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1973-10-21 - Orange Coast Pilot
_SlJNDAY. ' - VOL 66, NO. 294, 8 SECTIONS, 108 PAGE ORANGE COUNTY CALIFORNIA 1973 TWENTY-FIVE CENTS Richardson uits Cox, Ruckelshaus WASffiNGTON (AP) -President Nix- on fired special Watergate prosecutor Archibald C.Ox Saturday night and abolished his force of prosecutors. In a chain reaction, Atty. Gen. Elliot L. Richardson resigned and his deputy was dismissed. Robert H. Bork, who had been solicitor general, became acting attorney general. Nixon's ouster of Cox and dismantling of the special Watergate prosecution team he bad headed led to oongressiooal threats of impeachment proceedings against the President. Cox, who bad defif!Jf Nixon with a vow.to press court action in his quest for White House tape recordings bearing on Watergate. replied to the President's move with a one sentence statement: "Whether ours shall CQJ111Jl.-Ue to be a government of Jaws and not ol. men is now for Congress and ultimately the American poeple." The succession of events clouded with uncertainty the future for an ad- mlnistratioo which Ls now without a vice president'. Rep. Gerald R. Ford, Nixon's vice presidential nominee, said the President had no choice but to act as he did. Ford's nomination to succeed the resigned Spiro T. Agnew as vice presi- dent is now before the Congress, and is certain to become snarled ln the controveny of the Co1 resignaUoo.. 1bere was talk of impeachment pro- ceedings from Republicans as well as Democrats. Sen. Edward W. Brooke (R-Mass.) said Nixon's action "is sufficient evidence which the House of Represen- tatives shouJd ·consider to begin im- peachment proceedings.'' Sen. Sam J. Ervin Jr. (0.N.C.), chairman of the Wat~rgate committee, said be was "very much saddened" by the President's action and said Cox's di.smlssal may result in an expansion of the committee's role. Not only was the special prosecution omce-on:tered out of business, but within 30 mlnnta. of the Nixon announcement, agents ol the Federal B u r e a u of ·KJsslnger m~Mos(!ow Israelis Push. Toward Cairo; Talks Continue By UNITED PRE.SS INTERNATIONAL Nobel Peace Prize winner Henry Kis- singer sought peace in the Middle East at a t~hour meeting with Russian leaders at the Kremlin Saturday, bot on the battlefields Israel pushed its tank spearhead closer to Cairo and Jsra.eli officials said only victory and the deetructioo of the Egyptian anny would bring peace. Saudi Arabia,· Algeria Cut Off U.S. Oil Exports By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Saudi Arabia and A1geria on Saturday cut oil all oil exported to the United States, according to an official broadcast from the Saudi capital and a government statement from Algiers. The Arab sheikdom or Babrain thrutened to close down a tiny U.S. Navy base on Its territory in the Penian Gulf as another protest against U.S. aid to Israel in the Mideast war. Both Saudi Arabia and Algeria said the embargoes were imposed because of U.S. military aid to Israel. The United States, which imports about 175 million barrels of oil e!ch month, normall y 5:ets 19,749,000 million barrels a month from Saudi Arabia and S,006,QOO barrels a month from Algeria. Both, like most other Arab ail pra- duclng countries, previously had an- nounced small cuts in the amount of total oil production. The announcements brought to five the number of Arab countries shuttlng oH all oil exports to the United States, meaning more than 30 million barrels of oil are being kept from the United States each month. The only peaceful words troin the embattled Middle F.ast came rrom Defense Minister Moshe Dayan of Israel, but they were negative in tone. He said Israel wouJd find lt difficult to say no to any Arab proposal d. an in-place cease-fire, tlJt added it was unlikely the Arabs wooJd advance such a plan. President Nixoo cmlerred with Kis- singer, Who went to ~ with .,... itature u the U.S . ...,.e1aey ol state, and Soviet Communist Party Secretary General Leonid Bttilu• .. ~.~u. Presidenl'• spoliesman Slid. Nixon repeatedly communicated directly with Bretbnev early Saturday on the negotiations and spoke with Kis-- singer after be and a nine-man team arrived in Moscow. Israeli spokesmen said its divislon..siz· ed force pushed across the Suez 'J'hurs.. day and Friday was within 45 miles of Cairo, an advance of five miles, and bad ''widened and ~" its operating area inside Egypt. J Kissinger fiew to Moecow after "an urgent request" from tbe Russians for talk3 oo the Middle Eut. · He plun~ed immediately into a -'-meeting with the Soviet Union bienrd>y, in- cluding Brezhnev, and was lo hold more talks with the Rusaians today, a spokesman said. Beach Police Identify Murdered Woman Huntington Beach police said early tcr day they have tenatively identified a woman· wholse nude battered body washed ashore on the beam Friday, but they declined to reieose her name pend- inl! -of next ol kin. Police abo said they are 0011linuing their lll!IUdl for clues In her murder bu< declined to rei<ase detaib ol the inwsl· lg•- OUT OF OFFICE -Ruck•IWUS Fired 93 Known Dead In Spain Floods MADRID (AP ) -Al least 93 people are known to have died in Spain's worst flooding in It years and officials sa id Saturday the death toll may reach 200. Flash fioods hit south and southeast Spain on Friday'. Officials said 93 bodies had been rerovered and at least another 100 persons were reported· missing. The waters washed away dol.ens ol homes with families still inside. San Onofre question Coast Feels War Impact By CANDACE PEARSON Of 1119 Dafly l""-f Sl•ff The Middle· East war is making waves along the Ca1ilomla coast, The fighting between Arabs and Israelis 8,500 miles away may affect the fate of the proposed addition of IV{O nuclear reactors at the San Onofre pow"-plsn The _possibility cl oil production being curtailed 1s one of eeveral q.esUon.s facing the state Qiastal 1.one Qinserva. lion Commfsslon as lt considers the plans to e.xpand the power plant. A fl>ilMlour bearing last week In San Diego spotllghted the comp 11 ca, t e d balances the commission must achieve. With the energy crl&ls practically knocking at the door, uOlijy company oUiclals relied largely on pre-written te~Umony given at countless other meetings ahd on Atomic Energy Commls- sioo (AEC) reparts ro claim the nuclear pl..nt Is aafe and mandatory. But the environmentall91s oppoalng the txparulon three miles south of San CJtmente staged a pre~tallon by marine biologllta: and aeismolog1st1. TIUllll ACE In the hole was Dr. l{enry Kendall. a.n expert In nuclear 1 reactor safety from 1-lassachusetts They must \\'eigh the scales bet.,..·ecn Institute or Technology (MJT). a clean but potentially d.'.lrlgerous source Kendall accused the AEC of "grave or energy against a dirty but less mismanagement" and of supressing un· perilous ronn , fossil fuel. favorable reports on San Onofre. And his testimony on the e.ffect.s of A totaJ of 70 million barrels of higher a radioactive waste accident and on emisaion fossil fuel will have to be the Emergency o:re Cooling System burned, claim officials of San Diego {ECCS) appeared to shut the com· Gas and Electric Company and Southern m1_f1=~~ rupture tn pipe said the --caJUonila Edi.son, If lbe nuclear project 1 ' Is delaYed further. ..-~~~~~~~~~~ Sunday Special nuclear physicist, and the vol!tile waste In the core would heat up at JOO to 150 degrees a second and melt , the core. TllE REACl'OR would be dostroyed and the resulting radioactive cloud could kill thousands of people and "cause lallout within a l~mile1adlw," Kendall wd. The cooling system, designed to nm on 1.6 million gallon1 of water a...d.ay, h11_falled e•t!Y test, he add@d, The commlulonen aat silently through KendaD'1 deacripUon, thelr laces Intense. WHAT'S MOREJ those 70 million bar- rels ire gettlng harder to buy. Some environmentalists, I n c 1 u d In g Frederick Sutherland. attorney from the Center for Law in the Public Interest, said the cotnmission shouldn't conllider the economi c fa ctors. The commlsslon must decide according to lhe objectives of Proposition 20, Sutherland said Thursday in San Diego. These objeclives, he seid, include preserving the coastline. Increasing pu&lfe.-acce51-lo -beache5 and protecting the environment: The 1tate attorney general's otfke hns already ruled durin g the proposed ex- pallllon ol Edison's Lolli Beach steam (Se< SAN ONOFRE, Page Al l After Fired Inves;ligation appeared a~ the Cox offices in downtown ·wa11hington and forbade removal ti any documents ·by members of1 his :81.aff: They said•tbeir~orders· came ... from the Whlte House. The moves climaxed the historic and itlcreasingly acrimonious d I s p u t e bet\lo·een the President and Cox over the prosecutor's demands that Nixon tum over his Watergate tapes to a federal grand jury. Presidential Press Secretary Ronald Ul"IT...,...... . ' ' L. Ziegler said Nixon fired Cox because of his announced intention to defy a presidential order that he halt hi s court (See NIXON, Page A%) ATTORNEY GENERAL WAVES ON LEAVING JUSTICE DEPARTMiNT Elliot Richardson Resi gned After Learning of 2 Firings N-ixon Stuns Congress . Impeachment Talk Heard • in ~ WASlUNGTON (AP ) -The chairman of the House Republican Conference said Saturday night the firing of Archibald Cox would bring on a serious effort to impeach President Nixon. Referring to Nixon's '' e 1treme1 y unwise actions," Rep. John B. Anderson of"lllinois joined a growing nwnber of ReP'!bliC&!IS and an expected barrage ol ~ In critidzil>i! Nlnn'I firing · of Q>x and · breat·UP o( the special Watergate 1prosecution force. · Sen. Edmund S. M_mlde (D-Mainel, said the House abauld cmsider hold.i!lg impeachment hearings. "What the Presi- dent has done threatens to destroy our system of laws; it smacks of dic- tatorship." Rep. John J. McFall of California, the House Democratic whip said, "I suppose we'll have to take a serious look at impeachment." One member of the House Judiciary Committee said he would seek im- peachment of N"ixon and a aet:ond said Nixon should resign. Rep. B.F. Sisk (D-Calll.) lourlh-rank- ing member oI the House Rules Com- mitlee, said be would Introduce a resolu· lion lo create 2 15--member selec t com· mittee to inyestigate impeachment of Nixon. Sisk also said he questions the ability oI Nixon to govern and said the second portion of the 25th Amendment to the Constitution should be considered. This provides for at least temporary removal from offic;e of-an incapacitated presi· dent. Two Democrat.' on the Sen ate Judiciary Committee loined in o;an.. demning Nixon's action and former Trewiury Secretary John B. Connally said, ''It's a healthy thing that &tr. Coi is gone." Most of the few other members of Congress immediately available in the midst of this three-day holiday weekend criticized Nixon's action, some talking of impeachment. Rep. Jerome Waldie (D-Calif.), a mid- dle ranking Democrat on the House com- mittee which would first consider an impeachment•resolution, said in a tele- phone interview from California: "I in- tend now to seek impeachment. Ttie President Is acting i:nost unstably. There (Se< REACTION, Page .U) County GOP Leaders Stand Behind President By JOlfN ZALLER Of fM Dilly l"llot Sll1f Orange County Republican leaders Saturday lined up cautiously behind President Nixon's decision to fire spe· cial Watergate prosecutor Archibald C.Ox. They also rejected a1f'f riotion that Nixon should be Impeached over the .se- cret tapes issue, but acknowledged that lhe President probably will be criticized severely for his action to withhold the tapes and fire Cox. "The President took t't1e action he did because he felt he had to protect the best interests af the country," said Ar· nold O. Beckman, chairman of the Lin- coln Club, a group of Orange County's top GOP fund raisers . "I'm sure he'd be criticized , but I'm confident he acted rightl y and accord· ing to principle," Beckman said. U.S. Representative Andrew Hinshaw (R-Newport Beach) and Victor Andrews, chairman of the county Committee to Re-Elect the President, expressed slm· ilar though more reserv~ views. ''The President apparently felt he went as far as he could go in his com- _promls~ on the I.apes armounced on~ Fri- day," said ~linshaw. "I think Cox "'as premature in rejecting it so quickly. He was saying that he (Cox) and he alone could decide what was law and that's not right." "l think Cox shoold have given mor e coosideration eto the President's position that the issue not be pressed furt her in the courts," he said. However, Hinshaw stopped short of saying he approved the firing of Cox. "I'd have to know what other options the President faced before I made a statement like that.'' Hinshaw said. Andrews said he look exception to Cox's remarks indicating that the Presi- dent was assuming a position above the law. "That's si mpl.v one man's opinion and !hat's all it is. I wouldn 't say that's the case at all.'' But Andre\\".'l also stopoed short of disa~cing directly Ylilh Colt's position "I'm ~oing to reserve judgment on th i~ un til more of the facts are in." !'mid Orange County's 1op Republican par1y official. Hinshaw also commented on Watergate !Se< GOP, Page .UI o~ ·1·11t: ''°s1ot: · · · 'J\100• CAl\1P FIRE GIRLS -One of the oldest girls' organi1.ations In !he United States Is being updated In ml'lny w.ays and Staff \Vriter Jo Olson tel!s about It In word! and pictures on Page B4. TRACT HOUSE PROBLEMS -Just beeause you 're payi ng SS0.000 for a new home doesn't "guarnntee n will be frPe of na~. 'Ille question is r~a\ly how well the builder will fix them. Sta ff Writer Joli\ Zaller toots tnto the situil· tion In lead feature on Page Dt. SPORTS REPORTS -Saddleback Co\ltge wa" the only \\ rnner In CO..'l:-.t area..junlor colle~e football gan1{':-~a!ur tluy night. The Gauchos downed visiting &>ulhwestem, 21·1'-I. \Vhilc \.-01cl11n \\'<'~l battled to a 19-HI tie \\llh l ~prt"'' .ind Orange Coos! "'as bl\t :u~d by F'Ul\('r1r-n. :li·3, at Anahehn S1:id1um l'uU dl•t:.111:-. 011 pages C·2, f-4 . ~tlTJF..AST C0~1\I E "\TAl!Y - lJr lJoward l\.I IMlhol!. proil·.-~i r t•l biologlcul science al UC Jr vinc. ha~ visited Israel three time! In thl' p;1:-1 five years and, In the mid st of lh c current Jsr.:ieli·Arnl) .,..:1r, off,,., h1.s analysl s of th<' conflict on Page Ai l · Both Parties AT PRESS CONFERENCE Prosecutor Cox Beacl1 Trustees Quiz Officials On 'Deep Tl1roat' The Huntington Beac h High School Boa rd took statements in secret session for five hours Saturday concerning the sc reening of the X-ratcd "Deep Throat" se x film al a conference of top district ?dministrators two months ago. ment of action. Only 10 of the 40 ad· journed at 7 p,m. ther!: was no announce- ment of action . Only 10 of the 40 ad· ministrators required to attend the mee ting actually gave statements and trustees said privately that the in· \"C'Sligation still has not produced any definite conclusions. But !here 1\·erc indications that the school board inqu iry was broader than rhe m:U!t>r of a .'ling!e sho.,..·ing of "Deep Throat" last August. ··\Vhrn :-on1e1hing like this happens." sa id one !rustre. "you try to put it in a largrr rontexl. "\Vas the screening of a 1110\·ie like 'fleep Thniat' a nornial ac tivity for some or the!le Pfflplc, or was it simply an isolated even!? "That's an in1ix>rt11nt ques tion lhlll needs to be full y answered," he sa id. It is not known whether any other (See TRUSTEES, Pa~e A%) ln•ld e S1mdny J.at• AIKlor .. n A4 t,11,,.y H1rn1 Ai .I! Yov• S1nrl<t 11 5. r. HtY-"'41W• .11 ,,.,,. llombf(t It M--All Hol •• ,11 A1 "'"" L•"°"n II CW.ultoft Ol·U MlllM• .16 C41l1ltr~i1 • .IS Ori"'' C411111fY 4)4 l<lo•mA~ Co>u1l~l -• A1 "'9~1'' et. If C•OUW(lfll ,-•• llt•I l ll•lt Cl<ll Dtoollll N$!1(•1 .t.14 lilt• lt..O ., f dltorl•l Ptffl A6, t i 1H llt Cl•CI ••n.,1•! It"'''~" 1.1 r11,.a·..-1 tt. tt ["l•rt.,ntMnl t•. It Tr•wtl N ''"•"Ct C6 w ... 11'1tr .U c-Ot.O •-11 11 W11119W•IJI (l I t"¥ Gtl0,W411t < A' W11....,.•t M ... t tt C'lt Y l'l!..01" 11 CTION1 tllfl' CMlln 1"41mllY """' tY Wttlt' f \. .t 2 DAIL V PILOT Sunda1, Ottobtr 21 , 197) • Coast Roundup ftt:re •• a de¥tlopmut • n the effort IO brioJ Upper Newport Bay Into public owntrshlp last week "''hen the state Department of fish and Game AMounced !hat It WllS "''llllng to lake lmmtd.late posse!.'iion of the bay from the Irvine O>mpany. Details ol. ~ylng for the Back Bay \\'UUld be worked oot later. The Board of Supervisors received 1he proposal \\'ednesdoy but delay<KI ac1lon on It Wllil Oct. 31. In the meantime, 1uperv1Jor1 undertook a new th~t of their own in anocating '30.000 to 'be spent on legal research to determine whether the Irvine Com· pany holds clf.'ar title to three un· developed Inick Bay Islands. ~ A f310 mUHoa powf.'r plaat u:pansloa proposed by Southern Callfomia EdOOn received solid support from the Huntington Beach City O>uncil last week. Of the sevf.'n councUmen, only two opposed power plant ex· panslon which-has been a cootroverslal environmental iMue ln the city. Those who favored ll admitted the expanded plant would further pollute the air, but backed their action with the reQOnlng that there Is no viable Foelless In Bolivia alt.erDatll.·e to solYe a pend.int enerp eris!$. They aho said Edllon ~Is doing as much as paulble to mllJ.&ate the adverse effects or it.s upan4ld beach plant. Edi.!On must 3tl11 wtn tipproval from various state 1111d lederal agen- cies before ii can billld, but the city hurdl e \1·as the first major one cleared. ... The proposal to build on onl y 600 acres or the 2,700-acre Whltlna Ranch in El Toro was continued again by Orange County P I an n I n g Com· missioners last WCfk. The commission likes the plan -calling for a popula· 1lon or 5.000 by 1935 and a J.400 acre preserve -but can't decide how 10 make sure it stays that way. ... T'A·o West Orange County com· munllles are trying to cope with the prospect of runaway costs ln city council campelgrui. Huntlngton Beach councilmen have decided to atudy lhe possibility or imposing a limit on the amount of money a candJdale can spend for election. One lllnit suggested so far has been 10 cents per ttgistered voter, which would be slightly under $7,000. The highest Argentinian Airliner Hijacked; 49 Aboard ._.. -1 ID lho !alt CllDpolp wu abiut fl,IOO. lo l'Oullaln Valliy, O>W>dlmtn ate toytns wllh the Idea · ol llmlllni bow much mooty can be contributed to an lndiWb.la1'1 c1m-- J>1lp. LeJderl fnlm Dtlthu town ha"' llldlcatod II the Cllllpalp curbl augested will be adopted, but all pnipooall ... under 1tudy. • ,, 1'111 companies, ambuluce agtn· cles ud towing teM'ica may race • sharp increase in the amow:tL of death ln.!unnoe they must CUT}' to operate In Fountain Valley. The city la considering a fiat coverage of $1 million for each company, which ln the case of taxis \\1ould be a 2,000 perceent lncrease. The cab eompanles now only carry $50.000 worth of in· su rance to cover a pawnger dealh. The rate for an ambulance is $300,000 and for a low truck, $100,000. City officials say the change is proposed primarily to standardize the rates for all agencies. Company owners are expected to fight the change and at least seek a Jov.·er, compromise figure under $1 million. .,, Tell8nts of Oakwood Apartments In Newport Beach v.·ere evacuated from the second floor of one building 1'fon· day. v.·hen a $100,000 rue blamed on a short in a tape recorder brol<e out, Police banged on doors to awaken Ac ting Chief Of Justic e Conservative alooplni ...icJeoll. aome ti whom broke ' ... t bldroom wlndoWJ aod 1e1ped lnto an Ivy bed below. Th·a unill: were a:utted. No one waJ injurtd. ... Ctsla Aleu hlr entr Walter C. Rau and el&bt pitrals or blrmaid.t are bebind !he a.ball with polico end ihey're DOI happy about It. h recent raid at his Green Lantern tavern led to arrests of the eight on suspicion of gambling in connection with a pool tournament such llJ those held Jn many atber bars. They go to, a>Url- Tuesday. Rau Is crylng '1dirty pool". on alleged discrintlnatlon against his bar, but Lt. John Regan aays city's fle\Y anH·gambling stand wi ll focus on others now too . ... Jrvlne city councilmen toyed with the ideo of firing all seven planninv. com missioners to end "abrasiveness" between t"·o {'Qffinlissioners, the staff and the public. The id(!a v.•as scrapped ho\l"ever, y,·hen it \ras learned the wrong two commissioners Y.'Ould have been cut If a law reducing the size of the commission from seven to five members had passed. The issue began more than a week ago when councilmen. who were intervlewi.'lg planning d.lrector applicants .... ·ere told city planning staff may be leaving the new city due to rough treatment by certain planning commissioners. Councilmen ended the deba te .,...,. tlja matter. wwtni to meet )oln!ly wi th the conunlaloo to lmprave J be ""poll .... " ol Ill COlll!lllallone. A clt!Mf co~lu.e hu decided torecGllllMM I~ In the NOWJ>O!t -dlai1er that .. uld allow ~ upon a vote of the people -the city to sell waterfront property to private interest... The charter cur- rently restrim the aale of beachlront to the state or county, and then only U il'o to ba used for I public beach or park. The committee pro-' poses that the many leases rJ. city waterfront property, such ~s the Balboa Bay Club and the beaches surroun<ilng Lido Isle, should still he renewable for up to 25 years without a popular vole. .,.. Police believe a Su Bernardino triple #abootlng that left one Laguna Beach man dead and another seriously injured may have beeh the result ol a drug transaction that never quite panned out. Dead is Calvin Knight, 41. 'Mle injured man ls Thomas Richard Brown, 23, who reportedly has a long criminal background. Aootber man, 25-year-old Phillip Dem· mock of Cathedral City also was killed, PoUce 64id the trio met one Harry Le D'Argostin in San Bernardino Wednesday niJhl. Brown -~- Pllrkfna: mekl'S .. Lqua Btacb will continue to tick awty at IO cenl3 per hour following action last week by the city council. During budget lime two monilis ago. !he council bad auiliorluj! hll<lng hourly meter rates to 20 cents as a new revenue source: But downtown boslnesmlan Richard Wlllats mounted a .sucoenful referendum drive to roll back the In- crease. The council now plans lo Install meters in outlying portions r1 the city to make up for some ol · the lost revenue. ... " Tbe landmark red and whlle HJeguard tower that has stood on Laguna's ti.fain Beach for 38 years will not be tom down-Residents last wee!< presented the city coimdl wl)h 2.500 signaturm on petltlOlll urima: the ·city to .save the · tower, once · • a gasoline station on the corner of Broadway and Coast Highway. 'Ibe city now pla,ns to remodel the',towcr and has scrapped plans ror a new One. From Page l NIXON FIRES COX ..• moves to obtain the tapes:. Ziegler said Richardson felt the President's firing of Cox had violated an understanding wilh Congress that the prosecutor would be given a free hand in bis lnvesUgaUon of the \Vatergate scandal. agreed to prepare a summary of the tapes and permit Sen. John C. Stennis (D-Miss.) to listen to the recordings to verify that Nlmn's wuunary coo- ' tained all the Watergate-related ~· ... '"~ LA PAZ , Bolivia (AP f -Terrorists hijacked an Argentine airliner 1\ilh 49 persona aboard Saturday and flew it to the Bolivian border town ol Yacuiba after the government barred refueling in Argentina. t~in-e.ngine Boeing 7'll jet, 'A'as sur· rounded by army and police unlts at the airport in Yacu.lba. It was parked on a soft airstrip unequipped for jets. llo'. WASHINGTON (UPI) -Acting Atty. __ Deputy Atty. Gen. William P. Nixon said his summary, after being approved by Stennis, would be given to the courts and to the Senate Watergate oommittee . Argentine President Juan D. Peron, in his first confrontation 'A·ith terrorist hijackers since his inauguration Oct. 12, reportedly asked Bolivia to withhold ail aid from the hijackers, v.•ho ap- .parently wanted lo get to Cuba. Bolivian authorities complied with the request. "We will give them absolutely no racilities," a government spokesman 3Cld. Sources at the presidential palace in La Paz said Peron personally telephoned President Hugo Benzer of Bolivia to ask him lo go along 'A1th his tough stand toward the hi.jackers. Later, however, Bolivian officials agreed 1o send food to those aboard the aircraft. Tiie Aerolineas Argenlinas plruie , a Sources said the hijackers rejected a requ est by authorities to Surrender and turn over their hostages. They countered ·with a demand for another plane. but there was no indicallon that officials would agree, however. Police said they expected tha t the hijackers \l'OUld be able to hold out overnight because the stifling daytime temperatures at Yacuiba drop sharply after sundown. Reports reaching La Paz airport fro m Yacuiba said the plane landed with• dif· !iculty and would have trouble taking off from the short field. rt landed almost on its last drop of fuel , La Paz airport said. Peron's office a~ked !he Bolivian government to arrest the hijackers and return them to Argentina, authorities In La Paz said. From Page l TR US TEES . • • complaints about the moral behavior of school administrators have oome to the attention of the school board . The "Deep Throat" affair became public Thursday when Huntington Beach police officers con.fiscated a contraband c.i;-µy of the film at the home of a school admlni.stralor. lt was later disclosed lhat the film had been shown during a thre<'-day management conr~rence held in San Diego for all district administrators. The cost of that conference to laxpayers uas $36,000. The screening of "Deep Throat" \\'as held in the evening and not all ad· ministrators attended. Trustees toda~· refused to say how many administrators did attend. Two trustees speci fi ca lly i!cclined to affi nn lhat only 11 nl.inorily ·of administrators had attended the screening. But one trustee slated: '''fh('re are some very important distinctions to make. I think that for most of those ""ho did attend it may simply have been a maue.r of cu riosity, a matter of being in San Diego without anythlng else specifically to do that evening." Trustees acknowledged that the mat ter is a delicate one from a lega l standpoint. The main reason is !hat "Deep Throat" has not been officially declared by a rourt in Orange County to be obscene. alt hough !here are cases pending. "The people in1•ol\'ed are all adults 11·ith a right to do \\"hat they 11·ant 1rith their private livits:· said a trustee. .. There ls a legal qu estion about \vhat \le can do to someone for an act that 1s not illegal.'' People j Quotes Oon Drysdale, onetime pitching great for lhe I.os Angeles Dodgers. sa!d in <111 fntcr\'ie \\' last week ht· doesn"t 11111ch rarr 1rho \1in.~ this year·!!: 11-nrld !lrri{'"-Drysdale, 11ho nO\\' pitches cotQrfu l lines on K'.\IPi.: sporl s hroadcasts or Rams football and Angels b<1schall. said lhc ron. lroversy ~urroundlng th e OaJ.:l:in1J tea m <lnd !h1· r>x11·ncfe1I h1ngth of tht• ha~(·b;ill !'<':ison ha"-!urnrd him nff to ihe St'I i1·~. \\"hil<" h1• said hC' 11~cd 10 n1sh ho1n1> ;111d !urn 011 the T\' to 1\'nlch the "-trlc_s h<': ~:iid. ,.An~ 1110CC, J'1J II it!l'h !l if the !Ube h,11)Pt'l1~ ro be on but 1 usually <-"atch only fl fe1v pie«s on lht' tar rndlo for lack of 11ny!hini; f'lse to listen !o ·· ~ '\"ith undihu~·d l'OOf\Uenco but rc1\' reassuring facts, IXputy \Vhite IJolJ.)l' Press Secret ary Gtrald I .. Vt'arrtn specula!M on what will ~e of the C. G. "Bt:!bt " Rcbcno handling of a cash contribution from b1lllon:11re 1-loward Jlughes. "rm !lurt lh:'ll \Vtiatevr-r enlllll'!I look into !his \l"lll l\nd no 1mpropritl)' " ... Actor Jl!lmt!I !"la<'y dtscr1brd for rcpontrs 1n Los Angele-. friday hts n>action "hen he l('nMJ<'d 1hat a traffic omdent hnrl m!lt him hi'I lt'ft 11r111 <ind lrrt k-1:. "I \\{I~ l}lng there 1hln~ ing nhout l)(>in" :i hRlf·man , end 1 \\Ofl<lcrcd l\'hnt kind or per$0fl f "oulrl !urn out to hi· I rlrcidcd I w:intcd 10 U\•r !IO l oouhJ sec "hai nl\ ' , ROBERT NAFTALV llfe v.·ould be' like.'' • Rohert Naflaty, rl'igning chnmpion of :\lld1l't'.'Stern ~fen's lln•ltation J\fonopoly tournament uses n S500 bill (In monopoly 1nonty, of coor~) lo l[ghl 11 ciR:ar .i" thi'.'< year's tournament gol under \vay in n Detroll hO!t:I J.•ndn~« Not 100 long Hf!erwnrd , Naf· n!y v.as t'!im lna 1('(f trom the conte!ll. ... S:.ying lw-didn 't think raiioning of "111ter po11·cr \~OUld l>t' required, f"h11rl,.~ .I . Olllonn, rll'puty rlirector or the \\'hilc !louse· f'ncrg:, Polley Ort1(_'(•, rt.>~po11ded 10 R q\lestloo on how the 1Jn11cd Sl"h!s L'Ould handle Gen. Robert H. Bork wean a beard that belles a ba.siC Poittical conse"rvatism. Bork, 'AiM> became acting bead of the Justice Department after Elliot L. Richardson resigned and his deputy. \\'illiam L. Ruckleshaus, l1·as fired by President Nixon Saturday night, had been solicitor general since June 27. Solicitor genera! is the same job once held by Archibald Co:ic. In that post, Bork argued the govenunent's cases in court. Bork, 46, had taught law at Yale University since 1962, when he was tap- ped to be solicitor general. A native ol Pitblburgh, he Js married -and the father of three, and has degrees from the University of Olicago. He serv- ed in the Marines after World War JI and again during the K0ttan conflict and was discharged from the Marine Reserves in 1958 as a captain. He was a reseerch associate In Jaw and economics at the University of Chicago in 1953 and 1954, and wu in private law practice in-New ·York in 1954-SS and In Chicago lq;19=. Tear and Pickets HEADS DEPARTMENT Robe rt H .. Bork Aide s to Cox i11 Di sbelief As FBI Seal s Off Office WASHINGTON (UPI) -People hug· ged each other wordlessly. l\1en cried. Reporters shouted questions y,•hose ans~·ers couldn't be heard. And outs ide. near midnight. pickets appeared with signs: "Impeach the President." That l\'BS Archibald C.Ox's o!fice Satur· day night. !he energy siluatlon if the Arab states ultima tely cut off all oil supplies. "It could be handled by a mandatory conservation measures and extension of the v.·holesale allocation program," he believes. ~ "The Ume, Afr. President. is short," counseled Senate Democratic leader J\tlke J\lansfleld of ?.1ontana, In urging J\lr. Nilon lo seek a conference of six ma jor ""Orld po;rers in an effort to obtain a cease--fire in the J\lideast. ... The Israel is got off to a slo,.,. start in the-recent figh ting, but Defense i\lin.ister flloshe Dayan late in !he last ll"l'Ck commented optltnislically ! as usua l\ on the battles in the Sinai. Dayan com mented. "I !hlnk they und erestimated our ability lo change frorn a defensive to an offenisve operation . . . They relied too niuch on their defensive installnllons and their Russian equipment." lsro ell chief of stall _ Da~c!_ Elazaf puUL more bluntly : "We are oow calling the lune.·· ... v;ce PmldeltUal·Ile51gnate O.mld R· Ford1 obv\ousty resigned to making· hls past 11n open book, said, "I believe th.at wxl.cr lhe clrcumtsances . the per!IOn ~lected In this situation flS in any Olhtr has to bavt hit life exposed in a factual "·ay to the rnex· lmum degree." St<:retaty or Slate, lltnry Klsslnrer, In 11 cl!'\'C r policy stau~m~I. e:c'plained hi)\\' f11r the tin ited State!i is prepared ro go in 8iding lsrAel in the ~lideast wnr "It must be clear lhAI while lh~ Unl!cd St81~ i~ tryinl{ to mAke our nat ion ~afe from "·ar, ~·e "'Ill not do so flt lhe price o( nmking the res! of the world safe for '4°11r. •; It was less than two hours after Presi- dent Nixon had fired Watergate pros· ecutor Cox, abolished his staff, fired the deputy attorney general, accepted th e attorney generars protest re.signaUon -and ringed the building with FBI agents. \Vhen the staff began arriving -dress· ed in everything from blue jeans to party clothes -lhcy round the FBI on guard. on orders from the 'Vhite House not to let them take anything from their offices, not even personal possessions. "I thought in a democracy this could not happen," said Cox's chief deputy, llenry R. Ruth , hls voice breaking. "I keep thinking perhaps this is not seven days in May, but one day in October . . . I never thought I would ha"e an FBI agent tell me I couldn't take a lo\•e letter from my wife." John Barker. a press spokesman, unastramedly let the tears roll. "H's over, it's over," he said "I clon'L believe this ha~ happened. I have a picture of my little boy down there and lhe,v ~·on·t J('t me have it ... One by one. staff members filtered in. They ca1ne. explained one ynur.g secretary, "because we love ~1r. Cox. \\'e belong here. \\'e're logethrr. ·• Shepherded by e senior staff lawyer, the staffers trooped out of the 10th floor library al Cox's down to \V n Washington office and down to the 81h floor for a meeting. They dtcided-to- come into work next week after all and sec what wou1d happen. "I took his j(>b because I had strong beliefs,'' said Cox 's chie[ spokesman. James Doyle , a nonsmoker who was lis:htlng one cigarette after another. "Right now 1 h.1ve no beliefs." Navy Adntlts Fault OXNARD fUl'f) -The Na \·y acctptrd responsibility Friday for a fire ~·hich burnffi 12.200 acres of brush and limber in thr Snnta ~tonics ~fountalM ;)nd enused lhe lndt!finitc closure of Point ~1ugu Stale Park. The Nsvy said lln invP!ltig11tion conducted jointly with the Ve(ltura County F'l rc Dopa rt m en t determined the blaze uras caused by a smoke grenade used by Seil>et.s Irom the Point llu.enc.me Naval Base ~n field Ruckelshaus w~lt··fte ·refused to carry out the President's m:ler lo fire Cox,·Ziegler said. • Noxon then designated So Ii cit or General Bork to be acting attorney general. Ziegler said Bork carried out Nixon's directive that Cox be discharged. The rapid-Hre moves by Nixon came 24 hours after the President had issued a statement announcing that he had F romPqel REACTION. • • is little doubt that those tapes must to- tally Implicate lhe President in obstruc· lion ol justice, and he apparenUy will do anything to prevent them from being revealed to-the public." l\eR. Don Edwards (~.) also oo the Judi.ciary Co.mmitt.ee, sald: "I'm ln a state of shock, and .J think the Pre~ lhould ~gn." Edifatds .said ~fie would urge a com· mlttee meeting iarly next week to decide wbetbtz it shoUld move ahead with an lmpeadunent resolution offered some w .. lts ago by Rep. Robert Dclnan ([). Mass.). , Another Senate Judiciary COmmJUee member, Sen. John V. 1'wmey (0.CaHl.) caUed for an Jnune diale meeting of the committee. uThe President has committed a monstrous action and Is now openly defying all three branches ol govern· ment," said Tuliney. "In fact be is trying to put lbe law in bis own ha!\d!, and this Cllll mean the gravest possible consequences for him5el!.'' Sen. Clifford P. Ca!e (R.-N.J.) &a.id Nixon's firing of Cox and dismantling of the special prosecution team "bring to a head a situation \.\fuch requires the most serious consideration of im· peachment procedures." Sen. Cahrles H. Percy {R·Ill.), who had offered a Senate resolution last spring calling for a special prosecutor, said he did not beUeve any new auomey general could be confirmed unless he agreed to appolnt a new and independent special prosecutor. Percy said Nixon had gone back on conunitments he made April 30 when he appointed Richardson and promised in a televised speech that the new at· torney general would have "absolute authority to make at! decisions bearing upon the prosecution of the 'Vatergate case and related matters." Sen. Bob Packwood (R·Ore. ). said there was "no justification '' for Nixon's action. "The office of !he President o: !he United States docs not c11rry 1Yith it a license to destroy jusUce in America. His deeds are dishonorable.'' Rt'p. William H. fludnut <R·lnd. ), a freshma n who ran in support of Nixon in 1972. said: "If Nixon gi ves the i1n-. pression he is above the law. he is goin.11; to have an impeachment problem on his hands of conJiderable niagnitude." F ro m P age l WP ... commillce chainnan Sen. Sam Ervln"s (0-Nort.h Carolina) proposal thnt Coo· gress set up a special prosecuting unit to take up prosecution of the Watergate affair wtlere Cox Jett ofr. "I feel that u·ouldn't be necessary at all," l:finshalt said. '1tr Is not the Job of Congress to enforce the law. If aepan· tloo ol powm: means anything, it means !hat !be e11:ecutlvc branch, not Congress, Is chnrgcd wUh prosecutlng violations of the !a~·." ~linshaw added !hot "If Congress feels that lmpe:11chment ls netessary to fol· low up this m1111er, It Ms that option. Out I think Congros.1 "''OUld lnlve a very difficult Ume getting 1upport 'or the Iden that the President has committed any high crimes." On the subJ«t ol Impeachment. Beck· man corrunented, "I'm sure iL doesn 't. have a ghost of a chance." Nixon said bis compromise had the support-,,{ Sens. Ervin-and Howard H. Baker-Jr. o(lVJ'tmt1 -stnior1nembers of the Senate committee. However oo Saturday, Ervin, reached at his home in North Carolina, said he thought he was to receive a verbatim Iran.script. Later, at a news conference, the senator said he had talked with White House ct\lllsel and had been assured his impression had been correct . Cox bad told a oews conference earlier in the day that he intended lo inform the court that Nixon "ls in oon com· pliance" with court orders directing him lo surrender the tapes. Faced with Co:ic's determination to press his court battle despite Nixon's order, indications grew through the day that !he pros«utor would be dlsmiMed. But the announcement that lbe entire pt06eCUtion force was being aboliabed came as a total surprise. Cox was named special prosecutor last May. Cox assembled a staff of nearly 50 lawyers and divided them Into task forces to investigate various aspects of the wide-ranging Watergate scandal. According to Ziegler, the Investigations will be taken over by the regular staffs of the Justice Department. Ziegler said the government 's \\'atergate investigations would cootinue "v.ith thoroughness and vigor." In a letter lo Bork, Nixon notified him that he was now acting attorney general. "In his press conlerence today •.• Cox made ii eppa.rent that he will not comply with the instruction I issued to him, through Atty. Gen. Richardson, yesterday. Clearly the government ot the United States cannot function if employes of the executive tx-ancb are free to ignore in this fashioo. the in· struction.s of the President ... " Nixon added. Nixon's vice presidential nominee, wbo had promised a statement on the tapes case, said Nixon had no other choice than to do what he did. He described the compromi.s& as "fa ir and reasonable'' but said Richardson was "caught in the middle.'' Sen. Edward M. KCMedy !0-Mass.) called Cox·s firing "a reckless act of desperation by a president who is afraid of the Supreme Court , who has no respect for law and lio regard for men of conscien~. SUNDAY DAILY PILOT Ttle Ot..,... CN1t DAILY PILOT, WI"" ""'ldl It <ornlllfttd the N-..Preu,. It J1Ubl'11'1td W 111t Or•no• C.••t Pvlllh.tll"' c°"'""Y'-s-. f9fe edllleM .... ""9111Md, ,,.,...,..y ltlf"IOUlft Frldfy, for Cost• Mew, NtwDe•I fle..::n. H1111ti119lon flt•cfl/FllU<t"l" Yl!lty, l•g.u111 .flHcl>, lr\lint/Slldd11lrat~ 11111 S11t Cl....,1tt1f $111 J\1111 C1pl1ltlfl0. A l ll"Olf r19IOMI 11111111111 11 JIUbtl"*I 111vn11n .,.,11 s.u..ii1n. Tht prll!Clf>ll Plltlll1~l119 Pl•"I 11 11 UO W11I fl lY $1rH!, C0tt1 Mt11, C1!11Mt1l1, f"K1'. RoD1rl N. 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C•H1'flllt. .kkrF .. i.., tror u,,ltr tl .. -·~I toy IMll tJ,IJ ftlOl'lllllYI rnl!ltlf'I' "'""''~ tt;., '"""'''"'· I 0 0 BADGE IN HANO, INSPECTOR WEIR EXPLAINS 'JUNKER' LAW In Cost• Meui, It's Fhc:Jt ·Up, or See It Towed Away Publi,shing Executive Nor1nan Chandler Dies LOS ANGELES (AP) -Norman Chandler, former publisher of the Los Angeles Times and a builder of one or the great American publishing organizations, died early Saturday. He \\'as 74 years old. ,..1r. Chandler was publisher of the Los Angeles Tunes from 1945 until 19611, wbOfl bis son. Otis, took over the job. The elder Chandler continued lo preside over the T'llnes fwtirror Company, wtuch became one of the country's largest publishing finns. He roUowed his rather, ff a. r r y Chandler, and grandfather, Gen . Har- rison Gray Otis, as Tirnes publisher. ~tr. Chandler was born in Los Angeles Sept. 14. 1899. His first job on the nmes \\"BS delivering papers in a Model T. Ford. After graduation from Stanford University in 1922, he undenvC]ll a seven-year apprenticeship lhat took him through all the departments of the Times. He served as assistant lo th e publisher, assistant to the general manager, vice president and general manager prior to becoming publisher. When his son, Otis, became publisher In 1960, ~1r. Chandler directed the growtlt ol the Times Mirror Company. 11trough acquisitions, it became a publisher or encyclopedias. pa~backs. Bibles. dic- tionaries, medical books, legal treatises, charts and maps. The company also acquired the Dallas Times Herald, the Long Island. N. Y., Ne"A'Sday and the Orange C.oast Daily Pilot. ~1r. Chandler described the company's operations as the "knoY"ledge industry.·• He served as chairman of the board and president ol the Times Mirror Con1 - pany rrom 1961 to 1966. chairman and cltief execuli\·e office frOO\ 1966 to 1968 . and since 1968 as chairman of the ex- ecutive committee . Mr. Chandler scrvt:!d on the board of directors of The Associated Press for nine years beginning in 1947. 1-le was al.9o a trustee of the California Jnst.ltute of Technology Pfaffinger Foun- dation and a member of the California Clo!> ol L<s Angeles and the Bohemian Club ol San.Francisco. Norman Chandler and his wife, Dorothy Buffum Chandler. were active in Southern California's e eon om i c , polldcal and cultural activities. National Leaders Pay Tribute LOS ANGELES (AP) -National 1eadcrs;-Inrluding--Pre!ktent Nixon, h11ve- eulogl7£d formet Los Angeles Times publisher Nonnan Chandler as a world leader in communications who was a major civic contributor. Mr. Chandler died Saturday. President Nixon sakt, "His good work and his newspaper will serve as monummt.s to his life, but his personal qualities -_ 111:. wahnlh.. dignity and de\.11tion to o~ -wtll not be easily replaoed. I will Aho remember him 11 one of the finest gentlemen I have ever known." l.o8 Angeles Pi1ayor Tom Brndlcy al !IO praised ti.tr. ChandJcr, "The de"ath of Norman Ch.1ndler has lost ror the city of ~ Angeles a man rcsp0nslble for community progress, soclal Involvement and the building or a i;:reat, honest and fair newspaper.•· G9v. Ronald Reagan : "California and the n.aUon hAvo los& a lonitimc glwit or the newspaper lnduatry and a distlngulshcd American." SUCCUMBS AT 74 Norman Chandler The Chandlers were married in 1922. P..!rs. Chandler served as a Times execUti\"e, and she was instrumental in raising $33.S mJltion for const ruction of Los Angeles' 1.1usic Center. ~1r. Chandler's death came thrrl' \\•eeks after surgery. He 11•as admi Hed to Good Samaritan Hospttal F'rida y morning and died early Saturday. In addition to his Y.'ido1v and son. r-.1.r. Chandler is survived by a daugltter. Camilla C. Spear_ Private services 1vcre scheduled for Tuesday at the Harry Ch and J e r Auditorium in Times Mirror Square. Tltc family asked thal memorial donations be made to the California Institute of Technology, Fw1eral Planned For Mrs. Baird In LagWia Today Funeral services for Jeanette G. Baird, a member of the Orange Coast boating fratemity and Hoag Memorial J IOl'lpital benefactor, will be held at 3 p.nl . toda y at McCormick Laguna Beach Mortuary Chapel. Mrs..-Balr-d.~-rciiiclent---or-125:i I • Mirada, J....aguna Beach. di{.-d Thursday at South Coast Community Hospital . Mrs. Baird had been affili alcd \Yith the U.S. Power Squadron in Newport Beach, and taught classes In scamanshlli and sailing (or the Balboa unit. She was chainnan of the Hoag Memorial Hospltal medical library unUI aboul 19$3 when she left Newport and moved to Laguna Beach. In Laguna, she became involvr.d \\•ith the Laguna Beach Civic Ballet end performed with the company. She is survived by her husband, Stuart 0. Bai rd : 59f1, Sruce G. Baird, l..Rgun11 Beach Lifeguard captain: broth c r Wallace Gordon, of Pasadena : and four srandchlldrm. Ofriclatlng 11t services w1\I be Canon Bertrand llause of St C e o r g e ' s t:piscopal Church In Laguno I lills . ~1emoria1 contributions mny be made in memory of Mrs. Baird to the Cancer Society . DAil v PILOT A 3 Mesa Sheds Its Cln·nkers •. But One Man's Junk ls Another's Potential Drearn Car ' By RUDI NIEDZIELSKI Of ,... ~' ...... 11.tt Rusting in a weed patch the dirty white Buick ls a rar cry from the coveted status symbol gleamhig under the bright lights ol the showroom In 196a. Two of its tires are Oat. The fronl end and windshieJd were &maJlbed in a collision. The rear license plate is gon_e and everything worth taking ondcr the bood has been stripped by tbe Mid· night Auto Supply (thieves). Yesterday's dreamboat doem't even rate a trip to the jWJkyard. It wos simply driven orr the road alld lefl there to rot. Vacant lots In the city of Costa Mesa were a convenient repositor:y for wi- needed clunkers until a new law was adopted this summer whicb a11ows city officials to tow them away. One key element of the controversial junk Suto ordinance allows their removal from private property, including the owner's backyard provided certain pro- cedures are followed. In the case of the Buick, as well as many of the other 80 automobiles "hauled off to the salvage yard, the disposition posed no problem. It ~·as just a matter or taking it 'to the junkyard where it belonged. , But Costa Mesa Zo'!-ing Inspector Jim Weir, the man reSpoosible for enforcing the ordinance. has bad his share of trou - ble with some d. the others. lVhat is junk in one man 's eyes may he Fro11• Page I a priceless reston:ible classic In the eyes of another, the ordinance skirts lhe definition problem by making ii unlawful lo store "inoperable vehicles." What constitutes an l nope r able vehicle? "It OQUld be a car \Vlthout a 1973 license tag. If it doesn't have the tag it can't be operated on the road." \\'cir explains. "Or il c<>uld be car that has something missing fron1 it which no longer makes it drivable." Weir concedes that the definition 1s broad enough to include c I as s i c automobiles in tlte process of restoration. ·•nut if its a classic or an antique or a car wi\h high valuation. I ask why the hell are you letting ii sit out in the weather for. If it's so valuable., ~·hy let it d('teriorate? \Vhy not put it in a garage or in storage?'' The ordinance also covers the do-it- yourself auto mechanic wlto blocks up the family stalklij wagon on !be weekend to replace a bad wtiversal joint. However severe the ordinance may appear, \Veir maintains he is not after the home hobbyist or the auto enthusiast unless his car looks like a junker. \Veir says he is tipped off to !he junked wlten someone snitches on his neigltbor. "You get your tipof f from people. They'll call in and say, 'This guy next to me has three or four cars on his property and they're junkers·' " But in at least one case tltc "junkers" v.·ere Mercedes cars, old Chrys\ers and other valuable four-wheelers. There wer e 22 or them and they were all screened from the road. 67 ,000 See Do111e They didn 't bother anyooe except rc~dents or a nearby apartment house who complained because they had 10 look down ol !he cars and pile of junk nearby. .. I admit they y,•ere classics," say s \Veir. ·'The owner \\'oold r('build one a year and give ii to his kids . Th('y '''ere all pretty good looking cars. "\Ve gave hin1 the opportunity to file for a zone exception permit to store the vehicles in a residential zone. Bui he was bound and determined to ket>p nil those cars so he just mo\•d out ur to1vn ."' The city of Garden Grove does not have a junk auto ordinance -yet. Sant.a Ana however, just followed Costa t.1csa's lead and adopted one last v.·eek. "The type of thing we're aHer is the guy who buys an old car to take the ('Dgine out of it and put it in his car. They get the }ob done and then the junker sits there. Then they don 't want to pay the money to ha1·e it towed away," says \Veir. Junkers or inoperable cars are IO\\'cd ;nvay only after notification has be('n given. Jn cases "'here the car is stored on an empty lot the property O\vner is contacted lo determ ine if ht' \\'ill sign a fornl allowing the car to be ren101·ed. \Vhcn the car is on propert y y,·herc someone is living, both the legal owner and the property owner are notified that they have JO days to make the car operable or to h<1ve it t01ved away. The auto's oy,ner may ask for a publtc hearing before the planning cOmmlsaltf' to show cause y,·hy his auto sho1.119 not be to\\·ed away, provided he submib his public hearing request within tbc rcquirt'<i deadline of 10 days after r~if· ing notice. Ile 1nay e1ppeal an infavorab1e planning co1nmi ssion to the city t'Ouncil! ~1any persons prefer to gcr rid &f the cars 1hemselves rather thli:n tJt charged for the job by the city. Dpt 1n t'ases wltcre resislance is enrountercd. thr c;irs arc taken off priva te properly under the supervision of police. L'nder the urdinan ce auton1obilcs y,·h1d1 havt' bcrn to\.\·t'CI a"'ay art" nol permitted to be restored to opcra!ion. lloy,•evor. \\'eir says 1hat po1tion or the law ha~ not yet been enforced and that owner.I' usu3lly can nl.'gO tiate \l'ith the tow com- p.any for return of thei r ca r~. "\\'e're in the proct'ss rigltt now pf moving about 2S vehicles." he sa~. "There just srems 10 be no end to lhe1n. \\lhen you drive around to cit'~ oul a complaint about OOC' vehicfe. you'!! find three or four nlore aloriG the v.·av." The ioning inspector maintains he l s 1,1•i\ling to cooperate with persons who :lr1• fix ing !heir own cars and arc having diffi culty obtaining certain parts. Bu1 they had better provide proor th e pru;ts ltave bren ordered. · However. if your car is unsightly and inopcr1ttivc. ii \l"Ould be prudent to either i;:et rid of it or garage it !)('fore Weir adds another junker to the growing total of towawa ys . SANONOFRE ... gener!Aing plant that the commission can consider economic influences. Halftime Show-A· UFO And the commission's planners, in the staff report presented Thursday in San Diego. noted the "decreasing supply of .. _ fossil fuels . . . complicated by . . . the Middle East situation" as something to be measured. TllE UTILrrY companies portrayed the San Onofre expansion as not significantly harmful to the coast, scenery or healtn and safety. But 'heir arguments were weighed against images of tPe bluffs themselves: sandstone formations above the sand y beach. During construction, the land will be cut and covered with concrete, the en- vironmentalists pointed out. At the regional level meetings, the environmentalilts scattered their shots and often bturTed their arguments with hysterip and demands for denial. tn~ ~~· the citizen tn- vironnntali8ls 'safbtCk while~tlie scifn- 1isls took center stage . "[ WISH l could offer endorsement or this plan," said Dr. James Enright of Scripps Institute ol' Oceanography, "because it is preferable to fossil fuel." But the best evidence available. the marine biologist added, shows that the cooling system -v.·hich will continua!lv flush bolter water out to sea -will have "large scale, large m~gnitude ef- fect on plankton." Plankton, Enright explained, are tiny organisms that fonn the main source of rood for near-shore marine animals and include larvae of crabs, lobsters and mussels. Their mortality rate from San Onofre units two and three could be 90 to 100 percent. he said. Edi90ll scientists say losses won 't be that high. APPROVING the units, y,·hich are near lwo e~rthquake faults "from a scientific point of view," Dr. James Brune . a Scripps geophysicist said. "is a gamble nf sort~." Kendall. v.·ho heads the Union or Concerned Scientists, pulled no punches. 1-le said it could cause a "eatastropfl ic accident.'' Edison representatives point to the success record of wtit one, in operalion at the site since 1968, as proof of safety. Kendall conceded "it's a gratifying experience record," but cautioned that it "is so miniscule (it couldn't) support one reactor throug h its life." Edlaon officials said they plan to store the radioactive waste at salt beds in Kansas and are investigating other areas also. KENDALL. AN EXPERT acknowledg- ed by both sides. claimed the salt beds arc an experiment that failed and y,•am- ed that even a pollert-'Sizcd grain or the ashes can cause cancer in humans. But t~ environmentalists only want a delay, not a denial. Edison says it can't afford lime and re~ures the_ commission for a quick decision. "this ~ppeal,.. the commission plan- ners said, "presents a more complex array of i.$$ues than any matter yet before. 1he commission. On many scien- tific and technological questions there is disagreunent among the expens." That atafe?nent sums up the dHemma that 11 men and one "'Oman must solve. Under Prop<>sition io. lite applkanl has the burden of proof thRt the project doesn't substan tially harm the m- vlronment. Have the utlllt ie!! done that ? A compromise seems likely. ALREADY SUGGESTED arc requiring ways to protect the bluffs and adjactnl San Onofre Slate Beach and using a high 1f'mperature gas reactor in$tead Qf ECCS becRu.se ii i.c; less accident- P"""'· The ut.ililies say such $fCJIS are loo costly. BATON ROUGE. La. (UPI! -A multicolored ''unidentifiable" o b j e c t hovered over 67 ,IXMI persons at the Louisiana Slate University foot b a J J stadium Saturday night and then flew away t~ the southwest with a police .heliroptcr chasing it. "The object appeared to be round, flat on the: bottom, with a dome-type structure and through binoculars il ap- peared to be transparent," a policeman aboard the helicopter told newsman Rick O'Neil of WRBT-TV in Baton Rouge. "It gave no noise and from the time it was first sighted until it passed over was 20 to 30 minutes." O'Neil said he talked with the officer. who y,·ould not aUow his name to be used until he received permission from his su periors. immediately before authorities decided to y,·ithhold more in- rormation . "We are not allowed to give out any more information." said Jc.ff Daz, dis- patcher in the Baton Rouge office or the Louisiana State Police. "If you v.'OUld like. you can call Monday." United Press lntemational newsman Rafael Bermudez was among the spec- taton; at the stadium who ~·atched the object, y,•hieh was flashing blue and red lights. "It came in al halftime when the band was playing and then everybody say,• it and started roaring and looking up,'' Bermudez said. "It wasn't a nash. Out it was moving fast." O'Neil said the police officer in the helicopter said the object was "a thing. an object, solid,'' but did not knov.· what ii was. \ ··They had a copier right over it." O'Neil said. "'i! was definitely solid. Unfortunately, they didn 't have any In- frared camera equipment. '"He said it was transparent, but hr said he didn't know if he was seeing through it. or if it just gave tltat Ap- pearance." The police helicopter chased the object 20 miles to the southwest from Baton Rouge , and then lost it. •·we had six to eight thousand peoplr hollering. 'U FO.' and then everybody looked up and saw it." Bergeron said . "II didn't look like any airplane. "It had bright lights. It think 11'• just some kind of weather balloon." • I. DAILY PILOT 5, ... ,, Octobtr 21, 1973 Ft•eak Day it• Fountain Valley Although All Hallow's Eve is still 10 days away, ghosts, goblins, and weird creatures of ail kinds turned out by the dozens in Fountain Valley Saturday morning for the city's annual Hallowe~n parade. Al· together an estimated 150 floats, marching bands, and equestrian units n1ade the march down Bushard Street in the city's downtown area. Above left, two-year-old Casandra Khoenle, daughter of Mr. and ~1rs. Ted Khoenle or Huntington Beach, meets a hairy but friendly animal who made the trlp to Fountain Valley {roµi his home at Magic Mou ntaln. At top right, a marcher from Los Amigo High School has trouble with his hai-or is he just hiding 'his eyes at the sight of a spook? At lower right, three devils put on their best grimaces, but they can't fool us. We know they're really the three Os}?orne brothers from Fountaln Valley-3-year-old Richard, 6-year-old Michael, and 9-year-old Bandy. ' ,, ' . \Vhen tht final figures are tallied, tracting students," the chancellor UC Irvine officials expect' to learn that observed. another enrollment record has been set. Chancellor Daniel G. Aldrich last week told newsmen that an estimated 1,600 students enrolled for clases this fall at UCl The figure ls significant in that it exceeds even the projections for student enrollment which were set in the early 1960s when UCI as a ne1v campu$ was still on the drav.'ing boards. Tilose enrollment estimates charted a growth rate for UCI taking It to the size or a UCLA (II' Berkeley by the end of this century. A few years ago, those optimistic growth trends were shatttercd by perttivable reductions in the ra te of growth. "Each year V.'e have enrolled more students than were enrolled the previous }car." Dr. Aldrich said. \rhat caused planners lo take another look at the future size of some campuses. Aldrich said, "'as the increasing trend 1011·ard reduced rates or gro\vtb on some ca1npuses. "Irvine has never had a problem at· Al:Eorbing the students is another mat· ter. In the past two year!, nearly 2,000 students have been added to lhe Irvine campus count. In the same period of Hitch: 'No Campus Will Be Neglected' SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -There will be no "M<Xlnd class campuses" in a new academfc plan currently being prepared for the University ol caUf«nia system. a top school official assures. UC President Charles Hitch told university regents Friday that smaller campuses v.'OU!d not be neglected, despite reports th.at the plan seeks to protect the statltll d. the big Los Angeles and Berkeley campuses at the ~ of the smaller Irvine, Santa Cruz, Riverside, San Diego and Santa Barbara campuses. time, no oe" buildings have been buill to absorb the increase. Social Science Tower and Lecture Hall opened Int year and the engineering and computer science cooiplu; was finished lhe' year be.fore. No new classroom space is due to come on line this year and the next building Gt: •'high priority" for the general carnpu! will be a 71)().seat lecture hall to be located near physical sciences on the campus ring, Dr. Aldrich said. That facility will provide three lecture hall!. Two will have 150 .seats each and the third will be a ~seat facility. By a revolvq wall system the halls may be marged to create a single. 7~ seat hall, ;f needed. · Aldrich said the building is to be included in the 1974-75 budget being presently considered by the UC Regents. It will be the only major nddilion to the invenlory of classroom space on the general campus from now until the 1975-76 school year. U.S~ Enjoys Clear Day Only a Feiv Shoivers Fall Across Nation IJ.S. 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UPI) Angelo "Gyp" DeCarlo, a New Jersey Mafia chiertain once described as a ''brulal, sadisUc man," died Saturday at his home, less than a year after President Ni.l:on conunuted his lZ.year jail tenn. He Yi'as 71. DeCarlo was serving 12 years in prison on a loansharking conviction when President Nixon commuted the sentence just before Christmas 1972, because of diagnosed terminal cancer. He died of spreading cancer of the prostate area, a medical examiner'5 investigator said, He was pronounced dead at 6:40 a.m. at his rambling retreat here, -and will be bwied Tucroay at a funeral limited to DeCarlo's family , a spokesman for th& funeral home making burial ar· rangements said. DeCarlo was convicted in 196!t for extorting money from a Newark in- surance broker with whom DeCarlo had arranged a loansllarking agreement. \ TOKYO (UPI) -Exiled Cambodian Prince Norodom Sihanouk said today he has asked China and North Vietnam for anns to coonter American military aid to lhe Lon Nol government in Cam- bodia. He also indicated in a telegram to United Press International both North Vietnam and 01.ina had turned doYln previous anns requests <rt the basis that such shipments are banned by the Nobel Peace prize.winning Vietnam cease-fire accord. 'I1le exiled prince, overthrown J..1areh 18, 1970, said he wUI refuse any meeting with Nobel co-wiMer Henry Kissinger when the 'D.S. secretary ot state oomes to Peking Oct. 2e. Sihanouk replied lo ifive questions ca- bled him by the news agency after Pm:i· doot Nixon had asked Congress to give Camb;xlia another $200 million worth Unions Threaten Soviet Boycott MIAMI BEACH ' (AP) -AFL-CIO maritime tmJons warned Saturday they were prepared to boycott within '1! hours all seagoing cargos involving the Soviet Union if the Russians "persist in aiding and abetting aggression in the r.1iddle East." PresidC11t Thomas W. Gleason of the International Loogshoremen's Associa- tion said tho actiOh 'A'OOid depend on the outcome oC diplomatic negotiations in r.1oscow. "It's an action we'll probably have to take in the next 48 to 72 hours," Gleason said. A boycott by the seven AFI,CIO maritime unions would mean refusal by dock workers to load or unload cargo to or from the Soviet Union aboard both American and foreign ships, he said. of anns and ammunition between now and next July. "The actual military situation in Cam- bodia is to the advantage of the army of Lon Nol," Sihanouk said, "thanks to the violatioo by President Nixon of Article 20 of the American·Vietnamese accords signed in Paris last January, "President Nixon has not stopped send· ing colossal quantit~ of milita:y equip- me.nt to ihe Phnom Penh reglme • • • while our popular army ol national liberation today lacks arms and above all munitions. preventing them from ef· feding any further major offensives." Sihanouk said, "l have already asked our North Vietnamese and Chinese brothers to clitect thelr attention to this dra'matic question and to Tee:stablish an equilibrium cf forces. I have ex- plained to the mtbat Article 20 of the Paris accords exists no looger since President Nixon has c o m p I et e I y disregarded it and that lhe North Viet- namese and Olinese ought not to have any further scruples aboyt according anew substantial materia1 military aid to our popular liberaton army. "I hope that these tv.·o brother OOW>- tries will give us some tneans of realizing offensives during the next dry 1euan, which begins next l.>ectmber." DAILY PILOT DELIVERY SERVICE Oeli11try of the Daily Piiot is guarantttd Mt...i1v•,rU1f! II '°" ... Ml ~lft .,.... ._ .. , ty ,,,. '·"'"tilt ITHI Jhr Cfll't W~I " ''""'' lot pv, C11t1 In "a" •Ill 1:lf , ..... Sii••'"' •Ml s...-1y: 11 rt• .. ,,_, ,...,1..., \'911• CIPJ •Y ' I .Ill. 11!•~1,, ff I I .Ill. ~WMll,, t l ll ••·II j ,.,, will ltt •rfffllt IOI ytw. C11t1 •rt Ilk.., •~HI H 1.111. Ttltpllone~ Mnl Oronte Clll!llY l\t111 • .• U1·Ull • Nlrlltwtll Hwtt!l ... 11~ •1ach •nl Wttlmllut•r . • . ... .,.Int Sa~ Ci."'tlll•, C11111r1,.. •••<h, S•n Ju111 C1pl1lr•,.., O•nt P't!nt, So~lh L1g...,•, Lllllftt Jllluoj ...... ,.... UWl,A·UT'S FAaOUS "&REHSKEEPER CARE PllOUAr" tawn·a·mar~ ~ .. !!!:0:-=-:::!..., M'JIOOUC'l°"'t °""" l:.'m' ·--·--··--·.. s ,,.._ .......... 311 ·=-· ·=--::::::--·=-24"" . -.. -·= ·--·--·--~ l.:il;o_..,.-;· --·=· ........... _ ... ~ ........ ~ ::s. --';;%"..;... ._ .. _ ~~ • -'"""' .... _ ... _,_ __ ,_,_,...,..,.....,..,,,, ..... .....,. .. ,......- P!!Q\IEN ON OVER A MILLION LAWNS COAST TO COAST COl"YltlOHT UJ 1'11. lAlll'N·A-MAT CH£MtcAl & IOUll"MINT COlll", ~*l*forAnwb'•hOI•••••·" ,or 1 l=llEE LAYnf AHAL'f'Sll wllttollt orbllOlllOll ttll )'Olll' MIQllbortlOOd ,~.....,.-Mitt Min'" ACT NOW! CALL ANYTIME 556-1424 • ' , l ' • 197 4 Rose Princesses • • Tryouts for Royal Co urt of Tournament o'f Roses reach a high point as seven girls from Pasadena area pose for photographers after they were named last week as 1974 Rose Princesses. They are. from left, Joyce Hawkins, Sue Cary, Kim Latham, Melinda Kirkpatrick. all of Pasadena City College: Ceci Gui· ledge, La Canada Htgh School; Miranda Barone, Al· verno High School, and Janet Smith, Pasadena High School. Court Rules 'ThroaJ;' Not A Nuisance LOS ANGELES (AP ) -The slate Courl of Appeals has ruled that "Deep Throat" cannot be shut down as a pub- lic nuisance. The decision on the sexually explicit film upheld a lo\\•cr court decision by Superior Court Judge David Thomas made Sept. 6. State Sen. John Harmen, (R- Glendale), had sued to stop showings of the film because. he said, it was an affront to the public. Judge Thomas ruled that the film was not a public nuisance because ooly those who wished to view the film did llO. The appeals court decision Friday came one day after a mistrial was declared in 'the trial of the owner arid manager of the theattr where the movie is playing. Flyer Killed In Air !lace MOHAVE (APl -Racing pilot Bud Founlain of C>akdale was tilled Saturday when his Bearcat aircraft crashed during competition in the California Air CI as s i c , authorities said. Witnesses said Fountain 's cmverted World War II fighter appeared to be on fire just before it plummeted to the ground. 19 FEET OF PIZZA CAYUCOS {AP ) -Tu'o Cayucos teen-agers claim- ed Saturday to have baked the world 's largest pizza . It was 19 feet 10 inches by 1 feet 11 inches. The teen-agers, Kim .Borchard end Jan Adair, ,s~d they us.ed four pounds of salami. three pounds of pepperoni. four pouncls of beef, 67 pounds or ·11uee. llO pounds uf c.heese and 120 pounds of dough. The pie was cooked over a ba5becue pit. Tl'le first P!ece "·as auc- tioned 11nd dOnations were collected for bther pieces. The mone y is to help pa y for a community swim- ming P®I. Crane Wilbur Funeral Slated ~TOLUCA LAKE, (AP J - funeral services are schedul· ed 'ruesda}' In Hollywood for Crane Wilbur, whose haU~ klry career in show business stretched from starring roles in silent pictures to production of three-dimensional science- ficllon 1hrillers. Services wlll be at 1:30 p.m. F'or"t Lawn's Church or the Hill! for Wilbur, an actor. writer. producer and director who also achieved recognition as an expert on prison movies. lie was 86 when he died Thursday of a cerebral hemor- rhace. Alcatraz Open to Visitors . But They Won't Linger SAN FRANCISCO CAP ) - The first public tours of Alcatraz. once the most notorious rederal prisons in U.S. history, begin this "'eek with regular ferry service to the infamous "Rock"' in San Francisco Bay . Alcatraz. t I/~ miles off the city's waterfront. has been closed to the public since it was ceded to this country by Mexico in 1843. It was closed in 1962 after 29 years as a maximum security U . S . prison. Starling Friday, boats oper· ated by a concessionaire will leave Fisherman's Wharf every 30 minutes with up to 50 persons for guided tours to America's chilling synonym for violence. A1cii.traz is now part of the 34.000-acre Go1den Gate Na- tional Recreation Area, in- cluding the shorelands at both ends of the Golden Gate Bridge. Last April the Ge neral Services Administration yield- ed control or Alcatraz to the National Park Service. William J. Whalen . superintendent of the recrea- tion area, said his guides 'i\.'OUld g iv e "interpretive" tours or the island . including the reception area. main prison, cellblocks and out- buildings. The tours will be "strictly" controlled.. Visitors will be 'i\.'amed 1o Stay with VJeir group. The buildings. guntO\\"ers and a c c es s or y st ru ctures on Alcatraz are in 111sting. cn11nbling condition. In another phase of Alcatraz·s checkered history, a band of Indians from 30 tribes seized the island in 1969. They claimed the rock under a Sioux treaty of 1868. After an occupation marked by an assortment or incidents and occasional uproars, the last or the Indians were removed from the island in June Wll. \Vhat will visitors 5ee of the arid, mouldering relic where the likes of Chicago crime czar "Scarface" Al Capone and anoth er 1,575 of America's meanest convicts spent their years'!' In a 20-mi nute ride, they'll approacb Al catraz from ·the west, 2Yt miles fl'On\ the Golden Gate Bridge. 'J'hey'll see . swift currents eddying around outlying r o c k s . generating po'i\.·erful surges On the island's entire shoreline -deterrents to escape. After the tour boat docks , line handlers will strain to keep the boat quiet in the surge to allow visitors to get off. A chilly west wind likely will be kicking up decades of debris around the lonely reception area. Dominating the scene, a rusting tower once brisUing wkh guns. Aloft, most of the windows are broken out. Broken lengths of railing stick out. 1'lC island's main road angles up sharply through a twmel that leads to service buildings, long reamed of anything useable and strewn \\'ith every type of trash. The island is nearly choked Baby Scalded to Death • By Radiator Stea1n SAN FRANCISCO CAPl - A young mother returned to her hotel room Saturda y to find her baby daughter scald- ed lo death by steam from a defect1ve radiator next to her bed. police said. Officers said Katherine Stobie. 23. of f\tendocino Coon-t.r. left her l-year-old daughter Rachael Rebecca alone in a Chinatown hotel room Friday night "'hilc she went to hear her brother playing drunls in a nearby club. While the child was sleeping, the hotel furnace began pump- ing steam automatically to all radiators in the bullding. of- ncers said . The radiator in the Stobie room was missing a 1afety valve. allowtng the steam to gush througti a half- inch opening, engulfing the girl. Residenfs in the next room heard her screan\S but reae.b- ed the child too late to save her llfe. officers said. County Lawyer Loses C-01itempt -Case Plea · SAN FRANCISCO CAP) - A contempt order against a Santa Ana attorney w h o declared in open court that a judge did not want to apply the la\Y was upheld by the California Supreme Court Fri- day. The 5-2 decision turned down the habeas corpus petition filed by Lawrence Buckley, who was cited for contempt and sentenced to five days in jail and fined $500 by Orange County Superior Court Judge Herbert S. Herlands. 84ckley was representing the defendan t in a crhnlna1 case when he called a pros· ccut\qg deputy district 11- , tomey as a witness. A heated discussion took place over the net<l for Buckley to explain to the Judge what he expected to prove by calling the witness. Al one point Buckley said "This court ob viously doesn 'I want to 11pply the law." The judge lhcn round him in con- tempt. Buckley apo1ogiied t ll e following morning, but Judge llerlands said the language of the apology only aggravated the offense "because the ac- cu9ati0n was a chnrge on the integrity of lhls. court. The accusation \4'as, I knew the law and didn't obey it." "'ith wild growtbs of nowers. shrubs, grasses and trees planted over the years by the ,\rmy, which controlled the prison from 1853 until 1933. and later lhe families of prison guards. Farther up the road. at the fortress-like prison. bu I 1 et holes pock shatterproof glass Ofl a pair of slits In steel entry doors. possible souvenirs of the three-day battle that ripped the Rock in May 1946, leaving five killed and 15 wounded. Footsteps echo eeri· ly as the visitors mareh into the harsh. beetling prison. and finally enter the cellblocks. This Was the great "slam- mer'' -the ban, locks, steel doors, 9-by-&-foot cells and the corridors where once strode the elite or America n crime: Capone ; Basil '"1'1le 0 w I" Banghart. \vho was A.oger "The Terrible'' Touhy's trig- german, and gunman Creey Karpis. graduate of hf a Barker"s gang. Visitors will see the prison library and the chow hall . and perhaps hear (If the "silent years" of Alcatraz, al fi rsl, when a ronviet wasn't permitted to breathe too heavily lest he draw down the wrath of hi s keepers. Girl Dies After Dog s Cause Fall SAN FRA NCISCO IAP l A IS-year-old girl died Satur- day -0f head injuries she received when she fe ll off her bicycle after a pack of dogs 'surrounded her. Doctors at S1 . Lu ke 's Hospital said Anna Rose Viz· caino, a S'O:phomore at Mission High School, was admitted Tuesday in a conla and re- mained unconscious until her death. Her father . Eduardo Viz- caino. said she \\'as riding a new bike in Holly Park "'hen a roving pack of do~s swarmed in front of her. She lost control and fell. hilling her head on the asphalt pave- ment. "I only "'ish somethin g could be done about the dogs to keep this from happening to other children," Vizcaino said. Boy Guilty Of Robber y SAN FRANCISCO tAPl - A Hi-year-old lxly has been 1 found guilty in a $15.515 rob- bery of the l\landarin branch of Bank of Amerka last hlay. l;.S. Dis trict Court Judge l Robrrt F. Peckham sr-t No\'.1 :! for sen1encing for llonald (;ong after the youth was con- victed Friday. Th~ jurv or seven women and five nien acquitted Gong'~ co -defendan t. Edward II. Chien. , 19. The panel sa id evidence aboul Chien 's alleged role in the ~1ay 14 holdup was too confusing. DAIL V PI LOT A 5 % • ,.J. on doubleknits for Treasure Days. • JCPemey 123 t S6 189 0 9 l«i<"1!~!1 Slt"rt!M ·--·-·-·-.... -- CHARG E IT w11h your JC Penney Charge Gard. It you don"l have a charge, 1usl see how last we can · open up yQtH nc..'W accoun t. I BUENA PARK ORANGE !!e11rh ~1 ()anqtlhorpe f"·:v Qr 11 G.!:"de" GtOYll Blvd O;Je'I Daily 9 XI 10 9 30 11 m ~~v 10 tr. 1 ()(I~ !0.9 ~ m O.ty Sundl"1 10 In A • SANTA ANA !'?:JO So Bi J!OI No OI SO Coa\I ~""' ('''" 1()-<I r' "1 {}~Hy $t1.-.0~y 10 10 & " ' . . ·: • . ; • • ~ " • • • ' • 1 - A• DAILY PILOT EDITORIAL PAGE Welcome, One thing is to be said for the new rash ol UFO sighlings: We. needed it After Watergate, Agnew, Southeast Asia, lnfiationJ shortages and the very real threat of a spreading war in the Mideast , it Is a welcome relief to turn our at· lent.ion to a pbenomenon that teases our hnaglnatious without (unless you listen to the n1o re dedicated, dire doomsayers) infHcling a paranoidal fit of depression. 'Ve'd Like to believe that those two shipyard work· ers down in Pascagoula, r.1iss., really did have a free ride on a spacecraft: that l\1rs. Ann llodriguez and her little girls did have their picture taken from a flyiQJ: object that had landed on the road up in San Jose; t~· Indiana farmer Richard Pape truly was followed home by a strange, multicolored object: and that sheriff's dep. uties in Pine, La., hadn't possibly been dipping into tbe moonshine when they chased five orange-reddish fiy. ing objects 12 miles through the woods. We don't want some scientist showing us there are some plausible explanations such as weather balloons and the tike. While we're staying at home this winter because we can·t affo'td $!·a-gallon gasoline, and the house is • cold because of a fuel shortage, and the TV won't work because of a power shortage, and the newspaper is s maller because of tQe newsprint shortage, and we can't eat the way we used to eat because of food prices ... well, a body's got to have something to keep his mind occupied without worrying him to death. Two-strokers Too Offensive Antismog requirements have imposed so many de· vices and adjustments on au~omobiles that engine op- eration has been severely hindered. Presumably, that's one of the prices we have to pay for cleaner air. Green ·Men portation Committee, whlcb found that those noisy lltUe two-wheelers emit 10 grams of pollu~nt per mile -far1 far more than automOblles or lour-cycle motorcycles. Two maJor Japanese manufacturers say they can reduce emissions to seven grams by 1977, but even that falls irresponsibly short of an acceptable figure. 1 It's bad enough to put up with the noise pollution emitted by two-stroke cycle~~. It's too much to permit them to violate clean aid restrictions at the same tiine. Nixon's Tough Road Ahead nie fat cats of big business might be expected to produce the nation's biggest reservoir oC support for President Nixon in the wake of shuddering assaults on the administration. They may have supported him -by vote and con- tribution -but they certainly aren't happy with the man and his administration, according to a recent sur- vey of 250 corporation presidents. Four in five surveyed did vote for Nixon and 41 per-cent made personal contributions to his campaign. "But this is what they think about things now: -84 percent believe Watergate damaged the U.S. economy. -67 percent think development of a sound domes- tic policy is weakened. -65 percent see goals of inflation control and tax refonn harmed. -60 percent say U.S. has lost world prestige. Perhaps most surprising of all. these business lead- ers believe by a 62 to 38 percent margin that big busi- ness enjoys an unfair competitive advantage because of Nixon's inclination to support those who support him. But pray tell us why tw1Tstroke motorcycles are licensed with seeming unconcern although they produce 31 times more pollutants than a 1973 automobile. The figure comes from the state Assembly Tram- And if this isn't bad enough news for Mr. Nixon. consider the fact the survey was taken before the Agnew resignation and even then two thirds of those who liked him enough to make campaign contributions said they no longer supported him. The President has a whole new and very to'ugh ball game confronting him for the next three years. •11 WU! A FOl\t> .... (OME fl YIN' ouTrA NOWHERE.' ·t imitiltions of the Press Shown in Agnew A ffair \VASJllNGTON -The Agnew affair points up the li1nitalions of investigative reporting. The bloodhounds of the press art expected to sniff out scandal in high places with little more to guide tbem tllan thei r nose for news. Tu·o years ago, for example, 've in· vestigated whispers that Spiro Agnew had pocketed bribes from Maryland con- tractors. We went into Maryland anned ooly with a notebook and a pencil. But a notebook is no substitute for a subpoc!la, and a pencil is a poor prod 40mpared to the Ju~ t!ce Department's po1ver to grant \\'It· nesses immunity. \Vt ,,.ere told about the pattern or pay· )l'Cs. \Ve even dug out t'"'O witnesses \\'ho admitted to us they had slipped cash payments to Agne\v. Rut in each case, no one else saw the money passed, and the cash couldn't be traced. EVENTUALLY \\'E laid our findings before Agnew but he categorically de- nied everything. The evidence sim~ly wasn't suffi cient to accuse the vice president of the United States of a crime. It took the Justice Department to do that tvto yeaTs later. Tn cont1'8st lliith Agne"·· his designated suC"Cesaor. Gerald Ford. has a reputation for openness and honesty. Sources close to him say he won't accept cash con· tributions altOOugh he has a politician's constant n~ for campaign funds. But "'e have never heard the slightest suggestion that he h.is ever diverted a <lime to his O\l'fl personal use. TIJE CLOSEST TO a political skeleton \\'e have found in his closet v:as :~ bespectacled lobbyist nnmcd Robert \\'inter-Berger, who ·had been :associated \\ith fixer Nathan Voloshen and con- \'icted 1-rouse aide Manin Sv•eig. \Ve reported on J an. 27. 1970. that ~·inter-Berger ''operated occasionally out or Ford's ofrlct." \Ve stressed; "No one who knows Jerry Ford believes he would allow his name to be used by an influence-peddling ring. But in the back-scratching, favor-5wapping en· vlronment on Capitol Hill, it is easy for a e-0n man to take advantage of a congressman's potent name." TWO YEARS LATER. Winter-Berger gave up lobbying and published his con- fessions in a book called ''The Washington Pay-Off." He boasted of his dealings with Ford. The vice presidential nominee has now IT\a de his rues .on Winter-Berger available to us. 'Ibese show the lobbyist gained access to Ford on the recom· mendation of a t r u s t. e d friend. The Congressman's late administrative assis· tant. Frank Meyer, arranged some routine political favors for Winter- Berger's clients, such as writing a Ford endorsement for an organization seeking to standardize the '"'Orld calendar and recommending International M i n i n g President Frank Kellogg for a diplomatic appointment . At Winter-Berger's behest, Ford also arranged an immigration extension for a Dutch psychiatrist. Dr. Albert A.. Buytendorp, to continue lhis research v."Ork in the United States. IN A THANK YOU letter, Winter· Berger wrote Ford: "How wonderful it is to deal with your office. Everyone is also so eager to please, so correct and so efficient." In return £or 1hese political favors. the lobbyist made a few nominal c<ln~ tributions to various GOP campaign ch<!sts. These donations ranged Jrom $125 to $501.l. Ford thanked him for them in letters addressed "Dear Bob" and signed ''Jerry." It would appear that Ford's rela· tionship with the lobbyist, altOOugh in· discreet, was not a serious scandal. "Th• unifortn goos wilh lhe iob" Plaglle Today's \\1ashington, ·with its actual and suspected political intrigues, might easily put Machiavelli to shan1e. The process of achieving and manipulating political power in the strongest capital in the "'Orld is rough at the best « times. But in the at- mosphere created by the Watergate scandal and charges of crlminal miscon- duct against former Vice President Agnew, it is downright unbelievable. For example, rthe city boasts a large group <A citizens who believe absolutely that the entire Watergate affair was planned and executed by Democrats seeking to discredit the N i x on Administration. The whole subject of possible "double agentry" has been ex- plored in the best James Bond fashion. And what appears to be a state of open combat between some of ·the prin· cipals and agencies iilvotved in the Watergate and Agnew charges has con· fused and further complicated an already complicated situation. ON EVERY JIAND there are political paradoxes that have had no precedents in our 200 years as a nation. And when you have a condition where of ·Political ·Paradoxes [ BARRY J .__G_o_w_w_~_T_F.R __ the vice president has resigned and accepted a sentence for income tax evasion, and de?nands are heard for the 'impeachment of the President himself, you have a situation that would delight, if not completely overrome, the heart of that devious old rascal and expert in the art of unscrupulous political conduct, Nicolo Machiavelli. But even in this wildly unusual situa- tion, the most ridiculous argument I can find is the one that holds that the charges against former Vice Presi· dent Agnew were actually "leaked" to the news media by his O"A'TI attorneys. The idea is pttposterollS on its face, but it did at one stage receive currency in Washington, largely because it seemed to be the only answer Justice Depart- ment officials were able to muster in reply to charges that the government itself leaked the case. When you try to give this arglJ· ment political credence, it bogg les the mind. To begin with. you "'ould have to accept as fact the idea that the vice president. or men representing him, speeded up the process of destroying "1r. Agnew's political future by drawing 011 immediate and serious questions or his honesty and integrity. And. eventually, you woold have to accept the fact -that tbe vice president's own men were responsible for publicly degrading the second highest office in the land, and subjecting "Ir. Agnew and his family and friends to an elmost unbearable type of personal agony and distress. TIIE IDEA THAT the vice president's attorneys did the "leaking" was offered by at least one high official in the Justice Department as a clever, TOUnrl about move by Agnew people to T:iy the groundwork for an appeal, should the vice president be indicted and con- victed. As one administration official posed the idea, ''\Vho stands to gain the most from unauthorized leaks of criminal charges being considered against an of· ficial?" Tben he went on to suggest that the prosecution stands to lose in the event the legal process is poisoned by prejudicial publicity. One of the stranger facets of tbls ri.tachiavellian suggestion Is t.hat it persisted even after strong dema1s by Mr. Agne\v's lawyers v.·ere followed by direct action to prove their point. THUS IN TllE midst of all the con· jeoturing about a possible "in family" leak by the Agnew camp, the people handling the legal work for the vice president sought and obtained from a federal court the right to subpoena and question members of the news media "'ho had published charges against the vice president on the basis of information from unnamed sources. It strikes me that if the Agnew attorneys were rtspoosl~l•, either directly or indl!ectly, for any of" the news leaks about tbelf client. they v.-'Ould have been rather foolish to haul the newsmen they tipped on into court and demand that they reveal the sources of their information. The wheels ol justice grind slowly. And 'vhile they grind in the Watergate and the Agnew cases, the perpetrators of bizarre and weird theories of political maneuvering are having a field day. Loss of Desert Access Deplored To the Editor: On October 10, approximately 100 employees of the Autonetics Division of Rockwell International ln Anaheim met '"1th representatives or the U.S. .Bureau of Land Management. The meet· ing was held to familiariie the RI employees with the desert management plao and to provide a forum for public comment on the plan. DURING the public ccmmt'nt portion of the meeting, one RI employee advised the group that under the plan major portions of the Southern California desert will be 'effectively closed to any form of recreational use. In an, 93 percent of the desert lands will be restricted, to varying degrees, to 1111 forms of recreational usage. He went on to say that of the 2.5,000 square miles of desert land now available to the public for reereationat purposes, all but 1.800 square miles "'ill be placed under controls which wilt restrict their recreati<lnal usage. The plan, which '\•ill perform this disscrvic<'.' to the 1wblic, is the California Desert O.R.V. Recreation M:lnngement Plan. It is scheduled to become the Ja\\' No~·. I. 1973. This plan is !he BLl\fs response to a Presidential proclamation. Executive Order 11644, dated Feb. 8. 1972. BY CALl.JNG ttUs an Off.Jload VehiC'le Recreation ~tanagement Plan, the public J1as been led to beJicve it applies only to motorcycles, dune buggies and four- ,1·hccl drive vehicles. ln "'bat now seems to have IM.'Comc the pr.ttem of action for high·ranklng public officials. the BlA1 Is deceiving the public. The Prtsident's rroclamRtion defines orf·road vehicle as "any n1otorlzed vehi- cle designed ror or capable of cross-coun· try travel on or immediately over land. 1\'ater. snow. Ice, marsh. s~rampland or other nt11ur11t terrain." 'Mla llL.J\I is reported to have accepted this dcflni· lion deleting only the ll.·ords "cross-coun· ty" and "natural." With these n1odifica· tJous, 1hcy are able to prevent usage of existing roads also. This mean$ any motorir.ed vehicle is now an OTtV. This is how you can bQ barred fron1 your public. land. EVEN IF' you never use the desert, } ou should still he conctrncd v.·ith this plan. 'Mlere are presently 11 rangers for the 12,000,000 acres of desert land. The BLM is no'v adding rangers to enforce the plan's restrictions. This will require additional tax dollars for the enlarged BL?l-t budget to pay the salaries of these ne\v rangers. And the rangers \\'ill need ORV equipment to patrol the lands. Hov.·ever, by decree, the BLM ORV equi pment '~ill not damage the desert. WAYNE KING Stor11 on Handicapped 'fo the Editor; We have been so impressed with your news coverage of programs for lhe han- dicapped. We have displayed your articles on inrant stimulation by the Regional Center, the Hope Haven School for MulU·Handicapped, the Grandparent Program at Fairview and the Carl Harvey School Jn Santa Ana. HOWEVER, your recent article by Candace Pearson of Oct. 9, 1973, on the proposed Developmental Center at UCl C<>ntained serious omissions. 'l"here are programs to service the severely handicapped in the county. 'i' h e aforementioned articles attest to their existence. 'Illere is one program you have not covered -the Program for the Multi· llandicappcd administered by the Capistrano Unified School District. There :ire four classes with 24 children enrolJed. They are bused to San Clemente from as far away as Jrvine and El Toro. Included in the program Is a state-funded experlmentnJ program for I n f a n t s starting at t8 months. The progrRm was begun In Afarch of 1970. MARGARET ROBERTS CELIA VANOERPOOL RONALD KO'l'KIN CARMEN HIOS Staff ror the ~-tultl·Handlcapped at La11 Pahnas School, San Clemente 6rnft ha Dl,rg11lsel' To the!: F.dltor : With the political demise or Spiro Agne1v, the "''Ord "11raft" ill in vogue, after a lonjC absence. I looked It up in Dictures Webf.ionary and basically it mcan.s : "the use of one's poslt\oo to ' " (.,,__MA_IL_B_o_x _ _..J \.llltA lrofll ,....S.A 1r1 welttlt\t. Horm1Uy wrlltn 11>1v~ r.,.~,, llltlr m1•11"' In >OCI Mlf<ll .,. ltu. Tiit rl•lll "' U!Nltll• ltlt.n Ill 111 1par1 or 1llrt1lflttf flllfl II rfftn'tlll, AU le1111'1 fnW'1 fn• Cl\IM tlt!Wltllr'9 111111 fntlllllS l'H ...... blll l'&lftK ""' 111 w111111.id .,. ,_, If 1o11tfki.11t '""°" .. ••Pl,Clll. PM!ry wflt Ml 111 •~Dtltllect. take advantage of another." This reminded me of an old quote from Shakespeare that "An act by any other name would smell as bad ." BUSINESSMEN call lt a cu m e n , unlo~ call it fringe benefits. en· vironmentallsts say it's ecology, nev.·smen swear they art protecting their sources, generals refer to military tactics, Com· munlsts (or Marxists, as they are now called since the detente) say it's democracy, and planners say it's in the public interest. . . To lenders it's company policy. while thieves or secret documents call it the public's right to kOO:W, then som.e eth.ni~ groups· justify anything by invoking c1v1l rights or the protection or heritage. If I have left soml'One out, 1 assure vou that it was not intentional. and Ptease do not feel slighted. It is just that the space ls limited and the editor must give equal time. PAUL WESTBROOK Lohh11lst Reform To the F.ditor: Saturday's Pilot carried a fascinating story about Assemblyman Raymond Gonzales' desctlptlon of how lobbylst,3 lr.nuence government by showering legislators with gifts. As.9emblyman Gonzales seem! to be exceptional In his abillly to resist the blandishments of the lobbyists. A bill to regulate lob- bying was ertcetlvely nullified In the closing minutes or the Jut session or the L<lglslature when an amendment v.'as added which would have bAd the effect of requiring everyone who wrote a letter to a leelsl1tor to reJister as a lobbyist. THE rnm STORY referred to tM m6Vie "Meet. John Doe," in which in the end "the people" triumph•over the "comtpt cigar-smoking polilicians." The same thing: may happen in real life if the initiative now being circulated by Common Cause and other groups is put on the ballot and enacted. l t will produce the kind Qf rerorm of tht political system -including recognition of lobbyists -which is so desperately needed, but which our legislators have refused to enact. Let's hope that Assemblyman Gonzales represents the wave of the future . and not a lonely outpost o! integrity. PAUL C. EKLOF Agnem'• 'Colossal Egg' To the &:!itor: In his national network televised COvt'!r"- up speec-h !be former vice president Spiro T. Agnew, perennial critic and \\'OUld·be censor of our free prea, laid a colossal egg. Was his praise of the present occupant or the White House (Nixon) letting a pattern for the President to follow? Or ls Spiro putting In a pitch for a bigger pension to last him the rest or his natural life as reward for his proven crooked misdeeds while a "public" servant? BORIS BUZAN OlAN•I COAST DAILY PILOT Robert N, Wttd, PubUshtt" Thomas Kteuil, Editor BarbarB Krtirrich Edftorial Page Editor The clitorial .. pap or 1hfl' D8ily Pilot M!eb to inform and mlmul&te rendm by PreMmtl'W on ftlll ptp diverwlcommentary"on topics OC J.D. terest by i)ondlented columl\l11t11 and cartoonilft, by pnwldlng a forum for read en' vitwt and by flr"Rntlng thlt nt\VSJ)all'r'·• oplnk>nt aM ideu on ~mnt topka, 1111'! edltorit.l oPin~ of rbt Dt.llY PUot •PPtlt' only ln the editorial column at the trip OC the pq:c, OplnlOM e:itpreucd by the <.'04- umrdtta and t•rtoonlst• Mel l•tter writers art thel:r own-and no wdone--- mtnt ol 'lhelr vltw1' by •he Da1J1 PUot 'lhould be Wtmd. Sunday, October 21 , 1973 f u p All! co hit to aim man those blll<k vmit were jok .. Swed Jris11, Ea ol ad seltte th<lr due w obleo f~lou th<Y tlon. d Su!WIQ, Octobtf 2.1, llf7J DAJLV PILOT Mideast! History Holds Hope Book Critics Not Fairer- ] ust C1wosier By DR. HOWAJID M. LENHOFF In thete traatc Umes when Jewish and Arab blood Is llow\nr, we Americans arc bewildered by the barnge or conOJctlng reports, lbe Urade of oppoalng IX'JllOi•nda and tile Pleas 10< u,s. IUPf>Orl for one side or the other. Out bewildennenl may come 1rom Olli' lack Of Ulldel'IJandlni of Ibo hiatory ol lbe Holy Land, l'rom our not knowing why Israel must exlst, and from the un- fortunate fact that there is no easy and completely fatr answer to the quesUoa : 0 Whlcb aide is right?" Perhaps a good way to get at the core ol the problem Js to look into the na1ure and plight of the modem Israeli and or the: Palestinian. First, the native.born Israelis, some going back seven generations, are called "Sabras." Sabra actually is the Hebrew word for the "prickly pear," ~ fruit of the desert cac- tus. Ute the prickly pear, the young raraeli is considered to be prickly and toi.igh on the outside, yet sweet on the inside. MY EXPERIENCES in Israel convince me of the appropriateness of this name. Foc exam.pie, to the average· American touriat, tbe young l9raeli child of 3 to 11 seems loud , spoiled and unruly. I commented upon this behavior lo my Israeli colleagues by saying, "Young Israeli kids are not what we in Amerka call 'nice' Jewish boys and girls." · "Right!" ·ihti' said, and each Israeli gave a different answer to my inconsiderate remark. Orie replied, ''In Israel Jewish children can be themselves. They doo't have to be suppressed and kept out of sight so as not to displease their gentile neigbbon:." Another answered. " 'Nice' Jewish boys won't risk their lives to protect their country." But the most moving statement w~ that of a mother who said, "Why shouldn't we spoil them now? How certain are we that they won't be killed ln another war?" And, today I know that about 1,000 of U.... mothers w.re rqretably correct In this concern. What about the other aide of the Sabra, the "in" akSe, the "sweet'' side! This f e 1 t u re ~shes the S3bra teen-ager from the Amerlc3n one. For tht Young American. ter.n age Is a time of "finding oneself." a lime to develop one's independence - tn other words, a time to be sel!tsb. The Sabra tef!Ml~r, on the otht>r hand, leama to be selness, to give his life for hl.s country, to preserve . his cultural heritage for future generations. THIS FEEl.JNG be&ins I o develop early in the lives of Sabras. Even in the elementary grades, they aotively participate in the building of their land. For example, Dr. Howard M. Lenhoff is pro/.wor of biological acience11 of UC lrvinf:. He has vL!ittd lmiel three times since mid- 1968, the fir1i time for tliM months o:a o sdtn tist atld prof es· S01' at the Weizmann Jna titute, uud the latest for a month at tl~e Hebrew University of Jer· tualem. once a year every child plants a sapling to restore fores ts for future generations. Yet, on the grim side, they are sensitir.ed to the sufferings of their people's many struggles for the mere right to exist. The young Sabra cannot miss memorials present in virtually every village, erected to honor those who have died defending their country, and ot.her shrines dedicated to those who died in persecutions outside Israel. Sabras are children Qf a history ol ~lng o~asls in most Europei!l countries at one time or anothef. or the Spanish Inquisition, of Russian and Polish pogroms. and of Hitler's purges. But they do not have to Jook back too far. because a 25-year-old Sabra bas lived through four wan: 1948, 1956, 1967 and now the Yom Kippur attack. And in between,. they are murdered at Munich, sent letter bombs in E..'urope and bombed by terrorists in markets and bus sta- tions at home. nt:EIR BASIC HOPE is to be left at peace. But they know only too well the foibles of man and lessons of history. such is their U.S. Cultural Assimilation Provides Rich Experience A dtudent fr001 a racial rillnority at· tending college should remember a basic prindpl• of bird....,.ing. namely, thal to bit a bird on the wing, you have to aim not where the bird is, but where it's goq: to be by the time the shot gets there. You've got to ah>ot ahead. UnbiwilY moot Negro and olber minority students prepare themselves for careers in occu· pations in which memben ol their minority have al· ready been succe~ ful -teaching. so- cial work, nursing, law. The kind of young man and women needed now are tho8e who say, "There are no black mathematici&llS at thl.s uni· venJty. I'm going to be the first one." "'Ibere are no Chic;mos on the Ol~c ski team. I'm going W be the lint one." "1'lere are no Puerto Ricans in the U.S. Senate. I'm going to be lbe first ooe." THESE ARE THE men and women we need -ambitious people who are not willing to accept th e limitations of today·s world, but w'bo are preparing them!elves for new roles in the 'A''Orld of tomorroW. And the more young men and women there are who "shoot Bhead" to prepare for tomorrow, the more different that tomorrow 'ltt'il l be. I say this because one of the remarkable things about Ame rica is its hi.51oric ability to assimilate cullural, racial, llngui~tic and rellgtous minorhles. Germans Swedes, Poles, Dulcll, Italians, HungariaM, Irl!ll, Olinese, Ruuian Jews, Armenians -all be co m e Americans in a generation or two. Each of these minorities was regarded with di!ltrust and derision \'1hen they were new to Lhls (.'Ollnlty, There ware jokes about stupid Dutchmen, dum b swedes and Poli.cks and Hunkies, dirly Jmh, and sneaky Orientals. Each group hod lta .pedal prvbtema of Bdjusttnent, and huddled together ln settlements, urban or rural, to be with their own ptaple. All got adju&1ed In due time, c-Jally \IU'OUlll the ,.,.. Quotes Wm. Au1dn, ~A ., on environmentalist objec:tlons to' nuclc.ar power -"It's a tale het thAt these obstructlonl1ta (would) sqawk as·loodly as any or us If lbeY had to do without llghta, relrlgera· lion, TV and the Innumerable thinp tha t dopend on elccttldty." (s. I. HAYAKAWA) ces.sea o[ their children a·n d grandchildren. This g r e a t American experience is one Uiat ~-e really don't understand ourselves. because we are still in the midst or these adjustments. Those \\·ho are anxious about Negroes moving into their communities forget that the same anxieties were amused whe n they themselve! -as lrisl:l or Greeks or Jews -moved in a fe w years earlier. tt!: s!:~r;,tepa:;de '=~ '::i~r~~! neighbors as fellow townsmen and fellow citlzem. What Americans have learned through their nation.al experience is shown by Harold Isaacs of the Massachusetts Institute ol Technology in a book on "Americen Jews in Israel." Israel, like tbe United States, is full ol people drawn from many lands. There are Gennan Jews, English Jews, Ameri can Jews, Jews from the Arab nations, Polish Jews -all trying to get &king together in tbe tiny nation or Israel. IT HASN'T BEEN easy. Some, like the German Jews, are \rell~ucated and w1>anized. Others, like the Yemenite Jews, have a tribal, almost primitive, culture. Some are free-thinking, Reform- ed Jews. Others adhere to afi Old·fBsh· ioned orthodoxy that seems absurd to the sophlstlcated English Jew. Jews from Hungary and Spain and Rumanla do not see eye to eye. Many of the difCerent kinds of Jews can hardly stand each Gt.her. But who are the human relaUons ex· perts who are able 1G get all these different kinds of Jews united as Israeli? They ar&-ahnost inYarlably .the American Jews who, as Americans, h~ve long had the experience -in New York. Chlcago, 1..()1 Anteles. Atlanta -of getting 1>00Ple of different cultures and religions and races working together, whother In community organizations, in trades unions, ln business enterprises, or In poUUca1 action. It ls 11 tr any American, 1lmpl y by vlrtne of havtng shared the American experience, is, compared to J)l!Ople of other naliocs, an e1pert ln lntercultu ral relallooa. It would """" that the un1 rylng stren,th that Golda Meir brings to her position as prime minister of JJrael de.rives (at least In part) from her Milwsukee upbri n&ing. PerhAPll the American expelicnce Is lichcr tha n .... e rullzo while going lhnl<lgb IL • .. lntnnsigence" -It ts lbtlr desire fOl' survival -and lbe~ willlngnes1 to give their Jives 30 that olher Jews may Uve. The Sla te of Israel. then. ~·as crea1ed for these Jtws. oind for lhe oppressed Jews from aoy coun- try where anti.semi!ism resurges. as it has for the past 2.000 years. At lea.at wi th the existence of Israel. oppressed Jews have a place to go, a place where they can be them.sel ves. These are the facts of an ort- forgotten history. Yet they do not make it any easier for UJ to come to a decision regarding who is right or wrong in the 1'1ideast conflict. History certainly supports the claim of Israel as the Jewish homeland. At the same time, it also supports the PalesUnlan's right to be in Israel. The' major difference is that the Je\\'S u a peoplr. have · no other place to go; they can stay onJy ln Israel, Even our own great country limited the number of Jewish refugees that we would take in at the time or Hitler's holocaust. Aud Great Britain in 1945 neither accepted Jewish refugees nor allowed them to go to Israel. In tact, tbe Britlstt even went so far as to deport many Jews who survived the concentration camp and entered Israel U1egally. BUT FINAU.Y, the Jewish refugees were assimilated, some by other countrieoi: and most by Israel. And today there is DO Jewish refugee problem. A glance at history tells us that most ref~ee problems have been solved within JO years. For example1 in a brief few years our country usimilated many Cuban relUgeeS, over 100,000- in Miami alone. . Yet Lhe Palestinian refugees still remain homeless. Why? Because they were used by the other Arab states to distract the Arab peoples from their own poverty, and as ploys ror leaders hungry for power and money. Egypt would not give citizenship to the Palestinians. Instead, the refugees, under Arab rule, were kept in inhuman con. ditions, such as those found in the crowded camps ol Gau. The refugeeii received Uttle financial support from their Arab nelghlx>rs (except for Jordan): the United States gave $23.000.000 to the United Natioos Relief and Works Man's Mouth . ls One of His Biggest Foes Man is the only animal that con- sistently gets into trpuble by opening his mouth. Most creatures open their mouths chiefly to admit food. 1'ian opem his mostly to make a Jool of himself. He also must bave the most insensitive oral orifice on earth, for man is the only known species that can put his foot in his mouth witho ut even being aware of it. When his big rrap does lead him into one, he defends himself by claiming tbat he has the right tO free speech. What he ( HAL BOYLE ) doesn't realize is that, aside from free love. free speech is perhaps the most disillusioningly expensive thi ng in t h e world. IT ISN'T necessary to button up yoor lips. however, to stay out of trouble. All you have to do is to learn to think before you speak, and say nothing that will stir up anger in your fellow man -or make you rself an unwill ing victim of him. Here, for example, are a few classic remarks to avoid. remarks that probably have caused more than half thi: !rouble on ea rth: "Doesn't anybody around here ever do any work except rne'!" ''Put your money where your n1outh is." ';II you only had brnins in all )'our thumbs, you'd be a real genius." "SllALL l tell you to your face what even your fri ends are saying behind your back?" "If nobody el!e will. I'll volunteer." "Have you ever faced up to lhe fact that the whole thing n1ay be only psychosomatic?'' "Well, you might at least soy th ank you." "Yeah. ifs a good jokr. but It sounded fUMlcr the way fl.111ton Berle used to tell it 20 years ago.·• "No, it's your turn. I distinctly remem- ber buying the last round." "Yes. It sounds like you ~·ere In !he rl5lht -but of COUr$C I haren't heard the other guy's side of the story.'· "WHAT PUZZL&.I\ me is "'hy no woman v.•OI ever admit sh~ ls in the wrong.'' "lf I didn't love you, do you think I'd be 'lll'Orking m}'MlU Into an early grave so you and the kid! can buy the things you want but don 't need?'' "Why don'l we just step out.side and settle this m&n to mon~" ''Bring anybody and ev('rybody to the party. We're havlng open house." A1eocy to suppon the camps, whe.rta1 Ule total contribution ~ the Arab nations, lncludlng the oil· rich ahelkdorns, was not even ooe percent ol that aniounl. And their strategy ~rked. The oppr6SS8d Palest.lnian \\'As eaugbt ln betWilen: no bdp fram his brolhers and no return to the home he had lert. Hatred bui1 l up to such a poin t that, 1n despera- tion, the Palestinians commi tted atrocities like 'the Mu n i c h massacre. 