HomeMy WebLinkAbout1973-10-24 - Orange Coast Pilot••
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6to~1n Dra1na in .San Francisco· Bay
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Shotgun B,lasts
l ·njure Two Me.n
At Dot Springs
•' Poli~e Identify
Nude Body !J Seek
Suspe~t • t ·n Mesa
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.-,p(;J$di bg Waves
Threaten Coast
By L. PETER KRIEG
Of fM' ci.a1 l"'lllff Iliff
Huge westerly swells, Pushed by the
sl«m pounding San Fr¥.cisoo, Jasl)ed
the Newport Beach shor<llne from . th<
Newport Pier to the Santa Ana Raver
jelly today. . 'lbe winter season's biggest surf was
attracting thronis of surfers but was
ping a major beach erosion threat
to the already-devastated beach between
22nd and 28th Streets, 11 f e g u a r d.s
re= ranging from six to eight feet
* * * Waves Smash
Boat With 4
Off SF Bay
• ~FRANCISCO (AP) -Hug~ waves sm.ii.shed 8 35-foot sailboat outside the
Golden Gate Br~e. ~ashing .two J_llefl ~ and 1njunng their wives
before Qie Coast Guard could rescue
~~ times, the boat "had its keel in the air," ,.id Carol Babrock o1
Fresno. Repeated attempts d~g the (~ur ordeal TUesday to hoist Mrl.
Babb>ck her husband Edward, and Jan Morri~ from the wildly-pitching boat
failed the Coast Guard said.
• '11le• boat's owner, Dr. Donald Mor-
• ('ison, .spent 50 minutes in the cold
pacific Ocean before he was picked
up by a hovering helicopter. A Coast
Guard cutter towed his shattered boot,
with its three passengers still on board.
Inside San Francisco Bay· . Mon'IMMI, 39, a psyclrlatnst ftom
Sheridan, Wyo., said the fust wa~es
atruck bis boat, the Jandon... a few mUe3
outside the Golden Gate Bridge about
I Jl,m. ' 1be first wave hurled the boat on
U! 1lde and broke shrouds. bracing tho
right side of the mast, he said.
Mon"bon's wife broke .her leg in the
erash 6nCI BabCOCk was w a .shed
overboard, but hauled back aboard with
a aafely line. ' rAbout a half hour later, M~eon
aald a second wave, "25 or 30 feet
blgh " rolled the boat over again, anap-ptng1 the' mast and tossing Morrison
futo· l\1t water where his safety line
'bnll<t. Soffieone on shore witnessed the in-
(Sff RESCUE.S, Patt II
,,
I
were expected to Continue Thursday,
according to senior llfeluard Logan
Lockabey. .
Loeb.bey said sandbagging maY be
necessary if winds increase in order
to protect the McFadden Wharf beoch
area.
"lf we start getting a really sharp
profile -scarping -the bea~h will
start going fast," Lockabey said, ei:-
plaining that beach erosion occurs faster
when the waves hit the shoreline at
sharper and sharper ang]es.
Wind is also a major factor, he ei-
plalned.
"Right now the wind here is calm,
but if it , picks up, we could have some
real problems,'' Loctabey said.
'11f it starts to look critical we'll
start sandbagging," be said, noting that
it's been two years since lifeguards
have had to take such extreme precau-
tions.
But Lockabey said this year the prob-
lem may be compounded because of
the controversial 28th Street groin in-
stalled last year which is supposed to
protect the beach from surf.
"It was put in for protection from
the south swells fuat hit us during
the summer," Lockabey said, "but it
rtally compound! the problem by
preventing sand from replenlshlng dur-
ing the winter."
Before the groin was lnstaJled, be
explained, the south swells would wash
sand toward West Newport in the sum-
mer but it would be pushed back during
the west swells in winter.
"But these beaches by the Newport
(Seo SURF, Page ZJ
JIOUSE HUNTERS
SEARCH THE ADS
Recent figures compiled by the
Newspaper Advertising Bureau, Inc.,
should prove that house hunters start
thelr search ln the newspaper.
On an average weekday, according
to the figures, 29 percent of those plan-
ning to buy a house within 11 months
wilf read the "House for Sale" classifica-
tion In the local newspaper. Over a
; five-day period 45 percent of the pros·
peels will see those ads· and during
a month, 75 percent of the ready-to-buy
will read the listings.
If you're selling a house, put It where
house hunters can find it -easily.
Call a Daily Pltot ad-visor on the direct
line, M2-5f'18, and be where the buyers
are )ooklng.
•
ea
Ide ntity
Of Nude
Body Told
By JOANNE REYNOLDS
Of "-Delly l'llel It.fl
Orange County Coroner's investigators
today identified the woman whose nude
body was discovered in Huptington Beach
as' Pamela Sue Hodgman, 21.
They said.they believe the dead woman
oame from the Riverside area.
Meanwhile police are still seeking in-
fonnaUon about the suspect in the
murder .case, Michael Denis Bumelle,
29, whose car was found in Costa Mesa.
Det. Sgt. ~fonty ~fcKennon of the
Himtington Beach police said the blue
station wagon was spotted In a garage
on Newport Boulevard over the weekend
and delectivcs froni Huntington Beach
and Costa Mesa kept a watch over
It until Tuesday when a search warrant
for the vehicle was issued.
McKennon said some evidence that
rouJd support their theory that Bur-
nelle was involved in 1-fiss Hodgman 's
death was f9und in the car.
Burnelle LS also wanted by Buena 1
Park police in connection with a bank
robbery in that city Friday afternoon
In which Burnelle's alleged accomplice,
Leslie Alton Bannister,, was shot to death
in a gUn batUe with police.
Bannister's cOmpanion , Teresa Marie
Poplin, 20, was wounded in the . shoot-
out.
Police say a man matching Burnelle·s
description escaped from the scene in
a pickup truck which was later found
abandoned.
lnfonnation supplied to detectives led
them on the search for the station
wagon which was found in Costa Mesa.
Detectives say they believe Burnelle
may have tried to rent a room in
a nearby motel to "keep an eye" on hls
car while it was being repaired.
But he apparently left the lll(ltel ""hen
he couldn't get the room he wanted,
officers said. .
Investigators sakl they also believe
that the dead man may also have been
involved in Miss Aodgman's murder.
Crop Changes Made
WASHINGTON (AP) -Agriculture
Secretary Earl L. Butz arviounced today
broad changes in the government's
peanut program for 1974 which he said
Is a first move to get the crop into
the free market system and away from
burdensome oosts to the taxpayer.
,,
a ' .
liiiman Arm
On Freeway
Gives Clue
The body or a Navy .man, evidently
dead since Saturday, was found Tuesday
at the bottom or San Diego Creek,
thl! victim of an auto accident.
Discovery of a human arm on the
center divider of the San Diego Freeway
near Laguna Canyon freeway Jed to
• wrecked car and the body of William
Thomas, 34, of San Diego.
A member of a highway malotenance
crew found the arm and notified the
California Highway Patrol whose officers.
discovered the car.
Highy;ay patrol of!ice rs said Thomas.
southbound on the freeway, lost COlltrol or the car which struck the center
,divider severing the arm.
The car. 0H1cers said , piummeted 90
feet across the creek channel. smashing
into the ooncrcte channel wall at which
tin1e the dMver was ejected.
The car ::ind driver then dropped · 90
feet Into the creek channel beneath a
freeway bridge obscured from passing
traffic.
CAR PLUMMETED 90 FEET ACROSS CHANNEL AT FREEWAY
Arm of Victim Was Discovered by Highway Workmen
1 • ~"""tM.lghW3'1--~invC$!i"' determin-
ed the probable time ol death thfougb
a calendar \11atch on the detached, arm.
It had stopped at 12:05 a.m. Saturday.
2 I n jured by S hotgun
Blasts at Hot Springs
Till"ee campers escaped serious injury Officers said Barbara Ann Tschirhart.
in the Ortega llot Springs area when 25, of Santa f\1onica, \\'ho had been
one or two lntruders who ransacked carnping ~·ith the l\\'O 1ncn. was unharm·
·their van bpa>ed' ftre Qllt.,the.m.~.,w.Wl , ,..ed. . ...1'.,. , 1 • ::-_
a shotgun. she~Hf·s Capi . :ian1es' '1r0a<fbeu )'cJday
Deputies were called to the scene said none of the wounds inflicled on
Tuesday when California llighway. the t~·o n1cn \1crc serious and they
patrolmen reported they had ha lted the were released after treatment at the
van on the San Diego F'ree\vay after Orange Counly ~lcdfcal Center.
noting lhat the vehicle llad been damag-Brolldbclt said the trio lold his 1n-
ed by gun fire . vesligaturs that they \~·ere camping In
Ttfey said Dale Pearson, 20, or 225 thr popular hot springs area \\'hen Htt?y
Rosa St., San Clemente, had been shot hear1I nniscs coming Crom !he direction
three Umes and a m le companion iden· ot their· pnrked van .
Uflcd as Los Angeles attorney Lawrence They said they ran to the van in
Randolph Johnson. 31 , had been shot timt': to l\Ce lwo men loading the trio·~
lwict in the Hot Springs Cracas (~e GUNFtRE, Pagt tl
I
Orange Coast
• •
Weather
Thursd:iv should be a ca'rbon
copy of \\.'ednesday, according lG
1hc \\'ca thcr service -sunny and
\\'arm. Highs in !he mid-70s inland
and at the beaches.
l:\SIDE TODAY
1\ life-si:.f" yal/01vs turned up
''·~ a school vro1ect i11 occult
••cefM.uf« 'at Coro11a del ~for
lliyli tliis week. Story. Page 12.
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2 _DAIL< PILDJ_ S Wtdncwla,, Octobtr 24, 11~7) ------..
Second Truce Fails? Battle Res·umes ' I
By Tbt AJIOClated Prus
'The l!raell military command char1ed
that the El)'Plian.s launched a 1trong
air and armored attack oo the Suet
froot today evt:n as U.N. truce observers
hef.ded for the battle lines to enforce
the second attempt at a Middle !:ast
ce1se-fire.
1be Egyptian counteroffensive was
mounted to sJve catro's forces on the
eastern bank or the Sue.z Canal from
encirlement by Israeli tanks and troops
doubling back from their penetration
into Egypt v.·esl of the \\'&terway, Tel
Aviv claimed.
The nported fighUng came only a
few boW'1 after Israeli Defense t.tinister
i\'ixon Firing
Cox to
~toshe Dayan announced the new cease--
hre wu ln tffeet and teemed lo be
·'working properly." 1
There wu no immed.Jate word from
Caito.
EGYPT ASSAILS PORT SAID
ATTACKS. Story, Pig• 4
But lhe Israeli claims of renewed
combal appeared to jeopardize the
already precarious truce. reiterated by
the U.N. Security Council Tuesday night
after its first cease-fire collapsed in
furious fighting .
The lsraell rtportl did not pinpoint
the area of combat but lndlcated Jt
Testify
Wat at the SOU.them end o( the canal
near Suei city.
An earUe.r eomml.mJque from Citro
claimed the lmelis tried to cut the
main road to Cairo near Sun clly "but
out r......_ .... prevenlfol him by 1.,..
from accomplishing h£s ~}eetivt!'
The Israelis said 15 Egyptian ftthter
planes were shot down lD dogfight.I over
the battlegrqund.
The Israelis earlier saJd their Invasion
force pushed south from its foothold
midway up the canal, moving along
the western bank of the canal past
Suez city at the waterway's southern
end ln an attempt t.o cut oU the Egyptian
3rd Army on the eutem bank.
f4ypt ~.t the waelis made the ealn1 by advantqe of the tint
cease-nr. attempt Moaday and 'l\Joday
nights.
laraell spc>kesmen claimed tbe~ ln-
vasloo tanks and artillery now dominate
1he main E«YPUIO supply roalt• Jl'Qm
Cairo east to Ismaltta and from Cairo
southeut to Suez chy.
Egypt, which called fot the Security
Council session that produced the second
U .S . ..SOvlet truce proposal, did not
formally annowioe its acceptance of the
new cease-fire this morning.
But the head of the U.N1 truce
observers in Cairo, Col. Ake Bendrik
ol Sweden, canftrmed that Egypt ac-
cepted t.be 7 a.m. -, 10 p~m. POT
-halt. He 31ld he 1n1111mllted the
Egypllu ec<eptaJlce IO lanol and 1he
truce wu olftcJaUy put Into eUect wtlh
1he accord or bo1h sue. advenartu.
Syria, which lgoortd the Ural ...... nr.
call, announced ll a1'o accept~ the '
new truce, ~Ut on condlUoo Uui.t lm.el
withdraw 'Jlon) all ,\rab territories oc·
cupied in June 1987 and ·thereafter, and
on the basis o1· guaranteeing the rights
of the Palestinian people."
Syria's front with Jsrael -about 20
miles beyond the 1967 Golan Heights
cease-fire lines -was reported calm
a few hours alter the truce went into
tffecl.
IJay ended';
For Clerks
By TOM BAllLEV
' ' •
ot .. Dellf ~... .... ,
i Thlrty-<lght Orange Counly SllJ>erior :
Court clerks, each of them arn\W with >
a doctor's certificate, are1back ln tile '
job -today after a one day ~'aick'.out" '
that was described by &!'le ablenttt ;• as l'a little blt of miuc1e-llellng." • :;
County Clerk William E. St John cOn·:
finned that his workinf force WU at :i
Ml strengtlr today and .uld be dots '
not intend to discuss the lict«it ''With :
hia clerks "except on a 1trtctl,y informal ·
basis.
"I am with ibeJn," he said !OdJf
"I think they are very much UDderpQ!
and I think the abilities of what ~
regard as the best court clerical force.
in California should have been recognized
long ago." '
Before Senators St John, hi• superv!n'y penonneli'
and the ske1eton erew that kept coure:t
affairs running Tuesday on a nearly:
normal basis, worked until late Monday.r
night to clean up all arrears that IC":
cumulated during the day. · ··:
From Wire Services
WASHINGTON -The Sen at e
Judiciary Committee today set a public
hearing for Monday to take testimony
from Archibald Cox about his ouster
by President Ni1on as special \Vatergate
prosecutor.
* * * TV Speech
,Delayed
Due to War
117 HELEN THOMAS
.WASHINGTON (UPI ) -President
Nixon canceled a pranned televised
~peech to the nallon tonight on Watergate
because the White !louse said he was
concentrating oo trying to get a ~lidclle
East cease-fire. fie will hold a televised
news conference Thursday night inltead.
The President spent the night at his
PUBLIC OPINION FORCES
NIXON TO YIELD. Story, Pogo 4
Camp David retreat, reportedly prepar·
ing for the speech explaining hi s decision
to relinquish his \Vatergate tape
recordings and his reasons for firing
Archibald 0>1 as Watergate special
iw-utor.
A spokesman said at mid-day today,
however, he decided to call off the
speech because or continuing peace ef·
forts in the Middle East.
The news confenmce wlll be held at
6 p.m. POT Thursday in lhe east room
of the \\'hite }louse.
White House sources indicated that
while the President had beaime preoc·
cupied with the f\1ideast, son1e advisers
suggested to him that a news conference
might be preferable to a form al speech
in getting across his position on the
starlllng developments of the past few
days.
Some Democrats in Congress 'A'ere
slill iiressing for impeachment pro-
ceedings against Nixon for the Cox firing
in spite t)f his release of the tapes
for judicial review. But Admtnistratkln
supporters said the Nixon action had
taken the steam out of the Impeachmen t
drive.
White }louse deputy press secretary
Gerald Warren said that while at Camp
David. Nixon had frequent telephone
conversations with Secretary of State
Henry A. Kissinger and other advisers
"conccniing the Arab-Israeli cease-fire."
The President met 'A'lt h Kissinger in
hls oval office after returning from the
mountaintop retreat and spent most of
the morning reviewing foreign policy
matters, Warren said.
He said the President th inks the new
cease-fire "y:ill tlold ," desp ite SQme
reported violations.
OIANGI COAST
DAILY PILOT
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Action was blocked on a resolution
by a group of Qemoeratic liberals on
the committee calling on Nixon to
reinstate Cox temporarily until Congress
acts on legislation to provide by law
an independent Watergate proeecutor.
Sources reported that Sen. lloman L.
Hruska CR-Neb.), the ranking Republican
on the committee, invoked a rule to
force a week's delay on the liberals'
move.
Cox wilt be the first witnw, Sen.
Edward M. Kennfdy (D-ll-i~.). a com·
millee member who urged the inquiry,
said.
Kennedy and some Democra~ asked
that hearings start this afternoon and
Cox was reported ready to testily, but
the committee agreed after a two-hour
closed-door meeting to start the in·
vesligation Monday.
In other developments:
lll"I Telephoto
St John said he doubts there will'
be any further top level discu.!!!lon Ot-
the pay dispute witil Orange County'r
supervisors return late this week from
the County Supervbors Aasociation of
California convention in Redding. ?•
The board went 1nto executive st.ssioq.
Tuesday when it learned that 38 crern
were absent from their desks. But the)t~
refused to discuss the issue durillJ th&:
regular Tuesday meeting although ~
ficl8Is of the AFL-CIO u n i on wert•
present in the hearing room. •
County supervisors had earlier offerJ.°
the clerks a 4.4 percent pay raise after•
the clerk.! had njected a proposal thlt._
__wguld have raised their $1,o:zt a moatst.·
salaries by 2.5 j;ercent. ~~
The clerks feel that their salar\~
should be at least cOmparable to tM
$1,333 a mon1h enjoyed by Los Anl'l~
County Superior Court clerks. ...,,
-Speaker Carl Albert said today the
preliminary House inquiry on im·
peachment of Nixon wilJ proceed
regardless of the President's release
.of the Watergate tapes.
A Long Way Front Hotne
But a spokesman &aid today that tJwr..
real reason behind thelr cjedsloq ... -.
stay out Tuesday stemmed rrom .whit.
he said was the refusal of the cOuhtY1.
personnel department to agree to Jtledla."
tion of the dispute. r.-
"I hope it is expeditious. and I hope
it lays this tbiog to rest one way
or another," Albert told newsmen.
Bird specialist Clifford Lindquist h o 1 d s a rare
Spanish imperial eagle ·that was mysteriously kid·
naped from a bird preserve in Spain. The rare eagle
was captured by state agents in San Francisco. Llnd·
quist will accompany the bird back to its 5,000·
acre preserve in Spain.
Tbe clerks will meet In the OClllrthouto<
'ftiursdar night to cons.Ider poaslbk
strike action if the county re~ ada--
mant on its denial ol mediation. · The speaker said the Houae Judiciary
Committee has been mandated to make
inquiries into relOlutions to impeach or
to bring impeachment charges against
1he President "Ind Inquiries 1! 11 • 101z>g
to make."
Patrolmen at San Onofre FromP"!Je .I
SURF ...
.. 'Ibey have a good cue:t St ,Jolpl
commented. '''Ibey are seventh in the
list of California co1mty pay scales and
1 think that is a very Wlft&lisUc PolitiCllt
when one .cons.Ider! the caliber of ~
Orange County workers." ~
-Several """1ty departments repc>ri<d
"<!uabbies um -..q between 31 c!rir
-stayed out ,!l\!eld<y· and.,IM. wM ~ lo jgoore the sick:-oot and rtay
-AFL-CIO President George Meany
said today Nixon appeacs to suffer from
"dangerous emotional instability" and
repeated that be abould resign or be
impe ached.
Grab 400 Pounds of Pot Pier are really starved now," be said.
He said the beach 11 down to 20
to Z5 feet at ·tome 1p!)ints. It uied to
be 30 yards wide. ' ·:·
Meany also called for a new special
prosecutor. •
"We ft.rmly believe there must be
a completely independent investigation
of the scandals in this admi.nl.stratlon.
Nothing .that happened y e s t e r d a y
changes our opinion the the President
has so destroyed the people 's confidence
in government that he should resign
or be impeached."
* * * Students at UC I
Urge President
Be lnpeached
Some UC Irvine students are colleding
signatures on a petition urging the im·
peachment of President Nixon.
More than 200 signatures were col-
lected during the first day or the effort,
the campus newspaper New University
reports.
The Committee for the Impeachment
of Richard M. Nixon has been established
ns an ortlcial student government com·
mittee, but persons opposed to the action
are advised they may counter the peli·
lion drive.
Armando Banuelos. president o f
Associated Students of UC! said, "ASUCI
among Us other responsibili ties, Is
a plalform for student advocacy.
"Anyone y,•ishing to coun ter this peti·
lion m11y do so by cootacOng the
ASUCI," !he Newport Beach senior said.
Completed petitions are to he forward·
cd to offices of Orange County Repre.scn·
tatives and the state's Senate delegation.
Four hundred pounds of marijuana
with a street value of at least $40,000
wound up in the hands of U.S. Border
Patrolmen at San Onofre late Tuesday
and early today.
Spokesmen at the permanent check·
point said the two separate seizures
brought this week's total in seized con·
traband to nearly 600 pounds.
Jn the latest two incidents, routine
checks of vehicles for aliens prompted
officers to pull passenger cars over
to the side for inspection.
The first such stop netted 320 pounds
of the weed neatly stashed in the trunk.
All the material was in brick form
From Pagel
GUNFIRE ..•
tape recorder and other personal equip-
ment into their own vehicle.
Officers said the three victims then
pursued the burglars' car in their van
but had abandoned the pursuit and were
turning around when the burglars swung
their car around and headed for the
trio at high speed.
John!Orl said one of the men leaned
out of the car window, emptied his
shotgun at the van and then reloaded
'A'hile the trio heard the shots strike
their vehicle.
Johnson and Pearson leaped from the
van and rolled into nearby bushes. Both
men y:ere struck by the second volley
fired by the gunman. .
Of fi cers said they returned to their
"chicle and were on their way to report
the inc ident to aotborilies and see k treat·
nient when they were spotted by a
patrolling CHP officer.
Fit for Trip
Space Gal,s Sta nd Up to Test
~lOUNT,\JN VJE\V fAPI -Two weeks in bed and a pile of
Playbey and Playgirl magazines later, eight Air Force nurses have
been p'i'onounced as physically flt for weightless space travel as men.
''There's no reason to think there's any Inherent problem with
wo1nen in space." Dr. David Winter, deputy director o{ the National
Aeronautics and Space Administration's office of life ~clences, said
Tuesday. "There's no reason to think wo1nen are any better or any
worse than men."
A spokesman fnr NASA said the experiment does not represent
a commitment to add won1en to the U.S. space corps, but was only
a test to determine their qualifications for space flight.
"The biggest thing we missed wa s male compa·ntonshl~we're
ready to go out and party," Lt. Lo rraine C. Schoen. 25. of Larkspur,
told newsmen at the NAS A 1\mes Research Center here .
The wotnen said they watched television , lis tcnod to music,
kni tted. crocheted, read and d;1ydrean1ed about nien as they spent
their time in small, windowless rooms.
•
weighing a kilogram (2.2 pounds) each.
The driver, identified by patrolmen
only as Gregory Arthur ll.fontgomery,
25, was arrested on fed erri.I smuggling
charges. 1-lis hometown was not im·
mediately available, officers said.
Newport Beach ctty otnclals aiid''ti~
U.S. Army Corps of Engineers have
been Lrying to solve the Newport Beach
sand eorsion problem for years and
have in.!talled a whole series of groins
along West Newport.
•. rrJj-;i, -l?~Y for U," convnented C>qf/-
dfsgruntled absentee. "But when l\'e g_~
the pay raW? we've struggled so damn~
hard for guess who 11 be (!rat In t~ Iii!• wt1h their hands out." ,.,
The incident took place at 10:50 p.m.
Tuesday. ISRAELI TROOPS
The second case took place at 1:25
a.m. today -again during a rouUne
check ol a car for illegal aliens.
From Pagel
RESCUES ..• FACE 2ND ENEMY " •"
Fifty.two pounds of marijuana bricks
were discovered in the trunk of a car
driven by Arthur Fred Barela, 22, whose
home address was not released. A female
companioo in the car also was taken
into custody.
cident and notified the Coast Guard.
, TEL A V1V (uPI) -The llraell ~
;15 releasing several reserve 110ldien trom
,active duty so they can fight a mo&q\l1tQ
invasion on the home front. · ••
The cargo and all three arrestees
were turned over to agents of the Drug
Enforcement Admlnlstratioo, patrolmen
said.
"I thought I was a goner/' admltted
~lorrison, after the rescue helicopter
passed over him three times before
spotting him.
Meanwhile , two Coast Guard medics
wearing wet suits dropped into the water
and clambered aboard the Jandon to
give first aid.
A Tel Aviv government spokesman
said the reservists, mw:Ucipal inlect con-
trol experts in civilian life, will tp?Q
streams near the city to prevent the
moequllo invasion from becorninf a
lust Arrived-large
Shipment of Speedo
Swim Suits & Trunks
Water Wonder Kick Boards
Adidas Tennis Shoes
Men's or ladies'-18.95
Tretorn Tennis Shoes
Men's or ladies'-16.95
Converse Tennis Shoes Ladies-7.95
Men's-8.95
Tennis Dresses
Men's Tennis Shorts & Shirts
Acryllc Wann Up Sults-21.95
24.95-34.95
Racket Stringinr
Squash Rackets-Tennis Rackets
Wilson-Penn-Dunlop Tennis Balls Dz. 7 .95
Open 9 to sed Sunday
•
major onslaught.
Soccer Slloes
Brazils-11.95
Canadas-12.95
la Paz-14.95
Super Lite-17.50
• •
All Purpose Slloes-10.95 to 17.95
Bob WoHe Super Pro Basketball
Shoes-9.95
All Star Basketball Shoes-9.95
Volt Junior & lntannediate
Footballs-7.95
Volt Basketballs-5.95 to 19.95
Sact!rballHl.95 to 19.95
Watef Pola Balls-10.95 & 15.95
Boys' Fodall Shitts Reg. 2.95 Salei-1.95
Handball Glaves-RacquetbaU
Racquets-Bandmintan Rackets
5 8 Center 6
'
\__/ I
)
I
)
I
I
I
....
' .... ..
"
D « 1r
litn
,, .·
I
. .
I At Your
'e·r~ice
A Sanday, Wed•ldoy ad ll'rido7 ,...._
> 1
or ""·llollJ Pt1o1
Gol • probkm7 fh'11 "'"" Pel Dunn. Pal tllfll cul ffil
tap<, gll !he
acff<m ro"
-· cmd need to
101"• fMqtd-
Htl fn goo-
ernmcnt tmd
budn111. llail
11our czue•
tloru to Par
, Dunta I At
11 Y out' Stnrice, Orange Coo.st
,~Daily Pilot, P.O. 80% 1560, COlta
"' MelQ; ca., 92626. Include ~our
., '6ltphotle numb-r.
Thro.., It ·oui
DEAR PAT: I'm enclosing a copy
of a letter I received a few days ago.
I( sta~ · l 't\l a. sweepstal<es winner "l'd ~II receive a "Treasure Chest" of na-
ti~ly advertised products and a holi·
~' vacation for two gift certificates
t9·. C(!l'ltra] Florida, Miami Beach or Las
~as if I send my check or money
~ for $15. l have 10 tfays to reply
ta\ ihe Jetter and Vt'OUld like to take
.. antage·of it, if it's legitimate. There's
•~'1110rleY back guarantee.
v.w., Costa l\olesa
'bon•t bOtber with it. 'lbe company
·tffertng this "deal" Is . ClllTently under
lltvtt'Ugatlea by the CaUfGl'nla Attornty
Geltl'8111 Office. It II m1lawfu1 kt ootUy
a:,peraoa, as a par& of an advertising
program, that he has won a prize -
deli requ'lre him to parcbase any gooda
• services. The U.S. Postal Service
II)'· filtd a civil complaint against the
umpaay alltgl,Dg Jt was "engaged tn
4'fl'D4actlag a ~cbeme Or device of of/.
lalmng property lhl'Ollgb the malll by
ftiaMI di la1te representadoa la vloladon
.. tbe U.S. Code." lnvesdgation: baa
allegedly foaod that many people were ., ........ the ............. , .........
tllli!y load the Treasure Che 1 t
~ and that tltere were DO
~ to win. The •tale lltplrt·
meat; ef O>uamer Affairs notes that
am offer does not include tramportatloa
IDd restrvatioa1 are t ubject t o
'1lvallalillHy."
awn, Be•r-l'ffllats
..... -~ :._u__ --·~ -
tJ>EWl..,-J>AT: I've beard ptlnt)' of
~ alloo! tbil •Wild ""'""" "1~ Glimge Counlji•S • .. ~ etays, &t
l.,lll1d it djfilcult to ~· there were ~ bunts ud I"'' pet buiJ.rnud
-ftll!IU-k tbl•l'llll<lbe •leW!l '· .... 'lot, • ' ,i-o;.,M.l!_~ .. ,:!_ • i ;n,,"J?Tlllt
~~~~the·;:. ":.:':':...the ,Bo.lili ~ea ordeal, evea loll''""~
.... lllria\l<ll· Aa blttorbi -· .. 1 IYJ(ell titu lint dflcrlbes bow
He :Vaqgero woald ride atiead of Ute
ltear, slow ft down and tease It. When
the bear Cbar1e:d forward In anger,
1'e would jamp u lde whlle otber1 lassoed
tbe animal and guided It back to the
paeWO'I ·"ball and bear pit" to await
llgfllt bdd on Sanday. A -, reata
(rawhide .lasso) wu de.I to tbe bur's
Mnd lee ud to the front leg of a
_. ball. Although Ibo ball would
llmge bravely, tbt bear wa1 the maal
-of lhat parlkalar weekend ~pil'tll(' evat.
Dri1'fttg Her Nuts
, DEAR PAT : Each Halloween 1 make
carmel apples wilh spooky faces en
~m for . ~y children. ~ use pecflns
tel. ·form the features .ai:ld just once
Pd like to be able to> Crack Jtie· :tllit
.shells w!thoufbreiking"theipecane insidf:,
I also use petan and w:alnuL-, halves
t6 decorate. ~ of lDYi hom&baked
htliday ~11 and a:acked nuts dri~
me nuts every year. Is there any_ solution
to this1problem?
· . H.G,;-N"'11"<1 Bead!
1 You'll, H . ablf. io sllelf n;uts so they come oirt wbOle If yOa aoat:· ~
O\'etnlgbt ln s~lted water before 'crack·
lg.
'Wliat Triggers Born7
:-nEAR PAT: What kind of a switch
Urns oo lhe fog horn on the Newport
~ - a moisture+sensi~ive device or
somethlngl . T.R., Newport Beach
t•1 simpler. Tbere11 • ttgbt oa tbe
)illy. 11lt jelly Is IJtde,loarlhl of a
mile awef from Harbor Department ""'41<1wten. When lhe Harbor Depart.
iient patrolman C•l\'l H:e the Hgbt, lie kDOWI \111lblllty ls len than a mne,
so be fUcb a 1wltcb that turn1 on a.. fog bo<n.
St•klng a Tree
DEAR PAT : We just planted several J:9unl trees in our yard and my neighbor
'91d me he had lost two evergreens
llO'd planted this spring during the rec.mt
1S8ntana winds, even though he had them
staked. Wt both woold • like to know liOw • young 1... should be staked
aO It can stand up to heavy winds. -. C.E., Da• Point
A. young. aasteady trte lblald be doa-
Lje staked, aDowlal It to mtve -fttt v.lnd Detweta '" 1t•kt• YltbOUt
rabblag •i•te•t them. A number of
rMkrttn may be used 11 lon1 11 the
JHirk 11 pro«cted from damage Wltere de fattener botl1 the tree. TalteU.S
obtdld ht che<:ked r<ptarly to Int,...
tht 11 the trunk IP'OWI lft diameter
&be futelibtg. does not. become , Ugln.
C.rel'ol Jlnlnlag of top broclltt so If
the --... -me· too lltavy
""' bell"·
TIME AND Y;(l\IDALS .HAVE 1'AK'EN THEIR TOLL ON SAN ·JUAN CAPlsTRANO GRAVEYARD
. firtt '-e$1c;tents of MissiOn Community Have Tbeir Flnal RMtlft9.Place Here
County Orders
Nixon-Ho1ne
Tax Appraisal
The Orange County Board o f
Supervisors voted Tuesday to foot t}\e
bill and open county records for anothei:
t~x apprajsal of Presid~t Nixon's 25-
aCre".-seaside estate in San Clemente.
'n}e new review by the California·
Boatd of Equalization Will cost the coon:
ty a maximwn of $4,500 and will include
a thorough check of confidential files
in the offi~e of Orange O>unty Assessor
J~ck Vallerga.
'ftle supervisors agreed to the latest
contract with the state equalizatioo panel
after· being assured· that access to the
files, would not· mean reproduction or
confidential items.
The ·investigation was prompted by
reports that the. Western White House
was greatly underassessed and · that
Prelident N'ixon paid $55,000 Jess in
taxes than he should have, OJrrent
valuatioo of the three-parcel property
stands' al fl.37 million.
Critics of· the 'original appraisal by
county officials, includiilg r S>~V e f jJ.
membets ol the state a~tiit pidel,
claim the value should be set at least
Ntdl\Hoday, Oc:toOtr 24, 197:,, s DAILY PILOT ;I
Terror. Tales
San Juan Ghosts Stand Guard
...
By JOHN VALTERZA
ot .._. o.,lty , .. ti $1.tt
Few outsiders even realize that the
old graveyard exists -choked with
weed s at the end of a tiny lane near
the heart of San Juan Capistrano.
There are oo caretakers; the survivors
must clean the graves themselves,
'nme and vandals have taken their
toll, heaving headstones and toppling
small \\.'ood crosses that mark the final
resting places of San Juan's first
residents.
It is there at La Llorona emerges,
Y.'eeping in anguish.
lier black·shrooded form has been seen
hobbling alongside the gnarled trunks
of trees that creak of themselves In
the wind.
She walks from the deserted cemetery
to Ortega Highway. headed invariably
to a twisted, ancient pepper tree near
the old Mission.
La Llorona seeks the child she bore
in fatal childbirth, some say . . . the
infant she never saw.
Along Los Rios Street -in the oldest
section of Orange County's first set·
tlement -the people still know La
Llorona vuy well.
All agree she seeks her children. but
many insist she is not the most honorable
of specters.
She weeps. they say. as she seeks
tM children murdered by ber own hand.
And when her cries are heard in the
still night of old San Juan, women
insist La Llorona is dolng her penance
for the systematic murder of each of
her children.
In the colony west of the railroad
tracks lime has stood still among tbe
adobes and board·and·bat houses of
humble working people.
When a resident dies there, mortuaries
now do the necessary tasks.
But even in the last generation, the
dead rested for that last night in the
family living room, surrounded by wail·
ing mourners,
On those chilly evenings the men would
warm themselves by the fire and prac·
lice a tradition -the exchange of
abundant tales of headless priests and
spirits of soldiers wandering mission
grounds searching . , . searching.
\Vhile children sat goggle-eyed and
mute, the men wotild talk of Dona
Bernarda the witch, who for· a price
\•lould cure the residents of Los Rios
Street when they ailed .
She would scare the bejeezus out of
the Jdds.
Dona Bernarda died decades ago, but
many insist she still can be seen walking
the banks of the riverbed near Del
Obispo Road ,
Some call her the Phantom of Del
Obispo.
At .the same firesides the men would
also quietly related the appearance
of another mysterious phenomenon near
the old railway station.
It is the vision of a priest strolling
along the roadside reading his Bible.
His head is gone.
It is said he lost it in a strange
accident in the last century during a
-------VISif to the old mission.
DllltJ' PIM SI'" ........
While such tales stirred terror in the
minds of youngsters, other stories told
often at the wakes conjured up evt;ry
youngster's dream -buried treasure.
If Dona Bernarda is not the phantom
of Del Obispo. then it must be the
sweetheart of Juan Flores, the bandit
who met death at the hands or his
captors a hundred years ago,
Flores had a woman. Martina, who
lived in San Juan and once helped him
murder a man.
Martina died at the turn of the century
after years of self-imposed isolation in
her small home.
Some say the phantom along the
riverbed is her aplrit, condemned to w~~ through all eternity as punish--
ment for her ains.
twice that amount. ,
r ti illue ·of ~ to confidential
fecordll JD Vallorp's offke baited an
attempt last llldith . led by Supervisor
Robep. ~ttin"to ,""1 a reappraisal of
! Afl HALLOWEEll APPROAqHES; WILL Tl:IESE GRAVl!STONES SEE GHOSTLY ACTIVITY?
:...., · Dona S.marda, Martina, La LforOnl , the HNdle1S Priest All Reside Here
She guards Juan's buried gold along
the riverbank:, the old men wouJd say.
In the days when the wakes were
commonplace, San Juan W88 a much
different colony.
lhe lilb1!. ·
State offic:;lala ~Ve indicated that the
new apptatsal · should be completed
withiri a few weekS .
New .Swimsuits Created
Their report is expected to be ready
for the~Dec. 3 hearing before the County
Assessment Appeals Board on whether
or not a ne.w a~ssment -and more
taxes -should be' set.
To Cloak the Wobbles
$720,000 Bogus
Money .Seized
CAMPBEU. (UPI) -Secret Service
agents have raided a home here, seizing
$720,000 in counterfeit money and an
engraving and pririting setup.
John Wieht Seekins, 42, was arrested
Tuesday on counterfeiting charges.
Authorities said the raid· followed the
apprehenslon of several suspects in the
San,JMe area and ,SOU.them Califomia,
where bogus money was reported1 y being
.ciri::ulated.
By MAXINE YEE
LOS ANGELES (UPI) -For !he
woman who· wobbles and bulges a little
too much to feel comfortable in a
swimsuit, West Coast designers have
created a new line that controls and
conceals.
The new suits for the "not perfect"
figure were uncovered Tuesday at a
previe\v of 1974 spring and resort
fashions presented by the . California
fashion designers during the 23rd annual
press week .
Many suits, styled to flatter the woman
who has a few bulges and sags, are
U~I Tt1tpM1$
F'arm labor leader Cesar Chavei pi ckets outside the San Diego area
headquarters of Safeway markets. Picketing \Vas In protest over the
arrest of 29 persons al a Delano. Calif., SateWay last weekend. National
picketing has been launched in protest.
•• /'
taking on a new dimension. Control
and concealment are becoming more
prevalent.
Marilyn K. a firm that designs for
the young set as well as for the mature
woman, has created a line of swimsuits
with clip-out bras.
For the figure that doesn't need the
extra support, the stitched-in bra can
be removed. But for those who prefer
a padded suit. Marilyn K ha s them
in a series of oncpiece, two-piece and
tunic suits,
A new suit to the Marilyn K collection
is the bandeau, a one-piece step-in bikini
with spaghetti straps.
;GEM TALK'
TODAY
by
!tel J1. amM JS !.
I ~ I I I
RUSSIA-FIRST IN DIAMONDS?
After World \Var II, the West
stopped shipment of diamonds to
the Soviets, forcing Russia into a
crash search for strategically im-
portant industrial dian1onds.
Russia, \vhose first significant
diamond mines were discovered in
1954, today is second only to South
Africa in diamond production and
may, by no\v, even be first ..
l\1ost of Russia's mines are in
permafrost areas, \Vilh winter tem·
peratur.es always below zero. Con·
ditions are so bad that entire small
towns are covered with one roof to
make living and working just bare-
ly possible.
Clouded with secrecy, production
efficiency is not kno\vn. We do know
that although Russian-cul gem
stones, now marketed a b r o a d
through the De Beers organization,
are fairl y well cut in sma ller sizes,
larger stones are not. It is also cer-
tain {hat over the coming years the
·Russians 1,1,•ill become a signifi cant
•factor in the world diamond 1nar·
lket.
Auction Slated
To Aid County's
Boys Republic
Clothing, jewelry, lamps, Christmas
toys, television sets and radios with
a listed value of more than $1 million
will be auctioned off Thursday in a
bid to raise $10,000 for the new Orange
County hon1e of Boys Republi c.
The 100.000 items to go under the
hammer st arting at 9 a.m. in the
Pasadena Civic Auditorium were donated
over the last six months by SU,Ep<>rters
throughout Southern California, organiz·
ers said,
Backing the drive for a Santa Ana
building that will house 20 boys. from
Orange County homes are Margaret
Grier, the CQunty's chief probation of·
fleer, and the Orange County Juvenile
Justice Commission.
J.C.
Its inhabitants amounted to a few
hundred persons living on isolated
ranches or in the center of town.
But even today, when the night is
cold and dark and silence settles over
the city, one can still walk aJong the
side of Los Rios Street, and with a
little imagination, convince himself that
nothing has really changed.
Dona Bernarda. . .Martina ... La
Llorona ... the beheaded priest.
They might still be there.
Sitter Demands
Impeachment
SOIITH DENNIS, N.J. (UPI) -Glenn
~very, the owner of a health food store
here, swears he's not coming down from
his bell tower until President Nixon
is impeached.
"It was the last straw ," Avery said
Tuesday from his perch, referring to
the dismissal of special prosecutor Arch-
ibald Cox,
0
OMEGA
Today Orrie9a conltrms
tnat tne Elec1rcn c 1vatch is tle r<J lo s:ov. Electronic
Chrcno1n"'l,er 14K gold 10P.
s:aorlc~~ s10c·I baCK wa1er-
rEs1&tt1n\ Ci!Sf Date·tell1ng
calencar 1\1a1cn1ng 14K
go'd bracele1
Omeg:i Elrctronic .•. the
only elec1ro111c wllh a
chroriomele r 1atuig,
1823 NEWPORT BLVD., COSTA MESA
CONV~NIENl TERMS
~7 YEi'.RS IN THE SAME LOCATION
a.ii kAmtdc8rd -""••*•• Cli119t
PHONE J41·l40t ..
·'
-·L._ u .. JLt PILOT Wffbttdly, ~ 24, 1"3
.Just
./~· ~
; ;:{'~~~ wit•
':\;;•·. To• ·1 •. '· '8'Pllille
. ·~,::..., ,
You Can't
Stop Growth
GROWING PAINS DEPT. -DifrlCUlt
as it may be for them, a lot al folks
on the current enYironmental barKtwagon
art finding that you just can't stop
growth by declaring it stopped. That
~ to be the case here m Orange
County, anyway.
Recent reports indicate that Los
Angeles County has pretty much stopped
growing. Hooray, a lot of people will
say. "Should have stopped growing a
'""' lime ago." 'ftlat ls all nice. Similar reporU,
however, Indicate that our regiqn con~
tinues growing. People formerly from
the City or the Angels are still migrating
in our direction.
You cannot, however, blame our
growth entirely on transplanted
Angelenos. There are a11 kinds of theories
about our congestion. One Deep Thinker
ol my acquaintance hel'f: along the
coastline viewed our growth patterm
from a different vista. He suggested:
"WHEN WE ALL moved here to the
c:nast, it was pretty quiet and not so
many cars on the roads. Now everything
is bwnper-to-bumper and we blame It
all oo ~ people moving In.
<;Well, that's all a bunch ot bunk.
I'M \ell you where the crowding comes
front Ifs our kids:. They've all .grown
up. They've traded in their tricycles
for highpcm.-ered sports can. They are
ruling the roads wtth motor cars instead
of the sidewalk!! wflh scooters.
"WHEN YOU START <'O<lll'lainlng
about how ~ new a?TiYals are crowding
everything, jus:t look around and try
to ftnd where your kid Ls. He's out
there on the road, that's where ... "
Well, you haYe to admit il's an in-
teresting theory from this Deep Thinker.
Carry his: thesis one ste9 further, and
yoo can ftgure that those yomgsters
wbo were playing In the backyard wading
pool just a few years back wtll sooo
be starting families of their own and
filling the local maternity wlll'<b.
Fog Night1nare: IO Die!) 42
KEARNY. N.J. 'UPI! -At least
10 ptt90nS wtte killed and 42 or more
injured late Tuesday and early today
ln a series of chain acddl'fl.ts involving
m<re than 12 vehicle. on the New Jeraey
lumpike in a fog repor1td to be "as
thick as a brick wall." I
State troopers lniUally counted 10 dead,
and said 42 Injured persons were taken
to local hospitals. They sa.Jd the fm.a.I
toll could be higher.
(The Associated Press reported that at
least 11 persons were killed.)
U . Thomas Arnold ol the Rutherford
Pol.ice said l'elCUe workers had difficulty
get.Ung to lht accidents beeause of the
number of cars and the deme fog.
AlloCher state policeman Rid H
wa.s "like rumlng lnto a brick wall
without warning."
'Ibe N1tJooal Weather Service saJd
heavy 11J110ke from a dump fire burning
for the last 10 dnyl flYe miJet AWIJ'
in lbe Had:emack Meedowlands com·
blned with the fog to reduce vi.slblllty
to near zero.
The crashes marked the second major
accident in Jess than a week on the
turnpike. Last Friday eight persons were
kiUed and 11 others injured when a
tractor trailer blew a tire, jumped into
the -hbolmd lane and cnsbed Into
•Greyhound but and a ear.
Arnold said, "They can't ret to aome
cl the bod.Jes because they can't get
to that mass of wreckage.
"TREY HAD SO rrmch log Ibey
cauldn't even find ~ acddeol.I. 'Ibey
knew they were out I.here but couldn't
even find them.
"We'rr used to some bad accidents
in the area but all have said they've
never seen anything like It."
A state police spokesman in Newark
said there were thret major accidents
oo the oortbem podlon ol the turnpike
between Neworlc and the Geori'
Washlncton Bridge linking New Jersey
to M.ulllattoo.
"'nle llnt occumd be,.._ Keerny
and Hackemack about 2 1,m.," tnvolvlnl:
about 21 vehicles includlog a bus. 1bt
otbet ... occumd in the Keamy-
Sec:aueus area.
POIJCE IN NEARBY Rolberford said
the first crll3b happened sbonly alter
Ht p.m. Tuesday and the lul at 5
a.m. today. State police said the affected
sectl<m of the toll road were not cl06ed
until 2: 45 a.m. -nearly five hours
alter the Ont aocidoot
A bos driver who bad to take RauU
1 tooth as an alternate route to Uif
turnpike aald It -him aev<n houlf
to drive from Jeney Cly to ~~
N.J., usually a one-ho.Jr trip. •
Truci: driver Edward Gearhart. st
of All<o, Ky .• lllvolved in the crasi
on !lie llCl<tlH>ollnd lane llkl limited
'!fsibllity forced him to stop bio ~ trucli cxmpletely. t
'Jben be aaid be felt "• bq, -bang" of cars b~g the ,..,. Cl
a company car he was hauling ~
his truck. "It seemed like it wert ce
for 5 mUwtes." ...... ~ ......... -~ ............... ._ ..................................................................................... ~
Public Triumphs • Ill End • •
'Fire Storm' of Opinion Cited in Nixon Turnabout
• '
;
~
WASHINGTON (UPI) -The White
Hoose acknowledges that it
miscalculated the reacUon of the people
to President Nixon's weekend actions
in the Watergate case. In the end,
they, not be, prevailed.
The simple will of the public triumpbed
over the White House's oft-stated, often
complex legal arguments that the release
of h1s secret tape recordings would
jeopardize the Cmstitutlon doctrine of
separation of powers and the COO<
fidentlality of the President's affairs.
The White House assumed that when
Nlxon announced Friday night an agree.
ment to submit a summary of the tapes
for Sen. John c. Stennis to "autben~
ticate," the crjSis had been averted.
pie wouJd give a tremendous sigh of
relief at the thought that now we are
going to bear what ls in those tapes
and now we are not going to have
a constitutional crisis."
"Obviously that was a miscalculation,"
he said.
( NEWS ANALYSIS J
Then came Archibald Cox's refusal
to go along, Nixon's firing of Co1:, the
resignations oo principle of the top lwo
men in the Justice Department and
finally, what White House Chief of Staff
Alexander M. Haig ca.Ued the , "fire
storm" of Public opinion. ·
-The House Judiciary Committee bail ' begun an Inquiry into Impeachment Jrt-
ceedings for the first time ln 100 years.~
• •
--Chtel U.S. District Coor! Jll<lge Jolit
J . Sirlca had passed word that ~ hid
studied the procedure for citing die
President for contempt of court, aOO
he bad told the two Watergate graiil
juries to press on with their work. ;
-An NBC Quayle Poll showed thit « percent of the people quest~
faYored impeachment, 48 percent faYOrfl
Nixon's resign.atioo and only an all-tlme
low of 2:2 percent supported its
performance as President. ;
At that poil\t, Nixon called in Wriglt
and told him to irkrm Sirica. J:ae would
comply fully with the U.S. Court d.
AS THE PRESIDENT'S constituUonal BY NOON TUESDAY this ls what Appeals order lo tiim over the ti.pfs
lawyer,-Charles-Alan-W.rigbt..-.told.....it_oN~ix~o~o ~fa~ced~;===-======'-~fo~r:!'inspec~~llon~. ~The~peo~p~le~ha~d~won:;:::;.· _';._-I Tuesday, be thought "The American peo--
U~I T ..... i.
REP. KUYKENDALL IR·TENN.) WARNS AGAINST 'LYNCH MOB'
Impeachment Odds Reporhdly Plunged With Nixon T11>9 Decision
2 Fuel Tanks
May Delay
Skylab Shot
CAPE CANAVERAL (UPI)
•
So maybe we aren't just growing by
tr~lant as a lot of us would like
to think. Orange Counly and the Orange
O>ast may have become self·growing
• by internal population explosion. Egypt Charges Attncks
On Port Said Civilians.
Engineers were trying today to devise
a way to repair two huge fuel tanks
on the Sky!ab 3 Ja\Dlch rocket that
were damagOO Tuesday, raising the
possibility or a delayed blast off for
the last crew to man Americ.a's orbiting
space station.
j
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RIGHT HERE AWNG the coastline,
the government theorists have tried ta
limit growth when we got Prnposltlon
20, the ooastal control bill.
St.op the music, they cried. lt's: time
to slow things down. Well , I think
~itlm 20 has slowed tilings: down
aklng h coastline. And while it's been
dotng that, it has turned our quiet valley
jus:t over the coastal hills into a virtual
boomtown.
TifE DEMANDS FOR housing and
commerce. you see, didn't j\Ut go awa y.
Thwarted at one location, it just moved
over the hill and kept right on going.
Despite best efforts of the tbemists,
It is al90 extremely doubtful that
Proposition 20 is going to have much
o{ an impression on tbe aforementiooed
maternity wards.
Even lhe: Irvine Ranch Jn our region
has: felt the grcrv.1.h pressure. Back in
1969, the ranch put almQSt 50,000 acres:
into agrirultural preserve, Um getting
& tax l:reak by saying it wool.dn' I be
developed. Now Irvine is: asking that
nearly 5,000 ol those aaes be remoYed
from that tax shelter. You suspect. the
ranch people see more growth comm,.
Alas, that's the way it is with growth.
You can't just find a switch somewhere
.ond tum it off.
PORT SAID. Egypt (AP) -JsraeU
planes bombed Port Said, at the oorthem
end of the Suez Canal, for 15 days
and caused hundreds of c I v i 11 a n
casuallh.-s, senior military officials here
daim.
They said the last raid came within
hours of Monday's <."ease-fire order and
caused 47 civilian deaths. Gen. Said
Sabry, commander of the northern sector
along the canal, called il "a mean
and hated aggression against the civilian
population."
Sabcy and the city's governor general.
Gen. Abdel Twab Hodiep, said at least
200 civilians ha\'e been killed and another
500 wounded in Israeli attacks oo a
hospital, a church, the central market
area and other nonmilitary targets.
GEN. JIODIEP said three-fifths ol the
city's 25,000 people were evacuated when
the war began Oct. 6. He said about
10,000 civilians remained, but newsmen
touring portion s of the city by bus
Tuesday saw mostly soldiers.
Sabry told the Western newsmen, the
first allowed to visit Port Said since
the war began, that 140 Israeli planes
p.1rticipated in the raid Monday and
two of them were shot down. He said
the bombs were widely scattered because
the Israelis: dropped them from high
altitudes instead of dive bombing.
A coos:iderable amount of damage to
buildings was eYident , includlng in the
downtown commercial district and to
some apartment buildings. Military
escorts identified one of the structures
hit by a bomb as a gO\'emment b>spital.
HODIEP WAS ASKED about Port
Sa.id 's military Yalue since the Suez
Canal has been closed since 1967. "I
don 't know why they bombed it," he
replied. '
There have been reports the area
was off limits: to visit.ors because it
was a receiving point for Soviet military
equipment.
Mountains Gird for Snow
Large A1nounts Expected in Wyoming, Colorado
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Experls from the Marshall Space
Flight Center in Huntsville, Ala, \\'flere
the damaged first stage of the 224"foot
tall Saturn IB rocket was made, were
( ___ IN_S_H_OR_T._ •• _. _)
meeting at the spaceport with launch
officials to work on the problem.
e Legiolalor Indicted
NEW YORK (UPI) -Rep. Frank
Brasco (0.N.Y.), and his uncle, Joseph
Brasoo, were indicted Tuesday on
charges of conspiring to help a truck
lea.sing flnn get post office contracta
in exchange for cash.
'I'he one-count Indictment by a fed eral
grand jury in Manhattan said the two
plotted to rece ive $27 ,500 in cash from
John A. Masiello of Yonken, N.Y., owner
of the firm.
The indictment alleged that Masiello
actually delivered $10,000 to the Bra.scos,
but it did not say whether the balance,
$17 ,500, was paid.
e Klan Leader G11llt11
DETROIT (UPI ) -The former chief
of Michigan's Ku Kl111 Klan was con-
victed Tuesday In the tarring and
feathering of a high school principal
because of his racial poUcies.
An all-white U.S. District Court jury
in Detroit deliberated 21h: days before
returning the guilty verdict on counts:
of conspiracy and aiding and abetting
in the tarring and feathering of Willow
Run princlpal R. Wiley Brownlee.
• NolJC!I Vnlt Anltlnq .
OSLO (UPI) -'The Nobel Peace Prize
Committee waited today for official word
from Hanoi before deciding what to
do about North Vietnamese peace
negotiator Le Due 1bo's refusal to accept
this year's award. .
Haool'1 Vietnam News Ageocy (VNA),
In a broadcast morUtored in Hana Kong,
said 1bo -who shared the 1973 Nobel
Peace prize with Secretary of State
Henry Kissing.,--rejected the award
Monday In a message to Nobtl com-
mittee chalnnan Mn. A.8" Uonaes.
e S11r.,h>0r l'anuhes
RIO DE JANEffiO (UPI)
Authorities today sought a member of
lndiana's: trad~ delegation who dtsa~
peared following ho!lpltal treatment for
injuries suffered in the era.sh of a
Braz.llian Airliner that killed five other
persons.
The seven members of the Indiana
Trade Mission, led by U . Gov. Robert
11. Orr, were among the 55 passengers
who survivM. The twin-engine VA.SP
jetliner, carrying 60 p.1.Mengers, veered
off the end of the Santos Dumonl Airport
runway Tuesday and sank In. the warm
walcrs of Guanabara Bay.
\ . '
Indian Mourning
American Indian Movement leader Dennis Banks kneels over slain
AIM leader Pedro Bissonette outside reservation at Pine Ridge, S.O.
Bissonette was shot by Bureau of Indian Affairs police Oct. 17.
Y~all Co111e Now
Town iii Texas Welcomes UFOs
PALACIOS, Tex. (UPI) -Mayor Bill
Jackson says·he realizes President Nixon
Is: busy, but when things cairn down
he'd like the dtief executive to proclaim
this Gulf Coast town a mecca for visitors
from outer space.
"It is my belie! that every traveler
needs: a home away from home."
Jackson said Tuesday. "And It ls my
intention to go one step further to
reassure any lonely space traYeler is
always welcome at our airport."
A "BIG RED BLOtl" Oew over the
Pa1acios Football Stadium during a high
achoo! game last week, disrupting the
planned halftime actlvitle1.
Another unidentified Olckering red ob-
ject was seen over San Antonio and
two oommerclal airline pilots preparing
to land at San Antonio lnternatlonal
Airport. chased the thing for a few
minutes.
"UFOmanla" abo hit the Teus com-
munities of Fort Worth. Brownwood and
Mesquite tbts week.
JACKSON WOULD LIKE to tell any
visitors: from outer space that they are
more than welcome ln Palacios and
to prove it he hopes Nii:on will declare
'C had' Mitchell
Held -Pot Count
SAN ANTONIO, Tex. (AP) -Actor·
singer William ''Clad" MUcbeU was held
in lieu ol $25,000 bond today on a charge
of possessing marijuana with lnt<nt to
d!strlbute.
Officers s:aid they Sfllzed 400 pounds
of marijuana Sunday Nght when ther.
arrested him outside a San Antonio hote .
The head of the Drug Enlor~ment
Agency, William Kline, said AfJtchell ,
36, was taken Into custody as he started
to enter a pickup truck with a camper
loaded with the marijuana.
• '
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W.. fishing and !arming commlllllty . of
4,000 penons located between Houston
and Corpw! Christi the "Interplanetary
capital of the lmiverse."
"As soon as: he (Nixon) gets his heed
above the water up there in Washington,
\ve'll contact him for official aancUon "
Jackson said . "He aeems to be pretiy
well oceupled at the moment."
Jack.son said the UFO at the footbo.ll
game appeared in the second quarter.
"They ftnis:hed out the quarter, but I'm
afraid the thing detracted from some
of the halftime acUvity," the m1J0r
said. "It was: a big red blob. It wu<ild
travel for a few seconds, stop dead
still for 15 to 20 seconds, then moYe on."
Another "nickering, moving red I~."
wa.s spotted by FAA controllers at the
San Antonio AJrport tower and two pilot.I
said It moved away from them very
quickly when they approached.
Capsule 'Safe '
For 3 Years
BR!Gln'ON, England (AP) -
By 1171 women oould be try1nc
out a revolutionary contraeeptive
capsule which would last for more
than llv'et years. and men could
be prootlcing birth c0ntrol lhroogb·
an injection administered every
ltv'ee to sli: mOnlM, an expert
predicted today.
Prof. Rodnc!y Sheerman of tho
department of obltetrlcs a n d
tynecotogy ol Sydney Unlvonlty,
Australia, said the Clpsult for
women could be implanted in the
arm or the buttock. It would
gradually dls.tolve and would not
llave to be removed, he told the
11.!t llllHlA] conference ol the
International Planned Parenthood
Fcdttatloo.
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Here Are Seven Places to Look for
'Sunday's Best' in the DAILY PILOT
• ,. ,, f
(:: 'l. • •
I' ir-Ov Ii
1. MAIN NEWS
The page-topping Sunday Special each week leads a parade of articles of special interest to Orange Coast area readers end told as only DAILY PILOT
staffers can tell them. Main News is loaded with unforgettable photo features by staff cameramen, too, and for a variety of commentary in columns and
cartoons, check the editorial page and the page facing it. ·
2. YOU
The focus is on "you" and neighbors like you and just about any-
thing you're interested in. Check this section every Sunday for
At Your Service, the column that does things for people; Travel,
the pages that can take you anywhere in the world; Entertainment,
features, photos and facts about famous folks; and, of course, the
lead article which nearly always hes to do with the hottest topic
of the 1970s, consumerism.
3. SPORTS
Literally the "latest news" in Southern California on sports events.
The DAILY PILOT has the latest deadline in the area for Sunday
morning publication. What this means to readers is: c om p I et e
sco .. s on Saturday night sports events, a day-ahead jump on league
standings end others statistics, first look ot the "morning line"
when a major sports news story is about to break. All this and top
coverage of local sports, too.
4. CLASSIFIED SECTION ...
Sun~ay is the day to buy e house ..• a car ••. a boat ..• or?
. •• You'll find page after page of helpful ads in the big classified
advertising section of the Sunday paper, especially if you're look-
ing for a house or car. The section often follows (or includes)
Sunday's special Real Estate pages too -columns, photos,
stories about new homes and new development. Of course, Sun-
day classifieds have everything else from A to Z, too, literally.
5. COLOR COMICS
All your favorite characters from the DAILY PILOT's daily comic
page appear in full color on Sundays, along with some special
material that you'll find only in the Sunday Comics section. If
your kids haven't discovered the fun world of Junior Whirl, help
them find it next Sunday. And if you think Family Circus is some-
thing in a single panel cartoon, check it as a big, one-third page
color feature in Sunday's "funny papen."
6. FAMILY WEEKLY
You're in good company when you join the families of the esti-
moted 20 million adults who read Family Weekly every weekend
in the nearly 300 newspapers now distributing America's "fastest
growing weekly magazine." Celebrities, travel, food and fashions
are some of the subjects covered every week. Then there as spec-
ial stories on medicine, science, sports, home improvement -just
about everything any Americ.an fom ily is interested in. Yours too.
7. TV WEEK •
Full color cover pictures of your favorite television performers,
inside stories on upcoming specials and stars of the regular shows.
These are only samples of the "news" diet you get in TV WEEK,
along with one of the most complete and accurate, up. to • date
weekly schedules published in Southern California. TV WEEK even
lists shows for Orange County's new Channel 50, other major UHF
stations and San Diego and Santa Barbara channels each week.
•
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Sun.days are special
for readers of the
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DAILY PILOT EDITORIAL PAGE
Saddlehack Report
Saddleback Community College apparently is well
equipped to provide the average student with a sound,
basic education, according to a recently released acc redi·
talion report by a nine-member evaluation . team front
th e \Vestern Association of Schools and Colleges.
The report finds strength in a good general and
transfer education, but says the college is deficient In
community services. In recruitment of and servite to
"dlsadvnntaged" students, in creation of Innovative cur·
riculum or an atmosphere that would allow its develop·
ment.
The accreditation report is in the main favorable.
IL states that the lllission \1iejo college has made head·
way "A'ilh adding students to the curriculum committee.
evening programs. modern equip ment. a well·admin·
istered budget. good use of "exceptional quality" temp-
ary fa ci lities and the beginnings of a vocational educa·
lion program.
Significantly, the report notes the five-year·old
college was "born in a period or considerable can1pus
unrest" and its adn1inistration initiated strict controls
and restrictive policies. which today, it suggests. the col·
lege would be better off without. The administrators and
trustees, complimented in the report for their dedication,
should pay heed to its recommendations.
·Lesson Learned
The Laguna Beach City Council seems to have been
learning a bit about absorbing thought of the citizenry
before momentous steps are taken which would likely
rile folks up -a rough lesson taught by the great park·
ing meter revolt .
Newest controversial proposal is a change in fiew·
age service billing, and the cou ncil is eager to get public
opinion. Under consideration is a change in philosophy
to shift sewage charges to tho5e who generate the most
sewage1 hence produce the greatest load on the treat·
nlent plant. The concept seems fair. But It will place a crushing
burden on so1ne business such as laundromats, restau·
rants and other heavy sewage producers. (Example:
yearly fees charged I.he city's only car wash would go
rroni $42 to $2,162.)
A good solution would be a method of tyinf a fee
ceiling to a forn1ula which would encourage e ficient
water use and lower sewage generation.
?tleanwhile. written opinion has been requested .
Letters may be sent to the city council at 505 Forest
J\ve., Laguna Beach.
Beating the Oock
A move by the Laguna Beach City Council to ad·
vance its regular meeting time to 4:30 p.m. on first and
third Wednesdays is well worth trying. ,
The council's former meeting time had been 7:30
p.m. and it frequently ran well past 1 a.m. the next day.
Tbe earlier meeting-with a ball-hour out for din·
ner -recognizes two basic human qualities found in
council members: a need to talk and a need to sleep.
The two obviously are in conflicl and with six-hour ses·
sions the general rule, sleep was sometimes togging
council decisions.
Six-hour sessions ending at 11 p.m . -tiring as they
may be -are definitely better than those ending at
1:30 a.m.
One thing does need watching. The earlier hour
may bar some people who can't leave work early.
The new start.in~ time requires consideration be giv·
en to scheduling of items of special public interest at a
time convenient and accessible to all.
'
'Leftovers? What leftovers?' s
Don 't B e
Misled By
Manners
Butnane Societies' Thatikless, Heartbreakitig Job
Dear
Gloo111y
Gus
Owners to Blame for Animal Woes
~YD NEY J. HARRI~
I met a distinguished literary figure
many years ago, and \\'SS so awed
and impressed by him that 1 babbled
like a schoolboy and fell sure he never
"'anted to meet me again .
'-1aybe the answer to thost long
city meetings would be the muz-
zles they put on donkeys to keep
!hem from opening their mouths
\vide enough to bray at dawn •. ,
J. K.
Gl-Y Oltt <ll'lllllM'lh tr. WllMltf.<I '' rt .. tfJ .-• ...t -•H.•rilr l"tflttl lflt
•i"t M ~ •--· ,.... '1'911r "' -· 19 OlfMlr On. O.Ur Plltf,
looking for snubs. expecting to ~ di~ But later . .,..·hen my first book came liked. And this defensive attitude brings
out. I received a delightfully wann letter lh t' It · t 'kin tor from him, teUlng me how much he Ofl e very reac \On is oo I ·
admired my work aod ho\v riiuch he ..,. Strangers too often ire.at us the ,,·ay
had enjoyed our brief meeting ')'ears "'e expecl 1,bem to.
'People.who think they have ''enemies." a~o.,vas thunde rstruck, and immensely for instance, are usually suffering from
pleased. And hJs letter set me 10 \Vod· !his sort of delusion. They imaglllc that
dering how .many of us . go through these "enemies" are deeply involved in plotting against them, or in life thinking that certain people dislike humHialing them, or talking against us. when, in ' fact, t~y do not dislike us at all. them -'v~n, in truth. the ••enemies"
are not even al''are or the existence
of the feud. SO~IE PEOPLE arc shy with nelv
acquaintances. and thus they set>m to
be frigid and disapproving. Others simply
have a naturally gruff manner. which
"·c mistakenly take to mean impatience
"'ith us. And sti ll others are just vagU<'
about people. and "'hat ,,.e think is
a snub is merely ab.$ent-mindedness.
I have had lhe experieoce of people
telling me , after \\'e had got to know
each other better. that they \\'ere con-
\•lnced I loathed them upon the first
meeting -v•hich "'as not at all the. case.
If a man is reserved, it does ,not mean
he is passing adverse judgment upon
you; just as often it means he is afraid
or your judgment of him.
nlERE ARE some people, un-
fortunately. "'ho arc mildly paranoid
in this respect. They \1ralk through life
THE ONLY sensibl e approa<"h is to ns·
sume that most people "'ill like you. un·
Jess you give them cause not to : and 10
ac~pt the fact that some people would
not like you no matter \.\'hat you "'ere
or did. Trying to make everybody like
you is exhausting, and impossible of
achievement. ~lost of our trouble is
our egocentricity, which takes for
granted that people are lhinki.ng about
us much more than they really are.
In most case.!, they are th.inking about
themselves. just as we are. None of
us is as important to others as \\'e
think \\'e are, and "·hat \\'e Construe
as dislike is-most often indifference.
or fear. or self-absorption. But it is
hard to realize this \\'hen "'e come
fa ce to face.
To the Editor:
At least once a \\'etk, so.meone (who
is either thoroughly ignorant of tbe farts
of the surplus 3nim'al problem or refuses
to accept the facts due to concern for
only their one animaj) calls, <>r comes
in, calling our employea "murderers."
THERE HAVE been many television
shows, much nev."Spaper publicity about
the lack of homes for the animal popula·
lion. The Orange Cou.nty·Animal Shelter,
and every other pound and humane
society, tries to inform tbe general public
of the number of animals having to
be killed daily, yet ·there are those
who a>me in and become enraged
because we cannot keep and guarantee
their one animal a home.
We have even had people who threalen-
ed to sue us because their animal was put
to sleep -yet that same person would
not even pay the cost of a newspaper
ad or take the time to try to place
it in a good home. The animal v .. as
their responsibility but they chose not
to be responsible and when our efforts
failed at placing it \\'e were called
the "killer". We spend around a hundred
dollars a mon\h in advertising. A cost
we really cannot afford. We have
volunteers who allow their private
numbers to be used, because our Animal
Care Center telephones are busy con-
sti ntly with cruelly complaints and
requests for help for low<0st spaying
and neutering and ill or injured animals
belonging to those "'ho cannot afford
the services ol a private veterinarian.
EVERYONE at the Animal Care Center
grieves over the terrible wasle and suf-
fering of animals born only to die und er
the wheels of a car. mistreated and
chained for life. or dumped and grieving
at an y of the many pounds. For every
animal "''c personally place, an average
of 25 comes in ; there is simply no
Who Was Arc_hihald Cox?
The fol/01vi11g cQh1mn enlitlec1 ·'Re·
111e111ber Arr.l1il>o/d Cox?" k.'OS wri11c11
by Charles ~fcCobe lasl u1eel.·. shntrly
hefnri> Prcsi<lc11t Nlxoi~·s.surprise dis.
i11isso/ o( tlie \Vatergole prosecvivr.
/11 tire fight oj rectut tVt•llS, ~frCobe's
c:vn1n1cnls lake on a 11cu1 nucrsf.
H you are .... ·ondcring if the \\'1ucrg;'l!e
~<tndal may have become a dead letter,
torgct it. Forget it good
··The serpent that will gn:nv out hi~
\ itctls." is the w;1\'
ooe eloquent lal''}'tr
friend or mine rlcs-
cribes rhc m1nr-
bureaucracy spcciol
prosecutor Archibald
Cox ha ~ built un
1,·1thin 1he Justice
Department to loves·
ligate cha rges of
rom.rplim in Ill<'
Nixon Adminislratloo and turn over ihc
findings lo a se.ries of grJnd juries.
As or las1 count Mr. Cox . who was
John F'. Kcnntdy's solici tor-general
from 1960 to 1960, had a sia rf of nea rly
a hundr ed and 1; propo5ed budget ot
12.3 mlll1on for hi.! firSt year of opera-
tion. lie no"' has five lask force~ looking
in10: The Watergate bre11k-in ant.I C'O\'t:r·
up. 1he actJvitles of lhe \Vhilt Hoou:
plurnbc rs, camp3iflll financin~. poll1ical
espionage and the infamow ITT case.
~IR. COX'S guldellnes oons1itute nn
extraordinary ma ndate . ju,.t abou l un·
precedented In Wahsington polllcial
hlslory. He h11s made II clea r that
"the 1pceial proserulor v. 111 determine
v.·heth(r and 10 v.·h11t tX'lenl he wlll
lnfonn or comull lhc Attorne)' General
(cHARLES McCAB~
:ibout the conduct of his duties and
responsibilities." This mean s ~Ir. Cox
really has the free hand that special
prosecutors are always assured they
have : bu t in fact never quite achieve.
l\IORE Jr.IPORTANT to remember is
lhat ~Ir. Cox is a Democrat. and a
damned partisan Olli! at tha t, ffis staff
conlains only a handful of Republican!>.
T\velve key members have had con·
nections "'ilh lhe Ken nedy• in 1hc pa.st .
\\!hilc il .,..·ould not be good taste to
!iay that lho prosecutor and bis staff
are out to gel i\I,. Nixon, it is hard
fo see how the truth could be olhcrwi!Se.
Mr. NiXon himself appe:i rs to think so.
As someone has observed in the context,
even p:i ranQLds have enemies.
It is good to remember lhe clim:ite
"·hen r.tr. Co:t \¥3S named to hi!i job.
Tbe Ni1:on Oouse al cards was 111mbllng
dtwn. It got so Nd that polltlcal
stra1egy, afte r !he t'slirnon y or John
Dean, d1cta1ed th:it evrrybody should
get 1he shiv except the Pope.
Air. Elliot Richardson, "·ho has an
honest name, and an honest fece.
and is a Bo!;ton brahmin and IM:rcfore
in theory automatir;illy above the sort
or trickery prac!lced by the Snnla
Barbara·Pas:tdena malioeo "'as called
in . lo lend an odor or s11nctlty to the
\\1hite House Ct'lrf)!e. Richardson 'P'
parently chose Cox on the theory that
If Co" couJd exculpate ~tr. Nixon, lhe
President had to be clean as boiled
rice and much nicer to look at.
TllA T LOGIC may be just too good
to be lrue. Up to now, flfr. Cox ha.s
been about as visible as a beaver. and
about as occupied. \\1hen those grand
juries start to send up their indictments,
there \rill be proe_er hell to pay, no
matter what the courts decide about
l\lr. Nixon's famou s tapes.
The scum that surf3ced w i t h
\\'atergate will continu.e to pollute the
public gaze for months and even years
to · come. ~tr. Cox has made it clear
he docs oot share Mr. Nixon's "holy
\'lew of himself -that his slns are
not those of other men, that the
Consltltu!lon y,·ns !ipecially drafted to
keep him out of jail if he should do
i::omething that "'Ould put other men
behind Mr s.
If '-1r. Nixon has been obstrucling
justice. and that is the large unwritten
rhnrge before !he American people. the
former Harvard Law prof u.'Ollld seem
uniquely the man to nail him to the
mast.
THE 01\1.V THING !hat can slop
~tr. Cox v.·ouJd be pr,ssure from ~fr.
Nixon to have ~1r. Richard son sack
him . Th is ls just about the one thing
that ~fr. Nixon docsn·t have the political
chutzµJ h to attempt . Such a mo\'e \\·ould
mean lhe CCl\'Cr·UP of_ the cover·up , Thill
\\OUld be Just too much. It might end
up with the President bein1 hnnied
by his own ti ghtrope.
\\'hen '-Ir. Cox took O\'tr as special
prosecutor he said, "I hOld Lhe whip
hand," I'd say so. and •-ould add that
Watergate may sink l\lr. Nixon yet.
)
( MAILBOX J
LetterJ from rtaders are welcome.
Normally, writers 'sliould convey their
11tessages in 300 worciJ or less. The
rigl1t to conde111e letters to fit space
or elimtnate libtl i& reserved. All let-
ters n1ust include signature and mail-
ing address but t101nes may be Willi.-
held on request if $U/ficient rtllfcm
i1 apparent. Poetry will 11ot be pti~
lialied.
guarantee for any animal turned in
regardless or breed or pedigree. Our
only guarantee is a humane death by
injection, Ir no hOme is available.
1 KNOW this letter will not touch
those who selfish.ly consider only their
one animal but perhaps it wilt help
others lo Wlderstand the God-awful jQb
we, or any other humane society, has
to do. I should include the public pounds
too be<:ause they are only there because
or lrreSJX>nsible animal owners.
Our v.'Ork is difficult, heart-breaking.
Every year humane societies lose trot,
dedicated hwnanilarians because or lhc
almost endle.ss grief associated with UUs
"·ork, a·dded to their abuse by a segment
of the general public. In the long run,
only the animals suffer due to this
lo.ss. •
t<.1ost sincerely,
JEAN BAUSCH,
Executive Director
Animal C.Sre and Humane
Education Center
Tower Fan
To the Editor:
To all of you wonderful concerned
people who wanted to save our vintage
lifeguard tower and who gave your SUP'
port -thank you!
The city council r e s p on d e d af·
lirmatively to our wishes and cur
landmark, shall remain on the Alain
Beach.
NIC BILLY
T ax Re form
To the Editor:
No doubt everyone agrees there is
a n«d for tax reform. But, is Prop.
I the answer:
I. Do we want taxing pcv.·er shifted
from our Senators and Assemblymen
to the Governor?
i. Wiii Prop. 1 really reduce your
taxes ·or will the deficit ht made up
by an increase in local taxes?
3. \Viii the average citizen benefit
from the passage or Prop. I?
Because of the complexity of Prop.
1. a meeting discussing the opposition
will be. sponsored by the American
Association of University \Vo men ,
League of \Vomen Voters and the Council
of PTA 's will be held at the San
Quotes
\\1• Pudlns.kJ, Commissioner. C8lif.
lllghway Patrol on trend toward drunk
driving trials -"lrulstence upon a trial,
in contra.!JI to the common proctdurt of
accepting a plea of gullty to a lesser
charge. Is a progressive and vital step
hccause it recognizes the lmpor1ance of
firm. consistent adjudication ."'
Tobcylynn Birth -Santa Cruz. on
nted. of help far suicide-prone -.. The
only \\'BY thst any of us can have the guts
to stand up and march through Ufe Is by
knowing that we have tha support and
love of tl:loM around us.''
• I
Clemente High School in the Little
Theater on \Vedneaday, Oct. 24, at 7:30
p.m. The public is encouraged to attend.
MARILYN O'BltlEN
President, AAUW San Clementc-
Caplstrano Bay Branch
lJN Flag
To the Editor :
Re: 'Ibe United Nations flags being
di!ptayed in City Council Chambers.
IF THE CITY. Councils insist on
displaying the UN flag in their city
halls, are they aware that lhe UN
Charter is the .supreme law of tbe land
(Art. 6 Sec. 2 of the U.S. Cons1itution).
and it bas been upheld by the Supreme
Court that all treatiei supersede UlC
Constitution?
Wouldn't it lhen follow that the llN
flag, representing a One \Vorld Organ-
ization, be displayed In a position above
the national flag, as the national flag
is now displayed above the state flag?
WOULD IT then also follow.that coun-
cil meetings "'Ould be opened with a
salute to the One World nag. leading
eventually to a more appropriate and
relevant intemational anthe~?
ROSE CORRIGAN
Gun Protee!tlon
To the Editor:
The newspaper carried these stories
oo Monday. Oct. 15 -"Two young n1en.
critically wounded in an exchange of
gunfire; sixteen--year-Old arrested in con-
nection with shooting; bodies of three
shooting victims \verc found ; a group
of boys "·ere questioned by police in
shooting spree: Rialto v.·oman paralyzed
and reported in critical conditi<>n; man
killed in market ; bus driver \\"ounded
\\'hile driving" -an appalling number
of incidents for one day's reporting!
I Aft.1 DEEPLY dlstN!ssed over the
innumerable amount of citizens who
do pcssess guns as I'm sure many
other people are. Its th e afe-old question
of who lobbies the longes and hardest,
but WHEN ARE gun controls going
to pass the Legislature?
'nlere arc far too many gang wars
that have resulted in the shootl'ng of
irmocent victims (some of them
children ); there are too many deranged
souls looking for "kick" with a. pistol
or shotgun ; there are too many upset
lovers and husbands (wives too) who
take .re.vengc with a gun.
I HAVE heard the · saying, "I need
a gun for protectlop. '' To the contrary,
·we {'Ced prottctJOn ·1,.lnst guns -their
u les and usage. \Ve must, as lndi~nt
citi1.Cns, da something to prevent this
r:ipldly Increasing, senseless killing.
Our Legislature may Utke action if we
protest loudly enough. . '.
NANCY PENNEY
Tl11111ks T l1ursto11
Dear Sir;
'T1le Laguna Beach'school board 's nc-
qulescenee In the changes no\v under
way at Thurston ~hoof was a bitter
disappointmtt'lt. The new $ystem ha~
a foundall<Jn-wte.k schedule that 11 fixed
for the quarter. For each child, all
l\londays are the same, Tuesday.! dil·
ferent from Alonday1 but all the umc,
and ID on. Children will no longer make
dtllly decisions about I.he slructure or
1helr achoo\ day. The system 11 deJiljned
to run smoothly and lo make It eas\tr
to monitor elm allcndance. 1 feel that
the!IC reatures are being bought at an
e:(otbltant price.
BEING ABLE to decide. for example,
w·hlch offering of .o. must subject to
take, or what tlecilve to attend, or
when to have. lunch. and learning to
master the complexities of oonOicllng
demands on their time "'ere very im-
portant to my children. and I think
the experience helped them to gruw.
I always thought that this ·was what
Thurston v.·as about. flfr. Lloyd now
tells us that student choice \\'SS really
accidental. th a t the ne'v schedule
is no major change. He d o c s
acknowledge, bov.·ever. that there is a
philosophical change in the new ~s
on control of the physical location of
the child throughout the day. "The com-
Rl\llity,"-he says, ""ill no longer allow
the staff to cooceatrate on performance
rather than attendance. To ~ who
felt that the corg,munity 1avc the staff
m it was a vote of confidence Wt
spring1 th.is may come as a surprise.
'Ille ·tragedy of the matter is apparent
in that, before expressing the deckllnc
opinioo (alongside Unke and Gillette),
Dr. Browne reported an outsider's recent
praise of the responsibility that Lagun1
Beach High School students displayed
in an in terdistrict educational program
and said he felt that Thurston training
in decision-making was probably the
reason for it. It may take lime for
it to become clear what v.•e've lost.
I WOULD UXE to think that the
C'hange is not irreversible. While we
wait for the promised evaluation in
January, I want tc express my thanka
to Thurston teachers for all they've
gone through in the process of giving
my children the chance to make aome
choices at school and my deep regret
that this opportunity can no longer be
offered.
BARBARA MET7.GER
Birch Credit
To the Editor :
Your editorial-obituary on the demise
of the John Birch Society could, and
in my opinion ctrtainly should haVfl
included some complimenta r y
,;tatements because thal Society has
si;rely not been all bad.
YOU SPEAK o! the prolonged period
of byslerla maintained by JBS.
You call attention to some clforll
11nd beliefs on the part of JBS that
many people lbought ridiculous.
BUT YOU FAIL to give the JBS
credit for having alerted more U.S.
citizens to the objrctlvcs and dangera
or communism than any other or1.Uza-
1ion,
Tbese objectives snd dangers aU\l Cl·
1st.. But who do v.-e have naw to te:U
us so?
' \
DON HUDDLESTON
DAILY PILOT
Robtrt N. \Vtt!d, PubU.lltr
Thoma.t Keevil, Edllor
8Grbar~ Kreibich.
Editorial Page Editor
~ edltortal ,~ or 1ht D11.Uy
Pilot ·leeks 10 lnlonn ud l!tlmula.te
rf'ldets . by prescotirc m thJ. pqe
d!ver.t!•'commentary 'on topics ot in-
tettst by s)'ndlc.fed "°h1mnJ.1t1 and
rartoonlats. by provktlns a lon.im fof
re1dn•' vift• and b)' ~1nr tt111
ncwtp1.pcr'1 opinions and ldl-u on
cu~nl topb.. 'The «lilotial opinion& of tht 0.1\)i Piiot appear only tn lhe
editorial COiumn al the 1l'lp o( ht
pqe. Opl.nionl e.'<PftU'd by ~ COi·
umnim and rartoonlst1 and )titter
\\Tlttt"S &rt their own and noendon: ..
n'll'nt or ·their V)(r.I. .. by the o.iq
Piiot lhould be irdtrnd.
Wednesday, October 24, 1973
' .
• •
'
I
I
l
I
' ' I .
18 Hikers
Rescued
In Sierra
~E(UPl)
Si1teen. hlA ICboo1 1tudt.nts
and their · two lnatrtlctors
. believed · 1li;.t · tn , a • 6ltrra
i w,..,;. .~ during • mi.in. 1 taineer\na: . e1pedltjon . have
been found Jn good C<l!\dlll<>n ~ eicept for "oold feet:''·
' Alplne •COonty Sperl II' s
1 deputio,!.'l•ld the JJOUP froql_
Woodside High School In d\e'
San Mateo County community
of Portola Ve11ey, WIS found
.
'Violiztwns' Charges Fly
In Tax Initiative Battle·
By ne Assodlled Pru•
FOB! ol Gov. Ronald
Reagan's tax llmltatkJn plan wer:e accused ol violating
.lt4te ·election law1 by
tteagan's camp a 1 g n com-
mllltt.
'Ibe c.til!ornians ro.r Lower
Taxes Ccftnmlttee allo accused
Secretary of Stille Edmund
-G. Brown.Jr. Tue:tdity of "en·
.. -~. the tle<tlonl cOIJes on
"' a ~ck and choose hlsll" by
oot ix-outing olleced viol•·
Uonl by foes of the tnUiatlve.
Mike Deaver, ea m·p a I g n
fleer, "is a partisan in this
campaign, not an electlom or·
fl eer. He want.s PTOJ>. 1 .to
faH and be ta not enforcing
the codes on thole orgaclsa-
tions and individuals who are
campaigning against it.
day after board chairman
Pete Sch&barum was named
chairman oJ. a committee of
county and city officials In
favor or the Ragan tax plan.
EARLIER , the Los· Angeles
City Council endorsed the
measure and the 'League of
California Cities and the Coun-
ty Supervisors Association ol
CaUfomla opposed II.
Actbr James~~ w~o ' ·c ___ B ... ,RI __ E_F_s __ ~J ~~~t~tl~.;r .
manager cX committee in
favor of Prop. l, said the
IN ADDmON 'to the League
of Women Voters, Deaver said
Assembly Speaker Bob Moret -
ti, the Assembly Office of
Research, the A s s e m b I y
Democratic Caucus. t h e
CalifDmia state E m p I o y e s
Association a n d California
Teachers Association should
League ol WQmen' Voters and (
other opponents of the in· J
111.uv• raned to ·m .. 1 • Sept. pn·OP. I
Speaklng on the Los Angeles
City Co u n c 11 endonemeot,
Moretti hinted that some kind
ol political dea l had been
made. But he refused to
answer repeated requests at a
pl3in further.
"I'm going to be interested
in watching what the political
futures are of a couple of
members of that council,"
said Moretti, who is Den»
craUc lesder ol tile A3sembly
_ was sideswi~ a
car, filed eu1t 'l'u _ y
Tuesday after the snow storm for $20 million in dam· r ed the ·•ges. Stacy, 36, starred ore party to spend in the -TV series "Lan-·
l\fonday night in a cabin. cet.'!
Deputies said the etudentJ,: --~,------
2'T deadline for filing reports .I~ •
ol campaign contrlbut1Qns and "---------' spending.
Deavfr said Brown, woo is
the state's chief elecUon of·
all be required to report and chief spokesman against
money spent to defeat Prop. the Reagan tax plan.
I.
In a quick reply, hQwever, Bl!f MORE'JTI refused to which Included girls and boys
ranging in age from 15-18,
and ~ Willi Jolmoon
and··Jotm Keaton were in good
conditlOn. . •
Mass Murder Trial Brown told Deaver in a letter say which councilmen he was
he was "factually incorrect" referring to, or what else""be
because the Ca I i IO r n i a had in mind. except that
Teachers Association d Id "somebody" might get an ap-
'
DAILY PILOT 7
CHILDRENS SHOES
UNBELIEVABLE. PRICES
SALE SHOES
ON RACKS
BUSTER BROWN • ORTHO'S & OTHERS
DRESS & SCHOOL
Umited Sl1es
Rog. To $18
NOW $1.00 TO $6.00
4 01y10nly
-
. ', . ' .
• Boll11 n'etu""'ll
dlsclose expenditure:i: o I polnlment by Reagan to a
$40.ooo Sept. 26, and the oth" higher post. 30 Fashion Island Newport Beach
groups have not been required Prop. 1 would place in the'1~.,,...,,...,,...,,...,,...,,...,,...,,...,,...,,...,,...,,...,,...,,...,,...,,..,....,,...,,...,,..~.,,..~.,,...,,...,,...,,...,,..~ Of ~Kernper Under Way
LOS ANGELES (APl -'Ille SANTkt RUZ (UPI) -'Ille body ot an American es:-
to file because they have not State Constitution a fonnuJa 1-
Camarillo, was asked by raised or spent mo.re than llmiting the spending by future
Chang if he had a daughter. $1 ,000. governors and legislatures. Challenge tlie News Quiz
... on Saturday's Fa1nily Page
father of a teenage murder ecutive killed during a n
attack by Arab terroristt on victim -his voice cracking
8 Bank of America in Beirut, as he answered prosecutor's
Lebanon, has been nown questims i -~ a lead.off
here for funeral senices. ;'itness ~ testunony begu
· !ofin C. · MilrielJ, 52, was in the trial of 8CCU9ed mew
.tenier lllet ~rtfll'eflflntat!Ye---ln·· ~Edmund E. Kemper
"Yes, I did," he &ru1wered. In another campaign The spending ceilings would
glancing toward the man ac-development Tuesday, the Los be tied to a percentage of
~~ ol killing her. It wa.s Angeles County Board of the personal income o f . Supervisors voted 3-2 .to op-Cali!omlans, and that percen-
the first time be had seen pose the measure on the Nov. tage would be reduced slightly
Kemper. · ··g balt(lt. The vote came a · each·year. All bot '"' ol tile victims,1------------'--'-------'----------------------------
the Middle East for Douglas Ill. , slx Of them hitdiiikers, lffd
'been mutHated. ·in 96me caleS''
the ports of .... body had
been buried. 11) pttered loca·
tlq"'. .'. -..
Aircraft. He had lived ltJ Long Following a brief' opening
Beach with his family from statement which oo.Uined tbe
1970 until his transfel"a rronth
ago to the Middle East.
e League Elects
SAN FRANCISCO (UP[) -
Mayor ijarold M. ·Hayes of
Montclair is the League of
California Citles new presi-
dent.
Also elected Tuesday at the
leeguc's annual conference
were Mayor Lee H. Davies
of Modesto, first vice presi-
dent. and 1.-fayor Pete Wilson
of San Diego, second vice
president.
e liall Forlefted
evidence he will use to show
that 'Kerilper killed and
dismembeied ·eight members
-including his ·mother -
Santa Cruz County DistriCt
Atromey-Peter Olang Tues-
day called· two fathers and
a 'mother of young murder
victims to the stand.
LOUIS LUCllESSA, o f
Modesto, whose d a u g b t e r
Anita, 111, clisappe8red with
Mary Ann Pesce, 111, drew
his bandkercblel and wiped
his e)·es at Qang tried to
establish that the victims were
KEMPER'S DEFENSE •
counsel, Public Defender
James E. Jackson bu oon·
i.nded thst In lhe case or
two of the alleged victims.
there was not enough phys!~
evidence to · Unk the deatM-
to Kemper -though Kemper
led police to.burial sites .. _ .
Jacksoo said that Kemper,
who surrendered to Santa ·
Cruz police from a phone
booth in Q:llarado, was not
arnlgned before he took
police to the sitrs and that
• SAN DIEGO (AP) - A girls of good character and
.ftt,man accused of lrelping not the type to go with a
direct a huge alien smuggling strange man.
·ring didn't !how up at a Luchessa's voice broke as
1 evidence obtained on the tour
shou1d be inadmissible.
Kemper lw pleaded in-
noieent and innocent by reUoii
of insa~ty to the charges.
The bodies were found over
a period or four weeQ Jast Ptetrial hearing· Md forfeited he amwered .•
t17!5 ,000 bond. ' •1• The late hli~ P e .s. c·e ' s
Arcelia Robles; 37, of n:., f~r, Gabriel Pesce'' 'of
Juana. MeJ:iCQ, • had ·been ·
spring: · " ·
permitted to post the bail last
Ttiursday over the objections
of govemment prosecutors.
who predicted she would flee
to )l!exl,.,.
She was sbsent Tuesday at
a U.S. District Court bearing
for pretrial mouons in tbt
case, which is acheduled (Ol'
trial Nav. 6.
e Grape Protest.'
SAN DIEGO (AP) -Cew
Chavez joined a picket line
of 20 persom outside divisional
headquarters of. S a f e w a y
Stores Tuesday ln protest . of
the ='-" of 2t United Fann Work~ of America picteti ·
in Delano. Demonstrators carried signs
protesting Sa.feway's sale or
Gallo wines, target of the
UF\V strike. The Chavei·led
unioo and the g I a n t
supermarket chain have clash-
ed frequently during the
UFW's ongoing strikes and
boycotts agalnst table grapes
and lettuce.
Woman Gets
One Year
In Slaying
I.OS ANGELES (AP) -A
woman convicted of hiring a
teenager to klll her husband
was spared a 11t1te prison
tenn after her attorney
described the murder victim
tn court as "an absolute
animal who sexually moll.'stcd
his daughteri and beat their
mother."
Edllh Kramer, 52, of
Bellnciwer was placed on p~
batlon for life' and 11enttnccd
Tuesday to a ,ear In county
jail.
11£R HUSBAND, lloward
Kramer, wi.9 •ho:f. three limes
with 11 handgun tn Decem-
ber 1970 ot hit home while ~trs. Kramer was in the hill••" Jiil's. Kramer and her 24-
year-old daughter. Lorraine,
were convicted o[ second-
degrte mJrder last June JG,
and lhe daughter wu aen·
tenced to rive year1 to life
in prllon.
A giant poster
from your
snapshot.
3.88
HI• l••orn. 11•...-llf'· v ... '-1 1111,. S.N Turn ycur
t1VGrll• 111t:lu•• iftlo . ltl9 ,. II,. PG$1••·N•I bring In """I
b(1ck-1nd·wt>llt Of t olOf' ()fin! (llO 11991tl•M. pltlM) Ind
you II ,..... you• blte k·llld·Wl\IW poll .. i:i.<:k"' 2 .... k.
(Your print wl!! tie telu"'4'CI ul\'*"'91fl Tum Y'l'UrMll
ltlto ~'• !t¥0rll• hal'IQ-vJI flOW,
U•• you, JCPenn•Y ch•rgti card. gg• Trt·X Pan 36mm film 31 •KPO•UN,
Yerlchrom• 127 bl•ck •nd Whit• film. 45 c
¥'erk:hrome 1 2& bl eek •nd whit• tum. 5 5 c
JCPenney
We know what you're looking for.
Sloop Suolltly noon lo 5 p.m. et tflo followlnt ,..,.,, Donald R. Lea ch, who was
17 yoon old 'It the tlJne, was coovicted Qr nut-degree FASHION ISLAND, Nowpon BH<h 17141 644-21 I J
matder and sentenced to Ille HUNTINGTON CENTE.R, Hontlngton Buch 17141 891-7771
in prison.
·Impressive 25% savings on
all_ pictures, · q~
mirrors and
Wal.I-
Sale ·3075 .
Reg.$41. 36X46picture
from our 'Espana Collec1ion:
Sale 1716
Reg. 22.BB. Hand painted Ol''9inal oils ill
8 X 10, Sx 12oiJ sites.
Sale 31 50
Aeg. $42. Large ships. 22 X 33. llom out
'AmetlC<tn Heritage Collection.·
, Sale 1012
Reg. 13.60. ·eon1empor1ry 800Qu e1s·. 30 X 14.
from our °W3lm Mode1n Collection:
Sale 2241
A•g. 29.88. framed hahd painted oils on
stretched canvas. 37 X 37. 'Ava11te Oil CoflectiaW'. f
Sale 2250
Meg . $30. Gold finished plate glass mirror.
39 X 21. from our decorator mirror coUectiOft.
Sale 2850
Reg. 138. Rounded oval plate glass mirror.
27 X·33. from our decorator mtffOI co'lectioA.
Take 15% off all picture
frames, too. -
Save• big 15% Ofl all of ou r l)tCfUfe flames
ir1 oor w all decor clepa111ncnl Maki! your
selection fr om many s11es 8nd styles and i:to
11 yourself now. du!l11g lh1s great sale.
Sale prtces effective 101 1 ti111ited 1l1na.
UM your JC Penney cherge card.
JCPenney
We know wha\ you 're looking for.
Shop Sunday noon to 5 P.M. at the following stores:
FASHION ISLAND, Newport Beach (714) 644-2313. HUNTINGTON CENTER, Huntington Beach (714) 892-7nl.
•
I '
8 DAILY PILOT Wf'fnHdQ, Octolatr 24, 1~13
What~s Up Th~re? 3 Irvine Bicycling Boo t
'!be People'• Lobby ii ut-for eact mD• OJlftHd """"
ill& Onni• Cool>ty n>lldeota the -·· Dot.tfled "'""' " to oslke fer Ufe'' SonUy the route are available by
· For the
Record Reports Flickeri1ig Over UFOs
By JACK CHAPPELL
Of tflt Dell~ .,_ lltH
"Oh, I've rettived them OC·
caslonally O\'tr s e v e r a I
mon1hs. Rad two tonight and
both provtd to bt unfounded,"
a desk offi~-er .sale!.
dispatcher ukl she h a d
received several telephone
reportll last wttk, but oone
recently aod In Lo.s Alamltos.
the dl$patcher asked queg..
tloningty, "do you really
belleve in an that?"
Surgeons
Honored
·•·· ri ealllng the People'a Lobby ol to r~ moM)' to fUPPo en-83M.St4. ;
vlmlm nlal and P o 11.P ~ • t '!be lobby bopol io Piaee.'r
<eform lniU.Uve loaJsiltlao, In lnlUaUv~ l~gblalloo ~~,
llJe 11171 general olectlon!J,. c.Jffomia voi.,.. Jo m.ndale-
Marria9e
Licetases
Thtre's now onlrnoie U\lng
In Orange County as sure a.s
death and taxes -repons ot
unidentified Flying Objects.
Three surgeons from UC Ir·
vine have been elected to Fel-
lowship in the American C.OJ·
tege o£ Surgeons.
RJden . are encouragfl!I to complete cimpal'gn f u Q cl' ,
obtain sponaon w~ w1Ui pay di5closure. 1
Other
Deatlis ' .
LA JOLLA (AP ) -Carl
Ecbrt, physicist who once
was head of Scripps Institution
of Oceanography of UC San
Diego, died Tuesday in Scripps
Memorial llospital. He was
71.
SAN DIEGO t APJ
ORANGE COUNTY
Rare Coins
Will Come
To County
ANAHEl?.I -The \\'orld's
lhree rarest and moot prized
coins, one selling £or 2,000,000
times its face value will go
on display Nov. 16 when the
!l111t annual Don's Coin and
Stamp Exposition opens at lbe
Disneyland Hotel here.
More than 100 numismatist!
will converge at the
Disneyland Hotel Exhibit Hall
for the gaUiering and coin
swap meet. which opens at
10 a.m . daily for three days.
Orange Countians from San
Clemente to Seal Beach , from
Coat.3 t.fesa to La Habra nave
rtPorted seeing things. They
say they've even been seeing
things over the \Vestem White
House.
They report the things they
see arc unidentified, they fly
and they're objects. The only
thing that isn't certain is the
extraterrestrial oatur e of the
UFOs.
OISPATCllERS AT rnost or
Orange County's police age n-
cies ha ve rc«ived a nun1ber
of UFO <:alls.
In Costa Mesa . police said
one youth reported a flying
saucer had been "following
him arotmd" for several days.
The 18--year cld high school
student told Offi«r J.C. While
that the object would hover
at varying altitudes above his
head In downtown Costa ~fesa.
It flashed green, red , brown,
blue and bllick lights, the
youth reported.
TIIE YOUTH said he saw
the saucer-shaped objeet when
he rode his bicycle in the
vicinity of llarbor and Wilsoii.
He said 004 man called In
and reported. a UFO. "I told
htm ·1r ~ ,.. tt agalo call
us back. and .be never dkl,"
the officer said.
Several sightings w e r e
reported by Laguna• Niguel
and Dana Point residents.
One cf them, a !Onner sea
captain &8.ld he wa.s used to
looking at the sky. ''When
'1t'he1a I see
•01nethbog t h n t
doesn't be Io 11 fl
there, I tHlll ntteH•
tlon to It.'
I see something that doesn't
belong there. I pay attention
to it," he Said.
The Santa Ana watch com·
mander said he hadn't gotten
any UFO reports Friday, but
when told that o t h e r
departments had, he quipped,
''Hey, maybe I'm missing .
something. Maybe I ought 19
run right up on the roof and
take a look."
In Stanton, police had suc--
cessfully solved that t:!lty's
reported UFO's, placing the
blame on "kids throwing
narcs in the t1ir."
They are Dr. Rebert H.
Bartlett, associate professor
of general surgery; Dr. Alan
B: Gau.antga , associate pro-
fawr cardiac surgery and Or.
James If. Mahnke, assistant
prolessor of neurosurgery.
They were formally inducted
as fellows or. the world's
largest org an i zation of
surgeons i n cap.and-gown
ceremonies Oct. 13 during the
aivwa l ASC Clinical Congress.
Fellowship, a degree en-
BUT THEN THERE W8' the titling the recipient to the
case o( the talkin& television. designation "FACS" following
A woman told police that his name, is awarded to those
her TV talked to her, even surgeons who fuUIU com·
when It was turned off. She prehensive requirements of
said her husband thought she acceptable med.lea! educaUon
was crazy-Wltll the televsion and advanced training as
set talked to him too. specialists in one of the
THE POLICE N I G H T A Stant en patrolman in-branches of surgery, and who
sergearit in La Habra said vestiga ted, and determined give evidence or good moral
his department was "inun· that the new "instant on" character and ethical prae·
daled" with calls Friday television set \vas aomehow tice.
night. picking up the transmission Drs, B.1rllett and Gazzanlga
Residents there reported of a nearby amateW' radio are residents Of Santa Ana, sounds of explosions and and Dr. Mahnke resides in
streaks cf light in the night operator. !\'ev,:port Beach.
sky. Somehow the whole thing The garbled voice oomitlgr~~~~~~~~~~ was pegged to an artillery over the set wasn't clear Good "'."" ·-~
firing exercise In the desert enough to undersland; but u.rcu
"'"' Ba"tow. sounded ominous and ro, a make the scene
WESTEIN STA TE UNIVBSITY
COLLEGE ·OF LAW
OF ORANGE COUNTY
CALIFORNIA'S LARGEST LAW SCHOOi.
OFFERS A CflOICE OF TWO PROGRAMS .
OF LAW STUDY
• IN 2 V. .,. a YIAU of fUU...TIMI I• wit, 115-16
d 1tt1oom houn ,,., -•~1. or
• IN , 'fi .... YIAt$ of p.uy;nMI dty, ---•t -.und law 11udy 13 dines per wetlc. :S-4 '*"' per dtuJ,
• Yov can awn )'OVI' JUtlS DOCTOI IJ.D.I degtM .M ._...
ELIGIBLE TO TAKE THE
CALIFORNIA BAR EXAMINATION
... '!JJiliiwiii•~·n: OI. '"OHi FOi: CATAl.OOUI
'800 South 8...0lchunt
An1heim 92804
{714) 635-:!453
APPl.Y NOW FOR THE SPRING 1974
SEMESTEll; .EGINNING FEBRUARY 4th
FULL··TfME LAW STUDY PROGRAM-
AY.41LABLE IN FALL 1974
SnlDINIS IL~ fOl ffOfWLT MUl(D ~ ~
Funeral services were held
today for Rlchord William
t:'hadtrick Jr., a retired
policeman and brother of
swimme r Florence Chadwick.
He died ~londay at 61. Miss
Chadwkk. a San D i e g o
stockbroker.. was the first
woman to swim the English
0\8.nnel.
A S P E C I A L educational
forum about coins '>''ill be held
at 1 p.m. Saturday, Nov. 17
to highlight the sho\v requir·
ing $1 admission but \\ith chil-
dren Ll'Xler L2 accompanied by
adu1t allowed in free.
Rare coins will include 11n
IlllM Silver Dollar and 1894-S
dirTie. plus a 1913 Liberty Head
Nickel.
In San Clemente J\fonday
night, a "'oman reported
sighting a series or bright
lights hovering over t h e '
Western White House.
The C y p r e s s dispatt:!her ~iiile it was.· probably the Sundays
calmly reported, "None\-~coun~~ty~'=•:fi~rst~=ca~se~~ol::an51==i~~~~!~~ tonight." 1lnd in Orange when U ~ -u n Identified freak if.1. the l1f.OdQ!(t]j -,.,~YID FOl ~IAHS ~r ••
queried about ~ UFOs, the so · • ... -•••••
The fu-st sighting occurred
shortly after dusk, and the
'lady who resides on Avenue
Delores said the brilliant
lights \Vere up about 45
degrees from the horizon.
dispatcher bluntly. said, ''no." ~
In Garden · Grove. the desk
officers said. "none tonight,
but we've had several this
week. You know , whenever
it gets in the news, everyone
~·ants to get into the act." Wantedf -S.o\N FRANCISCO (AP)
Retired San Francisco
. Superior Court Judge Herman
A. van der Zee, 78, died Tues-
day night of an apparent heart
attack at hls home here.
SAN OTEGO (APl
RJchard Chadwick .S!m5. 48,
owner of the County Ne\vs
Assocl11tion here, died r.tonday
night at his home.
Death Notices
l•NlilNOIDOl:P
The Uberty Head N i c k t I
~recenUy sold for $100,000, the
ftrst foreign or U.S. coin
to surpass that figure. selling
£or 2 million times its race
value.
The silver dollar sold for
$80,000 and the dime £or
$50,000, both also new records.
Baker Na1ues
!\Ian to Unit
Later, at about 9:30 p.m.
a triangle shaped of thrcl:!
lights appeared again over the
Presidential a~; she said.
The wee)ctrod dispatcher lit
Laguna sald she received
several reports.
Another one was a \l'cman
\l'ho saw the Newport Beach
helicopter chasing a motorcy-
cle and reported It as a UFO.
IN PLACENTIA, the
Officials
LIHllt H. ltnnlngldort. AU IO, of al E. Wlhl>lr• "_.." Fu1l..-1on. 0111 ol SANTA ANA -Elerth
dn111. Oct-• 22, ltn. surv1wc1 bv "Rick" Erickson of Garden POUCE lN FOUNTAIN ;~~11~· :::. ·~.n1":"."'"'W ::1!'i'~~'. Grove has been named lo ' the Valley were firm in lhe mat-
Set Action
·For Noise
w.,11111111on, o.c.1 ,,., .. v•1fldclllld....,. Cit;.,.,n5 Thr ..... ILOll. Finding ler of UFOs invading their s ANT A AN.A _ An 1•0• M111.onlc Strvlcn, Thurld•Y• 11 fllM, ._., '"'" M<A1111v a. W•ll•<• '""""•· Fvli.....,. Committee by Supervisor territory. terdepartmen'la.1 Noise Study ,,., .. ......,,, Lorn• v1111 Memori11 ,.,,.., David L. Bake,. "We don't let ••em ·m Foun Co · Futl•••on. Mr. 1 ..... 1nvs11ort ..,,, • wMl<I ui -mm1Uee bas beeb directed
w1r t v1t.,1n1 ......... o1 "'• Amt•lc•n 1-Ie replaces Jerry Ferreri, tain Valley," the night watch by the n-.. -Coilftty Boan! 'M':.1:':.~~ 0~:0"':~ MV.uiiv " wi nec• also o( Garden Grove who commander said. of Supe;;m,~ to recommend
01 LOTILL resi~ n-ause of the pres1 Nearby Huntington Beach, , three quali"fled -ui•·-~·~ -· £1MI f'. O. l olall. Oti. of dfflh, 6 ' ... ?A'f'.~:-ho .......... """'1 w -oc1-"· Hn. 11ou .... w...,...., qf,~ business. : wever, was a different prepare a noise ettmelat or ~
j,,v;:'1":i ~~111~1;:"·c!::~'tt1~ l' ., .~ story. the county general plan.1
111 5•n 01900, c111"'1ti.. 111rle1 •' H'*t "We've ~ getting them The State Legislature in 1971
c ...... ,.,.,,,.,-y, s.tn Ot-. Lot.J &r· 'Y''B• hd · hi " d" h ,,1111-11. wn1mlftlfw M-•lal ,.,r11 , ~ . n·t ay every rug • a 1spatc er amended the Planning and
Mon1111r,i. Hou•KTOM shaid chee
1
rfully. "But, it's just Zoning taw to require that
Ftor1t111:• v. H0111111ton. 11n1a111 of s.11 SANTA ANA _ The Santa t e usua meteor sh<lwer," he all general plans of cities and ~~h ....... ~~',...,~:!,• :! t'::,lld~·~ • .;'; . Ana-1\m.ln YMCA was to ob-added . counties include a noise ele-
•l•t•• .. v101 M(:l•111111un. Sen ~t•1 serve Its 50th birthday today ment.
Ardell• vroom1n, S..c:r1me11to. kr\'ket, wj••. a noon luncheon at the TllE S0 •RlFF'S De l Th d t •· k. Frh:1tv. , ,.M, P'•llle v11w Oiapet. w1 ·~ par· e epar men~ ma mg up
'"'''m.,..1. P1clt1c V1"' ~111 P'••k. First Christian Church of ment hu received ca 11 s the committee are health,
"•clllc vi .... M:i"~'::~11~1tc1on. Sllota Ana, 17th and College and not just during the current planning, building and safety,
5~m J. D~•••rt. Aoe ,., or m e:. Streets. UFO craze ellher. airport and road.
lOlh ~I., Cott• Mtll. Diii DI d•llh, -~================================== DdDber n, ltll. $11rvlvld by wire, ---
51'!1rt1y; ...,. J011n1 two d1119lllt!r1, 51r•C1r1
II-"· Dtl M1r1 lv""" Goldin. San 0 1190; b..,lfl.,, Victor 0•1r1rt, fllewl>Ort
lt1c11. 51rvlct 1. 1'hi.r1<11v. I PM. Bell
Brwctw1v "\ortu1rv, wllh Dr. Charl11
01 ... ..,f~kl officl1tl1111. lltll Broedw••
Morl .... ry, DlrKIOtl. STAMNAllD
Jtnt1 V. 5111Mo1rd. ll11ldeM DI M!nl""
Vlt )O. S\lfYlvtd by hu•~nCI. HtrrY W.
5••"n1rO; d•IJllll!fll", Sure""' IC...utt l.
Miu.I"" Vl•lo; •l111r, Mrl. lt~•rv
HDll, HDll..,-; two 1r111Ckhl1drlft .
Fu111rtl M••I~"· Ttiurtd1v, 7 PM,
MtCormlct l11un1 ltacll (Mpel. '"'••· rnnl. El Toro C......i1rv. MtCormltll
lttllM Bttch Morl\lfrv, Dl rector1.
l'INI• Char11t Ht!I Tine<. AOf 13, DI 71'1
Clr.olt Avt .. (M!t Me11. 0.lt ol Otttll, Oc•-• 1J. 1t71. survived bY tour ...,.,, Ct lvln, Melvin and C.I . Tl,..r. tit DI T1~11; Hiii Tlntr, CC.II Mt11; lo\Jr
d111Vht,,.1, Liii• Cltllfiilnd, 51111 Spttntt,
to11 M•• J"""'· T•••" euu.1>1111 Crowlt'(, Cotti MllM! brt!Mr Joe ll~tr.
Tt•t•: ....., 11•1111, Arflt t..0 M41ybel1t,
Te••i: JI 1•1ndclllldrt11: U 11rt•I·
11r1ndch!I0•111; I 11•••l ·D•t•l-1r1ndelllld. Vltl!l!!on, Ion I 11 h l,
Wt'dnetdl v. 6 IO I PM, 8111 lrw<lwlY
Cllt!M'I. S1rvltt• tNt lnlltmlnl will ri.
In Hlthlt'!lll. Te>tl. llell llrwdwtV
Morlu••V• Forw1rdl119 Dlrector1.
ARBUCKLE & SON
\\'ESTCLIFF J\10RTUARV
•Z7 E. 17th St., Costa Maa -• BAL'fZ..BERGERON
FLNERAL HOME
Corona del l\lar 17S-1450
Costa P.lu.a '4&-iru • BELL BROADWAY
l\10RTUARY
110 Broadway, Cotta P.lesa u S-3433 • l>ILOA Y BROTHERS
l\10RTUARIES
litll Beach Blvd .
Hunlln it:lon Beach 142.7771
%44 Reflondo Ave.
Long Btacb !13--tB-lt•s • J\frCORflllCK LAGUNA
BEACll flfORTVARY
1706 Lacuna Canyon Rd.
~H-9415 • PACIFIC VIEW
MEMORIAL PARK
Cemttery Mortuary
Chapel
2511 Pliclfk View Drive
Newport Beat:!b, California .......,.,, • PEEK FA!!IL\'
COLONIA i, FUNERAL
HOME
7101 Bol1a Al"t.
Weslminllter 19345.U • SMITH'S MORTUARY m r.1atn st.
llanthlrtoa Be.tell
SlMlll
'
Introducing
the Coast Federal extras.
,
.
We11 give you a free checking account.
And a free sale deposit box, too.
\Vith a $2500 balance in a Coast savings
account, vve'tl give you a personal checking
account at J major bank, also a safe
deposit box. Absolutely free!
We'll pay you the highest inlen!St
in Coast Feder.ti's history.
Now Coast's ne\v inte rest rates are 1he
highest in our hi story, and remember,
interes t is compounded daily.
Maximum flexibility, no minimum.
Annu•I R•te Annual Yield
5.2S tfo 5.39°/o
On existing and ne\v passbook accounls.
You 'll find even higher rates with Coast's
many difleren1 savings plans.
We'll give )'OU billion dollar
coast Feder.ti security. •
Co.isl ha s over one billion dolla rs in assets,
\vith convenient offices throughout
California. Plus, yo ur deposits are insu red
up to 520.000.
We'll help )'OU spend your money
as wisely as you save it.
With the new $1,000 Insiders dub.
\Vant a nc\v CJr, ..ippliance, color TV,
lickels !o top en1ert<1 inn1en! ~Al special
lo'v "1n~idcrs" prices. Also free money
orders, free not.iry service~. free note
collec11on services. Just open an account
JI Coasl for S1 ,000 balance. We're open
~rxdays .i \veek , 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. Fridays all
offices except do\vnto\vn are open tit
6 p.m. Saturday I) a.m. to 1 p.m. (Except
Civic. Center). ·
·--
COAST
FECERAL S AVINGS
Wt want your mane)'
And we11 do more for it.
A'"ll DY<"• °"" 911hllll 0ou.,,
Ht1t1lin<M leKh Offk•: 91 liut1!1t1i;1ori Crnlrt {7"1<118<17-1().17 ·L.A. M1i" Offlc•: llrh f, /!ill, t.2Jo1)51
• )
"'"··· t, • -. ,,
•
Old cameras:
5.00Reward {,, .
~· Jl&Y.s "E>nly
Fri.-Sat.-Sun. • -c
Now for a limited time, you can trade-in your old camera-any make, any COnd ition-
and you'll get $5.00 toward the purchase of a brand new Polarold Land camera.
UH PoMeyo Time Payment Pion.
~ ' ..
The Model 420 4 with trade-in, 7aa
and Focused Flash
The Model •20 wfthagaa ··tra~e-in, witho ut
·focused Flash .
square shoot., 2 14 8B with trade-in
Sq uare Shooter 2 is Polaroid 's
leaat expensive all -purpose instant
color camera. It uses Polaroid's
square color lilm so you save on
every instent color picture you
take. And, it uses Inexpensive
4-shot llashcubcs.
There's an electric eye and
electron(¢ shutter for automatic
e1tposures. A 3-element focusing
lens produces sharp, crisp pictures.
An Ingenious viewfinder. And fast
pack film loading.
The Model 420 is the most econOm-
icat ol Polaroid's 400 Series Land
cameras. It uses the Focused
Flash system. A set of lou vers
open and close In front ol the
flashcube to 1Eit out the right
amoun t of light. It's automatic as
you focus. Electric eye and elec·
tronic shutter automatically control
exposure for all other shols. And,
ot course, you get big color
pictures in a minute, black and
while shots In seconds.
There are three other models In
the 400 lin11. Each offers you a
special combln•llon of features
and versatlUty .
I -· Polaroid Coiorpeck Land Flftft
Type 83 for 2 99 Square. Shootm .. -Type 108 for
the other
pack. cameras 3!!
JCPenney
We know what you're looking for.
Shop Sunday noon to 5 p.M. a: the tcllowing stores:
FASHION ISLAND, Newpo't Beach 1714) 644-2313.
HUNTINGTON CENTER. Huntington Beach 1714) 892·7771 •
I
I
• \
•
• •
..
; < •• t, ,
l· '
'
North,"South Legs of Baja Highway Linked
'SANl'A YNEZ.·Maloo (AP) Ym' ot _.uao. being built 11 Sin ~1\fl,
Sant.a Ynez, Guerrero Negro
and San Ignacio.
_,.Tho wtl> llJd ..,th l<p But In plaoel, U 11 ooly
of lhe Baja· Ca 11 for n I a 20 feet wide, be 18.ld, with
TranspeniJllulor Ht I h "a y the speed lbnlt between 45
hive b«il joined In u hlltoric and IO miles ao hour. PARADORES -OR service
Uotlnf up 300 mUu IOUth of 1be road can be widened centers -also are being built
the t1.S. border. by about four feet within IO the.re and at Puntaorleta.
~·A ceriemony n e a r here years when an esUmated 600 The par adores wUI be
drew toaether newsmen of the Vehicfes will be using it dally, located about 100 miles apart
tJlll> -~ "mt4: -MptQ¥1 tf.. , Y8:~ ,1aJd. • and sell fuel, have overnight ~.:...: .. ~·tu.ls Ettriqbe Hotql8 along the route -are acconunodations and food. ~.:·~e(ary of * * fr * * *
Eight trailer parks are plan--
ned eventually.
~ lll2-mllllon "'81 of the
new '!UfbwaY through oome ..r
Mexico a dtnstst wilderness,
lnc:ludlng 8llpport f1dlltle.s.
was borne by lhe natSonal
iJ>Vtromenl.
'lbe blgbway will Ol)ell , up
some of Mexico's mo s t
dramaUc scenery to extensive
--·-.,.....~
TH!!tjBENITOJ u 1 re1 ''
highway starts la Tijuana on
the Callfomla bOrdu and
wlndJ over lhe mountains,
deserts and !Jong the seashore
of the 90Ulhejl!moot Up.
Besides g1vlna, tourists ac-
L'eSS to some of the country's
best beachea and fuhlng,
reachable before only by
plane, boat or an arduous and
orten dangerous drive, the
road will ooMect the most
il!Olated' large area of Mexico
with the rest of the COUDtry.
DAILY "LDT f
D~ng Fang
Tiger Ha s T oot1iac1ie
LOS ANGELES <API -
When ~1adras the Bengs1 llger
has a toothache he. gets the
best of car" Madras, who normall y
jumps through rings of fire
and leaps over other tiger!i
as the star of a local animal
act. had a split fang operiled
on this week.
Or. John Palmer, a
auxiate zoo dindor, Dr.
Don Fart!. performed the.den·
tat work oa Madras.
They had to strap the
an<>lbethed !SO-pound patlenl
onto an operating table while
they repaired the damage.
Kids Like To
.Ask Andy Brownsville, Tex. dentist who
has done pioneering dentistry
on wild anirDOls. and an --'~~~~~~~~-
-~ Flll8'I' . {"nDllll to T • . B =~·1.:.~e~~~~:~d·fJ~e .-1 IJnana to 00111
en taken by bus at the
ernmerit-1,,1 invitalion.
The highway will give farmers fn Southern Baja'----------------------------. Callfcrnia access to markets Ir
in the more populated north. sts may be •hle to _use TIJUANA, ?i1exico (AP) -will see will be a l~lane freeways on both sides of this
wo-llhe'. 1 , 0 8 5 -m 11 e Freeways flanked by new bridge carrying them over the channel, And we are also going -way about Dec. I after hote'·, oew •·n1cs and new ~-tll1'on flood coo•-• ~--to have two-way s•-•· with
Qiaal wort·IS done: •· oltit': bWldin; are Planned ;ld~e to be finished'~ ifli.r brand new o{fi~ oo'il~s and ~the formal de d l ca t lo n for this border town, says It will have cost $50 million, brand new offlce buildings and
Olreinony" ls' pl"1mect "then at Mayor ?t1arco Ant<Klio Bolanos , and Bola00$ Cacho said in banks and hotels along them,"
But an even greater lmpaCt
will oome from · increased
tourism.
GOerrero Negro on the 18th Cacho. I an interview tlult $128 million he said.
~allel which divides the 'Ibe roads will follow a 10-will be spent on the first Stt-
stite of Baja' California and mile concrete flood control tiod' of the accompanying @! territory of Southern Baja chame1 .beJng 'built 450 feet development.
~-· Preatdeol L Ii Is wide· tliroligb Tijuana. -.Orrla wfD. atltnd. " BY NEXT sp"'""· when the ·I' .... ,·J ~O YL AN V A~8. Oal~~ ~~u::~ ~is":':nZt~~ .. ~~
gee1al dlJ:eclor c;if ,federal Highway cipens in December, , when we're going to start on
rciads, aald In. an interview 0 We're golgg ~ be swamped , the first stage of o u r lb "njuana that·· about JO with tourisfS," Bolanos Cacho downt ow n urbanization,"
"WE NEED this develop-
ment to improve our ~ity and
the living of the people here.
Each tourist leaves . a n
average of $8 in Tijuana when
he visits. We neid mOre than
that, and that's why we're
going to build these hotels
and facilities."
FOR YEARS, the southern
tip of the. peninsuJa -from
La Paz on the Gulf of
California sooth to San Jose
Del Caho and Ca:bo San Lucas
-was almost the exclusive
hideaway of top-level ex-
ecutives who arrived I n
private jel.!J to enjoy the white
sand beaches and waters as
clear as the best parts of
the , Caribbean and some of
the world's best deep-sea
fishing. !;.hlcles ate ei:~ to use said. Bolanos Cacho said. ~ roet;I daUy durfuc the fir.!!lt The firsbtbing U.S. tourists 1 "We're going to h a v e
About 1.4 million tourists
were in Tijuana last month.
"'· .. ».
J . -l
•
. Our phi1osophy:
'f91al Transpo<latton.
This yoor b.Jying o Volksv.<:igen means
buying 0 """' idea OS well OS 0 neN car.
The idea is coiled Volkswagen's Own-
er's Security Blanket. Ifs not just a war·
ro nty because warranties don't go far
enough. It's.a commitJ]ent to our ONners
long oft.,,: iliev~·~ on the dotted ~ne. ,.;'(°~~;"""..~., . ·.{ '•..,'; I N~· 1t!ii tdr·llu~qess has any
plan lik,;i,1,rqb~'f-~I'" to care enough.~¥u!Jhc~, except Volks~ . ..+ 'L. ~ ...
We li~tcrthin~cllt·pS: al Tronspor-
l'.ltioo OO;:llke.l?J.~·a car yoo con
coon! on ~~:>"P'·.Ard we bel.ieve
you shauli:l6:t1¥:ti>'6ip paying to get what you'~. . • -"
From the minute you drive owa,y in
your '74 Volkswagen you'll be secure
knowing you've gof the world's JT10St-Od-
vonced new car coverage pion riding
with yoo.
Take a little time to read this and yoo'll
find out how Volkswagen has changed
the remons for buying o new ca r. You'll
also discover that what's behind ·our
Owner's Security Blanket is as eXoiting
as what's under it. ·
Our 12 month/
20,000 mile guarantee.
Most car owners drive ,.,_ __ _..~
o~t 14,CXXJ miles
duiing the fir.I yea.
So what earthly
good is a 12,000
mile glXlrontee? Vol ks·
wagen's coverage is for
20,CXXJ miles-most car companies cX:n't
come near lhot. ' , ·
This is oor guarantee, in plain English:
"if ycu maintain and service your 1974
Volkswagen as presc ribed in the Yolks·
wogen Maintenance Schedule, any foe·
bry ports loond to re defective in material
or workmanship within 12 months or
20,CXXJ miles. which""er comes first (ex·
a!prlilters and tires), will ~repaired or .....
t'"~ " .. :I' t , .. ~Pfoced free of chprgetij,dil):,.,
•tlS.' or Cqr)ooion.VW deole(
Weguorante:e against more than
Just defective parts.
-.rVolkswagen's Owner's Security ~Ion· .
·ket goes far beyond just guorant~ing '
aji;iinst defects. Most car companies
~t ~oce q .windshield wiper 'if ii
wears a.it We will. They won't rnploce o
li\lflibulb.Wewill.
Take !hingS.like brake podsond Ii~·
.ings. As king as you hove them adjusted
'when your Mainlenonce Schedule "Says
so, we'll ·reptoce them free if they wear
out Some thing goes for clutch lin ings arid batJerieS: ~spi,rkplcgsandpoints?Wechange
them free at 12,000 miles and we'll
honor lhot no matter how long it tokes
yoo to go that distance. This is unheard
of in the auto induslry.
2• months/2•,000 miles.
We've gone one
~lep further with the
insides of oor engine
and transmission.
We glXlrontee them
for two years or JI,,~~
24,000 miles,
wtiichever comes
first. Of ·caurse we don'I cover defects
caused by lock of moinlenonce or abuse.
We Mrontee our ...,...,._
. When Yl?ll're, running out~ warranty,
yi!ll/re still not out of luck. We II make the
repair freeond glXlrontee the ports and
'M'.lrl<monship for an additional 6 months
or 6,CXXJ miles.
If the ,.pair takes O'lemlght,
we'll lend you a car.
lvloving right along, we'rn ~o=
committed to keep you
moving.Sc if you'rn
a qualified owner
and you find that a
"°nuntyrepair is going
to take overnight, we'll lend you a free
.........
HUNTINGTON BEACH
Harbour Volkswagen, Inc.
18711 Beach Boulevard
NEWPORT BEACH
Chick Iverson, Inc.
445 E. Coast Hwy.
842-4435 -673-0900
@ ---
car by oppo1ntmeni , for as long as the
rej'.Xlir tokes.
(And we haven't forgotten owners of
olderVWs.lf yourcor needso repoirond
'you need a car, we'll .rent you oneot a
·nominal price.)
Express care.
How many times hove you heard of
waiting two weeks bef0<e you con get o
head light lixe<J? Not ot Volkswagen.
?'/ith Express Care if we can fix som~
thing in less than 30 minutes, .,.,·11 do it
while you wait. Nooppointmenl .-Jed
f0r these little repairs, becau<e .who
needs aggravation?
3 free computer check-ups.
Noothercormoker
in!hev.:rl:J hosony·
thirij likeCom·
puter Analysis.
(They proba-
bly will some
day in the future.)
Ever, 1974
\l:il""'°gen can be plugged into o com·
pufer an9 out Comes a written analysis
of over 50 vital functions. Everything
from your engine compression down lo
your battery voltage.
Computer Analysis can spot things
that even o master rrechonic might not
see. So we can fix lhese things while
you'rn still c~ I,,, our O..ner's Secu·
rity Blanket ..•
We're tn this together.
We mode the car. You own the car So
we're in this together. As long as you
molntain your new Volkswagen prop-
erly.,.,'lldo most of the worrying for you.
That's what Volkswagen's Owner's
Security Blankei is al l
about-once )<>irn oVciks·
wagen Owner. we're not
going to leave you ou t in
the cold.
SAN JUAN CAPISTRANO
Bill Yates, Inc.
32852 Volle Rood
499-226 1
ANNOUNCING THE
•
AN~oxr FRENCH .FRY
Featuring
the
NEW
•
Now thru Nov.21st. buy
one delicious quarter
pou nd Carl's ~
Hamburger for ~
75c, get one regular 39c
11 Big Scoop French
Fries ABSOWTELY
FREE with this
coupon.
r -----------COUPON
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
SAVE3 c
This coupon may b9 redeemed tor one
FREE Big Scoop French Frles with the put•
chase of one quarter pound cart's Ham ..
burger at the regular pr1ce of 7So. Offer
good through November 21st at any of tho
90 Carl's Jr. Family Restaurants throughoUt
Southern Cal llomla.
rl' ~ • .,,.,._
Ca !Jr. ~· ft:~~
i.. __________ ... ___ - - ------
•
•
DAIL V PILOT
Gold Badge Blus h es
From \\'ln: Scrvicu
t'1)1ie f'auoa told f!OllCe ln
San Francisco that two women
be invited up to hi.s hotel
room for drinks stole bis
y.·aJ\et and a gold medal be
needs tn his v.'Ork.
Fannon, ~. ls police com·
mlssloner d the to>J.'ll of
F'irtbaugb in Fresno county.
The medal \\'as hls co~
miuloner'1 badge.
* Q u e e n Ell:uabeth of
Brita1.n flew ho1nc to I.Andon
utter a five-day visit to
A.llltttalla to atten<i tbe open-
( PEOPL E )
ing of the Sydney Opera
}louse.
Prince Philip, ,,. ho ac-
companied his wile, remained
in Australia for a tour that
,,..ill last until Nov. 7.
* Emperor Hlroblto ti n d
Empress Nagako of Japan
entertained zoo directors from
IOIM 20 naUons at ·tea in
the Impert•I Palace.
The emperor Is a marine
biologist and talked with the
Alpine
Air Atv ful
ZERMATI', Switrerlan<i
{AP) -The Swiss News
Agency said there is a lack
of toilets for the thousands
of climbers . scaJing the
14.701-foot ~f.alterhorn.
"The latrine-like smell
spreading all over d-Oes not
contribute greatly to the
slogan praising the clean
Alpine air," the agency
declared.
PUHi.JC NOTICE ---
* A ~year-old man has been
.sentenced to 45 days in Jail
for trying l9 extort $7.000 from
actor Joe F1ynn.
Oart Worthey o( L o s
Angeles-admitted the mor11on
attempt . He was placed oo
two year! probeUon.
Worthey ·allegedly to 1 d
Flynn he had pictures of Flynn
in 11. compromising tituatioa
tviU1 a v.·oman.
* Robtrt Dixon, assista nt
director of the P e r k I n s
observatory in D e I a w a r e ,
Ohio, said theN! C<luld be life
clsev.·here in the un iverse.
Dixon said scientists today
can make am ino acids and
v.'ith an electrical charge
create hfe in laboratories, and
the same elements on earth
are found Ul many places in
the universe.
Dixon is working an a proj-
ect to adapt the receiv\ng
equipment at the observatory
to pick up pos.slble rad.lo
signals from other intelll&ent
civilizations.
* The student got to his reet
PUBl.JC NOTICE
,ICTITIOUS •ut1Na1s NOTICll: INVtTIN4t •IDS NAMI ITATIMI NT Nollca I, MrtbY 9lvtn !ht! !hot! B<Mlr(I
Tl>e lollowll!O per'°" II Oelnt blll!MH of Tn,111efl (If 1M c;o.1t Commun)ly
••· Coll199 Ol1trld of <lflllllt County, ~ANTll:Y MAIO FOODS, 17656 wmow Cltlforrllt . will rtc~Vf .... "" bid• UP
TrM UM, 1 .... 1,,., C1llloml1 ft6t' to 11 :00 1.m , Wldneod1,, ()(;1ober JI,
Dorwlld I!. lllttfflf, 1145' Wiilow ''" 1m. 1t "'" Purc111slng 0e91 of uold line. IM .... C.rlk1nil1 ''"" l(hool Ol111"kl loaled II 1:210 Mimi
Tf!lj ~-11 Qlflduc:Md f)y Ml A-. COlll .Mtw, C•llfllrnl1, ol whh;h
lncllwl.s.I tl,... Mid bldt wlU be lll.lbllcty opened eon.Id E. l oJ!trtn Incl rtlod for: PRINTING 01' EVEl<llNG
Tf\11 tltl-1 w11 tlltd wit~ tru! COLLEGE SPRING 197' llROCHUllE.
Count"I' Cler-of Orin~ Cwntr .... 1111 bl1U ••• lo be In I CContl'ICf Or.I-lS. Im will! Ille IMlrudlont Ind Con.:1111«11 Ind 1"111174 S~lflctllans wlllcll art now on Ille ~ubll.t>H Or.nos Coe1t DtllY Piia! tnd mar be ~ecurlod In lht office
(kl-u, ]4, ll ""' Novtmb« 1, af !tie Pl/rt>U&l~ Agtfll ol wld Khoo! 1'1J lUll-13 dhlrlcl. EICll bkldtr rrwst 1~!1 wllll 1111
blO I uoll'llt•'• dlk1l, Clll'IUled cflKk.
· PUBLIC NOTICE 0t bldcl•<'• band m..s. P•vM>lt to 1111 -------------!"'" ... d 11\t (Oii~! (or'l'lml>l\ITY COl!eQI -Dl1lrlct 8 0<ltd af Tvr1IH• In en 1moun1
PICTITIOUI •Ullll•ll "°' IHI l!\ln Ovt P«Ctfll CS~) of
NAMI STAT•MIMT !tie ""'"' bk1 tt jl 1111trtnl" INll IM
TM lollowl"'CI Pt'lolltl II doh!O OUlflleU blOdt'r wl tl ... 11r Into ~ propOHd
M; . (.ontrld II Ille Mmt 11 t#trdt( 1'I
AOCICPOllT CONSTlllUCTION COM-him. In thl """'' of flllllvrf •t0 tnl.,
PA.NY, 2llJ1 l• AtlMll lt'i'Cl,. Ho Into WCl'I CCl<'llrkt. "" P~I ol
n s. 111i.s1°" V'-!o. eau1. nus n. cMCti: w1n w fatttOed, or ~ 1111
OoM!d L klMin. ~ ~. nt.J1 UM of I bofld. "" Ml •um thlr.vl
Los All-IMI •• Mo. us. Mlulon wlH .. forlt!IMI IO Mid KNol dl1trlcl.
Vltlo. CtUI. "'15 No blddef mey wlll'ldrtw tlh bid for
Tiii• bv1!-. It Mlroo cQllducltd O\I 1 ptrlof d f0!1¥-11¥e l<UJ cl1y1 t llW
1n lnGh1ldvtl the clllt .. , for !tit optnlr19 l!MrltOf.
Ootltld ·It. Schum Tiit IMn:I ot Tn11tH1 r9_...,I ltl4I
Tl'lll •IBl.mlfll fl'*<I wllh '"" C-ly prlvllttt 'OI' r9!tctlno I MY Incl Ill bkh
C!ffk o• Oranot CounlY on Oct. IS. Ot' to w1h• any lrreavlwllla or Ill·
1913 lorri!Alltlt1 In 111y bid OIT In lilt blddlf!O. ,-nm Sllf>td:
Publl~hed Ortt111t (Mii Dtlly PUol NORMAN £. WATSON.
()(tObll• 11. 1•, 31 incl Novtmbef 7. Stc.ly. eoercl of Tru1tH1
H71 3U9·1l Optn; Nov. 1, 1t71 -11:00 • m.
iso.rd: Nov. 1-f PUBUC NOTICE Publlthttl Ortnut Coe•I Dally Piiot,
Ocl-r 11, 2•. 1t7l l171·7l
NOTICt 01' INT•NTION
TO Dl!DICAT'I •Al•M•MT
NOl lCE IS HE1ll!8Y GIVEN 111•1 PUBLIC NOTICE
on JM 1611\ dtV OI' Oc!Obtr, 1971, IN ------'--'-------
8M•O ol Eauct !IOl'l of IN N-P0(1·Mtll SLP·lll Unllitd S<.hool Oltlrlct of Ortngt c-tv, FICTITIOUS 1u11N•s1
Ct lilotn!t . 11do1,ltid I AeM)lullOl'l ol lnkn-NAMI STATll:Ml!NT
flan lo dedlc•I• •n 11w..-I 111 '"'" Tiit followtno ptrlCl<'I Jt dOlfll ,.....i11t1t
City ol Cosi. M111, 1 munltlp.o1 ccrr· 11. porl!lOfl, tor tr1ttlc 1'111111 ln1!1lll!!Ofl LYON AVENUE ASSOCIATES, 11"'2
•nd ,,,..1n1rn.,•<:t pvrpoMI. w lcl .. .......,,, Camino C1p!t1r1no, L19\l!\e Nlgllt(,
1(1 bit loct!ed CIYt", Oii trw:I IU'OU (1tltoml1 92617
~art!°"'' of 1~1 1110 p,orce! of land S. v. H11nwker, Jr. (G-rt l
1oc:1l.O t i ltktr t nd lttr SlrHll In P1r!Nr). nw.I St-trd l11f, L111un1
11>e cnv of C~I• N-111. Nl-1, (al!tornl1 n•n
... Pllbllc ..... 11,,.. -Ille' o .... uon OI' Thi• bll'.ll ... SI II «inducr.cl by I ""'Heel
mtkl"'CI IUCll dedktllon wl11 bl tw+d II l>trllltfll'lfp.
1111 Co....<:11 Cl'lambtn , Clly ol (Ollt Mt ••. Lvon Awn1>1 Auocl111i1. n F.olr Df'lvt. Co.It Me11, C1llforn!1. on t C1 ntornl1 llmlttd p,orlntrllllp
'"-111\ day ot No.,..mlt« H1l, t i tlw hour llv: S. V. HU!lll\tr, Jr.,
of 1.lO 11'<\oek P.M. G~Nral P1rtr>er llOAAO (II" l!OUCATtON T~lt 1!1t1men! w•o flllcl wtlh IM
NEWPOtlT-M•SA UNIFlll:D Covn!V Cltrk of Ort"llt (O\lnly Oii
$CliOOL DllTfllCT Oclotltr 19, 1t7l. av M.orl11n C. 11 ... 11.-on l'•HOtl Clerk ot 111li:1 8otrd P11bll11\td Or1ng1 Cott! Oally Plto!
Put>ll.lllfd or•l>Ot CD11t Dilly Pilot Oclolltr 1•. 31 tl>d Nov1moer 1. 11.
Od<>Mr '" 197J 3136·rl l97l 3231·73
PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE ----=~==---1 rlCT1flDUS llUSIN•ss FICTITIOUS I USIN'ESS
N .. M'E STATIEM•NT N•ME STATEMENT
Tno loUowlno pe"M I• 111111111 butlneH TM lollowlng per1on I• doono l!uson•H
••. ~I:
l,\IS$ MEGGS MINISC-'PING, <IOI Al· Tl<'E Sl<'!AT SALE, 20t M1rl7•.
mond Pltc,, NewPo<I ll11ch '2'60 l!albot lsl•nd, Ct! f'/6'62
P1111ov M<'Q'l• wnl!~. llOt Almolld e unor I . Y•~m.1nn, 602 s.o.
•li ce. NewPOr! llttt h •]!.60 lllV f ro/II, ltlbN lsl1nd, Ct t. t16'2
1n1 t""'""" I> conduct!.'d bv •n fn. Tiiis builnon 11 conducltd bv 1n In·
d!·,ldual alvl0111I.
Pl'OgV MfW• Wnllt EJlllOr 8 . Y101m1M
ln1• '11!1mtnl w11 tiled will! IN Covn· Tnl1 1t1to,..on1 w11 IH..:1 wl•ll •ne Coun
•v Cltrk <>I Or1n91 (011ntv Cl<'I Octcl>t< f, Iv C!t rk of Ofl"91 CNlllV an O<:t-r 9,
l'1l. 191l l'llml p.)lllt
Publi!l1fd 0.tnot Cont 0.Hy •Uot, P11nli1hnl Or•"'" (Mii Otily Polot,
(ktoMr 10. 17, l~, ll, 1'!1 lOl]·7l OcloDU 10. II. it, 31, Ull ]DJ4 1) ---------------"'-"
SALE
38~~
Shffr nylon mtth:
popular lthadff. In
P/A: T/XT,
BRUSHED GOWNS
SAil
·~ • BNlti.d •cell.11/nr-
kHI In 3 1ty1M. Col-
OJt. SIUI &M-L
umE GIRLS'
BODYSUIT
SAL!
2''
CULOTTE PJ'S
FOR GIRLS
SALE
. . . . ·.·. ·',',' :······:···· .. '
;i.i j"'····,· •rr;~:·~:;;~TIITITTIT01~~~~~~.:::~~ -~· .. =·~:.~~::·~··~~~;·~•,if~~·~~:~~~m~ ::;-..... ,._ :·:::···
2.JS -·
POLYESTER POLY FIL 0
SAL! 97c, .... , ..
Flberflll 1tulllng;. loye. :~ c
ci.hlone, Wuh1bfll ·.· ~~. :::· .. '·
ASSISTANT
·MANAGERS' ' .
~5350Ff~~
ANY PURCHASE OVER $200
WOMEN'S NYLON BODY SUITS
Short aleev•d: •••hi. 247
1tyl11. Jacquard pet• $•1(
Wm1; S.M·L " " IA.
FASHION DENIM JEANS
v Jn our tumttura, 1ppU1nc1 1nd
aporllng goods d1111rtment1.
•txct,., PAii! TJIAOI 11'1.MS
Colton cltnlm; m1ny le.. S'lCIAl 497
1ur11, 11z11 1·11. PUICHASI I'll,
SOLO Ill l'KI . Of' I
Plk:·NH• • ttN'9d lot :·
:1;,1=.~:--· Cot-!_i,
•l'•k•Hlll i. t TM 8' C-puCfrp.
Cll• llf1 eo•l'M
uul •r1,,,,., c, ... ,,
YDlfliG MEN'S
NO.IRON PTS
SAL!
2~
Poly•1l1r I cotlon.
Cott-etyte. .... , ..
COTTON TERRY
BATH TOWRS " ~-94c •~ :t SAU: '"'"' TOWIL ~. -~ Whit• or f11hlon coJ--· or'" ·m . .;
!~: Mtllll ti .. ~ llfe 141 U.
••• cl•ll. Ill• Ml u. ~~. ·.~~. :~::s
MEN'S CIASSIC ·
CARDIGAN SWtATER-
!P1c1At MCHASI ·
!All s··
Rugged ICryllc; link·
l!lleh ; eolor1. S.M·L
MEN'S SOCKS ...
ACRYLIC( NYlOll
SAlI
2 m 99c
Cmr locfl: fuhlon CIOf.
... 11u.10 ttl1'111a.
DACRON° I ORl:OM'
WORSTED YUN
SAL!··~~..,,. Dec,,_ polye1t1r/()f..
Ion' IOl)'llc, Colott.
.. -'·
,,
MOST ITT MS AVAfl.Aet.C AT MOST GRANT CrTY ITOllEI
the more for your moneysworth store
AJIANllM
Llldffl Ani . .t ltata C.tftte
HUllTINGTOll IUCH
lrMllh1l'Wf An. 1t Ad11111
WTfUWITOll
fvrN Ur.dt llvd. et lrli'-rd
SAii CUMDITI ,
$tft Dftt• '"'· .. t.Mlflt • ltfftff•.
SANTA IJIA, 201 I. 4 .. St.
' I ( I •
•
•
,
'
_,
r ,, ..
,
•
I
\
D. K.'s
SPICIAL
DONUT HOLES-
'' .EACH
PER BAG
Mond1y, Oct. 22 thru Frld•y, Oct. 26
135 E. 17th ST., COSTA MESA
Kith Like To .
Ask Andy
•
DAll V PILOT JI
"~"'°'"' .... , .... , ...... ,..,. NAMI ITATIMINl c.tflCf k 11.H
1r.. tOllOwl .... ,..._ I• ._ .... ~ NOTKI TO C:OlfflUCTOlll •t· CALLI•• l'otll -.!OI
Cal Stliw Faculty Group Questioned
'
PUllUC"'1llCI PUii.iC NCIFICI!
SACR.UfENl'O (UPI) -A Thomas <D-San Pedro ) , to autlllary otgaob:160ns. respondenct for a tull strviee, ,,.'t~M;tf1"'~1.\'~~~f>~~ "=0° L'1r lc:'1 NIWllOllT.M.EM
(acuity or•.11nJ11tlon al Cal chair1nan of the committee, ''S om e transactions oc· prepaid medical plan. ttHK. c.11..,..11 nw •Id t>Mdls..., 11 "'ion. •·"" .. .,. llllw w, kfi9n~...,,... •. 20I O«ltft tlllt b l cMir of~. lt7'. Stale U>ni Bei!ch illegally said the group wu toiimd curring while S A 8 R r; _ An """'""iale p-r-.or ,......,11t. -""· 10. '"' 1 .. e11. c1111 .... 1, ,ltc:• ot aid 11ec:e1,.1 11u ~''"
led t Id lb I 0 led Ind --' II r ..-...... '" "" .01t0 ..,..._, '"" ,..,..., c.n1w1111 opera ou s e c oontro In October 1969 with the 1tated pera e.,.. ... en Y are o was pald additional com· TN• !l;W-•• <91111!.IC'" w ... 1~ ""!OfKt kl9f\1U'k•"-' H•-· ,.., • .,,~
of the unlverslly and purpose of bridging the gap q u e • t ~.o nabte propriety," petJ£aUon beyond the level 1111V1011.c.:1t.w w. kMftlll'nMf0t• ~~fH 1~~~,:~::0::1tj~~m P."Q~~::t!:1e mpro•p~cc:°y' .• , o! b~~wlne:;! _:hmme ~~al'~es'm, ic oind Thon1as Said. aultho~ed by thche '1''"A rollr ., T~,~··~..,;;;"c!i.':'w "'!"~ ~~rs'eNL£";~NTAAT1tv ~c~.:C:.. oA':.~ "" ,._ """ ..., ~ "A QUES110N exlsl.S as to un verai\)' resear n pr , 1m COSTA MEsA M1GH KMOOL. legislative report charges. ...... led · .. ~··•· SAD"" j~· 'I and J 1971 1 """• fll11<• Pt•"' ••• 011 1'!11. 1111 ,.._. '"e group opera 1n-.,.,,..u ... r .. , ru:. pro 11........ 1• ay une o serve l"'llblli1>ec1 °''"" cout D•lt-, Piiot, 114 A-. co.i. ,...,, c..wtor<111•
The report, lnued Tuesday dependent ot the university are withi n the educational as coordinator of a SABRE Oc.•OI* ~. "· "-"· 1•u »fj.13 NOT•CE tS HEReav GIYl!N t1111 by the Joint Legislative Audit f I I 11 •··lo f lb I I · t 1111 •~• """'* k llOOI D1J1rk t tt rom its ncept on u n t ffii-» n o e stale un vers ty proJee . PUBIJ.C NOTICE °''• c-iy. c11uCll"nr1 • .ci•n• DY
Comrluttee, sald the group, September l.912 when 1 I and colleges," Thomas added. -The reason why time off :_;',1n.'~~~~i.r;~ ,~0!:'"~!:SsT:i~;~
the Society for the Advance· became part of the California He said examples of such from teaching duties w811, "°'''' !.!f·',~•••ro•• o1<111 •tc•I•• "" 10. llYI "°' .. ,., """" ment ot Research and Edu· Stat u I ty t Lo g ac1ivltle1 were . 1 . .1 r cul '" 1"' "»" .i11• 11fl\4I, -1ec1 "'* ,.,. e n vers1 a n : given o uruvers1 y & ty 1u•111:10• cov1tT OP THI ,,.. •w••d 01 • C011lr•C1 ter tM .oo.... cation (SABRE}, JS compo3ed Beach Foundation, Thomes .,.... d f th School ben ( ( ff ITATI Of' CA.Llf'GaJUA •01t ollct ol faculty members of the -1ue ean o e mem o ac as o 1cera ™'COUNTY°" 01tA11f1 1>1"810• '.ii•n " tffllvM In ,119 ~
Wltverslty'• •~• ol Busi said. of Business Administratlon of SABRE Is not adequaltly ,11,,.. 11 s~A~o'&:'" MONACO 1c1 .... 1111ec1 "'-• •I'd 111111 a. ...,.. ~!\NI • Such operation, Thomas ad· engaged in private consulting disclosed, although required "'D .• 1t11 li'JIOw n 01 s. • MONACO·, •,;:..,"',111~' ... ''~ • ..!1111111 '' The 1._. ness AdrnirustraUon. r • 1 In b d' -· "~ ,..._, ded, was in violation o the serv ces us g university 1ta· y a 1,rective from the' HOT~i 15 Hl!'1tEav GIVEN 10 i11e i:~:: .. ;:::11111 ~ ::=1 '~'"
ASSEMBLYMAN Vincent state Education Code relating lionery to c on d u c t tor· chancellor s of lice. ,r.o;iuor• "' ,,,. '"'"' n•med 4ote11 ... 1 e1e11 111, _, confWm .;.,. M -----------------------------------------'--'--'------'--'--'----'---'----"----::_ ________ :.:_c__ ______________ lt"ll 1H Pl•-111-.11111 d 1lrn1 191intl rts-llw ~ tlll '°"""'1 d0c;ufl'l9"JL
thll 111111 dK..,.,,I 1r1 ffillti'itd to fllt EiC>! bid .... u ... 1°'*'"""'1M "'
ltltm. wllt! "" n1e1s11tr YOU<:ller,, ln tr. '"" ffClll'ltv •lf'l•r., to lfl The t Ol'llr1<t
BUY 1st KEY
-AT REG. PRICE
GET I 2nd C
KEY FOR
BltAll •• , ..... 1141
COLOft • • .. . • llf.
7·PC. ALUMINUM
COOKWARE SET
577
SALE 11T
wl .. 1r Telllfll trr flM
1, 2 qt. c:ov•r•d
11uc:1 p1n&, c:ov1r1d
Dutch o"n In I VO·
c:1do Of popp)'.
MAYllUINr
ULTIUASH'
MA.ICAllA
57'
WATltnOOf l.AJH.
au!LO!I. COLO~
3" FOLIAGE
PLANTS
SALE
2 ro1$I
A ti1althr 1110ftm1nt
ot !Nth pl1nt1 IOf
tiom1.
"
ASSISTANT
'MANAGERS'·
SAL£ ••~ ........ .
• FUN.SIZE CANDY IARS
Miiky Way•, Snickers•, M&M'S•, mo re!
• 115 ASSOllTED LOLLIPOPS
Dflllcloua llaYors lor e11t
•TOOTSIE ROLLl POPI
Filled with chewy T ootsie Roll".
V"..:.--~s35 OFF
ANY .POOL 'TABLE
OVER $200
In Out Sporting Cioods Dtp1rtmtnl
20% OFF ALL
MULTIPLE WIDTH
DRAPERIES
LA,.GE SELECTION OF STYLES ANO COLOFIS
7' CHRISTMAS TREE
16!~ SALE
,l,rtiflcl1l l lu1 Spruce or scotch Pint. J'h"
netdles. fl•me ret•tdanl bt1nt het.
GRANTS ANTHREEZE
WITH RUST INHIBITOR
SAL£ 136
1 GAL
P1otect1 ''" 'rovt\d,
Won't 101 111, boll
1w11!
Y4' INSULATED
UTILITY DRILL
SAll
, ..
U L lltt1d. 2 S 1mp1,
2000 RPM. OrHlt,
po tl 1t111, '!'"~'· mo1•I
"
:·.,
NO
TH•U
OCT. 27 ... ::::
"
WINDSHIELD
WASHER PRE·MIX
SAlE
57~ ...
