.._his IAllJ ·mud! on thl Mnll: (Ziii) "Cl~111 t.f 101 All(llO, m1kln( host11es.ol tfi1-11t~ d"" ,,., keeper, 1 SOLIYtnif dark ind on1
ou '" (dra) '"43-Jime• C111111 st1ar iourist. Dennis Morain. ' 0 i iplCW I M.,tM Ifs Alt tn Illy
Sll1rl It Adwet1!11r1 Mind This lilt8C.1thnic specill ii
W1111'1 MJ Ullll 1n ori1ln1I musicll d11m1 prestnl· ~= in( 1 slict of lir• .• !d the 1bett1 m I Dll•ll If Jninit whei1 11 people sliar1.their inner li.tt.W. dreams, p1ie-nnils and struulls
fllll If LlllPll' in I f!&hf !or SUNivl!. -Thf Pl.,, (i) Ille tin ldlpled from I rlPl!ftOrJ pfDddC-
kf f>rillff A.. lion, lealuru • e1st that iS 1ntirtlr ._111 ""COmposed of '1111mb1rs If th• 'Wack ·
-s;lirRICll' -.• "1tf:r::-• I Dul ~ -~ --
7:JO Treimt lhllt ..._ · ...
lftt;11'1 HefMI • ............ ' Ftslnf Mtdclel ..
I D11it(s Trill ~ '911111 "'''"" Jt>J••"' 1 ... ; ~mm...,
~~SMw - -.. ~es~m°'~~=
Cl) Te Ten tht TM\ 1 1•ncr amputiu.on o1 ·1 youn1 bof•
Cffywatci111 1rm causes unexpectM·~h$1tf'C111-
ComedJ aions within the lad's own famll;
The Choul iflltf and i11YOIYes Ot. Wtlb1 In 1 mll-
l:OD IJ 19 CJ) M•llff ts lt filr for 1 Piict suit 1g1lnst 1no1Mr dodiw.
woman to 1dmrt blln1 attracted lo A 111111 Clillllll lotllNll\t
_ 1 -mill othu-tl11n h•r h~ 0 .., M1ude and Carol uy ~s· but Flor· 1 :JO ften •
id1 Isn't sute, 1na that's 'wtier• th• Tilt lid
lroublt starts. lwlll(llt Z.M D Is Willnlnt tht N1111 11 t111 ~111'"1tJ Ffflb«t
lia111f A llNBC docume~l•ll 1bollt Bill CUbJ'
or11nizld •m1t1ur JOUlh sports. Mlf· ·:U Dt!: ~ .... r1tld br Ch•rll• Jonis, thl proern1 '. _ ,_ • •
offeg 1r1 l11..cl1pth look 11 JOUlll · -_,. , ....... ,, ............ , 11:11 U!lm-·
umnntlcs •. wrestll111. swlalq. U 00,lillll!' boxlnr. stltin1. sotc1r, bllttlll. arid r b1skttball. • ..., .._. •
&I MIW: (C) (2M) .,.._ M llrelV•Dttll -
Gr1111.,,.. INd'" (mys) '70-JIMl Te T .... Tftllll
Leith. Christopher Gt011•. Ill llllrt .• n @m m ... ,,_.... m,.. _ . ·
lilil111 "ACl1ssic CISI'" Dr. Ml ...,9llrdlcilit,..._ .
f11rs 1 m1lprlClice suitaplrst Ule · ,.CIJ TYllll: Willl -i ,/ ' ,
hospltll wh1n • mlsrud x.,.,,,... 11:3011·9 (Jl Cit l* lllevit: (CJ
1 h"tth patient NI traction for llPI ~ (f.OM) '8' -""li!it
weeks. Wood l111 lanntft. ""_ • k:._·
0 .... I """' !"" ..,_ B ifi-(1) II& Ill-...., . 'AnttY Mn" (d11) '57--HtnlJ fCllldl. Q ~: "fitlil .....,. (dra) '37
ltam .... · _..,,..,,".,.,.i;""'"'''·
fflt-C°lll !ff:m·Jid:P•T1Jtit1 ., .. ..., OMt . \ • : "ltr(U9e, ,., llllzt"
LI 5-no11 .IM11 com ·51.!.Roltald R11l;1n.
Mnlt: (C) (2111) NR111dl1 NI-m "'"" Hltdlcock Pruub
te1leMs" (wts) '52-M1n1n1 Dill· ep Movie: (C) "1U111 tf ·ht WM.I
rich, Mel Ftrier. StallilllS" (wes) 'S9-Geor11 MOlll·
I llitt l'ellOrlltft romtrt, Ed11r BllchU'iln. '
.. D Edltlcil d• Ellftelltt U:OO m Movie: "S.11 Dt~ ll!IHI" "-lffltr (d11) '43-W1tl1r rrtt11r1ICI.
. r GlftllS 1:00 Cl) 0 ([I~ (i) NM
1:30 8 '9(J)H1w1ii nve.o Don Por· tJtiiEI'l fi'•mw Tom Snrdcr
!er 1uests 1s 1 conupt feder1I tu ·hosl1
1pnt who, purslliltl 1 c1lmln1l l:lO 0 tt!l;llRJ P1trlf
undtr Indictment !or tu 1vnion, 1:45 Q Morie: "TM CrMtiH WI(' (weS}
sm flh Int dl1ra to slrikl it '4'-.lohn P&Jlll, Ellen Drew.
rir;ll and ijlh ttl• lu1illvt 101 $600,· 2::00 m AJl.flli.V. a,.: 'Wltdclh"' ... 000 In hot money. • Blach," ilj~,,.
D.~ (}) fiD AK TvesdlJ Mttie; ]:10 I) Mwie: "lfottl ihMM" (dr1) '41
(Cj (90) "lllltd Clrt ,, .. tht Lift" -JlmtS Masin, lllCie Mu hllm.
WedneliClay
DAYTIME MOVIES
9:00 (111 (l) "Wlllrtnr She Cots" (biol
.-51: -Muriel St1inback. Sw1nne
P1rr111!.
9:l0 D (C) "A Dist.Int Trumper• (dr•)
·~TIOJ' Don11\ue, Su11nne Ptesh· •ti•.
10:00 ~ "Klases 104' MJ Pruld11f' C<incl.
coml '64-frtd MlcM11rr1r, PollJ
1r1en. •
0 "The Prlnct11 Corn•• Aerni"
(aim) '36--Clro!e Lombafd, Fred
MICM urrtJ.
U:~O m "11rn.dt till'" (coin) '41 -
W1llKI Beery, LIO Cariillo.
1:000 "Better 1 Widow" (com) '69-
Virn1 l11i, Plier Mc(nery,
l:OO ()) (C) "TN Rlhl .. ttr-Put I
(10111) '56--Bun Lll'ICtSl1r, Kttlltf·
int Hepb4!1n. ®l HHolld1)"' (com) '37 -Cart
Grant, Kllh1rin1 Hepburn.
l :](l ti) m (C) H"frht Cieltum" (1t171)
'°'2...:P1ter Cuslllnr. YWn Rol'llin.
4:00 II "lht Twt Mrs. ~1 (111)'1) '47 -Humphre1 Bo1•rt. l1rb1r1
S!1nwytt.
4:lO (]) s.111111 lOAM lhtlnc
KOCE TELEVISION LOG
l:OO AS MAN ll!NAVE5 ccj Leuori
I "l .....,.mberlr>a 1nd Porgettlng"
P•Ytllclogv cou•i.e ror colle;• u Mllt.
l :lll CNAN-EI• WIV CCI CNMM ~00«·
lnQ d~ltrlltd bY M111.,. Clltl
Tllv1 c111n. •:00 CAllASCOL•NOAS It! lllllno111I
lnttrucilon for Ml•k •n·Amtrlcen
chlklrtn. •:JO •LICTlttC COMPANT CCI Lul1 ,\.YllOl_fl\~ft_. '"'--t!ory_ of "Tiit
Lllllt Ovlcl'I hr"'""° Ii !he town ..._,. wntll lie l1ktt hit !Int•• from
the dllo• to "' 1 ,..ncli.Mk•. •S:DO S•tAM• STl••T ICl s ...... n Ms
tr001bl9 911nno 'li!dlY't numbef 10
come out of 1111n1 c1n1.
6:30 HllTOllV '01' 11•T (Cl LlllOl'I
10 "Er.DI: New Kingdom I" Ari tpprec ellori courH for' college ct'9dlt.
1:00 THE Oltl!AT COllSUMl.lt CON·
Tl!IT Cl Ltl tOn II "Adver!bl119:
G1me1 PK!llAe Ple'I'' 'file rHI ~
!no o4 Ml~erlltlll!I c1m..-lgns _.,
Ille ..wrklll INI '"' controktd. 1:30 Al MAN alNAVl!S fC ) Leucn
1 "rtll'llmlbll'lnQ 11'111 For91Hl"'°"
Pt~llolo9'f CourM for ~llff crMlll. l :Olt SPICIAL-OP' Tilll wa11c-{Cl
"11...-1c1n &.lltt TllHtf'O: A c~
Up II) TllM"' GHmitHS ot cl1JM1 ,.,. llKM1•91 _,,_ •• Wt'M
11 11111m11111 of their IX'ltntlw
reportorv .,., '"'"""· .
•
•
Finns Lovi..-g
Sex Findkg R~vealed
' HELSlNKl (UPI I -Nine
out of ·every 10 Finnlih men
and women had sexual in-
tercourse before marriage, ac-
cording to a study of FiMish
~xual habits to be publbhed
m Nov~mber.
The report, ''Stu1f'of Sexual1
Behavior of Fir.m," was writ-
ten by three,,tiien -Dr. Kim-
mo l.eoq.fJ;'J>rof. Kai Sievers
and Ass.I. Prof. 0 s mo
KQi!keleint?n of the Finnish
Academy, which financed the
study.
Warning , Th e Surgeon General Has Determined
T,ha1 t1ga1e11 e Smoking Is Oange1oiJs 10 Your Healt~
•
Among their !indinp:
-Four or every 10 bri~s
were pregnant and every 10th
marrl~ge was because of
pregnancy.
-51 percent or the v.·omen
married the man with whom
they first had sexual in-
\ tercourse.. •
, -20 percent or the women
had their' firat experience of
sex at age 11·or you.'lger.
•
Spiral Sli.,ed
U'hole or llall
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DAILY PILOT
HAMS
•
for Yo1tr Hollow"" Porty -
SERVE OUR' SPIRAL SLICED
HONE Y BAKED HAM
"So Good ... It \Vilt
!!aunt You til Its GGne'"
e •••dv to $.,... •ltli HoffY '11 Spke Gl•re
8 Splral Sllc1d f ro111 Top to lottofll
9 Wt Pac••t • a11d Slilp tr0111 Coat to Coo1t
9 Fwll S.rvlco DollcotnMn
• l111portotl Cltffw1 Old WllWS
~ Catoth1g-A. Spec:lalty
l700 E. c .. t Hlflrwcry, Co,.llO del Mw -,1J.t000
t llKk Wnl .i J Cr•-•n•--
1222 S. lrootli11nt, at kll Rel., A.HNI• 6]5-2461
t '
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I DAJL v Pn.OT
Other
Deaths
GLENDALE I U P I l
TModore Yoa91, BS, lifth
generation descendant of a
midshipman who took part In
the muliny on the Bounty,
died on Pitcairn Island, where
the mutineers took refuge.
Young's death Friday was
reported ~tonday by lbe lsland
radio officer, Tom Christian,
.a descendant or U. Fletcher
'Christian, the officer wM led
' the mutlJ)y against Capt.
WiDiam Bligh ln 1789.
GREENSBORO. N.C. (AP)
-Lee Ena wtplamo a.ea_ Jt9, mother of two college
presldeots, dl..t Sunday. Mn.
Oittl: ..... Ille mother of Dr. James E. Oltek, praident
of Howard University In
Washington, D.C., and Dr.
King v. Oieek, presldelll ol
Morgan State O:>Uege I n
Baltimore. •
• •
• • • •
Tlltsdlr. Ottobtr 16, 1973 •
VCI PrograM
Symposiums Set
Library Beeomes Li~guisti~
On Coastal Life
11..i..t -Ille Fnodl l\ltl .... CKlel. "But we atm cater to
I.Ma ol Freocb ooot1ng Germ.am, Danei. Nnrwe(i&M,
cm O> db tbe ',umttf"'b7-1>ortuguese, Swedes and even taktas home 1UCb ....U u read.era of Esperanto, the ln-
.. Le Uvre du VlD.'' "Le Uvre tematJonal lancuq:e," Dim·
du ~" &Dd ' ' M e a mttt Aid. "We cater to l.s
score of languages a r e
recently natui'allied citizens
who are eagerly learning
English but who !Ind a book
in tbelr native language a
pleasant respite from the
chore.
SANTA ANA -Oranie
Cooiily Nille Ubnoy ol-
liclols llrmly bdi<ve they
have broken the 1a"8Jiqe bo.r-
rler.
Poetry, hlatory, m o d e r n -de Qalolne.'• And there natlooallUM rl&ht now and we .-c::::-:-=======
are allo Mkbelln'I "Green plan to extend that Uat."
Gaide to tbe Pnwinoet" and Dlmmilt &atel particular ~ Jn France" for pride lo his Ubrary'1 coDectioo
dmt wbo want Frencb dlJhes of Icelandic worla an d
.. ..,. the Freocb can describes it u by rar the
p etlll'e them. '" "mOlt Kbolarly and com·
A comprehensive study or to be esplored Nov. a, wW Uterature, folklore, baby care
oommunlty life on UM! Orange be a loot at the "special child." and "whodwtlts" by such
Coast 1'1.11 begin Oct. 30 at It wtll include a pane I ftlllllMllr NlllllTV rqqters of m}'ltery u Aa:atha
UC Irvine wit.h the first in disculsion on retarded and UMn111. wun 11 Cliristie and Ellery Queen are
a series of six special sym-"''ted children moderated by '-------~ °" the multl-lang111ce 1he:lves postum 8eSSiOD1 sporuJOred by 5u or aoon \\.'ill be lo the library
the Junk>r League of Newport Don. Hout, all !II is tan t system's ZS branebes.
Harbor. superintendent for in-Bun"aJ "Jt's a trtmendousJy The sympCl8ium, entitled structional service of the popular innovation,.. 1 a j d
''The Community '73," will Newport-Mesa Unified Scbool librarian Di cit Dimmitt. .. We
cover a rai.ge of topics from Dbitrict. knew we would meet a grow-
history to couta.I protection. Panelists wiU include Mart B £ ta& demand when we decided
It will feature ta1b by eaperts Hansen, dlroctar of sPectaJ ene 1"ts to expand ID lllll(Ualel """ !run many llelda wbich affect educatloa for the Newport-Jn arou ol J'.Uderablp, . but
the lives of the average Mesa district; Jack Coieman, even we U.w beea lU"Jlli3ed
citl>en. prloclpal of Costa Mesa's Con-Av.ailable and dfljgJltad by the resulll ... All segmenll ol the sym-tlnualion . School ond Mrs. Spanllb, .. IJl>rWy olliqaJs
poslum wllich is open lo tbe James Wabwor1h, director ol predicted, .._ the lilt· of
public will tab pGce in the the district's sch o o I· age demands and ·~akkig
Lowen GI lll1Jan literature prehenaive IcelandJc CQllection
can draw .., Ille wrttllli of wost ol the Mlslourl"
Dani<, Boecaclo, Leopanll , Nor II Latin, the ao<:alled
. Mamme aDd Silone for their • "dead" language 'neglected in
readlJlg pleasure. In 11ghter the public library'• erpaslon ~ tbere are booU bJ' program. New, colorful works
DO'f'diab M«aTia, Alfaro, are being made available to
Lt'l' and Tomaal '" the Latin IWdeota and ocbolars
Harbor Unit
Aide to Talk
lhroughout the county, Dim·
mlt said.
Many of the Ubrary patrons
seeking tbe new books in a
314 N. NEWPORT BLVD.
NEWPORT BEACH
642·3766
23 Ye.an S.me LOCatlall .
e SALES • SERVICE
Compllttr SdtDCe9 Bui1d1ng at mother program. SANTA ANA -Improved patrons wbo are eqfrly mat-
UCI in room 174. Each lecture 'lbere will also be • talk benefits are now available for ,Ing l19e of the u,panded cof.. SANTA ANA _ Larry
will nm from 7:30 to 9:30 by Paul Riordan, assistaot burial 1 lection are , .... 1.... b 0 me , ... .._.. ..1.J.J of --~· p.m. .1:-.w-of ••-··-devet....... o veterans, B e n 1 ~ ..-.-.., ~ ~ .........
ARE YOU TIRED OR MOODY?
UNDER STRESS AND STRAIN
UL11i:::o.;-r.u1-u1r: ....... ""' i....-: dA' ~~ n-.... avishly lllustrlted boob cm I ••· -~~ H b The lint session will be, mtnt education program fol CJ.A;V<•, .... ~ .. '6e County ardening decorat1og or """". -J a r o.r,
"An Overview: Hlatory aod the Santa Ana Unified School Veteran Service OlfJ<er has 11ng, ~ n:pa'-• .:..,..,..y,., -ud Pms Dopart-GcM!rnmollt." District. ...........i_ •• -...,t, will be lbe apeaker
11 -'D •• ~.~-tal tr81181atldhs ol the complete -,. wllm lbe ~.. • w• ~~ ks by Dr. .The tilth session, Nov. U, ..A --~ J .. ~ 11 -b o1 ~~ ..... ~ ~-~""" Wllllam-.i, dlnct« of will be"" welfare and lid ...,_ --.~-'"~""'---~--mtn'.Edoc:a-
inltnict!onal media for the to the dlsabled or elderly. It .Vtded IOI" Plot or Interment u!"~~~~ lion Qiondl _,bore.
Newport·Meu UDilied School will .. iJlclnde talks by John allowalla! In addition to the ol its French and ltallao ml-'l'be ,,,......, -lo the
District, on the pre-hlstQry of Foster, the county's aoda.I $250 ba.slc non-service a& lectioM with worts by C':~d-::e-~:-,!nwi~
-~ THE RADISON SOUND CENTER
tlktllMlfr """ ~.,.,
Has helptel thouunds of people to rel•x
and enjoy life ag'ain.
Caff 548-2452 for Appointment
Orange County and a services district d Ire ct o_r; nected burtal allowance, be Corneille, Baudelaire, La Foo--1770 Orang9 A~ult1 B-Co1t1 Mff•
, Open Mon. • Wed. • Fri. MilL VALLEY (UPI) -historical atudy by Orange Mn. Ellen Wllcot, a com-sakl taine, Racine, ffn•o • nd ~-~~ty Department of
Funeral ....tcea will be held Clout Qtllege """-Henry munlty ,_...,., development · i --~==~=-~_:_::.:__.:~:::::::llon~,:..'1210~::_S.:..'G'.'.rand~'..'.A~v_:::e·-'==================::i 1Wednm:lay for n.... w. Pinion. comuJtant and Betty Delaney, Pu~c ~w '::!.~ ~
-· 57, a public rdatioos The llnt session will also project dtreclor ol the min-t-man for ~ AlrllDes feature a talk en "Why Comity munfty servicer JrOjecl 18, 1973, and effective after ~ Barbour died in a Government?" by Mn. Judy The final subject of the sym-August 1.
\llolpital Monday from 1 heart Rosener of Udo Isle, a posium Nov. IS. will be a J.. larger burial allowance ls
attac:t be suffered while ~ o1. the Soath Coast dbcu.Won of the future or also available, in excess cl. the
1""--;~tdlj"J!:''11Je-Qa--Zooe-~-en-na1-0nonge eo1111'ty"'n:oast11ne-cun-ent.._1or--serv1<o-con-· llr~ World Series . Pme O:naerv1tion Comm.issk:rl. re90UroeS. nected deaths.
r,.IUiday. 1be -ms Y m Po s i um A panel disaisaloo .wlJI be Transportation coots are In
: --Nov. I, will be enUUed IOOderaled by l'l•wport Beach addition lo the burllll bellellts
' SAN ANTONIO, 'lU (UPI) ;~CUI~ s.e:;" -.;;.,"t:,1! City Qxmdiman Carl Kymla. be eiplaJned. . '
-· LI. Gen. -T. Clwnplin, Los Angeles 1\mes Wllll1m1, artillery entertain~ editor, and Dr. ~er for Gen. Geortl• Jooet>b Jtnuoe. pro1_.. of . S. PaU.0 dllrll!i the 3nf ftoe 1111 It Cal Stale Loog
ef>rmy's cWh acroos France &odi.
and GemwJy In World War '!be third session Nov. & .n. cUed &mday at the Brooke will be a loot at the Orange ~ Medical Center. He WU Coast Budoea oonunm:Uty. It ''2. · will leahft talb by Albert
Beat• Notlee•
ARBUCKLE & SON
WE$1'CLJFF MORTIJARY m E. 171h St., Colt. Mes• -• BALTZ-BERGERON
• FUNERAL HOrt.IE
Corona del ~tar 17J.HSO
Costa Mesa l4f.:U4 • BELL BROADWAY
rtfORTUARY
lit Broacl'way, Cotta Mesa
u~ • DllDAY BROTHERS
MORTUARIES
17111 Beach Blvd.
RaatlnKton Beffb semi
!44 Redendo A\'t:,
Long Beaclll Zl3--4Jl.11Ui • McCORMICK LAGUNA
BEACH MORTVARV
1706 Laprii Can)'OI Rd.
4M·Nl5 • r<CIFtC VIEW
MEMORIAL PARK
Cemet.uy rtfortuat')'
Cllapel
• Paclfk: vn Drt•e Newport Beodl, Ca!Uorola
.. ~2711 • PEEK FAMILY
COLOMAL FUNERAL
ROME
'7801 Bo111 Ave,
Watmln•ler "3.alU • SMITH'S MORTUARY
U7 Mala St.
na.11nt1o• a .... -
Auer, Irvine Oompeny dinclor
Irvine Company director of
ol commen:JaJ ·11ev~.
and James Kilroy, President
ol Kilroy~.
1be l«atb symposium topic,
Union Talk
Impasse
Reported
SANTA ANA -NeJ!Olltioos
between the Orange County
Pe""'1lld Department and the
AFL-CIO Service Empl<J)'OS
Unklo. have reached an • lm·
passe, the couoty Board of
Supervbon bas been told.
1be union represe11ts about
IS Superior Court clerks. A
spolesm&n for the union bu
been told by County Cow>oeJ
Adrian Kuyper that tht ag:ree.
ment between the county and
the ll'llon cans for direct con-
tact only with the director
ol penoonel.
lie said the board could
not c:ooslder the negotiatloos
between the imlon and the
department
·1be ouperviaon previously
approved a new contract with
the International Unlon of
Openltlng Ellglneen which
repreM:nts 18 plant engineers
at the central utility plant.
All other county employes
are represented by the Orange
County Emplores Association
which reached agreement with
!he persoone1 department In
July.
WblaN SJATI UNIYRSITY
COWliE OF J.IW
OI' OIANGI! COUNTY
CAl.ll'OINIA'S-LAIGISJ LAW SCHOOL
OFFERS A CHOICE OF rwo HOGRAAIS
OF LAW srtJDY
• SN IY. w I 1'IAll of ...... TUM Jew "'llfr 115·16 d•-hcMm per WMkJ, ...
• IN ay, • 4 YIAll of PAlf·nMI dlwf, twrllng, or
wwk«td l1w 1tvdy IS d-pw ....-. ~-' biMt
pw d.uJ,
• You c... .-your .IUltl DOCTOI tJ,O.J ct.g,.. Md ......
EllGllll TO TAKI THI
CAUFOllNIA IAR EXAMINATION
IOO 5Clulfl llNolthunt
Anohelm92I04
17141 635-3453
Al'Pl.Y NOW FOii THE Sl'lllNG 1974
SEM!STB. llGINNING l'llRUARY 4th
FVLL·TIME LAW STVOY ,ROGRAAI .
AVAii.ABiE IH FM.L 1914
..,....,. IU9llUI POI l'IOIU.UT'-nw.w UMHS " . -'°"-·~~~~~~~~~~
ARE YOU SERIOUS
ABOUT LOSING.WEIGHT?
medical 1;ndoro's un;que progrom ;, c scfe ond proc1;ccl ........ 19 ht method for the entire family to lo1e weight and
... learn how to mointoin proper we ight ..• under
the strict supervision of Medico I Doctors.
reduction
LINDORA+
MEDICAL CUNICf
Call for inform•tion
Monclay thru Fricl•y I A.rn. to 6 P.M.
COSTA MESA
Adami at Mosa Verde 557·18'3
NEWPORT HACH
404 Wntmlnster 645-3740
lllWPORT BEACH 'ARDEii 'ROVE LON' IEACH PASADENA
64S.J740 S34.20S1 426-6S49 796-2614 ORANGE
S31-2395 '*• "'"'··-.i 119 •. "'-•• •I ,,.,,,.,.,..i C•.c~t< f,.,,;,,.(~ .. ..,.. ....... tw,. ..... ~~.,,,... .................
WOODLAND HIUS SHERMAN OAMS WIST COVINA FUlllRTOll LA HARA
347·S647 789·7103 962.)431 170.9S01 694·1029 ........ v .. ..,. o..-.... v ... .,.,.. ,...,_ MNoi• lklt. f'tel"...,.i fWt, eu,,
COSTA MESA · SANTA MONICA POMONA
SS7-11t3 121·4S 1 J 623· 16SS _ ... _ ,.._ .......,_..., ............. .
SAii llRNARDlllO
18~4711
Af!ewhe-4
Nl1d"(el 1149
I. LOii' llACH
S97.0J71
l .. "''•• Me4otol c,.,,,,
"""""' ~ .......................... ~
CERllTOS llVER$10I
924-S741 717-12SO c..-Me4icel ....,...__...... '--'·
MISSION HILLS
J6S· 1131
Nilt•iefl
M1doeol lldt.
<
TlllE
. "' General JE"(-AIR ill
.95
'
General's Great 4-Ply Nylon Cord Tire
• Loftg-~Aile1ge Duragen• Tread Rubber • Euy Steering Contoured Should1r1 • Famous Dual Tread Design c-....... d ..... . ... _
ltz.£ 1-50-13 7.00.1! C71-14 .,.. .. na.14 ...... 071-14 HTl-14 071-15 ..,._,.
~ 871-13 rn.11 UO/US.14 7.oo/7.15-14 7.I0/7.71-14 L1D",7J.1!1 l.ll0/1.25-t 4 U0/1.55-14 7.10/1.25-11 7.80/US-fl. '
REGULAR ...... ...... .... ,,, .. . ..... .. ... .., .. ...... .. .... ...... LOWPRtcE
f!D.D'. TAX 11.73 ..... -..... '"' 12.42 ''"' 12.75 ..... .... PEllTl"E
Wlllt.w•llo Only S2 l!xtr• • FREE Mounting
Charge it ~ • II @) ' at General
&ENEllAL
TIRE
Steel-Belted Radials
General caJlbrated •
DUAL·ST••C RADIAL
• -hondltng rodtal ply ccnotruc:tion
• 2 Sleet be«tl under the lreM ,
THE 40,000 MIU! TIRE
WHITEWALLS for
IMPOl!T CARS
•nhllAL DUIA...Jll'I» -t PLY NYLON CORD
IODY -· IHllJ IOOrll
lth:l2 ltox14
JUIT $16's .. LT •
$1.11 • $1.t7
24,000 MILE BRAKE RELINE
This Week Only!
ll'ICludh new Delco br1ke llnlnga on •II fourwhetls. Brake
drum 4nd wtfltel dyUnder lntpecUon. Adjust br•ke1 and
rttto,. brake fluid, FREE
Road Teel!
Forda, Chtvyt, Plyrnoutht.
Compacta
Olla brakes •nd larger cars cost more
DON SWEDLUND
COAST G'"'" ~_,")A L Tl n.E
~-........ ._..,., 585 wm 19lfl ST., CO!;TA MESA
:::;:"':"::::::-.::,:::.,: 646-5033 -540.5710 -7:~o. hi 6:ro Da'ly _ .. _ ..... __ Sooner or latSt; }QIJ owri ~ ----
. ~ •
I
'
.~, .. " ..
t
'
REG. 1.35
PLAIN
POWDERED
•
MID•WEEK WHITE
__ ._;I" I ••.
STEAM/DRY
. IRON·HAI
CLIPPER
SIT
YOUR
CHOICE
51!~
SA.VETO $2 09
(,..9. fo 7.97)
PORTABLE .TY
COMPARE AT 69.97
Precision crafted to de-
liver crip clear picture &
full bodied1Sound. Weighs
GAFFERS & SATTLER
REFRIGERATOR :$119
Just 24 lnche~ wide. Full·
width freezer, Two alumi-
Comp. ctt 14.9.S Rich wal-
. nut grain wood top stereo
table rack. Swing-upspkr.
suppo~s:
-tesi than-15 lbs •. " -~ _
. -~--
. num_,.Jce trays, .1..LJ:J.!Q!,·7c_. __ ,
ft_ capacity. Automatic
pushbutton flash defrost-
. ing. ,,
I
' .
Comp-at 1.49 Rabb~"' ear··
special. Save
IXTRA DRY I NOXIMA ·I JOHNSON'S
SAVE I SKIN CREAM I ........ . ,.,. 1 1 . , ampoo
Reg. or •3 C I SAVE 9 J I SAVE L\"•cented. I • Reg I 29% C I ~~% ---------.!9c · I 10 oz. Jar ••u. I More 99 C POUDINT --i-_ 1.3 7 Tears ' Reg.
DENTUR• / ~:;~~:-G•,.s11cosMi1'1C-!!3
TABS -,-. ~--_iUl!FS-
. SIZE • C I Extra / I SAVE 30% • sAVEu"8 . ~-SAVE 2S~ < .
&O's ~.7i/ ~ZmuJa 6 ~!I siz~ 49c . 19c I 260s t . I eg. "" · 69c
BASKETBALL
BOXID fOR CHRISTMAS ' . ..199 SAVI 1.soHeaw-dutyru
bef eo"er h•d deep mold-ed ehlnoel seams. non-.
slip pebble-grain fin ish. REG ·
Butyl rubber valve b\ld--• der. Packed Inflated. 3.49
AYl1.98
.YOUIYBALL
OUTFIT 399 · ....
S.97
Regulation ball and net ·
w11aped top.
SAYIJ.38
TINNIS
RACK IT
... 2s9 :1.97
SiK ply laminated
frame. Nylon strings.
SAYE22°/o
:•-
.•
SPRAY
rNYAC
'139
Reg . 1.79 -.
For easy rug clean·
ups. Just spray and
vacuum di~ away.
BOX64
CRAYONS
59c
SAVE 33%,
COMPA11 AT lie
COSTA MESA
. .
I
. ..
l(MIB B~ISTOL ST.
S.n Dl,.e Froow1y 11 llrlatol
~.
DA!LV PILOT
3 20UNCE
MOP&GLO
99c
Cl~ans While
No more tloor syto~ Yfax. npprng.
PHOTO
FRAMES
-2-~-s,_
Metal frames with glass
insert, desi~ner edges.
5x7 " & 8x10'
14x50DOOR
MIRROR
29~
Decorative
tortoise she~lalnut or
Save nowr frame.
200 1 O" OR •OO 6"
Mlll1' EMYILOPIS
-~ $1
SAVE 36"'
It 39, Mint flavored
s::i envelopes. Any
combination.
SAVI $& •••
JACK LA LANNI
30 DAY NUTRA·PAC
OURREG . 199
9 .95
· nth s upp\e m e~t 1 mk o include natural vtt· pac s B C 0 E \eel· en:iins~~d m\~er~ls: 240
tti1n \US 90 capsules. tabs P ,... .. , '\ bt.1" heOltt-1 p .
. ""0 1 0 -
USf YOUR CREDIT CARD
WIMONOI • .... ltUll
• MUTllCllAK\CMI ~ -. .... ...., ...
"ISl M tMTrM\(11 CHlnTUm
•
' '
,
. ,
1
• . . : •
-·
•
•
• j 0 OAIL V PILOT Tut$d•y, Oc:tobe:r 16. 1973
AMILER
TUMBLEWEEDS
Mlln AND JEt'F
by Tom K. Ryan
Wl'l.1.1 IMPRISON
SOMOONEJ I FEE~
~ENI ENT!
by Al Smith
Ncm-llN' BUT ~IK."ES ,
~VIOLENCE, 'TIGHT MoNEY,
'---l~FLATION, TAXES AND MORE
TA)(ES .1
YEH,
YOU'RE
RI~!·
~15 CouNTRy\s GOIN1TO
"THE DOGS!··l.ET5 GIVE
TT ALL UP AND Md\/e: "TO
A Fo'Re1GN COUNTRY!
WHAT ? ANO ,
Gtl/E UP ALL. THIS
GtiOo Lii/iNG!
FIGMENTS ...
I 'TlilNK
\t:ULL FIN!>
'TlllG NEW MAJll
•. 15 A RB\!..
CHALLE'NE£ !
NANCY
AUNT FRITZ!,
1 HAVE TO
MAKE A
DRAWING FOR
MY AJ<r
Cl.ASS
'
•
HERE--PRAW
1HIS APPL..E -
Tl-IAT WILL.
MAKE A
NICE PICTURE
.TODAY'S CIDSSWDID PUZZLE
ACROSS
1 More secu1a
6 Meu11
f11tener •
10 Speak
imperfecdv
14' Creme de la
15 M uslim
prince
16 Healthy
17 U.A.R.
natiYet
18 Fuse and
bother
19 Noun ending
20 Cont1in111
22 Superuded
2of eo+ris of
Sweden
26 E<lectrical
appliances
27 Gett smaller
3 1 Comp.pt.
J2 She11r linen
la bric
33 Sola•
svstem unit
35 Animal's
foo<
38 Elec!rio units
39 Denver
co!Lege
.tO Flannel
41 ~dNlll
42 Breton tnd
Coo
•3 DeYilfith
~ 1nl1nl'1
food
45 'Pi:.rt\in~no to
meaning •
~ Prep11ed for
a light
51 Emulaled
Paul Anka
52 Put'• roof
Ot1:2 words
S4 Pr8i}ares •
1ur~ev
58 Beverages \i9 Greek god
61 P1ep.stiow
62 Scandal:
Sleng
63 Eu1opt1an
volcano
64 Marble
65 01 ··-:
Auto
of 1he '40s
66 Imparted
"'"" 67 Diminish
gr1ducillv
DOWN
1 Plan1
2 !r+sh
e~cl1mat1ol'I
3 Emollon
of ll'lvolves il'l
1r<Jum1n1s
5 Retain
6 Alberta's
Medicine·-·
7 Cupid
8 T111ms
~esterday''fuzzle Solved:
'
9 Foracasten 39 Kind of ol
10 Collect 40 English or
11 Weapon French
12 Corrupting-...._ of2 Emily or
condition Vikki
1J B;ind of3 Source of
$lction potenual
21 Trew•nO or danger
Elder '4 Atonce
23 Powerful 46 Some
om pact
2S Oormancv
27 Doe'• mate
28 Owe!li"'!1
29 Seasoned
30 Smart ones
3" Hills
35 Brealhe hard
36 .... lr1111e
37 Female
ermad lorc1:
Abbr.
college
grad1
of7 Saurels
48 Serious
diS&llMI
A9 Turn 1way
50 Ot»cene
53 Not ont
S5 Social org.
56 Bazaar
57 Prcyptlet
60 Unlleppy
2 .. ' J • 1 I ., ~IO 11 12 1o1
"
"
-
" " -
••
' --"
" h:
..
,.
" ..
~· ,. ,. ·~ " .. " ': ,,, ',, "
"I -
"
. I
••
by l>alit Hare
PEANUTS
---·-t(jO•ol&.alt..
JUDGE PARKER
-
t ·:
&A.M., LOOK, •• CAU, fil. INV<!~
POOLE AND TEL.l HIM THAT YOU'RE MV , APPOINTMENT TO
ATTORNEY.,. THAT 1 ADMITT!D TO 'l'OU Sf.E HIM! WHAT'S
THAT I OWE HIM $75.000 ... TKAT Hl6 ~1
l'M GONNA PAY HIM ... &UT
I'LL NEED SOME TIME!
MISS PEACH
PfOP!.1!' WIW..
WIL.L. FA.WN VOU
AU. av~ ME, ,.~NJO"I
/.NO F1611T l!£1N6 Mf
FO!ie MY &..ION/1tD.
ATTf;NTION. _,,,.___
DICK TRACY
o~,
'lfS,
Vfr!.V
Ml.K.Hi
I MAVI
NOTHING
TO DO
WITMTllE
OPERATION
OFMY
.. MY MANAGER, SMELT, ooes THAT, M R. TRACY.
mPeRTil!S
•
DOOLEY'~ Wr""LI ..
1'Mll'.R5 Mf.1\W>
Pf~Cli-$ OP cMss'
Ll'f'r-H•""-\l)(J UK• TU•
Bf661'Sr
SALLY BANANA:.
' MOON MULLINS
ANIMAi? CRACKERS
.. -.
'
.
by Mell
1MAT DOif
MaAN
11i ...;
CMA~flD
fJ'{
L.ION~,
Oai'SN1T 1'1?
by Chester Gould
"WHY L COM!! AlfV 11Ml,MR.TitACY ...
~ I
•
• '
'
By • Charlilt -liiiiittf-.
r-'7-.,-.......,,.---, 'JHilf DID
THaT
M eaN"?'
9'1T I Tli/NK I f:i•T
'ne O<.O. PU#"IP .ST~RTeD
'-=S::;Ga::.tN:::·:__r--'
by--Gus Anlola
• 11 jl ii J
'
by ROCJer Bolen,
' ,
I
f I
I ~s, UIJr!I .. ;: FMD
()l)T 1H6'.J HAVE n::>
~~iettr&I
•O-" ~ i:=-t:Y::==:z:::i:===::~:::;=d
THE GIRLS
"Dt.ar, the ptdebook aaya you'll enjoy the maDJ
tce1lc wooden alon~ Ute way."
O EMl\I•~ 'JHr: MENACE
'I WASJUST IDUN' Ot.O RuFF . _ . YOU LOOK
.fMt Alt77Y, ~A GIRL, GINA .'
' •
•
1
ii;
p
ca
ni
in
H
! f
··.~ ~
·I
u ..
C<o •• 11:4
1:IO
I••~ . • "·
. u
Cl
Cine •• ,,.
7:(11) :••C. . "
I
• ,_
' I
•
., -~
Ren1e111ber Ala11io
Peter Ustinov portrays a :r..1exican general Who re-
captures the Alamo in the movie ·'Viva Af.ax" to-
night al 9:30 on CBS, Channel 2.
·~.1:1=•• 91
TONIGHT'S ,
TV IDGHLIGHTS
KHJ D 8:00 -"Twelve Angry Men." Reg.
inald Rose's suspenseful jury room drama stars
Henry Fonda and Lee J. Cobb.
ABC 0 8:30 -"Third Girl From the Left."
A dancer (Kim Nova k) fa lls for a coUege dropout
(Michael Brandon) and must choose between bim
and the man she's loved for 13 years {Tony Curtis).
NBC 0 9:30 -"Maybe It's All in My Mind.''
KNBC presents an ethnic special, an original musi·
cal dran1a of life in the ghetto.
"°'" "SliVliN S111t1-rel '12
WONOEllS Th• Olrm1110 01' THli "VlllONS OF I• • Wt:ST" l!IOHT"
No p.1un •r + lllch Widmark s1 we.:111 "WMt:N or Udln L.EGE HOS
Oey, etc. DIE" (0 )
l"C*rt tGl Both l"C .... I (01 '
TRYOUtlRED
~~ORGREEN
\
BURRITO!
soc
tortillas, amolhlrllid with o·ur
apeclil refried btan1 and topped
wllh a mlld Red meat tauce,
or Hot Or••n Chill uuce and
gr111d natural chtddir ch••••·
NEWPORT BEACH SANTA ANA TUSTIN
Mltol I l'ell'°"" I 4th .Stl'fft 011d llod Hiii Ma
trt C....,.. Newpon fwy. Semo AIM Fwr.
HUNTINGTON IEACH
5156 w.,.., ...... ,,, .... COSTA MESA
llSI ... .., ., ,.,,. .. .
Kids Like To Ask Andy
• ----Tut1day, October lb, 197}
Variety of Talent at Huntin~on
•. :Twas the ~'Nightof October
llth" al lbe Hun~ Beach
Playhouse. an abbrMated
version ()( lfst year's ''Night
o( Qctober 15th," w fund-rai~
inc variety show """'!led by
the On Co<J>o, the dlstoll arm
ol the ptoylloU>e.
Altbough the 197S versloo
generated less advance billing
and pulled in leas money for
playhouse project.a than' its
predecessor, Sundiy's shindig
proved more impressive on
two counts -it was briefer
(last year's ran past mid·
night) and more srnoolhly
organized.
Credit for a well-balanced
and highly enjoyable evening
rests primarily wllh Ron
FUllan and Nick ?i.foee, who
shared the e.rncee duties, and
Carol Fau l stick, who
coordinated ~ program from
backstage. And , of course, lo
Lhc local talent on display.
much or it familiar from Hun-
the show as SnOOp)' • in the tain Valley. ~tlons are
btlng·;.cep1ed at 918-W.
lntermis$i0n
Tom Titus
~a t.lt'Sa .Civic Payhou.se
ven'ion last sea$00. Karen
Wong and Lori Riddle are
sharing tht role or Lucy, while
Bill Mwnaw will enact the
blanket-clutching Linus.
* BAt¥S'r AG~ -Orange
Coast College's two repertory
productions have bttn ex·
tended already -and lht)'
WM't even open u n t l I
Halloween ..... the la t est
schedule sees "·The Filth. Vlt·
lim" playing Oct. 31. Nov
2, ti, B and 10 \rlth "Damei;
at Sea" on stage Nov. I. 3.
5, 7 and 9 in the ocr
Desperate H o u r s ' ' and
"Antigone," proved himself a
master oomic in a routine
about an Eric Se"'1'1ed type
dolng a kidd1e show. Colin
Guiver, the playhouse's cameo
role 51>f'Cialist, offered some
Cockney humor from the old
country, while Howard
Solomon recreated the Crea·
lion.
One ol the more popular
acts of the evening wu a
newly organized band of !Jr
st.rumentalists who'U never get
jnto the musicians' 1mion but
\\'ho created a lot of fun -
the Cactus Flowm, composed
of cast and rrew members
Completing the Fountain
Valley cast are JohaMa from the theater's most recent Anderson and \Villa Bouwens
show of the same name. And, splitting the part or Pep-
oh yes. MJke Nichols end permint Patty, ~tar1in Bootti
Elaine May were represented and ?i!ark lfoist double cast
in a 1960I telephone skit by a.!I Snoopy and David Thielen
Le.Donna deBarros and a as the music·loving Schroeder.
certain newspaper columnist Special musical additions will
who shall remain nameless. be done by Colleen Robert s
audltoriu1n.
* 111 the piano and percussionist G F d
THE FOUNTAIN Valley Cw1 Crandall. raves e tc
Community 'Theater has &n· ''Charlie Bro\\n·· ~ill be HOU.YWOOD fUPJ !
nounced Its cast for "You're staged at 8 p.m. on Nov. 9· Peter Graves has been av.·ard·
a Good Man, CharUe Brown.'' 15· 16 and 17 and at 2 o'clock ed top honors ror a tele\•ision
opening Nov. 9 for tv.'o 00 the afternoons or Nov. JO. public service spot he nar·
weekC™U. David Maiville is 1~ and I8 at ~ theater, l82m ra1ed on behalf of th t'
direCtlng the Peanuts gang in 1.it. Baldy Cir c I e . Foun· High...,'ay Users Federation.
the m~ieal revue. 1-:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;::::::;;;;;;;;;;;;_,;:-Playing the title role will
be Mark Miller, who stole
tington Beach and other com· Opry Grand ~., !..!!" ... munity theater groups. _
THERE WAS Arat La pp.
who's become familiar over the NASHVILLE, Tenn. (UPl) j q
'~ •• easily the best
movie so far this.
past year for her Phyllis _ \Vhat started as a simple Surffq Fltm FettlNI
Diller impersonation. Phyllis live radio broadcast more than Tltls Weft
was back w. year, but Ann ID yearo ago has been .,. "~rlOREAMS" Lapp the singer came alonic paneled to the $28 milliop fami· .lt.ft
too, with a couple al well ly entertainment aimplex call·
· received show tunes. ed "()prylarai"U.S.A." By Curt Ma1t1lk•
Ben Le Be au, wtme .. ===========~ "" dramatic credits include "'Ibe 2 llTTY IOOP CARTOONS
"!>.,-Of Tiie J.0114" CNJ
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"Pete 'N Tiits. INI
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1. 10:)4
AIJ.IN FUNrs
"WHAT DD YOU
SAY TD A
NAKED LADY?"
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HARBOR 0.1. STARTS AT OUSIC
EXCLUSIVE
ORAllG£ COUNTY
ENGAGEM£NT
Efiotl'Kastner presmti "Jettmy"
Writtm ,rid Dim:1~ by Arthur 8&rTOfl 51,nin~ Robby Benson
irllloducing Clynni• O'Connor ,\ 1ui•< by Lee Holdridgt;
Produad by Georse Pappe.• f\ KenA»et Film p•odlll;tlOll
HI-WIT 31 • STllTS SOUlll com 2 I CIHEMILIHO
IT DUSI • llSO wmom l AHO HO
"APRIL FOOU" P.6. Sil. I SUH. UO. 3,05 • 4:40 • 1,15 • 7:40 · 9:15
------
SHOWING
NOW
SILLY DEE WILLIAMS
l't.U1-Jnr•·111 CcrbllrJI
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t!HAIRY IN
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'
DAIL y PILOT J I .
. . -ENfi&·TDNIGHT
lf'H 11 T.t11111 O'N ...
''Paper Moon''
''The Friends of
Eddie Coyle"
lot~ e.1.,. lotff tlll
STAllTS WEONISDA.Y
l11')111ar a.rt111•11'1
"CRIES AND
WHISPERS"
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LAST TANGO, IN PAllS r..1
lV(IYTHING AM>UT SlX Ill --·-t•Ul.1-.lt -
1
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T11tMiay, OclObff lb, 1973 J 2 DAILY PILOT
'Playboy ~pire Challenged 'High Court
Dis1niss es
A DEA D
DRUNK?
United Prm lnttrnaUoaal
Nineteen ytars ago, Hugh
t.farslon llefncr ll'fl Esquire
magazine when he was refu.
ed a $10 raise and founded
bis own pµb\i cation on S6IJO
of his own money, $10,000 bor·
ro\.\·cd ltom fri ends and ·an
idl'a .
Hefnl'r's idea, as a scientist
at the Kinse-y Institute put
It later. was to "link sex \.\'ith
upward mobility."'
THE l\.IAGAZINI<: \Ya s
Playboy, one of the most as·
(Third ia a Series)
touoding su c c e s s es In
publishing history. Hcfner"s
Playboy empire grossed $160
million last · year with an
assortment o r entl.'rprises
ranging from key clubs to
book publishing ventures.
innova11ve 1n 1,Jle 50s and 60s,
Guccione becamt: brasher,
more innovalive, and more
daring IA tht 705.
Today Penthouse is
Playboy's aolid rival in a field
\vhich takes a 20 percent slice
of newstand magaz.ine &ales
in the United States. l?layboy
;H!J 11akecl girls
b e ca1t1e n 8Jlt•tbol
of dlrobedle11re.'
Is still the leader with an
estimated 6.7 million sales
each month, but Penthouse has
a rising 3.4 million.
)
FOR THREE years, Hefner
·and his empire i g n -0 red
Penthouse. But last year. he
UPI T........,. a.cknowledged his compet itor
restaurants in lhe JJrUted
Stales. Although most ol the
new magazines follow the
Pot Appeal
Playboy patt.<n <JI IOPhlJti· WASlllNGTON (.\I') -The
eated o.r~es laced with nUd· U.S. Supreme coon b 1 s
Uy, Genesis has two center-• d1snlsed t h e appeal ol a
fokls. .
Attorney Melvin Belll, the TeMessee man who cll~ed
so-called king or tort lawyers his use of martjoana was
who defenlled Jack Ruby, Is lawfal bec&U$e it \1181 ln\/-0.l.ved
bank rolling Coq,, edited by in the practice of his religion.
PORT ELIZABETH, South
Afrlca (AP) -KaK Matazl,
SS, was fined $300 for driving a
hearse while drunk.
George Santo Pietro, a former The Supreme Court disrtllss-
photographer at Gallery. ed. t h e C"~ Monday "for a ANTHONY -SCHOOLI ~ tJOt Mt rt<tl' e .. ftf' \Vhetber all these magazines want of a S4bltanlial federal e .. ,. MtM, ~u•ni.
will continue or prosper is quesUori." Tbe appe!l-1 w;as n . 1714) t7t-2JSJ
still to be determined. lodged by stephen Gaskin for ANAHEIM
But I o c a I communities himSelt and for D a o e HARIOR CINTllt tn7 $. ll'IOi(lt\l,.I St. fellowing the recent.Supreme Q.llbertsoo, Wilbur Jordan and .t.ft•h.i111, C•L mM
Court decision might llave the Brandon Lerda. "'· C7141 776-SIOO
last say. A number of them , All four were arrested in lllllllllllll'llllll'llllll'llllll'llllll'llllll'llllll'llllll'llllll'~I
mainly in the South, already 1971 when slate agents raided A k A d
have 'tried to ban men's a farm near Summertown , S R y
magazines. Tenn., and fo.und marijuana • • •
growing, according lo Gaskin's Kids Like TO
brier.
• .,
. t••K• co••AM'f" IMC. "ti•& U.eUfllA CAlfYON lfJ&I
• LA•UMAllACM ONMltfl&, ..... •.M.aOJt,.fMlll •tA1,
WI CUSTOM STRIP UCH PIECi TO
SUl_T YOUR UflHISltlHG HHDS: ·
WJ .UH HO HOT OR .CQLO ALKALI,.
ACID; CAUSTIC DIP TANKS, ,HO HEA!;
LiVE. STIW OR ~IRASIVE.S.
Playboy captured the fan-
tasies of the n1iddle class
male. Hefner ga ve nH_·n· a
stereophon ic lifestyle. filled
with sleek cars, \.\'cll-tailered
clothes and girls \Vho offered
the image of sex without sin.
. "! ~ by introducing, Ou), a sf>!.n-off
ANOTH ER ENTRY -:---... of Lui, a slick French girlie.
Cofoun<J_er Al Goldstein ~ 'Oui is already in the black
show!. his weekly ne~s-.... 7"n oddity for a new publica-
paper. Screw. It has,c;rr· 1 Uon.
~ulatio~ ~{ 120,000. and A month after Qui hit the
Se x Life
Could Hurt SOUTH C08ST VILL8G8 .0
"PLAYBOY CAME at the
right,...time. when the United
· States was experiencing a sex-
ual revolution," Hefner told
Interviewer Oriana Fallaci
later. "My naked girb became
a symbol of disobedience. a
triumph of sexuality. an end
• of Puritanism."
Playboy also p u bl is hcd
topflight fiC'tion and non-fiction
and serious C'riticism and
·discussion. The combination
\\'as a tremendous success.
Playboy aod Heiner became
the unsurpassed leader of
men's magazines and then at·
tained one of the greatest
mass-magazine circulations in
history. Hefner's circulation
and pro{i ts were in the
milli008. His nearest com·
petitors were selling only tens
of thousands.
AND THAT vast gulf gave
~& $1 m1lhon·a-year bus· news stands, lawyer .. ~. Lee
iness. Bailey helped finance Gallery
under the editorship of Ronald -anolller ambitious y 0 u n IJ-· ·Fenton, a one-time computer
company president. Balley Is
now gone, but Gallery re-
mains. Fenton claims monthly
sales of a million.
publisher an idea.
In 1969 an advertisement al>"
peared in the New York
Times: A rabbit spotted inside
the cross hairs of a high-STEPHAN SAUNDERS, a
poy,•ercd rifle. The rabbit wa!il fonner ·associate publisher of
Playboy: !he sharp-shooter. Gallery, left tha t magazine
the new magazine Penth-Ouse. to launch Genesis, financed
BEIRUT, Lebanon (APl
-The Libyan government
has announced t h a t
adulterers and unmarTied
persons engaging in.sexual
intercoor~ will be punish-
ed by 100' lashes of the
whip in' public.
The Liby an revolu-
tionary oomrnand is ad·
justing punishments
prescribed by the coun-
try's lav.'S to conform to
Islamic law. "II made us the definilive by Rocky Aoki , the owner of
competitor. It \Vas th a 1 1~~·~s~tr~i~ng~~o~I ~J~a~p~a~n~e~s~·~=========~I simple," s:i.id Bob Guccione . .:.
.e.enJ.bouse's edit.or, publisher
and founder. ·
Thus began the battle of
the .centerfolds.
PENTHOUSE WAS almost
a carbon copy of the leader's
format, right down to the c~
tool!iS and articles. But when
it came to girls , Penthouse
stn1ck its own trail. Where
Playboy was brash , daring,
who is
VELV·ET FOG
HA IR S'1 Y L'I NG
8466 INDIANAPOLIS AVE.
HUNTINGTON BEACH, S36-8829
• IS
WISHON-HARRELL STONEWARE
" .. a trvly vniqve
collection of
handthrown pottery" _
loeat6l!l co.mer Sunflower & Bear, Santa Ana
Phone 556-8165
' . 20°10 to 50°10 •
P rese11t s
CO-OPERATIVE
FOOD BUYING
OR
"HOW 1rJ KEEP
THE WOLF AWAY
FROM .YOIJR DOOR ••
ACT TODAY I •
r-F~ :::::: ,:;M:;;,.----
I CALL (714) 547 -6324
OR MAIL THIS COUPON-to t International Buying Se rvice J. 1570 E. Edinger (Suite JJ ~nta Ana, CA '2705
I
I
I
Name ............................. .
Address ................................... .
I City .. ,... . ............ Zip ··'····· I ..__ ______________ J
The pooled buying powe r of IBS mem·
bers mak es possible large quantity pur·
chases of canned goods, dry s taples and
meats direct from producers at low distribu-
tor prices.
~liddleman profits .are eliminated.
Freight costs are reduced. Retail profits
are out.
JBS has con tracted \vith major canners
throughou t the United States including the
largest in the stale of California.· Rigid
quality control assures you of the finest
fruits and vegetables available on the mar·
ke t tod ay. ·
Prime Quality, Eastern,
Young Corn-fed Beef
Po'rk and Poultry
Direct fr om the farm • • • • •not
range cattle. \Vi ii be avai la bl e to IBS mem-
bers at considerabl e savings. This means
better quality--more edible food, less waste.
If you have sadly watched th e super·
market ground round shrink before your eyes
as it cooks, you know that excess fat and
water make that kind of meat cost much more.
tBS meatS are cut, wrapped1 and frozen
with assured quality._
Name Brands at
Greater. Savings '
By buying at F.0.8 . cannery prices we
are able to provide top ·brands at lowest
possible prices. You will find Del Mon te,
Libby, Hunt's, Case-
Yo u g et hi g h qu a lity
f oorls <it lower pri ces
iO)o Uu,11HJ .• , .1;;:1.it,,,,_l'I~ v11th oth1.·r IB~
111l'll1h1•!'. 1!1 L,1·.~1 l0t<., )"_~J SilVI' ·~101,:-
Swayne, Pil\Sbl/-ry ,
e tc .•.. the names
·you KNOW .• i
Savings on Canned
Goods and Dry Staples
(flou r, s ugar, ri ce, spaghetti, etc.)
~lore savings a re possible because JBS
buys \\'hen supplies are plentiful. Purchases
;it lhe peak of lhe growing season mean
lowest prices. When there is an over-supply
of cer1a1n foods 1 timely purchasing results.
in l'Ven grea ler savi ngs.
·ADD
THE
F:UTURE TO
YOUR LIST OF
NECESSITIES!
on your order
blank .
Phone
(7141
547-6324
for
more
information
•
l
Food Scarcity
is a real threat
Shortages of food throughout the wor ld mean
NO SUPPLY
(Have you tried to find raisins lately?
How about olive oil?)
HIGHER PRICES
(Some items have doubled in price in the
last 6 months.)
LOW QUALITY
(Better· quality foods a re disappearing
from retail shelves ..• Volume co-
op buyi ng gets the pick of the crop.
The strength.of CO-O PERATIVE BUYING
means SECURITY lo you.
By placing large volume orders· in ed-0
vance as part of the CO-OP, you are sure of
·SECURITY
• GOOD·SUPPLIES •
•LOWER PRICES
• HIGHER QUALITY
Try it Now and
SAVE
I
Come look us over ...
Bring th is coupon to the near·
est IBS warehoU1e. "We'll show you
around, answer your questions ind
give you a free °"""'of del icious
pears just for comlngl n.
3720 W. WARNER ,SANTA ANA
(comer of Womer •nd Horborl
MAIL COUPON TODAY TO INTERNATIONAL BUYING SERVICE 1510 E. EDINGER (Suite 3) SANTA ANA, CA. 92705
. '! ,
' l
1
•
,,
•
r
h
f
0
d
t
•'
u
'
I
t
I
BEA ANDERSON, Editor ..
Tvtl.Mr, O.:loMr 1'-ltJ' ,..._ 1
Mind Cleared , •
.Mud Wiped Away
'
DEAR ANN LANDERS: Yesterday I
read the letter from the girl who had
been in bed with so many guys that she
hci'd lost counl. It seems she was hoping
for a genuine love relationship and found
only rejection, sell-recrimination and
deeper depression. I could have written
tkat letter !Tfyself three year! II.go.
• • My problem started with a brutal sex-
ual encounter that robbed me not only of
JnY virginity but my self-respect. I had a
1atrict religious upbringing and felt so
,defiled that the only way I could convince
·myself that I was human was to have sex
\vith somebody-anybody.
I . Arter each boy friend dumped me !
~bated myself more and fel t more
worthless. My thoughts kept inching
'toward suicide. I knew if I didn't get
fSOffie help I'd probably kill myself. Of
course, 1 had no money for a psychiatrist
i(I was 16 yean old ). but 1 remembered
,your advice to others: "See your school
guidanci! counselor." I decided l had
nothing to Jose. ,.
With that man's help I am a new
t person. I actually owe him my life.
Several years have passed but I still keep
in touch with that incredibly insightful
and compnsslonate high school counselor.
•Because of him, my relationships with
1 men are on a completely different level.
I hope this letter will hel p someone
"'ho has taken the wrong road as I did
1 years ago. Keep telling them. Ann, that
, they don't have to slay in the mud if they
+don 't want to. Counseling might not be
1 the answer for everybody, but it was for
, me.-MY NAME IS NOT IMPORTANT.
1 MY STATE JS. "CONTENTMENT'
' DEAR CONTENTMENT: Thank y o u
I for 11 lelle.r lbat may provide otbert wllb
1 the Impetus they need to move In the
dlrecUon of help.t!Vou performed a more
1 valuable strvlct tod~ than you wW ever
'know.
' 1 DEAR ANN LANDERS : I run a small
, office, slaff«I by seven compelent
t.rumien. Jn lhc lost several WCC!k! there
h'as bei!n a mysterious dlsappearoncc or •
many small items and in.'lignificant sums
of money from our handbags.
All the circumstantial evidence points
to one girl as the guilty pel'90fl. Since t
am the manager it is up to me to straight-
en it out. But how can I tell this girl that
she is the suspect? My desk is the only
one that can be locked. The other girls
keep their belongings in the lounge area
on open shelves. Lockers would be im-
possible because of lack of space. Thanks
for ycur help. -TENDER HOOKS
DEAR T.H.: You s 1 mp I y can't
accuse a girl of stealing on the balls of
the "evkleoce" 1n yoar Jetter. IfwouJd·be
unforgivable. Surely evuy emp1oye'1
desk ha. a drawer on which a Jock c:aa be
installed. This Is the best solution, and •
well worth the few dollars lt-woakl coet.
DEAR MS. LANDERS: You will notice
I have addressed you as Ms. Landers,
although I kno\v your wriling name is
Miss Landers and you are manied and
therefore a "Mrs." How do you feel about
the "~1s." title? Do you like It? Do you
dislike . ii? Are you indifferent? -A
FRANK QUESTION
DEAR FRIEND: Your frank question
deserves a frank answer. I don't like
"~1s." 1 prefer MJss or Mri. -or e.vea
Oecupant. The Ms. label 11 for females
who figure It'• nobody 's basbte11 wbtthe:r
tbe:Y are iiinied or alngle lld dtey would
just as soon not say. I am not ln tbat
category and I do1't wlsb W be placed
there.
Discover how to be date bait without
falling hook. line and sinker. Ann
Lander'! booklet , "Dating Oo's and
Don'ts1" v.111 help you be more polk"'<I
and sure..-of yourself on aates. Send ;s
cents in coin along with a long, stampeJ,
self-addressed envelope and your reque~t
lo Ann Landers. 222 W. Bank Or.,
Cbic~go, Jllino.is 60654 .
•
• •
The Finishing Touch
After .•. and before.
Doris Holt show•
what a diff.erence. ' ' " ...
elothes; hair and '· '
make-up can bring
!above J. Below,
Maxine Chalfant
shows her correct •' make-up techniques. )(
Sketches are used •
by Maxine to illus-
Irate correct lines.
•
By JO OLSON
ot ""' o.i1, ''"' s11tt
The scales inch down, do"n· do...,'n,
and finall y, ~unk~ An overweight woman
reaches her goal.
Then she looks at herself in the mirror,
longing for a new loo\c to go with
her new figure. Or perhaps !rhe's never
been thin and has no idea bow to
dress.
What colo~ or Jines ah>uld she wear!
Is she really attractive, she asks hersell,
with a measure of doubt still hanging
on.
There is an answer for her doubb
in the person ol ~ta:-1:ine CbalCant, former
model, teacher and coach of beau1y
contestants.
The Fountain Valley resident has
d~igned a schoo l of finishing techniques
for the formerly heavy \voman -or
chlld pr man -who wishes to have
a new look.
She believes, first of all, that those
die.ting :1bould make themselves as
glamorous as possible and wear the
correct clothing lines since "the basic
figure remains the same because of
the bone structure underneath.
CHECK STYLES -"Even in the lra~ition period they
should pay attention to clothing styles."
1.faxine, a tonner Colorado resident,
has "-orked \\'ith beaµt y rontestants but
finds her y,·ort with weight losers much
lnore rey,'arding.
Sbe has coached a ~1iss Colorado \\'ho
competed in the Miss Universe pageant,
a Miss Wings (airline stewardesses) and
a Miss Press Photo, who ''bipwalked"
five inches off her hips in four months
to wln the title.
Maxine, a trim woman who has never
had a weight problem herself, broke
into the modeling field after buying
a course through an ad in the j>a'per.
"I dldn"t feel I was attractive enough
to compete with the others," she said.
"and after 1 got a modeling assignment
l was in a state of shock for two
years."
DE$ERT HA'lt
Hefl first assign111-ents included pro--
0 ( )
•
• \ •
• I
mo1ing a \!'hipped topping y,·earing Mis
designed by t.tr. John to look Ilk~
desserts. "'Ork.ing as a hostess at poUllca\
oonventloos • and helping host movie
premien. She also modeled furs on-
te!evislon for a year and a ha!£.
"I was absolutely fiabbergasted at
having such groovy )obs," she exclaimed.
'Ibough she has never had to take
off more than IO pounds al a time
ber&elf, t.faxine knows the heartbreak
and struggles a dieting person goes
tlvoogh.
"I was raised by .an old-fashioned
mother y,'ho showed affection for her
children by feeding them,'' she said.
"l also put a lot of food on the table
at mealtime and 1 Y.'OU!d reward my
children "'ilh food.
"We are not a family or drinkers
so our family entertainment centered
aroWld eating.
FASHION 5110\\'S
"At that time I was appearing on
television and narrating a lot d. fash kln
shows. ~1y daughter thought she couldn't
compete with me.''
Not koowing ho\v to cope with the
problem, ~1axlne was helpless to help
her daughter keep her figure, which
grew as she· grew.
"My daughter has had a weight prob-
lem s i n ce sh!! y,•as 9 and she \\'et'll
to 211 after her second child," the former
model noted. "She just stopped taking
care of herself."
lier daughter decided one day in
desperation to go to a group we.igbt
oontrol meet~ but felt so unattractive
she oou1dn't face the other women.
Maxine did her daughter's hair, put
make-up on her and sent her off to
the meeting, which gave her the impetus
lo lose 40 pounds.
At the meeting all the women wanted
to know wOO did her hair and mak e·up,
and if whoever had done it would do
theirs.
"?..Jy daughter told me. I had been
Y.'Orking \Vlth ·the wrong people," J\taxine
said (the beauty contestants).
lier new ·course goes into every aspect
of cotor and line, hair, cosmetics and,
phy>kal conditioning.
NO TWEEDS . . I
She teaches, for enmp\e, that "lweedi
fabrics make. you look heavier" and
that t>tavf. people should wear muted
colors and medium weight fabrics .
"The end result Is giving losers a
better self-image," ~taxine said. "t.fany
have a poor self-image for no reason.
Many have feJ~ WlBttractiVe Cor SO long
you have to ba't them"over the head.''
Exercise is import.ant, she believes,
because It "keeps you young looking.
You keep yourself supple and you move
in a youthful marmer.
''Body language and eye contact shout
our degree of self-confidence.. I tell my
classes that everyone will accept you
on your own self.evaluation. You have
to think you're important."
F o o d is a substitute for a lot ot
things for people, Maxine commented.
"I don't think about food. People who
ha'"e a 1veight problem really enjoy
food."
J\10DEUNG JOBS
J\1axine's new approach to beauty
classes is in keeping y,ith her Jong-time
dedication to the needy. She has helped
predelinquent girls and hard core girls,
getting modeling jobs for some of them.
(See TOUCH, Page 141
r
....
/
J 4 D41L V '"11.07 •
Worm
Wood?
Atrs. Eleanor Keeg \Vas
suspicious bec~use her
Tai\van·produced shoes
'''ere as noisy as those
\rorn by a tap dancer.
Iler suspi cions \V c re
confirn1erl ''" h c n the
heel crunlbled: sa\vdust
fell out, and there \Vas
a worm \\•hid! has been
sent to the State Agri·
culture Department for
analysis.
WEDNESDAY
OCTOBER 17
By SYD.'iEY 01\1ARR.
ARJES (!\larch 2l ·April 191:
Face responsibil ities. One \Yho
seems e.vasive will succumb ir
you apply pressure in mt1ture.
lega l manner. You have n1ore
on your side than might be ap-
parent. Sagltta.rttl.'l. Gemini in·
dividuals could figure prom·
inently.
TAURUS (April 21).1\lay 2U J:
l llndlJ. Ottobtr 16, 11J7l
Slud y Aries rl)CSSage for
helpful hint Strive for facts,
no! 1vishful thinking. Aquarius .
Leo, &urpio persons are likely
lo be in pictlu·e. Relatives
may appear heavy handed . .Do
what y.ou have lo do, one step
at a time.
GE!\tJNI (1\1ay 21-June 2CI ):
Some ideas can be trans-
formed into tnoney-making
procedures. Young person m;~y
be rebellious. Key is to l'f
analylica!. Don't rUsh, rorce or
Jum p to conclusions. \'/h at ap-
J)fars lo 00 out of hand is
1ncrcly a temporary situation ..
CANCER !June 21.July 2?.,).;
t-lome atn1ospherc commands
auention. r·amity memtK>r
should be approached in
diplomatic manner. Ob-taln
hint 'from Gemini message.
You have more responsibility
but you can handle it. Older
1:icrson acts in surprising n1an.
ncr.
Lt:O (Jul y 23·:\ug. 22 1: If
..
you take situations, indi viduals
for granted, you could be in
Loi: rude awakening. Do your
own checking. A p p I i e s
especially where leg al affairs
arc concerned. One behind the
s«nes is sitting on the fen«.
You have some persuading to
do.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22);
Momentum is on y o u r
side. li1 e a n s follow through
-don't ~ dela}"d by
doubts. f e a r s , suspiciOns.
Note: Family Contact Lost
By ERMA DOMBECK
I love the \'laltons on TV.
lity husband thinks they're
unreal and refers lo them as
Phase IV with 1neat on the
table.
~ly kids do not idcnlify with
John Boy who wears clean
overalls and never loses his
~ glasses.
But I love lhem because
they "rc what a family is all
about .. making homemade
ice cream, canning pickles for
the fair and delivering the
baby of the girl next door.
A lot of people like to say
television killed the American
family. I've got my 011·n
theory. 1 think the family
Q
lliLOON~ai LTJ~-
.,...-"1!lo~.-
Thr !:I'd llR!lnou Lid.
b lookin~ fur a \'cry
special p<"rson to i.ervc
our vPry &l)<'Cial
~ustom<>l'S.
,\ !'al"-" po~ltion that
)Pad~ to mnnai;:-cn1<>nt.
Call l'ill~trr nrynotds.
S.16·001 1 ... '1'11ltf.',.... ..
,,.. • .,, •ltwp1r.1i,. ••-•'
••• 1-1 ...... •• ll•r• I• ......... 1 •• J
Dot § !he m~n •R your
life sl•I! lfSPOn41 C•n
you com pet! .. 11h olhu
"Olfltnl •rt y(lll ~IPPY
wi th )'Olli 11testy111
Pvt a1e ' uptr1tntt
on )'Ollr ~1de'
'-Cl111lly. hit cin
t>r11n IOI YOIJ al 1
l~P \Chool ,.htn you
decide ta make J
c.l\ange IOI the btllt•
Do 11 no,.
C1!I Of comt
m !or ' frtt
ptrsonJI JnJl1~•1
1., r~r"<•·"it• ~ •·• • ..lolwi Robert ~ I
k .............. o..,,_.,,.""',_""' !
OR .. ~!1!~~~:~TY i
began to fall apart the 1ninute
\l'e bought the bulletin board
and began wriling notes to one
another ..
With children on the go.
mothers in and out. ·and so
many activilies con1peling for
our time, the bulletin board
has emerged as a JNay of com·
mLmication.
Our bulletin board has so
many messages it spills over
on the refrigera tor door. You
cannot resist opening the door
~·ithout reading all of them.
Things like, ·•\Vhoover stole
1ny new Spoo ky Tooth a\bun1,
please return . Criminals will
be persecuted."'
"r..1omm : Lost my speling
~k. Need $2 by r..lunday."
~ad. Cnll Doris. She says
•you have hC'r number ~"
··oad, Call r.1om. I have
Doris"s nu1nber too !!"
Swedi sh
Soiree
Celebrating its 13th an·
niversary \vhile raising
scholarship fu nds '\'ill
be the Anchor Lodge ,
Vasa Order of 1\n1e r1·
ca. restivities, inc:lud·
ing an authentic S\\'Cd·
ish smorgasbord and
dancing. \\1ill take place
Friday, Oct. 19, in the
Halecresl Clubhouse.
s c r vi n g rwtrs. Scott y
Nott are lilrs. 1\rline
Erickson (left) and A1rs.
Lucia Landry.
_I .• ,,. -.,.1
WELCOME: -C"':::
i]L~~~EW i~
Awaits you 10-5 Tue . thru Sun .
•
•
" I
!
l
AT
WIT'S
EN D
"Everybody: Don't ! o c :~
door. I've lost 1ny key again .
Signed, The Phantom.'"
"Gone to Pittsburgh "
••Jf it ralns. pick Phil up at
the gyn1."
Th!!Se notes lc<ivc so 1nany
questions unanswered. T o
begin 1vith, \.\'ho is Phil '! Can
\l'e keep Spooky Tooth lost?
"'ho \\·cnt to Pittsburgh'?
Sometimes the notes bccon1e
lu1nped together iind make for
problems: ··rick up Daddy"s
boss at the ai rport. Defrost
the ha1nburgcr in a 300 degree
oven for 4 minutes ...
Others are obscure. •·1 1vill
be home "'hen I gel there. If
nol home by the lime I'm sup-
posed to be, ca ll and lell
\l'hoever ar.s\vcrs that I need a
ride. Unsigned."
The ot.h(>r night l\'e 11·ere all
cro~·ded around the buUctin
board snapping up pape r and
trying to hustle a pencil from
one another.
"\Vt\IT A MIN LrrE!" I
5houted. ··isn•t c very on c
here?" I counted to satisfy
1nyself. "Then what are we all
d9ing \\Tiling notes? Why
can't \.\'e jLL<;l , talk to one
another like !he \Valtons?"
"\Vanta birth a lamb, John
Boy?'' asked one. "No, l'n1
going out to the barn and
1vatch Grandpa pick his teeth
with a matchbook cover."'
I wrote ··Fink" on a note
an d thrust it al them.
I li ked it belier though when
\\·e shouted and grabbed one
another by the thro:it.
0tildt>n Needle's
* " ...
P: ·'!'. .. ,
Sf;«.iat o1 tk 11/"'
CUTTING BOAPiDS
JJst what e1ery heme
Sewer N e~s
;.,_ lltClllJtly 1.'lfl
\,,w Uni v ~.77 ca.
~,,Id"" ·n,,dk "'"'" 10111 ~ C ~• f 'l 'l • • '"'0Ull• ll VI<
O•l• IWI""'" I i11•on1
•
---------
'Demandi~g' But .. -
Prospects . Excite Betty Ford
WASHJNG't'eN (AP) -Bet·
ty Ford, ~·Do has been a con-
gressional wUe for 25. years,
says she ~ "tremendously ex·
cited" aboul the prospect pf
taking on the role of the na-
lion's second lady. 1
·· 1 know it's going to be
very demanding," she told
reporters at Friday night's
Whi~ House reception for her
hu sbartd, Rep. Gerald R. Jt'ord
fR·Mich.). who is 1>resident
Nixon's vice presidential
nominee.
'I'all and chestnut-haired
Mrs. Ford, 55, is well-known
and 1 i k e d in Washington
circles.
Before her .marriage to
Ford. the former ·Elizabeth
Bloomer of Chicago danred
with the Martha Graham l'Om·
pany in New York, taught
modem dance for several
yea rs and was a fashion
coordinator.
She and Ford met in Grand
Rapids. She was 30 and he
35 when they married October
15, 1948, about two weeks
before he was elected to his
lint term in tile •touse .
They live in a n un·
pretentious horn" with a swim·
ming pool in suburban Alex-
andria, Va .. and have four
children. Asked how the
children were reacling, Mrs.
Ford said •'there's a little
question ii. their minds. But
they're taking ii pretty well."
Sixteen-year-old Susan, a
student at a private school.
~·as cooking stea k dinner for
the fa mily \vhen President
Nixon's historic call caqle at
7:30 p.m. Friday. "I was
rather shocked and hlppy,"
she said.
The Fords ' oldest son.
?.fichael, 23. a student at
C'.ordon C',onwell Theological
Seminary in 1\tassachusctts,
was telephoning home to find
out whether advance news
repo rts on F'ord's selection
were true while the Whit e
H.ouse e.:ill was coming in on
the fam ily's unlisted line.
The Fords' two other
children are John. a student
at Utah ~tale University, and
Steven, 17, a high school
senior.
In an Interview a few years
ago, Michael described bis
mother as "the anchor of the
whole ramlly."
And, Airs. Ford told how
she had rt' be "fairly firm" in raising children because
her h~n · was "gone a lot."
She noted "lt was not difficult,
but challenging to be in a
way both a mother and a
rather."'
Although House Minority
leader F'ord appeared to have
had a good idea he was Nix·
on's choice, he didn 't let his
wife know until the last
minute.
Mrs. Ford "''as sitting at
dinner, informally dressed in
slacks; . when her husband
tried to drop a few hints.
"He suggested that 1naybe
1 should comb my hair and
get some make-up on -and
maybe put on a dress," ~1rs.
Ford recalled.
Because none or the other
congressmen's wives had been
10 the cUice of Nixon's
penonal secretary, Rose Mary
Woods, to watch the big mo·
ment out of sight and vie
television .
Wo rkplace
Researched
Problems of the workplace.
ranging from worker
dissatisfaction with d u I 1 •
repetitive jobs to concern with
the productivity of govern-
ment workers, are the focus of
research for which four new
Ford Foundation grants have
been made.
The grants \vent to O>mell
University's Sc h o a I of
Industria l and Lalx>r Re ta.
lions, to George Washington
University , to .the National
Manpower Policy Task Force
and to the government of
Nassau County. N.V.
Invited to be in the East Room, __________ _
audience for Nixon's an-
nouncement. the White ffouse
said Mrs. Ford was escorted
answered affirm3Lively.
IF TODAY IS YOUR
e CllllrJt A«-fl e O.llvff'lft Lt! ut rllUr .,.ur 11<..-~f ilH'tlCtlJllMlt
.~
1 fltl ~lntf ... : ... .,_ QM.Mt
11111h1tl.., K1t'Hur .. .... .....
BIRTHDAY you arc a natural '**"""' • K•.,.,1t1H ff)-W!
I t Capricorn, Cancer persons uncertainly. Strive. to respond
play role,s. 1rccent-is on ways-in mature,-bumane -manner.
to fulfill .special desires. Posi· OVerbearing attitude w i 11
lion is strong. Money J>i.ctive · create unn~essary friction.
win change-in yourlavor, Remember1iiet, health resolu·
LIBRA .(Sept. 23-0ct. 22$: tions .. • .
organizer. You can handle I ~~--~~~i·~~-~-~-~-~~~· ~· ~ respomibility and intelligent!y Ji
delegate duties. You attract
many born under Cancer and
Capr icorn .
One \\'ho pulls strings may be • PJSCES (Feb. 19-March 20):
wary of you. You now tend to Whal seemed ce rtain may be
project argumentative or blocked by red tape, le~al and
revolutionary image. Be otherwise. Be perceptive. If
·moderate in ex:plaini rig views. aware of subtle nuances. you ___ --------~11
You soon will be rid of burden. find that {tdversity radcs. Ru Ff ELL'S Know it and avoid panic. Aries Gemini, Virgo individuals
could play significant i"olc. could fi g u r c promi nently. UPHOLSTERY
SCORPIO (Octr 23-Nov. Question of change sho'uld "be
21 ): Special study .brings
benefits. Bring c r e a I iv e
abilities into play. lllghlight
originality. Stin1ulatc learning
process. Broaden horizons.
Check messages. L o n g ·
dis tance comn1unications nta y
be garbled. Kno1v it and
carefully examine n1canings.
SAGITrARIUS (Nov. 22·
Dec. 21): You are able to
discover best ways of enhanc·
ing security. emolional and
otherwise. A~t is o n
clarification of pun.le. -one
close to you can provide light
as well as heat. Be receptive.
~hare knowledge -and feel·
1ngs.
CAPRICOR'.'11 tDec. 22-Jan.
19 1: If di screet. you gain.
Otherwise", you could beC<lme
entangled in situation \l'hi eh is·
costly, embarrassing. Pcrtnit
others, includ ing p .:i rt n er ,
mate, lo fully express
lhe1nselves. You can listen
and learn. Study Sagittarius
n1essage.
AQUARIUS iJan.. 20-Fcb.
18 ): r..taintain steady pace.
Avoid sensationalisin. On e
1vho Works with you expresses
Fro m Pag e 13
Touch .
She also has taught beauty
classes at a Florence Crit~
tenton home and was asked
by the state prison warden
before leaving Colorado in
January to work with young
male pri,soners in a half-way
house. "'I was very sad at
ha,'ing to turn !hat do v•n."
she" commented.
An avid outdoor per!';on.
r..taxine Hkt.s to swim. garden.
go to the be:1ch an d take
a carload of children to
Disneyland or the zoo. ·· r like
to do things that children do ,"'
she said. "Children arc n1 y
constant co1npanions.
"As a 1natter of fa ct. 1'1n
looking for a five-year-old boy
to take to the zoo and teeter·
toiler \Vilh."
}.1axine's cla sses are
available through \V c i g h t
\'latchiirs, Sania Ana .
'fin toi nette 's
DRAPERIES & INTERIORS
WINDOWS, YOUR GREATEST
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If your hol!'tl'-il I le11 l11i:iet'1 ho1111 ... on e bud~1f,
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-------
~
F'.RANCIS-
'\..QRR J Clippings from
Steve: FINE STATIONEl!Y
Q. 1 h•'• a 9yp1y Mltcvt b111
1'4 Uk• to 9rolli It to 011• leltl)th. What ce11 I cl• 111n111· ff •rows
01111.
Lfffhtf" O.llc Ac<1ts.o•l•• A. Thi b.11 tol111ion :, lo tri m
Fr1mn & Pl!llt Allltlm]
Cll•u & ••ck11mmon s111 lh• bollom l1v•" • w • r v ,;~
we•k• until llle lop l1ver1 •t•
llU l ,(fUI .. ,•WAI 111-lllf •Vin with •the bottom. Hevi~q
(fltlAJll I Al ·CllYlll!l l IAllHI your h1ir lriml!'t•d ofien will ~"'ltl"'ltl"'ltl"'ltl"'ltl~ ... "'ltl"'ltl~lll 'P''d growth •nd keep it in = 11ood condition.
l l ACH
YOUI CLOTHING
OOLLAI GOES
FURTHEI HERE
9. I ho•• 1111t111'911y _.., lrt•lt
with ju1t -"0119h c111rl to fr11atr•,.
"'•· I wo11ld Ilk• • 1tyla that 11
... ., to c•r• for 10 I ca11 wfth
my hair, Vio•• mv h•acl 011d 1'111
roody to 90!
A. W8•V heOr ;, in vour f1 ~or.
An ••pert h1ircut. 1ilorl end in
levtu would b• your en1wt1. A
1lyled cul 1uc.h e1 the c.•l!'tpu1
cul would be 9ood for you.
For further lnlorm&tlan Call or Writ• to:
Steve
Hair West
3305 Newport llYd.
Phone: 673-41 86
AUCTION INDIAN JEWELRY
FRI .. OCT. 19-7 P.M.
Jake's Auction, 2722 No. Ma in,
Santa Ana
(~14) SU·tUl -IN l'ASKION LA'lll
Why Weight?
If you care
... about how you look
... about how you feel·
...about you r hea lth
Don't Wait!
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under a Practicing Physician's supervision
YOU can look: better
YOU can feel better
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.. equally effective for both MEN and WOMEN
II"'""-"""' O..Sealifomil
., •• , .. "'"'~ Medical Clinics
' 4 CONYINl!NT WEIGHT LOSING LOCATIONS
Wl!STMINSTl!ft: 13861 BeachBIYd .• Sull••IS •
7 A.M. '1113:30 P,M, Phone 893-2449
TUSTIN: 17541 I Nine Blvd .• Suite C.
7~30 A.M. 'tH 4:30 P.M. P~OM 832-6525
ANAHEIM : 1701 S. Euclld, Sult• r
730 A.M.'ti14 :30PM. Phon11991·1800
GAIDIN ~IOVI
., ;A., NIW,OIT llACH: P'nont 6''·t6•1
w.::~_ • ...__ C A.LL OF~!CE NEAREST YOU ~OR ._ .. ...,
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and . .,,
A's
Ion
g
(
t
G
7
h
d
_,
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r
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Zany Series
NE\V YORK (AP) -Tom Seaver
and Jim "CatfJ.Sh'• Hunter. respective
aces or the New York Mets and Oakland
A's pitching staffs, were set to go in
tonlght's third game and hoped to restore
some order to the wild 1973 World Series.
The Mets are favored 6--S b y
oddsmakers here to win tonight's game.
The A's were rated 3-2 favorites to ~
wln the series before the baseball classtc
got under way.
The Mets and A's split the first two
games of the Series, with some sloppy
play on both sides maning the action.
OQkland took the opener 2-1, with
b<Mh A's runs uneamed fG!lowing an
011 TV To11l9ht
Cho11nel 4 at 5:15
ei;ror on an easy grounder by New
York second baseman Felix Millan. Then
tho Mets got even, winning a 4-hour,
13-minute marathon, 1~7, Sunday and
scoring five unearned runs aloog the
way. There were a half-dozen errors
Sports in Brief ·
In that game -fiva ot them by the
A's. .
"Welcome to the best World Series
yet?" said the socreboard greeting in
Oakland before the first two games
of the Series. It has hardly been that
so far.
The fir.1t game of the Series was
settled on an easy boune{!r that squirted
under MiUan's glove at second. "It was
an easy out," he said. "I just missed
i l."
And game two was decided by
Grandmother
Catches Tuna
Weighing 755
·Lakers Lose, 125-104;
. -' Fishing grandmother of the yeir award
surely has a top candidate' ln' Mrs.
Beryl Wonson of Gou c este r, Mass,
Grandma ·wonson recently hauled in a
755--pound tuna -and lo.st her pants
in the process.
The wire service acoo.mt of how that
happened is as follows:
Mrs. Wonson wall buckled into the
harness When the giant fish hit. All
went well until the harness began slip-
ping down her beck, forcing her
dungarees dowTI off her hips.
She says she tried to yank them
WHITE
WASH
back up, but finally said, "the hell
'With them," and kicked them off.
"What a relief In all that beat and
cx:ercise, and there I was down to my
lace-trimmed bikini shortll and t-shlrt,"
she said. "But I was really getting
.. the hang of fighting that Us h, and the ·
whole performance was so hysterically
funny it wasn"t eil'lba~assing -except
to the men, and they were perfect
gentlemen. They kept behind me, back
of the chair, and looked the other way,"
she said. * .* *
\Vould you believe that In successive
weekend •football games at tlle Colittum
that a combhled rrowd of 13!,000 saw
four teams chalk op 149 points!
And in each game a quarterback threw
four touchdown puses as USC'I Pal
Haden turned the trick Satanlay against
Washiagton Stale and John Hadl of Ute
Rams did it Sunday (In tbe llrsi b:alt, ·
yet) against Dallas.
Ron Pharris. former Anaheim l-ligh
£ootball star. is now the track coach
at Canyon High in'the Orange district.
lcehouse Wilson Dies
SPRINGFIELD. Mass. -Bob ~icAd0o
scored 21 points and six olher Buffalo
Brayes scored in double flgur o9 while
defeating the Los Angeles Lakers 12~104
Monday : night in the second annual
Naismith Hall of Fame exhibition game.
ROQk:ie guard Ernie OiGregorio, who
contributed 16 points and a game high
12 assists. put the Braves ahead five
minutes into the game. The Laker.;,
playing without Jerry West, never
seriously. threatened after that.
West was ordered back to Los Angeles
after Saturday's game in Buffalo to
have doctors observe a!l injured ankle.
eWilsoaDeod
AiORAGA - A requiem mass '\'ill
be sung today for George P.
(lcehouse) Wilson, 61, a starting halfback
with lhe St. 1.1"ary's College Gaels in
1933 and 1934.
Wilson. who died Saturday, gained the
nickname "Icehouse" because of the
coolness he displayed on the football
field. Upon graduation from SI. Mary's
be played for the Detroit Tigers baseball
team for one season.
He retired this year after 37 years
as a teacher in Berkeley.
e Emperltt' Missed
CHOSHI. Japan -A towering fou l
ball sailed over a stadium wall here
Monday night and dented the hood or
the limousine carrying Emperor Hirohito
and Empre~ Nagako to a high school
baseball game.
The Imperial couple, avid baseball
fans, then walked into the stadium
wuufOed. and sat at their designated
seats, which earlier had l:ieen shielded
with a~vy net.
e Ellert Soll•
BOCA RATON, Fla. -Chris Evert
began defense of her 1972 title in a
$110,000 women's proressional tennis
tournament Monday by downing Kris
Kemmer of Los Angeles, 6-2, 6-3.
11lird seeded Rosemary Casa Is
defeated Barbara Downs, 6-4, 7-6.