111US, TO VARYING degrees both the Sabra and the Palestinle n are rig ht in claiming Israel as their homeland -and in thei r own ways both are wrong. Tbe y both know it. The prime difference is that the Israeli has nowhere else to go. It is Israel or another 2,000 yea rs or wandering and persecution. And, hence, we have the so-called Israeli intransigence. It is no more tha n a new e.xpressio n or lheir ancient struggle to survive. For once Jews can light back as a unified people. This is the dif· ference that baffles a world used to seeing Je\vs die. Will eve r the day come that Je\Y and Arab can live in peace together? Of course it will. We have examples in distant and re- cent history. The flowering of Jewish medicine, literature and philosophy occurred in N o r t h Africa and Spain under Moslem rule. It was not under Arab, but European rule that tbe mass ex· pulslons and burnings of the Spanish Inquisition took place. And today -even during the time of !his writing -Arabs go back and forth between Lsrae.1 and Jordan over the AJlenby Bridge; the sister cities Eilat and Aq"uaba lie ne:zt to each other without con· fllct; and Arabs and Israelis work together on the Wes t Bank and in Haifa and East Jerusalem. Dur· ing the lottg cease-fire that existed after the Six-Day War, it was shown that Jew and Arab could work together. Although the Palestinians did not like being occupied, they found that their standard of living im· proved, their freedoms increased and they could still run their own municipal governments and schools. The West Bank and Gaza Arabs learned that the JeW5 are not oppressors, and the Jews learn· ed that Arabs are capable people \vlt h the same human needs as thei rs. BUT TIUS SLO"' progress that \1·as occurring despite the oc- cupation was shattered by the present war. The Arab politicians, such as Egypt's Anwar Sadat , have solidified their political holds while thei r people are dying, and \1·hile their all-too-limited resources are wasted on war. Beyond domestic Arab po litics, another major _cause of tbis bloodshed ls the big-power struggle. as Russia strives for world poy,·er. for control of the Mediterranean. and for a monopoly oo oil resou rees. Without Russian missiles, training and diplomatic support, the fighting \\'ould not have started. The Arabs and Israelis might ha\'e nwved gradually toward peaceful solutions. And the Arab countries ,might have begun I<> deploy their great oil wealth lo help their poorer brethren. As the free wcrld watches and tries to disentangle the claims oC the Russians, only ooe thing cer. tain: We can tolerate neither suf· fering oC refugee camps nor an· other Auschwitz. A friend ask('(! me yeisterday \\hy the drnma critics art so much more disliked and rcvill'd limn, say, book critics. "Are the dra1na. en tics harsher .'' he \\'anted to know, .. or less qualified for their JObs?" Sting one of that unhappy spct't<'i myseU, 1~:rhaps l cannot gh•c a y,·hoUy unbiased an~·er. liUl l think lhtit one reason for lhe unpopularity of dr.an111 ~YD NEY J, HARRI~ <Tilics is perlN:t!y pla in, altOOugh ne\·et taken Into consideration by the pubhc. The drama critic is oompellcd lo re\ic.-w ('very professional play that opcn.'i . This ranges from Shakespeare: Nld Sophocles down 10 the latest se.1 farce « moronic mystery melodrama or insipid musical conootioo. SUPPOSE th<' book critics \\·ere-forced to review df humanly possible! every one of the thousands of books th:it are published yearly. N'mely perc1•nt of them are junk. and pretend lo he liule more. The.y are ha stily wrillcn, hastily printed, hastily read. and hastily forgol ten. !\lost of them ne\•er achie\'e the dignity or 11 review, favorable or other.,.,1se. But 1he book critic does not engage in such prom1scuou., and futile activity. Instead. he ca['('fully selects a handful of books ouL of the hundreds tha t C'Ome to his desk -those that Sttm ·important, or attractive. or especially provocali\'e. Imagine a book revie\\·er g I v i n g serious and regular attention to the salacious pocketbooks, the i n a n e \\'estems. the trivial reminScences. the tedious hiGgraphies, the romantic novels as fragile as a buUerfly's kiss. In a \\'eek Ile Y.·oold be'1rantic; in a month, rabid ; lo a year. insane. , Yet this is what the drama cr:ltlc is expected 10 do -not in terms of quantity, but in tenns of varying quaUty. lfe cannot refuse to review a· play on the grounds that it is plainly trash. 1\10ST STAGE PLA\'S -like most of any entertainment -are beneath critical notice, They are simply com- mercial attractions designed to lure as large and undiscriminating an a udi ence as possible. The critic does rot enjoy panning them; he does not enjoy seeing them; but the exigencies ol his trade demand that he attend and report en every opening-night. Others can \\'a lk out after a ghasUy first act; the critic must stay and· suffer silenUy. Little wonder that he sounds bilious in print. But Ecologists Sliudder Offshore Oil Has Promise \V ASHING TON -O!fshore oil offers the best chance for the United States to lessen its growing dependence on foreign pe(rolcum and still keep the automobile tanks filled. According to the U.S. Geological Survey, nearly 200 billion barrels of rec:overabJe oil may lie under the continental shelf -the submerged lands between tbe coastline and the poim where oceans drop steeply to the depths. While this oil ·promises to relieve the developing shortage o4 fos.sil fuels, 1t also raises ,:rofound fears among en· vlronmertallsts. Mere mention of the M>rds "offshore drilling" recalls the rup- ture of an oil well in the Santa Barbara channel in 1969. The well spev.-ed thousands or barrels of oil into the Pacific, blackening nearby California beaches and killing birds and fish. Oilmen and ecologists are still debating wilether the accident left any lasting effects on the area's ecology. THE SANTA BARBARA dttid<DI con- tinues to have an Impact on offsho re oil exploration. It was a factor in passage of the National Environmental Policy Act of 1969, which requires federal agen- cies to assess the effect ol their decisions on the environment. Drilling remains suspended on half of the 70 leases previously a~·arded by the federal government In the Chan· nel. and the incident stiffened the resistance of Atlantic Coast stales to drilling off their shores. On the other hand, the energy problem seems to be pushing the country to\A•ord allowing a massive new search for offshore oil and natural gas. Shortages ol ga.901.lne became apparent t o American motorists last year and con· tinue today. giving the petroleum in· dustry a strong debating point in ils demand.'i for a relaxation of strictures against offshore drilling. Wells off the coost of Southem California and in die Gulf of r.tcxico already produce more than 400 million barrels a year, prov1dlng nearly 10 per- cent of this country's annual con· sumption. 011-o:impan y t>Xecutive-i say that much more rould be produced if the federal govemnlcnt ~·1Xdd open up more ortshore arus for dr!IHng. PRESID E!\"T NlXON appeared to aM\\·er thelr plea In a message to Congress 1n Aprtl on entrgy needs. lie ffile(I for o gre:tter tffort tG discover oil and natural gas and set o goal of trlpllng. by um. the ncreap:e leased for drlll lng -beglnMlni; with <'Xpandcd le~ sales In the Cult of '~1cxlco riext year. He said this ac- celerated lt&slng could increa5e: oil pro- duction by 1.5 billion barrt1$ a year by 1985 and provide llJ percent ot the projected oil requlrementa that year. EDITORIAL RESEARCH The latest le.ase sale, in New Orleans in June. drew bids totaling '6.2 billicn. a record sum, for HK tracts covering nearly 600,000 acres in the Gulf or ~tex· ico. The high bids amounted to s1.r, billion. just shy of the alHime high set at the previous sale last December. More than 17,00> \\-ells ha\'e been drilled in U.S. coastal waters. accordlr.g to the American Petrolann ln"tilutc. So far. all of the oil f\o\\·ing lr()nl American offshore operations t'orne" from -the north\\·estern rim of th<' Gull of ~1exico and from Southern Calfiorni:i RUT THERE ARE potential oil-pro· ducing areas in the Beaufort Sea olr Alaska 's North Slope. the Bristol Bay region orr the southwestern coast of Alaska, the Gulr of Alaska . the northeastern edge of t he Gulf of ~·1<'xlco. and the Blake Plateau, Baltin1ore Canyon and Georges Bank regions off the Allan· tic Cioas1. Nixon noted in his energy rncssagl: that object ions had been raised In the past to offshore dri lling. But, ht' saicl. "Nevi techniques, new regulat ions and etandards. and new surveillance c.1pa bilities enable ~ to reduet! and cont ra! environmental danger.i substan· tially." National concern over \Vater pollution was crecliled ";th overcoming the vigorous opposition of the oil and ga.J lobby to the Wa ter Qua lity lmprovement Act of 1970. Among other things, the act established a liability for polluters and· slrengthened the secretary of the interior's authority to regulate offshore drilling . A NUt.IBER OF slate !a11"S. some '\1th stricter pro\'isions than the federal la"'. have been enacted ro deal \\'it h roaslal polluuon. The Supreme Court in April upheld a Florida law requiring oil companies nnd shippers lo pay !he cost of cleaning up oil spills. \\'hilc federal law provides fo r negligence defenses. Florida law imposes liabilily rc~ardlcss of negligence. Florida y,·as supported by friend-of-the-court briefs filed by 13 olhcr states. The ghost Gf Sa nta Ba rbara thus in- hibits this na!ion's lust for more gasoline. The question of ecology versus offshore · drillin~ can be resolved only \\-ilen An1e ricans decide \\-hat -if any - pollution risks they are \\'i\ling to take to replenish their country's dwindlini; supply of petroleum reserves. Areas of Oil Exploration Bristol Bay ' Georges Bilnk Bathmor~ Canyoii N E. Gull of Me"'° I I • A • DAIL v PILOT Wealthier Students Abuse Aid SAN FRANCISCO (AP\ - The bulk of student financial aid abuses come r r o m studeni., whose high famil y income makes them Ineligible. a consultant told an Assembly hearing last week .. Elmer B. Cooper, consultant to the Assemblv \Vays and Means Conunittee en ad· ministration of student finan· cial aid, cited badly managed p><ograms at Sa n Francisco State, Sonoma State. UCLA. 1'1erritt College and Loni:! Beach aty College, but did not go into specific detail. He noted effectNely ad- ministered program.':i a t Fresno State. San Jose State, UC 81i n Die~o and Sacramento and Pasadena City college. Cooper recommended that starting with the 1974-75 pro- gram. federal 1040 income tax forms should be requirea with all applications for financial aid to verify student and parent in~.me. In n1 o s t previous cases, be said, there has beE:f1 no reliable check on family income information. HIS REPORT covered ad· ministration of such programs in ihe California universities and colleges. state community colleges and the , University ol caurontia system. Cha'irman. Willie Brown Jr. said there is a need to insure sounder administration of the Califtlmia student aid pnr grams, which usit some S50 million in state funds and $90 million in federal fun~s each year. Cooper said his reveiew showed a number of prog rams were "very well run'' but that some had been administered jXIOrly with few constructive steps taken to correct abuses. He said abuses among lower income students were the smallest. Thev u s u a 11 Y overstated family income and middle-income stude nts usually understated (amily in- co.me. COOPER SAID there was nG annual evaluation of the program by any slate agency · oi:-school authority and that f(l'"JllS use<! to obtain in- formation varied greatly from campus to campus. Some campuses. he said, had eight programs !ipread over several departments. allowing duplica· lion of grants. "ln onty a few cases are parent's or student's 1040 in- COIT"e tax forms required to confirm income for fin ancial aid," said Cooper. In some instances, schools turned back large sums to the federal government even though student need s were not met, while other schools received much larger federal grants because of w e l l respected programs or ag- gressive financial aid direc· ___ to,cs, huoncluded. Cooper called for estalllish- ment of a statey,·ide !raining program for aid directors and staff, a systemwide financial aid applica!ion form , man- datory use of the incon1e tax forms, an annual evaluation o.f each program. detailed documentation on e\·ery stu- dent applying for aid , inl· mediate reports of dropouts and proof of actual registra- tion of students. Meat Fir1ns Accused Of Fr aucl SANTA ROSA (AP) -Ty,·01 Southern California meat com· panies have been accused rif .~elllng ~irloin sieak door to door -but delivering onlv t>huck y,·eighini; \\\"O (XlUnds l1:ss 1han promised. The ti\"il consuml'r fraud arlion \\'as filed last \\"CCk in Sonoma Coun!y Superior Court against Tull y and Com- pany 1\Ieats !nc. of Gardena . Contemporary i\leat Product~ rnc. of Los Angeles and eight of their offi ce rs . Dist. Att~·. .John l{a\vkcs said the 'companies "vic- timized the consumers of Sonoma County during Au~ust of this yea r at a tinie or crilical meat shor11u1.e." The complaint indicale!1 the operation y,·as statewide tind may have been conducted dur- ing the past three yeArs. Hawkes said the :lCtion was Sunday, Ot:tobtr 21, lWl llG. 3.99 Melitta fi ltered coffee tastes better by removing much of the bitterness. Corning glass server. 10 filters included. ...... ,.....,,, INTERFACING FABRIC •EG. "' ••• 10~ WITM <OUl'OM Quality interfacing. non-woven polyester/ rayon blend. Machine washable 12x24" size. White only. Not i" Jefferson store. WEBCOR HAND MIXER tlG. 7.97 4ee ..... ,,,,,., Whip thru kitchen chores with this 3 ·speed mr~er with full si1e beaters. Choice of gold or avocado. 2 yr. over-Cl)unter warranty. Tubs & tiles come spar~ling clean in a bree1e. No rinsing or scrubbing. deodorizes as lt cleans. Hu1ry 1n on th1~ bargain loday ! -~ ·"~~ '~~~ ;> A must for laymen or mechanics. Complete with padded headrest. JBINEZ JO TORCH 4ee lfG. 7.J7 Comes complete with torch kit featuring a brass pencil 11ame burner & fuel cyhnder. COUPON ITEMS NOT AVAILABLE AT lV & APPLIANCE MMIT'i ' -·· I ' l·~ ~ . -· . ..-· f . UllllBIM LINER ··•·' 4 '81 3 f01$1 'x line your shelve~ in style .. At· tracl1ve ut ility liner. 13x48'' taken aft.er investigation by 10-402 hie: office and Eu!il;cne. Bolo<rn11. lhe counly sealer or \veigh1s1 WHITE FROl\IT REliARD§ !iERVICE TD THE CU5TOMER A!i THEIR Ml;l!iT IMPOIJTAl\IT AS!iET and measures. The co mpl aint snys salesmen for the tY.'O <'Om· panies offered packages. con· talning -eigllt U)-ouncc itirlriln atcaks, but delivered pnck11~rs containing etght chuck stt-;iks weigh ing only 48 ounces TV & APPLIANCE MARTS0 TEIEVISION •MAJOR APPLIANCES• STEREO• RADIO FLOOR CARE ond SMALL ELECTRICAL APPLIANCES 6 CONVENIENT LOCATIONS ... ln / • Iii-II '#llllllflllWG (J ! t1 SlllU '1'1~UO! I I. ·,~~!~I I TV fi APPLIANCE MART HOURS: MON.·!111. NOON·l IWISTCHESTU UI 11·11 I ~~.~~~ I SATURt.\T 111• SUNDAY tlAM 11 JPM COIMNIEI" CREDIT TERMS ' ·. -· SH • SUN. & MON. • VETERANS' DAY Feel clean & confident all day long as Dial k~P~ you fresh. llG. '" · R..,.., fliilk cl\OCOl•l• peanut butter cup. -,, de\1¢\ouS ""'k anytime. §HOP WITH COl\IFID COSTA ME1A Al ~·:. 111 Rich crin~le palen1 ~l·D·On teatu1es a moccasin vamp tr1m!7lfd 1111th ele~an! . white tops11tth1ng Site$ to 10 In hlac•. 18 OZ. EASY·OFF ar&. "' 39c [asy·orf window cleaner ma~es windows clean & shiny in a 111!1. S.rt Diego f reeway 1t Brl 1tol llG. "' Get your Chr1s1mas cards now. Selec1 from m~ny trad1honal. re!1~10us or contemporary designs All one design. 25 lo the pac~age. Oual1ty ammunitio n is a must for the serious sportsman. so buy Mohawk. Shoot with cont1dence. Stoc~ up at this low price. THREE&O MIN . CASSETIES OR ONE Ill MIN. 8 TRACK <•M••H 3 r BBC EACH 0 ATl.69 R Record all the sounds worth hearing again . Pack contains 3 blank 60 minute casseltts or choose one 8 tr~. 80 min. cas~ette. \Reg. 1.69 ea.I YOUNG PAUIEETS ·~·· 99 7.99. 9.99 Gigantic selection of colo,1ul & tat~alive para~et!\S 1n aU hues. lhese popular pets are ~nown 101 llle11 hiendl~ per~onal11es. STOii HOUISt MOll.·SAf. 10AMtet PM SUll. 10AMt•1 PM ~ DAIL V PILOT . _I\_ f) ' ' Couple Give Up On Arm y IT. ORD (AP) -Last December a eoople from Richwood, W. Va· enli sted In a widely publicized Army pro- gram for husband and wife tea ms. Last week. Richard and Barbara White walked out the gates of Ft. Ord as clv\llans. con tending they we.re misled by a recruiter. "l feel the government has lied to me and misrepresented the program to the general public." said Richard, 24, who served as a chaplain's assls- lanl. BEFORE LEA\1NG, While recalled in an inlerview the life he and his 21-year-old wife had been living in t h e military: "Since my wife and I are both in the service, v.·e have tittle tin1e together, our days off are different and there is no respect or considerat ion given to marrit!d couples." '·Hov•cver, the recruiting command states i t dif- ferently.·· The \\'hites claimed an Army recruiter in \\'e s t Virginia _misled them on the pay, where they \vou\d be sent and \vhen they \\'ould arrive at posts for lraining and final as~ignment. The Army agreed something was wrong. "lbe recruiler made an honest mistake. . .. " said an Army Rec!lliting Command sookesman at Ft. Sheridan, Ill. ''He was exonerated of any willful malpractice." THE WHITES' were victims of an "administrative error'' that caused them to be o\•erpaid for five months. The Army started taking the money back which left the couple financially strapped and looking for a \\.'8Y out of the service. Time Plans Ne'v "Life" NEW YORK CUPl) -Time. Inc., which folded its opulenl picture magazine Ufe a ye~r ago, announced Thursday it will launch a new weekly pie· ture magazine called "People" next March. People will be oriented largely to s1ories about in- dividual l)EnOnalilies. t h c company said and will be sold on newsstands and i n supennarkels and s i m i I a r retail outlets at 35 cents. An initial circulation of $1 million is envisaged. The format \\'ill have a num· ber of sec ti ons and departments, although not all wiU run weekly. Some of the tentative sections have a pro- vocative ring: ' 'Se x . ' · "Couples," "\\1inners and 1+_;,.,;eisf!".:...and-"Up-l'<ooC" which will lead off "'ith topical articles. Coverage of lhe an.s and entertainment ~·ill be tied to leading figures. 10..402 ....... ·Tax-11.etluctible' ' Gilt to HOAG' MEMORIAL HOSPITAL l GUARANTEE , VOVRSELF AN INCOME FOR LIFE! Here's the ptrfect way lo ma~I yoor money at securities do "ltipl•·duly'': If !his sounds imP<mible ... ull lod•r Jor the eyt·ope11i111 s!Qrf of Hoa![ Memofiil HosD1t1l's "'Four fle11bl1 Plans fat C1v1ft1". You wtll be In tor • pleas.int :.u1pr1ie! Te~ne: (714) 645-8600 Emmiool06 A•k f<lf" Tlto!Mt Stad11"991' HOAG MEMORIAL HOSPITAL Nt-ptHI ··~( ... CA. •211110 Jnt t N1wptHI loMl1~1rd I Sund.iy, lktobtr 21, 1cn3 CllrhlfMI kltn¢1! MoNI ... l"MM HANCOCK BUILDING TO GET 10,348 NEW PANES Cities Helpless, Ra11d Study Says SANTA ritONICA (APl - The nation's cities are almOi."it helpless to chart their own destinies, according to a study by the Rand Corp. released last wttk. Federal laws and policies are the overriding Jactors determining the growth or decline or cities and local or- ficiats are put in the position of simply going along for the ride, ,,said Dr. Robert A. Levine, bead of Rand ·s urban policy analysis progra1n. Rand has just completed detailed studies of Seattle . Wash., St. Louis. Mo.. and San Jose, and plans studies of 17 other cities before the project ends. A l\tAJOR objective of the study is to generalize about national urban proQl.ems and to suggest federal policies that might belp the cities. Levine said. Dr. Levine said the night to the suburbs was related lo •·a vast national ability to move" and that wxlerlying federal laws and regulations had set up a mechanism "to make movement n1uch raster and. therefore, I es s con- trollable." In St. Louis, for exan1plc. federal housing and highw ay policies have lured people and induslry from the city to the suburbs, Levine said. St. Louis has the least ability to determine its own futur ' because the loss or peopJ, and industry has cut the city's ability to provide for those left behind , Levirie added. "THIS JS particularly _true because those left behind tend to have more problems than those who depart," he COD· tlnued. "St. Louis and cities like It need some outside source of fund s such as more substantial and s t e a d i e r revenue sharing o r a metropolitan area tax base." Federal ni i I it a r y pro- curement practices In San Jose caused a growth boom that has brought economic prosperity but also an urban sprawl proble111. the Rand study said. Federal civil avi ation polici('S are critical in SeatUe because the city is s o depend ent on a single in· duslry . the aircrafl industry, Levine said. The city went through an econom ic recession from 196&-71 due to cutback! in federal aircraft orders. Levine said the ruture urban studies will attempt to develop hypothes.es relating to C?nlrol ol rates and patterns of growth, central city decline and the role of metropoUtan jurisdi ctions in growth.C.ecline patterns. End of Divisiveness In ~ehools Acclaimed FRESNO fAP\ -Stale schools chief Wilson Riles said last \\'eek the most important accomplishment in educat ion in the last three yea~ has been the ending or •·the j('r- rible divisiveness of t h e 1960s." He credited both the public and the school adminislrutors \Vith the accomplishment. Riles. speaking al a public meeting, said ending the divisiveness ha s led to new and beneficial programs that are going into effect lhis fall. HE SPOKE from a prepared texl . The divisiveness, he said, "threatened to tear the cducn· lion11l community apart Md threatened to permit the short-~ight«I nay-sayers to pit one faction against another lo destroy our schools. "Be<:ause we. the com- munity and the educators. have put an end to that divisiveness. we had vintage years for education i n Sacramento in 1972 and 1973. \\le harvested a bountiful crop of new legislation. This fall the children are beginning to reap the benelit of several nev,. progran1s which took a long tin1c to de\'('iop, enact and in1plement." One ne1v program is early childhood education. "IT WENT INTO action in classrooms for the nrst time last month . The Department of Educat ion received 1,llS applications for local early childhood education projects. To date. 999 schools have receivl-d approva l to move ahead." Hiles said. WIST Oii.i.HOF COUNTY UHITEO Tf.l.CHlit.I Ontroct E•u•-"'" .l.1toco111.., ~··" YI.-Tt•c~•r• Auttl#ll ... WffflnlnJl•r l 11dltti .l.H.OCl•llff Build.ing to Shed Its 'Bark' for Glass BOSTON -This city ai> parentJy ls golng to see - flna.Uy -"beauty" replace "the beast." John Hancock Insurance Co., wnose problems with its $135 million, 61).story head· quarters lower In Boston have draY.·n national attention, is going lo replace all 10,3'48 or the 4"1-by-ll·foot g\85.!1 panes in the structure's mirrorlike surface. at an estimated cost of $5 mllUon to $7 million. Hancock offlclals announced Oct. I lhat the archllects have come up w1th a toluUon lo the probletn of cracking - and sometimes falling -glass panes. SO, WHAT HAS sometlmes bt-en refernd to as Hancock's "plyv.·ood palace" on Copley Square will in coming months emerge aa the shining 1nirror lo Dame Boston th11t 1\s designers. T.~1. Pei & Partners, meant It to be. The thousands of insul ated glass "lights" that form the reflective "skin'' of the 790-foot tower will be replaced with Yr-inch·thick r e r I e c I i v e , tempered glua, which Ls "a hlgh-<lrength, monolilhlc glul of a different type from the I n sulating glass units originaUy used ," says a Han- cock spokesman. More than S,500 of the pana. either blown out by the heavy winds th at so1nctimes occur around the structure or taken out because of cracking or other weakness. already have been replaced by plywood. SINCE LATE 1'11 when the problem with the wind-buf· feted glass first became BP" I partnt, no aertous Injuries lo anyone from falling glaa1 have been reported. Bul elaborate precautions have been nect!W)', !ncludln( cover<d walkwa.ys. for pedestrians In the neafby Copley Square area over which the tower looms , and closing off streets around the structure when there are high winds. · Before plywood at a r t e d replacing glass in the Hanl(OCk Tower, Boston residents and workers saw enough · of the striking visual elfecta of the mirrorllke surface to look forward to restoration. Henry N, Cobb, principal · ard!lleCI (or lbe lower, said, "1be repJacemel\t glass will provide maxl.rnum aafety aDd comfort and will not alter the appearance of tbt1 buildiJli aa designed." -lbe Public Ubrlry and Trinity Epiac:opal Cl>urdl. So far, the company has not hid lo pay Ill)' pa1J!Ue1 1o It• schedul«I lenanll In the new tower. 1 Bostonlans first b e c a m e aware of lhe }lancock Tower's THE TAU.EST structure ln problems when they llW New Eogl4nd, the Han!'O'i plywood panels goln( up as ·Tower.baa t.n'unusua1 rbom-replacement& for the ~ bold •tiape' In addition lo' II!, glass panel!. Later, mUd\ of dark, refl'ectlve akin. A t ihls plyw<M;d wu cov~. wt.th Copley Square, it towera over a black, fke.retardlnt IPl!nt at l'ut two of Boalon'a mast -at the behest of the 8olloo noted architectural treaSl.ll'C! Fire Department. You can save a big 20% on this nylon sleepwear. It pays to set your alarm. Sale 4 80 IR ... II. Lovely shift gowns of nylon tricot f« b9autiful and comfortable .t98ping. Sheer Oftl'tays, aome with lice or emtwoldery rMke 1heM .amething special in llffpwear. Bright and pettel lhtdts. Slzn S·M·L -S~ndth~ • savings right here. 1 oss An1ron caftan in assorted prints mike• •l·hom• lounglng the comfortable took this year. V·n.ctl 1nd IOft gathars undef' the bust line give slight definition to the silhouette. One size fi11 ell. At 11i1s price .yolJ ctn make all your 1v911ings at flame glamourous. JCPenney We know what you're looking for. · Shop Sunday noon to 5 P.M. at the following stores -· FASHION ISLAND, Newport Beach (714) 644-2313. HUNTING TO N CENTER, Huntington Beach (714) 892-7771 , HARBOR CENTER, Co1t1 Mtla {714) 646-5021, , ' ' , , ·'~ A C~rl1I LO sound dooer days. The r cock Ame paid It's The -ndio ' I Broa brok e and same Jos expo mere pop Radi or roll in or -ne E SA ba5e Eco been In man Bet wor proj !ede ln Ads Debut, Luv, On British Radio Ctirfltl1n Scl111c• Monitor Strvl<• (The pop and prattle ate LONDON - A strange new left to London's second new sound is crackling across Lon-radio voice, Capital Radio, dooer's breakfast tables these which premiered last week days. playing as much as US records The radio isn't speaking the per hour.) familiar BBC old Etonian, but London Broadcasting bad cockn ey. Au s tralian, been on the air only 8'12 American. Why there are even minutes before beaming Bri- paid advertisements. tain's first radio commercial lt's commercial radio. luv. . -for Birds Eye fish fingers 'The SO-year monopoly of the (fish sticks, to Americans). -ndio airwaves by the British Ads consume up to nine Broadcasting Corp. has been minutes per hour, but are broken -and will porridge ireated with a disdain born and kippers ever taste the of a SO-year commerciaJ-free \ same again? heritage. There are no "fixed Just as Amer i ea n s spOl" ads, and editors can "discovered" pub I i c , non-shutne 3ds around if they get commercial radio a few years in the way of news. ago, Britons are now being Even so, prime-time oom- introduced to Amerie3n-style, mercials in the first week now·a·\~-ord-O-Om-o u r-sponsor were sold out. irogramming. Britain's infant radio voice "You've never heard goes out of its way to avoid anything like it ," boasts Lon· echoing "Auntie" BBC. All. top don Broadcasting Co., the first executives w e r e recrwted of. a projected 60 commercial outside the BBC. . . stations. It's literally true. 'Ibe news has a distinctly British ears' on1y previous un-BBC SOUDd: an Australian exposure to domestic con:r news reader, a London ~ mercial radio has been the End commentator, Amencan pop and pirated variety -overseas co""'pondents and Radio Caroline Radio London, women announcing half the or Radio CitY, rockin'-and· bulletins. Even the studio rollin' from the North Sea equipment ls Canadian. or Thames Estuary. \ 'I'he naUon's first legitimate conqercial station debuts Needles with a more sober format -news 24 hours a day. Eco-corps Pay Hiked Make Pain Disappear BOSTON (AP) -Surgeoris at Beth Israd Hospllal using SACRAMENTO (AP) -The acupuncture as an anesthetic base pay of California's 500 have removed the appendix Ecology CofPS: members has from a patient. A hospital been .lncreased $Z to a spokesman said use o f minimum of f125 per month. acupuncture in such an opera· 'l1Je COfiSi aatdllSl weet-tlorrts-belleved-Urbe--a-fint that, In addition to base pay, ln the United States. the corpsmen earn $.1.65 an The patient was a 27-year- bour overtime when on forest old nurse at the ~Ital She fire-fighting duty. reportedly suffered litUe pain The corps was established during the operation, was able in trll to provide reserve to walk out of the operating manpower for (orest fires. room and required no Between fires , the corpsmen postoperative medication. work on conservation-related Dr. Ivor Smith, a Brttish- projects for local, state and born anestheslologlst. said he federal agencies. used 11 needles and ad- In addition to the pay. they ministered small amounts ol receive housing, food, clothing narcotic and tranquilizer and personal-care items. drugs during the operation. WESTERN STATE UNIVERSITY COLLEGE OF LAW OF ORANGE COUNTY CALIFORNIA'S LARGEST LAW SCHOOL OFFERS A CHOICE OF TWO PROGRAMS OF LAW STUDY • IN 2'11 •' :I TIAIS of fVU..TIMI llW .-dy (15·16 cl•HtoOm houu ~· -kl, « e IN 'Vt et 4 TIAH of PAIT-TIMI dty, ...,ino, OI w"kend l1w 11udy (3 cl•HH per wttili::, 3--4 hotlfot per d t H), • Yov e.r1 e•n your .MIS DOCTOI /J,0,J cMrlr• •rid ....... ELIGIBLE TO-TAKE THE _ CALIFORNIA BAR EXAMINATION Wlin Ol PMOH1 rot CATALOGUf ~~ 800 South Broolchunt Anohelm 92804 17141 635-3453 APPl Y NOW FOR THE SPRING 197 4 SEMESTER, BEGINNING FliBRUAlY 4th FULL-TIME LAW STUDY PROGRAM AVAILABLE IH FALL 1974 SJUOIN11 IU011ll Po. llottAll'f tNIUllD STlilDIWr l~ ·~~~~~"':::;;"=O~VB>::_:'°":::,~11111::;:""";,;;.;;,_~~~- No Pace1naker, I\'o T/11u11p g!d the last pacemaker In February to Imp lant the new one in n1y chest, l bl•cked right out." Anderson , maM'led and the f1i.ther of tvoo dtlldren, was born with a concenHa1 heart cond1Uon -a hole between t"'O ventricle!. mtdical insurance pD:l hlsl bill. The nuclear pnetmaker ii po"·ered by p1utoni um and lasts up to t:i yean. compared to the t"·~year life span ol lbe battery device. Sundiy, October 21, 14173 D. K.'s . . --m.it . 1)~' DAILY PILOT SPECIAL DONUT HOLES 1c EACH Anderson, who's now on his seventh pacemaker, recalled be once went to the top floor ol New York's Empire State PER IAG JI. . ' • • ,, • • • . Frequencies Make His Heart Flutter He said nervea around bis heart were damaged during an operation wben be was lt. His nerves evmtually became unable to power any heart beat at all. Building to sightsee. Elec-6 tronlc l.ntereference caused hb Mond•y, Oct. 2.2 thru, Friday, Oct. 2 ATLANTA, Ga. (AP) -The tbu~mpJng of Rob ert Anderson's heart Is powered by a nuclear pacemaker. Without it, he'd have no heartbeat at all. survive the. failure of the mechanism which regularizes heart beats.• battery to go haywire. 135 E. 17th ST., COSTA MESA "The pacemaker responded 1~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~!""! to the radio frequency ." he 1.: ... d. "lt doubled the rate ., Nearly Everyone But not Anderson. my heart beat. I had to get back down immediately. Most people, whether they have nuclear or b a t t e r y operated devices, w o u l d "\\1ITHOUT f\1Y pacemaker. I'd have no heart beat at all," said the 29-year~ld sales manager. "When they unplug- ABOUT llO peraons around the world are wearing the nuclear devices, whi ch cost $~,5()0 nearly five times more than a c onventional pacemaker. Anderson 's office "Now r" ius• got " stay L1'stens lo Landers away from any atomic energy." 15% off all women's girls' and toddlers; coats.* Wrap up f _or winter. "'--RiOht rw:t#, with the bettllf' p1rt of wintllf' still to come, 11ve 15% on every girl a' coat in stock. You'll find warm 1crylic pile coats in solids or animal imit1tions. Aa well 1a 1 9re1t selection of hooded plaids, OOfd· uroys and leather looks too. In regular Of boot length styles for girls sizes 7 to 14. 3 to 6•. toddlers too. Come soon while our sel"ect ion is at its' best. Dress length coet in the newest '1nim11' look. Fike fur 1nm tops it off. Blue, antelope or brown. MiS5eS sizi!s·B-16. "••· 5<45. Sale 3821 2 days only! • Sunday and .Monday! UNyourJCPtf'lney Chtrge C1rd. a.a. prictl effective tttrough Sewrd1yl JCPenney We know what you're looking for. Shop Sunday noon to 5 P .M. at the following stores: FASHION ISLAND, Newport . Beech (714) 644-23 I 3. HUNTINGTON .CENTER. Huntington Beech 1714) 892·7771 . ', .... .... I ' :i " ' ; i: I; ' I Sillllfday, Ottobcf 20, l'f:' J Black Policemen Striving to Do Better Job SEEKS LARGER ROLE Chic1go Officer cw;.,1.., kltflc• ,. ... ..,. s.t•k• bl3ck ofricers were failins i.n ATLANTA -Black. pol ice their 01vn black communities. wan.t a biuer role i n America's ciUes -and insist "A head-whipping by a black tbey could contribute a Jot officer is no different th.an toward so)\•ing the cities' im-a head.whipping by a white mense problems. officer." said Irv Joyner of t.leeting at their first annual the Co mmission for Racial naliqnaJ ronvenlioJJ, black of-Justice, a guest speakr-r at flee rs last week dlscu»e<i a ,· the convention .. The convention ed h Wl\_ll 8J>OftSOl'l'<fby the Nati0031 lwr>-prong approac to en· Blnck Po Ii cc P3trohnen's large their role in the nulion. Association (NBPPA l. The approach includes: • Improving bluck police "\\'E NEED 1o scr\·c :is performance. a better exompl~ for the black • Improving the nu1nber of co1n1nu11ity." Joyner said. black officers. "De consider<ite of others· Critlcistn of black officers' opinions. performances were heard coo· I--'----------- sistently through the con· fercnce -especially that Conflicts Seen Scientists Look At West's Fi1.ture .,. If a brotner thinkl we are black -or aboul 5 percent portion of the nation's police not working out that way,'' out there. AL .Pruf.nt. aboUL must ·::.urn down Amertta' to -out of a total force or departments. he II.Id In an lnten'iew . Mlf the new black oUlcen IN -· p•-J al .. 1:1....__ ffieen for we get on the force are fix It, don't immediately bui:t -wl,000. ln &ome cities the " •·~ r.w•• ways • .-::iuul\:' young 0 1 ' dJ···-~ed for IOme klnd of "'-• di thought getting · ~ black example, are accepclng bribes. ~Ml nis head. • 'T w understand sporportlon to population ls officers on the ron:e WOl.lld Tbey're get.Ung caught up In mi.9cOr. uct within the r~ him. even greater. according to 1_~so~l~v~e~the~ipiroibileimi,.ibuit~iti''ii~thieiteimiiptaiitli0111~oif~thaiit~soc~l<~t~y ~t~wo~yca~~n~.'jjj' ~·--;::--"Stop indulging in destruc-!\1oses Baldwin, NB PP A tive vices." he continued . cnairman. "And move 00 ha rd drugs. In Detroit. for example, .a bout ~5 percent or the force Drugs are dest roying the if' black' while the PopulaU~n black community." is aboUt half black. Tn OUR' SUNDAY HOURS JWELVE TO FIVE -. • '' L:ettinf{ and holdl~ good, Newark, N.J ., the ra!Jos are black officers is proving dif· 15 percen t and 60 percent. • ficul! for a host of rensons, Baldwin, a 23-year veteran ~oafh P.oast ~u'a the conference was told. of the ·0c1rolL force, doesn't cJ \I JI About 2s,ooo lo 30.000"!'_~"°~1~;,~,_!do~·~·n~prl•~Y~~1he;~P~•;•~b1~e~ms~~'~"-~--:~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~lllllllllllllll~llllllllllllllllllll~~~'._-0uicers in the Unit~ States volved in expanding the black < • ' FORT C:OLLINS. Colo. fAl 'I -\\'hal "ill lhc \\'est he like in the ycur 2000'! Here are some conflicting possibilities !hat seven experts outlined in a !il'n1in:ir oo "Altcrnativt• Future.; in lhc West" recently at Colorado State University : -The 17 states \\<est of tn e l\Ussouri River wtn kick orf their CO\\'boy boots, throw the buffaJo hides in the comer and save most of their magnificent landscape. s_row th in lhe race o( populil·I t1on pres~ures. I -:\ll out poli1ical ll'arfart' betwe£'n O\'crburdenrd ea stern states und a \\'est reluctant to help. The discussions didn't lead 10 any definili\'e conclusions on \\'hat possibilities are mosl likely to occur. said Victor Koel?.er, the seminar's host . Figure the savings. They add up to one of our best Veterans Days ever. 2 days only! Sunday-and Monday! -Solar cells. geothermal and nuclea r J>O"'cr and the h~·drogen engine \\ill make energy one of the earth's most plcutiful c01nmoditles. but <1 nc1v environmental ethic 1vill see it used conservath·cly. -Three hundred mile per hour Amtrak lr11ins 11•il\ con- nect the refurbished cities and ne1v to\.\·ns that sprung 'lP across the West to replace obsolete suburbia and shoddy mountain developments aban- doned as ghost iov•ns. -POPULATION in t h c United States will stabillte at 22S million and that of the \\'est will level off slightly above present totals. -The Glen Canyon Dam in Arizona \\'ill I~ lol"n do\\ n as a symhol of old unthinking technoloJ::Y. and Olllcr maSSi\'f"' resloratic11 projects w i l l rollo11 . -i\"early 100 percent or the region's waler and other resources "·ill he recyeled. Or. the parlicipants said. the futu re might bo 1nuch less utopian: -100 million new people in the United States, with many fleeing 1hc overcro"·ded East for !he plains. mounlaln and Pacific north"·est slates . -Redirection of some of the \'ast irrigation projects suir porting "·estem agriculture to support the new popul:iH00:- -10 ro1d ·1ncreases in major metropolitan areas. "' i t h Yl?Ung people coninuing to sct-k 0111 cities like Ocn1'er. San Francist'il. Oall<1s and Houstvn . ' "ONE OF THE things \\'C agreed on "'as that the future is awfully difficull to predict. .. said Koelzer. a civil engineer· ing professor al Colorado State and fonncr chairman of the National \llater Com· n1ission. The prest>ntations rn ad e here recently \l'Crl' not mean! to be predictions as such, said Koelzer. but St'enarios based on different poinls or vle1\1• Additional sen1inars may be expanded to include planners from eastern states as ~·ell. he added. other participants in the three-day session i n c I u d e d Roger P. Hjlnsen, director or the Rocky ~tount:ain Center on· F.nvironment. ·t.arry Moss of the Sierra Club'..of Southern California : and "EQgeoe K. Peter10Jl of the P a c i f i c NQrt bwest River Basins Com• 1nission. Also . Victor R , Champlin . a Denver reallor. rorn1er Rep. \\'.ayne Aspinall ([).Colo.), and Lrnton K. Cald11·ell. :in Ind iana Unh·ersi· ty political scienlis!. Hansen and :\loss had the most optimistfc 1·ie\l'points. saying ad1·ances in tec hnology could produce a n en- vi r o nmehtlilly res?Onsible ou tlook ln the 17 we stern states. TOTAL PLANNING for the environment is imperative, said Hansen . and in the long run will also prove the most \\'Orkable and ccooomical means of acb1evmg a-h1Sh quality of life. ;\ ne\I' "land ethic" \\·ill hal'e to replace the idea th!t the uni\'erse ex· ists for man's sole use. Co nc e n tr ating o n dc1nographic projections and resource av a ilability , -C0~1PR01\llSE betY:ee n especially "·ater. Peterson and sp1rah11~ eeonomi c gro1\lh <111d Kocl7.er said that \\ith plan- £'n\·ironmenta l pressures. but ning a much greater popula· Improvement in big city polh:· lion could be accommodated lion still limited by available in the region. tax money. The frontier et hic of rugged -An overburdened East individualism must suffer, but looking on the West 1nore and the amount ol land needed more as a dumping place for to support millions more pe-0· the dissident poor of the ghe!· pie in the \Vest is tiny com· tos. pared to the vast areas for -A food crisi.s even grea!er parks and recreation that will thnn the energy shortage or still be available. said Koelzer. the 70s and a rc\1\taliz.cd Aspinall predicts a major "'cstem agricu\!Ure striving to food crisis for the United produce the one 1\merican Slates long before lhe year cornmodity cheap enough to ·2000. howe\'cr. and said the conlpt>le in 1,1orld n1arkets. k£'?>' question \\'ill be human -;\n intro\'crted . isol<1t1oni ~1 sun·i\·111 rather 1ha11 im- \\'rst banding toj!t•th1'r to hair · pro\·emenl of li\·ing .sta ndards. 11•v1c1 co••••' urtt. 11•1 lieVMI C•M¥eM IO&t li Oll"i t.lilCIO OPIN 110• •,11.191' .•. •ON.• 01111 • l•I. Wf CUSTOM !iTRIF' EACH PIECE TO SUIT YOU R R EF IMl !iHIMG HEEDS. WE U!if MO HOT OR COLO ALKALI, ACID, CAUSTIC DIP TAM K!i, MO HEAT, LIVE !iTEl.M!i OR ABR.lSIVES. •HONt 11• .... t t •l ttt ' - ' . ' ' ,. ' \\':, ,/ Womens' sweaters regularly sg to s13 on sale now at 20% off. Sale5 8 ~- Reg . Sto. Misses butkv c•ble •titch cardigan. V-nick. button fr~t. 2 front pockets. Narurat colOf. Size• S-M·L Charge it! lrs the Quick and easy way to shop. pick up a bargain on the spot. Next time you're in ask !or a Charge Card application. We'll do the rest. Chances are, yoLI can Charge the same day. .,. --..: .'.\ Sale 7 20 A~. S9. JuniOf" short sleeved cropped cardigans in 100% acrylic boucle knit. Assorted fashion colors . Sizes S·M·L. Sale•B Reg~ 110. Junior short sleeved long cardigan• in 100% acrylic knit. Tie belts. cable slitched, pointel fashion features. Assorted colors. Sizes S- M-t. Sale960 R1g. $12. Mis111s ball oon sl1e11e sweater in 1 00% polye s1er. Fashion features o f ribbed turtleneck slylin g. back zipper. Comes in basic fa shion color1 and ·pastels. Sizes S· M·t. JCPenney · We kni:>w wha.t you're looking for. Sale3995 Reg. 47.95. P..len·s patterAed polyester doubtE!knit .aportcoa!, Single breasled with center vent and natural shoulder. 36-46. Sale $11 Reg. $13. JCPenney pant tor men, Fortrel"' polyester that's Penn Pre$t9 end texlurized. Wide belt loops and flare leg. Sizes 30-42. Shop Sunday_i:ioon to 5 P.M. at the fol.lovfillg s~or~s: Sale 2 38 Reg. 2.so. Zip fron t shirts ol polyester I cotlon knit. Sizes 1-4. Pants in polyester/ cotton knit. Sizes.1-4. reg. 2 39 Sel• 2.03 Sale 2 12 Reg. 2.50. Long slec\le lops ot polyester I conon knil. 1·4. Poly· ester /Collon knit slacks. 1·4. reg. 2 29 ~·1•1 .94 FASHION ISLAND, Newport Beach (714) b44-2313. HUNTING TON CENTER, Huntington Beac h (714)'892-7771. HARBOR CENTER, Costa Mesa (7 14) b4b-502 1 I - I a w them as le The the news schoo area Th the news Wds l"Atuc Inc .. Th I SA Chari its from sip a Th Dis tr last W'5 to I l I ' D•Ur l"lltt s1111 l"~m S•tUrd1y, Oclobtr 20, }q.73 DA.IL Y PILOT A Consumer Investigator Beat~n Up " !iACRA~1El\'TO (AP ) -emphasis on the San Fran-ble for the licensing or p:?r~11s i;aid. "It wl.11 be lnte.restlng Organized crime Is trylf1( 10 cisco and Los Angeles areas, engaged ln a large nu1nbcr lO tee how llr this will ao . lntimk:latl! investigators or 1be be !aid. • of occupallons. Occupa!loMI 1iceMlag \s a. Department of Consumer Af· The Depart n1 e n t of •·we are on the threshhold grave public trust," Kehoe fairs. says Olrector John _ _:Co.:."c:'::":.:m:.:er:...:.Af::f::al::r_:_•_:l•:...:.res:=cpon=':..l·_o:_r_11>e_:__ln_vestig;ilton." Kehoe __ .. _ld_. __ _ Kehoe . ----- Kehoe said Thursday one Investigator was "beaten to r------a pulp" after trying to find CLIP THIS COUPON -----..... out aboot possible criminal I infiltration of a seemingly leglllmate business. I The investigator. who was working on crime links of an I employment agency in the San Francisco Bay area . has I earlier been offered bribes to "lay off," and had received I telephone threats, Kehoe SRid. "There was even a breakin I at his office . The whole scenario has been one of in-I timldaling us to call off the I inyesligation," Kehoe said. The investigator told Kehoe I that~ sent his daughter out of tile state for safety reasons. I Kehoe declined to identify the firm the investigator was I ~-orklng on. But he added that "we're pretty close to filing I SAVE $522 ATLAS BATTERY BARGAIN COUPON Use this coupon and save on the purc hase or an Atlas or Chev ron Battery al Standard S1at1ons and most Chevron Dealers. Present it and receive: $5.00 oll !he sta tion p•1ce o! an Atlas '"PHO" Bat1ery S2 00 ol! the sta!1on p1Ke ol in At11s "A"' Blttery $5.00 oH the st1!ion price cl a Che vron '"CPJO"' Ba11ery SI 00of1 !he Sl1t1on p11ce of ~n Alias "I('' 81tttry S3.00 ofl the station p1 1ce ol an A1iil\ "PA" Balte1y Offer and station prices may vary at part1ci pal1ng Chevron Dealers. Purch ases may be made by using your Chevron Nal 1onal Travel card Budget te rms .:ivaitable. TEACHERS BECOME THE TAUGHT AT DAILY PILOT WORKSHOP IN BALBOA BAY CLUB Don D•Laura Disc u1HtrfllmstJJp'* N.wtp1pers·at Aft.rnoon .Seuion . . an action" against it. This coupon good only lor purch1H1 mad• du11ng 1rie pet1od 11om Oc1ober 1. 1973 1tuough November 30. 1973. Only one coupon may be u1•d tor 11ct1 b.irtery purcha$ed. Th11coupon11 void ·1 Kehoe said organized crime I wl'u1r1 prori1bi1ed. ra•ed or 01h11rw111 resl••Cted, C1sh value \/10r. Fo1 reo1m11t1on. m111 coupons to is ihfiltraUn'g Seeming I y 8t1nd1rd Oil Compilny of C1lllornl1. Weu111'1 Op1r1t1on1, lr1c .. P 0 . Box H, Concord, CA 9-4524. I I I I I I I I I I I I I I legitimate bu siness to I T•ademark "At11•" Rig. U.S. Pill Ott. Atll1 Sutiply Comp1ny. 01sco1m1s shown 1bov1 do no1 •tiPIY "launder" profits from pres-on 1n 1d1ustme111or1n Alla1 or Chevron b1n11y. titution, gambling and other I AHOMOST I rackets. '!'he way thal works, St d d S • Ch D I °"""' ~n•y rrom 111.ga1 busi"'"" I an ar tations • evron ea ers !!11111!! I Teachers Given Lesson on, Newspapers The Daily Pilot sent school teachers back to school for a little while last week in a workshop which showed lhen1 ho\v to use newspapers as tex tbooks in the classroont. materials are furnished to participating schools by tt:e Daily Pilot free of charge as part of the ner.'spaper's public service program. 1s run through the bOOks as · tliilll El Toro High School ; Liz David Chapel. J\1arina lligh : sales of the I e git i m a.t e L • Meyers. Fountain v a 11 e y and Dave Brant, Estancia businesses. A wide-scale in-- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -• • The y.•orkshop was part of the Daily Pilot's in-classroom news program under way this school year in 30 Orange Coast Don DeLaura. V E C ' s western regional vice presi- dent, was the "teacher" of teachers at the Daily Pilot workshop and shared __ tips on how to "turn on" young people to current events and. news of the world. Elementary School District:1_H__:igc_h_Sc_hoo_1. _______ v_e_sl_,ig:.'_ti_on_is_un_d_er_w_ay:.,_w_i_1h ____ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~i~iiiiiiiii-Alka Muller, Rea Intermediate School; C. R. Cozad, Marina · ...... · · ·.· ·· · ·.·.· -·-·:· :-:-::::;:::::: :-::::;:: ·>:·:·: .·::::::::::::::::::::>:::::::::-:: .·-:· High School; Randall E. Kroha, Huntington Beach High Sc hool; Rita Cooney and Diane Craver.s, Harbour View area schools. ' School; · • The program is built around the use of a weekly ftopical) news fill'Ntri p alld teaching :Uds produced by V i s u a I &lucatlon Consultants (VEC), Inc., or Madison. 'Wis. The filmstrips and other Attending the session were these teachers: Ben Ellern1.:in, F o. u n t a i n Valley High School:B:ob Holt, Karen Hooper , 1 and · Lila Scb.o.enmehL; .K;l..ise • Jnterrriedlate School; Pam Strayer and Barbara Dreuer, Thurston lntennediate Scho.ol; Kenneth D . Bauermeister, Newport Harbor High; &.. Irishman Appeals Pub Ban SAN FRANCISCO tUPi l -said Malone could not .i<>in condition set by Cooli "stems Charles ~1alone , 47, believes Irish associations. from a belier that it is its unconstitutional to bar him On Thursday Ma Ion c , permissible to infe..-from the tmlawful actions of a rew from Irish pubs whre he can throu gh an American Ci\'il members of the Irish com, slp an ale w'lth his friends. Li· b e r f i e s U n I o n al· munity' that virtually all lri5.h The ban came from U.S. tomey, tSked for a hearing brganiz.atiqns or groups are District Judge Samuel Conti on Nov. 9 to v;lpe out the ban either engaged in criminal ac-- las t February afte r li-1alone which ,.,.as a condition for his tivity or would in some way was convicted of rulining guns probation. influence the defendant to to Ire.land. The judH also And, the ACLU said,. the engage m such activity." i 1·":if';. ·.... ..,_ Jal>"",e'~ J .. , •ij;r-;;;, ~-~....;--. - I .),;;/~15fufl $peciaL , . ; : SUNpAYTHRUTHU~IJ),\Y 4:,31! P'i' T9 8:30 Pf' f•.. I >,,> • ~ • COMPLETE DINNERS INCLUDE • SOUP or SALAD • POTATOES and VEGETABLE ,JCECREAM or SHERBET• COFFEE, TEA or MILK SUNDAY l MONDAY SHISH KEBAB with RICE SAUTEED RED SNAPPER GRILLED CALVE'S LIVER. with BACON and ONIONS THURSDAY BEEF STROGANOPF with RICE FISH and CHIPS GROUND SIRLOIN of BEEF Viii~ !,1USH,AoqM SAUCE TUESDAY & WEDNESDAY BRAISED SIRLOIN TIPS with RICE YANKEE POT ROAST GRILLED HALIBUT STEAK THE COCl<TAIL HOUR 4 lo 7 P.M. MONDAY lhtu FRIDAY DOUBLE SIZE $1 .00 (House brands only) SPECIAL SHRIMP COCKTAIL , 111 DOZ. CLAMS or Y. DOZ. OYSTERS ON THE HALF SHELL Jusr·s1 .oo ·-vouFi'CHOICE s3.·.·-4& , • • CHILDREN'S PORTION hungry tiger· RESTAURANT AND SEAFOOD OYSTER llAR SANTA ANA NEWPORT BEACH 1841 WEST SUNFLOWER 353 E. PACIFIC COAST HWY. (7"l 979-1111 ' {71.4) 673-5534 . . . ... ~ . . . ' . ' • ANAHJIM UMtl11 A•I· .. M1t1 C•ll• Cotton p 1rc1I• prlnt1, 10Ud1, All p11rp(lle. 30" W. Ofl 1.1111 boltt. 6 VOLT UNTERN WITH BATTERY SALE 297 Hi·imp1ct pt1•lic body, •1sy-gr1p h1ndl1. Hl!AD I IHOULDIJlll' tHAMPOO SALE 57~ .. 2.5 01. ol dandruff •ndlng shampoo. OPAQUE KNEE HI'S ,SALE · 2 Pts.99' Nylot1 : e4otlled'. For WOllllll l'ld QIFll, 51111 .. ,,, :·· ANY PURCHASE OVER 5200 In our fum1t1;1re, 1ppll1nce ind sporting good• dtp1rtment1. -~·'. i . ' 6RANTSlPPLIANCES' TOUR CHOKE • 3·tPl•d d1h,u.• m1~tr • 5~~ .qt. cooker·l1y11r • Cu11·1-minlt pe1eolt1or • S-11>11d blen<11r ·cu"llAHTff.-1-Yll. OVlll THf COUNTf.11 llll"L.lCflilf.MT ON SMALL Al'l'LllNCEI (.lip 1hi1 eoupo11 •nd brln1 1<1 Gr11nu L ""·:·::;::;~:{· A~~~~T ":ii[: S2 .... 5-GALLON AQUARIUM SET 7'7 SET INCLUDES: Tank, pump, fil. fer, chart<Hil, fish fooCI, & morel MOST ITEMS Al/All.ABLE AT MOST GRANT CITY STORES the more for your moneysworth store DO YOU KNOW GRANT CllY HAS: • Complete llne ol cleaning and laundry supplies •Toiletries for lhe family HUNTINGTON BEACH EAST FULLERTON SAN CLEMENT£ l ..... h11rM An ... M•lllt Y1M UflClti llvf. ot lr!Nlt.nl 'en Dltt• 'WV·., C•"'litt 11 l11rell1 SANTA ANA, 201 I. 4th It. HUNTINGTON llACH, 11601 Main St. OAlDIN Ol:OV!, 11 llt Volley View • . I } I d • d • ,. ,. ,. , w d b ,, ' ~ •• e '· ,. i ,_ e • g l A 1-1 DAILY PILOT F 01· the Recore( Oil Firms Win Dela y On Files Dfssol11tio11s Of ltfnrriage "''"~" l"•I-J°'t i,o.l~f 11'1<1 81r•D•• -'""' "-"'''°"· Ne>rm• J11n 111<1 GtM ,,J~, 'fl•ron L¥nn I nd lllO(IMY "'•"k 8ff1n1. Joan LIMI lftd Jl(t ,i,1wv WIHl1m,, ~¥11 I( Ind 9111 Gt, ~:~·r,~r:: ~~~!r.Jer'IC ~~ CllV!!!n Noto. A11<11l1 lo1"u11n1 tnd Jo11of\ Anlllon¥ k¥~1r, (f\1rlolN 1-1nd lllOl>t•I r W•D•t..-. Bonnlt J. 1nd A. Otvlo ll11m1, jfl•ron A. 1..a Cl1rtnc• l lll~"ell, 1n1! M Ind JAmt• I'. ~ol•no••. Dt¥1• ... Ind Gte>rl• J. :eifrn~=t r.~/= j~~··..,,. Mt~t•. L-••d -.o•m1n ,J Moll¥ •~n ~7:::;;,,~'.i':~.~~ ~~!t.,f~lnllln L Mon•. G-••l•I A Mid "'1•'110 ,.,,~1n1, C•n/1t J ~nd Gtll M. 5~~~· D<>rl• E ••IVn l"d Dtn•t-1 "f'lk, Oot""f\Y A Ind OtHl'I 5. W '""'l!ltr O<>rotlw l "'"~ J.,.,,., A. Pttln. MA.,lvn Ann""" L1rr¥ J~"'"' M1-.11 II, l'rlil (lltoJ., "'" E!le" C111..-Nlclw>I• kt•I...,.. ll<>n1'!t J tncl 111.,,.110 Ed""l'd °"""t. llllc111r<1 ,.,.,.,, l'ld Ju!I• f'tlomlno, S1ndr1 w 11\0 ......,y Sol.I. Mtrlt A -,\.lbtfl 5•M!f . Unclt GAYl1 ""' Stt-wn L~n" lllH~I. HumDl>reY Nfil •nd Je"v Lvn ~\;,i;i: s):7~":.J"~o~ ~~~ CrY>lt,, John >J1n•v II llld Vk-v Slit 11.tct, 0-.1•1 Alan &nd Ellt"lYn M~•le H~;;,1 f't!•lcl• litH •ncl Wit l•m Eft<l!tflll. Do<I, A. Ind f'l9llOll E. ~~F':'i:: ~~.~c?.'Tn:;.vic~~ .;:;~,,..~ r.11 .. 5""""""" 14 Sioloo. e ra •• oncl M•"I" lllli)f:;. J1m•1 Atm•n<lo •nd "1mt11 W1tl>ur<1. l!k'.lbbY Ver-.. nnd t<etl!le>en Cr1!n, Shirley Ann Ind D1wld !Al Sl"D!>•. N1loon Eve•tl •nd Oelm1 LDullt H1.1<1hn. Mlr/1111.. s~ Hool!•• 1nd Jl""°I Mlchtol . Davi•\. Jr., $h1rM Ctllne 1nd, He•old W~rl~n Oennl1 D<>•HV I nd Pl!tldt Aon•l Jnnn.1ot11'. (htrvl A. •"d " Scott ll•~c~1. Cl!~rle1 F Ill en~ Jtnnllfr M_ "'""'• Jo "'"" end John E<lw••d 01vld10f\, Jol>n Edwo•d incl N~...:v '"" Sm¥111t, Jl<>fltrl Peyl 1nd 8fllt l'•1ncl1 ,_.llMI OC1. 1 Ltnklord. P1trlcl1 1nd Gory DDU11!~1 Ftthre•, "llrklt Ann and OOl"lald lil;aY 111-IOll. Cl•••nc• Alton tl'ld Joy Nowlin llft1man, Lindt M. •Ml WHiiom E ltluo. Anffl• E. 1nd Tomml.O '°tel, Ml~l'Tf A1'n Ind Cr1l9 LIVffft Quin-Joe ~ tnd TWll• Je•n TurirDi. ,,,..._,, H. Ind Normtn L. 8owdll'I, W ...... le Ind V"lrgll Mill..-, cw•I,,. o. tnd t<ennottl! L. 81tkll..,., CJ'll'l'Gko 11111 Wiiier kt 111,...... .. ~ .M¥ft •nd Jtme• Dou!!••• -LM, LnTt L . 1NI Wlllll'" O. Hotfm1n, DDUQlll Cr1l11 1.-.d Plmtlt ·~ cr1rk, Cflrnttllt end Thom • 1 l!ll1wortfl Lvc-. J....,n ,i,1m1 1nd Jerry CtltbA\e, Sustn Ell11tltf!I tnd C1rlc>1 Al-10 lllodrlO\lfJ, Ctllt 8t!tncour l tnd Gtrman Grlmmtll, Tl\4'!mt (. tnd J1cl E8r1 L• Frtnct". Et•nn1 C. tnd O<>nnt Mlt Jtnien, Jll'"oen and C1rol L. F11111, F'"'e-rlck J., J1. 1nd L1n!1 L Clerk. H1.,rv A. 1nd G1vrtn• Dtvlt. Dll"I Ltt Ind Jack (nmnl J1ckJOn, Armon. Jr.~"" O<>to1hY Ann Flood, Wlt1!1m Ellllt!l>I 1nd 8el!y J1n1 L1w11nce. Konrlod '"~ k &rtn l . W1!111"'1on, Jtnk• \.. tnd J1,..,e• Roy Scolield,Jtooer C1vld, Jr. •nd Lvnn Mlt(f G""lnn, Serth J1ne Ind c; .. ,.,. lH Wood, Oon11d W. •ncl EJlalr.e T. Moore, O""na L. I nd 0-11>e N. Ftrrll, Sl~n W1vne ind Ol1n1 ''" J11vmond Lorrtlr>I! ancl JAm11 llllchtrd Tl<cM1r, A•'--'· Ind Loul!e F. PUIOI'. Dolores Ev<>nr>e tnd Str.ltn ,_, Ylr-. Gt-,tld G. t nd Oo<<>thy M. 1-<11111n. J~lne " 1..a O~nl~I " Fo•. S1111n Gr•te Cl,,.. and Fr..oerltk ,,.. ... 11.1 Htrtl•, J°"l>tl L. a9d Florl•M l Orwick. Pt1rlcl1 A. 1nd Willia"' G TrOV e1rb,,r1 J. A~I llorbArl Jtlll lllOQt-•11oct A•tn 111 1cti1•<1 Tror ·~• Ill(~ (ov. lvl'\ l ~"d J""lt K """'•· oon1!d lho<n•~ 1fld Snblev '"" Pll!f>fr, Will!am G. ,.,., AnnA 8 Stieo.trd. y..,.u, ,,.,,.,..., t!l<l l'rtn' 9USHNEL;.. Lo..,.rll "'•!'>Ci• 8111f\n~•1, 1.1.c . ~lln l'lv!r19 CIOll<I Or. L1g11"1 Nl9vel Oc!. lltfl. S11rvlvl'd by wife Oe>r<1!hy, ..,~. I»• ll1rlon Butt>"ell <>I 0111r!e. C.>11ohler M1rv Ell1Abe!n 8111nN ll ~I San GAbrlal, ~r¥1Ctt 1 PM T11e~•r S"I. Mlc1•1 tnd ii.II Anoeh Ept1IC(lflll Cn11•cll, N!WOO•I lle1ell. ln1erme<it Padflc Vlt.v M....,e>ri11 P~rli, P1cltic View Morllldf V dlr'<:IOri. Dl!TlllCt< Gerlrudt A. Dttrltk. .6ge IS, 01 711 I l'Vn!n1 Cenv<>n RM<I. Coron• ~•I MAr 17.yMr re1ldln! ot Ort..g-e County: <11•e ef dealll, Ck!-11. 1•7J. S11r¥\Y..O bv """"· WtHffl Derrick. r.tnla Ana: t:rrAndlOn. A!l111 Detrick, 0•""9"": 1l1tor. Ann R11ckl. L11 G1lc>1. Grevnldt- Strvlc•>. Moridty. 2:JCI PM. 5tn Gtb•'l!'I C...,..ter.o. Slltnnon l.'or!utry, Or1nvt, Dir-re-tor•. UIELL Gu1 " l<Ml1. O(IJ w. "'~ SI . c~•a ,,\ew. Ct•t ol """'· Oc1oti..-1', !t7J 5"'"'""" b'I" wlft, Vlrqin•" ~tu~ht•"· Sfi••on #lp•ll-. #ln:•di •: "AMelt ''""trl. ('"' /}•.,.: PIOl!l C•Oltl. l!:l!<tOt'<IO 9e1eh : •lilt••· Mr1. Ja'""' WHI. Co•on• .,., I'••: L•.-l!le V<'ll'I llOQ(.,, Coi•e /IHI. II"' "'"'" lnmt~. NtWl)O!"f 8•&el't Strvlcn. TutUl•Y, Oclob.,.,. 7l, 11 /\\.\. Ptclflc Vifw (~tl)el. ""l!l't l~ft N•Wt>O'I ll••th E•~• 8POE Nn 11',I, ()411d~tl"1) 1.,1..,.n•t"' PtrTllc Vl•w Mf<r'O'!AI Pt'~ PAtl!;c V••w Morl\IA•y. Dlt•c•o., SHA'N l .. J An~• Sh~W A~ of: dl•d fn llofilf" ¥1111. l"<!lt n& Ckl. 15 For.T>~• •t"<ll•"t n! tlyn!iN;)IO" 8tMCl't, !.vrvov.~ ~y 10" Jol'll• ol lloclle<ttr lnQt""''· oauqhte• Jtt" nt 10 milt Ore<11on 1n~ ""' J~m•• t f NOlll!•Vlllt. lndilnt. ll ~'!U•!ni ...... ~ "'o"ll'Y V•('IO AM. ~! S•l"nOn L Jv<I! Ctl!•<>l•C Cl'turcll thintlngl ,n ll•ach. l~t•r.., .. , w~1•mln"~' "'""'~'·~I P~'~· Sml!ll• Mortuerv. Slit llvrtd In HunTlnQ· ton ll••<h tor d yttri. ARBUCKLE &. SON WESTCLIFF i\IORTUARY •t7 E. 11th St.. Costa !\leia &IMS38 • BALTZ-BERG EROS l~UNERAL 110:\IE Corona dtl i\1ar 6"T.l-M50 Cosla i\fesa 61S-t.i2-' • nt;LL BROAOYIAV 'IORTUi\R\' 11n Hro;1rlwo1'. (.'ostn ;\l t~a I.I ~~~~ • Ill LI J,\ V UltOTllEllS i\IOllTU,\RIES 1191 I llr11r h Rh·d. llu111l111tt"n Hea<·h 81"!·-;"iil 'lll llfl1londn A\"f'. Long lk :l<'h 21J-138-l 145 • ,\lrr(lll\llCK l,,\f.UNA llEi\C'll \IOHTl'ARV 1;00 La)l;nnn C'anynn Rd, 491-!Ul5 • PAflf'IC \'11·:\\o' ~fF.\IORIAI, PARK Ctmtlf.r~· \lortu11ry Chwptl 3500 ParUlc \'lt1.1 Orh·r ~f"·por\ Bea~b. Callfornia 644-'ZiOO • l'EEK l',\\111.\' COl~<l~IAL ~·u:\'t:RAL 110\IE iSOl Bol&a A \'t. \\'.,,tminstflr 8!ll·l525 ~ S.,llTll'S ~IORTU,\11\' 621 flloln St. llunlinglon RtllC'h 5:16-4l:i..'\! • a nee! TO LIVE IN NEWPORT BEACH'S ON-THE-BAY COMMUNITY ••• Br fa" cnn11Jl1 linu nf ll1r fi'u1/ uuil, //1r /J/11flh· u•a1· COIU/Jf1•tr/y \f1/d 1111r. ,\'11U'. 1/111· /11 1r1t:rnf ("ff·dir r<"it•t·/1 , 11r lunr· ;11.1r n /1•1v /10011." /,fl lo .11•1/. Tlu•11 nrr rrn1/y n111u 1111d 11U1,r n -~•·· h'ctinn rJf 1iln11, prict>, frnt1Jr1'1 nncL.1//1 · I /Jl!f.1011a/ly urgt• you to 1;~1i1 //it· Rl11U.1· thi.~ 1r1"•'k. l'o1/J/ 11gn>1~. lltcrc's 11ct:rr litt'ri r1nyt/1ins like ii ... r111d ii 1c/// 11ev1•r haJJfJell ngain.1 .21;,. /Mt;:;,W PllUID(llf, I0.1rn. lll)UITIJU Executive Home on the Bay ' -Lot 9, 7052 f\"iccly furnished. ready for occupancy. B L·autiful front fllllio, view deck just abo\·c thr bay 'vith magnificent 'it'\\", ,\,•allablc for year lease '''ilh 'f cnnis Llub privilt·gC"s. Ri~ Home O'•crlooking the Bay Plan R, Lot 36, 7167 1"111~ htr:: tri-\c\·t·I hon1c captun'S 'ir'''S of Upprr ~f'\\'port Bay. Large n1a.<.t!'r .;ui!t . Spacious n1n1p11~ room. hrc,1kf;1,t nOflk ~ind chn1ng room. Rcadv now . $71,500 \lo<h·l l lon1l' \\"ith L"p~l air~ rln~TOOtll Plan 2, Lot 90, 6996 ( Jrft' ot tlu • rt11>'t popul11r Bluff~ pl.111~. I bt•d1fUJlll', J baths, <lin1n~ roon1, n~h 1 .1rp1·t .ind \v,1llpapt•r1, 2 \\"l't h.u~.. b1~ plnyronn1 \vith pool table include'd. \\"11nt!c·r(ul pnrt~ houn• ... fl!' big lu1111l y )11\"nr~ 1 875,000 :1 Brdroo1n Split -level ~lodcl Sparklin_I! tilt' 1·ntry. u it'l' ri•:u 11a\10 ... nH qui1·t slrl·Ct. rnnnl' ... 24.: hnlh,. l-'ln:plat1·. Hc11 I btiv ut this pric1·I Plan T, Lot .2 1, 7166 (;;i rpl'I ~. drapes, 3 bL'Cl- ·!63,500 ·rcnnl~ (:\ub Vill n ~todcl J1ornc Plan Y, Lot 89, 6996 lh·:1111iful cnv1•rrd pntio oil ~n·rn h1·1t l)t·ep ea rpt·I, drapes. \vallpnf)(>r. front dining nook and courtyard. <.::11hcdral <..'Cili11g. Dcluxt· kitcht·n, 3 bedrooms, 2~'l 1 1.1!11~. l'l'.Ld)" for ot•t•upancy. $67,000 T<J •1•11 thr Jl111i", t.,l .. !hr ~an l>t••r.,, F""i'"·~" "'lllh 1,, J.1mh1't•'" A!,,I 1'f'lln11 J"n1linrl'!" u••f 11~· lp1Mr 11,, 1\11<!1.:I' l•I I ,1l1lul'I [),,.,. 1 .. l .. 1 ... 11i1 .. u I'-''' tlw ''-.I"''' I\.· . ., )I To ·nnh c:li1l1 1111.n;.\ 1),,. 111> •hr,u lo1 lh• Hl uH• 1 nt" \ ..,_ -- . - lttt Bii KeaMe Battin Awaits Next Round ... 'In Lobbyist Legislation In his pitch for the law la st week, Batlln aatd lbat ir It had been In effect list year when it wat tint pro- posed, "a man who w81 in· volved in a bribery scandal woold not have been guilty if he "''as registered as a lob-- byist." ORANGE COUNTY The comme nto b v Io ua 1 y referred to Derek McWbin- ncy, a former \Vf'!lminSter mayor found guilty of grana theft for soliciting money fton1 a farmer who bad an agricultural lease in Mile Square Park coming up for renewal Battin did not elaborate on the connection between the lobbyist law and McWhinney, who never appeared before the board in the Mlle Square case. Fraud Charged THE NEW FACE CLASSICS: YOUR BONUS WITH $5 ELIZABETH ARDEN PURCHASE Includes Multiple Action Cleansing, Velva Moist ure Film, La!.ting Cream l Lipc.olor (geranium. and a c.arry·onyw ere compoct--or-Ft~esrf:inish--- (worm beige) and Cream Ro uge jgeranium). Cosmetics, 17 Tiii ft\c you'rt g•Hin9 wrinkl11? H•.r•'1 how lo copt. l v•-line1 Ni9htt••• Cr••'" for Ev11 , , • , , , , , , , ••.••••••••••. , , , , • , , 01., 8yt-·Line1 Vndtrm1k1up Wrin~I• Lotion • , •• _.,.,,,,,,,,, ,, , , , , • , • , , 2 fl, 01., '4 II. 01., l•t your l•1qr1nc1 be fun. ll lu1 Gran Httd-to-To1 Body Sh11npoo ••• , •••• • • • • •', ••••• • • • • • ••,,, I or., 8tu1 Grin Httd·to·To1 Tinq linq Tonic •······-•·-•··•·-•-·-•••••-••••·• 16 01., l lu• Grin P•rf111n1 Mi1! ••••• , • , , , .• -•• , • , , , , , , , , , , , • , , , , , • -, , •• -2 or., 1111"1 Gr111 Ou1li119 Powder wit+. Puff ,.,,,., .. ,, •••••• ,.,,.,.,,.,,,,,,,6 01., Al1-o ... 1r, 1•+n thould t :irpr111 new 1oftn111, u nb•li 1v1b!1 1moothn111. 7 .50 0 10 .00 0 17.50 0 J.50 [l 5.00 [1 s.so n s.ao o Skin Oyn•mic1 l11l•n1iv1 Body Stnoothi"9 ...... -............... ' ...... ' .... . 6 Ot,, 6.10 0 R1finti ind 1mootlt1 'bodv1~in' to ih .a~;.,, pouibl. t • .ture. ll1,1fh twty ro1,19h t•ttl with ih own 1ptci1I 1oft-frictio" tpon9e. Cr•ttiv• Colori..g P•ncil1. , ••• , , ••••• , • , , -, -••• , , , ••••••• , •••••• , • , , •••• •tch, l .00 0 Now • 1ofl, cr11rny p•11cil ctn thtd1 t ll •Y•· b.lu1h 1 s.h"k, 1h1pe • mouth tnlt rn11cl1, tnuch 1nor1. S•ippt• 1111• 0 Mid, Mtd Pi11\f 0 Softly Gr1•ll" 0 v,,., Viol•+ O Tht 8ro1dw1y P1r1ont ! Sltoppin9 S1rvi<• P.O . Bo:ir 20722 Lo i Ang1lt1, C11iforni• 900S~ S11n1hi11 1 Whlt1 0 Frtnclt Ftw" 0 Shy Aqut 0 llr1 ndi1d Ro11 0 Tel1plton1 Ord1rt W1lcom• 227-1177 T1l1phon1 Order l o1rd O p1n D1ily l :lO A .M. to g;]O P.M. Sundty 'f :JO to 5 P,M, N i m• (pl1t1• prlnll ••••• ,,,,,,,.,,, ••••• , •••••••• , •• , ••••••••• , ••••••••••••• , •••• Acldr111 -·····················•·····•··•············-······-··•··•••••••••••••••• City·············-··········-·•--•··-········•· St1t1 ,,,,.1 ....... Zip 0 C11h -I 1nclo11 $ •••••••.•••••• 0 C .O .D . 0 Cher9•·. • ••• • • • • •. My l •o•dwey n111nb1r 11 • • • • , • • • • ••• P1t111 1dd 11 111 I••· HtndllntJ chti9•• 1dclitio111I beyond Thi lroadwey cl•livtfY 1r••· Add 7St 1e•~•c• '~''9• on orcl1" 11nd1r S!..00 end .1rc.0.0.'1 , ANAHEIM NEWP0ft N. l~cll cl !7 14~ 515 ·1 111 47 F .. 1hi11~ h ltnd 17141 644·1111 ORANGE, MA LL OF ORANGE llOO N, T~1tin Str111 !1141 ttl.IJll ~00 L111 HU NT1N6TON I EACH 1111 Edin91r A•11'u t (714) tt?-Jlll CERRITOS Ctrrltot M~U !1121 l•0-0411 SHOP !O A.M to •:JO PM MONDA'I" THROUGH F~IDA'I". SATURDAY IQ A.M. to 6 P.M. SU NDAY 12 NOON to 5 P.M. Su!ld•r. Oct.obtr 21, lcn'l DAA.Y PILDT A 15 Vh·go: Take A 1-'eap MONDAY OCTOBER 22 By SYDNEY OMARR Libra has an Ingratiating quality, a kind of so ftness which tends to put others at t"ase. Natives of this zodiacal sign are able to reach out and capture the pulse of the )lUbUc. Libra has an affinity for 1nusic. the arts. the good life. Libra is the opposite of coarse. Libra is sentiment and a binrf- ing together of persons \\'ho are dedicated toward rommon goal. Libra makes money \vith Scorpio, love to Aquarill!, often marries Aries and ejoys PLAZA DRESS 0.EARANCE 5.99 Choose from a vari•ty of styles and fabric' to wear right now and later. Be early for the best selection in th11 ran9• of misses' sizes only. Plaza Dresses, 73 SHOP TODAY, SUNDAY ... AND MONDAY MISSES' PANTCOATS 34.99 An exciting group of thi1 verta. t ile coat length. Several styles and colors in assorted warm fabrics. Save on these for cas· ual wear. MISSES' PANTSUITS 19.99 Patterned jackets over match· ing solid color pants ... a great variety of r•ntsuif s fo r your choosing, al in misses' sizes. Very specially priced. Career Dresses, 27 FASHION SELECTION 19.90-39.90 An ex c it i n g collection of drassas in a variety of fabrics, colors and styles ... for the office, entartainin9, traveling. All in misses' si:s:••· Windsor Misses' Dre1 1a1, '49 travel with Gc1nini. Some 1•••••••••••••••"'•••••••••••••-l .. •••••••••••••mlti-•••••••••••••• celebrities born under thls1· intrigu ing sign include Ray Charles, Gene Autry, David Ben.(iurion a n d Catherine Dencuve. ARIES (March 2I·Apri1 191: Accent is on health. work, general WC'll being and rela· !ions with dependents. lf you arc a pet owner . check what appears to be a minor discom- fort affecting your charge. You will be repaid for past efforts. Know it and harbor no grudge. TAURUS (Aprll 20-May 20): I+-Good lunar upect now a> incides with ereaUvity, lov1, children and change. You are able to round out, project, to FA SHION SWEATERS 8.99 Reg. $11-$14. Cerdigans and pullovers with short or long sleeves ... e gr•at collection of fashion styles an~ colors in ver- satile sweaters. Siies lb-40. Plaza St. A. Sportswear, 65 imprint your style. One who'••••••••••••••• appears aggressive actually I.st• interested in testing your met· Ile. GEt.11Nl <May 21-June 20): \'ou get proverbial second chance. KeY is to avoid mak· ing past mistakes. Older in- . dividua\ is willing to lend benefit or experience if you arc receplive. Leo, Aquarius and cancer persons could be in picture. Check property values , taxes. '? CANCER (June 21-July 22): OLGA'S "LIMITED EDITIONS" 4.49-9.99 Frtedom Fronf® shell cup bra, nyon lace over polyest1r fiber .. f ill, A.8.C, 4.49. Long I~ 9•r· tartess pantie, paneled, Mad. and Large, white, t .H . Body Fa shions, 19 DOUBLE KNIT PULLON PANTS 9.99 Reg. $1 6. 100 % acrylic double knit pullon p.tnfs with button detailin9 at the waist. Assorted F.tll colors in th• group of misses' 1i1•s 10 to 18. Mis_s••' Ac;tiv• Sportswear, 78 FALL FASHIONS IN HANDBAGS 6.99-12.99 All the •xciting 1tylas in vinyls and leathers in • v.triaty of Fall colors. larga and small si:s:es with the new touches. Handbags, 37 CUFFED JUNIOR PANTS FOR FALL 7.99 Fall 's f.tvorit• colors in a hom•- spun look, pants styled with th• iust-right cuff. Al10: Nylon shirts, solid colors, S..M-L, 6.ff. Junior Sportswe.tr, 91-- ONE SIZE PANTYHOSE 99c pr. 6/ 5.00 Sh••r-to-waist pantyhose. Stock up now and save on this on•- sls.e . fit&· everyon• style in neutral 1hada1. GIRLS' PEASANT BODYSUITS 2.99 Reg. 4.50. Short-sleeved peas· ant-styled body suits by a fam- ous maker. In a selection of fashion colors for sizes 4 to 14. DUSTERS, LONG OR SHORT 14.99 Reg. $20.$30. A variety of w.trming 1tyles by Miss Ela in e, comforting for the wintery eve- ning• ahe.td. Short or long, 9reat colors. St'reet Roor Un9•ri•1 54 KNIT SHIRTS AND BLOUSES 10.99 Reg. $10·$18. Choose from en assortment of soli d co Io r blouses and kni t top1 ... all in washable fabrics. Whites end f.t shion shades in sizas 10 to 18. Misses' Sport1wear, 89 LITTLE BOYS' KNIT SHIRTS 2.29 Ori9. 3.60-4.50, A variety of ••r les from a famous maker .•. al with lon9 sleeves for cool weather. Bright c o Io r 1 end prints, easy-washing. 4-7. Little Boys' Waa11~74 WOMEN'S SLIPPERS 3.99 Reg. 5.50.$12. A large as1ort- ment of styles and colors in sli ppers for at.home wearing, hostessing and gift.giving. For warmth or 9lamour. Women's Shoes, 35 Emphasis is on movement, messages and call.I concernlng close neighbors and relaUves. You are able to 1earn and apply knowledge. Stimulating persons enter· your lilt.' F..1- change ideas. Give full reth1,.••••••iiiilii•••.•••-lli-·•'•••••••••••••li••••l.lll•••••lll•••"••••••••••••••lill'liil••••••••••••• to creative process. 1• l.EO {July 23-Aug. 22): Refuse to be painted into cor· ner. Spread cmolional wings. Ciood news concerning money is due. Your timing can be on target. Pay and Cilllect. SeUle acc:ounts. Investigate possibility of transaction ln- \'olving 1ong journey. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): [)(>al from position of con· fid·ence. You have nothing to fear. Judgement, intuition arc on target. Pt!rsonal magnet· ism is al peak. You win through indepcndenee.-erifil~ nality. Take intuitive leap. !\leans trust yoursc!L LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 22J: FAMOUS MAKE MEN 'S SHIRTS 3.99-4.99 A wida selection of fancie1, stripes and prints in stretch wov. ans and knits. Feshion collers, 1i:s:es 141/1°17. Also: Tia1, stripes, prints, fancias, 1.H. Men's Furnishings, 7 FAMOUS MAKE CUFF LINKS 1.99 $5-8.50 valuas. An exciting: col- lection of jewelry styles by a famous maker. M.tny with 9•n- ulna ston•s, others handsomaly tailored. Graaf gi~ items. M•n's Acca1soria1, I 05 REGATTA KNIT BOXERS 1.79 ,. Reg. 2.25. Bright fashion color• in IOO i'. p•rmanant press cot- ton for th•s• sle•k boxars that fit 10 smoothly. Sit•• S-M-L-XL M•n's Furnishings, 91 FAMOUS MAKE MEN'S SWEATERS 10.99-11.99 Orig. $18-$22. Choo1• from • good sel•etion of cardi9•ns and pullovers in Fall colors and styles. Soma wa1habl•s in the collection_. _ Men's Sport1we.tr, SO YOUNG MEN'S CREW SHIRTS 3.99-4.99 ,7.$10 valuas. Cotton knits from femou1 maker• ..• craw neck 1hirt1 in• variety of styl•s, great for guys or gals. Fan _..c2li>·~"~·-- Univenity Shop, 53 Be analytical. Get to heart1••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• .. •••••••••••••~ .. ••••••••••••••• of matters. Study V i r g o 1• message. Refuse to b e persuaded by scare stories. Check behind !he scenes. One associated "'ith c I u b. in- stitution can aid. Gemini is likely to be in picture. SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21 l: Acce nt is on getting your O\vn \vay , but there is no guarantee that \Vhat you want is good for you. Family and home are involved. Your ability to push, ins ist and get things done figures prominently. But use velvet glove in dealing with member of opposite sex. SAGITI'ARlUS (Nov. 22· Dec. 21 ): Be selective. Don't jump al first offer. Separate fact from fancy. PJsces person "EMPRESS" TOWELS BY CANNON 2.49 Bath. Lush , thick ell cotton tarry towels in an exciting choice of solid colo". Hand 1.49. wash 69c. Greet buyl Linens, Toweh, 23 OVEN TO TABLE STONEWARE 39.99 Reg. 59.99. 45 pc. Vlkingwara in "Oslo" pattam: 8 ea. dinnar, 1alad, soup, cupl 1aucer, covd. suger, creamer, platter, veg•· table. Buy now for holiday serv- ing. Dinnerwere, 11 RIVAL OPENER / SHARPENER 12.99 15.99 v.tlue. Pow.er pierces cans, shut1 off .tutomatically. For all can siz•s ... keeps kn iv es at peak effici ency too. Housawares, 95 DESCOWARE SPECIALS 15.99-17.99 R•g. $21-$25. Rugged cast iron with Fl•me or yellow porcelain fin ish . $21, 11" sk illet 15.99; $23 2 lt. qt. covered sauce'/.'"' 17.99; $25 2 qt. convtb, 1 .99. Hou'sawarts, lt" CASIO MINI CALCULATOR 49.88 Sturdy, yet super small ... fits right in your pocket. Displays 6 d igit answer in a minute. Rt1 compactly in a sm art pouch. Cameras, Shavers, 13 is sincere but you still must'•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• .. •••••••••••••~ .. •••••••••••••~ .. ••••••••••••••• accomplish on your own. You1• grt car of one in authority. Be specific and say what you rncan. Rare opportunity is In· dicated. CAPRICORN ( Dt-c. 22-.Jan. 191: Accent Is on puttin~ ideas to work . Combine lmaglnalion with practicality. Your long· ran~e goals m_!!y be closer than is apparent on surface. Natural abilities come to fore, are utilized and appreciated. AQUARIUS (Jan. 2()-feb. 18)· You get rundown on cosfS, I e g a I requirements. fi.1a lc, partner is very much in picture. Know It and share joys and problems. The time for daydrcnn1ing is finished . It is ti mnller of put up or fori;iet It. Your ESP plays role. PANASONIC 12" PORTABLE TV 89.88 J 2" dieg. meas. black/white set in • new A-line de1l9n. Super fast picture and sound, detachable tint screen. With eerphonas, hidden handle. Televisions, 72 AITC BATTERY VALUES 10c-15c each New AITC Super Grip termln.tl batt•riat for 'ilr•afar perform• anca and lon9ar life. 30c value C and D cell, 10c e•.; 79c val. 9-volt, 1 lc N . Sup•t values. R•cords, St•reos, 88 SAVE so·;. SAMSONITE TOTE l l.97 Reg. 23 .95 shoulder tote in sturdy beige corduroy with tan vinyl trim, •diustabla strap. Vinyl lining with insida pocket. Luggage, 33 SIMMONS TWIN SIZE SAVINGS 95.00 set 119.95 valu• mattress and box spring. "Potture Tone" features f irm tu pp or t , Adju1to-Re1t coilt, Sani-Seal cover. Sl .. p Shop. 69 SAVE ON ROOM DIVIDERS 249.95-269.95 Mediterranean h1'l 2 doors, center panel. In oak, 48x7 2", 249.95. Modern ha 1 walnut veneers, 2 doorsl 2 drawers, b0.70", 269.95. Furniture, 92 r1scF.s web. •~March 20i: an~ ([l;l:t lllb@ IloIPCID Leam lesson from 1\quQrlu' --------------------------------"! 7.: message. Permit others to show their hands. You rlo ~st ________________________________ .., ''""'..,.;""~I..&. now by revising method•. ob- taining fresh outlook. Your judgment It best If you count "ten '' before mRklng pro- nouncenu'.!nts. ANAHEIM NEWPORT HUNTINGTON IEACH ORANGE, MALL OF ORANGE CERRI TOS 444 N. Eu(licl 171 4) 515·1121 47 F•thlo11 ld•rtd 111 4) 6"44·12 12 1111Edi"Ot•A•trt11t171411•2·11)1 1100 N, T~tli"t Stroet 171 4) •ti-Ill! ~00 Lo i C•Hito1 Me l! !211 ) 1110·041 1 SHO, SUNDAY 12 NOON TO I ,,M .••. MONDAY • TUESDAY to A.M. TO 9;]0 '· M .... WEDN ESDAY l ;JO A.M. TO ro P,M .•.• THURSDAY THRU SATURDAY •·JO A.M. TO 9:JO P,M, I .. I I' I ) I J • I ' I " t' " ' ~ .. • J 8 DAIL V PILOT Sundly, Oct.obtr 21, 1973 Our big Treasure Days fram~-up/light up ··· - c·- ;. •1V • ~-! Canvas oil paintings ·2·2:48 Reg.29.97 30"x42" Still life and outdoor subjects set in handsome carved wood frames. 1 7.23 Reg. ~97 37"x 37" Orienta, till life and outdoor scenes with slender gallery frames • ' - .. Hardboard oil paintings 5.91 Reg.7.88 15"x15" ·Wide selection of outdoOr scenes. Ea ch has matching color frames. 9.73 Reg .12.97 11 ··x31 " Perfect decorator accents, alone 01 grouped tor gallery effect. ' l ' ~ J.l · l ' ~· ' i~ r .,, . •• -j I I ., . ' I I I .:'.~~ "':'l23 '456 ~8 9'Cii :9 ,, . . ... ,-:' MODr11rt SHOPPU ·?' ·~::,";: J---..J c_,....,,_ • .....;,,. __ .~ CHARGE IT at The Treasury with your JCPenney Charge Card: • If you don't have·a charge, ~l 1 just see how fast we· can. ~~ ~ 1 s11e-prlce11ffeclln 4 d8J11 only. -~open up·YQUr~new account ~-· · ·J~/1f 1 '--~~~~~~~~~~~~~~_:_~~~~~~~~.;,:;;.:.:.~~~~-, -~ -, ---------------,-------------------~--------;-..-.... ,., City Or. at Garden &rove Blvd. Opon 10·8 p.m. Dl•IY Sund1y 10 lo I SANTAANA Beach at.orangethorpe Open 0111y· 8;30to1:30 p.m. Sund1y 10 to 7 ORANGE BUENA PARK 3900"So. Brl1IOI ·No. of So. ContPf- Opon 10-8 p.m. Dolly SUndly 10 It e l At Your S·erv1 ·ce Go~ a eroblemP Then. tQ;ritlr;'.Pat D11nn. Pat will cut ~ed cope:, g~c the cm.awps ond.t o~tfun lfOU nefd' to toliie jneq'tlilies in goven1ment . tmd bu.riness. Mtia 11ot11.r ' quc.stfon.s to Pat t>unnlAt .1.our Service, Orcu.tf.e Coast ' Doil11 Pi{q,1-rP.O. Boz _1~6~1a Mesa; Ca.--i'M62 Jyf " =·v·~•.•11""119~~}1;1,i'Wc~ -....,.,.,. · ... ;w d •r. ifu on.I!""•-.. · · • ;::o;r-' .. _, e n•1 . ""tuUif'· Rock Festival of 1873 . DEAR PAT: When I opposed my ·son's P,lansrto'llltteqd a rOCk ftf!Wl~l last summer,. he lold me I couldn't ~ibty under.stand this kind of "experience" becaus~ tt's a new !9rm .of entertainment first presented by his generation. I bet him I'd be able· to find a reference to an earlier massive festival fealur- ing similar music, but I can't You're my last resortl ' T. N., Ll!guna B!iu:h How about the "Monster Peace Jubilee and 1'1,MsJcaJ FestivaJ"? PublUbtd reeord'i indicate that ho(des of you~g people and 30-plussen Uowed .up at tbla event held In Bosion ·from June 17 tlJroa,gb Jltly If, 1873. , . . -/ Searching for 'Lost' Friend . . DEAR PAT: My p~biem is more of a: ·~ish than anything else. My fn~d :Ur~ula Obst imrqjgi'ated a few months before me from Germany tf!'eide~eim!B_renz) to N9w York City. I came in April, 1962. We had become friends . 1n Pans where we studied together at the Sorbonne and we shared an apartment on 72nd St. in New York until l married. We continued to see each other and when sbe '.)noved to Florida, we continued to correspond. Then we_ ~th moved and SO[l\ehO\V lost contact. J've tried everything possible, even wnting to her mother 'in lfitldenheim but she had passed away. My parents have relocated so it seems there's no way for us to find each other by mail. I v.·ould appreci ate aiiy suggestions. C. D. Costa 1\Jesa You might write iigain to ·the postmaster in the city where your friend lived and ask for another.cbeck 'on a possible forwarding address. If this falls, place ads in the p&non~ ,Pla8slfied section of newspapers in those citi"' where you think yoar rnend inay be •living, or where, she formerly lived. u!. and European newipapers, addresSes and advertising rates are listed in your library's copy 01:.-tbe curren~ ~dltor and J»ubllsher's Yearbook. ' ojO"' ' I Nt.Jt Al.I Fabt .. ics Labeled . . ' ' ~ .. · -' . ' -_ J?EAfl.'.P~~: .,Afo. any f~rics eXe,mpt from .tlte new F.ederal Traae Com- m1ss10!1 r.Cgulation tha~ requires lab(lniJl on Jn~· apparel and fabrics? If I'm not m1st!lken , care gu!de labeling requirem-erits w.ent into effect in 1972, but SQme items J've ,purchased sinei! then dOO!t '.tieilr care and cleaning instruc- tions. C. N., Laguna Beach Fabrlct-Intended for home · decorating . and rurnlsbings are not presently covered by lbe. FrC regulation. Other ite!Jls excluded are fur and leather prod- ucts; beadwear,, handwear and footwear; apparel requiring no speclrlc maintenance, dispisable Items and those gram«l e,!emptlon· UtrOugb s~lal peUtlon, lncJu~g washable Items made to ·sell at't'etajl fot ~;r .lesi and nOJI· color-bleeding !l~slery. Sheer garments or. revef9lble cloiltln'g t~at Would ·be damaged by a~hed care labels aJso. it-re e~nipt, bu* separate cart bi__- Jnstrucllo.as mutt be provided. · : , .. Bubble Baths .D~Hgerous ? ·,h~ • • • DEAR PAT: A\ fri~d-"i.vho··works at a local department s\!)re mentioned to me that bubble bathS.r,-e ~r inv~SJ.ig<!tion as heallh hazardS. ls •.his true? ·::•. • .-., · • · s. n,, Coita Mesa . , ' .. ~ Your friend's right. Babble Jtatbs are being Investigated by tle FederJ) Trade Commission, which ~, ·uklng anyone wtth fnformatiou tbat might ·be helpful to call the Los Angele1-FTC Office, (!13) 824-7575. Potential dangen named include skin rashes, lrrltations and infections. Treat Tubs With Care..-. . . . DEAR PAT: I teach interior d~g.l af-;Orlioc~· ~ ColJe~ ... -.nd ,;• recently bad a running class commentary® fiberglass t~:.an(f&lioWer:'probo-" lems. The solutions, which evolved from use-testin'g;.. maj proV~ iDtereSJ.lng ' in view of your recent column article about Utia subject.· New hom·e ·buyers should check tubs and showers on their walk·thro\Jgh i9 s~ ihat goUges and- other damage during construction. ei;pecia\ly leaks, ha\re\ be1en tepaired._,&: fore initial use. "'e found a coat of Classic Car Wax provides the best protec- tion and non-skid qualities. When using the tub and shower, one' rrius[ be' w'arr of taking gritty dirt or sand into them. The fiberglass gel finish can be dam· aged. For light cleaning, \Vindex does a good job and following use where a lot • of soil or bath oil is present, a paste of laundry detergent cleans well ·and does not harm the fini sh. Read liquid cleaner labels carefully. Sonle cleaners. such as TSP , are too caustic. The best rule of thumb is never to use anything on a fiberglass tub or shower that you wouldn't put on the hood of, a ne\v car. l\.1. L. R., Laguna Beach Thanks to you and your class for sharing_ this inrormation. Gettillfl Rill of Odors DEAR PAT: I stored some eggs in our camper reCrigerator and, un- fortunately, they-broke -all over the inside. I thought I had cleaned up thor· oughly, but I missed somt: egg and it molded. Now it stinks lo high heaven~ Can you suggest somet~.that ~II elimi~te the odor? L. E., Costa ~feu Disconnect and scrub the refrigerator's interior with bot water and Lysol dJslnf~~nt. Dry out lborougbly and place charcoal chunks on small con· talners wben the refrigerator Is closed and running. Charcoal "absorbs" odors onto Its surface, so replace it frequently until the odor disappears. Jap1n1ese Pay lllore DEAR PAT: The recent' Sunday Daily Pilot featu ro, about horse meat seems to prove Americans are trying to find substilutes to beat the continu- ing bjgh CQS.t of _more conventional meat J!roducts. Since some Europe.ans have been eating horse"meat for years, it makes me ~·onder if meat prices In other countries are even higher than they are here, P. C., Laguna llills Are they ever! C4lmparatlve figures released by tbe U.S. Department of Agrleul\ure indicate that when tlrloln steak cost $1.lf • ~llDd lo wasbin11 I ' ton, D.t., It sold for $%.79 In Rome. 1op round was $%.fl -~»hr&;.iuld_,betf !. kiln $11.90 a pound In Tokyo. .· -, All Abo1~t a Toilet DEAR PAT: \Vho Invented the modarn flush toiJ~l? Was 0 it ttally a man nnmed Crapper? My friend told me she'd read th!S somewhere, but t think she's probably 1dddlng me. K. c., Lagona Beach Oo Dec. t, 1Mt, Ne•·swcek reported on a book or bathroom wl' by novel· lit Wallact Reyburn, "F'lnsbed With Prtdc." According lo the. review, the toilet was Invented by a mo.n named Thomal't Crapper_ who won an award in 1814 at the lltalth Exldbflton lor hl!I flu11h toilet. The urtlcle goes on to aay that bteau1e of hil 1t1ccc1sful lnvtnOon, his name became a household word. Reyburn'• book, however, wos humorn1111 flelion and not fa ct. There wn~ a flush toilet that won the· gold medal ut the 1884 Health Exhibition, but tlie toilet wns invented by a nian named Gcorp;e Jtn1tlng1. And the four--leUer word In question Is reported by 1'1_1rtrldgc (Olctlooory of Slang) to have !>Mn t1 use for '"'0 'i,ilnlurita beCore the nu~h toi.lt t was Invented. vou . DAllY PILOT SECTION 8 suna~. Oet.obtr 21, 1973 ~&yers Qf Faulty Homes Find=: Shoutin1g Often Fixes Flaws By JOJIN ZALLER 01 111• DIHY Pllol $1111 When Doris Smith moved into her new condominium in the East Bluff area of Newport Beach, she wasn't expecting paradise. But she wasn't expecting what she got, either. "You pay $53,000 for a house and you 1hink you're getting a quality pro-- duct." she fumes. "But you're not. You're getting something that came off an assembly line.'' Her built·in "self-cleaning" oven refus- ed from the start to clean Uself. the stainless steel sink quickly developed rust stains, there was no -electric oullPt on the p11tio and her walls had nicks and scratches apparently left b y workers. MOST IRRITATING of all , Mrs. Srnith says. is the sound.of. a gurgling, swishing -waterfall in 1 the wall behind , her living room sofa 'eyery time the upstairs toilet .is flushed._ 11You teU •me." Mrs. Smith. demands ... _ .. ~HµJeSte4_1hat her real name be Withheld},"' "shQUld I -have to .Put up wtlh:all tliis whin l pay $53,000 for a:~mU&e~" · AS homi !OOildin"g continues apace on the Orange Coast. there are more and more peOple like Mrs. Smith who think that when they lay down a big -hunk of caS;h on a home they have a guarantee that It will be flawless. Ine.vitably,-they Jind out that it isn't, even on a $60,000 or $70.000 home. The reason., developers say. is that much· of a home's value may be in the land rather than in the construction . ·And on top' of that, there are bound to be at least a few mistakes in any product as complicated as a house, they maintain. traubt "the crack had to be big enough so THE QUESTION is not 50 much to trip ever before the developer would ~bet.her builders make mistakes, but fix it Too often it happens lhat way." how well they fix their mistakes -w · and. ho well they cater to the hi h ~INTR~UB IS now , wo~k1ng on a • · -. g 1;11~ 'serious c ~~T..i_l~ 1 n t from _ · . • !/11 home:tiu,'(!JJ, I" ~...k~ 0( 150· sln~ij!\:lli!'!'"~ la, '' · t ~(~ds oo Who the deVetoper ""'.00~-Hill s. . · _· ~~ ·-:-' 'Ii'.'-. 8ikf, boW big the' .~, " ~!l'Y their~~ . a~e ftJ~fabng · ·leUl~/; ~:.stan .weiii!l'aub, w!io ·· '~~.. 0.11'1','h' 1h~;!'i' .'1'bu1 ~-)"':')'d","?' 'ba.Ddleu .driens or complaints for , .. ,~ .can . e P . ~vow . be 1 ~:oonge ·COOnty Office_ of Q:insumer a rflft . ~roiect lb;, lhe builder· and Affairs i 'r -(,, he1c.aD'_easily refuse. ~ \1Jf ,,ffie' ~ is a moderate one In 5maller cases, J:towever, builders •\ •/or e1amplC, . cracked gl~ on a are wiUlng-~ go to ~..-~erable expense •.nwr~'.Or .windows -, you no~ally to corn:ct.their e1T,orS.r, ~an ·aet~1t fixed. A ¥lssion Viejo ~art who r~ntly •0 But U the problem is too big, you bought a '30,000 bdme~~id. the builder may have trouble gettin·g the builder tore out a door Ira~~ arid replaced to pay any attention to you." it when he complainedrlhat it was I.~ "felntraub points to a tract of inches out of plumb. hoMes in north Irvine.· Twenly-two bo(n.~W]lers signed a petition1 ~omplain· ing that-their driveways developed size- able •cracks after the first winter's rains., "IF THE BUILDER had known whai he \vas doum, he co4ld liave prevented that problem,'' says Weintraub. \vho ·worked in the bu.ilding industry be-- J, ft)~ rgolff> .jllto consumer 'arf a'.lrs. "But. •&fter the homes ~re occupied·, it's dU'ficUltto oome back and fl)( things. I was lucky to be able to get anything at ail for those people ." The agreement he helped negotiate involved ·a promise from the developer lo repair any driveways in which a height .differential of 1nore lhan one. eighth inch occurred. "In other v.•ords, ., complains \Vein- BUT GETl'ING the U'Ork done v;as not easy. Numerous Cpmplaints and 'finally a letter to the president of the company were filed. "The reason they fiiced it was that 've completely refused to move into the house qntil something \\'aS done," he says. "![ you wanl to get u·hat's. rightfully yours. yrJ,. have to k.J!8p demailding., it until yOu iet it," he adds1 · , The old adage Iha\ "it's the squeaky wheel Vint gets the oii'' is amply ll- \ustrated by the case of anolhcr NC\\'- port Beach homeowner. Jo Charest. "IF VOU REALLY \\'ant son1cthi11g done, you have to nsk over and over again," she says. •·usually the builder 11·on'L just refuse lo llx something, but he·s very \Vil!ing to forget about things he's not constantly reminded of." Mrs. Charest's complaints range from missing wall paneling to nickS in the ~ter, arp she has a rue of oor-re~dence a half an inch thick to prove that she's done her complaini~. But she says she got her ~ dramatic results after She ciille-0"'" a "ite\vspilpcr to make public her COOlplalnts against the builder. ''The next (lay . the vice president of !he company came out personally to see v.·hat coo.Id be done to belp me,·• she says. BUT RATHER than boast about her success, Mrs Cbare,,t observes. "Now that I have their ittention, I've got "'orkcrs corning out here. But what about the people who don't C<1mplain repeatedly! Tbe.y ought to have the same rights I do -but in fact they don 'I seem to be getting them." \Veintraub, of the Consumer Affairs Office. amplifies th.is point: "There are some people who don't like to complain. They would consider t h e m s e I v e s troublemakers if they did. "These ·~kinds ·d. people simply \\ind uP · WitbOOt ~ gea,ti{lg the same quality house-that others who do complain get." . WEINTRAUB OFFERED several sug- gestions he said v.·ould clear up ntisundcrstandings betv.·een builders and bo1nebuyers: -\Vhcn complaints arc received, he says, builders should acknO\\'ledge them immediately in v.-Titing along v.ith an estimate of v.·hen repairs can be made. '"A few builders already do this and i't n1akes everything g() much n10re smoothly." • -Buillders should s!Ji ow fltri~ down" model home!; exactly V.·hat the buyer gets -along "'th the furnish- ed models, to avoid confusion. -Weintraub recomniends that the National Association oC HOmebullders ap- prove a plan to make two-to ten-year service warranties mandatory on all new houses. The price of the Contract would be included in the cost of the homes. AND TO HO!\tEO\VNERSt \Veintraub offers this advia!: "Don't be afraid to Jet the 'builder know what's \vrong with the house. If you don't get satisfaction on your oom- plaints. write to the highest officials ln the company. "Often times you'll find that they aren't aware of the shortcomings of their service departments. In any case, when a vice president orders something to be fixed it may carry more \.\-'eight than a homeowner's request." "'EINTRAUB SAYS one especially ef. fecti\•e "·ay to move reluctant builders is to threaten to "Tite to the state C.ootractors License Board in Santa Ana, v"hich has the power to revoke con-· tractors' licenses for shoddy "'ork. And if a threat doesn't bring action, \Vein- traub says, follow through and file the complaint . But the main thing. he says. is lo make your cotnplaints known in V.'riling to the buiJder. America: No Wasteland in Art Wo·rld British Lecturer Praises U.S. Contributions, but Dislikes 'Soup Tins' ·Criticism of America as a 'icullural wasteland" couldn't be more \\Tong,·ac-- cording to one or the world's leading art experts. who is spending a month lecturing at UC Irvine. "ln point of fact, the United Slates has become one or the foremost leaders in patronage nncl creation of fine art," Sflid Sir John llothenstein, retired direc- tor of the prestigious Tate Art Gallery in London. "The -very Sfrlicture Of the American s}'!tem of government and taxation has permitted establishnlcnt of the v.'01·ld's greatest complex or art musuen1s." he said in an interview. !. Sift JOHN. a prime pro1uoter of American Art in Europe during bis 26 y.rarl at the Tat.t: Oa.llcry,!13ys.Amcrlcan artjsis '.l\re contributing an untold wealth of good art to the world . ''To me, one ()f the great qualities ab6ut the American people and the.Ir artists i~ that they don 't brush problems W\der 1he carpet, but tackle them outright," he said. But the British ox)>ert caulions that 11just 3S Amcr\cans SOllll~-decades ago tended to d1 ~paroge 1helr native nrt. they now r.xa&gcr11te some that pcrh[!ps isn "t the lx'sl." Sir John referred specifically to the _ "soup tin"' art of pop artist Andy \Varhol. He also said that. n1any Americans are hesitant to 'buy art v.·ol'lc.8 ~ause they are unsure of the true quaUt.y. "People shouldn't "·orry ?bout that right aW<!Y when learning to appreciulc art," he said. "They should begin by looking at l'·llat they hapj>cn to llkc. "The difference bctv.'ce1.1 inferior urt cind superior art is !hat you get borC'd of the inferior art fuirly soon." he said. "Unlike many peo ple. I believe good art is good and burl urt is bad, nothing in betv:cen." he added. '"But the ker lhing to rcmen1ber is that art is a IJleasure, oot R duty.'' Sir John says troubled rimes. plus the 'The dif{e'rence between inferior art and superior art is that you gel bored of the inferior art fairly soon ... ' passing of one of n1odcrn nrt's gre:'lt fowlders, Pablo Picasso. have changed the direction of c0t1tcmparary arl. "\\'E l..IVE IN <'111 age \\hc1·c tradilion 1n thf' conventional !l~nse h:~s broken dov.·n." he said. "There I.Ire down~ of different movements 00\v but the pcopl(' who buy llrt have begun dcmnnding tlu.it ;1 picture havc content. not just splasht's of color.·· Sir John said he \\"as delighted to come to Southern California as a UC Regents lecturer. "The Los Angeles area in particular has sonic of the finest art colleclions in the v.·orld." he s<iid. "And this Irvine campus is one of the mo st beautiful urchitcctural \VOrks I have <'V<'r sern." Sir .John de<'linc-d to co1nn1ent cx- tcnsi\·cly on the quality of An1erican sh1dcnt art he hu s seen so far because, he s:iid. it \vould merely be a personal opinion. "tlKE ANY grouping of art. son1r. is. good and shows promise and some is not good." he said. fre said beginnin~ artists still should bt able to draw '.'with absolute realism" before dcparllng Into their 0"11 realms. "To do v.'hat yau Americans caU •your Ol\'n thing' too et1rly in art is a. dnnger to beginning students," he said. SOlnc-artists , like Franc-is Baoon - 1hc one he is lecturing about at UCT -use phot<lgroph!I as a point ol deparlurt'. But ·the very e){\S\('1100 of photos. Sir John sHid, 1n<"1k('S It important for artl~I~ to rt'al11c they can no longer dcpli:t life at Its 1nost re<Jllstlc. "It iii hard to tell "'hat pet'.l\lle 11;1\ apprC(i111e In art or whp.t Artist,, will do thut ls good tbdl'I)', ~cause art has Rrown a.~ big a" the 1vorld :ind all 11~ di.ffcrcn1 JX'Ople," he added. LECTURING AT UCI Sir John Rothensttln DAILY PILOT IRVINE TOWN CENTER NEXT TO UNIVERSITY CALL FOR OLD WORLD VILLAGE THEME RATHER THAN FUTURISTIC DEVELOPMENT ORIGINALLY ENVISIONED, ABOVE own Center Planners Junl{ Future for Past By GEORGE LE IDAL Irvine go\'ernment, To~n Cenler, if ap-restaurants on collegiate turf. ment. we'll guarantee ourselves an Isla cupy the third and fourth floor duplex: layouts and estimat.es of how many proved as proposed . will be the hallmark Others disliked the situation at Isla Vista." says Irvine Co. vice president which overlooks the busy street scene. residents and firms might be se.rved Of llO• D.tt~ PllOI ll•tl Nea rly 10 years ago. about the time UC Irvine opened. the master architect of a L500-acre campus put pen lo paper a n d envisioned a 1 9 8 •I "com· 1nuniversity". of the founding fathers. Vista where a seething community of Bill Watt . ' The owner's commute to work may within the Town Center acreage. It is to be the first large zone change isolated, one of a kind shops and services Watt , who heads the company's Town be down a flight of stairs to the second From these separate views or what literally "ordered'' by the founding plan-"serves" a caplive student population. Center team, theorizes that the normal floor where his budding architectural Town Center might some day be city ning commissiofi and council. Still others woo moved to Irvine to rules whicb govern typical shopping firm is located. officials then selected their favorite F'rom the initial round of policy talks enjoy tailored greenspaces and quiet. center developments would limit com-Helping meet the monthly mortgage single plan and suggested elements of to last week's presentation of .the. )t.single-famlly neighborhoods feared a petition and frustrate bargain-hunting payments may be the firs.t floor other competing plans they liked. To"'" Cent~r, as it \\'as kno11'Il theit and.now. "'as to ha ve been to architect \Villiam Pereira a modernistic, highly urban and format downtown for 7.oning packaiie that will-guide the 150--Telegraph Avenue ·a-111. Berkeley might students. delicatessen. The result is a proposal for a 'unique acre development, new city 1eader5 have spring up oijtslde the ToWn Center Cate So. as now l;llanned, ToWn Center will No cars will threaten those who lose home for 7,500 to 10,000 people who been iilvolved in each level of.the design. rui it d!d outside Sather Gate. restrict only -"hctg rendering" plants track ot where they· are. Cars-will seek the stimulation of life near a of To"'tl Center. No one is issuing guarantees, but from participating in the mix that will be left ootSide. university in a bustling low-rise urban "' a cily then envisioned Jo cover only 10,000 acres. The interest in Town Center also led Trvine Company planners hope their ef-form the central core area of tbe Town-Discovery -or an unusual shop or center. the Irvine Company to begin reconsider· forts and deliberations ol tbe city have Gown melting potpourri. • quiet comer _ is the by w 0 rd in the Most of the structures, 90 percent Since then, a city of 26.000 acres ifi. lendin,q to grow to 53.000 or 65,000 acres has been bom. ing the Pereira vision ol communiversity produced a plan which overcomes the Arehitects, engineers, sandal or serape proposed by Lee-Klages Architects , in fact. which will be buUt in the center by asking city officials y.•bat they felt objections they !ouod in other campus makers, a candle shop and a struggling Newport Beach. core will be iour stories or less. Only Democra cy and changing fancies of architects and urban planners have com- blnl'd to turn the Town Cent er clock back from 198~ aluminum and glass· modern American lo 1894 Paris right bank. Green"·ich Village. Nc1v York, or Georgetown, D.C. should go on the limited acreage. neighborhoods. graduate student family in a garret 10 percent will be. allowed to go as apartment might be housed all in one THE FmM won out over four others high as eight stories, meaning a "human ONLY TH1S ,,·,gle plot of the sprawl· ffiONIOAlLY, the proposal to be filed narrow storefront building in Town •---I · d b · scale" more like Disneyland than . h h •t . N be . th C W111)M! proposa s were reviewe Y city Fashion Island will be preserved. ing Irvine Ranch has a µniversity for wit t e Cl y 10 ovem r •requires e enter. officials and the Irvine Company in a next-door neighbor. city plaMers to tum their bacltr; on tbe design competition. "THIS Wll.L BE what downtown Some wanted to avoid a West\vood the typ,ical controls of !and use planning. AS um..E as 20-feel away acroS:S Taking only the policy statements of should be, a downtown where you go \'illage situation, where students seem "We know that if we limit the number a narrow European village street may city officials and development specifica-for the flm of ii, a meeting of the ufi"•elcome by virtue or the en-of competing shops as we ordinarily be another building designed by its owner lions proposed by the Irvine Company, more formal university and the more PERHAPS 1\tORE than anv other .!iingle decision made by the ilcdgling croachment of posh shops and ~·ould in another commercial develop. occupant. He and his family might oc-the architects came back \l'ilh drawings. informal village," Watt said. 1~-=-=-=~-=-=-=~~~~~~~~-=~ Good Deed People ~lcn1bers of lhe Ne,vporl·C'os!a ?ltesa Branch of the An1erica n Associalion of University \Vo1ncn are pooling their resources to pro\·idc dinner~ for a 1nen1ber unable to took for her· ~e!f anrl her family. Copies of her special diet arc sent to each person volunteering to cook, llel11 t'o1· Yoti Bewa re TV Dangers Tl1l' C.1l1fornia IJl.'part1nrnt nf ('onsu1ncr Affairs hHs i''U"r! tJ ~trong \1arning on 1!1" ha1.;1rds of atlc1npting :o ri·p;1ir 1 our O\\ n 1rlr1·ision ~r·I ~01~· or !he dnngrr~ 111 ntt1·1nii~1ng to replace lubes The tlanArr of implo~iun : Tl'l1·1-i!i11.n picture 1ubr-.; :ir•• subJCLI lo 1n1plo)o1on :l)o !ht•y arl' C\ actu1ted ! hiRh 1;1ruu1T1 1 (':irr should be lak l'n 1 .. prt'\'O:I\! ~triking the funn"I or neck of th1~ p1tt11rt· tuh<• 11 hl'll rr1novi ng nr r<·p!.1cin,i.t rl'Ceirinp: tubl''i. Thr dangrr or s<'verr Rhork: Since sornr set~· ret ;i1n .1n l'll'<'lric.'!I ch11rg1•. be sure !he t•li>1·1rital l'Urrt·nt h.1« bi•t•n d1seonncc\('rl for sc~·rrnl hour-.; bcfnrr rl•n1nving the bDCk of thr srl. A St'\f'rr· slWX'k could result from 1ouchu1g the second anode k·ad lu the picture IU!x 1 he (tangt•r of ra diallnn: Color trll•vi~ion sets em11 rl,u1gerous X·ra~s and ccrll11n t1rcu11s are shielded 10 protert the 1·1e~·er . ln1proprr tube replacement11 or failur<' to replace certain shields in the h.lgh voltage ';{•Ct!on rould resul t in dangerous \:.radu1!ion to persons v1r~ing lhc TV SCI after rcpnlrs. · The dan"cr of electrocution : Do nrit attempt to rcp.'!lr ac-<.lc sets ~st•ts nu1nuracturcd \l'tthout a \Xl\\'f."r u11nsforrner 1 11 1thout using an 1~olat 1on transformer The!t' ~<'IS ha\'r one side of the ;ic poy.·er input hnf' ronnL>et{'(i to the chassis. If !ll(I ln!~rk>ck is ck'fc11 1~ and 111(' po11cr cord I'; reversed. the chassis 11n<l !ht• l'11binct could have a potential of 117 volts ac A 1>t·r'°n !(~chi1111: 1hc m1•1al cabinet wilh one hund ;ind 1111) thing groundt'<I with the other could be el('('· 1rocUlC'd and with this as a guide, they fix the evening n1eal for the family of four. \Vhipping up a pot of soup for a nutritious supper are fron1 left. Kathy Blank, JJat Savage and Nancy Cor- i:orran. Y 01i Ca1a Hel11 Club Needs Coaches Sr;"tsonal changes often go un noticed in sunny Soulhcm C:ilirornia. )'Cf fall is the tradillonal time to gather 1hr rr11•ards and harvest the hcnc[lts pf earlier plannii1g. · Rc11·ards that come from working as a volunleer ca11 be harvested no1v or year round. Services can b? offered by calling the Voluntary Action Center, liJ2·fl963 "·eckdays between 8:30 a.m. and 4:30 p.m. The nHicc is located ~t 207 Avocado St .. Costa ?ttese. T11·cnty COflchcs for four di!fcreol basketball leagues arc needed from Novcmbef thfough Mareli at the Tustin Boys Club. Gomes are ployed week ly by th rril through eighth grade boys. . , ; Teaching boys to cook is another opportunity. S.1nta Ana Boys Club needs someone to plan and . iMtrucl a group of 10 in the fundari\cntals or cooking. The (.oursc \vould consist or a mlnhnum oC four weekly lessons. ' Psychological Ser\'iCt's Center, Buena/ark. a non-pro- ';t counseling servic staffed by volunteer professionals, ha! several opportuniries, Including a social chairman ne11uirements include leade rship and coordinating nbHitics !o oversee operations of the socin l co1T101ill!e in ronducting functions and ln logging their various sucrcsses. Time ln\'olved would be three hours wce•ly. Mccli ng people and mnklng direct contact with chcnls in person or on the telephone are some or the duties of the volunteer receptionist po'.sition open el the center. A 20-hour work Y.'c<!k fs required. · Sl:>me typing ·ability i! needed for two clericnl po.'!i· 1Lon11. Keeping files Jn order and sor:rfc bookkecplng dutlts are included in the Jobs whic h Involve rour hours weekly. New Location SAME GREAT FREE COOKING SCHOOL ~ Edwards Newport Cinema Newport Center Every Thursday, Oct. 25 thru Nov. 15-9:30-11:30 A.M. NOW IN ITS 22ND GREAT YEAR Free More Than $2,000 Prizes • · S urprizes • In • Gifts · Litton Electronic: Oven, Amana Radar-Range, Electro-Grill Tabletop Barbecue & More More exciting and profitable than ever b efore, the annual Cooking School returns ·to the Orange Coast areo for another year-but in" new loco ti on. Weekly prizes .,·t E~words Newport C ine mo (Newport Center ocross from Foshion lslond) include $I 00 i~ gift certificotes from Fashion lslond Merchonts Associotion, plus many more prizes ~;.:. some with such notionol brond names as Generol Electric, Frigidoire, Oster ond others. YOU'RE INVITED FREE Richard's Markets Lusk Homes Davis • Brown Co • Sponsored by Edwards Cinema So. Calif. Edison Co. Orange. Coast Dally Piiot Coast Community College District (Or1nge Co11t 1nd Golden West College1l -r -, .. H Nations Can Survive the Next Decade, Man May Achieve New, Humane World Editor'• Not" Thu " "" four-th of :ZO t!ta!IS bt1 leoc£. ing mn ~n. the world',. acod- emlc communiC,. The writer of Chia e11ay ii with th• Mental HtaJC1-'Ruearch Jn-. •ti!>!< of th• tlniv1•11tu of Michiuan. 1ferei1' 1i.e dis· cmsts what 1ome of tht de· milopmenta of cur,. en t . .ti~1 1n411 portend for tht future. BY JOHN PLA 1T Anyooe who I o o k s care- fully at the tremendous and rapid changes ol the pest few yean will begin to realize that the world is now passing through the greatest trllnl!I· formation in history. In almost every field of human endeavor, man 's great.est technological achievements before World War II can be matched or surpassed by development! since that time. AME -RICA Courses by Newspa·per . AND THE FUTURE DP MAN . ' ,-.... . ' Y91 eu &et college credit for rudlq tbe accompu)ilng artlcle, prGvlded ol course, tbll )'OU pay a.i.e fee, enroll ht UC! Erteuloa, uul 100<H1full7 complele tbe coarse. !Sa!'*'fal -pletloa Ind-au..dlll1 two ..ampm eveain1 Jedarea, oae oa Taeldaf,1 Dec. 4, and ooe • Tttesday, F .... It Ii\ w-mJil.year uul fbW tzaDll wUI be llmhtiltered. For IDfermaUon • ~ at UC! Exteallloa, pboae US. Sill.) ' 1bl1 is the fourth essay. In tlile It-Week t«krt bl a '1Coclnel by Newtpeper." ,..0. 4fam lllDCIM by the Natioul Endowmot for Uie lhlm1 nlt&el a.ad devieloped by University of California. San Dieco btensloa f• natkmwlcle diltrlba.don by Copley News Sttvlce. - ne Dally Piiot Is one of Mt 1ewspapen portlclpotlll( In tloe pnignm. ,,., flrot aerles, "America and the Flltme tf ~tu." II presented to Dally PUot reade:n 11 a for-credit eoarae in conjuncdon wltb. Ut1 Exteasloa_) beglnnln& In be glven by .several iotemaUonaJ dtizens' IJl'<l'IPt-the World Law Fund, the Club of Rome, the World EklsUcs Society, tho Pugwash Conlerenc<I. and olhen . • They ·~ that our problems now ' are multiple and lnttractlng, global and urgent, on a tlme .cale of )'tan rather than decadel. And they iee five problem11 as c r u c I a I : peace-keeping, population, pollution, exhaus- tion d. resources. IDd the rich-poor gap. SOME OF THESE pro- blems-especially populatioo, polluliOn, and the ezhaustloo ol resources-are now begin- ning \o get n.aUonal aDd • tematkmal attention and COl'- reetive action. But peace- keeping still hallgs by a thread, depending on the hours per day. A world We will have to move, cer· IN TRIS t'ONTEXT, one of per9003l relation,, of a few monetary system is already tainly in the next century and the hardest problems to solve leaders. There are still no ade- being created. These new probably in the next few will be that of the develoPlng quate a g re e me n t s or powers, and the problems they years. to some kind of countries, which are still far i n t er n ational lnstltutloM have brought with them, have "steady-state society" all over below the U.S. and the bl f •-1 the Western World tn their levels capa e 0 arm.! conwv or been producing great social the world. lt will begin to management of nuclear stresses for two decades now; resemble a mat .. e adulthood, of food, health, housing, and weapons or prevention of a the poorer countries a tense of bopeand_.