Walhea. c:llana wlfld.
ol'll1Ld. Praventa wlrt-
t1r frtl ZI
DOOR MIRROR
SALE 2'7 ..
Full 1exse~. Hano
or mounl on wilt
M door. Hird·
woOd lr1mel
.. ·
"·
•
MOST ITtMS AVAll.ABl[ AT MOST GRANT CfTY STORES
the more for your moneysworth store DO YOU KNOW GRANT OTT HAS:
• Sporting Good1
ANAHEIM HU~!_~TON IUCH EAST FULLERTON SAN CLEMENT£ U.C•a ... et ..... Cell... .,.., .. ...._. T.,._l.._ahll.et......_. IM ..... hry.•tC..IM .. l•~h
MOST mMI All Al.SO AVAtlAlll AT
SANTA ANA, 201 I. 4th St. HUNTINGTON llACM,, 1•01 Moln St. GARDIN GIOVI. 1111• Yall•y Vl•w
'
, i oys and Games
•Crewel , Yarns
~ti DI tlll t lert DI 11>1 1bo,._ ...i111H do(_,. ~ 1W ftilo fltl ol JN'~
coul'I, « II "''""! lllem, wHll '"" 1uoc:on1r..:tC11"., ,...;•H lry "9W'Cll«I. ID lh1 und1rtlQl\ld Mr. Ji m.! M. H1ltl1J'ld. Dlrtdlr,
In (I ll ol JAMES L RVllEL. JR,., ~cl>OOI F1d Jlrt.. Mlk'llt'*"f ttlO Qioltl• Allornay 11 L1w, l4l2 VII Oiiorto, t1ont. Yll'IU mt11 wllll 11\0M WMWOI
Nll'WJICl'I ''"""· c:.illOl'nl•, '2660, wllkn onJe•tti.<f In -lf19 1111 i.11• II tlll 11 1 ... pl«e of IMlllr.s1 ol lhl uMeri)anecl khool F1<IUllll C*IC .. ~ 9t nJ In 1n m11t•rt Ptrll!"I"' to ,,,. t lll!D e11<11 ,,,..,, Coll• MloM, 11 10.ta
a# Mid dKedltfll, wltl!ln ·-""°"11!1 A.M,. OI\ TIM.ndlv, Octlll« U. 1t11.
1n1r tlw llrot PVDllc:1lion II !1'111 11?1!c:t TM Dl$T•ICT ,._. 1tlt rltN
Dafld Ck-1 .. 1'7l. to ,..lett •nv Cl!' 111 bid• oir 10 w11 ....
l1I MAlt lE E. MONACO 1nv lrr~llt1 Cl!' htflf',,,.llllM hi
IEIKUl•I• ot "" WUI ol lllY ~Id• Cl!' In lhl b/Oll]llf
1111 1tovvl "'""" ODcld41nl TM OllTlt lCT 1>1• tltttfmlllld 1t11
JAMii L 11uaa1... ,It. ;iMer•I IM'CYll•llflf •••• "' ,... dler" Allwlll'I' It LIW Wltfl In tl'll loc1tlty 111 wtlltfl lhl
Mn Vlt °"""" -11: It i. M """"""" f9r Mtto
N_,.,. '-"' CA tM41 cr1f'I or tyM of --"*" .,....,. 10 T•lllllli 1n•1 •rs.nn exK.ull ttM cot11tttf TMH> "''" •~ A.._. .., aNCWlrilf OI\ fl1• ., 11S1 ""'•nil• A-. CO.II
,Vblltlled °'"'" (Oll l Dilly flllol Men CocilH m1Y Ill oblllntd Oii 1'9qlllll.
Oc:tObtr t._ 31 •1111 Nov•m~r 7, I~. A coi:iv ol 11•11• rltn ""'" bl '°"lid 1tn .32lZ 7l I I ,,,. loto .....
TM f«190•"'0I M;t..dul• of ptr dl1111 PUBIJC NOTICE Wlilff h bl11d UPDf' • -kl"I t11v --------------I°' 1rgn1 Ill l>Oun T~• ••II ror l\OllG1y tnd owrtl"" w,,..... 111111 Of If i.nt
!IMI Ind -II fl'ICTIT IOUS aUStNllS tt thlll bl m1M1lorv upon 11M CON·
NAMI STATl!Ml!NT TRACTOR to wnom '"' i;ontrKI .. Thi 1o1i-1111 ptrlDll 11 dol11g tiuslllt» IWlrded. ,,,., 1,1pon • 11rv MllKontrlC111f'
11, u'lder "Im, lo PIY l>OI le•1 tt..n IP!<! ORANGE FREEWAY ~S.OC !ATES, 1.1ld IPOClflP:G r1lfl to 111 workmlfl
1"'2 C1mr110 Clpl1tr1no, L1gun1 employld bY 1111m In ttM ••K~tlOfl Nkluet, Ctlltornl• tun ol 11\to cotrtrKf
$ Y. HUN1kDt, Jr. (Genet•I P1rtnDt) No bl-r m1y wlthdr1111 111• bid for
J)m SMw1rd Isle, L1gu<>1 Nlg\llt, 1 period of '°"" !Iv• ('5) d1y1 1fl1r
C•lllC11"nl1 tun 1119 flte H1 IOI: -°""''"" Ill bldi.. TM• bu$1MM II cOIMluc:tfll by I ~mllld A Pl•"'*'! llOnd ..... • P1rflf'll\lnc1
119rtn1r1111-. bllnd Wiit be rll<ll'lrld ,,.1or to ••ecu!IOll
OltANOI! flllEEWAY 11 lhf t_,ICI Thi .... ~ bonll
A!SOCIATl5 111111 DI In tl'll forf!I Ht """' Ill 1 C1llfoml1 11 ... 11111 P6rtnit1to.l11 tlll <Dlllrad llocwnlt'ltL 9y: S. V. HIMHklf, Jt , Gowmillll flotrtl G4nlr1I f11rtner fly Doral.., H.,,,.., fllslllr
Thll 1111-1' Wft nltd ..it" ' ll>I f'utCMtlng AOtfll
C1>11nty C1"11 of Ofl "O' C-IY on fluD!llMd 1n Or'l"9" CNlt D11ly ,,111,
0c.1-,,, nn.. oetot.tt 11, tA, itn S174-n ··-Publl1M<I Or1ng1 COlll Dilly Pllot[~~-~----------~otltr ,,, "ll 1nd Novtm-~::. PUBUC NOTICE
PUBLIC NOTICE NOTICI CW T•VITl•'I IALI NL Tl l t'1
9·Dl'l6 Oft Frldlv, NO\llft'I-f, 1f 7J 11 11.00
NOTICI! TO c•IOITOll o'tlOC:k AM 11 "" SOIJlll flo'Ol'll 1ntr1nc1
IU,•1t•C• COUJIT c• TNE lo thl Or1nge '°"""' Md CCl\lfff!OllW, STAT• Ofl CALlfl'OJINIA ,.(I. In "'' CITY of $1nt1 A .... Siii• ol
TNI cou•'"• , .. ,, •• o•ANOl C1lllornl1 CA,l"TAL ALLIANCE COJI·
I ' "' PORAT10N, 11 tru1IM Unch<' tlll DMd Esllll of RAY EDWARDS Oect1sed of Trust t xKWlld DV MICllUne L ,ll1l•r NOTICE 15 ~EllEllY GIVEN to rnt rec.oroed AP!"ll s. 1m In lloolc 1006I
cr-.!ltors ol !Ill IDDYI n•med 61Ctdftnl PIOI !11 °' otfltlll lllKoml• In tr.. 11111 111 ~"""' lllv!ntr cl1lm1 l~h\st o<' o< , .... It -o-o< O•o•,. c---ll'le 11ld t11<td1nl 1r1 r1qulrlll to m1 .. ct '"" 1t... ... ..... ... ,
tlllm, w11n -n«•n•ry ~°"'""'i. In Cllllornl•, •M by ... .., of dtMllll
1111 oflll l ot !Ill c1•rk of !he i llclvt In "" Pf.Vfl)l'nl Cl!' ptriormlnCI of oell91· !lllld court or to ~,...,, lllem wltn l!Olll 1..:urod IMrtbV 1ndudlntr The brot."
ttn • "' ' Cl!' def1ull, notlC• l)f wl!lc" •11 roc«Hd 1111 MC1111ry vouclllro to lhe ur>-Mn 30, ntl In look 10122 Plff c.
der119Md 11 tl>I 01!1c1 ot 1'>lr ''"'''"""" ol Mltl Olflcl•t flecordL '#Ill NH II AltMSTRONG, llllOWN ANO S~ERMAH, Pllblk; 1U(!I011 tor ctsll, without w1rr .... ty
Allort'll'fl 11 L1w. toll 5oulll 01 '' 51,....1, 11 to llt1• Jl!)IHU!on or lMumbr1nc1s.
Sul!• ltoO, L06 A1>9tlu, <;•Ufor1111 tCIQ.1 (, lhll '""'~ c-ev..i 10 Mild Tflrl.IM ""'"II lt 1~• pl1c• DI biullnn• ot 1111 trw Mkl °'~ DI Tnnt 111 ,,.°"'1Y uncle"'lg11ed 1n Ill mol!Dtl Pl•l•llilng tllullo In tlll cllv of N-1 ~
to 1111 ttlttt DI lf(d d1eeden1, w11n1n c " of Or•noe Stlll ol c11111rn11, f1>11r mDlll!\S 1!t1r thll tint l••.obllltllon 11::;,IOld 11. '
11 tnla nolk• I.DI 1 In l \oct O II TrK1 Mo 0.1 .. Ochlblr u. ltn . HOPE D MACAllTt!,E'I' 12lt, 01 Plf ~ tK.ordld In 1IOlli. .• ~ • ,..,.. " .... 11 ., Mlleelt-
l!•l<Vlfhl ... -WIU or ""'"" •DCOl'ft or °''""' COllMV
-'"""' .......... d«-n! • ' -· ... A•M$T•ONe. altOWM AtllD SHl!JIMAN Clllforll •• '''° "-.. --ll , Alt«'Mfl i t L.I• Rold, NtwJ)Ofl Btldl,. C1tlfornl1 '°' ..... OI N lll'ffl ,.. IM lllll'POSI or HYlflf otlll91tion1
lllltt 1.. JICUf'l<I "' tl kl DHtl of Tn11I, IMludl,,q ttes, cN roes. Ofl<I lllll*lffl Of -L• A""'", C•llflf'l>ll ,.... Truslff, 5urm ·--..,,., .. 1111 l«ms A"'"""' Nr1 ••ocllfrtir theriraf, lnllrut "*'°"· 1nd 114,JH 1f Pulllllhtd Orll'lll COHt 0.lly fl llot, I" vnP1ld prlnclptl o1 1111 l!D'I• ncured
Oc.1-2•. JI. Md NO'f'lf't\bllr '· u . ffrfbv Wllh lnll'r'fll ""'"" '' ,,..
"'' 2223-n ti~ II I~ per •IV>llM.
PUBLIC N<lrICE Dile« October 10, lf1l
CAP ITAL ALLIANCE:
COAPOltATION ev c11r1 s. T11t1
NOTICB OP IAL• 0, Jll!AL 5Kr11lry
l'•CWl ltfY AT f'ltlYATI! $Al.a (Corpe..111 $111!
• N .. A-llMf IPI 17'M
In S~llltlor Court of ""' Sl•I• .. flllbll~~ NIWPOl'I H1rllOI' NIWI •r•H
C1llfornt1, for flll Countv of Or'll>Ot eornbllled wltll O•l!Y f'ljot, Ntwpot'I In !hf Miller ol 1111 E•lllt Of JULIA tffcll, C1lllornl1 Octllbt'r 17, ,~. 31.
FRA"ICES LEONAAO, Otc:tllld lf13 31W..n Nolle• It lll'r'eDY glv1n IMI 1111 un-c1er1!gntd will H U 11 P•lv•le 1.1!e,
lo lh• l!lgh11t Ind but bldlllr. IUb]ll<I PUBLIC NOTICE
to contlrm111on or ••la SU'Pl'r!OI" CDV<I, -·-------·------on or •l11r rr.. 2nd d•V of N~v , un ,
•t !ht offit• of WASSON A. OLSEN, ,ICTITlCUS aUllNlll
NAME ITATaMllNT
lollowlnv por1011 11 doing
2l:lh Cretithlw lloultv1rd, Torrtnct.
C1!110rnl1 !'05Clt, County of LO'I A•lff. Tll1
Stott of C•lllor,.11, •II '"' rl,.t.1. 111\t Ind I I fntortll Ill&! lhll tstllt .. n ld dKt•lld Ol..0 WORLD AltT. no N ... porf
h•t •tctulre<I by op.,..1llo<l ot law or C<tnl..-0.-lvtt, Svl!1 No. -2, N.wport
otl>lrwln , ofht r !!\In or In l<ldlllon INlh C1llf tJ'60
ID t~at II 11ld GICfl!.ld, 11 lllll lllT't Henrv Vor~no. 501 I! Octtn ,.,onf,
of de1th, on 1nd 10 oll lllt ttl'llln lllbOI, C•lll. f'l6'1
oro.,.riw 111u11..:1 In lllt c nv 01 Hu" Thh ""''"'"' 11 c-IK!td DY •n llnvton I H cll. (aufl!Y of Or1ng1. 51111 lnd1"'1Gu1I
of C1tlto1n11, p1,1k ul1rty cle•crle>tel •• Ht,.,.., VOl"Q-
follow., to-wit : Tl'lil sllltmt nl w11 Hiid ~ '1111
Pl<RCEL I Lot U6, of Tr1d 5:!06 Coun1v Cl11t of Or1ng1 Covn1y on
•• ~· rn~p roeord.-d In Book n i. Oct-• 23. lfn
P•QU .. 19 •M loll &f M!se1U!MOU• -... "'11
MIPS. rttorGs 01 Or1ng1 Cc.univ, Publl•l>t<I Or1ng1 COISI' Dilly Plrot. C1lllorn!f Oclobtr 1'-Jl, i nd Novtmbw 1, U,
P ... RCE.L .2 An unolv•de<I 1/'61nG Im ltll-IJ
ln1e1111 11 1 t1n1n1 In common In PUBLIC NOTICE
Lois A. fl. <.. O. E, I'. (;, H.'--------------J, K 111d L of Tfl (! 57C4 11 p.err
m1p r1eorG9d In fl°'* l•J. PIQtS 1Lf'·111
d , .., lr>d 5D or Ml1c,111n1ous M•P•. IUf'trJllO• cou•T Ofl' TNI
•ecordl of Or1ngt Cc.unty. C1ll!ornl1. STATI! o• CALlfl'O•NIA •01t
m1W1 commonly ~nown 11 THI! COUNTY Ofl O•ANel I Hl1 M11g11l L1n1, Hunrlntton NI A·'""
Auel!, C•lllDr"I' NOTICI Ofl' HlfAltlNO Ofl PITITION Tl'l'ml of 1•1• c11n ln l1wful 11\0l'lt V l'O• PltC•ATI! o• WILi. AND •01t al lnt Unllld $t11t1 on tonfl rm11!ori (.l!TTIEll TlSTAMllNTAltY
of 1111, or Pll'I c1sn 1nd b&t111c1 Elllte l)f EVA KIRSTEN, Ooc111M1,
•vlcltnctd bv ne11 IO(Ufl d t>v M~l919e NOTICE rs HERE9'1' GIVEN '"''
or Trull Died on the P•Ooe<'IY so SANDRI< L OANLEY ~II fllld f\fr.-ln
1olG Ttn Plfct11I ol •mount bid ID 0 !191111on FOii PROllATE OF Will
t>e Clt 11C11lltd wllh bid A"'D FOi ISSUANCE OF LITTEii$ 81d1 Cl!' 0Utr1 IO bl! 1n wrlhng •nd TESTAMENTARY TO TH E PETl
will tie rttel"" 11 the 1lore1ld Dl!lc' TtONEA rtftfffl<I lo ""'Ith 11 mlcl•
II •nv time 1t lltr tllt lin t PUbllc1tlori l<:>r 1urt'>fr ao•l•cUtl rl -11111 lh•
tioreof Ind bltor1 d1le of ••It l•mt tnct pt1e1 &f hNrlng 1"1 11mt 01ttd 11111 lrd tin o/ Ocl°"'r 1•1l _.. t A• CHAJILEI E LEONAllO h11 Won set for Now. 6, h ,.., 1t . ...., · 1 m., In lhl <OU•-of ~rtmtnl E11<utor of lllt Elll tO No. ) OI MIG c;.ourt, 1! 100 Civic
WAISO:: a."~'t~~'"'· Ctnt•f Dr'lve Wnl. 111 1111 Cily of
aw· Jllkrt y w-Stntt Ane. C1IUornl1.
1ui1 c....,,..;. .,.,. O•IH Oc t u . lt1l. T'"'""'' C•lll tMIJ WILL1.AM E. ST JOHN, • • Caufllv Cl..._ Alllnltl'll) fw li:llC•lli' SHAf'LlllJH N lllMn
110-0C ,,.. CO'"'"" Or No M4
Publl1MG Olln(lt COllf Dlllv Piiot, NOW"" •·oc~· Clllf " ...
Oc.•ober "· 1A. lO. 1911 lUt-n Tel (1141 SJl.l;M •
PUBLIC Non cE Attor"9¥ flf' PD!lfilMr
Publlsl>td Or•ntrt Coast Dilly Pllof, [----.-,-"-,-T-,D-,-.-.-,-.-•• -.-.-.----~loblff lL It. 21. 1111 31':.7!
NAMI! ITAT•••NT PUBLIC NOTICE
laflawlng per1on b Golt19 bllllntH[--------------...
50 UTWC0,..5T AUTO 5.UP,l 'I' '" l"ICTITIOUS •UllM•ss
We1! l 10er Slrttl, Cost• Mt11, NAM• ITATllM•NT
C•lllo•nl1 fl6H l lle follOWlllll PlfMlnl 1r1 doln1
011011111 P1r!1 SupPIY Co , IJJJA W•tl busln~ss IJ M1~I• S!rttl, An.r1t1m, Cl!llor"l• INCLINEO MATU lt.AU.'I', fff W 1111'1
Thh bu1ln111 11 conduc:lld DY o COi' S!, &1"9 N, Co•ll M111, (II t1~11
par1tlon Ro.em•rv Ann l!v1ni.. 14'11 Cou"'
OlllCHNAL f'AltTS Slrfl'f'LY GO. """'ood. lrvlne, C1I.
Leon Kii!, V!(I ,l~IGt~t 5~• Ol110l'I, 11611 CountrywOOd, Irvin•,
T~ll S!l•tmfll! W&I llltd '""" ,,,. Coun· ,,,
'" Cle•• of Or1ng1 Coi'.llttv on O<.toblr t , T1111 l~1lntn !• Condutltd bv • llml!MI 1tn "''"""'!P ,,.,,. lt-f!llry t!°VMll
KATL GJIANOfl & flAl.AltL A""'-Tn11 tl1111'11tnl w11 filed w!ln l~• Coun
A P,..._.i-1 c.,,...,11111 IY Ci.rt. ol °''"" County Of! Qc;t-t f lM W!llllf" ar'tlll, • Suitt Ht 1t1'
••w•llv HlllL C•Mltrfll• Miii ,.,.,,,
Puflltllltd Of111111 COllll Dtfly PllOO, P\lblltllld 0rlt'l91 CN 1I Dilly flllo!,
OclotMlr 10. 17, lt , JI, lt7l Jl0!·7l Otloblr 10 11 M, '1, 1'7l JOl).Jl
\VANTED--
DIAMONDS • GEM.4!TONES
J1w1l1 bv jo11,li is 111rc:ltint fo r ili1fl'lelld1 '""
q•mllo,.•1 f1om ptiw1t1 l11d1v1d u1ls •nd 11t1t11
C 1r1ful •~•m1n1ti111 111ti 1wtlw1 !10,11 liy o ur Dl'P•rh .
Hi,ht1I pr!(DI p1id , C oll s.ro.~o·• • ~ 1 ~11y,
S1f u•d1y 10·•· Sund•y c:o11d, 11k for Jril ,)11111i1
Foils O• M1. Jo11plt.
iewels by ioseph
'"" c... ..... • JJJJ Mitel. ewe ....,. • '"'""''
DAllY PILOT
Students Choke You Up
Corona Del Mar Seniors Make Unlikely Project
By L PEftl\ WlllG
.... Ditty ........
Wh«l ""' IHch a hl1h llchooi .,.._
mtltled "Octult tn Uteraiurt" and
..,lgn dul prnjecu that are duo m
Halloween, you ou&}tt to tJpect the
wont.
Corona del Mar Hip School Englllh
teacher Mn. Gerry Brubaker had a
student bulld an early Amertcan prisoner
stocks for a project. a f'Ol.IPlt of yean
back, .. Ibo -111)'1blng .... llC*lbl•.
BUT SHE REALLY didn't plan "'
the 111.-nl-that ....... Mike
Cooley and 1ohn Crtt.eo dellverod to
hetd-Tueeday.
'G.Uews ,. • .,., ta ge.
........ .. • .,.,..., " ... 9""
wltehes slnee 189.2.'
"I knew that waa Mike's project, but
l didn't U1ink It would be l~ .. sile,"
Mn. Bnlblker exclaimed.
Coolay Aid he and Crtteo -the galiOWll "JUI! .. oomethlnc to do.
Mystical
Studies
Attacked
SEABROOK, NJ!. (UPI) -
Mrs. B11nche Bragg has begun
a battle against a local high
achoo! CO:Une on mysticism.
She says It could lead to devil
worship.
'l1le SS-year-old mother has
asked the ochool hoerd to drop
the elective course l n
mystic i s m and th e
supernatural being taught at
the WlMacunnet Reg Ion a I
High School in Hamploo.
SHE HAS FILED a petition
with -ta s.ignatures to "register
a complaint against th e
course." The board agreed to
review the coorae.
The elective lltBature class
covers telepathy, witchcratt
and reincarnation, a m on g
other topics. The class outline
also calls for students to bold
seances, Mrs. Bragg said. Drtam interpretation and ex-
trasensory perception are part
oC \he curriculwn. Students
are asked to relate their ei:-
p er le n c ea with the
supernatural during t b e
coone.
Books Returned
A MIXTURE OF Eastern
tbou&bt and Western
tedmology, the Church ol
Scientology began with about
200 members and now claimll
more than five millio n
adhert.Dts, and 250 churches
and missions around the
world.
the E~eten, battery-powered
devkes resemhllng Ile dtlec>
tort, were misbra nded
medical devices promoted u
a cure for various l1Jnes5e1.
'Ib.e return ol lhe materials Co11tr•ctin9
was largely symbolic, ac-llco11••
CIVIL WA
0L0 OUJot
MANNING'S
CoUJ!CTORS
SJiOP 'l&t
CHAIN
FENCE
cording to the Rev. Duke 21110
Soider, preoideat o1 t11e 1oon<1-NK FABRIC ing church here where tbe SAVE ON CHAIN U
movement began in 1955. The P~OT1c1• FAMILY. HOME AND pns
:1uo ... ~bi:t.~.d1!~hu~ 50°/o OFF* l~~~~E~H.~NWARDS
meters were "left on for 10 ClloOM ¥.lrtMs """'" ,.,.. .,.11tios tt "'""'· ...,,_,,,.1111011•11C• .. 1v111h• vo•n. and· that rul.ns them." ..-,,_ vlllyl-cNMll t1llfk. Win ldrlc ra 11t1.-i11 .. 11111111• 1w .. ,,,
~-· ,,.i.cu ....
'Ib.e books and d~Vlct's were ••--. ,..., ..,,.._ fttthltl m ...,.. ..... .,. °"" Ill' ..
stored in a warehouse. ,...._ t.w ,,..... c.a tw frH ......... ...,I "She already had the ltoCb In bet .-.. ... -·ht tlU woWd go aJon& well with It," he aald.
W1DLE SHE KEEPS the ltoCb In
the claaroom, Mrs. Brubaker Aid the
gallows are going to have to Co after
a few days.
WOOD AND WIOUGHT r•oH AL.$0 AYAILAIU.
HOWARD p AGE, Wln-1 __ THE'._'.'.'.:._:FD_'.'.'.'.A_con:'.'.'.'.l~end:'.:ed'..._'.lh'.'.'.a'.'..t '=================== nacwmet School Board
member, was assigned to vi!lt
the mystictam class and
report to the hoard.
"They haven 't han&ed any witches
since tf9Z, besides, they're just too big,"
she said, without ofrering any hint of
fear that someone mlaht try them out,
as they do l"eglllarly with the stocks.
1tfn:. Brubaker said mogt of the other
project! already turned ln are far more
tame.
Mrs. Bragg a conservative
Baptlst, said she !eared "any
relatioruhlp with the occult
and our youth."
"One student did a study cl the
astrolotfcal alps cl Ii great ponons
and compared them witb tbeir rul
lives," 1be noted.
STUDINTS JOHN CRITES (L) AND MIKE CONLEY WITH GALLOWS
Project for 'Occult fn Literature' Cl111 Surprises TNcher
This Is the third yur M ... Bruhek,..,
a -for 22 years (elfbt of them al Corona del Mar), has !aught the
occult COUZ"H.
SHE SAID 1'r5 popular -and, 1be
lhlnU, valuable.
"The interest in the OCOllt la: strmg
today," she aald, "ibty use lt to aell
cosmetics ln Beverly Hlll8 and I uae
it to sell literature ln Corana del Mar."
· Mn.Brubakersaldthe"'""°"°""
autbcn nopig !rum Nathaniel
Hawthorne to Ray Bradbury and books
like "1be Otvll and Daniel Webster,"
"Rm:emary'a Biiby" and much of
~e.
It rqes from topics such as ex-
true.osory perception to witchcraft,
although it doe.!! not deal with satanism,
Mn. Brubaker strened.
'Sat.anlam is a perversion or the oc-
cult," abe aid, "and I know of no
net pd-.. that dee! with it."
SHE SAID 'I11AT while "Rosemary's
Baby" dealt With satanism to a degree,
"It was more a stcry of man's com-
paction with the devil -selling his
soul fqr power, riches or youth."
While probably the most unusual
English course at Corona de! ~far, Mrs.
Brubaker pointed out that besides Occult
in Ulerature, students are also offered
a popular c:oorse entitled "Nature in
Literature.''
32.4 fit. NEW'°ltT BLVD.
NEWPORT BEACH
642-3766
JJ Yurt lolrM Lo<atlon
e SALES e SERVICE
GRAND OPENING
,
.-----• Grand Opening
1203
IOFF
I That'• righl, 1 big 20% off
all our dellclou1 foods. You
I can't beat Iha! at today· a prk:esl
Free Balloons for lhe kids, too.
Celebrating
Our 2nd
Store
Opening
in
Orance
I OPEN 7 DAYS.
10 :30-10;30.
Friday & Saturday
to 1:00a.m.
~ It's not ·, thesame
old chicken.
Break away from the old hamburger,
pizza, lried chicken routine with
deliciously different Teriyakl flavored
Japanese food. Our menu olfers a wide
va riety to please any member of the famity and
at economical prices, too.
Try our famous char-broiled Teriyaki Chicken,
Tempura Shrimp and Vegetables, Tarlyaki
Burgers, Chick·A·Bobs on a bamboo skewer
and the taste-tempting trimmings.
Have a snack or a complete meal -cooked to
Oriental perfection from authentic Japanese
recipes. A perfect way to add variety to your
weekly menu while keeping your budget In llne .
ORANGE
• • • I N ;
I
I
COSTA
MESA
" N
NOW 2 LOCATIONS TO SERVE YOU
~ICK·aRI
JAPANESE FAST FOOD
1009 N. T111lln Ave., 310 E. 17111 SlrHI,
Oranot 631-23311 Cotta Me11 IM2-0900
Men's goldtone dress watch, mesh band.
Men's day/date automatic, silvertone, expansion band.
Men 's si lvertone calendar, expansion bracel~t.
Ladiesgoldtone petite, adjustable bracelet.
Ladies si lvertone petite, ad justable bracelet.
From oor Fine Jewelry O.p•Jlm1nl.
u •• 0111 J11tl°For-J1welry l•Y-•W•Y plan.
BUENA PARK
OR ANGE """•"'·-SANTA ANA '"' Oplfl ~ 93> '° 9:30 p.111. &inclfy 10 '° 7
Cifv [)I, at Gardin 0rovt M, 3900 So Bl111d • No al So. Coas1 Plal.I
()pan 109 p.m. ~ Sl.n:ltlys 10 '°II Open 10.9 pm. Dilly 5'.indly 10 to f (
I
ll PILOT·AO\'l;ATIS£R
• j
-.-24,lf>l
~
KlllG Sill
CADBURY
Candy Bars
• Milk CUe1lat1 • Haztl Ntt
• F11ll l Nil • !mil Nil
12 oz.
PACKOF2
KLEENEX Boutique
or DELSEY
TOILET TISSUE 2i55c
13 OZ. SIZE
Miss · Breck
HAIR SPRAY
Gelusil
12"x25 FT. ROLL
Reynolds Wrap
ALUMINUM FOIL
4:88c
,
HALLOWEEN!
• , .
Be your favorite
111_.8 To Shop! Peanuts character! l"KK Sizes S-M·L
• SHOPI • LICJ Bullllle G11 • Charlie BrlW•
TOPP'S -"llr. h .. kl1" 93c
••• round bag ot 121 pieces.
"Bazooka" ., TOPl"S 63.
"DOO!KNDBBER" ... Dispenser bag C
of 90 pieces of bubble gum.
1opp•s Bubble Gum l SS
. ~ . etcS . Handy bag of assort2~8 ~1::i • f;~· ASST'D Candies
.. . ~~c"~!1~.~~r1 eo~~a~~"~; 59c
Jube Jets. 1 lll. IA&S 1 •
BRACH'S
Bank of Jots
"Pumpkin Head" ... candy filled
bank.
HACH'S -
Pump~ins _
Mellowcreme pumpkins •• , a
favorite of the kids!
BA& DF 12 11.
Bag of POPS
BRACH'S -Assorted flavors
1tl indi~idually wrapped.
BA& OF 15
Sugar Daddy
NAllSCO -Cilocolale Cov~ed
su1ar D1ddy Jr. 111 1f 11 79c Sugar Daddy Juniors la& tf 37
Sugar Daddy Nuggets Bat If IO II.
Hershey's
CHOCOLATES ggc
~racke~ Almond or Mr. Goodbar.
lllJ If 24 IL
Neutrogena
HYPO·AllERGENI( SOAP
WilHRIAI. SIZE
IWfD CIWI
Hand Crea111
CDNCEllTUTED
77c
2 ... 1.99
MAY~.Ew•E Great Shadow "'j
~REAM EYE SHADOWS I
Wate~proof, blend-f.
able ..• smooths on 79c 1 easily!
I .:;r~ "·
No.-• -·--., -~ ......... ,._ .... New Dawn 2
SHAMPOO-IN HAIR COLOR
1
.
Colof controller elim-1 39 .inates u~wanted red
and brassmess. • \
• -"Snooz-Alarm"
> I *'• . Compact design, easy •. · · · · • to read dial, repeat
: • · . :: ·.alarm. Antique white. 3 66 ·i ... #7371 •
llAnEL -A
golden suntan
and long blonde
hair. lce·blue
swimsDit
1.99
West1n1 P1~. -
Magic dispenser,
bingo cards and
number pieces.
1.39
Wash & Comb Salon Finish Old Spice Old Spice
SHAMPOO FOAM
One S..utiful •r HECK
' way to get Untangles and
Beautilul conditloris wet I I Hair! wnL
.
J u 99c '"· 99c
Pearl Drops ~:~:
A h....., l~uid for 1llt
whilest teetll.
us ... 99c
JOHNSON'S
Dental Floss
For healthy teeth & aums!
• W111• • Una11•
211 '! 1.29
Nl.WP'ORT lli .. C:M-102o lrvlow, w .. tctlfl Plet.1
MUNTINOTOM ll:ACK-A4olomt &. 8roo41""'11 HUNTINGTON lUCl4-$pflliodt i. 6 Ulneet
ll. TORQ-24l11 A;oc:•lleld Road
AEROSOL DUAL ACTION
DEODORANT ANTl-PERSPIUlll
DfOOORAXT
All day
protection
4 ... 59c .... 1.19
Wtdnnd•1 . October 24, 1973 DAILY PllOT J
. ;~~I. Comet
CLEANSER
Roya le
2-PL Y TOWELS
Silence is Golden EXTRA Arrid DRY
COUGH FORMULA ANTl-PERSPIRANT
SPRAYS
Pv~ honey •nd ., Regular or
natural lemon Unscented
I coats your light Powder • .. ,,,~,
lh"'L -· ·--· . . . --··-
3az. 99c --~~-~·
llz. eec ·:;:;:..,:.~
J4 DAILY PILOT Wtdntsctay, Octobrr 24, 1CJ73
L.ltl. Boyd
I
Some Natu1·al
Grudge Battles
Wu nmM! other than the wise Judge Rentoul, who lilted
as the ftve great mistakes men make in lite; I. To measure
the enjoyment ol others by our own. 1 To expect unlfonn·
ity of opinion. 3.. To fail to yield to wllmpottant trifles. 4.
To refuse to make allowance1 for the weaknesses of pec>-
ple. 5. To esUmate the worth of strangers by their looks,
their clothing, their mannerisms.
At the track, llr, you've got just about one chance in
three of winning, if you bet on the
favorite . . . Remember now, an ele-
phant runs a pound of brain to every
1.000 pounds of body ... A musicolo-
gist or note contends there are only
about five good singing voices in every
100 ... The golf cart owes ill success
to the fact that it can't count, l'm told
. . . Observed Jack Herbert: "English
is a fUMy language. A fat chance and
a slim chance are the same thing."
GRUDG~
1be grudge battle, as is widely known, attracts the
bluest boxoffice. I mean a contest in which each com-
petitcr burns with an intense desire not just to win, but
to hurnlllat~ $! opponent . However. the sports promoteni
fail to takii full advantage of this ract. Why not stage a
stadium tug-of-war between selected wives and secretaries?
Or a swimming meet between editors and acWertising man-
qers:? Or a volleyball match between tenants and land-
lordt? Or a pie-throwing contest between long-baired musl·
clanl and Marine Corps officers? Or a hog-calling com-
petiUon between certified public accountants and lederaJ
tax audit.on ?
QUERIES FROM CLIENTS
Q. 0 How many drops in a quart of milk?"
A. Figure 15.360.
Q. "Whal'• the raUo of \\'Omen to men In '\Vho's Who'?"
A. About one to 25.
Q. "L M., what do you think of Howard Cost.II?"
A. Believe I stand \\1th the vast majority on ?.Ir. Cosell,
sir.
'lbose surveytakers \\•ith hidden cameras claim people
smile the most in the South. Next most in the fl.fiddle West.
Not quite so much along the Pacific Coast. AJ'id least of
aJI in the Northeast.
-South-African ,IO!diers now use paradogs. That's right,
attack dogs that parachute out of airplanes. Their handlers
jwnp. too. Understand I.he canine! and the men hit the
ground at about the same Ume. Some pups, what? Cot·
respondent.I report the more jumps those dogs make, the
more lhev seem to like It.
Addre.•s TMU to L. M. Bo"lld . P.O. Bo:t 1875, New.
Beach, lm60. Copyright 1973 L. M. Boyd
Nearly Everyone
Listens to Landers
f'atnll11 Clreu• by Bii Keafte
"Hello? Con I speak to mommy,.,pleose?"
Cooki~g Sc1wol
Held at Theater
Offering more -$2,000
in merchandise prbes and
gifts, the Orange c.oast area
cooking school. opens !ls 22nd
year Thunday In a new loca·
lion -Edwards Newport
Cinema .
The theater offers more
seats than before to local
residents who faced opening
day tum-away or standing-
room-0nly situationa in recent
years.
The school is scheduled to
run for four co n secut iv e
Thursday mornings from 9:30
to 11 :30 o'clock at the theater
in Newport Cen ter (across
from Fashion Island).
AIL SESSIONS are free of
admis..~ion charge and the
general public is invited to
attend.
?.taster of ceremonies for
all sessions is scheduled to
be O. W. (Dick) :Richard,
founder of Richard's Markets
and a well -known llgure in
Orange County social and
community service circles.
The grocer will assist Sandv
Krogh, instructor in gourmet
cooking for Orange C.oast
Everung College, and Carol
Heinz, consumer services con·
sultant for the Southern
California Edison Co., in
presenting the four sessions.
DISHES TO BE featured on
each week's menu actuall y
will be prepared onstage with
running commentary to assist
those in the cooking school
audience in taking notes on
exactly "bow to do it."
Fash.ion Island M.e:rchants
Association will w e l co m e
cooting school "students" to
their area by giving away
$100 In gift certificates each
week.
Other oriz~ will include an
$800 Litton Electronic Oven
donated by Lusk Homes, a
$400 A m a n a Radar-Range
donated by Davis-Brown Ap-
pliances and gifts from other
sponsors.
'l1le cooking school is jointly
sponsored by the Daily Pilot.
Coast C.Ommunity Co I I e g e
District, E'.dwards Cinema, the
Edison company. Davis -
Brown, Richard's ?t!arkets and
Luck Homes. I
•
WARD, & HARRlllGTOll
LUMBER CO.
"We An llot Really loafing!" I •
WHAT'S GOING ON •••
l > i ~·Z·
'i i •
1\---j . f .....
... ~
-~...
-"-t , ........ t .c
' . ~
'
NEW COSTA MESA LOCATION!
MOST OF THE HEAVY THINKING HAS BEEN DONE, AND WE HAVE·STARTED
TO MOVE THE DIRT •••••••••
WE WON'T HAVE TIME TO THINK ABOUT FISHING FOR THE NEXT FEW
MONTHS.
•
PLEASE BEA__li._JilTH us DURING THIS TRANSITION PERIOD. WE WILL DO
OUR DARNDEST TO TAllE-GOOD tY.!-!--0~--¥0U.-·CAlL ANYTIME-. ·Me~-~
on111 •s-YOU WISH. ~-;-:. ~ • • • . - -. ----'-
WE HAYE SET UP PLAl!S TO KEEP YOU POSRD AS TO OUR PROGRESS, SO
LOOK FOR THESE REGULAR COMMUNICATIONS.
ALL OF US AT WARD AND HARRINGTON APPRECIATE YOUR PATIENCL
The Treasury · has ·the swe~test·
Baby
Ruth
Juniors
bag of 30
77e ·
.
treats for ghosts and gob.tins.
All 5¢
Candy
Bars
box of 24
Sophie Mae
Peanut
Brittle
Hershey
Milk Bars
Juniors
bag of 28
• • • II
.Ji
10 oz. box ~~
Smarties
Candy
Wafers
bag of 101
37e~J 59e
Candy
Corn
1 lb. bag
Milk
Duds
Juniors
11 1h oz. bag
Milky Way
Fun Size
Bars
16 oi. bag
·' ..,., __ -::i
~iil!oli,I. ':! .-.;
-'oc, 1:. r;i
:'! -· ~. iJ!r.,~-~-~.'iil:t~'~: Sweetarts '~ ..... 'I=
bag of 103 rir•w1J t:.. -·C"" I I'.'. . 59e fi' ~~ ,., 59e ~~i '·
Oum Oum
Pops
bag of 80
BUENA PARK Beach at Orangethorpe
Opon Dally 9;30 to 9:30 p.m. SundaJ 10 lo 7 0 RANGE City Or.at Garden Grove Blvd.
Optn 10·9 p.m. D••IJ Sunday 10 to 8 SANTA ANA . 3900So.Brlstol-No.ofSo.CoastPJoza
Open 10-9 ~-m. Dilly SUnday 10 to 8
I
\
'
~-
(
• ' .,
f·
ls
so
a
lo
m
In
v •
•
I
• • c
t
c
I ·s
I
n
f
I ~'f'l'IOlll 1'7J, TWOl'llO ~n S'(OMH(•t•
PUNCH'
•
"/csn't k ' · '"" " up my mind what to wear today •....
College Students
Senior Citizens
'ff it the Books'
' By JOYCE L. KENNEDY
DEAit. C:JOYCE: ReUremeot
ii a bOrt. Do YoU tbink ft
couple ~f duffers l'1 and 66
ire oU Ulelr n>ekefl (pardon
the pull) to lhlok of getllftg
the · colltge education-they
couldn't as youngster•? -
R. W., Dallas, Tex.
Happiness Is findinl out
you're not too rocker!boulld
to do whatever you want to
1 do. In (act, there's been • a.
• big \IPS\U"ie in the nu.m~r
_of .,.~~?-Jtar. ~lieges off~ring
the activity Itself and not
a.IWays to achieve some &oat.
COURSE'S AT Edmonds re.
quire no minimum grade point
or fonn.Uized schooling pre're-
quisites, at a student cost of
one dollar per credit, for two
and three hours pet week each
quarter, 'durlrig the daylight
hours. The school tries to offer
a variety of courses in
creative expressi90, vocational
retnining; soclal concerns,
and -use Of leisure time ac-
tivities. airect serv1(:es lo o I d e r
persons.; "K. survey made
earlier this year by the
American Association of com-
munity ind Junior (:olleges
. J!'orexample-;-the--itl•lr..,..~------_______ _,,
( Ca~r C6rner J
shows that more than 100 two-
year co\leges offer a com·
prehensive array of services
to seniors., and another 322
colleges ,e.rVe. older people: iq
some capacity.
terest in a soclal issues clas.s
:promoted related courses per-
taining to politics last year
-senior poWer, youth and
age, and consumer protection.
As an outgrowth, senior power
students recruited about 500
othert for orderly an d
p e a c e f ~ 1 demonstraUoos
before the legislature.
SCULPTING AND DESIGN
classes have generated a large
foll<>wiµg in ·driftwood
scu1pture classes. So m e
driftwood art pieces are on
SOME SENIORS take only exhibit at the state capitol
a course or two others study in Washington, and at the U.S.
!or one· year certificates; embassy in Japan. According
many enroll foc two-year to Dr. ROOert E. Sarvis, ~· associate degrees; a few con. associate dean for special pro-
tinue oo in !our-year· degree: grams at Edmonds, creative t programs at other *1tullops. ;)Vl;l\UJI elJl!r,ts have ~oducec!
; A number of gradUates. ire-' .)~Ve .llSufts in 1';1,,ilca-
f· enter the job marlcet .wl}ile-r , Uc:as.\ One , studen~ r~l!lved
some b e c o m e volWlteera . ._ '200' .inore for his article
Other students study for self• publislied in a w o m a n ' s
satisfaction. magazine than his instnlctor
Edmonds Commun It y teee!ved for. an ea rl I er
College in Lynnwood, Wash., published article.
is an example of a good full-Occupa;tional training for
blown program for grandma legal'·aSslstant~· is yet ~er
and grandpa. Like similar pro-option for Edmonds 0 mature-
grams, Edmonds recognizes ees." Graduates are placed
that older people have four as paid or volunteer legal
main educational needs: (1) workers in law offices, public
to beUer cope with society's agencies, and in Communities.
Influences on their lives, (2)
to make meaningful oon·
tributl<>M to others, (3) to
regain limited infiuence upon
others, •;and (4} for QP-
portunltfes to saUsfy • es:·
pressive needs by engaging
in activities for the sake of
CONCERNiNG volunteers, an
·increasing number of senior
citizens are unsung heroes
and heroines, serving on ool·
lege ~ as department
assistanbi, Ji~ aides, co-~ fl.•sentor activities,
and tutorS.
Community and junior col·
leges are becoming deeply in-
volved in the problems and
A • • • needs of older Americans. At ctiv1t1es any age. ]f tl1e sheepskin fits,
get one ~ frame it. I.et
At OC~ Open ,_!_our_•c_11o_f._~_ki_ ..... __ 1m_._"_w_h_•_·,
To Oldsters
"Special Persons" cards are
being Issued to senior citizens
who would like to become in·
volved In non-curricular
events at Or4lllge C o a s t
COiiege.
The special cards will be
given away !.ree to. any person
over 60 who desires one, Card
holders }YIU have the same
privileges as students with
student body cards.
"They will be able to attend
the Friday and Saturday night
films rree of charge," said
Carol Hilldson, CX:C atudent
body vtce president. "They
will gain free admission to
athletic contests, play~ B.Qd
many special lectures. Tickets
for produ~lon.s · •t. \he Loo . Angeles Mi>J;lc <:enter will also
be available It" f e d li C e d
rates."
KICKOFF FOR the new
program is Nov. 17 at the
OCC homecoming game in
LeBard StadJum. A table wilt
be aet up outside the gate
where senior citizens will be
able to sign up for cards and
attend the game free or
charge.
Senior citizens unable to at-
tend the game may apply for
cards by mail. Letters sho.uld
be addressed to Miss Hindson
in care or the Associated
·Students Office, Orange Coast
College, %701 Fairview Road.
Applicants must I n c 1 u d e
their name. addresS", telephone
nt!!Ilber and age,
genuine
AUSTRALIAN
FIRE OPALS
11,u\I F~e 0pJI f.~r•inr.~ s79
Ofop Style . 4 OpJI\ ~G •.•••••
fire Opal Pen~an! rioe s39 Pe~r ShJJ>e, W>'.l Cotd .•••• , ••
fir!.' 011a1 l f!:' Tok~. Sl J" ~urroondtd by ~ohC Gold.••,
f 1rl'Oo<ll&lmeratd Rrtl~ '189 J <le!'P tolor emer .. l ()flal.,,
f~e Opaj Sohlaffe Ring, sgg
Gold le.we~ ~u11ouno "Op.ii .•.•
tire Ofia1 & Gen Rutl~}
In cHset (!Inner r111c •• • • .. • 1125
rlfP. Opal C~tet toc:•t.lll Sl SO R1ng, 7 tiety opilll. J 4~ ~C ..
• SOS CIUllT PlUI • lAT•l •WlT
IAMIOil:ltltA•O • liUltl• CM<lt
STAftf
. SIAM
?""P~
• IONO 8t .. ("H, •JIJ ••I_,;."°""
• SANt.O A,NA. 101} IJ. M°'"
• l()otf.t.NC£. 2••5J How!'-ot~ l l•rl.
• WMlll!f,. l)fl8 '"'lod•l1>~ 5t,
• lll(W,glf UACH, No 17 'o•"--It!••
• l~fANC:t. 0.1 .t.ooo '"''"•~ $'1"0••
o ()*A,~, !i.e Mon of Oro~
• •tOONOO l l<IC"' •. S""1!1 l <r• c:~~,.,
0 0"1' SOON loo A,"(IOI•• • ~,._...;..,
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I
!
f \ ' l ;
i i ' • t., .• ' ' I
' ' ~
·' ~I "\"
1
811dl •t Orangetnorpe
CJier! Dilly 9 30 to 9 30 p m, &lnd~y 10 10 7
\
\
I
' i .
1
'
·--...._
City Or, II Gardell GtO\lf 81"1:1
Open 10.9 p rn. o.ily 84.n:laYt 10 to 6
... ,,--,.. . . ----... .-cinnU'..r, vca\Nln'" 2 .. , '"'''
SANTA ANA
3900 So. Brtttol • No. of So. Coa11 Pllra
Clpti1 10.~ pm. Daily &.irioly 10 1o I
'""t r n~u ,· I
' \
I • ' 'W! . ~
> > ' .. ~'\.'
'
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16 DAILY PILOT WtdrltSday, Dtlobef 24, lqll
QUEEN OF BOAT SHOWS -The Mer idian-48, shown cruising off Catalina
Island, will be the featured power yacht at both the Southern California Boat
Show and the National Boat Show in New York this fall and winter. The yacht
was designed by Blaine Seeley of Newport Beach.
4 B·foot Meridia11
Mes a T1·awler Sl1ow Queen
Elvstrom-Bich Team Dissolved
Paul ElvstrQm and Baron
Bich have parted company lrt
ttielr ~'idely Pll>Uc!ud effort
lo mount a FreDCh 12-meter
challenge for the America's
Cup, acconling to Sailboat
Week, a tablold newspaper
dedicated lO sailboat racing.
ber bid as challtnger by the top helmsmtn ln small boot sallmaker in his native Den-fiery ' Bkh dlsmJsaed two
A"•t•ati·ans rompeUtlon. He la a four-time mark. hehnsmen and finally toot
.... ' · Olympic gold medal winner The news o( the split over the hehn bhnseH ln hW
Sailboat Week said: "The and has won numeroos world between Bich and Elvstrom bid to become the first French
two strong-willed gentlemen and European championships is not surprising in view of challenger for the tiaUowed
presumably could not agree ln Other classes. He is a the 1970 trials in which the Cup. ~
on the design aM crew -:~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;'
America's Q.ip watchers on
both continents and Australia
buzzed wltb the news last .year
that 8ar<¥I Bich, the French
multi-millionaire ballpoint pen
magnate, had signed on the
"Great Dane" as helmsman
for a new 12-meter he had
designed and ·was building for
bl! second try at t h e
America's Cup. In the 1970
trials France was defeated in
makeup of the new boat, butl
Blch Is gQi,ng ahead with his
chaUenge, most likely with the
help of Louis Novarraz. who
skippered France's last ef-
fort." ~ added that Elvstrom is
rumored to be going ahead
on his own tz.meter program
with mast testing and boUding
programs pro.ceeding.
Elvstrom is considered by
many as one of the world's
VCI's Sailing T eam
Seeking Doug las Cup
UC Irvine will be among UCLA, University of Hawaii,
eight college sailing teams Tulane University, Tufts
compe''"" ln the Douglas Cup College, University of ~ Washington and Miami of Ohio
match racing series out of Univer!!ity.
Long Beach Yacht Club Fri-The Douglas Cup is a match
day, Saturday and Sunday. racing series with teams
It will be the first time drawing for boats. Each crew
UCI has been represented in will sa il the same boat
Douglas Cup competition, the through the three days of rac-
intercOllegiate version of the ing. The boats, loaned by local
famed Congressional OJp. Wllverslty sailing associations,
ARE YOU SERIO US . '
ABOUT LOSIN G WEI GHT?
Lindoro's unique program is o safe and procticol
method for the entire family to Jose weight ond
learn how to maintain proper weight ..• under
the strict supervision of Medical Doctors.
medical
weight
reduction
LINDORA+
MEDICAL CLINICl
NEWPORT BEACH GARDEN GROVE
645-3740 5 34 -20Sl
''"' Poolouoonol "••• l ld9. ,,,f,•11•ftol l ltl9.
Call for information
Mqnday thru Friday 8 A.m. to 6 P.M.
COSTA MESA
Adams at Mesa Verde 557°11t3
NEWPORT IEACH
404 Westminster 645-3740
LONG BEACH PASADENA DRAllCE
4 26:6549 796-2614 538-239,
Kl Prtfoni<onol C•oc>•r fv11on~-" ........ 9,;,~ ILtlj . .......... •ldt·
WOODLAND HILLS SHERMAN OAKS WEST COVINA FULLERTON LA ilABIA
694-1029 347-5647 7 89-7103 962.3438 870-9501
W1un .. ·Vtc•••r G"b•"·Vtn Dy! Mooun S••'• Cell•~• Hill<"''
,,,. ..... o1 l ldg P•oftn•onol 110,. lldg. MtdO:ol 11 I · Mttlitollldt.
COSTA MESA SANTA MONICA POMONA CERRITOS RIVERSIDE
557-189) 828-4513 623-1655 924-5748 787-8250
M..., Vo•d• ,,,,,oi,,, •--v•H•r , ... ~ .. Mtdicol
....i ........ 111" "'" ......... "'""' .. ''"'" ,,.i ....... , ..... Squa•• The UCI team will be skip-will be equalized by the race
pered by 1'-fark Hughes with oonunittee from LBYC.
crewmen Tom Willson, Jeff Sailing will rommenee daily SAN BERNARDINO E. LONG BEACH MISSIOll HILLS
The 48-fool ~feridian
trawler, designed by Blaine
Seeley and built by l\!cridian
Yachts of Costa Mesa. will
• •
New York. Jan. 12·20. has an-
nounced that the 1tferidian·48
will vie with a 48·foot Hatteras
as queen of the show at the
New-York Coliseum.
McDerrr.aid and Dick OJm-at 11 a.m. Spectators should 886 88 597 0 378 miles, according to ~1cCle\lan. . check with LBYC for ac--47 • 365-11 38 nun.gs. he it.11owhe11d los it.1101 Mi11ion
ACOOMPttODATIONS aref:lf· -~Othll_ller~~co~l~leg~es:_..".re~preseni!_'.~":led~-co~mmoda~--ti-ons_1_o_ob5erv ___ e_t__!~~~~~~M=•~';;:;.:11~1=81=,=• =~~===M:•:':'·~·~c~'":"~·~~~="'M~od~•·~··~·~·~·~· ==~~~ fered in 8 choice of four v;ill be Cal State Long Beach, races.
decorator schemes. There are -be-rrqueiii or ine-srso-w· at
t"'O major boating expositions
this fall and winter.
=:;._-
ntE r.tERIDIAN-48 has a
semi-displacement underbody
design that combines the long-
rage economy and comfort o,
traditional trawlers with the
speed and easy handling of
a modern cruiser.
two-private st~terooms-below.j;:============:;----------The master cabin features a
queen·size berth and the
forward statcroon1 can sleep
four in separate bunks.
The ~leridian-48 "'ill first
be on display· at the Southern
California Boat Show at the
Los Angeles Co nvention
Center Nov. 9-18. according
to Gerry McClellnn of f\fcri·
d.ian Yacht Sales. Inc.
The National Boat show in
PUBLIC NOTICE . ,,,.
l'ICTITIOU5 IUSINl!IS
NAMI STATIMICNT
Tll• !Cll-lllQ pl!f\.Oll> arf dOlng
~nes• •-= Wi1AlEfilS (;ARDEN, rl!'O NewPQrl 11~0 .• N-port tlHCh. Calfloml•
1. Edon• M. lllurock. t~ llay1l<1e
or1 .... C11ton• a.I Mar, ca. 91fi,J.
2. Wllll1m E. tlh1rock, 15loll t11y11M
DrLva, c~ de! ~·· (I. '76)S 3 ltk"'"rd Jon" OllO'I. l•U2 H~mdtn
Lane, 11unn....,1on 11'"""'"· c .. 111.
' LI""• L .. Olten. l9U2 Harnden
Un.e, 11vn1Lne1"" 111~11. Cal!!.
lnl• Dt.o\I"••• lo tonckl<led by • 11•...,.•I parfnenMp kll<IWn 11 Oh"" Lnvntrnenl
'"· Ellf>I M, tlk/rOC-.
Th11 ol•l•m•nl w•• lllld wll~ tlM
CDUlllY Cltrk <1' Or•nqa CDUnlY Oii
Oct. u. nn.
DavHI f'. De!lllC'/', lf4.
1'11 l . CMll HW'f'., h•I'-'tM c-• Ml ,,_.,_ c1111. n1u
Ttlt 17141 175-1111
,lltHMY 11 L-1'2A71 PuLllllM<I Or-C<Msl 01!1y Pilol.
October 11, 24, Jl, Ind """'m.,.,. 7, 1tn 11n.n
PUBLIC NOTICE
l'ICTITIDUS IUSIN•s s
NAME SlATlMl!NT
TIM 1011-!"0 panon II doing b\lllMH ••: COLLAR 0'N" CUFI". lD E. 11111
S!rM!, Cootl Mtia. Cat 92627.
W•ll•• B. M•<rloll Jr .. 'nJ l•Y'l"OCICI
Dr!v•, Ntwoort Bt•cll. C1I. tl'60.
Tiiis t>uslne11 Is canc!UCtta by tn In·
a1~10..,.1 Wll1tr B. Mlrt!ol'I Jr.
in;1 tll'f"'""' w11 !Ota wllh 1"" Coun·
,.... Cltrk of 0<1nva Coun!V on 0c1ooer 1.
"" ,.,..,.
"ublliM<:I O•tMt CNS! Dally Piiot,
0c1ot>tr J, 10, 11. 1•. 1t11 l031 ·n
PUBLIC NOTICE
1<1CT!TIOUS 1u11w•ss
NAM• ITATl!MllllT n.. totlowl~ ix>•son !1 00!1\Q !Kn!l!fft
II' J J FOll l(LIFT COMPANY. l6l1
Ou!<ll Avtn.,., An11\elm, C:1lllornl1. moo JoM Fell• 11'>d Judi!~ Jo1e11i.1,..
l<•l1o11r, 2.111 Dutel\ Avt .. Anallt!lm,
C•lllorn11 •~
Tiii\ bu•IMU II COl>OllClld DY t 9fMIDI
partn.e .. n1p
Ju<111n J, 11:.;,..,
lM• s!tl•.-nl Wll "1"' wl!h !Pit (OU"·
Iv Cle<k or O••P'lfle Ccunt~ "" OclO!>lr 1.
1f1l .....
Puol11n"' Oranof Coo1T O•llV Pllct,
Oct-r l, !O. 11, lt. ltll JOlol·7l
The new Meridian design,
fitted with twin I 8 5-
horsepower Perkins diesels,
has a continuous cruising
speed of 12. 7 knots and a
lop speed in excess of 15
knots.
\\'ith a singfe l~hp diesel
and optional fuel tanks the
range is in excess of 4,000
Each stateroom has its own
private, enclosed head, vanity
and stall showe r. The main
sa loon with breakfast bar and
galley, complete with eye-level
oven. offer.s good entertaining
opportunities.
The Y:hee lhouse. w i th
overhead switch panel, con·
sole, is surrounded with a pic-
ture window affording a 360·
degree v i e w for the
helmsman.
One Ton Yachts V ie
For A·dams Trophy
' Six One Ton class yachts
will meet Saturday in Los
Angeles Harbor in a sudden·
death race for the Al Adanis
and Son Olallenge Trophy.
The defender is Cabrillo
Fleet Sets
Final Race
Balboa Po"''er Squadron's
sailneet racing season will
elose out Nov. 4 \11ith the
annual Closing Out Sails race.
The event "'·ill be held as
part of and vdthin the
sq uadron's genera I mem-
bership meeting /\'ov. 3-4 at
Long Beach Yacht Club. There
"''ill also be a predicted log
race in ronnection vdth the
event.
The race \\'ill start al the
entrance to Alamitos Bay al
11 :i.111. and finish off the
Ne1\'l)()rl Harbor Jetty.
Beach Yacht Oub with the
Ranger-37 Wings, co-skippered
by her owners, Rick Taylor
and Randy Smyth. Wln gs plac-
ed second In the One Ton
Championship Regatta at San
Diego earlier this year.
Primary challenger i s
Newport Harbor Yacht Oub
with Gamma. O\\'ned by Gary
Mull and Tom Blackaller and
skippered by Tim 11ogan, lhe
1972 Prln~ of Wales match
racing trophpy.
Secondary challengers are
Rubber Ducky, a Ranger·37
skippered by Don Bovill for
Del Hey Yacht Club; Red
Baron, an lslander-36 ski~
pered by Bill Hargc of Htm·
tington ~larbour Yacht Club:
Hugh Rogers at the helm of
his Y;:inkee-38 Whimsey Tres
for Los Angeles Yacht Club:
San Diego Yacht Club is hav·
ing a sailof( between Chuck
Hope's Ranger-37 Cr ls is ;
Gordon Frost's Woodman, and
Ed Pf!rry's Ambush, both
Yankee-38s to determine their
bur gee bearer.
We'll
Print
Your
Tickets
FREE!
Ooe1 your club or Ofg•niz•tion N II ticket• fOf fund raising
actl•ltles 7 Stf•W Hat Pizza P•I•~• will pint your tlck•ts ff"H.
Each tlck•t wlll ~·•• S 1 OFF Coupon on tM bKk. The
coupOf'IS a,. good 11 all p1rtlcip•tlng Sir aw Hit Storits.
Fh'ld out ii your Ofg1ni1ation quallfl••· Wril1:
32095 Camino Capistrano
San Juan Capistr•no
M ission VUl•g~ ShOpping Centtt
496-00S1 .
Sears
Where Thrift Is Always In Style located On The Lower level
KNIT
Sportswear
S-t-r-e-t-c-h-e-s
For Comfort
P ants
Tops
Our pull-on pants are made of
'vasl1abl e., wrinkle resistant
polyester-and-cotton double
knit. In diagonal pat terns~
chevrons, stripes. Turtleneck
and tailored collar style tops of
ribbed nylon knit come in top
Fall colors. Pants ; Misses' sizes
Tops; S, M., L.
U11e Sear.
Revolving
Charf(e
Price• Effective throng-h
Saturday, Oc1ober 27
Sears
Sf l, A
Costa Mesa
3.333 Bri1tol St.
Phone 540-3333
Buena Park
81ii() l..1t l1aln1a Ave.
Phone 828-4400
'.
Hand Washable Quilt Robes·;
.~
Quilted robes with poJyester 4
fill, acetate tricot face and 5 8 ,
bac k. Side 11e•m or' patch '
pocket Lace and embroidery •
lrim. Jn pink or blue. Sizes S, ~:
M,L t
• .
I . , • '. ' • •
• . • <i • . . l . • • • • . -!
• • •
~
• • • • • • • .
Ul tra-Feminine i • Nylon Trico t Peignoir Sets :
Co•ll and marcJaln, gowns
with nyloq Jace and/or em·
broldered trim. In • 't'lriety
of all'lirl 1tyle1 in blue; pink,
ntaize. Sises S, M, L.
Orange
2100 N. Tuatin Ave.
Phone 637-2100
Slon-HOflrtt MotWtay
lhl'tl S.••rdty
9130 A..M. to 91JO P.M.,
Sund•7 12 N-..
I& 5 P.M.
co
'of
,ce
mo
.1.
orl
the ,e
Vee
llni or ev
. gen
any
ad
I'
del 0,
up
pa
By DICK WEST
WASHINGTON (UPI) -
When a~ reportei-recently ln·
quired about the whereabouts
of Spiro T. Agnew' he WU
told the former vice presidtPt
• \\'.~ cleaning out h1a desk.
If Agiiew were asked to re-
cottnt the most palnfuJ parts
'of hit entire ordeal, I'm fairly
,certain he would identify that
moment as the lowest Point.
~ CLEANING OUT one's desk
,Is undoubtedly the most
1iorlom and onerous chore in
the whole range of human
;experience.
O:rnrnlseration with the ex·
veep may not have been
universal during other stages
of his leave--taklng. B ut
· everyone everywhere can feel
• genuine cornp85Sion I o r
'anyone obliged lo clean out
a desk.
I've known people who
delayed their retirement 15
or 20 years rather than face
up to it.
COUNTLESS OTHERS have
passed up good promotions or
•
Las1
better jobs because they could
not bear the thought of having
to sift through lbe· contenb
of the.ir old detks.
The trouble LI, emptying a
desk 11 not a tut that can
·i;e· delegated. No ·Surrogate
can possi bly identify the wide
variety of peculiar objects in
the drawers.
Ergo, the stand-in caMot
make the crucial decisions on
which to pack and which to
discard.
Only the person who stuffed
all that stuff into the com-
partmenta, receptacleit, parti-
tions, recesaes, niche&· ,and
cubbyholes can beain tO sort
it out.
CLOSING MY eyes, I can en·
vlaion Agnew as he went about
this dismal duty, a packing
case at his, right knee, a
'
Straw
his trusty , well·thwnbed
thesaurus of pejorative
alliterations. Save or throw.,
away?
Re filcU to the page where
he lint found "nattering
nabobs of negatlsm" and ts
immediately lost in reverie.
Ah, those were the da~s!
Keep thill one for old tlmes'
aake, even if there is no
further need of it.
IN SOME respects, cleaning
out a desk is like a sen·
timental )oumey. In £.act. here
beneath the 1c~ used at
ribbon-cutting ceremonies is
an old l'tCOl'd or Frank Sinatra
singing •-•sentimental
Journey.'' ·
Save the scissors .and the
record -throw away the
directory of Mllrylind con· suiting .,,.....,.,
InW the packing case with
the autographed photo of Bob
Hope. Into the wastebasket •
with the autographed photo
of EJOOt RicbardS()n.
wastebasket at--tm-tefto----Save-the-!!Spiro-T;-Who?"
There, buried under a lilt button. In a few months, it
of network news directors. ii may again be relevant.
---~----··-
••• A PLACE TO
EXPLORE
Digital Delight
Model shows the very latest indulged in by the
-young---racinB -stripes and-dots and other decora·
tions on the fingernails. It's doubtful that older
women will get the hang of it.
•• :Discover the ups and downs of the Mercantile Building
where the rlass elevator takes you to any of four fl oors
of stores with no doors. ""t"<.r-1
<? ••• A PLACE TO l"--~
BE REAL CRAFI'Y
••. From art to artifacts, your whimsical tour of~;;~::::_.).~~
the craftiest of shops wlll provide you with the -
ul timate in gifts or gift Ideas. An indivi dual intrigue ... \\ ~
aw aits you In each specially des igned store where ~
you'll find everythlnr: be It something you create ""'-~
or somet hing you crave. "fl
. ' .
Wolnttd11. o..-24, 1973
Laguna m 11s_
Coast S tudent
Leads Trojans
have the privilege of leading
die show during halftime at
the Rose Bowl on New Year's
Day. Of course, the Trojans
DAILY PILOT 17
Duu-a-bus
Tried Out
SAN DIEGO (>.P) -As
an erperiment, Sao Diego
Is buying an II-passenger
van, a oompact station
wagon , two radios and the
services ()f a driver to
respond lo telephone calls
from cillzens stranded
from bus service.
A brash chap named Tom-
my Walker 1..-tallzecl the
distinctive strut of th e
marching band drum rnUlr.
Ted Meyer, the ll·)'Ur .. kl
son of Judge a.¢ Mrs.
Ellsworth Meyer of Laguna
Hill.s, plans to follow in
Walker's footsteps -literally.
have to win the bid first. ~--------~
MEYER IS THE new drum
major for use.
The Asian studies a n d
hlJtory major also is a
member ()f the concert band
and pep band, which plays
al all Trojan basketball
games.
His role as marching band
drum major .. however, is
reserved for halftimes in USC
gridiron games at t h e
COUseum.
IF ALL GOES rigbt, he may
Meyer It a graduate of John
Muir High School, Pasadena,
where he played trombone in
the orchestra, m a r c h i n g
at band, and pep band.
During bis three yeatt at
use. 1'1eyer baa maintained
a S.7 grade point average out
of a possible 4.0. He is bolder
o1 a scholarship from the Los
Angeles Philanthropic Fund .
FOLLOWING graduation in
June, Meyer plans to spend
a year traveling in Japan
beklre entering g r a d u a t e
achoo!.
He Is one of 1110 membet'9
ol lbe USC marching band,
whldl bu doubled in 1ize in
two years.
-----.
• ••
Lecturer
AtUO
Sir John Rothenst.ein, a
leading British art expert and
retired director of t h e
prestigious Tate Gallery in
London, will speak at ~ public
lecture Thllriday at \s p.m.
in the UC Irvine Fine Arts
CO<lcott Hall.
Sir John. visiting ucr on
a Regents Lecture grant, will
speak on the worleor Francis
Bacon, one of the world's for~
most cmtemporary artisUi.
~--
••• A PLACE TO
NOSE AROUND
•.• Into Ideally
'"'".,°'unique shops and fun
places to eat. As you 'f!S~~..,l stroll alonr the old world
cobblestone walkways you will
pick up t he scent of the
wonderful variety of foods and
rood things to eat prepared
In the quaintest manner.
ON SUNFLOWER BETWEE N FAIRVIEW AND BRISTOL
•i ~ ~ • • • •
~ .. ~I ' • . -CO.t~llW
l
\
. , ...
• II DAILY PILOT
' •
It's Paint and Hardware ·Month.~.-. ... .· ..
'
Low price coverage on latex. Handy savings on our tools.
' .
• ......
' • \.•I ':-, ., . . !·
. ' Hurry! Get to work on these great savings. ·vou just won't want to miss this big sale:,
' I ,pnecoat -
. 'CRYuc FLAT LATEX/i~T
lDOI 80 HOH·Y£llOWING ~1111_
ONE GA~LO~
•
Save 2 50
Reg. 7.49, Sale 4.99. One CQlt etu1 iruertor
flat lateK paint. Durable finlah llayt
beautiful even after repeated 'w1shing1.
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Religious Medal-Ara's Sta;dhY f or··sc I
'YOGI IERRA ·
' ' . J
\
Berra Gets
New Pact
F Qtr $ 75,,,000
'"11 " '
HAWORTH, N.J. The last time
Yogi Berra lost the seventh ga,me ol
the World Series, he also k>st his job.
That "'as· J9S4 with the New .York
Yankees. He did much better in 1973
y,ilb the New York Mets.
Len than 48 hours after the last
out in Oakland, Berra was granted a •
new ~)'.ef~ chi tract . by . the ~1~ts 1
with a subflantial raise. ·'.'I'lie gue~ is that the 1Kirnbers ·on the new ' deal
CHICAGO (AP) -"U sbould be a
helluva.. football' game,"" Notti Dame's
'Ar• Plrsegbuln totci'. writers• Tuelday
-' S..~y's · nlgb-voltage c 1 11 h
between his Fighting Irish and invading
Southern California. • . \ 1 No. 8 Notre Dame a~ks revenge
against No. 6 Southern O!ilifomla for
a 45-23 trimming last season by the
Trojans, still unbeaten In thelr last 23
starts.
'"I think we have a much better
~are:-sometrung-around-175:000.-~--'="--
That's not bad for a man who was
being fired• ·almost 111 summer long ·
";hen the Mets were languishing in last .
place in the National League's East
Divis loo.
• Fltdeii Ol>fec.ls
HONQl.ULU -~ed Billie Jean
King ellmin•led \Pat llottn>m, 7-5, ~o
In 1 quarter·finel match or the Hawaii
women's pro tennl.!1 toumament.
In the second qu11rtel"finol match
Tuesda.y night , Au1tralla'1 11e.lc.q Gourlay
defeated lc.llow Aussie Kerry Harrts tf.1,
6-2.
defensive team , with more speed and
qUThtneu thfn· ·Int y~r," •a Id P~lan, w~ lrlsh carry a $-0
record against the wxleftated, but once-
Ued Trojans lS-0-1 ).
suq a nlghlml\l'O lp·lbe Irish ~ Trojan
AnlhOnj Davis, who scored ' s Ir
touchdowns, including kickoff returns of
98 and 97 yards.'1n USC's romp over
Not,.. Dame Las\ Dec. 2.
Apinst the kickoff returns or Davi!
and punt returns oi fleet Lynn Swann, •
Paneghlan s.lifl. "l'n be clutching a
religious mtdal l tot lrom some priests
down 8're."
"Wh«I you consider S o u l h e r n
California '1 skUled players, such as
Oavll. one or the nnest wide receivers
In Swann, and a llne passing quar1erback
in Pat Haden, this is a very dangerous
football team,'' said Parseghian.
''People here have been talking about
thia game since lhe season started and
we're hopeful oor campus activit y ~·on't
Interfere with our practice progress this
week. We don't wan t to leave our glroe
oo lhe practice field .
"We want our team up for Saturday,
I hate to think we have any psychologicul
edge knowing what Davis did to us
last yt?ar. lie could do it again."
Trojani coach John '1.teKay, via a
tape recording, told the Chicago write rs
"Notre Oan1e has been preparing for
us since last Deccnibcr. They'll be emo-
tionally high, and it will be difficult
for us to get as emotionally involved
as Notre Daine since we have our own
conference race and battle (or I.ht
Bowl ahead of us.
"Notre Dame ia difficult to de
because they have many ronnat
motion play... n1ey have
diversification offensively than an • ,
we've met so far;• said McKay. .:J#
The coach said lhat the Irish "have
very good balance In their backfield
y,·ith two fine hal!'backs in Eric Penick
and Art Best. a big fullback in Wayne
Hui lock and a clever. good throw In~
quarterback y,•ith Tom Clemens." "
Jinx No Sweat tQ ·l(no·x
* Rams Called Aweso·me
Never Been
So Impressed,
Grant Admits
HARLAND SVARE
Williams Rap s
Chargers After
Concentration
Key for Rams,
Coach Claims
LONG BEACH (AP) -C.Oach Chuck
Knox of Los Angeles tenns his club's
battle Stmday in ~1innesota against the
Vikings ·,,s the most important of the
•year for the Rams, but not because
each club is undefeated.
"n's most im""""''"u because we're -·playmg-lt difs~~---fr-repeats"KDO'=x ___ -11-
of the same phrase he's used before
each ol the six regular season National
Football League games his club has
played. •
"What has happened before c:Joesn1t
mean anything this week," the coach
added aild then said h1s club should
be in good physical condition for the
trip to Minnesota "'here he knows a
great team awaits.
"Our defense was outstanding last Sun·
day," said Knox of the 24-7 win over
Green Bay. "We'll have to do it again
thls week."
Knox termed the current edition of
the Vikings as the best Minnesota dub
he's seen, including the Super Bowl
club of 1969.
They've added Fran Tarkenton at qua~ac .'and rookle~-running badf
sensahoo Chuck Forerun, second NFC
rushing. Also, said KnOx , "this is a
more experienced squad."
.The Rams coach points out that Min-
nesota is the only team to hav~ ·won
all its preseason and league games this
season. 'M>e Rams lost two and tied
one of the exhibitions before hitting
a \\•inning track.
Although Minnesota has won the last
four meet,.ings bet\veen the two teams.
Knox has said before that he doesn •t
beJieve in such a thing as a jinx.
"The most important thing is that
\\·e must concentrate. V.'e must have
concentration Wednesday, Thursday, Fri-
day, Saturday and then on Sunday,"
he said at bis regular Tue.Wy breakfast
session with newsmen.
The only time Green Bay had
possession past the 50 last Sunday was
"·hen Fred Carr broke through on a
Rams punt attempt and forced the
punter, Dave Chapple to run. Oiapple
didn't make it to a first down and
Green Bay had possession Qfl the Rams'
35. The Packers scored jn five plaY!.
i'hls 1~-eek the Rams will have running
backs Lawrence i\fcCutcheon and Tony
Baker back. fl.fcCutcheon, the starter
the first five games, was deactivated
because of. a ·knee injury for the Green
Bay battle.
Asked if McOJtcheon would start
against Minnesota, Knox asseNed thal
he didn 'I know yet.
2 PL AYERS QUlT
USC GRJD .SQUA D
LOS ANGELES (UPI ) -Two former
sta rters for the Soothern Cali!omla foot·
ball team -linebacker Ed Powell and
defe nsive tackle Gl1mn Byrd -have
quil the team and coach John McK~
had no comment.
'·J'm not 1,1•ith the ll'am anymore,··
said Powell. \\'ho started !he first fOW'
games but y,·as pu t on the reserve
squad before the \\'ashington State gan1t'
l1~0 "·eeks ago . "I 1nay have something
to say lalcr. but I 1,1·011't comment al
th1i:; tin1e."
Byrd. 11·ho started the first f\VO gan1et
before suffering an injury. has not wwk-
~d out 11·ith the teanl recently And
r<'1)1)rtedly hfls lcfr the school.
~lcl\ay sai d injured linebacker James
Slnis may not be able to play against
Notre Dame at South Bend Saturday.
349 Pounds-Just a Growing Li11e1nan
AUGUSTA, Oa. (API -Coach Joe
Olllll or Glenn H111J lllgh School has
r.nly one comP:lainl about his · _defensive
middle guard, 17~yearo(l)d David S1ewart.
''He11 not aggressive enough. I think
he Is afraid he is ROing to hurt
somebody ."
Thaf wou ldn't be: hard for Stcwarl
to do. He weighs 349 pounds and stands
&-feet-!.
"Last yen r he \l-'3S just there nnd
yo u couldn't move him," 0111ff said.
"This yc11r, against llcphr.lbah. tie ac·
tually pursued and nlade a tackle outside
the tnd."
At 3-'9 pounds. Stey,·art is easlly the
bi~u;iest football play1.1r In Georgia . Il ls
size. Olliff :idmits, intimidat~ .Pl number
or offensive centers. And hi s bulk in
the middle or tht! defensive llne also
dii;courages runs.
"I know one thini;:. nobody's 1n11dc:
nnythlng up th e middle when he 's in
!here." Olllff said .
Stewart. when he trit.'CI out for football
ns u lresh n1an fuur yc(lrs ago. \\'a!!
like most boys his .size "''ho y,·an L to
participate In athletics. lie \1•as slow.
lie .. h;is con1c a long ""'nys since
hf' C:lml' out :is n frcslnnnn ." Olliff
snid . "He rouldn't run 100 ~ards"
Stl'wnrt now :s::i~·s he:'s '"nol lh:it f:ir
behind everyone elS<'" :u• fnr as r;pced
Is con~rned . lie says he. cnn ru11 tl
4().yard dash in 6.2 St"CO!lds.
"l"ve ix'cn a 11t11e large!" than most
guys for n lo ng ti111r." Stewart 1<1111.
"You kintl of g(•t U!t•d to !! "
The youngster has a 5-t·inc h che1t
and \\·cars a 58 long suit coat and
size 13 shoes.
"I go ht1111c :ind rlrink about thret
or four quart11 of \\·ater aflrr practice,
but I don't eat much or one particular
fMd During a Jt!'lme. I can '9F
anv\\·herr from fh·e to HI pounds." '
Ste1\'art S.1\'S he has rec Cl Ive d
s1·hol;1r1hlp Ciueries from \1ale amt
(lkl11honi1t Stnte but has nol dkldtd
t!elinilcl: h1~ ph111s nrtcr graduation ntn
~p!'ttlfl:
DAILY PILOT
Brown
Bolsters
iNewport
U'• no coiticidenoe Anaht.im
(h of tm l®b a lot like
:~:-O.lonists clubs of s, to or
·~ years ago .
• :.. "Clare VanH~beke i s •V. .. •~ling and ls down on the
: .~eld for all the Anaheim
·"" Dll " :e.•"'m.es. uy1 Newport Harbor
lll(b footblll coach !loo Lent.
whole Sallon Cub mttls the
Colonists Thursday at 8 al
La Palma Stadlu1n i n
Anaheim.
"l $till haven't &een an
.Anaheim team Van isn't
~fOUDd· , He may no longer
bt the htad coach. but he's
Mill an innuence. They hit
-and play together \\'ell as a
t.am. 'lbe)''re just now com-
ing into their OWtl."
, Lent Isn't toutln,it Anaheim
at the expense o1 his oy,·n
elub, which Ja S-0. rated No.
3 in Orange Coonty. No. s
in the CJF f.A division and
is one of only two unbeatens
in the Sunset League.
Prep
FRID MOORE
Coron• del Mir
'
'''lbe ntum of Pete Brown DAVE MACKLEY
at fullback ha s reall}' helped Fountain Villev
balance our club." says Lent ---------'--
of his ZIG-pound back \\'ho
missed the nrst three games ~g. the year with • broken p essimis111
"\\'ith Pete we ha\•e an op-•
-we'<l -nor1nally-ha\·e..-Ste~ :TT •
lion on third down. Before. Pre ails--
Bu'kicb toll It on third and · 1'
three. Now, we can either
peu or give the ball to Pete.
who is bigger than Tom Saftig
af!d a little tougher to bring
down in short-yardage plays."
Lent says .his team is still
lucky in !hat it has su ffered
no Injuries lo any of its
starters. He also says the club
will be more prepared for
Anaheim than it was for
P.tarina last week.
"We let down some against
!I.farina in the first three
quaners and I can't explain
why," ht says. "I know we
weren't lOoking ahead to
Anaheim. I'm. glad "'e finally
mapped out of it.
"To the fint three quarters
against P.iarlna we made an
awful lot oJ mistakes. That
isn't taking anything away
from ~farina. They played a
good game and had us going
for three quarter!.
1'Mistakes will decide
11nusday's game. Not the
prior records or an~1hlng like
that, but mistakes. n1e team
that makes I h e l'ewest
JOistakes will win the game."
AtRCC
RIVERSIDE -Al Fages,
coach of the Riverside City
College Tigers football team,
is ln a pessimistic mood this
week on the eve of a ~1 ission
Conference battle with the
Saddleback Gauchos h c r c
Saturday night.
\Veil he might be. for the
Tigers have but 011e victory
lby forfeit) on their record ·
to date and last weekend were
clobbered by Palomar, 51·28.
"\\'e're getting a lot of
points but we can't seem to
get any wins," Fages says.
''I think Saddleback has too
much for us to handle. They
are a much better football
team than we and after our
miserable game at Palomar,
it wouldn 't surprise me if we
get blown out of the stadium
again this week.··
Fagcs says Saddleback is
probably one of the toughest
• For Marina Tilt
Offensive Players of Week Oile1's May Lose
BILL SPRINGMAN
Dana Hills
KEITH HERNDON
Huntington Beach
DAVE NAJERA
Mater Del
STEVE HINES
Edison
MARK MAZZARELLA
Laguna Beach
KEN ROBBINS
Mission Viejo
STEVE ADAMS
E1t1ncl1
GREGG FOSTER
Marina
BRIAN THERIOT
Newport Harbor
CL YDE,BIRCHARD
£1 Toro -
KEVIN PEGAN
Mater Del
GWC Foe
--Has-Lo-st ·
3 Straight
Nitzkowski Again
Hwilington Beach lligb's
Oilers may be going with a
new look offense Friday night
with regular quarterback Greg
Nltzkowskl's p.11rtlclpation in
questionnble status.
The Oilers of coach Ro)'
Brummett tangle with district
rival ~tarina at Westminster
High and Nitzkowski's
avallabllty is on a wait and
see basb after seeing action
in only the lint offensive ·~les 'for the Oil~r1 against
West.em last week.
Niti.kOWllld injured his leg
In the Loara game a week
prior.
Junior Keith Herndon took
over for Nitzkowski, however,
and did a creditable job.
Marina's Vikings have been
using Huntington Beach as 11
punching bag the past four
years and Brummett i s
hoperul He r nd on's
performance against Wes.tern
will carry over.
Herndon 'tooied a 32-yard
scoring strike at the end of
the first half, completed four
of five attempts in all for
lkt yards and engineered the
Oilers to vlclory in the second
half.
Halfback Loren M i c k I i n
scored twice to help Hun-
tington snap a. three-game los-
way-the I IJolalion Jtrles
with power aod bl&1L
"But Medna dciesn't oprlnt oul wltb its quarterback quite
as much. I'd aay "Marina Ls
a typl"-81 1.formallon ·football
team."\,
Brumm'ttt's solution l o
qwetll>g U'if Vikings offense
is simple and brief.
'1We've .aot\ to control the
football .
"That's been '• our bigge1t
problem ollemtvtly . . . we
get down to the four-down
zone and have a tendency to
turn the ball over.
''Gregg Foster has been a
starter since he wu a
sophomore for Marina and
they run the ball rlght at
you. And after the \Yay
Wes tern hurl us outside I im·
ag.lne Marina will be· trying
to do 11:he same," Says Brum·
mett.
Brummell says one of
Marina's biggest aasets is the
Vikings' improvement since
the outset of the season.
"They're getting better each
week, have tackles in the,UO-
pound and 210-pound range,
and seem to be a senior·
oriented football team," uys
Brummett.
Past Scotes
ing streak. 1965 -HB 'Z7, Marina 13
"Herndon got the op-1966 -HB ?!, Marina I
portWlily to play last week-· 1967 -Mafina 33, RB 14
and did a real good job," 1968 -HB 28, Marina 7
. _.§fil's Brummett. "No~ets 1969 -Marina &i We Ji ·~ opporturuty agalii. --r970 lJarini:l , s
Brummett rates Marina's 1971 -Marina al, HB 17
attack•comparab1e to Loara's. 1972 -Marina 14, HB 7
"1bey are like Loara in a Marina leads, 5-3.
SA Valley's White
Sets Sizzling Pace
SANTA'~MONJCA -After
three games of the 1973 foot-.
ball season Santa Monica City
College looked like it would
be a contender in the Southt'Ml
California Conference.
But with three straight con· . Santa Ana Valley High's the Falcons' unbeaten streak,
fcrence losses. ·the Corsairs Myron White has carried the but Hill has little to 58Y in
of CO{lch Pat Young are strug-ball 66 times In Irvine League regards to the opposl lion.
gling· as tflt'y prepare to face football action -and through "Corona del Mar bas 1
Golden \Vest Saturday night three games the amating YOWli ,quarterback who bas
at orange Coast. F=alcons jwtlor bu averaged giv.e.n theID some ammqg!tion
Santa Monica was blown out 11.4 yards per carry; saired and they have !OTne fine
in its last' game by l.Qs An-11 touchdowns and thrown for athletes. We've been v~ry
another fortunate !O far." geles City College >&nd Young · He nnks Fountain Valley
still 68.sii't recovered from 1-t. Saturday afternoon at Santa as the toughest team hil Ctf!ff
"What can you say about Ana Bowl he1l be trying 10 has met . . . but says all
a 50-7 loss. \Ve just haven·t add to those imposing totals five prior opponents have
played 60 minutes of football as he and his Santa Ana given Santa Ana Va 11 e y
in the last three games." Valley teammatea collide with "problems at times."
The · Corsa i rs, afler Corona de1 Mar in circuit As for CdM's defensive
defeating Compton { 18-7), San-hostilities. structure, Hill sa)'s he coaches
teams in the conference. "And DAN DODD MURRY GRAHAM BOB BLUMBERG
that includes San Diego," he S.n Clemente Un•'vers•'ty w ·
ta Ana (7-6 ) and College of Corona del Mar's forte bas his offensive line to "call
San Mateo (21-7), have suf· always been a tou11h defense block." an audible s)'Blem at
fcred conference losses to under ooach Dave Holland, but the line of scrimmage.
Cypress (43-21), Rio Hondo th.at facet surely will be put-;::========;;::., Cross Country
Smmnaries
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Robert J, Wiqmore
Cot & Home Insurance
In One Co11venl•11t,
Mon•y·Sa't'lnq Polley
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(Ill Ill oMIW,
7/2 W!GMORE
{:!; INSLl'RANCE
979-2555
says.
Whal does he !eel the Ttgers
must do to !lop Sadde\baek'!
"'Ve have to stop Aundre
Holmes and if that fullback.
Joe Jones. is back. they ha\'e
a tremendous one-two punch.
"Holmes is probably as good
a back as any in the con-
ference."
Injuries have hampered the
Tigers in a 1-4· t Sf' a son. Oscar
Edwards. described by Fages
as probably the f i n e s t
defensi\'e back in the con-
ference. is out y,·11.h a fra c·
lured sternum.
The Tigers Jost their of-
fensi\'e center and surgery on
strained liga ments in his foot
have put him on the sidelines
for the Sl'ason.
··\Ve also had a couple of
playrrs who decided it wasn't
\.\'Orth the price and we had
lo get rid of lhcn1," Fagcs
says.
!Ja\"id Cadena is t he
quarterback 1\·hile Joh n
Guzm;.in and Eddie Ta\IM'rt
arc the leam 's leading running
backs .
Cadena compleled 20 of ~2
atten1pts against Palomar but
Fagcs doesn'I like to lhro1v
that oftrn .
"He can thro\v pretty y,•ell
hut he is still ha\'ing trouble
rC'ading defenses and also has
a nun1ber of in!erccption:;. But
\Ve feel this is thr only way
ire can 1nove. the football."
(;ids Results
For Vollcyhall
O••ntt CM~IY Vo!lcJD->11 ·~•IUllOfll!
Stmll>"ll'
L1gynl 8t~(h Oii W111mln•llf. [,,.o
1<')(tl l••ll10l1! C0ton1 lftl Mir Ott. LIQUM 811<:1!
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lftl M1r V11 U·IO, l}.U.
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COlll ,_.HI dtl Et MOClt~I IJ I~,
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J-nlll' v1•1•'' r ... 11 "'"• Ml. El ~Ml U•• 11.1e
OES OU CAR IDLE ROUGH? WE START HARD ?
GIVE POOR MILEAGE? CAN HELP
THE CARBURETOR SHOP
lt•, NAllllOfl lllLVD., COSfA Mil.II 61H111
(21-14) and LACC. to the test Saturdav. SU THI HIW
In the Rio Hondo game, Santa Ana Valley coach OA'l'l'UN D210 the Corsa;rs had the boll ;n. Dick HUI. who has h•med that l.J ...
-______________ _::_:::~:_:::c_ ______ __:'..'._'.e~st~m~•n~s~le~r'_ __ _
Tars No. 5
111 Ratings
Pirates Rival Hoping
Trend Will Co11ti11ue
side the Roadrunners 10-)'ard school's football p r o g r a m AT
line twice but cou1dn't score. around to the point that the COSTA MISA DATSUN
And they moved to the Rio Falcons are the third-ranked 1141 H.tNr thoill., C,M.
Hondo IO.yard line before lime team in CIF f.A circle!, says 1'====54=0=-64=1=0===::0 ran out. he can't rate White with past1-
··Y.'e didn't especially play standouts under his system.
well against Rio Hondo. They "I don't really compare him
Ne11·port Harbor H i g h · s
Sailors have mo\·ed into fi[th
place in the CIF 4-A football
poll as selected by Southern
California sportswriters.
The Angelus League tandem
of St. Paul and Servile con-
tinue to dominate the 4-A
rankings with one-t \\·o selec-
tions.
SAN DIEGO -Orange
Coast and San Diego Mesa
colleges ha ve set a trC'nd in
the past five football games
that Olympians coach Tom
Carter hopes will not change
this Friday night when the
two teams clash at OCC.
"\\'e've always played well
in their stadium and they've
always played well down
here,'' says Carter. •••
Pol . l<llflOI, llto;O<d
I. St. P•"I ll·D) 1 5trv!I~ CS-01
J. S1nt• P.n• V•lll" !).~1 1. S •n!a Monk• l}.0!
As a matter of fact. San
131 Diego Mesa has a 2--0 record '" S. ,.,.,....,,, H••llor !J·OI
t.. 11:1•11~"41 (•·t-1)
11s over the Piratrs at OCC b11t
oren't ony better th with anyone," says Hill, "lle·s that, I SUS""cl a defensive an any r other team in the conference. his own personality . . . but
game this week.'' says Carter. we haven't played we 11 I do feel he's going to be
The Oly!!lpians ha\'e been against any conference team." a great footbe.l.l player."·
predominately s passing team says Young a star quarterback In addition to White, a
in past seasons. but have gone for Santa f.lonica in 1957 and Junior. Abel Fausto has come
to the run In 173 _ primarily '58 v.'ho is now in h.i.9 third Into his own at quarterback. a ANTHONY M:HOOU
because quarterback Gary year as the Corsairs head HUI says Fau.sto's no surprise HAllOI Cllftlll
Cady (6·1. 1851 broke his left coach. -but that his outstanding J:: ::::'c!C..
arm just before the season As for Golden West. Young play has been a pleasant situa-"· 17141 '79.Ull
began . · simply says that the Rustlers tion. 1111 1, 1rw1111Wnt 11,
But Cady, after mlssin& the "are a good football team. Corona de! Mar represents ~1;fl4j t;&.T:ff·
first three games Of the we can't key on any one phasc 1_it~he~s~ix~t~h~foe~~to~t~ry~tio~stioip~iiiiiiii~~~~~~~=i se::ison. ls back. He's healthy, of their game. Golden West
but still hasn't regained the is a sound foolball team and
Se(' i\tesa . Page 22 \'Cry well ooodled."
1 L•~~Wllflfl ~··I I ~-LB Mlill-•n (•·ll
t. Wt'I ffrt~~CI (& lJ
ID. Ctl\~! !rHll •
-____________________ , ~ is \Vinless in three games wirh
11 the Bucs at J\tesa . 1--
;~ •·\Ve just hope !he trend
I, MQflfOYlt ls-4) 1. ST. JG!ln 8o>CO fS.0!
J Lynwood CS-01
• Ctt\C~n!• Y.ofl•Y !>OI
S. a111r !U )
& v:111 Par~ IS-01 1. Cllrtrnoo>r t .. n
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f, 8UN'OUQhl /&·11
10 ll•OW•arld Oale'1 C• 11 011 .. ro: 8l1hoo Mo~IQO"'I•~
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!G. AQ011r• ( • 11
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st::iys that way," says Cartrr.
The Olympians are in the
s.ime boat as OCC -both
cannot afford to lose if they
\j,'ant to slay in the Sooth
Coast Conference title chase .
"In losing to Santa Ana last
\'.'eek \'.'C felt like Dallas must
have felt in the Washington
game a couple of weeks ago
,.5 on 'f'Y. \Ve thought we had
11°1 it in control and then it sltppcd
::: a"'ay." say! Carter.
1G1t S.1n Diego fl.1esa and OCC " " nre similar in style. Both ,. ..
"
like. to run and both plav
good defense. "BecaUse Or
Paramount Sports
Gueryf/,.infj in :Jenni6
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NICK PRIEST
Mesa High Runner
Runner
Bypasses
Dead-End
--By . .sT&V&-BRAND-
01 ttlt D1lh l>llel lltff •
A year ago Nick Priest was
just one of the Costa l\lcsa
High cross COWltry runners
fi nishing behind teammate
Tim Gollnick.
And it looked li ke that pat·
tem would conUnue since Goll·
nick was only a junior, like
Priest. For a roung man
trying to establish an identity
ii was a dead end.
Priest has come into his
own, however, and the fact
Gollnick moved to Royal High
in Slrni is only incidental.
Mustangs coach Joe Fisher
admits it may have helped.
but only a little.
"Nick has matured 100 per-
cent since last yeM," says
Fisher. "That, and he's gained
confidence."
Priest is the team's No.
1 man and his improvement
is such he's just a step away
from the top runners in the
CIF.
In the Villa Park Classic
recently. P riest was beaten
by only Loara 's Ralph Serna,
Troy's Mike Durham and Sun-
ny Hil ls' Andy Clifford. Sema
i! a solid choice for CIF in-
dividual championship honors.
He wys by the CIF finals
at Mt. SAC he wants to crack
the top five.
"I've got to get !erlous."
" says the solldly-built 16-year-
old senior who comes from
a· fami ly of runners. "l'rn'the
kind oJ. runner who needs a
lot of long distance runQing:
bacltgrOlllld, and I got !l lhil
suminer.
"t &Tl\ definitely in the posj..
Uon where I feel I can run
faster each week. By the CtF
meet, I think t'll be in there
with the best."
Cross country tilllC! vary,
but when he talks of his goals
for track, his improvement
becomes evident.
"I'm running 20 to 30
seconds fas ter now than a
year ago," he says. "By track
season I hope to carry over
that improveinent lo t~ t'l't'O
mile."
Since he rnn a 9:35 last
year, that -means he's looking
for a 9:05. That kind of time
could make him one of the
best In the state .
"Nick really gets better the
farther he goes," says Fish<'r.
"He's run a couple o f
marathons and last summer
he clocked a good 10.000
meters.
"Nick Is just starting to
bloom. lie"! been an in-
spiration to the other:t and
has really come Into bis own ."
Costa Mesa's only true team
loss came in the Long Beach
tnvitational. 11riest and team -
mate Kevin r.allnghcr ran in
the Ri.m for F\1n race instead
of the team co mpetition.
Priest figures if the two
had nm for lhe team, Costa
Mesa woyld have beaten La
Canada by 20 Instead of losln& by tbe urne margln.
"Ma team we hate a great
cnance \,, """ L .... CIF." "Y' Priest. "In Cl'(ll.S totinlry the
impon&nl thing team·wbe Is
to gel your first (lve runners
up blgft1 If one team ha!! l\vo
super runners but no di:pth,
It can Jose.
"Firat \\'C have to win the
league, though." Costa Meltl ~fl! already run
PISt ltt most formldob!a foea ,
Santa Ana Valley IHld C.Orona
del fl.tar. 'IO the leegue title
M!cms as!ured.
W'tdnesd.ay, Octobtr 24 1973 DA.IL Y PILOT
• Leave Dancing in Ballroom, Defensive Playe1•s of the Week
'
Not on the Football Fields
Men who get a raise at work often go
home and celebrate by takin~ the family
out to dinner.
The way food prices are going up . one
can blow two or three week~ ... :orth or
raises at one sitting. It takes a strong
will to smile and say, 'order 3nythlng on
the menu,' when one dish costs the san1e
as an entire meal five years ago.
Celebrations are ool uncommGn \\'hen one
wiM the office World Series pool. You win
, Uke too many banana splits, however.
lt got a little tiring when everyone started
doing II. Anthony Davis gave it the knee
look and others tried the high-step action.
The fad has slipped into the high schools.
Gary Templeton, lhe Santa Ana Valley
receiver who scores a Jot. docs a little
dance after each TD. as do others.
It's already tbreadwom. ·,
For wme reason, h's refreshing to see
the Los Angeles Rams' Harold Jackson catch
scoring passes from John Had! and simply
lift lhe ball over his head and hand it •
to the official. Even the officials, who by
STEVE
BRAND
now are used to chasing all over the stadium
from spikes and tossed balls, seem surprised.
Perhaps, like anything !bet is overdone.
.the spike-dance craze is running ils course.
It can't end soun enough. • • *
Lute Otson's Cal State I Long Bea eh I
basketball team hasn't added the numbers
of suptr players that shuttled in during
th e Jerry Tarkanlan era, but what qu ality.
$10 and by the time you buy a round of
beers, your winni ngs are halved.
The latest to enter Long Beach is forpier
All·CIF pl ayer Carlos !\Una, wbo prepped
at Central lUgb in El Centro. At 1-8 and
!20, he possessed pbenominal jumping ability
and USC recruited him heavily. lie soured
on the Trojans and spent a year at Imperial
Valley JC.
So it is too with football players \o;ho
score touchdowns.
A celebration or some sort appears in
order. It used to be enough just to score
and ·happily hand the ball to the official
while he_;tding back to the sidelines. The
crowd took care or the noise.
Last summer he played for the !\1e.xican
national team and was its leading scorer. . ;..
Then came the flamboyant spike. You
.know that one. The young man scores and
see! how hard he can throw the ball down
in the end r.one.
He's a potential super and teaming with " -'
the Ponde•ler brothers, Roscoe and Cliff, "'
Leonard Gray and Co., coold give lbe 49er!
anGtber outstanding front lin e. • • • When a pro player tried ,that action a
bit prematurely, like five yards from the
end zone, it slowed the overexuberance for
3...whilc. lastead of a touchdown and cheers
he was credited with a fumble and boos.---
Who says girls don't fit into boys sports
Obviously a new form or celebration was
ne&ssary. Elmo Wright provided it with
-a-nil'ty-danee-in -Hie· -.end rone:-Soon-K--
became popular with a lot of players who
added on the dance with a spike to boot.
at high school?
Clydine Crowder. one of the better girls dis1lnce runners, helped Los AJamitos junior
varsity beat Estancia. She finished ninth
but was Los AJ's fifth scorer.
-In-lhe varsity .. .r.ace. Estaricia.-freshman .
Forest Metcalf was second in the fine time
of 10:04 .
Edison Coach Lauds
Adarns of Estancia
Estancia High's Eagles ma y
be winless at this stage of
the 1973 football season, but
Edison coach Bill Workman
says he would have been
pleased if bis own crew could
have held Fountain Valley to
16 points as Estancia did last
week.
Workman's Edison team
meets Estancia Saturday night
at Newport Harbor a n d
although past records are
nearly opposite in terms or
won-loss, the Edison mentor
says his team has some pro-
blems facing it. ·
"Estancia can slow you
down for a while with all
of the diUereltt defenses and
things they do offensively.
Eslanica may be 0-5, but ob-
viously it's doing something
right and has some football
players.
"We saw the cenle.r line
up as an end against Los
Alamitos, but the play was
killed by too mu ch lime. \Ve'd
like to ha\·e seen what they
were go.ing to do with that
one.
"You've got lo try to
balance· your defense against
what they put up and you
can't hesitate.
·'But you're rolling the dice
when you're doin g thal sort
of stuff offensively. Estancia
may have as many blocking
problems of its own as we
have chances for defensive
mistakes.
"If they miss one guy on
a blocking assignment it's all
over. B.ut it makes you think
and it keeps you up at night."
\Vorkman's Chargers will be
going into the Estancia clash
minus a couple of first line
players -including their
ltading ball carrier.
Feller Pulls
Golf Upset
At CMCC
Jack Feller became the
giant killer at Costa Mesa
Golf and Country Club this
week vt'hen he defeated defen-
ding c.hampion Norm Popkin
in a first round metcb for
the men's club championship.
In other first round matches
in the championship fl ight.
Bud Darnell, laSt year's run-
nerup. defeated Aimo Palonen
and Vic Conrad ha lted Len
Santoro.
Drawing first round byes
were Joe Stafford Dave
Tackman. Mike Edelstein,
Mark Les. George Demback,
Art Di bbs, Daryl Benedict.
Dean Smith, W. Weber. John
Slobon, Jack Valasek and Eli
Cabrera.
Tom Grider, playing with
club pro Roy Eversole Sunday,
scored an eagle-t""-o on tbe
461-yard, par-4 second hole us-
ing a driver and a three wood.
MIKE FROST
Coron• del M•r
DAN BEAVOR
Estancia
MIKE SERRANO
Lagun• Beach
ROD FIGGATT
Costa MH•
CHARLES HICKS
El Toro
CURT JONES
.Marina
KEVIN EATON GAVIN HEDRICK
"Steve Adams can really
run and has e.:reellent speed ,"
says \Vorkman of the Estancia
lringback. Seoeliff
Mission Viejo Newport Harbor -~~~~-'--~~-
MARK ELJENHOLM
D•na Hills
JERRY GRUNDY
Fountain V•lley
GEORGE HANNA
Mater Oei
DON BENTON
University
JACK CLARK
Edison
TOM BAKER
Hunti ngton Be•ch
BARNEY RUMPS
Mater Oei
RICH ROSEN
Westminster
Edison's answer tQ the ex-
pected razzle-dazzle of Estan-
cia is simple. Workman ex-
plains. "We'll try to play it
straight against Estancia and
go with a balanced attack.
We just hope to adjust to
whatever it comes out with.
Tailback Bill Rutherford is
out for twQ weeks after
spraining an ankle in the
Costa Mesa game . Bert Sher-
ron takes Rutherford':. place.
Two-way lineman Al DiSitna
reinjured his knee and is
replaced by Joe Howard at
offensive guard and John
Giorgetti at defensi ve tackle.
They're do\\'TI to t h e
semifinals in the men's club
championship at l·Iuntington
Seacliff Country Club.
Jim Patterson will face Al
Dean in one bracket while
Paul Moro will play Fred Enl·
mert in the other.
Prey Football Log
Fountain Valley Passing
Impressive to Doretti
Frank Ooretti isn't hedging
a bit.
fie figures this,week's game
for his T...os Alamitos High
football team against Fountain
Valley oouJd· determine ,which
of the two teams wiods up
in the CIF playOffs. ,
"I don·'t see anyone knock-
ing off Sanu; Ana Valley. They
just loolt too strong," Doretti
say• of the. Irvine League's
poM~se team. "But the
winner of our game will hao;e
the best shot at second place
in the league."
Second pince would possibly
be good 1::nough for a CJF
playoff be rth. and with that
kind of importance Doretti
figures it's going to be n tough
game.
"Fount~ln Valley is a big
anti very physical team •s
usual . and they've always had
a good running attack,'' Oorel-
tl says. ''But this year with
Boosters Meet
Newport Harbor High"s foot-
baTI boosters club will hold
ils -rtgular mcellilflri' Uie high
scttiol Wtlghl room rather
than cafeteria tonight at 1:30.
Roqtcrs bus tickets lor the
game with Nlahcirn \\'ill be
901d at the meeting. The
rooter& bus will leave for
Anabelm et 6 Thursdoy night
fl'cKn U1e 15th street parking
lot.
Dan Troup al quarterback ond
Rick Hatrleld at end they 've
got a fine pn!sing attack to.
go with it."
"Alw ays when ""e've played
the.in before we felt if we
·could stop their running attack
we'd slop them. But that isn't
true this season."
Concerning his team. Doret-
li is worried about orfensive
and defensive inconsistencies
even thou gh the Griffins are
undefeated and tied for sixth
in the Orange County football
rankings.
\'\Vf didn't look all that good
even when \\•e beat El Modena
28'0 eRrller this year,"' DoretU
says. "We sort of e11pected
problrms. early in I.he Season,
but as we've gone nlong each
game hl!IS been harder, and
we renllv haven't irnproved
that much.•·
"Our defense came alive
when it had to last ""eek
against Corona drl h-lar. but
'"o llad a poor second half
in Ufe secondary. We'll have
to be much n1ore consistent
this week."
Orfensively, the Griffins will
be counting on halfback Louie
Orl lt for the key ground
yardage ::ind the passing com·
blnntlon or qunrterb:1ck Mike
OJivos to Brinn Tlcthurst.
Ortiz hRs picked up $62
~·nrds rushlne on the !lcn~n.
while Tlcehur!lt ht1s 24 plj~s
reec ptlons for 485 Yllrds.
Oliv11s hns connected on 31
of 64 paMCS for 485 ynrdll
, thi1 season.
The final match will be over
36 holes in the match play
competition.
So11lo A110
Only one match ren1ains to
be completed iry second round
action of the aMual high-low
men's championship at Santa
Ana Country Club.
1'he niatch lo be complet '."!d
is between Grant Hon1beak
and Dick Brown against Cecil
\Vright and Lou Scott.
Results of other second
round matches included : Bill
Hutchens and P.fi\o 1'edstrom
over Jim Voelkl and Bill
Koch: Stan Wood.-; and Phil
Sbeehan over Jim Okeefe and
Lee Hasenjaeger; E r n i e
Ainslie and Paul Renius aver
Bob Pohst and Hoggy Evans;
Bud Talmage and ~11 k c.
Stewart over Frl'd Werder and
Bill Jordan.
Also, Loo Clem. and John
Gabriel over Chuck Page and
Bill Livingston; Don Smiih
and Bill Foote over 1 Dr t-:d
Crane and Burt Stan!ibur,v.
and Jack \Vilder and Merle
Boyle over Dick Aubrey l'lnd
Ed Ethel\.
Bob Prost scored a hote·in·
one on the 173-yard sixt h t.olc
Santa Ana CC using. a four
Iron r«ently.
Jlleodotrlorf<.
Early round action in the
annual ml!'ll 'S club cham-
pk>nsh.lps at ~1 ea dolv I ark
Country Club of liuntington
Beach are currently bein g
coole.sled on a match play
(Set ('.olf, Page Zll
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p!n('I". Pete P1eue, Rod Atnip
and Dr Ed Snmple~ along
"·uh <l guest flnl!hcd thlrcJ
:it 136
U DAILY "LOT •
~JC Grid Picture Cha1iges
l From Rosy to Desperate
/..
Sports
Calendar
MD-Amat: One-Sided War
TllllrMlev 10ct. u1 ~1nter Oei 1-0gb's ~1onarchs coached Mater Del fQl" stven Oesplte ?.1aier Del'• prob-Bishop Amat, says, "It's JUJt
,;,oc•O.JI -ti.,.. ,rr,rn.l v•· M•lt• ~t -··at.lln 1 L. "-• .i J.nt• ....... 1ow1 N,..._, and the Lancers or Btshop years and Js ramlliar .wtUl !ems, M=-v6 • ....., s a'/ I, a norm a game i\lll '.~'JI:" .......... , ,,.,',·~. '."' •• L. P•lm.t ...-i.., ~l.A ed lot ---···-1 g --
!• Golden West. Orange Coast and Saddleback reollfCfS are stUJ alive in thtir conlereoce
• footbtU UUe race.s, but the plcture Isn't
as fOSJ as it was a week ago.
Ibo 1. Amat clash Thuniday ni""t Monarchs personnel. "11.C)' °"""w me a us ... IUJIUWC,I ea ue e-· .... M w,.... ..,, -l'lllftllfn V•llw •I 5'' bll pa11 or rllft play -but the hi& gahler ~ :~~ _ H~inatr tM(fl In Angelus League football ac-Third _ It's a ooe.si4ecj agaiqst St. Paul. II you dis-"But I'm kind of disap-
hu 1* bee!' pnvalellt la the "Tl •ltlck. ,:.,~ '!'!.f· M•r ~rl': , ifu.. ~ lion at Santa Ana Bowl . grudge match. Woods guided count the punl return for a pointed ••• t thousf.Jt Mater
The PlrttH' looge1t runalQ plaJ m btt.n ~Oiii¥i4.;, "~~~1 ~~'El '1"{!0g And consi d er l n g lhe Mater Dei to a .f7·17·2 reconl touchdov.'n by St. Paul, it Dei ms going to bl.Ve a
Coach Ray Shacldeford's Golden West
"Rustlers tied Cypress Saturday and now
f.an't afford a loss or a tie in their remaining
"p.mes.
37 yards (by John Dl:ion) wbDe tbe loa1est :l . .'.'.9::"'1~.rt<~"'~ "ti.,~~ clrcum.1tADCes one might tend in ultra tough circ;les. But would have been 1 lt-7 game. hedun year. I'vo no com-
Pl" hu be!n 33. ~r:.nr~: J.~·~ .x~rfr.nJ' ... ~ to favor the Lancers on the he was tlrtd earlier thls year. They took away what St. Paul ment about Mater Del'• 14-1
Golden West is well on the way to 11G1f.T:,,.V:~':J,1 !..' 1\...Son. Ott Mflr baJJs of severaJ apparent ad-Mater Oei, on lhe other likes to do best -\he LDside record except that they'd titt.-
e11tablishing a school rushing record. The !f t"~,,.,~~~-_s.:;':v"~'~~ ~!ii: vantages. hand, is struggling to get into game. ter not lole another one.
Rustlers have run for over 1,700 yards tn :: l:'I'~~~ ':i'm~':','°D•~~ First -coach 0 e nn 1 s the win column after three "l don't feel Mater De.i bas "It would be Mater Dfl'a
1be Ru:stlen have a 2-0-1 circuit mark r behind Rio Hondo's 3--0 record. Shackleford's
club faces the Roadrunners a ••eek from
,,Friday at OCX::.
~~. E••MCI• -11 El Mo6tft•1 LM!.!M AfcLaughlin's Bishop Amat straight losses. Lt n em a n reaJI t Its oU ff the worst lealOll ln hlstor)r." sJ1 games. The JG-game mark is 2,295, set vNCl'I ~· ......,.IM. !cit'°" • MIN1ot1 1 Is . off ,_ "-~ .. -~· h been ,_1 Y go ense 0 Ma•-n...1 -A..&. G"PV Carr last year. u~•t1~ 11 ''\!. u<: 1,.,.1,... tt e even com.mg an u1r ooa..--un ..-..v,. as """ ground yet . . , bu l it's >oP ug ~ B-1, h
And Rustlers back Bob Ferraro has moved ~rt:: c°od. ,., press.Ive 32--0 rout of St. for three weeks w:lth knee capable • . . it proved that acknowledges -t a o P
• he N 4 slti the u ti' -·-L.•-cro.1 c1H.1Mrv -Mr. sin A111ott1• A,nlhony, while Mater Dei is ligament problems. aa~insl Chalfey. Amat appears to have an fldce mto t o. po on on a • me 1u.:wuug lnvll•I <Miil fGaldln Wnl. kdcil1C.C:t, i-1~-In I "-and -d with w~ ·-the ·--t -mn. well behlnd record-bolder <hlrUe Buckland °'..t.~ ':".:.. 1111:£;'' H11r1t1""'°" Wu~ eague acuun Hector Delgadillo starts for "The threat of Jim Ger ea ''We 'r-e juslm __ 7:;;: ,~~ r In the South Coast Qinference, Fullerton
-looked awesome in beating Orange Coast
Saturday and il's bard to see coach Hal
( ~.70) ho 1 2 073 &Hell, N•WDMt H•• 11 Foo111111, 1·3-1 overall. Mater Del Thursday niaht at and Steve Martindale is there, 11....,.. w -~ l:nwr-• w ran or • · ur,n1_.c1v I' W•r,1mn11t1r, Miu.Ion 't"'. h h' h ard • to·do the aame UJ.Aa.' we've v 110 ., •••nc 11 S•dd1.i..c-., Second!~ Lancers have middle guard after rms.ci:lng and we ave 1g reg 1or _.._
Former Newport Harbor Walt. and OCC f::"1ftu 8'.~~1·:uY~_1~~· w:!, ~I an assistant coach named Bob most of the season with in· both ol them." done and 00pe we ~·t break
quartttback Alvin WhJte, who 1ead5 the f,~~1 LA Ill. idJ..,to«t •' P11om1r Woods _ the fellow who jury. Woods, a line coach for down ," says Can\. •. PacUlc-S in past completlon1, COIJllected on -i'ii;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;i;i;;i;;;;;;;;;;;;iii;i;;;;i;i;i;;;;;;;;;;ii;;;;;;;:ii;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;i;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;-.;;;;;;;;i;;;;;;;;;;;~
only 11 of 35 passes lut week for 177
)'ardS lb Oregon State's lou to Cal. CRAIG
SHEFF
White bad ll\'e lnlei:Jeeptions. rabJ.nc hU
seuon &otal to %1 In ZlS lhrowt.
Bob Smith has resigned as the bead football
coadl at San Bernardino Valley College in
the waked forfeits to Chaffey and Riverside,
Assistant coach Harold Beach takes Smith's
place.
.,Sbert>eck's Hornets losing. 'Ibey'll meet Cer· ~ 'rlWI aDd Mt. San Antonio in the next two
l1'e«!ks and If they win those two, they can
,11lart celebrating.
SBVC wu forced to forfeit the two games
because ol recruulting a player from Ute
San Di.ego ~rea.
;. 'Ibe: Misskm Conference picture Is sUII
,._a bit clouded, with leader San Diego (s.-0)
stlll having to play Palomar and Groumont
in successive weeks. Saddleback's Gauchos
(4-1), of course , can't afford any more losses.
Golden West Is defmitely in the best shape
ol the three -right now.
There are only four unbeaten JC football
telJlll la the state after Mt. SAC bowed
last week. They include Reedley (M),
Ga'"il'9 (Ml, Flillerton (5-t), RSo Hondp
(S.O). The winless lnclude East LA (IM),
Ohlene (M), Napa (G-5) and Foothlll (0-5).
a.Blfey was Without a "Yictory, WltD San
BerdoO forfeited. •. * • The lack of coming ap with the big play
has ce11ainly hurt OCC this football unson.
la Ute put, CMdl -Oick Tvtke.r's clubs
have alwa)'I bttD able te proclace wttll a
Rick Rice, Golden West's All-Amer ican
running back ol a yi?ar ago, is taking classes
at owe this fall alter a .short stint at
WubinJton State. -------~ ---•
Raiders Are Golden Hawks
Defense
Sparkles
Looking by Laguna?
Salora High is tmbeaten and
untied, and coach Frank Hicks
Is deflnltely non ·comm.ital
about It.
"We're awful small but
scrappy and we just hang in
there," Hicks says. "One week
we're good and the next we're
not; the way we play varies
from week to week."
One thing that hasn't varied,
however, is the Raiders' abili·
ly to win. They've got five
notches on their belts already
this season and are pojnUng
to this week's game with San
Clemente for No. 6. ·
In 1 change from early
schedules, the game will be
held Saturday night at 8 at
La Habra High's field instead
of Friday as was prevk>usly
slated.
1'ie Raiders' defense has
to rank armng the best in
Orange County. It Is working
on ty,·o shutouts in a row and
has given up coly 12 points all
se-ason. And ln San Clemente
it'll be Facing a team which
hasn't given up more than
a touchdown in three league
games even though two or
them have been losses.
You'd think El Dorado
would be happy to play
Laguna Beach Hia:hi a team
which has lost its last four
games and allowed just over
three touchdowns In each set·
back.
Not so, says Golden Hawks
coach Glen Hastings.
"It scares me to play a
team like this," says Hastings.
"Laguna has more pure,
natural speed than any team
we'~ played. It is n' L
quickness, \l's speed.
"It's alao a week before
what should be a very big
game against Sonora, one that
could determine the Orange
League championship. I'm
telling my kids not to get
trapped into looking ahead.
'Ibey can think ahead, but
not look ahead."
The Friday night game at
Valencia High figures to be
a mismatch on paper. El
Dorado is 3-0 in the league
wblle Laguna is o-3. That
doesn't impress Hastings.
"We haven't really been
able to put the ball across
the goal line," he says. "Our
defense has carried us so far
while the offense has done
just well enough to win.
"Against Brea last week we
were inside their 20 yard line
six times and didn't score.
We marched up and down
the field between the 20s but
couldn't score."
The Golden Hawks have
seen outstanding play from
tackles Jim Zure1 (&-<I, 200)
and Dave Lynch (6-1, 215),
who along with defensive ends
Jeff Brown and Wes Leach
have combined for 14 sacks
of the quarterbacks in the
past three games.
Offensively, a balanced at·
tack has been spearheaded by
the rushing ol tailback Steve
Adams, averaging 60 yard5
a game, and fullback Dave
Pickering, who bas a better
lhan 50 yards a game average.
"It's our passing attack
which bas really improved,"
sa.ys Hutinp. "We bad seven
interceptions in the first two
games but only two in the
last three."
Bob Farra Is over 50 percent
o n completions, averaging
over 150 )'ards a game in
the conference.
"Laguna will have Pete Cot·
tam back so we're going
against a different team than
the one that has lost four
straight," says Hastings. "We
can't be caught looking ahead
because we may play Sonora
in a meaningless game if we
do."
.. I hear San Clemen te has
a good defense. but that's
e'bout aJJ I know about them,"
says Hicks. "The Brea peo-
ple said they have a big line,
but that's no news to us ;
e\'erybody seems big because
we're so small."
"They've got a big
Dolphins Predicament
Brings Condolences
quarterback too, and if he's Valencia High was born·
a ,Q:ood -passer I hate to hear barded by Sonora High last
that; our pass defense has week. The same night, Dana
been the weakest part of our Hills High was trampled by
game sometimes." University.
The Sonora defense relies However, that's where
on Quickness and a number similarities bety,·een the two
of alignments and it has left · football clubs ends.
opponents totally confused so Valencia's set.back was the
far this season. Only defewive first in Orange League play
end Bob I-look weighs in at and when the Tigers battle
200 pounds among t h e Dana ffills Friday night at
iitarters, and the othe r San Clemente High. they'll be
linemrn are Alike Bell (170). trying to get back into the
Doug Arndt (16Sl. 'Yayne title chase.
Tavlor (170) and JeU Barker "We simply ran into a super
(150). Linebackers John Myer performance last week," says
( 170 ), Steve Greer ( 160), Va ten c i a coach Dave
and roverbaek Mike Burke Pinckney. "We didn't generate
( 160) are all hard hitters and any offense and the defense
among the leading tacklers. allowed four long plays. All
In the derensh•e backfield, v.·ent for touchdowns.
it's Jim Meirr 11851 . Tim "Dana flills made n better
Hanifin ( 1601 and Bill Lavton sho\\'ing agaiwt Sonora than
1110 1 ' • our club."
MESA • • •
Condnued from rage 20
touch Uiat he enjoyed last
sta$0n -completing only six
or 26 passe.."I against Sallta
Ana.
C'.erald Thomas figured to
be the Olympians' leadin~
back when the seam began
-but he'• been bothered by
an ankle injury. Thus
Sophomore Steve F'itch (~10.
195) has picked up the load
and ranks stCOnd In the con-
ference in rushing.
The Ol)'mplans won their nrtt tbrte games -San Diego
(10-7), Ariiona Western (16-01
and LA Valley {3.01. thtn fell
to Long Beach CC 141·20) an<i s.nta Ana 119·71
Reminded that Dana Hills
hns four starters out with
hepatitis, Pinckney gave his
condolences.
.. Take four starters off our
team. and it would ht a
tragedy. It v.·ould simply klll
us. You get u~ to certain
players nnd then to hnve to
go without them, that's rough.
I ~ympathize."
Valencil\ bumped off
Unl\'C~ity IS..10, the team that
Dana IUlls was routed by,
41 -14 . Vnlencta also stopped
Laguna Bellch 19-12 before
being levelc-d by Sonora.
The T11ers have" falily ba l·
anccd 11.ltack. led by fullbarl:
Ralph C.-oetLsche and Greg Oc·
kunui, who averaged !our
yards 1 carry.
Paul LaOOrde is rated Oil('
or the top quarterbacks in
the Ornni;c League.
Valencia also welcomes the
return of middle guard Dan
Bogoshian who was injured
in last week's loss. He Is
expected to solidify the in-
terior defensive line.
''To get back in the league
chase v:e have to win all the
rest of our ga~," says
Pinckney. "Ou r kids know it
and we'll see how they bounce
back."
Will Liolli\
Be Boiling?.
Herb Hill has a 100 percent
guaranteed way to b e a t
\Vestmlnster ll.igh F r i d a y
nig ht at Anaheim's La Palm~
Stadium.
"\\'e're going to borrow the
entire Anaheim High defensive
line." says the U:>ara football
coach. "The way they handled
Westminster last w e e k ,
holding lh~ to min us
yardage rushing, we cou\dn'I
lose."
Such activity Is naturally
frowned on, e11pecially by
Westminster, so Loara \l.'111 ~ve to go with tts own line,
a1'1rt that's not bad.
The Snxon~ are 4-1 this
season with the lone Joss com·
Ing lo Orange County 's No.
2 ranked team. Servite, In
non·league action. LGara Is 3·0
ln Sun5el l..eague play.
"All Anaheim did by beal ing
\Ycstmin.1ter so convincingly
(14-0J was get them mad
enough to be ready for UJJ, ..
See Llon1 Page t3
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(
W!dntSday, Octobtt 24. 1973 DAILY '1LDT %lJ
Horpel Selected to Post Area }Cs, Preps GOLF .•. LlONS ...
°"'1111 .. Flem ..... 1Z !Oootlooool !nm l'ac-11!
" •
For U.S. Wrestling Program llYI Hill. "Except ror one w t p I R It bub. game, Wtslmlnster has a er 0 0 esu s 1!>e men's club will tnvel
averaged 21 points each time to Palm Sprinp tbls week.@Dd
It took the Oeld. for two days of aoIL :
"Because of that, I llope Bl• (;-....
1"nlllt llo'l"l, wltboot • doubt the moat entbuslutlc wre<UlnJ promoter, coach and
fan in the Orange Coast area, Is 1t It
qaln.
'Ibey are waiting until Dee. 2 at the 8thtffalrga.~e b a nice, Jow.gcoring use *" w °'**; 2 2 14 scon "~"•n k -"iW~~ Members cl the men'• club
CIF t · pl 1 the 197<-'1'5 I ~·•-for uc 0-· 0 ,, , , F_,,1,. v11'-o :i 2 ..._. ~Gr-del M1r ! l '~" o com e e re eao_ ,.... -Lo. A'I"'''°' ~y 2 , 1 ,_, "'' A"' .v.un 1 t-" at Big Cln7on O;uitry Club
the aF Southern SectioD with atlll t1ltte Loara bas good she oo the ~ 1;f:_ ~~':~ i':.. "~ ~; ~':"~~ t.?J: ICOtll'IQ: L1111m1 2. l· ~:O.. <His. Ml:-~r.: c~ of Newport Beedl ~
leagues unresolved in the San Gabriel Valley. line balanced by • atrong-k'rllrd 1. "--:; ~ 1111 " 1• ~c:,r_: ~.,....., a two-day, Shole bet~ baD
Olances are Monrovia will leave the throwing quarterback a n d l:"''''" v~11•v g , 1 l:j CcwOM del ,...., -11" torlth. tow-nament over the weekmd llorpel, wbo has tutored a mullltude of
winoen at the Orange Coast YMCA
(including h1s own son who was an undefeated
CIF champion), has been named AA U na-
tional vice chairman for Gre<ll>-Roman wrestl-
ing for a two-year period.
Mission Valley League and trade place! with hard-running backs. ~.:::'1r. : ~ ~ t 1
: flli.fn~11!m1~°!11~ Kr.ln11: 0o!w111~ sri,"r.'!!':11 with Dick Fylr.e and Harry
Bel1 Gardena in lbe lUo Hondo Leairue (which Mike Henry (S-2, D>) and ~'.1"','. ,__.llQ; •. W•ll•*'"u l· '· ~·-I, M 11•• ' s::,~·A~ \I• r • .., l 1 l::i Carlton ...... 1 .... a Ul for IOp
G <"'•• (•2 2 5 5) Ill JOM Glbnl. "" ,,._..,lelfl l~ 6tl Mii Kor1llll: H'Kk 1, I""'...,~ includes San Marino, Duarte ai:icf Temple ary .-... er ,,. , sew. l>'t O...•rt1 L•u,.., 11 Orr t. ·-vr.abum 1, '----. --~-1· lb ·--I "'°""'"'" V•lltv • 1 ..... s.............. UUl ... ll City, the top three rated teams ln 2-A illl\UJr a me at 1.-g ven l«n ~nJ..'!.~ ~c. A\•"'u:? • o t.,1-4 l"c... " °"''"'1 In second place wtte Joe circles). up just 10 polnts in the lut 1~1='• · --2;4 i i!.-11 " "~~·,:i ~~·r. tc:orln11: •ut 11
.-.;1 ri~,,,1"°01111
0 ~ ~ t! Mad! and Frank Bueche at
Among duUes will be team development With or without Monrovta's addition to three games, including an im-4 ~"\no;I• tc.M...,'M!·· W'l•H i. Swen"°" v1n11v o .... Cotll \Cor1n•: Urry !H•1-125. Third place went to I ~' t f high! ., nilth J, S • Q le•,.,•n l . Mikt Vt r .. OOCI 1. Do<i<I the Rio Hondo League it wou1d appear that press ve ""'"" rou 0 y-111-M)orln11: ......,1...,t\MI 1, Him· F:r.:n111 Clf"f ... u•r;•1 , l:' Fr•nln•rn l. Walker Sm1th, Jr. and Earl
circuit ls ready to move up a notcb to toutedSantaAnalastweek'. mtl>ll'llll' ·J....,.,. "'"''" ~1::i:::Ji':/!0<or!M: Cv11t~HUdt.,., M•rln• ·virM.., , 21'-1 Lundhigh at 126. ""•rierback Mu Bacon h"· k ......... o ... ,,.,.. 2. Rld1.1I•"· ..... ~I I. ed f r--·
ROGER
CARLSON
3-A clusificalion. ~u '""' !~'=i. l 1 l ! f l=li -k.,~.~ll~~lno: F•rr.il. 'Jo:~-12. A tie result or uo.<1 u1 The only other problem is Montebello, completed 45 of 87 passes for a\_, 1(..,1...,, c ....... il'<I"""' 1• s!:: ... ..,...,~~;:tn o. w·-·· s. w1.-.. Roc:k, F•bl•11. place with Bill Moore and Bob
which desires to leave the Pacific League. 5 3 2 ya rd s and four CA:i ... T." .JJ...1tdf'°'w~fk~rv1~ h~ ~~ v111a ~ l: ~1i M•.rn.. Ju111011 vA11s1~T1 o ,_ i Fyke in a deadlock with Jack touchdowns. Wtlb the es:-1. ,.....,.S*I ., "''''''' ·,, · ,, Love and Don Banb at 127. Etl•no;!t KCM'lnQ : C-!•nd ] • Stwt "'° 0...f'ltn .._ ~ .-There are some lnttteallng: prep baskttball eeption of the Servile game, P."ril .. ,3 Murt•Ulln 1. Redm1YN ~fJ!!! v111a g 31 t1 M•n... '11osM·SO'M , 0 I t:t 'I'hrtt teams tied fer listh
collfUcta oa tap ha pre-leape and toarnammt Bacon"'~ tos,,ed just one In-lalll• s~re:-':!'r11n s.::l'Nfl 2, ";k'f.n':'f,1m,,..,r•r"'• 2, ~~rr~·~:.in11 : Ra111n1 s.21'u~• at 130 with Jim GW!ullus and
attiOft for area 1Cboo11. tercepuvu. ~·1-=11 o y ~ .__, John Storch on ooe sqaad;
ne age IUIOll aieta ander way Dec. Tailback Dave Walker, who I!:,:: •• K'Ol'inci : Strle~I I, ''M'.w .. Bob H.il.gren and De D JI I 1
and lntemati<lnal sdiedullng for the United
States.
I with Rlvenkie Poly at Wtstmlnster, Victor mlued Loar•'• lH win over "l'.lr.:.';.':.'1:',~M..!;,,,. ••. """"" Wome11 's Softball Harwood on another; and Jim Valley at Mater Del and La Jolla at Dua Marina due to injury, is again '· Rllty M.. 1· Gray with.Hant Weeks oo the
Bll1s. 100 percent and has collected third.
With Horpel ramroddlJ'€ things, Long Beaeh
has been selecte4. to host the Southern Pacific
Assocl.ation AAU national age group freestyle
and Greco-Roman championships Jwie J.5.19,
19'14:
Edlsoe jeurneys IO Lompot: to datl Cabrillo 257 yards in 54: carries this Tied at 131 were Toby Obon
and Lompoc Dec. 11 and 2!. season. and Doo Byers; Jack Banta
Coronado vfslta Laguna Beach Dec. II; "It hasn't been the running and Bill Walker; Dewe y
FOWltain Valley defends tta UUe at the Santa backs or defense wbic.h has Tackaberry aod WW Layman;
Marta toumament Dec. 13-15; Unlvenliy Is really come on," says Hill. and Jim Harstad with Dave
at the Chino tourney Dec. •ZS; and Estancia "Our offensive line ha s Ward.
In addition the open freeatyle cbam-
piomhlpt will follow June 20-22. _
Sftks to Palm Springs Jan. 5. become one, solid unit ln the A Hallowt'en tournament I'
Palm sprtnp ls coached by Bill Arm1troag:, past few weeks. It's usuany scheduled &nlay and will be
Tbe flnl three age group national toorneys
were held in Montana and Wyoming.
the fellow whe guided Compton Hlgb to the last thiiig to jell, and it known as the wttchel and
five CIF cbampiomhlpa and a U-game win looks like that has happened. warlocks event. It b a jack
* * * Marina and H ......... Beld mp School
slreak. Tbe wiDnlng streak, a CIF record, "We're about on schedule and jill la-amble with blind
was •napped by Marina In mt. where I'd like to be but it's draw for foursomes and •
will ---¢d rlwlry -,.., detpllo the 1pll< wllb Marina ooollnallC;bl
tough lo figure w-." noon shotgun start. Former Marina High football coach t.eonl--'=-"C:..:::....::~::....::=::....::::::::.:..._:===..::::::.cc_ ______ ....:.:=:.c..c:::.....:::....=c..:...:..c-------.:._----------''-------~
tbe -Leope and HuatlqtGD Beacb ln a revamped 1etup.
Wbee1er didn't stay out of coaching very
long, stepping down after two years at Marina
'111eJ'll clall ht a mo-leape pme daring
lbe -..! week ol the 117< campaign -
al Onqe °""' or BanllngtGo BeoclL
recently.
He's the specialty teams coordinator at
Cal State (Long Beach).
"Costii-M esa Ojiponeni-: -is-Brea
Seeks to End Streak Offense
Magnolia lli8h Sdiool'• Sen-
tinels footbell team has found
a dry •pell sinl:< entering
Irvine . Le.ague' warfare and
coach Jim Howell la wary
that Friday night's date wldl
Costa Mesa is perhaps another
stmOOling bloc!<.
"I don't know if we are
ever going to get ~r vic-
tory,'' Howtll says. ''This ill
a toUgb 1 .. gue IDd I'm rmdlng
it out more each week."
Howell is a flrlt..year roach
bl' Iba Inlne dn:ult and aft.r
lib Seotlnell .... tbeh' lint
too practice -Including a l+o vidory over Garden a .... Lague -Slnllago, ha .. flll<n lo Loo Alaml ... ,
Senta Alla Valley and EdlllOll.
Qlsla M... haa likewise
dropped decltlco9 lo SAV and
Edison, along with a 13-7 Joss
to Corona de! Mar.
"They (Costa Meu) are a
p-etty good football team. >..
1ood 11 most of the teams m this league," Howell adds .
"Tbey will give us all we
can handle and those two
backs (Steve Sharp and Den-
n.is Delany), are probably as
Slipping?
' good as anybody in the league If the southern schools are
"I've beoo very impressed ever going to rise in Orange
with the passing of Sharp and League football, Brea coach
Delany is a solid nmner." Rudy Estrada h....... it doe.sn't The Sentinels have found in-• ..,.,....
jwi.es a problem as has John happen this week.
Sweazy's Mustangs squad. Through the fit'!t three
Jeff Martin, a startln~ -ks of league play, none
linebacker and d e f en s i v e of the four southernmost
1ignal-caller, will miss the Costa Mesa game as will of-!dtool.s in the •league (San
fensive guard Dave V«'decia. Clemente, University, Dana
Venleda has been the Hilb and Laguna Beach) ha ..
team's most con s i s ten t been able to beat a league
bldcker while ¥artin plays _ representative from t be
guard on olfmse ,when' the northern part ol Orange Colll-
occasion demaods. ty.
The Senllnelt' slot and And Estrada llopes that
power-I formatklns are geared trend continues this week
around the passing o f when his Brea team lakes
quarterback Larry Randel and on University Saturday night
the running of tailb&ck Monte at Mission Viejo High.
Bullerdlck. ~ "The splitting of schools has
Bullenllck has gained over really hurt the s o u t h e r n
500 yards this se&900 and has scOOol.s, and that's probably
scored eight touchdowns. the difrerence that has shown
up so far," Estrada says. "But
MV's Impressive Win
Worries Knights Boss
we're not exactly looking
forward to playing University,
they're a much improved
team."
After winninc Its fll'Sl two
league pmes, Brea lost to
El Dondo laat week. Estrada
pinpoints bis team's problem
Foothill Hll!h footboll coach
Bill Snyder ~feels somewhat
like a poker player whose op-
poll"'I just tipped hll hand
to show two aces.
1 He knows he could be in
trouble, but he's not sure jllllt
bow much.
Snyder's FoothlD team takes
oo Mluloo Viejo this week
•nd, even though Foothill ls
undefeated in league, Snyder
feel! 90mewhat spooked by
an impressive victory Jut
w e e t by twice-defeated
Mllololl Viejo.
"After Jut week's game,
lbey appear to have become
a heck of a football team,"
Snyder says. "I ru.Uy wasn't
llUrpriaed to ... them beol
Saddlebact. Misslon Vle)o was
my choice to win U all Ulla
year. It just setfM Jlke aft.er
a 11low start Ibey put II all
together Jut weielr.."
"'Ibey have the kktl -could blow you off the football
field." When It comes to specific
indivkluals lmpmalng Snyder,
he nms down the entire
Mlulon Viejo starting lineup,
(ivlng particular notice to the
Olablol backlleld. ·~Guy Reevt.1 Is a.s flne a
fullbtlck e.s there ls in the
league and Ken Robbins 11
• fine nmnlng bock," Snyder
says. "Kevln Ea\orJ and Mark
Mtnnr are good receivers,
and tboul!h tbttr UM !Jn'I big,
Ibey ..,., off the ball vr:ry
well" Foolhlll, 2-0-1 In league play
and H -1 ovttall. baa -• Impmslve lndlvldu.lt ltsell,
even tho\lp the Knlghlt ore
neldlng a predomin11nUy
junior team thls aeason.
Quarterback Paul McGaf· oaan bu hit on 38 of 74
puses r" 54& yan!J, and
doeon't partkulorly favor an)'
of (our recelven.
Jn the backlltkl, the Knights
have a weD·bel.aoc'ed quartet
of runners to u s e in-
terchangeably. Tailback Tim
Bradley has picked up 292
yards in 59 carries and senior
fullback Mike Waldron (6--0,
175) has 331 to lead the group.
Dave Satherland and George
Mahlstedt see more limited
action, but have nearly 200
yards between them for the
season.
In. the lines, the Knights
are moet proud of Steve Kat-
nick {165) a defensive end,
Steve Gorti and Joe Ducey
as down linemen, and junior
lfueba.cker Mike Knapp.
Grid Odds
This Week
u a sputtering offense.
"We bied to pus agaiNl
El Dorado but didn't do too
well, and our running game
hasn't been what ~ sbollld
be," Estrada says. "The key
for WI thi..s week will be
wheUler w mt we can get
our offense going."
Brea's offeme has managed
just 10 point. In the lut two
weeks, and the Wlldcata only
touchdown came In the fina1
minute of a game in which
Ibey beat San Clemente, 7-6.
Even so, the Wildc.ata still
have the league's third rank·
ing passer, Carl Bostick, who
has passed for over 500 yards
thla sea!OO. Fullback Steve
Seeba, a rdumlng all-lea.guer
has rushed foc over 300 yards,
and lllil bock Nick Espooito
Isn't far behind.
Evan Orrell, a 165-pound
senior split "1<1, Is the most
danRel'OUS Wildcats receiver.
Another foreboding r a c t
from the University standpoint
is that the WlldcaUI will be tn
near top shaoe phvslcally
11ince return Ing all-league
llncman Bruce Ayers has
lrY recovered from an ankle in-
jury.
Estrada says he has been
Impressed wHh University's
backfield, and rates Murry
Graham among the league's
best backs after hls 191·yard,
four-touchdown o u t bu r s t
against Dana Hills last week.
"University isn't do Ing
anything dlffel't!!'lt, they're just
d o I n g eV'el')'th!nc better."
Estrada says. "They're tri1t
in the lines, and lht:v're going
to give us a tough game."
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TONIGHT'S
TV IIlGHLIGHTS
ABC IJ 6:30 -"Batn1an." 1-lere 's the (pow)
movie spawned by the ~sockl TV series with Adam
West as the Caped Crusader and Burt \Vard as the
Boy Wonder. Holy rerun.
NBC O 8000 -Adam-12. Officers Malloy and ~d · encounter a distraught rat her holding his t
daughter hostage at gunpoint. Martin Milner, Kent
?tfcCord.
KCET m 9:30 'Voman. A candid discussion I on fem ale frigidity.
··--------------....,
TV DAILY LOG
Wednesday
Evening
OCTOBER 24.
''" l~'ai~~ =:::
c.tstii, " (M11'1 f11h.i ~= i::. T.t
........... r1.
.._..: (C) tatl "nt 111111 Ptt.-
~lu" P1rt I (du) ·~1evt Mt·
i tn, Rld'larll Allenbornu1h.
Mldppedp Lidie n, .. St111n
l :JD CIJ ('fjJ CD ttora•'• Httte• u lliwM: (C) (90) Mlltll••"
(tam) '66--Ad1n1 Wtst. Burt W114,
-Cesar Romero; --· • 1ilfll91])-
• 6ldt ···-Dr• MtR Cr!ffi11 Slltw AlldJ liriffittl
Niltoly If Al1
• L/vlll1 [llJ u Htr1 f11111Lw
' Dllllt Tllutr• """ '"""
Wlleelbariow Full of Trouble .. Pl'lvl:t
clttlldive rianl! Fi1~dar is an.~ious
to !tarn wlly • well-~nown shady
used car de11er ls in t hu1ry to buy
a beet up 6-year-old car at tile llrs1
ptlce offered. Joe Flynn and E(d
Byrnes guest.
O .lamie Smith Jackson, * Andy Griffith in "Go
Ask Allee" Wedne~day
Movie of the Week o tHirn muc w. • 11e 1111, MoM:" (l) (90) "'' ~ Allct~ (RJ (dr1) '72 -WiUi1m Sh1tntr, Andr
Griftilh, Ruth Rom111. Jamie Smith
Jackson. 81sed on tile ae!u1I di1ry
of 1 teena1e 1irl uugh\ In the vi-
ciou! web of drug addiciion. Wi1h the help of her t1m1ly 1nd lrut
friends 1he lries despe11tely to h11:hl
ht1 ••Y bKk to "" ital WOfld. _I :-;_:riffin Show
''°' 8 WM. CONRAD-CANNON * TV'S TOP PVT. EYE! .IJ SCIJ C11u1~11 "Com• Witch
Mt Die:" C.nMln 111:reu to track
ctown 1n esuped convict when ht l11rns lhtt tile min may htw been fr1m1d for murder. Don Sttoud and
Michael Tolin 11:uest.
W111 I• Dolllrs l\t Untt11cb1blt1 ''°'I mam..., W"""""" Movie: (C) (Z111) "flillJI 11111 P1p1 Cor11on
b" (mu1) 'SS-f11nk S1n11r1, t.SO t11 M11cbdla 1t1ll1111 V"M111 Blalnt, Jean Simmons, Mar· ECi) CoMdJ l Sporb
Ion Brtndo. 10:00 ft 9 ([) PRD!IERE ll:oj1\ "Seiae
fl =-~My UM? OfTtrror" Telly Slv1las, sturine 1s
I LM • ·-Ntw YoB City polic1 de1edive Lt
MM s.'::J Thto Koj1k. lites 1 two-hour de1d·
el.I 0n1111 ti >eannle line in • daring effort to save the mllla llm of live llost11n held by a lr+o
ol d!!f'rate hol~ men . . ~~!!'.etc.... O l'Q_@l)jl w Lovt Story "The ~, f11 WlfW If $1mWM Roller ~ter Stops Here" Rt!11ve
WT; if P'lhMr ~ in 1 manla1e IO"t shit, 1 man be· comes ia¥Ol¥td with an unc:orrt1n· ""-ltfttr SllN lionll £irl, jeopardi.rin1 his future s.-1 bctf ind his !1milJ. 811bar1 Seaiull. 7:30 I) TM ....,,.. Dtt1111 C.11111 Jm llon Munay il!d Loi.Ilse l1uer star.
uni• ho511. ~omm a Mews rn Ht1u'1 tlertll li!Jtil Calltry
LER lHJ (})EI) Own M1nhaJI "Tht a PHYLLIS Oil meram Ale I Special Clan" Com· * TONIGHT'S BEST BET! p::iHr-sinpr John Dfnvt1 1111kes his
D Wilt Tiii low ratllfr kb KtlH i:ramatic a:ctin1 debut as e sinJinl
''nit lady o.tectivt" Pllyllls Dilltr star who 1s_ aecuse_d of .the me1q
'" th voice '°' a wtcliy cop k1lh"g of h!S te1m1nally·111 mo!htl. ~IUtS I lfi (Xltlll!I w11os1 comlt1I sleuthing helps Harry n. Silent Drv to recovu 1 company payroll stolen 111
11om h!s l!om• by 1 ne!1hbofhood 10:30 IT•:.'° Bick thltl Twllltfll Zone
M1111 TIIJ Mtiihhlf Com11un11J reeclhlct
hbbp C.otdsbort Slthf Biii CosbJ
· Contentlatklll Yo11 !Of Kt11th
TM N,. ~t It R1111t · TY Mnicll hwffdlH · Nrws/Sporb
Cl) To Toll I .. T••• lloOO I 0 El~ m m .... (]) HotljwoH s.iu1ns ®ii.OJ t;i::t @ Nnn
s.rtl11nt "Walls Writers Worll· TwiW(hl ne
"'°P" 6 Pt1ry MISGft
i (i) Ptlkc Sur1to11 • l'hi1 Donah ue Show
OtM:1 l'eoplt, Oiiier 1'11us T1 Ttl1 the Tnrlll
Tht lihlul Can& kl Snurt
.. ~ ... ...... (11) m The Mt.die 1:00 II"' CIJ S.n11r 111d _., ... m_, 66' Allred Hitdlcod ~senb
tie• nm N1bon 1nd Lissie 1u1sl .._. (I) Tfllll Wnt Q ·'i'i IJ)j?j €DAd111-lZ "Hot ~~ Shot~ ... O!ficers Malloy ind Reed 1r111:15 l!l Ci11tm1 34 \
ch1tlen1ed bJ a t1tn 11e robbe1, ll:JO I) 9 (!1 CBS Ute MO'fi1: (C)
and a dist11u1ht l1thtr holds his "Madllne Ciu11 McCaill" (dra) ·ro-
""'" d1ulflttr hosla11 at 1un point John C.u1ve1es, Peter Falk.
O lih\olt: (Ztlrl "ICM• Co11t"I Q ~ (6 ~ m klhn11y Cane11
(d1a) '68-Richard Boone, Vera l'I Mtwie: "Sonowhtl Jones~ (tom}
M1le1. i '19-Bob Hope. Lucille Ball. 0 !Jll (3J m IN & Ct1tl l Teel Q fJf, rJ) ffi Wide World al En·
l A11ot Ttd and Alitt art lascin-terta1n111tnt ··o~v1d Frost Presents
1ted b1 Bob •IHI C.rol's tritnds, lhe Guin11tss Sook o! World Rttords"
Gus 1nd Btryll, wllMe ot1tn mar-D1vid frost ts host brings on !llie rla11 Is al>oul to Of)ln ntn lurtller many ol the people who ilold e•tr1·
to lnc:tudc Gus" filMff, Chtr)"L ordinary m11ks 1n the 1ecord book. 0 Mlllle11 $ Mowlt: (C) (Zllr) "Tllt m Allred Hitthcotk Presents
DtldlJ Alhlt" (d11) '67 -J1111ts (El MO'lit: "Myttery Subm1rin1" M1son, Simone Si1nout. M11lmlli1n (d11) '51-M1 cdon1ld Carey,
Schell. 12:00 i OM. Step le,ond
I C1Hft Acm · Thriller
l\t loMI OMs MO'lle: "Tiit Actrtss" (drt) '53
Lt Sa11er1 """ -Jean Simmons, Spencer h;iq.
i; Mewlt:(CJ 1z11r)"JtM11tfJtettlt 1.001 G [J}~@ News
Uiikl'IOWll" (dr1)-Vtr1 Milas, P1tty ' ~O) €C Tamonow
Duke. , Wanted Dtld of Ali~e I I l tlCl.i!LI UJt. Day CHurt l'lO News
CH111•llflsl!IJI Wrtlllln1 • Hlfliway 1'1trot
Japa11151 U11p •ft ~1111111 1:45 MoYit: "lo11turdler" (dra) ''3
1:30 -Randolph Scott. Pal O'Brien.
~ (l) There's My'stery Tonite Z:OO m All-Nifllt Slltw: "Dort'! Take ft
CH fl Httrt," "The lo)' Willi Cree• * on KERO-TV-WAT ! H1lr," 111 Attadi
Q IH@ [11 €D NBC WHlnesdlJ l:lO I.I Mowlt: "TM II( Stt11" {dr1) ''9
MrthlJ -,_-,Idly & Co11p.a11r "Al -lloblrt Mitchum, Jane Greer.
Thursday
OAYTIME MOVIES
12:l0 m "TIM ltrin11ln& 11 tilt End" (dr1) "47-Brit" Donle...,., Robert
Wal~fr.
1:00 0 "Sbll'J ol WIU R111n" (bio) '52
-Will Rogers J1 .. Jane W.m1n.
1:00 flt(}) "SOutll 14 'an1"1t" (mys) l :OO (f) "Mich Nl)On" (drt) '52-<iary
'l1-Ro1e1 Prror, V111in1a Vile.~' Cooptr. Grite Kelly.
t:30 0 "Hotel '•rllllst" (tam) · ~01 (C) "S~ndlJ in N1w fo1"' (1om)
Alec Guinness, Glnt tcllobritid1. 6'--J111e o~i. Rlld layklr.
.. .. J:lO !j) ({] IC) "An1el in MJ l'DC-tl" 10:00 IJ) IC) ft11')" It Hon1 llon1 P1rt fcam)'69-Andr Grift•lh K•r Med-i (dr1) '61-Curt lur11ns. OrMin1 lord ' Welles. I ·
O "Wild stilllon" {wesl '52-een 4:00 S {Cl "Anbtsciue" (drt) '66 -
IAOptr. M1rth1 Hyer ' Gre11orr Petl. Soph11 Lo1en.
12:00 D "To111 S.W)'lr, OttKtlve" (1ctv) 4:JO L3 Same a• lOAM lbtin1
'li--Donald O'Connor. "The Aftlll CJo le 1 "0nlJ Two C.11 1'111" Part
IMI ~11tr (x1·h' '60 -Ger11d I !lOll'I) '62-Pe1e1 Sellers, Ma l Zt!
Ml>lrr, Lt~ lrtma7nt. I ltrll11z,
i .(I) HI"°" " A•IK~~~,.~;L,~Vl~~0:iil~0~, Ar! (ti leHon IJ
'(I'll"''" (•1"'"
J:Xt I'm 11, AMI ''°""'"' !Cl Srwt••I Tnt 1l•11VVlt o1 Ill "" ...., mo1n,r re m1~• ,,.. rlotrl dK•i.lon 10• nll'
ctrlld •
•:OO Al Mlfl ltlllwt IC ! Lrnnn 10
"'Cr111lvlly"' -P1vcl'oolot1v """" IOt coli<fot crtdll.
•·)Cl 1(19ct•IC c-.-lfl' \Cl Olt!lllll
J\lftt Af1$tlt oro:lll'l t yummy '"" 1>1111 wllft tvt•Yllllno on Ir rt11t tnoe
"""'"' l!illl. J 100 Sltlmt 11•"1 t(J flt HOCM•
UOI" IW °"'' . t•llA c•n TO lllttn •o • ,,,,..,.,, ot 111e G•0111h
r>f\i!llar""'""' t. 0G Tiit Grtll (llfl\11,...r (Ofllttl ICI
L'''°" 14 "Mhwll"Q Yo11• MO<ltl'" -to<1•..,....•• l<l\ll:f!lo<1 (P11•11 I<>•
1;1111 ... t•tdlt.