Flflh·secded Kerry J\.telv illc of
Fred Stolle beat Indian lefthander
Narinder Singh 6-1. 8·6. Fourth-seeded
Raul Ramirez, a Mexican Davis Cup
player, whipped Tao Luu of Hong Kong
6-0, 6-0. and sixth seeded Paul Gerken
easily defeated Zeljko Franulovic of
Yugoslovia, 6-3, 6-1.
e Gilbnma Neu' Cooeh
HOUSTON -Houston Oilers general
manager Sid Gillman Monday fired
coach Bill Peterson and as.sumed the
head coaching job himself in an effort
lo pull the reeling Oilers out of a
16-game tailspin .
"\Ve arc in a winning business," Gillman
said in announcing the dismissal of
Peterson. who led the Oilers to only
one regular season victory in 19" games
as head coach. '"T'here is no excuse
for failure in our business."
e Early Wilmer•
.. J\1ANlLA -Allen Stone and Geoff
1.-1asters of Australia led a group or
four seeded players who won first-round
matches Monday in the $25,000 Manila
Open tennis tournament, whi..:h opened
in the face of an approaching typhoon
which forced the matches to be shifted
indoors.
Stone, seeded sixth. defeated Bill Lloyd
of the United States 6-2, 6-3 and fl.1asters,
No. 7, beat Raymundo Oeyro of The
Philippines 6·1. 6-3.
Ninth·sccded fl.1arcelo Lara of fl.1exico
to pped Romeo Rafon of The Philippines
6-4, 6-3, and \Vest Germany's Han.s
Pohniann, seeded 14th, beat Jess
Jlernandez of The Philippines 7·5, 6-3.
e You t h Cl•or!Jed
DECATUR, Ga. -A 16-year-old youth
has been charged with armed robbery
and aggravated assault in connection
with the Oct. 7 shooting of Atlanta
Co nstitution sports editor Jesse Outlar,
robbery detectives said.
Detective L. J. Robinson said he drew
up a petition of accusation against the
youth , held in DeKalb County custody
since the day alter the shooting, antl
served it through DcKalD juvenlle
officia ls.
Tursday, October 16, 1~73
at Zany Shea
consecutive enon by Oekland stcond
baseman M.lkt Andrews -the first
orte on a play ldenlical to the ooc
1'-tJllan booted the day before. "It hit
the lip of my glove," said Andre"''· "l 19o1tOO in my glove for it.'' The
ball, however, wasn't there.
Andrews W&! the third Infielder used
by manager Dick Williams in Oakland's
revolving door act. at second base. But
he wasn't t.be man the Oak.land skipper
would have Ukcd there.
llov.•ever, f\.1anny Trillo, a utlllty
•
inrteldl'r the A's wanted to add for
the Sl'rits. was unavailable becalt!le the
Mets hltd blocked the roster""°'~·
Baseball rules prohibit roster changes
for the Series except in case of injury.
The A's wanted to subslitute Trillo tor
catcher Juan Morales, a Series eligible
whom they sold to Aofontn!al in
Scpll'mber. The Mets and the NaUon&l
Lcab'lle refused permission for the move
and the A's y,•ent ·into the Series with
24 player.i.
Says Ja e~son
Oakland's Players
Thinking Revolt
NE\V YORK (AP) -Outfielder Reggie
Jackson said Monday night that the
often·bizarre v.ttims of Oakland owner
Charles 0 . Finley could trigger a
wholesale revolt on the American League
champions.
"There could be a possibility of refus·
ing to play," said Jackson. "There are
a bunch of guys who ar.e close to that
point."
The A's are ·playing rt.he 1973 \Vorld
Series against the New York Mets, bot
are playing it unhappily since the latest
Finley action resulted in the "firing"
t1f a baseball player.
The Oakland team, almost lo a Qltl;n,
believes that the off-beat, A's O\l.ller
literally fired second baseman f.1 ike
Andre\\'S !or making tvo"o costly errors
in Sunday's 1i..1 loss to .the l\1ets in
12 innings.
"I just felt bad for 1the man.'' said
Jackson. "We all do."
Finley has pulled other zany antics
that have the A's in a depressed frame
of mind, added Jackson.
"Believe me, there are going lo be
a lot of holdouts in spring trajning
next year," said the star right fielder.
"Some player:s a rc going to hold out
ju~ for spite."
When esked if the A's would consider
their trump card-revolting during a
World Series-Jackson repfied that it
was possible. He said he was sure that
several or the players on {he team
'A'OUld have a. meeting soon regarding
the general situation with Finley.
Pi-tost of the A's stuck adhesive tape
No. 17 on their unilonn sleeves f.fonday
"in memory of Andrews" before they
held a 40-mioute workout ·at Shea
Stadium.
After the game in Oakland, Andi-cws
wa s declared disabled and was sent
home to ,Boston when the A's flew here.
The A's circulated a press release
Monday, describing the AndretA-s situa-
tion. It said in part: "Andrews indicated
his disability in ·the IZth inning of Sun·
day's· game when he couldn't go down
for a ground ball that allowed two
runs to score.
"He v.·as also unable to make an
accurate throw to first 'base, resultlng
in a 1'.hlrd New York run in the same
inning."
"It Jacked a lot of class," A's captain
Sal Bando said Monday. But he added
that the players were sure manager
Dick Williams "had nothing t() do 'vith
the departure of Andrews."
Wooden Says
Walton to Be
Better in 1973
LOS ANGELES (AP) -Supporter.;
or UCLA basketball already are looking
for space in the Pauley Pavilion rafters
to hang another NCAA championship
banner but coach John We9dcn isn't
all that corifident .
"Whether we can be better than last
year, I don't know,'' Wooden said as
his team operied practice ~ionday. "We
do have to replace two ·starters so
I don't expect us to be as good early.
in the season. Later oo we might be
as good."
Yet Wooden said he expects Bill
Walton, the 6-foot.Jl cent.er who has
been college basketball's player of the
year as a sophomore and as a junior,
to be even beUer as a senior.
Keith Wilkes, a :smooth-as-silk {orwanl,
and guards Greg Lee and Torrmt Curtis
also return Jor tbetr senior years.
Add ~10 freshman Rlchard
Washington, 7·foot sophomore Ralph
Drollinger, 6-7 junior Dave A1eyers, 6-5
swingman Pete Trgovich, redshirt guard
Andre Mt"Carter, and the cast is
overwhelming.
The record many predicted for the
\V alton era -90 victories without defeat
-doesn't sound unreasonable. If it hap-
pens, the Bruins will have eight con·
secutive national titles and 105 .straight
triumphs.
MIAMI'S PAUL WARFIELD (4 2) IS JOLTED BUT HOLDS THE BALL.
-~·
DAILY PILOT JI) . ,..-Family Way
Wav of Allen
•
ALBANY. N.Y. (AP )
Washingion running back Larey
Brown, e member of the ''Redstln.s
family.'' says the team11 dose-kn.It
composure is warming u p
newcomer Duane 'nlomas.
And although Thomal!I -a
talented runner known best for
his public aloofness -ha.! seen
Action only on specialty teams,
Brov"n thinks coach George Allen's
controversial new player is anxious
to play.
"Duane Thomas Ls one ol ·the
best backs in the NFL." said
Brown. "Any way George Allen
Clll use hiln will be a benefit
to the Redskins. I'm sure our
phjlosophy -the Redskin5 family
-has affected Duane."
Despite Thomas' former brilliance
at Dallas, ho\\-ever, he faces 1
formidable: task in slxlving Brown
out of a starting positioo. Brown
set Redskins rushing records ln
leading Washingloo to the Super
Bowl last season.
Brown, who appeared he re
J\.ionday before a Jocal college
audience, said his team's "family"
innuence places individual
acccmplishments in complete
disregard.
"\Ve win together, v.•e lose
together," said .!ht nrth year
running back from Kansas State.
"I'm really hung up on team
accomplishments. Regardless or
my individual accomplishments,
the team is the only thing."
The Redskins team has worked
\\"Cll together this season. '1t
currently leads the N a t i on a I
Football O:lnference East w\tb a
4'-1 record. and Brown , said tts
loss to St. U>uis early ln the season
"v.-as the wurst fteling we-ever
bad:'
Individually, Brown Is far off
tbe pare that carried him to the
NFC's rushing title last season.
totalling 1,216 yards - a Redskins
record.
But shades of , the old Larry
Brown were evident SmdAy against
the New York Giants when be
ran for two touchdowns.
"I'm playing sound now -100
percent," said Brown, referring to
a leg injury that hindered him
this season. --
Brown, smaJI at 204 poon<b, was
selected by Washington in the
eighth round ol the 1969 draft by
tbe late Vince Lombardi. who
Brown calls "the most important
figure in my professional career.11
Lombardi gambled on plck!ng
Brown, who was small, parUally
deaf and whose college football
experience .at Kansas State was
as a blocking back.
Sooners Better )
Than Last Year
NORMAN, Okla . (AP) -llaJTY
Switzer added up the pluses and minuses
f.tonday and declared the 1973 Oklahoma
Sooners -at this point ln time -are
.. probably" performing better as a team
than last year's 1'\o. 2 ranked unit.
The phBes we:re evident In the OXton
Bowl Saturday when the Sooners stunned
Texas, 52-13.
"It was (IW' fmest olfem:ive perform-
ance to date," SwiUer said. ''Our olfm-
sive line bk>cked well. Eckiie Foster prob-
ably had his best game."
The biggest plus for the Soooers ao
far has been quarterback Steve Davis .
Going into the game as the team's
leading rusher, he hurled first half
toudldown bombs tO nnker Owens and
Billy Brooks and ended the day with
185 aerial yards.
Other pluses, Switzer said. are at
halfback, where Joe \Vashington keeps
pulling off big plays. and at fullback.
Y(here Oklahoma eame up with a real
sleeper in jtmior college transfe:r
Waymon Clark. •
"Waymon Clark didn't gct. the pro-
duction against Texas. but tlls presence
\\'as felt," said Switzer.
He said the play of Washington has
helped compensate for the !OM o( All·
American Greg Pruitt. He called
Washington'l!I 40-yard touchdown pass to
Owens on the Sooner.; first ~
"probably the finest execution o( the
run-option play as I've seen.
"Nobody had any idea until be raised
his arm 'Ni.th the football that it waa
a pass. He kept hi s poise and threw
it intelligently, a soft type or pass that
let Tinker get to it."
••\Ve lost some individunls last yC"ar
that i.•:ould be staning for us now,
but as a !en1n, I'd say v.·e're playing
ns good -probllhly better," said
$\\'itzcr. Bud Marquette, rorl'.!ler coach of the
Long Beach SCA TS gymnastle1 ag·
gregatlon, has retired from coaching
duties and II replaced by Dan SperaW
of Long Beach. •
Marquette's top product waa Cetby
Rigby Masoii -and he's got a future
bnok a:em In Kyle Gayner or Costa
l\fesa, .mo could well be on the 1971
Olympic te1m.
Australia downed Tori Frofz, S-7, 6-4,
6-1. and No. 7 Julie l·Tcldtfian of London.
England won by default over Janet Haas.
Miss Haas suHi:red a left ankle sprain
Sunday.
T\na Zwaan, ~ from the Netherlands,
Jost the first set to Valerie Ziegenfuss
of Mission Vie!jo, but came back to
win the fioal 'tWO sets And the matcl? u , &-01 6-l.
the Difieren~e~ Says Shula
r wouldn't have COO:.'Jidcred such
thought sane a few months ago, but
the way things have gone so far ln
!he 1973 rootbo\l ~n it lookJ like
UCLA has a standout shot at knocking
off USC when the:y collide Nov. 24.
Eorlicr it seemed that with the passing
of Pat lladen and the running of Anthony
011.vis and Allen C8rte!r, USC would
be too polcnt for anyone to play on
CR!L_ tenns.
But ~llhoma Ms already di$p1"0v¢
that belief.
----·----
e Amrltraj Wf11•
NE\V DELHI -Vijay Amrilraj led
the way Into the quarler-rinfll!I of the
Indian Grand Prix lennls chnmpionships,
<'as\ly beating 0111 Brown of San Lui5
Obispo 6-3, 6·3 In a first·round m<1tch
Monday.
No. i Brian GotUricrl nf Fort
Lauderdale had a scare in the fi ril t
set of his match agaiMt Bidul Goswami
or lodia, but came oo to wln 9-8, 6-2.
CLEVELAND ( ~ P ) -"There: were
no fancy plays, just bead on head,"
said Cle\•eland Browns middle linebacker
Bob Babich. "In a game like that
something had to break, an d
unfortunately it broke against us.''
Dabich's comment came moment!!
rifl er the J\tianu Dolphins handed the
Uro\vn~ !heir second defeat nf the scn!W>n.
17·9, in a National Football League game
i\londny night.
"Mercury J\forris' run and J\.tike
Knl"n's interception \~·ere the big plays,'·
Uolphins coach Don Shula·said.
With Jhe Browns ahead 6-3, Morris
~---·--.----·--~ -.----
'
broke away for a 70 yard gallop ln
the third period and put the ball on
the Cleveland nine-yard line. Three plays
later Larry C."lonka 1ve nt in from the
two and put the Dolphin! aht'ad ror
good.
"'He l!he Bro"ns· Ch.1rt'nce Sto11 1
"'<ilkt'<I u1> lo m<'." !\1orris said ... ll
should h1l\ol' tx>e11 ..i tout·hdo\1·n I dirln't
know how closf' lk' wa-. or T \vould
havr sliff-nrmcd hi m."
llrown~ h11cback('r Charh(' llall ~aid,
""·c hild him (~lorr1s l cornered and
he caught our pursuit going the wrong
way. ll was a sweep to the left, he
~topped, pl11nt"d his feet and a 1t back.
Jtc h:is thr speed to !urn it on ."
Kolen intcrc('ptr.d quartt-rback ~·1lke
Phi[>!)."' p.'lss and r<'tumed it 29 yards,
givi ni;: lhl' Dol phin!! fi rst nnd ten on
!hr Rro\1·11!-i' !6 \V1th 6:41 left on the
('\OCk
C1'0nk:i. 11!~0 i;.::unC'<I 114 ~·t1rds for
!he OUlp hin•. 1110\"t•d the hall lo !he
1\\0. lhrn 11 cnt 1n for his ~('cond
touchdo,1n or th(' night tfl put il out
of ri':ich for th<' Browos.
.. Tht•y \\"Crc 1n zone rovrragc," Kolen
!>a id of the inl <'rcrption. "The ball was
not thro"'n th:tt welt ·•
Hall ~id "I still thouglt v.11 could
win it until the interecption. 'The
intercepUoit was the big play."
Al the time of the lnlercept.ion the
Browns were down 1i..9. :
This is the third time this !ICasort
the Rro1m s h.a\'e failed to score "
touchdown . Don Cockroft kicked fif'ld
RO..'llll of 30, 42 aod 35 yards for tlwt
RmtA·ns .
··1 don't really k"°"'' "'·hy we can1
gel into !ho end tOn<'." f-'hlpps ~al~
"l'll have to 1ake !he b111me ror aom~
bad plAy<alling. I KUCJ\." tMt:s where
my lack of ex:pcrience comes ln."
-'
I
Jf DAILY PILOT Tundif, Octobtr lb, 2q73
Attention Centers Around , I , t
P urnell Family's
01.der Brothers Help
Keep Tradition Alive
By ROGER CARLSON than anyone else .•. but none °' .. oio11v Pli.t •••" less either."
Brea h&.'1 had its Ledbetters, The 25-year~ld P u·r n e 11
Garden Grove its Rass-rates his youngest brother bet·
mu.ssens, Westminster its ter than be or Rob Y;ere as
Aldridges and Laguna Beach seniors in high school.
its ,..Ohvers down the years .. Rick is bigger (6-3, 195)
in Orange Coun1y prep foot-and older than we were as ·
ball . se niors. Ai'ld he's had the
And there's a ramlly combo benefit of older t:rothen giv·
in Huntington Beach . t h a t i.ng him advice and showing ;;'
.seems to join that select group him how to do things even
-the Purnells. at home. •"'-
'lbete are three of them "He's been 1n a really fine
and t.hey've all played center. football program and bad twu
In addition, Russ, the oldest years of starting experience r·
at 25, Is assisting at Edbon on the frosh and sophomore
High School where his brother level.
Rick is the starting center. •·He was also involved in
Rob, wbo prepped at Hun-defense," says Russ. Rob "'.'111
tington Beach and finished his point out that he's leaving
rollege career at Cal ls work-his feet too early ... little
ing: ~on his mi;lSter's degree things like ttiat can help." ·
at Southern California.· The Purnells' dad, Russ Sr.,
Russ also prepped at Hun-• \\'as a gridder and coach
tington &sch and went on himself. having pl a y e d
to Orange Coast College and quarterback in high school at
Whittier College. East St. Louis and having
RJck figures to continue his guided a pee-wee football
education at Orange Coast team (80-pounds) to the state
College, where he used to fight championship in T.eraa before
with Mart Jenkins ( t h e the Pumells migrated to Hun-
Cent er s
-'fOW1JU,,_.l!rof,her of the Jate tington Beach eight years ago. -· :ci BflP~~ to ~·' 0n-the practice field and
be the ball boy. In the games there seems to
__ Right-Dow. however, the ae. be little effect w!th. a brother
-tion: is at Edison High where in the starting hneup and
the Chargers are currently the another on· the s I d e I i n e s
No. 7 team in Orange County coeching. .
and are considered a threat 'l1le only chiding Rick ... gets
to Santa Ana Valley in the is from his teammates off
Irvine ·League championship lhe field in the locker room.
race. . The junior Purnell is rangy
And for Rick, although lhere at 6-3 and &lss says the thlng
are divlderfds when you've got he needs to wOrk' on most
a couple of older brothers to is sustainillg his blocks.
help yoo, there's also a price "It's a matter of keeping
to pay. .~ his rear end down, head up
Russ admits a tendency to and fee t under him," says
go a little harder on ' his Russ.' "Rick's pass blocking
brother in practice. "I think well an d he bas pretty .good
I look for mOre things with reactions because of the
Rick," says Russ, "because basketball experience he's also
J don't. want anyone saying picked up.
coach Purnell yelled at me "But when he fires out he
ROBB PURNELL -As he looked centering the ball ..
to former Westminster High QB Dave Penhall when
the two played for .California.
but be didn't yell at Rick has a tendency to leave hLs ••ii
for doing the same thing. feet behind him."
"And lt's not a matter of But that's about the only
punishing Rick more for doing thing Rick is behind ln holding
aome:thing w r o n g . • . . I ur his end of the long line
wouldn't ask him to· do more o Pumells.
First-y~~ Power
·El Toro Wins
'On Grid Basics
By HANK WESCH
Of 1119 O.llr ,. ... Sl•tf
"Om good thing that will
come out of this, I think, il
we'U be more prepared
next 11ear to face a varaity
schedule since we'll know
exactly what it takes tQ.win
at that lewl"-Dana Hills
coach· Ton_y Leon, fal.I 1972.
"We'll n't! in much better
shape next year for not
ptaying a varsity schedule,
mainly because of tlie me71.
tal aspects u11d winning at-
titude our players will
have,"-EI Toro lligh coach
Mack ~foore, fall 1973.
There are twO options open
to a new school fielding it!
first football team. and the
schools that have opened in
the pallt two years in the
Orange Coast area have taken
diverse approaches.
Dana Hills sent last year's
team against varsity rom·
petition and a full schedule
of Orange League teams. The
Dolphins went ().9 and only
recently won !he flrst game
ln the s,cbool's history.
Et Toro ls tackling a slate
of sman varsity teams, other
first • year antts a n d Junior
vanity squad!. The Chargers
won their nm four games.
impre!sively and may be on
the \\'8Y to an undefeated
season and a spot in the CIF
l·A playoffll.
' ·-
' Toro coach Mack Moort and
his team are weekly providing
powerful evidence in favor of
the latter approach.
"I beUeve that as athletics
go, so goes the school," Moore
says. "Sometimes the tail does
wag the dog.
"There's no doubt what has
happened so far haJ been a
big boost for our students,
the parents and the whole
area down bere.
'"'Some people say losing
teaches you things. The only
thing I think it teaches ls
how te> lose. I'd rather com-
pete aga'inst teams we · have
a chance to beat than fight
a losing batUe each week."
Moore characterizes what
has happened this season at
El Toro as only a minor
surprise to him. He credits
the attitude of the players and
a lot of hard Work for the
success.
The Chargers started their
season with an upset, lH vic-
tory over Army-Navy, the
defending San Diego ClF l·A
champion, and have averaged
28 poUlts per game 1• ..,.,.
ces.sive wtns.
"We're not really an ex·
ceptional first-year team,"
~1oorc acknowledges. "If there
Is anylhing exceptional about
this team irs the altitude of
the players -they really want
to pl.iy.
"\Ve have an exception run-
'
. ., ning back In Chuck Van Liev•. b.':":o.i ,
Though !he Ions -r a n ~ c
merits of the tv;o approaches
cuo he dcb<1tcd. the short·tcrn1
effects arc rc<1dily evident. El he could play on any team
in Orange County, and some RICK PURNELL -As he looks in a starting role
linemen who are going to be for the Edison lligh Chargers. A't 6-3, 195, he's the
Grid Poll
(
good but I wouldn 't classify largest of the brothers.
as exceptional right now.'' ---"--------------------
"The linemen really surpris-
ed us in the-first game with
the way they came off the
ball. we really were better
than Army-Navy in t h a t
aspect. Uke everyone else
•they 've developed i;ince then."
The Chargers run out of the
I rormJlion. have n nucleus
of fivr runn lnJ;: phiys and four
pas~ pattcms and aren.'t
fia~h.v in any \\'Hy. Tht• 175-
pound V11in Liew ill the ball1S
of the Attack. with stashing
runs at the tackles and up
lht mlddlt. Sprinter Clyde
(Ste BASICS, Page 171
Area Prep Football
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Wins Grid I
Pickeroo
Doris Lyoa of 3128 Boltqn
Way tn Costa ft.fesa picked ~
2S out of 30 football games
~rrectly ~ win . th~ Dally
Pilot's Pipkin ~lckeroo ~ ·
test for laat week and will ·
receive $50 for her cl:roris.
Four other entrants came '
up one correci pick bebbid
the winner and tbe everitUal .
piacinsl bad to be detehblned
by the tiebreaker · system.'
Mike Sbepard>oo ol Newport
Beach's guess of 1,0. was
closest to the over 1,'20l'.tpoints
scored 1n the game& to take
second. Third place ·,.ent to
Frank Oviedo ol HunUngton
Beach, lo!ichael ~ ·o1
Newport Beach, and T.R.
Hays ·of Costa Mesa. ' . . rl.,lcets tm ·Sale
Football
Top Ten
For County
Santa Ana vaney and
Servile maintained their 1·2
status while Founta1D. Valley
jumped from eigbth to fourth
In the Daily Pilot's rankings
of Orange County prep football
teams al'ter four weeks of
the season.
Santa Ana Valley's 40-14 vie·
tory over Costa Mesa and
Servite's '2l-O TOmp over
Alhambta were gOod eoough
to keep •hem atop the s.tand·
ings, while Fountain Valley's
jump was based on a 28"24
victory over previously rourth
ranked Edison.
Newport Harbor maintained
the No. 3 spot wUh lls victory
over Westminster.
ORANGE COUNTY TOP 10
Pos. Team, Record Pon.It&
I. SA Valley (4-0) "9
2. Servile ( 4-0 I 45 ·
3. Newporl Har!J!>r (I.I) 41
4. FountaJn Valley {J.l) U
5. Loara (3-1) 27
6. Villa Park (4-0 ) 21
7 . .t;dJs011 (3-11 20
9. Sonia Ana (2·1-ll 13
10. Tustin (J.-0.IJ 5
Others : Santiago. SooOra . 1':1 Tnrci.
Orange Coa.t Area Top Tbrte
I. Newport Jla rbor (4-0) 25
2. Fountain Valley (3-1) 20
. .
... __ . ._
ll41 H_... IW.. C.M.
54M410
. . . ''The best
placelQ
borrow
$2,000-
' is where . ' I
$2,
'
Where's !he bes! place to 1181 your penlOl\ltJ l!Jen? Wl*9'
a businessman goes for a blg loan r for his company. \\II,
make loans to some of America's largest companies. Millions of dolllla
at a ·ume." For lhlngs like cargo ships. New lacto~es. -o1811on1,
But fot 1111 !he millions we lend lo bus!,,_ we lend Just • llQCh to
people like you. Becauae we .feel Ille reasons you need money .. •
lmpor1ant 8' Iha reaaona a big COIT1'8'1Y needs money,
Need cash lo pay Off blllll'I To taka a wCallon? To meal m -
ganc;y'I Come see Us. The people who und8ratand al kinda cl money ·
problem& Commerclal Credit.
~Commercial Credit
The best M)' IO IJprrow • thouund 11 lrom !he people who lond mllllor&
Costa ?.'l~sn
Santa Ana
\Vestminst.er
• ' 370 E. 17th Street
• 1228 E. 17th St.
• 6793 Westminster Blvd.
• 645-8700
• 047-5871
• 894-4461
f
I
Cftdlt Llf• lll9',lrl11tt A•all•l>lt to .:n.n.i. 8orrowtn •l Crout! Rt.~
• Om!!Mft\ll Cffdlt Pl•fl. f1'f(lptl(IPltt.I 3. Edi"'1 (3-1) 15•1--------
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th
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•
•
Pilot Pigskin
PICKEROO ' . • Sponsored By
DAILY PILOT
s20 ' For Wt1kly Second
Place Winner
s10
'
Each for Third, Foutlh
and Fifth Place Winners
Here's how you can be t pi9skin prophet for profit.
Weekly cash prizes are. offered to winnlrs• of tht
Pil·ot Pigskin Pickeroo game. To}' winner each week
9ets $50 in c•sh. Second place winner gets $20. in
cash and third , fourth ani:I fihh pl•c• .winners ••ch
get $10 in cash. All "cash" ectu1lly +.. ~•liv•r•d te
winners in the form of ch1ck1 fo be plclcM up by
winners 1t OM of the I 0 perticipetin9 memb•ts of
the H1rbor Boulev1rd of Cers essocietion. Checb
for this wee~'s contest will be preper.d by:·
r f , • Dave Ron Pontiac
2840 tiLrb9r Blvd., Costa· Me. . . .
The I 0 participating auto dealenhips elon9 Coste
Mese11 "Harbor loulev1rd of .. C.n" Me: AtN•
Chrysler-Plymouth; Beuer Buick, Connell Chevrolet,
Costa Me sa Datsun, Dave Ross Poritiac, Johnson &
Son Lincoln -M1rcu.ry, Miracle Mezde, Naber• Cedillac,
Theodor• Robins Ford and University Old1mobile.
Wetch for this player's form •1ich week In the DAILY
PILOT Sports Section. Circle the team you thhtlc Wiii
win in each pairing ·in the list of 10 9eme1 end se11d in
the play,er's form entry ,bl1nlt or '•' rea10,neble ia,c·
simile. Then watch the DAILY .PILOT sports pages for
each week's list of five ,..innen. . .. •
RULES
J. '"""' tllt •:"!*-......• L,...... .......... tf II ...... ""'All ............................................. ....,.,., .. • •-'""',,... ........... lln ... ..,. ................ .,...
'' • ~ ••• , C'llllMll lfl!ll& ...... ........_
I, 5Mll II tf: I'll.OT l'IOSIUN PICICl•OO CONTUT, • ...,. °'919,,._., P.O. k• !Ml, C.11 MeM, c;A. l'llQrl.. ' •
I. Only -t11lry ,_ ,.,_ ~ ..ctt ..... C.....;..,. '" ... 1-1 ltlll CMllMI. tfflcllll lftrf ,.,~....,,,_ ................ I""" I ......
. Nclresi ., tl!lltf ..,.,...,. Md ~ ........,., ..., ~ ....-•trtn ,.... Mtce:•lll. OlddM .. JNlt ...... ,... _, .....
C ...... II flMil Illy 111.CMl .. llltt. ' '-•nt:1el -'* .. lilll'lnlrt1t• ll9f 111w ,_.. ,,_..,. A.M. w ..-lra ...._. '9 11M IM.U.Y ,l"ILOT dee., 6 l'.M. ~.
S. hf1id,.M119 .,_..., _,...., ........,,_ -MfC.'t PllOT I ;ut11• allf !Mir l111mM111e 1_91'ft11MI 11'1 1191' ......... It .......
6. Tiit llt:AICl8 llANIC MUST II ,IU.10 "' ff INTaY IS WHO.
... --------.. ENTRY 8LAJWK I Clrclt t•am1 you think wlll win this ~k'• l•IMI I
(homt fHm ii tt(eM eM 111f911J I Green Bay vs Los AllCJ•les I
I NY Giants vs Dallas I
Baltimore YI Dtitrolt I St. Louis YI w~ I
T1nn11Sff YI Alabama I I UCLA vs W,ashlngtoll State
I .9regon YI ~ •.
Stanford vs WcishlllC)ton I Wl~onsln YI MkMIND I
Oregon State YI Cal I I Y~I· YS Col.untla I Auburn vs ~ Tech I ·
I . Mississippi YI Florida I
North Ca...rlna YI Tulane
I Colorachr"vs Ok+mo I '\, l>artmouth YI itrOWn I Kansas vs Nelwoska I
I Southwestem YI $addlebaCk I
Cypress vs Golden ·west I Orange Coast YI Fullertoii I
HuntlllC)tan Beach ~ Westlnl I I. Los Alamitos YI Con1na del Mar ·
I Anaheim vs Wpstminster I ;
Mater Del YI St. Paul I University vs Danci Hlh I
Costa Mesa vs Edison I I Fountain Vall~y . YI ~cla I San Clemente vs Laguna Beach I
Marina vs Newport I Saddltback vs M111lon Vleio I
, ,,. ••UKll -MY --... ftle ..... -........ --I "' .... "'"" ............. -----------. I •.
• Nam•
~porfS
Calendar
I Addr'ltl
I
I
J K'w Like To I . .
~''~2:-.~~....:...~~~~~~--''~'~~~-..-1 · _ ... I '':ton• ..---... _ ... __ _ Ask Aluly
--
0
..
Tund'1, Octobtf lb, 1973 DAILY PILOT l l
MUTUAL FUNDS
.
""'I" 1•'41 ) \.. 1; , ..
•
J8 DAILY PILOT
Cutoffs
Of Power
Threaten
SAN l'RANCISCO (U PI) -
lntenuption!l of po'ver to
Northcm California homes
v.'OUld come only as a "last re-
sort" in e:ises ol fuel emer~
gcncies. the Pacific Gas &
Eleetric Co. says.
Ellt'rgy conservation plans
riled !\londay by the 'utility
said any cutoff of power to
residents 'A-'OU!d be for short
peri ods and in specified areas
by sequence.
1 ' THE INTERRUPTIONS
\\'OU!d be of a short enough
duration that the contents of
a freezer would not be likely
to melt," a co mpany
spokt'Sman said.
Acting in response to a PUC
order to present an emergency
pi on. the utility said there were
three increasingly harsh steps
wt?ich would be undertaken
one after another to meet an
energy shortage, .with Jnter-
ruplionS to home service be-
ing a further final step. 'Ibese were:
-A conservation program
Urging wise and efficient use
of energy.
-Voluntary curtailment of
electric use by I a r g e
commercial and industrial
customers.
-A request that the slate
Public Utilities CommiSsion
order customers to reduce
electric use by a Certain
percentage and p r o v i d e
penalties for those who fail
to comply. ·
,
IN trn, PG&E used three
million barrels· of oil in its
electrical generating plants
and this will jump to 45.4
million barrels in 1974, said
Malcolm H. Furbish, assistant
general counsel for lhe utility.
'"l'his is because we lost
a great deal of the supply
of natural gas ·that "'e
-anticij>ateiLwe would-have Jn
1974," he said.
Another 12 million barrels
of oil would be needed, he
said, because an anticipated
nuclear power plant would not
be available in 1974.
Earnings U_p
AtBofA
Corporation
Spedal lo the Dally Piiot
·.~ ;SA,N FRANCISCO -
BinkAmerita Corp. Monday
reported gains in earnings,.
deposits and resources for the
first three quarters of 1973.
Consolidated income before
securities transactions for the
nine montM ended Sept. 30
increased by 14.3 percent to
$154,387 ,000, or $2.24 per share,
compared with $135,119,000, or
$1.96 per share in 1972, Presi·
dent A. W. Clausen said.
"THE GAIN in earnings was
well ctistributed over the wide
range or our activities,"
Clausen said, "with both
domestic and intematlonally
based operations contributing
to the increase."
Profits accrued from the
revaluation of overseas in·
vestments as a result of cur-
rency realign~nts were on
a conservative basis and not
a material factor in the
overall improvement of earn-
ings, he added.
Clausen further sai d that
these earnings figures reflect
the effect or a $20 million
charge lo the reserve for
possible loan losses in con·
hec tion \Vith Ban k of Amt"rica
NT&SA ·s !oans to l'olemorC"X
Corp. and that furthe r cha rges
"''ill be made as and \\~1en
appropria te. Bank of ,\n1ericu
is the principal subsidiary or
BankAmerica Corp.
PROFITS 0 N
101aled St,692:000.
with $3,050,!XXl fo r
period last year.
' . . I securities
con1pa red
the same
mobile
phone
---·---
place a receive
telephone calls
in your car --·--DO 1k•n•c ---·---
No Otpit•! l~w•U11,.111
Mo"tk to lolo"tfi lt.•~••I 1,,;,
OR~NGf•CIJUN~Y
nAOIO'TELEPHONE
Sf ll VICf 1~c
401 s. Soota k,
Santo Ano
835-8305
Tund.u, Oc.toblr 14, 1973
••• Etteet Toda1
Second Gasoline
Boost Approved
By Ute AslOdated ~n
Motorist• found b i g h r r
gasoline prices a t m a n y
service stations today, the
result ol. new price action by
the C.Ost of Llvtng Council.
The council Monday all but
abandoned the rtg!d gasollne
pr!Ce ceilings tbat had drawn
extensive complaints from
gasoline retailers.
represents many g 1 so 11 n e
dealers, said the cocmeU's
actions "will give dealers a
great dea1 of the relief they
needed."
Indeperidenl gasollne dealers
In Northern Calllogtla planned
to pass along some higher
wholesale gasoline coats.
''THE COST OF LMng
Council ts finally listening to
us, especially since " t be
closures that dramatiied our
plight," l!U<I Di<!lrlch, an
Air Bag
Discou"'t
ClllCAGQ (UPjl -The
Allstate In1urance
Company llJ1ll<IW1<tld lodaJ
It will glve a 30 perce11t
dil!COWlt 00 medical and
n<Hault personal Injury
coverages for ley private
1974 model -· cu wJlh a federally approved
air bag tafety ll)'ltem.
Chaltman Archie R. Boe
said "recent field testinJ
and development efforta
by some autom'ob t le
manufacturers have
resulted In a reliable
system."
' In s.ta!es without no-f~ Wurance, the
con'lipuy·aald 1avlng1
-id .Initially be from l3
to $7 a year.
THE COUNCD.. said about
one-third of the n at I on' .s
estimated 185,000 independent
gasoline staUons will be abJe
to increase prices ·from one-
tenth of a cent to 11h cents
per gallon.
Orinda gasoline retailer and ,_ ________ _,
a leader of the California
ft will be the second
authorized price i n c r e a s e
within a month Co~ some
dealers.
Service Station Aseoclation,
said Monday. w1ig Bericli
lt(ay Stage
China Show
•
fuletime -.
Toy Safety
Goal Set
WASIUNGTON (UPI)
The aovernmeot has launched
a campt1p to get d&n&erous
lo)'ll off the lbelvea bet_. ,
now.-aod Qrlstmaa.
The c. .. umer Product s.f ..
ty commJ.uJon .. Id that
special toy safety coordinators
ln each of its regional offices
will conduct publicity and
educational campaigns ag~t
toy baur<ls. Volunte<n will
visit retail ...... 'to . make
sure none of the 1,!IOO '°1'
alttady ~by the pern-
ment Is belng sold.
TUE OQMM]!mON said the
natloowlde ln>pectiM beprl
Oct. 1 and will cicmtlam
through the Christmas teUOD.1 ,
the three-month period in
which 70 to 8Q percent of
all toys are sold each year
In the United States.
Only those retailers
receiving wbolesaJe !:;line
price increases "since • 28
-the date or the last councl1-
approved price hike -can
take advantage of the new
retail pfice increase
authorization.
Wholesale price increases
since the last ceiling price
hike on Sept. 28 that can be
passed along by Northern
Ca!Uomla dealers lnc!ud< .1
of a cent at Cbe:vron atations, .•
.8 of a qept at Shell staUons
and a mulmum of LS _,
at .Arco.stations.
on. COMPANY spokesmeo
The ~IJI will includo
radio and television ~lie
service ~ti I u ~
Englilh and SOonlsll. lo ... -
mind pert111S <if the bmrdl, '
LOS ANGELES (AP)---andpost<ncanylllgtbe"""",
Backers of a propooed fair on post offioe walls.
Bouncing Bedroonis -THE COUNCIL al.,
promised dealers the right to
automatically increase prices
·after Nov. 1 to cover any
future increases in wholesale
gasoline costs. This automatic
passlhrougb had been a major
demaiid of retailUs, a number
of .:whop::a. closed stations to
pnitest regulations t h e y
viewed as discriminatory. -
explained that the decision featuring trade and cu1tural VOLUNTEER l?OR£.le\ltl
applies only to independent 'Items from mainland China Inspectors will be ucruited -
retailers because company· say an invitation to st2ge web from local conllUlDer groups
owned ·stations are pennitted a show in Long Beach will by the .regional officea In
to pass on wholesale price be extended to the Chinese Atlanta, Boston, C!: bl t a Co , ' Model demonstrates spring ii:t 14 X 18 foot, zjp-up, ~oam Latex bed in rooril
of rubber noors, walls, furniture and light fixtures at International Design
Show ii) San Francisco. This B.F. Goodrich Co. entry-The Environmental
Rubber Room - is feted as a peek in Rubber Room -is touted as a peek in
hikes without wailing: for a Cleveland, Dallas, Denver, eo.t of IJving Council ruling. office in Washington.. Kansas City, Lo3 An.lelee,
Ken Davis, president of the The Los Angeles County Minn~!~ New Orfeans,
San Jose chapter of the Economic Dev e I 0 pm en t New YOrk, San Franclaoo ud
National Service St at Ion s.e._tUe._ -
Easing Oil Crisis • in U.S • Olarles Binsted, president
of the National COngres,, of
Petroleum Retailers, which
Dealer$ Asibctai101r said that -Program, private bllsmeasmen The comml•s!on said there
lo stay 1n ~. many aoid local govermiients are .,. 131,000 toy-relatacl ac-
dealers already ucoeded the · _ · ddentl each ,.ar -celllnp by lhree cenls or ._rn, tbt "P"~• P 0 ,. d ..,.,,p lo require ...,fllllCY
more. exhlbWon. room trea~t.
Stems on Combined Efforts
can help by promoting • .,, eronomic growth and high Complete .Mid .. day· American-Stock List . By SYLVIA PORTER
Americans, as individual
automobile owners. can help
-by buying and using lighter
cars, by organizing and sup-
porting automobile commuler
pools, by learning and obeying
the rules for better main-
tenance of our cars.
We , as individual
homeowners, can belp too by
heeding the calls for more
economical heating of our
r.;ai homes in
'"inter, by
less wasteful
improvement In mass transil. standards of living, wei•--------------------------------------------..1 ' in the U.S .. both in our rail Americans have been prodigal ~
~nd bus systems. And when with resources that once
\\·e increase our use of mass seemed limitless. But enefay e NEW YOJll( (UPtJ , Vot Nfl YOl. · Nfl Vef. Ntt y... Nft ¥11. = transit, we will benefit again resourcesaswellasair,water Fa11-1no•~or1cn""a. Ws1Cflt. 1.lallCM.,,, .... °" LM Liii •
b . ts and bl fi 'l .Amerlc.eft $l«tl£nMnvf: l!l!i--.0 1---\11· !lllCJrA ,06 S n,c,. ·•-':fl.·• "" _,,. • ----~ .. -Y saving money on our cos usa e space are lRl e 11 6 1t1 , '" • 11~ hK ,,.... _...... ..,... Ut-. • • '*' t" •• M •
of transportation. and the war crisis in tbe "Mid· ''· Lasi t::, • 1111 :JSb 1 ,.,.._·" •1trpt .11d : U::: t .,. ~ ii' »11o-Mo ~ • s ': .~ '"""""' • I "'"·" • __. ,._ -, .,·2! ', • ~'!:_ "'• Incl a;: 122 1~ \It ~· • ....,_. \i '°' l,M 1 ,,.._ "" ·,"°i ·•• "'~•,•[•, ,_ And our petroleum com-die East '" only part of the Mv eo ... , ,. • ~ ~ , •--Jl: " I N ••• 1 -Iii -~ ··~ "'••• """°"''" I 1.1'fl ••• 12 +\It . -••• .,.__.. ',tt~'°' l panies can help by doing their problem." ~ "'..:::. l; I""-·" vl!TOllC-10 '*'' ru 1 1 ,,..., ·I.ii wt " ••• htM i -~ utmost to e ......... .....i tbelr -From the best av";, .. i..le A<ti-llldst 2 M ••• lotc ,Ofll; 3' ~·~ ~~ d ~"' .,c:.r,:=..,. fl ""+'\.\ :--"'. ·1 ~ •. !! , ::-. ', .. .-..... ""4'<W ......... fl.-1 Mo-I'll J~°r:r, l T':;' ~ It lltty llW I Mio '5 -l'.-o.I U _ .. refin....., capacities, by '°"'"'•it 1's ~--ted that MNlrtU.JO :t m. ··· •U.L:f1t ll ll -'" .,.., c...-• ,.,._·-=::.• W-..... t "''J c.:l\.UJUI ~ ... ~It 12 11\lt--llMIMlll 1 "'*-"-· t• -... ll-Olli S ~1' ti 1~ boosting their volume of Im· the known oil reserves in the -· r ... DY 1 •*-"' m 1:n s"'+ "' '"""'"" M S4 ,.-!. 11:11...,.· Pr 11 w ... 5" •.,~ j ,. • • , •-• l: ; .-...-. Inc 11 2 + "" "' •P .20 2 SYI+ \'I :it I Jf11i.-11:"' Arie Cit 1 1 -\\ OI• -'" ·ported oils and gas, by world are mostly ln the Middle An11 c .. ~ 11 •'h--v.: hick u11 ~ 1 • -¥J • 11:1:,.. I 11¥1 Eli .... 11• ... f ,.._ chin 1 ll 1 E "••~· A11tt11 • ....., 1 1,,.. tk1 wo.1d 1s 11111+ '°"' ~ 5P' I It:" Kl 1-,u u111o-·~ l'•ttll!.• I·" . ,,_ ... it'ill ••• , sear gconsan y or new ast.Specifically,the~ "'',...••• 1 ·· ·:·: ''*Mii 1 J.··'· IOlltii.i& ,,..... !~ T!f 111--.·'""',.,.,. ~ .. ,. :'i"'· ,.,~·Ii
sources of energy. East bas more than 50 ptr.. ~~~a.~ , ~ .. t -,,& 1i ,, ~ :::' 1Nilil '' =:,'ii R=.~tfii 1' m-""· "~~ J ._·Wi ...,.<. .1.1...-.• •
aus,·er ~~~ •. BUT NO matter what all chaenv\e;~thael ietcebnltocresnae'!_~e· ~l~:!c~ ~ i,·~ .. :~'c1:i=:J~ ; 1141+·~ ,!:a11l·,.! »Ill+!!:::.,_.,,.'-+:-.~. rai'Ci tt'"°.~; W-"' .... ..,,...,.. ' • .a.ueoncp wt t ,.,. .... ,... c1 .. ,,,,.. , ' : •llll•JDio )It " ff:::; ir R..n. • ,JE 4' l"lllllTel '' ., ••• t
t1orun· g uno'ts of us. do -no matter h.ow mai'nf urope has 2 per~ A11~A1r1~ l •~v.· 11c .. K.t1o 21 1m+'~ F~~wt , ,._ ilwMll , ... ,._...., 74 ,-....,,.. • ll 'lf -Al199A win 1 1 ltmA11 .1' I 4\oli ... · ,..,,,(enJI J.IO" Yo L.ef'IMlk U1 J ~ PM l'laltk I .... ... ... ... .,t• . -
-wt-summer.,-1YLIDcr.ea,,f.0 Dur ... prOOuction-cent · Africa 16percent· the !l:r~,~~t~ : ~:~ ll~·=· .~·1~i!-:;:•"-'Mo,,,~l\'.t':. 11 •· · tt 1~-i , ·~l::, J~,"" ., .. 'l -" by slashina and refmery output -the US '. 1 . ' la ' A1pn1 Indus i J _..,. c'"'°" 111 , 1~"' , ~ •• 5 ,,__ ~ •• ,. -·:.:. Pl..._.. M 1 o -"' " .IM • ·~ • world w'ofl be dependent lor · ., inc ud. 1ng A ska. am.ere Alie< Corp 3 1s.16 .. 1.16 t•r.xlM·M 1 ,.._..,. , ... • M •, ........ w; It ,,._; MY•.-1• M+... City .n j -
many years on the Middle percen. · . a~a a. exico, Allfc c11w1· 1 ~+ .,.. 1op1y .os. 1· Rio-14 Ft=... ··· ;,. 1s • -.., -1~ :n • -... H .21 ,. "'•"' our wmeces-5 t c d M A1~c ep p1 1 , -\4 •MKO .>Clb i • -.,. f"tMlr.sN ·21 , 10 ·=fb ,, 1• ,..._."' auc....,.. 11 ...._ ~ l!tK,... :av.-
'°•nit electricity
year.
sary con· Eastfor•·tsoil. the c.ar1bbean .and South Atco.ipf3¥01u111sw. ... •t:::.,..u •l~h~'r::'.t1~·.40 '41'"-•• I~"' 112*-'4 titj-"' ou-pt1· "" oJ A l lh t Am(o lncht II JV, ••• C "s .~ .,._ F~!t'l-r"< ,.• >•'•,._+ L...s. to ,. _ "' Plaui ~-2 1"-"' 1'2'11 ••• -· ~· And th pt· f lb mer1can coun nes-e res AmH1u w11 ult 1~"' ..itt.<1 .111 o '"'' ...._ wts u 2i\lo Pl"" 1111& .1. 1 n.+"' h •1 throughout the e eru ion o e Ame111rt .50 1 '""+"' 011Mii1 .5' 1• 1~·~· '"'1Kllf.JOa 1 11 ••• L1.a.c..-111 " -·~ Plm••• 1 '"-"' ""~ ··&• I . . . of the Western Hemisphere ArnButP.?O 1 711~'"' u111.1Jb 3 ,.,.. Fron11.,Alf 4 5'111 ·· l..-l!M .» 1 Ml'I .,. ~IMtwtl 1 ~-•C-A atest Middle East .crisis -another7percent. ACnMt11wt Ill lV•--\.t ~~,:11~ ... ,.J'lll+·~ ft'Ol'ltAlrwsCf~~ lMHtllC. 2 J ... ~ •' m ... -~ .. -...
BY DOING these simple,
easy things, we not only will
contribute toward easing of
our very real energy crisis.
We also will substantially
reduce our coot of living. And
the changes involved in the
way we live and work ·will
not be unpleasant. Quite the
contrary.
At the same lim e.
governments at every level
-cit y. state and federal
Specialty
Shops Get
Laguna OK
The I.o!1guna Beach Board or Adjustment has approved
the mul li·million dollar "Lunl·
her Yard" specialty shop conl-
plcx for the site of the Laguna
Lumber c:ompany property in
downtown Lagunn
forces us to lace !hos e•. _ , . AmF111.01b 12 19v.+ \'I 11 .... ', •,-" _, ,;;-c. ,, _ • t#i '°'" 4 s.-""'· __J'llN,. , _,,, •••. ·-~ $t ·-_ ·• "hatmghtbe""meofthe AFJetc~ .... 'l)(; ··· oi~.ISb • ... .... .... u ,.._. "R+\41.......... ,.,._ -T-ceedinglydelicatereality. " ?I ""' AmG!rlFMI 3 1 ....... Clitlll .10. 3 .... 1:: •1••1 ci . ,,,.._~ i...1-.T-. f ~··~ °' !"-""' T.-oi--' .......
."We m"•l make new and answers. ...rt11..i1-P1c r··•v.·-:.: om1111eorn 1,,' ~. :i,:-r.~:i;:· ~ ~~ ~=•~ Ml 21..._\Ct Po!Wrll!Str t V.-\Ct T.clll'ICIW ti~"; ...., Amlvll .2MI 10 I*-1' Comb EQUJf -1 • •~ ..... .,... J 10--\Ct P.l'AlntOll a 2 ...M-·~ f~· <o j _,..._ "-.>.>MlaA .J3 • .1 •• ,. omlllCO 1 ~ V. · -... "LlfKol -Anl 1 2"'+' t rtt eor. • -•.. · • Iii • -~ Herculean efforts to <1vercome CERTAINLY, THE use of AMGon .10c1 5 '"" Comt•m .11 " u + >.r.· ""' .t• • 1~"" ~'•• ,, ••~-. ~ M JO Mv. •.. "" · m 1111-l'I' APr•c .OSb s 3v.:::eom1M .lo0g 1 U -V. llCIN.411 ••1:v,-+"' as~ ,.... .. •1s. T.-c.t., ..... our shortages on a permanent more coal -both directly Am Rtc.Grp 12 "'"-,,,_ 1• 1v.-"i nEd Serv 2 • . . . ~1,, · 1 1 ..,_ \\ ~ ·11511 1t ~ : T-1 .&. 2 ""'-"
ba · " ed J K J Ams.I.iv ti · 1 r,._ \lo Corn111 ""vc 1 11Wo ••• ~ • 2\\-"" ttt•'I< ,!'.. tO l\<io--"' "' 4i..u. • 1~ \Ct ,.,~ 111 IJ M -'111 sis, warn .. amieson. and as a source of synthetic AmT.c;.oSb· 1• 4...._• comP$1.1o2 1 "'t"· 111i.r1w .. 2 So\Ci, ... '' ·, ••• :':"~ t ·2"-••• , • t t.-oP..u :1t" h . I --C c ,, -· -, • '· .... ... t 31't ••• I .I 1 1"11 ••• ·, 1 1 C 1 r. •u, C airman 0 the •• Id ·d ·1 nd f AmT••l11~ ""'• omPK P • • ,.. _.. '"' ~ ··· ,-c -'', -·•-• •-••.,"Mc• '• ,._•i:• .. ·or w1 e 01 a gas or energy '"''' -,_0 " , •• 1ttst•c11 111 ,.,.,.__"' · '" p .. ,, ·~-,-" ,,, ... ,, P . • 19 -Vt y,. II""' ··· Inc H ~,,.. l...-, Corit I I •.. •• 11 l'>-Yt -Exxon Corp . "Mandatory purposes is a strong .-.noreaR.ci 1 1v. ... COlftlluar• .1 ··,"'"::'~ rtlffScln s sv.-1<o LU11C1yE11m t l!'H-\Ct , ... 10 7 1.,r::11>1& IM-'
II t. r h t. .1 ~~1o ··.~ '• •,,. ·.·.·. c,--""'P e~!P , , .•• •'" I::".~ ,, , .. ._ .. ---M Moo----o o--• ',-·,-.,t , .,. .... a oca ions o ea 1ng 01 , pro. rv\ssibility. The U.S. has ..ti!"°"' .... " ..... h ~· _,, r. ,. Mlf-Ch 10 "' -• i 1 J Y" A 0 Ind Inc 211 1 •. , Conchl .16b l 11..... elltVI . ..a. •I t-1to-l'o ·-• ••• lfllllr ()i1 17'3SV-~ Thrift"" .OS 21 10 +'i£. . pa ne and jet fuel arc directly perhaps a third or the world"s App!led 011 1 1,.... •.. CoNe< cp I ,_.iii llMl't •"" 1 ' ""'1""'1 Ro ' 1"' ••• ••nM '° 1 itlli+ 11o llct.11 .» • •l'I
h d ,.-~1-.20 6 1.,.,__ >,:. c-uy cn ...,. ITR11.20b 1 t\t ::; Jqll'IMrt .u j a• ... ~· :w. 1 s111-1,1, T:::,.: Hiii 4 '°"+'ii . a ea . C<>a l supply. a fact thal takes -~ c 1 , .... ·;:. 1-00111!:1 2k ' ·-v. ,...,.1 s.t111 ~ ... , •• ·,.. ,, ---Art111· Inc 1• ~ • . • Ol'lroy fK ...... ,., • ... auO(t Pr 1 •V.+ "" Mto.,.T r .50 s •Vt ., , ",• .,!'~•R 14 ..... t \'a .., • no • -+ -on special signifi'cance as we An cur .09D 1• " ... CoMOll Gas 1• .,... 1 11 it 90 , 20> Mt'lllduct e >i 5'AI .., ....... • 2 t¥o ••• Teti.+"' .1! 1 w. .,,. ''WE ARE sho rt of the run· Nlic flf A 1 ~ ••• c,°"' 'let .io :JO n'h-"" ~,. n 22 '°~ ""'• ,tMlilCoflt" , ~·y; R a 111dW1 1 ....... T!!~..P' '"' i.so St -..
damental resources. such as watch the Middle East oil !~Gi;,~ ~ ~~:_ c:::=i.~f ; ~~ ~11r'E l' '~"' t:=':: '=-.:" ::r"~~li: 1 11 •Yi t~i~ ~ ~~t sheiks becoming ever more Ann1"'°'P 11 ~+"" eo.tTe•wt• 1 a ••• ,_,.\;"\: ~ :t:"" .,,_911111130 2 1~" llKl'lo<!Cl• Jl it.-·il: jOW!l6' .10 1 '"'•"' oil pnd natura l gas ,~·hich powerful. :;=.,~~~ U 1~...,--.~ Z: 1~• . .e: .! U"-i¥i c~(11 1f ''*• = ~ .W.. 1 u...,..."' till':!~ J J: -; ~ ~=t~~~ 2J ;: ... •
create energy. r\nd ii is The development 01 shale Ashtoou c. 11 13\?-w C-r J .20 1 s111+ "'· LS 1c;: 12 !:; = =~:.iVc~ 21l ~~ ::: 11:'" ..., .• 1 n -"' TWA wts u11 ~~. :;; rnergy tha t li ght; our hon1es. ASPRO . ..:io ' • -"'-C«dOn 1"11 23 ..,.._"" 1c;li wt • .... Meo.no • .io u 13 -~ •...-..1. ,,• --• , .•.. Tr•llfwT •• ,.,._. • ., fo wh'ch th are ASMtgl .1'01) 1 ,.,.,_Vo Cor•Ub Ill( 3 1't\+... #7'> ... Mc""" est 1 '-"+ " ..... ,.,. T•IS. ·°"' J TV.• .. our fac tories, k'eeps our trucks 01 - r
1 ere .As tr•• inc-1 ,._ .,., corr&a .t1• 2 21 • "· dine wt 1» 1"' •·• • o c eor., 1 n; , R1.:ce11 .• • 4'lllo--.., T• Ma .Ult • t 1·w.-t.• large deposits _ is another A!<o '"""'" J 1~ ... cou Coro • l'A•.,. ~::::rl_;,~ 11 ".:=:.Z Meft"11 1 nv.-'i,,; •-°'' • ~• Tw"""'9 • J"' ... onthehighways,givesus heat A!l coM11w1 10 ·~v. Cotl(.orpwt 1 ':" ··" rMlllM9l , ~ ... ...,.1111.n 1 11'" •••. 1t1tott111t1A ',.,. ... Twl11 F11r u -~ . h obvious possibllity. But the •11cM1.•S11 5 12"'-""' eeurtld .110 s l"' •.. ,,1v .ilb , ~v. ·Me4eMo.oe 55 11v.-"' ••.n1m1 • s ,,... 11o Tyc•l..abw1 11 _.., in t c winter and air·con· technolo g ical and· en-A11ascr,w11 11s.1 .... 1.1• cous111M wt • •v. ... r1Anl·1"' 41,_16 M9d!Mlll .$.I u 11 -Y. •••N,t•a• 1 2'Ai ••• -uu-
ditioning in the summer, ,,,·ronm ental proble-" a r e ·~~ti.in 011? U ~ft l~!~~ ~ r"-.~ -',.,'lt' ""•••' ,", iv. .:;~ =~ C: ·t l 1~.,.:: t-. -~:i= f t:• .~ ~:;Jcr.t °'; ·,:+.~ h. I • """ AU1om81«1 1 •lo'> •.• cr .. 11..-Mg 111 ,._v. .. ,,.,.. iw.-... · -fllcMoll .IOll t 1Vt+" UfttMtl,Jlll 10 ~-operates 1nac 1ncs r om lremendous. , ,.1110 Rac1ro 3 l"-l<o c,.oi.Pt.?O 1, 'lm--"11 :Sconssa 1 • ... ·==~ ! ,ft_·~ Ric.Ar.Miii .ts f'lt.-"' u11-..u 1 .._ , •• typewriters t o computers. Auto sw . .i 5 UY>--1 Cr0i1A .llb 1 '' --"" R~~ 5: ~v.. 11111111 eit•l'I 111 u • "' fll•1t Mllt11 • • 1111o ... ""'"'*·°'to 1• --.wi The building of more ,Avffl'l<ll .u I •'" ... CrowMl1 .~ 1•0 •,_1 +1,. r•J1C ,zO,, 1 4v.-·~ Mllron111. •io: l M+ ~-•"•"'• •51_, •,•, ~~ ~ u"""~":l 1,• 'm+H• ·i1 makes our daily lives possible Avlllllll 1.1s. ~t v.. CrownCP ~ .. R 1 i,:p .~ • • ,.,,..._, Miii.Ry .20tl , uv-.,. !"'-g ,,_.. o .... ~ ... ,. r th 00 .. nuclear po'ver plants and the -• ..._ .C1Yto'•' on 111 m.o,+11111 l'llMTirt .to , 1,.,.,_ v. Ml»or e..1 , " _ ... •-.ioM . 1 ~"' ..,,. fOOCb 111 • "' ....
as \\'e ive em t ay. advancement of research o'n Bioorr .so.a 1 '04+ "" -DD-row c lflJ 1 •V.+ v.• Ef:K.,.T '11 2 •V.-"" 1 1 11~ y, !'.!".,"',,'!.." 110 ••'•• ••••••• Ju st a few key facts \vi ii thicfs. .1M1 · ' s~ ... o.ni.1111 .11 s 1• -'"' r11111 1ft.ws 4 ~"' M 1c111 e119, 3 27 _"" l'ft. '' 11~ v. .... ..tl'i the use of solar energy cannot llncrtt 1.10b " 1si..-"" o.11 Cof>t•I • U't .... Ti C0t1t 1 ~in M" "°':!f,t J ,,,._."' LM • 7 ... UtaNI" ·'° • 10 •:1. ' underline Jamieson:; point: Blll!IOl'P wt ·10 th--in 01i. 0oc in 1 2•~+ v. lttwd MH 1 '* · ~Co u 1 • •.• 11 IH 11,...:. ¥. u~11e WD 1 ""-,.. be downgraded as an answer 11,111111er LI s. 111-v, O•U PrOoc1 211 s -11o HM i.1:1o ,, iWi+ ·;,,; MotfC. • 31 1~ 1o11 ow 12 :tvii ••• u ...... ·.',.,. ,.• .!-·u Every day of the year 11<111~u111 .20 , 11-"" O•~Mll .•OO 3 1-MoOI ll!Kor J 10 «kw\' '° 1 IO'll .... .. w · -• too. But here, also, the en· h11ne•.otd s J~.., oc1. 1ncorp 12 ,,. ~::~·rm 2: :t: :::: MtOGfl.llll , 1JYt+·"· oc.llW ",·•,•,• I 1Y:--·~ 9L•11mi 1 '''-•~ lhc averageman,woman and 1 and 111r~••v1110 1 1~"'0.•rt111S .25 1'""'··· lfSe m 11,,,. Mononos .n 1 s-\!o 11 •-... ,..tR•• 2 ni.--.,.,
Ch'.1d ,·n our nat..,. n uses four vironmcnta problems dem 9,,"..,11111 l ' -,... o.J~, "''" 10 .w. •. : u1tSOM' w1 .u 2 ••• Moul!MllO 111 5 2 _ "' 11"' 111t111 ' 1v.-1111t1""'. • s-. ....
I · A J · 81rryWr .n • 1-~ Oii Ybl'lM 11 ID •• : -ft M-•·' Movieltll tll t 1~ ... ~ Ofl(O T_,.. 1J ~ \lo Rldloctn J tl,,,_ W.
gallons of oil , 300 cubic feet ~utlon. s am1eson says, B•rteil..wd 10 1v,· ... 0.111 Corp ' '"' ··~ ''"''11 ·• 1 ~+ v, Ml'SCt .40 5 11,,._ .. ""'*-" "• .~·. 1tll9fl .M I __ ,. ''Both the environmentalisls e1°111s,..11 . ' l _,,.. o.1111Fd .50 s '"' ... 0$11 s 5 •.,. MPO vi"'° 1 J'll't•"" -;t-, n ,.-, Uftltr •wS ,_..\ll.~ of natural gas, 15 pounds of e1rw1c• Ind > •"'i ... P11T1E.1 .OSI! 2• u..,__ l't crti11 .ai 1 lt't-.,. Mo.illlAm .:io , u.-... • •-'-, , -Un111111ff Ct 1,•, •,.. --~ and the energy '""Pliers must ••s111 P11r1 2f Hit-* Oelofrfl Pto 122 JI +i v. 1,_ Pllll 1 1 _,. ,._ .. _r , ••• u11111s119 .tt .... . coal and other energy-pro. ..,.. 111yroc .1Jn 1 11 ... DH•!!:!,. Jw1 ts 1~+"" 11.,,,, .u • 1 M'o+ ·;,; M•PC• ,....,. )(I tvt-.., ~ P ec11 I 1in •.. '""'N wt. 1 u111 ... : TJIE BOARD apptO\'ed 'an achieve 'a coordinated and aeo '"" ·°' 12 3\.'t-"• O.w~pr cc 11 11 -.,. artlld !.di , :w.--!-" N•rdofiMc 311; s • -"' ~M! ..._ • t ... u•1 sntr111 11 S\t+ =: environmental impact repo rt ducing sources. balanced goal . Conflict s t~~~l.;0~ ~: 1:'1• .•• ~j~nd·~lori ~~ ,m;= •rUMtC, i1·:w~+..,, H•ll'A11•11• ·• ~ ••• ~1t':, ; I~"' UVl'"llwt•y-.,12 .__ :
rrom 'he developer and ga "C -IN TIIE U.S., "'e ""C bct"·ecn en"t'rorunental goals •BelltUS Cp J ' -~ oi.....-. M 1' 20lilt-"' ·:::.~z. I ~ ..... fil:t!:tas.:l ·.11; -i~ VICI lllN ! • n•+'~ YfllM( "°' n ,,.,.,.....,
• TI .... ~ TI • BergE"I Jk 1 s +"' Ol•boldY•ft ' ..-. •••• lltl Mol' so · • •vi-·;,,; .i1Gllwu11 111 3~111 ~Inc . 1 ,,,.__"' V•ll.lt LI.-· 1 2ft ·~ r. I · · r th 00 1 ·ht 1· ch and nergy r•-.. c d I a~•e R1 .s1a 11 J(\t"" 01cot, •M 10 2"-.. : fllk:kf ill • '"" ,11 .._.1111 11 1"1-,,., 11111c.A 11 .-.+ •Y•DtNt.21 1 ..,_ 1na perm1ss1on or e a u e1g imes as mu e ...,.,,... e eve op-1HroRu1w1 s "" ..• Div•™' . .st • '""°""' .tt ... i OfD ,J 13vi-·¥i ttl 11111 _, 1 .,_, ··" Yfl\H ,1511 1s .n -111 ·V•ro tncerp :D • -architectural design of the energy as the world average. mcnt need to be resolved O.rqen •• J ~v. ··· Dl•1111 eorp s •~11o rt1j11 ·u. • u "'-t!K1,,..I 1 ~ -Sa--V..c.t•.t • 11 " -8'rnlf>m•I 1 s•.-. ·~lJ Ooll'llPelro 10S3"'-1'V IGlMo.it • s ·--·~ MtMcll!A .1 22w.-•\; llMil •41-V.,ltllldllst l 1'°'•$ proposed complex at i t s In Jamicson's words, "In our through appropriate govern-·1Hr.....c .10 1 •11to-.. l>OMlllY .a• 1 M •• ~ 11119 ..... ~ 1 '" "" l'lf'~ •s 1'111-"' ~ .u j " ... vemtr'" C• 10 ,....... Btll'lll'lm Cp 1 2"-\It Or••H.11 Ct :IO 2~ ,. • Hofmtll Ind ••· Hit Soni 2 t1' -Cort 7111+ Ito YeteiY C. 4 f -t rnee!ing las t week . desire to achieve Ta p i d men! processes." Bt~triv Ent n "' ... 0..1..-1 .,..., 1 '™-"' · iMI ''° J "M +·\to Mt•t11 La': 1, .__.VJ II•• • '""'-11i .Vlelftll 111e 1 'Mo+,. The pro...., now requ1·..,._. e 1~ 119~ .21 ~ 20·~ \'• or11 F111 .• 1 1 --v. , " .. ;,t , ,.._ NfoN• 05 ,1 ~" 1 1 "" ... v1 ........ _1~ ! 1*-\to. ./'-~• , .. ~ 8o8~•t 1.0I 2 !HO ... uplt>P .1• J fVt.-14 ~A"')o -••• Mewl ' 4t J1 1111 Al ! • Ylltlfll(Jtlll 1 Mlt-~ appr-·al ol the South '-a•t -------------------------,f Bf~tsM .1!).11 • 11~+ o.:. u1•lor co 1 1 .. +.\!t · ' •' _,, "' ttew1i":11 l 1""=• hid 1 sv. :·: Vl~llQI' 1 ~ .. -. v• ' \.Al"'' Bln..,.~$.11 1 11'1t-'l•·OuroTs .23Q "11...,_,,. ll&~ii~ • '4-~ ·HwMllAftl I ltl4•1t .10 10 I~ .. V •EM ,,S'h+• Regiona l Conser vation Com• e10 Oy~ll'I( l<I 1JW>---. o-,n11..:11 c » •o,; ••• ~IMMf 1 1' 11~ \Ii ·~ R J . ,,._ ~ 1111111 J ·~\lo '" L e«g • -w
S I d D 81~Ulfl9 .t.O 3 '*+ ..... ytiellEI JIC ·2 S"°+ \It HotMi2.I• 1 I"" Mtw .Pr .J~ U + llt'Ml .tQl;i 1 ti' ,,, ¥11l<11C.,1 4111+"! mission. a a a s ~::::rd ·: ,~ I:: .. "io; E s cmM• .,, __ \Co OIPMli wt • t\lt ... NY.!1:':!f 60 J 11~ "kll 1.::f 2 ~· Yo • -· w-. The board ord"rcd the y eQ<11Mp .~ 1J ,,._ ,,., e.,r. cio111 . 2 ,,. •• : HOtO 1N11111 1: ~r:!·~ "~~·12: l .:!-.. fZ .:111 1 · f'= ~ := :n ~ J':! :i dc veloP<"r to appi} 1o lht' cit ~· I e.011 e.r.-• •J 1~'"' E•rl"R• .u i• ~ ... ; .._YTo ~ 101 11v.--111i J , 1.u11 1J into+ i4 1t111ffcA11 1 11v.--y, w.-tt .w. • "t"' 8owV1ll ,IO Jl ,.~,,., EilA•0.-51 J Jh+\to ..... lft()lwl ,. • -". ltldlllC 1 !: .... 011YIN .OJ •s m.--1"' Wi:it-'• ,, -1': council! for a "historica l e ..... ,.,..,.,n, tt •ll'o+"" e1s1nc..at 2·1•"-\11 !Wlftl~I • 1,....._"' •'flC' 3 r1-.n 1 ;~"' 1011 10 "*"
I d k" d · I h p • A ll D, a ..... .,. C .~ 2 10 -Ioli E•1 Fr•lllflt • 5""-"' Mlllll 10 • 4'Vo+ \lo ..it 17 ~·-..,,., 11.i11 15 1,~.,. w .10h 1 ~ 'lf an mar es1gn<1t10n orl c 'r'"€S CtU({ y 'P er"'R•o•n ! 12v.--11o e1iorE•pr 10 ""'+w.'Nut ..0. • 1ft.--16 ~ ..,, j~ ,.._\II. Cont1111 14t7~1'.W•fllllf(,11s 1t ..,,._ • root rail Ch·p h urn c r IA_, ., 9,.., Cornpl 2 :n ....... EC~ Cp 1 17~ ... HIOlll'l<>I IJ '° 2~ ~Hit • , ... 411 Itel,. '! ·-e WI f'ost •• 'I l!..: • I 8r111Ch! .2• 7 '"" ..• EdQlnlonOI 39 21.,.,_'llo N'rtef ·1!1( lt 4 I 1..-110 $6 +YI -All ' 6 -Wtlllltl 1.20 1 •s ''Belch ior. B;srt '' wh ich \l.'Ould 9,..,,11 ,.l1 1 ,,._v.. Eo"* .1J 1 ·~~NrvnlFdj[ 1 2.._~ N wt 11 IW.-1' te .m .. ho-WllCIMTW J . ft••nln wli • l•lli ,. ., EOO (Ofp\n 2 SV..--\,\ _1 i:--uc , Oft s N .... II( Mt wt 0 l ... wttlU. S"-: •• r('ma in in !ht· Lumht•r 'nrd \VASl"IlNGTON (UPI \ -Very few foods.' or 9•••c •11 111 '° ""' ... , EdW•rds.ta 2 S\14+ "'' ica r!1,u 1 11~"' -. onG 11 two-" l'lflllc• I ' ... Wfl~l!9_,7f 14-
1 Tl . h . h ,. e ...... e ...... ''"+"' El'l•tlle.11 .:1(1 ... 1i t •'IMC . ''I • .,__ .--00.-' "'Jt' , I -"" W.."'9"" '! "'·:~~ comp "X. 1£>cl!.v c1g I Jlllll •other th ings for that malt cr, cost lesl'; now than a B•11i!1t Corp 1 S'lo--l'o E1coeor11111 j ~"''i 1e 1 ri;:: ~ C• 'I,.._,, ell """-.., W1t0tc11M 1~ ...
'
···"feet. 8"Wi'C .~o 1 11~\4I El<orCM"' m ... 1 1J:lP,.~1·11111 s't'llo-""'°"""''·:tO · l"-\\ . 11 t -\41 Weltl'111 C11 117-l'll. ., ...., year ago. But the 1\grit•ul1.urc Department reported e•1A1e .1tto 1 •t4+s-1• E*-tro0 .t0 lOlrlo-v. f, ,,,, • """•"" ••. l '"""°"' wn1110t1111 ,,.,. .. ,..
d b f Oro01rl llld 11 1 --"" Elt'tl AlllM ·1· !IE ..... : :::r::.: ~ "; 4;~ \lo ' ly .1' I 11rr..+ \i Cti'P -.... \II wt.tl'kl wt a t,.._"' Tiit-: OEVEJ..Ol~ER w :i s
:ilso rrquire<l to provide mort•
plan11ng: on Oct'<lfl Avl!nue !l()
lhn t the stil ts of undergronund
parking W()U]d not appear so
oroJT1inent.
PRIVATE TRUST
FU.OS AVAILJIU
FOR f'IAL tlTATI lOANI 1.i & 2Dd TP.UST 0£EOS
t l,SOO To tll-0,000
\If' TO In. LOANS Oft NIOST Dt EO OOLLATF.IW..
·~In 10\llTf l'tJMDS
Newriofl c.r.1tr
UO Ne•par! Cerl .. r Ot!"" "°t~ &f~h. C•llf 1714J 144.W4
•
to ay t at as all bega n ave rage fresh vegetable 11,..,, ~·•e 1 J --"" £•'''"'~ 1 _ ' · 111"19111 I"' '° 1,_ 1< ~ , :n.-* .L ··~ 1 1 ... w.11,-1,. l Mt."' . . " r ghtl I th . 1972 " Orownto .... " ~"" EN<ttll . 11111rvm YI lt Wt--." ... 1Ql:t ' f1"-It M .to I 11~+ Ill WlllClllW... ~\It pr1ces were runn1ng s 1 y ower an1n . ·::~::::!: .lTI,...+·"i::C~ .. f,;t;u 11,,,.1=:.. ,•,,,...... '!"", '! ""'i.:. 1~""·°':, •;ti;~=.'::'.!.~.• m-~•~ A report on the vegetable sitaution sald more 111u t:nglM • •\io--"" e:1 TrOll!u .i n.._ 11t 111 ,,_.,~, 11 i:·v.-... s.ri ! ~,,._ ·~ " I ~ v. WlcNU '"" ' E!"'·
Plentiful supplies or onions and salad vefietables 111111ci.•.lC1t> 11 111t--~ empr.uni ' J'h-\i ,,. S .. 1 ff.:n -,..., _,,., ~11ct1to111i t +>< Blll!Ch'Cl.OI l It ... j lqully N•tt I l~\to.l~l1'3:'M JI ··· SK ""--Mtd S ,,. WllLMl!tt .tl t I ~ contributed to the "easier" price situation. t added :~:r~1•;: ~ 1~ -·~ ~=:~ J fv?_·~ 1111"""11 :10 1 ,,._, ... •""1i~ ': ~"'+"' 1.~ ""1:;'"' j 'l ; that fall production of 14 fres h-market vegetable 11u11" Av111 • ' -"" rnuw .otto 1 ...._.. ~, 1111•SN• .-10 1111 • "' _, · ··· .,,, .. :12 ti t • ·i1[il~~ · t• t ~• v.r
I d be I I 9Ullfl 0•1 1(161"' •• .I E11•""'·'~ • ~111'l:fS::~:rttc£af11t .. .'i.l l"klo '"i'71111.+•' Kl!Clt II\\+ ·W "'""" I 1 -W crops !i expecte to up 4 percent rom ast year. -c -· l•<lf 1oweo 10 1"'-"' ~ 1 ,~ 1 ,,,_. ' 1,.,1, • ,,.... "'.w":i: '! , ..._ •
N h I , d ( .. !( "9110! )0 11l'lt--V.' IE•l(ll\e .2• U Uflo+ \'a 1~ ~ I H1"' ... a I )11'+ \Ii r.r:·M 1 •\\ •••. w.t Ill . . "'° 1 .• " evert e ess. conlinue stron g demand will l*t-tom 10 J~"' . -it:..__ -~ 1 "~ it 0 ,,.! .:; ,. ,. ... me; .n 1 :wi .•• Wtoc1 fllli n ,.~
k tab' . h h' h ·..1 ., I •l<IOI' 1't l~ 1~ \II' FilrHOC: n -,-..., 1 1 ! .• _. 1·,. , .. -Ioli "" 1 :F.'° 1 t ..• w...,_ 1 ·~ eep vege e prices on t . e . 1g si.,.e, t 1e report ,::"'~;, ;~ ll~ t "::.~ ,1 't ·n~ -·~· 1=:8r."~·.•s ~. "': iliU • 1m-·•· =·~ I f:__··· ·::"J;rci 1 ·~\a
ti cldecl . ~::;::~1!-: I "'""i ~::ii"''-~ :~~:::~fi't:~ 15 ir':v. ,..., '~ +'~ ~·wrw 1m+ WTtr;.':fo ',f"-\'I F:conomists said also that although 1973.74 sup-C•mPD-oi11t , l.-..1:ij, FMMrt . .o.t ,. ••1'+~ lllfllcs ·1fl(Jt 2 ,.,,.__ ~ f -"'· 11,~· 'J' ~··' ~ .. ~ 't · i--·\;
plies of proces~ed vc11et;ibles will be up slightly ~ ~~~ ,; ·~··-...... ~:ri.:..~ 2: al*.:~ rm'11c0r7'··, ,l ·~~ '~ 4\lt ' W -·if 1-... ·, ~ ,,.•llN~112. · '1' •--!! " COn!Pw l.OI I 1 '""; F•I .ti 1 • .._" -I~ oc.. ._ Q ... • ' -... • .. from the previous season . cost increases ror lhe g; 9'E-,, , -.... 1. ·~ 10. ·1J\I>-"-/ .. 1 t -~ .. eo ~ .. .1 J~11.;s~ ': '~ .. " ·~;;; 11 ~~~ ~ 1j; ..,.__~ ,,~ ,Li'• .s .:: l:ft 1l l~ ::: ..... , .. , •• ,.,~rn-.:~ C'f'ln1ingsea sonwillbe gre;atcrthanthose postedln N on ,51.,._~, ... ••t 'oi ,1 -~ _.. ~-. ........ n ".._>' ••.ta 113"'···-""-M'• t•S•-....:. 197 2·7~ because of 111ore llher;1J economi c control
regulatio ns in effect !;!nee Sept, 10.
,.
' . I
\
"w prl~ I '"
-· •• • Ml ..
"' "' '*· w '" ...
'" .....
',foday's
Closing Prices
0
...
NEW YORK STO{:ft EXCHAN<iE •
•
°''"" DAILY PllOl
Year's High-Low&
Appear Every Saturday
Burns' Remarks
Lead to Sliunp
NEW YORK (APJ -The stock market's
fall rally hit a roadblock ~!onday in the form.
o! \lllexpected revelations by Arthur F. Burns,
chairman <J ( the Federal Reserve Board.
Burns said the Fed's monetary policies
had not chanR;ed sttnllicantly in the last few
weeks and lndlcated thal further reluation
ot lb: tight-credit reill! wasn1t likely.
His remarks ''put a damper'' on specula·
lion that Fed eased on tl~hl money, and dealt
lhe marketa serious psyehological blow, said
Newton Zinder of I-I. F. 1-fullon & Co .
•
·-
•
. . ' y . . ....
11.tJLV PILOJ Twsday, OctoOtt lb 1971
i,_ __ ...... ____ ~~----------------""!'91----------...... ----~----..... ~~--""'~----------., The Blegest Marketplace on the Oranie Coast ~llWlli .•••• _ _.jQQ . Sl4 -· '
(I>~'"°''' 100 . 1~ DAILY p1rm ~ CLAS 1-FIED ADS
~ Hamn kw Sdl • , • Ill-149
~-...... .52S ·~
'"' ot.l ~ ' • •
hol Ellotie Genfrol. , ,
.&SO ·'"
.~·199
. JOO . 4'9
. 575 . S99
.000 · M9
. 915 • 949
Fi10•.al . 100 . 299 .
~tor Scilc 100 • 124
l.O'lol & Found , .550 -574
Mt.'fdlOnd~· . 800 . 8-40
You Can Sell It, Find It ,
Trade It With a Want Ad [642-5678] One Cal I Service
Fast Credit Approval
~ ......... .
Schook ord losllu<liofl • •
S...vites ond RfPOio ,
lrompgrtotiofl. • • . . .
...,,,,. .. ~ .
ERRORS. Adv•rti1er1 should check their
ads daily & r epcrt errors immediately, .The [ Hou111fOfS1le
DAILY PILOT as1umes liability for the fir1t .
incorrect ln5ertion only.
Houlel for Siii JI~ I [ HMff !or Silt
~--~~----~---------~,.-·-•"'-~ .... .-General Gener•I G•ner•I ==~~-1~==:;;;:;:;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;:;;;;;;;;;;
[ ]~[ -.. f~··· ]~
General General •
READ THIS
LA CUESTA VILLAS
$30,490
Close to the ocean in Hunti,iigton Beach!
Credit reje"tions at first unit price!
'l'hesc have carpet. floor tile, and drapes
iucluded. 3 Bit, 2 BA .. J·JUGE farm kit·
chen, detached ga rage.
CORONA OEL MAR
DUPLEX
One of Corona de] l\lar's
nio~t i:hnrming propcrtiell.
...,§,.. HERITAGE 546-SllO
Open Eves.
PRESTIGE WATERFRONT HOMES
. • REALTORS
Nr1v uppr.r unit has opcn 1.,.,._.,..,..,..,..,..,...,~-~"""""""""""""""~ bea1n ceilings, 2 Bedrooms.r•-$27 000 4 DR 2 BA GOODY IN ,1·i1h ovcrsilcrl master suite. General General ' ,.. ---------Mama's get.a.way. Sunshine Front house has just been clean & ready ' for OC· GARDEN GROVE
,·,·mooofo< wHh ""'' '"""'" .POOL & Warehouse ·
'
II P f " fl . cupancy, jLL-.t right for Decorated inside and out. , . w11 paper. ane t'11 \'ITIJ.l'. 1/2 ACRE Sale-Leas•back you renters to get started. roum, hrick l1rcpl;1<·c, '.! s Tailored plantings on a I Carpets & drapes thruout. 1 t • cd t 4 Berlr~ni~. On a pleasanr Lru~e rxreutil'C' est a 1 c. 0\\-n<'r w1!\ S1'tl and lease Huge kitchen ivilh gas arge rimm ot.
. l!'l'1"l1ned ~!reel & t.'lOSC' to 0 1rnPr n10\·iog & n1us1 St'll? hlH .. -k. ·1100 llf[. ft. ll'archouse. r;in~. Country' atn1osphcre, bedroom .... Fomial dining.
I 'I~ I') lhnr::. a1 homC' foi· lfl1"$!'C' fainily 2 year n1 i11inHun JrllSChack. I total paynienlll are less than Custom !Ito n e llreplace.
''.,lh f8 u.,,,:0,,·h••··' £ol,.<f brir~ building. 3 -•~·k Completely spotless. E-Z·
_,,, .... Housel !Of Sile
General 9eneral .
BEST IN BLUFFS
NEW X·PLAN • TENNIS CLUB VILLAS
Just completed, in low rn aint. area. 3 BR.,
2lh ba., fam. rm., formal din. rm. ~ictur
esque greenbe1t nr. pool. Latest kitchen;
many· upgrades: $65,750 -pr will lease/,
option.
JACUZZI 3 BR. -BAY VIEW
END UNIT, nearly new ''Trina", tre1nendous·
ly ui}graded, \V/lge. $5,000 jacuzzi in p~iv .
encl. side patio. Lovley \\'ide greenbelt with
bay view.'$79,500
NEW DOLORES 3 BDRM,, 2112 BATHS
END UNIT. Just completed. Latest kilcheh
w/elec. cookwar.e top, dbl.,. s.elf·cleaning
ovens Trashfuasher, eating area. Custom
carp.'& drps. Wrap aroun d patio on wide
greenbelt. ~73,500 -or will lease/option.
HELEN B. DOWD
REAL TOR BLUFFS SPECIALIST ~134
IMMEDIATE OCCl,IPANCY
. NO PAYMENTS UNTIL JANUARY
·Model One Block West of Beach Blvd .
off Adams in Huntington Beact-t
644-7270 ..... u 0 ""'-rent. care noor plan. Uberate the
I hi.1,>11 doors. i1·rt1•r 11·an1s family for less t h a n -.,.,.~.,..,..,..,..,..,."!l'_"""':"'""",..."""""""""; I equi1y out. f'ull pric{• SlS,000. S•K>,000 .00. See it, you'll Jove ~ 1 G eneral
W lk & L 0oo·1 h•s~i~u Now -W lk & l 1,_ Call 963-6767. j ;G;;;•;;";;••;;;•;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;====:
AYRES SINCE 19Q5
536-1445
---·--------General
* * * * * * ·*TAYLOR CO.*
COMMERCIAL
6 STORES
General
4 BEDROOMS
$32,500
6 con1m1'rc1nl slorc" 1<11u:11 I NEAR HARBOR HI Cosla fllrsll. I fit;/! tr11f[11· In. ,
tai;on. !n1111!•<.l1n1r .. ,.,.11111,11• '.! B111t1s. ll('1v carpl'IS & p;11n1.
1·y. An'l:il"lll"' ui.riri'. Ciill 1.~1ri.:•· !11!: Owtier 11111 ht:IP
Nm1· -f1n<111•·1·. V;11 ·~ri1.
' 546-1600 e CALL ANYTIME e
l:"\\ICST:\lEN r JJl \"l"l1 J:-> 646-3928 or Eve. 646-4S43
OPfN TIL ~ • 1r:i; f UN TO /<i IHCC' [® THE· REAL
ESTATERS' l' - _ _I
* N'PT HEIGHTS *
When you list with
us, YOUR HOME is
advertised in Home·
for Living maga-
zine in more than
900 areas-and cus·
tomers 'are sent to
y o u as referral1
from our over 770
affiliates of NMLS.
2828 E . Coast Hiw•y
Corona def Mar
LOVELY DUPLEX
. OLD Ccf:'ll cha1111 . .
1-li!h all lhP rnocll•rn amC'n11·
Ill's. Corner lo!, closr to
lx>ach , 3 BR., 2 ba. l'LUS 1·
tx.Jru1. int•<u11e unit. Forced
;ilr hC'at, sl1a ke roo(. bc"<1uti·
fllily dt·(,;Qral~'<l. OJ)(;'Jl b<'um
C"l'i ling,.., delightful patio.
$Sli .. ·i00.
PLEASE CALL
675-3000
-----
m11.n · & llE.\fll
UE.U :l'r IXf.
LEST _1_~29_ ~~000 3 BDRM-"NO OOWN
\\"ondf'rful 3 hftn•1. :! h11lh
homr 111lh d1n1n,C? rin. hull!
ins, di~hv.·ashrr. Fll nHl,v rrn, f\repla cr. fort...,d-n11· ht 1111-
m-n c· u In t •' land~t a111n·~.
$.1j ,9()0. 51fl.1 i2Q.
:t Ill:.. 1·11, h I>!•'. h\' n11.
ll rh11 ;•t. ;, Gi:n. kilt h. [~,. hal'!t~ •rd. Ou!. i.;ar. 3 YEARS NEW !!
I TARBELL, Rea ltors
I ,,,,.,.,r~ 111··., 1!r.·;1n1' S47. "()(). ~xii a sharp 4 l:k'<lroom Costa
BALBOA BAY PROP. :\l~tt honir. n<'ll'ly painted * 642-7491 * 1nsid~ & our. "Decorator "
General CeMe ral k1trlu·n .'!.: Oachs. Lighlcd, o.::=-"'--------'-="-'"---------1 M1verl>d p11t1n. Ready to nH1\'(' into:~ Jhrny on t11is •"'." .... ~ ... I ;1hnoKl·l1l•11· honie at only $31,:~. · c COATS
I . cw WALtACE ..... ---~I · REALTORS -546-4141-UNIVER SITY PARK SPECIAL
A \'Cry :-:,f:J l·:l 'l,\I , pric(~ on a verv SJ.>J•:cJ,\L
plan in a vcr.v Sl'J·:c·11\J, locatiorl! End unit,
tiled roof. '"ll,1novcr'' n1odcl. :i BR., 2 baths.
for 549.5-00 .
BEST OF BALBOA ISLE
60 fl. \\'<1lc1·Jrnn1 pier I Joa I. large. \o\'ely
home .\ar<I . ,) Br. !i Bath ". dell & play·
room , O\l'ner \1 ill hrlp finance la1·gc l st. T.D.
avail. i 1,;li;,. S295,000,
(0ptn Ev•nings)
1--* 6 UNITS *
:-,., ;irly 111·11· 2 UH., 2 h11.,
rt.•lu\<' un11s nn oc<'nnfron!
111 U11Jh,.,;i: Ek'C. [rpl1·1 ..
h11a1,v ~hai: o:nrp., bltns:
SU!ldl'Ck or b."llL'Oll)' \l'•Cill"h
unit: 1 t'\il''cl. rnrports plus
l·l>1•l'k1n..: sr1..1ce. S.1.10,000.