-..s. IF SUCH A GROUP llJ• beoome wtclespmd and hos dGne lts homework in time, the next global crisls-U\ree years, five years, eight years away?-might be like the great crises that marked the fonnation of the United States or the European Common Market, that b , not a moment of catastrophe but, instead, a moment when cata l ytic change suddenly b e c o m e 1 possible, bringing lhat new and more humane world of all man.kind very much closer. But it Is our leaderslll p and commitment 1n the next few mmths and years that will determine whether such a Movement, such a hope, such a global restructuring, will ac- tually be achieved. The world ahead, tn our children's cell· tury-after, say, WY 053--and in all the centuries to come. hangs on that thread of possibility. Sundty, Octobtr 21, 1973 D.ltt. Y PILOT LOOK AT THE LIST: nuclear power, nu c I ear weapons, jet p 1 a n es , in· tercontinental missiles, space travel, electronic computers, TV, DDT, penicillin, oral con· traceptives, new grains, new biology, new psychological discoveries, satellite com- munications, new global or- ganizations. but if we can learn to manage in which our knowledgfe, our schooeqw'•..1!_11Jg. ~~butactl,ontheof ~... nuclear holocaust. And the gap· Nert: Dr. James Bonner, .I them as they begin to lexel powen, arrJ our rates o com-"°"' e ~"' w between rich and poor coun-profesMr of biology, California CONGESTION , SMOG PROBLEMS PLAGUE WORLD off, we may soon find munication will go on being necessities of life for an men tries appears to be getting hlstltute of Technology. In Future Many Aspects of Life Will Be Different ourselves in a much less larger than they have ever may become one of the crudal larger rather than 1maller.,---------------------------~~--- turbulent period, with a much been before, but in which they ethical issues of the next and u all too likely to trigger better integrated global socie-will not continue to change iq decades. We may f 1 D d r e v o Jutionary movements, Whether we like them or hate them, these new develop- ment! are now producing massive changes in every part of society-farm, f a c to r y , transport, housing. b a n k , school, church, corporali<>n. Army. police, city and na· tionargovernment~hanges in everything from the family to the nation-state to the global society. So many of these major developments occurred around 194445 tha t I think we might begin to regard 1945 as Wor~d Year Zero. The year 1973 then becclmes WY 023-and T have begun to write it that way in all my letters. It is slightly eccentric, but it is a valuable daily reminder o( h<lw new thi s new world is. and h<lw greatly it has chang· ed from everything that has gone before. YET TRE PACE of these changes may now be slowing down as they reach their physical and bi<>logtcilMirlttts. Our weapons are already at the level of overkill. TV around the globe it already instantaneous-and you can only walch il for so many ty. Our present changes have every generation as they did ourselves having to move and powered by despair, that will been like 10 Pr o t e st a n t throughout our y e a s t y wanting to move, both for our change the political map and Reformations and Industrial adolescence. own sake and for the world's result in international stresses Revolutions roUed into one and !~·1.,.lnwardless lidefe-:.!!~ttbaMt throughout the wurld. nrr11...-ina within a sin ale TIDS WD..L ~tEAN 8 ... ... .,....~, U d "·· ~-~-------• -~ -~ h t surp Ising rev·-al goods and far more consonant n er u1i2e \.:u ... ......_.,,,.wn .... ~, generation. somew a r ~., the ext d de ls Ukel to be , , of much, ol _our traditional with our older high rtligjoUI ~ n eca Y • But 'if we can make the step morality. Tltrougbout 0 u r goals ol human affection and a period of great instability. t o · t b a t n e w w or I d history, when life was hard service creativity and con· with the steady P"Qwth of ahead-what I call "11te Step and survival was perilOU9, it templatioo ' · global networks competing at In M1an"-wit~t k 1 cltll. I ldri n g was good and moral to have It is in~g to see how ~ct7:d11i.rW:.t:'W:.~! ourse ves, we 0>11.1 our en Jarge families , to "be fruitful far we have already pnr see the need of some ldnd of will be beginning a new farm and multiply." But in a crowd-gressed toward ~ese new transnational World Survival of planetary human existence ed world, a true moral respect ~oals and ways of life. Educa-Movement which wt.11 carry ~ch as mankind has never for huinan values requires ~IOn has become our largest through these crises and will ~:i witl this new world be limiting our families, so that industry, and today one-~nt begin to give us m 0 re we do not steal the spa_s::e and of all Americans are either leadership and p I a n n I n g like? Some things about it are goods of others. teachers or students. toWard the crea.Uon of our fairly certain. For1 ('IOO thingh if Our changing knowledge of All together we are ae. long-range global future. we are going to ive toget er biology, sexuality aod human qu iring a new sense of our Such a movement could donedthe planet for anothhoer bundn-relations has be e n ac-responsibilities for ourselves, become a focus of hope and r years-or1 a t usa companied by decltnlng birth our planet and our future. If action for mill ions of people years or a mi lion years I or rates, reform of abortion laws, we survive, these new values -·•o have begun to d~;. of longer-many aspects of ife f 1 d oals t hel but 1 d w" -~ will have to be very different changing ami Y structures, an g canno P ea our present arrangements and commwies, the women's lib to a more intelligent and who do not know what to do or from what they have been movement, and even changing responsive· and humane socle-how to help each other in their during the past thousand or sexual attitudes in the ty, where the great business of diUertnt ways to build a world michllio1n yea:-' of man1 , .A~a~t churches. life will be loving each other ..... ether. In ........ 1 ... ,1ar, such a su ong time-sea es 1t IS o.... .. . and '-creas1·ng our aw0 -ess ~ "'"~-vious that population cannot The ~?18" potent 1 a I .. , ........ u m o vement could take go on increasll}g indefinitel y. movem~.,.grows, ~with and knowl¢ge. Jeadenhlp in desl.gning ne'fi' Neither can the CQnSLm'lptlon an app&renf ~ ~ nttgton Nevertheless, those Utopiail peacerbepm._ and ._biliza.. of nonreDl'Qbl .q L:tu-r 11 ,,Jll,>4 .~ ~e!!:cial mterest ln times have not yet come. And tion 8)'Nml: fOI' the... world , resour ...... ~, ........ tb-e ......... ""?ft,..-/~ !'Q..r'i,ental todiy;'whenthehopeofpeace ani:I new In~4t'.J.lnent ,-. ··"'.' , ~-phi~. And there are-conlliiues In he frustrated by ~-'lo gt~ in sumption <I .. pow.:er wblch paralld movemeitts toward war , and when ad· -;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;;;;,J overh~UI ~ -tlµ'th; nor the one ·wbrld at the global ministrations contlnue to be W' ~l\ut1on or land , water and organizaUonal level, wltli new overburdened and mable to .UffEll' air. contacts and b'iide w l th handle their new difficulties, Ul'HOLSTEIY ~tosoow and Qtin.Jli, and wlth and. there is violence and pro- To Enroll in "Courses by Newspapers" for credit clip and mail these coupons, with appropriate fees, as soon as possible: the r~pld growth ,of great in-test everywhere, the question .._ '" w• tematiooal corporations, and is, How can we get through lt22 ~ ...._ <>f ~atellite communications, thls transition period of the c.... ,._ _ ......,., aviation, tourism, and what --'""''"'''-! ~fe~w".2y."ears~''..· ::_Ans'.':'.w~''.''~'..'"~' ~~~~~~~~~~~I r------------------------, Le•rning Kit for "Ameriu •nd the Future of M.n" f·or your persorutl copy of The Future File (includes introductory record, book of essays. learning guide, 10 self tests and "The Future Game ''\ for use in studying the coun;e, "America and the Future of i\1an," send $10 by check or money order to; America and the Future of f\.1an P.O. B<>x F "'ayne. N.J. 07470 N•me-~~-~------~--~ Address ______________ _ Cilr--------------- Statc ______ Zip Code _____ _ L------------------------~ ,----------~-------------, UCI Extension Enrollment I Please enroll me in <check one I } o XCal 101 (For Upper Division credits applicable I toward degree I l o XCal 427 ~ ''fndustrinl '' course for self· 1 improvement or commercial credits I I I N•mc-~-~~--~~--~--- Add re$-------------- Cily ______ ZIP-------- I I I I I I I I Daytime Phone 1 Soc. Security No. f I Send $25 in check or money order to : I t Ubl Exten.'>ion H.oom 1325 I I Craw(ord Hall Irvine, Ca. 92664 I L------------------------~ l•ONIATVlll.-a CIVIL WA~ OLD DOLLa OLD OUNe :; MANNING'S COLLECTORS SHOP 'llil!i' 0R .. RB Nawr'Oll"T 8LYD. C"OtrTA M .... A. CALI,-. e•a·•ZSI H"•~ II··~- Sunday is F'l1D&AY in the i·tjl[lijlI·ll JACK & JILL Children's H•irdyling S•lon ly: flilr. ,..,.,.., are now severai thous and in- ternational non-governemental organizations. THIS GREAT Sf'EP we an taking toward a more mature mankind Is like a collective flash of awareness. When resources w e r • unlimited, more production of consumer goods made a better life for everyone. But when the easily mined resources are on the verge ol. ruMing out, further .expansion of the non· service sectors of o u r economy uses up t h e materials essential for our chlldren.'1 azrvival. Any ~ going life for mankind will therefore demand that Wf! learn and practice the morals imposed by ecology-Imposed, that is, by the interacting network of plant and animal and human life· around the planet, a aeamles.'I web of life that cannot be manipulated or polluted or de,,troyed at any point without damagln.g it everywhere. "Therefore choose .life." as Deuteronomy tens us. We must move toward a global ethic of protecting our fragile biosphere from exterminations and oceanic polluUon IDd radioactive fallout, and toward a personal ethic of having fewer childreh and recyc~ our goods and Improvin.c lbt quality of life. Halloween Costlune Parade 7 p.rri. Thurs. eve., Oct. 25 The Jr. Wom•n'• Club of Huntin9ton Be•ch pres•nt• their ennuel Halloween Co,tuma Parede h•re at Huntin9ton Center. Prite' for the spoo~i.,t, funnle,t, most oric;iinal and prefiiest. I Perm Sale. Now for Fall when you want one most. Two beautiful, body-building Helene Curtis naturals. 'Proteine' with three-times mor. protein conditi'oner for lustroue. live1y·resu11s: A•gu'9rty $1S. this week only 9.88 'Triumph' with perma-bond treatment for more l111ing body-a11d~bounce, •xtra gleam -and-glow. Regularly $20, this -only 13.N Style cut, shampo~ & set included, of course. JC Penney le.u1y Selon No •ppolntm.nl IMCftHf't Cherve il-s.w.y.-..,. _ ... _......, S•n Dle90 Fwy. end Beech Blvd. Shop Sunday"'°" to 5 r.M. at ttle foMowht9 ·1torft: FASHION ISLAND, Nowpo.t a .. ch 17141 644-2313. ---------I HUNTINGTON CENTER, Huntl n9ton Bch. 17141 892-7771. • . · 20o/o _ off_our entire stock of dla'monds. Smart Santas plan ahead. Sale 5 180 llleg. $225 heart pendant with 113 cl. diamond, total weight. R•g. $5801/2 cl. i diamond marquise. diamond overlay wedding ring. Sale 5 228 · I Reg. $285 insert ring, 18diamond1in14K setting. Reg. S285 man's ring with 7 diamonds in a 14K mounting. Reg. 534 .95 diamond earring in 14K buttercup mounting. Sale 5 1 50 "•g. $187.50 14K 115 Cl. d iamond engagemen1 and ma!ching wedding ring. Sale 532 Reg. $40 1n11tch1ng niens' weddu1g 11ng. 14K Sale 5356 Reg. $445 ] 1 fh~n 1ond womens coek1a1I r1n'il JC Penney We know what ~ou're looking for. Shop Sunday noon to 5 P.M. at the following store&: FASH ION ISLAND, Newpo•I Beach 1714) 64<4-2313. HUNTIN GTON CENTER. Hunt ington Be•ch 171 4) 892.7771. • ( ' • ' ft 4 DAIL V PILOT New uniforms, which t hey have mad e th e mselve s, are mode led by !above, left to right) Dorothy Baden, Mary Hogle and Sue Cole man and I at right) Nan cy Fl eming and Patty Woodfill. He1· Title's Relative, SJ1e'cl Lilce It Dr oppecl l>E \B A,\;<.; l •. \.~UEBS: Pft';:i~c fo:-gi\'e nle for :1llcring sornc of the facts in this ll'llt'r to ,1t5j!U1.'it' n1y idenl1l)'. bu1 I 1u~1 t'.•n't g1\-t• 11 to ~ou stra1gh1. \I~ uru:lt· "•is lie tl!l'n;,i nt governor of th1· "l:ltl' !:! \'Cars a go. F:\l'r~· t11nr 1111· hu~band unroduecs me he sa_v~. · Tl111' ,~ 1n.v 111fi•. l;cnru{tl'. Her unell' •1•1~ the l11•11tt•nant go\'l'rnor · fl-\Ta- ~inn;illy I t"ateh •t p;,iine<! "J;o-11·har" lflf1k. I 11<H1t to si nk through the floor. I 11c1·t'r' did earl' for that introduction b111. 1n1· husband Sl'l'l11S to think It's afr prupriatl'. 1\c1·nrd1n~ tr1 l11n1 j.!t•ner;il~. ~e11H tor~. _i::o1crn11~ .ind otl11·r Y!Ps ret ain their t1tk• 1·111_1 thuuch 1ht·1· :.trt• no loOftl'r 111 ntl1<1• II~· .;11. 11 1.• not onlv 1·11rrf'c1 . h111 l'h·:,.;111·: II h;i! ;1ho11I II. Ann·' I p ~ 1 ST!! I. d"" t 11'-1 1! ' -Jl'ST PL,\I\ '.1-.1:rlll.IJ!·; Ill \I( .I I' f,,; II i, apprt1t1ri:ite 1;1111t a"·ay on "·etkrnds or \!acatlons? ~s your spouse like your parent.!".' Are thry demanding, boring, llresome·~ Or urr they good company? Every yo ung married couple should sil dO\\'Tl and think about the~r things and co111e up with answers that make sense to lheni. And before you arri\·c at any con· l'lu sions. plt'asl• remember lhls: Vou 11ill n1•\'Cr r€'J:ret it if ynu put yoursrU out a little for lour folks . ritosl parenl ~ ha\'c put themseh·es out a great dc;1I for l.b~ir chiJdren. rl1:1,11n:. l"rn ,11n•f In ':':J!I :1 rt·tirrd [)EAR ASN LANUERS : I havr nn nl li1 1·r "l,1·rh•ra l"' n1· "''' 1111· lll1l' 11•ar~ of sympa1hy for !hat 40-year-old ··f,n11rnur·· or ··~1·11;11ur·· ;1ftc•r th1· i<u·I. •11,111 \1ho says 1\°s too late for hin1 h111 1uu :1r1• nnn1· ol lhr,1·. -.u 11 h~ 111 ~et dates. ISc\·cral girls tum<>d hun 11111..,t 11ur h11,l1:1nd 1tr:11.: 1n11r 1111.-ll' d1111 n :i nd he 1ras so hurt that he JUSl 11110 !l11• art'.' 1>111•, ht• ft•f·I· y•u1 1n•1•1t i.::ne up l ,, t~iild up·.• or. <int·' HE ru·cd il'.' ,\ rnan ah\•:n s has a chance. no inaner 'l\·11 hi1 u. 111 1111 unrt'r1:1in t1·n11~. that 11h;11 his age. Ttus is not true of a 1011 ;1r1• , 11nt1·nl In ht• Jll'I his 11ifr 110111:.in. l an1 40 and have never been :i nd th al'' tht• 11·111 \nu \\lltlt to IX' .1~kcd out by a norn1al, single 1nan 111rrn1h11·1·tl . only n1arricd 1nl.!n, a!rohollc!i aod ~ho1noscx11:i ls 1vho 11·:int n "t'fl1cr:· Such 111:\11 \\\I \\1 11·.H .., ll1•1p' l'l•'.1'•' 111.':<l'f' ;_ire a \1·a ~tc of tin1c and I refus1' \\ ll.11 1' lh•· i..11uh·~1 11.1\' !ur .1 1·ou111! lo be bothered. But since I'm a wo1nan •ri.1·r,,·d , •llpli• 111lh ;1° t·l11lrt 11·, !J•ll 111 111~111ait to be asked oul. 111 .. ~r p.-!l'•'llT• on h<•th 'Ill•·~ 111 i·r111! ii'' I \11sh lhat <tl}.ycar-0ld 1nan \rho lcel'I \\'.. di,ll·\ 11.u11 l•J .~•·1·111 1111i..1ntl (•r l1i..1· :1 "reject" "·ould ask ~t i:: for a 11nrr.1 ,·fnl tli!tl'. I'd arcrpt so fa st his head woul{I 1!01• n1 n\\ t111q-, ;1 ii 1\ ~hn111f! 1h•'\' !--l1'i111 -UNCLA1~1ED JE\VEJ .. ph1,1'1· 110.1 1tl.1n1 "11nd.1• < 111 ;1 n>11 DEAR JE"'EL: Voo nnd 500 other ~11 .. uht ht· d1•111tl'd rn p.1r1·111, · 11omen ""° hn\'e "Tltten to me this Th!"'' ;.r" 1t1~:t11h1n.! {!lll',!UHh ;oral 11r.-k. \\'hat's tht mailer "·Ith you fellas 1~·· 11•·'1 I \,;11•• 1h<· .n1~1u·r~ IX1 \OIL· out there, nny\\•ay'? Gtl movlnjit. And -H \11 IT I\ OHJ!) · don't o~k \IE lor n:unes and addresses. HE \r. 011111 : \•• \•ibmh ha<i. II cfrpend' nn a 1 ar it'I~ n( thin gs aboul "hirh I l.111n' onthln~. llo" ollf'n do 1hr1 t ~11!'.' llt'll1 lnn it 1!0 lhcv lull(.' llo ll'i·~ •lrop in uni111 lh'fl" l>o 0thf'y ln\flf' ~uu ru thrlr humt• 11r dn !ht:) ju.•I ('OOH' lt1 )Otlt!:' llfl"' lonit d11 !hr\ !ltll\':' Do 1hr 1 "IHl.:1• n11·r·· )Our 1•hi11t ·;" On ~on ncct'Jtl llnUtlCla l ht'lp from lhP.nl°.' f\fk.•n•h 1• J,tllt~·: F11111r,, ,urh a~ "'il- !in)%.'0 l:iklnt: !lie 1 hUcl "h1·11 1nu J.:O !lo yo ur O"'" researrh. I ~ Ho"· murh i~ 100 mll<'h? Ill pol OK~ Is L.SD 100 much? If ~·ou 'rc 1!11 dOJl(' or con~ifierinf.: 11. get Ann L.1nd<'r9's Ot'\V booklet ··straight Dope nn Orul{~ ·· Fnr ench booklf't ordered ~l·nd :1 finllar bill plus a long. self-ad· 1tn·s~cd . ~tamped cnvl'I~ 113 cent~ 1)'1~1:ip-1•1 1,1 Ann La nders. 222 \V. Bank Dr .C11w:11.:o. lllino1 ~ 606.'i-4 ) I I j • • ,, ,_'V 'The program gives the girls a foundation for what they will have to cope w.ith in the future.' Girls Preparin1g for the Future· Jen Hutton, a former Army cdptain, commands Camp Fire Girls with d lot of enthusiasm. By JO OLSON 01 lht Ot!I~ ~llOI Sltfl Camp fire Girls have a nev.• look. !l's not that they have shorter hair ,. longer skirts or bobbed-off noses. but their total program has a new emphasis. "We've updated it so it would be in keep~ with todar·s world. \Ve've always triCd to keep up with change." said Jen Hutton. ell'.ecutive director of the Orange County Council for the past year. Some of the changes are superficial, such as the new method of displaying badges for the younger gi rls and the new costume·typc uniforms for the ol~r members. and some are internal - new· programs and new ways of writing I hem. Jn gcnerul, both leaders and members arc pleased with the approach. ··1t is not as detailed a progra 1n :is before." commented f\1iss Huttoo. ··but it still is a flexible program." NO FOR1\tAT The old program \•:as expanded and made more relevant to the ruture. the director explained. "There v.•as no basic format before. There v.•as help for the leaders but nowhere near the degree and the quality there is flO\.\'." Before. she added, leaders were given basic guidelines and left to figure out programs for themselves. The new way will let working mothers, for example, become more active as leaders beca~ not as much preparation will be required of them. ''The program." Miss Hutton con· tinucd. "gives the girls a foundation for \vhat they will have to cope v.•ith in the future. It teaches them values and independence. "Nothing was thro\vn out. It was amended and upgraded and was two years in the making." Nb'\V TOPICS The traditional aspecls remain. such as ea1nping. Indian lore and community projects. but new topics give the organization a contemporary look - racism, drugs, ecology and women's rights. "\Ve have a "-'Onderfu1 program,'' Miss Hutton said. "I jusl wish we had more girls and I wish we had the Jeadersh.ip to doub le it." The new director. formerly a physical education teacher at Virginia lntennoot College, a school for women, dld graduate work at the University of \Vashington in Seattle. She was a captain in the \\'ACS before going to work for Camp Fire Girls 23 years ago. lier Camp ~Jre posts have included directorships in Sacramento. t h e Alamcda·Contra ·Costa area and now Orange County. She is a resident of Laguna Beach. loves to play golf and has traveled 10 ~lexico and Cuba. New book and new way of displaying badges are shown by Dorothy Kent I left) and Nancy Boman . Whole program was re- designed for ease and relevancy. • F T Christ ANC controv Ala.ska. know it At . of land plus N the the Uni IN I the I natives, land p that go Secreta large manag is, man wildlife tional s The 1 be ma Rogers acted 0 year.I. Al ask chance apporti differen Hoose during He mini mu •'Al acco rles k ctll federal million "First Alas lo the n But ferently. protecti possibly "We Ala all Am portunlt" for this Morton lected n Alaska economi keep its The million cash. ln Coogr U.S. citi more Al combina When Rus&a · wilh the TO Alaska: Freeze It or Thaw It? Faraway Land Struggle Touches All Americans By ROBERT CAHN C!ui stian Science Monitor Srroice ANCHORAGE, Alaska -A great land controversy is raging over remote Alaska. And all Americans, wllether they know it or not, have a stake in it. At issue are the future uses of an area of land larger than all of New England plus New York State. It includes some of the most beautiful scenery on earth - the United States' last great wilderness. IN 19'71,when Congress fillally settled the long-eontested claims I of Alaska's natives, thus opening the dOOl' both to land preservation and to development, that governing body required that the Secretary of the Interior recommend bow large ,portions of the land should be ~ged in the "national interest,'' that is, managed as national parks, national wildlife refuges, national forests, or na- tional scenic or wild rivers. The land-use recommendations soon to ·be made by Secretary of the Interior Rogers C.B. Morton will be debated and acted on by Congress during the next five year>. Alaska offers the country its last chance to plan for the future of a pioneer area. The issues are not easily sorted out. With so much of their state involved, many Alaskans are concerned' that they will la:1e control of their own destiny. "ALASK'.A IS not a pie .to be sliced and apportioned according to the appetites of different federal agencies," Alaska's I-One House member, Rep, Don Young, said during a recent hearing. He argued that ooly a "bare minimum" of land be locked up in I Over the years, except for a court set· tlement with two lndian groups ttlree yean ago, Congress did not resolve the issue, despite many attempts and court suits by natives to get land or com- penation or both which they fel~ was rightfully theirs. THEY NOW are split a m on g themselves. Some want "national i~ terest" land kept undeveloped because it supparts the fish and wildlife on wruch they subsist. Others would like to see mineral,. Umber, and commercial development that would provide jobs. The third .major group involved is the 200 million, United States citizens whose government now owns most of Alaska',s 375 milllon acres. ·Their desires are mostly unknown. The Alaska land ques-- lioo Ms scarcely been raised, except among conservation groups and in mining and other corporate development circles. Though Americans who have not been to Alaska may tend to think only <:A 8110\V, ice, and Eskimos ther.e is much more to this vast land. From the air, one breathtaking vista after another so overwhelms the senses tha.t it is easy to become scenery-sated. With feet on the ground, ho'flever, I felt the greatness of the country even more. I watched the lingering now of a mid· night sunset on the Porcupine River. I camped by a_nameJes.s Jake on the north ·slope of. the B~.where few ex,. cept natives -have ever been. Conservationists are p res s u r i n g Interior Secretary Rogers C.B. Morton to make a wilderness-national park out oI eight millioo acres -ol Brooks Range grandeur. "Alad•a is not a pie to be sliced a11d apportioned according to the appetites of different federal age11· ories ••• First and formost, Alaska belongs to Alas· kans a11d second to the nation." federal reserves, not the entire "up to 80 million acres" Congress has authorized. "First and foremost. Alaska belongs to Alaskans," he said. "Sccood, it belongs to the nation." But Secretary ~Iorton secs it ctif- ferenUy. He plans to recommend national rOtection for 80 million acres, and ~ bly more. "We are guaranteeing that, for lask.ans and for the long-term future of l Americans, there is going to be an op-PortunuY to make _futu~ land decisiOl18 'or this great part of our natioo," Mr. !Morton says. "These areas must. be p~ itected now. And there is plenty of land in asJca left for development." ALTHOUGH the Atask3 Native Claims tlement Act of 1971 gives the ~retary until Dec. 18 to make his ecomrnendations, Mr Morton says he ill make tentative decisiom early so hat environmental impact statements an be circulated and reactions can be eceived before the final December date. No matter what Mr. l\1orton proposes. cannot please all three major com- ting groups. The State of Alaska wants as big an omic base as possible. It wants to eep its future economic options Open. The natives are winding up with 40 · lion acres and almost $1 billion ln h. In the 1971 Native Settlement Act, gre$ has defined a native to be a .S. citizen who is one-fourth degree or' Alaska Jnctian, Eskimo or Aleut, or I inatiOll thereof. When Ala.ska was purchased from a in 1867, no settlement. ~as made with the native peoples then hvmg there. THE STATE does not object to a na- tional park in the area. However, of- ficials insist that only part of such an area should restrict mining, hWlting, or road building. The wilderness of the Central Brooks Range has already been macred by a winter hauling road built at state eipense in ·1968 on order of then-governor (and later interioc secretary) Walter fickle. It was used to rush supplies to oil O)m· panles at Prudhoe Bay and to prepare for a trans-Alaskan pipeline. Foc the first time, and without a public decision, the Brooks Range was split by mechanized mankind. Although, tbe "ffickel ffigbway" was used only two winters, the eroding scars of the road, bulldozed through the fragile tundra and permafrost, still can be seen from the air approaching Bettles, and at many places along its ~te .. TRANS-ALASKA pipeline plans now call for an all.year road to be built ad- jacent to the pipeline. It would cross the Brooks Range east of here along the Dietrich and Koyukuk Middle Fork passes. This road, more than the pipeline itself, is seen by some as a threat to the wilderness experience and to the wildlife. For the first time. animals would be within easy range of hwiters' guns and within hearing of the sounds and distrac- tions of modem dvillzaUon. Alaska officials allo want to cross the Brooks through Anatuvak Pass with a pennanent transportation corridor along the Hickel highway route. And their plans call for an east-west MAP SHOWS SOME OF ALASKA'S THREATENED NATURAL WONDERS highway along the southern fiMk Of the Central Brooks, or possibly a railroad to the Bornile area opening up the region laterally for mineral develppment and recreation. . In my two--tripr,-J··have seen only a small part of the slate which is really too vast and varied to comprehend. in a lifetime. Jr one tried to explore 1,000 acres a day, it wou1d take over a thousand years to cover the state. One of its glaciers is bigger than the entire State of Rhode Island. And most of the state, unlike any other, is still un- touched by civilization. ALTHOUGll Alaska claims one modem, comparatively large city in Anchorage, most of the . state's 300,000 population is in small towns or rural native villages. Less than a million acres are privately owned. The state owns or bas · tentatively selected 59 million of the 103-million acres to which it is entitled under the 1958 Statehood Act. After Alaskan natives take their 40 million acres the remainder will still be under some form of federal control. State officials and many Alaskans claim that designating the land as na- tional parks or wildlife refuges is 'locking it up." State planning director Bob Pavitt testified at a hearing that A1askans "overwhelmingly rejected the principle of reserving Alaksa's scenic grandeur and resource wealth for use by the privileged few who can alford the luxury of wilderness retreats and· the costs of air travel for access." Alaskan officials claim that to "Lock up" these lands deprives the state of the economic base needed to support its small population. ON THE other hand, conservationists in AJaska and outside claim that to allow mineral or other commercial devel~ ment could also constitute an ir- revocable "ldck up:." They point out that · the state already has selected a checkerboard of oil·rieh land and poten- tially metal~rich mineral areas. It now has the third highest per capita income of any state in spite of having a large population o£ rural poor, mostly natives. , Putting land in parks is like Putting it in a "safe deposit box," says Rollin del Piaz of -the Alaska ·Conservation Society. "The key to the box is held in the public trust of the United States. If ever the public desires to open the box and offer the contained lands for sale or develop- ment. theY have the right because they still own the key." Also overlooked by development-mind· ed Alaskans is the fact. that there may be more long-term economic benefit and employment from the tourist business than from such development as mining or logging. / "We need innovative new concepts for total preser.vation purposes," s a y s Nathaniel Reed, assistant I n t er i o r Secretary for Parks and \Vildlife. "We aren't trying t.o tie up Alaska and hold up wise development. Alaskans will learn to cherish lands that are now carefully put aside, just as people in Wyoming or Florida have done over Yellawstolle or Grand Teton or Everglades National Parks -which were all opposed at the start because they were assertedly locking up areas." "Alaska will become the most exciting place on the face of the earth, if we plan it right," he adds. "And we must do so - -M'e have done it wrong in so many places." Photos Furnished by the National Park Ser.,lce '?!-· .'l'f"'·.~ ""'~"' '""!' i\ ' t~ ,.J ... ~ -f;;>t'\!~ .~"'\""d-r+- 4/fffJ~ ''"' l '·' .. ,,,.._ ' ' Sunctar. October 21, 1973 DAILY PILOT 8 5 -· ... , -· ........ ·~·.J .. .:· -..... t.. -.;. --. . It .# • I --·-·1t;_1 I' ' ~ ~ ~ .~ • .:11.": . .. , • .-...,:,...-... -··~!.J.' • ·- - • -.. THESE MOOSE SWIM IN CRYSTAL PURE YUKON FLATS LAKE SEALS SUNNING ON ONE OF ALASKA'S RUGGED OUTER ISLES t • -.. """"'-. .. ····~ t .. .......; TOKOSHA MOUNTAINS FRAME RUGGED MT. MCKINLEY, TALLEST PEAK ON AMERICAN SOIL FRIGID CRAG DOMINATES LANDSCAPE THAT MAY SOON SUPPORT ALASKAN OIL PIPELINE ., . ' • ~ .• I 8 DAILY PILOT SUM;Q, Odobtr 21, 1973 U.S. Beautiful From Bayou To Bighorn ' ' • 1Uf1I!. '1CTfT10UI' •UltllW UBUC ·~CE ' ·MAMI ITA'NMllfT ' -=='.p="°',;-:~="==::----Ttw tdfOWllll MriON -dolftl1-~ •1 -' • STATIMSWT OI' WmtOIAWM. . LA.J. A S'.IOC.t tist1 Htll. l'IOM~PAan.llUMIP " ~. C'41f '2.S Of'IUTUf• UllOaa l..'.:=:'.'.:=:'.'.::::::====::::. ________ -'---==---===;:~;;;;ni~~~rr.;;,..;;1 -JtM A. h• it_-1 _2tn Nt#ttlf Pl., PICTtTIOUI' •!'flllftt llAM_I Ccwtl Mff,11 C1111,'«ZR1 ' · TM toll~~--1111• ..-lffitt"IWI\ '"' 1 . 1111 ...,... " · JOflll . It• .... 'Jr., tJlll tt.f1. N 1 09fWr91 ,.,,_ frorrl ttll ,.rm.r.ril• ' • w..t.N11ttw. C.llf, ' > ....-tlnl IH\llel' ,._ fldll!-"""''"'"' Christian Science /tfonitor Service SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) -If oralors of the future start declaiming about the beauties of America "from Kennebec to San Gabriel and from Cascade to Biscayne," you can blame retired geographer Dr. G. Etzel Pearcy of .::al State Los Angeles. Pearcy proposes reorganizing the 50 st.ates ol the union into 38 states, and renaming them as well. "Traditions may be sacrificed, but the gains could well be threefold: an approach to op- timum geographic balance in relation of the landscape to political boundaries; better balance between state area and required a~ ministrative funcliOns. and lower costs based on minimum personnel requirements and c~pital outlay." he says. His plan for reorganization is set forth in "A Thirty Eight State U.S.A.," published· in its "Horizons of Thousht" iserles by PIY,.COll Pree, Fullerton. "PROBABLY NO TWO geographers would come up with the same, or even similar, pat- terns," Pearcy c o n c e d e s . "Furthennore, scholars of other dlsclpUnes undoubtedly would disagree with many of the decisions of any geographer." Allhoogh Pearcy does not lbink that rucal aavings constitute the best re11!JOft for cbanging state boundaries, "& does eatimate annual sav- ings of $4.1 billion. "If 31 ,,.,.. ahould prove lo be lbe moat el· fective nmnber, a nvinp of $4.8 bUllon an- nually comes up in the: credit column ol lbe na- tion's balance sheet, an amount greater than the expenditures ol the Natlonal Aeronautia and Space Administration, wbl.cb sent , the astro- nauts to tbe moon. Pearey's plan \\"Ould relate state boundaries to populatkJD density and to metropolitan areas and work: more on regions than tlle presebt haphazard system. which uses rivers, mountain ranges and even lines of. latitude and }Ongtt\M!e to separate states. , Instead of riven, be would use valleys. "RIVER VALLEYS MAY r..listically be coostrued u geographic unUa, tbe territoty on either side ol tbe main. water course having a strong community OI. interest with the other," Pearcy say1. The states now v~ in size from Rhode Island ' ' ' " . ,~, t . ~J-~ Mt!,.. A ... , 11M19 ri1 NAEfUCAN IEAVTIU . 1t to Alub, which ls 4&1 times the ajze of Uttle the northern portion, incorporitml I bit o:t ~~ C~I~ w·. ~,., ~~ ~"' .,.. 202A. ~ a ......... Under the JI.state ..i ........... discre-~-.· ada, named El Dorado (or Tahoe or ,.,''""'"'P· • • ' Tiie 11eltlldW 1111111,...1 ,..me ,,,,,_, ·---r .,.... ....... .,,_...,. i '----'• e: H..wr ' ,,,, t1w 1Mf1ntnh1P w11 t11.s "" 1111n cit1 dlsapPear and the average state slze is in-~ta). lhl• .til-t·wu flted wllll tM cou"' '" thlo"C.Unty of Or9"'P-c-·~ by about 1 lourth. .. . • • . ~ c .. rti ·o1 °'""" c_,., G11 ..,...,... Dr •. H• !'ftW9 11n •~ --~·EBEC ( "•ERN' ATES •-.u-~ P• 1~') »1 w. c.t•r• Di'.'· •i· • ''Tbese greater dimenslons appear to be · ~rt .iu.1 ~lU-. , •. . • . ....,, 1ot0 MtiMftvr .. ..,., ,.. 11 •~··~ in 1,.,,. J bet•--lra"'-*".i-.CbaznOJain) would ibclude molt w ·the ,_aent r ~~ ~' catt· D•llV P1,1oi. i.n" AN. c~n~11, "1f1 '"'"''!ft:\I ............ tel .... ~-l.IUll t" .-'f', .. r·~ ~,~ ~.~ 7, '" n, HI•,.,,.,.... Tl1t , facilities and more rapid means of ·com-~IJnN. e, r:;wk.Hampsbire and Vermont and a ~ ' . »ocs-n Put.1•1Nc1 er.. c...:1 o11ir ':fiS:. tl111n&catlon developments, which reduct the .... si!" .or Seniinoi Cah ,, al) LI---" • . . ·~l't.JIUC NOTICE ~ 11, .. •nd Howmbtl' ~j,I~ handicap of distance," be notes. . ..... --~ .Cot ... ,....t,~ .. andaver .-1A..::,mo1' · : . ,: .~..... . . 1m. , .\U .l'-IWNllt bDe' w ua11.-. I ~.....-• "jtTiiiiii, .... tf!lau SMALL STATES such as Delaware, Rhode Alabama. Most of Texas pea into Alaft>o, whlcb , •fiM:i'iTAnMl"1" . PUBUC NOTICE includes a bit of Oklahoma'and ·a comer ol Ney n. -·~ _,.,._ .,. idol,. PIC'Tmotn 1ut1•ns Island and Vermont .dlslppear from Pearcy'• MeJ:ico. But the present-Tei:as 'loees a tip to ~ic•:u.-+;Mn <•: ~·"t!i~ ~ MWfTATaMlltn' new map, but then to do the other 47 as ~(~.Glla),a.~trip"ODtbeeut~BayoU .~~.-:.,s•. , n..to1111W1111'9'Wl••dOl1111t1111~n1 presently named. His praposa1comesupWith38 (or Chandeleur or&ibine) and its whole Panban· SIMI IL Milw1n. • co-11 """'*'• ~E0r .. '~~~ c~n..': oew names, such as Owt, Hudacm., Dearborn, dN to ShaWnee (or Cmarrori) 1111 ~ wff'I, Lat M9flltfol. Mohawk and Cumberland, which he feeb be\. Talladegi (or Tombqbee 0~ Bes!e!Del') and c-::_-~~t.~0-:.-1 P•ftil<lot· ~Ktflc Ttr; • "'"' tnt.. ·iw MM\KO ter ,txpms the ~cm they regresenl . Ptedm<iot take DP"ual·of·the mt of. AJ•beriu. l:..,c~, --~·~l\fl:l"ll• °'ti.1:'.==~· ~ :"'!- He gives .alternatives for some. areu.. 'k and Georgia. Bighorn and ·Bitterroot (cir · wmi.M •· ,,,. ... , GtMi-11 ......,,.., "'°'''~.dfk Tlrt a. "1"' 111e. 1 most northwesterly ct the con11--·· states, for y 1Jo •-·) ...o M-•·--~ ol 1.aai... 1 c...,.,.i 1911 ,ert..,,.cw• ,• Mii, ' . DIA '"""' 1111,.,.,,.._ "'A......,. e W!!o\UC r~.,.ace Ulll.AIJilO JUUIU UIUIU C11!f1:1111M,,,., • . ' instance, would beocme a state composed of and some .of Wyoming. Ha wall becomes JOiauea ~"'· llrlii-. •• ~ -. • ~1 • ~:!:~,..._.,. moet of. what iJI now Wasblngton and Oregon. and Alaska gives way. to two state. -Seward ~l~_!, ·lvf'lt•' 11111 11titl!Nllt w•• '111111 wllfl "" He calls It C89Clde, ·tiut givea Columbia and and' Kodiak. ™• :.~·~ w11t1"" c111111-=-,~"ff"n·"··oi;~ f-" ·"" Oc- Olympia u possible alternates. Pearcy says he pajd no attention In hJa " cim: '' Drano• County 1111 OrtttMt ., hbllil!M ore,. c-1 0111y '=~ 1be present C8llfornla ls divided also, with division to state ·capitals. After all, be bad ~ 1'73 , ~ • ~ 0rtotitr 1'-21. a •nd .,._bf<' 1• the southern part, includin& 90me of Arizona, leave 101J1ething for the pollUclans to 1rgue Publl1Md or.Kot c-t . 01nv f'llot., _•_m_· ___ · ---,--~•-•_..,_ bec,oming San Gabriel (1lt~te Mojave) and about. Odcllolt' 7• 1'-11• 21~ 1'" JOn.111-• PtlBUC NO'ltCE . -PUBIJC NOTICE ,' . -~~~~~~~~~~~~~------~--~--------------~----~--~--~--~----------~1-~=-=:::.:.,:.:,.:2·=c~l ~-===:::--=:~:-'---•• ••u ', PICTITIOUI •utlN•IS Caribbean Isle Cozumel . Tops for Seeing ·Bottom _,,...,.,. 1 NAM• nATIM8NT Monet TO' uaorroat Ti,. fi11owtn1 per-''' doltllll SUf'••ICNl ceu•rr•·, TMt 1111.i~ ": " STATS OP CA\.~•tA 110" "SYCHOLOGY AS$0CIATES. 4019 Ttftl-CO\IMTY OI' NAiii•• w~' f"l.C.. Suitt m tHwport lil .. A77m '2HO " , E1t1r. f/f THOMAS e D w"'. 0 -Ill J. a .. .,.. ,...., C•l•lltll st. rFEIFEll. Otc:n°f L...-...,.; c1n1on111. "'51 · NOTICI! IS HE-alY d!lfl!N ti tM ttl"(fn<WI r. Chol"'91''• 1f40 T .... 1ttt. UMllor1 " Ille allow IYrllld Hctd""1 N...-porf hK!I. C1lltwfll1, nut ""'' •" ~ '*vlnst ,i.1""' -011Mt '"' Dlt'IW ~,,,..,, 1t1n lk!Ml!Y 0r .. 11tf dlUMM 1r1 l'9Cluln.d'.t. rll• tfle!ft, lrvlftl, C11l~lllt. wllll "'°' -.art·~ lfl lfll ""'" 0.11 WOlllw. 22'2 '-""' M• An.J "tM dw-flf lfll 1Mw ..ntlld•uwt, • H......,art tffC"1 C1Mtwrt11, tH27 .. ....-t tlllm. \WI~ tt. ~ TNI Wlt-·11 (lltlCllldtd ·11¥ I 911111' .. .._,....._ ,. "" UIOHrtl ...... " Mlllw, plrlftlrlhfp. Nluori C._ l(otllw, Alttfttltll C. Al1IWr • IC.EITK J. GOUY NI-. A11'11rMY• •t llw. wn1 Mort!! ni. ... ~ w•• rlltd wnJll · ,. The Caribbean Wand of Visitors bolrd the •motor dants are ntber unique. ,.....,.y, s.m. ..,.., t.l'-1• mo.. c-tJ cl«k ., 0r1...-c-'Y' oit I .--...... !....-~ .... ·-' d o{ wtiltfl la ... --=-" .,.,,.. ..... Odmw ,, 1fn. • Cozumel, located 12 miles off •~ ~ _.-a •1 FO{k>r's Mqico 197S fUide Uflftf'J....,. 1n .ii _,...... ,.m+rilnl • ', ....,. the Yucatan coast of Mexico, snorkeling, ICUbe diving and .:.r .... ,,,,,,,~; .. : ........ tint.,, ....... ...,... 11 "*' ..-.,,,, ·~ w l"vtllll!Md OrNOe c;.., r:a.i~ l"f1ot, flshinc or just llzing in the •~ ~ ,, .• nuul UK .... ,. IMlltM ..,.,. "" *"' ~ « 1'111 OctoW 11. lt. lfld .._...,. A. n. b comldertd one of tbt top sun watching the crew catch ODe notlca,. for ~1 ls ,..,.n.C:.. on..r t. ms. tm ..,.,.,. five scuba diving lpob in the lobster, grouper, mapper and peotheplegen~~~ol the ~~~"' t11t e""tt « world and number one tn the OOflcb. Then it'.11 o(f to a • ~,,~.......... "" ............... ....,,, ~--· ·-~~ .... tile car.. peninsula (Yucatan) st Ml ... Mi-& Mltw' P•CTmovt. lvtlMllS Western Hemispbert. u.:iM::r~ U11:t1U1 wu.:: r and a refresbin" ,.,,,.,_ from lltf ..,,. ~ · . 1111.Ma nATaM•tn lain p--a delicMrua a .... ._..... s.-.....,, c.11..,. ·'"" Ti-. followlno •-1r1 •olot The azure and emeral~ ·~,.-w what many have learned. to T...:.=..•t::,•t:~· DlllY Pllll ~-a1: tinted water is cryatal clear aeafood barbecue of the·day'a expect elstwhert in the Carlh. ~ 1, .1.t. 2T. 2'· 1m · aon-n l"'OCO JOit, •m 11.i• Av•· 1 down to depth. cf 200 f~t with catch plus cheese, deviled bean." "f w:::,11ttt•~~ ·"=1tt1111110n. tut six-mile lon" Pitancar Reef eggs, tomatoes, IGcal fruit and ""-.O. ..... ~-fi-t cl .,· PUBUC NOTICE Mffl,.... ,,_,..,. v1•11Y· c.111,,.. ... annrn~•te beverages The "''""e .. au. ,., a ' Slllrl.-, DI-· '9'1111tl1111i.t. offering an underwater u-r,..-..,.... ' hotels On the Wmld with the , • .,. Mtr1.-.. '~" v1111y, c.111. plosion of colon. bil=~~·l~~ 110-room EJ Presidente the ·~:J:': ~::.::". ~= ~~~,.... 11 c.ONluctlf "" • Oft'« .. White-hulled 11-a n d -.. be ~-00 foot, Vlll. ""-'· , ........ s• follcwed by th e TM• COVJtTT OP OU••• ,,,_ hrirwlll 't'a.ii:t~1111ton c IU'Yt'<' ._... uuuc v..._.r uu5" .. , MO. ._""1 Thlt •f•Nmltll WU fllld ..,ft!~ - PIJBUC NarICB COZUMEL ISLANO BOASTS u.llLE·LONG PALANCAlt ltEI, F01t DIVERS schoooers ferry diven to cle (tl.10 a day) or .renting 1 Cotumel Caribe, Cantarell, None• w M1.u:1,.. °' "ITtTtow "c11rk cit 0r.,...'couri1v 1111 CktOOW tiQ ~ wllere they can dixover, Honda ($10 a day). Jeep tripe Playa Azul, Cabanaa del r=:..::s°'~~=-~~.~~.:!" 1m . ' -irrldesce!lt yellow sponges and to the rby M · Carlbe and the Mara. Prices, WAMIO> f'Vlllttllld ar..,.. c..i Dflllt ,1laitt red 8nd orange coral fonna-avaJD~: but a~ ~U:~ including two meals a diy, .1"• .. "'WA.NOA •· 1v"1te. ~ Otl'Mtr ''" 21. a. 1nd NWltl!Mr "',,i~ tions plus the rare black coral. just enough to prevent too average fl&-25 per peraon, NOTte1 11 HE1tE1v 01vEM ""'11-----'-------- v.ellow and black striped tiger many bottcms up. double oca!paocy. The big Ill =~i:..u:.t..O:"''!r::!' ;:-:;' ::t':.: PUBLIC Ntma; fish and angel, parrot and For centuries the Island wa.s all ha\•e compullcry me1l ..,._ "' Ltl'ltr• r•-11tY to ~-1--~===-c==::-· .,, .. ;_, filh can be 1-·~ In 'I holy .. pl••• and ra•-do not V2oPV ........ ClollC Wtl'Hd). l"lfwMet to wllldl PICfTTlCMll •UM•ils ..,w..•~ uw11.1 a" ayan .,.ace ruled over ....... ...,., -J 11 "' .. 1rw fwfllw .-nkvl•,... Md !flat MAM•.J{ATIMllNT underwater caves near Chan-by the patron, d. lety Xchel, the with the maon. · t1w "'"' •'llf '4-cit '-''"" 1111 11m. TM ta11ow11111 ~ .,.. .a1ri1 b La olf ' h Mt Men llllf 10' OdoOtr ii. trn. •• t:oo tMh•n• ~-= cana goon e = of fertility. When the For the .budget conscious •·"'·• >n ,,,. tMWtrootn "'o...rtm--1iu.Mo 11Ka IHOl'l"I. ''° "''" E11se11ada Resto1ing Missions ENSENADA. 8.C .. !\lex. - Plans for the preservation and restoration of seven missions in northern Baja California have been announced by Lie. Octavio Perez Patzuengo, mayor or Ensenada . The mayor said t h e municipal government has budgeted $80,000 to begin work in 1974, and has appointed a nine-man committee lo ron· duct the preliminary study. The comn1ittee is headed by Ton1as A. Robertson. historian and author of several books and o1her works on the history of ~texlco. THE SEVEN 1nissicns 11·ere built by the Dominican fathers during !he 18th century and hltle remains but cruntbling adobe walls. Robertson said. Plans include fencing of the sites to ;>rotect ruins from tbe depredatioos of tourisl3 ex- pected to flock into Baja when the n e w transpeninsular highway is completed in December, est ab Ii sh I ng museums, correlating com- mercial fac!Iilies nearby, and eventual recoruitructlon. Since funds will not be available until next year, money for the original studies is being raised by special events such as a pageant and fiesta held in September. The pageant at San Miguel Village, eight miles norlh of Ensenada on the Tij uana highway, "'ill recrtate the ar- rival of Father Junipero Serra and explorer Gaspar Portola 200 years ago, · 1.fissiOM involved in tha project are: Descanso, 15 mUes· sooth of Tijuana; San Miguel, at La P..fission betv.-een Tijuana and Ensenada ; Santo Tomas, 30 miles south of Ensenada; San Vicente, 20 miles south cf Santo Tomas; Santa Domingo, five miles ea.st of Colon.la Guerrero; San Pedro de Martir, in the Jn01m- taiM above Santa Domingo; Santa Catarina de Lee Ywnas, 90 miles southeast ol Ensen- ada on the San FeUpe road. AU. BUT Descanso fall will> In the 33,1'.m-square-meli muni- cipal boundaries o( Enscnada. The largest mwliclpallly in the world, Ensenada covers most of the northern peninsula, from La P..11.sion south to the ?.Ith parallel, aJthcugh the city it&e.lf nestles along Ta:los San- tos Bay, IO miles south of San Dlqo. scuthwestem COJ.Sl of the conque ~.~ there 1·1 the --Hotel J e1 •wt eM'I., tt ,. av1e cnw 011 .. 1 A .. " .. 11t01 1.i.nd, c.ut . .,..2 island. . ror, ........ ez, ar---......... w.n. I~ ,,,. City, II Stftt. """· C .. l'-1111. wtll!M c • ....,......,, l>l ..... Av• .. rived in 1519, there were 40,000 Lopez where· the cbarae ls 0.1 .. Odttitr 1. ,,,, •-'tlol 1ai.1111. c.n1. ""' Scuba gear and instruction inhabitants. Today there are $3.40 per · person, double oc-l'~~!t Sf JOHN, .. "::: ,:~'f!~7t.: ,.,11 An •• are readily av11!1ble 1t hotels 7,500 and the goddess has slip-cupancy, without meals. AU ••wt• o. 1M1J,.ott1M ... .., 11111 1K111M11 '' conc1uctM 1w 111 '"" or on the piers with snortellnc ped away. ' · rooms have private baths and =. =:, ~ 41"''"'11w._111,'" c. HttclwtV and scuba equipment renttn1 However the Mayan descen-celling fam. .._., ....,.. ~· ..,, TN1 "'"°*" wt• fltN w1111 111t c- f or u a dly with tanks'" ad.li;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;i;';;;;;;;;;;;;;;~·-'i!l"~»-~ "'ctw~" °""'" CavnlY 1111 "91......., ... ... ,_,.........., '11,,,,,. ditiooal. 'llbll Ori~ Cot• 0.11-, ,not. ·p..,. All the BOYD 'yn•v'EL'S OWN F•uous O<:tollf ~ u,' .'_1m -.n f'vtll l..,.. °""" c111~ D•Hv '1'°' alone coast caa be -~ Jw...i. -'"" ,,. •"' Oc1o1ttr 1, u. '.!t found sunken skeleton!: of an-l':\loUC NQTICE 1m -'°''"" clent ships, some once hunted HAWAII FAMILY CAR VACATIONS clown by pira,.. like llenry Morgan and Jean Lantte. Aft.r compietlll( their Carib- bean cruises tbeee pred1ton of the sea returned to the tranquil lagoons of Cozumel Today yoo don't have to be a swimmer or buccaneer to sam)>le the · IOU! o1 thlJ refreshing blind. Glass-bot.- torn boats leave hourly for the reef and al 9 a.m. ever}' morning there la the not to be missed "Robinson Crwoe" cruise. HIYI THI. FOil MAIN Ill.ANIS AS THOU•H TOU HAD TOUI OWN JAMILT CAI UNLIMITED FREE MILEAGE! NO GAS PROBLEMS! . 15 Days, Total Prices, l11ebidlng Tues: courLE ,, 1 Fill ENDS SHARING ••••••••••••••••••• ·•••2. courLE' I CHILD UNDEll: 12 •••••••••••••••••••••• 1211. courLl' I CHILD 12 Ok OYER •••••••••••••••••••• $1ttt. courtl I J CHllDR.EN UNDER 12 •••••••••••••••••• $1646. courLE I I CHILD UNDER 12, I CHILD OVEl 11 •••• $174t. COU'1.I. l CHILlllN 11 o.-on1 Slt!J TWO courLES !LARGE CAR. 1 ltOOMSI ••••••••••• ,,,,,. PUllUC NOTICE Enjoying California From Acapulco PAMILIU. OLI 4 TO t NAfl 2 IOOMI. AIOYE rRICES IASED ON MEDIUM ROOMS AT SUl'ElllOlt TYrE HOTEL5-Alll CONDITJ()NEP, SWIMMING POOU. GOOD LOCATIONS, UC. By ST AN DELAPLANE Up the bleak coosl of northern California over the week- end to stroll do wn memory lane. Drake's Bay. Where th& Alcutlan-born slorms smash inlo the rim of the continent, and the earthquake faull enters lhe mainJand. It was a rainy autunm day. The sea crasbcs on the rocky he11dlands. !)ai ry co1\'S moo mournfully in foggy pastures. Drake came to 1he California coast in JS75 alter ahootJng up u Spanish si lver ship with a colorful (bul unprintable) n;une. lie rolled lhc "Golden Hinde'' on its side, Scraped ofr U1c,bamacle5 and s.11\ed the rest or the way around the world. Queen Elizabeth knighted him. "Arise. Sir Francis." I am hot on the heels of Sir Francis. It's my 0"11 thing -nobody else seems to get excited. The editor said: "Soun~ like a good idea.'' lie Sllld \I 1n a half-hearted way. Like he didn 't want to spoil m;.r fun Wanl!'d to hunior nie. lfow do you 111ct into this joumatlstlc rlodge? T think by accident. Thereafter Ur(' Is a series or whip lashes. • • • Tll"RRE WA!l TlllS immigrant boy, tic thought he was applylna for a /ob 1\·ith thr telephone company. But he got In 1ht wrong of Ice and \\•ound up v.rorking fOf the New York World. · 1 Wbat mat .. iLmore complicated, lhe..lloy ,.lrieved-blm· self IOme years later. He became'tbe ~tul president ot a lar1e·1ucceulul corporatloo. This b a Sl<Ce1Utor)'7 • SJr Franc!J Drake was the auecfss otqrii of bis diy. He W<Dt m>Ulld tbe -Id. He wblppod the<SPuloll Armada. Jn' Enaland, people cheered •bell be drove by. On the Callfornl1 cout, he left a brua plaque. He claim- ed the enUre cowitty -(no mt spon, Francia) -for ~Elizabeth. When the plaque..., found -a'cr<at historical cfilc:ov. ory -I wrote the stoey. I p booked oo Drake. Found plec<1 of bl1 pas&af1e In lbe C.rtbbean. In Colombia I bought a postwd: It ref med to "'lbe pirate Dr1ke." A k>n& memory. • • • I SAID TO TUE EDITOR: .. , want lo do !bat Drw story ea:aln. I want to update It." (CaUforol1 bb:torianl are tan111na again on where Drake landed on lht.._q>U1J lie said: "Where do yoU)iVe tOa'Oto ~ It ou'it I said: "I have to start Jn Ac1puloo. •1 fie 14ld: "So that's what you were rettlng atf Wby didn't you ny so in the nrst place'!" DELUXE HOfELS Au'OAVl.10.ILC'" INDIVIDUAL DE,AltTUJIES lYERY MONDAY, lETUllNI~ MONDAY rw'O WEEKS "l.ATER ISUNDAY"ltET\!ltN OIC AT SA.Ml PAICEJ '"'" 111,11141 t111114tri' Hel'IM'f/•t •it4 111t.rltl1M ft+, °'1• 1cltl4vl.C, 1lrliMll flf kr fft• fvl flrn• •• 111.li 1111"4 with lntltll'•~• •114 11111li1111tttl f, .. 111il1.,1: rlYff f,.lt, te "i-hw.4 ,.,.. ,, .... , ...... 11: ,1.11111111 fll'll,. '"' lflt.~•tf•ll, .,, .11 1ppll1'•ltl1 ta1111 1114 1Kllf'lty ch•rt•l. BOYD llAVEL <714) 543°l2JI 27il II. lllllSTOL SANTA AHA ,.,,.. ___ , MlMlfl 1 H•••O Vl1itor1 l 11r111a Or11191 C11111ty Tt•,.11 At•nh A.1111, I t -· --.. ..... --.-::i....- ·~~ .... ,.. .. ·"'"~" ,!IA ... IC\\ j au1•; ..~I•"; ' !j • !"·'~ ... -·all h .... tex ,,,."mt . .., ·\(~ ~· • m of ..,, Ka -r. lie 11#:tn, 'It''• .. '""· " ;"!tu -gr . ~ !!1' ;; •• ~,,)'e •·t. go' • ·-..r .. i• •• ,) ti. •••• .~·' ' ,, ..... ... 1 .... <I""' • M•-,,(:i ...... ,~ ~ .. • 11) ~~~<;" ---be pr ~-.,. th ~"''''th ......... to~~ .. th .. ~· --~ .on .,.,,,.,, ~. -·~-Ja t"""r •D" .r;,J., •I ,· r. • t~<-a -,Ip ' ·-·ci ' ... t. ~:'.~.~1 w11 · -sT1 ;.~o .. ' ~ v ,Y """'".m hy ,, ... :o:Jh "'"I Jf " ;O:l<'.'jlC >-. L II ~u t'"'~ "I :;-J!1 " ••• u.-:. (. ~·-SI 0 WI' °Jll -··. ti' ,pl ..... ··h -lh -DAILY PILOT B f .. .. , .... ' • .. -' . DAILY 10 ·10 S~NDAY & MONDAY ONLY SUN. 10 . 7 , ' . ., . CAMERA DEPARTMENT . . s~PIC .IAL CLEARANCE!! ' / \ . .Uflf T.._... KU· f.IE!>ICAL. CEN1'ER HE AD. tALl<S TO STUDENT m r~ri11111m. D. Ritk• DllCUHOI Ab&rtvl1tod Progri m ' ~-: ~Students Q.nestion ~ ~~\::.:~·year Med Pl~ l f~·~<.". . ~ -Mike McCoy spends nearly med;ie8I sc hool -tr.. -·all his waiting hours -14 cardiovascular physiology is ll ~,,.c·~k -f)Orlng over medical one, ht said -tha.t ·make • c: POLAROllf'SQUARE SHOOTER CAMERA .... r. -• . " '} *' ., . --~ " • ' ~ ~ ~ u oo SUPER COLORPACKeCAMERA 2 Days Only I Expdsvre control, built -in fo.cvi 2·200 ~ flosh, e lectronic shvller ~ystem, :J t( d~tonce finder. Sove! ,, Lt'"ll!llPililiVa'"'WJ• ™--~""'!M);.;...,.~ ~· ~ I r •t:Wr COLOR MOVIE FllM « zo~~~s 99c t 50·h, roll tlrtntllt •r 'JPe A fits ,.. .. i.r I •• "' "'""'" Pr~ .. h1cl,decl. .. t.Jflf"* ... #!tM!r'.":. ---KANSAS CITY , Kan . (UPI) teresting subjects at the , 18 •• hours a day, seven days a . I ._.. textbooks and peering at him wish he had .more time . . 6 ON LY! "" "rhicroscope s)ides. He feels !0:r extra sh.1dy~ <i~·~ep. .this is not enough study Instead , of shortening the · ---- - 1 Ch arge /ti ·"J .U~~ d · hi 1 · i 1' 'medical curriculum, McCoY ~ \Js.s new Jow...co•t typ..U film. U1ts medicar s~~edts ~n thee cl~=· Would like to see i,t lengthened. ~1 hi-po""'.'' cube which •.11oble1 "'''" t.o 4 ;j .;_• ,--,_,...- r •75 t th Uni .1 ol "There's a lot more to learn id vtt br1;hter, sharper pu:turei. Electric o a e vers1 Y . · r.1· eye for'Outdoors .,,, Kansas Medical Center will now about IM:ing a doctor than t". 1 ... ...,.,..,..;,, • ..:..-~Ma.< .. ' .,.,. _be among the first doctors there was ii> fears ago" be P ~.~;,_tn ~ansas to rece1ve their explained. "l wouldn't ~ject ::..s:!I!' llR!tM"'W '",.,~'1 J'41f ,.,: .rnf_-~:.;8_,_,.J.tW · : 1;~!.D. s. after three years of to anyone making it five ~..z J?'"'4G.-~Jlla! -· . __ 11tudy instead of four, a pro-years." · •_i ,.._ -.. · gi"am more and more U.S., · i., __ _rrledical schools are adopting. Oth~r s t u d. en t s echo ~~ To 'do lhe course in three McCoys ~mplaints. The mos~ ~· th •··ddin .iA ..... A common is-that there's too ~.,1,,r;-Yeaz:s, e ~ , i.UUl,;~rs are .. to 1 _ , . .j litU , _ going to school 12 months of f!lUCi1 1 eanJ, ~ •. 00 e ~:; .. We year instead of nine. t1.tn~;, 'a.~: nq . t~e. t o ~l . t-tany includllig McCoy are assnTillate . it , pr put it all • ' '' li~Wni "that they wou)d Prefer 1ogether. ' · · .· . . i·~·1-~the .vaca.ti()Jls to· the early 1 • 10 1Jraduation. " --- NEW! CARTRIDGE PROJECTOR ' t -~ . ' . Mdl. 469Z 124~ OHL.V 2 ~.~Y' _-only· ' '. .-3..p()WER SPORTS"GrASSES I ~ t . A SENIQR student surveyed the claM oi '751 wbo are DOW (,.,., , "Yi:>U HAVE 00 time ~o 3.lmost ·liallwQy thrpugll '~e I ~ .. '.iii'ut things together ..in the three-year program, ,en . t~ir "" Atl.ree·year program,,. ~~4.: , attuuaes toward tbe ;ecfucat1on .... ·McCoy~. A strappiog' 6-3, .225--.-~ey lJ~ gJ!t,!lng. , . . .1 , f~,.f)Qunder who play~ center ['%t , ·,. t?ut (lf· ',.lM; :,lud~~s1: • ~ ,,,..."the Kansas Jayhawka in .f09t·"-'. reP~ed' .. tif.lho&e~ . .,10,t .pe i:cent ·(/°'t:'.ha!l's'Orange Bowl focrt Yeftrs had".° a 'IOWE!r 'o.ptn10h ' of the --ago. "Everything cnmes so medical school t,ban,whcn they fa st. There's something new started l 1h' yean ·ago. ~ -~ery day. It's a feat just three ·most common com· to keip. )iQUr. 'heid aboVe plaints aU _had .tO deal .with ~~r.i'"v.·ater." · time: •not.1:tJl!lllg_h ·;t,ime '. to I ... •McCoy is no strabger lo ' as!il!fllla(e ' m a ' er l a l i . in· a · ·;,· .. · ' ' .· · { Bell & Howe(flll Dvol-8 corrridge prorecto~ lectures mul11· ~iif go everywhere· wifh you! 2 88' Q ,. mo1100. zoorn len s. o utomo11c t hreoding,.•u,es,cortridges in Lightweight, Mnall, easy 10 I t~ 5 0.~l00;-200;.400-ft . s11es Forwdrd, shll. reverse con1rol. , corry aT011nd.Caseirn:l1.10ed., • . f.e'a~,;.:""Slw • 11 _ ..,_.~ ..,. ,f~:::JN;a;at,, . . . ·~ ,,._, J: ._......, ,,,_ .<, " W;<-...,... &. I , ~ $C >-,wtl ,# rdir' 14 ONLY! . ' • 11 t:d hard work. H,e played varsify suf[1~ent ttme for ~al ~ ,.,~·1,feotball for three . seasons pursu1t8, and. r¥l.l enough tlme oi;;4.)!, ' ~ile making exccllc!Ji grades for re.sear~. . · ";""111 a major reputed to.·be one ·Nearly ,~. 1a~ their . ' ~. _ . _..;,;:_~:.'i~~r~~ &:i.tJ.W,,...i.. .. i TI ::ee•l#'li . A A ii WW 'Sr, r of the toughest at KU, elec· cjl~t!SfacU6'>, · iyili: directly N-!trical eng~ring. He also caused by the three-year pfo- . )leld the school's bighe5t gfani .. Three i>u/.. of .{our s&.1~ ; 1~:. ~ademic award, , they· wanted more~ 1 vl!icatlori ~ ~(;; : But he has encountered in· , time.) · ' . . . , .. -Plwne Call Breaks • .... iO':> .. ::::·Fil m M~gaz ine Hab it I •• ·· By ERMA BOMBEOc r · ---- 1 ~""). A lot of women ha~c asked Ar ' .. •~m'hbw I kicked the movie .. WIT'S ~~lvagazinc ht\bit. ~!..,;; · Funny you should ask th8l END • --.becaute last week, just to . ' ' ~ BATmYOl!ERAnD GAPsUPER8 ,3311 With ~uiclt fl.ti, l •to• l '10_,m I•.,•· pl1tol 9rlp with foetoa• ~ttr C01'1Wli~ loqdmg. ft 0,,-olf tiotttfy swITT:h. . ' prove somethi~g tp mysel f l ; ·2 ONLY·! 1----m.ippose, I walked right doy,·n Not, only' wa•' l s.\.."'ding . 8 -· the aisle" lo l~e ru'.permarket .,.... '\1-----·IClll""'""'•-.. ••ICl"ktJG.~~-- DUAL·BMOVIE PROJECTOR ~ 7500 ' r For regular or .super 8 movie film. Operates; forward, still qn d reve rse and includes zoom lens. Motdt14&Ll 2 ONLY ! ' ~-• •f:...h -· ?I -.-.,..,..:;r ... -. .._. ........... .. DUAL 8 MOVIE PROJECTOR . 1111Mr 8·1ype film , Zoorn · lens, slow ol"ld mulh·mo- tion, oulomotic threod· Use' either stondord or 19 ... ting. ropld rewind. , , t i ONLY I ~i->W'~~._,,,. J ;«:.'A~~ ... ..:.::a.,~ •j • •• ._ M !ttor T•l•p\ofo i a lfghfwe19ht, COl'll• 'p1 ct, FS.• ind N.O. filt.r for corr•C· 11on to f.11_. T .-.ount flh mOit cem· 1r1a with 1d1pt•rs, C11• Ii LS. ·~1~.'lJ:A; ;1.-~ ·1 ;loJW"!in .. 1rrlr1.r--;wc:m·1 HAN I MEX · MICRO STROBE Comp•'' 1lt1, 9uide numb1r 21 @I ), ASA2S . Built in NICAO b1ll•ri11, ~ color (Orfl ,!td rtch••91 r. Bl•t incl ud· ji, "· t'~;,.tflat led me to the racks of bupdle O,f money, ' I . \Yas . • . ~.Rlagazines and just stood · vicariously involved jp: tb:e ;m-------""'--11111-""' .... ~~-:z. ........... , . . ;u.· -~~ ... -.. , ..................... __ _ .., .. ~ ... ~here for a minu.te looking. probielnS of ·every star lo ,.. ~ .. · They were all there-· ... Liz Hollywood.'.' "and Richard, Nafalie and .BQb At a gathering of editots "'l>"J: · · Patt y and .iohn · · · one nighf, my dinner ~riner : ou•,.·Jackie and Ari and or course was quoting. Norman Couslris, hf.n~Dino and Kathy. lamenting the fact that hls ',','1" • And e v • n wh•." 1· sa\v F b ·-.. i:; ,, or es suus~r1ptlon was ex- .-;.itka picture or' Chad Ever1'tl plring and confes.!ling he never -In sun g I a s s e s u•lth O\l'ned a 'TV set ·because it I Bell & l:lowell 459A ,4. lltfl 50 ~~~4~0 ~ •. ~~~l!~,· .. ~fo 400 fl, ,,,1 to 1111. Aul,~ thre1dlng, 111!0 11wind, forwerd, 1till & ••v1r11. "· ' 2 ONLY! ' .. . a-headline that tease .d · is . a _ cultural wasteland. As j . --CllAD'S ,TAILOR SAYS. ''I he tunied to , me for af·lfJ!'r-•""' . CAN PROVE CHAD NEVER ftrTnatlorl, i: ctia~ged, "Then 1 .8~ '\V ORE A P ATER N t T y I suppose yoa don'.t. care thatl>o••-"""-'""'"l\'11!"!';':"'."?,1!;";"!'!;'1 ~·~~UIT." I ··squared m Y Debbie ia . .leaV\ng:.Harry.',' " ·• shou ldeis and pushed on M. he•edgea away, my h"•· •• 1;,toward produce. '""' band . said,· ."You __ need help ,,. '· J1 _wasn't .alwa ys that ~Y · with your problem. Call.~ Movie ma 11:azines were ruining one who is a former add1Ct. 11 ;;;;t;.y life. 1 had developed a "I bayp no Probh:m, I said, ..: hypnotic tasclnaUon ab.out \u\.J.:khew.,irMny~·lleart that ,,.,:<!l hem that drove me crazy. the tlay.'l sne~ked lnfu a beau· ~;;·1~.I use~ to cruise by them. ty shop to read, HOW DORIS J3"-'•'.see a headline, ·ntE NlGljT DAY KNEW SHt w· 1' S >--CUC ILLE BALL ORDERED· FlGH'MN\l MIDDLE •AGE llER SON OUT OF Tl!E : '. !She ! uno ·a Wrinkle in .ber ~--nqusE; and go bananas. knte .S(>CIC), t 11ttst to; J>r.e•k r"'), µtter' Jn the car I'd \'P~: the . m~v~e magazin~ habit. 'His maUress was on f1re.r Yes'terday· I saw John-John ti-''~ t b I v • I ' ffl~.: ,l swore nev,er o •.. Kenne<tt / on a C(lver and .a unothcr one and then would headline that blared JOHN- ·' ' Koc another grabber, KATHY JOHN HAS SEX cHANGE. •"""~ LENNON TEI.LS 1{ E n J ran to· t}le phone to call ~· .. :SISTERS \VliERE TO GET 11 former magaiine addict. OFF! 'They were <>n the Her·volce wa, like a sedative. ,,,(,,:. subway at the ttmc.) "You kno...,: th"at when you .. ~~ • • .. . .. KEYSTONE 770 StlDE PROJECTOR 33 8~ ~-"'"'' ~ontrol lorwCPld ood ••"'•I~ 1w1!ch11. 5~n,"" ~" rokir ronert.,\ !ft~• ond 500 wot! briU:on<• tor b"9h1~1t, rloor11I 1Hd1· prol•t1f9~. Two mo to" lo• roolin9 Ono:! rycli09, ftf,(,~nl, lu•b•0 -I bl""'" rool:niJ Mkro fo(~'i"q (ft~h"I Autph Jtl0"Y populor ro'"'Y 1100 1hd11 o• ,1r-a1;!•! 140\ 1lide "oY w•'""" a••d .ir.c~ locidt•1. \JL oppro•td Kt~· •+a~• •hu;;h! 1111y •niluoltd. I • ·-- *Cartridge loading *dual projector f dual cartridge movie projector ONLY 5~11 • 0 J(l'f' ;p ____ ,.. ....... __ _..._ • ~ ~ !. I· r •"·· 'T h e r e w e r c m o '' i f open the magUJ.ne )'tlU ,ere ttf~1 "lnagazines tucked under evr ry goin6 to rind he it · golbg ";,.· pillow in the house, in evt~y through puberty, doi\'t yout " "2_· ··~andb11g nn"d Mat ~ket, i n' j'Thanks,•• t said breath.Ing :-2200 HARBOR BL VD . .;~;::r 0:~ COST A MESA, Harbor the car ond on every shelf. coslly, "t needed that." I I.I DAILY Pl l.0:.:.T ----~--'Scc'.c°":.:':.:''_:°'"-"'°""=_:2;.cl•:..;_1 •....:.73 , Stewart Brightens Up Some _Fac.~s WI.,,,, ~1J U.l SON MOH 4JU.f!M 'Jiddler 13 onm. =' RPof' 'ooo- T\lf ~,,Si 'l I..... TOrol w, I OO!l .... ~= .. ~ cu~·'~''I' aJUlll ...... - IOn4 IN 70 M mllOf'MONK IOUHO --(f!llO ... UYl7,.AOM.T U.T-SUN •ca-t.u.7111 By mo~tAS PAIMER Of .. Oall'r ...... ll•ff Faces camt to Orange County last 'A'ttk. but it "'as Rod S1ewan that the glittering rro"·d had come to see. Bcsheathed in yellow pants WK DAYS·9:15 SAT-SUN-MON 4:05-9:30 and nutte:rlng ralnbow blouse. 1opped with his bual'lel-«· feathers halr and awinging his mike slan<I llke a cane, the v.1afer-thin popula r English rock slnger pranttd onto the stage \\'edne!day night at the Anaheim Con\'ention Ct.'f\ter. Thr music that follov.·ed ne\'er faltered c.s the agile singt'r "'llh lhe voice that sounds like It has been throu~h a blenf'ler tore into ''It's All Q\·er No"··' nod C<lvert.-d most all or his best materi<il: "Cut Across Shorty" frqfll the Gnsollne Allev nit-um, •·rm Losing You." ·"Angel." ''Lo.it Paraguayos" . _ .. SUC11 A HIGH pe.reenlage of Stewart's and Faces' material Is of except ional qualitY that they CM and do ties are not to be C'Ompared fill an evening wiUI uniformly with, say. Elton John's, be well-known bits. dots his share of leaping and The anxious Stewart slrlngs lighting on p I a l f o r m s . his songs together ln modified swishing acrou grand piancs medltty faMlon _ that is, the and streaking through a bat- nwnbers are not abbreviated, tery of instruments and an but he hardly takes a hrea th annada of amplifiers. bet~'een them. HE APPEARS in a likimpy So the hits kept <m coming; white knit tank shirt after ''Every Picture TeJls a Story,·· a guitar lead·in to "Amazing ''Maggie ~fay," and "You Grace" v.'ith candle in hand, Wear Tt Wtll" '\'ere in obvious t eas ing energetically presented and facetiousness. For the most soundly appreciated. part his act is q u i t e FACES, A TRULY talented sincere if son1etimes a little rock 'n' roll band, provides com placent from having gone a perlect frame for Stewart's through the same motions for singing. with KeMy Jonea' so many shows in so many r eUable drumming, I a n tours. A1cLagen 's piano innovations But he lives up to his and the bass of T e t s u reputation as the good-time Yamauchi. rock star, smiling and bounc- ma~ •H·lllf1 r wi..,. ,...... , lie!., M~ I ..... lil04:'°41Jf But ii is Roruiie Lane whose ing like a child. e!lthusiastic style of good blues and ex-while offering only an oc- cellenl rock. le.ad g u I tar ca~onal hint that he might SUN DAY playing is u distinctive as be putting someone on. Stewart's voice. Technically. the night was Lane. in colorful collage nearly pe rfect, but it should I --·--- BOTH IN 70 M AND STEREOPHONIC SOUND Jt:.':•t: "Manof bMancha· --!El• WK DAYS ONLY 7 P.M. SAT-SUN-MON Ki.ds Like To 1'45•7 = 10 QNEMALANO .... ~ NIGHT ONLY jumpsui WI.th cigarette on noLhiYe been 9uile so. 111e his lip, did a Jong, \\·hining volume was quite eararum. solo of adept. fuzzy six·string pun cturing throughout. and AT 8 30 picking that 1,1•as a memorabl~ v•hile extreme volume is call- ', feature o( the perforinancc. cd for and effective on finales. like Sam Cooke's "Twistin' Though stewarrs stage an-the Night Away" and other MAJ 0 R intense nun1bc rs, the impact Mason Guests is missin11: "'hen 200 decibels is the rule and not the ex- STU DI o, HOLLYWOOD (UPI ) ception. simoil Oakland and Joanna Ringing in one's ears, even Barnes have been signed to jf one did sit up front, real- FEATU RE guest star in "The case of the I}" should desist at least by 24 Ominous Oath" episode of hours after any concert's en4. "The Ne\\' Perry Mason.'' After most songs, the frantic starring Monte Markham and applause by contrast sounded p REVIEW 11.::....__ Sharo_n Acke_r. _like_it was_coming_from a JEREMY Will PLAY .BEFORE & AFTER PREVIEW SOll!h Coast Plaza II IAll ttt" IWl. AT PISTOl • j.4f.)JJ! It's about the first time you fall in love. A k Andy 111•LllAttOlll'l'D .• •JS-7MI -~s ---~~-~~~~~~~~I TODAY'S CIDSS·WORD PUZZLI 'J ,, eremyUmtedA•HSls ACROSS 1 Domicile 8 Shoot: slang 11 o"uobuted cards 16 Conce•I 21 Astonish '2 Latin coun!<V '3 Esco•! 24 Auilt•lty 25 Ear1h 9odde9S 16 You and me '27 Thre11 ioed ~1011\ 28 lndetm•t• rcinod JO Comp;t$1 poon\ 31 Digrt1ln 31 Com11•nv ablJ•. 3J Pesty 1n~tr.1 35 Oomesuc 37 Sm~ll par\•~le~ 39 5,.d.t!" 41 Tr~tl.11onal 4J !l<'ho1<1' "-' Vene•a11 11., Ptddl 48 Poe!•C '·lJefotr " 49 G•etJv St T~lenr seeker !:12 J11ng1e 53 Rom1n b•oni• !>4 Malay 1lo11t !:>!:> R.>l'!u•e !!6 l11r1oca!e (>8 N~:ulv 61 Beas! 67 Surf.trrrl 63 Chros\11l a1 ftl Srop 61:1 fio111 v 69 Gtomeuic 1olids 10 Amu5emenl 11 ResUess de11re 72 Showy !lowtr ·13 Comoletely 11 Indian domlcile 7!:> Femall! rabbit 76 Seducuve sylph 77 An111hemetlz1 7a Mcst beeu1i!ul 79 G•eelt people 80 R.emov• wh•s~e•3 81 Most un1>leasant 8:? Wro11tn giant 85 M11an 86 Sera')ho 87 Building anne• 90 Mend 91 Roiches across 91 tH01 ch111ac1er 93 Greek goddess 94 Ad1u~t 'i5 Vt11•l~n1 96 Someihonn ~r•cucul;n 'J I A11emP'! !t8 l'er1es1111 tionon• <19 Arcumulatr 1(1() Al<Clmns oU 101 00/PS 102 OnrP more' 104 p,1111•n 10~ Ag·t~le 1116 Ph<hopme uee 109 tvr1on hNoone I to A$ftl1Dge I! 1 A1111le ce111e1 112 MJ~~ l•te 115 R11concile 117 Atlutlspeed 118 Jus11c11 goode5s 119 Dangerous 1]1 Fo•k 1i11• \22 Physician 124 Anic 1oom 127 S1cond·l'l1nd 128 0 1pnii,ong 129 Sc111 note 130 Prirn ing meawre 131 Thia: French 132 Provided 133 l'tusing word 134 E11yp1hm 10~11 135 On11: Scotch 136 Dorec\ 133 At no tome 140 Nom1nat11s 142 No! suitable 144 T1op•ca! ••h 145 B•aid 146 Stysound 141 Slodes DOWN 1 Doc~~· '} flfll game 3 O~t of bed 4 Fry 5 Overheid tra•ns 6 Read r1pitlly 7 Cool 8 Jeoanese mile 9 Wo!lhouna 10 Falsehood 11 Doubtful 12 Accom111nv 13 [•clam1t<0n 14 ll11ss Horne 15 Roy11,n1l1111 16 Gilt 17 L1ri11 18 lnspettor gener1I 19 T11ct1bl1 20 Weari awtv 34"\'imtol11!1 35 Simple!on 36 A111m tr\b1 38 "-· deum" 40 Qkl1llom1 clty ·42 Sc•ndln•vitn 45 Remedy 1mounl 47 CrutiHx 50 C1Mile S11t1 51 8u1irle1s decline 52 River bank s• llegan1 55 lntelltt l S6 luh1n poet 57 Specoal+11 58 Cau111c !:i~ Apollo'1mo1her 60 Arom1t1c i;pic1 61 Tree 11unks 62 B~l;ince 04 Be 1ull1n b5 War god 66 Printing tetm 68 Fr1n1v 69 Bend 70 Ea!lhQUlkt 72 Coo~ing clot~ 73 Type metals 74 Shopp1ng ftllowances 76 Begin: 2 wd1. 71 Animal's 78 Incursion 79 Swee!me~r 80 Eden intruder al Room dividers 82 Zodi1c 1ign 83 Loki'• d1ugh111 84 S1cred bu~ 85 Aulo "••tr•" 86 Moun11inou1 87 Other 88 Jump 89 Otpotitt 91 Cu11ed 92 Glo11v 93 J1cob'1 ton 95 A•p111tion 96 M1ddening 97 For•i11n 99 Ed!nbufgh 1111n 100 Arl11 101 Pro1Jdw11k 103 Rom;inlic ''F1!11" 104 Otll'Ofitor1 10!:> Thus 106 Cu11oms dilly 1(11 Rep•ove 108 Commo11on 110 Prle1\ty garmenu 111 Lu1ch llZ Annlln•e:;e me.11u1e 113 rrightened 114 Docirines 116 0111uc1 \171Vcomm11rcillll 118 M asculine u!le l1bbr I 1:10 S1y111h: sling 123 Cuchul1inn'1 wife 125 Oi111n1 126 Form11r 134 Mo101 cotch 137 And: Lalin 139 Odin's brother 141 Gr11ek 1et1er 143 ,,,USIC not• l 11' II II 21 ijl-Wll J! · SllRTS IT DIJSI • llSO "IPtlll FDOLS" P.6. SOUTH COIST 2 I Cll!MIUID wmom 1110 uo SIL I SUI, IMllll. l:Jt.U54:41·Ul-7:41-!:15 whlte-aloved QPera audience of 200. THOUGH AUDrENCE rta~ lion Wtu wild It usually Is at rock concerts, and Stewart gave the impression or. an idol somewhat skeptical of why the audience was not reacting with that r i n a I measure o f uncontrolled passion. However, he finally got the group into it, forcing th e m into frenzy by waiting through JO minutes of standing and jumping ovation before con- senting to two enoores. The band ripped into "Feels So ~" and finished with a Soft (for Facest pleasing, poetic arrangement of John Lennon's "Jealous Guy." But tbe full-house cro"·d had been in near-panic when afte r above five minutes of pan- damorllous clapping a n d screaming the stage lights were still oft. 'The convention center was on ..lire as tb0.Y$ands of un- fulfilled fan s ·lit Up rnd lif up matches, presumably to show Faces the y,·ay back lo the stage. AFTER A handful had given up and begun to trickle out. though, the colorful spots and fJashing light bars came alive and lighted the scene li ke the outside of a theater on opening night. The thunderous stomping , sparkler waving a n d oc- CP.sional fire-cra cker throwing had paid of( and Stewart, garbed again like a peacock and with. a sly grin on his face. returned. "Had a nice night?" he asked. They had. '! .. easily the best movi'e so far this Year''· -S1epr.en Fn•~er • NEW YOR K TIMES · EXCLUSIVE ORANGE COUNIY ENGAGEMENT fflfilY, iAIMRIAY i llDAYI 8 18118 161 11 ' Ill " ,, '" , . ' . f.,c,-t-~+--t~+--t~-ti · • • 1111 IBl :tj II» . ,. • " • .~ '" ~." • ..i;,,,.,ri, •• ri-.i.., • .-1....:.+-f--l--t.,f.,.:-+-+--+-+--+~ Ill lh 1 1r-·l-..j-..J..-l---l:,",,+-J--J.-t--l".'i!:-~*'"'~--11.1h"'c.-h,,r;,+- .0 Ill; Ill M Come to the spookl111, siho1Ule1t pl•c• In South•m C1Hfornl• when Kno11 ·1 la completely tr•n•formed to c1111e the motl heunled of H1llow1en1 thtt you will r1er exptrlencel See ... The Phantom ol the Oper• In th• Calleo Seloonl The bizarre, tpooky antics In the Heunl9d Sh•ck! Spooklacul1r Fireworks ind LIVE MONSTERS lhrougtt. outtt.e enlire fog-shrouded l1rml Aide ••• Th• Ghottw1y Expr1ss Into ttte dark depth• of the eerthl like a fvn4inCllint plunge lhrough the Davi!'• workshop In Satan's Sawmill! Plual Spacl1I Trick or Tr11l 1nd run 'n g1me1 lor youngsters from 3to11 ye1r1! Supli7 Spooky Spacial 6 Big Hours on Fri. & Sal.I 6 p.m. to Midnight! Enjoy UNLIMITED u .. of 111 Knott'• tlcket9d 1ttracllona throughout thllling Ghost Town, "'I• Fl•••• Vlll•a• and btwltchlng Oypay C1mpl tncludlng ..• Seymour In the John Weyne "H1unted" - Th111re1 scary run In the H1unled Sh1ckl Dunk the Mon11w ••cff9"Mnll Plue ••• Wllthff CKltllftO, Bat9 1c:reecn ngend orpHI __..,ng!I "Spooky" ·1 c ........ KNDTT'S BERRY FARM SEE CLASSIFIED SECTION FOR ANSWERS ! S•l.·S.,. . .Mlfl. 0 ..... S:U ,,m. Tlltl..-Prl. 0-''II 11.m. SHOW AT lllll 1 IMDll 11 MB • '·-~·' t!L....onSt. 52~1526 ••~Dl .. •1-io. 1 Coltltlr• .. °''·-· •ll ••.S•s ,....._,""'"~ Ml ANDltwl MAIY PO,PINS,.. SNOWIALL IXPlll5111l , er ,~ct! ~i: •• wbr gOn mo orr. ' Sunday, Oc.tobtr 21 , lfi7l OAILV PILOT 8_~ ~el;lgull: A 'Brief Encounter' for Birds ~''Jonalhan Livingston : gull''C. Is finally on the 1<•ner !p monlbl •I hard t:!;ai', 1lemp&arnental bird rs and $1.S mUlion. lt is e creation of Hall Bartlett, produCer-dlrector who sajd '*'Id be done w h e n erybody else said no, and respect his dedication and ~ .. fallb. It is not my cup birdseed. ~!~ write a comic review or onathan Livingston seagull" • ,Ost people are prono.unci.ng ... Jonathan Livingston · • gel..'..!.-as-U1oogh-the-bl rd To me. It comes oft u 10W kind of bybrid cros!I between a Na~ ~Geographic nature study and. a Jlod McXuen poem, aD<l ioodnc/'S Jcnows there -are audleoees for both genres, thoug9 hardly com- posed ot serious c~~. The movie verslon.:Of' •)~tban" will no more Iie·\'-in6VJe for criUcs than the~~sguls- ed philosop6y ~ 1:XXlk' to r children was • a wOrk for literary sno.be. Does anyt>ody know a seagull with a type\vriter? ' IT JSN"T EAS,Y; !or me to seriously consider a movie about s·eag;U lls with pretensions of grandeur falling in love to Neil Diamond songs. Thore's a nice opening :iho.t of blue sky. fo!Iowed by the power and roar of the surf that is Jonathan's domain, The camera actually seems,.to·soar \ as if it was a gull arid the film it captuf'e!I. is a series . of imp:essions ruiss'ng__au_oss__ fly at rught and see the world to Seagyll Heaven w~~ he --r-~ _!___I . he-uvesln. -----w!ftr31'el°peCted "Old Sf!a'gull ' ol fl'etodom .'' Th~re nre e\en shot"' t\,I Jonathan falling in love lo JtU$hy nlUSJl', wlth u quick cut to wa ter just a ~ the blrd.s rush into each other's wings in the bi~ clinches. F11ntl!y ruling. and all that. The final Se<:'lion uf the film lias Jonathan flying honte to bring love and hannony and the New Testament to the i::arh:ige dump. l!e is no11· :1 Jesus figure. repudiating the elders antl healinf.! the lame. bringing dead ~ulls back to lilc v:hcn thev ha1·e hl'ad-on collisions \\'ith a rock . ('1f"letcher Seagull. get up and fly!"l It has to be seen to erBperie Luneh • Dinner Late Supper Coelrtalb • Wine• QP[N DAlLV l t:OO A..M M(ln.-Th,.ol'ld ~O\lgr'1 r .. ,, ~di ("\Al.I s~"'N9PM Tel . 556-1225 _._,., .. ~ ..... °"' .. _ ......... be believed. 1------ "\\'e can trv to sec th(' good in every°one -that's what life is all about." says Jonathan. narrowly escaping the . mob violence of !he seagull extras, and they all end up in a color galaxy of paper .....stars tb.aL looks like Lord & Taylor at Christmas. SPECIAL CHiLDREN'S MATINEE er~ Jewish) and that is ex- 7.11\ctly what I expect most :1 critics will do. This is pro- ~bly not a movie that should t!# ri!yiewed, by anything but ijf)agulls. Bu~ so much honest wbrk arid. ·good intention has g6ne into the making of the movie that I hope it pays off. ffie Te~ma or~ seeguH I ~ye, guru named Chang, like John .Jonathan 1_s no ordinary FOR TIJRNING his back on Gielgud in "Losl 11ot"iwn." ~;;;;;;;;;~~;:;;~~,;;;;;;;;~1~~~i!~:;;~~~~~ ~1(<1, H£t h~s ideals., The flock the traditions of his flock, he and a spiritual lady seagull Ii thmks bes off his rocker is banished forever and we named r-.itaureen, and the because he wants to fly above come to the center section movie turns into a kind of the fog and over the rainbow, of the film in which the '"Brief Encounter" for birds, like Dorothy on her way to message seems to be as Jonathan heads home with SATURDAY-SUNDAY-MONDAY :'.'i'.;~""HHOW-AlL SEATs-$1-;oo- ... Khumble radiant }..r. terrific movie. .. niLLY ' ' • ' Oz. to a 'life that's better "Loneliness i1nproves .vour than just scavenging day to mind and..is gQOd for you." ·---------·---II "!:N[Ol \l Clllltl'l'IA CO Al>ORATIOl\I 0 f0UNT41N VAllff ,,,~.c~I ~.ooo;;;;:;;,;;;-;;;-,;;, ~Q "Day Of Tk Joc.kal" (PG) 3•MI • t1ot l'.M, .. , ... 'H Tiffie (PGI 2:00 • •:lJ'. 1t1• ' day for garbage. "There's a Without the protection of hi s world out there," says friends, he's attacked by a Jonathan, "and it can ctrange hawk and left to converse with 1 your life." The old gulls laugh horses, trek across desert at his d(eams. his family wastelands and llee lightning \Vanis to see bi1n become a flashes on a rear-s creen pro- Jeadcr of his own flock one jection. day. Dying in the~snow_ to vtolio ''We were meant to live niusic, Jonathan is transported this \Vay, accept it," says his by bird ·angels left over from , father. But Jonathan watches an old Alfred Hltchcock set ,,_ thousands of gulls desc:end l'"°iiiiiiiii;jiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~iiiiiiiiS,,[ upon a garbage dump. tearing .. each other apart with their t ·•. ,' ',' . 0 ,. beaks, and he 's dfsguste4. He wants to roll and loop and ~pin and dive for fish and ----------11 U . .Z., CITV ANCI SOUTH COAST CINEMA5-TUl!SD.Z.Y Sk lL.Z.OIES ANO GOl.DEN AOEll:Sl-OPlff 'Tit. J:IO ~.Ill. FIRST RUN P'o1I Wl11f11ld -< , It"-''' Prfcn ... I ,..,.'llN ,, WOftD&ll:I OF t THf: Wl;.St" lu-•tl72 .~ Tiit Dlym,ic1 ""! "VfSIO"'I 01" · elot4T" ,A ll:lctl, Wlfl'!Mr11 'ff "WHl!N LECllNDS 01&" llolll In co10r1 ,., ,. SHE'S THE FEMALEJAMES BD"ND ' ~ -"; IXCLUllVI INOAOIMINT ' Nearly Everyon~ Listens to La11ders Of "SOUNDER" ,, ''Gordon's War'' IRJ .... "Le9end Of Hen House" IR I New York Crltiu Awards - Bait Plctur•, Oirectot, Scr••~p!ov & B11t Actre u -* * Liv Ullman * * I: WIHer -h!t P'lctwro - Y.-lca Fl1111 hstl,al - Caitherlne Dtneuvt in ' Bd~ J d£ OUR .tJES.1 181l~ Newport Costa' Mesa S48-1SS2 Exc1 .. us1vE: The Biggest Family Show in Orange County ·~:·plu~ · Johnny Whita~tr Celeste Holm "TOM SAWYER" Cont. Sot., Su11,. Mo ... 2 p111 -,. ' -..... 7 & 10:J4 ALLEN FUNTS "WHAT DO YOU SAY TO A NAKED LADY?" 9:14 p.m. ---------- S11ndoy Ma'I"" • Coll ThMtfa for Schad11l1 "GORDON'S WAR" (RI ... STADIUM · 2 :1~ ..... :!:l.ffi.'"t."l':!J=· "LENGEN 0, HILL HOUSl .. -fPGI toen1ergesi nce "I.AST TANGO IN PARIS" IX! ... "WHAT 00 YOU SAV TO A NAK£0 l.AOV?" (Xl "HEAfY TRAFFIC" CXI . ·~ ",MY•A llECKINRIDGili" IXI Cecil B.DeMille µ::==::; founded Hollyv.·ood:' -w:.1Y101<1 sco'TT, ,,., .-.-·-·-· ,...,.... .. _,._ ... -.... -..... -... -"' ....... ~ ... -., ..... " ..... __ _ ,,_._...,"" "A Sea For Yourself" Ir Hol JtpMll 2 Betty Boop Cartoons 7:30. & 9:30 Ectch En11!119 * FREE SURFBOARDS! 0111 Gl•H l4Wfr'f Eoch W..ti: Free-Co1jlo11 '& 0.falli At Th.atr1 FAMILY TWIN CINEMA ' vo• •••lo' •• '111 " •t I t, '''" , ~I " ~ ''''"~"'"-'"""'""·"' 0,.11 ,:0 WtlllclflV'I Sw •• Su11. Con!lnuau• 12 Noon CINE-MA I Held 0¥erl "Camelot" tGl ... "FINIAN'S RAINIOW" IG J CINEMA II "MARY POP'P1NS" !GI '"' "SNOWIALL EXP'RESS" IGI SPECIAL MATINEE Moaday -Oct. 22ttd Doa,.·o,.,. 12· Heo" -~~~~ W'oNQ"" ' .JM'!,. . ~-·· ~""""' ·-r" . . "" ... -.......... .,. .~-: . ~ v.r.~ ,.....,.,,.,..... Al._ .... , ....... ~ E.B. Yffe'• Charlotte's Web Its scrumddilyumptiousl 40 YEARS AHEAD OF ITS TIME! CARTOON "KLONDIKE KID" "Fantasia" is an un· paralleled masterpiece. and stands as one of the alt·fime great classics; ii blends fantastic ani- mation and truly magni- ficent music into a realm of expression of total involvement. Originally released in 1940, "Fan. tasia" took over 4 years and 1000 people to make. More 'than 60 animators were used, under lhe guidance of 30 artists, and a milljon separate drawings were used in "F antasia". ''Fa n- lasi<'l" is at Edwards Newporl Cin ema Tneatre one week only, and in its original and uncut version. If is the ullimale in visual en- chantment and listening pleasure! THE MOST IEAUTlfUl THEATRE IN THE WHOLE WORLD • HELD OVER MUST IND TUISDAY OCTOBER 23 TO MAK! ROOM FOR "W!STWORLD" Starting Wed., Oct. 24th . ' ,; B JO DllLV PILOT Su"(lay, OttoOtr 21. 111)7) • ·-~ 32 OL QUART SIZE Listerine ANTISEPTIC "Kills Germs by the Millions!" 1.39 20 OZ. SIZE . DOW .... MIYDAY 89< . lOW NIU . 100% Polyester b-Order sc reen pr in t tops in attract ive colo 1 comb inatiGn S. Long sleeves with two button barrel cutfs. Button lront.·Sizes S·M·l. 6.44 .... 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Ostensibly, Jackson, whose two doubles drove in the first two A's runs and who scored 4>e 1hlrd one, did not ask owner Charles 0. Finley abcMJt tl>at. Hunter, however, Wll Oattered. •·u J can 1et 10 Mr. Finley belor• he does:.'' utd Hunter, noddin« at the A'• Uogglng outtieldtr, ''maybe I can." Jacbon wu the only Oakland regular to take battinc practice with the ttservu sa....say ·1nd It paid on bancbomtl~ with ~ doubles and a alnile that g.ve U.. A's jJtl> vital victory. . .. l"needed. tt, because I Wf'S falling asleep at · the plate for the last couple of weeks " be l&ld. "It td t good to be home again," Jackson added. "I fe1t more comfortable ln oar home park. I d.idn't reallie it until I 11.W It today. Ca!Uomia aunsb1ne and our fans ·• . • It was nJce to be home, believe me." Hunter left the aame in the el1hth Ott TV Te4a11 €"8a,.eJ 4 at 1:15 •tnAfftg 1Wben the-1Jitets ~red their only run. He was lifted iltter surrendering New Yark's fourth hit. "l wasn't ready to go out," he said. "1 was ready to stay in and make them hit it. But you can't be an in- • use· • ID 3~-1~ Vic.tory; Next Stop!.$outh Bend By GLENN WH11E qt 1119 ~11 l'lltll Stiff LOS ANGELES -Southern Cal seems tv have found Its offense but the defense continues to be vulnerable as the Trojans outdueled Oregon 31-10 Saturday af-. temoon before ~.Jr>li Coliseum football fans. · Thus the Trojara of coach JoM McKay set up the batUe ol. the unbeaten this Saturday v.•hen they invade Soutll Bend to take on Notre Dame, which obliterated • ' . Army, 12-3, ln its'flnal'tuneup for SC. MeKay said his Trojans are getting better every game following the triumph over Oregon, bu.t refused to elaborate on plans or thoughts about the ir,:icoming tre~ to South Bend. Against Oregon, USC r o 11 e d to 493 yards total offense with 253 via land ahd 240 through the air lanes. But Oregon found Troy's defense lacking and piled up 417 yards with 276 of that total coming on the passing arm -Bruins Scramble Past WSU, 24-13 of junior quarterback Herb Singleten, a Compton product. Oregon had outplaye<I SC much of the early going and bad two serious scoring bids die on missed field goals from the 24 and 29. Meanwhile, USC had scored on a.fourth down pass of 35 yards from Pat Haden to J.K. McKay and again on Danny Reece's 30-yard interception return to make it 14--0 with 3:07 left in the half. 1be Trojans chalked up a 17~ lead before Oregon got its only tOOchdown of the day with two seeoods to go before intermission, slicing the gap to 17·7. }{ov.·ever, ttie Webfoots v.·ere never able to get closer. Losing eoach Dick Enright said the two missed field gl)31S early was chleny Oregon's undoing. "It really hurt us when we wen t down the field l\nd mlss<d U>at ridiculously close field goal try. Then we did it all over again -that meant we went through them (SC) twice 81\d yet came away with nothing ,on tli'e sooreboard,'' Enright said. "I'm going to start kicking l\Je ball,". he added. dlvldual on this te11im. \'Ott ha\•e to Win every way yot.1 can." Saturday's wiey v.•as w1lh Jacbon's bat and the anni of )!unttr and lhe A's bullpen. Now they have 1o figw-e oot a way for today. Tbe A's triumph tied lbe best-of-KYen series at three 'Victories apiece and se.nt It Into a decisive seventh• tame today at 1:40 p.m. Leflhanders Jon Mlit.lack. of the Mets and Ken lloltzman of U>e A's, who have split two decisiort.s so far •• will clash in !bat one. Jackson ripped Tom Seaver for rbi doubles in the first and third Innings and Oakland pitcher .l\m "Catfish" Jhmler made the slim two-nm lead stand up u.nUI the eighth. The ace of Oakland's pitching staff. a 2l·game wtnner In each of the laat three seasons, slmply ott:rpowertd tbe Mets, limiting them 1to three ltlts wilil the eighth. Then. with one oot, Ken Boswelf balled for Seaver and lashed a sln~le to right. Oakland manager Dick Wilhams, think· ing Hunter might be tiring, hustled 10 the mound and decided to go to his bullpen. Williams called for 1e\t-Moder Darold Knov.'Jes aod \\1ayne Garrett greeted tum "''ith a single to center that sent Boswell to third. Felix Pa1illaq poked Knowles' nest pitch for a singto. to right , scoring Bosv.·eJI and stJlding Gw-rett to third. The A's escaped further damage. Holtzman and Patatlack faced each other in the fJrst game ol the Serl(S, \l'On by the A's 2-1 on a pair of Wlearned runs. r ln Game 4, PataUack pitched tw1>-hi~ ball for eight iMings and got credit for a &. I victory. SPOKANE, Wash. (AP) -UCLA put three t~ird-per!od touchdowns together, tY.'tJ in ·89 lebonds, as the Bruins rolled over Wa.!!hington State 24-13 Saturday in Pacifie-8 Conference football game. The Bruins led unly 3-0 at the half. Kermit Johnson, who set a· Bruins career rushing record at more than 2,000 y!i:rda, 3COred two touchdown.! on three-yar\l pllJt>gO!. in the> third period. Their only other score came late Jn the game when tailback.' Ken Grandberry plunged over from· a yard out. The run after toucbdoW}I fal\ed. One wsu~ drive ended when Andrew J.cnes-~1'ed at the Bruins one-yard hne. Fred MeNeill n)8de the ftrSt of. his two fumble recoveries . The Oregon roach was asked( to rom- pare USC with Michigan. which defeated Oregon 24-0 earlier tits year. Michigan i~ unbeaten and co-favored with Ohio State lo win a Rose Bowl bid and perhaps an eventual meeting with USC. OAKLAND'S DERON JOHNSON APPEARS TO LOSE HIS HEAD OVER BACKHAND CATCH Ill 2ND INNING. aiarlie Schuhmann, a reserve fullback, scored the third UCLA touchdown on a 54-yard, scamper that surprised and upset the WSUjleteme. _ The only "llCLA score ... llJtm first half came orl<.£fren Herreri'1~yird field goal arter the Bruilu were stopped at the Cougar's ayard line four minutes into the second quarter. The successful kick capped a 68-yard drive. UCLA, \\'hich boasted the nation's highest·scor- ing offense and leading rushing attack, had never before this year been held scoreless in lhe first period. The C.Ougars flpally !ICOred on a three· yard run by quarterback Oiarlle Peck Rams Seeking Sixth Straight Victory Today LOS ANGELES (AP) -Coach Chuck Knox of the Los Angeles Rams declares. "l'ni only worried about Green Bay," as he uses the san1e words, changes the titles and has one of two National Football League undefeated teams. "Green Bay has a fine aecoodary on defense and on offense they use play action passes, run at you and have a good kicking game," says Knox, who became head coach of the Rams this year after tours as an assistant at New York with the Jet.a and in Detr.oit with the Lions. The Packers come to Los Angeles today with a 2-1·2 record. The Rams stand s.<I. but Knox in typical styJe says. ''This ls our most Important game of the year beca~ we're playing it this week.'' Los Angeles stressed ball control through the first four games and then switched to an aerial att,ck with the John Hadl-t6:}iarold JackSon combine cllckl ng for f~Or (puchclowns and a 37-31 victory over Dallas. Ja.ckson caught ,eV""en passes for a total of 238 y41rds, most of them in the first hair. However, the Green Bay secondary might be tougher than the OaUas crew and the Pac kers also might put up a rurmlng attack that rivals: that of Los Angeles. John Brockington Is the only National Football League player to gain more than 1,000 yard1 ~ each ot ~Is first two seasonf. • The Packers also have one o( the beat field go.al kickers in Chester Marco! who has hit 10 of It an6 ICOl"ed 35 point!. His longest was 46 yards. A crowd ol about 80,000 iJ expected for the I o'clOC!k kickoff althoujh the game was no\ sold out soon enough to allow IOC!al television. lt will be on radio (KMP<;. 710). The Rams have problenu In their runnlac department with LAwrenet ~1cCutcheon, not expected to see ectk>n because of a pulled hamstrtng mu1ele. Tony Baker 1190 ha~n troubled wUh a shoulder injury su rtered last week again>! Dallas. If both can't play! Larry Smith and · Les JOICphM>n will a temate. Bitter Loss Hurts To the surprjse of more than 32,000 persons, the WSU defense stepped the nation's leading offensive team in the first baH and aDoy,•ed only ooe field goal -the poorest nrst-half showlng fcir U~ all yearr. _ I _ ..,....... OffenatVe errors idcludfrlg p i D:t fumbJes, spelled WSU's later doom. Four or the bobbles were pounced on ~ UCLA, three of them as the Cougars appeared headed for touchdowns. "11\ey are two different teams," Enright said. "USC bait better backs, wears yoll down ofienslvely. You see -backs running in and out all day and it doesn't seem lo majte any difference whether No. 28, 21 ot1'7•is in tbett. "However, Michigan.• has the better de!ense. It's defen sive line is about as good as you'll find anywhere. Inciden- tally, when we played Michigan, they didn't have their first te a 1n quarterback." .l J!id ~'f Throw Ba~ly, Sa)'S Seaver of 3-1 ·l ~ss Jo~ UCLA's premier ruruier. car· ried ~' times for 96 yards and broke the UCLA career scorinc record set nearly four decades ago. He had 1,900 total yruiJs coming into t~ i ame. ScbU~, replacing the injured Jim McAlister.:1 ~ IDS yards in 13 carries for ooe touchdown. Quarterbacks John Sciarra and 1'1ark Harmoa upt JO !he ground will) UCLA's wiahli>oe Attack and threw only five pisses !Qt 11 yards. UCLA 'a Pepper Rodgers commended the Cougars for being "well-prepared, tough." He said the victory despite the unexpectedly narrow margin, "counts as 'much as .if we bad won 59-13," an apparent refer:ence to the scor~ ing margin the Bruins accumulated one y,·eei; earlier against Stanford. Enright declined to tab a winner should use and ~1ichigan square .ofr ln the Rose Bowl. SC's backs were imposing Saturday. And so was Haden's throwing and the receiving of Lynn Swann. The latter caught five aerials fOf' 122 yards, in· eluding a 56-yard scoring beauty. Anthony Davia carried 18 times for 85 yards while Allen Carter chalked up 72. Rod McNeill piled up 70 yards ... all ln the last half.· tn all there were SI first downs, 910 yards tota1 offense and 31 oompletions for 60 passes thrown. OAKLAND (AP) -To1n Seaver's baseball season is over. "For me, it's opening day next year," said Seaver, who had a chance to close out the Oakland A's Saturday, but lost. The 1973 World Series iS now down lo one game, just like the past tY.'O cl,psslcs. after Oakland stepped the Ne\V York P.fets J.J in Game 6. Seaver, acknowledged by many as baseball's top pitcher, has had hard luck in this year's post-season com· petition. He1s given up l\vO runs in each ol the two games he's ~ur\ed in both the National League play-offs and the World Sertes. All he bas to show for his efforts is one victory, one J\o..decision and, OO'A', t\vo losses. 1'1 don 't kno\\' n'hy they don't score runs for me." Seaver said quietly in the solemn Meis' dressing room . "I just don't know why." "I didn't pitch badly," added !he hard- throy,•ing right-hander. "Just bad enough to lose." Saturday's problem for Seaver was that he had to face Reggie Jackson. Thorpe a Legend in Sports ,Indian Athlete Had Fantastic Ability Editor's Nott: Tl1t modern era sporU vista i1 provldina e1itert4i11· ment, quality 1tnd occasionally co11- tro~rsy on o scale 11ever before atkiined in the world of athletics. Yet sports of days gone by also Ii.ad Qreo:t mome1l!.s and star per· fornurs. Today 01tr look at those days focuses n Jim T/1orpe. James Francis Thorpe , generally conceded the title of greatest all·round athlete the world has ever known, was a phenomenon at any sport he trled. An Olympic Games decathlon and pentathJOn winner. All-Ameri can foot· ball player, professional football star, 'major league baseball playu, boxer. wrestler, swimmer, a golfer who JtOOrtd In the 70s, a bowler who rolled ln the fOOs , his versatility was exceeded by his fantastic abUity . Jim Thorpe was born ln a one-room cabin In Prague, Oka .• In 1888, one of twin boys. His father was hAll Irish and "half Indian, hrs mother a mixture Of F'rench and Indian. Al the 1912 Olymplc Games at Stockholm , Sweden. the" bushy·hDlred lndlan swamped the pick of the world '!! athletes· In the d~athlan and pmtAlhlon. He ac t a polnt ~otal that stood as a record for 20 years. The powerful, agUe athlele was so superior in running, hurdling, high jumping, p:>le vaulting and the \Veight events that he presented almost no contest. His marks in most or the events W&e exceeded later, but in the Going Back IN SPORTS early 1900s, nobody could come clo:ie to the fabled lndian. P.e came home from the Stockholm \\'a s knO\\n best ror his football skills. 'l'\vlce he '"'as selected an All· Ameri can by \Valler Camp after pel rorn1ing gridiron n1iracles for a little school in Central Pennsylvania kOO\\'Tl as Carlisle Indian Institute. Thorpe y,•as 19 when he sought to pursue a career as an electrician . J.le di scovered Ca rlisle had no course in electricil y and settled for one in tailoring. It was during a footbaU ga1ne bety,·een the tailoring class and the carpentering class that Thorpe's magn ificent athletic ability nrst was noticed. An assistant coach \\'as im· prcSsed w\lb Thorpe's blocking. run· nlng and kicking skills. He suggested that the young man report to Glenn Olympic Games a hero. One year S, Warner. the Carlisle football coach. later, In 1913, ~rpe's an1ateur sports • Thorpe "'all used sparingly In 1907. ":Orld bl ew up m his fact. 11 ~·11s his first year on the Carlisle varsity. disclosed that the spectacular Indian lie ~inally got his chan.ce al Franklin had pla)'t'd baseball lbree years Field in Pblladelphia 3. g a In J t earlier fo~ pay. thus branding him Penns)•lvanla. Shortly after the open· a! professional. , . Ing k\c kofr. Carlisle back Albert All o( Thorpe s Olympic medals Payne Y.';t!J Injured. Thorpe ca1nr in \\'ere taken away. The mar~s he set 11nd on the lt'cond play ca rrlOO i5 wtre ex punged from 1he book11. ya rds ror a touchrlo\\ n. C:i rliotle l>r::H I R~ntly, the AA U restored lhe Penn, 26-6. amateur stand ing of Thorpe_L Next to his Olyn1pic fame, Thorpe (See TlfOltJ>E~Pagr ctJ The Oakland slugger. ~·ho like the rest of the A's still has yet to hit a Series home run, stroked run-scoring doubles· in the first and third innings. "The pitches he hit 1vcren 't-that bad." Seaver said. "Tile first one was an inside fastball that he inside-outed on me. The second one was a strike. a\\'ay. I thre\\· the ball well enough. bot he got llnder it. It pays to be strong in this game." The first-inning double landed in left- center and. ~·hen Cleon Jones fell on the \\'aming track, Joe Rudl, running lvith ty,·o outs, \\'a& able to score from flrst. "It v.•as sandy." Jones said, "but \\'hat the bell did that have to do ,,;th the game!!' The-.lhird·inning double. also with lwo out. went into the gap in right-eenter field. Rusty Staub. , y;hose sore right shoulder has forced him to thrO\\' un- derhand. cut off tbe ball and ooe-hopped the throw to Felix Millan, who appeared to drop the ball as Sal Bando raced hon1e from first. "With the normal shoulder, he \1-ouldn 't go home from third. In fact, \\'ilh the normal shoulder, he wouldn't get a dou- ble," said Staub. NEW YORK OAKLANO W.G1ITTe1t lb Mllle<1 2b Siu.ti rf C.Jor>n If Ml!!19r lb Greif t t-1 ...... t i Krtl'IPOOI pft H1rreli0n 11 *""' p Solwell I'll MtGrlW P Toft I Ntw Yo•k 01-lend ... , .. rtll '!' ... ,.rl>I l 0 1 0 Cl ..... -r)I 11 • 0 0 0 •Ol lRudl11 31 10 4 010911!doJb •110 •000 11:.JKbontl •13 1 C0 10 TIMCIC. lDD O 4 0 l t 01v11fllocl 1000 lOOOJ.Mourf 00 01 1 o O O o.JoloNOn Ill • 0 I 0 JOOOFonec 0000 10000.CO<'Hl\lb )0 10 ll!O H11~!trp JOOO OOOOK._lno 0 000 Fl"9"1 p 0 0 0 0 ll 1 • I To!ll lO l 1 J «Ill 0:0 010-1 101 000 01•-l l"Hllllll9!0 S•1wr \., O·I 1 • 1 1 1 6 McGr1w 111011 >t\lf\!er w. 10 1'•' I l 1 I K,,,,...+•1 '~ 1 O O o 1 ~In,,,..., 11~ a o o o o s.~ .... Frnot•I (n. WP-lff ...... T-,:0). A-<J,Jll. Top 'Collegiate F oothall Scores FAR WEST Stanford 23. \Vashlngton 14 Cal 24 , OreRon State 14 tSec Details Page C'Zl EAST :"otre ORme 62, Arn1y 3 Penn Slate 49. Syracuse 6 j See Oelalls PA'!e C3 t i\llD\\'esT Ohio St. 37. lndl:ina 7 Okhihom<1 34. Coloriido 7 . \llchigan ~'l. \riscon~ln 6 I See ():otnils P;'llJC C:!l SOUTH Al t1b!ln111 42, Tenne§~ 21 AulJum 2~. c:t>()rgiR Tech 11> 1Sec l:>eta1ls Poge C3J • Let Baseball's Widows Tm·ow First Pitches Thoughts on a Sunday morn ing : Baseball commissioner Bo\\·ie "The Beloved" Kuhn could have made a popular ge5ture by having some of ba1'Cball's more noteworthy widows throw out first pitches of the World Serles. Prlme candidates would hal'e been the gals •left behlnd when RoberCo Clemente, Babe Ruth, Lou Gehrig and Gil lfodges died. Those WOlnen didn 't GLENN WMIY• WH ITE WASH play the game but they !il'ed it and allowing then1 10 share a moment or honor ~·ould be a deserving homage to them and their late husbands. Democracy bas apparently takeo a strong footbold at Estancia High In Costa ritesa where it has been reported that \'arslly football coach Jim Hemley allo1''ed bis players to choose the starUDg lineup for one of the games. Incredible, Equally incredible is the vole \\'hich denied H.untington Beach High a place in one of the new Orange County leagues. Princi pals Dennis Evans (Corona del Polar). Bob Packer (C<lsla ~lesa) and Floyd Harryman (Estancia ) joined chiefs from four other non-area high schools for the unrealistic denial. Fortunately. n1cn who nlay be nU>rc rxperienced and n10re fruniliar with s1X1rts world acth·ities hn\·r A rinal say un the n1atter if Huntington carries through \Vith an appeal to CJF co111- 1nissiont"r Ken Fagans and the Clf ex· ecu t1,·e council. Surel y jus!ice will eventuall y be served through suc h an appcAl. In the future ll'nguc matters of i1npor1ance should be determined by athletic dir('ctors, who arc close to the sporls scene. nol prin· cipals. t'rom the grral outdOOMi. next 1''etk'!' quail season opener could prnd11ce good rt~ulhi with bird populations coo- 11k!ttably up from last yt'ttr. And. corvlna fishing RI the Salton Sea has produttd rncoura~ng res ult& lhe past sevtral d~s ltilh !ht best (!shin~ belnr onshore from !Mert Shor es 10 the terget range area. The f ounl3in Valley-Edison ri,·alry may \\'ell bf' the mo!'lt inl('n<ie among !ht Ora1u;r Coast nrrll'!I 16 hii.th school!!. The f(ood rolks from thoH' t\\O schools rr11!1y g('t flrtff up v.h('n f'V and Edi!!On tell n111 l'Ollicle . · 1~ i'llllttr Oel jMcadlng na lo fOnl tndrt to rhnrgt& of unelhlcfli footlw.11 activity \\hlch v.·ert'. leveled by ~llRslnn VlrJo lllgh roach 8111 Smith \\1edr:1eAdly In a lelltr prtnttd In tht l>ally Pllol'! C 2 DAILY PILOT Hornets' Stop Bucs, 27-3 Seats Sold Bi1tNo TV Fo1· Ram s LOS ANGELES -The Los Angeles Rams announced Saturday that their game today wilh the Green Bay Packers has been sold out. All 79.281 tickets at lhe Colisucm \\'ere gooe berore noon Saturday. The game "ill not be televised locally, however, because the sell--0ut occurred after the deadline Thursday. About 3,M» tickets y,·ere left at the time. A team spokesman said running back Ll\t'J'ence McCutcheon, who pulled a hamstring against Dallas last week, was deactivated and replaced in the lineup by light end Terry Nelson, a rookie. e Sneed Kallie• NAPA -Rangy Ed Sneed rallied from a shaky start, caugbt front-running John Schlee with a three-under-par 69 nnd pulled Into a tie for the third round lead Saturday in the $1SO,OOO Kaiser International Open Golf Touma· ment. Sneed. a noo-winner in the United States in five years on I.be pro tOOr, anil the veteran Schlee had 54 holl! totals ol 203. 13 under par on-the 6,819 y"1"d north course at the Sllverado Coun· fry Club. Schlee, the Hawaiian ()pen champion and the second round leader, bad a 70. e Na•t .. e Vp•et fl.fADRID -Tom Okker of The Netherlands downed top-seeded Il ie Nastase &-4, 1-6. 7.5 Saturday to advance to the fina l d the Melia Trophy Tennis Tournament Jaime Flllol cf Chile won the other semifinal match. defeating Christ.opher Alottram of Britain 4-6, 6-3, S-2. Fillol v;ill meet 01.":ker for the championship on Sunday. e ltal11 Gains RO~lE -Italy qualified for the finals ol the \\'otld Soccer Cup Saturday by defeating Swi.tier\and 2--0 before cl~ to 100.000 fans at Olympic Stadium. Gianni Rivera scored bolh goals. one in each half. Ri\'era limped aff the fi eld rive minutes after his seoood goal 10 minules before the end of the gan1c. He was involved in a kicking and punch· ing melee with the Swiss. e Ne1cco111be f ,alls J\fANILA -\'oung Ross Case, using what he called "hit-and-n1n tacti~," 3C'Ored a stunning 64, 6-4 upset victory over toP""seeded John Ne\vco1nbc in an all-Australian semifinal of the $25.000 :".1anila Open Tl'tlnis 'I'oumament Satur· day. 1'lC other se mifinal. another al!· Aust ralian duel. also produced an upset, wit h scvcnth·sc«led Gl'Off ?.tasters rally· ing for a 5-7, 6-2, 7·6 triumph o" c r Colin Dibley. e De1·lh1 Le 11ds J\1ELBOURi'\E -Bruce Devlin of Auslralia overcame hcn\'Y ram. strong \\inds and a triple bogey six and fired a course record-equalling. four-under-par XI Salurday for lhe S('cond-round Je;id n the \\'Cather-plagued . $52,000 \YiHs .\fasters Goll Tournament. e Kh1gs Wh10 :J.(l ll'i'GLE\\'000 -Veteran Bob Nevin '!Cored t1110 goals and Hogatien Vachon . urned in his rir:st shutout of the Sl•ason D lead Uls Angeles to a l-0 Nation.it Hockey League vi ctory over Philadclphlo n a \l"ild, fight-filled contest Saturday •1igh1. The victory \\'as the (irst or thl' season 'or lhe Kings. who ar(' nO\I' J,J..2 in the \\'estem Oi11ision. The lo~s ga1·c the league-leading Flyers 11 4·2 mark .Referee Lloyd Giln1our assessed ti :ota\ of 132 n1inutcs in pcn.1ltics in •he roughly played C"On1est, inC"luding 88 n1inutes 1n rhe \\'1ld first period 11·hich 1nch1ded four separa te fighls. Gilmour h:indC'd 0111 12 fight ini; prnahtr" and fi\'c rn:ijor l()..minulc misconduc1s. Tod ay's Sports 011 Television JIJ a n1. 14l-Pll0 F'OOTBAl.L -The Bulf:i!o U1!ls met 1he Doi· f)hins at ~1irunl, I pm. I 21 -PRO FOOTBAll. -The Ne11· Orlean~ Saints n1ect the 49r r.oi at San Franci~. J:IS pm. !41-\\'ORLO SERIES -Th~ i;evcn1h ind fi'!el game of llX' 19il \\arid Serie.~ bc11-1cc!l thr New Y()f'k !\lets ru1d Oak.land Athletics fron1 Onkland. 4 p.m. 1i1 -COi.LEGE FOOT· UALI. 191.1 -Scheduled · Texas \'!I Arkansa" i\uhurn \'S. f.eorgia Tuch and K:uua.'I v~ Nebr:iska. t5f -f 'lll.1.f;r:F; t'OOTRALI. - The OrrRon Ducks mret fht USC' 1'ro1an~ In 11 gamt• plRyl'd S.1turd:l\' nt the Coli.'W)um . 0.1" l'llet ..,..... " ·~'f l(eelller ORANGE COAST'S MASON HUNGERFORD IS HAULED DOWN BY TWO FULLERTON PLAYERS AFTER CATCHING A PASS. Interceptions Destroy White, Beavers, 24-14 BERKELEY, IAPJ -The California Golden Bears intercepted two Alvin \\11ite passes deep in Oregon Stale tcr· rilory to set up a touchdo,1·n and field gGal for 9-0 first quarter lead a"nd Ylent on to beat the Beavers 24-14 in a Pacific· 8 Conference football game Saturday. The victory gave the Bears a l-3 01·cr-all record v.-ith 2· I in conference play. Oregon Slate is 1·5 over-all and 1·2 in conference pla y. The Californ ia pass defense. 1veakest in the league, ca1ne up with fi ve in· terceptions against the Beavers who have league's leading passer in Wh ite, the forn1er Orange Coast College star. Rob Swenson, a fi..foot-4 Bear tackle. grabbed a \Vhite pass on a dead run at the Oregon State 25 and carried it 11 yards to the Beaver 14 late in the first quarter. Five plays later, Chuck J\luncie leaped ave r the middle from a yard out for the touchdown. Just four pla ys later, col'tM'Tback Jerry Jones. defensi\"e player of the game, lnterceptecl another ~\lhite pass on the OSl! 38 and returned six ya rds fo the 32. \\'hen the Bears failed to gain. Ron Vander i\oteer. \\tJO had mis s ed a COO\'ersion point earlier, kicked a 27 -ya rd field goal. Each team got a second.quarter touchdo\111, Oregon dri\i ng 48 yards in nine plays with fullback Dick J\faurer running ove r from~-Cal, starting \l'ilh a fumble recovery, dro11e 47 ynrd s for its score . A :ll ·y11rd pass rrom \Vhitc to Lee Q\·erton and a nine-y.:irder to l\faurl•r on !he Cal two ,1·c re the big gainers in Oregon State's first louchdo11'fl drive. F.hin fllomon. "'ho led ~U rushing \\'it h 63 yards in 11 rarries. had a 12-yard gain ip the drive and Ra y Paroli. "'ho made 52 ya rdl! in 10 carries, had an I I-yard s'>'·eep. Cal's l\luncie. 1vho had missed practice ;ill week becau2'e of the flu, led the Bears rushing \\ilh 113 ya rds in 13 <:t1 1Tics. lie made a 6.1-v1:1rd run in the fourth quar1er, but it· (ai led to pay off \\'hen V:indt•r :'>leer missed 1.1 48-ya rd f1t'kl go.al try. Stricklnnd made r..o ~·ards in 17 ca1Tif''> \\'hite !tied 35 p..1!'-Scs, romplr!ing 11 fo-r Ji7 ynrds. !·le had five costly in· len:tplions. !11·0 in the Second half. spoil· ing O..~ll rhrc:irs. Bart ko11;ski completed 8 of J5 for 116 ya rds .. MIKE NANKO OF ORANGE COAST FALLS TO THE TURF AFTER A SHORT GAIN . Ali Batters Ex-bouncer Saves Rig ht lla1id for Frazier in Dec ision Jt\KAR1'A (AP ) -fl.luhammad Ali bnllerrd and bloodied Dutch heavy· "'eight Rudi Lubbers Saturday night in scoring a unanimous 12-round dt'Cision over 1he former discotheque bouncer. Al: had pred ic ted Lubbers \\"OUldn't last more than fi ve rounds. but Lubbe rs "·ouldn't go do1vn, although blood flowed frorn his nose and his right eye \1·as almo"t closed. Judge Li111 Ti Chang of Slnga1>0re scored 1hc fight 61H5, judge Locn Joh1JO· Ill''\ of lndoo<>sia sC'Ored It 59-52 :in(! judge C. Schneider of \\'est Germany rnade it 6()...12, alt for Ali . Heferce Euri · quc Jirninez of the Phillippi.nes did 11nt score the bout. "Lubbers is a good fighter,'' said Ali. •·1 hit him with everything I could." Asked why he did not Uirow many right-hand punches, Al l made a fis1 "'il h lhe hand an d said, "I have to sa\'e this for Joe Frazier." Ali 's next scheduled fight will be a 12·roundcr against Frazier in New York Jan. 28. rrazicr. then champion. ;,ro red a unanimous IS.round decision O\"er Ali al New York March 8, 1971. "I fought al'l hard as I could and 1 think Ali did too.·• said Lubbers. A crowd of about 25.000. far short of the promoters' expectations, 1-1·atchcd the fight at the 12.00!heat, outdoor Scnyan Stadium. AU, who weighed 217'h pounds, receiv- ed $200,000 for the figh t, for wh ich he \\'as a 4--1 favorite. Lubbers, at 28 three years younger than AH, got $50,000. lie \Veighed 196. Indonesia is predominantly J.loslem and the crov;d was an AJi crowd. Ali took charge from the outset. fiick · ing left jabs and easily dodging the lunging. wltd-swinging Lubbers. Lubbers' nose began bleeding in the fourth round when Ali trapped him in a comer and l:lnded a barrage of blows to !he head and body. 'I'hc fight \vas All's fourth outsi de the United Stntes since l~ing to Frazier. Sta11ford Boot~ W ashingtoi1, 23-14 St::Arrt.E <AP) -Stanford"! Rod Gnrci a kirked fie ld goals or 37, 33 and >17 ynrds Snturday RS !ht' Cardinals ~al the haple5$ Huskies of Washington 23-14 in a Pacifi<'-1 confertnre football game. (;arc1:i's nri;t field goal SCI ::i COil• frfl'ncc record or 15:1 po1nt!'i scorf!d hy .1 kicker. , 1 lusky fumbles led tn HI of Stanford's 13 point~ in lhl· first h:ilr ! ;ren Bcnnl'r fumhlrd on thC' Hu.<;kil'~ 1.i ,\·nn;I lini' and I'll! Oon<1van scooped 1! up. Scott L.3idluw broke ovrr center fnr 12 y:ir{I.~ nml thrcc plnys later Garci:i h11d hi., 38 v;ardrr Jn 1he second quorter, Stanford's Onve Tenn fumbled "aod \\'ashington recovered. 1\l'o plays later Glen l'Mmsburg furn· hied It back to Stanford'! Terry Pape. i\11kt Doryla gained 2 )ards· UJl thi' middle to the Huslde., 10, then passed lo Eric 'test for the touchdown. \\'t1shington. wtrich had only ty,·o first do"-ns in the ·nr!lt half. came to life In I he fourth quarter 111hen quarterback Cl1r!.~ Rowl:ind pnssed In &hit Phillips for n 4ff-~ a.rd touchdo11.11 on the serond pluv of lhl· tlll<lrh·r. t)11 lh(' nl•xt U\V series. llo"·l:tnd took the Huskies from ihe1r 31 ;ind carpi..'fl the scoring drh·c ·with a one-rnrd keeper. The I luskif!!! h:ld one mnre ch.1n1·c with 6:11 to play when they reached 1he Stanford five-yard . Skip Boyd's 22· ya rd field goal attempt was wide. \\'Ith one minute to play, the Huskies faled on a fourth and 21 .siluation ()Tl their O\.\'O eighL On SWffo~·s first pl ay nfter tha t Laidlaw skipped around left end for the final tOU<:hdol'11. "The gama \.\'ent about like 'we figured 1t would." said Stan ford coach Jack Chrl.~tl:i.nscn aflcr wlMing b~ fir st COO· fr11!nt'<! garne and' tlvenlng his record ·:"ti :l,;t "'l'wo young teams 11nd the main lhing thAt we tried for In the Ran1c "·as consistency." Conch Jim Owens, lo.sing his seventh ln 11 ro\v to Stanford and his t1rth • ()f the yur, said he was "proud of the momentum we picked up In the second mU, especially the fourth quarter . We had some good individual cfforls but also drastic breakdowns." The Huskies got an early break when Dave Ollmar's punt wen t off the wide or hll foot and traveled only nine yards early in lhe game. Two Huskies drives lnlo the middle gained only 'four yards nnd brought boos from the 51 .