1.00 TM G,...11 Con•-• c ... 1,,1 ff'\
lr•""' IS "Your 1r-.(dotllt (1~11··
-T.ot lff'll ... 1lfd U lf(.ICn t i r«111v·• ,..,.,.ti Ul<I ~o.ndlll\I ,_.c ... In
(M"• lod•~
I Y.I Th• Scluoct •nd At! lff 'oe!NU
((• 0.1tn1iv• Line Pl•v" E•PIO•t•
tnf 1tonl fQVt •nd !Mir <:IV!lt•
t OG M••lf•~tc• Tl>tllt• IC) ··c:10\l(f•
cl w •n•u" Par! 1 lnv'"'c.to<
••••• ¥1t•.,..1tv •nd Ot-te(!lvt lr•IH'('°'
P1•\1r •~•ml"' IM '<..r!' o1 !l\f
'''""' '"" ~'" to aroN 11\f c•1•1c1t• ct tl>t !tend "''" Drtmt ~ 00 'l>llo•llllf ''""--!(I O•bvl
f' ••!uflno • •t•I .. cl """"'•' •P<l:'cl•I• '"'~ •nl••lno•• (YMl>IA GOOClll'l<I ,.lO Al M•n lt111v" f('l I.,,..,, M r ,,~,·~nv" 1><vc11~1nqv !IN"• 1,
t(lll~~ (ttlfll (;II min!
Organist Hits Sour Notes
Several lovers cf organ
n1uslc from our COWlly were
11mong the audience in Los
Angelee' First Coctgregational
Church last weekend and t~·o
of them caught this critic's
car bt>fon! the program to
let us know. that they htid
spoiled the · reference t o
British organist Peter Hurford
ln last we(!k's "Music Box."
It may well have been that
they would have liked to catch
the ear of yours truly after
1hc program since there ill
very little doubt that they
liharcd this writer's keen
disappointment at a recital
that ~·as orV competent at
its best and unmentionable in
several passage.s. N e·•v lloHtRJtce Hurfo•d is the maste< of nlusic at the Cathedral and
Dori ~1urray plays a bored husband who meets an Abbey Church of St. Alban
unconventional girl (Barbara Hershey) at an amuse-in England and this writer.
ment park on tonight's episode of Love Story, air· knows enough abo\)t the kind
ing at 10 o'clock On NBC, Chann~~~ ________ o_r_s_1a_n_d_.,_d_s_d_ema_n_d_cd_a_t _1ho_l
. ' ..
TOM BARLEY
Music Box
level in Britain to be In-It was later learned th,at there_
credulous today at t h e were no encores from OW' •
lackluster eUort of an ofganlst British visitor. And small won·
who came lo us with such der.
glowing credentials. *
' .. 'llORDS AT RANDO!'tf -IUS BACH (Fifth trio-sonata It seems ilhat there are no
in C and the prelude and irrunediate plans by t h e
fugueinG )wasabysmaland "'-Cots b ony
1·1 was clea• that the audience ""ange un y y mp Association to resume the con-
thought so. certs which last s e a s o n
Hurford was slightly more broui)ll conductor Carmen
impressive in the work that Dragon of Hollywood Bowl
opened the program -six fame tO this county.
music of VlvatdJ. Scarla.tti and
Couperin among the featured
composers.
· 1be Cantores Gloriae of St.
Paul's Churcb, Tustin (thjs
~tel''s own chutt:h) will take
over after the Interval In a
paroque to· OOAtemporary
recital that will featu're music
by Purcell, Persichetti, Koda-
ly, Farmer, B~rtok and1El1ar.
-~10ST MUSIC lovera tn
our county will consider the
1975-74 mlisie seasoh officially
launched Saturday when con-
ductor Zobi.n Mehta brings his
Los A n g e I e s Philharmonic
Orchestra to UC Irvine's
Crawford Hall for the first
Orange County Philharmonic
Socit?ty concert.
U tbe program compares
to that offered by l h e
orchestra under associate con·
ductor Sidney Harth at Golden
West College two weeks ago
oUr new and eagerly awaited
season will be off to a
pieces by Louis Marchand -Current plans by the group
tiut you couldn't lieip thinking, are for the staging of several
even then, that his thoughts mini-concerts and the second
and concentration were far of these offerings ·is scheduled
a\l•ay from that magnificent for 8 p m. Monday in the
Sc~ organ. .._1\naheim High_ S c ho o l mora
Langlais' ''Te 15eufil" most auditorium. ~~~~~~~;;~=::=~~
OPENING
THl}RSDAY, NOVEMBER 1
NIGHTLY • DINNER AT 6:30 •CURTAIN 8:30
A UNIQUE CALIFORNIA EXPERIENCE
... presents live theater and a "served" buffet. Wednesdays, Thursdays,
Sundays -$9.95; Fri~ays -$10.95; Satu•days -$11 .95. Cocktails
extra. No food or beverage served during the performance.
l\rama Ditb !Jµur tiinner
appropriately ended the Music lrom the 16th and l1
tedium and allowed this critic 17th centuries is the theme
to beat a hasty retreat from of what looks to be, on paper,
a most disappointing recital. a very attractive program.
Surfing Filin Festival
Thl1 Wlttli.1 Pntri11n
"REQHOT BLUE"
Phti
Betty Boop Cartoons
Camplrlr Shaws f ;Jt I t :Jt
WINAS RF ·1
Ont. Gl¥en •wa1 E~fl Wftll:
[ Coupa~ I 0.l•lli Al T~lr•
Several medieval instruments
will be performed by the
Renaissance Players with the
O'OUNl f.IN ~-•lll~ ,,~!.
. "'•P« M ... " IN) I • "Wll•t's u,, Dec" IP51
CLOSlll 5UNDAY I
MADCAP EVENINO 01' ·PUllILY COMIC NOSTALGIA
"THE TAVERN"
1y.Gtorv1 M. c.,...n
1127 HEWPOll:T, COSTA Ml!SA 1'011: 11:11$1'.llVATIONS, CALL -6*130
~~.~!.~·~ ~CORONA OEL.MAll:
HELD OVER I
MARLON IRANDO
7 & 1D:l4
Ill.! l'H r.tJNT'S
"WHAT· DO YOU
SAY TO A
NAKED LADY?''
____ ,:14 ,,,·::.•·:...__
S1111doy MatlNe
Ccall THatr• for
kllltd11lll
"""'"" -MOOUCt•N -COMPMIY CCII.Oii
IOTH IN 70 MM --Jt::.=: .. t:
"Manor
hMancha"
--(iml9
IXI
Come to the spookiest, ghotlliesl place In Soulhem C1lllornla when Ke tt's 11 completety tr1n1lormed 10 cre11e
the most h1un ted cf Halloweens Iha! you wlll ever experience! Sae .. ~he Phantom of Iha Oper1 In tht C1!1co
Saloon! The bizarre, spooky antics in lhe Haunted Shack! Spooktacular Fireworks and LIVE MONSTERS through·
out lh e enllre log-shrouded farm! Ride , .. The Ghoslway Exprets Into the dark deplht ol lhe earth! Take a fun-tlngl/ng •
plunge through Iha Devil'• workshop In Satan'• Sawmlll! Plut! Special Trick or Trell and fun 'n games for youngslars
-·--... " ...... 1.-wwia ,, .... ,.
from 3 lo 11 years! ~
'
"Spooky"
Super Spooky Special
G Big Hours on Fri. & Sat.!
6 p.m. to Midnight!
Enjoy UNLIMITED use ol 111
Knoll's llcketed allr1cllon1
throughout chlUing Ghost
Town, eerie Fiesta VIiiage ind
bewitching Gypsy Campi
lncludlno . ,, Seymour In the
John Wayne "Haunted"
Theatre! Scary tun In the
H1unted Sheck! Dunk the
Monsler t11cltemenll Plus •.•
Witches cackling, Bait
tcroeching and Corp••• laughlnOll
KNOTT 'S BERRY FARM
I
FAMILY TWIN CINEMA
' ' . ' ' " ,.,
' ' " • ' 1 •
CINEMA: I
H.td o W:..1 Jrd 111 Wff\1
"Cli melot" (G) _ ....
"ROMEO & JULIET"
CINEMA II
H.W Offr'I 211d lit W ... I
,,,.. . .,.,,
t1i.-11.
515-J~:tt
lo~ Die~• ·····•¥ •. ··-~-·1 ... \ 961·1411
_.,_
LITTLI IMJ MAN CPO) il!.1119 1 ...........
MAN CALLED HOISi"'
~
'o'
this
IY
IO
up
I
"K ton
2.
c
ten
Sa
Yo
so
yo
up
at
lo
rea
wh
.iAJl. 'f PlLOf
Kojak-·A Co·p With Class KMEX Drops All-1iews Format
By JAY SHARBUl'r
, NEW YORK (AP)
There've been a lot of cops
'n' robbers shows on the tube
this season and most are prel·
ty·-bad. But sooner or later
someone was bound to come
up wUh something good.
It's finally happened with
1'Kojak," whlctl premieres
tonight at 10 on 'CBS, Channel~
and rour otben -one of In its depiction of the lhtaler·
them mortally wounded -in of-the-absurd atmosphere that
a car. usually a t tends lbese
The gang in the car ls cbas· particular situations in New
ed through the 1treets of New York.
York, flnally getting trapped A large crowd gathers lo
by a roadblock. They dump watch the show, the ubiquitous
ENTEllTAINMENT
LOS ANGELES IAP) -
News Televllion 34, the fint
all-news tel evision operation Jn
the country, will disconUnue
operatk>n Friday.
The 81ft·hour weekday news ,
service, inaugurated Juty 9.
shares UHF channel 34 with
the Spanish-language station
IQ\fEX. The Spart1$ broad·
casts begin at 3:30 p.m. daily.
( TV REVlE\'1 )
TV crew is there to bring their wounded accomplice on it all live to the folks at
the street and dash inside a home and even delegates from
war surplus store, shooting the Hare Krishna sect show
a cop who also had run in up . to dance, chant and ring
the store to warn · the clerks their finger cymbals. '----------~
"We }lad expected a faster
resp::inse to the show," said
Ren.old V. Anselmo, president
of the Spanish International
and customers there to get 1llE !'tfADN~ is nicely i-:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;,:-1 out. summed up when the crowd
THEN, AS THE police sur-cheers and applauds because
round the place and bring the gunsels have surrendered
in 'an armored half-track. the and are wa1king out, preceded
three stickup men demand a by Kojak carryinf the body
jetliber and f r e e d o m , or a policeman.
2. Save lime for it if you
can, because it has class writ·
ten all over it.
The proceedings star Telly
Savalas as Theo Ko}ak, a New
York polict lieutenant who 's
so sardonic and hard·boiled
you get the feeling he warms
up before work by sneering
at babies.
---TONIGH'f..18-SAGA. appears
to havft been lifted from a
real-life drama of last year,
when. some gunsels tie.Id up
a Brooklyn sporting goods
store; ~hen mad!' tbe patrons
host<iges When the ~lice
threatenlng to kill their five . The show: has a few minor
hostages if their demands flaws, mainly its tendency
aren't met in two hours. toward the .end to get briefly
The rest or the show has preachy about the t o 1 a I
Savalas, brisk and efficient. dedication of cops as our main
showed up and surrounded the trying to end. the impasse line of defense agains t crime.
place. without 'blbod~ed. You know But overall, "Kojak" is p.n
'Ille TV version starts things he will, bi.it it 's an exciting, excellent, fast-paced show that
off-with an-armorOO-car ~grlpplng-h0Ur110netheless. belOngs iRlhT"<lofi'tTtilss"
I oldup that goes awry when The show has the ring of category or viewing. You'll en·
DEBUTS TO~IGHT
Si1vi1las as t('ojak
'a passing citizen sees it in authenticity to it, particularly joy it.
prbgress and notifies the law. ,-----•--========= .'The law arrives, there's a
gunfight ' and the baddies flee,
three of them in a panel truck '.
l I DO • N:,."g,""'
i""1lt.AH<E TO LIDO ISlf
et13-iJ50
-~-'~ -.!-''L . CINEOOME 20: .• <-·-"-'J.ll1.!.'H .. ••
' ''THE STONI• KILLER" .... .
"DILl.INGER" IRl
"SOt::HD OF .MUSIC" ...
"CHARLOnl'S 'tl#EI"
I
·~~"E ,~~~°r1r.'t;·· (Ill
GllOW1 NG UI"" (ll)
"SWINGIWG WIVliS" (Ill
"GODSl"ELL .. !GI ....
"LtTTHE GOOD TIM~ ROLL" ll"GI
''THE GODFATHER" l ll
'-1DILLIN&ER"
"EHTER THI DU.GOH" f RI
'"" ''THE TRAIN ROllERS"
SOY1HAYE· WE G;>T A
VACATION FOR YOU ...
• a film i:ibout •
JIMI HENDRIX
Fufwirlir •/Jr ,,,..,1ot11/r .,,,,.,,,/Wt ~rPormt11Ct1 '"''" fMI It Tf70,
lndvdlftf 1"-M11t1ltrt7, lrli ol Wltltl, •nit WOlld1lod: Ft1l/w1tla
A OOCl.MllllAllT fllllf' W.1.1111111 ~llOI . A W...,.Nlll C:Otaft.1'4!CAJIOftS COlllPANT
A .IOl I OYD, JOHN HlAll, Tll GAlllT W"S ""ODUCTIO!"'
T£CHlllCOlOfl'
Nearly Everyone
·Listens to Landers
•
•
... Whe<e nothing
con-llbly ' go worn 9
--:WESTWORLD'' m_ BRYNNER· R1CHAAO BENJAMIN · JAAES BROU<
-...., ~ ... M1CH4E1. Cl'ICHTON • ..._ ..... PAI.I.. H. LAZARUS 111
PAHA\llSioN-METAOCCLOA
'l'H£ 'l'lllllN
•-o ROBBERS. PLUS · C11,lil\l TOH H ,, 1 ,_1
IN "SOYLENT GREEN" ~-· i...-.-•
''" .,.,... -•t•• ••~• '"'11'"'"" (PG) =~: ((Cf:-0: .
WRlr•1".:;,;·.;,;·~;·,;;;,D•,.w••• (G) 1.r.no
'" .. , .. ,. ·-· ·-· ...... , .... .. -...... . ........ ..
"HU.VY TRAFFIC"
rated
(X)
'~ •• easily the best
movie so far this
ear'' -S1•111>en F••D<l• y a NEW YORK TIMES .......... ~ Iii...\. . JI"• ~ ww• you ii '621 · •
AM"
EXCLUSIVE
ORANGE COUNTY
ENGAGEMENT
" ... Pt"rll.1ps
thr.niost
i l!lliJlk.tb .
lo en1ergC' since
C(.'(:ilB.De1'.·lille f...'.~~~
founded
lloll~·ood'.'
·VERNON scorr.
2NO AT WESTBROOK
JMIES GARHEi;i
"A MAN CALllO
SllDGE" ........
a film about
JIMI . 1•1
HENDRIX
PLUS JA NICE JOPLIN
"MONTUllY POP"
Network, operators of the sla·
lion.
"In view of the f!Wj. that
this rc!'ipon!C die! not come
~bout. "'e were ohligcd to
discontinue lhe news oper:t·
ti on."
~Imo said, •·\Ve knew vie
v.·ould need financial support.
to sustain opttaOOOI for a
year since we !elt ll would
take that loo& to produet
su bstantial rallngs However,
we were unsucctuful in ob-
laining bank financing due to
the tight money ,!tuat\on."•
U.4.. CIT'!' AN O iOl.ITM COAST CIN fMAl-TUllOAY J11c
IUOll"S ANO GOL08N AGIRS)-Ol'IN 'TIL Ii• P.JIL
"OAY 01" THI: JACKAL"
Slevt MCG-"1\JlllTI" lt!ll lft Ctlorl (1'0) .
' . ..
Max vonSydow
Liv Ulhnann .
'lbe New Land
l~fl.lotll()liTAll'iro.ClllJI
The New Land ..... -· O ·~·---··-· ; ..... -:-.-... . • • •• •• :I .[PG)
PLUS ·
(OWA.RO COX
fr911119ml 'tll
THEDIWOF
THE .JACKAL
, ........ flln
........._{PG)
=~ {PG)
.... .... ·~ "" ... . .. ...
KIRK DOUGLAS.
SCALAWAG ~~ :·...:.:::::; .......
PLUS J.\ME~ COBUR
~• "HA•IY ll'GJ
IN YOU•
PO<Krl"
FROM Fashion Island
N ewpo~t Be ac h STEREO SOUNDS OF THE HARBOR
I
..
• •
•
;
•
'
'
3 Speakers
To Address
Mesa Group
Councilman Dom Raciti and
two guest speakers w 11 l
highlight the first annual
meeting of the Mesa West
Homeowners Msociation Oct.
rt at Victoria SchooJ.
1be meeUng, scheduled for
2 p.m. to 4 p.m., is open
to homeowners living In the
area bounded by 19th Street.
Wll8on Street, Federal Avenue
and Whittler Ave.
THE TWO SPEAKERS are
Dennis Murray, first president
of the fro.homeowner assocla-
t lcil, and nurseryman Lloyd
Shaver who will offer tips on
lawn care and growing plants.
In an efrort to improve the
appeaance of Cl>sta Mesa's
we!Gide en
a.uoda.Uon, In cooperation
with the . Costa Me s a
Beautification Committee, is
scbeduling a trash drive Nov.
10.
Tbe drive will be from a
a.m. to 2 p.m. Property
owners may bring their trash
to the pickup point at 957 w. 19th St.
Fairview
Seeking
Volunteers
Fairview state Hospital ls
looking for volunteers to help
out with a Montessori Pre-
School project al the Costa
Mesa mental institution.
The ptograrn. in operation
for the past three years. is
sponoored jointly by the
hospital staff and a group or
UCI students. School is held
dally. Adults interested In donating
thei r services should contact
Enid Lathrop, director of
vo\untttr &erv\ces at the
hospital. ,
Volunteers are asked to
come one morning a week
rrom 9:15 a.m. to 11:30 a.m.
They will work under the
direction of a Fa Irv I ew
Jlospital teacher ln helpi ng lhe
children learn songs, rhythms,
!able activities. and to im·
prove their sensory motor
skills..
4 Students
Get $250
Four Orange Coast College
respiratory therapy students
have been given study grants
from the Geoffr ey W .
C r ickmay Memor i al
Scholarship Fund.
The students. each o{ whom
...,·i ll receive Uso. are Deborah
Davis of Anaheim, Edward
i\1arllno of Costa M e~ a ,
Christopher Geraghty of Santa
Ana and Susan Lloyd or
Garden Grove.
The grant fund w a s
established under the auspices
of Oranll:e r ounlv Lu n Jl
Association and one of its
founders. Helen Crickmay.
,\ofrs. Crickmay·s husband died
of cmphyse1na.
FAT
OVERWEIGHT
The Odriner Pl1n CJn llt!p you
become 1111 slim trim perscn !hi! ycu
would bke to bt. Od1lnr1 Ills bffn 111e:d
JUtCISSluJly by tllous.lnds 1!1 O~!I \ht
counlry for 14 years. Get rid of t•ttss
IJt ind tl'ft lonrtr.
Odrlntr 1$ I tiny tabltl Ind tlslly
swallowed Contains nod1nrerousdrugs.
No sttrvin1. Ho sp1cill t urchr1.
Odrint• Pl.In costs SJ.ZS 11'1d lhl I.Irie
tco110my sit! SS.25.
'l'ou m11st lo11 u1ty flt or you1
mo!llY will bt r1lundld. No Quet1ion1
11krd. ACCfPt no Jubslilutn. Sold wllll
11111 1u11ante1 by:
THRIFTY • .,, .•••
Ol<;('Outrrtr STO"f\
Wfdnttd~, Oc.tobtt 24, 1973
l
-'
• VITAMINS
@ :L'
Vitamin E
Bottle ol 50 s211
ComPO•• !he ciuo~T)I
com,oo•• tk• price.
r1tamin C
Ascorbic Acid
~g~ s12e
Bottle of 250
~"'1 !!;> Orange Flavor
Vitamin C
illlJ Anlll'lllall *!.58 ID *5.DB
~:.; Skin Care Needs
Hypo-Allergenic & Demi-Active
• 1 .. 1 fKI W1U • fl£1 W1d 011, I I c
• Dt•i fac1 li111 • 11•1 Dll ll1ttlf
• D111i M1iSllft Prl••r • flr•ill .
F1,l1I • ltyJHlltr1nk Clt111Ht
13;0z. aac S11e
Ckoit• of r•gulor, un-
l(•n••d, or
kold.
IOTJLI Of 25
Quart
Bottle
gc ALKA SEL lZER
· Famous Name Spray Mist
~".Iii
d'1.
. 1)). / J ~~r 1~
1
Yow'll k11•w It.,. 1l1tu.
Slllck Styler Dryer
tor Mii I Wo•
5t¥1el groorn1 ond dri•• koir for e $ I 88
fulle• <'o1u•ol look. Com11l•t• with
"~!Ing bru~h I. tomb onochm1nr1.
At lJO
Genuine Wood
Fashion Jewelry
Hetklaces • Earrings • Ropes
10191 wood b.ad1 with
~·.::;. ~::::·::;-.:,.~ I 7c
tilul f(lll fo1~1011 color•.
W•o• .. ,,..01 for •
"wilk-i~· (Ol\IOl lookl
faceted Jet Jewelry
$por~ling <op•1 or CorrJ.,go s1 ag
to drtn up 'f'O"' wo<d•O~ Q
-10 VO<)' •mOr! witk lh•
1•0111f1'1 look!
Sold on TV tor •a••
K-tel Record Albums
• ltlint 11 Mt1ic
• 2? l!Jltsh't Nils
• 24 C111try 5.l'fll $ • lick lt•l11L
• Pl'llitt Nlls
• KILl:J T11k
• IJU•lc Nits
• PtlU l1111s
• f11111Uc C111trr
• Ck1rtst1,,11,
Your Choice
You'w wonted !Mm ~ yo<Jt <allKl\oll • , •
now •nio'f Ike .. gr.at record l'llts al ti
rt<orcl low pric•l
Men's Short Sleeve
Knn Sport Shirts
• Stripts, P1tt1r1s, Stll's 11199
• Full Cit Sills S·M·L·XL ~ I
Poly.1i.t l <ono" b!.nd Knits by o 111ojo< U.S.
rnon'11ciclu•••· Skorl 1leeve1, crew ~k·butlon
cind zip uyl•1. i>r•mium fabric~
PILOT·AOVERTISU IJ
HALLOWEEEN SPECIALS
Bag
of 101
m . ~ .....
..... 120
franklt & Hl1 P•ll
M••ttr 10111 .... , ..
Good I. Pt .. ty T...ts .... , .. Dum Drinw ,.,, .. ,.t IOl
Sw11Tart1
11.01 ...... ,....
Mallo Cup1
ll;g bog of A111•rlco'1 lo..01it.
<h-ing ".al ol a glvwwoy
p•K•I
YOlr ·79c Choice
14-0UNCf JUMBO 39c
Allillll C08klel •••••• '
BAG OF 40 GOETZ aac
Cllly'Clt ..•.......
12.5-0Z. IAG 59c
T OIJllll lltJlll , • I I • I • I I
HOLLOWAY 131'1·0Z. 79c Biie' caw Paps ......
POUND llAG 49c , .......... .
.
7.0UNCI POLY IAG 39c Mell'll8 Popcn ....
~ · Boy's Kiit Shli'll or
FlaPl-lat-lox81'-Je11S-~ Deltl
COLORF~L FUN J1'1 c
. Pll'ty Hats ••••• I I •• I • I ~
Your Choice
• $1.49 l $1.19 K1its
l111 & S~trt SlttrlS
• Re1. $U9 Jeau ggc ~~~~
Bollw•oklo. Wood, Wood. s22e
S~in1 in IOU' 1lr11 2.,,j & boy'11i1e1 1-7. P•rfKt
rnotck mc111for 1lo11lclt•cl woi11 boxer j•ont.
Conon-poly blend.
~-7-la Clll'llllc
Carei Bowls
3i81°0
Colorflll (el'lll!lle bowl•
fot c-1. ooup, 9'C.. lr...
ly calot1 ., poltit'"I to
ck-•.
Mallory "C'
Trnlstor
Batteries
Pack of 2:43c
0A pow., poc:l of volu1I
*477 Family Size
d~~3 QL Corn P•per
With8333 Cord
POPI J>'ldK! corn W•
•ry .;,,,.. Avocado
w ith l'l•or-•e1i11on1
. 0!011 '°"''· 5 Q1111rt Stlf l11lttrl1tt Coni Popper St.t6
Newl ,..,.~Look
Sllld let
, WithS897 ~\~ ~~::.~ ~lod "' ha1 n,. 191990~1 look
of 1olad bowlt COii•
f' Ing muck rn0<et
.\ Sl .61 Por11111t Style Jr•r J1llll1s He
.ti), 60. 75 011d 10 Wott
8ulb1, prk:fll •""" •-., than 0<.1• .verydoy ·-
Coklred Allllllilum
Cookware
1·2-3 Qt. Sa11te P.11s • 1D·ltcl Sklllol c~:1:. ggc
Quick keoti119 olllfftl..
n11rn cookwar• ill
papulor colotL l llY or.• or o 1•! "' tkit
I w ice!
lnc:li.Jdll btigl\t CICf•
y!ie colon. Wood de·
1!gn1 pr•·prlnt•d on
bolk aid11. Co•d.
bru1h. lnllructloni.
PRE-CHRISTMAS TOY SALE
! Foat llNI•
WllklP IDlll
• lhtt••
N1ir
Bt11tif111, ONLY
Drust•
~:::=::~ .. :~ s32s
g•eot glh prit• ,_,
Pre-Christmas Special
Cl'loice of 24 ourfin..
(i!omovr doll1 11o ....
o.ol lo•~••· ke!rda.1.
ki •¥• lo1hion1.
pKk•r, l!oddody Mn. mo,..,. .
o•h••1t All or•
f!orn1.r11ordont. 8ov1' '
Girls' 1iie1 4-1•.
Get a CUlll Sllan. RllllllM
WITK 2 IAY.0.VAC IAnllllS WMIJf YOU IUT J PACIS9f
Polariod COlllJack FU1
01 If YOU PllJll
• llf 3 Picks ti flt• & ltt tk FltsatiPt •If
e 1112 P1,kt II flhl l ~t lM 2 lattltlH lltr
G9' tt.lt Hal-flt.Night & battt<IH
with Polaroid lot Df' T\'P4I • Coiarpodl
film 01 Thritly Dlacov"' Prie•I
11111. *11 44 Glmd
-Plllll8l'I
• II" l•tlt lHI -saaa • 5111111" Pttks
• 11· Msttalla1 fn Jm
•' 41• PalMlll Tm
No1utt1'1 moil populo1 foliage plo111.,. Ir!
lit.like pla1tlc ~ lalllng IMouty Iii "-.
po••<>. 11ff1C•.
WaltDllnayDP
Rlggedy Ami Blil
81°0 Dm~ Type
Ice Box Cllkla.
Pound Box 7 I C
A d.t.c:toblo OHort-
m•nt of 6 wr1-ff•• of
Dani1k I. J .. ly k:• IOll
IYP• cooll•1.
LIQUOR DEPT. SPECIALS
IGOR ::.1b1.
~!~~:!'on 8249
Ca•• of 12 -$29.SO
Mo k•1 cl•llclou1 Sc•e-
drMn, !lloady Mcuy-.. IOl'llc
cl•lnU. Igor do9• ..... ,.,.king
'tOC!ko do91 ••. but .,..,.,,
Iii. Stll Pi1t ............ $1.11
C111 ti 24 ................ $41.11
Sfrl!iKlfll kullng 1tl'lllgll1 '*'"
'*1 fre"' ~ •• Al'Mflco'1
lor9e11 dllltibvton. Stock ~p -·
(People/Quotes) Costa Mesa Santa Ana Fountain Valley El Toro
makes SU'nday ~33 E. 17th St. W. Edinger & Bristol Magnolia at Talbert El Toro at Rockfleld
Huntington Beach
Adams ., Brookhurst
liiintington leach
Beach Blvd. at Atlent• Fl11lf:lAY Westminster
I Costa Mesa Santa Ana Fountain Valley Wtttmlnster ,1 Huntington Beach H .. it!ngton lleac~
in the l•AU[ftl!1ll i;-,_ ___ H_••,.bo_•_•_•_w_11_ .... ___ ._ __ s_,_••.•.ol_••_M_•_'_A_••_h_u_, _____ H_•_•_bo_•_••_E_d_ingo.__• _ _.._ ___ Go_1d_•.•.w_._,, ______ ,_s_H_u_•_t1.".;.Vt.o_•_s .. _,_h_..;. ____ s_1_1.1.w_.,_•_•_• ___ _,
-• I
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H Fl
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1 FD •• I St s •• " 14 c
• bu '". I o • 11 G
17 p ,,
110
"' p . m
121 :
"22 F
•• 23 F
215 F
27 D
2ll N
1
30 ~ ,. c
,. p
38 v
I lo
38 v . m
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(CT
I c
\"m i I
UAILY PILU I
AMIW
TUMILEWEEDS
UH .. l·Hr:AA YOU~ l.Aresr AM~l1lON'S 1ll ll!'COME AN -Aff1RIMA11Vf •••. AN~ ltmRNA1lONA~ Q:l.~~-l'R_l1Y---1? j ~~~~ ~~~Pf~a:~
by Tom K. Ryan
510Ct<l'l~IN5' MY
AU10BAAPtt.
I IS CONSIV!ORA9U;.
l -!;;,.-..:~H~,... . ·~·
MUTI AND JEFF
GMENlS .
NANCY •
-·.
1 WISH
YOlJ'P MAKE
UP'WITH HIM
RIGHT AWAY
TODAY'S CBDSSIDID PUZZLI
ACROSS 44 P•rlly, for
t Fomi•I ont1
•gf'Mn'lent .115 Sayed
I Slr W11t1r 46 Hudton B1y
Scott, e.g. 47 Boy'•
I A• --nlckn1m1
c1nbe 49T•ke•ftv•
14 f.~• , 'ii Sororit\'
I ..... ,,.,... m1mber1
15 A1tron1uts' S4 Bird
employ1r: 68 Struc1ur1
Abbr. 60 HHlllde:
11 Greek.fitter Scot.
17 Ptiotocopy: 11 Planet'•
lnfo,rn1I enwlop•
11 Ori0ln1t11 83 Top·dr1wer
20 Pinb1n M H1ckn.yed
. m1ch1n·1 66 USSR river
· no· no' M Frog·1 11 Prefix tor 38 Keep11k1
121 Routine for r1l11lv• miter or liter .a Wr•th
Nlckl1u1 87 Mor111Mlbl1 12 Ending with _.1 Grab: Slang
· 22 Fade from 68 Thia: Sp lei! or le1k 4& Dep1rt
1lght 69 ·Frllflcl\ 13 Window gr1du11!y
23 Fett pl1y .. etorit trim• 48 Having
25 Fruit DOWN 19 Stove rounded
27 01lry product 1 Dough u1ed ch1mber projeetlon1
21 N. Amer In ravioli 24 Miid oaths 49..0ne getting.
1 n1Uon 2 Caper 2S OfdwA.M. up
1
30 Hindu bible 3 Flrem1n: 28 Ruaailn 50 lndi•1'
34 Cert.Pub.Acct. 2word1 figh1erpl1nt ••port
38 Pl'9fog11iv1 4 Old tom• 30 Fkto'• 52 Pen.eus'
38 V-stleped n1tdlework "M.D." mother: Gr.
fortilic1tion !i Sm1Q piece 31 Ttr0, e.g.. Myth.
( 31 V1cationer'1 cut off 2 wordt 53 Pi.nu In tol
: m•n;•: I W•t-•v 32 Brltllh·tttl• 54 S1ttl! Abbr.
I, 4 word• 7 Plum••: 2 33 Dill htftl 56 Luzon Mtiv.
42 Tinier•'° word• 34 ·-the cud 515 Fed.
I -to I Pini product 3& Coit with 57 A Europe1"
Chllnct 9 Ice cre•m •IPh•lt 58 Oist1nc1: la -concoot1an1 37 Look• In Prefix
ln1tftutlon 10 Thebet deity wonderment C $h1dt
r.-r.-r.,"""IT-7 ....,,....,,,...,.....,~
I I '
I : ... , .-+--1-t-
by Al Smith
by Emie Bushmiller
HE'S RUINING
OUR LAWN
PEANUTS
Fat'SGJ.AHD TEU.'"IJM!f,I HAVEN!lU611f 1lUSUAf
JUDGE PARKER
MISS PEACH
I.AH, M..41tGIA, 1 HAl'I! 1'0
rio;!loltl< YOl.11 llWT WHY
W"N'T '>\?l.l GIVE ME
~ THE QIMll:TE.Jt
'! LO,.NE.O VOi.i ?
IF YOU OON'I' H.t.ve rr,
YOU
WON'I'
~~&NO
IT .
SM.•1 I EV T. SMELT's
LIC.t!MSE Pl.ATES!
DOOLEY'S WORLD
HoW cAH
V0cJ BE SO
t>UMB?
... s.;..A;.;:LL;;_Y_;.BA_N_A.;..N;...A_S __ ...,.,... __ -..-. -------"-'By'-=Charles larsottl
. as You· ~aWL Ps:>'J/11 Tile HrGllCJaY oF ~k:' ·l.1~e ReMSMe.eR PBof'IS CJllo tJVe IN •
G'ass Houses ·Qri.l. cause 'TRaFf/CT<>
SlPW UP SoMeTHING .
"mRRlfrc.
GORDO
MOON MULLINS
ANIMAL CRACKERS
by Charles M. Schulz
~. NOlol,ABol/T 'IH"' LEAi'-
by Harold Le Doux
DO 'r'OU KNOW
THE HOTEL
THEY'LL &E
IH?
T.iANK~
'fO MA"C.IA,
i •M ZS~
'TO n£ a.ooo .....
by Mell
Toss TJ.l4T
IN 'tbUR OC.D
11aRTl~I a111D see 1P"
IT eQTSlMl-
OL11,/e,
by Ferd JolJnson
11 ll ii •
by ROCJ•r Bolen
SltJCEW!el
AM :t. A
[)IP-6TICI' f'
"I tltlnk I'll just mile my Jlallo"'ttn party a come-
•t-)'CHHll'fl affair-no Halloween costume could ever
cop what people are wearing these days."
DENNIS THE MENACE
''f/4/ff(R~'
EYfl?&:1JI UP 1· •
~a OAllV PILOT WtdAttd..ty OctcOtf 24 1q7) -------1 .-------------... PUB LI C NOTJCE OVER THE CO UNTER NOTICI Ofl $ALI Or' llllAL PlltOf'llTY AT ,1111\IATl iALt NASO Listings ..... " 1MJ1
SouM•lor C0<.1r1 •• 1,.,. '"" 01 C.•11•0t~l~ '"'•••••••••••••••••••••••••••• .. IOr lftl to\l"IY OI 0••-
1" In. ,,.,.II .. Of In. E>I•!• Of f,•Allt I~,. -··-Clar<" (;t l'o I 1 ..... ,~11n4 IO t 111 ltotwl 0.t I\ "'" Jl>'llE M CiOOOMA.N Ot(u .. f -llM _., ""' i.t• 0.w J>ool• 1' 1''• ... rvy ll 'II llolt..,, & It 1'0 Naik• i. lltf .......... n m.1 , ... ij.. 11""" A~IO(la-.. Oowio 03 11"1 , ... IMJ!• ,, ,, •• JI,,. I W'4 c. U\o 11
1l; estgatc-Call tonaiu Mail Orde1· Fi.Im
IRS Files Mo1·e Cited in Contest " 11t ~ .. 11 '"'"'"..,, Ot•le<' o..t....., •l i •J, Mitf•• c .,., •• •-rni ''" 1e•,
" wm Ml •' ptlYt1t .._1. on .,. -•O'IG .,...,, °""'-'" o "' I Mll'ft M5 u l it 11..c." ti'!! 11 • 1t Cl s • h ..,, •"•• .... Jhl ,,., Cl Oc;•-· lt/J _,,, I>~ •""'' -f••tml ll 1' Mllh-)I>.. ~'lo Auw s1 ... :n• Ill • • t
•t llM .tfl~I 01 f' )!, (UIUl.i.H, A.Uh llnl <°""'!•• <IHl9<\ ID [(°" LID 1il• ft•, Mph G•• )J>t 11'• llQ• AOI IO .. 10'• aims on fill • TrW ltttl l!ll•lt Olflttr. l l) w ... ""'" ot ..... OI lD\ -,, • 11. Mo .... F•b • • k M•tr 11•1 1, I SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -Development Corp., an OhiO
$Ito Sl"4!1, ~tfl Fklo" loo !Y11•1't'I (too• \Ef\ltrn El P•~ \l IJ .. Mo"NI G• II •I !ocll<lll '" ~ :10
Ce111>or'!N, ,.......,... ,,u..,.,,. ,_,v 1·-1 '"" ""'°'' £• "'~• 1i, •, """'"• T1 ·~·· '''1 5(011 \M , ... • 1 A mail order firm which Use1 firm, by Atty. Gen Evelle Of Lea Ano•i.. Sl•lt ol (tlllllrllo• tl0"1 dO ft\11 lfl.<IU(loo f ... •q1 c 11 ll'i ~ ....... ,,, Sc:etl\L G ••• ... t l ·-· •11 •• 1 l"'f'""' _., l<w"~ QI •• ,.,, M0111 M"' '. 1 "••PP' .. 11 111. a sweepstakes con es au... J y San Mateo Dist · !O ,,,. 1110 ... ,1 •NI fie\! ~. 1"'1 dO-9' ,_., Eeu ~I.I. IHO ,, • MOgul '~ ti t, lt '• ~· W•la ,,,," • umger, ~·
1ut1!«t 10 corinrmtH<#'I ny Mid sijl>lf'\ot' ,.,.. ..,. no ...,. £ 111.., ,., ,,..,1 •• ·~ _. 1o0 s. ~''" 11o.,, 1t ,. SAN DIEGO { Uf'll Th A' 'TllOVGH Tll E IRS 'I d free vacation certificates has Ally. Keolh Sore--and n •• ~ (OUtl tll '"' •IQl'I, Htl• .l<l<I (~te·••' ••Of•\tnl .ltlual ~,.,,,,.I Mo,,,, s. •) .. svmui. ,,,,)I i, -e &.. 11 e ed 'lh I wf I ·-· -.. at ••14 11.e~.-11 1n• 11...,, dt oitatn i.trnMlllll'I• E••<u 1n 11. 4 _,.., 1r IQ'I 11 • •--~ uo 11.,, 11•. lntcn1al Revenue Ser v 1 c e , h .. 2 11 d been charg WI un a u R ~ ,1111 111 llM •lf"'· 1,.11 ~..., 1,,.1r1,1 '"ousr111ttL\ E••••<P ,. 1, -"'"' 1111. 11Yi 'lnortw •· • 1 I e ... mt ion Jeopar Y 1 In ult -filed n £state Corm\issloner Ol,Jl;,I• ""'-' rM .,1,1, 0, ,,Id cioci•i.o ,,., 11,1<10 u'l'•L1T1r.i f•" i...... 1•. 1 , Mt• ""e ,,., ,,.,. ~"'D1oll" 11..,. 1111 wh1d1 has nlrl'ady den1anded pracl ces a s 1 "' --~ 1 1 TllttolM• f•"on e• 11, ,. , MO.i• co .. ,. "'• !.n•P 101> ic •1 a~sc!lsment aga1n.!il \Vcstgate, FINANCE Snn Mal-Superior Court. Ka""' • ..,,..,.,H br ,,.,,,Of' o1 I•• or 01"'"'"' ''· 0c1ooer u 1t1J ,.,,.. 8, ,,.,. 11 _,.,.. 1" n.,_ ,,,,_ w c11 wi u ,,., a record $22.8 n1llllon from "" .,....
o11 .. , •h•n or In 1<10111&11 10 11111 or ,,. "'~ ,.,.,0 l •O ,o., 11" 11101"v> 11i.. n.,, ~ cfl<'\6\ 31 ., >l'" f C 1t did not .!ieizc any assets ......__ ti b ht " wla d«••i.t~. •• '"' 11, .... ot d•••h A.Cu•nft1 10 11 , '"•"OfM , 1 •• M1, ,,1~ 11"' 11 . \oM P•o '''· ", inanc1er Arnholt Smilh. 1rn: ac on was roug -•
+n '"° 10 .11 '"" , .. •0·11 ''" 11ropt•rv "° ,,.,, .. XI. 10i.. f" eo11n n 11 . ,,..,,n '" .... n 1. Sp.re••• " Jt • ha~ fiJ-H claims ror I< 2 The JRS cla ln1cd back taxes '""-----------' Tuesday ogainst Market TllE PIRM IS acculled U1 •lluttt 111 .... (0<.1nly OI 0 .1 .. ,. S•~·~ "°""' C• IJ . IJ '" {•P•" ll )I M01U>n ... 11 . U'4 \l•n•~v I " 11 • <:U I
11 c 11110,"1' parU!vl•t1v ~Krll>td .. , .,,,, "'" J1'. 7• • ''' M<>•C .a· •1 • ~1~.~~ ·'~": 't~ sio ...... •• • "'· m1Jl1on against his \Vestgat<."-and penalties due (rO!n 1963 nol1ly1ng consume.rs they ha'1
•o1t_,, ·~•" ::~to ~ :; ~ :!., ::: ~~~ ~f: l:,: "'~' ~1 .. '" '"' tr~~~ 1J l~ CAhfom ia Corp and $2 6 h •·en ··'ecled by com"'•ler as .. AltCEL I Owtllfl'Q u .. I " I~ •11tt a... I '" Flllo It\~ ...... Muf11... ,, •• lO'lo l>l~N B•w ... I . I rough 197g d ~ = ~
,..,. 1uhr1 lno Nn :IOll.I, c0un•• ot Or~l'Q• An9" ""' 11 , u , F1• r, ... 0 11 , i. N11 Cnv~ ' ''" sie.-N s 10< .. ,.,.. lf'Jltion against his daughlt'r Th J • t Ca I 2 M h d • · -0 k ___ l s1.,. o• c1111.,..n1 •• •• ... 10 un11 I• 11,111.0 ,,1 i•"' i•. F-'"' 1n , n•. N.i Lll>I• "• ..... l>1-. '" n n.,, Th R e c aim again~ ro } lCte winners in a swee,,...~ es COTJY
Y>OWf' "" '""' (•rU(n (Of\dOlt\!~oum ...... """'' I ''• ~·••! °' "'. .• NI ,,,..1(1 I''• ,, . "''""b (II 11 ll t I s assessments Tue s· Smllh Shannon for tM "ear en lest and ha''' •• , opportunl"' P\•11 •n•cMCI 10 INI 1'\l<>ol • 01r1 ol ...... E •pt )' .. "°'' F •• "" .. ,, IJ>j, HI p ...... 41-'1 Ult Soupor El "'•II'• da y followed by only five da)'S J UI V:·
111., ,,,1•1., O«l•••ilon o1 c6~1,..n11 Nl'lf•"4 F•.-.• El •.10 . N,..,,...., t •G ~·'"'' Cp 11•.n l.o 1!169 was as a "transferee." chest"'·-;.
c-n•on• •NI 1tn 1•1<t1on1 ttcora1t1 J,,. . ..,.,. F·t11.i ·~:.'rt.~ ~:~•1c ~{,; :::~ ~t~~ G~ ~i :;1 ,::!,"°"'"i,'P .:·~ .:~ Sn11th's loss of one of the receiving assets from her lo buy a "treasure r.~
..... ,,. ,.., 1t11 1~ 1-"'°· "-oe T1l OI· ,_ F•t111 lol M\"I "'°' Far ''· •·· NJ NII o u .. 111, 1,,1°' w '' ~ ~ foundaUons of his financial r h merchanchse, 'including a lree. f!d1l lt1CC<dl, !n ll'>e otl!tf of 11\e C-ty t m Fu"' •\o 1 F,.1i.f " t•. IG ~ Nlto•et lft IQ•, 11', l•le<m ,;. r , at er '• l~Ofoe-r 01 0r.,,.... County. C•Ut°'N", A"' C.•tt .. .. ... F.,... ~ "' •, N;01-.n " l•.,, 1~ ,_ " •6 empire the US. NaLional US Di t t J d Leland F L d F d I ~· •nd • l lli)Otll """)y!IHO lnltrtll In •M+f< !>f ,, .. ]JI .. G•ll>tlft , ••• 11 .. HlolMn e )0'1 ll Tur, en 111 .. II\) Ba k Th I I'-r the s nc u ge 01 ail rau vaca l(Jl lo
•M4 ,0 Loi 1 01 Tftct nu ,, ...., row-. ,. •• "'• G.or11,. ''"' "" N0•0•" ,,.,, 11" 11"•"¥ '" 10 n e comp ro ""1 o Neli5en stud Tuesday he ex· ,. · The su1l ••od Cal•f-•a ,..,.. ""'w..ia 11 ,,,,. c;.11• L•J ••1 • N'"1 HIC. ''" ''· """ oc • ...., '°"" d I cd the bank --·· ~"" .now,, on • "'•P lt\frtl>f •C'CorOed """'w" U'' .. , G.1t .. T• , • ''· '"°''" c. ,, , " ,_ .. "" ,.,, 10" currency ec ar pects a consent Judgment to-__ ..:.b in 8 ool! i•r. l'•o• )1 ~"" .. IMht1lv• '-Ptt•(O .... 1~ .... Goel(O CP 1l. 11 a. .... d ... I •) l•n °''" 11•, 11'• 1nsol I the b I b k prohibits noLifying any pentQ. M1$(tll-• M•""· 1n 1111 0111,e or .,... 1f>(O 111 l'l7 c.n ....,,.., " •1 Ou•., 0r ... ~ .,,, 1r-.011 "" •·· io>o ven Ln 1gges an day to settle the SEC's c1v1\ •
tM co~n•• I K Ofotr 01 ••lo l...,n1, Alo<i Mvt l''I' l~ c.n Au10P "'• n , D<e•n E• "'" 10 • T•l<o "'o •1"" 11•. failure 1n US history and he has won a prize whiMli 5llO\NTI 1na Otllntll ,, "Comn\Otl .,,,,. A>•ow Mr ,, 16'-C..n R•f'l<t J<1, JS" Deno< 1o11 '" > • r ... n o.~ 1•l.o 11.. fraud suit against Smith ··--'--'"' ~·1 ..., ,.. •toov.-•l'l•rr•d ,0 COflGOl'!ll,,lum A1v11:1• 111 •, c.n c•""' Jt" oo•. Oli\h Lq1 ••'• 111. u111 t .-01 1 , ' seized it The bank was sold R rtcdl .~ SEC ed SA.11.l DIEGO (UPI ) -Two first umn:r u1e new economtc may only be obtained to...
P11.. ::1"'cfcL~ i!: n~ ~:o~:~ ::·· jJ:; Oq1l•Y M ,. 11 Uni ... \(II ,,1 .. 11 epo y, ... ~ ffiSISt crune project or the National r~
EXCEPTING Tf1E11E"llOM •n~ PO< "" ~, .. 1 11 tt Gr11"' """ u•. •11, 8:'~i"t i:;: l!i: ~~·~'n.!~ 1t'..! J;;: tfo another banking company as a term ot the agreement Arizona men have been in-District Attorneys Association. making a purchase It. a~
11on o1 Lo1t A 11 •Ml c ot Trtc• ... ..,.. r ... 10•. 10'' 0<1o11 St 1 • ' 0v1n o.i" •'• ... u\ t;ir~ ,, .s or $89 5 m11lion, that Smith resign from the dieted on suspicion of heading ted he nt;.. 11,!.'Lzg101~1~E·:':1~~ llrom ·~l<I L61 ::::~ ~~ .i ••• i~: a:1~ .ti:' ~.; ;:·· ~·~~. c~ ,~:: ;:; ~~lvT'Fd~ :!": :~{! management 0 f Westgate-a nal•onw1de scheme to sell ~.hc'1e<1'"'Jo'm'',i1gyal>bony owrr.·ci~a-<Ols ,nn-JJJand1sr~pa1'.',""01 the me' rchaquna-'•-'J:
1 111 o•• o11 llvd•«••ect11 mlnt••I• B1'"' "' 111 '' l'<•M EW ••' • tt•• '"•«•• ••·~ 011o \/ft .. Motl! •"' '~ S\UTH, ONE OF Pres1dt'nt u • WX. •ncl orn..r l tfDt11Mt• IVlllO below • , •••• ~~ Ill 16 ... Hill ""' .... !~. P•< c;..., 1M l • V10M Ho I'. I • Cah(o1 nla , and Smith has a lhl Ut h I d c I" A d u•·h , 1.11~ ..... L 111• 11>, 011m11 11• n•. ~ . i>1c t""" .o .O't. ..,..,, •• s.. '"' 1 • Nixon's staunchest financial r ne r-wor ess a an a uorrua, rtzona an .., . offered for nnrchase. , -. dto1n ot soo oo 1,..1, b~I ''""'o'" 1nt Bil•• Mn 01 " "'•~ Sciq1 ,.., i• • P~~ 0t:0t 11~. ""' 111n o1~ 11 •• • re used ,...
r111111 to tnie• ""°" 1~1 •urf4c' ~· ,..,~ 11.1 11 1• ~ "•'!It' " 1 , 11. P•u1 Rey "" 11 v•~ s~,~ ,., 10 supporters and close friends. Charged Tue sday \\t\h 36 Last summer, Mar k..e. O\Jlllvr!•CI ol !he PIOIJ.lrt• 41><1•~ oJ llllnf'• M 11 71'• M1t!rl 5< It"' Ml'' P'yl<• Cl\ ...... 1'<, V•CIOrl ~I 11"• II•~
01iptt> ,1 son oo '"' tor a11r pu•PO~ 1111"'" F 1s l• H•'"1n F1 I'• ''" ,'•"•"• '•' ,","',,',',• ,',',~:, '" ,,'., ,'," also faces a civil suit by the A LAWYER FOR \\!cstgate-felony counts of g ra nd Qevelopm-l C.rp. notif''"", ,•·, wn.i-v••· 11 , ... ,.,"' 1~ dte<11 ol 8••"" 11• • ll>.:i Me•llo M\ "• I!-G ~ 5< Sec t d E h C E • U -· -'< ~ <e<<>tO llf•l .. c" 6 ..... HtJCel c ,,., ,. ""' M'M 11 J& \IOI 5llOI 11•. 11 '• uri tes an xc ange 0111· Caldorn1a told the judge dur-theft. conspiracy and re a I arnings p num~r of Caluom1ans tb.41: l•• .... , .. 110•• P11cel No tll 11.tl)t =~tv ~~ n~ i~\) ~:~ EC~ !~~~ !i·~ ::r~;":."Lw ,:~ ,:"' ~:~ft E:~ ::'!! :~. mission for alleged "n1asslve 1ng a hearing Tuesday lhat estate [raud were Harold G they "won" lite conle.sl. tj;
"A.R:CEl 1. Hon••tlu1lvr ••1emenl• s.u L.ob •l l\ .. ,,. HOo~· ""' 7t)o Poontr w 11 • "" Wl\lf NC 1111o •s>o fraud" 111 the opera!ion of n '°' lnor••• •"'1 -O•"' 1111011e u1n111e1 B•MI co '"' 10"' """'' Mrg u·~ u PllM .-.1-!'"' ~ w1 omn 1 10 1ol.l the SEC suggested that the Beban, 37. Phoencx, 8 n d A D that time, lhe at t orn e
'llWll' •nd lor •II PVfll<llft l••dd.tftl•I 81Q °'"' ..... •!Vi Mv•lll c ... 10'• ~OQ+'<"•• ••••• •,•,•. we-n '"' 10·~ Westgatc·Cahfom1a and us 1· ' di I t atum d •11tre1o, 1nc:1t .. 111'Q, ""' Mii umue.t 10 ii.10 tNll':i " » "'•\It• c J•I• J11, ~,N ~1," w•t -10•, •o~ N 1 corpora ion s rec ors remove James E. Nobe, 47, Glendale general's office notl(ie
,,.. ton5'rucilon 1n11111111pn, r•pll(e-e .. .i Soni 11 7t IMS entnt 11 1. •• o Pwtn CM> .... lf19 lfV\ 1! at1ona Smith ahd the corporation I """"
IM1ll ,.~1, m.i .. 1-roc1, op1r111on •,t~M,' '!~ »,,., •,,"",~ .~!', "",, u:~ •is i.s 1 t• w.lc•l "' ••n '• The $22 8 mill•on a••c••menl Behan was arraigned and firm that its pract ces ......._..,.
trod uw o1 •II ntcet.urv « dnlr•ble ,-, , "''' ~ ~·-O...kr Cft " n w, 11.vGI " 11'" ..., ..., president, Ph.ihp Toft. as a I sed I ba J Ana' • d I wfu{ d dered t'I ~ 1ue " ... 1avi 1 .. ,,,...~ \ 11) °"''~ c. 11". 11 w 11Po11• n , .... "" agam l s Ith 1 led 11 re ea on 15,000 1 A Datum Inc . neim :-ase un a an or '"'-" •Oof4w•r• .• 1o .... 1k, •"° cpndulh -11.,~, cp~ ~ u~ 1,:',,", ~,,•, ,",:! ,',''" rt•tnr Cp 1~. '" w.nr Fo 201~ 20"" 5 m 1 ear er I.!! concUt1on for settlement. lie fu l refra•• " Loi• A., e . 1nc1 c ot Tr•c1 11:11. e... ,. ,.,, .. ., t•~<m w111...,1 1 ?JV, u 11 the b gg I I In I g1 1ve warrant was issued od f •• ' in iti. Cou<'lY o1 °'-· ~••t• 01 _., N , ••·· ,. '""" I!/\ ,.._. ,~·~ t.1 ,,, wil\~ M J '"" ,1 1 es c aim aga s a said the corporation is in f h N .. A ur JCl.'r o 1111n•tomputer , c111tQfJ.L• ., ""°"'"on •~ tnereo• Btt,.co 1 :s ... 16'11 1"""' Go is .. " ",',,'~•-',',;' i,•,~ ~-.,'~! •,•,, •,,',, private individual for one or t e nussing Ouo;. h I · • ·•t YOUNGE R SAID "e •""' f'l!l;<>tlMO In Book J,r, p~01 U -&n n•\ In 11'< I•''> lnl Al-!'1 I '• M -. -. ..., r~• :SUbstant1al agreement \\'Ith perlp era eqlllp0J1.!li, SVl • UI 11Jlll
,.. Mltc~lt-M•,... ,«ord• o1 11rot11 c.. 11•. ?•'. in 11•w ., •• ., t« ~,:flc1111 .~!I ,•,., ,•,·,·. •.•.,.• ':'-,,' •,•,•,, •,•,•,, year's taxes 1n the history the SEC. lied { d I ~ e • ..-. N •'> '"" 1 .... r .. 1 u" 11•. !!:.... ~ r the TRIAL FOR Beb3n was set ware-con.fro sys em.i an complied for severa mon ..id 0••"11<1 CDl.o111'1 '"'~De Ulo """ lfltrn Co 111'o l?>o A• UfloV 11 .. I] .... Wo<ld 5" 1•"1' ""' 0 country, the IRS says I I d I l lite f Tt •""'"' wit '''" In 11"'"'' .._ 8u(lt' ,,. ·•~um it 11 ., Re. P11r1o 1 ,,, w.1q1>1 w 5...., '" Th IRS 1 Tu sd n a suruar eveopmen for Dec. 10 and will include preci s1 on t.r.-.,ng 1n-but m past ew wet
ot IM Unltt<I S!ttr1 on c0t\llrmt110f' 8utMO SI "II Xl\'I 1.,.y j,(C 10·~ 1011; ~yn tt •I"° "1'1 XO"'• Cn 11"' 11 e ac 100 e ay, earlier, the COITlptr'Oller of the JJ h 'J "-· nds f C8]~,. :'v~~~ : ,:: .~!."'eo:1 ~~ M~~= ~~:~ S: ~. ~ 1:~H'E"' l~i: ll.., z•:: :~ ~~ l:.'~ I~ ~;~ ~!'" ~::~ court and financial observer~ currency settled a court case lZ ear er c arges 11 eel against ~trurr.<'nlallon, ha!! announced ~;:have ~n contacte<f
or T•v•• °"" Of' '"~ prooe•tv ~ ~!~'":1 ~:;: 1t1~ ~" E~ :r· ::l. t J'l'f, JU .11u,!;/ ,,.,;,,. said , increased the pressure by forcing Smith to resign ~s~~ Attorney, Ed !\filler third quarter eamuig,; the same way and • ~Id ''" "'"l'Mk,m '"'ouni 11<~ 1° CM:>n1•1 •'· 1~ '""M41 1v 11._,.,, 11 .. -,v.1wrw •1A~"c"" on Smith to resign as h r USN I \' •lace E R1anil• pre ·• ed !"' I the :.~'l, ...,111~~·:,1:,,'h ,;da.o 1~ w,111119 1..., l~M~~"'11, ~: ~~ ~:;:r, st .';;'.~:.':!';'+:";;:"~".l~•'•'"~c!!.-4'>""~1!\-!":;;.'-i;',i;r,-,...',,.·f-~cohoa•'o';man:;;;.c,,;•Tif the as c airman o ationa said the paLT and salesmen ·a · · 1:. • prompt wng o su~ ~ •------wiJ1.o.-·..,.•·--•1J_ ........ , •HkA , v•~...J-""-"• •~n• o. 11,n ,,. 11·. 1• -<-H~.!l!jl..,!lL-..;SA>i!A-.Jw,...,. .. ,.i.-<wM1"l~h•••l'--+1i.•~•i••-lh•~•<d•.;..~ .. ..t1•~~ltn,,;,•1•d•1M"'Jt~"'i>T"-ift1001n1t,-,,,11•dhc~ln1antr1nua1a"'11~."'"""i•dn11n1n11Nat--'-1A11'0-"''"'"'"'"''"'iolei1"~.i;~--
•1 •"v llmt '"'' 1n• u .. + 11111111'111°" Ctn11~ 0 11'""'• IC•~n T-•'• t'> A.M E•P 'l KIO ,,,,: '°'•-esga iornia e IS the the senes of (ederal actions cres f ba I d fo quarter sales were $2580643 are Eqwtab\e Dev~ ""'"°' '"" MIO•e a11e o1 1111 CF\ c"u 11•• •I') 1Ce11-1''• JG~ c..,n Gn '"' •1 soo "'4 ~·· '• majority stockholder 1n the a 0 rren an r use ' ' · Ii.A.I.
0•191:1 Oc•-• 1._ 1911 f',,:',!::, ~ ~'; :;" ~:~• C~~ :~., \'l; """"""' &.tl<ll U m ll • H1'1-< '" battering h1S empire IS a a:S recreation retreats and Up 'l:J percetl~ l)Vef l~ Corp., a f1orida·baSed ~ ~~;~J'~~r ::~~·c 2~Z: ~0 1:~~J,~~:~'~l: ~,!1!~ ~Jfi~~"s1., :l: *~Hr.!:~ ~~~i~!f~h~dt~~~r;~'~~;~ ''shocking abuse or ret1rementhomes1tes through r1 .i~~1.6~I of the lt:C~ period developer, and Vacali b.Jl
11., B••11lc• t s~tn ow er 1r ..:e"' Fb ii~. 11•. y,1.,""••n 0,1 !: ~ is•,, 11\•-1, bur e a u c r a l i c power," their Inter-Mowtta1n Land and 111 1972 Incentives and Properti~ vie• ""•ldenl •nd Tl'u•1 01uc1r 111•, 11J•, ••• '"" •'• "• processing b l N ,, $133 416 •. .i.:·-i.. ;_,,es the "Holiday. 'o l!•ecuior oi 1i... e.ia,. cN-1, s..~ '"" 1,1 :m' I~ 1;., 1j;; N•so voi-1°"'" 1 ""7 000 \ engeance 'I a n 1 • 1 x o n Trust Co !'..arrings \\ere · , , up w111'-11 ..... u ~,
w,11LT•' r1~;~f<I:;.:· ~;:~~'u°l ~·· ~;., K"•Pf 111 15 11 S:~:~:'r:f' fede ral orf1CJaJs foc his SUp-The indictments, by !he .'18 f.ercent over lht: f.>6,~&.i Two" vacation Certifica~t =~~::1~t: .. ~:::11Me•D ~::~Pk"" ;;·.~ ~~~ Z PT ~r· i~~ u-:.<,::(~1 111)1 Rockwell port of the J>rcsidcnt cowtty grand jury, were the or the prior year. sold by Market Developmen1.;~
A.llorMY• for lf•t<:ulOf' c,','",•I• i•,;• 100 , 1t.u1!m EJ •'> "• (~<>>'>>>'"•<>>>of Lo•••• ' l'uOlltMd 0••"11• Co111 O•ltv Pllo!, ow •P • 1 • la(lrd SI 11 l• ~ ' • Ckt-r H. 19 l•, 1973 l!r.l 1l COOt Uh ,., I )(IV> L•<ICI Ptt 111-\l co11,,.n o "'" 11111 t ... •i:•'' n"' 0 111
PUBLIC NOTICE
f'l(TITIOUI •US!NISI
NAMI ITATIMINT T~t lollowll'Q P•lfM>n !1 OOlno b\IJIMU ... T l F PROOU(TIO>IS 441.o\ We.I
,t..llon 11~ue, 5•n!f Ml, CA t1701
T"°Jo'n<l1 l Fkkl9, 4o11A Wt •I AJIOl'I
Av..,ve Stnlt An1, CA tt101
11111 11<.nln•n It mn<11>tlt<1 b' •• '"
dlvlowt
T"""'•• L Flci;;le
Trilt 1111-1 "'II llled wtlll ,,,_ C-· 1~ (l1rk ot Or•no-cwn1v on Ck!-< I
1'1)
PutPlot'led Ort-C-1 ()cf-• l !O 11 l~ 1tll
FlllU
Dt\IV Piiot,
PUBLIC NOTICE
STA·1"1 NOTICE TO Cll!OITOIS
Of' IULK TltA.NSElt
IK<VW N• 11--.1 .. f
1S1c1 •101-4117 Uc c I
~""
C«•( WI 1s .. 1' L1ntt n ll
Comm (I JI\~ IS\'I UW\11 Pt JO 11'"1
(ml ~~·~ 37' lll'" L•wtr,.. C •O •l''I Cw MIC.. n•. 71 WllY BO• 11'4 16'• ~ ..... ti P ll )I l ftclt NII 10 11 ,:;,1~uto J: :~ ) i..tt Ph•• 11 "
Conn Ft t '' 161< Lt-1 "' 16 ••Vi
C"' P&DI' ll'I l<'~ t:f"'~ ~'• r~
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Cordi• c" "~ '"'~ l "•< "'" ,,, 1 ., '°""Ill 1l ' 7• ' Lien Cl~ 1\o l'o Crou (o !I'> 2a·~ l.0Cll1e •I'•'', ~~'~NOi~ ,r: ,!~ Lent sia~ •o·, 10.,, °"''n 0.1 ~ o • l.CllO• FbU\ 1!0
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0-1"' 1.,11 y , \.>.> Mol<Y ICJ }J Jl 0.111~ C lll' > 39', Ne Cm:l llo'J. ll"-001"' (J~ u• .. ·n10 M<Owl e " 11to O.tm Md .... 101, M<Mllln u , •• Qly" Si:I 6\1 11' NlcQYfY 1• It"'
Oocuttl !l's II'• Me••~' J.ll:o 31'• Doll• (;fn I'• I , MIO<m ll ll.._
Dc<ltld• :Kl'• 111• Mld•ttn ,,.~, ~'"
Notte~ 11 llt•eoy 11lvtn to the Crf'dlo.., 1 I ot JOl'lfl F VOllfl, Tr1n5leror .,,.,OH
h111lnnt 1ddren IJ 701 E ll1l1>o. BIYd MUTUAL FUNDS (llill>o.), o.iewriorT lit"~" County ol ...... '"" ~ """"" "" • ~" .............................. ....-..;;..;.;.;;..;;.---11 lrtn•ter 11 '1KIVI lo be midi to EUGENE
M HOOVEI, Trtnlltree, w'1<l~o b<n•nHI
"lld•IH It ,., Wlnate< Plll<t. L111un1
e 11c11 Covntv ol 011n~ 5t~le OI
(•lllOfn!~
T11e p•ore•lv to be lr~nl!"•t'(I h
loce•tO 11 101 E l!o•lbOfl Blvo (Btlbo•l
N,....0<>•! 11e1<n C.OVntv of 0•~1'>\11 ~IA!~
of (llolornl•
Said P•OPtrtv I• dtt<.rlt!oed !n Ut<lett l
•1 ,1111 •Iott ln h tdr tl••ure1 equ\pffttnl
"'Id (IM<I will OI 111~1 1-t~l"llW .. f S!e<e
llv•IM U k"own •• B•ll>Ool tl1rdw1rt
t nd 1.,..~1.0 ti IOI E Btlboe llhtd
ClltlbO•l. PlfNl>Ofl &<!t<I!, (-IV or O••not ~tA•r ot Ct lilO""'" l ~t llUI~ lr~n•ft• ... II! llf C"'™lfft""'lfd on or ,n.,. •he 511! tJI V of Novffl_,..
1•/J, a! 10 00 A. M " lltV EK ._ Co., t"<~ 1.00 (•>• /o.'fVlflr Avt , Cltv
ol Ofl t>Qt, COltftl'V DI 0•1"9e Slf!f
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111~• ~·• Samr Ot!ed Oc:ftl~' lltn, 1t7J
Sign.a bv
'""..,' M tloo"fr P ullll111td Or•1191 (o.t>I
O<•lllltr ?•, 1t!J
T•i "\ltrt•
D•llY Polo! Jill 13
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PUBLIC !\OTICE
"ICTtTIOUS &UllNl!'SS
HAM• ITloTEMENT '"t '"llQ¥<lllCI rrsonl .,. do.no
~u1fnf•• "' e.a.ROH 01e CAST COMP.A.HY 11t37
ll.11•MI 11.voftUCI (iffGln ~ • 6 \o e
Cf lllon111 t u.cl •~11.,.. Kl!!-. 111()'1 P•rk•llll 11,,,_n!lf
Ct" 101. c~111.,..nl• t0101
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(ktOOf• 10 II, 11 ll. !OJ
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PUBLIC NOTICt-;
FICTITIOUS •u!.INESS
NA.Mil Sfl!,T&MINT
'"'"'
1111 11\llftw+"~ D~•lon Ii Oo•l'>O i)V\•n~'< .. L•V•NCr ~· c:r ••I ~ Co••' !<lu" ,n ...
l "'oun• "'"'" (~l·lo•n•• ~:r.11 fl ""~'" Jc,,rn rl•nt~•n•. :~ "''' !,!.l•!'I Conv~n L"~"''~ llt~cn C11IUNn••
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SCUOOElt f'D!. lntr lfW lt l•1•JI
ll•lan( 1• fllJ '' M Com II JI 11 J1
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l!,d Gw I JI l lt Ad inc ll1 l (lf AO In~ 10'0 I ll fn~ ~:& ! &: ! !! Sl>d u~ c 11 SOI SECU•ITY FOi
&ou•!1 •l IS • n 1nvt11 111 7 \l Ullrt F 111 1\.1. SlLllCTEO ,OS ...... Sii• l lt lh ~:r sr.~ :~ :; 1~ ::
SrM•M! It '1 11 ~ k<I!•~ F 1' 1l 1S '1 S"ARENLO GI .. Com1t l IO • IS Cnl rpt" I lJ 6 11
Flrl Fd • l! I tJ '°"'~ I 01 I., Leff! L 661 I JO
P•<• Fd l't t~ SMlAJISON FOS
APP'< t• a 11 11 In<°"' 11 lol 1' Ji lnvn l 10 1111 OS Sh O.•n 1l ft 11 11 \ollrFO l<tl 1! SIGMA l'UNOS c.., St>< I 11 '07 l ~Y 1111'111!1 T•~! 1 0] 1 11
Vfnlur t 11 10 ll
Smith 8 11" 11 •I SB lj,G• It •I 11 17
!ID Gtnf' IJ lt 1) 'M ~ .... ,.~~ ~"'" Swl .. vG 6M7 t<I Sovr In ll !I 11.)1
~P l11D fU 113 STATE IND GI, Com Fa SIS I ll 0 1..,.\•t 11• •Ill
Ptoqr• S '' o DO "FrG• 11'11' S! F• In< •JS •JS S(•tr St• 10 1l n ~I 1l!Af!..':""1 d,.~~\
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l•••I E~ II lt 11 IQ
'"""' .. l)IJ 1)11 10111 CG l JI J tl !ll111 Cl I JI • ft Ulllh~a t 11 t" Vn•,.,,.d • ll • l! UNION llllV!C( GllOUP ll1n ~ Iv Ut~l!M "l•U lllv ltl •IJ'I
un CllP! 10 00 10 OJ
WllTll •I 1) 11 !111
UNITED FUND\
~<~u"' I ll !W 8f>d fd 1 .i J 11 C~I q,. 1n II II .,.,
C&<I! IP'( '"-•0•1 '"<om ll 01 u '1
5t••ll( ',. • O't 11...W 1a I~ UUA C~ 11 ~11 0• U\ 0¥15 10 ll1 10 !I 'lf,LUI U"l POS 11•1 UI• I l\ 6.,. V.i 11\l I 1t I IO
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Vl"O•tl I 0 I It ll••IMI I 1 .. 'll \Ill~, O< 1 •1 ! " Wf H 101 'N IM
"'"" Mu 11 9t q " Wt•"O t<l ti 1l U !l WlLLINGlOfl OIOUP• l!•o!.,, t• !l !1 M
!"'f"\I 10 II II )!
""'""' II U 'I 'I
""'' 1} H lj It w..... 11 .. ll"'
w-11m 11 >o o i1 W''"'" 10 I< 111111 wv:i.';"r..,, ~;; i ~
W•l!!;I C,.. •O! f~1
Wl"Of'\ ~ 01 • V l l•qlf• 11"11 11
r •• "lv•<ir'<\11 ,_.,..,~.,..
To Acquire
Adn1iral
EL SEGUNDO {AP)
Rock\\"ell lntemat1onal Corp
has anoouncCd plans lo ac·
quire the Admiral Corp of
Qucago. a ma)OI' producer of
coosumer products.
Under the agreement 1n
pnDc1ple anoounced Tuesday,
Rock¥:ell \\'ould pay 56 of
one share of its common stock
for each share of Admiral
common stock
The pnce would total ap-
proxima tely $102 m11J1on. bas-
ed on Tuesday's price on the
New York Stock Exchange
Admiral's products include
refrigerators, freezers. radios.
telev1s1ons and s t ereo
systems
Rock,,..ell, which emphasizes
the production of spaceships
and bombers for the federal
governme111. also produCes
power tool'i hand-held el~
lroruc calculators and home
plumbing items
lrvn1e Bank
Deposits
Sk yrocket
Deposits 111 the nc1v Jrvine
National Bank have exceeded
$4 m1U1on dollars since its
opening August 21, accorchng
to James Lynch, president of
the hnancia\ 1nst1tut1on
The independent nahonal
bank ll:ns organized hy a
group or Oran ge County
residents \\'Ith a stock offering
or 150,000 :;hares al $10 per
sh~re Acrord1ng to Lynch .
shares were purrhas•'" "'1lh1n
t\\!) 1vceks 'ollo,.,•ing the
issuance of the offer i ng
circular in mid-sum1ncr
•·\Ve 11 crc exlrrmely
grat1f1ed v;1th the res~onse to
the stoc\> offering ·• Lynch
s.1id, "but we !lfC even more
pleased \v tlh the outstondtnst
reception Rtld supporl y,·e've
recclvcd tin our 1n1ll ol 60 days
(TO'l'rl the residents a n d
htis1nc!s communit y o' Irvine
LJntl ~·1rro11ncltng il l'<'il ' "
Jr\ inc Nat1onnl ~ank has
ofl1ct•s .1t 212 1 t:a1 v r~ rr11 1: .
11crO:;S the strr.cl llnn1 lh1·
Cr!!11;!" County /\•~rlOr:
T1 vo Banks
Dip R ates
SAN FRANCISCO tAP I
-Wt'llS Fargo Dank Tues-
day Jo...,ertd lls prime 1n-
rert,st rntc from 10 pcr-
ctnl In !P~ Pttcent, cf·
fcct1\·c nt Ofl('('. The 11'\0ve
fn!loy,t(I s11n1lnr step., ln-
i!latcd last \\'C<'k h y
scvcrll ! bunks
Security Pacinc Btiink
mtide Ii s r n11 1 ;i r nn--
nounccmt'nl r.tonday
.
Complete Mid-day American Stock List:~
Neru·ly Ev e1·yone Li stens to Lande1·s
• •
N
" ~··
r
;
~y'•
CloeingPricea
l
' . , NEW YORK STOCK EXCHANGE
Octotitr 197.l $1 DA.ll.V Pll.OT
Year's High-Lows
Appear Every Saturday
Market Rebounds
011 News of Tapes
OAIL Y PILOT Wtdnnclay, Oclobtr 24, 1973
Brand New 1973
GRAN TORINO SPOR T
2 DOOR SPORTS ROOF-13A3S8227S82)
FULL PRICE $3997 PLUS TAX
& LICENSE.
Brand New 1973
GALAXIE 500
Country-Sedan Wagon (3J74S210761) 1778 . $1. 1 00 !>J§g~T
PWS TAX & UCINSI
1973 Demonstrator
GALAXI E
2 DOOR HARDTOP (3JS8Hl45167) 543 -a 8., FULt. ·PRI PLUS TAX
& UCINSI
Brand New 1973
3;4 TON PICKUP
CUSTOM STYLESIDE (f25YRS0 7299l
_$3498
'4 1p•ed, ,adio, 1!•1l•r. accent 9'0Up,
wl!it•wall., wl!eel co~•ri. Ivory while,
•xlr1 c1 ... n. !J720TB I. FULL·PRICE
1970 MAVERICK
Auto. Irani., ••dio. h••ler, whitew<JI!
lire1, wh••I covers, acce"~t group,
good l'lil11, exl'a sharp. IZWA69l )
1969 DATSUN 510
'
2 Or. 4 •P••d. good mi)•t, r•di•I tire1,
mag wh•1 l1. like ntw. tX RU499 )
1968 ~ODGE DART
2 Door h•~lop. Small V.8, 11110.
h1n1., pwr. 1le1rin9 i nd 1<r cor\d. Ex-
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1965 MUSTANG
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196B MUSTANG
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1969 OLDSMOBILE
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FULL PRICE
PLUS TAX
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1973 Demonstrator
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FUL L PR ICE
1970 FORD GALAXIE 500 FASTBACK
V.8, auto. lr•n1., laclory a ir condit;on-
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1972 CHEV. NOVA
6 cyl., auto. tr1n1., rodio, he;ter, li!11
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•
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1967 CHEV.
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47,265 mil••, eitra c1•1111-"IUOP706 l -.-
1969 MUSTANG
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out. !YQBOlSI ·
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1970 FORD RANCH WAGON
1970 FORD GALAXIE 500
V-I, '"''-''"""• '"'°'Y •I• ooodllloo l s1 ,·699• ing, power 1l1•rin9, radio, heal••
vinyl roof, 4 Or. herdtop. Sh1rp. !92)
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1965 FORD
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1972 T·BIRD
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' ' '
' 1971 fORD F250
t 1nk1, H.D. camp•' tquipm•nt, n•w v.a, auto. lrln1., pow•r tl•••ing, 2 g11 s2499
p•lot, -'••p. i5t095Ki I ~ Ii
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i
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· Pre·tty ~Erll ·mugh
'
to .
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J
Wtdlltsday, Octobtr 24, iq73 PILOT-ADVERTISER
E.at , • •
Edible centerpieces are a novelty for
tnfonUat parties, beauty for the table
when Oowers aren't avall'able and a
boon to hDstesses on a budget.
Fall and winter produce provides a
variety of colon to accent any table
setting. Oranges, lembns and rosy
po-le.9 .... be-mounded' around
tall candles and ,greenery.
Or make a nest of1straw lo a basket
aod arrange a whole eggplant, stalks
of celery or broccoli, sq uash or gourds
and tomatoes. Insert wands of spaghetti
for an Italian meal.
If the buffet Is .crowded, hang a
beribomed basket of autumn leaves,
pears and grapes at eye level.
Pumpkins can be animated with made-
up faces as well as carved grins.
Use parsley or celery tops for hair
and moustache, suminer squash fpr ears.
ca rrot or red pepper for the nose and
an apple slice for the mouth. For bespec-
tacled eyes, use· a toothpick to SOOJre
a black olive on a slice of cucumber
inside a circular slice of green pepper.
Or use the pumpkin as a punch bov.'I.
Its flavor adds that extra something
that Will make guests beg for your
recipe. Cut off the top leaving a scalloped
edge, sooop out seeds, smooth the bottom
and eour in punch .
. RUM PUNCHKIN
l'i!i: cups sugar
1 cup lemon juice
2 cups cranberry juice
2 cups Ol';:tage juice
2 cups strong tea
2 bottles light rum
Mix ingredients in large bo'vl. Pour
into a hollowed out pumpkin shell. Add
ice cubes. Serves J2 people twice.
"PICK-UP.sTICKS" DUNK
t canned pimiento, chopped
1 small onion, minced
1;.. cup minced parsley
'h teAspoon &easoned salt
1 tablespoon lemon juice
l carton (8 ounces) cottage cheese
1 ran minwt.clams or J jijr f6akeY ~ spread or 1 can deviled m
• Later
f\.11x ingredieot.s well. Chill 'Until ready
lo serve. Surround bow) ol' ml:s:ture with
crunchy vegetable slicks ror dunking.
ti.1akes about 3 cupa. ·
DEVILED RQLL.UPS
t loaf unsliced bread
1 can d.evlled ham
Z tablespoons chopped mustard pickle
reJish
2 tablespoons mayOlUlaise
Dash tabasco.
Trim crusts from bread. Cut loaf length·
\vise into thin slices. (This can be done at
the bakery). Roll the slices with a rolling
pin to make them Oexibfe ·aricl prevent
tearing.
Combine the remaining ingredients and
spread on the bread slices. Roll the
slices up like little jelly rolls, starting
at tbe short end.
Press firmly to seal the end, then
spread eilch roll all over with a little
soft butter. roll in finely minced parsley
or sprin k1e with bright colored paprika.
\Vrap the rolls tightly in foll or plast.ic
and chill until ready to serve-Cut rolls
into little rounds. One loaf will make
from 50 to 60 tiny "roll-ups."
BEA ANDERSON, Editor
CAROL MOORE, Food Editor
w ........ ,. Ocfeber i4. u1a "•" Jt
'Salads' Dressed Fancy .'i.' ~ ·r .. ..,
..lb
' I I ;• • '
',,.• _,.,,-I ., •• I <I;!_ • "" 1' .. ~·11 ~·-I • #t<I ;'>,. ~-l' • ...._ ... .,,
: ...
;:i ·.,it .·• -
._.;.
• •
'
'Who Is Nibbling
'AtM H · ?'· .. ~ .• y ouse.
::. ~ ' ' ,
.JUJt thinking of a house made with sprinkle the base board" liberally with ' . . . ~' CJ!<!kfes,,ifostinit aqd gingerb~ead miniature marshmallows.
i.s:\fl. dell~ for piildren. These im-Varying sizes of chocolate candy bars
a~tive sttuctures, ,__ cottages, pala~ are all you need to make a locomotive
ot !Orts with sugary landscape -are atld railroad train cars. RoWld peppermit
~ar party decor and sometimes candies fonn wheels to 'carry a 'trafu
r9trfishmenis for youngsters. . loaded with logs of sliced chocolate bars.
'ot wlif not have a constr~ction party? · A sweet bouquet of potted flowers
Let . lhe children buud and d~rate 8 can be made with small lollipops and
hci~ to be taken to a children's h<>spltal leaves of sliced gumdrops. Set the
, lpllipop slicks in straws and r.est them W~ I t(.; , ); •• · a bed of candy-c<lated chocolates. 'A~ at J))).ll:ll .fwuse ca,n be nJlde ~ ea'sil~ ibi, 8 ~ sm 11 l'RhibOard ~. •. x~ f lorful candy tulips are made by
'-1~_.. 11 ting.~ a i~rge gumdrop into· sect1ofls csiv-1 Wit~ ~ink troSting. ?.tilke a roof -of ·. la)e p.rs ~ with :8 candy bd forcijlg the "P'!tals" .open by ln-
k'LU Ch _l;)Cy. • _ .. r:;1ng a si;iall 'gun;xtrop in the te9ter.
r· , .. . Use a few toothpicks to connect
Use gUin d~;to fonn' ~ ~o ange-flavored.,sli~ ,a~ .. gumdrops to
papee-nd brna en ts. L i c 0 r t·c e create a candy giraffe. Another time 1~cial es are cUt'+ Jo slriiUl.ale ~c~
8 door rRat. Add -a ~n: ~· 'Fllll · ca~ cane;s for the long '.a~ •.u.ii .. pl'"1 .. ,' tniined'. k,:!!"J ~egs. ',, ·.·1 " .1-• '~ .,., "i"" to> --ii.. Tht1Je's ·-no limit to U1e zoo and .
-llows and hard oi1 toflt ri.M . anlmii.lit· tbat clh be made
candie ·~· ' -:1!iJ-"7-i , ~ 'i ~y" favor!' a~ plate settings.
Othe building ..,. suggestions: 'n s e , Put se~eral candy animals on a circular
nouga for a' chioiney for'matlon and plattortb and cover 'with a paper uzn.-
..,..1 llgbUy' lfO!led I>?" ·With •ga brella 111pport00 by. candy aUcks, F<ir
•11Cii11 or .t wOli<I rt1rect; String mlrlc • sp«ial e!lect: place tlilt ••rousOl on I~ i_ for o~ilintng and r!bbOn· cand ' a lazy susan to h•lrl. mflMi Ice hedges..-~ 1 , ' Durinltt'thc holidays, make extra candy
"Mbr WA}'S tO sttmgte ·a;troof1 -m animols-r\nd n0Wer1 toi decora~e trees
overlapping thin, flat pastel candies or and pockagct 'Or have on bond for youflg
wafer cookies. To simulate a slone root visit.ors.
(
Wh~.n was the last time you used an artichoke
candle holder? •
Or took apart a centerpiece to make a salad and
pie? .
These are just beginning steps explained in the
bo9klet, "Decorate \Vith Flowers, Fruits an,d Vege·
tables," that's filled with feasts ·for the eye .as well as
the]>alate. ·
'a'he publication contains 25 arrangement ideas
pl~1• .. 12 recipes that Utilize the fruits a,nd vegetables
Oranges, and lemons are pyramided at left, with
bf~Coli j!o.wers· ;~d for ,__greJmery a® suppo~ pl.U~
artichokes for a topper and· candlestick. Broccoli stalks
and grapefruit accent t.Qe·'Jris; and··gEµ"anium arrange-,
m'ent, at right.
· Often quickie arrangements are more effective
than the very .belabored ones. Put your chafing dish
into. doq.ble ·duty . by fi!Ung it with crimson berried
pyracantha. Let some of the greenery rest at the base
along with several· oranges and lemons.
After a few days of beauty from a basket of ro-
maine leaves, lemons and baby's breath, there's still
time for Caesar's Salad plus a batch of Citrus Honey
Dressing.
To make the arrangement, put wet floral foam in
a foil-Lined basket. Spear lemons on bamboo. ske,vers
and insert in foam along with lettuce leave1s. Add a
sprinkling of baby's breath or dried star flower.
A large, cleaned out Hubbard squash beeomes a
Thanksgiving cornucopia when sliced at an angle at the
large end and filled with fruits and vegefables .
Don't be afraid to combine flowers with carrots,
spinach, fruits, stones or driftwood. Nature does it all
the time. ·so why no t you?
For a_copy of the booklet, send 50 cents In coin
to Sunkist Growers, Inc., CS 773, Box 7888 Valley
Annex, Van Nuys, 91409.
•
• •
\
-ti DAILY PILOT
Emphasis Put on
By AUJSON DEERR
Of ... .,...,. ....... , .. ,
What ire 1he psychoJogical
problems of the hearing Im-
paired cblld, ado I e seen I,
adult~
A panel or educators and
professionals v•l'lo work with
the dear and hearing Impaired
!old an audience at the Hoag
Conference U!nter they are
the same as those ol the hear-
ing.
Sptak'.1ng at the first or four
panel discussions regarding
hearing impairment sponsored
by the Audiology Center or
Newport &ach \l'Cre Dr.
Alathena Sm ith , Dr. Barbara
Rossier, Dan Clere and Craig
Klmberland.
"In work with s~cial need
children, we often place the
emphasis on the wrong place.
We ernphaslz.e the spedal need
-hearing, orthopedic, sight
-rathtr tluln kloking at the
child, first and !oretrX¥l, as
a hum11n being, a person whh
need tor food, shelter, com-
munication, lo\·e, warmth, ac-
eeptante and self-esteem ,"
Dr. Ro!!ier sald,
•·Jn the last two, special
need childre·n do have special
needll, and they also have
needs as children."
TRUST DEVELOPED
Tticsc chi ldren, she so.Id,
need: trust in people nod in
themslevcs, a sense o f
autonomy, opportunity t o
develop initiative and a sense
of purposefulness, Identity and
a sense of independen~.
"~fany of our parents
haven't even been around
sma ll children before. \Vhen
you compllcate that with a
child \vho does not respond,
because he can't hear, it ls
threatening to. the parents.
"\\'e're kidding ourselves If
we say we doa't aped
aomething from our l"htkfrtn.
We get angry and !rustr1ted
and communlcate uua noo-
vtrbally to the child," she
added.
"He begins to reel 'I'm not
okay.' And at a time when
he should be getting a fft:Ung
or autonomy his lack of
language beco.mes very ap-
parent and Js seen perhaps
In delayed toilet training,
feeding and the s e v e r e
restraint parents tend to place
on the gpeclal need chlkt."
SOLUTIONS
In her 'A·orlc as psychologist
for the aurally handicapped
program of the Santa -Ana
Unified School District, Dr.
Rossler has found several
possible solutions.
First, don't treat the special
need dlild as if he is dltferent.
Children, Not Hearing Loss
OliJdr<ll -thb and So Jnto 1doluceme wttb all klnds
ot UN'UOIVed con0lctt, thelr
trust In people and lll<Jr en·
vltonmentahabo.
Early dtagnosis I s im-
perative, sbe aald. • 'The
younger we can get the child,
the better results we have,
especially if we can begin
before their maximum time
for language development ,
between ages two and f~
and~haH."
Other euentlals are early
parent counseling, ear I y
educallon plannlng, continuing
parent educaUcn, acceptance
of what the child has to offer
sans cridclsm, keeping the
pattnt ego In check and com·
munJcating, r e a I I y com-
municating how you feel, to
the child, and reading his feel·
ings a.s well.
And moot lmj>ortant, aho
said, Is cooptl'IUon bet_,,
parenls and the ocliooL
Dr. Smith, who Is par<nl
education speclallst at John
Tracy Clinic, Loa Angeles,
quoted a story about Mrs.
Spencer Tracy!s feelings about
parent involvement.
A visitor to the clinic noted
the number of parents altting
in the classl'QOmS.
"Oh," she sald to Mrs.
Tracy, "you lake p&llnta,
too."
"No," answered Mrs. Tracy,
"we take parents, one."
Parents are important, said
Dr. Smith, because children
are dependent upon them fot
acceptance and wamlth. U
parents a:e not available to
their children, the chlldren get
angry and frustrated and tum
lhis upon themselves, begin-
nlog to feel unwortlly ol love
and acceptance.
SELF CONCEPT
"Thi• Is .... plA<e ~
tbe child developl sell """"pt
and 11 he can't "'lftSI Illa
leelinp, 11. nobody Usttm, he
woo't· he Independent and secure."
Too -olt<n, she &aid, we
make tbe n>latake ol looldnf
at tbe hearln( looa, not the
child. Deal children .,. tbe
same as any other cblldttll,
they just can't hear.
Dan Clere; guidance
apeclallst ,.. Ille hearing Im·
paired •t Golden West C<lllege,
talked about the L!lh year
w11en he nomwly meets tbe
hearing impaired.
Thia ls tl\e year Ibey leave
home, "'8ln oolh!ge, begin a
proCeSS ol declalon-makln(
and probietMolvlng and have
to accept respooal~llity. "It
is a time when they have
to make their own declsion.s.
' ' I !Ike away ool ooly the
failures of Ule but aoo
Flnt and IOttlllOlt, he
werted. parenls -Id •not
be --"'4t<h. lllhou"1 oommunlcatloa i.!
vilal '"' -· They -1d be _concemed _,. ,.u..,,.
ncept and independence. TOQ
many hearing Im pa I red
persons have ~een
overprotected.
'PAllEN'nNG
Parents, be said. Jhldd COO·
centrate on oomlstent parttr
ting -toochtng, warmth. car-
.in,g, lharing, atteotk>I, com-
munJcaUoo. giVing u:c as taklq.
'"lbe biggest probltm," he
said. "ii 11ettln( out ft th& I
shell, rpe&klng up. This mua.s ,
both tbe hearlu lmpalnd and t tbe hoaring. ;.-.,
Klmberland feel• lhal !be
major problem is lack of OX· 1 po.sure. How muy de 1 f
friends do you hive? Haft
yQU ever~been el"J)Olfld to the
hearln( Impaired?
He noted he gets f~ rac-
lions fron1 people When he.
tells them to speak more slaw"·
ly becauae he Is deal -lltock.
pity, 1keptlci1fn and
awareness of the probJeol
coupled with an in~ In
learning more about It. •
In hb 0"'1 oounaellnl of
the deal, he noted. he !)as
found that parents Often
empham• what the child can't
do, hear, rather than ~·lie
can do, almol!lt evefytlilng
else.
_JL.l.JIWLl!lo!!! for_ them,
Craig Kimberland: m dear
In orle ear, lost hls(hearln(
totally_ .in an accident when
he was 19. A po1chologtst,
he ls director ol meolal health
services for the dear at
Resthaven Hoapltal, L o 1
~
"LoM d hearing is an in·
visible disability. You can't
,..JI ond It's dilflcul~ but
not impossilile-toaear-Wittt
Most bearing people, however,
dQn't know anything about
deaf people. They artn't
against them, they just don't
know."
Scary Faces Put Oh
Joey Board demonstrates the
proper method of transfonn·
mg a pumpkin into a Jack
O'Lantern for Leigh Bradley
Qeft) and . his sister Michele.
Members of the Orange County
Adoptive Parents Associiltlon
will mark Halloween Saturday,
Oct. 27, in the In n of Tom or·
tow, Anahebn.--cttllchen wttl
meet the next day in Orange.
Jack O'Lanterns they create
will be given to Children's Hos-
pital.
ELECTROLYSIS
Perm1n•nt H1ir R•moval
Pri.,•cy of Oocton Office
c.t.aOL 10DIM 499-1717
AIM Mlnltll Vl•i. -•11Jt
emorrs
SPORTSW~
OAIL Y llH MON ... THURS. 10.f
Wcstc:l!fl' Plua, 17lh and Trvlnc.,
1 Nc"'·port Be•ch,Califomi:t92660
1-
Clubs Combining Socials With Fund-raisers • when ls
Boys Cl ub
A cooperative garage sate
ls slated ror Saturday, Oct.
27, by the Ladies Auxiliary
of the Boys' Club of 1-fun-
tington Beach. Baked goods.
refreshments and a variety
of items will be sold front
9 a.m. to 4 p.m. in the Five
Points Shopping Center.
Clipped Wings
A Halloween costume party
is planned for Saturday, Oct.
27, by the C1ipped Wings,
United Air Lines Ste"'ardess
Alumnae in the Tustin home
of Mr. and ~trs . Robert
Kiefer, beginning at 8 p.m.
Altrusa
Santa Anita Racetrack will
be !he setting Saturday, Oct.
27, for the AHrusa Club of
the Saddleback Valley night
at tbe races. Reservations for
the event, which will aid
Altrusa's international grants
can be made with Jean Davis
at 494-6283.
City of Hope
The Sarah Schoenfeld
Chapter of City of Hope will
meet Saturday, Oct. 'Z1 in Big
Bernie's restaurant. Garden
Grove, at 8:30 p.m. The new!~
formed chapter will receive
Its charter and handcrafted
items made by members will
be on display.
MEDELLAS
An evening of dining, danc-
ing and entertainment has
been planned for Saturday.
Oct. 27, by members of
,,1EDELLAS (Medical, Dental.
Legal Ladies Society o f
Orange County).
The Playboy Club, Los
Angeles, will be the setting
for the festivities, to which
husbands have been invited .
New officers are the J\1mes.
Albert Goh, president; Wayne
Ni s higaya, president-elect;
Akinori Suzuki and John Lee,
vice presidents; Richard
Arakawa. secretaries, a n d
Imagawa and Douglas
George Kura ta, treasurer.
Sigma Alpha Iota
Southern California soprano
Su Harmon 'A'iil be featured
at the Saturday, Oct. 27,
gathering of Sigma Alpha Iota
'A'Omen's music fraternity in
the \Ve9tmlnster home of Bon-
nie Shelley.
J\flss Harmon has appeared
wllh the Dallas Sympb::in y,
3DAYSONLY!
Thursday, Fiiday & Satunlay--O:tober 25, 26 & 'Z7
FOR SA I .E
ENTIRE STOCK
of american .
INDIAN JEWELRY
of
~H\\,l]W>ING
EST.1913 ~
GALLUP. NEW MEXICO
Specia l Low Prices During Sale!
ONLY AUTHENTIC TURQUOISE JEWELRY
S..Jcchon 1nr·\ud1~ hdnd1nr1de Navil iO. Zuni ond Hopi jewelry
~'.rim•, ··01, I P(lwn'' ()Yrronril properly ol lndlans)
HACITl'S
COSTA MESA JEWELRY
1 ~ r\1.'''l M)rt I ~11111 ., ar1 L t ~t:1 ~lc.."i\11, Olli f. !r.26:.'7
71114•Uj..i74 1
( ~;i,·n f nun Harn to tipnl
Wouldn't you expect a bargain at a pawn shop!
Roger Wagner Cboiale, Gregg
Smith Slngm and at the
llollywood Bowl Classical and
Popa nights.
orr at 7:30 p.m.
CofC Wom en
Chambermaids, Women's
Al s . t Division or the SaddJeback
A series of 10 programs
on Saturday mornings at
Gisler ScbOOI in Huntington
Beach began Oct. 13. Sessions
run from 10 to 11:30 a.m.
VELVET FOG
'HAIRSTY LI NG
8466 INDIANAPOLIS AVE.
HUNTINGTON BEACH, 536·8829 tar ocoe Y Valley Chsmber of Com-
St. John the Baptist Catholic merce, will have the twelvei----------~======================'
Church Altar Society will host . signs of the zodiac interpreted
a Whldl Craft bazaar Satur· in fashions Saturday. Oct. 27
day, Oct. 27, at S p.m. and in the new Hilton Inn, Laguna
Sunday, Oct. 28, from 9 a.m. Hills.
to 6 p.m. at the church. A The noon fashion luncheon,
quilt will be given away as themed Fall Fashion Fiesta,
a special prize. will feature apparel from area
BSP
Beta Alpha Pi Chapter of
Beta Sigma Phi has planned
a Halloween party for Satur-
day, Oct. 27, in the Bayshore
Recreation Hall, Huntington
Beach. Dinner at the Hobo
Night will be served in Lin
cans.
Crittenton
Fall activities for the
1'fariners Circle Auxiliary of
Florence Crittenton Services
will be launched Saturday,
Oct. 27. with a cruise abo8rd
the Pavilion Queen, casting
shops.
Mom s of Tw in s
Saddleback Mothers o {
Tw ins Club will have thei r
annual Halloween party Sun-1 day, Oct. 28, at I p.m. at
Coronado Park, Mission Viejo.
Fam il y Study
How to Be a Healthy Parent
will be the 10pic of Charle1
Leviton at the first general
meeting of the year of the
Family Study Group or Orange
County, Sw>day, Oct. 23, at
7:30 p.m.
e a re continuing our
J'mM~ SALE
OHM MANY ITEMS FOR LESS
SUN. k) THAN MANUFACTURERS COST
"''" D•I~ -· St11. ,, .. TABLE LAMPS
AND SHADES
25°1°0ff
CANE SWABS ~~.~ 18''
! ... IWI 11'1>!11• I Crywt•I
11JJV. MIWPOIT llYD.
COSTA MIU PH.·"41•7JDI
!At l1tt"'"'1fwl .. "'""" 11\11,
IF I CAN DO IT ANYBODY CAN
•.o.•. Hf AntOM
""""" '" two lltl"IOlll "' tucilf •lilt, °'"'1dlllf ... 111111 ... 1v11t, htlflhl, .cli,.lty • .,.1 _~· l<lf o!Mr 11-111 ,,¢, ",_ .,.. "'' -oplll!Mti Int of f ltt,
•Uf AHID HOf ffll •trY' Mra.-WMD ( Nf9 HOF •Alfll Wf,..,,J •,,
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11111 llJ-Mtk 511 Wit~ I -ti• 1ldl -k. II ( u.1'1 ta for yw,
.,.d ,....r -.t'IOll l1111i lllYl"J .i ''C.:: a.Mr9U) It lllclllllff f,.., TI!oll'I
I'm lftl•rtllff hi ..... IM'"'9 11 """ clllld.-Ii .,..19 n wMt M""nl t.,..,.
A IOI of PtDPlt 11'1 b!wlflt "' Wl!fl tt.
WIVftl .. 11 .. flabllf, ~ ltlty .... "' Off. '""" • """ "' Wll •'-" 11t11tlflt .. u~ .,.19111 ff!' 1t1e ,.,, ., ,....
11\tt -ti ywr 9'flilWlll "ltht ..,.ti.I ,,..,.,._I'~ "'' tt t.1, ...... a:--...,.., IM W1lfl'lt -tll ft tten off. I! •IKOWM•tn •IKAl
NIMMmn\YI •APnOVllAt,.... Ml
wotn.M-, " • _, ro .,, DOWN co..n ro Ml'M• -IM UCI h'fl 1'0fff • "'""''. COU.111 u.wwa
FRef lti • 'oDUcroiivL'Ecrum
.._., a~N1 .. IOAY, OCT. 26
9iaG ...... _.. :~ ,..._. "242 c-.. Dr ....... ,..._ ,._ a... c.,,..,, .,,,..,,
AllAftllflll. .. lpAY, OCT. 26
7 p.-. ................ c.t.Nrh. 111 •. u... lil~Tat&tli, IA'TUllDAY. OCT. 27
......... -" 12l30 """"' 4242 c...,.. ......... ,
IT WORKS
ASK MOlf THAN 1500 PfOPU IH OIAHGf COUNTY AIO«lr
MIKE TURIN'S Program • • • J
(714) 556-1350
• ,,.,.__...;_u
_ .. ..i..-.'
DE
this
23 a
Chris
he d
it.
_B
year
very
st
and
for hi
the
a I
yoo s
but
·"'ho
shou
In pe
..
Wtdnffday, Ottobet 24, }q73 DAIL v PILDT SS
Caucus Screens TV ·images ESTATE AUCTION
lo be held
In the By JO OLSON
Of tfMo Dfffr l'I ... St.ff
Gail Christian, television
news ttporter, was signed to
address the Orange CoWlty
Chapter fl. the National
Women's Political Caucus, but
at the last minute she had
to break her commltment.
KNBC aent two speakers to
replace her and they proved
to be capable of ftlllng her
shoes, judging by the response
of the caucus members.
Ms. Hassett, co-founder of
the Los Angeles M e d i a
Chapter of the National
Women's Political Caucus,
said her chapter now is
preparing material t e 11 i n g
women contemplating running
for olfice how to deal with
the press.
"We are developing a list
of ,questions we feel can-
didates should answer," she
noted.
Ms. Hasset, a high school
dropout, worked for a small
advertising agency in Los
Angeles for six years and at-
tended classes on the side
to complele her education.
1-ter boss at the agency ad-
vised her to "become an ex-
Ann Hassell, producer of
Focus, a weekly show, and
The Issue ls, a monthly
speciaJ, and her assistant,
Karen Snyder, came armed
with a list of topics to be
covered and questions to be
answered. which they had
formulated as they drove down the freeway from pert al something," and she
Hollywood. feels this was a hel1> in the
Focus, they explalned, is a progression of her career.
Producter Ann Hassett, left, program about agencies of· She also has been a viCf:
and Karen Snyder tell Womenis fering services to the public. president of Rossmoor Leisure
---.-. ---The format-ehanges~weekly -WorJd,--Pohttcal Caucus about TV because the topics covered are Mrs. Snyder i$ a former
n10re women to the newsroom.
).fs. Hassett said, and ~tn .
Snyder added that "knowing
another woman is the best
way to get in."
l\1s. llassett said beginning
In the mailroo1n 'is the fastest
way up for most people.
About public pressure on
television, l\1s. Hasseu noted.
"If 50 letters \\'ere received
on one subject in one day,
I can'I tell you what that
would do.''
\Vhen pressure is put on.
"you might not see any
changes right away," she
con1mented.
Caucus niembcrs \verc con-
ccrned about how to enlist
CQOperation front the more
traditional \\'Omen's groups.
such as business \\'Omen's
clubs, which might have funds
available to underwrite caucus
projects.
"Let them know you," \\'as
Ms. Hassett's answer. "We
have common bonds. We all
have laundry to do."
Apprenticeship Building, Del M•r Fairground•
Del Mar
Wednesday & Thursday Evenings,
October 24th & 25rh at 7:00 p.m.
Four Estates and Three Private Collections
ordered sold to the highest bidder
comprising of
Important JADE & IVORY CARVINGS, Old Pawn
and INOIAN JEWELRY, Antique ORIENTAL,
AMERICAN & EUROPEAN FURNITURE, Per-
sian and Chinese CARPETS -objects D'Art.
Jewelry comprising of DIAMONDS, EMERALDS,
RUBIES ANO SAPPHIRE RINGS, BRACELETS,
and EARRINGS.
conducted by
CONTINENTAL of San Diego
282·7494
strategieL varied, Ms. Hassett said. high school j our n a Ii s mli:-;OiiiOiiiOiiiOiiiOiiiOiiiOiiiOiii;;;;;;;~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ teacher.
The meeting fonnat was in·
fonnal. The speakers sat on
the 'edge of a table facing
the audience and basically had
a "rap" session. the Caller? Ring Ar und FABRIC EVENT!
WOOL OR ACRYLIC PLAIDS
The pl'evious Monday, Ms.
IIasselt said, 'she had traveled
DEAR ANN LANDERS: I am writing 1 _ __ at 1ne and \vhispering, wondering if a great distance to serve on
this letter for my son Howard. He is Q"".: l am a guy or girl. a panel for an evening college
23 and engaged to be married arcund ~ This happens on the street, the bus, journalism class. only to find
Christmas. But last week he decided in a store -everywhere. J am not that the other panel members ~ • i..: Fr ti l h did not sho1v up. She agreed he doesn't want to go through with ~----~\, .~ /~--' imagining tu.ings. _ equen Y peop e ave •~ answer quest•'ons. and the it. -said, "Thank you, son," or "Excuse w .. first question she was asked _Brenda (noi..her right__name) is two me, young .man. was, "Is Kelly -Lang mar-
·years older than Howard and sh~ is . When 1t first began I didn't care, ried.,"
,very pushy apddomineering. They dated ·age because It's a different world today but noW It depresses me. Should l ignore Ca~cus members responded
steadil for three xearl af!d ~B'iiri:;en;.:d'ia:--il;mnte'n:. t,,wrt:a_str25riylnef"ars'-.!aliigioo-. vTmhalttS'croo"dtoerunsr· !'igt-..:io;t?<;O':'rO:sh;:::;.ou~. t~d:il'::s'ftr'i"i'.gT.b::tecn'itiii~m out? ~-.by_asking, '.!a. she?" £Mrs r • ~-,, eriaut trr llil! · wt1ite .uauts doesn't M bat 1 I k l '~t.=~ was ser10Us gir r1ena. e .-ore on w oo 1~: MY 11<lll Hassett never said.)
Re9. $5. Lowt11t price •f yeor o• lolHt foshlo11 color. S•·60" wld•
POL VESTER DOUBLE KNIT YARN
Ret. $5. I• b1rg1"4y/bont. ''"' ,ot!Nt fel .. 1011 colors.
a nice person, but I'm sure she pressured ways make the perfect huSband. is medium length. I don't wear makeup. On a JnQre serious note,
Howard into. giving her a ring. From Enlightened iostluctidn 00 everyday [ wear mosUy jeans because thef are Ms. Hassett was asked if Miss
the beginning I knew she was chasing ~ing would mean a great deal more more comfortable than dresses. In case Lang is considered an equal
him. I an biochemistry, zoology or Russian you are wondering, I am NOT a lesbian. with the newsmen she works
_ Howard asked ine to write to . you tory when the going gets rough. Ho\•i -HERS NOT IDS with.
EARLY BIRD SPECIALS ~
Ass.orted Fabrics -$1 vals. to $3.99 ........ 2/$1.00
Monotone & Cotton Pri nts. V11ls. to $2.99 .. $1.69 yd.
and il}quire if it \VOUld be an Mght a tit, Ann ? -D.C.B. She is, the producer said.
for hi m to write Brenda a letter breaking EAR D.C.B. _ Sorry, I disagree. DEAR HERS: The solutton Is simple. "Kelly Lang has built an au-
the engagement. He says it would be c liege is too late. I've been speaking Wear lipstick. Get ·oni of the jeans. dience. Reporters are paid the
'a Jot easier on everybody. What do 0 beball of family living courses in Put on a skirt and blouse or a dress same but their stories are
you Say, Ann? -CONCERNED MOM h b school (or IS years and am pleased and some earrings. No one wW ever not equal. Women are sent
DEAR MOM: Easier for HIM maybe, t ,report t.baL many high schools now call you "son" or "young man" again. to cover consumer and 'fluff'
·but gut1ets to say the least. A fellow b e them. Going to a wedding? Giving one? Or stories." (Miss Lang, she add-
.who takes three yean of a girl's time e also d~ne a good bit of lecturing . standing up in one? Even if you're ed, makes $50,000 per year.)
Asst. Cotton Blends. Vais. to $2.99 ......... $1.00yd.
Remnants ................... ···········-····-l/1 Marked Price
r . ~ COSTA MESA
2300 HARBOR
549-1834
In person. lti s want to know because of the ques-pletely new "The Bride's Guide" will way .for women to get into
ti they w, '1'11ey are eager to learn answer questions about. today's weddings. key positions in television.
should have the decency to say goodbye ln~higb schools, and I koow what lhe already married Ann Lander's com· The two were asked the best
o omon tabr!lcs
sew what's new FOUNTAIN VALLEY
IT COSTS NO MORE
DEAR ANN LANDERS: Please don't' w t makes a marriage work. For a copy, send a dollar bill plus Public pressure will bring
consider this a put--down. [ just want variably someone wants to know a long, self-addressed, stamped envelope TO SHOP AT SOLOMON'S 1n42 MAGNOLIA
968-2333
,to ,Jell you that I think you are missing imany Umes I've been married. (16 cents postage) to Ann Landers, 222 t• good bet. ~ I tell them l'ln still with the W. Bank Dr., Chicago, Ill· 60654.
1 A person of your inllucnce should"'' ori inal model alter 34 years, they ac-
he' bendtng~every effort to get colltg'es .... -y ~cheer! B'S fullD}', but it's sad, Do you feel awkward, self-conscious
to include some couises oil what married tooj th at a lasting inarrlage is IU<'b -lmefY? Welcome to the club. There's
Ille is all about. The high divoree rale a •velty that It rates an accolade. help for you in Ann Landers's booklet, in our country is a scandal , and getting "The Key to Popularity." Send 35 cents
worse. ~AR ANN: I'm 16, female, tall and io coin with your request and a
Why ? Because young people have no sl er, the quiet type, just average Jong, stamped, self-addressed envelope to
idea ol what to expect. n'ley can't loo , ng. For the past three years I've~ Ann Lande.rs, 222 W. Bank Dr., Chicago,
learn anything from their parents' mar-• been the victim of stares, people pointing Ill. 60654.
' D~P~tfHM'~
~..IC'""~~~~~~l.b-.~~'~
. To avoid . disappointment, {>rOspective
brides are reminded to have their wedding
.stories will! black and white glossy photo.
graphs to the DAILY PILOT Women's De·
partment one week before tbe wedding.
Pictures received after that time will not
be used.
For engafement innOuncements it is
imperative tha Ute story, also accompanied
by a b1a.ck and white gloSS)" picture, be sub-
mitted six weeks or more before the wedding
dete; otherwise it will not be publish~d.
To help fill requirements ~n both wed· din~ and engagement storieS, Afrms are
available in all the DAIL"( l'ILO'l' of!ices.
Further· questions will ~ answered by
Women's Section staff members a t 642-4321 .
. ma!Ae~
WIGS
presents:
tlAIR-RAISI
• FRIGHTW~GS •
ALL COLORS -ALL STYUES
295 _ 395 -495
"Look A Fright On
HALLOWEEN NIGHT"
a j m /JG. ' WIG ••<! : allie 6 BE'iJUTY SAL,ON ' \
250.0 East 17th -HUlgriln Squore
Co5ta Mesi 548-3446
Peering Around
ATTENDING a salute to Club which operates the San
Ascot at Bay Meadows were Mateo ra cetrack.
Mr. and Mrs.. William T.
P3sooe Ill of Newport Beach.
He is president of t h e
C a 11 for n i a Thoroughbred
Breeders Association a·o d
serves on the board of direc-
tors of the Cali!ornia Jockey
WINNING an award for con-
temporary indoor/outdoor fur-
niture design in the ·annual
Resources Council Product
Design a\vards program was
Kenneth A. Milette of Design
West Inc., Irvine.
A hilarious new .
book by the
incomparable
To find tftl1 Title Clltd a COll'lplete collectlOll
of looks by Dr. Seuu COftle to:
THE CHILDREN'S IOOKSHOPPE
3707 E.,t Coast Highway
Corona del Mor
17141 675·1424
Dolly 10·5
Vi l ltc:ll.Wttl ..
IC,Nftl Relllll,lftl
WHILE YOU SHOP.
)
Look for the Colgate-Palmolive
display at your store. Vote and "Help
Young America" to $320,ooo:
Colgate-Palm61ive is donating SJ20.000 to six youtll
groups. How much each group receives depends on you. The
more votes you cast for your favorite you1h group. the 1nore
money it gets. And you could win S20,000 for youo;e lf.
ll's easy-get complete details and ball ots \Vhcrever
these Colgate prod ucts are sold. Look for 1hc "Help Young
America" display.
Vote today! See the "Help Young America" display
at your portlclpatlng stores.
'Eligible Youth Groups:
• Boy Scouts of America
•Girl Scouts of the U.S.A.
•Boys Clubs al America
•Girls Clubs of America
•Camp Flro Girls
• Notlonol 4-H Club Foundation
DAILY P'ILOT w~~. Octobff 24, 1~13
Coast Couples Celebrate
MRS. HOWARD
MRS. SIRACUSA
Your Horoscope
HOW ARO.COLES
Navy U . (j.g.) Thomu
Cromwtll Howard claimed
Candaoe Olrlstlne Coles as
his bride In the F i r 1 t
Presbyterian Church, Santa
Ana.
The Rev. Dr. Richard Irons,
officiant, was assisted by the
bride's cowin the Re\•. Van
Dyke Shaw of Columbia, Md.
Marine Col. (ret.) and )trs.
Thomas Mako Im Coles 'of
Santa Ana are parenll of the
bride, woo graduated f r o m
Fullerton Junior College and
attended Olapman College
World Campus Afioat.
Her husband, an alumnus
of Texas A & M, is the soo
of Marine Col. (rel.) and ~irs.
John Dul'.bury Howard of
Newport Bead>.
Miss Kimberly Coles w a s
maid of honor and John
Howard, best man. Other at-
tendants were Mr. and Mrs.
Phillip King Ill, the MJs.ses
Sandra Ireland, Mary Conlon,
Deborah Hand, Allison .Curlee,
Tracy King and Randall
Presley and Lts. Kenneth
Jacrow:: and Joseph Shea Jr.
SIRACUSA-VAN UDEN
O\lr Lady Queen ol th•
Angels Catholic Chu r c h ,
Virgo ~tte_'!l_pting ___ _
Too Much At Once
THURSDAY
OCTOBER 25
By SYDNEY O~fARR
Capricorn can be serene.
Natives of this zodiacal sign
learn from experience. These
are the late achievers.
The Capricorn p e r s o n
overcomes obstacles, survives
setbacks, bowices back and
concludes by stepping into the
wiMer's circle. Capricorn en-
joys spirited discussions with
Pisces, philosophical
dlscourses with Virgo and
makes money with Aquariu.s.
ARIES (l\tarch 21-April 19 ):
Check with partner, mate
regarding finan.,.,. EmphasiJ
is on discovery. Find out by
making inquiries. Be discreet
but show that you do mean
business. Cueer. Capricorn
persons flgw-e prominently.
Get to heart of matters.
TAURUS (April 20-May 201'
Maintain low protile. Not wise
to force Issues. Patience
bectlmes valuable ally. \Vin
your way through 90clal con-
tacts. Avoid prenlng for too
much, 1 too soon. S.glttarian
could play key role. Surprise
visit Is indicated.
GE~UNJ (11-tay 21 -June 20):
New moon position coincides
with emphasis in health and
dependents. Key Is to know
when to draw line. Moderation
is definite asset. Be aware
of details. Get basic task ac-
complished. There will be
temporary delay.
CANCER (June 21.July 22 )'
Good lunar aspect coincides
GAIL FONTANA
Rites Set
In Summer
~tr. Rod ~!rs. Jack Fonlana
of lluntingtoo 13 ca c h ,
ha\'e announced thr cngagl!-
1nent of the tr dallt?h ler. Gail
Fontan a to Denn111 Ley , M>n
of the ThrOOorc Leys. also
of the bt'ach city
~1is." l'ontana LS a graduate
of Ed1s11n lligh School and
Southern C<ilifornia Col\c(l:e of
Orntal Assis tants. Her fiancc
attcndrd California St a i e
Unlvcrs1t\, Long Beach.
The lx>!rorhrd Rn' planning
lo m<irry July 20 in St. ·rrancb
of A11sl!'ll Catholfc:: Church.
Huntington Beach.
now with romantic:: inclinations
and creative endeavors. Young
person returm a favor. You
have chance for beneficial
changes. What seemed out-of·
reach becomes available.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22)' New
outlook regarding h o m e ,
security, family is featured.
You retreat a few step.s but
you also make significant ad-
vances. Family member is
willing to see things your way.
Be a gracious "winner !"
VIRGO (Aug. :IS-Sept. 22),
Some appointments may be
mi!sed because of timing er-
ror. You would be '4'ise lo
double check. P J 1 c e s in-
dividua1 could ptay !ignlficant
role. See situation as it is,
not merely as you woo1d like
it to be. You could be trylng
to do too much at on<:i!.
UBRA (Sept. 23-0cl. 22)'
Accent is on money,
respomlbillty and achieve-
ment. Review Leo messag~.
Deal with older, experienced
Individual. A.void temptation
to take what looks like a
shortcut. Select quality, Be
thorough. Collect and pay
debts.
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21 ):
lAlnar cycle is tops -take
a chance on yourself. Trust
judgment, hunch. Make oew
start. Strive to imprint you r
own style. Be independent in
thought, action. H i g h I i g h I
orglnality. ·Be ready for com-
pliments from opposite sex.
SAGITTA.RWS (Nov. 22-0
Dec.-21 ): What you thought
was settJed"'may be revived in
behind-scenes m e e t I n g.
Clandestine a f f a i r s are
brought to light. If you want
to put head in sand. you tem·
porarily delay showdown. Key
is to understand in mature
manner. Don't cast first stone.
But do face Issues.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan.
19 J: Accent is on romantic
interests. creative pu.rsull!J ,
satisfaction to be gained
through pro£essiona1 activity.
cancer lndividual might figure
prominently. A.void any
tendency to look back. to
brood, to wonder about "U
only" or "wh at might have
been." Those are sledgeham-
me r words!
AQUARIUS (Jan. 21>-Feb.
18 ): Spotlight is on where you
want to go. how far you are
prepared to travel. how much
effort you Intend to put forth .
Don't promise more than can
be delivered. Ont? you care
for is watching. observing and
will pass judgment.
PISCES (Feb. 19-J\1arch 20 1:
You may be studying a new
subject. You could even be
speaking a different language.
You will be changing your
rou tine. Your views wnl be
sought. Fine for writing. for
making long-distance contacts,
connections. Broaden horizons .
IF TODAY IS YOUR
BIRTtffiAY you tt re In·
trospectlve, son1ewhat of a
perfectionist. You ha v e
lrndrncy to brood. You draw
to you many bom under Virgo,
Pisres. You arc due to eam
more hut you also will have
re1pon.sibilitle~. rr single, mar·
riRge is on horizon. Dynamic
young ptrson wilt soon bring
pll'asure.
Newport Buch, was the set·
tlng when 8arah Jane Van
Vdm and Marine Corpl 2nd
Lt. Philip 1barp Siracusa ex-
changed vowa and ringa before
the Rev. Uonel DoralJ.
The M~1. Spencer Knight,
John Carpenter, Oiarles Gr<m
and Mlss Barbara Louise
Slracuaa attend e d the
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. John
II. Van Uden of Corona del
J\1ar.
The bridegroom, son of the
late Ptfr. and Mrs. Louis
Si racu s a , asked Steve
J\leacher to be best man.
Ushers were John Van Uden
Jr., Mark Van Uden and
Oiarles Olmstead.
'Ibe bride graduated from
Col'ooa de! Mar lligh School
and attended Loyola-J\1ary-
mount College and UCL Her
husband studied at Runtirlgton
Beach High School and Orange
Coast College.
They will reside i n
Pensacola, F1a. where he at-
tends Marine C.Orps Aviation
School.
ARMOUR-HOGAN
Lagwia Beach School of Art
students Nancy Jean Hogan
and Timothy Lee Armour ex-
changed vows and rings In
MRS. ARMOUR
St. Justin Martyr Church,
Anaheim.
They were aUended by Anne
Hogan, maid of honor; and
Joeseph Yablonsky, best man;
the Misses Oler! Annour,
Kathy Hogan, Kathy Clark
and Candy Bradford and
Leonard Driver, J(!f1'-Kennaro
and RJck and Scott Armour.
Mr. and Mrs. Michael Hogan
of Anaheim and Mr. and Mrs.
Elgle Amlour of Newport
Beach are parents of the
newlyweds who plan to travel
MRS. RUSSELL
for a year through the United
Stated and Mexico.
She graduated from
Magnolla High School aad at-tended Cypress C o 11 e g e •
Newport Harbor High School
and Orange Coast College are
his schools.
RUSSELL-PRICE
Janis Marie Price and LWar-
ren C. Russell, both of Costa
Mesa were married In Calvary
Olapel, Santa Ana with the
Rev. Chlcl: Smith olftclatlz>l.
The dauahl« ol lhe °""'"' H. Prlcel of Coola Maa was
attended by Gall tua.n, Kim
NelaonandCu.i May.
CUey Pyle WIS the belt
!nan; MarUn and Roonte Prlco
aerved aa ulhers, and Craig
Russell waa the ring bearer.
'lbe bride ls a graduate of
Estancia High School and at.
tends -Orange Coul Oolle&•·
Hu -· •o•" " tho w. c. Rusaelll or Valellcio, ~
• gnduate ol Tiiiun High
School.
MAKOWSKY-GEORGE
Co mmunity Church
~.Corona dd
Mar .... the settln« for the
marriage --llnking Pamelo Siie Goorge and Ray-
mond T. Makolnty ol Kw>
tin,ton Beach.
The bride i. the daughter
and stepdaughter .ol Mr. and
.Mrs. Thomas K.. Morgan of
Costa Me!a. Her husbend ls
the son of Mrs. Frances
Makowsky. Officiant was the
Rev. Dr. Philip G. Murray.
-Attendants were Gay-Ames ,
Sheri Soss, Laurel Day, Katie Hoqie~ Danny Soos, John Oot·
tom, Eric Aylward and Dale
Howard.
The bride is a graduate of
C.Osta Mesa High School and
KING-WAL.BER
' " Coto de Caza WU the. t!nl
for the wedding or No Anb
Walberg and Scott Bak!r
King. ...
'Ibey are the daugtflr aod
100 of Dr. amonl B. yalberg
of Mcmterey Park,..-M rs .
Barbara Walberg ol Irvine,
Mn. Robert . 0 f
Maaaall"'I"', Long and
J-King ol dd -· 'l1li -· wlio side-aaddle on a white bone to
the woildlng lite ·-Morymoui>t Sc~«>I Surrey, England, and led from
Corona del Mar HI School.
Her husband w& educated
in Bernardsville, jW.J . and
served with dlst1!ition with
the U.S. Armed lt'orces in
Vietnam. ·1 ,
WATSON-~ONE ' Nancy Lynne J Stone and
Michael V. watsdt exchanged
nuptial vows in lieisler Park,
Laguna Beach bebre the Rev .
Helen J. Wilbur <\lf the Scien-
1
'
:.it:'.
-'I' -
I 94 Huntington Center-Huntington
c ...... *4 IMc• & •• ..., fl
I
•• ,~:~3f4 ,
'
I
WILMORE-VROOM
Denver ls the new borne
of Maj. Duncan Wilmore lbd
his bride,· the ronner Judtth
Ano v~ who were mar-
rk!d In the Air F""" 'Cliapel,
Colorado Springs.
Mn. Henry Vroom._, of
Newport Beach and ,MI'S.
Claudia -ol Bal!alo, N. Y. are mothers of 1be
newlyweds who were attendtd
by Ml!.s Barbara Igo and Maj.
Robert Brown.
The bride has been an
airline stewardess s i n c e
graduating from B u r b an k
High Schoc.I and Orange Coast
College.
-Her.lwsband g_r. ad u a.Le_d
Crom Wtst Point and ha!J
earned a Silver Star and Six
Distinguished Flying Crosses
during bia military --II•
is presebUy a graduate stu-
dent at the University of
Denver.
STOii HOUIS 111....., ...........
I010I • t 100
S.....,1 11 100.liOO
•
•
•
8 PILOT ·ADVERTISER $ WtdntSdaJ, Octobtr 24, 1973 DAIL V PILOT 3$
.EVERY-CAY OF THE WEEK
.
HAT•BllOI.
MONIYBACllGUAaAllJll .CMIQUAUTY•ATI '
IVIRY NCI Of MIA T IS
• UNCONDn'IOftALLYGUAIANTllD TOl'UASIYOU .•• 01 YOUI ~y (
WILL ti OflllRIU. Y llfUNOID
MORREllS All BEEF
DINNER FRANKS... LB.
1 • JOHNSONS GOOD 'N' SPICY 8
, • CH Ill BRICK. ......................... u . .
MANHATTAN All MEAT 12-0Z. aftc
• SLICED BOLOGNA ................ a·
MANHATTAN All-BEEF THICIC..12-0'C)~
• -SLICEO...BOLOGNA . _ .OlF
I MANHATTAN 12-0Z. 7j\E
ALL BEEF WIENERS ........... ;r
. .
STATER BROS.
CERTIFIED BEEF
BLADE CUT
LB.
,tl~ RIB
ROAST
ST A TIR BROS. aRTIFIED
BEEF • GUARANTEED.
$ 19 '
POUID
1-ST THRU S.TH 118 ............ LB. 11.39
ROUND
STEAK
STATER BROS. QRTIFIED
BEEF • IONE·IN
$ 19
BONELESS.-............... LB. 11.29
7~ S-• Sale!.
ST ATER BROS. CERTIFIED BEEF • GUARANTEED
T~BONE STEAK .............. -.. l .1.79
. ' SLAB MO]HIDl-IMID-OH
· BACON!i~ 7 9! """'"" •129 STEWING MEAT .......................... .
PORTERHOUSEsnA• 1.1.83
TOP SIRLOIN s11All ... !1. 99
' ' ,_lllOzacCINtlllCUT $169 I !Q!:!l!!SS~5HOULDEI ' s129 STATlllUOS.CEITFlmllHJ•CHUC1CCUT 99c !.~~UT ST~AKS .'.~u7.. ftc· 191A"'J! ROLLED ROAST .............. LI. 7-BONE ROAST ............. LB.
IURBC>I, FILLETS ..... , ..... ,,. ... 2 ft;ry ~ STA.a llOS. CEllTHD lllF • GUAIANTllD • 0 ft c FllSll'•DiuaouS. ANY SIU PACKAGE sac
.. ciAi.7~'Tiii .. ~----· '.1.98«. ~.'!'.~ CHUCK STEAK-........... ,.,~.a.0-7 . GROUND BEEF .="'"'=·""L-.-. _ ....... ' ~ . . . ~ ,$109, ~·!"'· ~a1ua. ,. 3· c ... CUT-•1 •9 STATll ... S.caT-IHF ···79 . , ILIC.ID BACON ......... ,... $ f f9 ROUND BONE HAn _ .,, CLUB STEAK........... . .. CUBE STEAK ...................................... · ~'..,.llAND '· ""89'c "' 5"0f.Ua·cUn.··nNDR 'I 39 sr ... m110s.c11r1R1D1111F · SI' 39 sn•11:s0110Asr $169 RICED BAC:ON ,.,.-... L . ·' . ' . POUND F~ILY STEAK ... .u RIB STEAKS .......... ....... SIRLOIN TIP......................................... .
• ' J .
'
NTADINA STEWED 2 3 C · OMAT ES ...................... ~~-~c~i · ·. · . , '
• ·HEINIS~ . . ~, \ . I 67' · . P 1 .. KL" 1.-... -~·-···· .............................. 24j~i
: .AJAX l , . I 6c . CLEANSER .... _ .. ___ ... _ ......... ::·
'.lii5i1' -PR·ING-. .. 8~~~ 20'
=•D DmRGENT \~ 6 7c . PALMO~IVE ..................... K~~~
, •. CHOICE OF GRINDS , , 5260 . COFFEE :t~~ ................. _ ......... -.............. 3C~~
SUNSHINE HONEY GRAHAMS, 1, 3 5 CRACKER-5 ............................... ·~~~ _. '
" CONTADINA ASSORTED ' .' 31 .. ··SAuc,1•~=~----..................................... rl~ ' ~
';ltald & ~ ?'ltu. S4vlif9A-
· HILAID -.... i:ck. 1xaDRIN
I AllLlll Ll!l•l' I I A BLIU
'ACKAGI Of-14 6 ff. PAQfAGI Of 100 59c· 97c 5 1~ 19
IVIRYNIGlll N:.2.~1 PLAYnx
SHAMPOO TAMPONS
llMOM-1-l•ISAM t.OTION 1:.outa 11GUU.I OI; M.IPa
~ .. 94c .56c -~1.19
.~ HAIR YAtMtUllll VICKS VAPORUI
COllDnlOpll ~Aant:' ·1 ,,.;.:,99• IY1l""";'t•~ -i "'"''f YTCKfliiiYQUIL 51.29 ·· .,6c ....... •1.75 ·
LARSEN VEG-ALL .. . ...... soz.18'
PITTED PRUNES W..~£r ........ noz 57'
TONIC MIXER SC"W'"" ..... .2<-0Z 38'
SCHWEPPES TOMC M"E' OR '111 BITIER LEMON, ...... 10.oz. •
w:::::~~ ... s 1 c
BISCUITS """""'"" 2"' HUr+GRV JACK . .. ......... 9$-0l. I
Blscu. ITS HUNGR< "" 2" 'l!IUTIERMILK ........................ 9.6 OZ. ·I·
BISCUITS t'.:t~~Yrti.. . .. . •oz 14°
=8'1T'!!. ... ••-0198c
BALLARD BISCUITS ... .. . soz.14'
PARMESAN ~~~\lo c..eeS< ............. B·O<. 99'
MARGARINE ~~~,'..'0~.~-'.'. ...•......•.•. LB. 45'
PEANUT · 63c 8UUIR JllANTaS ........ 11·01 .
MARGARINE !6'11 BONNET········· ... LB 49'
MARGARINE !6'11 !~~~;~·o ........ LB 49'
PEANUT CANDY ""N"" ..... ,.,.oz. 65'
DRY YEAST "'""MANNS ......... ~:~ 19'
WHEATIES CEREAL ............ 02oz 46'
C.H .B. TOMATOES ~~~it." "N 29'
LIPTON TEA BAGS .. ·•· 59'
TOMATO PASTE CO-'•OONA ...... 8-0Z.17'
VANILLA 39c WAFIRl-.. --11.oz.
TOMATO SAUCE coNr.OoNA •.. '5-oz.19'
PEANUT BUTTER ~',~g~.. ·'LB 99'
SAUCE wwoi.E oR JELLIED ....................... 300 27c
:::IAf.~~~~ _ o.o.3 5 c
P·op conN JOLLYTOME 63' ft' WHITE OR YELlOW ............. •·L!I.
MARGARINE ll;'c':~ "0.'.. .... LB. 33'
TIDBITS ~~gH~PN~A·P~~t.~.1.~ .................. 11.oz. 25c
:-:::L~~---··-·······-... 01 46«
EASYWASH it~hv,, ..... 0201 79'
BLUE Boy 1oocn •owe 59' CLEANfR , ... ,, '" 9-0Z
PERFORM ""' ON ""°" 43' Ml DIUM OR H[AVY . ..241·0Z
COFFEE ~~:~~L~~f~15.E .............. ~C~~52"
llRDS-EYE FIOIEN
IUCCHIMI 19• •un•• 27• IQUAIH .. 1 .. 01. alAMI .... -••-o~.
ltOIAIO
CHlltS FA•MUIO~ 1-1-Q ~l' -lllGUlAI ..... 51 c ....
.t-~ ~ 1-t Aau.
"':ll'l1 s 2•9 FKIED CHICKEN.. ~~: ·
JlMOS-SAUi.A.Gl "llA 1 J:Ol. 7.. 7 5c CHEESE PIZZA ............ 1i-or.
UW:S:.-,ATTIO • ot S&.ICIS 69C , · MORNING STAR .................. ·~~:
MM111MAG6..0l. .. )Oc 16..01 ... 1h · 57c ORANGE JUICE ........ -·····--~~8.~ ~.._ ..... _._ 89« .1uHNSTON PIES . . •. ,N
Glll9fGIANT 12·01. 1"4CXAGIS <OM . .oceou 43c CASSEROLES a::a:: ........... .uC>t
JEN05 85' MU~UTE MAtO 211c PEPPERONI PIZZA _,,,.,, TANGERINE JUICE . ,.o,. ~-
..I01<Ns10N 6nc WEIGHT W,OfCJoiUIS 75'
CARROT CAKE.. . .... '"" ;,· FISH LUNCHES ...... ···'·"
HONEY0wH0EAT LBREAo __ .W SOURDOUGH BREAD 7·0~ 54c
. s
LBS.
.·PUMPKI
. LARGE FRESH FOR HAUOWEEN
c
U.S. N0.1 RED . POUND . !!l,!!J :! ,~ ..................................... , ...... LI.
!~~]~!!uPEARS ............................ 5
S~LF!!I RE~.~~ICIOUS ...................... 5 LIS. 51
CHERRY . TOMATOES ................ BASKET 2 9c .
JLllSHMANNS 51 C SOFT MARGARINE ... "
'LANTIH 69< COCKTAIL PEANUTS ........ 1,.01.
IT'STHlllALTHtNG 6 12.o.r:.96c COCA.COLA ....... ······· .. .................... CANS
GUO 67< 30-GAL. TRASH BASS . ••-COUNf
GIANULATID 68C WHITE KING SOAP ........ •••••
NESTLE
CANDY
AlMOND-CIUHCM
¥1l• CHOCOLATI
LIFEBUOY BURGER BITS
aA1 soAP · 2 O' c-.· KE~~lI~R s36s
UID PRICES EFFEC. 7-FULL IJAYS •OCTOBER 25th~31st
~llP 14600 S. ll'flOltht.lnt A .... WtttwNMtlr
3430 W. UMoln Ayt., Anthtl•
BATH SIZE lS-LB. PKG. . . . .
WtRtdHm
FoodSt•mps
.rrAll
2180 Nt.,.rt llv• .. Cott• Mtu
707 W. 19th SI., (0111 M9N
1175 Wtr St., C.111 MtM
2564 W. lrt•1r, AMhtlM
1881 ChaP""" A•t., G1rdtl'I Crowt llOO (. (1111111 ....... o, .....
2:160 Nofth Tvttln, S1ftt1 Ant
6862 ldlnt•r AYI., Hun~"''°" htth
2603 W. 17th, S1nt1 AINI
2630 ldlltlfl' A'lt., 511111 AM
1230 Mcf1dd1n Aw., S1nt1 AM
14171 Red Miii A'lt., Turtin
1522 W11""httl1r llvd., Wntmln1tff
14212 MIMI A'ft., Whlttltr
38 DAILY PILOT
Deep
Dish
Crusty
•
--,
I 4-WAY NASAL SPRAY II OSCARMAYER I
PURE PORK
VALUABLE COUPON VALUABLE COU PON -----
1.,, oi. SH•Y 1onu 49' I SAUSAGE 49• I tJc W /0 COUPON t.i
The American love or pies , ........ AT SOMI STOllS I LINKS I
goes b3ck to London's Ifth t.L "'1·
century "cookshops" which I Wltlri !hit coupon. no 111i11imu"' p11rch••• ··~u•••-'· ~mit I Wltll th.1 c;o1111011, no mi11l11111m p11rcll•1• r.qul••d. U11dt I
sold deep-dish meat pies in I ptr coupon -on• co11 po11 por c111to101t•. Void oltor I p•• co11po11 -ont co11pon per c111to111or. \fold •ft1r
a heavy crust. S1111d ey, Oct. J I, 1971. Sundov ·~-.J I, t•7l,
An updated version Is I INAT 7Jll c;ooD ONLT AT IA••AIN IAIKIT I •OOD ONLY AT UIGAIN IASm .J -~~~~~----------------Beel'burger Pie.
Ground beef formr a mea t
shell, na\•ored by &luffing
eroutons containing a blend
ol eight seasonings.
And to create the warm
"cookshop" goodnes.s of this
new ~·orld meat pie, Green
Onion Beefburger Pie is filled
wilh p ·eet, sliced green onions
and a mellow, cream cheese
custard.
Serve as a noon or evening
main dish accompanied by
green beans tossed w I t h
crumbled Daron bits, molded
raspberry salad and hard
rolls. .
GREEN ONION
BEEFBURGER PIE
t egg
17 cup mlJk
2 cups herb sea90ned stuf-
fing croutons
l teaspoon Worcestershire
sauce
I tablespooa sliced g r e e n
on.ions
1 teaspoon salt
&.1~ pound ground beef
SALE STARTS THURSDAY OCT. 25TH AND
CONTINUES THROUGH WEDNESDAY, OCT. 31
EXTRA LARGE
FRESH
GllJADE "AA"
"TRICK OR
TREATH
CANDY
ASSORTED
BULK
INDIVIDUALLY
WRAPPED
R~ 49c Lb. 29~B.
ORANGES
LARGE
SwEET. &
JUICY
10~B.
EXTRA FANCY LARGE
CELERY
GOLDEN '
DELICIOUS Ol
RED DELICIOUS
APPLES ·
·YOUR
CHOICE
7; 1s1 .
POTAtOES
U.S. NO. 1
RUSSm
FRESH ROASTED
PEANUTS
1
10 OZ. BAG . 29~AG
Fillint: ~u_UA_! . .,_,• I,,._._,_
marRarine or butter
2 cups sliced green onions
fbulb and part or stern \
1 &<lunce packa11e or cream
chf4>se, softened
2 eggs
3 drops liquid oepper s:iuce
•,J. teaspoon salt
~Ii cup mllk
Paprika
In large mixing bowl, beat
the t egg until foamy. Stir
in the ~ cup milk and herb
seasoned stuffing croutons; let
stand a fe,v minutes until
most of liquid is absorbed.
GINC'~~A~
?EAS ~ $
N·EW STORE .HGUR-
OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK
9 · A.M. TO .'.9 P.M.
#303 CANS R Add Worcestershire sauce,
the t tablespoon green onions.
the I teaspoon salt a n d
beef; mis: only until combined.
With back of tablespoon
press me1t milture lighUy In
bottom and 1round sides of
f.lnch pie pan to form a meat
pie shell.
P..1elt m arga r i n e in
medium size frypan. Add the
2 CUP6 green onions; cook over
low heat, stirring occasionall y,
until onions are slightly wilted
and bright green.
COLD POWER
LAUNDRY
DST~r.tG-~~T
While green onions are cook·
Ing, place cream cheese i.n
small mixer bowl; beat until
light and nuify.
Add the 2 eg11ts. liquid pep-
per sauce and the Yli teaspoon
salt; beat well. Gradually add
the lfJ cup milk, mixing until
smooth.
GIANT
SIZE
Spread green onioos evenly ~ .._ . •· ~'
over bottom of meat shell: \fl! PllLL CONCINTIAn SHAMPOO
pour cheese mixture 0 V e r ' • • l'e~~~~' 1111,.rkll Sl-7 er. T•be green onions. Sprinkle "'ith -.::' 1..,. z.15 At so-sr ..... paprika. _ .... -~--
Bake in 350 degree F 0'.en CLOSEUP TOOTHPASTE about 40 minutes or until knife
inserted near cent.er comes
out clean. Let stand a few
mi.nut.es before cutting into 6-8
wedges.
Seasons
Blended
FAMILY SIZf-6.2 01. TwlM
1"9-1.1 l At So-jt-.
SURE ANTl-PERSPIRANT
6 oi. A.EIOSOL CAN
1"9. 1.2t Ats-Storn ------SPRINGFIELD
HAIR SPRAY
llG I J OZ.. AflOSOL CAN
SUNDAY · IN:tLUDED
~
DOLi
'
MINUTI MAID
ORANGE JUICE
snlN&FllLD
GRAPE JUICE OR $
DELEWARE PUNCH,,-":.M3, .. 1
MJB
COFFEE
l LI. CAN
1 LI. CAN
2.79 .98
~ Pi1NE'AP'ri:E llG ... , •••••
'\}CLOROX
IJLl:':ACH "' GAUON
A.IAX
CLEANSER h'..~~ 3/50' ----------------
PINEAPPLE JUICE .:'~ .. 3/$1 CANS
. . .
! DlXIE ' . :co LA
I
MAXWELL HOUSE
lr.:JC?AC'::T COFFEE ,. o.. , .......... 1.,
(,XL
Good chocolate navor and
an intn,:!uin't appcarane1•. BARGAIN BASKET BElTER BEEF
USDA Choice, Eastern Pork, Grade A Poultry, Bar M Hams & Bulk Luncheon
~~!;'! S~~~t\~ •Y· o.. <•• ........ 39C
IAGOllS ,000 WRAP
BAGS •••-.. ,. ,,,, ················-······ 49C SU\l'.\IER SNO\VBALL.'\ I
I cup unsifled nonr. stir to
aerate beforo measuring
l teaspoon baking pct""·dcr
'I• teaspoon salt
2 tablcsppons hotter
2 squares (2 oun ces)
uns"·ee1ened chocolate
1 cup granulated sugar
2 eggs
1 ~ cup chopped (lnedium-
finr J waln uls
Confectioners' sugar
On ""'31'[ paper thoroughly
stir tngether the flour, baking
powd1•r and salt.
In a medium sa ucrpan or
metal mix ing bowl O\'cr very
10\!o' Ol'al 11\Clt butter and
chOC"Olate; cool to lukt>\.\';irm.
Beat in granulated sugar
and . one at a lime, thr eggs;
continue to beat for I minulc.
Stir in the nut': gradually
i;;tir in the nour 1nix1ure unril
t)lended. Chill LIDtLl f i r n\
enough to sh~pe.
U!!!ing I level tablespoon
for each. shnpc into oo ns: roll
fn CQnfoo1onc~· ~u~ar. Place
a few inch''S ;ipart on grtased
cook ll' s!K't•ts.
Bake in :. pn~heatcd 300-
degrce oven for 18 lo 20
minutes. Remove to "''l rt'
nicks to l.~Xll.
'.\lakt~ ilboUt 31'l dozt•n
GRADE "A" WHOLE BODIED
FRYING
CHICKEN
USDA CHOICE BLADE CUT
CHUCK
STEAKS
FRESH SLICED
BEEF
LIVER
USOA CHOICE -SEVEN BONE
CHUCK STEAKS
ARMOURS CAMPFIRE
WIENERS 12 OL pkg,
Meats
39~
USDA CHOICE BONELESS
SPENCER
STEAKS
IETTY CROCKER-Your Choice of V•rletl••
HAMBURGER HELPER 49!.
OUR OWN CURED LEAN BRISKET
Praces Effectives
Thursday thru Wedllflday
October
25-26-27-28 ·29-30'31
Prlcn AltjKt to stock GA ._.,,
WI GLADLY ACCEPT
U.S.D.A. FOOD COUPONS 89~ CORNED
BEEF
NORTHERN \
FILLET
TURBOT
FRESH LEA N
GROUND BEEF
FARMER JOHN TOP QUALITY
SLICED BACON
'
a~~
89~
109 COSTA MESA
LB. PLACENTIA
-1901 aiid Pl3camia
710 w. Chipman
•
self
tom
nor
om
add
lo
dis
the
tod
ca
10
30 ...
In
m
p
m
do
co
"
Skillet's Surprisingly Slim
By ~ARA GIBBONS ect .all ~ the Iberian SPANISH SKILLET 4 pitted green olives, thin· chicken pieces bro.wn in their tomatoes may be used). Cook Uncover and stir In the
PVrilnsula for eight yea:rs CIDCKEN SARAGOSSA ly sliced own melted fat. and stir o"v highest heal Wltil olives. Serves six. 206 calories
Chicken breasts simmered while researching "The Foods f pilled black olives, lhln· When the chicken pieces arc most of the tomato liquid each.
in a ~with smok)' barn. ofCSpaln and Portugal'' for 3 chicken breaatl, split ly allced· browned, but not. bw"ncd, evaporates. (Ve.al Parmigiana, Ve a I
tomatoea, pePP*_s. iinlons and' tbi Time-Life c 0 0 k b 0 0 k Salt and pepper Use a large nonstick skillet transfer them to a plate. Return the chicken pieci!s Sausage, Veal Sea lop pine,
garlic. a:arn'lshed wlth green aerles. 2 large ooions, cut in equipped with a cover. Add the onions, garlic, pep-to the skillet, coatlng them Veal ,_feat Loaf -ror these
and black Qilves-a gourmet "' another meal you might atrtps Silt and pepper the chicken per and ham IG the skillet with th e tomato mixture. and more from lo"•-calorie
offering, Yet surprisingly J.ik1 to experiment, using the 3 ·red or green sweet pe~ breqts and pla ce them skin with another tablespoon of Place them akin side up and veal , send a stamped, self·ad:
almple. · nnt eomblnation tn a stlllet pers, cut in strips slde ,down In ,a cold tkillet. water. C.Over and cook !Qr cover the skillet. dressed envelope and 25 cents
Aad. best of all, Jow ln dinner of veal cl:lops or lean iA: cup finely chopped Add a tablespoon of water 6 to 8 minutes, until onions Cover tightl y and simmer to SLlf\J GOURMET VEAL
caJorlea! Ieg-d·lamb cubes; both are Canadian bacon and tum on the heat. Let art soft but not brown. over lo.w heat for half an RECIPES, in care of the Daily
Oar dieier's delight for to--loW \}n calories. Jt would be 6 to.matoes, peeled, seeded the chicken warm slowly, until Uncover and add t be hour, until tender but not over-Pilot, 50 'Vest Shore Trail,
day Is Skillet Chicken. a _::eq'.!~4;Yc_:•u".'.lh'.'.'.en".'.t'.'.'.ic::< _____ _'.'.an'.'.'.d'..:cho~"'.'p~ped:::_ _____ t:::he::_::w_::•<::er:__::•v::•c:J>O:::r•::t•::•~an=d_:th::•:__:t_::•ma='°'::::.' __:Cc::ann=ed:::___:c!to2pped~-="'°=ked=--_______ ::Spa:_:::rta::•::N::·_:J::, ::<Yl.::87::'-::l ------------Spanish offering from the Bas·r·
que regioo. If hot and spiCy
and too much rice Is your
Idea of Spanish .(o.od, you're
in for a pleasant surpri!e.
'Mlis delicious dish ls .typical
of the Arajon region where
the fGj)d is simple but savory.
Tf/ERE IS A BIG DIFFERENCE IN LOW EVERYDAY PRICING
Poultry, lamb," rabbit and
vea1 are ctten cooked this my
-"a la Chilindron ," in a
self-making sauce that C®nts
tomato, sweet pepper and
onion and smoked ~ as
Its main ingredients.
In preaparing this dish the
Slim Gourmet way, you won't
have to feel as lf you're com·
~1ng too much. beca111e
our only major chance is the
omission of olive oil, which
adds ne8r1v 500 extra calories
to an otherwise weight-wary
dish.
• •
I We've also replaced the
native Serrano barn with
lean Canadian bacon, available
PllCll All DIKOUltTIO I JICI" Oii PAlll-TllAND
..OMVNllMlllTCOltftOU.IOITllMI
PROVE ff TO YfXJRSELF MD BVJOY THAT a~,_,
everywhere. ·
We've taken our inspiration
from a recipe collected by
playwright Peter S. Feibelrnan
("Tiger, Tiger, Burning
Bright''). He Uved and travel·
Costs Up
Sweets
Shrink
NEW YORK (UPI) - Is
the five cent candy bar of
today just a little bigger than
penny candy of yesteryear~
When you can find a five
cent candy bar.
And will today's five cent
candy bar beoome tomorrow's
1a or 15 cent bar7 Is the
30 cont bag or gum drops
really yesteryear's 15 cent bag
-and will it either go up
In prk:e or shrink In weight
~ pricing situation • Yte ca6br front leads to ti&
qWtiof!S. 'Wben, you .reach for
a tweet, find It weighs next
to notblng and COltl what yqu
cOOsider' • a tot, you feel
cbea\ed. ' Well, there's grounds for
griping. But once you know
the reasons for the shrinking
candy bar and lhe growing
prices of same perhaps you'll
understand.
That's the hope of the Na-
-tlaiiil Cdnfectloners Associa-
tiOn (NCA) whose members
mate candy we spend $3.5
billion a year on.
Oiartes A. Smylie, a direc·
tor of the NCA said \h at price
controls plus hikes in raw
materials have eroded the
profit position of c an d y
makers.
Consider:
The price of chocolate
doubled last year. Sugar and
com starch prices have gone
up.
Until Phase Four the in·
creases in raw material costs
had to be absorbed by the
candy makers. Only now Olft
Increases in cost bl pellld
on. That wlU !IOI '-llfOI•
its. S"'!'lil 11i. lllUll0-11 1111111 bar Ii llftlllilCI, 'l'hl prlot bu
movld i1'om n.. to 10 or ~II for lilt lllr b~I lilt
tM" Jr'~;~~. 1:.= ·~::· Dl'll!t In• ...... , lmYUe llli Ulm'•
a'Ulllll It 'llil --ol ti =11"fiin,_~ 11111
'l'hl liurQI ...-11on ol ltli = ';.:'111~rri'R J ... \' lllftdtol" wtllbl for ftll 11 otlltd i 1•oancly lllr," urn lurOPl!t'' ht llld, "lltt
llriot vartll iNI ~CU!f1 blt , 11 • .t~ -: · I• don'\ • '~11«'1J\t"illll01t1 l11 lot.'1 ' I
Thi him In prlot• ol "" m11tt1111 Jta•• 111u111 pron11 111111'1' GllHlll of whit )MY
""" lilt yur at mllll' ciltdy -
'((Uls Like To
I
Ask Andy
1
-r , CHUCK ROAST ' ROUND STEAK '!.SIRLOIN RIB ROAST SIOKED HAI RIB STEAK
EAK -BEEF Bl.ADE CUT I.ARIE EID ... FILLT OlllEI BEEF
.. ~"" s 199 _-:.:..... 69' -19 -=£"+-..::·· s 101 u•c1111mtr•••y s 1 ---_ .. Of'OI -·-... --J "'tJ::"""o PUW.MO
.... __
'" .. ........ .. ........ .. ........... .. -=~='' s 139 f'Ut-A•O
MW.ITT LI
lllAIOi; 98' PO•T10 .. ·=·· ...
1rll5:'s!n~s~!Js''41%1'~!L~f 1?;!!t"* ~~~~!~sA~~ 131 i~ti~;~~ ...... :~ ;~ i~~~:~f.! .............. :-:11 :~
ttrmtMU,SW&lMILX . IOZCAN 14c s1.1ao.MEATTUAn .... 60ZPKGf 117 PORK SPARERIBS J.iQN£PSiEA'K' ............ ;1Jj. SllW.L••O.HIP .................. ~•
ILllE 11\EfSE DRESSIM& Ct' CAUYO AVOCADO DIP S4' •u•" '1°' ""'"' ............... 0 ~~.~~~·~~~! ............. 79~.