C.11!· liT.~·:1663. 612-2'~1 Eves.
associated
. a.,A~[.,.,l ee "'I -JXVEST~ll:.NT DIVISJ?N 8 er ee OPENnLt1 °rr3FUNTOBENICEI
1:7:E OCEAN VIEW [ i··"""''°"Na' Opo~~;~~~IAL ·1(Bl ~
P~g:Es~l1is ':~::·::·::~;=:::::=:=:'! PRICE Corona de! Mar charmer. * BRAND NEW *
BY SfATE OF CALIF. I Immaculate and su p er Now unr conlltruct.lon
Ask for fllr. West NEWPORT CREST CONDO sharp. Great location No lovely :I BR., 2 ba.: gas
!213) 620-3708 Sacrifice Pllul 2' maintenance fees. No Crpl., dbl. garage. 2 Blks. to
Poolside. Choice Joe. Save leasehOld rent and even a Catho!h:: church, schOols &
You do,.'t need a gun to I SS,500. Full price '$59,950. rieek at lhe Ocean. Call us llhor)plng. ChOOSl' your col-
"Draw fas!" when you Vacant Immed. occupy. for tcr1ns. and an ap-ors. Offered for $41,500 .•
place an ad in the r...ny I Xlnt int. & .1 e ~ nt s. pointment to inspect. Priced I MORGAN REAL TY
Pilot \Vruit Ad~! Call llO\YI o."'ncr/Agenl, 6-l,"J-3230. in SO's. 673-8550 673-6642 6i5-6 l5.<J
General -General G eneral General .
''·
LET'S GET IT TOGETHER .
COME TO REAL "ESTATE •
CAREER NIGHT
WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 17th
7:30 P.M.
Be Our Guest At The
SHERATON ANAHEIM
Santa Ana Freeway & Ball Road
JOIN ...
DEAR •••
One Of The Natian's Largest Real
Estate Firms With Offices From New
York To California.
John J, Lumbleau The Nation's Pre·
mier Educator & Trainer In The Real
Estate Field:
DRAMATIC OCEANVIEW
F'o11rplcx hi.t:h <in a hill u1 lJana Poin t. Still
an infn11 l at 11 ;: \'C:l l'.'-. l111c."tor':: drca1n at
only $105.000.
CLASSIC LINDA ISLE HOME
J,.1 r gcr fi l3cdroon1 4_1 \: b;1l_h." I 1n r111y ('l_istorn
(ca turrs. elegant 111,Uhl l1gh! v1r1v:;c. Pier ~'\:
fl oat (QI' ial'gC l)oaf Oil qulC! \\alCl' iOl'<lli0\1.
$229.oOO.
BROKERS-REALTORS
?OJS W loll1r111 671 JI.it ) ,·---.......... .......... 1.MAKE I NEWPORT BEACH ••
Big Money Through The Highest Pay·
• ing Profession Available. Learn Haw
With Colwell Properties, Inc.
OCEAN FRONT CONtfbMINIUM
(Jn a love ly pri1·AtC Laguna J~ea1·h. t \l'O pool~.
tcnn1li. beautiful .'!rounds. 2 Bcdroon1~. 2
Bath~. walk ()11 !he orcan front. Its spotless
at Sf>B.950.
CORNER LOT WITH PIZZAZZ
3 Bdrm .. '''tlh lari.tc trnw den. Manv ex~ras.
Lovely lanil~rap 1 nl.( on fee l;1nd . 1"ear best
schools. tenni~. churches, $72.500.
~ ..,.........
644-1766 ColdweR, Banker
AEAl.TOAS
[ ~. r-1; +5 ~1~':~~~~ 1-r~n1I
l I '.~llNJ
I t;H + 1-H + ;: IJ,1lh11 s .. :1.;-.00
'.'UH + rlr·n + 2 IJalhs
$!i\!'l(),'.l
;, ll!t rr.. ll1n rn1, ;1 ti:i
!;j l,!01
C. F. Colesworthy
Realtors 640.0020
BUILDER'S
CLOSE OUT
s:n.~ F'l.:1.1 .. f'Hlrr;
S:'.00 l'l1t11't• In ,\fl 11rlu!1
I
t"On•munll~ l{••n! fnl' 1
n1()0111 .. & 11'~ )1~1r5 S?J-~
prr n10. 1111 h11ifo~ 11 !1.
LOOK •••
SEATING LIMITED
TO COLWELL PROPERTIES INC,
REALTORS FOR
YOUR FANTASTIC FUTURE
PLEASE CALL NOW
ASK FOR SALLY 833·1931 FOR RESERVATIONS
A UNl()Uf t-IVMf
IN HARBOR VIEW HILLS-Four bedroom,
single sto ry,. sharp. clean, spacious. Beau-
tifu l landscaping, play yard. like-new con-
dition. $94,500. A li sting of I\1arian Reedy.
UNIQUE tiOMES Realtors, 67.S.6000
2443 E. Coa,t Hwy., Corona del Mar
General
EASTSIDE SPANISH
COSTA MESA I ABANDONED
A$ume """ '"'" of ••!"· ESTATE $35 500
I Genera l
$31,500 -Excellent location . . • -3 Bedrooms . Faniily I Lo_~ pnvate i_tnve I~ mag.
Room _ 2 Baths ~ Fire-nt!1ccnt Spa~ish estate on
place1 -Shake Roo( -Ne"' Jarge park·ILke if0lll1ds.1 4 quality carpcling _ Olli· bedrooms. J barh:i;. SunKen
dren niay walk lo sehool _ parly roon1. Mammoth v.•al!
Offered for $41,900. CalJ 11 length f!~placc. ~nqu_et
COL\VELL 6-16-rer..i). formal d1.n1ng._ ('.antlna k1!-
Ax ADVA TAGE chen "'Ith bu1!1-1ns. Oaken T N banister staircase. llidc-a. TRIPLEX I 1vay master suitt' \11ith sun· · deck and balcony. Red tile
B e Kt Jinancing available. roof. NEAR BEACll. Call
O..\ner may carry ls!. T.D. I 6-15-0303. ..
Below CUf'T't'nt rares, nilly
a<·ccpt prepaid inlc1·esl. 1 1 BR., 2 Bfl.,, 3 Br. All fur.
nlshed ext.'ellcnt rondiUon.
Call C'OL\liEI~L. 646-05.JS
10111.\ I ,L 01 \O~
ll E ..,lTU P .'>
VACANT·
COSTA MESA
'4 BEDROOM, 2 BATI-1
block "-at! f<'n<'i!, hardwood
Ooors. nice big yard. NOY.·
vacant, ready for quick
move in. Asking $29,600.
54Q..1151 Open Evn.
.,,,,~ HERITAGE
REALTORS
MACNAB
IRVINE _______ .... _____ _
. POOLI SURROUNDED BY HAPPINESS!
D~gner's dream, 4 BR, formal DR. FR. ·
U-s"haped plan 'round center courtyard
pool. Fe~ land. Immaculate! $110,000.,
Helen Wood 644-6200. (P20J
EMOT ION SMACKER/
Glitlers with cleanline$S & ~park l es ,.,.I th
l ovi n~ co lor. Dog run, boat, trailer & pool°
area. Best buy in l·luntington Beach. 4 BR•s.,
FR. $51,500. Lois Miller 642-8235. (P28J
PALERMO SPECIAL
$74,995. Delightful 4 BR., 21> hath home in
choite loca tion of Harbor View l·lomes.
Charles Arnold 642·8235. (P27 J
Irvine
ii'
!!-1111111!112 ~'"161!!1~S-• n·J···· q.•.; n-H ;.11 •• l!!R!!lld .!!II, !!llN!!ll. B!!ll. !!!!!!!!!!ii 15 .. 1 .. 1 • .. 5,,,11,,,o,,,1 .. r. .. :: .. 1 ,,,53,,,1 .. • S,;;•0;;01 ............................................................ _ ................................ =!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~ I-==
, 6-
11/age.Real Estate
IQJ OOV.r Drive 142-1235
1'4-4 MtcArtf'lur H•· 1200
Newport Beach, C11llornla t21·13
~~I
) •
•
•
• • •
,
•
I~! ]~[ • _ .......
General Gen.rel ,
'
DANDY DUPLEXES
'.! Bt•drofln1 unlt1 on Jari,:e
lof~. 1os;. rJ.1.,•on. Ortly:
$36,500
The price of a pOOnc 1:all
land a p;'lltil hl'Ushl huys
this S24.000 horn{' in (':'l:("f'l·
Jent neighborhood. 1'0. NO
00\~'N TO TI IE GI.
Walker &Lee ~.,\ .. ,.,,
ANYONE
ASSUME 6°/o-
$187 MO.
PR!i\1l: V1c\\' ho1nc \1·/grent
\nron1c on rear, on Ocean
Bl\'d. $189,500. 6~1'-40~8.
i!ost1 Mesa
ASSllME 61/1°/o
FHA IN
COLLEGE PARK
Deller s1rp q•li('kl~:: 4;BR. 2
Ba!h OOublc fil't>pla1\•. l":l nll·
ly rootn 11irh bl•ani<ld l'Cil·
In~.~-NU~~F' ~:\llJ~ Cal! ;;.io.
2'.\! ::.
oP!N l!i JI • IT"S FUii/ TO & NICEr .\8l' ' ' '
THE REAL
ESTATERS
ROOM FOR.LETTUCE,
TOMATOES, OKRA
AND YOU
So buy yuur fllmily this
KOf'KOOU.~ -4 bdnn biggie on
a corner lot \\ith open
counlt'y spaces. A I "o
Include:<; 2 1uxurioot1: l)aths.
All thi~ in Coma, ~1C51l "'-hen"
llvlni:t 11 h-ct 111wt tll5Y . rnA
And VA Tl°!rm" nva!lnbl~ nlM
ri-: do1111 pn·igram. \\'on·1
l:i:~t 10111? for $21,000 Call
Walker &Lee
~··~ tt1•T•
"" . '1!,!!,--Harhllur View
Boat a~~~1v fTO'ln your
liv. rm. I rtln. nn. d€":1i;.
ONLY $33,000
HUNTINGTON HARJlOUR
REALlY
17214 COAST 11\\'Y.
1714) l!Ml-13.'14 & t2l31 592,2845
-SURFSID-E CONDO
Golnii:: Goini;c · [)(>luxe .! BR.
Pi Ba nc\\·ly dl'Nlr . lllls
<'VCrythinK! U!lns, \V/0 , re.
rr 11::. l\'(Jf)fl tiurnin1: frplc "'
glls 1~11. Only S'.!7,5{lll, Ci'll
lknisnn As!l(ll·. 67::.7:111.
.GOVT
REPOSSESSIONS
3 & •I uns F'or run intorm!l!kln. C11ll:
SCOTT REAL TY * 546-7533 *
REPOSSESSIONS
. 'llr lnform11tlon •nd locallon o: thr:<c? 1''11.A .\.YA homt'I,
co-'.:ict •
KASA DIAN
Real Estate
BY O\\'NER J BR. 1~. BA
pnnelcd fn.n1. rm. "'fhltn~.
Pvt. llutly, Irr. kltchi.'n, dfo.
Juxc 1.-ptir, Nl"nr l'lillll, !11hpp'1;
& beMch. s.~.r,,o. 5.16··1562
Prin<"lpah1 f>nty.
Ynu don't 1W't"d R 1Nn 10
:'>L;..{).16."1 0!'JI'"' c"'~·'~'----1 "f>mw f"Aliil" '\'hen 1'1")11
LOVF.1.Y ·I HR i'll1!'11C, nr111· p:lll'I' nn 11d Jn thr Diilly
~~\1\ shop·~ ~ .priv. c~ub. Pilot \\'ant Ada! C<ill now
!'I , an. By own1 r. 5-I0·9:)<12. ---6~4~2-M70=co..· ------
ORE.~ MASTERS TE
"'Ith double clOSf'IS, f" r.l~<'C,
halrony and ViC'''" 3 a thhon-
al lxhms. 21, bath.11, fan1ily
roorn nnd an ex~ptional
barkyard on gl"e{'nb<-ll ...
lh<' plc&!!Utt's yours, lht' el-
fnrt's not. Tl-emt'ndou~ fam-
ily hon"' for only $55,(XX>.
CALL 552-7500
VISION
e red hill
Rl::Al.TY REALTORS
Univ. Park Crnlcr, Jr\'in<'
CHANCELLOR
HOME
IRVINE
UNIVERSITY PARK
011ly 5 BMroon1 hOlllf' a11al\.
able In lhl~ arra. 01".,'flra-
ror':< tk-light • profei;~ormlly
f:tnd~11.pe11. Quirt cul·de-t.ac
• :o:r1•ps 10 pool & tf'rlnis
rourts. BonU.'l WOt1cShop! !
Dretim horn(' • pri''"'' &: se-rludf'fl. i.;8,500. Call 545-8424
SouthCn Rr-flllON!.
LIVE IN IRVINE
$31,250
Sl1Arp It brli,:ht -l'f'lN'd
rtgh1 2 br & I ~r. Ohl. IO I
nunull'.'1 hY)nl Unl\1•1111!y of
C'nhr. al lrl'inr.
5'1tj·OO'l2'
Walker &Lee
~l•L 111 •l l
CLASSIFIED
REGULATIONS
ERHORS: Adv<'r tlscrs
should check their &.ds
daily & report. errors
immediately. T Ii E
D1\ILY PILOT 11ssumcs
liability for the first In-
correct insertion only.
CANCElLATIONS:
When killing an ad be
sure to make a rt'cord
of the KlLL NUl-IllER
given you by your ad
taker as rt><:cipt or your
csncellation. Thl1 kill
numbi>r must be prc:
srntf'd by the advcrti1cr
in case of 11. dlsputc.
CAi\"CEU. .. ATlON 0 R
C(lR,RECTlO:'W OJ.' NE\V
AD BEFORE RUNNING:
Evrry effort is n11\dc to
k il l or corr<'Ct II IU'IV Ad
that has bc<>n ordcrr<l.
b11t \It' cannot guan1n•
tl'E' 10 do sn until th<' ad
hn s 111ipcared in th c
P!llX'I'.
DI'.'ltE>,\·LlNE ADS:
Tht's(' ads are strictly
cash in advRnce by m111l
or 11l any one of our of·
flc(>l;. NO phorw orden.
DracJllnr: 3 p.m. FrldRy,
COfita i\lesa offlrf' 12
noon -all branch of· fices.
TitE DAILY Pll.OT re.
SCl"\"C':< thr rii::ht to clas-
~i fy, rdil, C('n~nr or rr·
fU~f' nny 11clv('rtl-(!mf'nt,
""d lri t"hn nge iu tfll~
&: tf'IO'.lil:t ti/\n$ 11·1t11nut
nrlor nnl1C('.
•
•
WATERFRONT
ISLAND HOME
1
3 Bdrm, F amily. Room,
83/•o/o loan avail.
BROKER 833·0780
' * 5 BEDROOMS * IX-11, din1ni: ;1r"n, .~ B:i.
('1••:1n, ~!):t<·lllu' l -~tor y
Cl1fn1n\ 1•n.
~~!l °ill\
-GEM-
\ 121l-F Tu•1ln 1\1 •'., i\ B.
1 Rl::Al.TOlt."i t»l~-lfi:?.1
, ----e"EACH INCOME
1-\lrnish•~l d11pl•:.. P~ l•l•'\'k
I lfl •l·"•"lltl )"""I" 11111! 11'1• I fhrpl111·•• :(: h11 1IJ 1n• (i.~ f'fjl'!
BALBOA BAY PROP.
:'\l l·~:t \°11d<' [)f Ht 11 tlh•'i * 556-8800 *
\'> l~r11l'll, i-h•11•~. 1···~1:1 111 .111 •.
fi,hill): .~· ~Ud!ili.: I !1 I~
I ~·h.1r1111111:, ·; Ill'. <·nll.11:<·
("••lllp\1•1<'1~· l"•'tl1()(1·1··1 ,\-.:; I hn: $~)1.:m.
BALBOA BAY PROP. * 673-7420 *
-H,,rbor -View Homes-
! 1C.rl ;o.11 f>3Jer1110 S:il.11~1
I>~ t h\11• I' Fr" 11•· I Ht:
I j\'('\I !11 1,....,...1 & 1:1'!'"" !~It, :.'
fr/ll<'"•. l'fll, 111n1il~· nn. h;1r,
11!.11)('~, lllnd~C'Rf1• rl
I 673-7133 * 675-8473
RAVC"HEST. h,v 01111t'r, :,?lo.I~\
..q fl, I Hit. l,111) I t!l L•rn•
•l+•1 nn, 2 f1 pli·i.. ""! I• 1 h'\:
.~1ah' fl'l~·,-.r, If 1 t .-11 • 11
11111111n .... u .. 1 (\\'''"• ST'.t:i0u.
CAii fl'lr npp1, :11~..h\!i, -01~11
h11u~r I :i ~un.
:\1 ·111~11 ! C°l'•'"' Ctonrl·~
rt,111,:i, JU I\• lflll\1,(fl. OP•' ..;;\;
$.\l'IOO ,11""~'11111. I hr. :l l<.t,
r.1n1 r•11 , ll!~Jl. ttr1t1!s. t•\1wr
f.12-Ti'lli.
Any"' UA,y 1S111e BJ:;.51' DA·Y to
1
Mill IJfl ndl ()on't d1!1ay .•
l'J!il\ todll)' 642-5678.
•
..
DAILY
PILOT
ORANGE
COAST'S
GET
A
'CHARGE'
out of your
DAILY
PILOT
WANT AD
NOW
' HONORING
Master Charge
and
BankAmericard
DIAL
642-5678
------'---''
,
•
..
D.\JI. Y PILOT ,..,.,-Octobtf u., 1913
-... -l~I ~I ---~l~;;;""i l~_"r!!._'!l"~I [jj I
Mollli. -Income Property 161 Mounteln, o.-t -F""'ishod
' I~ I ---
For S.le 12S ----"'"--'--Resort 174 Red Carpet -c."'e"'L•"".'""'"a1-,-...,.--.-,.."' .. ~, Generel
300 tfout.t1 Unfum,
Cotta MoN L•ouna S.Ktl GO Fl RST CLASS
Gt-t tf'f' fttw"$1 In !his ~tom
hit. ~. Jn be~ 1''.V. ad\111
park. To many cxtraii 10
tb1. Pr1Cf'd SZ,.000 ~·n
by llppnl,
COAST 531-7212
12.US '72 Mobile hoTM
in Hfthlands, C•. C•r·
port end lovoly porch.
Land1ca~ -in •
moclern Mobile ,,.,k,
5'6-0135 •fter 6 pm.
10x·t3' Flamingo, Q 11 a 111 y
made. Set up In nice Colta
Mnia. adult purk. Sp, rem
$61)., New awniJ1KX &
5kirtings. Only $3>150.
Aml"'rican S37·9390
PRIVATE pk11o I: garden, 1
bdrm, 10.."Ci(), 9.'Rlnut panel·
Ing, Xlnl cond. $4200. flm1.
Costa P.leaa. &fl-Qi89
'72 SILVER.CREST, 24x57 2
br, 2 ba, furn., untum., For
det&llt & appnt, 5.51-2579
NJ;W % BR, 1 BA living rm.
Adull per1r v.·/ private
beach -$16.500 5-ID-367l
i\.10Bll.E Homt 10x50, 8x.2-I
Cftbana, new cpl, "acant. -MOBILE Home Cabana ,
NN'pOr't'a ftn~ Parle. Near
bay, aJ30 fUm , ~3207
I~
Acrea·ge for sala llO
3 loll together, aell together
or sep. $200 ca. Harbor Rell
!'.tern CM &t2-a!34
Commerclal
Pr-rtv 151
NEWPORT &'EACH
PrlrTh· ~1 Si.1•
For boat rrpe.irs & salrs
Bill Grundy, Rltr. 675-SI61
Con<lomlnlum•
for .... 160
NEWPORT RMERA
Gradous 3 Br, 2i,t Ba, fpl ,
tam rm. 2 car 1ar. Immed.
PoA. t32,COO, Fln.1nclng
avall. To inspect ca 11
64>t002.
NEWPORT Crest co n d o ,
3BR, 2~ ba, plan 3, J)("W &
vac, Tennis, pool, aaun11,
acrosa lltreel, xlnt fin. avail,
Make otr, Owner, 6~
Duplu .. /Unn•
.. i. 1'2
Newpon Beach
Daple11
S.per Temis
How about 90 '7<. financing at
8% on a 3 BR 2 BA clown·
ltaJn and 2 BR 1 BA up. OnlY 6 door.I to beach. An
Ideal .!iuntnle1"·11·intf'r rental.
Only $84,500
CALL 644-nll
MESA Verde 2 & 3 bdr11t, J
car ga.rap, min. upkeep.
Sale by owner $.l9,400
>l!J.-0504.
DUPLEX -Sharp Santa Ant
Hellbtl. Prtnclpals only.
Terms. $37,!iOO. 642-372!1
Income Property 161
OFFICE A IDdualrtal bldg1,
100% full. Locat<'<I at
Orange County airport lO'N.
1ptndable after vacancy &
mgment. Bkr. 960-1248.
TIME FOR
QUICI CASH
THROUGH A
DAILY PILOT
Exclusives room . u"'6, + •lttplno $ LANDLORDS $ Please Help! ll~snw1 a>tliae on ,...,
$33,950. Two 2 Bdrm 1 88 on loft. PrtC'fd $7,500. T'f:rm1. Let US rmt UR pni~ . N ol lnr: lot. Pet olc
1 Private Party. 8")..~15 alt We auvn all the bee.ch WE EEO $210.1 br ~ view a,pl, Ira: '3i:.' v~°!ty ~niuid ~~ 8 pm. ciUes A inland 01:angp Co. 2 BEDROOM HOUSE <lecll:, Im.I JM'I Ok.
l'tf'ed r&laing. G~tt low s Re•I Estate Want.d 114 FEE FREE. SavP ThnP & SS. wtth tarp rerr.fd yard for 2 Sa.-2 br, frpk, .ep. dilliftE
fint lime investor slltl'ter $ ALA RENTALS $ n1ed!um 1111~ dol•1 (well rm, Ira fenctd yt.td. Redee
unit•. EX EC U T I V l: de1~1 trained l VU')' obed.N!flt!) Ir nict!
m ~ f I o .. l 2 • M<l'lira 2 BR pla.n. Old ""J""-t.rDBach ··-'t fWTI I 2 Mature Wo11cl.na Ad\llW $351)-3 Br, 2 ba, frplc, dbl _,_. OUl"JI ClC . .,.,.y • • vr • """"u-· ..,., • VERY RE$PONSIBI..E1 gar Atrium. Love! 3 of these 2 Brm 1 ba t-;flll!Oluff only. Pre re r hlk. to 1:>6,y. Util. pd. , Will take extrenlely aiood vu!· Y ocean ~le.~~·· 1r:n1=tn, \~II: ~f~~l~Vlll pe.y ca.th. S~~.BF~:able. CIOS1 c~·e ot home! $400.lr 3 Br. !rplc, aar, y~rd,
conventional. Reni.. .on way ~~~~~~~~~~ / $210.NS.2 br·Vkw' Com· I lease crdl C\'ell, ~·7881 patk>, exceptional n 1 c tt to $600 per month. ;. plete w/di/Jhes sml: pet ($175 n1ax) famUy hOmc.
$59.850 lourpl<'X, 2 Br •.. 1 bn. r1n1nclaf 11 •l ~_8. B11¥-2 hr., lge, LR. Sharp l IR, 1 IA. dW. NU-VIEW RENTALS
Backl oi1 goU courw. 1Cl'"k Ir&'. kit. pe.tio & g&r-avulJ. 9aroge, poof. Quiet m..«00 or 494-3248-
rlown, Will Rll on l'llntract SJOO.NB.3 Br. 2 00, loveiy strfft. Avafl IOW. $275 ATI'ENTION RDITER.S1 !
or conventklnal. % bl.k. to octtm-Neg, Yrly, per rno1trh. Coll Lorry Need a~! Apartment! or
$63,000. Four 2 Brm. l ba. Business '5aj-B, Bay-4 br .. 3 be. yrty. H 1_ Roal Estat ' Roommatie-? We have em houses on a lot big enouah appll's, lncd. patio & 1(8.r. ., ·-• •• a)!! •
lor one more hQuse or 2 Opportu_n_ll~Y __ 2_oo_ ALA Rent•is 642-8383 546-5880. BEACON RENTALS
more units. Eulsidt". \VIII
trnde for 12 or more unlls or FOR SALE Balbo• lsl•nd MESA DEL MAR W S Cwt .... H~6 Lag. Sch l'Onventlonal or cootracr. Pt-:.<\.~lIT. CANDY & GUM ;>"U• lO'i~.15~;, Down. twlts are Vt:NDING BUSINESS m 4 BR house avail now for 9 Super sharp cul-de-sac home. GREAT View home 6 nn
low al $663. per month. Costa Mesa GOOD fT';CQME mo. leue. Lob of room. Big yard & clean b , a pin. 2 Ba, 3 patio, or town'.
$85,850. Mna Verde Prlcle ot 6 fO S hClw-s v.·eekly. Total U75 per mo, STIJDENTS S300 mo. 1...easc only. ED $375.. 49'-2508 or ~ Ownership 4-plex. 3 bl', 2 ba pri~ St,238.00 Cll.Sh. Wrtte WELt."'O!'.tE. Olli {213) RIDDLE REALTOR, &I;.. PM
I On! 1~1 TEXAS KA.~DY KOM· 289-8300, lt no IU'ISWft" leave 8811. 1--===,.,.=-=-cco-= OV.'tll'ts un 1. Y .,.,~ m...,.,. (~•,_•~ •~•. otARMJ.NG 2 Br, ........ tum. down. Will &ell 00 contract PANY, Inc. 1321 Basie l'.W ...,,,,.....,....,, f I i.r· last
or convenUOnal. Rd., San Antonio, TPX. 78212 4 BR, 2 BA, No. Baytront. NEW ;;c, ~•ie. &. •
$185,850. Buy all 3 of these Include your phone number. AvaU Oct. 15-.Jan. 15th. TOWNHOUSE S ' 4 941·
152,950 lourplexe~. -PRIDE-Of--$375/mo. Days 642-1670, 2BR, l~ ba, sdlts, crpts, LtgUM HUii
For detailed Information on OWNERSHIP eves ~7 drps •. $265. 673-1899 , _1_,,.. Wo,ld, N<W 3 BR, 2 lhl"M' .!Ind Other units C:'\Jl UC a w Don Berman, Brok<>r and SEU' :J'ERVICE Balboa Peninsula East&1de, lrg 3BR, l'A Ba, car closed gar. $650 prl pty.
I -II R·' C t RE.'ITAURANT sep. din nn. Huge den. l.i'g TI4-8J0...9187 un ta i.,. ....... a 11• "" arpe Best location t.n Stanton. Ter-BA Y~'RONT 5 Bdrm.;, 4 yard. $285, 258 Santa Isabel. t--~~~-----Ni:l~t~ Co~~7
E. mri~~n~:.'"'n~~~r ri~vrc~ Ba1tru.6, J!.~e!;~oat. WinLer or &12-2639: f)46.. 7945. Lagunti N1guet
"""'"' ....... ,, l!i" yr Y· •J"""-PRIVATE l1ome $13), ana:ts, -==-"==----
9• co-MM'L $6S,OOO. Austin Smith Cor· Lido Isl• couples. Al80 2 BR, tnod, THE SHORES mWl. Reitlrors 644·'1'270. $130, kkWpoll. Agt. 1-~ce, Attractive ocean view deck. LIVE ON LIDO !m-843tl. < Bdnn, euy maintenanc<.
RENTALS Money to Lo.n 240 2 BR, 2 BA, brick trplc, dbl 2 Bedrooms, 2 bath 11 Beamtd ceilinp. Stlf<lean
$1 000 to $3 000 aar., wlhr/dryr. WVliet" TownhouM!. Jleated swim· oven. Security rate. Near • • or up ' rental. $350. 673-2227, 213: ming pool. $225/mo. Call beach, $450 indudes use of $59 500 $10,000 AND MORE '1!13-0127. 1 645-6610. "°"'· tennis q'l•. 23682 Sid· .. , Rememoer Avco 'thrltt for u .... _,. ~ ~-" a Real Estatp Loan. Upon \VINTER lease, beaut. So. BEAUT, 4 Br. + Fam rm nr ney ~· ,..... ~1o;r.
Loi -z.ooe c.2. SO' x 245' v.ith
apprmimatcly fiXl sq. ft.
o! bulldlng. Pr"l!'9ent Income
is tn-.o.· at $525 ptt n>0. \\'ho·s
first?
Newport
_,_JL
F•lrvtew
646-1111
(enytlmoJ
OCEAN BREEZES
DUPLEX
71'.i% FHA LOAN
ENJOY OCEAN BREEZE &
SMOG FREE UVT.NG near.
ly rent . tree. Two 2 BR. units. Liv in one • rent the
other. TAKE OVER existing
l'l!A loe.ns at 71.4 % int. No
qualifylna. No new Joan
con. BEST BUY IN TOWN
AT $39,500!! ~e ad'van·
lagt of this Value t'oday! Call
(714) 871MSOO
ronson
approval, use the money Baylront horn<>: 4 Br, 5 Ba, sch, frplc, S325 $330 A month, newer 3 BR,
ho\\'e\>er you like. Al!IO aiok Beaut furn, sandy beach. * 56'-5071 * 2 be.. with pool faclliUes. Pier & float. Sl,650. Month. $465 a month. Beacl'J aide about our unsecured per. Bill Grundy Rltr 6TH161 3 br, 2 bl., ~ly painttd, nPW 2 BR home, pc>Mibte
sonal loans. N a~ .. h ne1v landscape, excepUonal lcue option. Place Realty ""'6//IJCQ Tl-SIFT ewport ~-rental. sm. 646-6222. Gl-9704 -cM-9'129
WALK to Water I Br hie, ... _ p . 6".b.l N~ ~Dr. ktd11/pfts, UtU pd. Alto .... .._ omt Linda Isle
-
-o-h C.J\1. Sl20: • H.B. $120: 3 BR 2 BA Im ul t · ....,,...,_..c La Beach •150 AJJ • • mac a e. l 'OJ{"""2"'YR. Jeue Pier &: slip 833 3440 guna • · Magnficent ocean vi"' · · houses. Aa:t. Fet. 979-&CO Overmed 2-cat' gar. Qlllei 6 Br, 4~ Ba., air-cond. 7,lm 1st TD Loans Houses Unfurn. 305 residential street. $350 mo. e83i 8=Rlli: 6'15-6161.
Adults pret'd. 496-Tlll Blcr. • tJP TO 90% Gener•I OCEAN View, cu.st -4 BR, 3 Newport 8McPI
8~ % INTEREST . rt BA, !am rm, tp!c, wet bar. 0 2nd TD Loa.OS $175eM-1 b<. ""'· Now. P · walk to nwma, U5' M ST b<au!. new 3 S1Y
Low•st r•t•1 Or•ng• Co,
S•Hler Mtg. Co.
642-2171 545-4611
Servin& Harbor area 24 )'l"!I.
-00N'T BORROW .
'TIL YOU CAtL USI
Borrow on your· home equity
for any pod pw'J)Olle. Sent·
ilia Los Aneelet" County for
aVer 3l years and NOW 1.n
Orange County!
SIGNAL MORTGAGE t'O.
(TI4l 556-0108
vatt m ., m l. pet ok. 586-0237 outstandlna bay view, 3 Br,
$195-Bal. lite.rear Me. ulil, 3 Ba, huge sundeck. in-
pcl. Sml. pet ok. Yrly. .-Fountain Valley tercom, v.>et bar, bltna, 2
$225--CdM ld>r Cottage. nice . car gar, elec., opentt.
yarct, !tlV/re1:Now. 3 BR, 2BA, fplc.,bltna, 2 car $4!1.'5/mo. Balboa. ~2725.
SW>-CM-2 Bi-. C'utle! Fncd., gar, patio. kidA OK. $265 HARBOR Vlew Hom(ts •
pe.tlo w/ga.r-AvaU, mo. No fee, agent 84Ht21. Carmel NEW '3 hr: fam
SMO-OfM·2 .?r., 2 b,a· twnhae., Huntington 8Hch nn: pool, tennis privl.
frpl., appli s, patio. Lease/OptionJSell 'Eqizity.
$250-E. ~-3 .... 2 ba., ~'"'" Please Help! c&l+-=1"759"'.-;;-=-,;--,,-:::-patio COY d. gar., ruce area. "YEARLY 2 8 N ly $360-N'B-4 Br., 3 Ba. yearly, WE NEED r, ew re-
trpk, 2 decks, child & pet. 2 BEDROOM HOUSE decor. Nu crpts, drpg, Stv .. $425..QlM.J &: den :1 ha._.-.. frig, Adults, m pets, ~.
• ... ~-6'"3-wtrtrlarge" t~'"YID'tl-for~2 ~
beams, trpl., D/W, eke. gar. medium 91ttd dogs '"'e:l.Ji;;;==·c,-;=-:;:=..,,-= ALA Rentals 642-1383 trained &: very obedient! l BLUF'FS Linda·•inJtle I~ 3
l'I H I 1 2 ~1ature Worirtng Adults hr, 2 ba, oov. patki, Atrium ease • P· VERY RESPONSIBLE! lovely l'ODd. Lease $475.
WE NEED \Viii take extremely good Avail Nov. fi7S..598_2-~~-4500 camJJUA' Drtve, N.B.
NEED~'! $1,000, or Up to
$3,CXXl, $10,CXXl and more. Realty & Investments ~member Avco Thrirt for 2 BEDROOM HOUSE '"'' "' "°""'' DOVER SHOR!!S with ~e fenced yard for 2 Pleaae call eves. 548-7881 B!aut, view borne. ' Bdrm.I.,
medl"Ufu sized dogs (well ($1'15 mu) 4 Ba. $1,100. Mo/Leue SOS E. Et.Ja.JD a Real Eata.te Loan. Upon
F'l/l..J..ERTON approval. UM' the money
THREE IS A =-"..:"' ~~ .. ;t:
CROWD oooai '°""'·
In th.ls caae It'.!! Income! AVCO THRIFT
Large 2 bedroom, triplex. 620 .'l'~port Center Dr.
All with prtva.1e patloe. Buy Suite 101
111tJ 1~1Jt In su~r Costa Newport Beach
!'.le!S6. $5.1.500. Call 646-TITI. 833-:144-0 , _________ _
OF'fN Tll 9 • rr:s 'UN ro BE MCE• Mortg-en,
~. Trust Deecls 260 THE REllL
EST.llTERS· 1<o~ PUT YOUR MONEY
*8·2BRHOUSES *
lt6' x 300' lot
yearly lncon1c Sl4,1~.
SI JO,OOJ
RIVIERA REALTY
l•l:I liru.·' :-· ,.,
642-7007 645-5609 Ev ...
1ndu!ltrial Pro p•rfy 168 -CORNER IS-El Euclid &
Talbert FV, \VJll sell $8~1
bt.'iow Tax epprnl~'\l. C, J .
McCotrrrlck 64.S-4363
Lots for Sala 170
TO WORK FOR YOU I
1-.:am 10% or morc._on \veil.
Ge'CUftd 2nd Trust Deem on
Orange County f'l!'9..I estate.
SIGNAL MORTGAGE CO.
1n41 556-0106
4500 Camplll Dr., N.8.
\\'ILL Buy 1st and 2nd TD'a
up to $100,000. Ca.II betwn 5
&.9PMor7to9A?.1
&U-51\ll _ .. _
lnlined lee very obedient: J O FE BW Grundy Rltr. 6'is-6161
2 Mature Workli:ig Aduhs N E-OCEAN front 2 Br 2 Ba turn
VERY RESPONSIBLE~ NEWPORT WEST $300. Wlntt-r renlais. Havt
Will take extremely good 4 BR., 2 BA., $315 per mo. other call or.come ln to see
care ol home! tittpJace, all bu:llt·lni, va· Property House 642-3S5Q
Please call eves. 548-7881. cant. Mow in last. IR &: PRESI'IGE community 2 "' !Sl75 ma..'Cl la!t Wailt to beach Bkr · · ' FREE RENTAL BOOK 96U.51i. . . 2.~· tg. tam nn, all elect kit, w/d, prlv. bch. $390 Jse,
DROP IN & BROWSE St'ARKLlNG CLEAN 3 Br .. 524-3473 or MS-6527
For example: 3 Bdrm l1ome, huic furn rm, newty .Pnkl, 4 SR; 2 Ba, unfllrn yearly
2 bath, dbl garage, fenced crpld & draped sm $330. ttepa from ocean
yard, bu i I t -Ins. $250 Rt:D CARP.t.'T 'REALTORS Property House 6f2..3850
per/mo. New carpets. Arlene 893-1351 POSH -ExecTownhobelCon·
NE\V 3 BR. 2 Ba home. Fncd ,do. 3 Br, 2~ ba., frplc, pool.
yard, dbl pr. Pei. & $325/mo. 648-1231, 645-0!!30
children welcome. N r NR. Beach 4 Br, tam nn. 3
beach. 1915 A I 1 u n a , Ba fi-plt C'Ondo. Pool, ten· •t•~ •• ,.,. $290/per mo. 642-3216. niS: $500 mo. 66-1658.
2790 Harbor Blvd. at Adams. ALONE on lot priv. fncdlis~e~nt.c£!tem!i!!!!~~~== / LANDLORDS! ho"'"'· l150. dbl ..,. """ll: Br, $185. Snids or families. 4 BR tam rm, ~.
We Speclallze ln Newport Agt. Fee. ~30 prlv 'bch wtclub prlvl, conv,
Beach • Corona de! Pi tar • S375. mo 213· 794-.345.3 l Lquna. Our Rental Ser· LEASE w/ option nr bch., • · vice !1 FREE to You~ Try patio, 3 br, fam.:..<_!ln, dte0r'd1'H7o-UMl--~F-u-m-. -.,----
Nu·Vlf'w! shag. Immac. :M11--7150. Unfurn. 310
NU-VIEW RENTALS NEW 2 Bdrm odlt . """°· --------1 STJ....4000 or 4M·l248 pools, tennis, etc. $275. General _,,.....,.._..-c_.~-,-~~~ I Agent. 548-1290 I ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~ I
I' /I! l Bilbo• P•nlnsul• 3 BDRJ.f Condo. Frplc, l~il; BR 2 ba, oceanfront S4~
LEASE option 2 BR, 2BA, ba.th.s. ~./~. ~ 2 BR. 2 ba turn, winter $275
J ACRE near lluntlngton 1 ,:;oiiiijiiiijiiiijiiiijiiiijiiiij~-~
1
f 1 ....., =~ Harbour, R·l, $35,000 . pc, cpt~. df'P!I, appl!ances,r~~-'=..oo~=--Newport Beach, 3 BR, 2 ba..
Forti-~ R., 110 , l block lrom beach & bay. Irvine Unfurn. Yrly. $300. " .....,., .. ' On , .... Po!•t. ,,._.... t-;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;[ 642-5000. Houset Furnished 300 '"" " ............., I•
LAGUNA Beach Lot $2000 General Caplstr•no Beach 3 BR. 2 baths ......... $275
ea. 16 Lotsl. Not bu!!dable ~ & pro Mo NeW 3 & 3 BR, 2 ba. turn. ••• .. · $300 associated
BROKERS ~R£ALTORS
101~ W Unlboo t.'1 l~I J at thls lime, labolou~ viPw Sll&-UtU pd. Nice bach, 2 BR ho~.' beautifully 3 BR + bonus, 2% ba.. $4.25
& future investmen833-!. l.A.'e garage apt. Yan:!. Laiuna. tloo:mucd. Place Realty 3 Br, 2 &lhA · ··• ·•• ··• $450 Huglle~. Ri'Altor 1.355 $110-Util pd. lrg & nice 1 Br. 494-.9704 494-9719 3 Br, 2 Baths .......... S450i!""""""'!!"'"'!!l!!•!!O•• I 499-1731 over garage. Corona <let Coron• ..1~i Mer 4 BR, 21Ai be + vil!W • • $495 Leguna Beach
MOST Beaut. R·l OCEAN Mar '"'
t""'RONT BEACl-1 lot in L.A. StS9-1 Br. ncnr ~ach, View. LAGUNA 1 Br. Quiet beach
County, HoJ\ywood Rh'l'ra Jo"rplc, l)l)OI. Lai\lne. cottaae. $165 Sa la r I td Scc-t1on~ 65' x 400' hy 56'. SZ'Q-2 Br, 1rplc, patio, pet ONE OF A KIND! adults, no pell. 494-8170
$110,00'.l 12131 376-~14. ok. Balboa. Winter. 3 Bedroolns, 2 tu.JI baths. evrs.
WANT AD
642-5678 '=~~~-~-~~..,.. I F"ut re1ult1att 1us1 a phone NU-VIEW RENTALS \\'atk to beach & aJJ Mop. SEE "hear the 1urt, 2 br
,.nll nw:iy . 6'12 5678. 673-40.l) or 494--32.@ pmg. \Vater & gardel'l('r "SINCE l.IM6'• home, 2 car iar, util pd, ====~::===========~=:::;::::::::';!====;;I paid. Yea,~y Lease. Isl \Vestern Banlc Bldg. 1~Ca_ll_•_lt_6~p~m~,--~----
d ffQ 'O S.' ,( -f)-C ~C:.• 606)1 Jarmtne. o~;!verS~I.fC:· 'N';;hh Neweort Belch
\:)~ l.'Q!J ~). ~ P q• >:! "'noo=,~n""· .,-..,~bedrnn~-m-'-.,d"-,~,.,. . . TilE BLU!!"'· 21'0 VI~
TL f / f . • W d G 'fh Ch lf unit across from park and Dorado. Dolores Plan . no n r1gu1ng or am• w1 o uc. e ''""''. "'""' "•""" .,. 3 Bl<.. 211 ''· l<OO . .,, End """' 3 BR., 211 ba. IWlf94 •r Cl.AT a. POUAN tntnt·e _ &ar&ae $225 n10, 2 BR, 2 ba, den, A;C $275 FNah le C!e6n. $4~ Mo.,
644-7111 Agt 4 BR., J ba Sol~ unfum.
O R.o rrol'l!l• '-tt1rs of !h.·('°"'.t:<iO::::;m·,...-' . . 4 BR., 2 b1ui11 . W~ CRVINE TERR. Watk to golf four K1ombled worch b+-" LOVELY 2 BR hon\e, trplc, 2 DR, 2 l>aiha $32!1 club or bH.ch, 3 BR., 2 ba,I
kiw to form fo ur ,lf'l'IPI• 'HOl'da. r· l!lec. <'fC &a.rage. Adults on-5 Bit 3 bft N'pt Bch $575 tum. call ror det.aUs ~
i!i ,RINf NUM8ElfD l[TIERS IN
-THESE $9VA!fS l'l'l'l'I
6 UNSCRAMM.f ABOVE UllflS
1 TO GET /.NSWfl I I I I I
ly ......... Youly . c' AL'L 552 7500 Mo . $300/mo. 43-1 ,Golde11t"Cld • TI!F. BLUFFS. 2221 Vllt.a
A .... CdM. 67Hm ""· VISION ""'''" Lown! l>rl""' furn, 2 AR, : Bs. frp!c, crpts, 3 BR. In B.1urt1. ~ Mo.
i;!ove. No child/J)l'ts. A\·ni! • d h'll TllE BWFFS. 2010 Baja, ln1mt'd . Pref c·!lle. $23:>. re I Vf!f'Y sharp 4 BR. 2 ba.
6ia-0057. OvM'looklng parli:llk~ IP'f'"l·
SHARP 3 OR. fani nn. viov.', REAL'f\' RF:Al.TORS hl'U. Inunf)(.I. 0t.'CUPllllC)'.
11li·e yt'U'd, lcn&e, ava hn· Univ. l'ark CM11tt, Irvine $1.Z Mo. urrfUm.
meet. Don v. Frailklin, BAY & BEACH
Re11!t0l' &n.22Zl. SPAC. 4 llR, 3 BA, kld11 REAL TY 675-3000
'l BR. 1 BA, rernodelt'd, park1 · Pnnb 1~~re, "a.· s.mimo. Condomlntums n'!decor1111'd. Cape c 0 d , Dr ve )' .R;J Ttll, call
$11j. !i09 Goldenrod 673-1658 828-4-195 or 897-ll(5. Furn. 315
OIARMTNG 1 Br unfum. 3 BR. 2 BA. C:fl.l"Ptll It drapes El Toro
Btaut K•rden. $225. Adult•. built Ins, frn(,'°ed yard avaJl'r----------
no pet8. No c:lllld. 673-4169 Nnv 2 S29S Pt'r mo .. Phone BRAND new 3 Br. 2% O.., 2
l Bit 2 BA Uo 837t9ll5 car aan.ae. encl yant,
rle:'lrl l.t 1~cf::11. 's-~r:: Ttm.Tl.Ell.OCK, 4 BR. 2'1 c.rpet, drapes, frplc, pool &r: 'leaJ~Y l~<tt. 644-0611. BA. 3 car garap. No pell. rccreaUoMl ! a c 111 tI e1 , J4~/mo ~ ~7-1U'l7 -TRVTh:E" Ttrr vu IR.l'Jtf, 3 Br, . .~o:;:::-~o-::--:----3 Bii. 11va Oct Wth, lae or L19una Beach Condomlntvm1
m<1 $:)00 R.'tl·:l"T.\R. S2!i0 lnrl utll. 2 Br , 2 88. Cot· Unfurn. 3'20 * l RR, I Bl'I. fil'l'plnoe, hill:<', frplt: A j'IRlk"l. N~wly E --l~T~.-,.------'-'
hllJ':c' yaNl•lrtot11 •. S28a1mO, remodel«!. Nrnr he11ch
lnrluc1ell rarrlentt 8331-8974. 111om.. No pe1111 11r rhlldN!n. NEW 2 lrr. RRs, utility rm ..
SCRAM.LETS ANSWERS IN CLASSIFICATION 800 N,., •"Pad"' Place"' .. , °'11 71 "4" ·64 " " "' '"·· ""'· ''" "°"'· ------------------------------c Call 61HITS. 2!:;/462-3491 "'"et"kd11yJ1, xlnl localloon. $255. 968-1"163
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PUBLIC NOTICE
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PUBLIC NO'l'ICE
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Twtdq, OclOOtr lb, 1973 DAil. Y PILOT
1~-iiiiiiiiiiiiii·-~1:-~ 1-· ... l!tJ ,... , ·-.1~ 1-.. .. -...... l!tJ 1-... -lltl I .... • ·-1~1iiiiiil --iiiiiiiiiiiiiil~-,.1 ...... _ 1ail1 --I~
C-:'4"-'-°'=.I..,. A•1P~ll.~F!um.!!!:. __ ,2UO~J ~ ;;'.:;;:' :"""';:;;:;""=::-":-.,...365-Apll Unfvm. MS Apt. Utifwft. MS Apia Office Rental 440 '••nd I'-ado) 550 J :Siii<iiihooliiiiiisii&iiiiiiiiiiiim;~~
...... ~-a10 -hU...-lil-Fum. or Unfum. ml l MO. Ht£E REI<!' lnltTV<llon1 575 I--""'"""''"""''----= Costa MIN Coste Mina Hunt lft9ton BNch Exeeutl~ ornce Sultir: UtU FOUND II'>' nutty male 1dt· I ;;;;;;;:~~~;;;;;;;;\ Newport a..ch 2 BORMS., -1c. Private "'-""'-'-""''-----Cotti ~ & Janitor paid. Air' con-titna, About t n'Kll. \V1"arln1te [• $.JG WEEk I UP Jan111. AU elc:. bllllt-ins. DELUXE fl~ mi. N. ol Hnta Bch. 2 ditioned. CrPb. patio, x<'ro:ii: . ..--nlte nee. COilar. \'1r ot WANT TO
BLUFFS • StucUo Al BR Apta. Gai:aae. Brokt:r m-6700 APARTMENTS 8
1R. bl~ crpll.. drpt, "°°'· PREVIEW OPENING 9776 K11eUa, An ah e 1 m . Anita iii \\'u.Gn &., U gun1• WORK IN F~ \eUI!. Sparkllna-new e TV A Maid Service Avail. s P· .. ~-Air CoPd -P'rplc'1 . 3 Swim-Pay y ' carport A lndry Award wtnninc 1 2 il 3 br 5,39..1661. BM.ch.. 0i-al 30. A TltAVIL
Onto, areat unobitructed • Phone Service -Hld. Pool UNNY 1 br•OlL&1'""16 "-min& Poola • HMlth Sp. . racil. Cpl I: 1 amJ. child ok. •111• w/tamlly ' rms. No Buslnou Rental .... r St.1AU. btat>k ff'lnale Co::.·k·a· 1 view u~ Newport &y. e Children il Pet Section ~·=· ~ ~':'· S2:2S TeMts Coons • Gym ana No ptill. 842-84 alt 5:30. ~ue. Sorry, no ,ell. From -.. Pm w/ 8 Lu v~ ID AGINCYf :'=1 +~tr! ~l~~m~ 2376~ Blvd., CM Bi lbo• Penln1u11 ~~~m IUO L-iuru a.a. Just sin. OUR TOWN * TOP * t.q, vi e Ralph's l\trlrt, 17th Why not cxinsktf1' our new
elec lrl (Adaood roi::~t) Jl'EW tteJ)S from Laauna't Family Apta, 1250 Adams SI, Co5ta flolea.a.. Call !!.hOrt coune tf.ICht by
:"BA. se5o. ~:&-~.BR, * * STlOO{ING 1 & 2 Br 2 2 BR, near beach Ai: bay $250 1 8~ ~ Dg,~0S190 finesl Cove Beach. Very ~tS. l~~·A!r!~7~· * LOCATION * =~ whit ma1 ~= Coun~ l r a'• I
3 •· c-~-A ~1 Ai' mo, yurty. 2 BR 'l'wnMe fro •'>UI speelaJ, wry delwce, brand · e e puppy .... ~~ 0 · • N"· ~--·-BRAND new BR, 2~ Ba, -"'· IWVt<l'I pll . ..,., • r. 673-3145 ME, DITERR' ANmEA-N new 2 story townhouse apt. Huntlftlton lleach ~ Succt&Sf\1.1 tcta.11 or anv\ce Io. Near Allso School, El Toro ,~ow-ay 1-U1 ._.._ deluxe oondo. Newport rec rm. $165 & Up. 710 W. All tbe privacy or a home. 2 _ cation 00 Eut lTih St ln -Approx. 3 ITIOI. old. pAtt 3 Timia a \Vtt'k. Nut dut
crest, pool, tennis • -c""''"'h"S=''-' CM;;::::.,·~----~~,,~r:!~R: =~ ~i:. VILLAGE BR, 2 BA. ~aut deck• ott DELUXE_,ciult po0-1..a. .e Costa Mf'SL . terrier, black collar a: Rea Oct. 23. end Uoo.. ~Y •=,~~~!~ Lge Fully Fum 2 Br's turn. 673-6640. '!""' H·~ Bl·~ c M bolh Doon. Adults only. No ~!7'eif~towlo, r,r ~~. ! ~ Sqf F't~·-cellar. 837-1487 14 weekl to till H:NI/ 1 644--721.:. BJtns, w/w, bef.m ceJl, pool. C _.....,,. .... .,.,r ..... . . pet1. Chv?w!r. MOO leue. ..., .... pa. • poo ... , 'O au o ~,. FOUND or&nie shon tWrtd Call 5Q.'5M
.,...,.. mo urn. • A&t. Adlta, no pets $.1$). 6'2-Q. ;;;";;'";;";;'iiiidiioliiiiMoiiiiriiiiiiiiiiii (714) 5..i7-8020 497-1617 or 64>-Ei636. aauna, tenru1. 84$-.02M. • On site pa.ridna: male cat. Abou t 9 mo9, 1 i r·or QuallftC.lion
S•n Ju.n Caplttrano MOTEL Apt.I .. lo monthly OPEN EVERYDAY 12 BR. $2l5/$22S/$28l A1ao 1 Br. From SllS. * Excdlerrt ~ t11NSUILI !>&"" Vi<'. Anita & ' Intnvtew
rates, SllO mo. &: up, 2376 lfoun: Fri-Tues lG-6 1 BR., 'vM~v $190 Newport Beach * L.arp siin U't'9 \\'Itson St., l..aguna Jkach,
NEW 2 BR. O>ndo, eb!:5h Newport Blvd. 548-9755. ~ .... :; \Ved . & Thun. 10·1 -I Huge 5tudlo w/vtew 1190 Pltoase call 4.94.St30. '
drps, lnd1'.se pool , elote/ Da na Point '[\.. ,f ____ :_ Spacious 2 BR, 2 BA I BR + Jolt duplex~ * l BR, upstatr1., St70. yrly Realonomlcs 8kr 6Th-6700 FOUND bl.ad!: &. \Yhite male
& ~· ' su;. 830-4394 --------~ a pt. In prime resideriti· PUCE REALTY Including ulll. 304i 33rd. ' q . Vie or Wmwood Dr.
eves. WVE In the au new Dana TOWNHOUSE a l ar•a .Cpts., drps., 4.9-1-91'29 49-1-9704 ~ BUSINESS CORNER In Westmtnst.rr. Ca 11
TownhovM Unfum. SlS Polnt Harbor at th t' bltns, & lrg. y ard. Now OCEA;NFRONT Studio ln C-2 Zoning · ;;5.JO.-=ms-;-;:. ,,-=cc--.--::-c-
Cost1 Mela Motel. 3-4902 Del ObiSpo St. patiot, ccntinental brt>llk· c . -mm • Secluded, prlv beach. Pref a.ntlk ,,,.... building. S32S mo. Lob of w/nea rolla:r , brown coHar,
Um!ted Enmllmmt
PACIFIC TRAVl!L
SCHOOL
610 E. 17th 51, Slnta. Ana
(Accredited by Nattl)
Established 196l beautltW ~1AR1NA INN 2,.Br, fireplace, pool, private va ant I ecl l t• Spanl.!lh villa, many trees, II .e.J Approxlmattly 1400 sq. ti. f"t<,,'D: Little brown male dog.
(496-2353). Kl t ch en . Ef· fast. Spacious aroundt, near posuss1on. $170 mo. male &dull. ~. mo incl otf-s!rttt parking. ED RID· name "Sparky," Vic FV,
MONTICEILO Townhouse, ficiendes & Apartzpents. shopping i fine beach. f'ur. Cell 54$-1882 Mgr:. , Utils, Yr. lease. 494-2791 DI.E liEAL1'0R 6£88t1. Brooldlunt/'\Vamer. 962-1572 I I~ =!u.~.ri,!b~·m7a~: Htated-pool. dfrect !dial n1shed or unlUmlshed, from s· V'lla \VINTER rate. l BR, fully ' WI-UTE Fem Shephml & ............ -
pool tac $240 Cont phoOH, television, *8.wia .$250, Corona del Mar, 1ena I CJ• crpted, 1 blk to main beach, .Rooms 400 FOR lea.se Taoo no stand, puppy round on Newport I ';;;;;;~:;;~ Mr.•~ 5$.2132 act bath, I a u n d r fi taeilltiel, 644-26U. Small Adu.It O>rnp!ex In Lush $175. Studio nfil. $16:i. ROOMS $31 wk up w/kil $30 _Mil remodel to 5Ulte for lo'reeway & Bristol., O t j I
N-rt Beach a:e~~e&~·-~~ ~a5: LG. MWer l hr, 2 ba front ~from~· h"°"• ~~· 5 f>14-.8.47B or 494--i l. wk up apls. Oilldren & pet fut food service. Busy 6t6-29'11, 646-0C29 Baby1lttlnt Come play_ .... ;-our duplex. Nr. heh. bltln&, in. ~c .... ,.. New 2 br, 2ba view upts. sectio11. 237tl N~ Blvd., ccrne:r. S97W.19tb St. Daya FOUND Jone ha~. black --'---''-----
BRAND NEW sportflahlng, shopelng &: trplc, gar, lnclry. $315.. 2 8'1.i42 .r-m· Si:" C 'if .$215 trplc, ~~25. Call CM. 548-915.5, 3967. 64&-5033, eves 6t6-06Sl . w/da.rk orange. Pink collar -BABYSITTING
Leuie with option to pur-rt>1taurant1. $60 week & Up. 673-8.117. 603 Begonia. 548-0i37 or ~· l CLEAN furn Ne OCC STORAGE-SHOP U60 aq tt W/beU arnund neck. Vie. My Home ( Mete
ehul!I Top quaJity! Bring this ad & receive $5 * PLEAS.ANT. ccmlortable, TIRED OF NOISE? OCEAN view bachelor eel· KI t ch en, ~rid.rye; 10' cell. Nr. NB Post Otc. ~fesa Ven:!e Call 5404900. Xlm care. Good luncbn. e 2 & l Bedroom& oU on first week'• rent. clean 2 or 3 br ......... t, ..i ....... , t~. Full kitchen. Yard, no Retired OK. $15 m 0 . D>V. OH door&. Uc ft. FOUND ama11 belie k ~·hlle fenced play yard. can an)'·
• 2 Car Garag" H ... ,, '"""" Wliaon Garden Apts, 2 Br, pets. $125. 673-4156 979--0216 642-95JJ. Maggy dog. Jn Santa Ana time, 646-451~ .. untrngton 8-ch patio, gar. 42'J Larla!pur. l'ii Ba crpts drps Pool F Rl
$45(1. & $475. 673-3687. Mature'ad"I'· 'no ~t· · Mesa Vent. ROOM for rent, Ute kit "lllE aetory" baa a lrg ver bed. Female. Call Bus'tnOll Sorvl••
NEWPORT CRE!IT LOW WEEKLY RATES NEW du plox, now avall -ly. ONLY 11"6•2 ~/M~Os. privil. Non-smoker. Call 5hop ava~. Sl.85/mo. In 963-4846 -PHONE 645-6141 E I S J ' ,.,., • DLX 2 & 3 BR, 2 Ba, encl '"'7 ""~"" Cannery Village 425 30th St., FND. In VI,. ......... __ -a...tHnr PROMPT w•~ "P SERV xecut Y• ult•• 3 BR, S385: 2 BR, $375. 2283 Fountain Way East . ;170 Re laJ Of oN ............ NB 673-9606 or ~ .. uu.;;i.w.-. .......... ,..........,
Duplexes Furn. 345 727 Yorktown Blvd. Hilltop seclu11kin. GTa-5016 (W. of Harboi:' on Wilson) ~Ma up. " c., ROOM fn nice h 0 me · • lot -Hoa& H01Jpttal, Abygsi-\\'ill \VAKE you anyt.lmel
Bea.ch Blvd. at Yorktown 2 BR., bit-ins, pool. Adults, Call S46-2846 ce Ave. 546-l034. w/ldtchen prtvll. ~fature l600 SQ. ft. lndu&trial !!hop, nian female cat full grown * 96&-0289 *
BalbN Pen1n1ule 536-0411 no pets, S22S Lse. UPPER 2 BR, 2 BA Newport Beach Lady. 2915 Andto5, o.t. J':'S: ~ao ::.2rlo ft. Of--557-8375 CablMtmaklne
STUDIOS & 1 BR's. Semple R.E. 67S-Zl01 Married adults, no """ts PARK NEWP. ORT Guest Home 415 ' . S~ALL 10 week Black male OCEANFRONT, f o r mer .,... Industrial Rental 450 kitten, cannot keep!! CABlNE'TS & Fumltzn owner's unit. Upper 2 Br. •. FUll8 ~tchen BRAND new upper 2 BR apt, $150. Call aft 3• 6:U--ll3I APARTMINTS LARGE Privalo r 0 0 m Beautitul kitten! W--0847 Rttnodelina: It Boatworic
Furnl&bed Winter ..,,, · eiato:u pool open beam ceUlngs. S350 per Dana Point Ba 1 ru s l ••• -· · _..mo. e Laundry f&cilitie& mo. Realtor, 644-T270. _ Che or 1 or 2 Bedrooms w/nursln& ca.re, good food · . Pauo.. ~ Call~ e Frtt utiliHea 3 BR, 2 BA ~-·, So. o! BRAND new 2 BR 2 BA, .and Townhouses A-lawdry. 642-9278. NOW LEASING FOUND Female Irish Setter.1c=1-,-,..-'-n"1or='-""-'=--Ouplex" Unfurn. 350 e ,,.__ l'--,........., Cp d Fr. $191.SO Open ~ Dally Huntington Beach Call day or nitt!. ""~ """'"' Hwy fl>lc. patio $325. ta, rps, frple, ocean SJ>a Pools Te-Mis V1c1tlon Rentals 425 NEW M-1 9).11 CUSTOM WOODWORK Corona clel M1lr 0 T.V. Ir maid aerv. avail. ~ &ts.69oo D~Uy 1-5 view. S250 lse. 831-&XJ Across from Fashion Island 810.
: ~~e r' NEW delux 3' br, 2 m.i gar, 2 Story 3 BR, 2 BA, w/frplc.
1
at Jamboree on San Joaqum WAIKIKI -DikaJ (ocean l!am~o~& ~~\~ St. FEr-.tALE Cockapoo -b ~lne~panelinc, ~
NEAR Beaclli Vlew S BR. • 1 Mlle to ocean walk to bch, $365. mo. Call t'iuo, drps, gar, lndry, Hills Road. view) lux Condo, 2 BR, 2 960-lt10 & brown. Vic Ma:anolta St., _Jack Berpnan ......._
1 1% ha, ownr'a unit; CUit · itsuss 644-2281-. tns. 49&"49JJ. '714) M4-1900 ~~~ti~~~lyAV&.u~c -rl I~ ___ • ___ ~-;1'~kGr;': ~!!81 btwn * AJI typa '* -~; !:,'J:: ·~-BAClfELOR"&1.-SR:: patios-l -Bll,.-2 ba, 2. atory~ ntington Be1ch LOVELY _ l BR. 2 Ba Jan. 5, $500. per wk., car ·4001 'BIRCH, NB Lab A: Irish Sett« V1c Vic-Ga~ ca,blnets. r!oor lo
trplc'• priv. ganige. .: bay YU. $325. mo. Ava.ii. Bayfront Condo. ln luxury avail. D. C. Hallam. Im 3600 sq. ft. 15e J>CT' aq rt toria, C.M. 548--200& aft 4 Ceilin&: bookcaJe, etc.
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-. SPAC newer 3 Br, 2 Ba, Divided bath &: lots of Nov, lat. 615-7498, *Brookwood Manor* adult bldg, oh Balboa. Penin. Ala J'i.1oana Blvd. No. l!K4, below going rate, It. mfg. F'ND· Orlhuahua. fml Vi 536-lttB
serv. oorch. Walk shops. SJ&. closets. Rec. hall, pool &. Costa MHa Secluded. 2 BR. apt. in park Unbelievable Extras! -pool, ·(808:955-7121) wh:sle, strg. Baumgardner Sania Ana""""' 2100 · c. CUSTOM Wood'NOtk, rermct .• .,
Irll. S325/lse. 644-«182. ·pool tables, sauna baths, like atruosphere, sunny &. slip privU., etc. $415/per ACUPULCO Condominiwn, 541-5032. ..,..,. · & repair. Vince Lenbofr.
Cotti Mew See for yourself. 11301 2 BR, 1 Ba single story spa&us, $160 to $180. J)e.. mo 64&4al3 or S4S-9695. on be h p1 h. I h WAREHO &73-1851. alt 6. 5.16-MTS. Keelaon Ln. fl blk W. of ...... _._ ··-'t ""'"" &lined for tamily t:.,.;"~. En-2 BR 2 BA ·~ • 2 Br ac ' WI P ~ ' USE & storage, 1725 Lost 555 6"""'""" ""'" , ... ._ crpts, 1 __ .. .. ... '6 , _,., "' , ma.lei. 2 pool1, very 1n. sq rt 2 oftl.cea carpeted EAUTIFUL Beach, 1 blk N, of Slater). drps, dshwhr, fncd patio, c vnl::\.L playground, a child's 1 Ba. $185 Bltns, crpts, expensive, by week. Dee ht 2 rest rooms, ~ned M-1: C11rpet Sentw 8Eastaide cif. ~Ra:::~ =,----~114>-""'"-7848""....,.--., beam cell, frplc, gar. dream. ¥· gar's. Law drps, nr. Harbor HI Sehl. -Jan lSth. call 646-3785 Costa Mesa. $220. mo. GENEROUS REWARD , l\fatket and all shoppg, lg 2 BY oceanfront, beach, e:undk Adulll. S185. 2650 Elden No. cost aaa uW s. Btms, crpts, Gas & wtr pd. Ph 646-2723 962-8874 No ~ ask lor return J OHN s Carpet A: u~
BR 'BA -,_ bl newer 2 br e1 ......... t turn nu A. 531-3125 aft 7. drps, near Beach Blvd. & eves or 646-7382 days. Rent•l1 to Share 430 of _, -~ -ak Dri ~ampoo tree Scotdl· • • c., ... , """""' tns, d ""lodry_., · w847arno_
7380
r Ave. 842-0480 and COZY 2 Br + don, • ha, COSfA MESA 15,000 sq. ft. c_..n • T en gard (Soil Retardllntal OW, pr., $265 mo. 642-~. crpta, rps, , patio, 2 BR, 1 Ba A 3 Br 1% Ba, ROOMMATE wanted t 0 1300 , NC oHe, :s;; C!!_ ~~ rdg1rt0n trom car on P8rt Dqreuen & all coloi'.
EASTSIDE f;'r, nr abops Ir pier $235. bltn range, drps, crpt1, pool . porch over rar. 3 &lkl share furn home 1n Laguoa park g, tncd yrd, gasoline ea"'"·• tmie Balboa h. brighteners &: 10 ml.nute
2 BR. llv rm. din nn. kltch, arr Adlts. baby 0 k · clubrrn, carports. 2 21 2 VILLA YORBA· ocean. S2'75. Peggy Johnson, 3 , BR, 3BA lll7. mo: pump, l0.5 net. Owner/Agt,. It 675-'3384. bleach for white carpet•. ~ prl fenced yrd, attached 53&--2131. College Ave., 6 4 6 -6 0 3 2 . ~1 or aft 7 : 15, 494-00'78, &GOO:l.O, ask-for 673-3315 . . Save your money by 58.Vlni .
gar. $190, 64-HOM. 2 ~· J.:· l'00~· ~~~ 7si':u~:x. ~f 714/142-9622· 6Ta-0098. Jim U!wnsky_ I:m SQ. M'. M·l gpa.ct ~ M~ib.utePm~~ ~ extra trlpt. Will clefln
3 BR, 2 BA. rt!ar yd, children :'f. ' ' e c. or Acfu 1, 2 & 3 Br. Unfurn. SEAC1JFF ~fanor Apts. 2 WANTED female to share w/front office, lge rear muk i..o;.t 1011 . . Ra.I livinr rm., dlnini rm., & ok no dogs $270 mo l&e 84 -718S manied cpl. ults. Non· $123,.$144, $154 a l\to. Stove, Br, 1% Ba. Studio $175. 1 3 BR 2BA bl k door, sm mo. 1793 Whittler, It M·cF-'' s"'•'' Calltt hall $15. Any rm. $1..SO, • · · · MEN, amaU beach hotel. 5tnokers only. No pell. Req. retrig, util tncl. Moderate Pool .• Ask about our di&-ge • apt, oc to CM 646-5033 days· 646-0081 auuen, . . couch $10 Cha1r SS. 15 yn.
18th A Crestmont. 548-5244 Roomti $21.50 per wk. Apta ref. $80. dep. 972 W. 11th St. Income _ ApPllcatlons Wei· count plan. 1525 Plscentla Beach, yearly. On1y, ·$11»3. ~i. ' 5'7-9928 ~ • 9 6 8 -9 8 9 7 . exp. l! ;,.,.hat counts, not · .. •'
Huntlntfon beach $95 per month. SJ6...Tt:ri6. 54S-03S8. come. Ave. 548-2682 673-5950 * 675-4494 NEW faclf 1 000 REWARD. method 1 do \\Uic ll'l)'lelf.. l
N.-rt 8 ···h 3 BR, 2 Ba.. built·ln, c•-11, l BR ~ ' •-t ! SHARE Apt Ol' House · ity ' sq. ft. REWARD for return of red Good tt1 Sll--0101.. \ * s BR. 2 BA. cpts, drps, ~-~ -.,... · ..... .,ts, ""¥'"• s v, re , w/otfice 22()..3 ph.ue pwr .... -"""=='-' =;.'C'~,----1 drp, Ute new, quiet. Mature $75 OH 1st Mo'g Rent. Brand encl gar. Ideal for quiet SAVE SSS$ hot wtr gkylight ~ad lw.u ll'OWn male cat Cal'Jl4:f C&..n"'m \ ~er:__ .. ~ ,...~'n 0NJ. adults, no pet1. $210. 2TI new deluxe 1 & 2 Br garden adult, No pets. \Valk to Home-Partner, 8 3 6-1194, door prime CM' area. dQ' wfwh1te chest. l..i::l&t 10(6 tn Floor (•r & W..-... "'-"......., ... uu, ... ,ww.,. ..... OCEAN&BAYVIEW 16thPlace.Agent.~2414 apts.Frplc'g,dshwhr'g,etc. Bch $200 6'1'5-0'115 ~14'79 ---....,. -• aon .1417 Pr•1tl1e tract nr. •re
No . pe_ts. $300 per m:'· Step& to Bch: Huge 3 Br, 2 * GREENTREE * Walk to beaches & sbop'g. ~ ,.,......:_ 1 Bt •2 Ba. RETIRED lady to share 2 v,.....,,...,, wte .,,.,.-· GoldenwHt It Ed t n 1 er. Dutch Maint. Serv. 6l7·1508 ......,,, Ba. UpP"/' -·-.,.,_ .. __ ,_ Adults only, DO pei. 117S ....... ~. • on .._..___ 2 bath _.__,_ 1JOI) SQ. tt. m·l .v.ce 847 ... or 613-8800 c-nt, Concrete like ...., ....... ~JUl::\,:f\. Ne'N triplex, 3 BR. 2 BA, ::is-.an DD • beaut. Npt. bl. Frplc, mod. p;j_""~· ... 1 ~Q· w/lront ottice lge rear llOO REWARD I .,,,..... ·"\'i Newport IMc"h bltina, Ike: new. $350 furn; ti(eplace garap patio Ir Up. 536--• · AtWrta kitchen .w/dahw&tlr. Ba1 It · .., ........ mo. · door $180 mo im Whittler return ° our Co w
S300 unfum, 675-52CK· or $285. 2637 Elden A've., CM: Ave. sundedc. $350. 838-6988 FJTh1L roommate to slU' CM '64&:5Cm da-· -"A" ...,...; little black & w h J t e CUSTO~f ncrete orlc. 2 BR: cbe to bcb, ev.iiort 646.GOTl 646-4414. NEW 8 unJu:, 2 blks from ~===~~~~·-3BR · • ~¥· ~ Japanese Spaniel Pie~ Remove a.spbait drlvewys. Sho r e1, $225 mo . !!!!!!~~~!!!!~~!!!!!!'j 2 LUXURIOUS 4 Br. apt. 'apt, 1 blk from beach, eves. please call 64i.U7S Cir Replace ""'/l'OncN!te 65c. ft.
yeady/leue DO pets, 218 OCEANFRONT, * EXTRA lrg 1 J}r. Healed :::n·cp:·~~· ~/~ yearly $400 mo. Balboa Zl-30, call aft 6· 645-6729. Rent•ls W•nted 460 548-1452. ' No delayll. F'ree est. Walks.
Cedar 642-6745 DELUXE pool. From $14a. Mature , Cathedral celling. $220 mo. Blvd., Npt Besch. Call G•r19et for ke nt 435 AOORED tamlly J>l!'I. lost. slabs, p11lio.~. No job too
LRG. Luxurioos, u pper. 3 OZ', 2 Ba, )>ltns, frplc, Yrly aMd~~ .. 1 ""64,, _e?~· 18 8 7 Lae, 310 19th St., HB. Call 6T:H>342. MINI WAREHOUSES Please Help!! 'Kicky" blk Poodle PllWY tma.11. 63&..JJZi.
Ocean Front, acros11 SL 450 838-49 2!M9 o ... u. a. ...........,..., an 6 pm Wkend1, 5S6--0828. NEW cust. baytront w/pri · WE NEED Jost 1tnce '()ct, 14. Univ. CEMENT \Vork, pa t to•,
from _say $450 mo. yearly S · 1 l : 6~ ' 2 BR, cpt/drp, ~tins, refr, BRAND nu 6 unit bldg., 2 Br bch & pier, 3 br/2 ba, trpl. STORAGE BE OOM O S Pk Reward 552-1384 drivewaya, sidewalka, brtcJc 673-6~ S3S PER Wk & up. 1 Br, Z Br pool , Adult.a~ no pet. $150. gtlJdlo, ocean view, patio & BBQ. $475 yrly. f19..-0631, No Move.in etr Movc·out 2 . DR H U E · · ' . planters. Reu. 545-2943.
R 3 BR 2 BA lo & Bachelois. Color TV, ~~ ~~~~te Vl!lla Mgr NCI. 5, 1,.... balccny, plush O""'""e 644-4510. d1arges. Jo'rom $7.50 per 1\·1th large fenced yard for 2 B._':Ad~· green It gold CEMENT Work Any Kind NEA new • • c s-maid serv, pool, The Mem, .,.,~ ·• ·--o 2 BR & deck month. mcdiun1 slze-1! dogs (1vell ....:a 1, VIC: 17th or ~hill, · 1 1 & Resldent1ai ed garage. Yearly. 642-3188 4U N. Newport Bl., NB. ea.rpt. No pets. 116 7th St. swi • new cpls, & Hamilton /:..· N,,\\•lnrnl St. HB trnined & very obedient!) sentimental value, reward, Ccomm11 ~!re,!,.,
or 642-7914. 64EH16111 •· E/ai~ 2 Br, 1~ Ba. 962-3289, 536-3534. drpgs., clean, yrly. S?ill mo. ALLSPACE , 2 Mature \Vorking Adults 548-7244 or 673-2951. -co•""-"'-=~·-----1 · Bltns, ref'rlg, c rp I fd r p , Adults. lmmed. Occup'y. VER RE PONS C v;,~-a~ .. _,Ne:d~t ~· ON the beacb thnt J uneUtilllpd. 3 Poot No pets. $165. 2tr!R~~~a:.~~ h"{}';j Agt. 642...o596 or 556-8181. 960-1970 Will tcie !ir!;:LE~ ~~~I """""v -.:.•.;.n,;;l.;.r.;.•cto=-'--~=-$ii'.'6~e ., ... ,,. ~m,~'% ' 646-0474. ok. Play area. Np pet.a. $155. 1700 WESf CLIFF DR. GARAGE FOR RENT care of home!' of s cht1ege P.rit.w"~~ PALOMBO Construction Ch.
" DupleJCH, A1L el@C. 2 br, l ba, 1 842.-1652. 2 BR w/l or 2 BA. Bltn ap-$20. 557.5030 Pleue call eves. $48-7881 Call 557-3893. St. Uc. no. Bl-19UI01. AD
Furn. or Unfum. 355 ~~ ~~ stm&~ ~ _tj~ ~ V,75'0:: n:i-:. :~u:7o ~erg~ =~ ':~~~. GA~AG~1 VJ.t:N7218TED w~~l~~.~. mmt ~~~ca~ ~1;; ~ =-~i;L &ddk.
fiM....5996. paid. "15 l5tb St.. Hunt. garage, bachelor. One adult rgen . >nor be nice & cl8.n & only $3'.KI Shoredlttlll, San ofmenu; GER.WICK A: SON
LRG 2 BR. 2 BA. Newport
Shores:. Nu crpt'&· $275fmo,
yrly. $2SO winter. 54M!m
I~
3 BDRM, 2 BA. yearly. 2 2 BR.. unfurn. Pool. Crpts, Beach. only. $175. 642-6889. Office Rental 440 or lesa. For two emp1i:J)oed Pleue e&U, '92-(166S. Bldg ~tr. Addlt It RemCld ;--~~~!tt>~m~oce~an.~JJ!:N:;ke=.i drps, atow, ttfrig. Adulll, ;;;;;;;;;;:;:=;;::~;:;;:tyoung men. Prefer qutet COLUE 2 male b State L1c. 81·114321 ,?5· fm.282', notJets;-897 Center St, Apt p:-~Pf."Sl~~Nr~ BiA~lf t;i~~~~v!il~~ PRESTIGE street. am mq. )Vd. & Whlle ?-:... .. con: ~ 67J.$)l1 M9-211U 1 HOUSE to beach, Bachelor 2, C.M. 54S-6l30 '-~-.. N bag bl /yr! 673-2828 Phonto 642-024'.l before 2 prn • .. .._. .. 16 JACK Tau1ane, repai r , I: 2 BR. Redecorated. Furn """""''· ew a crpt, tns, mo y. OFFICES weekdays.. . choke chain, plte c:onta.ct, remod, add. Lie 8-1 am.
or unfutn. ~. LARGE 1 Br. Poot Nr. etc. 233> Florida, 536-5882 DUPLEX 3 Br, 2 Ba. All Fountaln Valley, BeaaH· l.:V:i;Nm)o:ZB;;u;;;wn.;;;;;;;j,897~"1~3~1.,,.-....,.=---== Co 541...ooJS shops • .Adltl:, no pea. S1S2 $160 -1 BR. New crptng, gar, bit-ins. Blk to beach. Xtra ta1 new bulldh!g, ground 1\VANTED: 2 Br unfurn house REW.ARD' Loe vaiuabl ~M'"y'-"W"'ay'-'"''"'-'~=·--1 ~,! No2.:;; ~~ ~t ~· 1884 Monrovia. 3 blks to town. 5 blks to lrg. Year round. l.&27·ZJS'l. &or, 3,000 aquare feet, ~iowC.OS~ ~ w:_r~ ring tol9in tn 1ooth W E l•ctrlcal
2 Adults.' 673-158!}. • I """"-'---::-c-,,-,---;=-c-beach. 515 7th St., Hunt. 11 y OCEANFRONT, new, 3 will divide into smaller pm. · Plua. Please call 548-8S29 ELECTRlCIAN-1.Joenae No • .:.c=====--~· 1$175 L.arie 3 br. 2 ba.. Oean Sch. BR 2 BA tpl t d ottlces. 50c per llJU&re A F 360 2 Br, 2 ba furn or unt. -cPts/drps, aduft.!, no pets. WALK TO BEACH oW 1y j 67scfs.;s ~. t 1 lnclud ts WANTED house to rent. BI.JC I Wht. Husky w/blue 23.n!ll. Small jobl. malnt I: r..:iP:.;IL:;:..,'-"u:Crno;. ___ ...;.,;,.o Great area. Pets OK. Tom 7ti5 9\allmar 547·ll55. · YT se. a-::.Pei, all u~ue3: Have dog/'1.-ould like place eye1. Young female. Vic. repain. 548-5203.
Balboa Island 838·3443 or MS-J869. ~UP=.P'°ER="'°1"BR='."°•o"w"'•"r~l~BR=, 1 bl~:. ~· fs~St. ~f:!.; OCEANFRONT Spac. 1 hr tor service. Call MarUyn for hone It P 0 • 1 lb I e · Bay ' Newpxt. 64.S-!'&4. Gerdenlnn
....,,.,, S•n Cle'"9ftf• both untum. No children, no or 847.3957, ~ apt. Unusually nl~. $275. Stovall <n•l 83$440, n4.-827-4580/5ST-4610. $50 REWARD$, male lrlsh :.:..:!
LOVELY Upper. Year1y,........., peta;, heated pool, $150 + Yrly. 645--0668. iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil Setter, 3 yn old, Scar on PROFESSIONAL aardener, I.
Wlnter/$250. 2 Br, I Ba. San Clemente Resident Hotel $50. Sec. dep. 548-9548 DOG RUN OCEAN view. yrly, 2 Br, 1 left naric, V'lc: CM. 979-8006 tree v."Ork, pr u n l n a,
Deck, Frplc, BBQ, }fuge Liv $79.50 PER MONTH 3 BR, l'ii Ba, ipadoua apt. 2 BR. $159. Pool. Gar. Child Ba duplex. $275. 644-ti780 Pwsonal• II"] LOST in CdM, male wtre sprinklers. deanup jobs.
rm. Employed older pre-Quiet _ Secure Child OK. $170. mo. 757 ok. SC-3546, 847-7786. days or 642-3639 eves. Mired terrier, Riverside ~! n~~-c aping. ~.
terred 615-8989. Fum · ut:U. v.'tllkin2' distance Shalimar. * * 2 BR, ] BA, cpts, drps, 11,i, Bl.KS to Bch; 4 Br. :iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~~~ tags, please call 67J...5402. 1 -"-::o::~=""O..,-~~,---~ ~e~.~~?~~t·s~: • U4Utg~c~~'s.c. •365 22Brba~ b:itl~~'tJ~· ~'. ~~Cij $14:>. Ask for lDale, ~~t~~uJ"f~~eck. _P_or_so __ n_11_• ____ ..;5o,;3c;OI ~triR:~·2 ~":. t~~ \~n~,.~~':n~~:~~.
per mo. Avall now. 673-3245. Apt. nrurn. 546-1458 eves&: wkend1 * 3 BR, 2 BA STUDIO. BLU!'~rs area 2 Br. 2 Ba, FUU..Y LICENSED Costs Mesa, 548-2492. Rye Grau & ;..taint. Spmkln
Balboa Penlntula 2 BR 18 ..i--$195/MO. 1fature family. vie11" fireplace pool. $265. * SPffi!TUALisr ... Inlll & &-iv. 641>1072. General ' c.rp ' ..... ., .. , nnge, AvlLll now. 0A"Jl~:<A. month. t!AA .,.... "' .,. WEEK & UP oven, refrl&'. No pets. $150. C)'l..<.,,......, _.....,LJ...I. Executive Offices ~plrituaJ readings 10 am-10 EUROPEAN Garde ner, .-* GREENTREE * Aft 5 pm. !IGS-1455. 2 Biies beach. 2 Br, attractive Sa n Juan Capistrano 2 air conditioned 0 t t I c es pm. Advice on all matters [ JI l•] l\talntenanCf! • Lancbcapina.
• Sleeplna Rooma Ne1v triplex un1ts with "ifake Room For Daddy" bit-ins. New carpet. $150. -avaUable In prof. airport JU N. EJ Camino Real, San ktltrvctm Tree Removal. Very reaaon-• Housekeeplnl: Rooms •--'-· 1 ..... 536-9638 aft 6 pm NE\Y 2 BR. 1%. Ba ocean .. _, -"•· N-"ly ,.,,,...,..,_.. Clemente, 4tn-9136 492-9034. able, 642-5.129 evK. • Ocean View Apta patios, garages, la ... , .... , ••• c ean out ""' gllrfli': · 1 • ..... " ewu: .... -..... LCU
BALBOA INN room, 2 BR, 2 BA, from .•• tum thlt Junk into ca.sh NEW 2 BR, 1 BA In Duplex. dejw. Topdul:ea·s 2 ouper &. dn.ped, reception & phone ARE y00 single 45-55 & want EXPERIEN~ ~
$3)5. 2837 Elden Ave., CM. with a Dally Pilot ClaaaUied $210/mo. No pef11. 313 A .... ~A. a • 0 .' a.nswertne service included. a date Wrtte, OuaWed Ad School• a m 0 nth l )' enance
lCl5 Main Street 646-4414. ad. Call ~ Oswego Ave. H.B. S36-4152. ,,_......_.. Secmarlat & xerox servkes N 543 / n.lly Pll clean up. RnDonslbl• fM
m.17to 2 BDRM t B condo Bltns avail, S~ pet' mo. call Pi. BoX ts:, Oxta Me!!: Instructions 57S estimate. 64.5-l:i87
$225/MO. Lux. 2 Br. Duplex, Apt. Unfvm. 36$. Apt. Unfum. S65 Apt. Unfurn. 365 crpts, dbl~. po.)1. $200'. 540-54 C.allt 93625. CLUB. HANG GUdlni Introduction, GREEN TREE Gf&td. Oxn/
king she bedl. Wtnlft'. 114 Cost1 Meta Cott• Mesa Cotta Mela mo. 494-2918 aft :t. DESK SPACE adj. O.C PROBLEM ~cy. Con· Construction & Instruction. res-Int/Ext. ~ est. N""
E. "Balboa, 1-8'79-S991. Westminster Airport I: Airporter Hotel. f Iden t, 1 y mp a thttlc C~ll anytime, aSc tor Anker. Lawns/F'r't'e aard. 673-S322.
BAt.:BOA 1 Br. apt. ~. •• S60 Ptt mo. Full aect'y, P""°'"•""" counseling, Abor· t!f>.1818. Sell klle ttem• ... 042..5STB
Yearly. S190 utll pd. r"· .... -····················································· . 2 Bdrm, 2 b8th. N~ly phone, copy serv., new tki~·&~d.OpUons ref. 1~;;:.::;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;.::.:::::;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;'' m-7218"" 54&-9695 • Distinctively Different Adult Living : p,;nred-nr.p .. • <&'P'tlng deoi<, etc. •vallable at addijl APCARE 642--4o1.16f,
Coron• del Mar i • ' • : . cleaned Sl60 mo. 642--56l7 charge, if req. 21.T'l DuPont, PREGNANT? T h Ink I n g ~-f • &ACHELOR A,TS. or 1 IR APTS. w/lOFTS From S 160 : Apt1 No. 8' Irvine. 833-322J. abortlon1 Know all the t11.cl• ,...,wJOI lllrgt, benut. urn. : • Furn. or Unfurn. 3JO BEAUT office v.ith son1e fir.rt! Call LIFE LINE _ 24 ~ a cove. priv. p11tlo, • ,.;· ., , ...J : ---------ocean \'le~·. out~ide en-hi'!!, 541-5522.
oee11.n 11\de hwy. l\1alure :. · ,.,, . .;:~ ,'-t?:·~',. ~ • • Btlboa 'Penlni ula 11·auce. conv. parking, cptA, ==----,--..,.,-,,-17
adult . Sl~. 673-2086. •t ~,·~· ::<..:..r:::::~:"j·"···~ ~•e.wBteed : llrps & utll incld . S75 ~r MAKE money Pasy Ill home •1~t "· ·--~ · · :;._1,. ~-v, ,.__. _ 1110. 2:t13 E. Coast Hwy eny Age. No e.,p. \Vrlte Box 1 Br. apt. !Ai blk 10 hf-11<'h. • ·,, t. •. !,:.,JJ/,rf,.. .. , : LRG l BR, utll pd. Encl Cor o na de-I Mar, S..15 Tustin, CR. 92680.
Sl55 & up. UIJI pd. No pets. • ,, ·~,-~,.;.'I ~ .. :; 0v-. ... 393 Hamilton ~ ~~ss,~:~ll.s~~/Gis-~~~: 7l4 :545-3165 ALCOHOIJCS Anonymous.
2500 Seavlew, CdM . : ' ·' ,,..~ta ~--.Ca.92627 Phone 542-7217 or wrHe
C .. 11
-
•• _. ~ Corone cfel Mar DESK space) avatlable S50 • <n4l645-441t mo. \VIII provkle lumiture P.O. Box 1223, Costa Meu.
• 1 BEDRM. turn or untum. at S! mo. Answerina 1ervtce Social Clubs 535
'• Apt. --t ~-.... ~ 2 ava.lle.hle. 1'7375 &ach Blvd.f---------
Trader's Paradise
lines
times
dollars • blkl t~ i:~h . .r~7N· Huntlnrton Beach. 642-43'l1 GOLF -I Want to buy
: Cai to .... __ Nl:W 4 omce & confeottnce mtmbe:nhlp In ti~ lrvtne ~"::::"!'::="".::'---:::~~~=~':':::~:":::::"::'"'."I ' ~ ~" i ~ 1q n t Cout Country Oub. c.a:i1 .~ • rm. W\U ,WY • " a ~1260 '69 DODGE Oiarger RT. .. 17' Gt.A.SPAR BOAT • • THE EXCJTINt. 17c per aq rt, ownr Dexlb&e • ~ 1910 • us hp. Evtnrude
: PALM MESA APTS. ~ tmant, day, LADIES want lo meet men SE·44!1 Mag. motor. Tnrde Trade far truck or !!