~ rain.: dampened fan". Stanford's flr!lt IJCnetralion started midway through the qua rter when Boryla Pll.1scd 2{I y11rds to Regg ie lslvnan 11nd 26 to BtAd Willlam.s, leading to Gircla's :li·yn rd fie ld goal. OCC Offense Stopped Cold I By Fullerton By CRAIG SHEFF Of ltlt Dall'!' l'lllf Si.tr Fullerton College blended its vaunted passing attack with a surprisingly tough defense to overwhelm Orange Coast College, %7-3, 'in their Soolh Q>.ast Coo- ference football opener at Anaheim Stadium Saturday night, before a crowd or 7.082. Fullerton's ability to move !he bnll at will tbrou11h the air and the inability or Orange Coast to move the ball at all were the key factor'! in the game. · Hornets quarterback Steve DeBerg. behind out.standing protection, completed 13 of 17 passes for m yards and three touchdowns. Two of the TO strike:i came In the secood ouarter when Fullerton locked it up. The first was a 16-yarder to running back Don Luginbill and tl1e second was to flanker Chris West for 13 yards. Field goals of 19 and 31 yards by Fullerton's Keith Cunningham in the first half added icing to the cake. MeanwhHe, Orange Coast 's rWlfling game couJdn't generate ""anything at all as the Pirates affensi11e line had I.rouble opening boles all night. OOC was held to just 47 net y.ards rushing. Orange Coast's only score came early in the second quarter , when Gary Balch kicked a 41-y~ field goal to tie the game at 3. ·. The Pirates failed lo mOWJt any ma jor 1 threat after that. "We just couldn•t get any kind ol drive going," said OCX::: coach Diet Tucker. "Fullerton played much better defense than we !bought. they would. "And they gave their passer good protection. They also hit a lot of passes on third down which hurt us. We couldn't sustain any kind of drive at all. "Most of the teams that have played Fullertoo have moved the ball pretty good, but not us. Wbat can you say, we just got beat," added Tucker. The OCC coacb felt that Fullerton did not present any surprises. 1 "They just i:rotected their pa~r re.al .-.11. We did • good job stopping their running game (Fullerton gained 54 yards ruShing ), but we just cooldn't get to that passer in the first half. "We're not out of thi.s yet, but it's going: to take a real good team to beat Fullertoo," said TUcier. •AM• STATISTICS Flr ll dOWM ru$111"9 Flr1! ctown1 (MUl119 Flr1! aown. lltillltln Tot•I first dOwn' Y1rd1 ll,lllllng Y1rd1 !HlllnD Ytrd1 IMI NII Vln:ll g1lned Pun11/•~•••11e d11tanct Penell!Hf~lrdl pen.llted Fumbltt.rlumblts Ii»! •« • . ' ' . ' . n 11 lit '°' ·~ "' u u ·~ "' 71)1 11.:. ,,.,, 101ns J/O '10 l <fft llor OUll"t9ft Or1no1 COflll ' ' ' ,__' Full•rton ' " ' ,_,, •USHIHG Or11191 c .. o "' .. " ... Oilo.Otl • " • • •• ..... • .. I ., Pr1nctollo • " ' ... "-' " • " .... '"-' • .. ... JOrtt ' " • 11.0 ll:'"'" ' • ' u "" ' • ' ,, Tot1l1 " "' " ... f'vll'""" Luolnblll " " ' ... "" " .. ' ., C..ldwllll ' • • ••• ..... ' " " ·U MOtl"'°"""f ' ' • • •• M~ ' • " ·ll 0 Thl~pe" ' ' • '-' Tor.I' • , .. " ... ..... ,., ... or1,.., CN1f .. .. "' " ~· Meo"'' ,. " ' " ••• ""'"" ' ' • • . ... Tc!ll• " " ' >N ·'" l"vll•r1Dtl ..... " " • ,,, .i.s Anion • ' • ~ ·"' TO!lt1 " " • , . . m THORPE. •• (Continued Fl'tlm Page Cl) The football season of 1908 was Thorpe's last !or Carlisle until 191 I. He lefl school after the 1909 track and field season and didn't relum unUI the fall of. 1911. It was during these two years that Thorpe played baseball at Rocky Mount. N.C. Defore he left Carlisle, however, the 6-foot 2-inch Indian made his first mark in track and fjeld. Warner also waa track coach at Carlisle, and he discovered that 1'mti:ie not only c:ould high jump with the best of his day, but could al90 nm} hurdle, pole vault and handle the sOOt put. disc~ nnd hammer with stand-out ability \Varner scheduled meets with the belt lrack·and-ficld teams in the East. Against a powerful 45-man Lafayetl.c College squad, Carlisle entered five men, including Thorpe, who proceeded to win the pole vault, hlgh jump, low hurdleo, shot put and broad jump and finish second In the 100-yard dash. Carlisle \\"Oil the meet over the stu.med Lafayet. les, 71-31. After a t1">;<ear blatus, 1borpo return· eel to Carlisle for the !ootbaU seAMl1 ol 1911. . Alter leaving Carlisle, Thorpe pt.fed prol«slonal football "11b tho canion Bulldogs and spent his .1ummers In b3seball. lie started oot with John ~lcGraw'1 New York Glanta and also played for the Cinci nnati Reds and Boston Braves before winding up, in 1J128. hia diamond earttr In Akron, Ohio, at the aae of 40. Thorpe's last hurrah came In 1950. v.•hen the As.'iOCiatcd Press ronducted a poll that brought Thorpe J<COgnitl<lll l'IS the greatest athlete of the first llaJf cf the twentieth century . Oklahoma Stagge1~s Buffs, 34-7 N"Olli\fAN. Okla. (AP) -~"'tlllback \Vaymon Cl::1rk hanime red for 172 Yards and scored one touchdown Saturday as third-ranked Oklahoma smashed Colorado :W-7 in a crucial BIR: Eight football game. The Sooners held only a 14·7 lead al halftime against the 16th-ranked Buffaloes. The turning point in the game •• came late in the third period, w h e n the Buffaloes had tbe ball on the Oklahoma two with only one yard needed for a first down, but the Sooners defense "'Ollldn't budge. Oklahon1a's touchdowns came on a tricky 37-yard pass hauled in by tight end \Vayne Hoffman and a dazzling 96-yan:l run with an interception by safe- ty Randy I lughes. Quarterback Steve Davis scored on a one-yard plunge in the third period, then the game turned into a R'.lUt in the final quarter as Clark danced in on .::i nine-vard run and reserve halfback Clyde RLissell scored on a 12-yard scamper. Ka11•n• Clipped UAll Y PILOT C 3 Southern Hig liUg hts Alabama Rallies;~ Auburn Explodes BIRMINGllA~f. Ala. IAPI -Robin Cary's 63·yard punt return and _Wilbur Jackson's ~yard scan1per Ignited a furious fourth-period fl11ish Saturday that lifted second-ranked Alaban1a to ti 42-21 Southeastern Conference football victory. The unbeaten Crimson Tide, 6-0, had seen a IY.'O-touchdown 9!dvantnge erased by Vols quarterback Condredge Hollo"·ay before 1he late rally that produced three touchdowns vdthin a span of 5:07 uf the fourlh quarter. • The defeat snapped Tennessee's win- ning streak at 11. longest. in the nation &mong major colleges . and left the Vols with a S.I record this year. Cary, a 5-foot-3, 1116-powKI senior, eased the fears of a huge crowd of 72.2'26 when he picked his way through a mass of Vol defenders to score 011 his punt retum with 11 :53 remaining in the game, \l'hlch was televised regionall y to about 75 per cent of the country. Then. Jackson. who gained !~a yards in 12 carires, applied the icing three minutes later when he swept left end. swirled R\1'3Y from ooe defender, crossed to the left sideline and raei!d 80 yard.s for his second touchdown. the other coming on a seven.yard run in the opening quarter. the 1>asslng or Kr n PengHore and Went on to defeat Dukc 2-1·8 Saturday, handln8 the Blue Devils their fourth slraigh! dch':il. Dukr. fnlStratecl by fu1nblcs and pass interceptioos, scored y,•ith 16 seoonds left on a 59-yard pass from Roger Neighborball to Troy Slade. But that 1,1•as about all the offense il was able to muster. Cle111SQn took the QP(!ning kickoff and swept 76 yards with Smiley Sanders scoring from the one. A 4().yard pass rron1 Pengitore to Bennie Cunningham hlghllghled the drive. Virghda llpset BLACKSBURG, Va. -Sophomore placekicker Wayne Lattimer aet.'Ollnted for nine points. six coining on second-half field goals. to spark victory-hungry Virginia Tech lo a 27·15 triumph over intrastate rival Virginia Staruday. A crowd of 38.300. second largest in \'irginia spo rts history. saw the Gobblers post their first win after six successive losses. Virginia dropped to 2-5. Rookie Stars t.rNCOJ..N, Neb. -Nebraska defender Bob Nelson intei·ccpted a David Jaynes' pass in !he fourth quarter Saturday, giving Rich Sanger a· chance to kick the v.·inning 28-yard field goal as the llth·ranked Cornhuskers edged 18th· ranked Kansas J().9 in a sec-saw Big Eight football battle. Kansas had taken advantage of Nebraksa fumbles and an interception lo lead 9-7 going into the final period. OHIO STATE'S BRUCE ELIA 136) rs SENT FLYING BY INDIANA'S GARY POWELL AFTER GAIN . Cary set up the third tally. pouncing on Stan Pt1organ's fumble of the kickoff at the Vols' 22. Fou r plays later, PauJ Spivey got the final three yards and Alabama had turned a tight battle into a rout. GAINESVILLE. Fla -~1aking his debut as a quarterback. split end 8111 ti1atouf threw .an eight-yard touchdo .... -n pass to Rick KimbrC>lJ.gh in the waning minutes of the game Saturday to boost tifississippi to a 13-10 Southeast Con· ferenee !ootball victory over Florida. TI1e v.'in moved Nebraska to S.l for the year. 1-1 in the conference after _Jagt week's one-point los.s to J\.fi.ssouri. Kansas is 4-2 over-all, 1-1 in the Big Eight. Although Jaynes and Nebraska's David llumm entered the game as the Big Eight 's leading passers. Huskers coach Toni Osborne elected to go with a con- trolled ground game and Humm threw only three passes in the first half, none in the first quarter. Ohio State, Michigan Romp Over Reeling Big 10 Foes A11ln1rn Cllrk• ATLANTA -Sophomore tailback ~l itzl Jackson. sidelined by injuries since Auburn 's opening g;:ime, turned a broken pl<iy into a big gainer late in the first half, spa rking the Tigers to a 24-10 college football triumph over Georgia Tech Saturday. , Two plays later Jackson scored from the two-yard line, giving Auburn a 14·10 lead and the Tigers neve r trailed again. Other Kansas drives were cut off by the Comhuskers' defense, including pass defenders \Vho had allowed an average of only 23 yards per game. shackled the vaunted passing game of Jaynes. ltlisso11rl tfh1• COLUMBIA, r-.10. -John Cherry threw a 35-yard sooring pass and Greg Hill kicked two field goals in sparking K'Vcnth-ranked ~1issouri to a IJ..3 victory O\•er Oklahoma State in a Big Eight Conference football ga1ne Saturday. Cherry, who attempted only eight passes all day, tossed his scoring bomb to split end Jim Sharp over the head of defender Darryl Stewart wnh 9: 18 gone in the opening period. Oklahoma Slate freshman Abby Daigle came back v:ith a 5().yard field goal 41i minutes later, but the Cowboys - the nation 's sixth-ranking rushing team -y,·ere thwarted thereafter until the final minutes. Cyclones llp•et ?t.lANl-lA'ITAN. Kan . -Isaac Jackson socred all three touchdo\\'tl.S to lead Kansas State to a 21-19 Big Eight football victory over favored Iowa State Satur- day. Jackson pulled the \Vildcats from behind \\'ilh a three-yard run in the first quarter. took a 27-yard pass from S!ere Grogan in the second and put the gamf' ay,·ay for Kansas State ~'ith a 28-yard burst \\'ith only lhrce minutes remaining. Kansas Stale is 4-2 over-all and 1-1 in the Big Eight . IO\\'a State is 3·3 over-all and 0.2 in the conference. Jackson rolled up 157 yards on 25 carries. Jt was the fifth straight ga1ne in which hr. has gained over 100 yards. BLOOMINGTON, Ind. !AP) Cornelius Greene r a m b 1 e d for touchdovtns from six and 11 yards out and Bruce Elia scored on three and one-yard ruru, propelling No. l Ohio St.ate to a 37-7 rout of Indiana in Big Ten football Saturday. Greene, who attempted only one pass and completed it for ll yards, directed a fierce Bukeyes offense that rolled up 419 yards, 365 of them on the ground. Elia. a &-foot·l, 212-pound fullback who started tbe year as a linebacker, chw·ned oui 109 yards on the ground . while runnffi& mate Archie Griffin added 127 yards. Ohio State, 5--0 overall and 3-0 in the Big Ten. opened the g a m e with a methodical, crunching 85-ya~ dri ve that set the tone for the bright fall afternoon. The awesome Buckeys offensive line, led by tackle John Hicks, cleared gaping holes in the Hoosiers defense and Grl[fin and Elia gained. consistent yardage. Greene capped the first drive with a sit-yard sweep around the righ t end. After a 37·yard Blair Conway field goal. Greene again scored for the Bucks, this time circling left end for 11 yards on a fourth-an~ situation. Neal Colzie, .,...ho intercepted two passes and scored once on a SS.yard return. put the Buckeyes in position for another seore before the second half expired. Elia smashed over from the three on anothe r fourth down play ...... ·ith 36 second~ remaining. JUielligon Glides ANN ARBOR, r.Ueh. -Quarterback Dennis Franklin fired a 4 6 · y a r d touchdown pass to Pllul Sral and also scored on a one-yard run, guiding fourth- ranked Michigan to a 35-6 Big Ten football victory Saturday over Wisconsin. Tight-end Seal was all alone at the five-yard line as Franklin fired the TD bomb up the mkldle 10 minutes into the first quarter. Michigan , 6-0, scored two more touchdOY.115 in the second quarter, one on a three-yard run by Gil Cbapnlan and again on a sweep by Franklin. Chapman's score climaxed an 80-yard. 15-play drive in which the tailback car- ried 10 times for S2 yards. The Franklin score came five plays aner the ensuing kickoff w h e n J\.1ichigan's Tim Oavls recovered a fumble by Selvie Washlxlgton at the \Visconsin 19. Spartans Booted EAST LANSING~ ·Mich. -Illinois freshman Dan Beaver, who kicked five field goals last week to beat PW'due, notched two more Saturday to give the Illini a 6-3 Big Ten victory over lttichigan State. Beaver's second field goal came with about four and one-half minutes to play and broke a U tie. J\.tichigan State came back in the final minute, driving from its own 35 yard line to the llini 16 before Mike Gow intercepted his second pass of the day, stopping the Spartan threat. Soccer-style kicker Beaver has kicked eight field goals in the past three weeks. I re heat Purdue single handedly last \l'l't-k, 15-1.3. Gophers Rally IOWA crrv. Iowa -A salety and freshman quarterback Tony Dungy's JO. yard run for an insurance touchdown brought ?t.1innesota fron1 behind Saturday Southwest Grid Action Texas Lashes Arkansas FAYl!."TI'EVJ~LE, Ark. -Texas fullback Roose velt Leaks. known more for his grinding three-yard runs than long distance dashes. thundered 43 and 59 yards for touchdowns in 1he third quarter S.1turday to give the l.ont:l'.borns a 34-6 victory over Arkansas and com· mand of the South\l'est Conference !oot- balt race. It \\'as a thrce-touchdo.,..'O day for the fr-foot -II. 218-pound Leaks. who made Arkans111;' dcfen11ive secondary look like lt was running In sand, Leaks carried 24 limes for 209 ya rds against the scra ppy Razorbacks who rollapsPd in the third quarter after Leaks had bulled his ·way tv.·o yards for n toud1down to give Texas a 6--0 lwlf time lt>ad. Texas, rebounding from last week's 42· 13 loss lo Oklahoma. struck twice for touchdowns In a span or 2:05 in !he lhird quarter. Leaks broke over right tackle and sped 43 yard.'! for a touchdown at 12:08 or the quarter. Arl.:tJt1a St11r111e d 'MJCSON, Arlt. -Tcx:ta Tach's Tom- my Conf'11 blocked a punt lo Aet the wlrmlng 1ouchdot\T1 as Tuch harnutt Ulth ranked Arl1.ona Hs first l°" or the season Saturctny niaht 31-17. 1'be block camo eRrly in lhe fourth qul'lrlf'r Ill !he Arltona 21 yard llne , and Tt'ch's t.awrcncc Wllllanu1 took a pitch oul eighl yard11 Rround right end four plays for the winning score. Arizona ...,.,·as behind 16--0 in !he first half, but came back strong, dominating the third quarter to go ahead li·l6 on a 37-yard field goal by Charlie Gorham. The Red Raiders, as they have done all season. took advantage of Arizona mislakes. The \Vildcats Jost four fu1nblcs and a pass intercepted. A&JU Rolls FORT WORTH, 'Tex. -Dovid \Valker, a 17-year-<>ld freshman starting hls first game at qoo1ierbtlc1., turned Texus CA L POLY (SLO) TRIPS FULLERTON SAN LUIS OBISPO. -Cal Poly 1San Luis Obispo). the nalion's third-ranked small college team, battled past F'ullerton State 21-7 Saturday to captW'e ilS fifth straight CCAA football title. Fulltrton scored on tt.e f I rs t scrimmage play of the game when after r«tiving the ooenlng kickoff. Cal Poly quorterbielt fl.file C.OU1son rumblNt fh<l ball and 'l'itan.'f ll~h.1cker Steve l)olkas recovered In the end zone. The victo ry lert C&I Poly 4--0 In the CCAA and 5-0 overAll with Fullerton SUl!e now 1·1 in the tengue Rnd 4·2 for the season. A&~1 's mistake prone offen se into a methodical rnachine Saturday that whip- ped Texas Christian 35-16 giving the Aggies thei r lirst Soulh\\·est Cooferencc \\'in of the season . \\'alker, given the starting assignment only four days before the game. scored on a !ive--yard run and dirf'Cted four rnore faultless scoring drives that resulted in touchdown runs of ooe yard by Alvin Bowers. one yard by Skip \Valker, five yards by Bucky Sans. and a six-ya rd pass Crom Walker to Mike 1'1oyd. Walker's touchdo'vn pass. which came with less than t.,•o minutes on the clock. was one or only three JXlSSCS he threw all day. The victory evened A&~1·s season re<.'ord at 3--3 and their conference record al 1.1. TCU is 2·3 !or the yc:ir ond 0.2 In conference play. llTEP RB11te d ALBUQUERQUE. N.~f. -Reserve qu11rtcrb.1ck Troy \\fil\iAms passed for tw·o touchdo\\·ns and ran for anolh<'r In New ~lexico's 49-0 rout nt \\'estrm Athlelic Conff'rence football foe Tex11 s-F:I ·Peso SliturOay. Williams, a sophom<>rt'. look over In the !hlrd pt'rtod when !! In r I I n a: qunrterb;itk Don \Voods "'AS sidelined by an nnkle injury. \\1oods h11d put New l\.fc:dco ahead 7-0 at the llalf ~'ith 11n I t-ynrd touchdown run. in a 31-23 Big Ten victory over winless Iowa. Dungy, replacing injured starter John Lawing, directed the Gophers to their final score with five minutes lett to hand the llawkeyes their sixth straight loss of the season -equaling the worst start ever by an 10 ...... ·a team. The Hawks took a 23-22 , lead with ;:ibout 9:30 left in the quarter when fourth string quarterback Bobby Ousley hit Mark Fetter on a nine-yard sCoring pass. The Gophers, now 3·3, regained !he lead With eight seconds left in the quarter when Iowa punter Joe Heppner fumbled in the end zone to give Min- nesota a safety. Minnesota ls now 2-1 in the conference. P11rd11e llot WEST LAF A YETJ'E, l n d . Quarterback Bo Bobrowski ran for two touchdowns and overpowered Northwestern with his passing the rest or the way Saturday in a 21-10 Purdue victory which dropped tbe Wildcats out of a first place tie in the Big Ten. Bobrowski scored on runs of one and 12 yards in the second and third periods and hit cm seven or IS passes for 115 ya rds. He directed the Boilermakers 98 yards in 14 plays on Purdue's first possession for a 7--0 lead and they never trailed. T011 !Jll y IU'flll!J•• Earlier in the second period sophomore quarterback \\'ade What_ley hit Rob Spivey on a 43-yard scoring strike for the Tigers. Roger Pruett added a 19-yard field goal and Chris Vacarella pounced on a Chris Linderman rumble in the end zone for Auburn 's second half scor- in,g. Tech"s points came on a first period field goal of 36 yards by Cam Bonify and a 22-yard scoring pass from Jimmy Stevens tu Jinlmy Jlobinson. JJlarylo11d Tough \VINSTON-SALEM. N.C. -~1aryland's football team held Wake forest to a single first down, an Atlantic Coast Conference record. and han.ded the Deacons their fifth loss in a row. 37-0, Saturday. After a scoreless first period. the Terrapins, now 4-2 and 2·1 in the lea~e. scored 16 points In the second period and were on their way. Steve Mike-Mayer booted a 45-yard field goal te> start the Maryland surge and before it was ove rfive playe rs scored 1ouchdowns, two of t h e m freshm en. Freshman Ken Roy · scored the first Maryland touchdown on an eight-yard run in the second period and frosh Alan Bloomingdale raced 3 yards for the final tally in the last period. Cle 111 s 1•11. G1ai11s DURHA.\f. N.C. -Clemson scored two touchdo\l'TIS in the first period behind Boston Llnl,•ers11y·s Greg Pcn1 hcrton is g rabbed by the fa<'I" 11H1:sk as well as pulled by the jCr!;ey while tr) 1ng In run a~ninsl 1'e111plc. To further the rrustratlon, Bos1on U. lost. 3f'i· l !"1 ~·lalouf. a junioi Who has played his enti re college career at end except fo r a brief stint against Georgia last week. set up the \\'inning touchdown with 4:31 left \\'ilh a 42-yard bomb to Kimbrough. Irish Destro,· • Hapless Ar1ny; Navy Cruises \\'EST POlf\"T'. N.Y. cAP I -Eighth· ranked Notre Dame. stymied for most of the first quarter. poured across four touchdowns in the second period and rolled to 62-3 victory Saturday that s:id- dled Anny with !he 11·orst start in il!i football his tory. Dave Casper caught t11·0 touchdo11·n passes in the second quarter. one ench from Tom Clements and Cliff Brown . as !he Fighting Irish 1,1·ore down Arrny :with three Jong scoring drives and one quick strike through the air. Jt was tOO fifth consecutive triumph for un beaten Notre Dame. Army. crip- pled and outmanned, has dropped its first five games for the first time ever. with three of the setbacks against Top Ten teams. Clements directed drives or 66 and 59 yards and threw a 34-yard scoring pass to ~sper before giving way to Bro\l'Tl. The backup quarterback led a i4-yard march. climaxed by a three-yard to Casper ...,.,·itl1 11 seconds rc1naining in the half. Liot1s Roar SYRACUSE. ~,_,._ -Chris Bahr tirrl a school rerord l\'i\h three fi eld goal~ as fifth-ranked Penn State took ad- vantage of numerous Syracuse miscues for a -19-6 college football vjctory Satur- day. Penn State. 6--0. 1,1•asted no time getting on the scoreboard. Bahr booted a ~yard field goal \\'ith the garnc only five n1inutes old. Syracuse n1istakcs led to Penn State·s first two touchdowns . Rnndy Crowder recovered a Jim Donoghue fumble al the Syracuse 23 and quancrback Ton1 Shuman plunged over from one yard out six: plays later. Fullback Bob Nagle scored from one yard out l\l'O minul c!i later after Doug Allen inlercr'ptcd a Bob ~litch pass at the S~Tacusc 28 and ran it back lo the 10. ,,.,,..!I Colle "'·' ANXAPOLIS, !\Id. -Underdog Na'·~. propelled by lhc p;1ssing of Al Glenny. th<> ca!chin g or Larry Va n Loan <111d the runn ing of Cleveland Cooper, routed Air Force 42-6 Saturdrn 111 the hrs! sl'rv1ce academy football battle of 1973. (;lcnny tc<1m<.'d .,..·ith Van Loan f(fr scoring · tosses of ~I and 28 yards and threw a 13 yarder to Bert ~Hand . Sand"''iched bct,1·C<-'n the,•ru pas.~cs were scoring run.':I by Cooper or 39, 5 and 2 yards. The gRmc \\·as the firs( in Annapolis be1"·ccn S<'rvicc schools sinrc l\·avy bf'ar. 1\rrnv 14-0 in l!H2. Thr Fatron!i. 2·l did iif'll score until !\avv. 3-3, Inserted Jls gul)s in the final q11<1rter. ll••rt·ar d Score " !TllACA. N.V. -Jiln StOl'Ckcl. 5t'nlor quarterback fron1 ti.ti run l lhJ'ew for a 1ouchOOwn and !!cored one himself in lending Harvard lo a 21·15 college foot bi!ll ,·1c1or;· O\'Cr Comell S.1 turday 1)(-forc 2,000 fnn!! in a rl'gionally televis.._.d ~amr. ll11n•.1rd remnmed one or lhC' n:11100'" major wibt>aten!I in h1kin,R ils four\, :-1 ra1ght conl{'st' It also cnluinecd It . II ~· l.e;lgue tillt> nspl ralion!I, lying idle l'ennsylvanio for the lead v.·tlh a 2-0 rn:irk. Comcll suffrred i1s flrsl l\'Y lOM In l\1 0 ~tnrts and ~ 2·!-1 O\er11ll. (; 4 DAIL V PILOT Sunday, OctvOtr 21. 1CJ7l White's l(icl{ Give ·s GWC 19-19 Tie 'By 110\\'ARD L HANDY ot l!lf o.i11 ll'llot S9'tf Brett White kicked a 33-yard f!ekl goal, his fourth of the game. after time tmd run out S.1turday night to bring Golden West College front the brink of defeat lo a 19·19 tie v.·lth a stubborn Cypress Chargers football team on the Orange Coast College field. \Vhite's drarnatic effort came after tilt: Chargers had taken the lead for the first lime on a 99-yard drive culminated by an end sweep by quarterback Brad Hillman with 22 seconds remaining. ' This put Cypress in front, 19- 16. A determined Golden \\'est squad took the ensuing kickoff at the Rustlers 36 with 17 seconds remaining . Tu·o nrst do"'" pass plays from Dan Accomt1ndo. lo Rod Brown mov('d the ball to the Cypress 25 and "'"hen a time out was called. one second remained on the scoreboard clock. "'hitc calmly stepped back and \\'ith &ott \Vhitfi el d holding. kicked the b a 11 squarely be tween the uprights to. salvage the lie. Wh.ite's other field goal ef· f«ts IA-ere from 28, l l and 39 yards. 1be four in one game .sets a Golden West ())liege record. While held lht previous mark of two in one ga~. Golden West marched to it. only touchdown on the second series ii had possession and appeared headed for a breather. Paul Fiskness, tlle ronner Huntington Beach High sta r. went o.ver left tackle from the one yard line for ·the score and While converted wi lh 6:17 left in the first period. White and his Cypress eounterp,g,rt, F.dgardo Lopez, a left.footed soccer-style kicker, traded four field goals ln the seco.nd period and it was 13..e at the inttrmiuion. Lopez had effort. of 30 and 26 yards. When Cypress scored its first touchdown with 7: 16 left in the game It brought the score to 16-lt' and the Chargers went for a two-point conversion with Lope2: on the bench. It failed and the gam· bit eventually resulted in a tie rather than a Cypress vic- tory. Golden West appeared to be working against the cloCk-all night. White's seoopd field goal came on a third down situation at the Cypress three yard stripe. One secoDd ro- mained when he coonected. The Rus tlers he.Id the upper hand statistically b;ut were fortunate ta; gain a tie at the fina l gun after giving the ball up three times on fumbles. G.f.MI. STATISTICS c Nit Yfrdtl tflMd W ~,.,, ......... dltflll(f 11'¥1 "-"*''',.,. ..,..11,.. ,,,, Fllf!lbllll""'"'"' i.t ;f/S k -.,. .,.,,.,. "' "" •• ~· Goldtn Wlfl 1 t I ~lt C'fPl'fH 0 'O l~lt Fff'tll'O P•rl•I• ,_ ,.,,_ Attomt ndo Cuny TOI Ill ·-,,..,._.., Vflldf.,...r Hiiiman TOlll• I USHIN• o..-Wtfl "' n .. .. . " ' n . " 10 S1 ' " .. ., C)IN'ltf ,, 101 " n 0 ' ' " " '" • ' ' 0 • • 0 " ' ' • • • ... ... '·' •• .. ... .., '·' '·' ... t: ... f lrtt clllwn1 rvlldllf Flrtl -• pni.11111 Flrll dowM IStfMlllltl Totfl l\rM <lowM Yfrdl rulhllltl •• " • 0 t PASSINO Y•rds ""11111 Yfrds l•t " "' o~ " ' 011 .. 11 w .. 1 2 ,. JK "" " 17 A«olrllndo lt t 0 102 "' c ... ,,... 14 Hlllm111 1' t I 14 .315 • Gauchos fu 21-14 Victory By llANK WESCH or t111 DIH'f 1tnot tt.tt Saddleback College struck for two first perio d touchdowns, then had to hold off a final quarter rally to down Southwestern 21·\4 in a Mission Conference football game Saturday n1ght a t Mission Viejo High. That's the good news. The bad news !Ot" GaudlOS fans is that San Diego City College edged Citrus _I0-9 in another circuit game Saturday night, thereby keeping Sad· dleback a game behind in the sta ndin gs and cutting the Gauchos' coorerence title hopes that much shorter. In winning its fi fth game in six outings (four of five in the conference) Saddleback followed a familiar pattern - start strong and hold on. DlllY Piiot Photos b'f L-'fn Ch1""'111 GOLDEN WEST'S BRETT WHITE BOOTS HOME THE GAME-TYING FIELD GOAL WITH SCOTT WHITFIELD (21) HOLDING. Freshmen Brian Hester and Sam Peek pulled oU big plays to give the Gauchos their first quarter touchdowns, and Joe Jones added the crusher after Southwestern had pulled to within eight in the fourth Oilers Zip To 28-14 Triu1nph By AR!\fAND JIANSON Of 1M Dlllr l'llet Sl1ff Huntington Beach's Lorin J\.ticklin came up with two third q u a r I e r touchdowns Satl{rday night to break a 14- 14 be with Western and pro- vide the Oilers with their first Sunset League football vie· tory, 23-14. at Western. The Oilers had to CQ_me from behind tv,.ice to gain.Ille 14·14 tie at halfllmc. The play that sparked Huntington Beach's victory was a 32-yard scoring pass from Keith Herndon to Paul (~assman as the first half enUed . Gassman look the pass near the four yard !inc and fought his way into the end rone after 'the gun \vent off. Gassman then booted the con· \'ersion to bring the Oilers t'!Ven at the half. llarley Hill ~rored the first Oilers touchdown on an 11~ yard run to bring the Oilers even after \Vestern took a 7--0 lead. Western scored 11s second TD with 1:54 lcft in the second quarter to take the lead at 14-7. It looked like the half JOE OEMETRAKOS RETURNS A KICKOFF WITH PAT THORPE (331 LEADING WAY FOR GOLDEN WEST. ,,·ould end that way but - ---------------------------------------------- t1cmdon comp!t>ted a 14·yard pass to Hughie Roberts. ~like ~fcAdan1s gained 17 on a run. and a Jlerndon 10 Gassman pass put the bnll on the Pioneer's 32-rard·line with less than fi ve seconds to go . Herndon's next pass ~·:is hii::h and Gassman madt• a Spt'C· tacular catch nea r t h c sidelint's then po\\'trf'd his \Vay in for the score. Then t\1icklin took O\'('r. Tl1c sccond-h:iff kickoff \\·en! out or bounds and the Oilers put the ball in pl:ly on their own 40 yard lin e. On the first play. f.1icklin squirted throu~h the line, sidestepped the lfnebackers. cu t t o th e sidelines. thtn hack to the middle of the field as he outspcd the derenders on his 60 ya~ dash to the end zone. &U.cJ(Un's spectacular run in· spired the Oilers defense. Smelling victory. the defense. alter allo"'ing \\1r.~1crn 154 yards rushinit in the fi rst half. stlrfened in the la!!:t half. govc up only 30 yards on the eround. 'Mts Olfers' two tnuchdOIA'nS came 11 M'CO!lds apart and J.1icklln '!I nl'xt touchdown . SC<>red on a OOC-)'Rrd plun ge Turnovers Cost CdM, 13-7 By ROGER CARLSON Of "'-D•llr PUii 11111 Coron:i ~I r..tar High's Sea Kings ,·an1e up with a blazing aerial offensive Saturday night in an Irvine League football crucial \Vith L:ls Alam.ii.Os - hut f"\\'O interceptions and a fumble deep in Los Al ter· ritory negated the efforts. And in !he end it was the Griffins o{ Los Alamitos roach Frank DoretU that left \Vlth a 13·7 victory btfore 3.800 rans at Newport Hartbr High. Three tlrhes the Sea Kings or Corona de! ~·1nr mnde serious bids in the flnal period lo overhaul the Griffins. Sop h ornore quarterback Gary Guisness and receivers Ste.,.e Behrens. flichArd Nebh. Mike r..finna and F'rcd Moore accountt'fl for 19.1 y :i r ri s through lhl' air -158 in the second h.s\f. line in the fourth perioci. And a third scoring bid was killed when officials ruled a Corona del Mar receiver had f um b led when hit sirOUttaneously as he caught the halt from Guisness. Greg Briggs pounced on the loose ball to stymie the Sea Kings at the Los Al nine yard line . • rt was a tough loss for coach Dave Holland and hls Sea Kings to take, especially con· sldering Corona de! !\tar more than held Its 0"11 against the undefeated Griffins. Los Alam itos got rich early In the fourth period when the Griffs took over on the Corona del !\1ar 24 after a costly furnblo . Three plays lattr. '''1th the help of un in· terferencc ~nalty. Los Al qu1lrterb.1ck ~like Olivn!I hit his second TD pass of the evening. the 7-all deadlock with 10:28 :o go. Corona del r..1ar's only TD came on an l!J..yard march. trlggered by Steve Marowitz's 42-yard run with an in- terception. Behrens ran for 14 yards off tackle. Brent Ogden got the ball to the one-foot line and Guisness cracked over for the score. Mike F'rost, \vho stood out defensively for the Sea Kings. toed the PAT with 1:25 left In the llrst period. Louie Ortiz was the bl~ noise going into the game for Los Al and his running was effective. Bui it was the pin· point pas.,lng ot Olivas and the splrkllng receptions or recf'iver Brinn Ticchurst that kept Corona del Mar In trouble most or the time . GAME STATISTICS ' l'!•l! oowm ru1lllt10 F!,lt -· P•Ulng First dOWnl Ptntltltt Totals llrsl dOwns Y11,<1< ruining Y~•d• p.11slog Yn•<h 1011 Nott y1•d1 111IMd P unll/ 1 ver •Gt cll t I Al'I~• Ptn1Uln/y1rd1 penftllud F11mblt1/f11mt:llH lost • ' " 00> "' " '" ,,. .. ~ ,,, Scort br Otl•rt•" c-• o.1 ~·· 1 o o L111 ,..11m<tot O f O 11.UHtlNO Gui<,...~• Bf~ttns C•ron• thl M•r tell> n 10 32 " .. 10 St M1k• Ft"'"' 0,dtft . " ' . 101115 Orllt Ollv11 P11"1ln ·~o llctn\1t\t J1nnlnt1 Tct111 ~ om Ln Allmlln • M 1 • ' . ' .. 0 ' ' ' ,, "' P.UllHG c-n• HI M•r 1 • 0 " ' 0 0 0 0 0 ' L • " 0 " '" "' ' "' 1111 10173 0/0 ,_' ~" ~u1,.,.,, Mitt ftftrf•O 1ot1l1 p1 pc pl!! '' llCI '° 11 1 "' .600 1010 .000 " 11 1 "' ,sn • period. Jones' touchdown came on a 20-yard burs t over tackle with 6:49 left to play, and gave the Gauchos e 21.0 lead. Southwestern scored just two minutes later, and the losers even got the ball back at their 47 yard line with two minutes to. play. But another freshman, Ken G<Jldstone, in· tercepted _a pass for Sad· dleback to end the late·game drruna with 2:09 remaining. The game wasn't always as exciting. In fact for two quarters it was a scoreless duel, with neither t e a m gaining any advantage. and it looked li ke Saddleback's early scores would stand. \ Hesler put Sa ddl e back ahead with an alert, 79-yard punt return for a touchdown wHh 12:51 still remaining. Southwestern had been forced to punt from the Saddleback 26, but a high snap caused the Apaches kicker to hurry his boot and it netted only five yards and dropped behind the punt CQverage. Hester picked it off on the fly , eluded two players and raced down the sidelines for the score. The Gauchos scored ·again after another short Apaches punt, this one lrom their own end zone was downed en the 26-yard line'.' Peek took a pi!chout and found split end Ji1n Poettgen alone in the end 1,0ne on a halfback pass tor !he sroie. Dan Brennan toed All three Saddleback extra points. Halfback Aundre Holmes \\'aS the \\'Ork horse as usual for Saddleback, picking up 130 yards on the night in 25 car· ries. GAME STATISTICS .. Flr11 down! rOJlhlnQ t Flt1! down• PIHlflQ ~ l"lrif down• ptllflllr• 1 10111 !'lrtl down1 TS Y1•d1 rull\1119 m Y••d• p1s•ln11 1'1 Y1tdJ lo»! :t2 Het r••d< 111!ned 1911 P11nt•l•Vtl'fllt dlsl1nc• •t:JD P-IKn/y1rd1 pen1llttd 4/iO score by .,,.,..,. .. • • 0 " o~ "' " '" n .,,.1 Saddl~•tl\ U 0 0 7-21 SoullWHShtm 0 0 • 14-14 Mi-~t!~ 5of'lngm•n .... T011l1 •UtHING l•H l.Uck 1(11> rt • 0 • • ~ OU ' " • u ' . 0 ' " "' S011lllw1U«ft . " • • " . ' . 0 0 ' " u Ut f'.UllNO l •fflfll>lcll • ,. ' ' • 0 0 0 n " ' • 0 • 0 " ... ·•.3 '·' .., '·' '·' "' o.• 1' •.01 '· ... .., •••• ... u Ill• pc phi rt pct ' 4 I ,, ,"'4 12 1.u .m 211M .MO 17 1 I 1" ,Ill lovthw.•ltftl Pilot Pigskin PICKEROO Sponsored By DAILY PILOT $100 A WEEK IN PRIZES ! • . $50 TOP WEEKLY PRIZE ' s20 s10 For Weekly Second Place Winner Each for Third, Faurth and Fi~h Place Winners Here's ho w you can be a pi9skin prophet for profit, Weekly ca.sh prizes a re offered to winn1r1 of th• Pilot Pi9skin Pickeroo game. Top "'{inner each w•~k gets $50 in cash. Second place winner gets $20 1n cash and th ird, fourth and fifth place winners ••ch get $1 0 in cash. All ''cash" a ctually is delivered to w.inn ers in the form of Checks to be picked up by winners at one of the I 0 parfici pating members of the Harbor Boulevard of Cars a ssociation. Checks for this week's contest will be prepared by: Johnson & Son, Uncoln Mercury 2626 Harbor Blvd., Costa Mesa The 10 part!cipating auto dealerships •long Cost• Masa's "Harbor Boulevard of Cars" are: Atlas Chrysler.Plymouth, Bauer Buick, Connell Chevroltt, Costa Mesa Datsun, Da ... e Ross Pontiac, Johnson & Son Lincoln.Mercu ry, Miracle Matd•, Nebers Cadillac, Theodore Robins Ford and Universi ty Oldsmobile. Watch for this player's form each week in the DAILY PILOT Sporfs Section. Circle the team you th ink will win in each pairing in the list of 30 games and send in the player's form entry bla nk or e reasonable fac· simile. Then watch the DAILY PILOT sports pages for each week's list of f ive winners. RULES l. Submit "'' tnl•'f bt•nk be11w •• • r11tMbl1 llcllmlfe 11 II "' "'"' Ille ctnl111. "R"IOll.llbl• IKllmil1" 11 dtffftM •s '" "u•ct 1111.,iluff," ~111!1t1 mull bol Ylllffrm Ill 111• •Ml llllH ff l•cllll•te /"91111. TMtf wlllcll d1111't Cltlhlrm will b• dlsq111lllltd. 2. SHld If '91 PILOT PtGSIO N PICICl!ROO CONTEST, Sptf'h Ofp,u1mtnl, P,0, h-lut, Co1lf MIU, CA. '212'- l. 011ry ""' 1111r'1' "' ""°" ptrmltttd .. ,h "'"· ctntett1nts .,. ....,;..-1n1 CNIHI Ol'Kcll ll m•y lftYfflJRtl• m111t lpl1 '"'"" , .......... . addrtu tr i.11111• '""I°" IJlll '"'' dfi.qv•llfy •nr "llctlll-llflM" l!llrln lhtn dillCIO'fftltCI, Dlcll lfft Of 11111111 on !Ills "lrll r11111t M •t· t•PIK •f fiMI by Ill COlll"l1n1t. ' I. Entrtn m111t bt Pftlmu11ftl not 11ttr !Mn t llurH1y A.M. tr _, M dlll~1rtd !ti 1111 DAILY PILOT •lfi<I by 4 P.M, T~Vr$dly. J. l"•rtlCIJNtflltl '"""'" Ind "'•Ir emplo'flft •nd DAILY PILOT t mplt'(MI , •rid 11'11lr im.,....l•M 1 .. nH >es ·~ llClf tllfllll1 i. tnhr. '· Tl• l•&AICI• ILAHI( MU ST I E "ILLl!O lN Oil l!NT•Y IS VO!O, r-----------ENTRY BLANK I I I I I I I I •• I I I I I I I I I I I Circle t•1m1 you think will win thl• WMk's g1mH (home t11m Is ncond one ll1ted) Rams vs Minnesota Cincinnati vs Pittsburgh Houston vs Aubum Nebraska vs Oklahoma State Missouri vs Colorado Kansas vs Iowa State lo-vs Illinois USC vs Notre Dame Navy vs Pittsburgh Michigan Stcite vs Purdue TCU vs. Tennessee Baylor vs Texas A&M Georgia Tech vs Tulane BYU vs Wyoming Soddleback vs Riverside CC Santa Monica vs Golden West San Diego Mesa vs Orange Coast Newport vs Anaheim Bishop Amat vs Mater Dei Magnolia vs Costa Mesa Laguna Beach vs El Dorado Corona del Mar vs SA Valley Westminster vs Loara Foothill vs Mission Viejo Valencia vs Dana 11111s Huntington Beach vs Marina Son Clemente vs Sonora Estancia vs Edison Brea vs University Fountain Valley vs Los Alamitos I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I "' •II • ''"""' 1111111 IN•mt Tlfi 1•1A1CI• -My 111111 "' "'' tol•I llijmbfr tf ,.Tftl1 Hire.I I lbt'ft It I Addr••• I Cit I PhDfle m.;;_ %1 Su I I I I -------~ lSte OILERS, Pn1?e rs 1 But Grtg~ P('rcboom of LM Alamil o!I squelrhed two bids filh interceptions at 1he JtOAI It \\'BS n 111ckle eligible play ·to Ji~ f.laln and i1 snapped Ticehurst caught s e v e n passes for 120 yard!!, in· eluding an 11-yard TD pass in the second period, 20 11 ?.,_ 21>1 .UO• .. ______________________ ., .,. .•1• l•tr-1 ' • . " I ~ u u ( " ' .... .. WM ' Wini c~o " ... .. "' ~ L •K • "" ' '" " ""' Wiiii Col St. 0 17 15 35 7 A w 0 • ' M 1 ' " '"' VO• ,, '" •• Wo 0 C• "· .. ' GO M Mo 0 •• " • •• "' ' J Co (( •• ' H ·~ MO ' I• :i (~ ,I o I Grid Scores For Colleges College We::! USC 31, Oregon 10 UCLA 24, \Vashlngton St. 13 cal 24, Oregon ~ate 14 Stanford 23, Washington 14 Sin Diego &i. 13, Pacific 10 Cal Poly (SLO) 21, C11il State (Fullerton) 7 Cl...,..onl•Mudd )S, Loyo11. t..A. 0 MorttlHll Colo. 21, K1111 Sltll, Pllt l SOUfMorll Go!O ;i:2, Nt'D<'llUI, ~"-• Wnttrl'I SI Colo 1S. Fl L.wl1 Col ' WllllttM'llO 17, ,Kirk U, Oft. \0 C:tfllret Wt.ti Sl 2t, Etll WI.rt St .. E11ttt11 OAvo11 W. Oreoot1 Coll• M H1rw1r.t St1te '1, Ctlll U. D1vl1 a Lnll• .. Clt•k 7, Llnntld Clll 4 ,tKlflC Lyttier111 21.. 191111 Col1111 • ClllCO l!11t1 31, hn ftlndKO SI ' Ctl 511:. (l.AI 32. Ctl L\fftltrtn n 511111 Cl1r1 44. US l11!t<lltHOt11L 1 Wlll~UWhUma110 Ea1t Notre Dame 62, Army 3 Pittsburgh Z8, Boston College 14 Princeton 37, Colgate 21 Vale 29, Columbia O Harvard 21, Cornell IS Penn State 49, Syracuse 6 Temple 35, Boston U. ts Dartmouth 28, Brown 16 AIMl'IV St., NY ». Curry ColltQot ~ lllCllnell 0, LtltV81lt G C:llMKt!Cvt 30, '.Uln l (,W, Post 24, l(ll!Ot Pollll 13 ~Ol"dl'llim ll. Jol'll'll HoCol<IM 10 ltllf99B it Deltw1.-. 1 NlchOLI COll'IJ• 11, lr1d9twel, MtM ' Wttt COtlfl St. 7, Mllnt Ma'11hnt • Cell!, S111e. ~ •• 21, Sl'llf1C19!'1"""11 l, H•-Col, 21, Ce!'llr1 CoU-O-21 Lock He.,.n 27, l!dllltlrl "111 2S Mlllerivllll SI. SJ, lloom11M1111 U Thi.I Coll• 7, le!llanv, W. V1. • C..,lrll COl'ln. S!. lt, SllMllO' llO(.k .. llllodl lll•nd ,,, M11..clwMtt1 35 Trinity Coll. 13, Co!llY Coli.Qt 6 UnlOl'I C<i!~ 11, 11;..,»111tr 14 w11n1m• Col. n. lowdoln IS lfidOtPort 17. Cortl1nd S11te 14 Cot1t G<11rd '1, Tutti 11 Htl'ttonl Univ. 26, ll\llO-,..,N1W1r~ I Ulla~ )f, Wllkts (OU"41 6 M~l'I 11111 :M, Oe11w1re Sti le 6 Norwltli Univ, t7, llottol'I Stell II Urtln11• 21, Sw1rt1'1.-1 I WldlMr Colltu• 21, Fr•~l!lfl'I • Mir ~ JUl'llll• co111111 21, Lycomtna Col 3 Mor111L1n c.t. 20. Ltbl"""' \ltlley " Mullletlbtt'1 21, t>lctlll'llOl'I Stile 10 Nort11M1lerft 41, SP<ll'llfleld lJ SaUll'I C-SI. n. Gl1ubor'O lltlt • Cl\f'rfltV 51111 10, 1C11tmi-2 Drlllll Tech 2'. o.1'1'Ylb\lf1 Col 1' Hofrlfa U!'llY. t, Wt'fnt St .. Midi. • NIW H1 ........ lrl 11, Vtr"'°"'I 1 Jtr..,. CITY 21, N .... rll SI 17 NV Tld'I V, StlOl'I Mill 1 Alll'lflll 27, WW>tr lt Soado Alabama 42. Tennessee 21 Auburn 24, Ga. Tech 10 aeTM>n 24, Duke 8 East Caronna 34, Citadel 0 M1ssissippi 13, Florida 10 Memphis State 13, Florida St. 10 • Furman 19, VMI 13 Vanderbilt 18, Georgia 14 Maryland 27. Wake Forest R1chmond 38, \\'est Virginia 17 Virginia Tech 27, Vlrglnia 15 Wm. '1 Mary 51 , Davidson 35 7 Ml!Sisslppt St. l!, Louisville South Carolina SS, Ohio 21 Tulane 16, N. Carolina 0 LSU 28, Ktt1tucky 21 A.ppalldll1n Sl, 2', Woflll'd :t1 Wflf l(el'lhlck~ 35, E111 1Unh11:ty o • Ell'IOOI a. HtnTY Sl, llt!'ldolpl>-#.Kon " MOreMld Slt!e 2l, TMMI-TKlt " S...,,...,.d Col 11, 8l<11f!l'ld Still 0 TOWIOl'I Sllte 'll, Ft'd.,•I Cl!y 6 TUlklQM 20. lle!Pl\IM..(OOIUN~ ll Vl111lnl1 Union 1', Norfoll! Sllle 0 Ll'l'IO!r 1l""n1 f3, M1r1 Hiii 20 LlwlnGllOll Col S-1, F~elltYllle 20 P~l'Mloirl SI. 10, H1"'plor1 '"'' 0 Wtll Mlryltnd 25, Wttl'l!llQl'on a. LM " C1rt0n·M1wm1n 10, G1rdntr•Wttlll 0 Fl, VII.., Sltll 20, Lint Collev • F•OllTWTlll S!1t1 16. SI. ~IUl'I (DI, • 01..,vllle S!llf 14, Wiii Ll'Ofr!Y If Mlddl1 T"'n SI. 33, .AU$lln ~•IV T1;11 L11tller1n ll. A.11111n Colll'Clt "1'Url .. 1 5tt .. 11t X1vr.,. 0 lltndttllln $1 11, Sou 51111, Ark. • Pr1lrl1 \lltw ~J, 81.iiop Coll-O-l Al"k1n111 St Col ll. °""11111 10 'w Tt•11 s1111 21, • l1m Hou.ion s '" Rockies Arizona St. s:. BYU 12 New Mexico 49, UTEP 0 Wyoming 35, Colorado SL Idaho 17. Weber St. 13 Texas Tech 31, Ariwna 17 Utah 28, San Jose St. 21 lllPl\ll'I F. Allltfn 4', E1st T11t11 SI. JO l o! .. S111e 21, Nortlletfl Al"l1ot11 6 HlllNI ll-_,., Ntrtllr~ SI, e C••-..v.wcl 3;S. Lwoll 7. -Ohio State fl, Indiana 7 Minnen& 31, Iowa 23 l\tichigan 35, wtJCOOlin 8 Purdue 21, Northwestern 10 Illinois e. M!chipn state 3 Oklahoma 34, Colorado 7 Nebraska 10,Kansas9 Kansas State 21, Iowa State 19 ' 8 g 7 Missouri 13, Oklahoma St. Miami, O. 31, Bowling Green Cincinnati %7, Wichita State Toledo ll, Daytoo o Tulsa 52, New Mex. St. 14 W. l\1lchlgan 21, Marshall Kent state 34, Eastern 1t1lchi.gan 20 ~~Mnon Cd 17, '°'11hWlll, ~1n-. Mlrllll1 Cot. 21, Dtl'lltOft Ul'll'I. 1S on.,.. co11e119 -., .....,,,n 1 A~111l1n1, 111. 23, Wllu!M Cfllleot Emport1 lttt. 1.1. Fl. Hl\'I Kans.. t lndl-C111tr1I M, E1l1Mm COi. 2 Jem11town 22, MIYvllll Sllle IS Like F-t 34, Nort11111tt'rfl 111, 1 lll!MMI COlllGt 12, Ll'Nfltl'l(I Univ, • Stj~ J~ll't. IN!. 17, Fr111klln Col. 11-, Miry, IC111M1 a. l(tfllll we11ey lllJINI Vl1t1 21, Lutlllr Collett 7 Hope Colttge II, Alblon l Norm-Mich 33, Hlllld1te Cot. a Wtltlnberg :II, W-!er 0 Almt ColllOI 24 IC1!1m1ioo Col. 10 Coe Coll9(1e n, Corl'llll Colleqe t Dell!'ltnCI Col. 29, llluttll)ll 6 Oubu<1<11 21, Upp..-tow1 14 Hirt"' Colltu• 26, c ... Wtstffn 0 ICll'l'/Ol'I ColllOI '9, Otltriln Co.Ut0• ' Ml(1'1191n TK~ JI, llll'l'lklll Sltle • MlM DulUlll 21, $1, JONI'" Miii!\, " No. Dtkolt $1, ,l, Norlll 01kot1 " South D1kolll 36. So, D1kot1 11111 " Wllll1m p-~. Wtrtb\11'9 21 C11~tlel'I Coll'IJt I" It, Oil! Colletot Clntrtl Col. '-!O. l llftlllllll Colllg9 • Conconllt T, Ill, Q, Pr111Clpl1 Col .. G~ectl•nd ~ol. 1'. Oll1w1 U, K1n1. , -• ~...r V1 lllY .52, Find!" Colltvt I 1Cno11 COii• 1, MOl'lmavth CCII. 7 ~Mid $!1!1 l7, SW MlnMIOll " NE Mluaurl $1. 21. Cenl Mluowl $1. I• NW Col, low1 :M, 81!11tl. Mlrt11. 7 Slou~ PIH1 IJ, W"lmlr Coll• ll So. Dl~ot1 T.m .D, So. Dekat1 Sprrkl. ' T1r1l!o co111111 JI. Emparl1 Collep " Wltlltll'I Jtwel 17, c ... 1. Mtl!lod!st " Wit. L.C-14, wr1. Elu Cl•I•• ' Alllllnd 37. Ol'l!o NOl"ll\t'r!'I I •\lrek1 Colleo-21, Clll111r·Slockl0!t 10 Frl9!1dl UnlY 11, Stwllna Coll'I• J.-1 llllnoh St Univ 17, E11t.,.n +nlnol• • • l!'ldlt111 Still 11, &!Iller 13 Jettn C1rr<ill JO. C1rnevt~lon 1 HOl"tlltrn 1111no11 .u. 8111 s1111 17 11;,.. Hui"""' U. IUl!lol1 Coll• 1 WH!lnl llllllol• u, Cent Mlclllge!'I " l1k!Wtrt-W1ILK1 U. H.tde!Nrg Col .. Colorl40 c..11'" .,. lltl\ltly', K1n1. l Dolnt Coll• 21, Otn1 Collf9e 1 SE OkLl'-'11 Sf 11, NW 511 Ollie " Tim~ U. Solllllt<'1't llltnol1 23 Junior College MllNl'tllll~ c......_. Lq Bffcll U, Pl....,._ 10 El Cl,.,lno •'· LA \1111•~ 1 Pitre• 14, l1k1r1tltkl 1 Wnlenl SllM C:_..rwct Gltlld1le 11, Alli~ Mtnc:oek 11 C1nvons 24 v ... f\I~• 17 Moorptrk 77, Comotot1 I Slnll &1rt>Jrl 12, WKI LA 1 ~ COflftl'tlt<t Imperil! \lllllV Jl, lllrtlOW 11 C<illlQe ol' Ontrl U. YldOt' YllltY '· ..... <11'1'-<• UtC JV l'-kn ltrn1nl!no 14 Birchard, Key Pace Chargers By ROY ENGLEBRECHT Of 11\a 0111)1 Pile! Stiff El Toro turned three Dana • HUis mistakes Into quick touchdowrut to regl.!tter a hard fought 28-8 football victory over the Dolphins JV's Satur· day night at San. Clemente High School. In keeping It.I unbeaten streak allve at five, and a possible CIF playoff berth bid stW very much in the picture, the Chargers took advantage of numerous Dolphins errors to account for 22 of its poln~ . A fumbled punt recovered by El Toro's Oiarles Hi cks give the Chargers great field position In the first period at lhe Dana Hills 44-yard line. From there it took only one play to score, as quarterback Gary Key threw 40 yards to Joe Carta for the first Chargers score. The Dolphins, who con- trolled the ball the majority of the first half, came right back with a long drive of their own, only to see It die at the El Toro 15 yard line. After an El Toro punt, the Dolphins went to work again on the Chargers defense and drove 55 yards in 14 plays, with Darryl Howe sweeping right end from nine yards out to send the teams into the locker room with a &O halftime tie . The second half was a1most a carbon copy of the first, with Dana Hills controlling the ball on the growld., only to cough it up to the Chargers on CO$Uy miscues. A bad snap from center on an attempted Dolphins punt in the third period gave El Toro a first down at the Dolphirut IS ya rd line. Again it only took one play for El Toro to reach the end zone, with Chuck Van.Liew scoring from 15 yards out. Key ran a two-point PAT in for a 14-6 lead. A fourth quarter fumble by Dana Hills at the 45 was recovered by the Qiargers. setting up El Toro's third score of the evening. Birchard rambled in from 45 yards out on the first play from scrim· mage to nail down the E1 Toro victory. El Toro collected its final touchdown with just 3 0 seronds to play as Clyde Birchard grabbed a 10..yard pass from Key. The two-point PAT came on a pass from Key to Van Liew. OAM• STATISTICS <T ., • ' ' " ·~ " , Flrtl down• ru,hlna I FlrJt dowl'll pelllf19 l Fl"l llOWnl Plfltllltl I 'Tot•t first dO<wlli 12 V•l'dl l'lllhl"V JO V1rch pe11!1111 fl' V1rd1 loll 42 Nltt y1rd1 91lntd 262 P~nh/IVWitOI dhltl!A 4/32 Pen1nle1/y1ro:1t p1n1U1t'd 61~ Furnblel/IUfllbltt lost 211 ,,_ 11y ou1rttn. ~· •I ll "'' ~· l!I 'Toro 6 a I 1'-21 Dini Hiii• JV a ' 0 6-1 ·~ Urciul'lll1 lllrtllerd ~·~ Lltw Tol1l1 8ir<01v1dtl Kntur Mel1gon ,~. T0'11l1 ... llUIHINO Iii T- ICll YI ' " ' . 16 116 10 15 ~ 111 Dl!ll Hllll JV . " . " 10 24 10 53 ~ ·~ PAISll"O l!I TtrO )I 1v1 21 -4.4 12 ·12.0 0 I.I 1 7.J 4J S.I • ' • ' • '"' '·' '·' ... '·' Ill JIC 11111 YI ...Pd 115011.Hll DI"• Hltll J\I J• 1 o 17 .no F or Coast Area Collegiate, Prep Cross Countr y UCI 11 Pre-lllle " mllt1) ........ Slllt 1111 UCI l"I 1. (lit ) Holl (I'), lluoll IFl ~:1J : 3. Ch•Vll !Fl )1 rltl •• Outlnll'IQ tl"I 12;0 1 S. Gt•d• tF> 21:111 6. llOll (P) 22 ;11; 7. (lmpbt!I II) 3J;)I; I, llUHler (Fl )2;4(1; 9, Kfl1911 Ill lJ:Olt 10. L...:b Ul )1111: 11. Sihl'llOl'I !U lt~)tl 12. C.Ol'lntllV 111 :M1S21 U, Hein (I) U :061 14, Fl'ltl (I) U ;11. A.r.IK ll!Yllllleo\ll a1INll Plrll.. Siii DI ... U .t mllt1J 0••1191 c .. u 11111 inti ~ ""' 21. Jontt (0) :b;091 2l. W1t•1t11re COJ 2:1!1): •1. 11:-i !GI 23;2J; i:I. c.,.,.;cty !Gl 2•:021 s.. 11:0111,.. 101 t':OIJ M.Gorm1n (0) 1'='11 "· Wllbutl'I (G) 2S:UI 114.. llr1Ul'l,ltl!'I tG) 15!$1; 111. Colllnl !01 U :Ol1 11~. SllC'f (Gl 1':1S; 131, Potel !O) 11:77; 1.1(1. VI~ !01 21 ;J7, Orlflff Cooi"ty CMmlllllMllln Al lit IMM YAltSITY 1-A RKt1 \, O'Nt!I ll!I OOfido), t :5t, L SI. JalNI (Mtler Doi) 91U. J. Altc,... (Dani NIUI) ll~ft. '· lll'lllY CL• H1t:N"1) lO ;OJ, S. Wlllllfl'I• (l•tll 10:119, lo AJbnClll IL.I H1bl'•I 10:12, 7, OIBnll'I !El OarldOl 110:1'-I, D•wll"' (lql1r 010, t. Her1111 (fl JC, Prep Football Standings IOUtH COAST CDNl'llilll!NCli W L Pl' PA Ctrrltol I e 17 lD Fulltrlol'I I 0 11 l s1nt1 An.1 1 a 19 1 Or111Q11 COllt 0 I I 21 Ml, Sin Antonio o 1 10 '' S.n OlllO·-.o I 1 It . ' hhlrd•T"• Jcoru • Fv1111'tOl'I 21, 011not Cotsl 3 Ctrrlla-17, Mt, Sin AnlOl'lla 10 S1nl1 AM lt, Sin Diego MIU. Fri .. Y'I GllNI Sin Dl'IJO INM ,, Or1noe CMll S1l•rdtY'I G•-Fullt~ 11 Ml. 51n Afllonlo f'utl ... IOl'I 11 Ctrr!IM Mt. Sin A~IO(llO •I S.nt1 I.I'll 00.rffoJ, 10. MUHl 'f ICYOf'tu) lO:JI, T .. m kor .. : 1. El OorKO ~.S. t. Mtlw Otl j.I, l. LI Htbrl t), I, G ... d.., GrOlll 14'1, J. lrN 14, Ollllfl: T. S111 Cltll'lt11t1 1'1, t . Dint Hlllt >U. 2..A ll1c1: 1. f'tl•" (C.01111 M ... ), t 14J. 1. ca IMll&lloi Vl•l•I ,,,,, J. Ctnc1ile1 (!1111111 Put) t :JJ 4, ICtllt (CMlt Mell) H1M J, H1t111 fMIUllM Vlllll 11111, 6, Newlt tMl1· lien Vltlel 11111, 7. lautl> lLowttll ID:O., I. Wll'fllautf' (llol11 Ort"41) 10:0/I, t. Klel1y CL1 Ouln!1) 10 :07, 11. Jll'tlltl CCMll Mt ... I 11111. T11m 5'.0l'll: l, C:tt.lt MI I I •t, I. MIHIMI Yltle ... '· Lowell M. •. lutnl Pert 110, S. LI outnt1 11J, ~' Ul'llYtnl" ta, M RICI! 1, Anttl fHIHlllllfl• 1 .. tll) 91Q , t, 11111 IFOOll\!Ul t 111. ~. A.llillll' (Stnt1 An1 V1ll•yl t :U. 4. H-.1111' IC-. Mt M.,),•t :U , J. M•llilllll' {C.,_,) t 1M, lo Salll11111rV (FOOllllll) t :•, 7, Frl1°"' (Fooll\IU) 10:07, I. 'TlllmAn (U•ltl'lcltl. 1110&. t. 9-(FOOll\llll 11~111. 10. Ntvt~ 1V11tnc111 lO;U, TMm !iCOtH: l , Fooll\111 olO, 1. ClfM tt. l, El Modlf" 17, '-Yl~Lt 11,, S. Ht11MIM!tol lllKll llJ, .,. RKt: I, Sirna ILoer1) 91M IC ........ llKOl"dl. 1. Hllhl ILl flllol •11clll t 1>1, 3. S1tvldr1 IL01r11 e :)I, •. Ourn1m /TrOY) t :l6, J, M<"CMllllll !•~I-) frl1, •· Gr1vt1 (Ptcl!kt l •~JI, 7. Wlno11rd (Troy) 10:01, 1. Slick !Or•"'lltl 10:112, '· Ell..-IOr1ng1J 10:0., 10. Spena11r cvrn. P11kl 10,01. 11. Print• IW•tmlnslwl II•"· T"m Score11 I. L!Hlrt U, i. VUl1 Pl•k ,J, l. L19~n1 l tldl IN, t. Wttl.,.ln"lr Ut, J. PAClllct 116. Otf\er1: I. llCM!'I 11•. JUNtoll VAllJITY l·A R1c1: l, Gf91ner ICMJ ll1M, I. Yl ll M0t11 IMY) lttl7", J. Ptmll ICMI 11iff, 4. Ml lll'I, IM\I) 11: ... s. GOOl<lly tCMl 11:'1, '· Rllyn1rd lE'f Oor'60) lO;U, 7. NM .... (Dt111 HIU1) 1110, I. c-y fMVI 111.W, t. Writnt ICMI 11117, 11. llllltml11 (Dllll HIUll ll1U, TN"' IAl'll! l . C•l1 M"' n, 1. Millltol Yltle SF, 1. 0•,.. Miiis U. I. M•ltr Dtl IC, S. El Oor1do Id . a-A RK•: 1. Ft'l'lr fFOOlllllO lO;l'. 2. Mlrtl"" (l!I -•l 10:15, 3. P.O.rsan IL-Ill 10:•7, 4. NUl'llI (LOI AU ll:s.l. I. LblMI (Lot AU lO:U, 6. Ald1rm1n (Footl'lllll 10:51, 1. P0tlWOOd (a ...... Ptrk) l0:17, I. 5pll1Jll\l'l' ll'oolhllll 11 :01, t. Lenotl IFoattil.lLl.U ;Ol~IO.. f'HM!lden !Lowell! 11;111. TN"' Seortlr I. Foa!Nll '!:/, 2. E1 ~ 111, 1 I,,_ P1fl( 117, 4. SA VllllV 147, 5. llolu Gftndt • 1ff, M llKe; 1. H•lnt<Nn !Lo1r1l, ID:)I, 2. Frwnch !L01r1J 10:~1. 3. Evtrltl ($1nlltv0) 10;4], ~. 81!1 (St n- 111'1"1 10;4J, J. Llt,,,.1 {LOlrtl 111:13, 6. G1rc!1 (51n111901 10:'7, 7. R~lldtl CCdM) 111 .. , I. Fisher (Y/111 Ptr-1 ID;Sl, 9. lltr!'ltlt (Lotral 10:53, 10. Surnt•I (VIUI Ptrk> 10:"4. Ttlm Sc0tt1: l. Loera 3', J. ClllM U, l . Wnl"'ln11.,. !OJ, 4, 5•nt1•'1" 104, J. l'Oll"lt ln VtlllY 2111, 6. L1911nt •••ell m. , 50PMOM01t1S l·A 1l1e1; 1. M\llNIHIM 11111 c;i. ~ftle) ltrU, 2. MtlClll l•tll!l(ll ) ll:JI, J. MtWkl-!CO&ll Met.I), '· Alv1rer IGtrden Grovt) 10;3' J. IColtr (CM) 111~, '· Erno! !El Dot-I 10;~, 1. Ellloll CCMl 1D:4J, I. $11 ... IBrul 10!11. t , Dvnlt• (Mlltr DtO 11:4.J, 10. Mt•111a11 IGtrllll'I Gr9vtl 10:47. Tum Sc0tt1; 1. Gtrde!'I GfOYI JO, 1. 1. E1l•1Kl1 '7, J. C1111 MH• ta, 4. Mttw Doi 1n, s. S111 Cl-I• JU, OINtt: I . Mllt!M Vlllt Ut. 1·A A1ct : l. R-11 (lltlentl1) IO:lt, 2. Wei""°""' (Slddltbltkl 1o:n , J Houll (El Modtrltl 10:'7. '· Ctnc:lel11 lll111n1 P1r1'.I 10:51, S. Tftrr IStnll Anll 111:,l, •· Ktmmlr (StHklltbKl!I 10;"3, 7. M1m11111e1 CTustlnl lO:S.. •• IClll'I IEI ModeN!l I01M, e. ltllll~ llllMM Pirkl !1;02. 10. Hoplr;IM llr."'I Mil 11:02. T..- Sctnl! 1. UMllOadl 54. t. >IWM' P11'11 ff, t.' Tvttln 11'11 Iii ,..._... "• S. FoolNlt 122 Otllert: 7, Ulll-.lly •u. M R~ 1. &Nl'd1t1y CSenlltfll) 10:)1, t. w11n111 t•••*I 11:27, I. ICNll'r IMVlllllllllll l111tft) 11144. I. Drcltfl.itl (P .. ~11111 Vtlll'l'I 11rl1, I. C11mmlllf' (l'V) 11111, i. Pt""°" !Lot At) lO:U, 1, llrlckllfHI (PVI lftN. I. lllHl'Wtt JWtslmlnlllt'l l htL t. IWlftmtn !WM) l11W. 11. 11...-.- IH•I 11 1•. TMm :l«n1 I, Pllltlfel11 Yllll'I' 44, J, '#Mlml11tltr 1'111 l . M- llllflW lettll I MI Ctrlfll ••I Mir Ill, .. 1•1-Ut.. . Pll•IHM•N l·A lltett I. HlndrlcU flolll Ort!'ldtl U :OL t. Mt lNI CMlMholl Vltltl lloU,). Nntlllflll II~ Pfl'lll 11;17~ I. ,,,....._ fMV) 11111, S. OlttVIM IUN) lllU. 6. Nichols !Sontr"I } ll~:rt. 7. AllllOl'I (l!luttll Ptrkl 11 :)1, I. Sorllllll tMlttt Dool) ll•JL f , Meffdltfl (81'11) ll!D. 10. TurMr IL1 MW1J 11:35, T11m korft: l. Ml.... Vi.fl 71. l. llolM Gr11'1111 ?O. ), S-1 lOI, 4. Ull'r11'$1" 111 • 5. SUlfll P1rk lJI, O!Mt'1: 6. Mlltr ...... llr0tl'I 2·A: I. Htffttl fMIHlllllfliol llKll) ll:tr 2. ~It .. (Ptr.llkl l 10~55. J, ~ ll.ot Amklall lO:U , t , Artlftttti tl«•l llrlS. S, 1'9!11l l~ewtllit Vllll'I) II: .. lo I'"""" IN•I 11111. 7. llWI~ lutunl llltlll 11114. 1,CllY-(MI J llllS. t , ToblrlV CFOO!lllll) U ;H , 16. ltMllll tW1t.1ml111ltr) ll1U , Tit"' $C.Ot'K; I. MIMllllCll• l tldl U. 2. WH!ml1111lr H, J. lfl-ff, 4, LitvM IHCll lU, J, PKl!ICI llt. ••<-ly ll:Yfl--Stnlori -I. 51111edr1 (Le1•1 l l ::M, 1, 0Vr111m CTroyl t ::i., I. f'rlill ICMI t 1tS. ~. Agull1r (SA Vtll~l •:4. s. GrlY" (fl'1tlllc•l t :S1. .. Clnd1[•1 (8uene Plfk) t:JJ, 7, M .. 1- lnttr IC:dM) 91JI, JUftlOl'I -1. Strne tlotrll t :21, Cyclists Compete In Mesa Sixteen motorcycle riders who survived qua 11 ry In R rounds wltl vie In the United States s p e e d w a y ch:im- p\on.!thips at the Orange ColUl· ty Fairground! Friday night. Leading the finalists 111 htlke Bast, the former national champion who collected n perleet score of 30 points In the qualifying rounds. Rick Woods, the current na· tional champ from Costa Me.!ta, will also be in the field and will have 10 be rated a 0>favorlte with Bast off his perfonnances in major compeUtion ln the past. Some ol the other top rider& Jn the field include Sumner McKnight, Larry Shaw and Steve Bast, all of whom have good re c ords at the Fairgrounds track. Cage S lgnups Basketball .!tignups are now taking place· for the Boys Club of the Harbor Area intramural leagues and will continue through Oct. 31, according to director Steve Polley. Boys between the ages of 7 and 18 are eligible to participate in the program by joining the Boys Club for the annual fee of $2.50. This covers an programs throughout the year . SIP.Ups are at the upoer bay branch of the Harbor Area Boy,s Club on Tustin avenue: off 22nd street. For further tnrormatioo, call Pol· ley at &U-8372. OILERS ... (Continued From Page C4) to cap a 45 yard 11 play ,drive put the game on ice. Glassman converted e a c b time, For Huntington Beach it was a victory .that see.med out of their grasp until the end of th.s first hall. Western had been having it's troubles this year, had soored on1y one touchdown in its first four games. When it marehed 80 yards in 12 plays "'1th the QPtning kJ.ck.oU 1:to take a 7.(1 lead, It tootec:t" bad for the Oilers. But they came baclc. Twice they came back, then when Micklin broke loose there was no stopping them. UMI ITATllTICI " 1'1"' clOWM nn!llng 10 Fltll OOWN ptlllnfl 7 Flrlf dOWl'lt ""'Illa 1 Tol'll first OOWlll ll Y1.n 1'\11111119 216 Ytrlb petting US Y1rd• 1<14t 12 NII yt nll 91llWll' 3:rt f'Ufl'111"'"'99 cfhllr>CI 1/21 P-1T1el/y1N 1 '*"1!19d ... 50 F"'"'blt&/hh"lblll Iott J/1 JC-lly Qlllr'WS HUflll"lton llll<h 7 1 14 Whtlf'll 770 Mleltlln Hiii McAdtmt -~Dtc;lll' T011l1 W!ltbn Wt llKe --tll-• LIOl'l1rd Tol•IS """""' Mltktln !tUSMINO Mm1H...,.. awdl ... " .. ,, 11' 7 . " ' I 0 0 • f4 J ' ' . " 211 n w"""' " .. • u . " • • ' ' ~ •u f'ASSINO • ' ' " ' " " .. " H1111llllflll'I I Htll ....... . . ' ' ' ' ' ' . . . ' Ntl?l<ow1kl 'Tott!I " '" 91d .. ~l! W•llll'll ,1 12 •4 " ' ' ' " '" "' " "' •m 711J "' "' '·' ••• ••• ... •• ••• ... u ., ••• u u "' ... '·"" . ... -'~ ·"' " Mu'l'l'f Sl1fto JO, E11t T....,, Still " WHI Ctrvill'll U, CMtlltlOOGI 0 Water Polo Results 2. Anttl !MIU t1Q, l. lltll CFocithltll t :.i.I, 4. M111111-er CCdMl t14S. I. Cool! IMV) l 1f1 , 6. 0'Nlll (El Oorl<IO) t :Y. r. Tl• tCel•r ICMI ll'ld H1rrl1 !MY) 1t1M. SoDll9mOl'e• -1, M•~I lL111111tl t 1>1, 2. Mce ...... u te1111111 ''"' 1. SI. Jollll (Mlltr Dtl) t:SI. t , Sp1H111Uty CFoothllll t ;SI, f. MNtllnltll 11•11 Cl-ltl ll1U, 6. Htrbll IEI OorldO) 10111. 1. •Hit ICMI ll:lf. P1·0 Scores T•n-St11• '1. Ftorkll Aa.M 0 8owlt Stitt •· 01tll\ldll Col U Gr1fl'll)llnrg Col It, JICMol'I 11111 11 H-•rd UnlY 4, Nt C1rolln1 AIT ' Southwest Texas 34, Arkansas I N. Texas St. 19, Drake 7 Texas A&M 35, TCU 18 Allli.nt Jt, Sul llou Still 0 Prep Grid Summaries sn THI MIW DATSUN 1·210 AT COfTA MB A IAn UN 1141 "•W -...., C.M. ~0-6410 VIiie Plrk Foci1nu1 El Ma0en1 'Tustin Ml11ion \119 10 K1l.!l1 Stddltblck ... .,,. SAVE 30.% FACTORY DIRECT !'RICES AUTOMATIC GARAGE DOOR OPENERS CALL (714) INCLUDES INSTALLATIO N 835.0505 F•tsflmen -1. M1te1H (1!1t111clt l 10:21. 2. IClltr ICM) li t... 3. Wl!trhouse (ildd!tblcllj 10•4J, 4, H•r- t•ll IHI ) 1•111, J. Clndtl•I llue"• P1rk) 10:11, '· ~HM (~Aeltl,1) 111..,S., 7. ~I (LOI A"'IOOI) lD;ll. ' .... ... ll•JlfllO l\6, Phltldelphl1 110 OVC.ISO 15, N-Vert # , Ctbltll M. IMtbn 11 Dl!rolt 107, Houston 1a.4 PorllaNI 12). Sl11!1e 108 Mltwli.*te 101, Clevel1nd U P'-nl¥ 119. /l.ll8ftlt lOI Gold•n Sl1t1 100, K1ns1t Clty-Omtf\e " Project Enginee1· P lant Engineer Production Fore1uau PROJECT ENGINEER -Hequires abllily to '>''Ork \11lth cui11on1ers And should be fo.millttr with dc11lgn and manu- rncturing pror.c11~c1. De~ In itccho.nical EnglnrerlnJr dtalrnhlc. Pl..ANT ENGINEER -F'nmllar u·ith prl'vcnti\•C n1nintP. nl\nce prognuns and n1ust have kno'>'·ll'd~ of n1achinc re-building. PRODUCTION FORE~tAN-RC'Qulres 5 yeart <iu)'lf'rvl~nry P:-r.-pcri!:'ncc ttne'I •hou\d have cxposurt' to all machine operatlons. 0\1lst11ndlng opporlunltiP!I for 1h& riaht indiv\d\1:i.I$ 10 Jotn 11. progreulve medium-sltt'd metal& part.a: mt1.nur•c· lurer, loc•led In Or&.n1e County. Excellt'nl Crlnij:'!:' benefits and \\'Orkin~ ("('.lndllk)n~. rt>sum~ lncludlna: 13!11.ry history 8.lld rC'quirtmcla lo• 9t0, c/o Dally Pnot, P.O. lo• 1560, C°'to M...,, Ca. 9262' Equlll Opportunt.y Employt>r 1\1/f' $f'nd to; - OA!l Y PllOT C ~~ THUJ ~ETHOD - KEEP YOUR HEAD STEADY One or the most cOmmon tins in ao1r1n1 Ls the tendency to sway the upper body durin& tho 1whlj:. Thi.t lateral sway· Jng must be avoided at all costs iC you want to act atnlght, powerful shots. This Is why ·so many golf experts will tell you to keep your head ateady u you swing. Don't overdo it. You don't want your body to be tense. Naturally, there will be some slicht movement or the head even when. you keep your eye; stctdily on the ball. One little trick that J have recommended Is to pal.nt your nose at the ball. This sounds a btt rtranae but it helps you remember t~ keep the head steady tnd your eyes on tho baJI. B·etter .!thots will result. EVERYTHING YOU NEED TO KNOW ABOUT GOLF can be found in Arnie's new book, "495 Golf Leuon1 By Arnold Palmer." Whether· you 're a low·h.andk:1p player or·a duffw, this book c1n help your game. To get 1 copy, send yo ur name,tiddress and S4.9S to Arnold Palmer, c/o thisnewsptiper. Checking Area W 01nen' s Golf It was a mutt and jeff tournament for members of the '°fission Viejo Golf Club women's golt group this week, In this type o( tournament, all scores on three and five par holes only are recorded, ln A flight it was Tudi Sher the winner with 30 followed by Jean Metcalf and Eleanor Wheeler at 32. Jan Schudel won B flight with ~ with Opel Batza sec- ond at 31'12 and Honey Car· roll tied with Sallie Meyer for third at 32~. Kelly Gardens and Jean Grubaugh tied for first in C flight with 31. Ranc ho SJ Sally Owsley was the A flight winner with 3S in an odd holes tournament at Rancllo San Joaquin -Goll Courie this week. Fem Sproul captured second place with 40. In B flight it was Vi Saxton the ..,-inner at 39 with UJ Orr and Shitley \Vhetzel tied at 41. and Elise SUpes at 8L Pat Wilson had S2. In an odd bole! tournament. Frankie Dunt was the A OJght winner with 32~ followed by Ann Pappas (3311:) and Barbara Leonard (35). Cleta DeLong won B OJgbt with 32112 with Rosemary Skillion second at S3~ and : Carole ~ third at 35. Shirley Jack90n was the c night winner with St\i follow· ed by Ginny Stasko and Norene Grady at 36. Eleanor Green won D night v.1th 36~~ with Reva Samuels second at 371h. El J\'lgue l It's president's cup quab- fying lime £or the women's golf group at El Niguel Coon-- try Qub ,.,,_lb Kay Horn ftring a 74 fee. low medalist hcmars Tuesday. Other low scores Included club champion Ann Tee.ie'1 '18 along with a similar mark by A team captain Jane Robertson. The El Niguel women's B' team v.·on Its match at La In C flight it was Betty Jolla Country Club la.st week Poindexter the winner with and advanced to another 42 folloWed by Cb a r 1 e n e round or compedtioo a t Collins with 42%. Saticoy this week. Elsie Mulle won D fllghtt.---'------- "With 39 with Lillian DeShazo PUBLIC NOTICE serond at 41. Cotta ~lesa Jn a black marks tourna· ment, Ann Pappas was the WiMer With 73 followed by FICTITIOUS •u11Na11 NA.Ml ITATIMIHT TM lollow1111 ~ I• 41oil'll llvtl11111 IJ; RAY OUINN ~ SEll:YICI!, '°'' llh11 SIJ11 Ori..... tlUl'lllngton llffch, C1Uf. t2W. RIV OlllM, 7""1 Blue S1llt Dr1v1, Mllfllll'IO!M lffcll, Ct!lf. '1"1'. Tiiis buf.ll'lf$1 It (ond\ICllO llPy 1n Dee Ascher with 76. lndl~1. ln B night it was 1t1arion Tiii• ~::1~"i' -fl lld wltll ""' Voss the victor with 74 follow· ~,., 1~ta;;,,, of °'... covn1y .., ed by Fran Lewis {75) and -' ,.,.,, Rosem"..., Skillioo {80) ~tlhld °''"'" Cot•' o.11y 1"1111. :6'" . • , Oc-.. 21, ti, l!'ld NOYtn'ltllr 4, 11, Vi Ttce won C night with 1'7l ,, ... n 72 with Ginny Stasko end ,... PUBUC NOTICE Shirley Jackson tied for SCC·l---c=,::..::....c...::.:::..:.::_ __ (l(ld at 74. ~~'1!~0s~' .. f~~·:::• Nina Danielson \Vas the D 'T~• following perlO!'I 11 c101no 1M11lntn ntght victor with 76 followed ••: SONSHINE ELECTRIC COM~ANY by Donna Costello at 78 and 1J2 &•Hdw•v E c°''' M111 '1627 ' a Ue between Eleanor Green E A(:i:' M~n .:;;'°"· n2 llrOldwtY - ------------1'1111 l)UllMst !s <ondU<:led b'I' 1n In• olvld~11. K ids Like To Ask A iidy HUBERT l. MlllER TIRE CO. INC . SINCE 1920 SANTAANA 209. Bu1h St. :147-1201 COSTA MESA 1739 SUPERIOR •••• , .. 1 ........ , Ph. 642-lJU PLACENTIA 144 So. Bradford I f!I~• ~' nl (hopmoP 524.9280 ORANGE 1100 No. Justin 1l •t. .. • l1ull1 I Celll••I ...... i. •• 11•• ••d .i11,. 532-JJIJ Aftll>OllY 0. Me.toll This 11aie111 ... 1 Wfs l!lt'd wllll IM Coun· ;~1i'"" ol' Or1"1)e County Ofl Odobt• lG. p._, P'ublhl>ecf Ort .... Cot1I 0111'1' Jl11ot, OcloOll" 14. 21, ll. Ind N°""mbtr 4, 19n 31t11--n l--~PUOLIC NOTICE FIC'TIT10US IUJIN•SS NI.Ml! STATEM•NT TM 1o11-1no Pil""" 11 <1olno boullnt,, ••: AME lllCJ.N CAil PL.AN, 11U. Atilt Avtnu.. B•tllOI l•ltt>d, t?M7, Jerry H.,rh. 20tl 2ope1 A ..... ltltKI• hl1N1. Ct. t:l:6U. r.1>1' ~,1.,.,, is <Olldu(ted l)y 1n llld•v10u•1. J••rv Htrrlt Thll 11.i~~"' w•1 filed wl!h Ille COUM!Y Clft-O! 0••"9• County on October 11. 1'1l. 1'2"U Publl,h!!d O•tl'l(lt CD•s• D•lly PllG! °''""'r 11. ll, Incl Nov1m11tr ~. 11 .. 1tl3. :1113·1'.1 rUBLlC NOTICE J'ICTITIOUS IUSIMIS-.-- NAMR STATIM•NT Tll• lo11ow•"ll "''"°" 11 c1o1no Dualn1n ~•! VILLA ll:QMA, 11120 lrootn11r11, Fovnt~r" V1!!ey. Cl . c."'~;;,~~ Not•, 7!.J Mor11n s1, 0.•llO• lflj• ll\ltl11t1\ 11 (Olld\IC!ld bY 1n In· div.au.ii Mt rl•n NOit '"1' 1ttt1me"t wt• Ill"' wl!fl t11t eou~. Iv Cllt~ o1 Ori..,. C:Otllltv on October 11. lf1J. PUIO P~blhnll'd Or•no-C&-111! oartv Piiot Oc•oter 11, )1, 21. Ind NOVtll'lbel .: 1t7l "JS 71 l--~PUBLIC ~OTICE l'tCTITIOUI I USIMISS NAMI STATIM.NT '"' followi nct ff'IOl'I II llolng 11\11/nt!I .. TH£ COVER·U~ Dlll!SS SHOfl, 11»U 5lnl1 '"' "~•·• \11'1!1 An1. C1lll, •J1111 Judllfl Ann Tlt(V'lt!, ltOll WOOdWOrd Line, Hunl11'10tori BN<fl. C1UI. T~h llu•lntn I' totldvtled 1Jf It\ I"· fivlOU..I Jucf!tll AIWI 'Tllattfl Thi! ~Ill-w1~ flied wllfo ""'COun- IV Clt•ll of Or•!lff C-1'1" Ol'I Ol;t.,... 10 1913 ' "*'' Putllllled 0-ll'IOe Cotti Ot!IV f'llGI, ~· u, JI, '1$, 1"4 No .... m11tr t, 1111 )1U.tJ ----------- I .. ,;; :;! ' .~ • ' 1 1 Si :~ • ' ' l~ ' , . " i ., ' - The Week's Market Highlights . - v oiuME, HEAVY TRADERS NA.S D Q11,olatio1is Olt Mutual Fu1tds This Week WIE ll( IN lliVl~W S.lt\ N!Ql'I Ulw Clo~ ~· 1.a(M,«IO .(, •• t " •• l • O• :t<IO lS'1 3• ;i.I'•~ l '• 111.«'ICI S'o •'> l 'o•· '• T'.O,!IOO •I'• 0 '' •Jlo-7'o '°2.100 11'• .,,, 11'~· J, 1t0.!00 J'~ l <o l 'o • '• !U,100 11>1 lf 'o ll '1• ,,..w 'I'&.• Fol ._"° I• • h\.I ot tmt •!Id •••"4 11<•· '"' ... ..... ...... """'°' "' ~.,i DT "" H•W 1,. ·-· ~1-r 1'1J"l,~ l'<IYi .. , 4-'l • .. A.o111.1 1a • 11 10 " ... ,,,.. lfl I) MIO '1 Ah""tt II U 11 U •C.E Fii \JI )4) &11\tf lf U l11• II AION Fa 1) St ,. m ""'t f P F S SI t . M ..... lh•!ll ..... 10 ... .... o .. ,•.to110).I :~ f~1i •• ~i' s., l'"Llt<tDi : c.,,., • 01 •. ,, 1...:0"' l tl t/I 1nv•tm 1111 191 S.tl •. l• ' I! Sloe• 1" I •I Nfl (',.rlll f 10 I ti AIOI l'l\lfl l.•t t 00 1111'1 1 .. ...,1 1.11 I 11 ""' lolul I Y t ll A.mM1 C.• JloO JM .t.M(lo!OJI GJIOLI': oow Fiii! Ill~ Gtw1" . '"'0"' Vtnlur \\'• N1tH A\lfO<> "''''"' F ... i .ll I .. • °" 111 I •I t .. 1.11 '·" t I] IQ,.,., 111] IJ,M • ll • '' 1 6) • 0 HOUGH'TOH; F.,"11 " •" I JI F\lr>O 8 >I lo I II ~!OX~ I I• I >/ A •~ !M:1 • 11 •'Ill BLC Gift ll 11 ll l! B•D""' 11 01 U 01 B•T•O< I 'it I It 81ytl Qt •.ll> 1 ~ Eltd(n '11 t ll t 11 So.KO<> ll •J l l,41 llo .. \fl• •JI I,/; 6on0>1\ I 1'.111 I II 9o\I FOi'! 10.ll 11 11 Brown l ff .1 I I 8•"""' 1! 1611 II CAr..VOI FU"IDi~ Bull I'll IO.!~ 1S \.I ton F<I U11H~ O•v ~IV l.•l l II N41w<I 10 or. II 01 '1Y V"' 17 11 1111 CC. FuM I! 111103 C~I> l"n 11011&1 C•n1 ~II• 11.'9 I) .. CHANNING FUl'tD': ll.-1...:0 811<1 F<I c.o ... $!~ C.rwll\ ln<o"' Soot I V•n1u• CHASIE •t»TOl'I: 10 1S11M '1110.11 1 lll , " !_ti • 10 ··'' ' .. 1 "II t 1, 10 11) 11 ]I FNI ~ •1\10.11 F•Dn CP •.11 6 n ~hTr lh 1~1 '"° ~OHi o~11• tr.em F<'I I! l• ll 21 COLONIAL FUN05: Con.,., 013 1on Eou•IV l \J l 9' FyM ,101111.&e c,,.,,,, • •l I.OJ 11>(0"' '·" 10 u ven1•• l.}.I l 11 Col""' C. 1J U U.t l CO'-'AllCNWLTH TllUIT; ... .. ...., Ofb IOl• 11 1' u._,.. 11 J.j 11 " w1"" In •l110l"O M.ln~I" •OS •&J MA'' co. F•••"I I •I o u l"GPf ,.,.,., ""'" F II OS 11 I• -~I FHC.L M•T II " 1171 M•(; 11111)0. MIO 1J t/1'~• MfO ,.ltl!o9 M(O ltJlll1' '"'-1•• h I 1' 111 "'4!1•tf 11 1' ll l< M'O •m I I! ill M.Jn r Fu 11.:. 11 .. 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P•ud SIP 11.6' II 0. l'UTNAM l'UNDS! eon.,. ~""''V ~· C.•w!~ '"' '"' V"t• F VOv•Q R••t•o F R•n•rl !will'<: Eq "Wq•l1•• !it~u' FO S<llu\ ~P 1'Jall0 q 1110~ !'> 10 II It 11n1111 8 I/ 111 •OJ TO I~ 11 •I !I.SI 11\l!lf>t I I)< I ot 11 /1 • •1 0 I! 1 '1 1.i I •I • II • 11 • l! Cta Sl\f' l .tO t 11 Inv 11 II 1111 r ,,1 11).< 1 1' Vo~!~r O JI 10. !t SM•I~ 8 11 I~ II U 5e 11-C.r 11,SI 11 SI '>o VrnF n.u u or ~I Inv IB 91! 5 .. Inv C. 1 tt 1.11 'loo•• +n I? ?'I ll •• S!>"l l•A ) IJ I Oii S&I> lnD I Y> I.It )TATE SND GAP: ComFd \1'\11 o'"""' l.61 • u Pr091• 111 • O'I St F•G• I ii 111 ~t F< II>( O]o ~}O St&1~ ~t• ••.'1 IO 11 STEADMAN FD': ""' IM l.•o J •• ....... f<I 111 l!l ·~"'" 1 .. ! "' Oco~n I 81> I M STEIN llOE FDS: B~!•nt n 11 n n • (~P•l l \! 1~ 11 1~ Sloe• 16 0'!\IO'I ~IS GltOUP : c;1 .. tn •11 JO S•l'IOEllS: ln•t~1 1U 8 11 V5C1>r>1 lft.< 8 11 511<'<1 l•G •\I Vtl<lrOll 4 I< I ll V•~9<<I 1 •I I loll Vinl 10'lll tor. Yi''"" I l<J'I ·~ ~l=~~t ~~ :.~ ::~ W••ll MY 11 ot 11.01 =~·~t1~'bT16~/ 11 ll GllOUF: E•PIOI" I~.!.! 1•-11 lv•,1 101(1113' MO•qn 17 llQ 1J.'l'I l<~n" Ill .. T•u>t 17 11 U.61 Wtl•I~ 11 ti 1) Q'1 V.•ll!n !1 l'l 11 0 w'""" 110 1'16 ~\I 11'd l 61 l •I Wl"d (,( ' I• •.fl W'\<On\ 603 6.1• l•~9le• !11111 ll •·e•-<t•voMM , . .....,vf1IH'4e. Ntw Y.,k Slecki Ntw Y-lllfwti .1.-ri(M 51Mkl Mlf .... 11 s.leckl Y r11 rl~· (:u111pu1•i,,011 ~· ~· ~·· ~·· It, 1•JJ 11, !OJ) 10, ltll ll. 1tll "it\' '"01';' "i"M ~~ "~· '" m 11t 1 i 1014 l't •l l tl '17 llS JI 111 tlJ UM '" '" ~ta11th1rtl i1111I J•oor •U 111tu1tri11i 11 ll•llro.>lh 14 Utlli!Wl !«I siock~ Hl9~ ll• C-C~ ll.•• ll).U 11!.H-1 . .111 ll.MI U .1' ll.60+0.01 ,>.n n.n JZ.M-1.11 nt.n 1ot.t1 110.n -1.12 \\ 11111°.• i\, . ...,. iti Slorl.,.. FOQ THIE WE£K OCT. IS111·1ffll E•llNING$ tNC•EA}ED DIV10EHDS "'"""• P,,bll< <,;,r.,,,le l'< t•o"' ~ lontu•n1•1 0.1-'<K ••om ll' '' Dtnhplv tnll ·I'< !•om 11< O••mOr.0 Slo•m•o<k l/'~< !t<>m 11< Gtnt•.i $IQ1W•-!J' >( l•om 1~2< Mo•!t""•" c°""· n•>t '"""' lt'JL.<r· Mt'(•• 119-lie 1tom Ilk. NY. S!il• E &C. Ut f'""' Ht P<•H At.O-•'•< from k P,,llm,on f"< ·S!'o< l•om ~ S1••1'1tr C~~m·}Oc t1om •I'.< T A W 1.-.; 26<. from ?~< Ten,,,.c9 l"t lOI l<Om Uc. ' !il 0Clt5 TO 8E ADMITTED TO THE N.Y ~.E . c ... •-nl 1ro:omo S...art, In<, ()(1 ll Wd,le M.inrl91'mtn1 Inc -Ocl 11 APPLIC.ATION FOii LISYING ON THE N.V.5.E. Bt~f' lll~U\ll le~ "''1'°"''~t'~ao~f:~ 1'0 11 USTIHG ON TNIE AMEX I<! VI QI E• Iv l < l•t P~•'""'<tul•c•I\ Hi9 ..... t Mltnl~ Ayon Pr°"""'h 11 ll .~ ~1 71 8•""" I Lomtl 1.'5 "~ 1 O'l 6oo\e Cd\.l;il<lt 1 11 Y~ <I Ctl•!'lt~ Corp. 3.11 v~ 1 JI ,Fefl '-1•11 M!q. ?.1• "' 1,So l'lc>M!'Wetl 3.01 ... 1,10 Nll!otwi Cd\h Req ' oO "S . n S•"?f' Co. J I.I "' l 06 ~l..otD••e• -''" I ,,. v~ • n Xt•O• Cotp l.t2 VI l.l l ACOUlilTIONS, 1'1ERG£RS Al'ID PRELIMINAllY NEG0fl.\TIDN5 e ilP' Mt9 -IC 'f(o;I Co. Gult R•.,.,..«rl . ~"" Ort•llr Mint\ Fly>"') T•<)0•-.1."1111 l~lttn•l•on.11 Int, Flvlnq T190t-·8ocl1he (0"'1>11t,... Cor11 C.•"!IOlll Co.-C .. p•l•I Joutn11 G•"!"ltll (.o.-Ore90n S!a1e•m•" l•I• l YM -Ptffl'lr• F•b"l' ,..,,,.,,,..1 Oo11rllkl!•nq Ca.-AllftO H•rt Co Nt~Of lrK -Wll""' Au1Dfl'til•Oft Co. Cop1r.q111 1t1J It U"•1•<1 Pr•u lntr,.11!10~11 Nt • York ~U PI! -l l\4! lon~w1ng \'" 11111,... 11'of ~10<•• l,..t t.ave 9•1....d hf "'0>1 """ lo•I 1~ l'O"Oll O.>eO on percent ot 1~•n9" on mt Ntt •M Pl!«•"l•O~ \hdrlQO• "'e t"e dlllrtet>Ct b~t-tn ld•I w~•k'\ clo1t~O pritc •lld 1n11 wee•"> Llo"m1 l>"<c. GAINlllS I Arc•l•N .1• "• • I 'o \Jp U.I 1 C.ull Qe&Ch 11 • 1 Up ?l 1 "J ut.L pllo .•o /1 * ... 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I I Pl>aenl• Sii )'t • I'\ UP IO.t l Mt Cullt~ OI 1"1• ?'l \JP Jo.O • l F I !n(DfQ •1t • 1'~ Up J.I .• : g~':.'uE~·~ !',~: ,;~ ~: ~·: I Nate,;, w!\!t ,. • -'• Vp l•.t 1 •meet Artl1t •',. ,., Uo 11.t 9 ltflW• In< I >• '1 Up 11.0 10 Sttll• "Kl'" 11 • 't VP 75.0 11 Perl~;C .!Oil I • H t Up 1•.• 11 C.OOdL~ .lib I'•'" 1 Up n .t 1l h•o M!o ,... -1 u11 21.9 I• UnA•bl .Olb l"+H·1' UP n. II Ml'O y~ 1>.:..,. It uo n .z 1• \loiely Co \' >+ I UP 11.1 17 Geon 1nc:1u11 1l ''l• 1·~ Up 11.0 11 Cry\!tl Oil 11 '1~ 114 U11 fl.I 19 Co~•n Ha!!d 1·-. .. ·~ Vo 71.1 10 E1~1iom .Ill 18>1 • 11> UP IO I n 11111a w .. a n l • '" uo :IOO 11 e1 ... b!r<1 wt lo• 1·16 Up 10.0 11 FeOMrl ."lQ 11 ,. l Up 10 0 1• Mallo-. Rd 1\o •l·1' UP 10 0 11 Moylel10 In 1·, .. ~· UP 2(1.0 L05EAS 1 --I', !l'o-S>o ''• -'• Ii •>-J>, I'•-•• '•-"• 2 .. -,.. P l -'• \"«-H o I'>-•• J --.. lJ' 0--l'.~ I ·-'" ·~-'" )l't-h 1l -1 1 , .. J • '• ]•·-'· •'·-1~. !t• o-111 . -' 1'•-'• 1·.-'• 11·.-, ••• "" "" "" "" "" "" "" "'' "'' "'' "" "" "" "" "'' "" "'' "'' "'' "" "'' "'' "" "'' "'' "' ., 1S.O 1J.I )l .1 11.1 '" '" "' "' "·' "·' 11,I \I .I 11.t " ' "' 11.1 11.1 11.9 It.I lo.I 11.I '" ". Shortage of Plastics Christian Science Monitor Service LEO~f!NSTER, l\fass. Do con- swners now need to .... ·orry about a plastics shortage? NOW TIIE PROBLE~f facing plastics manufactW"ers worldwide is that pro- duction of raw materials -derived from petroleum and natural gas -tlas not. kept up with rising demand. Perils W 01·ld Ii1olders "Not yet," says plastics manufac· lW"ers, including many faced with limited supplies of raw materials from which plastics are made. But in Leomins~er. r..tass .. which calls :tsclf "Pioneer Plastic City," some manufacturers are laying off workers and cutting back production schedules. Lack of raw materials "is threatening the existence of plaslics molders in this area," says one manufacturer. California companies have reported similar problems. Supplies of raw materials, such as benzene, ethylene, and styrene, say they are distributing limited supplies fairly and that few businesses are getting mucb Jess than in previow years. .. THOSE WIJO HAVE been hurt the worst." says a sjX)kesman for Dow Chemical Company, headquartered in l\1idland, htich., "are the small and medium businesses wbich in lhe past have looke'd for bargains by going rron1 producer to producer withoul signing long-tenn contrac1s." In the coming year consumers may notice a slight decline in supplies or some plastic goods, such as toys. furniture, garbage bags, or long-playing records. say manufacturers. But for lhe p;astics industry as a \\"hole. they say, total production should al least equal last year's pace, or may actually rise. New facilities to produce the raw materials have no t been built. because oil companies have concentrated on pro- duction of Gasoline and heating oil. The restricted supply of raw matcrial.s is likely to oootinue for ,:it least two years, say plastics experts, because new equipment takes that long to build. Not all plastics manufactW"ers believe that their problems come just from raw materials production rema ining slablc while demand, increases. Some charge that raw materials are being diverted profitably to : • Sa les on a black market without price controls. • Sa les oversea!' e Qinversion to more profitable substances. Producers or lbc raw materials deny the charges. IN.PAST YEARS American companies did export many raw materials for plastics. bec ause their suplies exceeded don1estic demand. NO\\' suppliers say that exjX)rtS arc cut back, meeting only existng contracts. One Leo1ninster industrialist admits he is templed to sell his raw materials overseas because he could ge t three times the domestic price for his goods. Recause he is loyal to bis customers, he says, he will continue to sell in this country -unless he finds he is risking going out ol business by selling at controlled American prices. New Ye•~ t Ul'lt -i' ... IOllG¥ .. n9 •• ' j f'IOWS lllt .tO<k\ 1"'11 f\fYe 9•m•d 11>t m<l\I •n<I 1011 11">1 "'°'' b~.,. <I "" Pl!"*"' ot rnanCjl' on 1"'" 0...~•·1nt·C011nt.,1 ml• ~ti •• Quote<! b, ll>t Nll~D. · ct,r,::tn~~d .;f'r;~:~t~ ~~:~?;~, ?;~, :;;:; Plitt •n<I Int tu"•"' II>! b•d ""'~- GAI NEll' 1 Cl'lafl Bk< ,lib 1111 • I • VP 1•.l I Qe<oqn E<!U•P \', • '• UP 711 0 J W"ltt !illoeld C l '1• ': UP 1~0 J E<1ui1y 011 Co l\l,. 111 Up 1&,t I Grn...,.,Pw 1 •2 !1 '' I UP 181 I MedoScl f e<Y t •,• I• Up 110 I .l.!woo<IO<n ,.., t >o, >, Up ll l I Oi~ E•ttll !M• •"•-'< UP UO 9 A"'""'t G•p I'•• 'o Up 111 100.n1oMll0 1n<I I'•-'• UP •11 11 ln!IVl<IOO C.O•P I •• '• Up lJI 11 Yi•uil Stoen<• 10•, -1•, UP 11 l 13 c ... b Le•\ .'>O ,,, •. l UP 'I ~ U NObllity H""'~ 7•, ->l UI> 1 I I 11 lnltt<Dn E"qy 9'•• I U1> 11 l 1• Cont •PI •ncrp I • ' .. 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I I 011 'M.J on "' J O!t • ' 011 ~ 0 Oii \ • Ofl I t O!I S • Ott I 1 Olt I 1 Ott ),J are being exported, has organized a petition asking M embargo on exports of plaslics supplies. Petrochemical companies have en· dorsed government allocation of son1c petroleum products but under Of!e plan get low priority. Few government officials have at- tacked the priorities of the allocation plan. But John R. Verani , Massachusetts Secre!ary of Consumer Affairs. supports the plastics industry "'hen he spcak.s of the need to conserve energy. HE SA VS Tl:IAT men in the future will feel wonder "tinged with anger. if we bum up in 100 years th e oil supplies which cou.ld instead have ser11ed as a raw material for plastics and other goods for many thousands or years." The whole record industry is feeling the "push and pull " of limited supplies, says-a vice president of · Columbia Records in New York. "We're making a m21jor effort jusl to maintain our present production ," he states. A pl asHc supplier explains: "Everyone is vying for the ssme thimbleful of product." The solution to the problem. he clain1s. is for !he United States to drill for more oil, build n1orc refineries, and lhus produce more of the prodtl£'ts that are in demand. "It will get harder to get rav• materials for plnstics as time goes on.'· says a spokesn1an for Dow Chemica L "because top priority goes lo gasoline and home·heating oit" RECORO INDUSTRY ALREADY FEELS STRESS OF LIMITED PLASTICS SUPPLIES Plastics production has increased year after year -doubling since 1967. The great increase in recent years, says one producer, has come in packaging, refrigerators, and automobiles. Another Leominster manufacturer, convinced that too many raw materials Petrochemical comp:inies could get as good or better profits froni plastics as they get from fuels, he adds. but pressure from government and con· swners keeps the emphasis on h!t!ls. ------- European Manufacturers Reach for U.S. BRU~ELS iL'Pl1 -The U.S. l'.:rt1ikl:'l'}' illl<.il·he drRpC'd his fcf't ovt'r the nnn ur .1 bl'O\\'ll leather l'h:11r and ::ilkt'd of the Europt"'an trr11d ro do n1orc 1hnn just sci! 1.'\'"0lll1l'IS in An1en('11. European hu~int'ssmt'n now \1·ao1 10 rnakc ll11..·n1 111 the United ~tnlc5. roo. he 5;1id. CharlC'S Va~;in , inch1i>lrijJ dcveloprncnt :iuac-he. ~n1001h ed a l!nlrill \\rinkk· 1r1 l1is .starched "hitc i;h1rt. lit• look- ed QUt across !ht' CC'f1n-0n1lc capital of a boon1ing Eu rope". Fir111s Set Up Shop Inside Van Rode's .\rcnangt'I ~'\ichael shone in !he suulight fron1 atop the town hul l spire. '"The ju111p in European rn.1 nufac1uring in\·estinent 111 Aml'rif'a? ~I)' lavnri1e sub· jcct." Fagan said. T'he tloll<lr devalu::ttioo this spring sparked it. he saitl, ~h111uracturers '~ho export to t h~ St11:tes are fll{'('(I vtith a choice: "Either they ghe up lhrlr mark et or get 1hc h1'1t o\·f'r there anll rnanuf:i.c· lurt• th;ll pr('lduct in'.'lide !he ho11nd11rirs of the l_;nitrd Statrs," Fa~an said, ncrorr tht' dt'va!untion. ht' ~aid. n1;inufactu rcrl'i h a cl rcscrvat1011." ~!>out setting up ;i pla nt i11 A1ncrk·1i, but. "\\hen your prof1l!l have rv11porated. these objctlions tend to ~ct brushed aside ralht'r quickly,'" lie i.~1d he h:ls 3J>O~l'tl 1h1 s Their A1nerica.u Market spri n~ to more thiln 140 com- pa nies in northcni Eurooc alone "'hose direclors v.·ant to j;Ct op factories in the s1:i.1es. !\lan,v already h.1 ve localed there, he said. but e)(act figures on just llO\Y n1any arc not available. "All lhc factors whic h caus- ed American industry to come to Europe in the '60s ha ve now s1vitched." he said. 1-l(l r cn u1n e rat e d lhc chnnge!'i: European con1panies pui;hcd by the devaluations and otll('r factors into i;l?('king a plant site in the United ~tales, hn,·e more help in Brussels than just Fagan. four states - New York. Illinois, Virginia :ind f\,fichigan -mRintain "mini-embassies" in Bru~sels jhat the devoting an in- creaslng p.irt or their time to helping European manufac· turcrs tlnd plant sites In their state. ves1ment in !he states is now estimated at $14 billion. The U.S. economy is benefit- ted by foreign investment, Fagan maintains. It provides jobs locally. Kationally i l helps hy reduci ng the amount or what otheno.•ise 1night have been imported from Europe. Alt.hough they \\'ant to go. m a n y European mal'lu· racturers are apprehensive about a move to 1he United States because they think the market is controlled entirely by large trusts, Roosen said. Going through another _phase with yo1tr invest1nents? Before you get phased out, take a look at this REAL ESTATE INVESTMENT CONFERENCE A series af 4 l1ctur1s-Oct. 9, 16, 13 end 30 Tuoaday, Oct. 23, 7:30 • 9:30 p.m. GWJ: Gives l11v estme11t Se1~ies e American \\age scales no1v arc competitive \\'ilh lhose in Europe, "pnrtly because of the devalua tion and partly bcca ui>e of hiJth soci al bent·fit pa yments European manufaclttrrrs n1nke U1 ad- dllion f() iqi larics. New York'l'I representati\·e, J. Stephen Stanton. is a Euro-- pean-e<lucated A me r i c a n , fluent in seven langunges. Jn 1971. ju'.'ll before the first dollar dcvf!lustioo. Stanton said perhaps five or six con1- panies he det1lt \.li lh "·ere COO· slderin g a U.S pl11nt sile. But John D. Brennan, depu· ty manager of the Illinol5 stotc ofDce, ~a.id directors of European firms IK! has sent to Ulinols find business Is re:illy not .!JO much different than what they are used to. J1ck Kistler, Realtor, DEFERRING CAPITAL GAINS THROUGH EXCHANGING Newport Harbor High School, 15th & Irvine, Newport Beach A l('('tUrf' on IK'I~ r n l'OOrdin111e 11.·11ls, insurance, i;11vings and current lncnmc Into nn overall pl;1n "ill oprn ll rour-"·eck ~rif'lif (111 111 1 estmenls sponsored h y Golden \Vesf Evening Collei;e. The serir~ is free and open to the pul11lc II "'il~ be h£'1d in the tollr>i,:1· c-1·nrcr ruch Tuesday 111 7 JO J, rn trtl ~v TrRC'" .Jnhnsnn. ;'I frn :1nl"1;1f mJOSf'lor in I il ": r ~ lhrOI'\ llllUU!)je11•Cl1I ,11lq lll 11•:-l11ft'lll paru1lng. On Oct. 30. .Johnson \.\'ill focus on l'low nnd "'hen to thoose invt>llt rnent. a look :it ",~lj,·1uglng trfl1lcrs" versu'.'I the profe~~innal appro.1ch. llE "1LL di~uss risk! and rcw;1rds, \l'hethcr or not 11) pay n money 111anager l\l'o percent 11nd the need for thl' invcsior to an:ity1,c hl m5elf bffo re plunfiing. Arr11n1ula l1n1t ll'l(lnr\ nnrl ket!ping it 14·!!1 be the 1np1c un i~ov. 6, .1 ohnson " i 11 • prcS<.'nt !dens for the $50 11 month inv~tor, ond lor t~ person read} 10 rellre or 1\00111 to rclirc ::is 11 ctl as t:i lldn}( nOOut !he pros ::ind COllll t.f mutua l ftmds. • Savin.cl on t:i.xt>!I. D\'Oidini:t pro1>.1rc an d optirnizi ng the n1;11·ilal drdurtion \"1111 he rovererl 1n the flnal ""'Ct"k. Nov. 13. Emphasis will be plact'rl on li ving 1rusts and lrlra~ to he lp II JM<r'.'lon main· 1n1n rult ci1ntrol or his nsM?t~ during vn rious cor1U11ge11c1"~ I • An1erican inflation is lo"·er. Ill' said. Unemployment Is hig her in the states. Conse- quen tly. niorc "orkers arc ava1lab!C'. • Since t h e Common ;\farkct has exp.1nrff'<l. r:w·o-- pcan fir ms have found It on· nr<:C-!l~ry to set up auxlli11ry plnnts in other market COUil· lr1ts an d ins lea d c:i n spend the time ;:ind money to do ~o 1n the United St.ates. No1v, he is deaJ\ng wilh nhno.~t 200 European manuf11cturers. "This hnJ> pened almo~t overnight," he Siild. F11gan said American COT· poralions now have 11 n estlma!ed. $80 billion invested Pbro.1d. About 10 percent com- t'.li back to the statC3 yearly as corpofate profit In con· lrast, he sa id, European in- "They rtnlflrk about the American thirst fo r ~tati!ltics, '' he said. ''Y.1e 'll all8l}'W why a paper clip goes on a piece of pa-per a t'ertailn way. Their llUit.ude is if it WMks, okay." "Bui the Europeans are 1nuch \.l'l'ler as rar ~1 tradlni goes \!.•Ith other firms," he said. "Aftt:r all, they were trndlng wUh other nations "·hen Americans still \\'ete running around In brccchcl<>1hs." Ticket Information M• •tf"'lldea, lttff tlclr.tt .,. ,.q•lr.cl. Tllrly C91t b• plcltecl ., I• -'"•• •t '"• Or~ Cocut C•H••• 011d C.oldff Wnt CoUot• c-p•let •nd ot tti. Doll't P'llot offlu. 111 CMto Mtt9, N~ ....... H1n1l_,M• IMch, l.et•1te IHcat ••4 S.. Ci.1Nt1t9 •ff f10111 ,._ NewpOrt Hort..r.Cott. M~ 1,.,4 of JINltott. c •. ., .... '"' 11., Orut• Coeit Do1ly Piiot Coa1t Community Con ... Newport Horbor·Costa Mno loord of ll:Mfton ' By ""'-mo vi con mod do w I as a whlc pro! pP!v ~ A w~ BC str SU ev wit rel sal ho ho R Est has 12.1 Ru ~ reg sal I ba Bu B B I sal th• nin an m Ru we for ... to Ru ex be ·-bo ' ho I • i ' ! , • i ' l • t I . , • ' . 'Coua111odity, Beconaes '1leso11rc~ Property Rights Slipping Away? By CURTIS J. SITMOER 'LOS ANGELES -A man's home is his castle -so goes the time--honored principle. But today In the U.S., public demand, legislative action, and· the courts seem to be chipping away at it. Both the federal government and at least a score of states art reassessing traditional ideas of land ownership and use. And they appear to be moving away from the pioneer coocept that land is a "com· moclity,t' which the owner can do wilh as he pleases. Instead many now see land as a "diminishing resource," v;hlch must be preserved and protected. evfn at the risk of private property rights. NATIONALLY Congress may be cklae to pa.aslng land· use policy legislation. Several bills are in the hopper. But In· siders see on (S-268) sponsored by U.S. Sen. Henry M. Jackson (0.Washlngton) ~1th the best chance of. mustering bipartisan support. It just missed becoming la\v last year. This legislation would mandate the 50 states to regu]ate certain lands. It particularly focuses on areas ot environmental conei!m and those that have regional significance. such as airports. industrial parks. and major subdivisions. The: bill al!IO would authorize the federal government to distribute grants of more than $1 billion to the states over an eight-year period for develop- ment of statewide zoning progrMll that 'lt'Ould bave to confonn to various federal guidelines. Additionally a half·dozen states have 80 far adopted sv.•eeplng land·use planning regulatk>os. A score of others have slapped on regional restrai.ots , particularly along shorelines. Others are study· Ing plans for broad land regulatk>o. IN CALIFORNIA, ror ex· ample. a bill under discussion. Assemblyman Paul Priolo CR· and proposed b y Assemblyman Paul Priolo (R· Los Angeles) \\-ould set up a state land-use commission to oversee and approve developmtnt in urban areas. "The measun attempts to provide ctrtaln perimeters for the future. And It would end development at a helterakelter rate," sa.ys Priolo. "As of now the state bas le~ local KOVemment without guidance. Freeway planning, massive wa~er·redlltribution plann~. among other things, aren t coordinated. And this lack of coordination puts a premtum on the speculator's market't.be state lawrri.al'.er declares. A statewide pl8Mlng agen· cy, similar to the ODe proposed for California, is ali-eady in operatk>n in Florida. Hue recommendations are made to the governor. U approved. court action can be taken to force compliance with 5tate &uldellnes, ii necessary. But according to Florida law, only ftve percent ol that state's total land area ls su~ joct to the agency'J "critical cxncem" Jurisd.Jcticn DESPITE FEDERAL and state moves toward land-use control, opposition to this type ol governmental interference ls strong . Builders, d eve lop e rs, realton, and others a re challenging state re- quirements for environmental impact reports and strict limits on oommerelal e:r- pansk>n along the coastlines In many states. Also, federal guJdeline.s. designed to curb srnog in Los Angeles and in other urban areas subject to heavy air polluUon. are being bucked by commercial BRIGHTLY DECORATED INTERIOR OF CAPISTRANO VILLA HOME Wliat's In A Number? Ho111e Funds Co111ing interests. "Thf! present Iav.'s such as the Clean Air Act are am- biguous, inadequate. almost impossible to enforce. and prob ab I y unconstitutional , n1alnlains Harry Newman Jr., chainnan of the California Ocean Vle\v Homes Savings Firms Getting Together Capistrano Villas Shown MILWAUKEE (AP) - A real estate man and his \vlfe are happy \vilh their a1..'COmplislunent, a new street number for their suburban home, b u t everyone else is baffled. The \Vhiterlsh B a y Village Board voted lo grant Jack H. Lee's re- quest to change the ad· dress of his new home from 5066 N. Lake Drive to 5068 N. Lake Drive at a Special to the Dally Pilot SAN FRANCISCO -Ad- dilional fWKls might be chan· neled into the housing markets in Arizona, C8li£omia and Nevada as a result of a new program being launched by the Federal Home Loan Bank of San Francisco later this month. Beginning Tuesday the San Francisco bank will serve as a broker to bring together member Savings and Loan associations that have e~ss fWKls they wish to invest on a short-term basis and other associations that wish to bor· row funds to make mortgage loans. The bank will attempt to match the needs of bolh lenders and borrowers in terms of rates, amounts and maturities. Business Proper ti cs Dr. Pifaurice Mann. presi· Association and past president On terraced sites alon g a Included Jn the full price The Capistrano V i 11a11 dent of the Home Loan Bank. or the lntemalional Council of hillside abo\'C San J u a n of the homes _ $30,500 to Design Center perm I ls explained that the program Shopping Centers. Capistrano, the garden homes $38.~50 _ are such features homebuyer s a wide latitude is designed.to "put to work" "TO ALL ~.·-E,,'TS and of the Capistrano Villa con1- ss funds that S 0 me "" ·1 fl f ·i· :is quality shsig carpeting filed in selecting I ands cap In • exee purposes the regulations pro-mun1 y o er a.mi ies a niost " associations have at any given mulgated by the E p A distinctive home location in cnlf'Y\\'3YS, vaulted ceilings, sc hemes. color-coordinalion of time, even during periods of (Environmental Protection the Capistrano Valley . r-..tany "'oodburning fireplaces, rnir· all appliances. upgrading of stringent monetary conditions Agency) constitute federal \\'ill afford buyer's views of rorrd \\'ardrobe do.ors, all carpeting and many other such as the present . land-use control and zoning." the ocean to the west. kitchen bu i I t _in s and special customizing features No estimates can be made Ne~man says. The one and t111·0 story. two if buyers deaire. · automatic ,..arage do o r as to the amount of funds Almost cenatnly, along with and three bedroom. detached " The Capistrano Villas com- that migbt be.made...availablc continued moves t 0 w.fl. rd home are available with openers. munit}' of detached garden ~ ·of-t!llO. Lee asked the change a month ago, saying it was "of the ul· most importance to n1y wife ." "It has nothing to do with magic, superstition, religion or othewise," he said. "ft's simply a very persoaal matter and I cannot nor wi ll I say anything more.'' San Juan Sea Ranch Project Now Open ·for home loans through this feMral and state land-use i;tin· three diff&ent floor plans and One plan as prove to be ho.mes and condominium villas ·program but conceivably the trots, will be more court tests ·three elevations per plan in e:<tremely attractive! A is a project of \\'estport Home· volume could f1lll as bigh as raising the issue ·of con-Early Califomia architectural ''dream suite" bonus room. Builders. Inc .. of ~m. $1 billion to $2 billion in the stitutional rights of property styling: forn\3.l fro.nt entry \1'hich can be converfed into \\'hen Completed there will be three-state ilth district, Dr. owners. Amon g other things courts. red rilission tile roofs, a third and fQUtth bedroom 1,200 famiVes 'in tfle large com· MaM said. the courts lvill nee<:. to spell textured stucco and decoratl\'e or serve as a family leiSW"c plex on 120 acres of prime The minimum amount an out v.•hat is just compensation wood fa cings. centei:-. property. association may lend or bor· to those whose property right s ------'"---------------------------- row in the program is $50,000, are abridged by government !; ~ "" ' < Big Volume Recorded By Russell Sea Ranch, Pacesetter Homes' newest family home orfering, is no\v open on the hillside overlo ok ing pic- turesque San Juan Capistrano Valley in southern Orange County, acoording to Landon M. Exley, vice president and general manager of Paceset· ter Homes, Inc. Only minutes from the center of one of Southern Califomla 's most co I o r r u I ooastal communities, Sea Ranch is also close to seven golI <.'OUNleS, an 18-fnile-long In its first 60 days or selling stretch ol public beaches, Dana Point Marina, Doheny both new homes and resale State Park and the Cleveland homes, the recently launched National Forest. Russell and Associates Real Nearing the end of con· Estate, in Huntington Beach structlon Is the :l3-unlt ·first in- has recorded a total volume or crement of the 60-unit, two-ln- $2,130,000, reports Richard F. crement Sea Ranch project Russell, iresident. near the corner of Calle Most of this volume was Aspcro and Del Obispo Street, registered by the new home about one mlle west of the sales divisions one of of the Ortega Highway 0 f r ramp tour division of the company from the San Diego Freeway. based in t he ne\v Ayres First increment owners wUI be Bushard bu.Jlding at 22311 able to move In to their ne1v Brookhurst, H 11 n t i n g t 0 n homes in November, ac· B eh cording to Exley. ea · Foor models, decorated by Sales were high in the other At:arcia Wynne Interiors of two division , seminars and Tustin, are on display at 32092 sales training acUvity and In Via Carlos. Prices range from the book division for sales of $4B,950 to $63,950 on one-and nine books on sales educaUon lY.'0-Story homes ln three-and and h o u s I n g construction four-bedroom. two-, two-and· management, both programs one-haH-and three-bath plans. under the personal direction of Estate·slze lots, averaging Russe.II. J0,000-square feet, are stm. cleaning ovens, dishwashers, when i·udged 1·0 -nni·ct w1·1h d I d •·· I v.•hile maximum borrowings ... v s po s e r s , woo ·U\lrn ng the public lnte-st. f. I with j ts et could be as high as $100 ·~ 1rcp aqes gas e , w On the cons11·1ut·1onal issue bar bell Ill · million for certain associa· s. mar ne van es 10 Rep. Steven o. Symms (R· dressing rooms, ceramic tile lions. Idaho ) sees the Jackson hill as in baths and s h ow c r s , 11.t:aturities range from 30 desi=er-selected brass fi:<· a threat to individual property p,o• lo 180 days, with the Federal rights. "This land-use bill is lures, custom finished ash 1-Iome Loan Bank serving as the result of collectivist think· cabinets, double safety locks an intermediary in ing which threatens to destroy on all exterior doors, shag determining thf!. interest rates. our right to private property," carpeting in living areas, utili-Eventually. the program he says. ''This $1.06 billlon ly porches, ceiling and will encompass the entire na-b·U could prove to be the perimeter wall insulation, 6 . · · · 1 1 . • d tion, Dr. Mann said, involving 1nost damaging blow ever ensive rougu-sawn w 0 0 the other 11 federal home loan dealt to the American concept siding and stained rough beams. Concrete driveways! _ban __ u_. _________ o_f ~pr_i_,._i_e _ra_n_d_o_wn_er_s_hi~p_. "_ and three-and four· car garage.s are also featured . Valley Park Under Way Construction .has started on the second phase of Pacific Coat Properties' 65-acrc in· duslria\ park in F'ountain Valley, according to Coldwell , Banker and Co., exclusive agents for theproject. Hyoute . a ~~- Half gone in half a year and the rest will not last long. Hurry to see this distinctive Newport Beach development of condominium homes. built·in clusters around handsome courtyards. LOW AS 5cro ',.DOWN i . ·1 ; ~ "Our volume of sales was dard. All Sea Ranch model.'! well ahead of our projections feature Pacesetter's w e 11 for the first month which we known shake roofs, cathedral estimated would be slow due or sletJ>sloped living room to start-up activities," said ceilings and rough-sawn in· Russell.''It turned out to be an terlor and exterior beams. excellent month, followed by a Home n1odels offered at Sea better month. \Ve see strong Ranch range from 1,774, to buyer demands for n e w 2,328 square feet. All units of· A total of 13 new buildings costing more than $3.9 million, will be ready for occupancy next January. The structures range f r o m multi-tenant buildings with 1easable in· crements as small as 800 square feet to buildings in the 10,000 square feet to 35.000 square feet range and a freeway f r o n t a g e divisible 99,000 square fet!t facility. liilost buildings provide land for expansion. according to Coldwell Banker officials who said that improved industrial sites also are available for sale to users. ~ homes." fer built-in ranges and self· ;;;;;;;;~~~~;;;;;o--;;;;;o;;;;;o~J Eight superb models. each a masterpiece of luxury, comfort. convenience and quality construction. S undecks. fireplace, wet·bar, elegant Master suue. Sun-LiteV kitchen. The Carefree Ille That$ave$ you Thou$and$ . ' • I . ' ' I ' ' ! ' l I ) . • • • • . r • . • . • • I SEA RANCM CAPISTRANO ESTAaLISHED JULY MCMLXXlll To have S.3/8% 6nancing thcac days is worth noticing. ' Pacetetter Homes hu such a commitment on their magnific,nt Sea Ranch Homes. That'• riJ!ht S.3/8%.' ~=,i.f· Moot bankurc charging IO% or more. You can buy an elegant ) or 4 bedroom home at our present S.3/8% rate-today ... but you mu&t hurry! Thia loan program will expire October 29, 1973 • From$49,950 HolilCS private enclosed double garage. R ecreational facilities include heated swimming pool, lighted tennis courts, sauna, therapy pool. All exterior building and grounds maintenance provided. Satisfy your curiosity-see Newport Crest toda y' Two. Three. and Four Bedroom CondomJnium Homes f'om$62 995 ,., .... .. ,.,.,, .... ~ .. . . ...... ,.,, From Paahc Coast High111oy '-il'hO'?'~ and Supirlor Avenue tBalbO<'I r Blvd.). drive up Supenor to Ticonderoga, and d\rectlv 10 Newport Creit Information· Cent~. Telephone: (714) 64&.6141 511~ Olf1ce opm d•lly 10 am ro 'unM!I '····~ ................ ' ................. "'" .. _. .......... , .... ~ ........ ,. ~ -· -... 1 ~ .. .................. ...................... ""'""'"' , ......... . . ,, ... ··-, . Here's the value of o lifetime. Monona Towntiouses, the complete adult development, represent the best buy in Orange CoUnty. And to save even more, they're available with as little as 5°/ •. down payment! Other fine long-term financing too, with interest rotes os low as 7. 9•/,. And these big, spacious homes (master bedrooms ore up to 18 feel long! ore complete with everything needed for gracious living. Custom-quality draperies, nylon shag carpet ore standard. So is cenrrol air conditioning ••• and every living room hos a cozy gos fireplace. We ·nave swirlpool bothtubs, private polios, wine cellars and electronic garage door opener) •.. all included in the price! We don't know of any other deluxe hcTies so complete tho! ell you do is orronge your furniture ... end you're settled! The recreation area includes a spacious clubhouse, huge 5Q.fool swimming pool, Jacuzzi whirlpool, sauna and billiard room. Freeways ore just o few minutes away for easy commuting to work or 1h• nearby beaches. Thi ~ is truly tomorrow'$ lifestyle today •.• come s•• Monona Townhouses today, for the best of your life! 2 & 3 Bedrooms 2 & 2V2 Bath ~ s27,995 to $35 ,995 JOQ S. flowt?r SI, Oronge lelcphone 532·6547 ~01J1hbound Sor•o Ano fwy. 10 Choo• man A~e. (QS1, tnpn eos1 to Flowe1, \Ou•h 3 bloc~s. Gr:rc.en G·ove fwy, Of "t't!H•eio~,,cJ !,cn10 Ana 10 Main Si , ,..,,1i. !fJ Pol.,,v10, we~ ~ blocl.L (,' 8 OAtL.Y PILOT Sunda1, Ottobet 21, 197) Mailng Up In Real Estate ltENNhlH D. STARK, 44, Square or Pacesetter Homes vice president or the Presley in Irvine. companles, bu betA given ad· SON ho dlUoaal ~sibilltles as ex· L DAVID ANDER 'w eruthre vteie! ~sldtnt or regist~red a totalsalu volume ..._.t-.; ~· R,o'm e 1 ()f tl.0~750. ln the first year ~· ~ of his career • <.;_ 0 m 'p any' In real tstate 0 subsidiary has been of the New-named man- port Beacb· ager of the b&lsed home-i:esaJe home b ulldlng division of firm . Russe11 and Stark has A s s oclates been a home· building coo· Real Estate, struction ex-ANP1•soM H u n lington . . . . . . ' • > Federal "Breaktht'!"'ff .... ' -Hom.e-P.rojeet Fad.~s ' WASHINGTON (AP) -The pro)ecl, lhi& tolves one of. lhe Nixon administration's. f0ur· big probletps P,1aguing mass- over lime as the lncl~ry. with thousands" of individ ual builders, becOmef I mere COf'I• centrated. , , prodUC<d housing' 1r..,.poftl1-year-ok1 program 't 0 • en-Uoo. uwe're not shipping a courage mass production of1' lot of air," he said . housing Is on , 118 .last, !'{I\ ; Alcoa'• apJ>"9"ch .~voided SUMICllRAST oaidtthe prob- • -~'1Ct1>'.~ 1 for~t, ~u,t1• J't.:, prob le~~-, pf.,...,oth e,r . letns with factoiy;..produced ~"II" lotsaken, 1 ~ -.f,i:"~,,. 't .,Br.ea~~' pn>Jettf1 he ~using. are thr·e~i''l.fol~; 1 SLnce •,•ov.e·ratJion .. aa1a. On~ was,<the sameness bullding new prn~pes 1n-·ireaklh-:··••·w~ launi:bed' bf ·l)la,..PfOdF""°mes. A volye stai\up <OS~-(\ranspor• · '""'&'' !llA$1-producoo · bathroom or tatioo .of wbole waua or hous- ,f.>Y ~he Hous~g aod:_ Urban kitchen co~ be p1,1t ill; -any Ing uni~ is e~ve. aOO the Affairs· Department -1n 1969~ ldhd" Of housing wUt;rhe said. market 1s quesuonable. . it tias accumulated many t • • > He said Europerut nations critics and found only a few Lannen &aid the government which pioneered ~t~. his ap- . perhaps defeated Its 1 own· proach are now finding many friends. purpose in Breakthrotlgh by' difficul ties with U . . ecutive ror more than 20 Beach. reports ftichard F. years. He joined Presley in Russel, president. ~;!« 1966, and was named vie'! His division, one of four The experiment. a nine-city issuing requirements Qiatcall· Ht]D's Shennan d;eclined_ to program that resulted in ed Cor expensive hous~g uni.ts. say bow long ihdUs~allzahon presjdent for Southern in the Russell organiz.alioo, TRABUCO ROAD PAVED OVER IN MISSION VIEJO AREA California construction in 1988. is based as new corporate ----------- The pres 1 e y Companies. headquarters in the Ayres listed on the American Stock Bushard building, 2 2 3 11 I Brookhurst $trtt)t, Huntington Exchange. current y has more Beach. Other divisions based ~ than 20 resident i a I com-there include new home sales. munit ics under development in seminars and education. and Southern and Northern California . Arizona, New ti.1ex-book sales. ico, Illinois. 1\1 a r y 1 and , Previously, Anderson or-v· · · nd \V hin D c ganized and managed thL' irginia 8 as gton, · · first branch office of Real ROBERT II. Wll.L1.U1S. Estate Mart in Huntington fomierly a member . of Beach in its first four months Coldv .. ell Banker l\1anagement recorded $675.000 i11 sales. He corporation's a ppr a is a I won top a\vards from the lfun- d e partment tlngton Beach-Fountain Valley in Phoenix, Re a 1 t y Board (with a has transff'r· membership of 1,000 realtors) red to the for his sales volume for one c o m pany's month and for four month Newport periods. Beach office ,v h e r e he ROBERT ~I. STRICKLAND will continue has been Promoted {c) vice his ttclivities presldent, sales manager or appraising 3 Hallcraft -Homes of -L o s . wide variety ol real estate A n g e j e s, properties in Orange, Riversde Inc.. it "'~s and San Bernardino counties· a n n ounced Announcement of Williams' recently by lransfer was made by Steven Thomas E . N. Bach, manager of the Breen, exec- Newpor! Beach appraisal of-utive vice flee, who reporte~ that a11 p r e s i dent eyer-iiicreasing level of client and general reqUirements will be better manager or met with the addition of sT111cKL.t.ND the Irvine Williams to his staff. based subsidiary of Hailcraft Williams, a native Southern Homes, Inc. Califomian, graduated from Sbickland previously had the University of Arizona with been one of Hallcrart's leading a bachelor of science degree salesmen ll-ith its Azusa and i n agricultural economics. E 1 To r o t o w n h o u s e Prior to his joining Coldwell developments before moving Banker 1'1anagement Corp., he into the management position. spent more than seven year::i Uallcraft ·homes of Los \Vilh a Phoenix·based agricul-Angeles, In c., is loic:ated at tural firm as an appraiser, 2082 Michelson Drive, Jtvlne. fann and ranch mana'er and ~ F-c:AR.uUNo has loan correspondent. • beeti iiamed Director o f JAMES E. KNAPP o f Dftign at Thomas a n d Corona del Mar, who recorded Associates, Newport Beach- $7,000,000· in home sales ln b39ed architectural firm. the first four Announcing the assignment. years in the RoOOrt ' Thomas said that business, has ~· Garduno u·ill i been rwned be responsi- r e k ion a I ble for .all \sa.tes mana-design de - ger in the v e l opment. ne\v homes Projects cur-~ sales ruvi-rently under sion or Rus-his direction KHAl'I' :'JOCiation Rt-al in~on Beach. sell and As-include such Estate, }lunt· diversity as Knapp lvlll be responsi- ble for selling in new hon1e communities of builder clients of the firm. working directly with top management in organi zing and executing sales and marketing programs. He 1s the first regional sales n1anager appointed by !he new fiml b:ised at 22311 Brookhurst Street, Huntington Beach. In !he 12 months before joining the Russell organiza- tion. Knapp rei::istered a volume of AJ,000,000 in new home sal es in his fourth year of selli ng at \\1oodside Village of Donald L. Bren Company 111 \\lest Co,·ina and at \Valnut GAD HO a :100,000 squue foot shopping and office complex in Tennessee, resort hotel and coodomlnums on the Sea ol Cortez and an eques- trian oriented cluster housing project in Ventura County. A · nationally prominent designer. Garduno's credits in- clude more than a dozen published articles in Los Angeles T i 1n e s ' Home ~1agazine. His designs also have been featured in House and Home. House and Garden Living Guide , Arts and Architecture. C hristi a n Science ~1onitor, ti o use Beautiful Building Guide and American Journal of BL.l.llding Design. Legislator Sets Home Cost Probe Assemblyman Peter R . Chacon (D·San Diego) has an- nounced plans to investigate the total costs or new housing construction and the posslble effects of st.ate financing of housing on th~ st.ale's cred it. Chacon. chairman of the Assembly Committee on Urban Development and Hous- ing, said the commitlee will hold t hearings during the interi . He said he hoped to have members of "Governor Reig n's Staff explain to ttie com iltee t.be fa cts and rea ons to support his veto message of Assembly Bill 1152. AB 1152 provided for a com- prehensive housihg finance program for moderate and low income families and eldetly persons in Ca liforn ia. Governor Reagan,;vetoed the bill claiming it would ad- versely affect the credit rating ot the state. The first hearing will · be in San Diego on Nov. 12 and 13, at 10:00 a.m., St ate Building, 1350 Frant Slreet, Room B-109. The subject is: Streets Sp~out ... Money Saved iii Viejo The planned community or Mission Viejo ls bullding better streets for its residents, and saving money at the same time . The consulting firm of Raub. Bein, Frost and Associales, Ne·.