H~.!l.~~SAGE 48'
1•111\.•11 •..•.....•. t-OIPltlll
SLICED BACON
f'A•11t1• JOllll, HOUIJI.. . $) 23
•ATH, 11T•UD• •.. 1~1 Pit•
~~~~~-.8.~P.~?112
~~~.!~~~It! 139
~.~1 ............ 1s~ozJAA · tEGUw.HOT.ONION ...... s.oz.m. ,,Y\.I ................. "' PORTERHOUSE '1 SIRLOIN TIP s1,, UD'S '1i11EISE SPREAD LADY LEI WIEllERS . . """""''" ..................... " . ...i .. ~ -... ""™52' "'""' ....... , ....... 1'0!P<G •7 ~ ~~~.~~!>..!.~~···~ SIRLOllJ TIP STEAK s1sa FiE'siiiR'ii'iism~;;;;;""39"· POTATOESJ 0 "7 5' 'SRllMP COCKlAll UDY LEE BOLOGllA ElTU LEA -1"1'11••P ............ _ ............. 1.1 w-...i100Y.u.a.•.t..HAM.t......... Lii CEllO
......... • .............. ,, .. 35• "'""' ............... ,,.,,, •• , •• &1ou110·1~EF !l~~~~A,!T ................ 99.~ ~~~C!!'!K!~J.~•.cs~. "e"A"°"N'GA .. DlN'"A""'s.. IAG 11 c
.llAUllSCKWEICER UDY LEE HAM """''m'-"' '1°' Anv<ulotmNto<•.,,.•10 -CUT UP FRYERS 45
-
... ',·--·-•oz-12' ·-~·· .-... 12· JOttNOll•I' ••••• .,.. LI yourowns"pec:lflUillon1 ... 11'\.UMPIJV< c GOlo'••••• _,,.. ........ n.v _,_... ............... • alnoaddltlon11lcharsi-., .......... ,.,, ... ,. "1 ......................... ,.lB
:;;:·13:t.JdJ·•{·l ·l·t•
~p CAKEMIX .~....:=67'
------------------------t ~!R~~.~~~'G""'-··-·------·"",. 49' KEY BUY
RITZ CRACKERS ................ := 53 '
~CIREAL ..... :···~.~~::;:.53 •
rCQOK·IES ........ ~~~~C: 47'
MOTHERS COOKIES ... ~.r.l 59'
H,ARYESf QAY BREAD ... ~~·~::; 41 •
zoNj:ERI SNACK ...... ~W.: 38'
'lt:f B£)NS .......... 1110~~~ 49'
KEY BUY
,llJ;RTHERN TISSUE
'°'" 36c 4PACl
J6SS.,~. NI.
DELMONTE PRUNES ........ ,,.:\: 62•
JDLL'ilTIME POPCORtL.~J:39•
... GINGERBREAD MIX .~.'i.',';'ljl 17•
'
' DIXIE1 ~Pl .. :'""''"' 711
LUMINUM '°IL ,,,,,;Qll! 1.57.
Lllltlli TISSUl ............ 15'
HIPrQll TO\'llLS. .. ., .... ,,JM II'
~·m n•IH IAOt~Rlll 1 .21 j
t DEL MONTE CUP
~:.-::.-:s7c fOUl4~Z.
' tAl9 .'
HOUSEHOlD ITEMS
CONFIDffi ................ ~':"."::':l 84'
DIAL BATH SOAP. .............. ~·::. 22'
.... RAIN BARREL RINSE ... ~m 1.25
.... AJAX LIQUID ................ ~ 71'
CAMA Y BATH SOAP. ......... ,,,\122'
DOWNY SOFTENER ..... .,,.1111! 1 ,45
COMET CLEANSER,,,,.,,., .. ,,,,!\1111~
MR. CLEAN LIAN 75'
SOLE LUNCH .............. ~.~ 73'
JOHNSTON MINCE PIL : ..... ~1::99'
JOHNSTON PIES. ................. ~: 95'
Al'l'U Oii ,,.,,,,011 .
MINUTE MAIP'JUICE ......... ':I: 75'
JENO'S CHiii PIZZA .. •':!I: 1.04
~--
9uBBY'S PUMPKIN
i~:::a 25t
CANNED FOODS PINEAP~-. UICE .......... ,,,.og.: 21'
BRIAD UGH. .......... :o::::: 63' ... PUDDINGS ............... ~= 33'
, .M.J.B. CDFFEE ... , ..... :t: 1.01 _
LISH MUFFIN ~i!W!e.. .... ~.:2.~ itlf!!!.!''31 f INSTANT COFFEE. .... :~1.26 -l'liiii INSTANT COFFEE..~.::l~ 2.21
..... iiiaiim.lfll ' COFFEE .......... =::=:-::2.25 ' ... KARO SYRUP. .......... ~~'."::r.l: 51•
... KERN'S PRESERVES ..... ~ 89'
PRESERVES ............ ...=': 65'
OVALTINE FOR MILK .......... '.'Jl 84'
!'\AM Oii ooau.11
!TU,,ID POTATOES ........... :::: 37 ' ---·'!'! ... OH IOY GARLIC BREAD ....... '.:l 43'
HAL WH" TO,PING ........... 'J: 39' .. ft'J'Wg+q11.1.11c44w v1fi Jllta ............. : 90·
MA~GARINL ................ '.".':-~:l'lll 43'
LADY LU SOUR CllAM ... ':'ol'll: 29'
SOpt MARllARINI ..... ~=: 47'.
Y'W IQ CRIAM. ......... ~l:l 79'
. ~GRANOLA CEREAL
PrttSMT fJ5A ~"' ¥
1 .. 01.MI "' ,,,.11. ................ ~ftl.. .
;l~ll~~~~~~ ............. ~ ... 1-... .......... ~.~ ,. i "TARTAN PLAID"
BEDSPREAD :!ft ··~~' ' ' '. ,eu\,~~ ........................... : ........ 7 9c
·11·L~:&' 79c INT
10111 0· .. ~ ................. '.'"''•········.· . -tolll ......
1 .... I0'5A 01M -
UtuM ''" 21tn CAt01 ... AT JANI ........
LA ............. -••. L .........
llllTA AllA est._,,..
""" lH1' ....... -.:::. ......•.
-utn-&lf I 11.--
WITI• UISS ..... ,._ .---,.~, ...... --.
•
$897 A:r~:
lronlngt TWiii •I••·
BED PILLOWS
Thi• b.outlfvl ciuHt.cl 1olln pillow
IMCllUfff 20" JI 26",
$247
,. ..... "... s 1 s1 HlilCltON .. ,., •
Y.UI CMOIQ .. , .......... .
PUFF
BASKETBALL
., a.ac.
ANDRIA DOLL
If'-" W•N
FUil CAN
s1~ ..
WHIRLY
BIRD F!I ...... ,., <;<•
2!M~J,~.,.~~~S ~~'" ..... u29'
~~~ .. fvR~~BE!IRIES '""G 29'
CANNED FOODS
NESTLE'S QUIK ....... ~~.'::-:i:!: SO '
... SPLIT PEA SOUP. .......... ::::'1: 27'
CARNATION TUNA ... !:?.'..~.~ 83'
,..sALAD CRISPINS-.... --~~ 41'
nllLIMIOll,._I
HEINZ Dill PICKLES ........ ~~,:: 91 '
SCHWEPPES MIXIR~ ..... .;: 1.13
.,.,. I.MM Ill TCllt
LOW l Vt • • , OR ICE
CANDY l'UMPKINS ::s5g1 PACIAOI
MELAMINE IET
.~ .. ,;9nMJ.~=
IRONSTONE BOWLS Vo~_,,, 7" 48 C 111• bowl In
0111. d•1lgnt.
Pl:ASTIC D'O"G
BOWL BRUSH HOLDER
c1 ..... r bowl btuth ' 'c helder lookt c11I•
In ony bolhroom,
•
H OAILV "LOT Wtdntsd.ay, October 24, 1973
' '
•
• an IS
, ..
"
p I
' ' 1'; Meet our Man In ~lue. His blµe'ja~~} t,ells you he's
the man in charge. The man who cru;t be counted on to
help, whether you're trying to locate ah advertised
Item or your three-year-old (last seen/id the candy
department).
o matter what the ques ton or pro em, our~
In Blue is quick to find and quick to help. If he makes
you feel extra special, that's beealiseiVou are,
1'l ' · at Alpha Beta. In these days of giganti,c supermarkets,
I
you'll find .he's a man who believes in oJ(i-fashioned
courtesy and friendliness. I~ .
Sure, all supermarkets have store managers. But only
Alpha Beta has a Man In Blue. As we w~ $ying, a good
man Is hard to find. ; ' 1
.•
Our Man In Blue .•• one more reason I
, I ' ;.
you'll like the tot.~ better
at Alpha Beta~
~ I I ~ 1 f
'
ALPHA BETA
~e4L~"1e.ul
..
' '
'
l
r. r,
I
1' .. :~ . ' '
I 1' s l HOUlS -· t, . • t1"MON-FR 10 A.M. to 9 P.M.
You'll
rat
, • ill ... •·~,. i ~ _t$AT & 10.A}.o\. to 7 P.M. 1 ,
" 0ra-,,,,w1.·1,,1iow1n 1111w11hourneweoache11a 90DOUBLE DISCOUNTS in this ad save you •5.75
D/Jcount Marl:etat49-7 HarriwnS1 .. (Hwy86JatAv~!iO. hundreds more In effect thrpughout the store. -s.mg. Ill con1puted on ,..,.., dKcull prtcM of -. int purchliML nw fltlh WCIUkl be much...,,_..,_. .... ,,___.. ..... .....,
• I
IUTClll'I Pl!nB
T·BONE
STEAK
. ,
IVTCBU'S Pll~E
FRUH
1 MEATLOAF . .
....
s
F ESH FROZEN • USDA "GRADE A
JENNIE O'
TURKEY .
. ;IBUMSTICIS
c
LB.
Al.Piil lnA. DVTCBl!'S Pll.llE BEEF
"~EAT FOR SANDWICHES"
MCCOY CORNED
BEEF BRISKET
18
LB.
FROZEll FOODS
UAll 1 09 CERTl.fRESH • II-OUNCE PACKAGE
GROUND llEF LL NORT11£Rlt 94c
'sn"UCKAK. BlACUOET ,.~. FRIED HALIBUT . ""'
-TASTE O' SEA • I-LB.
FANTASTIC IJlSCOUN TS
EVERY OAY
PERCH =--~e'f>--.a&c.~ i-~f=U~1~m'.!;:::::::=~=:::::;;
• •
S~.AlllllNG LARGE · 13LL5 RIB ROAST Er<>
"FLAVORfUll Y CURED~ I LB. PKG.
RED LABEL
HORMEL BACON 114
FANTASTIC DISCOUNTS
EVERY DAY
~ 41.\-0z. .kr •Sliced or
77• ~ oortmNT
MUSHROOMS
139
59•
""°" C4n • St~ & P'11tn WNDYWINE
MUSHROOMS
Oil 55•
USDA INSPECTED
NEW ZEALAND
BONELESS LAMB
SHOULDER ROAST
12-0UNCE PKG.• PURE PORK
JIMMY DIAN SAUSAH
U-OUNa PACKAGE
SOILOGREEN
89!. us ..
CABBAGE IOcLB.
FRESH RHUIARB
25! BANANAS
c
LB.
Wtdftttday, October 24, 1973
HAWAIIAN GROWN
PAPAYAS
so~A.
OCEAN SPRAY
CRANBERRIES
~9c ;.~
DAILY PILOT
Forei gn
Flavo r
Tasty
Island Far e
Chicken
Saucy . .
A sure -way to make chicken
fancy enough for partj fare.
BROILED ancJ<iN
WITH FRUIT AND
ALOllA SAUCE
2 broiler-fryer <' h i c k e n s
(each 2 to 2~2 potnls),
quartered
~1:eltcd bulter
2 teaspoons salt
1,14 tea.spoon pepper
8 canned peach halves
8 camed JXneapp\e sJIC"es
Aloha Sauce, see below
Brush chicken wilh melted
butter and sprinkle with salt
nnd pepper. Place chicken,
skin side down, on broiler pan
witboul a rack.
Broil 7 to 8 inches from high
heat until browned -U
miaute11: occask>nally brush
with juices in pan.
Turn chicken : broil 15 to 20
minutes longer ; occaskmal\y
brush with juicf'S in pen.
Place peach halves and
pineapple slices a r o u n d
chicken. Bn1sh chicken and
frui t wilh Aloha Sauce: broil 5
1ninutes.
Remove chicken and fruit to
serving platter; spoon rt'-
maining Aloha Sauce over
chicken or sen•e separately.
?.-lakes 8 servings.
Al..OllA SAUCE
\i rop butter
J teaspoon cornstarth
I ltasPoon grated lemoll
rind "\
2 tablespoon! lemon juice
~,cup pineapple syrup, from
pineapple rings canned \n
hea vy syrup
2 taiblespoons minced ooion
I teaspoon soy sauce
' 1 teaspoon dried thyme
tn a small ~ucepan over
low heal melt butler: add corn-
starl·h and srir until smooth.
Add rf'rnaininf!; ingredient!.
Cook. stirring constantly , u1111\
tlnl'kt'nrd and clc11r.
l • I
I
' •
.
'
. . . ..... -..... · .... ···· . . .
UAJL'f PIL01
EXTRA
FANCY
APPi.ES
WASHINGTON
GOLDEN
DELICIOUS
f_ach _L
,
-EA.
D Young Tender Carrots:·~ ·~0 15c
I • p 2U. CEILO 35c o ris opcorn •••.••••• ": •
••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
:' -Big Supply 01 Fresh :
• ~PUMPKINS~ • • IN All SIZES AVAILABLE :
\ AT All THRIFTIMART STORES! : ...........................................
D Red Radishes · •••••.. ~:~~ 1oc . _..,... o-Gre-en 0-inion-s :. -::-•. ~ 10~
Golden Blend
APPLE
°CIDER
ALL-PURPOSE
BOSC .
PEARS
as:
41
IU&I:
tiAU.011
CHRtSTMAS
CACTUS
INFULL • 0 f BLOOM
-4" POTS
FLOWER
BOUQUETS
FRESH •• f
LIQUOR VALUE
HALF GALLONS
:!_.SCOTCH
s~oo~~~~s/ $141 HALF
GALLON e
~.__.,.,
~
T["I HIG~ --· -·
VODKA
~~~ii: '18 II GALLON I .
TEN HIGH
HIRAM WALKfR'.S
86 PROOF-STlt
BOURBON WHISKEY
HALF GAL.
BURGIE
BEER
• "o""' 'JOI l'l·Ol.
CANS
'9.91
'TABLE
. WINES
.. : !;',:~~~ '111 ·cs • • Ui)NfWINf ,
•l'INK HAl'
CHAlllS GA
WHOLE
PEELED
: 28-0Z. ! CANS
: @ ~ : • • •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• Smart Sheen Shampoo
• (; HEt::\ 16'-0Z.BTL. 4 1 f
• l.E.\I().'\' )'OU ll
• l·'.Gf: CJIOI CE! •A.
D Pen & Quill .... ~~~:1z:<::"~" 29'
D Whip Topping ... ; :~:··:··.'.65'
D Melrose Pop corn .. ·::.~ .. ·: . 33 '
.dllHdaY, OctoOff 24, 1973 N 1 PILOT-ADVERTISER 8 ' 8 PILO,
The more/ yo~
more you eil ·
• •GOLD BOND-STEER BEEF • • •
PORTER-~
OUSE'
78
LB.
ROASTING
CHICKENS
U.S.D.A. INSPECTED 'II' FRESH FROZEN
· 4·S ~l~--.: . L8. ' . . " , . .
"·
""HOFFY·-BRAND
BACON·
SLICED ,,,, VAC·PAK
1-LB •. PKG.
• : CATERING
. , : QUALITY -
• ALL FLAVORS ! HALF GALLON
: le;~ =~
' ~ • • •
• • •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
~Gaines Dog Food . ~-)~~;·:-.spi ·
D Orchard Fruit Drinks:::~~, ~~~51'
•
• • • • • • •
TO BAR·BE-QUE : ; "
'
• • • • • 'JE~ • ' • ·LOW •
Punch Base .• ~:.;;:;:~~ .. 69'~ ·~ Nabis
n Toilet Tiss~e ':·: ~-:-. 30'1! L. iD Iris F
2701 Harbor Blvd., Costa Mesa e 13922 Brookhurst, Garden Grove .,
1308 w. Edinger, Santa Ana e 5858 Warner, Huntington Beach e 23811 El Toro,
•
El Toro
•
I I
at. the
il'l ·imart _..l ..................................
HALLOWEEN TREATS •
Largf' Sclttti .. •n •HERSHEY (PLAIN or A~ONO) • MARS or
I 'I 'bl ,. , •NESTLES CANDY BARS
', .• I 8 f" ,,U\t'• 111.USANAS$OllTMENTOfYOUIF4VORIT!CANP'rlA.RS ...............................
~· '
CONTINUING OUR ••• •
DAIL V PILOT .ff
Of Our Newly Rerriodeled Supermarket in Anaheim
0UC l'OUCYGOAl:ANlff.S THESI! lOW l'RICfS tOIE ffPECTIYf Allf"5T7 OAYSWfO., OCt 24 THllV Tl/ES., OCT. 30 ' ' . Harbor Blvd. at Orangewood
LB •.
-CORN BEEF
ROUNDS • 'llJ.:
• • ··························'···
abisco Oreo Cookies .• ?1.•91
. f " c "' 45° ris oam up~ · ..... ": ,~
'
• ~.: •• • • •
I
' f
•• • •• • • • ............................... ~ Olt•O""'IHtJI'~~ lf!Oll.. r.i.ntn SloCU reakfast Links "!•:":":":". '?'. 75t.
~Bii:K\s brapa Julca:--.~:;,:·:1591 :
' GUI"°'""'· •llOllN I 91sero1·•. C~ot~o-Z~~·:~.!'~='~ o,f4"• . . r ~· · · ......... 1u.. ..............................
MUG :
~::ROOT BEER 1
;
b~-1~·1 . ~ r ~-,I( ~o : ~ DEi:c»'T •••••••••••••••••••••••••• •
• ' .
THRIFTIMART
DISCOUNT DELLY
JUICY
DI' Virginia Collo Sal1111I ·~~·-$1 .09 Phil1d1lphl1 Crnm ChHH •.0!45c
WHson All BRI Frankl .. '.' ?~ 93c Tu111ov1r Pies ·~~,;':''"°'· 67c
Com King Mnl F11nks .. '!?'.89c OAK Danish Chopped Hllll •••'l.25
SL.1·c·e"o .. BOLOG.NA • ~""'""~"w ... -· • ' ' All IUl->11'0 l"l(l ~l(ltl
e • e e 11.0l ."'-G~ • e .... ;.;. '!r;;.;,.,-,.. "'It ., . -• -:.."
. _ :~,Longhol!n ~ --• EVERFRESH ~
. ::1~ ~"'· _ • fROCESS-CHEESE ~ ...
. -4'1,:.::..· .'.'"-:· ·• ·~· < FR~M ~~.!'N .. ~ ,P.. .,0., ... •·.<"-1:~ . .7~ .. -· -..: vN'P . . .--..:::..;;
Avocado Dips ""~~o~.::..°:'~"01 59cY..Cl1uss1n Pickln ....••• ;!~1;,93c
Soll M1rglrln1 (,.old,:;~~·::~·. H1.49c Cl1uss1n Tom1101s •.•.. ~?~ a3c
Pilluury R1111l1r DI BUlllnllllk Blac1ll1 ................ ' •• !?'; 13c
SWITT'S HAM PATTIES.·:'.:;;;: •• :''f••
-:J7. ..... _.;. . .,., v: ·~ "' ~"
• Oscar Mayer Quality •
O~car Mayerf.'!~fr $1~9 Sliced Beef :~;: 79e Wieners • • • • • • . Bologna .....
Oscar Mayer $115 Garlic 79e
Beef Bologna ?~'. Bologna .... ~fi~-..
a... ~!l. ~·· fUUY COOKED 3 ...
• • • • • • • • • R# GARL~ND HAM ,....._. ,;.:,,,,·.-..,..;,.~
WISTMINSTtR • ~,
·-,~ .
~-
LINCOLN
~
0 • i
. " ~ ,, ~~l"c:-~+. __ ~_-_-__ -_ ..... ,.-~..:.::::::::::.~,,_...~.
• ~ % % ""'llli~;;:.,,.;c~: ~f-~-,l;F--~--'~
• 0 • • •
•MILKY WAY
•SNICKERS
• MUSKETEERS
•••
REGULAR or QUICK-18-0Z.
Quaker
Oats ••••••
THRIFTIMART COUPON GOOD WED,, OCT. 24 THRU TUES., OCT. 30
Large
Avocados
Lll<'IT 1 AVOCADO & 1 COUPON PER ADULT CUSTOMER
. 2701 Harbor Blvd., Costa Mesa e 13922 Brookhurst, Garden Grove
1308 W, Edinger, Santa Ana e 5858 Warner, Huntington Beach e 23811 El Toro, El Toro
' I
, . -'
.t_i DAIL V PJLOI Wfdllf$dlr, Octobrl' 24, 1Q1J ~
Saucy Holiday
Holiday cooks ~·ho plan
ahead will keep a batch. ol
Vintage Fruit Sauce ready In
a tall glass container on the
kitchen counter -it's as pret·
1y as It Is delicious -for
salads, meat cookery and
desserts.
friend or start two batches
Of S8UC1!.
Sauce:
I cup fermented fruit
~. cup drained canned
peaches, cut in pieees n cup drained pineapple tid-
bits
Cool 5 minutes ; klo!len edges
with knife and Invert onto
1ervlng plate. Serve warm
with whipped crerun or ice
cream, ll desired.
VINTAGE GALA
llAM GLAZE
Use it as an lngredlent in
Vintage Upside Down Cake,
Vintage Gala llam Glaze and
Vintage Salad Ring. Spoon It
over ice cream. sherbet or
pound cake. Sha re the starter
and Vintage ideas with a
friend for a Gift thal will
last all year.
6 maraschino chenies, cut -4.
in half
pounds ready-to-eat ruJly
cooked ham
Tasty and easy on the
budget, Vintage Fruit Sauce
keeps almost ro rever. Allow
three v.•eeks to prepare a
batch -and just add more
fruit v.·hen lhe supply gets
low.
VINTAGE' FRUIT SAUCE
TO FER~1ENT FRUIT:
% cup drained canned
peaches, cut ln pieces
i~ cup drained pineapple tid-
bits
6 maraschino cherries, cut
in ha1f
t ~1 cups sugar
1 package instant blend dry
yeast
Combine ingredients and
place in a gla!! jar with a
1 cup sugar
Combine all ingredient.! in
a glass jar with a loose covt'r;
sttr ~·ell. Set in a fairly warm
place. Conlinue to stir once
a day. -$auce can be served
after one week. Fruit and
sugar must be repeated every
two weeks.
VINTAGE UPSIDE
DOWN CAKE
~,, cup butter or margarine
1-3 cup firmly packed brown
sugar
1·3 cup chopped nuts
l cup drained Vintage Fruit
Sauce
1 y, cups Oour
ll,.'1 cup sugar
I teaspoon baking powder
I teaspoon cinnamon
112 teaspoon salt
i,, teaspoon nutmeg
'h cup Vintage Fruit Sauce
syrup
1 '.t cup cooking oi l.
2 eggs
IOOle cover -an apothecary Melt butter in 8-inch square
jar ls perlf!ct . Makes 2 cups. pan. Add bro\1-'0 sugar, drained
Stir severnl limes the first Vintage Fruit Sauce and nuts:
day, then stir once a day. ntix well. Set aside.
At the end of two weeks the In medium mixing bowl,
starter has fcnnented enough combine r em a in in g in-
to make sauce. gredients: mix well. Pour bat-
1,~ cu p firmly packed brown
sugar
2 teaspoons cornstarch v, teaspoon ground cin-
namon
118 teaspoon. ground cloves
J/3 cup Vintage Ftu.it Sauce
syrup
2 tablespoons lemon juice
Iii cup drained Vintage Fruit
Sauce
In a 325 degrees oven bake
ham according to label direc·
lions. Score with sharp knife.
Meanwhile, c o m b i n e re-
maining ingredients in
medium saucepan. Heat until
thickened, stirring constantly.
Spoon aauce over ham .
Retu rn to oven and bake
ror 10 to 15 minutes until
light gold en brown. Serves 6
to 8.
Recipe can be doubled and
hair the glaze served warm
as a sauce. Makes 2 cups.
VINTAGE SALAD RING
2 packages (3 ounces) 1emon
gelatin
2 cups boiling v.·atcr
1i!i Cl.IP cold water
J 1h: cups Vintage Fruit
Sauce
l cup ~ur cream
Idea
1elatin mix ture and add '"'
cup Vintage Fruit Sauce. ~ur
into oiled kt.Ip ring mold.
To remaining gelatin, add
sour cream ; mix thoroughly.
Chill both mixtures -clear
gelatin in mold until firm and
creamy mlxture until lh1cken-
«l.
Add 1 cup Vintage :rruit
Sauce to creamy mixture.
Pour over layer in mold aud
chill until firm.
Spread fermented
fruit sauce over
the holidays -on
meats, Ml1d1 or
ice creem.
..
Offered
This' recipe makes enough ter over topping in ptepared
~f,rmcnted 91&rt~..fmo.-t,w&---paA.-Bak&-at...3SO d11gr"6 WI:
batches of sauce. You may 40 to 45 minutes until golden
-...ldd-bQ,iling watu..to.g1oia1iGJ*l-----
,
\\-'ant to give one cup lo a broY.'n. ·
stir to dissolve. Add -cold
water. Remove 1 cup of
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1 Name _ I I I
I Address I
I I I City _ . Slate Zip __ I
I 1 ·' ,,,., hn••~ /110 /11 /,' rnu.1tr """ h1uodlu1c. I I ~/,1ko• (/tr,·~ I PU}"illf lo T/1~ th"'' !1llo d l'it\J I
L --------------------------~
The DAILY PILOT Lists Them All
• .• All
• receive • •
the TV Channels You Can
. Saturday in TV WEEK
(Daily Logs, Too!)
PllCIS lfRCTIVI WED., OCT. 2'
fHIU TUES., OCT. 30. 1973
FRESH
• -CLOD
BONELESS
BEEF ROAST
* 29·
U.S.D.A. CHOICE AMERICAN FIESN LAMI
CELERY
,,,_,,,,,,_," ··-·-· .... -.... ~ -''"' ·---... ._., ... -·-~·"' _ .. ,,........ ._ .. ,,, .. ,~ .. ~·--· ,,_,_, .... ,_ ................ ,. ...... ... """'·""''""'" ........... -.. . ..... _ ... ,,,_ ....... _ ......... _ .. -..... __ ... . ...... ,, .. ,,,.,_,_ ·-"·'""..... . .... _ .. , . .,_.,, ·-··· ...... , ........ ·'-'""""'·-~ .........
THESE ITEMS AND PRICES GOOD ONLY AT THE FOLLOWING STORES _ ............... _ ·-· .. .,._ .... .. _ ................ ~ '"'""3'""'_ .... ,_ ............ _.~ ....... If .. ••-............ ,, .. ,, .... _ ........... ,_, ... _ ... _ ..... " .. ,_ .... ·-....... , ... _ ... __ ., ... , ... _ .... _., ..... _.,.,, ... _. _ ............... .._. ... ._ ...... --~ _.,., .... ,_ .... , ............ ,_. ,,._,,, ..... _ ....
.. --"'"' ·-··· ~';',:'I';\,\':!!.':;:... ...-.-·--· .. .......... ., ...... "' .... _.,, ... _ ... _ _ .............. ~ .............. _ ... ,
/' • , I
-,..•;-.:. -·-:..:::.. --·'°"
\
' YOUt CllCMCI AU MIAT 01 lllf
OO•OOHA, """" <OAf 8 s~ MAllP IAS111 COLD !l! .
CUTS.~~.
' r
-'-'
I
Wednesd ay, OttObtr 24, 1q73 DAILY PILOT 4S
Poppy H0tmel USDA ''"'-"" Red
USDA Brand Choice "The Rital McCoy'>"
Choke Grade USDA Choice·
°"'" 10 to T4· Savory· • Beef :$ 88 -
G•a3e "A"fll
..... Poun·.-~ c -
lab.I I.
SmokM~ c ··~''"''i''" $ ........ ,.I
Poinl c ... 1 · 29 S!Mrt .Weight · '
51. ... ROngo
lb. lb.
TOWNHOUll
APPLE CIDER
.·tBS~c·
. .
Comfo•tohlt,
Sole And
Hy genie
Cragmont Drinks
Tampax lainpons
Kraft Mar'slOnallows ~·.7.'.: .
Dixie Rlclclle Cups ~.~~:::.';::-,
8Plneapple Juice '"~·~=~•ii
"•· • 127 of AO ,
...... 39c l'k9.
Pkg. 83• of 100
~1\ BISCUITS
·:;:· '».; M". w,;gh1'o 8. 12"'
" { 1• lake & Serve Caor. ~ , ~ n
Lucerne Fruit Drinks ':!!':: ~::: 55'
Lucerne Cottage Cheese ;;; 47c
lucerne Cream Topping ..... 52c s1 ..
Lucerne Dips ""''' ... .;.,.,_. •··· 3 7 e ... Uli!Wilh l~ C:,,. .
....................
CHEESE PIZZA
lel-oir h cil Olil
fo1hionod Ftovor
TATER TREATS
,,,..,;,,,,a, .. ,_s.,.,,2 ;t~.s 2c
So Metny Woyi
Macaroni & Cheese ···~· ':•:: 52 c < IPREMIUM BREAD Van de Kamp'sEnchiladas'~;.·43c
• '. S.fowavF.••h 39' C Bel·ail'-CUt Corn .:>.:~~~~:, :>':: 66c ~ 0 "011" tahd) """ B I . B I' S 35e , . • '"' e -air rocco 1 pears ·~::
Fres~ Opnuts ..... ,,.. :.':\ 69' Buttermilk Waffles .l:~;~ ·;;;: 35c
8Ang~ Food Ring •;;;.~;;::;· ·~49' The New
GARDEN SHOP BUYS!
MUMS
Funk & Wagnalls
~~~~s! ... ~~1~peclia ~~~~-~E 4 9c
Bio do·
1-lb. Cul
Pkg. lb.
RIB STEAKS
I I . . SAFEWAY llOUOR BUYS!
~.~COUGH MIXTURE ''. ·•·ouii'oN
. ~~ .Vick's Formula44 3·••· 95c ~ Winner's Cup ,8 ,.
hr Ouitk Relief! Botti• :,._~,J Kentucky Stroight
.· .. ,,~• 80-Proof Ha lf MAALOX LIQUID ,, ... •10• '~·~' Galloo
O.mol<oo .. Mo<id '"''' • SCOTCH
AQUA NET ,,., 56• rn "s•i·,,, .. ,_ ... M ... ,,1t~··1' v·t · ".. 98' .. :. ~;.~:.;r• •m• .. ·-:: •• f 'I I 9 9 a eway u IP e I amins :;;·:,; Galloo
Secret Deodorant :<:'::.•.:::::,'::.~ ~:: 51' 8 @Vodka or Gin ·;;;::.."'· ~::· s5 99
Noxzema Skin Cream ;~::~. ·~:· 5l36 Ancient Age Bourbon :::::;~~:~ s 1098
Rapid Shav_e .~;;.::\>::'.<.:;~.: .. ·!;_~ 99e Sunnybrook Bourbon :~:;:: .,.5429
FLAT CUT sp• lb. lb.
Ground Beef
Pr•mi ... m·F•tth Gro ... nil & Flaworf..,I
Beef Stew Meat
rri... fff"'" '" u.......i .....,_.,.
SANG ROLE
Italian Swi'' •2•• t;:olony Colifornia
Magnum
Amigo Hermanos Burgundy ':.·99'
Cabernet Sauvignon .~~~: ':;·S299
Gallo Tyroll·a ·~'•'""""""'"' , .. SJ99 Wlth ... ··~""' .. O.lic••• Aoo•..G.t.
SAFEWAY GOOD BUYS'
Party Pride Popcorn
Sandwich Ba s
.... 39e . ..
BANANAS . •
. . -·-.,:i.. FANCY QUALITY
' • .19 Fl RM & GOLDEN c
De~icious Apples
........ i.,... 4 ->!· 59e Plppin-fonc., Grado le)
Ideal For Sliting ln!o
Gelatin Solads or
Breokfa1t Cereals.
Bean Sprouts s. r:..-:,~;;.~.';~~ ... ! lb.25 '
Yellow Onions ~";!;:':;!: .. 3 ~; 47•
Cucumbers , .. ,......... 29'
Lont G-ft Mi<••• lb.
Bartlett Pears ~.;;,:~::.~ ,.29'
Orange Juice .1:11:;~.~::c ~~:" 88'
Fresh Broccoli ... ~;.:.~;~ .... ~.29 '
lb •
GRAPEFRUIT
FLORIDA GROWN
RUBY RED
Rith In Vitamin C.
for An ldeol Break-
fa1! Eye.Opener.
lb.
I we welcome
FOOD STAMP'
SHOPPERS
House Plants ,, .... ~ 3 3c ·
...,.;...,.'.11.0t '•• Large Celery ... ,25' Carrols ~.~. 3 ~; 47' 'l'k•1 lllot1I~• Oct.JS~27, 1•7l tillt1A11tftt•' °''"'' C..ty (l111pl Cet.iille) -------------------------'
e 1 ODO Bayside Dr., Newport Beach e 636 N. C0ast Hwy., Laguna Beach e Wiiton & Fairway, Costa Mesa
• I
e 211 E. 17th St., Costa Mesa e 801 E, El Camino Real, San Clemente e 14417 Culver Dr. at Walnut, Irvine
e 24 Monarch Bay Plaza, Sa. La9un11 e S<1r. a Ar ~ l'reewa\' at La Paz, Mission Viejo e 24"2 1 ···r911erha t ... ~ .ir;.iway at Trabuco
,,
f<f DAJLY PILOT W .. _, -2<, 1'173 •1Lor.AOVUT1SU s
Add Texture to Any Meal
How about a convenient V• cup mayonnalte SWEET AND SOUR CELERY blne celery, onion, green pc~
celery casserole -one of l teaspoon finely chopped per. garlic. alt, cloves, OOy
lbote vegetable ~a that fresh onion 3 cups sliced ceJery lea!, pepper .net water. Bring
don't mind wa!Ung In tbt oven ~-te:1spoon finely chopped ~~cup chopped fresh onk>n to a boll; reduce heat and
for 1 delayed dinner? rrtSJJ garlic v, cup chopped !re.sh green simmer, covtred, for l~
In ~·-~~ -•ery 1·1 com· v, teaspoon salt pepper minules, unUl celery Is crlsp-~ ~· ·~ d'·•JatbaU lclovegarlic t •• bfntd "1th fresh mushrooms I/• teupoon r~ e .s • 'h teaspoon salt enw:r.
In a delicate white sauce. crumbled 2 whole cloves Remove garlic. bay leaf and
Otllcious ! ~• teaspoon cayenne pepper 1 bay leaf cloves. Drain and discard liq·
Celery Is mort familiar to Celery cut inl.O ~inch ~-t uid.
most of us served raw and pieces easpoon pepper Add sugar, oil and lemon
that's how It appears at table Mir aour cream, mayon-~ fa3:ie~pooate~ sugar juice.~~ celh andery. Spti rinklt'u withll for dunking in a Sour Cream corns .... c s r un W!
Herb Ol·p. naise and seasonings in small l tablespoon salad oil mixed. Cook over low heat,
d hill I tablespoon fresh lemoo 1-t. tantl f 2 A quite dllferent celery bowl· Cover an c 1 or juice stu1u1g cons y, or or
vegetable coune ii Swett and 2 hours. Serve with raw celery L teaspoon cornstarch 3 minutes or until celery is
Sour Ct'·-·. Here a pigquant pieces. Makes about ~• cup evenly coated. Makes 4 serv-~, di tn medium saucepan com ;ngs CELERY CASSEROLE DOESN'T MINO WAITIMG no~ Is achieved by cookmg:1_~P~· ~~~~~~~~~--'"'-'.""~'.'.:..~'.'.:'.'!~....'.:'.":'~""':~·~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~_:::.:::.::::.:.....:::::::::::...::::::::.:...:_::::::::.:..:.::::..:..::iT!==-~~~~~~~~~~~~
sliced celery witndh fre~:~ionnd. t ~ ., i.<.~ > .1
--·-· -o· finishing it with a brief .. ,.tr.~
beallng In sweet and sour .,)\ ..
aal.ICi! till the pieces are
008ted.
Quite a conversation piece
ror a family or company din-
ner.
CELERY CASSEROLE
6 cups diagonally diced
celery
l cup water
m ....,,.... salt, dmded
1/3 cup butter or margarine
1/• cup finely chopped celery
leaves v. cup chopped fresh onion
2 cups sliced f r e s h
mushrooms {'Ai pound)
Ve cup Dour
~ teaspoon pepper
2 cups milk
Jn a saucepan. combine
celery, water and 1h teaspoon
salt. Cover, bring to a boil
MEAT MASTER MEATS
and simmer 10 minutes or · Ralphs Exclusive
witil cri!p-tender. Drain and U SJ> 4 Grade A Su '
In a skillet melt butter. Add ... ~ •
,.
Wh<>-<r<ro but Ralphs would bring you penny .. a-pound pumpkins?
Buy one for everyone in the family and enjoy all the smiling faces.
At Ralphs, Halloween is super and the·price is nice.
DELICATESSEN DEPARTMENT PRODUCE DEPARTMENT
Longhorn Hallowlen
' .,.
turn "''° !!;-Quart casserol•. ·fresh Southern ~···:.. . . .6
celery leaves. onion a n d '--·-.,HIO!w 3 I n. IMAf .. -~....;mUJliNSO'~eoo1t--ov·ei'r ers· rb. •"' , ,_. _ _,_..,.....,,.. "'"""--tts.-· 'UJ.....f""=' '°" .73 I ~-~kins ..;~ ~ -.,...,...-~---==-= ~-~~-~--·~-~-------A11ph•-16 Sl1J_I• SHcti1 Arnertc111 1 03 W.1tNn lcebef9
Cheese
illedium beat until onions and A'SPECIALCOMBlNAT10NOFOROUN08EEF Cheese :spread "°" . Lettuce -.25
,.., .... 12
mushrooms are tender. ANO HYDROLllfD SOY PAOTEIN CONCENTRAT&
Sprinkle with flour and nUx
well. Stir in remaining 1 teas-
poon salt, pepper and milk.
Cook, stirring coostanUy, until
sauce thictens and comes to
• boil.
Pour over celery in baking
dish. Bake uncovered in 350
degree F. oven for 15 minutes.
Serves I.
CELERY WITH SOUR
CREAM HERB DIP
1t1 cup llOW' cream
Choices
Changing
New choices in allowed
foods have been announced
for Weight Watchers classes.
Beans have been added as
alternates and pork and ham
are now allowed in the beef
category.
Memben are making these
other menu shifts:
High priced salad dressing
that is "legal," is a cinch
at home ii you can first find
a grocer or pharmacy which
sells agar agar crystals.
Soften \n boiling water; air
proximately two tablespoons
to a pint of water gives a
rich thick consistency.
Add i;, cup vinegar or
tomato juice , dried herOO and
vegetable flakes, and a teas·
poon of your favorite season-
ing salt. (Agar agar is
tasteJess and dear).
Dulse or kelp have been used
as thickeners for two vastly
different oceanbound nations
-Scotland and Japan .
A pinch In soups, chowders,
vegetable sauces, etc. goes
farther than the romstarch
or flour Americans favor.
Look for ''kombu" \11here
Orienta l foods arc sold. Cau·
tion: sal1:v flavor!
Soyheaiis and soy sauce go
well toge ther on a m~u . Try
a soybean loaf as a mainstay
for the evening meal and
!;eason il your favorite way.
Braise a n accompanying
vegetable in soy sauce . No
oil or fat In either~
Poach a fish on ~ open
grill instead of broiling Jt.
1.et it simmer in a foil wrap.
equal t i m e for both. sides.
Herbs help. Forget l he
margarine or ()\her basting
sauce: this tidy package
makes ils 0\\11 juice.
Barbecue Hnu1 beans the
.~IO\\' heat ,,.,·ay. After cooking
hmas. ron1bine \l-'[th equal
amount (cup to a cup ) or
\t)nlato sau('e. Season "'ilh
Worcestershire sauce and chili
powder.
Place in CO\'ered dish or
bean pot and heat at very
low t.emperature one hour.
Cake Wrap
To thaw a frosted cake,
un1vra p it and place on a e<1ke
rack at room temperature. An
unfros!ed ca ke mny renmin
wrapped while thawing.
Kids Like To
Ask Amly
a..tShoulder
Chuck Steaks
Bfff Shoulder
BoneRoast
hlf Slrtof• np-Top "°""' Boneless Steaks
a .. r Shoulder Clod
Family Steaks
L1•n-IMfCub11
Stewing Beef
B••f Rib Clrl
Spencer Steaks
llMflolnCut
Braising Strips ee.;;·Meat Loaf
.... 79
lb. .98
... 1.59
... 1.49
1.19
... 2.19
... 1.29
... 89
6klnlff• 98 Fresh Beef Liver ., •
u.a.D.A. Choleo-F'"" l lS Lamb Shoulder ChQps lb. •
D1yt Frt1-'ter-3 lb. Avg.-Whol9
California Fryers
Cetllornl• Grown-D1y1 Fr••hlf'
Fryer Legs or Thighs
ZKky Finn-Plump
Fresh Roasters
SEAFOOD DEPARTMENT
.... 45
lb. .95
lb. .85
Frnh Dover
Fillet of Sole
S1lad Sii•
Cooked Shrimp
... 1.59
lb. 1.99
LIQUOR DEPAATMENT
laktltlhw Gin or
Sandra
sh;;rp·c~Cheese .. 1.21 ~=Onions
'01 Vlrglnl• 89 Fr•ah, CrilP
CBeef ~ranks "' ..... • Celery ountry s., •• or Butt1nn 14 lwfft. Julep
Pillsbury Biscuits •... • . D' Anjou Pears squ:;;:Snack SpreadeoL .47
Fl•ltchm1nn'1-8owt
Saft Margarine 11b. .53
Soft-2Tub
Blue Bonnet Margarine, .... 48
Rc;r;;t:5'°voguri ..... 83
f;liJh'S'Fn':lt Drinlqs -.55
B11uUM
Hallowpen Bouquets 4-: Pot--~1. lklom&nt
5COtCl1 Heall ier
I " Pot-Elotic
Bird Nest Fems
-·.19
' ,.., .... 29
.....• '11
-1.47
-3.97
BAKERY DEPARTMENT
White °' ""'"'-Sanctwsot. or apm Top
'HOUSEHOLD VAWES
lpedJ·siie-AI Nude
Ralphs PaRty,
~~kter Roasts lb. .89
~c~ ,., .89
Vcidka .... 3.09 Bread 24or. lo•••• .39 Hose -.87
PJ11tlc Cfftff-IJ stal'!W .29
Playina ~rds , -
Montd1tr C1nedl1n 3.99 R1lph1-D• ... rt Treet ~~ .51 Imported Whisky . .. Apple Tumovers
C.ntffCut-Bytn.Plec• 1 95 Canadian Bacon ,., •
Hickory 5mok9d 119
p~~c:;tt;:"Mugs -:is
AHOrtff c\lor1-~u~-,;;; 149
Ren" -Imported 1.89 R1lph1-Fr11h Biked .89 French Red Wine ... Pumpkin Pies a• alz•
Prt rnlum E11tem-12 Ounce C1nt R•!ph1-1 l•y1r Ralphs Bacon ,.. • BundfC8ke Pans -• &pick 1.09 .99 Edelweiss Beer c•non Halloween Cakes ••ch
Prices effective Oct. 25 through Oct 31 THIS IS RALPHS SUPER CENTURY 1873-1973 I
lphs Super Low Prices
Ralphs Vii Di KllllPI
Golden Premium Dole Best Foods qt,., Frozen
Ice Cream !~~ .89 Pineapple 131<.: .28 Mayonnaise .75 Enc)lillidas 111~ .41
HEAlJ'H & BEAUTY AIDS FROZEN FOOD PANTRY FILLERS HOUSEHOLD NEEDS
N .. -Wllh FlllOrid• 4.•~ .49 Whipped Tcwlnl 1ooz. .39 R11ph1-POfll*I •= .29 I.Mr' Scott-Al_._ Cokn .... .30 Aim Tooth Paste .... Pe!Whlp ··~ Popcorn ... Toilet T1s8ue .... IClll1 GIMll on Contact To< 69 . Dol1-Pin11ppl•IGr1.,.tn.aftor ••< .20 MPS or ICltty St-••• .18 Oow-A1r91olC1n ..... .79 Llste!lne Antiseptic ..... • Pineapple Juice '" Kai Kan Cat Food , .. Bathroom Cl-...
F•mlnlnl N1pkln1 30 Cl. .87 S1r1 L1•-Ntw 1014or. .85 Tlft1r'1 Cholc1-01<:•fl1ln111d •= 1.27 9 Ounce Rtllllt ..... .45 Stayfree Mini-Pads ... French Crumb Cakes ,.,. Freeze Dried Coffee JO< Dixie Cups .... sun Fo1Y1111l1 s 01. .88 Sto11tr1r•1-H11t &. l•I 12 or. .49 S•••n s .. 1-cr11rny ttaU.1 • •• .39 kott-A1.0!1M C°""' -.34 Jergens Exira Dr{ "''" Macaroni & Cheese ••• Salad Dressing ..... Paper Towels ... M011111-R11111l1r or S11p1r ""' .74 Down)'ft1k1-Hot N Butt•')' 11 Ol. .47 A110t11d Fl1.,o,. .39 P1fll,.-SIH•1 , ... .86 Feminine Napkins ... Waffles pkg. Bel Air Croutons .. . Fumllure Wiile -For Sin111 H•dlthe .71 Mlnut1Mtld 12 oz. .53 H11ni ..... .48 .......... , ..• I ..... 75 Sine-Aid ,. ... Grapefruit Juice Tomato Ketchup Food Wrap llagtl ..... "' ..... .....
M1dlc1tH 1.14 \11nO.k1Ch 1&Y. or. .88 Unpopp..:l-Y1llow or WlllM "= .41 Pltltk-Auo.tM Co!On .48 Tegrin Shampoo ,,. Fish& ips Jolly llme Popcorn Giant Ice Cube 1l'lyl tub• pk9. "' -F11n1nln1 Htpkll•t ..... 88 Jolln1lon1-A11ortld 1'11vort '" .27 T11t1r'I ctloin-~fl9'fl1t.4 ••• 2.15 Ju1nlle RON -.83 Staylree Maxi-Pads .... •Frozen Yogurts ""°" Freeze Dried Collee i" SaranWrap ...
'7ffl> EVERYDAY LOW PRICES ·---..59
.,,......"' __
::.:: • .(.J
.....,.._G..,. ~:.; .44 111--~ "~.43 .................. ·.: .10 ----•.:.n Cutex Nill Polish Double Buddies Cinnamon S1ltlne Cr1ck1.01 C•nnect Pop Nlblet1Com ............ ~;: .80
____ ,..,, ..
o.: ....... , :'.:;.83 c.._• .. o1*'•"'• Ac":; AS 111-c-r .. t:t>ollltf 1•;; .74
.....,. __ .....
•.:. .10 Listerine Breath Spr1y Pumpkin Pies ..... 95 Cranberry Juice Light Chunk Tl.In• Pe1nut Butter Tom•to S•UC. -··-1':.: .95
,., __ ,....,..,
':'; .43 fo ... ioo e.t<JH 1:,:. .46 11 .. ,.,,._ ..... .,... ~:;: .49 -'o-ll"bot----·-u.: .... --•.:.1• Orafll Pie Shell• Vanllle W1ter1 Oet1rgent ChlllCon Ame C1mp1>111._ soup ..... ., ·:.-: .97 o-~ ... •il•• ......... -c: ........ -... .!;; .39
,.,_ ...... _.
".': .15 O•C-•,: .29 ~ ..... ...:: .37 • S1v11ge H1lr Spray Brldglord'1 Bread ·~::: .13 Salad Dressing Beef RavloUoe Franch Frl•d Onion• Al phi Blttol'll .. _ ....... ....... -... .., ....... ou•~-• 1-:.:: .99 --!::.89
_.., ___ . ...__
.:.: .41 ... ~-.:: .37 • Cuta• Llpetlck _.62 Good Humor Birt !.'ft .89 Tea 8191 Apple Cider S•lad Dr•••lng • Tartar l•UCe
•Asterisked items not available
in the following stores:
__ ... , ............ ..
O•-•••· ,., (, ~1 .. 0.-• .,.., .,..,,_ "" "'°"'" e,.., _ ,.....,,.., ......... ~
loo~• .. -:1.Wo.-
~•••"•"'• .. 6000.,,W••"'-"""" \H .......... O)Ml k.••••"'H Loo .......... !Utt So. ••-"""'
LOo-otoo,fOHl.W"""'
a...~ ....... ,,.. .... ''""-"'"'""' .. _ .._.. ..... Nll ....... 9'.,l
__ 0.,.1111-.....M.
-.u 11 Lo1A01t1oo• ...
---.4'1 ........ ....
('.oodles for Gobllas
lt'aa tttat to 11ohop at Ralpba fOt';rour
Trlck or'freat goodk.11. ColJle In and
cbOOK from Ollr<:omplete M.le<:ilon
of tfUallfy candy, l'ookh:11, poJ)('om
and dl~uli<e!l.
~ •• ,,.... .... xo-.~·•"• , ............. ,.. ............ . _......,...._, ..... ~ ...... , ............ ., ........ ...t .. ... LM .......... a-Mlli._o _ '-.......... U ...... .__..
The L.V8r •••ket with~ Low prices
-"""''"" ........ _ _ ..... OltlTMHr ...... ......,..."""'_ .. ,.....
RALPHS STORES ARE LOCATED AT: 380 E. 17th ST., COSTA MESA; 9901 ADAMS BLVD., HUNTINGTON BEACH; 15471 S. BROOKHURST, WESTMINSTER;
lAGUNA HILLS, 24167 PASEO DE VALENCIA 1726117th ST., TUSTIN 401 N. LOARA, ANAHEIM STORE HOURS: 9-
\
••
•
B
lo
Zoe
ol cam
San ..
deli
fectl
a I
B
I
.,,,
I
Ihle
with
sou
2
l
2
l v. s
2
2
12
1
I
Ma
E
A
l
2
l
I
l
18
ter
bu
1o
cut
In
unt M
DAILY Pll OT
Better Eat Butter
Heal·.th Insurance Sold • Supermark.et
'l1lo bomt butter dlum Is
• ..u. ol the put.
'Ille mamdactun of butter
!'·is now a vital sqment of
'4 1ho daley lnoluatey, with 1.1
• bl1llM poundo ol bottor pro-
• du<ed amoally bt the Unlttd ·St.ala. cauromia ranks lhird
J!liitonally, producing I I 2
million pounds.
"BUtter abo contains pfe-
lormed Vitamin A," said Dr.
7.oe E. Anderson, proressor
of consumer science! at the
catiforina State University,
San Diego.
"In fact, butter is the fat
in which vitamin A was first
discovered lO' be Important for
growth, healthy eyes and skin.
and the maintenance. o f
healthy tlJsues for resbtance
to infection."
ConsWners wi!lhing to store
butter for severf! weeks may
wrap the eztra cubes tn foll
and frieze for future use.
Freezing will protect butter's
delicate DaVor m o r e ef·
fecUvety·than refrigeration for
a 1ong penod.
BUTrER FRIED FISH
1 Pound fish fillets, fresh
or thav;ed
~ cup { J cube) butter
1 tablespoonprepared
mustard
Chicken Stew made with
who&e pieces of chicken and an
assortment of flavorfu l
vegetable& la new to many
modern famiUes.
Perhaps a vague reoollec-
tioo of Grandma's stew slm·
mering for houni. di1COOrages
young cooks. But today's
stews are usually made from
fryer.i and these chickens cook
very quickly.
Make it extra good by
thlckeolng the juic... lightly
with com atarch. Serve ill
soup plates.
CHICKEN llrEW
I (21> to !l>i><l'Jlld) lryen,
cut up
1 chicken bouillon cube
2 teaspooo.s aah
I bay ltol
\14 teaspoon Uiyme leaves
5 <.'UPI water
2 cups celery, cut in 3-inch
strips
2 cups carrot!, cut In 3-tncb
strips
12 small white onions (about
% pound)
1/S cup ccrrl starch
1 cup water
Place chicken p I e c e 1 ,
bouillon rube, salt, bay leaf,
thyme and water In a large
kettle. Br'ing to boll . reduce
heal and simmer, covered, 30
minutes.
Add celery, carrotf and
onions: simmer. covere d .
about 10 minutes or tmtil
vegetables are tender.
Mix corn starch and w11tu:
stir into chlcken mixture.
Bring to. boil : stirring ~
stantly, and boil 1 mlnut~.
Makes 8 aervings.
Easy as Pie
Mix Used
A filllng dessert 1
SPICED APPLE
nJRN()VERS
l pacba:e (11 ounces) pie
cnlll mix -
I Iabl-.O cold bard bol·
ter
I> cup II r m 1 y packed
brown aupr
I tablespoon flour
11> "'-· apple pie spice
1/4 teaspoon aaJt
21ft cups peeled and diced
tart apples
1 tablespoon mUk
1/4 cu2 1e1ame teed
Prepare pie crust mix as
pacltap dlrecla; roll out to an
II by JS Inch rectangle. ·
Dot hall ol pastry with bot·
ter: told romllnlnc hall over
btrtlend putry. Roll out aialn
to an-11 by JS Inch rectangl•
c:ut lnlA> • toclt &qllU'll.
Stir . '91otlltr the broWn
..,.,, flour, •pple pie lplce
and lllt; add applet and 1Ur
unlll an ol opple Is ooattd.
P1ace about ~ CUP a p p I e
~ ·.m center ot eoch ""*"; fold to form a
triangle ; prta edge•
together; aeaJ with fork Unes.
Priclt tops for steam t
etcape. Brush with milk ·
spr1nkle wtth ,.,.me ....i.
ClfF.ERY CllERRY BARS cherties I tablespooa lemoo jul<o
l tablespoon. c h o p p e d
onloo
U 111lng frozen fish , tha"
completely,
BUTrERY OVEN FRIED
CHICKEN
;;. cup ( 1 cube) bOtter
\.it cup regular all-purpose
flolU' j
In a ckan bag combine nour
aod 1tUOlllnp. Add cblclten
pleca: one at a time and 3hake
to coat evenly.
Dip both sides of chicken
In lhe melted butter, and place
In tingle layer, skin side down,
in pan.
1 package (about l pound
!~a~a)ke1~j! or; av-
2 <W
In a large mixing bowl beat
together cake mix, eggs,
water. and butter for length
of time specified on cake mix.
NEVll&-FAIL
llOLLANOAISE SAUCE
11 cup (I cube) butter
2 egg Yolks
butter. Beat unUI ... n mlud
and stiU.
Continue beating, add lemon
ju.ltt and rest of melted but·
ter. a few dropa of each
alternately witll all hu been
added. Makes 1 cup. I teaspoon ult ·•
lh teaspooo JM1prlka v, teaspoon pepper
1/3 cup water e tablerpoons butter,
softened
':: teaspoon salt
Dash of cayenne Melt butter In a sklUel. Stir
bt mustard, lemon juice and
~· Add fish and fry slowly
on each side until golden bro...,. '
Sprinkle with c h op p e d
parstey. Mall.es 4. servings.
6-41 cut up chlCkea·partl
Place bulter In a 13 x 9
x 2 inch pan ~nd melt ln
oven.
Bake 4.00 degree oven for
30 minutes. Turn skin side
up and bake an additional 20-
30 minutes or until teoder.
~• cu p choppc<l, uncooked
dried aoricots
I ca n 131,~ ounces) flaked
coconut
11 cup chopped ,nlaraschino
Stir in apricots, ooconut and
cherries, mixing just until
com bined. Spread evenly lnto
buttered jelly rol l pan , 15x!Oxl
inch .
Bake 18-20 n1u1utes. Cool In
pan before cutting. t-.lakes
about 60 pie<:es.
l l,o.i -2 tnblespoons I e m on
juice
l\1elt the butter. Beat egg
yolks until thick. Add salt,
t·ayeMe, and 3 tablespoons
To use, heat sauce in top
of double broiler over hot
water, stir r in I constantly.
Serve at onoe over hot broccoli,
asparagus, or other greens.
Shocked by rising prices?
CJ'ide or ~est 'Poods
Giant Size CIJetergent Quart "Mayonnaise
Each
With Coupon
Below
Switch to Mayfair and save.
~-~-ib-~ (}round
'
Sh~k. frompr~ce inc~ease~. is
,---,no"=w "li1 1ng most everyone. And
cutling down on food is the only
lhing that many people think th ey
can do about it~
Food costs I es s at Ma fa ir
lff:in" it othe"r" lop supermarkets.
Proved by pri ce comparisons',
wilh the same long list of basic
foods which the t.:.S. (iovernmcnt
l• ...... ---·· !ko•t l loUI c_.,..,. ·-M.tl•·•
P.oc-CM,.A " "01 . O...-CM•o8 • ., " o ... -a. .... c • •1 ll
L..,·,..><O tN1• D n ... ·o, .. -c ..... IE • ... o ... -c ..... , " ii.oo ...., ... -a. ... c • .. " --4.oc-th•••" • •-» -·d•oc-0.""' " 11.ll _.,oc_tt.""J • ••
Mixed
. 'Pryer
Parts
J HINDQUARTERS WITH BACK
3 FOREOUARTEM WITH IACK
C-'•lor
••• •-• ... ...
SI lt
!>1.ll ., l• ... •• ·-·
s.._ ....
MO'l'I•"
1.0 ...
·" z.•t ,.
1.H rn l.U 1.n ••
Doc.-o(•Of' ol I,,. lt';te
<°""""""' •0•••1 ·-~ ................ .._ .. .. . .......... , ""''"'; c--· """''" °""" Mov••;, "'"°"'" 1500 &. Gwf ... d
loo ...... t.o. Coll!. toDo10
3 WINGS, 2 GIBLET_S AHJ N5CICS INCLUDED
1':/ack 0'.
'Lantern
'Pumpkins
qQm
qurkeys
LANCASTER.GRADE A
FROZEN, 17 T022 LB.
Wayfair ~est ~uys in "Produce
CWinternelis cpear~weET,JU•cv .19,B
Oceanspray Cq,fJPof!:f~~.0 .29,A
CJJelicious c':Apples 4 LBs lOO
WASHINGTON EXTRA FANCY RED OR GOLDEN . •
TRICIC OR TREAT CANDY c.uow~
A1JMW V1ri•lie1 ..•.•. lb. ,45
RED LEAF LETTUC"E
G1rdM Frtsh ......• 2 for-,29
80STON LETTUCE
$el.cl Otlighl ........ 2 for .29
CANDY OR CARAMEL APPi.. ES
O•l1ciou1 'or H1llow•911 4 for 1.00
RADISHES Glf"dtl"I Fr•sh Bin:hts ... II .. 12
GREEN ONIONS
But you can fight back.
The fact is, you ran save on
food by switching to t-.1ayfair.
Swi tching to ~la_yfair can sa\'e JOU
enough so that you won 't have to
t:ut down your food standa rd of
li,·ing.
ChucJt
8~*.CUT
MARINATE FOR BARBECUE
uses tu measure the cost of living.
Pro\·e it to yourself. Fight
back. Switch tosa~·ingat~layfair.
"May fa ir ~est ~uys in "Meat
'lJ.RPss~JfJc~~.'JLft,'1£..~lJ..~a'J,.~!.,a•FuL J. JB LB.
'!:~~l!s ;i;;~~~!TH~<!,f !~E A TT ACHED .77c a
~eel 8/!gr;,{B';F,/~~ATE .66,B
~TO ~{i'i.r<!N:er.i:! c&P.{VoPS MIXED l,28LB
~eel Shoulder Clod BONELESS BEEF OVEN ROAST ·TOPS IN FLAVOR
Smoked cpork Chops
DEEP SMOKED -THIN CUT FOR QUICK FRY
~L~~~ w~~~fc!!M!CAL KIDS LOVE THE M .49Le
~eelB§.tr .. lfuBt>!~~{ 1.18,.
Pr~t;foE ~/l!~'!i~~~rAcHEo .88La
~1!~<;.i;.,.'r,~!&f.N:f!,eIJ~[~G ,73,.
FRESH PERCH Flll.ETS
Sk inOn ·PtnFry ...... lb.1,08
3 POUND STEAMER CLAMS
Froz1n • T11ty and Good••· 1.98
TURBOT FILLETS Frozl!fl ·Rid! 1n Fl1•or ., lb .88
JIMMY DEAN SAUSAGE 98 12 oz. Rolls . . . . . . ... e1. •
24 01. Rolls ......... 11. 1.17
ARDEN LONGHORNCHEESE Bulk R•!ll-'l•r ....•.... lb. 1.43
ARDEN SW tSS CHEESE
Bulk R-vul1r . . . . . . lb . 1.45
PILLSBURY BISCUITS
Swe•lmilk or Bullerm1lk
l ot..... . ... e1 .• 14
OL' VIRGINIA BOLOGNA
Sta rlo le Sloced · 12 01. Pkg e1 .• 88
STANOING ftll ROAST LIVERWURST' BACON
Sm1ll End . F•I Add.<! ... lb 1.39 OR LIVERWURST CHUBS F•rmttr Joho · 6 01 Pkg ea .39
TOf' SIRLOIN STEAICS
te~~1-1--,~~':.!:!~~~~-+-+~-
BEEF • PAN FRY OR BROIL
-GREAT FOR BAEAl(FAST
LESS THAN 3 LBS., 11¢ LB.
f:J'his week~ ~est "'iluys in Groceries
CAfaylresh ~~.T,.~f., noz .• 10
Globe A-1 Spaghetti ,,0, ,55
ICt~l!L.~'t~~f '!e~F 't~~c{T~~~v~~N .15
Comet Cleanser,, 02_ .25
Clorox ~leach; GALLON .52
'Tel low Pop Cor{l,B BAG .29
'f9..{<!fcPriti"J"ilm " 2.99
cpolaroid Cfll9lo Tct/m. ,£0,~ 3.99
1Rfcill9.ff..,:V21.!ii QUART 3,99
LIQUOR
BRIGADOON Scolth • C1hfort1i1'1
F1voril• Fifth ............ 3.H
J. W. DANT Ch1rco1I Wluslt1-, •
10 Y•1r1 Old • IO·Prool F1tth . J.tt
SAM SYKES Bourbon • K•nluc.ky
Strei91'tt 8ourbon,WtltV.1y · F11ll
16-Prool Forth . . . . .. 3.H
ROYAi.. OCCASION T•quil1 •
Whit• or Gold · IO·Proof ·
P1rl.el f<>r M1r111r it1s F otih . l .H
ROYAL OCCASION C1n1di#!
W!'lilltty ·• Y•1r 1 Old · IO·Proof
F otth . . . ......... l .tt
FLOfllOA GRAPEFRUIT
Flrtl ol St11on
Ruby Of'" Wtutt .... , . 5 lor 1.00
Stlad 0.li<lrt . . . . . . ••.• 12
BARTLETT PEARS Liit• County ...... , .. , tb, .29
BOOlll!!ss DANOl..A COOKED HAM
Broi l or B•rbecut .... lb.1.98 S.ct1~ end Form!!d 78 rr-----------------~ w..----------'·'·"·"-•.· ·.· .· ·•·.· ·.·.·.·.".· .· -I Inflation 'Pigh ter! Coupon I
IELl PEPPERS
Th1dl M.tltd ......... ••· .10
SPANISH ONIONS
U.S. No. I .... ,, ..... lb, ,15
CRlsP CELERY
I T.nd9r·RtdB..-id .•.... t• .. 14
BANANA DJ.t.SH Thlct tAf•ltd ..•.•.... lb .• 06
·CMaylresh
'Pruit Cockt1;1il
#303
CAN
•
ALFALFA SPll:OUTS
Gounn•t·D•hghl ...... p6:9 .• 39
ORANGE JUICE
Tropic"-· 1~ Puri
1 qt BotO• ........... ct• •• 49
HOUSE PLANTS
AsaortM V•n•l••• 2 1/•" Pols •...... , 3 tor 1.00
Worthern
~athroom T issue
175 EAST
17th STREET
Sliced
~aeon
DOLD BRANO • 12 OZ
CRYOVA C PKG.· FIN EST OUAL1T't'
•
I Tide ~etergent • I
I Giant Size I I l• ... <T ICOUP()OjP(ll•OUI ! I
CUITOl"fll OC I l'> OC T 11
I w11 .. o1. s•...c;L( PuAt • .. !.f or \~OO Oii ...ct•l I
I l(•C<ulll .... D'<~• 1Q8l CCO A"IJ "-''°"°''( I L et vl~•GE ""ODIJ(.1s1 ;a -------------------CAfaylresh
c§lpple Cider
or
Cjuice
I GAt.
Palmolive
CJ.,iquid CJJetergent
LIQUID
32 oz.
Pl1ce oo cookie ahett: bakr
in a preheated 400-deiree over
until golden -is minutes.
Makes 8 tervlnits. ' .................... ..
COSTA MESA• OPEN 24 HOURS)
•
. ...., . .
PILOT-ADVERTISER JJ
d DAILY PILOT WfdntSdaf, October Z4, 1973 WtdnlMllJi, Octobn' 24, 1973
~ .
i
L •• c· ...
Delicatessen Specials!
RATH'S 49 BOLOGNA c
Sliced ... Beef nr !\!eat. .•. 5 oz.
Danish Ham ...••. 75e
Lean s liced, ready lo eat! 4 oz. Oa k
Italian Salami • . . 59e
Slicec1 -Galileo authent ic t1nvor'. :t oz.
Pumpernickle . . . • 39 e
This week, let your jack-o-lantem guide your footsteps ..• and don 't let any goblins sidetrack you. You'll find treats ·
·at every turn, with never a trick being played tin you, when it comes to' outstanding food values!
'" C-/l/1r QUART BOTILE! •••••••••••••• 311
Sparkling Cllear and just a touch of tang . that's Springfield! (Half-gallon .•• 77c ••• Gallon , .. 1.49) ------. .
Calm lliX BUTY. CRaR! ................. 831
Your choice of those famous layer varieties ... j ust in time to ·offer the family a real treat!
Aurora 11101 WHIT£ OR COLORS! •••••••••• 251
T .... ·o roll packs, at a price that makes shopping at El Rancho a real treat! Get several this week!
•
Chills and thrills
in Frozen Food!
; . I lirtemationa 39~ Jlegetables
Jake your pick of Birdseye's variety!
Potatoes au Cratin . 43c
Stouffer's, for favored flavor! 12 oz.
French Toast .••• 43c
Oownyllake -heat and serve! 11 ~-.? oi.
· Garlic. ,Bread . • • • 39c
O'Boy's 8 oz. pkg ... serve it hot! t'hoose liJ:hl ur, dark ... 16 oz. Bay's
-
-·BaAOBNYBBELEL!!' ~·L-fte-a..-.-1r-uil-(01ktai--I -. ~. -.... 2,..9~c -Soup -CAMPaEws'UlllGOll--.-.-,...16~____..l'iD~,!~ .~~i~~!~1. :~~~_; .~ 7c U 7 Di:I Monte's ... morsels of fruit in No. 303 can Thick and ri ch and creamy .• •• great buy at this price! 10 11~ oz.
' JOHNSTON'S 79c Favorit e chttsP nl Fronce! 8 oz .
Cheddar . Bars • • •
('u(lper's procP!l!'ed Sharp ... 8 oz.
String Cheese . $1.85 ~.
Armtnian style ... from l1arden11:1
Swiss Gruyere . . . 39e
~lice<l -natural cheese! 6 oz. pkg.
CHEESE 'n'
CRACKERS 3 tor25e
l\raft treats for t1 icksters'. In d .. !'ize.
Sundries
BAYER
ASPIRIN
·r rust the brrtnd you know! .~II) cl.
Head & Shoulders 79e
'.\lost 1)(1pular shamroo: ·I oz. \011011 .
Sure Deodorant . . 49e
Hej!ular n~ un~cen ted to be "ure'. ti oz.
Trac II Blades • • . 39e
t;Ll l£·1te. pkg. ul ,:; lpki: of 9, .. l.:?9)
PACIFIC 39 WHITING ~.
Fry pan '-iLe !l to Ill oz. ea.-headless?
Turbot Fillets • • • 39e.
From icy r;reenland waters!
Rock Cod ... : •. s12'.
Fres h fillets. priced for value~
Perch Fillets .••• s12'.
Fresh'. ... ror navt\r ,\'OU favor'
Halibut Steaks ... s2°9•
Center l'UI •.. great !or hrnihn11:'.
F. · · H dd ' s119 1nnan a 1e . . . .
Smoked tish in lhC' Scottish style!
Cooked Shrimp .. s199,
Prrfect 11ize for 11hrimp cocktail!
SALMON
FILLETS
Slices of 0Avorful King Salmon!
Apple Sauce . . . . 19c Tomato Sauce aozCM •• 9c PIES Choose Apple or Pumpkin -9 inch
Springfield ... t he flavor that goes with pork! No. 303 S pringfield ... from ripe tomatoes. seasoned just ri gh t~
Preserves sTRAwBERRY •• 69c Rice Mixes MJ.a .•••• 2s~
Lots of benies in Smuckers •.. makes it better! 20 oz. ''ou r choice of thene grand taste treats .. , except wild rice? 6 oz.
Cat Food KALw ,_ ••.• 15c Pop Corn 2LlPKG. •••• 33c
i\1PS Chunk. Chicken &.Liver, Heart w/gravy, Bits o' Beef.
~1ea\ Time, Stew ... 6 ounce cacs.
Jolly Time .. , v.·hite or yellow ... a t reat for Hallov.·e·en!
GIANT
DRIVE
lJete r~ent drives out dirt! 49 oz.
DIAL
SOAP
Hath size bars, choice of scents!
JOHNSON'S 7 9c PLEDGE . .
Regular or lemon ... 7 oz. size
The trick ? ... we simply sell it fresh!
... ,.,,,,, -PBBPB RIPE BARTLETTS!
l\1ellow flavor ... the kind you'd expect from El Rancho's super-fresh produce department!
Grapefruit • • • • • 5 ,., s1
Florida's finest . , . \vhitc ... ripe, juicy!
Celery . • • • • • • • 19e. Banana Squash •.• &e.
Crisp , , , tender! • , . 'cause it's fre11h! Thick mealed, to bake beautifully!
Apples • • • • • • • 4 ,.._ s1 Brown Onions • • 2 .... 29c Blackeye Peas • • • 39e
!\'.orthern Jonathans ... crisp, juicy U.S. No. l quality sweet all purpose! Fresh! .•• shelled! , .• 11 oz. package.
, Our meat ... a special treat!
Pork loin LOIN END
3 to 4 LB. AVG. II!
A delightful roast, because it's selected to be lean and llavorfui-midwestern grain fed pork!
Whole Pork Loin • s11l. Center Cut Roast .s l 4l
Or the rib hair, if you prerer. Pork with more value than ever!
STUFFED PORK s12!. CHOPS
Lean , with seasoned dressing!
FUllll STYU
Spare Ribs ........... 89t
They'll love these, 'cause there's so much meaty goodness on them!
COITIR CUT
PORK LOIN sis~. CHOPS
So tender, so deliciou,..!
U.S.D.l CltOIC£
New York Strip ... s2 1!
~ef at its best ... naturally aged! (NEW YORK STEAK ... $2.99 lb.I ·
ClllTO CUT
GROUND s 12!. BEEF DTU lllll Chuck Steak.:~~ ..... 99~
Fresh! Chooee bulk or pot ties! Here's proof ... you can have El Rancho quality at· a budget price!
El Rancho Sausage • • . . • . 89'.. Boneless Beef Roast . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . st.69 .
Country 11tylc. ju~t like home made! En~liflh cut, bonl'.!d and rollt!d ... U.S.0 .A, Choice quality beef!
Spirited-Values in our
Liquor Dep 't.
BLENDED $869
WHISKEY
El ~ncho's half-gallon reduced SI .00
Vodka -,TIE .••• s2.99
Bottled !Or El Ranchu! .. fifth
Save 1.97 on the half.gallon. here!
Weibel Vermouth s1.39
• Bone dry -really! Quart bottle
,carafes ,..i Mao... • •• s2.69
\"in l{ose, Hur~und~·. Chablis -quart
Lancer's Rose •.• s39s
Fine dinner v.•ine rrom Portugal? 5th.
JACQUES BONET $199
CHAMPAGNE
Extra Ory. Pink. Cold Duck -5th
Price . .; in effect
'f'hur.~day through \Vedne.~day
()ctober 2.5 through Uctober 31
fJ}J('n daily 9 to 9
."iunda_v 10 to 7
No Roles to dealer.~:
, . AR€Ap1A: PASADENA: SOUTH PASADENA : HUNTINGTON BEACH : NEWPORT BEACH: 1721 NPwpo•I BIY<i '"~
Sunsel and Huntington Dr. (El Rancho Cenle1) 320 VJes t Colo1ado Blvd Fremont and Hunt1np,lon Dr. Warnrr and Alv.onqu1n (8oardw,1lk C1·11 \rr J ,''./l'J f 1\t!Jlult D1 (l.i•ttiluff V.lla~c Cenllrl
I ' .,
•
• I
•in
al
an
I'
of
be
N
• it.
• • fr
0
of • dr
r
ol
co
on
Iii
lo
:lh
..
Wfdl!Hdl1, OfitolMr 24, 1~73 DAILY PILOT 47
Caesar Salads Conquer Roam in' Appetite
By JOHNA BLINN pioyer, oome o1 the ro1 in llOOlll in Vietnam.
He parllaJlttly Um the
Japanese dllbel EtalDe likes
to prepare. He 11y1 that they., ..... Cllly 1ret1t eotlng,
but that their fat content Ls
very low.
\1;orrying about overeatlna,"
he aays. LAS eot.i~~ the crew, Tennenee-Ernie VEGAS -~y on! Ind I baa .,me re.Uy
1ingu Wayne Newlon bas t fam aesaions."
always bad phenomenal, ~ewton. met his wlfe,
success in show biz, but until atne, a former a Ir 11 n e
nceoUy1 he alSI) bad a wardesl, on • .commercial pbenometlal problem 0111 ol satgoo, where he
U Ul , d. hall s doing slxiwa for our n ·ay~ana
11You can juat •bout eat as much u you want without
Elaine pral1ed her
husband's diet. efforts. "I'm
ecstatic about the way he
looks! I wem on a t)llllpalhy <Ile! with him in the beginning,
~ he WU 00 the Stillman <ll'll fa ll prot<ln and water ).
ago, he wu lnvarlably
described as "the pudgy, pink·
faced linger with the big
voice."
At' 30, the new Wayne
Newl!lo la lOI pounds 1llmmer
and in· better voice than ever.
He attribules hh dieilng suc-
cesa to "a atring of Caesar
salads."
. But It's probably his odd
comblriaUon ot Impatience and
perseverance that turned the
trick.
"I tried all kinds of diets
and went to a lot of doctors.
I'm super-Impatient a n d ,
USDA CHOIC!!
!?!i,U£K STEAK
'
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FOODS
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Wayne Newton
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therefore, can'\. like that ·1os-
ing a pound • week tlOnllnSe I
And that's tbt 111ual -cb
o1 moot dodon. Cit 11 .,.. .......
"AltbolJib their method may
be healthier, I found th1t Dr.
Newton's salad diet f111aUy did
it . for me. What really ~ j)Olled w ... 1 just quit .. un1.
•"tnily, there la no gimmick
.....
ia1.ZI
' tfllnc to loolni "e!Cht. ll'I
like mOo1 lltYll>Jn1 In lilf -11'• 1lmp11 1 mattar ol finally
0.-klnl tip )'Ollr mind IA> do
, It. •
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"Othar dletl filled me,
-once f'd Iott th• tfeli!ht, I'd IO rl1bt back IA>
tie 11"" dd · e1t1n& hi bit• MILLO CllllP ll:~ ~:.::.ttened ma up all . . ILICID IACl>N • --"Once you've Jost t be
ftight, the challenge b IA>
keep It off."
Wayne lost the fint 40
pound! on a ··monotonous
routine of grapefnit, 1111 and
1teaks. He found the 11lad
mtlttilely more ..U.fJIDI.
"Now I have totally ch8n&ed
my eating habits. I eat OOCl!!l
1 day, around five in the
afternoon and tat what 1 want,
omJtt.ing sweetl.
"On my 11lad dJ1t, I bad a big plate or two of caeaar
1a1ad. That'• jult 1trat1bt
sreens with Vil')' llttl• ptoteln
oLher than a Uttl• e11t ' U11te
of grated chlfft, 1nchovle1!
a few crout.oni and ltmon-ol
dressing.
"I didn't takl vltamlnl at
the time, and I found tbe
ttlad gave me all the enerty
J needed. I'd have the 1alad
every day for six days. On
the seventh day, I'd eat
nothin'J. but protein -veal,
broil .. baUd ll1b, '°' casloQally t0me chicken."
Wajno btlleves that the
body ...... ....., ... IOCtlltomed
., eotlng ltQlbtDf.
"U you 1ta)' on one thina:
"" lcnl, INw•er, JCW' bod.ii gela so adj\lllod O> that, yOll'll
stop losln1 t'e1ght. I foond
having meat tnct a week
shocked my aystem, and
started up the whole chemical
reaction again.
"I'm sure If I were much
older," Wayne conllnued, "l
oouldn't have sustained myself
on tt>I• diet. But having a
little Youth on my side worked
tor •·" , 1 "-"11'1 ill-Ulll1 too, wltal
. ... ... hll don• for me ~lly. I'V. overcome ! 1 the tear that I'm golnlJ to -. Put dle wtl&ht back on. And ' 'lb• lilll-of lrl'llll to find
' ·<10~ that fll It no tonier
11 worry,
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ao '111mmln1, I used IA> !eel 1tfatned, buf no more.I t find
I no lona:tr eat at much, and
tbat'i 1 not her lnter .. tlng lllt 1'11111 CllMa ~ z.•
thlag f letmed. u ""' eat 10melhing tha(aatbflet your .._.VMl!la ,,_,_,...,.. Ill ta1te buds, you don't eat e:c:· _.,,.. •M001J..n. •
lyely."
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JONATHAN -·""'
APPLES I&
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ELAJNE NEWTON'S
TERIYAKI
2 pounds lean sirloin
"1 cup 90y sauce (or mirin)
Dash of sugar (or 'i'J teas.
poon honeyJ
l·lnch piece fre&h ginger
root, minced
FRUIT
COCKTAIL
IANOUET
DINNERS
...a':"' .....
GROUND BEEF
I am.all.clove garlic. preaed
J tab1!4JJ00fl salad oil, op-
tional
strips ln marinade 5 hours
{or ove.mlghl 1 ln refrigerator,
keeping tightly covered.
poulzr-ovC:1 ~un~ ~~~~t~ '
Cut beel into strips 1 inch
wide and 2 inches long.
Prepare marinade by com-
bining soy sauce (or marin),
sugar (or honey), ginger root,
garlic and oil. Place meat
String strips or betf on
metal (or bamboo) skewers:
reserve marinade for future
ust 1 store ln jar with UghWit·
ting lid ; use as glaz.e for roast
or for broiled seafood or
turning ooce, or witil meat
ia leader but rare. Tertyakl
is delicious with pl•ln ot
parsUed rice (add 1 table1P90tt
minced f.-..11 parsley IQ CGok·
ed rice}.
VOllSVAWE GROCERIES
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V• lillll'll• ~.:.· 101.118
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APPLITIMI
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VANCAMP
PORK•Bl!AHI
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ENRICHED BREAD
WHIA7 INllMICll •
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HEALTH& BEA Un
NEW/AIM
G!LTOOTHPAITI
LAMITWl'Aar.
IJatll Alll19't11
·-Stll ll'IClll'
DRISTAN
COLD TABLETS
.. 00\MJ l'KG.
.17
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JIJ Clltll SWNI ~~ .41
llyl' Aqlrll TDllll ':f.'.· .IZ
1 Alll\ough be does not read 10111 (-~noft ol mu1le, Wayno ,.Y,
• hi! hnd ' hall doing shows. 340"1 "Between takes, my banjo U
Adams Ave., at Brookhurst, Huntington Beach
Doheny Park Drive, Capistrano Beach
5922 Edinger }ve., a\ SP.ringdale, Huntington Beach
Laguna Hills ·Plaza, El Toro
21082 Beach Blvd., Huntittton Bed
17950 Magnolia. Fountain Yaney
l
..fl OAILY PILOT
'Meet 'n Trear This Halloween •. •
I
-Tricks Turn Menu Ma_-9 ic
Halloween cari be a run tim e
for adults as \\-'ell aJ children.
Whether you wanl to go the
full route with a co.atume par-
ty or just invite guests for
a bu rt et supper, a little 1nenu
magic is called for.
111.e tlick in this case is
a delicious Spanish slyle
paella -one that tastes as
though it took hours of
preparation and long slow
simmering, but which actually
is prepared in only 30 minutes.
Invite guests for arter-<lark
arrival and use candles and
lanterns of va rious sizes and
shapes for main Ughting. Sug·
gest guests wear costumes.
Provide inexpensive humorous
masks for the less ad-
venturesome.
CIVC_j)ut J.b_tLfor a limlR<:t·
time ac1vcnger hunt in th e
ltnmediale rrelghborhood and
then reassemble for prizes arid
dessert.
M a departure from the
usual cake, cookie. pie routine
!ierVe Apple Buttered Rum
Pudding.
llALF·HOUR PAELLA
1/1 cup eacb chopped onions
and celery
2 tilblespoons butter or
margarine
I cup uncookl'd rice
l teaspoon salt
~~ teaspoon sa((ron
Chicken broth
I can (8 ounces) mi nced
clams (drain; reserve liq-
uid)
J l, cups boned cooked
chicken (leave in large
pieces1
l cup peeled and deveincd
cooked shrimp
~ cup cooked green peas
Saute onio·ns and ce1ery ln
butler unti l tender but not
brown. Add rice. seasonings,
and enough chicken broth to
clam liquid to make 2 cups.
Bring to a boll.
Stir, reduce heat, cover, and
simmer 15 mll\utes -or until
rice Is tender. ~Ur i.n re--
maining ingredl(!nl~
Cook 5 minutes lftng~. Ad-
just seasonings, ir neceuary.
Ser\·e garnished with fresh
lomatoes, quartered. Makes 6
servings.
SNAPPY MEAT BALUi
_.. AND RICE
1 pOund lean ground beef
1 ~ cup finely cru s h e d
gingersnaps
I egg ~
J '·2 teaspoons garlic salt
·~ teaspoon pepper
\~ cup bottled barbecue
sauce
I cup uncooked rict
2 cups boiling beef broth
l teaspoon salt
Yi cup each chopped onions,
celery, and green pepper
' '· , . '
FOOD TAKES NO FUSS AFTER FINALE
Sandwich in a Supper
After the theater. a com-FRENCll ROLL l\tEDITER· bov.•I. Add r e maining in-
mittee meeting or a sporting RANEAN gr~ients except butter; mash
event -it's run to serve until well blended . Pile mix-
a late-night su pper. 2 packages (10 ounces ea.) lure into bottom halves or
brown & serve French rolls And it's especially nice v.·hcn ·
the food is ready to slide rolls Replace tops and arrange I can t7 ounces ) tuna. drain-11 r ·11·ned sh II bak from rcfr iger.'.lto r to oven ro on 01 -1 a ow -
vdthout fuss or fanfare. ed flaked ing pan. Brush ·with butter
French R o 11 s ~lediter-2 tomatoes. chopped generously and bake in a
rancan. for example, is a 12 cup chopped black olives prehea ted 350 degree oven for
br:ind new idea. I small onion. chopped 30 minu·tes or until tops a re
12 cup mi nced celerv. b d l A clever coo k nxes lhc rolls rown :'.In crus y. 1 teaspoon salt h and stores the1n in the Serve ot. cul into thick I I ICaSpoo n pepper 1· IJol f refrigerator unti l the group s ices or \\' e or a complete 1 ~ teaspoon oregano 1 arrives home. later that night. 1,~ cup melted butter or mea ·
Then she bakes the main These rolls may be stuffed rnargarinc h r course for just 30 minutes. a e <l d o ti m e a n d H a side dish seems filling. Split French roll s into halves refrigerated. Bake at last
crisp relishes might be added lengthwise. \Vith a sharp minute. after brushi ng with knife. scoop out center. leav-""ll •1 k 4 plus a lovely array of fruit "" er. "a es generous and cheeses. ing shell \?-inch thick. servings or 8 appetizer serv-
Because the hour is late Cru mble rcmo\•ed roll into ings.
and friends rear thal corfee/r--~~:'."~------ii;i,;;;o-------il I
\\'iii kee p them wide-eyed all
night. a .subtle white wine
v.ould be appror~r~;tc. I
I
R•1111iilNr
Whtn To•'r• Gro-ct rl•t
Wtr• Dttl.,..,.•d
WE STILL
DELIVER!
COAST
SUPER MARKET
W• Dell¥•! TH• Pwrtll•ttl w .. , •• , ~..,,, •• '911' ,.....,
673-3510
3347 E.COAST HWY.
CORONA DE L MA.R
USDA CHOICE
TOP SIRLOIN
$I'' rb.
~-M .,...1111111
USDA FREEI(.R ,BEEF -SPECIAL CUTS
Skiff ISc lb. Front Ile 1111.
l•tf Loin $1.29 lb. Hin~ 91c lb.
uso• c~, MARAN.ATHA MEAT CO.
0 111n1r Mui 1500 Adams A••·· Cost• M•s•
IAT HAll l Oll-•llT t o Clllt•MA TMSATII>
54ft.1196
Optn S1v1n 0 1y1 t 1.m. t'o 6 p,m.
Plll(!"S 0000 WIDHl!SOAl' fHllU WIDHllD•V •
t can (lSl/, ounces) pineap-
ple Udb1ts, drained
Combine beef, gingersnaps,
egg, seasoning, and barbecue
sauce. Mi1 well ; form into
12 balls about 1 ~ inches in
diameter. Brown ln a lightly
greased skillet.
Into a greased shallow 2 ~
quart •casserole stir rice.
broth, and salt. Arrange meat
balls over rice. Cover and
bake at 350 degrees for 35
minutes.
Add onions, celery, green
pepper, and pineapple.' Cover
and continue baking to
minutes kmg@r or until rice
is tender and liquid is absorb-
ed. ?i.lakes 6 servings.
I
and salt. Bring to a boil:
reduce beat and aim.mer » ·
minutes, aUr.ring ~· s.r1m.n1A11n.Jn'•~-~~
to rice mixture _and ' stq.Untu·
gelatin dlasolvtJ. Cool •intll ,
thickened but riot set. Fold
in rum and sour cream.
Spoon into lightly oiled in-
dlvk!ual .mokls. Chill until
firm. Unmold and spoon hot
apple topping over pudding.
fl.fakes 6 servings (3 cups pud-
ding ).
APPLE TOPPING
~'Ii to o/, cup brown sugar
2 teaspoons cornstarch
1• tea.spoon salt
'h leaSpoon cinnamon
1h. cup water. • _
I can (I pound, 4 ~) APPLE BUTl'ERED
~UM PUDDING . • . ple-sll~ 4pples .,. •
2 cup1 light cream or .half
and, half
1 cup cooked rice
'6 cup sugar
1h teaspoon salt
l tablespoon (I envofbpef
unnaVOred gelatin ·.:
1,~ cup watef • ~
2 tablesl>cions rum
I cup sour cream
Apple Topping
Combine cream, rice, sugar,
• . (
• •
1 tab~blllter-w---
margarine :·
2 tablespoons rum
Blend sugar, cornstarch,
iralt, cinnamoo, and water. A4<1 apples. Bring lo boil;
requce heat, and simmer· u;. Jo 20 mlnlites or \D\~11 a~es ·
are tender, 1tirir ing be·
caslonany.
Remove from heat.· Add but'
ter and z:um .. Serve hot ol/er
Cold pudding. Makes 2'h cups
· Would be appropriate.
' I '·
.MltLBROOK'. ·
' .
I
G•mwanrnwwwwto1
'
"TJ!ICK GUESTS WHd {
• ;
• • •
i (
-..
.,
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r
J 3 PILOT·AOVUTISER
•}~ ·~:-~$£ p.
.,. · bEU'GH1' "'' . _, . . 'I.
Finest atta in CplJege Pitk. St~ to all
acbools, yet qule.t. 'ecluded streel sfxlklzl&ly l~P'ci -"'lots or 'brick plantert and ter·
racea. From warm, inviting entry, step into lush
~ carpets. RICb panelling decor. Ctacltllna: fire.
place. Large bedrooma and family room. 2 batlu.
Ree.I Value at $38,400. call 546-23lS.
WORK OUT OF YOUR
UVE IN! ~ f ~ ~ .
Nice clea.n home on C-2.zorilng o.k. tor a bwlli1es1
and near 17th "Strttt, Costa friesa. I.Arge corner
lot. $33,750. For qulck look call 646-717L
KISS YOUR LANDLORD
• •~ • GOODBYE
And become one! 2 bedroom home plus an in-
come unit above large double prqe. l block
trom Newpor;t. Beach Yachting Janes. Great" buy
just reduced to-'64,950. 646-7171.
' . ,-: ' .
~SSUME 7112 °/o· LOAN •
CORO~· ~EL ~All : VIEW .
Old Sparilsh ~m. den: 1~4\"ln~~·
frunlly room on ver-s)acd lol ~ust 1feP1 from• th1!
beach \\•tth 1, fnbUlous ocean view. Spac·
lous aUthentlc Spli.Qish home wllh all or the
charm of Coronal del 'Mar . .Q.ll. noW lot .al)polnt-
rnent. 673-8550. · •
-
...... :. . 18 kli, 1181
•• T~e ~urrou)1di~g1 in which they are brought up are
• ifllpor;t:ent :._Let u1 show you how affordable -how
. i:onvenient life can be in a home of your own. Re-
member we ere the largest. locally owned Reel Es-
, ·· t,811.; firm with over I 00 profeuionels to help . you
every step of the way. Please drop by, we will be
happy to en1wer any of your questions.
'
' ' I "
'· { 'r
. ' 1 · µRGEST, BIWARD ROpM · :wa:r OF MINNESOTA
800 aQ. ft. at pure cnjoynlent. Plus ~ 3 bed·
room, 2 fireplace home -only $66,500.
:'Ta;ke ii. u~ and call ~7171; . •
. : -·~ STORY . DUf.LEX ,!
_ • OCE~~FRO.NJ. , ,
'F.antutlc oceanfront view duplex.,~
·f'Jewpar( Beach ~tlon. t.aviAb ~uded ·root. tOp 1undec'k. 7,000 sq. ft. of ~ -~Ole U"tiiag. 16 l'OQDlS -5 bathS lhd"rmueb more. -0wner will finance. See if! can
'546-1600.
GOLDILOCKS SPECIAL
This neat· nest ii jU1t oft Fountain Valley.
OJJtomlied interior featutet romantic re-
. -""""JighU~ .. This cozy• ~ ....... , 'Y.N.tn ·~ &hd sJeepl.ng areu for cot)Y.en-~ ·Jctice 'ahd comfort. ~tlnl--care '~she .. i'f9Urih l'Je)Gfble -terms and unbelievably
priced at $28,960. CUh in and call Ha.6767.
PO$Hl POSH!
MESA VERDE
POSH '2300 s9. ft. of 1heer elegante .
POSH Joei.tlon steps from Alesa., Verde
• Country Qub , · · .
.POSH pool, 1acuzzl. brick planters and
decJChig; buUt In BBQ '
POSH decor of lush carpets. tlra~, pa-
~rs. aPPOlntlnents. 2 tli'epla.ces
POSH convenience ot sprinklered )$nd&cap-
..ing, front enclosed patlo, hideaway 1e?Vice
yard. ' • PUSH 5'.6-2313 to 1ee what POSH IS!
· THREE IS A CROWD
in ihd'caie
0.Jt'-: l.ncom~! Large ,2~b1tdroom.
triplQ. -AU WI.th private pat&Os; ~ and
rent lft super CO.ta )fesa location.F-500.
Call 646-7171. . .~
.• WANT A !Al-GAIN?
This ls it! Wall< put 'mamcured t.awfll and
brick planters into ·nieely kept borne. 3
spacioUll'' bedroOms. Private Spanish-style
sunken fa.i;nflf room. One of today's best
bU)'B at~,900. To see, call 842-2535.
CATALINA VIEW
MESA VERDE, R'EDUCED
$5,000 '
Spacious 4 BR 2-story with huire master
bedroom suite, lll&nd kitchen with btttk· fut nook, large family room, buUt In bar,
wood burning fireplace, ronnaJ dln!ng
room, 3 full baths, tcrra.zo entry foyer,
oversize 2 car prage, unlimited 1torage.
Reduced to $64;900. can 546-2313. ·
NOW BUILDING YOUR DUPL!X
, IN CORONA DEL MAR
l '. ' ):::hooaJ' youl' own ;doct1:r! CreAt:. 3 iedroom . .. . ~ Uni~ ~fua a 2 bMroom uni!. Near park. Steps to
the beach. Trff llned streeL \Ve'll flnW1 ft to
)"Ola' Wte. call 673..aMO.
~~~
. )
GARDEM SHOWPLACE
Whis~ j:Jalins. Trim·, taUcnd f.lld care-
free grounds. Hu~. covered out-door en-
tertainmen\ CC11ter'. Spotless J.nterlor. Call·
fon1la. casual living in bright and airy sur-
roundings. JUllt like new. Only $39,000.00
so hurry! <All 963-6767.
FAMILY 'ixP.i:NDING7
You ca,u, tit thetn in here. 'l\vo stories. End
of cul-de-sac location. Well kept yard 4
big bedrooms -includln&: private muter
suite. Entert.alner"'s living room. Try to
mat.ch this two story beauty f0(•$38,900.
Be~ter hurry!~ •. •
POOL TIME
Relax in the 1parklln1 pool. Entertain in
pool-aide covered patio complete with fire-
place! 4-·spacious bedrooms. Lodltt'd on
qlliet 'cul-de-sac. Low down payment -or
take over 7%% FHA loan. Wlll seU quick-
ly af $34.900. C"a1rn6w """".' ~-2535.
CORONA DEL MAR
NEW CONDOMINIUM
A f"v steps b:> "China Cove" corner unJt -
plush shag carpetlni: -2 bedrooms. 2
baths -ample wardrobes and stora1e -
deluxe built-In kitchen pl1111 pantry -onJy
$61, 750. cau 673-8550.
TAX SHELTER
TAX SHELTER
TAX SHELTER
Remove the pain from tax time! Own th.ls
beach duplex v.1th white water view from
tie.loony. 100% deprecl&don schedule. Aak
··· for our computer projections for Increased
equity and net spendable. call 546-2313.
MIWON $$$ VIEW
Best view in Wk Harbor View HWs.. Thia
lovely home sits out on a point with a for-
ever 180° ocean and Catalina view. SHARP
4 bedroom, family .room, 3 baths, 3 car
garage, pool with automatic equipment -
everything for indoor and outdoor Uvlni at
its best! For more itltormation ca.II nO\v
-673-8550.
MESA VERDE: ON THE
HILL
Arri\'e ! Beautifully decorated throU£"hout
with new carpeting and custom draperies.
4 large bedrooms, 3 baths, Dressing room
c!OtJets. Enjoy fonnal dining -two fire-
places. Every luxury Including a ta.mUy
room with wet-bar. Library shelve11 built· tn. Lovely grounds -sprinkleml. of
course. To see, call 963-6767.
LA CUESTA TWO STORY
Check out lhia popular, hard-to-find "San fl.lig-
uel" n1odt'.!l. Spanish b1·lck exterior. Tall double
door entry. Formal dining. 4 lar1e bedrooms. 3
baths. Located ln·ne\\--er area nttr beach. Try
to match this for ,49,9®. Call today! 842-2535.
Vltdntsd~. Oetobfr 24, lit?.) DAILY PILOT ,,
NIT ·PICKER'S CHOICE
HUNTINGTON BEACH
?.love into thls J.i:nmaculat.e 4 bedroom home.
Choose beW.:·een the crackling fire and the cool
pool Rel&.,1.: on the oiit&or deck. Peof)l~-&izel:I
for comfbrt plus convenlenct:-Fantaatle terma.
Under $39.000. O\VNER WlIL H~ FINANCE.
Don't Deley
114 UNITS
2°/o VACANCY , ,.
20 Building garden complex. 2 swtfumini;
µools .. cabana. 7 ac1:e grounds. Gorgeous
landscaplttg. Gross $19,500 per month .
01\•nCL' liquidating. Hurry -Call 546-1600.
RATEP' /,'G"
For a GREAT buy 3 Brs. East Side, Costa
i\tesa $23,000. call now 646-7171.
5 GIANT BED~dOMS
IArg"t l=~~~e ~~~ .. CUP tom pool. Bird avial'y. ~la.ssive wood ~k
ing. Park l_!k;P.unds.
Formal l!Wig room features large arched
Spanlah firepl&ce. Formal dining. Brf&:ht
pool vlev.· kitchen. 27 x 13 master bedroon1
1\·lth private patio, dressing area. sunken
bath.
Too many more features to list. At $64.900
It'!! a steal. can now to experience this
dream-come-true. 847-6010 .
NO QUALIFYING
ASSUME V.A.
Very little $ Investment. Anyone can as-
sume. Low monthlY payment. Avoid to-
day's interest rate, Cozy family home. Nice
nefghborhood. Low fUll price only $3P.SOO.
Act quickly -call to see now. 847-6010.
BUILD YOUR OWN HOME
NEAR THE BEACH
One of very few vacant lots nellr the beach
In Newport Beach. R·l in Newport Shores
for $27.500-good tenns. \Vlth $7,500 dO\\'n,
owner ma.y finance. 673-8550.
VETS-NO DOWN
FIXER:._$31, 900
Bring no money-just mop and broon1. Fix
it up. Save thousands! Huge Ji ving room.
Giant family room. Four klngsize bed-
rooms. A real family-size home through.
out. LO\V LOW LO\V piiced at $31,900.
Better hurry on this one! Call right no1v.
ASSUMABLE 6°/o VA-
INCLUDES OCEAN
&autifully manicured home. Carefree compact
plan providci privacy JIOCkels and brcalltlrij::
roo1n. All built-in.i, including refrigerator. Cover-
('() J)tltlo overlooking \l'l'll groo1ned grouncb.
<m·ner's pride sho"·s. Under SS0.000. Call
963-6761.
A TOUCH OF COUNTRY
Yet vi:ry close in -l\'e,,·port big trees, lari;e
yards. Loads of room in thi:S"'S bedroom home.
Raile chickens &. have freflh eggs. $31,950. ~
7171...
I
'
GARDEN GOODY
Ideal for today's famil)': not too big or small. A
!I bedroom r,lan designed for 1ninlmum ca.re but
gracloUll liv ng. 1-·catures include a custom sto~ nrepla~ and separate living room. ·spotless but
decorated Inside and out. Lovely landsoa.plng
Nghll&hts the large lot. ?.tore than just a 1ood
buy In the upper 30's. Ca.II 963-6767.
PELUXE SPANISH TOWNHOUSE
ASSUME 71/2°/o LOAN
with total payment $204 mo. No quaJi(ylni:.
Spanish tile roof. Garden enlrf"'·ay. Step down
lo distinctive livin)!' room \\'ith beam + brick
f ireplace. Formal dining. Garden kitchen views
private manicured. patio IU'i!&. Huge master bed-
room with giant mirrored wardrobe. + balcon)'
\•lewing lush association area. l\lust see ttrls to-
day. Call 847-6010. : • r----------.:
FORCED SALE-81/2°/o LOAN·
NEW POOL-NEW PAINT
SELLER TRA.NSFERRED -Forced to M.'ll! New
$6.000 pool -loads of derkint:! Ne1v Jlfllnt in le
out! S11Npin!-( curved drive11·ay. Covrrl'<l entry. 847-6010. ~::;;;;,i Giant livin~ roo1n over\ooki~ pool. Cozy fonnlll
.41 flreplat.'<'. Hu gP kllch<'ll -Joi~ of f'•lpboards,
Queen !lizf' hedroon1s. \Valk to schools and shov-
1ihu,:. ,\IUST s~;U.! T:ik" advantal?f'. NO QUALJ-
F\li\"G to n~s•11ne v .,\. loan. run 11ricc just
538.500. Call no,,. -S.l'i'-6010.
PRIVATE MANSION
3 HUGE POOLS
$34,900
S1veeping curved drive leads to private man!llOn.
B1't't'zeway entry. Ovt'.!1·slie li\'ing roon1. Fa1nily
stze bedroonu. i\lanlcured grounds. 3 1<1>arkllng
111·immlng pools. Larg(' ll!SOC.latlon 111aintalnrd
Green BelL NOT A CONDO. Value prlct'd R.t '
$34,900. As1umable loan. Hu rry -call 847-6010.
8°/o INTEREST
AND
OCEAN VIEW!
An unlH·atnli!e: ton1binntio11 ln today's merk(!t.
0\.\'nf'r ,,·jlJ ronsfd"r :t year inlt'l'in1 financing-at
8·: to quolUINI buyrr. Lois of v.'OOd and glasl
in 1hl!1 s1Ntclou11 fttrnily home tn C11rona del Alar.
Exclush·,, "Hh The He-al Estateor11. 073·8550.
THE REA.I.. EST.ATERS
' Nt:WPORT BEACH
1700 Newport llM.
'46-7171
C:OSTA IUESA
Z7tO H_._ llM. 546.nn
OPEN'TIL9
HUNTINGTON BEACH
17tJI _., lhd.
M2-21H
' '
21030 .... 1111 ....
'62-1151 6014 Worner A••·
147-6010
' . ... ~ ' . .
CORONA Of.I. ~IAll
332 Mortutrltt
673-1550
11\V•:STUt::'liTS
2790 Horbor Bl't'd., Suitt 201
Costa Mna 546· 1600
• I
;, ' .. )j4 PILOf·ADIJf.R fl$ER Wtd~, Oclobff 24, llJ7l l r.,_iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~~
I
Wtdi..sUr. OUobtt 2',~1~m:;j;;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiOAliiiiiLYiiiiiPiilLOiiTiiiii~1
' ' The Bl1gest Marketplace on the· Or111p Coast l -..... "()() .,,.
~· ••••••. 9S0 ·990
loatl & MoriM ~ 900 . 9W
t ....... it •••••••. 700 . 799 DAILY PILOT CLASSIFIED ADS Pltnonols. • •••••••• S2S • Sf9 • ,., and ~. • ••• 'l50 .'199
~ &taa. ~ • • • • 150 • t99
' ...,...,. -...••.•.•• D>· 499 ~inontW .••••.••. "200 ·299
ttoiMS few Sole • • ' • • • 100 • 124
Loil ' f«nlll . • • ' ---"° . 5 74
N..d1oodiM •. , .... IOO • M9
You Can Sell It, Find It ,
Trade It With a Want Ad ( 642-5678.] One Cal I Service
Fast Credit Approval
Schook ond lmrrudion , , , Sl.5 • S99
sm:..... ood .......... 600• "'
_ ....
~--------------~~~----ERRORS. Advortl .. rs 1hollld chock their
:~ •ds d•lly & Nport errors lmmedi•tely. The
DAILY PILOT •11ume1 ll•blllty for the flrtt
Incorrect ln1ertktn only.
i' ASSUME 7°/o LOAN
· LARGE 2·STORY 4 Bedroom home. Complete
v.·lth step-down living rooin, forn1al dining,
closed in patio room & 3-car garage. Great
~ cul-de-sac locatioii, jus~ steps to community
pool & greenbelt.
MESA VERDE FIXER-UPPER
SAVE$$$-Do your own cleaning, decorating
&:: minor repairs on this 3 BR, 2 BA. home.
1 •Large added family room, perfect for pool
'· . table, teenagers, etc. Vacant, neglected &:
: ready for your inspection. Call us for further I' deta11s.
:' ~ ·.~ HERITAGE
RlALTORS
544-5880
Open Eves.
Generel .•~r•I
,,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;:;;;:;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;:;;;:;:;;;;;;;
****** * TAYLOR CO. *
SPECTACULAR OCEAN VIEW~119,500
Breathtaking! One story residence on Spy.
glass Hill. Consists of 4 generous size bed-
rooms, family rm, formal dining rm & 21h
baths. Lovely carpeting, tile roof & 3-car
garage. Fabulous area of all new homes.
15 POINT SUR DR . OPEN DAILY 1·5 :30
'10ur 21th Year"
WESLEY N. TAYLOR ·co., Realtors
2111 San Joaquin Hills Road
''Overlooking Big C•nyon Country Club"
NEWPORT CENTER •• N.B. 644-4910
General Gener•I
PRESTIGE WATERFRONT HOMES
CORONA HLDS.
Thc1\"' is a pem1ant>n! Ot.'t'M
& Panyon view fron1 !his
lovely ~plit levcl 2 bdnn.
,t, dining rm. hon1e .
PLUS a lla.1.--helor uni!. Prop-
e-rty mned R·2, room for
expani;:ion. $86,:)(1(1.
PLEASE CALL
675,3000
fljll \\ ,\ 111 : \I'll
Ille.II.I\' 1\1'.
! ) • . > I ' I " '
~·
AND ASSOCIATES REALTORS
644-7270
HARBOR VIEW HOME
Immaculate enlarged Monaco model. Deccr
rator dral,>eS, shag carpeting. By_ enlarging,
we mean 1t now has 3 BEDROOMS, 2 baths,
family room, den, & formal dinipg toolli,
cozy fireplace, modem builtin kitchen, pl'OJ'
fessional, easy-maintained landscaping-All
for $74,500.
DELUXE DUPLEX
• :•
I I
IN MESA VERDE-There are several im·
maculate family homes available in pride
oi ownership neighborhoods in this uniq~e
country~b community. Golfing a chip
shot away, scb_ools a bike ride from borne,
parks just around the comer and a library
1n the middJe. Mesa Verde has it and Unique
Homes (6:irme~!Y Mesa Verde "Realty} is Jt !
Listings from '4(),000 to $198,000. ·
I UNIQUE HOMES Rultors, 544-5990
2850' Meu Verde Or., Cost• MeN One of the best floor plans in CORONA DEL l4Aft. Front Unit is 2-story with sunken llv-
in~ room, beamed ceilin~s. conversation Gener•I Gentr•I
brick fireplace, spacious dining area, built-1;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;1
15 ROOM in kitchen, 4 Bearooms,. 211a llaths. Back MESA VERDE NORTH unit also has 4 Bedrooms & is 2-story with
Linda Isle Waterfront M,lNSION builtin kitchen & dining area. This duplex DOLLHOUSE 3 Bedroom, 2 Bath, fireplace,
Lovely 4 bdrm.. 4" ba. home w1'th swi'm· EXCLUSIVE "-•-·-1 is close to all shopping. An excellent invest-huge family room/country kitchen comblna·
n: &ck nny. i:,n,.:1--.::u-~"::.'..i.~'. ment at "1110,000. lion. Itf'new section. See this one for sure! ming pool, pier & slip, panoramic vie\V of U<> """"" U'<U I'""'" "'
main channel. Lge . family rm. w/space {or like grounds swroun<f hUi<' Asking $89,900. CALL 540-1151
2 story L""Olonial. 5 bedroom!! CORONA DEL MAR DUPLEX billiards & family dining. Waterfront formal including v;ew m .. ,,., ~;r, Corner lot. 2 Bedrooms, beamed ceilinged !iOVERNMENT REPOSSESSION
dining & living rq;i . $290 ·~-F!~~~ ~tn~~ cu~ie with cozy fireplace, new carl?ets. & 29,500 -3 Bedroom, large double garage,
For Complete Information quet formal dining. 30· paint. Remodeled 1 Bedroom rear umt with hardwood fl oors + pool, near Newport Back _,· --*-JA!,BOA BAY PROPERflE$ * . . ·----·------
OCEANFRONT NEWPORT l!EIGttTS On-All ffOl!iis & loTr,PliiW-011:: --t-,;,,mtr:r"""""'."'2'M'nhiI>"' ~ulltim'ean·J1nlfstl~<ml Wet slfeSSed--ilay;-f'anwtic-value-='1>ids-close-somr.-eall-
BILL liRUNDY, REALTOR =• ~ ::;n,;...-:;; garage. A good buy at $77,500. us for~ulldetalls. . New delu xe triplex. 4 3 BR., l~vely Ige. liv.
, Car parking. Will trade nn. w/din. area. Bit·
'· ·for oceanfront home or in kitch. Lge. back·
'. ' -' $225 000 675-7060 yard. Dbl. 11.ar. Deco-
:" · · ' · • rator's dreal!l. $47,500
642-7491.
HERE IT IS
341 &.yslde Dr., Suite l, N.B. 675-6161 ~~i~'Z-1$57~j
!"""""l""'""""""""""""~"""~""""""""""""' I 64.'HIJ03. Gener•I G,ner•I
10111\I I 01\0\ '. REA, 'VR•
BIG HOME
NEEDS FAMILY
NOT EMPTY,
JUST VACANT
OUTSTANDING
BLUFFS CONDOMINIUM Enclosed patio
for entertaining under the stars. 2-storr.1 3
Bedrooms, 2.lh Baths, large homey builtin
kitchen,_ brick fireplace, new c~ets &
drapes. How is this for an outstanding value
ior $57,500!
• · • HERITAGE . . REALTORS
.540-llSI
Open Eves.
1 ~Gt;.;.:.;no~r~•~I~~~~--°"""'~-~~~~~~-
CUTIE PWS LUXURY TOWNHOME • .''3\.!a Lots in Newport ~~ 1,'Beach. plus 13 units, '.t bile. to be a ch.
,. ·$150,000. See them
'' i now !! 6~742.0.
OPEN HOUSE
Sat/Sun. 214 34th St.,
N.B. Furn. duP.lex, 'la
blk. to beach. Lower
unit bas irplc. & bltns.
$76,000. 550-8800
Ir you appreciare top grade
custom construction, ex·
tremcly ftexible noor plan,
4lOI HJ. tr. of Nbow roon1.
c-ustom swin1n1in~ pool. for-
n1nl dining, panornmic ocean
Vi<'\\', privalr acceS3 to
beeches. and ix>low market
terms voith only ~<;:, do'o\•n.
because this lovely home's
just been finished. It's all Z299 Harbor Btvd. This v.;ry Ct.rte two bedrool11
new&: sparkling. New green [iiiiiiiiiiiiO"""'""""'"'"iiii"'JWHO COULD ASK FOR ANYTHING MORE? home, ~at . ~1 the best
shag carpeting in an roo~s-* 59'x2f0# LOT * Loca~ed in CORONA DE. L MAR on .a lovely TEN~~~, schxita,A <1·-hasR.,ro.Jot
AT THE BEACH
~. one story lownhome
with excellent location •
wttlrl.a totall.,y planned COfll•
munlly J1.11t 1000 yds from
be a c.h . Prenlgfous Hun-
tington ScacliU portion of
Huntington Beach. Pt1any
CW1tom utras, cathedral
ceilings, Bennuda 1hutten
3 huge bl'drooms with t } d t t R t h f " .. _ _,, mntchlng bllths \\'hite bric k 1 c-1 ZONE ree· ine s ree . us IC c arm in root where perhapa hvo new
' · , * BALBOA BAY PROPERTIES *
4 OFF ICES TO SERVE YOU
flreplaC('. La.ixr back. yard. $32,500 E-Z TERMS house, 2 Bedrooms, builtin kitchen, carpets uniL"'l oou:td be added • large
Anyone can assume this VA & drapes, open beam ceiling, brick fireplace. 1rees ~ slruba . onty
ANO
l!!""'""!!""""'""'""'""'""''l!"""'"'l'""'""'""'""'""'"ln.:-i;h•c 4. 5, 6 or 1 brdrom11s
loan with total payment of * Cmona de\ t..iar DUPLEX New spacious income unit has 3· Bedrooms $39,0C.O. Call 67'>7715.
$230 per/mo. Seller \\111 -$68,500 2 Baths, cozy fireplace. Located close to ev:
Gener•I Gener•I CALL &W-7211
$155,IMll FEE
help finance. Priced at h" $28,500. Call * 4 Bedroom home /huge eryt mg. $95,500. '
master BRJ + family roon\
+ den, 3 baths, many ex-QUAINT CHARM TRIPLEX DANDY DUPLEXES
[ ' ' ' 2 Bedroom units nn la.r11e tras. Quiet street. $58,mo CORONA DEL MAR deluxe duplex. Charm-, , RXE1l '°"· 111% 00~· 0 '''' Walker & lee :;Jn NIG[L
GAIL[Y f;,
ASSUCIATES I "-"uge 3 BR. 2 BA units. Bl's! $36,500 111.1-l llTAlf * c-2 Property • Newport ~ntal Area. 'Valk to school.~. BEACH DUPLEX Blvd. wiUJ 30' x 30' building.
/ N'lops '= churches. Live in LlkE~NEW I ~ $36,IXXI.
'·· •one ,almost re!11: !~-Hurry, l Bedroom .l 2 Bedroom ABANDONED I I I ASSUME r wont last W .950. -Submll units, t block to the beach. , • • • 70;0 LOAN · j Roy McCardle Re•ltor
_bn exchange_ CaJI 645-8400. c 0 m plete\y redecorated. NC\\·.ly derornted .1 BR, 2 BA Sha.,, 'l ........ ,,., ''• ''"'''' I8lD Newport Blvd., c.r.f.
ing new upper unit has open beam ceilings,
2 Bedrooms with oversized master suite pf us
~ew carpets &: wallpaper. Front house has
)ust been remodeled with fresh paint inside
&: ~ut. New c~ets & wallpaper, paneled
J1VIng room with warm. fireplace, 3 Bed-
rooms, close to-.a.11 shopping & you can walk
to the beach. A real charmer for $119,500.
P , .1 N ts dra ior· delight. Shag cp1s, over--"''" '""'. 541-mt ; J'O!IWSEl!yt«i 'fPU/0"01719 C!W carpe • pea. ,(} ~izf'rl gar O'll IA-I'll:<'~ lot. honie in llel!.ut . r1,1int>. EIC'C. ' · J V. E. flcftranl & C.0.1 do'.1-n. $76,500 Etuier 0\\"11('1' asklnx $39.500. hit-ins, 1v1Th di."hwY!r .. F.A.1 ;:;;;;;;;;:j
· ..., .,_ -~ Cllil 6-15-8400 heat, ("Ul"P .. rlrapcs & shut. I' -~ · .._ ___ ...,.. &tl-lm · tcrs. 1.g.~. <'XLo;IJng V.A. loan WANT TO SEE BLUFFS CONDOMINIUM Be~utiful corner lot with large wrap-around
patio for your entertaining pleasure. In the
new North Bluffs section. This 3 Bed.room,
2'h: Bath condo has decorator ceramic tile in
t~e entry, up_ graded shag carpeting, cozy
fireplace, eating area in the builtin kitchen
plus a formal dining room. Let us show it to
you. 874.900.
.. : , HARBOR view 170ntu97 Orauge AVt'., C.i\1. l c:ffNnL CM be-a.~nll'd. Offered for OUR BEST? I Sll500. .
MONACO ~-MORGAN REAL TY Don"t pass up 'lhls gorgCOL1s
. _' Se-au1itully up-fmrled 2 brd· I 21 67~2 675-6459 3 Bedroom MESA VERDE I·-,ioon1 & convt'rtible ilf>n. home! Jt1s very Jargt' & l Cai'dm kitchen to brick General Gener11I I spacious Y1"ith a HUGE FAr-.1.
' patio. Large master suilc Ir. TLY ROOM PLUS FORMAL
' forn1al dining roon1. Prkt.'<l ' DINING AREA. Big master
~ POI' quick sale. NOl lease-bedn:>on1 suite "'.11th double
• hokl. $62.950. PRIME OCEAN VIEW sinks. \\•alk-in close! &: a . . : :. e. F. Colesworthy PROPERTIES ~·hl atrium. Dow" ..,.. FOREST E. OLSON -
1'
FOR SALE ment of only S'1500 needed. Realtor• 640-0020 Prit'(.'(\ now at S4'1,900. 644-7270 HY :.-.!ATE 0~· CALIF. 1 The fu test draw in the \Yest ASk ff)r !\fr. "'1•s-l
, , .a Dally Pilot ClaMifiai 12131 620-37!1! . .. . .,,.,..,,. I !!!""'""'!!!!!!!""'!!!!!!!'""""'
' Gener .. 1 General
I I
CHARMING IRVINE TERRACE
\1acant and.ready for occupancy. 1418 San-
tanella. 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, top condition.
Lease for $500 per n1onth "''ith option to buy
at $74,500.
NEW AWARD WINNING CONDOS
j
Choice of models, location. decor. Near
• Tennis courts. r.001. 1~:xccllcnt. terms. trade.
lease/option. Ne,,·port Beach location. F'or
cxa1nplc, J bedroon1 , $72.500.
EMERALD BAY
J\-lagn ificent \Vhite 'vater vie\\'! Situated on
the ocean side on one of the largest lots in
the Bay and just steps to the beach. 3 bed·
rooms, den, dining room. heated pool.
$259,500.
SPACE -VIEW -COMFORT
Beautiful green belt v iews lrom this spa·
cious 5 bedroom Harbor View home "''ilh
large Jiving room and fireplace, Wf:t bar.
Located near con1munity pool. $79.900.
SUPER FAMILY HOME
'NC
COLLEGE PARK-$42,000
PRESTIGIOUS AREA of fine homes. Close
to schools and shopping. 3 Bedrooms ;nclud-
in g master suite with private bath. 2 bed·
room c hildren's · ·ge living room
\vith 2nd firepli; SOLD 1s kitchen. Step
do\\·n family roo1 md wall of glass
overlooking private gardens. patio and
sparkling pool. This one won't last. BET·
TER HURRY' Call 64!>-0303.
15 ROOMS
EXCLUSIVE private street in presti gious
back bay estate area. Tov.1ering trees and
winding brick pathv.1ay leading to 1nagnifi-
cent 2 story colonial 5 bedroo1ns including
\liew m aster su.i le \Yith dressing roo1n , and
separate guest facility with 3rd bath. Large
livi.ng room · with floor to ceiling fireplace.
Elegant formal dining, 30' country kitchen
and breakfast room. 22' rumpus roorn. Fam-
ily room overlooking secluded park-like
grounds and 2 patios. Under $60,000. BET·
TER HURRY! Cal l 645--0303.
TENNIS COURT ESTATE
JCa,., co:Ts .
~WALLAC E
REALTORS _.,,5,..41 .... 4!41-
( 0pen Evenings}
Send for your frff
Homes for Living
magazine of Newport
Beech .. re• properties
with pictures & prlcts.
Corona del M.r "'"!!!!!!!!"!'~~~!!!!!!!...,[ 2828 E. Coast Hlghwoy
PALERMO l ~G~on~.~,.~1"""""""""""""""Gon!"'~.,~.~i"""""""""~I
Is The Name!! 1:;;;Piii1P.ii!iiiim
Top value Is the gan1e! Caul• g COMM'L LL, qui(·k uboul this extra
sharp. highly upgraded ho1ne
in deairable '"Harbor Vie\\' RENTALS Homes." 4 BR, 2~ BA, family room. formal dinin'!",
exceptional red'.1-ood deck. $59 500 Only ~~ bll)Ck from club-,
llOllllf' 11 nd ll'"IOI.
ONLY $81,100 FEE
Sho11 Escrow lk~lrl"d
~lut l)o-.·~· . H"""l Tl'rn1s
644-7211
~ j ~
OWNER TRANSFER !
VERY ANXIOUS!
Beautiful 5 BR, 4 BA pool
home. S upr eme l y oon-
&tructed and decoraled for elegant living. C ho I c e
Newport loc:Gtlon. Pr l c e
reduced to $135,000.
Wt • Zone C-2. 50' x 246' wl tl1
appn1·.in1a1 ely 4500 sq. ft.
or builclinl:". P1'r>senl inromc
i~ lo"' af $.'"i2J 1icr n10. \\'ho"s
lin;t ~
Newport
ot
' . lonytlmo)
-------.
WHAT IS?
SHOULD A
HUSBAND TELL
HIS WIFE
THE
SCHOOL BELLS
are just a block n1~1ay trom
this super sfuu·p 4 hdrn1
hon1c \\•l1h lo!s of ruom for
fh{' kids. I luge pool and
l{onie rooin al!!O. Nice car-
pets & drapes thruout. Obie
garage detached. Grtat kit·
chen aN!n. MO!it! Pt1~ to
sell In C<wta t.fcu. for
$26,SOO • all tenn1. Call ll45-"9L
Walker&Lee ···~ ,,,.._,,
Open eves.
645---7221, Eves ~ A Coronn del Afar rtupl •x * OCEANFRONT * til3 \VESTCu~·r DR .. N.B. wt!h 3 BR 2 BA owners u.iit DUPLEX
Omtu and $2'l5 rental wfrh over an
...::-, I and custom wood bu.rplng
fireplace. 2 BR, 2 BA &
lavhh livin&:/dining area,
u well Ill large kitchen
wllh Us own dlnlng space.
Enclosed garden entry A
2 car gar. All eJi;ter\dr
malnt. provided. Com·
-munity features include full
range of rec tacllllles blCldg
severzll prtv pool attu.
ThJ1 home won't last long!
Located in Bee.cbwalk, off
Goldenwe1t. Only S40.~
'l:>onald M. B1rd and AStoe.
$i.les A&ettt 'll.4:530-6557
NEW USTIN!i
SIX MONTHS NEW
Beautiful -Back B a y
S98.llish-type h o rn e . 3
over!lized bdnn1, 2 baths.
1epara1e lMng room plua
dln!ng a.ree.. de ta ch e d
1arage, heavy lhake root.
Roorn tor boat and trailer.
$54,500 . e CAbL ANYTIME e
... 3921 or Eve. 6t6-4543
Lachenmyer'.
Rc,1ltor
Neert n "Pad"'? Pl:.ce an ad!
Gener•I
' $26,-.i 'bclrm1 & Don
No down G.I., low down all
others on thla lmmac:ulate
3 bdnn, Jovel¥ prder.-llke
settir11. Covered ~tio. Plc-ture wi~. 5«)"1720.
TARBELL, Rultoro
Fat Protl.t ta il.ttained When
)'OU eell through result-get.
ting Daily Pilot Clasalfied
Ads. 6t2-5678
Gener•I
MACNAB
IRVINE
HERE I AM •••
your private world-I'm delightfully dif·
fcrent w /125' of Bayfront-moor your lg.
Power boat at my door-tntertain w/prhfe
m 3000 sq. ft. of charm. 3BR's, 3 bath-are
professionally decorated. See all my amen-
ities. $163,500. Bob Owens 642-8235. (Q49)
CAMEO SHORES
l\1agnilicent panoramic ocean view. Cus·
tom 4-B:R, 3 bath + den. Immediate occu·
pancy. iu9,500. Jack Gusler 1142-8235. tQ50)
BLUFFS BEAUTY
Lovely Trina Model -3 BR, 2\.!a bath -
on quiet greenbelt. Professionally decorat-
ed. Will con1Ider lease/option. Bob Owens
64U2M. (Q22)
EXCITING 2·STORY ENTRY
Dramatic 4 BR/FR + DR. Game room.
MaS1lve bl'ick -fireplace. Garden palio.
View. $129,500 Fee. Jane Frazee 642-8235.
(QS6 )
' ·'
Dover Shores 6 bcdrc.xllll residcn(.'e "'ilh
everything lr>r gracious living. l•"or1nal din-
ing room. la rge f<ln1i ly roo1n . i.:-rcat kitchen
with breakfa!t roon1. Large yard . $159,500.
ROLLING GREEN lawns and historic trees
on ~ acre grounds. Picturesque main home.
Fonnal entry to old wo rld charm.and archi-
tecture. Master suite with sitting room a nd
5th bath. Den '"ith rugged bean1s. tvlaid's
quarters. 2.1' TAVERN KITCl·IEN. Ba nquet
forrnal dining. Dance pavilion overlooking
:t guest cottages and sparkling pool. Room
for tennis court. \VON 'T LAST. Call 645-0303.
11etr ot gt'811L llu1t you never New · 3 BR., 2 b11. to.eh II/' hll.V<' to n1nw., Give up~ Tt'c unt (, ,~nken oonverMtton '''21 11t'1'Q.~~ f1•on1 11 prtl'k (lcl '••m pl! w /frplc. UPIX'I" ha.loony; ~ tu kt' 1·a1~ r'lr tlii-lr nwn l11wn). lo\1tt Pl\00. Subtl'lTafl('ln
~ I I ONLY $89,500 ~arag• "'"'""'""'""" 4 , -.==-==_,,,,.-,,-CAL ~ t1rs. St~.000.
SOUTH OF HIGHWAY
Outstanding duplex In "Old Corona del
Mar," Real value at $84,450. Lois Miller
642·8235. (Q34)
' ' TURTLEROCK CONDOMINIUM-$52,400
PRIVATE GATEO COMMUNITY
Bayshores home located close to private
beach. Move-in condition. Nelv custom pat-
io, landscaping. 3 bedrooms. $72,500.
WATER FRONT DUPLEX
MESA VERDE
EVER STOLEN A L 644-7211 a.u, 6T.h166:l "'8·1""'10 E.,...
T~:.::,i'~;~7~;."'Z~: '1Mln
ln11; $.'1:1.9j() try ''Ot1r t>\\n ~-=~-;;;;;;· ;-;··;-;;1 price. Owner says lfCll! Call ii
""'' Cl.r)l<t. R •' 110" A Sl'ECIAL fW5...IKJ80 £open evenlngt). E
Linda Isle Fo~e,~~•AL
associated
BROKERS-A EAL TORS
l0l5 W BolbQo 6}J.)661
WALK TO THI!
IAY-$69,500
l~t resale! ·~ Plan -3BR surrounding
alnllQ'I '-p~lllle location on park. Select
cpt,, Ule & .iipJlllance color. Martha Mac·
na b 642-8235. tQ17)
LIVE IN THE SUNSHINE
of lemon yellow in a setUng o! lava rock
' & •late overlooking the blue PacUlo. 3BR'a
& FR, '73,500. Martha Macnab 142-823t,
(Q43) . '
2 story Spanish Villa with 2 bedroom rental
unlt. Reduced price $239,500. 313 E . Bay.
front.
~tajestic giant 2 story on prestigious CLUB-
1-IOUSE RD. 4 bedrooms including view
mastet suite with fireplace, separate gues t
facility with Srd bath, and mafds quarters.
Banquet formal dining, Gourmet kitchen.
!luge family room. Entertainers ratio and
secluded rear grounds. $59,900. Cal 645-0303. By Ownor/Bulldor P EOPLE You can't beet thll fll'lfl value
In excluilve rt>Aldentlt.I areA
enjo)'fd by ICl'ffn st•n alld
en t erta lntr1 , Three
bedroom, two batt1' and t.C-
ceu to privet• beech. Appt.
only, 64&--ml Open eves .
204.1 \\"!!Stcllft Or.
--~ =-....... ---
i··
t •' I '
.....--
Coldwell, Banker
~ 644-1766
216l s .. n Joaquin Hiiis Rd., N.8 .
FOREST E. OLSON
INC
REALTORS
2299 HARBOR BLVD 64s.-0303
$150,000 2 Bedroom, 111.mUy & pool. £)(~11ent Tcnns C1fAR..\I . QUALl'h' I EX·
?!lay leue option TR.AS. So. ot 11th, otf
"T.l-7m + 67J,jjM lrvinr, N~rt Hlfh An!B.
t~Acre n<'ar II u 11 1InKt 0 n Dl"iv1· hy 4i4 '0!:1e IUid call
1111roour. Slfi.!XXl LU fo1· AllJ)!)in1111em ,
~;:~:\.:; !,.;:~ ~~:2¥· F-0~•11_:M
place an 11.d ln the t..JJyJ ~~~ra!l!ll!•,-!11~~; l•uot \Y11n1 Aris! Call nawl!..,,, Walker&Lee llllll •• ,.,,
----------vp-
[ lrvlne 1-b-.. , ..... ", ... ,.., I
IOI Dowlf' 0.IYe 141•t111
I"' Me~r "'•l200
~ ... oh, c.11rwnlt t2tU
~
"
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SI
\Vhn
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boi
and
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m
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CUI
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Vac
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Agl
2
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'" bu
m
67:i
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ol
0
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T
DAI LY PILOT ,.
Honeymoon
Cottage
R•tlrement Vlll•
or
Singles Dreemhouq
\Vhatevtt your rtag:e l.n Ille
thh hoo1 • <.-ould be ldeeJ.
2 .roomy bedroo11111. 5Ullny brirht kllcile.n 11.ntl living
room. lnrgf' g&l:'i('tl aT'C'a
•nri quiet, I0\1· rraJfir: l!frcet,
walking dii'llance io 11 t.'Offi·
mWl!ty paivate beac:h.
Only $56,500
-7211
/.Jn NIGEL
uAILl Y ~
ASSIJ[IAfES
MAGNIFICENT
sm1NG!
Llke a l'IU'c jl'\\'el . 2 ac1ies
on the hill , panoran1k· Back
Ba,y vie\\·. Exquisite 5 &-d·
room homt', stables &. pr11.i·
doek large !!\\ in1n1ing pool
& cabanit -11. rnn1ily·drea111
com;-tru;-. $375,000.
PETE BARRETT
. -REALTOR-
642-5200
NIOWPORT HEIGHTS
WITH POOL
Cule 3 BR. 2 BA Doll House
'A'ith H&F pool. gas bllns,
fplc, fam rm, detached dble
garage "'·i1h a.Ill')' enh'Rn1·e.
Full p1it.'f' S4T,500. Call R('{l).
tor 645.6646.
Balbo• lsl•nd
untlngton &Nc.h Irvine L do l•I• ncOMe Property 1'6 Mountain, o...rt ney to om 1,;:;;;;::;;;;;===i-=-"-'----·, I~ Re sort 174
·----·.
.ADULT
TOWNHOME
$23,stO
Ukt? new i.hai CAt'j)f!I CUI•
1un1 rt111Jlt~ "1n1 shre1~. Ml·
hwice lhl" cn.,loyme11t of lhls
2 BR ClfOICE E.r.~0 UNIT.
The covt'rt<i pa1io tlll({ tn..<e·
l!ti11derl m11l1 give ynu lhf'
UL'n l\IATE IN tlVTNC
pll"io!lurc .• And you ti.rt': Juli!
1>."1CIJ5 lo pool. clubhrnl.St.' &
Ji:llUJ)S. st;I:; IT TODAY!
COATS
" WALLACE
REALTORS
962-4454
CONDO CUTIE
* $199,stO * --,_ 4 UNITS N>:EDCA'1l!ll,...,,or,pto I BD0.~15. Plu.or makl's. 4 Ba. .,...... L.AKt; Arrowhead. LAKE $.l.000, $10,000 and IYlOre. I ~;;;;;:;.;:;. _____ +· I
, •• wtth itil tht! tN h.lrt"i o.I E 1e1:: an c e prr80riitledl Cioik.-lo 0nlnf.:I' Coruit Col· rnONT. doc'k. 4 Br, 3 lla, ltrmemtM; A\IT"O Thrlfl tor
a Jari,.,.r home. I Bdt'n11., B~Jld ltl""'· Call !Oday! lpgr 11nd a;l~na. l:Ji~I-2200 Sq. fo"'t .. rurn, l'l"C rrn. 11. Rea.I r.:1tah· t./)11n, Upon
114 batha, uf>8rackod e11rpet. GEM Mobile Homes lent renuil ~•-AS61.11u&b!t s'l<t.500 uu.u~ Time f'rop. l\l)prov~. W1e th~ mCIN')' AlNTALI , ,
In;, lt'p. launch')' rm .. lottr -! For c .. 11 125 Ult. lk'tld of TnlM. <hi 1x-r lit('. tTI <ll 337-4217 ho\l"ver you like. AllO 1111k i
of 1torage & 11!\.Teadon.t 12().io" 1'u1tln A'lre .. N.8. ,... "IU ~ll or t":'U41arige for •ba\rt our UMCl'W't'<'I {Jl'.r· Hou ... * Aptt, ·
llM:'il. U Ill!~ !or ttK-tir1y REAL1'01JS 642-4623 rl\O"' uni1ll. 01ff:l'l._'1'1 l•>r KEAR htarlno. ChAttnlng 2 IOll.."ll !On.nll. * * pnce of $11,IXX>. Mobile Home 19n S&l.riMl. Citll COL\\"EU.. BR house. rz C 1u~n1. 141•0111 )
CALL 552 .. 7500 N•wport 8••'11 lb:54 tHf>.r'..W. r;:::H$3,i~.~CA. p!K1e:.1~: AVCO THRIFT I 4»W.1111leotTAMl'4 • 620 Nel'.'J)Ort Crnter Dr. .i1 V,ISIQN GRAND df»ENING IN HIGHLAND, CALIF . Hllr. 49G-:'.lll2. Suite 10l $ll9 • Ni{'("
1
Hll f\n~I ""''
S AN BERNARDINO 2BH-2U.A hotne, Loi 120 " Nl'ilJIOrt Bt!;u·h 1 l ll tl pJ. C.i\1, ~· Newport B1y Towf!rS 1ro. fl1UJlon rlollflr ViMv 833-3«0 SJ50 -8&1."htloc 111x. I" l.
• d h·11 I ~ 2 n1:~onoo:i.1 COUNTY. LOVELY 10 rlo~· to i;hoppln:.!. Bl'aut1h1I U1U . I h~ fi-ont bt> 1. re I CONDOMINIUL\t HOME$ x 20 COVERED PORCH un•n to i't'!lre. 011·1~r DON'T BORROW \111·11 ut 0t1'.'wi, N~w 'I
BayfnJnt ik11ne11 WITH OUTDOOR RUG :1G&-:z:zo1 or Yi:-1-23...~ 'TIL YOU CALL USI B· tu1i. :-1 '
RE.\.LTY RE.ALTO. RS "°"' Sii]" • Sl"c L '!'It U ' --ALSO COVERED CAR liol'l1h¥' on your hnn11• t"f1Ui1" ""· rg ~ ~ 11Pt. ""\1'1
Univ. Pnt1t C1·oter, 1-•o• ~·11 "--·o·iiv nl•loci"< • " '' "'' v.-< C"I d •· '~· " r u """u ,, ,, PO fur any good purpose. ~rv. ""''° c1,, G;. •"''" "I ''"·
----Slee! & L'Onct"'t'fe0 coni;truc•lon RT. NICELY LAND· I~ 1111; ~ Alll(l"lf:~ Counly !or C,~l.
NEW !.ISTING Priva1cBu.l1,.'0oic.~ $CAPED. MODERN TAX PROBLEM Financi11I • 01·rr ~ yr:ir!I and NO\\' in $2.!_\.Jlou.te2brunfurn.Gar.
WALNUT SQUARE '.?g11ragt>11paf't?!lpcrunit MOBILE PARK. . IJrangc Co:1nty! Yunt ChHdN·n le pets oil .
Air <."Ond. 2 bdrm. 1£ ilen Roor 1n11 sundet:k I THIS YEAR? SICX1\L hl0JtTC:AC£ CO. r .\f. '
end u11Jt; henutiful patio. Unu11ual Opporluni!y to Pur· 546•0135 ah. 6 pm 1,111, nri\' bt• )O'.ll' S"l!ul i.in I B usiness t714! 5j(j.()JOO SG:235 .ylfow.c ,.1·"'. U&t• unf""1. pool & park """'Unds. Of· c,h.asc Bayfront Pl'Ofl('rty in '· • 0 1 It "00 4:t.O C.'nn1p1is Dnvr. X.B. .nr. :u'rl. l~ds flctl; t'.llc •. •'" '' t B h T/111o Tnrilr..; ls 1·lt'a r 0\\l"lt'I ppor un 'f .& (' '' frn"d at only S3J.500. ••l'"-'po.r eac • ~ ---Mo ·' ·
CORBIN
310 1-ndoRd Nil \Ox--11 Flam\J\b'O. Quulll y "111 r nn)' 1~·. i.><'c\I ol -rtg19es, LANDLORDS FREE
·MARTIN ernn ·• · · made. Set up In nic·C' Coi1111. Tt ust Rllll a<°\'<'lll pt'f'·1»1 u:! I \l[ih.t•~· Trust Deeds 260 ~~~--"'"'"~~~
Realtors 644-7662 675-855l t.lt"Sa. adult put'k. sri. 1'1.•nt 1111~1, .. 11. E."·ellrnt N Ii I"· OWNBUYSOINUERSOSWN * Please Help! *
Laguna Beach VACANT ! ! ! WI.. Xf'11• in1 uinl:s & I 'at ion. Olf('t"f'fl fhr 59.l.000. I • h PUT YOUR MONEY I WE NEED -
Heal ponderosa 11ith the 1,.,, ...... . ~kirtings. Only $3-150. Call COL\VF.:l.L 616~. I Mobil Was TO WORK FOR YOU! 2 BEDROOM HOUSE
n\Ot';I ~autiful landscaping THE .,. r '-""\l'n. 1mn1edi~1e Ol'· An1cril:'t1n ;,.·1j .9::90
in h:1111n. 3 ""'tios, Tl<!W thick .. 1 MOST cup."incy. Bc!;1 ~<"IJ)l)t•t I BR I h .~ FOR 1-!t•ii;:-hl.!! I01:·ahon. o .. n .. r HITZ l\10DEI. :!l.,fiO, 1 BR, I . . l::nrn JU'' Ol' lll<H"' on \\"1•JI, I or y,•' ga~ . I
ON 1/4 ACRE
CLOSE TO
BEACH
hist -Only $37,900. hsh 1 1 f\ 1 11 p k 1 JU!lt CPA,s. ~ lgul'l's. \Vt•!l Oi•ttni::r Coun1y 1~1 ~lnte. nl\°?IUn1 Sll.ed dogs. fll•o•ll shag, shrure root. This 11·011'1 THE LEAST say~ suhnHI any 011,,., 1. It\, f!lm rm, 1111. cor\ll'~. :-.:." flU~<'Y . Jli'O~t>etMJn hr:Tf'. :;:~~ui\:tl 2nU Tni~ [)(..eds fin I with ~ai-ge ~ctlC\.>cl yard tor !
RUSTIC Cl lAHr-.1ER: T<·"" $.lj,500, Cntl 6-IJ·S.JOO. I ' 11't1Sl cr, ~, r 111 ru· 1'!'lflb. '"or.;tni.: l\foiltl n1odrl . "l(',,,\I \101 1T"\GE CO lrfHned & \'•'I"' OIK'fhcnt~I ~harle rorner lo!, \VALK TO 7 F RV •CY'fN Tll 9 f'd to SIJ.:ol. ~ .. 1\1.r~,!,l'JO, '.\'.ET~ Ujl hi 57;.,oo '!lonth, 171~1 ;IDoi06 ' ~IATURf: \\'Of:~J..:JNC -. I' -~~IWkJ~-• , v '
BEACH. ~pncious liv. rrn. • , , -----------I n1os1Jy hl'l!' run. Serv1rc nl! ~:t>O C·uuf)u" Ol' :..; R I COUPLfo .
t'2-447T r:::. J 54•1103 11·/open IK'am('rl ceUln(!$, . \. F •• llcl'ninl & Co. I NE\\' 2 Bn. I Ui\ 1l\·in~ 1'111. I 1~11nr1any suppli{'d act:oun!S, • " .. ' , \"ERY R~SPONSIBLE~ cozy brick fir{'plru'<' ii•ith iw 1:..a.......,. I Arlull vu1·k 11·/ pdv:•H' 11•·11· nnll us.:>d Car Dl'fll<'rs, ;,,,"Mr.-1-,-TD-----1-, I \\'ill tai<<' rx!rcnif'ly J;OO"I ·-" I Cl beacl• $16 r.Nr. • 1u-•0 -2 ' \I I' Bo ,., ' ...,u,uvv s on 11.1.: I · I I • •
BEACH LOVERS
$36,950-1 YR. OLD
'''"'"'en n111nt c. iartning __ -•""" .i •ou.!._ , r·p .. t1<'.<1, a!ll, l'l' do "·n 10 ii·n Sa 1 Ju&. l C!lil' o ion1e.
Counlry kitchen "''"''!I lls of • \VATERfHONT . 110xl:J FLl~E.'T\\'OOD 1-·1ir11.1 VIEW from T\'Ul'k co·~. r>lotor & L\1obil1• Capi.~trnr~J. Ou~ i:l I yea;,, iOldcr horn(' grea1!1
Knoll.y Pinc Pane,.Ulng. A SPANrS.H tlll•d palio to .vou1• pool. 1•lubhou~e. adu!1~. ll(• honie~. JO' ln!er r .... 0 1 t I Plt>af.!.• cnll f'VPS. and t'C' l ICl'pC' 1 $49 500 I 13!!00 &16-4700 N B I THE TOP ,~ D ' (Is' UI \\·eckcnds. a'8·7&~1 : a s r a , . 01vi1 pier & sllp. Spacious D€' s, · , · . . · llF~RE'S JUST I\. f"E\\' 714-,.:ll-1210
1
($l~ nnLx + deposit _'~
S\\'ll'll l\-IING POOL· lei , 2 Bl',~ Ba ncirly d~l'at~d I COSTA l\fesa, 10x50 Angelu~. Oul!'>,ar1ding: Nrwport Bc~H·h DE.IAIL.S $Gil.OOO Js1 TD on 11 uni! lst and ls;o;t.l
outstanding ocEAJS1 V~n ;~::!~~:' l~~/d Ac i ~ 1 g l BR, xl/11 cond. S.1500. tuUy I Dui;lc.x. Ch\1u•r flridblc, -Your invcst1111'nt is SC· "-:0'"'~ "'"/f;11r rxposul<c i2r. !\'EAT 1 br $1 75 i::a.~L'liCf
Central Laguna :c;cctlon. J Spa~ist; !il;1ci~ ki1:i~,~ 't~e f11n1. 6•12-6689 I :\lay t·11rry 2nd. T.D. or ex· cured \m'o",,','h'ln ~\h11'.' ,1,i?usAl'·1$6d50. nu paint. ept, dri> . NO\\";
bdnns. 1vith lf,!e. !iv. rn1. rin has glas.~ ivinclo"''~ 12' NE\I/ 2 BR, 1 BA l~ving I l'liangc ur ..... ?nc 4 lx'<I· -No selling Involved Y inc" "'" ue BACK Bav 2 br S200 inshh•
& fireplace. s p 11 c i 0 us hig h & beaut. floor to C'l'il. rin. Adull park "''/ pr1vole roo1n and on" l _bC'd1wn1. -\\'ork froni )'OUr home 5 yrs. 714-493-1154 ltt'I\". o.s. ·bad . will fix.
coVf!r'ed patio 11djo1 n s frplc. R.-2 Jot. $97,500. beal'h -$16,500 541>-3672 Otren"1. 101'. S..'1_2::.>00· Call -Part or rull tin1e availabk• \\IJLL Buy Is1 and 2nd TD's (.'OZY 7 bl' 2 ha $240 Cd:\!
rlevatcd swin1 ponl. Nf-~ED~ O"'ncr. SAC. tlbl \Vidc $8500. Lirlo COL\\t:LI. 64G-O:.a..i. -No e.1'()l'ricnl:'e n<.'CeS$1!.ry up lo $100,000. Call betwn :i all appti"s. F.P. fncd pa.11.1
SOME PAINTING. Offered 615-7-1--15 , "'ater front pork. Pool. I & !l Pl\! or 7 to 9 AL\! oou~TRY 4 br, ti.11 $325 nell·
at Sfill,000. N. BLU1'·1-· BAY VIE\V I Covered :;ar, 6T;>-8220, CO:\IPA;..l"Y PROVJDES frl~..jjlJ rrp.1 "'' & d."D1,V. ~...!.,loffX * ~~\~~i?s~~ * * fR(£ LIST t.l'ITL!o: oouc1r _ LOTS ·o· A~ new lr!·lcvel condo. I T~~~11~1Z~ ~~ficJ~\I li'• 1ti"r 1\·eH·sccur1.'<I Is1; l ALA Rent•ls e ""wr;'i
Vacant duplex plus guest HOUSE: loc:ared on lge, lot. nme location. Ii u g e 11 I f.:8] ; ¥i3·';n b.al; pay.'! S6.u.1 nio I LANDLORDS! ' room. SUper renovaled . 3 bdrm. & den. 2 bnths. ":!'ster suite, ~ BR, den, Re~~~t•, I T ! I 1 r St5 500 lnC'l 10'.f: all due 1978: Ax • I boat niooring: fumishl'tl, Gov't 1'(>posse!!SC!f1 hon1cs. Long liv. rm. "~th firctilaec. 2_" ba. La test kil cl~n, frple, ! ~~11,;~;"~1:~ SlO.OOo 2:_ ,\11pte V11llcy, 714-2·12-3144 \\".; ~1)('C1ali7.e 1n Nc..\•p;rl
Extensive use of glt1ss, 11•00<ls,
& heiovy shake roof. 4 big
Blls incl. n big n1asrer suite.
Gi!ISs g11rck!n kitchen 1r/
rontin110LL.'4 1.'ll'aning ovl"n,
coJor.toned appliances. Step
dn. Uv. & t~n. nn. \11th
roaring fireplace. Pool·sizcd
lof. Ne'>\' exre arc11. TER?.1S
TO SUIT! Bkr. SO'l-5511.
xlnt J)flrking. Slep:r1 ,..., :~~ ~~:l.~~n~e: Built in kitchen. Upper level "et bl:lr, elec g.ir. _Pool. I .~nrl na111 <'. adrh·<'s~ & 1rli'· $5.~ 2nd TD for sn.le $4160.1 i::e9cl~ • Coron.a del l\1ar-~1
f--j,;j;;;;brii,;, +iH~.,,;:~;+.;;,+,~~. ~~"''"~.~~PP"~'~'"~~.~;1c;,~,~.~.~""-~,.~~-VU:-A-rettl-btty 8l~~dn~lfhlk ~~ ~i·v~d! -Propeff ~58 .\lobil \\'n<;h. Inc. P.O Dox /13:(-\ \29: 5'6-9751 CVf".!I. I IC('. I!! .~REE co You' T'¢'
beach. ()y.'Tler sny:r1 ".'11'.'ll " "& pynils. No obli ati n \1'/lgl'. SUN DECK & SalejOr Lease 0 P 1 1 0 ~ ·r commtrcla1 • I phone :: 10 District Olfil'c HY~ int.. 3 >on; due ,t:. La'."'un~ ?"' Rl':n1al ~I·
~~R~T~t~ving rm~~~~~ 1 !"~~~1E~~A~R~~:fu~·".,n"~s~~;,A,;~~K;,;~;;~.., -,>N'). ~1~ ~r ~~.1 u r fl' * SCARCE ITEMS * RED CARPET ~~p~:r;2~~·~2.sr.S.1' · -~V.!&'tEW RENTAL."Sr, t---~-
con,pletely redone on 11 lot, I · Gl..ASS \\' A L L S i\NO I To buy choil'( C0111111('rcial or EXCLUSIVES Bottle Water Ro~te I I~ 5n-4
0::0 or
494
·
31
ts
Balboa Island, 4~3622 LUXURY 4 BR. 3 BA, fanii· \VATER: Siveeping view of CARMEL MODEL industrial proTV>rtiC'S (soine lltlflt* .& B•lboa P . I Iv, dining & li•ftng T001n . the ocean & rocks be\O\\'. '<h . I ' .... , c II s:::.1.950. T110 2 brm. 1 ba. Ol\'J1 yoor 01\'n IJ?ltle '.~ater ,-•ntmu. ' I { h led •u• from this unique 2 bdrm .• Xlnt buy in Harbor \liC'\v \\'I trip C> n<'T eases I. a on 11 lot ICY/, Down lncon1e route. will train 1f q1.1t1td1f'd. · · BA'' 1, ,_ 3 h . ' "'''* P•n1n•U11 car ea garage. Cli>td, 2 beth hldea\\'llY. t bdrm. 1Jon1es . only $69,950; 3 BR., fl'fark Su 11 iv II. n · Brkr, S:l.750. YC'arly 001v and rents Best Or,u?Ce Co. nrt'O avaH. ~w uum :r1," MW ~ drpd, papered, bbq, many & balh b 1 di"'. & 1 ., 1 d 5404429 an.Ytin1e. n"'!d , .• 1,.1 ••. G<-al 1,,,. 1 11·,·u ndio•t -·"c ,,.,, ,0 ,,., 3 br ~ ba hUF :r1undeC')c,1
-..,.. "''" l H I -~ od I xtra Ad'"'l occ ._.. NEWPORT BEACH rirs1 time investor sta«I"'" vow· nc<eds. Earo $1500 .....,!' .u n errom, \\'e: r, ~s, t' HOME OFFICE
extras. Neoc Mo·"owl"-'· Y sep.ara e en. ng arru Y rooms. oa · ... ,. " 'Ob ' '""' · · Houses Furnish-' 300 I < Iba bl< d'I
or botll. 60 ft fl'Om beach,
eharming cott11..11:e zoned for
business. 1-.:icccllent Invest.
ment a! $67.500.
P•cfflc Properties
6T:>-6112 or J.Vl·S'100
Original Balbo•
Jill.~ been makin.11: tnoney 101·
years. IC'l ii n1akc 11.lme for
you~ 14 Unils, $1J5,000.
Prine. Only. 67f>.1573 Bkr.
Coron• del Mir
NEW DUPLEX
&rtraardinArily attractive all
siring~ ~ with
large dtt'ee bedroOm units ·
llOIJth of trigh\\11)' -$8300 II
year !l1"'0!lS . asking Sl09,9'"JO. can 67S-7225.