: MINUTES TO NP'T. BCH. , nlte ~1411. 1?'° ~m~=~p ~llti ~r Jpep of equal Vil!~ GCJod condition
: Bach, 1 & 2 BR. from $150 SAN Clemente. Small oftlct n~~.; 1 '79 r Phone SJ6.l'ir.io. * 54.1-3961 *
• Adullt1, No Pet.. •ultcs RVlllll, New rCJllSI. or '"°" 4 · : 1581 M~ Or. Rent SI00.·$150. 4i blk ocean MOBILE hOme lot In Palm DOUBLE K EY B 0 A R D
• fS hlks h'om N__. Bhxt.l &. Coast Hwy. C•ll "93.-&m. [ lal °"9cn Greens. loc. on (Olt \\'URLITZER 0 R GAN . • ~·' S.S Lost M'ICI,...... coun:c, Incl mbUl.lp, pl.)'OH TRADF. FOR 10" ~rETAl. ,~;~.:.we rr.C tl F F-NB $.~.!IOO. Eq. s7.700. for Vtt'y l.ATH.E. *CASA VTCT'ORJA * l(OO(l 1utoor !? 640-1090. + ~9719 '*
1. 2 & 3 BR. ).'urn 8' Unf. 2300, 1200 A ~ sq. fl 55c Norton 1SO CC Commando 'fi6 t''LY?ofOtmi ' Dr F\U)'
Cnrpet11. drapes. 0 1\V, 1'V l>H' aq. t1. Ample ~k·~· U1ll. Found (fr ff i ds) 550 ·n. nu chrtc+t ~ cond.. Wll(ln O•ra ... tl for ttn1.
11nt. Pool, etc. ~ Vlctorl11 Uaumg&rdnM', 54.1-503<1. k)w mil~ $85o or trade trailer. Mllbo&t. c.w1opptl:'
St. Al ll11rbor, CM. IM2o.397D s ,\fL of!ice ori Bl"08dway nr SHAGGY doi . ma I e vlt-. for .-Miler' motrJl'eyde~ or :"batewr, tn wtdl '
!Aoi<A•11hnut our 1peclal fl.fovt· Newport Blvd, CO!ltA ~1esa , Paulartno Ai: BrWol, OI. """' lll\.9151 tin JIU'• H.B. $38.TTll.
n owa.ncf'. $50 mo. or It•~. ~I 8'.dly m11tted. !67...f15l •••••••••••••••••••! •
.I
,1 DAJLV PJLOT
£i c' ;
Tuttday, Octobtr 1', 1973
l[Il1 I I OIOj I l[ij] f ~ .. l~ll·· lllil ' r-1 -, jl -.... --,,!DJ ~' -· Ol iiiiiiii' m;mJ;;•, 1 ----1~ I mll.__ _. ,,_, ·~IITTJ I llHJ I l ;' J
H•lpWenlod, M& F710 H••e Wan1J, AZ F 918 Gwdeni"11 !"!lpWanled,M&F !~O Help Wonted, M&F 710 He le W1nled, M&F 7IOH1lp Wanted, M&F 710
l,;,;:';;H;';J,q;';'u;-;.1,;-;,,T:;:;,:-., -;:w::w;:,-;-· I ;.;;;.;.;;;;;;;;:;;.;;;;;;;;.;.;;.1 CLERICAL * ENGINEERING
Help Wanted, M & F 710 Help Wanted; M & F 710
HOUSEKEEPER -to ~ FLEXOWRITER OPR in a ttractive , mnvalc~
ln.te:ret;ine le varied !>* hOlpllal. Fledble houri tot
gram.tsJ!Exper. desired on full or part tlnw emp!Oye:t.
lnden 2201 modcl. Good Xlnt -.'Ol'klna oood. ol pakl
starUne tialaty. I r v I n e vacation. Apply at 1445
Indus. area., Call !540-7630. • Su~rlor .Ave .. Ne wport
~~~ '~.,~ ::~· * Ag~~~NG Attention , ·Immediate Openings ALL uA1soN
MOW • •OGE • 0 . f GIVE us YOUR ~:,J,;,~'l ~r~~ ~~~ Mechanics penmgs or POSITIONS wJ\~~TotvE
~:;:·:~.:·::::· '""''"· Numbors? and in the Medical 100% Vonan y~~ ~:~ ...
F,qual OppOr. Employer Beach, or ctall 6U4nO
,\ctual llnlt' S. ml'lt'ri.al. You n1av bt' lht< nnt' \\'•· :II'\' ' L A I p I . -•J t in ~ looku1i.:·ror 1f )'OU ffil't'I th~· R . . ersonne 11n1mmt:u aeopen g 1vi-an ~:~~ Sf'ri"c;n~o ~te'~n r~1: !ol\0•1·1ng rl'QUlfl•n1cnts: epa1rmen. OS nge es, . F ~~~ul~~uny:
1>12-1403. . M ' , 1 REE t
FORK U IT OPERATOR HOUSEKEEPER llve in for
$3.72 hr. to ata.rt. Able to ho me on LlrM'la tile with 3
work rotating lhUta. 1.fust children. Some Englllh re-
pus ph.Y&lc8.l. References qu:lred. RefPrence11 please.
may be checktd. Permanent 6'f.rfi6U
poe!Uon & prog r ess 1 v {' f~i~O~U~S~EK~E~E""P~E~R~, -u~,= .. ~1'°n. * 1n1mum year Your 10<01 Allft'I •• , ...... 1111il Bell and Me<! ond "'<> .. •II or• needed to will be t"eS'pOflllible or COlh-• * RA IN (;uriers in.~!alltil, office experience "'"h yo11. II VIN 119•• o"• ol •h• onend "''""Y •••••v• m1t1in91. pUlng of documentation for
qunli1Y ·.oork. r<'asonnhle, *Oper at• a 10 ikilh Li•1•d below, .,011 con ecun "'' 10110 ... 1.,11 fllldicol •k•ll• 0,, shlpm<'1ltll, t'OOrdlnate &hip.
ra~O JOB AGENCY Spanish .11peaklng o n I y .
315 3nl St Su'te 203 ~an side IK>me. Prlv. I'm,
rree C11U1n8tl'fS, 968-2208. k dd good JHl'I· You <On ...... "'" ••. 0 c ty utt•n!ly "eeded 119111 now. H s CASH $ n1en1.sofdocumentatioowilh Hauling •Ya er lrGIPIOft•)'Olld~ffP-,OUrh1ltliMe range oun JO \/ clon't l>g•e one of 111111 production control, qUality
*Familiar with Alpha Job, toe. 11 yo11 c10.,·1 l!o•• one ,killt .,...·n h<1in you. eont:n:ll and .system11 ('fl·
LOCAL n1nv\11s ·"' hRuhn~ by & Numeric F iling of !l·u••• .~llh. let'1 !<Ilk lr<1inl .. 9. Are.as. Personnel Agency gineerlng. The ability to COil·
Huntington Jk~ch 1 S.1&-1439 bath & TV. No cooking,
GARDENER, part timP, 3-5'1 da)'!. 49•1-((-~l
days a "''eek, $3. hr. Contact Housekffplng
~•udent. LRn:r !l'\J<'k. ltras. *Desire to learn Aircraft & Helicopter Medical Corpsmen vl'rse "11h logic and con. Barry. S.ll·ll'!Ni ur 6TJ.-06.17. 833 gt>niallty is nlOSt Important.
II )'i>ll nu'tt 1h1'1K' qualifu·11. Mechanics Medical Specialists ·9770 ,\ m1ni1num of 1 year t'OI·
Thn f•otex. at Surf & Sand & Kitchen
lfotel, 15'15 S. Coast Hwy., Relic!. Call 5f9.3061
Laguna. * liOUSEKEEPER J\vcin, SKJ~~~!;F.:R &:1 1hnn11 trh"J'·,k lions and QI'(' llll('l't•STl'd 111 . [ . loco l A•111r •e•t,..; unih need lcge nece.'Salj'. 1~·c1i ....... oncrt'4'· 11 sP i • Jrlinhi,::, a J:"r>Jiiu1~ Orange Power Generation qu1pment 111 •• ~;11, of "'e" and women Operating Room Specialists ALL BEAUTIFUL
S8\\1ng. b1't'l\l;1ni:. ~4fi..-7ll0 C"uunty t'fln1putcr t'Olll pQny I Mechanics .. ;11, ot .,..;11.out p<ior milO•a•y •tro-CO'S ORANGE, NWPT If. you meet ~ qualil5.c~-
GARDENING HELPER Hunt. Harbour, exper. rels.
$2. PER HOUR .. PART TThlE TOP SAL. IWIHl106.
• 54S-67l9 •
32 Jo"'T. ~URNTTURE Van thllt offc·rs: . ice r.,.-16 hou11 o mo111h, h•o Trained LVNs BCH & FASHION ISL ~~~ and are 11,l(en?Sted In tor local !um hauls. & ~n·t Wheel/Track Vehicle week• a'""'""'· Ar"'y ,.,,,.,;," · • JOUll!W: a growrng Orange GARMENT CUTTER
~r. pref'd or~will ln!in
right applicant 5 Day Wk.
7:45-4: 15, $2.50 hr to start.
Apply 8Zi W. 18th St., C.M.
l\Ton thru Fri. 8; 30 am-noon
only.
* INSPECTORS * I RECEIVING I hauli n(t .. SJ&-1862. 557 .. 2736. *Modern F acilities J Mechanics: e<lf~ ffo.111 $l.S6' to u.:lO o~ tiowr Coullfy romputC1' rompe.ny
• *Com-titive P ay to 1lo•I. Plu• ptO!aOlio~ ond •e· EEG Specialists A.LL FEES that ofkrs. Housecleaning ,.... 1;,e,.,cnt bene~h. II yow clot1'1 PAID BY Varian Data Machines, the
big company in small com-
puters has imnK!diate open..
ings on (1st & 2nd Shifts) in
our receiving Inspection
area. Experience In receiV·
ing ~tion ol resistol'S,
ca pa c itors, transistors,
sheet metal, circuit boards,
etc. required.
Of
. •
HOUSE OF CLEAN
Pro!. cio.re for honic or ore.
C'al'Jl'-"b:, upholstt>l'Y & lloors.
)46.5745.
COP.fPLE"TE CLEANlr\G
\VINDOWS, 1''LOORi ftUGS
ffil.T. ESTIMATES 645-3716
XINI'. hsc, &pl & oUiC'C
ctnng don\.• by lady '\\'/r.Xpt•r.
Dep., OYlfl l:ran'I. 847-3637.
Lo1ndac•ping
LANDSCAPING, sprinklen;,
waterfalls &: fish ponds,
Bn.s. rales, Ac:e Landscape
&: Sprinkler Co. Lie. No.
~ -642-9780.
WlLUAP..tS & SON !'olasonry.
Lie. No. 283046. Brick,
block & i>!OrJ<'. ~637\'.
P•inting &
Paperh•nging
*CUSTOM PAINTING
Jnt cr /Extcr. Jo~n-e Color ton-
wlUng & 'f.'SI . \Von't be un•
derbid. St. Lie. no, 2.Yl9:U.
Ins. 642-61Xf1.
PROF. '\\'alioovering stare
Uc. No. 279514, insur.. all
types of paper. 7 14 :
842-<386.
PA:INTlNG: inside wxl out.
Small ;obs too. · 11 n e a I
references. call 642-«!iS
after 5 p.m.
}o'IRST c l'p.s s p Rin·
ting/paperhanging. E x t .
lnt. Airless 51>ray. f'?'(!(' Est.
97>-"94
BAYVIE\V p ,\J.."'JTING
DISCOUNT. CUSTOl\.1.
673-9352 Atrer 5 Pl\r * PAINTING &: STAINING
JNT!E..\."T. TRIM. Acrous
FREE EST. .Jiln 979--8186
*Excellent Benefits A·r Defense Radar Ren~irmen ho~• onv 0 1 '"' 1ki111 1111.d. £KG-BM, R Specialists
I ""' wt II leod1 you o~t ond poy you EMPLOYERS *Excellent Benefits
*Mod9m Facilities
*Competitive Pay
Please Apply lo
Person Or Contact:
a. Krafka
VDM
Varian Data M•chines
2722 Michelson Or.
Irvine, Calif. 92664
(714) 833-2400
an ('Q Ual opportuni ty
emplayer n\, f
ANSWERIN G St'J'Vir:e some-
one for w e ekends &
graveyarrl. \Vil! t r a i n .
540-1m.
~
A~ 5 pm By Appointment
CoUectioos·R.E.-'I'nlst $12'K
E>;edl Sec' , l 'inancia.t $1'00 Acrotzn"'l'in{ 'tle~ -10-$1;.iO
Sct·n"'taries lo S700
Scc'y/Mk1ng J)eo.r $650+
F'ire/Pcnnnal Lines to $650
Payroll O el'k to $550
lnven Conu·I Clerk S520
Keypunch $508
Clerk Typist $47-l G. Ofc, Lite 1ypc $400
CALL TRISH HOPKINS
'11'.:RRI W1 II'ITEi\10RE
IRVINE PERSONNEi.
SERYICES•AGENCY
4.liS E. 17th St. (al lJ"l'incl Ci\!
Suite 224 642-1470
~
ASSEMBLERS
SMALL METAL
PARTS. NO E X P
REQ'D, GRAVEYARD
SHIFT, XLNT WORK
COND & BENEFITS,
WAG E REVIEW 30
DAYS, ,
Barry L. ?.filler, Eng I nC'.
17200 Redhill Ave •• lrvine
equal opportunity employer
Data Processing Repainnen .... a. you leo•n. X·Ray Specialists
Field Radio Repairmen
Medical Equipffient Repairme n
Teletypewriter Repairmen
Translators/Language
Specialists Dental Spec ialists
Physical/Occupational
Therapists
G•neral Ofc to $600
Insurance Agency Plea.'\C Apply In Sharp lndiv. w/avg typing &
Commercial Desk $800 p Or t\lnt ct some exper, needed as tight
F / C Bookkeeper $750 e l'SOn l\-.: hand to great boss. Xlnt ad-
Off, M $900 B. Krafka vancement potential & co. ice anager benefits, Sh helpful. but NOT
Topographic Instrument
Repairm en
PBX Operators
Telephone/Teletype
Operafors
Medical Records Special ists Sec'y-Land $750 JJ, ~ 1 Receptionist .$500 VDM 8 nitW. Fee Nego/Al90 Fee
uuS. It you 1neet •nl'SC rcqu rl'·
Sec'y-Future $550 Jason Best Agency nH'nt's and are Jntcl'ested in
CoU 21 J·A30·6210 or 714·121·
Optical Lab Specialists
Oraftsmen
Phone 2!J·430-6210 or 'fl.4·811·
1>990, 9 AM IO 9 PM wee•dny•. Gal Fri, 60 wpm $500 17400 Broakhursl, F. Vly joining a growing Orange
6990, 9 AM lo 9. PM weekd1;1'1'· Typ'st ·Tra•'n $400 Su.it£" 213 96.1-6775 Co_only '°"'1""',Y tha. t otren1: '' · $375 Varian Data Machines
Typist, 40wpm 2722 M ' h I D GENERAL *Modern Faclliti•s
Put Your
Military Experience
to Work at Home.
Powermen
Surveyors Women: A/Rec, Train $375 ic 8 son r. MACHINIST *Basic & Malor
A /Pa y Clerk $450 Irvine, Calif. 92664 Di~rsifled work l oad , M-"I I & L"'-&
Communications Anilysts
Aircraft & Hel iC{lpter Repair
We 'll Treat
You to a
Career ,
Fire Rater $450 (714) 833-2400 manuf. e I e c t r o n i c in· 9U c:a ,._
C I $45 strumentatlon, P..todern \\.'Ol"k L.T .O. asua ty Rater 0 an equal opportunity *St •· p h 10
S I $600 II shop. OCM urc a
a es eniployer m ADVANCED KJNETI'CS, Th'C. *Prof_it Sharingr Parts Specialists
Jqin )'Ou'. locol "'"'' R•111v• .u";1 Offset Platemakers/Pressmen ond you II •tod ol your p•e•iou1
Escrow $625 1231 CallVict~~ ~ O l *12 Days Per Year
Keypunch (31 $525 ENUMERATORS ~ Pa1'd Vac•t'-
r1;1nk, T~en you'll t11;1rt building Clerk/Typists Your locol "'"'Y l t •t•ve un it of. Comercial An Equal Oppty EmplQYi'r ......
F , G I $650 $2, 10 per hour GENERAL OFFICE *'Day~ Per YHr p•omolion oncl 1elit1menr b•n•· leo you "'a"y diflt•cn! fob·
lih . All 101 ju1t 16 ~Out\ a ,.,o.,111 lrninl~g prog•a,.,1.• Jobi with o
ond two wee~s o 111111.,.e•. ,.,. Instruc tors luture. Job• w<th <holl•nge. Jobi I 'dre a The City or HUlltl.ngton W',. , , . bill' -Lit h-.. Paid Stck Time
n ustrial R/N $800 Beach has temporaru o ...... n. "'' tnun m mg e "'I"" *1-' 2"" Shift • A/ P bl • -r1."" • J ,,.. ing Great c:1iance to work _u 1• nu .
lt1e1\ed?'fven if yoLH 1~i!I i111'1 -with reipt(I, fond oul ol .,., ho•t • aya es ..,,,.....t-wga..lol-....J>!'?l't\JO""~~ 7W.. witioitCl'Nll'li'r"Clfttt'1~:-.... 1.:iiif9rlntl11I
Receptionist $475 people to t'Onduct a special Start eA75. Call Ann Christie, li1ted. coll 21l·•l0·621 0 or 71•· lnte•eUed'.' Coll 714·S,7·3031 ot o iob yoll won!, Coll 21J.4JO.
121.om. 9 AM la 9 FM Wt•k· 71A.821-69'90, 9 AM to 9 fM 1'6210 O< 714.821.6090. 9 ,.,... lo
doy1, weelcloy1. 9 PM weekd1;1y1, .
l'ensus beginning on Nov. 1 556-m, Control. Clil'e't'r
4019 Westerly Place Znc1 & ending Nov. 20th, 1973. Employment Agency, 3-100
(l\1aeArlhur & BIJ;ch• Each position will be trom
Suite 201 Newport Bc:h 5 to JO days du1·ation. Ap-Irvine Blvd., _N,..B~·..,=.--ihe •~ocl 1111mb11 of Job ·t•oi11in9 ptOG•OMI clependt llflO" the .~m ••qulremeflh of !he loc"ol le1enc u~it. plicants must be ll"illing to GEN'L OFC TRNE
If you'•• hod no p•e•ii:>u1 mililo<y e•perie,..~ yo u gel •Ome.iniriol g<li•• du ly llai";,,G· WO"k 5 I' 6 h--d"y •'n,
.--------------------------------., • u '" ,,... .. No e.x:per. necess. Avg typing I COOK • F /ti1ne employment. _eluding evening .hours . &: &: willingne11s to learn will do
THE ARMY RESERVE A ! tr active convalescent Saturdays. Rcqu1remen1.s: it. Xln'l starting sal. & co.
,j , • hospital. Top sat & benefi tll. Ptlust be 18. yrs o! age or I benefits. I· B In s litutional backgrouM oltkr & physicnHy able to do Jason Best Agency
I IT )A vs rr:o GO rr:o MEETINGS prefd. 642-2'10 0' •ppiy cxten~ve '~'ki"' .• climl> 17400 Brookhont, ,,, Vly I l'\.li J.' l.' • 1445 Superior Ave., N.B. ing. Testing dates n.re r.ton. Suite 213 963-6775
I · "' COOK. Lunches. Exper. on· Oct. ?9lh. & Tues., Oct. 30th. GENERAL OFFICE-• ly. White Horse Inn N.B. Appli!=allon for~s av11.ll. lo I Arm~ Rc1cn·e Oppor1un1r;,.~ ft <.>-p,,,1 be filled out 1n\nlcd. a t Salary ODen. Good typist,
You may be the one \\1! are
looking for, plellSC apply in
person or contac1:
VDM
Varian Oat• Machines
2722 Michelson Or.
Irvine, Calif. ·92664
(7141 833-2400 I Lm A!amito1li/.i,\kC:cu1cr 1 ""-"" u. PC'ralnnct ~pt., l·luntirt:fon Varied duties. ~arp. Fl .1 lhuldm<: 17 -COOK .• Breakfast ncedrd Beach City Hall. 5th & time. For interview, call 11.n equal oppot1unlly
Loi: Al.UJ1i10l', W\ 'J07:'fl immcd. Must be exper. for Main Sis, H.B. F'inal filing 1n4) 847-12'29. employer m/I
I fast operation. 646-5301. date is Fri., Oct. $th. Equal GENER.AL help wanted for !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!O!!!!!!!!!!!'I I Td l me aU 1hc rrlJOn• .. 1,.,. it l'iyt to go lo :rn<elings, and 11i1·c me 11"10: ;,,r.,un.""'" '"' ilit COUNTER Girl for drv Oppor . Employer gift store. Apply btwn, 10 ·---------•I
JU.se rve um1 ne;&r my t ommunuy. ..,1:========~~ ·-"pm, T•t'• """' Ne•-1 cleaning plant, assembling. """""' °' _, '"""•' l bagging, checking exp. Must Center i;>r., N.B.
I Name Aile-·._, do minor rewing, 6 days. Exec Sec'y to S700 GIRLS OR BOYS
I •. Add r ~ Appl y Jn penon, Five A/P Cleric (c.onstr) to $700 10.13 yean old for DAILY
Points Cleaners, 1 8 6 4 1 1'1ktng Secretary to $675 Pnm' paper routes in South 1 City ~1.1.·· ip Main, llwitington Beach, Gal i-~riday $600 Santa Ana, betv.'ecn Main
I 847-2466. Tax: Secretary $650 ~ Cum:nt Occ:upJUo~ fl'I,. Loo( General Office J $450 &: Fairview, Warner &: San I .,,,, ir LI'{E'RY work, \\1>f!W1, Personnel aerie . $425 Diego Fwy.
INSURANCE SALES
' No exp nee., earn whUe yon
learn, part time. eves ii:
wknds, full tlme when qUlllJ.
fiod,
F anners Insurance Group
Ed Lani * 540-1834 I "" . ""'"'of lntcrcs 1 m.anicd, over 25, part li~e, Insurance Clerk $400 642-<lm
I Md!ury l1Jckgro11nd (If 11n~·): Rank r>).!OS use O\\ll car, no seillllg, Design Engr (mech) lo $14K Lynn c:oogon C I Cl k good carnlngs, 894-Z750 Secretary SfiiO District Manager lnven. ontro er I S~iOS U~1e nf S.-p.ua1ion. f before 5 pm. Acctng, Ga\ Frt 10 $750 Equal Opportunity Employer Lite 'I'yp{', exp. $516 &..-----------------------'\.......------~ D i:NT AL r ec eptionist c. OfC' (RE.) 10 '550 GIRL FRIDAY r·c-e Pitid 'Alm Fee Jobs
Holp W•nted, M & F 710 Help Wanted, ·M&F 710 H I W ted M & F 710 Ne"·port o rthodonie otJice. Call Jeannie Sisco WESTCLIFF e P an • Top salary, Fringe benefits, & Sid Hoffman Rapidly expanding }Jospital Personnel Agent'Y
Pl .. fer, Pateh, Repair -4-S-S_E_M_B_L_Y_
* PATCH P LAST'ERING *
BABYSITTER. Over 16. $1. BOOKKEEPER CARPET LAYERS Dental exp req. Ortho exp. NEWPORT SUpply 1''inn Sl"Cks indivirl· 1651 E. Edinger, S.A.
hr 4-7 pm \\•kd11y + ~'9Qn1c Beautiful nlod<'rn office in F.:XPERIENCED ONL'\'! pref. Age Zi-40. 642--2ti26. Personnel Agency ua.I to handle typing & clcri-!Mark II Centcrl
eves. Have 0\\.'11 car or live Jrvinc. Cuinplex. l\.1ust havl' • 642-8535 e DENTAL Chairsidc Assis-833 Dover Dr., N.B. cal duties. J•'OR INTER· JAN,.IT...,.ORIAL
Ali ""C.:;,t~m·'" TRAINEES
Plumbing
L.R. OTIS PLU?t1BING
Remodels & Repairs. \Val('r
heaters, disposals, furnaces,
dAhwashn. SI~ P.1/C &
BIA Complete Plumbing
Service. Lie. zra394.
PLUMBING REPAIR
No job too small ** 642-3128 **
llome Repairs & Rt-modeling
Palio coven, fencing
F..lee. & plumh. 6-1~
Sewingf Altero1tions
Alter•tlons-642-5845
Neat, 11ccurat~. 20 }'earll exp.
Te levision Repair
COLOR TV P.cpair , CXJM.'rl.
reasonable. inoi;t In hon1c.
f"rer estimalc, 11.13. N.U, .~
C.P.t. Bert Ga l l l!m or (',
968-278:1.
Cal-TroniC8. Zenilh-RCA
769 \\'. 20111 St. at
• 6164112 *
so
NEEOEO NOW
in Green Valll'y condos. /\/It .~ A/P background. CHEF • SIOOO per mo. Ttw t~nt, ~or P~ontic prac 642~3870 VIEW CALL 979·7765,
Phone 968-3432 Start $600. CaU Sally HaI"t, Blue B~t. Call bl'f. lO<JO lit'<' 111 NeWpOrt ~.entcr.,~~!'!:~~~~~~~IGIRLS Needed, Prefer typ-Mature 11mnan,.exper prof ..
B A BY S ITT E !t nccdC'd 54Q.W.';5, Coast&\ PCf'SOllnel a.ni.642-5511. . ?.lust have exper. Bilingual r"EXEC. SECRETARY Ing. Apply In person, Port rtea<!y & reliable for night
'vroken<I. Dny.11 & eves In Agency, 2790 Harbor Bl vd., CHILD Ca Sc . prefcrrccl. 640-0003. Theatre, 2905 E. Cosst Hwy, \\.'Ot'k. Office bhlg. Newport
Trv11h'." 5404't30 our home. 8 mo old child. C~f. 13 yr 00;"· J\lat~~ Regular, DENTAL Assistant, exper ~ Pai1. ~a: = cCd""M~.'====--,-'"""""' Beach. 40 hrs . .,.,,k, Good ben·
NEVF.R A FEE i\1cals provided. Ref I . BOOKEEP"RISe • Co ho ' I'd , ~'.,,1 Cd>' ",·nnian only. Chairside & front desk ice ID . flAIR STYLIST w/ foJt-... -. e:fits, Phone 644-0000. .c. c Y m pre . JJJvt: y i K>lnc. duties. 4 Girl ofc, H.B. Great growth potential IU''""5 TE)ff'O Temporary Help 49J..6125. Apply F1i . 10 am-4pm, 1617 Rt>fs. 675-1~. 1,1 . n -tit Gd Soine financial background wanted lmme<liately for JEWELRY SALESMAN
BABYSITTER your house \Vestcliff Dr., Suite 208, lime. °""ne 11· helpful. Sala"' to $66(), Also l~ading beautY salon. Xlnt 21 Yrs of n<><>or older.~. ASSLJ\IBLERS -ele<:tronic. ?i!esa Verde arra. ll.;ippy N.B. · CHOOSE YOUR OWN S1tl111J'. 962-~. Fee Jobs. eaj} Helen ftluon, Ne\\-port location. Phone not ~.~Neat ln a;'~. :~~;';1 \\~~-ing!wlu~r i!r: 15mo old child, 7:30 am-5:JO B 0 o K K EE p ER public \'' HO~RS . DEJ\'TA L Assistant, exrk ~. C085tal Personnel eves, 64¥8762. ance. Salary optional,
strong background in pm, ref tcq. Call aft 6, 8<'counling exper nee. Full oman, part tune, 1n1,'1?ntory only. Chairside &: !ronl es Agency Z790 Harbor Blvd. HAIR Stylist \\'/following for Kirk Je\\.~leni
rcDding sclK:nmtics ,i;, \\'ii'· 556--0978. time only_ O.C. Airport management company dulies. 4 Girl ore. H.B. Ci\1 , • busy shop. Contessa Hatr mi Harbor Bl\'d. senieing JO<'al SIOl"l'S, Car salal)'. 962-2436. • . F hio 675-3316 Co61a Mesa ~94115 ini: from san\C>. Expcr. in BAB'\'SITTER. part time, area, (7141 SJ.1-34.13 n~-essary Re!ail f'XJX'rit'rn:'t' , . . . EXPER. 111ature woman or ;;;";:;=;:;;;""~'~"C~O:' :-;;;::::;: I
solderini: poinl to point 111r· lu·ly fo r 2 chi ldren, SL I-Ir. BOOKh"EEPER, general of. helpful. PIY.lnc 2Ll /R26-00JS. OF.NT~ ch1urs1de ass1st~nt. couple to care for 2 girls 4 &: HARDWARE Sales Clerk JUNIOR SALESMAN:
Ing, hru11rssing or Cll'Ctronic Your ho!nc/tnine. C r.1 f i ce , c 0 n st r u ct i 0 n \Vritc P.O. Box 49271 Los Expen~nced. 3 days a \\eek 6 yra. !'IOme v.·k eves & Should be knowledgeable In n~scn1blics & PC ~ards. M~361S. back~nd es 11 en t i al, Angell"S, C31if. !IOCH9. ' Dr. Wc1ncr 847-&;,ol , wkend eves while.mom and tools. plumbing or elec-~ ~~:4° scf:!1 ~ =:
()nly t''<JX'r. need apply. N. BACK Oflit'f' Git•! n.>quim:I payroll, accounts payable, CHRISTIAN ;;(,. ! . DENTAL Assistant. {'XP d dad go out. lrv:tne. ~fs. trical. MU1t have good ap-days .selling new subscrip. 1-1. ll{'search, 1510 S. Lyon for OB/GYN office. Send typiru:. non-smoker. 1\fon . p;¥iis iing com· rhairside & front desk. El Plea11e. 833-8958. pear &: personality for tions for the DAILY PILOT. SI, i;ant.a Ana. 8.?..~l6\6 rt•sumr to P.O. Box 3992 1hn1 Fri, 8 hrs day, 8~2-1•111 pany in Ne po rt Beach Toro 830-1395 f'ACTORY k I -~ d meeting public. Apply In -------~ks 11·om1111 11·/ heavy ' . wur n c ... .,..-.e ll \V w ·ht Co This is not a paper route ASSEMBLERS Loni{ 8'-nch, 90'\03. phone/r{'(."-'Plioni!>1 l'Xprr. ,t, OES1c;;NER, ~cchan1cal for area \\"~A con~ 7 FM music. ~~hellier, ·0 1 ng • ' and floes •not include de-
i\Tcchanfcally inchnf'<l I o BOYS OR GIRLS good typing skills for very WV\\'lng Medical l n.<1lrume.nt ~ n11n1al~ precl-liver!c.a.or collecting. Open.
learn n vari£'ty or aSS1·mbly BANKUINNGION BANK 10-13 years old for DAIJ.. 'f responslbilc.-, busy position. ~o. ~ust be dynam.1c, sion parts und<'r mic~pe. 9U1CK CASH ings In Costa J\fesa, Jo'ountaln .~ hte m<1rhi11t> sh Q P PfLCYf paper routes in South Closi• \\'t>rk \V/ president 1nnnva11ve & \\'Ork 11.1th Rl't'f!llt \l'OTk i;:icpcr required. Valley and South Huntington Qpcra!ior~'.-.C.~I. fi43-AO:\Q,., H:.<1 Op('nin!! Fnr Santa 1\na, hctween P..fain & & cxe<'. starr. Salary open. minimum supcr:vision. Sc.nd L'lt & 2nd sl~ift , Top wages THROUGH A Beach. Apply now by calling
ASSEMBLER VAULT TELLER Jo~nin.ie\v, \Varnl'r & San X!nl op111y for pcrsnn11J & l'l'SWlle. to B10-Dynam1cs + C.o. bcllCtits, OT 548-3013,
Srnall l'k'('ftun1('S firn1 l!ilOOk· l·:xprr, rerf\lil'l'd Diego F\vy. spiriru~tl growlh. C11!1 Judy, Inc. 17542 Armstrong Ave. GAISER TOOL CO. DAILY PIL Equal Oppor. E mployer
1ng: ror tl!l :i.,~sMnf•]f'I' \\' !Jl'f'· l'll'll."l(' Apply Jn Per.son 6424321 &1:>--1220 JrvinC', Ca. 92705 1701 E. Cnrn<'gie Ave., San1a WANT AD \'IOU~ !'llll(!~'l'1nE{ c'>P.'r, Utrk I.) nn Sn11th Lynn C·'Ogon i\lATUHE. cleAnin~ person. DISP l.A Y a dv c r l i s i n g Ana. 540-~. '
Eni.1n.-crinl(. W:?·~rl()j_ ti!O Nrwpott frnt"r Dr Equal D~t~~u~l~~u~';p\oycr I hrs !X'r wk. f2.50 hr. snlesmun \\'anted. ~~1J Help Wanted, M & F 710 Help Wanted, M & F 710
KEYPUNCH
OPERATOR, SR. IT~i~l•;c,. ________ ,,-,&-SIST1\Nl' i'-t an a g: t' I', i'\e11·pn1·r "''urh Call f'\'l'S. !162-6113 plus liberal !Jonus. , t 1~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; I
•i':iirX'<·s. ('(lunier ~iris, try Eiiuril Ot)f".ir. Eniplnytr BUSBOYS -CCE-R-KTYPIST ~O~~~o~ra:n ~~m~~~ll EXECUTIVES-MANAGERS 3~&7rBe~~i~,0" IBM
CERAr>1TC TlLF: Nf:-.\' & 1wk!;. Diiy..., I\' 1 t r~. RANK 01lt'ra1ion Sl't:ret111·y, Evening Shifts '""' -mod-I .,......,.. •'~I 0 11, JO' 1,· , .,_,.,·.,,,, • 1-,-,,ory. Co<<· Encrg1'1tr. f)('rson11ble 1•.'on11:1n 92672 Or call John Cross, ·~ ,-.r .. -.. ..• ., "lir·111C',vAr(!:.l11l1 so1>1'11.ruu • , .. • -..'U "'·' i\ l r P /\fl3P~l r 1 rr· k BABCOCK ''""""" ~·'"2126 -11 ' 1,.,,,1 ''''· \\'•lob, ''-"k ,,, 1 PP Y n l'rscm 1 or l:;('fll'J'a o ll'l' "or 714-4!12-5121. w.-~.-..1·"'· a.><>--" "' .~. p/l1111c. 1\pply J11rk In " 0 '-' St; i\1 C 11 Sc,r A
Top So''I Tl•<· I'-. ~~ L~. ,.,,,, ',''t, C>I. ('osta 1.lcsa. 979-4200 · 't' 1 r. u i·r · nie exp, nl'.'Cessary · t·· Dli':'Ti\RY Aide to work in 15K, 25K. 75K ELECTRONICS "'A"'"'·~ '' FIVE CROWNS t·111·n1·y, n1orl.' impo11ant than 4 ' • t;qual Or1'nr1w1lty ~mplnyl'r ,~ "'"d 0,,01,.1,._,_"~· 11 I Ir acllve Convalescent SALARIES· NEGOTIAILE Unit of Esterline AVON MAt<ES :tSOl E. Coasr H11)'., ClL7\1 .,..._.,. .. '" u '""""' '" 1 1 lb! "'" f , k ~ ·~-*QUALITY * UARTE:NDERS bolh pn11 & 1--~==~~=~--1 \\'rite, Cla:ss1ficd Ad #965 hospitR · Jo' e~ I' illl\Jrs 0 Are You Unemployed Now-Are You See ingi ....., ...... ra.....,, * MULCH & TOP SOIL * Cllltl~Tr>tAS Tl!!-; Sl".ASON full time. exprr prrfrr!'Ni CANDY l\IAKER Daily Pilot, P.O. Bnx J560 full o~ J>ll:t1 lime J1!*Ployee. A C henqe -Worried About Your Age -3501 llarbor Blvd :-~~q30 TO BE JOI.LY "ul not !l"C· Prefl'r 21 10 :to To SJ;,Q. a 11·k. Ll~ht C'X:Pf'r. Costa i\ll'llll. Calif. 92626 Ht~ne!its 1ndurle j)aid vaca· k d d d A T Co Eam eslrii nioney ror 1nfl11 yt'Rrs Qf ngr, clcnn rut. OK. ~lust be neat in ap. \\'(' will cnU you fol' lnler· !Ions, ~ inrome replace-Tired of Bro •n Promi1e.-lln •Ci • I o MA lofeaa, Calif.
Tutoring as AA AVON R£'p~nta!1vc t:~!abli~h·~I d!nl)("r hou~'" pcarance & willing lcarll('r viM\'. ' ni('nt pl11.n. Apply 1445 A Proper Court e of Action -92626
nITOR. Tr1unro 11n<I l'X· in your spare Lime, Call: pl't'ff'r rolll'Jt" s ! u d r ii r. 10 \\'Ork 111vlng shift. \Vilt CL, ER.K TYPIST ~~,1~, &lrl~,t·24N10e\\.-port Beaeh or ARE YOU UNDER PAID? Equal Oppor. Employer m/f ~71}11. "" 1 1 "'I, 1 • • l"l 1rain co mp le l f'ly ii .. u c-. pr>riAl1'Nt. ~TO!l:I l'Ubj('('(~. J pp y ,,.. \\' "11 "" .. •• . !.!If• d1c l:iho11. Constn1ctlon =7-"=~=o=-==-,::::11 If You Can AMW... ne Followlnt Cat...,tes
Jr. Iii through COll('J:I! 11'\'l'I. AUTO SALES ("r1~k & Cll'3\'Cf, JG52."1 n(r~~~ryJOB AGENCY \\'Ot'k (')([M'I', n ... rs. Hcply D!Sl,IWASHF.R, p/tlnll? eV{'S In n. Afffrmotlv•, We'd Uk• .... lnttnlew Rra~. 962-!1)121 Brookhurst. F\", rln~siflrit 11d. no. ~ e/n 8.· Snt & Sun. Apply betwn 9 I~~~~~~~~~~ I :"Jtfi lr't ~T ' Suitc 20:i !)aily Pilot , P.O. Rox ·l~ffi ,f,, .l, i\fesa Vf'rdt> COQV, With You j' l 1111111,.(ll.tt•· •)flf'1111:i;:.,., N•"'d nt:EnTF.Nl>Elt \\'ANTE!) lhuiiinizlon B~nch !'\16-l4.1!1 f"'lStn J\ll'!';I, ca !Y.!tlW llo~11it11! 661 Ccntc-r St, C1\f. IF YOUR ANSWERS ARE TllUTHFUL
I l[Il]. I fl.:l.;1'l"•'l\i' )'UUO)! nhn \1\\1 F~:l\11\J.I·; (',\!'ACITOP. i\ff~r no•rrl~ '"'''"'TE'R GIRL I r· 1<1'11\VASllER \\"unlcd 11-7 -WE c·~EL" YOU '~,...... '. '"' 1(1 ){',ll'll II<<' :1111n :11111~ ,~ M,, I r ,, m .,, I,, ,. I -'I I' o" '' ,. , ..... vv•• ~ . par 1111(' ~ . . ' "' r ,,~ I ' ~r.~• ''· invr " l)r full limr, $2.00 hr. tr1 linvot "'orking 1'0nds, Cit.II I ~------.;;;;;~ !.11,111• ~.~ t:\p,•111 lie•' no! -;B-0-0~1 -.Gen'IM-a~;n_I_,_ :1s~emhl<'rs . No rxj i. ne•'. , Z·{f"IR A. Do you heve 1lton9 vacel 1Ldrlv117 II nO'l't's.1;,1ry. \\',. 11111 !1'11111. Pu ll rill!!' days. ~lal'I a! .~lnrl . 21 or nv<•r. Call:,.,"='~~·'·=· ~=,--,,..,-::cc::-cll B. Do you h•ve good nallve lnte1119e11ce7
W d M I 700
l'.a1111rll{ p•>lent111! !o S2000. $2, l":I' h1'1. 1 \\"11xh 11'!t·. 2;il)() Sl .!lO ;~\!l-02.41. !Jli:l·O'l27 111· :i:l{i-ll7!lli, f:X).\lt::f.'TfC HcJp Gt• o r
00
g o C. Do you feel 1~ff1clentlr motJ ... ated to ecliieve1
Job ante , a 11 E~<'1•!11'111 J:X-11111 1111111, in.~11r. \\ < 1'1.'lxt 11)'., N. I. 1'11\~n Bylund Agency, '1 ·B O, Oa you h•v• the eblllly to 111ak1 c:leci1ion17 CAil \\'n11ht'r & 1H<' main1 , COOK TRAINEE S ••7--0•)n· d I b 7
ft' 1.TUSICl.\~S • nuo d"~lre,!:
r·luh \1'11rk. ('1111 John nr J311l,
:i57-~l.-tl.
Job W11nted, Fem111 le 702
r;-r:l~O h"lJI 111 r.01111•" '"" h11v<' 11Hh·~. uurKe5,
h flu ic t'kt1..,., 1•<»npanlon~.
llom('m ;1kt r• Up Joh n,
:117..J'.6~,1 _______ _
Help W a nted, M & F 710
ACCOUNTANT
F11· P;11d ld,-.11 Jl<l"llll•>n 111
II'" flll( 1· lh r"'SJl'11l'ithJr j•J~I
l1Hn ~·nr 1nrl 11 11 rh'Jirt·•· In 1.,.,. .. 1ul!1n11: k : J 1:r~ 1 \J,..r
:-!nH Sl :1K. Al.,1 F,.,., J•...0-.
(";i!] flrl1·n f\ht<Jl{l :1k1 ra-1,;
('n.1~•111 r'o'r"'1nn"l Air~'lll'),
".!7!10 l [1u..,~·r Hlvrl ., f';\I
A ~ wan! ad 1a a rood hi-
vl!StmcnL
itnl\', j)ttid \'l:IC._111>11,., 1\pJ1I)' UODY 1111111, Pmtlur1ion 11·n~k .. 1 II • 1;;. 16th .·1 .. S.A."" .. :.r,). E. Ar• yov re• y la 1et 1 re1 l1tic c;ereor o 1·•cflv• n1.'ln 1van!c.,, 11 t•nsc en f f I d h h I · bl Id Ill J)f'fll<)tl 1Q H1iy tt•llrtl't'~!. ~hop, ~.,o·' 20.?ll ll<•rbnr Blvd 1711) 832-1&71 fnr appl. Pi'f'f~r 11() .~IUfl<'nl."11, EXpt'r, l)ltAPERY U)ICratOl'~ & ' I you were COii¥ ne• I •• e p w•• •VI I ••• wou
DAVE Ross ('l'l~tn ~frc;;i G.J:i·5j20 .. A 8 •• & A ...,,, prl'rcl, h11 ! 111it! trnin, Apr[y labll'r. Clnssic DraJlt'r!('s, yoi.1 •'''P' it without deley7 ,,.·!w!'cn :,)IJ .. :JV. t 1 2 :i.o & 4 3Cl YOU SHOULD KNOW
PONTIAC To $3.00 fll'r ht 10 11Wrt II Ex )(' v.·n. :. · : p.1n.. 3853 Bin·h St., N.B. i>'J6-1431
2~~ l/,1rl,,11· Ul~r!.,
C~t.'I l\!~1
i300KK}:f'.:PEk CAR Radio InsL'l er. JX'I", ll111nl:l'urJt"er llamlct. 1rfl5 or 640--013.1 ('Vcs. e The better job• ••e 110t ed .. eitli•d
To s:l.00 ""r hr ro 11tnrt :ii·r.cs~. Up to $l60 wk to Ar\lutt!i, C~1. Ask for l\lr, DRAPERY ,.,...,rkroom help e Th!nl p1rty prof111ion 1l l11fluon ce 11 1ometlm11 ,,. ~11111 &12-0564. 11~ "" /hr jPWrl ry ma11ufnt1ur1ni:: · n<'eded COstn Mf'-"lll area. 111ce111 rv •
1•0., l'rt•fl'r nort·iUllok<'r & rAn Dcnlf'rsh\p l!Xpc>r only COOKS.full iime l'OOks. Pnrl 9~1611 e G1ttl11; the ri 9ht cloor1 01tt11, •t the rl9kt 1.~el ,,.
JW'il 00.dc sl\illlt. Al!llt help 11C'l'd apply, Servi~ cashic:r h ,n1c Ulility n1c!'· Lunch ~ --E-ARN BIO $ quir•1 t.c.h11iqu•I
in th1• :1hop v.•llf•n nn1 bu.~~· t.· ff'l ephonl'."l, 841Hl'.l39. dinner Will triun. r.lnsr be e EJ1•cufl .. e pe1itlo"1 1r• fllltcl threu9h e11ec.utl¥e In•
i11 1h•' 11ffi11'. lk :-1 g1>t1<·1·aJ ovrr 18. Apply at Ground f·u11 or part Umc, no CX· fervl ew•
nll an111rKI pi•Nt:\fl. Round Rr11t .. ZT.10 1!11.rbor l>t'rlcncf' n(lC'("S51lJ)', ~ \n. '\ Min 111um• m1 rli111i1 , 11110!1tot1l1111w1r
EC110 JOB AGfo:NCY CARPENTERS P.l\•11 CM ''e5tnil"l'll rtxJUIN"tl. E~!ab-CUTIY£ SERVICES, INC
n .\RY :<;:rfrET! \\";11111"1 -Ill)' :u~. :lrtf ~~ !'itUlt• 20J ' flnat·f'"in•~h (';1r))f'fller.~ 'TO<•I ' cOoK MATUR_E_ ll"'1 & lll'rv1ct aC('IS. Gt').8525 EXE •
h•u111 Flrlo:ihlr hnur,_ ll un~tnn l :ir1i_~:ir ... 11.~ inc t''=lll'r. h••lpful \\"t> p;_iy Eicprr'if'nrr-:t ,t lkpf'nfluhl<' ELEC~RON I CS TECH May HoYe A.fl A•swer For You!
BAHYSITI"ER. li\'t' In, !Uc
hskp:;:, rhil(lttn Rll:"S 3, :i
nnd 7. ltoon1 . hor1M & S Ml
I"''' 11 k l'rh rm, ·~JX.Yl,
f,~:i--lffl -------Bookkeepers Asst 1 .. 11 \\110:•'" \Ir 1\•nn1 f\f'I'· .llpplv In f)('1~11 • .S111·r it Tl''!t . ../\h~ 1>xp. 2·31"! l\olllZ Send Re1ul'lle Or Cell Tod•y
l\.\lli'."i1 rrE!t fq!-"lrl " r c;r, Ill ~!.1 11 111;: orA lill\I l11r tnanf'rll •'8rpt'l\ll'.TS fur f11<;1 ~irll)1n, fi!f.\O \\", ('oflicl ]{11,y, C01n1mun1r11IK>ns equip, 2ni1 -fo,._.
'h1lrir>·11 lrt 1ny h"'""· 7.9 i<h;u-r 111•!1\. II I !l•nt·nl or ~nh\ 1n;: .. ,)_ ktl<l\\JI '"I' l•Ulld N H • ("la!N phon{' Pl'l'f AAA lnr HO COST IXICUTIYI 1m•v1rw
"'" ;\lru1 t'f"i, Nit ,,1~;1!1.'!ll 111 ... hkkpnllf "·"P"r. c;n \\ill 1111.: 1h1• h1,::hf"C: \llHlll l)' Jt.1:11~. . Bob St('('le'. Pal Eloctromca, EXECUTIVE S.ERYICES INCOIPOUTl!D
You rf0n•! l'll'l'd tt r.un tn train. AVA: l}IHmt ,t 10 kry P acifi c a By KipP'r \'011 Mn'! T1C1NI 1, {;l!n 10 6.'19! \\'f'~mif'l!'l'frt lllvtl. .. 1:1,IH :T. -HOMI OPFICI -SANTA AMA
"Or1no,· ~~sl" 11 hl'n ynu hf'lfll11I. Yachts 'Or11w fa!'!" \\'lM.'n you "'~trmnl'llf'r, R9.l-lVn. S1curltv l1n• l uil"i"lil
~181',.. nn ad 111 rh" o11tlyl J ason Best Age ncy 92ll \\'. l'ilh St .. C .. \t phtrt" 1:tn ncl In !Chi!' D11\1y 1-:N1'Elt
3
TAINMEN1' wanted PHONE·, '<'7111•4>102_.~7.,6•25 Pilot \\'1tt1t ,\•I~! Cl'lll now 17Uil Hrmkhtlr<il, r \'ly _ s-1;;55ro Pllm V11nt Adt1? AU now l or pc 1nusical group 54·
-&12-5678. !'iuu,. 211 OO.'\.i:i7751.!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!•,'._~-~&IC!!H6~18~, -----646-2823. • 11!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!1!!!!0!!!!!!!!""""•"'"""""""""""
' .
KEYPUNCH
SWING SHIFT
6 ri.to'11 aciual 11'01ic exper. on
keypu1wh, keytapc or kl'Y
disc dt•ViCI'.
A11ply In The
~11111•] Dr:J1<u1nwnt
Mond1~i"F"ri, 9o.n1 • 12 Noon
PACIFIC MUTUAL
700 N('WIX)rt CC!T1tf'r Di:'.
N-cwpon Seftt'JI
KEYPUNCll 5496 or 9610
exp. Perm p/tJme nltcs.
Sys 3 oper. exp p.ret.
"6--0331
KlTOtEN Helper .l main!.,
Plrf or run ll me. Semi·
rtli~. malu.rc, rel1Ablt1
man desin-d. C8.11 , Brian
Richnrrtit, !'67-62l2.
LITE hkkpr. Acrn un l
PRY8.bll', ptiyro1J\.'.~ertlartaJ
Mill~. 11m. JCroWtng firm.
t'ull tlmt', $1."!0. rnn In 11111.rt.
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"Whtie Elrfl'11Ull8" ovcr-
ninnlna yaur houM17 Turn
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them thru 1 a Dally P llol
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OAILV PILOT Zr.
lIIJJ~I _ ... --·~liiJ;;.;r _ ... _ ........ _. · ;::;[§);;:..
Help \\'.anted,~&. F 710 Htlp Wanted,. M&F 710 Help Wanted, MI F 710 ~Want.cl, M & F 710 1 Help Wanted, M &. F 710 Help W•nhtd, M & F 710 Help Wanted, M & F 710: Mluellaneous lllMtte~l•l'\•U• Ill
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][j}]11.__ _L ... _. •___,J[il).11._ _ ...... _ ..... _J[Il]I! J[Il] I l(Il] I Lt ... ,_. I .,, ;
t.IQUOH. ll"lore clerk. 6 nti::lll.i
11 "C'l!k. Clean 1·ut. uuatu rc.
C.ull Oick, <1~1-2JIJ
i\t<Yl'~~I. M11.1d • j hr" wurk In PAkT-llmt'. ~'rm:•I~· J1i.;urf'
l'.>r:duu1':r lor 1:1p1. vt' w:.ry.' 1nodct, 111 to ~ yn1, ~:!<.p•r. l'UllCll,\.Slr\C
~'J>'rl. m!i ?l.1!"\'IJOrl 81\'d, "r ino•.,,;pi-r. Tc>j> I"'). !-\C1KI •
Cl\I. ."11~9'1:i5 1 ,. s unit' rrt·. 10 G.(.; *BUYER*-
YOU'VE HEARD IT
flE,\I. E$1Rh· 'Uh..-V'"'flf!I!'
~:\fll.'I' good hut ,.,1 1K'<'.
l1a1\ll Poinl Oft: .a96-l~I
Sec'y•, Girl Frki1y1 l\U,\I.\~ ).1 u1 o\'t>1 101 ioo
I Bkkprs $400-$1000 (11:'1•·••1111·111• :--r1\J)(lil uf(· ii,\-11' ur l l'•lll' \\'wl•[
FREE FREE FREE 1~-:<111,111,.,1~·1 .. 1 1nu1 wd2r
SHOWROOM CARPET CLEARANCE\
t.OT n1nn drlvt•r. purl !int~'.
mu1t havr i:oocl drl\'ln"°
rr.co1"1I k Ix' O\'l'l Ill yrs •lid
5:i7-M20.
• -1\IUS ICIANS Lookin~ for Smith. l'botogruphcr. Bo~
GllJ1;1hlt< m:u\ager. Rl'f's. 1871, Costa Mcia. 92626
Cull Juhn 01· Bill 5:i7-Sl51 .
Nf:E:D cOOd--rne-n 1u t1e1-;:;::
tiuallly turnicurt' & httntl!l•
pt-op h!. Rupid Wl\'.\lll'l'!11l'nr
oppur11u1hit•g l \'llilab\1•, All·
plin1 tlun~ 111k1:n 1tlon-F11
l(l..2 (Jill only. IG1~ 11/:h<\H·k,
RECEIVING Lu. llcim:lcJ"I AKl.'nt) i.~ t;.6t.i-~l.H1 h1·h~n l'IA-4P. 41~1 \\'~St(•rly f>IAl't' \\'()Of) \\QI 1,,.~---i\h111U"hU-..
Stull' 11r.. NU 11.1::-lO!ll I u r· r r 11 r i\1u11 i ta I
Fantestlc 'aving• on
uptraded SHAG CA RPETINGI
LVN
COll\'U]l'M'rnl l/•11111', lu!I &
part tln1l', ('HI\ tll:l·Oj.1.'I
PERSONNEL
CLERK ALL BEFORE .•. INSPECTOR I _____!'.!teblii;h.,:il _!_9'.."1 -1 n,.11illllf'lll~ llf't"d!I lr1ii.llW11 p . d L F I d' t s I s 0 CR ET A R \' tol' 8, hw ''""'"I» tl11i'°i"K. l nee OW Or mme la e 3 e l\"f"k•llf•P o1· .. ;1;, frw In-C S . I • rounlanl, 81'.:C'l.lUnlin1o: Ofhl«' Gftt/QS peCJG t&•S f{•'('t'l\'l'S & 111~P"•'I" \'<'nd,w In Irvine, In hundlf' 21'1t1•rnl !t'l'l'l•'11 -------
!lut 110" ollt'll hti\'l' :ill rhnst• 11111rc1•1nls, r11a•:lli11r rw1rt~. olJlrc & ~mt• bookkcriiin;:. 11·111:"IN1.; 1noHtrr ottli<t ,,[I 733-( Ben.dlni, Loi Angeles
offcr1> ro1ne lht'l.IUJ,:h, d\~':< c•l"t'IJ011ir par1 ~. p1'Hlh"•I <'I r-typlni: l"l'lfl t"all 83J-9:21J7 i.•r ,11~ 1111111,., ltJr '! .11· oH the Sent• A n• F reew•y ~lachinlsl
ProgTCBRlvr 11w11ulu<·!u1'i n!:
('On1pn11y, .~In! w u r k i 11 h
t-ondllion11. ~·rlngl' bt'r1<>11!s.
ln1mtdi!ltl' ()pentn~ t'or·
-"-·"'-·" .. '-" .. "",.· ............ -.1 PROPOSITION: •hi' 1'0mpany 1!1 1' up tu <'Uil IJQ..lrtl'. urll t1.lnl! 1>ri111,, St:CH£i'Artrl0rliro~"~-fi.~. ,,1,1 1,,.,1 :! 1.1 • n~~h•~ it {G•rfleld off r•mp-left to B•ndinl) pt'()Jlll!tt'l' lx-y0t1d .1'our ,111,1. l!flt't'lf1rnt1•1n~. ·l':unplf'S & .., 111! \,",. 111•r ni:.:!11 . Jl1 i-. 1 :1r~
NEVER A FEE ALL JOBS ARE NOT
CREATED EQUAL
<~I iir'i•iir.1~ VA!t l.\/\ 0,\T.I f'N('i'~st'S. lult•nir~I l1luC' ••fi·.icooil typin;,:&~,-JJfluli· ~h1•1 1..-ill'lll'n 1!1 hlr 71 4: 523-1032 or 213: 723-1311 ~l.'\{'ll!Nfo;S, tho• lug <'Vlll· p1'\nt.~ & M'h1•tnal11· dlH 1'
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AUTOMATIC SCREW
MACHINE
OPERATOR
I I II I "'"•''"·'· I \'i· 1.~, ..... , .. •~ ~-(ll'llll'Jtbh·. 1•1111 1'~-!11~!
MAINTENANCE H ~ou 1· lll't'lll'rll 1~1~111on "11) 11 11111'1 <'fllllPU<'rq. "'" '•" ,.----F . llO 'G SI 112 I i~n·1 hrtndln:; )vU 11 Un~·-r1•i1 \11i,: C'll't'k or 11t~Jlf'1'l<1r. St.:HVICE -itn. S:~lt•~n-;-a;;--& urn1ture I •rage • • j , MECHANIC to $5.SD ,,,m,·~ nu1 rn.i tht• 11ho.11 <'lld I • I~ ·------··· -uf th.• sl'all', rnu;-.lw it II 111111' I Th,. pronHSC'S 111"1' tt'AI And Call fo'or ,\ppr. ulll' rHan t:~pi·1-. P•t•fd I f!ll!i... • •iAltAli~; SALE • HV.\1,\1..\i:I-: SAi,. h,\ Goidf'n
:\1ullJ Nall F1rn1 Loo.:ittC'd Jn ! you lh11ught nf l1•\•1•hni: "Ul 1 th•• oftrr~ nh•:ui 11 ""1\ai<t I JriUuAOiaJ Hclfl11on11 ,;•l'ull .~ J!/lullt' il\,oll . Tupi ' ..._di_.. V Sl i.1111 1">111,.n .• .i. 11 .. ·u~ lt.11\.o,u Cu1h fn. ~t . 11)
1 1\l•\\ lr\•inl" Pia.ill. Ou1s111nd· \u111 ~·11Noe1· ir;.:. 'nallcni,:in!; ran'<'!' f()r I ~.~:Zi11n~.1.01<~::~11,~11:'.:;1,. ~;~[1'/ . <'I•• I hi rl le ~I'll'~ :,.JO. i\;\I -" 1•,\1 , ~·urnit.urr. Ap-
B 'I C It' k ,I •'I II! UlU Pur1·hu~u1;: l>r (714) ,, .... 01 ~ ~-,, l'anl'"'''· ilrt>.•···· .k111 ~.1 u!11tt11 •·~. Add1n" inarttuw·. 111~ enc l!i, o 01 er~ & VARIAN DATA 1 T'I SI ti 1 Jitl ,,.. I'\ t ti.: B .. '"' .. "' I ,\rh·a1KCl'n1cnl. -1 1'11 · ! -~~ 1-1 111'·' · · Antiques 100 11)0('~. tJ<'' t-:n1'}•'l111l"'d1;.~. 'l'Ylll'"'n1f't·, P 11·! u !'• ~.
Traub ~turi &. opcrute.
SHUR·LOK CORP
Apply At
Rohe Scientific
926 So. Lyon St.
MACHINE< TELONIC SE!t\'ICE "talion 11111•rtd1111I · /'\111 ·1 r,,,.w1r•"hiei;:, 1lisht~. l. 11 111 1• ~ , C' I 11 I It I u i ,I
I -s ftrq lll"l'mr111s uw·lud<' priur .... " Dortn~ll P ersonnel h:1~ an UUUl('(lilltC Uj)l'llittg Ill l'\J'4'11l'nl.'t• Ill j)Un:haslnY, of INDUSTRIES I ~1-,1~~~ :i_1a~_~:."~~~~l~'.1<:v~l:. SCRAM-LETS ru1~~ .. :·lu~,::;~K!h::o.11ro1,•!r;"1,'~1k ! ~'.;-;o~~~IK"lll~. lfli:, l'l•Ct'"'1'
Santa Ana
Service Agency I 11s llu";.o Pet'Sfl!Uk'i nlnce for· ,.leMr<+1111. 1'-0lnponen1.!' 111 1h.-.. ~ __ -.. a 1'tlc-onh; l'lt•rk. \'ou n1u~1 1'(Hllpuh.•r ur pt'tiJ'!ht'r.•l n• La gu.:;a Beach i\lt!i;;t~i.12:___ _ _ -Ncv.:purl Nu. :!I•. N\\fil. ----
500 Newport Center Or ' lll;f' 11 v:il'iely or dutil's. lyfl(' 111 ,..~1 rll'ld. \\"i• orfcr: I S1'~RV1Ct: ~•:111011, fr-II stutt . ANSWERS !-:Ch 6~!ll::~ , __ Jewelry 115
1 I"""'"'"'""'""""""""""" Newport Beach 64" ••70 ·1l l<'·1st '.11 \I'"''''""' ''""'Y" Fct""' 0111-1· 1·011110" I 6 cla)s, lllu:..1 !Jl· t'l>""'r \ 1 1 1 .---orO"I ' ' .J<J " " JV .. Mod F ·1· • · "' "' ~ } 1 ,.. ~1;..:1, ht'"11'°"1' · ,\\C"I, 11 ~·1 11.:...,:" u1srrt:1.Y he11utiful :\IAClllNIST hciJ'!C'r. run t'l" _ heavy work load. If you urc * ern ac1 1t1es I ;\P.C'O, Pllh .t· Nolwpor! I t:HU'"" flrc•;u1, 9 dr.11•"• ...., I
rands, no e:i<p JlCl'. i\lust interested in joining 1t 1:1'0\\'· * Basic and Major RECEPTIONIST Hlvd, C.:\I 0•-'Jll.lty -LA:al~ -""110111 ('11r-.1, · I· tiun~ll'. !-l Ouu nonol CtX·l!h\ll Rini;::. .... k c ll I ing OranGt" County rotn I I •L·l-tl'I-(''·'-.-, --, -Bron•" -~0:'-i(> 1 ' 1 1 1 •. 1.... ll!i\'I' , ... rtihr11r of v111ur.1
appt. ll 4 2 -8 J 8 4. SH putcr conipany that offers: 1 sh f 111 1 h r1 t-:x ~ 1 •H' uo: non smo <'r. n or /~EVER A FEE . . M edica + Life :\'IJ "'fl('r, 111·l"'l·s~. p1,.nsun1 ~"'. .r. s1 11 . 'ilt'!luan! CLASSIFIED AD : t'11r S11lr '!'.·"\".'.·, n11: il ~;on•• • ;1.1 S400 .. 49.l-979S I
Enttinecrin!.!. 8::0 1 P1lldUclio11 * L.T.O. fl''rsono lly, . urp llflflt'lll" .' l!lH'. !'\•' s I . '!~~'" -1~">11t•r do~. \\'111 ral an}-..:..' ... -.::...... -----l V2 cA·R-AT DIAMONOI cpcjc~N"'·.,00· __ .. ,..,. ----1 Production Control * Mod~rn Fae iii-* Stoc~ Purc~ase ;~:I(' \~(;11~\~11~}'~~~7 ~i'~111 11~~ ~~~~\If!~~,~~.:;·, (~~pl~'. i.iJO til!rlK. Ve? f''O~D.of k'.cb_._. -G•r"t• S&I• 112 1 ~1;1n~ 1'111:,::. '79-~SOO
lllA.IDS -IK'llf'L <1~sis1 in to $1 000 mo. t" * P rofit Sharing I ,.,1. Xlnt ~tar11nJ:: s;1! & ,.o S~'t'Vlt'F-" r;;-1-1 1Yi1 AN~IQUi.. St\Lf'. I ' Jes * p 'd v ,. · · , · · '• · · 111 1 11 "•1· 11 40' Couiauw.·r R1Tlvln2 son11 G'RAGE SIDEWALK 1 l,l•ch'onery 1161 1a unt11•y, ~r11e1•al 11'11rk. ;, 111' II eca ton hl'nrflts. i.rr NC>J:O t\lso l•t••· or p/11111•· !JOO v t'insl . F · "" • _
cle.y. ,\'Cat arounrl, Pni1! * Basie and I * P aid Sick Leave j Jobs !I r-.'( ; 'H h .. '·. Antl'ncan A11t1qu.. urn. SAL£ · 1 rt 1 Dartnell Per1onnel -J · B A 1 l\'~·:_____21·11n..!:_ __ ,_·_._ i\lus1 1nakf' room ~r.lltn.• 1 "l.AR1,· '-'Ai•k1,·11, ·-1-,,0•,. \'ncallons. .ui:unu \':11· 1. ason est nency r ' o 1 1'' ~ r.. ·"~~' "' " 494--1196 Service Agency Ma1"or Medical !Yoo niay he ihr on" 111 . ., -, . "'. . ."!.11\rtP J::1 11·i1h .~ot"I , nt · prf's«n~ 1n()('k 1<1 dra1111c· · 11 · (' · " $~:-.o 11r ir:i.i .... 67::-Zi1211 or . 1 v 11·100 bn111khu1~T . ~.\l,v 111\ld•· r.u-•1n1· i::1r1 f.11'!" rN.IUCllOllS Pl':ll'h " Co ,1;·1~ u Ill, I•• :1.0o fl .Ill. :i.)X~O-t!~
ll1A1D \\'a111cd -ScacliH + L•ife !00king ror. Peii.0.1' appl)' <;uitr2t: !Jti~:-G'i7.'i 1ronit· "·ilr. or1i1'" 11e"11' i1n1lqul'~ . .,J~'f2 'Nr.w pn ri l.U HNi.~it (If ' ---------1 "" · c 11 500 Newport Center O r . I tn pctii:ln or contat·1· ----------·• ' ·· .~ ,.,. t • Ill'")' I Ill ll.1otPI, luul s. oost · v.•y.. * S k p h · · · RECEPT/GIRL FRI Orang" County Aiqxir1 . No Hl vd .. C:ll. u.t2-Zi!I. Lvtl ...: U · .-c.:; ~ 1 Mi1celleneout
Laguna ncach. 4.%-489'1. Newport Beach 64~8470 toe urc ase ,· 8 . Krafka Xe11-po1·1 Bch. :u·1•fnn1tini.: ~ho1.·1,l~1J.lld. Call I 71 1 1 ANCJfo:NT Cr·C'('I• C"fJl ll 01.~'t' L'OSf,\ )IF.~" I
T C" .. 11• I " 8ARGAINS GALORE ! 1 BLUE AIRD u111fonn~. St. :i.-rAIN F.NAK r. • utility * Profi"t Shar'ing fi1·1n st•ck~ 1ndi\', whn 1~·111'~ " .... iu :.'IJOO yt•iu·~ old. , n1an. ~1cch. in 1· Ii n r tl . NE\VPOR'f Beach C P /\ 1 I t IO k I I -STUDENTS •·•'-6 " ful'nilllrr. Clo1h11\j?. 1 fi'I. l: i. 1 !'u1• !COUt; .. ~ Ill.
Capitblc-1ninor,Cl111X'Olry & F1n11 11l'L'l.l~ t'X~'I'. hook-* 12 days a •\\'ill ll'ctiii f•I l){'t'Qlll<-F C ----· ,lp11J1;1nct~. lio.•>k.~. Tuy~. "!\\Jot!!'~ .. •ll:.;t' 'prlnct'fll. .. VDM ac1·un1l<• v , "<'Y <H 1 ··r .;....,.,, • 4()-!'l&C."o I C 1 , .
pluinbin~ & elf'c. C1tll !'.Ion-kl'<'Jll.'r. Salru·y 10 S600. Sul>-bookk ~t· 1 S50(1 t> 11 ·""'!1 l'•H'( hnu 1:1 i\a!I hVli:in~~. A I' IO"I Sµo1·11n;i: Good~ ·'' 'i I.· )(, i1 ... a. ~l~m211. I
dlly-Friday, 811n1 ,~p111. 111it 1~sun1c 10 .Cla~Hicd ad l year paid -l lf'lenl't.'l~{i·ii~•;~'. ';;.Ki.m~:i. ~!~u 1~;:~r-,:!'.;1~.~ ~,a::, r~~ PP iance~ "i YOU 1\'.\.\IE rr~: !I-~,:-111~>1\11 l.· )(0111 l::o&:h,'I
644-0502. 110. !J61 t/o Ua1ly P1l111 P.O. • C I p,. , 1 ~' f' '·'/"' (' t · • · l'1u1·i'f'1l" lo lla1•1iur A1'i'" 1 , oul1•1111io1·:1 r\.' siv. linl . Lik,. ~~'cc~=~--~---., . t-~· c 't"' c I vacation Varian D a ta Machines oasta !ISOlltlt! ,\f;l'll\"}, .l i1 n C1un1µ!011 . r .r.1.1 T IJA?il.\Gi'. S.\l.~. 1'.IAINTEN/\N('l: :\ian .t· ~o.~ ...,.. os1a "l~a, a 2722 Michelson Dr. ! 27~H;i1·ti.1rBl\'1l.,C.\I --,rF:L~:PllONE Nrw llotpoint i·rf r·i i::·,., \'u1.11h:u11I Con~111ur111y UC'\\, 1IiO or· tnu1e fot
Di!'1l\vasht'I'. f/t11nr cloys. f:};~~l'tT Cl-.:N'fl::I:. P;i~·1 * 6 days Q year Irvine, -Ca lif. 92664 • HEC£PTIO:\'IST ' I v i I Jt 1 HF:('El'TIONl1'T tlishwasher!> k ,. an g " •. -~''11\'.I!},' l'1'0~('(_·J~ I 11·~<'1_4>.!:.._:,:!1-t:YM f'vr~. l
G<iod bcnC'fil~ "' \\'{)!'king "d • k I I 714) 83' "400 [11111\l'fl O""llirl". r:\11 11or lll· • ·1 rt ,. io· b \\'a~ht•rio; "-rl ryll'r!l, faC'IOI')' c'"o'"s~T'A""M1"Es'11: I ~ t>iOftllAN n 0 r kw ,. 11 L'Onds. 6-12--3.'iO.i. litll(' S..>c. Half days, l da~.~ pa1 SIC eave .r" I ·i •. Sl1-1fu "11 l'\t'I ing jJll ll1\P I . wa1·rnnly. "' Li!hO!!raph-c unr1-.mt<l
MANAGER
TRAINEE
ner wk. ~ll'xible hi;:s. t}p-:in l"llual opportunity cri t'I\. •. \\l' nt•NI a. sbharJl ~81 to BEACH CIT\' APPLIANCE! ROTARY CLUB I Arh~I "p,~r.· J r-n), 557-l97:i
lni;. lt.'lf'phont.'. /lla1!01v-Ken· You n1a,• I)(> lhr 011,.. 1\'r':i1,, t>n1ploy<'r n1 f I* RENTAL AGENT* a'.~~w~·~ ~1• usy P W:UleS lfitJ \\'. \Var11Pr, SA !J.G..-0780 ----------· "kwl.-dayJ. I l\~"tly t:orp. 6.W--:Ji6:i. Jook!ni;.for. Pll'a"<" :1ppiy in 1 t-'asl gt'O\l'in1o: .l'enl •'statr K .. ~-1.:;o 11<:11~..:.. 64·l-l~ ~'lli:l N. Tustin, Qr.,,ni:" ESTATE SALE . ., - -. .
-Jl('l'SOll or <.'Onln(·f : -~ ~-~ -~ C>----=--v,r'l~;oi:,"" P~ .. ~~.,.~ ~~ii;~Jiia~-L . ..-.~~ -~ ' ~ 'LlOl .~'.. l11h :.;i , Sa nt~ Anu, j 8 t::AUTY. ~ppl11!1, dreu1~~ NITE AUDITOR ,. • 11 needs_ rt!ntal agent for lls in-s11l1•sm1ln 11·1\ntt'<~ r~-good MAYT AG auto. \~·a.sl"'r .t, off of 171h " N. l'inr S1. I ~1:-~)hnr; t hll'ad, ,.. r · Hot~ or i·lub <'XJICl'. l'l'<(d. Prrsonnl'I l)('par1nu•111 H cr1'as1n~ly husy rl'ntal dl'pL one• 1111u~ floot'. G?OC' hrs', gaF rll")'!'r Sl1:i. Kt•ninutt! Ck:I. 16. 11, Ill -~ Ai\\ lo :: I ~---.-Y-"g_P · , .
Kno1\•lcdG'.<' ol NCR 4:!00. l ~ 1 i\_Just havl' ~a I e l' n1 a n ·' s_:i lary, 111s, no n1g~ts. 01· auto. wa~ht•r ST.i. \Vhirlpool l':\I. CA/lAGF: SALE .11tar1 '1 Sl:.AltS 11 11.shf'r. 3 'ailbol.t.
No Exper. Nece1•.
E•rn At You Learn
t'11inlf'. &C" Pt>rsonnl i\IJ,:r. v D M -hccnSl'. I Sund<iy~. All I 11 q u Ir I ... ~ f']l'ctric· rh-ytr ss;,, Fl'tt 111 ll A.tit. HtilU')' aod C.11r.r-b11by l'flh. All ..:lnl rend.
Balboa Bay _Club I Laguna Kl'ach !'l'Sid{'nl conr~~l'nti11l. ~ !~Wl')"S T\' deli\'Pl)', Gui11•. :1'1&-8672, I)' dl'pt'f'~lllio11 &;111.'!.'I, htlltJ I "llll a.".&-:.!477 l'\'11'.•.
l2l! \\', Coasl Jni·y., N.J:l, • HUNTINGTON HAR80JR Nolan Real Estate 19G-a1'18 49'l-J4:11. 8·11~1~. p11 i11rrd t'i1ina. ru1 lllll'~. /COTT ~·l-1 tuner t, :IO wall
ir )'OU nrt• an11Jitio11~. l'(lr('{'1·1 -NIGHT BE-LLMAN-:uALlY * 494.9473 * R-;;,t\Vash rs/Dry•r• p11 ttll'rn ala ~~. c:1<rni'val, '-1r. 11n1plilil'r. $40. ininrlr.d s, 11.·11 n! total in\·nll't'-I ' ' -----------TU:l::.-i e ') ~ . High posterrd IJl"d , l'htl!1,, 7'46·4•7.~
111lnf "'f"""llfC' \\'f' 1·nn dr-1.LP~l 11.1 i:Jt/Ai'.J SIHI < Varian Data Machines E d Off Sh I Jones Tir• Service s •. \Vk. tun ,:11n1nt. nu~cnnPhy[r-d iningl•.b'f\l .. , -----~·~----1
i·C'!op r~~u~·. i1u111oi.:rnu•nt I A1rporter Inn Hote l 2722 Michelson Dr . I Xpan 5 • or-e ROBINSONS· I itL'<f~ ln1111("{I. C:xJ"-'r. * ~:l'"~_l:ZO~ "---(•hair~. breakfront. "''ashr.~ llAJtBO~K ;-rr~; HOMES
b·1·1· II 1 · · · Lo.il:u•I j)irk !1111111un T11u l'l'SUl" olf<'t•t" 01>""111" FASHION ISLu•-ii T' S I M \VAS II I'' I'S rt ry f' r I d1·yr r, 1'<'lri1:;., book~. b1ic·ll·' •. ., ,!jl J I' ~ ~. , . n 11 If'.~ \I'll nur n11n111b Irvine, Calif. 92664 " ~ '"" ,. . ""'11m"I 1r• erv Ce en · • '· · · bi·a/', l••rnilur·~. piano. ,,1,11116! ft. Mnnll'igh Cirelr-, NB
1
_ r11t1gran1. SAM to 5PM /\"II! Grourul floor llJl)IOr!un-1 • R ·1 s I di!ih\\'ashrl'. Rl'hl1, ~Ullr.; .. '
-833-2770 (714 ) 833·2400 11y for anibiliou:; .sull'-~ pt'O· I f!a!! 0(JC'nins:11 I . Breetakoe Meecehsman•o."c, 1:X•li111>1-erl.. K1~'ilito u r 4ki11 11 nd ~lr-ds. i\IC and BA A Q U .'1. Jt 1. U f.1,.S k stand. '
Job Stability ph•. ln1n1cdiair r1001· 1i111l' 5~6-:i2J!I. (·11rd~. c::uston1 hi.uh. • 1sh. Pumptl. ·
NOTE 1 An cquuJ OP IJ O :~111~ l1 i 1 ) ai·ai!ubll'. Imml'tiiatl' earn· For Non-S!ll("S I Sal & Con1111, l'U pd l>o.:nelir~ \\"llJRLPOOl. \Vrtsh!'I' lnr HELEN NOL>\Nll Fille1i; I., heatrrl. 892-Cl!Ol . ~ Gr~up lns"!'Gnce ! Real Estate S~lesman I l'mploycr . ;~7;r~~:ib;~1~1·cnlc~~;e,:~~ Position~ In ;!:f1fia~'.:>0~,·~~.;:. -~~~"kf'ai~~; .. ""c?11·11M~;L:i1i _;CllP:aP ~"tllJF
Paid Vacation Jf you hR\'t'1~ li<:i?~~~· or \rant
1
PIZZA 1111111, no f'X(lC'r ., full I l!Ub-rlivi~ions. of the Chnsti· 1 -Stock Costa i\ll-sa duy or· nii;:hl.
Automatic Salarly ?~~iiU~~~iaJ c~llfl't'\'i~~l'r RI!~{~ time. Apply ;ti Tllllll' ::11242 I ~~I t081/Li'1i~i\1STOCK 1-Maintenance --n il~ i\10UNTERS--lR·CO. FT .•. ",".,,-,-;.-,-,-,.,-,-... -t.-.'
I
,. 1 t,7 1.61 · . Cro\vn Valley J>Rrkl\'ay, I · ·' ' ::i I ,,.-,,., . ., doo1· -11011 "111 ncrea5e5 ._.arJ>l' ' I (7141 MS-138--1 & (213 592 :!!;It w p k $2.7:'1 fM.'I' .br. 10 S18t1. SonH• "':.' -· 'J.~ ' "' '
I
· ' -" Lat,.'Una Nigurl. ' · 1 . a -rap aC • Wiln'IJOu~t· duties & ~l'tk'ral 1·ond1t~o11. Sl lO. 93&276-1, C11I
Advancement NuRsE:LVN. exciting (JOl>i· Plant Lover W anted REAL F:!-i'TAI~ .SALES Clerical & tl('lp. P1·11nall(•n• "'o r k . ~tc."·"-'~·~·~·'"~·:..... ____ _
lion !or qu11olilierl person to Boulique saiC'S. 675-ffi40. SUCCt-:SS CAREER 1 Jltugr-cssiv•• r.iises. IXJN"r huy a nrw OM. 1l1h1
Oppor. ii•ork in progrl'ssive eon-~:cw or t!xperienced. Join the ....., Security \ i::a-10 JOH A<;'ENCY i,:;1s ~co"" hntiJly used. Llkf'
A COtofWHIENT ~l'flNG AND
X WIN('; CO!()( fOI !Hl
\'lllNICf'nl hospital. Patient P\a~CirsTRAINEES World's iaqcest and lastrst ""1 :\la l rd ~'1 .. SU1le 203 DCW. $75. or otkr. 963-1458. C4t ON h iE CO.
1714 1 835-741 7 . I I 1· i:rowini: resale orpnlz.ation Apply , .• -· 1"5 1-luntm...on Beed\~1439 """'""""' P1-· .. p. Ref. ,,. ea1·1· orH'n N OJ)l'ra 1011.
1
.,.•iUi a network or ~ 300 ,..._._ .. "" N•r.• rf\.Li:. ""'...,.. ...-
T ' T S I . Xlnt 11agC's & lrinJ:t• benefits. lm111cd1a1e openif1':s IOI' wo-1 officH and become a No. 2 Faahion l!!.1., NB pliancPll. &rap n1,.. r 1 I .
1 IC oc ystems, nc. Apply or Sl'tl(i resume• to mt•n 11n all sh~rts. Acl'cpting nici:nbcr of our ritillionaire Equal Oppor. E111p\oyc1· TRAINEES G7.>-:>2:>S. rall 11nytl1nro.
Equcrl OpfJ'•i'. F:!n ployrr 1 !l.i Superior Ave, Nt:1\·porl I /'X~r. n10ld1n,c:: 1nachlll(' Club. ritulti-nilllion dollar j \\'111 train dt'.'.~1:'hl1· 11'<>n~rn i.'Oi\fi\-fF.Jt('J,\L doublll' ovrn
For •n •d In Wom•n't World
C•ll Mary leth '42·5671, e xt. 330
B1•ach l>r call 6-12-2110 111ir~. ,t, 11·aint>~,.;. C'h•an lilf' ad\-ertising progranl. F'rec ROBINSONS 1 lo ilt!1'011teo ll1J('<'!1on 1110Jd1n:.:1 bv \\'olr. Xlnl t;Ond. Call
MANAGER TRAINEE I NURSlfSAl-DE·S~--work in nr\1' hl~i.:. Shill ho-, ~uaranteed licensing school. OIJ'.'f"a1ors. twlust havt" o~\·n ~-1116 af! 4 1, wk"ndll. , . . nu;; p1·<'n1. p;111I rur 111!t-r u 1 al t · · FASHION ISLAND 1•ar 1>c 11blC' 111 ~!and 1'1111rr -"c..c=_cc...'-''-'=="'--Outstand1111: opportunity 10 E."lll'I'. ,\ll rslufls. _t-111 11.w, I 11 ork. Or.iw•r·. fur ncl\·iini'r'-.xcr rn s cs raining. I ,-hii1 & ..... ablr 1.1 1i1Jrk lfOTPOINT ~(rigeralor
ti "I .. 9 & I r l 11 .. "' \Vhal i~ your licl'nsc 1101111 0 ~ R ~dv1111~~<' lo 1111111:11ti-rinl po.~1 -1i1 oto "' • ~ · re 1c ·.., u n1ent & xln'I frini;c ht·npfi1s, IQ you? t1leck our mlJnthly Il a~ pcnin~~ "'<'t•kt•1ld$ if nec<>~S<H'Y uns i.'OOd. • Sl·,,
!ton 111 30-60 rlHyll. Our rlmr IK-ncl1L~ !ncludl' ~. l\k Shifts 7am-3pn1. Jpn1-llp111. bonus program which ml'an~I 1 S11·t11g shif1 !S2.0il to sra'u1 t: &47-:)J.i6 1!1 6:30 p11i
c1uTcr1t snnnagt·r~ r a r n val', 7 paid hol. group 1n~.. Jlpm-1am. ti blk. S. of Bak-SSS 10 you! Please r·a!! For F/time i::ravcyard shift 'S:J.:?J to GA~'rERS ~ Saltier built $1000-Sl~iOO mo. i\1ltsl hHvc• s1ek lcav; .• Park .L1d0 He~J1h 1·r. off Rcdhittl , Vin;:htia Jones S3.'i·~dll. Styl" t & ~r:irt1 . Ft11i~ in ~O doy~. ill slovl!'lopknvPnSGO.
cloot· lo 1loot' cnnvusstni; t'\· C~rC'. -l4li flHglihlp Rd .. N.8. Plrase-No Calls 1$ Apply 1 arn-4 11n1 •5.16-67!11•
pt'riencc.. ~ •. ,.,. i 642-llO M. Calif. fnjet:rion !lllolrhni:: 1t1::A1.. ESTt\TE S;\LES Manicurist * Oi·:i11g1· C1.1as1 Pla~rlt·~ •
Lall Mr. Nf'11•n1an 9~9-J~~l , NUHSES Altic, 7_:1 J).m., ll-1 200 Briggs, Costa Mesa $49 1!50 \\'<'sl IS1h St. Building Materrals
M 'NAGER !';l"ns clothh1•· I , 11, II'" ''"II tralo -, .. "---~~~ • LICENSING SCHOOL \ I · I" -Cosla i\1l'S<I, Calif. 1 • -.,, I '· · " ' "' 1 ----,A9 Tffctud~ ...,_,,p, mate1•ial~' 1 PP Y, 111 1w~son u-;,Npnl txprr. 10 opr1\1lo.' ll'11:1l>tl I ~r.wnrK'I. Xlnl bcnclit.9 I'" ...,..,.,....,. ,, I N 2 c,, 1 1 1 B I • Surplu1. Bulldinn rl' "' PLATFORM nnd art cla~roon1 sessions. '. 11· ~n~iion s ··' 0-RGE_N. TLY-~-• dep1. in high volurnr 1s-1' \\'hieh in1·!urlc in en 01 e No coi;l 10 ,·ou-if you Ni.in a 1 Equal Oppor. EmplOY•'I' :\fATERIAL -llY'iffs of NE\V ,
count stON:'. Pny 111<'. lrln~P 1 l'l'l'laccmc.ni & 2 \1·k.~ vnt'a· TENO 'v ITE1\rS! Doors, Jun1btr, fl~Y· · bcn., Q;ll11acl 1'lr-W1lkr~ t.\ I lion after l ~T. Apply al -. Tnrbl'll ofliN' aftl'r passing I t I h 1' JI c i 860-7:\1" . \Olli' ~111lt• exam & )'OUI' ({'<' S:\LF.S \\~. a \Jill s ff 1ne:. 1110 I • t _!IT~:_-·-'-1 Supe.rlor .'\\'I'., N ~ \V po r 1 \\'t• ~re _PN'St>ntly acCl'pt1n~ I ;.,1 549 ivill ·be rC'lunrlrd if $S to $7.50 per h r NEE OED ing, 11'indo1\·i;, f'lr:.
MASSAGE TECH. _Bca1~.~t call_&l2-2410 __ 1 npphca!Lo•is for plarforrn \'OU quAlifv. Call Al Sloiin PAID DAILY BUILDERS SURPLUS 1 '
TRAINEE ~un.-;EHY hclp!.'r. rull 111111· S1l't10. Nealness & 01l·curac-) s_12.~10. · · :.'406 So. l\llll in St.,.-. . .-.. I ·'.;-
Slimmi119!