\'J)OI'l Beach, reports the Company has been utilizing full-depth asphalt concrete pavements for the past five years. Originally tested in cooperation with the Orange County Hoad Depar!ment in 1968, results were highly favorable to the full-depth. The test involved one roadway surface of full-depth asphalt, and the other of conventional asphalt concrete on aggregatebase. Surprisingly, initial cost bids for the two pavements \\'ere equal. Moreover, although building costs have risen sharply since 1968, the full-depth paVement now costs 15 perCent less. · , "-~· ·-_ -· lri building roadways in Mission Viejo, earthwork, utilities and road work are -all conwleted first. Then, in each building · area, a 2.&-inch asphalt base course rs placed to keep the site out of the mud in case of rain and dust-free during building construction. Just prior to opening a unit, a final two-inch asphalt surface is placed, so the buver gets ;t new street. Mission Viejo Company is pleased with the continuing high ·performance of the full-depth pavement,-which costs less to maintain and passes this savings . on to the taxpayers ol their communities. Trees Being Readied For University Park Costs, user fees and essential Trees will grow \Vhere none etcments in land aequisition grew before in Deane Develop- and develOpment, eonstruction ment Company's forthcoming (inc I u ding labor and 230-home residential project, materials), and. financing of now in the lhitial construction new housing in California. stage at Village IV, University The second bearing wiu"'Jk -Park. I.~vin_e_. ·. -.· .'' , , in San Francisco on December The bui1ding ofg"anizatiDn is 17 at 10:00 a.m. in the Stale now completing an ext.eosive Building, 455 Golden Gate'. project at Big · Canfoo in Avenue, Room 1194. The sub-NewJXlrt Beach. For the new ject is: Sale of bollds tor Irvin e development, the firm holls~g and· the elf~ on the has comPleted a general plan credit of the state. If: which includes the planting of hundreds of trees on the 52- acre parcel of property located in a triangle formed by University Drive, Yale Avenue and ltlichelson Road~ The trees are being -selected on the basis of the aesthetics of inherent shape and ability to thrive in the soil and climatic condition of Irvine. Top Awards Presented. To Newport Architects Bissell·August Associate<:. Newport Beach planning and architectural firm. received three of the five ·first place honors and seven ol all 2 7 awards presented in the 1974 d·e sign achievement com- petition of the Orange County 01.apter of the American Institute of Architects. The jury \\•as cornposed of archilects from the San Diego chapter of the AIA. Four o( the 3\\'ards, in- cluding all three of the first honors, were for projects of Azimuth Equities, I n c . , Newport Beach. All three first honors were for recreational c e n t e r buildings a n d surrounding amen!Ues created for mc:ibile home conununities iri Irvine, Riverside and Tempe, Ariz .• developed by an Azimuth subsidiary, Diversified Com- munities. In each of the communities. known es the Meadows, the Bissell-Augusl firm created multi-purpose r e c r e a t i o n centers in keeping with the architectural characteristic of the geographic region, blend- ing contemporary styling with traditional design_. Typical of the ~es ar.? euc8.fyptus and pine aileties which are represent,p,tive of "the area and conform to the master landscape pl~ri of The Irvine Company. develOpers of Univei:sity Par~ The ~County Regional Trails System is ad- jacent to the property:- "We are concerned that Village IV becomes in- creasingly attractive as trees and other greenery achieve ijlalurity," Larry D ea n e , pr,esident of Deane Dev elopement C o m pa n y , Newport Beach, said. "Our commitment is to a com- prehensive community with fu11 integration or land, shelter and natural growth." Model homes are now under construction and will be ready for public presentation within the next few months. Village IV is the projected extension of University Park and lies east of completed phases, south of the San Diego Freeway and north o f University Avenue . TODAY'S BEST HOME BUY! building 3 000 housing units He also ,said the program sue: might take. ·, '. eithfr wholly or partially fac-~ered fro~ constant changes_ . "It,'s coming," he ~ld. "But . in regulations. 1t will not be as clean and tory-produce<f,, is now m what "They tried to do too much clear as the EurQpean ex- lhe department calls the with the money they had," perlence." "evaluation" stage. No new he added. He said many siqe benefits prototypes_ will be built.. Almost eveeyon.e. a gr e e d h a v e r e s u 1 t e ~ fro m The department ts making that the ind~bj· lt headed Brea}l:througb .. One. :·~ey ~ne only modest claims about for more mas production. has been to begin a nationwide ,vhat the program proved, But most agreed that .mass· move toward uniform local saying that one of the key produced housing will evolve building codes. findings is that the industry -- is heading for more in- dus trialization. But its experts are not sure that it is the wave of the future. "THE MAIN thrust of the program, trying to find a better technique to build houses cheaper, railed," said 11ichael Sumchrast, chief eeo- nomist for the Natfonal ASSlr ciation or Homebuilders, a trade group. "There may be .other ~efit! from the •prog- ram that \vere•not in the origi- nal design." Joseph Sherman, direc'tor of the program. said Breakthrough showed "that it can be done." He said the program may help to lower the rate of increase In the price of housing, not rma-a· low-cost alternative. The department h e 1 p e d private industry in con- struction of new housing pro- totypes Jn the selected cities, pumping about $65 niillion into the program for research and development. Plastic and steel were among the materials us- ed in the prototypes. Many of the projects have had a hard time. Some have failed . ft'am '30.soq Includes home and lot. •open areas. lavl1h landac::aplng,' 10"9 views down the San Juan CapllttanO Valley ftl the tell, .. ' a long list of piiCe Included features. and all In a garden world of serenity, security and w.lut.. ' •, TheNatur.lwottdof ' ...,,,...°""'......, 10.1.111 .......... [71 4)4"-1112. (114)t»Ml\ """"""~~' ---.... "' ., " '··' ' .; But one company, Alcoa. maintains that projects' ii is . . . '· participating in at tbrt& sites .Ji· are succeeding. One reasonl·p;;;;~~~~~~~~"~'~"~"°~-~~~~~~-~l ~;:;;I is that the firm is limited ~ flt11 • itself to producing self-con-s111 cit""~" ~; tained, ready-made kitchens and bathrooms that c 3 n •• ::i~.~ shipped .0 the hous-· .. S·. % 0 o-.-o· W' . N. ~ ACCORDING TO Thomas J. Lannen, president of thi? Ateoa subsidiary taking part in the To1nan Joins State Panel Warren Toman. executive vice president of G r a n t Corporation, Newport Beach- based homebuilding and. land development firm , has been appointed to membership on the California Chamber of Commerce's Statewide Urban Planning and Land Use Com- mittee. The committee was formed by the Chamber of Commerce to study and make recom- mendations on the vital issues of land use and planning throughout the State o f California. Come to 2912 Alta Vista, East Bluff and we'll prove It to you . Open today 1 toS $59,500 4 Bd. Rm . + Fom. Rm. Vacant. Move in Pacesetter Homes Announces Castlehill ... Where our prime rate has been lowered to 8% * Biq 75x125 Lot. Fenced ... Newly repainted inside. Owner will recarpet. You choose colors. Generous square footage. Larqe family room. Fenced yard , for privacy and safety. *Employment transfer forces quick move. If this is your price and size home needed. You can't do better, come see today. OUR 24th YEAR Offe'ring Service dnly Experience Can Provide • SALISMl:N AnlNTION: If ye1'd llke to l•I~ 111 ac:ll'f'I .,._ff, _.,. lio•l11t. L.t'• t.ll. s15.3000 [fililQll-! 675-Jooo Ofllct Open Today (Sundtyl 10 1.m. to 5 p.m. l Al you know. the banks charge to% or more. We have made a long term commitme?nt to deliver·homa at 8% ... but you IDUlt Kt now. 3 and 4 Bedroom Homes From $341750 "l,.i.lff ...... ,.,..... ,,_ U!,nl, _ ... _ ......... 07 .. ."' ..... ..,... ............... __ .. ..... Miff--------,.._ -· c In tllL hills abovt the La Paz turnoff of ti" San Ditgo Frttway. (714) a:J0.1840 ~· I ~· .. ' '' ' .. ' " ,, 1· •1;'1 'I~· " , ! ' ' ! l j l I I I i 1 t ... t : ~' ' \ . ~1 , \' ·: ~~ I I ! I I ,, i • l ' ; . ' . . ' ,, ; ' '" I l • :I ' • i l • '! • ~ ' .l, ,1\ I • .. • ' ' ~ :'i ~ V-8, auto. trans., Power steering, radio, heater, tinted glass, extra cooling· 'radiator, 5000 gvw. F10YRSS0723 '67 MERCEDES BENZ DIESEL cyf., aufo. traris., fadory air $15 6 9 ondltlonlng, radio, heater, Whitewall tires, #VEP345 _s~-'-"-~'-'°"~21_.1_~_,~~~~-•M_Lv_P~ DI AU 'NEW FOR 74 ::,•· '74 CABOVER CAMPER I THEY ARE HERE ~OW! fl MOUNllDONA #11 26 74 MUSTANG II .'70 FORD.STYLESIDE PICKUP V-1, auto. trans., radfo, heeter. 8«1F '70 TOYOTA MK II WAGON =:.~ $J 8 8 MANY MORE A'r $16 9 7 :~~:x_·~~.~ ;;~:~ Pickup_ .... ...,..,.. t:,';:~~~~!~i~';~~~~nc1;i;on-..... -;;-;-•-S_T_A_R_C-'~-•c_i;-~-•o-;-EN_T_T_R_L_R-.-i~--'-:-:-;-:-:-T-~-:w-E_u_~-~R-7:--- "' Ton E""""al -HUIT\'! $1 0 8 8 110 J<A WASA Kl Llcnt No. 146'1 o. ,. ------ooiiiiiii:..;;;:;.;~ SOOcc MACH m $4 2 9 ' HARO TOP, Sleeps ~ Icebox,. $5 8 8 =::a stntc. water lank. outslandlng . ' '71 ECONOLINE ·van f4945/ 'JM·~ ' l':.~1:.~_., .. i.noctt $2388 ......... _:.;,}·"'--------..t~ .. rw-D."";·M-0-· -,-0-R-.H-O_M_E_S-.-... -1 ------------t • · · '69 IMPERIAL ' FULlYSILFCONTAINED ~~~l~~'~·::;:;'::;r,,:~'= ' 779 --~' $3100 brabs,powerwkldows.pow.eraeats, s 1 = . ' ,,r W10 radio, tie&ter, whitewall firH, vinyl DtKOUNr roof, tinted glass, wheel covers, MOJllATllMIUtDllCOUHll ,_, · noM PACfOIYUST Loaded. XH5m SUGGUnD UST . '68 ·DODGE,~ustom Van ~'"'• rldto, '"''"· lJ<:en'" No. $1 3 8 8 :??"'°~!!'-'~'!.r~~~~r.-.$2 4 8 8 steering. power brakes, radio. hffter, Whitewall tires. Vinyl root, tinted glass. UcenM No. 737GNJ . Z~!.~~!:~.!.?.!.='-· $3 3 7 9 (disc) bnlkn. radio, htater, whitewall tires, luggape ntck. 10 r:iass. #"59GYA · '71 PLY. Spt. Wg. V..a; aufo. trans., factory air condltfonlng, Pciwer steeritig, power brakes, radio, heater, whltewall ti.res, tinted glas1. License No. '7 AZ 288 '67 'MUSTANG . $788 Va. stick Mllft, iadto, heaier. Lbnu Ho. J.OHEO '67 FORD Gal. 500 v-1, 1Wlo. trans., power steering, ncRo, hellttr. $788 Llcen~ No. VHA.461 '71 FORD GAL. 500 $1 588 V..S, auto. 1rans., factory air C'Qndltlantng, POwer steering, radio, heater, tinted glass • serial No. SS.CFO '69 BUICK $1288 WILDCAT. v-1, auto. tram., .,,, P'#I'. steering, pWr. brakes, radio, w-w fl,., vinyl roof. Uc:ense No. XTKIOf :~~ .. ~~!~!~ry~~!J.!~ -$ s 8· 8 steering, r'ldlo, heater, XHJ617. '70 IMPALA VI, auto. tr•ns.,' power steering, riidio, Whlfewall tires, vinyl roof. Llcense No.022AZD '72 PINTO 2 Dr .. apted, ntdlo, hHter. #911DUL. '73 FORD Gal . 500 $29 88 V-8, 11uto. trans., factory air conditioning, power steering, power (disc) brakes, radio, heater, Whitewall !ires, tinted glass. #211GGO '70 VW BUG $1 266 .t speed, radio, heater, 541}.ANO '70 FORD LTD $1 388 V-8, Mo. trans., factor'( alr conditioning, powerstiNrlng, radio, heater, whltewall tires, \llnyl roof, tinted glass. Serlal No. 233CIE '73 LTD 2 Dr. HT $ VI. auto. trans., factory air conditioning, l]CJ'Ner steering, power (disc) brakes, heater, Wt"!ltewaU 3 1 8 8 tiru, tinted glass. 211GGO . '70 TOYOTA MK. II Cpe. Auto. trans .• radio, heater, 06201 M $1097 '~} .!.~,~E. .~.!~!".!~2r~. $1 pQWer steering, radio, heater, wtirtewall tlrts, tinted gl11u. 763-AGO • 98 8 ~ _:Lf PILOI ~ ....•. ~·521 ~011'10tMn • • • • • • • • 9SO • qqo Boots & Morine ~ 900 • ~ f"ipluyuilll'M. . • • • , , , 700 • 799 The Biggest Marketplace on the Orange Coast Mobill ....,,..,.. b Solie • • • l'2:S • M9 DAILY PILOT .CLASSIFIED ADS ................... .w .)4J ........ -.......... ... hall htott Q.wol. • • . • tsO • "' ~ ........... 300 ·"" ·~iiil . . . . . . . . . 200 • 299 ~ ror w. . . . . . . 100 • 114 ~~ & fcMrd • , • • • • • i$O • S74 Mttt~ ...•. , ... IOO • 149 You Can Sell It, Find It, Trade It With a Want l>IJ (642-5678] One Cal I Service Fast Credit Approval Sdtoob grid INtiution • • • 515 • "' ................... <00 •6" Tronlpcwtaticll\. ••••••• 9'S • .., General _..-~~ Genet'al Gener•I 'Owr•I ERRORS. Adv•rtl1•r1 1houtd ctieclc thtlr 1"-='--"-------'-''--'------- adt dally & r•port •rror1 lmmedlat•ly. The DAILY PILOT •11umt 1 lli1blllty fo r the flr1t incorrect ln ... rtlon only. -···· ]~! -........ ]~ G•n•r•l READ THIS LA CUESTA VILLAS $30.490 Cl ose to the oct1n in Huntington Beach! Credit r•jaction s at fir5t unit price! These have carpet. floor tile. a11tl drapes included. 3 BR .. 2 BA., llUGE farn1 kit· chen, detached ga rage. IMMEDIATE OCCUPANCY NO PAYMENTS UNTIL JANUARY Model One Block West of Beach Blvd. off Adams In Huntin9ton Beach "' AYRES SINCE 190S ' • S36-1445 ------------ General IF YOU NEED MORE ROOM then thl1 t~·shadrd bt!au1y rllls !he bill. Adnlt occ11piM. Chttk the qun.lity of thr liutte addOO-on f 11. m l I y room. Perfl.'("l for klds or partiea. 3 be droonis. Beautlfully kept bAck;yard provides plenly of privacy. T11ke a look at all the fruit trees! A name with 110mt'thing special -all for $35.m Call su.2535. Beautifully kept .... 1th shai:: ('arpcl, fantastic rental prop. f'rty -or live In one & let the other pay. E)lct'llt'nt vrilue on The Enstsi~!l' - Sec It you'll take it. Call Red Carpet, R c altOJ'S 64..-. General BIG HOME NEEDS FAMILY CHARMING IRVI NE TERRACE Vacant and ready for occupancy. 1418 San- tanella. 3 bedrooms. 2 baths. top condition. Lease fo r ~500 per month 'vith option to bu y at $74,500. NEW AWAR D WINNING CONDOS Choice of n1odels, loca1ion. decor. Near Tennis courts. pool. Excellent terms. trade. lease/option. Ne,vport Beach location. f"or example, 3 bedroom, $72.500. E MERAL D BAY f\1agnificent white water vie\\''. Situated on the ocean side on one of the largest lots in lhe Bay and just steps to the beach. 3 bed· rooms. den, dining roon1 , heated pool. $259,500. SPACE -VIEW-COMFORT Beautiful grcrn belt \'iC\\'S fro1n thi s spa· ciou! 5 bedroonl Jlarbor View home with large li\'ing roon1 nnd fireplace. \\'Ct bar. Located near community pool. $79.900. SUPER FAMILY HOM E Dover Shores R hedroo1n residence \.\·ith cver~·thing for gra{'ious U\•ing. f''orma1 din· ing rocnn, la rge f:unily rootn, gl'c>Ot kitchen \'.'Ith breakfast room. Lnrgc yard. $159.500. PRIVATE GATEO COMMUNITY Rayshorcs home locntcrl <.'lose 10 private beach. Move-in cond ition. New custo1n pat- io. landscaping. 3 bedrooms. $72~500. WATER F RONT DUPLEX 2 sLOry Spanish Villa "'ith 2 bedroo1n rental unit. Reduced price $239,500. 313 E. Bay· front. LIOO ISLE BAYFRONT OPEN SAT. & SUN. 1-5 P .M. 8« VIA LIDO NORD. Prime loc., 4 on, 4 ba. home. Sep. din. rm.; 40 ft. lot. ~l95,000. ~ 644 -1766 Coldwell, Banker ~ 2161 San Joaquin Hiii• Rd ., N.8 . ****** Heritage Collection 'VACANT-C OSTA MESA 4 BEOROOM, 2 BATH, block wall fence, hardwood floors , nice big yard. Now vacant, ready for quick move in. Asking $29,600. CALL ~540-1151 NO DOWN VA SUPER SHARP 4 Bedroom, 2 bath Costa 1'lesa home. Great features like brick fire- place, kitchen/dinette area, new paint inside & out, large double garage & beautiful land- scaping. Just listed. Priced only $30,000. - Won't Iasl a v.•eek ! CALL ~5880 COLLEGE PARK DELIGHTFUL 4 BR & Family room. En· trance for boat or trailer. Close to all schools & shopping. Outstanding value at $33,500. CALL 540-1151 GOVERNMENT REPOSSESSION $l9,SOO -3 Bedroom, 2 Bath, large double garage, hard\vood floors + pool, near Ne\'.·· port Back Bay. Fantastic value -bids close soon. Call us !or £ull details. CALL 546-5880 MESA VERDE NORTH DOLLHOUSE 3 Bedroom, 2 Bath, fireplace, huge family room/country kitchen combine· lion. In new section . See this one for sure! Asking $39,900. CALL 540-1151 MAKE Ol'FER ALREADY THE BEST VALUE in Mesa Verde, but owner still invites offers on this 1800 sq. ft. 4 Bedroom home. Beautiful d~ cor, \\'OOd paneling, wallpaper & good car· pets. Elegant setting on spacious lot. Room for boat or trailer. CALL 546-5880 - TOWNHOUSE EXCELLENT COSTA MESA localion. Big 3 Bedroon1s, 2 Baths, shag carpets, near clubhouse, schools & shopping. Bargain priced at '24,500. Hurry! CALL 540..1151 ASSUME 7°/o L~AN LARGE 2-STORY 4 Bedroom home. Com· plete with step-down living room, formal din· ing, closed in patio room, & 3-car garage. Great cul-de-sac location, just steps to com· munity pool & greenbelt. CALL 546-SBBO ERITAGE REALTORS General * BALBOA BAY PROPERTIES * OCEANFRONT NEWPORT HEIGHTS New deluxe triplex. 4 3 BR., l~vely lge . liv. Car parking. \Vill trade rm. w/dm. area. Bit· for oceanfront home or in kitch. Lge. back- -? $225,000. 675-7060. yard. Dbl. gar. Deco- rator's dream. $47,500 HERE IT IS 31h Lots in Newport Beach. plus 13 units, I blk. to beach. $150.000. See them nO\Y ! ! 673-7420. 642-7491. OPEN HOUSE Sal/Sun. 214 34th St., N. B. Furn. duplex, 'h blk. to beach. Lower unit has !rplc. & bllns. $76,000, 55l>8800 * BALBOA BAY PROPERTIES * 4 OFFICES TO SERVE YOU ~eneral Lot • 7..one c.2. :ii' x ~· w11ti approxlm~tcly «IOO i;q. ft. al hulldl~. ~t lnc"Om~ 11 '°'"' ut 552S ptt mo. \\'ho'~ first'! Newport •I \General ONE OF BEST DUPLEX-CdM One of Corona del Mar's best floor plans. Ext'flllmt Joca. tion, close to everything. Front 2·slory unit has bt>amed ceilings, sunken Jiv- ing room v.·lth conversation brick fireplace, 4 Bcdroom11, 21~ Baths. buUHn kitchen, f!JlflCious dining 11rea. Bnck unit is alsn 2·story, 4 Bc>droon1s, 2'~ Baths, and luu; a bull!in kitcht'!n too~ llov.· about this for a good buy!! $110.000. ****** * TAYLOR CO. * FABULOUS SPYGLASS HILL Wonderful NEW home for a Ige happy fem· ily! Spacious entry ball w/circular stairway. 4 Lge bdnns, lge FR, DR & huge finished bonus room with balcony. Rm for poQI. Com- plete ldscp. You own the land! $125.000. 7 TWIN LAKES cm. SAT/SUN 1-5:30 COUNTRY CLUB ATMOSPHERE This 6 month New home presents a beauti· fu1 picture from a block away-you'll be proud to say it's yours! Palos Verdes stone front & situated on a lovely view lot in Big Canyon C.C. "Bright-as-Spring" colors in smartest decor. 4 Bdrms. FR, DR & 21h ba. Enjoy your holidays here. $129.500. 1 CHERRY HILLS LN E SAT/SUN 1-5 :30 WATERFRONT RESIDENCE--$1~.000 Includes the land! View of channel, ocean & sunsets. 4 Bdrn1s, formal DR. large living rm with fireplace & lge wet bar. Spacious master BR suite. Great patio on water side, private boat dock. Ample priv. pkng. Open .JJoU4eiJ BALBOA ISLAND 404 SO. BAYFRONT SUNDAY 1·5 Beautiful 3 llR.., 2 ba. bayfront home 'with lge. family rm. & spacious 2 bedrm. apL FANTASTIC VIEW. Ofiered at $219,000. 114 PEARL SUNDAY 12·5 Steps to South Bay from this 2 story 3 Br, 2 Ba home, exuding Isla~d charm .w!th 2 gard~ en patios, large family rn1, d1n1ng rm & beautiful kitchen recently remodeled. OFFERED AT $89,500 William Winton Real Estate 2'l9 MARINE, BALBOA l_SLANO 675-ml 644-7270 6 BALBOA COVES OPEN SUN. 1·5 :30 General 1 General I,;_'-'------ *4 BEDROOMS* S.nd for )'OUfl fr" Hom• for Llvln9 magazine of N•wport Beach area properties with pictures & pric••· 2818 E. Coast Hlway Corona del Mar SPECTACULAR OCEAN VIEW--$119,500 Breathtaking! One story residence on Spy- glass Hill. Consists of 4 generous size bed- rooms, family nn, formal dining nn & 2'h baths. Lovely carpeting, tile roof & 3-car garage. Fabulous area of all new homes. 15 POINT sun DR. OPEN SAT/SUN 1·5:30 DOVER SHORES BEAUTY--$215 ,000 Fantastic custom built 5 Bdrm home. Lge fam rm, formal dining rm & 41h baths. Afr· conditioned, Italian marble hall, mini-pool w/jacuzzi off mstr bath. Approximate 'IMO sq. ft . Land included. Really beautiful. 1337 GALAXY _0PEN SUN 1-5:30 CORONA DEL MAR LUXURY DUPLEX Enter thru a drainatic parlor to massive \vet ba r in combined fam . rm, kitchen din. nn \vhich opens to Spanish court-rd. The entire 2nd floor is the master suite with mezzanine study. 2 BR, 2 BA in main resi· dence, 2 BR, 1 ba in unit. Hurry. $149,500. 608 MARGUERITE OPEN SAT/SUN 1-5 :30 PANORAMIC VIEW--$235,000 See the bright city lights, bay & ocean! Truly charming custom built 5 bdrm home. FR, lge dining area, wet bar, beautiful pool, lush landsc, lge lot & much more. EXCLUSIVE LINOA !SLE--$195,000 The colorful bayside setting of this spacious 2-story home, typifies the relaxed llle style of an affluent island COmIT'llnity. Each of the 4 lxlrms. has its own bath, plus a powder room next to the downstairs den. The 18' x 38' living room with 12' ceil, overlooks a waterfront patio with private pier & slip. Just dock your boat & become a part of the fun loving atmosphere. 8 LINDA ISLE OPEN SAT/SUN. 1-5:30 Office Open Sa turday & Sunday 3 YEARS NEW !! . "Our 28th Year" Extrn ,,,,.,,, <Bedroom eoota WESLEY N. TAYLOR CO., Realtors P.1esa oome, newly painted 2111 San Joaquin Hii is Road in.'iidc & out. "Decorator" ''Overlooking Big Canyon Country Club'' GOODY IN GARDEN GROVE Ideal for today's family: not too big or small. A bedroom plan designed for minimum care but gracious living. Features include a custom stone fireplace and separate lh1ng room . SJlijtt~ btlt decorated in· !II.de and out. Lovely landscaping highlights the latYt!' lot. More than jU51 a good buy in the upper 30's. Cal! ~767. OPEN'Tflrl. rrs FUN TO BE NICE/ Be9t Ea.stidde location tur· rounded by choice homes. 2 Baths, very clean, Harbor Higfl Sctlooi District, doubh:o garage. Large lot, 1ow traf. fie street. We have money for this home. $33,500 a CALL ANYTIME a 646-3928 or Eve. 646 4543 Lachenmyer ' ~ NEWPORT CREST CONDO , Sacrifi ce Plan 2 Poolside. Choice Joe. Save I===:::~;;;;:;::::::= $8,500. Full price $59,960. Any day Is the BEsr DAY to Vacant. Immcd. occupy. rnn an ad! Don't delay,. Xlnt tnt. & ter.m s. RP,11101 .call today 642-5678. Ownar/Agenl, 6(5..3230, Ctener•I General MACNAB IRVINE FINER HOMES SOUTH OF HIGHWAY Outstanding duplex in "Old Corona del Mar." Real value at $84,450. Lois Miller 642-ll235. (Q34) I A PICTURE OF LOVELINESS Tastefully decorated one-story 4 BR. Spa· cious FR, formal DR. Near park & pool. $75,900. Lois Egan 644-6200. (Q35) kitch~ &. baths. UghteU. NEWPORT CENTER, N.B·. 644-4910 covered patio. Ready to'l=-~~-="'--=:..:..:.~:!....:=c:....:..:.:...:.:..:::.... __ , mOvt' into!! Hurry on this Genet' al Gene1·al EXCITING 2-STORY ENTRY Dramatic 4 BR/FR + DR. Game room. Massive brick fireplace. Garden patlo. View. $129,500 Fee. Jane Frazee MU235. (Q36) almosl·rlC""I hon1e at only•l;;..=,;,.:;,;,_ _____ ..:.,:"-"::;.------1 S34.!M. Walker &Lee 673-5636 LITTLE CORONA LOCATION $11,SOO A Charming 2 bed.room cottage \Vith a formal DR -& a 45' frontage o! prime location -1 block from beach. See 313 Poppy on Sunday or call !or appt. DAHLIA DUPLEX Rear 3 bedroom unit already rented! llee-yoo-tee-full !ront unit both 3 1ge bedroom s, 2· bath, a neat kitchen ' and roomy fam rm. Also a !ixer-upper guest rm. o!f patio, great for xlra co! ~=="='="='::'::"::'::' =~ 673-5636 "Budget Balance" j~'CJ 11011 3 Big bednns, 2 lull bathsl '!!!!!!l!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!iiiiiii!!iiiiiii!iiiiiiiiiii!!!!!!!ll tge ramlly nn highlight this r: family fun home. Bltns. General General cpts, clrps. 2 <"nr garage. _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __ ,\ gn:oal buy nt S29.9::.0! Call ~~ .. ,_..,. RARE EASTBLUFF VIEW NT/t 9 ASSUME 7°/o VA LOAN $198. MO. TOTAL $30,900 Enjoy the view fro1n one of the largest Jots in Eastbluff. Plenty of room for huge pool. 4 Bdrms., family rm., brkfst. rm., entry court· yard. $77,500. OPEN SAT./SU N. 1-S 2807 CATA LPA howan() Lawson jR. RealCoi:t No quall4'Sna Low cuh to loM. OnMnt drive. New )416 VIA llOO • NEWPOIT llACH,(714) ,,,.,, •• ~ ln and ou8':.Maeyl ~------------c1eeontor eJrtns. nlht IV· =..-c....-.~~ lnl room. Roomy bedrooms. r1I Genef•I View ~like KJ'Ound1 trom:l ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;.I afll'den ldtchen. llup .,nd f'l!dwoort cowr'l!d r a t 1 o . Don't mlll oul on lh\1 one • lt'U go fl\.•t. Call now to !'ltt. 847..iGlO. * IRVINE TERRACE * NEW LISTING Fabulous view of bay & ocean. 4 ·Bedrooms, family room. den. 41h baths, 3 flrcp l1ces. Pool. 3 C11 r garage. Approxi mately 4200 square feet, custom buiit. $179,500. Call for appointment DAVID D. CARLSON CO. REALTORS 833-9293 HARBOR VIEW MONTEG0--$69,900 One·story 4 BR -fantastic location acro81 street from community pools & clubbouae. Spanis h decor. Joyce Edlund 642-8235. (Q37) "SPECIAL VIEW FROM GALAXY DRIVE" English Coontry Home -6 BR's, 51> baths. Breakfast room, DR, FR, billiard room & panelled den. tlerriet Perry 6Q... 8235. (Q38) "H IGHLANDS"--$73, 950 Immaculate 4 BR -immediate occupan· cy! Beautifully landscaped w/partial ocean view & private beach. Jack Custer 642-8235. (Q39) PRESTIGIOUS BIG CANYON Outstanding 3BR, professionally deco- rated home. custom design pool w / jacuzzi. OPEN SUN. 1·5 p.m. No. 41 ROYAL ST. GEORGE. (Q40) EASTBLUFF LUSK MOTEL--$69,SOO Hilltop cul-<le-sac privacy. 3 BR/FR w/ fireplace + lanai room. Space for 40' pool. Dave Cook 1142-8235. (Q41) HARBOR VI EW PORTAFIN0--$15,000 Highly sought after 3 BR, 21> bath, FR + bonus room & bath at rear o! garage. $85,000 . Bili Burt 644-6200. (Q42) LIVE IN THE SUNSHINE of lemon yellow in a setting of lava rock & slate overlooking the blue Pacific. 3 BR's & FR. $73,500. OPEN SUN. 1-5 p.m . '7113 CORTLAND, CAMEO HIGHLANDS. (Q43) SUPERB Nl!WPORT HllOHTS Night & Day Panoramic VlEW. OUtatand· Ing 4 BR, 3\0 bath w/pool & ~p!ace In I8x30 master BR. $125,000. Vee Stinson 642-8235. (Q44) ---.....------ [Irvine I -·----0 • ,,., 101 DoNr °"" ...... .. , ........ HAfthut ...... ... \ I ) ~"""1. Oetobtt" 21, llf/3 ' ,,.,., G•n•r•l Genera Gtnera 1.::;•:n;•;•;•l;;:;::;::;::;;;;;;;;;G;'.;;•nt:;;•;•;;;::;::;::;::;::;1' =~=;,;;··;;;;··-= • NEW LISTING REALTORS P ele B arrell Rea/t'I pre3enf3 NEW LISTING ARCHITECT·DESIGNED HOME -Nestled in a grove of trees, lots of flagstone, redwood & glass ·makes this 3 Bedroon1 home a "charmer". 461 E. 20th St. (nr. Irvine Ave.) Open Sat & Sun 1·5 * OPEN SUN. 1-S * '49 PROSP ECT WALNUT SQUAHE: air-cond., 2 bdrm., den Newport Shore• I end unit: beautiful patio, pool & park I' Bil .. 211 b.1 . pl\bl li,:r. groun1ls . Offered at only $33,M>O. ri11n; 1hn1ru: Ulll.'8. lrpll'·· hi'"" "'"'» "'''"· i.u10. CdM OCEAN SIDE OF HWY. ~ 001, new Nlfl.ll!"lf:, \Y'nlk • • 10 bl'ri .. h. l('rtni,. & "oob . income unit 1n rear 011·1l{'r will 1·on.o;11Ji>r Unusual offering, ocean side of Hwy. 2 Nice le;i!)('/oprki~ ;-,oo houses on l·lot. Live in one, have income Cull · ur.:-;.G6.1 ',;1z-1n·; E\<'.., fro1n the other. PENIN. POINT I REDUCED $10,000 TO $79,900 I:: lk[1·111., :.! lw1rh honu· ln TWO NEW DUPLEXES ultru-flue ronrl. !)bl. rri1· !.'.Hr., :! p;•tl"~ ~ 111011 1 for OWNER WAN TS AL L OFFERS HARBOR VIEW HOME lmmacuJate enlarged Monaco model. Deco-. rator drapes, shag carpeting. By enlarging, we '!lean it no\\' has S BEDROOMS. 2 baths, (amd,r roon1, den, & formal dining room, cozy fireplace. n1odern builtin kitchen, pro- fessional. easy-1naintained landscaping-AH for ~14,500. DE LUXE DUPLEX One of th e best floor plans in CORONA DEL ?v!AR . ,.·ront unit is 2-storv \Vith sunken Hv-in~ roon1, bea1ned ceilii1gs, conversation brick fireplace. spacious dining area, built- jn kitchen, 4 Bedroo1ns 2'h Baths. Back unit also has 'l liedroo1n's & is 2-story \vith ~uiltin kitchen & dining area. This duplex is close to all shopping. An excellent invest- 1nent at $110.000. FRESHLY PAINTED NO PICTURE HOOKS TO REMOVE, no walls to scrub. absolutely clean & ready to 1nove in. 3 Bcdroo111. family roon1 home located in 011c of th e nicest areas in Ne\\'porL Boat h<IBI $T!l.:..OO. ~~xpect reaJ ~texican tile entries, the lavish ti()M-=~ ()v~~ OCEAN VIEW u~e of Northern redwood. large balconies to · ) Uuul~'.~. 'l lirln 11~. 1•11t·h. · d I ~·n~l'<l l.:uid. 1 c61 p:u ·k!n11. enjoy the ocean view. Theise up exes are XJni N'r1tt1I h\s1011•• S7tl,!);IO I one of 3 kind . cu~to1n built & designed for 1•5 THIS AFTERNOON call· G73-l6GJ •i7.'""6t\!ifl f'\1)~.1 t11ose \.\"ho ,1·an1 to be different ... ocean CORONA DEL MAR DUPLEX Corner lot . 2 Bedrooins, beamed ceilinged cutie \•1ith cozy fireplace new carpets & paint. lle1nodeled 1 BedroOm rear unit with builtins can be easily expanded over stressed garage. A good buy at $17,500. OUTSTANDING BLUFFS CONDOMINIUM Enclosed patio for eutertaining under the stars. 2-story, 3 Bedrooms, 21'2 Baths, lar ge homey builtin kitchen, brick fireplace. ne\v carpets & drapes. 11ow is this l"or an outstanding value for $57,500 ! yard & room for a pool. $69,;)00. · SECLUDED Cj)UIET COMMUNITY PRIVATE BEACH, FLOATS & TENNIS COURT -All included \Vith the purchase of this delightful 4 Bedroom home. Just steps to the beach. Owner ~·ill finance. ~1ake ap· poinlmenl to see. $69,500. DELUXE BEACH DUPLEX CORNER LOCATION -Upper 'vith ocean view, newly carpeted, spacious rooms, built· in kitchen. fireplaces. 5010 Neptune, W. Newport Open Sun 1·5 BAYFRONT SPECTACULAR LOCATION -And you own the land here. \'ie\v of J-larbor entrance & bay. Use your O\\'ll dock to keep boat handy for ocean fis hing & skiing. 3 Bedro.om ~ouse . large sandy beach. No problen1 \.\11th f1nanc· ing. WHO CCU.LO ASK FOR ANYTHING MORE? 2233 Bays ide Dr. NB Located 1n COHONA DEL MAR on a lovely tree-lined street. Rustic charm in front house, 2 Bedroo1ns, builtin kitchen, carpets & drapes, open beam ceiling, brick fireplace. Ne'v spacious income unit has 3 Bedrooms, 2 Baths, cozy fireplace. Located close to ev- eryllting. ·$95,500. Open Sat & Sun 1-5 QUAINT CHARM - CORONA DEL MAR.deluxe duplex. Charm· mg new upper unit has open beam ceilings, 2 Bedroo1ns Y.'ith oversized master suite plus new carpets & wallpaper. Front house has just been remodeled with lresh paint inside & out. Ne\v cai:pets & \\ial!paper, paneled Jiving room wilh war1n fireplace. 3 Bed- roo1ns, close to all shopping.& you can walk to the beach. A real charmer for $119,500. BLUFFS CON[)OMINIUM Beautiful corner Jot with large wra p-around pa tio for your entertaining pleasure, Jn the new North Bluff's section. This 3 Bedroom, 2lfJ Bath condo has decorator ceramic tile in the entry, up graded shag carpeting, cozy fireplace. eatin~ area in the builtin kitchen plus a forn1al dining rQOm. Let us show it to you. $74,900. -OPEN HOUSE- 13 BR& Fam. Rm. &. Den) 1727 Port Stirling, Clarbor View $74,500. Open Sat., Sun. & 11011 . 1-5 Honie, Duplexes-(2 BR & 3 BR) 400 Jasmine, Co- rona de! Mar, $119,500. Open Sat. & Sun. 1-5 ' (2 BR & 1 BR) 719 .?i1arigold. Corona del Mar, S19,500. Open Sat. & Sun. 1-5. 2828 E. Coast Highway Gener•I Se"d for your free Homes for Living maga1ine of Newport Beach ar,a properties w ith plcturet & prices. Corona del Mar General * BOYD REALTORS PRESENTS * SPARKLING LAKE ... to sail on, in front of this lge. 4 bdrm., 3 bath ho1ne. Vie\v of lake from most rooms. Brick terrace. lge. living r1n ., mastr bdrm. suite; on largest part of lake. Community pool , tennis els. & beaut. clubhouse. All for only $75.000. Xlnt terms avail. OPEN SAT. & SUN. l ·S NEWPORT DUPLEX TOP RENTAL AREA -LOWEST PRICE Roomy 3 Bedroom -each unit. \Valk to beaches. $69,000. J Office Open Saturdays & Sundays ' PETE -BARRETI REALTY 1605· WestcJiff Dr., N.B. 642-5200 ~~~~ General ~~· C.EfA>lesworthy & Co.· Realtors DISTINCTIVE HOMES CUSTOM POOL HOME-N.B. Anxious O\vner must sell spacious 3 Br, 2 Ba. family borne. Completely fenced 20 x 40 pool. covered patio. built in gas BBQ. and easy care landscaping. Ready for a quick sale. HARBOR VIEW-SOMERSET MODEL Illness forces sale. Reduced $79,500., not lease hold 5 Br, 3 Ba. Large fan1il y rm with fireplace & wet bar. l•~orn1al din rm & step dow n living r1n \Yith fireplace. An unusual opportunity. BLUFFS VIEW CONOO Elegant, vacant, & reduced to $72,500. 3 Br, 21f.i Ba, large dining a rea. Custo1n carpets, drapes & shaders & a forever vie\V of the \vide open spaces is delighUul. UNIVERSITY PARK FORMER MODEL HOME All the extras you could imagine. 3 Large bedrooms, includjng master suite "'ith open beams & fireplace. Gourmet kitchen, family room with wet bar. private patio with field- stone planters. Auton1atic sprinklers & gas BBQ. Close to recreation center. tennis coorts. pool & parks. Fully air-conditioned. Not lease I.:1nd . $69,500. C. F. COLESWORTHY 640-0020 WE HAVE RENTALS 22755 ISLAMARE, La ke Forest Gfilieral •Genera l I ~~=~;:;,;-;,,;;;· ==I TRY & BEAT THIS PRICE ... in' }I arbor Vie\v Hills. Ocean & bay vie\v; 4 bdrm., 2 bath ho1ne·on lge., delightful, low maint. lot, only $76,500 . OPEN SAT. & SUN. 1-5 1014 SEA LANE, CdM RENTALS 2 Bdr1n. home. Corona Others from $200 up. de! Mar, for $325. * 675-5930 * 3629 E. Coa st Hwy. Corona del Mar oflJo .!Jj fe OPEN SUNDAY 500 VIA LIDO NORD LOVELY cuslom 5 bdrm., 3 ba .. Lido Nord, on spacious 40 Ct. lot. Pjer & slip, $295,000. Adjacent lot a lso avail. for sale. BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR 341 Bayside Dr., Suite 1, N.B. 675·6161 General G9ner11I Gener.ii Gen&r41 -:::::---:-::----1~~~~-1 ;;;;;;;;;::;;;;;;::;;;;;;;;;;;;;~1 ALLERGIC TO NEW EXCLUSIVES BAYCREST-I HOME & UNIT PAINTING? ' NEWPORT ASSUME 7% VA LOAN Tired or looking 111 honlf'l'I CLIFFHAVEN BEACH f:A . ..,l."ll)P. COSTA i\I ESA :\ llft!dh1g ton~ of \\'Ot'k? If 301 St, Andrr ws Hd. :: + Brdmon1 1•on1plctely 1!lf. ilO, ynu'll like lhl~ cor11t'r a tnrnlly rrn.. c ll n1 P · Cri.'lll l1un!l y hnnn• I f1•1·r111 ho111r 11 ith l)().'11 01· hon1r . Nr""' pnln1. NI'\\' rr f11rhlsln'CI. $68,500. ll('droon1 . 2% \lfllhs -1·1•ry 11·ai1!•1· 6['111.\'C, i;:oocl /il'1vtu·~'· carpcL'I. Roon1 for boo/ 01· tunc1lon11I ttocu·p~n -1nnny c:11l-dr-s1u: ~h'l'C1. forn1nl t ra I lc r. Nrnt, lrhn NEWPORT SHORES lovl•ly lcalurN1 nn 11u l1•1 r!in in:.;. i;\ufly. big h i f: 'n n cl I c II p \n ~. "' bl11: 24.l 6l!it St. :'l an .. llC\\' hlt·in 111n.•rl • RelJl'I' will ht>lp bf'rll'!'lf!Jll!I. {'\'('fl a .<:llnd('('k ! brdroom11. 01111rr wnn111 to kitchen. /\croi;s rron1 v.·atPr. finnnt'l' -$7!1.00(l. Suh1ni! I Bc(lroon1 art. "'ill hC'lfl IN MESA VERD E-Several C:<cellent listings from $40,000 family con11nunit.y. top \'alue. entire sales staff will be there. 2850 Mesa Verde Dr. . Costa Mesa IN CAMEO HIGHLANDS -New listing. Deep water diving pooJ. \Vee bit of view. 4 Bdrms, immaculate. $76,500. Jean Cole will be there. 4521 Cortland Dr ..... , . Corona del Mar IN HARBOR VIEW HILLS -!This open house cancelled due to children being sick. \\'ish lhem good health.) It's a great hon1e. Ly\een Ewing would l111ve been there. 915 Tille r Way .... Corona del Mar IN HARB6R VIEW HILLS -Original set·· tion, 4 bdrms, pool. view, only S79.500. Georgia Healey will be the re . 1120 Goldenrod .. Corona del' Mar IN BAYSHORES -Re-done. 2 bdrms. rule. like new, room to e,;:pand. S62,000. Harriet Andreson will be there. 2582 Arl>Or Ave. . . . . . . . . Newport Beach JN THE BACK BAY -Co untry-Uke area. 4 bdnns, view at night. trees galore, $66.500. Bert Reedy will be there. {Off Santa Isabel). 2326 Tustin . . . . . . . . . . . . Newport Beach . IN CORONA DEL MAR -So of Hwy. huge du1>lex. exc iting features, 5 bdrm unit and 4 bdr1n unit, $139,000. Kay Glavas \viii be there. 618 Acacia .. Corona del Mar IN BAYCREST -3 bdrm or 2 with paneled den. 2,500 sq. ft., owner anxious. $89.500. Donna Superstar will be there. 2030 Hol iday Road Newport Beach IN HARBOR HILLS -Lusk, 4 bdrm, newer listing, clean in/out. $94,500. Marian Reedy will be there. 1412 Seacrest ......... Corona del Mir JN CORONA DEL MAR -New duplex each unit 3 bdnus, 3 baths. $125.000. Nadine Croul will be there. 815 Fernleaf Ave. Corona del Ma r IN WESTCLIFF -3 bdrn1, pool, perfect for couple plus one! Quiet and clean. Now only $82,500. A listing of Nadine Crout. (Appoi ntment only) 645-6500, Newport Beach IN CORONA DEL MAR -Remodel 2 bdrm. den. 45' R·2 lot. ~ood fin . avail. $108,500. Sharon Wohl will be there. 213 Fernleaf Ave ....... Corona del Mar IN HARBOR VIEW HOMES -Nilly 5 Bdrm, for1nal dine. So1nerset. groovy rear yard. S82.!l00. Vergilene J lull \\•ill he there. 1847 Port Abbey Newport Beach ON TOP OF THE REAL ESTATE MARKET WITH THE NI CEST PEOPLE SELLING THE NEATEST HOMES CORONA DEL MAR, 6756000 • MESA VERO£, 545.5990 • NEwPORT BEACH. 645-6500 • CALL US LAST OF THE CLASSICS? \Viii environmental controls be the end or 11e\v duplexes in Corona de! l\1 a r ? Buy be- fore the la\Y of suppl y & dem'and inflat~s the prices & \vhile interest rates are stab1l- 1zing ... see 615 Marigold .. no\Y ... the best • priced ne\1' duplex in t0\\'11. Just con1pleted, 3 Bdrn1s .. 3 ba in each unit ~ bit-ins, frplcs., pa tio1; & out~ide decks. Lovely residential street. $11 2.000. OP EN SATURDAY & SUNDAY l·S P.M. PRIME PENINSULA LOCAT ION 1.'our 1-hdrtn. units, Yi block from top buy beach. (;real n1011ey 1naker. $1 15.000. CORONA DEL MAR TR IPLEX, WOODED AREA. $95,000. Orange Coast llO -\l'W now ~t·ll no• do'wn OV.'tlcr 1vill fluiutee. S~S.000. l'xchangcs. Cull l\11\~7171. 1vi1h !hr $:170 pnyrn('n!. You V.A.! A 11.1/ld bnrgu!n 11t CAU.. US TO Sl'.:I-: oPE.N riL 9 • 11 'S FUN r.l ec NICC.1 cnn huve )~lur lw:nnr & hl· 2600 E. Coast Hwy., Coron• del Mar associated BROKERS-REAL To rt s 1025 W lalboo 61f·)t.6J I I *16 BALBOA COVES* I OPEN SAT /SUN. 1-5 1 Bi\Y~'RONT ~'ITJI ~L il' -I Cusl. blt ho11\(! lot-the (''(·I 1,.·u111 l". :'l /i4Jrn1.~ .• :! ili1. Opt"n llC',llll ,~u·s.. h<'1<11 l'•'rl"·ood ~nrlir11:, lge. 1luul : '1·1'1r. !11 lan1lly ,r, l i1 111~ 1'111 .. bl l·il1 ltitt•h1•n 11·il )\ I J( 1 t t•hi·11-,\ld<' rllsh111<l1 r .. i...1.111~ 11 ! 1·upbo:11•ds, ,.;t)ll ll'a tcr 1<.l"~h!ll1. J•:-.;rr;1 t11». 1lhl. ~:;1r111,:r 11/1>]('<'. 0[1\'ll PI' ,\1+r. J;i 11d.,l'af)4••I. (111 n1·r 11dl ffn:111c1• fut· CJllhllri1•d huyer SJ31l.500. "C" THOMAS Realtor I ~;;~~;~·~o~; I 'I• ACRE ESTATE ROLLING Glll::EN la""""'-j and sta1l'ly tr~.11. l\laln home has loads or old \\"Ol'ld charm and unique arehltre· turt•. S1ep d0\\'11 n1a1">1t'r suih! \lith sitting roo111, rug. J.!•'<I bc1;1n1s. n1aids quartrrl(. z:r TAVERN t~ITOIEN. Banquet forn1ul rl i 11 i 11 g . I-:11lr•rl11in£'fS paradi-"e 1\'ilh roon1 fol'.lcnn1s court. Bl::l). BARN lll·la\I' 11PIU'\11lf'nl vie\\' availi1ble. C;itl nur orfice for full details! OPEN SAT & SUN l ·S, 262 WAVE ST., L.B. NEW LISTING -CdM Nice 3 bdrn1. hoina "'ilh bachelor unit Lo help pay !he co.sis of 011·nership. Offered at only $73 ,500. HARBOR VIEW HOMES Carn1cl 1nodel. \rith valley vle11•. 3 Bdrms., dining rm .. family rm. ~1any extras built into this adultr occupied home ; it is better than Ile\\'~ Call for app't. to vie1v, $69.950 OPEN SAT & SUN 1-5, 1982 PORT ALBANS Pl., HVH, NEWPORT BEACH CORBIN· MARTIN REALTORS Call Anyti me 644-7662 BEST IN BLUFFS 3 BR, 1-LEVEL "PAULA" 3 BR, SPLIT LEVEL "DOLORES" 3 BR., FAM. RM. "X-" ·PLAN These are beautiful. brand ne'v condos on lovely, picturesque greenbelts, with the very latest kitchens. Beautifully decorated & up- graded thruout. Priced to sell now! JACUZZI, 3 BR. -BAY VIEW END UNIT. "Nearly ne\v", elegan~ Trina w/ fabulous jacuzzi in priv. ~ncl. patio. $79,500 ~:~~~·iJe ~~~:nc~tl~a~~lll';~~ HELEN B DOWD Ovr1· nig-ht ;::'tfCSlS. VANCI:: • PA \111~ I 0 N ovcrlookini.: I REALTOR BLUFFS SPECIALIST 644.0134 rnugnifk"t•nt rree lorn\ pool nnd secluded g a r d c n ------G--1 11aradil«'. Cnll &rrlTJJ:I. General ener• IOHl\I LOl~ll\ RFl"!f()f/~ I LUXURY TOWNHOME 1 AT THE BEACH E\eganl. orw s!ory \o\vnh<lmf' within excl'llc.nt location- 11 itlun totally pl8nnt'<I 1'1Jlll· 'muniry just 1(0) yds frnn1 j be a C' h . P1-e1:!1gious Hun- tington ~a.cliff po11ion of lluntin,i::ton Beach. i\tany I euston1 t•xtras, culhC'rlr!il ("('\lings, Bcrn1urln shul!rrs I 11nrl custon1 \\-ood bu111ir1~ fi replace. 2 Bit 2 BA & 1 lavish lil·l11p;/dining ;ire11. 11~ \\'C'll a." )nl"otj' ki1rh.1n 11·ith it s ol\"n 1lir1inJ:: space. J.:nclO!;i._'({ garden entry & 2 car gur. A\1 ('X ll'rior 111ai111 . Jl r o v i cl i' rl . Con1· n1uni1y fcatu1·Ps Include full rani:e of n·c facilities lncldc: Sl'1·crul priv pool 81'l'U5. This ho1nc \\'On't last long! Locall'd in IW11ch\\·alk, off Golrlcn11·rsL Only $•10.500. Donald r.I. Birtl anrl Assoc. ~111.'S .\gr nl 71·1:5J6...6.;ili IT'S ALL . HERE • S!rps to bathing &. sul'fini; I h<'ac/J, * l'ark-hkr yard 11·\th bo.'ll 1· i.· 1ra1!Pr l'1orngf' 7. ~l1tn1h•:o1 to p11 1·k & lih1'a1;.o. + \\';ilk l" :o;!'llOOI~ -I~ lh111 I 12 Ir .~ Hl~. !r11·111 (1111, fain I FABULOUS OCEAN VIEW Spacious Harbor Vie\Y Hills Home on Settinl Sun Dr.; just listed! 3 View bedrooms, 21h baths. <lining room. family room_ & large ~n closed yard v.1ith pool & a'.ttract1ve fountain. Q\vner transferred out of state, has priced home to sell! $95,500 BAYSHORES r·a1nily sized home on large cor~er Jot. 3 B~ rooms, 3 balhs. upstairs recreation room wi th fireplace. Close to private co1nn1unity beach. $83,750 SELECT RENTALS Eas1.bl11ff -4 bdrins. -VlE\V, $550 per mo.; llarbor Vie\V Hoines -2 bdrms., plush land· scaping. $525 per 1no.; Ne\vport Crest -2 bdrn1s. -\11EW, $500 mo. HARBOR COMPANY REALTORS 1841 E. Coast Hwy., Coron• del M•r *'Sell ing Real Estate In Newport Har bor Sine• 1944" 673-4400 lfrl. :;''" n.1. frpl1•, lnu111!. ~!!!!!!!!~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~ ........ ~ .................... _ ....... ( 1'111 , General General * ;.<~11 l.1· 11111!'11•1] "' lll'•~1r:1l1•1! -:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; [ I •. A-..,u1n,... 1'1 ln!c·1'£'~1 1·a1r· • ~ 1 I.\ \<Jail. • s i:t:.ou -s1 ,. 11 11H 1J1r~ COATS & WALLACE REALTOR< 962-4454 --------PALERMO Is The Name!! Tor 1·.i lt1r ;~ ll1r ga1nl'! Call u~ quu·k: al~"lllt 1h1s r'<l1·n ~11111 11. lllllhly Ul)J!l"lldC'<'t hf)lll" 1 in •t,•,ir;ihi'" '"ll arl~ir \'1•"1 flon1•·~." 1 l:U!. 21: H\, H•tl\lh I•• Ill. l••!llll1l 1ll111n '. 1''(t~·pn•111al r:•1hn~"l 11,., ~ 11111,1 1" hi'' I; fl,,111 ,·!uh )Jpll •'; •'l' " ti ONL Y $8 1,100 FE E ·'!"'' 1:~. ,,.,\ !h •1111! :\!in fft1· . r-1 1'1•rn1~ 644-7211 *. * OPEN HOUSES * * SO LINDA ISLE OPEN SUN. 1-5 4 1Jdrn1s. + fan1ily rm., \Vidc lagoon. Pier & floal'. ~250.000 . 107 SONORA OPEN SAT /SUN. 1-S \Vest Nev.'JlOrt. Ne\v ocean vie\\' duplex. 4 BR . & 3 13Jl. Cathedral ceil's. $130.000. 1740 P LAZA DEL NORTE OPEN SUN/MON 1-S l'enin. l't. Spanish design. 3 BR .. family rm., di11in ,:;:: rn1. Olde \\'Or\d charn1. $88,500. . . D A V I· D S 0 N B E A L T l 5801 W (oo,1 Hw y , N B 646 · 7767 3116 New or! Blvd , NB 673·90 60 General General ~ WHAT IS? ' ' I,\ {'!II f>l\'I d<'I \1.11' 1111!11 '' 'CC I 11 •!h , ltl\ ~ ]'. \ .. 1111• r~ t,1111 und s;>,r, 11 11111! 1•1lh •ll• 1 11n NO QUALIFYING ASSUME V.A. * NEW * 111 l'•' <lf 1:1.11.~ 1!1 11 \'1ll 11> \l'r hill" It• 111••\,~ (;\\<'!II•" II'( EXECUTIVE DUPLEX "'."'" '' ""' ·' , ... ' , '"' .,,,,,I DAV!DSON REALTY :t~. To see, c nll '9J "'n n1e too0. 011·rlt"'r 11'~~ hf"lp RF.AL ESTATE 644-4141 1_ , nan1•c. n Utr> ma,,.!"1 111 1_.,...,'.'!!'!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!,.. .... !!!!"'l'!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!'"" CORON A DEL MAR OPf.N17Lt•TT!IFUNTO SC NICEf '1 0 ',I, J $6?1.IXXJ.Ni:.i V LISTING!! 1• - -· ·~ G1tner•I 1 Ge,,eral :~w 'C) 1'"1 1·-.;11· . ..: :1 Bil ,-·, e COATS 1 .:.0...:.~------l:i H\. v ,\1,111.,· H\l, ,.·11t1:;. l1tk•' '"'!""of It\• u· 011 r'I 1•11\ 111 I ONLY $89 ,500 I CALL 644-7111 \'r1"\ llll l•' S !111·,,~1 n1,..n1 ,\1l1·nnr 1·nn i'l~~unn•. Low n11i'11thly Pll..\'111"111 . Al'oid 1orl11r'' lnt"rr~t r11!1'. Cozy ru 111 1 I .v h ornr , Nic e rn·i~hh'11•h("Wlfl. I .(111· I u 11 p1'1<'•' 11nly $.'\O,t"IO. Act qui,•kh· -cnU 1'1 :it'~ riow. l\l~-'1110. THE REAL ESTATERS 646 ·7767 673 9060 EXQUISITE--& I TREMENDOUS l'l.\CI°. k '"". l·:XTH ,\S ' POOL HOM EI I WALLACE POOL & S57-9930 -ESA " ROE !"''"'""'' ,,. ... ,..... "'"" REAL TORS 'h ACRE TRIPLEX OLDER HOME CLOSE TO SCHOOLS home. :i h<.vlnion1. 2 halh ,...,_ •141 IJur:r J J:H. 2 a\ 111111". l~·,1 2 BEDROOM hQnJ(' in (•hOil'f' co~•11 ~lriv1 ---\.:Jill"•' 1'"~~1HJ\"I' t' s I :'I',. ""'llUI lll"t·,1. \\'nlk ((I !i<'huQl~. EXTRA LARGE LOT ~ntly redoc:orattd 3 locatlnn 11 itt1 2ft'{IO """"' iiith (Open Evenings) l}i1 "''1' 11101 111h ~ rnu~I ~•·Ir' I ~11111'~ ,, ··1u1r•·h··1t. l.11·f' in ix'<!n'IOm 2 bllth homf' nn •'V"· t1! h<"11" lur 11111·,.. r,111111~ ! nn•· .11•11"'-1 i•'nt Ir·~·. ll111'r1'. \Vllh roon1 lo build lhXi qulli:-cul-dt>-Mc. UnuRuitlly 8l'J)llr&tely ht'titt'd J~cu7L f --· · l\ilh l-~11·,•1•t1ri·h.11•t ,1,,1·1 l;1~1 Sh.fl~ifl'' ~uhr1i11 - mort' addltklntl unll1. Bul d lltOl"t' '"-'droom~ nntiquerl 11u1111t'.' f11n1lly rnn111. '1f>11 1ned RE NTAL 1,1 1.,rh,ini:•'. Call 6~.}.S-l!KJ. EASTSIOE-POO L l\hll havt'.' 11 \'I<'"'· All lhl!C ii"OOdYMrk, l"O\'f"nttl pat\O ~ting~ nnd pnnf'llng, IW!\1 f Urr111fl ll<'ll' 1u"<'fl 111 fin~· !:'" 11:u.;•· ti'l•nll~ 1.v.111 \\l•h ror S::0.00). Cnll Rro Carpi'!, ll!ld large ~lwdc ll'l'CI {'fll')lt!I~ lhroui::hnut. And t\ I hOnJ(')'I, 3 + lirn ..; l1.1n1 i!I r'O~:!.IJ><e!:!.!i.J'.l'~'"'"'m"'""L'!., ! nt•I~"''' hl'I• k f11 "['lln1•f' :'I Rc11ltor~ l16-S640. S11,00(l. CAii Red Carpet, hUJF 11lnnC! lln:iplnrr tr. $.17i00 lAI ' L·~• N;1 I 111 .111,.,111 '1 l•alh 1~~·1 lM11n1• ne11!ton 5'16-$-10. W{lrnl yoo on l'(lt)l wlrih.T fti}·-0.lll Wa lker & lee I\ )lh pl1·nt\ nf !'I !\",H ~· pl•1~ AtD' day Is U1e OF.ST DAY fo 1 ----~----nlR'hl11. lfuJTy w()n'1 ln11t, I-'"'"-='------"'* ,_ '"""""'""" 1, '...'fhZll \\ ,,rkr -.1111 Ownrr ruo an llt'I! Don't dt!!ay. The "Yeliow J>o$Ct.ll" of Only f.!~.9j(). Call R<'d F&id ~uhs a-re Jtl:'lt a ptw:111e '---''"''"''"-' ""'""c:'.:."'---' I n11t~t ,ell (\\ll:'/1, r1111 Hcd rllll todny 642'-~. ci'll~'ll1cd., •. 6;12-5618. Cnrfl('I, j(rii!lora: ~. <'11.l!/llVlly (;.f2-M7S. :1 tfi·<K1:rJ ci,,·~1llr•I A•1 . 6-1'2·~11' rnq.ri. Hrnl!nr~ ~.1i;.,1:1;40 IN E PERTlfS ,. (ij.lii!H\i 2 BEDROOM tiOUSE --. V• ACRE-VIEW ('(l~T.\ :\IF:~\ $30 000 1-.,,ST SI01'- ' Dl /'l..E'X .S2:t.OOO Tt nly n '1t1('-.(ll-a-~111•l 1h ·~ 11!!11 • 1l1;1r'.;11 "'" <1111r1I~ 1•1\Y r1t th\· h.'l<·k nf n h•1t'f' ln! Lo:1t·U!t"'f1 011 th+• !oh1f1, 1•tr11 prupo.•11). Zunl'rl Tl · I UI\ 11•'1 1111,lnll<> \I d k t' \\ l::ST SIDE •·{JI Hf'l.1:.--:\ $.J-1.<r'l.I JOE FORTIER Rl TY fl\1'1-111 :1 \""'fiMinnhll' Ofl+'r It l' <I r ot' 1h•1 1l111m uMt:r s.:io, II) <'11rpi·t, H"fdlnr~ fi·l.~'llJ.110 ! the.-P<lnny PllW'htt. " .. :· • ' - ~ J D41LV PILDI Suftd•Y. Ck\obef 21 , PJ7l •n•r•I 1 G•ntr• +'-------MES A VERDE RAMBLING $44,SOO RANCH STYLE H~liunw.hli• a.I II'/; FIX IT & SAVE $$$ u11rut ~ bNtroon\, fan1lly Local~d \11 bl•.t 1-:. ... 1 .. ~ ,, '.l hatl1 hon11: Oil ~ on quirt trl'1.' lined nul-<lt-11;1.~· In prin1e •1'1'&. •ll't'C!I, 3 e.'Ctra J 8 1• I l' ""on'! last 111 1111~ !Q1v rirtrc. \)(-flroon11, .1ilu11 1J)&tl"io111; Call Rl'!d Carptt, Rralton bulll-in itiidNln, 2 1111!<1 f>46....8640. baths, rul+dr-~ lot, You I f\IG CANYON LOT on ro!f Villi enjoy dlis hon1I'. T•kc> C . Brea1hraldna: view. • look. Call Rfld Cl.l'pf!t, I •---·~-Ow R~allol'I 56-8080. Mn IVUlUUI" ncr, 1..c==-='-""=----tto.000 SfG-1931 Llk• lo trade! Our Tnder'1 Par•dl.Je column ii lor )'OU! !I lines, ~ cJay1 for 5 hu~kil. THE CHANNEL • REEF l BR. I. l BR . WATERFRONT CONDOS $95,000 TO $161,000 CALL JOHN SHEARER -67.\.3m JOHN P. CAREY -REAL TORS -741f ·DIRECTORY •••P tllh 11•114\' 4ht.:t1ry w!Hi r•• tfll1 w"k"4 • fti• t• 111-'i•lltl ... AR tt.. toc•tl1111 ll1td IMl•w •r• 41• tcrlltff h1 ,,._.., 11 .. 111 Dy oct .. rtkl11t ets.wMrt 11 to411Y'• DAILT PILOT WANT ADS. P1tre111 1ht.wl119 1pe11 houtct '°' MN ., r. ,...., •• .,.... r. lkt iwcJi l•f•r-11011 1,. tltl1 c•l111M eoc• frkMy, htr.tfdeY o-4 51114•y. HOUSES FOR SALE l BEDROOM 2100 Seville 1\ve., Newport Heights. NB 673-7608 $79.500 Sat Sun 1·5 386 E. 15th St.. Costa Mesa 675·7225 $39.900 Suu 1·5 22 4 Via Koron !Lldo Isle) NB 675·5200 $66,500 Sun 1·5 * • 3606 h1a rcu~. Ne\rport Beach 675·2445 $97.500 Sun 12-4 2582 Arbor (Dsiysho res) NB 64~6500 $02.000 Sun 1-5 2 BR. & FAMILY RM. OR DEN 426 Vis ta Suertc (The Bluffs) NB '644·1766 $55.927 (Sun 1·51 #33 Rue Fountainbleau (Big Canyon) NB 644-6200 · $87 ,500 Sat & Sun l ·5 321 Kings Rd IClil!havcn) NB 642·5200 $82 ,000 Sun 1·5 2781 Bayshores Dr (Bayshoresl NB __ 642·5200 $85,000 Sal & Sun 1·5 167 Albert Plare. Costa ~1esa 642-0179 $26.400 Sal & Sun 1·5 213 Fernleaf Ol d Corona del Mar 675-0000 $125.000 Sat & Sun 1·5 1574 E. Ocean Bl\.'d., Balboa Penn. 546·2313 $65.000 Sat & Suu 1·5 313 Poppy, Co rona dc l ~tar 673·5636 $81 ,500 Sun 1·5 3 BEDROOM 292 Knox Place, Costa h1esa 646·7171 20081 Bayview. Santa Ana l~gts Sun 1·5 646-7171 ' Sun I ·~ 2006 Vista Caudal (The Bluffs) NB 675·3535 $82,500 Sat & Sun 1·5 •42 Rue Fountainbleau (Big Canyon} NB 642-8235 $110,000 Sat & Sun 1·5 1951,Port Locksleigh (H.V. Homes) NB 642·8235 Sat & Sun 1·5 216 Via Lorca (Lido Isle) NB 642·8235 · Sun 1·5 • * 2233 Bayside Dr.. Newport Beach 642·5~53 $175,000 Sal & Sun 1·5 461 E. 20th St,. Costa Mesa 642·5200 $57.500 Sal & Sun 1·5 4831 Bruce Crescent (Lido Sands) NB 673-6210 .. $48,750 Sat & Sun 1·5 713 Larkspur, Corona de! !\tar 673-6642 675-6459 2428 Vista f"logar {The Bluffs) Sunday 1-5 675-5930 Sat & Sun 1·5 2030 Holiday Road IBaycrest ) NB --645·65-00 $89.50-0 Sat & SUn 1·5 235 Walnut (Npt Shores) N.B. 541H290 $49,500 Sun 1·5 SOI Vista Trucha (Blu!!s Condo! NB 64-0-0020 Sat & Sun 1-5 SOS Playa !Bluffs Condo) NB 640-0020 Sat & Sun 1·5 4423 \Vest Coast 1-1,~·y, Nev.·port Beach 675·7225 $79.000 Sat & Sun 1·5 2811 Bayshores Drive . Nev•port Beach 646·771 l Sun 12-5 • 1218 Parnell Plare, Costa i\tec::a 645·8080 Sal & Sun 1·5 717 Garn~ey, Sa nta 1\na 645·8400 $29.950 Sun 1-4 3309 Californi3 ~t. 1~tesa \'erde) 540·1151 $39.900 Sun 1·5 936 Dahlia. Co~la l\lesa 968-4405 $48.500 Sun 1-5 7641 Lehigh, \\'estn1inster 842-2535 $44.500 Sun 12·5 16372 Bircle L1nc. ll unt ingto n Bea ch 846·6-1 51 $35.900 Sun 1·5 8192 Brush Dr. Hunt ington Beach 842-6572 $34,900 Sun 1·5 21681 Saluda. Hu ntington Beach 963·1077 $49.950 Sun 1-5 4!'i75 Greentree (Univ. Park) Irvine 640·0020 Sun 1·5 233R Tustin, i\e,rport Beat h 646·7171 3 BEDROOM + FAMILY 917 .Junipero Dr, Co~ta l\Iesa Su n 1·5 ROOM 549·1036 !37.900 (Sun 10·6 pml 3 BR & FAMILY RM OR OEN 1418 Santanella 1Jrvinc Terr) Cd~t li.J .J-litlli $i4.500 (S un 1-5} 228:11 '\'illard tl.Jkl' Forc.s11 El 1'oro 83()-4!'107 ~41J,!l00 Sa t & Sun 10·6 • 1112 Berks hire I .11 1 (javcrcst) E\'B H46-7676 867.500 · Sun 1-.3 471 RrotHl\~·ay, Co:;:ta ~lesa l'i4A·32:l:l Sat & Sun 1·5 • • 65 1.;nda !~le !Linda Isle) NB 642·8235 Sun 1·5 4733 Cortland ICameo lligll!ands) CdM l\42·823:5 S73.500 Sun 1·5 11 01 l~i,ehland i'Vcstcli ff ) NB 642·8235 Sun 2·6 •41 Rovat St. Geor;?e <Big Canyon\ NB 642·8235 $160.500 Sun 1·5 20332 (>Perv::ile J,11. Hu nth1 gton Beach 642·8235 $.17.>00 Sun 1·5 Iii? tr"ine :\v~ .. NC\\'port Beach !i-lZ-5200 86~.;.,oo Sun J-j :lfi7 ('ll tntlna f:\ut Jl~ights) NB 1;.17-62!0 ~Bl.000 at & Sun 1·5 Ji40 r•1'1'A clr l Xor1e !l>e nin PT ) 1 'B fl7~·~1()· 647·7ifl7 • un &· ~Jon 1-5 li27 r ort Stirlin;:-(!!a rbo r \"IC\\" f"fm~) ND 644-7270 $75 $74,500 Sal . Sun & Mon 1-5 1982 Pt. Albans (H .V. Homes! N.B. 644-7662 Sal & Sun I~ 1821 Tahuna (Irv. Terr. l ) Cd~l 67~3000 Sun 1·5 2528 Bov.·din Place (College Park) CM 546-0022 $38.500 Sat & Sun 1-5 344 Otero (Blulls Condo) NB 640·0020 Sal & Sun 1·5 3350 Fuchsia. Costa f\1esa · · 645-0303 $43.500 Sal & Sun 1·5 917 Junipcro J)r. Co.~ta ~Iesa 549·1036 $37.900 1Sun 10-6 pm) 4 BEDROOM * 1807 Holiday Rd 1Baycrest) NB 644-1766 (Su n 1·5) 844 Via Lido Nord (Lido Isle) NB &14-1766 $295,000 1Sat & Sun 1·5) 19781 Seacanyon Cir, f"luntington Beach 53&-7982 Sat & Sun 10·5 425 Via Lido Nord . Newport Beach 67~7414 $137.500 Sat & Sun 1-5 4615· Cortland (Cameo 1-ligblands) CdM 642-8235 $73,950 Sun l·a • 1023 Dolphin Terr f Irv ine Terr) Cf.1 642·8235 Sal & Sun 1·5 3043 Royce Ln (o ff Baker) CM 549-21164 $33.900 Sal & Sun 1·5 * •2275S lslamare, Lake Forest 67~5930 Sat & Sun 1·5 1014 Sea Lane (Irvine Terrace) CdM 675-5930 Sat & Sun 1·5 • •6 Balboa Coves. N.B. 644-4910 ($140 .000) Sunday 1·5:30 *4521 Cortland Dr . (Can1eo Hilnds) CdM 675-WO $76,500 Sat &-sun 1-5 247 Colton (Nc \vport Shores) NB 64&-3255 Sat & Sun 1·5 1939 Sanderling (Mesa Verde) C~1 54&-5880 Sat & Sun 1·5 3125 McKinley. Costa Mesa 645·0303 $4S,500 Sun l ·5 I 4 BR I. FAMILY RM I 9462 Gulstrand. Huntington Beach 062·5511 $48.950 Sun 1-5 2851 Clubhouse (Mesa Verde).CM.·.' 645·0303 $59.900 "l't' Sun 1·5 4 BR & FAMILY<RM-OR-DEN 18691 Portofino Dr (Turtle Rock Hills) 644-1766 $89.500 (Sat & Sun 1·5) 4533 Tremont (Ca1neo Shores) CdM 644-1766 1115,000 (Sun 2-5) 1941 C01n1nodore ( Baycrest) NB 548-6125 $79,500 Sun 1·5 • 104 Via !vlent one (Lido Isle) NB 67~0123 1109.500 Sat & Sun 1-5 201 \Vake Forest rCollege Park) CM 540-8083 $33.500 Sat & Sun 15·- 1209 Santiago (Dover Shores) NB &12-6235 $98,500 Sat & Sun 1·5 2200 Francisco, Ne,vport Beach 642-8235 $74.500 Sot & Sun 1·5 #20 Rue Grand Ducal \Big Canyon) NB 642·8235 Sun I ·5 166 Shoreclil! Rd. (Shoreclif£s) CdM 642-8235 Sal & Sun 1·5 4545 Fairfiel d (Catneo Shores) NB 642-8235 $119,500 Sal & Sun 1·5 1856 Port Charles (H.V. 1-lomes) NB 642-8235 Sun 1·5 1601 Castle Cove (Spyglass #I) NB &12-8235 Sun 1-5 •1907 Galatea (Irvi ne Terr) Cdl\<1 642-8235 Sat & Sun 1-5 • 1933 Santiago. ( BaycrcstJ NB 644·6200 $!10.000 Sat & Sun 1·5 • 101 Kings Place (Ne,vporl l-leights) NB 642-8235 Sa t & Sun 1-5 42 Mission Bay Dr (S py glass f"lill ) NB 640-8664 Daily 1·5 * •50 Linda Isle Dr (Linda Isle) NB 6~-9060 : 64&-7767 Sun 1·5 172~0ccan Blvd (Balboa Penin Pt) NB 675-4060 $79,950 Sat & Sun 1·5 310 \iia Lido Soud 4Lid o Isle) NB 673·7300 Sat & Sun 12-5 449 Prospect (Newport Shores ) NB 673-3663: 642-2253 Sun 1-5 7 1'v.'in Lakes Cir. (Spyglass Hill), NB 644-4910 (!125.000) open daily 1·5 :30 I Cherry f"lill s Lane (Big Canyon CC) NB 644-4910 I $129.500\ Sat/Sun 1-5:30 15 T'oint Sur Drive /Spyg lass 1-l ill) NB 644-4910 1$119.500 1 Daily 1·5:30 2ROi Catalpa (Eastbluff ) NB 6i5·456~ Snt & un 1-5 3065 Loren 1,.in c li lalet·restl ('!it 5.J!).i856 S.17.9~0 Sat Sun /~•ton 1-5 15182 Lille Cr., tThc n.anch) Irvine 8.13·3380 Sal & Sun 1-5 19431 Sierra Santo !'l'urtlcroc k) lr\'inc 833-3380 Sat & Sun 1-5 2912 All• Vista (Easlblnff) Nil 6i~3000 Sat & Sun 1-5 1120 Goldenrori 111 .V. llillsJ CdM 67~6000 $79.5-00 Sat & Sun 1·5 1412 Seacrest lli arbor View Hills) Cdf\f 6i~·6000 $94.500 Sat & Sun 1·5 23?6 Tu~tin Ave !Back Bay l NB 645-6500 !fi!l.500 Sat & Sun 1·5 l8J :i Pt Ren1t·lck l lfar\'or Vie'v Hms )N8 644-7?.11 ~Al .lf'IO Sat1--Sun l-5 • •R Li11rlo Ti:lP l)r I LlndA Isle) NB r..i.4.49JO !i!lPS.000 SJ\t. ~· 'un 1-5 :30 •~Rnl f.,1,.1 l~IC. l!tnrllf1r \'u Tr tl1 t1 l\1B K;3_pp;50 SAt \~Sun 1·5 2Q"T •' lltn :::1~"fll ro"il:l j\fpcf! i:>Jr...rii;,:;,i; c::)SI iOO S!lt ~· Sun 1·5 t >:ll'71 Dl-1.,lnoi 1r,,.,tirlf..'IOn lfrirhor R4'1-Rt9~ ~'IS.000 Sat & Sun 1·~ Walker & Lee ,,,,, .. .,...,.,... SPANISH '--~·~··~,~·~ .. ~·~"'---' I · HACIENDA hU aJJ the b r f pc.th!.!, w1thout belna: eir· "'-'=------I 1reme. There '"" s Ire. bd-E TS 0-1 BEDROOMS nna .. h"'" tivinr nn .• '°" NEWPORT H IGH $21,95 ma! dining rm. pius ~n. Open House, 409 Cata-\Vonderful park-like set· Bca1.1li.M wct bar, oonve:nJ. lina. Newport Beach. ting with nwnerous col· ~~0i::~n~~ =~~ beBedautlfulJy deaslgn1ed 1 4 orfUl flowers & lush 1801 Santiago Dr (Baycresl) NB &1~7221 $127,750 Sat & Sun 2-6 512 DeAnze1 Corona del h'lar 673-8550 Sun 1-5 17 Tiburon Bay (Spyglass Hill) CdM 67~7225 $133 ,500 Sun I~ 2726 Cardinal. (Mesa Verde) CM 54&-2313 $63 .950 Sat & Sun 1-5 2701 Canary, Costa :P.1esa 54&-2313 $64,900 Sun 1-5 l BEDROOM 2615 Lighthouse Lane, Corona del Mer 644·2369 $119.000 Sat & Sun 1·5 4 Royal St. George ,(Big Canyon) NB 673-= Sal & Sun 1-5 5 IR I. FAMILY RM OR DEN 1724 Pl. Manleiah (H. V. Homes) NB 644-1766 $93,SOO (Sat 1-4; Sun 1-5) 17842 Mann St, Jrvine 545-M24 $59.900 Sal & Sun I~ • 1368 Galaxy Dr (Dover Shores) NB 642-8235 $138,500 Sal & Sun 1·5 #55 Royal SI. George (Big Canyon) NB 642·8235 $138.500 Sat & Sun 1-5 #5 Royal St. George (Big Canyon) NB 642·8235 $265,000 Sal & Sun 1-5 1337 Galaxy Dr. (Dover Shores) NB 644-4910 ($225,000) Sun 1·5 :30 3728 Ocean Blvd. Corona del Mar 675-0531 $197,500 Sat & Sun 1·5 1938 Port Trinity (}Iarbor View) NB 644-6200 $87.200 Sun 1·5 • •500 Via Lldo Nord (Lido Isle) NB 675-6161 Sunday 3761 Claremont, Irvine 839·1600 $49,500 Sun 1·5 1647.J!<>ol.Abbey-(Harbor Vu Homes) NB 675·6000 $82.500 Sun 1·5 * 1315 Santiago Dr (Baycrest) J\TB 645·7221 $135,000 Sun 1·5 5 BEDROOM & FAMILY 503 Hazel. Corona del Mar 675·6900 Sat & Sun 1·5 pm 6 BR & FAMILY RM OR DEN 1607 Bayciill Circle (Spyglass #I) CdM 87~7225 $129,000 Sun 1·5 15281 Touraine \Vay, (The Ranch) Irvine 833-3380 Sun 1·5 TOWNHOUSES POR SALE 10054 San Juan Court, Fountain Valley 841;.!305 $29.500 Sun 1·5 CONDOMINIUMS FOR SALE l BEDROOM 1644 Iowa D, Costa Mesa 541!-1168 $21.500 (Fri-Sun 1-4) 327 Dahlia Corona del f.far 673·7769 $59,900 Sun 1·5 3 BEDROOM '6 Rue Verte (Big Canyon) N.B. 644-1766 $149,000 (Sun 1-4 ) 663 Vista Bonita (Blul!s) NB 644-6200 $68,500 Sat & Sun 1·5 •2412 University, Ne,vport Beach 546-2313 $42,500 Sun 1·5 3 BR & FAMILY RM OR DEN 2657 Vista Ornado (The Bluffs) NB 675·5726 Sat & Sun 1·5 DUPLEXES FOR SALE 706 Na rcissus, Corona del Mar 548-9346 (Sat & Sun 1·5) 262 \\7ave St ., Laguna Beach 644-7662 Sal & Sun 1·5 1 BR EACH UNIT 404 Heliotrope, Co rona del Mar 642·8235 Sun 2-6 1 & 2 BR 719 Margild, Corona del l\.iar 644·7270 $79,500 Sal & Sun 1·5 I & 3 BR 420 Fernleaf, Corona del Mar 67:h!OOO Sun 1·5 2 BR EACH UNIT 703-703';2 Ca rnation, Corona del l\.1ar &12·5200 $85.000 Sat & SUn 1-5 Corner of Goldenrod & 4th , CdJ\.I 644-7392 $74.500 Sal & Sun 1-5 608 l\1la rguerite. Corona del Mar 644-4910 ($149.500) Daily 1-5:30 2 BR & DEN EACH UNIT 511 Poppy, Corona dcl Mar 67~5726 Sal & Sun 1-5 2 & 3 BR 400 Jasmine Ave., Corona del 1'.1ar 644-7270 $119.500 Sal & Sun 1·5 431 Carnation, Co rona del l\.far 673-8550 Sat & Sun 1·5 1 2+2 +Gu01t l 711 rris, Corona del Afar 675·6900 Sun 1·5 3 BR EACH UNIT 5010 Neptune, West Newport 642·5200 $100.000 Sun 1·5 i 3+3+Gu01t l 424 Dahlia. Corona del l\lar 673-563ft Sun 1·5 4 BR & l BR 112 44th St.. Nev.•port Beach 646-0555 ~.500 Sat & Sun 1·5 l BR & FAMILY EA. 518 Fcrnleaf, Old Corona del Mar 645-6500 $125,000 Sat & Sun 1-5 61 5 Marigold. Oorona de! Mar 644-4848 $112.000 Sat & Sun 1-5 4 BR & 3 BR 107 Sonora, \Vest Newport Beach 673·9060; 64&-7767 Sal & Sun 1·5 5 BR I. 4 BR 2508 Ocean Blvd .. Corona dcl t.-1ar 673-2 67S-6459 Sat/Sun 1-5 618 Acacia, Old Corona del l\.1ar 67il-6000 $139.000 Sal & Sun 1·5 TRIPLEXES FOR SALE 2 BR I. 2 BR & I BR 510 Narcissus. Corona de! ~ta r 67>-ti900 Sol & Sun 1.s * , ••• w .. .,,,"' w.,.,,,. .. ' , ... . . v18w or bay &: ocean rrom roo m on ove y Cl . most parta of the t>ouse. tree-lined street. Great greenery. 1tirm10g Sl5Cl,(O), family . area, Freshly family 3 bedroom with PLEASE CALL painted .inside & out. I dining room. Ricb.ty 675-3000 Downs~a1rs rec r~m 1 paneled Jiving room &: with fireplace. J:"'am1ly kitchen bar ni .. cover-m II\\ ,\ IU: lfll lllcll.I\ l:\L f~11111 o '~l:':~OJ r1n. Dream kitchen. I · .,.. Full dining room. Love-ed patio. Extra nice! ly ocean view. $75,500. Hard to beat for only 1 Owner may help with ~'28,950. 540.1720. fin ancing. 540--1720. ASSUMABLE 6°/o MESA VERDE 3 BDRM-NO DOWN LOAN INCLUDliS l BllRM OCEAN Has everything for the Excellent terms on Ibis •-1.1.... '-·~ ho finest in contemporary very sharp 3 bedroom, P<:llU I wiy man ........ ~ me li . ' E ll n care~ oompact plan p:O: vtng .. xc~ .ent oor 2 bath home on large vlde1 _privacy pockets and Pl.an w1t_h d1nmg room. lovely lot. Has full din· breathing room. All Big family room & fire-. . , bu 111 -1 n s , i "c 1001~ place. 3 baths. Den. Pa· u~g room. ~ome~aker s l'l'frlg£"r11_101\ Cover~ patio tio shake roof Gor-kitchen with built·ins & overlookuig \veil grootnf!d ' · ' d · I grounds. O\\'ller's pr id (' geous spra\vhng lot with , IS l\Yasher. Fa m 1 I y ~h:?'-''!11. Under $30,000. ~11 roo~ for ~ pool , See-1 roon1, f.ireplace. Patio. 963-fl7G7. 1ng 1s lovmg. $56,000. Your best buy! $35 900_ oPfNTll~•rT"S™'T08ENICEI 540-1720. 540--1720. ' I~~ •. ~I 2955 HARBOR BLVD. COSTA MESA 540-1720 Honeymoon Cottaqe l ;G~•:n:o~ra~l:~:~:~~:~::~G~o'"n'"or'"•'!'l""'""'""'"'"""''"I Retlrem 0 •:t VIiia DANDY DUPLEXES -------- SI I D " 2 Bedroom ""'" oo lru·eo KICK THE HABIT ng •1 reamnouse lots lO'"k do1vn. Only· Whatever yuur stage in life ' $36 SOO · OF RENT thl1 hon1~ coukl be ideal. ' 2 _1wmy bedrooms, ~11y BEACH DUPLEX bngtit kitchen and Jjv1ng LIKE NEW rooan, lari,'eo garden aree and quiet kr.v traffic street 3 Bedroom &t 2 Bedroom walking distance to a L'Oln'. 'lln its, l block to the bPach. munlty private bncb. Completely ttdecoratt'd. Only $56,500 :;'.;;,, '"'"'"" .,..,,..,. IJJ% 644-7211 $76,500 /Jn NIG[L • ilAll EY & ASSIJCIAT[5 * 59'xl90' LOT * * 4 Bedroom home (huge ~iii;~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiiiiii~ii;;;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiijl JllJUJter BRI +.family room + den, J baths, niaJlY e."<- traa. Quiet stn.>et, ~. 700 * C·2 Property • Newport Blvd. \\'.Ith 30' x 30''bulldifl&". S36,IXXl. Roy Mccardle Realtor 1810 Ne\\•port Blvd. C.M. 548-7719 . WALK TO THE BAY-$69,500 You ~~11n't beat thi!! fine value in l'xclus\ve residentl!ll a1't'11 enjoyed by screen stars and entc1·taincr.s. Three bedroom two baU1s and ac- cess to private beach. Appl. only, 646-7711 Open eve!i . 2M3 \\'estcliff Or. SNUGGLE IN f'or Christmas or n1aybe Thanksgiving fn this cozy charger that Is in "move ln" (.'l)ndition i1t'1idc and out. It has 3 bc:rtroon1s, 1a_. bAths, p:reat rirepl11ce bu ilt of 11tone. Kitehcn \\'ith built-lM. ll :i.lso is in CoroM de\ ~tar and has 11. little ,·ic.,..· or Uu? ocean. Pt·li:ed at only $511,500.00 Call now to !let' 67:!-&'i50. OF'Efl llL 9 . IT'S FUN ro EIE II/ICE• GI REP0- $26,500 Only 2 ~&l"I old In b€'auUl'Ul new clty ot lrvl.ne. R.e- J)lllnted inside and 0111. th.la dellghltul home Is lpllrkllnc clean ju.st wa llln.IJ: for your family. Onl'y $1,000 down lo an,yont. &4&-7711 Open eve1. Walker &Lee ltAt. lltAtl MESA VERDE WALK TO SHOPPING <t ne<1roo1H ~ bRth ho1n,., ~·Ith h1mlly roo111. Ju!t $36.500. IAl5 Of ll'f'°I'' 1111)11 llh/\d~. Bri<'k pialio, tu.nd pi1i11t1.>d 1Jh1<' t.J r"(lt•1u1 Ille In kitchen. Call Red Carpel, Rn.Ito" ""4l·lllll0. OCEAN VIEW-NEWPORT $68,500 PRESTIGIOUS NEWPORT HEIGHTS \Yinding tree shaded slrt?cl of beautiful cus- tom home s. Lo vely terraced grounds. For- mal entry. Family room \Yi th raised hearth fireplace. Garden view kitchen . Entertain- ers party room featuring bay window over- Jookmg Fashion Island and the ocean, 2 Oe droo1n children's area. I-fide-a-way master suite wi th dressing room and private patio. Private rear grou nds and observation deck overlooking THE BLUE PACIFIC. Call 645-0303. PRIVATE ESTATE 5 + GUEST $57,500 EXCLUSIVE private street in prestigious ba ck bay estate area. Towering trees and lvinding brick pathway leading to magnifi· cent 2 story colonial 5 bedrooms inc luding view master suite with dressing room, and separate guest facility with 3rd bath. Large living room lvith floor to ceiling fireplace. Elegant formal dining. 30' country kitchen and breakfast room. 22' rumpus room . Fam· Hy roo m overlooking secluded park·like grounds and 2 patios. BETTER HURRY! Call &15-0303. TROPICAL ISLAND PARADISE Beautiful private cu l-d e-sac street in pri111e area. South See island landscaping and huge trees, [Jft lVACY SUPREA1E . 4 bedrooms_ Ele~ant master suite 'vitb garden view. 25' rannly room with fi replace. Gourmet kit- chen. Interior gardens und mirrored wells. Island party room ove rlooking 35' covered LANAI and DANCE PAVILION. $43,500. Cali 645-0303. BAY VIEW BLUFFS-REDUCED $16;550 ON THE PARK. Iron gate entry to giant 2 story overlooking Back Bay. Secluded mast- er suite with magnificent balcony view. FamUy den. GUEST FACILITY wilb 3rd bath. Gourmet kitchen. Formal dining area. Entertainers patio viewing greenbelt and blue waters. Qw.ner anxious. TAKE AD- VANTAOE. Call 645-0303. FOREST E. OLSON 'N' REALTOR S - 2299 HARBOR BLVD 645-0303 - Co.st• Mes. Genec•I I c .. 1. Mow NEW DUPLEX I MESA VERDE GOU: COURSE Dov.·nto~"' U1.1n1ineton Beach. $76,000 OPEhl HOUSE SUN. 1-S On1y 6 blk1, lo the oct811. I 2-· KO N Deluxt' 3 DR .. 2 BA. owner's 1 -R AT tlftit. Plu.i luxury 2 BR. apt An Bil-encompassing executive home wtth ~ b)' buUdtt at only superb privacy. 2--story, 4 Bedroom plw _,,ooo. paneled otpce or den on 1st Ooor. Separate formal dl..nina room. double garage, ulltmate ALSO NEW privacy in Die incomparable Mesa Verde And neAr OCl!'an. Fourpt~ca Goll Course location. J)ri1.'fd from $74,500. Al!IO 8 &: 9 unit •pt!S. Nl.'ar romple· tion. NOT SO NEW But. in l•Xe<>llrnt con1tllion. 12 unit apt. ln i™I 1~'1Ual arc:\ ot Long Reuch. I 'riced l'lgh1 itt $130.000. Call : 53' 1161 536-11887 9:w'21 1 $27,000 4 BR 2 BA lttama'li gcl·a-v.•ay. Sunshine dean .lie ready f o r oc. cupan('Y, Jw;t right tor yoo 11!nlcrs to get started. Carpets & drapes Uuuout Huge kitchen v•llh ~ runge. Country atn'IOsphc>re, total paymcn!s IU'C le!is than rt'nt. Walker &Lee llfAL llTAll 1;0;"";;;";'~'';';';';""';:;;'";';;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~1 PRIME OCEAN VIEW I PROPERTIES FOR SALE BY STATE 01'' CALif. Ask f\ll' ~1r. \Ves1 !2l31 ti2JJ...3708 . B•lboa Island *REDUCED* NOW $1..19,900 Vacant duplex plus gue!il room. Super renovated - hoat moo1ing; funl.ishcd, xlnt parking. Steps tn -. ..bta.ch. 0....Tll'r ~tr. "sell" Open daily 1.j 106 Pearl St. Agt. 6Ta--0141 61.i-1313 Cl-I AR~llNG Pen. Point 2 Br. corner prnp. fRCE"!I park, S1rl'sscd for 'l story U\\'tll'r $6!1.500 6-if>-.JZl-i B•lboa Peninsula FIXER UPPER Older :1 units on the P<"nin· sula. $53,000. Pacific Properties 6f;HIT\2 01' 54i1·8'196. GOLDMINE 14 Units, $1S6,000. Attractive financing. Principals only plcn5e. 6/a-1573 Bkr. CH.Aro.1ING Pen. Point 2 Br. corner pn:rp. faces park, Sl:res'ied fnr 'Z S«lll" OWflW. $69,SOO. 646-1234. 61'5-&156. Coron• del N\lr "DYNAMIC DUO" 01.lP'LilKL-::Ncstlcd ll¥t" trees In ''Old ." Tou'll find the QlSb£ ctlarm )'OU\·e been aearchlng for! Open bean1, Shake ex terior, i;tep to shop- ping or ,;urf. Under market al $78,950-1...0\Y d0\\'11 or tra<J:e. GRUBB & ELLIS CO. 557-7900 W1 ·lt1 J1 1 Ci'll:.(~1 )IJ Jf >d i J\ VIEW 5 br, brand nu cuslom home. Open Sunday 1·5 . -..1 I I ••<•I !Iii.th"" I ''"'"' •1'-J \1.H ( ;~ tl'l~I MESA VERDE GOLF COURSE $16,000 14 + ACR E Cus,tom 2600 sq. ft. privacy home surround· ed 1n glass. Panoramic vie\v , 30' x 16' lanai entertainment house featuring a sunken loung~ .. firepla~e & "'et bar. Other graciou:; amerut1 es are includ ed. This ho111e \veil un- der n1arkel for quick sale. MESA DEL MAR $44,990 1109 EL CAMINO Check Utis 5 Bedroom, 3 Bath immaculate 2300 sq. ft. home. Finest carpets. drapes & waUpapers. King-size master bedroom & dressing area. Living room with loaded brick fireplace, 30' x 18' covered patio, red· wood & masterful night lighting. Lanai patio area. SprinkJers. AVAILABLE AT 10% DOWN MESA DEL MAR $46,990 Drive by and check out 934 Junipero Dr. A 22'x 14' pool house overlooks free form pool in liaWaiian setting. 3 Bedrooms 2 Baths dining room, living room, breakfaSt bar, fin~ shag & oak floors. COSTA MESA REALTY SINCE 1958 548-7711 After 6 P.M. Call 547~17 Coron• del Mir BEAUTIFUL INCOME UNITS Duplex on Oct>"" BIVtl. Ott!' 510 NarcissU5 or u kind, \\ilh paoorninic Triplex 45· tor Sar!Su11 l-.i ,·ir1v or lhc 114..'enn! Fron! 711 Iris houi'W' "'llh ~ Hit, 2 ha. /Cure fluplt>x + gtlt'S! Sun J-ii & sho1,·c1· n.on1; 2 frplci; .. huillins; rc111· h1)11st> :'i BR .. I 4 hn. 'l.i fo'I l•l!. Nic-e J>flllO. Good fh1<1n f'illJ.:. I MORGAN REAL TY I Costa Mes• 673-6642 675-6459 - NEW DUPLEX~ GREENBROOK Open Sat/Sun. 1-S 1f~~~.~:1.G~~~t~::~J~ ~P~ 511 POPPY & dt'J,'l!j. $.39Z> Ptr nlo , Supcr deluxe ut11t~. both hnvc larwin realty inc. 2 bdnn,. + den, :~ baths, 968.4405 (24 hrs) .blt·lns, rrplc., palio, \\'t"l ba1· Equnl l!OtNing Op~y. & laun1lty, Musf J>CC! $140,000 ;cc.;cC:::c:.:;.o::::.""~"'O!'':.,.., -\VIII trade By Owner, l'ttesa Del !\far, 3 OPEN HOUSE DOLLHOUSE EASTS1DE untlntton h Hunltngton a..ch SEA BREEZE THE BIG PUMPKIN TOWN HOMES S1g 2000 oq. tc j bod<-oom. • Our nVldehl Yt1Jl be: ready 2 HaJh 2·8tor)o. £lira LArKe In jutt , ft!• A...... But roo1n ... tth lom\al dining or ....., famll)i room. KttcMn to the if )'OU come OUI no1U, )'OU ~ar of !he hauk. Nl"Wl,y CM btat the PRJct; IN-on·'Jltted 4 h'b:h.I)' !Wllnled. CREASE. Spiral atalrctif)'A. Thl. hOlne has a SJ:J..00() loft bdmlll, b'Plcs. wet bart, caUi to Jonn on It with 2 1toty din. nn.s, front le only $296 f)f'r month 1o&a1 IT:1'to~sq~·. ::'~..: ~menJa.' ""1.900. Cf.II to "O h~l 8«J...JJ16. pool, jacuzzi •. Muna & HE SHIN recreauon room. Tllkt-Elll& T · Y APPLE E. of Beach Blvd ., tum Gl ... e thl11 home!' rtwo "'hlh· So. on 0\11.pel Ln In Hun-11lov~ le!I " Ir .... ·ould ptist. 1lrJi1on Beach. 962-6 070 J Bc<lr<n111•. ll,l hnll111, ror· 1 .;,""'&mioimiii.~il!i-.~ . .., .. ..,..,.,1 nc.r lot. 111:1"0Ks rro111 t~· 1• 1 ICl'IOOI. N1ce 1' .. HA loon can $ FOR $ t he fl"s!ruillN!, lt>111 1i1tClff.I, Larw\r1'!1 'tJburon roiulu~ a~ lloluu·p li01\u:•. C:ill 10 iu:c. a lx!ticr buy l \\'cu'·k\I}( $1l."i:iO IJ~i...'l~iS-1. park·llk1· su11'0undlngs lea· VA NOTHING OOWN ture t or 2 111011<'!1. 2 10 ..i NO COSTS BcdilXl!llll !1'0111 $2'J.990 \~·Ith i Plus Pool. li<Ull) Ill t~'(I !1Jlract1ve len\1s .. Ea~y llv. 1 of son1eon1? .,.,.hi) c:ir~. Lnrgr 1ng-alty all. L>l.t'l'lrl~ kitchen, f11n1il)' l'l"IOm 11i !h nk'<' pool Iota! exte1:1~1· . n1a1ncenante on tul-d&--181"". Excellent I: atr condtt1on1ng. We know floor plan, good lluntlnglon them lx.-st · ""t' bullt !hem. Be11ch location 11•ith cvn1ent can the specialists!. tlrl\'e & shake roof. cm larwln realty rnc. ro GoJden \\o'est CollCRc. On- 9'&-4405 (24 hrs) ly '34,900. Call 963-5621. Equal Hoosing OpPty. A MODEL HOME? No . . . even sharper than a n1odel! 3 BR. 2 baths + den. Spacious Deane gru'den kilchen, $57.500. OPEN SUNDAY 1-5 p.m. Huntington Beach's ~ DEERVALE L N Most Popular 1Q451. I Macnab-Irvine Realty Company 6-42-8235 644-6200 $200 PER MO. 2 BIJ1•n1 <.-ondo. 11 ~ yc11r1 new, ri·cshly Pnlntr<l wit/· tastefully paneled and inh' 1"0red Jiving roo1n, plus~ y.·allpnpc.red dining urea shag cllrpcts & custorr drRJlC!I, oversized pl\11U') at'\'u, ll('fll' schoo\!1, \\'fllkin~ di st11nce to Hu ntfni!l01 C('n!el', Swin1n1ing pool nnc plenty of greenbelt a~as Asking only $24,495 cnll to day 847-3095. ABANDONED CAPE COO GIANT 2-STORY 1llJge ReJI Es\Jte Su~, Ott.oOtt 21, 1973 OAJL V PILOT frvlne L•ll"•• IL ..... -Me.. • .... ~~~~~~~~,-~~~~~~~-.~;;,,;c.;;_,;;.;;.;;,;;::.....~~,_~~~~~---> ' s~! =~~.~ mth A UTTLE HOUSE TH~~T OUll FIN!ST t ownhou .. --WITH llG IDEAS THE LEA$T 5 IEDllOOM ~ WW'li1I and-.n end im\1, R.l"STIC Cl lAR.Ml."R: Tree. Pre-..i..e Mesa v-. -·• nw.ket lhls one of tne mNt Ntallfod tn the hnl1 of •ti.de corMr lot, WALK TO ~·Ma .s L. ......... •- '"""1lar r.mily homtll tn Lfl.iuna'• tin1f'd JUW-ra B""~Cll ~~-Uv nn. -' .-... -""' · on,...,...,.... • room , Dini., 'o o \Jnh•erstty Par!<. $58~. ("OAJltJine, an1l<hll: 1 he wfopen btamed (.'C(ltnp, Ji'\~ N-" :J CALL 552-7500 G1-te~ry Of !all 1hrubl. 11 may brick fU'ejlL9ce with •c.-e, ..,..,y pe.lllfea hid an OUTSTANDING 'OOdcn manU ira;I and out. ~T.95B. cab VISION Vt>.'W o•· TIIB OCEAN, C...nh'y ldl,,.,! .. ~, OOLW£u ............ SURGJ~G ON THE ROCKS Knotty Pint Pane.llln,a. A BELO\V. jtal <tl>ft' at $49,500. .,;::-.._.!" • red hi II uniqu. ' 1"''1 '""'"""""'· rEATURF.S 2 DORMS &. lll!:ALTY ltF.ALTORS Unll·. l'nrk Q!n~er, Irvine LIVE IN IRVINE $31,250 Sha1·r1 &: bl'IQ:hl' -priC1•d 1·l1Clll 'l {Jr & 1 yr. old. 10 111\nule!i fluin Unlveridl)' of Colli. ar Jnine. !).UJ.OO'l'l. 2 BATIIS. OtM' lxtnn. .l ~, bath is )ocated on lower lc,1t.l with IJoeplng loft &: hat Mlp.rill.a entran«. The uppe11 lli'\'f'I r,. at 11r e• ;\JOD~ltNISffC LfV, l'l.~I.. \\'f(f,J,ACK t,RON. }~JREPLACJ::. fo.:XT}:;Ns1ve t.:SE Ot'' Gt.ASS ,",;; OPE:-.'S TO LG~. ~U~ DECJ< Wt OCl::,\,'\l \'lE\V, Thill cnantiing little house CAHPt.'TINC & VIN'i"L HAS NE\\' \\'/\\T CARPETING & \'JNYL Walker & lee F" LOORl!\'G THJ<"U-OUT Spad m• ,.,,. bckk palfo ,.: ;;~::;;'::":='::';'':'':C':':"'.:::=::'.. I co1npaases rear grounds. UNIV PRK. 3 Br, BONUS 1'lK! 0\\11er \l'il1 ful'nlsh rm. $53,000 Owner/agtt1t PLANS f'OR EXP1\NSION. 833-S668JS52.-732A. This novel ' ' L 1 TTL E =-===="'----! H 0 USE \\'ITII BIG IDEAS,'' is an ou!standlng oppor1u.,ily at the price of ~;;;;;;;:;:;;;;J $49,500 FULL PRICE 0\VNER !\LAY 11.ELP FINANCE: MISSION REAL TY 985 So. C<.!111'1 llWY .. Lar,una RETIRE AT THE BEACH Phone (714) 494-0731 EMERALD BAY- th·· \'l't'Y 1011 of lh(' nc11• N<'Clion 01 !he lluv 11ilh th<! spcctaculu1· \'i<;1~·s you 11·ould C"X/X'<:I. I 1Jti1·nu;., :t balh & n frin1Uy roo111: ~1115,000 This 2 Bedroom, 1 Buth MONARCH BAY home . has ne10: paint . & A large family hon1C" of 4 carpeting: Neat as a J?ln. bdnns., 3~1 baths, !amity Landscaping _& ocean Vie\\' mi. \\'\th fircpb1cc, The you "un l believe! large lot contains S1vim-FAMIL y HOME ming pool, jac""'· puttin• grel'n, decks & patklB & SeyeraI 4 Bedrooms "'llh .a geoerous la."'11 $165 ooo y1e .... ·. _All have ~am ceil· VICTORIA ·HLtiS 1ngs, ftreplace, dming room ' & outside decks. Priced A large honle of 4 bd.nm., froni $~9.950 to $130,000. conver:tible. den, lge. family Laguna & Laguna Nlgucl rm. Yt1th. v.·e~ bat &. lovely area ~an views. Owner \\ill ·CALL 497·1161 cany /gl'. 2nd T.D. or traclc ~':'!!~~~~!!!!!!!!!!!! ... I [or \\'Psi L.A. are11. $144,500 SHANKS PON . LARGE FAMILY? 10 ..... ~ Y 10 shoppwg, One or Laguna's hu~est vie1\' ' ~ach. Adorable 2 honl<'S. 6 Bdn11s .. 411 ba!hs: bdnn.. • ba., frplc. hand .. ~ 000 fl r __ , pegged hd\l'd, firs. ChCt'l'ful O\C"I •. sq: : o \\''"''"'" l\1cxican lile kitch. 1 000 Sq ~ glas_s c on s I 1 u c I I on. fl. of 1i:-c1.,.,·ood decking + ~1~·ecp1ng ocean v I c 11· i;: 1'00m for pets & a garden. $9J,OOO Like ne1'\ only $68.500. BIG P RICE REDUCTION. Nice view. 1100 Sq. ft .• beam~. deck; small yard: age, 3. Good \'alue. $49,900 SWJ~WINC POOL: and an out•t&ndinsc OCEAN vu. Central I..agu.na. 5tttlon. 3 bdrm5. \\1th l;:e. llv. nn. •.• tll't~t.ce. S~aclOUli ~"iplUo adjotn 11 elel'11ted l11•ln1 TX10t. N~:EDS .so~rE PAJNTING. Ofitored i '~~··~i·~·~·o~n:...;V~·~·~I•:._ ___ ~ at $6!>.000. • * MADRID OPEN t.rrrLE DOlJCll -LOTS ·o· 1-3 HOUSE: loc.3.ted on I~. lot. Vie\\._ pool. -t BR, 2t1 ba 3 bdrm. ''!.: den, 2 b8th11. NIN', 2127'1 Calle del Ckl • Lorut llV, rnt. \l.ifh f]tep(a~. 0~'MI' 711-&1- Bullt In kitchen. Upptr le\'el 'l'.'/lge. ):UN DECK Ii. OCEAN V\J. A re11I buy at $57,500. Gl.ASS "' A L LS AND \\1ATER: S'ol.·eeplng vit'\v ot lhe oeean & rodu below, trom this unique 2 bdrm., 2 bath hidea\\'8y. 1 bdrm. &: bath by separateo en- fnl.n<"!. Has lren!f'ndous pot>slbllities fo~ only $19,500. Newport 8Ndt ) OPEN SAT/SUN 1-5 ' i 2657 Vitt• Ornimdo • I Fabulous &plan Condo. : Upgni.dM to u old ' En&!ish motlr, wiU1 a " Cro"TI.. family room; all cuslom flnilhed • detail!~ v.ith indoor-outdoor IMna; all oulside malnl~1ce taken a1re of, plu1 acce NEAR HIGH SCHOOL.: This 1· ~ t:;t All this for o 1nult1-le1·e1. 3 bdrrn. 8:: ta111. s' . • p I rn1 ., hos nn EXCEL.LENT I cen1c ropert •• ocr:AN VIE\\'. \\'nlk 10 I * 67S..5726 * ncach & \·!th1ge. h'.itchen --DUPLEX $69 500 : ha~ R&O, rt 1shI\"a11 hr., l Hlk 1. IX' ·I 1., ,' f rC'fri!?'E'rator. Sho\\'Il by appt. o oc l. 1 I roo I only "'$63 500. ~und('('k, c:ornC"l' ~01 . \Val~~ MiSSl.ON REAL TY .to rl·s1uura111s & Lido Shoµ111, I _ 2 Br, I Ra • lgc C'l'PI~ \)8:; 5'1. Coast l-l\\'V .• l.agun11 sleep-loft for teen11g.:! ~ , Phone (714) 494-0731 ! sludkl USl'. 2nd unit: t BP, : THREE ARCH BAY · 1 Ba. patio. 2 garages.~ , 2 BR ocean view home \\ith Comh. ~un1gc/pl.ayhou&e, .Q lge utilit)' rm. and red hri.ck i a ra i; e I potting ~·""1;~ lntmor courtyard. Ov.'nCt' arden1 &: vegetable \\111 offer good fina11cinc. Corner Short & 3:>th S ' $73 900 Open Silt-Sun. 14. 0 FANTASTIC VIEWS 6'>-3'7l. , N. BLun~ BAY VIEW _t oversize lot, 2.000 sq fl of • living spa.ce In this im· Brand new tri·level · 1 maculate custom hon1e. Prime location. 11 u &:6: $61.500 :n~~r LaliUlte, Id', SR, ~· EXECUTIVE HOME -' ...... test chen, trp , \\"et bar, elec gar. ' North Laguna, s 'ii' e e P I n Ii Sal~/Or Lease o p t i o . Dana Point fo Pa Io s Si4,500. Open Sun 1-4, Verdes view, Open beam Quedada. lb\k \V. of VI ("e.Uings, court entrance. 4 de.I oro &; Ea 1 f b I u r f J• BR Den&. huge bonus room. 6-IJ.-4133 or 64G-08()(). ~ $1'18.000 LOWER Super Starter!!~ ; THREE BAY ARCH De.l\g'htlul Dolt House In ~ BR hon1e l\'ilh CXL"€11cnl NC\\l)Ol1 Heights locatioli. ocean vie\\', close to pri\·ate -Vacant -.anxloull O'I\ ' bench enlran('j!, le nn ls .s&\"S bring oUer!!I $J5.~ t..'OUl'ts & park, ~105,0()(). Ca'.11 6'1:)-8-W() .- NT!' LINGO REAL ESTATE 4!).i-8086 or "99-1397 NEAR BEACH & SllOP-v. E. 11 ... ....i & c.; PING CTR \\'Ivie'" 3 bclnn Mr.Ir-....... v.·/spactou11 kit lgc liv rm .,, w/fi .... pl '"' lot~ Upool Fantast1"c BI L% LoaQl' 2 car gar. $47,500. Bier I '/Z '\ 493-3611 ... ' O-Y--0 5 Bedroom & family l'OOll\.' , CRO\\'N POINT, 2 bdim 1 OJ)('n lfouse Sat/SUn 1-5 ! ba CO"lY & clean one O\\Tll't' 207& Tustin, N.B $61 .SOO' ~.000. Bkr. 493--l611 ~ L•gun• Hills ~F~ i,,,mmm;.:;;-- Scenic Properties bedroorn, 2 bath, 1 story \\'ilh * 675-5726 * fan1Hy room, fireplace, RETIRE HER~ COV("l.,...d patio, Professionally Jandscaperi )'al'd. $37.000. CaU 549-1036. 2 Bertroom plus -culc as a ilug's f'ar! G re a I pcrionality homr & only $26.400. CAii 545-8424 , SouthCo nraltors. . <a©it~lA-L£t-trs· That Intriguing Word Game with a Chuckle In qui1:t Coron11 lllghlnnds. Rooni ro lh"l'! You "'Ill love thr frif'Odly pt'(lple & the pridr or 011·nc~hl 11 honiNi. Choll'c of '.t in1 n1:11·ul11lt' honlC"!!. 2 .t-;1 l)("l'troon1s, $56.:iOO to $0.'l,Jotl. University Realty :wen E. (.'sl. 11\\y. ti73·6.l !O HOME AND INCOME Jus! cotnplcll'd. Br;1nd JlC'\Y l.>eluxl' :\ )lr(lroon1 hon1r Inc. 1'r11lc., C"arpcts, (I 1·t1 pc s. bulltln np11liRt1c1·~. PI 11 :ii SpacioU8 Penlholl!IC rent..'\! unit. $122,j()Q, OPEN SAT-SUN. l-!"1 100 NAn.crssus Lois Vogel, RcnUor ~ * OPEN HOUSES * Set. & Sun. 1-S 703 Orchid, lt·2 ...... S.'i-1,900 ·tOO lrl11. dupl<')C .... $106.000 JJ3 ll~llol'ropc, duplc)C $127,900 HAL PINCHIN REAL TOtl 675-4392 CHINA COVE CONDO Beautiful """';-2 BR, 2 BA. bo\oony, ~1tlo. fr p I c . nmlom dl"Jlllf crptll, 0J)l'll 1..5. ~.900. Owner 6J3..1769. PRtl'tlE Vil?\V home \l'lgreRI lrn:nn1e Oil NQJ'. on Ot,."Mn Bl\.-d, U.~. 6~8. DUPLEX oon'll!r, ('hlrmlrm. by OIWf'ft. iOI) t>oln11etlia, Open ~ daily. a~,·,.e lnt. 2 • 2 Qn f'J(!h c1upl<'~c11. CcirnCll' or .fili '-Col1~nrod. 'Frplc:, $74,000. 6-W..1392. The Wle1t draw In the We!!. ••. a Dlllly Pilot Classified OPEN House Sar & Sun, l\T('Sll VC"rde, l.."lK> Indiana A\"t', VC'ry sharp 3 BR, 2 U.\, big fam rn1, !!hag 1·1·pt111g thruoul , n1w1}' xu·:ui. 11rl("('(I al $.17,9~. Spnr·iou~ 1000 !'l'.l . fl. 4 B.lt hon1••. Lo\'rly 20X20 pa.nL'lt..'<! 0(lf'l1 lwi111\t'fl fan1 1·n1, 2 c11l - ln(t 111'{'11g, 2 F'h',"IJlace.~. If; Cov. potin, rhtb pool avail. O\\•n('r rl'l>7856 $]7,roo e V2 AC HORSE PROP Cozy 2 BR. nott-t»mn1 .. A·l, 9CCl!ldro BACK BAY area. 14( 1rees, 7-;; by owner. 979·5.1&-i. BY OWNER 3 BR. in great location \11 Costa f01t"llln $24,900. Princlpal11 only. 642· 73'1K TOWNHOUSE 4 SR. By Owner, I year nu. nr. south Coast Plaza & Seh. dbl gar . $29,500. 507-8267. OPEN HOUSE Sat-Sun 1·~ Uy Ov.11tr. ,j Or, JI~ BA. $33.900 Al."Uine 128,CkXt »ll ftoyce Ln ~1~200-I LOVELY 4 RR home, ncur ~llloshop'g &. priv. C'~Ub. ~ .• 1 . By ownor. ~9:142. BY Ov.T1er Sharp 3 Br 2 Ba. w/ltg )'Rn\. must 8Ce to a.PJJ. $27,000.,64.)..129L i\eumt1 'i'ff VA loRn on t'JO.INXI home, 3 br, 2 I.la o.nttfa~nt 64&-7n9 BACK BAY RF.PO, lri; leil & OOol, 3 Br S2fl,500 \VLU ... 5 REALTY 546-7739 NE\\' spaciou:ii 4 BR. rnffi rm, !llnm1. •,1:h1 11·.11rr vi''", S14,90G. O\\·n 1'. 4fl.1-j lfl7. El Toro BHAND new 3 BR, 2' ~ Ba, :Z cnr gar11.gr. encl ynrli, raroet, drape11, fplc, pool &.' rcc laellitics, 557.1027, Fount•in V•fley OPEN HOUSE SUNDAY 1-6 7i 0/o FINANCING rllltell llr CLAY •• l'OUAN 0 Rearrange the 6 x.rombled wordt below lo moke 6 "mple word1. Print letler' of .a1:h 111 ift line of sauore1. THE REiil ESTllTERS TOWN! OM •< 6't. UNSCRN.18lf llTT£tS I I j I I I I j I You rfon'I l1Hrl " 1n1n ro fani rnt. hu~e m1u11rr g11tDJ. * I to;: 3 BR. 1-. ., "Df!l\\' Fn~r · v.·hl·n )'OU ,-\~C'n!/01\'111'1', 611\.-0!bf. bfl. $26.500. 1,.~~ loan al FO! ANSWER . • . . . . • .. pl<1•'C :'\n nrl in the D11 lly ''\\'~I It .ti tli-;:ip·· nv Q\\11('r, Pnrk I.Mio l 'bi'. 11~' mo. 0 w n. '. SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS IN. CLASSIFICATION 900 Pflo• ll'ont ... , Coll "'w '"""' ........ ,,.. fO "'"h 2'• bo. pntlo off -"---·-------•----------------------"'-.:...C..:.C..:..;;.;..;,,...,:..;:..:,_,,~-~....,,.~~18.!!:.______ Turn I.hem into C"ash $48.300. Xlnt oond. 64. - l I j le! DAil V ltlLDT S11rtdlf, Octobrt 21, 1,73 port IM<h , Income Property IU1nc:<1n>o Property 16' lusln... , Rou-,urmihOii 3001 \Ml Unfurn. l~:tiVri.'tl~. --J!11Pj INVESTMENT OPPORTUNmES Op"°"""lty 100 L•9""" a..c11 eo, .... .,.1 Mir HOME I ~;;;;;;i;m;;;;~~;;1 sHOPPING CENTER I ACRES M.-1 °'"""""'""A c 'A'NoY 111041~1SO Util p d Rich tn •«lda, C'OOI v. llh 11Mobll Ho 10 unl)s Fountain CORON.A. SUPPL y ROUTE BM·hf'kln Mat ~A('h Ji 1 OLD CORONA hand nwtt-tllc, and • mH Valley SS70,000 Gross 400 ft. freeway "ft.."'I"-'-•"' 1011.·n. I CHARMER f.'lltPf!dni In Ju,un. Ct>muU Far Sale 1U $50,000 frontage $12,!500 an ..... ~ $»a -~ I Br nicely furn. 3 URj, • 2 full OM. bNm n urn. EIT0<0 LAKE forut, tBR. u;.lrwl hon)fl ln The \\'oodfl, li:t fan1 n~. tplc, outaide deek, cpts, dJ'pt, I )T lae, $-ISO mo. ~2300. ~ Huntlnttoft lhlch :L~-~ne;;Hll;:;:b;:::;;;;;; 1, 1 VX&M auprr a::rp S Bft din •rH. 2 b4., RIO, dishw .. pat.Jo, r~nced yard, $291). No adv. fee. ALAN REALTY, &'J:6..5&i0. dlnlna rn1, s llr, roey v.wrl Mobile Home 197'1 IZ.. \\'ill exchange acre. Clear. \Vil! CERTS PRODUCTS trplc, KUO~. yard• pltio. r.!Ulnp . trplc. nllW kitchen bwnlnc tlrftplact'li .Ir bf.•l ot , , .. $20" 000 . f '!al 0• 1. 1 .... S350 -l br 2 ba, trplc, 1 & BA .. c:arpe11 "drl~. all ramlly rm \\'Ith ""°ti bat 52, In Highland, c.. Sen 1'f l •· equ01ty or exchange for 'nei. ::ru,~ !\:ii':!t f ull';;; dbl 1•r. alrlwn. Lovely , 1-'A hi:iu . 1oc.J o1 paneling . a .. ·ay from fonMl living 52, in Highland, c.. · property range investment property. part nn~. Qu&lltlfd • rwn ocean vlev.·~ ncv.· pa.Int . im mo. vrly ~. { VACANT , wper lhU1I 3 Laguna Nfoue' =~10~ ,S:~~.~ San Bern•rdino Coun. Co. wtn ~ dlstnburor tor ALA Rentals • 642.1313 Av11.lt, lmmfd., 644-8561. bdrm .. dining flt'ffl, 2 ba.. ti VACANT RIPB' .ttal1> 3 No. 4 Royal St. "Gtorat'. 8J'1; ty. l ovely 10 x 20 COY· , ON~ OF THE LA~T ttri!I naUonslly advertlled 61l-4lm or 4%-3248. SPYGLASS 1UU. • 4 BR, ~-!;i ~,' ;t:· '-drps., Bdrm •. fam. rm., 2 ba., Can;yon. i red pcH'Ch •nd a c•r· 2~:t acre parcel I.TI old Bel 1\ir, o(! h1UlhOI• produ<.1 , You may ketp )'OIJr ~rnoNT $500 ~10. lndK'J)d zror. dee. I Tenitic ,1t VACAN'r. dWi> & rlean, ttplc., R-0, di«l~lhi:J patio, port. Nlc-•ly landKai. IMd Or. View. Horses OK. Seller will fi nance f~~~t~ ~: 494-9'1otCEREAL~94-9729 ~imo. E:~e &:llew~ l bdrm. din. area, 2 be, ~MC«! ya.nt. $315. 0 adv. ed. MocMrn Mobi e or exchange ror Laguna. l.ned by Olb" coniJJ8llY. viery &H--0736 RAO dlhw1hr, fncd. yard. ,/!e&JPER SHARP 3 9drm., P ark 546-0135 after 6 1 MR. GOLDSMKAITSAH"IAN REAL ESTARTEES. 644-8567 high locom" pott"nt1al. You Lido l1le LOVELY 2 BR hon1e, frplc, -~~A· CANT ~ .. -•-clean tan1. rn1, din. area, z ba .. p .M . '"' · must have l-8 hrs. Pl'I' "·eek elec. eye gaf14,.-e. Adulta on-'38 'R. d1~1'...!'"" .. "' 2 .. 0 ' l r p I c . , b I t I n R &; 0 , 962-6644 apare tlme. Can be "''orkcd LIVE ON LIDO I y .. UI,. area, """ dsh h f need td 10x4J' l"l111nlnRO. Qu a 11 t .v clay11 or cvn. ''If ff kl1se11 s~· I no pets. ~a r I Y. frpJc.. R&O, tenctd yard s?.ta"N r., dv t r 1.:..AN rn:o.tlc. ~t up ln nlce Costa I Income Property 166 111 111 k.i 2 Bit, 2 UA, brick trplc. dbl 75 mo. 4. 14 denrod s::no. · 0 a · ee. i\le:o..._, 11thtlt park. :iP. i'<'itt Income Property 166 9 UNITS ;:h~C(•Bc" Cc;nln ss ,~h gar., wAhr/dryr. \Vlntl'l' Ave., Cdl\f. 673-8289 eves. 11 v ,\CAN'T.' Brand tle\Y, 3 REAL1'Y, 636-5650. $M.. N\'w a1,·nln1es & c 1-:ttTS." rental. $350. 673-2227, 213: ·I BR, 3 BR. cpls, drp11, br, r:un rn1, din area, :.! [ l ~klrti11i;:s. Ouly s:i,.i.;o. RED CARPET $1150. REQUIRED 793-0427. adults, 110 pets, $350. 424 bu., pa.do, fll('d yd, 2 1•ar =fled lltlEX ;\nto•r'it·:ul ;.5i·9.'l90 EXCLUSIVES COST A MESA r Wl.NTElt '•"·-. ·-··. so. PolnSC'ttla, 67:1-:>2l8 0 r gur. $285. No ttdV. Ji'<! ALAN '"'1tl1iring n\"(lll"tnl<'fll ~o.."t..11rOO. lnterC'lll .,,.,... .,.....,, r.:-.o """'~. ....,., .,.,., o.=r. Best hu) ! l r.11nn~.. 2 t.iachs ; 111'"· 1i.:unt. t°q)IC., be«n1;xl ('('l!'s., lihni:: 1·111'!)t!I: dbl. &:llrt!Jl'."· 2 Ulk,.. 10 beach. Co1n11111111ty pool &: i-ec. "rca. S4.ll,7j{I. Q\111Cr anxk>ua -!Olr BS HY;. do\l•n! fo:P,\CIOt'S 20 x 1j ?.lobilt', 9 unU romples. Vrry sharp. fret• tin&.nclng available for hayfrout honie: 4 Br, S Ba, J.J<>-........> REAL• '• """"'"""'" 1 HR. 1 RA. J>ii\'. patir>. i'.'.3,930. T,,-o 2 hrm. l ba. &iuth Co$111 i'llesa. N_k·e (',\J>:inl(ion. l~11uL tum. Sandy beach. l-tOl\1E'i.' 2 Br, 1 Ba., crpt. * Please Help! * Ailull park ""/jacur1.i, pool11 on oi lut. HY'\, Do\\'11. lncon1\! ho111c d(•lached lron1 S un1f)(, Fol" innr1~ inror:natlon 1,1r1ie· ! Pier & float. Sl,650 Month l'lect, range. Call Belly I ]~ ·~ pn:. OC!'. S9!'1j(j, Npl. SJ,750. Y_1· •. 11·ty no"' and rt'nt11 lo"' vacancy factor, pride NATION\\'JDE ~tARKETIXri Hlll Grundy JUlr. 615-6161 dnyl!. 6 7 3 -J :l 0 1 , eves WE NEED Reil Estate for Sale "f8 !f·h 6,J-JG-t.1 n_ccd ~1u~1~. Gl't't1.l low S o! ownership, only Sl.28.0CJO. SYSTF.l\IS 2 BR, 2 BA, great patio, &W-1291. 2 BEDROOM HOUSE . . J!J72 J\IODEL :t-lx60, 2 llR. f1rs 1 1 time Investor llnrter . Call 00\\'. DeparTnie1u 93 incl. \\"a.sher/dryer, dbl. gar, 3 BR, & den, 2 ba, frplc. \lo'ith large fenced yard fol' 2 "-,., , ................. lff 2 BJ\, fa11 1 nn, air oond"J(, ~nl ~· . 5-1&·1500 P. O. Uox 5612, aillts, no pets. $345 mo. 1 So or hwy. Yearly. $375. mediun1 si~.eJ dogs, 111.·cll M•chot1r1,.,.a11111 H•-... no dish\\·nshrr, e1c. Adult Park J:12·9:-'· Beach Tr .1 Pt e ~ · l:\'"\'F.ffi!F.:'l:T DrYISION San illall'O. Ca. S.W02 \Vinler. Barrett Rea It y Nt•w decor. ~l. 429 tra\nro & very oliedi@lt! I Me.ii. "-,. .............. '" in Lacn1na. Hills. Just red"~ •~, '.ICllt priCt.'fl triplex in Ple"r~ inclu1'-pl"n ... n ..... ,....... 6-1?--j2l'.lll. HeHotrope f\rATURE \\'ORKING Ac,..... '°' ................ 151 .. ,, 0 ·"""· . ..,.,...-~. 10 :!'..",h'. G-at lo· ., •. -. ·,.· ...... Lanot .. a:socCoat..... YEARLY lt"Rst', 3 BR, den JRV rNE Terr. VII!.\\•. '"e. COUPLE l uolMu ,.,....,.., ............ IM ....... .... • "~""' I arne ""n ..... VERY RESPONSIBLE! CflMf.,.Y 1..-U/CryJlll ··•·•·•• U' •• 1 • 1 · 13 """ ~o"-"""" ... -Neu"""'"" lleRch on 1, block II N r"""s , ~ 1--·:.:;·w1~1h. ..__.,.._.. "' wll .......... 1 » JONES llEALTY INC. l\10BJLt:. llon1t>-Budger Ex· nienl, appreciation and or "CE,.RTSn~. "OYo'TK't'lll 1% ba.; near beach. $400 3 BR., J ba. Avail. Nov. \V"ll tak tre 1 ............ c. ... -ro.1 .. ,..,..,., ........ u• f)Sndo 1n park nr beach. tt\\"nrr UM' too. illlU I ~1n&rlc. ~lo. Broker 675--5200 1. Lea!!e or mo. $500. 1 e ex me Y ,.......,.., CMffftllfti.tfl• Mr ule ........ we !'\ Bch G4G 27 48 ~ 831 2738 care of honw! ~M1tt1/U•lll wk ......... u2 e11.pi -• '~2.950. i 'ourplc.x. Only 2 left Money to Lo.n 2 _.,., 4 BR. 31Ai BA, den, frplc., -Please call eveg. IUld ...., .. te"''""" ........... 1 "' 642-312S. ol these 2 brm. 1 bn. _. S·l25 mo. lhru June. ~13: 3 BR. 2 BA, patio, garage, 11·cekertds. 548-78Sl ::;;:-"°r'='.'.:n.;:·:::;::·:::: ::: 11 x 3.:>, r.:E\\' au.ning. sp. fourplcxcs. lO'i't do\\'n. \\'ii! NEW TRIPLEXES NEED C•ASH? 44&-5003. ~7667 clean &: 1;pack>Us, $-125/mo. ISI~ maxi Ltt• ,., 1111 ................. 111 renr $-48 nm. Partly furn. E<'ll on C(lnlrael or ron-ANO DUPLEXES Yearly lease. 644--06U Mollli. M1.,..1Tr1111r ,.,,., .. in "'"" (714) 673·62l0 ., ·--, 1 si= · 1 R s1 000 0 to 53 000 N • IM:MACULATE 3 BR. sm M_,..ft, Dfteff, ..... " ...• 11• "ust """"""· ' !ti'a at '1-N· \"('nhona . enta an ~·ay to , ~::.:.. 000 "' 161500 • , r up , ewport Buch " BR l BA od led o c;o ,.l'"fffffY 114 .' , -S600 ti ~· • $10 000 AND MORE -, . rem e ' u,r. ram. m1., crpts. drps . ..,'"'!: ,,-.. , _ __..:···· .. ··· ... --~ll"..., . per n)(ln 1· , t Wilson at Pl•centl• Ave ' redecorated! Cape Cad· • SPAC 3 BR BBQ S~ -'"" • ..,...., ........ ,,. ~rge CUllt~nBRb~l~ ~!TI<', NF.\\' 2 BR. I B1\ li\'\ng n11 . s-,"·"°n· ~ourplex. 2 brm. l COSTA MESA Rl'lllPl11bcr AV('O Ttu1ft fol' \\'INTER Rental. l"e\\'port $27j. 509 Galdenro<l 673-165, S\ate~ntry, shagcrpts. ::."fh:St.~·~.!;."'~ .. ::::. ::: 200\ W.h lbol tlod. Nolwpott ltKll·Cilitoll'lli tllt O JOLLY GIANT I rooms: . n, .11.::::1• Arlult plll'k 1r/ prh·ate 1.11., nc s a,~ s;olr courst>. It Real Estate Loan. t lp:in Penin. ~~ bUc h'Om bay. SHARP :l BR. fem rni, viciv,, RED CARPET It.al ltt•I• w1111M •••••••.•• , IU ::c.lflu~ 1 1a1n. rn1 .. , "',',1.1ry lX'ach _ $16,j()() ~0.-3672 1 HY , 1 r1011·n . \\ 111 1 .Sl'!1 1 on con· P~ONE 547·6791 app!'0\'81. use !Ill• n1oney 2 Bl', liv rm, lrg kit, frplc, nic<! yard: lease. Avail. lin· REALTORS 893-1351 1 ,------~ 1 Ml'Y nns .. ~ o ire ~Al: or:onvi'n innn. hMl't'\'Cl' )'OU like. ,\l~ nsk nice patio&. guest house I l[il I or ctcn. U:e. h\'uig rn1, I SS:,,000. f our 2 hrn1• 1 ba. Lots for Sale 170 atx>ut. 0111. unl'C'Clll"i'l:I P<'I'· \\"/br. ~ ba. Service rnl n1cd. Ri'altor 673-222'2. FREE Rent for 1 Br. 10 I flnancill • kllchen 'ol"/all bit-i ns. ~luny. l\Ous••s on a lor hist enough sonal loa ns. 11· / "'' n sh/dry... ITI4) COZY, Rustic 1 Br unfurn. nuinage units, kids/pets. "'/Channing f'l•rlc. !_.gr. I it.11 Estate, 1 l•I '°'' ooo m0<~ '°"'° " 2 I ,,osr Bea"'· R-t OCEAN 61>2804, (213) G<;.2963. (n4) "'""'· "'"""' 12"..5. Ad"'"· Also •"''· homo, $120. _ 2 '"'""" •••"'"'" .......... soo " rnany ext1•as. Asking $6:.;,j()() Genel'al n1nrt! units. 1-:a.~l siclc. \\'Ill 1 FRONT BEACl-1 \ol in L .• \. J!/11/!llAICO T'l-l=IFT 5-18-0671, ext. 394 no pets. No r.h!ld. 673-4169 BR, bike lo !>each, $150. 11111n1u W•ntN .............. uo I or "''Iii lt•a11C-op1!ur1. I 1riu!,• for !2 u 1 r rnorc unlts Count~·. Hollyv.•ood B.lver:i 620 Nw•poi1 Ci:nll'.'l" Dr. FREE Rent-l Br to nlnnage C M Ag!. Fer. 9~30 ::::::~= ~:r~":1.1.~.::::::. ~: CALL r-tt, l4l·l414 f or 1·<1nvcl\hono or l'011tr11rt .. ')..'('!inns w· x .JOO' by 55'. Suite lUl unil'I, kids/rw>fs, H.B. Also ostl ffl 13 BR, 2 BA, ne\\·ly dee in-Molter 11 Le111 ............... ?4f , 9-=-, 1 Acreage or sale 150 ior,; -1;,r~ do11"11, Rents SltO,OOJ 1213) ::ffi.2Sl~. Nr\vlXll'I &·a~·h .. ~ /ou1. Nr beach. Sng!s M•...-, wa111e<11 ....... Ut _·•.ilf!a. .~.., nrf' Jo"' nt $6G.1 prr inouch alo11e on lot, I br house, * Pl~e Help! * •,.·P..lc.?,"'11'.'· Lse ~210. ~215, Mortg•'"' t,,.tt OMll• ······ m ~fA{~...., 1 ~UNTINGTON BEACH $85,R.10. illesa Verde Pride Mountain, Dttsert 8:\1-.'\.J-W Lag. Bch., $125 & $100, -~ _, ~ Ntar Mt.-porl •••• Ofrlco ~veral R·2 ~ R·3 Pa~ls ~2":,1·s~lp +-rlcx -SOLD Resort 11• 1st TD Loans ~!'.··9~:-~t, elea.n. Agt. WE NEED a BR, 3 ba, frplc, 3 car Rent• Jf__sJ GRANO Op G t?r apnsso"'ooo11cn ~ ar ro as. r ,· tn "--~I I ex~.. t" A I R \V AY lat Full A Ba.lt."Ony V!ry,·. 1210. 2 Br. 2 BEDROOM HOUSE gar, no lease required. $400. l::NIN rosC:oiT fEA.LT·v ,rr e ~" tf: onni\tion °1~ membership i 11 ~ \d in UP TO 90% Coad! Hsc. Kids/pets. Gar. with lllll(e feoced yard for 2 rno. 960-1248 Q\\mer/broker. "'-"'"'""" .............. ,.. Newport B.y Towers r .. 1.7533 * ~':Be a e~.: IS ~ ?.1i1~ion Lake Country Club. s~~o/o INTEREST Calif's l~t Rental Ae,<:V n1edlum sized doglll (well NE\V 2 Bedroom adult "-t111f\tf11 ................. ,. l & 2 BED!t(J(,f,f * <rtV"" "!la~. er 9 mi. from dawntov.·n Palm 2 7~ Homefinders 547.9641 trained & very obedient!) nd Pool · KMIN• ,.,,., w •lth.t"'· ....... Jll 001\fINllJl\f llOMES Cemete·y units Sl)('<"l~IS\, Red Carpet, Sprin=. Sellin" be I 0 y,· n d TD Loans l\1ATliRE \\'ORKING ,~ o. !, tenrus.,..8-etc. c;.MemllllvcM hml. •···•··•·• J11 • RealtOTS 645-808.S Z1i E 17th ·~u » l B 2 Ba , COUPLE ,.,;, Agent """ 1290 C ..... mlioHrllM -'-· .......... * nt Hornes Loti/Crynts 156 St Costa ?tfei\a · market price Jor quick sale. r. , near Newport 3 BDRJ>I "-·•-F 1 )\' c....., tttn .... •-........ m • t Sllps r-· " · · 968-3862 ltarbor Yacht Club, Bay VERY RESPONSlB1$! """""'' rp C, s T....,_. l11rw ............... :ut t"'u.11 Security lllghrilie 12 APARTMENTS , · . Lowest rates Orange Co. \'ie\v, $400 ma. 9o<l.nter, S500 \\'il l take extremi'ly good ~ths. $235/mo. T........,.. 11111-........... ,. >JS Steel &: concrete constn.Jc!lon 3 LO'fS together , s e 11 CABIN. Big Bea1· area .. 1 Sattler Mtg. Co. Yearly adults, Gla--1301 car(' or home! Call 962-6286· :;::~'\::'.'"":.~ .. ~~:.:: = Private Balconies i~elhcr R sep~I $200 ~· ~-ner \\"ill gcll or exl"tm~ rooni, 15x26, 7 sll"cpiiy;: 642·2171 545--0611 :: BR. JIOUSE. Plrose cnll e\'e!. and lrvlM °"" .... -..,11, ................ .. 2 arbor est , r1n ..... 1 1 clo1vn for fe"'f'r units. Not1fy loft. Priced $7,500. Terms. "ef'ke-nds, a.18·7881 ov,1uw. """'·or Wllfun1, ···• w prage spares per uni!. &Jz...-083.1. us ir yau hai"l' 2~ units Private Party. 8-12-2015 aft Serving f[arbor area 24 )'t"!'I. l602 Park Ln NB 1185 ""1. ......................... ,.. Roof lop sW"tdcck 6 0 6ia--26:i6 or 737-1379 C ina:icl 1 ""· tllllwnt. •·•·····•·••···•·•· * Unusual Opportun ity 10 Pur-Commercial and wanr lo inrren . ..c your pm. D N'T BORROW y A~fAZEi\fENT \\'JU. Bl-: I 3 BR .• 2~' ba, •••••• $400/~ a,i1 .. ,, .. , er ""''~'"· ........ m ci' ... 8 .,,, 1 ...,, 11 Pro-·•>· 1 • 11 p, 0 -rty 158 position. Good Costa l\Iesa 1..AKF. An'Owheatl. LAKE 'TIL YOU CALL US! Houses Unfu<n. 305 TOTAL , .. h•i• ,.0, s-th" 2 BR, 2 ba, den, AIC ••• $27J 1 ,1t!!~·.··,··N··,.······· ........... .,."' ....., '-" 1~• ,.-location. O rr er c ti ro1· FRONT d-'· I B• • Ba -~ .. ""' " 2 BR 1 ba S3 5 _,.. ····· ......... . NPwp:>rt Beach. • ......... ' •· ., • Bor1'01v an your ho1nc equity sclectian or over 50 af the ·• · th ''' •· ••·•• 1 'Kot••., M•t111 •..• ,.. ••··••••••• 4 1t 310 Fernando R\l., N.B. I C 1 L t $ 17 500 ~~~-Cail COL\\IELL 2'100. Sq. 1-:t., ... fui~. rec nn. for any good purpose. Serv. General CLE A NES T, l\I 0 ST 4 4 BBRR., 2~ .b~:11· ·:." .... •· .~~ :::.:i.~O:-wi~iS ·::::::::::::::: :: 67.S.1551 • O 1 $74,:.icx:t•Lcisurc Time Prop. Ing lDS Angelf'S County for BEAUTIFUL H 0 l\1 ES ., •11 "" 1 • ········ ...,., V1eo11N 1t11t11i. .............. 4U j()'xl40' Nen.r 19th &-Pon1ont1 Inc. •7141 337-t217 ovcr 20 years l\lld NO\\' in available for rent in all 2 BR, 2 baths ........ $325 1t1n11is • Sft••• ............... •• e \\'ATERFRONT e ,\\·r., C.~1. Prici'd IOI\' ut 0 f •'lnrl •~1;11 5 BR, 3 ha N'pt Bch .. $575 G11'19U !tr It.iii .............. 4U 52 50 Ni fl NE1\R l\.larln.a. Charn1ing 2 rangf' C1;1:.inly! a1'f'as rom __,., lo .,...,.,, 3 BR 2 b · 1 $400 Ottke 1t111111 .................. ,... s:~IpSHl ..... ti•''",,•,','.'os,'",:1o·o,",,' we' .1"'eyr N: T·· ylor Co. Bil house. E-Z 1nalnt. SJGNA(L71~r,o-~TG1A06GE co. per monll1. I,· .. boat 18 • • .. .. .. .. IMU1lrl1i ltlnltl ·•·•··· ....•.•. .,. .,.... "' ,_ f."t!n('ed '·'d. Frplc Cpt A!<.k· ., ·-,1 VACANT su.....,.. st1.,..,... 3 1 • BR., nus room ..... $450 Sflf" ... ························us 2Br 2 88. I <l t I RF \L1'0H' •-· ... ,., 2Bedroon1s flt'\\" $31. 1ttnl•l~W•"'9111 ........... , .... 4'1 1 • h new Y ecora. et 2 ·' :S Ing S3J,;""i()(). G. A. f(\ev.'11, 4:-.orJ C:unpus Drive, N.B. bdrm., ram. rm ., 2 ha. 2 fr. • ...... ;, Mltctll•n-1t1111111 ......... w ~·Ip us gold c r pt ' g lit San Joaquin J-lill~ JUI. Rl!r. 496-5112. pies, R&O, dlshw!lhr. eoct. CALL 552-7500 thruout, i11CI. Annstrong Ne"'port Center 644-4910. Mortgages, · fnC'd d Spanish Ltle in klte~n. Liv Condominiums Real Estate Trust Deeds 260 r~~· Jee.·~ ~.f!t0, VISION rm has glau wlndow9 12' ElCc-hange 112 4:SSW.11thCOSTAMESA 636--5650 high & °''"t. fio1>< lo oeil . for 11le 160 TAX PROB 1120. """"' 1 "'· !um. great ~='=-=-=-=-~ d h 11 !rple. R-2 tot. $97.500. LEM s.~~ ,.,rnando Vall<y 3 "'· PUT YOUR MONEY "''"•' ""'"""· CM. Sllarp 3 IR, 1 IA, dbl. • re i ·-I~ ........__,, ················• Ci ni .t Tlleflkl/r. Mt-r111111 .Mil L ... I i.ttlcfl • .• . . ..... llf Owner. COUNVTIRLYLACLUB THIS YEAR? dt>n, sauna, 1SO degree vicv.' TO WORK FOR YOU! nxJ. on the Bay w/view, goroge, pool. Quiet 675-2445 far home, duplex or sml F..arn 10,, 0 II lun1. 1 Br. apt., cttild ok NB. tr et A II $275 DUPLE.\'. nr oo..-an $62,SOO Beaut. 2 Br., 11,1 Ba., priv. Thi~ ma;ii be_ your solution, apt, SM-0066. ~red";ndrT~r;;;.er:.d~ea~ $160 2 Br., urdum., 4 plex ~.:,;.Oft:. c":u·Lorry, R~;T~al'k Cent'!r~~S [j1 l\liles J.ar90:-Realtor J>'lliO, sun deck, l"'lect. 2 car ~1s Tripll'x zs cle;ir. 01\'Mr Real E1t•t• Wanted 114 ·Orange Counry re..1..1 e11111ti'. encl. playground, for the l ======~~~~I L-~""'°""'.:'.'::~''.__ __ I 67l-8563 gar. dsh \\"sh. built·ins, car-\\ill carry 1st. DN'doJTru~t SIGNAL l\lOH.TGACiE CO. k1ds gar., 1m. Herltoc)e Real Estate, . ~~s,:.~f'P!'p '. ~lt"Sa Verdel nrea. ~~•1"r"',,~~llr•p•l'~NP"R1tf in-, \\'ANT from o1mer 2-1 un1!s. 1 714~ 5560106 S!Ta Hou~ unfw11 .. fixer up-$.46.5880. 3 BR . + bonu11, 21~ ba. Scl25 Newport Helght5 .,....,,........, r11·. pry, For urther . "' · · • · l01·a· 2'!nd ... s I 4.1)() c . · l per. Landlord 1\111 furn QUI 3 BR 2 baths I· info. , .. •II J"•n-Ed<"al~ ... -t1on. Ofll"rrrl l•u S9""i.OOO. ' N·, ,,. p'°o rot th B Sttv. d.. 1". nmpus Dr., N.B. n"inl, brino the ki .. -&: ...... ,~ ET T"CIU" 1 br house-. .. • •••. , ••. . 450 A11M 1~11"" , ............. JU ,..,_,15 .,., .................. Ill locllt Clll,1 , . . .. . . . . . .. . . . . lli Tr1 ¥et ........... , s• C h • C Cod .. "' ,.._-' "'·' C ll COL\ ,... "' "" ,... " Bel\m ceiling, lndscpe, no 1 4 BR., 21 ~ ba, + vicv.· •. $495 •rm1ng •pe <213) 27l-l464, E.lft. 21:)6, n \'J:::LL B-M;.0:~1.l I ~ll'/3s.;....cw56 or 64)..2331 $W.OOJ 1st TD on 1 ac I )l~~D'tlORDS FREE dogs. Srove 8.· retrig. furn. 2 BR. + d('n, 2 ba. •·•• S-t30 ~i: :~ni::;. strp! 1 ~ro1n Me59 Verde Villa;--rlu 111n 1 0 \\•n s,1n Juan $150 fll'r mo + cleaning 2 BR., 2 baths •••••· · .•• S325 --------iai be~ ·I' y, panr l! & 2 ht•, I ba, gar, pool, as.s un\-I [ 1 1 t ap1slr11no. OuC' In 1 yenr, Cottage, on Islarid $160 BJ>" dep. Avail Nov. 1s t . 3 Br .. 2 00 .. Incl. gdnr .. $325 Loet .ct f-ound den, brick1~~;a~~~T!l.~ ah!<' luau. Giant :: door re· , finana.I ~ 10'; 1n!Pr, rll s c· o un t 1 , ph'8, utll pd Pet ok ~;)....0062U. 2559 Santa Ana 4 BR., 2~i baths ....... • $430 '--------' open Jl(li>""'" ""-t & "· ,, .. 1 .• -,. fri g.. dish\.\'llSht'r. S.P. I 714~·a-1210 Neat 2 br I $155 fenced , ve., nit C. ,. -~ .. l'l /I & I I k ..,IMlllrM••hJ ........... SM ar appt. 2100 Sc\·ille J\\'I!. -.500. (.'a.II $GS,OCKI ls! TD on 11 unit I ~\' pa LO · gar--c11 c! o 11 VACAl\'1' SUl>l"f' sharp, 3 ~ ............................ JJS 71-HiT.',-7608 CJS REAL ESTATE I n1otcl l\/(11 )' t'XIXlSUre nr. 'U decor 2 _br 2 ba $215 bdrn1., ram. nn .. 2 ha 2 "! I I 'I 1 Ill I 1•l!d, ~33-0i'>.~4 or ~U&i Business \\"l•stern \\.'bite House. $650. f,rpl. f11cd ix1\Kl & poo). . ~ frpl_t11, R&O, dishwshr, encl. ·=~~~''USuJn B~5.F 6~2 NE\\'PORT JllVtt-:RA Opportunity 200 nionthly incld 9!k. All dt1() \\a1v 3 hr 2 ba $1Sa bring I pnt10, fncd . yard S.135. Na '-'I"= :i yrs. TI4--493-11 :l4 your J~t, cptldrp & gar arlv. fee ALA N REALTY, St. J ames Pl. f,ts-6310. 1 Grnciou~ :l Br, 21.~ Ba, fpl. OUPLEX-$39,900 jArfllnte ~love Ill 4 br Fl\l 2 ba l 826-5780. Ntwport Shores fain r1n, 2 car gar._lmm~d. Garden Apa.rt1nents 41! 2 BR ' OWN YOUR OWN \\"ILL lluy 1.st nnd :liirl TD's $32:'1 lrpl, \V &t D, patio =~RE~'"----~~-"srNCE 1946" Poss. $32,~. Financing-_ 1 Balh (ll 1 BR _ 1 I BUSINESS up lo $100,000. Cull betwn 5 & 2 ear F E rent for . I br to 1st Western Bank Bldg. BLOCK TO OCEAN ~~To 111Spe<:l ca 11 Bath, private patios. e.nclos· M b"I W h & 9 PJ\f or 7 to 9 Al\-t Lovely 3 hr &: FM $4Z5 now ~-d nag e un1a H.B., Univen1.ty Park, Irvine . e-d garages, built-ins. ""·iel 0 I as 644-5511 CdM'a ~st has: it all l\.I s/pcts. A\go 2 Br, $~. Day• 552.7000 Nights 2·Sty. A-F'ran1e. 3 BR., 2 bA. LEUCADIA•-Bl ff "B ,.,.. .,:;.,-• a' tr N"VIEW' RENTA. LS gar, slngle11, kids, pets ok. i~'!!."'!!!f!~"""""",,;,,"' .,._,a u e, • r, streeL Excellent co~ .. ,·tio•. ..., -~ LSC v.•e -set:ure<l Jst: ..,.. I Agl. Fee. -°'30 Newly dcror. in & oot. i11Cl. ~ B d t o ·~ .. ,.~ ~ a, c UXl', cenn Fron!. No fancy projl'ction here, S6:i,677 bal: PllYll S640 mo * Pl H SPAC. 4 BR, 3 BA , kids nt'I\' earpe\!1 & drapes. erid unit. Security. 20 n1l11 (714) 870-6500 jtl!':I CPA's F'igures. W~l lnel 10%: all due 1978: Bx ease elp! *I $185-2 BR. Duplex:. Appll '11 park. Pool. Peta. $395/nio. ---'l \l'ullo r ..___'""_'""_'°"__..!~ khMll .. l111lnKtllll1 ..... , .. 1'1 Tft•lll"lcll ................... Jiii 1-~-1~ S«Vk• DlrKl'ff"I' •.. , . , .. , . . • .. ... J.-W11tl.,, Mllll ............ nl .... Wo~IN, ,-llMll ........• , 711 ,_ WHIM, M&,-. • . . . . ... • 1M Miff Wollt_,, Mel' .......... 111 ~,A~WOOD REAL TY to San Dii'Jt"O. f714) Ta.1-7170 cstab. y,·m1dng l\.tobil model. ~. Appll' Valley, 714-242-3144 WE NEED ~:{.,-L,..· ~roRe. 0"1,id1s{~· Drive by l>SI Bates, call or 171-H 879-0l12 NE:I'S up to $2500 month. 2 BED 00M O SE "'" ''A".J 828-4400 or 897-1300. * 548-1290 * Nl-7\\'PORT Crest c 0 n d 0 . ronson mostly help run. Service all I ]~ 1th 1 ....... R f--.. Hn_,u , ' Homeflnd•r• 547.9641 TURTLEROCK, 4 BR, 21~ c ______ _,li~) S•n Clemente I :\BR. 21l bn. plan l, nr1\ company supplied aC'('.Ounls, Rtntatl e " """6 e e< ... -.. .... y...,., or l'olESA VERDE 3 BR 2 B \ Ba. 3 car garage. No pet.s. Meidlwiclw V S.· ,·,11'. Tl"!lnl~. pool, i;.auna, new and USC'(! Car fkHlt'rs, ,.. m~ium sized dogs: '""ell crpts drpg 'bl\\ns ' 1.,...Je'. $-175/mo 56-0630 FOR !'lal(' h\" (\\\"nrr !'!harp I IH'\"O"'"' ~!\'i'l"L slnt fh~. 111·11il. Realty & Investments AirptaJ'l<'S, Boals, Fleet ... tra~IT+J'nE"\\·o~~~~) I patio: ua'.sc.-sis -~o. :i·'s~n~.~.~B~A~· .=.,,,-=-,=,=. ~~-,,,,-. -,.,,-1o-.' "':= ..... . ... " ...... .. 2 BR. l 1 •• : B.I, do.-10 1 l\1nkt' ttfr. l)1v11"'" 67.">-.~26 !lGi t:. t:VCl.ID Tn1cll: Co's, 1\lotor & 1\Jobile H F . h-" lOO COUP',,. 979-6748 1--• .~. ~~ n<o. ph FU LLERTO:-< ll(ltlll'S. ouses u r n1s SCI lo<"' I ""'~~==-~---.. ~ ,... "~ bch' in onr "' thr lie~t \"A CA~T 11Clult l'O ndo. 2 RH \'Elt\' RESPONSIBLE~ i DISTINCTIVE 4 Er, 2 Ba fl.17-9115 w rti<l11"' of S·in Clemt'llt". 1 P ~ H.\, llf'\\' cplll & rlrp>. 6 Units--Beach llERE"S Jt;ST A t'i..\\" General \\'ill tskf' extn-mely good home. Blt ns, frplc, crpts. $39,j()t). Oprn 1-'.i Sun. 1616 -~~tnoo. UCIO clo"-n & n101"l' ra.rr or hon-.e! I V•·l'Y clean. S 3 2 5 J mu . Laguna S.acn s . Ola \'i .. 1;1. 111. 1(\6-l'.lfrti an. Earns $775 Mo. 1 _ Your ~~~~~;'nt is ... S LANDLORDS s PleaSP call eves. and R.11---08TI ar 542-1?18. $15.'> - l Br, stove/rcr, nc\v crpU, drps. 2 blks hen.ch. $210 -2 br OCC"an viC\\' apt lrl{ dcrk, sn1l pel ok. ' S.\50 - 3 Br, 2 Ba, rrp1c clbl gar, atrium. LovelY <N-ean Vu~ \\1LL N"n• QN{ln JI ill"' 11r"n. Duplexes/Units 1'1 1tt1•• !~o,it'h .tr1•11 11)(.'a!l"n 61 t•un'\I so:-LP! l TS n:r11 UR pn11k•111t•s 11"L'C'kC'nf~s. ~ 78S1 2 BR Untum. fncd. yarrl, 1 BR l'io IJA , flnll'/1·111~ s ale 162 ~h.u p unil.i>. Ennis $'1~00 Pf'\' _No i;\.'ll•ng Invoh···i! \\r SC'1'\·11·e nil !hr hea!•h l$1~ max) attnchrc! gar. crpt~. Sl7J & Pf'li"~ hltn.~. pv11!. i:nlf. r1•a1. Good ~fl('rnlablc. t.o11· _ \\'nri< frorn )'OUt' honi" r111rs & inland On:angl' ('.o. I LANDLORDS• 1 1no. 2633 Elden Av l'. 492-7677 Newport Beach lllf('l'('!U assu111nble loan. -Pllrl /JI" run l\1nr a\·ailable F'REE FH.EE. SaveTinn· & • I 67J-ii270. $2.000 riu,h 1n 1o:1.n. SJ2.4no S'.?\J.100 (~11v11. <'<111 Now --;>;u f'~])('ri1•11c" ne1.:essary $ALA R.ENTALS $ l n·r Specialize in Nell--pon °>~10~N~T~l~C~E~L~l~O~Co-o_'1_o_J_B_R Open h11u.:,.. Sun. 1011-7"'. Duplex S4t..1600 Kr J_iea('h l hr $150 in HB lkach •Corona <lei ~far • 2 BA, ~ew cpt.