Goll Cluh. $56.SOO. Corner ran?C;. as reme11u,ou11 we . s. w , up11.-u ~· J .,.. gar $485/mo SJ&-2'71.J I 5Koro \V. 1-fcil
1 1
s;;o
1
Lo poss1b1htlell for only $1\9,.IOO. & bC>ttcr than UC\\'. Call Prime Beyfront Site uni1.~. tno. Potl'n1ial unlin1il~>d. · ' · · '
Verd L Ms-.w
2
t B: 1)1)w1 ·for boat repair & sales $52.!150. Bea!·h Trip I e;.: . Silvl'r Sprinh-s \\111.u•r, 964 Gener•I C d I M '
O\VNER n. NEAR TIIGl-1 SCHOOL: This (ORBIN-MARTIN Bill Grundy, lltlr. llT.J-6 161 l.n\1·cst priced triplex in N. Bat11.vi11 , Orang<'. ~ orona e ar : , · I n1ulli-lcvel. 3 bdm1. &: lan1. REALTORS 644-7662 Nc11•po1·1 Bl'1u·h on 1 ~ hlock ___ (7141 j.32..6501___ $ LANDLORDS$
1
1. "OLD CORONA" chBtflt~ REPOSSESSIONS rn1., has an EXCELLENT Condominiums IQ IX'aeh. Creal for invest· PRIDE OF l.r1 US 1·e111 UR prope1•tics. galOl'f'! Steps 10 bellch ,:i1
-1) j f . t' nrll . I OCEf\N VIE\V. \Va!k to H bo v· H for sale 160 n1c11!. tJPJll'l'Ciatioll and OWNERSHIP \\lri;1'll'il"{"lllllhrlx'ltl"h 'bcd1'001TIS,3 bath~.s-<IUI. •,'
• r n orn1~ ion a. ocation beach & viJla<r<>. Kitchen ar r 1ew omes Ol\'!1<'1" u~<' 100 · · • · • I 0 "" ~ of il·r"'c Ill'' I •\ home• "" C \ 1 p1 s-900 -' "."l'.LI' S",.l',VICC 1·11 w~ "" u·,lin· iani,:c '-"· 2. r.rodou• 3 or 4 ".-· lroo•c· · · ,. : · • ha<R&O,dish111asher. j .rl .. 1. al'rtno '"'• · $52950 ~~our/IC'..; 0 I 2\cl< ·""'-"· ··1·1°• $ '~' ", ... ,,., 0 NC\\'l~RT C-<I ,. o ''do · .. · 1 • · n Y RESTAUft,\,"f ~ 1:: '.. '1..,.:F. ~·11·,, l'in1" & $ 2 •too·." • , .. -p<-··I I t•
'' · ' • relriger.1tor. Shov.·n by oppt. Br 11'llcr · Fre l.h1 · 4 BR ·u ·~ • 1 I II 7 I 1 h " ' ........ "''M'
KASABIAN
N 1 be>\ 2 381{. 21~ ba. pl11 n 3, new 11 ll'SC .;nn. .~· 11.~st locaiion in St!lnlon Tl'l.. $ ALA RENTALS $ -close to schOol. $550. J
only, $6.1.500. eJC t ~o poo & g~n t, & '''''· Tcoooo·,, pool, ·.·• "'''· ,1ourplcxe11. Hl'.• .rlown. \\ 111 .1. . 1 · 3 I ,·kc ,....... i. ... "lroo\ ,
MISSION REALTY lc11lc • '!' lomoly <'m b·c ·-II 1 r1 1r 1x.o1cnflil fu1· O\\·ncr . . . --,. · .' "." -~ ·-,
Re.I Est.te 962
1.1.1111 ' • , " , I 1· I <' on con 1111' "' "" fl/\C I " Cl ! S I • I ' ·~ ~ ~ _ C H La drapes II :. Loitn 11.r1us.~ st reet, x nl in. 8\'tll , · . ..-111anagcr. P1il"f'd ri!;:h1 :i.1 . 1 ..... •· . !i.i .. 'l:.:ullll $!,., pr1vatC' s 1p -.• ...,..i:oon..,,
HEADSTART
98.1 So. oai;t wy., gunn 67'71.33 * ·67' ••73 lllakr ofr, 01\•ner. 675-,~26 vC!nlional. Rents on l\'ay to S65,000. Austin Sn1i1h Gor· util paid. snlbh.'s only Newpon 11ddre11s. $4!». '
Pho-(714) 494-0731 .,.. ~ SGOO Pl'r n1onth. ''UTI'' b S ~ s •m 6--', ' Surl Side condo" w/a.ll ap. ,...,. . __ \rACANT adult condo, 2 BR $:i>.&."iCJ. Fourplex. 2 bJTil. 1 man. Realtors &W·72'i0. ...: r. I r 1..., J-:astsirle "'''-,,,...,__,
plianct'I! Deluxe 3 Br, 1~':: WEEKENDER WATERFRONT 112 Bf\. new cpts & drps. i»t. Backs 011 golf t'Oursr:. *LIQUOR LICENSE* no \'ilil!no 1x-i ·No"" OLD CORONA ·1 •
B;f, New decor. \\'alk to Neat 2 ·bcinn., 2 bath, just ISLAND HOME ~71.000. $390 down & mO\'e IO"/. do\\·n. \\'ill sell on con-Orange Counly o n -~ 11. le~!~~.!; i 1~·~-bo~=nc~~ I CHARMER ': \ •
beach &. shopping. $27,500. lll yd~. to beaeh. Bt>am!i,
3
Bd F •1 R I 111. 836-4206 aft. 1rac1 or conventional. gi;neral. "NO\V PRICED $7j(l 3 BR11 .. 2 lull BA!!, beam
Call Deniaon A 1 soc . rrplc blt·ins 11ui<'t street. rm. amt Y oom, COUNT~Y CLUB $63,QOO. Fau,r. 2 brm. 1 ba. , SEU.i'' Save SU. Mr. ON ~·11.ter, Inland. up, rJo"'J1 ceilings· IJ1>\c . ne'o\' kttcb~n
673-1311. --~ ·-A rt'itl1y ~ai housr. 0\\'Tl<'r 8;'4•/. loan avail. VILLA· houses on 11. tor big CtM>usdt \\lnston Collect ( 21 3) 1111 oround . let nie help u & BA .. carpets & drapcoll ·
BY' OWNER 3 BR, 1~ BA a
10
",-',,""', ! Cull !or n10t<' de-BROKER 83•0780 Be 1 2 B I' B ·, I for one n101~ hou~ or 2 272-424!'1. Al.A Rent•ls e '4l.Sl83 Jo'A h~I . Iott>. of panell'!J . __ ,., la /bl ,,.. 8~ · r .. k;:i 11'· J1rl\ · 111ort• unit.<1. ERstsirle. \Viii GOOD ploniho'og , • p 0 ,·, . . nf'll'."'.tnt . S37.i 1110._"" ly 1 ... ..-. ..... = m. r1n. w t/16. pnllO. sun dee · £_'lec;1. ~ car trnde ror 17 or 1110re units ' B Ibo P I ·-,. Pvt. 'lludy, lrg. Jlitchen, de. I COUNTRY ENGLISH -. BAYCR-EST-. gar, dsh/wsh, bu11!·1ns, cal'· Ol' eonvelltionat or <:ontnu:t. busines..o.; in Ne1\•po11 Beach. a a en1nsu a A11l.1!. unmed .. 644-8567.
luJCecpts.Nearschls.shpp'go . J)(ls,drps,McsaV<'rdea1'f'a, , -,, llundreds or good regular ~ . . LOVEL)' 2 BR non1c, frplc, & beach $36 TJO 53&4567 Otffo:-l"f'nt 3 BR .• 2 balh hmnf' 5 Hit., 31 2 balhs. Fcncrd S10 ftl'l P . 1 F f th 10'.r -l::i , down. Rt?nts eusloineni. Tc t e p h 0 11 (' CLFAAN i1nu1.ll 1 81 . rear 1 , Ad Its~ Principa~ oni,Y. · ~1·/ra1hl'dr11.l eeil .• lg~. din· pool. Sep. play yard. r.1any i~f~~-ral~tvjt~1~;1e o~d~~r~~ al'e lo1v 11! $663. pct n1onlh. • numUcr wlll be yourri to house. Nr !!hops & bay. ~ ec. ~e ~~_:ge·y e ~ r i 1
, ~ U"H! rm., baloony '11brnry. l'X li·o :unl'n itie~. 1~13 2T.l 4!64 Ex 206 ss;,.~so. lllf'sa Vcrrlc Pride tll kr over e xc e l l.C'nl 41612 E. Ba~·. A\·11 il Sun $irn t Oi GoJde'nreri
TRANS} ERRED. Have to hd11·d. fl!''!! .. f11ntastil' kil· Only Slli,Jro ,\gent '1 .. ' • t. · of 011·11<'rship 4-pl<'.lt: -SOLD cu:<tonlel'S &12...Si28. 10128 or 121 3) 672-3036 A ,' mCocii\I ,7 .. """"' .,._;r -
, sell our. lovely . 5 BR chc-n. Huge a(tic. Ocenn 6i5-46:w:l li-16·!01)3 Duplexes/Units -4,;2.9.'iO F'ourplcxl.'s. COLD GE . UAYFRONT ;i IJdrni · 4 \e.,
1
• .l"""O~ e.:..:::rj
lrl-level .1n SUhurbia Pnrk.
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vi<'i1·s. Close in. Rcdu<.W to PIER & SLIPS sal• 162 Fo1· detailed infonnation 011 . STI?RCA · k frt>c?.ui~ Balhs flier float \Vlnl~j. or ROOMY one bedroom dupjtx Great ne1ghbol'l'l, Ill'. beach, $Si .500. 111esc 11nd oth<'r units call hosincss In a PI s Ir rt ~1 0 '1 j;7~_0039 · unit act'088 from park ~(id
shopping. school&, tcnni~. 60' Bay!ront with 3 hr. :1 N B h Don Bcrn111n, Broker anrl BeEtc~. 3 . large operahn;::: ..l'.:..Y· ' I tennis -corner aeparat~·tri-
btke 1raii. A.'iSlmle 6'/~ VA ba + guest apl. Couslder ewport eQC units spel·iaHst, f{cd Carpet, "''a lk·1n freezers, 1~1. lease •I OR. 2 BA, bcachfront. 1812 trancr • garae:e $225/mo. * TWO * loon, only $55,000. 96.2-01.86 $16J,OOO. Call De 11 is on Duplex Healtors 64>-8088 277 E. 17th or ':nrchouse &. ortJt...-space. \\'. Ocean!.ront. $300 .P!'.r n10 644-7211 Agt. 1
•Colorful Cott•o•s SEA CLIFF 5 BR As50e. 673-7311. s1.. Costa i\1esl!.. ~\~~;:·49~~;;. 831--0670 or Ul June lath. 1-776-41:i.l. HOJ\tf';Y 2 Br, 1 Ba, ~t.
Rare oHm~ of ot.•ean ~idt? Pool Jncu1.2i, upgraded crpt~. NEWPORT CREST CONDO Super Terms 9 UN[TS Costa Mew elect. range. Ca.11 ikfi·y ot the hll')'. ~rt.y of 2 wall paper, f.atn tm & unlin Lasl chance $10,000 under llmv about 90rt,. financing itl • LI LI •·j days, 6 7 3-l 3 0 1, evti
houses on one lo!: live in bonus rni By 0 vine r 494 _ 6561 present price. 4 Br, fa_ni 87' on a 3 BR 2 BA do1\•n. COSTA MESA • u=: ~~ns.1@1~ Yr. 2 RR. ~Jobi!" l lon1c. S125. All 1 644-1291.
On<'. ha.\:e inr:ome !roni !he a.16-209'2. I rn~, 3 Ba.;. pool, tennia, stairs and 2 BR I B,\ 111>. • f\irport Upholstery Bus. lrt i\ I.xi. Singles ok. NEAR Beach. View 3 stt. oth~r. rim llnle otfercxl at BY ()y.·nl'r -:l Br, 2 Ba I WQlX'«J DOOCh .. c O\\ncr_ &12~1 196. ?;~! :un~~~.~in~1~~'n1~r 9 &:~:~ coc~:~x . ;;~2'.. ~'! • Gafl)e'f"!, Drapes $140K YI' ~\f s fr dC"Sl Rent511~7';~·, 21; ba, O\\'Tlr'5 unit, ~I
$79,900 I Dream hon1e in H.B. Lrg Bl~Uff S X Plan. $60.000. 3 hon"ll.' detached froni g unils, e Fabric Store $i'9K \'r ome n •PS • -1 duplex, beam clnit. patkil:,
CORBIN-MARTIN 1J81lo & many exlras! lllust SIT BACK ' B~. 2n Ba. I yr old. 301 Only $84,500 lo\v i'Rca.ncy factor. pridC HOLLAND BUSINESS fplc, nr shopli, S.175
· 6T;:i.611J>.
Realtors 644-7662 sell-Let's deal. Ask ·" • • VI.!~ Trucha. 0 w n er CALL 644-7211 or owner!hip, only Sl.28.000. 66-1170 SALES 54()..(16(1.! Laguna Beach IRVINE Terr. VlE'w. G .1
1 DUPLEX.. Sl3.rm. 892--tSOl. "1· n·u.;1t9 ~~ "~:hp11:~~Y.ln~~: :~~FF . Great 3 Br. Call rKl\\',51.,.1600 I *COFFEE SHOP* SltO · '$115 . SI~ Util pd. ~ B~·as! ~~ A~,;;:I . =·1·
HIDEAWAY Huntington Harbour n1l'rc:ial l>ul\ding plus si ranilly hom<'. CIOS£' t0 '1~ INVEST?t1Ei'iT DIVISION $13,500 BBci1Clors new· beach k !Ot-2738 . '.
One of a kind. in wooded 11.p111·tments. No vacBncy! .,o; h 0 p sf schools, Pool, I ', , • S<·a1 <: :l2. lilloal 101· IOll'l\, ., · · ...i.. 1ett!ng. \Valk to beft<'h. II'" 51.'.i(),000. $67.500. 6"6-7676/979-4&50. _ _ ~-··~1on1 & Pop" nperntlnr1 SM;) · Lrg 1 Br ni<'C'I)' furn, I" BR,
2
BA, pa.Lio, ga"'..rrc·1
Owner n111.y help finan~ HH ~/.tz.'Jl, TR/\ ~ , B I RIVIERA REALTY frple, i;:&r~e. yard 1c patio. clean & spal"l~~:z:s~. o.,, Newport e a ch DUPLEX S"-· "" 11 "~ ' b 1 •· !""" Yearly lease. U">"rUU•l $100,000. ~ p ---01 T · -rLHJ"P .~.nta rli\ 1 119 Broa<i11·av C.~l. -.n -"' r . '"'· 'l"c. HAL PINCHIN .....__ !'Op. ror Ou1 -O"ll Heights. Principals only. 642_7007 64,5·6·09 Eves rlbl ~n.r. n11 1un1 . Lo\'ely [JIARBOR Vlrw llomH-3. 0.·.1
REAL STA'JE Prop. Rkr, 711\/673-2!l'.'1S T Sl 7 -~ 612 ~-"" r · • p I it' REALTOR 67:i-l:l92 OCEAN VIEW E II'\ ern1s. """'' ,. · -uf~" __ OC'e:ln vtf'\1'
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fain l'lll. oo. lcnnrs ". ,UXURY 4 hr. T't bH, lg Income Property 166 . , . . .O~·Slil<' G<'ncrnl Liq u or NU-VIEW RENTALS S~30/n10. &1-1-11.19. ~ I ~Rll\1E Vie11· hon1c 1v/grca\ J\Rn:l In hclicvt• hut only 1190 Glctllli:')'rl' St. fan1 m1, huge n111s1cr suite. ~ 16 UN!TS -POOL, 11\11d10 I J'.1censl'. Trn.nsferrnblc, Ry 6i3-40~.IJ or 494--31-lS LUSK 3 hr 2 bn, fam sr·
1ncome on rt>at', on Ocearl S.:U>.flOO fu llpril'c.Siton your ·l!l~-9 11'.l ;,19.0316 Agcnl/ow11Pr. l'\(L.()166 2 BEACH DUPLEXES 1 BR, 2 BA & 3 BR , l 1'1'Qv. 1 1973. By O\\·ner \ -1 N '1· S600 I
Blvd. $189.~iOO. 675-40-IS. 1!Ct:k, ll'!l l(•h lhc bOals & t'n-MAGNIFICENT VIEW DUPI..EX llt' Ol"t:8n $62.500 BA. N11n1c )'OUI" ll'rnis -Ph. 968~5077. . oc~:AN~'RO~T s:~ MO. I i \"!llG ~\: ~· 644-~r
DUPLEX COn lCr, cham1ing, JOY Ilic gOO!I hft'. ~·1!le11 LttrM . Realtor 7112•/. LOANS \\'ill tlllT)' pap<'r -~o points (; \ROV:O.:ING Ro 11 PLACF. RF.f\LT) -sc. a inr. fl! by 500 p I Beaulifully detnilt.'<I :l brl1·111 Tlf,\T'S RIGHT~ 1 Ouph•:..('!!. or 1'1t:cl"ssive i111crest <'IC. · ,, u!e: 4!J.1-97().I ·191-91'..'9 Cost• MeH ii Ope:~·~~ally. s1~~.., n~l1.Ull, I H' tt.ma..v-iT'\Jo.I UADDl"'ll ID \\' i t h 111 ,., i; tl I { i (" e 11 I . b'73-8J6] ~irle l)y silk'. \.\111lk !(1 ht·11d 1. S11hn1it tr11d•· /or do1,•n. s;'~~ncrs I ll~~s. eq~i~~ 1 en. furn beach rotta~('. . E Ul'llll'C\.JIVl 'll~r.. u. no h st r u ct C' ii \'i1111•! Newport Heights Ca11 bl, ~'Old IQi;:e1lu1r or Sl"P· S77fi.OOO. f\cl/Q-,,,.n, 61:~-!lll ·1 • os 11 csa, ~nlArird rirlult, 110 jX'tS. $170. Sp11cl(Ju~ :: b<'rlroon1s 2 ~1h
Cott• M9s1 ~lY F1•11turcs I 11.111 I l y r1n. -··-----"--~--· aralr~y. T,\1\E OV EH 11nsi,:. 646-96001 rve>. 49-l-11170 f'\'t'S. r1•sid<'11re lri:..' thRn 2 ~.re
''DYNAMIC DUO" fi!·epl1Jce. Dining_ rn1, chef's JOLLY GIANT EXlSTING 71~'. LOA~~. 11 Unit~ roonl ror 3 moi-c. Money to Lo•n 240 • old y,·ith l\"/y,· :-a r1>ets jiorl 1721~ COAST 11\\')'.
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k1tchrn. Pool-st7.ed ynrrl. Best huy in 1ov.n a1 $3.~.or~! 1 & 2 BR Gro S\87•1 I -· Lido Isle drajX'S nrul pnvRtr ~~1.
SUPER DUPLEX! Ncstlccl fTI4 1 84S·l384 & (2131 fi12·21t~j Sl'C ll"l bcllevc! s:.il.~1()(). l..Slll(C Cll~10nl built home, r11ch. BF: Flr-tST TO SEE! p ·] ' I : "-511107 ,-·' ~i,o. 1 t TD L $2~~'\ pcrllno. G4G-7711 11!M.n among tile ln'Cs in "Old 4.91-!IOOJ. 17 roo111s: 1 Bl{, 7 ba. huge Cal! IQflny! s 1 nEo~rl"· c~, ~ "~ ~1 S oans \\"J~Tl::R l••a<;f', braui. N1. c"es 1~
Corona." You'll find the Irvine TARBELL Realtors 1'<'e. & ran1 . rn1,. utility · t, /si e -' 1·• or ca b11yfro111 lm111P: 4 Br. :->Ba. ' · · ••
nmtic charm you'\'C bc<'n 1920 s. co
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s( Jlwy .. L.B. .~ ll1undry rn1s .. ~ ulfit.v 1 Oi\ller, &l2-l!'l60 UP T O 00% IJ<.aut. rurn. S1111l'iy b<'tH·h .' ...r: -. ;..:
searching for! Open beam, -------·--or flrn . 1.ge. \1v1ng m1, I T,\X Shclrc1' ·:,~Gross 8 3h f1> I NTEREST Pier &r f1011t. Sl.650 t.lonth
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Shake e.'lterior, step to shop. TURTt.E ROCK EMERALD BAY ki1t··11cn 11·/11.ll bl~-1ns. l\;l11ny, }I Un!L~ -$26.\,001. L.A,. 1 ' Bill Cnn11ly RHr. 6~j.6161
ping or surf. Under mar~et BROAOMOOR The hon1<' for th<' ncll ve 11/rt1nm1 ini; lrpl1" Lgr. & l1''VE!"Til.lf 11J'rt:: 11rt'l!.. \\'ill lrarle f•lr Orani;<' i 2nd TD Loa RS -RUSTIC CHARMER_
at $78.9~Lo~· down or \\11y nnl Ii~ in 1h1• fnsCClll fau\ily. 4 Bdrn1$., huge flin· Lnflny cxln•s. Asking s~.500 fn11nt\'. A~en1. I D I I '
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, · II I 1 I . '111 • o • (714) 87Q.6500 r.-,~~lfi'."" r.111..lllGti. 10•111i:: ~ ll"' b11. l"f"1n1 -,-rauc. gl'O~~ng village in lrvtDI.• & 1111~ nn. \\' r11 r . ~' N('tl n1 \\I ca ... e-<1pt111n. ,,,, .. S E'U,"l 111 _....:::.. "' --lowest rates Or•n"e Co. 'I. nn E;'i1i:?" .i;c •h'P. 1p1, \r n.r GREENBROOK ,,
GRUBB & ELLIS CO enjoy ideel eath r •lo"" roo111 w/Crplc. Ort11n vic11•. CALL <:) 646 ·i •1• ,~,., • · 4
\ t 1 1f' ' P.C"nl "' I • iv r: · t,; "' \\"iilldnn rllst. lo n!l thl' e • f''lil .LF.TtT(I;\: '1r"ucic5 c:'s 1101 y. < • Sattl~r Mtg. Co. ~:~·11. 117"~2227 . ~1:: 1!1::.0121. l~·i«• \1 • (;rl" .. nl11~:iok -1 r..
67.S..7080 proximity to }o'ashion Isl.and, " ~ i I -.\n11r house. 11111.. lnrc 6421171 S4S.06ll 2 H.\ Hin\ rn1 luxury ~ll
SUPER SI"'' Ha I.
" ••• I u .c .I. Clunpw;, Irvine Ill· rc1•rc111lon11I f II. I' I l' 11[ 4'Jf.S& Nrl'f'I fl "~arl"'." Plal'" a_n 11.d: I ':t '·: .. '.'tl', !hn1 a l'rul~· Pilot . ~-~ . . . . . Newport B __ •1.c_h :i: ,;1.;). ~~~~ rc;r nlO, ~
-.. •.. dulf!ria1 Coinptex, Orange En1er11\d BA.v. $160.000. R l!ALTY , Call &12-5678. c 1t1~~11tl'fl Art. ,~l\1tl",.. 11 .• 1bQr ,,n-,1 2~ )I~. -· I · It I '-
home, ownt'r an.1'iot1s to sell. County Airport & B lxxlll.!1 of TURNER ASSOC. Nt•r Ktwporl Po•t Otfict I -~ -----\\'ISTER Rental. Nr•1110n arw1n r ea y nc.:4
Brighi k1tctlen \\'1111 brick, rapid appreciation in proJ}-1Hl5 N. Coa!lt llwy., L.ni;una l'<'11ir1. 'i blk fron1 ]l..."Jy,1 968.4405 (24 t\ttl ~~~I= ~~:1 r~~ ~~Yh":J~c.2 a"·anl·wiuning 494-1177 N•w~rt Shores , C.~-0~,. ( f>-Cf}Q. 9 ~l~r, ~~iom~. It~~~;· ::1:11~ '1' N~q~:~~ln~~:.O:y~~i
walk to achool-' & priv Plan-4"1t on !hP inarl<E'I. &II· OCEAN VI r!.W BLOCK TO OCEAN \:}~ J.'-~ ~ -~ J,.:; \:) 11·/hr, 3, on. Ser :il·c r1t1 ,. . . lO' • clubs. Grellt f1UTilly home. DUPLEXES . ii·/iill tt h/dr\' 171.11 .n1ertn1n n1 . t Am • m
$34,900 57o down. S41)-95.t2 ers at'f' l~tvlng area lni· "'.•. ,.,,,.,· .. ,, """ 01 .. -~ ,•. ,,, .. ,. 2·S!y. A·~'r11mc. 3 BR .. 2_ htl. That Intriguing Word Game with a Chuckle r,T.,.2-'IOI. j7l31 r,.i.~.~-:. !71--1 1 I or .i:a1"r;n_P11tio, frpl e. ~t!I., n1edlntely .,. are arudous to ..... , • -"""" " .,. Ni>wly ilc.-c."Or, In .t· (Ill!. inrl. 5-l~--067l t'\'.! 39-I dq l!<. S:\t).i/nlO. 642-661~. ()\'
By Owner, ;\JeM. DP.I l\lar, 3 entertain oUl"r!'. 2 Hit. effl'h unit. 1-·1r.'t user !IC\\' Cllr~ts & drapes ldi...i lty cu.Y -· 'OU AN • · · ;,1S...fllil1 . •: hc't:lroom, 2bath,l1tory with Call us for co1nplete details . depre<·l1t1io11 ava!!. 5.19 500 · O I! 1_ 1 ... f''Rt;F; Rr-111-I nr to 1n•111:1i.:l' . . . .
f11.mlly 1'00rn, tll't'plnl-e. do1ft 1nake the 1nistakc-or CORBIN-MARTIN CA"vw· OOD REALT earronoe .. rt.rs 0 •n• · unit~. kids/pl.'t.~. 11 .n . ,\Jl'.1 ~ R~.Jo. Ht•n1 J .. I' t Br{#
1
0
covered patio, Pmle11ilonally ivnlting ~ delay CQSIS dol· REAL TORS 644-7662 Y four JCrombled words be· '$ nl o11r nn lot. 1 hr Jl(,u~•'. I in;in r<iC<'. nnll~. kld11tt•· illnd11Caped yard. $37,000. Jurs. * 548-1290 * low to for m four s!mpl• words. l,u-:. p,, h. tl ~j k S100, l'. \l., I ,~I ~ 1~1·11·. h<1111". S 2
Call 549·1006. Lake Farest I T E Y N I M I ... 1Ar1111t. r!r11n, i\~1 r1•f'.' hh. hikr ~'' 1~'1ll'h. &O. South L•oun• ~I f1'9-8-I.~ o\!1. ~'"'· !11~>-S·l.IO. ,. 3\g~R,1...k~ ~UatBrt;~ln~: ~:~c:!~~ &3 l~~~pl.~. ::~c:~·,: ~. l.f\GUN,\, By ownl';' 1 I I I I I .'r\. n~; .. 'l Bil, T~· Ill" ~ .. \\ pnrl \ ,., ' ,-.]'.ll!"f) ' H• . S?.l.i Htli.-1 $27.000 gar., hugr ('1\il)house. hn· 11111. chtU'111 n·nlOrlC'll'tl COi· . . . . . . . !l:oi·l)()I' y 11<'hl ('\uh, Jl·ii· y.•nl: l "1rd111'r 1n1 •!. &1~! k. }o~orlln Co, Rltn Sl)..fi()()I) mac.~ 1ngC', 2 HH ft11l e $37/)(XI, -·' J \lt·11". 5IOO 111n, 11int('r, s:llX,} i ·ilol"' 1
:1i'"·•I l{cnt'l1 ,\ ,
2 BR Townh6lmt'. nloe! yArd, Lida Isle 1196-8896 I T A y I M 1,1
1
,.,..__~ ·-._:~ YP;1L'ly nrlull1;, 117.>-l'.'ll l Homef1nd1rs 547-1
1_t:anac. pool, $23.$00. fXJOO ·~CE i.w.·• Tustin z . _ . , , --ThH. 1Tot.:s-t:~---1.rtt; .... 111• rn1.~frplr. din "nTI.
down, $2!iO mo. ~7~ .,.,, A FAMIL y HOME J [ I J ::rm P:irk l.n :-.n I BR . \\'oodla.n1f sett: -
lt>'-"et). Ht Wl."llrern BM1k Bldg. 'DR., family nn., 3 ha. \\•\!h ASSU .. IAnl.E VA LOAN, lii:i-26.il' ..,r 7":T-J".j9 ll11h•w Jt t 32J t-.:..tlt"r.
TOWNHOUSE 4 BR. By Unt~ Parle, Irvine lge. patio. Vin U1io Soud. gori..-eom North Tu~Hn 4 Br. f.i:t.<lt'~. •• OWnel', 1 )"ear nu, nr. South Day• 55 7000 N..,_ts $.122,500 forml'll Din rn1., pool hon1P I M I l B p I [ "After some of !he tele-Houses Unfurn. 305 -~ l'!~:r>ROOl\J , 7,, tl1h,
Coll.st Plau. &: Sch. dbl &11r. Ch JI PIER & SLIP \V11.\kinl( rlh~tnnc.-e 10 t'oothlll J J 1 If • phone bills l'ye hod to poy, I General li[llll'iou~ !~~Mllllf', ht!f1 .... 1
S'J9,!IOO. 557-&liJ. anc. Of Home: 4 en .. 3 be. S?ro,CKXI. \VIII High .. " Prine. Only. call . . o 5ked the phone company to IJOfll $ •• 2 .1 I n1 o . tR.11
BY Owner Sbnrp .1 Br 2 IRVINE ](.'(I.al" with nm, optlon, 544-3456 1eploce my princess phone COt.:;<;TJt,. llvn,,:: · Bi1(.'k RAv 1 6-~.!_0. !•
Ba. w/l.r'I( yard. niust 11ee Unl-slly P•.....t. LIDO LOTS I ·rh od I " I r.11. ~ BA, f>N"I , 1·pt!I nRAND net1· 4 Br to"'·nl...t.;..A, t ..., ......... "'''J..tZll ••• rK HU PRES lwi a -m e . ••·1• 11 1'.!'9' ......... ...., ... o app . ..,,,\lllU . ..,.. · Only i Bedroom l'lomP a\•lll• Only lntrr1or lotll aVR.iJ. .C· l'lrp11, f111lt' 0r~' 11n'l'1. -· .1. ..,..,uhlf' garage, QOOI.
P•M Point l\ble In lbl• area. [)()rora· 57 f't. lor ~ldcncf', w/poo\. I J!l l"J j , I' J I J I' O C lete ~ .. '·l . _._.. S.lLl 111n Cnll :'\Ir. \\',•11~. Pell;. kid9. Cnll ~\· t -1lo $14""" "" J.'t 1 MobileHomel OMt'r 1 • c:,,1J(o;• a~ l\lln'1'1l Re11lty, SC-5200. !'1;9-1633. P\'f'll 52'1-1~--~-
tor's df'llat11 . profff!llona\ly •"· ,uw. •"' · nor by l•lring il'I 1~e ,,.;u1no WOfd ~~~~~=-"' c;-r.c-NR l\1ARCNA, 2 llR. frptc. IMdsdlpcd. QtllM cul-de·&ae' t'Omf'f {40 r1. liulld8blc t111 C you d•~•loo from"~ No. 3 bttlow. '* ~R'rnnd 11('\V 3 BP., 14 RR . 2 81\. 11&.f pool, ~ti:.
EZ eatt rncd yd, $33,500. • 11trps 10 pool & tennl• 56.1.000. 2 l.JA hnt11w In 1'11iclln A\·nll Int. s.-:r. l.ll'r rno. Avail "1111
Re111tor, 496-.,111. <.-otlrt11. Bonu11 "1'1rkShop?! Mobil• t1om•s & P1!1NT NUM8[~ED LEl1f'-~ IN No\'. ,,I. r.nrrl('nf'r \lll'I . No J1111t l:itl\. H~;l) C.\R~:i
El Toro ~•m homr _ prlv"rc & M'· J TH ESE SOU1'flES 1)('t.~. S>l\~12 I r:.J.TR~. ~9:"-1 :1:1 1 ,.
cludM. $a9,llOO. ('ail~ For $•le 125 UN!iCllAMBlE ABOVE l(ll EPS Ai'"JTu\C.ll\
0}:,.C\{'1u1 2Rr IJl S'rIN-(""('I \'-~; 1 81". 2 1»a
BRANO nrw 3 BR, 2~\ at1. SouthCo rteal10111. i\IOBU.1': l·loinc·Bud~l"r t;". 1 iO GtT ANSWt'-horn<' Sl~/\1 0 l,1.,,fr-r IH1111• Blt:•:i. frJJll', CQ>t~·
2 cnr anngc, encl y11rdl Like_, trade? Our Trader'• Thi'! tn~le!lf ttl"flw tn tno \Vest. t>•l'tll) In park nr brnch. [ ,.,.r ... r ,\J ,J, :0 19.-2641 \"rr) <'lr11n . $3 2 5 / t1 0 .
I· ~,1•1,d0f/r1~ .• " •• Jy~e, poo Ptlrodhoo eolumo 1' for )'Oil! r .. i ""'1" •N '"" •phone NcMil lleh. 6 4 •-2 1 ' 8 ' I SCRAM LETS ANSWl:RS IN CLASSIFICA ION 800 Ti\.t ;.•1'" '"'w 1
" '""''"· j '1l-"'1l °' """""· I •• ii• ~ 107!. S lh>«! 5 d•Y" !or 5 oorb. coll oway • Sl2-."611. 6'2--il21. , • • •it-" ... • Dally Pllol ClWI • 1 1 \•t• <W?tt'7' r
' -.. ..
. .
Irvine
. .. . . .. . . • • ... .. •
DAILY PILOT 'I
Cotti -Corona WC Mar
.:.. .. ___ H-' ! * IDEAL locatloo "' qulot e-de Oro *Brookwood Menor* ,"'I r~ wwp 3 BR. + bonut, 2\.s bll . S·l:5 DELUXE RENTALS c.!Ul--de-u.c 11t., near Bia , ~ -~. 2 BR. •Pt. In pa.1'k Br't"ftDf LIVING • CABA VTCl'ORIA * I· WE NEED 1 l BR.. :! Mt/!$ , . ·· ..• tt:.O ilarbor View homes -2 Corolla Beach. 2 Br, 2 Ba. AU. l1f1lJTIES PAID ~ like a~. INMY I ft(,~ I, 2 A: 3 BR. l"-zm A: Uni'.
: ~ BEDROOM HOUSE I" BR., 21 : ba.. + view • , $496 bdrn\M.. + den, nk-.ly 2 trplcs. lluite klldlen in C.on1PQl"e before Y'lU rent n, o-c~ apackllls, $160 tu $180, l)e. Cal'Pf'I•, drapes, D/W, TV
' I n I 'J UH + den 2 bl -5-l30 1--"~·~...,.,. -mer lot· <:Orl1• front w/dlshwfllh«, ~tc. OJstom det.i~, Mtutb\11:: • ' • ,.~ ~ , •• ,,... ...... .... FROM $155 ant. Pool, etc. S2S VktOrlli ,, .• or R wUb Kli.rflli:~ ., · ' · · ·· • ...... ,,,,_"'.'' ....... ' LIOO ,. ". \\'••her, •-·-. e ;:i:o1owo ltchoo with ln· ....... ""--· v ·• ,_...._ CM ••~ WC!h 1arx f need •·I !or 2 • Hit .. 21.11.11ht .••..• ,,,, 1325 ph•1c rirlv111y. S52511c.·r mo., ,, \llT"'-' closed playground. a t.i'llld't SC. At J .... .....,.., • ..,.,_.,~
lOl'tdlum e 5i~rd ~1 (well :1 Ur., 2 ,bu. .• Int•!. i;:dnr .. sm 1ank11cr tm·ludt"Cl. ttlr\g incl. $&(1. oo yrly d rect IJ.ihtill&: Towt:fHOUSE dream. End. p.r'1. !.1.1w Allk 1.bout QIUJ' 1pedal
\ti:alncrl l vc-ry obedient!) ·I lilt., Z l bath!!. ••••• ,, • $430 lie'. S'TJ.-W, <!vt 615-40'10 • ~rato din' a: a~a 2 Br, nreptaee, pool, privett c..'Nt cu utU'1. Bttns, ('l'p(s, Great A.ecrs.tion: Swimmina, Mov&-ln Alk>wanct.
1,.111'1A'l'\.1Rt; \\URKING NP\\ToOrt (n"llt: 2 bdrm&. + Agt/Ch\'Tlr. :. ~me;Uke ~Ol'llit! pattot. *tinental brtak· df'P5. Nn pets. Near Ik1u:h saunas, 2 health c;lubs, And Huntingn,rt IMch
COUPLE oe~. o:i·r1u1 vle\I'. tennis. 1 BR ganie a1;1t, stv Ir. • ,..._~ .. ~~ ...... ,' wl•·-.. tut. Sp&d6tu IT'OOnds, near Blvd. & Warner Ave. volleybell. tennis, ltinnls pm l VERY tu.:SPONSIULIO:! 5\v1n1mir11{ Brand new -$500 rel &eparate patJo. ra.rage, • M;e ·=·~an """ lhopping I ftne beach. Fur. &12-0'L~. & pro $hoJ;i .C. free }es,<j()Jll, DELUXE adult pool 1 ki • .Wlu mke rxtren1ely good I month. adulls. S200. 675-4726 eves. _. nlthed or lfllumill:bed, frorn bllllll.l.'da, Indoor gnlf drtving garden bungalow, nr ocean.
: care Of )l()f'l10: I C sta Me.a : ~-sz ~~..... $250. Corona del Mar, VILLA YORBA r11na~. color TV theatre, ele-frpl, lra pattp, 6 pool1,
, !Older horn~ art'nt! I .l':Mtbluffi_ 4 Bt1rm~ .• vltw, 0 -........... ""I ...... -1ur· 844-Sll. · l'lnt plll1y room. sauna, telVIUI. 846--02.19.
! Ple&ie c.1lll evi-s. Miid "S-~ i•~·· ron~r mt. Si'JO Pt·r mu., ""'' •tJTI~" b-1\d -w rounded wtth plUsh land· 714/842-9622 ., . Aho t Br. From $135. ,, .. ......,. ~ rdenl' 1 1 "'"""' .r: u~ ''" '"" • sc:apine l 2 & 3 Fw1 Actlvitiu: Full·ume act1-.. "" weekl•ndi, 5-IS·7lt'll i 1 IV . • Bank Bl 101 r nt', Ea,.ta.lde CM. nr Ralplfa Adults, No Prts c_=o~1t~•:...:;M~1~u~, :,_____ . Br. Unturn. vltv director, """p11---· Roornt ~ ~ ...,($190 n1ax + itl'pn~1l -j st e9,1e111 . dg. HARBOR Markel and all shoppg, lg 2 2 Bdrm .... ,., -$123, $144, $UH a h1o. Stove, ~ .. ,..,.. ...... _. • w and la.t. f Un!verl'•ty Park, Irvine _,_ .. , ..,,w DELUJC.E N>lrlg, util Incl, Moderate Sunday brunch. Weekend ROOMS -wk nn w/ltit
... AMAZE'IENT \"ILL RE Da ys 552°7000 Nights BR. 2 BA,1i;c· .,.~1 ... "'~· 365 W. Wllaon 642-1971 1 ·. Income • Applli..-ntlons WeJ. BBQ. Parties. 1'1'iJ>¥. Lee· •.n wk ~p apts. CJdlctren ~ ow. gar.. n10. vu.-1~. $30 WEEk & UP APARTMENTS come llu'Ci. &"pet aec:&n. 23'26-NewPOrt ~~n "'~~1~J~ 50~f :/!: La guna S.ach '~~t~I 2 br, $l5D. Bltns, 1 • Studio & 1 BR Apt1. A~n~~~1~!ai~ ~~im: !!!!!!!!!~· !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!""'IBee.utitul Ape.rtmenta: Sin-Blvd., CM. 548-9755.
CLE AN EST, t.1 0 ST REA LTORS cattr s j.rg~t RentBI A"'CV e TV & Maid Servke Avail. Tennis Courts . Gym and $75 Ott let Mo's Rent. Brarfd 1les, 1 &. 2 bedrooml f'Ur·o ;,64$-J9117"'°::='-:::=-,:--;;;::::oc=.i
$£AUTIF'UL II 0 M to; SI ATTENTION H fl d 547 "41 • Phone Servi~ -Hid. Pool Billiard Room. new deluxe 1 &: 2 Br ~8.I"den nlh!d & W1fumi!htd. Renta•BR to rent in Freedom
,avallab&e for ront In Rll RENTERS I I s~~~ ome n ers • • Chlldren &: Pet Section I BR. From $1SO apta. Frplc's, dlhwhr1, etc. from $15'5. Sorry, no pets or Home ... Working lady, ahare
areu trom $-'JQD to $450. I 1 Br, Priv yrd. E . Side, 2376 Newport Blvd., CM 1 BR&. Den From $190 Walk to beaches &: shop'g. children. Models open dally Ba &. kit. privlleaet 548-4600
per JTIOflth Nc.'f'(J a ho1ne~ AP6rlrnenr? or _ _ _ ___ bul & shop, matun! adults, 548-9755 or &e-3967 2 BR from $ll.O Adults only, no pets. $175 10 lo 7
,; VACANT 11.1per Aha•'P 3 Roomm11te! \\I'(' have them $180 ulll pd, 64.S-6456 I {Ad good for $5 On rent) 2 AR. Twnhsea From $250 &: Up. 5J6..~7. 536-0036. 8282· · ROOM. ldt privl. Pool. ten.
bdrm., lam. rm., 2 bit.. 2'1r. 111\! OPEN 7 l)o\Y~. BLOCK TO OCEAN Huntington Bffch Dana Point MEDITERRANEAN Atlarrta Ave. OAKWOOD nia: young penon prefd.
pit"I, R&O. cfUh..,.•i.ilr, en<'L BEACON RENTALS 4 BR., 1 ~ ba., frpt Gar. J BLKS TO BEACH 963"5878. $25 wk.
patio, fncd. yo.rrl S.'G5. :-.-o 1161 .S. C.st H"''Y •G yard. S300 t\io., {~·arty. Nt'1lt l BR, $125. Close to LIVE in the all new Dana VILLAGE Extra lrg 3 BR. 2 car gar. GARDEN FURN. Room, pvt bath, $8S
adv. fee. AL.\N Rt:ALTY, Laguna Beach f9.l·!M9t Call: GiJ..3663 64 -2'Zi3 Eves. everything. Kids/pets ok, Point llarbor al the 2 BA. Nei1tly pelnled. New APARTMENTS pe'r mo. Euclid at La "6J6..5650 Ca.Hrs 1...rge"St R.entlll A$CC)' brauti.fu1 t.1ARJNA INN 2-M)O Harbor Blvd .. C.M. crpls &: d.rps, Bltns. Dsh'l'.1\r, Palma, Anaheim ~.
SI55 -I Br, ~lovc/n-f, nl'w Homefinder1 547 .. 964) Motel. 34902 Del Obispo SL · OPt_~4~~~AY $151 & UP. No Pel!!. Call Newport Beach North ROOMS for ttnl $50. I: $75.
LEASE-OR OPTION rrpts. drps. 2 lllk.s bca~·h, N rt a.. -<496-23531. KI t ch en , E<· llout'3: FM-Tues lG-6 536-lnt. Irvine & 16th Furn. Blk froni beach. 129
TIET rransfern.>d. 6 nionlhti $210 -2 br ~an vil.'W apt,' ewpo en llciencies &. AJ)Artmen1s. .,,_, & Th JO.? DELUXE 2 B 2 o. 1 1 645-0550 Balboa Bl\•d, N.B.
3 G
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h·g deck 11ml ""I ok I H••tod pool, d•"-·t dl•l "~· un. • r, ..,.,_, rp c, Guest Home 415 ~ng. BR.s. r{'{•nll1 , -' ..-;-· NEAR new 3 BR. 2 BA, clos-"''" '"°" " -1 blk I beach Qu" t M ··•. f.llri"." Feotu~ for,11a1 1 $.!.;() -·'· "'.· •. 2 Ba. frrl,c. 1 phones. televlsion. sauna NEW VILLA PAULA · 0 ' ie • 8' Newport •·1-L •···t• •• " ••• !bl 1 .. 1 _ _ __ cd gamgc. Yeary. 642-3188 turo couple, no pets. Zl3. ~ Ql .auu 1• dining rooni "''ith <:h11.ndl'Ht•r, 1 1 1a1 ·, a nun1. .......v< y ! or &12_7914_ bath, I au n dry lacilltlcs, ONLY 1 LEFT! A·tJanta Apt C or1oc:; mo 16th at Irvine
wct bar, huge tamliy roo1n & ot.>ean Vu. 11 VACANT super sharp 21 ~~~=------meeting room, close to San 2 'Br 2 Ba ~'el' Apt · • ......,... · .a self-cleaning oven. $J!f1 pt'r NU-VIEW RENTALS l:xlrn1. & dl'tl, R&O, cpts. Ouplexe1, Clemente & Laguna Beach. $195. !FAMILIES \VELCOME. l BR. New er p t n g . iar, 642 1.70
10. or make offer. Owrli'r 673-1030 or 494-32411. & drps, 2 car i;iar, lencctl Furn. or Unfurn. 355 Come play in o ur Supertor2wurk'ggais.Shag 3 blks to town. 5 blkfl to
LARGE Private room
,.,,/nursing care, good '3ocl
& laundry, 642-9278, I t
Rentals to Share 430 tmxk>us & ready! 2 BR.. 2 ba. Weathered yard. Pool & ' en n ls sporttishlng, shopping & crpt, drps, Jl8¥.o, beapi ceil-beach.. 515 7th St., 1-lunt. Equal !-lousing Opportunity ~ • larwln r••lty Inc. shingle, updaled. Hear s.. facilities. 2 bUai. to be11ch Laguna S..ch restaurant&. $00 v.ottk & Up. ings, garages. _B_o_h_. ~~~~----
f'l-4405 . (24 hrs) see the surf. Beams, panel-~~Af.~ ~~~ee. ALAN 2 BR, sundeck, walk to ~~I~:::. ~:.,r:t~e $5 6'J2 Hamilton, C.M. 54S-n2 DOG RUN -=P~A~R~K~~N~E~W=P~O~R=T~-l~e ~~ f~';taJC: !_~ l~~Equat~~1,,1""'~~'" ... •0p..,p1!!y~ .... 11~~11.trp~~iva~~keteJ7c'~~ . bea.cli, Untrn $2!!>, Furn BEAlIT. Br an d New See 5~· Mr. a:V~l"la· Hoban 2o~RsJ~ ~~ar-O\ild APARTMENTS ~=,In ~5c:1 S jTQ c:~ 1; O.K. $-M)O f.lo. Rltr 494_7551 LOVELY new INH for $335. yrly, incl U t I Is Bacbtlor. View. Storage. letTa I t)8 · · · Bachelor l or 2 Bedrooms
IZO -3 Br 1 Ba, yarn, crpts, lease/sale. 2 BR, den -i,;491"---l~059=-~~~----Xlnt loc. :s3966 Malaga. 1 Small Adult Complex In Lush 2 BR, 1 be, new dplx, 2 and Townhouses 1,;'13-<8>-:::..,=~""'='--~~--~v~u:;_'h45~k~ 3 gd 8;,il..~ :'oce1: ~ ~~ "tonaro n1odel, avail In Newport Beach 6T:r1849. Jo~orest Setting. l..DCated 5 car gar. No pets, $195 mo. Fr. $19l50 Open 9.fi Daily GIRL to share two b@droom
nm .1 s!ory ' sha r,.P I Nov. r-.tany extras. Prol. Min. from Be6ch & F'l'wy. 313 Oswego. 536-4152. Spa Pools Tenni• apart. One block from lie.ch.
2 BR Townhowic, nice yard, ~5:.g19it<!ves 61&-su.J '1 1~~ tennis club & pool LRG 2 BR. 2 BA. Newport Huntlngton ... ch 2 BR, 2 BA ......•..•..• $215
1
2 BR, crp!s, drps, encld gar, Across from Fashion Island $100 mo. can alter 4:00 p.m.
Jt8r., pool, child welcome. pr1vtlege1, gardener 1t1cl. Sborf,s. Nu erpt'g, $275/mo, 114 E. 20th St., c.M. SlCJ, 2718 Florida St, Pam. at Jamboree on San Joaquin 646-1040. ~ Rivet, N.B. ·•=l>=•'-=55~7~-5385=',.','"""-"'~"~'~~ 2 BR, 11-:i bas, 00 deg. ocean $~•25 mo. 644-2696. yrly. $250 winter. 548-4802 $155-$165 548-0137 or 646--4095 [53&4 ~~~"'~'c· -------I-tills Road, MALE nttded to shr NB '~BR 2 BA II bit I hi \•ie1~1. deck. elec gar opener~ F CHELOR I ~ (714) 644-1900 .... .... • , a. ns. 1·es )' new demr. $320 yrly lease. OCEAN Vlew
1
Condo, plush, Apt1. urn. 360 BA &: 1 BR., patOl'i, TIRED OF NOISE? 1 BR. r~rplc. 4 blocks to Muse nr ucach &. .,..y pn.inted Drpl & crpts ('lean-Al 5 191_,139 nu 2 Br, 2,l Ba, sunken frplc's prlv. garages -Wilson Garden Apt& 2 Br, beaches. Gas paid. 415 15th -·--w/same. Responalble,....$175,
M. $285. 64l-235fi. . ' ~ LR, Formal DR. dbl. gar. General Divided be.th &: Jots of St. Htgn Beach. ADULTS ONLY 6T.H666 _ Ow-Cl-IARMING 2 br 2 ba w/view of pool, tl·nni5 els, closets. Rec. hall, pool & l'it Ba, crpt!, drps. Pool. La un!I 8M§'h DELUXE 2 BRi 2 BA. G~l~RLO"~,c.-.,,~.,.-,--,1um.--.~.~,.1
~mu: A~ .. No. '"end.;""" -j;1"F.""&OCMil. $39{1:'""'551-= ATTENTiON ~hie!, • 1f I73Cli ONLY $!62.50/MO. flali'io':" POOi, dshwshrr. 2 -
OCEAN View, cwt •I BR, ~ u •no J)l!ts . ..,,..,. HARBOR View Homes -RENTERS ~:rLn~bl.k W. of :nsl Fountaln Way East New 2 br, 2ba. vlew upt1. Disti""8.!her, fireplace, swim BR. CALL Chery 548-SOSi
3 BA. tam rm, fplc, \vel · Carmel NEW 3 br; fam lR5-$ll5. Rooms ideal tor siu-Beach, 1 blk N. ol Slater). lW. ol Harboi.• 00 \\i'llson) frplc, gar, $325. Call pool. AcrollS from country ROOMMATE to share, Fern,
bar, walk to n1fll'U1a. ~ VIE\V 3 br 2 ha & patios. rm: pool, tennis privl. clenll', O:nnm. kit. Lounge 842_7848 Call 646-'!! 830-9001 cl\ib. 557-212>. y.;/2 oJ same $100 mo. ;56&-023==~'-------I Frplc, crpt/drps, S 3 4 5. Lease/Option/Sell Equity. wtf1·plc. Ocean Vu. 1-=--"'-''-""""---I """"""'"""'""~-iii ...... -. L NI I 20342 Santa Ana. Ave. * 6T':rnll * t·Jose.in. ~·25C.6; 675-4367 641-1759. $115--$155 Studios incl all. MEN, sma.Il beach hotel. I' _.•~@~"~""""°'°"~p~ue;;.;.. __ _
Fountaln Valley eves Harbor V.lew Homes Oceanfront. StudeD1s ok. ~r ~~.pesJG._~~pt1 LRG 3 BR, 2 BA + Patio. 2 BR, 2BA. Condo. On GoU LOVELY 1 BR. 2 Ba Gara991 for I<~ 435
)I VACANT, super shsrp, 4 HUGE 2 BR, 2 ba homi". (CdMJ 'Palermo 4 BR, $175-i204 • l Br's. Some w/ Cr)1ts, drps, bb.·im. lmmed. Course. Deluxe shag, relrig, Bayfront Condo. In luxury MINI WAREHOUSES
Bdrm 2 ba E Z walk beach, shopping. $5l5 mo. viev.'ll, lge nns, frplc's &: occupancy. Nr. Balror & bltns, wshr/dryr, & a r . adult bldg. on Balboa Penin. STORAGE ·-tc ··R&l•0m·d hnn.h, r ,.. ~lnny cxtrru;. $325 n10 6--,133 * 6~8473 sundet·ks. LaGUM Beach Brl5tol. $195. Mgr. 919-8719. $265/mo. 831-1298, 675-0008 Unbelievable Extras! . pool, ,.
u1• .. • s ws r., nc · 495-1134 ,.,. ,.,.. Open 7 Days A \Veek M V rd slip privil ., etc. S415/per No Move-In or Move-OU!.
:,rardVA$365CANT. ··-r ........... , EMERALD Tl'IT!lce, 3 BR. Newport Shores BEACON RENTALS OIARMING 1 BR, on ocean.1 ...... !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! __ • ... •-•-•_;.;•-----I mo 64.'Ha>J or 548--9695. charges. From $7.50 per ,. ..... ,.... ,.,._.. .. $.225 incl. utib1. opposite 2 BR 1 Ba 11\""'le lo th •BR. bonua: 'rn1, 2· ba, r..Plt', 2 bas, encl i;_ar. yd, S4:.0 , RENT or lease option. 4 BR, 1854 S. Cst. Hwy. #6 Alberlson's 729 Gav i 0 ta. ' •06 9 ry • JiOME ATMOSPHERE -LIVE at Bch year round, ~ · ,Nt-.ln, R+O. d Is h w sh r ,' rno. yl'ly, -49-1-1669 I 2 SA, 247 Coltoo, Nt'v.•porl Laguna Beach 494-9491 494--1719 garden unfl, Sheg crpts, Dix 2 & 3 Br, $170 up. 6 drs from water, lovely Ham1Ho'l & NewlaM St., HB
:£!''°· e~~ "'~~.felll.~.L ~I c,i::i~h1~1~ie.Brisfa~ r:::;:: I ~~~~Open Da4ly l--5. Agt Balboa Island FURN. Studio w/garage. Sts.~~~~de~~: ~~ Ofc, :ms Mace Ave. ~sh~~.2 d~'.tw~ ~ A~~~~E
IJ.EALT'f. 636-jGJ(). $295. 494-49-11. Utils paid, adult11, no pets, A. 537.3125 aft 7. N llN cpta, 2 sun bale. ref req. DOUBLE garage Jor rent.
d 3 BR, 2 ha, lrpJ, bltns, curp, AITRACT 2 BR. wlg•r 497-1236 llft 6 PM ewport ch $350 n1o 637-375.l -.... ..
3 QR, 2 BA, frpl c .. b.llns, 2 ca~ I drps. $325 Yearly. ~ D\\i', washer & dryer, call * E/&lde 3 lk, l% Ba. • $45/mo. 177 E. .ui111 st. ~· patio, kids OK. $~ Lagune Hills Property Hoose 642-3850 aft 4 PM 673-3768 · Newport a..c" Bihl&, retrlg, c r pt /d r P, SPECTACULAR 2 Br, l'h S.ach and Boat Slip Costa Pt1esa. 642-3645.
Nlo fC\', a.gent IW2-4421.I S Cl 3 BR winter modern nice •<KPERWk• 1-2B ~,;.74No pets. $165. ~~.2 ito~kli~ng~~~ B~ ~l•~D2 ace....,. 2 ea""·,_Off_l_c_•_R_on_t_•l ____ 440_1
Hunt n,ton 6"ch ti VACANTsuper!!harp3BR an emente Comp .. s. a .... view. _,.. .,.... up. DI", r ~ · i..n., y~.. ..,..., · ug ...... • •1 · _,. 2 be R&O ..__.. _,,,, &: Bachelots. Color TV, SllO 2 BR. .i-... OX>.J· • ._.. ...,,..,. mo. pool. Ste. bldg. ebcl. prk. "!n area, . " · 4 BR I ~"I mo Utll. pd. 675-5838. "' ~ft-· ~1 ....__ M • ciP6. .,....,.., 675-1455 Carcv Cn<I 6 7 5-8 5 51 ·. *Please Helpl * d1shw pal10 fenced yard ·am rm, """"n;o.us, ma .... '""" .. ,_..'""' esa, ~Jes pret'd. 2043 6_.,:,... ,.. • S2!fi. 'No ad~. fee. A.LAN priv bch v.·/club priyl. conv, SAPACIOUS .prlv. 2 br, 1 415 N. Newport Bl., NB. ·wana 646 9243 WESI'CLIFF-2 Br, crpls, •.r•uo• eves.
WE NEED RF ALTY 636-5650 $375. mo, 213:794-3453 ba extra nice, home-like. 646-9681. ~· -or drps, bllns, adults only, no 1 Bectroom pool, blk to bch,
2 BEDROOM HOUSE . . . 2-SI'ORY 4 BR 2 BA. waJk Yearly lse SXIO. 675-8989. OCEANFRONTi pets. Avail Nov. $200/per yearly ~·
.... or I BR 1,111h garage L•l!una Niguel to beacli. A~allable lm· Balboa Peninsula DELUXE AU..hild~t<=-2 -br, 1
1315ba1, 1 mo. 1728 Bedford L n · &li-2198
w?fh large fe~ yard Jor 2 ·-medlalely $165 * 49&-3453 c ""• no • mo. --~=""=·~=----~ mediun ':red dog I JI t VACANT sh 3 ' $l5 WEEK & UP 3 Br, 2 Ba. bftn8. trptc. \\,.in-U'.l Albert No. 7, CM. :: S C....,_ -•--• '•sr _....,!· ,~,• 'Bd •--super arp Housas Furn. or ter $325. 8JS.1491; 61>29-i9. ~. SEACUFF ~lanor Apla. 3 an ,.,...,,,.... vcr,y """"'lE'fl. rn1., UUJ1. rm., 2 ba., I e SlttPlng Rooms Br, l'ii Ba. Studio $175. ~1ATURE 'A'ORKL~G rrplc., R-0, dish'l'."Sh .. patio, Unfum. 310 e Housekeeping Rooma 2 BR. 1 blk ocean, kids TROPICAL poo!. 2 br, spiral Pool. Ask about our dis-NEW 2 BR. 1% Ba. ocean * SMALL OFFICE BLDG.
••• COUPLE reru::ed >'aJ.'d. $3:15. No adv.G --'---
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'-.-'-------e Ocean View Aptl &: peU ok. Compl furn. $200 stairway, frplc, bltins, gas count plan. 1525 Placentia view. Top area, super ON old Newport .Blvd. A.p.
1 .VERY RESPONSIBLE! ree. enera BALBOA INN mo. Util incl imtll July 1st. pd, CJS REAL ESTATE Ave. 548-~ deluxe, adult&, $200., prox. *» aq. ft. 3 offices
WtU take extnon1cly good 11 SUPER SHARP 3 bdrm., 646-t0'11. 548-ll68. 492-2264 &. recept, or ~ area.
'Cllre of home! ran1. nn, din. area, 2 ba., 2 BR., 1 bll.., unl New carp, Uli =~treet ON the beach tbru June 31. 3 1 BR, newly decorated, shag ~ :. ~~~. ~ NR beat:~ 1100 9<f n. 2 BR, ~crpt'd "= drp'd. caII ,, ~?Ider h>tne j'N!at~ l fr p I c., b I tin R & O, drapc-s, decor. Yr'ly. SZiO. BAY Front l Br ri bch. Br, 2 Ba. $321/mo. U111 pd. crpt, stove, retrlg, beam Hm-bor Hi Sd:d. Gas & wtr li,i BA, cpt!:/dl'ps, ln 4 RIGHT REA' TY
' efUle call ev('S. and dshwashr., fenced ya.rd, 3 BR., 2 ba.. Wlf. new carp, & plec ~~. ·Sll~p v.avail. m.8350 or 548-4757 ceillng1, no pe.J.j. $150, pd Ph 646-2723 evt.>S or plex... Avail Nov l . Lease ,,.,:•~c:;;;=''°='=:..::~c;...;..,..~
. • weekends. 548-78.'n $.".\li5. No adv. ree. ALAN drapes, decor. yr1y. '325. 673-'1923/~7 2 Br, 2 ha furn or unt. i,.:"".._==.::afto..:G!:pm;:!... ~~-&1&7382 days. $185. rno, m.-3199 DESK SPAO!: adj. O.C.
• (ll'Ol'1m~__,+1 ~Jl081 it· REALTY, 636-56.10. 3 BR., 2 ha. Oceanfront. =~===~---Great area. Pets OK. Tom NEW 1 & 3 Br, built-ins, PARK N~ 2 BR. 2 S J C I t Alrpol1 I: A1rporter Hotel . ....... a,... THE SHORES Furn.; winter $325. BALBOA l Br. apt. Furn. 838-34C or 548-3869. drps, carpeting. pool, trplc, Bath.· Sublvu•• n....-1 t an uan •p I rano $60 Per mo. Full sect·y. r. VACAN1'. super sharp 3 Attractive ocean view deck. 2 BR., 2 'ha. tum, winter Yearly. $190 utll pd. gar, l'ldults, no pets, 376 eue uq;. 0 phone copy serv new .. bdrm., dlnrna: area; 2 ~.. 4 Bdiiii. easy maintenance. $300. 673-7219 or 548-9695 ~ !8Yftte; t!,1 ~r. w. Bay. ti;,e L $2651640-8313 aft 2 ~:~bl :...8.!:00~t Bl~, desk, ctc. available ~i addttt
frplc., R&O, cp1s, .it dl'JIS., Beamed C't'illngs. SeU-1.'lcan LRG 2 BR. ocean view. Steps • . cs, 2 BR n!um Pool Crp ; , a--• , . chargt!, if rcq. 2172 DuPont, ~en\~ yard, ~IO. O\'cn. Security gate. Near IO beach. $210 mo til June pool, slip. S5S1. 644-6744. d ' u · .-. ls, NEW duplex, l Br, 2 Ba. on mo. 494-2918 att.l. No. 8, Irvine. 833-3223.
1 ACANT., shlll"P &: c\l'8.n, lx'ach. S.t50 includes use ol incl util. 67~1573. OCEAN front 3 Br., 2 ba. norp:ie:.°897 = ;,~u!~i beaut. Np<. Isl. Frplc, mod. NEW deluxe _ 2 br, 2 ha, I MO. FREE RENT
'8' bdrm. din. area, 2 b(l, J..w! tenrus crts 2:1682 Sid· Furn. Yearly · $375 Mo. 2 C 548-61Xl kitchen w/dshwshr. Bal &: frpl. ~ patios. $240/1110. Executi\'c Ottice Suite, Utll ~. dshwshr, f11C'!.i. yard. I 11 ... , 'i:i.u-., raU 493-si69. Caplstr•no S..ch Property llouse 642-38,'j() ,,":!0,;:;,·•~·~· "'°:.;::;::,=~~~ sundK:k. $350. ~. 34592 Via. Catalln.a.. 49&-1924. & Janitor pa.id. Air con· ~., ~ BEST VU UPPER BAY
'
' VAC,\',~. ·"•-& cl•on, 1 $.'12.J. nio. ~ BR, 2 ba, -•. 1 BR apt for rent, near CLEAN I or 2 Br. Adults, 2 B , ~-'"d ~· NEW cust. baytront w/prl Westminster dilioned. Crpts, patio, Xerox. ·~. ''" .... ' I I I I ' ~., be n l. f all til pd. noo M pets. ~ kit. $141>-$160. r ....... CA. :n.l .-vu-I. heh &: pier, 3 br/2 ba, frpl. 9776 Katella, A II.he i m . 3 BR. dining 8tt'a, 2 ba.. < rp;;, rp c, car gar. Quiet Condominiums a....., um, u 2-E. 16th, NB. •~10ll. ~. ~1T.'9 15 ADULT•-' BR I · ·-661 -1 R&O 1-.......1 _, 1 blk 1 ...... , N _mo. Mu.st call Frank ...,, .....,. BBQ. $4 yrly. 919-0631, "f!;" ,poo,qu1et, ~1 . , $J~o~·· · · e ............ ya.v
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C~n VAiiey & ~"'p82~ Unfurn. •1..v &1&-m1 CLEAN 1 BR. be!lt 3 BR, l~~ Ba, spa.cioua apt. 644-4510. bltins, ~· super clean,lo0~ESK="",c... .. -,.-.-.-,~11~8b~le-l50=1
t' VACA.~T. Brand ncw, 31 Avail Nov l, Call Frank Huntington 8e•ch 1 BDRM, semi rum, priv bay.beadi ·toe-. Adults.. $175. ~tu OK. $170. mo. 757 NEW l BR, 2 BA apt. Bllns, fl47• S9 mo. Will pmvide tumtture
br, tam nn. din area, 2 ' &i&-ml or Lee 495--5075 yd, N' DP harbor, CUist.ian 6734112. a.r. £1lllc, laundry. '<l blk oct'an. Aptt at $5 mo. Ai•wtm. service 4~ •• patio" lncd yd, 2 t·11r $.125 MO. Newer 3 BR, 2 2 BR Condo, 11i ba. All retired, mn ,imoker, Reas. S.,. c .. 11_,.. 2 BR, crpts. drps. rarce, $300. Dl.YS 979-3lil;; Sat &: furn. or Unfurn. 370 avail.able. 17875 Beach IDvd.
1 gar. $285; No ad~. fee ALAN ba. with pool facil . shag crpl, pool, gar, patio, rent, 496-lfl.2. ~"S re~~~pea. $150. Sun, 64.5-0232 -Huntington Beach. 60-c2l
, 'R.EALT\, 636-5650. $-M>5 ?i-10. New bcachslde dsh\vshr & range. $190. Corona del Mar LUXURIOUS l!uoge 2 BR 1,,0"'-'-"P"'-:::..===o·~~-NE\\i' deluxe Bays Id<! Coste Mu.I 1617 WESTCLIFF-NI
OST nu 3 Br 2 Ba. home Eves. a36-SS45. apts, In prestige area of SPAC 2 BR. 1% ba townbowle, 3 Br 2 Ba, frplc. nm EXC.,.ING 2300, 1200 &: 540 aq. ft. 5X
& Fam RM, short 1,111.lk PLAOE REALTY L 8ea h BACH tum apt $.US w/util Sa.n Clemente, Cl0&e to Townhouse. $165. 637-2943 or view, dsh/wsh. Carpets & PALM MESA. APTS per 11q, tt. Ample prtc'g. Ulll.
to bch & 5Ch. for info Cflll 494-9704 49-1-9729 agun• c buain,:'QJ"..n, llM-51DOker. beach, occnn vle'l'."S. $225. m-8420 drapes, yearly 673-'J8g.1 • Baumgardner, 541-5032.
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Rich IMl-0011 Real Estate Linda Isle FOR l't'nt Ocean Front home, Spotlcu. So. of b w Y · up per mo., on perm. basis. •STUNNING 2 Br, 2 Ba OCEANFRONT -NE\V 2 BR. MlN\ITES TO NPT. BCH. 1736 ANAHEIM. C.M 600 911. ~y fl.lcVay. . year fOl.1nd $500, hent~ pool li15-485e "...,_:::C:::::~·-......,,=.=::c· ---·I Garden Apt. Poot Air, Rec. Security. Lea.~e 0 pl ion , ru_RN. OR UNFURN. 1 tt grd Ooor priV toilet
· tkEE rent for 1 br to I OR 2 yl'. lease. Pil'r & ! .t 1ntw.zi, 499-3723. 1 BR F'um, quiet, enclsd. 2 BR, pool, wshr/dryer, Rm. $115. 710 W. 18th, CM. $400. 21 3 1212 -7176 or Unbelievably Laree apts • 11th & Free ay $Jl5
niana ~ e units H.B. slip. 6 BR. t'·~ ~,., ah'-cond. I Laguna Hills a:ar. w/storRge, nr. rompl. $190., m pets. No deposit, 1 &. 2 BR. S135-$1.». Stove, tt4/673---01L ......
1 ~n~c9=l'aJ;~~d!.r:.ec~~~~ :O~ 673-26.54. w
KldS/Pf'IK. ,\]so 2 Br. $12.l, 7.000 s.:1. t. :1.000 ~tonlh shoppiflt An-a $175. 602 first "-la15t only. Avail Im-ttf, crpl/ch'ps, bid pool. 1700 WESTCLIFF DR. etc. Adults, no pet!!. LEGAL Exec SU!te, Union ~r. !\.lnglc~. kids, pets ok. Bill GruTllly Ritt". 6i5'-6161 3 fJORMS., 2 baths, 11ll""<'Ond. Heliotrope, 831-1300. m«I. 830-'76T.I a.ft 9 PM. AdultS. no pets, IW5-896,i. 2 BR w/l or 2 BA. Bltn UJ.l· SING.LES From S\50 Bank Bldg. 11th float,
II.gt. Fee. !:179-8430 M•sa Verd• Ek11utlful view. $275 Adults. Cost• M... Apt. Unfum. 365 pl hrncl?!I. Pool. &12-62'1·1. I BEDRM. From $165 Newport Centtt, Inc Id i
l BR. 2 131\, nt"'wly <lt'<' in/ Call : !'>..'!6-8075 --Dan. Point EXEC Townhouse. 3 BR. din -2 BEDRM. From $185 Xeroxing etc. Gf0.ai10.
, out. Nr. llf'at•h. ~nJZls Mesa Verde 4 Br Newport Beach LOW WEEKLY RATES :Gone;:;::::.":l:... ______ 1 nn, fple, patio, pool, terrific Unfur!_i AP,l• 1\-.,ail Fro1n $10 FREE OFC. SPACE tn c.B.
Y:rl<"Qml'. Ls<.' $270. 96Mi215, Swhn fU"I. Sl!"il mo. Pool Ex.cutlve Suites 3 SfORY 3 BR, 3 BA. loc $300. 548-3993' to Sla LESS. law ofe In cxchg for a.MWC!r· ~2-M7L ~·l"V. ltt<·l'd. 9~1.4."m. BLUFFS 2080 Newport Blvd. ~~=~:it: B~~75~fii1~ \V/frplc, drps, g air age, \\IATERFRONT apl, 2 hr, You're right, they're under· Ing phone 496-4977
CLf.Ai'I :1 BR. '2 llA, r1·pt~. Mission Vie1·0 For 1-w. Sparkling ne\v Con· Costa .... _.. lndry, bllns. 496-4921). nriced! 1561 :P.JeS3. Or. · ·
G ,... ~lus\on 675-5016 agt. H ti -h newly ck>ror. $275 mo. Util 15 blk.s from Ne\v....,... Blvd.)
drps, bltln stove Ii oven. do. rent unohstruL1~ ~u 642-2611 Un ngron pd. Slip avail. 673-2182. 540-9..VJ.,.,., TIME FOi =· patk>, S 265 · 1 SUPl::R Sharp 3 Bdrm .. ;::J ~=rtinBa~~ f;:;~ STUDIOS & 1 BR'S Anaheim 1 BR. •hag tt"Pta. privilte 2br2baguperdecor $240 PREVIEW OPENING
fam. rm.. dining area. '2 & din mr. • el!:lra lrg e t~RE~ U~ns 1 Br $150 per mo. Eucllrl patio, dshwhr, nr-new avl-now; no pcl/cld Av.vd winning 1. 2 & 3 br
i Bit. 3 ba, frpl c, 3 r:u· ba, lrplr., R&O, dishwshr. I fanl rni All clC'r. KIT· e rnEE Utilies at La Palma, Anahtim. Call $165/mo * 536--782'7 32lHi Balboa; yrly; 64.4-4340 apts w/f~-a.. rms. No QUICK CASH gar, no lease required. $100. palio, hlk. 11 t1U lencc $.UZi. CHEN. 3 BR. 3 BA. WIO. e ~Ull Kitchen 67S-.'l61.3. 2 be 2 Br t I OCEAN h J vie ,.......,. mo. 900-12-1.~ 01\·ll('r/brokl·r. NQ !ldv. lee. AL AN PH: Sat & Sun or \\"kd"" • lfeated Pool Bal•--l1l1nd Blks sch. '•tract ve •,. .. , • ',•"B"'R, 2 BA,ws. leuc. Sony, no pet&. From
NE.'\V 2 Bedroom adult RE1\LTY, 6.'lG-5650, ('\'I'S, 21:1/790-n!l'l "'¥ e La.undry 1.-acilitics -blt·infl. New carpet $ISO. cw "'""uxt, just. $lJ5. OUR TOWN
('l)l)(lo. Pools. tennis, etc ---, • TV & maid serv a•""'a CUTE 3 BR ,.-•--ly "3&-9638-;:e;::::::c.:al;:,I ~·~-::;:,,,,..,,,...,.,.., yrly $395. 6'D-5006 1',IU'Tlily Apts, 1250 Adams THROUGH A
BRAND 3 BR 2~ Ba ~ .. .,. • u ""'·1•• ,,. • -;H •w--Like to '-'•? "-Tra•••'1 A·-(A~--&I FaJ-'--), S2T:> ,\gent ~18-1200_ 3 BR, 2 BA. rnzor i;ha ... •, new · ,.. • • Phone Servk·e s= mo, lmmed .......,,...,..,.., aw IQl'ne ...... J'Otl want '" u..... ""' """' "'""' ...,,.. ~ .. .., ... • ,. 1!elw:c co ndo Newport .<.JLI .......... ,........,, ttell? C1aslfted ads do tt PandlR column Is lor you! Cosla M"'-. PhMe 556-0166.
;s_ BR, 2 HA, rlf'n.r bC'at'h likC' /!('\.\', quehty ept!I & c t 1' t · $140 & UP Nlccly furn 1 gar, refrlg, M4-8856. tp~.~2;~ J'!!l· r.10. i\fl••r ~1;ri~ i~~rd~~:~=~P~t'. ~~n~cJ. j t'O~~).Arn":i1in1t :n~le~ & 3 BR .trailers. ?i.1ature _8~1~lboo;;.:.;;...;P_,.,;;,;;.rnc;.;1~u~I•;;... __ l ~A!p~t~. ;U~nfu;:.:~m;.:;.. ---=365=-~""°"'~t·c.;:U~n~lu::::;m~.:,_--~3'5:.:::;.:.:A~pto:;._Un::::;~fur:.:.;n~.:,_--~3::::65 DAILY PILOT
_.,N sm ' mo. L" n rl r r ll h 1 11 , or ran1ily s.500/mo.. unf. aduJI~ 132 \V. \VUson, c.r..t. -C t M co-sto u--Co•t• ••---, I I' 8A ., ••~1 I &I'~ '"I &1<-~~ ~' ~,nr-'''· Fonl••llc •. o~•::::•.,::~nl=-----_:;;;:.:.:;.~~;.;;;;;.:. _____ _:;.:.:;:,:_~~c;:;:,:_ ____ _ l BR. Condo. 1'r~c. i . ~12-4 1Gl:l, F:v•''· ~.".l:;....:>\!{1 ~vv n1n Ul'TI . ...-0~1 •• ....,. • ......,...,.,, nc.n ...,.," ,., _
Kid!! ''°' pets ok. $2'3.'l/rno. ,\LI"'· 1'<11• I ''"'"Y ,_,.,,,. Townhouse Unfum. 335 1 BR, close lo m11.)or shop'i;:-, Ray View .. 3 BR. 2 BA, WANT AD cw1 s."J6..6X96. ·'IV . ... "~"'· S130 mo Abo 1 1..rg BR. tam nn. tlt>ek, l'ncl. p111io,1 r•••• .. •-•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••or•••••.1••••••••••,•••
Irv In• 1 ~uni:~;.'dna~.~~~h"m~: ':~: San Clemente util pd. i140. Bkr. 6T>&«Xl 6~71:n l~~h"~~;iy drd·u r~~: !, Distinctively Different Adult Llving.. . .~
642
5&JI
, ;,ilti-007l) nr oc051 2~ll-00'.'.<1 2-1 I _ 1 BR. lrg $165 & $)60. T'l'.1in ~ r ---· . Jl ?, !lpl't'ti'lCU or ocean VIP.I\.' IK'ds, ideal for bachelora. m I F $155 • 2,flt>drooins. N<'w' ...... $.115
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FOi! ll'HM', ~ Bit 21lA, 1111 ~If counct'. SZiO mo. 1993 Church. 5'tS·96l3. 1 BR. View, Near !!hops, : IACHllOR A • DI 111lArTS. w lOfTS rom : •
J ~BR. 2 balhi1 .....••... $:JZ) r·1111 rt11, 1·rn1rii] 01r t·oud., ·19'.l-n-137, ,1!12-27i«I. Behl!, New Dec $'175 unf, • _,/ :1;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~1
; 2>BR.'. J bAth .......... $.11:i $.100. 1l'IO. !"Jj}..OCM.'~ Dup l•x•• Furn. 345 I ~~~~ ~.~~; ~'lit ~fiu~; $100 Furn. OUI !nrl. &12-l'119 :.. ",•.ir . ..:.-:··,:,it."'•: .,,.r :II
• i BR. 2 ~· l'.h>n, aJr ... ~s:n:·, Newport Beach d 1 &12-t044 Corona d•I Mar •. ·-.;.~~;'.-wt•:'\:.!.'.~li·. ........... ~ ... wS.·eed : N ,. j 3 Bit, 2 • blL . , . , $3.~1<100 3alboa P el'l1 nsula " u 111, no 1)tt~. . -• '-'r • ~ v;· - -, __ • • ••• • .,.,,,
3 Bit., 2 bl'tha .......... $400 PRF.STIGE: l\rl'tt, stunrd f'n -LGE. FULLY ruRN 2 BR. NEA!t new, 2 br, 2 ba, lrg , • .' l ;;!"· ~ ,t. • ~'i : f t f 3 BR. bOmL~ room .... WiO 1r11nce. 5 Br. 3 Ba. 3 rrplc" OCEANt1lONT, form tt r Bltt111, w/v.'. pool, benm St"il tam nn/den, beum cell, : •~fi' ;'i/ : .':':"'.' ~ ~.-~ 393 Komllton J.t!I •Ill• pntq l 4BR.., 3 IJAlh8 .......... $olzj ~11<1role rn11.lds rm, fl'need. n1,1nrr'.• 111111. Upper 2 Br, Adlts, TIO pets. SISCI. 64'}...9521) patio w/oc:ean & bay view, ".~ CostaMno,Co.92627
4 -SR .. 2~ bt.Utl'; , ..... $450 & gardner, $875 mo · f'u~hcd. Y..'inter $250/mo. 1 BR &: 2 Br tmilrT'3, $00 w6!""""7~na/ dryer. $315 I mo. ~ <',..,.; 17141645_ •• 11 5 en. 3 ba, N'pt Ueh .•. $."iTJ 644-1444 or 646-4525 C;ill 67:N.:166 $12& util pd, No children, ,,,... -. -
: • CALL 552-7500 I DOVER SHORES Coron • del Mor no polo. 641H"'9.
• v' ISION &nut. dew home.< Bdmn.. •STUNNING 1 .... Ganlen I 4 balh~ SI.JOO f\1ot lrase. l BP. fum $1 ~. All urU pd, Apl. Poot Air. Rec nn.
" Bill Gn1ndy Rlrr. 6T:>G16l K11ls: pi•t,; Gnr aveil. $165, 710 W. 18th St., CM.
• red hi.II PHl::STIGE ron1munft/j 2 hr, Cahfs ~l"ltt llmlnl A1tcy NICE t br dplx. Quiel. ~P'
2 bn, lg. ram rm, n I clttl Hom•f1nder1 .547·9641 by pr'q'es. Employed Adult
>----kit, "'Id, priv. brh $<115 ]!k', $.....,-Clem ente OYer :II, no JM:hc. MR-.J(l'll j· Rf"'.ALTY RF:ALTOHS 52 1-3473 nr ~ MOTI:L i\pts. Low mnntllly
, Unr.-. P1u"k Cl'ntrr, lrvlnt· SHAJU>-\IB.e&nl J br, 21.i ba. l.J\R(;Jo:: r111Xlcm 2 n It ri •lt'.1 $110/mo &: Up. 2l'i6
I t££L!2 ~i---poot I:. yard mainr. J.A"asc duph•x. th:!nli.'d pool, v.·lk to NtwpOrt Blvd. CM ~::.5
1 AVAIL Nv \i' • Spac. 4 BR. SMXJ/ 833-8635 bch & shopping, compl furn . l 3 BA. park, potJI. \'cRr ~. mo. Must .IM' 10 appn:ciott:. 2 BR gsrrlrn ept. Pool. All
'
' '315. 3Wl 0.ICI. 8~19.'\ BL t,.f'S CONIJO.J br, !l 1):1 . ll!Ml >lo <9' n-·3 11.dul!, no ptitJt. Very clean.
• 1 • • .r-.,.'1> · SI'ffi/mo. 64~7289
1 18'f-},3Qj. 2 c11r l(llr. Pool. F'.P. bhns. 1 U 1 350 I ~n .... l!3J ~f\3.1. IM $-l;,Qf1no. Oqp •x•s n urn. ADULT, 1 UR, .......... 1. •""''· I <>D , 6DA, ~_!lrp;i, ll"Jll C, --I"""' I .1 .... , .. 1 . )'Td, ~ mo. 1>h -BIG CANYON HOMF: e albo• P•nlntula !lllPf'r clcnn, t1ti1 pd, $IM
1 '13 1.15 4 Rr. 2 Bs, tam rm. $i00 1..e•.0MH>97:::;:;c'1c.... ____ _
tV. ML 2 Bl\, 2 BA, \..M, 493-5197 or ;,4~. NE\V 3 hr, 2 hit, ou11111ndlng: l>on't 1tlve' up Uw! •hip! f:l~ce:, sm•ll~ ~Y~l..ow ~•" of vkl"'' of br1y. \'rly $600 nlO. "Li.11l" II in clwlOMt_!hlP
tra.. \nv. ctua\tlf!d, ••. &4J-.5tl18, 543--G'ilil , ~t~2Hl.1. lo SMt'I! Resultt! ~;r:11>111.
I .
DELUXE 'tol\ontiw, 3 br,
2~ 'ha. f'rplc, cblhW5hr. v.·/w
crpt, l '4 blks to bch. Yr
le.-~. 673-7127 .
3 BR. 2 BA hOUM!, So. or
Hwy, fple. 1)11.Uo, $3Z.
A~ 675-6900 Dally 1.a
BRAND """' "PP"' 2 BR ,_.
open beam cel11rtgs. $l"Al per
mQ. Rc{lltor, 641-7270.
2 BR, den. r~ Yl'rd. Gar.
Jullt paint<'<!. Crpt11, drps.
418 l.Arlmpur. 673-.'"~.
2 BR.. blt·ln11, pool. Aduttii, I !---1
nn petii. ~ Lr11~~
SEMPl.t; ft.E. 675-2101
Any day bi the nES'I' DAV to
run 11n 1d! Don't dfl11y .•
can today 642'«?1.
......
For Cltoal llfd Ad
ACTION
Coll
A OAILY PILOT
AO.,,,SOI
'41.S611
. J
J
I • I
D
0 w
I
* * * * * *
R
'·
•• •
1~tdntiday , Oetobet 24, lct7) DAILY PILOI
Help W1nted, Mi f! 710 Help Wanted, M & ' ho I Help W1nt0Cl, M & F
0
7ll p Wettled, M & F 7 D'fe p W1nl9d, M & j! 710 nd ( sl 50 I ar<Mning Ila
FOUND SUM or MONEY PROFESSIONAL prdtntr, CEJUMIC TILE NEW ' GIRL FRIDAY KEYPUNCH So& OI' 9fl0
OH July 4lh. P1'ue call l1"M v.ui&:, p r u n I n 1 • remodtt fNto Ht. Sm jobs I O I Great vart.ec:)' apot. N~ rxp. Penn p/Ume nitet. M.c~~ E1~ ;1
to ldontlly. m.7489 "' sprinkl•n. clea•"P lobs ""I'°""'. """""' alt ~ Del very-Sunday n y only I"' ... Wlll ... ........ ~1 ...... ... .,.1. i'ro'gam ..... 1221! ' TI4:3U-1C I and •ct pi nc. ~. Top Soll di~ w/ptant manager.'"""""''------..la:trcntc Olmpon!ftlt ... ~ l
YOUNG female Labrador 646-..5891 I • Start $500, CaU Kl.)' Wire, KITCHEN Help, • t u d • n t Product lJne Manqer S2'tC :
Retrl.eYtt. Westmtna1er O tMral S.rvlcu '* QUAUTY • OF DAILY PILOT TO CARRlERS. RE-5«>«116, Coe.Ital Ptttonntl pretd owr 21, pert Llrne Data Qimmunicadon.i. J. • ...._ MlNH ...,,. VU'/ *MULCH & TOP son.* ~UIRES THE USE OF A LARGE STATION ...,.._.,, :mo H.-Blvd.. _,,...,., """'8 io 2· Call 0'1\all ll>wr (mechJ io $1411 :
mudt. call 5.14-«306 "T1tlNGS" by Moow.. Ce.n'I 581-aJo CM. for appt. Tiie Gald@n Bear, &:ec. SM'y ro l8lll 1
Carpentry, -Plum-'~!!!!~!!!!~~I AGON OR VAN. CONTACT MR. HARRY GIRL FRIOAY '°' Ocoan A,.., H . e. c;.. ,.....,, S8J): 1-z~,w~ ~: blni.Elec.Remodellnrl~ SEELEY,S30\VESTBAYSTREET,COSTA Manqu ot div. aoeks In-~-~~~------TllJl:Secttwy •:
about e tnOI old. Vic Kl-~ I ~.... IT1' MESA. TELEPHONE &12.-4321 FOR AP-dividual wJ·-·-•a t)'J)tna LEGAL secm:&ry, e>rptt. A/Rec:/Bt.lllrw ' Rd & C1W Dr. NB. 54S-Oii6u LIGHT maintenance • haw-a ; I •• l It I POINT~tENT. ' lite 1h. c;;;r-variety mll(Ure b' partner in 3 General Otllce $CIO :
YOUNG Sia -··'A tng. Apt & »_ome call mw. spot. Call ?ttlkl Wh1t@, man Jaw firm. Nev O.C. ~ $Me '
DEmGN PLAZA, pr Iv ate-I _, •11 1me~ ........... cat Bob 549-<»3j_ S>M>-6055, Ooutal Perwonntl ---°"'""-"-'833-3622°""~'-· ---Uogai ~ to $700 : ortlces ·~·tJon -m ou."' · unt neton Atlanta, •-E-•al n..........-1ty Emp'--r •--H ~-m·~ ,._ .. J I SI •
I I ""' ·~-.. ...... 1111ntlngton Beach Ca 11 Job Wanttd, Mlle 700 ~ -.--no-•...... "'J• ''4"ncy, "';>U ar....... vu., UQUlD TRANSFER OPER ......., eann e !CO
w v ew. · ~1365 eves. Hauling CM. Ch!mlca.l tiff& plant need• &. Sid Hottman
lu1ines1 Rtnt•I 445 =-=-~----EUROPE tralned wt.l.rer CIRL 1'Tlday for bu1y &. lnduatrlou1 high khOol gra<.t N E WPORT J.'OUND small female It111h GET HAULED 1cnow1 art:a,e18, student: Help Wanted, Ml.F 710 Help W•nted, M & F 710 growing tirm. Muat he ac· fbr tilling optntUon. l·llgh Pe rsonnel Agency * TOP * rc!e:. oi: .. ~)Jl B ~-Ught-Heavy Haullna avall far ' )>rlv pe.rtie1, curate typllt l able to ban· chemlatry pr t f . Xlnt 133 Dover Dr., N.8. 6t-a648 ..._....... Odd joba. Reas. rates. catettn, mtmtt. 496-69t6. BINDERY WORKER Dental Oatn.1de to $8900 die rupon1lblllty. Room for bcntfli. &. working ron-6424870 * LOCATION * =~~-----* 675-63(11 * AUTO M ha;u Eq>cr. lo $2.50 hr. JOIN DRILL TEAM advancement. Sa!A.ry Open. dltioM. No exper nte. Apply •-------..,I
Successful retail or Aer'Vice Jo. FND Slame11e cat ~ youn&: LOCAL movb1K & hauJJni by In ~ et.n, ~~an;!u "~ Prefer exper, In the ptinUni And HU.b. rooCll w/~ Miu Abubo, !'151..s505 at Harleco, Dlvilkm <>I MASSAGE TECH.-
catiort 00 Eut l7th SI. in fml. Sunflower Fairview student. Larie truck. Reu. ownt"n money Call 646-33.19 field. Day &hlfl. Icuned: doctor wbG !leekll smUlnc GIRLS Nte'ded _ Apply ln Amer1can ltospltal 1upply ~. M.... Area. 97S--727L BaJTy. 534-1846 or 613--0641. &ft &. • open\ag. Too bus:; to train. indtv. to us1st wl)atient ......... ....._ __ ._ ......_. corp. 14.Sl E. Alton, trvtne, TRAINEE
.....,.1 Must haw n~u. exper. CMP' can Uz B1e.ke person, .,.., ~ ..... u ... ";IV'I ~~ Young lady (18-28! wanted •
* 18:1> Sq. r.-. ~~D SKIPLOADER a: dwnp truck * MUSIC'IAN~ • Duo desire1 in this woriL:. 833-iroo Omnia .le ~ E. Coast Hwy., Cd.M An Equal oppty employrt. for legltimare lull time pol\-* Two auto ba~ 673-8700 \\'Ori<. Onx:r~te, 1L1phalt, club work. cau John er Bill, D:HO JOB AGENCY ~ AamcY ot Irvine HAJRCl1ITERS le uellt, LVN-RELIEF 1ton. No exp. ntt. \Ve &end * On slte PIU'itlnK sawing, break.1111. 846-TUO 551-llSL 315 3rd Suite Xl3 2082 Mlcheillon Dr. ' chanoe for adva.neemenl, lo school, earn vmJ.le leartL * ~IC: v:po&Ure YOUNG Doberman Pi.nscher, 32 FT'. FURNITURE van Huntln(ton Beech 531rl439 DENTAL RK-ept/Secfttary. ma.le or Fem. lie. G. T. ~3°'.i"Sir·li'l>£S 117~ Apply ln penon any alt. or
: Ori)' $ooogn per u:.ntfl ~~~4~ii22 Costa for local tum hauls le ~·1 Job W•nhd, Female 702 BOOKKEEPER F /C Ptlw;t have dental exper. Benz: rnavin' ahead 979--9845 Xln't pe,y w/merit ~e. eve. 29X! W. Cst. Hwy.,
Realonomics, Bkr 67S-6700 .;:~~'--c-7"~~"-~ I hauling. 548-1862, 557-7736. GrN.t co oUt!n ldn't oppor-Pro ficlent typlsUbkkpr. HOSTESS Cuhier, owr 21 , ~endly relaxed atmos-Ne'A.'port Beach.
FND blk Lab -May Co. HA UL (NG-Rubbllh or NEED help at home! We !Unity ho &'t\8fll tncttv. w/ MWlt be mature, organized, mat\Jl"e. Exper. Apply aft ~ '' Medical Front Office
FOR leue all or part or Shpng Center, ~. furniture -small or large have aid«s, nu r 1 es • 80l'Tle ex....,. X1n'I future neat & like people Call 2:30 pm. See Mr. Hagen. phel-e. Low patient..,"""'. 7 Ass;st B•by Docto r I
2800 Sq. Ft. dlvkled Into _ call lor -1maie ""l""" ho u • e kprs, companions. -In ~1 • · • ~,. ' • or Miu OllM!, J-lan11. .. ~er Paid hol~ 6 · ~ ""'°"'· ....-ect fur Lost 555 ----=-·-~· ___ ....,., H omemakers Up""'1... J ":;:1•A.....,..,.. · 645-lOEIO aft 5pm or Sat & """"' ;;;;;;;~C~all;;':$;:;,;"'1~;;;;;;;;. j Frieodlinea ill die key , iti "II ,..... .,.1~-. I"""' •son ~s nency Sun. Hamlet, 1545 Adams, CM . ...;.. ...t•n• -· w,---'"I reheanal llp&Cf? music or H I I .,,.. "'VOl>L • ui... ...., .. "'16'"'''"'
art work shop aet'OM the LOST: \Vallet at Albel't!orts, OUMC Nn "I BABYSIT my home-Ex-1~400 BrooldlW"llt. F . Vly. DENTAL Chainide Asais-HOTEL desk clerk/cuhler. * * * doctor! Lots of phones It
St. trom Newport Center Laguna or Vic. East Indian, ~llent Javtng care-Good Sulte 2'13 963.f775 !Mt, for Pl!dodonlie prac-P.fust know NCR 4m Con· ctient.s! cau 5ue Knee.
s.23-3028 n1ulll colOl" $60. cuh, very ~an honte Jn1anlll y,·e\-BOYS OR GIRLS lice In Newport Center. taC't Dick Hannan, Alf'l)Orter 833-2700, Dennis & ~
FOR lease Taco Tio stand, lniportant papers, Reward, mn1c • Hunt Bch. 842-3818. 1(~13 years old tor DAILY MWlt have v:per. Bll.lngual Inn Hotel, Phone 833-2'T10. Personnel Agency o( J~,
will --odel to •ulte lor no questions. Pleai;e return, wr In So th preferred. 64G-0003. HOUSEKEEPER 2fBl M)chcll!IOfl Dr.
tut ·;~ service. Busy '~~everly 494-9980 or Help W•nt.d, M & F 710 ~.!nta l:'r,bi::.!: Ptt~ le DEPARTMENTAL Laguna NllUt!l area, 2 da11. MACHINISTS MEDICAL RECEPT.
comer. 591W.19th St. Dayg Lost black & white lg. cock· .......,,..... ""'" .,.. ~.~~"'.Warner & San CLERK a wk. 496--0958. Exp'd. busy doclOJ'S ot11ce. 646-:!00J, eves 646-0681. ....... 1 1 & b'· k .,. 1.1• .. y ~ Variety of duUes include in-HOUSEKEEPER -Tuell & c64&-J'0.1~~~· ---=~= 1600 SQ. ft. l ndull.rial shop, a·~am e · ... e: gle Acrowrtanlll to 12K MZ-4321 ventot')' & prod. control Fri. 9 to 4:30. For thorough & MOTEL MA ID WANTE,i)
$225/mo, Al!IO 300 sq. ft. Of· & doherman mix-Fred. Vie:. • ' . e Degree, R..E., Truat Elsie Fielder record1. Pro c ea 1 in g cleanin1 only. Refer. & own will lrain, apply In pel'IOtl
fj $95 of Mission Viejo. 836-3593 e Office Manager EDP Dtstrlct MaJ'lager engineering change orders, transportation After 6pm Costa Me118. Inn. '
e:e CM. S.1&-21.30. ~ard. HOUSE OF CLEAN Bud.nit & Jnvfntory Equal Opportunity Employel' ma I ntainlng engineering 644-8I48
''THE Factory" hu a lrg LOST, male Bluepoint Prof. c&I'<' for home or ofc. Exec. Sec'y/Financial $800 master files on bills ofH ""o'-uSEKEEP='-.--ER-,--,-h-1-ld MACHINE * 1-fUSJCIANS Looking~
shop avail. $185/rno. In Siamese. OWner in hospital, .Carprts, upholstery & floors. AccounU,. Clerk to $750 BUDGET ANALYST materials & other n1aster care, live in, own Br & gri~1~ :a:tf5'51-a~~ ·
cannery Village 425 30th St., please retum 10 33752 546-5745. Ex. Sec'y LegaJ, R.E. $750 $800 documents. Prefer in-Ba, non smoker, 90me
NB. 673-9606 or 64Z-3520. G~nada, Apt 2, Dana E XCElLENT ltouseclean-Firel'Penooe.I .Lincs to $550 WESTCLIFF divldual w/1 yr exper. in English noc. gd &alary OPERATORS
lnclustri•I R.ent•I 450 Point, 49&-4164 ing, 'dooe by Jaey w/exp. Tech/Stat Typigt to $5&) Pl!t'S>nnel Agency re~ti~~~~~es, Inc. "-=='-------Needed
LOS'l'; Blade male cat. I Dependable, own 1 rans. Payroll Cleric to Sa50 1651 E Edinger SA Irvine 833-8314 HOUSEKEEPER' wanted to
NOW LEASING neutered, ~x>rt hair, SCtU' 847~ Keypunch ~ CMarlc m Ce~ter) ' live In Laguna Beach, 3 •
on neck, Oi.ildren's pet. we Receptl"l'yp~ to $500 542-8836 hildl Pri & bath E d I nt1 d• t I HunHngton S.•ch mi"' him, Rewan!. Ml,.ion La ndscoplng Clerk Typ·"' $414 BUSBOYS DISHWASHERS ' '"· v nn ' xp·er1ence m e 18 e y NEW M.1 Viejo 831-2857. G. Ofc. Lite~ $400 ~'ith experience, mature, ~~~open, A1ust drl\'C I
MO Sq. Ft_ & UP LOST: Female Boxer, fawn. ~.0,,SCAP,, 8 ~ ,"",.,•lgn,, Sad~ Sh~JiSH Hof~shr Dining""~~ """"Ti-r.~~E·. ~~. Engll<hAnn.J~~· ~:b~c IMP.tEDIATE OPENINGS r· med"iat 15 GENEAAL
ftamilton & Neivl&nd St. Vic. TeWinkJe Park & illebae:k v,tli;y Landscape, JERRI WHITTEMORE }[;;.:"N.B~~ """ .._..,.... ~~...,50~ St &i'. New Accouni. Teller m e f•"'l'~~960-~1~970~"!!~""1 ~':.g~ward for Into ..3856._ _ ----~· _.!Joa~: J'lB. ~ En--K~~vC:~~a~ton··· -OP!nings --+--tABllR(URS<i----'.·-1" ----
1140-4230-SQ-FT-Mt. 2o30. MHonry SfRYlCESl"AGENCY CARPENTERS :i=mR ~anted, good 4301 M.cArthor Blvd., NB For Experienced
3 ~~: ~. ~~Y ~~J.11~155~~ SLUMPSTONE, block walls, .W_E.171'h St. (at !rvine) CM Boat-Finish Olrpent@rs-'I'ool-houn C&rmel's Dining & 833--0367 MACHINISTS &
782 w. 20th, Costa Mesa lD/18. Vic: Mesa Verde, planter. Expertly instaJled. Suite 224 642-1470. lng exper. helpful. We pay Pie 91op 628 N. Coast Hwy, VOLT. ,
Instant Personnel ·-
·renrporary !:lefVlOe : ~ Campus l>r., Suite 166
Newpon: Beadi M&-4741
3 doors au Placentia 546--3793 Specially priced, Bob , L +•-top wages, We want perma-Laguna. INSPFX:TION
RSO 645-4930. ~ • 111.rr ....... ...--nent carpentmi tor fut D R A P E R Y. manufacturer ~=EMS-~ ~~~~'\,%. Pl~~1grel WIUlAMS & SON Masonry. Acctg Bkkping Offlc'e .~~ knownllltor ~!~-~s e x Pb1~!.I encedhlneor INSPECTOR
4001 BIRCH. N·B--Springdale 845-5328 eves & Lie. No. 283046. Brlck, hasxlntopptyforCPAorPA mg e JJ§•rcc-.nqua v ~ ...... dtees ta ..... ~ & mac
Imel block & stone. 586-6371. Who can n\anage & produce Pacific• By Kipper operators. Good pay, 3600 sq, rt 15<' per sq ft w s. lo bu · ct' Yachts holiday• & vncaUons. Beach below going l'fttc, It. mfg. POODLE, sm. wht. male. P•intlng a Y m lo very a ive D Se.tvt 900 w •~-•,, ••-. n-um-~n-vie. The Ranch, Irv , p h I firm. Send resume to P.O. 928 W. 17th st., C.~f. ITrahpeSryCM ce, .
""" ·.. ou. 11 .... " .... •o.r •nQ nq Box 1890, Costa f\leA. M5-5570 -=' c.=c1o..· ='-· -----541 503'2 Re\\•ard. Call Mr. Severy "' - . 55&--0890 PROF. walloove""~ .!tale ADM ASSISTANT DneedRAPedER~_wo, ',kroo1 ..... m e'!;a.lp 1300 SQ. fl. m-1 space • u"" ....,,, ...... .... ..
Detail
Machine Parts
,v/front office. lge rear I.OST 12 KEYS ·oN fiexible lie. No. 279514, Insur., all Local land developer ~ CLERICAL 97S-1611
door,Sl!Omo.17'93 Whittier, wire ring, Vic. Imperial types of paper. 714: sharp lndiv. w/~ctionVaried clerical tn Tnl!lt oo""'M'--E"rn"'-C-H_e_l_p_G_e_o_r_re lrdShlft 11-..7am
CM. 646-0033 days: 646-0081 savings, Npt Bch, eve 842--4386. or deveklpen expt'T. Must Dept. or financial 0rpntta. All B land ~ lOO-B L ...... -
eves. 673-41156 F JR s T c 1 a 8 s pa In-have aot'\ll'ate typing & tion. Interesting work. op-E. ~th~ .• S.A. 541-ols5. 1st Shift, /a m-3:30pm
1-1-1-2 buildings. 4COJ Ft. 1210 LO""ST=''°'b°"Ik'"°'ld"tt""e-n-w""'l'"ye"'ll,--ow ting/panerhanl{lnr. Ext. calculaU>r exper. Salary to por for advancement. M11.1t ""~'=-'"=-==--".;'-'=;C= Ft., , __ Ill' old, 13c per collar Vic Grow Pl. CM Int. Afrless spray. Fl'tt Est. $150. Co. splits fee/Afso fee hav°e ~ & Pt I t u de DONUT Shop, nlte shl!t. lnspecbt mnnttolds, pismNI, b:lt. ~12. I REWARD 548-T'aOS 979-5294 jobs. Can Sally Hart , pleasant telephone voice' Female, qe :15-6. Apply sleeves, cranks &: machine
PAINTtN'G: inlllde and out. 540-fi055, Coastal 'Penionnel. ability to type light cor: In per.on Mr. Donut, 135 pe.rt.s Of tnedium complexity
Rent•ls Want.cl 460 5 ltfONTII Collie, vicinity eo-all ~ too. L 0 ca I Agency, 2790 Harbor Blvd.. ---ndence. X1n't co, E. 17th SL., Costa Ml'Sa. lO blueprints, rlnal lnspec-Newland & Atlanta, H.B. "'" ~ CM ~ .. R..., tion -.. &: verbal in
'
+DI---Help'. * 10121. Re91'8.f'd. 847-494? refettDCes. Call 642--0355 · benefits & working conda. EARLY morning route muc&;;'Uset o.11 ~ I-;\ .--~ alter 5 p.m. Advertising Sales 500 Newport Center Dr., delivery, l-6:30 am. Call lion hand tools & maim, own
":.. . ' WE NEID PAINTER, "Uhly qualified, Fonner yellow page or Newport Beach, suite 600• 536-&m moms. 96MS15 SE.'tUPI to <."t«k parts. Own
,' f -BEDRooM·HOUSE 1 ·~--1~ etticient, would lilce your n1agazlne spa~ exper. betwntMpm. eve•. basie: tmpectlon toola re-or 1 BR with garqe ---.-busineGF:. Reason ab 1 e . Commlsslon only. Call 1tr ELECTRONIC quired.
with larii:e l<need yard for 2 64>-3158 appt, "6-0036. CLERK TYPIST TECHNICIANS
medium sized dop/ (wtU * P.._mNG a, STAJNING A/Realv•ble Glrl Immed. postUons avail. in Apply8~ .. 'J1~PMFrld•y
trained & very obedent!) by INT/EXT. TIUM, AC'COUS lO key by touch. IT'S A the development & :~
MA1'JRE WORKING Ba •ltting FREE EST. Jim 9'19-8186 MUST. Typing, IT'S A Salea Departme:rrt exper. rnanutacture of state ol the
COUPLE BABYSITTING MUsr Xlnt -'U 1 ~ 65 w.p.m. Eledrlc art miniature sutr Thunct.y Evenlnt VERY' RESPONSIBLE! No Wute Mac · _. on or typewriter. awmblies. Some exper. in Interviews 5pin>-9ptm
Will take extremely good My Home, C. Me•• W~1~G ~2'JS~· Salary open. either, analog or digital
care al home! Xlnt care. Good lunches, =~.,.-"-"'-'"~"-'""'='=--1 -."::.,;~o--~-~-~·I Call For Appl. clrcullr)' Is req'd.
(Older home great!) fenced play yard. Call any-INT. & Acousdcal celHrvs ASPHALT Man. S te ady Induttrlal Relalion1 Function Module!!, Inc.
Pleaae call evee. and time, S.:.S...514. painted. Carpet cleaning. work. Top wages for all 2441 campus Dr.
weekends, 543-7881 &1i-7059, 548-3574 :~umndo raker, roller, etc. (n4) 4•• -1 Irvine 833-8314 LIC DAY CARE-My home .....,... rw-7-($190~and+ ~ • • Mon-Fri, Good care, Lee PROF. painter, honest "'wk, . ELECTRONIC TECH.
play areas, reas-rates, Crif rea~. Int/ext, ftt!e esl. mONIC Advanced development work.
WANTED: 2 Br unfurn house nr Fair Dr + Fairview, Refs. 548-2759. 642-5913. ASSEMBLERS Advan~ Kinetics, Inc. 1231 l800I Von Karm•n In C:O.la Me... w/pet. "'"""'00 P intar, Patch, Rapalr ' INDUSTRIES Vlclorla St., CM. 646-7165, Below $150. 979-3396 aft 6 "BAB~~y=s1=T-m-,-~hom-,-,-.,. __ ....;'---'--'--! Equal Oppor. Employer. lrvlne, Calif.
pm. nlgtlts-weekend,By hour day *PATCH PLASTERING * n.....,,1..,,.. on a ll thrH Lagun• Beach ENGINEERING TECH 83~142C, ext 294 ~~alt~~hofur:~ '(~ i: .. ~~J1'b~-~~ __ All_cy,.~ea='u=· """-'......._,~~"='c.1m_,_'"'_ Th~:-' Factory e xper-SENIOR or 8U-14l5 stores, must be neat. ~ Mnce helpful but not Equal ()ppr. Employer 3 or more yn exper. In test-Equ•I Opp. Employer
66-3013 Plumbing 5•2 15 Ing 'Ir: troubleshooting of _ · necessary. • per OONSI'RUCTION SUperln-digital circuitry in core INSTALLMENT LOAN
YNG manied cple 11eek 2BR C•blnetmaklnt L.R. ems PLUMBING hour to st•rt plus sht~ b!ndent req'd lmmed. for memory l)'Stems or coUege & CREDIT DEPT.
hse, gar, 'fnulet Remodels & Re-pain. Water dlff9rentla l. 48 unit cmcb pro:tect in levt'I traJning ln bu.ic elec·' ~~ $20:!, CM, ReCAB~llng "& f'ornlBoatwo~ heaters, disposala, furnaces, + Rivel"!dde. Resume req'd. trnnlaJ (AA degree). Re-1,. ba 2 ~ ~ 1.~
'Jl:JlrUAAJ ~ '" d!lhwuhrs. 642-6263 MIC & Apply I.n Per.ion At: Call Frank Williams 9'79-10'7tl irpooslbU1fJI' includes 8S.'lem-'"e ve. "l"""'"ngs •u• c ...,,_
Car..:·:.... "'""5219 B/A. Complelo Pl"mblng AVERY PRODUCTS . bly, "" " evaluatJoc ol ~ 'i:"!:i ~I~ .... ~·
-· ~~~G~AlR CONSUMER LOAN Qw~ & ~at~'s; per. desired.
JOHN'S Carpet A: Upholstery No Job too snail Consumer Division PROCESSOR equipment. S\lbmit resume Pleue o::.ntact ~M Sb&m(So'!"",1 "11e~-~~~h).' ---*-*-00-3=~'"~*-* __ , or apply Standard 1-tem-, __ S 1_ ....... ...... ........ ~ Exn.rlenc.d oiiea, Inc. (Subsidiary ol ~'"' m " Degrease~ & all color Se wlng/Alter•tlons 2620 S. Susan ,.. Applied Magnetics Corp.), UNION BANK
bl'ightenen & IO minute Santa' Ane , Ca lif. UNITED 2221 s An St Santa A GlO Nl"WJl'Jn Ctr. Dr.
ltll.LY LICt.."NSED ~~e:ee:'!,,_,!~rm~~ytebv.~~~R<. Alter•tions-642·5845 Equal 0 ........... Employer n1/I CALIFORNIA 8ANK Calif. 9z'lo.t™! " na, Eq F1""0prion I~andu-..-* SP!fUTUALISl' * .fYM Neat, accurate. 20 years exp. ,,,...... EXECUTIVES ua por. mp~,_. ... Spiritual ttadlngs 10 ani-10 nie extra trips. \Vil! cle11n
pm. Advice on &11 matters llvlng rn1., dining rn• .. & BEAtrrIFUlLY Detai l ed ASSEMBLE-RS--201 Avenlda Del Mar $15,000 to $75,000
lll N. El Camino Real, San hall $15. Any rn1, $7.50, Dressmaking, your fabric or SOl.dcrlng mt.'Chanical assen1 -Sar "l""""l'lle Send reaume or call TODAY
Clemente, 492-9l3G 49'2-9034. couch $10. Chair $5. 15 yn:. mine. Call before that bty or 'drill press expcr. 492-5123 for confidential NO COST
exp. is what counis, not special occasion. 645-:li95 hdp{u1. Ql:Je Instrument execuUve Interview.
Let ~~~! ~~~-n:/m. al-~r.I 5J~~f61~k 1nysetf. Telev l•lon Rapalr Olrp., IDl3 Pla~tla Ave., Equal ()ppor. Empl())'f.'!" EXECUTIVE SERVICES, ~~~·~ ~rt ~~e.w~ea~
b!nW.tlws to ABORTION, 1-'==-'""'-0:C"'"'-"-c~--C.M. &12-SOSll. Equal Oppor. INC. v.1mds, lull time when quali-call LIFE LINE 551-&522, 24 Carpet Cleaning COLOR TV Repair. expert, Employer. COOK WANTEO 888 N. Main, SAnta Ana 'ed
Floor Care & W indows rea90nable, most In home. AVON MAKES ITI 4> M7·00'.ZS µ~~ IMUrance Group
hrs. Dul l'h Main!. Setv. ~7·1508 Free estimate, H.B. N.B. l.: CHRISTMAS TI-iE SEASON Apply ODIES RESTAURANT EXEC. SECRETARY Ed Lani 11t 540-1834
PROBLEi\f Pregnancy. COn· 5rEA>I CLE•., ~•RPL-1'<' C.?tf. Bert Ga 11 em ore, TO BE JOlLY ' Z12 E. 17th St. r~ce Paid. $nCI. Exciting !!!!!1!;;,,;;;;;.,..,,;,;.;e,..., f ldenl, sympathetic ·~~ ..... i:.•~ 968-2'733 Corn P.1e$\ e 64&-4303 11 Abor Insured 0'1111lty !\faint. · Earn e."<tra monc)' for gilts catt!@r for 11harp penon JUNIOR SALESMAN: ~.:e ref~· · * 646-7811 * Tr•• S•rvlce as an AVON Representative COO"· G __ , -~'It 6 "''/contractor com Pan Y. Earn $20-$40 pt'(' \\'t>ek \\'Ork· •~·RE _..A..___.4 .. _.. in ....,.,,. 8...,,.., time ,.._,., .... ravey .. ~, .... u • Xln 't Benertts. Also 1-"ee
Ar>....1• .,.,......,......, C t C t !¥... ,....... • ~. niteii a "·eek. Conipany pa.id Call Ann ,...__,_,; ing alter school and Sa.tur·
BllL Aufder llelde i11 alive emtn , oncre • TREE "''Ork. All klnd11. You 540-1()(1. rrlnge benelllr Apply In =~· Coatrol '-Ca~f. dll.YI !ICUlng new su~rip.
& well aellin& propertyrlln PATIOS, walb, drives. Saw, :~ ~=~:ie~I~~~ AUTOMOBILE BKKPR P!....:~kJa~ i~he?t?°x . Employment Agency, 3400 Uon11 lor the DAILY P!LOT.
Grau Valley, Calll. W te break, remove & replace 847_1191. Part.& I& i;ervlce. Accounta l~ er t.. ta e11a. Irvine Blvd., N.B. ~~s dcels not a pal "°i 'd "'"d"
12·-s HI-20 •··-~ 1 b l E auu snotncue e-'fO;t' late .a"Wll.Y concrete . .,,.......,.,., •u• est. rec e ~a .111 • x Per· COOK, EX PER. FIBERGLASS Gun 0 pr Uver1e• or rollecting, Opcn-
ALCOHOLICS Anonymous. CEA-1ENT !:. Block Work. automobile 11rl only. We Apply lfu.ngry 'Mistt 353 \\'ante<!. Pay commensurate lnp In COll'ta Meaa. Fountaln
Phone SG-1211 or write Wells, pa.Uoe, 11idew-alks, :;!~~~~ l'IJ t':1o i r =. E. Onat Hwy, N.B.' w I exp er. Equinox Valley and South Huntington
P.O. Box 1223, Costa Mesa. etc. By hr. r,ir Job. ~15 Trader's Paradise keeplng equip. &tl&ry oPefl. CX>OK trainee call for ln· tndustrits. P. O. Box 2316, Beai!h. Apply now by calling
WANT a date! $1 -100 ladles -: "'ntr•etor 5 l'ines 5 daY11, g..5 pm. Phone Bauer tervlew 10 AM to 12 noon, ~ Ariz. 8537l. l602l SU-3013.
to cllOOl'Je from. 40-55 yn. Buick, !rf&..2500, M r 1 . Mon-t'rt, 642-7880 Equal Oppor. Employer
534-4622. 441 pm. JACK Taulane, repair, times CameronaftlOan1. Count•r& K ltch~Help GAL F RIDAY
Socl•I Clubs 535 remod, add. Llc B-l 269072· BABYSI'ITER needed Tue• Net<! enlh11~1u11e people to Fa..1t growing k>Cal co. Sl'f"k-KE YPUNCH 1;;;:.;;;.;.;....;..._____ My W&:f Co. 5.il-0036. dollars Frt, 6 Sunday nltes, var-IA'Qrk mornings&: ('Vet:. Ap-Ing &harp tndiv. w/avs OPERATOR
BERT EA
CORPORATION
I~ .........
Person•ls 530
INSURANCE SALES
MACHINE OPERATORS
2nd Shift 3PM-11PM
3rd Shift 11PM·7AM
To Operate
Miiis Chucker
Engine Lathe
Turret Lathe
N/C Drllla Grinders
Sunnen Hone
TOOLMAKER
t 1st 3lift)
Long 'T'mn EmpWyment
Y.'irh H1story or
NO LAYOFFS
,c4ual Uppo1:. Empto~ ..
NEWSPAPER mom.
route w/the Register (I
Costa Mesa, Nwpt are~. A.P-
prox hrs 4-&m. Pl'ejer
Nl&ponsible, family ~· ~:1 ~. p/time 11;-
NITE AUDITOR •
Jlo.'el or club exper. req•d,
Kl'JOlW\edge 0( NCR ~
F/tirne. See Pau•~ Mail"·
Balboa Bay Club
12'21. W. Qiu.: Hwy., N.8*
NOTE! ;
Re•I E •tate S•letm•n
ll yuu have a li~nse or wan!
one, see Peg BoUna:er '°r
con!ldeDtlaJ Interview. R,ed
fn OUr Manufacturing Area Carpet, 497·176L
E xcellent Workint I 'N'"u'"RSE--""'LVN!!!!,!!!!,'",.,.'"·u'"ng-'"..,""'l,_
Condition• lion for qualified penon
Comp•ny Paid Benefits work In progressive con
valescent hospital. Patlen
care oriented operation.
Xlnt wages & fringe beneDts.
Apply or send resume I
1445 Superior Ave, Newpo
Beach or can 642-2410
Interviews Thursday
Evening 5PM to 9PM
BERT EA NURSES aides, all shift&.
CORPORATION I Convalescent Hospital ' * 642-0C>!IS jlt
18001 Von Karman
Irvine, Ca lif.
133.1424. axt 294
or 833-1425
Equal Opp. Employar
MACHINE
OPERATORS
Sl:lttcr & CoatCT Machine.
\Viii train on our n1nch!n<'!I,
but 1nechanlcal aptitude
necessary. Paid insurance,
exc."ellent be~t.,. Apply
9.11 A.J\-t or 2-4 P .l\1.
AVERY
PRODUCTS
Consumer Olv ialon
~:ll s. Susan
Santa Ana, Callt 927!M
Equal OpJlor. En1ployer ~1 /r . . MAIDS for motel, 'A'kda1 on-
Iv. La~na Shorts, 419 N. COOst J-lwy, Laguna 494-8521
MAINT ENANCE
MAN
must be familiar w/plumtr
Ing, electrical &. gt'T'l('rQ}
carpentry Hotel e x p c r
tll!'Ceell. Sl-e ~I t-.1an--· Balboa Ba y Club
1221 \Y. O>ast H\\y., Nt3
MANAGEM E NT
OITICE
DOUGLAS OIL CO.
of cantornia
West Coast'• leadi , ,
petroleum compilny r.t":
locating headqu•rtett:'
to Irvine Complex. . ·, . ' EMPLOYMENT .'
OPPORTUNm~'.
' e ACCOUNTING
CLERK
. ' ' .
1 Year experlct'K"e. l'.tll"l
have ability to U!IC :10
key adidng machine by
touch.
e S R. ACCOUNTING
CL ERK
f{r-quiremM\ts l\l'"l' 2 )"N\'$
of coUcie acrountlng
:uxVor \l.'Ork f"Xl>erlencc,
~lll.r;t h"-v-e ability to 01X'f'-
lile 10 key lidding m&•
t•hlfK' liy touch and ca1:
c'llllltot'. ·
e ACCOUNTANTS
Zero to 2 )'rRMI of f!':'C'
,,,.~nee. i\c...'0Un1,.lng de-
iTt'\" required.
e SECRETARIES
to.JU!!\ tw~ good ~
hand l.: typing llkilli;,
e STATISTICAL
TYPIST
LADIES want to mel'lt men GERWICK & SON '--..;;; __ -.. ...... _, led hnl., n\y homl'J your ply in peraon, 1'1cDon•ld'll, typ!~ &: lite general <>le
tor com~lonehl~ &: mar-Bldg Conir. Addit & Remod TD'• l.: n .E. (lnnd & Im· l!'llrlll, can Donne., 646-6359. 16866 Beaclt Blvd. l-lumlng-e)Cpl'I". Xb1'l sttui.lng 1'1tllary i;xprrienrc nn Pl"OIO~\'I" Mlnu•i hcmpil.il I
r iAae? 'Ptu1.ne.r' &.16-U71 Stn.te Lie. Bl·l14321 provtmc.nt•) Jo'or hnPoi1 BABYSITI'ER fdr 0 Ider ton Beadi. ' & cO. IJenefits. Good poten· 1H~I 029 & C69 l)r51"nnVJ\1l<1n, X.B. Ret"lo•
r.1ust ha.ve 1ninh11un1 6f 2
)'ear!! exprrlen<'<'. 'lJ
11 .p.n1. !Yftil'lC n.nrt finl\A'
cia! l'f'!llll1~ atoni;: \\i lti
M'mlt' bol()kkteplnJ:;.
or 548-1479.· 673-6041 549-2170 <'at'S, \niprovcd n. E . chUdl;'l'n in my home, 7_9 COUNTF:R Girl for dry tin.I fnr udVllnl_'t'nnmt , <'ll('Jl,,'l'ti" n 11trWl.Rt'1' 10 ovl'r· I
Gardening !deM rt, locnl, or 7) ~1ycrs, ll!TI: Mon-Fri, NB 54&-59!!0. ('lcAnlng rlaiil, llSSl'mbllnK, J•so n Best Agency BABCOCK !lo.¥ ol>('rntton <'of 3 rapldl)'
[ s734i756. OABYSmER wantt'd full bngging, checking exp. r.1uiit .,.,~7~21~rooktn.L1'1rt, F".~~ffi ELECT RONICS ~!'0\1111£ ofcll. r;~pM· ln p.:r· Loot .,......, Jal * Cre•tlve G•rdenlng FREE 4 a.F:Att 23' Jflhn time Santa Ana. Ht'l&ht1. do minor sev.>tng, 6 dl\.Y•· I::~::.''""-'=-~--'""'"" L:n11 or Estt>rllne ~111111'1 & ICf'll'l of(' n1rtnfll(•"
Winter Cleat)up le. Pruning. Alln1and boat A trailer. Cal~551....ml Apply In peT'90n, }'lve GAL rnIDAY Corporollon in .. nt L"R.~ntlal. Soi + 111•
Rye Grus It Malnt Spmkln Looks &: runs llku new. Point11 Cleancn, 18641 Main, COMMON SENSE ('('nlh·c. Corp. bcncfic8, prof.
IM. & Strv, 646-ID'Tl. Trade for 1neome unlta, CM 8:e, , %12S "~ '°Bl~ lfunUna;ton Beach, 847-2.400. ts top ~ on this etl'l• 3501 l-111.rbor Rlvd (g~~~ ~ no~~e <' ~
Found lfrM Ms) 550 EUROPEAN Gardener. $6000 value. Owner 646-61155 ,.,..__1'• Mesa •-~o COUNTER. Girl a: Male Help ,,..,.... •.st! LoQ: of vtU"kty, C:O.St.11. Jl.leM, Callt. -.. 'M-'-• Landlca""'"' ~ 11W""O':u __ ,. offiat wat"-tor 92626 Daily PUot, P. o . nox 1.-.. • ·b a11neDMCe -t' .. ,.. t.108n.E home lot ln Palm ~BA lftWAITRESS ••nll'ld. Apply 1-4 pm, Ketl-......... ...Call... COO· ~,. •1-,..._,.r """""'"
FND young male Blk .... Tl'H lt4!movtl. Vrry ~ Dtltrt Greens. }oc, on rol:f ..... tuck;y Fried Chicken, 29'J9 jf'et'rta1 bdv! Lynn I :=::.;=;::;;..:::;~~ I ;~~;;~·~·-~·~"~"e·;'~-~-;;... • Well tmd • V1c Sttlokhunt able. 8C2.sJ29 eves. coune, fnd mblhlp, pa)'Otf W _ 646.9m E. Cou1 Hwy., CdM. Mtr<:h, 133-2'700, Dennit & Equal Oppor. Empklyer m/!
A Adam• H.B. 96H72'7 FASf NE&O Lawn cut ti:xtay $8.900. Eq. $1,700. ror wry , DER wanted , COUNTER GIRL. part time ~mM Pf:nonnel Aaft)C)' of MANUFACT URING
mo b11 bltck alley cat Vic. or tomorrow1 Call JUch: A'QO(I •uto or 1! 641).1090. F'eh\lle, no eitper nttded. or hill time. noo hr. to trvtne. nt2 P.tkhel!on Dr. KEYPUNCH E NG INEER
H1mll1on A MApio_lla H.B. expert A depmlable. Fn:e '68 T-mRD CLASSIC eon-CNI aner 1 pm, GHOl3. start. 21. or over. Call: OIRLS OR IOYS ~-EE PAID
Green '.rn· 962--9605 •· 61S-l300. ver:i. last or It's kind. will 0. . 962-0027 or 536-0796. 10.13 )'«!An old lor OAJL\' Dcliii:h1tul co.11t>1•kll 11. r11Jlflbl~
FND makot Bcta:e 91qzy dos ~~""MO°""W'"""A-E"'DC="E--trade for boat of eq\lal LLING CLE RK COUNTER Girl: Ex p 'd PILOT pnper routes tn South fnt>ndly indiv. to join 1/lf"b'
• Vk: MarW1 ,Way, Santa CLEAN UPS value. power or •ai l . , tnay level poslffnn for pt"t'f'rd, but will tnln. Qwr Sl.una Ann, betwtt:n P.faln teri1fl<' rnaft. GT't'at bf1Jt~f111.
Ana, 5.1C.a233. • fiM..0057 • 71M94-2!J;i0 1 1 , wflltf' !ypin& akillt1 & 20. Ltgunn l-!1111 Cleaners, & F'alrvlew, \\'&.1'ntt & S.in ei.n ~llll'lon 1>1ann , ~1-7700,
FNO yaunc, l"?Y. male c11t. GREEN 11lEE C11rd, Com / BEAUTIFUL mink 1tole lcu 10 key l\ddtr. Start SSOO. AlphA Bela Sl1011plng cenlM". Dli..'&'O 1''\1•y. All!IO r e.-Jobi, Dc>nnll• &
Vic N,wport He I rh I. n?I. Int/Ext. Frtt l'W1. New thlln 1 yt' u!d, worn enly Ctll Kii.)' \Vint(, 54(M;(X!(\, COUPLE \VO'!'k full tln1( I 642;!321 l)rnnt11 Pt•f'!lfllln('] Al:v"lll.')' or
MA-2400 Lawnt/ll'ree a•rd, 673-5322. l tlmet. Will tnd• kit lood Coo.Mal Pmionnel Agency, '62 !I 1 1 ' ..)IUI ._QOgOn lajne. m2 r.hche'ltion Or
!\Unlmum 5 ~ np"r, In
mrriin.ntNll ~lgn. produc·
tlon. "11Ml0f't. mMul'l'lrtunng
OONnW'Tlhltiorui & ft~l'!ly
oriem1io:111 ror gi1nl1 <'It'<.~
m~i1&Jll(.,,I 1~il."f'~.
l .. •11 54'°:»11
Equ41J Oppor, 1;;1np10).~
e KEYPUNCH
OPERAT ORS
:\Im.< haVl' 11. mlrrtmum ol
2 \"l"ftt"S f!:'t"pcrience. Mull.
hll~ ll ~ know-!~ of m.\1 029 •nd «I
Alpha and Nummc .,,.,
~ ~ lo lleypunch "' 12,000 IO'Okm per laa.
C'.OOD STARTING SALARY
& r:xcat_n.."T E.:PtlPLOYE!:
BF.NO"ITS
C~ll fo"or Appolntmf"nt -
In O:>n;'kk•nt,"'f! W\th ·
J . Diva.tie \l,'4lkt'1
Al (n4i 645-'iITT\l, e:-ct. 488
'-1c~11on cnr. "" ~1 -11-~ Blvd C>I n1Anage un ap romp ex DIMrict Ml'"'"'----' I R M _._~.,s bltoctd a la 111t11, llT·QUAUTY, LOW I '" .. ...,...._ ............., "''"" .... ...,. •• · COl!l.A Mf'!A SAiary & com-E l O I ·-E·· I "\\'r..;"U t .It eap" ~ ll'8llle'S. 0r.n(e Aw., Sl(lte Lie. No. 280044 11W ••test draw tn lhe Wnt. forutblc 1~.~ 2 n'Jt, 2 OJ\ qua pportun ty mp oyl.'1' From trtl4\ll'f!J1 to lm~h
nffr Men Dr!vt. MS--79SS ••• S.C.tTin ••• Cla91Uled Ad· ••••• .842-SS'11. , . ,. 0..11)' Pllot O,Ultled aJ)t. 1'1r. Phllllps M!'t-4411 CLl\SSlflF;O · •.•.•• 64M611 Turn tMm tntn CtlAh
J:~al Oppon\mfly
Etl1ptoyer Mil"
fallt tt1ult11 ...,... Jll11t a f•ho•'H.' '!!!!!!!!!!!~ .. ,..•-!!'!Poi °'11 a..-,·ay 6U~. NN'<l 11 ··Pad"? 1'18e.. an a111
. . .
VDM
Varian Data Machines
2722 ?\fi~n Drive
Irvine. Calif. !t2664
(714) 833-2·100
· an equal oppo11unil)'
f!1nploycr ml~
TELl.ER TRAINEE
HOW GREEN IT IS i
' ' "' "
\
PRIVATE PARTY NEEDS SEVERAL USED RUGS.
644-53216 • * * 615-8173
CHILDREN'S ~ ho u 1 e wanted. plca5e p h one , 5'4-887< ..
Muslca1 ln1trvm9frt1 m
OWNERS REPORT UP T 0 35 MILES PER GALLON
Included With Your Purchase
AIR CONDITIONING
• AT
NO ·\EXTRA CHARGE
I NC LU ft Es• •odl• -Tl•fff Gt .. -lvc:ilef h•t1 loth RKllnl•t -Whltew•Jlt -'4 Sptl. Tr-. Ji!" • -9 1Mrm:Mhll 4 Cyl. l11th1• -Ph11 Mtelt M--
"The extras aren't added on, they're built right in"
'71 MAZDA RX-2 '67 Toyota Wagon
4 spd , rad io, heater, whitewall tire1, rot1ry •n-4 Spd., Radio, Heeter, IVTW292 l 9;no,I SiOj995 '399
'69 M ~tang Fastback
V-8, Auto Trans ~ow11r Steerin9, R.td lo, Heeter,
tZAC7951
'1399
'69 .RANCHERO
V-8, Auto. Tres., Fe,tor.y Air' Cond.,
St .. ds1•·3· P.ower
Sp
K-2'
""
.. • p
pl
A ___ ..,
. .
;
' •
' ' • . • , .
' I • ' ' I
I
l
u
21 PU.OT ADVERTISER Wtdlltsday, Octobtt 24, iq73 _____ ....,,.,,.,,_...,.._,.,-,-,-,_---.,-,-..--,_..-..,,-,.,=-:-. I Wfdnetday, Oclobtt 24.o·.::":.:'.::'--....-.--,.---i,D'='Al::;L::Y_Plc.LO'-T-
pi_ano1 r91ns 26 1 Dogs "· 8S4 Boi1ts, M1lnt./ Boats, $pe.ed & Ski ill Cycles, Blkn I' Autos, New -980 Autos, N.w 91n A.ut01, New r-----~ Service 902 Scooters 925 \ :::;;;;;;:..;.;.;:;:_...,.. _ __:.::::;~:;;;;;;:..:..:;;;;_...,.....,..-'..;.;;..;.:;;:.:;;.:....;=:.....'--~ Free n-an Lessoos I ][ S • PUPPY woRLD • "' """""""'· ., ""· "'"' ....:.;o==----v•g r,..toYou Eneli•h Bul l Oog1, IS yuur bollom dirty:' I-lull&_ trlr, sacrifice! $WO. *BICYCLES*
As L-A1i You like I · • · Oilhuahuu, Tlny Poodlet, cleaning for 30c per °""'ler 557-5731 aft 5 PM. IN!!W Italian 10 sp ..... $59.9:> ~·• 3 Lines, 2 Times, $2.00 Amer. Esk . {Sp It a) 'I li~ fl. 66-1320 Sunlour Eq Co1ol ••••• M .%
Non-players A: players we!-0otw;rman, P1l Bulls, Bull 1 BOAT Ownen, tired of hi I I~ Nlshiki .10 sp •••• tium S99.~
come to attend Tuesday Tea'Mcr, Q>ckapoo'p Irl~11 I maLnt. cost'! fle!Lnishing & ltaMpOrulion ~ 1 U!it.'(1 b1kN1 ..••• _. h'Olll Sl!>.00
ni&ht at 7:30 PM. We want BEAtrr~ white Ge.rmAn Setter, 100 MIXED UPS.. monn.ly ... rvtre. 645-ll20. . _ .. 1 B\kf'll clea11ed/011etl •... S.t.50
everyone to leam to play Sheph-pUp, 12 "' k 11 . Stud Servke PifOlt Breed.ti. WANTED USED BICYCLES
the organ! All malerlal! Purebred, no papers. 199'!~1 Open Eves: 531-5027 I Boats/MarlM . I Beach Blcyi:lets. 800 E. Balboa
fu.ml.Bhed. ri.te~r Pl. CM. COLLIE Liwle pups . Equip. 904 Campers, Sale/Rent 920 Bl.vd .• Ba.lbon. 675-7282
Tont Dieterich . In charae. NEEDS love, dark grey & Co=wi Th he~lthy I 7; ~ 1 \VANTED Evinrude or '69 V\V Camper. Pop up top * BICYCLES * ~:1sT ':lu·25BSICI . rv~~ kiU~n, 1~ wks, fjm· ~I $ P-• Johnson boot 1:ontroli1 In gd ne1v. <'ng, ('Xtl'a licnt('r'. Rall-igh Reo:irds ... $99.95
r S.::k neuter llll: I · . corid. 1vlll ttadc or scU retnc & lilnk. l\fint <.'Oiio.l. \Vhlle 51.lpplics l...<1111
Newport Blvd. at Hacbor ee SCHNAUZERS, 11trc black, ?>.1ercury 0011~1. 64-1-6510. 540--0990. Othf'r nl0Cleh:1 fron1 $6t95.
O>sta Mesa WVING DoJmatlan, 1'~, stud service, &: r O o n1 ! n g Bo t p 906 ·77 CHEVY Van Cam r Peugeot In fill sizes & c.-olors. l•;_;;;;_;;;~iiiioiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiol AKC, spayed, all shots. xlnt terms. 871-8182; 522~ aft a 1• ower bubble lop 1 ton nuto '3,-it) Chris f ftla s la)' ·a· 1~·a Y s
PIANOS -ORGANS watchdog, to good home 5• SABRE-Croll '71 Zi ft V-8 air . sips '•I Oven Ci'CLE WORKS l.TD
New & Used. Great acleetlon. 644-4872 AKC DalnTRllnn pups, Pt'1 Cabin 225 H.P or.tc 110· he;ter s42001oircr '842-29&i lR112 Newport Blvd, Co.~ta c . GERM~ Shephonl P"•· 4" or sbo\\I, From $25. Arter I 4 II . he d. sis' -. M('Cl 5-18-571!3 ompetehve prices. Open _. / ~ 6 pm w•• .. ,. ,,7_.,05. sps .• ga ey, a. , 1911 Open Road Camper Ice "°o:::·:,::;""""'-~T~E~-~~1~,~1~3,1 Eves, &: Sunday&, The best nK>S u1d. Good w <.ilildren. "'4J ~ romp. LDw hours. Like new. Box Stove Jacks Boo1 DESPER A !
• dea1s lire a1ways at: To Good home. 645-7948 aft SILKY Terr!en-2 feniall'.':1. t-i'pt. slip. $6,ooJ. • Slee'ps 6. 11i~ J<~ool. ~MHiil·i YA1.tAl1A 500 ?>.1X, 100 n11.
Wallichs Music City 6. No rea50nahle oUer refused. 213: 623-3189 9 tn 5 Pr.1 $.lt:iO.
'
'REE · Call 832-9422 or &1~178 ·'-' C I 8 1969 YA.\tAHA 125 ~tX. South Coast Plsza M0-2830 ~ lo you Pf'E!CIOUS baby 1973 Sldpjau, 24 fiy bridge ye es, ikes Clean S225. Ei·e~ 96.1-.~.590
kitten, AKC 1.1ale Kll('Shound, 2 rruiser. Twin 170 engines. Scooters 925 ,,=cc::~;=c==-""""'"C'°" * 894-lll15 * years gd 111/chiltlren Deluxe tandem 1.railer. ~lost\---'""--'-----:.::: SC l\\'INN heavy duty 2S" ~ci G~~y~IT~~ Be!~: I IRISl1 SfUer,, female, 11~ * 644-1668 * fully equipped boat in area. '71 HARLEY D11vldson 3~ used b1k<' with ca?Tier, very
M-"-m"'' __ ,1 !""'"" yrs. Jumps 6 fences. CaU llEGISTER.ED Keet1hound P.1int conclllion. $12,500 Hrm. Sprint. Jmmaculate. $400. good oondiuun S.W. 893.0tro
....... ., ""' ~ """ •01-Pho '7'7703 af!l'r 6Pl\1 or Silt-Sun. See to 8ppree. 97!1--7579. .
1
1 536-f!P)G puppies Female $75. Male .,.,,,_, -'" ne .>-1 -~~"""~~-~~-. -FRISKY r.1AL.E 1..:ITTEN, $90. 842-9002 Tal<e Ove( Payments 1961 GREEVES 250 YAJ\!AJIA 2::.0. dC'srrt ready,
PIA(N77D) W992A~1:,ED \\'EANED & TRAINED. . YORKSHIRE Tenier slud 11972 Saber-Crurt t2.>hn;. in C'.OOD CONDITION custon1 pipes, pp fendl•r.
<I ....,..,,, Call 548-461::; llCfVicc. Tiny 3 lb male. "-atl'r). L'i-ft. hal'dtop, t.io $350 *** S79-0398 t~m.6Slt0iv rni cond,
PLAYER PlANOS & rolls, D. SMALL PUPPIES Call 968-4m hp. in & out. Chevy 4-cyl. ·n HONDA 500 br d ·' Dupree 2940 D Grace l.n . . 956-1164 call aft. 5 ~kdy. .'. · an llf'ii . Bll.1\V·R 75/5, 75tc, Grand 1
Costa 1.fesa S.1::;..46S() 96S-121J AKC Reg. Toy Yo1 ksh1re • -Sacrifice -l\1ake offer' Touring absolutl'ly new
\VEBER Cherry \Vo o d ,
11:prlght Piano, xlnt cond,
$350. 646-m.J
SHANA & Conan 10 good Terrier, Oiamp line, male 2 2 11 ' JNBOARD/Outlx>:n'd 842-1904 · l }GOO · SlS95 d y. ~-l r & 7 & !C"ma\c. 5-l:'>-4400 Vanson rn. 70 hrs. Ne\\' 1972 Honda 500 I ~;>~,:.;,..,.. ' .n11~A" 1997 a s, •M.01~-yr ~m . mo 1op, new 'floorlnlJ~-depth "''J-'UUllV ~v•s • .,....... ·
male, mixed Shep. 494'8942. Horses 856 finder & head, 125 gal tank, -xrnt0.,._oo~ $800. f '7l KA\\'ASAKI. 500. Fast.
Electronic ''Junk" lols more. r-.1ust sell, Pri "' '~ cng built Filtrons $1'00. in
Sporting Goods 830 MS-Tl~ GIFT TIME? I pty. Firm $3495. 979-0922. '73 YA_MAHA 125.700 1nile1i pnr_ts. Chambers. 536-3-10li, i~~-~------3 YEAR old white n1ale AI<C Does your youngster wanl n 2.0' OlRIS Cralt Mahogany Must sell-Sf75. ="'=''='-T='="'=·------
K-2'' 195 with Marker hin· Samoyf'd to good lt0nie. hon;c for n birthday 01·1 Ski Boat,l85l!P, very clean, 5-18-51116 '10 :J60 YA11.1AHA Enduro.
dings. Good C(lnd. $70. 5-10-364S. Christmas gif1? Wil! !t Ix' !or tnnuy xjras': cust. tandem 1968 250 1'.fX Husky. X'!nt Dirt ready also. Many llC\\' g~!r;::.~illon w;ri~rbran~t kn~~'. 1 YEAR old niale ncuteN.!d no1v or ,~·ill ll still be a rlc-1 trlcr Ph IJ,12-9514 ;:~~S7350. Call 847-575.<J or l'Xlra.~. $175. 64G-O<l?.O
never used. 5,'iO. 67.:)..2144 rnt to genlle, older couple. sire 3 nios ri:oni llO\\t, Clleck , ·17 Ft. 1CHARACTER ~ · 'li9 TH1Ur.1Pll 500. Complete-
548-4580. out o~r 1n.11~1u~ "~ease ~ TUG BOAT. $900. '69 l..:_A\VASAl<t :tiOCC 1.1' Ch11pperl. S700. or best
TV, Radio, HlFi,
Stereo
Horse :\hnnt(n11.nce free C •1~4971232 Lo11• mile. Good <--ondilion offer. f\1u~1 Sl'll. a.!R--Hl'~'5
YOUNG n1ale cat tn l!;t'nt!c 11J_an !or :: n1os . then you a I, ·_ • $2~i0 Af1e1· 5P~I 6·1&-9'2.il
836 couple "'1th no children. 111JJ kno1~ for su~·e. Call us 17' UNIT.\# twin Evin 33's, HONDA .73 _ 2.JOXL l\Ioln Mobile Homes 935 I
------•----5411-4580. fol' full 1nforn1atur.i. xlnt $129'i, or trade for Spo ·1 L'k. o 1· 1800 ZENITl·I, RCA & Si•1vanlH. T F K'tt' I k 1· -Saddl C't•I · =~ ~~= · 1 · l e new. n Y wo ree 1 1es .a e or~"' • · c • > car same \·alue. ,..,...-. ....... "> · ~Mn 9·" """" TV & stereos, priced le~.~ 1 z:>:ro1 Trabu<.'O Rd, El Toiu , nu. ~ t:..-o::>•" than the dlscoun1ers. \\'llh Call 4S.f-836S R.Ti--010l 30 HUN'l'ER: xlnt cond. * '73 HONDA XL ZJO. Xlnt
3 -. picture tubes, l yr I NeY.'JX)l'\ Shp. S 4 2 0 0. cond extm pi"" • .,,.,. ,,. \\'EST\\'000 Farms all new &1" ~~ ot "= ,...._,..,.. "A" .;;~ ,..... ...,.,.,_ parts & service. A I I \>"11UJ• ;JJIJ-'U.Al\I ""'""'O
?.10BILJ;; Hon1r, 1!)(;~ Jlomet-
te 12' x 4'1'. Par1i11!ly furn.
\\•/color console TV. Like
new · cond. I,. in an c ing
available. 842-7701. available inodels ·In stock ll ~l facility. English &. Western °"'~'°"==-.,,===~I &: on display. •73 nlcw:lel!!. r.u and Supplin lrs.-.ons. Begin11ern ro ad-Boats. S~il 909 '67 r-.10NTESA SCORPION Motor Homes
940 -~ cl "-·h 00 . \'anC£"ll lra iniri~. Aft. , 250-CC. "Cherry cond." pn ... ~ tG ear . .....,. Gpni-6.12-?.lll!I or 96S-!l!l6 I 12· ca1amaca1.1. Fas_ t. $600 or $375 Call: 842-7900 Sale/Rent
plan or terms lo 36 mos. ff C ll Bill 67 3128 alt ---'--------ABC Color TV, 9021 Atlanta, PetS, General 850 TR.,\DE Ne"' SinqC"l' Zit:: Zag ~ ei·. a a-er PENTON 72 M ~ t t co •Dale's
f---l-0<'-l9CW6 Bronkbnnt,-liufu. ·---'"'?lJlll" · ~ p.m. prepari>d, Koba kit. Xlnl '73 23· tingtGn Beach, 968-3329 or FOR sale nude Capuchin saddle. all ~69911 A1."i3ATROSS-27r-)'~"~ru~.jMraf[~~ai!j'.:~,~00~2=4~995~-~· "'.'.-l!'re~o ~m~1~o~':l~'fj
962-5559. nionkcy with CAI,?{'. All , Exl. Shli.Jie-$1100 S~'l-9776 l Pr:irlically ne1v Tanden1 RECREATIONAL Vl:HICJ..E
currAR Amp Ii f I er & shot~. Great pel. 5!25. Da\·c I Boats, Slips/O;>cks 910 Bike $T.i. . . I RENTAL BURt:AU
Ampeg, 12D "'nits H.MS 412, el'cnings 644-S632 Boat1 ind ~I 5:il·0-150 * 71 4: S.12-9922 *
Altec lans111gs. Special llf· 1 Dogs 854 Mmne Equipment I \\'A_NTED Slip for' :l 0. 3.')() YAr.fAl-IA n::;, 'Tl, ---
feels y,•/covel' & rlol!v, :dnt . -, sn1lbo.1l, Ne"'l)Ol'I Bl'ach. 111i xlnt corl(! StiO.
cond 919-9091, Uam·I011n1 Gt:R)f,\N SJa•ph<'t'rl . n1alr . 2 I Call G.'i~>-87'.ri. ' * G12-2710 *
ZF.NITII TV 1111th T.l inehcs yr; ·~o!r!, ,\KC rr ;;: · S::.O 1 Boats, General 900 BoatS~Soeed & Ski 911 Recrea.tlonal ____ _
of glorious bluck & while 61v-.J,).l.):c·~~-
w
1973 LINCOLN CONTINENTAL TOWN COUPE
Fully Factory Equipped , Executivfl Demo. {Stk. # 13241 $6989FULL PRICE
'74 COMET
picture. An oldie bur goo-Ji". AKC Irish Sc(l('I' [r·rn11f0 130.\T & 1r;11il•r ~torr1~(' 1.i' ALLEN Flnt J~t!o1n, -10 Vehicles
Great for kid's roon1. $2j. n1onths. Any rcusou:.iblc of-•oa<·C'. 11()1• ll"'' fool. r.1or1thly horse 110
11
·!'r en~. S650. 11r,~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~i~iii~~~~~~~~i~•p;~ii or ? Call 552-8028 (Irvine! ft.'1·. 84:.l--6829. r.dt•. :\,12'J:i Doli1'nY l'ut·k Hd. * li7:1-16.JO *
AKAI tape deck. nuto, rrv .. ENGLISH Bull flog, Al~C. I-4!):l-5SI(:\ __ The fa~tcst rtra1v in Ille Wl"St.
10·• reels. RIC, $800 in-shots. }'"rec to goOO hon1c. r~a.~t rcsull:; lll'e Ju~l a phone •. ,a Daily Pilot Classified
vestro.. Sell $325. 5-18-8011 847-1129. I rul! ;11vay 642-"578. Ad. 6-12-Sb"'IS .
. Autos, Imported 970 Autos, Imported 970 1 Autos, lmPO.:-t-;d 970 I A:",'",=,."."-1"-m"p"o-,-,,-d~-='11
' •
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.. • • • • • . • ' ,
'
f
f
owto uy
n economy car.
1. See how it holds
the road.
2. Test its steering
response.
3.See how it
comers.
4. Try the brakes.
5. Drive it on a
windy day.
6. Notice if its fun
to drive.
Introducing the New
Honda Civic:
. ..
11 ' ·I
.I
' i
I 30 MIL·ES PER GALLON!
BIG SELECTION-IMMEDIATE .DELI RY!
NEW 1974 CAB OVER CAMPER
MOUNTED ON YOUR CHOICE OF s
1973 OODGE 3/• 1973 FORD F·2SO
TON PICKUP % TON PICKUP ....... -Y·l. ~wk. TrllM., ... _
Sl1•rl"" C1"'1>1r Specl1I, l<lr Co!MI.. H.D. s,r1..,,, fln1..i
G!;;ls. llNkl, R1•r Slep
Bumper, ANO 1'14 • ~T.
Cl<I O\IE ~ CAM PER lL!c.
71SUMJ fSfr. 51110~1
'l·I. Aulo. Tr•~•·• Powt r S!t~rln9, Oise: Elr1kq, H.D.
SP"'"'c H.O. t lre1, lliar Slep B••,.,:er, AND lt1~ I Ff . C-•'!
OVE~ C4MPER f119l~!j)
l$lll4)
1972
MOBILE TRAVELER
COMPLETELY SEL~ CONTAINED
SERIAL •itwO
BRAND-NEW 1974
PERRIS VALLEY 19'
. BRAND NEW 1973
ESCAPADE 20'
COMPLETELY SELF CONTAINED
~::: n. T~ ~:: __ \ -.. ....:...:.'---2 1 ~& ~
"
"""-'F' .J;:.1-c --...,-SERIAL ·~ 8j&.J.O;Q
s
BRAND NEW 1973 SPORTS COACH 25'
COMPLETELY SELF CONTAINED
Generator & Air Conditioning
IMMEDIATE DELIVERY
00
00
llMl~".llATo DELIVERY
' r • • •
UTOPIAN
'
00
00
~~·.?. ZO'
MOTOR HOME
IMMEDI AT E DELIVERY
BRAND NEW 1974 BR AND NEW 1974 C~AN~ NEV'.J ELDORADO 18'
PERRIS VALLEY
18 FOOT
:::~~~ $1695
PERRIS VALLEY
12 FOO T
TRAVEL
TRAI LER
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" 1 DAILY PILOT
MORE & IORE PEOPLE ARE FlllDlllB OUT THAT •••
NOBODY "BEATS OUR DEALS"
,c:wtt.e-81-
.. AND NEW 1t74
BUICK REGAL
I-DOOi HARDTOP
COtclr TMt 1_.-...1 a C-d
M ..,.,. .rt~' lllL. wto. r•o~•.• -· ot••W...
...... 4iltc lllwMt. _.,., tl/tt CfOh,.., lrMI & ·-
....,_. _.,,.., eut.ltot .-1, COl'llrtl mlf<ot, '""'
.,.,i~M lftOIOli'olt, C\111°"" v1nol tc>ll!, l!nlt<I
.ion. II" ........... rOd!o. WIW !lrf l, C\lll<>m k lt1.
-......,.dl. ,.,.,.,,........ """"' a tl«'lr"' do<~.
llld, t ll llllM. l«lol Nt. IQSllll.
LUIUS J·DL HAUTOP
!Clltd T~ll ........... I (-ti
JS0 \/·· ""'~ ' 8 11L, outq,. lnln1 .. ""'· llMrlftO,
-· dt .. IW'Ol;H , '<rlllm e.i!L llfl!Od 11 ... 1, •• mote mirror. l<onr kHNI M011ftort. oa:t•-.. .,_,
cJl1--••· '"''°""' -i..... •Odlo, .,,..w llrn,
--"'" 111••· ---· .._. -· WO!. -'"''I"' JU•. nn -1 . .,, YOfll!v mlrr0t. tklo or111t1Jv1 ,.,....,1,,.,, roc.tlr ,...1<11-. 1lr
c-•• 1oulld olQ•m a lrlo _,,., rt<f>Olt mlr·
<II•'. -Ollil<!tlV lltH , -· W~I, 1 ... 1\111'1 l ... l(llllor, dl'l!IOI doG. & ......... st-lllO -ti. Ssrlol No. 1oon.. s5195
---:--::----::--::----------------W!dnfld11. -24. 1'173 PJLOT·ADVERTISER 22 Mo••• Hom.• ~· Auto Service, Porn 949 _T,_u_c_r.. ____ _:ff...;;;2 Van• -H3~~yi-,-uc~,-.--'---~nn2~--=D~A~TS=u=N~..=:
S•le/Rent ,,_.