'
. 1. 1 1078 . t 1 21 nr O\l'I nial». 'i2~10 10 1 ar<' a n1u~L Should hR\'1• TARBELL R It r:1n ti1n1• •It" Full 1111111 50 TRAINEE i\fon 1hn1 Sal 10-j oung .icy i o-J i\nn r~ SI I \V k . h I g:oorl typn-i;: & sh skills ' ea ors \ I 7Jt: :"46·10.t.1 for lcg1tu11ate lull lln1<' 1>0s1-, pi.'r II 01 i11t , pSoan1!li PleaS<' t'llnt11cr Ann · Gun· bi ofriecli I<. g1'U1\'in'( . 11r:u·l1\<' n1 a r ; i• t In~ '---/
11011 No l'XP nr(' \\"r scnrt & llO<'s, nuuntrnancc. n1P . • , , • _ --------. --n'fll'PS•~nlat11·es O\'t•r 2 l PRE-FINl511fo:D k i 1ch"'11 ......:::;
lo school cnn1 11•J11l(" lcRrn ilcl1Vl'l'), gardc11u1~ or Ille•. lrlll K:"l&-.t:iffi . REAL ESTATE SALES 11·anl<'d 1o i·alt on sn1i1ll ASSEMBLERS l·abir1"1s. vaniliC's. 1·ountt1·'1 ( Apply in 'JX'r.;on 1111, afl ot• I lndi.c11t.· cxJJt:r 111vr. Chalk·r Bank Of America n1r~. s, rrtnil flrn,,.. i\lust Ill' lops, paniclc> h 0 •r 11 , 1
•'Vt'. 2930 \V. c~1·. Jhi'). i fot~\IUH't.'m<'nl~~;._ Nc1vporl Cl'ntt"r Offit1' aggrrss11·t'. inrrlh~Pnl arul rormira, ronlllrl i·roi~nl. /
Nevoporl Betich. l'IJR~INt.; l'arr ror l'ldcrly Equal Oppor. !:mplo,v1•r ;\'<'11 ufll('" 111 1.n~un .• B1•a<'h :il1l<' lo S('ll ti pro1t1,11·1 thal i~ VOLT ~ink rin~s. IH:!-2:11~. Harrlro I JC~~""-=='-'----1 ... ,,,di"" hrr _,,,~1 ·1111~1 hr 111'''11~1'11· liui '\111 ""li.1 111 ll('l1r1·p in Instant Personnel Fn1 R1 -, IV !lilth C•••• 1 ~lEDICAL front offil'•'. lli••l 11t1111<111· '". "" _ '""'' na1~ldC'r ••a:.:••r. ne11 ,,'\h•~-liou s <'1111 1·~ (•k rn1 ' · · · ·•· 1
ti111e. Ophlhalmolot.:i~I ~::-.;1. i ~111! bi.th. ~ron1 ~:!):_1::'_~-!11., PRODUCTION r••11plf'. '.Jan· 111!\11111.1~•'•. i111t•r\'1C11 r111! !<~)(...'tl 'I" I Tt.'n1porary Sen.r1.1<' :\!•::<a '
prefcn-cd. &11-1:i1:1 I 'Ja)~ a Wl'<'k. s .. J. Jal-.'»46. Contact· Corie Smith I . ... '· ?~'i~ C;1111pu~ Dr .. Su111• 106 C•m•r•1 & : S11n!a 1\na l!<·1i,;hts 11.rra. A .. H R I S,\LF.S:llA'.11 & ~lRnni;er. N1•11por1 Br11"I' .-116-4141 • S ,
lllEDICAl. secretRl'Y· ['('('i'PL 01111 irans. Jt,•1i·i·, TECHNICIAN ~er1can ome ea tor I znalr .~· fPni. ~82:i ,f,, 1111 ~;qual Oppoi-. 1-:niploy,•r Eqy1pment 80 ,
Exper only for hu~y.orfu·r. I -----~ .. 1 1' Cst. H11·y .. L.a . ..;t111,1 nionthly :.;unrn. 1f riu11 lifiect. I . , . 1 t't
lluntlngton Bcuch nrcn. Cflll 1'tn:<C1'; * 4!1-i·IOlll * i\'.o ex""r~ llf'('f'S~. !\-lr. Ll'I' ,-:NION ,-, -R · r . O L\i\1~US 0~1-1 i'l.S I.en~ f ,-~~,· i14l 2547. LVN-Relief (3-11 ) -------. ~ r -.. v 01 00 cis -uv f1ltf'1". l-;i ~,. \\'/~1ri111. 1 l\tEDICAL Office in Jlu111. All ~hi!ll'. saJa1·1cs l'Onlllll'tl· l'l'1'f11rn1s rlertro111\· l'h<'1·kvu1 REAL ESTATE ~22:~ 1 17()-K).I.. ---fnrf'nuio .t srci;md inan. Unt·untlitionally p et' f f' 1· ! 1 l '4,
Bch. Back ofl\t<' girl. \\'rl!<'I .~111·11 11' \v i•xfK:t· .• Pa~k r.1'.lo ol niilToii·a\'r produ1 ·1.~ g, SALESMEN SAi.ES P1•rsu11. l/11111" r .. r F.arn lnp ~i·aql'.~ 11 yuu can J';1icl S~Z.-H:i/1J s.·11 s:1~;, s.s.1 .'""'-ti!it--.lll_;'~~
0 ., •. 1,1 •• •d Box No. ~lTl. !1<':11111 Cn H', H>G ~l:.i1,:~htp l t·oinpoiu•n1s. Trt·hnlcal tl!'1\\'lly 11111 work in lllC' h11111•.•1 1 ll:1lln1;ir!; ~1on· 111 l'/11. liusllc. Hui~clin;: 111'11' «rrl\'~ tli:vrlnp f'llnni~IC't·. ~C'C". S:'ll . '~ " I I '" l't' "'Ill ,.,., .. ,, ll11oli"••1ni• B,~it<'il _ !\1u.~1 h1• 1.~ or_ "'.' .. ," f!'.1q1p1· fr,•,•.· .•·.~tn·bl·1~ht•1 I. 1·on1 /Jiltty. 1;-,: .. ,·,;·,·,, I '',. •o II . Pll 1 P O Ro'I: No {( l) ~~···· i;.chOtll 11·aining i11 l'l('l'h~ll1·1 " .... l 71 k I l'I ll ' ~ a y 0 . . . •, ... --·-----1. ' . I l'ft,• FoutllHil\ \'iill!'y U.•1 II~ 11<1! llt'<', (rlJI .• l!\-2-. .01. ~··1· ij •1~ l)I ""11 ~rv ·,,. 1560, CO!!la l'.1c>~'\. !12626. J)ISll\\!ABllEHS. lraio{!f'S at:-1 a·s ·· n1in1 1n11111 Y•':tl' ,. . · ---...-----I or· I 'L1T)' \\'·1rr11•r I !iiiiO..,iiiiiiiiiOiii,_ii.-.-.-.. t'<'Jllf'd. Huyvit•ii· Con-lnti.'!1 r.~pcr. !r~un you. t'all J'h1I .\h·-Sl\.~[)\\'I Cll 111ak1't' 1111<! -" -' ·---Furniture 110
l
;lll::N &W\\'EOM ~H:NAVE ,,11<'sren1 Hospital, 2 o ;, :1 ~''.11,U'I':. ~-rLl-_A_S;J< 1:r:.\l. ~r·11rn1 I 1•111111111i-~:1ry 11n1k, I \\'i\l'rH~SSES-l11nt·h r..· rl1rl· . _ . . . I
Tl I I {• ,, ''t7 .. -.1.-Cnlt Fur Ap111 LS1 Al I'., !Jh.:->i.otiL l)Hr1 or full llllll'. ~ta1•1 Sl.~fl I 111'!' .. t(l()fi ~( I ' 111• k I;\! I ou.1-.i..1' ~I/!'. s Int Ill" 11 ,, I \ 111r 11 '"1" ·• ·.,. _....,.,,,, I • 11' 1 1 -------1· 111 I ii'' I f>I n"ui;ln;1 -~· ;1 1011~ hi' l'.ilt llria11 HiC'h:ird~. s1•rvu·r_. • 'JI r r IK!I 11f'-a·11•1 -..out• i. 1 \ r
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NUHSES Aidt"s.-!1a}s f!i'til ~~•trilr &ih'~ ;,:,J..f,2'.1'.! J 111•1·1·~~111,. l•11111rr1 r1p.•111ni.:~. 1:rl'l'11 I: h111\\n, !.'f~KI 1·011 9166 GOOD JOBS IN L\'N 11-7 A:\! (714) 494.9401 NEW OFFICE 1\i•fll.\ :ii l;r.,,u11rl r~1.und 1li1ion. R::tl-ll::t! afl 1;~'~' ;11nt
C:1ll 519-:'.061 SECRETARY 1: .. ,1. r;:~1 lhorh•u• Hh ll ·I '~"!'k'_'.1111.:__ __ I SIZES IOY1-20V1
ADMINISTRATION 11\Ll<-:Ei°" .\~de,;.-r'J)(.'f onl~. TELONIC rtppnrtuinl~ !nr I\\'" IH'<'n•·.-.. 1 l ,\I_ .. --)( t1' hrn"11 ~· g1ilrl {'(lU<'h -.l..-'
POR YOUNG
OhlC'r \I OIUt'll /H'>'f'd, I INDUSTRIES 1''111 t·~lit l i· ftt'(lph• 1" llu~ II! II•' nn• hiok1ni:; lor 11 '"I' WANTED I f'r1n11•n1poru1·y S1)1in:;:. l,i~r Ir., ..rT,.,·._ ""1 ,~ ..... \('.:tn1rnf(Jll11·<'. c~·1 fo1 111 , 1 ""'"''"""1,. 1,.0 ,.,, •I••· ,,,.,,.. t1IL.\1 ~ \\'f:S[ll\' A11<'1ldn1ll f4'1' '•...-Vi"''" nor''""''"" l\01~ori:u!~lO-l.:\ .. ,1l•••hl l 'U'I\'. $:(1 ur tnufl' 1°11·1
WOMEN AND lon1l Ch1w1•h, 111alu1·r adul1, Laguna Beach W . E . LACHENMYER nil hu. )I ~Oii 1 A k (' r'l'r ll.\11.Y PIL!iT l).tpl'r h't"f'~f'I' :~11-~'?.01 ~It'~ ~ltt\r1hnrwl . lrll" h1 ~t k a1·· · -----
MEN
.-;un A~l /Pj'I;(. Ttll'!' Al'\;I l'.:11ual Oppo1·. E111plo~1'r 6·ll).,1.1i2,, or ~,.i;,.;~\{~ ('1)n11l•I· .~. "uull'I lik<' :i I iuull'b u1 . ..:.•uth S;u11 .. ,\11u.1 LOVE-; ~RI~ $6:1; S<1l1•n~I ! l'C'"Y \' <1t' f•nf!m..-r 1:73-lOl~
1
i·hall"UCI' l{l')JI\' C'la••!flrr\ hl'l111•r11 . l>~a111 i· F;~!'\'11'11 .1 n1iir1ll' r1111 111blrt-<;2:,, S1n1·1<1 L';l'~ ·~~ ~hmnHn~ .,. '1111'. 111
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. _,. , A I k . I NUHSF.S aidt·~. all shifts. HelpW•nted, M & F 710 Help W anted, M -& F 71_~ ,\11 nn. ~I rln 'n11Uy Pilot., \IA1n•'1 ,\-:'·"~~~w;..1) ~11 ,1 "~ons ~ 111 i.: l,.. i. ... i $.:() h1n1t' ro1 th11 I i.1:;,•11 1~n uk.n,~ ~..,._,6.Y ~1 • ~;ny J111r~' Convolesct'nl llospi tnl _ l'.O Ho,,; 1560. C.ost r1 i\IC':ui. 1ill-•• t _._,1~-14 . """t'tir~ or p:i.-t} ,1r .. 1\r i~•,,,,
.Llk t .nun 1a \'C I. • IH2-059S .. (':i!l'!Ji26. L,llUI C••1!.:Pll • !'({)fA IC: 1.1)\'t•:-'l:\T . 11ilo11nin;: N111 r 1t•11w:I II•'.\ l' t yping, s1eooi::rop 1~. J)1~l n< 1 ;\hln<it:Pr 11,,1., ... 11..._,rl, 'ii:~, 1 n ti 01 offic<-mu11~rn1ent And fK'I'· f\'t.:R...;;ES AKies, cxpcr. T-::l lllEST•u••Nr SECRETARY E111111I (lpf~>rl_11n11y_En'!ilhy•·r 1 '"1
11 ", 1 , •r · 11 If :10nnl'I ~pecuiltll"I. \\'p'll i 11hlf1. lluncini,.'1on Beach _ I a11d l~t1\11 ~1•11\r1 \Ill •11n1r1, ':111r1·11 t,•t .. 1
"'Y ,·ou ri gooi'I st11 1·11n11 t\my. Jl(l11p. Sl1-3517. e c k e w •1 D11 •·••t111 ofn1-'v n1::in11r . fa1•ili-1~,.<-;!1!/f ;;111"! 1C1 •. 1'!1!, 11 1 . II •· ~';lary y,·hllr you lrnrn. Plu~ -{OFFICE:. GIRLS 00 s a I resses I\ or II\ na111 k fu 111 !\!'I'll~ II\· WEEK.ENOS . '2 1-.IATClll~\(: -;;-11111 -~ur;,.,, 11.',:.:.-" .......... 1.~'1,'..:r,\:1
->! ·l;'.'..,j, j' I j() day• paid \'IH':l!\on 111111 OED 1!11. 1;ho 1lr•11·1·~ l"f'~P. &'1'•') puntll "l.H'latui·. 'I-.·, :'\tll Ulln<e 111Jln1\~ (;,. .. t <>1rt1I '"~
. . ' . NEE • B H I • o· h h I,, );Jn .\1•11 l<'l1•11lhll\!' ' ~t:\'p;...:r, t·l\t, It:''" Olhl'r C'X{'rlll•n1 !o<'n<.'fll~ . us e p IS w ... s ers :.::1~111111 llllh•n!1nl S11l11r,\ '" . . I . $1'2.i. t...: l:<'!k~hil l' lt<it1i:h , l I ' n:1!111l<'lcphont'1tl~l}fl1<'h " S•;f~I ,,;;11 11<11 th'i'"~~. h11r IH 'l11 l(l l! ""' ""1k. l'f'\•linl'• ~j()I "ifl--£17~ ,,,,. ,.,.,,.11 10:•111•111 •1• ~I
Huntington Beach \11.~, h\' 2j, :1bl1• 10 1Jr1vc 1111. t'all ~:ill\ llfll I .i-lll nlii•. j ---· -1 • r111 ... hor .... 1·h 1'"11r111 1'"
18530 B •• ch Blud. l\pplv Jn Pl'r,;,io-,111 I • · '.? {'U(1l1f~:s 111:.ipl« •·oil<'•' ,-'111· ,\l·oil ~n,I "i11.-,·1~l llanoll
• YELLOW CAB CO De1111r'1, th• 11011011'1 teodln9 l4·hovr farnllv '*''au. i 'nn•l.i l'tr ... mn «I i\J.:"111·~. 1.ihh". \l:ll11111 111•·~~1·1 I.· !'ll,llf, ••~. f•a 1f.-n1 !,!.•)•1,
962-8.821 ' renl chol11, It ftOw l11rfr•l•wi•t fo r th1 above potl· :.!ilH! 1 (,!I hur Bl\ o! · ('\I t·h,.~1 .,r 11t·1"11•1 ~. ,.f.,111•••1 l•, ,,11w1 I''"' thtt•l, 1.,~ 1~1; E. J61h, ().1io1.1 i\l<':o>U •
Today's
Army
_ ----1ioJ1t ot ov• l:l•ov1lfvl newly 'edecoroled r••'auro111 SECRETARY 11111" ~i~l4~i. 1!rt11 ,.1 \ 11111 lll hl' llH•''°
(!~l·'tf'E lll'lfl \Vu11h•il lmsl!· h1 Hu11ti119to11 leach. )",.,. l'.•l•l. Jr ,l<JU :ik1• \.1110·1.1. SUI.Ill tnri·li l i\lll~; n•un.' 1•f'••I,• 1•1' l1U!I'!' S,.lul \u ~k11t~,,n·<i'd1 .lllhn 110 k!''l:ll lllJ•y ••p poy, profit •h•rlllt, f••• ir1iuio1>ce, pold 1i.·1>11ly ,--, u11l111u1t•1 I •11•r.i1· 1:J.;\l.1'n1:.; 1 1 ... 1r 111 .( •hrurii: 1'1)1•!11 J.ikl' ~1.11<"11 ,,,.,1i11. !h,. llA\I V 1111' u~r .r 11011 s11111 1•r , 111111rv 1hl' i~ tit•• 1"h 1111· \"11 ,I.\'('~; l•lll • w•\\ 1,11111 -.-~; htot.: :,.:! \11''1 1~1 11 -=1.. '\':'11
111•1'11\ full t111lt' nnly. r_..11 ¥1teatlo11• 011d o'h•r b<tftefltt ;., ... •Jcetltnl ..... ~1 ... , Trn·ili« fu!\1 11• 1<11 ~h.t![• 673-4400 I . .. ' I 'f.,1\,. :"' y 10011 1'11 11!
lt1i' flp11t 612-.~'JK-1 SR 1 en•lro11-n1 . nlli\ 11 ~1·~ l)plln: .~· lllr l t_;I,,\~-; IVfJ lt1 thlr ,(·I,' llail'~,-;"to'A\lt:, Af}llRt;<te. 111111
1-:n1i:\nt.'i'1·1111:, 11::4 P1~wlut'llon '''I"'"· :\h llt•lpful ,\J,,, ~i" ~ :it..., H11rh••1• ,h .. a (·,.111 'I.II' St7.t: 11nd !'Tl.1.t' Pl. N.R. F11U '"" ,., •• ,,,,.. p•1ltl•1t1 111v0Uoble •• Ill••·, ... , .. , ·'""~-\\f:l.nFI~. o i:NA:'-tt-:NTAL 1rr. :,, !\71l.(lj~ I N11-i1Bt:r:.
1 ~11N1AnJRF. :i.1AClllN!m' -OFFICE GIRL u•d 9'0 _,.,, dllfti. Appllco41t' '""It p,.fenff. Jason Seit Agency IHO,\' EX'f'. 1.Af'UNA SPA..~l~ihl1·t-:-1 t"llffrr , S1 :r. i\IOr,I-, Q ul•k -,,,N~E Wanted . C1tll ltir , ...... epply •I •H• 111 port•ll botWffl •:OO '·'"· 4C1 1--t:11f. ' _ _. I i n. ,..._ 21 \'r~nll1QC"()roldt>r,£Xj){'f' lilOO Urool<hural. t". \'Ly -• '-----I C'nd. 1 ,.,n11111)lll!', .\.tlO t'.1~h1nn' l1K1 f'l<ll"l~f' 111l"1 Appl .. a.iS~'219. not J'!«'l'SS. Nell\ Ill appear-tmdS:OOp.lll-Suile 213 ~\671.i \rH11 \\1\\TS ·1n \\'ORK'!' All in xln• ro1liJ ~·1-';t;l'f.I. Dllttrn 11'1"• "'°"' our
., tilODEl.S-i\IODEl.1\-;\lODEL.c; <---i t 1) I 11/tf\'F. A C/\81 F'OR'IAI 1 . ll !':pr1n::':,<;un1mer C"111 lo:::. All tilODELS 11nrr, .-..tu')' opnonll · f 1 ClfOltst: 1nur h('ur-.. work ·• • tillin;: :-;.-i 11' •l~"t' Only 50c. !
\\'onien _ ~irn f Kirk Jl'111•lrn ·~ SECRETARIES Int \l'lllr~ll. tlfo \•lU•' oi\'TI ~ht11r11. $,lflll "I' h!·~! nflrr 17\'..otr"Ar-."1' ~Wl~G Rf)f\t-.: 1
\\'antrrt ror ft1ll iulf'l 11 \ntl'I' 1.lOO llAC'bor ~vri j · & M,,,' ~Trn "' 11nfnrn ('11n _!:'.~nin:• ~7-·,;AA. j ~,.,\ lo<l•~·. "-'t'lt toRtr.,·m11· IR~hlnn11.. C11ll 11pril. 1 \<l~1tl i\l('U. Jl".5'1~9~SS KEYPUNCH OPRS Ii!" •l1::hTll l1.1n.11r11rfl"rl. oou n1.1-; hl'ot f l'lll•' n,,, S-1 ..
Amrrl('nn Bf'nur1ro; 1 1 '/T~ml' ~\rs:. & S11 1~. lflf't1l lt'l.irte ;iltll l fl \r·1 1.4·i.·,111 lppr:iranrP 1111rln_i:,,, 101111,,,,. 1h•nr1 f\'t:fA~'T ~·'1.Sl!JO N 1
tifodel~ Ai';i<\l'm)' tor iotu11cn!s \h·ly 1vn::r -t liSO'l Sk) f':u·k \'t,' i<'lll<'!I ,\i,:" Z.1 In i'O !Zi !)'i'.!:..-1.lr, Rl>OK lr tn•l n"•h1 o F
:noo NI!\\' port Ul \'d., :-.:.u. !)1•11U~'~. ( '111! S!l2~12:18 !II I NC. Nt:rr.1: A rr.r AT ., "''"') I Si.1f1°11lr1.i .. nl _\(~•I' 1rk:01n1".' 1 "i\t11 kr -1:...-.n. r . ! 1 .. rtrt~ .. ,,,hl~ f~~-!!._ -I
lit 6i:i-ll~12 • )>.,(1-inf.O 1t471 l"c"' t l•cl., 1-1 • .,,1~,1011 1.,.ch 'r•'•Jlp•\ Trn1por:\ry llrl1• •1 lll'1\1' n '.th 6 !1r, 111 111or,.. • . 1·lr.•ll (!·1t :•:r ,: .. 1-'!:" :.lk,. tn trart,.':' Our 't'r11rlrr'11 I
Dbn'I • l::l\'l' 1111 tt;;"" llhlf)! Tht• 1n,1r;T;Ji11,1•-1n till' \Vl·'ll . •I•~ 1\pf'l.\ 111 prr:u'ln, lurn lh11 1 11111!. 101C1 , .. 1 ~h P1111di~,. 1~1lumn I• for }")U'
"l.1'11'' u In t•lns.~lliM. Sll~r '' .n !)11Uv Pl\olf Cl11!111ifr .. rl An "'lv•I """11'"W~H~ fmtolo••• \\ hll•· Elef')h11nl f'l ll1ll'-A-l.1tll' j Yt'IJ011 ! ... 11 ro. ;~i; I' lfo!h \\'llh A 01111,1' r1ln1 l"!lt~•!t1Ctl .. 1itw'11, ~, rlM\• for !i buck~. •
In Sbnre Ht:Mtlt'I! 612-567!1, • Ad. 6'12-5tit8. f':\ll !f>l'l,.Y Mz-~,r,;11 ,, . "·"1" \!r...i, .ld, ('.111 fi12'-·-r.;~ '-'-''-"~~ ~-· I ---
'
I I
Thl'ff·Part Set!
'fvµ~l'. o·:op, hoa -rmrhr • 1·
;-1!•' ,,.1 l'R~~ and 1111lrk'
\\HAI' lNTtl r n rl ril y ,
11anntll Ill l0Qp·~l i1ch lace
nod .1-1ni.:lr {'IH<'hrl IOJ'!!>f'I' aM j
•'"!' 11 1th l<>l•I•) l11n1 and lna.1 L·~,. 1,111~1 ,..,1 l1::i1'<'t 11 11~rJ
.Iii«• 111111•. "''"~ ~ \~ \11-
, lt,1IPU .
t't;\'t:,"f\'·Yll '"-· rt:N1'!!i
!vr l"111·h l'"llf'fll -1dd t;;
f'••nl" for t'Rf'h f"llltro lor
\11' \Lui 'l tl•I ~fll"f'IRI llandl-
111::, •olht'll\I .... ' ihif·iJ.i•ll!..C
Ll"lt\t'I\ 11111 l~kl' fhl't"(' 1,,.~1,'I or 11u11·,. S.-nd tnl
\111 ,. llr•••l,•. 11,,. 1l '1..ll.Y
I'll t I I. !I ••. '""llltr1·1ft
11.-"1 , 11.1 .... ur:. 111.i Chrlv-1
'i\.Jli•\I' '''" \'011 •. -,,:,.
11~111 1'11111 St •nl', Ariri"'·•'·
/.i 11. 1'1111 .. t'll ~Urtl llf'r.
r..1·1 t11 r1·nA~"r ·n·
( '1 .. 1 ! ,.t l..ntt. rlr .
1l 11 ... ·I 11\!I'. ·11, ..
ln•l&nl 'l.i<"tl<ltl' "-Ir..
1\.1.11·, !.1•11·1 kl"'''· Pl! •
l "I''" \1 (~)
lllda11I ( rrn·hfol Rool.
IJ'.HTI bv pu·hn't •! ''I 1,.n,•. Jl.00 I
('nn1pl,.tr '"'''"' OHi 'ftllOj -1nn1,. th11n tm i:ttt.•
l l 00.
('nnopltrr AIJhl • Root -n r>o.
11 .1 111.' r.111 R<W>li• !iOr-.
RM>k •I I'! rr1r .. Af1k•111 ..
-~ ..
ftt1 llt "°"l I -lf; pal1 ,.rn.,
5(11·.
~h1v11,. Qlllh "'1ot I ..
~.
Q11fll• l11r Tiida_~·· l.l•lfllC •
-
,
'
....... DAIL V PILOT Tutldlf, OctObtt lb, 197l
1§1 1!..._ ___ ....... ~1~""'";;"'-~l§J;j~I ;;-~-~ .. ;;;l§l~I
1-I~ -910
l§J I Jfi] [ ]~[ '--_ .... t_, ... __,J[I: [ -~'t"-][~] [
_ .... -
Miscellaneous Ill
*AUCTION*
F'ln.r l\imlfu~ & RPIJlllilJlCC'I
l'.\Sll for lutr 1n ... J1•I
• 1p1•li;1n(·1·~ I.: fu1·nlh1rc, ric.
\111'11•fn<1 fri\la,v. 7:30 11.11\. MASTERS AUCTION
.!1Jijl 1 Newpol'!, 0 1 ti-ki-lSGSli
U~tlu1d Tony's Bid(. hlal'I.
Hl.ONDI'.: s1ud1•nl d 1• 8 k ,
tipllobnrrcd nc~'·nt chn1r.
'f ttll lnUlr J;1mp. Cati'I table
.t· '!. foldlr11-: chnirs.. L>ruf1ing
t11hlr, la1np ~ rools. 2 5hor·1
h;ir s1ools . :1 nl1o;hl ~cruuls.
E,lt•c. 111i1Jtkurl" M'I. E:lcc.
m11ke--Up 1nlrrol'. Othe r
rube:. hl'nlS. 5.57---0909
3 LIM<; 1 Tlmn, ll.IO
4. Mo. old female Has IMtll. Good
clll1dren. t'l'f't' to
ho111.-. 616-~1 -· "'it h . """'
6o1ts, Sail 909
20 F't . Olymplt: clll.U t1ylna
J>uu,.unan. NC\Y 1 s 111 ,
trndi•r. Pla1trrnd d1•idg:n.
l\lu.~t scll-besl o 11 c r .
L0\1NG ?lfuU, 11t<'d~ .::0!".11 ~7-7592 .
honll'. 1 ~car Ot"ute1-._•it r C:19~. '-"J"n"',~.,~,k~~Boo~t-. ~,,~,-~9.1
111~le, 1\•/:Jhotll & ficetl!'lt'. f t.lnhogf1ny 111J»;lr11kr hull.
.iltrl\l\7. Rl'nrly !or p11inl &. v(lrnlsh .
GOLl>F;N Ht'll"K'Y't'r ;o..11x{'(l, .v $!4'00/be-!t offer. 510-13.'l9
JJ3.J't CollJL•, i.;d \l.'.JJdds & art :i.
"111ch dog, $36-31'177 ~10NT~GO=;i.t~,~:R~Y~1~2~-~R=-u-c-,· I
ADORABLE Hvt'ly blk. & t>t1ui!)l)l!fl, $650. !\lust set' to
y:ht . .11 \Vks old n1ale kl\\1'n. appn •riate. G .15 -D 9 1 1 ,
Shots, b:lx trnd 6-1-Hlt:l9 612.c-~15~97:._::d~n)~'':.. ___ _
IO\'E'B rliiltlrf'n 9-1-£661 eon1plch>d, new trier, S·-KlO,
Motor Hum.• ... " 1.A.;.u:..t.;. .. ;.....W;.;•c.•c.tod;.;;.. ___ ffl_ -"'-"'°-'-' _lm~po_rt_od ___ 9_70 Autol, fmf'!'!ed Aut", UM 990
Sal•/ Rent -' ?s --'-.-5-A-Ll:-S-.--I TOP DA UN PORSCHE . ., VOLVO. 1.,, 4 '' ""1an CHEVROLET .
• SERVICE • DOLLAR WE'RE HERE MUST .,11 911T 'fA'I•. '10 '"to. rod~, hca< • air, ~·ANT to buy, '"' "' •.S
PAID Por:iCh1·, n1111\Y xlrss, bst .U,250 ml. Cash. sruio. Qie\'elle or O:le\'i!Ue Malibu
• RENTALS • Set· u5 nt orrr takes, dt\Y& M()..:o292 ~74 Stat.Ion Wqon. Body mu.wt
EXPLORER",
HUNTINGTON BEACH
l~/<lll f\j;,, >< t'l\li' b-1i i!!IOJ
fH 1r.JT,i'OC.1QN l\!AI l<
RECREATIONAL VElllCLE
RJo.."NTAL BUREAU
• 714: 842-9922 *
IMMEDIATEL y MaoARTllUR ~ JAMJJOREE '"' ......,04 "" in Kood 1 ha 0 ., BIG SAVINGS ON E Autos, Naw 980 ltcuonable, 968-4911.
FOR ALL ·n o.mo. R NAULT "'" CHEVROLET '68 MALIBU. v .. ~ ....i FOREIGN Pickup• RENAULT 1-..:..::.;.:;..;..:.:..:..;;..::..;_I oontl. thru-out, p/1, p/b,
CARS 610's BRA'ND NEW '1'.C air oond, vinyl top, Musi EL CAMINO CLASS! "1L !800; 55&-ll82 ° r
WE ARE IN i\1£11,,..-"lf(f -NEW ""~ -· 839-2399. DESPERATE NEED lV\.,;" ¥'\I R-12 4 DOOR FACTO;:w.rRICE CHRYSLER
OF GOOD, CLEAN DATSUN Automatic Ttan1mlsslon OUR PltlCE FOREIGN CARS SALE $3714 '66 CHRYSLER Newl"'n <
FREE \VEE~'I D TOP DOLLAR-PAID 888 Dove $2499 Call r-.racf'hmion Chevrolet dr HT. Air, runs good. Call
H.ccreatlonal Veli'icle ·rtenta.I FOR OR NOT! Newoort Bch 837-2TI1 e 492-1157 S.16-7878.
nt:ALT. sl ·y pu p, n1t1lc SAILBOAT. 12' hon1cbui11
t yr. 1111 s ts, Fricndly l h.•;u1!y. l\ull, ruddt"t',
r r~ :-.JA't"1fefilllr/Sl'it'p. 8.'l;G-51TI 11 ft 3pm. 1~1\l)I Jo:~ d1:c""'·,;. ~ & .up, l.n\'f's k11l"°'. \I: )I'S, Shul~. I s,\BOT no 70'.c'ti, 2 yn old,
Bureeu. (71'1) 8-\2-9922. 83.l 1300 01)('n Sundl\Y Dick Mill•,. Motors ONTI NTAL .;A"u"'to~Se-,"v"k'-e"", O::P"•"'•t"'s~9~479 Call or come In to see us. 1973 DATSUNS 120 \V. \Viu-ncr, s.A. Autos, UMd. 990 C NE n1rn~ -.ult' ·'-J.1\k('IR S200 5:'>7-{iUi6 n!trr 6Pl\I. raeuu: 111nn"r xlnt cond ~·n. ('JuldNn (' l (I I h I ti I( ' -----S.150 67"\-0·M I ' • :lt'l11111'l'.&l1nu,1•11a r~. *FLUFFY KITTENS · · ENGINEERING s t uden t,
!:,n'llll)' J'{'(hU'..:'ft a1·t-un'hau f /\flec11unalP -19:!·!i0-H C'\'C. I ?l' Albatross Sloop, no. 1, \\111 ftx your auto Lots of
NEWPORT
IMPORTS
5.57-21."12 ~=:...:=;:.... __ ..;:.co
ALL MODELS SAAB SPECIALS
OF THE
WEEK
·10 lltarlc Jn, 1 owner. like
rk'\\', n1W1t sacrir! Air cond.,
lthr, \'1nyl top, Ult wttl,-
A~tiFM .!tt>n'll, 714..:842-7771. -:1t11 conrl. N'1•11 Th1·1~l 11hop 0.1•n.1n sail.\, boftt I.' o v-c r , care, specialty V\\I Subaru, ~j_!:'., 1$tli .~1. C':'.l._ -I ~\ S"l()'I. P..1 pty. 642-673..l. Etc. 536-7110
CARPET BROKER I Ptt1 .id~ I 'L,, LIDO 11 l'\o. 116 1-'00d roo-[~~~~~~~~~
Rl'\'l'ntly par~·ha"-t'rl ~"v"ral' .~ J w.~11. .Covl'f'. Make oflrr l 11'4] 1-000 )Ill! 1,lush .I. ,.J1,1~l-iu·. I 61->-l36a or 833-2820 Autos f« Sile
p..·t. All l'\)ior~. B1·lu11 11huh·· Cits 852 Boats, Spefd & Ski 911 !.iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii:.:Oiiii~
SB.It'. 1n~1alla11on U\'flil. Con. I I
ta<'l Dick l..l'Slf'r. ast>-87-j2. Pl·:HSl,\N ki11cns, Cf..\ re-,: .. BOST():\' \\'halC'r 131~· Antiques/Classics 953
Befol'l' 9 anJ nr1.-r [1. 1011 qu.dity. Sij & up. Hn1nd nc'ol· il lCrC'tlry eiq;, ,10
AlIT0?11AT!C G ,\RAGE * S:f.!.2970 * 1!1• •. xJn: .t"Ond. v.•1 01· 11·1our
DOOR. OP~:Nt.:R. Fine.~t Plllti': S(o;ilpo@ ki!lens, 6 tru1 l('f 67.H)139
kno11-n branrl. Reg. $200. 1"I k~. gu1;..:•·•JU1-, lu\'1ng, $:.1tl.
SJ>('cinl $ 1 ~!I.~:. installed ca. •6-l:i-:I:::G:;. I 1~15 ) r guar. S9:l-~j77 o.r Dogs S54 i Tn1MpOrt1ti011
j;~O-\ ;,IJ :i. ';;;;;;;;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii:ii~iiii;
Campers, Sale/Rent 920
Al'T sale liv nn 1:ou\·h & e PUPPY WORLD e I
..:hr: din 1·111 lhl & -I cl1rs. t::n g l is h Bull D ogs,
2;\'' color TV, !a1>r l'l'<', 0 1ihuahuas, Tiny Poodles.
n1ovir:-. ramcra much m1lli:. j\n1cr. i-:sk I S pit T. t •
554)..113!1;dtcr12 noon Dubern1an, Pit Bulls, Bull
MlNK -A1n J l.'turning 10 TCL'l'ICI', Cockapoo. lrlsh
Hawaii. \\'on't nl'ed n1y long &tlC'r. 100 f\UXED PUPS!!
beaut. stoic. Only 3 yrs old Stud &1'Vice 1\lost BI't'Cds.
& lovrly. l101v about $150: Open E:ves: 531-5027
rosl $800. &12-951-1. Al\C \Vliite Standard PoodJc
.'73 KING-0.ROAD
II' "Co1npact" Cub-Over Cam-
per, llkc new, CIU'J)t.'lcd ,
J-lct•ps -1. Thru·boot filled for
Courier. Curtains, stove. ice
bo:\, 11 gal. watcr. ,t._rj(ing
$751'). 9G2-.1S22
'3.i Pl~YfllOUTII 4
sedan, $800 * &16-2055 •
Recre.ttional
~ehicles
BAJA SAAB
doo'
956
Saab professionally prepal'l.'d
to tac. tea1n specs. con_i-
pl<'tc!y equipped, race ready
fol' J\lcxican 1000. See at
Brilish J\1 otor Service, 1855
Laguna Canyon Rd, Laguna
Beach or call TI~94-39l0.
or 5'15-5171
FOR sail' 19-16 .l\Cf llnll f)UpfliC~. G \\'i'C'kS 0 1 d '
bus. S.C. lilps, 9 ept. stn\•C', Ch a 111 pion li;i..:kgl'ound,
J't.'frig. Solid 1,."0lld. •lW-32-10 l!riced !or pct a11d ~how.
4 Slecpcl' c1unpcr, ice box, Trucks
stove, jacks & caddy, .$350
962
$~300. • ~,,..,..:'7c:523=:._ _____ _ Finn &lj...7358
Cycles, Bikes
Scoottrs
\\1ANTED by private party
925
310(I \'I/, C.oast Hwy., N.B,
642-~5
TOP CASH
for C'lean late model can
and truckll!
Howard Chevrolet
J\IacArthur a nd Jan1boree
Ne-.1·port Beach
&U-0555
\VE PAY TOP 001.LAJl
FOR TOP USED CA RS
tr your car is extra. clean,
see us rirst.
BAUER BUICK
2925 Harbor Blvd.
Costa Mesa 979-2500
Ib1PORTS \VAf\TTED
Orange County's
TOP S BUYER
Bil.L !.1AXEY TOYOTA
18881 Beach Blv .:.
H. Beach Ph. 841·8555
V..'ANTED: Dunc buggy trall-
cr. J\lust be reasonable.
Phone 645-1305 ~fore 4 p.m.
Autos, lmport9d 970 Mt\ \'TAG \.\·asher green $60.
Kenrnore go!l dryC'r \\"hi1r
$.10. GM'C'n 11\'Ced nJodC111
rcclintr $2:5. &15-5235
1965 PONT. RC'huill cnginr.
fK'\V paint. 1 $350. or makr.
offr.r. \Vasher & dryer $25.
$1!HZIO.
!RISH settf'r, fC'/11, 1\1.:c
champion, 8 1110, sp.:1yerl,
shots, obedience trained,
oo-dirb-e;-$i3.· ~~=.....,
BJ:>:AUTTFUL Gcrmar. Shep.
pup, 7 nioir. ·nero good ho me
\1'/yard. SacrilicC', loves
kids $5. 642-8850
• ~ or % Ton Pickup
1968-1972, Chevy or Ford,
Gt-.IC, V-8, auto, air, cash
!Oday. 6~5-8375 I 835--9-169 Nf"~:,,~~~!-~ ~'!15 Olf:'U$Y75, ";-=-_:';-loo t:'~o~'-"'A!-'~~f,:A.:.:;R"'O~M;,:. ;;E,:O"' __
Sw1tour Eq & Colio .• S.~9.9:5 criu. J ... spc._"' trans~·
Nishiki 10 SP "" !ron1 S.<19.95 1111 sleel 7x9 nat bed $100. * ALFA ROMEO
ELECTRIC typewriter. slAn·
dard size. Recen1Jy recon-
ditioned, Excellent shupc
$200. 71 ·~0--t528
U . 4-115-S ply tires $1J. ca, sed hikes ., •• ;. from SIS.OD 1)4;;..7358
Bikes c-lcaned/oilcd ...• $4..50 ="C-C=:'~~~~~-~
W;\NT ED USED BICYCLES l!G) lnlPrnational l T .
Beach Bicycll's, 806 E. Balboa iv/dual whls & service bed.
Blvd., Balboa. 675-7',!82 New !'ng & tires. -Xln 't
i-;hape. $1200 or bst o£r. Cull '59 Indian Chopper, Springe!'' 979-8630
POODLES, beaut. aprit'Ot front end, 1 lal'lcy Da vidson
AKC miniature puppies. 7 rear, Rigid fran1c, Simrc 71 SPTS. CUSTOM
GREAT Dane pups. "Giant"
AK C, Gold & fn11·n &
brindle, ''civet black. Reas.
557-7480
BC'St d5:al ah~·ays! Bcrlinas
h-om $3795 (Ser. •0288J.
'Tl's & '13's. Complete SC.·
Jection now. Buy or !ease
Iron1
Jim Parkinson's
IN STOCK
BARWICK IMPORTS * SAAB
33375 Camino CapialTanO Rest deal aJy,•ays. Complete
San Juan. Capistrano selection now. Bu,y or lce..sc
, 493:3375 or 831·1!75 ln>m
'70 Datsun Sta. \Vgn. radio, Jim Parkinson's
heater, air, 4 spd, luggage
rack, tape deck, chron1e
y,•hlio;, nu lures. lo mi. Xlnl
cond. $.1850. 675-8195
DATSUN 240Z 'Tl,' like OC'\I'.
4 spd, a?!'. 1nags, 18,5CO
n1ites. Pd. I:tt:y. V.19j.
714-fJ36-8192 or 968-rn'i
FIAT
'67 FIAT, 4 spd, nC'IY paint,
needs work, n1ake offe1·,
days 83~30 ext-226, nites
962-6.l90
JAGUAR
l9n J aguar XKE Roadster,
6 cyl. air ronrl. chrome "'ire
v.·he<>ls, AM /F1'1 slen'O,
new Pirellis, tonneau, m inl
rondition $4000. 552-8705
':6 Jaguar XK 140 t-.1C
Rdstcr. Wire \11\IS, 475 mi.
on nu c.ng, Lria.ns .& brakes.
Xlnt cond. G4H l47.
MAS5!lAT~
Tlll'a rh jl111pu11~;
+~ .... ·" '""' ""'"" ~=· ~·!.. . ... ,, .!:'l .' ' ..-
S<>&IOO or 6'>6<t>;
Orange County'I!' Newest
SAAB
Dealer
CLEARANCE SALE
··73 SAABS STARTING AT
$2995
up to 24 miles per 11alkln
Dick Miller Motors
120 W. \\lamer, S.A.
557.2132
SUBARU
Drive A
SUBARU • " ____Djs:~ill'.r Motort
Sales & &:rvtce
Visit Ut Soon At
120 W. Warner, S.A,
557-2L12
TOYOTA
S500 G.'f. MODEL 1965
SUPER LEGGERI, has had
loving care, lo mi, xh:t
cone!, I'll trade for largt>r
car or boat of approx. $4000
value. Don Lightner eves -----~~---'67 TOYOTA 675-1047 days 646--0551
MAZDA tires, and super clean!
'68 PLYMOUTH
!XF.\i.s19)
S1299
'68 CAMARO
<XXP-5Dll
$1899
'68 BUICK RIVlliRA
(VEJ-641)
$1899
'72 CAPRICE CPE
(85l·EOO>
$3099
• '71 CHEVROLET STAT!ON WAGj)N
C7S4-80K) -$2599
'64 CHEVROLET
'h TON PICKUP 1'4292EI $1299
CORVAIR
* '68 Corvair Xlnl. shape. US Mags, 37,000
mi. $800. 5J&..3487
COUGAR
'67 COUGAR, 2 dr. All
power. New brakes, Urea.
Ex. cond. Lo nil. $1200.
673-8796.
-FORD
'72 FORD Courier. AM/FM.
Sterm. US Maga. 11,000 ml.
1 owner. Ex. cond. Sil
'Aliso, Newport He~hll.
&l5-02.83 7:30-9:30 AM. 8:36-
10 PM. or \\'ttkends all day.
Best oUer takes!
JEEP
'?U SCOlrr 4 wheel drive 30t
V-1. Powrr brakes,
automatic, uew Nonieman
tires, \Varn hubs, roll bar,
,Au:s.._gu tank_, skid p~tcs .. ~~clean. $2)50, 893-M!iO all.
6PM.
'63 WILLYS Jeep, 4 whl
drivt>1.PU with camper, new
Gates tires, over drive,
overhead ,cam eng., CB
driving lighla, man,y more
xtras, see to a pprec .
96>-8S9i>
UN COLN Mlscellan.aus
Wanted 820 "·ks. $100. 545-51211 C'ngi nc & frame. $1200. Aft V2 -TON, MINT COND.
AKC, Dachshund. male. 7 5 pn1. 5:''6-8193. BEST OFFER 892·1832 *Mazda '73 Rotar.f * Slick, radio, heater, new GROTH
$599 1971 Contin<n\al M4'k lll,
(TEf.t 529) CHEVROLET chocola-te brow n ORIENTAL RUGS
PRIVATE PAl{TV NEEDS
SEYE R.AL USED llUGS,
644-5326 * * * 675-8773
\\'ANTED maple cRptains
chairs and l11n1p table 111ust
be reallOMblc 112 Opnl "A\'l',
Balboa Island
CHILDREN'S play h o u s e
wanted, please phone, ,......, ..
\VANTED: Lawn vacuun1,
good oondltiion. r easonable.
Mt 5 pm, &iS-1609.
n1os. Musi :;ell! i\fftke offcl'! 10 s·P-E:E=D~--1970 EL CA!'.1fNO. P/S, I $66 MONTH
after 6 pn1, 548·655.'i, WANTED P/B, air, ,;nyl l'oor. Under 645-6·100 or 6'15·&100 36 r,fONTHS O?EN LEASE
GERl\.IAN ShephC'rd, __ l!!_~ _\1usL be in ,l{ood shap<! & :J0..._000 n1iles, ll('\V tires. Xlnl AUSTIN HEALEY I \Viii accept ti·,ade.~n~
f'amily pet. House--lraint.'Cf. rPasonahly prii'C't'I. 51~·5010 eonfi. $259J. 673-lG:iS. • .C.i\LL MR. F R\' ~~-
3 yrs. $100. 9li8-&n8 cvcs. FOR SfllC '73 1-111 r I(' y 19T~ CHEVY 1.:: Ton P1t·kup 11960 BUG-EYED SP!t!TF.. Hunt Bea"h
Sllli\" Terriers-2 fenialcs. Davidson Super G!irlc ~-X. Exccllc11t condition $319J. Asking $JOO. Ne-eds sonic • 1'
No reasonable oUer refused. l20ke. $600 & take over &&-OOZJ. work. Call &i5--0'140. MAZDA
Call 832:-$4.22 or ~178 payments,~. ·;.g FORD pick up, 11.ji Ton BMW '~. ;{{n~a~~~ io!td~~r~~:
493-9798. Must see t o ~-11211 BE:ACH1!tVD. -•ppt'eciat>-. ----f 847-6087 549·3331 '72 P..fark JV. \)'hlte on red,
HUNTINGTON BEACH Moon dust m e 1all l c .
~·~ ., Oul8tanding. rond, lo mi,
_.... .. "n.~erltc. ~arkway TODAY'S SPECIAL AU. 5pm 1:. ~·kend1 979-S834, M18810n VlCJO , 979-2640. sn..:h.'Y Tenit>r Bitch lo good 'fltAICO ·n 400cc, $700. f'ot d u a I v.• h e e I s S 5 00,
home for lease, 832-9422 or raced. Pvt. ply. \Vr~ (2131 213/592-5750 ·
644-617il. m-3461, ext 580 E vc 'ii FORD ;J~ Ton Ranger.
IRISH Setter. r·emale. 10 ~-==~!.;...,=--~-~ Camper Special4L:iadcd, lo mos old. Loves children, NORTON 750, ~ood cond. milrs. X1nt cond. 493-DZTi.
s:u-3>!0 • 495-4949 72 CPE DE VILLE SPOTLESS~=-.a-blac_k_lll'q_,
ORANGE COUNTY'S 11331 Beach Bl. S42-66j6 USE AVERY P\VY. EXIT 10,080 MILES ConUnenW ?ifarlt ru, Powei'
OLDEST MERCE_D_E_S~B~E-N~Z-'74 TOYOTA'S Vinyl top, """"" int<riot', '""""'· ........ ··--lo-
$75. Call !lG.~ $850. or trade tor smaller Vans 963
cycle or Van + cash
893--9157 & Here 8000 _ New 5 speeds . full pcm•er, 1actory air, tilt· miles, $5600 even. 962-3701
So -'SED GT Modct. . Coron• S.R. lclc_ whoel, AM/FM ,1.,..,. MERCURY u Coupe rad10, . P<>l''C1' door locks,
Office Furnltur•/ Horses 856 ·oo FORD VAN · tv.'ll1glit senUncl, power .-.---------·I Equip. a24 1:.::==-----= CONVERSION MERCEDES '73 DEMO'S trunk ope""'. Anim""""b" 71 MERC. Comet. Vinyl .top, -~~-------HORSES BOARDED: 1 acre SCHWINN Super Sport, 10 Excellent selection or pn>-automobile, (567FVZ) fact &.Jr, new brakes, tire$,
DEVON stecl c!f'!lk l\'/src. ranch ' N.B. Back Bay. speed. faclory b r 0 \Y 0 6~~is~·0c~sPa~ef:::i~ price re-e>Jaluatlon niodels. ON DISPLAY Ancl a few remaining new SALE PRICED below lot prke. Pvt pty
I dd d I II C.-,1 •. .t stall•. Richard 11•/lltes, generator & 8 othl'r E Sh N C '7.i's at Clearance Sa•..in~1• 0v--Fl-u~ ~-, to' C:592-0=:26210"7--=~--~-t>1uure: pa e 1nrta ro · .,,, .,, ,,~."~·~··~•~9&-°"'54~42'°'-. ~pvt"-'p~tY~·--Large TitX'<: 142-IHEU!. O MO $ALE arp ew ar •uig ,. au .. ., """"'._. 1 ~ ·ng desk chair, adjuslable: ~9~7').~220.5"'°"~,-------1 -$2489 SALES-SERVICJ::-LEASl.NG Trade-ins . Select From. MUST seU '69 Mercury ltfil.r· in~~ ~~~ro~1~1o~~b:1o;~i SACRtFICE~ lleg. Ji a ~f ·~~.Ile= 1;;Ji~\\':° GUSTAFSON OVERSEAS DELIVERY Coming In Every Day 1'a,." [a.n:. Nabers Cadllloc tl:· ~73-37:'n, loaded,
i.:oocl concl. $l50 takes all Arabian, e stnul. Seu\." • 67J....3.-ro:l * Lin('Oln·f\.11'1"Cury ROY CARVER, Inc, Ask About Our Unique .Wft, tAl'IO Atm-£0RJZED DEALER
919-l9G7 r 6 Colt, $500. or bHer 963-21:17.1 ~=~-=-""· """--=---16800 Beach a t Warner 23 U d M d . L TQYOJA 2Q()() f-!A.RBOR BLVD. , '72 Mere. Wagon Col Pk. all IC:~·===~'~'-"''~"':=.,·=~~ IJ\10RGAN English juniper,
1
SE:T o,r weigl~t~. Be
0
ll Slnr Hunti ng!on BeaC'h , 4 E. 17th St. 1e erce es ••se ~tru, lo miles. Llke nu.
l"XEC sivvl chrs $\j/25 -Sfc 13 !ding ood for fl(']mct. 0 1he1 helrnct, new. S42·8S44 * (213) 592.55~4 Costn. Mr.sa 546-4444 Plans .,_ COS'f.A MESA PrL Pty, 642-lU) 'h~ $8t"I Desk!> $211/00 · ~·r ge$500 '.~ n335 • 557--0909 • "J lome of the Vikin"" CREVIER BMW H f I 1966 Harbor, C.M. ., • ., """~ ID9lDO Open SUnday --~=:=:'-"7=--1 S~~~·~~=:=!~ j ~""~·1~,'"~"~·~~ .. ~-~~;;~· -~~~-=~·~ . ouse o . mports ·-~ MUSTANG Pierce 867 \V.19. C:\1642.3408 '70 StJZUl<I 250 Savage, goocl 'ti9 FORD Vnn lshor tyl ·73 TOYOTA Corolla Coupe 'T.I Sln Wagon 4 lpd, blue., _________ _
Pianos/Organs 826 rond, inany xlras, $375. custom paint, interior. t rick Sales • Sctvicc • Leasin.11: 6862 Manchester, Buena Park air a s lid lrflllS 9 ooO Very good COl'l'I., 25 nrl Iv•
1
1-c· I ""i-Jr,o wh""· '"""'loo. """' ""IV. 1't., S.A. 1153.3171 '"th• Sanla Aoa F""" mil". AM/FM ,;·,,;0 gal. $1SYJ. Finn,.,,....,, '72 .MUSTANG. Lit< bluo,
PIANO WANTED I ... ~!.~ * 121 to Spell<, Sch\\•inn & only 101· drive ins. Sac. $2-150 USED BMW'S -:-;..-0:523-~1'50F,i;";F-[,,1~279!i~·'cPri~·,.lprty~'-' "!968{i853~~·-· rndio, air, P/S, P/B, auto -·~ ~~'""' ,. b'k ,. _ _, • • •.• "'~' JIM SLEMONS . BUICK trans., wide oval white tn4) ~12·0'.l.'T.:I a rench 1 C' . ...,.".I\, conu., .,..-,,.,.n '73 BAVARIA (DEMO) ' * 13 CELICA 4 epd. vinyl waJls, 16,IXXI ml. othtt u.-
eall alt 4 P?\-1, 642-SO!M. ·72 DODGE Sportsma'h Van. '71 BAVARIA IMPORTS top. Xl'"lt CO"l , trm. Must ~ to Apprec.
·11 \'Ar.fAHA 350ce 31:<; cu. in. Radio, heater, & ,72 Tll $3000 1'I' ~~7-371 1 68 RIVIERA. Full, power 963-2543
Boats/Marin• i'dANY NE\\' PARTS. stl'rro. Back seat, carpeted, ,72 2002 MERCEDES BENZ TRIUMPH .",~!~'.:" .:!1°!~sale1 · Good '°"""•~ru~ST=AN~G~.~ . .,-Con-vml--b-le.
As Long As You L ikel Equip. 904 $4j(} * 6''6--:J603 \1·inclri"·s 1111 a.1-ound. $3,000. -AlrrHORIZED llUfT iOUO'"OUO 89-1--0820 '69 2002 .,.._, .,.,.. SERVI pis, p/b, radio, 60,000 ml,
Non-players & playrn wel· 32 MILE RADAR GOLD Colon1bin 5 .~pred lli ,68 2002 ~le CE 'liO 1'rlumph TR-3, rebll CADI'·' •c y,•hite w/blk top, blk tthr ~me 10 . &t!~nd 1,'uesday Rranrl nc-.\· tstill in cartons\ !'~',·(' xlnt. ro.ncl. Please call 'Qi Che\")' ''an. Goori cnginr. [;;ii;;;iii;iii;;;;;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiio [ Jim Sl~mons engine. Good condition Call ~ Int. $1,21X>, c4ll D Crowell
night 11.1 1.30 P~l. \\ie 1111111 I lhn1 h~'<ln J\l o<lel 291)11 Httrlar. I J.1-·Q09.1 hoys. Gnod t\n!s. Needs h<xly 673--0580. 8J3..8246. eve .... ·o"n to learn to plo)· · 1\·ork. $&)} or best offer, Bob Mclaren, BMW lmpo-.. L.ATE '71 El Dorado, P/B, , ·~ '"'" C•uisldl'r '"ash or ea.sh + ·n Cf. 12.l. firs1 sole! 4/i.t ::0 97!'1-9621 11 ;, VOLKSWAGEN steerin•, w\-.. -·,, •• ,1. T'•ll 'fiust nlll 6t F•stback the . organ! All materials 1rar!e rur Bosh1n \Vhalrr. hrs use. '13 C'quippcd. $100. Inc. ll\ .. ~., '.'>P buyer for WI}' •OUV>O .... Cal
furnished, . ,.., ~200. value. SE'l11ng bt>low 673-2ti23 or :;.18--0 121 '70 OODGE Van, V·S, mags. Sales . Service • Lt>asing USC\.. .. 1e1ce<les Benz.J wheel, A1'1/FM sterro, near 1 alt. 5 p.m. 91'!MiOi6 Tom PDhl~ne<h64·2.'2"8clhlA ;;e. riC'11ler i_w.-L %2-128.t $2000. or bc!>t offer. 979-~ s;;o North Beach ~Jvt.l,, ...XU. Quail Vince Automotive new tires, blk leather Int. OLDSMOBILE "" Motor Homes or Ti'6-5iO&'ask Doug. La Hahra ... 11J0l ~ !reach Specialii1ng in VW PorsCh"F Vhite ~·/blk .top. A perfect, __________ _
COAST Music ll.\HIE:"T , 11·1nchC'S, . n c I\ ,~, 4) 379.c""·' D T c' . Cal' $5500 644-7475 ' -
I • J2 2 , -Sale/Rent "40 '71 G!'.1C Rally srx Van. Has , , ....wo ........,.;jJVV atsun, oyota. elebratlng · · Sale• I: "'-."'-i:uar . \ 1 ,,o. 1 1 • o. £~. 7 1 ~----;... ... ---·I 3 d An · p '73 CAD SDV Ilk ·---·~ Nev.·port Blvrt. at HarOOr Li .. at Transit Jn('. 1 l ·I: 1\•inclows & seats. $2400. 11 ~·1 f'F.rt r.-r ./Jl!.CARTHUR r n1veI"!lary. a r ls · • e nu, .........., OLDSMOBILE
Costa l'vlesa. ;..i&-ili2 '73 LANDAU. Br11nd new 25' 546-9959 aft 4 pm. 1965 BMW, V-S, black. NOW OPEN (ne\v & used) -!K'rvlce, mi,_ fully equip. Pvt pty GMC TRUCl<S
1 iiiiiiiii;iiiiiiii ... Oiiiiiiiiiii [ C~~~=,_=,,-,:;-;= •1 0 to h , "-• 1·1,,11 Classic. Good cond. S30W. engine ~~d'\(• and Dunc $0450/or ofr. 644-7311 eve, J• 12 v II B ·c lfl ~ o " r onl · °" u 1 " Y 'Tl DODGE, V-8, custom p11t. Buggies. 1~= 1 """" Ave. 673-1010, 1·5. HONDA CARS PIANOS -ORGANS • 0 111 • 1 ge ,. ·im-equip]JC'rl. Close out sale. + button' tuc:k Int., "''''· or bes t offc.r. 54C-3493 Mission Vie1·0 Imports .....r ....,"'"'·" per Pu111ps, S!-4.!Y.i. Call P. d 1 14~ •i CJ\1 PHONE 5'l5-0177 1971 Cnd'I'• UNIVERSITY OLDS New & Used, Grce.t Sf'ler hon 5'1S--OJ5.1. .e UCl'< O\Tr ,....,. "usl stereo, xtras! 846-4246.
1
CAPRI le.llL111ng · 1 ... c Coupe de Ville,
Con1pl'tell\'e pncc~ Oprn I scll. Sc.e 111 .Johnson & Son • MERCEDES BENZ 72 VW a ll goodies, stereo, 2800 liar'--m .. • E , & -1 Ilic bcsl 19' Al\IERJC\~ Boil 1n11lcr Lincoln il1c.rcury. 26 26 FOR. sale ~6 Chevy Von SQUA 97S-4809 UVl' yg. "~~s.', , .:-iu111'.1,ys. 1 I lk1•fl'd up, :.trlusl pail~. Gd l ifH'hor Blvd., Costa J'l.11!Stl. .xlnt cond, 111 & out, call ''T'l CAPRI, V6. ·1 sp{'(.-d, fully & R E BACK Costa Mesa 541).9640
'" ,1 ~ ·"' ll 11ay1111 . .. Gll-t 0,1., ~"''Of"'" !lf,()..1938 ult 5 PM ("'uipt 10 000 ini FIAT Less than 2-1 ,000 miles !968 OLDS LS < d .~ W oll;chs Mus;c Cit f '"'"'· ·• ... .:"'"·"'"" . . , , .. , · · · $2400 CA MARO · ' ' ~an. ~ • ~ Boets, Power 906 iO LANl1i\U, 2:i', loaded. !o9 DODGE Van. New 1 r~e. * 5'10..()1142 • CnrnplctC' Sa!C'S & Service S73-6l::.S • After 6 vinyl tl!P· powr, air, xtru.
South co.1st l l.1ta :i40·2.'\:IO l\'ill sell for loiv houk or b.-S'I S~~DDD. nr ~s1 offer. Coll 1972 T\IEHCURY Capn. Vc•1y Vis it Us Soon At .611 C 4 pd 4W-9145. (:10·,1r f""l'1 i'r hoai fil~,r~lass. I rca~nahle offer. fl(i.,~ .. .;,~~1 _!ii.i-8613 ,l?OOCI (•ru1d. & gas n1ilragc:. ·1 2'fi01 l\1argu11rltc Park\\'ay ·5;i VOLKS\VAGEN Baj a i' 8
x'!"'1 !"· nd 11 ' 44.ooo1 --~P~L~Y=M=o=UT=H=--I
\
""V C II' .., .. '!NV\ c.~7 11~ M . v · . 40 · 00 Bu<>, de,,.,ndable lransporta-n1 H. n s co . Best offer. \ "" Ell hPrr,Y oo t!. 111nlds. Ull" 1n il1111·s~. musl all ·I pn1. I '64 VW Van, needs work l<'1n •. ~·~..., r11J: .. ~1 -..,.,, ission ICJO ,l;:i.Ji t lOi~ cai". .66 V\V C'ng. &•~"'~'""""=~''~·==~~~--l----------·1
11pr1gh! !.'1:.1n ... )lln1 ('011\1.l ""II. l"":lin_i.: Ut' cnn1plt•I(' ·7~ PHlDF: & J 111. 20' n\!,Jhl1' l'all al!. 5, 616·92::.1 DA". SUN rusr: /\Yr~Tl.Y P\\'Y. EXIT) I '66 SPO"'l'S S\.)O. lilfi-:.!n11 ~h"I' ]'ho"'-' day~ 711 : I •m'" ,~,, .... ·,· ........ ,,,,,,[A W Id 968 -tranii, 30 nipg, $350 . CHEVROLET . '\. J1\ny. Nn tll"Cll, _ _ _ ---t· t· •.• 0 k 1 1 _1, ,, , , , • .,. . ,.L • • uto~ an e __ ...::..:.:..:.:..::..:....: __ l.ATE: ·72 3JO SL Coupr, 4 1~ ~93-6125. starter motor, battery, $650.
PIANO WANTED [ .' .:;.:~1.4~ · .~ ·i~ .:.;.,,,''\'t'~. ' .. : ''"'1r ;11r \ .. i.. f ~rc <•1·1-r 1i1re, Jull P\\'r, lo mileage k U t •7111 ~:Z-(t:l:1.<i ..:! .... \~ii;_,.(.,,,. Slt.noo. sr.ooo. S42-~1:i2. \\IEHl'Y • • "7'2·l20D, 4 spris.., clr,t1n, Royal blu, like nu. $10,250 ·70 VW Pop Top Camper. '6..1 CllEV. Sta. \vagon, 283 :1-~ e
0
er . at 6
• --I CHRIS ~11 rruiS<•r 1951 TfS l'IPORT"D AUTO" xtnt rond., $2l50. !-'u-m. 7 I 4-63 7 -9 1 4 I d a ys, New rnglne, lr'Blls, clutch, V·8 eng., J>\'T. strg. radio l'L,\Yhlt PIA:\OS & rolls,[). ",. .. . · · · 1 •Dalc 's '10101· 1to111r Rrn1a1~ " c. ,, 9jg..12fl7 brakes, tirH, FM stereo. heater, 801o. trans.'. 4 ~'Tl 2 DR. Hardtop Scamp. V-
11uri1Y't' '.?!lli] D <;r;:i(..'(' Ln I ~,~1~::~ c~;:·-~lallsl6l2S·:: '73 2'.t·26' M.1 1. & ~n1s BEST PRICES PAID! •DATSUN '71 240 Z, 4 spd., 71 ~~~~~~E~~y Sharp. 960-1503 Amt>ricaJ1 Mags, 4 nu Fire-8, auto, Vinyl top, n.dlo,
Cos1 ,, ~le!'a j1;-,...iu~i0 or 6.'6-ooOO ' ' --Fi""" milr~ 9 1119, JS.ll!JOO Dean Lewis Imports air rond.. niags. $3900. 1969 V\V BUG, xtra clean, stone 500 wide track tires, heater, p/a. Very clean, 1a
Sewing M achlnes 828 21. "-1, .• 1 C 1. CLAS.t;;JFfED ~·ill r.c1! it! l~ Harbor. C.~1. &16-m:: 644-SSm. Bes! offer . 61l-4ll9 xlnt runnln" c.ar, xlnl tires nu 8 track tape deck, rN cm~1~·~316-"=~'l8'lll~.=~---·1 .-, .. _.a .ay • , utly ra 1111, • ..,. ., -'---'--.~
Ew ZIG ZAG
1/0. 23.lhr> O:O.IC, roi'ci-:o:, MG Sl.300. 557-&15L monroe .. r arlll\alS in back, "• PLn.tOUTH Sedan, new
N . !railer, CC rq11111. VllF rar!. '63 VW engine good cord ru hvy. duty monroe ~ paint, good cond\Uon. Allk-~11111 hill~'~ , $ld.!lJ + _!'<:~ ${i600. Days '.l ~ 6 -1 6 1 0 ms 7', '56 i'o1GA. Reblt engine, $500 40 11P ' ., n rront, nu gl&ss pac muf-Ing $850. S48-638J.
r .. 11t·h :--:--11· "1>1).:"r S'.~"·!l! Evr~/1vkn<1!5 :>-1-1-1'171. I r:;;,. STAR G.A:Z.EK1t¥-.. J or ht."!!! oiler. Ca.II 493-0065 ·Call 892-4801 tie!'$, Interior is ln f'Xcel. PONTIAC 1.r1rn.:hr .lkK1111~ ..... S.J.!1.11 .. -.. -... . . ~it~-"I'" or 491_z:i5i1 ~-~~~~=~--cond, Runsgood.$750.00or liul>v \o1<·iio1r1i~ ...... SIJ ~,-1 2.l R~.111 ~ /G, 1arho & f111h ~ tty cu.Y Jl POLLAN u '68 V\V '70 eng, re1,-e ntly makeotfer. Good body. <n4) ----------!
Pnr1:,h1,. "·""• ....• SIJ .~> ~1ri~ :,, 1andun1 11·11 ih•r, xlnl I 1'.-, A•1ts );/.. y . 0 .1 , , .. , , .. , );/.. HAJ MGA reblt, very good cont!. $1099 968-249;;. FIREBJRD 400 1967, air • I C I •n>~' \ k "411-' 11 ow. 011 "''"'1"""'e Sf,t.21 -.. t-.. t '· 4"' -, "" AM/FM I '" li11111,\1 ~ 11 :..:II·" ''.°!1< . ,'1~ •• 'N "1· 1 ~ 111-t I ,' ;.rcording to I~• Slaro . ocf 11 . or uo..?S Ou . .,.,...;:oov '69 CHEV tr.1PAL.A CUSTOl\f ?> ' ·Hep out an ~ ,, ,·1 • .:.,,. \I ,, 11. .~ \ 111', ~.li()O. G7.1-.. l l.i -,.1~:;7.~ l o develop ml'$~ for Wednesday, l6-J;.21~~ 'jf_j ~IGA. rc-b!t cng. A1nt '1! VW Bus, 7 pass, lo ml, 2 Door He.rdtop. liO v s, ~S-47.;f~ 6for ooiy
-;-, 11111~ I 'I 1 I, '•l!~ -i!{rl'J~I Ofl"n 1•rn1~1·r. I S-73.64-90 trod words7°rr~pcwl(!1ng .1n r'llNTlbl'r> 51.67 . -:.: n1t'ch cont!, ask S ~1 0 0. $2300 Flrn1 su I o n1 a 11 c trnnsn1ission ' ... ter pin.
i:ill:O.\: ,111 ,1 1,, ~' 111 •11 _ :!111 llP 110. 1\lt (•l1t·r• ---ofyourZod10Cb1fths.gn. -·l'.!1·235-1 or 4!J3·rM:"&. * MIJ....«i42 * po1Yer steer\nx, llnted g0tas~ '71 PONT. Forn1ula 4()(1, xlnt
\• 'I S I "'' O A TAUIUS 1 \,.... l • 1m~,1n''' •I r., Ko•,10 J "'150 R ,,,.,,1 ii.·"'' 1.-1 ,,,,·,1 11 ;•n·"'11 1rnt<'r. ·' "[ ?· ,.,~,10 2 101~·, 32,.,,,J" ~111" ocr.11 ' MGB LEAVING io;tnle! .'69 V\\I, oon11)lf'I('. Strato b u cke t C0!11· "' · un11 11upcr.
I 1111 n11ol1·) M·1·.1".: 1io .. r f1 ·.i1o1...+i';'Jt, 1 l;:-l"'",.;.10 JPu..n JJR,~lurc11 ol(oh>"Ud uuto. ~unrool. rebuilt cng., !K:Rls , vinyl lop. Factory air ~0!~~°"'21~80;.-~~~~~=,I
)\• t .. 1(1·1 1.11 j1•1·1 i": Ci\l.IFOHNli\ rr·~· 11·i 1 ....... ..Your J•P,..1>0•fti 6•01rl1•m•' nlust sell, $!115. 673-'1600 t'Ond. \VIII rtJ•ll ·(or Kell,11 '69 1..eMans Slat. \Va<, mJO
I )•1c 'l II • .• · .• ',,",' 63 ~,,.,,.,~'"' 35Rt1n< (ST,,, '67 MGB-GT Xnlt conrl, Lo blu ~. h I I I I TV, Radio, Hi Fi,-!loll l:,.-, l" · "ll~I ~P · • ~ · 1i10~-:it.Yo"' M C."'1~' milcai::l'. ne1v cu11t paint '69 V\V C 'n1pc r. Nu d1i>s 644:io87' iv 0 esa c' ~1~1• ,,,~~it Cl.!tkl, bet offr.
Sl.'.o 836 •. 11> .. .Jr~:!I J)lr. GlMll'll 7 y,,.,, JI R~·-61 l ·'l''' I . . <-t "'''~' 0 -•·h•"' C!'.'] ~ ~ .a -·~ t.SM , rncli11 s, wu'C'll, :1 1·111'<' find. : ,. • '-"' "" .. , gooa , · 1------· ----:\ I··\\ 1 S' \V R I E IJ T : ::,,., JQ ~· oQ ~~::~~' SI;;()), orig ownr, 53&-1000 ' rirrs. $1850. 64.2-3413 69 Capclct'. Air, p/s, b~ '61 PONTIAC Ce.tallna $600 '/~.~t n t , J:t.\ ,\ !'\<l~,1111,1 sT::-..<;ETt JF:T. ~fUST ioG.""'1 .. ov(lt.I ;ow.,.. aft6 p.m. VOLVO ~Priced to5eU, $1450. or offer, good condition,
j\ JI ~tl'I''''· ,,,.,,·1·! 1 •. ,, !'t.LL. 646--6269 DLR. 11y,,.,,. AJ A. 71011 '67 MG"GT $1000 6'13-SllOO -11 Wo•ik "' 1,.f1U1nCn 1iw,111 go 11H1 ll •h•· •\1,, '''" 11·r\. \\ 1111 SOats, Rent/Chart'r 908 13 ~ .. l For 7JSO-iti"°'!J !'.'-'""''--"'~ 536.7029 196.'I CHEV. Impala. 2&1. V.S, '67 FlREBtRD 326 V-8,
• }I l•W!UI' 1<11~·..... 1 ~T )( P-.out:ori .... R~kirl 7• !lo.----===:-:;;;'"""=---'73 e.tr, trans. Good condition. auto .U'tlna. tvll Jl(l\\'er. OnJy p~n.... i.· r' 111 I\ ·11 Ill .. Ll"X~"l?Y SAILBOAT 1~~1~"'1'°" !i:::::r j~~""'•• PORSCHE , * Olli MS-3367 * $42,tm 'ml. $1250. 5JS-t01B
i\,1!h1l•l0 1 "•I« 1, 111 ~t•~ k j l•\-1 · 1,,tf'n1o0ml" JtC'duCC'd 17 c;,,..u ,., p-1 77 Mo1t..,1.d CLOSE-OUT '67 CHEV Impala, 2 dr, T llRD
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pl.111 'r 1. qlJ' 1,, -~· 111u•. ·~1· 'l'()HT ,Fl~l{F;P. mo.i~ Y)floo AO ~~,,.. AOUAllUS l"f'hll NI.II:, chroml• \\'his. Con· HUGE' t!K'rs v''1"~GS I:.:'"=""=-,--,----'73 T-.BIRD !Andau .. All ex·
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'"'-'1"n ll'"••ll. .1,~ 1 .• 1 or Tl"E FOR ~,tl/0.11 '~"'·'""' ... ,, SAA,.,,.._ 196.~ PORSCHE 912. Orttn)te. Beat The• Price lllkt'. ~·Best ofler_,S46--837_!__ like new,'$5100. 641-4732.
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·""It ~·\1 11111,•r QUICK CASH j,;:' ')lf'l• • '°'""' · 111 v-" "K IS , h)' o~rl<'r. h'Th-lil4/64~r7.l:'i6 -!lAll'9 Cllll atL 5, 4.11·9'!03 nlr, lnJ>f", Lendau to'$,2ha1,:;,
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111 .. tl: li1f' WANT AD . ,.. ~ .)7 8?..89 ~"' -~) ..!!_) • 1 19113.... fiit1l't'~tdtii:.11r1•_ ~Ulll a l•l\011C i'llll " '• ••1'. v-.u '~>V<• them lhru I\ Dally P Uot x1nt condition. $1\!Jj. ean :151 row rail awAy 6t.i..56Th. Nl"l"d n "P11d"2 Pia~ Mad! t'lau:lfil!d 11d! 6Tol'"'8811 nr Gt.....0183
Free Organ Lessons
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San Cle1nente
£aplst~ano EDITION
• • VOL 66, NO. 289, 2 SECTIONS, 26 PAGES ORANGE CO UNTY, CALI FORNIA TUESDAY, OCTOBER 16, 1973
Voie~print Clash Delays Trial of
By TOM BARLEY ot tlM oaur l"u.t s1.t11
Saddleback College Trustee A1yn P.I.
Brannon and his ro-defendant began a
two-day brtak from the courtroom today
while both sides in the bookmaking-ex·
tortiod trial prepared to debate eligibility
ol the proseculion's con 1 rover s i a I
volceprint evidence.
Orange t.ounty Superior Court Judge
Eve.rett W. Dickey called the delay late
Monday after Deputy District Attorney
Clemente Bigla
William Evans argued that the in·
novalive voiceprint technique will Un·
doubtedly prove µiat defendant Emmett
Kelly made a highly Incriminating
telephone call to a Newport Beach
perfume salesman. ·
Evans claims that KellY , 34, of 8l5
Seagull Lane. Newport Beach, made the
call at a time that an eight-inch hunUng
kni!e was hurled into the victim's front
door in a further bid to persuade him
to setUe a $3,000 gambling debt.
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• Trustees Study
Open School Bids
By JOHN VALTERZA
Of ._ Dfllr Piiot Sl•H
A pair of Cai)fs tt8ri0Unified School
District trustees agreed Monday to sit
as a special committee to attempt to
3E!ek a solution lo a student campaign
to open the San Clemente High School
campus at J11nch period.
After Maring the Triton studefl'ts'
reprt!elltativt to the boatd harshly con·
demn newspaper stories about the paten-
tially coatmvenlal issue, the board
agreed unanimously to the request or
a student open-campus commit~ for
d.istriC~ representation af m e e t I n I s
calCtllated to seek a sol4tkm to the
issue.
The prime factor in the latest moYe
<>to Open' the campus to walk~ff privileges
is the Imminent opening of a hamburger
chain restaurant next door to lhe Triton
campus.
District officials have termed the Issue
a potentlally serious one of student con.
trol, but Monday . added their praise
to the studenl committee's current ef-
forts.
Trustees \Villiam Enqulat and Gordon
Petel'IOO will represent the board on
the negotiations with the students.
1vere matters of opiniori that were simply
not l~" she added. "Listen to us . _ . iiOrfO What you read in the
newspapers."
Miss Smith's attack on the publications
first sur(aced at the board's break as
she and on-campus committee leader
Linda Castillo a.saerted to reporters that
·last week's stories were erroneous and
(See OPEN, Page Z)
Nixon -Plans
To Meet 4
Arab Envoys
WASHINGTON (AP) -The White
House announced «>day that President
Nixon will meet with four Arab foreign
ministers Wednesday to discuss the
fighting in the Middle East.
The announcement came amid reports
that the envoys were carrying a message
from King Faisal of Saudi Arabia, who
has -beto under intense preswre from
Arab cotmterparls to deny Mideast oil
to the United Stat.es.
'
And Newport Detective Sgt. John
Simon took the witness stand to testify
that he called Kelly Sepl. 13. 1972, at
the Gartlen Grove car dealership where
he Worked, to get a tape recording
of his-voice that allegedly matches up
with the voice recorded in the ex1ortion
threat.
Evans argues that the voiceprint
technique, currently being used as
evidence in a Riverside County trial,
is as infallible as LQday's fingerprinting
techniques.
Kelly and Brannon. 42 . of Santa Ana.
were indicted by the Grand Jury on
multiple charges of bookmaking, ex-
tortion and conspiracy.
It 111as alleged that both mtn •,vere
involved in a Harbor Area bookie racket
that put $25.000 a week into the organiza·
lion's coffers.
Judge bickey shattered part of the
defense hopes in pretrial maneuvering
Monday when he rejected the argument
aw • or
Long Trek
lhnt t!H!-conversation taped by Simon
in Garden Grove violated Kelly's t'OO-
stitu1ional rights and COl,lid not be ad-
mitted into evidence.
"Mr. Kelly was not in cust<Mb' at
the time/' Judl!e Dickey said. ''I regard
it as a voluntary statement and there
was •no need for Sgt. Simon 40 ~'am
the defendant at the time of the
telephone conversation that he was a
police officer."
Evans disclosed late Monday that he
Father Francisco Miracle and his explorer scouts ].olexico in July. It is to conclude in Carmel where
don backpacks in San Juan Capistrano to coutinne'-!~e remains .of the priest lie. Story and additional
their pilgrimage. The long journey along the mis-picture" are on Page 3.
sion route of Father Junipero Serra began deep in
Most of Monday's dl~ion came
not from trustees but froiTI San Clemente
High student Kelly Smith; 'Who sits at
the board table along with "a counter-
part from Dana Hills High School in
an advi90ry capacity on matters af-
fecting students.
But a spokesffian for one Arab delega-.
lion said oil was ·not one of the issuer Reports of UFOs Flutter
Miss Smith lmied a-scathing con-
demnation ef last week's press accounts
of uW current campai1n and urged
trustees not to believe what they read
in the papers.
Accounts last week brought out the
concerns of district ofHcials over 'the
prospect of allowing the 1,600 Triton
students to leave the campus' at lunch
hour if they wish.
MARINES BOARD IWO JIMA
FOR MIDDLE EAST, Pogo 4
the ministers want to discuss. They
\vant only to take up "the U.S. in-
volvement in the war," tl1e Arab
spokesman said.
White Ho\lse Deputy Press Secretary
Gerald L. Warren would say only that
the foreign ministers of Saudi Arabia,
Algeria, .Kuwait and Morocco "asked
to see the President to discuss the
current situation in the Middle East."
The White House said pr ecise time
of the meeting, to be held in Nixon's
Oval Office. had not been set.
Sig htings Clai med by R es idents of Four States
From Wire Services
II there reall y are unidentified flying
objects (UFOs) out t~e. they've been
hovering again over at least four states
-Indiana, Louisiana. West Vi rginia and
Mississippi.
Sightings during the night of somt'thing
tou ched off a flurry lo local calls to
baffled local offi cials.
Slidell , across Lake Pontchartrain from
Ne1v Orleans, Lloyd Mercier said he
• "'as driving home when he saw an
object "approximately 15 or 20 feet
in diameter and it had a streak about
a foot wide straight through the middle."
Several persons, including a weather
observer and a pilot experienced in night
Hying, reported seeing an unidentified
flying object over the Raleigh County
Airport Monday night near Beck.fey, \V.
Va.
The object first appeared about 8:45
p.m. and remained in sight for about
30 to 40 minutes. acco rding to Howard
Moneypenny. weather service specialist
·for the National Oceanic and Atinosphere
administration.
"lt had no definite shape and I ha\'e
no idea ho1v far away or how· bii;
it was," he said.
Today's Fin a l
·N.Y. Stoeks
TEN CENTS
"'ill call l.l. Ernest Nash or the Atichigan
State Poli ce Department lO the witness
stand if J udge Dickey allo\\'S introduction
of the voiceprint evidence.
r\ash is regarded as the nation's
foremost ~pert in the new technique
and he is currently testifying in_
Riverside-trial ac'lion that \\'as granted
by the judge v.·hen Justice Robert
Gardner of the fourth District Court
of Appeals agreed that voiceprinl
evidence could be introduced.
EPA Rule
To Affect
Countians
By WILUA!\f SCHREIBER
OI Ille Olllly Plrtt ......
The estimated 150,0CO Orange .Coun·
tians who drive their own cars to work
in Los Angeles each day may soon
find il ·s a luxury they can't afford.
-The-lat.esr Environmental ' Pi-0-tCCuOn
Agency regulations for Los Angeles will
make lone commuting a lot \ess at-
tractive than car-pooling or riding the
bus, according to the man who lJ lm--
plemenfing Orange County's own mass
trSMit system.
Dr. G. J. "Pete" Fielding, director
ot the Oranp County Transit District.,
sa1d t:oday the chances are also good
that the new rules will reach into Orange
County pr:oper, affecting another 800,000
people who drive cars from home to
other d~slinations.
"I think the regulations will almost
certainly increase the cost of driving
a car enough to make many people
look at it as a drain on their budgets."
Fielding said. "Those who can use public
transit conveniently wlll tum to ii..,.
But Fielding said there is a big "if '
involved.
"These people wi ll use public transit
H somebody can come up nationally
Y:ith the funds for an operating sub.sidr,
providing for good. extensive service. '
Fielding said.
He sa id the latest EPA rulings
theoretically mean public transportation
will have to pick up at least 50 percent
of the daily commuter trips from Orange
County to Los Angeles.
"By our estimates, that would mean
use of 2.000 bases arxf $14 million per
year in operating costs." Fielding said.
The OCTD c!urrently has just over
100 buses with plans over the next
few years to expand to 300. Fielding
said that means he can handle only
·about six percent of I.he trips the EPA
is talking abou t.
"Without a lot of assistance and some
good lead time, a 50 percent trip figure
is out of our reach.'' he. said . "Our
current mass transit plans "'·ill take
at least IO years to impleitlent and
even they wouldn "t be enough."
fielding said the average commuter 1(See COAtMlITE, Page %)
/* * *
, Miss Smith Insisted that the new food
Outlet was not the only reason the open-
ca'mpus issue has swiaced. She said
foru other restaurants along Avenida
Pico would also be involved in lhe stu·
dent search for an alternative to on-cam-
pus food . -
"The articles said large groups of
students were going to come here tonight
to volcf: their opinions. That's not true.
1be committee a~ to approach the
lssue very maturely," she aa.id.
In addition to Nixon and Kissinger,
a spokesman satd it would be attended
by Foreign Ministers Ab d e I a z i z
Boutellika of A1geria. Sabah al-Ahmad
al Jabir al-Sabah or Kuwait, Ahmed
Taibi Benhlma of Morocco and Umar
al-Saqqaf of Saudi Arabia.
Sheriff's deputies chased five orange-
reddish flying objects 12 miles through
the Louisiana piney 'foods late l\1onday
night and early today near Pine. Disease Cl ai rn s South Coast "Cities Get
"The stories talked of problems and
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Oruge Coast
• •
Weather
Haty sunshine is on the agenda
for Wednesday along the Orange
Coast, with. temperaturc.s in the
mid-Ms at the beaches rising to
84 inland.
INSIDE TOD/\\'
Thrte men art in. cu.atody ~
day for tile stt1pccted kidnap
and murder· of o tDOttlCn. her
UDO children and a farnit11. friend
in Son Bernordino Stt stor~
Poge $.
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l'W 1M 11_.i I -.. A~ L.....,1 1)
IMwtK -n Mvt. .. ••..w1 II
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WH""1" 4 W-'I Nt'ft \)•11
WWI' NeM 4
Deputy Michael Moore said the ships
almost attacked a police car.
"One of our deputies was scared pretty
bad," Moore said from the Washingtop Ja zz Dru rn rn er It ts understood that Nixon and King
Faisal exchanged messages since the
oulbr'eak o! Arab-Israeli fighting 11 days
ago.
Asked about this, Warren said, "We
do not as a rule d11cuss diplomatic
w>ntacts from here.'~
Parish sheriff's department. "He turned G K 64 on his red lights. and they came dO"'n Ci te r1t p<1,
at his patrol car. He turned them off /"\ A
and they just van!sh~ like in a cloud." \ ·YONKERS Ny (AP! _ Jazz druni-
ln another sighting reported near ml'r Gene Kru·p~ died tQQay at his
hon1c here. He \\·as 6-1.
Sitt.ing Dn~k
Ba.ndit Ove rcome By 'Victims'
Orange County Sheriff's officers drove to the South Laguna area at high
&peed Monday night when they got a report that two motel guests were being
robbed ~t gunpoint.
They needn't have hurried. The reported gwtman was In much greater
danger than reported vlctlrns Walter Smith, 56. o( 5alt Lolte City and Leslie
Eaby, 54, of Van Nuys. .
1n fact, depullcs said, they W!l'e stttlng on the head of a man identified as
Clifford Dale Burkhart, 2t, ot Sao Diego.
Deputies Pid IM lwo motel gueet.s told U~m they Y.-crc confronted by
Burkbart who stmult11tcd poDtlSlon of a gun. Within soconds they were simu-
lating two hens sitting on a clutch or eggs with tha reluctant Burkhart play·
Ing 1he role. of the nest.
Burkhart was booked into county jail on charges of allempted iobbery. . ..... . "
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Krupa had been relcast'd from Yonkers
Gener3\ llospilal about a \\'L>ek ago after
undergoing trCl'ltmcnt for I leukemia.
His last public nppearance was Aug.
18 in Sarato11a. N.Y .. \\'i th Benny Good-
man, whose band he joined in 1934.
Survivors include two adopted children
and a brother; Jules, of Chicago.
Funeral arrangements w c r c in·
complete.
Krupa suffl'red a heart attack in 1960,
vrhich kept him Inactive for 11 time.
l~e retired 1n 1967. but came bflck in
Ut7tl, Jrading a quarlet at New York·s
Plai3 llote.1.
!..RSI 5Ummer during the Newport Jau
F'e$1iva\ In New York. he played with
the reunited Gooclman quartet , lneluding
clarinetist ("rO(Xlman; pinni~t Teddy
Wll Mn and Lloll<ll \11unp1on on the vibes.
Krupa also ap~ared July 4 11t the
renaming of the. Singer Bowl in New
(See KRUPA, Page Zl
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New Bu s Routes iI1 April
Nev,. bus mutes or the Or:1nge County
Transit Distrlc~ will include direct
service to San CIC'mentr. San Juan
Capistrano, Capistrano RC'ach. Dana
Point. F.I Toro. Lai(una Niguel · and
~fission Viejo.
The routes are to bC' inillated In April
after arrival of 63 r.ew busC'~.
Other increased serv ir~s ,,.~I! be of-
fered on Brookhursl Strt'el to improve
ridership in Fountain Vall ey.
In addition to the south coun1y lines,
new service will ~ of{t>rl'd In (,,.'I Palma
and \'orba Linda which nlso h:ivc no
bus lines at pre.'ICnl.
Intercity lines 1\•ill in<.'lud<' Edinger
Avenue, \'t111\ey Vic"· S11·ef't ;ind Jam·
borte Boulevard.
Thi' new buses arc r~pecttd !(1 arrivr
in late r-.tMch 11nd the new hncs In·
auguratl'd during Apnl 11nd ~IAy.
Fkc1h1sc fl1:it-l\·Rkh~ Ii hclnjl slndied
in ~l'\C'r<il clllc.s in add ition to the prtsrnl
:.~\lee in l..n ilnbro. most of the nc1v
busrs win be ust'd on Intercity lines.
OrRngc County Tran~lt Di~ tr 1 c I
rcncr<ll ~lnnager ('.ordo11 '' Pt t c' '
Fielding said one·hour service on the
new lines would be offered and some
buses would be used lo prov ide more
frequent service on Sf'asonlll peaks such
as ~un1n1cr beach travel on already
establish('({ routes.
Establishment of the new routes wll\
cover all inter·commnnity lines reCom·
n)endcd in !he Special Bus Needs Study,
Fickling said.
In other business, the transit district
board~
Nuc]ea r P la nts
Get AEC Okay
RUU.ETIN
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -The Atomic.
Energy Commission said it v•as author-
l7.cd today lo is5Ue constructiOf\ pMnftl
fbr t\vo nuclc11r power plant.I ac San
Onofre. sooth of San Clt:meote and the
Western \\'hite .House:.
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~ """1.• PIL01_ _sc ____ rc:""""=· °''°"" 16. 1971
Oemente
Apartment
Bid Nixed
A ~-unll S.1n Clemente apar1menl was
tumed dOWT'I Monday by the South Coast
Regional Zone Consel"\·ation Commission
arter some last minute maneuvering
by c.ommissloner Art tlolmes failed .
Holmes, San Clemente mayor pro ltm.
pa~ on the first round of voting
Oft the project proposed at 11135 to 1839
Calle Las Bolas to see bow the ballot
v•ould stack up.
\\'hen the 11 other commissioners had
voted, there \\'ere only four in favor
of Nocl BaJdwin's application. Six \'ottd
against it and one commissioner ab-
stained.
Before casting his vote. Holmes made
a motion to continue the item "because
I lhink there can be some changes
made."
Prime objections against the project
·were the lack of open recreation space
and the density, which was 34 units
a gross <'!ere.
C.Ommiss•on Chairman Donald Brjght
told Holmes he coulrin't stop the vote.
but could vote no nnd later move for
a reconsideration of the project if war:
ranted.
~tGtions to rehear denied permits must
CQme from tbe prevailing, negative side.
Holmes voted against the $.100,000 proj-
etc. The final tally v.·as 4-1-7.