~. dii>s & 31J Pali1.ada 12131 3;&-~11 1 Super Terms !;\\'EST.\JEN r J)f\'rSJON C.'O:\IPAXY PROVIDES hnsv· ru1·n, fenc~I -NO\\', 1 &. l..a~'11nn. Our Rental Ser· paint Rec farility $2j(J mo FL.'1.L ON 1'HE JOB Sliri/bo11.1 I hr $~00 l!'s in ''!Ce 111 FREE to You? Try 8;13-0328_ • · S•nta Ana Htlght1 !In\\' abmlt 00~ rin:u10.:1n; al ... TltAINI~G PROGRA'.\l NB, bil]5 pd & avail. Nu·Yli'w! s •; on 11 :l ll H 2 IL\ 1L·11 11--Even dishes 2 br S2l0 has NU·VIEW RENTALS 2 Bedrooms, 2 b n t .h s \\'A?\'T to r a i ~ r ;i "' • • 6 Townhouse H<atod sr.iirs 11nd 2 Bn t BA UJ•. I To1tt\ Jnv.,.stn1e1<l •15 Uli\ v1c11" 1.Jring sm ""t T.l-·10:'l0 or 494-3248 . · S\\'lm -garrlrn-1table a ha r .~,. ~ '"" ~ ,.JIN r · ,..., nnng pool $225/ma Cnll Reftdy ,,.. 1110\"I' i n. Only r, ij,'1(\1'5 to \)('/\l'h. ,\t] ... I ncqulred Cai:h $10.000 irep_l,c :'l hr 2 bfl $320 all COUNTRY living • Back Bay 64j-6610. . . ~erorntrrl. imninc-'.I Br, irk-al sunitll<-r-11'\nll.'r rtn1nl. ... -S.•nd n:inli!, add°rt'ss & tele· a~ph s, sml pet-gar. 4 BR.. 3 BA, pool, cpts O"~=~· =-----~ hom!!, 20?.01 s. \V, Orchid. Only $84,500 * FIXER-UPPER * JJhu1!C •. to: Dislrlct otfie-e '(ivate bcneh 2 huge. brs & drps, !rplc. I~orse area. 3 BR., JI,~ ba., carp. & ""Ill l inan~. see Sun J()...4 CALL 644- 7211 Tllis "rii("S!l" Is your r!i1U1Ci' ~~nl)1! \Vllill1 , Inc. ~.O. Rox gc frpl. J>ll1K> .Ii garage. $375 1110. Call r-.tr. \Velis, drapes. Lge.. fncd. yd. Near or cRll G46-6.W or 646-.1\0!I I to 881,1, thous<indti of dollars &iC(j, Turrance, Ca.hf. 905().1. Be;icon Ba.Jo; ii hr . 3 ba S52:i Barrett Really, 64z_s200. Ii t o re s . 0 v.· n e r /agt. -· Or phone f213l 542-8683 name It. 1111 go! 1t-avl. 6-12-5000. South Laguna I !~~IP.II <:Iran 11p _& palnl up the-!C .II • ALA Rentals e 642.alll DELUXE DUPLEX ... romp. "* 3 Dr, 2 Ba, ~1t, d-. ' forlo111 /lit](' hOUSl"I. They • LJQUOR Store $25,cm + priv. 2 Br, 2 Ba. !?10. \V/W ~.. ...., WVELY 3 Rn. Sru•ni~11 I ~ ik•n'r kllO\\" fh('y are In no 111n. Balboa Island cri1ts. f'rplc. dsh\\'Sr, tlbJ encl gar. priv. patio. Lrg hon1c \1·/charrning inMn1,. 1 ~ A 1~•nd 1lilln In ninki' n1onc•y. • 11~:CORATOR. crpts, drps gar. Avail Nov. ~i<>--j7j(l, )'Btd. No .!ling!~. no pets. apl. Cla)1il" roof. :! j , > • • • ,\S ts, thr·y i.,,~ Sl4.00l. e fAnH IC STOflJ-:, a l":em 1 Rr, 2 b11. No. Bayfronl. <213) 797-lt);J $23.5/mo. 673-3690. roin1\•ai11~. h:-.rdi\·ood flonr, 1 Dl'I L~-:'\ -:::~_arl? San!a 1\•1:1 RIVIERA REALTY e ,\L~O P,\RTS 111ore·in\'ffi. n1·1. fro1n i\o\·, 1-.lunt> 15. $100-1 nn. House l\id:i & LARGE 4 bdrm. frplc, dtn ht':1nl~. pHrli11l '-""'"n \U. ll<'h!h1· }"'._1 1nr1~1.~ •ltll). 14!1 fll\.>IH!v."&\' cr.1 1 ''"J'{'-\nVPll. S3iJ/n10. ll.1•11 6·12-1670 or pe-L~. Util.Paid. ' . ~· \\'oodland Sehl OlslrfCl. $62,.·ro. 011111'r, ·l'l!\....~;11 Tt•inis $l •. 'flli. f.l~·i7'19 _1642.7007 64S.S609·E-ves. HOLLAND BUSINESS ~,~ ;,.1>1-..~>-17 Cslil'i; Lr~t·~ Hl'nlal A<rcv 3~., F.!lher. Open House NU-VIEW RENTALS 673-4030 or 494-.1248. *LEASE* P1-e.Uglous Nort11 end locoi- tion. Lusuriou11 hOme with all. blt-!ns; 4 bdrms. den, family rm., 3~' bath:! 2 v.·et bars, with fabt.doos 'ViPws. $650 manth. SHIELDS REAL EST ATE ATILJ\-'TION Rl"':\TERS! ! Need a honil'? Apartn1ent? or Roon1mate? \\'e have t'm all: BEACON RENTALS t:t).f s c~i 1111}· •s La:z. 1.1c11 4.'H-9-191 _ln_c_•_m-'•-P_r_•~po.;...''~Y _ _.;.l.;.;.66 I 1 .• '''IT . ~~, I Iii.I ·ll io __ ,_·,_1L~t:'i ;Hl).Oii(lll Balboa Peninsul• Homafinde,, 547.9••1 I Sat/Sun/~lon. ST.J.-0626. -.• h V•" .'i -'''--"',, SIU( ]<1 --_-Vol U 1 'l Ort .. 2 B,.\ & :: Bit, :i * Balboa Beach * l'l·.·-,··t,"",'L't,,\ I'<. l Bil • B k B l l)r. I ba sirigll' garnge. 2 BR ., 2 ha . \\"eathcr('d :«t111tK'.' .. : ... :.::::::::::·:::: = ~9lldl11t M11 .. 111t , ... . ..... .,,...,. & &•11•1rr11111 •.•..•.•.• Ml ,..,,.."''' ................ . ... '" O•r.,, 1•11 ....... ,. . ... IU 1+9toNMld GM111 ....•..•.•... 114 JN'elf"T .•.. •.• . .. 111 M~t....., .......... ,.. llt M1Klii.n10111 ....•.....•..... 111 MIK ... _I Wini.cl , . , . lllt M•lkll lnllrTilmllllt .•.. , .,. 122 Olflc1 ""'"'llur•f E••lf , ...•.• .'. 11• .. 1 ....... a .... ft1 •...•..•...... ' •• 12, SIWlllll MIC!ll•n . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Ht sr:,n~ o-. ................ tJI s ... •ll••••nf, ••r ........ m Sw1p1 ............... , ....... Qt TV, ltfflt, Hl·,-1, SIWM ...... l:N ....... -![El "th. G_ .. 1 ..... ,,,.,, . .,,,,, l$e C11'1 ....................... ttl ~ ........................... ... ,.J .......................... us !Mnn ......................... IM Ll""llClll .. " ...• , . ,. .,, ..••.. IM I .. ~ I~ Glftlfll .................... , tet 1111"1, Mllnl./11rvlc1 . , ., . . .. ttJ l 11t1/M111M '•'''· , ......... ... ....... ,._ ................ "" a1111, ltt11t/Cn1rttr .. , , .. ...... 1111 ....... •. .• • ..... ., ••111.. su.-1D1C-• , ......... , tH IN"-t..W & 1-1 ........... tll ,.,,., s...... . . . ... '. tlJ I ~ 26 nits •~ ....... ac ay lur;:-c lul. $'.tiO. nw. C11ll 11 t I B:'· ;\r1111P rour t£'1·ni~ -B roaster t'll•iu\ & ,.,...,~" -:!nl location G46--2!rol . King e, updntf'.'d. llear ,I'.: Mobil• Homn 5illil Professional ~ \\ 111 •'••n-y p11pf'1' -No po1n111 I t'luckrn, ha111bu1"1:er takl'Out. In~·!. ii·n.~l;e~/dryrr. YrlY ALI. NE'I\' h11, pain!, cl'?( =.c.==-------se-e lhe surf. lkanlll, panel-!~· mmmmmm~·~;; "r r)l:{'l'S!(l\'I" inlt.'l"f'SI £'IC. 1l1'<'r 11·int• Hci-nse s.1·· Ha 1 Real flfl1!1, dspl. .Alon(' on Jot. 2 Ing, frplc, bl'ickcd patiog, c ______ _/Jl rli ) I \l('ry l1lifh UaJri\'.'. J(~'at1on orr Suhmil trarl\' tor (1o1,•t1. j ' $22000 .,.1'1• nio._ n ·cl ty B S200 5-18-95:«1 Oc.:•~n.:•_;.P.:o~;n~t-----tree!!, privacy. Pets/ch!ld Transportation n 11.(ikhur.<1 ln1~1'lit'l'li'111. In S'li:JO(IO ,\gt/O..\•n &12-2221 COAST PROPERTIES 1"'2-·1200 61·i-4000 r, ~ mo. . '· -0 .K. S400 l\lo. Rltr49.J-1511 Mobil• Homes lu~,.. shnppln$: c-t•n1rr, E:11i1~ (n1sR. 6~16-!16fo()I · I * 67,.5410 * JJ,\YFRONT 5 !:khTilM, 4 Balbo1 Peninsula OCEAN View, cust 4 BR. 3 G For S•le 125 $1~.£.?-1 ,gro11~. 0...·e: 10': I. O Vt-: I~\' \\'EST S ID r. . . B~I~. p11.'r, flont. \Vlnter or BA, fam rm, fplc, \lo'C!t bar, 7RF-s;.~ rie;U~m~~ tito:: A1rcr11t ........................ t11 I--'-::...;.;::.:. ____ ;;:;: 11111 ndablt . Cfllt !Odtl). [")(Jl;1Jl~E. 2 RR ('A, $-~l.!ljO <.OOll phinibing r '-' p n i r y1 l:i-:. fi •:l-20:19 2 f!R. nice quiet locallon \vnlk to n1arlna, S l :i 5 $:175, 49.l-2.')08 or 6/.">-4:167 l0x·1:i f1...f:t::T\\'OOO t"u1·n. . . • 54~1600 . Full prlC"C. \Viii sell ~ilA hu~1nes" 1n Nr11·po11 Bench. Coron• del Mer "'lth good yard. Prcf.·r adult I :58""S--023"7~7,_=.,,-----PM pool, rlubho11i;r, ad11ll s. no 1 :-:v r~""T.\IF.NT otVJSlON or Vctr rnn's 111111' ~ lltlY l111ndre'I~ or good l'l'gular cpl. No pc111. $325 mo. yrly. Fount1ln V•ll•Y ="'===~~---- pets, $3900, fi.lf ..... 1700, N.n . ~ poln!ll. $!500 Closl nsi:' Co~t11; t'11stom1·r~ .. T ,, 1ep11 on r $11 !"i _ lJtll [xi. Lr!ti' Bach. = Realty·i-&12-5200, CllAR.MING :I Br. part fut'tl, CQl\TA i\lt"!IA, 1Dx."ll An~lns, I an!y. Co nl t' & tulk to 11u111h('1' 1\·1ll be your!I to full kl!, -Ju;g iTpts, J blk t' VACANT, 91.lJX'r 11harp, 4 ~~~~· 4~~fi: Jst A last, I BR., xlnt "'"'11d. c.rm. fully 1hr hrnkrrs 111 1R71 Hnrhor t.'lk" O\"\'I' "" x c e 11cn 1 brnch. LEASE optian 2 BR. 2BA, Bdrm.. f"m. m 1.. 2 b11,, tt 1111 . Gl?.(iGI\~ • , ft Btvd., CCl!lll\ Mese. ru~1oni<·r11 6-1...-3128. $17;, -~mall , but nl~-c I tplc, cpt11, dr(J'!I. appl\anoea, fl-plc., R&O, dahw11hr., fncd. CltARMJNG studkl eottaa:c, 1 NE\V 2 BR. 1 RA livinll:" ~:=.:~=="""~""""""~~! TAX She.ltrr _ '.\ X Gro!ts *LIQUOR LICENSE* 81•~cv.·Jy f11i9ntf'rl,fgnr11.ged."I bnbl~~cTni. ~~~.~bay. f'V'A~NT. 1'.I....,.. ldi•"'", 4 ~!J{~ sf~1?14sJ~~=~~· l AnlBforW. I\ '41 rm. ,\dult pnTk '.I'/ ;ir\\·111(' :'>IOtlll.f.: Home Park SI.I~!.:}.$ i.;1111'( ~ $26.""i,000. L.A. 01'11ngl' Counly nn-t nle -.. r, rpt·, " _, ,.... -.. _ \l('Mch -$1 6,:KX) ~ID-36!2 :'>I. 21 ,\!': ;\l-1 101 71 ~ ,,(., nt'f'lt \\'ill tr.ule for Orange f{Pnl'rnl. "NO\\' PRJCt:D gar, yard. Alone on Int. Coron• del Mer BR, boniit mi, 2 b{I, frplc, llUGE 2 BR, 2 be.th house, 1 '--------J 1100 f1. on f r cf' 11· a y .· c01,,,1, .. Ag•''''· TO Sl!:LL.' '" ~1"' SSI. >!•. l!nmnc, bll-in, R +O, d 111 h w 1 hr· Extras, Euy walk to beach ,.,.,_,·,·::.;: .. ··· ............... ,.. SAC. did •1\11,. S~'oOO. J.l•ln . ' NU VIEW RENTALS patio, blk y,•1111 fi'nce. •~ff.. -.............. tu w:tl('r rrool park. Pnri! .~lustu\•">fll rarru Sl .T:"i:'>l,I; i;;:-..... 11110 f.10--016';. \\in~'"" Collt'Ct I 213 1 ~ t. "OLD CORONA" charm Na adv fl!.<!. A LAN or shop'g. $335. 495-113'1. a-•-r.'" .................. tJf CO'l'f'l't'd qnr. 6i~:z:?O :-il~111pu1" C,-.n1l'r $1.1:\1;\I: !)llPLEX ~OOO down to n 2i Z..424!t. 6i3-4Q:IO 11r 4.<)J-32-IS. g11Jore! Steps lo beach 3 RF.ALTY. 6.'D.5600, EMERALD Terrace, 3 BR. =•i .. ':':.'· .. ~.":...::::::.'.".'.'. m M O''-t -, lf/)rl\t• f•·r R•'lrrrrl: {,.111 ,,, lo·,·,,,· --· .,.,., ""\l'"IC s~oR >' ,, .. , ..• , .... ,BR 1 "'' Ip!•, 1~,,,,, l>Ntroom~.3batll!.'kl0. 2 .. _, ,-·· -· ,-... l l'JI ,_ ........................ , ..... .,.,· II l :osl Int.•' r In L"lllr 1 Cou1,1·~ 111 &i. Calif. .t 0111t•r rl·ri 0·,\.:)r~~,·1",!~ ::-~1·1 • ~~,1;1~1,.1" ·"tnvf'n'j0..._. ..._ ~·l'~;~ CPll. 'pr!i· 111,h '"11i.,, \\•io. 2. Cra.cklug 3 or 4 1.~room, 3 DR, Iii bf\, furn. rm, dblc mo~y~lr.''4~7001 u, _,., ::;= ~:;-i··;··········· ... t'4 I $1000 ar hilt nl r 6il-SG\O u1\·,....r1no·nr ot' nn ... · :;,;.7.'14~7"' -IN'<N n1('.11. i'.od)" ~·Super l\l1:k1 Sh(IPJ:. ek"C J:<U' Ofl('lll'r, S::..:iO. 717 2 fttory -f'XC'l'pllanal lot ~11.r .. cpt.11, drpsl bl111$, -"'"'-'-""-"""""----·--w,...!.• .... ~~.:::;::·: := ll lll'l' 5 P;\I. 1turrw~11onnl l•l\"f'~lt~•·n!.. .,, I }'111 \'llv. (';ill Sun 5.ii-9'i!)4 ;\lllr\i;wlf!, r11!1 Gl·l·Ji!l!lfl. J -f'IOtt' to Sl'hOol. s~. \l"nSher/dryer, J"ll)O. lennls Ill~ ............. , .,. U.AY ~lrl•· lraU,.r [,11,,.I> C•1r \>1ndertll\ut 5.~..._a\1 2 --· --· '3. Uki' tw1v -bllyfront -courts, klcl11 OK. no pf'IJ, TIME FOR :--· "-........ ·········,.. Adult•. l\1u~t ~tll nm.-· :..1~kt' * 746 TUSTIN .--THIPf.F.X hy 111\'nrr, 1\sotuml' ():\.Se!" '~"""' L i <1 u or Costa Mes• prtvlllt: sllp _ 3 tl('(!momll. $245 Pf'r mo. 8424121, No .,.,, 11 ... ····················,.. (lfrC'r Ph1tnj fi."rt1Pl7. 7': I.I Jrn1n s •1 2 o o u l.1er11N•. 1 r11nsfrrrnh11•, Hy · Ne"·pon addrrs!I, $\$. ·'~"~·~·~"'"'"~'·~-~-~-I\ - -?\pl. nr:i•·h.-~!IC" Sil.I. ,I, S.li'6/n10, ~· p ,' s:-~~.mri '1ti x.,,, 1. 1973. Ry O"'nt'r ... si:t.;..2 HI<: Mohtlf. lluUM', All HKR. 67~722!'i .... ,...UICK CASH 2 BR. l1xfil-t:hamplr1t1 ·;n, N.ln ... l-,1. i. lin11 .~ for AAl••. ~.i!l--O l\':I prlrn::lp.il~ nnl" i _l'h. 96K-51:1i7. uLll pol, s1n•l1·n!~ Ok l IJR, ~ 81:. frptc., bl0t':,~· 2 CIU' FOR ACnON ••• "Inn '""II ~ck 11.U. 011!u J •-.. ,, --1 ••-'' ' ~11r • -I •-t•I • ROOi\tY tine bedroon1 rl11nJex W. po-uv, ld<k n . ~ '' ,..~ " '";' •v• , .... · ""' . I •\J.IBITIOUS COUPLE .. c;: &> .... 11 .,...,,rs l'.t''1 ;d::cy· ,. N t ,,., •. ..,., $6000. Olli 96.Y.1'7I ~-Mi'.O &U..it;N Tho ff•Atl'!lt draw \111ne \V~t . • )i1ur n"·n bi"~· r.nm e1etl'll HomefJnders 547~9641 uni! acrou from pttrk nntl mo. 0 ee. aatT't en..,..~~. Like to trade? Our Tratler'11 llavr ti0methlll$:: )1'\l w1tnt ltt r•IJI rt1ullJI •J"C! )U51 ll phOne I moooy pllrt-t!me. C ll 11 "LlBt" It tn clas!Uled, Shlp tennis • C0111M' !ll'pnr.tll! en-Any day la the BEST DAY to Paradise column la lar YOU' 11cll ~ Clit.~~ilkd ad1 do It l'All O\\'llY _ &12-5678. 897..ml. trance • prnge $22Sfmo. run an ftdl Don't delay, • to~ Result•! 64'H678. 6f4....'7211 Agt. eaJI today f.C).¥18, C111111re. Sll•/ltll!f .......... tH ~ .... 1 111-. ,_, ........... ftll a ITIC c ... , ............... , .. t)I Metil• ""'"' .. " . '. " • . . . . .. "" MoNr Mtfftft ..........• ' .... " f4f Trtllen,. Tnv.i ............... , HI Tr•H•"· utmrr •. ..... .. . . .. . ,., ...... lenk• 6 ... , ............ ,., THROUGH A CALL 642-5678 CLASSIFIED AD • ti VACANT SUP<T :,harp 2 bdrm. It den, R&O, cpts. & drps, 2 car gar, fenced yard. Pool It. te n nis tacilities. 2 blk!. to beach $345. No adv. fee. ALAN REAL TY 636-5650. BLUETS CON00-3 br, 2 ba. 2 car gar. Pool. F .P. hltns. S."..1-8635. Lse $450/mo. BIG CANYON 1101\fE '4 Br. 2 BA, lam rm. .rrao Ute. <C93-5197 or 50-6135. BAY Vu Bluf!s Condo. Prime Jocalion on Vis!a Caudal. ~ br, 2 ba $600. 67".>-3535. •wport Shor•• ! BR, 2 ba, ~l. bllns, carp, f c1rpg. S325 Yearly. Property House 642-38.iO San Clement• ~ DR. lain rn1, Shorccliffs, ,,priv bc-h \\•/club prlyl. conv, I $375. n'IO, 1J_J:794-J.(-..1 ~an Juan Capistrano --3 BR, J1i Ba. 2 c-ar gnr. ffrplc, crpl.1!'. drp);, rncd yrd ~pool privilei.:c. 400-5717. ~u1tln ,160-1 BR. House. 1'"t:>nccd Ior kids. Gam!lc. cruu·s Ll;!t'~t Rt:>ntal A1t1'Y Hom•finders 547·9641 HouMI Furn. or Unfurn. 310 General 2 BR., l ha., wd. New carp. drapes, decor. Yrly. f250 3 bR.., 2 bn., uni. new cafl), drapes, dt'cor. yrty. $325 l BR., 2 bn. Otoeanfmnt. f\Ln1.: winier $325 2 Bit., 2 ba. furn, \Vlnltt S300 associated OROKER S -RI: Al TOQS lOl <, W t!olbo" 61116tJ i.tnt.E 1sland home. 3 BR, z ba.. a OOn, lo~-ely Pftllo, fum. yrly. SO'XI l\1oo\h t<li OPAL. Ne""' 2 BR, 2 bn., npl . lk'am cell'1, G&r.11.gc U11h1rn. $375 l\lo., yrl)', El Toro NEW 2 Jrg. BR:., utility rm., all gar., ccnL air. pool, xlnt locatloon. SU. 968-1763 OCEANFRONT, I o r m er owner'll unit. Upper 2 Br. Fum!sh<!d. Winter $250/mo. Call 675-5366 San Clement• Nu -4BR Exec. Home &ntcrtaln In XI' i.~am rm or prden potJo, frJ>lc, crpta, drp11, ~'"'°· 642.-661B or MS-0011. ~W~l,~l~°""-'-R.:..:>·~··~6~75-333;,;::=l ,,--.1BEA1JT'l1'"1.JL, b~nd llf'W, 3 UR y,e11rlJ', $300, Carpet Eastside 01. nf Ralph's " tlrapt:11, garae;e ~. lfkrketand-alt~PIC7""1Jr-2 211 Diamond, ConM!r of BR, 2 DA. cpts, drflFo, bltn•, Bl!lhofl D\V, llll'., .$2ti:i mo. 6Q..,U6C, • PARK NEWPORT APARTMENTS on the bay 2 BDRM., I Ba eonclo. Bltr., ""''· dbl -· -"'°· mo. '4$1-2Stl ah 3. Apt1 Fum. or Unfum. m -S.lboo ld•nd IA&J;Ury •pi..Mloent !1""- &Vrr1ooklrw tlw water. En· Joy mo.ooo bH.Jth spa. 1 IW'hnmlns pooll, T Ulhll'd l"rmil couru, plut mltet al blcycl, tn.J.a, puning, ahUf· !lt'board, croquet. Junlor 1'1 from $194.~ monWy: aao 1 and 2-bedroom plallj and Unfum. or furn. 2 BR., Unle 2-stor)I tow!\ nou.es. El!>C-ltfancl <imrm, yMrly/w\n. ~ tlic kltcbena,, private patiot le>r. Inqulrn D> Ab1Jor1e ot or bt.Jconle1, carpeliri1, dn· :6~7S-;,clJ~l4~.~------1 pcrlea. Subwrnoean park· 6albo• Penin•11I• In&" wUh «ilevatoni. Op!lonaJ mald 1eMce. Just :iorlh of Fuhlon lalllnd at Ja~hottt and San Jo1:1.qu1n Hiiis l"\Qnd. TclephOne tTl-41 &t-~1900 tor rt-n!sJ inromu11ion Apt. Unfurn. Newport B•ach l.RG I BR, util pd. Encl g11r. Adului. no pet1. Yrly. S®/rno. ~/67".r7023. DELUXE adull po o I 1 Id e garden bungalo\\', nr ocean, irpt, lrg patio, 6 pool.s, i;auna, tennis. 846-0259. Also 1 Br. Fmm $13j. ADULT 2 BEOOOOM. 2 BATH APARTMENTS IN A 6£'1JTIFUL OUTOOOR SETTING $260 INCLUDES GAS UTILITIES. S.\LES OFFICE OPEN 10.00 AM TO 6:30 P.M O\LL: 644-5555 SAN JOA~ >USROA!l PACIFIC COAS1 HWY. 365 Apt. Unfum. Newport Beech I! you'10 tired of tradil•onal apattman! living 11'\en you·re 1eady lor Oe.kwood! There's $1 million i~ rec· 1ea/1011 end fun. Free Tennis Lessons. Pro thop and Tenn13 Pio B1111ards. Heslin Clubs. Saunas. Indoor Golf Driv·r·'1 Range. Sand VolleybalL Swimming Pool. Plus on Ac11v11y Director who puts II all 1ogelher: Compton1entllry Sunday Brunch_ Sunday 880. Oakwood o!lert baau11lul ~1ngles, 1 & 2 bedrooms. Fu•nistied 11n(1 unfu1n1s1ied. Al'ld rents start as low as 11S5 Prices may vary according 10 loe11tlon Models o;:ien da ly 10 ro 7. Sorry, no pets or c.hltdrtn. Oakwood Garden Apartmenu Newport 8••th/Ntlf1h 1"'11'11 ,,.... lf!~ (7"1 ~~ N•wport 8••t h/South 101~ U IN IM 11111 .. 2 .. 110 I ! - Ip Wanted, M ... I' ,.f CASHIER s-r . .,.,_ u. 1973 i.;9"Tlt ...: lndvstrl1I ftenlM 4SO 01t ~. li lJ AUTO SALES r s's zJ a.DUCAL I •· PRESTIGE OFFICES Fountaln Valley, Bc>auti· ht! -bWldlng, ......,., tloor. 3JDI equatt! feet. will divide ink> amalle.- otftces. 50c Ptt *l\IAN fool, includes • carpel&, dn~. all utilltln, J&nl.. tor iU\'1.ot. call MarUyo Sto.all !n•1 8.'!2·5440. 1300 SQ. h, m-1 5P8Cf 1..-black • .,..~ •• c.'Odc• .... -/front ottlct, lp IT.Ar •·poo--J&mle ol tmdc" -.... door. $180 mo. 1'1'93 WhiltMT, • dobtrman mbf.Fted. V1e. CM. OiS-003! ..,.., 6'6--0681 ct MiaX>n Viejo. 830-Slt:l Job W1nted, MUe 700 lmmecHate ~ Netd =--'==;;:..:o.::::.:::...:.==1 aarnsfve )'OIJlll men -.11.1. DRIVER • oompanioo. ,.i. lna to learn lhe auto. uln Ce.uc. ¥'!nt. 46. klCal re:fL builn!u. Exprrience ftOC Auto dealt"t nf!fttl cap.able tndjvldual w/...,.t ~ aptitude " out10J n1 ptrainali~. Auto dNJer ex· po« het;tul. SW< IOOO-c.Il M~ \\'bite ~. CoUtal Ptttorme:l A&t"nCY. 2 T 9 0 llarbor Blvd., Ort e SOFTWARE PREPARATION cw1e .,... 1,:-:;:;;:=·:::-=.,...,.-.-,-,,.. • ••• •• UVE A1 The Beach • $25 1lfiffk. Pine Knott r.totr-1, l30f W. Colst 11"1)', NB Stwap 455 UNUAPPY dilld l<>lt '°""'I cat, \i SlameM. 'n brinclle NO'nCE -belitn, dean, modern blda on heavy tn.f. n.c bualneu st~ ln Lo111 Bc•ch. Approx 6000 IQ tt, 130' lg eJaa b'Ontaao. Avt..llable on \'ery favorable ti.xi• 10 qualltled tenants 213: 427-2013 -· -..... tall, ~= ltm, Re ward , GET RlD OF' UNSlGIITL Y TR.ASJI AND DEBRIS, Sl2 LOAD. 001.J..EGE s;ru· DENT. 548-6m, ~'"time Newport neccaary. We will train. 2ND SHIFT • • 1 """""'· NEAR BEACH -R oon1 w/kltcMn priv. Rc,pon, $90 mo. e675-M1Se LOVELY room pri ba I e:nt. Wnt Bade B&y. en1pl. ~per..on. SlOO mo. NIO: b:.>dm1, kit prlv otp., w/w crplg, prlvllle adult home, nr all, 548-4ZTI C.P.t. I Room & Boacd 405 VOCATIONAL 11une 'Ai li of· fl'r room & L'an! -1wm rental al~ a\'rtl.I. &12-2389 Guest Home 415 URGE Privnlc r to o 1n "4'/nurstni: rn.re, good food A laundry. 642-92'TR. V•c.ation Rent•l1 • 425 ACUPULCO Corlf1om.lruum , on beach, plush. plu!tlt, maid, 2 pools, very ln- expe:nsl\'e:, by wct'k . Dec isl -Jan 15th. Call ~ R•nt.111 to Sh•re 430 GIRL lo ltlare t\\-o bedroom a.pan. One block tron1 bl'och. $100 mo. Call after 4:00 p.m. 646-JMO. 5205 River, N.B. RESPONSIBLE, ~trnigh1 male, undC'T 25, lo share apt. 64:>-4589 Oc-e:antront sha1't' 2 hr w, -' straight grad stUdl'flt. 7210 '\'. C>Ce<anfront , NB &12-&'i&I. Rent•I• to Sh•r• 430 1 GJRL to 11hare ren t "''12 o( san1e ln brancl nu NB home. 3 Br furn 1, blk from bch, $100 mo. 6ia-2l!IO. , WANTED fen.ale to share· Ire 3 BR, 2BA apt, block to Beach, yearly. Only, $108. """"" * - Rent•l1 W•nted LOST, n\llle Blu•polnt ......... . .,..._ In holpiUJ, p1use return \0 33'152 Granadl. Apt 2. Dana Polnt, 496-1164 BRACELET, g:r-.. -n_,A,..-lOl'""d brads, vie: 17th or Redhill, * Please Help! * ,.,,..,,,.,., value, .. ward. Howeclunlne If . •• WE NEED 54S-n&< °' 673-~1. • • 2 BEDROOM HOUSE LOST VW bwnper oorr ber C1tri.t0n'11 C1ea.n!ng BTW. 6Jsl St. &: F'aah. J1\ Carpel, noon & Yl'indow1 * SMAU. OFPJO: 81.DG. with large fenced yard for 2 on Pac. C11t Hwy. aft 6, H0tue & otrlce 1naint. C)N old NC\\'Jl0r1 Bhol AJ>-medlUtll llZA!(I dogl, lv.•cll 645-8314. Quality clo··•··, lower 800 • I ll'llint'd & verv obedit'nl!} ~"''6 prruc. 11q. fl 3 on l'C'S ?ofATURE WORKING BLUEPO~T Slameae, male, prlt.-ei. 642-9693 & rttept or dls/ilay a.1'l"t1. COUPLl.~ tront pa\l1 de c I a"' e d , HOUSE OF CLEAN i''l..LUy_ r.rpl'U & r(>"d. Call VERY RESroN'SiBLE? ~l('fo~adden/C olden \\'l'SI Prof. care fol' home or ore. ~HT REALTY \\'ill take extremei)' good H.B. Rev.·IU'd 8S'-9234. Carpets, upholstery& floors. LVI" or home! • RE\VARD, orange tiger 5"46-a745. DESK SPACE adj. O.C. Plt>aae call €'\'f.'I, and 5triped cat, 2 yrs old. Vic: L.?.1. Q:implete House<.ieaning Airport I' Afrporter 1-fotcl, \\'eclc:ends, ~18-7881 Costa ?t1esa, f>.18-2492. _ Cari>ef.1. floors, window.a. S60 Pl'r n10. Full seet'y. ($185 maxl phone, copy &'IV., new WANTED· 2 BR hot1M? mu.st LOST: Siamese. Large feet I ~~~~·~-""'=":::,,-*::,,.,~~ desk, etc,. available al additl be nlL~ i,_ cl~ .l onlf Sa:NI Recent SUrgery. Ca 11 H 0 USE KEEPER. Ex· chargt>. If_ req, ZI72 DuPont, or fPU. For t\\'O empJoyed M&-1377 perienced. Tues·'lllurs. 9-3 No. 8. lrvuie. 83J...3223, young men. Prefer quiet PARAKEET, Yellow, Vlc: 547-1843 Bus.iness Rent•' 445 street, and 5hady yard. San Remo, Lido I.sle:. LADY wilhes daya work. Phone &n-0'141 before 2 pm. 673--2991 Good and reliable. Ref. * TOP * w""d""". LOsr. "1"-eety Pie" '"' "41-8108 1 'w~ANTE~=o0';'-;2~8'~unl~um--hou-se Parakeet. Vic. Hile A Spring. Landtcapl-* LOCATION * In eo... ""'· W/pet. d&le 846-5328 """ & W"""'-1 .o.c==:..c":.;!_• __ _ Below $150. ~ afl 6 Lost Beagle, temaie. Vic. of LANDSCAPE De8lgn & Successful Mail or ~rvil"E' 10-pm. Gleada St., Huntington Bch. Const., 8 yrs expe:r. Sad· l"ation on East 17th S1, in1 'R~00~,-,-1-0-,..-n-t-ln-M---1-,,,-.,.-$?5. Re\\-ard. &47-3310. dleback Valley Landscape, Coi.ia "!csa~ for surfboard shaping. H.B. 837-3856. • 1820 Sq. ~ :. area. Reas. price. Call I --~ -1[51 J10ME water s y is t em 11 * 1\vo .auio bays Chris. 960-1061. _ repuired & installed. Ca.11 * On Siii! parking 493-9338 San Juan. • i::xcl'llent eX(J)SUI'~ • La1-ge sign aren 1 ~ Masonry • Only S650 per 1nonth ~1 1 ~ Appli 9nce ReSNir \VILLIA?o.IS & SON :r.fasonry. Rl'alnno1nics, Rkr 61::Hi700 ~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;ii;; ~&:;..P:.;:a~rf~•:______ Llc. No. 283046. Brick, -block & stonc. 586-6371. rOR lease Taro Tio stand, REPLACEr.JENT & aux· will retnndel to suile for Announcements 500 Jllary gas tanks, pick-ups. Brick-Block-Stone fast 1ood Sl'rvice. Busy 4 wh!. chives, vans & n"JOtor • 6Q..8200 * rolTl<?r. S97,.1, 19th st. o~s NE\VCO?orF.:RS! Ftff civic homes. 89Z-8314 Piinting & 646-5033, {'Ves 646--0681. lnfo. & gtfts-We:lconle IBOO SQ. ft. lndustrlal shop, Wagon llostess. 847--0580. B•bysltting P•perhantfnt $225/mo. Also 300 sq. fL Of·t·--------BABYSITTING Complete HOUM? Painting · ' £amln& potential to UXXl, . Excellont Demo plan. Insur- • MUSICIANS • Dt.:i. daitts ance pak1 ~ APSQ club -.'Ot'it. Call John or Bill, ru pinion to Ray Chlldlu:a. J=-=~tod F-•le 702 DAVE ROSS ' PONTIAC MATURE, retintd, e:xper. 'A"Oman helps w/newbom. oonva1esccnta. elderly, Jlgbt Zl80 ~bor Blvd., hoUJlietA'Orir.:. Uve-oul, flex-.......,.,a Mesa lblo boun. T•mJXXUll O.K. AUTOMOBILE BKKPR 893-3374. Parts & &ervice. Accounts SECRfil'ARY· Experienced. r{'celvab l e, Expe:r . Attractive, mature. 8 yr. automobile girl only. We resident Newport Beach will train you on our new area. Ready for that lull automated 11 t ton book· time job. 979--0103 "eeplng equip. Salaey open. NEED help 11l home? we: 5 days, 8-5 pm. Phone Bauer have aides, nu r •.e 1 , BWck, 979-2500, Mr a. ho u s e kprs, con,paruol\5, Cameron aft 10 11.m. 11 o m e nia k e: r & Upjohn BABY Sitter; Lag\llla Beach 547-{i681. live In. Crest separate rm TYPESEiTER; IBM com-& bath. Across from beach. poser. fast, ac cu ra 1 e , + Sll.l_ar:y for cs1y but kw· reuonable 494-2222 int child care: I: U. Hsekpc. CASTERS. Decoraton, u- por. lor Ceramlca pla.nt. Ap-Dly at Twin Winton O!ramlCI, 31966 C&mlM Capistrano, Sen J u a n Capistrano. a-TILDCARE fw quiet obe- dient 7 yr otd girt aft ldlool (Newp:>rt Hci&ht!I . Elem) 540-3006 days, d't 4:30 -CITY OF IRYINE ACCOUNT CLERK $542-$656 p.,. Mo. Welcome to --1 Ypu .,. '8!1dled with oul· dated equipment and • altJy that'• 'A'dl, jlllt ~ of touch w11h today. tr• time fllr R chanae. Varian Data Machlne1 would Uke to 'offloome )'OU to tomorrow ' with an outstandlnc P.IU01) for a qualified l11d1vldua1. You must be able lo ~ 50 wpm and Mwi a minimum 2 years oHtoo CX· pe:tlence, preferably In a data proce:11in1 en. vlronment. \\'orking houJ'$ on Sf!OOnd ·1hih are 4 P.M1 to I2 A.?.1. Jf you nteel these qualillcallona and are interested in joinin& a rrow· ing Ch"MP O:lunty OOffi· '*1IY that otten: ' ~2200 ext 281 Help Wanted~ M & F 710 BABYSITTER your house: A Bener Temp. J?osition UR-GENTLY NEEDED UNSKILLED Mesa Verde area. HapPY l5mo old child, 7:30 am·S:lJ pm, ref req, Call aft 6, 006--09'111. *MODERN FACILITIES COMPETmVE PAY * 10°/o 2ND SHlfT DIFfEllENTIAL * EXCEWNT Will assist City FinMoe Of· fleer by estabU.shlng & , maintalnin&: records ot Oty, * financial transactions; act as City Castrter. .l-type detailed fiancial statements. LABORERS BABYSITTER for o Id e r children In my home:, 7-9 Apply 4201 Capus Dr. am. ?>Ion-Fri, NB 548-5980. SU1te 201 BACK OFFICE--CTI<l 83S-"4ll Fee Paid. One of the most ~'!"~~~ ...... ~ ... -fanlastlc opportunities \\'e CLEANING "-oman 4 hrs per have listed Jn the medical day, 3 days per wk, call tie4.d. Get in on t11e rround 642-4672 aft 6 floor ot new clinic, Aho Fee Jobs. Call Sally HBri, CLERICAL Interim 540-80.55. Coastal Per11Qnnel Personnel Service ~~ncy. 2790 Harbor Blvd., NEVER A FEE 17581 Irvine• Blvd. 1 's"'•°'RM°=A"ID=--,-.,-,"'ted~~K"°'no=tty #115 Tustin Keg, 2125 Harbor Blvd Ul-.5460 . Costa ?o.1esa 646-9910 Equal OpPOr. Employer BARTENDER Over n, ex· -A1st BookkMper -S.Cret1ry -Typist -Keypuch -Prod. Control BENEFn'S fll!eue nppty in penon, or contact B. Kr1fk1 VDM V•rl1n Oat• M1chlnn 7122 f.1ichel90n Drive .Irvine:, Calll., 92664 CTI4l 833--2400 lice $95 O.t &16-21.Jl M H C Me Custom Int, v.-cather proof ,, P~OF. · l\lale/20-3 0 "THE Factory" has a lrgl ,,,) Y ome, • 1• Exter.Nojobtoo1mall will share hoU&f' nr beech shop avail. $185tmo. In '-nONh Xlnt are. ~ lunclF.~ .l'rtt~e.slimales l.ocfl refs. .... ~ Ii bay \~I/same:, retpqnslbl.PA Caru>ecy Village 425 30th St.. fenced play yilrd. Call ~ CEIU;tAK PAINTERS $175, 613-8666 , .NB. 613-961)6 or 642-8520. time, ~14:--547-3296 ~.;,~'li:"i-"!",.;~~"'f per. man or \\"Oman. Apply Acctg Bkkping Office in penon, lA!clcy Lion, 1700 has xlnt oppty for CPA~ PAf;i;P~la~co~n~ua~· ~· ~"'iiii'·;;;;oOiiiiiiiiiiii wbo can manage a: proctutt BOOKKEEPER lo buy in to ·very active · -firm:. Send resume · to P.O. -part time Box 1890, Costa lrtesa. flexible bout!. Exp'd -for -Coordln1tor .-Diy. Pl•n~ Contrfr D•rtnell P•r10nell Servi~ Apncy An equal opportunity tm.p\o)'et' ml~ : RETIRED lady to share 21 REl\"T s. pace 1.1artinique Personals 530 BABYSITIING, Hourly, dai-*CUSTOM PAINTING bedroom 2 ~th T_ownhousc. Beauty Salon, Fonnerly ly or weekly. Victoria lnter/Exter. Free Color L'OM· Pool. S125fnio. &l:>-6610. l Ruds. a\•ait. Contact Ms. FULLY 1.JCJ:,;NSEO school district. 642--84.13 mlling & est. Won't be un· G f MarUn, 6n--4900. * SPIRITUALIST * BABYSrITING In my Cd?t-J dcrilld. St. Lie. no. 254931. 1r1991 or k.ent 435 lndustri•I Rent•! 450 Splritµa.1 readings 10 am-10 home i~1eekdays 7:30-5:30. Ins. 642-6005. • • S Construction Oftl.ce A: Pro-Advert111ng •l•1 perty P.fana.geme:nt. Send Re- Former yellow page or sume on BackgroUnd & magazine space ex P e·r. Give tteterences tu: Commission only. Call fur Write 08.sslfled Ad •972 appt. 646-0536. Daily Pilot, P.O. Box 1560 Adverti~n~ Sail"STllan. exo. Costa M{'68, Calif. 9263j SOO Newport C•nter Dr Newport llNch 6'11M-470 CLERK typl.lt, progressive: truck line needs clerk typist to train in license dept. Pennancnt position. CALL Frank Walter 546-7172 MINI WAREHOUSES pm. Adyice on au matters Single child S6 day. 673--0JOJ I oP~R=O~F~.=~ .. =,~11.,.'-v-"-;ng--st-•-lc ~ STORAGE HARBOR & WARNER 312 N. FJ C•ml"' Re•I. San Business Service 1;c. No. 279514. ln•ur .. all Clen1ente, 492-9136 492-903•1. types of papel'. 714 : MALE OR FEMALE &15-3631, 215 r.iverside AY, NB BKKPR ASSISTANT AN.'iWERI.NG service some· Locn! ro. nec?s shaiy lndlv. one fot· weekends & wfhtc !{Cnl .o!flce 01 graveynrd. \Viti tr a i n . bkkpng expe.r. Xln t stnr'llm! 540-1777. sat & C:O· benefits. Crelll CLEIUCAL MTST/SC C'OCKTAIL Wa.ltres& Over 21, experienced. Apply In person, Lueky Lion, 1700 Placentia, 01 No Move-In or ifove-0ut LIFE OR DEATH PROMPT WAhT.-UP SERV 842-4386. ciiarg('S. ~·1Ylnl $7.50 pc'!' 14~ sq, rt. . to 7000 sq. ft. Let OU" babl-II·-. ~. •I· Will WAKE you anytime! I~~~~------month. 1 1 I.It & • .... '" ru. * 968--0269 FIRST clas11 pnin· H II & niuui c.i; 0 a rccways tt"l'Tlativ{"\q to ABORTION, * tlng/nD""rhangl•g. Ext. am toll N1"\Vlllntf St., JIB O C A1rpo1t C r .. -" ALLSPACE pf.1;E BARJiF.Tr REAL'TY call LJFE LINE 551·5022, 2' -~u:Jpa~t_SerVI~,;c;<:.:•:____ Int. Airless spray. Free Est. 960-1970 642-4353 -"-"-· ________ ,-979-529-1 . 1 ~~-~------';iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii ...... iiiiiiiiiiiiilYOUNG ladv to share 11.pt. JOHN'S ~t & Upholstery PAINTING: inside a·• out •.rn •-·bl S t' ~ Ori Shampoo trC.C Scotch· uu -rv • ......,... e garage. tol"('agc f NOW LEASING "'-'Ith world famous p:x'!t, 6L gard (Soil Retardants). Small jobs too. Lo ca .I ooly, N.E, Costa 1'.te;<;a. Cull Object marriage. All races Degreasers &: all color referenct>s. Cal.I 64UU55 549-00J. I Huntington Beech welcome. Call a1ter 7 p.m. brighteners & 10 minute fllter 5 p.m. NEW M·I 10234 Ascol Cir. H.B. bleach for white carpe:tl'I. • PAINTING 1: ~AlNlNG l·Of_f_ic-'e-'R-'e-nt;.;a;;.1 __ -'440..;.; ! 9-10 ,Sq. Ft. & UP CO.ME PICK YOURS N'IW! Save your money by sa\•ing rNT/EXT. TRIM, ACCOUS 1 ?.i!O. FREE RENT Hamilto~rmland St. INSTANT FOTO DATE me extra. trips. \Vill cle11n FREE EST. Jim 979-8186 Dceeutive: OUico Suilc. UU\ .:-SEVEPn;i, living rm., dining rm .. & No Waste !\.lac A/Payable Cluk $S50 For restaurant/heh a.n?a Desk Cl•rk Must know NCR ax> Hours 4pm-Midnight Production Teehniclo1n Beaeh Area opportUruty for advance- ment. Je1011 B•1t Agency 17400 Brookhurst, 1'', Vly l Suite 213 ~ BOOKKEEPER Ni:.v t<.CFG linn in West N.8. seeks expcr. full charge bk· kpr. for part time tA'Orit. NIGUEL Afulll: know Pf.YT'Oll & taxes. Exper. P.ITSl'/SC operator needed for I.BM typesetting system & composer. Re- quire xlnt typing skills .l- abUlt:y to work w/min. supervision. Exper. In prepa.ration of forms & documents or newspaper \\'Urk helpful. CONSUMER LOAN PROCESSOR Ex~rl1ncecl UNI TEO CALIFORNIA BANK 3ll Avenida Del Mar San Clemente 4'2-5123 • & Janitor paid. Air con---hall $l5. Any rm. $7.50, \VAU.PAPERING , ditioned. Crpts, patio, Xi•rox. * DELUXE * 534-1772 couch $10. Chair $j, 15 yrs. 543-1#1 eves 9Ti6 Katelin, Ann h e i m. 1'~ul\~· ~prin~lered '2900 ~-ft. PROBLEl\t Pregnancy. Con-::~ 1'111'~t ~~sclf~ lNT. & Accousltlcal ceilings P I Microvlsion Inc., ~-;n:~~:~y BOYS OR GIRLS ExceUent co. benefits Please call THE IRVINE CO. '44 3319 Equal 0ppor. EmJ*iyer &! -----, J 539-1661 . M·l lnc.·l~ding 400 sq. ft. Qe· fide n l, s y mp a thelic Good ref. S3l--Ol01. painted. Cari>et cleaning. D~ space available .$50 luxe of_f1ce space. 16th l.:. pregnancy rounsellni. Alxlr-6-12-7009. 548-3574 mo. Will provide furniture l\Ionrov1a. Costa '.\-tesa. !Ion &. adoptions ref. Carpet Cl•aning * PATCH PLASTERING * al $5 mo, At1t~lng seivlce T*RI·~?., R06EAL TY APCARE &U-4136 Floor Core & Windows All types. Free estimates available. 17875 Beach Blvd. I ..... ~ 21 * SIU. Aulder Helde ls a.I.Ive Dutch l\1aint. Serv. 537-1508 Call ~ID-QZ Huntington Beach. 642-4321 1140-4230 SQ FT & well !K'lling property in Cement, Concrete PROF. painter, honest work, NEW 4 oflit't'S &. l'Ollff'l'i'fl<'<': NEW M -1 Crasl'I Val.ley, CAiif. Write reas. lnlfexl, [ree est. rm, total l,OJO sq. ft .. at ' 3 phn.se "'iring. l2489 State Hlghv,.ay ~ CEMENT 'Vork, patio 1, . Refs. 548.2759, 64z.5913_ 17c per Ml ft, OW!ll' nexible m \V. 2Cilh. Costa l\1("Stl ATTRACTIVE l>'Un Loving dri\·eways, 11ldewalkli, brick pf bl to pri mt' lenanl, day, 3 doors orr PlllL'1'ntia f.falc, 35, Like ~em planters. Reas. 545-2943. um ng 6°5-873.1, nlte GT.t-1417. J. B. SAUNDE RSON. i'~emal<', 18 to 38. Tel PATIOS, walks, drives. Sa"'-·, L.R. OTIS PLUMBING SAN Cle1nl'!nte. Sn1ull office 6-12.0'ZU, eves. ~22TI ~JXC or Box J..t.l, ll.B. break, remove & replace Ren1odels & Repairs. Water 11u.lle11 a\'&il. NC'w const. 4001 BIRCH, NB ALC0110LTCS Anonymous. concttte. 54S-8668 forest. heaters, disposals, furnaces, Laguna Niguel W-13 years old 1for DAILY 131-1477 PILOT paper routes in South .,..~~!!!!!!!!~~~!!!!! Santa Ana, between Main & A /R•ceivebl• Girl Faiiview, Warner & San Diego F\vy, 10 key by touch, IT'S A 642-4321 1'.1UST. Typing, t:T'S A Lynn eqon MUST. Xlnt position for District Manager sharp gal. Salary open. Equal Opportunity Employer 847-1.229. CA!t Washer & lite main!. ASPHALT !.fan. S tea d Y man wanted. pleue call \\'ork. Top wages for all (7141 832-4877 for appt. Mt1J1o.raker, roller, etc. between 8:30 & 4:30. !'qua! Oppor. E,..ioy.r CLERICAL Varied clerical 1n Trust Dept. of financiaJ organiz.a. tlon. lnte:rming work, ~ pur. for advancement. Mu.st have figure aptitude, pleasant telephone \'olce, ability to type light CQI'· respohdenee. Xln't co. benefita &: working conds. 500 Newport Centtt Dr., ' Newport ,Beach, wtte fiOO, betwn lG--4 pm. Rent $100.·$150. 1 ~ blk 0t:l'IU1 Phon€' 5-12-7217 ar write CEMENT & Block Work. dshwashrs. &12-0>3 MIC & i, Coa.<rt lh11·. Ca.II 493-8008. 3600 sq. ~-1l'c per sq ft P.O. Box 1223, Costa ?.'lesa. \Vall l>lltios ·d walks B/A. Comp!{'te Plumbing ASSEMBLER eves. &-8 pni. below going rale, IL mfg.I -~~--~=~~~ s, ,__ ·,A" &I e • "-. L. ~ \\•h.<;lc, slrg. Baurngard.ner \VANT a dste? Sl ·JOO Ind.Jes ~c. By 1u. or ,ivu. 646-6915 """!Vice, 1c. ~,_,..._ CARPENTERS Bo11.t·l"inish Carpenters-Tool· CLERICAL 1617 WESTCLIFF-NB 5-11-5032. to <'hoosc from. 40-55 yrs. Contractor PLUb.fBINC REPAIR 2300· 1200 & :;.ID sq . ft. ;,sc \\'ARF:HOUSE & storage, 111.;) ~-4·S pm. No job too small TRAINEES per ttq. It. Ample prk'g, Util. i;q fl 2 offices, carpelerl, Soci1I Clubs 535 GERWICK &: SON ** 642-3128 ** &un1garrinCT'. 511-5032. 2 l"{'St l'IXlni•. w--'l-l,' ----------Bldg Contr. Addlt & Remod S I g/Alt •at" s 5001/ D' t 1736 ANAIU~:J'.'11, C.M. 600 sq . Cosla l\!esa. sm ·~10.1Uo1ES \\"ant to meet men Stale Llc. Bl·ll4371 1-e'-w---'•=;__e_·='°"='---/0 ISCOUD ft grd, flonr. priv tolll'I, 962...SS7-l for companion.ship &. mar· 673..QJ41 549-2170 BEAlITJFULLY 0 e la 11 ed near 17th & Ft"N'1111.y $1 lj COSTA to.IF.SA lj,OOO sq. fl. riage? ''Partner" ~1271 JACK Taulane, repair, Dressmaking, ~ur fabric or ON TOYS nlO, 67J.-2rot. l:;flO ~\/C offc, ~j ('11.rl~~·~' ~-~~!4~79~-~~~~~~ remod, 11.dd. Lie B-1 269072. mine. Call before that STORE front office. Ground 1 park'g, fncd '."I, gasoline ?tly \Vay Co. 5-17~. special occasion. 641)-2695 Be Santa's hl"iper k mm Ou'istma.s m by helping ing exper. helptul. We pay RECEIVING CLERK . top wages. U'e want perm a. Entry level pogttion avail. nent carpent<TS for f8JJt for stable Individual. No ex· growil'€ co. known for build· per required l.ng the higbest qualitv boa.ls. ' Please° Apply Pacifico By _Kippar DANA Yachts 2401 campus or. Irvine 928 \V. 17lh St., c.~I. I (Near o.c. ~) 645-5570 F.qual Opppr. employt.r m/F Helo W•nted, M & F 710 Help Wanted, M & F 711 CONTROLLER To $20 K Plus Bonus Well known firm seeking in- dividual w/heavy expe:r, ln manur. NEYER A FEE DertMll P•rton"-1 Service Agency 500 Newport Center Dr. Newport Beach ~70 COOK-TRAINEE Prefer no student1. Expe:r. prefd, but will train, APP'y betwn. 2:30 & 4:30 p.m., lia.mburger Hamlet, 1M5 Adams, CM . Ask for Mr. H ..... Fut resulta are JU1t • Vbone call away &&J-51i'n!. Help Went>d, M & F 710 floor. $100 n10. Util pd, no p11n1p, 10.5 il('f, 011·tl(·r1A~1.-1 l[gj Furniture Alteretlons-642·5145 a.'J9efllble tun playthit'@:s for lease r e qu i r cd . 2052 1 673-3.'llj Lott met found -"..;.;....;;....;.. ______ INeat. accurate:. 20 ynrs exp. Kiddies bMgtit & airy en- • Nev.-port Blvrl. em.111 P.leAA. : NE\V fa ('ility 1,0.-.0 sq_ fc. l";;iiijiiijiiijiiijiiijiiij.:;ijj:; 'V O 00\\'0RKING. I'1'pair, T el•vlslon Repair \ironment. Great casual at· LEGAL Exec Sult(', Union I "toffJl·e 221}3 phase pi\·r, I I rebuilding. Craftsmanship I -'-""'-'-'"""--;.;.;!:.:.:.;..--n'IOSphcre-"'·ear )'OOr old ren. Bank Bldg. Uth noor, I ho t 11•1r. skylight, overheaf'I F d (I -• ) 550 only. ~T;;iSG COLOR TV Repair, expert, nies, bring IUDC'h & gattr.er ELECTRONICS ·--N('tA'por1 Cent l'r, i n c .Id i.: I rtoor, p1i1nc CM an-a, day oun rM eul G•rd•nlng reasonable, most In hon1e. in picnic 11.l'('R, No exper. Xeroxh~i;:: rte. 6-ID-&110. I 6i.J.-Si:U. nite 673-1"117. FOUND Srnall long haired Frec estimate, H.B. N.B. & n~('SS. Santa Needs U Now! S'.\IL o!f1ce on Broad"·ay n1' 1 i\1 -1·2 buildings. ·1000 F't . 1200 poodle fenialc. BI a c k PROF"Es.510N.\L gardener, C.M. Bert Ca 11 e m ore. HURRY! • Ne\\-port 81 ~-d. Co!l'1a i\fesn. Fl ., lyl'ar old, 13c IX'r w '"11i1e on l'hl'Sl. Vi c . tree v.·ork, prunin g, 968-2783. Irvine 540-4450 $50 mo. or lease. 67:'.-8761 foul. :..1:1-6012. f' 0 11 n 1 a in Valley. can sprinklers, cleanup jobs. TrH Servic• Anaheim 533-2322 . . DE~IGN PLAZA. pr i I' IL t ,. TI1e fastest draw in the \V!!sl .. ~'.:'-.=:~·c,-~--~--I a nd s ca p in g, George, NEVER A FEE AT TEMPO :: 646-5893 TREE · I & I TEJ\fPO Ten1porary Help offl~'.!'11 & l't'C<'plion roon1 ... a O:\il,v Pilot Clal!sifted F'El\-t.U.E Dog white 11., • • tnmm ng remova ,1·/vil'"'· 644--43.12. Ad. 6-12-5678. black ears & rme. ?<.led. * Creative Gardening -expert c 11 r c & Apt. Apt... 11!ze. F'rif'nd!y. Vt c Stal".<!.V IA'inter Cleanup & Pruning. n1aint{'nancc ot trees. Call ASSEl\.fBLERS R G • r-.t T ft 5 at to $2.50 hr. Sonie hand sand· Furn. or Unfurn. 370 Furn. or Unfurn. 370 Sc8.!":'1 1."-. Hing &ach. Cnll ye rass aint. Spmklrs om a er pm ing & light painting for "",......, "" Ins! & Selv, 646-1072, 6-l&-9076. small L'OmPM)'. Xlnt con· Huntington Beach Huntington S.•ch SA~IO\'ED. while. Superior E:X-PERIENCEO ga.niener Til• dition. Also need "Vo'OOd Ave & Pon10na, Q)!ila Mesa. month I y maintenance .& v.-orkers & many other CF YOU'RE NOT LIVING AT HARBOUR LIGHTS You're missing out on the only renl•l apartments In exclusive Hunllnglon Harbour. A tl m1led number of spacious apartments ere now avallable at Harbour Lights. In addition to lush landsc aping wilh streams. waterfalls. Quiet ponds. flowe r· llned pathways, gazebos and spacious open areas. you ge t an apartment with a private balcony, lh1ck shag carpe ls, large master ~edroom suite. walk-in closets. fireplaces in larger models. a cornplete GE buffet kit- chen, and air conditioning. T~ere 's a large swimming pool. rec- reation grounds. huge lolly-equipped club house with pool and game rooms. ~saunas. health c_tub, kitc hen, fires ide lounges and great neighbors to s hare ii with. The beach, sa lllng and tennis are all nearby. Aparlmenll From $170.00 Move to Harbour Lights In beautiful Huntrnglon Harbour. 16700 Saybrook Lane (7t4) 846-3341 \Vrd . eve. 8:30. Expired clean up. Responsible. Free CERAMIC TJLE NE\V k trades. No ~xper. required . ht.g's. Call to Identity, P.lisse!I rst.lmate. 64>1587 remodel. Free est. Sm jobs Come early & be ...... to •"' 'tll>'elcomc. 536-2426 alt 5. ,,, .. his prople. ...-2009. EUROPEA.i'l Garde: n e: r . \\-Ork. ri-IALE \Vire Hair Terrier itaintenance . Lanrbcaping. Top Soll ECHO JOB AGENCY (lik('j 11·hite·Vlc. Shopping Trc-c Remo\"a.I. Very reason. 315 ltd St .. Suite 203 o.n:a -Katella k Orange. abll'. 642-5329 eves. * QUALITY * Huntington Beach 536-1439 534-JZ!S G1rd9ni"9 * r.tuLCH ~ro: SOlL * ASSE?o.IBLERS BLK fntl kitten approx 3 c:--~-"'~=----\Vork in enjofabll! sur- nlO. Vic. But Id e:rs GREEN TREE C.-..n,i. Com/ TrH Service roundings Need "Vo'Orken: u Ernponun1 01. ~nca col· res. In!/Ext. Free est. Ne11· machine operator tralnet>s lnrl &1:,..Sill(l Lawn~fl-'ree gard, 673-5.12'2. TREE & Shrub Trin1ming, & production \\'Orir.:ers ror ,,1 QU \LITY LOW 1 Hauling, Horticulture Siu· various Industries. Come t"ND 11111\ hlk llnl half Pe· . ' • <le•!, 0 --·""""blo 1:.•7-1;,;·,1 S''te L~N-'4 .. ----~---ln11:1'S1' \1·/gn>y n1a.,k. \'k. .... o. """""' J ~loin St . at 5-Polnls Shpng ••• Ml-1101 ••• day. T d < Pa d' EL110 JOB AGENCY ('ntr 11.R. h1Jured r1.16-Z.IO\ ri.IO\V & l:OGE ra er S ra ISe :n:. 3rd St., Suite 203 St'otAU.. black cock·D·PoO CLEA.'l llPS 11unllngton Beach, 536-1"39 Fen1, gray Ince Vic nr 5 • 55i-065? • 5 lines Poin111 Shopping Center HB General S•rvices ASSE?tfBLY work, man, for 536-2.JOl times days, run time. AnmY Mfg. Inc. U.15 C Logan Av. CM Jo'OUND: ?.la.le A.fghan lll\ "THINGS" by ?tfootte:. Gen'! dollars ~~ 111~ N I! CarpentJ')', Re~. Plum· AT TENT I 0 N PARTY ....... st 5 "way• ' · bing, Elec. Rem ode Jing PLAN SALES\\.'OMEN: rt Phone: 642--0537. 642-5613 ~tOBILE home lnt 1n PRlm )'OU are ambitioU5 find WIUlt ll UPP Y : Tiioi-ouihbttd. LIGHT maJnttnance & haul· .~ Greens, Ive. on ,i:oll 10 cani BIG m 0 n e y Shoreclltrs &re:'ll. Phone: ln11:. Apt & Holm'! call now. :-ourte, incl mbshlp, txi)'()ff ptt.rt~tlme. Call 897--6323. ·~. Bob ~ J8.900. Eq. S'i.7'00. for vcl')' AVON MAKES ~ auto or ? ! 640-l 090. FND Kl'y!'I & rlng (High HAullnn CliRlSTMAS THE S£ASON &hooll Vic. 53 St, 11.8. ..., 5 ac off Ortep llW)' bet TO BE JOU.'\' on &ach. S.iS-4082. LOCAL moving ll h.lullng by SJC &. Elsinore lldJ. CNr. £11.ni t'Xtrfl.. l1'IOM)' fur flllt F'ND: Jo)'nl Spaniel • type' student. La.1'Jl(I truck. Rtu. Bfoaut., lcle-al, yr, md or re. RA an AVON ReprcS<!ntativc doi: Vic Velvt't & Nest In BA""'. !i.14-lMS or 673--0647. l!ilOrt. Val. S~ ac, trt1de all In )'(ll1r IPft.1'1t Umc. Call: ~n • '~ Jr pArt lf'JI" IMlllte, ~. I.JI Pl'llm11. !\:w-ml SKIPLOAOER It dump lnK'k ~roll. ' ~ I 1 Beautiful all purp()8(! 17' ·ouNn 1,.,.,.,1e. o,1·h le. v c v.'Ork. Col\Cre1e, ssphalt, Boat. ll\fP hull. V'6 lluli·k F~1 C11n1lno .l t'shvff~v.', l!l'll.11'g, breaking. 34&-7110 O~fC lnbd.Otbd drive. Trude Co!ll11 l'.l('M. CA11 :>45-1022 ,., 1,.. ruru·-m~ v·-t 1 -~ u •~••u~ "'" or al('""""" aulo, approx !-"NO· mult l·L'Olored Killen lor loettl furn haul11 & gen1 $3axl val_ 675-0J2J, ~lesa Vr me haulln~. ~'8-1862, M7-:m6. . ~ .,,,.. TD'" It R.E:. (land &: im· .~ .. ~ ,....., Cl..EAN--t1p, Hn.uHng, lil(ht pmwmcnt"J J>~or ln1port AUTO PARTS MANAGER t31 COUNTER itEN Gen. sflU1~r rtbollder CarburelDr rebuildn' ~·oowl Coi·k·a-1.-.:1. Vlrinty mo~. Reas. Dcpcndablti. c1u-.. lmpmvrrt R . E:. EXP'D ONLY XLNT OP· Or:i.ngt" & ~lnmr Vls'IR, FMI. 646-fAl-I. hlC!il!rt' local, or ? l r.tycri . PT\' ron ADV Ai-..CE. TOP O»lr-a ~ft-AA Call !..18-1~. TR.ASH JiAULlNG _61H7~·~"~· -~----I PA\'. 1'~1NCE BENEFITS. "'!,.....,~~-·!· !••!'!!!'r!,•!-~"!!!'!"!!!-!!!!"'!-!i!!!""i!!!°"""!!!!!!_,,!!~~~~~ Jo-No Turtle lht1ff_'ft'flt U'Cft GARJ\Of; CLEAN-UP Need n "Pad"'!'l"Jate jlj\ lid! 31121 W, 1st St., S.A. ;.;... COfla r.lf"ll M!P-1~1 $10 pick-up lood :>tS--0101 Call 642-567!. ' ~ COMPUTER AUTOMATION, INC. lhe NAKED MINI <Dmpony Needs Electronic Assemblers Immediate opening for electro mechanical assemblers. Required is a minimum of 6 months related experience in one of the followmg areas: -Touch-up PC Boards -Stuffing of PC Boards -Cable & Harness Auembly QC/QA Inspectors Openings in in·process & receiving areas. Should possess knowledge ol printed circuit boards including color code, component identitica .. lion, soldering & ability to read bfue line drawings &: change notices. Digital Test 1Technician$ We are· currently seekin~ DigitaJ Test Technicians who possess ex- perience in troubleshoot1ng, check..out & repair of printed clrcuJt boards, digital computers or -reJated bard.ware. Memory Test Technicians Immediate openings also exist for Memory Technicians. Applicants should be prepared lo demonstrate a working knowledge of memog systems & An'!log Circuits. Entry level technicians with minimum experience & small amount of electronics tr8inlng are also required. Join one of the fastest growing compani .. in Southern eamomla. Live & work In the.Newport Beacb/lrvlne area. Be a part of the team that is blazing new trails In the mini computer lnduslry. Computer Automation has over 320 employees. shipped II million dollars of mini-computer products last year, has d oubled lt.s sales each year !or the past 2 years, Is highly profitable & expanding rapidly. 18651 VON K-ARMAN, IRVINE An Equal Opportunity Employtr . I ' • I ' ' • , . ._, -•nhtd. Ml' f 10 --•p Wanted M & F 7tO I H ,1 . . S11Ma1, Oct~ 21, 197) 11.-,.i., ~ilQl D 9 COOIC: 0.."""'1! ahllt, G "LE ' . • 0 p wo ..... , m' F 71a Holp W•n•ld, M" ~ 71ijl ilolp Wonted, Mi F 710 Rolp Wonted, M' F 716 Holp W•nled, Mi 1"71iJRolp Wonted, MI I' no Holp WontOCI Mi)! 710' n(tee a-"· °"'>, ., CTROHIC •· -·-· -• b1op be .. iu .. f:J,."°~ TECljNICIAHS GENERAL OFFICE INSURANCE SA1£S ·~~c'i!tti ~'"• • Now1popor O.llvory PRODUCTION : SAJS'"°""""'-In SECURITY GUARD peNDn. Jaclc ln lbe Box lmmed. J>Ollltkml a.\•au ml & STOCK r.oorl bf' iu "-n Z r:11rl' 11 111in. Musi litn't' 1'1U' GIRL FRIDAY 1hne an:a•: Jtuntiiwtma ~·e.,.. ''CO' iltatdal In 12J$ Baker SL, Costa Me..: the de v clop men j ,t 1 P¥rtw.,-• (po,1. monituc ,.. 1 cmda. ~ wo 1 Ol·i·r 21 , r~ •r'flt'O~ .• S20D Htlp us bwld bNuutul m . ~ti. Nl'WpJl1 B ••ch 1 hltlnt an e •par I a• ce d COOK. P/time, da)o ihltt mtnu.factu.re of •ta to Of the l'Ull ~nd 011r IHI lllclklnr." ;"ii) ('l(p !\it!.' .• rur.1 wflllt-)IOU -~ "'', ""-'". 8ch lllY~L 3f 1·Dl0 boil••. \\'e DM(f • )'OU"4( but ) ount&Jn Vatltoy, c 0. Lt ww1Qf suam br ow ~II G!U' F' w lee I• 1nri art m In I at u re aub-. Jor II rpt'('lal ly~ :;ttl, nu•r· l~a.rn, part. !1rnr~ e\''!'11 .\ / MKTNC TRAINEE hl>f. JD um, mature Pf:l"80'1, iood w n1. Mn.a, Wetkeod ~ l rt* ~ "°"" localtd In Brookhurat, Fountain V1li 1.Mem&ues. Some~-In nf'd "'i1h 1 or 2 &C'hool 111md1, tvll rimt-· "hen quill~ NITE AUDITOR um 1111lo Jllu.•1 detall, vari. avl.Uabko, ~ weekday Flllbkln Island, ~ ,;;;;;;;;:==;;,o_;;;::~-"..!l~· eltJw~, analog or digital w Mtlld~n. ~ has iOn~ ~ed. C\y .l hard11i'Ork, .l can t)'J» openlnp. 10-3. 3-S, FrillK'! BeacR. Yau mla,ht ,...tbl)' cg»<ed-Brtaklatt needed cln:wtry Is req'd. &Pflre tin\C " is ron!Wk>Ml'I'" tnrml'r.: l~mirt1nct• Group Hntel or \·lub l'X~. ~·d. ~+ aC"CUratel)'. \\le ontTI beoetll• & 1ood Mlary, ~ be retlttd from ..cw1~ m. ta:' · M~t be exper. for Funedon Modules, tnc. 1,-olng badf 10 v.·o rk Ed l.An1 .. $l).J~4 Old FJf'ctrl,-nl l\now!Pd,ato of :-.-ot Q'O. )'Otl an 1ntttffdna-Job w/an ply )tonday Oct 22nd.~ looklna: for pt.rt drne houn I operatlOll. ~. 2.UI Campus Dr. part-time. 20 or :lO IKluNI ~ E ufppt'd CO r 1lrn ... &'t 1~1'1"\I ~tgr. xln't turure li'I a )'OUnl: tun 12, ·at Fotoma,t Oc:lrp, aN& lo 1Upplement )'Out l't'IUlar COOK for •nil tam, Irvine 83H.21-1 11. ·~k. Sht Is lntcn!~ted lnven. M.t'I q · B•lboa Bay Club ~'Or'fdng .et'OUP· To s.eo. 9rtlci:· 46$ No. Ana.helm Sttur0.)' job. You rnl8;ht alto . M00·1bur, f..8 P~f. llllary ELE!CTRONICS TECH r In ll'l"OPle. "111 ~njoy ll'Otic· Control Clerk s.sso EXPANDING 122! '""Coast IJW)., N.B. A!k for Btov, SU-8961. Blvd, On.n~ be a pOISct oet'l<!tt looking \ open, m-o230 CdM 1'nt Alien ex 2-30 Ml , trw. with people who tire Production Control lkkamd SANDWICH oUlktt and fnr • po.rt tJme olt dut)' COUNTER Girl for dry CotiimunlcatSo.:· eqUI ~1 to tally lnvolvt'CI wi1h thl"lr WESTCLIFF NOTEI QUA.LlTY ASSURANCE 1entta1 comrnilary v.·ork, atturlty poalUon. lt 1tw j cleaning plant auembllna: Class phone pref A!k t work worktnJt In u •OOnt Penonn I NEEDS Real E state S.lesman J:rt or run time, llart $1.80 !Ibo\~ ducriptlon IM!l!m& I lxtaln&'. checking exp. Mwil Bob Steele, Pai Eicctroni: I which wt' lee! Is lhe 1651 E. E:t~~'?A. II you lu..ve a licen1e or wa.n1 COMPONENT . c.JI Brian Richards, :Uatb' made for you, Pleue I do rnlnot aewtr.ig 6 da)'S 6J91 WestmlNter St d' ~atest in the ~-orld. (J..frk JI Cc ter) C111e. x~ Pt'g Bolln::"r for TESTER MT-$232. &14M70. "'* for I))(' A-polY in pcr.ln, Five W.mm1nster, $3301. v '1 Perhaps 11.t tJiat time lhe 542-8836n conf!d('nUal interview. Red Perm. opcnll'IR w/iirowlnsr: SEAMSTRESSES, ex P 'd. stol"f manager. I Pofnfs Clf'Jflne,rs, I SG-4 l position baaicaUy •unded , 38 JRAINE. ES C.trpel, 497·17'1. elec. L'O. 11 ln'W.-Jnlti&l Work at ~ur own SERVICE Sta. Salesman & A-fain, l~unUngton Beacb *Ex-.:. Sec'y to $700 lgre11, ut,. you "'tl'e not J A ~ I tT 0 R ' llt~·hlgen I . -. ihrllt-s COOll'isl of K1'Bdlna: hoon. ClO c~• fff..6163 lu~ IWU\. E"per. JM'l!'fd. 847~2-l66.. • "'-· n1erested in nc-ing Involved ma n enan c e . .,.. a MOT~! 1 nd D Full & p/tt1ne avaU. Trip ~1-•'tia~,.VP, • good. 41kllls & ':"ilh retaU ielllng, 11 1hls Corinthian yacht Cl\Lb, 1601 .... • MAID WANTED seru co uctors lo ana ~RE'l'ARIES pey, ll0ip!ta.J11.4t\on, PTOC, Count.r & Kitchen Help ,,. u H1 true, then we m•y have Bayalde Drh·e, Cdl.f $1QQ • $150 will troln, apply 1n person speclflcaUons. 0ppQr1un\ty -'---'•"•, etc. Apply -11 Need th \ *Exec St ' Cost1 l\lt'M Inn. ror pa_t'ddp.e.r1on hi otheo<I QA ......... .;.•.., worlc en us aattc people 10 • c Y to $650 !Mlmething yo11 ,,.,ould hlw. JANITORIAL tctlvitlM. &-quirements In-lfylanrl Laboratorlea ha11 ttn· Station, 17th It trv1n<>, N.8. 1., ln momln&"• &: evet. A,P. Op'jr. for career minded \Ve now need some-one . to We an! IOOking tor 8 neat NURSING clUdf': l YelU' of t>xpi.~r. n1t"diate openingl'I and ln-SERVICE Station Help. f'ull Pv pertil)n, McDonald a, ga • Prop, Managl'rnenl. help out In our Rl'Cl'lVlng person,· hoU!lewiJe or early In t'l'<:el\•lng lnsPf'(:lion of ter.·ie-.r.·s art prt!t'ntly beln&: or p/lim1• 990 E Coast 16:66 Beech Blvd., Bunting· *R~pt. to $433 & At't'OUnl11 Payable Dcpar1-retl~ to help with tht> To Start Al Pel' Asst. Director !K'nll cooduc1or devi<.'(!ti, ronducted to rut the follov•-Hv.')', NcwPort Bch. · to Beach, Lile typing, plush aimos. ment. It you art' our gal 1nalntetlafk.-e ot the g?'\'ati:S1 , Written Agreer~iit of Nursing Ing positiorui: OOUNTER. CIRbt part time •Secty/Constr to $550 please send a l etter or slol"l' In the °"-orld. It w'Ould Progressive 13() bed eon· Pie&~ Apply SERVICE Sta. ~endant. or full lime $2 00 hr to Type 60, some fig""' •"""'· reawne to Classified ad no. he on a Permanent Tuesday Only 10.a P)I \'&ll'!k.-e11r ho!lp, t/tln1e 3·1l DANA • ACCOUNTS O\'er 2A. neat. No exper, tart. 21 · · • Lo "'"· 969 c/o Dail Pi! 1 p 0 · 330-7850 shltt tle<:. No Set or SUn. ~ ,_,., or over. Call: It of Phoning. Bo" 1560 Co~ Mo· c'.i•• p1u'f-tun& bas i 1. ap. · LVN' 2401 Can1pus Or., J1"inc PAYABLE 0\-t:rtlme + prolit sharing ~·· <>I' 536-0796. •BookkH~r to $600 92626 • s a esa, u. proximately 30 hours per -s I Near O.C. Airport I se<> Stan ?tton-t"'rl Shell. DEIJVERY . of. 0 A 1 Ly E:)c;per. as <Wisfllnl. Tra.ln · 11i·eek. Preferably .~ornlngs. Mlctng Mgr J2'1K 3-11 fuU & P/t1me Equal ()ppor. En1ployer m/I CLERK 2801 E. Cout Hwy, bsr.1 ' PILOT, SUNDAY ONLY 10 by CPA. GIRLS OR BOYS II YoU \iiould be interested. ?t1icm Electronics Nurses Aides newspaper ctlniera. Re· •0.n'I Office $381 ID-U yean old for DAILY please send 8 .. letter or Program 1.-fgr S22K AJI shills. Exper. pret'd REAL ESTA i .e. .'iAU:S 10 key adder. Experience te· s~:· ~ta·e!"11rsh~~ ~~ ~· UI& -of a large ,Lile typing. deal w/people ~LOT pe.per routes in Sou!h =~: ''bif:;s8;!i1~~ ~ o· Electronic Con1ponents ! Huntington Valley SUCCESS CAREER . quired. & Nev.wn. :;{ ' I ... a 11 gon or Van. Con-•Receptionist to 5520 a. Ana, between Mam Box 1560 Costa P.fesa Calif .. · Product Une Manaa;er SJ)!{ Convalescent Hosptta.I :-~ew or experienced. J oin the • RESEARCH C't.'AMPOO ,../,tant. Mml act ..... arry Seeley, 330 ""-60 gen'l clerl--' Good &_Fairview, 'Varner&: San ,_.,..,. . ' . Data Com1nunication11 842-6551.. V.10rld'a largest aM fa•tetl s-R-ARY ~ West Bay St., CM. 'bineub ua.1. Dlt'g'O l>Wy. "~· Design Engr (niechJ 1o $14K 1:'l'OW1ng resale orpnh.atlon ~""" ..,, have Call!. ro5mololoi.Hst Equal Opportunity Employer *EscroW S.C'y 642-4321 JANITORIAL part time/full Exec. Sec'y to S800 NURSE-LYN with a neh\"Ork of over 300 Shorthand 80 '>l'pnl, typirig license Apply lo P"tsOn fml $6SO Lynn Coogon lime, local eves, exp adult Exec Sec'y to S'l'OO 11 to 7:30 AM shift. Relief ottices and beoome a 60 pm Wesclut Or., New PO rt DEMONSTRATORS A~ ilta Y'l'll el(pet. C.ood Olslrict Manag'r only, $2.40 hr., 979-3923 A/P Clerk (Constr) to $100 all shifts. Salary <.'Om· member of our AfllUonaire • w GENERAL "S.""'a~c'=h.'=~~====· I .c;':n•1 '0ffict $600 Equal Opportunity Employer JU~IOR SALESMAN: ru~~ ~~htry to~~ ;i~n.:U:'iear:.'~·, fo~orn;: ~~rti:i~u-r.=· ~ SECRETARY T~1ll'r:.c;1:.i R~~;;:N;;.. Sewing machines, all types WDI train, Should have sew: ing background & sales. ~~open. For lrilf'rvicw, Good 3kil!s. Oppor in R.E. GIR~ FRIDAY Eam $~$40 per week work. Gal 1'~riday $600 lcrvi(•w l\lon & Tues. guaranteed l oensing school. pearing Xlnt eha.nce to go 15 Mile comn1uie 30 dnys I. Man Office. Lite bookket>p-Ing after . sehool and Satur. Tax Secre1nry $65() Park Udo !Walth Care E1tcellent t>ale11 tralnlnr. Shorth1tnd or dicta 11 on. Into higher position. Good HELEN SCHAFFER ing. Must be good collector. days. sell1ng 'ne\\· subscrip.. ArRec/BiJJlng $55() 466 Flagllhip Rd., N.B. What is your Ucense "''Ortli Strong malh ability. 10 Kty "'Ith figures & defiling "'Ith PERSONNEL AGENCY Preferably one w/sickroom !Jons ~or the DAILY PILO'r. General Office S450 &12-81H4 to you? Dteck OIU' monthly ' and ca.lculJJ,tor. customl'r rontact11. 4262 Campus Dr., IJ.-.4, N.B. & 8J!lbula.nce e?'p· 6 hr. day, Thal' dls nor a ~per route !~u,;,,•,,n~ Clerk $.fl"~ NURSE. AIDES bonus program 1vhich means EOIO JOB AGENCY DENTAL ReceptfSecretary. 557-2711 I consider part tlme. Send re-an OC!& not include de· """"" ·J ,..,., $S$ to )'OU! Please call Apply In person or eall: 315 3rd St, Suite 200 Mus\ have dental expcr. I ~~~!"'~!!!!~""""""'d swne: llverles or collecting. Open-Acclng, Ga! Fri to sITio , E xp'd prefd. J' lo ll:30 Pl\1 Virglni,'I Jone& 835·4311. HunHng!on Beach 5.JG-1439 Proficient typislfbkkpr., ,EXEC. SECR-ET.ARY Write Classified ad #9T.l. ingsinCosta Mesa.Founrain G. Ole (R.E.J h} $550 & ll·7:JO.Ml. Ir you're in -RE.AL ESTATE SALES DON LEVERETl' J\fust be mature, organ!~, Fee Pilid. Beautiful modern Dally Pilot, P.O. Box 1560 Valley and SouU1 li11ntington Call Jtannie Si!ICO ~erest<.'d 1n caring & work· {7141 540-5000, ext. Z"iO Sl41PPING & Re Ce iv I n g neat & like people. Call office in Fashion Island. Cot!ta ~1esa, Calif. 9'1626 Beach. Apply DOW by calling & Sid Hoflmfln 1ng, our pallenls want )'OU. Clerk . Min. 3 }TS exp. 5 ~1060 aft 5p1n or Sat & Great growth pot<'fltial. GIRL FRIDAY ~~l.Oppor, Employer NEWPORT ~~s for intervie\v l\fon & $49 Hyland ~~." A~~lfo~i~e.s-u,' u · Some tinancia:J bai:kground !'.tanager or div. seeks In-Personnel Agency Pa~k Lido Jleatth Care LICENSING SCHOOL SKIPPER for large be:a11tlfuJ DENTAL Chalnide Assis-helpful. Salar; to $650. Al~ dividual w/accurate typing KEYPUNCH 833 Dover Dr., N.B. 466 Flagship Rd., N.B. $49 includes books, m1tleriala Laborator"1es yacht. Alust be thoroua;hly tant, for Pedodontic prac· Fee Jobs. Call Helen :i.tason, & Ille sh.. Great variety OPERATOR 642·3870 6'12--SQ.\.I and all clas.sroom S('!IBlons. qualified. Al \ellSI 10 ~-eert tlt.'e In Newport <::enter. 541).6({i6, Coastal Pe.rsoonel spot Call Miki White! N 1 exper. maU1talning & handl· Must have exper. Bilingual Agency, 2790 Harbor Blvd., 5'!0-6055, Coastal Penonne MAS·s·A-GE T-ECH-, • N~RSE·LVN, exciting posi-0 cost lo you-t you join 3300 l·lyla.nd A\oe. \ncr l"""'e wuel. State a-, preferttd. 64G-<003. CM. Agency, 2790 Harbor Blvd., D;perience on lion for qualified person to a Tarbell ofrlce alter pus· . ..,, -& .~ CM. . IBM 02) & !Xl9 TRAINEE \~'Ork In progressive con-il'lg ~'Our state exam & )'Our marital status, days v.'Orked DENTAL A SS IS TANT EXEC. SEC'Y to $650 Young lady ll&-7SJ wanted valescent hospital. Patient fee of $49 will be refunded C.osla f.1esa, C8.lit 92626 & sal. expected. \\'rite ( c ~riaJnkle1 Orthodontic) Fee Pa.id , Asrist ~to build GmL Friday for busy &: BABCOCK for legitimate tut! Ume posi· care oriented operation. J!,~~jualily. Call Al Sloan, An equal op port u n I t y OaMlfied ad no. 968 ere ~n pract ce exp ok. Ap-eo. from ground floor. The growing flnn. Must be ac· ELECTRONICS lion. No exp. nee. \Ve 5Clld Xlnt wages & tringe benefits. ............... emplo)-er Daily Pilot, P.O. Box 1560, pty 395 Second St., la1Una. !d(y ls the limit for sharp curate typi.st & . able to hiln· to school, <'llrn whne leam, Apply or send resume to TARBELL, Rt1ltor• maleffemale· Costa Meaa, C&li!. 92626. D E N T A L re c epllonlst. person! Good skills & ·xin't die respontibilily. Room for Unl~o! Esterline Apply in person any afl. or 14-15 Superior Ave, Newwrt 61 office• & grov.·ing Newport Orthodonic office. benefits. Also Fee Positions. advllllcement. Salary Open. rporation eve. 2930 W. Cst. Hwy., Bemch or call 642-2410 · REAL ESTATE .SALES Top u.Jary. 1'1inge benefits, Call Ann Chrl!itle, 556-8505. f\.tis.s Abubo, 557-9505 Newport Beach. Dental exp. ~· Ortho exp. O>ntrol Career Eniploymenl GIRL Friday _ bookkeeplog, 350I Harbor Blvd NURSES Aides, exper. only. I •-~ '" A 1 Costa J\lesa. Calif. O!d<'r "'on1en pre!'d. Pi:e . ~" ~-6~2-~. ge!X.")', 3400 Irvine Blvd., 'typ ng, lite d I ct at ton , 9262S MASTER CHARGE New office In Laguna Beach. DENTAL Assistant, exper. N.B. receivables & payables. CLERK OISH\VASHERS, trainees ac· !\lust, be licensed, but ~·Ill only. Cha.lraide & front desk EXEC. SECRETARY C 0 nstructlon experienL>e Equal Oppor E l cepted. Ba Yv i e w Con· L-onsidl>r eager, ne"'' sales· duties. 4 Girl ofc. J~.B. Fee Paid. $T..O. Exciting pre.fer.ed. 962-6685 wkda,}'S ' mp oyer ,m/f \·alesL-enl 11ospital, 2 O 5 5 f"'Ople, ~fa11v :>rlva rit11P"t>•, Fftlme. Bene(lts. Gd career for sharp person 9-S. ~ . KEYPUNCH ExJ>('l'i<'nced Thurin Al'e., e.~t 642-3505. Contact: Dorl• Smith 1,"'=la~cy""'. ~!!S=Z.:..:.24~3'3=·----I 11.·fcontractor com pany. GlRL Friday,. Sh _a r P • Fee Paid. Benutiful niodern -UNITED-NURSERY hl'l!X'r. Jt1ll tinie AmtrlcanHomeReeltor DENTAL Assistant, e."p'd Xln'I Benefits. Al'lO Fee pleasant: ambl!1ous girl .for ofc located in Fashion CALIFORNIA BANK 21 or over, male, $2.50 10 Si~ N. Csr. H1.1.·y., l.air..ina chaln:ide & front desk. El Positions, Call Ann Christie, ::;:wx;1te o1C1ce &: misc. Island. Swing shi!f. Start $3. per hr. Work with plants * 494·1001 * Toro, 830-1395 556-&'i05, Control Career """"°"'""''°'-;,,.-,,--,--I $520. Also Fee Positions. Contact Bill Oiisholnl & trees, nuUntenance. Some Real E:stal'e Sales DEPARTMENTAL EmplO)'JTlent ~ncy, 3'tOO GIRL.S Needed, Prefer typ-Ce.II Mild Wh.i le 5'l0-6055 lndscpe exper. pref. Cha_nCt! NEW OFFICE CLER Irvine Blvd., N.B. -ing, Apply itl person, Port Coastal Personn~I Agency' 309 Main St. for advancement, 830-~ K EXPER. mature \\'Oman or Theatre, 2900 E. ('Oaat H,vy, 2190 Harbor Bl\•d, CM ' Hwiticgton Beach Laguna HHls Nursery, Opportunity for !11'0 llcenSi'd Variety ol duties Include in· couple to care for 2 girls CdM KEYPUNCH 5496 or 9610 S36..SSl1 23002 EI Toro Rd, RI Toro. real C"State people. Call tor SECRETARY EXECUTIVE SECRETARY The Irvine Co. seeks a candi· dale y;·/substantial exper, as 1 an ex~. secretary. Typing 70. sh 90. Individual must be •01:illing to a.ccept respon- l'!ibility & ~'Ork independent- ly. ExceUenl benefits & 11,"0rking conditions. Call 644-3389 =· &: p ~~·e .~)~~ 4 & 6 yn;. 90me \\'k eves HELP wanted. Food service. exp. Perm p/time nites. Equal Oppor. Employer NURSE'S AIDES, Exp pre(. interviev.•. engineering change orders, & v.·kend eves while mom Day tlllun & night hours. Sys 3' oper, exp pref. 7 to 3:30 full time Beverly W. E . LACHENMYER ma 1 ntalning engineering and dad go out. Irvine. Full or part Un1e. Over/oi,....o=="==' ~~-----MATURE, re 8 pons I b 1 e f.1anor Conv. Hosp I la I , &IS.3928 or 545-3483 Equal Oppor. Employer muter rues on bUls ol Ref!. Please. 833-8958. 16. Am btw. 2 & 5 pm, KITCHEN Helper & maint., 'llo'Ornan for day 11 me I _!l.a~gu~nag:H~ill~'~· ,,..,_,;,.. __ ·,1.,,"':::~"':;';'::":'::::"'""'' I ~~~~;:_;:;;;,;.,;;;;:;;;;,;,,~ I materials & other master EXPER. sales he lp wanted ?.1on-Frl, ?.!cDonalds, 700 part or tun time. Semi· babysitting and occasional NURSES Aides·Days REAL ESTATE SECRErARY: Public:ationa documenlli. prefer in· for gift shop, San Oeme.nte. \V. Coe.st Hwy, N.8 . retired, mature, tt>:liable \\icends, own trans If poss!· LVN 11·7 A?.1 SALESMEN flnn need sharp, responsi- aivklual v.·/l yr exper. in 492-4900. H.ISI'ORY TEACHER man desired. Call Brian ~~dM area, eves call !>49-3061 \\o'hy not ~mic In the hottest ble, dlplom1tic, executive ~lated actlviUes. F1,CX:>ItJ\.1AN, exper. tor lead to write chapter in history Richards. 557-6232. NUR..::iES aides, all shifts, area . Huntington Beach . Reretary, 30 to 40, tor F'unctlon f.1odules, hie. ..wlfiou~ •• .,t3'..Jll". wit. text. Exper in v.Tillng for LEGAL Secretary Sant MECHANIC Convalescent Hospital Fountain Valley. Let u1 challenging desk. must be Irvine 833-81f.f medical ins. p e ii"i'l on, publl&Uona pn!I. W r It• Ana ~ exr) pre't., \\'OU/~ Ex'pi>r. in overtiauJ Of com. * 642-0598 * train you, Call Phil 'l.fc. fast, &ccurate lypist, good DESK Clerk, Jo.1otel. .i to holidays, vacations, 5'16-6682 Moduleam Inc. P.f?. Box oonslder legal 1r 11 i nee pttss0rs, forktifu. \\'cidl'f'S & Nan1tt, VILLAGE REAL on grammar, prooCing. die. Midnight. Exp'd PB.'\ & or 545-89ll 635, San Juan Capistrano, w/good skiUs. Salary open niisc, l'qUlp. i\fust /Jave 01vn Of."FICE ESTATE, 963-4567. tatk>n & details: capable NCR '1200. Laguna Call FOOD Service Attendant. Ca. ~. 547-9284 . tools. Cd pay & co. be~rits. REAL ESTATE f~ f~an~~ ~~e~~pl: Joyce Bolt 499-Zl71. ?.ton thru Fri., 6am-3pm. HOUSEBOY, live-in f/U1ne. LIQUID TRANSf'ER OPER Apt>ly in person. Hartley & LOOKING FOR Need Poople \\'ho Are Exper. 17671 ftvine Blvd. Tustin. DISHWASHER wanted, good Irvine Indus. Complex. Call ~ &:. ~ + sal. Refs CIM>mical Mfg plant needs Nixon Ren1als. 1900 W. Ana· TEMPORARY & Wish To \.\'ork At Their Suite U4 hours Carmel'• Dining & for appt. 639-4214. req d. f\.!amta1n lrg home Industrious high school grad heim, Long Beach. O\vn P~ce .... New Office. ~=~S~E~C~R~E=T=A~R~Y~-- Pl.!f Shop 6'l8 N, Coast J-lwy, FACTORY & yacht. Call aft 6 pm, for filling operation. High Mechanics-Fork Lift WORK? Tom llliller &15-4203 R.a "di Lngu1111. , 1n4) 346-0339. chemistry Pr e f . Xlnt Nl'ed 6 experienced ~·ork Llft REAL E • p1 't growing firm In DOMESTIC Help Ge 0 r g e WORKERS llOUSECLEANING, girl O\\'fl benefits & \l'Orklng eon· Mechanics. To $IS.?O + Ea111 extra money woddng state sait>S people h-vine romptex Great trans & ref, for Fridays diti0n1. No exper nee. Apply t · local D.SRignments 1hrit add EX"per ~ but not nee. chance to n10vi! up to Allen Byland Agency, 106-D Mature \.\'Otnell pennanent t'Xper. Phone 546-5271. Ill llarleco, Division of n~~<'fi!s, p bon e inTenst to )'O'Ul' life Sr open Dana Point Ofc 496-4800. secl'etary to officer of co. E. 16th SI., S.A. 547-039;,, positions, Ille machine & . American Hospital supply i,i~°"""°"'~~~~-ncv.' opportu·nities. Your of. Co. relrnburse~ fee. can oomrr Shop, nlte &hilt. ~I produetiOM. I H 0 USEKEEPE.R, l!ve.1n, oorp. 1452 E. Alton lrvu MEDICAL Ollit:e in 1-lunt. fit:e skills are valued at: Rec•ptionist /Typlst Helen Mason, 540-6ffi5. Al50 Femal~ age 25--45. Apply Sv.i!H{ stiim. & day Spanish sf>ealting on I Y. 540-5820 ' ie, Bcb. Back office girl. Write • ffj Part-full1 lime, JJeeklng sharp 1"ee PosiUorts. Co as I a 1 In penon !I-fr. Donut, 135 PROFIT SHARING Ocean skle home:. Priv. rm, An Equal oppty employer. Classified Ad Box No 971 , 0 ICe gal "1th good typing skills, Personnel Agency, 2 7 9 0 E l"lh St ...__ta. 'lesa DISABILITY PLAN bath It. TV. No cooking, ""2'='--'=:"'-=:!::::='-Daily Pilot P.O. 0 -.·· No' Nev.•port Center law firm. Harbor Blvd_ CM. • • ·• \,.(J!j ., • ai,,; dayg. 494-0561 LIQUOR Clerk. rull time 1560, Costa Mesa. g;'i6. • Overload &10-8900 . DRAPERY operators & e MAJOR MEDICAL HOUSEKEEPER eves, perm. po6ition, Afust SECRETARY !abler. Classic Draperies, PLAN be 21 , polygraph req, Sun· J\lEDICAL &ec-l'C("(>pt. Ex· 3723 BIRCH ST. RECEPTIONIST, P r etl'r Great boss needs career 3853 Birch St., N.B. 546-1431 e LIFE INSURANCE Laguna Niguel area, 2 das. day 6f3-7530 bet s &. 9 pm per. pref. Type application NEWPORT BEACH oriented per.;on to ht-Ip run or~~. a ""'k. 496--09'jg. P.1onday 838-3472 )>et 7 & & credentials. Mail to 19712 some acct~ 00 ck i r n d · his busy ofc. ~1usl havt' ELECT,R~ON--IC--e RETIREMENT ilOUSEKEEPER _ 1,,, ,_ 9 pm Qulet Bay, Jl.B. 92648 557.0061 Pleasant, dependable, full good phone voice. Creal PLAN "" tin1e. Bevt'rly f.lanor Conv ASSEMBLERS e PAID HOLIDAYS Fri.~to4 :30. For thorough LIQUOR STORE CLERK + J\tUSICIANS Looking for 2 OFFICE:. U-IRLS Hospital, Laguna H \1111, ~.·th po~ential. Fe e Applicanls lhould be e.xPf:r. cleaning on.ly. Refer. & O\\·n Eiq>et'only, ref l'l('(', capable mana~r. Ref's. NEEDED 83?-SCOO. 1 /Afso ee Jobs. Call hand aolrlerenon P'CB, also e PAID VACATIONS transportatwn Alter 6pn1 San C!en1ente, 492-3717. Call John or Bill a5l-8151.· =~=~=-~---K/lY \\'ing, 54()...(.ffi;). Coastal e STENO. PROMISES! • PROMISES! PROMISES I Some comp1nys make promls••· wt make offers. VARIAN DATA MACHINES the big comPB.ny in small compulers has an im· mediate opening tor an in· dlvidual with e"cellcnt skill• (typing 60 \\'))Ill shorthand IK> wpm\ and a quick learner. You must v.-ant a variety of dutle1 and be ablt to WOl'it: \\'ith ntde t!Upervlslon~ II )'00 are well organliro and meet these qualllicatklns, you may be the one we a.re \ookina: far. Wr offer; * EXCEWNT BENEFITS *MODERN FACILITIES *COMPETITIVE PAY Pica~ apply in pel'S()n, or contact: B. Krafkl. - VDM Varian D•t• Machines 1722 f.fichel90n Drl\'e Irvine, Calif. 93i64 {714) 833-2400 have knowledge of com"""-1987 Placenti& Ave., C~t ~14S Ask ror 01\·nrr only. Radk> telephone dispatch Recept/S.c,ttary PeNIOnne1 Agf'n<:y, 2 7 9 0 •-NEVER A FEE '\fu5! be 25, able to drive Sales Df>pL Del \VebM N~·· Harbor Bl\'d, Cf.I nenta ID l ooklr L'IXle, 110me FIBERGLASS Gun 0 pr · Housek .. pfng Machinists Apply In Person por!M" 111n, &l-1·1700, ext. 537. -S.c'ys, Gt'rl-F-,~,.d~.-y-,-an «iual o P po r I u n It Y exper. ot lite electro-l\ftieh· \\'a 1 nted. Pay comEmeo<1urate & Kitchen TOOL MAKER YELLOW CAB CO, RESTAURANT en1ployl'r m/f anical aasembly deslrablt. w exp er . q u 11 ox R"ll<'f. C 11 •l"306! Bkkpr• $400-$1000 - -Day shift Only. Gent-ral Industries, P. O. Box Zll6. .. 8 .r"" ENGINE 186 E. 16th, <'..osta t.IC'sa SM!ks wai\N!ssefi, busboys, J\fonltorslnc.3019Enterpri11e Poston, Ariz, 853n. l602) * HOUSEKEEPER 11\'eln, . LATHE Industrial PACKAGtNG <f\sh\\•ashcrs, ~ks & nlte FREE FREE FREE Technical Typist s1 •• CM. 622-4326 Hunt. Harbour, exper. nif!. TURRET LA THE MalOt. Mechanic Chemir.al r-.1tg plant n<'eds po111er. 1 J:."\-c shift. Pll'a~ Llz RPinders Agen<:y ~ 1>l';!SL·~tel/1r·h ~~j· ELECTRONIC TECH GENERAL help wantPd for' TOP SAL. 841Hl100. Shof Cleanup indui;trious high schOol grad aep Y n person, ?tlon-F'r1. 4121 \\'esterly Plare ... _,e 0 (' <'n 1 8 l'Y e P · Advanced development work. gift store. Apply btv.'n. IO HOUSEKEEPER, live In \\le n('{'d a few 10 p Too Maker for filling operation. High 9-:J. Top of the Royal, 7th Suite 115, NB &13-8190 ~.Box '296, Irvine, C 3 lll. ., T t' 230 N ............. Lovely bon1e aduh.s: woi·k Prod. Control school Chemisl!y pl't'I. Xlnt Floor, Royal Saving~ & Establishffl 1965 ,..,..,..,..,..,..,..,..,..,.1 Advanced Kinetics, Inc:. 1231 am.,,pm, a s. e .. I"'.. Mon·Frl GTa-82-is ' "1Rchi!11sts 101 our prcc1s1on Shoot Molal bcfl('fits & "·crking ron-Lo<!n Assoc. Btd.g, El Toro. 1 ---=---I Victoria St., CJ\f. 646·716J, Center Or., N.B. ' \\'Ork 111 our spacious, clt'an ditions. No Exix·r nee. Ap· Rd . at ~n Diego Frwy, SECRETARY T£MPQ'S Equal Oppoi•. Employer. INSTALLMENT LOAN shop. Steady C'n1p!oyn1cnt. Grinder ply at Harleco, Division of Laguna 1111\s 586-6866. lnterest.ing "'Ork, \"<Uil'd du- Any day is the BEST DAY fD & CREDIT DEPT. DAYS. Drill Pre5s An1<'ric11n Hospital Supply Saleswoman, E xo.r. l!PS. Ad\'anced Kinelics, Inc. Nl'ed a "Pad''? Ph.L'e an ad! ruu J).n ad! Don't delay. • Pl Chucker sorp., 14;a E. Alton, Irvine. Capable of managcrfRi re-\2'.\I ViC'loria ~t.. C.:'-1. o· I A J bl Help Wanted, M & F 710 H•lp Wanted, M & F 710 We have :.Z openings tor cleri-~'!l' contact. i\Ir. Al Shipping/ R•c. :>-10-5.112!1 sponl'lihilitil'!I. s a 1 a r y + 646-TIS,i, Equal Oppor. Eni. la • • Q , 1;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;!;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;.1 cal positions. T'ypin(j: & JO R1chardll0n for info. & appt. /\n Equnl Oppty Employer. ""M.'kly bonus. SJOO or more "•~'""'=~'·=,,.;;-;;==o--11 key &: C't'edit verifylng e.'IC· YARD NEWPORT Comm'I Artist PART TIME pt'r v.·eek. Opportunity for SECRETARY KO\V Orange County's most EX£CUJIYES-MANAGERS per, desirod. 3324 w. \Varner, s.A. Asst. Bookkeeper COUNTER GIRL ath'a?cement fnr C11pnb!e Tough job, tou,gh boss, hi pmgre!l&ive & innovative P1ea..1 Con 5'\5..TIS4 D II p Over 21 . Apply in per!'-Oll h1rll\·1d1111.I. Cnll For Appoint . PRY· Need Int e 11 i gent , Ten1porary Help Serv!C(' ,,_! Sm/\~ct Equal. Op~~ Employer. a rtne ersonnel onl y after 2:00 P~T. Deli n1l'nl, 5-I0-4997. v" rs u 1 l I<', 11 ccuratc, 'chx-s it again.· Tr.:'ll PO of. 15K, 25K, 75K SALARIES • NEGOTIAILI Are You Unemployed Now-Are You Seeki ng A Change -Worried About Your A9• - Ti r•d of Broken Proml111s.-Unclecidecl As To A Proper Courie of Action - ARE YOU UNDER PA/DI If Y .. Catt A••-The FollowltMJ Cat-In I• TH .Afflnnatl••· We'd Like A• l•tenlew • With You If YOUR ANSWERS ARE TRUTHfU~ UNIO"N .BANK nu.-Servic• Agency Stief DC' 1 i c 111 esst'11 , S,\LESM.A.N' & i\lanager, rielalled-m1nded, career IC'rs a trul)' unique &.· tin1e 1:1 11 MAIDS _ hotel, assist In 500 Newport Cente' Dr. Brookhurst & A'lams, HB, n1ale &. fem. $825 &. up penon. Exp<'r. Show reC'~. saving OPllOl'lunity f\Jf' .. ,. =rtf~Dr. laundry, &eneral 'llo'Otk, s hr Newport Beach 640-8470 near Savon. monthly guarn. if qualified. r~~ 25:>1~~7~83.iO, Aft Ui!lcd . . . . . TYPISTS Equaf .-.......... E """'-day, year around, Paid Pmme E\lf•s. /Jr. Sais.. ldc11l N, o ',xper .• net'('~. Mr. Lee-1 °"~~;,::c"""=''----"'n""'· .m., ... .r,.r '"acatlont1. Laguna Beach N~\VPORT Beach c p 11 l for !!hid<'nts. Jlrly \\'iigc + 213 771)-85-1:1'. SECJtETARY Bkkpr. p/tilYH" BOOKKEEPERS ~ • 11¥'-1fvi' 4~1196 ' F1m1 needs C'X'""r. l»'lk· llOnuS<'!I. Call 89" ....,~., .... SAt.:f:S P('rso11, mat u r ,, in profl'S.Sional olr . }trs flex· KEYPUNCH 1~ ..-u..» u• ible, (213) 596-45.53. ?-1A1DS foi motel, 11·kdas on· kl'1'1h'r. Salnry 10 $600. Suh-S.15-n'JOO. p/Llme e\'es & •wknds. loiiiiiioiiiiiii..iiii;;iiiii'-""""'I SECRETARIES ly, Laguna Shores, 4LCJ N. rnit l't'Suntc ro Clni1.<:ifil'd ad PART liinc "·ig & \\'iglet ll~al!h ll1unl<'r, i\fontgon1cry SECURITY \\110 \\ant r11irn1fl~.'d i. Coal!t Hwy, Laguna 4!»-S52:l no. 967 ('./O Dally P\101 P .O. !lyle girl \\ 111'1.ls. llunt. Bch. stimulatln~ 1.-.n~ nl' ~ho!1 ?t1ATD rnx'<led. f.folel in IJ.B. &x lr..60 Costa Ate1a, Ct1 .&12-0100 !71.C) 892-6611 trrm :isi1igrunrnt.~ . fc11 S1a11 $2 per h.r. 921.i26.__ PRX ans\\'C1ing s e r v i c e , S,\l.E~ r('rsou, l/l!nu.• for QfflCERS d.ii.~·11, i-oupl<.' "i•rk..; 01· r.,11 Call 536-().111 NO EXPERIENCE J:'l'nl'C)'lll'lt, f.t isglon Vi<'jo llnllm:irk stol'f' In C.M. mouth~ · )'()IL det:.•i(tr! 1\v''· :r;: .. M a intenance M an NECESSARY nrt·a. l'.:xpcr pre I 'd. ,\lu~! be IR 0~ M•e_r. Ex()eT I m •• ''tin · · · · · General Plant mninJcnan'"'· 837-773j. ~<'. C&ll •~l!}-2.:;01. APPLY BV PHONE A. Dov•11h•••ll•on9•oc•t!oneldrive1? . . ... ~ TRAINEE POSITIO S \DPIF:l\ACI ' Cl/ .__ NO EXPERIENCE APPLY BY PHONE I, Do you Ji•v• good netive l11 +.Ui9011co1' Son1r. 220--14.0. Lite r,Rrpen· N i>ERSON with mechanical & · ' • ~ · \ O ege , ... s C. Co yow feel •ulf!cl.nlly motivotod fo .,111evo? I0\1'NE try & plumblng, Xlnt wage NOW OPEN cleclrlcal t'xperienoo on OJlf'nlng fol' Gym/AthlcUc NECESSARY APPLY BY PHONE -WI CAN HELP YOU 0, Oo you h•v• tho .bility to "'o\e doe i1ion11 IJ'\YI PERSONl\JEL & fr\.nge beJ1t"l!f.~. Phone GB Jnduslrl('JC cf So. Calif. 1.Joats. Cmll Dullie-kl r-.t1111tl<' f'(J.UlpuK'nt & field manager. Call ·r1-:~lf"t.l'S Oft1"" Al E. Ar• yo .. re•ilv to ,.,. reolitflc t.11r••r abj•ttlve? 5cD\11r5.,ArCNCY n~ hllS ln1n1edla1c 01wnl!'ll(ll rnr flt &l&-4187 i\lir~. 3 yrs t'XP<'t; in Thanksgiving & 541).4,150 & l.i:·t lUi knou F. If vo11 we1• con~!"c•i th•t help••• •v•llelJlo, •ou1d LIVI'"-l"'o\JL" trn · l .. I / nuiintrnnnce .ft rrpnir O( ~tiat yo\lr skill.~ f.ll"li. JI;~' 1 At'COUntants to UK MANAGEMENT uiccs n , " s P a Y' PIZZA nian, no exper., lull Phy~. l:~ul·nllon & Athl<'tlc Christmas Work 1• .. ••<epY1011uw"s'"H"o' "u'L'o'' KNOW • ~grff. R.E., Trtts! ~~~~t~lrcl~1 ~:r~~1o,n & I 'c1n1c. Appv''11ttt TlnosP 30'l4:t ll P(lrntul' l'f'<J'd, Sll\rt SG."J6.. ~~TI/!,~<' t~~~ ~~:.7;:n,11,1h,: • Office b.tan.ag~r. EOP STORE MANAGER . i ! ''6• l~C'w l'O\\'ll a ey ark.,•ay, $600-$724 prr mo. depending &PQl li>r \,'0\1! e Thi better job& •re not edverlhe4 ~ • ln·~-1......, IO(;nllons to OJIC'n In nn· L.agunn Nlgiw!. up 00 Qti;:ililic-af'K'llll!, ,.._ j Socrr:s.c.lul nppli.·11nt1 • Ex • .. ~ .. v•" rnefliale f111urc . J\1.any -•I· 1 , ~ •hoo•ld m•-111·-Your Utne J,.. v11Jul'll•l1•. Don't e Th:1 P"ty p•oloo•lon•I i"flwo"ce It 1omotill'le1 ""' y/>""•-··'·' S800 r• Pl••tl•• r 'n "e /rnJ1't• Ca 11 '' " I A~Un, C\e·~ ... ,........, 10 f™) Unique omrtunJry fo r IJl.)los t)()\\.' open tor full lhnc "'"' .... TRAINEES " "" ~·· · follo"·inJ: r.-quirePl('nts: ivn$tt• t. 1!1\f'til It 1\·i~r!y • ~:~:::,er:lle ri9hf doetf opoo, •t Ille rl9Jit lovol ,.. I"-·~-·· I -al RE s'>kll qua.llned pentm to mnnRs:e JM'rn1tin~nt 11(.'()plc>. a,,•1•,~ed Per90nnel, (iloll v.·llh Te1n11(1 R.t hi hourly .c.ito •• x :\; -· • • '""' San J c pl I * x1 .. vr TltJ).INING PRO· ... IUU, -M' 2J I'll!~ u NEVEH A FT.I:: A'l ctidt•• technki11•I Secre • '10 r1UCl Ulln " i>trano OU! l't CRAl\I Immedt&I~ ope-ningll for "'()-S1\l,F~5GIRL, '10's or 30'1. In, •SI• 1'f~tro • E11oe11fl•e po1hlon1 •t• fill•fl throw9h elf1ewflve 1"· Sec'y/Ml•"•"' Dew J650 + lltof'e of n n 11 on w l de mMI on all s.hHU' \('C"e"tln< I -Height 6' or near T l•rvi•w• Jo'\re/~~ l..tnes 10 ~ 1port~r and awlm~·tar * SU!\r!\lf.R & P(TJME · . · / ,. f<l·linbr, llOOCI mcmrny, empo T•mporaryHelp () Meit ,.. 1 .. m• 1110 1nn 9 , h ~•• • totel •"•wer Biiiing Ofrlr: $ISZJ + mRn11factu~. RetaU Mies \\'ORK A.I.SO AVAIL ~'OR tx1)f'r. n10lrtins: rnaehlne izrM:WI eon1muni(•ntor. goo<t -Day or night mCUTIYE SERYI ' CES, INC. Payroll OM to 1tut1 &.nd 111pervill0t')' CllP"riell<X' I[ I G II • SC II O O I~ & I opi~. &-frttl~. Cll"11n lttr APl»'Mr11n1'1! Non smok!'f' 1v1i11bility tsesnti•t TYPIST-RECEPT. lnv.n Control Cl.'. - .,_.., -•1-:.i. COLLEGE STUDD-.'TS \\"Ori! in fll'W bl1S:. Shift ho· ~r\flr of!k't' exp. h!>Jplut: "--.. ,, ~ nUI p-m -•d I IJ • J ,,.....,)dl'nlit.I t.lfr hll~ 1111 lm· K~ * C0:0.1P/\N\' ei;~NEnT~ ,, , ..... or n t uhc~: n'ldl" f'l f 11 rt DISNEYLAND fHy fottrYe A.11 .A.swer for YOll Cl Typ'•t f!08 74 Apply: ft SO:\IF. PART TI ,\f E 11vrk. 011Por. !or adYl\l'l('l'· lui•nllll~ ,ell',, ll'lerihont' " n1Nllalu Opt'nlng; ln 1 o( Son.t Jte111"'• Or C•ll Tolley -,... Don Flt trl k p OS IT JON S A 1 SQ mt>rlT f.t >-ln'I fr1ngC' tM'nel1ti1. llfllC's, ~n1e C'l~Anlnl(. $2.11 !lit> nll"l"irt l<lc1tll' 1111 •: 111 N.B . ....for-0. Ofc. Ule-IYJM! Moo na lJ)8 c I '11 Bl ~ Shlft• 7:im.Jpm, 3/l'tl'l·llpm, lo $' •.. ~" Hr!! .'I ,,Ion lh•• c-• \\"r ~'(! n tlrl 11'/D Shlp/Rti::. aen: S3~ hr W-1~ Ext . 243 AV/\ .A .F' '''" ,,.. OU PJ ~IW' Ill! plt'nMnt phn111· n111n0l'r ID NO COST IXICUTIVE tNTlkYllW CAlJ.. TRTSJI lfOPKINS An Equal Opp 0 r 1 u n It y , FOR PERSONAL llpm·i11n1, 11 hlk, S, of Bt:k· SnL C!IJI 6'124166 17141 !\'.l'!...,t·l:-"3. l''-' r.7~ ii'(!rk ~.30 lP~I . rt rh1.)'' a EXECUTIVE SERVICES INCORPORATED JERRI V.'JIITTEJ\iORE ·Ernploy('r INTERVIEW CALL : rr. tif( Rtdhlll• ~1r1111!:•y rhnt ~i1urrlny k Pl 1 11~ f~tiH •7~-ttOMI Ofl'IC[ -SA.NrA ANA 4SQ: I :•1r-1ow ~" (',111~ ro11 •tr•n'I llt'M 11 !:!'ltn 111 111 i\~1 I Pl\I I "' · l'll8<' ron,•act F.\'il'i)'TI Soc11rltv 1~"~ l u1ld!n9 . E. 11'1h St. (al hvlnol CM 536-2591 Cnli( Tnj1-.·~1011 \ll\1•111\~ 'llr:iv.' F'nst'' ivhcn you J ll11m\ltoE' &14-:iGOO. EQull.l S11ito 701 I s~t':~24 642·1~ioM The in.test dnlw In I~ ~e,I. Monday Only 9.5 I ;.>00 Hr1~v. r11 ... .1 :llr .... r'n·~· "." 11<1 In tt1e ilrlll\ 1· £Qunl Oppttr, rr 1ployrr Qppor. mpio)'tr . PHOM"· 1714) ••7 9"5 • Dolly Pilot o ..... ~1 !'il!ll l\11n1 Ad!i:' C11ll MW ... ,. ... ..,'!!!!!!!I!~-~·~·,.,..,..,~~ ... ~·~~-'!!!!!!!!O!!'!!!!!!!!!,I ·-~·~llr~:L~-~·~llt~~~A~~·~ • Ad. ·&t2"'56'18. ..., Clasglfled Aris ...... 642-)678. Sell Idle lfrm, _ tHZ·!"iG~ • 6-12-!"1678. I Fast n'tult1 are Juat a flhOTII!' _ WRllt ad resultt. ..... ~8 cell a"«11y. Sti.!:S't&. ASSEMBLY TRAINEES SJ6.l460 Equal Oµpor. l:::n~pk1y<'r URGENTLY NEEDED 50 TRAINEE ASSEMBLERS VOLT ln1t•nt Personnel 1'P1nponl:;· S<>rv1c.. ~ Campu.'> Llr .. ~'ulle 106 N~'POr1 Ek>nl'h ~7-ll Equ~I Oppoc-. En1ployer Ei.:per., ~pendablt>. l\ta!UI'(' & Neat. Apply in fX'niOrl, Surf & Sirloin. j!l:JO \\'.Coast Hwy,, N.B. \.\'AITRESS. CX IX'r-ror colrcc ~hop, llolel L.ui:una, Ap11ly in person, •12.l S. Coast J111y , LB. -Renf W1sher1/ Dryers $2 ,\\k. t'u.11 r1111lnt. • 639-1:.'0:? "' 18-CU. ti . fo~n11:ida1rt> 11'0-lop /i"t.."'("•1flr, 2·•11'('1r, )'f'l.IM\·. Xlnl. 1·•·ndl!lu11, $110. 9511-:ZiG-1, Call ,.,,~.,. 5 p,lil, PORT A BLE K enn)()f'C I \,n,h1ng n1actiine, ex-c:ellrnt I ro1wli1ion, Best of l C' r l>·lf,....!O~i.11 :->Jo:An:s P<wtah[(' Oisl11••ash· 1•r. ;,'OX\ l<tHll"liliOn $-Kl. 8.18-7663 DOUBLE Elec. Oven. Cop- per. 111lcl\11g CO\'er, liming i;rl('('IQr. $200 17141 826-8541. -. 9137 ,\o pfghan'1' a :;rea1 gill! 1 StZESlO}/z.18~ I Chno,.p l t11lor'!'l lor th[,. one. I STRIPS OF' SQUA llES f_ • ....rT,._.• -rfi,._~ 1 l'1Yall' d111i.:onal i 111 r r f:' st . "'f lll._.I,... 111""'1.,.. Cn)(•h•·t In nfs;:hnn i lltrh, 11dd , 1-vn!l'!l~I zlg-r.•ig l)ord<'rs. Use i\IU\'~ gi·111i'fulh· in lhl"' knittini;i: 11·01'l!tt'd. Pnrtrrn SE\i\lED·TO-RLt.\I STY LE 7·Mll: dirrct1011s for nf1;hnn. ;1·1li1 lhl' quirt kind of rlcgnll· ~Y.V•:NTY·l'l t'ti Cl~STII t-e 1h111 111.ke11 you to n11"f'ti~li for each p1:tttem -Rdd 2S nr f('i;1 Ive dh'lltC'r parties. N'nls for cnch pattern 101 &nd! Air ~la\\ a nd.Spccio.l Hnndl· I ~FL.ATABLE ho11t, co1npl portable, \\'Ood kt.-el & floor, 11-elghii 60 lb~. holds 950 lh!I. All access lncldg oars, te.kcs uJ> to IS hp motor. Usl' for fishing, tender, div· ing. Perf <..'Ond. Used only 3 hours, cost $350. Sacrit! Sl90. !168-4505 BOAT & trailer storage sµace. 80c per fool. ~1onthly l'atc. 342$ Doheny Park Rd, 493-58&1 Boats, Power 906 B-210 2-DR. HATCHBACK 4.s,..d. lllC:ket s.n ' Whit• Shi-all Tlrn. IS.... #OOfZil B-210 2-DR. SEDAN Pnntr<l PMttl'nl 9137: H11!f Inc; otherw190 thlrd-<.'I Mll Sii.i"~ 10•;, 12~;. 14i:z, 161.. dcHvcry 1\·lll to.kc thrct" 1 s1~. Size 1.1111bust 37) tal;l'S '''l'.'!kl! or n1ore. Se-nd to 1 7/8 yards 60-lnch f1\brlc. Ahce Brook_11, lhe DAILY THE ALL NEW B-210 -4·Speffl, l11ckff S.... ' Wtilte 1"-all nr ••. · IS.. #OIOl1 I ~EVENT\·•'"'; a ;NTS PILOT. 10.1, NeerllecnJt for each pa1ten1 -add 25 Dept ., Box 163, Old Chelsea C'Cnt~ ror e-nch pattern for St11tlon, New York, N.Y. Alr ~fall And S~lal lillndl· 10011~ Print Name, AddrM11, Ptt.OT. 412, Pattern Dept.. Zip, rattern N11mber. tn~: otht-f'l'·liie thlrd-cla55 N 1'~ F. D t. ECRAF'I' '~! t1t llvrry wlll t;ikt! three Cn>ehet. knit, 11tc. f'ree' y,•f!<!k11 or more. Send to cl h-e<:tlons, 50c. r.tarlsn ?i1&rtln, the DAILY tn~tant Macr••ne &Mk. 232 \Vrirt 18th St., New &sic, f11ncy koot~. pat: ''ork, N.Y. 10011. Print lt'n 10:. SI 00. NA~ AODRf'.SS Wllh '"''""' CrN'hfot nook -7.IP, SlZ.E and ST\'LE Learn hy 111cturt!I! ft'ltt· NUM:RF.R. lt'm11. Sl.00. SE'E i\tORE Q U I c k Con1pltbl 111,tant UIM ~k Just 011• Of Th• Ma11y N.w Ccw Dotswt Trod•l111: 1972 MAZDA RX-2 ROTARY INGINE cou•• $2295 (LIC. #70JfAWJ ONLY f'uhkm• and thoo!t 011t' -more Ulan JOO gilts g:~e-rn ..... fr-¥ Cafrot~~ ouA1r1 S1 .00. 1(1~~'-Z ~{;.;ng .. ~mm!!r ruog. (.'(impiete Ar.chi n Borik - ' res:r 0n1y SOes "vuNG OOK I si.oo. INS"TA1''T t;, B 16 Jiffy Rua: &nlc• . 5(lr M!W loday, 'vt•r tomnrrow. l llMk ol I! Prlr.o o\fi tuin .. n. "°"· TNSTAl'>T f A S If 1 0 N Qi1llt DnM1 I -16 p;tUtrrui. B<JUK Hundl"t'd~ o f ~-fA•h~n fitcts. $1. ~tu..et1m qt,1111 Root. a - l~tkr In rndr! Our Trader's SOc. SALES HOURS Mon.0 S.t. 9 o.m .... 9 p.m. Sw11. 9 o.m.0 6 p.m. • I' B-210 4-DR SEDAN 4·Sp"-'• l•dtt SMf'I l Wt!/,. Sid-all nr ... SALES & SERVICE IS.r. #04JJtl SElVICI HOU{S Mo11 .• P.,I. 7:30 o.m.0 5 p.m. Sor. 7:l0 ..... :ii ... P1trt1dl~c rolumn ls tor yool Qullh1 ror Today'• l.l\•tn1 • l~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!ll!!"""""!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!I------,,_-: s...i.,, °'""'' 21, 197J DAILY PILOT fj OWNER lee.vUic _ MuR .sru• Scooters 92J . 906 1,CyciH, 6lket Auto S.rvfce, P1rts 94f 1 V.n1 utot, lmeor,tH 9 0) utoa. Imported OIAutos, lmpor1ed 970 utot:, mport OAuto1, •..-•!'! i1· °"'"" thn. c"r * v"''"""' '""'""" """' ,,,. 1970 FORD VAN CAPRI FIAT MASERATI MERCEDES IENZ PORSCHE naaahlp 28.'l, no hr1. lliOCf' BICYCLES * tri, half Hx-ti ~ lmJM!ci I .. com p. valve job. Radio, bo.11 RaH-11{11 R·~. , .$99,9,; ~~ii. 111 ll'kil drill !Mi 1 \'-II, uutn. trnni .. n.dio. heal· '72 CAPRI . XO>. Crel.'n. I 71 RENAULT R16 • 3:'iOO _G T • \fODl:.'1.. 19"5 tank. auto. bl~e pYmp. \\'hlle SupPlita Uu11 I "' iZ&.i61Gt a.pd, lo m1, am/fin •th"l'<t. tiutu, ractln, rndiAll fTZilOCt, SUPt-.H. l.f.GGl-::R I, hu bad fallwl. <I bait. t::XC@lMkma.1 OltlC!r mock-la frorn SSl.9.J. $2277 QQ new radlaJa, xlnl rond. $l79S lnvtng 1·a1•1\ lo i,nl. xlnt eand. 50 USED IQ PuncM. lolUll M'll Good candhbt,. .$9)). C.ll rondllion. Ready for <'TUIA· Peugeot In all iius I.: colort. l§J ,.._.,,. , I only S-tOOO. wi.11 ft'alN! IOr biz or f1&11lna-. &•rth1'd at Ch r J1tmas 111 y.&. • .,.,11 ys Alll•ilorSalt r-::i. • •72 Capri 20'.XI, lo mile• 111., Dick Mil .er Motors Jal<' uiOdel 1t ul o matlt' [kin& rt., al.Ip G..-47, J1dc CYCLE \VORKS LTD . ... am/Im Red. :<clnt cond. 120 \V .• )\~~r. S.A. 11ul.or11obUt'. Don l.Jghl.n(>r 1kle. $5000 Inv f' 1 t t' d . 1882 Nt\\·port Blvd, Cof>1a n l • $2800 •• 64~~ aa7-2132 t'Vff 67?..UM7 dsy1 646-0SrSt MERCEDES -ON DISPLAY ""' POltSCll E. .,,. m«:hanD.1 cond. M t wn. Sharp New car st5S.\ 91Ml44 $3{0'.I. P/Pty. 64"-2ll4 ""'" 1ques •u cs ~ "41118 7l CAPRI . Vti, 4 111Pffd, fully MAZDA Saa<Hce-h .. t """ """' """'· f>t8.'78.1 • ,. /Cl I 953 -••M ..... I JAGUAR * BICYCLES * TOYOtA """''· •1·,~ ~-• 30'i.:l2' pov.·er boet fib«Klau NPW Italian 10 ~11 ..... $59.0CJ '35 PLYlilOt.rrn 4 door ~ JAGUAR Trade-Im • .,., au• .. Coming In Every Day 1---""""---·-.. _'-1 Aolc About O..r Unlquo Uaed Mercede1 LHM mold.I. Due to lllneq, mus.t Stint our Eq Coloi ••••• $M9.9S lledan, $fm srll. Tooling or complete Nii;hlkt 10 bp .... from s~.95 * 646-2055 • l9fli Harbor, c.~t. 6-16.9303 DATSUN 420 SEDAN shOp, Phooo daYI 714: Used b"·-I $15 00 '13 DODGE Vn", ~1usl sell. 1967 \\'tilt(' "''llh full laci01"'' Gt:.-6570, wknd & eves, TI4: Bike!t (·~~ -.~·1j~1":~. $4:50 Recreationel Air oond, pt;,'' custom Int, WE'RE HERE rqulrment It toaded. r"·1C. ;,93-3153 or 623-Tll9. \\'ANTED USED UICYCLES Vehicles 956 an1/hn rodio, tape deck & !l001 Take Over Payments Deitch BJcy._·Jes, 806 E. Ba1boo "TIIE" DUNE 111nl't'. $4500 bt>st otter. St-e us a1 1971 Saber-Crall 12&-hrt. 1n Bl\·d., Balb:>o., 67!'r72.lt2 C BUGG)' 557-9748 Mo.cARTHUH & JA~fBOREE .,..·atcrl. l!:l·ft. hnrdtup, I.JO 10 SPEED Pors('hi· c~'tO~~~[ 111, gs I "i2 DODGE Spo1·1sma11 Van. BIG SAVINGS ON hp. in &: out. Clll'vy 4-cyl. I WANTED blue ~·/flor:ll' '1 :ns cu. l.n. Radio, heater. '73 Demo~ 956-2764 call aft 5 \l'k<!y . 1 1 ' & stereo. Back s e 1t t . :ilfl's ' . · ·. ,\Just ill' 1n guoc! shape & top & .91:'111.io 1 ca1-pt>ted, Y•lndo1vs al I Plckupg 36' TS Chrts Tri·Cnb1n l'l'a..'K!nitbly prict'd. 5-l&-5010 CQl>t over $6000 I around S:l ()00 m--01!2{1 610's Ex<..~le-nt ~d. loaded. By i\lAICO ,71 4C.Occ $700 N S2300. &12-4:'131 -. ' . 968 owner. 675.~75 ra<..'t'd. rVt. pty.' \Vrk . f21~: '68 '• TON Ford p.u Autos Want.er Bo•tl, S•il 909 390-J.Wl, ext 580 Ev c I 1vlcamper iihe!I -+ 'TI Kit TOP &.1·~361. 17' t>lf·cntd trh·. Sl2001Best. l>' Sedan. Nu eng & paint 2-1" ITAL \I EGA Gran G?l-8!20 apt B-36 DOLLAR j>b. Auto pilot. Ft-eAh ll'Uter. Tnrismo Can1pagnalo eqpd. T k PAID Trims tabs. 1-'ly bridge. Slps PC'rf. oond. $150. s.t8--81l'J.1, rue s 962 10. Huge''"'"" G...,., .. ,,.... ..,...... IMMEDIATEL y eboard" RD1',. Sat!'IDnleter, SCHMNN heavy duly 26" *SPECIAL* Chrslcr. $16•500• 6la-6456, used bike with canier, 1•ery FOR ALL ;-,;,~.IERY 12-R ... ~~~~s.~.,,,.,,...,.. *Of the Week FOREIGN equipped. $650. MUAL Aile to 4 Sale, 'TJ-75(} Honda. 6" CARS &fl.~~~~64 5 -0911 • tubes, pull bacJu;, custom '73CHEV. WEARE IN seat, Harley Rlln, Best 4 Whl Dr " Ton DESPERATE NEED CAL 39 1''ully equipped. oHer. Call 536-n12 ' • ..,4 OF GOOD, CLEAN Ba-nln for lhc serious t2851NJ ... SCH\VJNN 5 speed bikes. 121 $4399 CA S racer. Prlncipnls only. Both 1 year old. 1 orange. FOREIGN R &~i..s94:; I blue. Call 11·knds 9-;, TOP DOLLAR-PAID O\VNER Sacrifice 27-tt Sol-644-9Z!2. '72 DODGE FOR OR NOTI ~In~ 0;rd~~rsail~:~G~~~ B~t\V-R 75/5, 75cc, Gl'and l/2 TON PICKUP Call or come in to see us. Boal! 675-6189 Touring, absolutely new (77333L) rond., 1600 n1i. $1895 days, $3299 INTERNATIONAL · 14 w/ 64~ eves, 6.t&-1997. lrnilcr, $'150. LEHMAN 10' '7G 360 YAMAHA Enduro. w/ trniler, & oars, $250. 979-8533 or 847-1004. Dirt ready also. Many nC\I' extra5. $475. 646--0430 CAL 2f>..No.l 6 h~. Evinrude. 4 bags, RDF, c lo rk, Knotmeter, Ioa:. $ 6 O O O. 64&-3677 WANTED: 28' Tr I ton fiberglass sail boat. \VIII pay $7300. casti tor the right boat. 675-8990 SABOT m 711J6, 2 yrs old, racing wtnner, xlnt eond. $350. 673-0444 -. CAL 2.i, four Mils. Sleeps 5, many xu·as. Priced lo seU. 492-2431 HOBIE 16 \\'llh t ra I I er degperate, mu.~t sell immed. Xtras incled, $1250. a36-{;128 LEHMAN 12 3 SailA No. 135 64>2138 175 YA~1AHA F.nduro, xlnt cond, many xtras. •642--1984. '69 TRIUJ\IPH 500. Complete· ly chopped. $700. or best offer. Must sell. S.S-1025 I Mobile Homes 935 Jl.10BILE Home, 1968 Hornet· te 1T x 44'. Partially fum. w/color console TV. Like new cond. Finan cing available. 842-7701. Motor Homes Sale/R•nt e SALl:S e MO • SERVICE • e RENTALS e '73 CHEV. t/, TON PICKUP & CAMPER (29675N) $2999 '71 FORD 'I'• TON CAMPER SPECIAL (22102Kl $3599 '72 CHEV. 112 TON PICKUP (73032L) $2999 '69 EL CAMINO !9.).l070. $1899 NEWPORT IMPORTS Jlitl W. Coast Hwy., N.B, 642-9405 -TOP CASH ~~1f'Ot<T DATSUN SS.~ Dove NC\\'J>Ol1 Bl·h 833-1300 Open Sunday 68 DATSUN ~402 Mat'gUl't'i!e Park11·:.1y i\'li;iskm Vi('j<> 8.11·2Q.10-• 495-49'19 USE AVJ::RY P\\'Y. EXIT 1973 DATSUNS ALL MODELS IN STOCK $2198 lll•u 11111,; lllJJIJll o 11 ""-W ""-''I >l!?I'.< .. . . . . '73 XKE CONY. Nol a DE'mo. Actual 1900 n11\e automobllt> Ill terrili<' savings 'Ailh full lac1ory \\'ttn·anty, 111aroon .,... it h nlllun1I inll•rior, cltrornc \\ h'l· l'l'h£'£'1~. Al\f/F'l\f NEWPORT IMPORTS 3100 W. Coast Hwy., N.B. 642-9405 XKE 1971 Yclloo...· Cou?<" Loaded! $4850 (262CQ'f J 71 JAG XKE 6 ryl. coupe, 4 spd, AM/1',~t. \Vil'<' wheelf> 2.1.LOO miles (~~'i9DJ0) $5095 Dick Miller Motors 120 \V. \Varner, S.A. 5,j7-2132 1973 UA RX-2 COUPE Plans House of Imports 6862 Pifanchtalt"r, But!11a J>ark RENAULT NEW R·12 4 DOOR 4 eyl., ·I ~peed. l'iitllo, hce.ter, un tht> Sant• Ana Fn\7 rodlal tlN'll, viiu·I roof, Aide =__,,,,,,....,011::;:c·.:;l250:;;._,.,.--,,,, I Auton1allc "l'rflnSllll$Mut\ SALE $2499 n1ld&"'· 1 ~75GRV1 '72 t.fll 280 SEL, 4.~. V8, $3177 .OO n1etll1Uc gold, full le1Hher. Dick Mlll•r Motors full power auto lraM, l20 \\'. \\'11n11•r', :i .. \. ~lereo, elect !illll roof, air af>7 :l\31 ~'foy~fr ,;:tt'~: :~;~;: :~~:B l!MiS llnrbor, C. \I. 6<\6.9:l0.1 lo11t•r. ' • 1<(«J1 ... •11rni 001'1. Uuy or k>u"c 1 49'1-S~ 11·kod 492-3942, JM-. .. t 1h•t1J ul.,..&y1. Colll1Jlr1e * Mezda '73 Rota'"Y * MG fro111 $66 MONTH Jim Parkinson's 36 MONTIIS O?t:N LEASE \\'ill accepl trad(."·ina CALL ?tfR. 1',RY 842.QiOO Hunt. Beach MAZDA lilll Beach Bl. MERCEDES BENZ JIM SLEMONS IMPORTS MERCEDES IENZ NEWPORT IMPORTS 3100 \V. Coo.st Hwy., N.B. 642-9405 * '68 MGR HARDTOP R11dio, \O\\' 1niles. Niel' rar . l\VTUUil. $1395 Harbour VW lSil l B1•11l·h Bh .!. St24Lti l-IUNTJ :-.lGTO:Ol BE.\Cl l PEUGEOT OPEL '72 OPEL SPORT COUPE Automatic, radio. heotrr, low mileage. f27'lF'YVI $2395 • '73 OPEL GT's ~lt·arh Jh1411111!i .1~ •.•)'> ,., J .. ,, -. n ...... ,,.. .. i..--.r '-"' ..... ., &15·&!00 "" Orange Cow11; '11 N1•west SAAB !H>f.lll'r CLF:Al{A.':O.: SALE: '13 SA,\liS STARTl;\:C AT $2995 u11 to 2·1 nulo-s J:.Er gallon D ick Miller Motor• l:?O \\' \\'ll l1'l'i', ..... :\. !'ii7·213i SUBARU Drive A SUBARU " Dick Miller Motors. Sall'S •'-Service Visit Us Soon At la! W. Warner, S.A. ~7-2132 Autos, Used 990 :2 ro rllOl'!Sl' rmm, Auton1utiC'l:::C:.:::!..:::.:=. ___ .:,:: ond 4 SJll'i'<I. t.111v n1ilcagl'. ~\!RI] IS\\' I ( 9it.~l!l 1 $3695 • BAUER BUICK 29Z'i Jlarhor Blvd. Co,.;ta J\lesu 979-TJOO CADILLAC Nabers Cadillac • 1972 EL DORADO. ' ' I 14.Jtrlr, just . .>dnt cond., $395. 2696 ullt Cat $500. Alto 14' ome Built Sloop. $300. Aller 6 p.m. 847-0334. 22' Albatross Sloop, no. 7, Dacron sail11, boat <.'Over. $500. Pv1 pty. 642-5735. EXPLORER o, HUNTINGTON BEACH 1~~01 Mf/.< H "1\IJ b~1 (i)jlj! l!UNI ~;<.fur<. l\IA\ H FOR STEAL 30 ft l.tTR home Dodge engine, new !rans, 3 spd, Comp. self contained head, sho11·er, range, sink, gas heater, hot wtr htr, etc. 80~0 roinplete. J\.1usl sell! GROTH CHEVROLET 18211 BEACH BLVD 847 Ll'la7 549-3331 \VANTED: Dune buggy trail-'72 FIAT 124 DEALER i IN NEWPORT BEACH Featuring the full line ol NOW OPEN Mission Viejo Imports le:ituring MERCEDES BENZ & FIAT Complete Sales & ScM•lce Visit Us Soon At 28701 Marguwite Paric11·ay r-.lisslon Viejo 49.>1700 (U!-'F. AVERY P\\'Y. F:XITI *'69 OPEL* JtA LLYT•: KADET'T ·1 !'peed, air· 1.-'0nd. r.'\dio. vinyl roof. llurry? tZAD- 9251 $995 J1·c blul' firen1is!/hlue vinyl : lllp/btu~ leather interior, fu!I po11·er, factory air, Ult 1 11•hccl, ,\r-.1 1''i\f s!erro wltape player, power door locks, twilbr:ht s e n t I n e I , cnrim• control. r1a .... ·les.s eondllon. (6S()ELTI ll' Catamaran. Fasf. $600 or otter. Call Bill 67>3128 after 6p.m. Boats, Slips/ Docks 910 WANTED Slip for 3 0 , for best offt"r over $350. Or trade tor good \'\V. sailboat, Nev.•port Rench. fi.&5..47'11. aft. 4:oo. CaU 615-873.'i. =7"7-="""~C"---.,...-~ '13 LANDAU. Brand ne\\' 25' J\.I o t o rhome. Bcauliruny equippM. Close out s."\le. Reduced Ot't'l' $400). l\tust sell. ~ at Johnson & Son Lincoln ~lercury. 2 6 2 G Harbor Blvd., Costa ?.lesa, a4Q...'i630. BOAT DOCK 30' II e \\' . private, for renr. SunS<?t Beach, TI4: 847~.9. PRIVATE dock, accon1d . up to 30' boat. Channel Jtrca, NB \Valer & ul!l. 61.>-4911. -er. !\Iust be ri"asonable. . HUNTINGTON BEACH Phone 646·1305 before 4 p.m. Wagon 4 11pd radio, low miles '6.'l J.'ORlJ V!\:-. (ll2HECJ CONVf.RST6~ I Autos, Imported 970 ~2195 6 cyl, 11.D. Shocks. t Ton Dick Miller Motors Chassis, Carnji. Paneled. ALFA ROMEO 120 \V. \Varner, S.A. Large TiN""l 14 ~ltEUI . 557-21 32 52489 * ALFA ROMEO ... •1" ''""" 124 GUSTAFSON E.itcellent condition $1600. l..incoln-,\f('J't·ury Hcst d<'al aJ~·ay:s! Bcrlinas 5.l6-Qi68 16.iOO lka1:h ;it \Varnrr !':1.m $3.~~, (SC'r., •0288I. '72 Fiat. ~50 Spydel'. xlut !!urning-Ion Bt.•;u·h 72 ·~ & 1l S. Con pie!(' SC· rond. Xtra pipcfi, 13,000 mi, 842·~ * 12131 592-5544 lt•c11on no11·. Buy or l<'a!>C $1900 6001 S<>asliore Dr, NB "llon1C' nf 1hc Vikin~" fron1 I~~~·~=~=~~~- '70 !NTERN.\TIQN,\L ~i T J im Parkinson's 72 RENAULT R15 CAh & L11AS-~ii;. r.1odrl 4 spd radio side stripe 14 ,000 1200-D, V-8 engine, 34 cu. miles ~5.t.lFVYI in. 180 HP. 131" ll'hee>I base, $2495 4 ~peed transmission, JID Dick Miller Motors Springs S995 w/Helpers, 1'.!() W. \\'arl\C'r, S.A. 750:x16 wheelll, 6192 Sydney 6·15-6400 or 557J2132 JENSEN HEALEY JENSEN INTERCEPTOR Large Selection of Colors lmmediat• .Delivery FULL SERVICE DEPARTMENT NEWPORT IMPORTS Harbour VW • 1972 $5777 I i\IBRCl:..-UES _ 1970 ZJO. 1iu1o IRTII BP:t<'h Bh•l. $1'..!-l IJ:1 , _.:;ll;:UNc.T:..:l:.:NG:e.,T:oDoc·'~Bc:E:.:ACI=' _ 1 SEDAN DE VILLE trans., a/c, p/ii, an1 !m. 1• flt>\\' radial lireii. x1nt cond. PANTERA Byzantine gold. 11·hitc \inyl 830-8547. l ---'-:...:C.C..:.::.:.c... __ I top, gold JcathC'r and ~tB '69 280 SI:: to / I PANTERA tapestry Interior, full power, , , alu , P I, f••I"'"" ~·,~ ... ,-·"t'-n'"", "I' r:>/b, lthr int. x nl cond. .. "'J .. ' LVllUJ"' -... u 67:;...77JG Sports Car of lhl' Year. &. 1elescopic "''heel, .stereo, · LEASE door locks, lighl sentinel. 19~8 MERCEDES I t'ronl 11 f actory Authorit<'d all 1hl' C'Xlrrts. c759ELU• $500. Clll! 67:14.t.".9 l)('a]C'r. ~56:)(). $4999 "\\-'hi!<' 1':!eoh1111r..1" "ver. running youi-hou5c'?' Turn them lnlo "Cash" ... sell thl"m thru a Dally Pilot '72 AUD I l:S 100. aulo, disc PORSCHE • 1972 "JOO \V c t H N B rlnssifietl Ad! I.irks, cll'C. ignition. 9,000 " . oas wy.. . . ·• S•l9<J o·· 1---COUPE DE VILLE 642.9405 1111 s. , :l01-:i11. Ern1 lne "''hilt•. ll'hile vinyl ---=-'-'=----1 TI1e fastest draw In the \Vest. top, reel leath('r interior. CLASSIFIED \viii sell ii! , .. a Dally Pilot Clasllifled You'll tlnd it in Ctasalfled factory air conditioning, full '73 KING-0.ROAD * FOR RENT * Dr., Huntington Ben.ch BMW Imported 892-1573. 970 Autos, Imported '7 ... Autos, Imported 970 Autos, Imported 970 po\l'er, tilt & lt>ICll(.'Opie .c.o.=:.--'-------'---"'--'---"----'I Wht't'!I. AM/F~f ~ t <'r e o CREVIER BMW 8' "Con1pnct" Cab-Over Cam. 1973 EL OORAOO J\.lotor. 1960 lnlen1aliorml 1 T. per, like new, Cflll>eled, home, IS-ft., tape deck, T.V., 'A'/dual wh!s & service bedln · 4leeps 4 'T?lni·bool' fitted for sett-conhrined, sl~ptir 4. Call New eng & tires. X 't siles e Servfce • Leasing Courier. Curtaln.11, stove, Ice aft. 5. 956-2764. 1>ht1pC'. 51200 or list ofr. Call 208 \V. lst., s.A. S3a-3tn bo..'C, 14 ~al. wal('r. Asking e Dalc's i\1otor Home ftl'ntals 979-86:10 USED BMW'S rr;i0. 967-382'2 'i3 23-26' !'11.H. & :-O!inis *72 CHEV BLAZ_ER* '73 BAVARIA (DEMO) '69 FORD % Ton Pickup Free miles 9 Iii !I, S.'l.S·0900 IMMAC. LOADED , R w/'70 11' Vacation eer RECREATIONAL \"El{ICLE $4100 FIRM 549·2367 .~~~~A IA camper. self cont. mnny RENTAL BUREAU 71 SPTS CUSTO-M xtras, 1mmac con1I. $3900, * 714. 842--9922 * . '67 2000CS-COUPE or best offer this weekend. · I V1-TON, MINT COND. '69 2002 Pri ply. 968-6684 '72 PACE Am>w •. 20 It, niany BEST OFFER 892·1832 '68 2002 8' STOCKLAND Ca m p e r shell lln!ed sliding windowiJ w/vents. All ""'hill'. 6 mns. old. New $.i&5. No11• $.100. ......... CHEVY % chN1si1 n1ount camper, &<!II cont'd, 4 spd, lo n1i'5, gd tires. Asking $1T;iO. Ph: 5'G-3886. ·n 0-IEV. Camper Spec. 3."JO AT, AC, S'C/O. Camper. Loaded! 2400 Elden, C~1 548-189S. • extra1, lo1v equity, assume ------ pymnls. ~1. 919-9584. '69 CHEV. ~. ion. P.!J. \r-.11 -ORANGE COUNTY'S t"REE \\'EEKEND standarrl trnrt~. (;1n11><'r OLDEST R-~01 ,·o·-I Vehici(' Rcntol shell. l'r11· !Ire;;. Gond •'Onci. • L'" "" SI650 5?.6-3'.!21. & Bul'C'aU. 1TI•I) l.U2-9922. I 1970 El. CA\\! I ~O. I' /S, Treiltrs, Tri1vel 945 P/B, air, vinyl roof. Undci· 30,00J milrs. 11('11• Ht'l'!I. :\Int I 16' Xlnt roncl, ready .~ clean, l'Olld. $219.). 6i3-1G.i.'1, E,,.,•nllCl't ,,)C"lioo •I 0,-. nu tires, slee>ps 3. all xlras. .., .. ., .. JJOrt A potty 812-M!IO or '72 DODGE, V-8. custon1 price t'f'·l'Valuatlon n1odC'ls. G16-9.~3S pnt. + 1>ut1on 1uc·1c Int., DEMO $ALE mags, stert.'O, x t ra s ! SALES·SERVICE·LEASJNG 846-4246. OVERSEAS DELIVEH.Y * ·73 PRO\VLER 23' Save ROY CARVER, Inc. plenty! Air, awn i 11 g • '63 Ole\'Y Step Van. (hnv~rt· C•mpers, S•le/Rent 920 "~~:=::...::•::_ll.:;5c:Pc:>71.'----t"I'.! ror <'an1p1ng. Good cood. Tr&.\Jer J:l' 6 cyl eng. t!47-5016, '69 VW Camper. Pop up top, new eng, eX'lrR heR\er, rcfrlg & l\lnk. ~!Int cond. S.ID--0990. Cycles, Bikes Scooters 925 548-7586,,---,,.-. '69 F'ord Van. auto, F i\!, 8 Trailers, Utlllty 947 track, mags. cu~lom inside, Bob M•Loren, BMW T.:14 E. 17th St. Cosl a i\lcsa 5464444 .;.c.:.:;.:.:;;:_:.;.........:e---out~id(.". $2200. ·l!»-:i.1."11 "' e 4' ·" S' TRAILF:R e \\'ITll SlDf~S SHllJ ................. 493-9793 STAKE Truck, 1111 r::ih, 2 Inc, ton Ford. Aln1~1 n~'''' Sale,.. • SeNice • Leasing l"nglne. 64·c~::lt=J!l.f-~--11:,0 North Beach Blvd., =-l.."\ llabra '72. 12a Suzuki Encluro. Low I Keed a "Parl":' P1ac:-an ail! 1967 Chev. 1/2 Ton •ii-I) 8'l'9-562.I niileage. 1-:sttllcnt Con· ~~78. ___ [ S~~~l~~..-S1 20 """';'."'~·~-.-~.'.,:~~~~~~~~!'°I dition. 492-409'l. - '71 HUSKY 250. CLEAN. ll.EUABLJ..:. $600. Cnll 847-5306 10 Speed 8lc:y(le, good 1..-011- dlUon, S6, &19-3137 llONDA SL 100. Dirt Blke, good oondlllon, extra& In- cluded. 552-8310 'll HAJU,.EY Da\id110n 350 Sprint, Immaculate. $475. Pbone 873--1703 SUZUKI 90, x1nt cond. Sacrifice: at $100. 1141h1510 '70 SUZUKI 250 Sav11ge, im- rnac, very k> mUenge $350. ~.prlply. • (2J 10 Speis, Sch1vtnn & • 1''rench bike. Good cond., Cl'lll aft 4 PM, &12-5()9-1. '71 Y A);{AflA S50cc MAN)" NEW PARTS. l4llO * ........ GOLD O>lombla S speed iii ti!M! xlrit. cood. Ple.ue cnll 552-0<&1 bo)lll. '72 SU1.UJ\I 12.i !'i mos old, :iilnt cond. $500. $4129 ~lE\~J('Cl~T • DATSUN CUSTO M VAN SALE! SPECIAL PURCHASE! CLOSE OU1'! 6 Automatics to Choose Fram lo1d1d/C1rptt1/Wlncfows/Strllpftg/Surf1r1/Sin lln1 NEW 1 73 DODGE VAN Cornp1tition ytllow, striping, automatic, cu1tom wh••l1 & mor•I (S•r. #38681 Only: '3898 DODGE & FORD VAIS! NOW IN STOCK At Newport Datsun When You Purchase a New DatJun or Van You Get a FREE 5 YR./50,000 MIU GUARANTH! NEW '74 8210 Good Color Selection CHECK THESE PRICES ON THESE IMMACULATE RESALES! '69 Chev. Wa90R '69 Plymouth WAGON • pau1n91r, rv9oooe •ock, ••· tillt nl rondition, (ZCC02tf '6f hll• 510 HATIOM WAGON IHI 511cirpl (YXW7,6t '67 ford Mu1tans A.lo, '/S, rod•I , 1htJtP! (Tll •1399 $1199 •1499 $1099 SPIC,At ,URCHASf Factory Executive Demonstrators 5101 s·4 DOORS 22 8 7 to choose from! $ 6 PRICED fROM OHL Y ''Where we take pride in service" ou• NIW LOCATION 888 DOVE ST. MacArthur at Jamborae NEWPORT BEACH 833-1300 I i I Including Air & Automo!ic.l Ser. ;:9032 multiplex K ll't1ck stereo tape, new wsw. 11448741 $4555 • 1970 EL DORADO Fac·iory air conditiong, full pow(r, fire1nlst blul'. l'>illtt> lop, blu<' leather interior, ll'ar huckcr J;(.'8ls, ltlt & !l'lcsCOpl!' 11hl"f'I, !!1CI'C'O, •luor lni:k~. t'nJISl' control. l1;.::h1 !'!•11r1nl..'I, 1runk Jock. ·l'l.OCXl nul<'s. 17.VF.J4 j• $4444 • 1971. SEDAN DE VILLE R1't'lr1z.1• rin•n1is!, 11·hilr vinyl 1011, 11·hite 1rn1hcr 1111l'rior. factory 11ir l'Ondilionin~. ful l pil\\'('I', till ~f('(_•!ini;:. SICf'e(I, 1loor lock~. low mill's. lm- macu!ute. No. lli5 $4333 • 1970 COUPE DE VILLE F!itlory air tv1rldll1.,uln1:. full po11er. 1•lnyl hlJi, f u 11 lei'l!lil'I', 1111 K l!•]('M'Oj)lt' 11!!Ct'I. Sll'\'1"1, 1lnor IOC-ks, t"l[!::,:ht ~'l\111111\, IW\\ .... hll• .. 1d''" nll t 1r1• • ,,,c-.. rient I "'11o1.11~·ll 5 .34144;. • 1969 EL DORADO 11'ri11a1. bl1u· ti re1n\ .. 1. IYhlte 1 in~! top. hlu<' h-.,rl11·r HI· t•·n or, 1:1rr11r~ .111 rou iiili~l!\1111.!, hill J.rl\\• I . lilt ,i:. 11•1l•st'(l111c 1~'h('{<I, slrrw. door loek'. Ill«' 11' 1'1 11 1SAV30l1 $2999 • 1968 COUPE DE VILLE C11r><i111u! hro11·n, h <' 11!',. lf'·11h1 r 111h'rinr, hrti.:•· v1n1 I fn[I, f,tj'IOI" Air, hdl lllJWrr. 1111 ,\ t1•lr'l('l'!11r l\hN•I. A~l/I· ,\I rtUllO • l~M.11 $1 B88 • Nabers Cadillac CO:\T,\ \IF:-:.\ '68 Cli 3:(1 •tonda, 15,IXXl mi. clean, $«J0 ar Mt oftr SW.-1516 /\l'Til0Hl7.FI" l1t .. \LF.H 2$"rl) II ARM R Ill. \l"D ' I ;141)..!llOO Opcn :O:u!Klay ____ C.:::.:R:.:O:.:SS=..:W.:.O.:::.:R=D_.:.P=U=ZZ=LE:_:A.:;N:.:5:.W=E:::R:.:S ____ , ____________________________ ,Cla.«lned A<I> • "'. ··"·'~"' ... • •• ' > ~ ... .,.,.. I r ' 70 Auto1, Imported 970 Auto•, lme?rt;cf f76 \ A=utc;•;;••c.N;....;.•w ___ .,...fiil_1 VOLKSWAGEN 1 VOLKSWAGEN CHEVROLET uto1, Imported OAuto1, Import.cl' 970Auto1, lmPOrted 9 O _A_u_to_•_, _tm~!'!-"-"'---~---0 I Auto., lmport9d 0 Autos, mport-. • ,1974 DATSUN B-210 not com- p•+ i tion , for our Z-Car. lt'i Oa t1un'1 new economy champion e.2 10. ECOIOIY llEYER LOOKED SO 8000 ONL'f TOYOTA T1UUMPH VOLKSWAGEN LOOKING FOR AN '74 TOYOTA'S '1 '67 TR SPITFIRE 1971 vw Jlere 9000 New 5 lfpecds $600 a.s I•. Needs Hiiie Y.'ork, g,,!'""•b · °'"""' s.R ~~~1 i!':i1~e.1.72 E. wu,.,., 411 STATION WAGON '59 TR3, need1 minor rt'pllir, '73 DEMO'S I~ n.i~cond, nu tires, 4 cyl., auto. 1rans., J\M/F~I An<I a few ~n1ainln~ FM!'4' $&25. 5116.. · radio, heac1•r, Thi& t.1i.r br 'T.:'11 Ht Cir&l'&J'l(-c Savine11. VOLKSWAGEN lnunaculal<>! 1670EQRJ j H•rbour VW h•s "••M LfAVi&' 1 *'6B YW* $2477.QQ • I Ovo• 20 1odan1 1968 and OLDER, RELIABLE V.W.? ·ri V\V <.'Onvtrtible, xh11 <.'Ond. lo mlle• S2.>IOO. ltll-3110 VOLVO '73 VOLVO CLOSE-OUT \Vhilt-they lallt HUGE SAYINGS • WA ' older economically TO n .. w la·~· priced VOTI I C"'"''Y ><llow. "'""'\ tdm ....... ...., Also I '" l'lllJ:S. Perfect u·1uu.porta-VOLVO Of1 [)(>n10$ I · · I 1io11 1\V!Jf """'~ Over 50 late models Beat Tht" Pri<-r Hlkc>. 1966 Harbor c ~1. 646.930.l . ss·~95 I 695 thru 73s I n l • 19~~,v~~~1~~~~!., 'Harbour vw '::&8vw "suNRoor'1 Har·b~·~i;s·vw 1 e'~oL:r' 18711 Be h Bl d 842-413.'i Radio. cuslon1 pai11t. L1kc l I.f('TJ\ B<•at•h Rl\'d .. S~t-4-135 !1966 ll11.1•bor, C'.P.I. ~-9303 llUY....;fNcroN· BEACH new. (\V\\'S-0161 I HUNTINGTON BEAQI I 68 VOLVO 142 . ---==-c===-', ,73 YW FASTBACK $1095 ·72 SQUAREB,\CK. •u· & 2 De. ' •pd, rodlo. au· '70 TOYOTA '""" '"""· $2"1tl. ""'' ~11· 1 (6"AGG) Ha\1e co m pan y car. $1295 LANDCRUISER Automatic transmission, air Harbour vw 5·U-:il07 ; aft .6, 673-1153 01' Dick Miller Motors 4 Wheel drive, gorgeous. condlUoni11g, radio, heater , 586-1067. 120 W. Warner, S.A. (978ASQ) ~·1uTanty n val l a b I e. 18711 Beach Blvd. B42-4'13S '68 V\V '70 eng, ttl!ently 557-2132 BR.AND NEW '74 EL CAMINO CLASSIC FACfORY PRICE $428' OUR PR.ICE $3714 Call MacPlierson Chevrolet 837·2'771 • 492-1157 PONTIAC 197~ LE lr!ANS S po r t Coupe. \.\'on on 1'V ShOW. l.fust sell U<>!. del. thl1 nlO. Best ofter takes! 493-652) Autos, Used 990 By Private Ch\'Yll'r Good Trensportalion ·59 Plymouth 4dr. 6, auto, runs great. $125. '6.1 Mail Delivery Van 3 wheeler, 40n1ph. l'1ns good, great for school, beach or delivery, $125 , '69 Dodge Coronel hanltop f vlnyi roof, gold. 318, auto, air, pis, !KIM mt, $750. 962-3!!76 A good want ad·'• " good L,. vestment. See the new Oat1un 8-21 Os I Hatchbeck, 2-Door Seden and 4-0oor Sadan I soon. Three fine examples of the 9raat things to come from Datsun '74. 112·~0. UMe.O.'f.L • .,. la '* $ec. o.. !!:Qui-I: 4 -· olr, moo1. AM /FM r<>dlo. tic. $1795 t40IGJU) 1-IUNTJNGTON BEACH rcbli, very good cond. $1099 '72 VOLVO l42E. aulo, lo $2888 e 61 VW VAN • or bes! olr. 494-98()<1 , ml, $3300 only 8 mo. old, • Need a .. Pad .. ? Place an ad! 548-3503 ---~----==I DOT D~TSUN Oean & runs good with s . 7-='-==o-----= 9IO , 18835 Beach Blvd. BAUER BUICK ·71 . rebuilt engine, cori Autos, New 980 Autos, New 980 Autos, Nt'411/' • Used Car Specials '64 CHEVROLET PICKU~ All OrJQll'lol. LI~• New. I C'IO OJ'l!ii I $695 low Mllff. A11ta. T11pe s 199 Dae•. Mot•· lodlots. 1415 IL51 '71 VW BUG AM/fM Ster-. Ne• Radltd Tirn. 1551 DJll s1795 '73 FORD J,i TON PICKUP s2995 '70 TOYO TA LANDCRUISER 4 Wlteel Dri.,., 911r.,..111. 1971 ASQJ $2795 DOT DATSUN 18835 BEACH BLVD., HUllTINGTON .BEACH 540-0442 842-7781 ~42 842·7781 29:25 Ha1·bor Blvd hcndlinC'r, corpcts, panC'led · AJ\l/fM with tape, anc; '70 COROLLA Cos1a Mesa 979-2500 other extras! i /~.~~~~~) 2·door \\'ith lots of l * '68 YW FASTBACK .!~. ~:n. :~~ $1300 J Hndio, 11 llC'C'I trim dnc:s. shape insidt-. & OUI. 1600 I BC'iiul iful rond. (XDZ-lMJ CC, rebll cng & tru n~, I 119-i,\on, ! Harb$o109ur5 VW ~1;;~e:~~~;~:aker 1 'G8 V\V Ault>, reblt eng. New tires. ~lus1 s c 11 im· mediately. $700 01· best of- 1972 TOYOTA CELICA ; 18<tl ll<'och Bh'<I. '12->4l5 c'1~::a"';'~ vw, ..,, rool. ; HUNTINGTON BEACH an1/fm stereo, pressu1·e ~ l'Y I., 4 spf'cd. radio, hC'ater, 'li6 SQBK, xln! cond, $395 v.·ater, bed, 1>lnk, ice bx. vinyl root, side n1ldgs. A 493-4503 ask for Tom, eves $2850. 830-2785. "'al "'$'267i.i1oELU\ 8.12--~; vw CAMPE•• * '65 vw Bus* Rebuilt engine, new tires Sl.l50 CAii: 552-7913 h1echanically OK, needs body · "t.oic. lroii& VW BUS w"k. <UDE-5781 - TOYOTA Good "'""'"'"· .... !47s $595 'TI V\V 4ll auto. radio, lo , C<t!I 842-2436 . mi. xi•• "'"· """• !1995 Harbour VW 1966 llarOOr, C.i'll. 616·930.1 ·12 COROL'\. '"~. 4 d" *Cl..EIA!l6N9 V\V Bug, xtra 187 . u """" • , xh1t running cnr, 11 Beach Blvd. 842-4435 st>dan raet :1i1·. l'lltlio. sti<.·k. ' xlnr 1ilvs $1350. ~7-8151 HUNTINGTON BEACH 10.000 n1i. CIC'an. :?nd car~ SJ~. 71 1: 9.:;:,:.4011 . 1!172 COR.01.L\ ,·""l"iC-11 -~~11~,,. lrade for V1111 , or pickup I sl~le <."ar. 12'i A6ale, lialboa Island. 6T;t-JJl3 * 1968 V\\', sunroof * '71 V\V Bus, 1 pai;s, lo n1i, S72j, or hl'sl offer S:Z.100 Fil"nl 49.i-152!) art 6 or ll'knds. * 5-ls--O::i42 • '60 \1\V \1·indo\v \'nn l.500cc '69 V\V Cain(JC'r. Nu dnis, Pnginl'.'. Full Luggage Rack crpt, major O\'erhflul, good !~--~----~~-~-----~--~------! f ·~ ···'·'l'c1 1\n.; . . M2·5S7li $a..'JO ph 646...fi054 lircs. Sl.850. 642...3413 ·Motor Home:a. Motor Homes Motor Homes I Motor Homes I Motor Homes '68 V\V 42,000 n11\es on rcblt cng, A-1 n1e1:hanlcal cond. 940 $900 494-5638 Sale/Rent 940 Sale/ Rent 940 Sale/ Rent 940 Sale/Rent 940 1 Sale/Rent 1 ~--------------~ THE SEARCH IS OVER! '71 VW Bus, $1 ,950 Call art. Spm, &12.0S."17 '70 V\V. Ai\.1-FM radio. GOOll conrl. SUOO. Also Free-kit· tens. cau 5.'\6-4682. 1973 LINCOLN CONTINENTAL TOWN COUPE Explorer of Huntington Beach announces the··· expansion of their SERVICE DEPT. to service all makes and models of Recreation Vehicles. OUR EXPERTS WILL BE HAPPY TO SOLVE '71 V\V F11stback, auto. 11ir, new brakes, xlnt rond below 11•hlsale, pvt ply. 6T.Hl666 '7:l Sqback. Orange, black in- tf'r, l>('rlcct. $3000. firn1 . 546--6'.!61 Fully Factory Equipped, Executiv e Demo. ! Stk. # 1324 ) YOUR RV SERVICE PROBLEMS-CALL NOW! ON ALL '73s IMMED. DELIVERY --__ ':'!'!......