_....;.•;_s_A.;.L_a:_s_e __ ~~'~. :i,,.~~: ·~~~ ~·:.5::."'.::U~s,';;.t: *SPECIAL* WFRE HERE e SERVICE • 4 whl drives, Vil.Ill & nM)(()r 6 (')'t, Jl.l>. $iof..'ka 1 Ton 96)...1834 all 5 pm. See !JI at
honie1. 89'l-3314 Chuab, Cam~tled, '70 vw Van. Nice oondllion. *Of the· Week ~lacAR'l'llUR .. JA!if.BOR.EE • RENTALS • Loni•~ · S1lOO or beot •Her. Call m a SAVINGS ON
EXPLORER O,
HUNTINGTON BEACH
I[ c::, j GUSTAFSON 673-1S83 •12 CHEV '13 5~:""
. Unt"O!A.Mercury "utot W1nttd 961 VAN Pickup•
lSM'.> Beach at WUTIB' 976CltK 610'1
•1untlha1on Beach TOI' $2&99 General 950 842-8344 • (2ll) 592-5Q44 ==---_;_:.: "Home ol the Vilring'' DOLLAR lllH<J nit./.;, ~I, I "l. ~l!IJ I
'TI TORONAOO, 'n Cad
'73 LANDAU. Brand new 25' Deville Cpto. All Xtras. cau 1970 ll. pAt-.flNO. PIS. PAID
M ot o ri>ome. BeautlfuUy m.4809 P/B, ""· ....,., m>f. Uod" IMMEDIATELY
HIJNI N1.ru~. llfN.t!
t'Qulpped. Cose out aa.le. ,A __ n_1_i,,_uo-'1/_C_l_11_1_ic_1_9;;.;c53 30~ ~· ::',~· XJ:ri: FOR ALL Rl"duet!d over $4(0). 1.iugt 1 · -OOnu. _,_.. v•.r wo.
sell. See at JohnJ!on & Son '35 PLYMOUTH 4 door V•n1 963 £ftUIGN Lincoln t-.tercury. 2 6 2 6 sed&n, $llX) ~
llarbor Blvd., Costa Meu., * 64&-21li5 * 'li8 CHEVY van, good oond, CARS 540-~0R RENT * Trucks 942 ~e ~~:;; :1ta400W;: WE ARE IN
1973 EL DORADO J\olotor-'72 I N T E RNATIONAL 612-3985 ~-or ~ DESPERATE NEED
ho111c, 18-ft., tape deck, T.V .• Travel-All. Except. cond, '72 DODGE, V-8, custom OF GOOD, CLEAN
I
st'lf-l"On talned. sleeps 4. Call p/s, 11/b, air, 4 spd, au pnt. + button tuck Im., FOREIGN CARS -
art. 5. 956-2764. the 1;uodie1, but no fancy mag$, stereo, x l ra I ! TOP DOLLAR-PAID trim pkgs lo rosl extra 846-4246. Trailers, Travel 945 rnoncy . Priv party ""ill 5ac. FOR __ , _ ,.....___, FOR OR NOTI -..e • '-"ICVJ' Van Call or co~ in to aee us.
f"IH.EBALL 14' Tr a v l' I
Traill'r. Stove & oven.
Sleeps 6. Sul>C'r Clean. $375. Eve~. 963-3::190
for $3(0). 5-I0-8614. xlnt co1id, In &: out. call
1960 INTERNATIONAL l T. 960-1938 art 5 PM
w/dual whl8 & service bed. ·"'n"'oo"oo=E"""'==-~ New f'ng & ti.res. Xlnt 318 cu. In,
shape. $1100. Call 979-8630 &-track tape, t@d.Rr.ar
Auto Service. Parts 949 1967 Chev. YI Ton seat.% ton U.900. ~.
NEWPORT
IMPORTS
CHRYSLER ,72 318 Full $1095. Call 673-8120 ext 52 '66 DODGE Van, 11undial, 3lir W. Coe.It Hwy., N.B.
equipped, ps,' a11Cma10!. '55 !):. ton Ford U:Uck. $225. auto, pop top,...'$1735, '41-MOS
elc. '72, 318 Torque filtc Alake offr, l nu tires. 54S-81CS aft S pm WE PAY TOP DOLLAR
!nu"°'. Make offer. 546-021'\ 548-ll!n •57 DODGE"' VQn, must sell FOR TOP USED CARS
1962 FALCON parls, 1961 Any day is the BEsr DAY to fast? Best Glfer! 606 2 U your car Is extra clellll.
I 3 ~ I k -~• Do •t d 1 ?ttahopny, Westminster. .see us flnt. Fa con s.,........ s t c run an ...... n e ay ••
transmiSsion. 968-4971 .call today 642-5671. Sell idle Items •· .... &e.-5671 BAUER BUICK
Autos, New 980 Autos, New 9IO Autos, New 9IO C'Olta 2:5eaa Harbor Bl\·~2500
·1
'72 DODGE
y, TON PICKUP
ITT.lllLI
$3299
'73 CHEV l'.i TON PICKUP & CAMPER
'"'""'' $2999
'71 FORD :i. TON CAMPER SPECIAL
· (22102Kl
$3599
'72 CHEV.
'h TON PICKUP
l'l3032L)
$2999
'68 VW CAMPER
(XYG87TI
$1999
GROTH
888 Dove
NeWpOrt Bch
&n-1300 Open SUnday
1973 DATSUNS
ALL MODELS
IN STOCK
BARWICK IMPORTS
3.1375 Camino C.pls~
San Juan Capistrano
493-3315 or 831-1375
"Tl DATSUN Pickup, xJnt
rood, call el'es * 673-6885 *
FIAT
·n Fiat, 850 Spydtt, xlnt
cond. Xtra pipes, 13,000 ml ,
$1900. 6001 Seashore Dr, NB
JAGUAR
XI JAGUAR XK 140 MC
Rdster. Wire \,.hl9, "475 mJ.
on nu eng, trans & brakes.
Xlnt oond. &14-U47.
·n XJ 6. 28,0CXI n\i. Good
rond., all extras. $5795.
846-1452 CHEVROLET '!'.., '~PJJ,~"prl~· .. ~:
827-8440 or 892-5822
Johnson & Son 18211 BEACH BLVD *'64 XKE, Conv. Like new
radlals. hardtop, $ 14 O 0 • 147-4087 549-3331 673-5"9 HUNTINGTON BEACH ==J-E_N_S_E_N---1
AutoS Want9Cf 968
PRESENTS ... WE !<UY YOUR NEWLY
IMPORTED Al!fOS APPOINTED
BEST PRICES PAIDI JENSEN
p
R
Auto
Die
a.st ..Jee
from
J
c
'13 s
up t DI
DI
•
t---111 .... -·-----
the ''Class of 197 4''.
----· -
Dean Lewis Imports 1966 H=ra~~~ -ff·E-ALEY-· ·--·--Au~~-
0r11.nge County's '"""'
• • e Cougar XR-7
e Mercury Marquis
e Mercury Montego
e Lincoln Continental
e Comet .. , . Capri
SEE ONE • ... BUY pNE
. DEALER DffiECT LEASING!
• TRY ONE • • • • TODAY!
• • • • e • • • • • • • • • • • • • •
Saves You Money
e NEW OR USED e
Full Maintenonce Available On Most All Our New Automobiles. See ••• Hal Sanders· Malcolm Reid· Charlie Thomas
PREVIOUSLY DRIVEN SPECIALS
'70 CONTINENT AL
4 Door. Full power, factory air conditioning,
landau rOof. (288ASll)
$3275
'69 l\1ARK Ill
Factory air, po,~·er \l'inaows, 6 \vay pO\l'er seat,
AM/FM stereo, landau roof. (YXL696)
$3475
'70 MAVERICK
2 Door. Super clean . 3 speed. radio, extra de-
luxe trin1. (1481-IDC)
$1775
'69 l\'lERCURY
~larquis coupe. Automatic, factory air, power
steering·brakes-windows, radio, heater, vinyl
top. (XKV707)
$1975
'69 PONTI At: '71 CONTINENTAL
Bonn evill e. Automatic. farlory air. pO\\'er Cou pe. Factory air, full flO\\C r. AJ.1/FM stereo,
steer ing-brnkcS-\\'in dO\I'!', r!ld io, healer, vinyl lilt \Vhccl, auto. ternp. control. (862197)
lop. (417AGll l
$1295 $32 75
"Ora~ Count11'.t Tamilv of TJ 11t Carl'
'71 CADILLAC
Coupe de VilJe. Full power, auto. temp. con-
trol air, power 6 \vay seat, AM/F?.1 stereo,
till-tele., landau roof. (610CXV)
$4175
'72 CAPRI 2600
V6, 4 speed, AM/FM .radio, heater, decor
group., n~w radial tires. (503I'LY)
$AI.E PRICED
'71 OPEL GT
ln1n1aculate. Automatic, radio, heater, See and
dMve this beauty today. (615FF;T)
$ALE PRICED
•
.
Home or The New Car • , •
''Gofde•t ToucN' ohnson & son llome Of '111• N.., OIP, , •
"Golil'e.t l'.,.ell"
Ll 1'COI N J\'lt !{I l lf\Y
COl rt il\f~ CAP l~I
2&21 HAR BOA BLVD. COSTA MESA • 640·5030
TOPS BUYER DEALER
BILL MAXEY TOY?TA IN NEWPORT BEACH
18881 Beach Blv... F . th •·II "-· t H Bertch Ph IW1 ~ eaturing e •u w1e o
. TOI' CASH. JENSEN HEALEY
JENSEN
INTERCEPTOR
for cl~an late model Cll1'9
and trucks!
Howard Chevrolet
MacArthur ·and Jamboree
NewPort Beach
833-""5
Autos, Imported 910
ALFA ROMEO
*ALFA ROMEO
Best deal al\l•ays! Bcrlln&!!
Large Selection
of Colors
Immediate Delivery FULL SERVICE DEPARTMENT
NEWPORT
IMPORTS
flum $3795 (Ser. #02S'8J. 3100 IV Co H N 8 ·n· & '13' Co . 1st wy., .• s s. mple1e se-642-9405 lect.ion now. Buy or least' --ococ==~=---1
from MASERA Tl Jim Perkinson~1
~h·<1rh jl111pu11!i +·· ' ·. ' ..• .,.,.,
'• '• • , • L < 1 • .. . '
3500 G.T, MODEL 1965
SU Pl!:R LEGGERI. hu had
loving car<'. Jo mi, xlnt cond.
only 54000. wiU trade for
late model au t o m11.tlc 11645-64000=.c.=._,~°'~~..;"'-==I automobile. Don Lightner BMW eve.~ 675-ICM7 days 646-«'>51
MAZDA CREVIER BMW
Sales e Senrlce e Leasing * Mazda '73 Rotary *
208 w. Jst., S.A. 8.'\5-31TI $66 MONTH
USED BMW'S 36 MONTHS OPEN LEASE \VUI accept tra~lna
73 BAVARIA (DEMO) CALL MR. FRY ll42-<66ll ~ r:'ARIA Hunt. Beach
::~ ~:c~OUPE MAZDA
'68 2002
ORANGE COUNTY'S OLDEST 17331 Beach Bl. .....,.
0 MERCEDES BENZ
50 USED
MERCEDES Excellent &election of pre-
prico re-evaluation mod•I•. ON DISPLA y
DEMO $ALE Sharp New Car
SALES.SERVJCE·LEASING T d . OVERSEAS DELfVERY ra e-tns
Roy CARVER Coming In Every D•y , Inc. Ask About Ou• Unique
234 E . 17th St. Used Mercedes Lea&e
Costa Mesa 546-4444 Plens
Bob McLaren, BMW House of Imports
Inc. ~2 Mllllchesrer, Buena Parlr; Sale~ . Service . Leasing .in the Santa Ana Frwy
~ North Beach ~lvd., 52.1-7250
La Hn.bra
(714) 879-5624 JIM SLEMONS
IMPORTS
., ___ c_Al'_R_l __ I MERCEDES BENZ
•1 -Alll'llORIZED '71 CAPRI SALEs. SERVlCE
f speed, radio. hell.mo, vinyl
lop &: mag wheelt. (844-BMZ).
$1995
Jim Slemons
Imports
(~ ... .n •• !'JP buyer for ll!JY
~ .dercl'des Benz,)
11 r---==~-::=-=-.I -Quail IE:l ~·TFi~~~;;u-
28402 Mt1.r1t~eri1e. ~1u1cwny Mission Vi1jo Imports
l\'11ss1on V1C'JO f<':tlur!ng 8.1J~VF.nv• P\\'\'. ~J.19 MERCE~ES BENZ
'72 CAPRI, V6, 4 speed, IuUy FIAT cqulpt, 1{1,000 ml. Co ,_ * 54C}.()IW2. • __ mp...,tc Salee A: Scrvice-
CORTINA vim ·a, ·soon"'
28101 Marguarite Pll'k:Wll
' Mlssk>n Viejo 495-1700
CORTINA G'I' '68 Maroon, IUSE AVERY PWY. EXITJ
tape deck, radials, gd oond, MB •69, 280 SE, auto I•
536-2.1t9 . p/b, lthr int. xlnt • ~
CRICKET m-1'1!.6 --~----~·l ·~~:-7.M~E;RC~E~D~ES"-'"'22JS==~Sed,-,a-~·I
'72 CRICKET Meehlelcally oound. $1100. . Call 64i.s766 4 door, automauc traJ\111\is-,,-i:i'i:"=='-=---~-1 8'on, radio, hooter It low 67 MB 2000 as mpg. tUck,
mO.c.. (9401"'NFJ. ~63&-~an. Lo ml.
I~ 1~~~~,~~s
~ 88 OPFJ. ~=R~ OOUPE,
l lL·-_ _._----"---'-'I lO'J hp, one owner.
7840'1 ?\larruL'file P11rkwflY 642-429.'t
Mlaalon Vlc)o Don'l r1W op tlot _ I s:n.21»1> • GMMl9 "Lllt''lt to dUllfted, i!:o.~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~--~----~--------------------~~.lll USEAVERYPWY.El<lT ~tlllonltolul~l..,..,._
•
&ll· us
J
N
SA
• 4
831· u
'
St.
'11 28, sn ••
•
r
•
PILOT-ADVERTISER Wfdnt'Sday, October 24, 1qr) Wtdntsday, Oct.obtr 24, 1973 DAILY PILOf ·;~
l~A;.;utoo.;.;.;.:.,' .;.lm-"tp0'"'-rt;.;;ed..;.._9..;70.;:I··.:.;"""=;;.' .;.lmpo=;;;rt.:.;ed;;;__.;;91.;:0:l:A:::ut=°'::.•.;:U:::sed;:;:.. __ _;.990.;.: I ;A.;.";;;'°'=•.;:U;.;•.;.od;;.._ __ ..;.990.;.;; Auto•, Uood
RENAULT VOLKSWAGEN CHEVROLET CONTINE,NTAL DODGE
990 Auto1, UMd --~990~~A~u~,-.. -.~Ueodce-~--'--990 _ __;...;... ___ _ Autos, UMC& 990 : AutM, Useo --'--------, JEEP MERCURY OLDSMOBILE PONTIAC
RENAULT 72 SUPER BEETLE '12 KINGSWOOD E" o1 •
22,IXQ mUN. Am-Fm. ~· Wagon, 8 pau, pwr strx.
roof, map. New brioJ. $2200. brb, ~ind°"" & 5Ctlt NEW . Call 6'5-0306. · AM/FM radio, Contlonron
'72 Sedan. $56SO &Old w/blk
leather It vinyl. air, pv.T.,
A "\f/f'?,1 ittteO, apd corllrol.
oll, n,ooo ni l, s:tl-3246 lift 6.
1968 DODGE PolAra, RU
pc>\''er, rac alr, xJnt cond. noo. pvt pty 827-344(), .,.,...,,
WILL Y'S JEEP, 1 9 6 1
4-wheel drive-ti cyl. rebl!.
eng. New lire1, radW>. Xlnt
rond. ldl'RI for c1:1mplng,
fishing 01· dunr bll!W'.
f lnallC'!ng ava 1I11 b le .
s.&i-7701.
Im MERCURY Mt\t'QU}I:
Brougham, loaded. $3895.
~ ask for John Of'
Dan.
'Sale• A:~
OLOSMOBILE
GMC TRUCKS
HONDA CARS
'12 PONT. GrattfvlUc, 2 <tr
hnttp. all pwr, Rally whls,
am/Im awreo. 5,Jl-Ui26.
Afler 6 pm. R·12 4 DOOR nlr &: heat, complete travel
Au, ___ .,_..._ __ , __ ,__ '60 VAN, w/'65 1500cc enii, trlr b.ltch padtagP. Rack. CORVAIR 1967 OODGE Dart, V-8, auto,
xlnt rood, $900. __ M_U_S_TA_N_G_ 1 UNIVERSITY OLDS '68 PONTIAC, xlnt conct.
$850. "''~ ,,..,..........,..,., full 1yncro trans, l\11'111 I
SALE greal, mU1t sell, $450 or 11 l.'OOd cond. Sacrif! $3450. * '68 Corvt1.lr
$2499 ""''· ........... 61'-4<01. ~"c-... -=""'=' ==~~~ '"
,.,...,...
'W CONVERTIBLE. P/ I 2850 Harbor Blvd.
P l'b, V-8, 65,tXXI nii. ~ l Chila Mesa 54().9640
can i\hke, 642.(i()2 1 __
'64 LE MllJlll, 2dr, bucket
~·n\.s, V-8, &har11 Inside I
Ulll. $395. Pri pt)' 9f>!(...3817
•72 CH!:VELLE 350 ..._.nt. shape. US l\1ng!i. 37 ,000
Dick Miller Motors '6G and '62 V\V'a •ultable air, pfb, p/s, '1a1~d11u,8~; mi . $800. 536-J4S7.
·n CHARGER -I.JO J\1agnum,
tllke over payments, * &12-0097 *
MERCURY
eond . $600 hrm. 6·12.-8884. PINTO
'6S Mustang $500. * 6'6-2-Wi *
·~w w SA for dune buggie1. ,..,.,"'En/•~-"-" . 'CORVmE '7t MERCUHY Colony Park ~ · &mer, · · reuonable 847-1Jll9 aft G c~~~'C~~-:o,-~~= '----="5c,7·c.%13~2---·I PM ·65 EL CU.UNO, 327 V-8, ---------·I \\'gn Beaut rond. Attept 'TI P INTO. Shnrp! Cu!'ltom
1_ reasonabl<" offl'r. 5-Ml-3278 \ntenor. Air/eond. Vhl)'I FORD T·BIRD SAAB .70 BUG R/H, mag wheels, auto I.rans, p/s, p/b, clean, '73 VETI'E, lmn1aculate, 1---------1 .1 .
l---------·l 1mmacu1ate. $l450. S595. 642-6373 or 962-4934. 3500 miles, metallic yellow, '70 t11AVERICK, lo 1ni's, '72 ~IARQUIS \\'ago11 Full OLDSMOBILE top . .lJ\I.' mi f''..iJlC. L\'L'S or '73 T Bird , bi.nr1au, fully
* SAAB 551.4193 air, all IX>"'T, au!o trans: a/rond, p/s, r & h, good 1;wr & uir. Very clean. weekends, 5r5z.-O'll7. equipped, all op!ions, like
CHRYSLER -\Veckdays only, 8.'\3-94Tl tirt'S. fl400. !'J.J8..1651 714-646-2573 '6S OLDS F .. ~. 2 rl,, 6 cyl, n1">11, $4950. G42·47S2 __ "~ d··' -~-.. ,. ~mpl-• '73 VW. S•pe< ""· aJle_C RJH.,________ -PLYMOUTH ~· .,,... ...... ...,... ........ "' SU t 9500 1 ·n FORD LTD, lo mileai...._. '&I MEHCURY. Trans c::ar. auto ll'ans, R&.J1, P /S, ori1t. '66 T-BJRD, perft·t:I L"OIVI.
selection now, Buy or lease nroo · mi. Priv. Ply. '69 OIRYSLER NE \V COUGAR \'t'ry clean. Ale, 846--0708 Nu batt. Int gd cond. Recent ownr, good cond, 968-1574 Pvt party. ~take uffl'r.
from $2500. 53&-2842 YORKER nh 5:00 pnt job. OUer. 675-3430. aft. 2 pm. '56 PLYJ\.1. Sia \Vag. Nf'OOs ~67J.-06T==''=~=~---
Jlm P•rklnson's '66 VW 4 Dr. hardtop. Full pwr., '67 COUGAR, Xlnt cond '65 FORD 6 cyl. "Gas '&1 ~Tcrcury Montclolr '65 JET-Star. gd oo ntt .. or4: M!~ ~~11 !t{. bt'sl orfer. 'Qi T-SIRD.
ilh-.1rh Jhnput1~; SC-4.12.8 * $650. all extras. New paint, fact, PS/PB, air, tape, 11m V-8, 1 Saver". Xlnt condition! Xlnt condition. Xlnt u·11ns-owf)(•r, $395. 89.J-3753 or ---------J<\ltl P™'C1'. si;..YJ. VOLVO air. $1,050 640-0596 rww tires, $ll!50. S.'l().9807 j Sacrilice, $290. 5.1&-.1.'il\J µo11a1ion. $400. * &t2-7011. 897...f240. '.\!C'eft a "Pnri"H 1~1~•"' an alt' 2443 Vas.1q1_r Pl., C'O..IH .\!P!';fl.
+! '· . "·~,. 1---------+Autos, New 980 Autos, New 980 Autos, New 980 ' Autos, New 980 Autos, New 980 Autos, New 9IO Autos, New 981 '74VOLVO~ ..iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii;ii;;;;~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~iiliiiii~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii;ii;;;~~iliiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~iiiiiiiiiii;iiiii;;;;;;;iiiiiiiiii~I r. ~"' 1~ • r < ! , 0,1,0
Orange County's Newest
SAAB
DeRICl'
CLEARANCE SALE
'73 SAABS STARTING AT
$299S
up to 24 miles per gallon
Dick Miiier Motors
120 W. Wamer, S.A.
567-2132
SUBARU
HERE NOW
Immediate Delivery
On AH Models
SA VE $ ON REMAINING
7'J's & DEMOS
flWtlewi&
VOLVO
1966 Harbor, C.M.
'72 VOLVO 142E.
ml, $3:i00 only 8
548-3503
1---------·IAutos, New 980
Drive A 1---------SUBARU
•t
Dick Miiier Motors
Sales & Service
Visit Us Soon At
120 W. Warner, S.A.
557-2132
TOYOTA
'67 TOYOTA
CHEVROLET
BRAND NEW '74
EL CAMINO CLASSIC
FACTORY PRICE ...,...
OUR PRICE
$3714
Call i\.facPherson Chevrolet
837-2771 • 492-1157
PONTIAC
A u t om a t I c transmission Autos, UHd 990
-·-·.Ji~ air_~ lue-ehip-Attto-&ll
tionmg. { $699). 1969 Pontiac Fireblrd, R!H,
auto trans, p/s, air/cond.
--$1550 full cash prlt't'. I~~~ 1 1:1:~~~ ~~"i:e~a~iJ~ ~ auto !rans, p/s, Rir/cond.
~ ~· Have losee lobelicve. ~ K..A... 1969 J<Vrd LTD Coupe, RIH, I '--~----'---'I auto trans, pis, air/cond.
2840'.l Marguerite Parkway $1095
Mission 7iejo 1969 Mark III, fully equipped, 831.204() • 495-4949 $3000.
USE AVERY P\VY. EXIT For Information call
JUST ARRIVED
'74 TOYOTAS
New Modl"ls . Nl'\\' Colors
SAVE$ ON RE:\1AINING
73's & 0Ei.'10S
&1~59t0
443 West Ba.y St, Costa l\Jesa
BUICK
SACRIFICE Late ·~ Buick
R iviera-1..oaded, AM/FM
stereo-4 spkr tape. Auto fl'4« lfl0i4. locks. Transistorized ig-
nition, mag wheels. $1295.
644-1253 TOYOTA 1 ''62~s=u=1CK-El~..,-1ra-. -,..-bull~. 1
trans. 28,000 mi. on rebuilt V-8. Good tires. Needs body 1966 Harbor, C.M. 646-9300
'69 TOYOTA
• St•tlon Wagon e
4. speed, radio, heater
!579ABEl
$1095
ls::J
work. 'lteliabljt tnmsporta.
tloll $1751 or lbest offer.
~J.m.
'&) BUICK 300 cu in V~.
fact air, auto. New radials.
$350. 5f"'J"6759.
CADILLAC
TODAY'S
SPECIAL
'73 FLEETWOOD
28«12 ~~ie~arkway O'ELEGANCE
831.3)40 e A95-f949 Padl:Wd lop, ll'afJ1('1" interior,
US!: AVERY PWY. EXlT dual eon1!ort seals. full
·73 COROLLA 5 speed, FJ\I IX>\\'<'r, faclory rur, Al'-1·F'M
dlo dial 28 Sll'l'l'O and lllJll' player, ra ' ra 6, n1.p.g. $75. Crul-se Control, <'~ry i~n
&: T.O.P. 962,..2373 l."eivabk-luxury option. Jn1-
•n TOYarA Coupe for sale maculate. 11J45.131.
xlnt shape, $IB50. Call $6999
646-8298 or 536-9415 Over SO Fine Used Cars to
'68 TOYOTA Corolla runs gd, Select F'rom,
needs minor work $550. ND.hen Cadillac
5J6..2710 Alll'liORIZED DEALER
"12 TOYOTA C a r in a, 2fiOO HARBOR BLVD.
AMITTI stereo good gas COSTA MESA
mileage, xlnt ~-644-4044 540-9100 ()pt'Ti Sunday
'69 TOYOTA ·n EL OORADO, '10000• am '!m !>1ereo, tilt whl, Jthr
2 Door H.T. inrer, p/b, p/s, 6 way St>at.
Auto mat1otransmisston. Xln't tires, paint & body,
radio, heater. facrory air l\Ius1 scJ!. Best of l c r .
conditioning & v1n)·I top. (7141 &W-1-175.
CXIT070). '73 CAD SDV. like nu, 4500 $1395 n1i, fully equip. P ... t ply
$6450/or orr. 6#-7311 eve.
I~ I 6C!-1010. '·"·
W\DJLl.J\C '72, coupe, \1·hite, o<iLey air, stereo, !ull power. Best ._.,.......,,..-,r,.,_,C> ..,_ offer <1ver $.'i,000. ?.lu~t S(']l,
II.A... 586-9278.
28«J2 Marguerite Parkw-.y '67 COV .13,000 on tac nu Miasion Viejo eng, nu lll"('!, buying home,
831-~0 e 4~ must sell, $1450. or make
USE AVERY PWY. EXlT offer, aft 4 pm. 557--0803.
I H '70 S.D. Must sell, very TR UMP clenn, lo mi, loaded, bsl
offr over \Vhlse 774-71$
'67 TR SPITFIRE 'TI EL OORAOO, C.On-
$600 as Is. Needs Utile work. ...ertible, prl pty. Mu.at sell Call 645-1791. 172 E. \Vilson · Xlnt. cond. 644-2136 '
St., Costa 1t1esa 19TT SEDAN OeVllle, loaded,
'71 TR;, ,reen \\'/tan Int., 2-1.<XXI miles, perteet cond.
28,0CKI ml., C1ss tape deck, $4695. 548-3519
'
73
"""'· '"""
97
'·.
96 76 CA MARO days: ask for Charlie
VOLKSWAGEN
* 1969 VW Bug. xtro
Q.EAN, :dnt running car,
xlnt tires. $1350. 557-8151
·n Cam11.ro, auto, p/!C, p/b,
air. xln't cond. $ 2 7 SO.
67:"'1""5196.
CHEVROLET
'i3 ~_£le. Oru,nge, blnck __!_n· ltiONTE CARLO "Z3, black ~r:tect: $300). flnn. A/C, P/W, 6 way M!'llt, titi
I wheel, cruise control, ins:t. '69 VW, must 11ell, am/ m, group, dee. door Jocks, elec.
SUlll'OOf, good oond. $950 or trunk release, 1p, whls,
best ofr, 645-0429 bef 8pm ww's, dual mirrors, extras,
'12 VW convertible. xlnl Jo ml. $4400. 6 7 3 ~ 4 G 4 2
cond. fo mileage. £73.-6213
833-3110 ~1971='""-ci"IEVRO==L"ET=-.,.M'"o-.,.oto
'63 vw Bui AM/FM, rebuUt Csrlo. air, bucket seats,
ena:. Good tires. $595. vinyl roof, tilt wt.rel, 38,IXX) •&t&--Olm• mlr $3.195. 673-1901 .
'69 vw Bwl. >..1nrconrtltton. '68 MALIBU, P/8, PIS.
See to appreciate! $1350. AIC, nu.to, V--8. Vt!ry good
673-7261 cond thn.ioul. Mu"t llt"ll $850.
'66 iijijK, air cond, nidtals, 01' best M~28U . '650. eves '70 Chev Impala cu.«om * &16-3858 * -cpe, lo mlk!1, Xlnt cond. 1 --.~NEW=""·73="'s"'u"'G-•:---1 Sz\crtrI~. 493-«m.
DtlVfll 8 wk.1, perfect! ·n CHEV Impala, 2 dr l-IT 613-4!069 alt 5 pm Red, air oond, Orig owner
Fat Proftl ll attalno!d wMn $l 9'75. 4•3686
)'O'I fill throuKh rnult"'IOl• '73 LAGUNA 2 door H/1op, tins Da1lY Pib O...uled aulo, elr, "Int oond, lo ml,
Ada, ~ $l400 finll 642'-0BIM C\o'G.
I -_,
•
l
YOUR FACTORY AUTHORIZED CHEVROLET DEALER SERVING THE ENTIRE HARBOR AREA FOR OVER 13 YEARS
Try Our Newest at Connell Chevrolet ---
Leas e the "CONNELLEASE" Way
See Jerry Perkins, Leasing Manager II
WE'RE LOADED WITH BRAND NEW
1974 --------1----·--· ----------------·-
·-· CHEVY Y2 TON PICKUP
FLEETSIDE
l llSTJ 11 1075 7)
$2799
ALL SERVI Cf D AND READY TO GO TODAY IMMEDIATE DELIVERY
BRAND
NEW
BUSINESS IS . .SO_ GOOD AT CONNELL'S THAT WE'RE
' RECEIVING EXTRA SHIPMENTS OF 1974 CHEVROLETS!
YOU DON'T NEED TO "ORDER YOURS TODAY" AT CONNELL. DRIVE YOURS HOME TODAY
FINAL 1973 DEMONSTRATOR SALE! '73 CAPRICE 4 DOOR CAPRICE 4 OR. $469347 MONTE CARLO s479500 (1248) (200473) Eleclric Sun l~oof. (1 08) ,
M•. CONNELL'$ CAil (44 t573)MJIS. CON NELL'S CAR ABSOLUTELY LOADED! '"""1
o1scouHTED
'73 CHEVY II NOVA
6.440 miles, 6 cyl., auton1a tic, power
i;tcering, factory \Varranly. (2601-I Yil-'I)
'73 VEGA HATCHBACK
9,795 miles. Ne\\' car \vnrriinty. Radio,
3 speed, auto1natic. (1~3GXP)
'73 IMPALA 4 DOOR
SJ)()rt Sed. Air. vinyl roof, radiu, Vfl\\'t•r
slt'('r!ng & llrukC's. auto., tilt \\'l1&..~1.
11 CXlO n11lcs. <70'2GB1 I l
'72 VEGA WAGON
Automatic, air cund .. rildio. 20,000
n1iles. Real clean. l574f1'"11J
'72 VEGA WAGON GT
3 speed auto. trans., radio, air
cond, nice. C706GVR ) ,
'72 VEGA PAN EL
23,000 miles. 3 spPed automatic, radio,
aux. seat. C07'1FNI}
'71 IMPAl.A COUPE
Wholesale. P.S .. P.B., auto., air, vin)·I
roof. 31.000 mill's. Kl'\ly \vholL"iUle S2'2T.).
VEGA G.T. s259900 IMPALA CUSTOM
Loaded. (202) (118619) (112) (l03651) 51250 IMPALA 2 DOOR s377255 CAPRICE 2 DOOR
(121 ) (l04511) (775) 164956) OFF FACT. WINDOW STICKER PRICE
'69 IMPALA 4 DOOR Sl499
'70 IMPALA COUPE S-1)599
V8, aufom•lic, powtr 1!11tin9, 49,000 mil11 !2b7AHW J ~
'71 CHEVROLET WAGON S2699
Kingiwood 9 P"''·• Y8, aulom1lic, power 1+11•ing, 1ir, t ltc. window1,
roof ••ck {747DKH J
TRUCKS
'72 EL CAMINO SALE PRICED
VI, 1ir, P.S., •~lo .• 21,427 mil11. R1d io. ~ 53192K !
'71 GMC 'I• TON SALE PRICED
4 wh11I driw1, r1dio, 1ulo., P.S., (81125) ---------
'70 CHEVY 1i NOVA S.S.
350 V8, P.S., air ('('Ind., 4 spt.'Cd. Really
nice one. l 480BEQ !
'69 CAPRICE WAGON
9 pass. 40.000 mite!-\. Air, P.S.: P.B ..
P-windO\\S, P-scrit~. roof ra<'k. (Jn•·
c11.rerul <1\v11rr. (772ALN 1
'69 CHEVY II
Coupt'. S1nall V8, nut ... , l'.S .. -17.000 rnilt·.~.
Rl'ally nicl·. 1z1.-~1ori~1
'67 MALIBU 4 DR. SEDAN
Smal l V$, P.S .. r11di11. Utt Ir .. !!'
lady car, lf'FJ97711
'72 DATSUN PICKUP
Air ronditloning, 4 spt.'l'd. radio. 26,000
1niles. Superior cond. 1270ETIJJ
'69 EL CAMINO $2199 1 '72 IMPALA 4 OR. H.T.
VB, P.S., •uto., 39,000 '"i, Spt,l•I pti11f. ( lbSOOEI
'70 FORD 1 TON
R11fr i9111•led v111. VB, .tkk, (b2301 I ------'73 EL CAMINO
' '
12.000 mi. VB, P.S., J •p1111d. {145HOCI
S2799
$2999
"Quality Is' The Reason Why
,
~1aefl 11 ™ ~-To lfuy"
24,500 n1ilcs, reg. gas VI-I, aut ... ,
vinyl roor. P.S .. P.B., Air cond.,
Superior car. t218DVV!
'69 PONTIAC WAGON
Calf\\ina. VH, ~lllomahr. l"'l\'f'I' ~11•1•1in\i.
air 1.:ond11io11i11i;. \Zl)\\'::ill"il
2828 HA"OR BLVD., COSTA MESA -546-1200
$367700
s4099oo
~899
'
•
' DAil V PILOT PILOT ·ADVERTISER 2!t
We Thank You ••• For Making Us ••• ~::D '7 4 CUTLASS No.1
No.1
We Will Continue
To Serve You To
The-BesN»f---
Our
Ability
Because
"WE
APPRECIATE
YOUR
BUSINESS"
IN ORANGE COUNTY HONDA
CAR SALES FOR THE PAST
6 MONTHS ••• AND NOW •••
IN AMERICA!
!Sept., 1974 Sales Fi9uresl
# 114495. VB, automatic, air
conditionin9, radio, heater,
power steerin9, and brakes.
• '
53177
' IMMEDIATE DELIVERY
• Ii •
•, .•
BRA~D 17· 4
NEW .
#136786. Loadecl!h:un pow-
~r. factory air conditionin9,
cruise control, tift.tele wheel,
etc.
98 REGENCY
· -5 5377 ·
IMMEDIATE DELIVERY
SERVICE DEPARTMET OPEN 7:30 to 5:30
MONDAY THRU SATURDAY
WE SERVICE ALL GENERAL MOT ORS CARS & TRUCKS OLD & NEWI
FREE LUBE 'JOB WITH EVERY OIL CHANGE AND NEW OIL FILTER
' PURCHASED. GOOD THRU OCTOBER 30, 1973
· PHONE FOR APPOINTMENT NOW.·
OFFER GOOD WITH THIS AD ONLY
•
. . .. . '· .
• -:
SELECT 1-0WNER LOW MILEAGE SPECIAL,S ' . ,_, ..
' ' . • ' . '72 Pontiac Wagon '72 Toronado '72 Olds 98· .. '71 Toronado · '72 Olds Toronado :
Grand Safari. 9 pass. loaded. (339902) Loaded with power options and air Condi-Coupe. Loaded with power, air condition-LoadJ with power and air conditioning.
53477
I
tioning. (790CVX J ing, vinyl roof. (995EOSJ (882PBKJ
,LOad2d iriclu~ing. air conditioning.
169.6EYVl
SAVE SAVE SAVE 53977 1
'67 !:.~· .... , .. ,,;, ....
!UDB~IOl
'71
$777 (3) G.M.C. SPRINTS s3977 ,71 . ' ,t1.ulo!nlll<, VI. ,o ... er 11eel'lng, powirr brak ...
lllr colldit•Dnl119, tS01J9~1 (JlllSl) 4S01'SOI REG. $5195 Now I •
HONDA ·
C•r. (91 ICEP)
MALIBU
V8, 1ulom1ti.;, 1ir condition·
i119. !Vb2JDN I
G.M.O. 314 TON PICKUP s4477 6 EVELLE
""" '""'"" ""m";" "• '" """" REG $5695 NOW , 6 CH & brak .. , air<-.. H.D. M1•pe11sle11, f7J171l) 1 , · •
• YI, '"'•••';" ,.d;o,
--------------h11t1r. tVCSJO'l)
•
•
. $1571 -.. . $ · '74 ''STAGECOACH" VAN 100981~ 8 7 7 l~fv!~~!~9~Ese~~~~~~~~ustom Vans Todays $3Q 7 7 '70 CHEVY
3
/4 TOI $26·7· ;7-
With c1b o••• -
camper. !95'45cpG) ' · . ~~ . , , • -.
,
~ ' '
' I
• •
Wtdnfida~. Octobfr 2-4, 1973 DAILY PILOT
THUNDERBIRD.
1974 MAVERICK GRABBER
;-----..__
·.~
~
1974 PINTO
3 DR. RUNABOUT
1974 MUSTANG 11 GHIA
' . :;
• ,,
'• . ~
THEODORE -ROBINS
LEASING CO. --
• Complete lease progr.am. All makes. Daily
rent'als: $6 per day, 6(per mile. Call
Kenneth Cliff, leasing Manager.
Lund Jones, Leasing Specialist.
642-0010
• • . j ~ ..,, '
Al" 19J4"a :
ON'Ol$fl,AY ~ () J • ~~ IT'S -HERE! O! I~ THE ALL NEW The Ford
Econoline with ~~ -QUADRAVAN 4 WHEEL J.; :J DRIVE ~~ CARGO VAN ~ CLUB WAGON
ALL SEASON VEHICLE
DRIVE IT TODAY
IMMEDIATE
DELIVERY
NEW CAR SALES HAVE OVERSTOCKED OUR USED CAR DEPT.! OUR FINANCE EXPERTS
ARE HERE TO ·HELP YOU! SAVE NOW ON OUR 2V2 ACRES OF FINE TRADE INS!
'69 FORD LTD
'4 Door. VI , t ulom•fic, r1dio, heater, pow.
•r 1ft1rin9 · '..& br•ft1, 1ir c9nditionin9,
Yinyl roof, l~eM·~ "'-''
• -·-s4. 13 ...
MONTH
• ' ! •
JUt It !9!1~dn. """'· MJ.U hi tti.. mo. 1ym1. Incl. 1111, 1k ..... & 111 c1rf)'l"9 cllll'f" "" •Piii'. c.-11 ,., 24
"'91. O.ferTld pymt. 1rlc1 11111.n Incl. llr, llc..,H.
ANNU,IL. P,RRCBNTAGlli RATlli H,06,.. T11.i c;1S11 PliC•
11M7.1S.
'71 PINTO
'4 1p1tcl tt•n1mi11ion, rtclio aicl httler.
!185HDCI . ~
'71 CHEVROLET
,. Mtli~u. 2 Dr. H.T .. kii•m1tic, r1dlo, h11t-
er, pow•r st••ring, air condition ing. I 59J.
OTAJ
'72 MUSTANG
At.ifotiii~i'c, radi;, heater, power 1f1trin9,
br1 kes & windows, •ir conditioning. IJ86-
DT8 1
549!! 5 68~~ 5 71~~
• SIU 11 l1t1I dn. pymt. 141.tt 11 ftlNll frll. pyml. lncl. IOt b'Jittl 11'1, nmt. HI.SI ii '"•I me, Jl'llll. IMI, t1r, 11r, lie. & 111 c1rrvr111 ch1roe1 on 1ppr~cred1t tw ti 111.10 11 lot•! mo. pymt. inti. 11r, nc .. & 111 t •rrvl"g mo1. Dtltrrld pyml, price llHl.411 Incl, I•• & tic. llctnM & •H c1rry1,.. ch1r1q " •IPI'. <11:-111 fer :N ,.,.,. d1~rg11 Oii IPPr. en.Ill for 41 mos. D•ferr..S pyml. prlc~
ANNUAL PERCENT.I.GI! RATE 14.Jl • Telal ulh Ot11rrtC 1iint, U,U,11 Incl Ill & lie. ANNUAL Pllll· IJC11.MI Incl. lal & lie. ANNU AL PERCENTAGE RATE ,.le. swn.1s. • • 'lc•11tACJ'I ilAT I 14.7'%, 'T•l•I ,.,~ ... k. fJUl.1'. ll.6¢".io. Tolll cllh IH'I<• U•Zl.7S.
MUSTANG II
AMERICA'S
FIRST
PERSONAL ..
LUXURY CAR
IN-T~E
COMPACT FIELD
• TWO DR. HDTP.
• GHIA TWO DR.
• 2+2 THREE DR.
•MACH I
NO EASIER TERMS
ANYWHERE
'72 FORD
CUSTOM. CITY CAR. AUTOMATIC,
POWER STEERING, POWER IRAKES.
11508591
NO MONEY DOWN
s4270
"' MONTH
No Mon.-, OOwn, Ul.7~ Is lotll mo. pVft'lf. Incl. I••·
Lie .• & Ill c1rrylng cli1'1111 on I P!lf'. Cnclll tw 41 mo1.
Defier ... pymt, PJlct SlOff.4.0 I~. lu & Ne. ANNUAL
l"l!ltC'INTAGI! It.I.TE 13.~. Tolll Cllll price suri.11.
PINTO
Coupe, Auto., radio, h11ter.
I tlSHDCI
$1·495 ~67 ~~~"~· '~L•''· '"''· $795 '70 ~,?~~ ... ~~2~"1 1 $2295 P.S., P.8., P·window1. (b42AVIJ ..... __________________ _
$1·~R-9c-'71 r~~~~~~~~il .. ,. $12·9· 5 '71 ~~~~. '"~:~,~~·"·· $2495 · ~ ~ t 88lETWl h1al1r. 182227JI ----------.-----------, 68 ~~~:~~~,~~~~;~~·~'· $17 9 5 '7 0 ~~.!~~~."~~.~~~ $13 9 5 I 7 2 ~~~~:~ .~: .. ,~~.~ $ 2 7 9 5
• __ ,... ________________ _
'72 ~~~.~' ~~~~~ $1895 . -
'71 MUSTANG $2595
Con•1rl. 'VI, 4 •P••d, r1dio,
h11t1r, pow1r 1t11rin9 I br1k11.
l571HTA J
'7·0 ~"~~~~-~.~~ ""'· $1595 healer. l 2418EW!
'70 ~~.,~~"~.~~~'''"· $129· 5 r1dio, h11l1r. ! 150747)
'72 Ford Chateau $3995 ·
9 pan. dub W .. JOft, ve, IUfet·
m1lic. 1ir cond .. powt• 1to1rinq
!666ELTI '
IA\11 Of,l. HOUll: I •M•f ,.a M11t,••rl.1 I-··,... Set,J 10 •M·· '"' ....
'Alli lll'll(l HOUll1 7 •M•t ,,,. M111.1 7 IM·t "" Yw.t .. Jrl ,
•altJ 01,1. ONl.Y1 I •ffl•1 "" s ...
THE 5 ARE
ALL '735 MUST
'73
WAGON
ROLL-OUT
Gi9antic "Sacrifice Sale" on each and every
remainin9 1973 Chrysler and Plymouth
Wa9on. We're Over-stocked ••• It's
Time To Trade and Save!!
SATELLITE $
SEBRING
PLUS
BRAND NEW 73
PLYMOUTH CUSTOM
SUBURBAN$
WAGON
USED CAR
specials
'68 DODGE
CORONET 440
VS . "ulomalic, radio, heal1r,
pow•• 1te1rin9. WSW. 1ir
cond. ~invl l"P· !XIYlbSJ
$895
•68 BUICK
Station Wagon
Vs. •ulom•tic ,r1dio, he ,,+-
•r. power 1!1erin9 & bt•k~1.
WSW, 1ir condilion;nq, rool
r•ck. (YXV3071
Sedan
6 cylindtr, 1ulom1lic tr1n1-
m;uion, r1dio, h1at1r, pow-
er deerin9. {Q5802S)
s595
'71 AUSTIN
AMERICA
A~tcm•to c lr•n1miuio", ••·
doo tnd h1dl1r, 1018ELH l
s995
6 cylinder. 1fand1rd tr1nt•
mi11ion, r1dio, h11l1r, vinyl
top. chrom1 window fr1m11,
!72,BHJJ
'67 DODGE
Dart 4 Dr. Sedan
6 cylind1r •ngine, eulom•lic,
r•dio •nd heater. IVCW905)
s595
•
NEWPORT 4 DOOR
VB, 1ulom1lic, r1dio. heeler,
pow1t •!e1rin9 & breke1,
w1w, 1ir conditioning. ( UZH-
819 )
'68 RAMBLER
AMERICAN
Sedan. Economical 6 cyl;nder
1n9in1, 1!1nd .. rd l1an1mi1.
iion, rodio • n d he1ler,
(WVR8t4)
I • II ••
\l\StOUll
OFF
MANUFACTURERS
STICKER PRICE
LOADED
SERIAL #RP2JM3G20-4067
OFF
MANUFACTURERS
STICKER PRICE
LOADED
\l\SCO\\ll
Polara Wagon
VB. automatic, radio, h11f.
''· power .te1tin9, power
br1k11, WSW, air condition·
in9. CJOOBLMl sags
'68 PLYMOUTH
Station Wagon
Cui!. Suburb1n. V8, •utomt·
1;c, r1dio. h11ter, pow1r
ole1r;n9 & br.,~es, WSW, eir
condilion!ng. IVRCSl I)
$695
OFF
MANUFACTURERS
STICKER PRICE
LOADED
SERIAL #CP-46-TJ0.289347
Station Wagon
VS, 1!1n61rcf tr1n1minion,
r1dio, pow1r 1!11rin9. WSW,
/OYSl85l .
s595
'69 v.w.
Fastb.ck
Stendercl fr1 n1mi11ion, heel·
1r. (7 15HEWJ
s995
WtdMsday, Octotier 24, 1CJ73 PBILOT-AOVERTISER 28
$
BRAND NEW 73
International Scout
LOADED
America's Leadin9
Recreational Vehicles
from the LeadiftCJ
International Truck
Dealer ••••
ATLAS!
BRAND NEW 1973
LOADED
TRAVEL ALL
$
DISCOUNT}
OFF MAHUFACTUREl'S STICKER PRICE
NOTICE!
Atlas Chrysler Plymouth now has
facilities for service on ALL MO-
TOR HOMES regardless of size, by
experienced motor home mechanics!
WARRANTY work on International
and Dodge truck chassis.
I
·.
. • •• -.· •,
~ .
•. : : ;-:; ::
~ -· . -· ::
~: :: •. :·
[· • . .
.
' .
'
. • .
.•
. ::
~;
· . . . . . ..
·•· :: .·
. " •• ;,·
~· .. •• ~ .. :: . •• >· ..
i~ ·. !• .. . • :.: •• •• ~ • .. ;:
s-
'
NEW '74
B-100
VAN
ll11"84X0106 10l
IMMEDIATE
DELIVERY .
... -.-. ..
' FREE CREDIT
CHECK
PHONE 557-9220
and sa ve yau rself same maney
If you are new in Califomia • If you awe on your car • If yo
are new o., your job • If you have little or no credit • Drive
home today in the car of your choice. Examples of our man
ways to finance: Crocker Bonk • Union Bonk • Security
Pacific • Bonk of America • United California Bonk •
Chrysler Credit • Fireside Thrift
' ..
NEW
DART
FULLY
FACTORY
ECj)UIPPED
s
'74 DODGE
ORDER
TODAY
FULL
PRICE
NEW. .'7 4. DODGE 100% FINANCING
AVAILABLE ON APPROVED CREDIT NEW '7 4 DODGE
I
TAKE
YOUR
CHOICE
Y2 TON
Fully
Factory Equ ipped
. FULL
PRICE
··72 PINTO
Automatic, Air Conditionin9,
WSW, Bucket Seat1, Radio, He•ter.
IPTLlbSI
:, 71-~~~y .~~A '""'' .....
WSW, redio, ~••ter. !416CRKI
FULL PRICE
CHARGER ·
Brand New '74 Dodge Station Wagon ·s
ORDER TODAY
Automatic, Air Conditionin9,
Radio, Heater. t b66EHT )
s
'72 DATSUN
PICKUP, 4 1peed, AM.FM
Redio, Chrome Wheels. I 178EAFJ
COURTESY .DODGE
FULLY
FACTORY EQUIPPED
s
r61 ~~~.,~~~~~ s~ ....
: !YO'f771 l
The $666 '72 ~~DG·~•·C~~~~E~" '°"' Walking Man's Friend ............ , .......... 161 7
FOP! . .
·=·
!! 7 2 . Dodge Polara Sta. Wag. -:· :~ V-8, •uto. tre1>1., air cond.,
::. power 1t••ti1>9, pow•r window•,
•: AM/fM, crui1t conttol. (I )4-
'• • EKG ( ..
FULL PRICE
$766
FULL PRI CE
$1766
FULL PRICE
FULL PRI CE
·-~~~~~~~~~~~~-·
'62 DODG E '68 DODGE
PICK UP DART
F11lly f•c.lorv •quipp•d. ! Ut.8029 ) VI, •ulo., P.S., R&H, •ir c.ond. (171CICI
$266 '71 FORD PINTO
AYlo. fr""'·· buc.le! 111al1, ·~· d io, llealtr, reel. l 6'170VWI
'67 DO DGE
STATION WA GON
'70 OPEL
STA TION WAGON
V8, •ulo., air c.ond., P.S., •oof ••ck. 4 i poed, •adio, ~e•ler. roof rac.k. (~OI AVL J
fYCT8ll >
.
I 7 0 ~-~V~'"'' ... 1. i.11, """'' equipped. (735 0NVI
ORDE R TODAY
FULL -
PRICE
$766
FULL PRICE
FULL PRICE
FULL PRICE
FULL PRICE
FULL PRICI=
1 69 ~~-e~.!.~~~~~,c~,~~.,, $ 166
I • •
FULL PRICF.
DAIL V PILOT Wtd11tsda,, Octobfr 24. 1973
'73 FORD PICKUP '69 OPEL KADETTE WGN . ~~· '74 CABOVER CAMPER
A spe!d, radio, healer, YCN-517
~ '71 MAZDA RX2 ROTARY .
MOUNT~D QN A # l l 26
'70 FORD STT~ESIDE PICKUP
V:f, auto. trans., radio, heater. 84821F '·
v-s. aulo. trans,, power enn1 ne w/fvll guarantee. #330EHJ · '-:--J.L/I. steering, radio, heater. ..,, .--. , / ·-1
tinted glass, e)(fra cooling-· '
~~:~~~;.;,;, "
00
O'W '71 DODGE COLT FULL PRl.CE , ORDER YOURS TO~AY.. ' . ·~·
'73 FORD L tD -'speed, radio.'"'"· ""o'e "-:., $12 a· 9 ....--~C'"'!"A~M~P~E~R~S....--+-"":'aR::":'A':":':ND~N~f.w~1~9~-4~'--
........, ____ -..... ............... 37 TO CHOOSE FROM PINT.OS ,: . ~~~~~~~;-~-~ . . iE.:!~,;~i~l:.fd~~T; -·72 HONDA CPE ALL SIZES • ALL MODELS All MODELS & COlPRS '·
IMMEDIATE
DELIVERY
'70 TOYOTA MK II WAGON IUNl!!'EW I '
CAl-OVI. WITH
5TOvt, SINK,
Auto. trans., toctory air""'"''"· $16 9 7 \';:.~~ ••<-PRICED ,_01!1 IMMEDIA'Ff DEllVEfY ~ ----------------1 in;, radio, heater. i.tdOBNT l------=--=.o..;;;....,;;;;;;,,,;;;;..-t--....i=Oiiiii.ii.i .... ,;;,;;;,;;,;.;.-,;,. __ ....,.
'69 DODGE Pickup '69 STARCRAFT TE NT-TRLR . BRAND NEW 1914. . ,.
~;,~:.~~~';' w"'"'"" ""'''' $1 088 '70 KAWASAKI HARD TO~. Sleeps •·stove, keb<>x. $5 a·,, TO .RINO';s1· , ·;, :·
$4 2 9 .. •w•ar•drobe_,_sink•,•w•at•er•t••"'.· o•u•t••_•""_i_,,. _____ .. , ~ r ' , ·.1:.1" 500c< MACH Ill l>uy! #"'J GOOD SILECTION-IEAUTIF.UL CAI •• '. '71 ECONOLINE Van 9•9•s1 ALLMOD1Ls a..c0Lots ,,,,
Van,Auto. lran~., pd$5engtr seat, r!ady $ 2 3 8 8 "'---------------f IRAND for work. 7564H. r NEW '69 IMPERIAL
'68 DODGE Custom Van
=o;rans .. rad~, heater. Lictnse No $1 3 8 8
'69 PLYM ; Roadrunner
V8, 4 speed, radio, heater, whitewall tires. -llYG K099
'70 CAD. Cpe
V-8. auto. trans., fa ctory air conditioning
power 11eering, power (di sc) brakes, power
windows, power seats, AM/FM radio, heater,
whitewall tires, wheel covers. NJ06AKW
'71 PLY. Spt. Wg.
V·I, avfo. Iran~ .. laclory air condlliooing .
power steer ing, power brakes, radio, heater.
whitewall !ires. tinted Qlass. License No.
914JAZ
'69 VW BUS
'67 MUSTANG
va. stic k ~hilt, rddio, hedter. License No, 14JHEO
'71 TOYOTA Corolla
Wgn .. -4 speed, air conditioning, r•d!o, heate,..,
reboil! engine . .f4JJCQS
• •
V-8, au1o. trans., factory air condi-
tioning, power steering, power 9 brakes, pcwer windows, power seats,
radio, healer, whitewall tiri~s. vinyl s 1 7 7
roof, tinted glass, wheel covers,
Loaded. XHS322
'71 PINTO
-4 speed, radio, heater, ISO·DJE
'67 FORD Gal . 500
..........
l SCM'ADIS ..........
MQu AT JIM.Al OIKOUNt'S
V-1, auto. trans .• power steering , radio, healer.
License No. VHA463
988
'71 FORD GAL. 500
V·8, auto. trans., tactory air conditioning,
power stee,..in9, radio, heater, tinted Qlass.
SP.rial No. S54Cf'O
-'69 BUICK
WILDCAT. V-8, aulo. !rans., <'lir , pwr.
s1eer in9, pwr. brakes, radio, w-w tiret.
vinyl roof. ,License No. XTKfl02
'72 PINTO 2 Dr
4 speed, radio, heeter. #fHDUL $]47
:r.~.!2r9.,!~,, -"'""'"·· :.di.:$-1 ·3·~a· a·· Matl)r. License No. 062BIM "
" .
. '73 FORD Ctry Sed ·-.$. 33· 7c. ·9
Wgn. V-1, autG, trans., power steerlng,~er - ' ·
(discJ brakes, radio, heater, whitewall .t kes, :;
Luggage rack, 10 I?'''· #"59GYA ,._ , 1.
'73 FORD Gal. 500 .
V-t, auto. trans., factory all' condltlonlpg,
oower steering, power (disc) brakes, rai:flo,
neater, whitewall tli'es, tinted glass, #211G'GO
'70 VW BUG
4 speed, radio, heater, 540-ANO
'70 FORD LTD . · $·'1·, '"" '·•".
.V·8, auto. trans., factorr. air condition1~, . , .._,_ • • ,
power steering, radio, heater, whitewall fires,· ,.. 38 8
vinyl roof. tinted glass. Serial NO. 233CIE 1 '
'73 LTD 2 D·r. HT ..
ve, auto. tra~s .. factory air co~dlfionlng, PoWer,$3
steer'ing, power (disc) brakes, heater, wnltewaa
tires, tinted glass. 211GGO •
'70 TOYOTA MK. ii
Cpe. Auto. trans .. r~io, hH~. 062DIM
'71 FORD CTRY. SED.
V·8, auto. trans .. faclOt'y a ir conditlonrn9~
Power steerln;g, r adlo, heater, whitewall )Ires;
tinted gr;ss. 763-AGO. '
,
'
7
. ,, ,•
• ..
. ..
•"
' . .. '·
~·'
Mi
• '
of
M
to
: .. ..
• •
• ' .
.. .
San Clemente
f;apist•ano
\'CL ~. NO. 297, 8 SECTIONS, 106 PAGES ..
Today's Final
EDITION N.Y. Stocks
ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 2*, 1973 TEN CENTS
Saddleha~k Trustee Collins to Resign Jan. I
7
'8addleback Community College trustee
Michael Collins" 32, ol Newport Beach,
announced TUesday he will resign his poi\'Jan. t.
A charter member of the six-year~ld
bc-ard, f.ollins 11aid business pressures
iii' bi.s law tlnn of Collins and Kogler
in.:_Newport Beach pnimpted his decision. Jihen Collirui was elected to his first f°'21"'year term in 1969 at age ze, be
'fJ18 ;one ot the youngest men ever
TJe<;tth Case
" 'lo Resume
In Clemente ..
' ~Judge · Raymond Thompson today
denied a defeme motion for the dismissal
of murder charges against former
Marine !\lark Allen John90n of San
Clemente and ordere4 tM. _p~Uon
~:resume its interrupted case· against
lhe.-..ed wife killer. lliis ruling came while the Orange
O:.i.mty Superior Court jury was absent
from the courtroom during arguments
tii.sed on defense attomeY Ray Sharp's tene•ed plea that Johnson, 22, was never
Jhperly advised or his rights when
~ was arrested two years ago.
~ sparp, claimed that testimony this
IJ)Qrrililg by San Cl.erhente police officer
ieOnard Goodwin provided ample proof
~t his clieiit.'1 rights were violated ~ be wi.s booked for the killing
o(, tif• pregnant wife, Connie, 2{t, on 4Jine 11, 1970. .
; ~udge Thompson di.ugreed and the ja'y , will be brought beck to bear
~win'& account of the year long in-~ ·'tlia't endtd with tlit charging fl'Jl>4:~ 'lllni·~ 'Oorpl ,AJr litolipn
elected to a community college board
in California.
He was vice president during the first
year, and served as board president
the next two years.
"It is with deep regret and sadness
that we accept your resignation,'' said
John Lund, board president.
111 tried to talk you oot of it, but
I guess you have to do it," Lund said.
The board will appoint a trustee lo
fill Collins' spot until the 197$ election,
when Collins' tenn 'f\'Ollld have expired.
Trustee Hans Vogel, also a charter
member of the board, lamented Collins'
decision.
"Mr. Collins has made a tremendous
contribution to this board," Vogel said.
"We started out together on the same
controversta1 slate and we've worked
together all these years. I wish you
weren't going, Mike. We've disagreed
a lot-, but n~ver disagreeably,'' he .said.
Collins' resignation paved the way fGr
de-anD80Uoo of the Harbor View Homes.
seCtim of the Saddleback district in
Newport Beach.
He lives right on the controversial
line dividing the Saddlebact dlJtrlct and
the Coast Community College district.
Residents on the SaddJebact side of
the line have been lobbying to have
their section transferred to the Coast
district.
But before Tuesday's meeting they
felt their case stood litUe chance, since
a transfer would mean that CoUln.s v.·ould
have had to either move or resign.
Collins stressed district business had
nothing to do with his decis.ion. But
he said he hopes .. a new spirit of
discusaion" will prevail on the board,
tSee TR.VSTEE, Page I)
Shotgun Blasts at Hot
-Springs Injure Two Men
Pair Chase
Intruders
MterTheft
Three campers escaped serious injury
in the Ortega Hot Springs area when
one of two intrl.lders Who r8Dllacked
their van' opened fire ·on them with
I shotrun.
'· ~:~ ..... second trial QD -~ A • vefdict fJI ""'°"" de&f<! -
·Deputies were called to the scene
Tuetc!&Y w)>I!\. Calilocnia HI g.h way ~ ~ed .they had ~led the
-.. Ille' ... Diop l"reeway alter noti~ tp,st the vehlc!e had ~ ~g<lil by;gan fin.
n~:-C<iurl~ ~ Ii. ,...... William M~ Orteil wtien.lit
~u.d certabt ~ evidence Into iiioi (Int trial .
• Judie Tbompoon "°""'t l~ coopera· tion of the prm today . to enaure that
1:;.·jury does not get the opportunity
to-• read the basis for U111t ruling in
kiCal oewspapen.
, .. Johna(ln had served nearly two years
ti bis atate prison term of. five years
tcJ: Jlfe when the conviction of second
degree murder was overturned. ;~t verdict wu returned by a jury
Wblcb listeoed to evidence that Johnson
atabbed h1a wife after a quarrel between &tat eouple and left her nude body sprawl-
ed on "tbe bed in their San Clemente
a~ent while be went to duty al !¥'Bl Toro bue.
~-
' .2: ,Couples Saved ..
fn S1nmlied Boat
' . ~N FRANCISCO (AP) -Huge waves
aciiashed a 35-fOGt sailboat outside the
Gqlden Gate Bridge, washing two men
oVtrboard and Injuring their wives before the COast Guard could rescue
them. -~'lbree . times, \he boat "had its keel Iii' the air," ,.1d carol Baboock al r.ljsno. Ropeated attempts tturlng the !-ordeal Tuesday to boiJt Mro. Babc:ock, her hu.sband Edward, and Jan
~son !rom the wildly-pitching boat
{aQtid. the Coast Guard said · 1'be boaL'a owner, Dr. Donald Mor-
tf900, spent 50 minutes Jn the cold
J'aclfic Ocean before he was picked
~ by a hovering helicopter. A Coast
Guard cutter towed hls shattered boat,
Wipl Its three passengers still on board,
iDside San Francisco ~y. -~Mo.Tison, 39, a psychlatrlst from ~rldan, \'fyo., said the first waves . ._. (See RESCUES, Page %) -·
:HOUSE HUNTERS
" • f ' •
·SEARCH THE ADS
!I •llecO!ll flgu,... corpl>lled by• the ~piper Advertl~lnf Bureau, Inc., 10C!uld prove that house hunter1 1tart
t!*lr wrch In tho newtpapcr.
.... On an average weekCS.y, according
lo'the flguru, II percent at those plan·
~ to buy a ho.,. with!• t2 mooths WW read the •tUOUse for Sale" clanlfica·
tloa· In the local new,paper. Ov<r • 11~ period 4' percont al ~ pros· 11«11 will ,.. those odo and during
• month, 7r]><l'<f0nt of-the1'<ldy't .. btl1 1"11 r .. d the l~tlllp.
"4f you're lltlllng a house, put It where
• btmten can find 11 -ea>ily.
Call a DlU7 Piiot acl-vloor on the dlttct ll1". -· ind bo where the i.zy.r, ~ Jooldn1.
· .. • ,, I • •
Dtltr l"llM ""'°"' ~,. akMft K......,
FIREMEN SCALE SAN DIEGO CREEK FL6oD CONTROL CHANNEL WITH BOOY
Victim Had Been Undetected ,Since S1tUrd1 y .Fat•lity; C•l•nd•r Watch l1t1bll1hed Time
'Wet Scrubber'
Unveiling Set
At Crestlite
A new .. wet sCrubber" calculat~d to
bring tile Crea:Uite Aegregate Prodlicts
plant's dust emi11ions'Wlthin legal limits.
will be unveiled Friday at a barbecue
lunch open to public officials and the
plant's neighbors.
The device, developed in Costa Mesa
by Celesco Jndustries, already is in
operation at the plant beset 1for years
by a controversy over the amount of
dust a1k>wed to escape from a large
kiln used to bake shale pellets for the
concrete industry.
"We are proud of the improvements
new devices we have in.stalled. The
we have made at the plant Y:ith the·'
scrubber complies with all county, state
and federal air-pollution standards,'' said
Crestlite President Kenneth Teel .
The inspectk>n of the machinery will
take place from 3 to 6 p.m. at the
plant site at the end of Los Mares
and local and county 2ificials have been
included on the guest list.
Residents of surrounding housing arc
also have been welcomed to the open
house.
The device which will be the focal
point of the day is a huge tubular
chamber made with fiberglass material.
i
'Ibe chamber creatC:!I an internal at·
mosphere similar to 1 rainy day when
dust particles are trapped In moisture
and fall to tbe ground.
The acrubber is designed to trap dust
emitted l:n klln exhaust gases end cause
It to drop to the bottom of the scrubber.
The slu!:!)'_~ing from the mechsinl.sm
1s C!Wiii<leinoli01<11111 ""'"" Residents recently petitioned the city
to review the plant's variance because
of dust problems.
Planning commfsslonen tonight art
expecting to wind up their deUberation
of the variance Issue on orders of the
city councll.
( I
Crew Led to Wreckage,
"
Body by Severed Arm
The body of a Navy man, evidently
dead since Saturda)I, was £ound Tuesday
at the bottom of San Diego Creek,
the victim or an auto accident.
Discovery or a human arm on the
center divider of the San Di,ego Freeway
near Laguna Canyon !reeway led to
a wrecked car and the body of Willi am
Thomas, 34, or San Diego.
A member of a highway maintenance
crew found the arm and notified the
California HighYt'ay Patrol whose officers
discovered the car.
Highway patrol officers said Thomas.
90uthbound on the freewa y, lost control
or the car which struck the center
divider severing the ann.
The car, officers said, plummeted 90
feet across the creek channel, smashing
into the concrete channel wall at which
time the driver was ejected.
The car and drivei then dropped ' 60
feet into the creek channel beneath ll
freeway bridge ob!cured from passing
trarfic.
llighway patrol investigators determin-
ed the probable time of death through
a calendar watch on the detached arm.
It had stopped at 12:~ a.m. Saturday.
Patrolmen at San Onofre
Grab 400 Pounds of Pot
l'·our hundred pounds or marijuana
with a street value of at least $40.000
wound up in the bands of U.S. Border
Pirirolmen at San Onofre late Tuesday
and early today .
Spokesmen at the permanent check·
point said the two separate seizures
brought this week's total In seized con·
lraband to nearly 600 pounds.
In the latelt two incktents. routine
chock• of vebLclet --for. allens prompted
officen to pull passenger cars over
to the side. for Inspection.
Th& nrtt 51.tCh stop netted 320 paunds
of the weed neatly stashed ia the trunk.
All the material was In brick form
welghlng a kilogram (2.2 piounds) each.
The driver, identified by patrolmen
only aa Gregory Arthur Montgomery,
25, was arrested on federal smuggling
charges. His hometown was not im-
mediately available, officers said.
The incident took place at 10:5'0 p.m.
Tuesday. -~
The second case look place at l :25
a.m. today -again during a routine
check of a car for Illegal aliens.
Flfty-tv,.11 pounds of marijuana bricks
were discovered In the trunk o( a car
driven by Arthur fo'red Barcia, 22, whc:R
home addrea was not released. A female
companion In the car al90 was taken
lnto cuatody.
The u.rgo and all three-arrestees
were turned over to agents of the Drug
Entor.cement Administration, patrolmen
s11ld. r
,; ' .
.. Thlt 1.aid Qale ~ -. of 225 RDA-lit., S&n ClenVnte, had been shot tine times and a male compaidon iden-
tflled u r..o. Angel~. a-J,awrence
Randolph Johnson, '31, bad· been shot
t.wice..ln lbe Hot Sprinp fracas.
Offfcers said Barbara Ann Tschirhart,
25, of Santa Monica, who had been
Camping with the two men, was unharm·
ed.
SbertU:'s Capt. James Broadbelt today
said none of the wounds inflicted on
the two men were serious and they
were released after treatment at the
Orange County Medical Center.
Broadbelt said the trio told his in--
vestigaton that they were camping in
the popular hot sprinp area when they
beard noises comin1 from the direction
of their parked van.
They said they ran to the van in
time to see two men Joa.ding the trio 's
tape recorder and other personal equip-
ment into their own vehicle.
Officers said the three victims then
pursued the burglars' car in their van
but had abandoned the pursuit and were
turning around when the burglars swung
their car around and headed for the
trio at high speed.
Johnson said ooe of the men leanetl
out of the ·car window, emptied hi s
shotgun at the van and then reloaded
while the trio heard the shots strike
their vehicle.
Johnson and Pearson leaped from the
van and rolled into nearby bushes. Both
men were str:uck· by the second volley
fired by the gurunan.
Officers said they returned to their
vehicle and were on their way to report
the incident to authorities and seek treat-
merit wflen they' wert: spolfed by a
patrolling CHP officer.
Border Patrol
Welcomes Special
'Reaction Unit'
SAN YSIDRO (AP) -The U.S. Border
Patrol says its men are loo few in
number to hold back the record invasion
of lllegal aliens, plus narcotics. So OO\V
comes. perhaps In the nick or time,
the new U.S. Customs Patrol.
After a month's special training in
San Ysidro, the Initial forct of 26 men
wilh law enforcement backgrounds is
swinging into action.
''The new petrol la a "readion force"
expected to deal mainly ·with narcotics
smuggling by armed aliens, aaid District
Customs Director Vernon G. llann in
an interview Tuesday.
In a shootout Oct .· 2 1 few htmdrtd
yards north of the l\\exican border, thr«
young ~lt:xitan men were kllled and
a border ~lrolman WflS wounded in
the intercepdon of m pounds of 1narl·
jrana.
A number or customs agents \\'ert
!See PATROL, P11e %)
• •
RESIGNS AS TRUSTEE
MicMel Collins
State Board
Pair Back
Nixon Revieiv
Two members of the State Board
of Equalization staunchly defended the
state's_ upcoming review of President
Nixoh's San Clemente estate a !!I
"necessary to find out what's really
101.n& on" during • meeting in Newport
Beqch today.
John Lynch. wbo represents most of
SOuthern California on the board, said
there are ··01any complei questions
relalfilg to the value of the Presk!enl's
estate and I Jhl.nk it is entirely healthy
for the state agency to review lhe work
of the local assessor on a matter of
this importance."
The state Board of Equalization. com·
posed of four Democrats elected to their
posts, raised the question of the value
of the President's estate before the
Orange CoWlty Board of Supervisors,
In a vote that pitted three Democrats
agairut · two Republicans, supervisors
voted 3 to l to ask the state board
to review the COWlty assessor's valuation
of the estate.
Student Bashes
Self to Deatl1
BATON ROUGE, La. IUPl l -While
deputies tried to r e s t r a i n him. a
Louisiana State University student kllled
himself by beating his head against
the steel wall of a jail isolation cell.
East Baton Rnuge Parish authorities
said.
Frank Mistre1 ta , 24, had been pul
in the cell Tuesciay in an allcm pt to
restrain him after he ran l'ron1 the
office of Dr. Hypolite Landry, parish
coroner. Mistretta's parents had taken
him to talk lo Landry because they
said he had seemed disturbed.
Landry had ~tistretta hospitalized at
a state mental institution this year after
he showed signs of dep ression and
suicidal tendencies.
Orange Coast
•
Weather
Thursday should l'.h:! a carbon
copy of \\''edncsday, according to
the weather ser\'icc -sunny and
\varm. Highs in the mid·705 inlund
tllld at the beaches.
INSIDE TODA\'
1\ /ife-s1Zf' gallows lur11rd U/J
n.~ a school pro1trt it1 ocr11/1
/lttroturc ot Coro11a de/ i\fnr
fligT1 tliis week. Siory. rag~ 12.
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ISRAELI TR001,>S
FA.CE 2ND ENE!'tfY
TEL AYlV (UPll -,,,. hr .. u Army
Is nilea.sl.og several reserve soldiers fron1
acUve duty so they can fl&hl a mosqutt.o
invasion on the home front.
A Tel Aviv govmunmt apol<esman
said the reservists, municipal insttt con·
trol experts in civllia.n lite, wUl spray
stream.-; near the <"ilY lo prtvu1t the
tt'lOl'lquito invasion from beomling a
major onslau&ht.
'Sick-out'
Day Ended
For Clerks
By TOM BARLEY
Of .... O.lly ... let lftff
Thlrly.elght Orange County Superior
Cow:'_t ~lerks, each ol them armed with
a doctor's certificate, are back on the
job today after a one day "slck-out'1
that was described by one ab5entee
as "a little bit of muscle-flexing."
County Clerk William E. St John con-
finned that his working force was at
full strength today and said he does
not Intend to discuss the slck-oot with
his clerks "except on a stricily lnfonnal
basis.
"I am with them," he said today.
"1 think they are very much underpaid
and I think the abilities of what 1
regard as the best court clerica). force
in California should have been recognized
Jong ago."
St John, his supervi5ory personnel.
and the skeleton crew that kept court
affairs running Tuesday on a nearly
normal basis, v.'Orked until late Monday
night to ·clean up all arrears t'hat ac·
cumulated during the day.
St John said he doubts there ~·ill
be any further top level discussion of
the pay dispute until Orange County 's
supervisors return late this week from
the County Supervisors Association of
California convention in Redding.
The board went into executive session
Tuesday when it learned that 38 clerks
were absent from theft desks. But they
refused to discuss the issue during the
regular Tuesday meeting although of·
ficlals of the AFL-CIO u n i o n were
present in the hearing room.
County supervisors had earlier offered
the clerks a 4.4 percent pay raise after
tl'le clerks had rejected a proposal that
would have raised their $1,026 a month
.!lalaries by 2.5 percent.
The clerks feel that their salaries
should be at least comparable to the
•t.333 a month enjoyed by Los AJJieles
County Superior C.ourt clerks.
But a spokesman said .today that the
real reason behind their declalon to
stay out Tuesday stemmed from what
be 'said was the refusal of the county's
personnel department to agree to media-
tion of the dispute.
From Pagel
PATROL ...
transferred in July when the Drug
Enforcement Administration was fonned
under the Department of Justice, leaving
a manpower void.
Jn unmarked cars and pickup trucks,
but wearing their regular blue unifonns,
the new customs patrolmen are working
t.he border of Southern California.
Robert Lasher, the supervisor, said
if the experiment pays off, it will De
exlended along the entire Mexican
border. Its men will infiltrate areas
where smugglers normally operate.
The Border Patrol seized 5,086 pounds
of marijuana last month in the San
Diego sec tor, along with three ounces
of hashish and other narcotics, while
apprehend!H' more than 15,000 aliens.
"GOO 1rnaws they have enough prob-
lems with aliens alone," says Lasher.
"and we "'ill probably help them ap-
prehend aliens, too, if any come our
"·ay."
DAILY PILOT
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Egypt Asks
U.S., Russ
Police Suez
BULLETIN
BEmUT, LebaDOll lAP) -Cairo radlo
said today Em' caUcd oR the United
Stales and the Soviet umon to send
troops to tht Suez Canal frent to btlp
enforce the Middle Eut ceue-flre.
By The As80clated Press
The Israeli n1llitary command charged
that the Egyptians launched a strong
air and armored attack on the Suez
front today even <IS U.N. truce observers
headed for the battle Jines to enforce
the second attempt at a Middle East
cease-fire.
The Egyptian counteroffensive was
mounted to save Cairo's forces on the
eastern bank of lhe Suez Canal from
encirlement by Israeli tanks and troops
doubling back from their penetration
into Egypt we't of the waterway, Tel
Aviv claimed.
The reported fighling came only a
few hours after Israeli Defense Minister
Moshe Dayan announced tbe·new cease-
fire was in effect and seemed to be
''work ini properly."
There was no immediate word from
Cairo.
EGYPT ASSAILS PORT SAID
ATTACKS. Story, Pogo 4
But the Israeli claims of renewed
combat appeared to jeopardize the
already precari()IJS truce, reiterated by
the U.N. Security Council Tuesday night
afte r it! first cease-Dre collapsed in
furious fighting.
The Israeli reports did not pinpoint
the area of combat but indicated it
w~s at the southern end of the canal
near Suez city. •
An earlier comtnunique from Cairo
claimed the Israelis tried to cut the
main road to Cairo near Suez city "but
our forces are preventing him by force
from accomplishing his objective.''
The Israelis said 15 Egyptian fighter
planes were shot down in dogfights over
the battleground.
'Ille Israelis earlier said their invasion
force pushed south from its foothold -
midway up the canal, moving along
the western bank of the canal past
Suez city' at lhe waterway's southern
end in an attempt to cut off the EgyptiaJl
3rd Army on the eastern bank.
~t charaed the IsraelliJ made the
gains by taking advantage of the first
cea_se.fire attempt Monday and Tuesday
nights.
Israeli spokesmen claimed their in·
vasion tanks and artillery now dominate
the main Egyptian supply routes from
Cairo east to Ismaflia and from Cairo
southeast to SUez city;
Egypt, which called for the Security
Council session that produced the second
U.S . ..SOviet truce proposal, did pot
formally announce its acceptance of the
new cease-fire this morning.
But the head of the U.N. truce
observers in Ca1ro, Col. Ake Bendrik
of Sftden, confirmed that Egypt ac·
ce.pted the 7 a.m. -10 p.m. PDT
-halt. He said he transmitted the
Egyptian acceptance to Israel and the
truce was officially put into effect with
the accord of both Suez adversaries.
Threat of High
Tides Raised
011 South Coast
A steady buildup of surf and the
prospect of high tides tonight and Thurs.
day have caused concern along the South
Coast oceanfront today.
Swells as large as five feet began
hitting the area early today and
lifeguards said the siege apparently
would build through the day.
The •i'nitial tide of the day measured
6.6 feet v.'ith a slightly higher level
forecast for Thursday morning at 9
a.m.
Such occurrences in autumn often
cause heavy beach erosion and residents
in the oh-hit Beach Road colony of
Capistrano Beach become more con-
cerned.
AJ though the surf is regarded as a
menace to homeowners, surfers are ex-
pected to revel in it.
"The water's pretty cold today -
about 62 degrees -so v.·e don't expect
much swimming uctivity," said one
l1frguard on duty in San Clemente.
From Page I
RESCUES ...
slruck his boat. the Jandon. a fev.· mil es
outside the Golden Gate Bridge about
3 p.m.
The first v.·a\'e hurled the boat on
its side and broke shrouds bracing the
rijitht side of lhe mast. he said.
?tforrison's wife broke her leg in the
crash and Babcock was w a ~ h e d
overboard, but hauled back aboard with
a safety line.
About a hnU hour later, Morrison
said a second wave, "25 or 30 feet
high,'' rolled the boat over again. snap.
Pint:: the ma~t and tOS,'!lng Morrison
Into the v.·ater where his safety line
broke.
Someone ()ti ~hore witnessed the in--
cidcnt and nolifled the (;O&,t f.uard.
"I thought t was a goner.'' admltted
?ttorrlsoo, af1er the re5C1;e hf.lic:opter
pas5Cd over him three tlmts before
spotting him.
•
.
'So Ar e Y.ou'
Chinese Deputy Foreign Min·
ister Chiao Kuan-hua yells
across the room from his seat
in the U.N. Security Council
at Soviet Ambassador Yakov
Malik during a debate on the
Soviet-American resolution call·
ing for peace in the Middle
East.
Planners Hear
'Cross Hill'
Plans Tonight
San Clemente plannlng cornrnis&on(n
tonight plan to take up the oft-delayed
proposals for the development af "Cross
Hill" into a lla..unit condominium com·
pl ex. ·
'lbe propasal by the Condor Interna·
tional Corporation had been delayed at
two previous meetings because plam
were still in preparaUon.
Tonight's deliberation on the project
will amount to commission study of
the tentatlve:tract map for the develop-
ment set for construction a1ong the 100
block of A venida Pizarro.
The land ooce was used as the site
of Easter Sunrise services µi San
Clemente.
Besides that development Issue, the
commission is faced with 10 separate
public bearings and five items of new
business.
They 'include:
-An application from Orange Savings
and Loan for permission to erect a
mobile office to serve as a temporary
structure at 103 and 105 E. Canada.
A bid by the Butler Housing Corpora·
lion for city permission to erect a 10.by-
20-foot sign to advertise the sale of
townhouses which will be built soon
across Aven\da La Esperanza from the
civic center. 'The sign would have a
time limi t of one year.
-A tentative tract map filed by builder
and former commissioner Ray McCaslin
calling for 34 condominium units along
the 200-block of Avenida Lobeiro.
-Consideration of allowing buslnesse.11
offering S\Vimming pool supplies to
establish in lhe city's Cl (centra1-com·
1nercial) district.
New San Juan
To,vn Hall Unit
Elects Officers
A packed agenda of discussion topics
and the election of new officers' will
mark Thursday's meeting of the new
Town llall Association of San Juan
Capistrano.
Members wiU act on a slate of
nominees, approve a set of bylaws and
then settle into several topics for
discussion relating to community growth
and land-use planning.
The proposed officers who will be
voted on nt the 8 p.m. session at Marco
Forster Junior High School are Yvon
Heckscher, president; Carolyn Nash, vice
president and Barbara Davies; secretary.
Members also are welcome to nominate
from the Ooor.
The discussion topics wi ll include pro-
posals for a study of the functioning
of San Juan city government; progress
in the revision of the city general plan
and the possible review of the city's
plan ror streets and highways.
Voting memberships in the new
association sHll arc available to san
Juan residents and dues are $2 per
person. Student participation Is welcome
as well, said spokesmen for the new
group .
Detailed in!orm3lion on the groups'
fun ctions Is available by ca 11 1 n g
493-J~16.
Union Talks Secret
DETROIT !UPI) -S«:recy B\l~
roundtd auto contract talks today
between Ford Motor Co. and the United
Auto Workers as they head towtu'd a
Friday strike dcadllnc.
•
War Cuts
Nixon Talk
On Tapes
By HELl!ll TllOMAS
WASHINGTON (UPI) ~· President
Nixon canceled a planned televised
speech to the nallon tonlt:ht on Watergate
because the White llouse said be wu
concentrating on trying to get a Middle
East cease-fire. He will bold a televised
news conference Thursday night instead.
The President spent the night at hts
PUBLIC OPINION FORCES
NIXON TO YIELD. Story, Pege 4
Camp David retreat. reportedly prepar-
Uig for the speech explaining his decision
to relinquish his Watergate t ape
recordings and his reasons for firini
Archibald Oox u Watergate opeclal
prosecutor.
A spokesman said at mid-day today,
however, be decided to call off I.he
speech because of continuing peace ef.
forts in the Middle East.
The news conference will be held at
fl p.m. PDT Thursday in the east room
of the White House.
White House sources indicated that
while the President had become preoc-
cupied with the Mideast, some advisers
suggested to him that a news conference
might be preferable to a fonnal speech
in getting across his position on the
startling developments of the past few
days. ·
Some Democrats in Congress were
still pressing for impeachment pro-
ceedings against N'u:on for the Cox firing
in spite of his release of the tapes
for judicial review. But Administration
supporters said the Nixon action bad
taken the steam out of the impeachment
drive.
White House.,deputy pi;-eM secretary
Gerald Warren said that while at Camp
David, Nixon had frequent telephone
conversaUotfs-with Secretary of State
Henry A. Kissinger and other adviser.!
''concerning the Ara I> Israeli cease-rU'e."
Tbe .President met with Kissinger in
hill aval office· after retuming from the
mountaintop retreat and spent ~ of
the morning reviewing foi;eign policy
mailers, WarTen said.
He said the President thinks the new
cease.fire , "will bold," despite aome
reported violations.
Students at UCI
Urge President
Be lnpeached
Some UC Irvine studellte are collecUng
signature.! on a petition urging the im·
peacbment of President Nixon.
More than 200 signatures were col·
lected during the first day of the effort.
the campus newspaper New University
reports.
The Committee for the Impeachment
of Richard M. Nixon bas been eStabllshed
as an official student government com-
mittee, but persom opposed to the action:
are advised they may counter the peti-
tion drive.
Armando Banuelos, president o f
Associated Students of UCI said, "ASUCI
among Its other respomibilities, is
a platfonn for student advocacy.
"Anyone wishing to counter this peti-
tion may do so by contacting the
ASUCI," the Newport Beach senior said.
Completed petitions are to be forward-
ed to offices of Orange County Represen-
tatives and the state's Senate delegation.
OPIN ' .. '
... -BY JAN W\)RTU
0( ..... ., ""' ..... ' .......
Saddleback Communlly co 11 e &. e
trustees 1\lelday slgnalled ·• cbaoge In policy OD dealing with their top ad·
minlstrators. '
f)edarj.ng jt is time for ".a ni:w spirit
of open discus:iion, '' the trustees sald
matters relating to lhe pertonnance d
superintl'indent. Fred Bremer should no
looger · b .. shielded In the privacy of
closed sesstMS. •
Criticism of BmJ?er's performance' has
been cbumlng under the surface for
months, with trustees polarlzini In their
support 9r disapproval of administrative
actions.
"The district, board and admlnlslratloo
are all ill-served by an attempt 1o
obscure the nature of the divisloos on
our boord," said Newport Beach trustee
Michael C:OU!ns.
"We should-make it clear there Js
a predictable divisioo," Collins said
He related growing disenchantment
direclty to Bremer, superintendent of
I.he school since 1968.
''Some feel the administration has
fallen below the Jevel of acbeptance
in performance. Others feel differently,
and are convinced that not onJy has
Dr. Bremer perfonned acceptably, but
has gone far beyond the call of duty."
To an increasing extent, Collins said
board discussions about various issueS
have turned into a "rehash of basic
board differences.",
"It is easy to either find fault or
commend if you 're defensive about
criticism," he said.
Growing resistance to some cl Bemer's
ac tions has come basically from Hans
Vogel of Tustin and Patrick Backus of Dana Point.
Strongest support 10< the administrator
ha> come lrom Chairman John Lund
o1-r..guna Jleach and IloMa Berry Of
Misalcn Viejo, with tru!Jtees Collins, Alyn
Brannon, and Dr. James Marsllall taking -•eutral or alternating pooitkms.
Backu.! was absent Tuesday, but Vogel
responded to Colllitt' remarks by saying
most district methods of dealing with
controversy are "pulling bandalds on
recurring problems."
"Many of our actions will never
alleviate the _prt1:blems until the manner
in which _m~y people have been treated
at Saddlebaclt College is changed," Vogel
said.
He added that be penonally had I~
lerceded ·for several of hi.! constituents,
including a Tustin resident who wanted
an·'lnter-dlstrlct permJt to take a real
estate class: at Santa Ana College •
"He was told in a very high-handed
manner that 'Tblrls the last time you'll
get an intetdriltrltt permit and we"don't
want to see yau again,' "VOgel said. ·'
He was paraphrasing an illefed" state.
ment by the .!IUperintendent.
The resident is now leading a petlUon
drive to get Tustin out of the Saddleback
district.
Fl'OtltP-.el
TRUSTEE ...
which he said bas been suffering with
division: on many issues.
1 Collins has four children, two boys
and two girls. He ha s been active in
the Sadd1eback Valley Chamber of Com·
merc'e, the Sadd1eback Va1ley YMCA,
St. Nicholas Orurch, the Rotary Club,
and the Republican party.
His laW finn specializes in real estate
and finance development.
1ntenli1tr1c1 penntte ban 1*n • ;' repeated sOurce. or cooruct ifiet"~ Bad·
dlcback:· students and tbe admibiitratioo. !
For each permit llw dlllrll:! """"' l_
!or a student-to toke ~~,\D,-.,i
diatrict. fhe..lbome i~ ~r paj. the~
recelvlng dlltrict ita ~J>ifW'iiOet. \ ~ "Our reasons !or not graiiUns them $
ha.ve been exclusively economic," ColllM ~
Satd. · 1 SCA G V ietvs . ,1:
~· Six-county
Airport Plan ~:
By CANDACE PEARSoN .,.,.. '
Of ... .,.,.. ''"" Reff ..
The adoption. of a sl<-ooWlty riog!onet-
airport plan by the executive conunitlfld•
of the Southern California As>oclatjoq,
ol Governments (SCAG) may ta~e l'l&C\
Nov. 8. -
The SCAG meeting will begin at 9:30
a.m. al the Hyatt ·Regency Hotel, 7th
and Flower Streets, Los Angeles. '.+
The aviation needs study begun. lilt
1969 by p-ers William Per<ir&, Jlllt
Associates has beeit. through 10 PQ~
bearings· in the Orange Coast area, iQj
eluding a final hearing Oct. U. · ,-r n will oome 1o the committee-fiil
action with reeommendatlma '~ .t-
citizells b<aring board and any wrlttal
tesUmony submitted by oci~ 31. ,.=.
Periei:a'11 study orla1naU.v eO<:OIJ'.lllft'8's!!, 10 countie.!I but four~ -San Diep,
Bernardino, San 'Luis Otilspo ~ Keiir
-broke away to act oq its. ~
independently. · ·?
If the SCAG cornmitfee, adopts. tlilr
hearing board'•-·~ .. new airport facillUes would ¥ .. s~
!or Orange County ;mtil after l9tl0. •-_,..
And alter 1980, the hearing """"'
listed a series of aptioos which coUJd
be takeft' by Orange County olllctdl
to meet airport lra!llpOrtatlcn de-._,
These include extensive expaosiao J;J.
Orange County AirpOrt, joinf mllitati'-
civllian use of El ,Toro Marine ·Cifs-
Air Station, joint uoe of Camp .Pendl~lw.
or airport sites at Chino Hill~,' 1Ben
Canyon and Mesa , de Colorado, on the bord:f be"!ee11 Ojange and Riv!~ coun es. ....
'fbe. dtlttn tioa1d, wliklr ine!ud<!l
tenner Newport Beach MaYllf -
Marshan, realizes that any · <Jla.
plemenlaUO!J i"' •n airport master ~ would have to lle'looe by local lllt<nder,
sctG •fudy director Walt Gillflllan 'f'd
~r. ·'' .. - . ...
But the lll>om!·'ftrnl 'In • 98!1fj"lf
cooditims, Gillllllan · said, thal Orllll,i!
County wiU "no ...,... be •hie to Cfdll-
tinue to depend m Loa Angeles In...,.
tlonal Airport !or oervfc." lrom 19*
1990. '•
Without a new airport ladllly -II
Orange' County, more preaure ·ww :.
placed en Loa Angele>, which, GlllfllfC
said. will no longer be an alternative. '.t
Before 1980, while 0ran·ge C'A:luzlty WW
be able to serve long-haul • p~
at Loa Angeles International Airport 'll!f
short-haul travelers at the existing O:Nn..
ty airport, strict state nol8e regulatiO'Q.
will have to be met under the ~~
recommendatiom. " ·r ·
Whatever plan ls adopted, SCAG ~
only one hold over the six countlM
to force implementation ol any of it:
federal funding.
"""---.. J , •• .'
Just Arrived-Large
Shirxnent of Speedo
SWim SUits & Trunks
Soccer Shoes
Brazils-11.95
canadas-12.9.5
La Paz-14.$5 Water Wooder Kick Boards
ttSE?«Ge -Alfldas Tennis Shoes
Men's or Ladies'-18.95
Tretorn Tennis Shoes
Men's or Ladies'-16.95
Converse Tennis Shoes Ladies-7.95
Men's-8.95
Tennis Dresses
Men's Tennis Shorts & Shirts
Acrylic Warm Up Suits-21.95
24.95-34.95
Racket Stringing
Squash Rackets-Tennis Rackets
Wilsoll-Penll-Dunfop Tennis Balls Dz. 7.95
Open 9 to 6 Clos8d Sunday
Super lite-17.50
Alf Purpose Shoes-10.95 to 17.95
Bob WoWe Super Pro Basketball ·
Shoes-9.95
All Star Basketball Shoes-9.95
Voit Junior & Intermediate
Footballs-7.95
Voit Basketballs-5.95 to 19.95
Soccerbalfs-9.95 to 19.95.
Water Polo Balls-10.95 '&-15,95 .
Boys' Football Shirts 'Ref. 2.15 Salt-1.95 '
• Handball Gloves-Racqaetbafl
Racquets-Bandmintoa .Rackets
38 Center
"QUEENIE By Phil lnterlandi
"I don't know what they do there. Nobody's ever in."
No Cutbacks
County Flights
Won't Be Pared
By WILLIAM L. SCHREIBER
The two airlines serving
Orange County Airport have
no immediate plans to cut
back on flights to conserve
fuel , an action taken last week
• by three of the nation's big-
gest carriers.
Officials at Air California
and Hugbee Alrwest said today
th.ej.: s ::. vi : 1·asn't been af.
fected yet ~v Pr!'<:id·"lt Nix-
~ on's mandatory fuel allocation
-:program. ;..;
~U N IT E D , 11VA and
American Airlines agreed last
week to trim a total of 63
flights a day from 10 major
routes to cut fuel consumption.
-But Mai: Van Dordrecht, ex-
: ecutive vice president of
~ finance for Air Ca.I, said' the
•fuel ctl!ls was a good e.xcuse
~'for the big airlines to dump
(exCess fligbts. .
~· "Some Of the big ·airlines
7are so far over fiight capacity
l-.oJr<ady· that this cutback will ~P !Mm slreamlino things,"
Van Dordrecllt said'. "Wt .Gor\!J
have that problem. we,CouUf
use even ptore nights." · • <; ...
THE CONTROVERSIAL jet
!IJgblt out al Onmae Colmty
Airport are limited by the
county Board of Supervlson
through contracts with the
airlines.
Van D:>rdrecht said Air Cal
is not oo the allocation yet
because it is an lnlrastate
carrier with no routes outside
California.
"We'll just keep on doing
what we've been doing until
we hear something new," he
said. ''Our fuel !lupplier (Shell
Oil Company) !lays there
hasn 't been any change so
far and we hope nothing will
change that "
CIVIL AERONAUTICS
Board .officials 'say the
average load on the three .
airlines cutting back on their
service is about SO to 50 per:
cent full. Culling back on
fil!'.hls -and operating costs
·-will increase the toads and
alrllne profits, the CAB said.
Airwet publlc relations of·
fleer Larry Li tchfield said f.o.
day any decision to cut back
on flights will be based on
the outc<me of meetings
starting today in Washington
D.C., during which airlines
will discuss the rue! crisis.
"So far we have not done
anything because it wou1d be
premature," Litchfield said.
"We have been operating
since Juty on what we call
a 'flllht profile' that saw!
up to three mtruon gallcins
of fuel a year. >I
·~ ,U:,ir ;.;;;;: ra;...;, D18bi
condltloiia, type o{ aircrift
and other factors are fed mto
a computer which detmnlnes '
the optimum flight capacity
and fuel load of each Airwest 1
jel He said that process 1s
called the flight profile.
Another Alrwest spokesman,
who asked not to be identified,
said he lhlnk3 Airwest will
cut back on flighta before Air
Cil because Airwest Oles out-
vf·state. The Hughes jets fly
to Mexico, Las Vegas and
several Southwestern states.
Lease-purchase
Guidance Center
Funding Chosen
r
By JOANNE REYNOLDS
Of lllt Di lly l"lltt 11111
~ 'I11e $660,000 guidance center
for the Huntington Beach
r Union High School District will
be built on a lease-purchase
basis.
.. Robert Martin, assistant
.. superintendent for business,
said trustees decided last
'· .,
Admission
" ~ Signups
f Will Open
Applications for admission I lo any of the eight UC cam·
~ puses for the fall quarter of l 1974 may be filed beginning
' Nov. I. ~ To be sure of a place at
lj the desired UC campw a stu·
dent should apply during
1 November, UC official! said .. I A single application filed
~ with a f20 fee at the campus
' of first choice assures
'1 qualified applicants a p1ace
at one of the campuses serv-! ing undergraduates.
AppllcaUons are available l from high school or com·
, munlty college counselors and
I from the admisslom office al
UC Irvine.
During the first monlh of
the fillnK period, each campus
wtll consider op--i pllcationt. When quoUll attt
' fillod, additional applications
will be redirected lo another
UC campus.
week to use the leas~!le
method to "make the district
a litUe money."
nns IS POSSIBLE, Martin
said, because the dlstrid can
take the money earmarked
for the center's construction
and put it into a short.otenn
investment with a return of
9 to 9 Yi percent .
It will borrow money at 5'6:
to 8 percent. to pay off the
construction cost of t h e
center.
He said the system Is not
new. The district has used
the leas~purchase method to
acquire all of Its nearly 50
relocatable classrooms.
THE CENTER, to be built
on the Wintersbl.lrg site at
Golden West Street a n d
Warner Avenue, will provide
classroom space for all of
the district's 1,000 special
students. Most ol the.$e are
either crowded .into t w o
trallers on tbe site or housed
In other districts.
The contract for the center
has been awarded to the W .J.
Shirley Co., which bl alto
dolng 10me ol the work on
HWl!lngton Beach High School.
Trustee Ron Shenkman SUI·
gested t h e lease-purchase
method when elected to the
1ChoOI board Ill April.
TWO WEEKS AGO, trwileet
hired the financial consulUng
firm of Stone and Youngberg
to ald 111 a tax ovenidc elec·
tlon, That election w\11 be u!ed to raise fund! for achoo! con·
slMICllon.
'(
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now. All shimmer and shine.
Lighting up the night Sparking
up the good times. VII, division
of Venice Industries, shows
you how. In washable polyester,
all silvery-threaded For sizes
8 to 18. A-line, pull-on skirt
with ribbed top, '48
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SOUTH COAST PLAZA
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SC OAIL Y PILOT :J 1
Bullock's Santa Aoa; Monday through Friday from 10:00 Lm, to 9:30 p.m .• Sarurday from 10:00 a.m. to 6:00 p.m., 1 Fash ion Sqc arc, Sa nt a Ana, Telephone: 547·721 l
Bwlock's South Coast P1-Moodty thlougb Friclay 10:00 a.m. to 9:30 p.m., Sarurday 10:00 a.m, 10 6:00 p.m., 3333 Bristol Street, Costa Meu, Telephone : ll6-061 I
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DAILY PILOT EDITORIAL PAGE
Saddlehack Report,
Saddleback Community College apparently is well
equipped to provide the average student with a sound,
basic education, according to a recently released accredi·
tation report by a nine·men1ber evaluation team fron1
the \Vestcrn Association or Schools and Colleges.
The report finds slrength in a good general and
tr3nsfer educatio n, but says tbe college is deficient in
con1nlunity services. in recruit1nent of and service to
"disadvantaged" students. in creation or innovative cur·
rtculun1 or an atmosphere that would allow its develop·
1ncnt.
1'he accreditation report is in the main favorable.
It states that the A'lission Viejo college has made head·
way with adding students to the curriculum committee,
evening prograins. modern equipment, a well·admin·
istercd budget. good use ot "exceptional quality" l.emp·
ary facilit ies and the beginnings oC a vocational educa·
tion program.
Sig nificantly, the report notes the five.year-old
college was "born in a period o r considerable can1pus
unrest" anc.l Its administration iniHated strict controls
and restrictive policies, which today, it suggests, the col·
lege would be better off without. The administrators and
trustees. con1plimented in the report for their dedication,
should pa y heed lo its recon1mendations.
Lesson Lean1ed
The Laguna Beach City Council seems to have been
learning a bit about absorbing thought of the citi zenry
before momentous steps are taken wh ich would likely
rile folks up - a rough lesson taught by the great park·
ing meter revolt.
Newest controversial proposal is a change in sew·
age service billing, and the council is eager to get public
opinion. Under consideration is a change in philosophy
to shift sewage charges to those who generate the most
sewage. hence produce the greatest load on the treat·
rnent plant.
The concept seems fair. Bul it will place a crushing
burden on some business such as laundromats, restau·
rants and other heavy sewage producers. (Example:
yearly fees charged the city's only car wash would go
from '42 to $2.162.)
A good solution would be a method of tying a (ee
ceiling to a formula which would encourage efficient
water use and lower sewage generation.
?i!eanwhile, wriUen opinion has been requested.
Letters may be se nt to the city council at 505 For~st
1\ve., Laguna Beach .
Beati11g the Oock
A move by the Laguna Beach City Council to ad·
vance its fegu lar meeting time to 4:30 p;m. on first and
third Wednesdays is welJ worth trying.
The council's former meeting time had been 7:30
p.m. and it frequently ran well past i ·a.m. the next day.
The earlier meeting-with a half-hour out for din·
ner -recognizes two basic human qualities found in
council members: a need to talk and a need to sleep.
The two obviously are in conflict and with six-hour ses-
sions the general · rule, sleep was sometimes fogging
council decisions. ·
Six-hour· sessions ending at 11 p.m. -tiring as they
may be -are definitely better than those ending at
1:30 a.m.
One thing does need watching. The earlier hour
may bar some people who can't leave work early.
The new starting time requires consideration be giv·
en to scheduling of items of special public interest at a
time convenient and accessible to all .
•
'Leftovers? What leftovers?'
5
' Don't Be
Misled By
Manners
Huuaane Societies' Tlaatakless, Heartbreaking .Job . . Dear
Gloon1v
Gus
Owners to--Bla$e f o:r Animal Woes
~YDNEY J.HARRI~
I met a distinguished literary figure
many yea rs ago. and v.·as so awed
and impressed by him that I babbled·
like a schoolboy and felt sure he never
Maybe the answer to thost long
city meetings would be the muz-
:des 'they put on donkeys to keep
!hem from opening their mouths
\\·ide enough to bray at dawn ...
J. K.
Gloomy Gut <emmtt!I• 1r1 tvbfrlltlff (ly
rtt,ttl l lld " Ml M< .. ll•llY rtflKI lttl ~I"" If !tit lltwm-. SMll y111r '" Ml¥1 II GllOl'nY 0111, Dtllr l"llof.
1l'anted lo mett me again .
B looki ng for snubs, expecting to be dis-ut later· \\'hen my first book came liked . And this defensive at~ilude brings o~t..1 re_c:cived a. delighlfully~varm letter on the very reaction it Is looking for.
f om. him .. telling me ho much he Strangers too often treat us the \\tay admire~ my 1vork ~nd how . much he \\'e expect t~ent, to. •
had .enjoyed our brief meetmg )'e.ar.s ... p 1 = ht~i. i.. " · ago.
1
• ,t ~ope Wnv I ""' t111::)!' have tnemtes,"
J "'3 s thunderst ruck, and immensely fo~ instance, are . usually sufferl~g from
pleased. And his letter set me to woo-this so~~e~f d~lu,~M>n. 'Ibey 1m3i;lne that
dering how many of us go through !-hese . enues . are deeply mvolv.ed
life thinking that certain people dislike in _p_lot.t1ng agamst the~, or .1 n
us. when, in ract, they do not dislike hunuhallng thei:n. or talkm! aga.1ns.~
us at all them -\vhen, tn truth, the en~m1es
· are not even aware o! the existence
SOi\1E PEOPLE are shy with ne1v of the feud.
acquaintances. and thus they seem to
be frigi d and disapproving. Others simpl y
have a naturally gruff manner, which
\l'e mistakenly tak e to mean impatience
1rith us. And still others are just vague
<1.bout prople. and 11,hat \ve think is
a snub is merely absent-mi ndedness.
1 have had the experience of people
telling me, afte r 1ve had got to know
each other bett er. lhat they \\'ere con·
vinced I loathed them upon the first
meeting - "'hich v.'as not at all the case.
If a man i~ reserved, it does not mean
he is passing adverse judgment upon
you: just as oft en ii nte::ins he is afraid
of rour judgment of him.
ntERE ARE scnnc people. un·
fortunately. who are mildly paranoid
in this respect. They \\'iilk through life
THE ONLY sensible approach Is to as-
sume that most people will like you , un·
lt?ss you give then1 cause not to; and to
accept the fact that some people would
not like ·you no matter \\1hat you \\'ere
or did . Trying to make everybQdy like
you is exhausting, and impossible of
achievement. i\1ost of our trouble is
our egocentricity. \\'hich takes for
granted that peopl e are thinking about
us much more than they really are.
In most cases, they are thinking about
themselves, just as \1·e are. None of
us is as important to others as ,.,.e
think 1\·e are, and u•hat we construe
as dislike is most often indifference,
or fear, or se lf-absorption. But it is
hard to realize lhis \\'hen \\'e come
lace lo face.
To the Editor:
At least once a week. someone {who
is either thoroughly ignorant of the farts
of the surplus animal problem or refuses
to accept the fact due to concern for
only tbeir one animal) calls, or comes
in, calling our employes "murderers."
THERE HA VE bee n many television
sho\vs. much newspaper publicity about
the lack of homes for the animal popula·
tion. The Orange County Animal Shelter,
and 'every other pound and hu1nane
society, tri es to info rm the general public
ot the number of animals having to
be killed daily,• yet there. al'~ thOse
who oome in and become enraged
because we cannot keep and guarantee
their one animal a home.
We have even had ~ple who threaten·
ed to sue us because their' animal was put
to sleep -Yet that same person would
not even pay the cost of a newspaper
ad or take the ti111e to try to place
it in a good home. The animal was
their responsibility but they chose not
to be responsible and when -0ur efforts
failed at placing it we were called
the "killer". We spend around a hundred
dollars a month in advertising. A cost
we really caMot afford. \\'e have
volunteers who allow their private
numbers to be used, because our Anin1al
Care Center telephones are busy con·
stt ntly \\•ith cruelty complaints and
requests for help for l-0\v-cost spaying
and neutering and ill -0r injured animals
belonging to those who cannot afford
the services of a private veterinarian.
EVERYONE at the Animal Care Center
grieves over the terrible waste and suf·
fering of animals bom only to die under
the wheels of a car, mistreated and
chained for life. or dumped and grieving
at any of the many powids. For every
animal we personally place, an average
of 25 conles in ; there is simply no
Who Was Archibald Cox?
Tltr. followiug col11n1u r•ntiflerl •'Re.
nie111ber ilrcl1 t!Jald Co.r?'' ii·11s i<•ritle11
by Clinr/rs f.1 t:Cai>e lai)t tt'••Pk, .~l1ni·tl11
before Ptcs1Uc"l NLto1l-'s s11rprise <l1s·
n1l.~.Q(l/ of the \Vatergate proserulor.
I n the light vf recent evenls. /11 cCabc'i;
co111n1euts ta~·e ou a 11e1u i11lersl.
If you Are \1·ondcring if !he \\'alergate
~canda\ n1ay ha\·e become a dead le!tcr,
forget it. Forget il good.
"'The scrp('nt thot w11I gna\'' out his
vitals.'· is the 11·a\'
one el()(111(!nl Jr1v.·ylr
fri t:nd or 1n1ne rlc.s-
cribcs the n1ini ·
bure;n1cra ty spcc10J
1>roscct11or Archlhald
Cox has built un
\\1thin thr Justice
Department to in\'Cs·
ligate charges ():·
corrupli(ln tn lhl'
Nixon Adm lnlstr:lflOl'l and turn O\'er the
findi ngs to a sC'rics or gril nd juries.
A'!. or last count r.lr. C.Ox. \\"ho \\'as
John f . Krnnl'dy"!i solicitor-general
from 1960 to 1960. had a staff of nearl y
a hunrlrC'd and a proposed l>udgc t of
$2.3 mitl1on for his fi rst )'l'Ar of opera·
fion. l~t no1v has five t:l Sk forces looking
Into : The \Va1ergare hrenk·in and ro\trr·
up. the ac11vi1 Je,, or tilt' \\'l111c Jlousr
plumbe r!!, campaign finnncins;. politlcal
espionage and lhc_inl.tunous !TI case..
rtllt. COX'S guidelines ronslltu!e :in
f'Xlrao rdinar}' mandate , Jus1 aoour un·
prucedcntcd In \VahsinJ{ton poltlMal
history. He has n1adc it <"le<1r 1h11t
"the .11pccial prosecutor "Ill dcll'rmu'lc
\\ hethcr and lo \\·hat t'xlcn l he 11 Ill
inrorm or co nsult the Attorn"y General
..
~
(cHARLES McCABE)
about the condut t of his duties and
responsibilities :' This n1eans ~lr. Cox
reall y has the free hand !hat special
prosecutors are ah\'ays assured lhcy
have : bu t In fact never quite achieve.
~IORE J~tPORTAl\'T to ren1e1nber Is
!hat ti.tr. Cox is a Democrat, and a
dan1ned partisan one at !hat. His staff
cont ains only a handful of Republicans.
r .... ·cll•e key n'lembers have h:1d con·
nections ll.·ith the Kennedys in the past.
\Vhile. it ll'Ould not be good taste to
'3Y 1hat the prosecutor and his starf
are. out to get ri.t,. Nixon. it Is hard
to see how the 1n1th could be otherwise.
ti.Ir. Nixori him self appean to thin~ so.
Ni ,'!Ollleone has observed In the-context,
even paranoids have enemi es.
It is good to remember the climate
\\'hen ~tr. Cox \YBS named to his Job.
The Nixon house o( cards was tumhllnit
d(,1111. It got so bfld tl'lat polilical
strategy. after the tesli mony or John
Ucan. diel<:1ted !hat everybody should
gt'I !he shiv except !he Pdpe.
~I r l':lliot Richardson, \11ho has an
honest nan1e, and an honciii face.
and is a Boston ?5~atlmlif a-nd thl!refOlt
in rheory nu ton1a1ic111\y above the so rt
ol trickery practiced by thC' Santa
Rnrba.ra·Pasadcna n1nfloso .... ·as called
in to lend an odor of snnctity 10 the
\\mite House corpse. Richa rd.wn aJr
pa rently c~ Cox on the lheory that
if Cox (()Uld txculp111e ]I.tr. Nixon. lht
President had to be clean as boiled
rice and much nicer to look at.
THAT LOGIC may be just too good
to be true. Up to now, Mr. Cox has
been about as visible as a beaver, and
about as occupied. \Vhen tbose grand
juries start to send up their indlctm~nts,
there 'viii be proper hell to pay, no
matter \\·hat the courts decide about
l\1r. Nixon's famous tapes.
The scum that surfaced w i l h
\Vatergate "·ill continue to pollute the
public gate for months and even years
to come. Mr. Cox bas made ll clea r
he does not share Mr. Nixon's boly
view of himself -· that his sins are
not those of -Other 1nen, that the
Consititulion was specially drafted to
keep him out of jail U he ' should do
somethlng tha t would put other men
behind bars.
lf Mr. Nixon has been obstructing
justice, and that is the large unwritten
charge before the American pt0ple. the
formtr Harvard Law prof "-"OUld seem
uniquely the man to nai l him lo the
nu.st.
TllE ON'l:Y THING that can slop
r.tr. Cox would be pressure from ?vlr.
Nixon to have !\tr. Richard30n ssc'k
him. This Is just about the one thing
that floJr; Nixon doesn't have the polltlca l
chutzpah to attempt. Su<'h a move \\'OUld
mean the cbt·er.up Of 'the e-over-up. ,,,at'·
would be just too much. It mlght end
up "'ill\ the President being hanged
by his O\\'n tightrope.
\Vhen ~tr. Cox took over as special
prosecutor he sai d, "I hold I.he whip
hdnd." I'd say l!O. and Y.'Ould add that
\\'atcrgaie may sin k !\tr. Nixon yet.
( MAILBOX J
L etters from readers are welcome.
Normally, writers sl1ou/d convey tlieir
111essages i11 300 words or less. The
r ight to condense letters to fit space
or el1n1ii1ate libel is reserved. All let-
ters must in.elude signature a1Kt mail·
ing address but nantes may be with·
held on r equest if sufficient reason
i! oware-i1t. Poetry will ·not be pub·
!is lied.
JUarantee ror any animal turned in
regardless of breed or pedigree. Our
only guarantee is a humane death by
injection, if no home is available.
l KNOW this letter will not touch
those who selfishly consider only their
one animal but perhaps It will help
others to understand the God-awful job
we. or any other humane society, has
to do. I should include the public pounds
too because they are only there ~ause
of irresponsible animal owners.
Our work is difficult. heart·breaking.
Every year humane societies lose true,
dedica ted humanitarians because of the
al most endless grief associated with this
\\'Ork, added to their abuse by a segment
of the general public. In the long rWJ,
only the animals suffer due to this
loss.
1\1'.ost sincerely,
JEAN BAUSCH.
Executive Director
Animal Care' and Humane
Education Center
Tower Fan
To the Editor:
To all of you wonderful concerned
people \\'bo wanted to save our vintage
lifeguard tower and who gave your sup-
port -thank you!
Tue city council r e s po n d e d af•
firmatively to our "'ishes and our
landmark ~all remain on the fl.tain
Beach.
NIC BILLY
Ta:r Refor111
To the Editor:
Nn doubt everyone agrees there is
a need· for tax reform. But, is Prop.
t the answer:
I. Do "'e \Vant taxing power shifted .
from our Senators and Assemblymen
to the Governor?
2. Will Prop. I renlly reduce your
laxes or will the delicit be made up
by an increase in local taxes?
3. Will the average cltiwn benefil
Crom the passage of Prop. 1?
Because of the complexity or Prop.
1, a meeting discussing the opposltion
"'ill be spoosored by the American
Associalion of University Women .
League of Women Voters and the Council
of PTA's "'ill be held at the San
Quotes
\V. Pudlnskl, Commiss ioner, C.all f.
Highway Patrol on trend toward drunk
driving trial:! -"Insistence upan a trial.
in contrast to I.be common procedu re ()f
accepting a plea of guilty to a ltsscr
charge, Is a progressive and vilal step
because .it recognizcs .. Lbt. impartance. of_
firm, consistent ildjudication."
Tobtylynn Birch -Santa Cru:t. on
nttd of help for 5Ulcide·prooe -''Th~
only \\'SY thnt an.y of us call. have lbc guts
to .stand up and 1narch through life Is "by
•· knowing that we have tlu!; tuppon and
love of those arou nd us.''
CJemente High School in the Little
Theater on Wednesday, Oct. 24, at 7:30
p.m. The public is encouraged to attend.
MARILYN O'BRIEN
President. AAUW San Clemente·
Capistrano Bay Branch
VN Flag
To the Editor :
Re: The United Nations flags being
displayed in City Council Chambers.
IF THE CITY Councils insist on
displaying the UN flag in their city
halls, are they aware that the UN
Charter is. the supreme law of the land
(Art. 6 Sec. 2 of the U.S. ConstituQ.on).
and it has been upheld by the 61,g>reme
Court that all treaties supersede, the
C'.onstitution?
Wouldn't it then follow that the liN
nag, representing a One World Organ·
ization, be displayed in a position above
the national flag, as the nationaJ nag
is now displayed abo1ve the state nag?
WOULD IT then also follow that coun·
cil meetings woulc;i be opened "'ith a
salute to the One World flag, leading
eventually to a more appropriate and
relevant international anthem?
ROSE CORRIGAN
61111 Prolecllon
To the Editor:
The newspaper carried these stories
on Mopd8J, Oct. 1~ -"Two young men
critically wounded in an exchange of
gunfire; sixteen·year-0ld arrested in con·
nection ·with shooting; bodies of t~ee
shooting victims were fesund; a grqup
of boys u·ere questioned by police io
shooting spree; Rialto \\'Oman paralyzed
and reported in critical condition; man
killed in market; bus driver wounded
\vhile driving" -an appalling number
of incidents for one day's reporting !
I AM DEEPLY distressed over the
innumerable amount of 'citizens who
do possess &\IDS as I'm sure many
other people are. Its the age-old questi<1n
of who lobbies the longest and hardest,
but · WHEN ARE gun controls going
to pass the Legislature?
There are far too many gang wars
that have resulted In the shooting of
innocent victims (some of them
children): there are too many deranged
soul s looking for "kick'' with a pistol
or shotgun : there are too many upset
lovers and husbands (wives too) who
lake revenge "'ith a gun.
I HA VE heard the-saying, "t need
a gw.i for protection." To the contrary,
we need protecUon api°'t guns -their
sales and usage. We must, as indignant
citizens, do something to prevent this
rapidly increasing, senseless kllllng.
Our Legislature may take action if we
protest loudly enough.
NANCY PENNEY
Thn11k• Tll11rslo11
Dear Sir;
The Laguna Beach school board's ac·
quiescence in the changes now under
way at Thurston School was a bitter
disappointment, 11:1e netY systen1 Ms
a foundaUon·week schedule that is fixed
for tbc quarter. For w ch child, all
Mondays arc IJ)t same, Tumays dif·
ferent from tlfondays bu~ all the same,
and so on. Children will no longer make
daily decisions about the struolure of
.their school doy. l'he system. is designed
to run smoothly and to make It easier
to monitor claiss attendance. I feel lhat
lheJc ft'atures 8te being bought at an
exorbitant price.
BElNG ABLE to decide, for ex;imple.
which offering of a musi ~ubject to
take, or what elective to attend, or '
when to have lunch , and learning to
master the complexities of confiictiog
demands on their time were very hn·
portant to my children, and I think
the experience helped them to grow.
I always · thought that this was what
Thurston was abouL Mr. Lloyd Mw
tells us that student choice was really
accidental, th a t the new schedule
is no major change~ He d o e 1
acknowledge, however. that there is 1
philosophical change in the new stress
on control of the physical location of
the child tbrougbout the day. "Tbe com·
mwiity," he says, will no longer allow
the staff to coocentrate on J)etfOl'WlDOe
rather than attendance. Tot those. who
tJfelt that the communijy gave t~ 1taH
1.s it was a vote of conlidmce Jut
spring, this mar. oome as a surprise.
Ttie tragedy of the matter Is apparent
in that, before expreaing the deddina
opinion (alongside Linke and Glllet(e),
Dr. Browne rePorted a.o _outsider'a recent
praise of the respomibilitY that Laguna
S.acb High School students dioplay<d
in an interdistrict educational program
and said he felt· that 'I1iurston tralnlng
in decision-making was probably the
reason for it. It may take time ror
it to betome clear what "·e've lost.
J WOULD LIKE to think that the
change is not irreversible. While we
"'ait for the promised evaluation in
January. I want . to express my thanks
to Thurston teachers for all they've
gone lhrough in the process of giving
my children the chance to make aome
choices at school and my deep rqret
that this opportunity can no l;onger be
offered.
Bi\RBARA METWER
Birch Credit
To the Editor:
Your editorial-obituary on the demise
of the John Birch SOciety could, and
in my opinion certaio1y should have
included some comp lim entary
statements because that Society bas
screly not been all bad.
YOU SPEAK or' the prolonged period
of hysteria maintained by JBS.
You caU attention to some efforts
and beliefs on the part of JBS that
many people thought ridiculous.
BUT YOU FAIL to give the JBS
credit for having alerted .more U.S.
citizens lo the objectives. and dangers
ot communism than any other ·orgeniza·
Hoo.
These objectives and dangers 1Llll ex·
ist. But who do "'e. have now to tell
us so?
DON HUDDLESTON
OaAN61 c0ASr
DAILY PILOT
Robert N. Wttd, Pub1JJl1fr
Thom<U Ktcvil, Editor
Barbara. Kreibich
Edttorlal Page Editnr
The M!IDrlal ,..,aae of 1he' Dalty
Pilot '.lttk1 to tntonn and tl(lm\ll•te
reedert by Pttftlltirw oo lhii: JJ9P dlve!'M1Commtnt.try·oo topics Of in. t~st by ll)'ndice.tcd «>!um.nisli •nd c&rlOOnllts, b)' providiJW a tonun rar
reader.' view. and by pttlll!fttlDll this
n<'"'spa~r·,· opfnklni and ldtu on
C\lrrtnl topjcs. The edi"!orlll oplnkn
Of the oauY PilOt a-pptar 'onl,y ln the
edltoritJ-coolumn,......,-ttM!--1'1p-of..ttie ---~-Oplnkm: tX'pl'EMd by the col-
umniltl and <'•rtoonift.• and ktttt
\l.Tlten att their own and no 91dcinit-
mrnt of their vlew11 ti)' 1he DtJb'
PIJot Wlwld bt Wtrrtd.
Wednesday, October 24, 1973
I
;
Wednelday'•
Cloaing Prieea
: New York V.ps and Downs
...
WtdnHdlY, Oc\Obtr 2'4, 1'7J SC DAILY PILOT
NEW YORK STOCK EXCHANGE Year's Bigh-Lows
Appear Every Saturday
Volume Mode1·ate
NEW YORK (UPI)-Slock market prices moved
irregularly 1n moderate trading Wednesday on the
New York Stock Exchange, with investors beset
with a number or 'pohtical and economic uncer-
ta1nues
A rew nunutes before the close, the Dow Jones
tndustnal averlge was up 4 22 points to 970 73
But few issues showed s1gn1!1cant changes, and
declines maintained a slim lead over advances.
among 1,735 stocks across the tape
Trading was subdued with interest centering
on issues reporting large upward or downward
1novement 1n third quarter earrungs --· -... P E Ch0.1 HIO'll LOW Ult Cho
,tn1erlf"nt1 Sales
l 'olume
Briefs
e Royal Ind.
~'let'lnl to the Dally Pilot
l'AS1\0ENA Roy :i I
l nd1L~l1 u•s re1>ortcd sharvly 1n
crcaSC\1 results for the qu.ir1 r1
nnd the n111e months of 1973
it v;as announ~ by J R
,J,,\in S(Jn l'ompnny prtsldcnt
For lhe qnarter ended Sept
30 nrt 111<.'()lnt! and earning~
flt!' ~ha1 t" rose 42 percent
Net Ult'OlllC \\:'IS $1905,000 OT
37 perC('nt!i R !ihnre rompa:rcd
.,.,,th SI 343 000 or 2R cents :i
sli:'lre l:ic;t ye11r Soles climl:X'd
lo M7,4ill 000 trom $39,764 000
Sntthd to tbe OaOy Pilot
LONG B~:AC!l -C.P'J'<'dl
Int., a diversified compa:nT,
rt'?Qrtcd hlghtor tamtn;:s·o\'8'
romparable per\od' laaC year.
111' Ernst II P\e11el
cl•aJm\3tl of the board ind
president. anoouOl'ed Tutsdl)
Eamlngs P'f' Mare l"OIC to
IR C('Ols lor 1he quarter ana
10 ~9 ctnts for the first nint
Tl)()OlhL
I
I
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•
Lag1111a. Beaeh
• EDITION
Today's Final
N.Y. Stocks
·voL. 66, NO. 297, 7 SECTIONS, 102 PAGES ORANG~ COUNTY, CALIFORNIA WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER·24, 1973 TEN CENTS
' ~
Lights Out This Christmas in Laguna Beach?
By JACK CHAPPELL
Of .. .,.._ f"lllt .....
·The Lf,guna Beach Chamber of Com-
nSerCe will seek. a So pe"rctnt reduction
iD Christmas llgbtlng on a voluntary
be.sis for homea and businesaes this
11\>llday oeaaon.
Anc:I, the annual city Christmas lighting
OOthpeU,tion apollllOred by the Jaycees
J"M.Y , ~ powered ' down this year as
I iesult .of the energy crisis. ' ' .
Chamber president Larry Hunt said
• • .. ' ..
'
a
..
'
Meter Fighter
Willetts Seeks • • ~t on Council .. '
:. P.artlng 111eter re.volt leader Richard
'Willetts, wbo once said be bad no in-
lintion of runni~ for the city council, ·
t{eclarid bis caodJ4aey Tue~y for the
upcordin& ~c·.ft.Oe.
:wu1etts, oi>efator of the Halrem Beau-t1 Sa~n, said he had cllanged his mind
on running for COlJ!leil. He Is the fll'st
CJlQOlllctd candldale for the election
~ch will ~ held , earlr in March.
Filing is l#lldred In ~-
-:-"JUst wor~IJ;1g • on t tHe •Jll.'Oj6(t (the ~ meter referendum) mlde me
~,are· of ah ln~nse feeling by 90me
~ple that things should be done a ,
Ultle differently. .:
"La-Beach has ,been good to me
over the '¥1 years 'i•ve been here,"
lj'llletts iald. ·
Three council seat1 up for grab!-in--
cl1J.tie those of Vice-Mayor Pe. t e r
Qatrlnder, Councilwoman Ph y 11 i s
St..eeney and, Councilman Carl JOhnson.
None oC Uie couiicil ,Mmbtfs , 'have in-
dicated whether they will be-candidates.
'!-Mrs. Sweeney Was appolntecJ to the
d)Wlcil, .and Johnson w~ fleeted in
•. (See WIU.E'ITS, Pace 21 . -
.
• •
Weather
Thursday should be a carbon
' /copy of Wednelday, according to
the weather service -lllMy and
warm. Highs in the mld-705 inland
and at the beaches.
' INSIDE TODAY
!
..1 • A li/t-tiie gollows turned Mp
cu a .tehool projtc& (n O«Ul&
J~ttrcturc at Corona <ill Mar
High th.la wttk. Stor11, Poot 12.
.
' ' ' • • -. ..,, ....... ,
Tuetday he ·will ,..k IWi!t.oct of the
Laguna Beach City Council In what
could become a major community eUort
to both ease and bring attention to
the power crisis.
1be sub}ect was broached at a I~
eoo of cbaniber ditedon.
Al Geiser, Soulhem California ~JOO
Co. branch manager and member oC
the· city Cbriltlnls deooratlon.committee,
asked that ·the ,chamber reConslder the
annual lighting of a simulal<d stained
e
Director
Appo~nwd
In ·Laguna
Stanley E. ScbOll, preuntly city
engineer for Glendon, bas been a~
pointed the new Wguna Beach public
wOl'.ks director.
Sc:hoU, 39, w:u selected lnxn 25 ap-
pocanll for the job and was the top
-.ilj',the nmning,J.ap1a.-Buch City
M-AI Tl)eal said today. . ~-:~~ The pooitfup pays · flt.• ...... n, and ~ ...... ""·-~a.. -. 'llleji1 ...,.;t. •
--llld llWWd oi .... .,
i}. ',andeo-
vtrioinooill .ftlll~ . . . ":i.-lbt ·of · thinp ire "(IOlng on and
we·nlett aomeone -b8 get involved," TheaJ .. sald.
PrOject,s now ·Uader·wiy inClude Main
Beach Park: sewage plant remodeling
a~ a switch ,to the .AU.to Water Manage-
ment Aaency service, parl<lng structure
constructJon and mtinltipel b u s 11 n e
-alloo, all falllq linder t h e
stewardshJp rl.. the publlc worts direciot'.
'Ille>! has been holdlnf down the office or. public worb dJreetor hJmself sinct
Jf10virlg up to dty ~er following
the resignation of former city manager
LarTy Rose In August.
Scholl is the father of two teen-aged
children. He bolds a bacbeJor of lclence
and master of adeoce in civil engineer-
ing, both from the University of lllinols
and a master of science in public ad-
ministration from the University or
Southern califomia.
ScOOU joined the city ol Glendora
in 1969. Previously, he bad been a
tecbnical and promotional representative
for' Portland Cement and from 1963
to ·• he was an assistant professor
of civil engineerihg at Cal Poly Pomona.
Other po8itkm ·lncluded work in civilian
and. military .engineering.
' Wrought Iron Bird
Stolen From Roost
An Italian wrought iron rooster worth
$350 and a Cllinese ginger jar set valued
at . $600 were repor:ted stolen t·rom
Lagunan Jack Smith, 2230 Crestview
Place.
Smith told olficen TueJday that three
brown crackle glaze furlsh jan and
matching bowl were taken from a
storehouse and the rooster from his
patio area, while he was away from
home .
HOUSE HUNTERS
SEARCH .THE ADS
Recent figures compiled by the
Newspaper Advertlalng Bureau, Inc.,
should prove that house hunters star\
their search in the newapaper.
On an average weekday, according
tb tbe figuns, 29 per<:ent of thole plan-
.nlng to buy a ho113e within 12 months
wtll rtad the "Roule for Sale'' claaslfiai·
Uon in the local newspaper. Over a nve-dal' period 45 percent of the pros·
pecta will see thole ads and, during
a monl.hi 7$ percent of tht! ready·t~buy
will rud the llsUngs.
If you're selling a houac, put It where
house bunter• can find • It -eallly.
CID 1 Daily Pilot ad-visor on the direct
line, l!Mm, and be where the buyon
art looklnc.
glass window standing at the foot. ol
Bnia<jway.
•.:,You've all be~ of the energy
shortage. We're talking about fuel The
more electricity you ~. the more fuel
it take.s," ~ said noting that the
present Middle East situation was com-
plicating acquisition of fuel oil for elec--
trical genention.
He said that while each decoration
its'elf may take onJy a small amount
of ene~, the sum of all the deoorations
placed a conaldera~e demand on the
electric&! system.
He said the nonllgbting of the city's
tbrisuna1 deooraUon could stand as a
symbol of conservation.
"la's look at this in a realistic light.
Let's be leaders," Geiser urged chmlber
directors.
He suggested ttle chamber encourage
the business community to hold back
on decorations.
He noted too that the company would
no lona:er be.ar a $69 hookup fee and
provide free electridly to the stained
glass window.
Hunt suggested that merchants and
resldenb could take voluntary actkm
to reduce displays, ~ to make decora-
tiona ''daylight" praentatlons.
"I would encourage it and J would
encourage the chamber to take Jn active
role,'' Geiaer said.
Dave Dllttenhofer, Jaycees represen-
tative to the chamber board, said the
rus·tee •
'Pressure's
Too Much'
--Collins
Saddleback Omununlty Co11ege trustee
Michael Colliri'.s, 32, of Newport Beach,
announced TUeaday be will resign his
post Jan. I.
A charter men1ber of the six-year-old
brard, ~m.ns said busines,, pressures
in his law finn, of Collins and Kogler
in Newport Beach prompted bls decision.
When C.ollina was elected to his Dl"llt
four--year -term in i969 at a1e-II, he
was one I!! jhe f!lllDl!tll men, ev<r · tleeiel w~ a, .ieomnii!dlJ' c:80ep t.ard
in~ ., -
He wu v.O. pre-I d~ the first
)Jaf, and oerved Is board ,...ident
, i.;~twor.an-' ·
'.· r."'1111 wtlli. ~....,Ot ...... -. ~"we ·accepc''yOll" Mal....,, .. said
Jofln !Amd, board president
. . D.ellJ '""" ~ t'I' •lllllN "--
CAR. PLUMMET-ED 90 FEET ACROSS CHANNEL AT FREEWAY ,
Arm of Victim Was Discovered by Highway Workmen
Crew Led to Wreckage,
Body by Severed Arm
The body of a Navy man, evidently
dead since Saturday, was lound Tuesday
at the bottom of SM Diego Cn_>ek,
the victim of an auto accident.
Discovery of a human arm on the
ceoter divider of the San Diego Freeway
near Laguna Cany1JI· freeway led to
a if~ car and the body of William
Thomas, M, M ~h Di~go.
,A member of a highway malntenance
crew (OUAd the· ,.rm arid notilied the
California Rlghwa1 Patrol whose oUJcers
d.IScbvered the Car.
Highway patrol officers said Thomas.
!lOUthbound on the freeway , lost control
or the car which struck the center
divider severing the arm.
The ~ar. ofn cers said, plummeted 00
feet across !he creek channel. smashing
into the concrete channel wall at which
time the driver was ejected.
The car and dri\'er then dropped SO
feel into the creek channel beneath a
free.way • bridge 'oblscured from pa·ssing
traffic.
Highway patrol investigators determin-
ed the probable time of death through
a calendar watch on the detached arm.
It had stopped al 12:05 a.m. S8turday.
Gasoline Sho~tage Puts
Crimp in Coast Tourism?
Ttte recent gasoline crisis is causing
IOfl1e ol Laguna Beach's tourist-related
lnduatrles a pain ·in the pocketbook,
a spokeswoman of the Laguna Beach
Hotel·Motel As8ociation told Chamber
of C.Ommerce <Ufectors Tuesday.
Betty RobiMon told directors that
"busineu thlJ summer was lousy and
it'• not good now."
Mrs. Roblnaon. of lhe Laguna Shorts,
placed rno.t ol. the blame for the current
reduced buslne&s to the ga90ltne shortage
and urged the Chamber to initiate
10me coordinated ways ol trasnporting
iourist.s Into and •round the Art Colony.
She said talk of the gasline shortage
had nipped the usual now of di!!:tant
towiats. and that aome would·be visitor•
w(!te "afraid that once they got here,
,
they couldn't get gasoline to go home."
"This is something we , must con.
sider," Mrs. Rqbinaon s&id po,lnting out
that of every tourist dollar spent in
Laguna, only ti cents gQes to the b()tel·
motel tnduWy with the remaijlder being
spent in local &bops, restauranll and
other toorl!lt related ertterprlses.
"If you cut the number-of people
coming In, I can guarantee the downtown
businessmen will feel· It," Mr11. RoblnSCKl
said.
8111 Axline , representing the Downtown
Businessmen's Assocl8Uon, i\lggffied
spe<la(rallroad "fun car" could be hired
with a stop at the TMOVated San
Juan Capistrano station. Buses could
bring !he visitors dh-octly to the Art
(See TOURISM, Page I)
l<J tried to t'i!lk you out ol tt, but
I gueu )'Oil have to olo It," lAmd tald.
!be board will appoint a trustee to
till Collins' spot until tne 1975 election,
when Collins' term would blYe BXpired.
Trustee Han.s Vofel, also a charter
nteniber of the board, l~ted Collins'
decilk>n.
"Mr. ColliM has made a tremendous
contribution to this board," Vogel said.
"We started out together on the ssme
controversial slate. and we've ~'Orked
togetber all these yean. I wish you
weren't going, Mite. We've disagreed
a lot, but never disagreeably," he said.
Collins' resignation paved the way ror
de-annexation of the Harbor View Homes
section of the Saddleback district in
Newport Beach.
He Uves tight on the controversial
line dividing the Saddleback district and
the Coast Community College district.
Residents on the Saddleback side of
(See TRUSTEE, Pase !)
* * * Library Cleaning
Consultant OK'd
For Saddleback
A consultant to tell the Saddleback
C»mmwiit1 Colle(e 1 how to clean Its
new library was hlred for 58.000 Tuesday
night.
lr"1n B. Ked \\'as hired by action in
executive ses.sion to do the job. \\·hich
had been discussed \rithout reference
to a particular individual in an ope n
meeting of Saddleback College Board
of Trustees.
A proposal ignited objections: from
Trustee Hahns Vogel during a discussion
ol criticism of administration action .
Vogel pointed out the entire m:ittcr
had been placed on the agenda for
'executive session. which legally only
applies to personnel n1atlcrs.
Trustee !tans Vogel during a discu~i;ion
openly in the publi c scsskln. Trustee
Donna Berry questioned "''hy $8,000
should be spent to find cut how 10
clean a building.
Superintendent Fred Bremer. v•ho had
'placed tbe matter on 1he ext'('utive
session aegnda, said that cleaning the
new 100,000-square-foot structure. "is no
simple matter."
Bremer sakt the consultant would
organlic which jobs should be done on
\lo1hlch days and "''ho should do thcn1.
He said the consultant could \11ork with
the library staff for up lo a year.
The concept was approved by :i
unanimous vote from the board.
"Things have changtd shlC'B Dr.
nremer and I W«I to t11ke turns dusting
the telephones and cleal\,ing the johns.''
BusirU!SS ti,1an11ger 'Roy B~rletla quipped.
group bad intended to go ahead with
its annua( lighting competition, but added
that now a rtCOJ13ideraHon could be in
order.
Hunt suggested the Jaycees might
wint to encourage nonlighted displays.
rather than the traditional electrified
ones. .
Bill Axline, speaking as a represen-
tative of the Downtown Businessmen's
Association, lamented any cutback: in
(See UGHTS, Pag~ %)
I
RESIGNS AS TRU TEE
MlcHael Collins
Board Delays
South Laguna
-Park Project
The purchase of land for a local park
in South Laguna -a community of
4,000 persons without a pa.rlt -was
delayed thrtt \\'eeks by c o u n t y
supervisors Tuesday.
Filth District Supervisor Ron a l d
Caspel"5 or Nc'A'J)Ort Beach said be
wanted to canvass residents of the ana
to determine if tbey \\'ere willing_ to
pay additional taxes to support the. part
purchase and development.
The 10-acre park would consist of
four parcels of land at Catalina and
i\tonterey streets just north of First
Avenue.
The county parks department reported
that three or the parcels are in danger
of being developed to sing le family
homes in the near future.
Lorcl\ Long. of the Orange County
Environmental CoalitiOn and a South
Laguna resident. said !he residents had
the promise of the lando'A'Tier that the
property would not l>e developed im-
mediately pending a decision by the
county.
"However \lo·e only have his good failh
in the promise."' she said, urgi~ im~
mediate purchase of the lots.
School Bus Hit
In Laguna Beach
A school bus carrying 5!t Tuslin High
School students was hi11olvcd in a minor
traffic collision Tuesday afternoon in
Laguna Canyon Road. about 500 yards
non.h of Broadway.
The California Hlgh'A'3Y P a t r o I
reported no injuries OC(urred in the
accident.
A CHP spokesman said a small foreta:n
<'&r dtiven by Rand8.I ~I. Taylor, TT,
of 31366 ~tontcrey. South Laguna purled.
into tile !IO\lth boul'let travel lane! from
n private driveway and collided with
the right front ol the bus.
~linor dama,Re was done to· the Com.
munlty Chanr:r bu11. driven by P11tsy
L. Viinmntrc. Jt. of Garden Grove. The
right side or the car was damaged.
The 1'ustln ~tudcnt.~ were coming to
11 sports r1·cnt ~n Laguna Beach .
I
1
" . • . -, ' -
.2 DAILY PllAT Lt -· Oct-24. 1973
ISIU.ELI. TROOPS
FA.CE 2ND ENEMY
TEL AVIV (UPI) -The 1 ...... u Army
is relusin& RYttal reserve aoldiera from
ctcUve duty ao l.bty can fight a lDOlqUito
invasion on the home front.
A Tel Aviv government spokesman
said the reser\'isls. municipaJ insect coo-
trol experts in ci\'llian life, will spray
st.reams near the city to prevent the
mosquito invasion frorn beaiming a
major onslaught.
Sho tgun Blast
Injures Hot
Springs Pair
'lbret campers escaped serM>us injury
in the Ortega Hot Springs area when
one al. two intruders who ransacked
their van opened Ure on them with
• sllolgun.
Depuiies were called to the scene
Tuesday when California I{ i g h w a y
patrolmen reported they had halted the
van on the San Diego Freeway after
noting that the vehicle had been damag·
ed by gun lift.
They said Dale Pearson, 20, of 225
Rosa SL, San Clemente, had been shot
tine times and a male companion klen.
tifled u LOiS Angeles aUomey Lawrence
Randolph J ohnson, 31, had been sbot
twice in the Hot Springs fracas.
Officers said Barbara An n Tschirhart,
25, of Santa Monica, who had been
camping witb the two men, was unbarm·
ed.
Sllerifl's Capt. James Bzoadbelt today
said ncae of the wou:rtU inflicted on
lhe two mea. were serious and they
were rdeued after treatment at the ar.,,.. c.ooty Medical Cente. .
Brvadbelt said the trio told his in-
vestigators that they were camping in
tbe popular bot springs area when they
beard DOi9es coming from the direction
of their perked van.
'Ibey aid they ran to the van In
time to eee two men loading the trio's
tape ...:order and other per90lllll equip-
ment into their own vehicle.
Officen said the three victims then
pursued the burglars' car in their van
but had abandoned the pursuit and were
turning around when the bW'glars swung
their car around and beaded for the
trio at high speed.
Jobnn:t aald one of the men leaned
out of the car window, emptied his
shotgun at the van and then reloaded
while the trio beard the shots strike
their vehicle.
Johnson and Pearson leaped from the
van and rolled into nearby 00.,bes. Both
men were struck by the second volley
fired by the gunmtkl.
Officers, said they returned to their
vehi cle and were on their way to report
the incident to authorities and seek treat-
ment when they were spotted by a
patrolling CHP officer.
La guna Legio11
Will Observe
Education Week
Laguna Beach American l.eJliOn Poot
222 and the Legion Auxiliary will observe
American Education Week with a potluck
dinner at 6:30 p.m. Thursday al the
Legion clubhouse, 386 Legion Street.
Laguna school officials including Dr.
Norman Browne, school board president;
·0r. Don Haught, high school principal:
Mrs. Howard Wilson, PTA council presi·
dent and Francois Dubau, hlgh school
student body president.
'I'he trigh school solo ensemble under
direction of Fred Stoufer will present a choral program during the event.
Following a review of the local school
system by officials, 0. \V . Price, pro-
gram chai nnan , will close the progran1
with informal discussion.
The American Legion and affiliated
units spent more than $12 million on
children and youth programs last year,
Price said.
OU.N•I COAST LI
' DAILY PILOT
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'Sick-out:_
D ay Ended
Fo r Clerks
By TOM BARLEY
OI lflf' O.llJ Piiot lltff
Thirty-eighi Orange County Superior
Coor! clerks. each of them anned with
a doctor's certificate, are back on the
job today after a one day "sick-out"
that was described by one absentee
as ''a little! bil of muscle-flexing."
County Clerk William E. St Joho con·
finned that his working force was at
full strength today and said he does
not intend to discuss the sick-out with
his clerks ''excepl on a strictly informal
basis.
"I am ~ith them," he said today.
"I think they are very much underpaid
and I think the abilities of whet I
regard as the best court clerical fo rce
in.CalUomia should have been recognized
long ago."
St John. his supervi!ory personnel,
and the skeleton crew that kept court
affairs rUJU'ling Tuesday on a nearly
normal basis, worked until late Monday
nigtt to clean up all arrears that ac·
cwnulated during lhe day.
St John said he doutits there will
be any further top level discuasion of
the pa.y dispute until 6Mmge Omnty's
s4perv1sors return late thls week from
the County Supervisors Anociation of
California coovention in Redding.
The board went into eJ:ecutive sessioo
Tuesday when it learned that' 38 clerks
were absent .from their desks. But they
refused to discuss the issue during the
r~lar Tuesday meeting although of·
flc1als of the AFL-CIO u n i on were
present in the hearing room.
County supervisors had earlier offered
Qie clerks_a_~.4 .perc~!....P.!lY raise after
the clerks bad rejected a · proposal that
would have raised their $1,026 a month
salaries by 2.5 percenL
The clerks feel that their salaries
should be at least comparable to the
$1,333 a month enjoyed by I.Os Angeles
C.Ounty Superior Court clerks. -
But a spokesman said today that the
real reason behind their decision to
stay out Tuesday stemmed from what
he saJd was the refusal of the county's
personnel depa.rtment to agree to media-
tion of the dispute.
P roposition 1
Issue Halted
In Mid-speech
Irvine Mayor Jolm Burton gav~Jed
down the only person attempting to
a~ss the City Council Tuesday night
during the oral communicatians portion
of the agenda.
The speaker, Mrs. Judy Swayne of
L:lgwta Beach, is presiden t of the Orange
C.oast League of Veters. By the time
she offered that infonnation, Mayor
Burton slopped her.
"Do I understand that you wish to
address us on Proposition I?" the mayor
asked.
''Yes," Mrs. Swayne replied .
Citing a city ordinance prohibiting
cowicilmen from taking stands on
political matters, Mayor Burton asked
the speaker to sit down.
"I personally object to your ruling.
\Vha t I am here to talk. about is more
than a political issue," Mrs. Swayne
began before once more being cut off
by the mayor.
Councilman E. Ray Quigley Jr, came
to the mayor's aid pointing out that
councilmen had agreed not to address
any issue with ''political connotations''
attached to it.
_f\lrs. Swayne sat down fin ally ·when
Vice ~fayor Irenry Quigley explained
lhe problem further.
. Short!~ after the city began, tM eoun-
c'.l unanimously passed a city law ban-
ning the taking of political stands as
a body.
"It is illegal for this council to become
involved in political issues," Vice Mayor
Quig ley explained.
It would be a misdemeanor violation
tor members of the council to have
allowed Mrs. S"•ayne to speak as much
as il would be a violation for Mrs.
Swayne to speak, the vice mayor reason·
ed.
From P agel
WILLE TIS • • •
the Ed Lorr recall election .
\Villetl!, 48, first came to public at-
ten!ion leading the successful parking
mc!er referendum petition. He later
criticized the city's plaMed Patriots'
Di1y Parade date saying that the event
disrupted business on Saturday.
\Villetts had previously publicly stated
that he would not be a candidate for
rouncil . once even quipping Umt his
\Vife had sald she would dlvorc:e h.lm
If he ran.
'·r-.1y wife has reconsidered,'' he said
Tuesday.
From Page 1
TOURISM ...
Colony, ht said.
ftfrs. Robin.~n said the hote.l·motcl
35ll0Ciatlon was now more Involved in
adve rti sing ror small conventions and
conferences.
"We have to. We can't get anyont
else to do ii (or us," she said .
' '
1
•so Are You'
Chinese Deputy Foreign Min-
~ster ·Chiao Kuan·hua yells
across the room from his seat
in the U.N. Security Counci l
at Soviet Am bassador Yakov
Malik during a debate on the
Soviet-American resolution cal~
ing for peace in the Middle
East.
Medical Center
MQ<lification Hit
' By Supervisor
By JACK BROBACK
Of tl'MI Deify Pllfl Stiff
Indications that UC Irvine officers
'vould accept a modification of the
present affiliation agreement betwe.en
the county and the Wliversity in manage-
me.nt of the Orange County Medical
Center raised the ire of Supervisor Ralph
-. • , . I
Man,25,
Arraigned
In Murder
A 2$.yeaMld San Bernardino man
'nlesday was arraigned on murder aad
assauit charges. In coonectlon with a
triple shooting that ten a Laguna Beach
rt!ldeot and a Cltbedral City man -
al mulliple ~ W<limds.
Harry Lee D'Agdatin eot""" an in-
nocent plea to two COUDts Of murder
during tbe short proceedings. in San
Bemanlino Municipal Court.
A complaint filed by the dtstrlct at-
torney 's office also charged D'APDn
with one cnmt of usault with a deadly. ..
weapoa agalnst Thomas Brown, also ,
an Art Color\y r'"1dent. ·
Brown, 23, wa,, the only member Of
the trio that ~ved the sbootlngs.
He ls listed ln tfnproved coodiUon al
San Bernardino County General Hospital,
Dead is Calvin Knight, 41, or 1005
Catalina St. and Phillip Demmock, 15,
of Cathedral City. Both men bad been
shot through the head with a .38 caliber
weapon and their bodies d:wnped in
an orange grove neat an ababdooed
ranch house.
Brown was found ]Jo1ng' lnJured
alongside Sta te Hlghwaf ti · tbe main
route to the Lake Ari'oWbead niountaln resort area.
Information provided to police by
Brown led police , to arrest D'Agostin
late wemesday night, just hours after
the shootings took place, .
niat night, police also found Dern·
mock's van, which contained a number
of weapoos, including a · .22 caliber
automatic pistol, a revolver, a ~
and a rille. The Interior al thO veblcl~ was splattered with blood.
Police still refuse fA> speculate on what
motivated the sbootlngs, but rumors
persist that a drug transacticn may
have been Jnvolved.
Brown ls known · locally as "God"
and ha.s lold friends be believed be
could not die. He bas a pending court
appearance for possession of marijuana
and ha.s a long criminal record In Ihr<e
states.
D'Agostin was ordered to face a
preliminary bearing on the charges Nov.
7. He currently is being held in jail
In lieu of 1256,000 bail. ·
A bail reductiin hearing IJ adleduled
for Friday.
• .
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• J~
Policy Changes ··
:l
' • -By JAN WORTll
Of .... '"·· Sf ... ~
Saddl•baol: Community Co 11 e g • lrwitees'.~ iignallcd a change, In
{>Ollcy en dealing with their, top •• ad· ·-·· . m:u,,..trators.. •
Declarirlg it is· time for "a new spitit
of open discussion,'' the trustees said
matters ·rela ting to the performance of
lllperintendeot Fred llre\n(r should no
longer. be !hie!~ m Ille' privacy of
closed sessl<ils.
CrtuclSm of Bremer's perform~ has
l>een cbumlng under the surfaoo for n...ths. with trusiees ~ in · their suWon or dlaapproval of administraUve
actions ....
"The ~ct. boord and administration
are all ill~served by an attempt to
obscure the nature of the divisions on
our board," said Newport Beach trustee
Michael C.ollins.
"We should make it clear there is
a predictable di\lision," Collins said
He related · growing disenchantment
directly to BN:mer, superintendent of
the school since 1988.
"Some feel the admlnfstration has
fallen below the level of acceptan·ce
in perfonnance.· Oti)ers feel differehtly, ,
and are coovinced that not only has
Dr. Bremer performed acceptably, but
has gone far beyond the call of duty."
To an increasing exteit, Collins said
board discussions about various issue~
have turned into a "rehash of basic
board diff~ces."