The actions drew angry criticism from
Sierra Club representative J o s e p h
Edmiston. "If that's tbe \Vay lt's going
to be," Edmiston said after rushing
up to the podium at the Long Beach
meeting, "the SielT8 Club ·v.1ll appeal
it. take it up to tbe state conun.is.sion
·· ·ar.-!-nmove YOUJI-jwisd:ietion."
Bright admitted the commission is
"abusing a li1Ue" its rigflt t o
reconsideration. He ruled Edmiston out
of order.
Holmes said It m.1y be possible to
add more land to the be.If-acre pai-cel.
During the discussion before the com·
plicaled vote, commission planners
re<:omrnended denial.
The project would have thre.e stories
over a subterranean garage, which would
require extensive grading and use of
retaining walls.
A swimming pool in the original plan
was deleted to comply with the com·
miMioo's parking standards of two
spaces per unit.
The commission bas received "one
after another (project) in San Clemente
in the 30 to 40 (units an acre) range ,"
said Commissioner Ronald Caspers of
Newl>Ort Beach. "lt bothers me. U it
doesn't bother lhe J>eQPle of San Cl~l""Ybt l sl>ooldn'S "°"'.~, ln lit.tr action. the conitrdakJD
establl.shed by PrQpooltioo :W, the 19'12
coastal zone act, unanimously approved
a $300,000 warehouse, public work.!! Qffice
and mechanical maintenance garage on
a 17-ecre site at 390 Avenida Pico by
the city of San Clemente.
Woman Choked
And Assaulted
In Laguna Park
A »year-old Hollywood v..-oman was
brought to Laguna Beach's Heisler Park,
choked lnlo submission ~d raped on
the beach early today by a man who
picked her up in Los Angeles and prom·
ised to take her lO a Newport Beach
party.
The attractive dark-haired v.·oman v.·as
found crying as she walked along Cliff
Drive. She was found by a Laguna
Beach poliet; officer.
The woman told officers she had been
walking down a street in liollywood
when a ·man in a small foreign car
drove up and offered her a ride.
Recounting the inciden t for Laguna
Beach detectives, the woman said the
• motorist "looked all right" and she ac-
cepted the ride. lfe then asked her
II she wanted to go t-0 a party in
Newport Beach.
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DAILY PILOT
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COMMUTE •••
wW bei111 to feel Ibo crunch of the
Dew EPA ruJH .. earlY u neit. June.
wlUI Imposition ;rtqWr~ }~ psnllDt
surdwl• oa all numlclpol paitln( r..s
lo CO'l'lf the OOlt cf mua transit develop-
menl
Electric Curbs
-
'lbe parklng IUJ'charge will teap to
25 percent a year later.
Seen for County . )
By 1977, the courl·tnandaled EPA
regulations will control construction of
any new parking facilities ln the Los
Angeles basin and other metropolitan
areaa in the United States and would
provide priority freeway lanes for }u.ses
and car-pools.
Fickling said !here are good examptes
of bow ipcreased parking cost!: have
forced people to reconsider using mass
transit.
By WI.ARY KAYE
Of ftW Diiiy PllM Slaff
ElectrfCal service in Orange County
could be limited beginning in the summer
of 19'74 under 1 three-stage conUnaency plan flied with the state Public UUlltles
Commission Monday by a.outbtrn
Catlfornia F.ciflOT\.
;'Befors the Mk!east war began, it
looked hopeful that we couJd purchase
enough supplies to forestall this curtail-
ment." said Bob Beck. Edi.son's Orange
County divisional manager.
"In \V&shington , D.C., v..'here it costs "Now, with the war going_ on, we
$3.50 lo $4 a day to park, large numbers just don't know," he saia. "Everythtna's
of people have turned to the buses. up in the air."
which cost Jess than $1 a day and The emergency plan would mean elec-
noth.iog to park," he saMI. trical shortages for both bu.Wlesses and
Fiekling said he can see a time under residences dW'ing 197f.7f, according to
the ·new EPA rules When car commuters Beck. to Los Angeles will piy at least '3 The fl.l"!t phase would go Into eUect
or more for parking every day. when EdJson's oil supply drops to 8.5
Fielding said it is not clear yet whether million barrels, "wtth no additional oil
the EPA rulings direcUy affect the prospects In sight." CUm:ntly, Edison has
metropolltan areas or Orange County 14 million barrels, with additional
-specifically centered in Garden Grove, ~~ commlttted .. A f ,. n~ Santa Ana ~ Anaheim.----..:.~ ~. _ _ e ~;esen ra,... o uaage, ~k
"It would appear from IOQ}dng at initial explained , we will ~ch the 1.5 point
reports that Orange County is considered by the •~mer of ~974. , 4
part of the Lo.! Angeles metropolit an When this polnt IS reached ~sinesaes
area and hence would be directly af-would be forced to reduce their ~
fected by lhe rules," he said. ~Y ~ pe~cent, ~~lng non-res.ldenli1l
Other lighting to be eliminated under
phase one would be advertlslna: lllbUn&,
~me street light!, and lightln& for nlaht
aport.s events.
1be:.se curtallmenll wouJd be backed
up by the ·threat !hit falluro to comply
Y.'OOJil result in total dlscontlnuanct of
electrlal service.
Beck said the PUC ordered utility
companies to fi1e tbe emergency pro-
grams. The PUC plans to develop
statewk!e conUngency procedures after
a series of Public bearings, he explained.
The second phase "-the emergency
pl.an woulcLgo into effect when F.dl.aon's.
reserves dropped below seven million
barrels ot oU. This would mean a
''rotating blackout prot:ram,"' under ·the
&!It-proposal.
Under this system, blocka of homee,
bustJless<s and lndustrie3 woold ho left
without electrllity for periods up to
one hour.
'Ibe fmal phase would ao into effect
when the oil level dropped to 6.5 rnUUon
barrels. Thi.s would mean that up to 10
pe~t of Edllon'• servj,ce could be cul
off. eustomera might have to endure
three hour periods without eledricity,
Beck said.
GENE KRUPA (RIGHT! WITH BENNY GOODMAN IN 1938'
Jau Drummer Succumbs to Cancer at Age of 64
Planning officials in several Orange hghling, all" condlt1on1ng and healing.
Coast cities said today they haven't
had eoough time to study the regulations • Lea~ers Named
Still, no customer would have to be
without service for more than 15 hours
per week under the Edison plan, Beck
predicted.
Beek explained that , along with the
t~phase p~am filed Monday, a pll!ft.
calling fo.r a 'mutual assistance pro-
gram" wu also filed by EdlBon. Quake R.atUes
-Pots and Pans
In San Diego
SAN DIEGO (AP) -A light earth-
quake centered in the Gulf of California
rattled pots and pans in the San Diego
area at 7:55 a.m. today.
A scien tist at California Institute of
Technology, in Pasadena said i t
measured at 5 on the Richter scale.
No damage was reported, but
seismographic sensors along lhe Inlerna·
tional Border were set off by the rumble,
a U.S. Border patrol spokesman said.
"Our sensors picked up movement
all the way to the other side of Campo
for a duration of aboul one minute,"
hoc said, C8mJ9 50 mllea 80Utbeast "of Sa.a btigo. '" \ -l • \
In Pasadena, Caltecb's John Norequl.st
said the epicenter appeared to be about
60 mile.s south of the border along a
fault line ruMing the entire lensth of
the' Gull.
'Ibe Richter scale is a measure of
groond motion as recorded on
seismograph.s. Every Increase of one
number means a tenfold lncrease in
magnitude. Thus a reading of 7.5 re£lects
an earthquake 10 times stronger than
one of 6.5.
From_ POf!e J
KRUPA-;-~',
York as Louis ~ Stadium. Later
in the aummer, Krupa gave a eulogy
at lhe funeral of jazz banjoi.st Eddie
Condon.
After graduation from high school In
his native Chicago in 192S, Krupa got
a summer job as a soda jerk at a
\Vlsconsin beach "dime-a-dance" ball.
\Vhen the drummer in the dance band
fainted across the socia 1ountain, Krupa
substituted for him. and played ·tbe rest
of the season.
After the summer, his family sent
him off to a seminary in Rensselaer,
Ind., where he studied for the priesthood.
The following year, after his father's
death, be left the seminary to play
drums in Chicago. His first recorda
were made in 1928 with a Oticago group.
ID 1929 he went to New York to
play in the orchestra. of George
Genhwln'1 llllow "Strike Up the Band."
'!be on:bestra, said to be the lint wb!le
swing band on Broadway, included Good·
man, Condon and trombonist Glenn
Miller, and was led by Red Nichols.
After stints with bands led by Buddy
Rogers and Goodman, Krupa tonned
bis own orchestra in 1938. He remained
a band leader thelufter, except for
one year -1943 -when he served a
six-month prison tenn for a narcotics
conviction. After""1..is release, he was
briefly with Goodman and Tommy
Dorsey before re-forming his own band.
to determine what local effects there U
will be.
But Fielding said it is almost certain
that cltles wblcb genttate a lot "-traffic
-such as Newport Beach -v.ill have
to ciime-up with some alternatives w·
car traffic and iDcreUed perking.
' In South County
F~d Campaign • !!1l-parklng 15 regarded by the EPA
as foster:i.Dg pollution, then the citles
are going to have to find alternatives • Top officers ror the SOJthern Orange
quickly to meet the law," he said. Co.mty United Way campaign have been
Fielding's contention that much of the named to start railing $986,600 toward
enforcement burden will fall to local government has been supported by the St.5 million goal set Car that region.
George Taylor, executive secretary of Associate Chairman for tbe area under
'-''l'hil would meu that the enUre
state would be in the same situaUon ''
">..Beck said. "AU the utilities in the ataie
"Awid join tOlelher and stw'e their p:nver plant fuel, In the event one company
is low."
FromPqeJ
OPEN ••.
the Air Resources Board in Sacramento. the direction of campaign chairman
"Much of the responsibility will fall Thomas Riley of Newport Beach will serioualy lnflated the situation.
on local govtnunents and I think there be , Robert R. ~. division manager The two specifically aasailed Dally
will be a ve.ry close look at what can of Southern California Ediloo.. Pilot coverage of the luue and uaerted
be dooe to encourage car pools," be Beck will dittct the campaigns o( that accounts stated that atudents plan
said. five primary areas, including The Harbor to converge en masse before the trustees
Los Angeles Mayor Tom BradJey said Area La Be ch San A Or and fill the meeting room.
1tlonday the EPA measures att "a and Soutf:'°~a cotnm~U:frcman~ . No such statements. have appeared
necessary evil" to get motorists out Toro and Irvine south to San Clemente. many local press accounts of the issue.
of their cars and into pool.s or buses. Assisting Beck and R1ley -tn J:be cam-Praise for the student campalJn'a
Other segments of the new EPA ruJ. paigt, will be 'Ibomas s. Santley _ of "maturity" came !iom Supt. 'l'rwTian
ings will hurt the average car commuter Pacific Mutual Life Insurance in Benedict Monday, bul h1s concern about
as well, Fielding said. Newport Beach. He wtlt ·be respc11Slble the major change in the district's poUcy
For eum;ile, the EPA i.s looking at for all public relaUoos during the comin& remained. •
Pl raUonlng u one "' the only wl.ys "This amounts to a aignificant contrGI
fi> cut car lnlfftc ....,git to do any Y'Th;, third major Job In the United problem," the official told Ute boord.
good in big metropo!Jtan areas. w -• .'"""'• :W:~t ·~-~ 't:-. E E ay cam.,_.gn, that of ptbering oon-'l .. "r' J..~u .._, ~for the PA claim vlr1llally all tributloos oC employes ol lhe 55 SOulhem ~der ~ nbOoi lif mat tbO pil1
traffic on Loll Angeles roads would have Orange County member agehciea: who ceo take advantage of a new humburgar
to be eliminated to meet the 1977 Clean benefit Crom lhe charlty'I cO!Jecllom, operation ~ built near the campua.
Air requirements. will be handled by Rev. Pabl H. Kuat~. ''Bu( ·u.e .\iird also must realize the
U gas is ralioned, Fielding foresees Rev. Kugler, area dirtttor for ·.UJe oonoem about having several hund~
gaaollne costing $1 a galloo or more. SalvaUoo Army, said it is im-.. ..... t students concregatlng in the Pico un-Besldes bus and car-pool serviet;, I""..... derpua area." be aaid.
Fielding thlnkJ the Amtrak trains will =e ~ :rttu:-t.ed thew::~ He Aid the only altemat1ve would
ha ve to start rwi,tlng on oommuter paJgn also give a fair share to .,,_n be to "pr0vldt more people for control
schedules again. . ---on a cloeed.campua."
But he said the big problem will it.The 55 ageocles which receive funds Both MI.u CUWJo and Miu Smith
Kissinger, Le Due Tho
Wh1 Nohel Peace Prize
be interference with criUcal lrelgbt train through the United Way -o1.i... lft. Monday asaerted that ham~• at schedules. ..,.v • ....., r tbt -.i.. .. rat.a .. -.. , ·-not onl• "The robl "th . and proximately 90 1"""'11 ol lhe .,.1un1ary ... .----· -· ' p em wi the trams .. __ 1 h Jr · reaJOrJ for n.-....... -" !or t~ ~ r !ht t Iha --1.~-A" 1-.it ' we are and cblracter building ~"' .....,.,"" lJ'C wr-any o s s t w UQJ you o;.uange services 1n the community. campus role.·
one part of the economy, everything Apparent deep re 1 en t men t of
Is affected ooe way or another." dbc.lplinl.ry actions liken od campus
Ove<all_ Fielding says most of the W1" tnesses Hunted with students who violate the ealltlni EPA rulings will bUrt t;'OnUnutera in "1le ll another.
the low to middle income range who "I tee kids being busted In the parkior
ca n't handle another burden on the LOS ANGELES (AP) -Rapid Tranalt tot every day for trying to wait oU
OSLO (UPI ) -Secretary of Stale
Henry A. Kissinger and North Viel·
namese Politburo member Le Due Tho
1\'0n the 1973 Nobel Peace Prize today
for work in negotiating a cease-fire to
the Vietnam v.•ar -the "most
gruesome" and longest conflict since
World \Var II.
The surprise winners were announced
by the Nobel peace committee here
even as Kissinger -who alsO played
a key role in the improvement of U.S.
relations wi th China and the Soviet Union
-was conferring in the \Vhite House
on the war raging in the lo.liddle Ea st.
The t\\'O peace negotia tors v.·on · out
over a big field of 40 nominees lhat
included President Nixon , Y~lav
President Tito. Daniel Ellsberg. of Pen-
tagon Papen fame. Brazilian Archbishop
Dom Helder Camara, Swedish disarma-
ment minister Alva Myrdal, and
France's Jean l\.1onnet. father of the
European Common Market.
Kissinger said today be was "very
pleased" at winning the prize.
State Department spokesmen indicated
Kis..~ingcr might have more to say later
about the award.
In citing the two -who will share
a record prize of $122 .000 -lhc Nobel
committee said:
"The war in Vietnam was lhc rnost
gn1esome and longe..'11 n1ilitary conflict
since the Second World \\-'ar was brought
lo an end with a ccase-nre. The conl·
mittee has given lhe peace prize of
1973 to the two negoliators who with
a joint achievement brought about the
cease-fire Jan. 23 this year -Dr-Xis·
singer, USA, and Le Due Tho of the
Democratic Republic of (North) Viet·
nam.''
Kissin ger. confi nnea as U.S. Secretary
of Slate in September, was born in.
fucrlh, r.crm.iny. or Jewish origin, in
1!123.
Jfe emigrated 141lh his pa r c n 1 s to
the Vnitcd St.ates in 1938 and bec~mc
a U.S. citizen in 1943. lie later became
a professor al Harvard Univer.slty wh.ere
be spcciaUzed In foreign pollcy.
Nt'!tbcr Kissinger no r Tho had been
mentioned publicly "~ nc.minces dur ing
the year's deliberations.
Pollt1ci11ns etnd NolX'l Pri1.e experts
'
pocketbook. lli!trict olllciah Monday urged wl._.. the campll!," M1"' Castillo Aid dlJl'inc
said the announcement was the great.est But he ays the average driver in to the wee.liend shooting of a RTO bus the confroataUoo at the meeting break.
surprise in the history of the awan::L the upper middle income range most driver to come forward and aid police "1 don't like u and I t.biok it bu
it was the first Nobel Peace Prize likely will keep driving untll short gas in solving tbe case. Edward Qialter, to stop," abe added. -•ed . supplies force him to.. atop. 30, of South Gate was: listed ln fair Under present rules studenta ca"""t awan.1 since 1971. The committee last But he sald even that isn't a black cooditioo after being abot Saturday by leaving the campus at hmch break ;:'~
· yea r named no v.•inne r because it said • and white situation and he could be a -·p of about l" J:-n ............ 1.... .L.•A " ., -Id t ·r· d "tabl &-v-" ,.,. ... ~ ..... ......,. ucu:n1.1on and ultimately suuwon•ion for L .. vu no m a su1 e candidate. wrong in bis predictions. di de t•-~.. rltl --'d -~·-
The last ptevious winner was West 1._r;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~'°;;' ~';0•;;;;;·;;;;~~~·~·~u:;;;;~;";;-;;·~~;:':'pea::~ted~VK>~· :l•~tlon~:'·:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:; German Chancellor Wi\ly Brandt In 1971.
The Nobel committee said Kissinger
and Tho were nominated by Prof. Jon
Sa nness, professor of history al Oslo
University and director of the Norwegian
foreign Policy Institute.
In explaining the award, the commiltee
said. "For more than three. years they
ha ve used all thelr strength and good
"''ill to achieve a negotiated so lution
a peaceful solution of the Vietnam war. '
"Thereby. they have performed a feat
.,.,·hich Is in the best accordance with
Alfred Nobel's though ts , that conflicts
shoold be tried to be solved through
l')('gotiations and not through war." .. ,t was a gruesome war that did
no1 only force upon the vtetnam civilian
population enormous sufferings but that
also poisoned the atmosph ere in and
between other countries In the whole
world," the announcemen t said.
Burglars Grab
$3,000 in Loot
Burglars \\1th unusual tastes ranging
from antique jewelry to froU'n meat
tM!lped themselves to both valuable com-
modities in Dana Point Mondey night,
Orange County Sheriff's offlcen said .
Deputies said intruders who entered
!he home of antique dealer Rose Timer,
56. of 33342 Palo Alto, via on unlocked
sliding \\.'indow carriM off watches. ringa
and brace:lcts va lued by her at mo~
than $3,000.
Officers believe the lntroders pockettd
the frozen meat as an afterthouRht aftrr
lhey carefully sclecttd the Jewelry they
~ wan~d ' lrom their victim'• master
btdroom.
Miss Timer opeartes the Attic Antique
Shop on Doheny Park Road Jn Caplslrano
Dcach •
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I\ALEIDOSCOPE
Our showroom is • virtu1I k1leidoscope of colon. n.. ,...'°"' 1,.. •., . vantra -:
We lcnow th•+ color .-dineting Is tho primory tugot when buy.
i119 cerpet. Ouolily is usuoOy second in lino, ind b.ceuse wt hovo NICh •
vast selection of quolities, it is e1Sy to coordinolt color ond quoro+y to
eech individua l's t1ste.
However, we •now that 1 volume of samples lookin~ at you c•n
seem very confusing -but we fHI thet showin9 just e few s.amples is not
a fair repres'i~tion of the carpet business. Our ~uge selection gives our
selespeople •very possible option in working with people, helping, them
to fi nd the perfect choice.
'~
So if you •rt i~ tho morktt to select your cupetlng -sol.ct
Alden's to help you, thet's whet we're hero forllll
ALDEN'S
CARPETS. e DRAPE.S
1663 l'lacentlo Aft.
COSTA MISA
646-4831
HOURS: Moo. Tin Tllon., f to l :JO -Flt. f to 9 -SAT, tiJO to 5
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Tuesday's
Closing Prices
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T ..... J. on. 14, lt7l SC IWLY PILOT .J9
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NEW YORK STOCK EXCHANGE . .
Year's High-Lows
~ppear Every Saturday
European Money
Markets Shaky
LONDON (UPI) -Concern about the long·
term political and economic consequences of a pro-
longed Middle East· war kept European money mar·
kets nervouW Tuesday.
The dollar was '_!lOstly lower or unchanged.
Gold on London s free market opened un-
chan§eil at $101.50 an ounce.
'Trading remained dull and me~l hardly
moved." a dealer for brok.ers Sharps Pixley said.
ln Paris, th e Americe.n currency drifted down-
ward after a two-day improvement.
The financial dollar used by tourists and specu-
lators traded at 4.2750-4.2850 franc:;. llle Monday
close was 4.30 francs.
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uAIL.Y PILOT Tu,td11y, Oet.obf:r 16, 1~73 • • ---The Biggest Marketplace on the· Orange C9ast __ ......... 1~·1'9 Annol.iotemc.onr~ , , , , . • !IOO • S24
Ai.llomobiln . • . . • . • . 9SO • 990
loar• & Marone (q\llpnwnt 900 · 914
En1pio\omet'lt . . . ..• 700 -199 DAILY PILOT CLASSl.FIED ADS P.tloONlh. • • • • • • • • • ru . 5-49
Ns ~-~ .... .t• .• 8$0 • 899
Real E1tnf• 0-lal. . . . , 00 • 199 . ---• f1nonc.iat •. , ••• , •• 200· 299
HolMl for Sale . . • . . 100 • 124
Lost & Found . . . . , .. 5~ • 57•
Mer<hondi~ . ' . . . . . 800 • 149
You Can Sell It, Find It ,
Trade It With a Want .Ad (642-5678] One Cal I Service
Fast Credit Approval
(
lentol 1 • • • • • ~ • • • • :JOO • ""'
Sc:hook ond liutruc~ion , • . 575 ; Y19
Serllicet arid R-sioln , . • • 600 • 699
TfOMPOl'IOtion. • , • , . • • 91S • 949
General Geoeral
READ THIS
LA CUESTA VILLAS
$30.490
Close to the ·ocean in Huntington Beach!
Credit rejections at first unit price!
These have carpet. floor tile, and drapes
included. 3 Bit, 2 BA .. J.I UG E farn1 kit-
chen, detached· ga rage.
GOV'T REPOSSESSION
2 BR MESA VERDE TOWNHOUSE. Full price
only $18,450 \Vith $800 do\vn. payment. Pay· }4~ n1ents includin g ~veryt~ing, less t~a n $195
~ per mo. Call us unmechately -Bids close ~ Thursday, 10/18.
NO DOWN VA RE..\i.roi!s SUPER SHARP 4 Bedroom .. 2 bath co.s ta
Mesa home. Great features like brick fire-
place, kitchen/dinette area, new pai nt inside
& out, large double garage & beautiful land·
Scaping. Just listed. Priced only $30,000. -
Won't last a \veek!
CORO NA DEL MAR
l ll:IJ t A">T (.OA._, T Hlt.HWAI'
644-7270
CORONA DEL MAR
DUPLEX ~-.6;,g. HERITAGE 546-5180
ofl11,fa !J:,/e
PRESTIGE WATERFRONT HOMES
Linda Isle Waterfront
Lovely 4 bdrn1., 41h ba. home with swim-
ming po01, pfcr & slip, panoramic view-of
main channel. .Lge. family rm. w/space for
billiards & family dining. \Vaterfront formal
di ning & living rm. $290,000. '
For Complet• lnforl\'atiOn
On All Homes & Lots, Please Call:
BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR
341 Bayside.....Dr., Suite 1, N.8. ' -675-6161
. • REALTORS
One ot Corona del r-.1ar's Open Eves.
mo!:'t charming properties. General
Ne\\· upper unit has open --------General
beain ceilingio;, 2 Bcdroom~.1~!!!!!~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!'l:'!!!!O~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!"'j -$27,000 4 -BR 2 BA
1\·ith 01·crsitcd 1nastcr suile. General General i\lan1a·s get·a·ii·ay. Sunshine
t'ront house has jus1 been clean & ready f o r OC·
ren1odclcd 11·i1h ne1r carpets POOL & Warehouse cupanry, just rig ht ro r
k 11·allpaper. Paneled lh•ing l/ ACRE . · S I L b k fOU renters to get stal'led.
roon1. brick til'eplace, 3 2 G e-ease GC Carpets ,t; drapes thruou1. Bt><h~111s. _ ?n a pleasant Lai·gl" cxcrutli·f' cs ta!".! 011·ncr 1ri~l sell and lcasC' Hugi" kitchen \l'ith gas
fl'(>('·]1nc<i st1 eet & close to Q\\·ncr 1no\'ing & niust Sl'!I~ : back. ~10~ ~er. (t. ll'Arehnusl'. r1111gc. Counlry atn1osph('re,
,,, l'l'Ylhing. at hon1e for l11ri;:-r fan11ly I 2. Y.ear r!11111n1un1. k'aS;t'back. total pay1nents are Jess than
GOODY IN
GARDEN GROVE
Decorated ins ide and out.
Tailored plantings on a
large trinl'med lot. 4
l>eflroo111 .... Forn1al dining.
Custo111 s I one fireplace.
Con1pletcly spotless. E-Z-
care floor plan. !'..!berate the
BEST IN BLUFFS
NEW X·Pl:AN • TENNIS CLUB VILLAS
Just co mpleted, in low maint. area. 3 BR.,
21h ba., fam. rm., formal ·din . rm. Pictur-
esque greenbelt, nr . pool. Latest kitchen;
many up grades.-$65;750 -=--er will lease/ option. ·
JACUZZI • 3 BR. • BAY VIEW
END UNIT, nearly new·"Trina,'', tremendous-
ly upgraded, w/Jge. $5,000 jacuzzi in priv.
encl. side patio. Lovley wide greenbelt with
bay view. $79,500
' NEW DOLORES 3 BDRM., 21/2 BATHS
eND UNl'r. Just completed. Latest kitchen
w/elec. cook\vare top. dbl., self-cleaning
oven s, Trashmasher, eating area. Custom
carp. & drps. Wrap around patio on \Vide
greenbelt. S73,500 -or will lease/option.
HELEN B. DOWD
REALTOR BLUFFS SPECIA~IST 644-0134
IMMEDIATE OCCUPANCY
NO PAYMENTS UNTIL JANUARY
Model One Block West of Bea<h Blvd. 644-7270 11·ith \8 tre1• orchard. ~oh<I bnc·k builrh~ . .l dock rent.
high 1loor;;: 011'ner 11·ants
rquity ool. l'ul! price S2..'i,OOO.
Don't hesi!ato:>. Call No1v -
546-1600
L\"VEST?llENT Dl\!lS!ON
family for less t h a n i 'l!' ... ~:""'!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~~~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!""J
-S·J0.000.00. See it, you'll love G•nera1 General off, Adams in Huntington Beach -Walker & lee Walker&Lee ii. can 963-6767: -;;;;,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; J
AYRES SINCE 1905
S36-144S
.... l •• , .. ,,
PRIME OCEAN VIEW
PROPERTIES
FOR SALE
•fAL flTAt.I
OPEW TIL 9 • fT'S FUN 10 BE MCE! Open eves 545--0:!65 111 VERY SPECIAL ·
-------------------General G.:neral When you list with
us, YOUR HOME is
advertised in Home
for Living mega•
:z.ine in more than
900 areas-and cus--
·tomers are sent to
you as referrals
from our over no
affiliates of NMLS.
,t::·:: .. ::' ::;1'::::'::::::::::=.conma ,~R~C:.Ech"m"·· *BRAND NEW*
BY STATE OF CALTF. · -I In1n1actdate and su p e r ,Now under 1.'0rurtl'llciion ·
Ask for r.Jr. \Vest NE\VPORT CREST CONIXJ ! sharp. Great location. No lo\·ely 3 BR., 2 ba..: gas
** ** ** *TAYLOR CO.*
C213) 620-3708 Sacrifice Plan 2 ' n1aintenance fees. No frp\ .• dbl. gRl·age. 2 Blks. to
I""!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!"""!!!!!"" . Poobide. Cl19ice Joe. Save I leasehold rent and even a Calho!ie church, schools &
You dor>'t need a gun ro I $8.5PJ. Full pi·ice s:t.J,9j(), peek at the Ocean. call us shopptng. Oioose )'OUr ooJ.
"Draw · Fast" when you Vacant. lmn1ed. occupy. for terms and nn ap-ors. OCfered for $41.500.
place an ad in the [..ijyl Xlnt int. & _tern1s. point~1e~t loi?spect.Pri(.'i!d _MORGAN REALTY _
P ilot Want Ads! Call now [ Owner/Agent, fi.l.~230. 1.n 50/· ti73-8550 61 3-6642 6T;>-6159
General , Gener•I Genr al General
General
COMMERCIAL
6 STORES
6 commercial stof'('~ M>ulh
Cos!a l'l!esa. High fraffilr.!.Jo.
cation. Immediate oceupan·
c-y. ,\nxious 011·11rr. Call
1'll'o1v -54(>.1600
IN\'EST;\IE:NT Dl\'1 ~10:"<
OPENTIL 9 , IT'S FUN TO 8E NICE'
~ ~I
THE REllL
ESTllTERS
Genera l
4 BEDROOMS
$32,500
NEAR HARBOR ~I
2 &tths, 11c1v carptits ~ pain!.
Largf> lot. 011·n1..'r Will help
fina11er. Vaean1. e CALL ANYTIME e
646-3928 or Eve. 646-4543
Lachenmyer'
Realtor
2828 E. Coast Hiway
Corona d•I Mar
LOVELY DUPLEX
. OL'D Cd;\1 chann . . .
with au t11e n1odem an1enti·
Iles. Corn('r lot, close to
beach, 3 BR., 2 ba. PLUS 1·
bdnn. inron1e unit. Forced
air heat, shake roor, beauti·
fully d~:orat<.'d, open beam
et:iliiigs. delightful patio.
$S6.500.
PLEASE CALL
675-3000
~---' m11A\' ,\ llE.ll'll
UE.ll:I'\' IM'.
f~T l~lq 67 5 1000 l ------· 3 BDRM-NO DOWN
v.·onder ful 3 bdrm. 2 ha!h * N'PT HEIGH1:'.5 *l .. !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!ll
ho1ne 11·ilh dining rn1. built 3 BR .• Jo1·r!y l"P. hv .rn1.1---------ll
ins, di~hw11sht:'r. Fan1lly r m, \\' rtin. area. 81111. k1t<'h. 3 YEARS NEW II fireplace. Fort'C'd-air h!. J111. Lg,•. lmckyard. Dbl. ~:i.r. ••
n1 a(' u J a 1 e landw11pi11g. Dl.><'Orator 's dream! S-17.500. Extra sharp <I Bl:'droom Costa
$35.900. s.10.1120. BALBOA BAY PROP. J\lesa h<Hnc-. ne11·Jy paintro
TARBELL, Realtors * 642-7491 * inside .t out. .. Decorator"
kitrilen & bath~. Lighted. G_e_n_e_r_at _______ :;_•_n_•_r _•l ______ 1 co1·rrrd patio. Ilead)• to
niove inlo! ! llu1·ry on this ..... ~111111~"""'1111 aln1os!·nc11· hon1e at only
I I
UNIVERSITY PARK SPECIAL
A very SPECIAL price on a very SPECI.<\L
plan in a very SPECIAL locati on! E nd unit,
tiled roof. "Hanover" model. 3 BR., 2 baths,
for ~9.500.
BEST OF BALBOA ISLE
60 fl. \\iaterfront pier/float, large, lovely
home +I-yard, 5 Br., 5 Baths, den & play·
roon1 , O\Vher \\'i\1 help finance large 1st. T.O.
avail. 7 1/2 ~h. $295,000.
DRAMATIC OCEANVIEW
Fourplcx hi;:;h on a hill in Dana Point. Still
<in infanl a1 11 :.: \'cars. ln \'cstor·s drean1 at
only SIOil .000.
CLASS IC LINDA ISLE HOME
J.;·1rgrr :-i B{•droo1n 412 baths + n1any custon1
fcHt!lfC'". clcqant nii.:ht lig/11 vie\\'S. Pier &
flo;;:rt frJr large boat on qulct \Vater location.
$22fl.5011.
OCEAN FRONT CONDOMINIUM
On a lovely private Lag11na Rea ch. lt\'O pools,
tennii;, h('autiful grounds. 2 Bedrooms. 2.
Baths. \Valk on the vcean front. Its spotless
at $58.950.
CORNER LOT WITH PIZZAZZ
3 Bdrin., with lar.c:c c.ozv den. J\1a11v cxlras.
Lovely landscapin,1:: on fee land. Nc11r best
schools, tennis. churches. $72.500.
$3-l,fl50.
•
. COATS
" · WALLACE
REALTORS
---54~141-
(0pen Evenings)
* 6 UNITS*
Nea1·!y nt'\\' 2 BR., 2 ba.,
<lclu:-;e units on oceanfron!
in Balboa! F.lw. frplcs .•
hell\')' shag carp., bltns;
sundeek or brllcony 11/,each
uni1: 7 ('("V'd. carpom plus
l·park1ng sµacl'. $330.000.
Call: tiT.l-366..1. 642·2253 Eves.
associated
BROKERS -REAL TORS
101~ W Balboo 6 71 J6t,J
NEWPORT BEACH
SPECIALS
.ll;IR +flt.+ 2h;i + 11001
Stfl.900
•I BR + FR + 1 l>arh~
8j~.JOO
2 BR + den + 2 baths
$63.!lOO
5 BR. rR. rtin rn1, 3 ha
i9.000
C. F. Colesworthy
Realtors 640·0020
BUILDER'S -1
LET'S GET IT TOGETHER
COME TO REAL ESTATE ·
CAREER NIGHT
WEDNESDA y I OCTOBER 17th
7:30 P.M.
Be Our Guest At The
SHERATON ANAHEIM
Santa Ana Freeway & Ball Road
JOIN •••
HEAR •••
MAKE ••
LOOK •••
One Of The Nation's Lorgest Real
Estate· Firms With Offices From New
York To California.
John J. Lumbleau The Nation's Pre-
mier Educator & Trainer In The Real
Estote Field.
-
Big Money Through The Highest Pay·
• ing Profession Avollable. Learn How
• With Colwell Properties, Inc.
I)
TO COLWELL PROPERTIES INC.
REALTORS FOR
YOUR FANTASTIC, FUTURE
I
•
.<l Ui'OllClUI: tiVMI:
IN HARBOR VIEW HILlS-Four·bedroom,
sin gle story, sharp, clean, spa~i.ous . Beau-
tiful landscaping, play yard, ~e-new con-
dition. $94,500. A li sting of Marian Ref,!:dy.
UNIQUE HOMES-Realtors, 67·5-6000
2443 E. Coast Hwy., Corona del Ma~
Gener~STSIDE . I Genor~NISH
COSTA MESA ABANDONED
""um' 7\1% loan of •PP'· ESTATE $35 500 $31,500 -E..xccllcnt. location . .• -3 Bedl"OOlnio; • ·Family I Lo_n~ pr1vaie ?rive to mag.
Room -2 Battis~ -Fire-·w.ric:ei'lt.. ~i.sh eflJ.te on
pl:ace!I -Shake Root -Ne-.v lat# park·hl(e grounds, 4
'qualiry cBl"(>eting ...,., Chi!· bedi'oo111s, 3 batJ1s. Sunken
dferi may "·alk 10 school -party l'OO_m. Mammoth wail
OUered for $41,900. Call I length f.1~place. ~anquet COL\VELL 646-0055 • fo1mal d1nmg. Cantina kit·
TAX ADVANT. AGE ch'" '''" •"'"·""'· o'"""' be.n1st·('t' strurease. Hide-a· TRIPLEX "'llY master suite with sun· · deck and 'balcony. Red tile B e s t financing available. root NEAR BEAOf. Call
O"'llC'l' may carry lst. T.D. ~·
Below current rates, may
accept prepaid interest .. -L
BR .• 2 BR .• 3 Br. All fur.
nished .exceUe nt condition.
Call COj..WELL. 645-05.55
IOHI \I L 01 \0\
" RfA(T()R)
VACANT-
COSTA MESA
4 BEDROOM, 2°BA11I
block "·all ICIJCt>, hardwood
f.IQOrs. nice big yll.l'd, Now
vacant. ready for quick n1ove in. Asking $29.600. NO QUALIFYING 540-llst Open E"".
ASSUME V.A.
Vi>ry Jlttle $ Investment.
Anyone can assume. Lo1v
~-HERITAGE
. ' REALTORS
monthly payment. Avoid '""""""""""""""'""'"'"'""""d todays interest rate. Cozy HARBOR VIEW-
f am 11 y home. Nice SOMERSET MODEL neighborhood. Lo1v t u 1 I pr1ce only $30,500. Act Illness fol'ces saJe. Reduced
quickly . call to see no1v. $79.500 .• no lease hold 5 Br,
847-8:110. 3 Ba large fan1ily rm \\•Ith
OPf:N Tll 11 • Jr'S FUN TO BE NICE' fireplace & \\'{'f bar. l'ormal
THE REllL
ESTllTERS
The fastest draw In the \Vest.
... a Dally Pilot C111s.1iged
G1111nei'al ·1
din l'IJI, & sk'p do1vn living
rn1 with fireplace. An un·
usuat OPPortunity.
C. F. Colesworttiy
Realtors 64o.G020
You'll find ii 1n Cliwtfled
General
MACNAB
IRVINE
--------"'·-------
POOL! SURROUNDED BY HAPPINESS!
Designer's -dream, 4 BR. foRnaLOR • .FR.
U·shaped pla,n 'round center courtyard
pool. Fee land. Immaculate! $110,000.
Helen Wood 644·6200. (P20)
EMOTION SMACKER!
Glitters \Vith cleanliness & spa rkles with
loving color. Dog run, boat, trailer & pOol
area. Best buy in l luntington Beach. 4 BR's.1 FR. $51,500. Lois Miller M2·8235. (P28)
PALERMO SPECIAL
$74,995. Dellghtful 4 BR .. 2'h bath home in
choice location of Harbor View Homes.
Charles Arnold 642·8235. (P27 )
644-1766
-CLOSEOUT
---~ s ·~'~-~, :;'· ~:~'~;;,,, SEATING LIMITED PLEASE CALL Now Irvine M ....... , ........ ,,yeom,."' ColdweH,Banker Mnu111rr1,1r. '~"n' for :l 111•)11 111~ s, 11'!! YOU!'!<. S22X ~ If'""'"'"'""""' ASK FOR SALLY 833 --1 9S1 FOR RESERVATIONS ~=-~::.~~:~::::::
2161 S J I Hiii Rd NB Newpo,t liffch,C•lltornl• t211J
l!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!•llln!!!!!!••111q111u 1111" !!!!!!Ill• !!!!!!·1111• !!!!!!!. 1111• !!!!!!!!!l /~100 I ~::i 53!·51001!!... ........................................................................................ _...,.,...""""" ~~~~~~~~~~~~
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Lag1ina ·&-e'1 Today's Final
N.Y. Stoek8
VOL 66, NO. 289, 2 SECTIONS, 26 PAGES
• .,
ON
ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA TUESDAY. OCTOBER 16, 1973 TEN CENTS
Voiceprint Clash Delays Trial of Trustee
By TOM BARLEY
Of -.o.11y Plltt Sl•ff
Saddlebac.I.:. College Trustee Alyn M.
• Brannon and his oo-defendant began a
two-day break from the courtroom today
·while both sides in the bookinaking-ex-
lortion trial prepared to debate eligibility
ol lhe prosecutim's contro.versial
11oiceprint evi~ence. .
Orange County Superior Court Judge
, ' Everett 'V . Dickey called the delay late
.Monday after Deputy Dis~ct Attorney
'He Looked OK'_ •
William Evans argued that the in-
novative voiceprint technique will un-
doubtedly prove that defendant Emmett
Kelly made a highly incriminating
telephone call to a Newport Beach
perfume salesman. ...
Evans claims that Kelly, 34, or 835
Seagull Lane, Newport Beach, made the
call at a time tbat an eight-inch hunting
knife was hurled into the victim's front
door in a further bid to persuade him
to settle a $3,000 gambling ,debt.
oo-
W onian Raped
At Heisler Park
A 20-year-old Hollyv.·ood woman was
broughl to Laguna Beach's Heisler Park,
choked into submission and raped on
the beach early today by a man who
picked her up in Los Angeles and prom·
ised to take her lo a Newport Beach
party.
1be attractive dark-haired woman was
found crying as she walked along Cliff
Drive. Sbe was found by a Laguna
Beach police officer. . n.e woman told· officers she had been
walkinc down a street in Hollywood
when a man ln a small foreign car
drove up and offered her a rlde.
Recounting the incident 1 for Laguna
Beach detectives, the worban said the
motorist "looked all right" and she ac-
1 oepted the ride. He then asked her
lf she wanted to go to a party in
• ~'ewport Beach. ,1
· .• i"he couple went first ·-to Newport
.' · ~ach. but then the rapist told the
• . womao lbe party must have been moved . . \o t.guna Beach.
'olice said the v.•oman who recently
' came to ·Lo! Angeles from the state
of Washington, was unfamiliar with the
Southern California area.
Arriving in Laguna Beach, the mnn
11frsuaded the woman to walk along
• the beach below Heisler park. There
he hecame aggressive, she told detec·
, tives.
Wben she resisted his advance.J, he
·' grappled he r and choked her until she
' •topped fightinj<.
: on i;:cethr:~ Ji~t ~~:rn~~ bruises
· -# The suspect was described as being
~.Laguna Board
,o1To Eye Thul'ston
School Schedule
A proposed change in the fiexible
scheduling program at T h u r s t o n
Intermediate School will be reviewed
tonight by the Laguna Beach Board
of Education .
The 7:30 p.m. meeting will be held
in the district EducatioQr Center, 550
Blu r.iont St.
The change would have the eUect
of tightening the flexible scheduling used
at the school since it opened in 1967.
It is not considered a major change
by achool officials, however.
Trustees asked to review the change
after several citizens appeared before
the board two weeks ago and asked
for an explanatloh of the proposal.
It came to light during the discussion
that board members had little or no
fiiowledge or the change .
Thurston principal David Lloyd will
make a full presentaUon on lhe cl\ange
before board members tonight.
ISRAEL TROOPS
GET ICE CREAM
TEL AVIV !UPI) -1bret civilian
volunteers have gone to the Syrian front
to hand oot Ice cream and sherbet.
10 froot·llne Israeli troops, Q>e NaUooal
radio said P.fonday.
Two of them, Slmha Kadml and hil
wife, Bracha, s&ld they had done the
i;amc thing ln the !Ir.Al Sinai ca~palgn.
·•unreal.'' sa id i n Israeli soldier down-
fiig a sherbet.
'
\\'ell-built, tall, with dark blond shoulder-
Jength hair. Police believe he is in
his early 20s and is from the Orange
County atea.
Nixon Plans
To Meet 4
--........
Arab-E-nvoys
\VASHINGTON (AP) -The White
House announced today that President
Ni:ion will meet v.·ith fou r Arab foreign
ministers Wednesday to discuss the
fighting in the Middle East .
The anoouncement came amid reports
that the envoys were carrying a message
from King Faisal of Saudi Arabia, who
has been under intense pressure from
Arab counterparts to deny Mideast oil
to the United Slates.
But a spokesman for one Arab delega-
tion said oil was not one of the issues
MARINES . BOARD IWO JIMA
FDR MIDDLE EAST, Pago 4
the ministers want to discuss. They
\Vant only to take up "the U.S. in-
volvement Jn the war," the Arab
spokesman said.
White House Deputy Press Secretary
Gerald L. Warren would say only that
the foreign minl!lers of Saudi Arabia,
Algeria, Kuwait and Morocco "asked
to see the President to discuss the
current situation in the ?.fiddle East."
The White House said precise time
of the meeting, to be held in Nixon's
Oval Office, had not been set.
In addition to Nixon and Kissinger,
a spokesman sakl it wouJd be attended
by Foreign Ministers A b d e I a z i z
Bouteflika of Algeria , Sabah al-Ahmad
(See ltUDEAST, Page %)
Laguria Niguel
Shopping Center
Rejected, 8-3
By CANDACE PEARSON
Of 11N D.11111 "lltt Sll M
The South Coast Regional ~
Conservation Commission P.fonday denied
8·3 a request for a 36,900-square-foot
Laguna ·Niguel shopping center.
'Mle 3.8 acre center was proposed
at the northea st comer of Niguel Road
and Pacific Coast Highway by Mariner
Propertiee, which is buying the site
from Avco Community Developers.
Avco attorrniy R. Wicks Stephensi
representing Mariner, claimed the ccntel"
v.•as needed.
But he couldn't dvercome a ne gative
staff recq_mmendation and tbe testimony
ot seven Laguna Niguel residents.
Stephens indicated after \he lat&n.lghl
IWion in l.4ng Beach that he will
appeal the decision to lhe 1t1te Coastal
Commission .
The coastal commissions have permit
jurisdiction within 1.000 yards o(_ mean
hii;ih tide line under the 1972 coastal
zone act.
The center was propastd to include
a 1$,000-squar~root n11rket, a savings
<Seo UENTAL, Page Ii.
•
And Newport Detective S~t. John
Simon took the witness stand to testify
that be called Kelly Sept; 13. i972, al
the Garden Grove ca r dealership where
he worked, lo get a tape recording
of bis voice that allegedly matches up
with the voice recorded in the .eJtorlion
threat.
Evans argues that the voiceprint
teclmique, cw-renlly being used as
evidence in a Riverside County trial,
is as infallible as today's fingerprinting
techniques. _
Kellv and Brannon, 42. of Santa Ana.
were ·indicted~ by the Grand Jury on
multiple charges of bookmaking, e:i-
ton ion and conspiracy. fill
It was allegeQ: that both ml.'n v.·ere
involved in a Harbor Area bookie racket
that put S'l5,000 a week into the organiza-
tion's coffer!\. .
Judge Dickey shattered part of the
defense hopes in pretrial maneuvering
Monday wben he rejectl'd the argument
that the conversa tion taped by Simon
in Garden Grove violated Kelly's con-
stituti onal rights and could not be ad-
n1ltted into evidence.
··~Ir. Kelly v.·as not in custody at
the time," Judge Dickey said. "I regard
it as a voluntary statement and . there
was oo need for Sgt. Simon to warn
the defendant at the time of the
telephoo.e conversation that he was a
police oUicer."
Evans disclosed late P.1onday· that he
will call tt. Ernes t Nash oI the A-iichigan
St.ate Police [)('partn1ent lo the witness
stand if Judge Dic key allows introduction
of the voiceprint ev1dence.
Nash is rC'garded as the nation 's
foremost expert in the new technique
and he is current1 y testi!ying In
Riverside trial action that was granted
by the judge when JustiCe Robert
Gardner of the f'ourth District Cow1
of Appeals agreed that voiceprinl
evidence could be introduced .
......... ount ? • or
Long Trek I
Father Francisco Afiracle and his explorer scouts
don backpacks in San Juan Capistrano to continue
their pilgrimage. The Jong journey along the mis·
sion route of Father Juni~ro Serra began deep in
fl.1exico in July. It is to conclude in Carmel where
the remains of the priest lie. Story and additional
picture are on Page 3.
Laguna Cai· Agency Loses
Vehicle, Gains a Suspect
Lightning struck twice at Laguna
Imports, an imported automobile agency
ir. Laguna Beach, but \Vhen it hi t the
second time, Laguna Beach made an
arrest early today.
Police were called to the car agency,
985 S. f,oast llighway, by a citizen
who toldofficers a man had broken into
the offices and was ge ll ing into the
display sports cars.
Officers Don Abshier, Mike Davis and
Sgt. Victor Sagan arrived on the scene
and reportedly found a nian si tt ing in
a Datsun 240Z sports car.
Police arr~sted Peter J . 1'fuller, 181
of 1172 Catalina St., Laguna Beach and
booked him oo suspicion of burglary
·and suspicion of grand theft auto.
He assertedly told police he liked
sports cars. Police belie ve the office
-hat.I been broken into and keys taken
in order to gain access to the vehicles.
Office rs called the agency operator,
and v.·hen he. arrived he discovered a
V\V camper bus was missing from lhc
Jot. ~
Police believe the camper \Vas laken
bct\veen 7 p.m. and 11 p.m. ~fonday
night. There appears to be no connection
between the incidents.
Nuclear Plants
Get AEC .Okay
BULLETIN
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -The Atom ic
Energy commission said it v.·as author-
ized today to issue construction pe rmits
for two nuclear power plaots at San
Onofre, south of San Clemente~ and thC
\Vcstt!rn \\'hlt e House.
Sitting Dn~k
Bandit Overco1ne By 'V ictirns'
Orange County Sherlrf's of!icers drove to the South Laguna area al high
11peed l\.fonday hight when they got a report that two 1notel guests were being
robbed at gunpoint.
They needn't have hurried. The reported gunman was in much grea ter
danger than reported victims \Valtcr Smith, 56, of Sall 1.ake City <1nd IA.'slic
Eaby. St, of Vaa Nuyii.
In fact, depulies ~id, they were sitting on the head of a mn n identified as
Cllfford Dale Burkhart;26.. of San Diego.
Deputies said !be two motel guests told them thty were confronted by
Burkhart who Simulated poS8e88ion of a gun. Wilhln SOO)rlcis lhey \vere slmu-
lalihg _ two hens sitting on l'I clutch ot eggs \Vilh the reluctant Uur kh1111 play-
ln1 the role ot the nest.
Burkhart was booked into county j.lil on charges of 1111cmptcd robbery .•
) .
Disecise Cla.i1ns
Jazz Dru1nmer
Gene Krupa, 64
YONKERS. N.Y. (AP) -Jazz drum·
mer Gene Krupa died today at his
home here. He was 64.
Krupa had been released from Yonkers
General Hospital about a week ago after
undergoing treatment for· leu kemia.
Hi.s last public appeara nce \Vas Aug.
18 in Saratoga, N.Y .. with Benny Good·
man, whose band he joined in 1934,
Survivors include ll~;o adopted children
and a brother, Jutes, of Chic.!tgo.
Funeral arrange ments we r e in-
complete.
Krupa suffered a hea rt attack in 1960,
which kept him inacti ve for a time.
lie retired in 1967, but came back in
1970, leading a qua rlet at New York's
l'laza Hotel.
, Last sumnter during the Nc\vport Jau.
Festival in Nel'I York. he played \\'ith
the reun ited Good man qua rtet, incl uding
clarinetist Goodinan. pianist Teddy
Wilson and Lionel Ham pton on the vitws
Krupa also appeared July 4 at !he
renamin g of the Singer Uo" I in New
Yo rk as Louis Armstrong Stadium. Lat('r
in the summer. Krupa gave a eulogy
:it the fu nera l or ja7.z banjoist Edche
Condon.
Arter graduation from hig h !:tllool in
his n:tlh•c Chicago 111 1925. Krupa gill
" s111nn1rr job :is 3 ~od.1 J!"'rk a! a
\\'i~consin beach ''din1t·-M-<.lanrc'" h<ill.
\\'hen the dru mmer in 1hl' <lnnrf' bnnd
fa1n1ed across lhe sooa 101u1!a1n. l\ru1n1
substituted for hirn and played the re~t
of the season.
Afte r the summer, his f:in1ily senl
him off to a seminary in ll enssch1er.
Ind., wl?e re he studlt'd for the IJnt"c;thOO<I.
The following year, aft11:r hl8 httht>r's
death. he ~ft lhc sen1lnary to plfly
drums in tllic11go. His f1ritl records
v.·erc made In 1928 wit h a Ch1t nhro group.
In 1929 he \~cnt rn r-;c\1· York 10
play in thf' orrbcslra or .!il'QC$:.~'
(:crshwl n's 8h-Ow ·'S1rlke tJ1) th e U;ind "
The orche!ltra. said to be the f irst \\•hltc
swlni;: band on llrOAdw•y. Inc luded Good·
ISt-e KRUPA. Pugt 2)
EPA Rule
..To Affect '
Countians
By WILLIAM SCHREIBER °" ,... o.11r ,.r11ot '""'
The estimated 150,000 Orange Coun·
tians Y.'ho drive their own cars to work
in Los Angeles each day may soon
find it 's a luxury they can"t afford.
_The latest Environmental Protix:lion
Agency regulations for Los Angele s \'i"ill
make lone commuting a lot less at·
tractive than car-pooling or ridinl! the
bus, according to the man who .is i'Tl·
plemenling Orange County's ov.'ll r ;a
transit system.
Dr. G. J. "Pete" Fielding, director
of the Orange County Transit District,
said today the chances are also good
that the new rules will reach into Orange
County proper, affecting another 800.000
people who drive cars from home to
other destinations. •
"I think the regulations will almost
certainly increase lhe cost of driving
a car enough to make many people
look at it as a drain on their budgets."
Fielding said. "Those who can use public
transit conveniently will turn to it."
But Fielding :said there is a big "if''
involved.
"These people will use public transit
if somebod y can come up nationally
with the funds for an operating subsidy
providing for good, extensive service,"
Fielding said.
He said the latest EPA rulings
theoretically mean public transportation
v.·iil have to pick up at least 50 percent
of the daily commuter trips from Orange
County lo Los Angeles.
"By our estimates , that wou ld mean
use of 2,000 buses and $14 million per
year in operatlng costs," Fielding said .
The OCTD currently has just over
100 buses with plans over the next
few years to expand to 300. Fielding
said that -means he can handle only
about six percent of lhe trips the EPA
is talking about.
''Without a lot or ass istance and some
good lead time, a SO percent trip figure
is out of our reach." he ~a id. ''Our
current 1nass transit plans will takt.
at \easl 10 years to implement and
even they \1·.ou ldn 't be enough."
Fielding said the average commuter
v.·i ll begin to feel the crunch of the
new EPA rules as early as next June,
with imposition required 10 percent
s11rcharge on all mwiicipal parking fees
to cover the cost or mass transit develop-
ll)rnl.
The parking surcha rge \\'ill leap lo
ISce COi\tMUTJ::., Page :Z)
Orange Cout
• •
Weather
llnzy sunshine is on the age nda
for \\ edncsd<iy ;ilong the Orange
Coast. \Vi1h tr1np<.'rat ures in the
1n1d·OOs at the bl':ichcs rising to
84 lnl:ind.
l :\SllU: 'l'OUA \'
Tlirrr rr1e1~ are 111 custod11 t1Jo
dn!J for tile s1tsµrctl·d kidnap
c1111i nntrder vf u 1como n, lier
rico cllilclren unrl n farriity friend
in Suu Dernvrdi110 St!e stor11
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DAILY PILOT l l TUHd.11, Octobtt 16, 1973
'' I ' 'Sliip' Attack s Po lice (ar
Qeput_ies Chase UFOs
From \\'ire Strvlce1
If lhere really are urudentlfied Oylng
objects (Ut'Os~ out there. they've been
hovering 1g9\n ovrr at least four states
-Indiana . Louisiana . \\'est Virginia and
hfiuls.sippl.
Sig hti ngs during the night of something
touched off a fl urry to local calls to
baffled local officials.
Sheriff's deputies chased five orange-
reddish nying objects 12 miles through
l h~ Louisiana piney woods late 1\tonday
night and early today near P.ine. .
De puty Michael 1\too re said the ships
almost attacked a police car.
"One of our deputies was scared pretty
bad ," ~foore said from the Washington
Parish sheriff's department. "He turned
on 1111 red llgl>U. and ll>eY ..,,,. down
at his patrol car. lte turned them off
and they just vanished like In a cloyd ."
ln another sighting reported IH!ar
Slidell , across Lake Pontchartrain from
New Orleana, Uoyd Merclu Yid he
was driving home when he s:i.w an
ob.iecl "approximately 15 or 20 feet
in diameter and Jt had a streak about
a foot wide straight throu gh the middle."
Several pel'Slns, Including a wuther
()bserver and a pilot experienced in night
flying, reported seeing an unidentified
fl ying obje&t over the Raleigh County
Airport Monday night near Beckley, \V.
Va.
The ob}eet first appeared about 8:45
p.m. and remained in sitht for about
l\.issinge1·, Le Due Tho
Wh1 Nob el Peace Prize
OSLO {UPIJ -Secretary of St.ale
l{enry 1\. Kissinge r and North Viel·
namese Politburo member Le Due Tho
\1un tbe 1973 Nobel Peace Prize today
for y,·ork in negotiating a cease-fire lo
lhc Vietnam 'Nar -the "most
gruesome" and longest conflict since
\\'orld \\'ar 11.
The surprise y,·lnners were announced
by the Nobel pea ce committee here
even as Kissinger -who also played
mentioned publicly as oc.mtnees during
the yeai's -delibtralions.
Politicians and Nobet Prize experts
said the announcement was the greatest
surprise In the history of the aw ard.
It was the first Nobel Peace Prize
awarded since 1971. The comm ittee last
year named no winner because It said
it could not fllld a suitable candidate.
IO to 40 mlnuteo, -,,. to Bowan!
~loneypenc1y, weather servtce speclalllt
ror lbe Nallooal Oceanlc and Atmo6phere
admlnl&tration.
"It had no definite shape and I have
no idea how far away or bow big
It was,'' he said
The aiitJort is not equipped with
radar, bu t virtually all employes
reported seeing the object. It was
described as having red, green and white
(lashing ll&h"-
Police and res idents in south central,
v.·est central and northern Jndi an a were
puzzled over strange, multi-colored ob-
jects which have been sighted the past
two nights. ·
"II followed me home," aald Richard
Pape, who lives on a farm near Hun·
tington in northern IO(liana.
The HunUngto n Co'bnty sheriff, who
lnvestlgated the report. dki not see
anything but said Pape and bb family
are "very reliable citizens and were
all shook up," abou t the incident.
Town Marsha! Ron Stucker at nearby
Andrews said he saw one UFO !OUlh
of Huntington and one sou th of Andrews.
lie said they appeared to be lights
in the sky. ·
In south central Indiana, Morgan Coun·
ty Deputy Sheriff Robert Williams said
be saw an unidentified flying object
that "took ()ff from the ground" Monday
night just northeast of Martinsville. •
In Pascagoula, Miss., reports of
unldenllfled flying objects continued
around the Ptflssissippl Gulf Coast nearly
a week after two men said they were
taken aboard a nooterr~al craft.
UP'~~
GENE KRU PA !RIGHT) WITH BENNY GOODMAN IN 1938
Jan Drummer Succumbs to Cancer at Age of 64
........ r,...1
COMMUTE ••. '
2:l -I I ,..., later. _,
By lJ77, the court-.mandated Ar A
....ia-"111 ---·" .. , ..,. pu~s rac1111i.. 1o ·1111 1.oa
Atl(tl" buin and other motropoll"'
areu in the Unittd Stales and would
provide priority freeway laDK for bulea
and car-poola.
Fiekffng uld tbert are 1coc1 namptes
of bow tncreued J)lltkln, coltl bavt
forced people to re<:onslder ustns mu1
transit. "
~In Wubqton, O.C., whore rt coals
'3.liO to 14 a day to park, Jarp numbers
or people have turned to the busdJ'
which coat IHI tban fl a dty and'
nothing le park," he said.
Fielding llJd he can tee a time uNler
the new EPA rules when cu commu~
to Loa Angeles will pay at leut p.
or more for pariJrlg evt:ry day.
Fielding Ill<! It b not clear yet wbelher
the Ef A" ntllnp dlreotly affect the
m~tropolitan areu of Oran1e Cotmt;
-apeclfically centered In Garden Grove,
S..ta Ana and Anaheim.
"It would appear from looking at inlUal
reports that Orange County is considered
part of the Los Angeles metropolltan'
area and hence would be directly af·
fected by the rules," he aald.
Plannlpg officials in 1everat Orana:e'
Coast cltlet said today they haven't'.
had enough Um e to aludy the regulaU...,
to determine what local effects there
will be.
But Fielding said It b almost email\
lbat cities which generate a lot ol traffic
-such as Newport Beach -will have
to come up with some alternatives to
car traffic and Increased parking.
AvcQ Decisions Dela yed
a key role In the Imp rovement of U.S. The last previous winner was West
relations with China and the Soviet Union German Chancellor Willy Brandt In 1971.
-was confe rring in the Whi~ House The Nobel committee uid Kisainger
on !he \.\·ar raging in the ~1iddle East. and Tho were nominated by Prof. Jon
F rorn Pnge I
l{RUPA ....
"If parking is r:egarded by the EPA
as fostering Pollulioo, then tbt cil>er
are gotng to have to find aJ&emaUvu
qulckly to meet the Jaw," he sa!d.
Fielding's-contention that much of tbl
enforcement burden will fall to local
government bas been supported by
George Taylor, executive teeretary of
the Air Resources Board in Sacramento. 1
J'he two f)E!ace negotiators W'On out Sanness, professor of history at Oslo -
.·-~ver a big field of 40 oommees-·nraf -·'Uillvinity and directonf'ln~'a7rweg1an ....
incltfded PreSident Nixon. Yugoslav Foreign Policy Institute. B s . te c • · •
President Tito, Daniel Elbberg, ol Pen-Inexplainingtheaward,thec:ommillee y ta ommisswn
tagon Papers fame, Brazilian Archbishop aaid, "For more than three yurs theY
1nan, Condon and trombonist Glenn
l\lil\e r, and was led by Red Nlcbola.
After stints with bands led by Buddy
Rogers and Goodman, Krupa formed
his o\vn orche!itra in 1938. He remained
a band leader thereafter, except for
one year -1943 -when he served a
six-month prison term for a narcoUcs
conviction. After his release, he was
briefly with Goo:lman and Tommy
Dorsey before re-formi ng his own band.
"Much of the responsibility will fall
on local governments and I think there.
will be a very do6e look at what can
be dooe to encourage car pools," be
said.
Dom Helder Camara, Swedish disarms· have used all their strength and good
ment min ister Alva P.fyrdal, an d will to achieve ~ negotiated solution , 4;,
France's Jean Monnet. fa ther of the a peaceful solution of the Vietnam war. f<' State Coastal Comml.ssion decisions en
European Common Market. "Thereby, lbey have performed a feat Avco Community Developers 1,218 ·unit
Kissinger said today he wa!' "very which ls, in the best accordance with ifagun& Niguel Rf'Ojecl and a 213 ~t
pleased" at wlr~ning the prize. Alfred Nobel's thoughts, that conflicts San Clemente condominium have again
Sta te ,Depar:tment spokesmen indicated should be tried to be solved throogb been continued.
Kissinger might have more lO say later negotiations and not through war." Voting on the Avco Oceanside con·
about the award . "It was a gruesome war that did dominlums and· the Ptlira O>sta Villas
ln citing the two -who win share not only force upon the Vietnam civilian development by the Robert H. Grant
a record priie of •122,000 -the Nobel population enormous sufferings but that Corp. was scheduled to take place
committee said: also poisoned the atmosphere in and Wedne!day In San Diego. ·
"The war in Vietnam was the most between other countries in the whole 'Mle state Coastal Zone Conservation
gruesome and longest mllitary conflict world," the announcement sakl. Commission will meet at 9:30 a.m. in
since the Second World War was brought ' the Pacific Room of the Bahia Hotel,
to an end witb a cease-fire. The com· 998 W. Mission Bay Drive.
mlttee has given the peace prii.e of Front Page 1 Wednesday L! devoted to hearing a~
1973 to the two negotiators ~bo with peals of actions taken by the six regiOnal
a JO. int achievement bniu""t about the DENIAL c::onmia\OM. created by Proposition 20. cease-~ ,Jan. 23 this ye:; -Dr. Kis-• • • 1be state commission bu lie\ apecial
:singer , USA, and Le Due Tho of the 'J'bUrsaay mOrning teSSionl on the permit
Democratic . Republic of (North) Viet· and loan b\llldine, small llhopa and request to add 1two 7400 megawatt
nam ." 194 parking apacea:. nuclear reactors to the San Onofre PoWet
·KiS!inger. confirmed as U.S. Secretary Regjonal staff planners said unofflciaJ plAnt, three miles aouth. of San Clemente.
cf State in September, was born In commission standards would call for 'lbe application by the San Diego Gas
Fuerth, Germany, of Jewish origin, ln roe parking spacer, which Stephens &a.Id and Electric Company and Southern
1923. ~ could be met u necessary. • C&llfomla Edi5on was approved by t.be
He emlgtated wi th his p a r e n t s to Planners al91> based their recom-San Diego Regional COastal Comml55ion.
the United States In 1938 and became mendatlon for denial on commuiUty That aetion was appealed by GUARD
a U.S. citizen in 1943. He later became disapproval, adv~rse environmental Im· (Groups United Against R a d 1 a l l on
a professor at Harv ard Unlvef!ity where pact and what they said was the in·
be specialized In foreign policy. advisability of buiJding more commercial
Neither Kissinger nor Tho bad been uses without a eo:mprehensive plan.
"Every time we're here we hear about
Gro up Organized
By Gay DO<'tor
NEW YORK (UPI ) -Dr. Howard
Brown, a fonner head of New York
City's health services who announced
two weeks ago that he Is a homosexual,
says he fonned a national civil rights
organiution to be called the National
Gay Task Force.
nie organi:r.ation is expected to act
as a clearing group and coordinator
for some of the 850 homose xual groups
in the country and to press for federal
legislation ou t I a wi ng discrimination
against homosexuals. Brown said Mon-
day he will act as chainnan of the
board.
In an appeal for funds. he st ressed
that "if you give money it doesn't prove
you'r.e gay."
OlA"GI COAST "
DAILY PILOT
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"'¥ilftlf 1 •• ,...jh n 11 -t~1y1 t11ll,,tr'I' ""'"""''~ ll U """'"'11'
piecemeal development,'.' Stephens ob-
jected. "There is a plan for development
of the area. Jt has been approved by
Orange County. (It's) the Laguna Niguel
PC (planned commllllity ) zoning." ,
The Avco plan-calls for commercial
at llilS site, said Stephens. He added
the center would serve Ure neighborhood ,
not outside residents and thus, would
decrease driving and impacts on air
quality.
Trees and other landsca ping v.·ould
"prov:ide additional beauty in the area,"
!he attorney added.
Opposition speakers Included Frank
Irvine. vice pre.!ident of United South
Orange Chast Communities (USOCC );
\\'illiam Burling of the Niguel Shores
Co m m un i t y Association zoning
committee: residents Dick and Lee But·
terworth and representatives of the Dana
Point Citizens for Action and Nigue l
Coastal Protective AssociaUcn.
"This project is another example of
development before planning." said
Irvine, reading from a USOCC state-
ment. "It's always a r,iece at a time,
never a complete view. '
Irvine and other speakers said the
center wasn't needed because there are
ot hers only minutes away.
'"This Is only one of seven commercial
projects being considered In a 1.3 mile
segment ol Pacific Coast Highway In
Laguna Niguel ," Burling told the com·
mission after requesting that the permit
be delayed for an overall plan.
Voting for the project v.·cre Com·
missioners Louis Nowell, Dor. Phillips
and Russ Ru bley. Casting no voteJ were
Commissioners Ron ald caspers, Rlmmon
Fay, Art Holmes, Robert Rooney, Judy
Rosener, Carmen Warschaw, Don Wilson
and Don Bright. Commissioner Ja1nes
J-layes was absent.
Malaysia Mob
Rlps U."S. Flag
KUALA LUP.lPUR, Ptlalaysia (UPI) -
Thousands of screaming Ma1aysian
youths protesting American aid to Isreal
today ripped down and burntd the
American Oag al the U.S. Embassy
and stoned an AmericM cult ural ~nler.
The protesten . .shouting obsctnihes
and -an1t:-Amertcarr slogan!; als;o bumcd-
efrigies o( President Ni'xon and Israeli
Defense Minister ~1oshey Day.an.
1be demonstration began with about
2.000 persons and quickly swelled to
;ihou! 5 000
From Page I
MIDEAS T • • •
al Jabir al-Sabah or Kuwait, Atrmed
Ta.ibi Benhima of Morocco and Umar
al-Saqqaf of Saudi Arabia.
It is understood that Nixon and King
Faisal exchanged messages since the
outbreak of Arab-Israeli fightin g 11 days
ago.
Asked about this, Warren said, "We
do not as a rule discuss diplom atic
contacts from tiere."
A.Mouncement of Wednesday's meetlng
between Nixon and the Arab envoys,
who are in New York for sessions of
the United Nations, came after Secretary
cf State Henry A. Kissinger met for
an liour with the President.
Kissinger also attended an hour·long
meeting of the Washington Special Action
Group, a panel of top-level diplomatic,
military and intelligence officials who
continually kee p track of 1'1ideast
developments.
Warren turned awa y mC>St questions
on the Arab-Israeli war, but repeated
that Nixon instructed Kissinger ,;to re-
main in .contact wit h all parties in
the conflict and with the major powers."
-The govemment released figures f\1on·
day showing that the United States im-
ports about 1.1 millK>n barrels of oil
daily direct from Arab coun tries .
This is about six percent of total dally
U.S. cOMUmplion.
Open Brushlarul
R emai ns Cw sed
In Laguna A reas
OJx>n brushland within the city of
Laguna Beach has been closed to all
public use because of an extreme fire
ha:r.a rd.
"Keep Out" signs have been posted
by Laguna Beach firemen on all roads
11nd tralh leading into the bTU!hlands
which Include the hills behlnd '!'op of
the World and Arch Beach ifelg hts.
tind portiOM of IAguna and El Toro
canynns.
The signs warn that vlol aton or the
closu re wlll be subject to arrei1t.
Fire Marahat James PresJQn said he
Is p.Artlculnrly concerned that sparks
from motorcycle exhaust systems may
ignite brush fir~ In the clostd areas.
The closure w1U remain In effect until
enough rain Is received to reduce the
fire hazard. ....
Danger), Orange County Environmental
Coalition and Friends of the Earth.
'lbe Avco project adjacent to Crown
Valley Parkway and Salt Creek. Beach
octr.nside of Paciflc Q>ast Highway,
originally called !or 1,690 units with
srme building up to 12 stories.
That has been tiimmed to 1,21_8 units
~·ith the highest structure at five stories.
but stale commission' plaruters are ap-
parently working on other com promises
with Avoo.
No new date for the vote was set .
Also continued indefinitely was the San
Clemente project al camino Estrella
and Camino Capistrano.
· State planners said a number of souU1
Orange County developers are trying
to coordinate their plans.
A public hearing ls scheduled Wednes·
day fl>r' a proposed 190 sing k! fami ly
ho(lle project by AvcO, also in Laguna
Niguel. The permit was granted by the
South Coast Commission and appealed
by the Orange . Coonty Environ mental
Coalition.
The state commission also will ccn·
sider a permit request by Dana investors
for nine duplexes in Dana Point which
y;as denied by the Regional Commission.
Elecb·ic Type~ri ter
Stolen in S. Laguna
An electric typewriter and postage
stamps with a total value of more than
S700 were stolen P.1onday night by
burglars who broke into an attorney's
office in Sout h Laguna, Orange County
Sheriff 's officers said.
Deputies said the property was taken
from the offices of attorney \Villiam
Pierre Paulson , 50. of 31607 S. Coast
Highway, after he had closed his offices
for the night.
Lag1ma P arking
Board Adding
Ne,v Compromise
Members of the Laguna Beach Parking
Revenue Committee have hammered out
another compromise to the city's parking
meter hassle. · "l
The commiUee meeting Monday night
agreed to put some 900 more meten
ln town and to maintain .the exilttlng
rate of 10 cents an hour for all meters
except seasonal meters installed In
Laguna Canyon Road which would be
25 cen.,...-an hour.
At the time of the Glenneyre Street
parking structure's completioo, the com·
mittee agreed that the city and
merchants would again look at a poulble
increase h1 fees for on-street and Jot
spaces, but would bold the 10 cent an
hour premium for the atructUre to en-
courage its off.season use.
The additional new meters would be
installed on Coast Highway north to
the city limits and JOulh to Ruby Street
including some of them on intenectlng
streets ; on Cliff Drive between Ceda r
and Broadway; on a portion of Glenneyre
near Thalia : and a portion cf Ocean
Avenue
Laguna Canyon Road in the vicinity
of the Ari festivals would be metered
during the summer.
Los Angeles Mayor Tom Bradley said
Monday the EPA mearures are "a
necessary evil" lo gel motorists out
of tbelr cars and into poolJ or bu1e111. .
Other segments of. the new EPA rul·
rngs wt11·hurt the· average car commuter
as well, Fielding sald.
For example, the EPA l! lookln1 aL
gas rationing as one rJ. the only ways
to cut car traffic enough· to do any
good in big metropolitan areas.
Experts for the EPA claim virtually all
traffic on Loe Angeles roads W'OUld have
to be ellmlnated to meet the 1977 Cun
Afr requirements.
U gu is raUooed, Fteldlnc fonl<ts
guolJne cootiqtl '1 pll"1 or·more.
Besides bua aod car-pool service,
Fielding lhinkJ tbe Amtrak tratno wtU bayt,:Jo, lllarl runn1n,· .., oommuter
sc~agaln.
But be said the hie problmn will
be inlorference with crtUcal !night train
achedulrs.
"The problem with the trains and
any of 1hi.! ls that when you chanaC
me part ol the ecooomy, everylhlnf
is affected one way or another."
Overall, Fielding aaya mott of the
EPA rulinp will hurt oommul<ra In
the low to middle b>e:ome rana:e wbo
can't handle another burden on the
pocketbook.
But be 18)'1 the a\"el'l.ge driver ln
the upper l'niddle Income range most
Ukely will keep driVinl UDW lhort pa
supplies force him to atop. .
But he said even that Isn't a btact
and white situation and he mild be
"M"ong ln his predictlona.
"A good example of the cbangeeblllly
" this situation Is the fact that our
(OCTD'•I bl-and beoC u,. IW.
comes from Newport Beach, -ane of the
wealthi est communltles in the county ,"
he added.
l\.ALEIDOSCO PE
Our showroom is a virtual kaleidotcope of colON. The reasons are
varied-: .
We know that color coordinating is tht primary targtt when buy.
ing carpet. Quali ty is usually second in line, and becaute wt hive such •
vast selection of quarities, it is easy to coordinate color ind quelity to
each individual 's taste.
However , we know that a volume of samples Jooking 1t you ean
seem very confusing -but we feel that thowing just a few Samples is not
a fair representation of the carpet business. Our hu ge selection gives our
sales people every possible option in working with people, helping them
to find !he perfect choice.
So if yo u are in the marlcet to select your
Aldon's lo hel p you , !hot'• who! we're hero lorllll
cerpe!lng -Hloct
ALDEN'S
CARPETS e DRAPES
1663 l'lacentla Awe.
COSTA MESA
646-4838
HOURS: Mon. Thru Thurs., t 1'> 5:JO -N I., t h> t -SAT. t :lO I• I
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' Saddlebaek To1lay's Final
l .
N.Y. Stoeks
VOL. .66, NO. 289, 2 SECTIONS, 26 PAGES ORA':'GE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA TUESOA Y, OCTOBER 16, 1913 TEN CENTS
'
Saddleback Board Delays Drug Policy Ruling
\
By FREDERICK SCllOE!\tEHL
S¥uld a high school student possessing
manjuana on the Mission Viejo High
School campus be expelled, sent to a
drug rehabilitaticn program, Or both?
Trustees of the ~addleback Valley
Unifie{i School District again confronted
the thorny issue of a district drug policy
itonday night and agreed to continue
the -!ubject until early fl{oye_rober.
Prior to the November' meeting, in-
dividual board n:iembers are expected
to suj.>mit comments On what the policy
should say.
Discussion at this \\'eek's meeting
opened with a sta tement from the
Mission Viejo High School student coun-
cil, urging the following a~tion for drug
law offenders:
-Mandatory expulsion of students ar-
rested selling drugs on campus. Ex-
pulsion or students requires school board
action.
-Five-day suspension for any student
found under the influence of drugs while
on campus. Following the five day period
the student 's case would be revltwed
by a five-member Drug Abuse Com-
mittee for disposition.
The committee could recommend the
student be suspended for an additional
period, eipelled pennanently ar allowed
to retum to school. Final decision would
rest with the school principal.
-No school action on students aJTested
off campus for violations of drug laws.
The last. point met ~ition from
the Missk>n Viejo Parent Teachers
lrviJ!e Shakeup Hit -
Clark Raps Proposed Planner Ousters
B~ GEORGE LEIDAL
Of 1M 0.tlly ~llat Staff
Reorganization al the Irvine City Plan-
ning Commission for the second time
in the past six months w~ criticized
as "irressJoosibl.e" today by the city's
first planning commis!ion chairman.
Wayne A. Clark ~ University Park
sa1d, "I think the ciUzens of Irvine
deserve and should demand a, full and
complete explanation (or what appears
to be an irresponsible action on the
part of the City Council."
Clarlc sen•ed Jess than one year as
commission chairman, resigning eariy
Countians
Face Forced
Car.P~ling
By WILLIAM SCHREIBER
OI ._ ~IY l'1let Slaff
The estimated 150,000 Orange Coun-
t.lana who drive their own cars to work
in W Angeles each day may soon
find it's a luxury they can't afford.
The •latest . Environmental Protection
Ag~ regulatkllll for Los Ang~Jes will
make lone commuting a lot less at-
tractive than car-pooling or riding the
bus, according to the man who is Im-
plementing Orange County's awn mass
transi t system.
• Or. G. J. "Pete" Fielding, director
of the Or.ange C.Ounty Transit District.
said today the chances are also good
that the new rules will reach into Orange
ANTISMOG PLAN TO CURB
VEHiCULAR \!SE, Story Page 5.
County proper, affecting another 800,000
people wbo drive cars from home to
other destinations.
"I think the regulations will almost
certainly increase the cost of driving
it car enough to make many people
look at it as a drain on their budgets."
Fielding said. "Thj)se who can use .public
transit conveniently will turn lo it"
But Fielding said there is a big "if"
ii\volved.
~
this year In the face of threatened
. reorganization of the commission and
reduction of the nwnber bf com-
missioners. Robert West of Walnut
"Village suceeeded Clark as chairman
for two mooths.
The first commission shuffle came
in March when the council reorganized
itself. The riumber of planning com-
missioners remained at seven. And only
five original commissioners were
dismissed.
In secret session Saturday, councilmen
suggested they might reconsider yet
another revision of the_ _ city Jaw
Judge Sirica
Ref uses Bail
WASHINGTON (AP) -A federal
judge refused today to permit live.
Watergate conspirators to go tree
on 'bail while requests to have
guilty pleas thrown out are pend~
. -I ' ·mg.
U.S. District Coort Judge John
J. Sirica &Mounced his decision
after a stonny hearing during
which he criticiz.ed Sen. Herman
Talmadge, (D-Ga.), of the Senate
Watergate'Cnmmittee for implying
Slrlca had been too twsh with
the defendants.
Fout of the five who sought
release we.re in court: E. Howard
Hunt, Eugenio R. Martinez, Virgilio
Gonz.a1ez, and Bernard Barker.
When Hunl was before tbe com-
mittee, Talmadge said he_ found
it "very strange" that Hunt was
in prison while-the men who plan-
ned the break-in were free.
Disease Claims
Jazz Drummer
Gene Krupa,64
YONKERS,· N.Y. (AP) -Jazz drum-
mer Gene Krupa died today at his
home here. He was 64.
Krupa had been released from Yonkers
General Hospital a,bout a week ago after,
undergoing trealment for leukemia.
establishing tbe ~ission ,
City staff members Saturdar. 1n an
lmpiomptu public session were Qi.rected
to prepare a new commission ordinance
for consideration at tonight's council
meeting in city hall. That law is to :
-End terms or au city commissioners.
-Authorize appointment of five com-
missioners each to both the planning
and the community services com-
missions. i' '
----=-Each -appoi ntee· would be appointed
by a councilmen who would be em-
powered to remove his commissioner
tSe.e AITACK, Page~)
"Nixon Plans
To Meet 4
Arab·· Envoys
' WASHINGTON (AP) -The While
House announeed today that Presideht
Nixon will meet with four Arab foreign
ministers Wednesday to discuss the
fighting In the Middle East.
Thi? announcement came amid reports
that the eiivoys were carrying a message
from King Faisal of Saudi Arabia, who
has been Wlder intense pressure from
Arab counterparts to aeriy Mideast oil
to the United States.
BUt a spokesman for one Arab delega-
tion. said ail was not ane of the issues
MARINES BOARO IWO JIMA
FOR MIDDLE EAST, Pago 4
the ministers want to discuss. They
want only to take up "the U.S. i~
volvement in the war," the Arab
spokesman said.
White House Deputy Press Secretary
Gerald L. Warren would say only that
the foreign mini sters of Saudi Arabia.
Algeria, Kuwait and Moroceo "asked
to see the President to discuss the
current situation in the Middle East."
The White House said precise time
of the meeting, to be held in Nixon'!i_
Oval Office, had not been set.
In addition to Nixon and Kissinger,
a spokesman said it wouJd be at tended
by Foreign Ministers Ab d e 1 a z i z
Bouteflika of Algeria. Sabah al-Ahmad 'See !\fIDEAST, Page!)
Organization (PTO), which wants school
disciplinary action against off-campus
violatars.
A letter read to the board by Shlri
Hirrel. PTO president. urged students
coovicled of ielling drugs of{ campus
be expelled by the school board.
If the student was convicted ol a
lesser cbarge, the PTO .statement recom-
mended tlie violator be lransfened to
ar:otber high school in the district, or,
in some cases, also be considered for
expulsion.
Loilg ·Trek
The PTO letter stressed that the only
"'ay to craek the student drug use
\ g:;~~~~Jng :t t~f~~:m~~ set!!~~:~:~ TtJe letter also urged school officials
to \YOrk closely with local drug abuse
agencies.
"~ty hang up Is that we need to
give everyone a fair chance,'' com-
mented Trustee George Henry. "We
should offer 90Dle type af rehabilitalion
for everybody, no m.1tter bow deeply
u.ey are involved.."
llenry, along "'ith Trustee Dennis
Smith. h11s urj:tC'd the district ta ke
a "buman1tan:1n " appro:ich in the drug
policy. Trus!ees Chester Briner and
Joseph Peterson l'.·ant a hard line. Vin·
cent P.1cCullough, board president, has
opted for a middle path.
Trustee •lenry urged the students
them.selves to suggest rehabilitation pr~
grams to drug Jaw offenders. Student
representative SL Clair said he would
raise the matter at an upcoming .!tudent
COWlCll meeting.
Father Francisco .Mir~cle and-his ixplorer scouts
don backpacks in San Juan C_apistrano to co ntinu e
their pilgrimage. The long journey along the mis-
sion route of Father Junipero Serra began deep in
Mexico in July. It is to conclude in Carmel where
the remains of the priest lie. Story and additional
picture are on Page 3.
Reports of UFOs Flutter
Sightings Claimed by Residents of Four States
From Wire Services
If there really are unidentified Dying
objects (UFOs) out there, they've been
hovering again over at least four states
-Indiana·, Louiiiana, West Virginia and
Mississippi.
Sightings during the night or something
touched off a flurry to local calls to
baffled local officials.
Sheriff's deputies chased five orange-
reddish flying objects 12 miles through
the Louisiana piney woods late Monday
night and early today near Pine.
Deputy Michael Moore said the ships
almost attacked a police car.
"One of our deputies was scared pretty
bad," Moore said from the \Vashington
Parish sheriff 's department. "He turned
on his red lights. and they came down
at his patrol car. lie turned them off
and they just vanished like in a cloud."
In another sighting reported near
Slidell. across Lake Pontchartrain from
New Orleans, Lloyd Mercier said he
was dr iving home when he saw an
ob.lect "approximately IS or 20 feet
in dian1ete.r and it had a streak about
Voiceprint
Debate Deln ys
Brannon Trial
By TOlt BARLEY
a root wide straight through the middle ."
Several persons. including a \Veather
observer and a pilot experienced in night
flying, reported seeing an unidentified
flying objecc over the Raleigh County
Airport ~tonday nigbt near Beckley, W.
Va .
The object first appeared about 8:45
p.m. and remained in sight for about
30 to 40 minutes, according to Howard
?<.ioneypenny. weather service specialist
for the National Oceanic and Atmosphere
adminislration.
"It had no definite shape and I have no~ idea how far 31'.'ay or how big
it \vas," he said.
The airporl is not equipped ~·ith
radar, but virtually all cmployes
rcpor1cd seeing the objeet. It was
described as h::iving red, green and white
flashing lights.
'·.
"These people will use public transit
if somebody can come up nationally
with the fuods for an operating sulisidy
R:roviding for good, extensive service,"
Fielding said.
l ie said the lateSt EflA rulings
Uieoretically mean public transportation
'tfill have to pick up at least SO percent
ol the daily commuter trips from Orange
County to Los Angeles.
His last public appearance was Aug.
18 in Saratoga, N.Y., with Benny Good-
man, Whose band he joined in 1934.
Survivors include t\vO adopted children
and a brother, Jules. of Chicago.
Oakland's Andrews Back,
Of 1M Dally 1'110! Jl1tf
Saddleback College 'Trustee Alyn f\f.
Brannon· artd hi s co-defendant began a
two-day break from the courtroom today
"'hile both sides in the bookmaking-ex-
tortion trial prepared to debate eligibility
of lhe prosecution's cont rover Si a I
voiceprint evidence.
T1·ustees Approve
T'vo Ne'v Schools
For Saddleback
~·ey our estimates, that would mean
use of 2.000 buses and S14 million per
(See C0!\1!\1UTE, Page !)
•
Or.ange Coast
• •
Weather
J{azy sunshine is on the agenda
fot Wednesday along the Orange
Coast, with temperatures in the
mid-605 at the beaches rising to
84 Inland.
INSIDE TODt\ V
Tlirte men are fn custocL11 to.
clay for ths 1u1pscttd ktdn.ap
and mttrder of a woman, her
two children and a ftimlty friend
ht San Btrnordfno See 1tor~
Page 5.
(•11 .. nil• $
Clattllltd )0.1•
C-'tt 11
(NU'"r4 10
D41tll Holle•• •
litlllwlll Ii'-. I lillltl'ial._.. 11
l"IMK•· 1 .. 1' ,., Illa llKWll •
M~-14 Allll lllldtN I)
MW!lt II
MUf\lt1 flllftft U
Nlll9!111 Nl'lllt •
ClflllM (OUlllY I
tHrt. IJ.1' IMtk Mtrlttl 1 .. lt
Tattwl""" r , ........ , " Wtl~ I
W-'I N .... l>H
Wwlll ...... t
Funeral arrangements w e r e in-
complete.
Knipe suffe~ a heart attack in 1960,
which kept him inactive for a time.
lie retired in 1967, but came ba ck In
1970. leading a quartet' al New York's
Ph1za Hotel.
Lasl summer during the Newport Jazz
Feslival in New York, he played with
the reunited Goodman quartet. includ ing
clarinetist Goodman, pianist Teddy
Wilson and Lionel Hampton an the vibes.
Krupa also appeared July 4 at the
renaming of the Singer BoVll in New
York as Louis Annstrong Stadtum. Later
In lbe summer, Krupa gave a eulogy
Al the funeral af jaiz banjoist Eddie
Condon.
Alter graduation from high school In
his native Chicago In I~. Krupa got
a summer job as a soda jerk at a
Wisconsin beach "dlme-a-danct" hall.
When lhe 'drummer in the dance band
fai"nted across the soaa 1ountaln, Krupa
substituted for him and played th'e mt
of the season.
A fl er the aumn1er, his familY aent
him off to a seminary in Renue.lactr,
Ind., where he studied fGr the prtesthocid.
The following year, after h11 father's
death, he left the seminary to play
·drums in Chtcagd. His first records
were made in 1928 ,"ith a ChlC:lllJO group.
In lll29 he went to New York to
ploy ln the orchesLra o( Geor&e
fSee KRUPA. Plge !l
By Commissio:o.er's Order·
NE\V YOllK (AP\ ...... Baseball Com-
missioner Bowie Kuhn slapped Oakland
A's owner Charles 0. Finley on the
wrists today and slapped s e c o n d
baseman 1'1ike Andrews back on the
rebellious A's World Series squad.