---- NEW 74 NEWPORTER SAN SIMEON CONVUISION Equipped wirh bubble top, Dodgt chassis, V·8, automal •C & much more. (Ser. #J6'712S350) * t.arr1st Slltctiol Anywhtn '73 EXPLORER 20' FULLY SELF CONTAINED _,,.. stove, ove", shower, toilet, ti"led glass, overhNd bunk, wi"dshield curta in, on a l Ton Do<%1e ch1uis. hose & carrier plus much more. (2607n $91.77 MON1'M NEW '73 VIVA MINI MOTOR NOMI Ml' IN" tolfl'MO. .. ,..., -· ............ ~ •• 1 ............... -.c-. . $90.1 S MOHTM ' $6295 "' .. -,,.,. ........ ~h!Cl.19•.l.ll-lo~.7t .• ~ .,_., ,..Ice 1• $no2.SS. A~-1 ......,_ -11 ttMS· 0..,.,..... ....... * Coqilete Senlcl Facilities '72 \r\\' Bllf/:. Xlnl rond 17.000 n1 iles. Yel1011• $2100. Fin11. W>-IT."il '71 VW DELUXE BUS i l.ik1• 11('11• !!\Sll-CBS1 82495 Harbour VW '74 COMET LEASE 18711 Beach Blvd . R~2-413j l!Uf'."TI NGTON BEACI! Cl.AS..;;IFIED ... , ..• t)42...5678 Autos, lmportea · 970 See Us First! / READY FOR IMMEDIATE DELIVERY BRAND NEW '73 DATSUN PBCKUP 4-speed, white sidewall tire1, tinted gl•ss, heeter, power a1 1i1t breke1, & up to 25 mile per gallon of gasl ~65450 ua.oseo suNDAYJ • ., ., ' ,. ' "'--------990;,.; Autos, Used '10 BUlCK Vf\kkat, 2. ldr, 990 Auto1. Ust0 air. t ltct w:lndowt, only 0,000 ml It: clea11, $119.\. '10 OLDS C u 1 ll a 1 con- ytttible. Alr It ~ Wll)o 4oW1, ~ra nl(.-e, Sllm. •• OLDS Dell& II con-vttt.lble, K/c, real nkc car, 11195. '611 Ou'Yalcr New Yorkeit, t dr, run power, air, &:ood """'· 1495. Deller &e-0281 BUICK YOUR FACTORY AUTHORIZED CHEVROLET DEALER SERVING THE ENTIRE HARBOR AREA FOR OVER 13 YEARS Try Our Newest at Connell Chevrolet --- .. Lease the "CONNELLEASE"'Way SH Jarry Perkins, Leasing Menager ' WE'RE LOADED WITH BRAND NEW 1974 CHEVY ¥2. TON PICKUP FLEETS!'OE fllSTl (1107571 $2799 ALL SERVICED AND READY TO GO TODAY IMMEDIATE DELIVERY .. f.• BRAND·; NEW " -• . . BUSINESS IS SO GOOD AT CONNELL'S THAT WE'R~ , .. , R.ECEIVlNG .. EXJRA SHIPMENTS OF 1974 . CHEVROLlT.Sl .. -. YOU DON'T NEED TO "ORDER YoURS TODAY" AT CONNELL. DRIVE YOURS HOME TODAY ) ' . FINAL ·1973 DEMONSTRATOR SALE! -. ? .. CAPRICE 4 DR. S4693 47 MONTE CARLO $479500 '(1248) 1200473 ) Electric Sun Roof. (108) Mlt. CONMElL'S CAii (44 1573)MA:S, CONN£LL'S CAii -, ,}~73 . CAPRICE 4 DOOR ¥· ..... ABSO~,,T~I. Y LOAl)ED! ,217074) • . VEGA G.l;. s259900 IMPAl.A CUSTOM Sl67700 I Loaded. (20~) (118619) . 111~~4103651) co·iJHTEO' ··12 5 ·0 IMPALA 2 DOOR S377266 CAPRICE 2 DOOR (121) (104511) (775) 164956) DIS OFF FACT. WINDOW STICKIR PRIC~ •73 CHEVY 11 NOVA · 6,440 mll<'S, 6 c}I., automatic, po\\·er steering, fa ctory ~ty. (~HY~l l '73 VEGA HATCHIACK 9,i93 milf'S. N1•w car warranty. Radio, 3 s1>e<.'CI. auton1ntic. (l83GXPl '72 VlliA HATCHIACK GT Courie. Fresh car. 4 1peed. " radio. (267EMZl '72 VEGA WAGON Autotnai.ic, 1:1.lr cond., radio, 20,000 n1llcs. Real clcu11. 1574F'FHJ '72 VEGA WAGON GT 3 sµecd auto. tran.~ .. radio, air l'tlnd., nice. l 706GVR) '72 VIGA PANEL 23.000 miles. 3 Jpred automatic, radio, aux. seat. (072FNll '11 IMPALA COUPE \Vholalale. P.S .. P.I ., (luto., air, vinyl roor. 31,000 mill's. l elly ,,·holesale S:l275. . . . ". . •. 52199 ' TRUCK'S '72 EL CAMINO SALE PRICED VI, .1,, P.S., •vto., 21.42 7 milei. R1dio. 15ll"•11C I '73 RANCHERO SALE PRICED VI, 1uto., P.S., t ,l7J mil•1. R•dio. 17151) '71 GMC 'I• TON SALE PRICED 4 wh•1l driw•, rtdio, 1ulo., P.S .. ll b25 1 --------'70 CHEVY 1/2 TON $1599 Pi~•up. V8 , '!'"~• r~dio, !71b41E ) -~~-----~------~~~-~--'69 EL CAMINO $2199 VI , P.S., •ulo., 39,000 mi. Sp1ci•I p1 i"t. ! lb500E) '64 CHEV. 1h TON $999 Pitk.,p. VI , •uto., r1dio, good one. !PI S814 1 '70 FORD 1 TON $2799 R•frig•r•l•d w•!'I. V8, 1titk. (621011 '73 EL CAMINO $2999 12,000 '";·VI, P.S.,) 1p••d. (14SHOCI THERE'S MORE TOO! .. '10 CHrYT II NOVA S.S. 3!50 VS, P.S .. air cond .. 4 speed. Really nice one. C480BEQI '69 CAPRICE WAGON 9 pass. 40.000 miles. Air , P.S., P.B., P-v.·indov.•s, P-s!'als, roof rack. On~ r iu'<.::(u! Ov.'nt'I'. 1772ALN1 '69 CHEVY II Cour~. Sm11.ll \18. aut•1 .. P.S., '17,CXXI rnill'!>. Heally nice. IZl\i\1092! '67 MALIBU 4 DR. SEDAN Sn1all VS, P.S .. radio. Little uli'.' lady car. CFFJ975) '12 DATSUN PICKUP Air condltlonin~. 4 sl)C'Cd. l'l\dio, 2G,OOO miles. Superior cond. {270ETD) '72 IMPALA 4 DR. H.T. 24,500 rniles, ~· ga.s V8. auto .. viqyl roof, P.S.&B .. Air cond., Suprr1or car. {<0a1DVV ~ ; '65 CAD. COUPE DE VILLE FuU powt'r, air conil. Cnrrfu\ O\\'m!r. Yo111hou\d see It. (NHE970! s4099oo FALCON '72 OLDS 98. Load('d, like ~ '65 RANOIO, 81.'C()nd ~ner, nrw. Yl·Jloy,·/blul'k i n t . ii auto, rt'<X'nl \•alve )Ob & Vinvl roof. Stereo.. FUll •I ~2wo1·k, nu I Ire 5 · po11:cr. $4199. 121314.1l-9;a'J • ._ ---~~=---1971 OLDS Toronado, all tbit , FORD goocli{'«, sierro & so forth. Jo 111ilcagc, 979-<1809 1972 FORD i-~1-91=1 ~-• MUSTANG H.T. V-8. auto. tn1.ns., JJO\\Cf s\('('r· i11g:, rarlio. heal<'r, spec. \Vheela. 16,000 orig. 111i!cs. !87'.?GIOI $2777.00 al)Wt le.wiA W TOYOTA TORONADO l Ycllo v.•/1,1·hitC' vi nyl ; top/bronzr ca p csrry in-~ tel'ior. lull pOV.'l'I'. factory , air t."011dllio111ui.;, l1l1, stereo, 1 dunl lro111 i<rat. loaded, • At.1/Fi\t i;1c1·00 n1ultiplex. ~ t325CX DJ SALE PRICE $3222 Nabers Cadillac · · A\fl'HORIZED OEAU.:R 2600 HARBOR BLVD COSTA P.tESA 1,.~ Harbor, C.M. 646-9303 5.W-9100 Open Sunday , · *'64 FALCON* PINTO 2 door Hardtop, G cy1, 4 speed .. Clean a.<; a top. New 1971 FORD PINTO "'" ILMA-9.tll RUNABOUT Harbour VW 4 cyl., 4-spced, vinyl roof, 18711 &>ach Bh·rl. 842-4435 n1ag \lih'Cls (702DJA l HUNTINGTON 88'\Cll $15.77.00 '64 Fairlane, 4 dr. 6 c,·I. Right d1·. dnn1agt>d, 48.cioo mi. Runs perfectly. New ftlt•u L•rO:• \ rnd1n1or ,r;, l>11llrry. $100. 51'.'f' ....... WllO '" Sp. 33. Thi' """'""'"· VOLVO 1!19! Nr11·1>0r!, Cl\! . 1967 ,FORD Custom 500. .J dr. V-11, a/c, good flf't!_ll. 1966 Harbor, C.\1. ti~G-9303 holly. Ens. etc. $ 4 9 ;i , 5."17-..123'9 · 1971 PINTO. f\ u to ma t I c , l96.l FORD Fairlane SOO. Custonl illtC>rior. blac_k vin- $199 \\'Ill l•k• yl r o o I. Low nnleq:e. . car or 5~.l(..Qj 76 n101orcyclc in t rad c. --------- &12-l'lSl. PLYMOUTH '10 LTD. Xlnt cond.,l---------·I a~nd. Original owner. II.ID! Call 543--3200 1967 PLYMOUTH ft1 FQRD L '1'1.J,. 16 mU~ge very rlean. A/c, 8.f6..-0i08 ff T CP£ alt ,,oo , • 1969 LTD G:>untry Squire wgn. lo ml.; air, new tires, V·S, aulo. !rans .. factory air xlnf. '-ond. 64.J-6607 ah. 5. ('01Klition1ng, po11"Pr s1C'Ctina. '70 FORD XL. Excellent 1"011-l'llly\ roof. HJJF'AA41 diHon. J..0111 mileage. $1800. $877 Private party. 846-6932. 1966 Fon! °'"'· Good ooo· ~lOlt Lei.Ill&' • · dilion $a95 f.'lrm. 831-2857 ... F'ORDi.Ga\>XI•, )!lot "'"" VOLVO rehuilt m<Jtor $.100 543-.1187 1996 Harbor, C.M. 646-9303 CLEAN '67 Fol'd Gal>u<io >JO. ,72 PLYMOUTH 67.000 n11. $000. 644-6238 JEEP GOLD OUSTER WlU.Y'S JEEP, l 9 6 1 +-whee.I ~ve-6 cyl: reblt. 6 cylindf'r, auton1Rtic, po~·er eng. New tires, radio. ~nt stet'ring, vinyl top, custom contl. Ideal for camping, inlrrior, 16.000 111 I I es . fishing: or dune buggy. l954FTDJ Financing avai la ble . $2799 it-d-7701. * ft JJ::J::P, 4 \\'hc<'l drive. Xlnl rond. I.At" of extras! Low mileage. 548-5349. LINCOLN BAUER BUICK 29Zi 1-larbor Vlvd. Cosla 1'1eu 979-2500 '73 ~ATEl...L!Tt.: \\'a i ., n-<'Ond, a/trans. 1'1 11 , $71 QJn11ncntal A-fark Ill. p11T/disr.-. rack, 0l'luxe ch o co J ate brown R.egt>nt T1in1, 1600 n1i. Musl \\'llTiatchlnq Jca!hcr int. Sac. $3,99;) 642-7474 or Xln! cond, loaded, $559()., 548-3667 evrs. 49.1-979!1. r-.tusl st'e I o '66 SPORTS Fur~. Nn t!re1, _!lflJ)l'C'Clatc. slarter n1otor. ha11Cry. $650. SPOTLESS ;111 black 19TI or n1akc o!ler. aft 6, Contin~ntal 1.!nrk lll. Power 5j7-2492 lon1_l<'il. s~rl"f'\J, 1il1·\\hCel lo.1 '1~97~2.-9~. -P-<L-.,-. -s-.,,-_ ~\\-.,-.-.~,..~II tntlrs, $5600 C'ven. 962-3701 power, 15000 uclual rnl, nu MERCURY cond, sell for \\11olcsale Blue Book 552-9656 '64 l\l ercu r y convertible, 1966 PLYMOUTH Fury lII ~ood :lnr! car, radio & 4 dr sedan 11 / c, f'llll power. hl'ater, both "~rk, hu auto Good cond. I o"·ncr S.KXI. tran<1. 64&41447 846-5079, t'Vell ,r,, v.·e<>kC'nda. '72 1\11'.'rc, \\'ai;ion Col Pk. all '56 PLYM. Sia \\'RJi:. NHd5 extrall, lo milet. Like nu. work. $125 '"' bC'st ollt r. Prl. Pl)'. 642-33li Phone 842-11 27. '71 l\IERCURY Colony Park '70 DUSTER, I> cyl. Slltndan:I \\'gn BC'aut concl. Accept floor shift. 198 cu. 1n. ena. M!fl.'IDMhlr n!fer, 540-3218 1"°646--"""""1'=-~-~-- '72 t.1Al{Qt.i1S ,,.RfZ0/1 Full ·n 4Dr. Sil11rl1ll' t•JJJllOm. P" r & air. \'cry clean. p/b. p/5. u1r. 2t000 1nl's. 114-646--257:: Clean. $189.S. 6.o.-0146 ·7:: n1 ·.>::TF:H. \:lnr ~'00•1. l'/S, l'/H, /ur r11nd t>fu.~t -~-------1 •tll. .-~·l(',...~7!17 ]..q&7 1'1UST1\NG, lo1v. milaJ<:e --~,-O~N~T~l-~C---1 390 Cohra J<'I cngin<', C.\· A MUSTANG C't•llen! 111l'('h;init>al ronrli1inn ---------1 throughPuL 1\'c1v ht'llkC's. '69 Cr1111<1 Prix E. L'Oll. 37111 n1ni::s , llrcR, air shocks & NP.iv llrl·!I. shocks, pnt. paint. P.1u11t 11ee to ap. Al\t/FM Stereo 111pe Beaut. prcclate. 545-2083 after 5: 30. int 6'1&-0184 MUSTANG '69 ConverUbte.l'·1"2~PO'°'N"r"1"A"C'°"'G"ra"oa.,."s."1,-n p/1, p/b, radio, 00,® ml. Sllltion Wagtin. Loltded! white 1v/blk top, blk llhr Low-Low mUe11. s uper ~200, can o Cro\\·ell clean! $4400. MJ...31 00. -"''-:+~~~=~-1 '67 Li'~!ANNS 2 DR, l\ulo. OLDSMOBILE '"'-"'""""" c1 ..... on •. ---------I ()\1ncr. 5'19S. 993-.l.100 or '72 DELTA U, 4 fir, full s;u..A-;66 p~T + ale. to 01\1<'~. pvt '"'67'""'"'F"m"EB=1"n"o-3:>;=.~v-.,. ply, likt nu, r c 111 on . llulo !ram, full p<l\\'t"r. Only 644-73U 42,((kl nit. s1r.:i0. 53&-4078 'G.'i J ET.Stal\ g<I ronrt , orig 'fiR FIRl::BIRD. 01'<'rhearl owner, UG. RSl-J<:iJ or con1 6. $$00/bf'!il otle.r. An· 891~240. Ill', 6n.-ti70S, &1~-.11:i6. 19611 OT~DS LS. 4 dr -"<"Inn, ·s,~ PO!\'TIAC, Mlnl cond. vlnyl lop, po11T, a;lr, xtr11A. $850. 57~ll1. ur ll<'-t offrr. 493-91 r1 f'al1 illike, 642-ti024 } OlJ)S Toront1rlo 'fili. 11lr ('one\. '1>4 LI:: Ptlans, 2dr, buck,.t xlnt n1locil. 1111 power 5TJO. !IC'11ts, V-8, &hfll'P !Midi &: ff75.-<YJ30 prlv ply OUL $395. Prl pty ll68-.3S7T 1 . SurldlJ, Oct*" 21. 1973 I \,... ... . . . COURTESY MOTORHOME • ·HOUSEKEEPING KIT! A $200 value No need to furnish your new Motor Home . with left-overs KIT 'INCLUDES: Dishware (service for 81, Cook-re (7 pc. ensemble), Flatware (service for 81. Drawer organizer (for flatware), Electric coffee maker, Toaster 12 slice), Cutlery (5 pc. kitchen setl, Beverage glasses het of 61, Sheets (1 double, 2 twin), Pillows (41, Pillow cases 141 , Towels 14 each of bath , hand, wash cloths I, Blankets 11 double, 2 twin l. · \ GIVEN WITH EVERY MOTORHOME SOLD THIS W·E.EK! NEW 20' ROADLINER MOTORHOME by REDMAN DODGE VB ENGINE• AU .TOMATIC s TRANSMISSION • POWER STEERING • POWER BRAKES • LOADED WITH COM· FORT FEATURES. I #520300443 I $1 10 i1 tottl d". pyont. $101 .IS i1 tot.I mo. pyml. i11ct. t••. lictn1t I 111 ctrryi,.9 coh1r9t1 on tppr. crt dit for 14 mo1. Dtftrrtd pyont . prkt $99•4 ind. t11 I l ictn1t. ANNUAL PERCENTAGE RATE 12.22 'f, IMMEDIATE DELIVERY . -. ' ~ BRAND NEW BRAND NEW 28' ROADLINER MOTORHOME by REDMAN 520300445 GAS and PROPANE I\ POWER By ~OURTES~ ~.,,, s· . 1 20' FLING MOTO RHOME by REDMAN GAS and PROPANE POWER by COURTESY s #20520818 IMMEDIATE DELIVERY Phone for FREE CREDIT CHECK: 645-8321 1971 NQ~D , 21' TRAVEL TRAILER COMPLETE LY SELF CONTAINED. SIH P• '6, l•rgo b.lth & shower, oven, refi'ig. & frHier, r•n9..oven. ~ER MONTH Ce1t. price $2297.40. $400 i1 totel dn. pyml. $44.95 i1 tolel mo. pymt. i11cl. te .. , licen1e I ell c•rrving cll•r911 on 1ppr. credit for 60 mo1 . 01f1rf1d pymt. pric:1 $1067 incl. I•• I Lic1n11. ANNUAL PERCENTAGE RATE 14.21 % ' •HR8760. 1971 DODGE % TON PICKUP ' -,. ~·· ..... AUTOMATIC TRANSMISSION e POW· s19' . ER STEERING e POWER IRAKES e RA· DIO AND HEATER . l 7001 JK I 1Atl New 19-74 FIELD & . STREAM MOTORHOMES Now Ready For Immediate Delivery 1965 FORD PICKUP WITH CAMPER Shell. 1/2 ton pickup with Air Conditioning, radio & heater. ( R7 I 3112) 5 988 ·~~~~E . ' . ,' . •• ·:ALL REMAINING . 1·973 .PONTIACS PRICED . . . ' .AT ACTUAL FACTORY INVOICE COST! ' . . Over · 80 .Brand New 1973 Pontia.cs .. ' .· ... ~ · Must -Be Sold Before November . 1st. •,' ACT NOW BEFORE ;'II'.S TO·O LATE! . · .. '~WE'LL . SHOW YOU ·THE · . · _FACTORY INVOICE'' --THAT'S WHAT ... i . . YOQ P.JY ._.__ :NO -M~JIE ~-~NO: l:ESS. HURRY! ! ! ; I ,~. 1974 PONTI.ACS ~ NOW *fiERE FOR ~DELIVERY TOltAY. 1 I . , " ~ . .. . ~ , . ~BU¥ ·o LEASE FROM:~~ PONTIAC . • ASK ABOUT OUR MONEY BACK 'LEASE PLAN • •• ' • ·,. ~ ; l • ( • \ '· . r -~f.fllANGING JO 1 FIT YOUR--BUDGET • '69 MERCURY '69 PONTIAC '71 OLDS '70 GRAND PRIX " c ·ouGAR STATfON WAGON CUTLASS VI, tape player, mag wheels, wide ovel raised va. •utomatic, radio, heater, power st•erlng, VI, automatic, radio, heater, air c;ond., P.S., P.B., V8, automatic, radio, heater, power steering f. P-windows, tilt wheel. I 121AGAJ letter tires. IYQVl<t7) power brakes, air conditioning. lb80GOEl brekes, Vi{lyl top, air conditioning. 1271 CKQ J . 5 775 51895 52095 52195 '70 PONTIAC '71 CHEVROLET '71 BUICK '73 CHEVROLET . TRANS AM CAMARO RIVIERA LUY PICKUP Vt, '4 1pe.d, r•dfo, heater, power 1t•erin9, power . ~f>ktt, l•p• dock. I !.98A YLI . Vii •ufo., •ir cond., vinyl top, r•dio, he•ter, ;we..- steering & brak•s, r•lly 9u•g• clu1t•r. 1940 NA) VS , •otom•tic, •ir cond., vinyl top, power steer- ing I br•lc••, tilt wh•el, /ow mileege. 1222CQT) '4 speed tran1mi11ion, r•dio, h•at•r, low mlle1. S•e to appr•ciate, ll7bHPM I . \ SAVE SA E SAVE SAVE ' ' . • • I.·~~ .. :·, . ' 2840 HARBOR . B.LVD., 'COSTA MESA 546 -8017 :~ OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK 9 A.M . TO 9 P.M. \. .. "• ' ' . ' ' ' . • . ' • . I ' I " ' • . .NEW '74 8-100' "VA~ f 11lly f•ctory Eq 11ipp•d "~ .. I I IAl4X0106t0 . . . 52866 IMMEDIATE DELIVERY TAK·E Y OUR CHOICE '71 VEGA '70 MAVERICK $30 DN. s30 MO. ut " .. , .. .._-"""· .,. i. """ -*'-nm•. ki(I. Il l!, lk-llMll •It ta,,.,.... <Mrwn .. •PPI'. <i:ndlt fw J6 -Tha. ~"'9111 nmt. ,nu II Sn it Ind. Tai., ANN, f'E•T. ltAT• 1~ FREE CREDIT CH EC K Phone 557 -9220 and save younelf some money If you ore new 11 CaRfonlkl e If you owe on your car .e If you are new on your job e If you ltave little or no aedlt e Drtwe ltome today In tfle CAii of yow dtofce. Exampl" of our nte11y · ways to fiftClftce: Crocker ._. e · U•ioft '-k , •· Secwity Padflc e lank of America e United Caflfonlla ._ ... k e .'' Chry•ltr Credit e Fireside Tltrl~ . 100% FINANCI NG AVAILABLE ON APPROVED CREDIT I :·1RAN ~ 'NEW . ' '7 4 DODGE 1/2 TON FuRy f•ctory E,quipped $2566 OIDH TODAY NEW '7 4 DODGE 5.TATION WAGON ORDER TODAY GALAXIE ' • H~ cw"' ltlr c•lll., llOwtr 1tfff'iftt. flllt.. .... 111., rMle, llNtw, etc.. (IJIAYS) I 7 0 CHEY. NOYA C..,.. SM W, 4 ...... .. 1nr1 roof, (7)SDNY} '7 ' ' EW. I . ~74.' CHA RGlR r:r . -:*"·, 'Y - ) '"-~.,~ '. ,; LOADED: VI ENGINE, .AUTOM.I\ TIC ' ' ' • Tll.AHSMISSION. • · ·" . ;. ·\ 'Z86. 6 l::. ·, ~ --.. . . .... " • ,OIDli TODAY '69 CHEvloi.h . : lmp11la Coupe VI, 1111111..,, vilt)'I l11ttf!W, ............... C1'CIM1l I ... ' ' '\ '· ' ... ~ ... COSTA MESA SADOLEBACK LAGUNA BEACH HUNTINGTON BEACH NEWPORT BEACH FOUNTAIN VALLEY IRVINE SAN CLEMENTE WEEK OF OCT. 21 · OCT. 27 AMERICAN MOTORS Ward S. Lee Inc. 1234 S. Main St., Santa Ana 547-5826 FORD Dunton Ford 224'0 So. Main St., Senta Ana 54'6-7070 Theodore Robins Ford 2060 Harbor Btvd., Coste Mew Roy Carver Inc. 642-00 I 0 234 E. 17th St .• Costa Mew 1 Wilson Ford 546--4444 18255 Beach Blvd., Crevier Motors Huntington Beach 142-6611 208 W . 1st St., Santa Ana 835-3171 BUICK Bauer Buick -2925 Harbor Costa Mew 979-2500 CADILLAC ~eben Cadntac 600 Harbor Blvd., Costa Mesa '40-9100 CHEVROLET Connell Chevrolet 2828 Harbor Blvd., Coste Mesa 546-1200 DATSUN Dot Datsun 18835 Beach Blvd., Huntington-Beach 842-7781 DODGE Courtesy Dodge 2888 Harbor Bfvd., Costa Mesa 557-9220 'University Oldsmobile 2850 Harbor Bfvd., Costa Mesa 540-9640 JAGUAR Bauer Buick -2925 Harbor Costa Mew 979-2500 LINCOLN -MERCURY Gudefson Linc/Mere 16800 Beach Blvd., Huntington Be•ch .842-8844 Santa Ana Lincc>ln-Mercury 130 I No. Tustin, Santa An• 547-0511 Connell Chevrolet 2828 Harbor Blvd., Costa Mesa 5'46-1200 OLDSMOBI LE University Oldsmobile . 2850 Harbor Blvd., Costa Mesa 540-9640 THE DAILY PILOT, TV WElK. OCTOBER 21, 1973 OPEL Bauer Buick -2925 Harbor Cost• Mesa 979-2500 PONTIAC O.ve Ross Ponti1c 2480 Harbor Blvd., Coste Mesa S.ff>.8017 PORSCHE. AUDI Chic• Iverson Ponche-Audi .f45 E. Co.st Hwy. Newp0rt leech 67J.()9()0 Roy Carver 1.nc. 214 E. 17th St. Cnst• Me1a ™-44it4 TOYOTA . O.an Lewis Imports 1966 ~arbor Blvd., Costa Mesa 646-9101 VOLKSWAGEN Chick Iverson V olrswagen 445 E.Co.st Hwy. N 1673-0900 ... VOLVO Dee.. Lewia lmPoth 1966Hnor llvcl., C0tt1 M_.. 646-f JOJ l 1 1 l l l 1· :''l;"''Wl<0«'~,~' : '.~~\Ii !PORT! Hlt1Hllt1/IT! ... ~ :~::J.:$. .. ~~x~~-··*' SUNDAY, OCTOBER 21 7:00AM ~-Gramblirut College Football 9:30 9 Pro Football St. Louis vs. Wa shington. 10:00 0 (I) ®) World Series Baseball/Pro Football Tfle 7th game is scheduled as is a Pro Football game between the Pittsburgh Steelers and the New York Jets. 12:30 I ~ Pro Football New Orleans vs. San Francisco. Pro Football Green Bay vs. Los Angeles. 1:00 · Cil (Jg) Pro Football If the 7th World Series game is not played a Pro Football game between Kansas City and Cincin· nati will air at this time. 4:001 USC Football USC vs. Univ. of Oregon. @ 00 College Football '73 10:00 · Q) Cil (1Q) NBC Reports "The Long Winter of Henry Aaron" 12:00 Grambling College Football MONDAY, OCTOBER 22 6:00PM 0 @ CV Monday Night Pro Football Oakland Raiders vs. Denver Broncos. TUESDAY, OCTOBER 23 6:00P~ 0 9 4jcers Basketball Lakers vs. Houston Rockets. THURSDAY, OCTOBER 25 8:30PM ID Boxing From the Olympic FRIDAY, OCTOBER 26 B:OOPM @ Pro Basketball Warriors vs. Seattle. SATURDAY, OCTOBER 27 10:30AM 0 (ii) (j) NCAA Football USC vs. Notre Dame. 11:00 II ~ Ci) ffBA Basketball Buffalo vs. Cleveland. 12:30 0 Sports Special USA/USSR Junior Track & Field Champion· ships and the U.S. National Roller Skat ing Championships. 1:30 II ~ 00 The Jockey Gold Cup A 2 mile added $100,000 event from Aqueduct Race Track, Queens, New York. 5:00 I (i1) CV ABC's Wide World of Sports • Rams Coaches Show 7:00 • Rams Hlghlights 7 :30 6 Boxing From the Olympic 11:00 USC Football USC vs. Notre Dame. K•at .. Kratt Re .. llell .. •~e•tera OFFICE: 406 32nd ST., NEWPORT BEACH THE OAILY PILOT. lV WEEK, OCTOBER 21, 1973 •srYUSH •EASY TO USE 1000 •ORDER FOR YOURSELF OR A FRIEND SHAPE AND SIZE OF LABEL Mrs. John Doe 123 Main Street Anylown. Anyalat e 123<65 Labels Do Mot Have A Printed Border Styli1h Vogue type on fine quality white gummed p aper, r---------------------, Fill in this coupon. clip and mail with $1.25 to: Pilot Printing l abel D iv., Post Office Box 1 560 Costa Meu, Californla 92626 le Sur• to UM your Zip Cod• ---14''·''''"'"'ri---L _____________________ J Page 3 "The Return of the Phoenix, " a one-hour Chinese musical fantasy adaptation bas.d on a Peking op1ra of the sams nam1 which r1c1ntly won critical acclaim oH- Broadway, airs as a CBS Special, Satur- day, (Oct. 2 7) at 2PM. Tisa Chang, a young Chin1s11-American, adapted the story, a fairy tali with a Cinderella quality that tells of a beaut11ul girl, her ugly stepsister, a contract of marriage, mis- taken identity and plot complications that resolv1 in a comedy of errors. Produc1d in New York, th1 adaptation is snactsd -by th1 original cast, 11 troupe of-Ch·1-· _ _.__ ness-American p1rformers, some of whom trained with the lamed Peking Opsra Company. Opryland USA takes the spotlight again as Petula Clark and T11nness111 Ernis Ford host, with Wayne N11wton (pictur1d), Carol lawrsnce and Melbe Moor1 as spscial guBSts for "Opryland USA: The American Music Scene" on NBC, Mon- day at 8PM. Taped entirely Ofl location at Nashville 's Opryland, the special f 11Btures the stars singing songs encompassing the richly div11rs11 American musical heritage of the past and pr11S1nt. There will b11 old favorit11s 116 well as cont11mporary bits psrform11d on a showboat cruising down the Cumb11rland River, on the wat11rfront and aboard a railroad 11xcursion train. Thi Opryland Sing11rs, tbs Nashvill1 Symphony Orchestra and the Tom Hans11n Dancers are f11Btursd. THE DAILY PILOT. TV WEEK, OCTOBER 21. 1973 REGULAR DAYTIME PROGRAMS MORNING 6:00 (IJ Sunrise Semester Knowledee Features University of the Air 6:25 Not for Women Onl, 6:30 Odysse, Daybreak I Educational features • Qg) G1mer Ted Armstron1 New Zoo Revue I Fum Report/£Jlecutlve futures 6:45 Commod~· Report 7:00 @ ~ 8 News I (!) m Toda1 Show Cartoons · features Nanny and the Professor M1rket Openln1 : Sesame Street · Market/Business/ J1ek Anderson 7:30 The Gallery 6 Bozo's Big Top News Skip 'n Woofer • News/Dow 30 Rnlew 8:00 Qi Captain Kangaroo lick La bnne 6 leave It to Beaver Ralph Story's AM Sunup Mel t<noepp PiHnne Dennis the Menace l @ Public S.Nice Stocll £Jlch1nie Bozo's Bia Top : Educational futures • Motiv1tors/Fin1nce/Sport1 8:30 Features Ouie and Harriet News Yo&i ind friends Gumb1 (}'} New Zoo Revue the Bible Lesson : Yoga lor Health · Weather/The Wist Bu,er 9:00 Cl) The Joker's Wiid : Sesame Street (i) @) m Dln1h's Place Feitures L-~~~~e.,::.::e~n Cisey Bruce Brown T1lks To ••• I Love Lucy; Children's Movie: ( ) "Jldt frost" Mon. I Tennuse1 Tuxedo [3) Movie: See Daytime Movies Trlvel a. Leisure /Rell Estate 9:30 Q?' a The $10,000 Pyr1mid I ~ mB1ffle Movie: See Daytime Movies. Grun Acres Except Mon. Romper Room ObstN1tlon/ Mon1t1r, Report/ Aeroi1ce Tod11 10:00 = 8 G1mbit ovi e: See Daytime Movies. Ci) @) m The Wlmd of Odds Run for Your lilt The Real McCo1s Andy Griffith Show Except Mon. Bozo's Big Top Stock bch1ng1 700 Club : Educatlon1l Progr1mmln1 1 Retallers/£coloo & Environment 10:15 uh 1111 Denny Show 10:30 (I) love or Lire @ (JQ)€t)Holl1w ood Squeres 0 Philbin l Co. .m That Gir1; Children's Sped1I "The Emperor's New Clothes'· Mon. I City Kids Stock Ellchanee Susan Stattord/B1nll & Ins/Good Earth m News/Pandoram1 def Ville 10:50 @ @ Joe Baratta Health Show 11:00 O Qt; (I) The Youn& and the Rest. less . Q} @ @) m Jeopard, 6 The Fugitive The F11ine Nun Except Mon. futures 1 rn Living E..51 : The Electric Comp1n1 · News/Probe/Market Upd1te · Li1rs' Club 11:30 0 ~ (i1 Search lor Tomorrow O IU@c@ m Wh o, Whit, Where G1me @ (3) W The Brad1 Bunch Let'sRap I Gene Aut_!! Mister Rogert' Nel&hborhood Sports/People in the News AFTEF?NOO"l 12:00 I Noontime · m Three on I M1kh Movies: See Daytime Movies. 6 Hazel @ @ m Pmword I 0 ®) m I!) @ Ci) News Tennessee TUHdo ~features (!) Ann Gutcher Show News/Call NEWSlELEVISION 12:30 O ~Ci) As the Wor1d Turns O ~@®J mD•1 s o r Our Lives I Truth or Consequences @ (J) (if) Split Second Make Room for Daddy Movie: See DaY1ime Movies Diallnf for Dollars Not for Women OnlJ 1 :1 ~ a1 ~ ~diiJ. Light · 1U-. · J)octors 6 ~hine You ~n Do (ll') (J) (E All MJ Children • Movie: See Daytime Movies. 1.2§ Phil Donahue Show EI1) Education1I Pro1111mmln& 1 :30 I ~ ~e of Nleht · ~ 6 O_QJ m Another Wor1d 6 Mike Dol!I!u Show I @ (J) W Let's Make a Deel G1lloplne Gourmet Commodity Report Up Front & Backstaee/Sound Off 2:00 O ~ 00 The New Price Is Ri&ht O fR@@®J mReturn to Peyton Place I @@ (E The Newlywed Game Pettlco1t Junction futures Bee Une/Financi1I Week 2:30 I I~ Match G1me '73 , 6 @ (\O} m Somerset a> The Gfrl In My Life f11tures : Educational Pr111rammln1 · Sports/Prollle on Business 2:40 m Ben Hunter lnteNiews l:OO O ~ Ci) The Secret Storm 0 PREMIUIE Truth or Const· quences Bob Barker hosts i 11 hm' Ji~~rtoons 1 (3) a> General Hospital Movie: See Daytime Movies. Uncle Waldo I C61 'fl!ree on 1 Match Mr. WtZard Beaut, & the Bust 3:30 I The Datine Game · Mike Douglas Show Oule and Harriet Dennis the Menace @ (}) (if) One Life to Live •. Cutoons; Children's Classics: ( ) "Kidia ped" Tues. I @ (j) Cartoons @ ovle: See Daytime Movies. Green Acres m Features C'fiiem1 36 Felix the Cit 4:00 Movie: See Daytime Movies. The Rifleman • Get Smut (17J [3) (E Love American Style • Grib-lb1 G1me m ~rtoons Los Toms I Beverly Hillbillies Sesame Street (j) Tiie Munsters Velo de Novl1 Underdog 4:30 (3) Movie: See Daytime Movies. Ex· cept Mon.: ABC Afterschool Special Wed 0 hther Knows Best (1) The flyfn1 Nun fJ News; ABC Alterschool Speclel :"The 1ttcrelti1>1e. Indelible, Ma&ical, Physical, Mystery Trip" (R) Wed I Flipper Yo&i and friends Betm1n @ Butch's Back Alle1: ABC Af· tersc:hool Special Wed. 11 Love Luq 00 Movie: See Daytime Movies. Wild Wild West Kimba 4:50 m fashion s In Sewing 5:00 · 0 'I9.} News 6 @ Gtlliean's Island 8 Concentration • Luve It to Beaver The Flintstones 17 (V Green Acres Except Wed Natach• Star Trek : Mister Roiers' Neighborhood · El Amor Tiene Cara de Mujer • Western star Theatre • • futures Three Stooges 5:30 ~ New' Mon Twlli&ht Zone; Jerry West Show ues. 6 M11berry RFD (j) 111 (6) ~ News 8ever11 Hillbillies Bewitched I Dream of Junnie 1 (3) The Wor1d Tod1y : The Electric Comp1n1 • Don V.11son's Town Talk Speed Racer The Small Car Experts Factory Authorized Saies -Service -Parts Good Selection of Used Cars Personalized Lease Plan DOT DATSUN 5 rn in. S. of the San Diego Frvv y. 18835 BEACH BLVD. HUNTINGTON BEACH 842. 7781 540. 0442 Pagr 5 SUND4Y OCTOBER 21 MORNING 10:30 I Face the Nation C3J (!i) The Osmonds a Zoor1m1 Reverend Ike 1 {}) Sprin& Sbeet USA Mideast Anatysla m~ Esl1Vld1 Church With 1 Vision 6 Movie: (C) "Mr. lmperlum" 11:00 I Newamakers 6:15 m The Christophen/fhe Bible An· ra) '52 -Barry Sullivan, Lana swers Turner. 6 30 I L u t M Feet ~@m m H.R. Pufnstuf : amp n ° 'I Mov·1e: (C) "Hurricane Smith" • The Chrlstophers 6:45 la"\ Christopher Close.Up (adv) '52 -John Ireland. Yvonne uu OeCarlo. 7:00 The Hair Bear Bunch m Movie: (C) "Good News" (mus) · This Is the Liie '47-June Allyson. Mel Torme. Peter 6 Dakllrl Lawford. 8 Rex Humb1rd (D Church in the Home o Inch Hieh, Private Eye Q.dj First Baptist Church Unit Two m Pant1ll1 Dominica! Cil This la the Life ll:lO 1 Belief Gr1mblln& Colleee footb11f @ CIJ (!i) Make a Wish 7:30 Amuln& Chi n • Movie: "War Hunt'' (dra) '62- , GO Children's action series. John Saxon, Robert Redford. Chaplain of Bourbon Street Biiiy J. Harels o The Addams family Elemenllry News AfTERNOON Smed Hurt/The Christophers 12.00 IC 'tm t 00 Rex Humbard · ommi en 7:45 1 @ Sacred Heart · 3 Colle&e footb•ll '73 8:00 Dusty'• Trethouse I~ Is Written The Jetsons Vision On Cathedr1I of Tomorrow Your Government Today (fi'J (3) It Is Written 1 00. Nobe Dame football Look-U-p and l ive Sunday Celebration Hertld of Truth ffi lnslettt Qi Old Time Gospel Hour 12:30 6 00 Pro football New Orleans vs. Wonderama San Francisco, Revival fires i The Pacesetters 8:30 l ook Up and Live 6 Car Ii Tncll Serendipity (££) Directions Campus Profile News Lamp Unto M'f feet = 00 Pro Footb1ll Green Bay vs. Meetin' Tlme at Calnry Los Angeles. ~ (6) Kathryn ltuhlm1n 1:00 {}) @ (J) Directions ReV. Ike/Joy of llvlnr 0 Qj @ m Pro Foothill If the Town Hill Meetln1 7th game of the World Series is 9:00 C1mer1 Three not played, a Pro football &ame be· Ch1llenfe My Sermon tween Kansas City and Cincinnati li9l CJ) D•'f of Discovery wlll air at this time. Real E5tate Open House 0 'THE KING IS COMING' The Good D•Y Show * Or. Howard C. Estep asks · 00 eiJ .m Or1I Roberts "Did the world begin with o It Is Wntten , Voice of c..1v1ry Adam? 'PROVOCATIVE! m Revival Fires I The Kinr Is Comlna Bob Wells Hour 6 Celebrity Bowlin& 9:15 Problemu f1mll1res (££) Issues Ii Answers 9:30 Toda(s RelleJon • Movie: "Trouble Alona the W1y'' Accion de 11 Comunld1d (ram) '53 -John Wayne. Donna NFL Game of the Week Reed. Or11 Roberts Sports Action Pro-nit Dom Info Oakllri Let There Be Llaht Here Come the Bridea Amuln& Prophedes ReviVll fires Day of Discovery , Tribun1 Publica ~CV Did Tlme Gospel Hour 1:30 @CV lnues ind Answen first Baptlat Church The Eiplorers vemor and the Studenb 6 Roller Games Cl) Pro footb1ll St. Louis vs. Movie: (C) "Kint Solomon's ashineton. Ines" (adv) 'SO-Stewart Granaer, 10:00 IJ Steps to leamlne Deborah Kerr O til Ci) tlOH~ World Se rlu I Meet the Press Baselii117Jirotootball The 7th ireme Biiiy J. Hareis of the Wortd Series Is scheduled, • Wlter Wortd as is a Pro Football aame between 2:00 forum the Pittsburah Steelers and the New Movie: (C) ''The House on Green-Yor~ Jets. Times tentative. apple Road" (mys) '7~hnstopher I Hour of Power George, Janet LP.igh. Home Buyers' Gulde m N1me of the G1me r3l Kid Power Outer Limits W 8 loolts at Lumln& Movie: "f,.ntls Goes to the Movie: "Ptessure Point" (dra) Races (com) '51-0onild O'Connor. -Sidney Poitier, Bobby Darin. ~ (3) Roller fllmu 9 Du l Hur Faltll lor Today EE Muslca y P1labm • Toros Page 6 THE DAILY PILOT, TV WEEK. OCTOBER 21, 1973 ; Wild Wiid Wert 2:30 It's Your World Movie: (C) "llrzan'a Greatest venture" (adv) '59-Gordon Scott. ~ Fires of Evaneellsm J:OO @ Youlh O Movie; "The Champion" (dra) '49-Kirk Doualas, Ruth Roman. m Chiller Q~ Blue Rid&e Quartet m Kippy Coses CE Pentecosbl Temple 3:30 I University Di1lo1ue Hud On (IO l ee Trevino's Golf Movie: "Cattle Drive" (wes) '51 -loel McCrea, Dean Stockwell. @ Rell&ious Town Hall @Ii) lnsieht !lD Dr1I Roberts Special 3:45 ! Greetlnes from Germ1ny 4:00 Medi• "Three to Gel Ready" wo pediatricians and a group of mothers discuss the assertive and sometimes unpredictable three- year·olds. i Real Est1te Report John McKay Show USC Football USC vs. University ol Oregon. @ Movie: "Desert W1r"' (adv) '63 -Peter Baldwin. ~ [f) CV Colle&e footb1ll '73 'Victory 1t Sea Hee Haw ~Ci) Forum @ fcilce of Enn&ellsm I Consultation (j) Sat1rf to Adventure festrnl fllmlc:o This It the life Panorama Latino C1mpus Profile 4:15 Movie: "Merrill's Muauders" @a) '62-Jeff Chandler, Ty Hardin. •:30 IJ Guitar Wortshop Steve Gillette 1uests. und1y ice the N1tlon Movie: "Mrs. P•r•ineton" (dra) • Greer Garson, Walter Pidgeon, f.E Korean V1rlety Hour Q 6 Meet the Press Ci m1Zln1 Prophecies : Blick EJperlence Cl) Challeneina su • Sund1y Movie · Movie: "Suddenly Lnt Summer" Corona Now 5:00 Wortd of Survinl "When Is a Park Nol a Park?" John Forsythe narrates a film tour of Pembroke· ~shire~~a~tion~::;k in Bntaln. Untamed World T e orld at Wu "Alone" (May 1940-May 1941) Britain fiahts on 11ter Dunkrrk; the RAF wins the Battle of Britain. but cannot prevent the Blrtz; and the Nazi force over· runs Yugoslavia. Greece and Crete. ~ Daniel Boone ffi Movie: "Mr Brother Jona· t n" (dr'a) '4&-Michael Dennison. I (6) Passport to Travel Hour of Deliverance Will Street Week Three Stooees S:JO Amertc1n l ife Style "Will Roger!' California Ranch" Ci) Appointment With Destiny "Cor- tez and Montezuma" 0 ALL NEW! ALL FUN! * TODAY: "OVER SEVEN" ON "RAINBOW SUNDAE" 0 Rainbow Sundae "Over Seven" fOplcs Include. Tanya fucker, a 15· year.old country and western star; an 11 -year-old gymnast; the life of a family of youna couaars and a mini·film festival. 00 News (jg) Movie: (C) "Batman" (com) '66 -Adam West, Burt Ward. n Korean Comedy Serial 00 Garner Teel Armstrona Cbarism1 ED Wachineton Week in Review ~ (1) ut Me t1Ut to the MIMI" m Roller Games E VENING 6:00 I) I $rol(1Al-! The Youna Alcoholics (R) An exploration ol the problem of alcoholism among youn11 people. i The Virglni1n m Meet the Press Movie: (C) (2hr) "lndl1n, Fleht· er"' (wes) '55-Kirk Douglas, Walter Matthau. Cl) I sp1(1Al I 'Voya&e to the Sea of Ice B Movie: (90) "The D1~ the Earth Caueht rire" (sci·fi) '62-Leo Mc· Kern, Janet Munro. Hieht Gallery Akko·Ch1n's Secret 00 Dlalo&ue C..sey Santos Show : Storefront A Better World · News • • lbllian TV Hour 6:30 ~ The Thrillaeekers World of Survival Onie'1 Girts "Tuxedo Pants" Oz· zie gets lots of cntlcal attention from the girls and Hamel when his old tuudo pants won't quite bridge the gap. m Merv Presents: P1ul Anka Taped at the Circus Maximus, in Las Vegas, Paul Anka is star host to special guests Wayne Newton, Odia Coates land ~: ~~gne~~nian Gauchos. (6) Amerlc1n West The French Chef (i) Jim Thomas Outdoors Mundo Submtrlno Wings to Adventure The Rookies 7:00 6 News O Wild Klnedom "Giants of Dada· nawa'' Marlin visits a wildlife ranch in remote Giana, home of the Jaguar, arant anteaters and the 11ant ana· Conda. 6 Movie: (2hr) "Somebody Up T ere Lihs Me" (dra) '56 -Paul Newman. Reflecclones Latin Profile Pusport to Tr1vel 1 (3) Colden 'Voy110 Dailcon Ho Han1 (6) ffl Wild Kinedom VOTce of Victory : Zoom • Ci) Victory I\ Sea · Eitelar '73 · • Teatro del Domineo 7:30 eif) Cl) Hew Perry Muon "The Case of the Deadly Deeds" Mason defends a gambler charged with murdering a man alter 11 poker game over possession or a seemingly worthless batch of land deeds. Will Hutchins_&.uests 0 ~ (J.J ®) m World of Disnty ''Stub, the Best Cow Doa In tho West" Rox All•n narrates the 11d· ventures ol an Australian shoep doe that herds cattle, performs in rodeos and makes a darln& rescue of a \ drowning boy. Slim Pickins and Me If You Can" A killer sends clues Jay_ Sisler star. on his Identity to Barnaby, then 0 THE FBI-NEW SEASON leaves a trail of victims when the * NEW TIME-NEW CASES private detective begins to unravel D (iJ) Cl) al Tht FBI "The Ex· the cryptic messages. Change" Inspector Erskine poses as 0 Gamer Ted Armstrona head cashier at a race track in an Ii) The Bi& Question attempt to caplure the bandits who 10:00 0 la) @ ®) m NBC Reports pulled off 1 darinc robbery, but iifhe Long Winter.of Henry Aaron" A were forced to hide the money at documentary and in-depth portrait the track before makina their es-~ of baseball great, Henry Aaron. cape. Cameras visit with his parents. boy-fJ The Lu~ Show hood friends in Mobile, Ala., his m I Sli'1cn I Who's There! A Ghost children, teammates and the big in Your House? A trip into the world leaguers who played against him. of the supernatural via a "haunted" I Day of Discoverj Los Angeles guest cottage, a visit EE News lo specialty shops that sell supplies : BHam•n at 10 "Brink of Life" for witches. an interview with Dr. Three women in a delivery ward David Nowlis, course coordinator of view their approaching motherhood a UCLA course titled "Exploring the -<ine with fear, another with eager Paranormal." anticipation and the third with total I Three Passports to Adventure lack of understanding, Eva Dahl· Lassie beck, Ingrid Thulin and Bibi Anders· Mime Circus Students from Car. son star. negie:Mellon University's drama de· @I) las Putaas partment mime the participants in m Lou Gordon Show a circus-the ringmaster, clowns, • t:t:\ acrobats, ti&hlrope walker, strong· 10.15 ~Golf man and the animals. 10:30 6 The Protectors A kidnapping in m Italian TV Hour Copenhagen is complicated when the 8:00 D Amerio "Domesticating a Wll· Protectors deliver the ran.som. derness" Mr. Cooke traces the hard· i The Reasoner Report ships faced by settlers trying to Oral Roberts develop an unpopulated land. The Evil Touch. Julie Harris stars D Movie: (C) (21/zhr) "SlncerelJ as ~ woma~ confined to a whe~I· You rs" (mus) 'SS-Liberace, Doro· chair who w1t_nesses a g~ngland kill· ih Malone, Joanne Dru. ing and reahzes the killers aot a Movie: (2hr) "The Truth About good look at her. men" (com) '58-Laurence Har· I At Issue vey, Julie Harris. • ~ ~ews . I Slful to Adventure M1won: Impossible Nippon No Uta/News I (1) T.H.L Cat P1ul Bowm1n Show 00 Chlnnet 29 Tllks To ..• Folk 1970 · N11hville Mulic Noche de Gi la 10:45 Ei} Japanese L1nau11e Pro1r1m Armenl1n TV .Hou~. .. ll:OO lrn D ~Cl) News &:30 IJ ~. (j) M1nn11 Desert Run_ Reverend Ike Mannix s search for ~ missing Pn· 6 ~mour Presents vale plane and the pilot leads to a Cl)@)@ 00 News struggle .tor life in a ghost town in • Sherlock Holmes Theatre the Rockies. Jeanette Nolan and John m THRYN KUHLMAN Doucette guest. ~ 00 Join McMILLAN & WIFE * (IN COLOR) * Tonight on KERO·TV 1 K1thryn Kuhlman O 12) Cl) lRil m NBC Sund 1 y 1 00. Top Ten Issues Mystery-Mtllillin i nd Wile "The • Chnsto~her Close-Up Devil You Say" Sally's life is en· • It Is Written dangered and Mildred, the maid-11:15 ffi Problemas Famllues as witness to a murder-becomes ~Cl) Your Auemblyman Speaks the unwilling victim of a scare cam· 11:30 I Name of the Game paign. Keenan Wynn. Robert Hooks, ' (lg) Sund1y Toniaftt Show Rita Garn and Werner Klemperer Broken Arrow guest. Movie: (C) "Th under Alley" 0 1 ffi aJ ABC Sund1y Movie: (adv) '67-Fabian, Annette Funl· m (2Jlr) "Love Story" (R) (dra) '70 cello. -Ali McGraw, Ryan O'Neal, John (]) Tetepulse Marley, Ray Milland. Two apparently m Movie: (C) ''The Loves of Car· mismatched young lovers play out men" (dra) '48 -Rita Hayworth, their brief Ille together. Glenn Ford ID This ts Tom Jones Cass Elliot, Ii) Movie: "Crime ind Punishment" George Car1in, and the Dave Clark (dra) '59-George Hamilton, Mary Five guest. Murphy. m Movie: (90) "flowing Gold" @ ~ Movie: "Whom the Gods 9:00 D The Hippy Wanderers Love' (mus) •4q._John Loder. ct) Movie: (C) (2hr) "The Tenth CD Movie Victim" (susp) '65-Marcello Mas· 11:45 9 Cl) Pelicul11 de Mexico troianni. 12:00 O Gr1mbling Colle&• f ootball I Wandertna S1murat Qi Right On Tht One W1y 12:30 ~ New Directions M11terpl1ce Theatre "Clouds of 1.00 ' f1i"I fi'il ~ N Witness" Part 111 • 1.JtJ 'W eW1 ml German Variety Hour ' Sf>ealuni reely 9:30 • One .s~r, Btyo~d .. D BUDDY EBSEN STARS r ·~~udd~~~r!~ttllltu (SCI· * AS BARNABY JONES! 1:106 Movie: (C) "Gun tor a Cow1rd" D a Cl) Barnaby JOflH "Catch (Wes) '57-fred MacMurray, THE DAILY PILOT, ·TV WEEK, OCTOBER 21. 1973 'FOR ROWR COASTER LOVERS' If JtU don't lib '91ter coasters and rour ltotlacll flls up '" 1 llttft baH ,, ,,. ........ "" "" ....... stay ..., frt• NIC'a Lowt Story dr1u, "Tiie ioiier C.asfllt Stops*"•" WtdM1- da1 It lOPM, *-UM. • ._ It er .-t., lM vttwef wffl 19t .. tlM I trip rtffrt alttla wlUt tM Cl..,.. Dirtd9f """ Cofdstttlt dtddod tbt 1it1ce ttM 1'911tr COllfllt WIS I • ., ...... Ill th dra1111 about 1 mtltu II..._, (Den All unconventional &ir1 who adores roller coasten (Barbara Hershey Se•· aull) introduces a dlsturbln1 note In the lift of a restless husband (Don Murrayl. Mllff1Y) a"d a cf11nwl111 alrt (laltaara Hershey SN1utl) wtlo "llonwlH his yeunptw so •IM can rfdt ~ '911er coaster, tootare from Ult ride ltltlf was ts1tntl1I. At Loll& Be~h rt•• AmuMtMnt Par•. tlM ttlevtslon emr frtta Peramoullt Teltvlalott w11 ifvell Utt word by etkl· stone to ta•• a lfdt or two to fliurt out wfllt te do witll tllM ca•trts wbtn th• 111 .. ut11t. ea .. ,. ... Mil• O'SIMa said the first ti.. •reund IM wn too buay WOnderittf wtltft hla StHIKh WU to ..ink about t1•flll llllftl. "fortu· nattly, tllty aave us two '"1 rides bt· Iott I hid to at tile ca11ttra, • by tflt tltd of tM lfttfld ride I WU UMCI t. It altd I'd flaured out wMt to de," he said, Since the uew of the teltvlalon sllow llld taken OYlf tlM ""' notMNtJ WIS dltrpd for rldl111 tflt 1'911tr coaattr. In fad, tnce tllt foota11 for ttlt sllow w11 co111plt.ttd 5oldltollt an"°unced tllat anyone i11 tht cnw or ca1t who hadn't hid a cho11e1 to rtdt was .. 1. come to take t trlp, A number of ••acu· lar crew 111t19lbtrt suddtntr r1111t111btrtd t mindl ""1 flld to do tisew'trt. It ,,..., ti..t the airt In tlM *'"' Iowa roller coasttn, bllt !Mt MfYf»odY Wm lier entfllflios•. II ••btra tf ttlt ..._. 1111 audltnce dotl't-well, tlley ca jult clue ttltft' eyes. [§ears ] ' Hearing Loss? Behind-the-Ear Hearing Aid Regular $279 ~249 Sea r s s nu g f itt i n g hea ring a id is in- conspicuous . . . rests com for tably behind your ear. Has con- venient . adjustable volume. separate on-off switch. Economical ... 400 hours of battery life. Ask About Sears Convenie nt Credit Plans Hearing Aids Are Available a t the Followin g Sears Stores 1141fll ••• ,~ C'frrllo• C'ompton· 1.y11Wood F.1 \14"1ff r.1 • ...s.1. lncl~wood l•CVol Hiii< I.owe !Uar~ 'lorthrldct ''•••d••• Plto ti Rhnpou romOftl ~u1h ('01•1 l'lna rorr1nr r V1llto Pr ices Effective thru Saturday. October Z7 P•&• 7 THIS WEEK ON CHANNEL 50 KOCE-TV ORANG E COUNTY TELEVISION SATURDAY: OCTOBER 20th (P.M.) 3:00 History or Art (C) Lesson JO (La Conso111um) 3:30 History of Al1 (C) lesson 1 I (La Consortium) 4:00 History of Art (C) Lesson I Z (la Consortium) 4:30 The Science and Art of Footb1ll (C) "Offensive Line Play· Pass Blocking" 5:00 The Black Composer (C) Special (PBS) 6:30 As Min Behaves (C) "Remem- be11ng and Forgetting'" 7:00 Orange County Review (C) 7:30 The Olunn1 Trait (C) (PBS) 8:00 Wuhin(ton Deb1tes for the Sev- enties (C) (PBS) "The Economy and Phase IV" 9:00 Masterpiece Theatre (C) (PBS) SUNDAY: OCTOBER 21st (P.M.) 3:00 Sesame street (C) (ClW) 4:00 Carrascolendas (C) (PBS) 4:30 Sesame Street (C) (CTW) 5:30 Zoom! (C) (PBS) 6:00 Omnibus 50 (C) (KOCE) 6:30 As Man Behaves (C) Lesson 8 "Memo1111ng" 7:00 French Chef (C) (PBS) "Soupe du Jour" 7:30 Fred Wiseman Film Festival (C) (PBS) "Essene" 9:00 Station Music (C) (PBS) "Rober· ta Flack" 9:30 Focus Orange County (C) "Mar riage" MONDAY: OCTOBER 22nd (P.M.) 3:00 History of Art (C) (la Consorti um) "Middle East" 3:30 Miking Things Grow (C) (PBS) 4:00 As Man Behaves (C) 4:30 Electric Company (C) (CTW) 5:00 Sesame Street (C) (CTW) To· day's show features the letlers M and K and the number 2 6:00 The Great Consumer Contest (C) (KABC) ''$ Decision-The Sci ence ol Spending" 6:30 Focus Orange County (C) "Mar riage" 7:00 The Great Consumer Contest (C) (KABC) "$ Decision-The Sci ence of Spending" 7:30 Omnibus SO (C) 8:00 The Black Composer (C) Special (PBS) 9:30 As Man Behaves (C) "On Becom ing Your Own Teacher" TUESDAY: OCTOBER 23rd (P.M ) 3:00 As Min Behaves (C) Lesson 9 "On Becoming Your Own TeCJch er" 3:30 Chan-Ese Way (C) (PBS) 4:00 Carrascotendas (C) (PBS) 4:30 Electric Company (C) (ClW) The Dippy Diamond 5:00 Sesame Street (C) (CTW) To· day's show tealures the lelters O and M and the number 3 6:00 Or1n2e County Review (C) 6:30 History of Art (C) (la Cpnsort1 um) 'Middle (asl Chaldea and Persia" 7:00 The Great Consumer Contest (C) (KABC) "Minding Your Money" 7:30 As Man Beh1ves (C) "On Betom 1ng Your Own Teacher'" 8:00 Nefertiti: Birth and Death of ' St11 (C) (PBS) 9:30 Book Beat (C) (PBS) Page 8 WEDNESDAY: OCTOBER 24th (P.M.) • 3:00 History of Al1 (C) Lesson 14 (La Consortium) "China" 3:30 I'm 17, and Pregnant (C) Spe· c1al 4:00 As Man Behaves (C) "Creativity" 4:30 Electric Company (C) (CTW) S:OO Sesame Street CC) (CTW) To day's show fealures the letters S and 0 and the number 4. 6:00 The Great Consumer Contest (C) (KABC) "Minding Your Money" 6:30 History or Art (C) (la Consorti· um) "China'' 7:00 The Great Consumer Contest (C) (la Consortium) "Your 1ncred1· ble Credit" 7:30 The Science and Art of footti.11 (C) "Defensive Line Play" 8:00 Masterpiece Theatre (C) (PBS) "Clouds of Witness" 9:00 Folksong Patchwork (C) (PBS) • 9:30 As Man Behaves (C) "Creativity" THURSDAY: OCTOBER 25th (P.M.) 3:00 As Man Behaves (C) (KOCE) "Creativity" 3:30 French Chef (C) (PBS) 'Trench Bread" 4:00 Making Things Grl>w (C) (PBS) 4:30 Electric C"mpany (C) (CTW) S:OO Sesame Street (C) (CTW) To· day's show features the letters Q and S and the number 5 6:00 Omnibus SO (C) 6:30 History of Al1 (C) (la Conso1ti um) "Korea" 7:00 Orange County Review (C) 7:30 As Man Behaves (C) "Creativity" 8:00 Focus Orange County (C) "Mar riag.i·· 8:30 Woman (C) (PBS) "The Older Woman" 9:00 Firing Line (C) (PBS) FRIDAY: OCTOBER 26th (P.M.) 3:00 History of Art (C) (La Consorti um) "Korea" 3:30 Woman (C) (PBS) "The Older Woman" 4:00 Carrascolendu (C) (PBS) 4:30 Electric Company (C) (CTW) 5:00 Su1me Street (C) (CTWJ To day's show featufl!s the letters U and Q and the number 6 6:00 The Great Consumer Contest (C) (KABC) "Your Incredible Credit" 6:30 Zoom! (C) (PBS) 7:00 Chan·Ese W11 (C) (PBS) 7:30 I'm 17, and Pregnant (C) Spe cial (Children's Home Society) 8:00 The Advocates (C) (PBS) 9:00 Folk 1970 (C) (PBS) SATURDAY: OCTOBER 27th (P.M.) 3:00 History of Art (C) (La Consorti um) 3:30 History or Art (C) (la Conso1 It um) "China" 4:00 History of Art (C) (La C-Onsorti um) "Korea" 4:30 The Scienc.e and Art of Football (C) "Passing and Pass Rece1v· mg" 5:00 D1nce Thutre of H1rlem (C) Special (PBS) 6:30 As Man Behaves (C) "Percep lion" 7 :00 Orange County Review (C) 7:30 The Oleanna Trall (C) (PBS) 8:00 Washington Debates for the Sev· enlles (C) (PBS) "The Foreign Trade Policy" (60 min) 9:00 Masterpiece Theatre (C) (PBS) "Clouds of Witness" THE DAILY PILOT, TV WEEK, OCTOBER 21, 1973 MONDAY OCTOBER 22 For morning •nd afternoon ltstinp, please see DAYTIME P~OGRAMS. Below, for your convenience, are the day's movies. DAYTIME MOVIES 9:00 m (C) "Jacll Frosf' (fan) '66- Natasha Sedyka, Alexander Khvula. @ill "Dancerous Lady" (mys) '41 -June Storey, Neil Hamilton. 9:30 O (C) "Bonjour Tristesse" (dra) '58 -David Niven, Deborah Kerr. lO:OJ "Money, Women and Guns" (wes) '59-Jock Mahoney. O "Belle of the Nineties" (com) '34-Mae West, Roger Pryor. 12:00 O "Alice in Wonderland" (fan) '33 -Charlotte Henry, Gary Cooper. "Rocketship XM" (sci-Ii) '51-ltoyd Bridges. 12:30 m "Abbott l Costello in Hollywood" (com) "45-Abbott and Costello 1:00 O (C) "I'll Never forget Whit's 'ts N1mt'' (com) '68--0rson Welles. 3:00 @ (C) "Masquerade" (dra) '65- CliH Robert.son, Jack Hawkins. ® "The Tunnel of love" (rom) '58 -Doris Day, Richard Widmark 3:30 @@ (C) "Dragnet" (dra) '69- J<:ck Webb, Harry Morgan. •:OO fl (C) "The Nilled Jungle" (adv) '54-Charllon Heston. 4:30 Ci?, (8) "All the Young Men" (dra) '60-Alan Ladd, Sidney Poitier. EVEN I NG 6:00 I 0 m m tiE) News 8onant1 6 Courtship of Eddie's Father (i]) (3) al Mond1y Ni1ht Pro football Oakland Raiders vs Denver Broncos. I The Lucy Show Cl~ (6) lj9' (j) News The f'1rnts1ones Star Trell Simplemente Maria Movie: (2hr) "My Favorite Spy'' (com) '51-Bob Hope, Hedy Lamarr. ~ Hodgepodge Lodge Three Stooaes 6:30 Hogan's Heroes a ~ 6 ~ News • Diel! an ~e o Mm Griffin Show Andy Griffith : History of Art • livine Easy · • Travel Loe Little R11uls 7:00 0 rn News Bowling for Dollus 6 Movie; (C) (2hr) "Away All Boats" (dra) '56 -Jeff Chandler, George Nader, Julie Adams. a Wild World of Animals What's My Line? I love Lucy Mod Squi d Esmer•lda ("i) Dr12nel : ffilna line Bobb't Goldsboro Show · M Primer Amor Speed RaC4f 7:30 Wac'1 World of Jonathan Wlnlm Joe Namath and Andy & David Williams guest. ~, O Police Sur1eon "Killing Favors" Or Locke is summoned when a young hockey player is beaten up by the mob for refusing to throw a game to pay for his drug hablt. I Help Th1 Ntllhbor ~ Tbrittsetktrs Concel\lratlon Wild Kingdom I ~~~:e:rice Is Right 00 Nashville Music Jimmy Dean Show Hollywood Show The Ghoul Gang 8:00 6 fj!, (j) Gunsmoke "Killy's love Affair" Richard Kiley guests as a reluctant gunfighter with whom Kitty falls in love-alter he risks his own lite to save hers Leonard Stone and Christopher Connelly also guest. 0 "OPRYLANO, U.S.A." * Tennessee Ernie Ford, Pet ula Clark & Guests Presented by TIMEX. Q In @ (19) m I SiiWAL I Opry- land U.S.A. "The Ame11can MUSIC Scene" Petula Clark and Tennessee Ernie ford host this tune-tilled spe c1al 011ginating in Nashville's Opry land. U.S.A. Carol Lawrence, Melba Moore and Wayne Newton also guest offering songs encompassing the richly diverse American musical he11 · ~e. D Movie: (2hr) "Kona Coast" (dra) '68-Richard Boone, Vera Miles. 0 Million $ Movie: (C) (2hr) "And Soon the D11kness" (susp) '71 - Pamela Franklin, Michele Dot11ce I The Ghost ~nd Mrs. Muir The Bold Ones la Sellota Joven Ci Movie: (C) (2hr) "Journey to the Unknown" (dra)-Vera Miles. EID Hollywood 1V Theatre "Wines· burg, Ohio" Jean Peters stars in this KCET production, a dramatization of a group of tales by Sherwood Ander· son about small town life in the 192°0s Joseph Bolloms, Albert Sal· mi, Laurette Spang and William Win· dom also star. i El Comanche Mlguelito Valdes Show Movie: (2hr) "Two Guys from Milwaukee" (com) '46 -Dennis Morgan, Jack Carson. 8:30 m Merv Griffin Show , tiE) Novela "" 9:00 O Ci!; (j) Here's Lucy Jackie Coo· gan guests as an obnoxious used. car salesman who leases Lucy's spare room through a real estate agenl and won't move out when 5he says she had no intention of renling to a man. 0 ~ (6" m NBC Monday Movie: (~) (2hr) "A Big Hind for the lit- tle lady" (wes) '6&-Henry Fonda, Joanne Woodward. Jason Robards. A compulsive gambler us" his last S4,000 to participate in the bluest poker game In the West 6 Sica of Wtstern Man The Rookits "A Matter of Justice" Jill and Mike Danko ere dining out, celebrating an ann1ver· sary and expectant parenthood, when a gunman enters the reslau· iant and opens lire, seriously in- juring Jiii. • l1Q) Movie: (C) (2hr) "Sweet Bird o1 YoUth" (dra) '62-Paul Newman, Geraldine Paae m Notte Dame Footb1ll @ rn Movie: (C) (2hr) "An Eye for an Eye" (wes) '66 ~ Robert Lansing, Pat Wayne. I Roller Ciames Entte Amieo TUESDAY OCTOBER 23 Movie: "Days ol Win• and Roses'' For mornlnl and afternoon listings, 9:15 c:I!) News/Sports please see DAYTIME PROGRAMS. 9:30 6 Cit The New Dick Y•~ Dyke Below, for your convenience. are Show Dick recalls for Dennis ~nd the day's movlK. Max his first real Hollywood acting iob. on a "Medical Cent~r" episod~. DAYTIME MOVIES which was such a horrible expen· ence that it almost made Dick re· turn to Phoenix 9:00 @ (I) "Minstrel Min" (dra) '44-fID Tribute to Jim Croce Rock star Benny Fields, Gladys Georae. Jim Croce, kllled recently in a plane crash, performs in an informal mu· sic setlina 9:30 O (C) "Treasure of San Gennaro" (com) '63-Harry Guardino. Senta Berger. m Much1ch1 lt11i1n1 c:I!) Y11lety 10:00 (J) "Min Afreld'' (dra) '57--0eorae 10:00 6 ~ Medlcel Center "Casual· Nader, Phyllis lha.der. ty" The sudden relurn of an Army 0 "Nlaht Plane From Chun& King" sergeant presumed killed In Viet-{dra) '43 -Rober! Preston. Ellen nam staggers Or. Gannon, who ls in Drew. love with the sergeant's wife. Bar-12·00 0 "Ph1ntom President" (com) '32 bara Anderson and Joseph Campa· . -George M. Cohan, Claudette Col· nella gues~. bert "Texu Rangeri Ride A11ln" I ;eq; ~'';l News (wes) '4~John Howard, Ellen Drew. N1ctit 61llery .. 12:30 m "Firhting Coest Guerd'' (dra) Oep1rtment S Who Plays the '51-8rian Oonlevy, Ella Raines. Oummf." Kina and Sullivan search for the explanation to the mystery 1:00 6 (C) "Run 1 Crooked Mile" (dra) of a crashed car which has only a '69 -Louis Jourdan, Mary Tyler tailor's dummy at the wheel. Moore. m Wiseman fllm Festini c:I!) International Y11lety 3:00 (j) (C) ''Tom Jones" Part I (com) l0:30 I Draanet '63-Albert Finney, Susannah York. Talk Bitk ®l (C) "R1mpa1e" (dre) '63-Rob· 6 Twlllaht Zone ert Mitchum, Elsa Martinelli. • Ciovernment scene 3:30 ~ @ (C) "B1llad of Josie'' (com) Tony £ Sus1n Alamo Chrl•tl•n '68-Doris Day, Peter Graves. Found1tion El) "°'he Tlp1tlaa c:I!) Amateur Y1rlety Twlli&ht Zone U :OOl~BI~~·-· 6 Perry Mason • Movie: "West Point Story" mus) '50 -James Caaney. Doris Day. I To Tell the Truth Get Smut (3)Ute Medic Allred Hltchcodi P1u1nts (j) Trells West 11;30 6 ~ CBS L•~ Movlt: (C) "The Priest's Wife" (com) '71 -~hla Loren, Marcello Mastroianni. Movie: "St1 ind the Sln< irl" (com) '64 -Natalie Wood. Tony Curtis. 0 ~ (6) Q9l g;) Johnny C1rson Barbara Walters Is euest host. O Movie: "Big Broldt1st ol 1938" {com) '33-Uob Hope, W.C. Fields. D Movie: "Sundown" (adv) '41- Bruce Cabot. Gene Tierney. m Alfred Hltchcoclc Prtstnt.a &) Movie: (C) "Plt1tes of Monte· ~· (adv) '47-ROd Cameron. U1J m Classic Wutem Thutre 12:00 Ci) One Step Beyond m Movie: "Catlfornl1 Conquest" (wes) '52-Cornel Wiide. 1:00 ! ~ ~ ~=rrow 1:30 II m 0 News O Hfahw11 Patrol l :~ IJ Movie: ''Th1t Wonderful Ur&•" (com) ·49 -Tyrone Power, Gene Tierney. 3:10 0 Movie: "Cut I O•" Shadow" (susp) '57-0lck 8oe1rde. 4:00 6 "Operation Stcret" (mys) '52- Cornel Wilde, Phyllis lhaxter, Karl Malden. 4:30 (1) Same as lOAM llstln& Qi, (!) "Comanche St1tion'' (wes) '60-Randolph Scott. Nancy Gates. EVE NIN G G:OO ~a~ ~lfE :::: W'§ LAker~11llttb1ll Lakers vs. Houston Rockets I Courtship ol Eddie'• father The Lucy Show The Flintstones star Trell Simplemente M1ri1 Hoctrepocle• Loda• Three St.oofes 6:30 Ci) @ (I) Ho11n's Heroes D Movie: (C) (90) "Alter Ule foa" (com) '66 -Peter Sellers, Britt Ek· land, Victor Mature. i ek~~~"ews Merv Griffin Show Andy Griffith Human Relations ind $(hool Oi1elpllne I Uvln& C.sy Umd y 11 Pollcla Desert Theatre Llttle R11t1ls 7:00 II rn 0 m News @ Movie: (C) (2hr) ''Tbundtr 81(' (dra) '53-James Stewart Joanne Dru. (I) S1lui to Adventure (;J Whit's My Uni? THE DAILY PILOT. TV WEEK, OCTOBER 21, 1973 @ The Bold Ones m I Love Lucy &) Mod Squid @ (3) I Drum ol Junnle m Esmer1ld1 @)The Kopyk•ts Raymond Burr hosts. EE}C1nnin1 f'A Ci) Dragnet I Feast of L1neu1ae (j) Hee Hlw ID Lightnfn' Aopklns Concert ~ El Sl\ow de Welter Merc.edo Mi Primer Amor Celi Club def Hogar Speed Racer 9:30 6 1at 00 H1wklns "Die, Darlin&. Die" Hawkins 1s asked to defend a young woman in the lace of over- whelming evidence-and her own admission-that she withheld vital medication from her hopelessly-ill husband. Julie Harris guests. 7:30 Treesure Hunt 3 Hog1n's Heroes ~ Hollywood Squuu 8 Dusty's Trail Concentr1tion • Bewitched m Muchacha Italian• c:I!) Festini Mexicano @ To Tell the Truth (!) Let's Mike 1 Dul : C1tyw1tchers • Stlnd Up i nd Cheer · • Comedy The Cihoul Gene 10:00 0 ~@ ®) g;) P o I Ice Story "The Ten Year Honeymoon" A ter· minally ill policeman unnecessarily places his hie in danger. Claude Akins and Paul Burke star. @ Ni&ht G1llery 8:00 6 ~ Maude When Maude O @ @ ~ M11eus Welby M.0. takes a part-time job selling real es· "Fnends in High Places" A lie about late she discovers she may have to a starring role by a bit-actor son to choose between her newly-acquired cheer his dying father backfires and real estale license and her marriage the lather loses the will to live. license. frank Langella and Jack Kruschen ~ THE CHASE IS ON guest. * KERO-TV TONIGHT 6 mm Q& News O fD ®)g;)Chase "The Scene Steelers" Reel plots become 10:15 0 News real plot~ when the Chase unit pur-10:30 Ci) Twlli&ht Zone sue~ th1e~es who use unreleased _ Communltv hedback movie scnpls to plot robberies. -' 0 (jJ) CV m Movie Spe,111: (C} m Bill Co1bJ (2hr) "The Presidenfs Pline 15 EE} Vides en Confllcto Missln(' (dra) "73-Buddy Ebsen, m Chesphito Peler Graves, Arthur Kennedy, Ray-c:I!) News/Sports mond Massey. Mercedes McCam· cast Is fealured m this suspenseful 00 EE}~ Ci) News drama aboul the sudden disappear· · Twill t Zone bridge, Rip Torn. A star-studded 11:00!0 Imm m News ance of lhe President of the United 6 Perry Mason States at a crltical p0mt in world • Movie: (C) "Toy Ti&er" (com) history '56-Jeff Chandler, Laraine Day. (;J McQueen & Natalie Wood I To Tell the Truth * The Proper Strangers Get Sm1rt A I I $ M · (2h ) "L t @ The Medic ~ M II on ovte: ,. 1 ?we . Allred Hitchcock Presents With the Proper Stranger (dra) 64 (j) Tralls West -Natalie Wood, Steve McQueen. m Th1t Girl 11:30 6 Q9; (i) CBS late Movie: (C) m The Untouch1ble1 (2hr) "'Scar-"Saddle the Wind" (wes) '53-Rob· face Mob" An account of how Scar-ert T_!tlor, Julie London. lace Al Capone's grip on the c~ty of R \:2~ (6) ~ m Johnny Carson Chicago was broken by a picked Movie: Mr Fa11orlt1 Blonde" iuad ol Treasury Agents. (com) '42 -Bob Hope, Madeleine L• Stno11 Joven Carroll Movie: (C) (2hr) "Journey to the 0 @ ffi Wide World of En· Unknown" (dra)-Vera Miles, Patty tert1inment "Honeymoon Suite" Duke. Part V. A comedy loolt 11 the saucy I Blick Performers goings-on in the bridal suite of a El Edlllclo de Enfrente plush hotel. Morey Amsterdam, Rose CoMedy Marie, Richard Deacon. Fannie Roller Games Flage and Herb Edelman star. 1:15 0 Movie: (2hr) "Ilona Cont" (dra) m Alfr~d ~ltthcocll i:ments, '63-Rtchard Boone Vera Miles m Movie: 'The Rln( (dra) 52-• Gerald Mohr, R11a Morano. 1:30 fl 5 Ha.~iii F'rve-0. "!ricks 12·00 ~One step Beyond Are Not reals The assassination of • M ·e· "Chld Hinn•" (dra) '40 a Honolulu flesh peddler threalens ovi · . all oul wer between two competing -Henry Fonda. Linda Darnell vice empires and brings McGarrett 1:00 00 0 CI) (il Ci) News into aclion to avert gang-style war· 0 tlQ) m Tomorrow fare Rescheduled from last week. m Me"' Griffin Show ~Novel• 9:00 0 ~@ g;) The M1aJcl1n ''lllu· sion tn Terror" When Joanna, his love interesl, reportedly ls kllled af· ter beina struck by a car, Tony Bla~e. the maalclan, sets out to prove the report false. Brenda Benet, Cameron Mitchell and Macdonald Carey guesl. Hiehw1y Patrol 1:30 -News All·Nl1ht Show: "Cllro Rold.'' "The Intruder," ''Below Zero" 1;45 fl Movie: (C) "Bloodhounds of Broadwaf' (mus) '52-Mlttl Gay- nor, Scott Brady 3:10 t1 Movie: "Blind Spot" (dre) '58 -Robert MacKenzie, Anne Sharp Page 9 WEDNESDAY OCTOBER 24 Below, for your convenience, are the day's movies. For momln1 and afternoon llstlnp, please see pAYTIME PROGRAMS. DAYTIME MOVIES 9:00@ @ "Inside the law'' (mys) '41 -Wallace Ford, Luana Walters. 9:30 O "Executive Suite" (dra) '54- William Holden, June Allyson. Fred· ric March, Barbara Stanwyck. 10:00 (3) "Bus Riley's Back In Town" (dra) '65 -Ann·Margret. Michael Parks. O "Hold That Blonde" (com) '45 -Veronica Lake, Eddie Bracken. 12:00 O "Danger Zone" (mys) '51 -Hugh Beaumont. Tom Neal. "The lady Eve" (com) '41 -Barbara Stanwyck, Henry Fonda. 12:30 m "Footsteps In the Fog" (dra) '55 -Stewart Granger, Jean Simmons. 1:00 O (C) "Bus Stop" (dra) '56 - Marilyn Monroe. Don Murray. 3:00 00 "Tom Jones'' Concl. laurel • Hudy featurette. 3:30 !ll '6) (C) "Coogan's Bluff' (dra) '68--tlint Eastwood, Lee J. Cobb 4:00 1J (C) "McHale's Navy" (com) '64 -Tim Conway, Ernest Borgnine. 4:30 ~ "Bitter Victory" (dra) '58- Richard Burton, Curt Jurgens. Don't delay! r,.,..,......, In ll'OUr own Mi9bott.u1U EVENING 6 : 00 319&~1~ :::: Bonanza 6 Courtship of Eddie's Father The Lucy Show The Flintstones Stir Trek Simplemente Mui• Movie: (C) (2hr) "The Sand Peb· bles" Part I (dra) '66-Steve Mc· Quec11, Richard Attenborough. Eil) Hodgepod1e lodfe ef} Three StOOflS 6:30 @ Ci7l (I) Hocan's Heroes 0 Movie: (C) (90) "Batman" (com) '66-Adam West, Burt Ward, Cesar Romero. · 8 @ C6l eij Ci) News • Diet V.n-0,ke o Merv Griffin Show Andy Griffith : History of Art • livinf Easy • • la Hora hmiliu · Desert Thutre ei) little Rasails 7:00 I Cil 0 m News Bowlin& for Dollars 6 Movie: (C) (2hr) "Guys ind Dolls• (mus) '55-Frank Sinatra, Vivian Blaine, Jean Simmons, Mar· Ion Brando. 8 Journey What's My Line? I love Lucy Mod Squad @ I Dream of Jeannie Esmeralda @ Drainet : The French Chef Tl,DAN, INC. AlPHA DIVISION Cheiw .. "*' ...... ,.,. 10 THE DAILY PILOT, TV WEEK, OCTOBER 21, 1973 I (J) World of Survival 9:00 if Primer Amor U WM. CONRAD-CANNON Aaron Btrcer Show * TV'S TOP PVT. EYE! Speed Racer 1J 9 (J) Cannon "Come Wa tch 7:30 IJ The New D1tin1 Came Jim Me Die" Cannon agrees to track Lanae hosts. dow)I 1n escaped convict when he ffi Ho11n's Heroes learns that the man may have been O PRYLLIS DILLER framed for murder. Don Stroud 1nd * TONIGHT'S BEST BET! Michael Tolan &l&Ut. i The lold Ones O Wait Tiii Your Father Cets Home The Untoudlablei '1he Lady Detective" Phyllis Dille Papa Corazon provides the voice for 1 wacky cop whose comical sleuthing helps Harry 9:30 Eil) Woman "Friaidity" A candid dis· to recover a company pavroll s1olen cussion which explodes the my~ of ' 1· id women. from his home by a neighborhood Muehuha luliani thief. Help Thy Neichbor Comedy ' Sports I Bobby Goldsboro Show 10:00 6 9 Ci) PREMIERE Koj1k "Seige Concentration O!Terror'' Telly Savalas, starring as The New Price la Richt New York City police detective Lt. Bewitched Theo Kojak, faces a two·hour dead· ffi To Tell the Truth line in a darina effort lo save the (j) Hollywood Squares lives of five hostages held by a trio : Storefront "Watts Writers Work· of d~rate holdup men. s op" 0 QJ (j) ®) er;, love Story "The I Ci) Pollce Surceon Roller Coaster Stops Here" Restive Other People, Ottler Places in a marriage gone stale, a man be· The Ghoul Gina comes Involved with an unconven-tional girl, jeopardizing his future 8:00 IJ Iii Cl) Sonny ind Cher Comedy and his family. Barbara Seagull, Hour Jim Nabors and Lassie guest. Oon Murray and Louise Lasser star. 0 ~(])®)er;, Adam-12 "Hot ~ B m I!) 11j News Shot ' Offlc.ers Malloy and Reed are NJiht &allery challenged by a teen age robber, @ CIJ a) OWen Marshlll "The and a distraught father holds his merons Are a Specl1f Clan" Com· own daughter hostage at aun point poser-singer John Denver makes his 0 Movie: (2hr) "Ilona Coast" dramatic actin& debut as a singing (dr1) '68-Richard Boone, Vera star who is accused of the mercy Miles. killing of his terminally·rll mother. 0 ~ (3) a) lob ' Carol ' Ted fl) Escenario ' Ahce 1'ed and Alice are fascin· Eil) lera111n at 10 ated by Bob and Carol's friends, 10:30 I Talk Back Gus and Beryll, whose open mar-6 Twill&ht Zone riaae is about to open even further • Community Feedback to include Gus' fiancee, Cheryl. Bill Cosby 0 SPY THRILLER · TV Musical * THE DEADLY AFFAIR • · • News/Sports B Million $ Movie: (C) (2hr) "The 11:00 i ~; ~ ma) News 681dly Affair" (dra) '67 -James Ci) CI) News Mason, Simone Signore!, Maximilian wilig ne Schell. 6 Perry Mason I Green Acres • Movie: (C) "Suidde Comm1n· The Bold On.s do" (dra) '68-Aldo Ray. LI Senora Joven I To Tell the Truth Movie: (C) (2hr) "Journey to the Get Smart known" (dra)-Vera Miles, Patty Cf) The Medic Duke. AITred Hitchcock Presents Ell) Wiseman Fiim Festival "Law & (J) Trails West Order" Emmy-winninf examination 11:15 • eliiem• 34 of a major metropolitan police force 11:30 9 Ci) CBS l•te Movie: (C) in action. '·Macliine &un McCain" (dra) '70- ai) Championship Wrestlin1 John C.ssavetes, Peter Falk. al J1p1nue langvage Proaram 0 Qj (I) ~ m Johnny Carwn 8:30 ~ Movie: "Sorrowf.ul Jones" (com) 9 Cl) There's Mystery Tonite 49-Bob Ho_.e!, Lucille Ball. 0 (i7j (]) W W"Mle World of En· * on KERO-TV-WATCH! terblnment "David Frost Presents 0 @ Ci) (IQ} m NBC Wed(tesda the Guinness Book of World Records" Mystery -hraday l CompanJ "A David Frost as host brings on stage Wheelbarrow Full of Trouble" Private many of the people who hold extra- detective Frank Faraday is anxious ordin1ry marks in the record book. to IHrn why a well·known shady m Alfred Hitchcock Presents used car dealer is in a hurry to buy Q) Movie: "Mystery Submarine" a beat up 6-year-old car al the first ~re) '51-Macdonald C1rey. price ottered. Joe Flynn and Edd 12:00 One Step BIJOIMI !!,trnes guest. Movie: "The Actress" (dra) '53 U (11} (!) a) ABC Wed n es d 1 y -Jean Simmons, Spencer Tra cy Movie: ("?)" (90) "fio Ask Allu" (R) 1:0011 Cl) ~(I) News (dra) '72 -Wiiiiam Shatner, Andy · m fOmorrow Griffith, Ruth Roman, Jamie Smith 1:30 ews Jackson. Based on the actual diary Hipway P1trol of a teenage girl caught in the vi· 1:45 Movie: "Bombardier" (dra) '43 clous web of drug addiction. With -Randolph Scott, Pat O'Brien. the help of her family and true 2:00 m All·Nl&ht Show: "Don't Take It friends she tries desperately to fiaht to Ht1r1," "The Boy With Green her way back to the real world. Hair," 811 Attack m Merv firilfin Show 3:101J Movie: "The Bl& Sttal" (dra) '49 tiii) Novela -Robert Mitchum, Jane Greer. t t t t f INSIDE ~ the tube OUTSIDE hollywood by BHI Mahan A MESSAGE TO MY DAUGHTER, the ABC/Metromedia Movie of the Week which is scheduled for airing sometime near the end of the year, is coming in on budget and on time. This is due principally to the competent and talented work being done by Bob Lewis. the film's director, (an ex.film editor) and Richard Glauner, the film's cinematographer. As I have so many times stated in the past, executives and pro· ducers should look to the cutting room as often as possible for new directors. ~ Take for example all the work done yesterday. The film unit had arrangements made with AMTRAK . and the crew and stars met at 6 AM at Union Station in downtown Los Angeles . They boarded a train and rode it to and from San Di- ego, grinding out 5000 feet of printed film during work- ing hours. Many of the scenes shot showed one of the female stars. Kitty Winn, riding in a window seat listening to a tape re· corded by her late mother. The scene is delicate and requires proper lighting -. and color tones to make it Kitty Winn fully effective. In the old days the director would have shot it on a sou'nd stage in a mock-up train using process plates for the background. Proc· ess plates are motion pictures of moving shots of the coun· tryside being projected as a background behind, in this case. the mock·UP train. This gives the illusion that the train is trav· eltng. No matter how good the process plates. nor how good the performances or direction, the ultimate scene will suffer greatly because the background will be washed out and fuzzy. You , the viewer. will be aware that something isn't right. but because you're not a trained technician you won't know ex· actly why the scene is bothering you. Lewis' film was so artistically shot that he gave the viewer panning shots. from inside the train. showing the passing terrain on. both sides of the train. In the same shot his per- formances from Kitty Winn and three bit players equalled his technical abilities. One of the many reasons a sound stage and pro.cess plates were used in the past was for the purposes of mobility. Equip· ment was clumsy and large. Today modern technology has reduced the bulkiness and made it considerably easier to shoot the way Bob Lewis is doing on this film. Nevertheless, many old timers are still doing everything the old way. Not only are they losing quality, but the cost is much higher on a sound stage than on an actual location site. Oh, well, the old time major studios are collapsing for the most part and maybe with a little luck the old-fashioned methods will col- lapse with them. THE DAILY PILOT, TV WEEK. OCTOBER 21, 1973 YOUR INVITATION TO GRACIOUS LIVING . . IAYVllW MANOR -Re~iclential care center for the active rotired BEAUTIFULLY APPOINTED SUITES leautifully appoh1te d suites wiH1 bdleonies, and private or semi· private rooms feature distinctive eolor-coordinetcd earpoh <tnd in- terior decor. Every room hH • prlveft '-•tfi complete wlth tub or shower ALL MEALS AND SNACKS "" meals end 1n<teks are nutritiously prepared <tnd ollr<teively served by our ••pert dietary staff. Speei<tl d ioh for ihose who ro· quire t~em. and tr<ty service lo the room h provided when lhtt resi - dent is ur1able to come lo the dining room. SERVICES Centrelized heating a11d air eon· ditioning; Buuty/Borber Shop; Patio ancl-_-S;_-~-.... --=.------_--,~'r/- balconiu; Personal l<tundry room; Intercom • .._ ___ ;.l . .'/1 music; Doctors on call; AHendanh 24.hrs.; l/J/ Air conclitionecl limosine. r ' r Ba--... "' ow MBDOP :1---~.:~} ... ~~~ ,r./ .~.... ,~ 350 BAY ST 540-7095 TELLY SAVALAS FACES CHALLENGE How can one 'be unique in a season full of television detective series? That's the challenie Telly Savalas confidently faces when he makes his television series debut as LI. Theo Kojak, 1 New York police detective. on Kojak berinning Wednesday at lOPM on CBS. Savalas first wondered, "Does the world need another television cop show?" He thought ii didn't-until ronfronted with the role of Kojak, which he first played on "The Marcus-Nelson Murders." Tbe role won both Savalas and the movie 1972-73 Emmy nominatlons. "There are a lot of reasons why I agreed to recreate the character in a series," Savalas said. "I like the character and I have a great deal of regard for the creative team behind the series. Kojak is a New York cop. He knows the neighborhood. H.e grew up among the people. He cares about them and sometimes ls fooled by them, which makes him a very real person. instead of a white knight. This 1s a cop who can be toufh when It's necessary-but he also knows when to look the other way. To him, the neiahborhood is like a family. The people know him and trust him. Althouah the series will be based in Hollywood, we will use actual New York City locations as much as possible to prcwide the realism the series demands. I think this series will also show the American public just how tough a job the policemen have in this country. Each and every day, they expose themselves to all kinds of danger, while still being the taraet of criticism." POSITIVE WEIGHT LOSS! Our Patients Show It FBEE CONSULTATION & INFORMATION FULL MEDICAL SUPERVISION DIAL 673-1182 10 AM to 6:30 PM NEWPORT WEIGHT CLINIC 3355 VIA LIDO , SUITE 250. NEWPORT BEACH Paee 11 'THE REAL THING' "Interest in the police has never been greater than it i' today," executive producer Roy H uggins proclaimed recently. '"The demand for authentic police stories in books, motion picrures and television makes several points very clear," Huggins continued. "'The public wants to know who the police are, what makes them tick, why they choose to be cops, where they come from Cind how they operate. This season, television is heavily programmed with police !.hows. one of which is Toma, the first and only series based on the career of a living, working cop-David Toma." David Toma is a Newark, N.J . police detective in the vice divi- sion. His incredible story was told in a Newsweek article early in Tony Musanr~ and ~mon ()aktand 197 I. He ha.) appeared on se veral talk i.hows and his life story ic; being told by a major book publisher, The Newsweek article caught the allention or MCA-Universal executives who sent 1t on to Hug- ginl> for considerntion as the basis for an A BC Movie of the Week and/ or a seri es. ''I wa.ci sold on the idea Immediately," Huggins told TV Weck. ··because Toma reminded me of a hero I created awhilt: back named Maverick, but at ·first, I didn't know why. Maverick was a slightly larcenous gambler operating in the old west Toma is a modern doy lawman-an honest one-doing his job in a large eastern city. What did lhey h11ve in common? To finu our, we sen1 writer Edward Hume lo Newark where he literally lived with Toma for two weeks. Shortly afterward, Dave ~amc lo Hollywood and we became in'itant rnend~. I pro mptly saw what it was that reminded me of my old amigo Maverick: Both men are loners. Nei ther of them like rules. Both men are clever a nd compassionate. A nd both arc con men. I figured any con man who make!> his living as 11 policeman deserved ro have a movie and a series made ahout. him." F.d H&Jme and Gerald OiPego wrote the screenplay for the pilot, which aired last March and wa<; repeated last monlh (9/ 5). The AB\ series airs Thursdays at XPM Favorable response 10 the Movie or the Week pilot, and subsequent sale to ABC as a series, compelled Huggin~ to analyze h1'i wo rk to see what he had done that wall right. H is conclusion wa, that that strongest single element 1n the show was its star. Tony Musante. Despite youth, len years of theatre and motion picture experience and a long list of credits. including 12 feature fi lms, M u~an1e was relatively unknown. "Tony Is a charismatic leadin~ man and an actor of gre:1t skill aml range,'' said Huggin'>. "'He has played so many contrasting character' that until now ii ha'l been 1mpoi.sihlc for him to establish an image. Casting Tony lo play Toma wa~ probably the mo<;t right thing we did because Toma himself i~ an in!>tinctive actor, a role-playing in- vestigator." Starring as Toma's wife Patty is Susan Strasberg. Simon Oakland is also 'l tarred, D'\ Toma's boss-Inspector Spooner, Toma Is a professional loner who can psych himself in and out of any character lh:it can take him where he wants to go_ in the cour~e of an investigation. With lhc use or costumes and makeup. which he carries in his car. Toma may appear as a spaced-out hippie, a middle-aged official. a hardhat worker or a mild-mannercu clergy- man. He is at home anrwhcrc. On the !ltreets. he move~ with ca'e among hustl_crs. hoodlum~ and junkie\, many or whom arc hi\ friends. As cops go, Toma is indeed a Mnvcrick Page 12 THE' DAILY PI LOT. TV WEEK, OCTOBER 21, 1973 THURSDAY OCTOBER 25 For mornln1 •nd afternoon llstfnp, plHse see DAYTIME PROGRAMS. Below, for your convenience, ere the day'a moytes. DAYTIME MOVIES 9:00 (i7J m "South of ,1111m1" (mys) '11-Roaer Pryor, Virginia Vale. 9:30 O "Hotel P1ttcllao" (com) '66- Alec Gulnness, Gi11a Lollobrigida. 10:00 aJ (C) "ferry to Hone Kon(' Part I (dra) '61-Curt Jurgens, 00011 Welles. O "Wild Stillion" (wes) '52-Ben Cooper, Martha Hyer. 12:00 O "Tom S.wyer, Detective" (adv) '38-0onald O'Connor "The Anfl} Red Pl1net" (sci·fl) '60 -Gerald Mohr, Les Tremayne. 12:30 m "The leflinnlnf of the End" (dra) '47-Brian Donlevy, Robert Walker. 1:00 O "Story of Wiii RO(ers" (bio) '52 -Wiii Rogers Jr .. Jane Wym an. 3:00 [i) "Hip Noon" (dra) '52-Gary CoOper, Grace Kelly. (JO) (C) "Sund1y in New Yor•" (rom) '64-Jane Fonda, Rod Taylor. 3:30 ~ (C) "An1el In MJ ,ocket" {cOm) '69-Andy Griffith, Kay Med· ford. 4:00 B (C) "Arabesque" (dra) '66 - Gregory Peck, Sophia Loren. 4:30 ~ Sime u lOAM listine "Only Two C1n P11y" Part I com) '62-Peter Sellers, Mai Zet-terling. 6:00 EVfNINC IB~~lfE~::: Bon1nu Courtship of Eddie's father The Lucy Show The fllritstonu Star Trek Simplemente Mul1 5 Movie: (C) (2hr) '1be S.nd Pebbles" Conct (dra) '66-Steve McQueen, Richard Attenborough. Ell) Hodaepod1e lodfe m Three Stooees 6:30 (6) (i7J CV Ho11n's Heroes O Movie: (C) (90) '1be Collector" Part I (dra) '6~Terence Stamp, Samantha E~r I 123 CTl Qt News m I Dream of Jeannie Gmer1ld1 (6) Df1pet : trfca & Tileonle £1) Laule · Mr 'rimer Amor • • Tele-Rtvlsll Muslul Speed R1etr 7:30 ft OrSOtl Welles' Shut Mysteries ''The Monlcef s Paw" The famous tale of a cursed paw th1t rains dis , aster upcn those who would use its power lo tamper with fate. Cyril Cusack stars. 3 Hopn's Herots Tht New Price Is Rl&ht Help Thy Nel1hbor You Ask for It • Concentration Lera Mike 1 Deal Bewitched 1 (])To Tell the Truth (j) The Tllrllls11km : Acclon Chluno "In a Penal Col ony'' A look behind the walls of the Great Meadow Prison in Comstock, N.Y., to present prison lite as seen iSpanish-speaklna inmates. (j) Jimmy Dt1n Show Jon1th1n Winters The Ghoul li•na 8:00 0 Ci! (I) TIM W11to111 Oscar Cock rell. a wealthy former suitor of Olivia's, comes to visit her and ar rives durlna a family dilemma over the ownership ol a aift plfl. Peter Donat euests. ~@ WATCH FLIP DO HIS *THING ON KERO-TV 0 Q) Ci) ~ m f lip Wilson Show Harry Belafonte and the comedy team of Burns & Schreiber guest O Movie: (211r) "llon1 Coast" (dre) '68 -Richard Boone, Vera Miles. Joan Blondell. 0 (fiHIHiE Toma "Stakeout" Despite a veiled warnina from In spector Spooner, Toma t1ku on a partner to help keep track of 1n allraclive youni woman who may lead him to a million-dollar stash of coc.1ine. Skye Aubrey, Jared Mar· tin and Oon Gordon guest. D Mllllon $ Movie: (C) (2hr) "The fir Country'' (adv) '55 -James Stewart, Ruth Roman, Corinne Cal vet I AJfred Hitchcock Presents Boline from the OIJmpic u Senora Jown Movie: (C) (2hr) "Journe1 lo Unknown" (dra) -Vera Miles, Patty Ouke. I Behind the Linn Loa Nuevos Polivotts C.raV1n1 Music.al Movie: (2hr) ''The Gay Siste11" (rom) '42 -Barbara Stanwyck. Nancy Coleman. · Did Van Dyke Merv Griffin Show AndJ Griffith 1:30 m Merv Griffin Show Clii) Novtla : Mime Circus (R) • Living bsy · • Novel1 . Desert Thutre Uttle Ruuls 7:001 CJ)0 m Newt Bowling for Dollars Movie: (C) (2hr) "Whit Did You Do In the War D•ddy7 (com) '66-Dick Shawn, Aldo Ray, James Coburn. I lnne11p1u Wlllt's My line? I Love l1Ky Mod Squid 9:00 ft Qj Ci) CBS ThuradaJ Movie: (C) (Zhr) "Gueu Who's Comlne to Din· ner'' (R) (dra) '67-Spencer Tracy, Katharine Hepburn. Sidney Poitier, Katharine Houehton. A wetl-to·do couple, lltefona llberala, find their beliefs put to the test when their daughter returns from a· holiday with a prospective husband, a black, in tow. 0 Ii) ~ (lg) m Ironside "House of Terror • When a youne couple mysteriously disappear from a 'haunted·houu party' In an aban· doned mansion, Chief Ironside sets 9 10: 10 11 11 11 • himself up as the neat victim. Sher. on Gless and Russell Wigins 1uest. ~TlltlolclOnn FRIDAY @CI) a> lU111 Fu "The Brulo" ht superstitious people ol the llt· tie town of San Martin are under OCTOBER 26 the spell of a bru)o, 1 male witch, whose sorcery provides an unique For mornln1 and afternoon listln1s, challenae to Caine's philosophy. pa..se see DAYTIME PROGRAMS. I Hlstoria1 de Papa y Mama Betow, for your convenience, are Foll! 1970 (R) the day~• mov'8s. Y1rk!dades Yer11I DAYTIME MOVIES 9:30 &) Muthacha Italian• al) Roller Derby 10:00 0 (U (I)®) m NIC follies Sam· 9:00 @Ci) ''The Contender" (dra) '44- my Davis Jr. is joined by Don Adams, Buste1 Crabbe, Arline Judge. Don Rickles, Frankie Avalon and 9:30 0 (C) "Brigadoon'' (mus) '54 -Michele Lee. Gene l(elly, Van Johnson, Cyd Char· mO m Q)Qj Newa lsse. 0 NENr,ShtTGRaEll~S Of SAN 10:00 (]) (C) "Fe1ry to Hone Kone.· Cone!. ET (dr1) '61-Curt Jurgens. * FRANCISCO--BIG HIT! 0 "Follow ~e Hunter" (adv) '54-0 (jj) (I) a> Streets of San Fran• Cha~~es Ch~~lin Jr .. On~.low Stevens. cisco "Harem" Rick Nelson iuests 12:00 0 M11n1f1cent Fraud (dra) '39- as the leader ol 1 ring of young llo~d Nol~n. "Hijac•ed" (adv) '50 prostitutes, all 1unaw1ys, who are -Jim Davis. killed if they aet out of llne. Kay 12:30 m "Julia Misbellaves" (com) '48- Lenz, Darlene Carr and Laurette Creer Garson, Elizabeth Taylor. Spena also guest. 1:00 0 (C) "Finey Pants" (com) '50- 10:30 T1lk lack Bob Hope, Lucille Ball. Twill1ht loft• 3:00 (j) (C) "Ci.I. Blues" (mus) '60 - • Youth 1nd the l"uts Elvis Presley, Juliet Prowse. 1111 Coaby ®l "The Ancry Hiiis" (dra) '59 - Yid11 en Conflltto Robert Mitchum, Stanley Bake1. : Yo11 for He1llh 3:30 fH (]) (C) "Nlahl of the followln& • Super Show Day" (susp) '69-Marlon Brando. , • News/Sports 4:00 R (C) ''l\e Thrill of It All" (com) ll:OO i 0 ! &). , m al. News '~Doris Day, Jam~s Carner. (() fE ta Cl) News 4:30 ~ Same as lOAM ltrtln& Twill t Zone ~ "Only Two Can Play" Concl. Perry Mison com) 62-Peter Sellers. • Movie: (C) "lackl11h'' (wes) '56 -Richard Widmark, Donna Reed. I To Tell the Truttl lttt Smart CI> The Medic Alfrtd HitcMclc• Presents Tflil1 West 11:15 m Cinema 3' 11;30 6 ISi (j) CBS Ult Movie: (C) "R.P.M." (dra) '70-Anthony Quinn, Ann·Mar~l. I lil (j) ~ m Johnny Cuaon Movie: (C) "Tbt Paleface" (com) 8-Bob Hope, Jane Russell. 0 l'rn CI> al Wide World of En· tert1Tilmtnt "Walt Olsnty: A Colden Anniversary Salute" With Dun Jones as host and Fred MacMurray, Buddy Ebsen, Julie Andrews and Annette Funicello among the auests. this special pro1ram reviews 50 ye111 of Dlsnty accomplishments In the entertainment world. ! Alfred Hltdlcot• P1eu11ts Movie: "The Stran11 D11th of olph Hitler" (mys) '43-Ludwlg Donath. ' 12:00 (6)'0ne Step Be1ond m Movie: "My Otar Secretary" (rom) '48 -Kirk Douglas, Laraine Day. 1:00 Cl) 0 (j) fH (l) Ntw...-0 ®l m Tomorrow Hlahway Patrol 1:30-News • All·Nlrht Sllow: ''Thein la tht 8 ry," ''Th• Halfbrttd," ''The Chimp" 1:45 6 Movie: (C) "P1wnM" (wes) '51 -George Mont1omery, Loli Al· brlaht. 3:10 IJ Movie: "Mlahty Joe Youn1" (dra) '49-Ben Johnson, Terry Moore. 6:00 EVENING n111za 6 Courtship of Eddie's Father The Lucy Show The Flintstones Star Trell Slmplemente M1ria ~ Movie: (C) (2hr) "G.I. Blues" (mus) '60 -El111s Presley, Juliet Prowse. I Hodppodce Lodge Three Slooces 6:30 @ C1) Hocan's Heroes Movie: (C) (90) "The Collector" Concl, (dra) '65-Terence Stamp. 7:00 a Cil (6) ~ News • Dftll Van Dyke Merv Griffin Show Andy GriHith i History of Art • Llvinc Easy • Novel• Dtsert Theatre Utue Rascals Om News owtinc for Dollars Movie: (2hr) "Treasure ol Sierra M1dre" (dra) '48-Humphrey Bo· aart, Waller Huston. Animal Wor1d Whars My Linet I Love Lucy Mod Squid (5) I Dream ol Junnte ESmerald1 (6) Drapet : Upts In th• Abyss "For Better and for Worse" A discussion of the mean Inc of the word. "love." am America 0) llr Primer Amor THE DAILY PILOT. TV WEEI(, OCTOBER 21, 1973 al) Eventos Latinos ~ Tht Bold Ona '1) Speed Racer @ @ al Room 2.22 "Twenty 7:30 6 Dusty's Trail "And Then There ve Words 01 less" Student Herbie Were Seven" The old saying "di· quiets skeptics aboul his entering vide and conquer" seems to wort slogan contests with a l ele1r1m well for a lone pair ol outlaws who proclaiming him • $500 winner in a contest. manate to capture the entire wag· I This Week In Pro football on train. Hoi1n's Heroes Cine Como en Cint . f.l ~ ~ Holl-ood Squares Masterpiece l'Matre (R) IUfJ •-La Criada Bien Criada tip Y Nelchbor Japanese Variety Hour Elephant Boy Concentration 9:30 0 12) @ ®) m B r i a n l e I t h Bewitclled Show When a cocoanut clobbers Or. I (3) To Tell the Truth Ch1ftee. Dr. Sean assumes his prac· : Will Street Wee-lice. He tells a sophisticated lady • Untamed World patient that she has fleas, and an· • • [scenario other patient that his toupee is The Ghoul Gana causina his itchy scalp condition, 8:00 B 9 ([) Calucd's Depl Con-0 @@ al Ad1m's Rib "For firmed bachelor-about·town Conzal· Richer, lor Poorer" A former girl· es falls in love with a beautiful friend ol Adam:s. is sued lor alimony Ii!.! trom the unemployment line. by her mus1cian·~usband, with @ W l augh with SANFORD ;a~~~h~!h~111~!u~~s1 case. * & SON on KERO· TV a!> Premier dtl 40 0 Q) 00 Oj) m Sanford and Son 10:00 0 ~ 00@) m Dean Martin Lamont and Julio 10 into the used· Show auto parts business which drives I 0 QI m News Fred to skid row. 6 ffijht li1llery ~ Mo~le: (2hr) "Kona Coa~t" (dra) (11) (j) al Love American Style 68-Richard Boone, Vera Miles. Love and the: "Opera Sinaer," "La· 0 @ (J) al Tht Bredy Bunch dy Prisoner " "Wei1hty Problem " ''Marcia . Gets Creamed" Marcia's "Fortunate Cookie." ' new job in an ice cream parlor aets ED fhln1 Line her into ~roblems at home and with l0:30 I Till Bac-h~r b?yf 11end. . . 6 Twlliaht Zona 0 Million $ Movie. (C) (Zhr) • Consumer Profile "Whars So Bid About Feellna . lioodr' (com) ·s~eorge Peppard. =~!nCosby Mary Tyler Moore. , Loco Yaldu I Bobby Goldsboro Show The Bold Ones 11 :00 ~ 0 m m ffi News La Sellor1 Joven 3 8 @) ~ 00 Ne•s ~ Pro B11ketb1ll Wa11101s V$ Seat. willpt Zone tie • Perry Mason I. Washlneton Wed In Review Shertodt Holmu Thutre La Matitfl Mendez To Tell the Truth Japanese Lan1u11e Program Get Smart 8:308 ti!) Ci) Roll Out! Pfc. Brooks 1 ~R~~fs:e:!cMarone ~urts trouble when he wakes up Roel Concert ~1s buddy Cpl. Wiiiiams on a sleep. r.11 Trails west m Sunday and then has the r.oura1e ~ to invite the Red Bait driver to 11 :15 al C1nem134 church. 11 :30 6 ~ (j) Qi CBS ute Movie: (C) 0 ti) (6) ®) m The Ciitl With "frop" (susp) '72 -Ray Milland, Somethlnr Extr• A throw-back habit Joan Van Ark, Sam Elliott. of John Burton't childhood 1nvolv· I Ci) Cl) @) m Johnny Cerson ing an annual gilt from his mother ~mour Presents rears up to threaten his new mar· (11) CI> a> In Concert Chubby tied life. Checker, The Coasters, Jackie Wil-0 THE ODD COUPLE son, Dion, Bobby Rydell and The * STNARJSATCOKNKY URGANMDAANLL I' s~~~ ;:::~aders A D l Alfred Hitchcock Presents p @ ffi al The Odd Coupl~ Movle: "The Blac• Sleep" (hor) This Is the Army, Mrs. Madison '56-Beta Lugosi Lon Chaney. Felix reveals . the he~lic details of 12:00 Cl) One Step Beyond Oscar's mama1e while both were m Movie· "Roiue Cop" (dra) '54-on Army reserve duty. • · I Merv Griffin Show Robert Taylor, Janet Leigh. Cltywatchen 12:30 i Suspense Theatre Novel• · Movie: "The Sllme People" (hor) 9:00 1J ~Ci) CBS FridaJ Movie: (C) ' -Robert Hutton, Susan Hart (21'1r) "Ben11th the Planet of tht ~ The Prisoner . Apas" (sci·fl) '70-James Francis· 1:00 0 tlO) m Mldnl1ht Special Sly & cus, Charlton Heston, Roddy Mc· ffi8 Tamily Stone host. ~uests in· Oowall, M1urice Evans. A sequel to elude Marll Almond, Me lissa Man· "Planet of the Apes," lhe story takes chuter and the Four Seasons. place in the year 39SS A.D in New U M~le: "Captain's P1radlse" York where an astronaut must face (com) '53-Alec Guinness. the possibility that his civilization 1~30 m All·NIRftt Show: "Ni&ht Boat to Is gone and must cope with • soci· Dublin," "Tl!• An1YJ SUen(t," Bil e__ty ruled by ~s. Altldl 0 ~ @(101 m Needles I Pins 1:•5 6 Movie: "Lklycb of London" (dra) "Do Your Own Thing" Nathan hopes 036-Tyrone Power. his nephew Jeff will join him in the 3:10 D Movie: "Those End11rin1 Younc business, but lhe youna colle10 phi· Ciarma" (dra) '45-Robert Youna. losopher Is a bit ,., out. Laraine Oay ~AT URDA Y OCTOBER 27 MORNING 10:00 I ®) (j) ~ed BuJD . OJ @ ().9) m Sigmund Ultra Man 8 (i7J CJ) The Brady llids ' Movie: "Ai; r..ctef' (adv) '51- Rock Hudson, Stephen McNally, Gail Russell. 6:00 Sunrise Semester Ci ne en SU tau · I Gospel Singina Jubilee Kids for Christ 6:30 Sunrise Semester 10:30 ~ 00 Josie and the Pussycats TV 8 Classroom ~ @ @) m Pink Panther Let's Rip Movie: ''All for Me" (d ra) '34- 7:00 ~ a The nlntstones Fredric March, Miriam Hopkins. ~3 @) g;, lldsville (6) ~aj!_ to Bottom of Sea 6 Tennmu Tuxedo 0 (11) ~ m NCAA footblll USC @(3) Bugs Bunny vs. Notre Dame at South Bend, Ind. · Double feature: (C) "East of I The Scene Sumatra" (adv) '53-Jeff Chandler : Mister Rogers• "eiahborttood Anthony Quinn. (C) "flame of Ara'. • ~ortscope '73 by" (adv) '52-Jeff Chandler, Mau· 11:00 M' 00 NBA Basketball Buffalo reen O'Hara at Cleveland. I Brother 'euu · lil Ci) @) g;, GO 7:30 ~ 00 Bailey's Comets News ~ @ g;, Inch High, Private , Theatre 26 ~ : Sesame Street U Mormon Tlbernacle Choir 11:30 · '23 Ci) (fQ) m The Jetso11s ~ Uncle Waldo 6 filuana: Window to th• South U (fjj (3) Yoai's G1n11 Ad Lib (}OJ World ol Wonder Movie: "Ma and Pa Kettle on Elementary News the Farm" (com) '54 -Marlorle Coun~ Music Main, Percy Kilbride. 8:00 ~ 8 Scooby·Doo ~ 6 g;, The Addams Family John Wayne Thutn AFTERNOON 6 Rock & Friends 12:00 R Serendipity ~ 3 Super Friends Movie: "Outcast of Ute Islands" o Vision On (adv) ·~Trevor Howard. d) Movie: "Brewster's Millions'' 00 Movie: "Conquered City" (dra) (com) '45-0ennis O'Keefe, Helen '65-0avid Niven, Martin Balsam. Walker. O Movie: "The Torch" (dra) '5(}-Ci61 Voice of Tokyo Paulette GOddard, Gilbert Roland. I Sesame Street m lnslaht ~ortsco~ '73 unQer 8:30 Q~ (_6) 09) g;, Emergency + 4 (i) Education at Wort Underdoa 1· Mfster Roprs' Nelfhborhood Movie: "A Public Altair" (dra) · Champfonshlp Wrestlina . '62 -Myron McCormick. Edward 12:30 · Sports Specl1I USA/USSR Junior Binns. Track and Field Championships and I All Pro Breakfast Show the U.S. National Roller Skatln11 9:00 ~ a ~Favorite Martians Championships. <» (lg) m Butch Cusidy I San Dieao Happenlnir MOMe: "Coin' to Toiwn" (com) (6) Voice or Afrlculture '35-Mae West, Paul Cavanaugh : Sesame street (6) Samson 1:00 It T1ku 1 Thief I (i7l @ lassie's Rescue Rangers Soul Train Cartoon Camiv11 Ltnd o1 the Giants Mister Roaers' Neithbothood u Ci) fum Show 9:30 ~ 8 Jeannie Roller Games ~ 0 g;, Star Trek 1:30 Qj (i) Horse RacJna "The Jock· Johnn Quest ey Gold Cup" Jack Whitaker hosts 7 3 Goober & the Ghost this 2-mile added $100,000 eve nt Chasers . from Aqueduct Race Track, Queens, Q) Movie: "The Iron M1jor" (dra) New York. '43-Pat 0"8rlen, Robert Ryan. @ Movie: "Paid to Kill" (dr1) '54 ff) Seu me Strett -Dane Clark. Page 14 THE DAILY PILOT, TV WEEK. OCTOBER 21. 1973 O Movie: (C) "The Sundowners" (wes) '5 1 -Robert Preston, John Barrymore Jr., Robert Ster1ina. I (() Concern ~ster Roaers' Nelahborhood Flnfarria Fiie.on 2:00 ft titl Cl) I IFmXl I Return of the Piloeftll A musical fantasy adapted trom a Chinese opera, that tells the story of a beautikll young girl with a Cinderella quallly, her ugly step· sister, a contract marriage and mis· taken identities. O On Campus "To Be A Woman" A look at the role of tomorrow's womal) 1n the world, society and lhe home. O Movie: "The Return of Jesse James" (wes) '50 -John Ireland, Ann Dvorak. i @CI) m Mission: Maaic Sports Action Pro-File Combat Comedy Cluslcs Repeat of 11.JOAM movie. I (6) Fiim Feature Sesame Street Futbol Soccer Travelure 2:30 O Eapresslon: East/West "The Case ~alnst Phll!nJine Martial law'' U @C3)WABC Super s hr Movie: (?} ''The Mlnl·Munsters" A cartoon version of the Munsters se· ries. I NFL Game of the Week F utbol-Soccer 1 Movie: ''Cooe•n's Blutt" (dra) '68-Cfint Eastwood. Susan Clark. I ~riculture USA 3:00 Qt, EYerythlne's Archi1 Aarlculture USA John Stearns and guests discuss the !armer and W icultural problems. Wild Wlld West Sherlock Holmes Theatre Movie: (C) "Plllua of the Sky" (wes} '50--Jeff Chandler, Dorothy Malone, Keith Andes. @) Sd·Fl Theatre m Movie: "The Fiahtlna 5e1bees" (adv) '44-John Wayne, Susan Hay- ward. I Wrestling Mister Roaers' Nelahborhood U.S. Navy • 3:30 Dusty's Treehouse Focus "Veteran's Administra· tlon" ~mour Presents m ~ Action '73 Vffaln1an : flm Adventures In lmp1ovisin1 flt Albert • Movie 4:00 Blenvenldos ~(])Thia Week In Pro Foot- ball • lmpacto "Cannery Worker Stri ke" 6 Outer limits Celebrity Bowling ~ Danlel Boone Babf1fleld Civic Thu tre bum Brothtra : Mr. Wizard · Drama .• ranor1ma Lttino • This Wttk In Pro football Voice of Aarlculture 4:30 Juat Natural ' Inquiry Sports Crt1f11n11 Hlah thap1tral It Pays to Be lanoranl Platea Contlnuada (i) It T1kt1 a Thief itli Anderson Sltow : Nu t Billion Yta'1 (R) m Coron1 Now 5:00 U Anlmal World "Kenya's Spring or Ute" Biii Burrud's cameras taP· ture the animals that frequent the Mzlma Spring in arid Southern Keo· ya. ! What's Geinf On Pinbusters ~mour Presents 0 l!7J (]) m ABC's Wlde World of Sports The Har1em Globetrotters in exhibition play from Memphis and the Duke Kahanamoku 81a Wave Surfing Champlooship$ from Oahu, Hawaii. O Rams' Coach'$ Show 09) News m Movie· "Thir1y Seconds Over TOkJo" (dra) '44 -Spencer Tracy, Van Johnson, Robert Mitchum. I The Persuaders Nuhvllle Music 00 NFL Game of the Week Roller Games Vince lombudl's Science & Arf of Football 5:30 U Johnny Mann's Stand Up and Cheer Lloyd Haynes (Room 222) guests. I 00 Ci) 00 News Untamed World Movie: "Butterfield 8" (susp) '60 -Elizabeth Taylor, Laurence Harvey. I Porter Waaoner Show Aeclon Chicano (R) 00 Animal World Speed Racer EVENING ;i tl~Wlfi~ ~Aw '74 * LAUGH EVEN MORE!!! Hee Haw The Real Don Steele Show ~ht Gallery CA) Nation1t Qeoaraphic Jimmy Dt•n Show : Behind tht lines (R) (j) The World at War • Teatro def Slbado Three Stoogei 6:30 Ne•s 3 Sports With Bi rth KNBC News Conference Twlli~t Zone @ lV m Rusoner Repor1 a Surlost Platea Contlnaada Bobby Qoldsboro Show · C1pulin1 • l&ssle uWe Ra5Clls 7:00 Other People, Other Places Pe· ter Graves nanates "Pallo at Sien· na ," the story of a wild horse race staged in Italy's Tuscan hill$ Wild Klnidom The Starfost Bowllna for Doll1rs Other People, Other f111cu """ Rams Hl~llahts tif} (I) W Ltwrence Welk Show It Takes a Thief CI) Tiie Rootdu Cl) Wild World ol Anlm1l1 Hee Haw 1 When Witches Hovered Near In honor of Halloween, narrator John Colle wande~ through Connecticut graveyards resurrecting ahosts from 18th·century folklore. Two spooky tales are told . I El Show d• Rosita Peru Pollet Suraeon Speed Racer 8: 8 .7:30 8 Wild World of Anlmtlt "Too plre is enloying the fruits of his Many Elephants" William Conrad labor until a crafty business type, narrates a film on why the great who is tryln& to dominate the re· behemoths are becomin& another of gion, begins foreclosing farm mort· the endangered species. gages and refusing to honor water D SELLERS & SCOTT! 4'l~ts .• * "DR. STRANGELOVE" 9130Ua00 1ob NewMrt Sltow A A KTLA SPECIAL rather embarrassing operation leads to 1 romance~ for Caror Kesfer with e Mtvtt: "DI. Str11t191CM" (com) htr doctO<, I rel1tlonshlp that every· '64-Peter Sellers, George C. Scott, one questions due to the disparity Sterling Hayden, Keenan Wynn, Slim in their a1es. Pickens. I Ckll Roberta Harvest Spedal I Boxln& From the Olympic Altrlcl Hitchcodl Presenti (3) L.et's Make a Deal Minority Commun"' ffil Datlnf 8am• . llptnln' Hop.ins Concert (R) 0 tchcock s Thriller 10:00 -lift! CJ) Clrof lumett Sllow John * "TOPAZ" ... IN COLOR ~:iuests. O Milllo11 $ Movie: (C) (2hr} "To-U ~CJ) al Qriff "Prey" Griff's paz" (dra) '69-John Forsythe, Fred· friend. President Gamal Zaki, cru· erick Stafford. Dany Robin, John Vet· sading 'for peace in the Middle East, non. , is the target of an assassin ol many o:Ql Gale's Girls disguises. Sal Mineo, Albert Paulsen 9 (6) Other People, Other Plues and Scott Hylands guest. m Bobb) Goldsboro Show I Gl News m The Gboul G1n1 : A Tribute to Jim Croce (R) 8:00 fJ Qi (I) All In the f1mll1 Edit~ · lox de Mtxlco gets more than she bargained tor • Chinese Varlet, Hour when she sends In 1 coupon to a Lou &onion Show p1une company for a lree quarter 10:301 ftepper Roditl1 Sllow and the coins pour In without stop· Dr. Irene ~uori• ping. • Pllllbln Ii Co. 0 ~ (i)o:Qj m Emer11ney El) News "Snake Brie" A rattlesnake strikes : HollJWood TelevbJon Thutre Johnny Gage durina a mountain rtl· "Winesburg. Ohio" (R) cue. 10:-40 -~ue Lanrv•1e ftroaram 0 Ci7l CI> a> The P1rtrld19 fa11-11:00 lU O Cl) Newt llr ''The Last of Howard" On botrd USC football USC vs. Notre a cruise ahip to Acapulco, Keith Dame. Tape delay. end Danny suspect that the self· I M1nhal Dillon professed millionaire courting tau· • Frtfht Nlpt rie is ··phony. Mission: h'llpouible m Movtt: (2hr) "Tortill• Flats" Rev. LtrOJ Jtnlllns (adv) '42 -Spene.er Tracy, Hedy CJ) Rodi Concert L.amarr, John Hodlek. fOO Club I Ct11mplonalllp Wrest1rn1 (j) Movie: "OftlJ Two Can ftla(' huble Sltodl Th111r• (com)'62-Peter Sellers, Mal Zet· Prwmltr terin1. Tutro del Sabado ~ It Is Wrttten Movie: (2hr) ''tonfesalons of 1 11:15 Movie: "What • War to Qo" Nul Spy" (dra) '39--Edward G. com) '64-Shirtey Macl.alne, Dean Robinson, Paul Luku. Martin. 8:30 fJ 9 (() M•A•s•H Hawkeye de· § t12l News cides to light lhrouah the maze of Ct) Movie: '1he War Lord" Army red t1pe to help a corporel 11) '66-Charlton Heston, Richard mmy his Korean girlfriend •Iler he Boone. learns the couple already has 1 11:30 II Fabulous 521 (C} "Mamie" baby. (susp) '64 -lippi Hedren, sean ~ This Wetll In Pro Football Connery. cm Cl) (1l S u s p 1 n s 1 Movie Ci) Movie: ''""'-Bleck Hand'' (dr1) cney to Bum" An inaenlous con· ·SO-Gene Kelly, J. Carrol Naish. vict uses the prison print shop to 0 Movie: (C) ''The H1ppe11ln(' make $100 bills which he mounts (dra) '67-Anthony Quinn, faye Oun· on art paper and covers with water away, George Maheris. colors as abstract palntlnas. The Cl) star Trek , warden unwittingly helps $mueale I!) Movie~ "In Which Wt Serve' the boaus money out of prison when Ira) '42-Noel Coward. John Miiis. he insists on selling up en ut show • Cinema 34 for the convict outside prison. E. G. 11:45 · 90 Tonl&llt Marshell, Mildred Natwick, Alejandro ltoct Con~rt , Rey Cleavon Utlle Charles McGr1w 12:00 • Movie: (C) "a.di to Qod • and' David F. Doyle 'star. nW' (dra) '54-Rock Hudson. fl) ,,atea Contlnu1d1 m Movie: "Cnation of the Human- £ll) llacll Performers (R) Olds" ($cl fi) '62-0on Megowan. 9:00 tJ Qi) Ci) Mary Tyter Moore Show 12:30 ff) Movie: "La Dolce Ytta',' (dr1) one of Mary's ex·boyfr1ends (Jerry •Sf -Marcello Mastroianni, Mila Van Dyke) gets a lob In the ntws· Ekberg. .. ., room aod tries to tum the old ro· 1:00 0 Movie:. Redhead (dra)-Ros· mence on aaaln sa110 Braw. Gert f robe. ---/Tl J h W . ChJ Im Movie: "ladit ol M11$111I lttn· 161' l.lf.J o n ayne as sum n1n" ewes) '58-Jim Davis. * On KERO·TV Now 1:15~ It Tans a 111111 D CD Cl)@) m NIC S.tvrdez 1:25 fJ Movie: ••u Rue Mldelelnt" MOvlt: lt> (2llr15m) "Cl11Jum ~usp) '47-James Caaney. (wes) '70 -John W1yne, Forrest l:JO All·Nlpt ~: ''Gettlnc Gertie's tucker, Christopher George, Ben •~ti" "Dan1erous Proltulon," Johnson. Glenn Corbett, Andrew "His Kind ot Woman" Prine, Lynda Day. In 1878 New Miii· 2:40 f.I MOYfl: "Montana hilt" (wes) 1co, tl'te owner of • vest cattle em· '"52-Jane Russell, Geor1e Brent. THE DAILY PILOT. TV WEEK. OClOSER 21, 1973 ~ '' "(\,J ~~4"--.· . • -.,1~ LIST E . M . ,,;a.1~ oF verung ovies 6:00 1:00 1:30 11:30 8:00 9;00 11:00 1):30 6:30 8:00 1:15 11:00 11:30 6:30 1:00 1:30 11:00 11:30 6:30 8:00 9:00 ll:OO ll:JO 6:30 1:00 9?00 11:30 7:30 8:00 l l30 9:00 Jl;OO 11:15 11130 SUNDAY. OCTOBER 21 '- 5 (C) "lndlan flaht•r" {weS) '5~l<lrk Dou&les, Waller Matlhll.t 9 "Tfl• Day the E'•l1h Cau1t1t Fire" (sci.ft) '62-Leo Mcl<ern 9 (C) "Slncerely Yours" (mus) 'S>-Liberace, Dorothy Malone 11 "Tiie Trvth ~t Women" (com) "SS-Julie Harris, Laurence Harvey 7 17 3 (C) "L4ve Sto~" (dra) '70--Ali McGraw, Ryan O'Nul 7 (C) "thunder Alley' (adv} '67-Fabian, Annette Funicello 11 (C) "The Loves of Carmen'' (dra) '48--Rita Haywor1h. Glenn rord 13 "Crl,,,. and ~unlshment" (dra) 'S9-Georae Hammon 17 3 "Whom the OH• Love" (mus) '•9-John Loder, Laine Heid MONDAY, OCTOBER 22 5 "Kona Coast" (dra) '68--Richard Boone, Vera Miies 9 (C) "And Soon ttle Darkness" (susp) '7J-Pamel11 Franklin 4 23 6 (C) "A Big Hand for the Little udy" (wes) '66-Henry Fonda. Joal\1te Woodward, Jason Robards JO (C) "Sweet Bird of Youth" (dra} '62-Paul Newmen, Geraldine Pa&•· 17 3 (C) "An Eye t·or an Eye" (wes) '66--Robert Lansing, Pal Wayne. 9 "Weal ftolnt Story'' (mus) 'SO--James Cagney. Dorl~ Day 2 29 I (C) "The Prleat'• Wife" (com) '71-Sophta Loren, Marcello Mastroianni 3 "Seit and the Slngl• Glrl" (com) '64-N11tal1e Wood. Tony Curt is 5 "•II aroadcHt of 1938" (com) '38-8ob Hope, W. C. Fleld•. 7 "Sundown" (adv) '0 -Bruce Cabot, Gene Tlernfy 13 (C) "Pirates of Monterey" (adv) '47-Rod Camero11. Maroa Mon\ez TUESDAY, OCTOBER 23 7 tC) "After the f ox" (com) ·66-Peter Sellers, Britt Ekland. 1 l7 3 (C) "The PrHldent's Plane Is Mlulng" (dra) '73-Buddy Eb sen, Peter Gravet. Arthur l<ennedy, Raymond Massey 9 "Love With th• Proper Stranger" (dra) '64-Natalie Wood, Steve McQueen. 5 "Kona Coa•l" (dre) '68-Richard Boone, Vera Miles 9 <C::> ''Toy Ticer" (com) 'S6-Jeff Chandler, Laraine Day 2 29 I (C) "S•ddle th•. Wind" (wes) '68-Robert Taylor, Julie LOridon 5 "My tavorlh Blond•" (com) '42-Bob Hope, Madeleine Carroll 1J "Th• Rini'' (dra) '52-Gerald Mohr, Rita Moreno WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 24 7 jC> ''Batman" (com) '66-Adam West. Burt Ward S 'Kone Coast" (adV) '68-FUchard Boone, Vera Miies 9 CC) ''Tiie Deadly Affair" (dra) '67-James Mason. Simone S•anoret 7 1) 3 (C) ''Go A•lt Allee" (dra) '72-Wllllam Shatner, Andy GnHoth, Jamie Smith Jackson. 9 <C> "Suicide Commando" (dra) '68-Aldo Ray. 2 29 I (C) "Madlln• Oun McCain" (dra) '70-John Cusevetes S "Sorrowful Jones" (com) '49-Bob Hope, Lucille Ball 13 "Mystery Subm•rlna" (dra) 'Sl-Macdonald Carey. M11rta Toren THURSDAY, OCTOBER 25 1 !C> ''Th• Collector" Part I (dra) '6S.-Terence Stamp. 5 'Kone Coast" (dra) '68-Richard Boone. Vera Mile~ 9 CC) "The F'•r Couotry" (adv) 'SS-James Stewart. Ruth Rornan 2 29 I CC) "Ques• Wtto's c.omlng to Dinner" (dra) '67 -Spence• Tracy1 l<atharloe Hepburn, Sidney Poitier, Katnarlne Houghton 9 (C) "••ctila1h" (wes) '56-Richard Widmark, Donna Reed. 2 29 a (C) "R.P.M." ldra) '70--Anthony Quinn, Ann-Margret 5 (C) ''ttie Paleface" (com) '48--Bob Hope. Jane Russell U ''fhe l tr.nae Death of Adolph Hitler" (my\} '43--Ludwl& Donath FRIDAY, OCTOBER 26 7 (C) "The Collector'' Concl. (dra) '6S.-Terence Stamp. 5 "Kona Co•st" (dra) '68-Richard Boone, Vera Miies 9 (C) "Wtlat'a So Bad About Feellnc Good1" (com) '68-Georite Pep· pant M•fX Tyler Moore. 2 2t • (C) ' aene•ttl ttie ftfanet of the Apes" (tC•·ft) '70 -James Fn1ncl•cua, Ch8rlton Heston. 2 29 8 (C) "Frcip" (su1p) '72-Ray Milland, Joan Van Ark. 13 "1'h• a1ack SJeep" (hor) '56-Bela Lugosi, Lon Chaney SATURDAY, OCTOBER 27 5 "Dr. 1H1an&elove" (com) '64--Peter Sellers, Georae c. Scott. 9 CC) ''Topaz" (dnl) '69-John Forsythe. Frederlclr St1Hord 11 "Tortllla Flats" (adv) ·42-Spencer Tracy, Hedy Lamarr. 7 17 3 (C) "Money to lum" (susp) '73-E. G. Mushall. 4 23 6 10 CC) "Chl1um" (wes) '70-John Wayne. Forrest Tuckt-r 29 I "Only t-Can ~ay" (com) '62-Peter Sellers. Mal Zet1erling. 3 ''What • Way to Go" (com) '64--Shl rley MacLalne, Dean Mart.in 23 6 "The Wer l.ord" (dr•) '66--Charlton Heston. Rlchafd Boone 2 (C) "Mamie" (susp) '64-TipP,I Hedren, Sean Connery. 1 ~C) ''The Ha.ppenlnl'' (dra) 67-Anthony Quinn, Faye Dunaway 13 'In Which We Sente" (d.-a) ••2-John Miiis. Noel Coward Sidney Poitier. H • brilliant youna rnearch doctor, asks the blnsl"IS of Katharine Hepburn end Spencer Tracy, portnylnc the p•rents of . the air1 who wants to merry him. In "Guess Who's Coming to Dinner" on T'he CBS Thursday Night Movie at 9PM. TIHD OF CAR ,A Y11\IHTS? LEASE! ORDER YOURS NOW 1974 MODELS * * • James Franciscus stars as an 8ttron1ut who must face the r.oHlblllty that his clvlll:ution 1 1one, and that he must cope with • society ruled by 1pes, In ••peneath the Pl1net of the Apes," whlcfl hes Its world television premlen! on The CBS Friday Night Movie at 9Pa.t. ALL MAKES OIL a. 5rl •GEORGE JO I NE~ e DON C ROS BY DUNTON FORD '740 ~ Mo1n ~I Santo Anu 546-7070 Pace 15 • ATLANTIC'S BARGAIN STEREO DAYS COMING! OCT. 29 The Ten Dollar TapeDeek Tuneup Thad's A pro should put your tape deck through the paces. so we've arr· anged for the famous T andberg .Tape Recorder Clinic to appear at our store. A factory engineer will be there to answer •ny questions you may have on tape decks or taping and to give your machine a thorough going over with his bat· tery of test equipment. a free engineer CDSCOT'F 3s7a 56 watt (RMS, 8 ohms I AM-FM Stereo Receiver. 1n eludes walnut c ase. REG. PRIC E $239.95 5175 00 A product from S O NY. SUPERSCOPE. DR-7 A STEREO HEADPHONES r; ~~!sCE $ 7 9 8 o~:;:,~1 •. Sony HST -1 19 A AM /FM C.ssette Receiver. Record directly from A M/FM or pluq in furnteble •nd record from recorda. R ... Price S 149" 51H.tS ... . ................................. . s ONv.·s I R -603BA FM STEREO/FM-AM RECEIVER 6036 So1ty STR 6036 A •••••.•• , ••••• SU t .50 Garrord 401, lase ....... , • . • . • SS. to Sh11r. M44-7 .•.••••.. ~...... lt.'5 Superacape S·I'• • • • • . • • • . • • . • • ~ 5364.ZS A product rrorn SUPER SCOPE. SONY· TC-13450 SAYE $108.45 ! $25580 Deluxe Dolby Cassette Deck 30-17KHt Response REG. PRIC~ $239.95 s17&1s HOUIS: M .. f . lZ·f : T., W., !H. lZ-6: SAT. 1 0-5; SUN. 12-5: -445 E. 17TH, COSTA MISA - atlantic music stereo . , Advice on Spanking -By the Author Of UHow to Parent" DAILY PILOT Susan Saint James: ''I Vote for Life, And for Nonviolence'' ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA What's Your ESP Ability Got to Do with Your IQ? ?:. sk Them Yourself Went 10 uk a famous person a qu.atlon7 Send !tie queallon • • poelcard, to "Aak," Family Weekly, &41 LeiUnoton ,..,..., New VOfk, N. Y. 10022. We'll pay $5 '°' pubU~ queaUons. Sorty, we c.n't ans-r otherL. FOR GEORGE PEPPARD; TV' a "Banacek'' I hear you're tlarough with women after becoming a two-time loser al man-iage. Tn.u?P-John Welton, St. Louis, Mo. • No. I pay alimony to two former wives. Being a wife is the only job you can get for live years and then retire at the FOR HUG/JES RUDD, TV t1e1c:sma11 You were quoted as saying that you don't consider Barbara Walters of the "'Today" show to be a newswoman. Isn't this just a cheap attempt to boost your new CBS morning show that is bucking "Today"?-D. Reynolds, Atlantic City, N.J. •What I really said was that l <lon't look on Barbara as a re- 1~uter. I consi<l£'r her to be a perfom1er and she is very good ;1t that. There is no way l can consider her a reporter when she has no background in that ar!'a, as Sally Quinn nnd I do. FOR TERRY ANNE MEEUWSEN, 1973 Miss America Was there any aspect of the Miss America Pageant that you didn't like?-R. Grant, San Antonio, Teus •Yes th("t'c was, and I feel very grntiJied that this year they accepted my suggestion and le~ the girls' measurements out of the judges' bOOh First of an, they never check to see if someone has told the truth or doctored the facts. S6<!0ndly, lhnt infonnation isn't necessary. l'<JR LARRY CSONKA, Mio mi Dolphins star Whnt arc your feelings about Astroturf?-John Brady, Durham, N.C. • It c.\ll finish every player in the 1C3gue years before his time. Let the engineers play on it. l hear there's a guy off somewhC'rc working on a diffcf('flt weather-resistant surf ace. It's ea.llcd gra!.<t. Cod bless him. 1:on JULl1\ CllILD, 1'Vs French Chef Diel being a tall girl ever bother you when you were grow· ing up?-Mrs. I. Walton Bader, s~rsdale, N.Y. • Yes, when I was about 15 and all the boys seemed two feet shorter than me. Now l find it n great advantage because people in stores and restaurants remember that big tall girl. Uut clothe~ arc expl!nsivc and hard to find! FOR DICK HAYMES In 1961, after six marriages and n war with the bottle that nearly wrecked you and did ruin your care41r, you went to Europe. What happened to mnlce you decide to come back to your career nnd America?-L. F., Watsonville, Calif. • I nc\'cr ga' c up my career ... J continued to sing in Eur- ope'. Bnl I spc11t mosl of my time examining what hacl be· t·11mc of rny Ii£<'. Tht' prc'isme arising out of knowing what l ''1 doi1t · to myself. l• 1 rny caf{'er and to others was ngoniz.ing. S11 t quit drinking. {:(1mpletely And l stnrted planning to t•omc home one dny. In 1971. uut of the blue, I got n call in Spain askin~ me-lo come bnck to the U.S., to ll<' on n Ten· 11c'isct· Ernie• ·'l)C'dnl. I walked hnc-k into a top show and h:t\'l· hcen "o h1t\)' cn·r since thnt I ,1i11 haven t goue back lo colll•CI m~· 'luff in Europt·. salary of a federal court justice. Mine is a high·stress busi- ness and f ve yet to. find a woman who doesn't start soaking up some of the tension. I am looking for a woman who is physically attractive, but th:lt doesn't mean be:lutiful. Some- one who likes men, as opposed to needing, wanting, hating, loving them. Not having a constant and warm relationship with a woman is lilce complaining about the rain. There doesn't seem to be much you can do about it. FOR PETULA CLARK You have sung all over the world, .and (or a lot of famous people. Who impressed you the most?-Lisa M«gan, Los Angeles, Calif. • I'm not saying this because I was born in England, but it was the British royal family who impressed me more than any other people I ve ever met. FOll]OE NAMATH Why ta.Jee the chance of being crippled in a game when you could sit back and get money from insurance because of your injury?