"It is easy to either find fau1t or
ammend if yoo're defensive about
criticism," he said. ·
G.rowing res~ to aonie of Bemer's
acuoos has come basically from Hans
Vogel of Tustin and Patrick Backus
of Dana Point.
Strongest support for the administrator
has come from Cbainnan John Lund
of Laguna Beach and Donna Berry of
Mission Viejo, with trustees Collins, Alyn
Brannon, and Dr. James Marshall takiJ!g
neutral or alternating positions.
Backus was abse nt Tuesday, but Vogel
responded to Collim' remarks by saying
mo.st district methods of deallilg with
controversy are "puttftlg bandaids on
recurring problems."
t~ed f~r several of ~ Consututnta.~'
inclUding a TusUn res.Iden\ wbo wantec:P··
an Inter-district pennlt· tQ . tair.e· a. real~.
estate class at Sant& :Ma CoUeC-&. , J
"He was told .in a veif ~ili!>ftanded\•
maMt:r tJ:iat "'This ii\ht~·tPne'you'D~i
get an interdrisk}ct permll and we don'~·
want to see you again,' "Vogel sakl. ~:
He was paraphrasing ~ 8lleg~ state{''
ment by the superintendent. li
The resident ,is now leading a1pelltio(;
drive to g'et Tustin out of tbe Saddlebacle '
district. ·I
Interdistrict permil.s have Ileen. I(
repeated source of conflict betWeen Sad~
dle~ck student.I and the adminisb'alion. 1 For each permit the district grantl·
for a .student to take a course in anotht11
district, the home school mus t pay the..
· receiving di.strict its per-pupil cost. -f
"Our reasons for not granting tb!D\1
have been exclusively economic," Colliri!~
said. " ..
'
State Board
Pair Back . . ' .
' iv Nixon Revieic..
• ~o members of the State Boaz»
of .Equalization staunchly defended tha•
state's upcoming review of PresJti-..
Nixon's San , Cl!?tllente estate a.1 ·
"necessary tO ·thld ·out. w1>aes rea1111 .
going en .. ' durJni a mfe~ in N~~
Beach today. (R,elated lllJl!rr;.flD .. ~).,
John 4-ncb. who .repr....ta -I ol·
SoutJ;em Callfornla QD the "1ar<!, u1!J
there are "many , complex. QUlfjloQJ
relating to the v~. o! the Preskleol~
estate and I thl!)k It ·* enQrely healthr
for the state agency to review the )VOl'k
of the local aaeessOr on. a maUer d
thls im""..+""ce." . · ~ l""..... . ••• ~ ...
'rhe state Board of Equallzetloa,,-
posed al foor Democrals ele<tecl fA> tlitir
pmts, raised the question of the,·Vallle
of the Pr~iden:~·s. estate . ~or,e 1'
Orange C.Otm.tY Board of Supervl!Ors.' ·
Clark Tuesday.
Clark, """ of the original negotiators Coast Residents
"Many of our actions will never
alle viate the problems until the manner
in which many peojSle have been treated
at Saddleback College ia changed," Vogel
said.
He added that be personally bad iD;
In a vote that pitted three Democrats
agaiMt two . Republlcam, , lllpervlaon ••ted . ? IA>,,~, to ~k . tb, telf.!e ' I>oai!l to review the county aueuor't valuatioo with the university officials over a possi-
of the e.state."' "" · · ' ,.")l ,. -t f'I ble '1°mplete takeover of the medical Lose J4';m,; center by UCI, made a "tat' 1' or '"-"1 .... pment F...,,.. PtifJe .l
else'"statement. · ·· • . ··::ii ·:.U ,'ti, •••• " ~ • '""'!: u;w:~,~~:a~~:'t~c~!~~~~ To Burglars TRUSTEE •• · • f!aJl;J rt Event
tion entirely or we will cancel the af· · !".~· • • , 4 • \ ·.;..
l'.llation ·-~ent," Clark said. Burnt ...... coocentra+; .. ,.. on the the.ft the line have been lobbym· g to have B.. • -.. p1 ._ d •-
Supervl7c;;"'iaipb Diedrich, the other of 1te~;; "equipment f~ e.1adly what their section transferred to the Coast ein·g Kinne _ , . ~
supervisor on the neg0Uating committee, they were looking for Tuesday night district. " . .. 1.,
agreed. in almost identical breakins in the South But before Tuesday's nieeting they Guy Bevill, organizer of ~
A firm proposal for turning over the Laguna and Laguna Hills area. felt their case s~ llttle chance, since Beach's ,fourth summer art festival'.'
medical center to the university medical S~riffs deputies said stereo equip.. a transfer would mean that Collins would Disoovery ~tival, ls now in the'~
school should be ready for presenta tion ment and speakers valued at $450 were have had to either move or resign. of organiiing the· ~·s .first fall aft
early in November, the county ad- taken from the garage at the home C.Ollins stressed district business had fest iyal. : ·.$o •
ministrative office said. of Mary Ellen Goodrich, 23, of 23601 oothing to do with his decision. But Bevill plans lo run the festi11al"frbl\\
C.Ounty Administrative Officer Robert Las Grandes , Laguna Hills, by intruders he said he hopes •fa new spirit of Nov. I to Dec. 2 on the ocean blufb
Thomas said a county study committee who manipulated the lower corner of discwsioo" will prevail ·on the board, behihd Okada Pli.nt Gallsyo611 s. CoaC
had concluded thal it could not arrive the locked garage door unUl the bolt which he said has been suffering with Highway near where the Art--A-Falr·wi&
at a suitable modification of the e:t.isting slipped out of position. division on many Issues. held this· summer. , ~
affiliation agreement. Intruders bad an easier time at the C.Ollins ·has four children, two ·'J>oys "We will give the Laguna Beach tourf!t
Thomas added that UGI neg-otiators home ol Danit;l Bruce Pehkoff, 18, or and two girls. He has been acUve in an art exhibit for which Laguna ·~
seemed fa,vorably dJsposed toward the 32018 Sunset Drive, South Laguna, where the Saddleback Valley-Chamber of Com· is ramous," Bevill said: i
idea of single management of the center. a stereo and four speakers valued at tnerce, the Saddleback Valley YMCA, A jurying for prospective exhlbltort:
The proposal by the county calls for $300 were stolen . St. Nicholas Cllurcb, the Rotary Club, will be held by BevUl from 10 a.tft:
the university medical school to lease Officers said the burglars entered the and the Republican party. to 8 p.m. Wednesday at 417. Canyon
the center. lt \•iou\d take over the facility garage at the Pellkoff home via an His law firm specializes ln real estate Acres Drive, Laguna }!each. EaCb. ~
in its present condition and make all unlocked side door. and finance development. should bring two works for judging. •. in1pr~vem~nts necessary to bring it up l lF;;;;,;~~~~;;;;======~~~~~~~~=====~~~~~~~;;;;;;;;;;;jf" to university standards.
l t has been estimated that it will
cost $9.5 million to remodel the county
hospital and the funds have been pro-
vided for by the state .
Under the agreement , the county would
pay for medical care for the indigent
the only duty it has under law noW
in relation to the medical center.
From Page J
LIGIITS • • •
downtown lighting.
Axline suggested businessmen. pledge
to cut back in electrical use all year
long, and provide the holiday displays .
"~e should have the lights on at
Christmas ... with our festival -0f lights
it would be a shame to turn theni
off at this time of year," Axline said.
Hunt suggested that perhaps the
residentia l decorations could be minimi.z..
ed, and decorations downtown be kept
up to past levels, but another chamber
n1ember said that would seem unfair
to residents.
"If C\'crybody else turns off their
lights and \\o'e have that thing lighted
(the window decoration) what would they
think ?" ·another director asked.
lt v.'as· estimated that lighting the
~indow would only cost about 31,I, cents
a night.
''We have to start somewhere," said
Director Cy Nugent, who confw;ed whit
••bugged" him was the waste of electrical
energy on rootball and other sports
events held at night
Nugent said that whlle they were talk-
ing · about· pennies; ·mtJltons ·of· kilowatts
were being used for lighting the football
gum es.
No action was formally lakcn by the
board, but it seemed to be a gentral
consensus that conservation steps ought ·
to be taken.
llunt said he "'i ll try to Initiate a
coopcratlye program wilh the city coun·
ell for the cutback.
Ol'IN ' ...
lust Arrivell-larp
Shipment of Speedo
. Swim SUlts & Trunks
Water Wonder Kick Boards
Adias Tennis Slloes
Men's or Ladles'-18.95
Tretom Tennis Slloes
Men's or Ladies'-16.95
Converse Tennis Shoes Ladies-7.95
Men's-8.95
· Tennis Dres$es
Men's Tennis Shorts & Shirts
Acrylic Warm Up Sqlts-21.95
24.95-34.95
· · Racket Stringin&-
Squash Rackets-T ennls Rackets
WilsOIH'eM-llunlop Tennis Bans Dz. 7.95
Open 9 to 6 c;s8il sunliay
• ••
Soccer Shoes
Brazils-11.95
canadas-12.95
La Paz-14.95
Super lite-17.50
CLOI• IUMDAY '
All Purpose Shoes-10.95 to 17 .95
Bob WoHe Super Pro Basketban
Shoes-9.95
All Star Basketball Sboes-9.95
Volt Junior & Intermediate
· . Fqntball~7.93
Voit 8asketballs-5.95 to 19.95
SoccerballS-9.95 to 19.95
'
·Watir Po!O-llafts-10.95,& 15.95
-Beys'-Fllllflall· Shirts·Rlf:·295·Salf-t95: --
Hllldball Gloves-Jlacqvetbatl
RacquetH='mlnton Rackets ..
538 tinter , Bi1919
d
a
I
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' -1
7
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,.
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• Saddlehaek
. ,
VOL. 66, NO. 297, 6 SECTIOt-!S, 94 PAGES . . ' . .
'
ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFOgNIA WEONESOA Y, ~OBER 24, 1971
Today's Final .
N.Y. Stoeks ·
•
-
·--;
•
.
Saddlehack Trustee Collins to Resign cJt:lµ-=-~--
Saddleback Quilmunity Colleg~ trustee
Michael Collins, 32, of Newport Beacb,
anoou,tced . Tuesday be' ·will resign his
poat Jan .. I. ·
. A: -charier rienlher of· the six-year-old bir~, 'ColJjns Said business pressUre1 iJI~~ la'!'· f\flll of Collins and K°'Jer
iq_ inewport' Beach P.romPted his decWon. ~en · Colllns, )Vas elected to his fim· f~year· 'lennA In 1969' at . age 26, ~ .
one ' of inc y01.U1gest men ever ~ 111\ ;-eoinmunity coUe~ boJrd • Ol'Dla. ")! '"";
' He was ·vic,e president during the first
y~ar, and Served as board president
tile next two years.
"It .is With deep regret and sadness
11\.at we a~pt ,Your resigriation," said
John Lund, boatd'prerldi"'t.
"I tried, to . talk you out of it, but
l gue~ ·f.ou have to dorlt," lAmd said.
The' board will appc;>lnt a trustee to
fill' Collins" spof 'unW the 19'15 election,
when Collins' term would have erpired.
Trus~ee Hans ·Vogel, also a charter
.• .r ~ '
• • , ' • • •• l • '
"!· •• •. _·• '{ -· ·• • , 1'1"~·~·,... ·r~~-
rCAfl;Ptl,J~ET~C! 90 FEET 1ACROSS •G!iANNEL •AT FREEWAY .-~ ., '.Arm-ofYictlr\i WH Dlocovorod bTHlghWoy -· l . .
~rew,. Let) to #{ reckage,
~: .. ·· " . 11.~y; ~by .Sever~d Anm
-~ . . '· . ~ ' ·~ ' .. ~ .. -~of a NaVf man, ~evid~tJ~ J of · the :r i--which struck · the ceuter <k'il'S.i~. Sa(urdar• was Jound Tuesday divider severing the iinn. ~the bOttom o San Diego Creek, The car, omcers satd, plummeted 90 ~~er:f :,1 !U=den~m 00 the teit across the creek channel , smashing
ct!bter .divider of the San Diego Freeway into ~ concrete channel wall -at which ne:i Laguna Canyon freeway led to time the driver was ejected_
a ;irected car and the l>ody· ol Wllliorri•. The w 31'!1 driver then dropped 60 npnas, 34. el San Dieio. ~ • .,,!' Jee:t into_ the· creek c.haMel beneath a ~memliif Of a hisbway .maliltenance • freewar, ·btidge obsciired' from passing
cret'i. found the efm and i:l!lltl~ the tra(!ic. ·
cShfornla FDi'liWa'y Patrol-wbclae otficers Hig~y· patroJ~tnvestigator:i determin-
dlij:overed the car. ed the pro&ble time of death through
-Rlgbway f~trol -officers said Thomas, a caleridar-watch on the detached arm.
dtbbouDd oii the free'fVay, lost. control , It had atopj:>ed at lJ:05 a.m. Saturday;
-:·'., ..
member ot the boar~, lamented Collins'
decision.
"Mr. Collbu has made a tremendous
contribution to tbl!J board," Vogel .uid.
"We started oUt together on the se1me
controversial ·slate and we've worked
togetlier all thele years. I ::~ weren't goJ.nc, Mike. We--'ve
a lot, but otter disagreeably," be safd.
Cl>llins' resignation paved the way fur
de-anneutiOn or the Uar,P>i" View.Homes:
section ol !be Saddleli!ick" district In
Newport Bl!acb.
He lives right on the oontroversia l
line dlvidlng the Saddleback dlltrict and
the Coast Community College district.
Residents on the Saddleback side of
!he line have been lobbying to have
their section trarisfemd to the Coast
district.
But before Tuesday's meeting they
felt their ease stood little chance, since
a transfer would mean that Collins would
have had to either move or resign:-
Collfrul stresaed dlstrict busine!W had
nothing to do with his deciaiOn. But
he said he hopes "a new spirit of
discussion" will prevail on the board,
which he said has been suffering with
division on many iss:ues.
Collins has four children, two boys
and two girls. He has been active in
the Saddleback Valley Ownber of Co~
merce, the Saddlebact Valley Yli1CA,
St. Nicholas Church, the Rotary Cub,
and the Republican party.
His law firm specializes ln ~a1 estate
and finance development.
Debate Sparked
Electric Outl:ets 'May Be ·Faqlty'
A$ many Bl I,300 .Univhsity Park had the "beckwiring" process been
homes built between 1964 and 19'11 may 'reCommended by aluminum w i re bave--faulty-electcicahudei-~loiis:-'lnanufacttzttrr.--· ,._ test~ooy given· Irvine councilmci'l Tues-The ~mment followed testimony from ·
day rught suggested. Paul C. Ellis of University Park, a
Debate over the merits o(· copper retired electrical engineer, wbo observed •
versus aluminum wiring prO(iueed the that every outlet in his home was
infonnalion. "backwired." Because the aluminum
Spokesmen for Kaiser.Aluminum Corp. wires shrink, outlets ha\'.e heated up,
said a particular type of wi!~to-w~l-plu~ Ellis contended.
connection "never bad 't>een approved Backwiring, county electrical inspector
by the Underwriters Laboratory" nor Clive LeVoir told councilmen, was allow-
ed for a period of -time In Orange
~~-the first use of. aluminum wtruig ·
until lbe code was revised in 1971, LeVoir
alleges his impectora bad DO information
lo suggest !he connections could not
he used by builders.
Instead of screwing a wire to the
electrical outlet, an electrician who
backwires a ooonection -merely pushes
the bare wire into a s(>edally designed
IS.. WIRING, Pqe Z)
Modification Agricultural Land
. '
. ' On· Center.·s·
• ~ ' • 0 ' I • ' . . . " .... '
·Paci ~ · · Red ,.
. . ~ l • .
ly JACK•BliOBACK ..... ..., ""' '""
Irvine ~ouncil Approves
-x ~Stte T~ S~ppleht~nb;' ·
~ lliat 00 livlne officers
woW4 acctpt 1 "modllkatlon ol the
present . affillaUon Agreement between
the county snd the university in manage-
ment ol the Orange Olunty Medical
Center rai.sed the ire of SUpervisor Ralph
Clark Tuesday.
aark, one of the original hegotiators
with tbe university officials over a ~i
ble complete takeover of the medical
center by UCI, made a "take it or
else" statement.
"We should reaffirm our posillon tllat
UCI should take over the center opera·
Uon entirely or we will cancel the af-
filiation agreement," Cl,arJt said: .
Supervisor Ralph Djedrlch, the other
sui:)efvisor on the negotiating committee,
agreed.
A finn proposal for turning over the
medical center to the university medical
school should be ready for presentation
early in November, the county ad-
ministrative office said.
Irvine ~ ru.._day higbt op-
Jlll>ved .... ppltcatlon ... ltate tax •Ill>
pleJn<nls partia!IJ reimbursing the city
foi' taxes it i»esn't collect on lands
placed in agricultural preserve by land-
owners. .
Under the WilliaD180n Act, landowners
may receive a reduction in aS5e$Sed
valuation for land they guarantee will
remain in agricultural use. Only by
giving 10. years notice of intention to
remove land Crom preserve status may
a landowner continue to enjoy the reduc-
ed lax status.
Land' deveJoped for other purpose!
wilhin the notice period is subject to
tax eenalties.
The idea of the law was to eila;>Urage
farmers to continue fanning land which
is valuable to urbanizing areas for two
reasoM.
Some of the land is highly productive.
Loss of prime agricultural land to
development with homes or factories
means a reduction in the supply of
!Uct •1vallable to contlnW! to feed grow.
ing· popolatioos.
llnder the WllllallllOO A.ct, aereage
producing crops worth more than '200
a year per acre are classed as "prbne
agricultural land." ·
Jn all the city of Irvine, only 993
acres are classed as . prime soil. In
exchaqge for the lost tues the dty
would receive if that land were taxable
at the full rate, the city may apply
for a $3 per acre state "subveotioo"
or reimbursement for lost taxes.
Another 5,260 acres of Irvine's present
ag J'."eserve properties is classed as
"opeJJ. space of statewide significance."
The state pays only 50-cents an acre
for the taJ: loss to cities 'due to the
Williamson Act property tax revaluation
of such ag preserve Janet
The prime land means a $2,981.25
repayment and !he open spa~ class
ag preterves entiUe tbe city to another
$2,629.90 for a total of $5,611.15 to be
paid 10 the city.
County Administrative Officer Robert
Thomas said a county study committee
bad coocluded that it could n<rl arrive
at a suitable modification of the existing
a'fflliatioo agreement.
Gavel Muzzles Speaker
Thomas addl'd that UCI negotiators
seemed favorably disposed toward the
(Seti CENTER, Page %) On Proposition One
Irvine Mayor John Burton gaveled
down !he only person attempting to
addres1 !he City Council Tuesda y nJght
durlng the oral communications portion
of the agenda.
The speaker, Mrs. Judy Swayne of
Laguna Beach, Is president of the Orange
Coast 'League of Voters. By the lime
she ollered that infonnntion, Mayor
Burton stopped her.
"Do I understand that yoo wish to
address us on Proposition l ?" the mayor
asked .
"Yes." Mrs. Swayne replied.
Citing a city ordinance pro hibiting
HOUSE HUNTERS
SEARCH THE ADS
Recent figures oomplled by !he
"' NeWspaper Advertising Burtau, Inc.,
should prove that house hunters start
their search in the newspa per.
On an average weekda y, accord ing
lo 11\e figures, 29 percent ol t~ plan-
ning to buy a house within 12 months
~ wtll.read the "House for Sele'' classlfJca..-tlOn bt tbe~ loci! ·newapaper'. 0ver a
fiv~ ,Aeriod 4$ per.ctnt of the JX'OS·
pects will see lhoee ads and , during
a mon th, 75 percent of the ready-to-buy
will read tfie listings.
councilmen from taking stands on
political matters, l\fayor Burton asked
the speaker lo sit down.
"I personally object to your ruling.
What J am here to talk: about is more
th.an a political issue ," Mrs. Swayne
began before once more being cut of!
by !he mayor.
Council man E. Ray Quigley Jr. came
lo the mayor'!! aid pointing out that
councilmen had agree<i not to address
any issue with "political connotations"
attached to ii.
Mrs. Swayne sat down finally when
Vice Mayor Henry Quigley explsioed
the problem further.
Shortly alter the city began. the coun·
cil unanimously passed a city. law ban·
ning the taking of political stands as
a body.
"It is illegal for this council lo become
in\'olved in political issues," Vice ~layor
Quigley explained.
It would be a misdemeanor violation
for members of the oouncil to have
allc.wed Mrs. Swayne to speak as much
as It \\'ould be a vlolaUoo for f\trs .
Swayne to speak, the vice mayor rtason·
ed.
lmpeacl11nent Sought
-• fiii'IMliN· SCALt SAN DI~ GREEK FLOOD CONTROL CHANNliL WITH· BoOY',
·~c1;m)!ad &Mn Und1t1<tld Si~ S.turday Fll1llty; C1l1nd1r Witch E1t1bll1hed ;nm. l
If yoo're ,.!ling a hou.!e. put it where
houa hunters can find IL -easily.
Call a Daily Pilot ad·vbor on th~ direct
u~ ·'42·5rll, and be where the buyers are, IOokJng.
~ ~
OAKLAND IUPll -The Alameda
County Board of supervisors Tuesday
vottd S.I for a reso lution calling for
impeachment action a(!ains t Presidcnl
Nixon. The board caned oo !he Cllifornla
deleg1Ulon In Congress to move for Im·
peacbmcnt over Watergate issues .
..
•
RESIGNS AS TRUSTEE .
Michael Collini · ...._
Saddleback
OK's Library
Cleaning Tab
A consultant to tell the Saddleback
Community C.Ollege bow to clean Its
new library was hired for $8,,000 Tuesday
night
Irwin B. Ked was hired. by action in ~u~ seSli§n 1o do 111• Job, . which
had t>-discussed wltboot reference
to a particular individual in an open
meeµtig of Saddleback · COllege Board
ol'nua1ffs. ' A 1'n>P9saI ignited. object.ions from
Trmtee Hahm Vogel during a discussion
of crfticism ol. administration action.
Vogel Pointed out the entire tbatter
had been placed on the agenda for
e:xecutive session, which legally only
applies to personnel matters.
Trustee Hans Vogel during a discussion
openly in the public sess)on. Trustee
Donna Beny questioned why 18,000
should be spent to find out bow to
clean a building.
Superintendent Fred Bremer, who had
placed the matter on tbe executive
session agenda, said that cleaning tile
new 100,IJOO.square-foot structure, "il'llO
simple matter."
Bremer said the .consult.ant would
organize which jobs should be done qp
which days and who should do them.
He said the consultant could work with
!he library staff for up to a year.
The concept was approved by a
unanimous vote from the board .
"Things have changed since Dr.
Bremer and I used to take turns dusting
!he telephones and cleaning the johns,"
Business Manager Roy Barletta quipped.
ISRAELI TROOPS
FACE 2ND ENEMY
TEL AVIV (UP I) -The Israeli Anny
ls releasing several reserve soldiers from
active duty so they can fight a mosquito
invasion on the home fronL
A Tel Aviv government spokesman
said the reservists, municipal insect con-
trol experts in civilian life, wifl spray
streams near the city to prevent Oie
mooquito invasion from beco ming a
major onslaught.
Orange Coast
•
Weather
Thursday should be a carbon
copy o( \Vednesday, according to
the weather service -sunny and
warm. Highs in the mid-70:s inland
and at !he beaches.
INSIDE TODA\'
A life.size gallow& htn1ed up
as a school project in occult
Ut1rc1ture at €'oro11a del Mar
1·/igl• t/lis week. Story, Page 12.
Al Tnr s~, 1
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Yl'llf'lltfl't N-n ..
Wtnll N-4
J
..
Farm Group
Of Students
Trip Still On ,
For Kissinger
WASHINGTON (Al') -
'Sick-ouf,
'· I
. • -Day Endeµ
Clemente Bo•1e -• ~· ••
'
--
Will Meet
-.my ol stale Henry R. Kl>
singer'• hip lo China, )>OllpOned
beca .... " the Nl4dle F.all crl!la, hu been racbeduled for
November.
Jn a atmuttaneous announctment
For Cler"ks-~~Necessary • r • • ' • ~
here and in Pekina;. the State .
1'lt El Toro High School cbaptu of Department and the Ch I n e 1 e By TOM BAlll.ft'
Futur:e Farmers of America will hold govttnment s&id ~er will °'., ~""" ...
t Ing t 7 J(l \'isit Peking Nov. 10 • 13. The 11Urty.elght Orange County Superior an organl2:3tiona meet a : p.m. \.-\.-AA ched led oo C.ourt elerks, each ol them ---• with Thursday al the P.1ission Viejo High secretary ue1d .,._-.;i, s u °'~ spend Oct. %6-29 in tbe Oilnese a doclor'S cutificate, art bact CID the
School agriculture building. capital to disaiss increasing con-)Ob Wday after a . one, day ·'tkt~t"
FJ Toro l ligb School students tern· tacts between the ~cmment11. lh•l wa.s delcrlbed by one ablentee
porarily housed on the MVHS campus th=~e~sC:e<frnJted tt;a~~~ as "a little bit of muscle-flexing.''
are encouraged to attend the meeting. •toeoow reached lhe climax of ef· County Cl k Willia E St J bn which •·HJ include election of officers 1' er m · o can-
and an e'pla""tlon of \\'hat F'l.lture foru to arrange a ceru;e.fire in the finned that his working force was at
""' Middle Eest. full stn!l1gth today encl aaid he does
Farmers of Amer1ca. is all about. not Intend to dlscua the sk:k«t wttb
Tabbed for president of the new club his clerks ''except on a strtcUy informal
is Fred Neeban. who last swnmtr woo J • B d basis.
the blue ribbon for ...... at u.. Orange rvme oar .. , am with tllem," he said -y.
County Fair. "! think U..y are "'l' much -.,,.id
Joanne White ts nominated for the s h I and I think U.. abllltles ol what I Eyes C 00 regard as the best court clerical force vice president'• positloo ; M""'tey Car-, In C&Ulotnia tthollld bave been recosnbed
raru. secretary; Teresa Ar b o r , Jong ago."
treourer: Denn1a Craig. reporier, one! r· D st John, his IUperviaory penonnel.
Mike GID, """llnel. nnes, avs and the skeleton =w that kept court ·
Accordlna to 0-alg, Future Finnen ., affairs running Tuesday on a nearly
•--·-ged to select a ....... ~ for normal basis, worked until late Monday ... .,.......,_.. r·,.,...• Irvine Unified School District trustees . ....,t to 'I all that Ole ICbool year, such as ralsing a ._. n16" ... ean up arrears ac-.. ...._ tonight will consider approving new cumulated during the day. "-·· Members of the group plan to tranl school starting times and inslructional St John aakl he doubts there wUl
to Colorado in December to buy sh:· days that would mean up to 1f. mirM.!\es be ant furtber 1lop ·level discussion of 'Se Are¥ .. '
moatb old steers and raiJe them. Each more classroom time fer some s:tud61ts. the ~dttoate until Orange County's Chinese Deputy Foreign Min·
steer costs about $300. Food and Third araders at UniversUy 'Park ·su~ 3()(1'~ .. late this week from ister Chlao Kuan-hua yells
medicinal atppliea for liI months cost 5(bool ~'Ollld undergo the biigest the · l.J .. Superviaors Association of across the room from bis seat
another SDI. schedule change Wlli<r the pro)l08e!I new Calttorn14· <Qnveotion In Redding. in the U.N. Security Council
Students rabe the steers for six syste~ The board went into executive session at Soviet Ambassador Yakov
months, then enter them in competition The children would stan scbQQl at' " Tuesday ~it learned that 38 clerks Malik duriDg a d~bate on the
at the county fair. Livestock aLJCUons 8:30 a.m. instead oI B:15 a.m. m>d leave were absent Imm their desks. But, they So'liet·Americanresolllllon calJ.
follow the lair. school at %:25 p.m. Instead ol 1:111 p.m. ~ to dllcuss U.. Josue during the Membenbtp In Future F~ colts The longer day would be tn effect ftiur regular ~Y meeting although or-ing for peace in th·e Middle
UPI Ttltft!MIO
Two members of Lhe State Board
of Equalhallon staunchly delended the
state's upcoming review of President
Nixon's San'. Clemente e.state a s
"necessary to find out what'• really
jtOiog on7' during a meeting ln N,pp0rt
Beach today. (Related story, l>age 3).
John Lynch, wbo represents most or
Southern California on the board, ·laid . ' there are "many complex ~tlons
relating to the value of the President's
estate and I think il is entirely healthy
for the atate agency to review the work
of the local asseaor oo. a matter of
this ·importaoce:''
'J'be state Board of Equalization, oom-
posed of lour J>emocn\ls elected to their
pcirsts, raised the quesUou_gf~the vajµ~
~--
Shotgun Blast
Injures Hot
Sp~s .. Pa_ir
Three campers escaped serious injury
in the Ortega Hot SpriJ:'.lgs are:& when
one of 1Wo intrUdeH who nnucled
their· van cpened ~ on them with ·--
• • . .
or ttia Pruklent's estate,. before tbt
Orange Cauuty Board of supervisors. : ag~tvo::o~e~~='.;!~ ~
voted 3 to 1 to 'll-111< .~ '.boa"{
to review the eollnt)I ~'J v1hiat~
of the estate. ~
"The talk that this is a partisan effort
lo get a RepubHcan p~t 1\.
hogwash," said William Ben n ·e t t
chairman of the st.ate board. ·~rt
a great defense t() put the public to
sleep, but m're looking into a PoSSf~
crime and that's a non-partisan issue."
Lynch detailed some ol I.be com;
plexitles invol""<i In 1be ~ •
Noting that the value d N110n'I esla~,
has been set at $1.3 mlllioo, Lynd!
said iliere was serious question wbe~
the value of the estate .should be st!l
that low in view of several miJll~
:;r1~ f=~ :ve=~~ments m ,
"If all ol U.. federal improvemenlO
are really security it.ems that will ~
rerno...i when the Prosid&t lea~ <il-fiee, then obvtously Nixon sbiiiild ncil
be asked to pay'tUei on it. · · · "
''But iwbat about an , item like Pte
n~w eJectric: bealq:, s~?" Lynch ·
said. "II wu Jn¥all'!I. ~ tbo. ol4
gas system was c:oosi~. ~~ but 'tl• is dear -that 'the Jiew' · ~.
system will remain ---a privtte dtizm agaiD and tbm it will
U. wlUch Inch., a .~~ to days with-the fifth d~y being a m.inlfuurii .ftdals fil' ttie AFLCIO union were _E_a_s_t. _________ _
the m.tlmwide orpnlzahoo s magazme. 280 minute day. .• F~sent in ~ hearln&' room.
enhance the value .ol llia-Ol\&"'i
Thel"eloce be ought to be l"'Jini properlY
tai:ee on'lt"' Deputies were called to the ~cene LynCb ~Id be does mt mow·~
The nel cbonge wUI ·be 17 minutes PxmlY SUJ>«Vilorf bad earlier offered . _. Tu~y w~~lfol1Y!t_Jlli U..a.y_ ...)hscm is pv;lq tna iiMtil' ~-~ -~tbe...,.,.·<:....roo.rrcLly.---t!le-ii>?4:4~y~ilret "~~ p,....~,p-.. =e~i~·
other ehangee mm no additiooal !Imo. "the ·c1erts bad ro)ecled • pn>pooaJ lhlT-
on the school day to JO or 15 m!nutes would'_ ba1! raised tbelr 41,0»-a· month CENTER
patrolmen reported they bad baited the ting ayst.m or ·~ Jlems~
van on the San Diego Freeway after "the '°"'"l' ...,....,bu ~ept hls,""""4
Urge President
Be Impeached ~
Some UC Irvine students are collecting
signatures on a petiUon urging the im-
peachment of President Nixon.
P.1ore than 200 signatures were col-
lected during the f1rst day of the effort,,
tht campus newspaper New Unl'm'Sity
"'"""'· The Committee for the Impeachment
of Richard f.1. Nixon has been established
as an official student government com-
mittee, but persons opposed to the actton
are advised they may counter the peti-
tion drive.
Armando Banuelos, president o f
ASM>eiated ~tudents of UCI 11id. "ASUCI
among its other responsibilities, i!
a platform for student advocacy.
"Anyone wlshi.ng to counter lh1s peti-
ticn may do JO by contactinf the
ASUCI," U.. Newport S..ch ""'°'said.
Completed petilions .,. to be forward-
ed to offices of Orange County Represen-
tatives and the state's Senate delegation.
School Bus Hit
In Laguna Beach
A school bus carrying S5 Tustin High
School students wa.&: involved ln a minor
traffic collision Tuesday afternoon ln
Laguna Canyon Road, about 500 yards
north of Broadway.
The California lligbway P a t r o 1
reporttd no injuries occurred in the
accident.
A CHP spokesman said a small foreign
car driven by Randal M. Taylor, 17,
or 31366 P.tonterey, South Laguna pulled
into the !OUth bound travel lanes from
a private driveway and collided wllh
the right front er the bus.
Mlnor damage was d<lne to the Com-
munity Charter bus. driven by Patsy
L. Vanmatre, 31. of Garden Gro,·e. The
right side of the car was damaged.
The Tustin students we re coming lo
a sports event in Laguna Beach.
•
DAILY PILOT
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added-or fi ve minutes: subtracted:---salirles by 1.5 ~ • • • noting that U.. vehicle bad been damag. ciri the Nixon esla~ .,.,..i ancj we .hl1'
ed b f,_ been unable to review them. · ·-~·· .
The 9Chedule calls for no changes 'Ibe clerb feel that their salaries Y gun u~. .... . .. '•
at University High School aod a 'slltbt sbould. be at Jeasi comparable to the idea of single manbgement of the center. 'Ibey sald Dale Pearson, 20, of ns · ~ . ..~
Rosa St., San Clemmte, bad been shot p,... P ... J° ;• modification ol Rancho San Joaquin $1.SSS a month enjoyed by Loa Angeles
Intermediate Sehool. The cbMle calls County Superior Court dertl.
for a starting time cl 7:45 a.m. rather · But a spokesman sald todly thal lhe
The JRposal by lhe rounty ealb for
the university medical school to lease
the center. It would take over the facility
three times and a male companion ideo-, ,.,
tified as Loa Angeles attorney. Lawrence W:JRJN G • • • '' than 7:30 a.m. and a finishing time real reaJOD behind tlitlr decision to
ol. 2:15 instead of 1:50 p.m. stay out Tuesday stemmed from what
Other items of the board's 7:30 f .m. he sakrwa.s the refusal o( U1e county's in Its present condition and make all
Randolph Jobnsoo, st. bad beeo sllot • ,,
meeting ln the University H g h personnel department to a~ to medla~ improvements necessary to ~.lne it up
multipurpose room A include : ilon' Ol the disPut~ to Wliftr'Sity standards. ·
-Discussion of current planning for The clerks will meet In the courtbow:e It has been estimated that ft will school racilities. Thursday night to con.sider possible •
-. ~sion of district polldes slrike action if the counJ:y remains ad.a· cost $9.~ million fo._·remodel tbe. ~ty
govemJns releosed<ime lof students 'wbo mant on ils denial ol mediation. hospital 8"" the f1lilds,'llo~ ·~·pro-wi~ ·to partldpate ln rellglous or ~81 '1'tey' have a good case.~· Sl John vlded fot by the st.ate:~ • ~ ... ·:·: ·
trainlng. . commented. "'nley are setili.th in-the · ~ · • ..... A-..PLtiic.~ over a proposed list o(:~ oo•'JUf. ..... ~, •Vnlertbea ' ~~
easm<nr 11\al>ortlon or Rancho San r think lhat u-1 vel'l' ~~Jliiri "P•f !Or ..,a'H., . the t,
Joaquin land f<r coostructioo. by tbe *ben one con&ldera I.be caliber ol eu.r the only duty .it has under 1§.w now
City of Irvine of an extension or Orange County workers." · in relation to the medical center.
Michelson Drive.
' -" ~. . ' .
U.N. Day Hliiled
Along Coast-
Except in Irvine
In many cu;es along the Orange Coast
and throughout the U.S. today is United
Nations Day.
In Irvine, J10y;ever, the day carries
no official significanc-e.
Last week Irvine councilmen determin-
ed that a resolution proclaiming U.N.
Day in Irvine wouJd violate the city's
ordinance forbidding co u n c i 1 en·
dorsement of "political matteri."
Councilmen voted 4 to I to deem
U.N. Day a political matter. Vice Mayor
Henry Qui1ley was the lone opponent.
Be said he was prepared. to approve
a resolution of support for U.N. Da y
pro\iding it suggested there is a need
to review the U.S. share of financing
for !he world body.
Coast Residents
Lose Equipment
To Burglars
Coriilt)r" Pl~ners Approve
Tract Map in Viejo, 4-0
A tract map calling for 444 dust.tr-type
condominium dwelling units and 13
single-family detached homes on 112
acres in A-1isslon Viejo was approved
4 to o by U.. Orange County Planning
Commission Tuesday.
The tract is located west of Marguerite
Pari<w>y and south ol U.. Missiool Viejo
Golf Course. Oso Parkway ls to the
north of the rol\lng-to-steep aettage.
Present plan projections call for begin-
ning building in November, 1975, with
full occupancy by April , 1977.
Mission Viejo Company planners said
some 256 school-age children will be
added to the Capistrano Unified School
Di!trict by the deveJopmen t.
One elementary school site is included
on the plan.
A total of 15.4 acres of parks will ·
be included in the tract, aild the 'private
La Sierra Recreation Centu i1 directly
south ol the project. .
'rtle Department or Harbors, Beaches.
and Parks recommended disapproval of
the 15 acres of parks to be deeded
to the county because the terrain in
the opinion of department represen-
tatives is too hllly for adequate public
use.
But planning department spokesmen
said the open area is an attempt by
the applicant, the Mission Viejo Com-
pany, to preserve the character of the
'hilly site by "slmulatlng natural contcurs
and ridges while attempting to provide
usable open areas."
Planning commi:micners recommended
that until the park question is resolved,
responsibility for the park maintenance
should be left in the hands of the
developer.
OPIN ' .. '
twice in the Hot Springs fracas. ..
Officers said Barbara Ann :1'9chirtw1,
25, of Santa Moo1ca, wbo bad been
camping with the two men, was ~
ed.
Sberiff°• capt. James Broadbelt today
said none ot the wounds inflicted oo
the two men we.re serious and they
were released aft« treatment at the
Orange a.Dtty Mfiillcal center. .
Btoadbelt ialcl the trio tOid his Jn.
vesti.P.tors that they were camping in
the popular bot spnap area wlleo t1ley
heard,nobes tomJng franl..the directloo
of their ·parted 'llD. '~ . ·' TheY said tbey ran to the yan tn
time to see two meo loadlng the trio's
tape r<ee>r<ler and other peraonal equip-
ment into their own vehicle.
Officen said the three victims then
pursued the burglars' car ln their van
but had abandoned the pursuit and were
turning around when the burglars swung
their car around and beaded for the
trio at high speed.
John!On said one of the men Jeaned
out of the car window, emptied his
shotgun at the van and then reloaded
while the trio heard the shots strike
their vehicle. • •
Johnson ·and Pearson leaped from the
van and rolled into nearby bushes. Both
men were struck by the secood vo1ley
fired by the gunman.
Officers said they returned to their
vehicle and were on their way to report
the incident to authorities and. seek treat-
ment when they were spotted by a
patrolling CHP officer.
Burglars coocentraUng on lhe theft
of stereo eqt;Upment found exactly whal
they were looking for Tuesday night
in almost identical breakim in the South
Laguna and Laguna Hills area.
Just Anfved-.l.qe
~If Spellll
SWin Slits & Trnb
Water W• Kick Bms
oote in the beck« the swUch or phag. '""
LeVciir Said a 'kind ol :'Cllinest ~
pmle'" ineclianisin grahi the wire iJl!I
1iolch it till>!.
Howeve!'. the · backwlring -aold I~
be legal for copper wiring -bu• -
found to cause ~.ems when Ult ~
inserted in the.• bllf.~ alQrlJnum. 1 ' I -'
The issue came fln!ard.u"""1lCiln>en ~ IJilcO -nMi!ons'llr the
electrical. o>de_..rtnr, -. .\'!
Irvine.' \). 1, ' • ~ streo&1h~,,!(, !J"li?.'!' ·~ .. week$..'8"~.~~ .. -~~.ti!
ailOpl "on """""""' • . ..., ""' ol coppef wlre in lrYiDe. j , l ~·'· ..•
Te>til!>OllY Tuesday night, however, led
cqll!ldimeo I<> delay until .. ~~
13 meeting further actioo on the.,....,._....
code changes. .• ... .. ' • • '
They Wero told chaoget lll the typOi
of coonedor boxes .av1Uable .for , uA
with aluminum wire eliminate the safet)'
hazard. LeVoir said that recent testi'
of new alum.inwn wire ~ CODDtcton
suggest there . ta no lec;bli~· nlet1
problem in use of aluml\Ulm Wirf.,, ·1
He has some "&Ut level" reservations·
about the use of alwninWn ~~
howev~, Le V qi.r said. . . 1
Councilmen Will studf ma t.e.r i •I•
presented by the Alumlnum proponentf
before finaliz.irig the electrical codes. ~
Also· at i.!mie is the · 'bilitf tJe
city Tnigbt be.n ~use r rioo-metaWc
sheathed cable -Rofuex -and ogt
for a minimum standard1requitjnc: fltj;.
ible aluminum tubing to protect home
wiring.
Soccer Sboes
llnzls-11.95
Canadas-12.95
La Paz-1(.95 -
•• .
• ....... IUMDAT
Sheriff's deputies said stereo equip-
ment and spe&kers valued at $450 were
taken from the garage at the home
of Mary Ellen Goodrich. 23, of 23601
Las Grandes, Laguna Hills. by intruders
\\·ho manipulated the lo"•er comer of
the locked garage door until the. bolt
slipped out of position.
Rescue Workers
Free 2 Trap-ped
Men iii Mine Aditlas Tellis Shoes Super Lite-17.50
~ Pu1'P9se Shoes-10.95 ta t7.95
Beb Wolfe SUper Pru llasllet6al ·
Slloes-9.95
......
Intruders had an easier time at the
ho me ~ Daniel Bruce Pehkdf, 18, of
32016 Sunset Drive, South Laguna, where
a stereo and four speakers vaJued at
$300 \!.'ere stolen.
Officen said lhe burglars entered the"
garage 1t the Pehkoff bomt via an
unlocked side door.
Fuel Blast Kills 1
At Na~·al Station
SAN DIEGO (AP) -One civilian
fireman was killed and another Injured
TueM111y vthen th' tank of a Jct fuel
truck exploded at the San Dlqo Naval
StAllon. otflclall1 said. A na vy spoktsman
said the explosion occurred as the men
wert 1tandlng on the J,~gallon tank
which had been tmptltd of liquid jct
fuel and was being fUled with carbon
dloxl<lt.
00\VNIEVJLLE {UPI ) -Rescue
workers dug tons ol d!rt and mud away
from the entrance of aa old gold mine
late Tuesday night lo free two men
"''ho had been trapped 33'h. hours by
a landslide.
Air compressors had been used to
pump oxyte:n into the Brush Creek Mine
four miles west or this old minlng town
in the Sierra Nevada.
The Sierra County sheriff's offkt said
!hat • heavy rainf1ll lripered the
landslide with blocked the mine'• en-
trance Monday afternoon.
Both the l'tk'Ued men -Eni>I
Christman ol' GrflSI V11ley Incl Rlchlnl
Brookl -nre reported ln good con-
diUon although cold Jnd damp. Bot.b
are profeM:lonal mint.rt.
A caretaker, noting they had not
retum«i to their &Mcie oo lt'hedule,
sounded the alarm that broUjht out
25 diggtrs.
As they dug, lho)' "ere encouraged
by tapplng .:iunds from the trapped
men.
Mia's or Lallies'-18.95
T11t1111 TenlJ Slllles
Men's .. Latles'-1&.95 r
Caanrse Tnis Slrees l.llies-7.95
lllea's-1.95 . '. T~llmSi
Matt's Tellis Si*1s & Shits
Aciylc Wann Up Sults-21.95
24.95-3(.95
Racket StliRPI
Sqaasti llackets-Tenris Racllets
Wilsen--hnn-Dan Tennis Bals Dz. 7.95
Opell 9 6 ~ nday
(
All Star Basketmll SllliA.9S .
-
538
)
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Saddlehack Report
Sadd.leback Community College apparently is well
eq":lpped to , provide lhf: avcraee student, with a sound,
basic education, according to a recently released accredi·
talion report by a nine-member ovaluation team rrom
the \Vestern Association of Schools and Colleges.
The reporf: finds strength ~ a good general and
transfer education, but-says the college is deficient in
community services, in recruitment of and service to
"disadvantaged" student!, in creation ot Innovative cur-
riculum or an atmosphere that would allow its develop-
ment.
The accreditation report is in the main favorable.
It states that the Mission _Viejo college has made head-
way with adding students to the curriculum committee,
evening programs, modern equipment, a well-admin-
istered budget. good use of "exceptional quality" temp·
ary facilities and the beginnings of a vocational educa-
tion program.
Significantly, the report notes the five-year-old
college was "born in a period of considerable campus
unrest" and its administration initiated strict controls
and restrictive policies, which today, it suggests, the col·
lege would be-better off without. The administr11itors and
trustees, complimented in. the report for their dedication,
should pay heed to its recommendations.
Upper Bay Priorities
After years or litigation and political infighting, a
solution to the Upper Newport Bay issue is literally
there for tbe taking l>Y the Orange County Board of
Supervisors.
The proposal put forth by the California Resources
Agency calls for the state Department of Fish. and Game
to take over immediate possession of the Back Bay up·
lands and wetlands. Details of the purchase from the
Irvine Company could be worked out over a 10-year
period. Any lands still unacquired at the end of that time
would revert back lo the company.
This concept, a sort of "buy now, pay later" ap-
proach, should be aceepted immediately by the super·
visors. \Vhether it will, however, remains in doubt.
Supervisors stalled tbe deal last week, instead va t·
ing to fund $30,000 worth of legal research as groun~
work tor ,a lawsuit over title to three marsh islands in
the bay. If they decide to press tbe suit, it could muck
up the works again for years to come. And that, appar·
ently, is the intent of some supervisors.
Some supervisors also are complainin~ that the
method by which the stilte proposed to appraise the bay
will favor the Irvine Company to the amount of several
million dollars. The logical implication of this talk is
that these supervisors may want to delay accepting the
state offer until they can conduct an appraisal on their
own.
Any more delay in approval of the offer because of
either a lawsuit or the appraisal would be a serious n1is-
take. The state offer includes a promise to carry out a
proper title search'and to abide by all the accepted rules
of land appraisal. There is JJO reason to believe the state
would not do a fair and honest job on this work.
There is ont other consideration. Ecologically
speaking, Upper Newport Bay is in trouble. It is laden
with silt and 'water pollution poses an increasingly ser-
ious threat. In view of this, it is imperative to achieve
public ownership as rapidly as possible.
When. supervisors meet next Wednesday to con·
sider the state offer, their top priority should be to
start the whole matter moving. They may want to attach
stipulations to the state offer -they may even want to
pu·rsue a title challenge of their own -but they should
accept the state offer while it still stands.
There are many proble(lls to be resolved, but pub-
lic possession of the bay should be taken now -a con-
cept fl,\IIY acceptable to the Irvine Company. The details
~an come later. 'Leftovers? What leftovers?' SB
-Uon'tBe
Misled By
Manners
De ar
Gloomy
Gus
Hu11w.~-S11cl~elies' Thatiktess, Hea1•tftreaki1t9 loft ---
Owners to Blame for Animal ·Woe's
Looka as if some of th<>R leaden
who'd rather be dead than red
would a190 rather be corrupt than
bankru~! •. ::
W.H.O.
I met a distinguished literary figure Gl•m., 0111 c-1· ••• 11.1M11ttec ,11., , RU•• .,.. • .t -ffl••ll'f rell•t 1119 nany years ago. arid was so ,awed ~ .. ,... -· ,.,... -·"' '"d impressed by him thi.t 1 babbl~d _.,, .. ~· 0111. oaino ~Hot. ~ke a schoolboy and feft ture he beVel' ' 1 l
wanted to meet me again. . . .
But later w~n my first book came looking for snubs, expecting to be dt~
>ut. I recel;ed a delightfully warm letter ~ked. And this def~nstve attitude brings
rrom him, tellinl'-1Pe f»J. mtq tiel": on Jbe VefJ; rea~10n It Is looking for.
idrnired my wor~1 ~nd how . muq,-.~.,,,.;.S~rangers' too oftiit tr.eat ~ ~, way
had enjoyed our brief meeting -yesrs We expect them tO. •
ago People who think they hav6'"tnemies,"
I ·was thunderst'ruck, and immensely for instance, are .usually s~fferlng from
pleased. And bis letter set -rµe to won-this so~! of delu~1on. They ~8'lne that
dering bow many ·<If q.'I -'go ~rough !hese e!lemles . are deeply ~volv~
life thinking that certain people l1islike in .~lot.ting agrunst the~ 'Of • i n
us, when, in fact, they do not rdislike humiliatlllg ther_n, or ta.Ikinf. aga_ms,~ s at all them -when, 1n truth, the ene.JnJes
u -are not even aWare of the eilltence
SOJ\.IE PEOPLE are shy with new of the feud.
9cquaintances, and thus they seem to
be frigid and disapproving. Others simply THE ONLY sensible approarh is to tis-
have a naturally gruff manner, which sume that most people will like you. un·
we mistakenly take to mean impatience ltss·you give them cause not to ; aod to
\1itb us. And still others are just vague a(Cfpt the fact that some people would
about people, and what we think Ii not like you no molter what f<IU \\'ere
a snub is merely absent-mindedness. or did. Trying to ma,ke everybody like
I have had the experience or people you is eiha.ustii\g , and impossible of
telling me, after we had got to know achievement. . ~ost of . our tr6uble is
each other better, that they "'·ere con· our egocentncify. which . ~kes for
vinced 1 loathed them upon 1~ ,fi~•t granled ~t ~~le are thinking about
meeting -which wa!i not at an·t11e nM: ~ us m~ more ithan they . re,aUy are.
1r a man is reserved it does not mean In most caaes, they are thinking about
he Is passing adve~ judgment tipon '-'" them!elves,' just as we are. None of
you ; just as often It means be is a~ld us. is as important to others as we
of your judgment of him. . thmk . ":'e are.; and what ~e.. construe
as dislike is most <1ften uulifference,
111ERE ARE some people., UD· or fear, <1r self·absorption. "But it is
fortunately, who. are mildly paraoold hard to realize this 'when we come
in this respect. Tbct· wa1k lhrodgh life face to face.
To the Editor:
At least once a week , someone (who
is either thoroughly ignorant of the facts
of the surplus anlmaJ problem or refuses
to aceept the facts due to concern for
only their one animal) calls. or comes
in, calling our employes "murderers."
THERE ,HAVE been many tele.vision
showll." much. newspaper publicity about
the lack or homes for the animal popula-
tion. The Orange County Animal Shelter.
and every other pound and humane
society,-lries to inform the general public
of the ".llumber or· animals havin~ lo
be killed daily, yet there are those
who come in and become enraged
because we carmot keep arid guarantee
their one animal a home.
We have even had people who threaten-
ed to sue us because their animal was put
to sleep -yet that same person would
not even pay the cost of a newspaper
ad <1r take the Lime to try to place
it in a good home. The animal tvas
their responsibility but they chose not
to be responsible and when our errorts
failed at placing it we 1vere called
the "killer". We spend around a hundred
dollars a month in advertising. A cost
we really cannot afford. We have
volunteers v.·ho al101v their private
numbers to be used. because our Animal
Care Center telephones are busy con·
sh.ntly with cruelty complaints and
requests for help for low-cost spaying
and neutering and ill or injured animals
belonging to those who cannot affo rd
the services of a private veterinarian.
EVERYONE at the Animal Care Center
grieves over the terrible waste and suf-
fering of animals born only to <lie unde r
the wheels Of a car, mistreated and
chained for life, or dumped and grieving
at any of the many pounds. For every
animal we personally place, on average
Who Was Archibald Cox?
Tiie fo llowing coLU'1\1l 1ntttled ·'Rt ·
member Archt~Q911'i"--was written
by Charles ftfcttlb1.f"3-{ t,•r~h9rtty
before Pre.rident N'f%Qn'" Ju . ,e ffi~·
1nissaL of the Watergate prose cutor.
lit tl1e light of ,.ecent events. McCabe's
commenU take 0 1t a tJew interst.
..
(cHARLES MceABEJ
aJJOul the conduct of his dutie.S and
respensibi!Uies ." This means Mr, Co:t If you are wondering If tbe Watergate teally has the ,free -hand that special
scandal may have be<:ome a dead letter, prosecutors are allvays as.sured lbcy
forget it. Forget It good. h b in r · hi "The serpent Ulat will gnaw tOUl·\bie avq; ut ., a~t never q41te ac eve. ' . vitals," is the ~·ny• MORE IMPORTANT to remembtr Is
one eloquent laW)'el' that .. Mr. Co:ic iii a Democrat. and a
friend of mine ,dH-: damned partisan one at that. 1111 starr
cribes the lJl · contains on1y a bahdflll ot Republicall.!I.
bureaucracy = ;T\iQtlye key :rh~rs have ~d con·
prosecutor Ar ~ons with"'tbe 1\ennedys if1 tJ;to pasL
Co:ic bas bullt · tlP • ~ne-it wo~ not be goOd taste to
'vithln the JUiUco· .that u.e. prosecutor and Qls staff
Department to lnves-~ J otit. tO Jtl lift. Nixon, jt Is "bard
tlgate chargG1 !I ·· 1~·see ~·~truth could .l>e'Jolherwise.
comiptioo in ~ Mr. 'Nl1.on 1~cl/'f!ppeat1 to think so.
Nixon Admlnls\rali.., ~ tum \>"\ll the Ai .,:m...., b .. oboervtd ill the llolilext,
lindlllJS to a se'rli.1 or grand juritti+.· even paraoolds bavt enemies:.
As of last couiit w. cox; • 1Was It 11 a:oOd to remember .the climale
John F. Kennedy's sollcltor.genertl • WhCn Mr. Cox wes riamed to his job.
rrom 1060 to 1960, had n 1tefr of nearly The Nixon house or cards was tumbling
A hundr~ and I proposed. budget or c:k."11. ll got so bad Lhat poUlical
$2.3 mllhon for hia first year of opera· strBteaY arter the 1estlmony of John ~n . He now has five task rorces looking Dtan, dictated that everybody should ·
into: The Wale~gate break·ln and cover-get the shiv exce pt the Popci. up, the activiti es of the White llouse -, . plumbers. campalgr. financing, politlcal Mr. EIUot Richardson, "ho bns 9n
espionage Ind the lnta1»1>us ITT case. honest name, and ~n honest face, and Ls a Boston b~a hm1n and therefo re
In theory automatlCall)' above the sort
of trickery practiced by the Santa
Barbera-Pasadena mofl050 was called
In to lend an odor of 1anctity to the
White }louse corpee. J{Jchardson ap-
parently chose Cox on the theory that
If O>x cou)d exculpate fii r. Nixon, the
f\tR. COX'S guldelint:1 constitute nn
exlraordlnary mandate, just about un·
precedented in Wahslngl on p61tl cl•l
history. lie has madt It clear that
"the apeclal prosecutor will determin e
whether and to v.'hat extent he wil l
in!9nn or oonsu lt tM Altomey General
" t
President had to be clean as boiled
rice and much nicer to look at.
THAT LOGIC may · be just too good ·
to be true. Up to now, Mr. Cox has
been about as visible as a beaver, and
abolil as occupied. \Vhen those grand
juriea start to send up their lndictmeots.
there will be proper hell to pay , no
matter what lhe courts dec ide about
lifr. Nixon's famous tapes.
The scum that sltrfaccd , w I 1 h
\\'atergate will continue to pollute the
pubJJc gaze ror months and even yeani
lo come. Mr. Cox-has made it clear
he dOes not share tilr. Nixon 's holy
view of himself -tha t his sins are
not lho.!e of other mep, lhi t the
ConsltltuUon was specially drafted to
keep him out of jail ii he shoo.Id do
s<nnclhing that would put other men
behind bars.
If Mr. Nixon hns been obstru~tlng
jwtice, and that is the large unwriuen
charge before the American peop}.e:' 'the
ronner llarvard Law prof would seen1
uniquely lhe man lo nail him to the
must.
TH~ ONLY TmNG that can stop
Mr. Cc:ix would be pressure rrom Mr.
Nlxon lo have ti1 r. Richardson sack
hlm. This is just about the <1ne thing
thtt.l Mr. Nixon doesn't have the poll!lca!
chutzpa h to attc.mpt. Such a move \Vould
mean the covt r·UP of the cove r-up. That
\.\'Ot1ld be just too much. Jt might cnri
up v.·lth !he President being hanged
by hla own tightrope. ,
Whtn r..1r. Cox took ove r as specinl
prosecuto r he said, "I hold the v.·hlp
hand." I'd soy so, and would add th!U
Watergatt may sink ~1r. Nixon yet.
,\
( MAILBOX J
Letters froni Teaders are welcome.
Nonnallt1, writers sliould co11vey their
mesro ges i11 300 ·words or less. The
right" to condense letteTs to fit sPace
or elirninote libeL ·is reseroed. All let-
ters 1n11~t i11cl11de sig11ature and ma il·
irig oauress but narnes may be with·
held 011 request if sufficient r.easo1i
i.• apparent. Poetry will ·1tot be pub-
lislied.
of 2S comes in ; there is simpl y no
guarantee for any an imal turned in
regardless of breed or pedigree. Our
only guarantee is a hwnane death by
injection, if no home is available.
I KNOW this letter \1.·ill not touch
those 'vho se!fishl.Y consider only their
one animal but perha ps it v.·ill help
others to understand the God·awful job
\re . or any1 other humane society, has
lo do. r should include the public pounds
too because they are only the re because
or irres ponsible animal owners.
Our work is difficlllt. heart-breaking.
Every ye ar humane societies lose true,
dedicated humanitari ans because <If the
almost endless grief associated \vith this
\\'Ork, added to their abuse by a segment
of the general public. Jn the long run.
on ly the animals suf fe r due to this
loss.
~Iost sincere ly,
JEAN BAUSCH,
Executive Director
Animal Care and Humane
Education Center
~I is 11 r1de r s t.a11di11g
To the Edito r:
I v.•as distressed by lhe mis un·
derstandi ng sho'm by a letter you
recently received fro m John J aeger.
FIRST HE ' indica tes that the City
of Irvine has the highest tax rate 1n
lhe co unty. That is clea rly in error.
\\le •have the second lowest ,,·ith ooly
the city or Yorba Linda lower th an
our 33 cents. If you consider all services
tha t municipal ities usually provide, our
rate is the lov.•est in the coun ty at
81 cents (.3.'J-city, .It-county library, and
.37~ounty fi re.)
J1o\vever, rnore importantly. he implies
that the city council is 1\•asting
everyone's ta:< money because a voca l
Quotes
\V. Pudlnskl, Commissioner. Calif.
Jlighway Patrol on trend to1var d drunk
driving trials -"Insistence upon a tri al ,
in cont rast to the co rrunon procedure of
11<'cepting a plea of guilty to a lesser
charge. is a progressive and vital step
because it recognizes the importance of
firm. con~istent adjudication.·•
Elsie ~lacCallnm, S.F. -"f{C; Jlenry
Kissangcr·s appoin lment as Sccrelary or
State. H's about time n 'foreign accent'
has been taken out of ~ond class
citizenship."
Tobeylynn Birc h -Sanla Cruz. on
need of hrlp for !'l11icldc·pronc -"The
on ly way thJJt any or us ci:ln have tht ~u1s
to stand up and mllrch 1hrou,1?.h lire is by
knowing th ol we hav<i the support and
IO\'C of thOSe i'lround us."
"The way things look now. the cost of
food In tile lai;t thr~ months of this yt:'ar
might cven be less 1han in July lhrough
September.'' -Agriculture Secretary
~:arl L. Buts.
minority wan1s a city ambulance. The
sum expended v:ill seem a paltry sum
if it saves a dozen li\'e..s in a year.
~pecially if it is your own life that
is saved .
AS A representative of the people ,
it seems clear to me that a majority ,
ol citizens wants the ambulance. TbGse
"'ho wish to make their views known
should speak to us before the declsi<1n
is made -that's v.'hen it has a chanoe
to affect the direction of our policy.-·
HENRY QUIGLEY
City Councilman
No t School's Job
To the Edilor:
"But they showed Presi dent Nixon
\vith Hitler as a crony and they ricficulPd
him like he \.\·as a clown over the
school public address system . . .to
absolutely all the kids."
So said my incenred Uni High
daughter.
"How did the kids re.act?"
"They just laughed and thought it
\\'as great."
"Didn 't any of 1hcm think this \.\"as
a cheap shot . . . at least unfair
and even disrespectful of the office of
President?"
"No, everyone I talked to seemed
to agree that Nixon's just like Hitler.''
""'HEN THE school gives a faction
\\ith such an extreme point of view
the use o( its facilities doe sn't it al so
give equal lime to the opposite point
of vie v.·?"
"No. in fac t some or the teachers
even hung posters of their candida tes
up in the classrooms and jokingly told
the kids they \vouldn't get good grad.?s
unless they \•oted for them.·•
"And , of course. they presented both
sides, being good teachers, didn 't they?"
I asked.
"Dad. are you na ive. You must have
been brought up in a democracy. or
something."
Please, schools, no more prosetytizlng
of our children.
Keep your cotlonpicking hands off their
convictions.
And. if you really want to change
them , give lhen1 BOTH sides.
In a nu tshell, educate them. don"l
v.•arp them .
R. L. CLARK
VN F lofl
To the Editor :
Re : The United Nations nags bt'ing
displayed in Cl ty Council Chambers.
IF THE CITY Councils lnsist on
displaying 1he UN nag in their city
halls. arc they awa re tha t the UN
Charter is the supre me la w o( the land
(A rt. 6 Sec. Z of !he U.S. ('()nstltut ionl.
and il has been upheld by the Su preme
Court that' all treaties su1)CrS4.'<le •he
Constitution?
\Vouldn 't it then follow that the ITN
nag. representing a One \Yorld1 Organ·
ization. be displ&ytd in a position abo\'e
the national nag, 11s the national flag
is now displayed $1bovc the state nag?
\\'0\JLD IT the n 11lw fol10\v that coun-
cil met;lings \\'ould be opened with a
!!alute to !he One "rorld flag . leading
C!\'entuoll y to a more appropriate and
rele\·ant lnternntional tlnthcm?
ROSE CORRIGAN
611 1t P rol eC'flo 11
To the l~ilor :
The newspaper carrif'd these? s1orles
on ~tondlly, Oct. 15 -"T\\O yoong n1c11
critically \\OUnded in on txchange or
11unfire; !!lxteen·ycar-old arreste<t in con·
nection v.·ith shoo\lng; bodir:s of three
,I
shooting victim.! were found; a lf'OUP
or boys ,_ .. ere questioned by police in
shooting epree; Ri81to WC1man paralyzed
and reported in critical condition; man
killed in market; bus driver woonded
while driving" -an appalling ,number
of incidents for one day's reporting!
I AM DEEPLY distressed Civet. the
innumerable amount of citizens who
do posses:S guns as I'm' sure •Jnany
other people are. Its the age-old guestion
of who lobbies the longesl and ,hardest.
but WHEN ARE gun Controls C<ting
lo pass the Legislature!
Ul There ar Ca( tttoo man)' Ian(. :wan
that have re'sudCd in ihe !.1¥Jol.iria or
innocerit victims (some Ot \ hem
children); lhe{e are too many deranged
souls looking for "kick" with a pistol
or shotgun ; there are too many upset
lovers and husbands ( wi vu too) who
take revenge with a gun. '
I HAVE heard the saying, "I need
a gW1 for protection." To the contrary,
"'e need protection against guns :._their
sales and usage. We must, as indignant
citizens, do something to Prevent this
rapidly increasing, senseless killing.
Our Legislature may take action If we
protest loudly enough.
NANCY PENNEY
BlrC'h Credit
To the Editor:
Your editorial.obituary on the demise
of the John Birch Society could, and
in my opinion certainly should have
included some complim~ntary
statements because that Sotiety has
s1·rely not been all bad. ·
YOU SPEAK of the prolonged period
of hysteria maintained by JBS.
You call attention to some efforts
and beUers on the part of JBS that
many people thought ridiculous.
CUT YOU FAIL to give the JBS
credit for having alerted Irl(lre U.S.
citizens to the objectives and dangers
of oommunism lhan any other oraantz.a-
tion.
These objec1ives and dangers still ex·
isl. But \\'ho do "·e have now to tell
us so~
DON HUDDLESTON
Columns Help
To the Editor:
I like many of the well-thought-out
editorials and special articles, such as
oo Agne1v and the Edison plant expan_,\on.
Your col u1nns from varying viewpoints
help give informaHon so that we can
more readily make up our own minds
on issues.
LEONARD WRIGHT
OIAM61 COAST
DAILY PILOT
Robert N. \Vetd, PubU.htr
Thomas Ktef1il, Edi'°7'
Barbara Kreibich
Editorial Page Editor
The t<di torl•I Piiie' Of 1he Dtlly
Pii<Jt teek11 to Inform. and lrtlMuJat•
~11dl!n: by J)l'Henlinc en this ~· dlvrne commtntary'on tosilct OI in. '""'st by 1Yndle•ttd ~Untnisl•-.nd
rtrtoon!1ts, by providing a fonim for
ttadtr1' views ancl by prnentlnc thla
nc:w11pa~r·1 opinioN and ~ on
C'\IM'Ml lopin.. The t"dltorlal op\Monl
ol the o.ily l''ilot appear only ln tti.
c.•chtori.l mtumn at the "'9 ot 1f1e
Pace. OPi.nlonl eicpreaed ht tile etJ.
l1mnt1ta and c:aMoonlstc and >ftttr
\\Tilmi are their °"11 and noftdoneo..
mtnt of thtlr vle!'A.. by 'the Dall)
J>tlot shoukl ~ Wft'ttd..
Wednesday, October 24, U73
QUEENIE By Phil lnterlandi
oi: ... r-a......., .. i.....1t1J.w..w,...--a.
"I don't know whal lhey do there. Nobody's ever in."
No Cutbacks
County Flights
Won't Be Pared
By \\'ILLlA~f L. SCHREIBER
Of flle Dally ~Hot 5l11f
The twt> airlines serving
Orange County Airport have
no immediate plans to cut
b,fck on flights to conserv e
fuel , an action taken last week
· by three of the mtion 's big-
gest carriers.
'
Officials at Air canromia
and H"l!heo Airwest said loday
tnei.· a:::.. vi~! 1·asn'l been af-
fected yet by PrMld ''ll Nix-
on's mandatory fuel allocation
program.
UNITED, TWA and
American Airlines agreed last
week to trim a total of 63
fiigtos a day from 10 major
routes to cut fuel consumption.
But Max Van Dordrecht, ex-
ecuU•e vice president of
finance for Air Cal, II.id the
fuel crisis was a good excuse
!or the big alrllbes to dump "exceu ~ti. -. ··
· "Some ot the big airlines
are so far over flight dl~ty
already that this ~biCk..'1.1t
''\lelp them Mreamllae lhlDp "
Van Dordrecht said. 1'We cSori-t
have that problem . We could ·
use even more flights."
THE CONTROVERSIAL jet
flights out d Orange County
Airport are limited by the
county Board of Supervisors
through contracts with the
airlines.
Van Dordretht said Air Cal
Is not on the allocation yet
because it Is an int ra.state
ca rrier with no routes outside
Callfomla.
.. We'll just keep on doing
v.·hat we've been doing unti1
'A'e hear something new," he
said. "Our fuel supplier (Shell
Oil Company) says there
hasn't been any change so
far and we hope nothing will
change lhat."
C I V I L .~RONAUTICS
Board 'oUlcials say the
average load on the three
airlines cu tting back on lheir
service ls about 30 to 50 per-
cent full. Cutting back on
fights -and operating costs
-will increase the loads and
airline proflbl, the CAB said.
Airwest public relations: of-
ficer Larry Utchfield said to-
day any decision to cut back
on flights will be based on
the outccme of meetings
starting today in Washlngtoo
D.C., during which airlines
will dlsel1'0I the fuel crisis.
"So far w"e have oot done
anything because it would be
ptemature,'' Utchfield said.
"We have been operallnir
since July on what we call
a '1llif1.~e1 that saves .~.:tn~~~
LITcam:LO EXPLAINED
that weather factors, fllgbt
condlUon.s, type of aircraft
and other factors are fed into
a computer which determines
the optimum flight capacity
and fuel load of each Alrwest
jet. He said that process Is
called lhe flight profile.
Another Airwest spokesman,
who asked not to be M:leatified,
said he thinks Airwest wi11
cul back on flights before Air
Cal because Airwest Oles oul-
of-statc. The Hughes jets fly
to ri.1exioo, Las Vegas and
several Southwestern states.
Lease-purchase
Guidance Center
Funding Chosen
By JOANNE REYNOLDS
Of 1'M Ololly ,.!lot ll•lf
'Ille $660,000 guidance center
for the Huntington Beach
Union High School District will
be built on a lease-purchase
basis.
Robert Martin. assistant
supcrtntendent for business,
said trustees decided last
Admission
Signups
Will Op en
Applical1ons for admission
to a·ny of the eight UC earn·
puses for the fall quarter of
1974 may be filed bcgtnning
Nov. I.
To be sure of a place at
the desired UC campWI a stu·
dent should apply during
November. UC officials said.
A single appllcntlon filed
v.·ith a $20 fee at !he campus
• of first choice assures
' qualified appllcanls a place 1 at one of the campuses serv-
ing unde~graduale!.
Applications are available
from high school or com·
munity college counselors and
from the Admissions <1frtce at
UC Irvine.
During lhf' fir~l month nf
thl! fillng ptriod, cnch campus
wtll cons ld l'r ap-
pUcation.l!. \Vhen quota1 are
f1Hl'll. addition11l application.,
~·Ill be redirrctt'd ro another
IJC cnmpus .
v.·eek lo use lhe leasc-purcha!t
method to ''make the district
a little money."
TillS IS POSSIBLE, Ptfartln
said, because the district can
take the money earmarked
for the center's constructkm
and put it into a short-tenn
in ves tment ~·ith a return of
9 to 9 i-:i percent.
It .,.,;n borrow money at 5~~
to 6 percent lo pay oft" the
construction cost of the
center .
lie said the sy~tem is not
new . The district has used
the lea se-purchase method to
3C'quire all of its nearly SO
rrlocatab!e classrooms.
TIIE CE1''TER, to be built
on the \\'intcrsburg site at
C'.old cn West Street. and
Warner Avenue . 'A'ill provide
classroom space for all of
the di~trict ·s 1.0CKl special
students. ri.tost of these are
either crowded into l w o
trailers on the sit.e or housed
in other districts.
The cont ract for the center
has been awarded to the W.J .
Shirley C.O.. which Is al80
doing some ol the work on
Huntington Beach ltigh School.
1'ni!lee Ron Shenkman sug·
gested t h e lease-purchase
method when elected to !he
JChool board in Aprll.
T"'O "\\'EEKS AGO. trustees
hired the rinnnclal consulting
firm of Stone and Youngberg
to rud In a tax-oven1de elec·
lion . That election will be used
to raise funds for school COO·
strucUon.
~
\
It's the way you want to look,
now. All shimmer and shine.
Lighting up the night Sparking
up the good times. VII, division
' of Venice Industries, shows
you how. In washable polyester,
all silvery-threaded. For sizes
8 to 18. A-line, pull-on skirt
with ribbed top, 848
Also available in taupe.
Sherwyn .Knits
SOUTH COAST PLAZA
WtdnHd.ly, Ottobfr 2AJ, 1973 SC DAILY PILOT (J
Bullock's Santa Ana, Monday through Friday from 10:00 a.m. to 9:30 p.m., Saturday from 10 :00 a.m. tO 6:00 p.m., I Fubion Squaro, S.nta Ana, Telephone: '47·7211
Bullock's South Coast PW., Monday throusJi Friday 10:00 a.m. 10 9:30 p.m., Saturday 10:00 a!n. t0 6:00 p.m., 3333 Bristol Srrott, Costa Mosa, Tolophone: '56-061 1
' \
--•
·-
VOL. 66, NO. 197, 6 SECTIONS, 94 PAGES
. • I
ORANGE COUNT'I', CALIFORNIA
• • •
'
WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 24, 1973
• • unt1n ton 0
•
* r.Hot .Car'
-·
Attracts
Curious
-: 11'e car driven by the man YID.led
ln oonnection with I murde!' in Hun-
ll!lgtm Beach and a bank robbery In
Buena Part waa founr! in a Q:Jlta Meta
fr::~ the IUOpecl bad taken
"When pOuo. bmd 11.-Ille --Ibey lhoagbt the ...... Mlcblel llemlis
8'lmelle, -~ ••. !L.
up, .. Ibey -.. -It wt
and·walt for him. ~lhlng waa quiet· at th• Utile
prag~ on Newport Boulevard near Bay
Slreet until Tuesday.
;• Burnetle ~ever showed up. But a lot
" Of other people did. •
DetOctfv.S DaireU 'P«i!IY and' Dick Nolan bad empk>yes-vacate the place
;,l,u. Ibey hid In tho bad ·o1 ti\• pr ...
waiting 1..-Bumolle·w'clalm hil ·car.
• •An llllOllfl11C>'1' tip phoned 10 th_• ?°Uy :Pilot newsroom at, about '11 a.rn.,: told
ol a 1'>i>berY In Jl'OIJ<ll at the prqe,
tihlili 11 ad)o"'"t 10 1be newspaper'•
lilficea. and ~plier ~ere
EVERYBODY DOES THEIR. OWN T.HING-SOME GO LEFT WHILE OTHERS SLIDE RIGHT
Surlars Had Ilg Day Off 23rd Street While City Ofllclala WMry About Beach Erosion -· ·~ • Wbat tl"'1 fOd ..0 IW~ · 1d were not toO ·-· -~~-~,,·--. :: • Nd! 11111 ~ """' ..:..... .rlil ol 11111 -.... a ~..:..,;pbee ~m ......,. li>cal ...,... ~-up to take i pjdiue o1 tbe
~iii.re be·.,... pw'IDC al tbe car fui taking plcturd o1 I\," Noleo Mid.
"I tOld blm to get ·aWit'J.-1 tt."
• Lal« that al-an Irate woman
came lnlO the Dally Ptiol -11n1 10
know •bf she coWdn'\ get. her ear
i>ut ol the 1•121• nest door ml 'Who
'WJrt those two guJi in ·bmtnell aw.ta
bangln& 'around Ibero ...,..ayT
Deteclt•es finally obWoed a IWCh
warrant to 1et into tbt car to look
for evklence in tbe murdtt and robberJ.
"TueJd,&y WU bed, but J .,ally tbln~
the JtaktoUt WU burned from th6..start.
)letecilve Sgt. Mooty McKerum aid
t.day.
Nolen
winced-.. .
didn't say anything. He just
Garage SaJe ~t
;~y tfoys b~&rs
·.An ... -...... iale,; ....... ed by -.u;iiiary o1 Ille Huntfn&lm
lbe -. =· -~-~·· llU1I -Boys aub, w~ -·-'" a.in. ·10 t ,,m.,~s._1un1ar. · ~=tbe
live Points Sbol'l>in& Ceiller.-.-. -Y from 1he 1110 will bl tlled to slipport eoys Cub ad!vlll<I lhroogh
the year. '' · ~Auxill.ar)'. members are also looking
foe. donated items which can be !IOld
00 ·Saturday. Anyone with old clotbea,
ioy, houoebold goods · or olOO' artlcl"
can • drop them Off at Che Bors. Club,
3l9 Yorktown st.; between I a.m. and
,noon or t p.m. and S pln., 'tbls week.~
For further informaUOn phone Mrs.
Lou O'Donnell, 968-47'0, Or Mrs. Sharron
'O'DoMell, 116&-9459.
~HOUSE HUNTERS
·.::SEARCH THE ADS
Their SQilhoat
SAN~Cl~ (,(p) -Huge waves
lllll8lfiiid a 35-fool ·iallboat outside the
GoldC!n Gate ~' · wasbing two men Overbolkf · and bi)urlilg their wlves
before the Coast Glllrif could rescue
them.'
Three ti.mes.. the boat •!bad its keel
la :t'* air."· aid CXol Babcock of
FrMio. Repealed attempts. during the
fOuN1ouc: m.tea11-~y to hoist Mrs.
BabcOck, her ~ Ed"8rd, and Jau
-.... from lbe wil~tching boat
failod, the Coast Gurd said.
:tffe· boet'S ·owner, Dr. Donald ~tor· ri~. !lpiellt . 50. mlnutes in the,. rold
Pacific Ocean berore he was picked
up ·by a hovering helicopter. A Coast
Guard cutter towed his shattered boat,
with lts•three passengers still on board,
inside San Francisco Bay.
llof_rls9o, 39, a psychiatrist Crom ~an. Wyo,. aaJd the fi!'!l waves
1tmck. b1s boar, the tJandon, a 'few miles :oulatde !be Golden Ga\e Bridie aliOot
S f:· .. flrst ;aVe. buried the boat on
ltl.'.alde --.i lll:ol<! shrouda bracll!g the
rfclit side ol U!e mal(.he wd.
,,._ •• wife -her leg In the ~' lftd ... Blbcock· ·was.1 w a sb e d
-· bQI baule6. back aboard with a< aatet1 J~, _ --
• About. a bill hour Jeter, Morrl90ll
said a second wave, "25 fl 30 feet
bigb," rolled. tbe boat over 11aln, map-
ping !be .... t . and .... Ing Morrisoo
int.o the water where his • safety line
bi'oke. •
Someme on shore witnessed the irr
~ident and notified the 'Coast Guard.
, ."I thought I waa a goner," admitted
MolTison, after the rescue ~liCopter
passed over· bim three Urncs before
spotting him.
•· w:!~w!"ef·~\~s0 ~~::them~:~
and clambered aboard the J IJlllon to llt• flrit aid.
• • At Let\ennan General Hospital, a
spokennan · said Mn, Morrt!IOlt was
. ~O\I In atable C"'1dltlon in the ln-\~lve .,,.,.. 1111\t with a broken right
.. _. ... , •• t •D <Omplled by the -. I" and broken jibe. Mrs. llllioock WU
1 ~n cureJ ,, Inc , "'9&ed_ .for cuts and bnllses. ~twspapt{ Ad•~ B~lu, ·• -. ~ Mcqllon, an expe:rtenoed s1llor, said lhoul'1 pme thof , b6ijle bunters •tar\ ·be aJ1f hb wife usually 1pend a mootb ;11\flr ,.arch In lbe.,,..,papar. · ,_,.__ aad1 year crulsln& Ill llOl'lbern Calllornia .. On an 1vence weekday1 1CC01\Wlf! Watera
·11> !be flguru, It pen:ent" thole -plan-Mr&. Bal>cock •Id Ute trip wu her
t!lnl to buy • lloUH within U months 11\d her hwband'1 tirlt l&llinc ex·
;-11f read·the "Houle for Sile" classlfiCI· -r.. ....... "'l!Xi our tut." . 1tJon tn the kql neMpllper! ~r a ""'~· ·
. five-di1 period 41 percent of !he )JIOI•
'l!OCli will ,.. thoao ada and duriTiti
a monlb, 75 percent of I.he ready.to-buy 'l'fil. read the lllUnga. .
· If )'OU're aellfl>tt a itoul<, put It wt..re
hO<le hulllera can ,find It -•lilly.
Call a Dally Pilat. ad'vilor .. the dlrtct ·~1-141-Ml', ud be Wbert•lbe·)lqym
.,~ ..
"
Crop Ch~ges Made
WASHINGTON (AP) -Air!culture
Secr'ttary Earl L. BU!> aqnounced l<>day brOad chtnj;et in I.he gtivt!mmenl's
peanut procram ror 111'14 which he said
ll a Grit move to get the crop il'lto
the }tee m1r1i:et 17&tem and away from
'-------------burdtaaome costs lj) the ~P8Y.'"
'
' <!.
I •; • ' . j
~ ' ·-~ .... ,;,
ilig, ,'. ftfJ~~ .~ t~t;
. ,, .. t, . . ?. .,J'
NeiVport Sand Periled
By L. PETER KRIEG
Of •10eN'r' f'tllt St.fl
Huge ~ly awelll, pus:hed by the
storm .pounding $ari Francisco, lashed
the Newport Beach aborellne bun the
Newport Pler to the Santa Ana River
jetty today.
The whiter seetim's biUest surf was
attractlnc throngs cl sWiers but was
posing a major beach erosion threat
to tbe already-devastated beach between
2tod and 28th Streets, lifeguards
reported.
Waves ranging from six to eight feet
were eipeCted to continue Thursday,
according to senior lifeguard. Logan
Lockabey.
Lockabey said sandbagging may be
necessary if winds incr!ase in order
IO prate<! the McFadden Wharf beach area.
* * * High Surf Hits
·In Huntington
Heavy surf, with waves ranging from
five to seven .reet, . trashed along the
shoreline of Huptington Beach today.
but llleguards said it wasn't big eoough
to cause any !fe.rlous trouble.
'lbe tdgh surf s~ed sometime during
lhe night. a lifeguard said, apparently
cauSed by a storm in the north because
the swells wete running from the west.
EVen Sunset Beach, which often
becomes a flooded area when high lllrf
and high tides combine, was spared
any rtal trouble, a lifeguard said.
'
"lf we start getting a really sharp
profile -scarping -the beaQl will
start going fast," Lockabey said, ex·
plaining that beach er<:l6ioo occun faster
when the waves hit the shoreline at
shalper and sharper angles.
\Vlad is a1so a major factor, he ex·
pl-"Rigbt now the wind here is calm,
but if it picks up, we could have some
real problems," Lockabey said.
"U it starts to look critical we'll
start sandbagging,'' he said, noting that
it's been two years since lifeguards
have had to take such extreme precau·
tions.
But L«k.abey said this year the p~
lem may be compounded because of
the controversial 28th Street groin in.
stalled last year which is supposed to
protect Ute beach from surf.
"It was put in <for protection from
the 90Uth swells that hit us during
the summer,'' Lockabey said, "but it
really compounds the problem by
preventing sand from replenishing dur-
ing lhe winter.''
Before the groin was installed, he
explained, the south swells would wash
sand toward West Newport in the sum·
mer but it would be pushed back during
the west swells in winter.
"But these beaches by the Newport
Pier are really atarved now," he said.
He said the beach is down to 20
to 25 feet at some points. It used to
be 30 yards wl4e. ·
Nev;port Beach city orricials and the
U.S. Army Corps of Engineers have
been trying to solve the Newport Beach
sand eorsion problem for years and
have insLalled a whole series of groins
along West Newport.
Father and Son, Others
·Face Bookmaking Comit
A Htmtlngton Beach man and his
father allq:edJy involved in a bookmak·
lng and betting ring that police claim
grossed tl2,000 per weell: ln horse w-sgtr·
Ing al""" today face ptoeecutlon along
wit!\ ....,., otheT --Tbey are free on ba.11 pending ar·
ralgnment, ht Harbor Judicial District
Court on chargs ot conspiracy to com-
mit bookmalt,lng.
Patrft:k A. ,..,._, II, or 1542& Golden
Welt St., and JVodalher, -Miehael E.
Towner, 45, of Pico itijtra, were picked
up 1loog with Fnnl>·M. Marcell1, 39,
of Alhambra and JiL J. Tipton, 30,
of Cudahy, in a !tries of basically . -
I r!'
I .
unrelated cases last Friday .
Newport Beach Detective Vice Sgt.
John Simon userted al least three
separate gambling operations were
-nocked out by the sucet.ssiop of raids
in. Orange and Los Angeles countles .
'ftle "npton woman's home served as
headquarters for the action involving
ilie Towner father-90fl team, Sgt. Simon
alleged, in addition to Marcella.
"We took of[ A 'phone apot' operation
where lhey lake in yottr bets. We also
raided a 'back olfice' and a home where
there wal!I a type (lf back otnce having
only to do wlt.h football cant actton." JS.. BETTING. P111 I)
~~~~~~~~~~-
......... '· "' f J. . ... ~ .. ~
.Eor $40 FaN;
Three Arrested
Three Los Angeles men were arrested
today by Fpunlain Valley police after
they allegedly beat a taxi driver in
order to steal halt of the '80 rare
they had paid him.
Detectives said Manuel Martinez, 58,
apparently took the cab ride from San
Diego to Fountain Valley, but bad no
ir.oney to pay the driver, Bernardo
Rodriguez. ·
So he called his son. Ramero. 29,
who drove to Fountain Valley to meet
the cab along with a friend , Rodrigo
Guunan, 25, police said.
Officers said they .paid Rodriguez $80
and then allegedly beat him over the
head and took $40 ol it back.
The three men ~·ere arrested in their
Los Angeles home by detectives who
had traced the address through the
telephone nwnber ' that the e 1 d er
MartJ.oez had used to call his son.
Detroit Police
To Frisk Outer
Space Aliens
DETROIT (U PI ) -Detroit police have
a Cull·fledgcd plan on the handling or
creatures from un identified flying ob.
jects. (Related story, Page 4)
A special group of officers received
the go-aheod to slop and frisk all aliens
from other planets that are in the city or
in the air space above.
In addition, the police can ticket
creatures \llho attempt lo flee or vani sh.
In a seven-point departmental memo.
Detroit's eig ht fi eld duty inspectors "'ere
given detailed instructions on how to
care for UFOs, their passengers and/or
crews.
The top priority item said gel them
to the ground even if a bullhorn or
-public address system must be u.sed.
The next order o( bu slnes was the tradi-
tional ticket for fleeing saucers. but
with the proper copy of the citation
lo have on hand for future court a~
pearances.
Diplomatic immunity for passenl!lers
or crew members of UFOs fro m alien
planets "'as al90 required, including the
separation of males and fem ales for
queslionlng.
Duck Hunter Drowns
YUBA CITY tUPI) -A 21 -year-old
~hirine stationed •t Treasure b land
drowned in the Sutter bypass, whllt
lryl ng to retrieve 11 duck he shot, sher·
iff'!I deputies reported Tuesday. rfe WAil
ldcntlried as R<>mlld GcM ~'lelds.
Today's FDal
N.Y. Stocks
TEN CBjTS
· 1 Police Seek
111£ ormation
On Suspect
By JOANNE REYNOLDS
Of ... o.llY 1"1"91 St.ff
Orange County Coroner's investigators
today identified the woman woo,,e nude
body was discovered in Huntington Beach
as P~ela Sue Hodgman, 21.
They said they believe the dead woman
came from the Riverside area.
P.feanwhile police are still seeking m.
lormaticn about the s~ in the
murder case, Mic.hael Denis Bumelle,
29, whose-car was.fotmd in Costa Mesa.
Det.. Sgt. Monty McKermon of the
HwitingtOn Beach police ·said lbe blue
station wagon WM spotted in a garage
on Newport Boulevard over the weekend
and detectives from Huntington Beach
and Costa Mesa kept · a watch over
it until Tuesday wJlen a search warrant
for the vehicle was issued.
McKennon said some evidence that
could support their theory that Bur·
nelle was involved in Miss Hodjlrian's
deat h was found in the car.
Burnelle is also wanted by S'uena
Park police in ooonec:Uoo with a bank
rob;bery in that city Frida:Y altemoon
in wbich.Burnelle'1 alleged acampll~
Leslie Alton.Bannister, was shot to death
In • C'"I, batue with !'O!let,
BannlSter's compank>n, Teresa Marie
P0oUa. ZO, "" wounded in \be --cu!. .
Police say a man malching BID'belle's
descrip&ion escaped lrom the 1eene in
a pldUp truck wl!lch wu liter lound abQndoned.
lnlormation supplied to detectives led
them on the search for the station
wagon which was found in Costa Mesa.
Detectives say they believe Burnelle
may have tried to rent a room in
a nearby motel to "keep an eye" on his
car while it was being repaired.
But he apparently lelt the motel when
he couldn't get tbe room he wanted
officers said. '
Investigators said they also believe
that the dead man may also have been
involved in Miss Hodgman·s murder.
Student Bashes
Self to Death
BATON ROUGE, La. (UPI) -While
deputies tried lo r es tr a i n him, a
Louisiana State University st.odeot killed
himself by beating his head against
the steel wall of a jail Isolation cell,
East Baton Rouge Parish authorities
said.
Frank Mislretta, 24, had been put
in the cell Tuesday in an attempt to
restrain him after he ran from the
office of Dr. Hypolite Landry, parish
coroner. ~1istretta's parents had taken
him to talk to Landry because they
said he had seemed disturbed.
Landry had ~fistretta hospitalized at
a state mental institution this year after
he showed signs of depression and
suicidal tendencies.
Orange Coast
• •
Weather
Thursday should be a carbon
copy of \Vednesday, according to
the "'ea.ther service -sunny and
warm. Highs in the mid-70s lnlaod
and at the beaches.
li'\'SIDE TODt\ Y
A life-si ::e oaiLOW$ t"rned IJP
as a school project il1 occ11/t
literature ot Corona deJ ltfor
lligh .tliis week. Story, Pog, J2 ,
Al y..,, $tt\'k t J AM LlflHn ii
L.M. It¥• I• Mi ii .. • •
... ..;.. lt Mt..W. , .. u
CtlUW'flla J Mllhi&I l'llMI l'I
CM<:ltl .. U• U H1tlt1ttl N-1 4 Cl1u!llH ,, .. , 0.11111 Cw111y e
c-ia v $.em IMJ Cl"Mt_.., ff IH><k M1A:tt1 11-tt
Ottlll Htflttl I T,19•1\ltll M
ldll..-l,ll ..... I T"-'ilfft M•U
1"1trtt l-tfll tt•U WttlRW t
1'11""'' ti·" w-·• N1wt JI ... ,.., lllt lleaor1t I w .. i. Ktwt t
14tnK• )I
• ..
' •
• z u....1l 'f PJL.OT • Wld: bdQ, ~ 2'4, 1973
• lllJLUTIN
aEJR.trf, LebalOD (AP) -Caire ndkt
uid ioday Eppt caUed on the United
S<el and I.he So)·k!t Union to 1eod
.._ lo lhe S.,.. Canal lroDI lo help
ellforct Che MJdille F.ul ceue-nre.
By The .VIOClated Ptt:IS
The Israeli military command chargtd
lhat ~ Egyptians launcbed a strong
air and armored attack on the Sues
front today even as U.N. truce ob.servers
beaded ror lhe batUe lines to enforce
the second attempt at a Middle Eut
cease-fire.
Tr ip Still On
For Kissinger
WASHIN G TON (AP ) -
Secretary of. State Henry H. Kis-
singer'• trip to China, postponed
because of the Middle East crisis,
has been rescheduled f o r
November. Jn a simultaneous announcement
here and in Peking, the State
Department and the C h I n e s e
government sald Klsslnger will
visit Peking Nov. 10 -13. The
secretary bad been scheduled to
spend Oct. 26--29 i.n the Chinese
capital to discuss Increasing con-
tacts between the governments.
Kissinger call<d off the or!gb>el
timetable as lhe United Slates and
Moscow reached lhe cUrnu of el-rorts to arrange a cease-fire 1n the
Middle EaJt.
Meetin g__ Sla ted
' In Huntington
On Fireworks
How do you !eel about Fourth ol
July fU.worb! Sboo!d they be banned
totally, sold only to aduJts, or not con-
trolled at all?
'!be Junior Women's Club ol Hun-
tington Beach wants to know bow other
in<ilvlduals and groups In the city feel
about this explosive issue.
A public meeting bas been scheduled
ror 7:30 p.m., 'l\iesday, in the dty hall
ldmkUatrative anneJ:, 523 Main St., to
gather axnmunlty feellnp "' the sub-
ject,
The Women's Club has asked the city
to adopt a \aw 1im1Ung the age of
penon1 buyina or using flrtworU. Qty
cooncilmen, WUlble to set an exact limit,
have asked the club to see what limits
lhe public Urlll' most rea~ble, ·
Two JlOllllble age Um!ls, II and 1!,
have been BUUested, but nelther was
picked, The neighboring city of Fountain
Valley recently banned I.he sale of
fireworks to anyone under 18.
For further information phone Bobble
Shepard of the Junior Women's Cub.
Groups Endorse
Charter Changes
'Three civic organizations have in-
dicated their .support for the charter
cha nges Huntington Beach voters will
be as ked to at a Nov. 6 election .
The office1 of city attorney, city clerk
and treasurer, all currently filled by
elections, would become appo intive
departmental posts if the charter
changes are approved.
Groups which have studied the pro-
posal and given their official support
for the change include : the League of
Women Voters, the Chamber of Com-
merce, and the board ot directors of
lhe HOME Council .
AJI three incumbent offl~ holders.
City Attorney Don Bonfa, Cit y Clerk
1\1.icia Wenl'.11lrth. and Treasurer Warren
11aU, have also said they would prefer
to have the position! fi lled by civil
service style appointment s.
OIAN•I COAST Ha
DAILY PILOT
'Tiii O•t .... CMol DAILY l'!lOf """' wllkl!
h t-'-"'-H•wo-l'ru ... II l'UblllhM W
lfl• or....,. (0111 "<lflllollll'>O ~11y. l lOPI·
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FrlflY. Jor (<Mii Mt_., H-r1 !lt1<.11.
1-1..,11.,. .... !111(f\/P_,11a.. V11,.y, L1;.,...
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edllloll II oub+lol'ltll Sllvnl1~ -Sun01n..
lhl pr lflCllHI ~ll""lnf 1''-111 IO •I :U0 Wot ••t '''"'· Co••• MKI, C1lllo•11l1, t7•~
Jlob1rt N. W11d
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Viet Prtl!clffll ""' Gt~l"I M1111;1r
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...... 1111., ...... u U II """'~"' l!lillfl"'
.. t!ln1t!°"'' nu """~''·
Russ
1be f4ypllan counteroffemlve wu combll appMJ'ed to joopardlu the main road to Caln "'"' Saei city "but
-to .... tm'• f--... ~~ .. ,...-v-, ~ In: 'pur ....,,... ... Jlmlllllnl him by farec:
eastarn baat ol'tllt Sun CUii ~-lllo"UJC~ Couocll 11-, nIPt ~.~-.. ~Je<tlve!'
rncltlimeiii "1 llrae!J lelor'IJlll tr«#--'·r,9'rif!..:Ss1uLS PORT' SAID r,,,.,·briillt iAlcl II ~Ian ftiN<•
doubhna· back ,from their ~atkin • . . planes were 1hol dbwn ta dOlflgt:it. ver into ·~-·Of tbe wa~'l'.1 :-·'; "l'.1'1.'Ac KS. Story, Pa.-•·-U.O "'-Ulegi,jimd.pf11.7,r.~ ."'-
Aviv cl•tmtd .• • _ . afte:r ffs -firtl. cease-fire collapsed in The l.sraells r.arller.said their lnv.asion
'Mle "reported figbUng eame Only a . force pushed toUtb from Us foothold
few hours after lsr11ell De.feme Mlnlster furloUs 01htuig. . . midway up the canal, :moving along
~oshe Da~an Mnounced the ne:w· cea1e-The lsraeU reports dJd not pinpoint the w~stern bank o! the canal ' past
fire was m elfect and seemed to be the area of combat but Indicated it Suez city at the waterway's SOllthern
"working properly.'' ~ "a' at lhe 10Uthern end or the canal end in an attempt to cut oil the Egypt'ian
There wu no immediate wOrd from riear Su,ez clif. ' 3rd Army on lhe eastern lltnk1 :: •
Cairo. An eior!ler cooununlqae .1rom· CeJro • .f.pi>! charged lhe 1-)ls -lhe
Bat lhe 1'raell claims of renewed claimed the laraelli bied lo,, cut ' lhe pbil by 1UJ111 advanlqo of_ the first
~ • j 1"
•
38 Court Clerks
By TOM BARLEY
.. or .., 1>111y ,...,, 11.n
'11llrtymht Orange cOimty ~uperlor
Court clerks, each o£ thein anned With
a doctor's certificate, are back en 'the
job tciday after a one day "alck-out"
that was described by one absentee
as ... litUe bit of mlbcle-nulng."
' . '
But-a spokesman said today that. th&
real reason behind tbeit. ~ to
stay oot Tuesday •• ~nimed ·-:!iii! he aald was the ietUlaJ ''( tli'~. 1~
penoMel department to agree to 'II'
Uon of lhe dispute, , ·' .. , -~-
The clerks will meet Iii the cOuttbouie
'Ibursday ntgbt to coil!:taer possible
strike action if the cOunty rtmains ada-
mant on its denial of mediation.
. '
ceaae-ntt attempt Monday and Tueedly
ni«Jlls,
laraeli spokesmen clalmOO their ln.
vaslon tanks and. arUUery now domlnale
the main Egyptian supply routes from
Calr.o east to Jsmailia and from Cairo
southeast to Sue city. .. ..
Egypt, wbi<jl.~au.d for. !be S.C.rUy
Council session that prodlletd the second
U.S.-Soviet truce proposal, did not
formally announce Its acceptance of the
new cease-fire this morning.
But ~ bead of ti\< i!:':N• truce observer11 bl €8lro1 <1.ol. pe Bmdrlk
of Sweden, ·confirmed that Egypt ac-
cepted the 7. a.m. -10 p.m. PDT
t ; • .., 1
I,
' ~. -· .
-halt. He uJd he lrlUllmltted ti.;
EgypUan acceptance to I•raeJ and lh~
ll'UQI QS ofUcially put into elle<:t wltli
the accOrd of botb Suez adversaries. ,
Syria'l which igrlored the first 'ceai;e.fir8
ca~., iymou,nced it also accepted the
new '4\ice, bu( on condUiOn that l1rael
with.draw '.'fr.om all Arab· territories ocj
,cupied.iD June 1967 and therealter, an11
on .the basis of . guaranteeing the righf!t
.of the ,Palestinian peqP.)e. '" , : '... t
• Syria's front with Israel -about 2G
miles \'<Yo"~ I/le JS\17. G~ Hei,bi~
ceate:h lines -'!ii ·re\iOrted~ a ~ ~ ab.er the truce went lo
effect. , ,, . .,\ '· , ~·-,. ~ • .U.· ~ )1 ' ' , , f I
Year School ·'
. .
D'~ . ' .t ('A.l
ISCUSSIOD ::
•'
Scheduled
'
• The pros and. cons or all year school
will be discus~_ at 7:30 p.m., ThurSfiay,
at Wardlow Schbol, i.q. Huntipgton Beach ••
One gl'()up 91 parents has already
asked the Fountain Valley School District
to consider' the placement of Watillow
SchooJ,.9199 Pimeer Drive, on an ,aJJ.year
caleodar, -i .. to Plavaln School, •.
>\QOther parenlal £X<>up, c'J II o;d
"P!iJ'enlS for Tra~tfon_al FAu~tion," has
forined to oppose any move toMid
an aJJ..year system at Wardlow. '•
Oounty Clerk William E, St Jolm con-
firmed that his working force was at
full atrengtb today and said be does
not intend to discuss the sick-out with
his clerks "except on .a strlcUy iD!onnal
basl!,
'"Ibey have a good case," St John •
commented. "They are seventh in the
ll!t of California county pay scales and
I think that Is a very unrealistlc poeition
when one oon&iders the caliber of our
Orange County workers." . _ ' •
Frank Wallace, cbairnun ol · the of>-
. posiUon group, said. today his ,organizl'I
don intends to be .. a ~litlcal pres.suo:
'•' 1 iil II ~-• ' "I am with them,'' he said today.
"I think they are very mucli underpaid
and I think the abilities or what I
regard u the best court clerical force
in California should have been recognized
long ago."
St Joho, his supervisory personnel,
and lhe skeleton crew that kept court
affairs running Tuesday on a nearly
normal basis, worked until late Monday
nlght to clean up all arrears that ac·
cumulated during the day.
St Jolm said he doubts there will
be any further top level discu.ssion of
!.be pay dispute until Orange County's
supervisors return late thJs week from
the County SOpervisors A!sodation or
California ~vention in Reitdlng.
The board went into executive session
Tuesday when it learned that 38 derb
were absent from their desks. But they
refused to disolss the issue during tbe
regular Tuesday meellng although of·
ficials of .Ute ..\FUIO uni o n . were
pre3ent 1n the heiring room.
County supervisors had earlier offered
the .cler~1 a t-t percent.pa)', raise, alter
the clerks bad reJeciod a pioposal th.It
would have raised their $1,0'l6 a month
salaries by 2.5 percent
The clerks feel that their salaries
should be at least comparable to the
$1,333 a month enjoyed by U:>s Angeles
County Superior Court clerks.
Blood Requested
For Leukemia
Victim in Valley •
Fountain Valley residents have been
asked to donate at lea.st 300 pints of
blood Thl1J"9day In the name of Pam
Betts, a IO-year-old girl who died Oct.
10 of leukemia.
The PTO at Fountain Valley Elemen-
tary School, where Pam was a student
when her health permi tted, is behind
th e blood drive and also an effort to
raise cash to help ~ir. aod ~trs. Robert
Betls pay a $10,000 medical bill.
The Red Cross bloodmobile will be
parked at cit y hall, 10200 Slater Ave.,
from 2:30 p.m. to 7 p.1n. Any group
of eight or more individuals who need
a ride to donate blood, can phone the
Red Cross at 8$.5381 for shuttle bus
service.
PTO members will hold a rummage
and bake sale from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m.,
Nov. 17, at the school to help rise
money for tbe Betts family medical
expenses.
The PTO is also donating all of its
profi ts from the sale or ice cream at
lhc school this Thursd ay.
Several ,county deparlments..~"-L ~·
squabbles this morning between 38 cler~s
VlohO stayed Out Tuesday., and tbqse ~
decided to ignore the sick«it and stay
•· .•iiQ a ·Y _ e tfilbk there shoU:ld be ·:,_· ·eon.1-
munity vote on ithe issue, but"onlr ,afte"r
the community is totally informed,"
Walla~ sai4. "We don't feel ttwi district
adimw.stn,tion is totally unbl~cd or
objective In its presentation Qf.
on duty.
"They'll pay for it," q>IIlIQenled one
disgruntled absentee. ''But when we get
the pay raise we've struggled so damned
bard for guess who'll be first in the
line with their hands out."
Man of the Year
Nominees Sought
In Huntington
'.l'he Htmlingto.n Beach °"3ml;>er -o!
Conunerce is once again looking for
nominees lOi' Us aooual :.llaD of the
Year" award.
All local cIUbs and orp.Aizatiom~ are
Invited to submit ~g~ fl)(! the
honor. The only rf!Rilirement is , that
the man susgested must have made
a significant contribution to community
betterment and exemplify the objectives
of the Chamber.
A candidate's name, with a brief
re11ume of his activities, should be aub-
mltted to the Chamber, 18582 Beach
Blvd., Suite 224, Huntington Beach, %ip
code 92646.
Suggested individuals do not have to
be residents of Huntington Beach.
All suggestioM must be submitted to
the Chamber by Dec. 1. The Women's
Division i5 also conducting its sean?h
for a "Woman of the Year," with local
clubs as ked to submit suggestions.
Both honors will be announced at the
Chamber's annual installation banquet
in January.
Twenty·three persons have received
the Chamber award. an? the first thr,ee
actually went to women, before · the
women's division sponsored its own
category.
Past winners are: Bill Peterson (1972 ),
Joe Irvine (1971), Noble Waite (1970),
James DeGuelle (1969), Roger Slates
(lllfi8 ), Ralph Kiser (1967), Wilfred
Schryer (1966), William Gallienne (1965),
John Murdy, Jr. (1964), and Lewi:!
Douglas (1963).
Also Donald DouglaS, Jr. (1962),
Reverent Everett Auger (1956), M. M.
McCallen (1954), John Eader {1953 ), J .
Sherman Denny (1952), J.~ .s: Sayer
(1951 ), RM, Pyles (1960), Tom,1'lbert
(1949), \Yillis Warner : (1948), D. W.
Huston ( 1946 ). Solomon White (1943),
lttrs . ~1'ary Reed (1941), Mra. John
Corbett (l!HO), and Mrs. Mary Newland
(1939 ), -
F.....,.P119e l
BETI'I NG ...
•' ............ ~·--~
CAR PLUMMETED 90 FEET ACROSS CHANNEL AT FREEWAY
Arm of Victim W11-Dlscovered by Highway· Workmen "
Crew Led·w Wrec~g .. ·e;~·-
. " ,. \\ 1
Body, by Sev er eil A'rm
The body of a Navy man, evidently
dead iinoe Saturdar, was found Tuesday
at the bottom o San Diego Creek,
tht! victim of an auto accident.
Discovery of a human arm on the
center divider of the San Diego Freeway
near Laguna Canyon lrteway led to
n wrecked car and the body ot William
Thomas, 34, of San Diego. ' •
A member of a highway malritenance
Union Talks Secret'
DEIBOIT (UPI) -Secrecy sur-
rounded auto contract talks today
between Ford Pttotor Co. and the United
Auto Workers as they head toward a
Friday strike deadline.
cre:w found the arm and notified the
Cali!ornla Highway Patrol whose officers
diacovered ·the car . .., ..
Highway patrol offlCers said 'lbomu,
aouthbound on the freeway, lost control
or the car which struck the center
di~der sevetin,a: lhe ,:&rm. • _ 4 • •
'\'lMt car, p~ jllld, plummlllod 'llO
fee't acroas the ct&lf Charlntt,' Smf~ng
into the concrete channel wall at which
time the driver was-ejected.
·-The car-'tnd drtVft'.then ·d!O!'I#·IO
fief Into the cree1'1d!annel benetth a
lreeway bridge obscured from passing
traffic.
Highway patrol investigators determi~
ed the probable time o1 death through
a calendar watch on the detached arm.
It had stopped at 12:~ a.m. Saturday.
lust Arrived-la11e
Shipment of Speetlo
Swim SUits & Trunks
,,
Water Wonder Kick Boards
information." · •·
Thuraiay's dilcussion ww feature a
panel composed of ·wallace, two distriOt
trustee&, Fred Voss and Roger Belgen,
and Wardlow Principal Myron Morper,
The meeting is'open lo the comm.~ty.
So tar,· district trustees have takiti.
no action toward calling u all ye.at
8Chool •election in lhe Wardlow
neighborhood. "· •
The trustees are currently trying to
establish gutdelinea OD ht>•" illJ-yiOr p ..
posa1a will be handled at each school in the (Uture. ·
One -propo91.l. 1 whic.il feahlres UR!
esta~t ,of rlD eledkin con:amitt~
at lodiVidual schools including partnts
on both sides Of the Issue, Jt'lD • ·before trustees·at their Nciv. I ~Uht.
Plavan Is !U.: only Fountafut Vallef
·sm.ol on1·an all year system at the
pr,f:iellt.~Jt features a. 4ft.15 plen which
di\!ldes the school1 ~ear Jn~ foiir .nini-
wei!k' q~· wilh a .. thr\*wejik in·
teisessio'ti 6e.t~n each., ·•
, The J!'ter~~ &fl' ,SUllPOSed to be JlextqJe mom~ w.gere childien can
lllWnd, OI) a vol~tw .basis,. specially
ed.progr~ or. Lbe intersc.ssioos
.vacations.. .. . . . .;-
•Wallace ,said lhe earen1a1 . oi>pomthln to an all-ye.ar program at Wardlow._ge~
from jts lnterruptio~ of ,family lmllt,
and the lack of rtP'eational acijvities
geare( toward· nOn-summer va~tlon1.,.
"It will alsq cost more money,~· he
said. ."They. &a)' lhe state pays any
a~ costs, but we're the taJpayen
who give the state money."
Supporters of the all-year propoyl
generally feeJ U will tirovlde a ·mote
fle:r:ible educational program with the
interses.'rlons, while keeping a bett~
educational continuity betw~n nonnal
sessions with less of a vacation' break .
Soceer Slloes
Brazils-,,:11.95
&anadas,-12.95
La Paz-14.95 .
• cLOllll SUNDAY.
Trustees Weigh
Comp uter Bus
Report Tuesday
Sgt. Simon said. Adidas Tennis Shoes Super Lite-17 .50
The computer-prepared bus schedule
which wen t Into effect Tuesday ln th(!
Hunting!.on Beach Union High Schoo l
District will be the subject o( a report
to trustees Th ursday night.
The school board will meet at 7:30
p.m. in the caftterla at t.1arina
Hi<h School.
fhe computer program . prepared by
the district staif with the aid of the
\Yhittier School District, is designed to
make maximum use of bust"ft for the
4,800 high school students who use them.
Distrtct officials saJ d the high school
district is the first in the wesfem Unlled
St11tes to ·use a com puterized bus
schedule. Other districts prepare bus
schedule by htind.
If the program proves succes.~ful,
elementary districts will be lnvltf!d to
make usf or the progra m, spokesmen
added.
A back office, he el"plained, is where
the major work of a bookmaking opera·
lion occurs, where cash, cwtomer
records and other incriminating evidence
1nay often be foWld.
Simon sa id in the case of the football
card action, it fUMe\s blllloru of dollars
annually into the lreasuries of organlied
crime.
"And the re's less than a two percent
payoff," he added.
~le said the elder Towner and l\.farcella
ore free on $10,000 bail each, while
~frs. Tipton Is out on $2,SOO and the
younger ToYi>ner was !reed on $1,000 bail.
A wldt!pread series of gambling rakls
took place in Los Angeles County over
the weekend but Sgt. Simon sal'd they
were unrelated. •
He said the series of ·lhree local
crackdowns clim axed a two-month probe
lnvolVlrtR agent& from the Orango County
and Los Angeles Count y dl3trlct at·
tomeys' offices, Los Angeles County
Sherlff's Office and police from Newport
Beach, La lfabra and Fullerton.t
Men's or Ladies'-18.95
Treforn Tennis Shoes
Men's or Ladies'-16.95
CoDYerse Tennis Shoes Ladles--7 .95
Men's-8.95 -
Tennis Dresses
Men's Tennis Shorts & Shirts
Acrylic Warm Up Sans--21.95
24.9$--34.95
Racket Strilging
Squash Racke~Tennls Rackets
Wilson4e~nlop Tennis Bans Dz. 7.95
DPili 9 to 61iosedSillld3y . · 1
I· •
All Purpose Shoes-10.95 to 17.95
Bab Wolfe super Pro .Pasketball
Shoes--9.9~
All Star Basketball Slloes-9.95
Vait Junior & Intermediate
' . · Footballs--1.95
Voit Basketballs--5.95 to 19.95
Soc~rballs-9.95 to 19.95
Watef Polo Balls--1 0.95,& 15.95
~s· Jeotball Shirts Reg. 2.95 Sale--1.95
HandbaH Gloves-RacquetbaQ
RaC111111ts-larllmint&n Rackets
staliii ter ' &4t 19f9 · ·
(
'
. :-
I'
I.At YC!,Ur .Nixon S.erv1ce .
A Solay, w_, ... Pl1day , ....
OI lloe llolly P11a1
t Got o probltm1 TJi:"' write'
Pat Dunn. Poe tofU cwt red
'4Pf, goet tht action w 0 11 answer• and
need ro
10Lve -neqlfi.
ties in 001>
ernm.en& and
biutnes1. Mail
11 our que1·
tion• CO Pat
Dunn / Al
Your Stnnce. Orange Coo.al
Dai.Iv PUol. P.O. Bo.z J5M, Cotta
lffl'Cl. Ca., 926M. lneludl rour
1<1f9hO!I< ftM!llbn.
Tll~'ft .ot.t
Gunfire
Wounds
2 Cauipers
Three campera escaped -. injury
in the Ortega Bot Sprin&s area when
ooe of two lntruden who t1nsacked
their ... opened Dre 00 them with
a alJolaun. , DEAR PAT: l'm enclosing a copy Deputies· .were Qned ao the acme
1(1( a letter I received a few days ago. Tuesday when Callfornla H l g b" a y
It sta~ ~'m. Ii '"!'P""k" ~ and ~ nported ·they.bad baited the
will reCelve a ''Treasure Chest" ol ni-"811 :.., Ille san DIOgo FtteWO¥ alter
qooa.IJy advertised products and a holi· qoting .~t the v~cle ~d been damag·
day vacation for t""° gift certificates ei:l by iUDi lire. .
to central' Florida, fi.1iaml Beach or .Las They . ~d Dale Pearson, 20, o[ 2Z5
Vegas if I 5elld my chec'k or money Rosa St, San Clemente, had been shot
order for $15. I have 10 days lo reply three times and 8 male companion iden-
to the Jetter and would like to take tified 88 Los Angeles attorney Lawrence
advantage of it, If it's legitimate. There's Randolph Johnson, 31, had been shot
a rnooey ~k guarantee. twice in the Hot Springs fracas.
V.W., Cotta Mesa Officers said Barbara Ann Tlchirbart,
Don't bother wltb. It. The company 25, of Santa Monica, wbo bad been
il!ffedlJ tlal1 "deal" IJ CRrTeady uder camping-with the two.men, waa Uftban:&.
-plloa by lhe callftrala A-y ed. ·
~·· Olflc<. It lo --la ~ ~ill'•. Capt. -Broadbell today
• ~' 11 • part .of u ~C said none of the wounds infUcted on
Jll'Oll'Ull, &11at be DI woe a prise -the two men were terioul ·and they "'°" reqodre him lo ,..;:u. my pda were releaoed aft.r · treatmont al the
• oenka. Tiie U.S. """1 s.mc. Orange COunty lledlcal Cenler.
lia !Ued a civil complaint aplnll the Broadbelt WI the trio told hla In-" vestigaton tha~ --~y· were campllll m ----c1o1---..... ..__._t11i-poji(ll~_._-mir coadudil1 • sclttme or devtoe et ._ heard noises cotn.ll:!I froln the direction
talnlng property throogk Utt malll by of their parked vari.
TtalOll of false representadoa In viol•dou They said they ran to the van in
el Ult U.S. Code." tnvesilgatloa has time to see two Dl$ loading the trio's
.uegidly htund tbat many people were ::1 :U a:n ~~l equip-
Jlol reee1W1c the adverilled relaad wlltn Offiett1 aaid the lhtee vlcllms then
tlteY. load • the Treaaare C It e 1 t pursued the burglars•' car in .. their van
mlltldadory and tll•t thtte were • but bad abandoned the pursuit and ftf9 ~ lo wl•. Tiie otalo Depart-turmng artJODd when the burglan "':"'18
-91 C.U.-AUOif. -tul theu: C'1 around and beoclecl for the , . , • tr10 at hl.gb speed.
lloe--... IDclade ..... pwtatlaa J-Aid, ... ol tho ...... -
_. ~ are Abject to out of the car window, emptied hla
''a...,.hllhy." sbotgm at the van and tbea reloaded wbilO ,lhe trio beard tho lhota lllrike lheii Yebicle.
DEAR PAT: I've ·beanl..plenty of
"""'" aboul the wild pnp qn during
Orange County's "Rancbefo" diJt! but
l · find it dilllcull to l'!'lleve there were ""~ bunts al)d su~uent bull an~
bt~ fi&bts.. Ia this an Utd level?· ~1·:
·•T.N., 'lnitnf:
Griuly bears were roamtag Utt Sc*UI
CNll ldlla la the i-. aad their .. ...,..
was jlllte u ordeal, even for tllie expert
V...U01Mtrsemf.8. A11 lllllortcal aeeomit
ti • tJplcal lllev lta11t dncrtbea llow ... v._... w•ld ride llbead o1 die
._, o1aw tt ...... 1act 1em 11. W1IU
~ . lleu cllarpl forward In .. ,.,.,
)le ......, Jamp aside wkUe oCJttra l.uotd
. .... .,
Siuer De{llands
I mpeaehment
SOU'l11 DENNIS, :11"1=· ) -Glenn Avery, lh!i'~o!J'-l\food.4""' here, swelri Ile'• nOt down from
his bell tower until President Nixon
is impeached.
.• "lt was the lasr straw," Avery said
Tuesday from bis' perdl, referring to
the dlpnjual ol special pn>ltCUlor Arcl>-
lba1cl CoL
--
Probe
o.lh'l'UffS'-'f,...
Alt HALLOWEEN' APPROACHES, WILL THESE GRAVESTONES SEE GHOSTLY ACTIVITY?
Dona Bernarda, Mlrthwi, La llorona, the HNdleu Priest All Reside Here
Ghosts _Standing Guard
San Juan's Graveyard Chock Full of Terror Tales
By JOHN VALTERZA
Of ""' ~ty l"lltt ll•ff
Few o_utsiden even realize that the
old graveyard exists -choked with
weeds at the end of a tiny lane near
the heart of San Juan Capistrano.
There are no caretakers; the-survivors
must clean the graves themselves.
Time and nDdala blwe takea their
toll, heaving beadstooes and loppling
small wood crosses that mark the final
...wig .places of San Juan's first
resident..
It is there at !-a Llorona emerges,
weeptng in anguish.
Her blaek·shrouded fonn has been !een
hobblint!alongsidei the gnarled tr<iilb or '~ 1tbat creak o( tbemlelTes In the-. •,
She walks from the deserted cemetery
to Ortega Highway, beaded invariably
to a !Mstecl~,..;..,1 pepper tree •liar ttMhof« Mf' :-:-t ' . ' .,
La Lli>rooa seeks the cblld she bore
in fatal childbirth, some say . . . the
infant she never saw.
Along LosrlUoa ·Street -in the oldest
aection of 'Orange County's first set-
tlement -the. .people still know La
Uorooa very well.
All agree she seeks her children, but
many insist she is not the most honorable
of specters.
Sbe weeps, they say, as she seeks
th!! children murdered by her own hand.
Editor's Note: As tht Halloween
sHaon approacMs, this is the first in
a tnUa of articles on ghosts along
the Orange Coast. T~y. meet La
Llorona -and Utt others -of San
Jwrn-Capiltnmo. Happy haunting!
And when. her cries are heard In the
still night of ·old sa.n Juan, women
insist La Uon:ma is doing her penance
for the sysh!matte murder of each of
hei-children.
In the colony west of I& railroad
tracks time bas stood still among the
adobes and board-and-bat houses of
lrumble wOrking ~people.'
When a restdeht dies there, mortuaries
now do the necessary ta.!ks.
But even in the last generation, the
dead rested for that last night in the
family living room, surrounded by ~ail·
ing mourners.
Ille -... plded ti -.. the ~'• .. kB and bear pit" &o await fllliia Mid .. -Sadoy. A -I reata
(1nWde a.to) was tkd to Cite Mar's
-let . and lo the fnat i., of •
-botl. AIU.0.llo lhe batl waold dllf&:e bntvely, dte bear was the asaal
wtme.r of &ht putkular Wettend
•'JportiD&" event.
Regional Airport Plan
May Be Adopted Nov. 8
On those ehltly evenings the men would
warm themselves by lbe fire and prac·
tlce a trad!Uon -the exchange of
abundant tales of headless priests and
spirits of mldien wandering mission
grounds searching ••• searching.
While children sat gogg1..,,,ed and
mute, the men would talk of Dona
Bernarda the witch, who for a price
"'Ollld cure the Mdents of Los Rios
Strttt when they ailed.
She would scare the be)emis out of
the kids.
'»rl1'l"fJ Ber Nuts By CANDACE PEARSON
DEAR PAT: Each Halloween I make Of lfM Dt11r ,,.., "'"
carmel apples with spooky faces on The adoption of a sli-eounty regional
them for my children. 1 use pecans airport plan by the executive committee
• to form lhe feetures and just once of the Southern Callfomla Au:>dation
i!'d l~ to be able to crack the nut ol ,shells without breaking the P,8cant inside. -Governments (SCAG) may take place a aiacr --llld-watilot . h!!ves Nov. 8. lo -.i1o m&ny "-riJy · ~ed 1be SCAG meeting will begin al 9:30
,holiday ~terta and crac:ked ,outs chive ,, a.111:-at the HyaU Regency Hotel, 7th
')ne 111111,ewey year. lo ti.s, 1111:101111ion .aocl.Flowa"~ Los Nlp!M. -
'io thll .pr.Olom! · · 1be avtatlen needs atudy begun In
·• ·_, • , : . RG.,•Newport Beacll !!lit by plamterg Wllliam Pmlta and
V.O'B f!f ,Ule 1o,11oa11 ·-~ 11oeJ --ba i.n tinollh 10 publk:
..,.,.. ·Oil& J. """" I ,,.... ·-tWon tiw1dp in Ibo Orin«• Coul area, tn-'•venili!ll-,.. Mtled ~ -· _, .. , cludlDi' a llnol!hearing Oct. 12. lilC· '' .. ll will ...,. to'. the cmnnlllee !0<
.:.... ' action with -tlooa ol • , "'..,t Trlnen B'"'.ftl' citlleN hurlng boanl and any written
~;n PAT =·t kind of .tcb leStimony submitletl by Oct:31. • ~ : """" a SWI Periera'• study origin.all ena>mpassed terns on the f~ horn on the Newport 10 counties but four -Zin Diego San
<jeUy. -:-.a, moislur&-sen.!lttve d~vlce or Bernardino, San Lu1s Oblspo and 'Kefn ..,~thing · -broke away to ac\ on its findings T.R., Newport Buell independenUy.
It's llmpler. There's 1 U1bt oa tff If the SCAG committee a&opts the
t jttfy. ne jetty II Ulrte-fo~ of a hearing board's recommcndaUorui, no mile away from H•rbor' Departmmt !~~rs. w.a U:ie Harbor Dtptirc.: new airport facilitie! would be suggested
me11. paitrt.lman can't see u.e I'·"•, for Orange County until after 1980. t HH .-And after 1980, the hearing board M: Dows via b y ii len Chae a mk. llstel:I· a aeries of ~Ions which cou1d ~. tt = 1 owlkjl l!Mt taraa .,. ba taken by Orange COunly ollidals
to meet airport transportatloo demarid!. •-•·f... 8· ,..._., Tbeee Include ei:tenslve expansion of .... _. ~ ~.... . Orange County Aifport, joint military·
• DEAR PAT: We 'Just planted ~ral dvllian me ol El Toro Marine COrpo
Y<Mll! trees in°'!': y4rd,8l)d 'P-l' !"!ghb<f ,AJr ~tton. joint uae ol Camp Pendleton,
told .me be had JOit two evergreens or airport 11.tes at Ollno Hilla, B'tll
,he'd pli.nted this •P"it't during the recent CanyOn And Mesa de Colorado, on the
Santana wind.!, even th®ab he had tbem border between Orange and Rivenlde
1staked. We both would 'like to kno• oounlies.
, how 1 young tree lfKluld be Raked The citizen board, which Included
IO It can stand up to htavy winds. former Newport Beach Mayor Doreen
C.E., Dalla' Point Marshall, realize! that any Im-
A yomia, 11.1111eady tree sboald be do~ plementation o( an airport master plen
; Ille 1t1tied, al\owtq , k lo move •1UI wouJd have to be done by kxal agenc\eJ,
.. U1e •Ind 1tetwee11 hr ttsikes wttlrout SCAG .st.lily Wredor Walf"G!Ilrman sati:I
nbbtDC •a•iltt them. A namber of tueeday.
.. f9dentrs m1y be med a1 Mr u the But tbe board warn.. ln a xrtet ol
bark la pntocted !>Om "'"'"'" wt.ere L'Ollditlonl, Glllllllan said, that Orana•
the -bolda.llM tne. ,........, County wtn "no longfr be able to con-
Dona Bernarda died decades ago, but
TODAY I"
b ' y '
J. C. HUMPHRIES
RUSSIA-FIRST IN DIAMONDS?
After \Vorld War ll, the \Vest
stopped shipment of diamonds to
the Soviets, forcing Russia into a
crash search for st.ralegically im·
portant industrial diamonds.
Russia, whose fir~L.. significant
diamond mines were di'Scovered in
1954, today is second only to South
Africa in diamond production and
may, by now, even be first.
Most of Russia's mines are in
permafrost areas, with winter tern·
peratures always below zero. Con·
ditions are so bad that entire small
towns are covered with one roof to
mako living and working jdst bare· .
ly possible.
J.C.
H DAIL V PILOT ;t
State Board
Pair Cite
hnpo1·tance
* • •
J
" J
J
By JOHN ZMLER '.t
ot Ille Dfil ... ll'flet Slaff ,..,
Two members of lhe State Board_
of Equalization staunchly defeoded the l
state's uj)CQltling revlew of Presklenl f
NW>n's San Clemente estate 1 s
"necessary to find out what's really
going on" during a meeUng lD NeY1P9rt f1 Beach today, '
John Lynch, who represents mO!>t of t
Southern California on tbe board, said i
there ·are "many complex question! (
relating to the value of the President's •
estate and I think it is entirely healthy 1
for the state agency to review the work
of the local assessoi: on a matter of ,
this importance." ~
Th~ state Board or Equalization, com· .
posed of four bemocrats elected to their '
posts, raised the question of the value t
of the President's estate before th e ,
Orange Cowity Board of Supervisors.
In a vote that pitted three Democrats
against two Republicans, supervisor3
voted 3 to 1 to ask the state board
to review the county assessor's valuabor. ·
of the estate.
"The talk that this is a partisan effort
to get a Republican president ii
hogwash." said William B e n. n e t , ,
chairman of the state board. "That'll.
a great defense to put the public to
sleep, but we 're looking into a possible!
crime and that'! a noo--parti980 I.slue." · •
Lynch_ detailed li:QDle Q( the C'OOl·
plexities involved in the appraisal. •
Noting that the value of Nixon's estate1
has been set at $l.3 million, Lynch
said there was serious question whether
the value of the estate should be sett
that low in view of severaJ million·
dollars worth of improvements made
by the federal government.
"If all of the federal improvements1
are really security items that will be ·
removed when the President leaves of.'
(ice, then obviously Nixon should not '
be asked to pay taxes on it.
"But what aboot an item like the 1
new electric heating system?" Lynd)
said. "It was installed because the old •
gas system was considered dangerous
but it is clear that the new electric"
system will remain when Nixoo become!-'
a private citizen again and then it will~
enhance the value or his eslatc?t
'lbe<elore he ought to be payhig property
taxes oo it." "
Lynch sa41 he does not know whether ~
Nixon is paying taxes on his new heal·
tihg system or similar itenu beca~ •
"tbe county ase'a9or has Jtept Jiis records •
on the'Ni:ron estate secret and we have
been unable to review them. ,
. "What we're proposing to do no\v ·
JS to open up the whole case and look
at it from scratch. We know that some 4
items will be removed from the estate
when Nixon leaves office but we want·:
to know exactly which ones. That 's the
key question,'' Lynch said.
The ~rd or Supervisors, in a ltcy ~
compwmise reached Tuesday, agreed''
lo open all ol its records to the lltate
appraisers.
Lynch said two appraisers from bi/.
agency \\i ll be sent to Orange County
to begin work immediately.
0
OMEGA
Today Omega confir ms
tllat Irle Eleclron1c watch is
here to slay Elec1ron1c
Ch1onornr1er l•IK gold top,
slainlC>ss s•rel bac~ wa1er-
res1sta nt cas!'.' Date-lrl!1ng
c•londar Matching 14K
gold bracelet.
Ornega Electronic . 1-,o
only e1ec1ron1c 11<1111 a
ctironome1e1 1at1nq
·•-be cll«l:ad rtplat!y to ....... llnue to depend cm Los Anf.eles lntemt· tUt a1 dM tnmt pw1 la diaee&er Oonal Airport for service ' from 1-.
Clouded with secrecy, production
fflclency Is-not known. We-do know
that although Russian-cut gem
stones, now marketed ab r o ad through lhe De Beers organization,
are fairly well cut in smaller sizes,
larger stones are not. It is also cer·
lain that over the coming years the
Russians will become a significant
!actor in lhe world diamond mar·
ket.
1123 NEWPORT BLVD., COSTA MESA
<Uoe 1 ........ -"" -up!. '"°· Canbl pnallg of .... ._ aa H Wllboul a new airport laclllly In
111oe lr'eo -•t he<tme loo t.eavy Onoce. Comly, more fl™IU"' wlll ba
,alaa loelpa. placed on Los Anger.,, whlcll, GIMll•n
'
• •
I
CONVENIENT TERMS
27 YEARS IN THE SAME LOCATION
l•nkAm1tle•rd -M11t1r Charg•
PHONE 141·)401
' .j
4 DAILY PILD{
You Can't
Stop Growth
Fog Nighi1nare: IO
KEARNY, N.J. IUPI) -At 1 ... 1
IO pet'IODI wen killed and a or more
Injured late TUesday and e:arty today
in a series ol chain accidents lnvol~
more than 22 vehicles on the New Jer.y
turnpike 1n a fog reported to be "as
thick 1.5 a brlci waU."
State troopers initially counted 10 dead,
and said 42 injured persons were ltiken
to local hospil.als. They said the fin.al
toll could be higher.
I Th& Associated Pm1o reporied lllat at
leut JI penom were ldlled.J
U. Thomas Arnold of the Rutherford
Police said rescue workers had di.fllculty
gettina to the accidents became of the
ownber of """ Ind tbe -,.,. _,,.,. llate Pollcoman llld tt
was "llke runn!ng into a brick wall
without wamlna:."
1be Nationaf Weather Service Rid
heavy smoke from a dump fl.re burning
ror t.be la.st to days five miles away
ln the Hackensack ~feadowlands com-
blned with I.he fog to reduce visibility
to near zero.
The crashes marked the second major
acddent In Jess than a week on the
turnpike. Last Friday eight pel"!()ra were
kUled and 11 other! injW'ed when a
tractor trailer blew a tire,. jwnped Into
the nonhbound laoo l1l1d crW>ed Into
a Groybotmd bus and a car.
Amold said, "'Ibey c:on't get "' ..... cl the bodtee bec:IUIO Ibey can't 11<t
"' that .... cl wreckage.
0 TBEY RAD SO much Cog they
couldn't even find the accidents. 1bey
knew Ibey _.. OU1 there but couldn't
even find them.
"We're used to some bad acddeots
in the an!a but all have said they've
never seen an,ytbb1g lib It."
A state police spoi<'"'1lall In Newark
&a.id there were: three major accide:nta
oo the northern portion of the turnpike
Die~
betweea Newark and tbe Gem-Cf!
W-Bridge linklntI New Jeney
to Manhattan.
"The nm occurr«f. between K.-uy
and Hacken.sack about J a.m.," tnvolvlnl
about 22 vehicles lncluditli a bus. '!be
other two occurred in the Kearny-
Secaucus area .
POLICE IN NEARBY Ru~herford said
the first crash happened shortJy after
10 p.m. Tuesday and the last at 5
a.m. today. State police said the affected
sectlw ol the toU road were not closed
until 2:45 a.rn. -nearly five hours
alter lhe first accident.
H 11rti
A bus driver wllO bad fl> take RaulO
I aouth as an alternate mite to U.
t.,,.,iq said u took him ....., houri
"'~ .. 1rorn Jeney Qty"'~ N.J., -..ny a one-hwr trip.
'nu<S' drl.... Edward Gearhart, 51,
of A1leai Ky.. Involved In the cra>h on tbe norih-bound lane llld limited
vi>lblllly lor<td him "' llcip hit dump trudt CGllljlletely.
'lllen °be Aid he lelt ... bong, """8 ..
bang'' of cars bumping tbe ,.., of.
• oompllllY car he was hauling behht;
his truck. "It seemed like i1 went m~
for 5 minutes.'' 1
GROWING PAINS DEPT. -OOll<uit
as it may be for them. a k>t of folks on the CWTeDl environmental banctwq<ll are finding that you just can't atop
glOW1h by declaring It st.,....i. 'lbM
seems to be the case here -In Orange
County, anyway.
............................................................................................................................... 1
Public Triumphs • Ill End
Recent reports lndlcate that Lei
Ang~es County has pretty much Mopped
growing. Hooray, a lot of people will
say. "Should have stopped growtna: a
loog time ago."
'Fire Storm' of Opinion Cited in Nixon Turnabout
niat b all nice. Similar reports,
however. indicate that our region a.
tinues growing. People formerly from
the City of the Angels are still migratini
in our direction.
You cannot, however, blame our
growth entirely on transplanted
Angelenos. There are all kinda oC theories
about our congestioo. One Deep Tbi.nker
of my acquaintance here aJoog the
coastline viewed our growth patterns
lrom a different vista. He suggested:
''WHEN WE AU. ll10V<!d ~ fl> the
roast, lt was pretty quiet and not 10
many cars on the roads. Now everything
Is bumper-to-bumper and we blame it
all m more people moving in.
''Well,. that's all a buncll ol bunk.
I'll tell you where the crowaJ~-""""''-.J from. It's our kids. They've all grown
up. They've traded Jn their tricycles
for highpowered sports can. They are
filling the roads "1th mot.or cars instead
of the sidewalks with scooters.
"WHEN YOU START complaining
about how the new arrivals are crowding
everything, just look around and try
to find where your kid ls. He's out
there m the road, that's where ..• "
Well, you have to admit It's an ~
teresting theory from lhis Deep Thinker.
Carey hls thesis one step further, and
you can figure that those yomgsters
who were playing in the backyaro wading
pool just a few years back will sooo.
be starting families ol their own and
filling the local maternity wants.
So 'maybe "we aren't just growing by
transptarit as a lot. of us would like
to think. Orange County and the Orange
CoaSl may have become self-grovfing
by internal population explosion.
RIGHT llERE AWNG the coutline,
tile government theorists have trled to
limit growth when we got Propositioo
20, the coastal control bill.
stop the music, they cried. It's time
to slow t.hi.flis down. Well, I think
Proposition 2Q has slowed things down
aloog the coastline. And while it's been
doing that. it has turned our quiet valley
just over the coast.al hills into a virtual
boomtown.
TIIE DEMANDS FOR housing and
commerc-e. you see. didn't just go away.
Thwarted at one local.ion, it just mewed
over the run and kept right on going.
Despite best efforts of the theorists,
il is also extremely doubtful that
Proposition 20 is going to have much
<lf an impressi on on the aforementiooed
maternity wards.
Even the Irvine Ranch in our region
has felt the growth pressure. Back in
1969, the ranch put almost 50.000 acres
into agricultural preserve, thus getting
a tax break by saying it wouldn't be
developed. Now Irvine is asking that
nearly 5.0CX> of tho,,e acres be remo\·ed
from that tax shelter. You suspect the
ranch people see more growth cmting.
Alas, that's the way it is with growth.
You can't just find a sYtitch somewhere
and turn ii off.
UPIT ......... REP . KUYKENDALL IR·TENN.) WARNS AGAINST 'LYNCH MOB'
lmP9•chment Odds Reportedly Plunged With Nixon T11pe Decision
Egypt Charges Attacks
On Port Said Civilians
PORT SAID, Egypt (AP) -Israe1i
planes bombed Port Said, at the oorthem
end or the Suez Canal, for 15 days
and caused hundreds of c I v l 1 i a n
cazualtics, senior military officials here
daim.
They said the last raid came within
hours of Monday's cease-.fire order and
caused 47 civilian deaths. Gen. Said
Sabry, commander of the northern sector
aloog the canal, called it "a mean
and hated aggression against the civilian
populat ion."
Sabry and the city's goveroor general.
Gen. Abdel Twab Hodiep. said at least
200 civilians have been killed and another
500 \.\1lWlded in Israeli attacks oo a
hospital, a church, the central market
area and olhcr nonmilitary targets.
GEN. llODIEP said three-firths of the
city's 25,000 people were evacuated when
the war bt>gan Oct. 6. He said about
10,000 civilians remained, but newsmen
touring portions of the city by bus
Tuesday saw mostly soldiers.
Sabry told the Western newsmen, the
first allowed to visit Port Said since
the war began, that 140 Israeli planes
participated in the raid Mooday and
two of them were shot down. He said
the bombs were widely scattered because
the Israelis dropped them from high
altitudes instead of dive bombing.
A considerable amount of damage to
buildings was evident, including in the
downtown commercial district and to
some apartment buildings. Military
escorts identified one of the structures
hit by a bomb as a government hospital.
HODIEP \VAS ASKED about Port
Sa.id's mil itary value since the Suez
CanaJ bas been closed since 1967. "I
don't know 'Nhy they bombed it," he
replied.
There have been reports the area was oft limits to visitors because It
was a receiving point for Soriet military
equipment.
Mountains Gird for Snow
L"rge Aniounts Ex11ected in W yo 1ni11.g, Colorrulo
r r .s .. 'i'.11t11u1nr!f
,. ¥'"""" ~~l!~•n ol '"°''""' llo!lfd Tn• "1!•1on ~••Iv •o<t~v Lox~llv ''"~•I •nQ" "'" •·~rc•f'd
on r1>t n•o.,n•~·"I n! C1>lor~~O ~""
l'\{)l'tt'lwt'1IO•n \V'"'"'·~Q ""''' OX{l\lon
11 rain <l~"'P<'"t<I •" t•<!~ "°""' •llt! nortl'l~fn Pac•!IC {NIT 10 the north.
we"""" plaint.
L&! Y..,~,
lCNl•~ltle
/,.'la ml
Nllw•u~N
N/nf)el POh•
New O•l••n• N~~ Vf'rt
Oliltl'Hlml City
i"'·~· •Jm Sorln<11 " l1delO!ll1 P'-'>b
" " " ~
" " n c
l! u ll
" li ~
....
WASHINGTON (UPI) -The White
House acknowl'edgee that It
miscalculated the reaction of the people
to President Nixon's weekend actions
In the Watergate case. In the end,
they, not he, prevailed.
'Ibe simple will ol. the public triumphed
over the White House's oft-stated, often
complex legal arguments that the release
of his secret tape recordings wou1d
jeopardiie the Constitution doctrine of
aeparaUon of powers and · the con··
fidenUality of the President's affairs.
The White House assumed that when
Nixon anoounced Friday night an a~
ment to submit a summary of lhe tapes
for Sen. John c. Stennis to "authen·
ticate," the c:rlsiJ had been averted.
AS_THE PJDJSIDENT'S <>llL•t,itutional
lawyer, Charles Alan Wright, told It
Tuesday, he thought "The American poo-
2 Fuel Tanks
May Delay
Skylab Shot
CAPE CANA VEAAL (UPI)
Engineers were trying today to devise
a way to repair two huge fuel tanb
on the Skylab 3 launch rocket that
were damaged Tuesday, raising the
possibility of a delayed bl~t off for
the last crew to man America's orbiting
space station.
Experts from the Marshall Space
flight Center in lluntsville, Ala, where
the damaged first stage of the 224-(oot
tall Saturn 18 rocket was made, were
( IN SHORT ... )
meeting at the spaceport with launch
officials to work on the problem.
e Legislator Indicted
NEW YORK (UPI) -Rep. Frank
Brasco (D-N.Y.), and his tmcle, Joseph
Brasco, were indicted Tuesday on
charges of conspiring to help a truck
leasing firm get post office contracts
in exchange for cash.
The one-count indictment by a federal
grand jury in Manhattan said the two
plotted to receive $27 ,500 in ca!h from
John A. Masiello of Yonkers, N.Y., owner
of the firm.
The indictment alleged that Masiello
actually delivered $10,0CX> to the Brascos,
but it did not say whether the balance,
$17,500, was pald.
e Kimi Leader GafU11
DETROIT (UPI) -The former chief
of Michigan's Ku Klux Klan was ron-
vlcted Tuesday In the tarring and
feathering of a high odiool principal
because of his racial policies.
An all-white U.S. District Court jury
in Detroit deliberated 2~ days before
returning the guilty verdict on COWJts
of conspiracy and aiding and abetting
in the tarring and feathering of Willow
Run principal R. Wiley Brownlee.
e Nobel lln.lt AUlOltlnq
OSLO (U PI ) -The Nobel Peace Prize
Co mmittee waited today for official word
from Hanoi before deciding what to
do about North Vietnamese peace ~-.. <Wt• lt>e Art1nrlc (lfCI 1 ... to DOt"llont ot "'• e'"' Coe\! ••••v lodaY w•ll> CIM Hal!ffH N ( tKtlw·
lnq n•••lv one 1•1111 ol •~ If>(/!
QI rt!" I" t ~I • r..c>u• l>('tlod,
l'ltt11>uro~ k~lltnd. Ort . r~=, ... ~ fi
i .10 negotiator Le Due Tho'• refusal to accept
Foq wit l(IO'mlna !r$n 1i.. .,_..
Ol'i!o Vl!llV 10 ,... ,\,\-t Alltr1•k coef! wltll w1 .. 1>1toty •' rtro 1t Mer·
QUtlll , Mkh , tn<I Allen!lc Cl!y, N.J, whlle vt>M• M!Cfll\I"" ....... ~,,...., d•i111•
Clef!• '~~· p•evtlltd ow., 1 lo•Qn t••• lrom Ctl•!..,nlt to ""' A•!ontlt
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SOl1ll U(1111, \'flM llifMI .• 492·'421
.01 lhl3 year's award.
.n lfanol's Vlotaam Newa Agoocy (VNA),
.. In • -monitored In Bona Kong, said Tho -who llhan!d the 1!713 Nobel
Peace prize with Sea-eUry of State
Hoory Klasinpr -"iected the award
Monday in a message to Nobel com-
miUee chainnan Mrs. Aase Lionaes.
e S11rllloor Vonuhe1
mo DE JANEIRO (UPI)
Authorities ioday sought a member or
Indiana's trade delegation who disap-
peared followlng .hospital treatment for
Injuries suffered In the crash of a
Brazilian Airliner that killed five other
peMIO!lS.
The 54!Ven members ot the lndlana
Trade Ml,.loo, led by Lt. Gov. Robert
D. Orr, were 1JMng the 5i5 passengen
who survived. The twln-tnglno VASP
jetllntr, Cl"'Ying 60 J)llllenlen, veered
olf the end of ~Santos Dumoot Airport
runway Tue!d&y and aank in the warm
waters of Guanabara Bay.
-~
pie would give a tremendou.!l sigh of
relief at the thought that now we are
going to hear what Is In those tapes
and oow we are not going to have
a 0011stitutional crisis."
"Obviously that was a miscalculation,"
he said .
( NEWS ANALYSIS J
Then came Archibald Cox's refusal
to go along, Nixon's firing of C.Ox, the
resignations on principle ol the top two
men in the Justice Department and
llnally, what White House Ollel ol Staff
Alexander M. Haig called the "fire
storm" of public opiDioo.
BY NOON TUESDAY this Is what
Nixon faced :
Indian .Mourning
-The House Judiciary Committee had
begun an Inquiry Into Impeachment pro-
ceedings for lhe first time in 100 years.
--Otief U.S. District Court Judge Jolm
J. Sirica had passed word that he had
studied the procedure for citing the
President for contempt of court, and
he had t<lld the two Watergate grand
jurles to press on with their work.
-An NBC Quayle Poll showed that
44 percent ot the people queltlmed
favored Impeachment, !8 pemont,lawrod
Nixon's resignaUoo and only an alUime
low of 22 pen:<11t IUJlPOl1ed hit
performance as President.
At that point, Nixon .coiled In Wrlg!&
and told him fl> lnlonn Slrlca be would
comply fully with the U.S. Court of
Appeals order to tum over the tapes
for Inspection. The people had-won.---""
American Indlan Movement leader Dennis Banks kneels over slafn
AIM leader Pedro Bissonette 01:1tside reservation at Pine Ridge, S.O.
Bissonette was shot by Bureau oC Indian Affairs police Oct. 17.
Y!'all Co111e Now
Town in Texas Welcomes UFOs
PALACIOS, Tex. (UPI) -Mayor Bill
Jackson says be realizes President Nixon
is busy, but when things calm down
he'd like the chief executive to proclaim
this Gulf Coe!t town a mecca for vtsiton
from outer apace.
"tt ls my belief that every traveler
needs a borne away from borne,"
Jackm said Tuesday. "And it ii my
intention to go one step further to
reassure any lonely apace traveler la
always welcome at our airport."
• A "BIG RED BLOB" Oew over the
PalaciM Football Stadium during a high
school game last week, disrupting the
planned haJ!tlme activities.
Another unident!Hed flickering red ob-
ject was seen over San Antonio and
two rommerclal airline pilots preparing
to land at San Antonio International
Airport chased the thing for a few
minute!'!.
"UFOmanla" also hit the Texas com-
munities ol Fort Worth, Brownwood and
Mesquite this week.
JACKSON WOULD LIKE fl> tell any
vislm rnim ooter opece that Ibey .,.
more than welcome in Palacios and
to prove It be hopes Mxon will declare
'Chad' Mitchell
Hekl-Pot Count
SAN ANTONIO, Tex. (AP) .:_ Actor·
slngor Wllllaro ''a!ad'" ~fitd!ell was held
in lieu ol $2$,000 bond today on a cha~e
of pos....mg mBrljuana with Intent io
distribute.
Officers aald they seized 400 pounds
of marijuana Sunday msht when they
&rn!!led him outside a San Antonio hotel.
The head of the Drug Enforcoment
Agency, William Kline, Aid Mitchell,
36, wu taken Into custody u be started
to enter a pickup truct wllh a camper
loaded with the marljUana.
,
this fishing and farming oommunlty of
4,000 persons located between Houston
and Corpus Christi the "laterplandary
capital of the tmiverse."
"As soon as be (Nlxon) gets h1! head
above the water up there In Washington,
we'll contact him for official aanctkn,"
Jacbon said. "He seems to be pretty
well occupied at the moment."
Jackl!on said the UFO al the loohll
game appeared ln the secood quartet.
"They finished OUI the quarter, but I'm
afraid the thing detracted from 10me
of lhe halltlme activity," the mayor
sald. "It was a btg red blob. It would
travel for a few seconds, stop dead
sUll for 15 to 20 seconds, then move
on."
Another "flickering, rooving red light."
was spotted by FAA controllers at tbe
San Anton)o Airport tower and two piloU
said It moved away Crom them very
quickly when they approached.
Capsule 'Safe'
For 3 Years
BRIGHTON, Eng\aod (AP)
By 11171 -could be tryl .. out a revolutionary contraceptive
capsule whlcb would Jut for more
than three yean. and men could
he practJclng birth control throuah
an injection admln1.stered every
three to sll: months, an expert
prodlcted today.
Prof. Rodney Shetmnan of the
depa.rtment of obstetrics a n d
gynecol08)' d Sydney UnJveralty,
Australia, said the capsule ror
women could be Implanted in the
ann or the buttock:. It would
gradually diuolve and wouJd, not
have to be removed, he told the
2l!t annual confeta)CCI of the
lnte""'tlonal Planned Pan!rtlbood Federation.
I
I
-
e D AILY PILOT EDITORIAL PAGE
Facts Needed First
Before the "Deep Throat" incident flares into a full
controversy in the Huntington Beach Union High School
District, more light and less heat will have to be shed on
the issue.
Right now, it threatens to shake Uie district's ad-
ministration foundations and no doubt some members
of the public are tempted to launch ~ moralistic witch
hunt. Before the torches are lit, let's review the facts
which are clear:
certainly take the matter quite seriously.
It's ue to public officials to be aware of the bound·
aries within which they work, and to stay within those
boundaries. Considering the likelihood of a tax override
election next June, and the ongoing fi scal troubles of
the district, it's a poor time lo make even a small seg-
ment of the public uneasy.
U1ll'ealistic La,v?
I
••
The X-rated sex film was shown one night during a
district.sponsored, three-day administration retreat last
August in San Diego. It was not part of the regular pro-
gram for the retreat. The conference was attended by 47
district personnel, from assistant principals to superin·
tendents-, but it is not known how many viewed the
Fountain Valley. city councilmen are working on a
new law which cQulcl require taxis, ambulances and tow
trucks to be insured for $1 million for accidents involv·
ing death or injury.
!
l • i
! • :
I
movie. .
The video-tape copy of "Dee\) Throat" - a sexy,
though not yet officially obscene flick -Was apparently
not made on school district audio.visual equipment, as
first thought. Such an action would have been a severe
violation of the state education code.
The movie, screened_!o.r administratOJ:S....lt_thJ!: Si!i
Diego retreat, may have been shown on district e<J.uip-
ment, certainly a case of poor jud_gment, it nbt a viola·
tion of state codes.
Trustees, who were not involved in the .San Diego
affair, have promised a thorough investigatfon and reve-
lation of all facts. It's a necessary move to maintain pub-
lic confidence.
The worst part of this is ~the apparent poor judg·
ment on the part of some individuals. In a time when
national confidence ih public institutions is ~haken, _it
seems quite foolish for local leaders to be involved 1n
questionable conduct.
The first reading of the Jaw was approved in Sep-
tember and the final adoptiop is set for next month.
The idea behind the ordinance is to equalize and
modernize the insurance requirements for lhese services .
As the law p'resently exists, there ai:e great differences
in the amount of insurance each is required to carry.
It is a_gQOd__idea fQr the city to reyiew ordinances
such as tbls<-0ne to make sure the Jaws have not Oecome-
inequitabfe or. outdated.
But W4l question the large amounl of insurance
premiums these services would be forced to pay if the
new law is adopted. One ambulance company represe nla·
tive said the additional cost to his firm would be $4,000
in premiums each year.
A good many readers are no doubt getting a hearty
laugh from the whole affair, but a good many others
Councilmen should take into consideration the possi-
bility that they may force these needed services out of
business in their city. Rather than do without taxis. am-
bulances or tow trucks, councilmen may want to reduce
the insurance requirement to a more realistic fig ure -
one that will fill lhe needs of protection and not impose
an unfair hardship. 'Leftovers? What leftovers?'