Andrews, supposedly suffering from
a shoulder 3ilment. was placed on the
disabled list Sunday, an action which
Marvin Miller, executive director of the
Major League Baseball Players Associa-
tion, called "highly susplcioull" and
which Andrews' teammates and Kuhn
labeled embarrassing -and wOrse .
Andrews committed two 12th-Inning
errors.Sunday which gave the New York
Mets three runs and · a to to 7 vit::tory
that squared the Serles at one game
apiece. Less than two bour!I l3ter, he
was on the disabled list while his team-
mates were Oying to New York for
Tuesday night's third game.
FlnJey had requested that the A's
be given permission to replace. Andrawt~
w\Lh Manny Trillo. "There ls no basis
tO grant the rcquesl and It Is accordingly
d<nled," Ku ho replied.
"I mlghl odd lhal lhe llandllng of
this ll\llUtr had tbe udlnunate elfect
of un tairly mtbarrassint a player who
'·
has given many years of able service
to professional baseball .
"It is my determination !hat Andrews
remains a full-fledged memlX'r of the
Oakland World Series squad." Kuhn ad-
ded.
"There is no su,ggestion that this con-
dition (Andrews' shoulder) has changed
or worsened since the Seriell began.
or has been injured in this Series. The
faci that Andre\\'! was used . In Game
No. 2 by the Oakland club appe1rs
to il'ldicate to the contrary."
Flnley said tbe A's would abide l;y
the commissioner's decision.
Nuclear Pla11t s
~t AEC Oka y
BULLETIN
SAN rRANCl$CO (API -'l'hHlomi<
Energy .Commi~ion .11.iid it was author-
ized today to imie constru~tioo pcmths
for two nut::lear p0wer plMt.s at San
Onofre, south of San Clemen1e and Ille
Western While House.
Orange County Superior Court Judge
Everett W. Dickey called the delay lair. ~tonday alter Deputy District Attorn.cy Snddlcbatk Valley Unified Sc::hool
\Villiam Evans argued that !he u1-n1strltt 11·u5t~s scl wh~ls in motion
novalive voiceprint technique will un· ~lnnday nigh t for t"·o new elementary doubledly prove that defendant Emn1c11 Kelly made a highly incriminating sc hools. a junior high school and 1
l<!lephone call to a Newport Befl.ch pem1ament t::onlinu:it ion high school.
perfume salcsmllil. The two new tlf"mf'nlary campuses
Evans claims that Kelly. 34. of ll.'l~1 art• planned alonJI: J('ro111mo Road, one
Srngull Lane, Newport Beach. n1:ide !he t>:tst of Lake Vi<:ta Dr[ve and. !he other
cnll al a time that an eight-inch hunt1n~ ncnr Ridge Route , 111 !he Lake F'orest
knife was hurled into the \'1Cllm's front community.
door In a further bid 10 persuade him Tnist<>C:'I authorizt'<l thlt di1<0trict staff
10 settle a p ,000 gambling dcbl. lo proceed v.•i!h preliminary plannipg
And Newpol1 Detective Sgt. John for both school<: and acQuisition of land
Simon look the witness stand to lestify fron' the Occiden!al PC'troleum and
that M: called Kelly &opt. 13. 197Z, al 0<'\Clopmenl Corp
the c.11rdl'n Grove cJr dralership \\'he1·e In :i separate ac!il"ln, the hoard 111~
he 140rked. to get a 1ape rccordil1A arprovl'd con trncls ""ilh .rrnsen. Jonc:oi
of his \'OiC>e that allege<lly 1na!ehes up nnd Partners fnr arrhi1 t•c1u ral S{"'rvlces
~-ith the voice rcc:ordl'd in th<' extonion for :i !hird intern1c(H'1lt' srhool and a
threat . permanent loea!lon for Silvtrado High
F:vans argue s !hat th" \'Oiceprin1 School
fl'Chnlque . currently being usl'd :is ThC' intermrdint~ ~chool, for sP,venth
eW1erice. in .Jl llivcrslde CQ!.inty~t@.!,_riniJ. eighth _gr11fle _l!tuclents. is j:!lan~
ill a9" lnh1lliblc as loday's fingcrprintu1i; !111 land :ilon~Jerc1n~1ween Ridge
techniques. llnUtl' :ind Ctinndo ftoad in Lake Forest.
Kelly ;:ind Brannon. 42. of Sa111a 1\na, A site for the IX'rmancnt rontinuntlon
"·ere indicted by the Gr8nd Jury or1 <:choc>I (aclli!y hall not betn located,
multtplt charRes or book.making. ex· hut di~trict offlclals Jiope to find ont
!Ste DELAY, P1ge !l nt'.ar the !\1 1~sioo \'le jo Industrial Part.
'
{ .
OAl'l 'f' PU.OT IS
,
h·virie Planning Aides
Have Gro,ving Alumni
By GEORGE LEIDAL
ot ... o.n~ ,. .... s•
AT LEAST TWO more public servanlll will join the Former Irvine Planning
Commissioners Club, (FIPCC) If councilmen do tonight what they indicated
Saturday they would.
Considering the plaMing commission is to be reduced from a seven mem·
ber body to one with five commissioners, two are sure candidates for the un·
certain honOl'.
The FJPCC ranks after tonight, probably will outnumber the active roster
ot the Irvine Planning Commission.
Now, that's not too unusual for m0«t clUes who over a
period of years accumulate large numbers of citizens
who've tired of unloldlng large tract maps on tiny dais
des.ks.
,gti)l others leave planning commission service after
years of fighting density battles from unden:tandlng dt-
velopers' mathematical gyrations to fending off outrage.d
neighbors of. ·•subject parcels" about -to be blitzed with
apartments at It~ to the acre.
L•IDAL
LOTS OF Citl!!S, in short, wear out planning commissioners. It's only
right there'd be more ''former'' -.eomrnis.sioaer1-.-tba.n..acUve. commiasioners.
But Irvine bas yet to mark its second birthday and already there are five
charter members of FIPCC and two more unknowm wbo'U probably join to-
Dlgbt.
_ Strange ll Is that the new city, prematurely born int.o a world of urban
bllghl to preserve a chance to plan vast amounts of undeveloped acreage,
should have so mueb trouble with il3 planning commission.
'lbe public isn't supposed to be privy to why the second edition of the
commission is about to be scrapped for a third. Leaks from the private· session
suggest the revamped commission is due to a number of reasons. Among these
are:
'
-WORD THAT all the prol.,..Jooaf planning stall -have bad offer& from
otber ciUes and that because of "abrasive" relations between the current com·
mission and staff1.aoffi&.a.~'i.inking of accepting.t~.Qff_e.a._ --.,; --
-Not all the councilmen are convinced planning commlssioners of both
the first and second editions, have not been "abrasive" to them, too.
-The current mayor has made it clear he hasn't tboogbt much of either
of the planJtlng conunlssions and blames them for aendiog up faulty reeom-
mendatioos "every ooe of which has been overturned by the city council"
EVERYONE IN mVINE ls overworked. Starting a new city is hardly an
easy task .so relations between council , staff and commissioners may be ex:·
pected to be "abrasive" from time to time. •
What is a puzzle, however, is bow planning commissioners so eaBily can be
blamed for indecision and ineptitude, as: Mayor Burton put! it, when in fact
all the ~oners were chosen by the city council?
It's no secret which coUncllman appointed which commissioners. When
two or mbre are dropped from the commission It'll be no secret whose ap-
pointees·were deemed dispensable.
Inexperience may be the chief c.ause of council-commission ill will. If that
is recognized, then tbe two original 'commissioners who survived the first cut
hardly may be expected ,. be dropped oow.
Burton (then councilman) appointed his: incorporation electjon council
campaign chairman Harry Shuptrine to tbe first planning commission. Shup-
trine now chairs the second edition and makes no secret of bis independence
from the Mayor's political camp.
VICE MAYOR Henry Quigley appoin~ Frank Hurd to the ftiUnding eoin..
mission. Hurd was Qulgley's campaign,chairroap. The two have since had their
differences. ·
Shuptrine and Hurd were the holdovers Crom commission one to commis-
sion two.
If they remain on commi!s:lon three, they will do so at the pleasure of
some shlgle councilman. Just who that will be is in questiQtt. ,
For Shuptrine it is a matter of Burton's choice. 11le mayor may beCk hlm
or cityhood backroom adviser Gary Dalzell or another cityhood loyalist Lowell
Johnson. .. +
U Burton drops Shuptrine tonight, the commission loses the only member
who has eerv~ on any other planning commission in any other city, ever.
And, another club could form in lrvineo with three members: the Former
Irvine Planning Commission Chairman Club (FIPCCC).
WAYNE CLARK and Robert West are the founding members of the former
chairmen's club, the elite corps of discarded Irvine public officials.
Girl Escapes
Killer in Car
CARSON (AP) -A gicl escaped a
kille.r who shol lhree young persons
to death in a car near Cal St.ate I»
minguei Hills, police have revealed.
'It .was the first word from police
that anyone escaped the shotgun slayings
Saturday night.
Investigators refused to identify her
-she was described only as a "juvenile
girl" -or divulge whal she told them
regarding the killings. They said only
that she eS<'aped from the car and
hicf in a \'&cant field until officers ar-
rived.
Oll:ANGI COAST •
DAILY PILOT
Tho();•~ Cout o.t.ll.Y I'll.OT, wll!I .tlldl
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From Page I
A'ITACK .•. •
by merely giving notice to the city
clerk of the person destined to replace
the original appointee.
Councilman \Villiam Fischbach today
explained that he supports t b e
reorganization because seven com-
missioners are ''too unwleldy a number
to ""'Ork with."
Fischbach added he believes the plan-
ning commission must reflect the poUcics or the city council.
He echoed Mayor John Burton's view-
point saying, ''f personally think 1he
planning commission as a group has
been a disappointment to a number
of our citizens."
Fishbacb said be would reappoint Plan·
nlng Commissioner Robert Smith of Tur·
tie Rock.
Councilwoman Gabrielle Pryor in-
dicated she would reappoint l\1rs .
Maryanne Gaido to the planning com·
mission and ~1rs. Sally Ann Miller to
the community services commission,
which Mrs. Miller chairs.
No councilmen have indicated there
will be drastic changes in the community
service.'l commission appoin tments. The
law setting up that commission hov.·ever,
ill to be eonsidered t.onight so that it
may be made CQnSistent wilh the law
e.<rtablishing the planning agency.
M3Yor Burton said he would appoint
Gil Challet to the commwiity services
commi.sSion, OOt declined to indicate his
choice for I.be planning commis.'>ioo.
Burton originally claimed eredlt for
the appoln!Jnent of now chainnan Harry
ShuJ)U'lne to the founding comm!ssion,
Gary Dalzell will Burton's pick for the
second rommissioo.
Councilman E. R:iy Quigley Jr. ap-
pointed LowclJ Johnson to the planning
commi MiO'n and it i!!n't known 11 he'll
L'Ontinue that appointment a(te.r tonight. S. Ci.-.t1 All ht•rt1111•u • T,,_,._. 4tZ'"4410
·----·-~. Wl;-o>'•~l•-l"ilMliJl""f" '-II•"''· Ho -n••C 111w"t11M!o, "'"""'' _..... ... _,,,_,. ..... ~ ~ IM •~P~... WI"-! 1-111 pet•
.......... ol (ffl'•IQM -·
--Commissioner Frank. Hurd Is a
holdover from lht founding planning
commi~lon .
~ cln J POI'• J>lkl ti Coo!• M*••· (•!llon!I•. 1~"-'••lf<! IW Utrltr H IJ
.....,1111¥• In' "''" u •I ''"''"""' "''(llor1 .. 1111\11101'11 ",., l'NftlPIJy,
1-lurd, plaMlng commissioner Paul
Tonkovich and Jtobert llolt of the com·
munHy suvlcts commission, llrt. the
'Choices fatjng Vice f\.t.ayor llenry Quigley
as he cons Iden appointees lonlgh!.
New County
Bus Rout,es
Hit Coast
• New bus routes ot the Orange County
Traru;it District will inclOOe direct
service lo San Clemente, San Juan
Capislrano, Caplstrano Bench, Dana
Point, El Toro, Lagima Niguel and
Mission Viejo.
The routes are to be initlated In April
after arrival of 63 r.ew buses.
Other increased services wUI be of·
fered on Brookhurst Street to improve
ridership' in Fountain Valley.
In addition to the south county 1ines,
new service will be offered in La Palma
and Yorba Linda which also have no
bus lines at pn!sent.
Intercity lines will inclOOe Edinger
Avenue, Valley Vi ew Street and Jam·
boree Boulevard.
The new buses are expected to anive
in late March and the new lines in·
augurated during April and May.
Because Dial·A-Ride is being studied
in several cities in addition to the present
service in La Habra, most of the new
buses will be used on intercity lines.
Orange Cpunty Transit D i s t r l c t
C'-.eneral Manager Gordon •' Pete' '
Fielding said one-hour service on the
new lines wouJd be offered and some
buses wouJd be used to provide more
frequent service on seasonal peaks such
as summer beach travel on already
estabLished routes.
Establishment of the new routes will
cover all inter.community lines recom·
mended in the Special Bus Needs Study,
Fielding said. __ .__.;,__
ISRAEL TROOPS
GET ICE CREAM
' TEL AVIV (UPO _-Tiree clvili ..
volwiteers bav~ gone to the Syrian front ,. band out Ice cnom 1ad abeJ1>et
1,. tropt-lloe !Jr..U troops, the National
radio Nld Mooda1.
• Two of them, Simha Kadml and bis
wife, Bracha, said they had done the
same thin2 in the: 1956 Sinai campaign. "Unreal~' said an Iaraell 1soldier down-
ing a shorbet.
Fro,. Pagel
KRUPA ...
Gershwin's show "Strike Up the Band."
The orchestra, said to be the first white
swing band on Broadway, included~
man, Condon and trombonist Glenn
Miller. and was led by Red Nichol!.
•
•
Seltool Site ' • .. • C_~po :, Trustees
'
Select Viejo
• • -
•I • •
Capiitrano Unlfled &cbool. District Westberg, absent for vacaUoo Mooday,
trustees ended tbelr uncertalnty and remalned adamant In t_2PP08itico, It Waa:
debate-~slze-ol a tcbool atte_lwne«t, but Hurst swung ,. the majority
they hope ti) own In Mltllon Viejo--Wli<n lli...,..e-camo.~ ..
fioally aettltng on the tai-geot 11110U11t Trultee• hold o1r oo a dedlton 11111
of ._ poollble. . arowtiJ In 11.e IOUthetb' ' pol1ion 'o!
By unanllDO\IS vote the board tgroed Mission Viejo where lludent. at pment
to beglo coodemnatton ,,....,....,. on are attending claM tn portable bulldtnga
a 13·&ere parcel of land ow n e d by brought In tfil5 summer. •
tbe M.1.51\on Viejo Corrlpaoy. It ls lm· Pro,JectJcm show that the pennanent
mediately adjacent to a aegment being schoo1 on tho site to be condemned
used as a temporary can'lp(m for elemen-would 'probably be fUlJ lo capacity the
tary pupils. day 1t·1s completed. •
The size °'" Ute site nezt to the insent Trustees held of! on a deicislon t!M>
Castille School was the illua when the weeks ago primarily ,. hear from ccunty After stints with bands led .bY Buddy
Rogers and Goodman. Krupa formed
his own orchestra in 1938. He remained
a band leader thereafter, except ror
orie year -1943 -when be served a
slx·month prison tenn for a narcotics
conviction. After his release, he was
briefly with Goodman and Tommy
Dorsey 1before re-forming his own band.
· board ·met two-....U ago-wlt!J the park a deparlmtnt apoteameo. 1bM
majority · opting for-the malimum agency oflilcally owiia the site w be r e
amount of laod avail..... 'Ihasteel Bob the J>C!Nblez. sit because the land is
Krupa and his orchestra appeared in
a series or movies in the 1940s. In
1941, Life magazine ran a seri1s ot
multiplHXJX18W'f: photos of Krupa in ,
action. and said hls bands moved so
fast the camera had to be speeded up.
From Page 1
DELAY ...
tortioo and conspiracy.
. It was alleged that both m.en were
involved in a Harbor Area bookle racket
that put $15,000 a week into the organi7.a·
Hu"'1 and Or. · Edward W-rg, part <if a parb' commitment by the
however, favored a SIDlller aioount of development firm.
acreage becaus< ol the cost I.actors. A two-you 1-allows the dlstriCI
All motlcos were tabled. lo use the land u a school site.
3 Choices Given
For Irvine Bond
Election Date
Recent changes in slate 1aw governing ·
mwUcipal elections leaves the city of
Irvine onJy three choices or a date
for a parks purchase and improvement
bond election.
'!be ultimate ioal, however, •as for
the j<itnt ... ol the ... tire paroel ..
• park and school. ..
Some negotiaUons have take!i place
between the school and. parks_dJatncta,
but -... ktllks In the proposal rema!JI.
Parks . olfldal ·Robert Y ablooald told
trustees that the immediate future far
the portable school appears bealtby
because the county would not be able
to consider development on the spot
as a par.It for at !east two years. •
tion's coffers. --.r. .. vae-P.,e~J.-.,..,=---=~ Diek~--1.~~~ pan of ~
defense hopes m pretrial maneuvenng
Deputy City /tlmneY Joltn Murphy
said today the new state law which
shUI! the City CoonciJ ,... lmn mid-
April to March 5 also affecll uy bood
elecUom to be called by general law
cities.
"And when it is time to develop.
we foresee that the funds would have
to come from a special ta :r i n g distrk!t
organized among the property owners
in the area," be said. .,
lfe·-add!d ·{hat ·•'coosiderablf more
dialope" ...Wd be r<qUlred Oii the joint·
use issue before 8Jl adequate agrtement
could be worked oot with the two aomn-
mait enuties. COMMUTE Monday when be rejected the argument
. • • • that the conversation taped by Simon
year in operating costs," Fielding saJd.
The OCTD currently bas just over
100 buses with plans over the neJt
few year.t to expand to 300. Fielding
said that means he can handle onJy
about six percent of the trips the EPA
is talking about.
"Without a lot of assistance and some
good le.ad time, a 50 percent trip figure
is out of our reach," he said. "Our
current mass transit plans will take
at least 10 years to implement and
even they wouldn't be enough.''
Fielding said the average commuter
will begin to feel the crunch of the
new EPA rules as early as ne1t June,
with imposition required 10 percent
surchirie on au municipal parking fees
to cover the cost o( ma:ss transit dtvelop-
, ment.
nie parking surcharge wut leap to
25 percent a year later.
By 1977, the court-mandated EPA
regulaUons will control construction of
any new parking facillties in the Los
Angeles basin and other metropolitan
areas in the United States and would
1>rovide priority freeway lanes for buses
and car-pools.
Fielding said there are good examples
of how increased parking costs bave
forced people to reconsider using mass
transit.
"li:i Washington. D.C .. where it cosU
$3.SO to $4 a day to park, large numbers
of people have turned to the buses.
which cost less than $1 a day and
nothing to park," he said.
Fielding said he can see a time under
the new EPA rults when car commuters
to Los Angeles will pay at least $.'!
or more for par~g every day,
Fielding said it is not clear yet whether
the EPA rulings directly affect the
metropolitan areas of Orange County
-specifically centered in Garden Grove,
Santa Ana and Anaheim.
"It would appear from looking at initial
reports that Orange County is considered
part of the Los Angeles metropolitan
area and hence would be directly af·
fected by the rule!," he said.
Planning oflici~ls in several Orange
Coast cities said today they haven't
had etlough time to study the regulations
lo determine what local effects there
will be. ·
But Fielding said it' is almosr certain
tha t cities which generate a lot of traf£ic
- such as Newport Beach -will have
to come up with some alternatives to
car traffic and increased parking.
"If parking' is: regarded by the EPA
as fOSU!rlng pollution; then the cities
are going to have to find alternatives
qu.ickly to meet the law," he said.
Fieldin·g•s contenUon thaf much of the
enforcement burden will fall to local
government has been supported by
C'.eorge Taylor, executive secretary of
the Air Resources Board in Sacramento.
"Much of the responsibility will fa!!
on local governments and I thlnk there
will be a very close look at "'hat can
be done to encourage car pools,'' he
S3id.
Los Angeles Mayor Tom Bradley s.ild
Monday the EPA measure! are "a
necessary evil " to get motorists out
of their cars and into pools or boses.
Other segments or the new EPA rul-
ings will burt the average car commuter
as welt, Fielding said.
For example, the EPA Is k>okJng at
~as rationing as one of the only ways
to cut car traf!ic enougll • to do any
good in big mctr()pOl!tan areas.
Experts for the EPA claim virtually all
traffic on Los Angeles roads: would have
to be cllmlnated to meet the 1977 Clean
Air rrqulremcnts.
Jo'~reho1nb Spews Beer
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -Jlc<r
d\s:tributors here posted a $5,000 reward
l\fonday for lntonnation leading to the
arrest and convlclfon of persons who
firebomhed a Coors truck last week.
serl~.sly Injuring rui cmploye.
in Garden Grove violated Kelly's con-
sUtutional rights and could not be ad·
milted into evidence.
"Mr. 'Kelly was not ln custody at
the time," Judge Dickey said. "I regard
it as a voluntary statemenl and there
was no need for Sgt. Simon to warn
the defendant at the time of the
telephOne conversation thal he was a
police officer."
Evans disclosed late Monday that he
will call Lt. Ernest Nash of the Michigan
State Police Department to the witness
stand if Judge Dickey allows introduction
or the voiceprint evidence.
Nasb is regarded as the italloo's
foremost expert in the new teclmique
and he is CWTelllly testifying in
Riverside trial action that was granted
by the judge When Jl.lltiCe Robert
Gardner of the Fourth District i:curt
of Appeals agreed that voiceprint
evidence could be lntroduc.ed.
From Pagel
MIDEAST • • •
al Jabir al-Sa.bah of Kuwajl, Ahmed
Taibl Benhima of Morocco and Umar
al-Saqqaf of Saudi Arabia.
It is understood that Nixon and King
Faisal exchanged messages since the
outbreak of Arab-Israeli fighting 11 days
ago.
Asked about this, Warren said. "We
do not as a rule discuss diplomatic
contacts from here." _ _ _:___
Annollllcement of Wednesday's meeting
between Nixon and the Arab envoys.
who are in New York for sessions of
the United Nati.ons~ came after Secretary
of State Hcnr¥ A. Kissinger met for
an hour with the President.
Kissinger also attended an hour·long
meeting of tile Washington Special Action
Group, a panel of top-level diplomatic-,
military and intelligence officials who
continually keep track of Mideast
developments.
Irvine may plaee ti! expected $lO
to $25 million bood measU:re on the
March 5 ballot or watt until Jane 4
or Nov. 5, 1974, Murphy said. Tru8tees Reject
A:U ·School Bids Toillght councilmen will -_. recommendation of the oommunlty
services commission' aod department
dir«IDr Paul Brady and parb bond
cooSl!ltanl! Ribera and Sue. All air« In Saddlehack now the ,June_®.J•_.l~-~-~-
election. ------·--
Until advised ol the state change o1 _Saddleback Valley Unllled School
election dates for general Jaw cities, District, trustees have rejected all con--
Irvine had considered a February date tractors bids for construction of an
for the bond election. el.em~tary school 1n the New Wor\d
-distnct of Laguna llllt!.
Fossil Hunting
At Construction
Sites Gets Okay
Newport Beach moved Monday to re.
quire private property °""""' ID allow
scientific ei:ploraUon · ~ all Sdtntlfied
an:heologlcal dtes before -.uction
can take place.
Councilmen and p l t 11 n I n g com·
missioners, meeting in joint HSSlon,
ordered the propooed -.mUoo el·
emeot or their general plan modtliod
to inclOOe the stipuJaUon that the Pacific
Coast Archaeological Society and an
aca<!emlcfiii!ltullon be -nolllied prior
to any "largHCale" improvements and
that scientific exploraUon be permitted.
The change came at the insistence
of planning Commissioner J a c It I e ·
I-feather who made ber pitch, she aaid,
"at the risk of being ca11ed the 'Queen
of the Fossils.' "
Public bearlogl aod formal acttoo by
city authorities on the overall plan will
be needed be(ore the fossil requirement
goes Into effect.
The lowest bid for the project ••s
about $200,000 more than the fl.212,000
cost allowed under sttte school coq-
strueUon regu]alions:
'!be school ;., • pllumed (or a partel
or land at the lntersectian ol Blrberra
aod ~ Vottorio. Dr1V.e1 , SUiJiriJlten<lellt . Wllllam Zogg 14ld
trustees: Monday night the Portion of
the bid f~ electrical work made ~
a maJ;ir portion of the COit overrun. on Zogg's ..-men<tatlon, the board
oped ,. rebid the entire project.
Biass Thief Gets
'
650-pound Haul
A thief who had a lot ol bran hlo
lot ,_e today alter loadtog up 11,300
"""" o1-bran lire hyiliant val"!ii
welihfng 650 pounds, which had ~
dumped at tn Irvine construction lite. . . Euaooe Jeffrey, ol Card Conttnictlqn
Company, said the 10 brass hydrant
auemblles had i.n hidden behind a ·
mound of oaod far off the lllreel al
Holyotk Drive and Almood Street.
Jeffrey rold Officer Harry Ehrlich the
fire hydrant valve grand theft case wu
the. ftrst such lncldent he has ea·
counten!d in a long construction career.
I\ALEIDOSCOPE
\
Our showroom is a virtual k•loidoscope of colon. The .......,, •re
varied-:
We know that color coordinating is tho primary ,torget when buy.
ing carpet. Qualify is usually second in lino, •nd because wo hove such •
vast selection of qu1lifies1 it is usy to coordinate color ancf quality to
elch individual's taste.
Howevor, we know that a volume of sample. looking at you can
seem very confusing -but we feel that ahowing just a few Mmple1 is not
a fair representation of the ctrpet business. Our huge selection gives our
salespeople every possible option in worlcin9 with people, helping thom
to find tho perfect choice.
,.
So ii you ere in the 1Mnet to select your carpeting -select
Alden'• to help you, thet's what we'r• hore forllll
HOURS1 Moo, Tl;ru Tt4an.. t .. l:JO
ALDEN'S
CARPETS e DRAPES
166J•Placotla Aft.
COSTA MESA
'646-4838
,. ... t .. t -~T. t 1JO .. I
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VOL. 66, NO. 288, 2 SECTIONS, 24 PAGES
' '
. •
. --
ORANGE COUNTY, C>iLIFORNIA
-~-
Today's Final
N.Y. Stocks
'
MONDAY, OCTOBER 15, 1973 TEN CENTS
Parking Charges to Reach Orange County?
By WILLIAM IJCHllEIBER
Of '""' e>.lly ..... ''-!' '
The esUmated 150,000 Orange Couo·
tlans who drive theii own c~ to work
in Los Angeles ~ch day may soon
fmd it's a luxury they can't afford.
The !at"ll Elivtroom..iol Protection Ag~ncy re&W•tionS for Loi A.Qa;eles will
make ·IOne commuting , a 'Jot .1eu at-
tractive than~ or rJdiag the J>u!, ,ccon1ioi . io UM maa w~ Is lm-
P!ententlng Qraage COunty'a own maA
••• ' -
tianslt system.
Dr. G .• J. "Pete" Fielding, dirtctor
of the Orange eoun7 1Taiiii\ D131r!d,
ANTISMOG PLAN TO CURB
VEHICULAR US!, Story P. 5
sale! 14day Ille chancel are also good
that the new rules wlll reach into Orap:ge
County proper, affecting 8J!Olher tMI0,000
people who drive cars from home to
other destinations. .
1SOD
·"
"I think the regulations will almost
certainly increase the cost of driving
a car eoougb to make many people
look at it as a draln on their budgets."
Fielding said. "Those who can me public
transit convenlenUy will turn to it."
But Fielding said there ls a big "if"
involved.
"These people will use public transit
If somebody can come up nationally
with the fwxb ror an Owating sub.1idy
providing for good, extaisive service,"
Fielding sa id.
He said the latest EPA rulings
theoretically mean pubttc transportation
will have to pick-up at least SO pertent
of the dally commuter trips from Orange
County to Los Angeles.
"By our estimates, that would mean
use of 2,000 buses and $14 million per
year in operating costs," Fielding said.
The OCTD currently has just over
100 buses with . plans over the next
feYf years to expand to 300. Fielding
• ans1on
Huntingto11
Council
Votes 5-2
By TERRY COVIl.LE
Of tile D11tr ,11'1 Stiff
Southern California-Edis-On Company
won city approval Monday night to ex-
pand its steam generating plant in Hun-
tington Beach and dpuble the plant's
output of eleclricity. (Related Story.
Page 3.)
The expansion approval came on a
s to 2 vole of the Huntington Beach
City Council.
said lhal means he can handle only
about six percent o.f the tri ps the EPA
ls talking abouL
"Without a lot of assiJtance and some
good lead time, a 50 percent trip figure
Is out of our reach/' he llaid. "Our
current mass transit plans will take
at least 10 years to implement and
even they wouldn't be enough."
Fielding sa id the . average commuter·
will begin io feel the cri.mch of the
new EPA rules as early aa next June,
wlth imposition required 10 percent
surcharge on all municipal parking fees
to cover lhe cost of ntass transil develop-
ment.
Tbe p.irking surcharge will 1eap to
2S percent a year later.
By 1977, the court-mandated EPA
r.egulalions will control construction of
any new parking facililies in the Los
Angeles basin and other meltopolilan
areas in the United States and would
(See C0~1l\IUTE, Page l)
rove
Edison officials must now take their
. ~'"' P<-1 before tbe . 8'\lllll --,,.,,..;,, ~al 7.oae CoriservatlOli Com-
mils:ion for another approval before work can be~ to enlsrJe the generating ·plant
an Pacific Coast Highway.
Eipanslon of Ille pltnt was opposed
by environmentalists and Huntington
Beach homeowners who Jive in the
shadOw o.f the big generators.
<:"° , • Wiii' P'll.t Iliff P'Jlo,. AUDIENCE FILLS HUNTINGTON BEACH COUNCIL CHAMBERS FOR EDISON HEARING
P.,rnr Company Officia ls Cl .. r One Hurdle on Ro.ct to Expansion of Loa I Plant
' • ' • .. • Qtl.ll' , ... , ,,.., '"'19
RICKY BRANDT; 1o;· OF,-WESl'Ml,.STERI SHOWS HIS SPUNK ..
'Li'I Crunder' Le.ads West o _raoge County United Cruude
' ~ ' .
.
~ounty .Boy 'Crusader' ..
. . '
For Charity C~1npaign
By HILARY KAYE
Of lltt °"'" t'lt.t llaff
Al the drop of a bat, young Ricky
Brandt throws tfack his head and breaks if'° an litfecUous &Iggie. His blue eyes
~rkle behind bom-rlmmed glasses, and
you can 'tell the liUle 10-yeaN>ld lad
II h•P!>Y·
In betweer. munditag on a hefty piece
his ~avorite fried dttckcn, Ricky ~ds like iny lither JO-year-old boy,
at peace in the world.
. lie says he hatet school, hates girls
even more, likes t.o play army ~·ith
h\1 brother and loves water.-balloon ...
fights, 9nd, he wanta to bf a fireman
w~n he grows up.
Typlcnl as he may sound. Ricky is
different from most Hiiie boys. Dorn
~·Ith Sptna-bifida. A congc nltal defect
ol !he spinal oord. Ricky Ms been .•
paraly?.ed trom the waist down since
birth.
Jie has been in aod out. Qf hospitals
all hii life ·and has faced numerous
operations.
RJcky's diJease Ls non-proeress.ive,
however, and will not gro.,. V.'Orae. Now,
be must learn to live with the ever-
present steel brace from the walsi down,
and crutChea: he uses to wa lk. From the
looka and sounds of Ricky, he ls leamin1
well.
Ricky Is this year's "U'I Crusader,"
the campaign symbol ror the United
Crusdade, and rcpr~nli oru: _ _oj
U:ou1ancls helped by the O'\lsade's tund. ·
rni~lng t!f{ort1 .
Ricky nt'cds lo be helptd Into and
oul of chairs, \.\'hl ch m11y be 1wic:ward
for thMC oot accustomed to helping
IS<e RICKY, Pa&e %)
'!
Only two of the seven councilmen,
however, supported their opposition. Environmental
Group Threatens
To Bloek Edison
Tempqrary Setback
Norma Gibbs, a psychology professor,
and Henry Duke, a stockbroker, opposed
Edison's $.110 million expansion proposal.
The council majority, in supporting
F.dison's plan, conceded the expanded
plant will present "a substantial adverse
impact on the environment, primarily
in the form of decreased air quality
caused by fossil fuel consumption."
Coastal Board Rejects
The Environmental Coalition of Orange
County, Inc.. today threatened to file
a lawsuit to _block Huntington Beacb
approval for Soutbem California Edi.son's
power plaat.
Plan for Bolsa Chica
But in the motion presented by Al
Coen, councilmen also said: "However,
the council further finds that any adverse
impact will be outweighed by substantial
benefits to the community through the
necessity of expansion of electrical
energy sources to meet the needs of
(See EDISON, Page %)
Station Employe
Battered in One
Of 3 Robberies
A ~year-old service station attendant
was beaten unconscious with a pop bottle
during one of three Huntington Beach
robberies Monday.
Walter Baumgart, 20, of Westminster
Is in intensive care at Huntington
lntercommunity Hospital .
No other i.njuriea were rcporled in
the robberies under investigation. Police
said today they do not have an estimate
bf the losses suffered in the stickups .
The first robbery in the string of
three occurred early J\:londay morning
at !he Union 76 gas station at ~1agnolia
Slreet and Warn er Avenue.
A passerby called pollcl: The station
owner later told officers he believes about
$100 was missing from the till.
Investigators said today thal due lo
head injuries, Baumgart is still unable
to give them a detailed account of
the robbery.
At about 11 p.m. the next two robberies
occurred nearly simultaneously In the
downtown area of the city.
Attorneys for -1he coalition con!end
that Huntington Beach has improperly
assuined the role of "lead agency" -
the: agency issuing first approval -
for the power plant expansion.
The environmentalists also claim the
city failed to send copies of Edison 's
environ mental imPact report to all agen-
cies which might become involved in
the Edison project, thereby failing to
comply with the California Environ-
mental Quality Act of 1970.
Verlyn Jensen, of the legal firm of
Jensen and Jones, tried to halt Monday
night's city council hearing on Edison
expansion, but failed as hfayor Jerry
1t1alncy gaveled him out of order.
''There is a question raised over the
jurisdiction of this body to hold a hear-
ing," protested Jensen.
"You're out of order " snapped
1fatney. '
"You're operating under state law.
\\fill you deny my prolest ?" asked
Jensen.
"I 'll receive and file it," replied
~fatney.
A frustrated Jensen tumed to City Al·
lorney Don Bonfa and asked. "\\1r. Al ·
lorney, are you going to allow hin1
to proceed in this manner?"
Bonfa leaned over his microphone and
sent lhe audience in howling laughter
wtren he slowly replied, "The mayor
does as he pleoses."
TilC dispute over who is '.'lead agency"'
involves the city and the Public Utl lilies
Commission (PUC ) v.·hich controls lhe
establishment of po\.\·er plants.
The state office of planning and
research in the resources agency must
settle lhe di spute.
Bonfa told councilmen he would not
(See TIIREAT, Pagel)
By CANDACE PEARSON
OI tlll CMlilY P'li.t 11111
Improvtment plans for Bolsa Chica
State Beach in Huntington Beach were
torpedoed Monday by the South Coast
regional Zone Coastal Commission.
However, the action was only a tern·
porary setba ck for the state Department
of Parks and Recreation because the
commission left the door open for a
new application.
Precipitating the denial was what the
commission called a "piecemeal presen·
talion'' of the state's Plans for Bolsa
Chica instead of discussion or an overall
masler plan.
The project called for one building
with rf!trooms and dressing rooms, a
2~5-space parking lol, two lifeguard
stands, sewage, water and electric tines
from \Varner Avenue to mid·park and
curb and gutter improvemcnls.
The new entrance wilh parking lot
would be about t .S to (wo miles sou1h
or \Varner Avenue on Pacific Coast
Ilighway.
Senior Citizens
l\leet i11 Valley
All Fountain Valiey residents more
tha n 50 years old have bf>en invited
to organite a senior citizerui group al
a planning meeting Thursday.
The meeting will be held al J p.m.
at the city's CommWlily Center, 10200
Slater Ave. In one, two ar:tned men held up the
Taco Bell, 818 Pacific Coast Highway, ~ccordlng to 1 cily spokesman, the
and In the other a lone gunman held Govet:llot• POtidered re'lreatlon department has been receiv-two people at bay whlle robbing Dene 's Ing reques!S for organizalion of such
Liquor Store, S26 Main St.
Th e Taco Bell sliclrJp OCCU1Ttd when \VASlllNGTON (AP "1 -Former 9 poop.
the stand aMlstant manager. Steven .Delaware Gov . Russell W. Petl':rson )\·i ll "Interested persons should allend this
Beard~ 11, was_s.losing for the _ni&.ht. be . nominated to succeed Russel.I E. meeting and help decide the scope of
lie told officers liC was "i'lccoslCd by --rrAUlaJ ctmt~or the Councrl on--trur group ll! well li! lhc p.1rttculirr-
Lwo men wearing ski masks pulled over Environmen!al Qu.n~ty. th~ WJ11!e l!ous_e actlvilll':l'i 10 be plt1nncd for the futur<'," their races. s:iid 1\londay. Ofhc1als sa1cl lh:it Pres1-\.A k .. "!. d
They ordered hhn lo ol)('n the sofe dent Nixon ln!('nds 10 nominate Pctrnion h11.:. spo rsman ~ooc · .
and when he lold them he couldn 'I, for lhe $41,500-a-ycar post. subject to for lurthtr 1nform1111on contact the
(Stt RO~Bt.~IES, Pagt II Senate confirmation. t"" reorcation· department, 962-~24.
•
I
Voting for the project were five com-
missioners: Rimmon Fay. Louis Nowell,
Don Phillips, Russ Rubley and Don
\Vi Ison.
Voting no were commissioners Ronald
Caspers, Art Holmes, Robert Rooney.
Judy Rosen er. Carmen \Varschaw and
Don Brighi. Commissioner James Hayes
was absent Seven \'Oles were required
for approval.
"\Ve need a master plan lo see how
it all fits together." commission
chairman Bright told John Thorpe or
the state parks department after the
vote. The commission wlll look at 'the
project again after its staff studies the
plan.
Pushing for defeat of the state plan
Monday was Vince ~loorhouse, director
of harbors and beaches for the city
of Huntington Reach.
"It's only right that the public sector
is required to do what !he private sector
is," s<iid ~·loorhouse, who criticized the
EIR and the state's failure lo improve.
light and landscape the center di\'idcrs
along Pacifi c Coast Hijh\.\·ay.
Orange ' Coast
•
Weather
Hazy sunshine is on the agenda
for \\'('dnl~sday along tht-Orange
Coast. with temperalurl's In the
m1d-6ps at Ille beaches rising to
8~ inland
INS IDE TODA l '
Three mctl ore in c'lstody to.
doy for the s11spec1ed kidnap
nnd murder of n wortl(l lt, her
ttoo th1 /dre11 and ri fan1i/y frie11d
in Sall Bernarrln10 See Stoll
PaQe 5.
'
. (
-...
•
> ' % DAILV PILOl •
Capsllle CouDcil Action
Hert lo e1p1uJe fonn art major actiaoa taken l;tooday ntght by tht! llun-
tin&tOO. Beach City Council : • ' -..
POWER• ApprOvtd & lo % expansion of Soulbtnl CaHIOl'llil Edlaon'a local
power plant, admil Ung iU adverse effect on air quality, but opting . to firlt
solve the enerb'Y cri!is.
FIRES: Approved a fire ~t agrttmenl wtt.h Fountain Valley, West·
mtmter and Seal Beach to ellm.inale city boundaries in ter?TU of firt protec-
tion.
WATER : Dr.nied a request from the Irvine Ranch Water District for $102,·
ooo in lt>ase mooey not paid by the city while the San Joaquin Reservoir was
out of se rvice.
LOBBYIST: Signed a toptract witb lbe cities of Anaheim, Santa Ana and
Gardt'n Gro\'e to shRtt the services of William Morgan, the man hlrtd by the
four cities lO ser\·e as tht-ir "t.tan in Washington." .
GOTHARD: Authorized the city to seek a $J'1S,OOO federal grant to help
realign and reconstruct Gothard Slrfft as an inducement to industrial devel-
opmcDL
BOOKMOBfLE: Instructed the city admintstrator to aplore the possibility
of r,ptacing the city Ubrary's rundown, and now retired, bciokmobi le.
CAJ\lPAIGNS: Asked the city adrrtinlstrator to report on the possibility of
limiting City Council campaign expendirures.
Two Huntington
ProjectS Facing
Coastal Hearing
Two Huntington Beach apartment proj-
ects ~;u have public hearings Wed-
nesday in San Diego before the state
~ta.I Zone ConservaUon Commisskln.
l'rotn Page l
COMM UTE ...
provide priority fr eeway lanes ror buses
and car-pools.
Fielding said there are good examples
of bow lncreued parking costs have
forced people to reconsider using mass
transit.
'lbe oommission meets at t :30 a.m..
~In the Pacllic Room of the Babta Hole!,
1198 W. Mission Bay Drive.
"In Washington , D.C., where it costs
$3.50 to $4 a day to park, large numbers
of people have turned to the buses,
which COii !es& than 11 a day and
nothing-to part~'' be said.
Fielding soi( be can ,.. a limO under
the DeW EPA rules when car commuten tO ·Los Angeles will pay ai least 13
or more for par~g 'every day. -
Both West Orange County projects
to be beard were denied pennlt! by
the South Coast Regional Zone Comerva-
tion Commission, which covers Orange
and Los Angeles counties.
George Michelle is proposing to build
an ll~t apartment ·building at Acacia
and 19th Streets. &g!onal planners
reconunended denial because It ls a~
jacent to a noisy oil compressor, which
would make residential 1 i v I n g
"WlSuitable."
A few commissioners objected to the
project's denaity o( %2 units per acre.
Also denied w8.!I Leonard O~ Undborg's
propoeed 12-unlt apartment building at
ll>llth St. The regional commission
said the area ia undergoing local plan-
ning.
l'...,..P .. el
ROBBERIES. ••
they locked him ln a cJ05et whJle they
ransacked the ofllce.
He had to walk to the nearby police.
station to report the crime, officers
noted, because the telephone bad been
ripped off the wall by the band.its.
In the liquor store holdup, clerk Donald
Loomis and a woman Ct.13tomer were
surprised by a lone gunman who police
said wu a1ao wearing a st.I ml.!k.
"nie robber, anned with a .4a.ealiber
revolver , ordered Loomis to clean out
the store's cash registers and then had
the two people lie face down ln the
store room while be made his escape.
Loomis told officers an undetermlned
amount of cash, checks and food stamps
was taken in the holdup.
Parade Talk Slated
By Band Director
Frank Barnes. director of Foi.mt.ain
Valley High School's marching band,
will tell members and guests of the
Baron Booster Club the intricacie3 of
judging a parade.
The booster club meets at 7:30 p.m.,
Thursday, in the school 's faculty dining
room. Everyone ls invited. Special draw·
ings v•ill also be held Th ursday by
the.pepsters and the cross country team .
OIANGI COAST M•
DAILY PILOT
Tl'• Or_. CN•I OAIL 'f ,ti.OT wlllt ""'<ft
11 -"'td !ht H•wt·l'nu. I• 1111&11....., 1111' ,,.. O<•-C011t """'""""" c_...,. ,_
Fielding said it is not clear yet whether
the EPA rulings directly affect .the
metropolitan areas of Orange County
-specifically centered ln Garden Grove,
Santa Ana and Anaheln1.
"It would appear from looking at initial
reports tbat Orange County is consktered
part of the lA:ls Angeles metropolitan
area and hence wouJd be dlrecUy af.
fected by the rules," he said.
Planning officials in several Orange
Coast cities said today they haven't
had eoougb time to study the regulaUons
to determine what local effects there
will be.
But Fielding. said it is almost certain
that cities which generate: a lot rJ. traffic
-auc:b as Newport Beach -will have ·
to come up with some alternatives to
car traffic and increased parking.
"lf parking is regarded by tbe EPA
as fostering pollution, then tbe cities
are going to have to find alternaUves
quickQI ta meet the law," be said.
Fielding'• cont.e.ntioo that much of the
enforcement burden will fall to local
(OVetnment bas been supported by
George Taylor, executfve secretary of
the Alt Resources Board in Sacramento.
"Milch of tbe resporudblllty will fall
on local governments and I think there
will be a very close look at what can
be done to encourage car pools," be
said.
Los Angeles Mayor Tom Bradley said
Monday the EPA meB!ures are "a
necessary evil" to get motorists out
of their cars and into pools or buses.
Other segments of the new EPA rul-
ings 91-ill hurt the average car commuter
as well, Fielding said.
For example, the EPA Is iooking at
gu rationing as ooe or the only ways
to cut car traffic enough •to do any
good in big metropolitan areas.
Experts for the EPA claim vlrtuaJly all
traffic on Los Angeles roads ..,.·ould have
to be eliminated to meet the Im Clean
Air requirements.
If gas b rationed, Fielding foresees
gasoline costing $1 a gallon or more.
Besides bus and car-pool servi ce,
Fielding thinks the Amtrak trains v.·ill
have to start running on commuter
schedules again.
Nuclear Plants
Get AEC Oka y
BULLETIN
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -The At()mJc
Energy Commission said it was author-
ized today «> issue construct ion perm il s
for two nuclear power plants at San
Onofre. south of San Clemente and the
Western White House.
·ocean V rew
Won't Back.
Prop._One
Ocean View School Distri ct trustees
voted Monday night to .. not support"
Proposition One, Governor Reagan 's tax
llrnlt11ion initia tive. (Related story, Page 3.)
The Huntington Beach trustees debated
wbelher or not the proposition Is a
partisan is.me.. Board Presktent Robert
ZlMgrabe felt the issue was partisan,
and that the board should not ta ke
a strong stand in opposition to lhe
proposition.
The weaker position, of uoot sup.
porting" lhe plan, was then a~ to,
wilh Zinngrabe abstaining.
Admlni.!trators of lbe dittrid prepared
materials for the trustees concerning
the proposlUon, including a nport by
James Jones, assistant superintendent
of business.
Jones' ~rt dealt with the financial
implicat~ of Proposition One for the
district. The Early Childhood Program, ·
designed to aid minority children Jn
grades Kindergarten through second. v.•as
scheduled to receive $100,000 this year.
ll is n1ost in jeopardy, in Jones' opinion.
Because of ·the implications within the
district. and the fact that the proposition
is opposed by state teachers, and ad-
ministrators associations, and State
Superintendant of Public Instruction
\Vilson Riles, the trustees felt they could
not support the ini tiativ e.
"It Is highly emotional, partisan issue
that really isn't too clear," said a district
spokesman following 1J1,e Board meeting.
l'...,..P .. e I
EDISON ...
the community.
"And the council further finds the
adverse impact will be mitigated by
imposition of the conditions as amended
by the council."
A precise list of :11 cooditions -
designed to protect air and marine qual-
ity' the 'sthetic design or the plant,
and prevent obtrusive noise levels -
was attached to the Edi!JOll approval.
The five "yes" votes came from Mayor
Jerry Matney, a county education
admlnistraU>r; Ted Bartlett, a gas sta-
tion owner; Coen, an attorney; Jack
Gtten, direcU>r of environmental quality
for the City of Los Angeles; and Don
Shipley, a bio1ogy professor.
Mayor Matney warned Uie council au·
dience -more than 300 spectators pack-.a the room, filling all the chain and
lining up agalnat the walla -that he
want.eel an effldmt heuing and hoped
for a declsion by 10:30 p.m. He got
botlt.
The public hearing feJI into equal thirds
-ooe hour each for Edison supporters,
Edison oppooent.s and councilmen.
Spokesmen for Edison took up about
20 Jninute& of their hour, then the rest
of the time was filled by a coalition
of bUsiness interests and labor leaders.
~ Jn essence, they said approve Edison's
expansion because it means further in·
dustrial development, co m m e r c i a I
growth, more jobs 3Dd a better tax
base.
One labor leader, Dave Goldberg of
Carpenter's Local 1453, Huntington
Beach, stepped to the microphone
proudly sporting a bright yeUow hard hat.
"What are you going to do for the
working man if we don't have con·
structloo?" be asked the council. "Are
you going to feed him, clothe him , give
him a home. if you don't provide for
the working stiff?
"What are you going lo do for the
hard hat? Every snowbird, Okie, Arkie,
V.'hatever you want to call 'em -
they stay here. The pooor working man,
he 's the guy who supports eVf:ryone."
It seememed the majority of the audi·
ence was pro-Edison. Edison supporters
had no trouble filling lbeir hour , but the
o~sltion apparenUy ran out of steam
after 30 min utes of speeches.
hfayor Matney, however, refused to
close the hearing, sticking by his promise
to treat both sides equally. He nearly
had to beg more opposition speakers
to come forward, saying, "Come on
now, you've got 30 more minutes. Are
there any more speakers?''
For the next half.hour, s h y
homeowners, most living w:lthin a mile
of the power plant, shuffled forward
to give impassioned pleas against e:it·
• ptmSion.
•II• """'°"' ••• pWll1-. M-.Ot !ft.._ii ,_,..,.... '-c.... ,....... ,......_. •NOi. _tt.,.... 8tto:hlJ01111llllo Vtllt-r, i...,,_
•M<h. lrr!M/S-'-bt'-l!ld II~ ( ............ / ,.., J,,.., (o .. ,.1ro.... A tlott'-,..,..,
Oakland's Andrews Bacl{
eo111..., h l'Vflll•'*' k tvr,..,.. ...,, s..m.~
Tl•o P'l"'IM I "''"'II"'~ pion! 1J t i ~ ~ ••t ilfMI, C..lo "ltM. C.!~011111. nllil.
lleM11 N. W11cl
........... , •!Id "'""''"''' Jee;~ •· Cu1l1v
By C~mmissioner's Orde1·
\llu ,, .. ....,, "'" c,.,,.,., Mono""
T1to111•• l(,,,.;1 NEW YORK (AP ) -Baseball Com·
E1111.. I ni ...... A. Mv•,hi"• missioner Bowie Kuhn sapped Oakland ........ ,,.,, ,,,,.. A's owner Charles 0. Finley on !he
a,,,1., H. Looi •icltor4 P. Ntll wrists today and slapped I e C 0 n d
""'1"''"' M • .,.,,i.. '''*' baseman Mike Andrews back Oil the T ,,.., Coville W Id Se" d w .. r o·-'°"'M' l'"'' rebeJlloui A '1 or r1es squa . HPtlllff.-i ._. OM. Andrews, supposedly 1Ufferlng fron1
11115 8•1ch l oul•••"' a &boulder ailment. was placed on the
M1lli111; ,..,.,.,, .. , ,.o. ••• 1to, t 2•41 disabled list Sunday, Rn action which
OtMr Offk.t Marvin Miller, executive director of the ~:r." ... ='U.mW:r:':.,":=' Major League Bueball Playet'I As.'IQCia-
.'!~t',.._,~ .:'::.::..~~":.".::!. tion. called '"highly suspicious·• and
, .. .,._ 17141 Ml-4J:tl which Andrews· teammates and Kuhn
Ci...affkrf A'-''",_. MZ·l•tt hibfled ~'TlbarrasslnJt -and worse.
,,..., 11.,,., 0,_ ,_.., ,_"""'"'" Andrews com mined two 12tl'l-lnnlng
140·1ZlO Prrors Sunday whlch gave the New York
~---f-c...,......., ""· °'---............ -j--!.,,.,,-tltm-e--nm~mTtf 11 ~--rcr 7 vlrtnry (-J. M1 .,..,., '"'''°"• mwot•••-, __ , \., <'h •Ut0<111 _,,.,, o• .., •• """"""" h.,,,, that squart.'1 1111' o1'Ur1e.~ at one l!all\fl
.,.., M ,_...,,...., •1•-•OM'-1 !It' apil'CC, Les,, than l\\'O hrnir~ l.ilf'r. h~ .... u ..... , ... ,...,, II'"'''" ~ ,11 .. _1_,. ... , •t ""'' WM.. w11s on thi~ d1~abled list wh!le h11 ttam ·
=~ .,..~111"','j;, :..,1:,~""1!'111~.:.! rna tt!S wi:re flying lo New York for
.,, ...... _ n~ _.,,..,., TueS<lny night's third game.
Finley h;id rf'quc~h"'d thnt the A ·~
'
be gi ven permission to replace Andrews
with 'Manny Trillo., "There Is no basis
lo grant tbe rtquest and It Is accordingly
denied," Kuhn replied.
" [ might add that \ht!: handling of
this matte r had the unfortunate elf~
of unfairly embarrassing a player who
has given ma ny years of able service
to profes~ional baseball.
"It Is my determlnalion that Andrews
remains a full·Oedged member ()f the
Oakla~ World Series squad." Kuhn ad ·
ded.
'·There ts no suggestion that this oon·
diUon !Andrf'w.f shoul d,rl h:is chl1tll!'.etl
or wnrsronl'd -ilnct UX! SC.rie1 ~gan,
or h...s been injured in this Serles. The
fnct tha1 Andrt"ws \\'RS used in Came
l'io. 2 by 1hc Oakland club appears
10 Indicate lo the contrary."
Flnley p.ld the A's wool d abide by
the commissioner's decision.
•
,, •
l ' '
. '
Ediso1i E1iergy ' ~'
I I
bfe Westgate, 17; Shari Woolridge, 16; Lauri Bal-I
lard, 16; Jeri Walker, 17; Julie Gillespie, 17, and ,
Sue Brown, 17.. ~
Thou gh it's-fall. the varsity song leaders at l-Iunling·
ton Beach's rEdison High School show they have a
lot of spring in their legs. They are (from left) Deb-
Edison High Drill Team
Tickets Still A vailahle
_McClish Named
To .Ocean View
Principal Post
Nearly 300 dinner tickets are Still
on sale for !he "celebrity night'' celc\f"a-
tlon Saturday in 1-funt ington Beac h 10
help send the Edison High Charger drill
team to the Sovicl Union.
The dlnner starts \Vith cocktails al
6:30 p.m .. in the Sheraton Beach Inn
Dinner v:ill be served at 8 p.m. Tickets
are $15 and can be reserved by calling
the school at 962-1356, or J\lrs. Mary
Boone at 968-7412.
At least 13 celebrities have agreed
to attend the charity banquet. 1bey
include four of the girls from television's
"Gold Diggers"; movie stars Anne Blyth
and McDonald Carey ; and AssembJyman
ROOert Burke,.lR-HuntiJ!gton Beaclt).
Also appecirlng are ·l.Uckey. Dolem,
formerly of tbe J\fockees ; former fiew
York Yankee. third basenian Andy
Carey; 1s-·year-0ld track star Mary
Decker; callfurnta Angels pitcher Rudy
May ; Pat McCormick, Olympic diving
champ ; and Olympic gymnastics com·
petitor Cathy Rigby.
Tbe SS.member drill team will join
the marching girls .fro~ Ana~im's
Western liigh fo r a tour of Moscow
and Leningrad Nov. 20 to 26. It's the
firsl time U.S. high school girls have
been Invited to perform for _ tbe Soviet
citizens. Boosters for the Edison drill team
have so far raised more than $20,000
of the S24.000 needed for the trip.
Saturda'y's banquet is the last sc~uled
fund raiser before they leave.
J:>oQr-prizcg will also be offered SallJ!·
day night with the top prize a round-trip
for l\loi> for three days and two ni'ghts
in San Francisco, hotel and car included.
• Mrs. Lois Carrington is chairwoman
£or the celebrity dinner. She has been
he lped by Mrs. Luan Bagnoli , Mrs. Mary
Boone, J\trs. Nancy Jollie, and Mrs.
Sally J\1anasse. '•
Entertainment will be provided by
Father Caughlin's "Barber Shop Boys
Choir'" from St. John's Catholic Church
of Costa Mesa, and "Just Friends,"
a folk duo.
Ronnie Brown, entertainment dlrector
for the Balboa Bay Oub, is also arrang-
ing Ute dance music for the evening.
•
From l'age 1
RICKY ...
him. But the youth displays no 'm-
bamlssment over being helped .into bis
seat at a restaurant.
Mrs. Winn MacEwan, crusade worker,
experienced minor trooblea In getting
Rkty · settled into h:ls seat at the
restaurant where be ·wa& lnterviewed.
Other diners looked oo with staree of
sympathy, and curiosity but Ricky did
not flinch. He just began «> giggle,
oblivious to the &taru:.•
As the "U'l Qusader'', Ricky attends
the Crusade's official functions, fn.
eluding I~ and vblla \o dilf.,...I
companies. Hla favorite -visit.! so far
have been to fire departments and the
post office.
Ricky lives with bis mother, Omnie
Brandt, and his brother David, 12, Jn
Westminster. He goes to Plavan School
every day -a year-round 1el)ool for
both handicapped and non-liandicapped
children -altbougb be says he doea
'hot like school.
"It's boring," be complains. When
prompted lo find !IOl!lething about -
he like3, be tbouiht for several aecoocb,
scratched his mop of sandy blond hair,
and answered, "Intersession."
At P1avan School, the liandlcapped
yoong.oters still au.nd school during the
three-week intersessJon, but be I&)'! Ube
work is easier lherl. 'Ibe other children
need not attend school during tbue
periods.
Kent McCllsh bu ~ appotnted ae-
tlng prindpal of Pleuant View School
in Huntington Beach in actim by Ocean
View School District trustees.
Mt'Clish, who has been servi~ as
administrative assistant in personnel
services for the di.strict, replaces Robert
Vouga, who is leaving Pleasan\ View
to hK'ome principal at Crest View
School.
An opening was created at Crest View
School when Principal Joe Diamond
resigned to take an administrative posi-
tion in nortbem Calilornla.
A district olficlal explained tbot rather
-appoint a new Prindpol In .the Wdd19 of the year, McOllb wUl eerve u act1ng· Ji;.cipo1 lllllil -•. · '
.. ~ lju ..,....:.,·-
us!-!or lour yeon, and pmlouoly
taug1>I at si-1ng View School. 1ba 111111
In prlndpals .ill effective l"""""IMelJ.
F ..... r,,.el
THREAT ..•
offer a legal oplnioo on a Pn>leat llled
tjylt night which be had no oppor1Unlty
lo r.......ch but be said the <OUllCi!
could go ahead and acL
Al · to compliaoce with state tn-
vironmeatal Jaw, Boafa II.id even· tbou&h
the flnt ln1pact reports had no! ,..,.
lo all posalble agencies, the clty hid
"been in subslantlal compliance" with
the law, and 8fencle1 or1g1nall7 left
oul, have since been contacted.
Jenaen said today be will -a "writ of mandamue '', an order to lbow
caUJe wby the city's action lltould not
be revensed, In Superior Court, Saota
Ana, later this week.
IULEIDOSCOPE
..
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Our showroom is a virtual ••leidoscope of colors. The reasons ire
varied'-:
We know that color coordinating is the primary targe.f•when buy·
ing carpet. Quality is usually second in line, end because we have such e
vast selection of qualities, it is easy to coordinate color and qu1lity to
each individual's taste.
However, we know that a volume of samples looking at you can
seem very confusing -but we feel that showing just a few samples is not
a fair representation of the carpet business. Our huge selection gives our
salespeople every possible option in working with people , helping thtm
lo find the perfect choice.
So if yo u are in the marl:et to select your carpe ting -seltct
Alden's to help you, that's wh.I we're her• forllll
.-
ALDEN'S
CARPETS e DRAPES
!663 Pla_centla . Ave.
COSTA MESlo
646-4838
HOURS1 Mon. llirv lliun,, t to S<JO -'fAI., t ta t -SAT. t tJO ta S
•
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I
• H DAJLV PILO! :J
May ·Limit County Electricity
Huntington
Man Offers
Fraud Tale
From Wire Servlcet
JACKSONVIUE, Fla. -A Huntington
Beach man bas testified in the mail
fraud trial of Orlando tycoon Glenn
W. Turner that be paid, $5,000 for a
cosmetics distributorship, only to find
himself In a different field.
Rudy Muerle told the court during
testimony Monday that his stake 'instead
bought him a pieee of a consultlng
business In which investors were told
th.at only hard work brings big profits.
The bizarre proceedings in which
"{uerle's testimony led prosecutors to
ask that he be declared an adverse
witness -when he WS.!1 supposed to
be assisting them -wound up with
-him-endorsing the delendant.
·Muerle, whose address was not im·
mediately available, changed bls original
critical viewpoint of the Turner en-
terprise during cross-examination in the
ftfth week of the trial in U.S. District ~
Court.
NOBEL PEACE PRIZE WINNERS HENRY KISSINGER, LE CUC THO
U.S. Diplomat, North Vietnamese Negotiator Brought .Truce
Muerle testified that lie invested $5,000
in Turner's Koscot Interplanetary cos-
rr1etics business in April of 1971 , was
shifted to Turner's Dare To Be Great
motivational courses and tried to get his
money ·back when -lie couldn't .. obtain
enough products to sell.
But on cross-examination, Muerle said
he though Koscot. and Dare To Be Great,
two Turner enteipNes, offered great op-
portuniUes Cor their distributors.
Kissinger, Le Due Tho He said company officials told him
olhers that work was the key to success
and freely admitted that some people
didn't succeed. . .
Win Nohel Peace Prize Judge Gerald B. Tjoflat refused to
declare Muerle an adverse witness but
let postal inspector Billie Barron testify
that 1t1uerle had come to the government
and asked help in getting bis money
. OSLO (U PI) .-Seeretary of State
• Henry A. JGssinger and North Viet·
namese Politburo member Le Due Tho
won the 1973 Nobel Peace Prize today
, for work in negotiating a cease·flre -to
the Vietnam war -the "most
gruesome" and longest conflict since
World War U.
. • The surprise \yinners·were announced
, by the Nobel peace committee here
even .as Kissinger -who also played
..... key role in ~improvement of U.S.
relations with Chltia and the sovlet Union
'" -was conferring in the White House
'•on the war raging in the MiddJe East.
The two peace negotiators won out
over a big Geld of 40 nominees that
included President Nixon, YugMlav
President nto, Daniel Ellsberg, ol Pen·
tagon Papers fame, Brazilian Archbishop
Dom lrel<ler Camara, Swedish dlsarma·
:meut minister Alva Myrdal, a n d
France's Jean ·Monnet, father of the
Europeaii Common Market.
K1.ssWger said today be was "very
'• pleased" at winning the prize.
" state Departrtfent spokesmen in4icated
·~ Kiulnger might have more to ,say later
· about the award .
-In ·citing the two -who will-share
;• a record prize of $122,000 -the Nobel
~ committee said :
"The }'lar in Vietnam was the most
• gruesome and longest military conflict
: since the Second World War was brought
to an end with a cease·fire. The oom·
1, mlttee has given the peace prize or
" 1973 to the two negotiators who with
a joint achievement brought about the
~ cease-fire Jan. 23 lhls year -Dr. Kis-
singer, USA, and Le Due Tho of the
Democratic Republic of (North) Viet·
nam."
Kissµiger, confirmed as U.S. Secretary
or State in September, was born in
Fuerth, Germany, or Jewish origin, in
1923.
He emigrated with his p a r e n t s to
the United States in 1938 and became
a U.S. citizen In 1943. He later became
a profes!IOr at Harvard University where
he specialized in foreign policy.
Neither Kminger nor Tho had been
meoUOned publicly as IJ(,minees during
the year's deliberations.
Politicians and Nobel Prize experts
said the ~uncement was the greatest
surrr:, in :~"W:f'N:~tbe ;~:i·Priie
awarded since 1971. The-committee last
year named no winner because it said
it couJd not flnd a suitable candidate.
Tiie last previous winner was West
German Chancellor Willy Brandt in 1971.
'lbe Nobel committee said Kissinger
and 1bo were nominated by Prof. Jon
Sanness, profCSBOr of history at Oslo
University and director of the Norweglan
-Foreign Policy Institute.~
In explaining the award, the committee
said, "For more than three years they
have used all their strength and good
wilt to achieve a negot iated solution,
a peaceful soluUon of the Vietnam war.
"Thereby, they have performed a feat
which is Jn the best accordance with
Alfred Nobel's thoughts, that conOicts
should be tried to be solved through
negotiations and not through war."
back.
The wife of a previous witness , Mrs.
Roy Lynn Garrett of 'Ibe Dalles, Ore.,
testified that Turner company sales peo·
pie were continually advised to "b£
positive'' and told to get rid of their
spouses lf they interfered with work.
Nine lndividua!!I, including Turner and
Boston attorney F. Lee Bailey, are
charged with defrauding by use of the
ma.ib: numerous people who bought
diatrlbutanblpe in Koscot or Dare To
Be Great.
The other defendants are Harry B.
Atkinson, W. Leroy Beale, Ben U. Bun·
tiJlg, Clyde C. Cobb, Jess 0 . Hickman .
Malcolm A. Ju!ian and Hobart \Vilder,
all of tbe Orlando area.
The cosmetics and motivational firms
and their parent corporation, Glenn ·w.
_Turner Enterprises, are also defendants.
Prop. 1 Backed
By John Wayne
In County Talk
Actor John \Vayne galloped to the
aid of Proposition 1 P.tonday.
Wayne appel!;red at a Santa Ana ne"'s
conference with Orange Co u n t y
Supervisor David L. Baker.
Proposition l is the revenue control
and tax reduction initiative to be voled
on by Californians Nov. 6.
Legislators From County
Wayne caUed it "the most impo11ant
piece of business the people of California
have ever been called on to decide.
The issue is whether government con-
trols the people or the people control
govemment ''
Rank Tops in Expenses
The Academy Award winning actor
said "every taxpayer knows our lazes
are too hlgti and getting higher. If
we don't act on Nov. 6 to put a rein
on the tax spenders. our free enterprise
system will be in danger."
Five of Orange Coun~'s. seven state
,legislators cost taxpayefs more than
average to support and one, Republican
Assemblyman John Briggs of Fullerton,
ranked lhird among all Sacramento
lawmakers lntotal satary~and expenses
ror the past legislative year.
According to figures released this week
by State Controller Houston Flournoy,
the average legislator cost about $20,300
per year. Jtls report also showed
'.&ssemblymen and senators traveled far
and wide at taxpayers' ei:pense. ·
1 Briggs' total for salary and npell'lel!
~I $22,419 w" topped only by lellow
··Assemblymen John Burton (0-San Fran·
lciJCO) and John Knox CD-Richmond)
a:'ho recived 123.221 and $22,708 rupee-
,uvtly. ·
Oth~r county legislators who exceeded
the average include:
-Al!Wllblyman Kermeth Cory (0.
Garden Grove) at $21,974.
-Assemblyman Robert Burke (1\.-Hun-
tington Beach) at $20.!87.
, -State setiator Jtimes Whetmore (R·
G&.rden Grove) at J20,437.
~ -Assemblyman Robert Badham fR·
~Newport Beach) at jlll!t '7 over the
I.average CO!Jl with a total of $20,30"1.
tatives, only drew $103 in his foreshorten-Wayne added that "without sensible
ed Sacrarii.ento term , according to the controls government soon \\•\\\ take more
latest figures . than half. maybe as much as two-thirds
So far, legislators have collected only of our income."
$14,400 of their annual $19,200 salaries. "The inflation "·e are sufferi ng is
The remainder of the money in the a direct result of exeessive government
totals to date comes from a $30-per-day spending. We must put the brakes on
tax-free Jivirig allowance provided when now or our hard-earned money won't
the legislature Is in session and other be worth the paper it's printed on,"
expense accounts for traveling. the actor continued.
To date this year, lawmakers have He accused "tax spenders" of making
cost the C&llfornia tupayers about $2.4 alt sorts of wild and untruthful claims
million in salary and expenseoi. The about Prop. I. "The plain truth is that
totals will increase next year when the proposition won't result in state
salaries will jump by nearly '2,000 to programs being cut. It will leave them
$21,120. more than enough money to gr·ow as
In addition to salary and expenJeS, needed ."
Jeglslaton1 are provided with a free Wayne sought to refute the argument
automobile, gasoline and telephone credit that the proposition would shift costs
ca rds, plus large retirement beneflta. to local government and school dlstMcts.
The high cost of running the legislature "It natfy prohibits state government
has betn crUklied by fonner Assembly from pulling such tficks.
Speaker Jess Unruh, who once said, "As our income grows, so will the
"For a private clti2en to live like a state's share." he stated. 'ti
California legislator would require an Wayne prefaced his remarks by saying
annual Income of at least $150,000." "I don't-like to get mixed up in politics
But Assembly Speaker Bob Moretti, but I feel this Issue is Important enough
a candidate for the Demo er a t I c to make a statement."
gubematotial nod neii:t year. Mid the Asked about the charge that Prop.
expense ls worth It becaWlt CallComla 's I will help the rich mort than the
lcglslature Is rated nurhber one In lhc poor Wayne 1akt "You are talking about
nation. Moretti • has entered just over eamers. Some earn more than othen."
'7 4 Sum1:i1e1· .
E1ne1·ge1icy
Move Cited
By IDLARY KAYE
Of llMI DMlr l'lllt illll
Electrical st•rvice in Orange County
could be liinited beginning in the summer
of 1974 under a three-s tage conlingency
plan filed with the state Public Utilities
Commission ~!onday by s o u t b e r n
California Edison.
"Before the ~lideast war began. it
looked hopeful that we could purchase
enough supplies to forestall this curtail-
ment." said Bob Beck, Edison's Orange
County divisional manager.
"Now. with the war going on, we
just don't kno\v," he said. ··Everything's
up in the air."
The emergency plan vt'ould mean elec·
trical shortages for both businesses and
residences during 1974·76, according to
~ase would go into effect w~~c ~·~ oil supply drops to 8.!I
million barrels. "11.·ith no additional oil
prospects in sight.'' currently, Edison has
14 million f>arre.l s, with additional
amounts committed.
"At the present rate of usage," Beck
explained, "we wlll reach the 8.S point
by the summer of 1974."
\Vhen this point is ria.Ched .businesses
\\'Ould r>e forced to reduce their hours
by 25 percent, curbing qon-resk!ential
lighting, air conditioning and beating. 0 ~~--_ ..Otlu:r.J..i!h!.iq&.!o be elimioat~. under b ·~ h . ul'• T"'""°'• p ase One wou1d be advertising lighting •.
GENE KRUPA !RIGHT) WITH BENNY G,.JDMAN I~ 1938 some street lights, and lighting for night
_Jan Drummer Succumbs tO'Can~t-Age of 64 sports e\'ents. These curt.ailments would be backed
Leukemia Claims Jazz
Drummer Gene J(rupa
YONKERS, N.Y. (APl -Jau drum-
mer Gene Krupa died today at his
home here. He was 64.
Kry pa had been released from Yonkers
General Hospital about a week ago after
undergoing treatment for leukemia.
Hls last public appearance was Aug.
18 in Saratoga, N.Y., w\lh Benny Good·
man , \vhose band he joined in 1934 .
Survivors include t"'O adopted children
and a brother, Jules, of Chicago.
Funeral arrangements w e r e in·
complete.
Krupa suffered a heart attack in 1960,
which kept him inactive for a time .
He retired in 1967, but came beck in
1970, leading a quartet at New York's
Plaza Hotel.
· Last summer during the Newport Jazz
Festival in New York , be played with
. the reunited Goodman quartet, including
clarinetist Goodman, pianin _ Teddy
Wilson and Lionel Hampton on the vibes.
Krupa also appeared July 4 at the
renaming of the Singer Bowl in New
York '3s Louis Armstrong Stadium. Later
in the summer, Krupa. gave a eulogy
al the funeral of jazz banjoist Eddie
Condon.
After graduation from high school in
his native Chicago in 1925, Krupa got
a summer job as a soda jerk al a
Wisconsin beach "dime-a-dance" hAU.
When the drummer in the dance band
(!l\nted across the soda rountaln, l\rupa
substituled for him and play~ the rest
or the season.
Art er tbe summer, his family sent
him off to a seminary in Rensselaer.
Ind., where he studied fer the priesthood.
The following year, after his father's
death, he left the seminary to play
drums in Chicago. His first records
were made in 1928 with a Chicago group.
In 19'29 he went to New York to
play in the orchestra of George
Gershwin's show "Strike Up the Band." Thi orchestra, said to be the first white
swing band on Broadway, included ~
man, Condon and trombonist Glenn
Miller, and was led by Red Nichols.
After stints with bands led by Buddy
Rogers and Goodman, Krupa fanned
his own orchestra in 1938. -
100% Polyester
Knit ...
up by the threat that failure. to comply
\\'OUkl. result in total discontinuance of
electrical service.
Bec k said the PUC ordered· utility
companies to file the emergency pro-
grams. The PUC plans to develop
statewide contingency procedures after
a series or public hearings, he explained.
The secood phase « the emergency
plan would go into effect when Edison's
reserves dropped below seven million
barrels of oil. Thi! would mean a
"rotating blackout program," under the
Edison proposal.
Under this system, blocks « homes,
businesses and industries would be left
without electricity for periods up to
.... how'.
The fmal phase would go into effect
when the oil level dropped to 6.5 mitllon
barrels. This would mean that up to 10
percent of Edi!on's service roukt be cut
off. Customers might have to endure
three hoot periods without electricity.
Beck said. Still, no customer would have to be
without service ror more than 15 hours
per week under the Edison plan, Beck
predicted.
Beck explained that, along wl!h the
three-phase program filed Monday, a plan
calling for a "mutual assistance pro-
gram" was also filed by Edison .
"This would mean that the entire
stat#! would be In the same situation."
Beck said. "All the utilities in lhe state
woold join together and share their p:i~·er
plant fuel . in the event one company
is low."
28th
A1rnlversor)'
Sale
I
"'.:
' \/I
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SWITCH GEAR
SUIT $8900
COAT S5900
SLACKS s1a00
FOR THE MAN
THAT DEMANDS
THE BEST ...
I
.. HAND-TAILORED SUITS
lly G-h10 S.l•ottl
, ... l!H "tilt
" State Sen, Dennis Carpenter (R,.
.Newport Beach) was the only full-term ~-.ur""Afllf"Q)unty lawmaker that made lc!s
than the average . tlls total wa1 Sl9,t80,.
'one of tbe lowest In the ~gislature.
the-average at-a<>.~hl&--ye•r. - ----Oherle!-"Cbuck!.!... ~ one of. th6.-
I{ Fonntr State Stn. Clair Burgener,
•Who now reprtsoot1 much of toulhcm
"Orange County and half oC Newport
--Beath in the U.S. House ol Rt.preaen-
•
Accordlng to Flournoy's r f: port. authors of the tax inJUatlve uld there
legislators have traveled extensively at will be no effect on public ,educaUon.
taipayer:1 expense, Including numerous "They uld the same thine of Reagan,"
1rtps to Wu hlngtop , D.C. and one by added Wayne. "He \\'Ou.Id ruin education.
Sen. Randolph Collier (0.Vrttl'a) to Scan-Teachen are getting more money to-
dintvia for a 11tudy or limber taxation. day."
••
South Co•'' Plt1•
Cotlt M11•
s~o.,•t 1
6' 12 E. Sp,;.,, Lo"; a,.,11
'21 • .. •I I
•
_, ••
D41LV PI LOl lund•Y, Octobfr 16, 197)
c.!.~~ 'Gerald Ford Helped Liddy Get Joh'
, ,...·. ·. . ~ •'rom Wire Servkfil politicians In upstate New York while by tbe Trea4w'y Department, sald speech Monday ~ that lhe former be wu in Jngb or low office, violated
' '.:.. ""\"\ ST. LOUIS_ Vice President-des ignate c~mpaignlng for President Nl1on In 1968 Engelmayer, White ltouse plumbers hem Vice president ''was really prejudged." blJ oath ol otnoe. n.t 11 ooe ibinc --'.~-. Gerald R. Ford once acknowledged a and told to get Liddy "out of their EgU Krogh hire:d Liddy dfsplte warn1ngs He made the conune8' to newsmen that bu not bttn adequately diaculled/'
.:: .. /"·' balr" (1 voiced by Treasury Undenecretary whlle flying back from I two.day said Ford.
p<T'ipberal role In getting a government Despite being apprals<il that Uddy Charles Walter. speaking visit to the Wost O>ut. Forti ~ wbat appearod lo be
BREATIDNG EASY DEPT. -starting
pretty soon now, we are all going lo
·be breathing puri(ied ai r here along
1hc Orange Coast and in the Los Angeles
Basin generally.
You know th!.s ls true because it
has been orde red by the federal govern·
ment .
Only yeslerday, a rroup of federals
known u the Environmental Proltttion
Agency. or EPA for sbort, is.sued some
new dictums on how we are going to
conduct ounelvcs in t,he years ahead
so that all the air will get clean.
job for convicted Watergate burglar G. had caused trouble for I.be county's ( refenDces to the Apw and Walerpte
Gordon Uddy, the editor of the. North regular Republican pe.rty organiz.atlon, "NO MATIER. what role Ford played 1'WU1tl"RER 'J1IE le&b came lrom > tftatn ID speecbta to a Republicm
Amerlcab Newspaper Alllance said Engelmayer said, Ford assisted Uddy in brJn,glng Uddy to Washington, it is tho U.S. Attorney's office or otherwlle, ptb9rtna and t.llo to the O.Yention
Monday night in obtaining a Treasury Department job. not as important as bow It relates to even Wore tl)e case p to the Grand ol tbe '!'JaUoo&l Ret&ll D r u I I I 1 t I
Sheldon Engelmayer, In an Inte rview Engelmayer said Ford told Terhorst Ford's judgment ln picking people," Jury, " -· ertremei .. unfair," said Asaodatioa in Portlaod, Ore., Mcoday. wtth tch!vlslon stalion KPLR, said Ford Engelma yer said. "" ....... Y admitted ••-role during a previous that his only act was to place Liddy's Ford. 1be House GOP leader declined w.:ro • •-' I "B t the In Washington, Ford said the subj ect interview with NANA's bureau chief Jn name m a pa .. .,nage poo · u re lo discuss Agnew personally or bit-.. no
Detroit, J. F. Terhont. havl e bee! n strong ~~~ionsbe~~ ohf news leaks against Spiro ;::_~w contest" plea to a tax evasion charge,
po itlca pressure was "'""6"t to ar, ave not beM "adequately ~" but be spoke strong!) of tbe events
FORD, ACCORDING to Engelmeyer,
was contacted by D\Jchess C:Ounty
. . .
Engelmayer said. and that Agnew was unfairly pttjudged. prior to Agnew's resignation.
Alter Liddy was subsequently fired Ford told newsmen before Agnew's "Somebody iD government, whether
. .
• 111J'HERE HAS been bad news U
ol Wasb1astoo In the last two montlla
and no one II oadde< about k than
!. But ... lhouldn, let -sod cloys hamper or hinder what we have ahead
of us," Fon! told Ille dnlglats. I
I am sure you clearly understand
l-'~~-a11-Jhe..Jlew..rle!.
Marines Board
Nary Carrier
For· Mideast
"
first, !here Isn't going to be any
gasoline rationing. We know thls because
in Washington, EPA Administrator-
Russcll E. Train said so.
ON THE OTHER JIAND, at a San
franaisco news conference. same day,
th e EPA's Deputy Re g i ona I
Administr~tor L. Russell Freeman said
~ gasoline rationing will be considered li
plans to restrict the amount of fuel
available do not work .
So there you have it, folks. In order
to get our clean air, there won't be
any ga30line rationing unlen it tums
out that it's necessary to have gasoline
r3tioning.
Once again , our. l\'onderful federal
government bas come out witp an an.
_ QOuneement of public policy which ·h.a.s
an of Ule preclsloo of 1 "Norwalk bog
""""'-butcher.
In addition to having . or not -having
gasoline rationing, there will be other
n1les aimed at cleaning up our at-
mosphere.
~IOSJ' OF TIIlS will deal with flow
you drive to work. If your employer
provides 700 or more parking spaces.
he has to give you one free in a prime
location it you get there in a car pool.
I suppose that means your car pool
van is going to get the parking slot
previously occupied by the executive
vice presldenl's limousine, You have
to figure the on1y way the executive
VP is going to get his parking space
back is if he rides to work with the
rest of you guys in the vaIL
?i1eanwhile. the federa1 EPA people
say, you may deelde to give up all
lhis automobile business and ride to
work on the bus. tr you do that. you
get to ride free . The boss has to pay
your bus [art!.
Now; on the other band, }'OU ma)'
be one of those stubborn types who
says to balderdash with all these new
federal oolions, I'm going to drive my
old crate to work anyway. Well, ju.st
don't be so s.mnrt. The fed erals have
some new rules to fix you, too, buster.
YOU ORrvE IN there solo and you
get fined. First of all, you get the
parking place away out there ln the
south 40. Al!o, Instead of the boss paying
you, you have to pay the boss for
the parking space.
If all this puzzles you, do not worry.
You are no more confused than · the
EPA federal people.
Notice how, with all th!.'Se new roles.
the federal government has some people
paying and d'ther people get t Ing
something free ? Free parking. Fr.et bus
rides. Hoorah.
I suppose ii sho uld be mentioned,
howc\•er, that it isn't tht? federal govern-
mf'nt that 1s picking up the tab !or
;ii\ these free lhins:s. Somebody is going
10 ha\·e to pay ror it T suspect that
after the boss pays, he is going to
pa~!'i that cost ulnng to somebody.
SomP\\"hl·rl'. somebody has to end up
pa ying.
TTll S i\llY'V BE a basic . flaw in the
federal EPA anti-smog thinking. But
you can't really be surprised by that.
1"hc government never has really
lf'arncd that there is no such thing
<is a free ride.
Clear,
.. ARAI COUNTRIES
FIGHTING ISRAEL
..
" . ..
TEN ARAB .STATES ARE NOWJ N WAR AGAINST ISRAEL ~
Token· Force• Join Egypt •nd Syria tn Midd'4i E••t Conflict
, Agnew Says Farewell
Admits Violating 'New Post-Watergate Morality'
\\'ASHINGTON (UPI) -Spiro T.
Agnew bas said goodnlght to the
Americans who believed in him.
He faded from the American political
scene in a sad televised speech to the
nation 1.1ooday-night in which he
protested his innocence of criminal
\\TOngdoing, said he was driven from
the nation's set'Olld highest office by
the testimony or frightened men trying
to save themselves and admitted nothing
excepl the possibility he had violated
a "new post-Watergate morality,"
ntE FOR.\1ER vice president gave
no accounting in his 22·mi.nute address
for cash oontributions he h a s
acknowledged receiving from Maryland
contractors in 1967 and acknowledged
spending "for nonpolitical purposes."
Nor did he address the specifics of
the U.S.~ govemment1s cbarG;es in U.S.
District Court last \\'ednesday that he
had received cash payments totalli ng
at least $87,500 from those cootraetors.
beginning \Vhile he was governor of
Maryland and continuing long after he
bec:atne vice president.
Agneiv S~ech
Irks Vie ·rvers
COLU~1Bt.:S, Ohio 1J.;PJ \
Several viewers of \\'BNS-TV, a
CBS affiliate here ttlonday night
called to find oul what happened
to the regularly scheduled progra1n
when former vice president Spiro
T. Agnew appeared on nntional
television.
Station officials sai d lhe pre-
empted program was "The Pr ice
Is Right.''
lfe ronfined himself, instead, to an
attack on the news media for publishing
leaked stories about the government's
c88e against him, an 8.5$8.ull oo plea-
bargaining and an expression o f
continued loyalty to President Nixon.
The speech was without precedent in
American political history. It was
delivered -unemotionally and calmly
-just five days after Agnew stood
before a fedel'al judge ln .Baltimore,
pleaded no coolest to a 1967· tax evasion
charge, resigned the office he held for
five years and accepted a judge'a verdict
of three years' probetioo and a $10,000
fine.
''WIDLE J am fully aware lhat the
plea of nolo contendere was the
equivalent of. a plea ol guilty for the
purpooe ol that negotiated proceeding
in Baltimore, it does not repre3Cflt a
confessioa, of any guilt whatever for
any other purpose," he said.
He said he had decided not to fight
the government's charges because "the
American people deserve to have a vice
president wOO commands l b e i r
unirnpain!d confidence and implicit trust.
For more than two months now, you
have not bad such a vice president."
Meanwhile, the Internal Revenue
Setviee indicated today il may attempt
to collect taxes from Spiro T. Agnew
ail the 1,1ray z ·---itJe da}'! when he was Baltimore c ty executive.
THE TAXES nd penalties could total
more than·Sl00.000.
\\'hile refusing to comment specifically
about Agnew, a spokesman for the IRS
said it was comm.on for a criminal
charge of tax evasion involving a
relatively small figure lo be fo1lo\11ed
by civil proce«ii.ngs for a much larger
amounl.
The spokesman said the IRS !sUnder
no statule of limitations In filing civil
suits to coll ect back taxes.
Midwest Cool • Ill
In resigning the vice presidency last
Wednesday, Agnew pleaded no Io
contendere (no contest) to one count
of income tax evasion for 1967. The
count alleged that Agnew and. his wife
stated their taxable income for that
year as $26,099 while actually it was
$50,599.
Attorney G<neral Elliot I. Riclwdnl
told the couri the government -woUld
not pursue further criminal cha!]:es
against Agiiew. '
'My cllsnt wishes to plead
guilty to th• parking offence
if you squesh th• murder
charge.'
Bill w Control
President Home
Costs Planned
WASfONGTON (UP!) -A How;e
subcommittee will draft legislation to
control spending of taxpayers' money
on private homes of presidents.
...
MOREHEAD CT!'Y, N.C. (UPI) -
'I1le Navy helloopter carrier Two Jlma
arrived In port here today to load about
2,000 Marines and a number ol
helicopters.
The Navy said the Iwo Jhna wu
expected to 1e.ave later ln the day for
... the Mediterranean to bolster tbe U.S.
6th Fleet.
Marines from nealby Ounp Lejune
began loading ooto the . carrier ~
alter It arrived In port It 7,:io, ii!!!.
An undllclosed numbtt of Marino
bellCOpt.n also were rudy !or loading.
THE NA VY RAD """""1IOed that about
2,000 Marines WOllJd be .loaded here.
elements of the 32nd Marine Amphibious
Unit composed ~ a battalion landing
team and Maririe Medium Helicopter
Squadron 261.
Military equipment and supplies piled
up at Morehead City an day Monday
at dockside waiting for the lwo Jlma.
The Jwo Jima's 'oomplement will
double the sire of the Marine dela.chment
now with the Sixth Fleet. Sources
inclicated last week the lwo Jima and
the carr-ie.r Guadalcanal, already with
the fle€t, will stay in the 1.lediterranean
in case Americans must be evacuated.
The Virginia Pilot's Associ ation
confinned that the Israeli frelghter Aben.
Dot sailed into the naval base. An
association ·spokesman said the vessel
new no flags for security reuons.
Military Cargo
Plane Crashes;
7 Aboard Perish
FORT SMITH, Ark. -A four-engine
propeller-driven military cargo plane:
harried by thick fog and heavy rain
craS'hed into Sugar Loaf mountain in
('-_l_N_SH_O_R_T .. _. ~)
a heavily wooded area near the western
Arkansas border Monday nlgbt .
Seven crewmen on a training mission
rrom Little Rock Atr Foree &se died
In the crash ol the Cl:IO transport.
Capt. Hal Lac of the base Information
office said the names would be withheld
until next of kit1 was notified.
e Tlud Clea11up
BANGKOK (UPI) -Thailand's new
prime min.ister announced formation of
a civilian-oriented government today
while students who trought down the
military regime in two days ol bloody
viole nce fonned cleanup squads and life
began to return to normal.