-Gary Camary, Chlno, Calif. •There are rc:illy three reasons: (1) I enjoy playing foot· ball. (2) I don't believe you can live your life around the possibility that something bad might happen. If you did that you'd never leave your house in the morning. And (3) the money I'd receive from my insurance wouldn't leave me , enough to buy a ticket to see a Jet game. FOR LEE TREVINO, pro golfer Have you found any change in your mental approech to golf since you reached the million-dollar winnings mark fast May?-Franlc Johnson, Sacramento, Calif. •Yes. When you reach the first million, something happens. I still love playing the game, but there has been something laclcing in the mental approach. That wiO change in January, I promise. FOR TAYWR CALDW ELL, author What is your real first name? By using a masculine first name, are you saying it's easier to be born a man?-B. S., LancasCer, Pa. • J wns christened Janet Taylor Caldwell. When I started writing, J was tokl that editors would give more attention to a man's work than a woman's. And so I dropped the "Janet." No. I am not saying it's easier to be bom a man. No one has it better than the Americnn wife, and that is why so few of them w:111t any part of that inane Women's Lib. October 2l, l973 /iunlfY ~ The Newtpaper Magazine MORTON FRANK, Pruldent Md Publl.Mt PATRICK M. LINSICEY, V.P.-Ad Director Sid Layetllcy, Marketing Dir: G•reld S. Wroe, Eastern Mgr.: Robert 0. Olldt, Associate Eastern Mgr.; Jo. Frazer, Jr., Chicao¥<1gr.; Rlcti.rd T. Flynn, Detroit Mgr. ll'Ullf..llHEA RELATIONS: ROBERT D. CARNEY and LEE EL.LIS, V.P.a and Co-Directors: AotMrt H. IAM'riott. Mgr.; Robert J. Ctufttlen, Publlaher Services: JoHph 0 . Atmttrong, Ant. to Publisher. Newspaper Services: Aober1 B•nlc•r, Promotion: LEONARD S. DAVIDOW, Chelrman MOAT PERSKY, V.P.-Edllor-ln-Chlef Reynoldtl Dod9on, Managing Editor Richard Veldatl, Art Director Rouly" Abt'•veya, Women's Editor Merttyn H•CtMn, Food Editor Joen Henrlc:kMn and Hal UlndOn, Auoclate Editors: GIOJfe Brief, Pictures. Contributing Editors: Peer J. 0Pl)91\Mlmer, HollywoOd: 1AnJ BOf1etefn, Sports. Cetyl Eli.r, Merchandising; loul• LArale, P"OOtJCTION: ... lbourM Zlpprich, Director; Distribution. Rleherd W•ndt. Mgr.: AotMrt.t Colllne, Makeup Headquarters: &41 Leiclngton Ave .. N.Y., N.Y. 10022 ~ 1973 FAMILY WEEKLY, INC. All rights re1erved. A pvbtlc.Cloft Of DoWfte C-m1111lutlott1, Inc. EchHtd ft 0.-, Jr,. Cit/et Encutl~• Oftlc•r "°"" Madi Cer1er, Ch•/111en of tit• Bo•rd Aot.n4 S. Tretltllla, PrHldent Smoke from the finest tobaccos filtered through a bed of real charcoal to enrich the flavor and soften the taste. Warning: The Surgeon General Has Determined That Cigarette Smoking Is Dangerous to Your Health. "8tergate as S"°w Business: Dr ........ Dr. Joyee Brothers Explains How the Spotlight of the~ Changes Se11ators and Witnesses Alike ~ i ~ ii: ~ ::> "Once the hearings are OW8f', the senators' penonalitles will be• comprGlnise between the new and the old." ··&en though the •ftnes•• ..... coMlict, t think...., N o issue in yea.rs has caused as much all-consuming interest as Watergate. One of the main reasons for tJliB has beco the televi Senate oommittec hcarinp. For me as a psychologist. one of the most fascinating aspects of lbc bearings is the behavior of the individual 5enators on the committee and bow they have changed their images sinoc 1hey've been thrust into the limelight. The Watergate senators are political and congressional vetecans, so semng on committees is hardly a new e~perieoce for them. But the Watergate Committee is like oo other. There hasn't been a congressional investigation of this mag- nifudc since the McCarthy hearings in the early 'SO's and, like those hearings. the all-seeing eye of television bas plaoed the senaton into a fishbowl type of ex- istence. These seven men have never had their work as cJosely scrutiniu:d as they have during the Watergate proceedings. Of course, they'~ quite aware of this, and each member projccts-ioteotionalty or not-a particular image to his audi- ence. It is quite natural for us to behave differently when we know our work is 4 • FAMILY W£EKL Y, Octobef 21, 1973 tend to be beliewed a long• titer are In front of the public." .. Changes in their public personalities don't take plltce without any awareness on the waatora' part. ••• However. 1118 tact Iha aware mean they hawe calculatedlJ adopted lhe9e ~ ot "#atergate personalities.' ••• I want to emphasize that it isn't a COH9Clous md intentional 'slipping Into a role' or 'show biz.' " being examined mon: closely than usual. , We try to improve our perfonnanc:e be-· cause we arc aware of someone figura- tively looking over our shoulder. What actually happens to the individ- ual isn't much different from what hap- pens on the st.age. A big audience puts a spotlight on one's behavior. And the very ad of observation on the part of so many other people changes our be- havior. These changes in their public per- sonalities don't take place without any awareness on the senaton' part. At first they probably were not conscious of it, but by now, I am sure they are very con- scious of it because these arc astute meo • who read the papera and understand what the papen are saying about them. However, the fact that they ~ aware doesn't mean they have caJculat.edly adopted tbete changes, or "Watergate personalities.' .. It just means they know what's going oo, so to speak. But again, I want to emphasize that it isn't a con- scious and inteotional "slipping into a role .. or "abow biz." What happens is that there is a continuous feedback. An actor oo the stage moves unconlciously io ·~ direction of the audience, as a result of felt waves of approval or dis- approval. Very much the sanic thing hap- pens to public men in a situation like this. The truth is, it isn't even very litely that the senaton will slip back to being · onna: scbtt ~ .the.-Watupte bearings are over. Each man by now has acquired a persona baaed on the bear- ings. And he bas a vested interest in it. You know. the wllole idea of role-pl.ay- ing in psychodrama is to obtain a change in behavior. People do change when they a~ "playing roles" -wbether it'a a role like the one of being assigned to find out the truth about Watergate, Of' a ro\c in a play, or a role that is assigned by a psychotherapist in an attempt to change someone's behavior. What probably will happen to the senators is that, once the bearinga are over, their personalities will be a compromi.9c between the new and the old. In other words, they probably will inC«pOrate some of their ''Water- gate penonalities" into their private and public selves. You·n notice that some of the senators have even gone on television shows-four of them (Sens. Howard Baker, Daniel Inouye, Herman Talmadge and Lowdl Weicker) appeared on the "Dick Cavett Show." In the caac of the wit:nesles, I think f 1 l ~ I ti c k s there is a tendency to believe each man as he comes out to have his day in the spotlight. Even though the witnesses are in conflict, I think they tend to be be- lieved as Jong as they are in front of the public. But Inter on, a Gallup Poll showed not only that the investigating senators all had fa\•orable images (from Senator lnouye's 84 percent approval to 69 percent for Senators Wcickcr and Gurney), hut that the witnesses all had 1111/avorable images (from 67 percent disapproval for John Mitchell and John Ehrlichman to 62 percent for H. R. Haldeman and 60 percent for John Dean). We all pay lip service to the idea that everyone is innocent until proved guilty. But we don't really hchave that way. When a m'ln is on the witocss stand, the very fact that he is being questioned about something that appears shady will color :md taint the way we look at him. Only if we are really participating in an important judgment about a person, as when we're membcn1 of a jury trying to make an important decision about him, do we try to be fair. At least. that's what studies have indicated. One study showed that a member of a jury will tend to set aside his prejudices during a trial-but he can only set aside the prejudices that he knows about. Other prejudices creep in -the ones he has, but doesn't r~cognize. Nevertheless, the very fnct that the wit- nesses appear to be "accused men" re- sults in a negative reaction from the public. Among the witnesses there is some role-playing, too. Once a man begins .to act innocent, he begins to feel innocent. So I'm sure every one of those men feels most earnestly that he is completely inno- cent Q.f JUl)' w~doiag. and probably feels it more strongly after going on the witness stand than he did before. One theory is that if a person assumes the posture of an emotion, he begins to feel that emotion. Thus, if a man assumes the posture of grief, if an actor assumes rhc posture of grief, he very soon begins to feel that emotion. Right now, every one of the witnesses must feel very un- justly accused. I want to emphasize that this isn't "show business." It isn't a con- scious "act." It ju!lt comes out, and in a sense it is role-playing. But it isn't some- thing the witness sets out to do. and it isn't something the senators set out to do. They don't plan to slip into roles. It just happens as a logical extension of what ~hey arc doing. and the fact that they arc doing it in front of so many people. Son\e people call what happens here '"hamming it up.'' But actually. the mean- ing of what happens goes deeper than that. fronically, President Nixon has under- gone changes of a very si milar kind. The man who gain'i the Amcricnn Presidency FAMILY WEEKLY. October 21, 11173 • I not only experiences a new role, but an enormous increase in stress, partly result- ing from the im mense c hangeover in- volved in becoming President. There is an enormous difference between the Nixon who made the "Checkers" speech and the present-day Nixon. One study ahout how life-changes affect us shows that pressures not only change us, but also they change us physically. Even pos- itive changes have an effect of stress and strain on the body. For example, a man may become less rc~istant to disease after a _great change like the one a President ............. ... m Co111i1111ed _ onpagt! 'J IA 1 .. 111, • 111 ...... 0 I enctoee IS.as (CHECK OR MONEY OROEA) tor a ~ place • .._ tlfl9 In lnhtN pdlm. 0 I enctoee $3..00 (CHECK OR MONEY OAOER) for a ~ plllce eet-*11 In .. ,.....,, cMdlllcl l*ow: (PlEA8E CHECK ONE) 0 ....... 0 P. Henry 0 My ROM 0 YlnlMd 0 ~ 0 Vie ROIM ....... ~~...:....~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ~'--~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~'--~~~- ~ 8tMe ~ u.M -P'-...... per e-lrt ...... To -*"-Y 9M »p codlit. 04ltf good Oflly """"' U.LA. '*' elql!IW J-. 15, 1W4. ')>. • I gave uPSillo · g a11d lost 68 pou113s. By Carlene Paulk -as t.old t.o Ruth L. McCarthy ·· F"f'be day I took my last puff, it seemed like I ..I. blew away my will power. Because once the smoke cleared, that scale began to go up and up until l reached 196 pounds. At first, you see, I was like everyone else who gives up cigarettes. When I stopped reach- ing for one, I started eating everything in sight. Why, my mouth was full all of the time. ru tell you, my appetite nearly ruined my life. And the whole congregation of King's Bap- tist Church in Vero Beach, Florida knows it. Why, more than once the pastor prayed with me -not about my fat, but my marriage. As I gained, Billy (my husband) began calling me "Famous Hips ... For good reason, too. I was 56 inches around, so I really earned the nickname. But how it hurt when I heard it. Yet instead of controlling what I ate, I kept loading up with more food and caring less. Even my son was ashamed to have me at school Still, I couldn't get hold of myself. I guess it was because I knew my husband was losing interest in me. If an invitation came for us, he'd refuse it, saying that he was getting too old to go out anymore. And imagine, he was only in his thirties! Finally, we withdrew from one another, \inti I all that was lef\ of our marriage was the love we had for our children. Understand, though I hated to bear about my problem, deep down it was gnawing at me. That's why I tried so many diets and pills. But they made me nervous, so I gave them up. When I did, my appetite doubled. I sometimes, thought about going back to smoking, hut rd promised myself not to, so didn't. Thank goodness, I'd been reading the stor- ies of people who'd lost ·weight with the help of the Ayd.s pla n. So I bought some vanilla cara- mel Ayd.sa at our local drug s tore. The label on the box said that Ayd.s contain vitamins and minerals, but no drugs. And they certainly proved right for me, because I experienced no nervousness, no side effects, no sickness at all on the Ayd.s plan. For breakfast, rd have two Ayds with hot coffee about 20 minutes before a hard boiled egg. At lunch, two more Ayds with black coffee, a salad, lean meat and a vegetable. Then a mid- afternoon snack of Ayd.s and tea. And at supper, two Ayds and coffee, before baked or broiled meat or fish, a vegetable and a salad. Those Ayds really helped me cut down on food, yet I was completely satisfied. By the second week, I'd lost three or four pounds on the Ayds plan. Soon, I began to lose more -sometimes five pounds in one week. After t.hat, nothing could get me off the Ayds plan, even when we visited Billy's family in Georgia, where I was surrounded by good cook- ing. That was about three months after I'd been on the Ayd.s plan and I was down to 160 pounds. My weight 1088 made s uch an impression on my sister -in-law, she bought a box herself. Of course, she only needed to lose about 10 pounds, but the Ayds plan worked just as well for her. You Cdll eee wily '"Y ~ ued *> oalJ nw "'FCllllOU H;p.." At 196 powu:la, I wcu a bi6 cu OUT oar (nedu. Thoee Ayd.s candies were wonderful an- other way, too. l could carry them around as easy as a pack of cigarettes. And since Ayds contain only 26 calories apiece, I was soon in pretty good shape. Instead of reaching for a cig- arette or a fattening sweet, I'd have an Ayd.s. Now, thanks to the Ayds plan, I'm down to 128 pounds and compliments are coming my my way. I don't mind saying, the whole church is proud of me. Billy and I are real close again. What's more, my husband's talked so much about my experience, I think the whole South knowsofit. lftheydon't, I guess they will after reading this. So I'd like to add one last thing. rm not trying to preach to anyone, or to SllY .. I -.,.,~-...... Loolt aJ tM di/T~l"nl« ill '"Y fAi«lu aMl bees "'*'· A"'1 tJtar 1 llol oU ~ I !8 potUUJ.. Ito. d4#W (or "N!. the Ayds plan will help everybody in the world with a weight problem. All I know is that the Ayds plan helped ~ where nothing else did. And I hope and pray that this story will help someone else be as ha ppy as I am now. BEFORE AND AFTER MEASUREMENTS Before After Height ................ 5'5W' ................ 5'5%" Weight ................ 196 lbs .............. 128 lbs. Bust .................... 38" ..................... 33" Waist .................. 36" ..................... 24~" Hips .................... 56" ..................... 36~" Dress ................... 20% ................... 8-10 Jobmanshlp How to Deal with Phonies and Shirkers One of the most exasperating co-workers is the person who manages to win credit for work he didn't do. Your natural reac- tion may be to have it out with him or to march in and set the boss straight. Since neither way is apt to lead to the resutts you want, you'll have to use subtler methods. Or. John BuUer, a leading indus- trial psychologist, suggests you and any others involved send the boea •brief note .tMMll the job .... pboltJ hen> .. dllilMd for Na own. In the note, just oudlne the c:onlrtlMlona of NCh ......... of ycMA' work gnMlp. Gift the simple r.a.. not 11CC1•1tiiw.. After the note you can have a straightforward discussion with the boss to straighten out the record without tearing down any individuals-including the phony hero. Your conversation is simply to give the credit where it's deserved. If the prob- lem is the reverse, where one member of your work team doesn't carry his load, Dr. Count Your Calories bJ Whal You Do Do you know how many calories you use up by sleeping? About half a calorie per pound of your body weight each hour. So if you weigh 100 pounds and sleep eight hours you lose 400 calories-or at · ..c one chocolate sundae! The U.S. Deplirtlnent of A9rtcultwe breMs down our,..,._. .cttwltJ Into he categories: SedetUry Ktivttiee (reading, eating, watching TV. playing cards, typing-things that require little arm movement), in which you lose 80 to 100 calories an hour. Ught KtivHles (cooking, ironing, walking slowly, miscellaneous office work and activities done while standing), when you lose 110 to 160 calories.. Modentte Ktlwities (making beds. machine laundering, walking moderately fast-things that require some arm move- ment while you're standing and vigorous arm movement while you're sitting), that will let you lose 170 to 240 calories. Vigor- ous ecthrita.. (changing beds, walking fast, bowling, golfing, gardening), when 250 to 350 calories are lost. Strenuous ectlvtties (swimming, dancing, bicycling, playing tennis, skiing), in which 350 and more calories melt away.-BJ Harriet La Bane FAMILY WEEKLY, October 21, 1973 • t Butler says it's often useful to try to un- derstand why your co-worker is failing to do his share. Does he know what is ex- pected of him? Maybe that's the problem. Does he have an assignment he is capable 'of handling? A IJ9ll..respecte co-wodcer could discws .... problem .... h low- producer and -..... what he feels he CM do 8boul cainylng his Iha.re. Setting up the low-proclucef with ... buddy" who would work cloMlr with hkn Md tuch him how to reach the dMirect lewel of ptOduction can..., be uMful. -a, s. R. Redfonl We listen. And we know that these days there's a lot of concern about a fuel short~ and an energy cnsas. About inflation and rising costs.. If you·rc in the market for a new car. these things might even influenre what size car you buy. But before yoo make up your mind. you really ought to 1hink aboul how you're going to use your new car. For instanre, the family of six trying to get by with a small size car may soon find out that a full size or mid-size car isn't an extravaganre-it's a necessity. On the other hand. it might be just right for them as a second car or a pefsonal car. To help you choose the right car for your neros. Ford Motor Company will send you a free book. Ifs the 1974 edition of "Car Buying Made Ea<iier'." And it tells you the pros and cons for the different size cars. Part I is about cars in general-types. styles. engines. options. etc.-advantages and disadvantages. This information can help you regardless of which make of car you buy. Part II covers 1974 Fords. Mercurys and Lincolns -all the models.. features, specifications.. even prices. There's no other book like it To get your fr~ copy, just fill out the coupon. .•• has a better icka (we I isten better) 1974 Edrtron CAR BUYING MADE EASER r------------------------, For your free copy of "Car Buying MaJc J a"cr ... v.ruc Ford Moror Comrany Ll'!cn' P.O. ~x 1958. The /\mcric11n k oaJ LY t>carbc>rn. Michigan 41< 12 1 Mt n M". n Mi,s Q Mo n l>r [ l'llONF. AllDRF.SS \PT. N O e n Y 'il ATF. /"IP L------------------------~ 1here~ a lot of good . '' . . between Wmston ... Warning: The Surgeon General Has Determined That Cigarette Smoking Is Dangerous to Your Health. Continwd from pag~ 5 undcTgoes when he takes that office. with its constant spotlight and enormous pressures. Another thing lhat happens under stl"CM is that a man·s aging is ac- celerated. Thafs one of the things you see in Nixon. The witnesses have some dis.advan- tages that go beyood the fact that they arc obviously sitting .. at the wroog table... If J could show you a graph of how tension affects ~pie, you wouJd see that tbere·s a point of tension where you function better than you normally wouJd. The senators, in all likelihood, arc on the up-&lopc of the graph. They arc at the point where they function best, spurred on by the tension that exists in the situation. The witnesses, probably, have gone beyond that point, OVCT the peat, and to the downslope or the graph. At a certain degTee of tension, our ability to function at our best becomes adversely affected, and the witnesses have gone be- yond that point, hence their effectiveness is probably impaired by excessive tension. The presence of seven men on such a panel has the crucial efl'ect of mating judgment much fairer than any ooe man·s judpneot could ever be. A teo- year study of judges aod jury verdicts found that judges would have come to the same conclusions the juries came to except in 10 to 12 percent of the cases. But in most cases where he differed from the jury, the judge said that the jury came to a fairer decision. The jury was able to take into considention ex- tenuating circumstances, their own in- stincts for kindness-or even severity. The judges themselves, however, arc not allowed to take any of these things into comideration. A judge must "follow the letter of the law." Thus, it seems to be true that a large number or people sitting in judgment tend to be fairer than a single person. Celebrity Soapbox DAVID BIRNEY: "America ls neglecting one of ita vital cultural as.sets-the thea1er. Something must be done to support it before the situation gets any worse. Opera and symphonies seem to find support In the larger cities. Why not theater?" David Birney, FAMILY WEEKLY, October 21 , 1913 • t who ~an as a stage actor but zoomed to tame on television as costar of the "Bridget Loves Bernie" series. concedes some fact.a of life: "Obviously TV and movies have done damage in terms of getting audiences for theater, and the audience for quality theater Is afways a smaller one. But .trong and hi •• .., theater Is lmport8nt lo ... c:oanunity ••whole, and It Is vital toward cultural growth and develop. ment to have places where the classics can be done. The public has been discouraged by lots of bad theater, but It responds to exciting theater. There is nothing like live theater. TV and tnO¥les, no matter "°"good, can't ,..,tece the llwe •xperieftce. If• ... dltf ..... w:e betwaen watching• .Ung rece on TV Md being t1Mtr'9 • lhe Mier comes bJ. live theater must be helped to stay alive and flourish. It probabty wtll take some type ot government subsidy to accomplish this-it is time!" -mlenlew bJ Wiiia... 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OffU WIU NOT H RD'£ATED THlS SEASON Supply is limited. Frankly at this low price, we expect what SUP1?fies we have to go fast and many folks will want an extra one to put Wflfl'J as a gift. To avoid disappointment, we wee YoO to order yours now. NOW DIERE'SA BOOK Q.UB THAT GROWS WITHmull CHILD. START YOUR CHILD WITH ANY OF THESE EXCITING BOOKS . FOR ONLY c WITH MEMBERSHIP This Hard Cover Book Oub is Different. Grow-With-Me, a Doubleday book club, offers 2 to 7 'fear old children a graduated program to de- velop their natural curiosity and creativity and take thefl1 from listen- ing through reading. The Parent Participates. This book club grows with your child. When you join, you tell us your child's age, and we'll send the appropriate books. Throughout the membership, you tell us how your child is pro- gressing, and we'll adjust the reading program to fit Every Book Selected to Stimulate Your Child's Curiosity. We send the highest quality books. Award winners. alf..time favorites, the best new books. With plenty of color and imaginative illustrations. The Creativity Fdders are a Unique Feature at Grow-With-Me. De· signro to supplement each book. fNery folder helps encourage your child's natural creativity by providing fun-ttrmake projects or learning games. . How the Cub ~ As an introduction, choose any 5 of the books shown. Mark your choices on the coupon We'll send them to your child and bill you only ~. plus shipping and handling if you're ac- cepted as a member. You must be satisfied or return them within 10 days and ~ us nothing. To join, keep the 5 books. Then about £Nery 4 weeks we'll automatically send your child a new book We'll bill you only $2.49, plus shipping and tendling. (Most selections are at least $4.50 in publishers' editions, some cost fNen more.) You ~n cancel membership any time after your child has accepted 4 selections. Join OON. Just mail the coupon today. fi5.l.6 lest frieMs A r& mo Ra 1s rm ~J::; 222-0 Tiie Sa-. ~ 221·2 Tiie Tmets of laUt assurq slDry tor dllldren :. ~luslTll!ld .,..2-6 Elatq arMritures al ~ enlerq 5CftJol. >6. ~ ..... Prtce SU5 M.M:eSl.15 8abo1r nl <Ulel ~ M.M:eSl.15 041..c me .. -. ... u M. l'rice s 1.95 OJ4.9 11le ·= c-382-2 Tiii YtMtllll .. ~9 Doc1Drs •Mines: .... H!lanous acMrl-......... ~7 W1111t Do llllr DI A looll at tum of 1-o friends. >6 M.PrtceSU5 1111 A lay rabbit becaQl!S the med.cal world ·eases ..... Prtce S.Z.75 rell, transbnal~aboy's Q's about ~ ID the 34Ui 1i11J Visit" Ill Die «l7·7 Tiii s-, Ila, c.. -2 ici ..... P'rlte SU5 clatlD-. >6,.. rrice$Z.75 u.s A science baa* chi-decoCt Medal wmer. 2-4 370-7 ......... Ylly 037.2 E.d ~ IJl'lw. cnn can~ to~ M.M:e$3.15 Y-. A. A. Milne"s ~ set.es. S.7 2 Ill> ..... P'rlte $3.50 1111 ...... ...., lbt ,.. !'rice Sl.75 387· I Tiie a.y of Fri-03>6 ....... Wllll to draw with letters. lines. uM The IUI lllfl> in-dots.~~7 410.J 1"1-is Clauic$ ferrect nc-s lo the bull Tiii•&• Are C1ldecot1 M.Mce$Z.95 2-6 ~l'ltce$U5 ,.. 2·5 M. l'ltce $2.95 Medal WIWJ, bo¥ an- cprs ~ mcnsters. •Suggested age ~7 PriceSU5 Grow-With-Me offers 1ts own complete hardtx>und ed1tt00s, sometimes altered 1n size to ltt special presses and save members even more. r---------------- G Row-w1rH -M E A DOUBLEDAY BOOK CLUB GARDEN Cl TY, N.Y. 11530 DL-924 Please enroll the child named below as a member Send the 5 books wtose numbers I have wntten tn the boxes bepN I agree to the membership plan descnbed 1n thts ad. L I I I J Boll me ooty 99f. plus ~ and handltrg H nol happy, I may return them wrtti.o 10 days and OM! no(hirg Otherwise, you will 5end a new book about every 4 weeks and bill me only S2.49. plus sh1Pf>i~ and handl1rg I may cancel membership any time aft!!f the Child has acrepted 4 seleehons CHILD'S NAME ADDRESS _ --- CITY ____ _ SIGNATURE Of PARENT NAME OF PARENT ---__ __,,GE __ (Pl(AS[ PRINn !YRS. MOS.) ------------ STATE -ZIP ____ _ (f>lEASE PRINT) Members accepted m USA and Canaoa only Canadian members will be serviced trom Toronto Offer shghtly d1fferen1 in Canada 01-GW 6 ' Star Cttflt S11san Saint James: .. , Vote lbr Life At1d for Nonviolenee" B y Peer .J. Oppeahe ime r El April Susan Saint James was vole<l most popular TV actress by FAMILY WEEKLY reaJers. Rock Hudson"s husky-voiced kading lady in "McMillan & Wife .. is a refrcshJngly different TV i)\:rsonaJjty. That she's different away rrom the TV screen as well was evident when I ~l her for lunch al lhe Brothcr- hooJ or lhe Source restaurant, run by a .. family" who bclicv~ in the awakening of "pirirual wis<lom in the Western wortd, which includes serving only raw. natural foods. Susan showed up in a long loose lilue skirt 'anti pink swearer. canvas shoes. no makeup. a bag slung from one l>houl- dcr. and her I 1-monlh-<lld baby daughte r -wearing tiny gold earrings in cn\:h pierced i:ar-riding on one hip. FAMILY WEEKLY: Whal i'I your baby's name? SUSAN: Sunshine. FW: Why Sunshine? SUSAN: &-cau!IC she looks like ic. FW: Talking about names-Saini James isn't your ~nl name, is it? SUSAN: No. Ifs Miller. Actually, it isn't Miller either. It's now Mrs. Tom Lucas. But Susan Miller was my maiden nam.:. FW: What made you change it ? SUSAN: It was part of a dream I always had-becoming a glamorous actn:s.,. I lhought changing one' name was p.irt of the gumc. FW: How did your parent'! feel about it? SUSAN: I was living in Paris at the time. and they sent me a tclcgrnm saying "Saini James sounds great." FW: Why did you live in Pari.~7 SUSAN: My father believed that 1otraight white teeth unJ ;an abilily lo speak French were the prerequisites to the suc- cess of any young lady. I wore braces for a year ancJ a half. anti I wa'> sent to Paris when I was 15. during my last year in high school. FW: How long Jiu you stay'/ SUSAN: A ye.tr. r came home when was t 6 and enrolled at the Connecticut College for Women. But I stayed only a rew months. r couldn't cndun: all chose rcmalcs any tonger. FW: Then what? It• FAMll Y WEEICL V, Oc1ober 21. 1973 SUSAN: I went to New York and got a job as a model. But after a year I got bored with New York and went back to Paris to model there. I soon realized modeling could be dcodly and that I re-al- ly wanted to become an aclrc:M. FW: r n:ad somewhere that Charles Aznavour was instrumental in getting you into show business. Is that true? SUSAN: In a way. l had a crush on him, and J applied for a job as a curtain puller at the Olympia Theatre in Paris while he appeared there. I didn't really work. but they were so sweet. They put a stool in the wings so I could watch from there. He agreed I should become an actress, and when he came on tour to thi., coun- try, I acted as his interpreter. When the tour hit Hollywood, I dccidctl to slay. FW: Why did you choose to meet me al 1his particular restaurant? SUSAN: It's the clO\'ICSI to my philosophy of tifc-anJ it is nutritional. All the food "There are people who hate, who like war, who think priSOM are fine. That if someone com- mits a crime he should be there. Like if someone kills my daughter, I should be the one lo pull the hanging rope. No way!" here is raw, except lhc soup, melted che~'SC and rice. The family that runs this plJc.: doesn't even drink cofTcc. but I still Jo hccause ii is so great here. FW: When ditl you get started on I his'! SUSAN: About three or four years ;igo, when I met Tom (her husb~md. makeup man Tom Lucas J in Albuquerque on lo- ca11on. I wa'i nlways weight conscious iio we flxed salads all the lime. We gradually eliminated ;ill meat. rhcn chicken. then fish. I even chanl,>cd my w:1rdrobc. FW: In whnt way? SUSAN: I 11~ to wear '' 101 ol leather 1ackc1s lo go with my jeans. r sold all of them. That's the n icest part of the philos- ophy. Saving anim<1ls. Don't kill them to get leather or fur lo wear. Or to cnt. FW: Do vo11 hclievc in n ~trictly nom•io- slu<lio with me. ! FW: What do you Jo \Vhcn you·r\: on :_ leave from the series? ii SUS~N: Go camping. live in tents. The ~ ultimate thing must be back-packing. ii: which is whal we inlcnu lo do when Sun- shine is a little older. Just liv1.: off the wilderness. lent way of life in all circumstunces? SUSAN: Absolutely. There are people who bate, wbo like war, who think that prisons are fine. That if someone com- mits a crime he should be there. Like iC !>OITI\."'OOC kills my daughter, I should be the one to pull the hanging rope. No way! That sort of thing. I vote for liCe. And for nonviolence. I am not for death. FW: You said you don't wear anything made out of leather. Whal about your shoes and your purses on the television series'! SUSAN: I only came to lhis conclusion just about the time we went on layoff. I will try very hard lo carry my philosophy into the series as well. I don't c;irry purses in the s how anyway because they always look empty. As for shoes, women used to wear silk sh~s, and they have nice canvas shocs now. My husband used to have beautiful leather boots. Now he's having them made out of canvas. We haven't seen them yet, bul I moy have some made too. FW: Is your husband involved in your career? SUSAN: Very! Tom a nd I alway" d1..-cide ~vcrything we do as a unit. FW:Wherc do you live now? SUSAN: In a house thal belongs lo a friend. ll's a big house and has a separate place with a tiny little room thal Tom and I uscJ unlil we expected Sunshine. Then our friend moved into the little room and we moved into the big house. We painrcd and wallpapered ii . FW: Do you own lhe hou:rie"! SUSAN: No. I don"t believe in owning things. We climinalcd that JS much as we could. We gave away most of our dothcs, and we even gave away our lur- niture. We have pillows on the noor and a low table ~ we can ~it Jown with the hahy on the same level when we car. like humans. FW: Do you ,1ccp on 1he noor a' well? SUSAN: We 'lccp in a norm:1l hell. an,I rhc bahy sleep-. with u~. It i'I much easier. because I brcasl-ll~I her. FW: Isn't th.ii a prnhkm when)''" work all day"! SUSAN: Not ~11 ~111. I 1:1L.c hN hi th\.• FW: You gaw away most or your posses- sions. you live ~i mply-what do you tlo with ull the money you make'! SUSAN: I mal..c more money th:m a lot of olflcr girls. but not that much mor.: because I Jnl under exclusive conlracl, and I haven't been under contract that long that the money i:.. so extravagant. Som1..-day in lhc future we'd like to buy a farm in Northern C:1lifomia and huilJ our own place. Develop the land and live olf ii. FW: What do )Ou think about toc 1.1ual11y of your voice? SUSAN: I 1hink it is an ~1~t. People no tice ii. Today I forget about it. But u:. a kid I was alw:1ys lca.o;cd because it wu' ...o low. Other kids would so1y. "What's the math:r'! Gui u coltl'!" In school pf;1ys I always pla)'cu boys' p:1rts, like the :.ail- ors in vilbcrt ant.I Sullivan. FW: Were you "'poilcd as a child? SUSAN: Yes. a li1tlc b;.. I got thing~ I didn't nttJ. Lile a c:ir before I was old enough to drive-a '54 MG th;11 I -.old lo my brother for one tlollar. FW: ~caus.: your father was an c~ecu tivc in a toy company. Jid y\.lu ha\.: all the toys yo11 wanleJ? SUSAN: It wa<1 fine for my brolhl·r> Ill.·· \:.lll~ he nude mos1ly lo}:. for mature OO)'S. (would h.lve IO lr;1de lh\'Ol olf for tlulls. r always th'-mght I got the i.hort enJ of 1he sticl. .. FW: How did going lo a i,!irh' 'l'.hool in- tlueocc your life'! SUSAN: The lxlys would say ... She's a grcac girl, she's lx:cn to Cath,)l1c )>dhlnl!" fhey felt hccau-;c I was so much nwrc protected. I might go ovcrbt)anl the other way. All along I kepi ~arc:hing for ;1n~wc~ in school. I wonJcrcJ why a wom:1n W\luhJ become ;t nun in~tcad ol gelling married and having children. which "natural FW: Wh:it g1)a" 1hl you have tod:iy? SUSAN: I conccnlratc on rel:umg. Yet I want to ~ totally involved in ome things, no1 ''and by :l'i an observer II that sounds lil..c a contradiction. I g~' at i<1. I want the gO<XI things oul of lif ·. the 'iimplc thing-;. Rut my mind i<1 alway<; workmtt. ;1lW.l}'i lhinl..ing. I WO\tld rw like my mind to be m1lrc peaceful. lili. .... STYLING SENSATIONS OF THE YEAR! ( J!!rl~ TOTE BAGS ) '1>!'.RsoNALIZED DURJ\NGo.., *Anlletttc We1ten1 ~ - *4'5 Cllllc lllCINs C.,.ctty *Fil r., zt,,.r *"-ntd. Waablllt 111n OtU. Fawtc *Ad)lmMt Cany sin, wttll Metal Hllte Hit the troll with your 11ear stowed in this seemingly bollom- lesa "u-haul-lt" tote bag with wild western styling, a great look-alike to those original blue jeans made famous by you·know- who 1 So roomy (for camera buffs). so groomy (for cosmetics, etc.) but you can carry anything. So good looking It goe1 any- where. on vacation, picnlcs, shop- ping, around town, around the country! Accented with belt taba and runaround saddle stitching. Two "back pockets" keep small Items handy. Measures lblOx 13'/t". Indicate in coupon, first name(s) desired. P-1.XD-Tote S., .......... SUI OUR NAME "BRANDED" HERE! "HOBO LOOK" UNIQUE NEW BLUE DENIM BAG HAS 4 ROOMY SIDE POCKETS, TOOi The latest of carry-aU1 with new look destined lo be copied aJI over! Our new tote looks just lllte famed blue jeans. ll's the everytbin3 tote for everyone! Photographers, models, atudenta. camp- ers, yachtsmen, travelers have found ii the most versatile-and talked-aboul- carry-all ever! Meticulous detailing and trimming: saddle stitched In while on genuine blue denim, buttons as red 11!1 a prairie sunset. Main compartment is 10x101/r". has snap closure. 18" carry · strap. Completely waahable blue collon denim. Our best aelllns Item yet. so or· der today while we still have some left! 1 .. -...Hobo ... . ................ la.• ~------MATCHIN6 ------ BLUE DENIM WALLET *Adtltlc WHlt1'11 Stytlnt *"•flld. Waalla•te 8111 Dnl• fabric *~' te 7" CloaM *HaMlt ftf C11'\'yf111 .6 .. IH S~I• Slltclll111 Use ii as a purse ... use it as a wallet-1h1s darlins in denim is so versatile! 11 has n self-handle. so you can carry it onywhcre. It foltls to only 7". so ii slips into purse or pock'et. Vut area inside guerds your cash, coins, credit cords. snapshots, etc. Sn3ps closed securely. Al our tiny price. bound to sell out las11 Order now to avoid disappointment! •--Wallet . . .. SS.• r ---------MAIL 10 DAY NO RISK COUPON TODAY!---------1 I PALM CO., Dept. lYl GrN,l•nd Bide.. Mi•ml, fl•~9 l I Please send me denim items checked below If not deh&hled, I may return the llem(s) w1thln I I 10 d&Y' tor a orompt and comolete reh. id Enclosed is check or m.o tor I I I Tore B•c<sl <=P1262J> @ SJ.98 olus 65( I I po.t & handl. Pnnl n•me here: •-I : Hobo S•g(s> 1= 13146) @ 12 98 plus 65¢ I post & handl Acldtess,-------------1 Wallet(s) (., 13588) @ $3 98 plus 65' post. I I & handl State I I IF'lorida residents plea~e add '0.(, ules tax) City Zip I /__L~~~c~~:_~:~~:_:Y~~·:s:_:~_:~~:1:_:a~e~~~~--------j People Qui% By -Jo•• E. Glltso• How M11eh Do Yott Know About ESP'! True or False: A person's ESP ability 1s related to his JQ. (See number 4) TRUE OR FALSE? 1. Some people can send and receive ESP messages from vir- tuaJly aoy place in the world. 2. It's difficult to tell if n person is liJcely to be good at ESP. 3. Telepathy, intuition, and other products of our sixth sense can be invaluable in everyday life. 4. A person's ESP ability is re- lated to his IQ. 5. lt would be wonderful if your ESP faculty was developed to the point where you could sense others· thoughts and "read people like an open book." ANSWERS 1. True. Results of tc srs in bridging great distances wirh ESP have shown that in some instances the ESP scores of subjects "declined significantly as the distances increased." In other cases, however, distance was found to have no effect on ESP. It has been suggested that the mood and personality of the individual may have more effect than the number of oceans and continents the tele- pathic thought waves must cross. The question has also been raised of "whetber ESP goes around the earth or di- rectly through it." There is evi- dence to indicale that the path of travel is around the earth. 2. False. A team of researchers compared the scores of sub- jects on ESP tests with the re- sults of a standard personality inve nt ory. Their findings pro- vide a personality profile of the person who may be expected to be good at ESP. "He is warm nod sociable rather than aloof and stiff; good-natured and easygoing rather than crit- ical and suspicious. At the same time. he is assertive and 12 • f'AMILY WEEKLY, Ootober 21, 1117:1 sclf-assureJ rather than sub- missive and dependent.'' He is also described as tough-mind- ed, enthusiastic, talkative, alert, adventurous, impulsive, emo· tiooal and carefree. 3. 'J'rne -but they should be carcfully screened and evalu- ated before we act on them. Studies show that our in1ujtivc promptings can be just as sub- ject lo misinterpretation as the conclusions we arrive at through ordinary garden-v;iri- cty thinking. And nothing is easier for many of us than to let our iotuilion become con- fused by wishful thinking. 4. Tme-according to the find - ings of studies evaluated by Dr. H. J. Butcher, professor of higher education at the Univer- sity of Manchester. The findings suggest "that intelligenoc is rel- evant-not, ;u one might ~up posc, that more effective extra· sensory perception is dependent on superior intelligence, but that high intelligence may defX'll<I on ESP!" 5. False. It takes little imagina- tion to appreciate what would happen if everyone could read. everyone else's thoughts. lt's been truly observed that "with total telepathy, life would be chaotic -and every exchange, however fteeting. could well prove fatal." For example, a great mnny family gatherings would likely end in frcc-for- alls. And if your boss knew some of the thoughts you'd had about him at times, how long do you think you'd be on the payroll? But since evidence in- dicates little likelihood of total telepathy occurring, the devel- opment of all our abilities-in- cluding !he faculties of our ~iitth sense-would seem ,_ eminently \lcsirablc. llllll CHOOSE ANY ONE OR ALL FIVE-B U T E DITION IS LIMITED TO ONLY 10.000 IN SILVER-WHE N THESE ARE GONE. THE RE9LL BE NO MORE t C ome. Rediscover America with this NEW series .. America's Greatest Events." Choose from five fine art ingots minted in 999 Pure Silver. Take: The Signing of The Declaration o r I ndcpendence; The writ- ing or The Star Spangled Banner; Lincoln's G ettys- burg Address; The Linking of the Trans-Continental Railroad or Man's First Step on the Moon. A TREASURY OF FINE ART Five flawless, gleaming mirror-like proof finish in- gots will be issued, each quarter year, until late I 975 ... ideal to display individually or as a group during our country's bicentennial celebration in 1976. Future ingots will commemorate the most outstanding discov- eries and events in our country's history. A STRICTLY LIMITED OFFER The Hamilton Mint, known for its magnificent relief sculpture and craftsmanship will strike this series in an extremely limited edition of I 0.000 proof finish sets in Pure Silver. To protect the integrity of this edition, only one complete .. proof' set will be minted for each subscriber and the dies will be destroyed after aU edi- tions are completed. Proof sets are usually reserved only for masterworks of medallic art. GUARANTEED PRICE PROTECTION! If you purchase all five now. The Hamilton Mint will guarantee this remarkably low purchase price for future purchases in this series should you choose to make them. Although the price of sil\'er and gold have almost doubled this past year, The Mint will commit fo r a sufficient quantity of silver and gold at current market prices to fully cover your future orders. (No matter how hjgh the price of silver and gold may rise while the collection is being minted.) YOUR PERSONAL SERIAL NUMBER Your indivjduaJ proof finish ingots will be minted expressly for you and each ingot will carry your per- sonal matching serial number along with The Hamil- ton Mint Hallmark and certification of Silver and Gold content. If you purchase all five in this initial group, your same serial n..um ber will be reserved for you for all future ingots in this collection. . Each group of five will come smartly packaged in clear lucite display case along with fascinating histori- cal background of each subject commemorated ... de- tails worth preserving together with your valuable ingot collection. REMARKABLE INVFSl'MENT POTENTIAL! This remarkable opportunity to acquire ingots of ar- 1istic and historical significance in Silver and Gold is at a lime when leading economists and investment ad- visors are predicting silver and gold will continue to become even more valuable in the years to come. Col- lectors have already realized bonanzas. A 1970 Christ- mas Ingot, for example, was issued for $12.00 and is now being re-sold for $185. A 1972 Thanksgiving Ingot containing I oz. of silver originally sold for $4.50 and is now trading at about $62. So please act promptly to share in the excitement of building a mag- nificent collection in silver and gold at a guaranteed cost. Your order can only be accepted if it is received in time. to be included within 1hc edition limits. Order yours today! Deloe Version: 24KT Gold on Pure Silver The beauty or these: silver ingocs is made even more exquisite and the ingots made more valuable with gold layered on pure silver. Only 5,000 of each will be minted. Each .will aloo be individually serially num- bered and each will cost just $12.50. Examine Your F"ll'St Ingot (or all 5) for 10 Full Days with No Risk! OFFICIAL ORDER FORM r--"AMERICA'S G REATEST EVENTS""fwl"i>iil LIMIT: ONE PROOF COl.LECOON Pl!R SUBSCtUBUI THlt RAMIJ.TON MINT •£Mt U•l•tnle.1 Ori••, A.u.ctM e~...-. llMls 4"94 Plusc send me: indMdU41 lnlO(a c.bected bc:Jow. I understand 1f I order all live:, that my ~~I serial number will be rcurvc:d tor an future inaots i.a this .crln and at lhe suaraolec:d price:. I en- close my check or m.o. for-------0 Single lna0((5) ~ $7.9~ ea. i.a 999 Pure: Siher as indicated. O Sir!f!c: lnsotes) ~ $12.$0 ca. In l 4JC.T Gold on Silnr a. indicated. Oulantlon or lndc:~ncklllt"c: Star SpanJrkd ~nner Gettys.burs Address _ Golden Spite Man on 1lle MOOfl P\c:ast' add SO.. poseqc: a.od baadl Ins ptt ordc:f. (Illinois rnldmt please :idd S<::. saln tu.) Nnmc:·~---------------~ Addrr·;u._ _______________ _ Zip Cny \rn1c ___ Code: ___ _ A UNIOUE OPPORTVNTl'V Tp BUY SR.VER AND SA 'V~! n Send mt all S Pure: Solver lnitOlt (a full 2.400 lt'r:>iM) f(>f only S \4.SO plus $1 00 for ~t:ige and h:a.ndltn1. n Send mt :in 5 with 1Qld liayc~d on :?.400 cnin Silver lnjlOI\ lor only $~.H plu• $1.011 for Jl(>'llagc a nd handllns. I WANT TO CRAltCIE OADl!RTO MY: ~rlcar Master ctlartt Acct. :t 3 (Flnd above }'Ollr name) lntubank ..._ ___ _ Cood Thru, ____ _ ">. ·- Warning: The Surgeon General Has Determined That Cigarette Smoking Is Dangerous to Your Health. 18 mg ... 1ar." 1.3 mg. rnco1ine. rN. per cigareue. FTC Report Feb. 73. Do you feel the .. urge to emerge? -. There's no denying that the world is a moral mess. Once again. man is finding out that he can't achieve justice and peace unless he works iw partnership with God. This requires first of all belief in God and. indeed. in a God who cares about what happens to man. This kind of belief demands a; religious life of worship and servK:e. Man can't work thiS out for himself . But God is constantly offering His help. Faith and a supporting graces are there for the taking. Vet. from all appearances. the world has few takers. Where do you fit into this pictUre? Do you take re- ligion seriously? Do you work at it? Or do you take a "leave it to the clergy" attitude? The time to come out of your shell is now That urge to emerge and do something to bring men back to God is God's own call to you. "Why are you standing idle? Go into my vineyard'.' It's not 1ust a message for the clergy but for all. To help you think about your God-given "urge to emerge:· we are ottering a free pamphlet, "The lay Apostolate'.' Wnte for a copy today. No one will call. r-FREE-Mail Coupon Today~-------------1 I I I Please send Free Pamphlet entitled I I .. The Lay AptJstolate" FM-13 1 I This ofter is limit~ to ~· fr-ff pamphlet. I I I I I I I I Name_ I I ----I I Address I I City State Zip l I I I I : CATHOLIC INFORMATION SERVICE • I : kRIGHTS OF COl.UIDBUS I I P. 0 . Box 1971. New Haven, Conn. 06509 I --------------------------------- ... ~ illlT ... 1ust like having your own private secretary! ~~~.,, GIANT m14 IUllll I "I I • .. •• ntnan .. ,... ~ ~ WOWf LO' YOU f'OllCET MIOTMJI .-nt- " '1• :· 4 I. .. • DAY,AMlllYDl5AllY• ...... DAffl ••• 'l1> • -..s•·-----l .. .. • ,.., ........ 1m1 .-.oo I .......... ..,_....11 .. Wlte Ottly -.-. 1 ~ ... _...,! - ...,.. "'\ ""'"•••la tor..,t .,. 1~.t ecuslGll w 111111-ljljlellllt· ~• tMlll. "" IUlllbcl M-C.l~r It a aure cure for 1 Nd --.. U cll ow~lrwcl 20"'1~11 IS# p.tCt displ"' In bit bOM ~k tetlet• ....... _...:;; Int wfl•l's tllud fOr 1 Mt 6 •tells ... .tlo•s 2 "'"'s of IM•t -"' ·~·v-· es """ H CtUTtftl -111 ... pltnb of wllllc 1'1ae• ~ llaJ to llsl 1 ~ 1pp01nt111enti. To otlltr spKl!y "'"' M-Cal.Wr (•1711) ft $1 u plus 3S¢ llJO•l. a llandl. GIH'.E: ...... D SlVDIOS. 45a ~land Buildinc. Miami, Florida 33059 Sewing Cortter By Besalyll llrevaya I ,Jloliday Stunner Y ou couldn't be more atlractively turned out for the upcoming galas-- from Thanksgiving to New Years- thao in this flattering silhouette. It features a shirt collar and a front panel with button trim. Long, gathered sleeves and a belt com- plete the pretty result. Make it in a silk, a crepe or a blend. Size 12 takes approximately 3Y.z yatds of 44-iocb fabric. Standard body measurements for size 12 are: Bust 34, Waist 25~, Hips 36. A PAINTED PATTERN Send to: FAMILY WEEKLY PATTERNS, Dept, 3934 4500 N.W. 135th St., Miami, Aa 33054 PLEASE PAINT Be sure to give ZIP Code NAMc.._-------------~ STREET-------------~ CITY·----·------------ STA "-----------_..IP·--- Send S1 .00 plu.$ 25 cents for postage and handling; ca.sh, check. or money otder. Sizes 10, 12, 14. 18 (new sizing). F-1700 State Size Sports Mlnl-Pronle MARGARET COURT: Tennis ls Second to Dannr The Courie-Barry. Danny and llargaret-pl•J oft-court. Margaret Smith Court is living proof that motherhood is no bar to tennls success. The 30-year-old Australian, who has won the U.S. tennis championship at Forest Hills five Umes and IM Grand Slam of wor1d championlNps In 1970, retired late in 1971 to have a baby, and said she would not play in tourna- ments again. But her husband, yachtsman Barry Court, convinced her to make a comeback, and she won the Virginia Slims tournament and the Australian Open, while also taking the lead as this year's No.1 money- winner in the Grand Prix women's tennis drc:ulL Margaret has such a power- ful service and forehand drive that opponents complain that "she plays like a man." ... The Courts,,. ... with their infant son, Danny, llnd Margaret fs u.ualty lffn with ,. . F-1700 tennis racquets in one hllnd and a pacifier in the other. Tennis buffs say lhe haa become prettier and slimmer since becoming a mother. ... The statuesque Australian Is a native of New South Wales and grew up in Victoria. She won her first title 13 years ago, then went on to win a series of championship tournaments. In 1966, however. she retired abruptly to run a dress shop in western Australia. After meeting and marrying Barry, ·she decided to un-retlre because he was willing to travel with her .... The rise of young female tennis st•,. llke Chris Evert and Evonne Gool~ is a source of tor to Margaret. "I think It's terrific for women's tennis and I hope there'll be more youngsters coming up. They've given our sport a boost.·• she says. She's not ready to concede any titles to the younger set, however- she expects to remain at or near the top for at least another two years. -By Barry Abr..,..,., Fl'MILV WEEKLV, Oct0b4lf 21 , 1973 ac:tvertl ~~ment AT LAST! A DOCTOR WHO SAYS: Take Food, Not Medicine,- ---------~ If You SufferfrOiil Ariy One of These Ills! "Why do I avoid prescribing drugs?", says this brilliant and controversial physician. who has cured literally thousands bf patients with nothing more than ordinary food alone! "For these four vital reasons"- l . Because dN&S do not prod11tt ltenlrlt. Tiiey merely mask tM symp- toms of a disca_w ... cowr up the condition. whf/' th' bod,. stwtt1/,4 on va/lm11/y lo cur' /t.~I/. 2. Thi1 Is the roson why so mllnY men a.nd women, of all 11es. no soo"n filflll thC'lr •'"1)' °"' o/ on<' all"'"'', Ilion lllt>· /all rlrltr Into a11-otltrr. Why they arc always "hal.f-1ick". W hy they never really know what It means to be completely frtt of pain, in r/owi11~ health. Because they. i nd their doctors. do no11tlntt tt1on titan ,,,,,..,,,./It.hi oD C'ach Mw anoc!... and never drain out '"' potson that is left from that attack. or r'h11/IJ 1lw vllfll w«•lt.•t1<'d tl4m• before ii can fall prey to a no• disease! It I• "Tluue Weakness" That Open• The Door To One New DIMaM After Another! And NO Drug-Only Food-Can Bulld REAL TISSUE STRENGTH Again! 3. The la.r11T1g way to fight disease, then, is no/ just lo counter.attack each new sympcom in its turn ... bur 10 bu/Id such shur phys/C'ol slf'C'flflh lnlo roch thnalrn•d NII of yo11r bodr thal the organism tliar causes that di~~ is rJ/hu dntroyrd, or f'C'na,nd horntlC'u , IM wry ln.fla111 fl en/us your body! 4. This is clone in two w1ys: First. to use a ,..,d/cal-dl111 to drain out the poisons that mike your body weak today. And. finally, 10 un a u c- ond. r1·r11 mart' powtuful ""dlcol·dirl 10 powr S11fJ'r·Nutrienrs-Na111n's ow11 medlcmes-11110 ewry crippled orra11 of tit.al body •.. no1 only lo /orCC' out that siwcl/ic dlsrau, as /alt as lt111nanly ponlble, bu/ also If> ltav, 1h01 orgruo puh11ps "'''n lualth1'r 1ho11 b#/o" II was fir11 a11oclt.rd! For uample- See How Thia NATURAL Method Has Worked- In Thousand• Of Case Histories, From Every Walk Of Life, And With Almost Every AiltMnt You Can Imagine! We •lull ~l Dr. Ni1tler'1 patients 1>pealt foe. themselves: "When I came to you I suffered from swellina ind tinallnii of extnmi- riu, aJ~t coMCant hunger. periodic weakneu, ¥real sensitivity to glare and loud nolle .•. Sin« bccomlnr. your ratient l find myself ener&tl ic and alen until nearly mldni&ht, aw .. :e fully b)I 7:30 or 8 uch mornina. in 1&ood •r>irit~. not 'luulsh, a.nd co11tinuln11 1hroughou1 the day alad to he alive, performing ch,allena.Jn1t tt.1sks!" "Before I beeame )'Out patient. I had visited several skin specialists oopinp to lind help in the removal of wh11 arpcarrd 10 be g1owths on my face. Bio~lh wtrt 111.ken: reJuh neaativc. I aslltd how 10 !!:Cl rid of these 11mwLhs; how co p~vtnt their 11rowin11 b•ck. I rcetived 1 shru11 of the $l'C.dJ!.li~t"s shoulder (l:uer. Ills bill!); he didn't know! Or. Niulrr took o "c rook '' tile 11ea mvolvcd tind pfcs<tl~d (nacunl) medication for external applkarion which within one week'~ time cleared up the dff'fi. culty. II hlh nor returned." And Still More Thrllllng Results! All Told In The Patient'• Own Documented Word•! "Howevtr, on E.\ster Sunday, March 29, 1910, I sulTered not only an-other <><:clusion, but an acute cardiac arrcJI. Tb~ was preceded by three clays or intente wuriness, fatlaue and restlessness ... Only otrtme l!ood l11ck made h possible for me to write thcs.c word1 ... They (hi• rr11ular phy~iclans) ~llcvtd open heart surgery 10 be thr only hope for alivinw me a normal lifr span . , • It was at this point that I was referred to Or. Nilller . , . afttr his lnlti•I cumlnatlon and aftct revlcw\011. my medical history ... he srarted me on his "basic hort proar11.m ..... Within w~kl. I noliccd ~cat lmprovemenl ... an lncreai.cJ 5urge of well-being with each passln(! wrek. My family doctor continues to monilor my cue. He c;annot. 11 thl• point1 rule out the open heart suraery recommended by hi• I>«'"'· but hc Is ionHt enou11h to admit I've shown peat lmprove-rnl·nr. Hr says my heart 15 bcalinl! rnore slowly isnd s1ron11er and chat •verythlntt 11<>und\ 1100\I. My laboratory trit'I arc all normal . , . I'm look-in~ forward to rtturnina to wotk and a normal J'lroduccivc life." "l'vr been subject to asthma all my tire. It would come with a cold or when I laughed or oerciscd too bard. The shuatioa became dram•ticaUy worse when we moved to Santa Cr"UZ in \966, For soine reason l'd catch 11 COid every foot t(l ''-~kl ... Only when I icot It, it would go 10 my chtttt. ckvrtnp lntn u thma and I oould hardly brtathe. I was rcid u!' with Minri sick 1nd tired all the tln-c ..• So I wcnc chrouah Dr. Nittler 1 whole pro11ram ••. Now ( 1971) the ftw cnld\ l catch arr ve11 mlld. I c•n't even rememher the last time I h•d a.thma with or without 1 cold!" "In the h•tte1 ll••I of November pa", I broke out In an allc:cak derma· tltls-o.tvcre hivn . In addition to the hlvn, I would JCI a .even: pain IMPROVEMENT BOOKS CO., Dept. 4594 In ao area above the d&ht kidney ... It wu an acuie $h1tterin& paln that Immobilized me. I wa.s next alven cortisone. After 24 bours this would lessen the severity of both hives and pain. As Iona as I continued with cortisone ..• I was fine, but when I stopped, severe hives and pain re-curred. Then back w cortisone for four or five days. followed by ltives and pain. I i.eesawed back and forth i.n this manntr for !iCVeral weeks ... A friend or mine: gave me Dr. Nittler's phone: number and be&aed me to call him .... Then on the tenth day under Dr. NltLler's care, somcthlna wonderful (to me. a miracle) happened-I was rree or my allmenL,! A aa,aerlng weight had been lifted from bolb my shoulders and my wife's •.. Now 1 am In the thirteenth month after the doctor's care, en)oyin11 the best of hcallb and rtellna ereac." And Literally Thousand• Upon Thouund1 Of Case Hlstorlaa More! ALL STEMMING FROM NATURAL "SUPER-FOOD" TECHNIQUES LIKE THESE, THAT YOU CAN USE TOMORROW IN YOUR OWN HOME! Aeai~ to Ii.st only a /rw eumplet or the specific, step.by-ctep "Super- Food" 1 rcatmcnts given you in this great book: Home treatment for constipation that works rhrou/fh your sit.In , and remo•'C'S l11tnnal po/sotts, painlessly and automalically, at lhe same lime it restores normal functions.. How ro lncrcue the blood now (and therefore the: lirc-stvina OJQ'geo) no1 only to your heart tissues. but your enllre circulatory sY$(em. (As jusc one side-benefit of tltis new, natural therapy, cold fert simply feel wa.rm and good again!) Thia process automaticalty lowers the work load of your heart, a11d your lunas. and so, as another marvelous lido-benefit oln1ost lmnrtcllately din11<1llhts 1/1e nttr·lnc~aJlttt. sltortntu of bnat'I.. that plaaues most people! How to ¥Cl rapid f'C'llt/ from gallbladder pain. A treatmr111 that also may enable you to actually, painlessly pass a stone or two (and lltt rid of them tor aood). And, al the same Umc, slimulolt r1" fWw o/ blft from youf ""''· and be&in simultaneously stomach-healing food-therapy. Why hemorrhoids do no/ bave to be endured any longer! A simple c.aPSUlr 1ha1 may yield apparent benefits in a day or two, with restoration of nornud function and comfort in a few weeks, just u It has In case after ciue In Or. Nlttler's own files! How It> kup Jrom "''"' polsotttd by t:0mn1tffli1/ /O<Xi spra,.1. This method sln1ply f'C'mo1•rs 1h~ spruy trom fruits and vegetablC$-/n mlnlllnf A new way to brush your teeth that costs nothlna. And that rno1/y lnt:n'tUl'J yot1r !HJ-rs of dirrs1/o"! How, If you sulfrt rrom an acute lllPUS, you can actually /,,d your body healing food-ingredlents 1hrourh '"' sli.lt1. Thal 11<> to work to help you, In s•co11ds/ How to cut down overproduction or stomach acid almost lmmedlatcly, wilhat1f 1al..i11r a th/,,r;! Liver Detoxfflcation! Follow Thne Simple Rules, AND PAIN-CAUSING POISONS LITERALLY POUR OUT OF YOUR BODY! The best and most 111cient method of healln11 wounds. (Animals do Ibis instinctively. But we've toraonen ii.) A d<>-lt-yourself ptostate mauage th•t Involves only a simple motion '4'1111 '"' /~1s and ~o/..s of )'our Jut ... plus a liule-known and delicious food that 111eatly aids In tM normal fu11c1/on of tht. imponant 11land, What co do for repeated violent pains in the chest (callt"d lntcrcottal Neutal1ia, and often mistaken for heart troublt or t~n auack). How to tell the diftercnce at once. And then UK' a simple natural 1pray lhM relieves this torturous pain in mlnu1e1. for houn! The inexpcnslvc fe>Qd that has fe.nlastk: results with cold, and even ftu l As Dr. Nittler s.ays: "Thia remedy alo11e cuses many cases of nu." Why Dt. Niltkr darn to Sa)!; "I have known very &evete long•standrnii. cases (of Athlete's Fooc) "'pond dro1n111icRlly after 011r arpllcatio11' ! Aod why he also says: ··t have seen a deep nasty boil on 1 chclck drain through the skin in one nl~ht with the use of this (natural food product). 'The lnfeclion w1s on the pad, then was DO lnfectJon left In the boll and no wound visible." PLUS: eme1acncy trcAtm.ints for burns thlll prevent sc1rrln11 .•• a ilm· pie remedy !or poison ivy (llat works ... how to melt away warts {and cnn som.e brown •J>OIS) ••• a non-prescription product (as are all tJie other remedies 11lven here) th.i has a wonderful healin1 effect of the murous membr1nes of '"' lntC'Stina/ truct ..• home remedies for internal paruitet .. what you nuur dO, at on<e, for diarrhea ... b-Ow Or. Nitti.tr trub ulcers •.. how lo td>uihl weak stomach•. wlll1out lla11rava1in11 them ... hQw to break fever In emer~ncles C'Spttelo//y 111 citlldnn . . thr tcsttd routine co follow for any virus infection • , • 1trttnl(th-food• for ever)' part of the hody •.. how your body can build llf'l II• 0"'" "srrw 13490 N.W. 45th Ave., Opa Locka, Fla. 33059 ABOUT THE AUTHOR Allam ti. Nktlu, M.D .. received his diploma In medicl.ne atinoSI thirty years ago from the University of Cincinnati ... has been auociatrd since Chen with both the United States Army and the San Francisco City and County Hospital. He was one or the lint physicians ro'recOIU'izr the need for vitamins in medical t'-•PY and the radical difterence in rlTect betweeo syn1hr1ic anJ orpnic vifamins in lbcrapeutic dosase. He Is a frequent contributor 10 various maguincs and journals, and is recocniZ!td today u one of rhe lraclers of the new medical science of prcvenrlve nutrition aa a major factor 1gajnst both fatigue and disease. 111ppl)' of nwrlr111s to fortify its natural resistance in ter-of IO'CIS or epidemic ..• wel.cht·rcducinv "''llhou1 tears ..• the moct elrce1ive 1rea~ mcnt ever invenled for hypoaJycemla (low blood sugar) ... •nd mttc . ' ~ n111ch '"o" ! All Youra To Read From Cover To Cover, For 30 Days, Entirely At Our Risk! The choice Is yours. This ls a b<lolt fot flCX>ple who mcen busj~s. It costs you nothins! We lake all the risk! Fair eooulh? Why not send ln the coupon-TOOAVI ,..-----MAIL NO-RISK COUPON TODAY - - - --. IMPROVEMENT BOOt<S CO., Deot. '594 13490 N.W. 45th Aw., Opa Locka, Fla. 3305 9 Gentlcmrn: PlcaK rush mr a copy of NEW BREE I'> OF DOC'- TOR, IS00.9, hy Allin H. Nilller, M.0 .l I ef!CIOK $6.98 In full payment. In addition, I 11nderstand that I may U1tmlae this book tor a full 30 day" entirely at your rf'lk, If a1 tlw! end of chat time I am not satisfied, I will simply return the book 10 you toe ~vetr w.nt of my money biu:k. Bndoted ia c.beck or M.O. for S------------ YOU MAY CHARGE MY: 0 MASTER CHARGE Acc't 1·--------------------~ lllter Ba11k #·----------('Find above your 01111>e) E1pirallon da111 nl my car.._ _____________ _ OR YOU MAY CHARGE MY: 0 BANKAMEIUCARD A.cc·11 ____________________ _ Eapiration date of my c.atd. _____________ _ Nanto , a d v ertisem ent Doctor Talks About His -Hearing Loss Chicago, Ul.-A free otJer of special interest to those who hear b ut d o not understand -~--W.ord.a-A--..been-announeefl ~ - Bellone. Reprints of articles by a noted doctor will be given free to anyone requesting them. The articles discuss frankly and factually the doctor's own hearing loss and what he did to correct it. Reflecting his own personal experience, these arti- cles also describe t he special problems of the hard-of-hear- -rf1b and the consequences or continued neglect. T he art icles are free and easy to understand, so we suggest you write for your copies now. Aicain, we rt'peat there is no «ost, and certainly no ohliga- t ion. W rite today to Dept. 4258, Bel tone Electronics Corp .. 4~0l W. Victoria St., Chicago, Ill. 60646. Help fade them with Esoterica.9 Makes your skin look yun younger. eweathered age spcJ(.s on ~ hands and faa tell the ~Id you're gietting old-perhaps before you reaHy are NO\<I< help fade them with ESOTERICA, tl'lf' medicated cream. NO( a cover-up. ESOTERICA actually goes into the skin where •t WOf1's m the pigment-f~ ·~ cell~ to help make vour \kin look lighter and vouneer again l SOTCRICA. which~ in a mildly lri'l(ranl grt>ase~ hase. may be rtm U5ot'(I on age ~s c)n hand~. lU.I lace, arms and neck. Why let • spots <lg(' your appt>ar· anct•' Get lSOTERICA MNiic-e11ed Skin lont.'f todav-R~ ular, fort1ttE'd and ~--I!: f .t< 1al Crt•ams plus _ .. I I.Incl l C1C 1(1fl Spallkillg•• By Dr. Fitzla..gll Detl8e• This Dootor Sa)1S There Is a ···Ri~liilfiiY:..;1{00 a Wfou~ w.y -·- "Many parents also have the impression that modem psychology teaches that you should not spank children. .•. However, as a psychologist, I believe it is impossible to raise children effectively-particularly aggressive, forceful boys-without spanking them.'' 0 ver the years I have discovered that many parents have major misconceptions abouf modem psychology. Modem psychology does not believe it is good for parents to be p:rmissive, if by permissive we mean letting a child do whatever he feels like doing. No sensible psychologist bas ever advocated such a strange idea_ But incredible as it may seem, I have actually known parents who lee lbeir children scribble on the walls of their home with crayons because they thought it would be psychologjcally harmful to stop them! What is really happening in most of these cases is that the parent is afraid of saying no to cbe child and tries to use modem psychology as a rationalization. Many parents also have the impression that modem psychology teaches that you should not spank children. Some psy- chologists and psychiatrists have actuaOy stated this idea in print. However, as a psychologist, I believe it is impossible lo raise children effectively-particularly ag- gressive, forceful boys-without spanking them. This does not mean that any .kind of spanking is all right for a child. J want to mate it clear rhat there is a Mright" kind of spanking and a '<wrong .. kind. By the wrong kind I mean a cruel and sadistic beating. This fills a child with hatred, and a deep desire for revenge. This i:s the kind that is administered with a strap or stick or some other type of parental "weapon." Or it could also mean a humiliating slap in the {ace. The rigbl kind of spanking needs no special paraphernalia. Just the hand ot the parent administered a few times on the kid's bouom. The right kind of spanking is a positive thing. It clears t he air, and is vastly preferable to moralistic and guilt-inducing pareoral lectures. Some of you may have heard 1he old saying '"Never strike a child in anger.·· Or Fitzhugh Dodson is a child psychologist and Is psychological consultant of his own nursery school, L• Primera Preschool, in Tor- rance, Calif. I think that that is psychologically very poor advice, and I suggest the opposite: ''Never strike a child except in anger." A child can understand very well when you strike him in anger. He .knows you are mad at him and be understands wily. What a child cannot understand is when he disobeys mother at 10 a.m. and she 1ells him, "All right, young man-your father will aeal with you when he gets home!" Then when Dad arrives home be is expected to administer a spanking that will "really teach the boy a lesson." That's 1be kind of cold-blooded spanking a child cannot understand or forgive. What I advocate is the "pow-wow'' type of spanking: your "pow" followed by his "wow!" Spank your child only when you are furious at him and feel like letting him have it right then. Too many mothers nowadays seem to be afraid to spank, their children. They talk and nag a great deal as a substitute; they try to negotiate. This is a huge mistake because it reduces their authority as parents. What you should do is tell your child once or perhaps twice what you. wanr him to do or to stop doing. Theo, if be refuses to obey your reasonable request~ and you have become frustrated and ang_ry. let him have it right then and there! After spanijog, sometimes your first immediate reaction may be frusuation and guilL It may bother you that you·ve blown your cool. Courage, Mother, aU is not losl! You can always say to your child. in your own way: "Look, Mommy goofed. I lost my temper, and l"m !'lorry I did ... Then you can go on from there. You don·1 have lo be .. stuck" with Lhe guill. lhc fmt>tration and the unhappy feelings. Wait until you r\!aJly feel better about the situation and about your child. ll might be five minutes or five hours later. But if you feel you have blown your stac1', 1t"s important to admit it to your child. Above all, Jon't pretend 10 him that rhc sole reason you spanked him was for hi.s benclil. That's as phony a3 a threc- dollar bill , and he will know iL If we were 100 percent perfect par- ents, we would all be so mature we would never need Lo spank our kids except in unusual or extreme situations (such as when a child runs out into the street). The point is, we are not such I 00 percent perfect parents. We nrc not able to ad- minister discipline calmly and serenely all the lime. We get frJ up when our kids misbehave and we lose our cool and swat them. But that's not.bing to feel guilty about We feel better and they feel better. lbe air is cleared. U you are quite honest with yourself, you will find that there are times when you will lose youl" remper, fly off the handle at your child, and yell at him or spank him-only 10 realize afterward that whal he did should not have elicited such a violent outburst from you. You were really mad at your husband or your neighbor. Or just cranky for some un- known reason. And you took it out on your child. What can you do in such a situation? Well, you could pretend you are a holy paragon o! virtue and that your child fully deserved the scolding or spanking he got. Or you can have the courage lo say something like this to yotlt child: "Danny. Mother got mad at you and scolded you. But I can see now that you didn't do anything that was really that bad. I think I was mad at something else and J was sort of taking it out on you. So rm ll<>rry ... Your child will feel a W'Ot'lderfut warm reeling lowqrd you for admilting you are human and fallible. This will do wonders for his sclf-oonoept -:and youn! I Frum "How to Parent,·: by Fitzhugh Oodton. Copyrloht <ill 1970 by FllVlugh Oodeon. Publlthtd by permlatlon ol Huh Publi.hlno Corporation, Loa Angele" 11 • FAMILY WEEKLY. Ootober 21, 1973 ·------·--.... Sure, I've heard it all. I'd light up at a cocktail party. And somebody would remind me of what they've read about smoking in the papers. Well, I read the papers, too. I've heard all that stuff they say about high 'tar' and nicotine. And I'd be less than honest ifl said it didn't make me concerned. So I went the whole route. Tried one of those ..... , low 'tar' cigarettes, and got as much flavor out of · it as a toothpick. But I kept trying. Guess I enjoyed smoking too much. That's when I ran across Vantage. And what do you know. It tasted like a cigarette. · Now Vantage wasn't the lowest in 'tar' and nicotine. It didn't claim to be. Just the lowest 'tar' and _ _ nicotine cigarette that still gave me the full VANTAGE --t, ~ tobacco taste I'd missed. Maybe ifs .the Vantage filter Frankly I don't know, and I don't ca.re. I just know I ca.n cut down on' tar' and nicotine. Without cutting hfla ~ uut t e vor. ~ ~ ~ow I don't have to make any excuses for smoking. "...., · · ~ _ ~ ID~ Not since they made Vantage. / ~ ~~~ Maybeyou'llfeelthesameway. el-e(}_--f ~= ~~ Lee~nt NcwYork.~wYorlc / ,,:S -.. ~ ~ ' _§g§ ~ flllt:R ~... -~";····~~N"r4Ge Warning: The Surgeon General Has Determined . ~-.. ~ Ii That Cigarette S~oking Is Dangerous to Your Health. ~b'~""-' fl fillet II my ·1a( 0 8 mg fl«:O(IOC, M1~11hol n 1119 'till." 1(J rnq lllf.Ollfl(• ,fV iJt'I fi!J<'!Tl'flll. rn: fli?VUll I Ph l.l -~----------------------~ I I Compare our prices on 4l:t!j(IJiliJl1J$Ull9 v- ----1 --V~l~e!~!S~~-----i I I I I I I NUTRITION HEADQUARTERS I Ml prices l'OSJl'AIDI Satisfoctia• ..--•••d or-y It.ck. -100 ms. Ro.. Hips 100% Natural VITAMIN C TABLETS 0 100 for .49 0 SOO for 2.20 0 1.000 for 3.95 -250 ms. Rose Hips 100% Natural VITAMIN C TABLETS 0 100 for .ao C 500 for 3.SO 0 J.000 for 6 .2S I 500 me-Rose Hips 100% Natural VITAMIN c TABLETS 0 100 tw l.2S 0 500 tor S.50 0 1.000 for 9 .2S ·I-.. --1,000 m C.-Rose Hips 100% Natural VITAMINC TABLETS I g 100 tot 1.M 0 soo for a.95 -q_ 1.000 for 16.39 I Natural VITAMIN E -100 INT. UNIT CAPSULES o 100 for 1 10 o 500 tor 4.85 o 1.000 tor a.9S I Natural VITAMIN E-200 INT. UNIT CAPSULES C 100 for 1.95 0 SOO for a.JS 0 1.000 fw 16.SO I Natural VITAMINE-400 INT. UNIT CAPSULES I _g 100 for l~ _ O SOO for lS.95 O l.~ tor 29.7S I Natural VITAMIN E-'80 INT. UNIT CAPSULES 0 100 fw 4 99 0 SOO few 23.SO 0 l .000 for 43.SO I -Natural VITAMINE-1,000 INT. UNIT CAPSULES O 100 for a.2s O soo tor 37.!IO O 1.000 for 69.00 I Natural VITAMIN A TABLETS 25,000 USP Unit. each I O 100 for .65 O soo to< 2.ao O l .000 for 4 .95 I IODINE RATION-N;tural K£LP TABLETS O 100 for .JS O 500 for 1.20 O 1,000 for 1.9'S I Cold Preuecl WHEAT GERM OIL CAPSULES 3 minimum O 100 for .4S Q 500 fo< 2.20 O 1.000 for 3.9S .-7% pain Desiccated LIVER fABLETS low heat dried I 0 100 for .SS 0 SOO for 2.3S O 1.000 for 4.50 I Red "Wonder" VITAMIN B-12 25 MCG TABLETS 0 100 for .65 0 500 for 2.SO O 1.000 for 4 .3S I Natural VITAMIN A ancfD Tablets 5,000 unit. A; 500 D I 0 100 for .SO 0 SOO for l.9S 0 1.000 for 3.50 --Natural BONE MEAL -TABLETS-Rerular 1111 pain I O 100 for .50 O 500 for l.90 O 1.000 for 2.9S I Natural Soy LECITHIN T ableu. Co;,;-pare this low price 0 100 for .6S 0 500 for 2.50 0 l .000 for 4 .2S I S uper LECITHIN Capsules Giant 19 pams, 1200 mr. each. 0 100 for 1.49 O 300 for 3.9S O 600 for 7.50 I LECITHIN GRANULES-Sprinkle oftr food I O a oz. for LJ9 O l lb. for 2.2S O 2 llK. for 4 29 I H irhest Potency Food YEAST TABLETS. One tablet a day O 100 for .7S O soo for 2.1:; O l .000 tor 4 .95 -J DOLOMITE Tablets-Rich i;;-Calcium, Magnesium 0 100 for SO 0 SOO for l.50 Q 1.000 for 2 .SO I GARLIC and Parsley TABLETS. Order now and SA VE I O 100 for .SO O soo few 2.3S O 1.000 for 3 .95 I .. Arecibo-C" -Tropical ACEROLA-100 ms. Vitamin C 0 100 for .79 0 SOO fOr 3.49 0 1.000 for 6.2S I COD LIVER OIL CAPSULES-Easy to take O 100 for 89 O SOO for 3.7!> O 1.000 for 6.819 I HIGH PROTEIN TABLETS-300 me. Protein per tablet I 0 100 for .4S O S00 for l.95 O 1,000 for 3.SO I PAPAYA PA.PAIN-Natural Direstant Tablet 0 100 fOf' .6S 0 500 tor 2.7S 0 1.000 for 4.85 I ORGANIC IRON SUPREME with related nutrient. 0 100 for l.49 0 SOO for 4.9'S 0 1.000 '°' &.7S I Natural VITAMIN B COMPLEX with Vitamin C I o 1ootor .7s o sootor 2.JS o 1.oootor 4.as I ALFALFA TABLETS-Rich in ru11tural fact.on 0 100 fw .40 0 SOO for t.2S Q J,000 for I 95 I n..s. .-pnc.s eoCM1 ,_. ... ., 2 weeks. ... , your orc1er to: I NUTRITIOlt H~ARTERS I '°" w. JDctu ... Dept.ls37 I Cortsa11dal1, llMols 62901 I I I llAIL THIS AD Indicate items desired and meil wtth remitt.nce. City __ _ State Zip I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I ._ _____________________ _ & Smart Coo&Qng A St1eeulent Ste,v- The African Way! llAM.:nrs AFRICAll..., W1 ... af/f~E_.A...._ ... Mtc. ...... Mk:MGN•••W• cr..ay ......... -..- c~-fll SINie4' P11tMe_.Alil. C.... T" ~ • llecipe g:iYen WEST AFRICAN STEW "-Cllp CDr1I oil 1 ¥.t ... II DMh 11 c:t.c:k. all .. 1.-.. albes 2c..-...... 1-..11a1•Dftalbe 1" Cllp a.., Of dtllM.e,le . ............. 1-•---...aAcell v.r ......... ¥.t t11111 a• a uhd red...,.,.,. 1.-11pa•~ 2tlllllupaw...., 1 ..... .......,. ..... CooUd wic:Md rice (¥.t aip,., ...,,.., 1. Heat com oil in large skillet over medium heat. Add beef cubes. Brown on all s.ides, turning as needed. Add 1 cup water and bouillon cube. 2. Bring to boiling. Reduce heaL Sim- mer covered 45 minutes. 1 Add remaining 1 cup water; grad- ually stir in peanut butter. Add onion sl.ioes, salt and pepper. Bring to boil- ing. Reduce heat and simmer covered about 45-60 minutes, or until meat i.\ tender. Add water if needed to main- tain comistency. 4. Blend cornstarch and 2 tablespoons water together until smooch; gradually ~tir into stew. Bring lo boiling aod boil • • FAMILY WllEKLY. Oc1C>Mt 21, 117'3 This week. Food Edlor .._.,..H...nfixes dinner with an African beat ... One of my young friends served In Africa In the Peace Corps. Greatly influenced by native foods there, she has prepared many of them at home. Here are some I enjoyed." I minute, stirring con.stanlly as sauce tbictem. Add tomato slices and heat l minute. covered, until heated through. 5. ~rve over cooked rice.. Mai,11 5 u rving11 AFRICAN GREEN-8EAN SAl.AD 1 .......... ._ ...., Sell 2-• ...... ......, ... ..... lw 2 ........ ~... 1d,wclM .... alll lilllo ... sbtpa 3 111111111,aw......, 2 1 ... 11.,aau cenoil .,....,.... ..... ,.,,., 1. Remove tips from beans. Cook in small amount of boiling salted water until tendeT-crisp, about 8 minutes. Drain; cool 2. In a bowl, mix beans with onions and clWies. Add vinegar, oil, I tea- spoon salt and pepper. Toss lightly with a fork until evenly coated . S. Cover and refrigerate. Flavor is best if beam are chilled al least 2 hours. Male's 4-5 ~rvinp COMPOTE OF STEWED PEACHES AND FIGS 2 C-. (1 lb.·1 OL ebie) peedt ...... 2 c.. (1 ... 1 oz. 8in) bclota ... 2 dw ., -stidaa ~ tea1p a !Mt.._.. do9ee 1. Combine 1111 ingredients in a 3-qt. ~uccpan. Bring to boiling. reduce heat and simmer I 0 minutes. un- covered. 2. RrlRgernte, covtted. Sene chilled. Malen olH>fll 1 qts. r 11111 PAIE FOi IORE~ " EXCITltS FALL AID EASY CARE, COMPLETELY WASHABLE, NEW "IN" FASHIONS wmlERFAIHIOll Double Knit Fall &. Winter Pantsuits ~~-=~ PUT YOU IN THE FASHION SCENE AT LOW DIRECT-BY-MAIL PRICES_ IAVllll . , -. ..,._ --~-·--~ ......... --...---.. N ~ - ----._,..,.___..... ·,. ______ .,. ____ ., __ _. ____ --.,·--· t O----· ,... ___ ,-,... .. ---.J•-._..,-----·_,.,~.---......... - 14~·24~ $1.• STYLE 40412-4LOOM WrTH BEAUTY-Ger~ STYLE 40238 -SUCK SLACKS AHO STAR· fresh doubl• IU'llt pantsuit ~ YoU wfth flow-BURST ,._INT TOP tuhl<>Md from 100% ma-ws, "ties" them with parky bows. Top h .. IOft chlM wasti.bfe. bond«! 0'1on mekAls au~ "V" nedl, ldeemln1 purflzed buttons. Solid-carefree knit pantsultt Comfy .aastic: pant waist. ~nts r. .. bllufuf a--t..,+t-c-h walstb9nd. top Is front b41ttoMd. In 1'favy or Fomt Green. 100 MW mlrect. ecrytlc kntt -fully wash-Sias: a to 1a. ta.-. 14% to 24%, $9.ta. ors: white top with '9d/blue print, red pants, or whtt. top with Aid/blue screened print. blue pants. sa. a to 1a. $&.ta. 14% to 24% only $9.M. STYLE 40378-"P&K·A·BOO" DOUBLE KNIT PANTSUIT. Bonded solid-tone CM'lon vest opens ilamorously. ,..,,..,. sweep of SWMtert 5'1m telf....-ope ties with pretty boW thru 2 brlaht. bokf ~ ITMltal rinp. Color-coordinated bonded acrylic ptald pent. has a~ut new fullneu, and comfort elastlc walstblnd. Colo,.: blue vest. with blue pfald 119nts: or broWn Wit with brown plaid pants. siz. 10 to 1a. $9.98, 14% tD 22'n, only $10.ta. STYLE 403'0 -VARIETY IS FASHION STAT£· MEHT of atunnln1 2-pc. double-Mlt •'Wool feel" 1>9ntsult. Short--slewe top Is wonderful new bonded Or1on IU'llt, In brilliant aofld Jfteltone. Pretty collar, at.n pocbta, IOfd9n buttons. 5alahtly flanld, elastlc-w.lst pants .,.. double .c:tyllc lcnlt. In cotor-matched diamond print. Colors: red top wtttt red plald 119nta; or btue top with blue plald pants. Ibis 10 to lS. $12.ta. 14~ to 22%, only $13.98. SEE 4th PAGE OF _THIS AD FOR$~~ Sfk ,. USE HANDY COUPON ON 3rd PAGE OF THIS AD .. ALL IN NEW EASY CARE MIRACLE BLEND FABRICS lovelg Dag or Night loungewear . -ALL LOOK EXPENSIVE-BUT PUT YOU IN FASHION SCENE FOR PENNIES ~ -. ---···--lallbsll• Ia• J .. ~r:... Ca,e Gow. ( & .. ' " •ws •14• .., .. _,_ $ta. '81.9 ;~~J &· .-...... ~ ' .. "" --~ • I ' •9• ~.or~ ~. \ ... , ........ \ Sleepwear or Hostess NOW CHARGE YOUR ORDER TO: MASTER CHARGE • BANKAMERICARD .... ' . -Al I NEW MIRACLE BONDED FABRICS THAT NEVER SAG, NOR LOSE THEIR SHAPE ' ~New Fall, "Go Eve ere~ Bonded Knits -· THE FASHIONS YOU WANT AT THE LOW PRICES YOU WANT ----T11ese-rat1 Beauties· Have the Look of Fashions Costing Up to $50-0rder Early for Prompt Delivery USE HANDY ORDER FORM .. . .___._ __ ) --· .... -~----_ .. 1111141171 .. ... .•u• ••• r---Ad1f,../ 2WAYS TO ORDER:---........ PREPAID • USE YOUR CHARGE CARO! °' ~ bshiot'ls .,... 4563 GOO K.W. ll!Mlt S1ni111. ...... flDrtd9 nost (Send... .. ... -~ ~ ............... , Strte No. sa. lstCofor 2nd~ Price Add 85-postap pet' styte. TOTAL 0 PIEIWO: I encloH the full prtc. Pl.US 8~ postace '°' e.ctt style. '"-"-----·--...... .._, _________ z.1p __ _ Y0'1 May Cha~ Your Order 0 MASTER CHARGE 0 BA'U<AMERICARO Acct. Ho.---- IHTEABAHI< HO.__ Ac:ct. No.---- -, I I I I I I I ' I I (Find above your name) Good TI"" Good ThN L ~--------------------- • 1 SPECIAL CLEARANCE SALE! . . EVERYrtilNG ON THIS PAGE DRASTICALLY REDUCED WITH SAVINGS T.0. OVER 25"1 STYLE 400M -P'AlfTY TIME ls e perfect time to weer flowers, bl1 white collars, and bows. Not to mention the p1 .. ts of this short slffw seml- fltt9d dress .whef'9 fine stylln, combines slm-pllctty with mild extnwapnce. It's perme-pren. mec:hlne washeble Polyestef/Avrtl crepe. Colon: llme/lllac/whlte florel print. Sime 1~18. 141h· 22'f.r. Rec. $7.te. Sele $5.aa. STYLE 40220-TEN'S YOUR UJCl(Y NUMBOt ..• thet'1howmeny1Qlden buttons trim front on this bonded or1on knit. Low-slun, poc:kfts and Yertkel ~llorlns netter your fl,ure, Scooe> necll zlppel'9d back. Colors: Brown or Nevy. S-. 10 to 18. 141h to lllh onlJ. Rec. $7 ... !We SS-. STYLE 40221-TEXTlJRD) ACETATE and e beiUll· Ins bow crute e ftettertns outfit. This creese-shy double knit keeps you completely contemporary with cuff9d sleeves end matchlrtJ rope tie. Me- chine wuhable: Colors: Brown/White or Nwy/ White. Sime 10 to 18. 16'f.r·18'f.r ontJ. R-.. $7.98. s.e. u.aa. STYLE 40307-A·UNE JACKET DR£SS Of bond9d nyton Mlt ecetate knit Is teether lliht .. sy-cerel Snowy white trim on dress, coller and lepels. Back zippered. Mint Green or Blue. Sias: 10 to 20, 14'f.r to 221h. Rec. $12.te. Sele $9.aa. STYLE 40308-Cl..ASSIC COAT AHO DR£SS OUT· m. Coordlneted buttons hl&hllaht trimmed coet owr short slewe dress, both bonded nyloit pockets. Blue or Pink. Sb8s: 10 to 20, 14'f.r·22 . f!OC:kets. Blue or Pink: Sins: 10 to 20, 14'f.r·22 . ff9C. $15.te. SM $13.18. STYLE 40309 -SET OF SEPARATES. fMtures pet· tem9d Iona vat with nwy plpln1 owr on.piece A·llne dress that looks like two! Fold~ coller. plestlc bett, back zipper. AJI wrinld•f,..., dress • welheble, no-Iron doubfe knit acet.c. jersey. R9d/ Nwy only. Sins: 12 to 20, 16'f.r·lllh only. it-.. $10.98. Sele $8.& STYLE 40316-Sl'OT·DOT PRINT on this )ack9t and dress outfit of double-knit ac.tete Janey. Wesheble and wrinkl•free end no-Iron. Nwy collar trim, accents the bac:k-zlpper9d sleewleu dress and the bl'Kelet·lentrth slewed topper. Matchlna fabric tie: Color: R9d/Nwy/Whlt. as shown. Sizee: 12 to 20 only. Rec. $10.te. Sele $8.& ~TO ORDER USE HANDY COUPON ON PRECEDING PAGE -·~ END DENTURE MISERY SNAPSHOT CHRISTMAS • CAtDS give special, rnoaal .!F~ tq~~J IQ'.d.iaJ5 Cbrimoas cuds aDd new deluxe folders ill many ditlercat slyks made from your color didc or negative. Priced from $1.49, in· ------------4 duding cavelopes; 20% ddcount ND a so::pi: 1 •Ne -r ,_, ....-on Of"dc:n recciwd by November A ,..f ...,......,. • .-. ......... 1 Sch. For fftlC brochure: Wash- ll. I .... ---__ _, DUIOST tif&rntUOI -~ EJiminates hlirmful ice scnping. messy hot .at«. drippy pans! Just plug in infra.ftld defroster, place it in freemr ~·All-around radiant heat ruches ev«y comer in minutes, loosens ice aocumula· tion. metts _,., f'f05t before t~ foods thaw! 6' cord. #S063 Dlfrldlr @SUI tMd ~ pestaet) 17 1 MMe STUDIOS ..,. 1 , ........... ,.. ington Master Pho(o, Dept. F. Box 2032,Wasb.iogtao,DC 20011. \\edlend Shopper BJ· (pm lkatat,· •AaY"S tint shoca can be bronze-plated ia solid metal for iust U." • pair! Also. al mctal~t stands. bookends. TV ...... de. _..,...,.,..llliiiijiiiiii!F~"1 Send ao money. Few fulJ details, MAKING YOUR EARS HURT AND ITCH? "fMitis"'-annoying pain Mid itch itl JO'lf ws-cM be bnliuttlt °" t,, ucess WU. But wflen rocJ try to remcM WU with Poifttect obittts. JO'! may ifljure 100f -ears! There s 1 better, Slftf ""I to remove eacess wH -with AURO fM Drops. When elCUS Wll is IOM· paill ~ itch of "Ewltis" is aone. Cet auro" to help st09 "brltis." moncy~ving otrtifica&e, write: American Bronzin.g. Box 6S31- P26, Bcdey. OH 43209. 'l1mi'E U .S. SWnp Often ~ yours to keep for only I~: Ccn- tconia.l postage stamp picturing J st u .s. stamp issued; 25 aJ1-dif- f cn:ot u .s. stamps; collection of prized oommemontivcs. Plus cat· aJog. Send I()('. Also, otba stamps to cumiae. Buy any or none. re- turn b•lancc, cancel anytime. H. E. Harris. Dept. C-853, Bos.- too. MA 02117. lf~<t-11 ~ itnu taN NOf' tMI• ..mn. •. If ~ .... _, ... u. aC et-• • ...._. (n. -• littH. J Thisdiild ~a good home, nice clothes, a kMng mother- and Pin-VVorms! A tonMnllft9 ltct. In dM rectaf ..... ~ Md fidgetinQ .,.. often Witt.le ligrts of Pin- W~ ft c.n happen to~ 19' _, ,....,,_~ OI old, ~ Of' POOf. tt'• ., ~. iwedical ~ uythat 1 out at 3 cNl- dren ...... d. Md INl1Y '*1lf'lb. u.. PfMlfori... without l"""""9 it. And ~ Pm-Wanna bring on llc:Nnt Md -.'"'9. tfNIY can cNtinct cfUldNn Md an.ct .... achoof WOttl1 What·• MOre, Pin-WMWm - ltlgltlr ~. 90 1fMIY Qft ~ "°"' pefWOn '° pefSOft. WIQI the wftote flllnity la Infected. What C9R Y'O" do eo..t it? For- tMNilefy ....... fa ... ~ ~ that .,.. rid of Pin- •~.It'• cllled J.-··· p._we t.blet». AM your phanweci9t. Hell ten you lt\atJ~'aP.WblbMCs- 9C)eci ..,Y tonftulNd with an ettee- tMI medicat Ingredient th-' ge4s Pln.Wom1a out of your system. A91! fa< Jayne'• P-W tablets at your drug store. WHEN YOU ORDER BY MAIL FROll FAMILY WEEKLY ••• Allow up to four weetts for defivery. Sometimes unintenttonat ~lays occur. If they do. just write: Lynn Headley, family Weekly. 641 Lex· ington Avenue. N .Y .• N .Y. 10022. If~ use a laxative more than once a week ... Here's . ' re.al reJief from eoostipa6oo --· · If you've been taking magnesia, salts. oils or harsh chemical laxatives once a week or more and you ·re still not satisfied-here's a better way to end constipation worries. Take gentle. effective Serutan. It's different! Unlike other laxatives that may cause irritation or griping, Serutan, taken daily, forms a soft gel whiCCi moistens food wastes and shapes them into a well· formed stool. Serutan produoes the proper amount of bulk needed to help bring peristaltic stimulation to your sluggish colon. This is utterly difforent than (Of"cing your system with harsh chemical laxatives which may dry you ouL You can take gentle Serutan every day because it is a pure vegetable hydrogel and contai~ no harsh roughage, no chemica1 laxatives. Take Serutan every day to get regular-and keep regular. Delidoas Fnit Fbwcw Serutan is available in delicious fruit flavor. Get Serutan fruit flavor Of" unflavored powder, or toasted granules. When you read Serutan backwards, it spelb-- .. natures:' And natures way is best. {;)ir\§~tJ~iroY t@m~n imiiiiiiiiiir:w::=====:, FLUSHES UP v to -T or 5"1>Cic tank ---- -4iccinc \AP floors -Ill ..• ••PHI 11\0..., IMC. eox ISi )J TAMPA (l & l'lti14 TIUPS ••• 51 f• s1 SI biftbolr -·of Ufdy _...,. size ~ <2"4-r ciR.J tw faft plMtilic. plus ' Dutdt lilusclfj .... llutbs F1££. Guralteed to bloolll for 5 JUf'S "' tree .. aoeMeltt. s-1 today, 50 •• °"" $1.50 .-s 40c pos!Jle .. "-dliftc 1100 for $215). .................. ~ ..,........,.. ... U~ediC may impair hearing. Soften few removal wi1h lk9itrs• llrUlm LIMIAllY PGPlAIS 5 ,.,...,, •• Hady, fast.,,.... U'sefJ ,...... franl .......... mttMcs. _,. t.rampUntect Vety ~ or1\llMlltll. A t~ ..-.S Wpill a tllis ll'fic:e. Sltisf"'--\ tioll Of •• ewat tree. -................ , •. er.. ..... ........ What Do Many Doctors Use When Th~ Suffer Pain Of HemorrhoidaI Tissues? This E.xdusiv~ Formula Gives Prompt. Temporary Rdid In M~y Cases from such Pain. Also Helps Shrink Sw~lling of HemorrhoidaJ T asmes Due to lr*dioo. Newa about a most effective med- ication comes from a recent sur- ftY of docton. Asked what they, thesuelves, wie to reline such painful symptAJms, many of the doct.ora reporting, named one particular medication they either U8e t.hens.eha or in their o6:e pnctice. Thia medication gives prompt ttlie.f for hours in many ca-. from pain and it.chin« of hemor- .. rhoidal t.iaaues. And it actuaJJy beJP9 ahrink swelling of liQdt U. suer cauaed by infection. ~ by doctors &bowed thd to be true. The medication u•ed ••• Preparation 0--the same e.xdu- .ift formula JOO can bay at any drug-counter without a pre.crip- tion. Just eee it doctor tested Preparation H dodn 't help ,...._ There's no other formula like it. Ointment or suppositories. ( -. ~...__I _Quips & Quotes "' ARMOUR'S ARMOURY By Richard Armour )'u11 k11 11w 1clw 1cmtld /woe do11c 1ccll 1citli tlic (!.OS ,,/,nrta{!,<'? Co/11111/ms. Ile f!.UI :).000 mile\ toa 1-:ollcm1. -Robert Orbc11 I _rU,.. /, --.. ---.. --, ___ I / ___ ~aliotttt1-· -Hittmtont.>:1':-Home---- makc r-ll<:arthstu1w: P1cac:hcr-l>rim- ·'to11e; Scl·rctary-bpstonc; 'l'ravclcr- CONSIDER THE RAISIN Tho rahin, that was on<:c a grape, Unlined nnct smootl1, w ith rounded shape, Is now unlovely, Onttened out, With lines and wrinkles all nbout. Of raii.in11 J am fond indeed. Their f()()cl supplic11 my body's need. And yet lo my close-peering eyes The)· luok like prunes, of smaller i.izc. I wonder, could a raisin be, Though good to tostc, so sad to sec llccause of e nvy, forced to pine, Ldt uul, 11ot winding up as wine? Yl'llo\\'Stone: Excculi\ c -grimbtonc; Astr1111aut -moomtonc; Patriot -Oag- sto11c; La1111<lrcs,-suap~tone; Politicia11 -hl:irncy stone; D n 111kard-lo<lcst01ll'; Pl'dcstrian -headstone; Shoe Ik pair- ma11-1.·ohblcslo11c. -L 11cillc Good11car /)1111r-l11-tloor .w1/cs11u111 111 /11111.\cwift•: .. ro11 s/11111/d lioi;c st·c11 1clwt I sa1v al !fnllr 11ciglil1nr's .. Hay I ''CJ1 in mu! tell !JOll alJ011t it?'" -l/c11ry Lcob11 Yo11 can't /Jr mrc uf a11ytl1ing tliesc day.~. 'flii11k of all t/1c motlrcrs 11:/w , t11;c11ty years <1f!.O. lwcl their daughters rncci11otcd i11 11/acc.-; they th5!''{!.11t 1rn11/d11 ·1 ,Jw1c. -Cmirarl Fiord lo T imes today are upsetting. \V c have a neighbor tt.:ho is so in.vcc11rc lie has t1 life l'reserver 011 his mwin~ 111acl1i11e. -T homas LaMance THROUGH A CHILD'S EYES Kids see Ille d1fferenlly. Send original contributions to ''Child," Family ,..,... Weekly, ~1 Le>1ington Ave . N.Y . NY 10022. $10 If used-none returned 1\ly little brother is S11p<·11na11 ('l'azy. One clay he w:\\ t.ilking with my father. l\1y father a~kccl him ii hl· wa11tc<l lo he Superman when he grew 11p. H is reply wa~. "No, people would laugh at nw. I'll just he a Girl Scout." -S11sa11 )VII('.~ Florc11cc. S.C. flccent Iv we ~pent SC\ <'rnl clap \\'ilh our sou 1111cl fomi ly. While dri' in~ .1lo11g the high· "ay. we pas~<>tl 11 1111ml>tT 11£ )>ij:!n\. Onr wa~ a pic:l11rc of n mC'r· maid. Our fo11r-yl'.lf·11kl J:tran<l- '"" piped up with, 'Thcr<' is a wom.111 in fM1 p.rnt)>." -.'1rs. C. R. Pifer Cm1s. Ill. 26 • FAMILY WEEKLY, Oclobor 21, 1973 By Frank Baginski LITTLE EMILY "Th•l'a Mr. BH•ley. He drlvff the achool bus." I ~ m t1te \\Orldt I RAMONA VAN ZIJL Men fall for her Ramona van Zijl of Holland became interested in the Japanese art of self- defense, jujitsu (judo), when she was 13. Now 20 years old, she holds the highest honors a woman can receive in that sport: the Black Belt. And she teaches judo at the College of Further Education in DusseJdorf, West Ger- many. Most of her pupils are men, and t11ey are quite surprised when they see their instructor. It only takes a few minutes, though, for them to reaJize that 5-6, 108-pound Ramona is well worth her Black Belt honor. ln jujitsu, "Hehm Kefler delighted in showing off her garden .... Miss Keller, rely- ing entirely on her sense .of smell, pointed out the ... Bowers. She spoke • in a harsh, guttural voice, which, of course, she could not hear. At 6rst, the anima l-like sound of it added to the strangeness one felt about Miss Keller, but soon one became accus* Helen Keller tomed to her way of spealcing. When my [wife) Helen got to know her well, she asked whether she felt the loss of sight was worse than the Joss of hear- ing. 'My dear.'~ Miss Keller said, 'you can touch a rose. You can smell it. You do not have to see or hear it to know it. But not to hear a fellow humM be- in~'s voice is the greatest of depriva- tions.' " From "Thr Autohiography of Dr. Samuel Rosen.·· by Snna ucl Ro~en (Alfred A. Knopf, $6.95). weight and size are not important, for judo is an art of balance, holds and throws. During her years of training. Ramona has broken her own teeth and bones, and has had numerous disloca- tions, but she says it was all worth it. "The problem," she adds, "is where do I go from here? I have reached the highest honors for women in jujitsu, and as I am only in my 21st year, I have a whole life ahead of me .... I suppase that I will try to become upgraded into the male class, but at present, that looks very unlikely." DATES: United Nntions Week begins Sunday. Veterans' Day will be oh· served Monday. BIRTHDAYS (Sunday and Monday: Libra; Tuesday-Saturday: Scorpio): Sunday-Dizzy Gillespie 56; Whitey Ford 45. Monday-Annette Funicello 31; Joan Fontaine 56. Tuesday-John- ny Carson 48. Wednesday -Y. A. Tittle 47. Thurtday-Anthony Fran- ciosa 45. Friday-Jackie Cooper 51: MahaJja Jackson 62; JacJcie Coogan 59; Sen. Edward Brooke 54. Saturday- Nanette Fabray 53. BIRTHDAY PEOPLE: Annette Funicello and Sen. Edward Brooke FAMILY WEEl(LV, October 21, 1973 a 2 . .._... /------------------------,, I I I PALM CO. Dept. 4593, 4500 N.W. 135th St., Miami, Ffa. 33059 Please send me the Ornament Kits checked below. I understand if I am not deliatited, I may return any kit within 10 days for a prompt refund. Enclosed is check or m.o. (()( $. ____ _ 1 I I I I ---"'Ornament Kits (#9831) @ $1.00 plus 25¢ postage I ___ Wooden Ornament Kits (#12696)@ $1.98 plus 35¢ postage ) I I (Florid• residents •dd 4 % s.les tall.) I I N•m•-------"'--------------"-;.;=....._~~----------I .a Add,.,s I r-Cl~ -..._ State ~,__~~ ... -\ 8 Save 75¢. Order 3 Kits for only $3.00 and we'll pay the postage. I '-Or 2 wooden kits at $3.96 and we P:&Y postage. Extra kits make fine gifts! / _______________ _. __________ _ A. Special lnt~tory Off er for Only 11.00 DO-IT-YOURSELF 22 PIECE Kfl' You'll have loads of fun and 15 ex- tremely attractive yuletide ornaments to grace your tree this Christmas. Each ornament is made of sturdy non-bend cardboard with a white paper finish bonded on 2 sides. Designs are print- ed on both sides and areas to be paint- ed are numbered. Everything you need to make these beautiful ornaments is included: 3 bags of silver, goJd and red glitter; glue, watercolor paints and brush and golden tie strings. These will be real conversalion pieces when your family and friends drop in and nothing you could buy can com-pare to satisfaction of making your own. ORDER NOW FOR CHRISTMAS This is a special Christmas introductory offer for those of you who like dc>it- yourself projects. Our Reg·u1ar Christ- mas supplies are limited. To avoid -~~S:::::::!P' disappointment mail coupon today as . ~~Jl~:s:"-•!t-.-r~ orders will be filled on a first come, "' first served basis. A sensational buy for only $1.00. Order 3 kits and save 75¢ more. Now also available -a kit for making 13 wooden ornaments! Glitter, glue and paints included. Kn CONTAINS: (.0,0,0.G) water color set ptden tie atrlna PLUS 15 ORNAMENTS TO MAKE &. HANG .. " •I -f Sii ________ _ IWHAT's i·NEW! i-21'ai(S- I of 1 Shoes 117!! I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I II Burgun "\..oafff I I I ANY 12PAIR I 1795 I :t, -L---------- ---------------------------------------, BREAK THE SHOE MONOTONY I I I I I I I I I· I I I I with Haband'a incredible man-made polymeric BURGO DY BROGUES ~~~~-~-~~~-- 2 PAIR 4 ·7195 STILJ: !:iv .I. ;UT BIG PRICE BOOST~~ NOW IN WORKS!· ~ With shoe prices zooming up, Up, UP -how can anyone afford these new. more interesting, better- made Brogues? In fa ct, while some men wonder I bow to get together $25 or $40 for a single pair of brogues, thousands of o thers are solving all their shoe problems and saving time and money buying direct by mail ! Hat>.nd Company of Pmrson New Jersey carries• tremendous line of high quality Executive Brogue style New Price Shoes. 2 pair for $17 .95. They are all new 100% man-mad materials that look and feel like full grain leather, yet perform even better. All have a thick one-piece heel and sole, built-in support shank in the arch, cushion insole, fine laces, bindings, linings and trim. The detailing is remarkable, and the fit and style are Authentic Brogue in every way. FIVE NEW WAYS TO BREAK AWAY from TRADITIONAL HO-HUM STYLES ! Take a close look at the shoes shown here: 1974's new colors and styles indeed, yet built on the tnditional full fi tting Executive Brogue Last which you can be sure will feel just as well-made as it looks ! EASY TO SEE I We will be proud lo 1e11d you any 2 pairs you like, to 1ee and try on in your oMJn home. )uJt 1ef' if your 1ize ii 1hown on the order f orm and tell iu what 1ty le1 you wont. You will be delighted ot our excellent higl1 quality and fa1t reliable 1ervice. More important. you will be amazed at the many direct compliments you get for wearing sue hendsome Executive 8r09Ues. People wifl notice I E~HABAllD NEW PRICE SHOE HEADQUARTERS 265 N 9th Stree~ati!non NJ 0'7<Nl ______ ...... ..,. ......... __ ~=-lb .. EXECUTIVE miracle polymeric BR HABANO COMPANY Direct SeAice Oepertment 266 N. 9 St. Paitenon NJ 07508 Gentlemen: Please tend me the .... '" pain of Haband N~w Price BtotUH specified for which I enclose my remittance or s GUARANTEE: If upon r«:elpt for •ny 11 t'NWn I find I do not choo# to l¥!Nf t1*n, H•l»nd will refund •wrv ,,.nny / peld tMm. I •A-49 BURGUNDY I Name . • • . • • • • • ........................... ,...,.~A--.+--f--4--~ ; Street ..•...••.••.••...•.. ~~ .. . BROWN BLACK I City ................................. WllllLAUIJK..4---f--+-- BLAa< I ... ;,;:~oooot:r ~~..r..~ ------'------------~-~-~-~---~---~-~-- -I I I I I I I I I I I I I I New Ta11 1 1 Oxford ·-I I I I Bro wn I era1d I Loafer I I We wm 1 be proud. to lend you ANY 2PAIR. for your I On.-ApproHI, I At-Home INSPECTION.I -------- ' ' I I I I I I- I I I I I-- I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I 1- 1 I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I •I •I I I I I I • I •I I .. -:-o:ra~ge . Co~st. . ' ' * .... * . -.• '•. ' .. t=l"AL SPORTS LOCAL "·WANT ADS • ' i'D LIKE TO HAVE <{OV ON Ml{ TEAM. CHUCK , ~VT ! Jll5T DON 'T 11-HNK i{OU'RE 6001' ENOUGH ... NANCY . ' . , I· ' I .' IN FACT, I DON'T see ANl(JNE AROVNP HERE WHO COUl.D COME ap TO M1{ 5TANPARP'! PRICES ARE' AWFUL LATELY I I I I THAT WILL BE'. $2.50 PARCEL ·. POST· ' ' SUNDAY. OCTOIH 21 , 1973 ·-·-·~ . • . . i ,,. . I HOW A!IOVT Mt.{ • ,,.--...::~1', l.INESACKER . . HIM ? -OVER THERE .? , . 1-lE'S ~ETT'{ 600!1 OKA'(, LET'~ TR'( HIM Ot!T .. TWO- FIFTY ? '?? • YES, THE BUYER MUST SHOP WISELY THE DAYS I I I ~ NOPE: f --. . ' .. GOOD &HOT, KID! HOW IJOUl.D L(OV L.IKE 1:l Pl.A'( FOR A DECENT TEAM? • 11b;:, -- KEEP TALKIN6,' SWEETIE •• . . Bv Ernie Bushmiller ' ·• . .. l'LL SHOP AROUND A LITTLE --- i'M SU RE I CAN F IND A LESS EXPENSI VE POST OFFICE / •. 1~ I . . ~ . . ""' ·- Tio •te U. I. "9\. Off.-'tf'I• ..,_ • lf7.Jh'li!lllod Fool~>t S-,MIUIO , .. OC.1 ZI • ' • r IO·ll Al..~01 MY FATHE" /S MAD Ai ME! 1 ANO 10 iel-L. YOU iHE T~LliM1 Hl: '~ NOT AL.I.. OWING Me iO HAVE AN'( ~~IEND~ ave~ F"Ot(. A WH11...e ... ' DENNIS THE MENACE BY TO CALL ON you , .. [> t> t> l MtA~-r' f<NOW TH~ T~U1H. 't' L. L.. A~K 1-fef', ·- . M.A~,,A, ~aw OM, ~•ve~AL. ~OM~ YOU. ~000 1'~ASON~ MAVIN•-r l~A. FOJ/C ON&1 INVl1'iC> Ml iO l'V& 9SiN ~o ••s101~, otA~ MOIASf IS 91JNG: PAINT,-01 AND ~ . HAT& 10 tNS:L.1'.i ' YOCA" MOM& IJ~SY THfff!. £'.AV~ . • :·' ·~i&L..Y !' l HAV!Nrj HAO TIM£ 'fHli <f~·~ . .AND-IY.K"' oiJ MY G&..Ui,-rS ! ! '· • W&l-L.., . 1'Hi'Y A"lf ALL.. Pi~ FICT~ "Y VAL.ID rl£A~ON'! _::JHA.,.,9MY NAME -PRl~ON IT, •.1'0--E.N1EJT<1A IN ... ' ~-- 'VSS. ANO IF YOL{ PUT TMSM AL.L- 1'C~f1'MER!. I 'T'H&Y ADD t.4P 10 "TH~ FACT iHAi I. CAN'T · ~TAND THE <S'IGMT OF YOLL, ~IJDGE PARKER --By~ Hank K~tcham · NOW, DON'T FORGET,,, !'LL BE 6ACK WHAT DAY WOULD 8E YOU NAME IT, MISS A-56EY.' I'M AT YOUR ----I THINK WE SHOULD 5TOP &PARRIN G, MR. POOLE! YOU GAYE SLADE ROBERT6 THE SUM FROM CHICAGO ON MONDAY AND I'LL MOST CONVEN IENT CALL YOU AGAIN TO 5EE WHAT DAY FOR YOU, SLADE? YOU 'D LIKE TO WATCH OUR· PRt\CTICE GE5510N! t APPARENTLY YOU KNEW THAT 5LADE WAG HAVING FINANCIAL PROBLEMS OR HE WOULDN 'T HAYE ACCEPT~P YOUR GIFT! ·WELL, HE WO~ 6E A8LE TO KEEP ~15 PART OF -. - THE BARGAlN! · 8ECK. AND CALL! YOU'LL BE PAID BACK WHAT YOU'RE ,__-. THE MONEY,,, euT IT'LL SAYING 15 THAT IF I HAYE TO BE PA\D 8AC.K Dlt> IN FACT GIVE HIM· $75,000, HE'S e.LOWN IT! •. OF $75,000 IN CASH FOR . CERTAIN 5ERVICE5 YOU WANTED 'FROM HIM! ISN'T THAT RIGHT 1 ~"]Iµ, THIS 15 A COPY OF THE FAIRY TALE IN LETTER FORM, LIKE A AUGIE! IT'S ADDRESSED TO FAIRY TALE, THE Dl6TRICT ATTORNEY! DRIVER! MAY0E I SHOULD TELL MY SECRETARY TO DROP THE O"IGINAL IN THE MAIL( > " '\.. ,_,. 1n1· . " •. WOUL..t> Yoo . L.IKI! TO 58! MY . 8UTTS"~FL. Y COL..L..SCTION 'f' -.. (... ... ~3.N~~·'' a . .,.,.,..... • ..... ~~·"'&-...-..- ~ , .,.., ·' ... DR.\VE AROUND 'TME BL.OCK . AGA\N, · .. MUTT.· .. . . "' ~ 4, • . . ·~ . : . .,. . ... I • ByAlSmith . JEFF, RUN AROUND "T'4E BLOCK ANO CHASE HlM BACK! I'LL · · STAY +-\ERE! I i 1 I . I ~&ALLY ! LOFlC> PLUSf-{SOlTOM · AND· 1 ·<SOT A GReAT BUT.TE~ Ft.. Y COLL6CTf0N'f FIRST· W~. , CATCH 1sM .. :rHeN.we · CllL-o~FORM ...;;..;;;;." - 'EM... . -yr-: by Charles Barsotti T/ t ' I. 81LLV!, oou.v. J&s:FV ! PJ! TIME FOR &l!O! . . - ( .~· ' .. l'LL.. ~f: OUT OF IOWN 'FOR IHE Rf:SI OF TH E l?AY/ WIM ~LE ... e WHY CO WE MAFTA GOTO aeo WM&il .. M~Y GETS TIAED? l'~ ~f~~~~:;~~NJi~m t--O_U_R_1H_IR-D-L.-. F-I N-~-IN-P-IVl-DUAL--..... , GeNr?~R: ONE EVANG~L.INE. WHY, OUR veRV FIRST EVEN,NG- GUMP OF. NAOSE.A LlUNCTION l · ~ CHAfrEP OF l'LJRIAL. Pl..OTS .. JNf0· 11-H: WEE HotJRSlt.~OUR WITH LUCK ,SHE'LL' SAY \\YES" JO A SUPER- ~f:LUXf l l'RONZE,-' WATERTIGHT" _. . MOPeL.! ~ . se~ON~ t WAS CAP11VA1!17 EJ'( H~ ·cXQVl~ITf rAsn: 1 f\J ~ E:APSIDN ~S ! . , (I ><><>LE~'S' OKAY 1 ou1T'A MY WAY! S\AJJTu Yt>U rwo ! YER R16HT IN MV WAY! SCA1-fcR, You GUYS - t'M COMIN ' THROUGH ! . ~ .. I . MOVE II, WILL YA ? DO YA EXPECT ME 10 GO AROUND? I ' . . HOW Vf.RY EMBAARASSrN6 . (\ . .. • .. ' • •• ---~- ' '.t:~~ YOO' TR.UST YOUR f:YE5..'.' There ire at le1st slX dif£tc- ences.. J n . .d!awln1 details betweel). top ind bottom p1nels. How qu.kkly'. can you. find them? Check: 1nswers with th05e belOW, -'"llM!Ot\ odir S'I 'Pll'tK 'I 'lbliiffflrtn:Jt1rv-Jut.-rm-S'l"1POl::J ,. 111•nJllP • 11 ,..,,~-i~-s--11"P'fW"SJ«'-.i:itl'v ·: ·iva.i•JnP •1 ,.,m ·t :u;>1n1•1ua ~ • , I Ila/ Kaufma11 ~ ~ ANYONE can petrorm this feat of magic once th.e secret is ob- tained. The m1Jician places three coins or buttons in.a {OW before , him. He then asks if ' ~yone present tltinks he can remo'' the mid- dle coin from its posi- tion with q__ut touching it in any ~·ay. Sup'pose you were in his audience, could you comply~ Actually, thf. trick: i,s quite simple: The mai;; jcian. merely pivks up ' one of the t"''o coins and place's if-at the op. ~ _ posite side . The coin formerly in the ml~dle ;v.·ill then be ' at one ~f th<e t:nds and will not. hav e br:en ---BULLETIN BOARO --- e NU~1BER, PLEASE! \.\'ill all ttn or your fin1m flt In th• tiol•t on a &tanda.rd telephone dial? Ye1 or no? e Jot dov.·n the diiitS 1 throuah 9 In such an ordtr that th• lint th~e are equal to one-tl\ird of the lut thret and the middlt thrte equal the Jut three ml nut the t\nt thret. How 's it done? Li9,ttelt UMOp 111•, 1or eHere art some more '''t\'hat' .. in·l·t\lme?" words aubmitted by 'Th@od~re Youn1 of ToledO, Wa&h.: 1/11 Spollsible, Pete R'oleum, Ray Dl1tor, Ron D. View, Sally' Mand1r:C1~ you m1k1,up' aome toppen? e Unscramblr. names of musical ·instruments: 1. BAUi'. 2. DUR~t 3. PRAH. 4 .. tsoo. Time limit: 30 second5. touc.n~d, j 1!51_!s tt\c _LE'f'SJ~_(!E IT! Whl tom~ of the 1corn1 -i))pve__are s.milin1_and_ _ ftlaJlCllll cor:itendr:d._ tolne arc_ not 11 any_on~s aueM. Which two are look·alikn? · CC> 1111 .Kine Featur. S7ndic1tc, Ine.) /0:.2.r HEAR, HERE! Add these colon for• hidden picture above: 1- Red . 2-Lt. blue. 3-Yellow. 4-U. brown . 5-fl!fh tonts. 6-Lt. (Tetn. 7-0ark: rrem. 8-0ark bro.,.,·n. 9-Black. 10-Dark blue. SPELLBIN.DtR! SCOU: 10 poin.t1 for u1in1 all the letten in the word ~low to form two com,11lete w!)rd•: ·CA p L .D R 0 N . . '!"... • .. .... - iTDN' .COre 2 poJntl each for all wotdl', 9f fou.r letters or more f:oulld. am.on1 Ute· leltel"I. - $Tf'! te ... -., le'u& ii JtO(atL·· :vmr'pnwrt-::~ ·• • i .. -·· ! YOU It.I TME BOXCAR! WE'RE 01-l TME LOOK• OUT FOR STI<'ANOEOS ! A NATIONAL GUARD FLOOD RELIEF .,: SURE~ USE A.~IOE ! NEED A LIFT?. · CREW! . ' OH~WMAT c.;UTii . TMEY SURE HAVE IF YOU FO.LKS WILL GIVE MC YOUR ADDRESSES, l'LL see TO IT THAT P.UPPIES!. ' PRETTY MARl<IN<:>S! • . YOU EACH GET A PUPl'Y ... IN ABOUT · SIX WEEKS, WHEN THEY'RE WEAl'IED' ARCIHllllE ARCHIE, I WON'T HAVE THIS GREASE ALL OVER THE G,l\RAGE FLOOR! I LOST A GREASE CUP UNDER MY JALOPY! YOU GO ·· DOWNTOWN AND FIND A .NE CUP,OR SELL THAT PIECE OF-JUNK/ . . . ,, • • • I '• I FOUND HOMES FOR ALL FOUR PUPPIES, AMBLER' Tl<EN EVEl?Y· Ol\IE SHOULD ee VERY MAPPY, HALI 'l""' . ' ARCHIE •.•. DID YOU GET THE CUP? BoB MON7ANA- • '\ RIGHT THROU6H HERE, SON! -- ' ON VOUR NEXT "TRIP TO TMe FURPllAC! ROOV., BURN TMIS BLUEPRI NT. TOO DANGEROUS TO ~AVE AR.OUNO. ~ 1973 bv The Ch1c1~n Tribune Wcrld R•i hts Reserved GORDO , ' TME OICI( 15 MAKING IT TOO MOT. W~ MAVI' TO ACT! I CAN'T l..OCATE MV MANA.GE~. ME'S /l..l..W/l..'15 o~ TME GO eETWEEN MV PROPERTIES. Mr. Wallet, I notice )iour Lt son's camper is qone. I ~-} I -- ACT? AS MANAGER OF VOU!t . PROl'!RT1f5, Pll<E, W~ATS IN IT FOR ME? MAVlll MIS BATTERIES MAVE llUN OOWN IM MIS PAGER. Corky decided not to buy it so he's returned it to its I just said that to bug ·1· you, Wallet. We don't • have a son and the 'Jf' tree was for firewood ~-,,...._._ Having them and the kids here was very nice. """"-~..,.... Mr. Bloop didn't seem to think so. By .. Ohl he ·I havetit heard just any more abOut likes to your son and complain. ~ c~mper .. I have to work on my whoppers, Walt. And some· of em don't even fool ihe little kids! Gus Arriola NO-GOOD K.!Q AND f/IS New l=LAS!-1 CAMERA f • 7 ..