-Don 't Be
Misled By
Manners
~YDNEY J.HARIU~-
Dear
Gloomy
Gus
The nut time HBUHS district acl~
. I mlniltrat.ors want to attend a coo-
, ·vent.ioo, they should be given $.".
each to see the currently popular
porno film locally. It would ht!
cheaper: for .1;11 tJJ;payers.
~ ~ . I. c.
heel . f' o._, .,.. ..... .,.. """""""' ., J met a di.stinguis literary 1gure ,.....,,,,'°" ill, ... ~.,. rett-ct ,...
many yea rs ago, and was ·SO awed w.w. ., -. ·wam,.. .... .,_ "'
and impressed by !Jim that I "babbled ,_. • ~ !"'-Da11Y ""·
like a schoolboy and felt sure tie;neve.r ~---.-·-r
wanted to meet me aP.fP. ... '1 lookinJ ,..: ~ \upect\ilg ._;,,.' be cJis...
But later, whenl my ftnt ~ came liked. And this defensive attitudii' brings
out, I r~elved ~ dellghtMly wann letter 00 the very reaCuon it is Jooi:tng: 'for. fro~ him, ·lelhng me how rntich he Strangers too often treat us lbe way admir~ my work and how . anucb , be we enwt. tbftn to. ~
:"d enioyed our .~ meetinf',,~rr ; p,.jp!\,~(;m ~.a~mle!,"
go. • . .-: ~~, for instance, are from
I was lhund~rstruck, anCf I~~~ this sort of delusion: ~ 1 e that ple~sed. And his letter ~! me to ~ these "enemies" are dept :tnvolved
der1ng how many of US go ,thfo~gh in plotting against them ~.er I n
life thinking that, certain~people~ ~!shke humiliating them, or 1a11diii against
us, when, ln fact, ~ do not Cbsllke them -when, in trutb, ~ "enemies"
us at all. are not even aware of the existence
SOP..IE PEOPLE are· shy with ne1v of the feud. "
acquaintances, and thus they Sffm to·
be frigid and disapproving. Others simply
have a naturally gruff manner, which
'A"e mistakenly take to mean impatience
with us. And still others are just vague
about people, and what we think is
a snub is merely absent·mindedness.
I have had the experience of people
telling me, after we had got to know
each other better; that they were con-
vinced I loathed them upon the first
meeting -which was not at all the cue.
If a man is reserved, it)does not rinun
he is passlng adverse ucWnent uii)n
you; just as orten it means be Is afraid .
of your judgment of him.
'lllERE ARE some people:, • un.
fortuna tely, who are mildly paranoid
in this respect. 'nley walk through life
THE ONLY sensible-approach ls to r.s-
sume that most people will like you, un·
leu you give them cause not to; and to
accept the fact that some people would
not like you no matter what you were or did . Trying to make everybody like
you is exhausting, and impossible of
achievement. Most of our trouble is
our egocentricity, which takes for
granted that people are thinking about
Us much mOre than they really are.
In mQst cues, they are thinking about
themaelf'es, Jaat as we are. None or
us i$ aa._ Dpportant to others as we
think we_ are, .and what we CO{ISlrue
as dislike is most often indifference,
or fear, or ,aelf-absooption. But It is
hard to realize this when we come
face to face.
H
H 1111101te S ociet i e s' Thankless, Heartbre aki11g .Job
Owners to B·Iame for Animal Woes
To the Editor:
At least once a week, someone (who
Is either thoroughly ignorant ot the fa cts
of the surplus animal problem or refuses
ICI accept the facts due to concern for
only the_ir one animal) calls, or comes
in, calling our erpployes "murderers."
111ERE HA VE been many television
shows, much newspaper publicity about
the lack ef homes for the animal !)Opula·
tion. Thi Orange County ~njmal.Shelter,
and evefy otliU pound and humane
society, tries to inform the general public
of the Dwnbe~ of animals having lD
be killed \la.Uy, yet fhei-e are those
who come" in ianQ become enraged
because we cannot keep and guarantee
their Olle animal a home.
We have even had.people who threaten·
ed to sue us because their iinimal was put
to sleep -yet that same person would
not even pay the cost of a newspaper
ad or take the time to try to place
it in a good home . The animal \vas
their responsibility but they chose not
to be responsible and when our efforts
failed at placing it we were called
the "killer". We spend around a hundred
dollars a month in advertising. A cost
we really cannot afford. We have
volunteers who allow their private
numbers to be used, because our Animal
Care Center telephones are busy con-
su.ntly with cruelty complaints and
requests for help £or low<OSt spaying
and neutering and Ill or injured animals
belonging to those who cannot affo rd
the services of a private veterinarian.
EVERYONE at the Animal Care Center
grieves over the terrible waste and suf·
fering of animals born only to die under
the wheels or a car, mistreated antl
chained for life. or dumped and grieving
at any of the many pounds. For every
animal we personally place. an average
ot 25 comes in; there is simply no
(
,.-----------...,, ~ to whal seemed to be pre.coached ques·
J
tions. Edison officials had lo help Mr.
MAILBOX Camerillo answer some of these ques·
tion regarding pollutant emissions·
.. ___________ _. EIGHTEEN spoke against the project,
Lett.ers from readers are welcome.
Normally, writers should convey their
n1essages in 300 words or le!S. Tl~e
rigllt to condeuse letters to fit space
or~linJi11a1e libel is reserved. AU let-
ter! must include signature bnd mail·
i11g address but names may be with-
held on request if sufficient reason
is apparent. Poetry will not be pub·
lished.
' guarantee for any animSJ turned in
regacdlfss of breed or pedigree. Our
only guarantee is a humane death by
injection, if no home is available.
t KNOW this letter will not touch
those· who selfishly consi~er only their
one anlmal but perhaps it \\.'ill help
others to understand the God·awful job
we. or any other humane society, has
to do, I should include the ~blic pounds
loo because they are only there because
of irresponsible animal owners.
Our work is difficult. heart·breaking.
Every year humane societies lose true .
dedicated humanitarians because of the
almost endless grief associated \\'ith this
work. added to their abuse by a segment
of the general public. In the long run,
only the animals suffer due to this
loss.
~fest sincerely,
JEAN BAUSCH,
Executive Director
Animal Care and Humane
Education Center
De 111ocratie?
To the Editor :
15 gave a Huntington Beach residence.
The first speaker was ruled out or
ortler by the mayor who was rude lo
the public. ordering the microphone
turned off on one speaker. I hate to admit
he is a represeg~ll'!'e of the city or
the voters. The mayor showed his bias
when he told Councilman INlte he was
\\'&sting time when Duke wanted \o give
his thoughts on pollution and the EPA
opposition to fossil·fuel plantl.
I feel the Daily Pilot did oot fairly ·
reflect what occurred a\ the meeting. '
To me the sad outcome of the mffting
was renected In what a representative
of an air conditioning company stated.
He testified that we needed the expansion
to provide needed electricity to operate
air conditioners/purificn ~o th a I
residents could get in out of the polluted
air. It's ir'OfliC tbal our city would
approve a facility that will provide tons
more pollution every day.
Since.rtly.
~1AVNARD JENKINS, JR.
Wl111 No A l er t?
To the Editor:
Friday, Oct. ,19 at 10:50 a.m .. I called
the Air Pollution Control District in
Santa Ana to inquire if they had a
smog alert in eUe<:t. I was told by
the gentlemen in the office there. that
there was no alert in effect any"·here
in Orange County. I've lived and "·orked
In Huntington Beach for over 13 years
and this year seems to be the worst
I have seen for smog here. Today, r am actually nauseous -from tbe air
(or lack of it ).
shooting viclims were found ; 1 group
of boys were questioned by police in
shooting spree; Rialto woman paralyzed
and reported in critical condition ; man
killed in market; bus driver wounded
y,•hile driving" -an appalling number
of incidents for one day's reporting!
I A~I DEEPLY distressed over the
innumerable amount of citizens who
do possess guns as I'm sure many
othei: J>C.O~le are. Its the: af~d_.__gue~Uoh of who lobbies the longes and narorst,
but WHEN ARE gun controls going
to pass the Legislature?
'11lere are far too many 1ani wars
that have resulted in the shootinl of
innocent vlcikn.s (90me of \ b em
children); there are too JO.any, def~
souls loo'kill;g-for "kick" With a pistol
or shotgun ;· there are too many upset
lovers and husbands (wives too) who
take revenge with a gun.
r HAVE heard the saying, "f need
a gun for protection." To the contrary,
we need protection against guns -their
sales and usage. We must, as indignant
citizens, do something to prcve.at this
rapidly increasing, senseless killing.
Our Legislature may take action if we
protest loudly enough.
NANcY PENNEY
' B i r ch Credit
To lbe Editor:
Your editorial-obituary oo the demise
or the John Birch Society could, and
in my opinion certainly should have
included some co mp 11ment1 ry
statements because that Society ha1
screly not been all bad.
YOU SPEAK of the prolonged peTi«1
of hysleria maintained by JBS.
You call attention to some efforts
and beliefs on the part of JBS tbat
many people thought ridiculous.
•
Who Was Archibald Cox?
In regard to the editorial of Oct
l9 was it really "efficient democracy
ln action" at the Huntington Beach Coun·
cil meeting regarding the proposed ex·
pansion of the Edison facility?
WHAT I WOULD like to know is
what kind of an AJ>CD office do we
have here in Orange Cotutty? Even if
they wear gas masks at the APCD
office, they must be able to see the
color of the sky. What does it take
to close do..-TI industries and stop all
unnecessary traffic.
BUT \'OU FAIL to &Ive the JBS
credit for having alerted more U.S.
citizens to the objectives and danger•
of communism than any other organtza~
lion.
Tlie following column tntitlfd "Re·
number Archibald Cox?" was written
bu Charles McCabe ltut week, ihortly
before Pre1id1:~t N~OT&~~ 1urprUe dft·
missal of the Watt_rpate prosttUtor.
Iii the light of rtcent eventi. i\fcCabe 's
commenls take on a new interat.
J( you are wondering if the Watergate
scandal may have become a dead letter,
forget it. Forget It good.
"The serpent that wiU gnaw out his
vitals." is the wny
ooe eloquent lawyer ~ friend of mlne de1-
'\ .,,,.
cribes the mini-
bureaucracy epe,cial
prosecutor A,rthlbald
Cox has built \f P
wtUlln the JustJce
Department to lnvt1·
ligate charges of
coJTuptlM in the
Nixon Administration and tum Over the
findings to a serlet of grand jwieJ.
As or last count Mr. C.Ox, wl,o was
John F. Kennedy'• sollcltor·l'8era1
from 11166 to 1990, bad a staf[ or lJeatly
1 hundred and • pn>j)O&Cd budget of
$2.S million for his first year ol opera-
tion. He-now har five-1.ask forttt looking
Into: The Watergate break·ln and cover·
1,1p, the actlvtlles or the White House
plumbers, cempaign financing, political
esplonaae and tlwi lnlamous I'M' case.
MR. COX'S guidelines constitute An
extraordinary mandate:, just about un-
precedenled In• Wabslnglon polllclal
hi,tory. He hes made it clear that
"100 1pecl1l prosecutor \\111 dctcrmJne
whether and to whal extent he wtll
inrorm or ooMulL tilt Attorney Oeneral
. ' !
about the conduct of his dulies and
responsibilUies." 'lbis means Mr. Cox
....i11 has the free hand that special
pNieecutOrl are al'ways assured they
ha•e; but in fact never quite aclUeve.
MORE UIPORTAN'l' to remember is
that Mr. Col ls a Dtmocrat, and a
da,rMed parttun o:ne at that. His staff
contains onlY 1 handful of Republicans.
Twelve key members have bad con-
nections with the Kennedys In the past.
Wbl!e ft would not be good t11te to
say that the pro8CCUt0r and ·hl1 staff
are oui to get Mt . Nixon, lt Is hard
lo ,.. how the tl'\lth could be otherwl1<. Mr. NiXoO htmseU 1ppc1r1 to Ulin'k so.
As someone has observed' in• µie context,
even paranoids have. tncmlet.
It is go6d to femcmber the climate
wheo.Mr. Cox was named to his job.
Tbe Nl1.on house d. cards was tumbling
dtwn. ll gol so bad that pollllcal
strategy, after the teMlfn9C\Y_ or Jahn..
Dean, dictated that everybody should
get the shiv except Lhe Pope.
Mr. EIUot Richardson, who has an
honest name. and an honest race,
and Is a Boston brahmln and therefore
In theory automatically above the so rt
of . trickery practiced by lhc Santa
B1rbara~Pasadena maflMO v.·as called
ln to lend an odor of W'ICUty to the
White 1-toullc corpse. Richard~ ap-
parently chose Co• on the theory that
If Co1 could exculpate Mr . Nixon, the
President bad to be clean as boiled
rice and much nicer to look al
THAT LOGIC may be-_jµst too good
to be true. Up to now, 1'.trl Cox has
been· about as visible ai a lieaver, and
nbout as occupied. When th>se grand
juries start to send up their indictments.
there will be proper bell to pflf;. no
matter what the courts/JC!ecide aboul
Mr. Nixon's famous tapes.
The scum that surfaced w j I h
\Vaterg91te will continue to ,pollute l~
public gaze for months and even years
to come. Mr. Cox has made it clenr
he does not share Mr., Nixon's holy
view of himself -that his sins are
not time of other men, that the
Consltitution was specially dr:a!ted to
ke@p him out of jail U be should do
somethlng that would put other men
behind bars.
If ~ir. Nixon has been obstructing
justice, and that is the large unwritten
charge before the American people, the
former Harvard Law pror would setm
uniquely the man to nail him to the
m.,L
THE ONL y THING lhal CAO stop
Mr. -corwoma be prissure rrom Mr .
Nl1on to have ~1r. Richardson !lack
him. This is just abOut the one th ing
that Mr. Nixon doesn't have the pollllcal
chut.ipa.h to attempt . Such a move would
mean the covcr·UP or the l:over-up. That
would he Just too much, It might end
up with the President being hanged
by his own Ughtrope.
When Mr. Cox took over as special
prosecutor he &Aid, "I hold the whip
hand." I'd MY so. and would Add that
\Vatergate may sink ~lr. Nixon yet.
BRsic ground rules set down by the
mayar \\~re : one hour pro-Edison. one
hour against. Each speaker had a five·
minut e lime limit.
llfE FIRST TWO speakers \\'ere
Edison officials \\'ho consumed about
25 minutes. What happened to the five--
minute rule that \\•as enforced on
speakers opposing f~dison? Seventeen
spoke for the expansion. of these, three
gave a Huntington Beach residence, one
being an Edison official.
I question 'A'hethcr it \\'as truly an
open hearing as the councihvoman from
Cypress thanked the mayor for inviting
her. Did the mayor invite the Air
Resources Board? Councilman Green
called a representative from the
A.P.C.D. to the 1nicrophone to respond
Quotes
W. Pudlni;kl. Commissioner. Calif.
Highway Patrol on trend toward drunk
driving trials -"lnsistence upon a trial .
In conlrast to the common procedure of
a~pting a pica of guiUy to a lesser
charge, is a progressive and vital step
bc.cnuse_lLrl!CDgnizes lhe--1m.pori.ance of
rJrm. consistenl adjudil.!alion."
Tobeyl}·nn Birch -Santa Cruz. on
need of hel p for 5uicide-prone -''The
only 'A'ay thllt ;iny or us can h:ivc the guts
to stand up and march through life ls by
knowing that we have the support and
love or tbose around us."
Elslf l\tacCallum, S.F. -"Re : lfenry
Klsslnger'1 appointment as Secreta ry of
State. It's abollt lime a 'foreign accen!'
has bocn taken out or second c_lass
citizenship."
So many people seem apathetic to
the problem, l!: it because they have
become so acclimated lo smog or
because they are too lazy to do anything
about it'?
l..ORRAINE M. KAMj'MAN
VN Fl11g
To the Editor :
Re: The United Nations flags being
displayed in City Council Chambers.
IF THE CITY Councils insist on
displaying the UN nag in their city
halls, arc they awa re that the UN
Charter is the supreme law of the land
(Art. 6 Sec. 2 of the U.S. Constilulion l,
and It has been upheld by the Supreme
Court that all treaties supersede 'he
Constitution?
Wouldn't it then lollo\v that the ttN
nag. representing a One \Vorld Organ·
iza tion. be displayed In a posilion above
the national nag. as lhe national nag
is !'10\\' displayed abo\'e the stale nag~
"'OULO rr !hen al$0 follow that coun·
cil n1ecJing~ \vould be opened \\·Ith n
salule to the---onc -World nag . if~adfng
c\·en1ually to a more appropriale and
re lC\'llnl lntemallona\ anthe1n?
ROSE CORRIGAN
G1111 rrole<'llo11
To the Edltcr:
The newspaper carrl'd these stories
on l\londay, Oct. 15 -"Tl\'O younJl n1cn
crlllcnHy 'A'OUnded in an exchange of
gunfire: six1een·}'enr-old arrested In ron·
nectlon "'i\h iihooting; bodies of thr~e
These objectives and dangen still ex·
isl. But 'A'ho do we have now to tell
us so?
DON HUDDLESTON
Coh1H11u Help
To the Editor:
I like many or !he "·ell·thoug:ht-out
edilof'ials and specia l articles, such as
on Agnew and the Edison plant expansion.
·Your columns from varying viewpoints
help give information so that we can
more readily make up our own minds
on issues.
LEONARD WRIGHT
DAILY PILOT
Robert N. \Vttd, PubU.htr
Thomas Kttvll, Editor
Barbara Kreibich
Editorial Page Editnr
~ edHor1al ,pqe or 1M-Dl.11)1
Pilot 5f't'kJ 10 inform and r.IJm\llate
rtaden by prtttTrtlnc on thit pqe
dlvt-rw•commentAr)•on mplc. 'bl t,._
ltte.IL~odlwcl <:Qlumnisl:a and
r1.rt00fli1ts, by prnvldins a forum tor
readf:n' vk'ws and by Pftsmtlnc thll
ne~·ipaptor'I (IJ>irrion1 md kteu on
CUrT"enl topics. Tl)e '4illlk'ial optnlona
of the Dlllly rnot awe•r only tn the
edltorlal column •t the 1t1J1 ol tt..
Pf.le. Opinions expmmed by the coJ..
urnnl1Jt1 and cartoonlsta and k«fT'
~Tittn are tbelr oown and oo eadone--
mcnt or their ~ by Uie n.lb
Pibt should ti. Wtl'Ttd.
Wednesday. October 24, 1973
· l
·oueENIE .
By Phil lnterlancli
ODo.P'_......_..._,,,,,,, ......... _..
111 don't know what they do lbere. Nobody 's ever in."
N o Cutbacks
County Fligl1ts
Won't Be Pared
By WILUAM L. SCHREIBER said. "Our fuel supplier (Shell
Of TM Dlil'I' ... kil SIMI -Oil Company) aaya then!
The two airlines serving hasn't been any change so
Orange County Airport have far and we hope nothing will
00 imml'Ciiate plans to cut change that."
back on flights to conserve
fuel. an action taken last week
by three of the nation's big-
gest carriers.
Officials at Air caJiforni a
and Hugbeo AirwM ,.Id today
their leJ"Vice hasn't been af-
fected yet by President Nix-
on's mandatory fuel allocation
program.
CI VI L AERONAUTlcc;
Board officials s a y the
average load on the three
airlines cutting back on their
service is about 30 to 5".I per-
cont run. Cutllni back on
flights -and operating cost!
-wi ll increase the toads and
airline profits, lite CAB said.
Airv:est public relations of-
U NI TE D , tw A and fleer Larry Utchfleld aald to-
Amertcan Airlines agreed las t day any decision to cut back
week to trim a total of 63 oo flig hts will be based" oo
flights a day from 10 major the outcome of meeting.a
route1 to cut fuel comwnption. awtlng IOday in Wa$blngton
~ut Mu Van Dordrecht, ex-D.C.. during which alrlinea
ecutive vice president of will discuss the fuel crillJ.
finance fC1f' Air cat, aald the "So fat we have not dooe lueiOiala was a gOod ezcuu-anytbfng-becanl<-It woaJd be
lcr the big •irllnet to dump premature.'' Utcbllekl Aid.
,.ceas. lligbll. "We haYe been operat!nl
"Some of the big airlines since J Uii on what we · call
are so fir over filght capacity a 'flight Prome' that UW!I ·
already that this cu~wlll up to three millJon gallons help them ttream1ine-' , " of fuel ~year.''
Van Dordrecht said. ''Wt on't 1'-_ .. lfi, .. ·zEXFIAIMzii'1 have that J)roblem. We coQld UTalFJELD1
we even more filghts." that weather fact.on:, fll&bt.
THE CONTROVERSIAL Jet
fiighta out or Orange Coollty
Airport are limited by the
county Board of Supervllors
through contractl with the
airlines.
Van Dordrtcht said Air Cal
ls not on the allocalloo yet
because It 111 an intretale
carrier with no routes outside
Callfomia.
"We'll just keep on doing
what we've been dolng until
we bear something new," he
coodlUons., type of aircraft
and other lacton are fed lnto
a computer whlcb detennlnet
the optimwn fl ight capacity
and fuel loa d of each Alrw"t
jet. He sakl that process ls
called the flight prorue.
Anothe r Airwest spokesman,
who asked oot to be Identified,
!aid he thinks Alrwett will
cut back on flights be.fore A1r
Cal because Airwest Dies out.-
of-state. The Hughes jets fly
to ~1exico, Las Vegu and
several Southwestern stat.ea.
Lease-purchase
Guida1ic e Center
Fu nding Chos en
By JO.tNNF. REYNOLDS
Of IM Olily .. lliol Sl•tf
The SMO.<m guidance centtr
for the Huntington Beach
Union Atgh School District will
be built oo a lease-purchase
basis.
Robert Martin, assistant
superintendent for bu!dness,
said trmtee.s decided last
Admission
Sig n up s
Will Open
Applications for admission
to any of the eight UC can1·
puses for the fall quarter ol
1974 may be filed beginning
Nov. I.
To be sure of a place at
the desired UC campus a slu·
dent should apply during
November, UC officials said.
A alngle application filtd
with a $20 fee al th e campus
of first choice assure s
-qua:Ufied •pplicanta a place
al one of the campuses serv·
ing undergraduates.
Applications are available
from high school or com·
munlty college counselon and
from the adm isalom: oHice al
UC lrvtne.
Durlng the flrat month or
the ruing period. each campus
will consider ~p
pllcatlo~. Whtn quotas arc
filled. additional apphca 11on~
will be rtdlrecttd to anothtr
L'C campus.
week to use the lease-pwchase
melhod to "make the district
a UtUe money ."
n11s JS POSS~LE. Martin
sald, because the district can
take the znoney earmarked
for lhe center·s construction
and put It into a short-term
investment 'lll'ith a return of
9 to 9 'h: percenl
It v.ill borrow money at 5'h:
to 6 percent to pay off the
construction rost of th e
center.
lie said the systern is not
Ill'.,.... The district ha.a ltlled
the l<'ase·purchast method to
arquirP all of Its nearly 50
relocnlable classrooms.
TllE CE~'TER, to be bu.Ut
on lhe Winlersburc site at
C.olden \Vest Strei-et a n d
\Viirner Avenue. v.111 provide
classroom space for all of
lhe d1lJtrict's l,000 special
sludtrats. Most ()f these are
ci1he.r crowded lnto t" o
trailers on the alte or housed
in other dlstrlcts.
The cootract for the center
has be<1l awarded to the W.J.
Sbirl•y Co., "Aillch is abet
doing !'Orne of the work on
Hun!ington Beach tllgh School.
Tn1.~te.e Ron ffilenkman sug-
gestrd the lease-purchase
method when elected to the
school board in April.
T"'O \\'EEKS AGO, trustees
hlrt'd the financial consulting
firm of Stone and Youngberg
lo R.Jd in a tax oven1de elec-
tion. That election wtll be used
lo ra.19" funds for IChool corr
structlon.
•
-
It's the way you want to look,
no w. Al l shimmer and shine.
Lighting up the night Sparking
up the good times. VII, division
of Venice Industries, shows
you how. In washable polyester,
all silvery-threaded. For sizes
8 to 18. A-line, pull-on skirt
with ribbed top, •48
Also available in taupe.
Sherwyn Knits
SOUTH COAST PLAZA
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SC DAfl Y PILOT lJ 1
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Bul lock'• S..ta Ana, Mooday thn>ugb Frid17 from 10:00 a.m. 10 9:30 p.in., Saaird.sy from 10:00 a.m. to 6:00 p.m., 1 Fashion Sqoare, S..ta Ana, Telephoa<: '47·7211
Bullock'• Sourh C:C.. Plul, Monday through F1ida7 10:00 a.m. to 9:30 p.m., Somn!ay 10:00 a.m. co 6:00 p.m., 3333 Bristol Suet~ Costa Mtsa, Telephone:· 3'6-0611
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Today's Flmtl
N.Y. Stocks
. ~ tie••·cs" , f;o·asi , e EDITION •
'
Y,OL ~. NO. 297, 7 SECTIONS, 102 PAGES t . . 1 ' . ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 24, 1973 N TEN CE"$ .,
'
Newport Planners to Tackle Population Curbs
. '
city may find itself faced with a lawsuit
if it does so.
"I'd -be very reluc:unt to aay which
way ·we're going to resolve · all these
questions," said Commission Chairman
William Agee today. "But I will say
Uiat l wa:nt· very much to come to
some.. declslons ao that we can move
on to. other ma\ters.
"We've already devoted a great deal
of time to the residential density ques-
t!®,'' Agee-said.
The commisi500 will begin iii dellbera-
ti90s at 7 :30 p.m. in city council
cbarnbtrs with the proposed new
developmetn standards for all the older
Rctions of the city except Balboa Island.
'Jbe ~ new development staod-afds would require three garage park-
ing places for virtually all new duplexes
in the city, and tour to stx spacee
for otJaer" multi-family qnits.
A series of formulas contained in the
standards are designed to encourage
developers to J11Bke their structures less
massive than 1n tbe past.
Since the commission has opened up
the whole question of residential density
for the city, oommissioners could also
enact. new zoaing policies to reslrid
populatioo growth.
Without specifying the method, oom-
m.lssiooers indicated at their last
meeting that they may make a major
new effort at cutting population growth
for older perts of the city.
"Personally I'm unhappy with some
of lhe R-3 and R-4 zoning we have
on the peninsula and think something
should be done about it," Agee said
today.
.. But don't think rezoning b the
answer. I'm more inclined to wort
through these new deveklpment ltc1d-
ard!," Agee said. •
Commissioner Jostpb Rosener sajd to-
day he will press the commlsslon to
adopt a specific policy about bow much
growth the city will allow on the
peninsula, and then to develop ron1111
or development standard.I to put that
pollcy into practice.
Rosener says that current city ordinan·
ces will allov.• growth or 8.000 to 10,000
people more on the peninsula .
Hti:nihiers Newport Coastline
, .... ~ . .... -. ,.,.. --~ --. . .
Cease·firW3 ...
' • . . . --. ·1
Shattered
< . .
. .
f'woHours
By u--Press !Jl ..... llo•ll ~ T!w! .stcond. middle, e8.st cease-'firt in
If hours broke . down for two · bcilJn
h>daii· apd \!IJYJ>tian and hraeµ -lanb
and ·~ ballled .t the oouthem
-' ol. the SUez Canal. Peace Was ~ _by o1g1111a1rJ#'~iil ~ii . il~ di;ollnd' U.S. and SO\iel troops
,,., Iii~ lllldeaJt ;.n-lte11 to polii:<
Ute~' .,. ' . .} .,~,,~~~~
lifted, na-I lmpoi¢
-'"' br<*e out Oct.I. ~~._Iha• tllt> 1·.b6 _,. ~ ~ 11.-·w11• .i!l.t ·---bid --Jo, looi<b lritii llOvlet • commun111 ·party : a I a e ~a 1
5«Ntlly Leonid I. ~v to~ Ille Middle Eut. 'll>e Whl\11 llouli oald
Ille• Unit«! Stoia upoealed wtm_. tb cut . down 01 lbe 'lDusiv.e lnDI lift ... ,., .. 1 It Russia -the ...... f(lr
,lbO Arabo ,
... ----.... ~ -;<r-.... ~·· . •
/
. ·F.cYP1. wbich ........i Imel of lftak· In& the truce. tad&! with ... Ullillt
mi &J<z Cily, ctlkd lot -,..... n.;eeting of the United Natlool '.llelirity
OouncU. · tl>e second In IYo· , doJI, to
EVERYBODY DOES· THllR 'OWN THIN~OME GO LEFT ' WHILE OTHERS SLIDE RIGHT
SUrfen Kld•l}e 'Dly Off 23rd Strfft Whil9 City Offici1 l1 Worry About ·a.ch Erosion
~.....,~ ...... ~~~-'-~~~~-' ' ~~~~~~~~~~~~
·~man.i --1hat the Unllocl' -lllld
lt\mfa take over f6r leeiq
~··•be ... -. It t. ' · ~Cliro Radk> • Ja1d esldent . Anwar Sa¥t uked Foreigni. Mirtlster Mobam~
11]ed ·El-Zayyat \Jl' New York to ask
hlm ... to req~l' the lt<!W'ity councll Jiieelitlt! and to requeot U.S. and SoVl<t
tioopo : fnto the Middle Eaal for ·ll>e !!fa• 11me. , -~'Die radio aaid Soda! ·also hlltf1KUd u~ lo uk Ibo coiladl .to meet
1ti &Utinuoul leSlioft until .. Israel ~el the oeue!flre. '!.. lt laid' Adat
Ibo oent meaa1'" to .'N!Son and-to
·!!mhn<•-lakinl -.... -. -.to the Middle East:t .--
';:'.!JI Tel ~flv, Jmoll Forelp Mlll!Ster
#d>DI Eban told 1 liewl coofe1'91C< that
Jiirael had at last Qblalned t2le pmnlte !I . -negotl•-With the Arab Jfotld for which, U-bod, fought four ~ars, 1and .that if this .came to paas,
li!Tbli montb or -and grief
1filll become. a tum~ point in the history
-of. the region," •
'S,:JS1'ael aald Ejypt's 3":I Army violated tb'e cease-fire with a geneflll otfwtve ~ an attempt to breat. ·out of llraeli ~
,epclrclealenl on both aides of the Suez lanai • but that the alltmpl failed, and
;.lbe EgypUana loet JS pl,anes 1n a
if~tight. IsraeJ 1aid lbe E~lan Anny
.·'4'11 crumbling and • 1utrtnderin& en
muse before tbe breakout~attempl · '
. . '
Me(ijc3.l . Center . ' . .
l\'ltidifieatiori Hit
' • f '. •
By Supervisor
' ' .. .' By.JACK IJROBACI:
• • Of .. D.ttr ...........
~ thal UC .Jrvioe officers ....... <a<eept,. modlllcallon of the P<Oieot llllruatloo-agr..inem be-
the-counl)' ... ~ lltti~ty in manage.
~ " ~\;finnl'· Oltmty Medici!
C¢et -· ... ~ •(Su~rvlsor Rali>h Clllt on...dly. '
. aart.,'I!" e!'gi,.erigina! negoUators
wllll lbe tmlwnilJ olflcla~ .. ., • flOISl-
ble oomPJete tateoVer of the medical
center by' UCI. tnade a "take It or
else .. stalf:n)eDt.
uwe-~ ruffinn our Position that
UCI abould take over the center opera-
tton entirely or we will cancel the af·
fijlation agreement," Qark said.
Superv!llOr Ralph· Diedrich, the other
supervisor on lhe fiegoUattng committee,
aar...i. 'A. firm pr,oposal tor turning over the
~center to the university medical
sdioot should be ready for prtsentiUon
~ ;lo November, the county ad-
. ' • • · · " • mfnlsttative office aald. :. !HOUSE HUN.TERS· · O>unly Adnllnlslrallve Officer Robert
·· · • / ~-Mid a county study commllth!
SEARCH TH"lt ADS bed oOoolldad that It C<lllld DOI arrive ., !' at I ltJltallfe modlllcttlon of the exlsling
.,, ~ent llaures_,,c;om~lled -.by the 1~ ~~l UC! negotiators
')JOW&J>liper Ad.venwna ~au, Jnc:., seemed favorably dlSpoeed toward the
.Jhould provertbat ~ thunttrl start idea ot sln&le management of ·the center.
. their teardl In the nt-P<!f, , nie ~I by the county calls for
!· On an av.,.,. weekday, ac«n<llll/I the-ltftl"ertllY medical ocbool to lease
• o Jh•Jlf%;• ~porctt!,\.'/1 1'-Plftii-~-'R IWmuld.lakeovcr the facm1y
oiling to .~ Ult WJµ110:12 mqn ln Its pre1ent condition and malte all wU! read the llouH for Sole dasslflca· lm~l4 necessary to brinf1 It up .ijen In the local newspaper. Over a . -~ Jive-day t>Crlod 45 percent of the l'fOI• to ~1venlty ala?d".'"'· • l>eCU will tee· tho8& ad1 and. during It has br:~ eattmated that It will
'.a month, 71 percent of the ready·to-buy COii It.I mlllion, lo remodel the county
·.wW reod the l~linp. hospital and the funda have been pre>
, It' y,..·,. selling a hot"1t;.tJUl ti~ vfded, ~by the state. ·
•,house hunter• can find Jt -ea~ly. • Id • Call a Daltii PilOI »vi.or on the 41rtct Under tbe, agreement, the county woo •
line. 6'Wf78, and be where the buym pay 'for ml!lll'al core for the lndllent.
po-IOollfnl. ' ; 1be ..i, duty It 1111 under law now -+-----------· _ In rilalm'to lhe·medieal-center.
• •
EVERYTHING UP IN THE AIR IN NEWPORT BEACH SURF
Wt1ttrn Swtll Gav• Enthu1i11t1 a Tre1t Tod•Y
Marine 'Drowns Chasing Duck
YUBA CITY (UPI) -A 21·ycar-old
Marine stationed at Treasure Island
drowned in lhe Sutter bypass while
l.rylng to retrieve a duck he shot. sher-
iff's deputies reporttd 'T'uelday. He was
identified as Ronold Gene 1''\e1ds.
t . I
2 Couples Saved
As Waves Smasl1
Their Sailboat
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -Huge waves
smashed a 35-foot sailboat outside tbe
Golden Gate Bridge, washing two men
overboard and injuring their wives
before the Coast Guard could rescue
them .
Three times, the boat "had its keel
in the air," said carol Babcock oi
Fresno. Repeated attempts during the
four·hour ordeal Tuesday to hoist Mrs.
Babcock, her husband Edward, and Jan
l.1orrison from the wildly pitching boat
failed , the Coast Guard said.
The boat's owner, Dr. Donald J\lor·
rison, spent 50 minutes in the cold
Pacific Ocean before he "'as picked
up by a hovering helicopter. A Coast
Guard cutter tov.'ed his shattered boat,
~'ilh its three passengers still ori board .
inside San Francisco Bay.
J\1orrison, 39, a psychiatrist from
She ridan. \Vyo., said the first waves
struck his boat, the Jandon. a few niilcs
outside the Golden Gate Bridge about
3 p.m.
1be first wave hurled the boat on
IL! side and broke shrouds bracing the
right side of the mast. he said.
Morrison's wtre broke her leg in the
crash and Babcock was w a s h e rl
overboard, but hauled back aboard wilh
a safety line .
About a half hour later, !\lorrison
said a serond "'ave. ":Q or 30 feet
high," rolled the boat over again, snnr·
pllig-the mast and to!l!ing· MorriM>n
Into the "'11ter y,·here his safety line
broke.
Someone on shore \\'llnessrd 1he 11\-
cident and notified the Coast Guard.
•·1 thouRht I wa11 a goner ." admlttrd
!\1orrison. after the rescue helicopter
passed o\'et him thret times before
spotting him .
· J\1eanwhlle, h\00 Coast Guard medics
wearing \\'Ct suits dropped into the water
•nd clambered abOard lhc Jandoo to
giYC: first ald.
-.
Threat Seen
For Major
Sand Loss
By L. PETER KRIEG
Of ,,,. o.lly ~ti .......
I-luge weste rly swells. pushed by the
storm pounding San Francisco, lashed
the Newport Beach shoreline from the
Newport Pier to the Santa Ana River
jetty today.
The winter season's biggest aurf was
attracting throngs of surfers but was
_P.O!fill ~~r beach erosion threat
to the alrea<t.y~eYiitatec! bellcfi Detwttn.
22nd and 28th Streets, I i r e g: u a r d s
reported.
Waves ranging trc:q six to eight leet
were expected to conttnlie Thursday,
accantmg to tenior lifeguard LGcan
Lockabey.
Lockabey said sandbaalnr may Ila
n-It winds lnawe In ordor
to protect the McFadden Wharf beach
area.
"I f v"e start getting a really sharp
profile -acarping -the beach will
start going fast," Lockabey said, ex·
plaining that beacll erosion occurs faster
when the waves hit the shoreline at
sharper and sharper angles.
Wind is also a ma1or factor, be ex·
plained,
"Right now the wind here is calm,
but if it picks up, we could have some
real problems,'' Lockabey said.
''If it starts to look critical we'll
slart sandbagging," be said, noting that
it's been two years since lifeguards
have had lo take such exlreme precau-
tions.
· But Lockabey said this year the prob-
lem may be compounded because of
· the oontroversial 28th Street groin in~
stalled last year V.'hich is supposed to
protect the beach from surf.
·'It was put in for protection from
the sout h swells that hit us during
the summer," Lockabey said, "but it
really comix>unds the problem by
preventing sand from replenishing dur-
ing the wlnt«."
Before the groin was installed, he
explained, the south swells would wash
sand toward West Newport in the sum-
mer but it v.·ould be pushed back during
the "'esl swells in winter.
"But these beaches by the Newport.
Pier are really starved now," he said.
He said the beach is doWn to %0
to 25 feet at some points. It used to
be 30 yards wide.
Ne\l'J)Ort Beach city officials and the
U.S. Army Corps of Engineers have
been trying to solve the Newport Be.ach
sand eorsion problc.in for years and
ha ve installed a v•hole series of groins
along West Ne"·porL
Orange
•
Weather
Coast
•
Thursday should be a carbon
copy of \Vednesday, according to
the \\'ealhcr service -sunny and
v.•arm. 1-lighs in the mid·70s inland
and at the beaches.
INSIDE TODA. Y
A life-size gallows turned up
as a scltool project in occult
literaJ.u.r.e at Cor..ona..deLMar
fl/Qh tlliJ week. Storu. Paos. 12.
Al Y"r t•rvkt ) L.M .• ..,.. I• • •• 11.., ,,
C•Ui.tftl• 1
~~::!!:.. Ut 49~!
c .... k• '' c...u ... , 17 °""' fttll<•' • •lfllfrilll ~.... •
lllltrtll-tftl U·'I
~11110.Ct l .. H
Pw lllt lttctf'• I
""""'-.)4
' .
'
RESIGNS AS TRUSTEE
Mlchael Collins
Saddleback ' s
Collins Out
As Trustee
Saddleback Community College trustee
A-fichael Collins, 32, of Newport Beach,
announced Tuesday be v;ill resign his
post Jan. 1.
A charter mentber of the six·yeaMld
branl, Collins said business pressures
in his law finn of C.Ollins and Kogler
in Newport Beach prompted his decision .
When Collins was electtAf to' bis first
four-year term In 1969 at age 26, 'he
l\'aS one of the yoWl_gest men ever
elected to a community c<1llege board
in California.
He was vice president during the firs!
year, and ser\·ed as board president
the next two years.
"It is vdtb deep regret and sadness
that \\'e accept your resignation," said
John Lund, board president.
"I tried to talk you out or it. but
I guess you have to do it," Lund said.
The board will appoint a trustee to
fill Collins' spot until the 1975 election,
when Collins' tenn would have expired.
Trustee Hans Vogel, also a charter
member of the board, lamented Collins'
decision.
"Mr, Collins has made a tremendous
-"contribution to this board," Vogel said.
••we started out logether on the same
controversial slate and we've worked
together all these years. I wish you
wettn't going, Mike. We've disagreed
a lot, but never disagreeably," he said.
Newport Citizens
Seek to Curt.ail
Growth in City
A Newport Beach citizens group,
Newport Res idents Unit.ed ( N R U ) ,
adopted a policy statement Tuesday call-
ing for the end to population growth
in already-Oeve\oped portions of the city.
The resolution will be presented to
city plalllling commissioners Thursday
"'hen they meet to continue consideration
of the residential density issue in the
new general plan.
The NRU position spcciticaliy states
that "'hiie population must be held level ,
new construction will be allowed on
lots that have al ready been subdivided .
It did not specify how th.is would be
accomplished.
"'lbere are several \\•ays to stop
population growth \vithout holding back
all construction but we felt it would
be better to let the technical experts
rome up "·Ith the methods," said Allan
Betk, a member of the group.
The NRU position was taken at a
meeting attended by an estimated 20
to 25 members Tuesday night.
Members also elected Ellis and
Barbara Glazier, ZSS2 Vista Drive, to
be o:rchairmen of the group.
Ol.\NCJE CO.\ST "
DAILY PILOT
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Tiit prl...:l~I PUOlilllln• pleM a •I )J(l w .. 1
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Saddlehack
Sees Harho1·
View .Switch
Br'JW WORTH
Of llrt CNJIY Piltt l'!•tf
'
Saddltbl.ck Community C o 11 e g e
trustees agreed Tuesday night that a
small section of their district in Newport
Beach should be transferred to the Cout
Community C.Ollege district.
Following a presentation by Paul
Busse, a resident of the Harbor View
llomes section in Newport which is d.ivid·
ed between Saddleback and Coast, the 1
board voted to initiate a petlt!o:n to
the Orange County Board of Educattoa
endorsing the transfer.
Tbe affected area currently iriVotves
300 homes, one third of the housing
development. It Is bounded b y
M{tcArthur Boulevard, Ford &ad, San
Joaquin Hills Road, and NeW MacArthur.
"Boundaries should enclose, not dl'Yide
a community," Busse said.
The section to be transferred is part
of the Newport-Mesa Unified School
district, wh ich means that neighboring
graduates of the same high school have
had to attend different commwUty col-
leges.
Busse and a num.ber ol residents sup-
porting hlm sought the boundary change
because classes offered by Orange C.Oast
C.Ollege are much closer than those of-
fered by Saddleback, which is ap-
proximately 20 miles away in ?-.fission
Viejo.
Trustee Michael Collins, whose own
home Ls bisected by the irregular boun-
dary line dividing the two districts,
agreed.
"Everybody fn this area ls geared
lo Newport Beach," he said. "This
transfer makes sense."
HL!t resignation from the board, an-
nounced Tuesday night, paved the way
for the transfer. Busse had speculated
th.at the proposa]s would fall on deaf
ears since the transfer he sought would
have placed O>llins outside tbe district.
If the petition to transfer the land
is accomplished by Dec, 31, the new
boundary lines will take effect July I,
1974.
The trustees' peUtion must be
presented with an agreement signed by
the board of tbe recelvlnt district, Coast
C.Ommunity. Residents of the area then
wollld attend Orange Coast College in
Costa Mesa.
Surf Overtakes
Borrowed Auto;
T een in Trouble
A San Bernardino teenager today was
-in trouble with Newport Beach police
and also probably his big brother, an
Army soldie r who could have told him
the vehicle Ford Motor Company
manufactures for amphibious landings
is not the popular Mustang.
lie borrwed the brother's sport sedan
and drove down for a look at huge
storm-Oriven waves pounding the Orange
Coast shoreline but apparently wanted
a closer look.
Newport Beach police said the boy,
Ji, drove onto the sand somewhere
around the Balboa Pier about 8 a.m.
and headed for The Wedge.
He reportedly thought better of his
bcachfront maneuvers at about Eigl11h
Street, turned around and headed back
but it was too late.
!Us brother's car was hauled to safety
by a city skiploader crew, while the
boy himself was taken into custody on
suspicion of Jack of parental control.
His folks v.·ere coming down to pick
him up later today.
CdM High Seu Cox Firing
1 Ot1i R eunion T •
cuooa dol -Hip~.. est_:imony ,
fint gradu1tln1 class WUl bold Its
~Otb .;oni:~~~~ ·. ,..,o. Be Afr· • ed . the lioiMll... _ -~= J.-' • An orpnliatklftal rneeu:ng• of a • ·
group plamlklg the event wUJ take.
· J)laee Thursday at 1 p.m. id Roam
h7 •I the high school. Mrs: Clyda
.Bttnner, secretary cf that first.
graduating class, ha:t issued an
tnvitatton for all members of the
class to attend .
Mrs. Brenner said Bill Leech.
~who was class president and ii
now a teacher at Con>na del Mar
High School. is wort1ng with her
to initiate the arrangements. .
She also requested ~ lmow..
ing the, whereabout.a Of dMI·
members out of the area a.re urPd
school.
Nude W()fuifu
ldeniified;
Quiz Pushed
By JOANNE REYNOJ,.DS
01 rllt Deily '1flt lllff, ,I
Orange County Coroner'i inveatiga,iors
today identified the wOman wbOse nude
body \\'as discovered in Huntington Beach
as Pamela Sue Hodgman, 2L
They said they believe the dead woman
came from the Riverside area.
Meanwhile police are still seeking in-
formation about the suspect in the
murder case, Michael. Denis JJume.Ue,
29, whose-car w8s round In C.OSta Meia.
Det. Sgt. Monty McKennon of the
Huntington Beach police sald ·the blue
station wagon was spotted in a garage
on Newport Boulevard over the weekend
and detecUves from Huntingtan Beach
and Costa Mesa kept a watch over
it until Tuesday when a search warrant
for the vehicle was issued.
McKennon saJd some evidence that
could support their -theory that Bur-
nelle was involved in Miss Hodgman'•
death was found in the car.
Drive to Skirt
Door~to•door
Solicitations
The residential campaign cf the Harbor
Area United Way drive will not Include
the traditional door-to-door-80Hcltatlons
this year, according to Doreen Marshall,
Harbor Area chairman.
Instead, the 1973 Unlted Way fUnd
will rely on material passed out In
the September-October issue of New
Worlds of Irvine Magazine, which is
distributed to most hemes in Newport
Beach ond Irvine, Mrs. Marshall said.
In areas where New Worlds does not
circulate, the United Way fund will rely
en mailed solicitations.
'Because of the broader coverage af-
forded by this method, we are attracting
many new donors who were not con-
tacted in the past," said Mrs. Marshall.
.. But we are also concerned that •
previous United Way contributors might
not understand that there will not be
a block we>rker ca1Ung on them this year
and, in view of that fact, we urge
them to send their contribution in at
this time."
The residential campaign goal of tbe
Harbor Area United Way is $40,384.
The overall goal of the Harbor Area
drive, which includes contributions from
businesses and payroll deductioos, is
$502,205, Mrs. Marshall said,
•
From ·l!'h''~·
WASHINGTON -1be Sena jc
Judiciary ComrDlttee today set a public
hearing ·for Monday lo take testim®y
from Archibald. Cox about his ouster
by Prtsldent Nixon. as rpecW· Waterptc
prosecutor. . -
4.ctioo was ·blocked on a ret0lutlon
bf a group or Democratic liberals on
11\e' ~ -..uJng on NIIoo lO
rtinltate C.01 temporarily untU Congress
aOts on legtslallon lO provide by 'law
an independenl Watergate prosecutor ••
5qln;os ~eel that Sen. Roman L.
Hruska (!\-Neb.), the ranking ~can
on the .committee; invoked "-. rule ..io
force & Week's delay on the ~· • ' • • t move.
COx Wlil be the first wttnels, Sen.
Edward t.f. Kennedy (D-Maa,), a coln-
mJttee member "'!ho urged the inquiry.
said.
Kennedy and some Democrats Uked
that heartngs start this afternoon and
Cox .. was· reported ready to testuy,~but
the co~mittee agreed after a t,w0:&o.ur
closed-door meeting to start the · in-
vestigation Monday.
Jn other developments:
-Speaker Carl Albert said today the
preliminary HouSe inquiry on im-
peadunent of NLllXI will proceed
regardless or the Presldent's release
cf the Watergate tapes.
"i hope· It Is expedltlom, ond I hope
It lays this thing to rest · ooe way
or another,'-' Albert tcld newsmen.
Tbe S peaker said the HOUR Judiciary
Committee bas been mandated tc make
inquiries into resoluticM to impeach or
to bring impeachment charges against
the President "and inquiries it is going
lo make."
-AFllCIO Presld<nt George Miany
said today Nixon appears to suffer from
"dangerous emot1ona1 inatablllty" and
repeated that be should reeJgn or t>e
hnpeacbed.
Meany aLoo called for a new special
proeecut.or.
"We firmly believe there must be
a completely i:Ddependent tnvestigation
or the scandalJ 1D thia adminisb'atlon.
Nothing that bapReD;ed ye Lt e_r d ay
changes our opinion the the Preajdeot
has so destroyed the people'• confldence
tn government tbat be ,lbould nsllD
or be impeacbed."
The Wblte House quickly called Meany's ~ "'1Qcredi-1e •. inelCUMble
and ~hie" .~,declared that
Nlmi's health la~ •, .
Tbc shirp While House """"""' c:8me Within mtnutc. alter Meany's state-
ment.
Car Rams House;
'
Driver Injured
A young woman 'dr1vt r .JUf(ered mhlor •_
injuries this morning •ben her car
crashed into the wall of a house oo
the Newport Pen1Mu1a.
The accident occurred •'shortly before
noon at BaJboa BoWevard and «Ith
Street. aCCCJl'OOlg lO police trallie tn-
vestlgators.
Damage appeared tc be fairly major
where the car struck the slde d. tbe
reslderu:e, according to ca-the-sceoe
witnesses.
Y · O•Hr Piiot S!tlt Pllt!t
Close, Vet JOI Years AP.art . ,J
Fiv'e.:v.ear--old bnda Stenge -(right} pr~sents a birthday car'ct she m"adE! 1 i
to ~rs. Ellen -Webster who celebrated hei' 106th bl'rthday'Tuesday 31 L •
Port Mesa Convalescent -Hospital. The-birthday party was arranged · 1
by the Costa.Mesa \Voman's Club and the well wisher~: included Wil~· '.
lard Jordan, vice mayor Of Costa Mesa. Linda is.the daughter of-one ~:
of-the club members.
Character Boat Parade's '• ' ·-'
Los~g Ll,ster-May End ·
The Newport Harbor c\iaracter, .Boot
Parade ~bat " annually eneul!s. .N~wport ~c~ with varying degr:ffs .of lunicy
u lo¢ng !ls.l.llltcr. ". • . •
Some . ""°~ Chamber , '!! <;om-merte -omcials are so discouraged .they
are talking about discontinuing it.
1be talk i.!n"t serious, insists Newport
Harbor Chamber of ~erce Manager
Jackrllan\~lt 1B11G '~t ~<to
day thilt tbe !f-yiar<>1d. event Is silfferlng
from dwindling numbers of participants
and ll<ilds •;, thorough 'lv~l/),"11
Barnett sill! there wtre ·o61Y 2' Mries
~ ... ~ ~:~ ~~adl .~1~•)!,•~~l~ -~· ,,,.ul5""'"' ·.i·nu S un y ·• ·abi:iati .nau • '•w1e number tbeN used to be.·•\'. :·· " ·'
'"11>e thing's been gcing· oo !or 12
yeans and things have happened'. that
shouldn't," Barnett said. '!The Harbor
Patrol is what scares tome of them."
Barnett referred to-the .. ed ot the
Chamber and the Orange>,(Jounty Harbor
Patrol to issue stem warnings and isaue
numerous citations the past couple of
years because of rowdy behavior by
some boa~. , ~ ''The par t; needs a thorough re)'~nJ;!:p
and ft will gft ·OOe as· fhe.~Ghalnl>ef'1s
Commodores' Oub, whidl sponsors the
parade,,, meets ov~r the Dt'It,. few
months, Bernett ssi,d,-, t
.He disclosed th.a\ ·the.re were,.12 -JeWer
.boats in the parade this year than last
and said there are sharply declining
numbers cf .true "cbaractei;" boats in-
volved ariymcie. . '
''This year we lost about 10 boats
that are normally in the parade. Dick
Shaw's 'Michigan' always seems to have'
something wrong with It. The plumbing'!
loose er else the motor's gone haywire,'"
he said.
"There were._ iJ. couple of .steamboat.
inoperative And ·anyhow, we went aroUnd
this year and counted IO boats not
in it that always have been,"· Barnett
said. •
"We've just '1got to get Some diOughts·
on how to L get it back on the track
like it used ·to be. It's like everything
else. It needs a thorough overhauling,"
lJe.P.ict. j ·~ur any . talk of dropping it l1111't sermii'l~'.1"""lbo good arl event,"' he addea .• ,. 'ff ·!' '
.'."Thefe's ~iDg s6 Sl:ri6l1S wrong ft\at
cah't belb:>rrected,'1 he said, Batn~tt !ia.id that Cl.ihton HOosei
chalrmall. ef this year'S ·parade, \\.as
probably the' mqst disillusioned ~d
downhearted over the poor turnout. ,,.
·Hoose was unavallable fer cOmrilent
but he had written some thoug~ ii} 1
the cutfent -Chaml5er bulletin that pretty
n1tfch Olltllhed' his feelings.
"One· Of the big questions fa cing the
Commod'ores' ·Club following this year's 1 character bo:i.t parade is, 'Do we cOn•
tinue with a character boat parade tha\
is losing lls partici pan ts at the rate
of about 10 percent annually?'
'·Many commodores can remember the
days when numerous requests to
participate in the parade had to be
denied as it .was already operating at
its maximum capacity.
Sup e1·ior Court Clerks
Return Aft er 'Sick-out' OPIN ' .. ' ClOSID
I UND.\'r
By TOl\f BARLEY
01 lh1 01Uy PllOI $1111
Th irty-eight Orange County Superior
Court clerks. each of them armed with
a doct or's certificatt'. are back on the
job today after a one day "sick~ut"
that ""·as described by one absentee
as "a little bit of muscle-nexing."
County Clerk William E. St John con-
firmed that his "·orking force \\'as at
full strength tod ay ana said he does
not intend to discuss lhe sick~ut with
his clerks "except on a strictly informal
basis.
"I am 1\ith them." he said today.
•·r think they are very much underpaid
nod I think the abilities of what r
rega rd as the best court clerical force
in Callfomia should have been recognized
long ago."
!\t John . his supervisory personnel.
and the skeletoo crew that kept l'Ollrt
affairs ru nning Tuesday on a nearly
normal basis. worked until late ~londay
night to clean UR a\\ arrears that ac-
cumula ted during the day.
St John said he doubts there \\'ill
be any furlher lop level disc ussion of
~1c pay dispute until Orange County's
supervisors return late this week from
the County Supervisors A.<111ociation of
Cali fom1a ronvt'ntion In Hedding.
Th<' bonrrl v.·cnt ink) executi ve session
Tuesday \\'hen it learned that 38 clerk s
were a"Ment from their desks. But they
refused to dlscu~ lhe issue during the
regular Tuesday 1nccting although of·
ficials of the AFL-ClO uni on were
present il'l. the hearing room.
County supervisors had earlier. offered
the clerks a 4.4 percent pay raise after
the clerks had rejected a proposal that
v.·ould have raised their $1,006 a month
salaries by 2.5 percect.
The clerk s feel that their salaries
should be at least comparable to the
$1 .333 a month enjoyed by Los Angeles
C.Ounty Superior Court clerks.
But a spokesman said today that lhe
real reason behind their decision to
stay cut Tuesday stemmed from what
he said was the refusal of tne county's
personnel department to agree to media·
lion of the dispute.
The clerks will meet in the courthouse
Thursday night te> consider possible
strike action If the ccunty remains ada·
mant on its denial of mediation.
'"They have a good cas~," St John
cc.mmented. "They are seventh In Oie
list or California county pay acates and
I think that is a very unrealistic poslticn
\vhen one oofillide1'9 the callber or-w
Orange County workers ."
Sev<'ral ccunly departments reported
squabbles this n1omlng between 38 clerks
,,·ho stayed out 1'uesday and those who
decided to ignore the sick.out and stay
on duty.
"They'll pay for it," commented one
disgruntled absentee. "But when we get
the pay raise we've struggled so damned
hard for guess "·ho'll be first In the
line with thelr hands out."
Just ArrlYed-1.arge
Shi1111ent of Speedo
Swim Suits & Trunks
Water Wonder Kick Boards
Adilas Tennis Shoes .
Men's or ladles'-18.95
Tretum Tennis Shoes
Men's er Ladies'-16.95
Cenme Tennis Simes Larfies-7.95
Men's--3.95
Tennis Dresses
Men's Tennis Shorts & Shirts
Acryllc Warm Up Sults-21.95
24:9F34.95
Racket Stringing
Squash Rackets-Tennis Rackets .
Wilson-Penn-Dunlop Temis Balls Dz. 7.95 ·
OPill f ffil0Sed*s1tlii3Y •
Soccer Sl10es
BrazHs-11.95
Canadas....:12.95
La Paz-14.'95
Super Lite-17.50
All Purpose Shoes-10,95 to 17.95
· Bob WoHe Super Pro Basketball
Shoes-9.95 ·
AU Star Basketball Shoes-9.95
Volt Junior & Intermediate
Footballs-7.95
Volt Basketballs-5.95 to 19.95
· SoceerbaUs-9.95 to 19.95
---Water Pororans 10.~s & 15.95 -
Boys' Football Shirts Reg. 2.95 Sale-1.95
Handball Gloves-Racquetball
Racquets-Bandminton Rackets
538 Centtr 646-1919
•
I ' '
l
I
-'
• DAD.Y PILOT EDITORIAL PAGE
I
l
' Uousing
Anyone who tak .. the Ume to plow through the 45·
odd pages of the just-releas'ed Housing Element of the
Newport ~each general plan bas a chuckle coming.
The document -not yo! approved by city co•ncil·
men -certainly has a fair share or outright hypocrisy.
On one page it spe~ boldly ol developing, adopt· in and enforcing an ... n housin " ordinance which
:S1 prohibit .. discriminl on In the ~e or 11ntal of hous-
ing to asaure that all peraona Viii be able to purchase or
rent adequate housing facilities or their choice ... "
lt·also endorses joining the Orange County Housing
Authority which has been formed to promote housing
for loW; and moderate-income families.
Yet other pages are !Uled with platitudes about the
Newport Beach environment ind declarations fuch as
"envJr:Onmental ~quallty~conslderations take l>recedtJlce
over the problem of satisfying the continually-growing
housing demand."
Clearly, the two are contradictory. You can't_give
priority to medium· and low-price housing while giving
precedence to preserving high-priced housing.
It would be more honest to just admit that hous-
ing values in Newport Beach are so' high that they will
keep out the poor -black or white -and 'tbe city
really isn't able, or interested, in doing anything about
It.
Upper Bay Priorities
After years o! liUgation and political in!lghting, a
solution to the Upper Newport Bay issue is literally
· there for the taking by the Orange County Board o!
Supervisors.
'
Double-talk
period. Any lands still unacquired at the end of that time
would revert back to the company.
This concept, a sort of "buy now. pay later" ap-
proach, should be aceepted immediately by the super-
visors. Whether it will, however, remains in doubt.
Supervisors stalled the deal last week, instead vat·
ing to f\lnd $30,000 worth of legal research as ground·
work for a lawsuit over title to three marsh islands in
the bay. I! they decide to press the suit, it cou ld muck
up the works again for years to come. And that, appar·
ently, b the intent of some supervisors.
Some supervjsors also are complaining that the
method by which the state proposed to appralse the bay
will favor the Irvine Company to the amount or several
million dollars. The logical implication of this talk is
that these supervisors may want to delay accepting the
state offer until they can conduct an appraisal on their
own.
Any more delay in approval of the offer because of
either a iawsuit or the appraisal would be a serious n1is·
take. The ,sta\e offer includes a promise to carry out a
proper title search and to abide by all the accepted rules
of land appraisal. There is no reason to believe the state
would not do a fair and honest job on this work.
~ere is one other ·consideration. Ecologically
speaking, Upper Newport Bay is in trouble. It is laden
~ith silt and water pollution poses an increasingly ser·
1ous threat. In view of this, it is imperative to achieve
public ownership as rapidly as possible.
. Whe11 supervisors meet next W~nesday to con·
sider the state offer, their top priority should be to
start the Whole matter moving. They may want to attach
stipulations to the state offer -they may even want to
pursue a tiUe cballenge or their own -but they should
accept the state offer while it still stands.
;
The proposal put lortb by the C.Ufornia Resources
Agency calls !qr the state Department of Fish and Game
to ·take over· immediate possession of the Baµ· Bay up-
lands and wetlands. Details of the purcbue from the
ll'Vtne Company-could be worked out over a 10-year
There are many problems to be resolved, but pub-
lic possession of the bay should be taken now - a con-
cept fully acceptable to the Irvine Company. The details
can come later. 'Left.overs? What left.overs?'
N
Don't Be
Misled By
Manners
Dear
Gloomy
Gus
·Hu11inne Societ ies' Thankless, Heortbreuki1ag .Job
Owners -to Blame for Animal Woes
To the Editor:' Court that all treaties supersede ~he
_At least o~ a week, someone (who ( J Constitution? -. ' Is either thoroughly ignorant of the fa<'ts MAILBQ·V \Vouldn't it then follow that the 11N
of the surplus animal problem or refuses A fla g, representing a One World Organ-
And u .. we wget those little trams, ~YDNEY J.HARRI~ just how are the summer renten
supposed to move in!
to aca!pt the facts due to concern for ization. be displayed in a position above
only their one animal) calls, or comes the national flag, as the national fl ag
in, calling our employes "murderers." is oow displayed above the state lag? . . B.M.~. Letter.! fron1 readers are welcome.
• THERE HAVE been many television Normally, writers should convey their WOULD IT then also follow that coun-
1 OtottM Ow· ~ ,,.. ..,....,,... ff ho h t met a distinguished literary igure ,.. • .,. ... ,.,_.._HMl'hr pf*t "'• s ws, muc . newspaper pu~licily about messages in 300 words or less. The cil meetings would be opened with a
many years ago, and was so awei:I :=: ::.::..,, "':7ilb-'e;:' ... ~111t "' t!1t lack of hiomes for the a~al popula-right to condense tetters to fit space salute to the One World flag, leading
and impressed by hlm that -l ~babbfed -1-__ ..;.... ____ ...;;;;'-"'"'---' --:-Lion.-3'he.Orange..County .Arilina.I Shelter..___o r _t!imtn~~1libe.~ r~e~ 41l--k,t_· _eventuaUr t~ a more appropriate and
like a schoolboy aod felt sure· Ile never t• an~ everr ot~r pound and huma~e ters m11st 1nclude iugnature and mail-relevant mfumatlocallJitbem.
wanted to meet .me agalq,-' , rOrt ~ 1 \ . , be dis-society, tries to mform the &eneral .l!lJbllc i11y address but names may be with-ROSE CORRIGAN
But tater, when my first book cime l~king ~..., ~ting · . of tbe 1ou~ ·of .,animals hav111g to held· on request if sufficient reason
out, I received a delightfully warm~ lett~r liked. And this defensive attitude bnngs be kip.~ daily, yet there are those is apparent. Poet1'!/ will ·not be pub·
from him, telling me how rnucq he on. the very ~ac;tlon it is looldng for. who come in and become enraged lis1Ied.
admired my WOfk and how D):,,_.!ie Strangers ~oftlJl, treat ·US , l\e way because we cannot keep and guarantee
bad enjoyed our brlef'lfteetiog_ .. r:s -"' ~t. .fP,. .. their one anlmal-a home.
ago. { People who t In~~ ba:..M.::;;.i:L. ita," We have even b'id J>Ct?Ple;who ihreatel'!"
d \ ulv for instance, are u5uaJ:ly 3'1.lU\D'l"il from ed to sue us because their animal was put I we thunder.struck. an mmen~ this sort of delusion. 'Itiey ~-e that to sleep -yet that same person would pleued. And bis letter set me 14 won· the ml " dee-"' 1 ed dering bow many of us go through . se "e!le es . are N : vo v not even pay the cost or a newspaper
1 d" \"k 1n plotUng agamst t~, or I n ad or take the time to try to place life thinking that certain peop e 111 e humiliating them, or talking against it in a good home. The anima l was
us, when, in fJCt, they do not dislike them -when; in truth, ~ "enemies" their responslbill"' but they chose not us at all. .., are not even aware of the existence . to be responsible and when our efforts
SOME PEOPLE are shy with new ot the feud . failed at placing it we were called
acquainWlces. and thus they Sttm to the "killer". We spend around a hundred
be frl&id and disapproving. Others simply THE ONLY senaible apProarh is tons· dollars a month in advertising. A cost
bave a naturally gruff manner, which sume that most people will like yoll, un· we really cannot afford. \Ve have
we mistakenly take to mean impatience less you give thtm cause not to; and to volunteers who allow their private
wttb us. And still others are just vague accept the fact · that some people would numbers to be used, because our Animal
abbut people, and what we thlnk Js riot like you no 11,1atter what )'Od were Care Center telephones are busy con-
• snub is merely absent.-mindedntss. or did. Trying to make everybody like stuitly with cruelty corhplaints and
I have had the experience of people you is exhauating,w and impos&ible of requests for help for low~st spaying
tellina: me, after we had got to know achievement. J;lost of our trouble is and neutering and ill or injured animals
each other better, that they were coo-our egocentricity, which takes for belonging to those who cannot afford
vlncff I loathed them upon lbe flrst granted that people are thinking about the services of a private veterinarian.
meeting -which was DOt at all the case. ai mudl ~ thin lhey really are.
Jt a man is restrved, it does oM ~ In moat eatff, 'they are thinking about
he iJ passing adverse judgment upon themselves, just as v:e are. None of
you; just as often It mean.s he ii afrilld · us ii ai Important to others as we
f · d t f bi think we are, and what we construe 0 your JU gmen ° m. as disllke ls moat often indifference,
nmRE ARE some people, un-or fear, or seJf-abeorplion. But it is
fortunately. who are mildly paranoid hard to · realize this when we come
in this respect They walk through We race to face .
EVERYONE at the Mimal Care Cen!er
'grieves over the terrible waste and suf-
fering of animals born on ly to die under
the wheels or a car. mistreated an<l
chained for life, or dumped and grieving
at any or the many pounds. For every
animal v.·e personally place, an average
of 2S comes in; there is simply no
•
Who Was Archibald Cox?
Tht following column C!ntilled •'Rt·
member Archibald Co~?" wai written
b11 Cha.rlf:s McCabt Ja•t 'Wtf:k, 1hort111
b<fore Pretfdtnt. Ni:ton'f'sUrprlJe cUs· mlt.tal of the Wa.teroati-pro,CCutot.
I ii the light of recenc eve·nta, AfcCabt's
comments take on a. new intera t
If you are "'Ondering if the Watergate
scandal may have liecome a dead letter,
forget lt Forget it good.
"The serpent that will gnaw out his
CHARLES McCABE . !
about the condu'ct of his duties and
responsibilities." Tfiis means Mr. Cox
reaJJy his ~the tree hand that special
prosecutors , are ral'f/ays assured they
have; but In fact neVer quite achieve.
vital!," is the WAY MORE !MPPRTANT to remember Is
one eloquent lawyer. ~ th:at Mr. Cos: is a Democrat. and a
friend or mtne dee-damned partlaan one at that Hl1 staff
crlbes the mJni·
1
-containa only a handful oi Republlcans.
btlreaucracy rped.a Twelve key members have had con·
praaecutor Arcl>ibald • nectloils with '.the ICelu>e<tys In U.. past.
Cox has buUt JJP .-.Wbi(e tt 'would not be ~ taste to
witllln the J.UJ!lce "say t\Jal• the proeecutor ind 111.i staff
Department to lnves-are. out to get M&. Nixon, It 11 hard
tl11te chargts of . to iee bdw the truth could ba otbeTwise.
oorruptioo In lhe · Mt. Nl1Ql\'bimle~ appean to ttW>k so.
Nllioo Admln&tralloo and ""'1 ovtr the Ju """"""°<lias -rved1n the contell,
!IOclings to • IUlet or' gnnd jlai11. • ··even par~dl 1\1.•• enemies.
AJ of last count Mr. Cox, Will> wa• 11 u coc.i' to ttmember I!>' Cllmate
John f'. Kenned)'' a solldtor-tt~ral when Mr. Coz. was niunecS.. to his /•b.
President had to be clean as boiled
rice and much ni~r to look at.
THAT LOGIC may be just too good
to be true. Up to now, Mr. Cox has
been· about as visible as a beaver, and
about as occupied. When those grand
iuries start to send up their indictments.
lhete will be proper hell to ppy. no
matter what the courts decide about ~r. Nixon's fam ous lapes. '"
The sc um that surfac<!d w I l h
Watergate wilt continue to pollute lbe
public gaze for months and even tears
to cotne. Mr. Cox has made it dear
he does not share ~1r. Nixon's holy
view of himsell -that his sins are
not those or other men, that the
Cons!Utution' was spectallt lb-Wied to
keep him out of jiil if' blj ShOUld do
something that would put. Other men
behind blr.!I. .
If Mr. Nixon has been obstrucllng
jusUce, and that is the large unw;ritttn
charge before the American peo_ple, the
former Harvard Law prof woull:I l:~m
uniquely the man to nail hhn to the
mi.st. from 1980 to l9e&, had a 11·atf of Diarty ""'J'be Nixon .house of card9 wu tumb lng
11 hundred and a proposed budget of d<.wn. ft got so bad that ~,.u~uc,~a~l-,,:i:w:;_ 0.NLYJIJIML.lha1 can :?!~ m mUHon for hl1--nnt year ot"'open· s rategy, 1fter mony or Mr. O:ix would be pre ssure froln f..1 r.
!Ion. He now has five task force• looking Dean, dictated that tvcrybody should NixlYI to have Mr. Richardson sack
into : The Wateraate break·in and cover· get the shiv except the Pope. him. 1bls Iii just about the one thing
up, the activities of the White Jfou,,e !\fr. Ellk>t Richardson, who h11s an lhat Mr. Nixon doesn't have the pclilical
plumbers. campaign Onanctng, Political honest name and an honest race chuttpab to auempt. Such a move would
egpionage and the Infamous ITI' case. and Is a BostOn brahmin and therefor~ maan the caver·up of !he cover-up. That
p.fR. COX'S guidelines con1Utute 11n in theory automatically above the !!Ort wou ld be Just too much. It might end
extraordinary miindate, just about un· of trickery practiced by the Santa up with tbc President being hanged
precedented in WaMingtoo polticl1I Barbara·PaJ.lldenA m1D090 was called by hi• own tJghtrope.
history. fie bu made It clear thlt In to lend Jn odor ol sanc:Uty to the Wbm Mr. On took over 11.s 1peci1I
"the special prosecutor will determine White House "corpse. Alcbardlon a~ prosecutor he aaid, "t hold lhe v.·hip
whether and to what extent he will pareotly chose: COll'. on !he theory that hand." I'd say so. and "'<luld add that
inform or consulL the Attorney General If Cos c:ould e.1culpate Mr. Nixon, lhc \Vatergatc may sink ~1r. Nixon ye t.
•
gµ,arantee for any animal turned in
regardless of breed or pedigree. Our
only guarantee is a humane death by
injection, if no home is available.
I KNO\V this Jetter will not touch
those who selfishly consider only their
one animal but perhaps it will help
other's to understand the God-av.1ul job
we. or any other humane society, has
to do. I should include the public pounds
too because they are only there because
of irresponsible animal owners.
Our ~·ork is difficult, heart-breaking.
Every year humane societies lose true.
dedicated humanitarians because of the
almost endless grief associated with this
\\'Ork. added to their abuse by a segment
of the general public. In tile long run .
only lhe animals suffer due to this
loss.
!\:lost sincerely ,
JEAN BAUSCH ,
Executive Director
Animal Care and Humane
Education Center
T ax Refor m
To the Editor:
No doubt everyone agrees
a need for tax: reform. But,
I the answer:
there is
is Prop. .
I. Do v.·e want taxing power ~hilted
from our Senators and Assemblymen
to the Go\·ernor?
2. \VIII Prop. I rcAlly reduce your
taxes or will the dencit be msde up
by an increase in local taxes?
J. Will the average citizen benefit
fro1n the passage of Prop. I?
Because of 1he complexity of Prop.
1. a meeting discussing the opposition
"'111 be sponsored by the American
Association of University \\1 om en .
League of \Vomen Votr.rs and the Council
or PTA 's 1vill bt held at the San
Clemente High School in the Little
Theater on \\'ednesday, Oct. 24, al 7:30
p.m. The public is encouraged to attend.
,,IARILYN O'BRIEN
President. AAUW San Clemente-
Capistrano Bay Branch
VN Flag
To the Editor :
Re : The United Nations nags being
displayed in City Council Chambers.
lF TJIE CITY Councils insist on
displaying the UN nag in their cit y
hall s, are they av.'are that the UN
Charter is the supreme law or lhc land
!Art. 6 Sec. 2 of the U.S. Constitution ).
and It has ~pheld by lhc Supreme
Quotes
,V. Pudlnski, Com missioner. C.1\if.
Highway Patrol on trend townrd drunk
rlrl vl ng trial s -"Jnsistentt upon a trial.
in contrast to the OOll\lfl-OI procedure of
Reoeptlng a pita o1 guilty to a lesser
charg e, Is a progres!Jive and vital Btt:p
because It recognize!! the lmporulnce of
f1 r1n, consistent adjudlc11tion."
Bay E.,.,fOfl!I
To the Editor:
Re: Daily Pilot editorial, Oct. 11, en·
titled "Restoring the Bay."
I'm not entirely familiar with the
details of plans to dredge Upper Newport
Bay (lo provide fill for the Coroon
del Mar Freeway and supposedly
"restore major portions of the bay to
Ilda! action"\ but ii seems as though
man, with liUle prodding, is quick to
stick his oose into business better hsn-
dled by the Creator. It seems "'e are
on the verge of "'inning Hie security
of the Bay for its wildlife values when
"'e get the idea to "improve" the Bay
and get rid of scars of man's and
Nature's past deeds. The lesson that
some people seem never to learn is
that Nature best governs hel'Sflf.
PRESEN'M..Y, at Upper Nev.-port Bay.
-Silted areas such as major portions
of the fonner salt V.'{)rks do undergo
tidal nushing and are converting (since
1969) into healthy salt mar:sh-mudnat
habilat. Those areas which are not
reached by the tide are used as nesting
grounds for some avian summer
residents and as resting grounds for
the myriad migrant and "'intering flocks
of bird s.
-With completion of East Bluff
developm ents, siltation deri\•ed from
those areas has hopefully' slov.·ed con·
siderably and now shouldn't threaten
the exlinclion ol lhe tida1 habitats.
-Ironically. the waste water (of
dubious quality) derived from run-off
of homes , schools. ancf golf courses (as
in Big Canyon) has allowed the develop-
ment or willow thickets and other
marshy-riparian vegetation, which in
turn is Pl'!>Viding good v.•ildlife habitat
-an unexpected. beneficial side-effect
of that urbanization.
A CAREFULLY considered plan of
sill removal may, in fact. imprO\"C
wildlife values but such a plan must
be very carefully considered. '·To return
the are3 to tidal action" isn't. of it self.
an ecologically 900nd basis for action.
"To provide fill for a freeway'' is a
sound basis only for ecological rape.
1 suggest all partles "'Ork tov.·ards
seeing how little 1ve can <lo while ma1.-
imizing the quality or these precious
wildlife resources.
CHAALES W. SEXTON
P.S. Supplemental: I :im a senior
at U.C. Irvine, majoring in biology.
I am a native Orange Countian and
I gre\v up in ~nla Ana !{eights. In
high school and coll ege, I ha ve ~tudled
much of the v.11dHfe around Uppcr
Newport Bay. "IY most 'recent v.·ork,
under Dr. George Hunt at UCI. COO·
cerrf<.'d the '"7\vhm l1tt-of Upper Ne,..,,ort
B11y llnd Other Areas of the Estuary.'
Coastal Lagoon Eeo!iystr1n ot SoutM!rn
California.''
G1111 rrolerllon
To the Editor:
The oewspllper carried these stories
on l\1onday. Oct, 15 -"T1\'0 young n1cn
crl1lcalty woonded ln an .~xchange of
gunfire: si:<tttn-ycar~ld 11rrested in con·
ntctlon wiH1 shooting: bodies of thrt>e
shooting victims were found; a IJ'OUP
of boys "''ere question~ by police in
shooting spree; Ri'alto won:ian..., parllyzed
and reported In critical condition; man
killed in market: bus driver wOunded
while driving" -an appalling nUmber
of incidents for one day's reportint!
I AM DEEPLY distressed ow t~
innumerable amount of citizens who
do possess guns as I'm sure many
other people are. Its the age-okl..qµestion
of-who-lobbies the longest-and hardest, oot WHEN ARE gun cootrols eoinl
to pass the Legislature!
There are far too many· gang wars'
that have resulted in the shooting or
innocent: vlctlms (!!Orne or th em
chi \dren): there are too many deranltd
souls looking for "kick" with a pistol
or shotgun ; there are too many upeet
lovers and husbands (wives too) who
take revenge with a ~·
I HA VE heard lhe saying, "I need
a gun for protection." To the contrary.
"'e need protection agalmt guns -thefr
sales and usage. We must, as indignant
citizens, do something to prevent this
rapidly increasing, senseless .k:llling.
Our Legislature may take action if l\'t
protest loudly enough.
NANCY PENNEY
Birch Credit
To the Editor :
Your editorial-obituary on the ~mh1e ot fbe John Birch Soclely could, and
in my opinion certainly should have
included some compliment ary
statements because that So¢.ety has
sl·rely not been all bad.
· YOU SPEAK ot the prolonged period
or hysteria maintained by JBS.
You caU attention to some efforts
and beliefs on the part or JBS th.at
many people thought ridiculous.
BUT YOU F All. to give the JBS
credit for having alerted more U.S.
citizens to the objectives and dangers
of communlsin than any other organiu·
lion.
These objectives and dangers still H ·
ist. Bul v.·ho do \\'e have now to tell
us so?
DON HUDDLESTON
Col11111 11s Help
To the Edito r:
I like many of the 11.•ell-thought<>Ut
editorials and special articles, such as
on Agne"· and the Edison plant expansion.
Your columns fron1 varying viewpoint~
help give infonnation so that we can
more readily make up our own mind!!
on issues.
LEONARD WRIGHT
DAILY PILOT
Robtrt N. \Vttd, Publilh«r
Thomas Ktwil, Edilar
Barbara Krtibich
Editorial Page £diklr
~ editorial pap-of the Dally
Pilot S«ks to Inform. and 11Umulat•
~aden by ptt~tina on thl• pqt
dlverte•c.'Ommentary on topics ot tn-
tm1r by syndicattd c:olwnniltJ I.rid
rartoontm;-bJ pnn<idhc a~EMtm ktf'
N:adtn' vi-·11 and by ~Ina this
ne-A'Speiptt'• opLIUonl and icieu on
('lll'n'nt toplet:. Thi} t.dlto.lal opWons
of the Dally Pilot appear onl.Y tn lhe
tdltorlal column at Ult mp 0( dirt
Pact. Oplnk>nl c11preutd b)' the cof.
umniftl and c11 r1o0nlsta and Jctttt
wrltm arr their own and ro ctMb•
rnrnt ol their ~ .. ti)' 'the> Dau,
Piklt lh:luld be Wtrftd.
Wednesday. October 24, 1973
·-·
I
•
I
•
•
QUEENIE By Phil lnterlandl
"l don't know wbaL they do there. Nobody's ever in.0
No Cutbaeks
County Flights
Won't Be Pared
By WILLIAM L. SCHREIBER
Of ni. Dalty Piie! ll1tf
The two airlines serving
Orange County ·Airport have
no immediate plans to cut
back on flights to ~e
fuel, an action taken last week
by three of the nation's blg·
gest carrters.
Officials at AJr C8ll!ornfa
and Hughea Alrwest sald tocfay
their serv1Ci! hasn't been af-
fected yet by President Nix·
on's mandatory fuel allocation
program.
said. "Our fuel supplier (Shell
Oil Company) says 1bere
hasn't been any change so
far and we hope nothing will
change that."
C l V I L AERONAUTI~
Board officials s a y the
average load on the three
airlines cutting back on their
service is about 30 to 50 per-
cent rulL Cuttin& back on
flights -and operating costs
-\\'iii increase the toads and
ai rline profits, lhe CAB said.
Airwcst publlc relations of·
UN I TE D , TWA and fleer Larry Litchfield said to-
American Alrlin'5 ag reed last day any decision to cut back
week tG trim a total ot 63 on flights will be based on
fllg.bts a day from 10 major the outctme ol. meet.inp
routes to cut fuel comumption. starting today in Washington
But Max Van Dordrecht, ex-D.C., during whJch alrllne:!f
ecutive vlce president of wlJI discuss the fuel crisis.
finance for Air Cal, said the "So far we have not done
fuel-crisis wu a 1ood-excuse anytbtng because it would be
for 1be big alrlin<s to dwnp prematlll'e," Litchfield said.
excess fUgbts. • "We have been operaUn.t
"Some of the big airlines since Ju1y on what we c:ail
are so far over IUgbt capacity a '11111>1 Jll"lllle' tbal A,..
already 1bat tbls cutback ~I up to lhree mllliotl 1aJlom
help them streamline thlhtl/' • ot fuel a year.'.&o: •
VanDordrechtsaid."We don't · ' ' ,t 1· -
have 1.bat problem. We could L1Tt'BFlELD EXPLAINBD
use even more flights." tbat wbther factors, fltgbt
'111E~jel
rugllta out of O..Oge OolmlY
Airport are limited by the
county Board of supervisors
through contract.!I with the
airlines.
Van Dordrecht sald Air Cal
is not on the allocatioa yet
because it is an intrastate
carrier with no rout.ea outside
California.
"We'll just keep on doing
\\'hat we've been doing until
we hear something new,'' he
oood!Uoas. type ol alrc:raft
and other fact.ors are fed into
a computer whlch detennlnts
the optimum flight capacity
and fuel load of each Alrwe.st
jet. He said that process ls
called the flight profile.
Another Airwest spokesman,
who asked oot to be ktentified,
sakt be thinks Alrwest will
cut back on flights be.fore Air
Cal because Alrwest fiies out-
of-state. The Hughes jets fly
to f..lexico, Laa Vega! and
several Southwestern states.
Lease-purehase
Guidance Center
Funding Clwsen
By JOANNE REYNOLDS
Of IM Dilly Piiot Iliff
The '660,000 guidance center
for the Huntl.ngton Beach
week to use the lease-purchase
m«hod to "make the district
a litUe money."
Union High School Dl!trict will THIS IS ~LE Martin
be .bl.lil t oo a lease-purchase said, becaUSe the disirfct can
basis. / take the money earmarked Ro~rt f..1artln , ass~stant for the center's construction
slrpcnntendcnt for . business, and put it lnlo 8 short-term
said 1.rustees d«.1ded Inst investment with a return of
Admiss ion
Sign ups
Will Ope11
Applications for admission
to any of the eight UC cam -
puses for the fall quarter or
19'14 may be flied beginning
Nov. l.
To be sure of a place at
the desired UC campus a stu-
dent should apply during
November, UC officlals said.
A single appll catioo filed
with a S20 fee at the campus
of first choice a 5 l'I u r e s
'l!!?llflcd applicants a pl ace
a[ one or the campuses-serv·
ing undergraduates. .
Applications are a\·a1lable
rrom hig h school or con1-
munity college counselors and
from the ad missions office 11t
UC lrvlne.
During lhe fir!lt month nr
the filing period. tach ca mpus
wl ll co n sl d~r a p-
plicatlorni. When quotQ are
filled. acldillonal applleall-.ns
will be redirected lo another
Ir campus.
9 to 9 1~ peroent.
It "·ill bom>w money at 5'1
lo 6 percent to pay off the
con~tructioo cost or the
center.
•re s:iid the systein is not
ncv:. The dis tric t has used
the lrase-purchasc method to
i!C'qUirc all of !ls nearly 50
relocatable clas.<;rooms.
TllE CITh'TE R. to be boilt
on the Wlntersburg site at
Go!dl!fl Wes:t Street a nd
\Varner Avenue , will pnwlde
classroom space for all of
lhe district 's 1,000 special
students. Most ol these are
eilher crowded Into t w o
trailers oo the site or homed
in other districts.
The contract for the ctlll«
hns betn awanled to lhe W.J .
Shirley Co., v.i\lch is also
OOlng f<!me of the wt'lflt Otl
llun!ington Beach lligh School.
'rru.tlee Ron Shenkman sug-
gts!ecl t h e \ease-purchase
mf'1hod Y.hrn electl.'d to the
school board in April.
TWO \\'l'~EKS AGO , IMtees
hlrtd thf> finan<:in l consulting
firm of Stone and Youngberg
to Rid in a t.11 override el«:·
Hoo. That election will be used
to rtitt funds for IChool con-
st.ructloo.
> . ' ---. ...
It's the way you want to look,
now. All shimmer and shine.
Lighting up the night Sparking
up the good times. VII, division
of Venice Industries, shows
you how. In washable polyester,
all silvery-threaded For sizes
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SANTAANA
SOUTH COAST PLAZA
\
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SC 0.W.V PILOT fr
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Bul lock'• S..Ota ADa, Moodar lhrvush Friday from 10:00 a.m. to 9:30 p.in., Saturday from 10:00 a.m. to 6:00 p.m. l Fubion Square, Santa Ana, Telephoot: '47.7211
Bullock's South C.O... Plw, .MoodaJ thrcu,ii Ftidq 10:00 a.m. to 9:30 p.m., Satutday 10 :00 a.m. to 6:00 p.m., 3333 Brisa>! Streer, Costa Mesa, Telephone:· n6-0611
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VOL ,+6. fi.O. 297, • SESTIONS, 106 PASES
~ ·-' ---.. .,
I east -. ------· .. __ ..
0.~6E COUNTY, CAUFoRNIA
as
'Hot ·Car'
Attracts
Curious
• .
Tbe car driven by the man wanted
in coonection with a murder in Hun-
tington Be,ach and a bank robbery in
Buena Park was foWX: in a Costa Mesa
garage where the suspect had taken
it for repairs.
Wben:polict found· it oYet the weekeodc___J:~~~ theYJ60ughf the man, PMChael""DeMIS ,
Burnt:lte, would come back to pick it
up, so they decided lo stake it out
WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 24. 1973
rea s
-and ,wait for· him. . _ .•
Costa Mesa Wins Battle
With Pier I I Bai· OWners
• ' ,
'Ibe f1Ist round of what is ~xpected
tO be an 11 or 12-round court bout
lliwlvins .the city of t;osta Mesa and
owners of the "~r .. 11 night club v.:as
W..'1\lesday by Assistant City Attorney
Rbbert Humphreys_.
:He was successfuJ in convincing
SQperior Court Judge William Lee that
b zooe exeeption permit under which die: rock bar haJ been oper::ating should
nOtberestored. -O:ista Mesa city couneilmen last ·March
yink;ed the . variance from Jlle Pier,
u tt js cilted, 19'11 NeW]IOfl Blvd ..
after listening to neighborhood 'com·
plaints about varied aUeled misoondud
of ill patrons. I
Revocation or the! pennit technically
meruw that contlnµed operation of Pier
11 is illegal but ' the doorJ have been
kept open while the bar pleaded· for
rest«ation ol t)>e permit in court.
.. ''They'll probably f11e an appeal on ~ ,... exception and 1 doubt il ,..•u
nave a trial on abatmr the ... public
nui!ance tmtil January o,r, • F~,"
llum)>hreY• s~4. "'Thi• fight· ls l"lni
~go ll 'orl2roundS." · '·\ ~11ie public nuisance proteCution' is the s!cond of a double-barreled•legal attack.
HOUSE HUNTE.RS
·SEARCH TJlE ADS .
•
;· initiated by Humphreys to nm the bar
oot of town.
Alleged In the ~ suit are
unreasonable auto and motorcycle noises
in the vicinity of the bar, the use
of obscenilles ammg. bar patrons, the
throwing oi liquor cmtalners oo private
pnlfl'!l11, the blocking of poblic "reels,
vandalism. the painting of oboceniU'"
oo fences and autos. threats of violence
and ,Jiaiassment. and the def<catlGn a.or: µrtnation on re,,ident's lawns.
Both .aetloos were precipitated by
residents on Churdl Street and East
20th Street, who frequent.ly complained
to city counctlmen about the alleged
dlsruplioa ol peace In their neighborhood.
Crew Finds Body
Iii Automobile
Under Bridge
~ body' or a Navy man, evidflntly
dead since Saturday, was found Tuesday
at the bottom ol San D1ego Creek.,
the victim of •n auto accidtn\,.
Oi.scovery 'of a human arm on the
center divider of the San Di.ego Frttw•y
near Laguna Canyon freeway led to
a wrecked car and the body ot William Tboniis, 34, ol San Diego.
A member of a highway n;ialntenance R«ent liguret .t~mpiled by the =w loond the itrm and notUled the
Nowspaper Advel\ISIDg Bomu. 111<', Callfornla Hlg!iway Patzol whooo ofllc<r1
O>ould prove that ~ hunter. start diacovered lbe ~ar. ~ s:rc:v~= °t.::8:.· ictonHng Highway petrol orllcm Mid Thomas,
to the figures 29 percent ~ those plan-aouthbound on Che freeway, lost control
nln to !:)Uy ~ house within 12 'tOOfllhs of the car whlch struck the center wuf read the "Hou11e for Sale" ctlUllica· divider eevertni the ann.
tion-in-tbo-loeol-newspeper. r--o-----'l'he-roolfi<ert-.. id plumm.ted-00
five-day period 45 percent of tbe pro,-feet acrou the creek cbannel, 1m111h1ng
peels will see ~ ads and, durlna lnto I.ht t'Oncrete dtannel wall at which
a month. 1S percent or tht: rtady·to-bu)' 11me the driver was ejected.
will read the U~tinga. The car and driver then dropped IO
U you're selling a bouH, put It where lee~ lnto the cm:k channel beoealh a house hunters can find It -easily. treewaf bridge:O bscured ·(rom · paulr\a
~11 a oauy Pilot ad·vlJor on the direct trafllc. -
fioe, MWm, and be where the buyers Highway patrol tnvestigator1 dete.rmJn-aro loo&inf. ed tho probable u ... or d ath throuflh
A calendar wateb on the detached arm.
It had stopped at 12:05 1.m. Saturday.
• '
Everything was quiet at the little
garage on Newport BoulevaM near Bay
Street wiW Tuesday.
~e never showed up. But a lot
of otbcr people did
Detectivee Darrell Poodry and Dick
Nolan bad employes vacate the place
while they hid in the back of the garage
waiting for Bumelle to claim his car.
An anonymous tip phoned to ~e Daily
Pilot newsroom at abo-J\ 11 a.m. told
of a robbery in progress at the garage,
which Is adjacent lo the newspaper's
offices.
So a rep()rter and photographer were
dispatched to cover the robbery.
What , .,.ey found were the two
disgruntled detectives who were not too
happy-about-having any-<1ttention f~
Oil their pr-ill'ttlo'larai•· Not lool _ ._ ..., ~ bad
~.ni "··~ --.. • p!iotograp!IOr ·1nrm. ,notbq local 'paper
....,.,... 'll' ill lak~ • picture of lbe
car. • ~ ·"~iit~l'!'!IW>I at tbe ·car and ' \Ir, I~" Nolen aalci. "i · 'tilm l•l'Away'lii!m It."
La'tef-Uiai· af1ernboo, an irate woman
came. int,o tbe llllily Piiot wanting to
know why .she couldn'.l get her car
out of .tbt garage next door and who
were lhoSe two guys in business suits
banglna: -around there anyway?
Dt:teCtiveis finally obtained a search
wart&nt to get Into the CU' to look
for evidence ·in the murder and robbery.
''Tuesday wu bad, but I really think
the stakeout was burned from the start."
Detecflve Sgt. Monty McKennon said
today.
Nolen didn't say anything. He just
wjnced.
* * * Police ldentif y
Nude Victim;
•
Seeking Suspect
By JOANNE REYNOLDS
Of ltl• ~11., "'"" ., ...
Orange eoUnty Coroner's Investigators
today 'identified the woman whose nude
body was discovered in Huntington Beach
u PameJa Sue Hodgman, 21.
They said they believe lhe dead woman
came from the Riverside area.
MeanW'hile police are still seeking in·
formation about the suspect in the
murdef case, ?iflchael Denis Burnelle;
29, whose ctr was fow'ld in Cosla Mesa.
Det. Sgt. ~k>nty McKennon of the
Hw;itington Beach pplice said the blue
station "fagM was spotted in a garage ' on Newport Boulevard over the weekend
and detective!! from Huntington Beach
and Co!ta Mesa .kept a watch over
it until Tueaday ~hen a search wanant
[or the vehicle was !!sued.
McKeonon said some evidence that
could support their theory that Bur-
nelle was involved 1n Miss llodgman's
death was found in the car.
BumeUe ia allO wanted by Buena
Park police ln ccnnection with a bank
robbery 1n that city Frklay afternoon
in wbich i Bumelle'a all~ged accomplice.
Leslie Alton BIMister, was shot to death
in a gun battle with police.
Barinlster's companion. Tere.,a Marie
Poplin, fO, was wounded ln the shoot·
Police aay a man matching Bumelle's
ducriptlon escaped from the acene in
a pickup truck which 11111 later found
• abandoned.
JnfonnaUon aupplied lo detective1 led
them on the 11earch for the station
wagoo which was found in Ccst.a ~1e11i.
Ottectlvea qy they believe Burne.lie
may have tried to rtnt a room ln
a nearby mote.I to "keep an eye" on hi!!
car 1'1\lle lt was being repalred.
. . -. • """" "'I! """ "Yet 101 Y!e.rsl it.fart" · .,. ·
. . -. Five.y,ar-old l.4nda Stenge (right) presents a birthday card sbe made
to Ml'il. Ellen Webster who celebrated her 106tb birthday Tuesd'y at
Port Mesa Convalescent .i!OBpital The birthday party waa arranged
by the Costa Mesa Woi;nan's Club an·d the well wishers included Wil-
lard Jordan, vice mayor or Costa Mes~. Linda is the daughter or one
of the club members.
Mesa to Take Possession
O·f New Parks by January
The people or Costa Mesa should be
in possession or the 70 acres of parks
aod open space they vol£d for dllI'ing
the recent bond election by January.
City Manager Fred Sorsabal said today
a UmeBble for the acquisition or the
acreag~ had been established and that
the first item of business will be to
compare appraisals made by the city
and the property owners.
After buyer and seller agree on prices.
the city council will the n be asked
to authorize the sale of the bonds. Coun-
cil action is expected in November.
The actual sale of the bonds. a $4
million package. is scheduled for
December. Property owners will pay
the bonds off during the next 30 years,
with lhe annual payment to the ave rage
homeowner amounting to about $8.
The properties include four surplus
New port-l\1esa Unified School District
Mesa Officials
Retu1·n Home
After Confab
A delegation or 11 city officials from
Costa !\1esa returned today from the
fou r-day conve ntion or the League of
California Cities in San Francisco.
Their expenses, $150 per person, were
paid by the taxpayers of Costa !\1esa . tor a total cost of $1.650.
Participants in the municipal con-
ference included ~1ayor rfack Hammett
and Councilman Robert !\1. \Vilson.
Robert K. Duggdn, assistant city
manager, representl'd the manager ial staff. , -.,~
Others who went on the San Francisco
junkeL 1A'ere-1.elwra.-S4trvicM Oirootor
Keith Van Holl, Planning Director
William Dunn. Parks Superintendent
Chuck Rust, City Clerk Eileen Phinney.
City AUorney Roy E. June. and planning
commissioners II. J. Wood. Ed
~1cFar1and , and Chic C. Clarke.
City Manager Fred Sorsnbal !!aid the
delegetk>n did not joun'lcf to San Fran-
cisco for any specific purpcse: other
than to attend meetings Md workllhops
which will benefit them in their work.
school sites. The school sites total SO
acres. The remaining 20 acres consist
of privately held parcels in various parts
of Costa Mesa.
Three of the four sites are in the
vicinity of the future 257-acre Fairview
Regional Park and the fourth is located
in the vicinity of the Mesa Woods housing
development.
Bergeron Nanied
Chamber Chief
For 2nd Term
Eugene Bergeron will be installed for
a seco nd term as president of the Costa
Mesa Chamber of Con1merce during a
bnnque t Friday night at the ~fesa Verde
Country Club.
Bergeron will lake the oath of office
at 8 p.m. along \\'ilh five other members
of the Chamber executive committee .
al'. of "'ho1n "·ere re-elected for another
one-year tcrn1.
Lining up for the Chan1ber team again
are Vaughn Redding, firs! vice president;
\\'erne r ES<'her, second vice president ,
Ra y Russell. treasurer : Joe fl.letca!L
immediate pasl presiden t, and Nick
Ziener. executive manager of the
eha n1ber.
New directors \vho will be installed
are Ho\\•erd CI a r y , administrali\'e
manager of Duncan Electronics, anl'I
Dr. Hilda McCartney. district librarian
for !he Nev.·port·Mcsa Unified School
District. Both \\'iii serve · 1hrce--year
terms.
Current-dtreetors wl~1i1:ill--continue.
in office are Thomas Baun1t>, Jock
Curley, Ken Fowler. John Loonhardt.
Gordon ~1artin. Leslie ~filler. Dr Bohcrt
~1oore. Richard Nabers. Luci lle Pin~l('y,
Snmucl Parker. Oon1inic Ra c i t i .
Tht'Ol'lore Robins .Jr .. Cliff \\'esdorf. Don
Bull and Frank Zrcbicc.
c.:uc!ll speaker for the affair Is John
J. l~yman , a financier who 1•dll talk
at:out "C.Ontinutd Presaure on the ~1oney
!\larktl "
Today's Final
N.Y. ·stoeks
c TEN CENTS
Egypt Asks
Help From
U.S., Russ
By United Press Interaatioa•I
1be second middle east cea.se-nre In
24 hours broke down fpr l\\'O hour~
today and Egyptian and Israeli tanks
and warplanes battled at the southern
end of the Suez Canal. Peace was
restored by nightfall but Egypt said
it \\-'OUld demand U.S. and Soviet troops
· fly to the~ e 1tnmeaiitel)' to police
the truce, . •
The White House said the cease-fire
"appears to be taking-hold;...and ISll.ael
lilted the natioowide blackout it imposed
when war broke out Oct. 6. But Israeli
leaders cautioned that the days ahead
would determine whether there w1ll real~
ly be peace after four wars since 1948.
In Washington it was disclosed that
President Nixon had been in touch with
Soviet Q>mmunisl party G e n e r a I
Secretary Leonid I. Brezhnev -to discuas
the Middle East. The White House said
the United States expressed willingness
to cut clown on the massive arms lift
to lsrael if Russia doe!! the same for
the Arabs.
Egypt, which accused Israel of break·
ing the truce today with an assault
on--SOO CiW,-caned-ror-anotber wgti1t
rueeting of the United Nations Seeurtty
EGYPT· ASSAILS PORT SAID
ATTACKS. Sl0ty, Pilp 4
Council, the second in two day•, to
demand that the United States and
Russ.ia lake over machinery for seeing
that the cease-fire is pennanent.
Cairo Radio said President Anwar
Sadat asked Foreign Minister Maham·
med El·Zayyat in New York to ask
him to request the security COWlcll
mee ting and to request U.S. and Soviet
troops into the Middle East for the
firs t time.
The radio said Sadat also instructed
El·Zayyat to ask the council lo meet
in continuous session until "Israel
observes the cease-fire." ft said Sadat
also sent messages to Nixon and to
Brezhnev laking them to send troops
to the 1'fiddle East.
In Tel Avi v. Israe li Foreign -Minister
Abba Eban told a news conference that
Israel had at last obtained the promise
ot direct negotiations with the Arab
world for wh ich It had fought four
wars, and that if this came to pas.s.
"This month of bloodshed and grief
"'iii become a turning point in the history
of the region.''
Israel said Egypt's 3rd Army violated
the cease-fire "'ith e general of{emive
in an attempt to break out of Jsrae1i
enc irc lement on both sides of the Suez
Canal but that the attempt failed and
the Egyptians lost 1:> planes in a
dog fight. lsreel said the Egyptian Army
\\'as crumbling and surre!Klering en
1nasse before the breakout attempt.
The Egyptien military command said
Israeli armo red forces broke the truct
by attempting to storm Suez city at
south end of the canal but that the
attack had been driven back and eight
Israeli Mirages were shot down. It said
sonic of the l\Iirages belonged to the
air force of a "f<m!ign country" other
than Israel but did not elaborate.
Orange C:out
• •
Weather
Thursday should be a carbon
copy of \Vednesday, according to
the \\'Cat her service -sunny and
\\'ann. Highs in the mi d-70s inland
and at the beaches.
11\SIDt: TODAY
A life·si:t ga/low~ turned up
as a school project i1t occutt
li teratu re nt Caroun del /.f ar
---111911 ll1is 1t~k. Scoru. PaJl!...l....2.
"' ,....,, 5•••><• ' ltftR l.lf141t .. »
l..M. l tYI .. M1llllu • I HliJMj " ..... ....u
C1lll1n111 ' MOlfYll '"""' •• C~..:•1'" U• " HIUllMI NtWI • (111111111 "·•2 O!'tR•t Cflilnf'I • Ctnll<t " S11trt1 .... Cronwm " StM• Mll'lllll ....
Dt1I~ Nollctt • Tt llvltlt9 • 11111..-i.1 '"' • T~t11tr1 ....
lnl1rr11-...t t••H \111111111!' • 'I01a1ttt .... w-·• "'"" ""' ,., ,... 11:_ ... • ·--· • -•
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•• DAIL" PI LOT .-c Wtdntsd.11, Oct.obtr 24, 1973
CdM High Sets
l Otli R eunio1i
Corona de! ti.tar T-ligh School's
Ont gradu&lillg c11ss will hold Ill
tOl.h rtunfori M:xt year and worlr:
is already beginnlng to arrange
the festivities.
An organizalional meeting or a
irroup planning tbe event will tab
place Thursday al 7 p.m. in Room
217 of the high sdlool. t-.frs. Clyda
Brenner, secretary of that first
graduating class, has issued an
invitation for all members of the
class to attend.
~frs. Brenner said Bill Leech,
"·ho was class president and 11
now 1 teacher at Corona del Mar
High School , is working wilh her
lo initiate the arrangements.
She also requested persons know -
ing the whereabouts of class
members out of the area are urged
school.
Modification
On Center's
Pact Raked
By JACK BROBACK
01 .... Dt UY l'lt.t 11111
Indications that UC Irvine c[ficers
would accept a modification of the
present alfiliaUon agreement between
the COlDlty and the universlty In manage-
ment of the Orange C.OWlty Medi cal
Center raised the ire of supervisor Ralph
Cla!k Tuesda~
Clark, one cf the original negoliaton
with the university officials over a possi~
W a r Cuts .
Nixon Talk
On Tapes
By HELEN THOMAS
ll'ASJllNGTON !UPil -Presi4•nt
Niion canceled a plaoned televised
speech to the nation tonight on Watergate
because the White House said he was
concentratlng on trying to get a MJddle
East cease-fire. He will bold a televised
news conference Thursday night ln&tead.
The Preaident spent the night at bis
PUBLIC OPINION FORCES
NIXON TO YIELD. Story, P•ge 4
Camp David retreat, reportedly prepar-
ing tor the speech explaining his decision
to relinquish his \Vatergate t a pe
recordings and his reasons for firing
Archibald Cox as Waterg1ite special
prosecutor.
A 1pokerman said at mtd~y today,
however, he decided to call off U\8.
speech· because of conllnuliog pe.ce el·
forts in the Middle East. .
The news conference wilt be heJd at
6 p.m. PDT ThW'sday in the east room
of the White House.
White House aources indicated tha t
while the President had become preoc-
cupied wilb the Mideast, 90me advisers
suggested to him that a news conlerenli!:
might be preferable to a formal speech
in gettmg--across bis position on the
starUlng developments of the past few
days.
OFFICER OF MONTH
Robert G. Cornuk1
Young Mesa
Patrolman
Wins Honors
Cox: Firing
.Testimony _
,-rfo. Be Aired
Fnm.lllnServlc<s
WASHINGTON -· Tlio Se Q ~! e
Judiciary Committee toda:V set a public
hearing !or Monday lo talO. ~
lrom Archibald Co• about bis ouat.r
by President Nlxoo as ·opOcui wa1.,P1e
prosecutor. ..,. .... •
Action waa ·blocl<ed
0
Oii a xehuilon
by • group of Demo<n11c.1Uberill,.on
the committee caUing on NizOD • to
reinstate Cox tetnporarily witn Cong.fess
acts on legislation to provide by law
an independent Watergite p~tor.
Sources reported that Sen. Roman L
Hruska (R·Neb.), the ranking Republican
on the committee, invoked a rule to
force a week'• delay on tb6,,'li~all'
move. ' 1 ~ •
Co• will be the first witness: ,.-sen.
Edward M. Kennedy (o.Mua.), t.®O·
mittee member who urged ·~ inqUiry,
•· said.
Kennedy and oome Don!ocratl asked
that hearings start this afternoon and
Cox was reported ready to tesUfy, but
the committee agreed after a tWo-bour
closed~oor meeting to • start · Ul~ in-
vestigation Monday. '
In other developments:
One or Costa Mesa's newest police -Speaker Carl A1ber1 said today the
officers, aged 22, has been selected of. preliminary Home Inquiry on tm-
fl.cer or the month by lhe Cosla Mesa peachm'ent or Nixon will proceed v . . .. . . ..~ o.lly Plllt ...... tw.tllc!wlrd,,I( ...... I ~· r .-. Presld t' I E ERYTHING UP IN THE AIR IN ,.EWPOttT BEACH SURF ' "~"· Crime Prevention Committee and is regaiuiess 0 WH: en 11 re ease w c II ~-· ol the Watergate tapes. , .-11t1rn ~w•. __ v1 Enthul l11t1 1 Tre1t Toct.y · .;..'"1
already making a nanle for himseU. "I hope it is expeditious, and 1 hope ,. , · t • •· • • ~,:. r ~~ Patrolman Robert Cornuke has taken it Jays this thing to rest ooe way • '"'"·~f '
-,--part in several-major·cases since joining or another," AJbert-told newsmen. 11 • f) r"" .._. La ·h Coast o ,. a the departmedt a year ago as a Tb al: said .-. ff Judi 1ary el:.' S
ble complete takeover of the medical
center-~ll~.,,.!!"~....JL....!!!iJr..e_it.,~, ..
else" statement.
f18& ::i~wn .boJ· ~ detjde$! to stay ~~ :S been ~1:t to ~ke ~ . D . ~: .-. , . , ' ~i l~ ... r-S~f .,..._ · h'--.. ...ru ..... •-.. ......i:....... inquiries mto resoluhons to impeach or · ., • , ... . . . .,.., · ~eaivv ... ~~,--;iE".::::i~clii;·~i~~~·~;~~~i!~~b~ .. "X'tew--·~p··o--;;: S·a .. ·= '~·Pe· ·r-"led. -~7+
member of the 47th .class of the Orange to make." 111 I • l l Tia-· . : J ··:t "We should rtaffmn our position that
UCI shou1d take over the center opera-
tion entirely or we will cancel the af-
filiation agreement," Clark said.
Supervisor Ralph Diedrich, the other
supervisor on the negotiating committee,
agreed.
A firm propQS&l for tumlng over the
medical center to -the university medical
school should be ready for presentation
early in November, the county ad-
mini.strative office said.
County Adminis trative Officer Robert
Thomas said a county study committee
had concluded that it could not arrive
at a suit.able modification of the existing
affiliation agreement.
-'Jbomas-edded-that--UCI -negotiators
seemed favorably disposed toward the
idea of single management of the center.
The proposal by the county calls for
the university medical school to least
the center. It would take over the facility
in Jls present condition and make all
improvements necessary to bring it'up
to -enity slandanb.
It has been estimated that it will
cost $9.5 million to remodel the county
hospital and the funds have been pro-
vided for by the state.
Under the agreement, the oounty would
pay for medical care for the Indigent,
the only duty it has under law now
in relation to the medical center.
Mesan Injured
In A11to Crasl1
A Costa Mesan v."hose car apparently
tried to take a tum too fast in the
downtown section of the city Tuesday
night suffered head injuries when it
jumped a center divider and plowed
into another vehicle, police said today.
Gary Ji.t Fellbaum, :ra, of 854 Darrell
St., was treated at <:mta Mesa Memorial
Hospital for a laceration over the eye
and a possible concussion, then releaRd.
Damage to the left sides of both
the Fellbaum car and a second one
driven by llichard Burnett. 21, of 1994
Church St., 'vas major, police said.
They said fellbaum was northbound
on Harbor Boulevard when he attempted
to make the turn at 19th Street. lost
control and vee red over the 19th Street
divider into Burnett's soutbbound car.
OIAN•I COAST CM
DAILY PILOT
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Cl!1rl•1 H . lo1>1 ll:ich11' P. Nill
Alfitllnt M•,..8"'9 Elltoro
c.... .._ Offtt.-
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cs-NW ~ '4:t·1•11
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'"'""''""' lJ .... """"'"',...·
TONIGHT
"THE ' TAVERN" -Soutb Coast
Repertory Theater, through Sun. 8 p.m.
UC! COMMUNlTY LECTURE
"New Developments in Heart Disease,"
Science Lecture Hall, 8 p.m.
UCI LECI'URES -"The Classic
Cinema" series, Science Lecture Hall ,
8 p.m. "Educatlon to Meet the Future"
series, Room JOO, Social Science Hall,
7:10 p.m. Adm. $5.50.
THURDAY, ocr. Z5
COOKING SCHOOL - E d w a rd s
Cinema, Fashion Island, Thursdays
through Nov. 15, 9:30-11:30 a.m.
IJBRARY ~STORY-HOUR-Stol')I
time .00 films, 10:30 and 11 ;30 a.m.
COSTA MESA SENIOR CITIZENS
CLUB -CoriunUnlty Recreation' eeDter,
12·3 p.m.
1'"'00TBALL -Newport Harbor at
Anahelm, 8 p.m.
<XX:' LECTURES -"Ta:r Shelter9,"
Mi chael 'Gutner lecturer, COM HJgh
Little 'Theater, 7:3()..9:30 p.m. "Family
Estate Planning," Paul Marx lecturer,
Elastblulf School, 7:3<J.9:30 p.m. ..
Burglar Nets
$20 at Eatery
A burglar who apparently hitched his
car bumper to the ornamental wrought
iron grille over an eatery window and
pulled it loose that way, made off with
$20 in cash and coins, the manager
reported to Costa Mesa police.
Enrique Sanchez, of El 1'aco, 2101
Harbor Blvd., told Officer Rob Flathers
it appeared nothing was taken from
the food storage area of taco stand
at tbe corner of Harbor Boulevard
and Hamilton Street
He said he was certain the rear door
had been secured the night before,
although the burglar apparently left ii
standing ajar when he fled the premises.
County Peace Officers . Academy at -AFL-CIO President George MeAny · · · · · · · · •: · · ' -.., ~~~~~ West College m Huntington ~.aid today Nixon ~Ppear;I to sutte;, from .-:
He has lived in Costa Mesa· for -13 dangerous emotionaJ mstab~lty and By°'";.~~'~· lhe summer,'.' ·Lockabey said, "but ' ff.
years and attended Cal State Uni versity ~epeated that be should resign or be rectUY; _com~ ... the problem b)l
at Fresno on 8 full football schol"-. .. 1... impeached. . Huge westerly ·swells, pwhed !>Y th~ prevenUng .S!Uld from replenishing dUPI
_....,. M lso U d I al 1-""""'~tlina San Fr ' • I ·•·• ing the winfer." · ' with a major in criminology. eany a ca e or a new spect s ........ ...,.....::i-'& ancisco, ,a~Jl:U •
Patrolman Comuke, who recently prosecutor. the Ne'VPQ11 Beach shorellne.Ji:qm ·the Before the groin was Installed, ht:
moved to Huntington Beach, h'as been Newport Pier to the Santa Ana River explained, the South swells would wasH
married to his wife, Terro, for three jetty today. • .. -: · :iand toward <West Newport in the ~
years. They have a daughler, Shelly, Detroit Police '.Ille wlhter seaioli's b=· ("'If;... mer.bu! ii woul~.be poshed back dnrinf who is 2 years old. _ _ "" . the west swells in winter. . • ,. attra~ t~s of ers but was • " -The Golden West College law en-posing· .. ·m&_j(l'r ·~beaeh efoslon threat ..A. ..A. ~-.t;;ra,'~~~ forcement mai'or graduate uses bis Sftllre To · Fr; ek Oute' r ., x H .H ''I·'.''" •. i--&<.:J to the already~evastated beach between '' -r
time to pursue typical outdoor hobbies 22nd and 28th ·streets, I i f e g u a r'l:I s 2 Coup'les Sa' ved ! such as snow skiing, hWlting and fishing. reported •. --"'pace-Az;...,ns Waves ranging from. ~x to eight. feet
Students at UCI
Urge President
'. '
Be Impeached
Some UC IrV'ine students are collecting
signa tures on a petition urging the im·
peachment of President Nixon.
More than 200 signatures were col-
lected during the first day of the effort,
the campus newspape r New University
reports.
The Committee for the Impeacbmcnt
of Richard M. Nixon has been established
as an official student government COOl·
n1ittee. but persons opposed to the action
are advised they may counter the peti·
lion drive.
Annando Banuelos, president or
Associated Students of UCI said, "ASUCI
among its other responsibilities, is
a platfonn for student advocacy.
"Anyone wishing to counter this peti·
lion may do so by contacting the
ASUCI," the Newport Beach senior said.
Completed petitio ns are to be forward·
ed to offices of Orange County Represen-
tatives and the state's Senate delegation.
12' • -..., wer• e-'6!1, ,o. cbnlinue. "'it,..iay. A · W Sm h,
" "' . ". acconlliili''!O' siulior •ftfeguar~ I.Ogan . 8 -aves as ) DETROIT .(UPI) -Detroit police have Lockabey. ,, " · !
a full-Dedged plan Oil the ~g of Lockab!y said. """1bagging. l'l!-y .. be TJ1e~",: Sailho· at creatures from unlden~ied ~ ob-necessary -4.f w\ntfe 1 increase ,., . of'dlir u.,
jecll. (Relale<l slor)', !'"i". 4l-• ., lo proteot lhe McFadden Wllal! beach
.r
" ~ special 11".0UP. of_ o.mcei:• '?~elv¢ area. ·, • •1.,.. 'f'·-;·~4~ ;r:-.'i ·~
the g~abead to stop andlrlsk~-.tl allena "If we atar¢·getting '.:f.'·rea1Jy"._rt>
from other planets that are in. tbe city or profile .~ scarping-~ the beacli will
in the air space above. start going.: fast," ·Lockabey said, ex-
.In addJ Uon, the police <:an .ticket plaining that beach erosion OCLWS faster
creatures wbo attempt to Oee or vanish. when tbe· waves •tltlt the shoreline at
In a aeven-point department:1l memo, sharper and sharper angles.
Detroit's eight field duty lnspectors were Wind is also a , lnajor factor, be eI·
given detailed lnstrucUons on hOw to plained.
care for UFOs, their passengers and/or "Right now the wind here IS calm.
crews. but if it picks up, we could have some
'Ibe top priority Item said get them rell). probleqp,'' Lockabey +said.
to the ground even if .a bullhorn or-~ '!lf it stpts . ~"~ cri!jgal y.re1n
public address systtm tnust' be used.l start sandbSg&ind'ifie sald,~ti,llg, tbat
'I1te next order of. busines was the tradi-: it's been two years slllce llifeguards
tional ticket for fleeing saucers, but have 1Jad to take such extreme precau-
wlth the proper copy of the citation tions. f 0:. ! +
to have on hand for future court ap-,' ·But lf!G:ltabey slit tbis y~r'{tb~rob-
pearances. 1.em may' be cofbpodnded becauSe of
Diplomatic immunity for passengers the controversial 28th Street groin in-
or crew members of UFOs from alien stalled )a.st. :r~.ar which-is supJ>06ed to
planets was also' requlrtd, inCludlng the protect ~·,~Cb 'fl'1lhl;"~.s~!'{ .. ·
separati-0n of males and females for "lt .w~ }lut rn for protection from
questioning. the south -swellil tha.t ~.it US dUring
,·:JAk~~lSCC\ (AP) -Huge wa<cs
~-a .3>-fOOI' sailboat outsida .lhO
GOiden· .Gatei Bridge, washing two· metl
overboard and lnjutirig their Wive~
before 'the Coast Guard coUid • resa&J if.em ;
.• Th(ee time11, the boat "had Its keel
in the air/' said carol Babcocl{ cf
Fresno. Repeated attempts 'during ~ iour~hour !lldeal Tuesday to hoist Mr'~
B~bcoc.k. her busband ,Edward, and .Jan
Monison from the ·Wildly pllcbing boll ,
tailed, the Coast Guaril said. 1 ~ :
The boat'~ owner, Dr. 'ilooall) ·¥,.;
rison, spent 50 minutes in the C9ld
Pacific Ocean before he was plckesf
up by a hovering helicopter. A Coa~
Guard cutter towed his shattered boat,
with its three paSsengers still on board
. JJ\'id~ San Francisco Bay. ;
Superior Court Clerks • Retur11 After 'Sicl{·Out' -~ ~-~::··,"""""._ .. 538....,""'c""E~N~TER STREET -.;¢0STA MESA-646-1919,, .:~::~
By TOl\t BARLEY
01 m1 0111~ Piiot St1t1
Thirty-eight Orange County Superior
Coort clerks , each or them anned with
a doctor's certificate, arc back on the
job today after a one day "sick-out"
that was described by one absentee
as "a little bi t of muscle-nexing."
County Clerk '"illiam E. St John con·
firmed that his "·orking force was at
full strength today and said he does
not intend to discuss the sick-out "'ith
his clerks "except on a strictly informal
basis.
"I am Y.i th them." he said today.
"I think !hey are very mucb underpaid
and I think the abilities of what I
rl'gard as lhe best court clerical force
in Califon1ia should have been recog11ized
Jong ago.''
St John, hi!! supervisory personnel,
and the skeleton cre'v that kept court
afh1irs running Tuesday on a nearly
normal basis. y;orked until late ~fonday
night to clean up all arrears that ac·
cum ulated during the day •
St John :iaid he doubts ther~ v.•tll
be any further top level discussion or
~he pay dispute until Orange County's
supervisors return h11e this week from
the County Supervisors Association of
C11Hfoml11 convention ln Redding.
The board v.·cnt Into executivt session
Tuesdny v.•hen it lcarnt>d that 38 clerks
w're absent fron1 their desks. But thty
refused to disruu the issue during the
regular Tuesdny meeting nlthough of·
'
~:.mam;...,,.,,,,.u-.. ........................ ~ ........... _,,.....,,.,.,..,.-..,.;,;.u.;....;;;;;;;;...~
ficia ls or the AFL-CJO union were It Just Arriv~rge
present in the hearing room. ; l
County supervisors lrad earlleroftered ~-Shi1111ent of Speedo
the clerks • •-1 percen1 pay raise aner ~ swi·m sui·ts & Trunks !he clerks had rejected a proposal that .
would have raised their 11.1126 a monlh Water Wonder Kick Boards salaries by 2.5 percent.
The clerks feel that their salaries
should be at 1east comparable to the Ad'da Tenni·s Slloes 11.:J.13 a mooth enjoyed by Los Angeles I S
County Superior Court clerks. Men's or Ladies' ' 18 95 But a spokesman said today thal lhe -•
CC<ll reason b<hind their decision to Tretorn Tennis Shoes stay out Tuesday stemmed from what
1ie said "'" the rerusa1 or the coun1y'• Men's or Ladies'-16.95 l'::~~~·,~/:JFs~:,~.ent to agree io media-Converse Tennis Slloes Ladies-7.15
The clerks will meet in the courthouse ·
1'hursday night to consider possible Men'H.95
strike action if the county remains ada-Tenm·s ore·sses 111ant on its denial of mediation.
''They have a good case," St John Me 1 T • Short & Shirt commented . "They are seventh in lhe n s enms s s
Soccer Shoes
BrazilS-11.95 Canadas..:..12:~5
La Paz-14.95
Super Lite-17.50
All Purpose Shoes-10.95 to 17.95
Bob Wolfe Super Pro Basketball
Shoes-9.95
Alf Star Basketball Slloes-9.95
Voit Junior ·g Intermediate
Footballs-7.95
ti.st of California county pay scales and Acrylic Wann Up Suits 21 95 I lhink Iha! is ' very unrealistic J)061tlon l , _-__ • -------..-
when-one C001id<,.. lhe caliber or our-24.95=--3{9S
Voit ·Basketbalfs.:.....5.9S to 19.95
Soccerballs-9,95 te.J9.i5c::-::---•
aler Polo Balls-10.95 & 15.95 Or11ngc County v.-orkcrs."
Several county departments reported Racket Strinorjng squabbles !his morning hetwe<n 38 clerks u 1115
\\ho ~tayed out Tuesday and those who
decided to ignore tho sick·out and stay
on duty.
"They'll pr1y for It," commented one
dlsgrunlled abse ntee. "Bui when lVO g~I
tbe pay r11b1e we 've struggled so damned
hard for guess who'll be first In the
lin~ "'Ith lhci r hands out."
Boys' Football Shirts Reg.' 2:95 Sale-1.95
Handball Gloves-Racquetball
Racquets-Bandminton Ra~kets
· 538 Center 646-919
•
•
I l
l
I
DAILY PILOT EDITORIAL PAGE
'
Fair Pay for Firemen
A long-fought t.We for p1y laereasu bas been won
hr men ~l the Cos\a Mesa Fire Department and the
v1clory wiU bope!Wly )Vind dqwn a long series of per-
sonnel problems. '
The 8. 75 t>ercent overall bike means a beginning
fireman or engineer can expect to make $1,053 monthly
after five years of satisfactory advancement and per·
formance.
Charges of personiiel discriminalion ID a variety
of ways agaln!t those involved. in unionism or other
campaigning to effect the pay increase led to count~r
charges of !Ubstandard per!ormances among certain
personnel The truth probably lies somewhere between
those two extremes.
Co.sta ftfesr has maintained an excellent record over
the years in its municipal file servfci, bowever1ftfiected
in the city's rather low death and damage toll and fire
jnsurance rate levels.
Certain citizens seem to think that because fire-
men get long shifts off -due to long shifts on -and
dine communally that they are on some sort of prefer-
ential type of welfare.
They, are trained professionals respoosible for lives
and property, often enough risking their own Jives in
the process, and they should be plid accordingly.
Upper Bay Priorities
'• After years of litigation and political infighting, a
solution .to the Upper Newport Bay issue is literally
there for the taking by the Orange County Board 'of
Supervisors.
The proposal put forth by the California Resources
Agency calls for the s~te Department of Fish and Game
to take ·over immediate possession of the Back Bay up-
lands and weUands. Details of the purchase from the
Irvine Company could be Worked out over a l~year
period. Any 11nds stiU unacquired at the end o( that time
would revert back to the company.
This concept, a sort o( "buy now, pay later" ap-
proach, should be accepted immediately by the super-
visors. Whether it will, however, remains in doubt.
Supervisors stalled the deal last week, instead vot-
ing to fund $30,000 worth of legal research as ground·
work tor a lawsuit over tiUe to three marsh islands in
the bay. 1l they decide to press \he suit, It co uld muck
up the works agaJn for years to come. A:nd that, appar-
ently, is the Intent of some supervisors.
Some supervisors also are complainin~ that the
method by Which the state proposed to appraJse the bay
will favor the Irvine Company to the amount o! several
million dollars. The logical implication of this· talk is
that these supervisors may want to delay accepting the
state offer until they can conduct an appraisal on their
own.
Any more delay in approval of the offer because of
e ither a lawsuit or the appraisal would be a serious n1is· taJse. Tile tate offer in~lud~s a promise to carry out a
proper title search and to abide by alJ the accepted rules
of Jami appraisal. There is no reason to believe the state
would not do a fair and honest job on this work.
There is one other consideration. Ecologically
speaking, Upper Newport Bay is in trouble. It is laden
with silt and water pollution poses an increasingly ser·
ious threat. In view of this, it is imperative to achieve
public ownership as rapidly as possible.
When. supervisors meet next Wednesday to con-
sider the state offer, their top priority should be to
start the whole matter moving. They may want to attach
stipulations to the st4te offer -they may even want to
pursue a title challenge of their own -but they should
accept the state offer while it still stands.
• There are many problems to be resolved, but pub-
lic possession of the bay should be taken now - a con-
cept fully acceptable to the Irvine Company. The details
can come later.
. '
'Leftovers? What leftovers?'
c
Don 't Be Bu111ane Societies' Th:ataldess, Heartbreaking .Jeb
----7!~ -··
Misled By
-Dear
Gloomy
Gus
Owners to Bla~me for Anim-al Woes
Manners
I met a dilltingulsbed1 literary figure
many years ago, and was so awed
and impressed by h.1111 that I babbled
like a scl'Joolboy and fe,lt sure brneTer
l..()Oks ·aa if some of thoae Jeaders
who'd r8.thef. be dead than red
would also rather be corrupt than
bankrupt!
W.H.O.
" 01 .. ,,.,, ~ ~ .... ~ .,, ,....,.._ ..... Mt -...rllY ,.,...., "'-.,,_ tt lllt ,..111• 1t1r . IMlll Y•r Ht
,...,. h ........, ..._ O.llr '"""·
wanted to meet me again. , looking for 'snubs, expecting to .be di!!-Bu t later, when my first book.t,.~Qle liked. And this derenstve at!ttude brings
out, I r~eived 1 dellghtfull>' wann letter •L-ry ,,.ctlo It Is looking for. from b1m telling me bow ifflch ·he on ui.:: ve n
admired ~y work and how mlffl qe .,. S~angers too often treat us the way
had enjoyed our brief mtetina ti: · \\e exJle£! them to. • • " · · ~ People who think'thir ha Ve "enemies,"
aglo. ·as thun.t-s1,nter: and~ lft'l~DJeJ( fo~ instance, are -usiiiby ntrertni, from "' ~ ' ,..~ ..... , · tlua sort ,of delusion. They lm~ that pte~sed. And blJ le~ set me to woifl these "enemies" are deeply involved denng how many df us go .through . 1 11. • st them 1• n rf thl .. i.1 .... lhlt certain ~e CU.Stike in P. o. mg .agam . ' or . 1 e ·~ •L-humiliatmg them, or talking against
US, when, ID faCf, u"'y not ~like them -when, in truth, the. "enemies"
us at all. 1 are not even aware of the f!xlltence
SOME PEOPLE are "'shY with new of the· feud . ' ·
acquaintances, and thus they seem to
be frigid and disapproving. Others simply
have a naturally grutf manner, which
we mistakenly take to mean impatience
with us. And still others are just. va"gue
about people, and what we t1tlnk is
a snub Is merely absent-mindedness.
I have bad the experience of peop1e
tellin& me, after we had got to know
each other beuer, that they were con·
vinced I loathed them upan the first
meeting -which was not at all the case.
If a man is raer\'ed, It doel nOt mMD
he is passing ·adverte judgment upon
you ; just as often It means he i1 afraid
of your judgmeut of him.
THERE ARE some people. un·
fortunately , wbe are mildly paranoid
in this respect. They walk throUgh. life
THE ONLY sensible approach is tons·
sume that most people will like you, un·
less you give them cauae not to; and to
accept the fact that some people would
not like you no matter what you were
or did. Trying to make everybody like
yoi.t is exhausting, and impossible of
achievement. Most of our trouble is
our egocentricity' which takes for
granted that people are thinking about
us much more than they really are.
In most ·cases, they are thinking about
themselVes, just as we are. Nooe of
us is as important to others as we
think we are, and what we construe
as d.islike Ls mo&t often indlHerence,
or fear. or seJf-absorptlon. But It is
tiard to realize lhls when we come
face to face.
To the Editor:
At least once a week, someone (who
is. eitJ\er thorouglily ignorant or the farts
of the surplus animal problem or refuses
to accept the facts due to concern for
only their one animal) calls, or comes
in, calling ow:; employes "murderers."
THERE HA VE been many television
shows, much newspaper publicity about
tbe lack of-homes for the animal popula·
lion. The Orange C:Ounty Animal Shelter,
and every olber-pound -and _humane
society, tries to inform the general public
ol the number of animals having to
be killed' daily, yet there art those ·
who come in and become enraged
because y,·e cannot keep and guarantee
the.ir ooe animal a home.
We have even bad ~pile 'whcl..lhreaten-.
ed to sue us because thelf animal was put
to sleep -yet that same person y,·ould
not even pay the cost of a newspaper
ad or take the time to try to place
it in a good home. The animal was
their responsibility but they chose not
to be responsible and when our efforts
failed at placing it we were called
the "killer". We spend around a hundred
dollars a month in advertising. A cost
we really cannot afford. We have
volunteers who allow their private
nwnbers to be used, because our Animal
Care Center telephones are busy con·
su.ntly with cruelty complaints and
requests for help for low-cost spaying
and neutering and ill or injured animals
belonging to those who cannot afford
the services oC a private veterinarian.
EVERYONE at the Animal Care Center
grieves over the terrible waste and suf·
ferilijJ oC animals born on1y to die under
the wheels of a car, mistrt.ated and
chained for life, or dumped and grieving
at any of tbe many pounds. For every
animal we personally place , an average
ol 25 comes in; there is simpl y no
Who Was Archibald Cox?
The Jollowi11u colum1i entitled ''Re-
me rnbeT ATchibald Cox?" wat wHtttia
by Charles A-feC'abe last ~eek, 1ht)rtl11
be/ore Pre1ldet1i ftl$on'• iurpr!Je dlJ.
nti.t.tal of the Woft,.gata pr91,cut6r.
In the light of rectnt evetatl, McC4bf's
comnu-nt1 take .on a 11ew i11ter1t.
tf you are wonderirc if the Watergate
scandal may have become a dead letter,
forget Jt. Forget It good.
"Tbe serpent that will gnaw out his
vitals." Is the wu.y ,
one eloquent lawytir ~ friend of mine der·
crlbes the ,mJn • • '
bureaucracy specfaJ 1 ~. ,_.·
prosecutor Arcblbald
Cox has butlt. uo
within the JUsttce
Department to inve ..
tlgate charges of
COn'UpliM in ·the
Nixon Administration ind tum over the
findings to • Hrles ol 1rand iuqf!I,
As of last c®ot Mr. Cot, Who was
John F. Kennedy;• IOllcJ~ral
rrom 1960 to 19«1, had • ataft Of neorly
a hundred and a proposed budget of
about the conduct of his duties and
responsibilities." This means ti.tr. Cox
really has the free band that opedal
proeecutors are always assured they
have; but ln fact never quite achieve.
President had to be clean as boiled
ric:e and much nicer to look at.
THAT LOGIC may be -just too good
to be true. Up to now, rifr. Cox has
been about as :visible as a beaver, and
about as occupied. When those grand
juriea start to send up their lndictments,
thel'e will be proper hell to pay, no
matter what the courts decide about
Mr. Nlxon's !ainous tapes.
The scum that surfaced w i t h
• MORE IMPOl\TANT to remember is Watergate will continue to pollute the
that Mr. Cox Js a DeJJ\OCntt, and a public gaze for months and even years
damned p&rtlsat1 one at that. Hb: stafr to come. Mr. Cox has made it clear
con~ns only a baodlul of Republicans. he does not share r-.tr. Nixon's holy
Twelve key members haye bed con· view of himself -that his sins are
nections witll tbe Xennedys In lM past. not those of other men, that lhe
"-bne it would not 1)e 1ood taste to ConslUtution was specially dratted to
say tht~ 1 the1 pro!ecutor aM his staff keep him out of jail If he should do
are out to ·eit M1 . Nixoa; it ";"ls h:ird' something that would put ether men
lo oee bow Ille, truth cOllld be otherwise. bcltlnd bars.
Mr.J'(lxOb hbritelf· appean: to tNnk so. tr Mr. Nixon has been obstructing
As l!I001e0ne. has oblerved tn ·1bt context, justlct, and that is the large unwritten
• e:'len-para.ootda have enemies. charge before the American, people, the
tt iJ good to rcfnember the climate former Harvard Law pror would seem w~ Mr. Cox was named to hit job. uniquely the man to nail him to the
1'e Nlion hOuse of cards wu tumbllnf[ m1o5t.
( ..... _MA_IL_B_o_x ___ )
Letters from readers are welcome.
Normally, writers should co11vey their
'nessages in 300 words or less. Tlie
right ·to condense letters to fit space
or eliminate libel is reserved. All let·
ters must incll1de !ignature and malt-
i11y address but 11ames may be with·
held oii request if Sltffici.ent reaso1'
is appareiit. Poetry will llOt be pub-
lished.
guarantee for any animal turned in
-reR&l'dless of breed or Pf'dj.gree. Our
only guarantee is a humarle death by
injection, if no home is available.
I KNOW this letter will not touch
those who selfishly consider only their
one animal but perhaps it will help
others to understand the God-awful job
we, or any other humane society, has
to do . I should include the public pounds
too because they are only there because
of irresponsible animal owners.
Our work is difficult. heart·breaking.
Every year humane societies lose true,
dedicated humanitarians because af the
almosl endless grief associated with this
'''ork, added to their abuse by a segment
af the general public. In tile long run ,
only the animals surfer due to this
hm.
!\.1ost sincerely,
JEAN BAUSCH,
Executive Director
Animal Care and Humane
Education Center
Co11ncU Critic
To the Editor:
I am writing as a present homeo"ner
in Oceanview Park, a former homeowner
in Mesa Verde. and the College Park
area. and a long-time resident of Costa
J\1esa.
ALTHOUGH the stimulus for my
writing was the Oct. 4 special zaning
meeting of the city council (wherein
the Mayor. Vice Mayor, and all COlRl·
cilmen except Mr. Raciti voted in
favor of out-of·town developers as op-
posed to residents and taxpayers). my
concern goes far beyond that point.
The council meeting \\'as a travesty
because it appearl'd as though l\1essrs.
Pinkley and Wilson had predetermined
th eir positian. To meet merely to go
through the motions is a waste of tax·
payers' money and an insult to those
concerned citizens who take the time
to attend the meetings.
It st ruck me th at al least three
members of the council have been there
far many years. frequently trading the
n1ayor's scat between !hem. \Vhcn one
considers this fact in light o! the demise
of Newport Blvd. as a once prosperous
business district, th e extremely poor
•
Quotes
movement or traffic through our city. shooting victims were found ; a group
the mix.ing of industrial and residential of boys were questioned by police in
areas and the other evidence af poor stiooting spree; Rialto woman paralyzed ,
planning (If any planning at all ), dictates and reported in critical coodJUon ; man
that it is time to throw out the "old killed in market; bus driver wounded
timers" and install some new blood while driving" -an appalling number
with a new thrust Car our city. of incidents for one day's reportin&'I
THUS stimulated. I have decided lhat r Al\I DEEPLY distressed over the
at the next election they wUI have at innumerable amount of citlzen.s who
least one sincere competitor for their do possess guns as I'm sure many
seats, one· \vhQ will work.for what is..besL.___other ~pie ~e. ~ts the age.old question
tor the people of Costa r-.1esa. otwM robblert~lon'(est and hank;st;
H. L. \VHITE but WHEN A~ gun controls IOlDI to pass the Legislature?
Bau Ecology
To the Editor :
Tllere are far too many gang war~
that have resulted la the shoot.in& or
innocent victims (some of th em
children): there are too many dt.ranaed
11, en· ~)s looking for "kick" wlth a pistol
or ibotgun; there 11': too mlDY upeet
lover& and husband& (wives too) who
take revenge with a gun.
Re : Daily Pilot editorial, Oct.
titled "Restoring the Bay."
I'm not entirely familiar with the
details of plans to dredge Upper Ne,vporl
Bay (lo provide fill for the Corona
del Mar Freeway and supposedly
"restore major portions of the bay to
tidal action'') but it seerm: as though
man , with little prodding, is quick to
stick his nose into business better han·
died by the ~or. It seems \\'e are
on the verge of winning the security
of the Bay for its wildlife values when
,ve get the idea to "improve" the Bay
and get rid of scars · of man ·s and
Nature's past deeds. The lesson that
some pe<iple seem never to learn is
that Nature best governs hc~lf.
PRESENTL V, at Upper Newport Bay.
-Silted areas S1Jch as major portiOlll
of the former salt ..,,·orks do undergo
tidal flushing and are converting (si nce
-1969) into healthy salt marsh-mudflat
habitat. Those areas which are not
reached by the tide are used as nesting
grounds for s&ne avian summer
residents and as resting grounds for
the myriad migrant and wintering flocks or birds.
-\Vilh oompletion or East Bluff
developments , siltatian derived from
those areas has hopefully slowed con·
siderably and now shouldn 't threaten
the extinction of the tidal habitats.
-Ironically, the wasle water (of
dubious quality ) derived from run-off
of homes. schools, and golf courses (as
in Big Canyon ) has allowed the develop-
ment of willow thick ets and ether
marshy-riparia n vegetation, v.·hich in
turn i! providing good wildlife habitat
-an unexpec1ed. beneficial sidc-effecl
of that urbanir.ation.
A CAREFULL V considered plan ot
slit removal may, in fact, improve
vdldlife va1ues but such a plan must
be very carefully considered ... To return
the are11 to tidal action" isn't , of itself,
an ecologically 80\lnd ba~."I for aclion.
"To pravide fill !or a freev.·ay" is a
sound ba."lis only for ecological rape.
I ~ggest all parties "·ork to.,.,·ards
seeing how lillle \Ve can do wbile m::i1··
imizing the qualit y of these prcciaus
v.·ildlife resources.
CHARLES W. SEXTON
I HAVE heard the sayinc, ''I need
a gun for protection." To the contrlry,
we need protection against guru -their
sales and usage. We must, as in<fi&nant
citizens, do something to }>f'event this
rapidly increasing, senseless killing.
Our Legislature may take action if we
protest loudly enough.
NANCY PENNEY
Birch Cr edit
To the Editor ;
Your editorial-obituary on the demise or the John Birch Society could, ond
in my opinion certainly should have
included some com p Ii nt.c._n ta ry
statements because that Soa'ity has
Sl:rely not been all bad.
YOU SPEAK of the prolonged period
or hysteria maintained by JBS.
You call attention lo some efforts
and beliefs on the part of JBS that
many people thought ridiculous.
BUT \'OU FAIL to give the JBS
credit for having alerted more U.S.
citizens to the objectives and dangers
of communism than any other organiza·
tioo.
These objectives and dangers still ex-
isl. But .,.,.bo do v.·e have no1v to tell
us so?
DON HUDDLESTON
Colu1nns De lp
Ta !he Editor: 4
1 like many of the ~·ell·thought~t
editorials and special arttcles. such 1s
on Agnew and the Edison plant eXJ!tns.ion.
Your columns from varying viewpoints
help gi\'e information so that we can
more readily make up our own minds
on issues.
LEONARD WRIGHT
OIAN•I COAST
DAILY PILOT
Robtrt N. lVttd, Publislltr
P.S. Supplemental: 1 a1n a senior Thoma.t Kttvil, Editor
at U.C. Jrv lne, majoring in biology. Barbare Krtibich
1 am a native Orarlie Counti:in and EdHorial Page Edit-Or
l grew up In Santa Ana Heights . In 1be ~torial ,pqe of the D&lly
high school and college, I have studied Pilot .fttks to inform and 11timWat•
much of the wildlife oround U'Pf>Cr ~Mk" by prnentine en thla pqe
\V 'p di kl Com · · C l'f Nev..'J)Ol't B<ly. Aly mo.~t recent \lo'Ork, divene•('Ommtntary'on topk:s Of~
--'U.Jl)lll~L!lrJI Y..et r o a·
tlon. He now has nve task forct!I kloklng
into: The Wateraate break-in •nd cover·
up, the 1ctlvttle1 of the White House
plumben, c1mp1lgn Clnancing, poU!lcal
espiona,:e and the infamous ITT case.
ck.wn. Tt a:ot so bad that political TllE ONLY THlNG that can slop
&trategy;--aft~le&Umony of John -Mr .... Cox.. would be..prusur from. .Mr.
Dean, dlclated that e.verybody 1hould Nixon to have r-.tr. Richardson sack
get tbe aruv except the Pope. him. 71111 b1 just about the one lhlnR
~fr. Elliot Rlcbardson, who has an that Mr. Nixon doesn't have the political
hOnest oame, and an honest face, chutzpah to attempt. Such a move would
and Is 1 Boston brehmln and therefore mean the cover-up ol the covcr·up. nu1t
· u ns • missione r. al· under Or. George llW'lt at UCI. con· oo· col nl ll~gh,vay Patrol on ~rend !9__ward. d~li'k_ cernecr·ttit "t\Vl8n ttse or Uilpper Ne\rai,;r-f---;1:;"'°';';;;;""~;!'~~"':;;"""1";:;''"";<·,;;;~C,;';;:'',;nd:;-; drlvl"I fflals -nfns1stence upon a tnat. . cartoonists, by provldirc a m
In contrast to the common procedure of Bay nnd Other ~reas of the Estua~Y· tt11de~· vi"-·• and by prnentlrc this
accepting a plea or gull ly to a \e~c;er Coastal . 1~,gooo Ecasystcm of Southern nc~-spaper'1 opilllom and ideas on
charg<. Is a prN!ressive and vital step C&llfomia. current lopics, The e-ditortal optnkln9 --e OI thf l.>&lly Ptklt appt-U only in the btcause it recog ni7.es the lmport.ance or «lltori&I column JI! 1he tnp ol 'd\e
firm , consistent adjudication."' Gttlt r rofecllu1 1 p&(t. Opiniona lf:~pl"t'Mtd by the ooJ. rtfR. COX'S guJde1Jne1 conslltute ~n
extraordinary mandate, just about lltl-
precedented In Wahslngton po!Uclal
history. lie hu made It clear thaJ
"the 1peclal prosecutor will detennine
whttbtr and to what extent he will
Inform or mnault the Attome7 General
in theory automatically above the sort would be just too much. lt might end
of trlckery practJced by !he S~nta up with the President being bonged
Barbara·Pt11t1dena mafl080 was caned by hla own tightrope.
__In to_lend an odor of 11nctlty lo the \Vben Mr. Cox too k over as special
Whitt House corl)lle. Richardson a~ prosecutor he s.ild. "l hold the ·whi p
parcntly chose Cox on the theory lh•I hand ." I'd say so, :ind .,.,·ould add that
If Co1 could exculpate 1'1r. Nixon, the Watergate may !link t.1r. Nixon yet.
T •· I 81 h •· ( To !he Editor : umnista and t •MoOnlatt and lttttf' O•n::)' ynn re -.,..ntrl ruz. on wri~fnl ~their own and"°~..,
need of help for suicide-prone -"The 1'he newspaper carried thei;e 11tarlc" mtnt oi their \1ews b)' 'the Dt.lht
only way that any of us cnn hnve the guts on r-.tonday, Oct. l!'i -"'T\loo young n1tn PIJot lha!Jld be lntft'ftd.
to stand up nnd mnn::h through life ii; by crilically "'oundod In an exchange or
knowing thnt we have lhe support and gun fire: sl11cen·yCflr-old ar~tcd In con· \Vednesday, October 24, 1973
love of thOSc around us." nection with ghoo!lng: bodies of 1hrcc
l
--
•QUEENIE By Phil lnterlandi
"I don't know what they do there. Nobody's ever in."
·No Cutbacks
l
County Flights
Won't Be Pared
By WILLIAM L. SCIJREIBER 1-----'Of tt.t o.tly-l"llot Stiff
said.~uel supplier (Shell -
Oil Company) says there
hasn·t been any change ~
far and we/bope nothing will
change that."
The two airlines serving
Orange County Airport have
no immediate plans to cut
back on flights to conserve
fuel, an action taken la st week
by three of the nation's big-
gest carriers.
Officials at Air California
and Bugbee AJrwut said today
their service hasn't been af·
fected yet by Pre3ident Nix·
on's mandatory fuel allocation
program.
CI V I L AERONAUTICS
Boanl--ollleialo-s a.y -the
average load on the three
airlines cutting back on their
service is-about 30 to 50 per-
cent full. Cutting back on
flights -and operating costs
-will increase the loads and
airline profits, tile CAB said.
Airwest public relationS of·
• UN IT E D , TWA and ficer Larry Litchfield said ~
American Airlines agreed last day My decision to cut back
week to trlm a total of 63 on flights will be based on
fll.gbts a day from 10 majOr the · GUIC<llle of meellngs
routes to cut fuel consumption. starting today in Wuhlngton
But Mu Van Dordrecht, ex· D.C., during which airlines
ecutive vlce president of will discuss the fuel crl!il.
·finance for Air cal, sa.id the "So far we have not done
'fueJ crtsis wu a good e1cuse anything beca~ it would be
1---,-1f"'or-ththe--bfg-atrlinelt-ttHl~ture,!!-Litcbfield-Aid..
excess flights. "We have been operating
1 0 Some of the big airUnes since July on what We call
}'~are so far over flJght capacity a 'flight · profile' that saves
"alrtady that this cutback will up to three mUlioo gallom
belp them streamline things,'' of fuel a year."
Van Dordrecht said. "W~ t!oP't ,J~
have that problem. We '®uld ~ EXPLAINEn ·
use even more Oigbt.s." , ' \hit~ ~ttier ljfactort, ·n\Olt
' -cOnd\Uom,•type o! a1t<n11 •
THE CONTROVERStAL jet and other facton art fed into
flights out of Orange County a computer which detemllnes
Airport are limited by the the optimum flight capacity
county Board of Supervisors and fuel load of each Alrwest
through contracts with the jet. He said that process is
airlines. called the flight profile.
Van Dordrecht said Air Cal Another Airwest spokesman,
is not on the allocaUon yet who asked not to be kleotifled,
because it is an intrastate said be thinks Al.rwest will
carrier wilb no routes outside cut back on flights before Air
cawornia. Cal because Airwest Oles out-
"We'll j~l keep on doing of-state. The Hughes jets fly
what we've been doing until to Mexico, Lu Vegas and
·we hear something new," he several Southwestern states.
Lease-purchase
Guidance Center
Funding Chosen
By JOANNE REYNOLDS
Of fM Dellr l"ilot Iliff
The $660,000 guidance cen!er
for the Hunti ngton Beach
Union High School District Y.ill
be buil t on a lease-pu rchase
basis.
Robert Martin, assistant
superin tendent for business.
said trustees decided last
Admission
Signups
Will Open
Applications for admission
lo any of the eight UC cam·
puses for the fall quarter of
1974 may be filed beginning
1 Nov. t.
1 'fo be sure of a place at
the desired UC campus a stu·
dent should apply during
November, UC officials sa id.
A single application flied
wi th a $20 fee at the campus
i of first cboice a ss ur es
· l qualified apptlcan~ a place
_.!_aLi1 e ·of the cam puses serv·
ing lmd ergra ua es.
Applications are available
rrom high school or com·
monity college counselor!! and
fron1 the admissions office at
UC lrvine.
w~k to use tht lease-purchase
mtlhod to "make the district
a little money."
TillS JS POSSIBLE, 1'.fartin
said, because the district can
take the money eannarked
for the cent er 's construction
and pu t it into a short-tenn
investment with a return of
9 to 9 'h percent.
It will borrow money at 51,i
to 6 percent to pay off the
construction cost of t h e
center.
He said the system is not
new. The district has used
the lease-purchase method to
acquire all of its nearly 50
relocatable classrooms.
THE CENTER. to be built
on the \\'intersburg site at
Golden \Yest Stre('f. and
\Varner Avt'nue. w'ill provide
cla~sroom space for all or
the district's 1,000 special
students. l-.tost of these are
either crowded into two
trailers on the site or housed
in otl)(r districts.
The contract for the center
has btffi awarded to the W.J.
Shirley Co., which Is also
_c;toing some or the work on
l!Unfmgton Bea<:h Rfg!i SOMDI.
~tee Ron Shenkman &qg·
gestrd t h e lease-purchase
m('thod Y.·hc n elected to the
school bollrd in 1\prll.
T\\'O \\'EE KS AGO, trustees
hirt'tl the rin11ncial co nsult ing
It's the way you want to look,
now. All shimmer and shine.
Lighting up the night Sparking
up the good times. VII, division
of Venice Industries, shows
you how. In washable polyester,
all silvery-threaded For sizes
8 to 18. A-line, pull-on skirt
with ribbed top, •48
Also available in taupe.
Sherwyn Knits
WedntSday, Oc:tobtr 21\, lfll SC DAILY PILOT (I
During the first month of j the filing peri od, t.ach campus
wlll cons i der ap-l pHcatione. When quolA1 arc
filltd, addltiona1 applications
wW be redirected to another
lJC campus.
flrn1 of Stone fl nd Youngberg t..---------------------------------------------------------~
\
l-0 aid in '"'' override elec-Bullock's S.nt& Ana. Monday through Friday Imm 10:00 a.m. to 9:30 p.m., S&auday from 10:00 Lm. to 6:00 p.m., 1 Fashion Sqaarc, Santa Ana, Tel-bone: 547.7211 tion. That election will be used .. ,..
t-0 "'"' funds f0< sdlool con· Bulloclc's South C...C Plua, Moadar tbrcagh Pridar 10:00 Lm. to 9:30 p.m., Salurday 10 :00 a.m. ro 6:00 p.m., 3333 BriJtol Street. Costa Mesa. Telephone: 556-0611
slrua.ion.
7