Student organi1.ations, cheered by the
flight of former military strongman
Thanom Kittllmchorn aod his deputy
from the oountry, mobilized their
members to remove burned out vehicles
and debris from streets where they
fooght batUes with police and troepa
Sunday and Monday,
e Str8peet field
Central~ Eastern Texas Pountletl by Thunders1io1.ve rs
Rep. Jack Brooks (J>.Teus), cbalm'tM
of a House government activitieS
su bcommittee which bas concluded
hearings on public expenditures for
Pre!ldcnt Nixon's San Clemente and Key
Biscayne, Fla., homes, said Monday
legislation will be drafted to ensure
"that it doesn't happen again."
Pf'M'SBURGH (UP!I -A l!eCllrity
guard In the Koppers Building, wWe
Mary Lee Walter was stabbed 72 tlmes
and strangled Saturday night, was
arrested Rt hl'I home A1ooday n1ght and
chan:i:ed wtth the slayi ng. Constnl H'eniher
~ . .,. ...
'I ~·· 0 • ...... " • ., .. ~ ' ......... ~')
f:~;·.:. ,., .. ~
" ··~" .' 11~ ~·>"'"I ' ·•
t '' V•n•• l u!·~ He ·~ •• .,,1 i.'"w•I/\•• ·~1"""•P<r!1\ .. ~ ... 0'1~~·~ N'w Yo" ("I"~"'· to!~ !'.lf'lll>• p.11m $nt\"q' P1>ll•<i•l<)lll1
l'lo(.<>Mv
Pllh!>l>!Oh ~~~I~?..:, ....
~.,..,,...,,o ~' LOU•• : :~ 1'~!~1~C': '••!II• '""' ... "' \Y•lll "Q!ll'!
1<lo1> Low 11<1 .. ., •• h ... ·l .. ,. J.
~~ :f 'l ~ H .. -" 10 Sl 1i lt ,, 11
·~ H :; 'I l~ 16 . ~ :; el t •
ti ., 01
'' I! II ;1
~l ~1 n :f •I ., " " . " " .
Cnlifnrnin
lot"t10NAI 'lllfATlllt $1tvt(l IOllC~U le 1•"" I ll •O· 17 ~1t
1111 "'1:AtMlt IOIOC.UI.
comlno;i WH1t/V I '" ,. ~"'II• !n """' -today al>d We<IM>d4y. HIOll IO-
dlf. upper Mh-
Coe11tl h!mpe<-ature' •a~ ''°"' n
'" 14. 1..ia...i •emi>ertturti ••"II• l•om ~· to 1l. W••er ttm~r•lur• 63
Sun. ~loon. Tid es
• TU E~O•Y
S.Colld l'l!tl'I 17:10 p.m. S.I
'-<olld iv-t ,,Jt 0.1'1. o.c
WlONl!iOAY
F't•1! l'llQll 3~0' a.m. l.S F'!t•I ICM 6 11 f ,m, ).0
SKllfld 111011 1;19 pm, S.S
$M;Ol>d low ,.11 p,m. 0 I
liu" tl!Ht •·it' m. St!• •·1• p.m.
Moon lth tl 10:0I p.tTI. Stll 1!;M ,,l'I\.
Dl LlVERY SERVICE
!<IN•Y ol Ille D•~ P1lol
1s guarantr.ed
~ F"'1\" " ,. .. Ill b'9 ,._
,., ~ ~311 ..... ul .. ,. "'' .. lit JlllM ll Y• till •t i.rt 111111 I JI ,,
~,...,., n ~ 1t ,. 111 •t r1ttl'lt
flt! C&fl' ~ t I& $.ltwdlf. • I l&
~.u1n 1 c~d 11tllr~ll
.,. tab1"1!1111l'lllti ll 1-. __ Jo'""".s -
llln1 Orqe""" &rm .• , . , 5'2"'321
lllr1htSt lldlatttl ltxt .... ,.,,. ' . . ' 141· 1221
"ntE PUBLlC has been asked to
spend hundreds of thousands of dollars
on private homes of the president,
3Jthou~h he is already supplied with
lhe \V"n ite House and Camp David,"
Brooks 11aid.
Brooks said $141 ,000 in government
funds was spent on former vice president
Spiro T. Agnew'11 private borne In
Bethesda, Md., and added: "I UUnk
we ought to build a Mme for our
vice presidents ao that the taxpayers
can pay for all of these costs at one
time."
Government witnetses said moat of
the money spent on Nixon'• homes was
for communications equipment, ofnces
and Sl'<:Urlty, Mtmbtrl of th e
subcommittee have challenged the
seeuriiy justiflcaUon for aome Items,
such a. lcemakers and landscaping.
Afclvin Brown. 26. of nearby Rankin,
a guard on duty when the killing
occurred, was arraigned on chargell o(
murder before deputy coroner George
Phillips, who ordBred him ttmanded lo
the Allegheny County JaU without bond,
e RQfJer• Uonored
W ASHTNGTON (AP) -Form e r
Secretary of State William P, Rogers
got a WhJte House farewell dinner party
and S\lrfl'lse awani of the Medal of
Freedom from Preaident Nlxon Monday
nl1ht.
Rogers said lt was "Uke 'J'b111 1s Your
Life in the irrJDd maMer" and he was
"at a iosa ror wordl" at nnt.. amid
the array of friends, present and former
cabinet members •nd officials.
ec.ueout
DETROIT (UPI) -A lederol judge
P.1EANWIULE, the Pentagon told the has dismiseed COl\lplrncy ch a r I e s
subcommittee Monday lhat the co8t of against 15 New Left radlca\1 because
maintaining Camp D a v I d , the the !(Ovemment refused to reveal the
l{ovemment-owned presidenlial mountajn mtthods lt ustd to gain its evidence
...,re•t 111-Ji!obliii<l CliOL~Ol'ttc'!Ji:ft'<>l!r ig•lnsr tliem .• --_.
Sl 18,000 ln 1984, when Pmldenl Lyndon It was anOthtr Jn a loftg 1er_~ of
Johnsoo used It, to $&40,000 for fltcal cases prepaffil against ndlcall ol. tM
1-C'ntatt. C.110• kxl,
SM Jut CJpntrn, 11~1 '-!.
1973. lt atb1but.ed the Increase ' to lMOI by the lntemaJ 8ecur1ty Division
lnnauon, mort: COllly aecurity equipment o[ the JusUce Department that hive "'
nnd President Nixon.'• mort Jrequenl ellhar been dlsmllsed or kllt by lhe ~ lat:WN. llllN lllfnl 452"44211
use or the ttltt:at. government.
_ ... ..
' .'
' '
Ul'IT_.....
El1'b IU
Roel< and roll singer Elvis Pres-
ley has pneumonia and will be
in the hospital for a week. HJs
doctors admitted the 38-year·
old star into Baptist Hospital
in Memphis for 'recumnt
pneumorua.1
Drama in Skies:
Pilot in Plane
Talks Down Boys
LAS VEGAS (UP!) -"Las VCfU
tower, th1s 1s 4120 Tanao, we hlive
an emergency. • .t don't know bow
to Oy thi5 plane .. .! noed help."
THOSE WERE the franUc worda ol
a 17-year.old boy spoken from 1 atolen
twln-<nglne light plane Mooday Digltt
before a dramaUc "talk down" ID the
air,
Officials at McCamm lntemat!oul
ahwrt said the boy and -!&-,.... old bad stolen the Ces!na 320 rrom
North Las Vegas Airport, about 36 mllea
'"'" shortly after dark Monday. The youths ,..... In tbe air fO< more
than two hours and running out of fuel
when Ibey radioed the McCamm -10Ll!dl>~· --
"THE 17-YEAR-OLD boy Indicated to
us that be bad ooly 20 hours ol Dying
experience and didn't know bow to bring
the plane down," a tower apotesman
said.
"We notified the Clark County Fire
Department to bring in emergt.ney
equipment," he said. "Then we ·manapd
to locate a pilot who was Dying an
identical plane in the vicinity."
The airport spokesman said the pilot
bomed in on the wayward era.fl, made
radio rontact with the youths, and began
to talk them down.
The pilot, flying wlthlt1 a mile of
the other plane and leading, told the
youths what speed to fiy at and what
altitude to utilize ID making their
approach to McCarnn whlle around
crews stood ready on the runway.
A TOWER spokesman said the boys
made a smooth la.odlng, credlUng the
pilot of the rescue plane for brlnalnl
them In.
The you~ who were not ldenUfted
because of their age, we~ arrested
and booked on cllarges of grand larooty.
Nixon Always
Short of Cash
ST. LOUIS, Mo. (UPI) -
Whenever President Nllon went
to church with the Rev. Billy
Graham, he borrowed mooey from
the evangeUst to put lo tbe
collection plate, Graham said
Monday. Graham lw officiated a~ two
of the 41 rellgiOUI servk:iel at the
While House. and baa accompanied
tbe President to other churclt
servlce-1. While dl9CUsslng the ef!ects of
scaodalt on the admlnl~traUon et
1 news conference:. Graham said,
"He (Nixon ) Is a private man
who , for lnstance. lmt le.ft hla --rurwa1 iffalrs 10 som~ 11lse.
"WhcQtVC:r we went to church
together, he alwayi had to borrow
money from me to put In the
cOOectlon pl1te."
•
\
I
" ' '
-
Tot1ar's Final
N.Y. Stoeks
VOL. 66, NO. 289, l SECTIONS, 46 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA TUESDAY, OCTOBER 16, [973 N TEN CENTS
Parking Charges to Reach Orange County?
By WILLIAM SCHREIBER
Of 1119 Dlilly l"llet ll•lf
'111e estimated 150,000 Orange CoWl-
tiam who drive their' own cars to work
in Los Angeles each day may aoon
find it's a lUDJry they can't afford.
The latest Environmental Protection
Agency regulaUons for Loe Angeles will
make Jone commuting a lot less at..
tractive than car-pooling or riding the
bus, according to the man who ls im-
plementing Orange County's own mass
transit system. ,
Dr. G. J. "Pete" Fielding, director
of the Oranse County Transit Dlslrict,
ANTISMOG PLAN TO CURB
VEHICULAR USE, Story P1ge 5
said today the chances are also good
that the new rules will reach lqto Orange
County proper, affecting anot~r 800,000
people who drive cars from home to
other destinations.
"I think the regulations will almost
certainly increase the cost of driving
a car enough to make many people
look at it as a drain on their budgets ,"
Fielding sald. "Those who-can use public
transit conveniently will turn to It."
But Fielding said there is a big ''if'
involved.
"These people will use public transit
if somebody can come up nationany
with the funds for an operating subsidy
providing for good, extensive service,"
Fielding said.
He said the latest EPA rulings
theoretically mean public transportation
will have to pick up at least 50 pe'rcent
of the daily commuter_ trips fromJ>r.J.nge
County to Los Angeles.
"By our estimates, that would mean
use of 2,000 buses and •t4 million per
year in operating costs,'' Fielding said.
The OC'I'D currently has just over
100 buses with plans over the neit
few years to expand to 300. Fielding
said that means be can handle only
about sis: percent or the trl~ the EPA
is talking about. ·
"Without a k>l of ·assistance and some
good lead time, a 50 perct:nt trip figun
is out of our reach," he said. "Our
current mass transit plans will take
at least IO yean to implement and
even they wouldn't be enough."
' Fielding said tbe average commuter
vdll begin to feel the crunch of the
new EPA rules as early as nex~ June,
v.·ith imposition required IO percent
surcharge on all municipa) parking fees
to cover the cost or mass transit develop-
ment.
The parking surcharge will teap to
2S percent a year later.
By 1977, the court-mandated EPA
regulations will control con,,tructlon of
any new parking facilities in the l..llS
Angeles basin and ot~r metropolitan
areas in the United Slltes and would
(See CO~U\1UTE, Pa&e Z) ,
'
er .a am ro
Sitting .-Duek
-Bandit Overcome By 'Victims'
Orange Coullty Sheriff's officers drove to the South Lagwia area at high
speed Monday night when they got a report tha( two motel guests were being
robbed at gunpoint.
They needn't have hurried. The reported gunman was in much greater
danger than reported victims Walter Smith, 56, of Salt Lake City and Leslie
Eaby, 54, of Van Nuys.
In fact, deputies said, they were sitting on the head of a man identified as
Mideast
Mi-ssiles
Poised
Clifford Dale Burkhart, 26, of San· Diego. By United Press lnternatlonal Deputies sald -the-twcLJUO.~l _gu_cfil,3 __ tol4.__lht;!m they w.erLI:Jl:nfn>o.ted __ ~y__ _ .1 . -·rr---------.J-1--.---·-. . __ _ Burkhart wbo simulated possessjon of a gun. Within seconds they were simu· -An srae 1 commanuo orce crosscO
la ting two hens sitting on a clutch of eggs with the reluctant Burkhart play-the Suez· Canal today and attacked an-
ing the role of the nest. . . . ti.:.ircraft and SA1'-t missile sites in Egypt
Burkhart was booked mto county sail on charges of. attempted robbery. in a oombined air. sea and land assault,
Newport Studies Plans
t ~ -\, "
To Dig Prior ·to BUilding
_ Newpo{t BeaCh moved Monday to re-
quire private property owners to allow
aclentiflc exploraUon of all ldenttfied
archeological lites before construction
can take place.
Councilmen and p I a n n i n g com-
mis!lonen, meeting in joint session,
ordered the proposed cooservation el·
ement of their general plan modified
to include uie stlpulalion that the Pacific
_eoast~ical Society_and !l11
academic Institution be ootified prior
to any "large-scale" improvements and
Cliamber Board
Vrge s New po rt
Boat Sub sidies
Directors of .the Newport Harbor
Chamber of Commerce asked the city
Alonday to consider a form of public
subsidy to support private boatyard
operators who are being driven out of
business by the rising value of waterfront
land.
Chamber directors asked the city to
study using public funds to b u y prime
waterfront land , which wouJd then be
leased back lo private operators on
a oometitlve lease basis.
Directors argued that the private
boatyards are needed lo service Newport
Harbor's 5,000 pleasure craft and to
preserve the marine character of the
city.
lbat scientific exploration be permitted.
The change came at the insistence
of planning Commissioner J a c' k I e
Heather who made her pitch, sbe said,
"at the risk of being called the 'Queen
of lhe Fossll3.' "
Public hearings and formal action by
city authorities on the overall plan will
be needed before the fossil requirement
goes~ inlo effect-:
Mrs. Heather criticized the original
draft of the archeological and paleon·
· to logical r esom ces section-of-the con-
setvation report. She said it downplayed
lh·e significance of historic sites around
Upper Newport Bay.
' "The report says there 3re 'a few'
sites,'' Mrs. Heather said, "Upper
Newport Bay is a major resource. There
are 57 identifiabl~ sites and Otere are
30-40 still remaining."
The report said there are only 17
sites still intact.
l\.1rs. Heather and ·members of the
planning staff became engaged in mild
debate over what she feels are abuses
to other Newport Bay reservoirs of the
remains of the Gabrielino Indians who
inhabited the Orange Coast during the
winters as Jang as 1,000 years ago.
She said construction of the North
Bluffs development by the Holslein Com-
pany destroyed a major site known as
"Fossil canyon," but Newport Beach
Advance PlaMing Director Rodney Gwm
disagreed.
"Fossil Canyon has oot been destroyed.
It's been built on," he said, "but the
resources remain and they a r e
recoverable at some point in the future."
"It sounds funny, but it's true,"
observed Larry Moore, deputy director
(See FOSSILS, Page %)
an Israeli military spokesman an-
nounced. Cairo also reponed the crossing
and said Egypt was trying to throw,
back Israeli tanks.
.Prime Mjni ...... ~ Meir reported
the crosslhg 'in a speech to the Israeli
Parliament but gave no details. She
spoke shortly after Egyptian President
AnWar Sadat warned tllat Egypt has .
missiles on the launching pad ready
to strike deep into Jsrael il the Israeli
Alr Force bombed Cairo.
An Israeli military spokesman said
the commandos went over to the east
bank ol the canal in the central sector
and struck at missile and other an-
tiaircraft units protecting the rear of
the 100,000-man Egyptian army on the
I~raell side of the ·eanal
Israeli had sent rommandos into Egypt
earlier but the spokesman described this
group as a "fairly large" task force.
He would not say how large. He said
it already had been "successful in
destroying antiaircr:a!t_ batteries .and
artillery positions ."
"How long they'll operate there I don't
know.·· the spokesman said.
An Egyptian communique tonight said,
"The enemy attempted at noon today
to concentrate large quantities of annor
on tl'le central axis l of the Suei front I
and carried out strong counterattacks,
attempting to advance through a
bridgehead created by one of its forward
formations.
"A violent battle is going on at the
moment in which our armor, infantry
and mechanized infantry supported -by
the air force are seeking to throw back
the enemy and de stroy him. The enemy
has suffered St:vere losses and ~the
fighting is continuing."
Use of the word "bridgehead" in·
dicated that Israeli armor was across
the canal. An Israeli spokesman, asked
how the Israelis got across the canal .
said the EgyptWin bridgeheads on the
east bank had gaps through which the
Israeli task force knifed.
Meanwhile , the first American planes
with Israeli war supplies landed in Israel
as American involvement in the f.lldd le
East war increased in an effort to
counter Soviet afd to the Arabs.
·~ .A. ...
WORKMEN LABOR AWAY ON EXTERIOR OF HOAG TOWER
Ho1pit1I Offici1ls Modify Plans for Opening Facilit.1
•
Hoa g· Ho spital A11nom1ces
Delay Ove r To we1~ U11it
Hoag Memorial Hospital officials said
today they have delayed the opening
of portions or the hospital's $12 million
tower ror six months.
Hospital Administrator Scott Parker
said several patient service sectioos.
including the emergency room and x-ray
department, were scheduled to be moved
lO the first llvo floors this 'll'CCk or
next but now will wait unul the entire
ti -story tower can be opened in April.
Originally. directors considered a me>
lion asking the c i t y Dally to buy water-
front land for boat operations.
llowcvcr. \1'hen some directors otr
-jected thnt this amoun ted to a public
gubsldy, the request V.'83 90ftened lo
ask the city simply to "stuQy" buying Nixon Will Meet 4 Arabs
Parker said the dela y is "a maller
or economics." allhough he said he
\1·antCd to slress lhat it has nothing
to do 1vilh the financi:il capabilities or
the hospital.
"There "·err s!orit•s going !lrounrt tho!
\V('d run nu! of n1onc~·. hu t tha t's
absolutely not 1ruc."' l'arkrr said .
bn1shing thcrn orf.
w11terfront land. •
The proposal was advanced by Mike
Christiangen, representing the boatyard
committee of the Marine Division or
tbe chamber.
He told directors that the high value ot v.1aterfront land, especially for use
81 reslaurant3, was forcing many
.. boatyard oper1tor1 to stU out and close
down.
Christiansen said that already many
boaters -• lor~,_to 10 to Long Beech
or Dana Potnt for aervice, and that
unless aomelhinj: wu dont, the problem
would-wor1en.
"\Ye •~ concerned that without
service aveilable, boetl won't be able
to stay In good repair end will produce
more pollution in the bay," Christiansen
.said.
At one point-, Christiansen suggested
that money for buylf!i the waterfront
land eould come from sate. of the Balboa
Hay Club land to present holdf.ti of •
tbc Bay Club lease.
Spokesrnan Says Oil Will Not Be Major Issue
lie explained thal lt just would br
too co stly to move p11rt of the oµeration
10 the ne1v wing al l hi.~ tin1c, \\-'hilc
all the paticnls rcn1ai11 in the ol<l
WAliHINGTON (AP) -The While
House announced klday that President
Nlxoo will meet with £our Arab foreign
tnlnisters \Vednesday to discuss the
fighting tn the Middle Eaat.
Algeria, Kuwa it and 1'-1orocco "asked
10 see the President to discuss th'e
current 1ituation in the 11,1iddle East"
The \Vh.ilc House said precise time
MARI NES BOAR!> IWO JIMA
FOR MIDDLE EAST, Pege 4 'Ibe announcement came amid reports
that the envoys were tarrying a mes.sage
tr.om Ktng Faisal of Saudi Arabia, who of the meeting;-to be held ln Nixon's
hU bten under inlen.~ pressure from OVJI Office-; had not betn set.
N"ab COUJ1.terpam to deny J.lideast oil In addiUon to Nixon and Kisslncer.
til.-the United States. a spokesman sakril would be altrndc.-d
But a spokesman for one Arab delegf:"-'by Foreign PYtinisters Ab d c Io z i z
lion said oil w11s not cmc of the lssues Boutenika o( Algeria , Sabah n\.Ah1nod
1he ministers w11nt to dlsaiss. They al Jablr al-Sabah or K'tJwait. Afrmt.d
v.•ant only 10 toke up "the U.S. in. Taibl BenhlmL_of Morocco and t 'mur
volvcmen1 in th{> war,"' the Arab al-.'iaqqaf of SaudIArabla.
spokesman said. Tl is understood that Niion end King
\\'hilc tlousc Deputy Prell!!, ·Secretary F'ais11l cxchongc.'tl. mcssuges si nce the
r.crald L. \\'arren ~·ould :say only that outbreak of Arab-Israeli fighting 11 days
the foreign niinl.sters ot S11ud1 Arabia, ago.
. . ' ... ,
Asked &bout this, Warren said, ''We quarters. Parker said the pr<1 c1\C3 lltles nnd
do not as a rule discuss diplomatic logistics also entered Into the oidecliiion
contacts from here." to delay the opening.
Armoun«ment of Wednesday's meeting "It just doesn't flb'Ure right to have
~tween Nixon &lid the Arab envoys, patients v.'hccled through construction'
who are in New York for sessions of areas to be x-r:iyed." he said.
the United Nalions. came after Secretary Besides the emergency room and the
of S11te Jienry A. Klssingtr met for X•rny department, lhc fir!lt !WO noors.
en hour with the President including the ba~ment wlll house a
K!sslnger al so attended· an hour-long new cr.feterla nnd kitchen . pharmacy,
mee1ln3 of the \Vl\shington Special Action central supply racilll il:o!, envlronmcnla\
Group, a panel of top-level diplomalic. services scclion, laboratory and dietary
military and lntel\lgence officials who facilities a!I \rcll a!I s1or11ge areas.
eonttnually keep track of ~tideast ' .lf'he1·e Wiii be a rou11 or 2.-:i liin,g'le
d1'Velopments. pat ient roo ms in the lO\\'cr, bringinft
\Varre11 turned A\1 3)' most que~Uon!I the tota l numix'r of rooms in Hoag to
on the Arab-I sraeli ""'at. hut repented 470. There nrc 382 roo1ns now but about
1h11t Nixon instructed Kissinger "to re-!Kl medlc11l-~nrg1ral :ind mental carc>
m:1in In c"ontiiet v.'ith all par!les 1n " room.~ in the hospital annc:< acroM
the connlct and with lhc rnajor power.~" ISee DELAV. Pai::,. ~1
• +,·
II .
( .
\
State Plans
..
Takeover
OnAppro~al
By JOHN ZALLER
Of lfl• DlllY Plf91 lltfl
Tiie California Department of Fish
and Game Monday accepted 'Ille Irvine
Company's offer to take over ownership
oi all the Upper Newport Bay from
Shcl\mak:er Island to Jamboree Road.
· The state agency says it would lake
title as soon a! federal, Orange County
and Newport Beach officials give tbeit .,,.,.....
Detajls o1 t1!e --ladudlnc the tmne ecmpany•1·disp,&t.ed wlbip
of parts of the bay -would be worked
out later. ,
Any Jand not paid ror by the stale
at the end of 10 years v.·ouJd rever1
back to 1be Irvine Company~
In a letter· hand-delivered to lhe
Orange County Board of supervisors.
Norman Livermore, secretary o f
resources, asks immediate Orange Coun-
ty support for the takeover.
He said a similar request would then
be made to Newport Beach and the
U.S. Department of Interior. '
"The state's interest in proceeding
with negotiations and development or
an implementation schedule will depend
to great extent on the attitude and
official state position of t h e s e
governmental bodies," Livennore said.
Livermore adm its that "funds for ac.
quisition of-lhebay are not ·1mmedllitely
available.''. but he says tbe state would
assume immediate title to all bay lands
oow owned by the Irvine Company.
The Upper Newport Bay Field Com-
mittee -a joint federal. state, county
and Newport Beach panel -has been
working to find an acceptable formula
for taking over the bay, but it has
been stalled no w for several months.
The state Department of Fish and
Game has been ~·orking independently
of the F'ield Committee for more than
two months in an ef£ort to break the
logjam.
Details of the Livermore proposal were
worked out by Jarnes 11,1cCormick. chief
planner .for the state Department of
F'ish and Game.
The letter ~uggests that the state
assume ownership of lhe whole bay,
and tben proceed tG purchase it in
small parcels.
Federal, state, county, and Newport
Beach governments would be expect ed
to provide funds to complete the
purchase of the entire bay.
Any· lands not paid for at the end
or 10 years \\'ouk1 re\'crt to the Irvi ne 0ISet: UPPER BAV. Page %1
Orange
•
Coast
•
Weather
I lazy sunshine is on the agenda
for \\'cdnesclsy along the Orange
Coast. "'·ith ternpcratures in the
mid·6Qs at the bea ches rising to
8<I inland.
UliSllll> TOD/\ Y
Th rtc '11cn a,.e i11 cu.stod11 to-
da y fo r the aii.specttd kkfnap
o"d rn11rder of a N'Qman, he,.
two child rt it and n fa1nil11 jri~nd
iii S(Jll Brrnar<Jl)IO Set Rto1·u
l'fl!)f' 5.
(lhl'lr"i., I
CIS$JI.,.. ,,.,_
C....ic~ II
( .. HW9tfl: lf
0.11~ Htncu '
l!d1Mril l l°••t I
li .. -l>l~Mt"I II '•"••c• 11•1' ,.,. lllf •K t rf I
Htfff(IH 1'
"~" ~l"Cll•I 11
. '
"'9•Mlt 11 M-e\ ,.,.,,, H
Htl+. ... I Haw1 f
0••~ .. c .... ,,. •
'-'"' 11·11 SIMk M•rl!tll 11·11
T1l~1t-!' Tl""'"" It Wttttltr 4
'f'l"'-"'1 H1w1 ll>U ..v .. 1, ..... '
... -\ .
2 DIUlr PILOT
Nom Page J
UPPER BAY •..
~ Company. Jn the meantime, L.ivermore
propose!i that the Irvine Company be
exempted from paying property tales
on the bay lllnd. •
The proposal also would fm.oie the
cost of the bay at its 1973 val ue -
evel\ if purchases was not completed
unHI 1!)&1.
J.ivermore also pr~ that the state
move lmmedlatE>ly forwa.n:t wjth a~
praisa! of Uack Bay l:tnds beld by the
Irvine Con)pany. lie s;1ys that the ap-
praisal sbould be done on the assumption
that the Irvine Company holds unen·
cumbered fee to evtrythlng it claims.
But noting lh<it the COlmty has !ile<I
a prescripti ve ri&:hts suit for virtually
the entire Back Bay and that it may
also lodge an additional challenge to
the company's ownership of three un·
developed isJands, Livermore acids that
the appraisal would be subject to "ad·
justment.s based on ultimate findings,
negotiations, or court decisions affecting
value."
Livermore says' that fish and game
officials have already begun preliminary
negotiatioos with the Irvine Company
on these problems.
"The sLate intends to insure that the
final proposal, the terms of any agree·
ment, and the ulti1n3te acquisition costs
fully reflect and protect the public's
interest and the righls of Orange..Coun!y
as Trustee to !he lidelands of Upper
Newport Bay."
Orange County Supervisors are ex·
peeled to take up discUs!ion of the
p·roposal at their \Vednesday µieeting.
E. C. F~llerton, deputy director or
tbe department of fish and ga me, has
informed supe.rvi.90f'S that he will be
pretent to answer quWions about the
proposal.
The proposal al.so is expected to be
discussed F'riday at a meeting ol the
Upper Newport Bay Field Committee
in San Francis<:o.
* -tr *
Irvine Company
'Encouraged'
By St.ate Move
The Jrvin6 Company reacted with
caut.ioas eatllusiasm to the an-
nouncement that tile California Depart-
ment (){ Fish and Game wanls to accept
the rompany offer to take over
ownenbi'P of Upper Newport Bay.
"We are encoutaged by the ev\denl
cooponlloo ol the publlc ag.00.. In-
volved in seeking an early resolution
to the question of public use in the
Upper Bay area," a compruiy spoke3man
said.
"The concept being advanced places
a high priority en immediate ~ion
for public use of some of the Upper
Bay.land! and recognizes the very com-
plex questions yet to be settled con·
ceming both the Irvine Company's and
the public agencies' interest.I," the
spokesman !or Irvine Company President
Ra]IJQOO<l. L. Watsoo said.
Watson is on his way to Washington ,
DC., to accept an appointment to a
federal panel.
1--Lemn...to Ski
OnDryL~nd
The Ne\1.-port Beach R e ere at ion
Department is offering a thr~y
course in snow skiing t.liat Y.iU include
-everything but the snow.
• On the first Saturday of the program.
participants will meet at Eastbluff
Elementary School to learn the ba~ics
oI skiing.
For the second and third lessons,
cl<1s~ wi!l be held at the Sunland
Ski School in Anaheim on an artificial
COW'SC designed to simulate snow con·
• ditions. '
· ~ program begi!ll! Nov. 3 and \.\ill
,,
rost SIO per person. Participants must
register 1\·ith the city recreation depart-
ment by Ott. 27.
OR.ANGE COAST •
DAILY PILOT
l >1 0<•"9• Coo.i OA.h,.'1' i>tl..OT, "'I"' ""'IOI
" ~"'blt1td "'' ,., ...... !>,_, 1• P<ll>I\-bt
111• O••no• Co•" l"obl11ftl1'19 Co'""""Y l •IM· '"t• H l!to"' "" 1>1,1l>llihN, Mo,.;ty ltlt""Otl
I ' 11•1, !Ot ~Sii MtM, "'""Plltl 811tft
"""'lf>ll'Otl ll••<tlll'1>1,1ntt1" Vtfl1V. l •w":
~t•<tl, l•~'"''~-ltt>lt(~ •~G $111 Cl•...,.Mf/
l •n J,,.., C•o'•"•rw> A 0111011 ·~-I
..i,t>Oft I\ ""~"1111<1 $1l11r01vt •I'd $vM•l"I•
'"• P<'•"•1o•I 1Nl>li1Mr>Q 111111• I\ ~t ))0 w~11
~•y '""I, t~•t1 Ml .. , Cfl,.~rn11, •llll.
~ob1rt N. w,..i
'''""""' •<>d PvCll.....,,
J1c\. ~. C111 l1y
V·~t ,,t,,C!o111 •<>d c.t"'rtl ,,...,,._Ill'
1~o"''' K11•!1
!Ol!O•
n ;1¥1•1 "'· M u•p~i~1 M•~l"f !QllOr
L, P1!1• K1i19
Nc.,pofl &t~ft (•IV £4•lo•
N~rt 9"t• Office
JJJI N•"'lt4•t lo~l••11cl
M1lli~t Acl<l r111: f'.0 .1011 1175, 'l46J ...... .,... ..
(Olio Mrt•' )JI) Wtfl ••r 51,.1!
1.111...,. •••(ft m ,..,..,,, "-14,,...lrlV-•1o.cl'I : 1111S llffdl •""1.,.11"11
J1ft (io-.ito: lOS Hont> l'I ''~"' llH!
Tel•''--17141 642 ... JJI
Cl...m.d A .. e•Thfitf 14?•1671
COl)y•lff\!, 1'12. Q ... .,. CO.OU ""'°ll.itllot C-IM~'I'. "'O ....... , 110t'ln. HIVllrltie<lt tdl .... 111 -''-' ., ""'"''l·•-11 --1~
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,•
'
'S1iip' Attacks Police Cqr ' l From P"fJe J
Deputies Chase UfOs
Judge Sirica
Refuses Bail
, WASHINGTON (AP) -A federal.
'lllclp ..-today 1o permit five Wat.ergate COMpiraton to go lret
on bail while' rcquesta to have
!l"Uty pleu thrown out are pend·
COMMUTE ....
provide priority liee:way lane3 for buaes
and CD.r·pools.
• Fieldin& aaid Ibero ~ Rood examples
of bow lnmued parking COila have
forced people to reconsider u:1ing mau
tfamit. From Wire Senttet
If there mlly ar< unldenllfied Dying
objects (tJFOsJ out there, they've been
hovering again >0ver al' least four st.stes
-Jnd.ian::i. Louisiana, West Virginia and
Misslalppl. · ·,
Sightings during the night of som('thiog
touched off a flurry to local calls tu
baffled local ofJlcials.
si.;.tu•s depuU .. clwed OYO -reddJsb Dying obl«Lt 12 miles tllrough •
the Louisia1111 piney woods late Monday
night and early today oear Pine.
Deputy f\.Ucbael Moore said the ships
almost auacked a police car.
''One of our deputies was scared pretty
Nd," ?.1oore said from the W1tshington
Parish sheriff's deparlment. ''He tumed
Joi1a Co1111ty Group
Newport Planne1~s Urge
Limited Dwelling U~ts
By L. PETER KRJEG race. religion, creed, color or oational
Of TM O.ilY ,Ult Iliff Origin. >t
City government should give more cort· sideration to preser'1iog the "quality . The report also says the average house
of life" in Newport Beach than satisfying in Newport Beach is now selling for
gTO\.\'ing demands for new housing, city $49,000 while the average !or Orange
planners said t<.londay. County is $27,000. The average monthly
Jn their recommended hot1sjng clement rental in Newport Beach is more than
o! the new general plan. ttie city planning $1 75 per month. The county rental
staff saJd it should be "the CQ!ISCious average is $138 a month.
intent of the city . , . to limit the Realtors indicate that prices may be
number of d\.\'clling wilts \\'hich can somewhat higher now, since the figures
be oonstructed . . . even though this are based °" the 1970 census. Tax Collec--
limitatioo \.\'ill result in a shortage of tor Robert Citron said last ye ar the
housing .•. " average house in Newport Beach was
At lhe same time, planners recom-worth $36,000.
meul the city join the Orange Coonty Planners say that more tban 95 pereent
Housing Authority which is ~g to of the 57,000 persons in Newport Beach
provide housing for law and moderate are white.
ineome families throUghout Orang~ Based. 0t1 the-1970 CenslJ.j, when there County. -·'fr~ 47;100 residents, tbeM ·were 41
The planners propose giving the a .. cks, moot of them bouaei>old ..mnt.,
autOOrity "coment IQ transad business six fewer than there were when the
within the city, wil.h the understanding .1960 census was taken.
that no project may be initiated without The 45-page document ts a required
the coosmt of the city council." general .Piao elemen~ un~er ~te law.
The report was received with little Plamung Conurtlss1oner Jadtie Heather ~t ~t a joint meeting of the was one of the few who bad any com-
c1ty council and planning commission ment at all.
Monday night. Both will conduct public "All th~t ~~ a~t 'open housing'
hearings before adopting it and non-Oiscnmmatioo, she said, "and
In the report, plann~ alSG say Y~ 1.eft out 'sex.' " . .
Newport Beach will "develop, adopt and f Did you. wan! to ge~ mto a discuss ion enforce an 'open housing' ordinance. 0 that s~bJect?' quened Mayor Donald
"lt would prohibit discrimination in A. Mclnnis.
the sale or rental of housing to assure
that all persons will be able to purchase
or rent adequate housing facilities of
their choice, regardless of tbeir age,
From Pagel
FOSSILS ..•
of planning administration for the Irvine
Company, owner or the land on which
most of the fossil sites have been un-
covered.
"They would be even more valuable
later on," commeoted Councilman John
Store.
Gunn pointed out that the fossil sites
have not been pinpointed on any maP6
at the request of arclleological groups
who say amateurs would destroy them
if they were known.
_ In ,_encl~a:_ing the modified language
of t!le conservauon element, the joint
session also endorsed the idea of a
m~ for archeological and paleon·
tological objects found in Newport Beach.
Planners recommended that t b e
museum could be a part of a nature
e<!ucation center which may be developed
with tbe Upper Bay flora and fa una
reserve, or as part of the cultural center
proposed in Newport Center.
"The possibility of recreating one of
the early Indian places of habitation
could also be considered," planners said.
Edison Project
Ge~5-2 Okay
In Huntington
By TERRY COVILLE
ot ...., ~" ,.1io1 s11n
Sou~em Qlll!omia Edison Company
won r.1ty approv;il J\tonday 11ight to e1'·
~d Jts steam generatmg plan t in Hun·
!ington Beach and double the plant's
output of clcclrlcity. (Related Story.
!'age 3.)
The expansion approval came oo a
5 to 2 \'Ole of Ui c fluntington Beach
City Council. '
Ecllson official! n1ust now take their
expansion proposal before the Sou!h
C~as~ Regional Zone Conservation Com·
mission for another approval before \.\'Ork
can begin to enlarge the generating plant
an Paci,Il~ Coast High\\·ay.
Expansion of the plant wa:; oppo~d
by environmentalists and llunlington
Reach homeowners who live in the
shadow of the'big generators.
Only t\\'O of the seven counclhncn
fi<r.,·ever , supported their oppoe;ition. '
t':orma Gibbs, a psychology professor,
:i.n~ Ji~nry Duke .. a stockbroker, opposed
Echson s $..110 mllhon expansion proposal.
The council majority, In support ing
Edison's plan, conceded the expanded
pl11nt will present "a substantiaJ adverse
!mpact on !he environment, primarily
1n the form of dccrca~ air quality
caused by fos..~il fuel consumption."
But in the mollon presented by Al
C-oen, coancilmefl also said : "i'fowcvcr
the council further find~ thnt any ndver~
im~ will be outweighed by 11ubstant!al
benefits to th~ community through the
neces.'dty o ( ~xpansion of electrical
energy source!'! to m«t 1he needs of
the community.
"And the council further finds the
~d,\:c~c impact wHI be mlllgated by
1mr>0511lon of the CQndiUon~ as amended
hv ll'lt' rouncll." .. ' ..... .
Charles Finley
Sla pped by Kuhn
In _Andrews Case
NEW YORK (AP) -Baseball Com·
'";issioner Bowie Kubn slapped Oakland
A ~ owner Charles 0, Finley on the
wnsts todar an~ slapped s e co n d
baseman Mike Andrews back on the
rebellious A's World Series squad.
Aoclrews, suppcdedly suffering from
a"' shoulder ailment, wa.s placed oh the
disab~ed l~!t Sunday, an action which
Ma:vin Miller , executive director of the
MaJor League Baseball Players Assocla·
tlo~, called "highly suspicious" and
wh.ich Andrews• teammates and Kuhn
fabeled e'tlbarrassing -and worse.
Andrews committed two 12th-inning
errors SU.Oday which gave the New York
Afets three runs and a 10 to 1 victory
th~t squared t~ Series at one game
apiece. l..ess than two bOOrs liter."'liC
was on the disabled list while his ~am·
males were Oying to New York !or
Tuesday night's third game.
Fi~ey had requested that the A's
be given permission to replace Andrews
with Manny Trillo. ''There is no basis
to grant the request and it is accordingly
denied," Kullll replied.
'.'l might add that the handling of
this matter had the unfortunate effect
of unf.airly embarrassing a playe r "'ho
has g1\'en many years of able sef\lice
to professional baseball.
"It is my determination that Andrews
remains a full~fledged member ,of the
Oakland \Vorld Series squad," Kuhn ad·
ded.
"There is DO suggestion that this con·
dition (Andrews' shoulder ) bas changed
or worsened. since the Series began,
or has been injured In this Series. The
faet. tha t Andrews was used in Game
No: ~ by µie Oakland club appears
to 1nd1cate to the contrary."
Finley ~ai~ the A's would abide by
the comm1ss1oner's decision.
PUC Authorizes
2 Developments
At San Onofre
"TI1c AEC direct.or of regulalion ?.torr
da y was authorlud by the Atomic Safety
and !jccn~ing Board to Issue con·
struction permit.s for two additional l 140
megawatt nuclear Power plants at 1the
Santa Onofre nuclear generating 11t.ation
near &in Clement~,'' the AEC an·
nounc:emt>.nt here said.
The licensing board filed lt.s 162-page
decision nuthorh:lng the permits for
Southem Californi a Edison And San
Diego Gas and Electric in Washington ,
D.C. l\tondoy night, the AEC sald.
The two new prcsauflied water rrae-
t0f1:. cstlmn.ted lo cost more than $800
million. wilt join the 430 megawatt unit
currently operating on the 84-acre 11ite
21,1,i milc.<1 fl"bm San Clemente city limits .
The llcett~inj:l boar<l held hearings· In
Sfln Clemente and San Diego lhi.s year
and heard opposition to the plam from
the Scenic Shoreline P r es e r v l\ t lo n
Con~er~nco and Gf9ups United Against
Rnd1at1on Doogers.
" ·-"-. I -
•
on hll red Jfptl, Ind they came down
at bis Patrol car. JJe turned them orf
and they just vanished like in a cloud."
. In another &lgbUng reported near
Slidell, across Lake Pontchartrain from
New Orleans, Lfoyd P.1ercier .said he
was drivin,g home when tie saw an
object "approximately 15 or 20 f~l
in diameter and it had a streak about
a foot wide straight through the middle."
Several persons. includlng a weather
-0bser\·er and a pilot experienced in night
flylng, reported seeing an unidentified
flying object over lhe Raleigh Cou nty
Airport Monday night near Beckley, \V.
Va.
Tbe object first appeared about 8:45
p.m. and remained in sight !or about
30 to 40 minutes, according to Howard
Aloneypennyi.. weather service specialist
for the National Oceanic and Atmosphere
administration.
"It had no definite ~pc and t have
-no Idea • how far away or how big
it was," he said
Tbe airport is not equipped with
radar, but virtually all employes
reported seeing the object. It was
described as having red, green and white
flashing lights.
Police and residents in south cent ral.
"'·est central and northern Indiana were
puztled over strange, n111lti-colored ob-
jects which have been sighted the past
two nights.
"It rollowed me home," said Richard
Pape, who lives on 3 farm near HWl·
tington in nort hern Indiana.
The Huntington County sheriff, who
investigated the report, did not ~ee
anything but said Pape and his family
are "very reliable citizens and were
all shook up," about the incident
Town Marshal Rori Stucker at nearby
Andrews said he 'Saw One UFO south
of Huntington and one south of ·Andrews.
He said they appeared to be lights
in the sky.
In south cen tral Indiana, Morgan Coun-
ty Deputy Sheriff Robert Williama said
he saw an unidentified nymg object
that "took off from the ground" Monday
night just northeast of Martinsville.
In Pascagoula, Miss., reports of
unidentilied flying objects continued
around the Mississippi Gulf Coast nearly
a week alter two n1en said they were
taken aboard a nonterrestrial craft.
From Page .l
DELAY ...
Hospital Road will no longer be used.
Among the features or the new tower
will be . used to expand the physiolherapy
floor, Jll'OVic1irtg' the best VleW a1'd tttra
services to those who will be • willillg ·
".'fi.s. District Court Judge Jobn
J. 'Sirica &MOUllCf!d hls decision
after a atormy hearing dnrlng
wPl\ch l\f;l;crilicized Sen. Herman
Talmadge. (0..Ca.), of the Senate
W~.tergate CommlUet for implying
Sir1ca had been too harsh with
the defendants.
Four of the five who sought
relea'.se wtre in court: E. Howard
llunl, Eugenio R. Martinez, Virgilio
Gonzalez, ind Bernard Barker.
When Hunt was before the com·
mittee, Talmadge sak! he taund
it "very ~strange'' that Hunt wa5
In prison while the men who plan-
ned the brf.ak.fD were fret,, •
Oakwood Fire
May Be Laid
To 'Recorder
Evidence uncovered at the seen; of
a $100,000 fire that gulted ont noor
of Newport .Beach's Oakwood Garden
Apartments early Monday indicates the
blaze may have originated in a faulty
u.ipe-mora:er:
Investigators uncovered the pof.!ible
cause later 1n the day wblle p-Obtng
the charred ru!ils of .Apt. 205, occupied
by Sylvia Tedemar. .
She and a second person leaped to
the grotmd from a wiDdow to escape
the flames which tOtally destroyed her
own apartment and another at the op-
posite end of the hallway.
Damage to the involved structure
Building N at 1970 16th St., ·included
burned. doors to all 12 units on the
second Boor. plus smoke and water
damage to 22 others tln the first and
third noors. '
Newport Beach Fire Department Bat·
lalioo Chief Jim Topping said today that
severe damage in the living room area
where Miss Tedemar kept her tape
recorder indicates that was the spot
where it started. ~
The predawn blaze brought men and
equipment from NewPort Beach, Costa
~fesa and the Orange Coumty Fire
Department.
Several peraons were rescued from
second story balconies and windows by
firemen using ladden.
Spokesmen for the b~'I\ owners.
u1n Washinitton. O.C., where It coats
$3.50 to '4 a day to imrk, large numbeni
of people ·have hlmed ti) the .~ .
which cost , ltss than SI 3 day\-and
nothing to park," he said.
f'ielding said he can see a Ume under
lhc new EPA rule11 when car commuten;
to Los Angeles wlll pa y at least $3
or more tor par;.:ing eYery day.
Fielding said it is not clear yet whether
th e EPA 'rulings direct1y affect the
n1etropolitan areas of Orange County
-speciflcaUy centered in Garden Grove,
Santa Ana and Anaheim.
"It would appear tromJooJdng at initial
reports t.bat-OraDge C.Ounty .is· considered
part of the Los Angeles metropolitan
area and hence would be ~ Bf. fWOO.-bY the rules.'' be 'iaiO..
Planning officials in 11evlU'al Orange
Coast dUes said today Ibey bav,.•t
llad' eno1llh U01e to atlXly the "1Uloti9M
,to determine what local df'ecla -there
w.ill be.
But. Fielding aaid it 11-.almost .. eertlin
that cltie3 which generat.e_a.Jol-«-Jcaffic
-such as Newport Bea.Ch -will have
to come up With ~e"~ aliernaHvea to
car ,traffic and ¥1ae.a5ed~PJY:king.
.. If parking is ;egarded by the EPA
as rostering ponution, then the' ciliell
are going to have to (ind .alleroat.ives
quickly to meet the lilw,'1 lie said,
Fielding's contentiOa that much of the
enforcement burden will fall lo local
government bas beea supported by
George Taylor, eXecuUve secretary of
tbo..Air ReS®rmJma1iUn Sa..mJllel.llo. "Much of the responsibility will"fill
on local g0Yel1llllenl.t and I. think-there
will bo a very clooe loP at' what can
~ be done to encouraiii car pools ,. he illid. ev '
Los Angeles Mayor Tom Bradley said
Monday the EPA measures ll'll "a
nec.euary evil" to get motorists out
of their cars and into pools or buses.
Other segments of the new EPA Mil:
logs will hurt the average car commuter ~·
as weU , Fielding 88ld. _ _ _ _
For example, the ·EPA Ls looking at
gas raUoning as one of the ooly· ways
to t"\lt car traffic enough to do any
good in big metropolitan areas.
E~rts for the EPA claim virtually all
traffic on Los Angeles road& would have
to be eliminated to meet the 1977 Clean
Air requirements.
If gas is rationed, Fielding fo~
gasoline costing Sl a galloo or more.
Besides bus and car-pool service
Fielding thinks the Amtrak traina will
have to start nmning on commuter
schedules again.
But be said the big problem will
be Interference with critical lrelght train
schedules.
"The problem with the trains and
any 'of thla is that when you cbange to pay for It. ' ,
The existiiig pathology laboratory,
~ when moved, will house business of!ioes
and the present operating room suite
will be used to expand the phmotherapy
iacWty.
The present orthopedica wing will be
combined with urology and become the
mental heaJth urtit.
R and B Development -Cmlpany, Said
Monday they belie~ damage would
be less !ban the $100,000 eslliiiated by
ftremen on the scene.
Appraisers today were studying the
bl ackened rem&ns ta determine !low
much Joss was iDvolved.
... ' part ol the -· e"'1')'llllng ia ~one way or another."
Overallr -Fielding gays moot ol the
EPA rulings will hurt """"1Ulers in
tbe low-to· middle income rlllge who
can't hmKile another burden oo the
pocketbook •.
The present doctors' lounge will be<»Tne
a so{.arilUll and the present su~inten.rlre
care wing will be used for ·general
patient bed ~re.
That section , as well as intensive care
and corooary care rooms, will be on
the fourth noor of the new tower.
The nuclear medicine section will be
expanded-into.-the.. present..x,ray section
The pharmacy and central supply
facilities wil.1 become classrooms.
The kitchen and part of the cafeteria
will become a coffee shop for visitors.
The intensive care unit will become
a doctors' library and lounge. -
The present emergency room will be
eonverted into offices or the record
librarians' staff and the present doctors•
library and records room, along with
the present physlotberapy section, will
~me the admissions and discharge
sectiorus,
Trip to 'Japan'
Slated for Kids
The Newport Beach Recreation
Department Is sponsoring a day-long
trip to Japanese Vulage In Buena Parl<
Oct. 22, a school holiday.
The trip Ls open to dlildren ot all
ageo, and will include the price of ad·
mission and tra.nsportaUon.
The price for children U years old
and under ts •1 ; foc children 13 to
17, the prlc;e ls $2i and for 18 and
up. the price ls 13.
Children six and under must be ac·
companied by an adult. Oilldren under
8 must be accompanied by an older •
brother or sister. For signup fonns,
c.ontact the city Recreation Departmenl
But he aays the average drtver tn
the upper .middle Income range most
likely will tr.ep driving until short Pl'
supplies force bim to stop.
But he said even that isn't a black
and wblt.e ·situation and he c:ould be
wrong In his predictions.
"A go<>d ezample of the changeability
ot this situation ii the fact Wt our
(OCTD'sl highest and beot ""' lines comes from Newport Beach. ·one of the
wealthiest communiUes in the cowty"
he added. '
Firebomb Spews Beer
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -. !!...-
distributors hert posted a $5,000 reward
1.fonday for Information leading to the
a_rrest and conviction of persoos who
ftrebombed a Coors truck last week
seriously inJwing an employe. '
l\ALEIDOSCOPE
,
. Our showroom is • virtual hleidoscopo of eolors. The reasons 1,..
Vtried -:
• We know. th~t eolor coordinating is, tho primery target whtn buy.
1n9 ctrpet. Quality is usually second in fine, and because we have 1Uch 1
vast selection of qualities, it is easy to cOordinate color 11nd quality to
each individual's taste. ..
However, .we know that a volume of samples looking at you can
see".' very eonfu".~9 -.b..•t-wt fffl th1t showing just 1 low 11meles is not
a fa ir re presentation of the carpet business. Our huge Sefection gives our
salespeo ple every J'°"i~le option in working with people, helping thom
lo find the porfoct eho1u.
So ii you are in tho m.rltot lo seloet your carpeting -select
Alden's to help you, that's what we're hero forl!I!
ALDEN'S
CARPETS e DRAPES
1663 Placentia Ave.
COSTA MHA
646-4838
• HOUlS: MOL T1tnr l'llon., f lo l :JO· -Pit. t to t ' ••t t 10 • --.. ' ...
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Today'~ Flnal
N.Y. Stocks
• YO!:. 66, NO. 289, 3 SECTIONS, 46 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA TUESDAY, OCTOBER 16; 1973 c TEN CENTS
~ (
, Parking Charges to Reach Orange County?
, Ji.~. -' . ' By ll'ILLIAM SCHRElDER
Of .... ~ .. ,~Of lit•ff
The estimated 150,000 Orange Coun·
tians who drive their--pwn cars lo work I in Los Angeles each day may soon J find It's a luxury the}' can't afford .
I The latest ~Vironmental Protection
Agen~ regulaUons fOr, Los Angeles will
make Jone commuting a lot less at-
tracllve tban' cal'-pOOling or riding the
bus, actarding to the man who is im·
~ementing· Orange County's own mass
transit system.
Dr. G. J ... Pete" Fielding, director
of the Oraoge Co\Dlty Transit District,
ANTISMOG PLAN TO .CURB
VEHICULAR USE, St~ry Page ~
said .today the chances are also good
that the new rules will re.sch into Orange
County proper, aUeeting another 800,000
people who drive can from home to
other destinations.
,
I • er ' e
1' ' .
ll'atclaing Over Ber . . .
~1ary McLaugblin,,who lives down the .street from Zuver's Gym on
liamllton.Street in Costa Mesa, can't escape the feeling that she's bf;.~
ing watched as she walks pa st the health spa, which is well known
for its unusual·d,ecorl}tfte figures. -
Mesa Council Approves
· Project 'With Warning'
condition31 permit status imposed on
the reroning. ·
He also wamed that if the builder
(See WARNING, Page%)
"I think the regulations "'ill almost
certainly increase the cost or driving
a car enough to make many people
look at it as a drain on their budgets."
Fielding said. "11"lose who can use public
transit conveniently will tum to it."
But" Fielding said there Is a big "ir"
Involved.
"These' people will use public transit
if somebody can come up nationally
with the funds for an operating.subsidy
providing for good, extensive service,"
Fielding said.
He said the latest EPA rulings
theoretically mean public transportation
will have. to pick up at least 50 percent
of the daily comm uter lriJ:'I fr0m Orange
County to Los Angeles.
"By our estimates, that would mean
we qf 2,000 buses and $14 million per
year in operating Costs," Fleldlng said.
The OC"TD currenUy bas just over
100 buses with plans over the next
few years to expand to 300. Fielding
said that means he can handle only , wil)l imposition required 10 per~nt
about six percent of the trips the EPA surcharge on all municipal parking fees
is talking abc>ut. to cover the cost of mass transit develop-
"'Wilhout a lot of assistance and some ment.
good lead time, a 50 percent trip figure The parking surcharge· will teap to
is out of our reach," he said. "Our 2fi percent a year later.
current mass transit plans will take By 1971, the court·mandated EPA
at 1east 10 years to implement and regulations will control conatrucllon of
eYen they wouldn 't be eoough." any new parking facilities in the Los
Fielding said the average com.muter Angeles basin and other metropOlltan
will begin to feel the cnmch or the areaJ in the United States _and Would.
new EPA rules as early as next June, (Ste comtUTE, Page %)
am ro en
M·ideast
Missiles
Poised
By United Press Inlematlonal
An Israeli commando force crossed
the Suez Caria! today and atta~ked an·
tiaircraft and SAM missile sites ·in Egypt
in a combined air, sea and land assault,
an Israeli military spokesman an-
nounced. Cairo also reported the crossing
and said Egypt was trying to thro\v
back Israeli tanks.
Prime Minister.. ~Ida Meir ceported ..,
the cn>!sing m.~(a%peech to the' Israeli •
Parliament but gave DO deteils. She
spc:>ke shortly after Egyptian President
Anwar Sadat warned that Egypt has
missiles on the launching pad ready
to strike deep into Israel if the Israeli
Air Force bombed Cairo.
An Israeli military spokemian said
the commandos went over to the east
bank of the canal in the central sector
and struck at missile and other an-
tiaircraft Wllts protecting the rear of
the 100,000-man Egyptian army on the
l~raeli side of the canal.
Israeli had sent commando! into Egypt
earlier but the spokesman·described this
group as a "fairly large" task force.
He would not say how large. He said
it already had been "successful in
destroying anliii.ircraft batteries and
artillery positions."
"fJQw long they'll operate there I don't
know," the spokesman said.
An Egyptian communique tonight said,
"The enemy attempted at noon today
to concentrate large quantitie.s of annor
on the central axis (of the Suez front)
and cai:rled ,._qut strong counterattacks,
attemptu1g to advance through a
bridgehead created by one.of its fo™'ard
formations.
''A violent battle is going on at the
moment in which our armor, infantry
and mechanized infantry .supported by
the air rorce are seeking to throw back
the enemy and destroy him. The enemy
has suffered severe losses and the
fighting is continuing."
Use of the word "bridgehead" in·
dicated that Israeli armor wa.s across
the canal. An Israeli spokesman, asked
bow the Israelis got across the canal,
said the Egyptian bridgeheads on the
eas~ bank had gaps through which the
Israeli task force knifed.
Meanwhile, the first American planes
with Israeli war supplies landed in Israel
as American involvement in the l\Iiddle
Easl war increased in an errort to
counter Soviet aid to the Arabs.
*
WORKMEN LABOR AWAY ON EXTERIOR OF HOAG TOWER
Hospft•I Offici•ls Modify Plans for Opening Facility
Hoag Hospital Announces
Delay Ove1· Tower U1rit
Hoag Memorial Hospital officials said
today they have delayed the opening
of portions or the hospital 's $12 million
tower for six mdnths.
1-lospital Administra tor Scott Parker
said several patient se rvice sections,
including the· emergency room and x·ray
department, were scheduled to be moved
to the first two floors this week or
next but now 'i\'ill wait until the entire
ll·story lower can be opened in April.
~ State Plans
' ·1
Takeover
On Approval
By .JOHN ZALLER
Of ltM Dalt'I' f'llM Stiff
The California Department of Fish
and Game Monday accepted The Irvine
Company's offer to take over ownership
of ell the Upper Newport Bay from
Shellm.aker Island to Jamboree Road.
The Jtate agency says it would take
title as soon as federal , Orange County
and Newport Beach ofncials give their
consent.
Details or the purchase -Including
the Irvine Company's disputed ownership
ol parts of lhe bay -woold be worked
out later~
Any land not paid ror by the state
at Ute end of 10 years would revert·
back to The Irvine Company.
In a Jetter hand-delivered to the
Orange C.ounty Board of Supervisors,
Nonnan Livermore, secretary o f
resources, asks immediate Orange Coun-
ty support for the takeover.
He said a similar request would then
be made lo Newport Beach and the
U.S. Department of Interior.
"The state's Interest in proceeding
\vith negotiations and development of
an implementation schedule will ilepend
to great extent on the attitude and
official stale position of t b es e
governmental bodies,'' Livermore said.
Uvermore admits that "funds for ac-
quisition of the bay arc d:>t immedlately
a1•ailable," but he says the state would
essume immediate title to all bay land!
now owned by the Irvine Company.
The Upper Newport Bay Field Com·
mittee -a joint federal. state, county
and Newport Beach panel -has been
working lo find an acceptable formula
for taking over the bay, but it has
been stalled now for several months.
The state Department of Fish and
GIUlle has been working independently
of the Field Commiltee for more than
two months in an effort to break the
logjam.
Details of the Llvermore prOPQSal were
worked out by James ti.lcCormick, chief
planner for the state Department of
Fish and Game.
The letter suggests that the state
assume 01\•nership of the v.•hole bay,
and then proceed lo purchase ii in
small parcels.
Federal, slate. rounty. and Newport
Beach governments would be expecled
to provide funds to complete the
purchase of the entire bay.
An y lands not pa id for at the end
of 10 years 11'011ld revert 10 the Irvine.
~See UPPER HAY. Poge Z)
A major re1..oning project which opens
the way for aboUt 250 new apartments
in the ci ty's so-called Golden Triangle
11,rea as ·a means of cleaning up blight
was barely approved Monday night by
the Costa r.1csa City Council.
The (development firm whi ch won
authoriiaUon to proceed with the project
covering approximately 12 acres of the
old Francis X. Shoen properly wa s sent
3way with a warning .
Nixon Will Meet 4 Arabs
Parker said the delay is •·a matter
of economics." although he said he
wanted to stress that it has nothing
to do ""ith the financial capabilities of
the hospital.
'"There \\'ere stories going around lha t
1ve·d run out of monC'y . l'lln thal's
:ibsoh1lely not true.'" l'arkrr said.
brushing them oH
Orange
•
Coast
•
Councilmen· are not totally happy with
Larson Industries' densitY of 22 units
per acre and said if plans for the
proJect rail through the property will
be rezoned to a lower density.
Jim Glanulius, a representatlve or
Laraon Industries, is the fourth builder
to approach the city with a proposal
for lhe land, much of which Is undevel-
oped.
The properly Ucs west of the Newport
Freeway1 south of Paularlno Avenue
Jnd ,nortn ot Baker Street.
Glnnullus, whose firm developed the
Mesa de\ A1ar 1roct, aleo In the ·
northeastern area of town , succeeded
In winning II" re1.0ne rrom R2-CP to
JU..CP. Thit permitted mort den!lty.
Councilman Robert M. Wlbioo aald
ht Ms faith in the firm's ability lo
create a good ~Yelopment be*' on
its performance in the Mesa de! Mar
11rt1 1ndl 1trict controls of lhe CP or
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Spokes1nan Says Oil Will .Not Be Major Issue
\VASHINGTON (AP ) -The \Vhitc
Jiouse announced todny that President
Nixon will meet with fOllr Arab foreign
ministers Wednesday to discuss the
fighting in tbe Middle East.
The announcement came amid reports
that the envoys were carrying a message
from King Faisal of Saudi Arabia, who
has been under intense prcuure frqrn
Arab 'counterparts to deny Mjdeast oil
to the United Sta1e1. ' · '1 nut a spokesman for one Arab detega·
!Ion s11id Qn was oot Ofle Qf the lssue1.
the ministers wnnt to dlsaas!I. They
wAnt only 10 take up "the U.S. l~
volvemerit in lht wer," the Arab
spokeaman sa id.
White House [){lpu1y Press Secretary
r.erald L. \Varrerr "-'OUld ~Y only thal
lhc roreign minJslers of Saudi Arabli,
Algeria, Kuwait and Morocco "asked
to see the Pr esidef\t to discuss the
current situalioo in the Middl~ East."
The \Vhite House said precise time
MARINES BOARD IWO JIMA
FOR MIDDLE EAST, Pago 4
or the meeting, to be held in Nixo.n's
Oval Office, had not been set.
In addllion to Nilon and Kissinger,
a spokesman &aid it would be attended
by Fonilin Ministers Ab d e I a z l z
Boutenlka. or Alg1'.!rla, Snl>Rh al-Ahn1ad
al Jablr al-8abah of Kuwait, Ahmed
Taibi Benhlma of Morocco and Umer
al-&lqqar of Saudi Arabia.
IL ill ulldenlood that Nixon and King
Faisal fXCh~ngtd nwiuage1 since the
outbreak of Ara~lsraeli 1ia:hllng II da.Y!I
ago.
""
Asked abc>ut this, \Varren said. "\\'c
' do not as a rule discus.s diplomatic
contacts from here."
Announcem ent or Wl"dne.sday 's meeting
between Nixon and the Arab envoys,
who are in New York ror sessions of
the United NatloM, came after Secretary
of State Henry A. K.Jssinger met for
an hour with the President. K~inger also attended an hour-long
meettng of the Washington Speclal Action
Group, a panel of top-level diplomatic,
military and inte lligence officials "'ho
('()nti nually keep track or ti.1idcast
devel()prncnls.
\\'arren turned ;iwi:iy most questions
on the AraJ>.lsrnrli war. but f'fPCllcd
thal Nixon instructed Kissinger "to re-
main in contoct with all par1les 1n
the o:innrct and wit h the mriJor powers.··
lie explainl!d that It jui;t v.·ould ht•
too costly to move pa rt of the opcra11nn
lo the n<'w "'ing at th is tin1c. \1'hile
all the patients re1nain in the old
quarters.
Parker sa id the practicalities und
logistics also entl'red into the decision
to delay the opening.
"It just doesn't figure right to ha1·e
patients wheeled througl? construclioo
areas to be X·rayed." he said.
Besides the emergency room and lhe
X·ray department. the first !WO Ooors,
including the basement, ''ill house a
new cafeteria and kitchen . pharmocy.
central supply raciUties. en\liron ment al
servlcts section, l:iboratory and dlct~ry
facl lll ir!I a!I "·t'll as storage l\r('n~.
There will be a totAl or 243 si ngle
patient rooms in !he IO"'Cr. bringing
tht-tol::il numhcr of room s 111 !long to
470. There art 382 rooms now· but about
90 medic;JI· urglcal and rnental c11re
rooms in the hospital annex acro ss
!Set ~lELAV,, rnge 11 '
Weather
Ht1zy sunshi ne is on th<: agenda
for \\'ednesd:iy nlong the Orange
Coast. v.·ith temperatures in the
1nid-60s ut the beaches rising to
8'I inland.
INSIDt; TODA l'
T/1ree ·n1e1L nre iu cu$tody to.
dny for tlte ~u.spf'Cli!d kidnap
ond murder of n womn n., htr
t1i10 children u11d n fo111ily f rie11d
;~, San Beruarrl11to See story
Paae 5.
Ctlllttft11 l ~~lt1 11
Cl•nillt't tf.i. M"'f\tl>I .-1111111 11 Ctml<t II Ntl ..... I ".,... I
(rtn-f 11 0.l"M ( ... "" ' ON!~ Nelltfl I t .. n~ 11>1
l •i"'°!fl '''' t llMtl Ml<titlt 1 .. 11 E"lfflfiftlM"' 11 'Ttl9¥1,i.o, J l'!M<l<f 11•19 TltNlln It
llM "'-lltt<ff~ I Wtt tltti" t
Mfrtl'(Ht II tl'"Tlf"•' H"" 1J•1t
Aftfl L•"°I" 1J tl'MM MN• •
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2 OAIL 'Y PILO'f c •
Ship' Attacks Police Car f'rent Pqel
Deputies Chase UFOs Bandit Overco1ne By 'Victi1 ns'
COMMUTE ...
provide . prlority (retway I ants ror bu5el
.:ind car.pools. -
t'itJcllna Aid Utere are 1ood uampleo
of how Increased perkln1 colts. hive
fotoed people to recon&lder using mass
transit. t'rom Wlre Ser\'lces
If there really are unidentified flying
objecti {UFOs) out the-re, they've been
hovering aptn over at least four states
-tndl11no. Louisiana, West Virginia and
A1issis.,lppi.
Sighllngs during the nighl of something
touched off a rlurry to local calls to
b&lOed local officials.
Sheriff's deputies chas.t<I five orange-
reddish flylng objcct.s 12 miles through
the l..ouhliana pincy \\'OOds late !t·tonday
night dJld early today near Pine.
In Costa /tlesa
llel'llY Mld>ael Moore lllld the llllp&
almost 1ttacted • poUce car.
''One or our deputln was scartd pr~ty
b<d," Moore "1ld from the Wuhln&IDn
Parish sheriff's depa~ment. "He turned
on his red tights, arid they came down
al hia patrol car. He turned them o£t
and they just vanished like in a cloud."
In another ~hting r~rted neoir
Slidcll, across Lake Pontchartrain from
New Orleans, Lfoyd ~1ercier said he
wa:s driving home when he sa'!f an
object "approximately JS or 20 fett
in di~m,te.r and il had a streak about
a foot wide lltrllpt tltrouah the mlddle."
Seven.I pemns, including a weather
obse rver and a pilot experienced in night
Oying, reported seeing an unidentified
flying object .over the Raleigh County
Airport Monday night near Beckley, \V.
Va . ,
The object first appeared about 8:-4S
p.m. ind remained in sight for about
30 to 4-0 minutes, aC'cordJng lo ltoward
Moneypenny, weat her :service speciali:it
for lhe National Oceanic and Atmosphere
adrninistration.
"It had no definite shape and I have
no lde-a how far away or how big
il v.·as," he said
Orance COunty SMrlff's officers dnwt lo the South Laguna art:a at high
speed ldanday ni&ht when they got a report that two motel guest. were being robbod ll IWIP<tlJ\I.
They 'ticoedb't have hurried. The rtpGrttd gunm•n wa.., in mu<'h greater
danger than reponcd \'ictirns Walter Smi th, 56, of Sall Lake aty and Leslie Eaby, 54, of Van Nuyi.
In fact~ deputies mti d, they were !!lttlngon the head o! ;a man ldenUlled as
Clifford Dale Burkhart, 26, of San Diego.
Deputies said the two motel guc.>s ts told them they were conCronted by
Burkha rt who simulated possession or a· gim. Within seconds they were slmu· ~allng two belll silting on a clutch o! eggs wlth the reluctant Burkhart play-ing the role of the nest.
Burkhart was booked into county jall on charges of attempted robbery.
Huntington Beach Ol(s
"In \Vashlngton . D.C.. where ti coabl
$3.50 lo $4 a day lo !)irk, lara:e: nwnber1
or people hive turned IO the buses.
u·hich CO!it less than SI a day and
nothing to park," he said.
Fielding said he can see a lime undtr
the new EJ'A ruJes \vhen car commuttn<
to Los Angeles will pay 11 least $3
or more. for par:..!Jig every day.
fo'i elding sa id It is no! clear yet wbethf'r
the-EPA ruli ngs directly 11ffecl · tht
n1clropolitan area s of Orange County
-speciflcalJy centered in G11rden Grove,
Santa Ana end Anaheim.
Meeting Slated Tonight
On Downtown Project
Tbe airport. is not equipped with
radar; but virtually aU ernploye.s
reported .. seeing the obje<:L It was
described as b:aving red, c:reen and white
flashing lights.
Police and residents in south central,
west central and northern Indiana were:
puzzled over strange, mulU-colored ob--
ject.s which have been sighted the past
Expanswn for Edi-son
two nights. .. By TERRY COVILLE
"It followed me home," said Richard °' "-a.ttr ...... stJtt
Pape., who li ves on a farm near Hun-Southern California Edison Company
Only two of the '.seven rowic.ilmen,
however, supported their opposition.
Norma Gibbs, a psychology professor,
and Henry Duke, ~ atoekbroker, opposed
Edison's $310 million expansiQn proposal.
"It would appear from looking al inili•I
reports that Orange County is coruidered
part or the Los An~eles metropolitan
area and hence would be directly af·
fee.led by lhe rules," he said. .~
Planning o[ficials in 1ever•l Oran(l;e'
Coast cities said today they haven't
had enough Ume to study the regulalloM
to determine what local efftct.s ther•
will be. ~
But Fielding said it is almosl oerbia
11\at cities which generate a lot of b'amc
-such as Newport Beach -will have
lo come up with some altemaUves to
car trafl'i c and increased parking.
A special meetin~ of the Costa Mesa
Redevelop1nent A8ency has been called
'for tollfgltt to dtscu~s two different plans
for remodeling the do'ATitown area. Each
oom about $4 million .
The meeting is scheduled for 7:30
in the fifth floor conference room of
the Costa ~tesa Civic "'Senter, 77 I•"air
Drive.
During lonight's session nlembers of
the aty Council expect lo fo~-ard the
plane t.o the city planning commis.!ion
for action. Tbe live councilmen are also
direoton: of the redevelopment agene)I.
'The tY<'O redeVelopment plims have
been drawn by the Pasadena consulting
ftrm Wilse:}• & Ham. Tbe $4 mllllon
figure represents an lncreate of nearly
'40 . percent over the original 1970 pro-
jection. Th.is is attributed to Inflation
and additional Y.'Ork wh ich must be
undertaken in the redevelopment area.
'Ibe redevelopment area 1s bounded
on the north by I!Hh street. on the
south by 17lh Street. on the east by
Orange Avenue and on the West by
the Newport Freeway righ:t-of·u·ay.
Not to be confused with urban renewal
projects. the (\\'O Costa Mesa redevelop-
~sobemes proJ>OM! to improve traffic
clreulation and commerce by widening
and realignment of roada and improved
parking.
Work will include the widening and
improvement of 17th, 18th and l!tt h
Streets, acquisition of lend on tbe west
side of Newport Boulevard for additiooal
parling, street modifications for con·
I
Fw-o1I& Page l
DELAY •..
Hospital Road will no longer be used.
Among the features of the new tower
will be used to apand the physiotherapy
floor, providing the best view and extra
services to those who will be wUltng
to pay for it.
The existing pathology laboratory,
when moved, '"111 house business offices
and the present operating room 51iltc
will be used to expand the ph:liolherapy
facility.
The present orthopedics wing will be
combined with urology and become the
mental heallh unit.
The present doctors' lo~ge will become
a solarium and the present sub-intensive
care wing will be used for gCfleral
patient bed care.
That section, as '"'ell as intensive care
and coronary care rooms. '"·ill be on
the fourth floor of the new tower.
The nuclear medicine Stetion will be
expanded into the present x-ray section.
The phannacy and central supply
facilities will become clas..'>rooms.
The kitchen and part of' the cafeteria
will become a coffee shop for visitors.
The intensive care unit will become
a doctors' library and lounge.
The present emergency room wtll be
converted into offices or the record
llbrarians' staff and the p~sent doctors'
llbrary and records room, along '"1th
the present physiotherapy soction, will
be<'ome !he admissions and discharge
sections .
OU.NGI COAIT "'
DAILY PILOT
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struction of several !lmall shopping com·
plexes and land acquisition for nev,i
busints!I office sites.
~fembers of the agency plan to finance
redevelopment from taxes in the
redevelopment area. They have set Jan.
I as the date for adoption oC a freeze
on the assessed valuation of property
in the project area. After Jan. l all
tax re<:eipU: from added valuation will
go into the redevelopment fund.
One of the plans developed by Wilsey
and Ham is keyed lo const:ructlon of
the Nev.port Freeway arouvd the proi'&"
area while Uie-ctber is not.
Ullller tbe llrst plan, the freeway llOUld
be used ID carry traffic 1ll'OWJd the
downtown aru and Newport Boulevard
would be closed to through traffic.
Newport Boulevard wou1d then ·be
realigned u an extension of Harbor
Boulevard and rejoin the present align-
ment of Newport Boulevard near lsth Street.
The second plan proposes the con·
structlon of two traUic loops lo carry
mot\lrlsts around and l.hrouih the
downtown• am. 'Ibe outer loop would
c.onslst ol Fullerton Avenue, l!Hh Street,
17th street and a new loop road In
the vicinity Qf Anaheim Avenue.
The inner loop would consist ol 18th
Street and Broadway. Harbor Boulevard
\l.'Ould be closed 1lllder the second plan
and replaced by a mall with mini-shop.
.ping C<Jlten.
Mesa Council
Approves Hikes
In Firemen Pay
Agreemeat en an a. 7S percent ba!le
pay ~ for Costa Mesa Fire
Department personnel represented by
the Teamsters' Union was quJckly and
unanimously roached by the city cooncil
Monday.
Tbt pay hike will boctot 1 beginning
fireman or engineer 's base pay to $867
with a maximum of Sl,053 per monUt
in five years.
T .. mmr olficials and flro department
personnel have been dickering with the
city for months over the pay issue.
The question oI pay remains a ques-
tion, howtver. in other municipal
departments alt.bough increases have
been granted lo most e.mployes. They
1otal $17S,OOO annually.
John O'Mal\ey, representing the Costa
t¥1esa City Employes' Association, ap-
peared briefly before the council lo cor-
dially but finnJy accuse the city.....()f
not acting In good faith.
tington in northern Indiana. won city approval ~tonday night to ex-
The Huntington County sheriff, who pand Its steam generating plant in Hun·
investig ated the report, did not see tingtOn Beach and double the plant's
anything but said Pape and his family output of electricity. (llelated Story,
are "very reliable ci!iz.ens and were Page 3.) -
all shook up," about Jhe incident. The expansion approva l came on a
Town r-.tarshal Ron Stucke r at nearby 5 to 2 vote of the Jluntington Beach
Andrews said he. saw one UFO south City Council .
of llunlington and oue .south o( Andrews. Ed ison officials must no1v take their
He said they appeared lo be lights ex:pansion proposal before the South
in the sky. Coast Regional Zone Conservation Com·
In SCJuth central Indiana, ~torgan Coun· mission for another approval before work
ly Deputy Sheriff Robert Williams said can begin to enfarge the generating plant
he saw an unidentified fl ying object an Pacific Coast High'"·ay.
that "took oU from the growxl" Monday Expansion of the plant was opposed
·night just northeast l>f Martlnsvllle. by envlronmentalists and Hwitingt.on
In PueagoWA. MIM. r~ ..All Beach. homeowners who live in the '
unidentified flying obJed,s coouiiued -'Shadow of the big generators.
around the Ml.uisslppl Gull Coast nearly -t,r -t,r fr a week after two men said they were
taken aboard a nooterrestrial craft" Environmental
From Pagel
UPPER BAY. ••
Company. In !he meantime. Livennore
proposes that the Irvine Company be
exempted from paying property taxes
on the bay land.
The proposal . also would freeze the
cost of the bay at Ill! 1973 value -
even if pw-chases was not completed
until 1983.
Livermore also proposes that the 5tate
move immediately forward with ap-
praisal of Back Bay lands held by the
Irvine Company. He says that the ap-
praisal abould be done on the ...unpt.ion
that the lrv\ne Compuy bolds llllm+
cumbered fee to everything It clalms.
~ul notinlJ that the county has filed
a prescriptive rights suit for virtually
the entire Back Bay and that it may
also lodge an addiUonal challenge to
the company's ownership of three un·
developed islands, Uvermore adds that
the appraisal wouJd be .subject to "ad·
justments based on ultimate findings,
negotiations, or court decisions affecting
value ." '
Livermore says that fish and game
officials have already begun preliminary
negotiations with the Irvine 'Company
on these problema.
"The state intends lo lnirure that the
final proposal, the tenns of any agree-
ment, and the ultimate acquisition costs
fully reflect and protect the public's
lnterel!lt and the rights 0£ Orange Coun ty
as Trustee to the tidelands of Upper
Newport Bay.''
Orange County Supervisors are ex-
pected to take up discussion of the
proposal at their Weditesday meeting1
E. C. Fullerton, deputy director of
the department or fish and game, bas
infonned 6Upervisors thnT he '"ill be
present to answer questions about tl1e
proposal.
The proposal also is expected to be
discussed Friday at o meeling of the
Upper Newport. Bay t'ield Committee
in San francisco.
Group Threatens
To Block Edison
The Environmental Coalition of Orange
CountY. Inc .. today threatened to fil e
a Jay;·suit lo block Huntington Beach
approval for Southern Cali fornia Edison's
power plant
Attorneys for the coalition contend
11\at Huntington ~ach has improperly
assumed the role of "lead agency" -
the agency issuing first approval -
for the power plant expansion.
The environmentalists al50 claim the
clty fai\ed lo lend .copies of Edison's
environmental impact report 19 all agen-
cies which might become lnvolved in
the Ed.iJOn project, thereby failing to
comply with the California Environ-
mental Quality Act of 1970.
Verlyn Jensen, or the legal finn of
Jensen and Jones , tried to haJt Monday
night's city council bearing on Edison
expansion, but failed as Mayor Jerry
Matney gaveled hlm out of order.
"There is a question raised over tbe
jurisdiction of this body to hold a bear-
ing," protested Jensen.
"You're out of order," .snapped
~falney.
"You're ope.rating und er slate law.
Will you deny my protest?" asked
Jensen.
"I'll receive and file 11,'' replied
Mainey.
A frustrated Jensen turned to City At-
torney Don Bonfa and asked, "htr. At-
torney, are you going to allow him
to proceed in this manner?"
Bonfa leaned over his microphone and
sent the audience in howling laughter
when he slowly replied, "The mayor
does as he pleases."
The dispute over who is "lead agency''
Involves the city and the Public UUlltles
Commission (PUC; which control.a: lhc
establishment or power plants.
The council majori ty, In supporting
Edison1s plan, conceded the expanded
plant will present "a substanUal adverse
impact on the en Vironment, prim::irily
in the fonn of decreased air quality
caused by fossil fuel consumption ."
But in the motion presented by Al
Coen, councilmen also said: "However.
rhe councll further finds that any adver!e
impact will be outweighed by substantial
benefits to the community through the
necessity o C npansion of electtical
energy sourct8 to meet the needs of
lbe community.
"And the C:OWlCil , furt.ber finds the
adverse impact will be mitigated by
Imposition of the condiUoos as amended '
by tbe council."
A precise list or 51 coodltion!i -
designed to protect air and marine qua!·
ity, the estbetlc desJgn of the plant ,
and prevent obtrusive ooi.se levels -
was attached to the Ediaon approval.
~ five "yea" votes came from Mayor
Jerry Matney, a county education
administrator; 'Ted BartleU, a gas sla·
tlon owner; Coen, an attorney ; Jack
Grttn, director of environmental quality
for the City of Los Angeles; and Don
Sliipley, a biology-professor.
From Page .l
WARNING . .".
' falls thLs Ume, the JU.CJ> rezoning will
be voidecl.
City pi.,,..... had 1111Ueoted 18 lllllts
per acre would be more desirable than
the 21 or 22 unils GlanuUus aa1d were
the bare mlnlmum that would be a<:·
ceptable.
"We can't live wftb nnythlng I es s,"
be remarked Monday night.
Planning Dlrec1<tr William Dunn said
today it Is lJDCtrtain exactly how many
lllll13 will be bull~ but Aid ~ ..Wd
be a fatr figure based oo the acreage
and authorized density Involved.
· Councilman D:m;Untc it.cit! wu ada-mont In voting against the lna'ellsed
density and Councllinan Alvin L. PlnlUey
sided with him in the s-to-2 vote.
"We have 17,000 homes and l ,SOO
apartments In Cost.a Mesa/' Raciti argued. "That 's· too mucb apartmenu."
Councllman Wilton agreed that be was
not ln favor of higher density develop.
~t. but would go along 'with It 1o
get the old Shoen property cleared and
developed u a community asset.
Desp~ assurancea that the condlllon•I
permit. status of the rezoning would
resu.Jt 1n structures and landscaping that
are 311 asset, Councilman Raciti criticiz-
ed the move. "'
·He also called for a st.udy or high-
density r.oning in the city. No action
was taken oo his suggestion.
"If parking Is regarded by the EPA
as fostering pollution, then the ~citie't
are going to have hi find altemetives
quickly to meet tbe law," he said,
Fielding's contention that much of th•
c1Uorcement burden wi ll fail to local
government has been supported b,v
George Taylor. executive secretary ot
the Air Resources Board in Sattamtnto.
"Much of the responsibility will faU
on local governments and 1 think tber•
will be a Vf!r/ ~ leolt 11 what Clift
be dOOe ~to enCouiage car pooll,11 he
said.--
Los Angeles Mayor Tom Bradley aald
Monday the EPA measures an "•
necesMry evil" to get motorists cut
of their cars and into pools or butel.
Other segments of the new EPA ruJ. ·
lngs will hurt the average car commuter
as well, Fielding said. -
For example, the EPA Is look!na' at
gas rationing as one of the only wa~
to cut car traffic enough to do any
good ln big metropolitan areas.
F;xi>erts for the EPA clllm vlr1ually all
traUi~ on Los Angeles roads would &.,·~
to be eliminated to meet the 1977 Clun
Air requirements.
If gas is rationed, Fielding fOrtlitts
gasoline co!ting •1 a gallcn or more. .
Besides bus and Cit-pool aenice,
Fielding thinks the Amtrak t.rainl will
have to start running oo a:mmukr
schedules again.
But he said the bJa problem will ·
be interference with crltlcal tmpt train
schedules.
-."'Ille problem wlUt the -and •ny of Utls 1' that wtxm 700 dtaoge
one part ol the econom,y, •"1111>!ng
ls affected one way or another."
Overall, Fi.lding says mott ol the
EPA rWing• will hurt commultn in
the low to middle inc:ome ranee who
<'an't b&ndle another burdtn on the
pocktlbook.
But be IBJ'I the IVM'litl drtftf in
lhe upper mlddJe income rqe most
likely will koep driving until 11bort ps
supplies force him to stop.
But he sJ.id even that Isn't a black
and white oltualion and be could be
wrong 1n his predictions.
"A good e1:ample of the chanleabllity
of this situation ls the fact that our
<OCTD'a) highest and best "'° line9 comes from Newport Beach, one of &he
Vr'ealth.iest oonurnmiUes ln the county ''
he added. ' ,
Firebo1uh Spews Beer
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -Bttr
dis tributors here posted a '5,000 rew11rd
Monday for information Ie.1dlng lo the
arrest and convlctloo of pel'Qls who
firebombed a Coors truck lut .,.·eek
seriously lnjurlng an employe, ' City officials and the employei'
representatives are still nOl in complete
agre:ement on .certain salary qur.stions,
parucularly involving municipal license
inspectors.
A series of recent pay increases to
be reflected In this Friday's paycheck
raised the city employes' income. Raises
range from 3.75 to 11.25 percent.
IULEIDOSCOPE
'l'ONlGllT
Charl.es Finley
SlQ.pped by Kuhn
ln Andretvs Case
REAL ESTATE JNVESTI.fENTS -Co-
sponso red by Board of Realtors and
Daily Pilot. NewporL Harbo r Jligh
1\udhorlun1, Tuesdays through Oct. 30.
NEW YOHK (AP\ -Baseball Com· 7:30--9:30 p.m .
missioner Bowie Kuhn sl<lpped Oakland NE\VPORT·~IESA SCljOOL BOARD -
A's ow~r Charlts 0. Finley on !he Regular meeting, Costa f\tesa Council
Y<T1sls today and lllapped s cc 0 n d Ch11rTibcr~. 7:30 p.m.
baseman fl.like Andrey;·s back on the OC'C EXJllBIT -Robert F'rank -
rebellloos 1\'s World Ser:es squad. (&lr· Photographs, OCC Library, 2nd floor,
lier story, Page 15.) Ocr. 16-Nov . 8.
i\ndrews, 11upposedly !luffering fron1 UCI LBCTURE -Fifth in seric! on
1 shoulder aliment, wall placed on the Aging, Origin!, Effects and Conlrol,
dis.abled li11l Sunday, an acllon which Jloom 161 l1uman1Ues Hall, 7·9:30 p.m.
~lar\'ln fl.1Ulcr, executive di~ctor of the Admission $5.50.
~tajor League Baselmll Playe rs Associa-WEDNESDAY, OCT. 17
!Ion, called "highly 11111picioui;" and COAST CO~fUNITY C 0 LL E G I~
which Andrews' ttammate.s and Kuhn BOARD -Regular meeting, 1370 Ja~led eonbarrassing -and worse. Adams. 8 p.m.
Andrews committed two 12th-Inning ORANGE COUNTY. f<~AIR BOARD -
errors Sunday which gave the New York Rtgular meeting. 88 Fair Dr. 8 p.m.
~fe\11 thrr.e runs nnd a 10 10 7 victory "THt; TAVER!'l" -South Coast
thut 9qUared the Serles at one gamr. f\(!pertory • Theater, lhrouRh Sunday 8
apiece. Less than t\l'O hours later. he p.m.
W3S on lhe disa ble-<! list •·bile hls team· LlCJ COMJ\tUNTTY LECTURE SERIES
males were J)ytn g to New York for -Dr. Stanley van den N nor t , Tu~sday night's third game. ''Headaches." Science Lecture HfU, 8
Finief-' had reque•ted th81 the A's , p.m.
be glvt:n p!rmission to replace Andr~ws i' UCI .~Eci:uR£S. -''The C111saic
with M8nny Trlllo. "Thtre Is no bAsis Cinema .rienes, Science Lecture llall. . 8 p.m. "'Education 10 Mttt the Future" to ~ran!, the rtquesl and It ls acconhngly St'.l1es. ROom JOO, Soc.la t Science Hall,
d<'n1!!d. Kuhn rrplltd 7-10 p.m Admr¥io n ~.50.
. Our showroom is a virtual kaleidoscope of colors. The ,.as.ens tre
varied -:
. We know th~t color coordina'.ing is the primary target when buy.
1n9 carpet .. Quority 1s usuolly second 1n line, and because we have suCh a
vest selection of qualities, it is eaty to~coordinate color and quality to
each individual's fl!lste.
However, .we know that a volume of semP'les looking •t you Cl!ln
see~ very confu1~n9 -but we feel that showing just a few samples is not
a fair repre!entat1on of the carpet bu1iness. Our huge selection gives our
selespeople every poniblo option in working with people, helping them
to fiod the perfect choice.
So ii you are in the marltet lo select your
Ald,n1
1 to help you, that's what we 're here for!!!!
carpeting -select
ALDEN'S
CARPETS e DRAPES
1663 Placentia Ave.
COST/\ MES/\
' 646-4838
HOURS: M..,_ Tin l'lltln., t lo 5:10 -Nf., t lo t -S4T., t :lO 1o S
I
. ...-